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                  <text>Page-12-The Dally Senlloel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, May 14, 1992

Prosecutor to seek new trial for officer in King case
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A
judge will have the final say on a
prosecutor's wish to retry one of
the police officers charged in the
beating of Rodney King and to
hold !he new trial m a city, not a
suburb.
Meanwhile, four alleged gang
members were to be arraigned
today in !he televised attack on a
truck driver !hat occurred as riots
erupted after the officers were
acquiued on most of the charges.
District Attorney Ira Reiner said
Damian Monroe "Football"
Williams, 19, Henry Keith "Kiki"
Watson, 27, and Antoine "Twan"
Miller, 20, faced charges of

attempted murder, aggravated mayhem , torture and second-degree
robbery. Gary Williams, 33, faced
one count of second-degree robbery.
The four black men were arrested Tuesday in the April ?9 beating
of while truck driver Reginald
Denny. Authorities said they were
affiliated with a street gang called
the 8-Trey Gangster Crips.
On Wednesday night, a crowd
from a gang unity march near the
nash point of the rioting banged on
sheriffs squad cars responding to
disturbance calls.
About 300 law officers and
National Guardsmen set up a com-

mand post and authorities cordoned
off an eighr-block area, bur rhe
crowd of abour 200 people dispersed withoul additional incidenL
No injuries or arrests were reponed.
The riors were touched off by a
jury verdicl acquitting three white
officers of all charges in the heal·
ing of King, who is black, and
acquirting Officer Laurence Powell
of aU but one charge.
Reiner said he would ask Superior Coun Judge Sranley Weisberg
on Friday 10 retry Powell on a
charge of assauh under color of
authorily, which the jury had deadlocked on.

The prosecutor also said he
wanted the relrialto be held in Los
Angeles Counly or some other
urban area The frrsr Dial was held
in suburban Simi Valley.
"I undersLand rhere are many
people !hal feel !hal 10 retry Laurence Powell on this one charge is
lo reopen wounds," Reiner said.
"My feeling is !hal healing begins
wirh justice and justice was not
done in the Rodney King case."
Weisberg, who presided over
the firsllrial, would decide whether
IO gran! a relrial and where il
would be held. An appeals coun
order !hal moved the trial oul of

Los Angeles Counry because of the
highly charged political silualion
there remains in effect.
Powell's allorney , Michael
Slone, did not rerum relephon e
calls Wednesday.
Meanwhile, about 4,CXXJ National Guard troops from a 10,000srrong force wirhdrew from the
ciry. Gov. Pete Wilson had ordered
the troops 10 Los Angeles to help
resra-e order.
"We did a good job. I felt good
ahour il," said Guardsman Ronald
de Jesus. "The people made me
feel good aboul il''
Wilson said the remaining 6,000

Ohio Lotterv

Alzado

~

cancer
victim

rroops would leave gradually.
About 3,000 Marines and Army
trOOpS were withdrawn lasl week.
Fift y-onc people died and 2,383
were hun in the riots. Damage esti ·
mates approached $800 million and
thousands of homes and businesses
were burned down.

Pick 3: 344
Pick 4:3481!

Now you know..
Sla very was
outlawed in U.S.
territories in 1862.

PageS

Low tonighl in mid-50s. Clear.
Saturday1 sunny. High in mid-

HOs.

Presidenl Bush on Wednesday
announced more federal assislance
for Los Angeles - a $600 miltion
loan package for rebuilding
burned-out homes and businesses.
The administration has now designated S1.2 billion in loans, grants
and other assisrance for the ciry.

--

·- -- -

Vol. 43, No. 10

Copyrlghled

1992

2 Sectlona, 14 Pagea 25 oenll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, May 15,1992

A Multimedia Inc. NewaDaoer

Rep. Miller will remain
in congressional race
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Hospilal held a practice drill for a staged disas-

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ter yesterday in the counly. The disaster was a
bus wreck near a chemical spill or ammonia
hydroxide. This particular patient, while getting
off the bus, was overcome by tbe fumes of the
chemical and was struck by a car.

Sierra Club
sends letter
to Corps
By J]M FREEMAN
OVP News SLaff
The Ohio Chapter of rhc Sierra
Club submined a leiter to the U.S.
Army Corps of Engineers Huntingron Districl office calling for the
Corps 10 deny American Elecrric
Power a permir 10 cons01JCI a limebarge unloading facility and a land fill near the Gavin electric gcnernl·
ing planr, borh critical ro AEP's
proposed inslallalion of nue -gas
scrubbers al tl1e Sile.
The 14 -page lcuer, submiued
May 12, calls for a full environmental impacl statement.
The lcllcr was submiued 10 the
Corps in lieu of spoken testimony
at a public hearing which was held
May 4 at Meigs High School ,
Pomeroy.
More than I ,200 people auended the hearing wirh rhe norable
cxceprion of lhc Sierra Club, which
had originally called for the public
hearmg. AEP's proposal 10 install
flue-gas scrubbers al the Gavin
Planr drew unanimous supporl ar
the hearing.
The lcucr, signed by Ned Ford
of the Oh1o Chaprcr of the Sierra
Club. reads (in part): "In lighl of
the clear environmental degradation ro be caused by the proposed
project, and the clear and subslanlial economic risk 10 lhe affcclcd
Continued on page 3

WORKING ON A PATIENT· Nursing assistants at Veterans
Memoria l Hospital, Garcia Adams and Lois Deem, work lo save
lhis patient who is eight and a half months pre~nanl and is in full
cardiac arrest. The patient, portrayed by Melanie Qualls, a nursing assistant student at Meigs High School, was part of the disaster
drill staged Thursday afternoon for the hospital and units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service. The disaster was
staged with 12 injuries. Of those 12, seven of the injured were
transported to the hospital by emergency squads and the other five
were transported by car.

WASH!NGTON (AP) - Indus - in outpul at the nation 's facrorics,
trial production JUmped 0.5 percenr mines and utilities, the govemmenr
in April, the third slraighl advance said today.

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No one hurt in accident
An accident involving two trucks, no inJuries and mmor damage,
was investigared by Pomeroy Police Thursday afternoon.
According 10 the report, Greg Burncm , 'M, Langsville, driving an
Eblin's trash service truck backed 1010 a Columbus Soulhem Power
Co. rruck driven by Thomas M. Bowen, 47, Pomeroy. The power
company 011ck, parked on the lcfl side of Plum Strecr, had lighl
damage to the front fender on the righl side. There was no damage
to the Eblin vehicle.

Bus driver cited after wreck

FREE
DELIVERY

A bus driver for the Eastern Local School Districl was cited afrer
a two-vehicle accidcnl on Ohio 248 in Olive Township Thursday
around 9:30a.m.
According 10 !he Gallia-Meigs Posr of the Slate Highway Pillrol,
Floss ie M. Dill, 59, Long Bouom, wa1 wcsrbound on Ohio 248 and
Continued on page 3

•

His staff sa id McEwen would be
mad e available for comment after
Mi ller's news conference.
McEwen and Miller were thrusl
inro the primary batlle by changes
in congressional d1srric1 lines made
10 reduce Ohio's representation
from 21 seats on Congress 10 19.
Miller was w1dcly cxpeclcd 10
rrlirc rather than run in a primary
agamstlhe 42-ycar-old McEwen .
Bur McEwen has a serious campaign liability : 166 overdrafts at
the now -dcfucl House bank . He
blamed the overdrafrs on rhc
bank's Dcmocralic managers even
afrer adminmg that he knowingly
wrore checks when he knew there
wasn't enough money 1n his
account lo cover them.
In campaigning, McEwen also
has characrerized himself as a leader in efforrs to close the Hous·e
bank.
Miller's slatemenl explained his
recent bathtub fall thai resulted in a
minor bur painful hip injury that
led him 10 cancel campaign appearances and reconsider his ability to
campaign for nomination 1n the
June 2 primary.
He said he was planning lo
encounter.
announce on Monday lhal he
McEwen refused 10 discuss il or would withdraw from the race. Bur
be interviewed aboul the campaign the meeli11 g with McEwen changed
on Tuesday and again on Thursday. allrhar.

" In my 26 years 10 Congress, I
have seldom encounrered a situa tion as unscll ling as thiS, " Miller
said.

Th1s is Miller's fir st rough race
sin ce he was firsl elected in 1966.
He's never had to spe nd a lot of
money, buy telev1sion commercials
or deluge the voters to keep hi s joh
Both he and McEwen are rated
lughly by COIIscrvauve groups lor
their votes supponing Presid ent
Bush and former President Reagan.
Miller is a member of lhc House
Appropriarions Commillcc, which
decides how much money eac h
governm ent acrivity should ge r
each year. McEwen has a plum
House assignment, too: the Rules
Comminec, wh1ch decides whar
will be taken up by th e full House.
McEwen ha1 been a high -profile
congressman, and at ooe poml was
rrying 10 position himself 10 run for
rhc Senare against Democrat
Howard Merzenbaum . He aban doned thai effon when ir became
clear he did nor have rhe same
Slalewide support as Lhe eve nlual
nominee, now -Gov. George
Voinovich.

Miller, on the or her hand , ha s
been so low -key that Roll Call. a
newspaper !hat covers Capiro! Hill,
once named him one of rh c mosl
obscure represen tative s 1n
Congress.

Phillis encourages grass-roots
support of equity in education

Industrial production up
for third straight month

Spring Air Jumbo Thick
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WASHINGTON (AP)- Ohio
Rep . Clarence Miller said IOday a
privale go-round with his Republican primary opponenl convinced
h1m thai he should slay in the race
when he was on the brink of bowing out.
M11ler, 74, said Rep . Bob
McEwen angered him by lying to
campaign audiences and then mfu nated him in a face-to-face meeting
on Monday.
"I had never seen such a performance since Pinocchio," Miller
said in a written starcmenr prepared
for a news conference. "Then and
there, I made the determination that
the people of soulhern Ohio
deserv e an oprion in this primary
elccrion.
''I n good conscience I felt I
could notlurn and walk away from
this conrest and ler his charade go
on any longer.
"I have had enough. I have
heard enough. And I'm here 10 tell
you enough is enough."
The Associaled Press had
learned of the meeting from GOP
sources. McEwen's sraff confirmed
the meeting happened but McEwen
refu sed 10 give his version of the

"The Apnl mcrcasc was led by
a sharp rise in auro production,"
the Federal Reserve report said.
II was lhe firsl lhrec -monrh
srring of advances since lasr May,
June and July and fresh evidence
that lhc manufacluring reco very
had resumed after slackening for
severn! months.
The Federal Reserve also
revised upward, to 0.4 percent, irs
inirial estimate of producrion in
March. Thai was twice the 0.2 percent gain fir~ reported . The April
increase marched the growth in
February.
While auto produ ction ro se
sharply, "Ourpul of !rucks was
abour unchanged,'' the Fed said.
" Outside motor vehicles and
pans. overall production advanced
0.3 percenr last month, similar to
gains posted in both February and
March," it continued.
In a section on capaciry utiliza(Cootinued 011 Page 3)

By RRIAN j. REED
Sentinel News Stall
A grass-roors movement supporting equity in education funding
was encouraged by William Phillis,
cxecu rivc d11ector of lhe Ohio
Coalition for Equiry and Adequacy
of School Funding, when he spoke
to a group of communily leaders
and educators on Thursday afrcrnoon .
The meeting was hosted by the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce at their offices in Pomeroy.
Philli s has been dirccrly
involved in the educauon field for
40 years, 16 of which were spcm in
rhe Ohio Dcpanment of Education.
When he lefl that dcpanment c.arli cr rh is year, he was an as sista nr
state superinlcndcm of instruction.
Since his resignation, be has repre sented rhe 350-member coalition
across the stale.
Lawsuit filed
A lawsuil was filed in January
in Perry Counly Common Pleas
Court by a group of educalors, stu ·
dcnrs and their parenrs. stating that
the state's school funding system
fail 10 prov1de adequate or sufficient revenue 10 enable the boards
of educa tion and educalors in the
Perry Coumy schools 10 provide an
PHILLIS SPEAKS ·William Phillis, standing, a former stale
"adequare educational program and
educalion official, spoke lo Meigs County educators and communirelated services for the pupils of the
ty leaders on Monday re~arding equity in _school _f~nding. Phi~! is
school dislrict, as required by law,
now works as executive director of the Ohio Coahlion for EqUJty
rhus denying equal protccrion of
and Adequacy of School Funding. Also pictured, 1-r, are Dr. Nick
law as guaranteed by lhe OhiO
Robinson, Counly Superintendent .John Riebel, and County AgriConsututioo."
culture
Agent Hal Kncen.
The goal of the lawsuir is a dcc 'lararion by rhe courl thai public
educarion is a fundamental right in
the State of Ohio, guaranteed by
the Conslilulion. Such a declaration , according to Phillis, would
require funding reforms to th e benefit of poor rural school disrricrs
like those in Meigs Counly.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Stare
"If a dirccr -mail solicilation
Local schools hurt
and federal officials arc calling for brings in a few million dollars a
"The stale has really had irs tougher laws againsr advcrriscrs $5,000 fine for violating the sra~te
head in rhe sand in terms of our and fund -raisers who falsely imply docs little more !han send the mes~r school districrs," Phillis said.
some co nneClloo with Social Sct:u - sage thai the govcrnmenl is not
'We've acrually gone backwards in rity 10 gain !he conf1denee of older genuinely serious about protecting
funding schools this year, and !hat Americans.
rhc public from these predarors "
will continue into the year ahead."
"When disrcpulable people usc Ms. King told a hearing before ~0
Although some school districts Social Secunry as a come-on, th e House Ways and Means subcomin the slate (including Easrern VICtims arc among the mosr vulner- minccs.
Local) have been held harmless able of our Citizens - elderly, poor
The $1 00,000-a-year limit on
from school funding curs from ·the and disabled Americans who can penalties in such cases "is simply
state, Phillis said yesterday that the lcasr afford rhe loss of money, " madcquare 10 deter con anisrs from
money used to mainlain funding said Social Sccuriry Commissioner pcrperrati ng their nationwide
for those districts held harmless Gwendolyn S. King.
lucralive schemes," said low~
will come from s1are lottery funds,
"When eldcrlr men and women Altomcy General Bonnie J. Campwhich were earmarked for educa- are lold lhal rheJr Social Security bell.
rion when rhc lotlery was estab - benefits arc not safe, they pay a ter·
Rep. JJ. Pickle, 0. TeJUts, chairlished.
ribl c emotional price as well, " she man of the Way~ and Means over.
"Nexr year, the sltte projects a said.
s1gh1 subeommutee, said he has
$75 million shonfall," Phillis said,
Dcspilc increased federal cffons concluded "that the federal agen.
"and !he s1a1e has fiXed cosrs, such ro hall such practices, enforcemenr c1cs regard these laws as either trivas Medicare, Medicaid, publi c officials say they arc swimming ial or unenforceable."
againsl the tide.
Conlinued on page 3

Tougher laws are asked to
halt exploitation of elderly

�Friday, May 15, 1992

'C ommentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 111E MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L WINGETT

Pllbllsbtr
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PllbUsber/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Genenol Manager

LElffiRS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be le" !han 300
words. All letters are subject 1o editing and must be signed W1lh name,
addr&lt;ss and lelepbone numb&lt;.. No unoi~ !etten will be published. Lenm
should be in good taste, addre•sing u....., not penonalities.

The positive side of recession
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK - The common goal of bolh business and households
over lhe past few years bas been to get the house in order, to get rid of old
problems, correct lhe imbalances and lJIIprove lhe balance sheet. . .
h has been a pervasive activity, but generally not htghly pubtictzcd ,
panly because those so-called observers - lhe media, economtsts, academics and olhers - have had !heir eyes trained for SJgns of econom1c
growth .
Growth, however, bas hardly been lhc goal of miltions of families and
thousands of companies, large and small. First on their agenda has been
the correction of the past Efforts to grow, when they existed, were secondary.
Among homeowners, for example, the que ~ t hasn't been for a bigger
borne, as it was during the laie 1970s and early 1980s . More Important to
them has been the necessity of putting household fmances on a more
secure fmancial basis.
In many instances, !heir success has been phenomenal, with a good
deal of the credit going to lhe Federal Reserve's policy of lower mtcrest
rates.
Those household with variable-rate mortgages have benefitted auto matically, with monthly paymenls diopping by hundreds of dollars. Many
owners have renegotiated loans and locked m smgle-dtgtt rates for the
next 25 years.
.
.
. Families have been cleanmg up budgets too. 1 he total of consumer
installment credit outstanding, which used to grow each month as regularly as the federal budget deficit, has actually dechned 10 some recent
months.
Consumer psychology reversed itself: Before the recession there was a
rush to accumulate goods; during the recessiOn, these same fam1hc s
d1rected !heir energies into not buying; now, they arc resolved to go slowly . Much of thts activuy hasn 't been appreciated by those critics wbo measure the economy only by growlh sta tistics and bigger spending. To them,
tile failure to spend reflecled low consumer confidence.
In U1Jth, however, millions of people described as depressed were just
acting sensibly, putting their houses in order so they could ilve comfortably and intelligen~y instead of francucally and dangerously. .
Smart business people did the same lhing but, agam~ thetr acllon s of1en
were interpreted negatively . In retrospect, th e poSitive aspect of thm
behavior can be beuer appreciated.
They cut their ginh.
.
Many con1pames had become bloated - w1th personnel, obsolete production facihties, huge mventories, old fashiOned lechmques .. Tens of
thousands of companies have spent the past lhree years corrccung !hose
problems.
.
.
Inventories in some bus111esses today are at thw lowest m- decades.
Productivity has been unproved. The break-even point for proftts has been
reduced . Busmesses are, as they say, lean and mean, and co mpet1Uve
aga1n.
They rclinanced.
.
.
Billions of dollars of bu rdenso me debt have been turned 1n1o equ11 y
through stock offerings. And many dcbt.s that rcmwn arc now at lower
interest rates.
Yes households and companies retrenched and regrouped , but not n&lt;&gt;.: cssarily out of fear or lost conlidcnce. Tlletr numbers didn't grow bigger.
butlhat doesn't mean they fail ed to gain in strength, stabillly and compel'.
1~veness.
.. .
.
.. Those things, lhc pos!l1vc s1de of theu efforts and the results accrumg
fiom them, could be lhe big econom1c story of the year to come.

:foday in history
By The Associated Press
Today is Friday, May 15. the I 36th day of 1992. There are 210 da ys
kft in the year.
· Today's Highlight in History:
.
Twenty years ago, on May 15, 1972, Dcmocrallc prcs1denual cand1date
~:corgc C. Wallace was shot and left paraly~.ed while campa1gnmg. at a
Lwei. Maryland, shoppmg center. Wallace s assailant, Arthur Bremer.
~· &lt;Js se ntenced to 63 years in pnson. although the sentence was later

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, May 15, 1992

Perot readies his entry for the race
WASHINGTON - While Los
Angeles was in Oames, President
Bus h found himself fc11n g wllh
maJOr fund raisers and fending off
attacks on hi s leade rsh ip that
ha vcn' t been !eve led against a sit ting president since Jimm y Carter's
days of "malaise."
Not coincidentally, Carter was
the last prestdent to face a serious
third - party challenger, John
Anderson. Now Bush has to de al
with an incipient independent chal lenge from Ross Perot , who has literally swe pt lhe elec torate off 1ts
fe et. His speec hes radiate the energy of tent rCVIVaJS.
Perot parnes unfnendly questions with a blend of wit and temper, while Bush still stumbles over
his own synlllx . Perot IS the pmtsize d Texan with the I 0-gallon
charisma who parlayed a $1,000
loan imo a billion -dollar com puler
cmptrc. Bush IS the man who a
Texas pol once described as having
bee n born on third base a11d believing he hit a triple.

for months, but ultimately boil
down to a few defining mom ents , a
ICw images seared in the memory
that have make-or -break conse-

By Jack Anderson

and
Michael Einstein
qucnccs tor candidates. No doubt
one was the Los Angeles not, a
dome sti c Desert Storm that was
missing a SlOrmin' Nonnan.
We inter viewed Perot the day
Los Angeles went off like a Roman
cand le, and he d1dn't shy away
from second-guess ing Bush, a man
for whom he has a demonstrably
low regard.
"It goes down to what leadership is all about. What kind of general would not go out on the from
illlcs of the battlefield in a situation
hke thi s," Perot said. It was later
that ni ght tl1at Bush was socializing

Prcsidcnlia1 campaigns drag on

I

in with some ongmal, If nol very

spccafic sheet rnusac.

As he exp lained to us, "Step
one is to get there as fast as you
can and hit the streets. The mam
lhing I'd try to do would be to ~ct
all the folks to se t~e down to g1ve
us tim e to let justice run 11s course,
because destroying your own
neighborhood is the saddest thing
'"thc}liorld.
"We have split the melting pot
again. We 've broken it into a thou sand little pieces. It's tragic . We're
suppos ed to be a beacon w the
world and that doesn 't mean cmes
on ftrc ."
Air Force One linally delivered
Bush to Los Angeles after the ftres
had been extinguished. He received
an icy reception from a smoldering
city. The stage presence on dtsplay
during the Persian Gulf War
seemed elusive and an etemtty ago.
In one short year an incumbent
president's political stock has taken
a 1929-style nosedive.
Perot cfToctlessly upstaged Bush
at every turn. "I pledge that I
won't talk ," he said. "I won't bold
press conferences about it. 1 won 't
hold Rose Garden ceremon1es
about it. I'll be a very different
presidcnL You'll lind me buried in
meetmg s with the leaders of
Congress, cabinet members, and
the who's who of the country !hat
knows the problems and can fix lhe
problem s. "
.
Some oLhcr PcrotJsrns:
"The way we select a president
is unrelated to getting the best qual ified person in our country into the

White House.
"Our co untry is probably the
biggest and most complex thing to
run in 1he world . We the peop.te
own this country so let's assume
it's a big, complicated business to
be run for tl1 c benefit of the owners
(who arc) the people.
"People want me to do it (run
for president) and tl1is country has
been good to me ... (if I run) I'll
giv e it cvcry~1ing I have ."
As Perot nears an official entry
1nlo the presi dential sweepstakes,
he is de stined to wreak more havoc
than aT nas twister.
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are syndicated columnists fur United Syndicate Fea tures

Roots of the permanent underclass
If th e re's on e th1n g almost

and liberal Intellectuals of the
1960s - arc dead now anyway .
Bcs1des, it' s only fair to cred1t
them with th e best of intentions.

everybody agr ees on concerning

1hc Lo s Angele s nots. ll is that
there must be no aucmpl to lix the
blame for them . President Bush
says so, because he mu st appe ar
sta tc sman slikc and above s uch
mundane considcralions as politics.
Th e Democrats and their liberal
allies in the media say so, because
they arc ri ghtly tcrnficd of what
any se nou s di sc us sion of the
responsibility for this di sas ter

William A. Rusher
But what kee ps today's liberal
De mocrats from acknowledging
the hi storical truth is the fact !hat
they arc still wedded. albeit rather
uncomfon.ahly, to tllosc dtsa~trous
pol1cics of the 1960s.
Say that to a liberal apolog1st,
how e ver - Mark Shields, for
example - and he will installlly go
1nto the old broken-wing tr1ck,
lead in g you on a dilig ent hunt for
the errant polic1es while crafuly
luring you away from the U11th . .
What policies can you posSibly
be talking abou~ he w1ll ask . Surely not Head Start (one of the few
li beral progrw11 s that is supposed to
hav e succeeded, though even that IS
debatabl e)? Medi car e, then, or
Mcd1 ca1 d (cruelly ex pensiv e
tll()ugh they arc)? The one program
y()u CHI he sure he wtll never men-

would do to thc ar reputation s and
thct r pol lues.

Yet if we arc not perm1tlcd to
t.::c.arninc the tru e roots ur this
'"''edy, we will !cam noth1ng from
it. Must nearly 60 people d1e, and
J,OOO be injured, and almost a billion dollars' wonh o f property
ll:lm~gc be done. wilhoutthis coun try l earning an yth in g fr o m 1hc

cxpe11cncc because "c arc too Wctful to sugg es t th cll anybody was
re.sponsihle for tl1e policies that led
to it?

Most of the people directly
, cs pun s tbl c - Lyndon John so n
and the cOJtgrcsswnJI Democrats

reduced.
: On th1~ elate :

: In 1602, Cape Co d wa s discov ered by the English navigator
JJJnholorncw Gosno ld .
In 1RX6, poet Em ily DIC ki nson died in Amherst, Mass . .
· In 1911. the U.S. Supreme Coun ordered lhe d1ssoluuon of Standard
Oil Co.. rul1ng 11 was m violation of the Sherman Antitrust AcL .
In 191R. US a1nnail began scrv1ce between Wash mgton, Philadelplua
qnd New York.
- In 1930. Ellen Churc h, the first atrline stewardess, went on duty aboard
,; Uniuod Airlines Oigh t be tween San Francisco and Cheyenne, Wyo ..
· In 1940, nylon stockings went on general sale for the lirst umc 10 the
tJniuod Stat es.
: In 1942, gao;o linc mtioning went into effec t in 17 states, limning sales
llJthrce gallons a week for non -essen tial vehicles.
• In 1948, hours afuor declarin g 1Ls Independence, the new swte of Israel
was attacked by Transjordan, Egyp~ Syna, Iraq and Lebanon.
.. .
• In 1963, U.S. astronaut L. Gordon Cooper hlasted off aboard Fa.lh
Seven'' on the final mission of lhe Projcc1 Mercury space program.
' In 1969, Supreme Court Justice Abe Fonas resigned amid a con troversy over his past legal fees.
• In 1970, Phillip Lafayette Gihhs and James Earl Green, two black stu ~nts at Jackson State University m Mi ssiSS ippi, were lei lied when police
opened lire during student proiests.
. In 1986, searchers on Oregon 's Mount Hood found two leen-age sur'llvors of a hiking expedition that had beeome trapped in a hli1.zard. Nine
ather climbers died.
Ten years ago:" Aloma' s Ruler" won the Preakness Stakes.
. Five years ago: President Reagan told a ga th e r~ng of out-of-town
reporters at the White House he did not consider lumsclf "mortally
wounded" by the Iran-Contra affair. (The preSident got to relive hi s
~dio-announcer days when he comphcd w1th a reponcr's request to read
ryromo for Nashville sllltion WSM.)
• One year ago: President Bush took Britain's Queen Elizabeth II to a
~baU game between lhe Baltimore Orioles and the Oakland Athletics
(the queen left after two innings; the A's won , 6-3). French President
ftrancois Mitterrand appointed Edith Cresson to be France's f1rst female
IJ1emicr (she resigned April 2).
.
• Today's Birthdays: Actor Joseph Cotten IS 87. Actress Constance
Cummings is 82. Singer Eddy Arnold 1s 74. Playwnghts_Peier Shaffer and
lmlhony Shaffer - twin brothers ~ are 66. Actress-smgcr Anna Mana
Alberghetti is 56. Playwright Paul Zmdcl IS 56. Smger Tnn1 Lopez IS 55.
S}nger-songwrit.er Bnan Eno is 44. Baseball player George Brett ts 39.
Actor Lee Horsley is 37.
.
..
.
: Thought for Today: "People love to talk but hauo to hslCI1. - Ahce
Duer Miller, American author (1874-1942). ,

with key Republican moneymen at
a Col umbus , Ohio, fund-m1ser.
The BushJQuayle ucket must be
ru nn ing scared. They have already
ra ised well over $23 million thi s
year in the race, and yet felt that
Jnoth er eve ning of political pan handlin g was required during the
worst domes tic siege of the ccntu·
ry.
Aga in, the contrast is calamitous
fur Bush. Perot JS cschcw1ng all
campaign con tribution s at the very
time that Bush is vetoing campaign
reform le gislation, albeit an imperfec t piece of legislation.
"If I run, I w1ll run as the people's servant," Perot self-righ teo usly proclaims. "And I won't
belong to anybody else but them. "
Even though politicians hav e
vowed not to poliucize the Rodney
King verdict, those promises were
broken before the ink had dried.
Bush and Democrat Bill Clinton
sparred over law and order, and
then Perot - posing as the most
presidential of the trio - weighed

tion, however, ts Aiel to Farmlics
with Dependent Children.
AFDC has been around for a
long ~rnc, but in it s current malignant form it 1s a child of Lyndon
Johnson's Grea t Society and hi s
ce lebrated War on Poverty . Its
basic idea must have seemed, to the
liberals of th e 1960s, pure bottled
co mpass 1on. It simply called for
g1ving monthly payments to every
needy woman who had children to
ra1sc and no man to suppon her.
What did not become apparent
for so me year s was that thi s
amounted to subsidizing unwed
mothe rs - and, as Jack Kemp has
pointed out. " When you s ub s1 di':~
some thing , you ge t more of ll .
Worse yet, 1f by any chance th ere
was a man in a pour household,
AFOC amounted to an order to h1m
to vani sh, so that the woman could
qua lify for th ose payments
The re sull, quite simply, was th e
de stru cti on of whatever famil y
most blacks had. Th e girls began
havmg more and more babies out

of wedlock - 63 percent of all
black births. according to the mo st

recent figures . The boys, growing
up without a falhcr-figurc on wbom
to model themselves, took to the
strccLs, and to violence: today , one
young black male in every four is
uffic1ally in trouble with the police.
It is estimated tllat th1s country
has spent $2 1(2 trillion - !hat's
ri ght , I said trillion - in the last 25
years. oying to cope with the multiple co nsequences of poverty .
Docs anybody think we got our
money's worth? I can think of only
one group that d1d: the powerful
black Congressmen and thelC
patronage appoin1ees in the welfare
agencies, lhrough whose hands the
money trickled down to the needy,
convc rtmg the Iauer into a permancn tJ y dependent unden;lass.
But tl1 c truth IS that the whole
li beral assumpuon- that !his is an
ccono m ic problem - IS wrong,
and is to blame. At bottom, it is a
moral problem . And if saying so
doesn't sugge st any instant solutiOn, that doe sn't keep it from
bc111g true.

William Rusher is a syndical·
ed columnist for Newspaper
Enterprise Association.

What the Maharishi is up to now
T~l is a Westernized ve rsion of
one observer.
have heard the last of the Mahari shi an an cient llindu technique to
Whether or not he is right in
Mahe sh Yogi, he is in th e news b r1n g about r c la~ati o n ;wd relief assert1ng that "we arc not a reli aga m. The lnd1an guru who taught from stress and anx1 ety, regarded &amp;"'"·" the Mahanshi_himself must
th e whole world to metiltatc ha s
be considered a relig1ous f1gurc .
annottn ccd plan s to oren a Tran After receiving a degree in physics
scendental Meditation (TM) ~1emc
at Allahabad Lnivers1ty in India m
park on the Canad1an sulc of Nla 1940, Mahesh deCided lo become a
g;ua Falls.
monk.
It will cover 1,400 acres, cost as til e big kill ers in la st -pace d,
lie went off to th e Himalayan
$1.5 billion to build, be pan amuse- c: hx k-oricnlCd America
mountaJns to serve a s pir~tual
Amcn cans. the Maharish i was apprenti ces hip to Guru Dcv, a
ment park (with nd cs), part health
center and pact rc sllle ntial develop- smart enough to know , can be .sold swami who had revived lh c act of
ment. If you live there. you may a tim e -sav ing tec hni que that tran sce nd ental meditation first
promises pra ctica l res ult s while mentioned in the Hindu scriptures.
w~Hll to enroll in the TM univcrstly
they will tum th eir backs on someth at will be built on the grounds.
When Dev di ed 10 195 2, hi s
Maharishi (a Sanskrit word thing too lhcoretical or speculative . mantle pa sse d to Mah es h who
TM provided just tll e nght com- spent two years in solitude devel meaning "great sage:') Mahesh
binati
on of my stiCism (or contact oping a te chn1qu e that would
(h is fam1ly name) Yog1 (an lnd1an
word for teacher) tS an unlikely wnh the higher, transcendent pow- enable the masses to pmc11ec tranWestern idol. In h1 s public appear - CI S of the univ erse) and an easy, scendental mcdmuon .
ances. he sits crossed-legged on an do -n-yourself formula: For two 20He embarked on his f11s1 interantelope skin to protect him se lf minute periods a day, sit or lie still national miSSion in 1959. Strong
and recite a "mantra," a Sanskrit student concentrations developed at
from bad vibrations.
l-Jc has a high-pitched votcc and word assigned each TM student by places like Yale and Harvard.
giggles when he talks. He usually his teacher.
But it wasn't until the MaharTM claims it is not a religion holds a bouquet of flow ers . He
ishi's London tour in 1967 that TM
dresses in a white robe. His break· and stnctly spcakmg it 1s not. No took off. Th at was when the Beat fa st consists of honey and distilled deity is invoked or praised. But if it lcs singing group signed up for a
is not a religion, some consider TM TM se minar in Wales . They
wat.er.
to
be a rival of religion. There is no became the Maharishi' s first world Yet !his decidedly un -Westcm
doubt
Lhat TM has caused religion famous convects.
man may know more about Westto
si
l
up
and take notice.
Everything went fine until th e
ern man than.Western man knows
"TM comes as a judgment on Beatlcs, disillusioned , left the
him se lf. Th~ number of tense,
jumpy Americans shedding their the spiritual communities and movement in 1970. The Mahar tensions by practicing the Mahar- churches of the We st lhal have ishi's fortunes sank . He announced
ishi's Transcendental Mcd!lauon neglected the spiritual and mystical to the world that h1s mi ss ion had
possibilities of humanity,; · says failed .
may he more than two million.

Ju"it w hen we bcgm ID think we

George R. Plagenz

\

It was one of tho se occasions
when ll looked as 1f we had heard
lhc last of the Mahansh1. But a year
laier he was again flying high. He
had come back to life - "almost
like Lazarus," said Newsweek.
He is apparently still w1th us.
Geor~e l'lagenz is a syndicated columnist for Newspaper
Enterpri..~e As..'iociat ion .

Berry's World

Sierra...

Phillis ...

continued from page 1

public tn relation to present aliema tive solutions to the AEP Clean Air
Act Amendments of 1990 Title IV
Acid Rain compliance requirements, the Army Corps should
deny this permit applicauon."
Ford wrote: The Corps should
withhold issuance of the permit
until such time as the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio bas made
its investigation of lhe AEP acid
rain compliance strategy, and
issued a determination approving
the scrubbers decision.
Furthermore, Ford wrote that
the Corps should require substantial further examination of the environmental impact of this project.
Foremost among those concerns,
Ford alleges, are the lack of an adequate mitigation plan, the inadequacy of the delineation and
species identification, the lack of

examination of the site for affecled
endangered species and the almost
complete lack of consideration of
lhe long-term character of the site
after the project is completed.
The Sierra Club made a day ·
visit to the proposed landfill and
mitigation site, Ford wrote, and
made a list giving a "sense of the
diverse nature of the biological
community supported by !his site."
The list of more than 60 flees,
herbs, shrubs and vines includes
such mundane species as the black
locust, poison ivy, Japanese honey·
suclde and multiflora rose.
The Ohio Chapter of lhe Sierra
Club alleges !hat AEP's proposed
mitigation site is already a wetland.
The chapter also noted concerns
about aesthetics, flood hazards,
land use and wetlands.

r---Local briefs...- continued from page 1
sU1Jck the rear of a van driven by Keith R. Myers, 44, Long Bottom.
Myers had slowed down in the road after his van was struck by a
wild turlcey, the patrol reported.
.
.
No injuries were reporled. The bus was unoccup1ed wtlh the
exception of the driver.
Damage to lhe 1986 International bus was listed as tight. Damage to Myers' 1977 Dodge Tradesman was listed as moderate.
Dill was cited by lhe patrol for failure to maintain assured clear
distance.

Patrol probes two deer wrecks
Two deer-vehicle accidents were investigated recently by the
Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway Patrol.
No injuries were reported.
Edward L. Mattox. 79, Albany, was nonhbound on Ohio 143 in
Columbia Township Thursday afternoon and sU1Jck and killed a
deer !hat ran onto the roadway. Damage to Mattox' 1983 Chevrolet
Cheveue was Usted as moderate.
Deborah K. Osborne, 31, Reedsville, was soulhbound on Ohio 7
in Olive Township Friday morning and struck and killed a deer !hat
was attempting to cross the road. Damage to Osborne's 1989 Dodge
Caravan was listed as light.
Both deer were released to the Ohio Department of Transportation for removal.

EMS units answer calls
Six calls for assistance wert answered on Thursday by units of
Meigs Emergency Services.
On Thursday at I :58 p.m., Racine squad went to Bashan Road
for Randy Friend, who was taken to Veterans Mcmonal Hospttal.
At 2:42 p.m., Middleport squad went to South Second Avenue.
Charles Tyree was taken to Veterans. At 6:51 p.m., Pomeroy umts
responded to Clark Road for a tractor accident. Allen Lipscomb was
taken to Veterans. At 10:32 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mulberry
Avenue and took William Heff to Camden-Clark Memorial Hospi·
tal. At 11:05 p.m., Pomeroy units were sent to !Cingbury Road for
an auto fire. Jamie Ash was the owner of the vehiCle. At II: 15 p.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Condor Street. Ronnie Eakins was taken to
Veterans.

--Area deaths-Geraldine Barton
Geraldine Gwen Banon, 66, of
Bartlett, died Thursday, May 14,
1992 at her residence.
Born at Long Bottom, she was
the daughter of lhe late Russell and
Hazel Pigott Johnson.
She is survived by her husband,
Roben L. Barton; lhree daughters,
' Wendy Sue Barton of Marietta,
Mary Lou Barton of Vincent, and
Gwen Hall of Chester; nine sons,
Gerald Lee Barton of Marietta,
Ernest Raben Barton, Jackie Ray
Barton, and Roben Lee Barton of
Bartlet~ Randolph Kenneth Barton
and Mark Eric Barton of Vincent,
Barry Mickel Banon of Stockport,
Donald Nowell Barton of Coal
Run, and James Matthew Barton of
Alhens; II grandchildien, and one
brother, Raymond Johnson of
Columbus.
Besides her parents she was preceded by two brothers and one sister.
Graveside services will be held
Saturday at II a .m. at the Mount
Olive Cemetery in Long Bottom.
The Rev. Landen Hope will offiCi·
ate. There will be no calling hours.
White funeral home in Coolville is
in charge of arnngements.

Lottery numbers
Pick 3 Numbers
3-4-4
(three, four, four)
Pick 4 Numbers
3-4-8-8
(three, four, eight, eight)

The Daily Sentinel
IUIPIIIJ.Pllblilhed enry af\emoon, Monday
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Ohio by lhe Ohto Valley nabliahll\f
Company!M.allimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Obio 4,';769 Ph. tm-21116 . Seeond ciao
pmlap

paid at fl~l~Mroy, Ohio.

Memba-: The ANoc:latod

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Ohio Newlpal* Aaociatlon, National
Ad•ertbtnr Repr...enllltt"'· Branh01
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llollhboortIooldellolpC..U.IF

~ ~i:.: :· · · · · •·•· · · · · · · · · ~-~
0 Ulde Met• Co•ab'

··Ju! l /lun~
now yots 11011 ., hsV6 lo Jesrn
1nylflrng more /Of rrl6 195/ ol your /riA ··

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

::::: ·.· · · · ·

..·

·•· · · ·

.::::~~

Roger Grimm
Kristin Grimm
Graveside services for Roger
Wayne Grimm, two, and Kristin
Ray Grimm, nine months, who
died in a fire at their home Tuesday. were held at I p.m . Friday
(today) at the Bradford Cemetery
with AI Hartson offiCiating.
Roger was born on Jan . 22,
1990 and Kristin on Aug. 7. 1991,
both at Point Pleasant, W. Va .
They arc the childien of H. J. and
Alona Cleland Grimm, who sur vive along with maternal grandparents, Wayne and Joyce Cleland,
Langsville, and paternal grandparents, Roger and Linda Stobart,
Middleport, and Bob and Carolyn
Grimm, New Haven, W. Va. Also
surviving are five aunts and nme
uncles, two great grandmothers,
and several great aunts and uncles.
The children attended the
Church of Christ

Alice Koenig
Alice V. Koenig, 86, of 642
Brownell Ave., Middleport, died
Thursday, May 14, 1992, at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born on April 8, 1906 at
Coolville, she was the daughter of
the late Addison Russell and Cora
Hatch Russell. She was a housewife and a member of the Middleport Church of Christ.
Surviving are her husband of 58
years, Wilbur Koenig, Middleport;
a son, Reed Koenig, Middleport; a
sister, Winifred Harmon, Coolville,
and several nieces and nephews.
Besides her parents she was pre·
ceded in death by four sisters, Mattie Nelson, Evelyn Welch, Beatrice
Dixon, and Cora Dixon, and a
brolher, Stanley Russell.
Graveside services will be held
Saturday at I p.m. at the Mound
Cemetery, Chester. AI Hartson will
officiate. There are no calling
hours . Arransements are being
handled by Ewm~ Funeral Home.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS Kathleen Lehew, Pomeroy; Charles
Tyree, Jr., Middleport; and Allen
Lipscomb, Pomeroy.
THURSDAY DISCHARGES •
Anneue Knight, Lula Young, and
Sarah Yonlcer.

COlONY THEATRE
FIIDAY TIIU MilS.
DANA CAIYtT, ME lniS

IN

WAYNE$ WORLD
PG 13
ONI Mli.G IIIOW 7:l0
ADIISSIOI $1.50
44W92J

Continued from page I
relief and other state programs.
Rest assured that schools won 't be
held harmless next year."
State school funding cuts, of
course, effect poorer districts far
more !han affluent districts.
"When the state transfers the
burden of school funding to local
districts, lhe more affluent school
districts are able to raise revenues
[through property taxes] while
those less afnuent districts are not."
In most instances, Phillis said,
teachers and administrators are
subsidizing their school programs,
often spending several hundred
dollars so that their students can
have lhe material !hat they need.
The disparity in school funding
is so diarnatic, according to PhiiUs,
that one school has $1.5 millioo to
educate 500 students, while olher
schools are unable to afford even
the most basic materials, such as
paper.
"Money not the answer"
Phillis criticized the Bush
administration's approach to education sbonfalls, quoting Bush as
saying !hat "clearly. money is not
the answer to improving education

EXPLAINS PROCESSING SYSTEM •
Larry Spencer, Meigs County Clerk or Courts,
explained to county title orrice workers, car

dealers and rtpresut.atives or locallendint
institutions Lbt title automattd processing sys·
tem wbicb will co into tffect next month.

Spencer explains new processing system
An automated processing system for new and used vehicle titles
will go into effect in June, Larry
Spencer, Meigs County Clerk of
Courts announced.
According to lhe clerk, the new
compuierized sys1em w1ll eliminate
some forms, consolidate others,
and in general cut down on the
preparation time for a new titJe. h
also will decrease the possibility of
fictitious ti~es or titles which have
been altered going through th e
transfer system.
As Clerk Spencer explained on
the new title forms, the ink will not
impregnate lhe paper, but instead

in America."

"Try to pay for roofing, school
supplies, teaching aids and teach ing staff wilhout adequate money,"
Phillis said. "Those who say that
money is not the answer have all
lhe money !hat lhey need."
Phillis said !hat under lhe current funding system, one school
district in Meigs County would
need to pass 35 to 40 additional
mills in order to provide educaticnal services at an adequate level.
Of course, voters in Meigs
County have proven themselves
unwilling to support much smaller
millages in lhe past
Although lhe coalition is con ·
centrating on the "fundamental
right" issue and not funding alier natives, Phillis said that he feels
local income taxes are the most
reasonable funding alternative for
local schools, followed by a sales

will be in capsulated form . If an
a:tcmpt is made to erase letters or
figures on the title. the capsules
w•ll burst and the ink will blot the
title, he said.
He also said another security
measure will be the bar code which
wi II appear on all titles. On the fact
of lhe title, it will be black. while
on the back it will be a redish
color.
Spencer said that the new precautions are being tAken by the
State of Ohio to prolllCt purchast.rs
of vehicles, particularly since
copiers have become so sophisti-

Meigs Grand Jury indicts 19
The Meigs County Grand Jury
indtcted 19 individuals on felony
charges when they met on April 28,
and those indJctments were filed m
Meigs County Common Pl eas
Coun earlier this week.
According to Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story. those indicted were: Gregory
D. Hicks, Pomeroy, aggravated
burglary and felonious assault;
Danny Robson, Pomeroy, aggravated trafficking in diugs; Monte
Rifne, Pomeroy, breaking and
entering;
James
Minshall.
Pomeroy, receiving stolen property; Jasper Bonecutter, Pomeroy,
receiving stolen property; Samuel
L. McCloud, Middleport, cultivation of marijuana and failure to
comply with order or signal of a
police officer; Robert Martin .
McArthur,
Leslie
Storms ,
Pomeroy, and Randall Storms,
Bloomingville, breaking and enter·
ing; James R. Martin, Albany and
Leslie Storms, Pomeroy, breakmg
and entering and receiving stolen

tall.

"Does it make sense for us, as a
social order, to accept inferior
funding, resulting in inferior programs, when we have a constitution
!hat says we all have equal protection and equal benefit, and an Ohio
Constitution that guarantees equal
schools and a high quality of education statewide?" Phillis asked .
"Regardless of where one moves,
or where a business decides to
locate, excellent school programs
are not too much to ask."
"For those who ask if we can
afford equity in funding," Phillis
said, "my question is 'can we
afford not to do it?'", Inequity in
funding is unethical, uncon scionable, and bordenng on
immoral."

property; Mark McCloud. Middleport. cultivation of marijuana and
unlawful possession of a dangerous
ordnance.
Joe Smith. Middleport, unlawful
possession of a dangerous ord nance, two counts of receiving
stolen property; Roben H. Eads,
Ru~and, unlawful possession of a
dangerous ordnance; Rick S_tone,
Middleport, escape; Ph1lhp L.
Anthony, Jr., Columbus, carrying a
concealed weapon, having a
weapon undes disability and wllawful possession of a dangerous ordnance; John Amos, Racine, three
counts of aggravated burglary. two
counts of vandalism, twa counts ci
breaking and entering and one
count of unlawful possession of a
dangerous ordnance; and Mark
Theiss, Racine, three count.s of
aggravated burglary, two counts of
vandalism, two counts of lnaking
and entering, one count ci unlawful
possession of a dangerous ord nance , and receiving a stolen
weapon or firearm.

cattd that cop1es and originals are
near undistinguishable.
In preparation for the new system going into place next month,
Spencer met this week with county
title office employees, car dealers
and representatives of lending instiwtioos for a seminar on the preparation and precautions of the new
auUomated processing system.

Court news
Cases pi"'CtSS&lt;d
An action for divorce has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Charles Salser,
Pomeroy, against Susan L. Salser,
Middleport_
A divorce action bas been granted to Herbert L. Grate II,
Reedsville, from Rebecca S Grato,
Loog Bouorn.
An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed by Ann J.
Bradbury and Stephen D. Bradbury .

Marriagt liC1'n.st issued
A marnage license has been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Wendell Lee Blackwood,
31. and Beverly Melissa Ramsey,
24, both of Bellville, W.Va.

IndustriaL ...
(Omtinucd from Page I)
tion, the report showed that the
operating rate of the nation's factories, mines and utilities rose 0.3
peruntage point to 78.7 percent.
After remaining unchanged in
Septanber and October, industrial
production fell steadily through
January as the economy

weake~

following a brief burst after the
Persian Gulf War.
The Fed report was stronger
than earlier indJCations of manufac tunng output in April. Many
economists had expected an
advance of jUSI 0.3 percent.
will be held and members arc
The National Association of
requested to wear wh1te.
Purchasing Management had
Coin Club to meet _
.
reJKlfU:d that while the manufacturThe OH KAN Com Club w1ll mg sector conunucd to expa nd .
meet Monday at Burkett Barber growth was slower than in March .
Shop in Middleport. Soc•al hour
And the Labor Depanmenl said
and tradmg sess1011 at 7 p.m. pre - the manufacturmg sector posted an
cede the meetmg. Refreshments. increase of only 8.000 jobs last
New members welcome.
month.

-Meigs announcements--

Weather

Poppy days slated
Amencan Legion Auxiliary voluntccrs will dJstributc lhc famitiar
red, handcrafted poppies honoring
America's war dead this weekend ,
designated as Poppy Days by Auxiliary Unit No. 602, Racme.
The annual event pays tribute to
those veterans wbo have died in lhe

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, partly cloudy early
then clear. Low in the mid-50s .
Saturday, mostly sunny and
warmer. High in lhe mid-80s .
Extended forecast:
Sunday through Tuesday:
Sunday fair and continued
warm. Morning lows in mid-50s to
low 60s and highs 75-85. Sunday
night and Monday, a chance of
showers and turning cooler. Morning lows Monday 45-55 and highs
65-75. Tuesday, fair. Lows m the
50s and highs in lhc 70s.

last
It also who
honors
the will
mil -lions70ofyears.
Americans
have
ingly served their country m seven
decades.
All proceeds from the distribu tion arc invesled in local programs
for the benefit of the veteran and
his/her family.
Each poppy is made by veterans
for veterans in AuXthary -sponsorcd
Poppy shops that supplement physICa l and psyc hological therapy
needed by hospitalized and diS abled vclerans. The veteran makes
the poppy and is pa1d a small
amount for each flower . For some
it is tbeir only income.
The memorial poppy is never
sold, but given in exchange for a
contribution.
D of A to meet
Chester Council No . 323,
Daughters of Amenca, w1ll meet
Tue sday at 7:30p.m. The 58th
anniversary of the lodge w1ll be
observed. Initiation for a candidale

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
May 14 discharges - Brian
Boggs, Linda Boggs, Chad Bon·
nett, Brandee Buck, Brenda Casto,
Mrs. David Downard and son, Preston Eisnaugle, Debra Henry, Brenda Hill, Rebecca Martin, Bertha
Smilh and Lisa Thornton.
May 14 births- Mr. and Mrs.
Chris Copley, son, Galhpohs. Mr.
and Mrs. Homer Mills, son, Syracuse. Mr. and Mrs. Roderick Pennington, daughter, Gallipolis. Mr.
and Mrs. Mark Smith, son, Ashton,
W.Va . Mr. and Mrs . Charl es
Warlh, son, Hartford, W.Va.

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�~ports

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, May 15, 1992

Page-4

Symmes Valley bumps
Southern
baseball team
.
from district tourney
in the second for a 4-2 score.
By SCOIT WOLFE
The roof fell in on SHS in the
Sentinel Correspondent
Despite a great stan, the South- third when after Jaye Criswell dou·
Qn Tornado baseball team fell to a bled, Mark Edmonds singled, and
1&gt;0-4 defeat to Symmes Valley Andy Lester singled to load the
thursday evening in the District bases. Grueser came on in relief of
t(lurnament at Athens High School. Jones to walk one batter and force
. Southern bows out of the tour· in a run before Jerome Fuller
liey with a 10.11 overall mark and drilled a grand slam over the left
a·'7-4 second place finish in the field fence to cap a five-run inning.
The blow gave Symmes Valley a 7SVAC.
; Southern took a 4-0 lead in the 4 lead.
Southern hillers were led by
first inning when Keith Jones
Jeremy
Dill with two singles,
walked, Billy Jones singled and
Scott Lisle sacrificed them to sec- Gruescr a double, and smgles each
QI\d and third. Kyle Wtcklme by Billy Jones, Lisle, and Chris
Ebersbach.
wallced to load the bases.
Symmes Valley hitters were led
Andy Grueser reached on an
by
Fuller's home run, Lester a
crror to score a run before Jeremy
triple
and single, Chris Gates with
!'lonhup and Joey Hensler walked
a double and single, and Criswell a
tq each fon:e home a run.
· With Southern ahead 3-0, Jere- double and single.
Symmes had I 3 hits in all as
my Dill then delivered a single to
SHS
pitching fanned six and
knock in the final SHS run of the
seven. Eric Wall was the
walked
night, which gave the Tornadoes a
winning
p1tcher after Todd Robin 4~0 lead.
son
gave
up four runs in the flCSI.
: Keith Jones had waded right
They
walked
four and fanned eighL
tflrough the Symmes lineup the
Symmes
advances
to the next
fqst time around, but gave up two
markers to the Lawrence Countians round on Saturday.

Scoreboard
.

. In the maJors ...

Teu~at

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Ttam

L

PtL

GB

Pltl.lbwgh
10
· SL LouiJ ..
. .... 20 14
New'l'ori ...........201 5

W

.fiYT
.5113

l~

571

4

Monuea.J ............. 14 17
Chic.&amp;o....
.. 14 19

452

8

424
406

9

n

~dclp-u.a ..... .... l) 19

Thursday's scores

New 'r'ork 100, OUcaao 86, .em:. tied

l -l
Ul.lh Il l , Suttle I 00, UW wins Knco 4-1
Portllnd llR, Pt.oenil 106, Portland

9. ~

'WI.nt Knt:a

Wettrrn DlvWon
: Sanfnnci.soo . .... 19 14
.576
• ClndnnaU---Ml7 16
.515
• SanDiego .... . .... l71 7

Atlanl.l .. .
HOUitoo

16 20
..... 15 19
loiAnarJa ........ t l 19

500

444
441
J67

Tonlijht- Cltwtlud at Hollon , I

21

p.m.

4.1
4.1

Conference nnals

61

Saturd1y -Utah at Portl1nd. 3:30
pm

Thursday's score

Conference semlnnals
SundiJ - BoAton It Cintlll'ld, 2
p.m., If MCUNry; Ne-w YcU. at Oua go,
3:30 or 4:)0

Tonight's games
Phlladtlphla (Mulholl•nd 1-3) at
Cindnn.atJ (Brownlntr: 3-1). 7:35 p.m.
Sari Diqo (Ldle:tU )...].) II Pi.taburgh
(Neaalc 1· \),7 :35p.m.
M&lt;mu-eal. (Natnoll. 2-2) It ALlanl.l (Bi ·
dedi 1-2), 7:40p.m.
St. Lou ia (Conniorr 0-3 ) u Houa \.On
(X.ile l-4), 1:35 _e.m.
New Yrnt (Sabethagen 2-. 2} 1t Lo1
-"P (Ojc&amp; 1 - 2~ 10 ,)5 p.m
Ch.ictgo (Danny h ck•on 0-5) at San
Franciaco {Diad: 0.1). 10:35 p.m.

Conference llDals
Tuudar - U ~h t1 Ponl.and. 10.)0
p.m.
rrldliy, May l l - Ponlmd at UtAh. K

NOTE: If the Eu1an Cmfamcc. fual
u::ri.ea end. Ltl fi'o'e pma1 or lc:a, Game 7
of the WCllem CMf~ fin.&amp;\ will be
moved LO Sunday. hby 31

Saturday's games

Stanley Cup
playoff slate

QU"f.
San funciJco, 4:05p.m.
Ptllla t lphla 11 Cincinnati, 7:05 p.m.
11

lAetlo at Piuaburgh. 7:05p.m

Mm.UQ].at Atl.an... 1:10 p.m.
Louilat HWAOO.. 8.05 p.m
N- Yolk atl...ol An&amp;ela. 10:05 p.m.

Conference ftnals

Mal

Sl.

S.turda y,
16
f.dmonaoo. It Oucago. :35 p.m.
Sunday, May 17
Bo&amp;ton 1t Pmabut)h. 1 35 p.m
MOftdaJ, Mayll

Sunday's games
Diego It Pitabu(f.h, I :35 p m
MonuulaL Allanta, :!:10 p.m.

SUI

Phlladelphll at Clndnnati,l:1S p .m.
SL l..oo.ilat HwAon. 2:3~ p.m.
New Yad: 11 Loa ~dea. 4:0~ p.m
auc.ao 1t San FrmQW). 4 :35 p m.

AMERICA!\ LEAGUE
W L
ToroolO .. ............. 2.5 II

Ft:t.
694

Baltimore ............. 22 11
NcwYod: .......... 17 16

.667
.515
.467
~2
.424

[)drotl ................... l4 19
Oell'dand.-11 1J

.343

W 11:1Un1 DM1ion
Qucago................19 11
613
OUJand ..... .
20 14
.511
Cahfonua .......
IS
.S45
Mu\I"ICI1ull
..... 11 16
.515

::::-:u

T&lt;&gt;U
Sutllc

Ko~nul City

Edmor&amp;on at OUc::aso. R:l"'.i p.rn

Tuaday, May n
Boaoo at Pmabw)h. 7:35p.m.
WIMinelday, May 2t
Oucago 11 Edmmton. 9:35 p.rn
Thund.l y, May ll
PttuOOr.,h It Boti..Oil, 7:35 p.m
Friday, May 21
Oucago 11 Eenmton. 9:35 p.rn
Saturday, May lJ
Puutu rgh at Rillton, 7 3~ p.m.

[Mtem Divllion

Tun~

s~~m. ..... .. .. .... 14 t6
MJ.lwaukclt: ......... .... 14 17

1 .~
b.S

'
1.5
9.5
IB

..5
2
3

....... li li
.. 12 22

500
35 3

8 .~

10 l2

313

'1.5

ll

Thursday's score
Torooto 5, Seault"

Tonight's games
O•kla nd (Welch 1-1) 11 New York
(Kamaaucd.i 0-\i, 7.30 p.m
Cal.t!om ll (J. Abbott 2-4) It B01ton

Transactions

Bas&lt; hall

.4.rnnicM Lupe

CA LIFORNIA ANGELS - Pllr ·
ch ucd lhe contract of Hen Blylcvm ,
pitcher , from Edmontoo of the Panftc
(out League. Opcionod Joe Gn.he.. pi~ ­
c:r, to Edmonton . Acti'o'alcd Oon Robin ·
p•tdle:r. from tne IS-day cbubkd bll;
llld ~•ood him on w&amp;J'I'a1o_far the purpoi-C.
of g1vin1 him ru. Wl&lt;:ald.itiona.l ~K
DETROIT TIGERS - PlacW Dan
Gl•~r:n. nutfiddcr, ~\he 15-day dia •bled list. ~voc 10 May I J _Rec.illed
Shawn Hue, outfldder, frmrl Toledo of
h~.e lnt.c:mauonal Lap

•on.

National Leape
CISC INNATI R[DS - S•nlllll
Morrl•, nnl buetn••• to Nut.•ilt. or
tht Amtrlun Auoclatlon on 1 lt-da:y
r~hablllt.atlon

t.lm'oy.c 4-2). 7:35p.m

MlnnuoU (E.rlcU. l -)) at Cl~ve.
land (NII)I J-l), 7:3! p.IIL
Teu.1 (JOK GuzmUJ 2-3) tl Mllw•u kce (8.ofio 3-2), 1_05 p m.
lh h..imor c (Mlllltl"ll 4 -0) IL ChJCIJ(I
(Fc:mandocr. 2-)).1:05 p.m.
DetrOit (Gu!hdson ~ - 2) at K1n111
C1ty (( Y~ 1-1),8 J5 pm

Saturday's games
ll

Nnr York

•alanmtnL

Football

(Oc:mcru 4- )), 7:35p.m.
Scanle (Fk:mlna 4-1) at T()f(W'II.O (Sid ·

Oakland (Unilnt1· 2)

4-1

Conferenre semlnnals
2

PitUhwJh 4, AI.J.UJLI l

San

y.
p
M.ihraukcc, 1;('6 p.m.

NBA playoffs

Euttnl l&gt;i•lllon

NatiMal Foolballl...t..qM

HOUSTON OILERS - Siw&gt;"' ELJoh

AutUn , defen1ivc linem an ; Core~ Ed ·

mond, ChytOO H01ry and AnM Carron.
la nebacle" ; Clyde Hawley, oCfcn1 1"e
~arrl , Carltm Lance. deiCill.l..-e back, and
John Rood . wtde m;c:iva.

Hockey
National Hockey Leap
ST . LOUIS BLUES - Sa8flod Gooff
Sarjeant.. goah.c:nder .

(Leary 3-2), I -10 p m

Seattle (P1ricr 0-0)11 Toronl.o (JLJan
Gur.man S-0). 1 3~ p m.
Mlnnetota (Smitty 2-l) al Ot'o'tland
{Otto 2·3), I :3! p.m.
Tull (R~tn 0 - I ) t l Milwaukee
(Bona !- 1), "1 JS pm
( lhlomta (Vtlera 2-1) 1\ 80fun (VIO·
Ia 4-2). 105 p.m.
Ba !Umon (M.tl.cl' 2-2) 11 Cht CIJO

(McDo.....-ll 7-0). 7:05p.m.
Detro!l (A ldred 0-3) &amp;L
(Gordon 0-4), 8.&lt;B p.m.

College
B IG WEST - Announced 1hat
A.rlunua s._.tc., Louiaianll Tecla, Nonhem
Dlinr:.:a and the Univcnily ~ South.-t·
c:m louiaiUJa will cmtpeu in rootb&amp;ll i.n
lhc ron.fcrmcc. dfeaive in 1993.
ILLINOIS - :'-lamed Rm Guenther
1thlctic ducctor

NAVY -

Named Emmett O.oru and

~&amp; Wojcii men'• aaaiuant bu&amp;etlwoll
COICh e&amp;.

K1nJII C 1ty

Sunday's gamu
Cahfomia II 8oooo., I :OS p-m
Oakland at New Yod. 1:JO p.m
Seaulc.ll Tornn&amp;o, I :33 p.m.
MIMHOI.Itt Ctevdand., 1:JS p.m.
Baltimc:tte u Chicaao. 2.3~ p.m.

Sports briefs
Tennis
ROME (AP) - Top-seeded Jim
Courier ousted Sergi Bruguera 6-3,
6-2 and No. 2 Pete Sampras beat
Goran Prpic of Croatia 6-2, 6-7 (7·
5:1, 6-3 in lhe Italian Open. Fifthseeded Michael Chang downed
defending champ Emilio Sanchez
6-1 , 7-5.
Tennis
BERLIN (AP) - Top-seeded
Su:rfi Graf beal Helena Sukova 63; 3-6, 6-2 in the Berlin Open,
while No. 2 Aranlxa Sanchez VIcario ropped Nalalia Zvereva 7-6
(7c5). 6-3, and Jennifer Capriati
oUsted Barbara Rittner 7-5,6-3.

Ohio

1992

mTERBErN - Announced \heR:of E W. " Bud" Yoal, athld.IC
director. dfectivc Aua. 31 .
.
RICE - Named Trmt. Jduuan uw: ·
t.lnl ma~'• haU:cthall co.cb.
SOlffifWESTERN LOU1SIANA ExlU\dcd the a.~!Pct o( Marty Fldcha',
buletb.&amp;U coach, throuah the 1994-95

tJranm l

~

IOWOPUFOI
IIIIIIIUSOI
eo.pllto line of hthll.. 111111
V~totalllo

Plants, llo011l..
allll foll•1• l•llfllll
lalkets, lora• SeleCtion of
Slnlllory
olld TrHs.
o,. Dalr h.a •• s~

iiunuirs
GREENHOUSE
Syraose 992-5776

SOUTHERN SECTIONAL CHAMPIONS- Soulhern's base·

Hensler, Roberl Kimes, Seolt Lisle, Chris Ebersbacb, Andy Grueser
and Billy Jones. Slanding are Ronnie Spaun, Keith Jones, Jeremy
Northup, Jeremy Dill, John Chaney, David Smith, Kyle Wickline
and Winebrenner.

ball team, piloted by Mick Winebrenner, rec:ently claimed the Divi-

sion IV sectional championship by ddeating Kyger Creek J-0 ear~­
er this week. Pictured are (front row, L-R) Trent Cleland, Joey

Bucs, Blue Jays victors in light baseball action
ATLANTA (AP) - The Pitts·
burgh Pirates own the best record
in the major leagues and have final ly found a way to beat the Atlanta
Bmves: Stay close and win it in the
ninth inning.
For the second night in a row,
the Ptrates rallied in the ninth
inning to beat the Braves. On
Thursday night, it was Jeff King
with a two-run, bases-loaded single
providing the 4-3 victory in the
only National League game.
On Wednesday night, Jay Bell
hit a solo homer for an 11-10 win.
Until Wednesday night, the
Pimtes had lost seven straight regular season games to the Braves in
Atlanta, dating back to Aug. 29,
1990.
The Pirates (23-10) have won
seven of their last 10 games. The
Braves, meanwhile, have lost five
of six as their bullpen failed to hold
a lead or tie in four of the losses.
King, who had a solo home run
- only his second of the season in the eigh th o[f starter John
Smaltz (3-3), ~otthe game-win ning hit off reltever Marvin Freeman after the Pirates had loaded the
bases with one out of[ Smoltz.
It was Smaltz' ftrst appearance
against Pittsburgh since last October when he pitched a 4-{) shutout
in Game 7 of lhe NL playoffs to
send th e Braves to the World
Series.
The right-hander gave up a single and intentional walk before getting Ron Gant, the league's leading
RBI producer with 29, on a fly to
right. Mason protected the victory
for Vicente Palacios (2-0), who
pitched I 1(3 innings and escaped a
bases -loaded, two-out jam in the
eighth inning.
The Braves had gone ahead 3-1
in the sixth on a two-run homer by
Terry Pendleton and RBI single by
Damon Berryhill off Pirates starter
Zane Smith.
Pendleton, who had three hits
orr Smith, has a career mark o[
.48 1 off the Pirates lcft-hander (2552). Pendleton also extended hi s
hitting streak to I I games and 22
of 23 games. In that period he has
raised his average from .174 to
.33 I, hit all six of his home runs
and driven in 20 of his 25 runs.
"It's a situation we somehow
have to forge~" said Smoltz, who
had allowed only five hits. struck
out four and walked one until the
ninth.
He walked Barry Bonds to open
the inning, got Gary Varsho on a
fly ball , then issued a double to
Steve Buechele and walked Mike
LaValliere intentionally to load the
bases before leaving for Freeman.
"I think we·re snakebit. We're
doing the right things until that one
point," said Smaltz . "I never
thought I was going to lose this
~arne. I don't know what the
answer is. Something's missing."
So far, it's been the bullpen ,
which is 2-9 and has blown four
saves in I I opportunities.
"They're jusl going through a
spell that overybody goes through
during the season, ' said Mason .
"You lrnow they 're going to come
out or iL rm just glad that it will be
after we leave town."

Blue Jays S, Mariners 4
At Toronto, the slumping Seattle Mariners found out that two can
be better than one, even when the
one is worth three.
Devon Wh1te and Kelly Gruber
clubbed two-run homers Thursday
night to lead the Toronto Blue Jays
to a 5-4 victory over the Mariners.
whose power production came in

the form or Pete O"Brien's threerun shot.
White broke an 0-for-1 I slump
and erased a one-run deficit with
his home run off loser Calvin Jones
(I -I) in the seventh inning. Gruber
added a run-scoring double to his
two-run homer as the Blue Jays
captured their ninth win in their last
I I games and sent the Mariners to

their 13th loss in 15 games, includ·
ing their eighth straight road loss.
Manuel Lee chased Mariners
starter Russ Swan with an infield
single before White sent Jones· 2-2
pitch to right for his third home run
of the season.
Both White and Gruber dedicated their homers to their birthday(See MAJORS on Page 5)

New York tops Chicago 100-86
to force seventh game Sunday
By BILL BARNARD
NEW YORK (AP) - The New
York Knicks already have achieved
the unlikely - knocking the
defending champion Chicago Bulls
back on their heels to fon:e a scv.
enth game.
On Sunday, the Knicks will try
to achieve what nearly everyone
considered impossible -knocking
the Bulls out of lhe playoffs.
"We got it to a sevenlh game
and that"s what a sixth game is
abou t,'' Knicks coach Pat Riley
said of Thursday night's 100-86
victory over the Bulls that tied the
best-of-seven series 3-3 . "You
play one game, wilh no tears, no
regrets."
Patrick Ewing, hobbling after
spraining his left anlcle in the third
period, combined with Xavier
McDaniel and John Starks to rout
Chicago in the fourth quarter,
outscoring the Bulls 32-16 in the
final 12 minutes.
Ewing scored 10 or his 27
points, McDaniel II or his 24

START DISTRICT PLAY SATURDAYThe sectional champion Eastern Eagles, 14-I on
the season and ranked 17th in Division IV, will
play North Gallia Saturday al 2 p.m. in the first
round of I he district baseball tournament at
Athens High School. Pictured are (front row, LR) Philip Woods, Wes Arbaugh, Ryan Buckley,

Pal Newland and Tyson Rose. In the back row
are Robert Reed, Wes Holter, Mike Smith, Jeremy Buckley, Jeff Dursl and head coach Eddie
Coltins. Absent from lhe photo were Tim Bissell
Charlie Bissell, Mike Newland, Dave Koenig:
Randy Kaylor, Rod Newsome and Jerrod Ridenour.

points and Starks eight of his 27
points and four of his five steals in
the fourth quarter as New York
overcame its only deficit ·or the
game, 70-68, at the start of the
period.
While the Knicks came together
in the final 12 minutes, the Bulls
fell apart, hitting six of 21 shots, or
29 percent.
Michael Jordan scored 21
points, but his only pointsin the
fourth quarter was a meanmgless
three-pointer after the outcome was
decided. Scottie Pippen finished
with 18 points.' but was scoreless in
the final 12 mmutes.
·
Elsewhere in the NBA playoffs
Thursday, Utah and Portland
advanced to the Western Confer·
ence finals with victories at home.
The Jazz beat Seanle I 11 -100 and
the Trail Blazers defeated Phoenix
118-106to complete 4-1 series
wins. The two teams meet Saturday
in Portland in the series opener.
New York drew two technicals

Palmisiano named first head
football coach at Malone
CANTON, Ohio (AP) - Joe Greenville, III.
Palmisano says he's tackled the job
"But we went8-I that first year
before, so starting a football pro- and there was a sense or pride on
gram at Malone won't he as tough everyone's part in how far they had
as it was the ftrst time he did it.
come and what they had done,'' he
"I've been associated with the said.
start of football programs at
"I will use the word 'establish'
Wingate College and Greenville in discussing the football program
College," Palmisano said, "so at Malone, because I'm not looking
starting a football program [rom for a quick-fiX or shortcuts to success. We're looking to establish
scratch is nothing new for me."
Palmisano, 39, is the flfSI coach this program for the long haul, to
of Malone's football program, give it steady growth for years of
which will begin in 1993.
success," he said.
It is the first head -coac hing
He said there are many talented
position for Palmisano, who is an athletes in northeast Ohio who
ass1stant coach and a physical edu have been passed over by the bigcation instructor at Cumberland gee colleges because they were too
College in Williamsburg, Ky.
small or too slow.
"I am excited about staning this
"The great thing about coaching
program because they say the at this level is that you still have
greatest opportunities are usually room for the size of a young man's
disguised as the greatest chal- heart," Palmisano said. "If I do the
Ienges," Palmisano said.
JOb right and if college officials
He said he expects frusLralion, want me around in 15 to 20 years ,
something he found when he start- this is where I want to be. This is
ed the program at Greenville, in --Ule only job I wanted."

In the majors ...

(ContinuedfromPage4)

scoring bloop single to center mthe
celebrating daughters.
"I don't call too many third before Gruber's run-scoring
homers," said White, whose double to right pulled the Blue Jays
daughter Davcllya turned I on even atl-1 in the fourth.
Thursday. "I called one before for
"The 1wo infield hits (Wednesmy son backin Chicago in 1987.
day) helped me ou~" said Gruber,
Gruber, whose wife, Lynn, ¥ave batting .200 in May before falling a
birth to a daughter Monday mght, triple short of the cycle Thursday
said he wanted lo do something night. "But it's only one game .
special for his second child, Cassie. And just as soon as you get out or
He hit Swan's J.J piiCh into the the eye of the stonn, you can fmd
second deck in left for his fifth yourself right back in it.''
home run of the season and a 3-1
Swan pitched effectively over 6
Blue Jays lead in the fourth.
1/3 innings, giving up four run s on
"I was actually trying to mouth five hits. He struck out a careerthe words 'This one's for you high five and walked four in the
Cassie.' I'm sure Lynn was watch- American League's only game
ing," he said.
Thursday.
O'Brien, who put lhe Mariners
up 4-3 with his eighth home run of
the season, a three-run shot to right
off Dave Stieb (2 -3), pul the loss
into perspective.
"If we keep r,Iaying the way we
did tonight, we ll win a few more
down the road," 0' Brien said.
Stieb allowed four runs on six
(otered By
hits over seven innings. He struck
out lhree and walked three before
David Wells pitched two innings
Call For Menus
for his ftrst save of the season.
Harold Reynolds, batting a
&amp; Reservations
car~er .452 (14-for-31) off Stich,
(304) 675-2260
put the Mariners up 1-0 wilh a run-

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and two flagrant fouls in the game
with Chicago, but became the ftrst
tea m to score 100 points in the
series while holding the opposition
under 90 for the ninth time in II
postseaSOn games.
Although they tied the score
seven times, the Bulls didri'tlead
until two free throws by Pippen
after a Oagrant foul by Starks gave
them a 70-68 lead with 1.9 seconds
left in the third quarter.
But New York, which took a
14-game losing sueak against lhe
Bulls into the series, scored the
rust 13 points of the fourth quarter
for an 81-70 advantage.
John Paxson broke an 0-for-6
Chicago drought wilh an IS-footer
at the 5:51 mark, but a basket by
McDaniel and two free throws by
Starks gave the Knicks their largest
lead, 85-72, with 4:37 IefL
Craig Hodges, a three-time
long-distance shooting contest win ncr who sees little playing time for
Chicago. gave the Bulls some life
offenstvcly wilh consecutive threepointers, closing them within
seven.
After a basket by Ewing, Will
Perdue hit a free throw after a flagrant foul on Anthony Mason and
Horace Grant dunked when lhe
8 ulls retained possession, pulling
them to 87-81 with 2:54 left. But
another field goal by Ewing and
two more free throws by Starks
rebuilt the margin to 10 with 2:12
to go, and Olicago didn't threaten
again.
Trail Blazers 118, Suns 106
Portland advanced to the West·
em Conference finals for the third
straight season, beating Phoenix
be hind Clyde Drexler's 34 points.
Portland's only deficit of the
final game was 43 -42 midway
through the second quaner.
The Blazers led by as many as
16 early in the third period before
Phoenix, playing its final game
under retiring coach Cotton
Fitzsimmons, closed to 97 - ~ with
10 minutes to play.
Portland scored the next eight
points to pull ahead 105-94, and
the Suns got no closer than nine
agatn.
Jazz 111, SuperSonics 100
Utah advanced to the CORference
finals for the ftrst time in team his tory by improving its home record
in the playoffs to 6-0.
Karl Malone scored 37 points,
I5 in the fourth quarter, to ral Iy the
Jazz from an eight-point deficit.
Utah scored the game's last 10
points in the final two minutes.
Utah is now 43-4 at the Delta
Center this season, including six
straight playoff wins.

'·

LUMBER
WEEKLY

I

I
(831 04 99)

ALZADO DIES - Lyle Alzado, shown in lhis 1977 me photo as
a Denver Bronco, died Thursday of brain cancer in Portland, Ore.
Alzado, wbo blamed steroid use for his cancer, was 43. (AP)

-------I
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land Browns and Los Angeles
Raiders during his 14 years in the
National Football League. He
re tired in I 985 and failed in a
comeback attempt with the Raiders
two years ago.
He was a member of the
Raiders' 1983 Super Bowl championship team, was named the NFL's
defensive player or the year ip
1977 and was named All-Pro twice.
He said he began using steroids
in I 969 and spent $20,000 to
$30,000 a year on them. He also
said he used a human growlh hor.
mane, which he believed helped
destroy his immune system, during
his comeback attempL
After he was diagnosed in April
I 991, he appeared on talk shows to
urge youngsters to avoid steroids.
He said when he was playing, 75
pen:cnt of the player. took steroids
or some drug to enhance performance.
The Lyle Alzad&amp; National
Steroid Education Program was
established as part or the Athletes
and Emenainers for Kids organizaLion.

With Swings and
Treated Lumber

99.99

Brain cancer kills Alzado
ByBOBBAUM
PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Lyle
Alzada, who took anabolic steroids
to build himself into a fearsome
football player, has died at age 4 3
of brain cancer that he blamed on
his steroid use.
Doctors said there was no proof
that the steroids caused the rare
form or brain lymphoma that
turned Alzado into a whispering
shell of the 6-foot -3, 270-pound
football player he had heen.
"As a scientis~ one cann01 real ly say it is clear the anabolic
steroids led to the lymphoma,"
said Dr. Thomas DeLoughery, a
blood cancer specialist at Oregon
Health Sciences Universtly . "I
think it's unfortunatel y open to
speculation."
Alzado died in his sleep Thursday at his home in Lake Oswego, a
Portland suburb, said Lee Lew is
Husk, a spokeswoman for the Oregon Health Sciences University,
where Alzado had heen undergoing
treatment.
His wife, Kathy, was at his side.
Alzada played on the defensive
line for the Denver Broncos, Cleve-

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---------------

�Friday, May 15, 1992

By The Bend

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dally Senllnei-Page-7

The Daily Sentinel
Friday, May 15, 1992
Pag~

~;s~~~~ e:~ends tha~}~~::

•'

wanted 10 leave money to charity
and ~ked you to recommend an
organozabon that helps humanity
and does very liule skimming
off 1he lOp. You replied, "The
Hereditary Disease Foundation. No
other foundalion comes close. Its
mtegnty IS exemplary."
As the pauidmt of the Hereditary
Disease Foundation, I am delighted
that ~e have your confidence,
especially these days when many
organ1Z31Ions are being investigated
for betraying_ the public lnJsl. The
Hereditary Dt~ Foundation is a
tax~xemp1 organization dcdicallld
10 findmg the cure for hereditary
ollness. ?ne . hundred percent of
all con1nbut1ons are placed in a
restrt cted researc h bant account
and can be used only for science.
Our board of trustees pays for our
very low administralive costs.
PIRATES AND LOST BOYS · Shldnlts at
Harrisonville Elementary will prtstnt the play
" Peter Pan" Friday evening at 7 p.m. at the
school. Pictured are students in a scent feahor-

inc 1M Pirates and 1M Lost Boys, 1-r, Tina Fraley, Kelly Dahon, Robin Donohue, Jillian Will,
Holly Welsh, Amanda Parsons and Joe
D' Aagustino.

s·

once you gave us that generous
accolade nine years ago, we have
been named as beneficiary in a
number of wills from people
throughout the country. In some
ins1311CeS, the entire estate has been
donated 10 the Hereditary Disease

Foundation.

PETER PAN ·The play, "Peter Pan," will
••.be presented by students at Harrisoaville Ele: . ,enlary on Friday at 7 p.m. Debbie Lowery is
' the director and pictured are members of the

usl, 1-r, Dawn Yost, Melissa Reeves Megan
Drummer, Lindsey Lyons, Kyle Smidd~ Chris
D' Aogustino, Corlney Haley, Aaron S..;athers
and Jasoo PreasL

LafldCfS
ANN LANDERS
"1991, Leo 1\Jrc.._
~ SJDdlale

c - Syndl&lt;ltt"
MICH.
DEAR B.C.: I'm well acquainicd
wilh the Cancer Fund of America
and 1would 1101 give them 8 dime.
Peter FennellyoflheCancerFund
of America. Inc., recen~y wrote to
Benjamin C. Bradlee, vice president
at large_of 1he Washington Pos~ 10
complain aboutlhe column 1did on
this so-called Charily. Mr. Bradlee
has given me pennission 10 print his
response.
Here
it is:
"Dear Mr.
FenneUy:
1am IOid that
the Cancer Fund of America has

f~. am

told the Cancer Fund of
America is oot approved by either
the Bettec Business Bw-eau or the
National Charities Information

Bureau.

"I'm told that your fund ~raising
costs vary from 27 pett:ent to 72

landers.
All of us a1 the Hereditary
Dosease Foundation extend our

you have consciously
·
leas
pauerned your fund-raisong p
so

heartfelt !hanks for giving the
public_ the facts. Our new address is:
Heredi lary Disease Foundation
1427 71h St., Suite 2, Santa Monica:
Calif. 90401. ··NANCY S. WEXLER, PH.D., PRESIDENT
DEAR DR. WEXLER: I would
like my readers to be awn that I
know your organizalioo inlimalcly,
having served on the boanl for 16
years. One of ·our· scienlisls, Dr.
James Gusella of Harvard. locttled
the gene marker for Huntington's
disease, and discovery of the gene
itself, though elusive, cannot be far
behind. For those of yoo who want
10 suppon a truly fine cause, you
need look no further.
Dear Ann Landers: My husband
and I are not weallhy, bul we are
sufficien~y comforlable 10 make
some modest conlributions 10 a few
worthy causes. Since three family
members have died of cancer in
recent years, we are inclined to
give to charities thai suppon canctr

Churdl &lt;I J...., Cllrbt Apoote1k
VanZ.andt and Wud Rd
Pa.swr. JiffieS Miller

Sunday School - 10:30 a.m.
Ev~ ·7: 30p.m.
Wr:dnesday Semccs . 7JOp.m.

that you serve less lhan I percent of
the number of patients served by the
American Cancer Society.
"If any of that is true, I'm IIOl sure
you should be writing to me as you
did."
Now my friends in Battle Creek,
did Ben Brad lee answer your
question?
An alcohol problem? How cDII )IJU
help )IJurself or sontLoM you love?
"Alcoholism: How to Recogniu It,
How to Deal With It, How to
Conquu It" will give you tht
answtrs. Stlld a self-addressed,
long. busiMss-siu enwlopt and a
check or moMy or.Ur for $3.65 (this
incllllks postagt and handling) 10.
Alcohol, c/o AM l..muUrs, P.O . Box
11562, Chicago, II/. 6061 W.562 . (In
C111111da, send $4.45.)

been sued by 12 stales for dccepti ve
fund-raising practices and has paid
oul close to SI million in settlement

This is 8 remarkable testimonial
10 the trust people have in you, Ann

Apostolic

~.:t.told

Assembly of God

Fr.. Witt Bapdst C""rdi
A•h Street, Middlq&gt;on
Paslor. Mark Morrow
SaiUni.ly Service-7:30p.m.
Sunday ScOOol. - 10 a.m.

Woniup · II a.m.,
Wednesday &amp;.-...l&lt;:t-?:30 p..m.
Rutland Flrst S.plht Chunll

Sunday School · 930 a.m.
Wonhtp · 10:45 a.m.
Pomero1 Fin11 U..p&amp;S
East Mam 5I
Pa~tor: Dr. Lee Morm
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.m.
F'lrsl Southern Baptbt
4t872 Pumeroy Ptlre
Pastor: E. Lunar 0' Bry...t

Sunday School · 9,30 a.rn

Middleport Flrst S.plbl
Comer Sixth cl Palmer
1-utor: Rev. Jame5 A . Seddon
Sunday School - 9: 15 a..m
Worship - 10:15 a..m .

MIDDLEPORT
FLATS•••••••••••••••5695

7

95

,.••••••••••••••••••••••1111

WE'RE

TH

NEWmR-FRV DINNERS

Concerts slated

SCIENCE WINNERS· These stadenll were
the top sixth grade winners in the sc~ fair at
Sa lisb~ry Elementary School and their projects
are bemg displayed in the window at Quickel
Insurance Co., Co urt and Second, Pomeroy.
They are (rom the lcfl, Myra Haynes, Mrlissa

Ramsburg, Heidi Lecar, Michael Leifheit, and
~rad Davenport. Haynes, Legar, and Davenport
hed for first pia..,, Melissa Ramsburg look second and Micharl Leilhrit, third. Approximalely
70 fourth, firlb and sixth gradr students or
Karen Walker compded in the science rair.

Names in the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) Roseanne and Tom Arnold arc
involved in three new proJects: a
mov1e, a house and a baby.
Mrs . Arnold, star of th e ABC
comedy "Roseanne," underwent
surgery 16 days ago to untie her
fallopian tubes so the couple can
;"llllve a child.
• " It wa.• very successful. We can
1start trying in five week s ... her
1110sband said Wednesday.
In two weeks, he saJd, the cou-

pie begins shooting a movie in
Iowa, whete they also are building
a new home.
NEW YORK (AP) - Many of
the medical workers who helped
save Sally Jessy Raphael's son's
life after a near-faiBI car wreck
were in the audience when he taped
a show with his molher.
"Every moment he would say,
'I wan t to walk on your show. I
want 10 walk on your show ,"'

Raphael recalled Thunday.
Jason "JJ." Soderland, 19, wa.•
in a coma for 10 days after his car
smashed inlo 1 tree in January
about60 miles nonh of New Yorlc.
Soderland, who also suffered
two broken legs, praised the
paramedics, docun and nurses many in attendance - who saved
his life. The show will air May 20.
Raphad 's daugh~er, 33-year-old
Allison Vladimir, died of an accidenlal drug overdose in February.

''

;Crafts fair set at
~ob Evans Fanns
: '.c:_~ springtime crafl.! fair will be

• l""""nted 81 Bob Evans Fann Sat: urday and Sunday from 9 a.m. to 5
'p. m.

; A variety of items will be avail ; able at lhe fair and local crafters
1will be participating.
Articles will be displayed at the
! homeslead, homes1ead patio,
• homestead front yard, homestead
; bad yard, craftbam, fann museum
:and on the fann museum road.
• •, The public is inviicd and funhcr
: ihrormalion may be obtained by
:calling Bob Evans Farm at (614)

r·

!245-5305.
•.

The Eastern High School Music
Department will present its annual
spring concett Sunday at3 p.m.
The concen will feature all of
the instrumental and vocal ensem .
bles that participaicd in the Eastern
music program.
Fealnred ensembles will be:
Fourth grade recorder classes
from Tuppers Plains, Chester and
Riverview elementary schools, the
high school vocal ensemble, the
high school clarinet choir, elementary band and high school concen
band.
The high school vocal ensemble
will perform The Thinking Tree,
Keep the Spirit, Singin' in lhe
Rain, and Boogie Woogie Bugle
Boy .
The Eastern clarinet choir will
perform selections from Mozart
and Gneg.
The combined elementary bands
will perform: The Fat Cal Goes
Disco, and Baywood Ovetture. The
high school band will perform Silvercrest Match, Jubilaoons, Theme
from New York, New York, and
Celebration and Dance.
Williarn Hall is the director and
the public is invillld.

99

I!()*

cl· ,

sent and 39 sick and shut-in calls
reported.

The tour of Henderson House
and Red Bird Mission will be June
16-18.

Chester UMW hold meeting
"Literacy . Copi ng With
Words" was the title of the program presented by Mrs. Ethel Orr
and Mrs. Denise M001 a1 the recent
meeting of the Chester United
Methodist Women.
The purpose of the program was
to enlarge the undetSianding of the;
~tng of litency, 10 participate
•n the Decade of Literacy, and 10
get mvolved locaUy and giOOally in
efforts to eradicate illiteracy.
The group sang the hymn "For
A Thousand Tongues to Sing" with
Beuy Dean as pianist.
The group nead a lirurgy for literacy, together.

It was staled that near! y onefifth of the world's adult population remains illiterate.
Nations and organizalions
became aware lhat not only were
nearly one billion adults without
basic reading and writing skills;
over IJO million school-age children an: without access to school.
The most disadvantaged in lhese
groups an: women and girls. 11 is
estimaled lhal one in every five
adults is functionaUy il~terate. Several stories relating to illiteracy
were told.
Mn. Ka~ Mora presided at
the meeting With 13 members pre-

The group voted to purchase
more silverware for the kitchen. A
potluck breakfa.•t was held Easter
Sunday.

GRAVELY TRAClOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE
21M Ccllldor II.

p "" .,. 011.

Spri11 M ._.., ...,

•••":1._
.........
.,
t
·SP.a.
s... tUL·IP.a.

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

•
Acnu lly.
"&gt;llrrm g up a
delK!OII&lt;&gt; varwry of frf"'ih \f'.Q.
eta hies With your c hCII (f' of
chkktn or bed all 'e~ rd wrth
d1nner hread and nee and Shnnfy\
spec• alt enyak• "&gt;Juce I! \ JvadJhle at

both lunch and dmner And a1 'uch ;r
low pnce. 11 \ really ca us1n_g qu1tr a ' r11

Inger

O'Del Lumber

Bradl'ord Church o( Chrlst
St. Rt. t 24 .t U&gt;. Rd. 5
Pastor: Derek Stump
S~mdly

School - 9 :30 1.m .

l..iberty Christian Church
De&gt;. let
Putor. Woody Call
Sunday School - 10 1.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednelday Service - 7 p.m.
LanCJYtllt Chrlltlan Church
s...tay School · 9:30a.m.
Wunlup · IOJO a.m., 7,30 p.m.
Wednesday Service 7:30p.m.
u._~

Gron Church

Paaoc Cbarlt:1 Danigan
Sunday IChool · 1030 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30 1.m.., 1 p.m.
Retd.nille .::burch fA Christ
Puwr: Philip Stunn
S...tay School: 9,30 a.m
Wonhlp ScfVice: 10:30 a..m.
Hiblo: Study, Wedncaday, 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Sema. · 7 p.m.

Ash Str... rr...rill S.p&lt;bl
M;ddlcport
Sundly School · 10 un.
Wunlup - II am.

·

~:~~~ScM&lt;.=
· 7JOp.m.
Sacred Hurt C.lllollc Claordo

t61Mulbeny A&gt;&lt;., Pomaoy, 992-5898
Pastor: Rc:v. Wal1er E. Heinz
Cm4:45-5 : 15~.m .; ~au - 5 : 30pm

Sun. Con. · 8'4H.t5 Lffi .,
Sun. Man - 9:30a.m.

Daily Mu1 . 8:.30 ••-

Church of Christ

I&amp;C Jewelers
Hood Fmlily Shoes
Swisher Lohse
Anderson's
Chopmon fGmily Shoes

='l.

F.....-. R"" S.p&lt;bl
Pastor. Arius Hun
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Wonh1p - II a.m.

Sunday School - I 0 a.m
Evenin&amp; - 1 p.m.
Wedn«d..y Services - 1 p.m.

Sat

M...,. Cbun:h rA Cbrtst
Millt:r St, Mason, W.Va .
Sunday School~ 10 a.m.
It a.m., 7p.m.
W
y Services - 7 p.m.

H - C..rdi &lt;I Cllrlslln

Rull.and FrH WHI Bapllst

n..ls to tM gneroslty of local Mermt.ts, P••ts of
tu J11lor Gld Sellor classes co. .ded a1 after Pr•
adlvlly for Meigs HigiJ s..-ts at Royal Oak Resort.
A free a~etlo1 was co. .ded by Kelt~ Ka,.y 01d
A.....la Molclel wit~ yow . .y tlo.atlollS. Yo• lllllle tM

Outer Cburch of Christ
Pastor: Ouis Stewart
Sonday School · 9,30 a.m.
Wonhip · lOJO ~m
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Faith Baptist Churdl
R ailro&amp;d St , Masoo
Sunday SdJool - 10 am .
Worthip · II a__m_, 6 p.m_.
Wednesday Servict~ - 7 p m

Putoc Rc: ... . PIUI T•ylof

Three in One
Frm Aoris1

Wonlup · Hl a.m., 6JO p.m.

Sua:tSS Road Churth of Chrb1
Pasto• Joseph B. Hoskin•
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Wonhip - 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~J - 7 p.m

Sal&lt;m St

AbeGrueser/TheEagles
(!II Hysel
Ohio Rive! Beer Company
ARA Food Services/Meigs High
School
Loder 219 /lleriloge House
Mi Slreel Bookstore
The Plesu~ion Shop
Frudl PN IIIOC'f
llleSubway
The Added Touch
Yaughaa's Caditd FGOds
Midclepcwt llejKJ l111t11l Stare
WMPOlc.lio
Rutland Deportment Store
Birchfield Funeral Home
lullaad Fumittfe Compc~~y
Bank I - Pomeroy
laRk 1-lutbld Btundl
Oalie's Y'tdeo
Jed's Caryout
Olmic Cuts
SeLaslills
The Hobby Horse
Meigs County Golf Club
Beacon Gtgo Station

Puler: Robert F01ter
Swdly School - 9 a.m .

llellllfllem Ba pll!l
Pastor: Re\1. Elrt Shuler
Sunday School - I 0:30 1.m
Won;hip · 9:30a .m
Thursday Ser.ices - 7:30p.m.

Antiquity Baptisl
PaslOr. Kenneth Srrulh
Sund•y School · 9:30a.m.
Worship . 10:45 a.m
Thunday Services - 7:30 p..m

321 VIAND STREET • PT. PLEASANT, W. YL

P.D.K. Construdion

Tappen Plains Cburdl or Christ

Wonlup - J0,30a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Savict:J · 7:30p.m

Ml Moriala Bopllst
Fourth .t M&amp;m SL , M;ddtcpon
Pastoc Rev. Gilhen Cra.ig.. Jr.
Sunday School - 9:30 1.m.
Wonh:i.p · I0:45 a.m

Christian Union
Clortsll• Utalon
Puwr: Theron ll111ham
SoMay School· 9,30 a.m.
Evming - 7 p.m.
H...,onl Cllurd! orChrlsl In
Cltris&amp;lan Uaion

Hanford, W.Va.
Pusoc Rr"'ll. David McMUJjs
SIOby School - II 1.m.
Wonhip · 9JO Lm., 7,30 p.m.
We&lt;k&gt;esday ScMttJ . 7,30 p m

Church of God
Ml Moriali Clourdl rA God

Racine

Putor: Rc:v. James San.crfic:ld
Swodoy Sdtool · 9A5 a.m.
Evming - 7 p.m.
Wednucby Services - 7 p.m
Rutland Church rA God
Pastor: John F. Corronm
S...Jay School · t 0 a m

Wonhip - 11 a.m., 7 p.m
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
SyraCUS~e

Church of God
Apple and Secood Su.
Pa.nor Rr:v . David Ru.sseU
Sunday Sd&gt;ool and W'"'hip~ 9:30a.m.
Evtnln&amp; Services- 7 p.m.
Wednesdly Services · 7 p.m .
a..n~~ rA God or Proph«Y
OJ. WhiiL Rd. olf St . Rt 160
Putor: Pat Henson
Sw.day School - 10 1.m.
W&lt;nhip - II 1.m.
Wt:dnt.Wy &amp;rvice! - 7 p.m.

Sunday SclJool - 9:30 a.m.

Ntw Uft Church ol God
O,estc:r
Putor: Gary Hin~5
S..,.jay School · 9,30 a.m

Wonhip - 10:30 1.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sctvices - 7 p.m .

Wednesday Scmr:es · 7 p.m.

Pom..-oy Chrdi "'Cloriol

2t2 W. Main St
Pastor : And~w Mlle.•

Wonhip · 6 p.m.

Bullons &amp; Bows

Gro« Ep!ocopal Churdl
326 E. Main St. Pomeroy
PasLor: Rev. Dr. Roy C. Mycn
Sunday school and wonhip - 11 a.m.

Holiness
Pine Grove Bible Holiness Church
112 mile off RL 325
PuLor: Rev . O'Dell Manley
Sl.blday School . 9:30 1.m.
Woottip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m .

Pomeroy
Putor: Eunhac (GRoce) Kee
Sunday School~ 9J5 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 1.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Servu:;es- 7:30p.m

Wesityan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St, MMidlepon_
Putor: Rev. Roy McCarty
Sunday school -9:30 a.m.
Woohip · JO,JO o.m., BO p.m.
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Hysell Run Holine:ss Church
Paslor: Roben Manley
Sunday School ~ 9:30a.m
Worship · !0:45a.m., 7 p.m .
Thunday &amp;rvl~ - 7:30p.m.

Harrisonville Holiness Chapter
Pas LOr: Rev. John Neville
Sunday School tO a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m .

Latter-Day Saints
Reorganized Chun:h ol Jesus Cbrlsl
In Latter Day S.lnts

l'onland-Racine Rd.
Putoc William Roosh
Sund1y School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .
Wednesday Services · 7:30p.m

Lutheran
St. John Lutheran Chun:h
Pine Grove
Pastor: Laura A. Leach Shrdfler
Wonhip- 9:30a.m
Sunday School- 10:30 a.m.
Our Saviour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry S!J ., Ravenswood, W.Va.
Pastor: Rev. George C. Weirick
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Worship - II a.m

St Paul Lutheran Church
Comer Sycamore &amp; Second SL, P&lt;me roy
Pastor: Laura A. leach Shreffler
Sunday School - 9:45 1.m.
Worship - II a.m.

United Methodist
Graham United Methodist
Wurihip - 9:30a.m. (I 11 &amp; 2nd SWl),
BO p.m. (3.-d &amp; 41h Sun)
Wedne!d.ay Service - 7:30p.m.

~01

IA!T MA!II
I'OIIOOY. OliO
992-2259

PRESCRIPnON SHOP
992· .. ••

SNOUFFER
FIR£ &amp; SAFETY

27lllortlo

s.c...r

SAliS &amp; SRYICE

ll........rt.

1n North lot:OIIII An
MiM10art, Ollia

0111•

9112-7075

RuUand

Puwr: Anhur Cr1.htrec:
Sund1y School ·9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m .
Thursday Servim: . 7 p.m .
SaJan Cenler
Past.or: Ron Fierce
Sunday School· 9: 15 1.m.
Worship- 10:15 a.m.

Pastor: Sh.aroo Hausman
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonh1p • II a.m ., 6:30p.m.

Mornlng Slar
Wo11hip - I 0:30a.m .
Thund.ly Services - 7:30 p.m.
Suuon
Putor: Kenneth Baker
Sund1y School ·9:30a.m .
Worship - \0:41a.m . (hl &amp; Jrd Sun)

East Utart
Pastor: Roger Grace
SWJday School - 10 a.m
Wonhip - 9 a.m.
Racine

Pu1or: Roger Grace
SWJday School- 10 a.m .
W""lup · II a.m.

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

BeU.el Churt"h
Township Rd., 468C
Sunday &amp;:hool - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m .
Wednelday Services . 10 1.m

Rced..~vllle

Tuppe.-s Plains St. Paul
Pastor: Sharon Ha usman
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worslup - 10 a.m.
Tuesday Semces · 7:30p.m.
Central Cluster
Asbury (Syracuse)
Pastor. Wesley Thatcher
Surnlay School - 9:45 1.m
Worship - II a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Enterprise
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m., 6 p.m
Tue!da.y Servi ces - 1 p.m.
Flatwoods
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhtp - I I a.m., 6 p.m.
Th ur.;day Serv1ces - 1 p.m.

Hockingport Church
Grand Suw
SWlday School- 10 1.m .
Wonhip - 1l1.m .
Wednesday Services - 8 p m
Tort"ll Church
U&gt;. Rd. 63
SWJday School -9:30a.m.
Wonlup · 10:30 a.m.

Nazarene
Racine Flrst Church of the Naz.artne
Pas10r: Thanas L Gales, D
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.
Wor~h.ip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m
Middleport Churrh oflhe Naz.arrnr
Putor: Rev . Uoyd D. Grimm, Jr
SWJday School · 9:30 1.m .
Wonhip · \0:30 1.m., 6:30p.m
Wednesday ~rvtc:ra - 7 p.m

Chesttr Church or the Nazarene
Pastor: Rev . Herbert Gn.t.c
Sundmy School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - "f p.m.

~.

nl Columbus , 0 .
904 W. Moun
9911311 Pomerov

Hazel Community Church
Off Rt t24
Pulor: EdJel Hat!
Swlday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.

Stl~ersvllle

Word or F1lt11
Pastor: David Da.iley
Sm1day School 9:30a.m.
Evc:nmg · 7 p.m.
·nlUrsday Servia. -7:30 p.m

Dyes"Yille Community Church
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - I 0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Burlington Community Church
Rurlingham
Pastor: Ray Laudr:rmill
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Worship - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m
Christian Fellowship Center
Salem St, Rutland
Putor: Ro~n E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m
Worship · 11:15 a.m., 7p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m

Rejoicing Uft Church
500 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Pustor: Rev. Michael Pangia
Su nday School · lO a.m.
Wednesday SeNu;;es - 7 p.m

Pentecostal
Penlecostll A!ISembly
St. Rt. 124, Rlcine
Pastor: Willi~m Hoback
Sunday School- 10 a.m
Evening · 7 p.m
Wedne sday Service• - 7 p.m.
Mlddlep(M"I Pmtenstal
Third Ave.
Pastor: Rev. Oark Baker
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
E\lening - 6 p.m.
Wednc:Jday Services-7:30p.m.

Mor5t Chaptl Church
Sup..: Mike Matson
Sunday school - 10 a.m.
Wonhip· I t am., 7 p.m
Wedn esday Semce - 1 p.m.

Presbyterian

F•lth Gosp~l C hurch
Long Bouom
Sund1y School · 9:30a.m
Wor!hip - 10:4S a.m .. 7:10 r m
Wedne.sd•y 7:30p.m

Harrison\'111~ Presbyl«lan Church
Worship - 9 1.m.

Sunday School · 9:45a.m

Mt_Olivt Communlly Church
Pastor: Law~ncr Rush
Sund1y School. - 9:30a.m
Everung · 7 p.m
Wt.dneday Service · 7 p.m.
United Faith Church
Rt . 7 on Pomeroy By -Pm
Putor: Rev. Robert E Sm~th, Sr
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wotlhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servioe 1 p.m
.&amp;desla Fellowship
128 Mill St. Middleport
Paslor : Chuck McPhe tlon
Sund•y School · I0 a.m
Evening . 7 p.m
Wednesday Servitt . 7 p.m

Middleport Presbyterltn
Sunday Sdtool · 9 a.m.
Wo rshtp · 10 a.m ., 4 p.m. (2nd&amp;. 4th Sun.)
Syracuse Flrsl United PrestJytS"ian
Sunday School . 10 a.m
Wo rship - 11 a.m., 4 p.m . (I st &amp; 3rd Sun .)

Seventh-Day Adventist
St'venlh·D•y Adventisl
Mulherry Ht~ . Rd .• Pom~roy
Pastor. Bob SrJ yde1
Salunily Services ·
Sabbalh Smoot ~ 2 p m
Worship · 3 p.m

United Brethren

Full GOSIWI Lighthouse
33045 Hiland Road, Porn~roy
Pastor: Roy Hunter
Sunday School - 10 a.rn
Evenmg 7:30pm.
Tuesday &amp; Thur~da)' - 730 p.m
Nus.e Settlement Chun:h
Sunday Woohip · 2:10 p.m ·
lhunday mvices . 7:30p.m·.

Sou th Bethel New Testamt-nl
Silver Rj dg~
Pauor· Duane Sydenstnd.er

Mt. Hennon United Brethren
In Chri~ Church
Te;u~ Community off CR 82
Panor: Robert Sanders
Sunday School . 9:30a.m
Wonhip - 10:30 1.m.. 7:30 p·. m
Wednesday Serv1ce1 - 7:30p.m
•:den United Brethren In Christ
2 I{2 miles north o{ Reedsville
on Sllle Route 124
Pmor. Rev. Robert M•rlley
Sonday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip -7:30p .m
Wednesday &amp;.Mces - 7:30p.m.

(row 's Familr Restaurant
"fteiUI I~g Krw1u1 9 Frltd Chldu"
228 W. Moin II., PomPIOy

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

We Fill Doctor\'
Pre\cnption\
991 79SS

'- -----

992 -5432

BILL QUICKEL

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Pomeroy, OH.

ru

Pom~roy

RAWUNGS-COATS

RIDENOUR

'1"

SUPPLY

J

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWAR E
Homehte S.-w"'i

EWING FUNERAL HOME

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
Middleport

Calvar-y Pilgrim Chapd
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. Victor Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Worship - llm.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m

Nalionw•de Ins . Co.

PHARMACY

264 South 2nd

Ca l.,.ary Hihle Churth
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Su nday School 9:30a.m.
Worship 10:30a_m, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Scmce - 7:30p.m
Spiritual Faith Church
Sta~ 338, Antiquity
Pastor: A. Stewart
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenmg · 7:30p.m
Thunday Serv~~ . 7:30p.m.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

204 Condor St .

992-5141

Fairview Bible Church
Letart, W.Va. KL I
Paslur : James LewiS
Sunday School · II a.m
Wnrl:h.ip - 9:30a .m., 7:30p.m
Wednesday Serv~ce. 7:30p.m:

W o~p - 10:30a.m ., 6p . m .

llealh (Middleport)
Pastor : Frank: SnutJt
Sund1y School - 9:30a .m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Service! .

992-2975

Tht Sal\lalion Anny
115 Buu.emut Ave., PomeKI)' .
SWlday School · I 0:30 1.m.
Worship- 10:00 a.m., 7:30p.m

Syracuse Church fl the Nazarene
Pastor Rev. Glenn McMillan
Sund•y School · 9:30 1.m.

Forest Run
Pas lOr : Wesley lhatcher
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m.
Thursday Scrvtccs ·6:30p.m.

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

!)astor: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School -9:30a.m
Wo11ih ip- 10:45 a.m.,7 p.m
Wednesda~· Service - 7 p.m

Rtedsvll~ Fellow!ihlp
Church at the Nuarme
Pastor: John W. Douglas
SWJday School · 9:30a.m
Won.h.ip . 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
WcdneJ&lt;ily Setvice1 - 1 p.m

Wcdne5day &amp;rvitts -7 p.m.
Pomero1 Churdl ur lht Nuarent&gt;
Pastoc Rev. Thomas McClung
Sunday Sdtool · 9JO a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m. 1nd 6 p.m
Wedneul•y Services - 7 p.m.

S•&lt;ll ®uof.s

Trl•ltJ CongrqalJonaJ Church
Putor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Oiurch · 9:15 1.m.
Wonhip · JQ,JO a.m.

Syracust Mission
1411 Bridgeman St.., Syracuse
Putor Roy (Mik e) Thomp!lon
Sun&lt;hy School - 10 11 .m.
Evc:rung - 6 p.m .
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Putor: Kenneth Oaker
Sunday School-9:45a.m.

Freedom Gospd Mission
Bald Koob, on U&gt;. Rd. J I

Wesleyan
Coolville Road
Pastor: Rc,. . Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worsh1p · 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service - 1 p.m

BelhanJ
Putor. Krnneth Baker
Sunday S&lt;:hool- 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m
WMnesday Services - I0 a.m
Cannel
Pastor: KefUldh Baker
Sund1y School-9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:45 a.m. (2nd &amp; 4lh Sw.)

CarldoalnterdenomlnaUonaJ Church
Kingsbury Roe.d
Panor: Clyde W. Hendenon
SW'Iday School -9:30a.m
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Serv:itt -7 p.m.

Whit~'!l Cha~l

Other Churches

FaUh Tabernade Church
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmdt Rawson
Swuby School · I 0:00 a.m.
Evming 7 p.m
Thund1y SeM&lt;:e · 7 p.m.

Chester
Pastor: Sharon Hau sman
Wo11ihip - 9 a.m
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thursday Services · 7 p.m

Pastor: Rev. Charles Eatun
Worstup - 9:30a .m.
Sunday School · I 0: 30a.m
Wed~~day Services - 7:30p.m.

New Havtn Churdl of" the Nazarene
Pastor: Glendon Slrowl
Sunday School- 9:30a.m
Wonhip - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m
Wodncaday Services - 7 p.rn .

Southtrn Cluster
Appl~ Grove
Pastor: Carl Hick!
Sund1y School - 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 a.m., 7 p.m
Thursday Service! - 7 p.m .

Coohlllt United Methodist Parish
P:ulor: Harold E. AUoway -Priddy
Coolville Church
MIWl .t Fiflh St.
SWJday Scltool - 10 a.m .
Worshi~ - 9 1.m.
Tuesday Serv~ces. 7 p.m.

Long Bollom
Pll!itor: Olarles F..aton
Sunday School - 9:30 • m
Worship- 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Servi~.:es - 7:30p.m.

Portland First Church fA the Naz.arenf
Putor: William Justis
Sund1y School. - 9:30a .m.
Wonhip - 10:40 a.m ., 7 p.m
Wodnesd1y Semces - 7 p.m

SnOWTIIIe
Pastor: Rormce South
Sunday School - 10 a.m .
Worship - 9 a.m.

RuU1nd BIWe Methodist
Pastor: Rev. lvan Myen
Sund1y School-9:30a.m .
Evenin&amp; · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;r1 · 7 p.m

Atr....t

Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship - 10 1.m., 7 p.m .
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.

Rutland Church cl tht Nll.lrenf
Putor: Samuel Buye
Sunday School . 9 JO , m.
Wonhip- 10:30 1.m., 6:30p.m.
Wtdnesday Services . 7 p.m.

Middleport Communily Church
575 Pearl SL, Middlepon
PasLor: Sam Anderson
Sunday School 10 a.m
Evming - 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.

Meigs Coopenlive Parish
Northeast Cluster

·.
)

Worship - 10 a.m.
Wednesday Scrvi&lt;rs - 6 p.m.

L11urel OUT"Fne Methodist Church
Pmor: Wilham William s
Sunday School· 9:30 un.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday ~Mcel - 7 p.m

93 Mill Slloot
Middleport. Ohio 46780
(814) 992 ~ 6667 - 1998 -00KSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

John F . Fultr , Mqr .
Ph. 991-1101
Pom&lt;'roy

Rock Sprint!'
Pastor:Keilh Rader
Sunday School - 9:15a.m .

Mt. Olive United Method! A
Off 124 behind Wilkesv-ille
Pastor: Diaries Jones
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · I 0:30a.m., 1 p.m.
Thursday Service! . 7 p.m .

0\\;fl

MEIGS nRE
CENlER, INC.

Mlnenvlltr
Pastor: Wesley Thatchtr
Sundly School- 9 a.m .
Worship · 10 a.m.
Pearl Chapel
Putor. Aorenct Srnitb
Sunday School - 9 a.m.
Worsh.ip - 10 a.m.

~~~

The Fabri Shop
Cbk's Wy Store

Powel's Super Value
Farmer's BIN
G&amp;J Auto Pm1s
Pomeroy Rower Shop
Crow's Famiy Reslaullllt
Super Ameriat
Home Enterloinmenl Center
Farmer's Mmltet
Suatr loo Ma
Mle's Btrber Shop
Y'tdeo W-Pomeroy
Y'tdeo 1oudl MiYeport
Sl.lluions
Sun's Up/luson Coleman
Shammey's 7-33
Don Toke Chevrolet/Oids, Inc.
Rullond Mine Supply
Joe's Country Mcnet

Episcopal

Wonlup · 10:30 a.m.

ML Union B.aplist
Pastor: Joe N. S•y~
Sunday School · 9:45a.m
Evening-6:30p.m
WMnesday Xrvi~s - 6:30p.m.

VktorJ S.plisl
525 N. lnd St. M;ddiqx&gt;n
Pastor: l~me! E. Keescr
Worship · 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday Servi~ - 7 p.m.

Smith Melson Motors, In&lt;.

Sunday School-9:30a.m.

Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday Sdlool - 9:30 a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m., ? p.m.

Hope S.pll!l Ctupd
570 Grant St., Mtddlqton
Pastor. David Bryan. Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a..m.
Wonhip - 11 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesd,ly Service.~ - 7 p.m.

THANKS!

Pastor: Tom Runyon

RadM Arst Raptht
Putor Steve Deaver
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m
Worihip - 10:40a..m.• 7:30 p.m
Wednesday Servict:s - 7:30p.m.

Hillsidt&gt; Baptist Churdl
St. Rt. 143 JUSt off RL 7
Pa stor: Rev. James R. Aatt, Sr.
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wodnesdly Servloc:s · 7 p.m .

differe~ee:

Bradbury Church f:l Chrht

Rudand Church~ Christ

Old Betbe Fr.. Witt S.plisl 0...-do
21160 I St. RL 7. M;ddlqx&gt;n
Sunday School . 10 a.m.
Everung · 7.30 p.m.
Thursdly Savices - 7:30p.m

research.

OHIO
~~IVtRS!T

Zl&lt;ie Cbur&lt;b rA Christ
P&lt;meroy, Hurisooville Rd. (R1. t 43)
PaJtor: lnrerim paswr
S.mday School ~ 9,30 a.m.
Wonlup · tOJO a.m., 7,30 p.m.
Wccklesday Scmccs • 7 p.m.

Wednesdly Savtccs- 7 p.m.

Silvll!l"" Run Baptisa
Pastoc Bill Unl~
Sunday School - 10 1..m.
Wonhip- II a.m, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services . 7:.10 p.m

UR

We just rtteived a plea for funds
from an organization called lhe
Cancer Fund of America. You
mentioned this group in your
column but we don't recall the
delails. Is il something we should
support? ·· BA TfLE CREEK •

Ba""'tlow Rid&amp;• Cbun:h or Cbrlsl
Paster Jack Colegrove
S...tay School · 9,30 a.m.
Wunlup · 10,30 a.m., 6'30 p.m.
Walnc.sday Service!- 6:30p.m.

Wednesday Sc.rv1ces -7:30p.m.

PRODUCE

BASKETS••••••••••

MiddlqMwt: Church of Christ
5lh and Main
Pastor. A1 H1nsoo
S...Jay School · 9,30 a.m.
Wunlup · 8'l5,10,30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service! - 7 p.m.

Sunday School · JQ,JO Lm.

Worship - 10:45 1.m., 7:30p.m.

s

33216 Olildren's Hane Rd.
992-3847
Sunday School - I I a.m
Wonhip- 10 a.m., 6 p.m
W~!lday Services - 7 p.;n.

Keno Chorda of Cluist
Wonhip-9:30 a.m.

MITCH'S

HANGING

........., Wostsld&lt; Cburdl or Chrlsl

··n;p,;r, rmd .~·nin' ·flwa n··
Es tablished 191.1

7811 NORTH SHOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

992-2121
106 Mulborty Avo.

Ponwroy

214E . Mam
991 · S1 JO Pomeroy

6.hl
-:::5

Veterans
.
Memorial Hospital.

11 S I. Momoriol D1.

"2 ·2104

Pomoray

.

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, May

~==~~~~===r~~~~~~;,:~------------~~~;;i§~~~~~~~~~==lr~~~~~U0~7:~~:;~Th~e~D~a~IIT~Se;n~t~ln~e~I=P~a~g~e~9~
Friday, May 15, 1992

1 1992

=------.------------~~----~~.~~~~

ns1nes
.,,.,_
..

rvtces

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

WKI'S
HAWNG SERVICE
36970WI•I...
'-o,.Oirlo

•

•New Homes
oGaraps
oComplete
· Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

985·4473
667·6.179

oUMESTONE

(614) 992·3470

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

POLICIES
. ~ · AdA outald.• lhe eouty your ad

n11U1

&amp;1151'1211

Gallia County Mei@a County Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
4-46-G olli ...~.

992-M;ddleporV
Pomeroy

367-0-bi..
383-Vintoa
245-Rio Gr.o.de

Ia Men~oriaa
Yard Sal.
·• A cW.if.d a(h•ertUutent placed in the Gallipolia D.i.lr
Trihuoe (..cept Cluo;food llioploy. B,.u-. Card or Lop!
l'iolicel) will a1.o appear i.D Ute PoUlt Pleuut Repter a.a&lt;l
t.D.c Daily S.otiael, .-c~ o.._ 18,000 bom•

256-Guyu DiL
b43-AralMa Dill.
379-Walaul

Public Notice

I

985-Cl.e.Ler
843-Portland
247-Let.rt
949-Raciu
742-Rualaad
667-Cooi.We

r.n.

675-Pt. Pleanlll
458-Looo
576-Apple Gro••
773-M..oD
882-r\ew Hnaa
895-Lelarl

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Soalod propooalo wiD bo
received by tho Ylllago of
Middleport, Molgo County,
Ohio In !he Olllce ol tho
Mayor, Vllloge Hall, lllddl•
port, Ohio, until • p.m. May
26, 1992, lor tho folloWing
protac:t:
Dornolldon of the Belly
Rou Bakery building, located at Wllllomo St. ond
South Flhh A"""uo, Mlddl•
port,andc(oorenceollheolte.
Tho propoood work lncludeo demolition ol the ox·
Is tlng building, removal of all
debrlo from the oho ond fll~

lng and leveling of the demolition alte.

.................
''"1:':;:..............

-·dorocl

..,.h

992·3138

RAONEMOWER
QINK

P.O.Iultl W'e-.,

Ww~~r:--

Plm &amp; SEIVICl
Mowen • 0.. Saws

•We••• ~~en

614-949-2804

BOARD DEIDUNE
4:30 P. M. DIY BEFORE
PU.llclnoN

LAYNE FURNITURE

LANE MOTION SETS
Sola and Recliner
$1150.00
MON.lllllJ SAT.~.~
3 MlES OUT llllAVLLE PI(E

We now offer beauldul new furniture at low renHo-own pricH.
Uving Room, Dining Room. I ·
Bedroom groups, Bunk Beds.
ELLIOIT RENTALS
431 Pile• St. Gollpollo
(61•) 445-8051

'~
~

.
,,,...,
TyNt

-N-

WAIII•fAihy

[!]

,~-.,.....

•

J

FOR DESIGNATED

TOWNSHIP
ISSUE 2 PROJECTS
IN MEIGS COUNTY, OliO
Bid pr:p:ula tor .. work
dHcrlbod heroin will be
r-od by tho Board ol
Molgo County Commloolan-

en in the Court Ho ...e,
"-GY· Ohio until •:30
p.m. tho 2nd of Juno, ltrr!.
The bkM wtll be ap•tocl 11
10:00 Lm. an Juno Srd,
1182 ond ..... aloud.
The propooola wll be In
ploco lrlclo oubmlu.d lor
_.. prc¥ol•lal-:
.loll ·I
T&lt;M~~ohlp­

· WAIEflfl.l'l

II. SO Wosl, "-- Olio om.JII S

Public Notice

ONLY
5% Above Cost
Final Doy~·Seasoo AJC Salo

ELLIOTTS
43 I P1"'! St, Golipclis
t614!446-11051

mon Pteaa Court ol llelga
County, Ohio, Court S....~
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
The oiJiect of a. eo..,.
plaint Ia to quiet title to 1-112
acrea alao known •• 1.67
acreo olrealeotatelocalodln
Fraction 23, Town 8, Range
t 5 of the Ohio Compony'o
Purcflaoe, In Sol'"" T_,.
ahlp, llelgo County. Ohio.
and to quiet Uda to the lnooll of the Plalnutt., to elude onyclallllolln-tby
the Dolondanto. ond lor coola
ol the action.
You ore horeby requhd
lo answer the Complaint
within twent~t (21) d-ro
after tho loot publication ol
thlo notice which wiN be
publlohed onoo a lor

olx (6}oucceoolve-.. The
loot publication wiU be~~~­
on the 22nd doy ollloy. 1992,
and the twenty-eight (28)
dayo lor onoworlng will
commence on tNt dele. In
cue of your failure to .,...

swer or otherwtH respond
•• required by the Ohio Rulea

ol Clvll Procedunt, JudgeSuccesaora, Spousea, and mont by deloult wll be ~
Aoalgna. II any of E. E. Nol- dored agalnll you lor the
aon, Jennie K. Nelaon, end retial demonded In the CornW. F. Thompaan, wl\ooo loa! plaint.
Dated lhlo 91h day of April.
addreaaea are unknown.
1992.
You oro hereby noUfled
Larry E. Spencer.
that you have been nomed
Clerk ol Courta
Delendanlo In o legal action
By
:
Marlene
Hanteon,
onllllod Frod Goorgeoncl Lola
Deputy
Avanell George, Plalndffa, va,
(4)
17,
24,
(5)
1,
8,
15,
22;
6TC
E. E. Neloon, ol al., Delon·

Real Estate General

2

In Memory

In MMiory 01

BIU HOBACK'S
40th Birthday

Born: 5-15-52

2

In Memory

''To liw ia 1M
beam of rlwoe
tH 1Hw belaind
il nol to die."
Your Couelne

To my loved one up

above.
Mia you,
Love, Wife uWida
and F1mlly

992·2259
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

LONGBOTTOM· Appro• 9 aero&amp; ol nooo laylt\g land
Owner wiM split $18.000

REEDSVILLE- 11\oof bioc1111ramo horoo With 2 bedoCMno,
tear garage, I)IOOOoobuilding, scroonodrearporch Pmtty

location. ASKING $18.000

you how much you'N
loved on lhl1 opoollll
d•y •nd every day
lhroughout tho
Fromyowdalght.-, Dole Tribble
MCI
R..t

TillE TO SEU YOUR HOUSE I LOT? TIIY OUR
SERVICE. WFRE REAU Y HC&gt;TI WAifT A LAIIG1il'£
ANER PLACE? WE CAN FIND ONE Tlt\TS AN
I
SIIAUER HOliES ARE LISTED TOO,
COllE ON ltl... WFU DAZZL£ YOU I
HENRY E. a.ELAND·-········-·····.......... -.........-"U1t1
TRACY BAINAGER ..•••••......•......•••.••....- -..··-2431
JEAN TRUSSELL ...._.......................................Mt-2MO

y-.

OFFICE.....- .................................................... _ .992·22511

I

t.quipmant,

Cattle. 614·387.()610.

P1ttarns. 614-446-3Tl2.

Already Cut In Chunka, Have TO

Tallo All. 614-367·7681.

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Mana and womens clothing
womens handbags and shoes'
box of Christmas lrH or:

5526.

Puppln

4-4·92-tla

to

giveaway

,oa:,_

Lote in New Haven •

owner financing tl $101.48 per
month buys all three loll a:J04.
675-2722.

'

Lots joining Point • 100% owner
financing at $101.46 per mont~
buye ail thrM Iota. 304-675--

Brit·

tanyiBeagla, 304-675-5419 .

51

Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS

FOR All MAKES

&amp; MODELS
992·7013 or
992-5553

KING'S TV
ZENITH
SERVICE

.. ..

1·800·148·0070
DARWIN, OHIO

114·949·2202

CARPENTER SERVKE

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

-A.- Addlllcwlo

...OU..Warlt
~ ond Plumbing
-Rooting

..........,,Extortor

;:1'111111ATES)

(all614-992·6637
Sl. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
• 992-6215
Pll••roy, Oblo

NG

""'
'
"
"'
I
-UIUsPoltl'ttr,..

$20.00

ltmiiOR &amp; EITERIOI

---

All• 6 ,.._ 614-91HIIO

•cROWlVI OVEN
VCR IIPAIR

••til 111111111

949·2123

217Ls-.1St.
POIIIIOY, OliO
3fl3192mn

PII'IN'Inlals &amp;
Annuals,
Sbawftowars and
mont Everlastings.
Hybrid Tomatoes,
Baskets, Etc.

Loc.htJM ,..,, ..
IMIIfWIJ JMtw• Depot 51.
111"'-4.!11.554
MON.·Sll. 9 ID 5

614-742-2772

lawn Mowing,
Fertilizing, Weeding,
and Seeding.
Shrub and Treo

Friday • Saturday: Tomato
stakes, craft supplies, 1et ol
four tires for Sunbird, Cflltls,
baseball cards, toys, clotnts 1
dlthtl, canfllng jars, yara
chairs, hammock, depreulon
gll8a, old trunk, chalu lounga,
&amp;uketbaill hoop hlmper. 2 mlfet
west of O.llipolls, on State
Roula141.

Trimming &amp; Removal
R•lclontiall Commetelol
F,_Eollrnaloa
v.lw:!lfn

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

VALLEY INC.
Rt. 2
Mdlwood, W.Va.

Co. Rcl3,
Leading er.Jt Rd.
lllddleport
742-3030

304·273·5555

Pt. Pleasant
Fomlly Yard Sate, odun

3

&amp;

chlldNM clothM. many 1tn. ell
slz•, glanwtre, Frt-S.t, 1:00

5,00. 13! S. Port Drtvo.
81~ Yard or If r1ln butmant
II t, Sat Mty 18th, 8:00 AM,

2321 Ul

12·5·tln

Vomon Avo.

Mty 14 1 15, 18. A.c.roae trom B•r·
rtiMICI Carryout In Hendlrwon,
WV ~?

SJ.-.....

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Rick Poaroon Auc:llon Company.
full Ume tuctlonMr, complete

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

9

134.Stft"; til.
NOW OPEN
Hn.9to5
... lin Sat.
HANDGUNS, RIFUS,

SHOTGUNS

BUY...SElL-TRADE

Wanted to Buy

Don'1 Junk HI Sell Ut Your Non·
Wor1dng
Mllor Applltnces,
Color TV'a, VCA's, Mlcrownes,
Air CondtUonerl, Etc. 014·256·

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ESTIMJ\'RS

1238.

614·949a2801 or 949·2860

Ueed Mobile KorMI, C1ll 614·

2112192

446..0175.

fREE ESTIMATES
"Wt Ott Tht Jo&amp; Dona Now"
Call II Tromm
614-742·2321

4.21-92- l -·pd.

tchool

tor

IMPORTANT NOTICE:
WE HAVE BUYEIIS... WE NEED USTWGSI

nectiUry. 1-I00.255-

b242.

ltmllliBM.
...............
..., Hi EffideiCJ ~
C.aI IIIII n, Heat
fau(IIS&amp; Now
Wat•lftattn.
BeDDetll Mobile Uo1u
1391 Safhnl s.-Rtl.
c.l (614)446-94

011., WV. &amp; H.U.D.
Appn¥111 M•lu.turlll
IMtlltPretltsds.

0

•AVON• ALL AREASI Shtr. your
lime wtth Ul, You'll to.,. thl
comptny. 1-800-112-1358.

3 Announcements
LIVEI UVEI LIVE!
1-110o.454-IIIOOJ (II •I SSTEL

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU

Excellent:

Orl. FL 13.115111 n.

Nat retponalble for 1nr debit
own: AoMrt L•
Oonney.

£:.3;;; hid woom llhalio,

Dlll~bulorwhl...,_lgnor

7285.

Receptionist lor medical oHk:e,
per1· time, expert.nc:e pNftrr.d,
'*"''llo: cJo Dally Sentlntl, PO

BOI

729W,

Pornon&gt;y,

Ohio

45769.

r'" Coekor

Hom .. C111 114-24S.t211 ~ft., 4
P.M. Of Slop By 1511 Onen V1f.
ley Orlvt, Bidwell, 9et"lout tn.
qulriH Only.
'..:___.:___

___

I.

~ngn.

l-800-499-3499.

Konmoro dryoo,

comtNntUon,

1'.0. Bo• 721, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769.

WANTED, EMERGENCY RELIEF
COMMUNITY
SERVICE
WORKERS Noodod AI A Com·
munlly Group Home For Per·
eone Whh Oevalopmtntlf Dl•
tblliUn In Gallla County

slllpollo/Bidwollt. High School

re•aa~•Jkl Drtver'e UcenM

5na.

Nlc:e sofa $60. Ten •peed btke

PICKENS FURNITURE
NtWillted
Household lumlahlng. 112 mi .
Jerrlcha Rd. pt, PINNnl, WV,
call 304-675·1450.
Refrigerator Like New, Htrvnt

Gold, l250.i A_otrlgorolor Sldo By
Sldo,
....,portono,
$175;

Refrlger•tor Advae1do, Grttn
Frott Fret $150; 20' Elect:rk:
Range, Uke New, $150; Ktn·
more Wtther $95; Wlllrtpool
Washer, $95; Skaggt Appllanett, Wt Hne Moved To: 76
VIne Strtll, G.tlllpolla, 614-446-

T.I!....

SWAIN
RJ RNITUAE.

AUCTION

2 Rooms &amp; B•th, Oownat1ln,
Clean,
No
Pets,
Quiet,
Aolooonco And Dopoall R•

qulred. 814-446·1519.

At Otherwlst ScMdulld. CurNnt LPN Uc.nH (Interim Per·

mh

Ac:captablo},

Sttlt
Board lpprond Training, Vtlid
Ortver't UctnH, Good "Driving
Record And WllllngntM Ta

Drive

In

Araas,

Good

And

Congtttld

Tn~tfk::

Communk:ttlon
OrgtnluUon
Skills,

Pun~uel,

And Able To Work As
P1rt Of A Tum Requii'MI; E.J.
pertence Working With PII"IOf'l
With Mental R•l•rclltlon And
DIHbllltiH

Prererred. Stlary: $8.00/Hour, To
Start. Send RNume To Cec:lllt
Baker, P.O. Box 804, JtcUon,
OH 45640. Otadllne For Applicants: 512W2. Equtl Opporlunhy Empk)yer.

Business
Training

Pltza. Ctll Today, 6

-4367fl

_18.:....._w_a_n_t_ed:...;_lo;..:.Do.:....._
Will Babnh In lly Homo. Fon·

eed In Play Area.. Rtft,.ncu
Avllltblt. Rodney Attt. C.ll
814-245-5887

Babyolftlna In lly Homo.
Chuhlro vlclnlly. 114-367-7588.
E 6 ATREE SERVICE. T~.

call ~75-1)57.

tir, ,.tw.ncet.
Befort 7p.m.

814-+46-0338,

Furnished apt : CAICH, ulllltln
pd. Prlv111, quiet . 614-446-2602.

Fumlshed Eftlcltncy 920 Fourth
Avenu•, Galllpolla.
tiOS!Mo
Utllltln Ptld, 814-446-4416 AHer

7P.II.

LIVING ROOM : Soft And Ch.llr
$171 And Up; Colfao And End
TabiH $79 And Up; Swtvtl

Modtm 1 Bedroom Ap.artment,
814-446-0390.

room apertments

aR brick, 3 bedrooms, full
blltmtnt wlfamllyroom, 2 car
garage on ont ac.rt, shown by
eppolntment anly 304--875--3248
•her 6 :00 PM.

Nice 1 BR, tumlt~ kitchen,
carpeting, water peld. O.poalt
required~ 814-446-8568.

VInton trlt, 12 acr.t at oak
llmbte", 2 bedroom, all electric
holM . Owner, 814·388-i001.

bodroom apt

loo ronl, 304-

One bedroom tpt parity tur·
nlshed, 304--615-1812 after 5:00

PM.

One bedroom rumlehed apt
Jtfttt10n Ave.
$200. ~U.:
electr~ 1 304-175-240fl. bttare
5:00PM.

45

1180 Buddy 14x70 2 Batht, WrD
OW, CA 15x30 poot 3ml out of
Porter. Call 614-:J.88..8352 · 5:00

Furnished
Rooms

Roome for rtnt - ._tk or month .

Stlrll"ttll $120/mo. Gollla Hotoi .

1980 Ftlrmont 14x54 Gu Hut, 2

114-&lt;146-1580.

BldroomsJ.. ~trll Air, llkt New
Through un, $6,a50 . 814-446-

91Mplfl9 I'ODml whh eookJnt.
Atao lrliler space . All hook-upt~.
can
2:00 p.m., 304·7'73-66511 Mseon WV.

011'5.

•fl•

1985 Windsor 2br, Fully FurDiapo~al,

46 Space lor Rent

5711.

1-8Q0..58~

llinglt

hudboard, 6 draw.,.., padd;d
~llt, good cond, $150. 304-57614 Cu. Fl lroollreo
Aotrlgorolor $75. Whln- 30·
Ranga $50. B.. h Good W...lng
Cond 814-388-1801 5:PII

Whl~pool

52 Sporting Goods
Auger Rldhawi., 44 Mag; S&amp;W
886. 357 Mag; S&amp;W 65i g mm.
$350 Each, $600 For Any Ptir,
1900 For All Throa. 614-24S.i504

Lumber Seasoned Wild Cherry
&amp; Poplar Alto BIN Boa:rd.
Casing Door J1me. 6~

Livestock

Wa,. 11-. eo.r.ty Tobac&lt;c

quota wiM~conlo (.-)
por lb.
'a Woodlawn
Farm, Al 36.

-2018.

Rototlller, 2HP Btlgg• &amp; Slra1ton. 614-446-1160.

Sears Lawn Traeter 1.2 HP $700 .
00 Uke New 614-256-1267 After
7:PM

Shop Smith tot sale, '"' .cceetori•• are Included, 6")4..992--

2615
Signs: Portable chlngeablt Itt·
ter signa tnd ..u.,.. FrM

delivery. AAA Signs, 1..00..5333453.
Horu Pow.r MTD
Mowers, $895; 5 H.. t ;:
er
Lazy Boy T111ers $298 Each
While Supplin L..;i_ Wornel~
N.w

dortt &amp; T~omu Hardw.,._ 614446..0965

Vhamalter Extn:ist Bike, $15·
OP Rowing Machine, $25 Cali

Counlry Mobil• Home Ptrk, At.
33N., urar new mii'MigtNnent.

47 Wanted to Renl
Nlc., clean 2 or 3 Mdroom
house, prefer prtntt a.tllng/

Building
Supplies

55

S3

Alo Grtndl, OH Call IM245-512t

1~ ,

Pets for Sale

1,;;;;;;-;;,s;;ppiy=-i;;;p:j;;
(lroom and Supply Shop Pol

Grooming. All tweeds, etyles.
llmt Ptl Food DNier. June
Webb. C..ll614-446-4l231.

AKC Lab pupp6ea: llhott, AJ&lt;.C
papal"'. Choie"e: yeJiow, ~k.
chocolate. 114-2ae-.2371.

Alllo Cholmoro WD 45 $1,200.
V.A.C. C.11 1600. Mu11y H•rrls
Pony $450. 711 dloc 3pl $450.
8hp Brlgge new engine $250.
18ft boat, motor trailer *'.800.
1

R~ialtred

Lltndor

Allrolvoo pupploa, oho!o &amp;
papttl, 614-'N2·3034.

AKC
ReglaterH
mlnlatw-e
blackltllver achnauz..- puppy, 3
mos. old, h11 1Jt 11rttt of
1hotllw01ming. 61" ·7C2 -3013.

1!171 llallbu Claaok:, 2 do. 75...
rvom conditkln. Low

milol. $29!15. ..... 614-192·3481
tftll 5pm.

1982 Dodgl - ' - . AT, AC, "IS,
PB, CC, tarv'Wttlte • nMdt wert.
614 U&amp; 3375

1982 SubaN GL St Wagon 5

11185 Buldo I..aSatn llm•oct.
4ck. Mdan, bMulltul family car,
Ukll .... au opdone, 3111 ou,
bnnd
$29!15, ........

_1....,

1985 Buldo t.Sotn. Good CondiUon; 11t1 Hondl XR80 Mdor·
c:yfe. 6.381 1111 A,.., 5 P.M.

Buk:k Skytart. \1-4, Joldad.
hloh
mi!Ngo, a11111. $125G_ 814-~ .....,.
1885

n

11185 Dodgo Shlltor Chaogor
T......_ 5 apaod, ~·. good
mpg a """"' akainiJ $2;1'50
304-675-.5306.

HOMES

$31,995 &amp; Up. Bulh On Your Lot

Poodlea, toy., tMeu... also
tdufta, AKC, aiM mlnlalun
Schnauzer~ . Coolvtllt, ..........,.

new Ktnmof• wnher,
$300; wlnd&lt;M alzld •lr conditioner, $150; 114~992~102 Dr
814-tm·'IIIIIO anyllmo

1987 Okla Cutlt• Sler1 S2,700.

1987 Conwerslon Van F· 150, TV,
4 captAins eMirs. CB, bad1 fiNt
makes full .W bed 18,000. 1983
Fotd Rlngw 4x4 $2.600. 1986

Oodot V"ttta 12,000 mlltt
SJ,OOO. 1t85 Ford F-150 $2,300
1185 oe. Dent 18 12,515.. 1m
CJ5 Joop oxc concl 12.11!15. 1!111
Blaur t.. liM $1,000. 1986

-

DtWauH, heavy duty 10" radial
trm uw, $300. 814-367-0138.

FREE INSTALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS

Only $799.00 Beau11fut Above

Ground 18x3'1x:4 Pool lnetudet:
Filter O.Cic, Fence, Ladd•ra,

Etc.

o.,;, Aollovo II? COil BPI
1-800-.MI-1923

19S1 Jotln DMrl Model B, AUla
Chalmer., H.D. 8 Ooar, Hytter
Eloctrtc Fork Lift. 614-446-2351.

285 IIF Tract"!, Whh

$9,850; 11111 II• With

lJ&gt;odor

U&gt;odor:

$6,550: 65 IIF Wilh Bus/J Hog

12.195. 814-281-6522.

•

•

W.nl to buy exc mobile home

7x14.5, call and .....
m uge 304~75-4673.
...

tires,

79

]~

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

t'

7.13;;ft:---com=por=,--..,.--pl-ll_o_ly
remcJ deled 5400. no calta .,..,
9·00 PM, p61... 304-67'5-2808

\

1983 Coltmen tn ca~.
SIMps sir:. Er:c.Uent condition.

i

\

. "';
I

'

Services

81

Home
Improvements

llarnan Home lmpro""'*"•·
Additions, Gar91 PaiNing
Roofing.
E~tncea'
Ruaontbltl. 814-446-8568 &amp;Ji
446-4116.

•

~

t.

j

1
t

t

BASI'IIENT

''•

Unconditional lifetime gu..n~.n­

tM . l.oeal rater.nc.u furnished.

""

~

Fret eslimat•. Call collect 1·

614-2'37~81.

~

day or nigf\1
BIMrNnt W1twproo-

~og•rs

'•'
•
•••

~

}
Hom.

lmpro"-'"'.,.• ·

~ &amp;
l
1
Newer Homes. Room Additions
Foundation WOf\,
Rooting ' ;
I Khchens And Bttht. FrM U.: ;,
timatn! RehwtnetS, No Job ,
Toa Big Or Small' 614-36J..OS16.
~
J.W. Construction. Raom Ad·
;
dhlons, Roolt, Oecka, Skii
\
And All Typet 01 El'llllior ~)
lntllrior Painll~ . Will Give Low ~
1
Bid. Ucenstcl . 6l4-24S-5076.

'

14

Btrd $1,100 5cun u.d ear.,
t-. Htvtn~ wv. ~.,752.

EVANS, JACKSON , Oti. 1-800537-9528.

~

Ron"• TV Service IPidalllincl
In Z.nhh also MrvidDG moa1
o4hlr brand~. HouM c.allt, als-o
!101M apphance
repairs.. wv
304·57'6-239-8 Ohio 614-446--245-4 .

Buick SkJ Hln S\n5. 1114 T·

celltnt condftlon, low mi. . ..
caii614--H:2-7'115 1fter 5pm 01 on

...._nda.

199'1 Z-28 eUIIo 5..1 blue loadtcl
22,700 mi-. l13,oo0 firm:
$2,.500. bekM Ntail,. 3-04-475-2332 ewnlnga.
3 \lolkow- Boo11H r.. pona
or Ill up. 3 Junll e... .... Horne

m.dt car lr.i... $900 for 1M.
614-992~l4111f11• 5pm..

JET

~

I ,.buin motors in stock, RON

•

'\

\

•

I
I

!

Septic Tank Pumping $90 , Gauil
Co. RON EVANS tHTEAPRISES

JAckson. OH 1-800-Sl1..g528
Davis
Stw-V~&lt;:
S.Vk:e
G.otget C,_. Rd. Perla
plies, pickup. and dill varY. 6l-l446-029-4

,up:

(1st 11~
tptelal), ii'\Ciudn mowing &amp;
weeding , Clll 6M -992-&amp;Jl.l . ~mlpm.
•

Total lawn ur., S8

'

W. Do:

Trucks for Sale
V-1, 4ap., low
good

304-6'n-m7 Of 5JS..t247.

61 Fann Equipment

.

Aeration Motors, r.-irtd . tw.

1979 F-150, 4 wo $1..000. 1877
F600 Fill r.d SI,OOO. 1981 Otda
OmeQe &lt;tO, doea not rvn, S75.

1-800-537-i528.

Toanomloalons, Usld •

B~

Curtill

11J11 0..'1)' 1

Concrale &amp; Plasllc StpUc
Tanka, Jet AeraUon Tanlq:. Flon
Evens EnttrprltH, Jackson, OH

~

=c:-c:-:-:--::c- - -- - - Yurs E.tpertence On

ton,
-!II.
....,
llnlo ......
llno,lM-1112-'11192.

Farm Suppl1es
&amp;Livestock

;;-:--:-::---:--:--.....,.,...----"-

1111-, $1,450. Call 6M--24S-9504
After 4:30P.M.

n

B~nd

...

f1ng.

340&lt;.

0331.

BOATERS
GuiMt Marcl-W1 Manne~:
Mercury, Manner, Mercn.tlsar .
specl1hst. Mercury certiftecl: · "'·
lllobilt, We come lo you. &amp;~ ·· ~
251-597'11.
•. ;

1986 Honde Shadow 500. 11,000

1190 Gto Prizm hatchbKk, u:-

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Avs.
Point PINNnl:, 304-875--2013,
full line Trop6etl ftah birds
tmtll tnlmalt and eupp~\ea_
'

BOATERS

WATERPROOANG

Fr.neh Lop Bunnies, G,.tt For
4-H Projects. 614-446-4680.

Doyo 304-21:J.5655.
DAKOTA DREAM

aft• 5pm.

J .S. Mtrina Senrk::oa, Serving All
Your Boating Naeda, Parts, AI; ceeaoria, Two Cycle Oil And
S.Mce. 614-256-t160.

lltga

Army

Ortgonewynd c.tt.,.,: CFA P«·
tlan Sitmne klftana. 6M-44ft...
3844 afttr 7:00 p.m.

HP

$2500. 304-T13-.a4181 - ··
· Air
Collbo&lt;,
Phone:
614-371-Z!U
Alk1300.
Fat
...... 6M-371-.251t

Black Of While Bunnln. Atso,

Surph,.1
camfleug e,
men t, Jun6or .. ~, small •
qul.,..nt, ranlll IUrpiUS Cloth·
lng, Stm Somerville 1, S mllu
Eatl J..n, Revtnawood by Stn·
dyvllle Poet Otllct, Frl, Sat, Sun
Noon-1:00 PM. Aft•r houre •

114-912~3481

thaw

~.$40. 16' biko $20. 304-

'

And Cement
,
Ptitioe, Porches, Drive. . ye '
\
Sldlwalks, Gar~~gas, EIC. 25
•
Yurt bperlenee, F,.... b- ...•
lknaln! 614-446-4431 Or sM.
446~842.
.
Block

Will build patio co~. d
- oc- k-s.
ac:r"ned rooms, put up vinyl
~ding Of trailer skir1ing . 6t42U-9152

lffl Ford Ranger F-150 4J:4, l51
tuto.,
exeelleM
condlion.
$2600. :I04-li82-M30 .. 304-882·
21'58.
1911 Ford F-150 pkttup 300 6
3 . -. ·~
WIO.,.,drhe, AC, ~1 or
1182-2582.

82

Carter'• Plumbing
Fourth and Pi,.,.

cyt,

1113 Fonl s - , ,_ palm
tluminum whetta, ,~bod!
1200 ..... $4500, 110.1112-411123

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
- ~

Gallipolis, Ohto

-----Electrical &amp;
614-446-3888

~

'•

\
\

un: 84

Qeneele
taaturing

NlllrHion
Products
Amino Acid Body
Building weight lou tnd tat

bumlf formufn. Aveilable ex·

clutfvtty 11 Alit Ald Pharmacy.

Good ulld Broyhill living roam
tulle, 3 edra chtlrs, like new, 1
~rga

ch•lr, 614-Jt2-21M,

Oulbrtneen Premlert tt'Mifrt
organ, A·1 condition, mutt ...
lo tpprtclatt. 614-992·llt•U.

Holr dryOf, $100; big puoh
lon phono IKand ,_,
IIINO,

fiOO,

bul$40;
114-tm·'IIIIIO

Alllt Chalmtr1 H[).4 T,.,ck
Load... 18,500, 0 .8 .0. 11!3
Dodao Dump Truck 13 200 1M3 Ford Bronc:o, ..... paint .
O.B .b . :12.5 Amp. Gtt We'lder
aklm ........ r body lift, 1200
1825 O.B.O. 614-3&amp;7·1031.
u.... $4,500. 114-H:!.ttl23.
Cadet pullfng tractor,
winner, 114-~o.3020
eyenlnge, 114-62-3384 dlye,
Cub

prov.,

Otlllie Wtblr.

Refrigeration

1i87 S-10 Piek.Up Automatic Air
Cond, PS, $3,500 Ann. &amp;14-446.
88'111 Aftet ! P.M.
1W Bttnr 4- lrhNt c*"iw. 304-

Cte Wllh Cuftlv•ore 675-11!1.
llorly · IUne
Toboc:oo
Seller,
Main
AGtotlller
· Long
Tobtcco Fralnea, IM 388 11ad .. Chevy Luv. bod. $800. ~··
After SP.M.
Farmall

For Sal•: New Holland Rak•
Baler1, Mowen, &amp; Hay Binds:
Ptawo. Dltka, Corn Pta.._
Uanutt

SIM'Iedtre

Drillo And Culllvat.,:..

~
Other E·

KILLS FLEAS! Buy ENFORCER
Floo Klllo&lt;o for pall, haM &amp; Phono: 114·281-5M4
yard. Gutr~nltad eHectW.I Buy
KUBOTA
ENFORCER at: Baum True
S1tes Parta S.~
VaiUI Store, 11 W..t Main
HURST tRACTOR SALES
Slrllt, Chatter Oh. &amp; Ytlley 2B HP 4 WD MIN: 20 HP 4 WD
Lumbar &amp; Supply CofJJ., 555 $5,195, Route 7North, llllietla.
Port Stroll, lllddloport, Oh.
814-3Jil.4151

rvom w!Woodbumer, mtfor tpptloneoo, Sl!I,!IOO. 304-6JII.2783. Ohio. 71!-'1113-4732.

eondillan, ..,,. Ul MieJ\elin
Jlrw, $1100 080, 614-992-4530.

1917 Ode Otfta 18, Vinyl Top,
Loadtdl Excellent CondiUon!
$4,900. 6~225, Afttr &amp;p.m.

no answ•.

Commtrclll Building, 12,000 Sq.
Fl. Docka, Lovotora, Hootad
c...r Span Rl. 32, Jtcklon,

1177 Olch StaUonwagon, Qaod

862 7.

tnyllmt.

Very nk:t 14x:70 mobile home on
prlvalt acrt. 3 bedroom axtre

614--Qt2-7938.

3BB-i3(15.

114-62·2421, INVe mtua;t 1

~4_9__F.:.o...,r.:Le.:.a:.se:.:.._ _

,...r

-:1112=-&lt;i-:53-:-:-&lt;011-:-a-n_.,_&amp;
...:':__
"" ___

AKC

Boa!. 95

1m Blj.l Ski

Johneon outbolord. Rune good
Netdti Upholtlery wort. fl5o00

Wanl to buy 4 ai)Md transmis.aktn kK 1tl3 CJ"t tMcl whh 2sa
engine. 304-675-3161. ·

saoo.

$150. Blues are worth S4QO..
$600. Reduced to Mil. Good
netur.d &amp; lnteplgenl. 614--446--

50 Inch aaw mill ••• 35h x T'
1111 boll. 304.(;75-2358

1960
B1rbour
16-112
ft
Mahogany AufHI-Bout with SO
HP Jo'hnton CMJtboan:l. 14,250. 1·
304-522-6240, Huntlng1on.

1171 .......... Bonz. 2lJO Sl',
needs minor body work,
mint Interior, 6"14.992·1313 01

u....

10 Gel. flth lank, llghlt &amp; filter
eyatem, lett extratl 5 tropkal
fleh, nc. ftlr protect, $80. 614-

puppl11. S75 &amp; S125, 614-667-

675-18111 tfter 5:00PM .

-:·
rebuift, llartinQ at $91; tn:q •
wheel drive lllrting a1 $MSI.(Il~. ~ '
114-24!-Mn, &amp;14-99:2-6291.
""

1186 Okle Rrenza. 5 tpiiJd. air,
tnV fm • .,., tin wheal, 114-

6758

elumn V-bottOIII bolt, 'i.8 hp
...rcury malor wt'lraia..-. JO.I.

.... $175, 6'J4.992-7ti23

AKC reg'ed. 2 yr. okt blue
femala Chow Chow, asking

AKC ,.glsterlld B1 ...n howld

lor Sale

Auto Parts &amp;
:,.
Accessories
::::--:--:--:---..,.---..:. . ',
6ft. Iouck ' - lor ulo, ~ .. - •

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1g91 W\zlld 18hp riding lawn
mowwr $900. Gardtn lawn 18hp
mDMr J1,200. 304--895-3018.

75 Boats &amp; Mo1ors

1968 Dodgo Don GT, 360 onglno,
full race cam, road lift.., good
body good.
514-!14,..
3080 after 5pm

67'11.

Ahtr 4:30P.M.

Commerelal Spece Ta Rtnt In
2125.

12

whh extrae, good slv.pe, J04..
_675-_50
_86_._ _ _ _ _ __

76

Transportation
PI nile And Medal Culvert 6 Inch
Thru 60 Inch In Stock. Ron
Enns, Jackson, Ohio. 1-800537·9528.

SuzulrJ RM80 motorcycle , 1 yr
old, good cond., 11200, 614-1112·
2fi65 lhll 4pm

14ft

62 Wanted lo Buy

d.-r

12

Bklck, brick, ,..., pipes, wtn·
dows, llnlltls, etc. Claude Wln--

Gibson refriger1101 &amp; tlove,
goad cond., 614-912~137

o.k Hill, 1,100 Sq. Fl. 114-441-

I

pedestal.

614·245-95()41 After 4:30P.M.

Tht ut. way ta d&amp;.l.

"""'*· 1114-11112.&amp;511

uaac~ moblll

tuper

Wtterbtd

40x"' building tor rtnt : s.tur·

day thru Thursday. 114-4oC6-1750.

1991 Mx80 3Br's, 2 Bathe, lote1 ~!85i home Nnttlt, $235;
$17,500, Do Aao,.., With 1750 ......
_.:..,.;.:..;-211;;.;.;7_ _ _ _ __

OY•r Ptymenta. Call

Of

Black latthtr Jtcbt, Slza:
Small, Brand New, $75. 814-367-

Ono

7,30-1'30 AM oo 7:301:30 Pll, 304-695-3421.

Down. lluot Ba Movldl &amp;14-44611325.
To Bank Aac:lalm:d
Mobllo HomH, Groot -ctlonl
llony AI $500 Down, And Toko

Chh'l

Onnre $44.95: Twin Mattrats

Range, ttfrig. lum'td. Water,

675-2218.

n.adt some rtpairs,

1189 Cllyton WHtwlng 14x52 2
Bedrooms, Totti Eleclrlc E.Jc.
Condition, 9111-Up On Rented
Lol, Ala Grandt. 8t4-388-8'788.

Drawer

$99

Set Our Modal•, 814-88&amp;-7311 .

6~34.5 ah•r 5p.m.

1968 King mobile home, 2 bed·

n .. hed, Otthwalhtr

4

B•dl

Nice One BR unturnlsn.d 1pt

g•rbaa• paid. Dopooh roq'ld.

New Home AI EIIN Home Cen·
ter, Gr11t Stltetlon, Ft.. Stt·Up
And Delivery! C.ll 614-m -1220.

rooms,
$2,700.

(21:6);

Bunk

Gr~ciout

Rt. 2 Nann, 3 mllea from Pt. Pn,

Uwn mowing &amp; trimming, (20
yr. oldl. 614--446-1859.
Lawn mowing and odd )obi,
tuHy lnau,.d1 114-992-7172.

S.Curhy 1-800-344·1011 lnveet· R•••onable rltH. CAll 304-178·
5
mont 01 t12K Soc:uract.
='-:::37..,.:.-:-:-:--::::-- - - Eaay World Excollonl Pay! AI- Wilt do bobyolttlng In my homo,
Hmbtt Productl At Horne. C.ll lel.n F•lle artt, lh4·247-4965
Toll FNI. 1.aoo-IBU!IM, Ex!. Will do houaacloanlng. 3(14-415313.
3836.
\

IO Ubraf}, perking, central MNI,

Nice 2 story, basement, gtrage
&amp; large lot , ex:c loeatlon, Scm•
rvllla Rufty, 304-675--3030 or
675-3431.

Give plana leuans In
home
111°udonlabtaln,.odrs.uho. A~oo ~ncod
...h
II l.
cording • trtnapo~lng, II Inter·
Ntlld, ~·~• call 814-992-5403

Mitt Pault's Day Cera Ctntar.
Solo, altordablo, chlldC1111. II·F
Ap- &amp; o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2~10.

~ br, next

llvlrtg. 1 and 2 bed·
tt Village
Manor
snd
Rlvsrsldt
Apartment• In Middleport. From
$1116. Coll614-i92·7787. EOH.

T.V., Stereo Syttllm ~hroughoul
Wnhoo &amp; lloyar 2 Bodroomo 01
Furniture And dvlng Room Furniture, Mlcrowtve, ""Retrtrr~tor
And Stove. 814-446-354 , 304~:J.&lt;t358.

ml

Fumlsh«&lt; Apartment,

NMd oHer, 2923 Spruce Ava,
complete kltc:htn, btatment,
g•r~ge, Somerville Rtany, 304·
675-3030 ar 6~3431.

-.y

,..n

Buy or sell. Rlverlna Antiques,
1124 E. Main Strut, Pomeroy.
Houre: M.T.W. 10:00 a .m. lo 6 :00
p.m., Sunday 1 :00 to 6:00 p.m
614-992·2526.

polvllogH. 30US2-2566.

675-3431.

----' 111 -

Ukt new. 63
Rou-mlnor.d hNdtM..nt. 3046 ,.., okt raglsl:...t Umousln
615-3288
bull, S1700, ~268 aft•r
Living room couc;h, uphotet•M 5pm
In gtHn and btlge, $60 ; small
round tsble (36" Cll•meter) wi'lh For aale: minlalurt Vletntmeu
two chairs, $15; 30 x: 38 poO· bolly pig&gt;, $100o: .• 614-,.2·
boolc.ctst, $15, radlo4tereo 2050
console with buUIItul wood Purtl:nd lknouatn bull, 2
cebinet, SSO. Charlllflt Hoeflich old 614-'1112-254~
614·992-5292 after Spm.
'

2bdrm

Furnished ·~nmenl tvalttblt
by
-k
wtlh
cooking

Mudowbroolr. Drive, on• Uoor
pllin, 3 bedroome, kitchen,
dining tnd family room, Scm.
rvltlt Ruhy, 304-675--3030 or

Klngslza wotort&gt;od.

double

Polnt Pt11aanl, WV.

ESTATES, 536 Jackson Plkt
from $192/mo. Walk to thop I
movlea. Call81ot-446·2568. EOH.

Mdlaon Ave. thrM bedrooms,
new khchen, Mth, Ulllily room,
upper 30's. Somerville Realty,
304-675-3030 Of 615-3431.

..._ '--M--

O..n, Sumnar Road, 814-985-

Pets, Home &amp; Y1rd. G._.l'lniMd

dlys

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACkSON

Country Honw , Sand Hill Road,
8 rooms, 2 balht, 5 acre land,
304-195--3671after 3:00PM.

tr1rwport else, T Bush-

• ,.., - - · - . . uc. - - .

3G4-421J..3207.

cY-a...
-.,.ho-400...:....d,..in- bi-.k-.-.- - .....
-1.

10 . John

Effective! Buy ENFORCER At:
Browne Trustworthy Hardware Wanted to .....: tobKco quott.
St•l• Route 160, Bidwell, Ohkt ' Gallla c-.ty. &amp;14-446-2101.

Antiques
-:;--::;--;-::-;._-:-;..,.,-.,..-::Big Alv .. A,.lquaa, S1o Ualn so, 56

H:!-2218.

Main St . Pt P111sant, W. Va .
Completely Renovated: 2 Full
Btthe, 3 Large Bedrooms, N•w
HVAC, New Carpet . Avallible
June 15 814-44&amp;-2205.

eart.

KILLS FLE..I.SI
385.5.
Buy ENFORCER F... Killen For

2 BR oparlmonto In lllddloport,
nowty romodalod, 1ow utlln!oa,
no pete, $220 per month,
dopo&gt;H roqulrod, &amp;14-112·2381

t,..iler,
$200 plue
utllltln, dapoei1 , lbdrm. duplu,
1bdrm. epartment, no pelt,
$225, ulllltl11 Incl., deposit, 614-

304-675-3030 or 675-3431.

Dlaabllitl• PNitrrtd. Hourt: AI
BEAUTIFUL HOUSE FOR SALE
SchoduloG'AI NMdod. Salary' Historical
A,... Corner Lot . B16

$4.50r'Hour. Send AnurM Ta
Ctcllit Baker, P.O. Box 804,
Jeckson, OH 45640. Ottdllnt
For AppUeantt: 5121192. Equal
~pportunity Emplaytr.
WANTED: Fuii·Timt Ueensed
Practical Nurse For Twa Community Group Hamu For Ptr·
eons With Oevtlapmental ~·
•blllliltl In
Gallla
County
(Gallipolis/Bidwell). Hou,..: 1·
9P.M. OR i-11A.UJ3.9 P.M.
(ROtiiH)
Thura;
12-IP.III.,
Frt/Sat/Sun!Mon; lncludee 2·
Hour WMkly S11tf IIIHUng; Or

Apartment
lor Rent

1bdrm.,
$225mo.,
Includes
Llllfltiet, aecurlty dapoth ,..
quired, no ptlt, 614· ii2-2218

••r

-- -

axle

Autos lor Sale

OPEN: 7 Otyt A Week, I A.M .. 6
P.M. Sundty t2 Noon· 5 P.M .
Rt. 141 4 M1ln Ott Rt . 1 In C.n-

1 BR, newly *"odtl•d. 109
Second lvt. Utllltln pd
l2951mo plus dtpoalt. 614-3"7i
2171.

~ Ia ull,
financing
IYIIItblt, Somerville Rtalty,

Ilia

614-446-3158

2062.

AppJI Orovt 1.5 tcres, modem
3 bedroom, gtr•a•. ci1y wtter,

o-r.

tor

614-1'42-2095 .

double

BARGAINS GALORE!

2bdrm. mobile home In Mkf.

44

IS acrt country e!latt with
pond. Vinton. Colonial rtrm
house newly remodeled. 2 large
btme, summer hou11, garage,
lfudio, hunting cabin. By owner.
Agenta Wtlcomt, 3%, Dan
arack, 614-388-8210.

16•

82
Oliv• St, Galllpolitl. Ntw • Used
tuml1 urt, heatlf'l, Wts1em &amp;
Work bools. &amp;"f4.446..3159

DINETTES: Wood Bar Stools
S14.95 (26") Teb.., And 4 Peddtd
Choirs $12!1.

aU

3 BR, 1 balh, naw siding,
woodbumln; tireplace. 114-4463221.

0 , NEA '""

61 Fann Equipment

Merchandise

&amp;

t•nery.

only 304--875-1238.

Cash paid tor Hal1ey 0.¥Miton
snd lndl•n motorcycl" and
parte. Any condition. Evenings

t===========r====~=~==~

11()38.

2 bedroom trailer, unfurnished,
no pet1, Htn by appointment
call bltween g:ooAM &amp; 5:00 PM
only, 304-182-3626.

2021 llarquene Ave, 5 yre old,

kitchen, utllhy
room, all one level, cover.d
p.tlo In back, privacy tine•,
gar1gt, lhown by 1ppolntment

i ''.19.1

Blooming lilt plant•

SIMI Sot.

dleport, 614-im-5858.

room, diNngroomttamlly room

., . ,
""AAl
......,r.1 ~{

cond., 814-941-2833
Complele home tumlahlngt.
Mou/"1: Ma.Sat, -..s. 614-4460322, 3 mil• out BulaviUe Rd.
Frtt o.tlvtry.

wtftt •·

Motorcycles

74

good

LIIYNE'S RJANITUAE

~·

transmission

overdrive , anvtrnlcauatte, un.
air, c:ruiat, exc:. c:ood ., 614-992·

VI'RA FURNITURE

42 Mobile Homes
lor Rent

brk:k m~~lntenanc• frM
home, 4 bedrooms, small living

autCNN~tlc

7759 after 7pm.

duty 54 Miscellaneous

heavy

plus, 4 yur11 okt, Vllf'Y

.....;:.:,

1HI Ford Aerottar ltlni

/

APPLIANCES

Upper River Ail. Bnlde Sl~
Crest Mottl.
Call 6M-446-7'3i8,
Skaggs
Applltne.s

3010.

2 bedrooms, com..- lot, priced
in 20'1, 107 Locust St. ~andar-

tklllt, hive reUablt lrllnsportatlon and bt willing to worll: rltJ·
Ibit · hou,. lncludfng w•Dndl.
An E.O.E. Return appUcation

Show You How? For A Ptraonel, Phot:ogrtpher·WIII do weddings,
Sh-Oown lnlarv• Call Mr. sports, &amp; lcx:.tlon partralts.

3 Yilt Old BPayH Femate
Mired Shephtrd, Needa o;;d

2bdrm.
howe,
clttn, deposh I reter•ncee ,..
qulr.d, no Inside pills, 814·992·
Unfurnl1hed

0857

1011, 304-i7S.761i.

YDUr Home? Would YDU l.At U.

2 pupa, 1 doa. All
Spanltl. et•·:Jft-275 .

Elec:trle.

1 t.droom trailer, pay own
utllltlet plue dapoalt, 304-675--

RHpltl
Ca"'
Glv.r,
quallllcallone
Include
tl·
perience working wtth e6der1y
tnd or a hunh Nltttd Hakj.
Must have ex~rtenc. In oHICII

And Only Work Port·Tlmo Frvm lam Toddlor Corw, 114-14U227.

114-

USED

BEDROOM :

Jlllrwl. Would 'Vou Ukt To Elm Belonl, tfttr echooJ, Drop-Ins
Mort Money Than You Do Now, welcome. 61,.-448-8224. New In·

~

Pty

Nl&lt;o oHk:lanoy eoltogo, unlquo
and beautiful, ~J'S"-6042

17 A. MIL 3ml From Gallipolis
Cape Cod Home. 3 01 5 Br't L.R
O.A. Kitchen, Btth. Full Bau-mtnt, CA, Bam, Garag•. lmmedlattd Pouuslon 614-446-

.....7604.

••kl.

Watt'l•re, dryers, r•trlgtrllort,

2 bedroom trailer mostly turnlthed, VInton, Ohio eraa,
depotll &amp; n~f•renc.s, 304--875-

AVON I AU Arua I Shlffey
Spo~rw, 304-4175-1421.

Giveaway

112 Ooblrm.n, 112 Husky

B•netllt,

Tr111apot1aUon,
407...212--4)17.
Ext. 5'11. la.m.·10p.m. Toll
Refunded.

~her lh1n my

4

Pty,

GOOD

PROCESSOR, make up to $1000
a WHk proeestlnq HUO!FHA
refund•. Will train. 1·216-324-

367-715T.
11 Help Wanted
PonaW. Sawmill dan't
mM)oy -lng. phon• 0&lt;· Georgu
haul yoLW 6oQe to the mill Just
pet~enee

You

/

Dining Room Ttb~, New, 8
ChJirs, 2 E.ttra lalv.e, 614..-441 1408.

Roektre $79.

Trimming, Tr• RemoYII,
Trimming. Fr• E.ttlmtle•l I

Announcements

aner

N. .ty rwmodeltd 2 bedroom
howe, In Addlton betide Tara .
814-62·5304, 614-W2·5.225.

31 Homes for Sale

SSOO Ott Purch••• Price Of Any

dlral People call you. No tx-

304-67S.noe

$250/mo. $250 Dopoa~ . 814-387·
0415, 614.:161-7180.

Real Estate

Regltttrlllon f90-05..1274B .

lefeNMII lwaiiUie

i11YT

Houst: In Kyger CI"IH Sc:ttooi

The Newest Machines., Making A
Nice StNdy Cash Income. 1·
801HI56-0354.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Employment Services

~

Vending Route: Local . We Have

Retrain
NowiiiSou'lheaat.m
Buslnnl College, ~f~~~ Valley

151 Second Av.nut, Gallipolis.

homo •ur
~- ,.,. In 1~n ,
.......
.... month ptua
da-•.
.,.._., •~

VEND.

Wantld To Buy: Junk Aulot
With Or Whhc.w Motora. Call
Lorry Uvaly.I14-3BB-113G3.

Colnt, Gokl Rln~ Sllv., Colne,
Gold CcNna. M.T.&amp;. CcMn Shop,

P.M.
3 BA

VENDING ROUTE: Get RlcM
Quick? No Wayl Bul We Have A
Good, Study, AHordablt, Busl neu. Won't Lut . 1.aG0.284·

end
dillon.

P.M.
Top Polcaa Pold: All Did U.S.

$325/Mo. 614-446-4701S Aher 8

675-3433.
5pm .

caa.. sterwo,
kil, ,.... lirel,.
55,000 mi'-s, 6,500 or btsl ottw;
t990 Ford Ranger, 5 tp., DVW·
drive, ttlll undw Ford warranty,
Wrp lruc:k. S5,M5. C.ll 6J4..

Air condltlor-.r, •etrtc cook.

$35. 304-675·1224.

3 Bedroom Hou11, 2 Mil. . From
Galllpolla, Otpoalt Required,

Dlllrict.

14

Wtnltd To Buy: Large Size
Drtll Mak.,.t Form. Good Con·
dhlon, ean 114-446-4015 A"" 5

NEW CONSTRUCTION &amp;
REMODELING

304~75-3271.

wo....

u•

5 Pc. Dining Room Sal, $20.00
Coli 614-245-1504 Aft" UO P.M.

2535.

DIYt~ntal

Ok:lm1rbfn, loye, comk: boob,
lanteme, picturee tnd tumlturt,
Ot:by Mtrtln, 814-892·"ll'41.

(No Sundty Calls!

20Yrs.lllfo

3 bedroom 2 .tory ~.
Nfwence I ~H requl~.

Hundreds of Companlas Need
Homo w ••
••• 1nor-re G usreniW9\ol
c:ome. Ea ey ., ~ Ru·•
... your
name and Address S.A.S.E. 110
tnd $1.00 to: 0 I A Suppllll
O.pt. C PO Box 1443 Fairborn,
Oh 45324

1987 Ooclgt 4J:4, auto., AMIRI,

ln1 :: nge. Exeenent Condition .
6)..3945.
61

wee~ procn"ng HUur,.HA
retundt. Witt train. 1·216-32472.85.

OOPNESINAPHESJOr

Ctlh pt~ld for Harley Dtvldaon
end lndl.n motorcycln and
parts. Any condition. Evenings
304-128-:1207.

New Homes • Vinyl Sidia1
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions • Roofi•g

MIDDLEPORT GUN
SHOP

Ready June 3rd, 114-Hl·7S03.

1

Retardation And O.veie&gt;pmentsl

auction
tervk.t.
UetnMd
11166,0tdo &amp; W•t Vlrglnlt, 304773-5185.

CONNIE'S OHIO
RMIHERISCIId
EVERlASTINGS
52100
ow.

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
Ncommendt thai you do bus!nne with people you know and
NOT to .. nd money tMroll9h tMe
m1ll until you have lnvast1gated
the offering.

1887 Chev CuSiom Convereion,
314 ton, 45,000 milia, fully ...
qui_.,, lmmac...la conct. 304TT).n22 all• 7:00 PM.

40' Mot PcNnt Whhe S.lf..Ciean-

Rutland,

In

$225/mo.
plue
ulllltles
•
deposit relarencn rtqUNd .

PROCESSOR, moko up lo _!1.000

aigns.
5114, l F~. 5115. ~.
3217 MOeamtn Avenue. (Off or
ct.adend} Chlchne clotl••·
blby clolhea, maternity cW.t.a,
miiCIUtneoue.
Ytrd ......frldty, May 15, t-4
.tory brick houM tcroae trom
vocaUontl ~-

MNIA

825 Third Avonuo. Galllpatll, OH
45631.

house

2bdrm.

!NOTICE!

Part-Time Sal.. PMson Hourly
I Commlaelon Rettll Sate Mutt
Be Flulblt, Send AnurM CLA
118, rJo G.lllpollt Dally Tribune

School, Galllpolle Ferry follow

ThiKI;c

NEW-REPAIR
GUTIERS
DOWNSPOUTS
GUTIER CLEANING
PAINTING
Free Estimates

Part·Time Peraon Hourty I
Commits6on Retail S.lea Mutt
Bt Ftxlblt, Send Rnume ClA
116, elo Galllpolle Dally Tribune,
825 Third Ave Galllpolle, Ohio
45631

Driving Record,
Good Commun6elfl0n And Of.
ganlzatlon Skllle, Punctual And
Able To Work As Part 01 A TNm
Requlrtd; Experience WorkJf'ltl
With Pereone With Menttl

May 151h • 12:00..?1 Mty 16th ·
9:00.? Aero~~~ rrvm Bnle

IOWUDL.
WIIIII:SEL
ROOFING

Ptrt-tlme hand on dtlry hmn,
mutt htvt experience, S14·e854102. Leave m...age.

poolmartld by May :u; 11m to

&amp; VIcinity

PH. 614·992·5591

4-9-t1n

INI-pd.

Kathy 51.

Uconoed and Bonded

Agriculture
Lime

Need to Mil, moving to smaller
home: Fr1, 811. Cr~fts, 1oo11,
boat. lola, lots goodies. 475

BULLDOZING

FOR SALE

OIUCI'S BOATAUTO REPAIR
LOWWORRATE
15% OFF 0. Mast
Boat Parts

Big Yard S..le: 1275 THrw Run,
1 Mile OH Routt 7, Friday 5115,
Saturday 5118, Monday. G To 1
Lawn
Mowers,
Fumhwt,
Clothes,
Oithll,
Jewelry,
SwHper.

1~37-1460

ANGIE'S FLOWERS R&amp;C EXCAVATING

~laOrW.

lEI'S l~lNCE
SERVICE
992·5335 or
915·3561
_
_ ,_.Oitloo

Back Yard Slit: Frldty, 5115, &amp;
Saturday,
5116 · 9:00-1 414
Bulavllle Pike.

949-2627 or

New SCA WOLFF
Call for ApplToday

Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day before lhe ad It to run.
Sunday edition - 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday tdlllon - 2:00
p.m. Stturdly.

KEVIN'S LAWN
MAINTENANCE

6 MI. Olt Eagle Ridge
Rd. or 1ML Fr011 Baslraa
BedSL24

ALL Yard Salas Must Ba Paid In

412111211fn

1 S..slon.... $2.25

07606.

3 Family: Fr~ Sat, Sun, May 15,
16, 17th. 9 rill 5. 38 Smithers
Avenue.

614-992·2242

12 S.nlons....$20

n::•p

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Custom Painting•

15 S.sslons....$25

Work you',. own dty lime
hours. Na w•lcende. Car
--•-•
n.....
-.. No experience nac;n.~~a : Sond
10 ICC
0 ~:~~
South Hackensack, New Jefll"
'

Yard Sale

Welcome Slates

TANS

&amp;CO.

7

"SPECIAUZIHG IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CALIF ORillA

1---...:...:,.,=,.,-...:...--

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto, reward, Huntington
WV
25704.
614-696-1293
O.adllne: May 22. EEO, M/FN/tol,
JTPA training.
Lost: Vlc:lnlly Ot Porter, 1 Month
Old Femate Rcttwaller, Bilek Part ti!N deplrtrnenlalort mtr· Anentlonl Styling Salon For
With Tan Markings, Weighs: 70 chanditlf needed. Must live Salt! Prime Location. Call 614·
Pds. 614-388..S33(.
wlth-ln15 Mille Of QalllpoUa. 446--8803, 614-446-8355.

:Meadows

NOW OPEN!

Pan-time Cllll managtrfiNcher
ror G~ll Industries, Pl .

Pl•uant
()egrM
required.
Lost: mans' canvts, brown &amp; Some tr~vel. S"end r11um1 to
white, lost at auction by Personnel, 1005 VIrginia Ave.,

'J(jl.tfr.ryn

1

3-13-92-lln

Ellnbeth Farrar, please retum,
Important papers enclosed, 614-

ti·Pita-WIIdltr.
Molon:JIOIM-Etc:.

JAYMAR

YOUNG'S

1----------

t 100. pd. 411 6N.I

7131F9 1/tln

4IUIHI'I-

Renlals

985-3954.

1178 F-1511 4 WO Loot&lt; Slwp,
OriYel Goodl 614-361-0657.

llwn
parts,
olt.r
howehokt lttma, '14-62-2756

Lost : Dog In Rio Grandt Black
And White With Brown And
Black Fac•. Has Coller And
"I'd be out by now ill hadn't parked in the
41 Houses for Rent
Whits Fl11 Collar On. Antwtfl
judge's spo1 the day I was sentenced."
To Name: "Wimpy" . It Foond,
PbtH Call 814-245-5951, 614· f-----------r:======~~~,., 1 BA house across from the
245-5152.
Unlv•rstly of Rio Grande. 614388-9146.
Found: Bible on road near Rolllngsville, May 10,304-675-4613. FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS
2 Bedroom House, Down Rt7, 3
HIRING. S16,000 • $12 000/Yr. I·
Milu
Overlooking
River
Los! : checkbook, K·llart In Gal· 8CS.564 8500 Ell!. GBII68 Foo 21
Business
$280/mo. Aotoronco Aoqulrod.
llpolla, or Pomeroy vicinity, lmmedlllt Rlaponae.
Opportunity
614-446-1615,614-446-1243.

204 N. Sec. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
992·3184

MIIH, Jot,SOO. 614-24&amp;--5978.

A•

uopoolt

Household
Goods

stove,

Lost &amp; Found

6

Galllpalll.

Plno~

Merchandise

IVIilable, 304--675aZ722.

'

1W7 Ford F-150 414, New Tnt,
Whl....
Breba,
Exhaust,
RotoreL.Shocks, A•dio, 10,000

qull"ld. Ctll 8~2"1, 814446-2325, Do 114-446-4425.

Lots In Gtlllpolle F.,ry • 100%
ownar flntnclng at $98.64 per
month, tny one of tour lot 1

namants, 614-992-5530.

USED RAILROAD TIES

Soc:ond a

lott tor sal•, trellert ac:cep.tab\a. 304-67§..2722.

H~rd Maple Trve To Giveaway

Fat

Bath,
a Aotrlv.

Slovo
Water Furnished. No P .. t . Cor·

nor

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Good oak alabs. 614-388-93!4.

Apan_,,

''•

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

One B.A .,

$230. Pot ll.,.h:

Crochet, Taddlng, And Knlltlng

Kittens to good home, approx.
&amp;wks. old, weaned 614-gQ:Z-

WELCH TOWN RD.· Cuto one lloor home with new vinyl
siding &amp; winng. acldod insulation &amp; fenced yard siluaiBd on
two lots ASKING $24,900

11om, we want to
wloh
you a very
Happy Blrlhcltty ltlld toll

L.Nao, LA.,
Sell Khchon WI

Calla~

8ullalngo.

Old, To Giveaway. 614-44&amp;.3114.

75-1751.

POMEROY· t floor frame home with 3 bedrooms CIA,
WBFP, ,_ roo! &amp; dee!&lt; 1 car garage, lui basemen~
oomlortab(y k&gt;calod on 2.13 acres. $31,900

lr8tp you;
I watched you day
by clay.
Gocf watched you
whlll you suffered,
And kMw you had

c.....

WhhJW~hout Farm

Wonlod lo buy: 24 ft. ' 4 ft.
tboVt
pool. Good COO·

an oHer.

May 15,1NO
I wanted 10 much to

yourlha ....
He tenderly cloMCI
your weary eyes
And took you fn hla

Blae~ And White Pup, 7 Weeks

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

OR TOLL fliEE

MLe...r

OPU
WED.·SUN. liH p.a.
4-21-n·•-rl

POMEROY· Ileum Subdlvlolon- Really nice biio:Mrame
home 3 bedrooms, lui basoroont, 26' t oi attached garage.
fireplace, CIA GoodlocationlnoJghborh&lt;&gt;Cid. $57.900mako

Memory or
PETE WHEELER
Who puMCI-"J
3 yNrs ago tod"J,

•rr... , ,
'r"

EYIIItniilti

MIDDLEPORT- 1 112 story frame homo with 3 boOocwns,
CIA, Fireplace, fenced bad&lt; yard, front &amp; side porches, hAl
basemenl Newer .vrnng, plumbing. carpet &amp; ftoomg.
ASKING $29,900

HappyAds

...

247-4035
IIOW OPEl FOI SPRING
Plllls.Hirh, Pwt Itt,

--Prrvlng.

5

""8

1111 B'IIIWIS
dania. Thlo action haa "-n
HAVE
maoos
aulgned Cue No. 92.CV·105
.
.
.
.
,...!...
......
and Ia pending In the Corn- '

Plvtng.

ALL FLOOR SAMPlES

Specializing In Custam

"WW ,., Nt a.r ~II

.,llorl
CauriSINol

.loll ~ Rutloncl Townohlp
- llulllplo Culvort Roploo•
mont
Jab_. Sal- Townohlp •
Brldgo ond Culvert Ropi11Comanl
Eoch bldclor muot 1111 1
10% porfonnonce bond ot
the lmo ol the bidding oncl
the auacalahll bidder muat
file o I 00% porlormonco
bond. A 111111 ootot.llohl"'l
- tillod llno al onclt, In tho

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

RAONf.OHIO

Youl--r~o-r.

.loll·2 Orongo TOWMIIIp-

FAIDAY·SATUADAY-MONDAY

SNODGRASS
UPHOLSnRY

o- s,n. ..,,., at or
r..,.-8111 'Ilion Now .. SoocL

Engln••·

Bid., - -...., ...
enva-··

~

FREE £SmiAT£S

93; -B.Jralo

ollted -~ .,_ 1 t.nk,
doing bu~ wtthln llo
I
ha ........... forll71
TheYillagewlllrequlrethe ooope ol Ohio Banking
• FtGO • Fonl C.b/Citeoela
dlopoaltlon olallaultable flll Lllwo, ............... ..
lolrlllaciM Fn D J m•ot
material on a tlte provided ~.!'!!!"~
tri Truoll) •ohiD11 N.......,
by tho village, located within
FIIEYAJII .. lllttl4:00 p.rn.
lor bJ6.
1 flvo-mllo dlotonce of tho
on llan*J, U.y 18, llt2.
demolition aile. Tho VIllage clng. only CONTRACTORS
lllnlrtr- llld $3000.00. c...
will require that 1 portion ol that oro qu1l1Hocl ODOT
the oalvaged oteel will bo llktdora .....
1M II RIICIRo W.llr
Ill .,.,. Bldo to 1M ap onod
donated to Molgo High ............ngwwt.
U.y· II al tho roonood
TM•ucatte'ulwcall :lar
School. A llol ollheoo maloCouncllloolrtg.
rials Ia available 11 VIllage """ 1M nquiNd lo
1111'/ loll wor11 • roqo I eel br
Hall.
~L:-u
The building demolition ........ eauna,
The m I po, -tolnlng
RIICino, Ohio .rTI
alte Ia to be eKCIVIIed to a
1•1 2•; (S) I, I, 15, •tc
depth ol two loet below tho bid, MUll 1M plolnly
oxlotlng at root level and fllled lllorkod, "TTWN. . IIIUf:
with ouhablo flll dirt oher 2 PAO.ECTI- .Ioiii . .lion
Townohlp ar .loll 2 Orexcavation.
Any lurther lnlormadon Townehlp or .loll a Rutland
on the protect may 1M ob- Townahlp or Job • ..._
tained by contacting Mayor Townohlp."
Fred Hollman ot Vlllllgo Hall.
Tho ouccolllul bidder plokocl up at tho llelgo
omc..
muot be an Equal Employ· eaun~r
Tho llolgo County
mont Opportunity Employer
Commiaelanen ,...,.,. h
which prohibit• dlacrlmlnatlon beeauM ol race, creed, rlghtlo IICOIIII or roJoct lilY
color, nallonal origin, sex, or all bldoo, or any part
L _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - l l a g e , handicap. polltfcalalllll· ......I.
llolgo County
r
allen or bellelo. Tho VIllage
CoMmilll:...,.
of Middleport Ia an Equal
Employment Opportunity
llory ""'--·Cork
BAND CONCERT
(5) 15, 22, 2lc
Employer.
SUNDAY. MAY 17-2:00 p.m.
The prolac:t muot be co ...
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
pleted within a lhlrty.&lt;fey
CHICKEN &amp; NOODLE DINNER
perlodlromthotlmeotaward·
$3.50- Immediately following
lng the contract
Public Notice
concert Sponsored by Band
The VIllage rooorveo tho
eoos1ers
right to reloct any or oil pr.,. In the Common Plooo Court
posalt and to waive eny In·
ol Melgo County, Ohio
formalltlea or Irregularities In
Fred George, et al.
tho propooalo roeolved.
PlolntiHo,:
Fred Hoffman, Mayor
c... No. 92.CV-105
VIllage ol Middleport
Yo.
May 8, 15, 22; 3TC
E. E. Nelaon. ot al,
LARGE SELECTION OF
Delondanto
NOTlCEBYPUBUCAnoN
LIVING ROOM SUITES,
To: E. E. Naloon; Jennie
Sofa and Chair
Public Notice
K. Nelaon; W. F. Thompaon;
and the Unknown Helro, Neil
PRICED FROM
of Kin, lagatoeo, Devl-,
810 SPECIACATIONS
$450.00 to $995.00
Admlnl1trator1, EJ:ecutors,
LEGAL NOTICE
AMino ~ Clerk ...

83 Acree W12.Vr. Old Home
3Bra1 2 Balhe, Ibm, S.V1rti

Sacond Flo«

&amp; Collie. 304-895-3877.

KIT 'i'i . CARLYLE® by L.ar~ Wri~hl

For Lease

mowt/"1

:

Public Notice

49

2722.

1:00 p.m. Saturday
I :00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tueoday
1:00 p.m. Wedneoday
100 p.m. Thunday
1:00 p.m. Fnday

Classified pages c()Ver U.e
foUotcing telephone e:tchanges .•.

• SeatiDelil aot .... po111ihle for error• aftar fU'II day (cheek
lor error• fnt day ad. nm. iD. paper'). CUI beiore 2:00p.m.
- ~J a(ler puhlicatioD &amp;o n~ ....ka COrt"e~::litUI
• Alb tbat lllYII be paid ia.ad•&amp;~~ce an:
C.nl ol n..lu
Happy Ado

33 Fanns lor Sale

DAY BEIURE PUBLICATION

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wedneoday Paper
Thunda y Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

•n•t be pnpaMI

• Receiwe da..:oWit for ..U paid la aclftDCC.
,. Free Ad.: Gi.,.way ud Fouad acll u.ad.• lS word• will be
· rv.ll 3 d.yt at ao cltup.
• Priee of ad (or all eapita.l lel&amp;en U double price of ad c~l
• i pc'lat liae type oaly IIMJid

H-92-tln ·

SNAFU® b)· Bruce Beattie

Giveaway

4 puppies, 8 weeks Old. Psrt lab

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL

FIIEE ESTIMfrES

oSAND -GRAVEL oOIRT

an ad
Call 992-2156

4

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

qulprMnt
Mtchinery,

Howt'e
Jackson ,

Farm

73 Vans &amp; 4 wc·s
1IJJII Chowy Stop Van 350, lully
- o d. Pt. Pl. v.F.D. ~~
2311

at.•.-·s.

ONo 19'71 Ford Econofhlt Van. engina ltOO.

body good
lor·llulomatlc
cor

1177 a.vy Suburbert 4 whHI

drtvo, 350 ;;;;;~... body
fair-- PI Ptt v:FJf 304-62311.--. . . . . .
·~

Wt Oo Hauling
Anyp!KI, No JDb Too
Tao Utile. llattmenl
Gonorsl

W..., ,., Klncll

3~Anyt11M .

ff7
Upholstery
;T.:=~;:;:::::::,:.:;.!.._--,,.-

•

lng trl counly a... 27 ,..,.. Tht
bnt In 1\!mhu,. Upl'tolll..,..... , .

:

Yow"'Y 't Upholattring ~· •

Call

~54 "" ..;-;:,

tlmattt.

•
'

- ..

�FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middleport Community Chun;h, 575 Pearl
Street, will hold revival throu~h
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. nightly w1th
diliemtt speakers and singers each
. night. Public invittd.

HENDERSON • The Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
Community Center in Henderson ,
W.Va. John Waugh will be the
caller.

SD..VER RUN . The Silver Run
Baptist Church will hold revival
through Sunday 81 7:30p.m. night·
' 1y with preaching by Alan Black, wood

RUTLAND . There will be a
hymn si ng at the Rutland
Methodist Church Saturday at 7
p.m. featuring New Life Singers
and Tabitha. Rev. Arthur Crabtree
invites the public. Fellowship and
refreshments will follow.

SILVER RIDGE · Revival at
South Bethel New Testament
Church on Silver Ridge Road will
be held through Saturday at 7 p.m.
·nightly. Noonan Taylor is evangelisL
POMEROY • A special meeting
for the Meigs County React Team
will be held Friday 81 Pleaser's in
Pomeroy at 7:30 p.m. Memorial
Day weekend coffee break will be
discussed and all memb ers are
urged 10 auend.
11JPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will have a
dance Friday from 8-11 :30 p.m.
with music by CJ and Country
Genllemen. Public invill:d.
BASHAN · The Bashan Beamers 4-H Club will sponsor a dance
Friday from 7- 10 p.m. at th e
Bashan Fire House. Adm issioo is

50 cents.
RUTLAND · There will be a
dance Friday at the Rutland American Legion Hall from 8 p.m. to
midnight with music by White's
Hill Band. Public invited.
SATURDAY
CARPENTER • Carpenu:r Baptist Church "Busy Bees" will have
bake and rummage sale Saturday
from 9 a.m. 10 4 p.m. 81 the IOwn·
house on Rouce 143 near Carpenu:r.
REEDSVILLE· The Reedsville
United Methodist Women will hold
a creamed chicken and biscuit dinner oo Saturday, from 5 p.m. to 6
p.m. at the church. Buu.ered peas, a
salad bar and dessert will be
included in the price of S3 .50 per
place. Canyout will be available.
RACINE · The Meigs County
Retired Teachers will have a lun cheon meeting at the Racine
Methodist Church Saturday at
12:30 p.m. Call 992-3887 for infor-

mation.

TIJPPERS PLAINS · A Loyalty
Day program will be presented by
the Tuppers Plains VFW Post No.
9053 and Ladies Auxiliary to honor
hometown heroes Saturday at 2
p.m. at the post home. Public invit·
ed. Refreshments served.
NEW LEXINGTON · Distric t
13, Daughters of America, will
have practice at the senior citizens
building at New Lexington Satur·
day at I p.m. This practice is for
the District 13 rally 10 be held May
30 at New LexingiOn. AU members
in the district are urged to attend 10
support the district.
RUTLAND · There will be a
gospel sing 81 the Christian Fellowship Center on Salem Sueet in Rut·
land Saturday at 7 p.m . Featured
singers are the Shafer Family of
Crown City and Patty Simpkins of
Gallipolis.
ALEXANDER · The Third
Annual Spartan Spring Fling featuring The Fabulous Flashbacks
will be presented Saturday at
Alexander High School. Gates will
open at 4 p.m. for a 50's and 60's
style cruise-in and feature entertainment will begin at 7:30 p.m.
"Off Season" and "Backwords"
will perform at 4 p.m.
RUTLAND • There will be a
dance Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
Rutland American Legion Hall
from 8 p.m. to midnight. White's
Hill Band will perform. Public is
invited.

EEKLY

lowed by meeting 81 7:30p.m. with
conferral of the fourth degree obligation and a program by Janet
Bolin, amb•ss•dor for Ameriflora.

SUNDAY
POMEROY · The Meigs Junior
and Senior High School Bands w11l
present concerts Sunday at 2 p.m .
A homemade chicken-noodle dinner will be held immediately following the concerts and the cost is
$3.50.
POMEROY · Rev. Edd1e Buff.
ington will preach at the Naomi
Baptist Church in Pomeroy Sunday
at 10:45 a.m. The public is invited.
GALLIPOLIS ·Notice of radification meeting for contract agreement between UAW Local 1685
and Federal Mogul will be held
Sunday at 10 a.m. at the Holiday
Inn in Gallipolis.
SYRACUSE ·There will be a
chicken barbecue at the Syracuse
Fire Department Sunday beginning
at II a.m. Cost of the dinners is
$3.7 5 and desserts are extra.
RACINE · The Southern High
School Band will present its spring
concert Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
high school gym. Featured will be
a medley from the movie "Beauty
and the Beast" as well as a collection of pop songs, 'Top 40." Public
invited. Jeff Arnold, director.

BASHAN · Services will be
held at the Red Brush Church of
Christ in Bashan and Keno Roads,
Saturday at 7:30p.m . and Sunday
at 10 a.m. and 6 p.m . Denver Hill
wil be tho. speaker. Public invited.

REEDSVILLE ·The Eastern
High School Music Department
will present its annual spring concert Sundax at 3 p.m. The public is
mvited. William Hall is director.

SALEM CENTER · Star
Grange will meet Saturday at 6:30
p.m. at the hall near Salem Cenu:r,
Potluck dinner will be held fol -

MONDAY
POMEROY • AMVETS will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at Smitty's
m Pomeroy .

WEEKDAYS

FAM

=
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(MOl ~ -

5:00 IIJ

11:G0 0 AlMd H.lct cock Haw
IZIAuiDI!Ming Zerex Saab
Pro Seriet from AUonta (R)
Ql ~

LAiaNigtlt
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IZI Sc'i ' tic Spom
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(1). Morning Agrlc:uttln

woa tile poster coutest. Picturrd, 1-r, are Clinton
Horn, ftrSI piau; Marjorit Halar, second; and
Miclldle King, !bird.

POSTER CONTEST WINNERS • Opal Dyer
with the Soil and Water Coaservation District
recenUy visittd Salisbury ~menlary and pr~
sentrd awards to the rourlb grade studtnts wbo

A.,.ort

(J). Wolld-Ill Qll (MO) Up "' the Mlnu1l
111111 (TU,WE,TM,FR) AQ
Dey

----People in the news--zine. "The problem was that as I
began 10 read. Johnny slipped over

CHARLESTON, W.Va . (AP)
- Actress Sheila Kelley mingles
with actors playing lawyers every
day on the set of "LA Law." On
Fnday, she'll mingle with the real
thing.
Kelley, who portrays legal sec retary and law student Gwen Taylor, w1ll be a guest at a Kanawha
County Bar Associatioo dinner.
Kelley comes from a family of
lawyers, including her brother, H.
Gerard Kelley, who is a partner at
the Charleston law ftrm of Shuman.
Annand and Poe. She &lt;aid that
makes her acting job easier.

11J (lU,WE,TM,FR) NIC
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lpmiWMit

Chester Alumni Banquet planned

The Chester Alumni Banquet
will be held May 30 816:30 p.m. at
Cbestcr Ekrnen!Br)'.
Officers are Bob Wood, presi·
dent; Victor Bahr, f~nt vice-pn:sident; Maxine Wbildlead, second
vice-president; lldty Dean, =rewy; Opal Eichinger, assiaW'l sec·
retary; Rosemary Kdla, uasurer.
Esther Freda, assistant ueasoru;
and Harold and Beny Newe II,
NEW YORK (AP) - Ed David Koblentz, Swting Massar,
McMahon remembers when John - John Reibel Sr. and Maxine Goeny Carson zinged him with a prac· glein, deaxating oommioee.
tical joke in 1957 on the game
Following a dirua a slot busi.
show "Who Do You Trust?"
ness meeling will he held.
" I had to read the names and
Classes being honored will he
slogans of six sponsors from a 1922, 1927, 1932, 1937, 1942,
sheet," McMahon says in the 1947. 1952, and 1957. Special
upcoming issue of Parade maga ·

IZI (Til) Jimmy Ouldooll
• Spom LA!alllglil

tables will be prepared for these
classes.
At 9 p.m. a dance with Charlte
Brown Ritz providing music will
be held
Reservations may be made by
calling Betty Dean at 985-3855 or
sent to Betty Dean, Box 82.
Chester, Ohio 45720. The cost is
S9 which includes S I dues . If
unable to attend please send $1
dues to keep your name and
address currenL
The menu will include baked
steak, mashed potaiOCS, gravy, ltma
beans and corn, 10ssed salad. hot
rolls, lemon dessert, iced tea and
coffee served by the Chester PTO.

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a Both Stdeo Wltll .1o1M
Jocluoon
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12:00)
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muaic group Boyz It Men,
R~o Rudner. pianist Michael
Falnsteln, and Barbara Bush
visit tho Amar1Fion '92
s•hlblt In Columbus. Ohio
{1 :30) Stereo. &amp;:;1

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(game 1) (ll C
(I) LIICI-ofl Men
ID Woodclrvtng With Ale~
Bull Stereo.
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- In- Wlnlton Cup
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necesaary) or Westem

DD• 7 T
o.-.
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ID" 7
&lt;llec.i.t

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rD Logencltt at 11e lktciyord
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(race 5, It necessary) Ill
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3:05 (l) MOVIE: Tho Atilno Ara
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3:30 ""
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Playoffs. semifinal (geme 7, 11

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8:30 (J) ID IIJ Golden Glrtt
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~1 sex appeal. (R) Stereo.
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lllJID COP$ An officer's wrte

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5:351)) Fllhln' Wltll 0r11nc1o
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Power Stereo .
a Nowornakll

2:30 (1) a (J) • P&lt;lA &lt;loll GTE
Byron Nelson Classic, 3rd
round from Irving, Texas (L)
1D Boll of Joy ol Polnlln9
Stereo.
lllle Pold Progrom

~· PlriiH of Dirt!
Ellctrtc
(!) All You 8olng llenold?
tlll•llotlw l at the

5.-otl ~. Cltl7to.r -

~ Wind In the Wlllowo

iiJ My Two Olda

a robbery suspect: a man
leaves an occident scone.
Stereo. C
llJ WLAFFootbltl Bercelona
Dragons at New Yor1&lt;-New
Jersey K~hts (L)
@ Indy
·A AICI for
Horooa
a PYfrMNIWI ~
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4:00 (D 1bjor LNguo -~
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FronciiiCO Giants Ill
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Cooking Stereo.
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IIJ C1llp
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while brushing up on

Ntwtmlker

ae looomllucldtio

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Championship. 3rd round
from Bethesda, Md. (l)
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You Con iPGi(2:30)
~a Blluty ond the Be11t

iHowollon
:."':.~~~ Stir. Mill
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till• Taxlc CluuaoMICI'-arera

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(2:00)
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(2:00)
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1991 OIVIOIIT
PKIUPLWI
1
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•

SPECLtL

Call Dave or PeJe
For More Information, 992·2155

:leapl rdV1

0

.6250

~ 5 "'" oir Clllld., bed lilw, lw,.
..-.pin~. ·~

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~~995 MOWs I0,800

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NEWGEO
PRIZMS

(I). •

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ftDI,.,.ak

IOW$7600

AFTERNOON

1'111111

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1991

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(MOl- F.-y'o
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ID (TU) YOfll'l Che11
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IM'FM 11.....,. 58,000 , . . ,

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7:00 (2). 0 Today

1990 IUKI &lt;EifMY
IS LOW IS

,MorN~.

1:45(1) .......
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Advertising Deadline:
Friday, May 22, 1992
12 Noon

•

CIISII'OOm C
121 -1/SIIOwlltz Title

1990 OlDSIIOIIU
9&amp;1EGDKY

11

SAT., MAY 18
c·

fills ....

uu.

ID

IllS
SSHS

Daily Sentinel
Will Publish A
Special Supplement

W1\U'

ID

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WCitl

0
0

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The

-....
-...-

wsn

Clle
(lJ
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••
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••
•
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2944.

RLO GRANDE . A springtime
emits fair will be presented at Bob
Evans Farm Saturday and Sunday
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

---

CIJ
CIJ

Ill

POMEROY · A UMW A rally
will be held Saturday at begiiDling
at 10 a.m. at the Pomeroy Football
Field. All miners wear camaflage.
International President Rich
Trumpka and vice-president Cecil
Roberts as well as district representatives will be present. A caravan
w1ll travel to Ravenswood, W.Va.
for a USW A that begins at I p.m.
Further information may be
obtained by calling Max Whitlatch
at 992-3130 or Woody Call at 742-

SATURDAY

Insurance rrauds. tabkltd

news stones. polltlcol
scandals and the lives of

musician Billy Tipton and
author F,srost Carter. 10:30)
Stereo. :iL
a Rolli Sourcoo
10:00 III fl (J) • Tho Commllh A
~lend of the Scali lamlly 11 a
lnvostlgatioo
Stereo. C
suspect
In I .drug
(!) Aullllrt City ~ S'teroo.

'"'"''"""'Colt
8 Wol1d
Nen
1··-ID
0tyrnptc Gold Trock
~ ondU.S.
Field: l.t&lt;idesto
llll.

lnv~otlonal

10:30(IJ[]). Ug1111tlng F - C

8

STereo.
11:0000• (l)ID (J). 11J
vs

(Hitmen) Hart, Kamala.
tatanka, Mountie, Brooklyn

fouo CoflOteellalt

Non

~ Tile Houeyrnoauera
(I) L....- Pine lpoctoltt

•••
•

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..
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•
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Coall•od.., Nnl .....

L-------------~------------------~ ~~------------------------------~0

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