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                  <text>March 5, 1992

OhiO

U.S. faces shortage of deli pickles
By CLIFF EDWARDS
CHI~AGO (AP) - Restaurants
and delis around the nation are in a
pickle: Rain wiped out the Mexican
cucumber crop, causing a shortage
of the deli dill.
Some places are offl'ling substit~tes such as pickled peppers or
ptckled tomatoes, but others don't
relish the idea.
"There's no question of changing," said Hal Horowytz, a manager at Zabar's delicatessen in New
York Citr. "Most of the customers
~refer th1s tYI'." of product, so we
JUSt pay a ltttle more
. eat the

Ohio Lottery

Eastern
girls are
beaten 76-40

cost We manage to get enough to rants try to palm off processed or
fresh-paded dills for refrigerated
keep our customers haPI?Y·"
pickles,
Hentschel said.
Cucumbers for p1cldes are
A
processed
pickle is stored in
imported during the winter only.
fermentation
tanks
for months
Some come from Nicaragua, but
before
being
flavored
arid put in
Mexico is a major SUI?Piier.
"It rained and nuned and con- jars. A fresh-packed dill goes
tinued to rain for about a month directly from the field into a jar
and essentially drowned the along with spices and flavors and is
fields," Richard Hentschel, execu- later heat-processed and stored.
The refrigerated, or deli pickle,
tive vice president of Pickle Packers International in suburban St. also goes from field to W' but is not
Charles, said Wednesday.
heated and is refrigerated for only a
few
days before being sold, allowPersnickety pickle lovers with
as many as 36 flavors to choose ing it to keep its crispness and its
from can tell if delis and restau- greenish color.

•

J-S

Low tonight in SOs. Chance or
rain 100 percent Saturday

chance or rain 70 percent. High
in 60s.

Vol. 42, No. 213

Copyrighted 1~2
TO COMPETE • Bradbury Elementary 5th
and 6th grade cheerleaders will take part in a
competition at Federal lfocking on Saturday,
March 7th. Pictured In the front row rrom left to
right are: Michelle WIDiams, Brabara Whitting-

Pick 3: 628
Pick 4: 5751
Cards:
7-H; 6-C; 3-D;

2 Socdono, 14 Pageo 25 oonto
Allulllmodla Inc. N""'lfiiiP"'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, 'Friday, March 6, 1992

House fails ·to approve redistricting bill

ton and Chandra Moon, Second row (l·r): Jessi·
ca Evans, Sandra Young, Carrie Harston, Mel·
isba Swisher and Terra Dowler, Back row (l·r):
Kristen HiU, Karab Winter and Amy Younker.
Not pictured are advisors Sherry Swisher and
Michelle ~hi.!'i~li!!t&gt;l~.~

By ROBERT E. MILLER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS -Ohio's lawmakers apparently
can still complete passage of a congressional redistricti~g. bill in time to avoid the n~ for a separate,
$6 million electJOn after the May 5 pnmary.
A Senate-passed bill stalled in the House Thursday in a sea of bipartisan protests over the shape of
the 19 new districts that generally were crafted to
protect incumbent mernbers of Congress.
House Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelersburg,
adjourned the House until Tuesday, despite an earlier
warning from Secretary of State Bob Taft that he
needed the bill by today to make preparations for the
p~ary. . ,
.. .
. ·
We don t have the votes, R1ffe S81d.
. He said 42 Democrat~! and four Republicans were
wtlhng to support the bill, with 50 needed for pas-

Riffe said he thinks there still is time, despite
Taft's warning. He said candidates do not have to
have seven days to file petitions, as Taft had requested. "We could give them 48 hours," Riffe said.
Taft later indicated agreement wit~ the speak~r.
But he sa1d, "We are raptdly reachtng the pomt
beyond which there will not be sufficient time" to
nominate congressional candidates May 5. Taft said
he needs all the details worked out, including candidate filings, by March 13.
Those opposing the biU included 34 of 38 House
Republicans, who apparently heard an appeal from
Rex Elsas, executive director of the Ohio Republican
Party, not to support it.
.
Tbe speaker said all .of the II blacks Iii his caucus
were opposed to the btl!. They ObJected to changes
affecting Franklin County where, under an earlier
verswn, they may have been_able_to elect a second

black congressman to join l{ep. Louis Stokes, DCleveland, in Washington next year.
"We've only had one black congressman in the
history of the state of Ohio," said Rep. Ray Miller,
D·Columbus. "We have surrounding. states like
M1ch1gan, and llhno1s and Pennsylvania that have
anywhere from two to seven black congress people. I
think it's a shame that there's only one black congressman in our state."
Assistant House Minority Leader David Johnson,
D-Canton, said there was not much support for the
final version of the bill.
'
' ' We are concerned about splits. There were, like,
24 cdunlies that as you know, were split, and a lot of
concern and .~iscussion about the process and how
we got there.
The Senate approved a joint conference ~om":'ittee s verston of the btU 24-9 Tuesday, wllh ftve

Democrats and four Republicans vot.ing against it
Ohio will lose two of its 21 seats in the U.S.
House next year because of national population sh1fts
recorded in the 1990 Census. The realignment was
required to keep the districts vinually equal in popuIauon.
·
Stokes said Thursday that " in all probability we
. will have a lawsuit" as a result of the redistricting
plan, which he said may not meet the requirements of
the federal Voting Rights Act That law is designed
to preserve minority districts.
"!plan to consult with our lawyers over the week- ·
end " Stokes said. He declined to say what specific
problems he had with the redistricting.
Although Stokes has sought to get all of the black
voters he could in Cuyahoga County, he also has
sought control of white suburbs that include liberal
voters.

Syracuse residents asked to take part
in annual fix-up, clean-up campaign

sage.

By Kathryn Crow
Sentinel Correspondent
Syracuse Mayor James Pape
Thursday night called for residents
to "pitch in" and take part in a two·
week spring fix-up, clean-up of
their properties beginning March
14 during the Syracuse Village
Council meeting.
The mayor said "I appreciate
cooperation of residents at all
times. However, during this twoweek cleanup period I would like
all residents to ~o all out to
improve the village.'
In regard to rental propeny, the
mayor said that it is first the

CHERRING FOURTH GRADERS • Tbe Middleport-Bradbury
Elementary 4th grade cheerleaders will take part in the Federal
Hocking cheerleader competition on Saturday, March ·7th. Pictured in the first row rrom left to right are: Bethany Boyles, Ashley
Burton, and Jennifer Neece, Second row (1-r): Ashley Vaughan,
Brandy Tobin, Mindy Halley, Brandy Stevens, Third row O·r):
Crystal Leach, Cindy Lewh, Missy Cremeans, and Renee Stewart.
Pictured In the back row are advisors Vickie McKinney and Connie Burton.

responsibility of the renter to do responsibility , of the property
cleanup work, and then if the renl!'r· owner.
Continued on page 3
fails to comply, it becomes the

Pomeroy man found dead
A Pomeroy man is dead following an apparent suicide on Thursday evening.
'
According to Meigs County
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, John
Carl, 23, of Kingsbury Road near
Pomeroy, was found dead by
deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Deparunent, after a call was
received by the derarunent at II
p.m.

Sheriff Soulsby and County
Coroner Dr. Douglas Hunter were
on the scene, and according to a
news release from the sheriff's
department Hunter' ruled that Carl
died from a self-inflicted gunsnot
wound.
Susan Carl, the victim's wife,
was outside of the residence at the
time of the incident, Soulsby
reported.

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
The first week of March and
daffodils in bloom? Now that's
incredible.
On top of that where else but in
Beat of the Bend would you learn
that congratulatory cards from
President and Mrs. George Bush
are available to note weddings,
50th anniversaries, 80th birthday
and upward, and for the IOOth
birthday, a special greeting?
Due to the numerous requests
that the volunteer-staffed office
processes, written requests are
required four weeks prior to the
event Send requests to The White
House, Greetings Office, Room 39,
Washington, D. C. 20500. And
you did need to know that, didn't
you?

Parkersburg, W.Va.
A graduate of Warren Local
High School, she was a standout at
Rio Grande. She excelled both in
academics and athletics and held
scholarships not only for her academic ability but also for being an
outstanding athlete. She is the
granddaughter of Mrs. Victor
Brown of Minersville and Mr. and
Mrs. Hllyman Bamitz of Pomeroy.

-Not exaaty as shown. 11W rester wUI hetp you put
stress on hold. It lealuresa pub-back bade, son pillow
comlort, waling delals and a side pocket to hold
magazines.

CHECKING THE BOUNDARIES • Rep.
Vernon Sykes, D·Akron, lert, and Rep. Tom
Roberts, D-Dayton, discuss a map or proposed

Unemployment
PrHcenr MXII: force,

Dr. Mark Brown has returned to
his medical practice in Maine following a visit in Meigs County and
in Columbus. His new address is
P.O. Box 243, Bar Harbor, Maine,

of

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Jobl~ss

rate jumps
to 7.3 % in February

::~;:~:r£i~E~~~~r~~

~Local b~i;r~Lynch.

ODOT workers comple'e project
Meigs County Ohio Department of Transportation workers have
finished installing 278 feet of pipe to impf'QVC drainage along Route
7 north of Chesrer. Repairs to the storm drain and call:h basin were
done by local workers over the past few weeks. ·
The project was difficult because the trench for the pipe had to
be dug deep and the ground has been niuddy. At times, trifftc at the
project site was controlled by naggers.
Clean-up is now underway at the site. The ground will be reseeded as soon as weather pennits:
.
.
.

Show makes move

taiDment. And USA Today report·
ed today tbat PIOdacen of "M.I·
lock" are in
with ABC
about possibly making a similar
switch
. for their show.
. '

), .

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
nation's unemployment rate leapt
to 7.3 percent in February, the
highest point since the recession
began and the worst level in 6 In.
years, the government said today.
The new rare, up from 7.1 percent in January and the highest
since July 1985, came despite separate data showing employers
expanded their payrolls by a morethan-expected 164,000 jobs.
The two statistics are derived
from separate Labor Department
surveys and can sometimes conflict. The unemployment rate
comes from a survey of American
1"'--"M...
A_.M...
J -"JuAR.lllsuo,..NuoLJLilll.J households, while the payroll data
1K1
is culled from a survey of business-

04609

John Madson, whoever he might
be, must have fared well with his
Application deadlines for the detailed story and photos of a trip
scholarships to be awarded by the on the Delta Queen.
Middleport Alumni Association is
The story which mentions and
April30.
sometimes is accompanied by phoThe Susan G. Park (requires a tos of Pomeroy has appeared in
3.5 grade point average); the numerous mlijor newspapers across
McComas-Moore (major must be the United States.
education) and the Lewis-Gray
Lois Harris who has two sisters
Scholarships are the ones awarded living in Houston, Tex. received a
by the Middleport organization.
copy of the stDry from her ~isters.
If you'd like to know the pea- The newspapet was in the Houston
. pie involved in committees dealing Chronicle. Charles Lochary of Illiwith the scholarships they are Judy nois sent along the story as it
Arnold, Carol Brewer and Joe appeared in the Chicago Tribune.
Young, the Park; Nancy Cale, Mary Powell r=ived copies from
Jeanette Thomas, Judy Crooks, the Sunday Star-Ledger in Newark,
McComas-Moore, and Nancy N. J. and another copy showed up
Beavrz and Lewis-Gray.
from the Orlando Sentinel in
Applications undoubtedly are Orlando, Fla Earlier Floyd Clark
available through these people, at of Oregon had sent a copy from a
the Meigs High School or from large newspaper there.
·
Alumni Association Officers.
So Pomeroy has had some
Transcripts of grades as well as national publicity thanks to Mr.
college acceptance acknowledge- Madson and the Delta Queen.
ments should be filed with the
Now does lhal mean that people
applications.
will be streaming in to look the
The scholarships are open to the community over? Probably not.
descendants of Middleport High Do keep smiling.
School grads or ·someone who
, sl8lted school in Middleport before
COIII(l(idation.
If. the annual M.H.S. Alumni
BURBANK, Calif..(AP) - This
Reunion isn't a success this year it is Andy Griffith's last season play·
wila't be lJec•ure Pre5ident Iva Sis· ing a wilv Southern lawyer on
01 iJn 't worting at iL Br. the way, "Madock,!' atleul en NBC.
and "In the Heat l'l
the AlumDi Band is sun on the the"Midock"
Night" were canceled by NBC
bumef. The JroUP will don on~~ge
.... wbeli they IJilPW to pneeat Tuesday beca~e of low ratings,
· 10111C l'l die old M.H.S. ~ p~e­ bill th8t isn't the end of the IIIX}'.
"In the Heat of the Nilbt" will .
ClGIIinllhe biDCJuet lf you'te mrer...,.s COIIIICtlva at 742-2187 or move to CBS for lhe.l992-93 &amp;ea·
, Ro!er William• at 992-6782. - trepalug Ill Octobtr, lllid Jetr
Sapillty, ~t of CBS Eatu- .
111111 ala willlllll in April.

seasataJ/y adjusted

legislative redisiricting at the Statehouse in
;! Columbus Thursday. (AP)

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Arrests .made by local department .
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby teports !hat several
amsts were made on Wednesday and Thunday,· ·
Harold J. Howard of New Bolton u teiUmod 10 ~igs Countj on
Wednesday to face a hearing in Meigs County Common Pleas
.Coun. He was ¥ctet! 011• charie of lliltteking in drup.
is being held in the Meigs County Jall,pending' a hearing
m the Common Pleas Court.
,·
Ml:OIIIb, Beech Grove Road in Rutland, was amsted on W
y on ac:bllp of domeatic vio!Cace.
. Micllld Dellaville, Jr., of Jacks Roed in Rutland was arresred on
'1111nday morning on a bench _ , flam Meigs County Court. fa
falltn topay,his $342.10 line IIIII COlli on a ~oua charge.
. Conduuejl oa pqe 3
.

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Sltfp Nr t AJL io SPA
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51111 Fri.; A.11 toiP.IL ISUID Art. IIM/IIalfllwlltr .......
.
_
..,
OII.IVIRY
_
• • I'•
-AVAIL-I
4464045

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"*""'-

il

.

'

· "The key thing here is not that
the employment rate went up, it's
that employment is fmally growing
again,'·' he said. "That's not ID Say
we're in a strong recovery.
Rate up In Ohio
Ohio's unemployment rate
jumped ID 7.2 percent in February,
a 0.5 percentage point increase
from January, a report released by
the Labor Department in Washington said Friday.
Unemployment in Ohio was
pegged at 6.7 percent in January.
Despite the increase last month,
the jobless rate for Ohio was less
than the level recorded in nine of
the nation's II major industrial
states.

Retirement funds will be returned
to ·LCCD for use on spe.cial projects
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
More than $120,000 set aside as
a retirement fund for fanner Leading ~reek Conservancy District
f7es1dent Jack W. Crisp will be
g1ven back to the district for use on
spetial projects.
.
The Meigs County Commission·
ers met wilh 'members of the current LCCD Board of Directors .
Wednesday to di$1:uss the money
now held by the commissioners and
p!ans for disbursement of that
money.
~ a condition of a plea t.rgain
agreement approved by assigned
Common Pleas Judge ROger Jones, ·
an annuity held by Midland ID.!ttr·
ance Company and establiShed by
the now-defunct Leading Creek
Watershed Association was transferred to the ~igs County General
Fund, along with approximately
$4~,000 in anticipated excess
reurement funds for Crisp and his

wife, Glenna, who served as the
district's General Manager.
Another $20,000 was forfeited
by Jack Crisp as costs of prosecution. Commissioner Richard E.
Jones said Wednesday that he was
unwilling to fum anything other
than the annuity over to the district
because of an appeal ftled by Crisp
and the anticipated legal costs
involved ID the courity.
· The annuity, howe,ver, will be
assigned to the LCCD board as
soon as a list of~ is submitted to the commissioners.
A power of attorney granting .
Special Prosecutor K. Robert Toy
has been .executed, and Jone5 said
Wednesday that the lssignment or
lhe annuity fUnds to LCCD woul&lt;!
be in place shortly.

Diatrld's plllns

Board members Robert SDOVi·
den and Charles Barren outlined
the district's plans for improvel
ments on Wednesday, and indicai·
···f,

.''

'.

Bruce Reed as he signs the proclamation are,
seated, J.r, Autumn Phillips and Andrea Neut·
zting, both of Junior Troop 1309. Standing, l·r,
are Misl Neutzling, senior troop, and Jessica
Hooten and Sara Moon, Brownie Troop 1271.
(Sentinel photo by Julie E. Dillon)

PROCLAMATION SIGNED· The week of
March 7-14 has been declared Girl Scout Week.
March 1l is the 80th anniversary of girlsrouting
and troops will celebrate by decorating some
store windows. Pictured wltb Pomeroy Mayor

ed that the annuity funds could be
used on some of those projects.

Lanha~

(Fenton Taylor, the third member
Continued on page 3

pleads not guilty

David L. Lanham, 50, of Point no date has been set.
In a signed confes.•ion, Lanham
Pleasant.. pleaded nm ~uilty during
his arratgnment tn Sc1oto County, said he actually shot Oliver,. whose
Ohio Thursday for the aggravated body was found Feb. 15 in Fmnklin
murder of Lewis Michael Oliver, Furnace, Ohio. Oliver's sister
40, of Point Pleasant a.ccording to reported him as missing on Nov. 8,
a SPQkesman fQr the Sc1oto County 1991. She told authorities he was
.last seen with Worthy G. Siders Jr.,
Prosecuting Attorney.
Lanham was indicted by the 47, of Henderson.
Lanham implicated Siders in the
Scioto County Grand Jury on
murder.
Siders refused arraignment
Tuesday, Feb. 25. He was arrested
on
the
charge
of aggravated murder
in Mason County on Feb. 17 and
was arraigned Feb. I8 by Mason on Feb. 18 in Mason County. He is
County Magistrate John S. currently housed in the Mason
Reynolds. Lanham waived extradi- County Jail .
Mason County Prosecuting Attion and was transported to Ohio on
torney
Damon B. Morgan· Jr. said
Feb. 18.
According ID the prosecuting at' the county is waiti~g on extradition
tomey's spokesman, the ne~t step papers from Ohio for Si.dcrs.
for LMham will be a pre 7tr1al, but
vi

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbould be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Voters in both
parties are restive
ByTOMRAUM

Associated Press Writer

SHREVEPORT, La. - Restive voters of ~lh panies are assuring lhat
lhe battle for lhe 1992 presidential nommal!ons wtU be contennous and
cantankerous for some time to come.
.
. .. .
After Tuesday's round of primaries, the Democrauc race IS sull wide
open. And Republicans handed President Bush yet another election-day
message of unease.
Not only did Republican challenger Patrick BuchanaJ_J's second-place
finish in Georgia nearly match his srrong New Hampshrre showmg, but
Buchanan picked up roughly 30 percentm each of !he two states where he
did not campaign: Maryland and Colorado.
.
Meanwhile, the Democratic contests did lillie to suggest an emergmg
consensus.
.
- G · lh
Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton won an important victory ID eorgm, e
frrst Southern primary. But former Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas won
primaries in Maryland and Ulah. And even former Califorrua Gov. Jerry
Brown scored an unexpected victory in Colorado. .
The mixed results across regtons, across party hnes, _refl~ted strong
voter discontent that appeared to be related to the nauon s economic
woes.
.
On the Republican side the balloting showed a perststent protest vote
against Bush that seemed 'independent of Buchanan'~ efforts. Tuesday's
contests followed a 31-percent vo.te for an uncommitted slate ID South
Dakota's primary the week before, in which Bush ran unopposed.
,
That should give Buchanan some pause, even as he _found ID Tuesday s
outcomes the justification for pressmg his upstart candidacy further.
"We can win this nomination ," he told supporters. But few, even
among his strongest supporters, really expect that to happen.
Sens. Tom Harkin of Iowa and Bob Kerrey of Nebraska seemed to be
the casualties of Tuesday's races.
But other than !hat, Tuesday's set of primaries did little to meet hopes
of Democratic party leaders that Democrats would coalesce around a
prospective nominee early in the primary season. .
For the third week in a row, Bush and his strategists found lhemselves
trying to explain why an incumbent president was doing so poorly m hts
ownTuesday's
party. primaries suggested Bush ,s weak ~uormance
"'
· th N
tn e ew
Hampshire and Soulh Dakota pnmanes were not JUS I flukes. , ,
.
"I hear your concerns and understand your frustrauon, Bush s3ld
Tuesday night in a statement aimed at "those who have been wtth me 10
the past but did not vote with me today."
And Bush spokesman Marlin Fitzwater ~d Bush w~ "going to win
the nomination He's gomg to wiD the elecuon. It doesn t make sense for
them (Buc~ supporters) to make it more difficult for him."
Buchanan said he was in lhe race to go all the way.
.
"I think King George is getting the message," Buchanan told cheermg
supporters.
.
d
Bush lOOk more than 60 percent of the yotc m ~land, Colorado an_
Georgia. Buchanan's best was 36 percent m Georgm, and his advisers pnvately conceded !hat his inability to bener the 37-percem marie set ID New
Hampshire could sap some of his ")?m~ntum.
, .
.
"We've got to win somewhere, said Buchanan s sister and campaign
manager, Angela Bay Buchanan.
.
_
But his team is hard pressed to say where that WID might come,
although they arc currently looking for strong ~h~w1~g 10 the Su~r Tuesday contests in Louisiana, Oklahoma and MissiSStppt, and. later, ID Michigan-Things get more complicated on the Republican side in Soulh Carolina
on Saturday, when lhc president not only has ~uchanan to contend with,
but also faces former Ku Klux Klan leader David Duke for lhc frrst ume.

Letters to the editor
Expresses opinion
There is none so blind as he
who will not see. If !hat doesn't say
i~ it can't he said. I'm referring to
the recent cut of benefits of about
1,500 to 1,600 people from that
wonderful institution we know as
!he welfare system.
I know our state can't afford to
keep paying for these progr~ms
because we have to have millions
of dollars to build new building$ to
hour these institutions. And we
can't forget about our wonderful
state employees. I know one can't
judge a whole group of individuals
just by talking with a few people
from !hat particular group, now can
one?
I'm not saying !hey are all had,
but I know some who could stand
to read a book or two on ·manners.
From that statement one may be
. under the impression !hat all state
emr.loyees are not so niee, well this
isn t true. Neither is it true that all
of lhe people being cut from benefits are. lazy. If you call not be_ing
able to wort because of a physical
impairment lazy, well then I guess
some would be lazy. ·
,
Some believe the cuts won't
matter 100 much. It won 'I if the
pec!ple who an: being Clll from certain prognms ctn still pay for A

WASHINGTON _p·ICture th.IS..
A television ad for a presidential
candidate that shows the candidate,
"'
t · th
talkin ~
full
~~~~a~~~~': he s~d~o~ lhe close 10 giving voters what they
issues. No American flags in the want out of a candidate's ad, and
background no music swelling no that is information. The FCC
adoring-cro;,d scenes. Just straight should not dictate in too great a
utile
detail how political advertising
It wouldn ' t win any awards should be structured. That is a decifrom Madison Avenue, but it sion !hat should be left to the marwould win the gratitude of voters ketplace. The marketplace has been
who are smart enough to differenti- screaming for substance for a long
ate between the way they choose a time, but !he image makers haven't
beer and the way they choose a heard the message.
president
They think if !hey show footage
In Jan~y. the Federal Commu- of Paul Tsongas swimming laps,
nications Commission took a giant you will believe !hat Tsongas has
leap in campaign adverti sing by beat cancer, and you will -vote for
requiring that every ad include an him. They think if they show
audio and visual announcement footage from a TV documentary of
identifying the candidate who gay black men wrilhing in chains
sponsored the ad - a clear and and leather _ a documentary with
sustained announcement that can- a thin money trail back to the
not be missed. It was too much for embattled National Endowment for
media consultants who badgered the Arts - you will vote for Pat
the FCC until, last month, the Buchanan because he won't spend
requirement for an oral announce- your taxes on stupid things (or per·
ment was dropped.
haps because he has tapped into a
The FCC rule did no1 come latent racist homophobia among_!he

about the attack ads of Jesse ·
H1 '
I ction campa1gn of
ems re-e e
. .
..
1990, saw sh~des of Willie.~orton ;
10 Buchanan s recent ads. There ·
arc two things ~~~~ b~~~:sa~a~a~d
attackm.¥, gays a, se white a .
Bcyle. He didn t u
gYmen. People down South are_ve'\ ' ·
upset about non -tra~11_10_na . ,
lifestyles and If you .c~n be II mto. ·
the race guest10n, II sa double · .
whammy.
·an f~
. Attack ads are espect Ye ec·
tive nght before Su)!Cr Tuesday . :
because the damage IS done, and ::
the votes are counted m _12 states, ·
before a battered candidate can
~ecover. Candidates end up ~n~;
mg ~hat httle time they do ~
fendmg off attacks or concocung
attacksoflhetrown . .
The damage negative ads_do to a : .'
candidate pales m companson to _the_ havoc they wreak on represen- · .
tauve democracy- Negauve cam- _
pai~ns are turnmg ~?ters off to the
poh,uc~l process. Negative ads _
don t give you reasons to vote for
somebody. they JUSt give you re~;
sons not to vote for somebody,
----------------------:::1_[':-:----~--~-------------, Beylc
told our
associateISEd
Henry.
"If every
candidate
do10g
tt,
preuy soon lhere will be no reason .
to vote for anybody."
.
· A survey by the Kettering Foun- -;
dation last year stood up for Amcri- cans who have become so discouraged that they don't vote anymore.
The foundation study discovered ·•·
that non -voters aren't apathetic.
They care, but they have been beat:: !
en into retreat by superficial cam paigning, broken promises and a government lhat caters to loud and •
weallhy special interest groups. . , .
If lhe voters don' t want negauve :
ads or empty rhetoric backed by the
American flag, then why do the
best ad people money can buy keep
feeding America just that? The
polls tell them that the power of
television ensures that an unsub- ·
stantiated accusation or an empty,
but artful ad wiU stick in a voter's
mind.
f-1--Why mess with a formula that
L...;:.:::::!i?&gt;:::::!!~~=====-----J works? Because it's time for some
Straight talk.
. ,
Copyright, 1992, United FeaT~\~
Sf~SPN
-rn~
HOU~~
ture Syndicate, Inc.

r

~

'

-----Weather----Soath·Central O'in
Tonight, periods of rain with
thunderstorms possible. Low SO·
55. Chance of rain near 100 per·
cent. Saturday, showers and thunderstonns likely. High in the upper
60s. Chance of rain 10 percenL

-mE VOTERS

AAVE GIVbNME

Katherine Bush

WJE ...

PRIMARY

nr;y WILL BATTlt IT OUT FoR

IN T~EIR OWN

;uMMER OLYMPICS"&gt;...

WHITE

,Katherine R. Bush, 79, Route
124, Coolville, died Thursday,
March 5, 1992 at the Pomeroy
NUJSing and Rehabili&amp;ation Center
after an extended illness.
She was born in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., a daughter of the late Frank
and Virgie Riffle Carpenter. She
was a retired employee of the U.S.
Joice Shoe Company in Columbus.
She is survtved by one son,
Cecil R. Bush, Hockiagport, two
brothers, Frank Carpenter Jr.,
Springfield, and Walter Caroenter,
Point Pleasant; four sisters, Frances
Kerns and Lucy Rollins, both of
Point Pleasant, W.Va., Betty Carver, Georgia, and Alice Sprouse,
Whitesville, W.Va.; three grandchildren and four great-grandchil-

BID
_

dren.

She was preceded in death by
her husband, Charles Bush, in
I980, and three brothers.
Services will be Saturday at 3
p.m. at the White-Blower Funeral
Home in Coolville with burial in
Stewart Cemetery, Hnckingport.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 7 p.m. today and all day
Saturday until the lime of services.

Democracy needs your vote
Suppose the famous quote from
history read: "A government of
half the people, by half !he people
and for half the people." Obviously , the quote is inaccurate, but,
unfortunately, the numbers aren't.
The numbers on voter participation
indicate lhat Americans don't vote
- at least, not to the degree they
should. Studies reveal that the
American people have a very limited understanding of the fundamental concepts of U.S. history and
civics.
The need for greater voter participation in lhe election process is
painfully apparent when considering lhese facts:
• in 1990, only 36 percent of all
eligible citizens bolhered to vote the lowest voter turnout since 1942,
lll:ating lhe previous low which had
,peen recorded o•liY four years prior
'(1986).
• in the 1988 Presidential election ,
barely 29 percent of the eligible
voters in the 18-24 age range participated in lhe election process.
• one of every two 18-year-olds
does not know that each state is
represented in !he U.S. Senate by
two Senators. An even smaUer percentage know the names of their
two U.S. Senators.
• 50 percent of 18-year-olds surveyed nationally believed that the

'

Cong. Clarence E.
Miller
President may appoint members of
Congress to their positions.
As a part of our "Congress In
The Classroom Program," a survey
is distributed to those swdents participating in this academic exercise
and they are asked to assess the
importance of citizen participation
in the election process.
.
The vast majority of the students taking our survey have indicated that they consider the public's responsibility to vote to be a
matter of the greatest importance.
I originated "Congress In The
Classroom" several years ago in
response to local educators seeking
a srronger link with the government
and in an effort to assist I Oth DisDiet high school government teachers in their examination of
Congress, the legislative process
and the foundations and functions
of democracy. Many of our high
schools have participated in this
worthwhile educational endeavor
and our government teachers in
Southeastern Ohio have made a
conscientious effort to make the
link between government's actions
and the public welfare clear and

on the participation by 7 to ·w mil·
lion young people and their fami- ,,
lies for 1992.
State educational administrators
are being urged by members of : .;
Congress and political activists ·
alike to give the National
Student/Parent Mock Election program full consideration as a useful · :.
tool for reaching millions of young
people. A number of educational ,
activities arc tied to lhe national ,.•
mock election. Guidebooks on : ·-.
issues relevant to !he Presidential '•·
election have been sent to th e. ·i
nation's 15,000 school districts. : c
The organization coordinating the ·
project is a non-profit counci\ '
based in Arizona and its honorary
co-chairmen are former Presidents
Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford.
· :
In the interest of rejuvenating · '.
the very basis of democracy - !he _:
privilege of voting - I can see the ·;
merits of this ambitious project and ' ·
I encourage our primary and sec- ~·'
ondary ·school educators to contact '
my office for m(lre infonnation on ··':~
the National Student/Parent Mock ':
Election program. Such hon-parti~ · '
san, educational pro~s can only · ·•
help reverse a trend mAmerica that .,
carries with it the worst of conse- · · i
quences for the fabric of democra' ·: ·
cy.
_.. ,.

relevanL
Nationwide, however, studies
conducted over the past several
years underscore the increasing
need for greater commumty awareness of, and inv 0 1vetnent in, the
election process. In May 1990, the
Markle Commission warned !hat as
the rest of the world marches
toward democracy, voter ignorance
threatens our own system. The
Times-Mirror Center for the People
and the Press found that many
young Americans between 18 and
29 are becoming part of a •'generation that knows less, cares less and
votes less." The Carnegie Council
on Adolescent Development has
found that many young Americans
·do not appear 10 make the connection between the actions of government and !hose of citizens."
There is a promising ray of hope
in the midst of this discouraging
news, however. In 1988, more than
3 1/2 million students - from
kindergarten through college - and
their families participated in an
attractive, non-partisan educational
program called the National Student/Parent Mock Election. A
major news magazine called it the
largest voter e_ducation proj~ct
ever. The organiZ3hon sponsonng
the mock election has its sights set

.

William A. Rusher
Buchanan supporters, and if's
amazing how fast they run out of
gas. Usually they assert that he
should battle Bush right to-the end
of the primary season (which may
be harder to do !han it sounds, if
Pat keeps on losing to Bush and
contributions begin to diminish).
OK, but what then?
There are, of c:oune, die-hards
who will tell you that, if Bush heats
Buchanan at the convention,
Buchanan ought io run in Nov~ber as an independent. But that is
tantamount to asserting thai he
should act L'l a spoiler, trying to
destroy Bush even at the cost of
handing the presidency over to lhe
Democrats .• To his credit,
Buchanan has never even hinllld 81
such a thing. On the contrary, he
has said flatly that, if BUlb is nomililted, he wiD~ him.
We may ·ptcture, . then, Pal
Buchanan lplll'oaching 'the I08IIUm
in HOUJion 10 1 huge 0V81ion by his
sujlpotteQ. He will he, It 1ea1t IIIIIporarily, Mr. Con~rvativo, and
-there wiD be no ~ of TV commonlltol'l to point out that he Is
&amp;CttiDa off 10 a Iut ..S. early llllt
fa the-1996canpedlion.

C.

.

-

~

Jobn Carl

.

...•

.. ~·

-·••

short, is to play the Happy Loser, :
preparing to do battle for George ..._. :
Bush against whatever nominee the : :
Democrats finally pick. I predict .. ·
we will see George and Pat stand· ·': l
ing there, arms around each other's ' 1
shoulder, waving and smiling at the ·:, :
crowd.
·- •-' •
(C)U92"
NEWSPAPER ~~ :
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
· 'l l

· What kind of speech should Pat
give? A rousing salute to conser·
vatism, we may be sure. But what
·shall he say about Bush?
Buchanan himself hinted once
or twice, earlier this year, that even
if he eventually had to endorse
Bush, his endorsement might be
tepid unless Bush mended his
ways. But Bush has already thrown
'
NEA Chairman John Frohnmayer
..,;.i I.
to the wolves, preuy clearly as a ~------------------, ~
. J;
-gesture to conservatiyes; and it's Berry's World
safe to L'!sume he will find other
ways to please them between now
and July. Buchanan, lherefore, will
have plenty of e~cuses to tiJgue that
Bush "got the message" implicit
in the Buchanan vote totals. The
only question will be, how Should
P11 play his hand? ,
ACIIplns. bloadly Dep!i1111 lUitude toward the renominated preai"
dent miJht be fatal - not to Bush ·
(though it eerllinly · wouldll't help
him) b!lt to Buclwlln. If by any
, dwK1e Bulb •lblcquendy ICIIlthe
election, plenty of people would
blame Buchlala. But even if Bush
won, Bucblnan would JO thnlu&amp;h
the ensuinJ fQUI' yean With a reputatlon u a llOJO ln. - the very
wont.bullduD for whatever amblticns he bu &amp; 1996.
Buchwn'l ,klb at Houston, in

l

L

'

.

\

Extended forecast
Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair on Sunday wilh lows in lhe
40s and highs 6S-7S. A chance or
showers Monday and Tuesday.
Lows 50-S5 Monday and 40-45
Tuesday. Highs 55-65 Monday and
45-55 on Tuesday.

created when lhe sewer line WL'I
laid.
It was also reponed that ditches
in the area need cleaning along
with !hose on Worchester Street.
Councilman Jack Williams sugsestcd that perhaps a new culven
needs 10 be ills&amp;alled.
Mayor Pape reported thai the
Stale Highway Department will be
ditchina the entire village along
State Route 124 within the next
month, and that they will ditch,
load and haul out the din. WiUiams
also brought up the fact that a .tree
needs to be cut down on the Greer
property and also a tree near the
Cogar )llopetty.
The mayor siated that in regard
to trees if they are on village property, it will be up 10 Council to CUI
the trees down. U not it will be up
to the owner. The owner must
P!Ove that it is on village poperty
1f the village is to assume the
ibility.
~or Pape requested a raise
for the court clerk, Shelly Fortune,
from $50 to $75 a month which
was approved by Council.
He also requested that the vii·
!age purchase an electric typewriter, legal size file cabinet and a calculator. The purchases were
approved.
Also given approval was repair
of the Gravely tractor. In regard to
purchasing a new police cruiser,
Williams stated that the one in use
is a 1984 model and that the village
needs a more serviceable vehicle.
He stated that it cost more money
to keep it running, and suggested
that council go ahead and purchase
a new cruiser through the state pur-

----Area deaths----

Till~ ~PtCIAL

Where,is Pat Buchanan's bid going?

em.

COI!IIaued 1n1m page •
"If repair, or no effort is made to noted her work in trying to obtain a
repair WISightly property, steps will prison for Meigs County. She
be taken to have the pwpeny .tom reported that !he Salem Center site
down," Pape said.
is the preferred locatiQII and that all
· "If residents fail to comply dur- efforts are geared toward that loca·
in$ the two-week cleanup cam- tion. She said !hat while Belmont
p11gn, steps will be taken by vii- County remains a chier contender,
!age officials to see that the.work is "we are still alive". Services or the '
done," he continued. The mayor Chamber were offered by Thacker
reported that the viUage will usisl for any Syracuse village efforts.
in picking up large items such as
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Cunningham,
appliances.
Seventh Street residents discussed
Syracuse Council Illssed a reso-- a parking problem near their home.
lution to join the Meigs County The mayor offered to investigate
Emergency Managemeni,IEme~n- the situalion.
cy Services Agency. This IS a
Former Mayor Eber Pickens
newly rormed organization to help reported that there is a breaking off
with citizens of the county in times of Bridgeman Street in the Rustic
of disaster such floods, several Hills Addition near the Jim Hill
snow srorms, or spiUs of hazlrdous residence. Council agreed it is a
chemicals, Bob Byer, director, serious situation and asked that the
reported to Council. Cost to the vii- problem be checked, then referred
!age for joining the agency is $300. to the street committee. Thai comByer explained that the Meigs mittee was authorized to proceed
County Commissioners have widuepairs L'l needed.
placed $7,000 in the budget for the
Pickens was also hired to do
disaster assistance program.
repair to the village house 81 a cost
Also meeting with Council was of $596.06. Bill Roush, councilthe new Meigs County Chamber or man, reported that there is a probCommerce
Executive lem with the roadway in front of
Director/Economic Development the Jeff Hubbard residence on SecDirector Paula Thacker. Paula ond Street This problem will be
Thacker. She llllked to Council referred to the sewer district since
about needs of the county and it was felt that the problem was

electorate).
Th
·
ff
e campaign _got o to an
encouragiDg start 10 Ne~ Hampshtre but New Hampshtre was a
luxu~y. Every candidate ~as
foc~sed on one state, With the ume
to sitdownandhaveteaandcrumb
cake in_ Nashua or debate one
another m town halls .. New Hampshire, a state 10 ens IS, had no
patience for muted messages and
the voters there demanded substance from the candidates.
But now the candidates are scurrying from state to state, and resorting to the media to sell !hem. Next
week's Super Tuesday primaries
are bearing down_ o~ the cand_I·
dates, and thetr pan1c IS reflected ID
!heir advet;~tsmg_. The best way to
grab attenuon thiS weekend ~ill be
wilh 30-seconds worlh of wmdow
dressing atlhe expense of a careful
inspection of the issues. Voters
who lhought they had seen an end
to the Wiltie Horton-type ads are m
for a rude awakemng.
.
University of North Carohna
political science professor Thad
Beyle, who has wnnen extensively

The Dally Sentinel Pag1 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Syracuse...

'

Campaign ads do voters a big disservice :-

few luxuries in their lives like clecoic, water, gas, and even medicine.
All is not gloom and doom though.
Recently, I read a report from a
vocational expert in the Columbus
area stating that there are "between
5,000 to 6,000 jobs available in the
Meigs County area." I thought
these figures were a little odd but
here is the catch.
Of these 5,000 to 6,000
unskiUed, light jobs, most of them
We now have the results of sevare salad makers and security mon- era! Republican primaries, and it is
itors. Imagine thaL Before I close I possible to calculate a trajectory for
would like to thank God I have a Pat Buchanan's bid.
job, a good car, a warm place to
Clearly, about a third of RepubsleeP., and most of all a wonderful lican primary voters nationwide are
famdy. I did not write this letter to sore enough at President Bush to
offend anybody. If I did offend vote for Buchanan instead. That,
anybody, I apologize.
however, is very far from saying
The purpose of this letter is for thai they won' t vote for Bush over
me to exercise _my rights as an the Democratic nominee, if it
American citizen and a voter to comes down to that. Most of them
express my opinion on a topic I simplv want Ill ''send Bush amesbelieve needs to be dealt with . sage'' !hat they deeply resented the
Wake up Meigs County . If we breaking of his "No New Taxes"
can't help those who are less fortu- pledge, and that they think. he
nate than us, what good are we. We should stand up to !he Democrats
who have a part to pitch in should in Congress more, rather than forpitch in our part to help those who ever compromising wilh them.
don't have a part to pitch in.
Buchanan's own rhetoric and
Rief G. Herman nds have stressed that a vote for
Middleport,OH . him will ''send Bush a 'message."
Pat scan:ely eveu pretends that he
himself is, this year; a serious con·
tender for the presidency. It is a
safe bet that Buchanan knowa that
1996 will see the really big batde
for the soul' of the Republican
By Tile A_.llteclrn.
Party, and that he means to play a
Todly is Friday, Marth 6, the 66111 cia)' of 1
There are 300 days majoc role in that baltic.
. Very well, then- what course
1efl ia die '1*· , ...., u;.._
should Bucllanan follow for the
TcdiY'I HIJhliglll i..........,:
OlltWch &amp;. 1836, die A11mo in Sill Anlonio, Tb, fell to Mexican rest oftliis year'/
·
,_.. lifter a 13-dly &amp;p · All187 defCIIIIen of the miaion compound
1 I have asked' that question of
many of my friends who are
-llldtdnJ Davy Ooctillt.S Jlmel ~--kill~.

Today in history

-.

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-MiddlepQrt, Ohio
Friday, March 6, 1992
.·

Jack An..ler,son

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

'

Friday, March 6, 1992

fohn Ed\VII'd Carl, 23, of Kingsbury Road in Pomeroy, died
TOOrsday, March 5, 1992 at his residence.
Born on November 10, 1968 in
Pomeroy. he was the SCil of Dwight
and Sandra Barnett Carl. He wu a
welder, and a member of the American Motorcycle Association.
Besides his parents, he is survived by his wife, Susan Trader
Carl of Pomeroy; a brother, Ivan
Carl, Cardington, Ohio; two s!Jiers,
Paula Butcher of Harrisonville and
Sherri Roush of Middleport; paternal ~parents, Ralph and Sadie
Harrison Carl of Pomeroy; miter·
nal grandparents, Charles and
Grace Knotts Barnett of Grove
City, Ohio; three nieces and 1
nephew.
F.uneral services wiD be held on
Sunday 11 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home in Pomeroy, with Rev. Clyde
Hendcnon offtc:llling. Burial wiU
be in Clrlcloo Cemetery'
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Saturday.

The Daily Sentinel

grandchildren, Mark, Jeff, and
Amanda; silt sisters, Mary MiUer of
Watertown, lila Ruble of Waterford, Pearl Knapp of Syracuse,
Mrs. Denver (Margaret) Biggs of
Pomeroy, Mrs. Roger (Nancy) Snyder and Mrs. Allen (DUN) Davidson, both of Middleport; step·
mother, Lois Jean Province of Middleport; and several nieces and
nephews.
He was preceded in death by
one daughter, Teresa Pearl; and one
brother, Charles "Bud" Province.
Services will be held 1 p.m.
Sunday at Waugh-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Alfred Holley officiating. Burial
WILLIAM FOR1NEY
will be in Mina Chapel Cemetery.
Members of VFW Post 4464 will
conduct graveside services.
William Fortney
Friends may call at !he funeral
William Joseph Fortney, 84,
home
on Saturday from 6-9 p.m.
Torch, died Thursday, March 5,
1992 at his home after an extended

iUness.

A retired oil field worker, he
was born Sept. 4, 1907, in WL'Ih·
ington, Pa. He was a son of the late
Ross Bennett and Bessie (Goodnight) Fortney. His family then
moved to Calhoun County in West
Virginia.
Mr. Fortney began work as an
oiler for lhe Southern Oil Company
Gasoline Plant in Dutchman,
W.Va. in 1927. In 1931 he worked
for the West Virginia State Road
Commission. Followilig !hat, Mr.
Fortney warted as an oil field toOl
dresser, driller and rous&amp;about in
WaShill3ton, Meigs and CoshoclOO
counties in Ohio and Ritehie and
Win counties in West Virginia
except for in 1942 when he worked
at the Republic Steel Corporation
in Massillon . He retired from
Columbia GL'! on OcL I, 1969.
He wL'! a faithful member of lhe
Little Hockill3 Otureh of Cluist in
Little Hocking.
He is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Billy L. (Evajean) McKnight of Coolville, Mrs. David L.
(Betty) Ross of Middleport, and
Mrs. Wayne (Christine) Ly~s of
Torch; two sons, Robert J. Fohney
of Reedsville, and Willard L. Fortney or Dresden ; three brothers,
Charlie Fortney or Marietta,
Woodrow Fodney of Long Bouom,
and JI!Ck F~ or Warsaw; lhree
sisters, Mrs. Gall (Geraldine) Han
of Perrysville, Mrs. Fred (Kathleen) Morriston and Mrs. Carl
(Louise) Perkins, both of St.
Mary's W.Va.; 19 ~randchildren
and 27 sreat-grandcluldren. .
He was prCcecled in death by his
wife of 61 years, Delphia Mae
(Robc:ns)
a brother, Tracy
E. Fortney, a s1ster, Mrs. Perry
(Glldys) Roberts and an infant sister, Mildred 'Beatrice Fonney.
Services will be held Sunday at
2f.m. 81 the Litde Hockin' Chun:h
o Christ in Liitle Hoek•ng with
Roger A.. Roush and Steven Fuchs
offkiating. Burial will be in Ton:h

Fonner.

Paabti1hed eve11 aften.ooa, Mond1y
lh...,.h Fri..y. IU Coon St., I'Goooeo.,,
Ohlo by lloo Ohio Valloy Puloliohlftl
Conipany/MulU. .dia Inc., Ponttroy,
Ololo 4574181 "'- 1182·31118. Secon4 claoo
....... ,... ol I'Gmony, Ohio.

Mo-: Tho Anodollll Prool, o..t lho
Ohl• Now.,.,.. AooodoU., Notional
All•mill"l Jlo,.._IIIUn, Bn•hom
Nowopopor 8a!_!o1 732 T\lr&lt;l ,.,..,..,
Now v.t, Now 1Ift 10017.

Cemetery.

.

lloNl-.. ._"'

Effie Sanders

Ellie FOIDids Sanders, 94, Route
681, Reedsville, died Thursday,
March S, 1992 at Ovet!Jrook Center
in Middleport
She wL'I born in Meigs County,
a daughter of the late Zachary Taylor and Mary Baker Founds. She
WL'I a member of the Mount Hermon United Brethren in Christ
Church. She was an avid quilter
and a member of the Meigs County
Senior Citizens.
Sh: is survived by a daughter
and son· in-law, Inez Belle and
Charles Whited, Pateskla; a son
and daughter-in-law, Robert Lee
and Nina Sandm, Reedsville; nine
grandchikRn, 18 great-grandchildren and 16 great-gm~t-grandchil­
dren; and two sisters, Edna Lott
and Eunice Pullim, both of Belpre.
She was preceded in dealh by
her husband, Ira S. Sanders in
1959, three brolhers, three sisters,
one son, one daughter, one grandson and one son-in-law.
Services will be Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Mount llcrn!!:ln United
Brethren in Christ Oturch, 364 11
Wickham Road, Pomeroy, with
burial in Success Cemetery, Tuppers Plains.
•
Friends may call at the WhiteBlower Funeral Home after 5 p.m.
Saturday ud at the church one
hour prior to the service.

chasing fund at a cost of S12,000
which council approved.
Councilman Dennis Wolfe
repcrtcd that a rue hydrlnt is need·
ed at the top of Rustic Hills. The
matter was referred to the water
andrtredepartmems.
Council agJeed to advertise for a .
pool manager and life guard with
applications to be received by April
1. These are to be sent to Janice
Lawson, clerk-treaswet, Syracuse.
The Methodm churehes of Forrest Run, MinersvUie, and Syracuse
were granted pmnission to use die
shelter at the park for an Easter
sunrise service.
Council passed by emergency
an ordinance authorizing the Ohio
Department of Transponalion to
place guard railing Qll State Route
124 near near Hubbard's greenhouse and the trailer court.
Mayor's report showed receipts
of $859. Police Chief Jim Connolly reported issuing 17 citation,
received 21 calls, was in service 86
hours, and drove l,f1J6 miles.
Clerk·Treasurer Janice Lawson
reported fund balances, general ,
$4,056; street construction,
$13,766.17; highway 3,230.50; rue
department, $2,088.96; water
$8,992.30; guaranty · meter
$2,495.28; cemetery, $79.42, making a balance in all funds of
$34,108.63.

Retirement...

ConliDued trom page 1
of the boaril. was unable to aaend
Wednesday's meeting.)
Snowden said that one of the
ftrst ;Jrojects that the new board
would like to undertake is connec·
lion wilh the Gallia County Rural
Water District at a location near the
General James M. Gavin Plant for
emergency use, or a similar connection with Tuppers PlainsChester Water District
Snowden and Barrett also said
that the board plans 10 do necessary
~ng at the district's treaunent
When Commissioner Jones
asked if the diStrict would be able
to lower biUs or refund monies to
the district's 1,100 customers,
Snowden was cautious.
Snowden told the commissioners that an equipment sale last year
- recommended and carried out by
former management • has leflthe
district without necessary equip-ment, and contriCting thai work out
ro a private fliiR has posed a finan.
cia! hardship on the disuicL The
proceeds from that sale - approximately $30,000 - is now in a cer·
tifJCate of deposiL
''We figure we should put every
dime we can into laying pipe and
increasing customers, and replacing
equipment." Snowden said. "This
water system has been Sllapped for
years. We've been reducing payroll
and taking other cost-saving measures, but I lhink that people will
be laid off."
"If things are not repaired, lhe
customer will be without water,"
Snowden said. "You can't let
something go 20 years and expect
it to bounce back in a year."
"We've got a lot of problems,
but we're going to make it," Barrett
told the commissioners. "I promise
you !hat"

Friends may call at lhe White. Blower Funeral Home in CoolviUe
POIITMASTIIl:
T\o
Dolly _8anlloel, Ill C011rl Sl.,
after 5 p.m. on Sallllday.
l\wiWCG),0Hie4!'188·
VETERANS MEMORIAL
In lieu of flowers, memorial
· IUUCIIPriON II.A'IU
TiruR.SDAY ADMISSIONS •
contributions may be made to the
a,c....,.
... - .....
LiU1e HOcking Church of Cluist of Michael Hubbard, Syracusei and
Otol Woot.
..........................................&amp;t.60
0.. MCiftlh.........................................t&amp;.86
Helen Williams, Syracuse.
LiU1e Hocking, 45742.
· Ono Yur...................................~.... $13.110
TIIURSDAY DISCHARGES ·'
IDIOLICOPr
Willian;a;
E.
Province
Jaines
Hawley, Helen Well, limes
;
Pale&amp;
Doily. ..........................,............. - .2&amp; Cnto
'
wuu.n
Eddie Pro~. 11, or Barber and Arthur Roulh.
1224 Second Ave., Oallipolis, dicid HOLZA MEDICAL CENTER
or _,,..,uta .., _ •1nc1 111 Tho
Pridly,
Mllth 6, 1m. at Holzer
DIIClwJ84, March S.• Daany
Oallloollo DoOy Triltttoo .,. a llltoo m
• If -lh ....... CrMit wlll-llo ~oo
Medlclll Celtla'.
Bol ecnltet,Judy..._,Plw
He waa ·born June 2, 1920 in. CaMden, Oary BilnauJio, Carl
No o l ori'llooo liJ lUll ponoiiiM I•
Beverly, 1011 of dlo llle J - E. Ho:alcb. •osl Killlol, Taslllb
wlooiO " - uo,Mr oomc. lo
llld Miry CIIQ Dlrdt ~
McWID1er, Lucr +'· NaP, vu.
..o~a~tto.
gil
Ilollll, Mn. .SioWtl Savqe 81111
' He - a w&amp;erlll of World W•
[
n, wu awarded die Purple Heart. son, Marion Thompson, Daniel
......................................
and allllllllber ol VFW I'Qit 4464. Wright, and Jacob Wyatt,
'
·•u-..
w-.
.
........
.
.........................
.11
Survivor&amp; Include his wife,
Birtba. Min:ll s·- Mr. and Mrs.
IIW............................. H
.............. .'71
0111 11 o-c..er
Goldie ... u llll'luvincc, whom David HowcD, a -.l:ltt. Jacbon.
II w-..........................................1:11.40
Mried Sept. 30, 1960 in 011· Mr. IIIli Mn. 'l"'loonM MeNictle, I
.............................................ttuo lie
..............
. ............................ ... Upolla; OliO dauafl&amp;er, Mn. Andlony 1011, Ewilsltlll. Mr,. and Mn. hal
(Lilt*) I Iadiey ol C'ot!lipolil; dtrec Milia, a 11111. Rudllld.

Hospital news

C0111iallfd frOII Pllt 1

Squads receive two calls Thursday
Two calls foc assiscance were answered by units of the Meigs
County ElllCillency Medical Service on nunday lflelllqOII.
At 3:19 p.m. the Rutland unit was cai1od 10 MciP, Mine No. 2
for Randy Cross who was taken 10 Velmlls Merbotiat JlolpitaJ.
At3:52 p.m. the Racine unit respmded 10 Pearl Street lor Timothy Gheen, also ~en 10 Veterans.

RG slates standards teleconference
A telecooferencc outlining the ISO 9000 series of quUity stan·
dards wiD be prcsenllld Wednesday, March 11 from 1-4 p.111. ill die
auditmwn of Wood Hall at the University or Rio Gnnle.
·The conference will be presented by the Blackwell Corp. and
VisNet, and will outline ISO 9000's set of ,qllllity sllldaids. The
standards, which are to become mandalay for any COillplll)' doing
business with the European Community by the end litis year, (10vide a common worldwide set of consistent quality assii'IIIICC guidelines.
.
Products manufactured by companies which have abeady conformed to these standards will be allowed 10 circulate fieely in die
EC, a market in excess of 325 million cUSIORICn. Thole COillj)lllies
thai have not ~ the standards wiU lind entry into the ~ ntore
diff'ICUIL
.
Participants in the teleconference will lalm whal is required to
implement, document and audit an ISO system. Cedif'ICillion information will also be presented.
Cost of the teleconference is $50 per person, payable to the
Berry Center for Economic Education at Rio Oraitde. For more
infotmation and regisuation, contact Jerry Gust at the~ Center,
245-5353, extension 381. The toll-free number in Ohio J$ 1-800282·7201.

or

Soliciting incidents investjgated
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby repcrtcd Friday morning that his depallment has received sevc:nl calis SlatinJ that a subject in a red and white pick~ truck wM in the JRa soliciting funtk
roc the VFW.
Deputies were unable to locate the subject or 10 make contact
with the VFW post to determine if they had 111yone soliciting funds
in the area.
Soulsby urged all area residents to exercise good judgment in
malting donations to peOple they don't know.

Items reported stolen
Otarges are pending against a juvenile reladng to the theft of
several items.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that Mary A. Myers of
Langsville repciiWI WeG!esday nigllt that llpllfiWmately five weeks
ago, a wllll:h, a knife and a tape player had been taka! from thei:
residence.
Stllements have been obtailled from several individuals thai purchased the items.

Triplett transported to Orient
Timothy Triplett or Portland has been transported Ill Orient Correctionallnstiwtion to being serving a three to live ye~r sentence.
He wL'! sentenced earlier this week by Common Pleas Cowt
Judge Fred W. Crow m for his involvement in the Felmary 16 burglary of the Virginia Oiler residence in ~ine.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

IMU.UIII#ITIII(£5 S'illaY I Sllaf ,

'. : .

IAIIU.III Ill"" TUE~Y.

..w :.•
\

CO"eCtiOn

J :JO,t:lO Mllf.
T S :JQ :

Adult literacy courses are being
offered by Gallia,IMcigs Head Start
theM . Coun Publ' L"-~
at
e1gs
ty
tc: •~- 1
in Pomeroy from 4:30 p.m. 10 8:30
p.m. on Tuesday evenmgs. Registration and information are available from the Pomeroy office of
Head Start, 992-3088.
The time was inconectly rtpO!ted in The Daily ~lllinel.

'-

U.S. forces bepn flrinK into Cam·
bodla May 1, 1»66.

if this is the ftrSt sign-up. Cost is
$12.
Pomeroy PTO to meet
Pomeroy PTO will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at !he school gym.
'I'hiJd grade wiU have the prognun •
Seminar set
Keith Wood and John Riebel
will conduct a turkey safety semi·
nar on March 15 from I p.m. to 5
p.m. at Eastern High Scliool. Reg·
1stration can be made by calling 1
(800) 282-3557 before the lSth.
Registration is limited 10 50 people,
and is open 10 flfSt-time hllllm of
any age.
A 9ccond session wiD be held on
March 29 from 1-~. and pre-Jqisll'ltion may be made by telqlhonil'lll the 1111110 number.

Make
MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT

STORE
Your Spring and
Summer
Fashion
Headquarters
ON THE "T• IN MIDDlEPORT
'

•,· I...,.""'....,.."''"'"'"'"'""'·

----·
.........

.........

. ·--c:..uoto !:.14
...

- .

,.,._

...

.

'

~

~

•

1111 'MID, • -~~liM . 1ft_i!.- .

--Meigs announcementsDance plaaHd
The Belles and Beaus Western
Style Square Dance Club will
sponsor a dance at the Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy on March
14 from 8-11 p.m. Billy Gene
Evans will be the caller. Refreshments served.
S~acase Sip-up
Stgn-up for Syracuse Youth
League_baseball and softball will
be Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon
at Syracuse Elementary. Other
dales .-e Wednesday 81111 March 18
from 5-7 P..m. a the pacie school.
Birlh cerufiCate must be provided

.-----Local briefs...- --.

IIII'DOII, OliO
OPEN EVERY FRIDAY 'TIL 8:00 P.M.

LAYAWAY NOW FOR SUMMERt

•• .,. ~.., ltul • • • •

..................__...... .. ,

~~.-w.o.-.......

�~~~M~a~r~ch!!_!~1~9!!92~---------------..!~~~:!:!!!~~~~!!__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.........,.._ _2The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

The Daily Sentinel

:S ports

With Roberts'(game-high 35 points,

Lynchburg Clay beats Eastern
::76-40 in D-IV district action

Friday, March 6, 1992
Page-4

.

·Golden State beats Cleveland 116-108

I

•

BY SCOTf WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Outscoring Eastern 23-ll in the
first period, the Lynchburg Clay
.Mustangs soundly defeated the
:Lady Eagles 76-40 Thll!Sday night
in the fitS! round of the Division IV
. girls district basketball tournament
at Jackson High School.
Eastern finishes the season at
:14-7, while Clay, 14-8, will take on
New Boston- a 5'6-47 winner
over Hannan Trace in the succeeding game- Saturday at 8:15p.m.
in the district finals.
Kim Roberts, a 5-foot-6 junior
guard, was the main cog in a welloiled, Lynchburg scoring machine.
Roberts scored 35 points and had
eight assists, while hitting seven of
II field goals, and five of seven
three-point attempts. Robens' assists involved her directly in the
scoring of 51 of her club's points.
Freshman teammate Angie
Schmees had 10 points, including
· eight in the frrst half.
At mid-season Lynchburg's
1!ridget Hibbs, a 20.5 points-pergame scorer, was sidelined with
torn ligaments in her knee. Eastem's Lee Gillilan watched from the
sidelines~ a similar injury.
Eastern had a balanced attack,
but lacked the inside game it usually gets from the half-coun offense.
Senior Tabby Phillips and sophomore Jaime Wilson each had nine
markers, and Tiffany Gardner
added seven points and II rebounds.
The game sLatted off on a sad
note .for Eastern, when Melissa
Guess's name was left off the official book. as she was on the roster
in place of Gillilan. Eastern was
whistled for a technical, which
Roberts sunk. Roberts then capped
off the frrst possession with a 22·
foot jumper from the left elbow to
give Clay an early 5-0 lead.
Phillips hit the first of two free

0 third-quaner run as Chicago reb1unded from
a rare horne loss.
Playing almost as poorly as they did in ·
Tuesday's loss to Indiana, the defending NBA
champiOn Bulls trailed expansion Minnesota
67-61 with 7:51 left in the third period. But
Chicago snapped out of its stupor behind Jordan.
Rockets 114, Heat 93 - Otis Thorpe had
23 of his 25 points in the first half and Vernon
Maxwell hit seven of 10 from three-point range
as Houston beat the visiting Heat.
Hakeem Olajuwon had 13 of his 22 points
in the fourth period, and Kenny Smith added
20 points and nine assists. Maxwell finished
with 25 points.
Reserves Brian Shaw and Kevin Edwards
led Miami. Shaw had 20 points and Edwards
added 17.
Suns 118, SuperSonics 105- Kevin Johnson scored eight of his 24 points during a 17· 3
third-quarter run as Phoenix beat visiting Seat·
tie.
The Suns were outrebounded 38-21 in the
fltSl half, but took contrOl of the boards 19-7 in
the third quarter when their five-minute burst
brought them from four points down to an 81 7llead with 2:48 left
Tom Chambers led Phoenix with 27 points.
Ricky Pierce scored 23 points for Seaule.

The Cavaiim were led by Larry Nance and
Brad Daugherty, who each had 20 points and
10 rebounds.
In other games, it was New York 101, the
Los Angeles Clippers 91; Washington 119,
Dallas 109; Chicago 113, Minnesota 100;
Houston 114, Miami 93; and Phoenix 118,
Seattle 105.
Knicks 101, Clippers 91 - Patrick Ewing
broke out of a scoring slump with 31 points as
New York beat the visiting Clipper.;.
Los Angeles led 83-79 on Ken Norman's
jumper with 8:32 left, but the Cli~rs didn't
score for the next4:27 while the Kmcks had II
straight points to take the lead for good, 90-83.
The Clippers made five of sill free throws to
close to 91-88 with 2:38 left But Ewing, who
had a season-low four points in his previous
game and five straight outings without scoring
20, then hit two baskets in a 6-0 run.
Bullets 119, Mavericks 109 - Pervis Ellison had 21 points and 10 rebounds as Washington snapped a five -game home losing
streak.
Ledell Eacides scored 23 points for the Bul·
lets and Michael Adams had 20.
Derek Harper led Dallas with 30 points and
Rolando Blackman added 21.
Bulls 113, Timberwolves 100 - Michael
Jordan scored 10 of his 33 points during an 18·

By Tbe Associated Press .
Tumovezs turned the tide for Golden SLate.
Sarunas Marciulionis mall:hed his season
high with 29 points and the Warriors capital·
ized on Cleveland's 18 turnovers to beat the
Cavaliers 116-108 ThiiiWay ni~ht
The Warriors scored 30 pomlS off the mistakes by Cleveland, which had a season-low
seven turnover.; Wednesday against Sacramento.
Cleveland's Craig Ehio, who just missed a
triple double with 10 points, 12 rebounds and
nine assists, said the Cavaliers were weary
from playing their second road game in as
[llany nights.
"We had some tired legs," Ehlo said. "B ut
that's no excuse. They played well and controlled the game and we had to play to their
. tempo.'
Marciulionis, who recently missed three
games with a bruised knee and thigh, looked
healthy against the Cavaliers.
"I felt pretty good," he said. "I just wan led
10 play."
Steve Kerr's three-pointer cut Golden
State's lead to91-85 with 10:07 remaining. But
the Warrior.;, who trail first-place Portland by a
half·$ame in the Pacific Division, increased the
margm to 100-89 on a driving layup by Marciulionis with 7:13left.

Rio nine return home after 4-3-1 trip in South
men opened with a 10-0 win over fered another defeat by Alma 9-7,
St. Anselm (N.H.), played in 2·1/2 but regrouped to capture the ni~htinnings due to an impending rain- cap 7-6. Andy Bulach UunJOr,
out. Eric McLean (sophomore, Hamilton) pitched the first game
Columbus) was credited with a while Shawn Bossen (freshman,
triple and single and Jason Wright Frankfon), in relief of Phil Kuhn
(junior,Carroli)hitadoubletolead (freshman, Oak Hili), had the win
the scoring in the first of two inthesecondmeeting.
shutouts recorded by Rio Grande
James Lewis (senior, Cincinduring the series. Chad Carroll nati) scored two runs in Rio
(sophomore, Chillicothe) got the Grande's 5-0 sweep of Adrian
win as pitcher.
(Mich.), which sent Carroll's seaThe R10 men the~ fell 2-1 10 son record on the mound to 2-0.
Alma (Mich.), w•th Mike VoorheiS
The team then met St. Anselm
us."
(junior, Lucasville) taking the loss. again, which avenged its earlier
At Panama City, Aa., the Red· the following day the Redmen suf. loss with a 5-2 win over the Red-

The University of Rio Grande
baseball team returned from its
spring break trip in the south taking
a 4-3-1 record into the remainder of
the season.
"I was fairly pleased overall,
considering we have 12 freshmen
on the roster," Coach Dave Oglesby commenll:d. 'The key emphasis
in baseball is on pitching and
catching. We lost our two top
pill:hers last year, but the guys who
stepped into that position and filled
the ca1eher's slot did very well for

Thursday's seores

In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENC[
AUanlk Difldan
Tram
W L PeL
GB
New Ytrl .............. 37 23 .617
B~tm................... .33 26
..5.59
l.l
i .l
Philadelphia ...........28 31
.47.5
9.l
New Jersey ............ 27 32 .458
10
Miami .......... ........:n 33 .450
Wulrington ............ 20 40
Orlando .................. l4 46

I,

17
23

.333
.233

Dcuvi.L

i!
. ....35 2.5

AllanLI ...... .............29
Milwaukoe .............26
Indiana ...
....Tl
Chuloae ........... 22

~eb« 10, Hanford 4 u
N.Y. W~ndcll 4, ChiCiao 4,

Toronto S, Calaaey S, lie

tic

Tonight's games
N~w ~ency 11 B~alo. 7:35p.m.
Wmmpea: It Wuhinpn, 7:35p.m.

SLI....oUiJ 11 Edmonlal, 9:3.5 p.m.
PitllbwJh 11 Sm }lllll, 10:35 p.m.

Saturday's games

Central DMt&amp;on

~.:g~·d :::::::J:

V11K0.1vcr 2, Botton 2. tie
MWIC*U 4, Detroit 2

N.Y. Ranpr111 Philadelphia,I;05 p.m.

:~

9.!
\3.$

.583

29
32
34

.SOO
.448
.443

1&amp;.5
21.5
22

36

.379

25.5

Chict&amp;O II BOltOn, t :3.5 p.m.
V~eratHanfotd.,1:~p.m .
Dcuoit II Q.lcboc, 7:35p.m.
New Jmc:y It w~ 7:35p.m
SL l.oWI ot ColSUJ', B~l p.m.
N.Y.ld~ndalat

Monueal, 8:05p.m

PiaaburJ,h lll...ol Anade~,l0:35 p.m.

Suaday's games

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mldw•l Dh'Won

Tum
W
ULih ........
40
San Atltonio .......... .J5
Howton ................ .32
M ••• , . . . . . . . . .

L
21
24
28

Denm ...................20 34)
Dtllu ........... .......... \7 42
M.in.na;tU ............. .II 47

Pd.
.656

GB

. 5~3

4

.533
.339
.288
.190

1.5
19
22
27..5

B01ton "Oiica10, 2:35p.m.
TOftll!.to at San J010, 4:35p.m.
N.Y. lalaDdal atB~alo. 7:05p.m.
Decroit It MC11troal, 7:05' p.m.
V111co.wat1 Pbiladdptit, 1 :05 p.m
Winnipca I t MUmtallLI, 8:05 p.m.

Major college
basketball scores

Podtlc DMslon
Ponb.nd ............... ..41
Goldcd State ..........40
PhoeniJ. ....... ····· ..... .39
Scatlle ................... .33
L.A. l.akcn ...... ......Jl
L.A. Oippcd ......... 30
Sacramcnto ............20

18
18
22
27
28

.69.5
.690
.639
.SSO
.525

29

.508

39

.339

South
.l

..,

Mll')'land 77, Wake Forea66

10
11
l1

E. lllinoiJ 75, W. IllinoiJ 73

3

Midwest
Loyol1, rn. 95, Ill .-ouc.~~go 91 , OT
Micbigan St. 72. NortbWC!Item SS

Thursday's scores

Southwest

New YoU 101, L.A . Clippen 91
Wllltinpn 119, Dallu I09

Rial \03, Te.au97

Chic&amp;ao 113, Minr80U.l00

Far West

HOUitcn 114, Miuni 93

Aril.ona 100, California 77

PhoeniJ. 118. Sc.~~tle lOS
Golden Side 116, Clevela•d 1M
L.A. Oi~ 11 801;1m, 7:30p.m.
DU1u at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m
Indian&amp; at Atl111t1, 7:30p.m.
MWni" OU..ao. BO p.m.
Orlatldo II Milwtukee, 9 p.m.
Dc:uolt 11 Denv12, 9 p.m.
New Jcney 11 UtAh, 9:30p.m.
Sacrama~to at Por\land, 10 p.m.

Milwwbc V1. WubinJlon 11 B1lti·

Ot'+'flaM al Atl111t., 7:Jt p.m.
Minnetoun lndiutl, 7:30 p.m.
PhoariJ. 11 Saa Anlor\io, 1:30 p.m.
New Jcne)' 11 Setulc., tO p.m.
Houst.an 11 Golden Sute, 10:30 p.m.

Chitoao" PIUioddpllio. I pm.

Dlluoital L.A. Lall.cn, 3:30p.m.
Wllhinplntt Miami,6 p.m.
Bottm lt0danda,1:30p.m.
San Atltonio It DalJu, I p.m.
Utah 11 Denver, 9 p.m.

rnwcn.

Golden SIMCIIL.A.
9 p.m.
Houlton It Sammmtn, 9 p.m.
Seaalu1 Portland, tO p.m.

In the NHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE
P.trlck Di"-IM

y,_
W L T Pia.
N.Y.Roopa ..... 4221 ' II
w.................. 37l3 6 ..
New- Jeite)' ...... .. 34 22 9 11
Pitublql&lt; .......... 29 27 I 116
N.Y.I...dm.... Z7 30 I 62
............... . ..... )13011 "

•

•
..

-01-

1),1ahecM.... ...~.. R 14 41 10

DlYIIIDnm

AWill 41, Colwnbia37
llabloito39,0nndVolll&lt;l
B...tficld 41. Pym•unina Vol!. 14
OUppowa 60, Mapleton 49
Coldwater 74, Shcnmod FWview 41
Doylealwn 60, Maple&amp;an 49
Flm.wood 61 , lantu Lakota 4.5
Gumuvillo 24, W&amp;mn Kennedy 22
Gsaruhicw 63, Col Reidy 40
HunUn~ton g. fc:dtraJ tkdllna3Z

Loodonvilie ~~.
lllq.nllle Valltyll, NeiJOnYIIIt·
York 41
M.ar1ueaa 73, Eutwood 58
""""' 38 -

Smim;::n;t
'-'•

l7

NMlttnor 31, Ridpd&amp;le 3fi

Oborlin ~6, Bn&gt;okl,., 31

RoouuJwn 62, W11m1oo49
rmora 68, Padlwj{ 46

UrUied Local 3.5, . Pai.1inc 34

W. M...tinll""' ~~ C.dU 22

WdlJvUle4.5, TUICiflwu Vall. 34
Dhilloll Jl'
Aludil41 , On:p! Strik:h 34

·
- tS6, J!daa1on
Contil!cntal47,
Dddl01 S6
Je!enon 34
Convoy Ctatview ol\o, K.Uidl 36
DIIIVi1lc43. Uberty Union 41
Dol"" ~:z. l.oda....,&lt;33
E. Canton S7' S". Rlnac lO

Fnm0111 SL JOICph-47, B!Wfton o46

Ubcrlf'Bauon .59, Nonhwood 34

Mon1.1n1 St. 107,N. Ariwna63
NllW MWoo St. 63, Cal St.·Fulletton

110

Poa&amp; U. 71, Lono U..ch SL 61
Soulhcrn Cal~. Wubinpn 63
UC Sanu8ubm 92, San JOIC St. 64
UCLA 19, Wuhinp St. 85

ma South conrtrtnct

Flnl round
Campbcl.l. 69, Davidt.on fiO
Clwle.lm Swlhem .5 1, C011L&amp;I Car·
olin&amp; 54

l..ibeny 15, N.C.·Aihtville 54
Ktdt'ord 80, Wimhtop S4

Hilltop 50. Suyior •a

LJithbutl ClaJ ''· Rttdnlllt

E.u""'*
Mukal..o&lt;oi.,,F\. R......y 34
~~2.S.......W.41

New lol&amp;on 56, Ha11nu Trlft 47
SouthinJ\(m 41, l.udltown 40
T~&amp;~carawu Cuh. 53, Bellaire St.
John'• 50
Upper SciCIO VaiL .56. Wooci.Jn(n 37
Zln•villo Ra.Dm.n. 12. Skywc: .54

Boys-toumamentactlon
Dh~lonl

MauiJon Jtc:baa 68, N. Camn 52

Mld.[uWft Alllletk Canrere.ct
Q-~

Sunday's games

· ·llon... ........ :1122 I
· ·........... .. 26 10
Bttllolo .............. )I 30 II
lloJII... ......- ... 20 n 11

Shelby l:Z. Vetmilion 47

Wi!Wd 62. a.Jioo ll

Monllna IOJ. Nevada 86

Tournament ac:t&amp;on

men. 7:30p.m.

n.

Oilmalt 49.1ti&lt;!ron Clv. 37

Saturday's games

CbarloUcatNcw Ycct, 7:30p.m.

Dl•lllonD
Akron Hoban 60, Cll:lftwood 42
Akron St. V-SLM62.Nonon44
Alhrnl 54, Gmnfttkl C
Avcn LU.e 63, Medina Budeye44
Bry111 65, Sw111ton 48
C&amp;n6dd 7 I, Salem 31
Conland lAkeview 43, S1n1Lhcn 29
I&gt;on:r :W, River Vtew 32
Elido
Nopol..,ll
Firelanda 68. Olmltod Fal.lJ .58
J"~bon 57, Porllmoulh 37
l.oulrville 49, arm.~ Orec:n 23
Mc.dowbroak 66. Beaver l.oaJ 44
Oavi.lle 46, MuJinatoa 43

ArizoM St. 76, Stanford 7 I
BoiseSL 7tE.W......... l9

Colondo Sl. 72. Air Foroe S4

Tonteht's games

Rcridt AAM 71, Oclawue St. 73
Howard U. Sl, &amp;Muno-Coc*man S4
Morpn St. 7S, N. Camliftll AAT 70
s.c...... S&lt;. 9!, Coppins.. 91
Northtul ConrtNMe

Q.. rwr~~

men. However, the team was
unable to keep the momentum
going in the nigh leap, which Rio
Grande netted 3·2. Eric Parrish
(freshman, Grovepon), in relief of
Jon Gibson (senior, Chesapeake),
took the loss in the opener, while
Voorheis improved to 1·1 in the
foliowup. The save was credill:d to
Allen Elliou (freshman, Gallipolis).
The series' final game with CapGOING FOR TWO - Cleveland's Craig Eblo (3) leaps past
ital ended at 3-3 when it was called
Golden State's Tyrone Hill in his attempt to scor during the first
due .to d~kness. B~lach was the quarter or Thursday nigbt's NBA game In Oakland, Calif., which
sLartmg p11eher for Rio Grande.
the Warriors won 116·108. (AP)
Oglesby has assigned Carroll,
Voorheis and Bulach to the pitch·
ing rotation, but the fourth spot is
presently "up for grabs, " he
explained. Wes Young (junior,
Pomeroy) is serving as catcher,
with backup from Shannon Bossen
(freshman, Frankfort), both of
TOLEDO, Ohio (AP) - ~ine School.
whom are doing a "very good job," people will be inducted into the
-Bob Owchinko, Eastern
Mid-American Conference Hall of Michigan, baseball, 1973-1976.
the coach added.
"I think our player.; will contin- Fame at a banquet in May, Corn- All-American first team and All ·
ue to improve, and if that happens, missioner Karl Benson announced. MAC in 1976, he had a 29-9 career
The 1992 class includes three record with 309 strikeouts in 305
we should do very well," Oglesby
continued. "But with the beginning women, marking the first tilne innings pitched. He was the San
of the season, it's hard to tell, women have been inducted since Diego Padres' frrst selection in the
because there are so many factor.; the hall was created in 1988. The June 1976 draft. He was National
1992 inductions will bring hall of League Rookie of the Year in 1977
involved."
fame
member.;hip to 42.
and played major league baseball
The Redmen are tentatively
The
inductees
inclode:
from 1977-1984.
scheduled to open at home Sunday
-Maurice Harvey, Ball State,
- Janel Bachna, Kent State ,
at I p.m . with a doubleheader
against West Virginia SLate. The football, 1975-1977. The All-MAC gymnastics, 1959-1991. Gymnas·
early season home slate includes first team defensive back in 1976 lies coach at Kent for 32 years, she
twin bills with Radford (Va.) on and 1977 played in the National led the Lady Flashes to four state
Wednesday, March II; Wilber- Football League for the Denver titles in the 1970s and four MAC
force on Saturday, March 14; and Broncos, Green Bay Packers, titles in l!le 1980s. She ~as the first
Marshall on Tuesday, March 17. Detroit Lions and Tampa Bay Buc- woman to conduct tesung and cercaneer.;.
tification of women's gym_nastics
Starting limes are I p.m.
-Phil Villapiano , Bowling judges.
Green, football, 1968-1970. The
-John Pont, Miami, football ,
Sports shorts
1970
MAC
Defensive
Player
of
the
1949-1962.
He was fir.;t learn All·
Tennis
MAC
•n
1949,
1950 and 1951 ,
Yearplayednineye81Sforthe0akINDIAN WELLS, Calif. (AP)
land
Raider.;
and
four
ycaiS
for
the
rushed
for
2,390
career yards and
- Andrei Chesnokov upset top~
Buffalo
Bills.
was
the
nation's
l~ading sopho·
seeded Jim Courier 6-4, 7-5 and
-Karen
Kerner
Michalak,
Cenmore
rusher.
The
Miam1
head fool·
16th-seeded Jakob Hlasek defeated
second-seeded Pete Sampras 6-4, 'tral Michigan, basketball, track, ball coach from 1956-19621ed the
3-6, 7-5 to advance 10 the quanerfi- field hockey, 1976-1978. A mem· team to a 43-22-2 record. Currently
ber of the 1978 U.S. Field Hockey is head ~oac~ ~~ M~unt St. Joseph
nais of the Champions Cup.
Team,
she averaged 11.7 points a College m Cmcmnau.
In other third-round matches,
~arne
in
her senior season and fin-Bill Hess, Oh10 U' ! football
third-seeded Michael Stich beat
•shed
with
32
career
goals
m
field
coach,
1958-1977. Complied over14th-seeded Derrick Rostagno 6-2,
6-4, lith-seeded Sergi Bruguera hockey and 17 assists. She coaches all record of 108-9 1-4 in 20 seadefeated sixth-seeded Petr Korda 7- boys and girls cross country, voi- sons and was named Ohio Coach of
5, 4-6, 6-0 and seventh-seeded ley ball and track at Caro High the Year in 1960 and 1968. He died
in 1978.
Emilio Sanchez roull:d I Olh-seeded
- Mel Long, Toledo, football,
Sports
shorts
Andre Agassi 6-3, 6-1.
1969-1971.
His 186tackles in 1971
Tennis
Tennis
still
ranks
as
ninth in the school's
BOCA RATON, Fla. (AP) COPENHAGEN, Denmark history. Played four seasons with
Second-seeded Gabriela Sabatini (AP) -Patrick Baur upset second·
defeated Chanda Rubin 6-2, 6·2 seeded Christian BergstrOm 7-6 IJ· the Cleveland Browns.
- Fran Ebert, Western Michiand third-seeded Mary Joe Fernau· 5), 6-2 and Jacco Eltingh beat fifth.
gan
softball, basketball coach,
dez beat lOth seeded Laura Gilde- seeded Jonas Svensson 6-3, 6-7 (4·
!96J-1985.
Western Michigan's
meister 6-3, 7-5 to advance to the 7) in the sec'ond round of the
first
softball
coach, she comp•led
quarterfmals of the Virginia Slims Copenhagen Open.
an
overall
record
of 270-116-1
of Florida.
Yacht racing
from'l976-1985. Woman's basket·
In either third-round matches,
SAN DIEGO (AP) - America3 ball coach, retiring after the 1982
fourth-seeded Conchita Martinez defeated its America3 Foundation
defeated lith-seeded Kimiko Date stablemate Defiant after Defiant season with a 186-133 record.
6-1, 7-6 (7-3) and fifth-seeded withdrew from the third-round race
Nathalie Tauziat beat Radka in the America's Cup defender
Zrubakova6-2, 7.(, (7-4).
selection series.
GRAVELY TRAClOR
BaSketball
Defiant withdrew oiqhe thltd
SALES &amp; $'ERVICE
TORRANCE, Calif. (AP) leg of the eight-leg cours! after its
Pomeroy, Oh.
Former Loyola Marymount coach mainsail began to come down. To 204 Condor Ill.
Paul Westhead has been dropped · collect the four-point victory, Spring and Svll•er Hours
from all legal action stemming America3 had only to finish the
MOnday_thrv Friday
from the death of Hank Gathers, 20.03-mile course within.the 491.&amp;·5 P.M.
who died after collapsing during a hour, 12-minute limit, which it did
Sat. 9l.M.~ I P.M.
game in 1990.
in 2 hours, 49 minuteS, 36 seconds.
Westhead, who had earlieP been
America3 leads the series with
dropped from a wrongful death suit 24 points, followed by Stars &amp;
filed on behalf of Gathers' 8-year- Stripes with II ancl Defiant with
old son, was dismissed from a sim· four.
·jlar suit brought by Ga~· moth·
er, brothers and aiDIL Westhead left
the tinive!Sity shortly aftei GalheiS'
deadi and DOW coaches the NBA's
Denver Nugets.

Nine inductees to be added
to MAC Hall of fame in May

Scoreboard

..~

t.ona tsJond u. n. FW!ei&amp;h Dktin·

~110

Marilt75, Maunwlh, NJ. 60
Rober\ Monia: 83, St. Frlncil, Pl. fi6
St. PMN. NY74, W•ana73

Roqch named to all-tourney team
Meigs junior high girls basketball player Ashley Roach was
named to the Miller Junior High Tournament's ail-tournament team.
She was chosen by coaches of all the teams competing in the tournament.

Boat registration renewals available
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources announced 1992
boat registration renewals are now available and can be purchased
from registration agents located throughout the state. Registrations
purchased in 1992 are valid until March I, 1995.
ODNR's Division of Watercraft is reminding boaters and agents
that the boat registration must be complell:d in full including title
number, boat length and propulsion .information. Boat owners
should check their registration carefully. Inaccurate information on
registration forms should be corrected at the nearest watercraft
agent's office.
The llicai boat registration agents are the park manager at Forked
Run State Park near Reedsville and William C. Quickel at Davis
Insurance, located at 114 Coun St in Pomeroy.

Boating class set for Saturday
The Division of Watercraft is offering a one day Ohio Boating
Basics class covering the fundamentals of boating, navigation and
safety. Successful completion of this course may. result in savings of
. 10 percent or more on boat insurance premiums. Sllldents completing this course will be invill:d 10 attend an on-the-water session
which will cover laonching, traiiering and docking procedures.
This class will be held Saturday, March 7, from 8 a.m . to 5 p.m.
at Ohio Univer.;ity in Athens. Those interested in registering may
conl.aet Ohio University atl-800-336-5699.
Questions concerning this or other boating safety classes should
conl.aet the Division of Watercraft at 614-439-4076.

Parkersburg Baseball Card
Show scheduled for Saturday
'

locisonrille IOS.I..omor71
Naw Orlew 66. Catt.l'lcridl47

I&lt; 226167

'10 223 223
59 23l :IA6
ll 2iM 23~

9926 3

Heard about

31 1

'

D REFUND? .

MASON .FAMILY
RII,IURII'I'
wv&lt; '

.

.

The lith annual Parkersburg. Baseball Card Show will be held
on Saturday, March 7, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Holiday Inn in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
A Topps 1968 Nolan Ryan rookie card will be given away at the
close of the show. Admission is $1.50 which includes one ticket for
the Ryan rookie card drawin~. The winner does not need to bo pre·
sent A major card auction Will be held at 3 p.m.
.

:Turkey hunting seminar slated
·

The Southeastern Ohio and Hocking Valley chapters of the
National Wild Turkey Federation will host the Ohio State Turkey
·Seminar, CaUing Contest and Banquet Saturday, March 7 and Sun. day, ~h 8 at HockinK Technical College in Nelsonville.
Fealilred speakers wtU be Dan Stuckey, 10-timc Ohio state call·
ing champion and past grand national champion; Wayne Bailey, the
"Oean" of America's turkey hunting; and Rob Keck of the NWIF.
For more information, conl.aet Dave Graber at 373-9613 after 5
p.m.

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

Amerioonl3

throws to put EHS on the board,' 5I, but the Musl.angs initiated a potent fast break that left the Easttrn·
ers stunned and trailing 11-1. Eagle
head coach Dawn Heif,icman called
a time out to adjust and settle down
her crew.
Phillips hit two consecutive
three pointers from the comer, surrounding another lay-up by
Schmees that left the score at 13-7,
the closest EHS would come the
rest of the night.
·
Eastern trailed by scores of 17-8
and 19-9 before closing out the
frame at 23-11.
Lynchburg hit 9 for 9 in its fJtSt
nine attempts before missing a
shot.
Eastern, meanwhile, was forced
to a perimeter game. Clay was suc·
cessful in resislin~ the drive and
sealing off the passmg lanes, which
vinually took away Eastern's inside game of Ruby Burke, Roush,
and Gardner. Eastern also could not
get an offensive rebound in the firSt
four minutes of play.
Clay head coach Linda Hatten
said, "I feel like we shut down their
middle. That fact, plus getting off
successful fast breaks early in the
game, and having (Kim) Roberts
hit everything in the first quarter
was a key to the game. We established the first quarter tempo and
that set the tone for the game."
Heideman countered, "Their
shooting must have been 80% in
the fJtSt half. That killed our confi·
dence and allowed them to set their
tempo. Offensively, we weren't
very aggressive, and we didn'tdrop
back well."
A Tiffany Gardner bucket
pulled Eastern to 25-16 early in the
second quaner, but Cheryl Mullins
and Roberts thwarll:d that momentum with a series of fast breaks,
shon jumper.;, and the culminating
factor: three swishing long-bombs
from Roberts.

....--Area sports briefs___,

~THI!

Sun ltfl Cc..-rtrNm
Flnt ,.nd
Ark .· Little Rock 6.5. Tcau·Pan

· Bposters to'spontor
:Eastern alumni cage games
.

''

: The EHS Athletic Booster.~ will be sponsoring the annual Eastern
•Alumni baskelball games on Saturdar, March 14. The women's
~ game begins at6:30 p.m. with the men s game to follow.

'.

:Point Pleasant league to sponsor
ispring
softball tournament .
•

RT. 33, MASON,
NEXI'TO FAST 4 U AND MASON MOTEL
OPEN SUNDAY THROUGH SATURDAY, 10 AM-8 PM

f

•

Oldw 2Ep Any 1tJ11 Wilt I t - II . . .titllt llllaultl, IIIII CoiiM W
HMI, IMXIII••M!•QI•EIJIA
III'RIIY DAY-·· a Ul , .............M.48 .

f

•

•

lUNDAY, I A1111110,.

CAIIRY our OIIDW

(3041 ~

'

: The fint l&gt;avid Bw Soflball Tournament will,be ~ on April
111 and 12 at OnlnanC$ Elemenwy'a soRbell fiOld m POIDI Pleuant,
: W.Va., accordingiO informalion from the Point PICUIJII Girls Soft.
J..eape, tho evenl'uponsor.
·
·
. .
• · 1bere wiU bo a $60 fee and two aepla1ion softbllls required for
' rqilbllioo. The doubio-elimlnalliltUIIIIIIellt will have a mini·
· mom or 12 1a1111 part1c1p111na. The rain dlle Cor ~ eYeDt wW be
' Aprll25 and 26. .
Fcir 111010 lnfonnldon, call Riclt HaiSIMtl at 675-7618, Fred Sur·

:bill

..

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,.

·bltuJb at675-7441 or.lini S11W1111167'-U98.

Clay went on to lead 44-24 at
the half.
Eastern missed a couple of shots
early in the third frame, but
stymied a couple Oay scoring attempts. Unable to capitalize, East·
ern fell victim to 15·6 and 17-10
scoring offsets in the final two
rounds. After three frames Clay. Jed
59-30,lhen coasted to the 76-40 ft.
naie.
Hatten said, "One of our goals
was to keep No. 12 (Metzger) from
driving and we succeeded in doing
that. We wanted to stop their mid·
die game and contrOl their heighth.
We did a good job on the inside
and took them off the boards.•
Clay had 49 rebounds, led by
Sara Hastings.with II and Schmees
with eight, while Roberts and
Becky Hastings eac.h had seven.
Eastern had 33, led by Gardner's
11 and Ruby Burke's seven, while
Roush, one of Eastern's top rebounders, was held to three.
Heideman stated, ''I'm very
proud of these girls. They've come
a long way in two yeaiS. Two yeaiS
ago, no one ever dreamed we
would win a sectional title and he
at the district Each year we want to
move up one step. Next year, we
hope to win the district crown.
"Soon, we will stan worldng to·
ward next year's goals. This will ·
take a lot of hard work, and a lot of
time spent in open gym this sum·
mer. One of the big things about
this game was tradition. We just
haven't had it here lately."
" You can't teach shooting in
two years. You can work on it to an
extent, but it just doesn't happen
over night They (Clay) have had a
winning tradition. They were sim·
ply great~ shooters. Some girls
here don t see a ball u•til junior
high. They (Clay) begin playing
bali in the fJtSt grade. We're Hoing
to work on improving and building
a similar tradiuon. •
Clay was 30-59 for 51 percent
from the field, including 18-33 in
the first half. At one point, Clay
was 16·25; they were 11-18 at the
line. Eastern shot only 11 -61 overall and was 14-25 at the line.
· Eastern last went 10 the district
in 1984 after winning sectional ti ·
tles in 1978, 1980, 1982 and 1984,
all under Coach Sue (Thompson)
Arnold.
Eastern had 14 steals, led by
Metzger's six.
Seniors Tiffany Gardner, Jennifer Roush, Ruby Burke, Tabby
Phillips, and sidelined Gillilan
wore an Eastern uniform for the
last time.
Quarter totals
Lynchburg Clay .23 21 15 17 = 76
Eastern ................ II 13 6 10 = 40
Eastern (40)
Player
2s 3s Ff Pts.
Tiffany Gardner .......2 0 3 7
Jennifer Roush .........3 0 I 7
Tabitha PhiUips........o 2 3 9
Ruby Burke ............. .! 0 0 2
Shelly Metzger.........O 0 6 6
Jaime Wilson ........... 1 2 I 9
Totals
7 4 14 40
Lynchburg Clay (76)
Player
2s 3s Ff
Cheryl Mullins .........4 0 0
Regina Jones ............! 0 0
Kim Roberts .............7 5 6
Sara Hastings ...........2 0 0
Jessica Ciuuer ..........! 0 0
Tammy Henleir ....... ! 0 3
Beth Baker ............... 2 0 2
Teresa Waits ........... .2 0 0
Angie Schmees ........ 5 0 0
Totals
25 5 11

Pts.
8
2
35
4
2
5
6
4
10
76

Hope defeats
Wittenberg 76-60
in D-Ill playoffs
By Tbe Associated Press
Wittenberg is host to the NCAA
Division III men's basketball flll8is
this month but the Tigers will have
to watch the games from the
stands.
Colly Carlson scored 28 points
to help Hope oust Wittenberg 7660 in a ftrsl·round game ThiiiWay
night in Springfield.
The Ttgers (23-6) scored the
game's fttst two points bul never
. led again. The Flying Dutchmen
(23-S) then went on a 17-2 run,
keyed by Wade Gugino's ·seven
pomiSand Carlson's four.
Wittenberg closed 10 28-23 on a
three-point ba~et by Jon Brinck
with 4:58 left in the half, but Hotte
stretched the lead to 37-27 at the
intermission. .
The Tigers came wilhin six, 56SO, on a jump shot by Luke Ragan
with 10:43ieft in the game but &amp;ot
no closer. .
Carlson, who averaged 17.8
points per game during ·tho regular
season, made 12 of 16 fiOid-gOII
auempis and had 12 rebounds..Tom
Ha1ben added 16 polntl and Ougi·
no flallbed wilh 12.
·.
0tq Perilllled Wiuenborl with
17 pofnta while Raaan finlahed
with·l2 and8rillct 11. .
'.
: Hope shot 59 percent from tho
field white hoidin&amp; Willellbeq to
37percenL
The Flying Dutchmen face
C~vin (26-1) in a second-round
game Satur~ in Orand RIPids,
Mich. Calvin m:eiwd a first·IOWIII
bye In the toumamllll

ARM LOCK- Eastern's Ruby Burke (45) and Lynchburg
Clay's Becky Hastings (len) lock arms while figbling for position
for tbe rebound during Thursday nighl's Divisiotl IV district tour·
nament game at Jackson High School. Clay won76-40 to earn the
right to face New Boston in tbe lo!ver·bracket district rmals.

314"x4'x8'

Tongue &amp; Groove

Underlayment
Plywood

1
518"x4'x8' T1·11

Wood Siding

14.99

Paint or ataln to enhance the
·natural wood beauty.

Brickmoukl
included·
energy saYing
weather
stripping
Primed and
rea~y to paint.

Prehung Insulated
HERE, JEN! - Eastern guard Shelly Metzger (12) prepares to
pass to teammate Jenniser Roush (far Let't) as Roush backs into a
Lynchburg Clay eager during Thursday night's Division IV district
tournament contest at Jackson High School. The Mustangs knocked
olftbe Eagles 76-40 to end the Mei~ crew's season at 14-7.

Yanks' Perez to face suspension
after testing positive for drugs
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla .
(AP)- New York Yankees pill:h·

er Pascual Perez resll:d positive for
drugs and is facing a one-year suspension, a source close to the player said.
Perez failed to show up at the
Yankees' spring training camp on
Thll!Sday, and the club at fJtSl said
his absence was " unexplained."
The Yankees would neither confmn nor deny that Perez had failed
the drug test.
· · The New York Times reponed
in today's· editions that Perez
decided not to show up at camp
when he learned of the test results
Wednesday night.
.
A spokesman at the comm1s·
sioner's office would not comment
directly on the drug test resui~ but
said a statement concerning Perez's
status was expected today . The
spokesman said commissioner Fay
Vincent was en route from the
owner's meetings in Rosemon~ Ill.
to Florida.
In 1984, as a member of the
Atlanta Braves, Perez was suspend·
ed by then-commissioner Bowie
Kuhn after he served a three-month
prison term in his native Dominican Republic for cocaine possession.
·
Perez, 34, also spent two
months in drug rehabilitation prior
to tlie 1989 season while a member
of the Montreal Expos.
To avoid suspension in 1989,

Perez agreed to accept a one-year
suspension if a second test from the
same urine sample proved to be
positive, the source said. Perez
would also have to apply to the
commissioner for reinstatement.
The New York Daily News
reponed in today's editions that a
Yankee source confirmed that
Perez and his agent, Tom Reich,
had been notified that a second
urine test was needed.
Baseball and the Major Lea~ue
Baseball Players AssociatiOn
agreed to a joint drug program on
June 21, 1984, after owners backed
off their demand for random testing. The owners, however, terminated the agreement on Oct. 22,
1985, and began to demand drug·
testing clauses in individual con·
traCts.

Steel Entrance
Doors
FLUSH • 32" or 36"
6 PANEL • 32" or 36"

,~grc~ 89.84
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112"x4'x8'

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Sheathing

UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT

SOUTH FORK
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FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
MARCH 6 &amp; 7
10 P.M.-2 A.M.
3 Mile• North of Pt. Pleasant on
Route 2

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PHONE:

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Sil

-1

�By The Bend

The Daily

S_en~inel ·

Friday, March &amp;, 1992
I

Frida)', March 6, 1992
Page-6

.•

Victims of drunk drivers are often
robbed of more than their lives

PARADE • Students at Middleport ElemeD·
tary, ia observance or Right to Read Week,
paraded on streets surrouadiog the school oa
Thursday momiag wilh members or the Ameri·

caD Legioo Feeaey Beaaett Post No. 128. Fol·
lowing the parade the studeall hosted the lqioo
at the school wltb rel'resbmellts aDd a provam.

Dear AID LaDders: My llrolher
was killed by a drunk driver. In
an effort 1o cope with the grief, I
BUended several meetings or MADD
(Mothers AgainSl Drunk Driving)
and OOier such groups.
One of the shocking things I have
become aware of is !he number or
victims who have been robbed at
the scene of !he accident I am talking about dead people, Ann. It was
upsetting 10 hear doz.ens or family
members recount the same srory of
missing wallets, purses and jewelry.
In my brother's case, not only was
his wallet missing, but !he back
pocket or his pants where he kepi
his~ aller was ripped off and the
go d chain he always wore was gone.
we have a serious problem
wirh rescue personnel or police
officers who are called 10 !he scene
of these accidenll? 'Whai do your
readers have 10 say about this? I
wonder how many olhers have had
lhe same type or experience. Will
you ask rhem? .. LONGTIME
READER ON 1HE WEST COAST
DEAR LONGTIME READER:
You've raised a very inreresling
question, one that I have wondered
about myself. But before we jump

D of A district meeting slated March 7

!'

Chester Council No. 323,
Daughters of America, met recenlly at the lodge hall with Thel~a
White associate counctlor pres1ding. '
The pledges 10 the Otristian lll!d
Adierican flags and the Lord s
Prater were given in unison. Elhel
orr J.P.C. protem, read !he 23rd
J&gt;saim.
il was reported Belly Roush is
home from the hospital; Helen
Wolfs husband had a heart auack
and is in Grant Hospiial; Ze~er
Weber is home from 1he hosptral
anctAiraBallanlhaspneumonreadia. b
A lhanl:-you note was
y
Esther Smith from Erma Cleland
thanlcing the members for coming
to J he funeral home, for food,
prayers cards and !hose who
helped i~ any way at the time or
her son, Vernon's, death.
District 13 mec:ting

the Chester Lodge Hall on Satur·
day at I p.m, All members are
urged 10 at~nd- Plan~ will be made
by Beue B1ggs, DistriCt Deputy, for
the Spring Rally to be held at New
Lexington on Maf 30. .
The next meeun~ WtU be Marth
17 and quarterly birthdays will be
observed. A potluck supper will be
held. There will be a produciS party
at the meeling wilh proceeds going
to the miscellaneous committee.
Kathryn Baum was pianist for
the meetin~ .

The Past Councilor's Club will
meet March II at 7 p.m. at the
~of Elbel Orr. The other hostess IS Lora Damewood.
Attending were Mae McPeek,
Martlra Durst, Betty Yo~ng, Ethd
Orr, Jean Welsh, Marcta Keller,
Kathryn Baum, Etma Cleland,
Mary Jo Barringer, Goldie FRderick,llsther Smilh, Elizabeth Hayes,
Ada Bissell, Thelma While,
Dororhy Ritchie, Salldra White,
Faye Kirkhart, Opal HoUon, Mary
K. Holter and Doris Grueser.
•

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"JMl, 1A1 Aqelee
'11mo1Syndlcale
CftMen SJIMieate.''

ro any hasty conclusions,
acknowledge the facr thar ofren
passersby arrive at the scene before
the police or rescue personnel.
I'd like 10 hear from friends and
family members who have had
some experience with this Iype of
mysterious disappearance. How
about i~ readers?
Dear ADD Landers: My wife
and I recently sent a gift to my
mother-in-law. We deliberalely
bought it at a store where it would
be convenient for Mom 10 return it,
since 1ha1 seems 10 be her pattern.
We live in Texas and she lives
in New Jersey, so we were very
careful about the s10re we selected.
Well, my mother·in·law retwned
the gift to us with a note saying she
does not shop at !hal particular store
and "would not be caughl dead
there.· Let me say !his is one of !he
largest and most stylish departmenl
stores in the countty. She ende:d her
message wilh lhe following: "Thank
you for the ihought, but I have
no earthly use for !his ridiculous
looking gannent. I would return il,
buiihe store is diflicuiiiO get to and
accepis only the srore charge card,
which I wouldn'r possess for all !he
tea in China."
I was disappointed that she didn'I·
like the gift we spent all afternoon
shopping for. My wife was livid.
TraditionaUy we have given her a
birthday gift and something nice ar

Open house set

Workshop explores stress, conflict

MARTY niiiiiW

A workshop, "Conflict and communi~ation and social psycho!·
Communication", will be held from ogy.
Registered nurses will receive
9 a.m. 10 4 p.m. in lbe French 500
Marty O'Bryant. music director
Room at Holzer Medical Center oo 6.6 contact hours of continuing al First Southern Baptisl Church
Thursday, April 2. Registration is education credillhrough CHEAO will present an evening of gospel
which is approved as a provider of music on Sunday at 7:30p.m.
at 8:30 a.m.,..
This program will benefit all continuing educalioo by the Ohio
O'Bryant has been a church
heallh care providers by exploring Nurses Association (OH-049). music director since the age of 16.
ways to handle stress and cooflict ONA is accredited as an approver He sang and played piano wilh the
through bettet management of their of continuing educatioo in nursing Sons of Sharon Quanet at age 17.
own emotions and through under- by the American Nurses Creden· and taler traveled wilh The Loolsstanding emotions or others. Partic- tialing Center Commission on men Quartet for several years. He
ipaniS will be able 10 explain how Accreditation (OBN-001 -91). is the son of Pastor Lamar
and why anger occurs as well as Social workers will receive 5.5 O'Bryant and lives wilh his family
cool anger in others and move them clocl: hours of continuing educa· in Pomeroy.
10wards solving !he real problem,
lion crediL
The public is invited to auend
The presenltr, Gerald Herbener,
The program is sponsored by !he concen at the church localed at
Ph.D., ts a professor of communi- Ohio University College of Osteo- 41872 Pomeroy Pike.
cation at the University of Ken· pathic Medicine! Consortium for
lUcky. His programs in !he fields of Health Education in Appalachia
eommunicatioo, personal develop- Ohio and Holz.er Medical Cenlel'.
Calisla Searls was the best
men! and leadership have been
The fee is $35, lunch is not weekly TOPS loser and Bernice
auended by health professionals included. To register, call CHEAO
Durst was lbe best KOPS loser at
across lbe counrry. He received his at (614) 593-2292.
the recent meeting of Ohio TOPS
Ph .D. from Ohio University in
Club No. 570 held at the CrupenIer's Hall in Pomeroy.
Phyllis McMillan won lhe fruit
By The Associated PrfSI
lications, Inc.
basket.
The foUowing are the most popI. "Thelma and Louise"
Division winners will be honular videos as lbey appear in next (MGM-UA)
ored next weelc.
weel:'s issue of Billboard maga·
2."TheRocl:eteer" (Disney)
The group meets every Tuesday
zine.
3Y Regarding
Henry" at 6 p.m. with weigh·in at 5 p.m. at
VIDEO SALES
(Paramount)
l.ile Carpenter's Hall in Pomeroy.
Copyri~I 1992, Billboard Pub4,"PointBrealc" (Fox)
For further information call 992·
5."HotShots"
(Fox)
·
lieauons. .
5638 or 992· 7464.
t."Fanlasia" (Disney)
6. "Double lmpacl" (Columbia
Judy Wolfe and Wanda Faulk
2, "Cherfimess: A New Aui- Tri-Star)
received charms for six straight
tude" (CBS-Fox)
?,"Mobsters" (MCA-Univer- weeks of weighr loss. Ciady Faullc
3. "Robin Hood: Prince of sal)
was the monthly loser.
Thieves" (Warn&amp;)
8."City Slickers" (Columbia)
4."Piayboy: Sexy Lingerie IV"
9."Jungle Fever" (MCA·Uni(Piayboy)
versal)
Rex fustis will speak at the
5. "The Jungle Book" (Disney)
IO."Dying Young" (Fox)
Faith Fellowship Outreach Pro·
6. "Oscar's Greatesl MomeniS"
p1l!l1 at Faith Full Gospel Church
(Columbia· TriStar)
m Long BotiODI on Tuesday at 7
?,"Penthouse: Salin &amp; Lace"
p.m.
(A Vision)
Jus tis is a 1987 graduate of
8."Goodfellas" (Warner)
Eastern
High School and resides
William Villers, Anamoriah.
9."1992 Playboy Video Play·
his
wire, Maggie, and two
with
W.Va., will speak at Mt. Olive
mate Calendar'' (Playboy)
Community Church in Long Bot- sons, Kaleb and Charles Curtis. in
10/ 'Home Alone" (Fox)
tom on Sunday at 7 p.m. Pastor Parkersburg. He also has two
VIDEO RENTALS
daughters. Cassie and Jacyln,
Copyright 1992, Billboard Pub· Lawn:nce Bush invites the public.
Pomeroy.

0' Bryant to speak

Erwin and Margaret Gloeckner,
Racine, will celebrate their 50th
wedding anniversary wilh an open
house on Salurday from 2-5 p.m. at
the Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy.
The couple was married March
7, 1942 in Gallipolis. They have
two children, a daughter, Joyce
Bad~ley, Bend, Ore., a soo, David,
RaCIIJe, and five grandchildren.

Chrisunas. We would like some
guidaoce on how 10 deal wilh this
situation •• present and future. ••
FED UP IN DALLAS
•
~
DEAR FED: By now you know
without my telling you lhatlhcre is
no way you are going ID please this
woman. I suggest that you re1um
the gifliO the srore, get a credit aild :
then buy something nice for your
wife. Skip this occasion completely.
No gift. period. And in !he fublre,
send Godzilla a check.
·
Dear Aan Landers: It happened
again today. My lwo sons and I were
in a shopping mall and a toral
slranger felt the need 10 comment
on the factlhat my boys don't look
anything alike.
Apparently my 6-year-old decided
it was time he explained the difTereoce. ·rm adopted,· he said. "That's .....,
when you have !he same family, but
norlhe same face."
I'm thanlcfullhatlhis child doesn't
let lhese rude remarks get 1o him.
Any commenr, Ann? .. A MOM IN
HIGHLAND LAKES, N.J.
DEAR MOM: That was an
extremely intelligent response to a
very dumb remark. Thank you for
sharing .
Lonesome? Take chargt of your
life and turn ir around. Write for
Ann Landus' new booklet, !!How to
Makt Fritnds and Srop B~tng
Lot~tly ." Send a self-addr~ssed, long,
l!usiness-siu tnvt:lope and a c~ck
or mon~y ordu for $4.15 (this
includes

posrag~

and handling) ro:

Friends. c/o Ann Landlrs, P.O. Box
//562, Chicago, Ill. 606/1-0562. (In
Canada. stnd $5.05.)

On dean's list
BUCKHANNON, W.Va. • Lisa
S1archer has been honored for
being among the best academic sludents at West Virginia Wesleyan
College in Buckhannoo. She was
named to the 1991 fall semes1er
dean's list for having outslanding
grades for !he semester.
Siarcher is the daughter of
George and Judith Starcher of Wes1
Columbia, W.Va. and the granddaughter of Mrs. Mary Starcher of
Pomeroy and a freshman specific
learning disabilities major. She is a
1991 graduate of Wahama High
School.

The third birthday of Trisla
Simmoos was held recently at the
home of her pa!emal grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Simmons,
Ruliand.
Also aaending were her pareniS;
Mr. and Mrs. T.T. Simmons, broth·
ers, Thomas and Tyler, Tuppers
Plains; Mr. and Mrs . Danny
McDonald, Mine!~· !-ngie, Danny
Jr., and Tiffany, Kathy and Aman·
da Jeffers, Albany; and Melanie
Dudding, Pomeroy.
Others presenling gifts were
maternal grandpareniS, Mr. and
Mrs. Roben Sanders, Deleab and
Jonathan, great grandmot~er,
Lavinia Brannon, Tuppers Plarns,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Holbrook, Ben
and Catlin, Logan, Ida Roclc, Soulh
Charleston, W.Va.

Justis to speak

TMICJtlet•

1111 .............17
Sews 23 stilchee -

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THE FABRIC SHOP
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Cotltr of ••• 11d lutternut
.,~

,,

.

Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Worship· 6 p.m. ·
Wednesday ScM~· Tp.m.

Episcopal
Grace Epbcopal Churth
326 E. Main St, Pomeroy
Pasror: Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myers '
Sunday school and worship- 11:30,alm.

Saturday Service ~ 7:30p.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · II a.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:30 p.m.
Rutland Flrst Baptist Churcb
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wo~hip • 10:45 a.m.
Pomeroy First Baptlsl
East Main St.
Panor: Dr. Leo Morris
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. Lamar O'Bryant
Sunday School· 9:30 a.m.
Wor&gt;hip · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
Middleport First Bapllst
Corner Sixth &amp; Palmer
Pastor: Rev, James A. Seddon
Sunday School · 9:1S a.m.
wo..hip. 10:1S a.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.
Racine First Baptlst
Pastor: Steve Deaver
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wo,.hip · 10:40 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:30p.m.
Silver Run BapUst
Pastor: Bill little
Sunda.y School - 10 a.m.
Worship- 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.
Mt. Union Baptist
Pastor. Joe N. Sa}'ft!
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
Evening - 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services. 6:30p.m.
Balhlehem Baptist
Pastor. Rev. E&amp;rl Shuler
Sunday School · i0:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 9'30 a.m.
Thursday Services • 7:30p.m.
Old Delhe Fr.. Will Bapllst Church
28601St. Rt. 7, Middlepon
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening-7:30p.m.
Thursday Services-7:30p.m.
HIJJslde Bapllsl Church
St. Rt. 143 jun off Rt. 7
Pastor: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship · lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.
Hope Baptist Chapel
S70 Grant SL, Middlepon
Pastor: David Bryan, Sr.
Sunday Sch09l· 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes • 7 p.m.
Victory Baptist
525 N. 2nd St, Middleport
Pastor: J1mes E. Keesee
Worship · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Faith Baptist Church
Railroad St., Masoo
Sundar School . 10 a.m.
wo ..hip . 11 l.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Forest Run Baptlst ,Pastor: Arius Hurt
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Worship · It a.m . .

Holiness
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
ln. mile off Rt. 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manley
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Serv1ce · 7:30p.m.

Keno Churth of Christ
Wonhip-9:30 a.m.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.

Free Will Baolllst C
Ash Su.et, Mid~llepc&gt;rt
Pastor: Mark Mo1t0w ·

Bearwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pastor: I ack Colegrove
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m .

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
7S l';arl St., Middlepon.
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCany
Sunday school - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Zion Churclt of Christ
Pcrneroy, Harrisonville Rd. (Rt . 143)
Pastor: Interim paslor
Sunday School . 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi.~s · 7 p.m.

Hysell Run Holiness Church
Pastor: Robert Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
wo~hip . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service - 7:30p.m.

Bradbury Church ol Christ
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.

Harrisonville Holiness Chapter
Pastor: Rev . John Neville

Sunday School 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednciday Scrvioc · 7:30p.m.

Tuppen Plains Churclt of Christ
Pastor: Robert Foster
SW1day School • 9 a.m.
Worship· 9:4S a.m., 6:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorganized Chun:h of Jesus Christ
In Latter Day Saints
Ponland-Racine Rd.
Panor: William Roosh
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Wedilesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Dexter Chun:h of Christ
Pastor: Chris Stewart

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m .
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Rulland Church ol Christ
Panor: Eugene E. Underwood

Lutheran

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship -!0:30a.m., 7 p.m.

St. John Lulheran Chun:h
Pine Grove
·
Pas lor: Laura A·. Leach Shreffler
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

M.,.n C~urch ol Christ
MillerSt. 1 Mason, W.Va.
Sunday School- 10 a.m .
Wonhip • 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

OUr Saviour Lutheran Church
WalnuL and Henry Sts., Ravenswoo:l, W.Va.
Pa stor: Rev . George C. Weirick
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.

Bradford Church of Christ
St. Rt. 124 &amp; Co. Rd. S
Pastor: Derek Stump
SWJday School · 9:30a.m.
Wophip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Sr. Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Scc:ond St., Pomeroy
Pastor: Laufll A. Leach Shreffler

Succm Road Church or Christ
Pastor; Joseph 8. Hoskins
S!Dlday School . 9 a.m.
.
Wonhip - lOa.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Sunday School • 9':4S a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Wor&gt;hip · 9:30a.m. (ht &amp; 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (3rd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Liberty Christian Church
Dexter
Pastor. Woody Call
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenin&amp;- 7 p.m .
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Mt. Olive United Methodist
Off 124 hohind Wilkesville
l'aslo r: Charles Jones
Sunday Sehool ·9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursda.y Services - 7 p.m.

Langsville Christian Churt:h

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:3hm., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parish

Hemlock Grove Churc•
Pntor: Charles Domigan
Sunday school - 10:30 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Northeast Cluster

Alfred
Pastor: Sharon Hausman

Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
11 a.m" 6:30p.m.

Wo~hip .

Reedsville Church or Christ
Pastor: Philip Stunn
Sunday School: 9:30a.m. ·
Wo11hip Setvice: 10:30 Lm.
Bible Study, Wedneoday, 6:30p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hau ~man
Worshjp · 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 10 a. m.
Thursday Services - 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor: Brtnda Weber
Worship - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Christian Union
Ho1&gt;1011 Chtlrdt or Christ In
Christian Unlon
Pastor: Theron Durham
S111day School - 9:30 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

LoogBouom
Pastor. Charles Eaton
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip -10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Hartlord Church of Christ in
Christian Union
Hartford, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. David McManis
Sooday School • 11 a.m.
Wonhip · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Reedsville
Pastor: Rev. Charles Eaton

Worship · 9:30a.m.
Sunday School- 10: 30 a.m.
Wed nesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Church of God

Tuppers Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Ha usman
Sunday School- 9 a.m.
Wonhip- 10 a.m.

MI. Moriah Cllll'dl ot God
Racine
Puaor: Rev. Jame1 Sauerfield
Sunday School - 9:4S a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea · 7 p.m.

Tuesday Services -7:30p.m.
Central Cluster
Asbury (Syncuse)
Pastor: Wclley Thatcher
Sunday School • 9:4S a.m .
Worship · II a.m.
Wednesday SeNices · 7:30p.m.

Rutland Church o1 God
Pastor: John F. Coroo110
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Worship· 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
. Wedne1day Services • 7 p.m.

••

•I

Pastor: Gary Hines

Middleport Church or Christ
Sllnnd Main
Pastor. AI Hartson
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 8: IS, 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~s - 7 p.m.

•

RACINE
NT STORE

EntC!rprlse
Pastor: Keith ltader

Syncuse Church ot God
Apple and Second Sta .
Panor: Rev. David Russell
. Sunday School and Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Evenina Servioes· 1 p.m.
Wednesday Serviceo • 7 p.m.

Churct1 of Chnst
.........., Clsurdt orCIIrtst
212 W. Main St
Pisror: Andsew Miles

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wo rJhip · 9 a.m. , 6 p.m.
Tuesday Services · 7 p.m.
Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader

Churm or God of Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. off St. Rt. 160
Putor: Pat Henson
Stmday School· 10 a.m.
· Wonhip - lla.m.
W~nesday Servioes • 7 p.m.

Sunday Sehool - 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Thunday Services · 7 p.m.

Forest Run

Syracuse Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Glenn McMillan
Sunday School- 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
W~esday Services • 7 p.m.

Pastor: Wesley Thatcher

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m .
Thursday Services· 6:30p.m.
Heath (Middleport)
Pastor: Frank Smilh
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship • 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 6 p.m.

Carleton .Jnterdenomlnatlooal Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor: Clyde W. Hendersoo
Sunday School· 9:30 ~m ..
Evening ·- 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.

Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Thomas McClung
Sunday sc:'hool . 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7 p.m.

Mlners\'llle
Pastor: Wesley Thatcher
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m.

Fre&lt;dom Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
PasiOr: Rev. Roser Willford
Sunday School . 9:30.Lm.
Worship- 10:45 a.m .• 7 p.n\.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Chester Church or the Nazarene
Pastor; Rev. Herbert Grate
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m.,6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Pastor: Florence Smilh

While's Cfiapel Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Won;hip · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Rutland Church olthe NUirene
Pastor: Samuel Basye
Sunday School - 9:30 o.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Won hip · 10 a.m.
Pomeroy
PasiOr: Eunhae (Gmce) Kec

Sunday School - 9:tS a.m.
Worship · 10:30'a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:30p.m.

PorUand First Chur~h of the Nazarene
Pastor: William Justis
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip · 10:40 a.m., 7 p.!Jl.
WednesdaY. Services - 7 p.m.

Rock Springs
Pastor: Keith Rader

Sundoy School · 9:15a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services • 6 p.m.

New Haven Church of the Nazarene
Pastor: Glendon Stroud

Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip · l0:30a.m., 7p.m.
.Wedne&amp;day Services - 7 p.m.

Rutland
Pastor: Arthur Cfllbtree
Sund1y School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday SeMces - 7 p.m.

Trinity C'"'gregaUortal Churth
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
01Urch · 9: IS a.m.
Worship t 10:30 a.m.

Sunday School· 9: li a.m.
Worship · 10: IS a.m.

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.

The Salvation Anny
liS Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Worship · I0:00a.m., 7:30p.m.

Southern Cluster
Apple Grove
Putor: Carl Hiclts
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship · IOa.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m.

Middleport Community Churth
575 Pearl St., Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Andenon
Swtday SchooliO a.m.
Evening - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

Bethany

Faith Tabernacle Churclt
Bailey Run Road
Pastor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday School- 10:00 a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Snowville
Pastor: Florence Smith

Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.

Worship · 9 a.m.
Wednesda): Services - 10 a.m.

Carmel
Pastor: Kenneth Baker

Calvary Pilgrim Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Rou1h
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wo~h:r,
' ·I! a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednes ay Service ·7:30p.m.
Stlvcrsvllle Word of Faith
Pastor: David Dailey
S1111day School9:30 a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:30p.m.
Rejoicing Life Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middlepon
PaslOr: Rev. Michael Pangto
Sunday Schoo! - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Se;rvices : 1 p.m.

Pentecostal A...,.bly
5t RL 124, Racine
Pa~or : William Hoback
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Evening· '1 p.m.
Wednesday Sc!Yices · 1 p.m.

Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Mornhig SUr
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Wor5hip · 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30p.m.

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt. 124
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Sulton
Pas10r: Kennelh Baker
Sunday School-9:30a .m.

Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. (ht &amp; 3rd Sun)

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9~

Mill StrMI
Mldrleport. Ohio 45780

(1141992-1117- (99B ,OOK8)
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

(RegubPrke)
'

.11\

Mlddlep,..t Penteroslll
Third Ave.
Rev. Clark Balter
· 10 a.m.

·1

110, DAILY 9cJO nL 5:00
OPEl
Ill 8 P.M.
94..2642

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GRAVElY TRACTOR SALES

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PIISCIIP110N S~OP

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271 . . .

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111,-1111.

204 (ond,.. St.
Pomeroy, 011.

Ph. ttz·llll

J992-297S

· Pom&lt;'roy

Burlington Community Churth
· Burlingham
Pas1or: Ray Laudermih
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service . 7 p.m.

Racine
Pastor. Roger Grace

Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Laurel Cliff F,.. Melhodlst Church
Pastor: William Williams
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· I0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7 p.m.

FISHER
FUNERAL HO.
992-5141

171 ..,.. s.M , ...

i64 Seuth 21111

n ,,. ,t, 01r11

..••

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Coolville Unlled Methodist Parish
Pastor: Harold E. Alloway-Priddy
Coolville Churdl
Main &amp; Fifth St.
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Semces · 1 p.m.

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Jl Middleport PresbJtertan
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
wo, hip . 10 a.m.. 4 p.m. ('lnd .t. 4111 :&gt;un.)::£

Syracusc.First Unlttd Presbyterian
Sunday Sehool • 10 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m., 4 p.m. (lsl &amp; 3rd Sur~~~~

F1lth Gospel Church
Long Bottom

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:4S a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.

Belhfl Church
Township Rd ., 468C
Sunday School - 9 a.m .
Worship · 10 a.m.
Wednesda.y Services · 10 a.m.

Mt.Herm ..
In Christ Church
Ten• Community orr CR 82
Pastor: Roben Sanden
Sunday Sehool • 9:30a.m.
Worship· !0:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7:30p.m.

Mt. Olive Community Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service · 7 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Street
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 8 p.m.

Eden United llrelbren In Christ
2 112 miles nonh ol Reedsville
on State Route 124 Pallor: Rev. Robert Markley
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

United Faith Church
Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pau
Pas10r: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
wo .. hip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~ - 7 p.m.

Torch Chur&lt;h
, Co. Rd. 63
Stmday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 i .m.

Ecclesl~ Fellowship
128 Mill St. , Middlepon
Pastor. C-huck McPherson
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evenins • 1 p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7 p.m.

Nazarene
Racine Flnt Chur&lt;h of lhe Nazarene
Pastor: Th&lt;Xnu L. Gates, n
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. , 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servioes · 7 p.m.

Filii Gospel Llghlhouse
3304S Hiland Road, Pomeroy
Pasaor: RQY Hunter
Sundoy School - 10 a.m.
. Evening 7:30p.m.
Tuesday &amp; Thursday · 7:30p.m.

Middleport Church oflhe Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr.
SWlday School - 9:30 a.m.
Wnnhip - 10:30a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Neue Settlement Church
Sunday Worship - 2:30p.m.;
Thunday service• · 7:30p.m.

Reedsvllle·Followahlp
Chtwch rl tho Nizarone
Pastor: John W. Douala•
Sunday School · 9:30 a.rri.
Wonhip : 10:4S a.in., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~s · 7 p.m.

South lletbel N.,.Testament
~ilw:r Ridge
Plstor. Duane Sydmstrici.cr
Sunday Scltool : 9 a.m.
Wonhi:r.· 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednes y Service - 7 p.m.

P. J. PAULEY, 'AGENT

(row's Family

N:::~~;~ii;:~ -~

POMfROY, OHI0-992-6677

Co.

'

BILL QUICKEL

Rest

"Fntlllnf K••l•dg Frill c..,•:N
221 W. Main St., Pomeroy

..

SWISHER &amp; UIISE
PttARMACY
Wo Fill Oocton' ·ru·
:1::..~
Preuriptiot"

992-5432

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

Homeme !.aws

Pomoroy

£WING FUNERAL HOME
"/)i~nil)' nn1/

S&lt;'rt'ke .4/~·~~· ·'

Eslabllshed 1913

992-2121 .

716
stCOND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT. 01110
I'

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:1;

M""" Chipel Churth
Sup.: Mike Matson
Sunday school- 10 a.m.
Worship · 11 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~ - 7 p.m.

IAWUNGS.C:OATS

sHOUFfER
Fib I SAFETY
SMIS I santa
ftl-7075

..

Worship a.m.
Sunday School · 9:45a.m.

Christian Fellowship Center
Salem Sl., Rutland
Pastor: Roben E. Muu er
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 11 :15 Lm., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7 p.m.

Rutland Bible Methodist
Pastor: Rev. Ivan Myers
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

9U·l95S

•.

Dyesvllle Community Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship-10:30a.m., ?p.m .

East Letart
Pastor: Roger Grace
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.

I

.

-,~· CEN1ER,
INC.
Johsl F. Fullt, Mgr.

Grand ·opening·SavinO•· t

: i

.
fl

.

~\MEIGS DRE

•

. Tlaroua• Satunlay
Register for.Door Prizes

' .

.

Pentecostal

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman Sl., Syracuse
Pastor: Roy (Mike) Thompson

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:4S Lm. (2nd &amp; 4th Sun)

Calvary Bible Church
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Bl•ckwood
Sunday School - 9:30 Lm.
Worship 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Se:Nice- 7:30p.m.
Spiritual Faith Church
State 338, Antiquity
Pastor: A. Su:wan.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Service - 1:30 p.m.

Other Churches

Salem Center
Pastor: Ron Fierce

Fairview Bible Chur&lt;h
Letart, W.Va. Rt. 1
Pastor: James Lewis
Sunday School · 11 a.m.
Worship · 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.

•

%Off·~

Under New MiutageDient
OPEl'I!ION.•FRI~ 9 A.M.•S P.M.
Evening Appoint••••• Available

t t. •.....,............;o·--,

llachlua

Speaker named

RE-OPENING

I

....... Ultreloek "

Chester

Pomeroy Wesulde Church or Christ
33226 Olildren's Home Rd.
992-3847
Sunday School· 11 a.fl!.
Wonhip- 10 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~s - 7 p.m.

MI. Moriah Baptist
Fourth &amp; Main SL, Middleport
Putor. Rev. Gilben Craig, Jr.
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship· 10:45 a.m.
Anllqully Bapllsl
Pastor: l&lt;.CMelh Smith
Swtday School - 9:30a.m.
Wo~hip · 10:45 Lm.
Thursday Services-7:30p.m.
Rutland Free Will Baptist
Salem St.
Pastor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
AJit Street FreewUI Bapllst

Top video sales and rentals listed

New Lire Church of God

' Sunday School· ~:~ a.m.
Wonhip- l!HO a.m., 7 p.m.
· Wedneaday Services·- 7 p.m.

Apostolic

TOPS meets

Birthday celebrated

PomerQy-Middleport, Ohio

•

'

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,.....,,,

214 e. Main .
"H130 Pomeroy

rJi,\

.

\257

Veterans
Memorial

115 I......illllr;

tft·IIM

I

�Ohio

i~r~r~•v~M~a;ro;.h~~1~~2--~~;:~::::::-----------------r-------~~~~~~~~O~h~lo~==~~::::-=~:-~------------Th~e~~·~'~v~~~~~~-:~

Marc:h 6, 1992

Announcements

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

Call 992-2156
MoN.

thru

FRI. 8A .M.-5P.M.- SAT.S-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ada out111de GaUta, Ma1on or MeJ81 eounllet mull be prepa1d
• Recetve diKounl for ad. paid m adva nce
• Free Ada: G1veaway and Found ad. under 15 wonb will be
run 3 day• al no c:huge
• Pr ice of ad for aU capital letter••• double pr1ce of ad cott
• 7 potnt Ime type only u•ed
• Tribune w nol rupon11hle for error• afler fint day (cheek
for erron flnt day ad run• 1n pa per). Call before 2:00p.m.
day after publicatiOII' to make c:orrec tton
• Adl that mull be patd in ad·..ance are.

Coni of Thanlu
Happy Ado
In Memonam
Yard S alt~~
• A. clautried advertiaement placed tn the Gallipolil l&gt;a.•ly
TnbuDe (u:c:epl ClluifJed DLiplay, Bwlne.. Card or Legal
Nooce~) w11labo a ppear m the Pomt Pleau.nl Regut.er and
the Daily SenbneJ, reac:httl@: O\'er 18,000 home..

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
I :00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesda y
100 p.m Thursday
1:00pm Friday

Words

1
3
6

15
15
15

10

15
15

Monthly

Rate

Over

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

3 Announcements
Beauty Pagaant Full Figure Trl·
Co April 13, Monday, Holiday
Inn, 7:00P.M. Call Marl• Palmtr.
614-367-7412
MEET SINGLE GIRLS
In Your Local Area. 1·900-407·
1004, $2 95Jmln. Must Bt Over
18, Fonpals lrvlnt CA
NRA Instructor will bl hawing a
basic pistol course for women
beqlnnlng In April, must pr•
regtster, limited number of
people par course, 614·992-6311
Open &amp; Affirming Churc~s: a
workshop to help churchet;
welcoma lasblarts, gay &amp;
bisexual people, Saturday1
March 14, 10am to 3pm Unl1ta
Campus Ministry, Alheris, OH .,
$10! 814-593-73()1 to• ....,.
V81 ons.
Unattached? Meet Area Slngl11
Through Our Slnglts Ntwslll•
ter. Write: Slnglea, P.O. Box
1043, Gallipolis, Ol'lio 4563"1

15 Words
Mul icallnllr umenll

$ .20
$ 30
$ .42
$ .60

Vegetable.
For Sale or Trade

fru1L1 &amp;

$.05/day

Rates are for co nsecutive runs, broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

GET RESULTS ·FAST!

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...
GaRia County Melgo County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446~oiUpoUo

992-MJddleport/

675-PI. I'Je01anl

36 7 - Cheahire
388-'Vmton
245-Rio Grande

Pomeroy
985-Chetter
843- Portland
24 7-Letlrt F1Ua
949-Raeine
742-Rutland

4 58-l..eon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-New Haven

256-Guyan Diot.
643-Anbia Di.l.
379-Walnul

2- ln Memory
3- Ann ounce menta
4- Giveaway
ft- Happy Ada
6-- Lo.t and Found
7- Lost and Found
8- PubHc Sale &amp;
Auchon
9- Wan ted to Buy

895- Letart
937-Buff•lo

667-CooJ.ille

II- Help Wantod
J2- SttuabOm Wanted
13-lnauranee
14- Bu.tneaa Tramins
15- School• &amp; lmtruction
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repatr
17- M&amp;acellaneou.
18- Wanted To Do

I· \Ii\1 ~11'1'1.11-~
,\ I .I\ 1 : ~ 1"0( 1,
q p

32- Mobile Home• for Sale

W.nled to Buy
Liveatock
Hay &amp; Gra•n
Seed &amp; Fert.ihzer

33- Farme for S~tle
34- Butmen Buildmp
35- Lou &amp; Acreage
36- Real Eatate Wanted

4

\I~

1\1-.\"1

\1'\IJI~I-:

Sl - Houoehold Good.
52- Sporting Gooda
S~

Antique•

54- Mm. Mercha nd1.1e
55- Buddme; Supplu:s

Brown Female House Dog To
Glvoaway. 614·446·4514.
F•e• Puppy, 7 Weoks Old.
Female, Pan Golden Ralrlaver,
614-245-5986.
Friendly Pretty

•~

rROY-BI£r
O ur Spring ShJpmen1 Of

Troy.OUt1Wen Now In Stoek.
four LocGl Tr::z-· Bllt DeoJ1r

ARNIE'S SPORTS LOUNGE
GALUPOUS FERRY. liN
PRESENTS
The Band-HEAD OIZZV
and DJ Randy Sm~h
Friday. March 6

WAKEfiElD'S

II 50 Will, ~~'"' OWo •513-liiS
21201V213 mo.

87- Uphol1lery

Howard L Wrllesel

ROOFING

NOTICE
SENIOR CITIZENS

NEW-REPAIR

Read the

THE MONTHLY
MOOSE SENIORS
LUNCHEON AT
MOOSE LODGE IS
MONDAY, MARCH 23
AT 12 NOON.

'

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

CLRSSIFIED RDS

FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

I

31619211 mo. pd.

TROLLEY STATION
CRAFTS

MARCH 14: Free Demo
Jackal Swealahlrt Claoa·1:00p.m.
MARCH 16: Slala Tole
Painting - 7 p.m.
Slop To See Sample
MARCH 24- Basket Clau
- &amp;p.m.
MUST PRE-REGISTER
HRS: Mon.·Sal10 om-S pm
SundoyHpm
For Mort Into Call

Public Notice
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
By order of Board of True·
tee ol Sclpl~ Townohlp Clerk,
Betty Bishop, Bobby Arnold,
Harold -Graham , Randy
Butcher, membero.
(3) 6, 13, 20: 3TC
Public Notice
- ------..,..-NOTICE OF APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On March 2, 1812, in the
Melgo County Probate
Court. ca .. No. 27382,
Allen T. Downie. 43340
Ridgewood Drive, Pomoroy,
OH. 45769, wn appointed
Admlnlotrator of the eetate
ol Chrlotlne D. Bright,
dtceaoed, lata of 101 20th
Stree~ Dunbar, YN 25014.
Robort E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. N•HirOIId, Clerk
(3) 6, 13, 20. 31c

614-992-2549
3/4/9211 mo.

992-2259
608 EAST. MAIN

NEW UST1NG- Beautilullog home on 4 acres Includes
3 BAs. 2 baths. Many, many added leatures.

Quality
Stone Co.

$87,500.
NEW UST1NG - Forest Run Rd. Older 1 floor frame
home 4 rooms, 2 BRo. on 2.29 acnos olland.
A.klng S24,i00.
NEW UST1NG- Portland-Wells Run Rd. 1 floor Jrame on
$8,500. MAKE AN OFFERI
2.81 acres.
POMEROY- Handicapp.d accessibla home With 3 BAs.
firwplace. basement. large kitchen.
~.iOO.

SinD LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call 614-992-6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire,

OH.

OFFICE 892·2886

MIDDLEPORT - Remodeled 1112 story home Good
location. fenced yard, 3 BAs, s torage building, closet
apace.
$11,500.
POMEROY -2 olory blook home. 3 BAs, large Iron!
pon:h. Homaln good cond1tion.
$11,500.

' 205Morltl Slcond Ave.
. Middleport, OH
LANGSVILLE-Look at this n1ce 1 1/2 SIOIY home that sits
on 31 acres It has 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, heat pump, and
WQOdbumer Some of the land" ~liable, plusH would be a
g1'91t plaoe lor hunbng.
NOW $47,100
RAOINEAree·SI Rt124-Aimost4 acres ol nioe Jay1ng lawn
llfld Qlfd!ln area and a 4 bedroom home that with ill Jlle laet
a ye.. has had a new roo(. siding , cabinets, lurnaoe,
windoW• aalel61e, steel garage, fixtures. 11111- tliumb'
ing in baih.
'
ALL FOR S37 ,Mil
CHESTER-Baum Addition-Hey , With the riaht woman·s
touch lhil aplit level home oould be beau1ilul. Tt has two big
bedroOms up and two down. Has a spacious family room
lllld 2 baths. Also closets and storage ivefywhere you look.
With a one Cll garage and a patiO. All sits on I!PPfO}· I acn1
JUST SII,IOO

WHAT DO YOU DO IF YOU WANT 10
USTYOUR HOME?
FIRST: Call Cleland Realty. We lttva profHolonal
people to h1rtch the lltUng lrtd 1111 ol"your horne.
SECOND: We wiU advortloe, ahow and anower all
·
queeUono -.oimlng your property.
THIRD: You limply 111 b10ft arid Itt Ul handle
verylhlng111d blat of lliL ••You don't II8Y ua a cont
unlooo lila Pf-'Y Ia tololl'-d -yilt lal Give ua
a cal Hyou sri Hiloua ltbOut Mlllngl
.

ttlnry'E. Clll.nd..... ................... - •••••••••._ .........112-t11t
Tracrr .................................................:......."M..2431

.._. TtulltiL- ...·-··.........,_ ........................M..2110

Offloe.....- ••••- ..............................,... _,,,,,,..,_112·2211

eo

L..AHGSVILLE.St Rt 124·Appro•. acre !arm with a big
" b.-n pond, lnd obouttO acres tillable. Also hu 1112 sloly
hOml with 1 big oerport, eatellitl dish. will\ 7 room•,
being bedrooms
S47,toG
,•

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucensed and Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

or
304'-773-9545

MASON, WV.

Specializing In
Co•plete Auto
Upholstery.
(Tel, we

NO SUNDAY CALLS
2114f9211 mo.

.,
IF YOU WEAR II HEAR
l!t ADMIRE I~ WATCH

tlo II all.)

AlSO COMPlfTE AUTO
REPAIR SERYKE •d 24
HOUR TOWING.

lr,

.

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
•lnsulatron

=

:1

CAll 992-6120

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

I02 E. Main StrHt
Po11er_,,_~o

To Fl•tl:..'ev.flo.

539 Bryan Place
Ohio
1111411fn

992-2269

-New Conetruction
-Remodeling
-Cabinet Work
-CommerclafRealdentlll1
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Year. Experience

614·742·2328

1S Snsloas.----'25.00
12
'20.00
6 Stssloas..--·--'12.00
1 Stssloa-----.'150
FRU SESSION WITH MAY

s.s......_ _ _

BISSELL &amp;BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
eGa rages
-complete .
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

IENEWAL
Stvwal kinds of lolloas
SCA WOlfE lmS

2117/1 mo. d.

ttOWOPEtt

FlEE ESTIMATES

985·4473
667·6179

MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

2-7·92-Jin

AUTO
PARTS
In

-

FOR ALL MAKES
. 'MODUS
992-7013 or
992·5553

OR TOLL·fREE

1·100·•41·0070
DAIWIN, 07H
1'il0,"a'ltf•l

GUN SHOOT

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY
SAt NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Starting Sept•. 28

Factory Choka
12 O.uge Shoftun Only
Slrhi1J laforcoll
i·13·'t1-lfn

Rutltatl,o•le

742·2341

15 Sessions.- 525
Plus 1 FREE

BULLDOZER • BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

Hrs. 8-10 Mol. tku Sat.
NEW SCA WOllf lED 24Sl
r.~~tPrHtcls ArllltiiJit
Eqorioneo llso

c•

T...........
fw ~·lttnll.

llfyodqMo' lA

FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

' 2·1•

...~··' ·
•(

•

GUN SHOOT

Air Conditionen '•
. &amp; Heal Pump&amp;

1:00 P.M.

•1 00% 2 year parte &amp; labor warranty
•1 oyr. hilt pu~ ~OJ11l'"'" w1rranty
•F111 eellma111

Bemettl MobUe Home Headng &amp; Cooling
1391

Whnl Sdt111Jt,416

wi-IOHJ-s\711, ~

IISSILL IUILDEal, INC.
ltw ...ts•YiatyiShllatt

lllfi)DLEPOIIT.PIIIf It-A nice 2 slilry , _ wltl3111d_ . I 112 belhl. vinyl siding, , _
U bllarnant. HO.i• 11 ~a goDd atwtt Prtoe

iili.!':i

........
•PII!ce•••.
w
la
....
.... wltle•·····

:Wiir'Jo

.,..

POIJIIIIOY4t Rt 124-3 112- wilh lleorlc an tile and
Up
•
ONLY . . . .

-and .....

992-215

4801.

..'•,

RACINE GUN
CLUB
SUNDAYS
Slarllng·Sepl. 22
12 Ga.- Factory
c•o~e O.ly

Want1d To LAst Tobacco
t xptrltnce,
Bosh. Call Anytlma 614·388ochodullng avollabto.
9769.
Contact tha Director ol Nurolng,
Plntcru:t C1r1 C.nter 110
Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos Plnacroot Drlvo. Clllilpollo,
With Or Wlthout Motoro. Call Ohio. 614,.45-7112. Eqllll oppor·
Larry Llvoly. 614-388·9303
tunlly ompfoyor.
Top Prien Paid: All Old U.S.
l.lbor Work
Coins, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins, lo $458 wkly., pt. FT, will train,
Gold Colna. M.T.S. Coin Shop, pltce work now avalltblt, t.aoo151 Second Avonuo, Goltlpollo.
M3·744i
Load gulln tll•y•r lor • ·
ve~ory band. must be
Employment Services lobllohld
protnalanal, 304-.451-1130.
Local Rltlaurllnt St1klnSJ A
A•pontUH Person F01 A
11 Help Wanted
Wortdna Manage,. POIItlon.
$25()..1475 par -kl 33 million Willing lo Troln lho Right Por·
Americans (up 22% over last oon. Sind Lotto• Ollnl-t And
yoo~ work lull or par1 tlmo ot Worll Ewpo~onco AIO!!IJ With
home liming IXCeiUtnl pay. Sotory Requlr.,..,... To: CLA
Hundred• ol componiH riold Box 108, c/o Clllllpotto
hom-koro Howl Col tar Trlbunt.L.~5 Third Avenue, Ga rocordod m-go. 604-761-1173. Npotlo. "" 45631.
CABLE ADVERTISING
I350IOAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERSI PEOPLE Coble Advortlotng Satoo Rop
Noadod For Tho CIIIIIJIOIIIIPOint
CALLVOU.
NO EXPERENCE NECESSARY. PJoount Am. wo•ro Sooltlna A
Coitdldato Who Poo-• En·
1·800.25U242.
lhtalotm And wtlllngnooa To
Hard. Saito Exportonce.
1$350/Doy procoootng, pflonl or- Cold Colllng SkUll, Stntng Cloodarol Plopfo colt y011. No or• Jng Skllla Prolonod. Dnw
perlenc• necenary. 1-800..255- ICommllllon /Car /AIIow1nce
0242.
/1-lh., Send Rooumo In ConlkiOnoo To: 2120 Haml~
$800 WEEKLY POSSIBLEI Work· tot&gt;'lllddtotown Rood, Hamlt1onl
Jng AI Homol 37 Olrr-t Qrlo ON 48011 ATTN R-tono
.....,vntttoo. Ruoh $1 And Soli· 111
• '
:
~
90
Addrooood Stamped EnYOiopo " :;:"'::==::;:r· --::-::-::--:=-:---:
Ta: Thomlo Boovlro, Rtf&amp; Box liLT For A Fully, EquiGDod
373 Mo~lfto, OH 46750.
Phyok:lono Olllco l.lb. Citod
B-1111, No Shift Work. Apply
In Person: Medical Plaza, :24D
Jockoon Plko, Gllfllpotlo.
NEED EXTRA MONEY FOR
SPRING? Boll Avon Eotn Ao
Much Ao You Nood. 1.6Q0.281·

oaur.

1Yz MI. out Ntw

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

.

...........

CUI. ... USIDEN'itu.

61~949-1101

., 949·2160

, . hi• ., Clllt)

'

Send

Two 2-bdrm lrallon, good cond,

pan. tlm1 marklt help, truck
drive ... opply II Harris Farms,
Portland, OH., no phone calls
piNn, apply 10-4pm

UOOOu, 1110 rooms S10per

Wo'll pay you 10 typa namto &amp;

33

addresses from home! $500 per
1,000. 1·900-896·1666 ($1.49

s.
Aororo, IL 60542.

mlnf'l8yrs•) or wrHe: PASSE·
517W, 161
Llncolnway, N

12

SHuation

Wanted
Captain
Stoomor,
Carpot
Claana!, f13.95 Per Room, 3
Room Mlnlmum. 1..aoo-89-4·8066
Someone lio Uv•ln Fo• Room
And Boord 614-446·3419.
Witt's Guna 7950 112 Stale
Rout• 7.bi.Nonh, Cl'ltlhlre. Ohio
Orders ty 614·387..()438
14

Business
Training

Rotraln
Now111Sou1hoastom
Bootnooa College. Spring Vottoy
Plw . Coli Todly, 614-446-436711
Roglot"atlon 1110-05-1274&amp;

18

Wanted to Do

Will Babysit In My Hom• Rod·
n:r; Arta. Rtfertnclt Avallabtt.

I~c~a~~1~-~4~·~·~··l'=:::-:=----,----

night, 614•949·2526

48 Aerts, 2 Story House, Bom.

busy physlcllne offici, 509 s .
Avo. Middtoport, Lg.

Thl•d

offices I

~ard, 814·985-4231

~~~k~b· !~•;;~.~~iu~~~S;.
1953 0

Trailer Iota Gallipolis F•rry, all
hook up,
or 675-

35 lots &amp; Acreage

49

48111.

304~75-321&amp;

•~ ~

Lots joining Point • tOO% owntr
financing at $1()1 46 par month
buys all thret lois 304-6752122
Nlct 2, 3, 5 Acre P1rc11 , Rt 35 W
Rodnoy. (Unmtrictod) Land
Con,.oct. 614·245-9448 Appi. To
Soo.
Trailer lot for rent. Water, 11wer
and sanitation lncludtd. $110
month. 304-675-1806 or 675-5037.

&lt;;J""aou

Rentals
41 Houses lor Rent

South, Route 7, River VIew, One
Acra, 4 Bedrooms, New Apo
pllanc11, Deck, City Schools,
Reference, Deposit, $490/Montl'l.
614-446-4900.
2r,:,&amp;5rm
bd ho uso Ior rent , 614·:~~;r2·
~

1vlerchandise

5I

Household
Goods
t plect Duncan Phyfe DR suite,
5 Ia~ oak DR tablo, 3 ploco
1930 1 LA oolto. coli Joon Wolfa,
::J~;:;9!12·2t 33 or nfghl-814-

Big Savings On All Ca..,ot In
Stock Cooh And Corrt. Mot·
lohan Carpota, 614-446-11144.
Complete super .Cyle water bed,
f!SO. 304-875-6741
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wash1rs, dry1rs, refrigerators,
rongoo Skaggo Appllancos,
Upper Rlv1r Rd. Bulde Ston1
C•ost Motol. Call 614&gt;446-7398,
1-800.499-3499.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Complete home furnishings.
Hours· Mon-Sat, D-5. 614-4460322, 3 mlln out Bolavlllo Rd.
FrM Delivery.
Matching Couch, Lovttut ,
Choir, 1250. Clood Condition,
614 ..46-6271

\A HANDFUl~
IS BETTER

THANA

....

:r.:

191J11 Ford F·250, 314 Ton, 4x4, a
Cylinder, LDt1 Ertra1! $4,200.

Ooy: 814-4411-1473. Evenings·
614-388-8029.
11• GMC 'Yin, fully auto, cua-

tomlzod, tow mll01go, gm1
lhlpo, 88,000. will nogcllato,
304-882·3473.
4

1

wo tillS s-10 Btozor Tohoo

Exclltont Cond tlon, $5,05,
~~~~~~~~~= ~~~~;;;::j!Po!c;lut~g~a,~V~.fi!,jl!JI~TW~,jPS~,
;P;B,
o Bo 614-441-0131

Merchandise

63

ijj~na:::Wri~~ndcr:r:.lt~~~;

...

~-:7.0~52~3:.:i::f~~~

· ,.• , .. __ chongaablo lot·
$291. ltlttrt
FrH
Plastic
14150 bo
1 al\lllo . ".. 3453
·
•·
~-·~
onytlmo.
Surplus, rtntal, danlm, army
clothing. Frl, Sat, Sun, Noon •
6:00 PM. Som Somorvlllo'l, 6
mlln Eaot ol ~77, Rovonowood,
WV. by Sondyvllll Poet OHico,
olhor houro.&lt;fayo, 304·273·5a55
Union
madt
advtrtillng
specltltlet and mllcl'las.
Water Cr111 Greens Pick Your
Own! Rtd Prom Drat• Sl11 5,
Llko Now. 814·255-1357.
WATER WELLS DRILLED:
WATER GAURANTEED. 614-8861 .731~1;._._______________
1
55
Building

Supplies
Block, brick, HWif Dlpet, win·
dows, llnt1ls, etc. Claude Win·
ltrt, Alo Grandt, OH Call 014·
245-6121.
SPKial- Two car garage•,
24x24xVs $3995 Nx2Tx9=
14199 27•32.s. $4e99, P...,.
tlon Poat Frame Builders, 614·
992-3541
Utility Bolldf~g. 30r40r10 10w12
olldlng door sun.oo. 24r40w10
t0lt10 sliding door 141100.00.
Proclalon Poet Frame Bolldoro.
614·992·3541.

56

Pets lor Sale

1 Fomolo Chow Poppy. $50; 2
Female Rat Terrier Puppl11, $25
Exch. 614-37f.2566
Groom and Supply Shop-Pol
Grooming. All brooda, atyl01.
lams PM Food Dealer. Julie
Wobb. Coll614..j46·0231.

74

Livestock

1f76

Hondl

wlndohloid, ''"' tuggogo
Limousln
ynrllng
bulle, garage kept, IXC cond,
tr•brod. 2yr. old Llmouoln x 304-482·3431
nta Gtrtrudla bulls, nh:e l917 Yam1ha 400 SlrMt. New
81tt
bulls, r•aaon~bly priced 614· p tnt Tl
C1 b a698-2785
'
""il ery, ' · rwll
G
Con ltlon, .,.25, 614-~
64 Hay &amp; Grain
2!1~ After 8:00P.M
1982- Yamahl"' XT 250 Dirt Blkl,
Hay lor Sotol $175, colt Now Tl•... oxhauot And Tune
evenings, 614·H41-85D5
Up. Excellent Condition, 3,100
Now tobacco otlclut for ulo·. lllln, 1550· B14-448-348S.
1984 H nd
Sh d
lhl~ both ondo, 22 conto ooeh.
o 1
1 ow 700
614- 45-5114.
5800MI, f!SOO, 614·742·2545
'
Sf raw lor u 11, call auer
• 6.00 19••
ow TR X 125 Honda, Four
PM, 304-675-2443.
Whttler, Very Good Condition.
614-256-1964.
1881 VZ Yomoho 125, f1,100. 304·
Transportation
675-21111.
1D8t Vamaha, Modll Rt 80, 1
Milo. 614 4481853 Alto• I P.M.
71 · Autos lor Sale

!od

~'

• ~..

:

;ll'llj

• ""i

•

1450 1MO Ford Folrmont, nooda
mufftor. $250 1980 Chovy Cttnolion. noodo onglno. 614-882·
6931, 1614
lfncoln Hgts,
Pomeroy
1857 Chovy lor parto, $500, call
WHkondl, 614-ifl2·3733
1974 Monte carlo,
305 tn·
In•, 4 barrel. $600. l04-171--

li8i YFM 9!0 ERW Yomoha
l
Moto4, 011 Cootod Wlth AMIFM
I
Rldlo, Excellent CondHionl 814·
!
256·1H4.
•t
Hond1 XR 250, IXC cond, $1,200.
I~=ty Sporta Shop, 304· • ~
;;;--:---::-:c--::--:--:-- •
W1 Buy, Selt, Trade, Utld Har·
ltys, Parts And AcciiSOrltt
1
Avollobla. 614-4Jll.7055.
1

1977 Lincoln Town Car, 304-1752888.
1981 Chovy Comoro, V-8, good
lim, runa g•oatl f11000bo. t977
Camaro gOod t m, $650. 614·
941-25aS.
1982 Colob~ty, PS., A.C., P.B.•
AMIFM, Auto. O.D. Now Tlroo,
E~:cellent CondHion, Low Mll11.
f1,750. 614-446-8350.
1983 Cullan SUpreme, new
pelnt, 304-875·201 t

75 Boats &amp; Motors

!283,

t
~

'••

lor Sale

•

Chrl1 Craft Cavalilr 32 H
dual motors, good cond, h.ooo'
304-8711-8699.
1!173 Wollcraft 18ft. 7 Jn.W. 150
HP Mercury, SNtl I, S4,000 Or
Boot Olltor. 814-245-9057.
20 Ft. 2 Sootor Soors, 10 H P.
Motor. $1,200. 814-446-88111, A~
torS P.M.
BOATERS
1183 Mwdo G~ !J*d. runs GluiMs Man;ury
Martnt Service.
good. $600. 304-TT.HII08.
Mercury, Mariner, MercruiHr
1183 ToYOio Coltco Stipnt, 1984 spec:laUat Mercury ctrtlllld.
Mobllt, We come to you. &amp;14·
Florro SE, 814-tf2·7ll111
258..5979.

1984 Dodtll Chorgar, 2.2 tHor,
SJood conCI., 1m'fn'l radio, Nnt
good, f1800 080, 614-992·7935

1964

76

•
••
•

••

•.'•
•
i

•
•

:·

·:
l

~
'l
•••

•

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

;'

~

Budget Tran1mlnlons, Ulld &amp; ~
robuiH. otartlng ot $Hi_ !font whaol d~VI otortl"lf at Ol'IUO
__
1984 Pon\lae Grand Prix, V-8, Air 114-245-Hn. 614-882-&amp;293.
Cond .• PS, AM/FM Coollllo. 2dr,
Good Condition. 12,100, Or
O.B.O. 614-245-1011. '
campers &amp;
· ....
1984 wllh• Floro, luagago rock. 79
.. .
auto, AC, PW, PL. AV·FM call,
Molor Homes
..... ,
CB, ~~~II $3,000. Jlrm.
304-41
or 6711-8884
::1f71=-:Cont:-::-lnon-:-to:-l14,..,.-:-ft..;.
, ca.::.._mpf_ng_ · ' ·
ti'IUtr, 2 owner, t1Hpe11x, bef· ., ,•.,
1try or lflc hook-up, new llree .,
ntco, $1,500. 304-882·32311.
',
Sl/11 Sprint•• llfth whlol 24 n - -'
camper SI,OOO. firm wf84 Ford ~ ., 1
Truck $10,500. 304-875-5408.
:1
Travel Trailer, 32ft. Holiday "' ''11
Rambler, Full Self Contained. '., ..
PrlcedToStlll814-388-8331. ' , . . ,i ..
1115 Town Car, Signature
S.rtoo. Good Condition. Sun... • I
Services
"""· Luthor lntttlor. Good
Tlroe. $8,000. 8M..j4f.2n0.
========:=. '••o•
'•
Home
11M More. Cougtr, 13,800. 614- 81
24s..o57 Rodnoy Coro Ulll
Improvements
-,~ ,
Road.
--....::-BA:O:SE::=::M::-ENT::=:.:;.:-- '' :o
1117 Chevy GO Spactrum. 2
WATERPROOFING
' "o;•
door hardback, eXC cond, 5
aooad. 80,000 mlfn, $2,600. Unconditional lifttlmt gwran· "I J '
111. Local retwencn fumlthld. '
304-675-1238.
Frtl lltlmiiH. call colltcl 1- In Cl .
11117 Chrysler LeBaron, whlto 814·237-0481, doy or night.
wlbwgarwty lnttrlot, lotdld, Rogers Bailment Wlterproo- - ·
48.000 miiH, 16,000. firm . 304• ling.
875-57117 beforo 2:00 PM
Comoloto Mobllo Homo Sat-Upe
•
1967 Dodgo Artoo ' aolo, $2,40o· R~palra; Commtrlcal, Allldln.: -.........
•,
1817 Plymouth Horizon, 40 mpg. tlal Improvement•. Including:
t:
$1,700, low mltoa, 304-871·2440. Plumbl~, Ellc:trlcal. lneurance
Clolmo Accaptod. 614·2M-1811
.•
1gu Jlodao Dorton• 41,000
'
llltH, o... o.-. 614-441.0731. Curtl8 Homo lmpro-nto:
Yuro Exl*lonco On otdor I
1Ni Ponttoc Grand Prix. Homoo. Room AddMiono •
30,00011!, whMo w/groy
Foundation Work Rooll~' '
auto, around ltfecll, loaded, Kftchono And Batha. Fm
111100, M-882-t071/ "2-2171
tlmat•t Rtflf'encN, No Job To '\ ••
• I
11H1 Pontile Lomono. rod, 2dr., Big Or Small 814-441-0225
41p., omllinlco111nol. 12,-1, Renovations, Add Ont, A.,.., ..1
1-owner, IIC cond, HIOO, 114- Pointing, a.. thy Work! call ~ •
MJI-2177
••
R- At: 814-446-1568.
1891 Sonlro S.E. Auto, Air, Ron'o TV SIIVIco, opaclottztng
~
Showraom, New! 2,000 Mll11, In Zlnlth alto HrVIclna fiiOil
'
$10,300 Or Take Over Payments. OChtr brlndt. Houtt caiTe, tleo .1 1
614-441·1312.
oomo oppllonco ropal... WV ~ 1
304-4711-;J:JM Ohio 814.-46-2454. ' ~ •
1992 Eoco~~od , very vory ==~~~~;._:.;===~' .w '
low mlloo,
75-4248.
Davia
S.W~Vac
SlfYicl, ,,C •
~ Cr11k Rd. Parta, sup••
1t88 Ct.vy 2 Door DelRoy t..,~kup, ond dollvory 614- • ., ' :
az,roo. Rune Strone. 814-317·
0813.
;;;;;:-:-=-.::-:----:--:-- ' ...· ~
For uJo. 1171 Chovt Coprlco WlU build patio COVM, tlockt. ,) ,
N---~ 30 5
pb ecretntd roomt, put up vinYl ·•1
-75
-·
""011111 ' Jll.
lldlng or lrollot oldrtlng. &amp;M- &gt; 1
• S14-"N2·1400
2454'152.
" ,
For Soli: 1810 Oldo Cutloa
Plumbing &amp;
::1 '~
1400, Molto Good Work Car. 114- 82
IIJJ
448·102!1•
Heating
-.o :

.,.

Full Btooclod Rid Chow For
Solo: 3 Montho Old. 814·3888039.

Financial
2 BR, Mlddloport. Ohio
Reftrtnct &amp; cllposlt required
304-882·3267.
Business
21
2·bdrm mobile homo In Mid·
Opportunity
dtoport. 814-992-5858
INOTICEI
2br Unfumlahld Mobile Homt 1
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. Holzor Hoopftol, No Poto,
rtcommends that you do butl· $200/mo.
$100
DoposH .
nno wtth pooplo you know ond Roloront:e. 814-448-3817.
NOT to send money through !he
msll until you have lnveatrgatld 2br. - · I 1111• Out Rt.218,
I20Mio.
Dlposll
Ano
thtofterlng
Aollronce Roqu)Nd. 614-256VENDING ROUTE : Gil Rich 62SI.
Oulclt? No Woyl But We Hovo A
Good, Study, AHord1bl1, Busl·
Apartment
Rill. Won1 Laat 1.S00·284· 44
8363.
lor Rent
Vending Aout1: Local. We Have 1-bdrm apl. In Mlddl•port,
Tht NIMII Machlnll, Making A utllhiH lwn, clop &lt;aq, no polo,
Nk:t Ste•dy Cuh Income. 1· 114-H2-2218
800-t55-03511.
'
1br Untumlshld Apartment,
Wllh Sto .. And Rolrlgerotor. No
Real Estate
Poll, $1811/mo. Wotor Included.
f!OO DoposH. 814-446-3817.

Wl'lltt'e Antique Fumltur•
Ropalro And Rollnlohlng. (25
Yt lrl Experience) 614·245:.t448.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

3 pc aocllonol. Sol kldo 11011 61 Farm Equipment
cluba
Exercl11
blke. 530 ca.. backhoe. &amp;14-441Rot~go"lor. Weight bench. 3047750.
875-7988.
Buoh Hoa fog opfhtot lor 3-pl
Air CompiHior. L.orr Etoctrk: hhch S3tlo. Rovorslblo Scoop
Molar. 1 112 H~, 2 VC Comput· to• :J.pt hitch SIOO. Spring tooth
.,.,, Other Computer Equip- cunlvotor
lor 3-pl hhch $78. 31tp
ment, Stcwlty Alarm System Gordon tllltt
S75. Sol tractar
lnc:ludlng Yldeo camera, Chain chalna
'25.
Huvwodutr
Hol11,
Ctlllnl
Fans, torpo (2) 120. NCh. J..Dg canvaa
chains
Lawnmowars, PA mp. Electric (2)
$10. ooch. 75 n ~~~- t11o wtro
Typow~llro, Chlln Saw, VCR.
rope $20 All very good cond.
Atl11 Battery Charger, Pollee Glonridtll Form, Rodmond
Band SciMifO. Royal AM.SSB Rldgo, 304-675-5504.
CB Baao, Etc. 614·255-1238.
For Sa to: 4230 John O..ro, 3300
Appaltchl•n WoodburMr, Bay Houro, J.D. Plow And Disc. 814•
Window. May Bo UNd Aa 441 .om.
Flroploce lnurt Or Uaed Ao
Free Stondlng. Ulld Ono wtn- For Sato: I HP Walk Bohlnd
Buma, 22 Inch Lago, Bor· ~ ':-~~T Good Conctnlonl
2 bocf&lt;oom opt In Hendoroon.
P~cel614-387·7913.
1
wv. :JOU75-1tm,affor 5:00.
I!:::::.;_:.:;:::,.::..:..:::.:..;~;.;..__
31 Homes lor Sale
Big 4 lod.-n Dakota Oroom
Roducod To Soli: $48,800, 2 bod,_ apt. utllhiH paid. Homa, '.20.gu &amp; Up. Buln On
Clloohlr'!i_ Ohio i04·932.fi5g, Hud opprovod, 304-675-~.
Your ""'· "" OUr Modll, 814804-132· ...70, 814-317-o648.
731
886
2·bdrm opt In Syracuao. 1.::--·,...,.-1.,..---:----,:--1810 Brandywine 14x'70 hornt1
clair, doUbll car gartge, city
utiiHI•, dop, 814·
wtttr, cabl•, SJ1Ut lOcation~
roooon- prlcl 304-fi/1-3878 2 bdrm. opt. In Middleport.
ulllnloo lurnlahod, $2751 mo.•
or IU·3514 oftor 7:00AM.
Haavy guogo uood roollng ttn.
814-84f.2217
Clone cQI!lput••
Hlllon l'T·IO itt hoyblne. Otlvor
3 bedroom brtc:k ranch, large 1 t.drvam apts. good location, bolrcl, 2 diiC drl¥11,
araln drill on rubbir. 20ft tam·
tamllyroom wltlrtplact, launcfry
Clln lXII traHer. 614•388oll84.
1()1
Slsth
ond
Main
St,
newly
$226.
304-882-2016.
room, 1112 car Dlf•ge, new
deck, 11:Bo outlklt woocl1n romocfolod with now oppllonc11, OP wotght bench 225 Jbo $180. Jim's Firm Equlpmont, SR. 36,
ltonge
, 114 ac,. lot, Salt UtMhiH 1101 Included. Dopotll Culllgon wotor oohon" 3 y11 Woot Clolllrtoflo, 814-4411-i777;
arlee SII.S • QollfpoNo For&lt;y, ;'felrad.. 304-675-7131 or 175- old sao. AO Smfth Hydntnk: wtdo oalactlon now 1 used linn
by oppolntmont onry, 304-8758.
boltor. 2r ton oDHd blko nooda tr1cto,. l lmpllfMRia Buy,
2287 or 171-78St oftor 5:00PM.
BE.wTIFUL APARTMENTS AT tlroo $50. Fifty 2x4rl; $25. 304- Mil, tredt, 8:00.5:00 weekdaya,
Sat. till Noon.
31od,_, 2 Bath Homo, Uppor IUOOET PRICES AT JACKSON 87S-2t18,
110'1. Localed Near centenary, ESTATES, 631 Jackoon Plko Paclutrd Boii1 .11M Comrtollblo llooeey Ferg....,. 250. lluooy
a.-• Elomontary School, 1rom $1t21mo. Wolk to •It® • Computot, ..asx. $700 In Ferg....,. 10115. MUIII' Fot•
- · C o l 114-Wl-2588. EOH. SoftwaN Alroody IMiallod•
(Ciolllo County). 814-448-2808.
255. Now Nollond AoiOid
•· Comololo Una ol- Jlol.
4 racMM I bath, carport, g~r~ge Corriplolty Fum- Smell ft~OO Flrm. Colll14-448-4471.
lond ond llo- Forpc~~~ E·
FREE fHS~•L' •·TJON
..-k ohop, 1110 ..... wotl - · f2SO/mo. Pluo Utllftloo,
qui-'ll. F,_ llnonclng Ill
SWIMMING ~LS
Wlter1 runl water, achoot bus And DIDoolf. 114 446 0331. Call
OnlY $82.81/Mo. • For 12 Monlha. S.Dil 1 on Troy·Bin Equfpmont.
lOUie, coblo tVIIIablo{ 2 mlloe Boloro 1p.lll.
Faf,Ptaln Tractor lalla, Inc, US
Now :.·~ ca I lor op- Effk:Jonc~ opt. Jn Doltlpollo. 1h~Sx4 Pool lncludH Fllllr, At. S3 • 1·77 ••• 31, RlptoyL
·3158 . .
-"
Liddon.
Hugo
Dock
Elc.
A
304-372·11e7S/84'/V. ~ ....
"" 61""""
•oq'ul·-· ('Baood$14.45
On Soiling Prloo 01 ........
871 or
._787_.345·
APR, Tolat Dofwild lng Ohio ond Woot Ylrglnlo.
Foml- 3 Roomo And lsih Prloo: $754.112) 11Dn1 Bollovo ft? Ollvw 3 Boetom Ptaw, 14 Inch,
Upotolnl, Ctoon, No Polo, ,Coli BPI
Hlilh ctooronco. Trip Shonk, Er·
Ao....,_ And Dlpoolt R..
1-800-6411-1923
collont Condnlon, POD. 814-:rtf.
quiNCI. I-·1Sii.
2711.
Qonllio
NutrHJon
Produclo
Fum- Atllrtmont. 4 Roome
Wlntad: Uood llrm oqul-1,
looto~ng Amii!O Acid llodv -hlng YDII Wont ID MIL Coli
And loth.lleloroncu.
No - · 'f.':~l
llljklnL wtlaltl loll ... IIi tiWII-lfOI, Ill 1040 lfttr I
8
-1armtloo. Avoloblo ...
cluaJvalr II Rita Aid Jlhormoor.
The- W1J ID dlot.
Uveatoek
83
. . . .: ICeftwoed AID liver Witt
Aemllo; C.D. I'll~
With llooncto; OIX !IPoa.... w
11" ...... 1100. C i l l . 17110.
•

t~";lptu•

rg...~u~n~k~~·:o~~··~-~~~~~

L":"

OF CASH
1

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

For Lease

Lots lor 1110, trallo111 accop· Sacond Floor Apartmonl For
tabll. 304-675-2722
LNoo, LA.. Ono B.A., &amp;llh,
I ,--=,:-:,::-:::,:..::=: - - -- Knchon WI Sto.. &amp; Rofrtg.
loll In Golllpolla F"ry • 100% Wato• Fumlohad. No Pots. eor.
owner tlnanclng 1t $98 64 po• $230
ntr S.Cond
&amp; Pin~
P Monlh
UlGIIUpolls.
uR
montl'l, any one of tour lots
I~" •cr1It 8 i pat
•
4
ovallable. 304-675·2722.
qu
·-· 0• 814-448-4425.
-&amp;-12 9• 614446·2325,
Lots In New Haven - 100% lobi
owner financing at $101 46 per
eco pound•SJ•, Meigs Co.,
montl'l buys all thrae lots, a304· call 814 -192·5533 lfttr Opm
67".,..~"722·

1888 ct.vy 1 Ton DotJvory :
Truck. 9!0 El9no,·1218 Ft Bowl
(lOod Shl.,.. P~co To Sail
$4,300. llorll Botw- 5-7 P.M.
814-3174411.
1Dat Chow 414, ID!tdod, very
pretty truclt. ftt.soo. can &amp;14441.,110 ahr 10:00 a.m.
1991 Ct.vy S-10, toodod, 5
opood. 29,000 mltoo, $7,200. lor
luit dotllfto 304-815.31156.
4 WD, 1i83 Full SID Ford
Bntnco, 4 Spood. $2.100; 1987 o50 Plck.Up Doda•. 2 WD.
12,1100. 814-256.fi25f.
Solo: 11187 Ni&gt;un Plck·Up, 4w4,
SEV6 AC,I6,400. 814-446-8138.

fi.QQ ~"I" S\Jff.&gt;QZ-11!£
na.u;
...-A
"'I'"'O~ ..
t..n&lt;'
lt'WI 7l I'

Buslnoa proporty, provlously
Farms lor Sale

~

72 Trucks lor Sale

~1!1:;

_sa_5...;1 •_M_110
.;.;..;n~WV------46 Space for Rent
54 Miscellaneous

Wlgtl,

CALL 742-2778 .

6-12· 90·tln

prafarro .

f

ncluc
od, now
huto•, SINplng
Atao troll or opaco with
All hook-upo.
'Pidted,
stovehot&amp;wotor
refrigerator
!3000,
614·1112-2796
Call oftor room•
2:00 p.m., cooking.
304·773-

Want to buy I IHI IWptnsiVI ~~~;:i~~~~V~I~IIa~blo~
moblla homo. 614·992·5t58
·j(
Shift Su·

NtwU•a load
In lltland

USED RAILROAD TIES

Middlepor~

TROMM
BUILDERS

SUN'S UP
TANNING

BILL SLACK

BSW

lor Rent

~

Or 11'1 ly

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

II...II

EAGlE RIDGE llOAD-APProx. 40 aa'H of lind of wltlch
allatrl20- . . lllabl8."Hat. bam Yl)tt hay taft and ..
eqtl •••~lhld. Pulllicwaterand llleclriciVIIIIIIJll,

~~~'r~ water lor anlmlll1

J&amp;l
INSULATION

Month Old able.

Part· time grMn hou11 help,

KIT 'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment

,,.11••.

call 304-175·1957.
Frl , Sat, Sun, 33198 New Lima Easy World Exclllent P1yl AtAd, RuUand OH,Iool~ , fu miturt, umblt Products At Horne. Call Miss Paula's Day care C1ntar.
clothes, 1ppllancts, air cond, Toll fJH, t-800-167·5566, Ext. Saft, affordable, chlldctrt. M·F
6 1m. • 5·30 p.m. Agoo 21&gt;-10.
beds, %&amp; mort.
31
Befort, ttllf school. Drop-Ina
---------------------1 ~~
3· ~~--------- welcome.
814-446·8224 N1w In·
8
Public Sale
Ewcnlng Now Coroor Oppor·
tunltles Witt! Leading Coametlc lant Toddler Cart, 614-446-6227:
&amp; Auction
Compony Ewpandlng Into Tho Roofing, Remodeling, Room
f.~~~~~~;~ I 446-8194.
Are1. Call For Interview : 014- Additions, Call Bolo" 8 A M Or
Altot 5 P.M. 614·256-6510
I
auction MrYice. Licensed
tiVACfR Strvlct Man Nttded
Wost Vl•glnlo, 304·773·5785.
Moat Havo Ewpo•lonco In Com·
morelol And RHidontlol Ropolr.
3 Yoaro E•portonco RoquJNCI To
9 Wanted to Buy
Apply. Send RHumo And Poy
Don't Junk hi StU Us Your Non· Requirements To: Box CLA 108,
Working Appliancn, Color TV's, c/o Gllllpolls Dally Trlbunt, 825
VCR's, Power Tools, Etc. 614· Third AvenUI, Galllpoll1, OH
256-1238
45a31.

We turn your new and
good uald wticltto lnlo
cash ond uw you money
on whaiJOU need.

3-5-'92-1 mo. pd.

12-5-tln

PLAY ITt uSE IT or
NEEu IT

, .... wh ..
EMILY'S AniC

1-304·773-9560

AVON • All areaa, Can Marilyn
Wuvor 304-862·2545.
116 bad long t"m coro llcllltr,l•
seeking aoclal worker. Full t m•
position DonatH pac~ avail·

Help Wanted

E &amp; A TREE SERVICE. Topping,
TrlmmlrlSJ, TrH ~Ramoval, Htdgt
Trimming. Fr• Eatlmataal 614·
367-7957
ALL SKil.: bS
Ewperltnctd house &amp; office
Yard, Bake, Craft Sal• Mt Major lnttmatloRII Project• cleaning, have rereran~et. 304·
j
Flowor School, Rt. 81, Maret! Must Rolocato. Hooslng And 773-5326
617, 8:30.3 30. Mt flowers TraVIIlng Expensn Paid. EXCII·
lent Salarltl And Banelltl. Call E•Pirltnced Molher Wlll C1re
Parents.
WMkdays 9 A M. To 7 P.M sun· For Your Children In Her Home.
day N_, To 5 P.M. VICA CORP. Friondly Atmoapharo, HOI Moats
305-936-8070
And Snocko, Any Shih ; Dtop-lno
Pomeroy,
Welcome, Rio GrancM Oh~
Drummlf to form orJoln group Ar1a. 61..245·9261.
Middleport
doing country rock, ohn "Pack,
&amp;14-698-2083
Sawmill, don't
&amp; VIcinity
m•nt
' IICCIIIt nt tqu1p. G10rgn
l'laul yourPortable
loge lo tl'lt mill just

614-~42·3090

A&amp;E AUTO

11

PT_.,._:.'·

Llntl •••

POMEROY - 111 slory home 3·4 BAs, on two lots of
50x100 each.
A.lilng $14,540.
PLEASANT RllGE - 111.! story horne 3-4 BAs. on two
lots of SOxiOO each
At king $21,000.

.

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

2·28-1 mo.

LETART- Remodeled 2 t lory home, 3 BAs, 2 acres ol
laval ground. large sllawbtrry patch.
$29,900.

.

2/3 92/1••·

Help Wanted

- - - - - - - -- 1

New Homes,
Additions, Siding,
Pole Barns, Painting,
Garages, Porches

Cml614-992-5521
.. 385-8227 '

POMEROY, OHIO

Real Estate General

tr..M
a

Just Nortlt of P••••J
SJcrlirl at '225 por ••·

Real Estate General

Incorrect date was in the
Moose News Letter.

PUBUC NOTICE
TheB011rdofSclplo Town·
ohlp Truot..., Meiga County,
Ohio, will receive blda until
7:00p.m. o'clockthe20thday
of March 1992 lor the pur·
cho.. ofouoedtractorwlth a
no-trlmtypemowerattaehed.
With apoclllcallon oe fol·
lows: 50 h.p. Ia 70 h.p. trat&gt;
tor, Ro .. ry cutting head on
17 boom or longer, Revero·
lble 30 lb., 4 way blad11 ca·
peble of mowing graoa and
chopplng4lndlametertreeo.
Only rnachlnto monufat&gt;
tured In the U.S.A. will be
con.. derad.
DeftveiY Tlmo: imrnedlala.
Bidder to oubmll detailed
opoclfleallono ol equlpmenl
oH.,ed : The Board ol True·
,... reaerveo. tho right to
rejactany or all blda.
Sand bldo to Harold Gra·
ham. 3800B Stott Rt. 143,

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

rROY-B/£r·

FRIE ESTIMATES

304-675-5789

Public Notice

COUNTRY MOBILE HOME
3 Nice Mol.de Ho•n for Roat

44

10x60 older modll mobile hom•, Gracl~ll living~. 1 and 2 btdexc cond, 304-57'6-Z510.
room apar1menta 11 VIllage
Manor
tnd
Rlvertldt
Till And Tille Down Preowntd Apar1mtnlt In Mlddlepor1, From
Mobllo Homu, UH You• Tow $196. Call 614-992-7787. EOH.
Rotund. 50 Hom01 'To Ch-I.
EIHI Home Ctnt•~. 1 ~g.. Modem 1 Bedroom Apartment,
5710.
:6;14__
..__-= 3;._90':.: -:-:--;---:c:Compfotly
mot .lo
1969 Baron 12x65, 2br. 2 AC, homa, 1 mileFumlohld
btilow 1awn1 overUnderpinning, Wash1r, Dryar, looking
river. No Ptlt, CA. 614Refrigerator, Stove, Part Fum ,
GOod" Condltlonl 114-446·2871 446.0338.
After Sp.m.
two
bedroom
Ont and
1984 two btdroom mobile apartments lor rent. 304-8752053 or 675-4100
homo, 2 bdrm .• 814·992-8722
Townl'louM Apt 2 Br, 2
1991 14x60 Sunshine Mobllo Tara
llooro 1,160 sq. loot, 1-112 bath,
Home, 3 Bedrooms, 2 B1th1 CA,
CH, dlshwashor &amp; disposal.
Take over payments, $23"4
Playground, 2 pools, starting
monthly 614-446-8325.
$309. Electric not Included 61(.
199'1 M1nelon double wldt, 367-7850
28&lt;64. partly burned out,
$10,000. you movo off lot, 304· 45
Furnished
675-7689 aftar 4:00PM.
Rooms
84 Schultz 14x65, 2BR. 1 112
both. CA, f!O,OOO. 304-675-3104 Roomolor ront . wook or month.
or 875-3276 oft" 5:30.
Stortl:lll f120/mo Galli&gt; Hotat.
614 4 9 0
Nice, 10o45, 2bdnn.
tully : ,..._....,_ _5t
_ _·_-,-,---.,.-1

18 6 4

po
82- Plumbmg &amp; Healmg
83-- E ~eca ~t~.hng
~ Elec.tr•u l &amp; R ,r,,'«"""''~
85- General Hs uhng
l:l6- Mobtle Home Repa1r

Business Services

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

~===::::::::::::::::::::=-r-========::1

11
White r: 1 Tw
S od resume
to
Administrator,
err It ·lr'Je, pay , P.l111cres1 Cara Cent.,, 170
~~~ 8 , ~~ ~1~~· Dog, All Pinecrest
Drlvt, Gallipolia, OH
45a31
Puppy 8 mo old, mixed Blu1 Aerobics &amp; GymnulicalnstrucTook Beagio &amp; Cocker Spaniol, foro Wonted. Cootoct o.o. Mcln·
wiiM nice dog house, 304-675· tyre Park Dtstrlct At
614-4464612, Ellt 256
6836
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
6
Lost &amp; Found
Ewcoliant
Pay,
BonoiHo.
Found· mala, yellow tomcat by Trens-"'1tlon,
407·292...•111•.'·
,.....
Pomeroy Cliff apts., very Ext. 571. 9a.m ·10p.m. ToN
lrtondty, no tall, 614·992·3863 :R7:•1:,::u:;:
ndo
::.:;=
d.7:----:-----:-----:c-,---anytfmo
AVON I All Areas I Stllrley
LOST large mala blk &amp; tan d~, .::S::,JIII:::;::"::.•:3.;0:..;-8
4 .;.75:.:..:1:::42!1
=---family pat, vary friend~,
AVON
-t
In
on
tho
gr-·nd
answers "Doble", REWAR
•·
...... floo•
304-675-6734.
' of Avant new earning tlruclurl.
1·600.992-6356.
Lost : L"ge Malt Roddloh : : - - - - - - -- Brown Dog In Patriot Area, Babyslner nHded Cheshire
ar.. , 111lerenc•s requlr~d. 614c hlld •5 p01' 614·379•2562 Aftor 367-o629.
oo;.;..
P;;.M---------I ~..:.:.:..:;...===--05;;.
CLEANING
7
Yard Sale
Ho"sok11pa11 Light
To 1550 Wk. All Shlhs,
ALL Yard Sales Most Bo P11d In ~800
:..:...:·2:.:21;._·:9:20;;.7;;..- - - --..,.Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p m Ciunlng houaokurr• tl ht
!he day be lora tl'le ad lslo run . worll aam
' to....
All ohgr
Sunday tdhlon • 2:00 p m.
·-.::.~.
...,.... w
rtl•
_r-ao'lo-~221;;;;·92~0;1:.____
Fr lday. Monday edition • 2:00 p m. Saturday
ClttnlnSJ
Hoosoliooparo, 11 m to $550Wk..
111 l'llft1
r1 11
nd lull
• pa • m• 1
·
s
time, 1-800.221·9207
Pt . Pleasant
CONSTRUCTION ALL TRADES
&amp; Vlclnlly

I

Read the Best Seller

Giveaway

"My problems 1\ith hecklers ended when I started
doing comedy With a flame thrower ··

2
1
2437 Lincoln, Pt.
:down,
-:t::
re=a-=stocatod
-:-.,.-::-lir-ow
ut 1 11
Ptt,
4-5
5- 2._o_od..;....y-ou-c""'
30 7 382

41- Howu for Rent
42- Mobtle Homet for Rent
43- Farra• for Rent
44-- Apartmenl for Rent
45-- FurnLihed Room•
~Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48- Equtpment for Renl
49-ForLeue

\11-.1\CII

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

RATES
Days

SNAFU® by Druce Beattie

~,

Int-.

tf:'"·

,....

.'
••
••
•

*'

wv. 72

sen.

.I

a: .,

Trucks

lor Sale

1177 Ford Plclt.Up For Solo 0.
Trodl. 814-2116-1121.
11171 Ford F460, 414, 400 1t01
11,21111. 11171 Portlloc Flroblra
NOQ. 304-475-1128 or 87S-78S3.
Chivy plclt-up1 now llroo,
11,800. gOod oona, ~
42U.

--:;--::::::-;:~-:--- li S

I

VI "

Cortot'o Plumbing
Fourth ond Plno
Gllllpotlo. Ohio
814-4411-3888

'•

~---------------'
84 Electrical &amp;
,~"

=..

Relrlgerat}Dn

.......,..,.

t :

or T-s auoiii 'J

oriilng, ........ Of
I l l - U...... It

a-.
tJII.

:;1

" ·~

~ :c .

II

�•

'

J

~~~=!~~~~~:;=:=:;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~O~hl~o------~------------------------~~~~~1~99~2;··

---People in the news

COriijifeieiiiniiM including beans, a

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT· Chicken nOO·
die dinner sponsored by Evangeline
Chapta' No. I72, Friday, 11 a.m. to
7 p.m., basement of the Middleport
Masonic Temple. Eat-in or carry·
OUL Cost, $3.50.

roll and half a chicken, or $3 for a
half chicken only,
MIDDLEPO_F.T · Spaghetti dinner, Saturday, noon to 6 p.m. at
First Baptist Church in Middleport
sponsored by Cornerstone Sunday
School Class. Eat-in or carry-out
available. Deliveries in the Middleport and Pomeroy area.

LONG BOTTOM • Preaching
and singing at Faith Full Gospel
Church, Friday, 7 p.m. featunng
David Dailey and the Dailey Family plus other local talent. Pastor
Steve Reed invites the public. Fellowship will follow.

POMEROY - "Elsa The
Lioness" and "Kid From Borneo"
will be presented at the Meigs
Counly Public Library Saturday
and· Sunday at 2 p.m. and at the
Middleport Library Monday at 4:30
p.m. All children invited.

ROCK SPRINGS · Meigs
County Pomona Grange, Friday ,
7:30p.m., Rock Springs Grange
Hall. Harrisonville Grange will
serve refreshments.

CHESTER · District I 3, Daugh·
. TUPPERS PLAINS • Round ters of America, will meet Saturday
and square dance at Tuppers Plains at I p.m. at the Chester Lodge Hall.
VFW Hall, Friday, 8-11 :30 p.m. ·All members are urged to attend.
sponsored by VFW Post No. 9053 Plans will be discussed by Betty
and Ladies Auxiliary. Music by Biggs, District 13 Deputy, for
CJ. and Country Gentlemen.
spring rally at New Lexington on
May 30.
POMEROY - AA meeting, Friday, 6:30p.m., JTPA office, 117
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rock
West Second Stree~ Pomeroy.
Springs United Methodist Women
will have a bake sale on Saturday
SATURDAY
at noon in the basement of the
MIDDLEPORT · Middleport church.
Youth League will hold sign-up for
the 1992 ball season on Saturday
SALEM CENTER · Star
from 9 a.m. to noon at the Middle- Grange and Slar Junior Grange will
pan Council Building. Cost is $10 meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
per child, not to exceed $25 per grange hall on County Road I near
family. Any child not playing last Salem Center. The fourth degree
season will need a copy of their obligation will be performed on all
birth certificate Membership cards candidates. Potluck refreshments
will also be available at this time will follow the meeting. All members are urged to attend.
for a cost of$ I.
RACINE • The Racine Youth
League will hold its sign-up for
baseball and softball on Saturday
from 10 a.m. to noon. If this is the
ftrst sign-up for a participant a birth
tertificate copy must be furnished.
The cost is $10 for girls softball
~nd $15 for all others.
TUPPERS PLAINS · Tuppers
Plains VFW and Ladies Auxiliary
have a soup supper with vegetable and chtli, hot dogs and
dessertS, on Saturday at 4 p.m. followed by Euchre Tournament at 7
p.m. Public invited.

wilt

RACINE · Southern Local
alumni basketball game, Saturday,
7:30p.m. at the high school. Three
elementary games will be held
before beginning at 5:30p.m.:

RUTLAND • There will be a
round and square dance at the Rutland American Legion HiiU on Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
music by C.J. and the Country
Gentlemen . Ray Fitch will be the
caller. The public is invited.
SUNDAY
RACINE • The River Valley
Boys, a southern gospel quarter,
will perform at the Carmel United
Methodist Church, just off Bashan
Road, on Sunday at 6 p.m. Rev.
Kenny Baker invites the public.
POMEROY· The Pomeroy Fire
Department will have a chicken
barbecue on Sunday beginning at
II a.m. at the fue station on Butlernut Avenue . Cost is $3.50 for a

POMEROY • Marty O'Bryant
will presenl a concert of gospel
music on Sunday at 7:30 p.m. at
the First Southern Baptist Church
on Pomeroy Pike. The public is
invited to attend.

SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) It's been 16 years since John Good·
man pledged loyalty to Sigma Phi
Epsilon at his alma mater, Southwest Missouri State University .
Now, he'll fmally gettojoin.
The actor, a 1975 graduate, said

POMEROY· A 12-step AA
meeting will begin Sunday at 7
p.m. at the JTPA Office, 117 West
Second Strcet in Pomeroy.

NEW YORK (AP) - Burt
Reynolds said he was deeply
wounded by vicious rumors and
friends who abandoned him when
he was bedridden for two years
after shattering his jaw in 1984
while making a fi,lm.

William Villers, Anamoriah,
W.Va., will speak at Mt. Olive
Community Church in Long Bot·
tom on Sunday at 7 p.m. Pastor
Lawrence Bush invites the public. .
MONDAY
POMEROY - The regional
meeting flJ{ the Soap Box Derby
w11l be held Monday at 7 p.m. at
Pleaser's Restaurant. Neil Vanderbilt will be the speaker.
POMEROY · An organizational
meeting for those interested in
planning a Sugar Run reunion for
its students will be held Monday at
7:30 p.m. at the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce/Park Distri ct office on Second Street in
Pomeroy. For further information
call Eleanor Smith at 992-2639,
Marvin and Lois Burt at 992-3101
or Linda Mayer at 992-5954.
SYRACUSE · Meigs County
Holiness Association will have its
annual camp mjleting at the Syracuse Church of the Nazarene Monday through Saturday at 7 p.m .
nightly and on Sunday at 6 p.m.
Spectal speaker and special music
nightly. Public invited. '
DARWIN· The Bedford Township Trustees will meet Monday at
7 p.m. at the town h~l.
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans will meet meet
Mond;ly at 7 p.m. at the hall, 124
Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy. State
Representative Mark Malone will
be at this meeting.
KYGER CREEK - Women
Alive, Kyger Creek, will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. There will be a
devotional speaker and Pat Elison
will be the craft demonstrator.
Refreshments. Call 992-2469 for
fiutherinfonnation.

.

Birthday observed

14 349
1

Just A"ived

1992 FULL SIZE PICKUP
~~~~.. w· -...~

v..,s.,
liiL. •·
AI/II •Hit•

Ill I"'"' P...... llodl•

WAS$IU

71

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NOW 5

JustA"ived 5

121 895

1991 CHEVROLET
LUMINA

""' ..., ......... , ... , ..... I •• • •

9875

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....., ...... ¥-6, , ...., •• '· .....
AM/IIIcou, .... _ ..W,.. 5....

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1992 FULL SIZE PICKUP

1991 OLDSMOBILE CAlAIS

lml W../shw • • H S.. *•

4 DR. 4 cyl.. air.

AII/Hicou,tliot_....._,,...._
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NOW

$9875

$8495
4 Dr. automatic, tir, 4 ql.

.,. 1114/ttorA ,.,, 4J . . , ... 4........
lfl_..,~-··

WAS$IJ,Oit

NOW ~11 1 599

169 DoWI$169PtrMo.

5

1991 GEO PRIZM

1992 FULL SIZE PICKUP

.....
""4 cyL. "'"' •., .........
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$7495

WAS$1t,l14

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.... n4/llorA '"" u

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(jp Smr ""' 111-'k. ....

11,l99 39 Dmt $139 ,... ...

1991 $-10 414 PICKUP
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1991 5-10 414 PICKUP

'

POMEROY

loarlarl, I owa11, only 12,000 mdos.

'

$8495

DECK CLINIC
9:00 AM-2:00 PM

I owa•, ox..Uoor cooolt101.

$7999
loadod. 1owa•. Hurrr.l~urlll tlmo for

$
9999

Advice!

$7999
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uc.tllllart••·

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Y·l, 3 .,..t 48,000 actuai11Bos.

52200
1986 CHEVROLET C-10
PICKUP
Slv•Mo, .,.. nllt, All/Fl. do&amp;

SAVE

THIS IS YOUR CHANCE TO SEE NEW
PRODUCTS, MEET THE SALES REPS,
DISCUSS INSTALUTION AND THEIR
PRODUCTS

REFRESHMENTS SERVED AND DOOR :·
PRIZE DRAWINGS THROUGHOUT THE
DAY. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.
.

'

BUILDING ANEW HOME? REMODELING? BRING YOUR PLANS•• ~
The following suppliers cordially invite you to attend: ·

'Staaley Bastltdt Phet11aHc Toals
'Appalachl• Sasll •d Door
'Callllllal Stairs
·•Awsca Wlldows
'Sa~tpsan Door
'Pe1se Doors
'Celatex T•H R
'Asllland Dnl~ Vltryl Sl..g
'Gel. Oar Brldt . . ,
'Fotr Seasans S.• R0011

'Snnely Forest Predud
'LP. La.. Beams
'GAF Roofllg
'SeqMia s.pp1y
•Nri S.Hc. L•ber
"Tr•WII..strles
•Anlerlca~ Shltld.d
'Lasca Flbergllss
•aopay Gw... Doors
•aassk Doors · · ·

r

'BriCe Floorlag
'AIIIstroag Cel.. gnle
'Kalller
•Aqua Glass
•Delta Faucets
'Dykelildustrles
'C.adca Windows
•s~erwln Wlhns Paint
"B&amp;I Wholesale
'Aidersell wi.dows

::

~ ~.TH;FR) Paid

: :.
• '

G • Donlltul
iiJ lmurlt

·.

' -~

, · O&amp;lltpolts, OH · . · Phone:.(614)446-0002

Store Hours: :Uon.-Sa.t. 8:CXM.m to 8:00pm
Bunda.V 12:00 nOOn to 600pm

:•

~(TU) MOVII:

1 '~

.••

-·.,,..

•

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III.C I.N
4:31 (J) .,., lluncll
4:55 a (WE) Colage llull11blll

PINnt

TH) ICicld Vldlo '

'-TPovloh

(I)

Ill

~ IIOVII: Pun and

!!!':

'tlpt

laact:yltl'd,.,.,.;.

• ollmtnJ lloullon Ouldaort

~=~-r-:-~·k
I:OI(J) WCW ,_Hour

~='-·
~

• • Qarlldo

. IDl DonlltUI
i1J (MO,TU,WE,TH) Jull 1M
Ten of Ut
:: ~quako: Word

1:30(1);Pntltlrl
(1)
!11 a!ric Q

AZ~r~·

(1).
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a hllhr1rPIP•IIrktw•

., Iuper Mlr1o lrot.
. . .rllltOW
5:01 (J) Happr . , .

lSI

IIIII ClttdtUIIIII Q

(J) W~ God

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!:!:

IIJl
l ld'a lxaelllnt
~
Mutant Ntnjl
!D
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TidiM
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Jolllllll

Mag dN
2:50 (J) (WP.I'RI Ton of l'un
a:oo!lle IDlllnll .....
(I) Thlllol..-ttn
Olnl4lt nurllll
(1) (MO) .... of JoJ of

•w~ Thta
-

Ill PltnM Vltlllnt Stereo. Q
1D:DI !IJIIIIIMI Qaogntphlc
P•r toNI
1Ul !2). 0 CNp a r a

Ill Ill•

.'

c.- •• tm

5:31 (I) Jtllet-

CSN on PBS: Gra)'hair ·

and' ~reat·harmony . · ·
NEW YO K (AP) - Crosby,
Stills and Nash SJICIII most of the
1980s as a kind.orsip.t PI for the
Woodstock generation. ThO guys
who looted so poovy bllck in ''69
were balding, graying and bulging,
and their look sOmetimes ditlnlcled
people from their IOUliCI. ·
Now, however, with the
irrevocal!ly comnliliOd to, m die
ase - Graham Nash is SO! attention can shift bac~ to the

music, which lias~ 1110111 altl'llc·

,I!~i::
ff!":.:'='
01'1J

a

D World CUP 8tdlng
Amencan Ski Clattle;
WOfllfln'a downhil tram van,

e wt.e•a Waldo?

Colo. (T)

ill NIWI/Fulln WitCh
5:00 (l) Frugal Oour- tlw
Amtrtcan lodl Founllln
Jeff SJTl(th and Craig Woltam
lnvne vi1We11 to share tn the

iiJ My Slotar S.m Iii
ta 0otng Our Way

=~
ra Collage llakltllltt
PllviiW
a 8 Nol Jull111t NIWI

Clalllc rtCipeS of an old

soda lountallllnd
tJ'cheonette. (t :30) Stel'eo.

AFTERNOON

~~~a Fer Away

.YIIF

12:00 I]). IIIII Wlnldlmln'l
Clood Fllllttng Babe and
daughter Donnie spend a
weekend camping and
flllling; trolling lor lake trout
()) Soul Tllln
(!)From I Country Olrden

8
rrJ)

Ill My Two Dedi
1B Eattyl'rtntl

aWorld
• w1c11
wor1c1 or 1por11
Challenge of

IIIWerld

Champions, danoa
competition from Otto,
Norway; Santa Anita
Handicap ~ Arcadia, Catll.
(T); ldharod report.
Dlonanaa

5:05 (J) Fltlllng With Rollnd
Martin

5:30 (!) Wind In lit Wlttowt
Ill Oonao OlmH
ta Counby 1111 Stereo.
ID 8entor PQA Ooll GTE
West, 2nd round ~ Ojal,

:f',!h.

Calli. (L)

ill Nlwamalcar
s.tunlly/NIWI

l'lllrle
12:30 I]). S.lnllkl Jerry Is

5:35 (l) Flthln' With Ortando
Wlllon

dlatractad·by a woman who
commas e ha-and-run
accident. Stereo. ~
(!) Vlc1ory Olrden
~· ABC WHit
Bpecllt
Thta Old HouM
0 IIIII Wlnlllemln 1 Clood
Flllllllfl Babe and daughter
Donnie spend a WMJ&lt;end
camping and fishing; trolling
tor take trout.

EVENINO

1:00 C2l • (I). Ill D •
Nlwa
ell Ulea1ylaa ofliMl Rk:ll a
FIIIIOUI
(!) Wid Arnartcat Sterto. Q

2

II)) • Qludgt Milch

IDl TV Honor lactatr

OCDJZ*"•'*••
ill World Today

a. Hlgh.Q

iiJ Nlllonll Geclgllphtc: On
AlllgnmtM

Qll Onlat Amlllcln 0u1t1aort
. Fishing lor boneflsh In tt1e
Florida Keys. Stereo.
0 Colltgt lllllcltiiiM Big
South Conference
Tournamen~ championship
from Anderson, S.C. (L)
r8 Evana and Novak
(I D Paid Program
1:001]).
RozupIsto a
lorcectNight
to tryCoult
and live
pen pal'~,_...,,,
St:1
,....-·-·

Wttl

(!) 011111 Ameltcln OuHt
Stereo.
(I) • Dwtgltt F,.....n
Mallhlll basketball.
(!)IIOmellme
ill
!De Pilei Proglllll

~rc~AJ:.:r.~nd

Nauonat•s Hardtt·s 200
teleCasts live lr6m Richmond
lntel'Riltlonat Raceway In
Richmond, Va. (L) Stereo.
ra NniDIJ
a a Colage lllkltllll
Michigan State at ltllnola (L)
1:01(1) MOVIE: Till Lind Thll
Tlmll Forgo! (PGJ (2:00)
1:30 (!)
Ill •Strip
Bporlacanter
Oull1tng With Klye
Wood

e

(I) Mctunlll- Mlglllnl
(}) Allvintlnt In Bella

::.:lt
Madallng

PICklf'l Colltgt

L5ofKidt
ID WIIJOII Tnlln
2:00 I]). Cottage llltltltllll
SEC Wltd Clrd Game (L)
(D . _ , Julltc:t

(!) llwlntl Will NIIICJ
(I) • WY1F w,.atll11g
Clllllllfll

r.

!il~-Hall 11 St. John's (L)
........
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Amerlcln
Cup..

2:30(!) .... of., of Patnllng
Ill Calaga lllllcltllll
Colorado Stall II Wyoming
(L) ..__• ......, ~ ~~-

8 ..... ., •.• - ..... _
Klanach

3:00(1)...,.. uagu• ........
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Bltwers at Chandler, Ariz.
((!)~) w-................ -... Rick
11u1z Stereo.
(I)• PIA lowttng Paula
Clrter•a Homeelttd Cla11ic
from Homelltld. Fta. IL) Q
; Thl A l i t - . Stereo.

. . . . . . . ., .,

lllmodaltng and
= T o c.l.lr

Manu
ill
llllllllll
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(L)

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(2:00)
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Pllce (2:00) Stereo. Iii
QllllltnocteMng 1nd
o.-etlna Toclly
lllllold IIKtng R~elne Sk
frOm Los Angeles {T)
ra NewtDiy
a a lOb Vlta'a Home
V'""nlln
...
12:01 (l) Llt1le ~ on the

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Ill lonlertown Stereo. Q
1:01 (J) Wttrld Clllltplottllltlp
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1:30~~ 0 NIC Newe &amp;:;I
- Hank w.tami

p"':i.-,.s
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1D Zorro Stereo. Q
7:00;· dl Wlllll of Forlune
lluMway With lhl Rtcll a
fllftOUI
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7:30 (I)~ ill Cllllt !•t II I n
(j) 100,000 Forlune Hunt
• Church B1rii!BIItlon
D Coltga llllllclllll
Mld·Eittem Alhlltlc
Conference Tournament,
championship ~ Nortolk,
V I . = lllurdly
ill
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10 llacll Stalan 818reo. Q
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allows hll buddltt - . t
pictures of Rou modltlllQ
t~rie.S~
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help 1n aeeldtnl victim out of "'
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Onlvayllll lhtft It (II) (2:001
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....
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tereo.
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rgllry auapee1. (R)

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On Saturday night, PBS offers a
Will ~
fine opportunity to enjoy the uio's
Kllllllh
Cooklnl Stereo.
·
~
provocatlvdonasand inventive
.o laalmgallllt Z,O .
(}) W11M In ... Welld II
. 10:00(1)• --.Tidcly 11111
T.;
harmonies. "Crosby, Still.s and
11:001•, IJiaflllltrlltltl
~e.tdlaga?lltereo,
MIICIIIIOottoracat"'llhll ~
Nash: The Acoustic Concen," is
111e jiQA 0o11 00111
run ~- (A) Slll'eO. liJ
IChedUied 10 air IS a fdan:h plcctse
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(I) Nlwi
.
special for netwo~t affiliates, so
· &lt;lle
nu.rr
~.-...,CIIr LlllllaC! ~-• ·~
checlc local listings.
lhtiir
..,
• "- • • '
;
Tlie r,rformance, taped at lite
--•
Warftel
lilni'Jn
illellllllll tie .
Htctcory, N.C. (T) .
SinO.
.
last yeu,
..., multi)' II! w t
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voices accompa·
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4:31i(l)eWide Wctlld ollpolti
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lively than the mUilcians.

Good

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D (THI W_.. TIMII

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Frugll 0011111111 Stereo.

:~

10:00(1)• iiJ Wl8hKid f1lrltng
Ma~••ov ,., ...,_ C

D(THI1'IIorouglltlle
Digiti

11:30~~=Q

Swimming Trills (T)

Dl'lllltft' 11011

~Truck

Handic.,llrom AICidlll, Calli.

iiJ MOVI!: The F,rltoo Kid

=:::=-"

Amtrlcl

·=Jenkins' "" '

!il; ldttarod

Gymna1tica; U.S. OlympiC

111 Hollywood
a Jot of Cllnllnlng

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1:00 (I). 1DJ Clpllllct NlliCI . .
New
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2:30 (I) Andy Qrtflltll
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• (MO.TU,Wl!,I'R) On

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1:05 (J) lonanaa
1:30 (I) e OJ Yo, Yoglt Q
(I) Mlltolll) lluatnett Raport
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(!)No,_ Ulte Home
ill Wide WOIId of KJc11
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ltlu1lful

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4:00 (I) e !Ill I[J Oprlllt Wlnlnty

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ID 1!8PN Ouldaort
ill llni/1Dot11 Clote-Up
iiiD NAAtP ACT·SO
Awardt I'NWil4atluoJ
High-school studenlt are
honored In the areas or
science, humanities and 1he
arts. Host Vernon Jarrett.

OScntbbte
aJITopCird
"
a1 (MO,TU,TH) NCAA Flnlt
Four Hlghttghll
0 (WEI
Pro Snow
Biding

The Deatclly Cargo
.
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(WE) MOVIE: Empn of
liMl Anti
(I) (TH) MOVIE: TMintulla:

: 1:01 (J) 1DrHm ot JMnnll
: , 1:30 l!)lo&amp;o
•
(}) Millar Aogara'
::
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1 owtttr, automatic.

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(I) DuckTataa

!Ill D

Hlmmannan Q
Ill Poptya
7:01 (I) QuniiiiOke
7:30 (j) WOIId T (I) • iiJ Clp1aln Planet
and the PtallltMnl "
91 Agrt Cowlb, .,.

Partltna

(I)

..

1990 BUICK CENTURY 4 DR.
MUSTSIE

'

a.

IDIK'
ID 8poiiiCill Day...ak

(J) (TH) Flnanclll AdNora
(J) (FR) Art or fttam

Ill (FR) MOVIP: '1111 Qlrl
From Mila
1:05 (I) (MO) MOVIE: DIJ of lit
Anlmlla
(I) (TU) MOVIE: '1111 Savage

•
•' '· 1:00 ® (MO,TU)S.ved by the
llttt
(j) (WE,TH,FR) OuckTalla
(}) Lamb Chop'a PIAJ·Aioltrl
liD • Plter Pan a 1111
Pt11181
rf .'
iiJ Scooby Doo
r·
'
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We have invited our
primary building
material suppliers and
manufacturers to
display their products.

1987 CHEV. ASTRO
CONVERSION VAN

vacatloo

'

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iiJ 8cooby Doo
• llusklett Illy
!Ill Poptyt

7:00 (I)
(I) •Litty
Mr.Jonel
Clrtoon
(I) • i1J Paid Prog11111
Ill U.S. F11111 Repoll
II)). lucky O'H1111 and.the
TOld Wlnl
aJ ~TVtnapeciOr Gldgtt &amp;:;1

(J) (MOl Mlgtc or 011
PI~~luck Paullon
(J) ~v~ Uvtng With

~uclt~~
Foitlldden
Ill
MOVIE: Madrot:

(}) .......Street

ill tnterniiiQnel
Connpondenta/Newt
Ill Mldwell A,.,_ Fishing
lor large mouth bassin
Porter County, Ind.

(1) Mlater Rog~r~'
Nllghllolltood

Twatn'a~or

!Ill G. CIS Thla Morning
llllll J - Bond Jr.
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Frllnda
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rl!Daylreak
DALI'
7:30 liD. 0.1. Joe

Biding F)rom Mount Blehetor,
Ora. (R

3:05 (J) Tom 1nd Jerry'•
Funhouat
3:30 (I) lived by lhl Sell

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(}) lTV Programming
IIJl II MIIIOck
II! The Judge
Cookln' IJSA
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In Motloll
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12:05 (J) Perry Mlton
12:30(1). IDl ACiour Look
With Filth Dlnltlt
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91 1!21• Young and liMl
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ill (MO,FRJ eou.m, Kltchan
(TU) Ramodlltng and
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ill (WE) 8ldt IIY 8ldt
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(MO,ru,WI!,TH)

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1:45 I]) NIWI

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NBC

1:30 (I). llllunlly Repoll
(J) 111tt111n 1M I.!Mt
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1D. 1J1t1e Mlrmlld
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iiJ Divorce Court

u:oo IDJ
Ill • w l.ll •
NtWI

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Af'TERNOON

iiJ (MO) Paid Program

1988 CHEVROLET'/, TON
PICKUP

·

Mogul Tour from Mammoth
Mountain, Clltn. (R)
ill Spoilt LlltNight
1:00 (J) Fllllttn' With Orllndo
WH1011
Ill Ill Pllkl Plogrlm

(!) (TH) Economics
~-AdventunJa In Scale

11:35 (l) (TH) Andy Qtflfttll

(}) (M0) AIJIInll AI Odda:
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(!) (WE) Bualn~aa and liMl
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(!) (Fill Clrowlng Y1111
llll• Mllrte Mllodtaa

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91 D • Prtcl II Right
liD. Buccett·N·Uie
!IJl 0111 on 0111 With John
Teah
iiJ Divorce Court
ID CletUng FH
1B DlyWIIch
Ill llllrt to llllrt With
Shalla Wallllt
11:30(!) Blume 1111111
IDl Cllllllc Coo-tbatlon

World Chllilngl of ,
Champions, dance

Mountalnllr Mgulnl

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a 11 cas Mamlng ,...,

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(1) (WE) Mllgtc of Acryttc
Palnllng With lrendll Hlnlt

11:00 (I) • Mltay Povlch
()) JOin Rlvell

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0 CBS Morning Nawa
llllll Tllnage Mutant Nlnll
Turttea
1!2111 CNN Newa
1211 lodtea In Motion
liD Todly With Mlrttyn
5:05 (l) I Lova Lucy
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a Olttlng Fn
,
ra Dayllteak
' &amp;:351]) • NBC Nlahtatde
:
(l) CNN Hlldftne Newt
' 8:00 I]). i[J) NBC Newl at
Sunrltt
()) Shtpherd'a Chapel
Documantary
I]) ABC World NIWI Thlt
Morntna
!!l (M0) AIJIInat Att Odda:
tntldt StaUitiCI
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i1J (WE,TH) My Siller S.m
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(I) II ABC W
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Building
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&amp;:00 Ill MOVIE: Charlll Chan II
TNUiniiiMd (1 :30)

a

MORTON® SALT

1st Annual

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SATURDAY
MARCH 7th
8 AM TIL 4 PM

MORNI!tQ

. liiJ Ag WMictnd Report
Snow Siding Budweiser

/ '

MULBERRY AVE.

8

SAT.. MARCH 7

aa01rnaPnt

t1ow Yen

WIYX

ID

·:~~ - -

Amanda Jeffers, daughter of
John and Kathy Jeffers, Albany,
observed her fourth birthday
recently at Showbiz Pizza in Parkersburg, W.Va.
·
Others attending were her
maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Tommy Simmons, Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Simmons,
Thomas, Tyler and Trista, Tuppers
Plains;' Mr. and Mrs. Danny
McDonald, Mindy, Angie, Danny
Jr. and Tiffany, Rutland; Melanie
Dudding, Pomeroy.
Sending gifts were paternal
grandmother, Mildred Jeffers, Dexter; Mr. and Mrs. Kenney
Longstreth, Langsville; Mr. and
Mrs. Lanny Longstreth and Corey.
and Ida Rock ; South Charleston,
W.Va.

II

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•• AM/II . .
WAS$I6,07S
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.

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AMANDA JEFFERS

- ......,...==·...,.
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8

CMi' ,

'I ;

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SATURDAY

WPIY

1,"

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CHEV.·OLDS.CAD. GEO

Vkt., n4 ""' V-6, llllllllk, SlvonU.

WEEKLY

ln the forthcomiAg Parade mag·
azine, Reynolds said he even :
advised Loni Anderson, now his :
wife, to leave him.
"I told her she was young, that
I'd probably be an invalid all my
life the career was over, the·money ·
wo~ld go. Leave me. Find someone ·
else. She never left my side," :
Reynolds said.
. :
The accident occurred whtle .
Reynolds was making ''City : .
Heat." He was hit on the temple
with a chair. "It shattered my jaw,
the ... joint cracked like an egg." ..
He couldn't chew. Light and sound
were unbearable.
·
"And then the rumors started. ·
The AIDS stuff. The gay stuff. I
was incredibly hurt. But what
amazed me were the friends who
abandoned us." ·
,

DO 'A'E
FIC'I'ORY PROGRAM
CARS

he couldn't afford full frat membership.
'
"I ran out of money," Goodman said.
Goodman, who plays the husband on the ABC sitcllJTl
" Roseanne," will be initiated Saturday in a private ceremony, fraternity President Tim Mueller said.
Goodman said he pledged
Sigma Phi Epsilon as a student
because "they're a great bunch of
guys. A lot of guys from my high
school are brothers."

.

f

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~

~,PIIIICilcoba

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BORN LOSER

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Television
Viewing

CAUC.D AMl P.AUE,
WP'I~!

HIT IT DOWN
Tllf; /AIOOtf ~

•

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p

EVENINO
8:00 C2.J 8

~~I

WRudl~alnbow Q

3- 6

SO.IN5TEAD OF PITCHING JT,
WH'r' DON'T'r'OU JUST DROP IT ?

r-

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~

Grandma to new bride,

.

.

.

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;

you four reasons for why he IS
doing something , the real
reason is usually ---' of ....."

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Complete tho chuckle quolod

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

by f illing in the missing words

'--L--L-..__..L...J

NU Q H E C

· 6:05 (]) Beverly Hlllbllllee
8:30 C2.J 8 II)) NBC NIWI ~
(]) laved by lila IIIII
(I) (I) 8

ABC Newt
C
Square Onel"TStereo.

(I) Wild America

8

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18 Andy Griffith
II1J Scooby Doo
aiUpCioH
all New ZorTO Stereo. Q

LETTERS

;

@)

IN SQUARE S

Iori

.
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
; ..!
Shroud - Clank - Lousy - Forger - ENOUGH
"I'm allowed to eat danish on my second diet," an·
nounced the overweight woman . "because my lifst diet
doesn't give me ENOUGH to eat!"

.8:35 (]) Andy Orllfltll

WhHI of Fortune

roCIJ lnelde
The Jenereona..D
Edition t;r

MllcNeUiehrer
NeweHour
(I) e Cend camera
(}) Llglalatlve UP!!Itt
1m Current Antlr ~
® ID Star Trek: Tlie Next
Generation C
aJ e ·oreal &amp;J!."Clllliona
iiJ MecOyver 1;1
a1 SporteCenMr
Qll Moneyllne
all MOVIE: Rln Tin Tln end
tho Pa~e Conaplracy (2:00)
7:05 (]) lddama Family
7:30 C2.J II Cancer Special (D:3D)
(!)Now It Cen Be Told
(I) Ente!!!!lnment Tonight
Stereo. 1;1
IJlfll Mam~...With ChNdran

FRANK AND ERNEST
~~~--------------~------.

~fLp SAVf 7tff

fNVI/lOftiMfNT··

tAT' OU/l CHit.i

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THI"G6 SIJ~
iltREN'T LII&lt;E
THEY WERE
WHEN TUN~
WI'&amp; KING.

115 MecNeiiL!,_ehrar
NewaHOIWI;!
1m Wheel of Fortune 1;1
llJ 18 Family Feud
II)) Jeopardy! c
a Be I Sill Sfereo.
aiSkl Wortd
Qll Croaeflre
7:35 (]) Sanford I Son
8:00 C2.J B II)) Metiock Matlock
confronts mob members who
abduct Michelle. Stereo. Q
(]) MOVIE: Steel die Sky
(2:00)
(I) (I) 8 Family Matiere
Urkel sues Carl lor causing
the death of his pot. (R)
Stereo. C
(I) W11Mngton WHk In
Review Stereo. ~
~ ll2l• Scorch Stereo. 1;1
® 18 Amarlca'e Moll
Wenled A mastermind jewel
lhlef; a Florida magician
whoee~ks are deadly.
Stereo.
II1J Mu
, She Wrot. 1;1
a On Stege Stereo.
a1 World Cup Skeleton From
Lake Placid, N.Y.JI)

J

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Re, ! EiUE55
f'e N\OVINIS AWAY.

MINT- FLAVORED
100THP10&lt;6.

J

..---... J

BARNEY
I HATE TO SET

I'LL BE
UP IN TH'
HAYLOFT

HERE AN' WATCH YOU
CHDPPIN' ALL THAT
WOOO, MAW!!

Welterwtlghl ChampiOnship:
Kevin Pompey (24-4·1, 11
KOs) vs. Stephan Johnson
(t&amp;-3-1, 1D KOs), 12 rounds,
from Catskill, N.Y. (L)
9:00 (IJ 8 II)) I'll Fly Awey A
reporter threatens to
blackmail Forreat on the eve
of the election. Stereo. 1;1
(I) (J) e Baby Telk A
jealoue singer refuses to
record James' advertising
jingle. (R)·Stereo. C
til OM! Pe!formlnc..
Selections from Bob Fosse's
many worl&lt;a ere profiled. 1;1
(!) Wllhlngton Week In
Revltw Stereo. C
1111 llJ e Teqlllllencl
Bonetti Stereo. C
liD 18 Hidden Vkfio Mothers
sellhelr daughters up to
marry MTV'a Adam Curry.
Stereo.
11)1 Beyond RHIIIy
Ill Nelhvllll Now Stereo.
Ill Larry King Uvel
Ill Ftlllt!.Dowllng MylleMI
S\areo. 1;1
8:30 (I) CMen
(J) 8

WEST

EAST

+J98Z

.KJ3

• Q 106

+KQJ 103

+ts

+n 1

+QB 63

SOUTH
+AQ?643

U5
+A2

Who was right,
North or South?

ACROSS

iJ
Teue Connection Stereo.
rD Top Rank Boxing USBA

LOTT'E1l'f TICKET 1,.4Sl'WEB&lt; .

+A 8 2
+10 5

• 764

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North
South

West

Nortb

••

2+

2+

Pass

4+

3+

Eaol
Pasa
Pass
All pasa

••

Opening lead: +K
'------------'

mond nol to the jack bul to the king.
Then he should have led the diamond
jack for a ruffing finesse, discarding a
club loser if East didn't play the
queen.
Who is going to become your best
friend, North or SouUt?
North was correct. This latter play
guarantees the contract. Here the fi·
nesse wins, but suppose West has the
diamond queen. He niay cash one club
trick, but SouUt's heart loser will dis·
appear on the diamond 10.
llolden "" !Dvltod to -

,,.,.r.
.....

Cllrd-ploy q -

UOIJI to PIUIHp Aid«, iiJ CIIY of WI
l'lloy""' br .,...,..., . . , ......... tbr ra~
(5),-., ...... APUINIUU IIUUL

1~. Hocking, Jackson, rxteigs and
Vmton counues. Public 'comment
begi_ns March 24, and a public
heanng ~ill be h~ld in Wellston
M_ay 7. Fmal. revtstons to Ute pl;m
wtll be constdered by the Policy
Comm1t1ee at a later time.
The new plan must he ratified
by three sets of local government
bodies before it can he sent to Ute
Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency for review.
The plan must have Ute support
of four of Ute six boards of county
commissioners, as well as at least
four of Ute largest city councils,
village councils or city commission

in the district, including Athens,
Gallipolis , Logan, Jackson,
Pomeroy and McArthur,
It must also have the backing of
city/village councils and boards of
township trustees representing at
least 60 percent of the district's
total population.
·
· The district's previous plan was
criticized by area environmental
groups for the amount of out-of·
state trash that could be brought
into the district due to contracts
signed by district officials wiUt Ute
operators of three new landmls.
District officials countered Utat
limits are imposed against out-of·

By JIM FREEMAN
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis
man died in a one-car crash on
Burlthan Lane in Gallipolis Friday
evening.
Gary C. Roach, 39, 1591 State
Route 588, was northbound on
Burkhan Lane, ·approximately 500
fee( south of 588'; ~6~n'iiis 1983
Pon1iac Phoenix went off the left
side· of Ute road, over an embank·
ment and rolled onto its left side.
Roach, who was not wearing a
seat belt, was panially ejected and
pinned under Ute car.
Dr. Edward Berkich, Gallia
County coroner, said Roach died

from a fractured neck and heaq
injuries.
Gallipolis City Police said the
ftrst two people at Ute scene were.
unable 10 locate a pulse on Roach.
Gallia County resc.ue and emer·
gency medical service personnel
were called 10· the scene at 9: 12
p:m. Air bags were used 10 help lift
the car so Roach could be extracted
from Ute wreckage.
Total time 'of ·extraction was
approximately 45 minutes.
The Willis Funeral Home, Gal·
lipolis, is handling burial arrange·
ments.
The crash was the second· in
Gallia County in 1992 10 result in a
fatality.

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

llllnlll7,111:1

Y#Nt ~lltiM for.,,.._. are much
*'*P
In !he yur alltld than they ·
_.laiC yur. Tille Ia becauM you've

...... -

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JIIIICII ~- 20 II1RII 20) There'a a
J ll,lllillty you mlghl bt attrected to
· ,Mi 11 ana today who repr_,ta forbid·
IIIII 1n11t. Think thingl through 10 thllt
;·yau4on'fgellr)voMd In i llluatiOn wHh
II II\ melle praDIII • . K- - · lo
JIIU'IIInd n, Tho
M1ro-0n1P11 MIICI'""Iker lnllently ....

_..,.,-end
\

to use somethlog - where you were

blameless - against you In an attempt
fo belittle you to a friend. Defend
yourself.
,
TAURUS (April 20-Mey 20) An alliance
of convenience might have Its durebllity
tested today, and the resulti could be
rather disappointing. The substance
lhal blndalhla union Is not firm enough.
QIIIIIHI (MaJ 21-.IIIM 20) Your handl·
work will be closaly ICfutlnlzed by supe.
riorl and anocietea today. ~· 1 Bllr1d
enythlno out to which you wouldn't
prOI'dly eftlx your llgnature,
CAMCIR i.llmt 11..1UIY Ill) Social In·
volwtnenls will have a llgnHicant elloi:f
on your lmagelodl)l, ao be on your best
behavtor. lf you're a guest, 1t1ve before
you - r out your welcome.
LIO (Jutr 2t-Aut. Ill) Don't do things
for others today out of a sense of obli·
galiOn. II you do not do them from your
helfl, the recipient could fltl uncom·
fortlblt, wllhlng you hlldn'l done
anything.
VIIIQO (Aug. U..lepl. Ill) lnatead of

expend on your behalf today, you mll!ht
criticize them for fho way they do things.
This won't encourage them to help

again.
.
LIBRA (BepL 23·0ct. 23) Your resources must be managed prudently to•
day with an eye toward future needs.
Failing to budget wisely now could
cause probleii)S down the road.
SCORPIO (Dol. 24-Nov. 22) II you know
that what a youngster wants Is not for
the chHd's good, don 't give In today.

57 Quartet
member
58 Ripe
59 Cupid
8001d

1 UK mil. pllota
21blln character
3 Amerlcen
Indian
4 Something
remerkllble
(II.)
5 Mortar mixer
6 Relating lo

grendperenia
7 Hebrew
proplltl
8 Iron (clolhtt)
10 Numbtrt
1I Haith plent
12 Went without
food,

c.

You may have to face a situation where

FUNDS FOR MORE • Low·lacome Melp
womeu, pregnant or post partum, aDd lbeir cblidren under nve are encoura&amp;ed to apply, tor
· nutritional aud rood 1sslstanee ·through the
· Meigs· County Health Department WIC Pro-

·

t.r=l

I

I

:::!'!C:Q .

e Arlllllo IIIII Stereo.
.

'

.

•

gnm. Fuadlng tor abo11l a bulldrecl aew c!leals

is currently avaUable. Medlcaluset~~~meul is one
facet of lbe prqgram aud here Deborah Babbitt;
R. N., checks mother's blood for anemia.

a

NeW sewer district Jo serve
•
·
•t
. ,ppers PI
. a1ns co~mun1 y
To

til Qrwt PtifonniiHarry Coonlck Jr. performs
With I full Oldleatra In
Dalila. Stereo.
(!) ClrHt l'erformlncet
Selectlonl from Bob FOIII'I
!llln~ works .,. profiled. !;!

I

levied by Ute district's landfills.
• Adoption of a policy calling
Significant revisions 10 the orig· for strict environmentally-conina! plan include:
scious criteria 10 be used in local·
• Adoption of a rule limiting Ute ing future landf~ls .
entry into Ute ilistrict of trash from
• An increase in lipping fees 10
anywhere in Ohio and out·of,state eliminate a deficit in Ute district's
sources 100 miles beyond the dis- operation projected in Ute original
trict's boundaries.
plan.
• Establishment of a water rcmc·
Should Ute new plan be ratified
diation fund to to meet pollution it won't be submitted to Ute state
problems caused by landfills. The EPA in time 10 meet the agency's
fund has Ute potential to fmance a June 24 deadline. However, Neal
district-owned landfill when cur· noted, EPA will extend Ute dead·
rent dumps are filled . Money for line so long as the district has a
the fund would come from a 10· plan in development.
cent surcharge on tipping fees

wearing 1 seat belt, was partially ejected and
pinned under the car when It rolled over an
embankmeut. (Times-Seutiuel photo by Jim
Freeman)

"Our hope is that WIC in conjunction wiUt oUter health services
will help bring about a healthy
course and outcome of pregnancy
and optimal growth and develop·
ment of participants," she continued.
A participant must be a resident
·of Meigs County, must be deter·
mined to be in nutritional need by.a
WIC healUt professional, and must
meet income guidelines.
Once certified for Ute program,
a panicipant is eligible for a specific period of time and Uten must be
re-evaluated on a regular basis to
determine continued eligibility .
Continued on A·3

Gallia, Meigs jobless figure8 increase

e 20/20 Stereo. Q

tough love Is necessary.
111 ar • w-Are Wid A
SAGinARIUI (Nov. 23-Dtc. 21)
linger It \hrMIInld when an
Guard agllnat the Inclination today to
obleiMd fan ltll'lllollowlng
take full credit lor something In which
you played only a small pari. You could
be emberr-.J later, when the truth
comes to light
WIIIIIINiwt
'
CAPRICORN (Dtc, III·J8F!- 11) If
fGO CltiiiWIII Pat
haven't been getting as much mileage
na' 11an
as you think you should pa geltfng from
'lllllllltltt ...
your budget, it'S time to make some re· 10:30 Creilllllll
ChaN
visions. Begin today by curbing non-"ea·
'
....... Cult 'II
santlal e•pendlturoa.
Ill MOVII: l'or YtNt 1,.1
AQUARIUS (Jan: 20-.FIIb. 1g) Slgnlll· 10:10 ontr
(PO) (2:45)
cant achievements are possible today,·
11:00(1).
Ill 11)8 • • •
but the world Isn't going to strew roee
llllllwl
pedals on your path juat be&lt;:auae you're
a nice person. Motivation end effort are ,
alio required.

miuees, told the Jackson Journal

Herald.

caseload increase.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Assessing growth rate, analyz·
Seutiuel News Staff
POMEROY • Nearly 100 ing blood for anemia, and evalua·
income-eligible pregnant and post· tion of diet intake are among the
partum women who are breast· nutritional services provided for the
feeding, and their children under clients, Ute nurse explained.
This nutrition education is an
five, can be added 10 Ute medical
imr.mant
part of Ute program, she
and nutritional service of the
satd,
and
every effort is made
Women, Infant and Children
(WIC) program at the Meigs Coun- through education to bring about
positive and pennanent changes in
ty Health DeparunenL
Deborah Babbitt, project dircc· eating patterns so that health is
tor, said that currently .there are improved.
"WIC is a health program
more than I ,000 clients participat·
designed
10 operate as an adjunct 10
ing in Ute WIC program, but that
existing
low
cost prenatal, pediatric
Ute level of funding from Ute Fed·
clinic
and/or
physician services,"
eral Government· $103,743 for
Babbitt
said.
fiscal year 1992 · allows for .a

DOWN

goea .to a restaurant where
you eaten your own dinner.
(R) Stereo.
11)1 lily llrlclbury 1'111111f
10:QO (IJ 8 101 Nlgltan.,. Clfe
Frank helps a woman to
· eacape from her alltgtdly
abu.W. huabend. Stereo. Q
~Men

..

Meigs WIC project director
says caseload
has
been
increased
.

nld g1rment

lllllr Mary Is annoyed

(I) (J)

state refuse and Utat negating the
contracts will not stop landfill
operators from obtaining EPA
approval. WiUtout district rules in
place, Ute landfills can accept trash
from anyhwere, officials added.
The new plan is also under ftre
from environmentalists for rnaking
only small revisions 10 the original
proposal.
"Our outspoken opponents are
not satisfied wiUt Ute revisions, but
we hope Utat enough changes have
been made to sati~fy the govern·
men I entitjes," Jackson County
Commissioner Dale Neal, chainnan
of the executive and policy com·

FATALITY SCENE- A Gallipolis man,
Gary C. Roach, 39, of 1591 Stale Route 588, died
in Ibis oue-car crash on Burkhart Lane, GallipO.
lis, about 9 p.m., Friday. Roach, who was not

018 Hidden VIdeo A&lt;:OUple

veals which signs are romantically per- being appreciative or the efforts others

.

Edna C. Cook, 83, Rio Grande,
died from injuries resulting from a
head-on collision on U.S. 35 near
Rio Grande on Feb. 3.
A second wreck occurred near
the site of the Roach fatality while
police and emergency crews were
at the scene. .
.
·
According to a police report,
Virginia•L ThOmas, 64, Pomeroy,
was eastbound on 588 and failed 10
see officers at Ute crash scene.
She lost control of her 1986
Oldsmobile Ciera, which went off
Ute left side of the road and struck
some mailboxes, Ute report stated.
Thomas was reportedly unin·
jured in the accident.

by her marriage when her'
credit rt:a threatened.
Stereo.
\f4 Weft
Week Stereo.

feet lor you. Mall $2 plus a long, self-ad·
dr-.J, stamped envelope to
1',1atchmaker, c/o lhls "-~Jer, P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
ARIII (March 21·Aprll 11) Your reputation Ia one of your most precious ••·
sets. Today, an acquaintance might try

14 Stctlont, 80 Peg~e
AMultimedia Inc. Newapeper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, March 8, 1992

Gallipolis man dies
in one-car crash

44 Be ·lllent
(mualc)
48 Uncle
47- -the
ground floor
49 Winter :
athlete
51 AclrtllSignoreI
53 Eellly don·

1 ActorJulia
5 Runway
9 Shrewd
12 Prefer
131naecl
antenna
t4 Degredtd
16 Single llema
18 Mlnut
t9 Ettclrlcal
unll
22 Runa away
24 Fnt alrcreft
(ebbr.)
25 Loa Angelot
team
27 Vertlcally
29 StorehOUII
31 Tenaeal
35 Poked fun at
371nrudlnen
(2 wda.)
38 Weary
40 Perlilnlng to
en age
4t Cup

Cloudy. High near 70.

New solid waste plan awaits panel's decision

GALLIPOLIS - A revised
solid waste management plan was
sent 10 Ute Policy Committee ofUte
multi-county .district overseemg
regional trash concer~s for
approval, following Ute fat lure of
an earlier plan to gaiQ accord from
area governmental units.
The district's Executive Com·
mittee approved the new plan
Thursday during a meetin~ m
Wellston. The Policy _Committee
meets Monday, 7 p.m. m Pomeroy.
Should the plan be approved .by
that body, .the public rattficat10n
process begms later UtiS month.
The district covers Athens, Gal·

+KJt09

Tbe World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle

115 Are You Being Served?
~ C e Fleh Pollee Stereo.

HE WON A LIFETIME

~1-tl

,,\8742

PHILLIP
ALDER

Sports............................. C1·8
Weather. ..........................A-2

.

+K

Today's hand caused a debate be·
tween North and South. If you would
like to arbitrate, cover the East-West
cards and decide on your line of play in
four spades. West leads lhe club king .
South had an uncomfortable bid on
the second round because his spade
spots were so bad. But three spades
worked well here, the right contract
being reached .
At the time, South won the first
trick with dummy's club ace (correct
because clubs could be 6-1), cashed the
spade king, crossed to hand with a diamond to the ace and drew two more
rounds of trump, learning he had a los·
er there. Next he finessed the diamond
jack. But East produced the queen and
a second club so that West could cash
two club tricks to defeat the game.
"I was very unlucky," South protest·
ed. "The spades were 4-2, West didn't
have the diamond queen despite his
two-level overcall, and East had a sec·
ond club."
North felt that it wasn't bad luck but
poor play. He suggested that, at trick
six, South should have played a dia·

1:05 (]) MOVIE: 0ctopu11y 11'01
(2:45)
1:30 (I) (J) 8 Step by Step The
Lambert&amp; are shOCked when
Frank's tether Introduces his
fiancee. Stereo. C
\Zl Wei $trHI WHI&lt; Stereo.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
MY O&lt;ID HAD A Wti'-ININEi'
wow.' r-ow THA.T HES A

NORTH

BRIDGE

By Phillip Alder

Qll P~meNewa Q

Vol, V, No.5
Copyrighted 1992

.-------------~

(I)

Deaths ................................ AJ
Editorai ............................. A4

•
tmts-

yotJ develop from step No. 3 below.

UNSCR AMBLE ~ORI
ANSWER
.

Along the river .............. B1-7
Business/Farm ...............Dl·8
Classified ....................... D3·7

Gallia's mood following first winter
of World War II - Sands • Page A· 7

1

PRINr NUMBERED

Inside

Forrest (Butch) Bachtel honored
in Arizona - Hoeflich - Page B-4

8-1

f---,J,.;;.J.;.:_;;Js_;,J~&amp;-1 I "When your husband gives

Ster&amp;Q. .:;;;~

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aiMotowo d
Qll Wo~d Today
all Rln TJn Tln, K·g Cop

7:00 ~ 8

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Buckeyes defeat Wildcats 93-78 -c 1

Life at
Gallia
EMS

low to form four simple words.

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elM I

0 four
Rearran'ge letters of the
Strambled words· be·

M

FRI .. MARCH 6

S

Sunday•

fi WOlD

TIIAT DAILY

By BRIAN J, REED
Tlnifi'Seulbiel Staff '
•

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P.
'

OPYHPt.PI

HW

'

J Y I Ill H 8 U HI Z ·. ' '
,

JIUFPU .

TUPPI!RS PLAINS • A new

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"f
PREVIOUS SOLI,JTION: "Whlt't niltory going lo MY about the rnovtea?
All tnoae rowa of · -te fiiCino a blink - ? Crazy!" - Robert

Mitchum.

e ·1•11r·NM.-..'

r

.

regional sewer district hail been
established for t!te Ttfpen Pl8ips
community, aDd appltcations for
fllidina that district are expected 10
be flloCI in the near flllllre.
ClliDg public health, safety, COR•
venlonco and welfare, .Meigs Coun·
ty Common Pleu Court Juclse Pred
W. Crow Ul approved tbe eallbllahmom of tlie Tuppera Plains
Regional Sewar DIJtrict following
a preliminary heariJi&amp; on the pro·
ppaod district oq Mo!tday.

.

~~

Health rlsu
' In an entry filed on Friday,
Crow refened 10 the teatimony of
Jon Jacoba of tbe Meigs Coun~y
Health Deplli!Dent. In Monday's
heaiina, Jacobs llaid that •
is a
"serious health risk" 'il the cililens ,
of TtqJpen Plalna bued upon lbe
lalllt of
cijspolal. ClOW said
thalli is particularly dlngerous 10
cbildren who lltelld Tuppen Plains
Elomontary School, lloc:ausc of
"ai8!Kilnlaewase" ID and arou'ld

aewaae

tltcaeboOI-.

·

Tbe BavlrOIImenlll Protection
Ag~y 1111
a bin on build·

""*'

COLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) The state's unemployment rate
jumped 10 7.2 percent m February,
according 10 figures released Fri·
day.
Qallia County's jobless figure
totaled 1,600, or 12.5 percent of Ute
cqunty's 12,700 labor force. Meigs

unemployment insurance claims from January. The number of jobbeing fded compared to a year ago, less Ohioans in February was
but the new jobless figures 391,000, up from January's figure
'.
"demonstrate a persistent lack of of 370,000.
.
Ohio'
s
civilian
labor
fol',
c
e
employment growth and a need for
cautious expectations about the included 5.462 million workers in
February, down from January's figimmediate future."
Overall, 5.070 million Ohioans ure of 5.491 million. The share of
Continued on A·3
had jobs last monUt, down 52,000

~~~i~~olliej~:n Martinka mine lays off 167
Meigs figures are up from last
year's February totals. Gallia was

~;L199JwhileMeigswas11 .5

The Ohio figure reflects an
,
increase of 0.5 percent·over Janing and ilevelopmel\t in Ute com· ~·s 6.7 percent jobless rate, Ute
munity due 10 a IIIC!k of P,dequate Ohto Bureau of Employment Ser·
sewage disposal, aud committee vices said.'
members hope thai thO .bin will be . The national unemployment rate
lifted once the scwagc S)'l~m is in was 7.3 percent for February, up
place.
from 7.1 percent in January, the
A group li Tuppers Plains !W· Labor Depertment reported. . ·
'dents and business ownen orga·
James Conrad, OBES adminis·
nized a sewage disqlct steering . trator, said the
"repre~Mt a
committee in August, 1991. Lind· sizable increase m the unemployLyons, who sirved aathat com· menl rate for Ohio.".
milt='s chainnan, Ilona wiUt com·
"Both Ohio and the nation are
miuee metnbers Sue Malson, experiencing mixed sir._ais on the
Homer Colo and Marvin Kee· stlluJofdtceconomy,' he said"
baugh, were appointed by Judge
COIIrld said Q11io has~ a
Coatlallld 01 A-3 ·
signifteant ~Jn the.number of

r._ures

sar

'

.

AEP owns Ohio Power Co.,
FAIRMONT, W.Va. (AP) whoso
Mitchell power plant is 1
Reduced demand for its coal led 10 .
major
user
of Martinka coal. oite
the layoffs of 167 people at South·
of
Mitchell's
generating units is
em Ohio Coal Co. 's Martinlca Divi·
shut
down
for
IS
weeks for maiNesion mine, officials said.
"The stockpile problem js one nan_ce, r~ucina demaud for COil,
'·
many electric utili!)' and coal pro- Smtth said. ·. .
The
layoffs
of
119
UniiCd Mine
ducers are facing. It's due to tbc
Workers
members
alld
48 others
· mild weather of the last couple
were
effective
immediately.
About
years, and the slow economy,"
390
pc:ople
remain
on
tbe
job
at
said BJ. SmiUtj a spokeswoman for
Martinka, the COIII!*IJ llitl.
American Electric Power.
S~~the~11 Ohio Coal Co. Ia 1
American Electric Power owns
substdlll')'
or Ohio Poww Co., 111110
Ohio Power Co., the parent compa·
of
seven
utiUiiel ill lite
ny of Southern Ohio.
Alnerican
· Friday's was the second mass
The
layoff at Martinka in five monUts.
al)qut
2.6
In November, lSS people were let
I~ l, and ibout
go. '
1990.

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