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DailY Sentinel

Thul'lday. January 24, 1991.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

---Area deaths-- County EMS.answers 7 calls . _,...._Meigs announcements-John Meeks

Falls; and sevUal nieces and
Meigs C®nty EmcqaJcy Medi,_,__
c8l Services llllSWeled seven calls
John A. Mee.b, 76, of 42725
In addition to his parents, he was
Gilkey Ridge Road. Shade, died preceded in death by a soo, Dolllild
Wednesday, Jan. 23, . 1991, nt MiUer in 1979; a stepmodler,
Veterans Memorial ~ilal.
Mamie· and a sister G111:e
Born in Lodi Township in Athens
The ' funeral will be ·held on
C~U~_~ty, he was ~ ~ of the late Saturday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
William and Mazie Gilkey Meeks. · Funeral Home with Rev Earl
He was a ~ ~ !~~tired Shuler officiating. Burial will be in
employee of Ohio Uruvemty, an · Letart Falls Cemetery.
Low income Ohioans have five
Anny veteran of World War II and
Friends may call at the funerlil working days left to file their
a mem~ of the Albany Veterans ho!lle from 4-9 p.m. on Friday.
regular HEAP applications before
of Fore1gn Wars Post .9893, and a
In lieu of Dowers donations may tbe Jan. 31 deadline. ,
member of Harrisooville Masonic be made to . knerican Polio
Rei!Ular HEAP pays a portion of
Lodge411. .
Foundationor the American Cancer · eligib1e households beatiil bill for
He is survived . by his wife, Society.
·
December, Janllll')' and ~ebruary.
Thelma P. French Meets; a son,
·
Assistance for this program is
John w. Meeks of Albany; a son Floyd Baninger
limited to One per Mating season
" and daughter-in-law, Robert F. and
·
but any income-eligible households
Joyce Meeks of Guysville; a
floyd F. Barringer, Jr., 62, of which have not applied are wged to
daughter and son-in-law, Florence Reedsville, died Wednesda milm- doso.
·
and Matthew Grueser of Shade; a ing, Jan. 23, 1991, at .SL roseph's
The regular HEAP prognim
bro!M' Dawson Meeks, also of Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va., foi- benefits are not classilled as emerShade; nine grandchildren; two lowing an extended illness.
gency ~ applicants do opt have to
step-grandsons; and two step-greatBorn in Meigs COIDity, he was meet eiiiC!l!eiiCY .criteria to apply
granddaughters. .
,
the son of the late Floyd and Lucy for the regul.- HEAP program.
· Besides his parents, he was Deeter Barringer. He was a veteran
The (!eadline for the eme~gency
preceded in death by three brothers, of the U.S. Anny during the Korean HEAP program .is Marc.h 29. EmerVinton, Rex and Everen; and two confticL He was previously ~ency HEAP provides assisl8nce to
si~rs. Flossie Bricldes and employed · by
Walker
of lllCome eligible hQuseholds who
Aorente Sloane.
Parkersburg, W.Va. .
have had ·· utilities diseonnected,
Funeral services will be held
Surviving are his wife; Elizabeth face the threat of disconnection or
Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Bigony- Johnson B8rringer; four daughters, have 10 days or less of bulk fuel
Jordan Funeral Home in Albany Mluy Sue Barller; Little Hocking, supply
·
with W'dlard Love officiating. Sherri Bauman, Marietta, Tammy
ApPlicatiOn must be made in
Burial will be in the Burson Putnam, Hockingp&lt;Xt, and Teresa . penon by an adult household
Cemetery at Shade with military Barber, Reedsvilfe; two sons, Thny membe'r. Additional information
graveside services by the Albany and DarreU Barringer, both of . can be provided by calling 446VFW Post
Reedsville; two brothers, Dorsel 0611 in Gallipolis, 367-7341 in
Friends may call at the funeral and Gerald Barringer, both. of Cheshire, or 992-5605 or 992-6629
home 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m. on Reedsville; three sisters, Lori in Pomeroy.
Friday. Masooic services w'dl be Smith, Reedsville, Betty Keams,
conducted by the Harrisonville · Clifton; W.Va., and Donna Gibbs,
Lodge at the funeral home at 7:30 Letart,
W.Va.;
several
p.m. Friday.
grandchildren
and
step-

·-·-WS.

Application
deadline is
January 31

grandchi~dren.

Lewis Miller

In addition to his parents, he was
preceded in death by an infant sis" .
fer and an infant grandson.
·
Services will be held on Saturday at ll a.m. at White F1111C1111
Home in Coolville with Rev.
Gerard Wilson officiating. Burial
will be in Weatherby cemetery in
Coolville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m.
on Friday.

Lewis Miller, 79, of Tuppers
• Plains, died Wednesday, Jan. 23,
1991, at Holzer Medical Center, af.
fer a lengthy illness.
.
He was retired from the Union
Barge Line after 20 years of service
and was affiliated with the United
Methodist Church and Maritime
Union.
He was born on March 6, 1911
in l.elart Falls, the son of the late
Ban and Mina Harris Miller.
·
He is .survived by his wife, Ruby
Marr Miller of Tuppers Plains; five
sisters, Mrs, ~les (Irene)
Hayman, Westerville, MIS. Elmer
(Lydia) Stultz, SL Mary's, W.Va.;
Mrs. Wilmer (Cma Mac) Byers,
Warren; Mrs. Bernard (Opal) Diddle, Racine, and MIS. Kermit (Jean)
Fisher, Galli lis; ~ brothers,
Bjll Miller, ~ipolis. Bob Miller,
New York, and F~ Miller; Letart •

'

Clarification
Donald R. Hall, Williamstown,
W.Va., was the driver of a truck in
an accident last week involving
Lori Louks of Long Bottom.
Hall struck Louks' vehicle as she
was twning into her driveway from
Summerfield Road, and his name
was omiaed from a SIOJy regarding
the accident in The Daily Sentinel.

•

BOosters will meet Monday at 7
far assistance on Wt4neoday and
. Gardea Clab to •eet
.Thursday IIIOfllina.
The Rutland Garden Club will p.m. ll the hi~ scbool lllnd room
. At 12:36 p.m., Middleport~ meet Monday at 1:30 p.m.. ll the to plan for .!be cbiclcen DOOdle dinwent to R.mOid Saeet for Sue home of Mn. Qlris Diehl. A net to be. held Feb. 7. All parents
are wged ·to llald.Salem Centtz ·
"FFowerin
Yares. who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. AI 8:10 p.m., ~lallts.:Hanging Baskets~ Elementary Cutline
·
Pomeroy squail went to Pomeroy will be pmiCI1Icd by MIS. Vernon
Nursmg
. and Rehabilitalion
Cent.rz Webtc and MIS. Curt1s Dalton.
.
flW Iva Johnson, who was II'IIISpOI'·
Vetenllll Memorlallfoepltal
ted to Holzer Medical Centtz. AI
OAPSE to •eet
WEDNESDAY
AD~SSlONS ·
The OAPSE'Cbapf« No. 17 will
8:59 {l.m., 'Rutland squad went to
Fosler, Racine.
KingsbUry Road for Debbie Six. meet Jan. 31 Ill 7:30 p.m. at the ' Frances
WEDNESDAY
DISCHARGES •
She was taken to Veterans. AI 9:23 Meigs Junior Higb School.
None.
p;m., Middleport squad went to
Southern BOIII'd to meet
Powell StreeL Anthony Perry was .
The Soutllem Local School
,·
taken from there ·to VelerBJIS. AI Board will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
Continued-from pager
10:31 p.m., Racine squad went to at the high schooL
itself
from attack. .
State ROIJte 124 for Misty Grueser.
Revival
'
'Every
state in the world has
Grueser went io Veterans.
.
Revival
with
.
Norman
1ltylor
at
rtght
to
defend Itself accordthe
On Thur:r at 12:53 a.m., Mil\·
the
Asb
Street
Free
Will
Baptist
ing
to
the
U.N. charter," Mudleport sq
went to Leading Church in Middleport will be held
barak
told
reporters after adCreek Road for John .Lambert.
Monda.Y
througb
Feb.
2
at
7:30
dressing
a
special sessiOn of
Lambert was taken to Pleasant Val,
p.m.
nightly.
Theze
will
be
special
,
Egypt's
parliament.
ley Hospital. AI . 7:59 a.m.,
His remark was the clearest
Pomeroy squad and .Chesler Fire singing niglltly.
to date that Cairo would
signal
Department went to State Route 7
Band
boo5ta
8
to
meet
not
leave
the coalition If Israel
for an auto rK:CidenL Pearl Edwards
The
Meig~ High School Band
struck back at Iraq.
refused treatmenL .

Hospital news

Saudi ... ·

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a1
Vol.41. No.193
Copyri~hted 1991

ANKLE &amp; DRESS

S15 oa2/S25

S15!

Allies record 3,
sorties against Iraq
By PAUL BASKEN
United Press International
, U.S.·Ied pilots took advantage
of a second straight day of clear
skies Friday to continue heavy
bombing · in their air campaign
against targets in Kuwait and
Iraq.
The pilots, plagued earlier this
week by several days of cloudy
weather In the Persian Gulf war,
greeted clearing skies over Kuwait by pountllng airfields, fuel
dumps and Iraq's elite Republl·

DONATIONS MADE • Meigs County's rour
banks have lent a helping hand to the Meigs
· County Chamber or Commerce. Each bas
donated $1,000 toward the cJuunber 's new Ex- • ·
ecutive Director/Development Direclor's oRlce. .
Pictured at the presentatiOI! · at Fanners Bank
and Savings Company's main ofBce in Pomeroy
on Thursday are, · l·r, Chamber Director
.

BOOTS

AU LEATHER

ne .

SHOE PLACE
MIDDLEPORT, OH.
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1972,
lhefir~
24-hour banki~ machine in lhe U.S.

J'llfll.lmli:IIM to process a

pm'""lcash ~accounl.

1985, illlmduad bankwide
quality i~ system.

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By. BRIAN J, REED

. named i.n the indicttnent against
· ·, '·-Yoling, is an aggrJIYIIIed felony of
}ohn i.e~V!S Young Is ~xpected to the firs_t degree.
· ,, ·
be returned to West V11g1rua to face
TesJunony got underway on
a 15-count indicttnent following his Wednesday in Young's second trial
conviction in Meigs County Com- in lhe court;· the . first trial · in '
mon Pleas Court late Thursday December ended in a "hung jury".
evening.
·
. An attempt on Tuesday to elller into
After five and a half hours of a plea bargain agreement fell
deliberation, the 12 member jury through when Young refused to
returned to the courtroom -llt ..JJ •. Plead guilty to the charge. ..
p.m. last night with a verdict of
Sentencmi in the case has been
guilty on a charge oflcidnapping.
deferred unnl the prior conviction
Yi&gt;ung, 46, was indicted in SJ?CCification against Young can be
August by the Meigs County Grand toed before Meigs County ComJury, and accused of transporting mon Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow. ill. ·
his teenaged niece from her home Youn~ has been convicted of two
io Middleport and into Mason felomes in the past • an armed robCounty, W.Va., where she was . bery in 1970 and the murder of
raped repeatedly before being · Mason, W.Va., resident Mary Berry .
returned home. Kidnapping, as · in1977.
,

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1986, storttd 8oM an. Collegr,
a ltlldershlp tmirl~ program

1985, llffl&lt;!inred firsi

l989.pianw&lt;d dtdronic ~

&lt;flax mums.

1990,~ -4-lhe-art scfi'NW&lt;
10 lin1t all customer &lt;m&gt;m15 and llrmsaelions.

aiJd
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Two Ohio legislators want
to regulate .automated calls
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -At mated calls .
least two state legislators are fed
O'Brien's measure would reup with recording devices 'that quire those firms to ensure that
call yoa on the phone and won't the recording disconnects when
disconnect even after you hang . the. recipient hangs up.
up. ,
"What if someone has an
Rep. Jacquelyn O'Brien, R· emergency call to make and this
Cincinnati, ~nd Rep. Jane Camp- thing is going on and on?"
bell, D- Cleveland, have both O'Brien said. "I've had them on
introduced bills directed at com- my answe~lng machine while
panies that' make those auto- I'm away. It goes on for three

-March to honor U. S.
troops set Saturday

our laurels. Because we know hard work is the

Cl9fJ ... ""'~ ..... """"""'"""'

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By JULm E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stair
A march to show support for troops serving with oPeration Desert
Stonn in the Gulf War will be held Saturday begiMing at I p.m. in ·
Pomeroy.
. The parade 11181Ch, organized by Michael Crites, son of Vivian
Miller and Don Headley, will congr,egate behind the old Pomeroy
Junior High School beside Grace 1Episcopal Chun:h. Crites, a
sophomore at Easttzn High School, organized a similar parade
march in Tuppers Plains on Monday in which -approximately 50
people participated.
.
_
- Crites reason for organizing the 11181Ch is simple. "I've got family
and relatives over the.e and it's for them. I don't agree with all of
the proteSIOI'S. I think our trQOPS sbould be :su~rted." Crites says.
"Wiien the smoke clears I thinli: America will still be standing, and I
think we·u ha~ the troopS home again. God bless the families of the
aoops. If it weren't for God, I don't !mow what I'd do riJlht now." ·
· Paulette IWTison and the Shady River Shufllers will also participate in the .Jl!U1Ide and she feels, according to Crites, that there
wid be a surpnsing turnout It has also been reported that The Mid·
nigbt Cloggers will participate. pjtes says anyone wishing to take
part in the march is weleome. "I'm hoping for a good turnout," says

Crites.

24-hour phone banking. New ways to give you find out. Simply stop by the cloSest Bank One,;
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.
WOO kmws, yoo
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~~take$." :

With a history of innovation like this, secret to winning your business and keeping it.
you'd think the people at Bank One would re~.
Right now we're already researching
.But we're not about to start resting on new banking services that will set trends for years

.

· According to Meigs Cou'nty
Prosecutlng· Attorney Steven L. '
Story, such' a specification could
signficantly increase the sentence
imposed against Young; but must
be tried seperately before the judge
for the purpose of sentence eoliancement
·
If the prior conviction sp:ecifica·
lion is included in the conSideration
of his sentence, Young could face
10 to 25 years in prison.
The Mason County, W.Va. grand
jury indicted Young on 15 counts
related to the incident, and Young is
expected to be exttadited to Mason
County to face those charges following sentencing here,
Story anticipates the hearing on
the prior coiwiction specification to
be held anytime.

Parade participants are to meet at 12:15 bdrind the old Pometoy
Junior High School to get organized. Crites Stated that signs and ribbons will be available but that peole may bring their own.
.
The parade will travel down Main Saeet onto Court Slreet to
Second Slreet where the marchers will disband on PoweU 's parking
Icc.

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days and takes up most of your
tape."
Her bill also would require that
any such recordings identify the
caller and the na ture of the call.
She said many of the devices try
to sell a product or service but
first "they make it sound like
you've definitely won so)nething.
It's almost an invasiorl of your
privacy."
.
Campbell's bill Is even more
restrictive. It would forbid automated dialing and recorded
telephone messages to nursing
homes, hospitals, emergency
service providers or anyone else ·
who does not give written consent
to the local telephone company .
Her measure also would proqiblt such calls 'between 9 p.m.
and 8:30a.m. and require that at
the', outset a live operator states
the source and nature of the call.

FIRST TO FILE • Bruce Reed (R-Pomeroy) has become tbe &amp;rat
candidate tb file (or the office of Pomeroy Mayor. Here, Meigs
Couiiijo Board or Eledlons Director Jane Frymyer processes the
pedtlons Reed filed in conjunction wltb his candidacy.

February 21 is deadline
for filing election petitions
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr ·
With the de8dline for filing a
month away, residents in Mid·
dleport and Pomeroy are gearing up
for the electiOn of village official&amp;.
Mayor's races in both Middleport and Pomeroy wiU be
decided in November, and accord·
ing to Board of Elections Director
Jane Frymyer, several individuals
have been in her office to pick up
the necessary paperwork to file.
The deadline for filing for those
offices, according to Frymyer, is
February 21 nt 4 p.m.
Frymyer states that Republian
Fred Hoffman. the incumbent
mayor in Middlepqrt,"has picked up
his petition, as have Pomeroy
residents Larry Wehrung, Walter
Grueser, Doaie Turner and Bruce
Recid. Wehrung, who currenUy serves on Pomeroy Village Council, is

IJI

a Democrat, and Grueser, Turner

and Reed are registered wiih the
· board as Republicans.
Reed .filed his petitions and became the first candidate to ckl so on
Thursday (see related stay, this
page).
· F9'!"yer stated that potential
candidates do not declare the
offices for which they are circulat·
ing their positions at the time they
so both Grueser apd
pick them
Turner coul teehnically be seelcing
either the mayor's job or a seat on
the village council. . ·
Reed, a Republican, is cunently
serving the village as a councilman,
and his spot on the council will be
decided in November. In addition, ll
second Pomeroy· council position,
that held by Republican Bryan
Shanlc, wiU also be decided in
November,
. as
wiU
the
cledc/treasurer : position now filled
Continued on .pag~ 10 ..

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Bruce Reed (R-Pomeroy) has
become the first candidate to file
his petition in race for the Pomeroy
Mayor's office.
Reed, who has been a membtc of
Pomeroy ViUage COUllCil for 10
years, serves in the capacity of Vice
- President at Farmers Bank' and
· Savings Company. He has been a
life-long .esident of the village and ·
he and his wife, Rita, have two
children with twins on the way.
· Jn 8ddition to . serving, as a
councilman; · Reed is the most
~~ past president of the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce;
being one of the moving forces behind 1990's combination of
Pomeroy Chamber and Middleport
..:hamber into a county-wide organization.
Reed was also a chief organizer
of this r.ear's Big Bend
Stemwheeler s Festival, which is
ex~ to become an annwil
event in Pomeroy each fall.
Reed sees the mayor's office as
an opportunity to take his ac~
complishment's as a councilman a
step.funher. .

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"~ a councilman." Reed said
Thursday, "you see a lot of things.
that need to .be done, but sometimes
your hand$ are tied because you are
seving on the oouncil."
.. "The clean-up of the village is
one of the first things I would take
care of," Reed said. ''That's one
mauer where the council's wishes
have not been followed ~gh."

Flu outbreak lis
detected in Ohio
COLUMBU,S. ·Ohio (UP!) State healtll offioials say four
cases of Type B Yamagata
influenza have been confirmed In
Ohio, meaning the flu season is
officially under way.
Dr. Thomas Halpin , chief of
preventive medicine In the Ohio
Department of Health, said ·
. · Continued on page 10
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RA C to restart .third pot line
at reduction .plant ..on Monday
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RAVE;NSWOOD, W.Va. - Ravenswood
Aluminum Corpora'·
More S~uds hit Israel
lion
announced
Thursday that it
., ...
JERUSALEM (UPI) - Sev- will restart a third potline at its
eral .Scud-B mlsllles apparently reduction plant In Ravenswood
on Monday. thereby enabling the
fire~ lrom Iraq hlllsrael Friday,
evading U.S. Patriot mtselles plant to increase tts prlma.ry
bronght to Israel to shoot them aluminum production capacity
down, mllbry source8 said. · · by • 50 percent, a news release
·
"A fe~ ~cuds hit the ground," from the company said.
The
company
is
boosting
its
said the source, just minutes
after the mlulles landed at 8: 02 production in order to meet the
p.m. Israeil time (11:02 a.m: growing demads ofoutsldecustomers, who al'ready have p·ur·
EST).
chased
the potline's production
Officials could not Imme1991.
for
diately ._say where the mlselles ·
The company is res tar ling a
landed or detennlne how much
potllne
that has been Inactive
damare waa cauaed.
1981.
Approximately onesince
•11 waa the fourth time that the
month
after
its res tart, the
high-explosive mluUea have
potllne
will
reach
its capacity
been llred at Israel. In the Iaat
production
of
250,000
pounds per
attack, three people died ol heart
attacks, cl- to 100 were Injured day .
Ravenswood management
and conalderable properly damalso
Is studying the possibility of
age wu caull8d.
restarting the plant's fourth and

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more al'lled aerial targets and
captured one British airman.
Britain conllrmed losing
another Tornado fighter bomber
over southern Iraq, but there
were no reports of other new
allied casualties.
Baghda(l Radio quoted a war
communique Issued by the.Iraql
high command as saying allied
hombers had struck various
targets In Iraq Including "civilian centers" in both ·the north
Continued on page 10

Reed files
p~tition for
mayors' post

EHzabetb Schaad; Emma Jane Paugh, represent·
inJ Central Trust of Soutbeasten Obio; Millie
M1dkllf and Joan Wolfe, co-managers or tbe ·
Pomeroy ofBce or Bank One, Athens, N.A.;
Chamber President, Dr. Nick Robinson; Bill
Nease or· Home National Bank or .Racine; and
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., President or Farmers
Bank and Saving~~ Company.

-;.:-_,-,.-·-;Seltf!ael Nua Stair-

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Chief Quality Olnrrol &lt;!f&lt;er.

can Guard units, they reported.
Allied forces registered a gulf
war-record 3,000 sorties on
Thursday, as a Saudi !ight~r pilot
downed a pair of Iraqi
warplanes .
.
At sea, U.S. forces sank an
Iraqi. minesweeper and liberated
a tiny Kuwaiti island.
Iraq .said Friday allied
bombers had launched 111 overnight raids on Iraqi territory.
Baghdad Radio said Iraqi antiaircraft batteries shot down 14

·: Young convict~.d by Meigs
·jury; sentencing deferred

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25 Cents
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday, January 25, 1991
'

OUPWOMa'S

WOMEN'S SHOES
&amp; SNOW BOOTS

Low tonight In mid teens.
Chance of snow 80 percent.
Saturday , cloudy. Hlghtnmld .
3118. Chance of precipitation 50
percent.

•

South Central Ohio
Mostly clear Thursday night ,
with a low between 10 and 15.
Increasing cloudiness Friday,
with highs between 25 and 30.
Eldended Foreeaat
Saturday through Monday
A chance of snow saturday.
with generally fair weather Sunday. and a chance of snow again
Monday.

UI.GIOW

1966,one cf lhe first banks
to cffer consumer credi! cards.

•

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Weather

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1950, introducedfir~
drive-in bank in the Mid..,st.

Pick-3: 901
Pick-4: 4380
Cards: Q·H; 2.C;
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NU R
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..... CONTINUES
20°/o OFF ALL DEITERS ·
20°/o OFF ALL NURSEMATES
20°/o OFF AU WORK BOOTS
30°/o OFF ALL .CONNIES

N. SECOND STIEET

Ohio Lottery

Ohio State .
racks up 17th
win, 80-70

final potline, bringing the smelt·
ing operation to its full capacity
for the lirst time In nearly a
decade. The decision on the
fourth potllne will be mad_e
during the next few months,
based on market condltioRs.
"This announcement demonstrates the continuing progress
and development of our company,". said R. Emmett Boyle,
chairman ot Ravenswood Alumi-num Corp. Boyle said the potline
restart will strengthen Ravenswood's customer base and improve its flexibility In responding
to changes in the marketplace.
· "Our primary aluminum customers have shown they are
condfldent that Ravenswood can
give them a quality product at
competitive price," Boyle said.
"Their confidence Is J\lstlfled.
Despite the strike, Raven~; ~
wood's performance remains
solid.' '
·

· The expansion of Ravenswood's primary aluminum
market is an Important step
. forward, Boyle said. It will give
the plant new capacity and will
help the company broaden Its
customer base.
Traditionally, the reduction
plant produced its aluminum
solely for use by the Ravenswood
fabrication plant The fabrica··
lion pian t processes primary
aluminum into a wide range of
products.
Following their purchase from
Kaiser Aluminum, !he Ravenswood reduction and fabrication
facilities have beguri to operate
more Independently .
No llew proposals were made
by either the company or the
union, · nor were there any
changes In positions by either
side during the meeting. No
further bargaining sessiQns are
schec:!uled at this time.

�.

..

. Friday, January 25, 1991

111 Court S&amp;reel
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE JNTERI!STS OF TR.,; ME108:1\lASON AREA
A~

f!i!m~

qj~

.· .

,......_. 4 -ro .......,..c::~,.,. .

.

ROBERT.L . WINGETT
Publisher
·

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

. General Mana1er

PAT WHITEHEAD

Aulslaal Publllher/Coalreller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Pub!~ her• Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shquld be less than 300
.. words tong. All letters are subject to editing and must be sterted with
name, address and telephone numbel'. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should heln good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·

lies.

•White House getting
uptight over war

Could.~ U. S. have ammo shortage?
.

WASHINGTON - It has been
so long illl!ce U.S. troops engaged
In massive combat that the am·
munition buyers Inside the Pen·
tagon feared before they went
Into Operation Desert Storm that
prolonged combat would strip
the cupboards bare.
Pentagon Insiders were con·
cerned In mld·January that the
operation could exhaust much of
Its crucial ammunition before .
the mission was over. In fact,
much of the ammunition sent to
the Gulf was used up In practice
firings.
A top Pentagon official re·
cently confided that the ammunl·
tion reserves are at such a low
that U.S. forces almost ran out of
crucial Mark 66 2. 75-lnch rockets
In the 10-day Invasion of Panama .
In December 1989. The rockets
are needed to provide a mass lve
spray of firepower from helicopt·
ers. The Pentagon Is still short on
those rockets even now, more
than a year after the Panama
invasion. The Air Force has
some In stock. But typical Inter·

service Infighting Is getting In
the way. The Air Force Isn't .,
s h ar Ing wlth ·the A~Y un Iess the
Army · buys replacements !rom
Canada to replenish th.e Air
Force inventory .
U.S. troops also are reportedly
s· hor t on M791 s, a 25 mm armor· ·
p IereIng roun d II re d Irom the
Bradley and the Marines' ar·
mored vehicles. That shOrtage
resu lied .f rom a 1986 ·dec.s
I io n by
the Pentagon to build a better
mousetrap. The new
rounds
were developed and ordered, but
will not be delivered for several
weeks. To fill the gap, the Dutch
government has offered to sell
the United · States 2.5 million
M791 rounds. Buf so far the Pen·
tagon Is In slow motion and.
hasn't bought the Dutch ammo·
·
nition.
The M791 armor plercers are
cruclal to front -line fighting. Sol·
dlers are carried Into battle In
the armored vehicles that rely
heavily on the 25 mm ground lire
to protect their assaults. ,
Despite the known shortages,

~lR JOi4N

TWIN ~A~

Anderson

DIFF~T WORL.O .

Recasting makeup of the Peoples llouse
Cla!ence Miller

letters to the editor

.
I

...

Democratic leaders lost war vote William Rusher

56).
On thll date In history:
.
In 1890, Nellie Bly, a young New York reporter, completed a trip
around the world In the as toundlng time of 72 days, six hours and 11
mlnutel.
.
:In 1915, transcontinental phone service was Inaugurated In a
boolnlp between New York and San Francisco.
In 1971, Cbarll!l Manson and three wom(!n were found guilty In the
murders of actretl Sharon Tate and six other ~·pie In Los Angelea.
In lJIIl, 52 AmeriCans held holtage In Ii·an for 444 days returned to
the United States.

..

I

In voting to authorize President
Bush to commit the armed forces
of tbe United States to battle
against Iraq on the terms . laid .
down In tbe resolution of the U.N.
Security Council, Congress hand·
ed the Democratic leadership of
txith Houses a resounding defeat.
Nothing cari erase the memory
of the way those same leaders
jerked Bush around during the disgraceful "budget negotiations"
last Slimmer - refusing to make
any projlosals of their own, luring
him into the repudiation d. his solumn pledge ("No new taXes").
and then denying him eVen the ex·
pi!Cted benefits of his costly compromise. But every .dog has his
day, and Mr. Bush Is certainly entitled to chuckle over his opponents' !allure to block the war re-

solution.
the power to declare war, many
What makes the victory· so be honored largely In the breach
sweet Is what the Democratlc ' and be broadly unsuited, In add!·
leaders were actually s¢heming lion, to 20th century conditions.
to bring about, If ony they could But It has never been repealed,
deny Mr. Bush the congressional and If Congress could have
authorization he soug)lt. Senate avoided passing any act of au tho· .
Republic leader Bob Dole was rlzation, and If a war aiJalnst
criticized for excessive partisan· Iraq were then to be launched
ship when he wisecracked that and drag on until AmeriCan pubsome Democrats seemed less In· lic opinion turned against Mr.
terested In getting Saddam Hus· Bush, the ·Democratic leaders
seln out of Kuwait than In getting wouldn't have hesitated to try to
George Bush out of the White •Impeach .him and remove him
House; but that l.s precisely what from office lor violating the plain
Speaker Tom Foley; Senate rna· wordJ ol the Constitution.
jorlty .leader George Mitchell,
Happily, that possibility i.~. ~
and a m~t~orlty'llf the Democrats eliminated by the resolution ConIn both Houses had In mind.
gress adopted. Things may ~o
Article I, Seeton 8 of the Con· badly for Mr. Bush In Iraq, and
stttutlon, which grants Congress the Democrats may benefit poll!·
lcaliy from his distress. But the

sword of Impeachment, which
tbey managed to poise over
Richard Nixon's head. ·and which
tbey labored so long (and unsuc·
cessfuliY) to swing Into position
over Mr. Reagan's In the Iran·
contra hearings, no longer poses
any threat to Mr. Bush.
If anyone doubts that Impeach·
ment was on the hands of thJ Democratic leadership, let them
contemplate the highly partisan
nature of the vote for authortza.
lion. Almost every Republican In
both Houses voted for It; almost
every vote against It was cast by
a Democrat. The winning margin was provided by a distinct
minority of House · Demacrats
and a bare handful of Denio:
cratlc senators.

42-39 at hal1t1me and had to Jiold
off tile Cardinali In the final

the win.
played without freshman Damon head coach Randy Ayers. "We ball with 34 -seconds left ,. but
Elsewhere In the UPI Top 25,
Bailey, who was out with a thigh always have a tough time at Grant came up, with a steal at
seccinds.
.No. 3 Indiana topped Michigan bruise. Demetrius Callp paced Williams Arena. "
mldcourt and dunked to seal the
Daron Jenklll&amp; added 17 points 70-60; FourtiJ..ranked Ohio State Michigan, 9-8 and 2·5, with 21
At Stanford, Calif., Sean Rooks victory. Utah Is 18·1 overall and
-.,
points. · ' ·
for the Golden Eagles, Bernard downed Minnesota 80-70; No. ~
.
banked In a turn-around jumper 7-0 In the league. Colorado State
..o,
Haslett, who started In place of Arizona edged Stanford 78-76;
the
with
one
second
left
give
At MlnneapoUs, Jamaal Brown
•'
fell to 9·8 and 1·5. Walter Watts
•',.
Chancellor, had 13, Johnson 12 No. 10 UCLA was upset by scored seven of his team-high 17 Wildcats the Paclfic·10 victory. added 13 points lor Utah. Doug
,.,,
and Ron Rembert 11.
Oregon State 97·96 tn · double points during a decisive 2l:S run Cllris Mills had 18 points and Larson led Colorado State, 9·8
Everlck Sullivan's 26 points overtime; No. 17 Utah nipped · In the first half that helped the Brian WIIUams eight of his 13 In and 1·5, with 1.6.
,,••
paceed Louisville, which Colorado State 55-51; No. 22 New Buc!(eyes remain unbeaten.
tbe second half for the Wildcats,
At Las Cruces, N.M., Reggie
"•I
dropped to 7-8 overall and 1·5 In Mexico State tripped San Jose
"Ohio Sta)e, 17-0 overall and 7·0 who Improved to 16-2 overall and Jordan scored 16 points and Chris
'I
the conference. LaBradford State 88-58 and Georgia Tech In conference, Is off to Us best retained a share of the confer· Small added 15 - all via
~:,.
Smith added 18 and Cornelius thumped Clemson 89.QI.
ence lead with a 5·1 mark. The 3-polnters - ·to lead the Aggles to
suo~t since the 1962 season when
Holde~ 16.
·
At Ann Arbor, Mlcl)., Greg . the Buckeyes went 22-0. Mark Cardinal, who. received 29 points a Big Wesl vlctorx. New Mexico .
,,,,,I•'
Louisville trailed by two, 81-79, Graham scored 19 points and the .Baker and Perry Carter added 15 from Adam Keefe, dropped to 3·4 State, 14·2, 6·1, too"k the l~ad for
with 47 seconds remaining but Hoosiers put tbe game away In each for Ohio State. Minnesota,
and 10-7.
· ·
good midway through the first
••
Smith missed a pair of jumpers the second half with a 17·6 run. 9-7 and 2-4, was PIICed by Kevjn
At Corvallls, Ore., Teo Allbe- halt. Chad Higginbotham paced ·
".,"
and committed an Intentional Calbert Cheaney added 17 PQlnts Lynch's career-high 27 points.
, govlc scored a career-high 34 San ·J ose State, 4-13 and 2·6, with
..,,
foul with 14 seconds to play. and 12 rebounds lor Indiana,
"We're just happy to get out of pOints and sophomore Charles 12 points.
'•
Jenkins then made two . free
which Improved to 17·2 overall here wit)! a win," said Ohio State McKinney hit a 12-foot jumper
At Atlanta, Kenny An~erson
. ··.
•
,.
throwswith14secoildslefttoseal and 5·11n the Big Ten, Indiana
with seven seconds remaining In scored 32 points and the Yellow
,.,.
double overtime to · lift ·the Jackets went on an 8·0 early In
In the NBA Thursday night,
.
. .
Beavers. Oregon State Improved the. second half and nev,gr looked .~ ::
to 11·5 overall' and 5·1 In the back. ~rgla Tech, 11·5 overall
••
Paclfic-10. TheBrulns4ropped to and 3·2 In the ACC, got 20 points
,,""
14-4 and 3-3. Tracy Murray led from guard Jon Barry and
..
rebounds.
UCLA
with
28
points.
,,'•
Malcolm Mackey hauled down 15
By United Press International
. ·
"Larry
Smith
Is
strong
and
smart,"
said
Minnesota
forward
At
Salt
Lake
City,
Josh
Grant
rebounds and blocked four shots. . . :!
Larry Smith might be just filling In, but he's grabbing everything
Tyrone Corbin. "He ~oesn't stand around and waltfor the ball to come
scored 17 points and grabbed six Clemson, 9·8 and 0·5, got16polnts
he can while he's there.
.
-·
to him. He goes.and get it."
. ,
. rebounds to power . ttie Utes to . off the bench from junior guard .
Larry Smith, sw.rtlng at center for Houston In place of the Injured
Kenny Smith and Maxwell combined for 30 points to help Houston
their 15th straight triumph. The David Young. Dale Davis added :.;.:-·
Akeem Oiajuwon, snagged 23 rebounds Thursday night and Otis
Rams
trailed ·53·51 and ·had the 14 points and nine rebounds.
57-46
halftime
lead
.
·
·
build
•' ; ,
Thorpe scored 23 points, leading the Rockets to a 118·94 rout of the
The
Ttmberwolves
closed
within
65·58
on
a
jumper
by
Richardson
Minnesota Timberwolves.
with 8:03 left In tb,e third quarter.
.
Larry Sm lth has been relen tiess on the boar~. He now has grabbed
But
Maxwell's
tiiree-polnt
shot
he
was
3
01 3 from three·polnt
at least 20 rebounds In three of his last five games . .
range
and
had
a
season-high
10
assiStsstarted
a 14-3 run that gave
"I can't recall w.here I've played this well in this short a span," said
the
Rockets
a
79·6i
advantage
with
less
than
four
minutes to play In
Smith, who also scored 10 points. ''They Jet me run around tonight.."
the
quarter.
.
·
Kenny Smith scored 22 PQints, marking his fourth straight game
The
Rockets
ted
by
as
many
as
·24
points
In
the
final
period.
with at least 20 points.
·
&lt;
''The boards ·were the keY to this game," said Minnesota he~d
•'Our theory this year Is ,to come out extremely hard In ·the first
MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) -Jam· sota outscored Ohio State 19-8
coach
Bill
Musselman.
''Larry
Smith
had
an
unbelievable
game.
quarter," said Kenny Smith. "When we play hard defensively, It
aal Brown scored · 14 of his 17 over the next five minutes to pull
In other games Thursday night , Denver edged New York 120-117,
triggers a lot of easy baskets for us."
.
.
points In the decisive first hall to within six points at 74-68. But .
San Antonio held off Cleveland 111·103, the Los Angeles Lakers
Vernon Maxwell and Buck Johnson each finished with 19 lor the
lead No. 4 Ohio State to an 80·70 with only a minute togo, that was . .. ,.,
romped over Charlotte 113-93.
Rockets, who Improved to4·71ngameswithout01ajuwon. He suffered
victory over Minnesota Thurs- as close as the Gophers could get. , •.
. a fracture of the right orbit, which houses the eyeball, Jan. 4 against
. day night.
Minnesota , head coach Clem ., .
ChiCago.
·
·
Perry Carter and Mark Baker HaskinS was encouraged despite .
The Rockets also ended a two-game losing streak and won for only
added 15 points apiece and Jim the loss.
the second time In their last eight games.
" When you're rebuilding like ' ··~
Jackson had 13 for the Buckeyes.
"He (Larry Smith) is the key," said Houston head coach Don
17-0 overall and 7-0 In the BlgTen. we are, you don't worry so much
Chaney. "He sets the level of I!Ow we play . I think he's moved his
Kevin Lynch scored a career· about wins and losses ," he sa id., , . _.
game up several notches"since Akeem went out." ·
high 27 points for the Gophers,' "You want to see effort. This was
Jerome "Pooh" Rlchardspn ·scored 23 points and Sam Mitchell
ByROBERTJ.MURPHY
point to give the surging Sabres who fell fo 9-7 overall and 2·4 In the first time all season that
finished with 22 for the Tlmberwolves, who are 0-4 In The Summit and
UPJ Sports Writer
we've played hard for the whole ·. · ·~
their fifth straight win.
the Big Ten.
.,
have lost four straight overall to Houston.
The ·Buffalo Sabres came back
"Sometimes when a guy gets
The Buckeyes rode Brown's 40 minutes. (Ohio State) Is a
•
The Rockets dominated the boards, 53-32, and scored 30 points off from two goals and two goalies
thrown Into a fire like that, he can pair of three-pointers and 4-for-4 team capable of beating you by 40
second-chance opportunltes. Larry Smith grabbed 10 offensive . down Thursday night.
..
really shine," Ramsey said of free throw shooting to break out points.''. ·
1
'
With top goal tender Darren Wakaluk. "He was definitely of a !lrst·half cold spell. In the
Puppa · out with the flu and
nervous, bl!t he shined when he second half, Ohio State led by as
The Daily Sentinel
veteran Clint Malarchuk back In had to."
many as 17 points and withstood
;
.,'
Buftalo with a stiff neck, just
Ramsey also registered three a late rally by the Gophers to
(USPs 14J.t80)
.
.' .
called up Darcy Wakaluk shook assists on the night.
remain undefeated.
A Dl~lelon of Multimedia, Inc.
., "'i.
off
some
early
jitters
to
l!elp
the
."We're
just
happy
to
get
out
of
"Ramsey
was
outstanding
..
.
oWomo Jllvlolooi
'Published . every afternoon, Monday ' : ~ ·""
In the NBA...
Sabres rally past the Chicago and Darcy·played a great game, here with a Wilt," said Ohio State
Bostm ...............27 16 8 62 183 164
throusb Friday, 111 Court St., PoMontreaL .......... .2718 5 59168 149
meroy, Ohio, ·by the Ohio Valley Pub- . ·, ~··
mackhawks 5·4 at Chicago especially considering the clr·
head coach Randy Ayers. "We
Eascer• Conference
Buffalo .......... .... 2117 10 52 174157
llshlna Company/Multlmt'dla, Inc..
~
Stadium.
cumstances/' . Dudley said, "It
always have a tough time at .
Atlantic IMvlsh•.
Hardonl .......... ..11 23 5 47 142 164
Pomeroy, Ohio 415789, Ph. 992-21!56. Se.
,.J
Team
W L Pel . GB
"For us, In this building, ,to was his first full game, and he Williams Arena."
Quebec .. ........ ....10 31 9 29140 222
cond clall pc»tage paid at Pomeroy,
· ·•!
Boston .. .... ......... .. 30 9 .769
Ohio.
., .....,·
come
back like that, down two had to play In this building."
The Gophers led throughout
Ph lladelphla ........ 22 18 .550 8\&gt;
CampbelrConl.,.nce
goals, It's pretty gratifying,"
Wakaluk couldn't recall the most of the game's early going.
Washlngton ....... ... l8 %1 .462 12
Member: United Press lnternatlonaJ,
Norris Dl~•lua
New York ............ 18 22 .450 12\&gt;
Sabres
head
coach
Rick
Dudley
Inland DallyPrNa AuoclaUon and the
last penalty shot he faced , and It They took a 6·5 lead on Walter
Tam
W LTPto.GF.:lA
New Jersey .......... 13 26 .333 17
Ohio Newapaper Auoclatlon. National
Chicago .......... .... 321H 681n 133
,Bond's 1ay-ln and led until
said.
was Manson's first ever.
Miami. ... ....... ....... ll29 .275 19\&gt;
Advertising Representative, Branham
St. Louis ...... .. ..... 2615 7 59175146
A late second-period g~l by
"I feel a .little emotionally Jackson' s jumper put Oliio State
Newspaper Sale., 733 Third Avenue, ' •· u.r
.Detrolt..., ...... ...... 22 22 ~ 49161172
' .
Central Division
New York. New Yort 10017.
· Dale Hawerchuk and another by drained right now, but I feel
up 23·22 with 7:..40 to go In the half.
Minnesota ........... 14 29 8 361:1317'J
'
Chicago .. .. ........... 2812 .700 Tormlo ............... l2 32 ~ 29142 207
Pierre Turgeon 38 seconds Into good, " said the 24-year-old roo'1 ...•
DetroiL ... ........... 2813 .683
I&gt;
PQSTMASTER: · Send address changes
Minnesota's biggest lead came
the final period tied the score 4·4. kie, who was called uP from
to The Dally Sentinel. Ill Coun St.,
Mllwaukee ..... .. .. .. 2715 .643
2
8my81ellh1with
10: 45 to go when Lynch, who ·
Pomeroy, Oblo 45769.
Atlanta .... .... ........ 2416 .600 4
The key play then came when Rochester and didn't learn until
Los Angeles ........ 2617 5 571941!16
Indiana ... .. ........... 16 24 .400 12
Calgary ...... ........ 2519 5 55 201.160
referee Paul Stewart awarded tight before game time he would had 17 first-half points, stole an
SV1181JBIPTION RATI!S
Cl eveland ......... .... 13 27 .325 IS
Edmmlm ... .. ...... 23 21 3 49l!le m
Ohio State pass and drove for a
Chicago
a
penalty
shot
with
10:
30
start
.
Br
Curler or Molor
' . ...... 1
Charlotle .. ... ........ 12 27 .308 15\&gt;
Vancouver ..... .:... 19 2li 4 421!16184
One ~eek... ..... .. ....... .... ..............$1.40
basket,
giving
the
Gophers
a
Winnipeg .... ........ 15 28 8 40160 181
left after defenseman Dave ManBelfour, who pulled a hamst·
' "'l •
One Month ................... ..............S6.10
Western C'o•l~•~
22-16 edge.
~ ·
son was puUed down bn a
One '!fear ........ ............ .. ........... 172.80
ring
late
In
the
third
period
and
Midwest DIYIIIon
• 1bunday'1 MllMI
But from that pol t t.tle Buck·
breakaway.
Team
.
W L Pel. GB
SINGLE COPY
had to leave the game, mIssed
Bostm 3. Hardo"' 0
.' '
eyes went on an 11-~ :d'ii to take.
.San Anlrnio .... ..... 2810 .737 -'PRICE
Manson tried to go up top wl th a
Philadelphia 6, Washlngtm I
out
on
his
bid
for
his
30th
win
of
·
Dally ........... ... ............ .. ....... 25 Cent•
Uiah .:..... ............. 2614 .650 3
New Jenoey 6, Quebec 1
wrist shot, but Wakall!k got a
• ,, I~
the season. Chicago, which had the lead. Jackson and Brown
Houston ....... ........ 21 20 .512 8\&gt;
Bul!alo5, Cbicago4
each
had
four
pOints
during
the
SubSCribers
not
deslrtng
to
pay
the
carstick
on
It
to
quiet
the
noisy
Mlnnesota ............ l3 25 .342 15
. ...: ;
Its five-game unbeaten streak
rier may remit In advanC'e direct to
Da llas. . . ........... 13 25 .342 15
Stadium crowd. That set the snapped, received a pair of goals spurt.
ToaiJht'• aamea
The
Dally
Senttnel
on
a
3,
6
o~l2m'onlh
Denver .. ,... .......... 10 30.250 19
After Lynch canned a put-back
St. LoW. al Detroll, 7: 35p.m.
basil. Credit wUI be gtYen carrier each
stage for veteran defenseman
' ,,""1
from Jei'emy Roenlck and three
Orlando .. .... ......... 10 3) .244 19 \1
Minnesota ·B_I Washlngtm. 8:05
week.
shot
to
tie
the
game'
at
27-27,
the
Mike
Ramsey,
who
banged
In
the
assists from Michel Goulet.
'" l
p.m.
Paelftc IMviAion
No subscriptions by maU permitted In
go-ahead goal with 7:39 .remaln·
N.Y. Islanders at Winnipeg, 9:35
"When you get a two-goal lead Buckeyes went on a 10·3 tear .
. Ponland .:............ 35 7 .833
area.a where home carrier service 1J
p.m.
L.A . Lakers ....... .. 2811 .718 5\1
lng, beating goalie Ed Belfour on like that, you have to put the · highlighted by Brown's three·
available.
N.Y.
Rangers
at
Edm(lltm.
9:35
Ph~nlx ... ..........~. 2513 .658
8
pointer to give Oh to State ~ 32-27
a rising slap shot from the far left qther tea m .away," Goulet said.
' . \.,.
p.m .
Golden State .. .... .. 2217 .564 11\1
edge. They led by as many as
Mall Sublcrtptlon•
Los Angeles at Va~ou~r , 10:35
' '' 1 ;:
Seartle ... ., .......... .. l819 .486 14\1
'
Julde Melp Count)'
p.m .
seven points during the half.
L.A. Clippers ....... 14 27 .341 20 \1
u
w..u
.................................. $19.24
Sacra"lenro ......... 1126 .297 21\1
•'In the first half, we did a good
26 WeekJ .............. ........... ......... $37. ~
Sahardv'• -AIMI
52 Weells ........................... ....... S74.MI
job establishing our tempo,"
Buffalo at Montreal. l :m p.m.
' I r:
Thunday's resuks
Oolalde Molp Counl)'
Ayers
said.
"We
felt
good
about
Calgary
al
Bost~.1
:
~
p.m.
L.A. Lakffs 113. Otarlotte 93
13Weells .. ,... ........ ......... .... ....... $20.80
• '! : •
Philadelphia at Hardonl, 7:35
Houstoo 118, Minnesota 94
scoring 44 ·polnts by the hall." .
26 Weelll ... ..... ................. ......... $40.30
' '1.\
p.m.
.
San Antmlo 111. Qeveland 103
52 Weeko .................. :........... .... $75.10
The
Buckeyes
led
66-49
with
PIIISbu!lh
at
Quebec,
7:
35p.m
.
Denver 120, New York 117
seven minutes to go, but Mlnne·
Minnesota at N'ew Jersey, 7:45
. ' '.),•

.

-

...

Ohio State posts 80-70
win over Minnesota

·'

. ..

'

~

....

Buffalo slips· past
Chicago with 5-4 win

..

'·'

Scoreboard ...

.•'
•

•''
'
'•·
'..
~

I.

..

••.
'
i

•
•'
'f

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Tormto at Cbicago. 8: OS p.m .
Detroit at St. Louis. 8: 35p.m .

Milwaukee at Goklen State, 10; 30

. p.m .

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Seattle at Phoenix. 11 p.m.
Saturday's 1ame8

.

Dallas at Washlni'!'ICIJ, 7: 30p.m.
Philadelphia al Charlotte, 7:30
p.m .
DetrOit at Orlando, 7:30p.m.
New Jersey at Miam i. 7:30p.m. ~
Cleveland at Houston. 8: 30 p,rri.
Minnesota at San Antmio, 8:30 .
.

u tah at benver , 9:30p.m .
Atlanta at Sea ttle, 10 p.m .
NE&gt;wYork a t PhOenlx,10:30p.m .
Milwaukee at L.A. Clippers,
10:30 p.m.
·
·
Sacramento at Portland. 10:30

••
p.m.

In the NHLWalel CGnfereace
Patrick DlviTeam
W L T Pto. GFOA
N y Rangcrs .....2617 8 60 1861!16
Philadelphia ......26 21 6 :lllll'J 165
Plt&lt;sburgh ....... :.26 21 3 ~5 2~
New ·J er,.y ....... .20 2010 501
WashlngiM ........ 22 2li 2 46 )57169
N.Y.I slanders .. .17 25 ~ 40135\68

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WHY WAIT TILL SPRING?
Winter Clearance Prices
ON ALL HOMES!

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Vancouver at t..os An~eles,10: 35

p.m.

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Dallas at Detroit , 8 p.m . .
Miam i at Chicago, 8:30p.m.
Sacratnento at Utah, 9:: 30 p.m.

p.m .

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L.A . Lakers at New JerEy, 7:30

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Smith.leads Rockets to 118-94 ~n over Wolves

Support our troops in Desert Stonn .

By United Press Interna&amp;lonal
Today Is Friday, Jan. 25, the 25th day of 1991 with 340 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury and Venus.
There are no evening stars.
.
'lbo.e born on this date are und~ the sign of Aquarius. They Include
lrllb aatural phllosopher Robert Boyle, a founder of modern
cbemlatry, In 1627; Scottish poet Robert Burns In 1759; soapmaker
and phllantbroptst WJlllam Colgate In 1783; novelists W. Somerset
Maupam In 1874 and Virginia Woolf In 1882; news commentator
Edwin Newman In 1919 (age 72), and actor Dean Jones In 1935 (age

By United Preu lntenuJenet
Southern Mississippi had
never won In LouiSville's Freedom Hall, and with their leading
scorer out with an Injury, the
Golden Eagles chances looked
sUm against the Cardinals.
But No. 18 Southern Mlssls·
sippi got 25 points and 12 .
rebounds from Clarence Wea:
therspoon Thursday night to post
an 84-81 victory over Louisville In
a Metro Conference matchup.
. The win was the 11th In 12
.games for the Golden Eagles,
now 6-0 In conference play, and
was their first In 12 trips to
Freedom Hall.
·
Southern Miss, playing without
leading scorer Darrln Chancel·
. lor, out with an ankle Injury, led

lack ..

the Pentagon didn't rouse Itself ·give our troops the best. chance
out of business·as-usual until. al· Ol&lt;l !here." ·
Parfoi theced
blamethe
for politics
shortages
most the eve 'of the deadline •or
' ·
of
Iraq to pull out of Kuwait. Even must be P1a ·on
after troops were deployed to the Pentagon · spending. In recent
Gulf by the hundreds of tho~· · years, tbe sexy, high-tech weasands, the head of the Army s pons systems have received more
Munition Command told Con· . attention
and money than bland
·
he
gres·s that. 11 be had more money , Items such as bullets.
hewouldn'tknowbowtospendlt .
Congress has compounded t
Maj. Gen. Paul Greenberg told shortages by deciding !hat am· a controversial
Congress that the Arm.y had all . munition was not
the ammunition It needed.
line Item and could therefore be
Pentagon Insiders told our as· •. cut with a minimum of fuss from
soclate Jim Lynch that the Army anyone. As recently as Septem· ·
doesn't know what ammunition ber, the Genera~ Accounting Of.
It has: or where It Is.
flee, an arm of Congress, augSources ten · us that those In gested a $434 million cut In I~
charge of procuring ammunition ammunition budget. This year s
have focused ·on affordabillty budget for ammunition. is $2 bllrather than need during a time of lion. Just six peaceful Years ago
budget belt tightening. It wasn't !twas $4 billion.
until Jan. 11 that Pentagon plan·
.RE~EATING HISTORY ·~ The
ners began to study combat nations commercial banks apsurge capabilities - the abillW pear ~med to relive the savings
to expand production to meet and loan scandal. Even our largest
wartime demands.
· banks have only about half the
As one Pentagon veteran told loan-Joss reserves that their tous, "I'm concerned that they 're reign counterparts consider resnot doing everything possible to ponslble. So the buck will pass to
the government whose.guarantees
stand behind a variety of loans to
home owners, students, farmers
and small businesses. The govern·
ment's losses on bad loans are al·
readY huge. President Bush's only
remedy for this crisiS-In-tiJe.rnlik·
lng may be to .ask Congress to
create a super regulator to consolidate the functions of the Federal
Reserve Board, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corp. and Comptroller
of the Currency. .
MINI-EDITORIAL
- The
United States has some strong
purse strings that It Cl!R use to
manipulate the dangerous hard·
lines In the Soviet Government
who seek a return to the bad old
days. Americanald to the Soviet
Union could buy time for the
hardliners who want to restore
authoritarian rule. Soviet Pres!·
dent Mikhail Gorbachev Is close
to losing control of those forces,
as evidenced by the decision of
military commanders to strike ·
out against Lithuania earlier this
month. The. Soviets should know
that U.S. Aid was promised to
help perestroika, not to restore
tyranny.

'l!

Southern Mississippi posts 84-81 road ·win over Louisville

Page 2-The Daily Santintl
Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio
Friday. Janu~r~ 2&amp;, 1991

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - Th~ White House Is beginning tO' show a mood
swing.
President Bush, elated himself over the preliminary successes
after launching a war against Iraq, warned several times against
euphoria and over optimism In Immediate aftermath ofday-oneofthe
war.
But soon the sobering news was enough to car~y out his cavea1. Not
that there IS any doubt In Washington that the war .can be won
decisively and over weeks perhaps, not months, cerlainly not a
.
·
protracted Vietnam style conflict.
StU! every day that goes by when the air war goes on and a ground
war may be needed to achieve victory, worry and concern grows over
the possibility of larger casualties.
The obviously coerced statements by captured allied pilots aroused
great anger In the :&gt;\'bite House and for the first time Bush called It
SWDI~HING
" the war a~alnst Saddam," the Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
The capture of the airmen brought home the human side of the war
and cast a pall of sadness over the nation.
.
A new tension Is apparent In the White House. The president and his
top aides are tight lipped, watc)\l~geveryword, every step so as not to
jeopardize Operation Desert Storm or to spread any anxiety.
But the certain macho exemplified by Bush's. bravado statements
about where he wanted to kick the Iraqi president Is no longer
dominant theme.
The usually affable White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater
Is visibly uptight and less patl~nt with questions, many often
repetitive. He also has considered an extraordinary closed door
policy for the press office to keep reporters from running to his
bailiwick with their Inquiries when news l:!reaks on the war front.
Instead he wants to dispense the news on his own terms and when he
decides It Is time to come Into the press room.
Closed doors have always signified a White House under siege: The
administration does not have a builker mentality yet, and It has not
yl't circled the wagons. But ques ttons that seek deeper explanations;
questions about the number of casualties on either side; questions
about Bush's plans f11r the Middle East In the future are quickly
brushed off.
the colder cllmets for an environ·
With war ranting In the Middle
The current war Is already a longer confliCt that the Grenada
ment more conducive and con- boring states of Michigan andCong.
East, it Is hard to focus on the
Invasion during the Re11gan era or last yl.'ar's bombing of Panama, a
sistent with the type of lifestyle Pennsylvania suffered a similar
other·aspects of governme'\t pol·
proximately 20%. Other winners
two- day affair, to depose strongman Manuel Noriega.
they would like to live. More and . fate and likewiSe will experience
Icy and change that are t~klng
were Arizona, North Carolina,
The quicker the· victory, the more successful with the public.
more Americans are turning a loss of two seats, while our
place as the new year and the
Georgia
, Virginia and WashingBut It may be a little more difficult to rootout the thousands of Iraq I
frQm a city seftlng to the su· neighbors to the south, Kentucky
new Congress get underway.
ton
which
ea,ch gained a seat.
forces dug In In Kuwait, although they could be demoralized under
Her haps one of the most sign I·
burbs. to an environment they and West Virginia will suffer a
·
In
the
current
Congress each
bombardment and as they are more and more cut off from their
flcant political happenings to
deem more conducive and more loss of one seat each , The big
House
member
from
Ohio repre·
commanders and supplies.
. 'take place this year will be there·
consistent with their fuilfillment loser was New York state which · sents an average of 514,000 con·
So far the public Is being Saturated with war news on television, but
of the American dream.
casting of House Congressional
will lose a total of three seats.
stltuents. That number Is slated
not sometimes the' dazzling fourth of July firepower In the sky looks
From the played-out lands to Other states negatively affected
Districts as mandated by the tal·
to rise to 572,000 once redistrict·
more like a nlntendo game.
.
· ·
lies resulting from the recently . the played-In lands, from the Include Massachusetts and Jl.
tng Is completed nationwide.
It's a stocy that Is concentrating the mind all over the world. The
completed decennial census. As
rust·belt to the sun-belt,, Is how . linols, which will Jose two seats
Getting back to Ohio, the lar·
war along with the Baltic upheaval threatening to break Into a civil
many demographers define lt. each, and Montana, Minnesota,
we all know, It Is this every ten
gest
population shifts within the
war In the USSR appear to be causing a postponement of the · year monitoring of our·'natlon's
Americans In search of the Ideal· Iowa and Louisiana ,which will
state
have taken place In Norpresident's best laid plans for another summit meeting with Soviet
!zed good·llfe as personified on loseone. The big winner, as It wapopula lion patterns that forms
theastern
and Central Ohio, with
President Mikhail Gorbach.V next month In Moscow.
·
our nation's television and movie sin the 1980 decennial census, Is
·the buls for the allocation of pol·
Cleveland
and environs being the
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said surnmlt plans
screens are moving In droves Californian which will gain a to·
!tical representation In the U.S.
blg
loser
and
the Columbus area
are "up In the atr" and there are Indications that unless the gulf war
from the Northeast and the Mid· tal of seven new seats, bringing
House of Representatives, the
showing
the
largest
growth. If
ends quickly a superpower meeting, Feb. 11-13 would be out of the
so-called "Peoples House." The
west to the South, Southwest, and to 52 the number of seats It will
redistricting
could
be
done ob·
question.
.
Western regions of our great have In the U.S. House. of ~epremakeup of the House of Repre·
jectlvely, free of political consld·
Other planning for journeys abroad, Including a spring trip to
country. The political and policy sentatlves. Rough,ly one out of
sentatlves In turn can Slgnlfl·
erations,
tbe two seats Ohio. Is
Japan and Australia, also appears to have been put on the shelf.
ramifications of these shifts are every eight seats In this 435 seat
cantly shape or alter the policies
slated
to
lose
would come out of
The president's domestic program also will take on a low priority,
significant. with a dwindling chamber Is going to be occupied
emanating from our nation's capl·
the
northeast
corner
of the State . .
and the w~r Inevitably will move to the forefront, surpassing the
population and tax base, with de- by a Californian In the 103rd Con·
tal. Therefore, what changes reHowever,
Inasmuch
as politics
administration's deepening concern ove~ the recession and condition
sult from this decennial census
caying Infrastructures,
with gress. Also, In as much as the to·
will
and
almost
always
'does
of the nation's banks.
spiraling crime rates, a good tal number of a state's House
should be of great Interest to an·
play
a
role
in
our
state's
and
So everything Is on hold, depending on the outcome of the war, and
number of our country's major seats plus Its two Senate seats,
yone concerned with the phUosomost
other
states'
approach
to
Bush Is expected to walk a tight rope In· the days to come until it's all
cities In the Midwest and East constitutes thl! number ol electo·
phlcal makeup and policy dlrec·
rt:dlstrlctlng,
It
appears
likely
over.
tlons of the federal government. In
are facing Insoluble budget pro· ral v,otes a state Is permitted to
that because ofthe present politi·
pure numbers, the new numbers
blems. Conversely, the burgeon· cast In a Presidential election,
cal Impasse that exists between
·also mean more or less federal dol·
lng populations of many of our · all a candidate has to do Is win
the Republican controlled state ·
sun-belt clUes 11re such that they · California and he or she has Y.
Iars for the respective state goSenate and tbe Democrat con·
are having a hard time keeping the total number of electoral
vernments, as the dollar dlstrlbu·
trolled House that each party
up with the Influx of new res!· votes they need for election. One
. tlonfor many of the federal gowill be asked to sacrifice a seat
vernment's social services prodents. Water shortages, housing could conclud~ that a presiden·
that they presently hold.
grams are tied directly to a state's
shortages, and service shortages tlal candidate s success will no
Though 1 have long maintained
Let's turn the lights on for our again and put them In the population count.
In general are the order of the Ionge~ be dependent on how he or
that the redrafting of Congress!·
service people serving In Opera· windows! Let's let them know
The ·results of this most recent . day in mi)ny these '.' promised she plays.l.n Peoria, but rather on
onal House seats should be left to
lands." ~
lion Desert Storm! Why not show . ihat they'll be .welcomed back ·. decennial . cenSUS are, as ·(!X·
how h'e or she plays in "Leisure
Independent panels and be free
thele fine people that we love and with open arms! Let's leave a
Ohio, as most by now know, Is . Land." Th~ other major sun
peeled, a continuation and accel·
of political considerations I'm ·
respect them? Let's show them light on for them!!!
Slated to lose two. seats In the meccas of Florida and Texas
eration of trends firmly set In
afraid that the process
Ohio
Thank you again for printing motion at the end of World War
that we want them home as soon
House of Representatives. AI· fared well also . Florida will In·
and In most ·of the other states
a1 possible. Whether or not you this.
II. Call It a pursuit of lelsure.llv· ·though we as a state did not suf· crease Its present delegation by
that will be gaining or losing
believe In the cause, please show
Sister of a Marine, lng; call us i' nation of sun seek·
fer a population loss during the four , based on an Increase In
seats as a result of the just
that you care for the,m.
Linda Montgomery ers and fun. seekers; however
last ten years our state's growth population of ~orne 33%. Texas
completed decennial census, will
· Get out those electric candles
I..,a.ngsvllle, OH. 45741
lagged far behind many of the will go from 27 seats to 30, l&gt;ased
you define It, Increasing numb·
once again be more political than
nation's other states. Our neigh· ·on a population Increase of ap·
ers of Americans are glvlng up
practical.

..Today in history

The Daily Sentiriai- Page-3 . ·
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Comment
The Daily Sentinel

POfna'oy-Middleport. Ohio

· , 1-1.

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The road to the
Super Bowl ·

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.SU•N.,-, Ju. 5

NFC- Woshlngtoo 20, Phlladel·
phla6
·
AFC- Mtamt17, Kanoas Clly 16
8uodoJ, Jsa. l
AFC- Cincinnati 41. Hou11on 14
NFC- Chlcaao J&amp;; New Orleans
. .6..
.
DlvloionaJ Ptl)'oflo
SoololdQ, J111. I!
~FC ~ Bullalof4, Mlaml34
NFC - San Franclaco 28. Wa·
shlng1m 10
8uodQ,Joa.1S
NFC- N.Y. Glants3L Cblcagoa
AFC- L.A. Raiders 20. Clnctn·
natl 10

8uodQ,Jsa.ll
AF(J c•ampiGallttp
.Buffalo 51, L.A. Ito idOl's 3
NF(J ctoamp._llllp
N.Y. Glaalsl5. S•n Francisco 13
Ioper Bow! XXV
......,. 1111.17
Buffalp VI. N.Y. Giants at
Tampa, Fla., 6: 20p.m .

. ..,.,.,..' ..... 1.

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Every home has been marked ,down to
mak.e room for new spring stock.
•

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SPRING VALl FY CINEMA

See John Smith or Dick Cole Today
YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID!

446 4524

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IS YOUR OLD BOX SPRING
•TOO HARD? •WORN OUT?

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•TOO SOFT1 •OUT OF SHAPE?
•TOO SHORT? •TOO COLD?

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WHEN YOU'RE SERIOU$ ABOUT A
· GOOD NIGHrS SLEEP
COME SEE US AT...

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·"* All-Star*

,c OLE'S
MOBI.LE .HOMES
Located 5 Miles East Of At. 33

On Rt. 50; Athens 592-1972

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NIGHTS-?

SECTIONALS
AS LOW AS ..
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ARE YOU TIRED ·
OF SLEEPLESS .-. ..

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PEA RIDGE PLAZA
HUNIINGJON. WY.
(3Q4) 736-1501

232 RUSSEll RD.
ASHLAND, ICY.

(606) 324-2337

OHIO RIVER PLAZA
GAWPOUS, OH.
(614) 446-2337

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Friday, January 25, 1991

Frid&amp;y. Januii'Y 25, 1991

The Daily Sentinel

EHS students to
conduct lift-a-thon
for ~eight facility
.

~s.

_Redrnen .to-host Walsh Saturday

Easterfl beats Symmes Valley

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wars who are asked to congregate
outside and then enter the sanctuary
in a group.
·

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Post, eacb student tied a yeilow rlbboa to 'the
reace aroullll the playground at the KhooL
Students have also been writing letters to lhe
troops and each Wednesday they wear reel, wbite
and blue to sbow their support.

11E A YELLOW RIBBON • Students at
Pomeroy Elelllenlary lleld a brief service
• nanday IIIDrlllll&amp; to hOIIUI' all mea and women
•nil&amp; witb ()peratloo Desert Storm in the
Middle East. Foilowto1 a sbort talk by Frank
Vaqban ot the American
Drew Webster

:t.

STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Dorodty Lelfllelt was se~ as
student ot the Mek at Melp Jllllior
School ror work ia
E111Usb and behavior. ~11t1111 the ce
te Is Mn. Emmalene
Pratt.

STUDENT OJI THE WEEK • Darrell Lee was cbosea Student or ·
the Week at Melp Juolor High School for work in science, history
and behavior. His certificate il p~ented by Mrs, Chris Dowler.

Band Boosters to meet
POMEROY • The MeiJ.s High
School Band Boosters will meet
Monday 81 7 p.m. to plen for the
chicken noodle dinn« to beheld
Feb. 7. All parents II'C urged to II·
tend.

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I knew I was going to be better 1
in alweek... that sure beats 6 weeks 1

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Thlob to anew IUI'gical blaklhrough blown as . Usin1 specialized instruments, surgeons at
l..aJ*Oitopic Cholccylti1CIDIIIy, Denile Scarberry of PICIBI Valley Hospital make four tiny openings in
the abdomen, leaving almost inviliblc JC811,111d for
PoiJl ~ had her pllbladdlr removed in the
maniUw llld llcpt in her OWD bed at home 11181 niil'L 11101t J*ients that means there's virlually no post1be.a&amp;day llboWIICIII.Saboll.totboamaaocnt . opaative pain.
If you IUfJcr from gall_stooel Cl pUNI&amp;Jer disof IM1dl _. r-'d tenllo llltl
•+~MioJnll pDale, lilt your doctor,about liJ*oieco(llc pYbhd«&lt;e•
bh'' . . .,, . . Wll.-k* ltlleMIIIO lterblirllyJi11&amp;dliielaMv.cedDr 'p "1'~-people aurpry, or Cll! one of cu uaw•. Youq I. Cl10i,
M.D., at (304)675-1666, or Jack M. Levine, D.O., at
· widlleln from lin to there," Deolle says, motionina 8C11111 her IIQ!DICII,'"l would have~ ~~Cam~ to (304) 675·1460..
l..ap8roacopic CholecyS~eetomy at PVH. Yet
. ckd, but 1 Wlill't nenous lbout dtilalll I knew I
anocherJeaa~ tO look to 111 for hip qualil)', lllle-Of·
was.&amp;001110 be bell« in • weet.llld thll~t~~e beats
the-art IIICbnology in healthcare.
six wecb.".
.

Mason Family Restaurant

t

tiori is being made to veterans of ill

.

*2.99

'GRAVELY
8Y8TEM

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LAPAKOSCOPIC
CHOLECYSTECTOMY

Featuring: Fresh Scrambled Eggs,
Homestyle .Biscuits, D.anish,.
Muffins, fancakes, and_
Much, \Much More!

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MoMIAY·IiuoAY, a·.ur-I I

ONLY

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~the~&amp;~tyCh~and

The Middleport First Baptist
Church will
observe "Four
Chaplains Sunday at the 10 a.m
semce on Feb. 3. A special invita·

(;ITJZENS SPE£IAL
You-CAQE·To~T

:by

Bob
Hoeflich

Announcement

Mas.on F_amily Resta.urani

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George Nessclroid whom you bills are paid by contributions from
will mnember for his long associa· both Ohio and Wesl Virginia
tion w~ the ~itb
the cqmpany and residents.
his acUVJty w
summer ball
Paul Nease. one of the faithful
programs fOI' young people is 81 who helps keep the cross prognun
WC3l Hill RcbabiliWion Hospital, 3 going, received a telephone call
West Hill Dri~. P.O. Box 1428, from a woman this week who
~. W. Va.
needed to know how to make a
.
. conlribution to the projecL Ia view
The .MeigS Band Boostm will ·of thai a reminder is in order SO
. be ~gsubs as a ~-making" that aii residents who ·wish the
projeCt and ~ will. be taken lighted cross to. be a part of the tothrough Feb. 11 With delivery to be cal scene have the information.
on'Feb.19.
.
.. . Conlributions may be sent to the
You can place orders With Gen Cross Fund. in care of Trinity
Walton, Judy C8DIIIt~ and Jane Church, Pomeroy.
Walton. Perhaps, knowmg that the
By the way the electricity used
subs will have !Me kinds of meat and the bulb ieplacements average
. and two .kinds of _cheese will en- about $475 a year.
cooraJC your placmg orders. The
price IS $2.
Jackie Hildebrand, always a
good scout in worldng to help
Unfonunately, it does happen but someone, has taken on a ieading
Helen_ Roush Johnson grov.:s weary. program for residents of the Skilled
1\vicc recently~ prelly silk ftoral • Nursing Facility 81 Vetemns
. IUI'IIJigcDICIIIS wh1ch Mn. Johnson Memorial Hospital.
·p~ on. the graves of her ~ts • The only problem. is that Jackie
m Rivemew .Cemetery. have di~ is, shon on reading rruiterials. She
• peared... It m1ght ~ ruce 10 think currently is using Tom Sawyer,
•· that they were piCked up by the which won't last forever. She hopes
'' wind. However, Mrs. Johnson says that residents who have good
that's not tbc way it is - she children's books will lend them to
•anchcred theni down with wire on her for use in the program. If they '
both occasions.
would prefer to sell them, Jackie
will buy them but can pay only a
Upriver, La-nce Glueaencamp minimal fee since she will be
' will be lll81'ldllg his 80th birthday paying for the books out of her own
• on Feb. I · and February is geUing pocket.
close. His address is Box 79,
She'd like Huckleberry Finn,
Portland.
Heidi, PoUyanna, the Good Girl,
.,
George Roberts of RoUJe I, Long Anne of Green Gables or any other
Bonom, will also mark hi$ 80th voiDmes · which · you think might
· birthday on the same date.
wort for her.
'
Jackie lives at the Maples and
Students at the Pomeroy Elemen· books can be left there or at the
,lary School are into saVIng labels counltt in the lobby of the boWital.
and sales receipts in order 10 help
And, by tbc way, the Women's
' get equipment fr~ their school.
Auxilialy of tbc hospital clirrently
The students are saving is conducting_hymn sings for Skil·
.CampbeU's soup labels, Delmonte Jed Care Fac'Di%a:dems. If your
VPC symbols and Kroger sales church has pure
new hymnals
·receipts. If you can help they would and you have a few old ones on
.appreciate it • those grqcery sales hand · the Auxiliary will be 1-.appy
slips really add up. You: can leave to ge't them. These, too, can be left
them by tl!e ~I on Mulberry · in the hospital lobby.
Ave., or mall them m..
·
'
·I'll be looking at the moon, but
The · impressive lighted cross I'll be seeing you · aild will expect
w~ich overlooks the Big Bend-area · you to be smiling!

Piias -

.

By

Alice Wolfe, ~Joyed in the
Meigs Councy Senior Citizens
program since 1978, .
beea
named dRctcr of the ·Redied
. Senior Volunteer ·Pmgram effective
· Feb. 1. stie rep~~ces S111111 Oliver
. _ _.........__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _........ who resigned to acapt other
..
employmcnL Mn. Wolfe hal scrHere's ·the word on a couple or . has been dotng ·so for over the past ved as t1!e RSVP~. for
friends you ,robably will want to SO 1~.
·
• the past e1ght Yl*1- She antielpiltea
rememblr.
UrigiliruJy, the cross was made of no ·changes in the activities C?f the
Former Pomeroy Mayor and Fire wood, but later 8 steel cross was 275
volunteen
!elvinJ181
Chid Olarles l..cga' has undergone made 10 replace it. For several numerous p~ around the couoty.
swgery · 8l a Columbus lxlspital. years, b!Ds for the lighred cross The ann~ Yes~ ~·
Cards may .be sent to Grant Medi· were . pa1d by women of Trinity s~ . m ~ with .the
cal Ceoler, 111 South Orant Ave, Church and the cross was priginally ~e~gs &lt;;mmty aistorical ~ety
Room .326 CCU, Columbus, Ohio a communicy projec:L It is still un· Will conunuc, Mrs. Wolfe slid. ·

'

ea-

Director named

Beat of
·the Bend..

By SCOTI' WOLFE
football program on I1'1!Ck.
Senlinel Correspondeat •
Eas1em 's senior high worts out
The student-athletes of Eastern on Monday and Wednesday
High School in conjunction with evenings, and on Saturday mor·
varsity football coach Randy nings with both a somewhat
Churilla ·will be Sponsoring a lenient, but yet ~blc
weight "lift·a-thon" on Monday, schedule to. be meL 1uruor high
' January 28 and Wednesday, students lift on Thesday and
~81!uary 30 after 'school in the Thlndays.
Eastern High weight lifting facility
"I just don' t do this for football,
jlt the high school.
but for all the kids in the comCoach Churilla indicared that all munity who want 10 improve their
proceeds,
compiled
through ~trengtb or appe8lllllce...those wbo
pledgr.&lt;~ per pound 01' by dmation; JUSt want to be a part of somewill go to further renovate and thing," corntncnred Chtlfiu.. "I do
Supply the Eastern weight tmining hope, however, that once they see
building. ·
what we're doing here and become
•· (burilla staled, ''We need the a ~ of the aunosphe.e, that they
~X&gt;mmunitfs help and support, w11l like it and want to be a J!Brl of
UIO
Euliera aenler Pouc MIOer · IIIIo- beaeh
BARNETT BENCH PRESSES - Junior Steve Baraett of
either through donations or work. our team. We try 10 teach life and preslllar a l!u're quullly of welpt durlnr workout 4!arUer Ibis
Eastern Ia shown benching a large quanllty of weight durillg a
-:Ne've had treinendous support so confidence, plus teamwork and · week ill the newly suppUed Eaaliera Wp wetrht tralaillr facUlty.
workout e!ll'lter this week. Spoiling ·Is senior Doug Miller With
fl1f and have made a lot of progress, · other components of res! life," '
Spolllnr. l.f junior Sieve Barnell wllh Easliern coach Randy
Coach Randy Churilla super\'lslnr. EHS plans a "IUI·a·lhon" next
~ in geUing equipmen1 and in
Becoming ·inCreasingly quicker Churilla, rl&amp;ht, supervlslnr.
·
·
week to ralse more money for the faclUty.
\1eveloplng our spons programs . in his speech and bubbling with
here at Eastern."
· §!!Sto, (burilla genuinely exclaims,
Barnett continued, "I've got only
Miller 1!'85 the leading tackler for casionallv; and those who lift as a
. Five days a weelc between 30 to 'We want everyone to feel like they one more year left and realize that 1 Eastern this year from his team are the ones who win.. the ing car wash and other donations.
Two friends of the Coach, Dave
SO students have beeJI regularly ac- are a !l8ft of something ~ial."
· would never come close to my l.inMacker position and he even- perennial powers," said Churilla.
and Sue Joy, who live out of the
tive in Easrem's weight traming
A ~an on the VftlSlty fOOiball potential if I wouldn't have been tually beCame a bread-and-buttrz
Oak
.Hill
and
Symmes
Valley
of
district donaied $300 betause IIley
program, including both boys 81ld team, Juruor Steve Barnett says, ''I involved in our lifting program "
player at Fnlfback during tbe last .the SVAC and ~on, a team felt this was a worthwhile project
girls. Others have show!! Interest on no!"-~ how important wci'-ht
Senior Doug Miller, wllo wa:, In- few pmcs.
•
near Churilla's origin were cired as and sai!l, ''We just support kids in
a not so regular basis and yet other tnl!nmg IS to a football p~yer. I ve·. voived in vigorous weight training
"If you .don't have it (weight prime examples.
general."
·
athletes CUimltly involved in other gamed· twenty pounds S1IICC we programs before moving 10 Eastern ttaining) it rcally hurts and a team
''This
JI!Oject
is
continuing
to
sports have show!! intcn:sL
staned lifting (in mid-November). 1s still active in EHS workouts The is at a definite disadvantage. This grow," SBid Churilla. ''We hope this
In closing Churilla said,
"I believe academics and ath- I've seen myself gain a lot of transfer from Oviedo IJillh School will be a ~ addition !0 Eastezn continues and is a plus for the ilis- ''Without the communicy's support
letics are 36S days-a-year jobs and muscle getting reildy for next year; in Florida said, "Weightlifting can fOOiball ...a big pan of the overall tricL A plus for the Easrem people and especially that of the parents
in on!er to do well in both, one and I feel better ~d stronge~. I can rcall.y improve ~
ream. It will better program, Only the strongest will and kids."
and kids, this \VOuld not have been·
must be prepared. We must be really see the difference m my . prepare tbem (the player) for -col· survive. Those who don't weight
So far, numqous ~ weights, . pOSSible. The voiunteer WOrt . has
prepan:d for Our futili'e tomOITOw.'' chest and legs. I've Increased my lege and helps make a player stron- lnlin will be also-rans," said the two squat !liCks; loose weights, been overwheltning, and · I thank
said the enthusiastic mentor, who max (maximum lift) from 325 ger, smarter, and quicker. I lifted bulky linebacker.
conveyor belt. and weight benches · them all."
incidentally is volunteering his time pounds 10 470 pounds in just a bef~ I came hm and it helped me
Olurilla, w:b:..flayed folD' years have been purchased or built since
Although progress has beCn
and . energy to get the Eastern shon time."
·
greatly this year."
.
, knows how im- last fall, all in donations in addition
of college foo
made
is still a need for other .
portant weight tmining is to a 10 those already earned through types there
of equipment 10 help round
fOOiball ·team. At tbc college level hard wort by the EHS boosters.
out the program and to allow more
Rio ladies on road this we~kend
everyone does it and must do it to
Students through their psrents, students to participate.
compete, indicared the coach.
on the average of $12 per child, got
Among those needs Include an
"At the high school level, those the prognun off the ground, in addi- Incline bench, more free wights,
who lift regularly, not just oc.- tion to nearly $2SO from a fundrais: and a neck mac.hine. The neck ma: ~: The Rio Grande R.edmen, 18-4 season schedule was tough, but and feel It has prepared us for our
chine is very, important to build
- - - - - - Spo~ briefs-----..., muscle in the neck and thus avoid
. :~nd 3-2 In the Mid-Ohio Confer- we feel good about our schedule conference. •'
· ~nee, take on the Walsh Cdllege
Handball
· the season with a neck injury, neck and spinal injuries. Pledges of
:&lt;:avalters (15-6, 2-3) Saturday at
The U.S. handball team has possibly a disc' problem. The one cent, five cents, or ten cents per
:~~ 30 p.m. In Lyne Center for
pound are being accepted in addi·
arrived in Prague to play 24 right wing may need surgery.
~' Dell Lumber Night. ·
lion to outright donations for the
matches In the Czechoslovak
Honors
.
..
lift-a-thon.
:-· The Redmen, on an eight-game
first division. Five members of
Ewa Mataya of Grand Ledge,
Wltn cjouble-digit offense from Swisher rebounded a Bobcat
:,i,treak prior to last Saturday's Shelly Metzger, Stephanie Otto miss and put it In for the layup
If the interest and support conthe U.S. team that competed at Mich., has been named 1990
·parrow loss to Cedarville, fell and Jennifer Rou~h. Eastern did with 22 seconds left. Shaver
tinues
at the current level of suc- ·
the 1990 Goodwill Games In Woman Billiards· Player of the
!llack into form this week with its part to stay In a first-place tie sealed the win·with a pair of free
cess,
!ben
next year's Easrem
seattle are In Pragu\! for the 24· - Year by two. industry publica·¥ictories over Ohio Dominican with Kyger Creek by beating throws In the last seven seconds.
football
team
should be a legitimate
match season.
ttons, "Billiards Digest" and
'a'nd Dyke. The Dyke game saw Symmes Valley 51-42 Thursday
force
to
reckon
with; and ~bly
Hockey
"Pool &amp; BiiUards, " Mataya, a
Swisher led KC with 13 points
the Redmen experience one of night.
downright
dangerous;
that IS if you
Joe Mullen of the Pittsburgh Swedish native, won five major
and 10 rebounds. Oak Hill pivot
their best n tghts on shooting from
happen
to
on
the
oppo~ing
team.
Penguins q:tay miss the rest of championships last year.
The Eagles (9·6, 9·1) stepped Cindy Stiltner led all scorers with
the three-point range, netting 21 its offensive production after 17 points.
J.
' .,
of 42 attempts for a final score of . getting an eight-point lead o:ver
'
' ' ' '.,.
·Kyger Creek will host Monday
112-88.
the Vlkings - (7·9, 7-4), who fell night's showdown with confer. Entering the Walsh contest, victim to center Cathy Krausz's ence co-leader Eastern.
' '
: the Redmen are third in the committing "three fouls in the Qllarler totals
• MOC , with Cedarville (16-4, 4·0) flrsi quarter. Krausz, a 6-1 Kyger Creek .... ll 10 13 9 6-49
•
' in the first and Tttttn (14-5, 3·1) at sophomore playing In place of Oak Hill ..... : .... 4-12 14 13 2-45
'
' second. Mount Vernon Nazarene junior Jennifer Owens (who was
Kyrer Creek (te) - Swisher
• is fourth at 15·6 and 3·2, while sidelined with a back injury), 6-0·1·13; Ragland 4·1·1·12;
: Wals!lls fifth.
tied Metzger for scoring honors Shaver 3-0-4-10; Skidmore 3·0·0• The Cavaliers, under the direc- with 14 points, liut jlidn't play In 6;' Gindlesberger 1-0..2-4; Brad·
: lion of new head coach Ron the second quarter - a quarter bury 0.().2-2; Bush 1-0-0-2. Tolals
' Frederes, boast an experience- that saw the Eagles soar to a - 18.1-10-tl
laden bench led by forward Corry 32-13 halftime lead.
fleld roala - 19·58 (32.8%)
Appline, who opened the week
The Vikings made a strong
Tbree-poillliers- 1·9
; with' an 18.6 points per gam~ comeback by outscoring their
Foul sbo&amp;s - 1-9
i scoring average, fourth in the
guests 29-19 in the last 16
Rebollllda - 24 (Swisher 10)
. Moe behind Rio Grande's Gary minutes, but " the first half was
Steals-10
: HarrisOn (20.6).
the
difference,"
said
Symmes
Turnovers - 17
,,
Valley hea.d j coach Jennifer
Oak Hill (45)- . Tolals' Appllne also began the week Davisson.
·
Foul shots - 4-9 (44.4%)
:leading both the conference and
· On Monday's agenda, Eastern
•Dis trtct 22 in individual field goal will head to Cheshire to take on . Hanaao Trace 45, N. Gallla 31
percentage {66.1). Harrison led Kyger Creek, while Symmes
At Mercerville, sophomore
the district and MOC In assists Valley will play Hannan Trace at guard Lucy Mullens led the court
16.9) as the week began.
•
Mercerville next Thursday.
with 16 points, and junior center
" I have never seen our confer- Quarlier totals
Tammy Thomas scored 14 points
' ence with so much balance," Eastern ...... ,.... .. .14 18 6 13-51 and collected 10 rebounds, to
Redmen head coach John La- Symmes Valley .. 6 7 11 18-42 guide Han~,n Trace to a 14-polnt
' whorn recently reflected In a
Easliern (51) - Metzger 4-0-6- , victory over North GaliJa. ·.,
· post-1ame interview. "It only 14; Otto 4-0-2-10; Roush 2-0·6·10;
The victory, the Wildcats' third
,proves that you have to be ready Gillilan 2-0·1·5;. Gardner 2-0-0-4;
straight and sixth In the II!St
•
'to play every ntcht."
Wilson 2-0-0-4; Clay 1·0-0-2; Eas I· seven games, allowed Trace
; Also -tnc action ' this weeMAKES SAVE - Sabers' goalie Darcy
1-0-0-2. Totalll - 18-0-111-51
(11·3, 9-2) to remain bait a game
Hawks' Dirk Graham during flrsl period. (UPJ)
!': kl!lld are t~ Rio Grande Redwo- · man
Wakaluk
makes a save al close ranp ~n shot by
Foul shots- 15-29 (51.7%)
behind SVAC co-leaders Eastern
:men '(12·8) atNotreDameofOhlo
Symmes Valley (4!)- Krausz and Kyger Creek.
!P!!!!E;e;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;e;;;;;~;e;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
; (5-9) Saturday on the Blue 4·0·6·14; Schneider 3-2.().12; S.
Junior Tina Myers ' ted the - - Sports briefs
-Falcons' court In South Euclid.
Wilson 2-0·3·7; Conley 2·0-0-4;
Pirates with 10 points.
The Rio ladies are on a Massie 0-1·0-3; J . Wilson 0-0·2·2.
Austria's
Hoeflehner,
Hannan Trace will host winner
of last year's World Cup
three-game string or wins over Totals- 11-3-11-42
Symmes V~jlley next Thursday .
downhill utte; regislered the
,Malone, Ohio Dominican and
Rt. 33
fleld goals - 14·55 (25.5%)
Quarler to&amp;ala
Mason, WV
fastest time In Initial training for
:urbana during the past week.
Foul sbots- 11-21 (52.4%)
No rib Gallta ........ 5 14 8 4-31 the World Championships down·
;The Malone and Urllana games
Rebounds - 38 (Krausz 13)
Hannan.Trace ...10 13 10 12-45 h!ll at Saalbach·Hinterglemm,
.rnarked the first time this season
steals -16 (Schneider 5)
Haoaao Trace (t5)- Mullens
us tria . .. : Austria's Petra Kron·
;In which the Redwomen broke
Turnovers - 11
7-0-2·16; Thomas 7-0.().14; D. . A
berger,
the runaway World Cup
•100 or more poln ts (100-67 oover
Nelson 3-0-0-6; Ours 2·0·1-5;
overall
leader, registered the
• :Mal- and 101-71 over Urbana).
KCBS 48, Oak Wll 41 (Of)
Sanders 1·0-0-2; Triplett 1-0-0-2. second tastes t time behind Ger.t\IJ,•
;Debbie Fredrick, Rio Grande's
At Oak Hill, it took field goals . Totals- Zl-0-3-41
many's M!rlam Vogt In the final
i•~rUJII IU8fd, hit a career high
bY. Lisa · Swisher and Amy Glnfleld foalil - 21-65 (32.3%)
.
training run for the women's
,or 31 points and forward Kerr! dlesberger
and .a pair of free
Fouhhota- 3-12 (25%).
downhUI. . .. Norway, citing ..
;Kidwell also netted a milestone. throws by Bobbie Jean Shaver in
Rebollllda - 35 (Thomas 10)
safety risks because of the
·with 22 markers In .the Urbana . the fifth quarter t.o seal Kyg~r
Blocked lhots - 7
Persian Gulf war, will not take
.game.
'
Creek's 49-45 overtime victory
Aulsla-9
part In competitions in Spainand
Steals-10
: Fredrick Is currently the lead- over Oak Hill.
the United States.
..u~
Turnover• - 19
:ing scorer for the Redwomen
GoH
The Bobcats {13-2, 9·1) got
North GaiDa (31) - Myers
•with 12.5 points a game, followed ahead early, but the seven-point
Britain's Steve· Richardson
2·2·0-10;
Dobbins 2-0-1-5; McCor- shot a 6-under-par 65 to talle a
center Ann Barnitz at 12.3 lead they took into the second
:potnls and 8.3 rebounds per quarter shrank to five at halftime mick 1·0·2-4; Robie 2-0-0-4; Salls· one-stroke lead after the first
bury 2.().0-4; .Meadows 1:0-0-2;
rqund of the Standard Chartered
•oudq.
and to four at the end of the third
Twyman
1-().().2. TotAls- 11·2-3- Kenya Open In Nairobi. Fellow
: Dlatrld ratillp for this week quarter. The Oaks made up the
difference in the (ourth quarter, 11
Briton Jonat118n Sewell was at66.
;~ * - Dame center Se'Foullhots - 3-8
Jll!!~tl C.teipln rebounding
with Holly Sharp being true to
COlONY 1 til f\ 1 Ht
,with 10.5 per aame, while team: her name by sinking a three'mate Rosie Schneider was rourlh
pointer with a2 seconds left In .
. FRI. THRUTHURS.
:with 10.3. Barnitz "ranked 11th prime time to tie the ·1ilme at
JEAII·CLAUOE VAll DAIIIIE
GRAVELY TRACTOR
•
:and Kidwell was 14th with 7.6. ·
43-43 and send the contest Into
•
SERVICE
SALES
· The Redwoml¥\ enter action overtime. That basket erased a
204 Condor lt. l'o-y. OH. •
:next week with 10 games remain· three-point Kyger Creek lead
FaD A Wiater Roan
) ng on their schedule, including a · boosted by Swisher's rebound
TUEIDAV
THRU FRIDAY
•decisive MOC contest at Tttrln on · and the following layup five
. I A.M.·I P.M.
;Tuesday. The Redwomen are seconds earlier,
.
lAT. I A.M.·1 P.M.
now 3-2 In the MOC.
In period five, Glndlesber1er
CLOIED MONDAYS
' ''We .llr1ll have to win a lot of sank a basket with 2: 38lert to put
betwwn now and the end
KC ahead , and after several
~THE
ltd die 112 •• to eoter the playoff misses by both teams, the Hill's
'Rt. 33
(304) 773-5321
Muon, WV
•picture," Redwomen head coach Allita Clrney SCOred from the
:Doug Foote commented after the field to tie 'the game at 4!1 with 46
(NEXT TO MASON EXXON)
·urbana victory. "OUr early seconds left. Then the HO
f

The DaiJy Sentinel- Page-&amp;

.

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Friday. January 25. 1991

' Ohio

Helping fill
the.need
for trained
technicians

•

t·

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INSURANCE ---. SERVICES

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John F. Fulll. Mgr.
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•

K&amp;C JEWELERS
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MIDDlEPORT. OHIO

..............
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OOOI'DNJI\'I: PA&amp;UNITICD 11&amp;'1- CRJtal
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,,

.... a-.. -

ALFRED - Chuldl SObool II: ill! a.m.;
Woroblp,lla.m.: UMYtl:ll&amp;,:'!;', t1MW
Third Tueldoy, 7: 30 p.m.
wtlOII,
ftnt Sunday. (Haualtmon)
,
CHESTER .,. Wonlitp 9 a.m.: Chureh
Sohod IOa.m.; Bible Study, Thunclay, Tp.
m.; UMW, nnt Tbur.day, 1 p.m.; eom.
munllm, ftnt Sanday (HIUIII!IIIll.
JOPPA- Woroblp 9:30a.m.; Cburoh
SohooiiO: :tO a.m. Bible Study Wedltadoy,
7:30p.m. (Jollucal .
LONG BOTTOM - Quid! Scltooll: 30
a .m.; Wortlllp 11:30 a .m.; Bible lltudy,
Wedlladay, 7: :tO p.m.: Comm111114m l"'rtt
Sunday ar Mootll (ReY. Clttrlet Eatoal
REEDSVILLE - Sunday Wonolllp Sor·
vice'' 30o.m.; Cbureb - 1 0 : 311o.m.;
Bible Study 7:30p.m. Wlllntfl!day.
•
TUPPERS PLAINS II'. PAUL Cbuldl llcbooll a.m.; Wonlllp 10 a.m.;
Btbto Study, Tueldo,, 7: lllltt.•.; Cammu·
nlon Flrtt S~Halllllilill.

nt!: ' ·wo:,";'I;J'eStudy.

at 7: 31! p.m.

·DAY ADVENTIST,

Mul·

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ll/lt'lll:e loll...... at 3:00 p.m. Ewry•e

~~D FIRST Bi.PTIST CHURCH

- Slotor Harnett Wtml!l', Supt; Sunday
~9:30a.m.; Morollll Wol'lhlp, 10:1~
I•D'U

'.POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Eaot
Mall! St.' Sieve l'llller. paotor. Gool'Je
Sldlial!l', S181day Sobool Supertnt. .dent.
SMclaY Sobool, 1:30 a.m.; Morollll Wor10:30 a.m.; Wedll-y eoenlna
llfal(l!l' and Blblutudy, 7:30p.m.
&lt; I'1RST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. flBTl
PoiiHI'oY Pt~e. E. Lamar O'Bryant, pu·
tor and Suaclay School Dlreotor. Sunday
9:~ a.m.; Momlq Wol'llllp,
Cbolr praotlco. 6:30 p.m.; eoenlna
, 7:311 p.m.; WedD-y Prayer
• 7: 30 p.m. Ml1alm Frlellda (lies
I, RoYaiAmbal-n (boyo qes 6-IB) ,
~ Glrlolb Ad lea (1100 6-lfl &lt;XI Wednet·
if~ 7:30 p.m. Chureh-Wide Vltttatlon

*"

:F:Ji."'i~l!Ucu CHURCH, Bot·

loy !lull Rood, ReY. Emmett Row...,, p11Handley Dillin, tupl. S~y llchod,

~

a.m.: SUDclay .... lqoervloe, 7:00p.m.
blo too...._, 7:00p.m. Tbartclay.
SYRACUSE MISSION. lfll Brtd1omon
. , Syraouoe. SUnday Sobool 10 a.m.;
ft01!111 oorvioo I p.m.; "'edo..Say atr·
?p.m.
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Rev. James Sattorlleld, pastor.
: -~c·.·--c WUIIall\l, Supt. Slllldoy Sdloo1
Sunday and "!'eclnot&lt;lay tvft·
:

a.llllft&amp; '

'""""
. s..... .

-.~

--aal.

............
........-

10~~

.

w--Y.

Mlclay,.•~Tp.m.

N CHURCH, !lox·

LIBERTY

tor .. Woody Cal~ paotor, Servloet Sunday
10 Lm. and 1 D.m. Wedn-y, 1 p.m.
DYESVII.I.I: COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Swtday Soboo1 9: :tO o.
m.: mombli - p 10:30 a.m. Sunday
evt!tiiJII oervioe 7 p.m.

IJOfd layre, Slpt.

l.-miJi.=:r.

~~iiO~~~~

.,.

t:•

llllpuo'iFJn;
''::;~~
Br
Wt 5 I

i

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KENO CHURCH OJ' ·CIIIIa'l', .......
utd Ollwr ....... ltoalar ........
~ t. :110 ...... -ltiaclay;
ty ScbooiiO:illla.a.
HOBSON CHURCH or CH1UI'I' IN

clay eveotna Bible Study 1:00 p.m.
WHITE'! CHAPEL WESLEYAN .. Cool·
vtlle RD. Rev. PIIIIUP Rldeaour. pa1tor.
Sunday llchoo19: 30 a.m.; wonhlp service
10:30 a.m.; Bible study and wcrlhlp aervlce, WedDNdaY, 7. p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Eu·
gene E. Underwood, mlntlter. Sunday
llcbooi.I:!Oa.m.; Mombli wol'lhlp, 10:30
. a.m.; Evtt!lna Worthlp,•7:00 p.m.
Rtrn.ANDliiBLE METHODIST. Rev.
Ivan Myera. SUnday Schod 9:30a.m. wltll
SOMy HudiGn. Supt.; Evenl01 aorvlce
7:00p.m. Prayer meetbiJ and Bible study,
Wedn-y, T p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE !'IAZA·
RENE. Samuel Baaye. putor. Sunday
School 9:30a.m.; WonblpServioel0:30a.
m.; Youna P'eople'• Service 6 p.m.
Evan1etlltlc aorvloe6: :tO p.m. Wedneoday
service 1 p.m.
·
- 1
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, MWer
St., Muon. W.Va. Sunday Bible Study 10

a.m.: WorSIIIp lla,m. and 1 p.m. Wed:Dea·

day Bible Study, vocal mualc, 1 p.m.
UBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
dlng.La1e, MUOD, W.Va. J . N. Thacll:er,
putor. Evonlq torvioo 1:30 p.m.: Womeu'IMin~tryThundoy, 9:30a.m.; Wed·
n - y Prafl!l' and Btblo Study 7: 15 p.m.
IDLLSIDE BAPTIST .ClfURCH, St. Rt.
It:! )Uit oft Rt. 7. RO\'. Jam• R. Aoreo So..
putor: Rev. Mike Wlllett. Aut. Pattor:
Joe Humphrey, S.S. Supt; Sunday Sdlool
10a.m.; MomlngWorshlplla.m.; Sunday
evenlnatervtce 6 p.m.; Wednaday even"'f&gt;l,&amp;fLAND FIRST CJri.rRCH OF THE
NAZARENE, WOllam Juttll, pallor. Sun·
day School Supt. SOnja Juttll. Sun~ay
School, 9:30a.m.: mo!'IIJII worahlp, 10: to
a .m.; Slltlday and Wedneoclay oerv1001.
7
COMMUNriY CHURCH,
'
!1711 PUrl St., Sam - . putnr. Sunday
........ leriob!. JJo.m.; Evenln(tervkel.
Slinaylnd
~ 30 p.m.
HARTFORD. CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Harttonl, W. Va.
Rev. David MoMan~. pa1tor. Churob
Sollool t:30 a.m.; SUDclay morotna ltf·
vtce, n a.m.; Sunday evening aervlce, .
7:311 p.m. Wednesday Prll'W moetiJII, 7: 30
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart.
W. Va., Rt. I, JomM Lewlli, pattor. Wor'
thlp oervloes 9:30a.m.: S - y llchool11
a.m.; E....,lq •oroblp 7::110 p.m. Tuelday
oottaa:e prayer meotbiJ and Bible Study
9::110 a.m.; Worahlp oorvtce, Wedoeldoy
7:30p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Honry Sll,, RoveaswCXId,
Vt. The Rev. Gool'J• C. Wetrtel, paotor.
Sunday SChool 9:30 a.m.; Sunday worohlp

~RT

w-.

w.

MT. Hi:RMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Lootttd Ia Texu
Community oiJ Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. RGIIort

. ""''-.,...... ___ _....,_ _~.._;_ _ __ _....;.,..,...._:..

..... ... ...._....

day evelll.q wol'lhlp 7:00p.m.; Wfi!dnea-

S"Pik'rfu~-"j:~

a

.

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH,
Grtmm, paotor. Sunday School 9: 30 a .
m.: Wcnblp 10:C5 a.m.; Sundty evottlnC
·atrvlot, 7 p.m.
.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knoll, tooab!d oo County Rood 31. ReY.
!loa" WIHfonl, paotnr. Sunoy llcbool 9:311
a.ml: Momlna Wonhlp 10:~ a.m.; Sun-

CHURCH, Stab!
RoUb! 338, Aotlqtllty. lio. S-ort. putor.
SUnday Morolq, Jla.m.; SUndayi!WIIIII
7:30p.m.; Tbundly ....11117:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI· ·
NESS CHURCH, Ino., 'II Pearl St. Rev.
Ivan Myen. aotltll paotor; Rorer Minley,
Sr., SUnday Sobool Superta-t. Sun·
day School t:30 a.m.: MomtQ wonblp
10:30 a .m.; eYe~~ Ina ........,, !' 30 p.m.;
Wedlleadoy ....... Bille Ohldy, prayer
and pnlH •eM&lt;e. 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF JI:SUS CHRIST APOSTOLIC - VIDZandt and Ward Rd. Elder
James Mlllor, paotar. SUnday Sdlool,
ID:.3 0a.m.: Woratupllorvlce,SUnclay,7:30
p.m.; 1lbla ~~_!'!rrday, 7:30p.m.
CALVARY I"II.UKUI CHAPEL, Horri....W. Rolli. Rev. Vl&lt;tor Routlt, pattor;
Clln""' rna. SUnday._ lllpl.: Stat- .
day llcbool t.illlo.m.; nlontiiii'Worllllp,ll
a.m.: S u - torvke 7::110 p.m.
Prayor MNI
WedDIOdar, 7:1111 p.m.
SYRACUSE
CHUJICHOFGOD.
noo-"-nteoollal. Wonbtp- ltlnday
10 a.m.; 1 - y . . _ 11 a.m. EwnbiJ
WGI'Iblp T:CIO p.m. Wlllnaday
prayl!l' m..un, 7:00p.m.

MORNINGII'Ait-CIItudl-t:e

•11$1!•#"-...-....,- _ ___

FL

CALVAR't: BIBLE CHURCH,Inoated on
Pom...oy Pike CD11nty Rood :IS near Flat·
wooda. Rev. Blaclnrmd, puler. Servl.,..
on SUnday ttlO: 311 a.m. and 7:30p.m. .tttll .
Sunday llcbooll: II •m. -eStudy, Wed·

a.m.; WortltiD 10::110 a .m.; lltudy,
Th"u'm•T:!llp.m. (8Wr).
S
N - Cburdl - . 1: a.m.;
MontbtiWcnblpiO:Ua.m. ftnt-~
Sundayo; 1'111-111 ...... Cumo1
tltlrd -~. 1: Ill_f.lll. !IIINrl.
. EAST LETART- ~W......
a.m.; Ottudt'-lt:•a.m.; UMW~JOp.m. (Onoej.
1

f

IIETIILEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Sbuler, paator, Worwl!lp.aorvloo, II: 311a.m.
!Iunday llcbool 10: 30 a.m. Bible Study and
prayor IIO!'YI"" Tbunclay, 7: 30 p.m.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH, Klapbury Road. Rev.
Clyde w. Hl!lld•oca, putor. SUnday
llcbooll: :tO a.m.; Ralph car~ Slip!. Ewa·
b1J wanblp 1:00 p.m. PraYI!I' meetlaii.
Wednttdoy 7:00 p.m.
OLD II£THEL FREE WD..L BAPTIST
CHURCH, 28111 Stab! Roub! 1, Mlddl ..
SUnday llchod10 a.m.: Suaday tvft·
.....,.,. 7: :110 p.m.; 'l'lleoclay torvi.,..,
1 p.m.
'

ua.m.

-uti

=. . .

:t:

"Fifi*'I•IIIHIId:g Flltl e~1d11"
221 W. Main SJ., Pomtroy

992-5432

.Sentinel Calendar

CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES.

RAWuNGS-COATS

'

Middleport ·

~

t

__...' :r --- · - _ . . . _ .

106 111•rrr An.

Sertnonette

•

,,.,

Wendy's heads
east to ·Poland

.

Mldc. .port. Ohio 411780
16141992-1.887 ~ 1998-00KSI

Sanden, paotor. Jell Holter, lay leader;
NEASl:SETTLEMl:NTCHURCH,SunEd Roush, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
day afternoon -'iervtcee at 2:30. Thursday
School 9:30 a.m.i morning worship and
evening servJces at 7:30.
cblldren'o ohuren 10:30 a.m.; evening
nRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Masoo. W . ·
preachtna service ftrst three Sundays,
Va. Rev. Wallace MJngs, pastor. Sunday
7:30p.m.; Special service fourth SUI)oday
SchoollO a .m.; Sunday evening service, 6
evenlna, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday Prayer
p.m.; Prayer meeting and Bible study
Meetlna:, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
'
·
llhlp. 7:30p.m.
.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
CHURCH OF GOD OF J;'ROPHECY .
lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
Located on 0 . J. Wblte Road of Hlahway
SchoollO a .m .; Sunday eovenlng7:00 p.m .;
160. Pat Hnson, pastor. Sunday SchoollO
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7;00
a.m. Claates for all aa:es. Junior Church 11
p.m.
.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
a.m.; Momtna: worship 11 a .m. Adult
Cholrpractlcelp.m. Sunday. Youn$PeoCHURCH, Sll"'r Ridge. · Duane Sydenple's,_Children's Church and Adult Bible
strlcker, pastor. ·sunday School 9 a .m .;
Study, Wedne&amp;day at 7:30p.m.
Worsblp Service, 10 a.m.; Sunday evening
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, ~10 Grant
service, 7:00p.m. Wodnesday night Bible
St.. Middleport. Atftllated wtth Soutllem
study 7:00p.m,
NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH OF
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Ml:
nllter. Sunday ScboollO a.m 1; Morning . GOD, Cbester-GaryHines,putor.SunWOI'IIllp lla.m.; Evening worship 7 p.m.;
day School 9:30 a.m.; worship service,
Wednesday evenlna Bible study and . 10:30a.m.; ev....,oorvtce,6p.m.; Dttd·
prayer meeting 7 p.m.
pteobtp class. Wedoeoday, 1 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF'CHHIST, St.
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Rt.WandCo. Rd.5. DerekStump,pastor.
Lawrence Bullh, pastor. Sunday School
Wtulam AmberJer, S. S. Supt.; Sunday
9::.1 a.m.; S~y and Wednesday evenScbool9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship lO:.Jl
taa warthlp service, 7:00p.m.
a.m.; Evenlni warship 7: 30p.m . WednesUNITED FAITH CHURCHi Rt. 7 on Poday w&lt;rshlp 7:30p.m.
meroy By-Pass. Rev. Robert E . Smtth, Sr,
ST. PAUL Ltrri!ERAN CHURCH,
putor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sund4y
Comer Sycamore and Second Stt., PoSchool 9:30a.m.; MornlngWorshtplO:JO;
meroy. The Rev. [,.aura A. Leach, pastor.
Eventna Worship 7:00 p.m.: Wednesday
Sunday School9:45 a .m. Church servlcell
Prayer !@rvlee, 7:00p.m.
a.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
SACRED HEART CHURCH. Msar.
St .. MotM. SUnday Sohool10 a.m.; Mom.
Jac wonhlp lla.m.; Eventna service 6 p .
Anthmy Clannamore, Ph. 992-5898. S&amp;turday Evening· Mau 7:~ p.m.; · SUriday
m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed·
Mus, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Confeastona one
nesday, 7 p.m.
half hour before each Mus. CC'D olaa....
FOREST Rim BAPTIST. flev. Nyle
11 a.m. Sundab 1
Ji9rden, paator. ComeJiut Bunch, supt.
VICTORY
ST, ~25 N. 2nd St..
Sunday School 9:30 a .m.; Sooond and
Middleport. JamH E. Keesee, paator.
fourth Sundays worship service at 2:30 p.
Sunday mornlaa worlhlp 10 a.m.; Evenm. .
Ina III!I'Yice 7 p.m.; Wednesday evening
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST. Fourth and
wortblp 1 p.m. VlsltatiM Thund.ay 6: 30p.
Matn St .. Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Crala.
m.
Jr.. patter. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
Sunday School SUpt. Sundayllcbool9: 30a.
Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, tO a .m .;
m.; Worlhlp Service, 10:'!5 a.m.
wol'lhlp oervloe II a.m.; SUnday n~ht
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
worship service 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
-:- Jc.eph B. Hoaklnl, evan&amp;ellllt. Sunday
pra)"tr aervlce Wednelday 7 p.m.
Bible Study9 a.m.; Worthlp, 10 a.m.; SunWESLEYAN · BmLE
HOLINESS
day evenln1 aorvlce 6 p.m.; Wed,esday
CHURCH or Middleport, Inc .• 75 Pearl St.,
evening aervice, 7 p.m .
Rev. Ivan Myoro, putor; Roaer Manley,
P,ENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY,. Racine,
Sr.. Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
Rt 124. WOllam Hoback. pa1tor. Sunday
9:30a.m.; Momlne WorJhlp 10::11 a .m.;
School tO a.m. ; Sunday eventng service 7
EveniDI Wol'llllp 1:30 p.m. Wedn-y
p.m. Wedneodayevenlli&amp;sel'vlce?p.m . .
evottlnl Bible study. proyor and praloo
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
terYioo, 1:30 p.m.
·
Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a .m. Morning
FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH , Long Bot·
Worthlpl0:30a.m. Prayeuervlce,altern·
ate Sundays.
.
tom, Sunday School. 9: II a.m.: Moml11
Worlhlp 10:f5 a.m.; Sunday evening 1:00
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,
p.m. (tumml!l' 1:30 p.m . ); Wedn-y
ntaht 7:00 p.m. fsum~r 7:30 p.m.).
next to For1 Metts Park, Rutla~. Robert
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Rlchard1, pastor. Services at 7 p.m . on
Avt. Rev. Clarll: Baker, pastar. Carl NotWedneldl:ya and Sundays.
tbiJbam, Suodoy School Supt. Sunday
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
School 10 a.m. wtth clasees for all aa,s.
TER of the Wealeyan HoUness Church.
Evonlnt! toovloel at 6 p.m. WedDMdaY Bl•
Rev. Earl Fields. paator. Henry Eblin,
bleltody at 7:311 p.m. Youth servloel Frt·
Sunday School Supt. : Sunday Sohool10 a .
day at 7: 30 p.m.
m.; Morning Wonhlp U a.m.; E~n ing
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 125 MDI St..
aervlce7:30 p.m. Wedneoday evening otr·
vice 1:30 p.m .
Middleport. Bi'otber Chuck MoPheram1
putor. Suaclay School 10 a.in.; Sunday
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH
evea1ac tervk:• at T p.m. and Wednesday Gary Holter, past&lt;*. Sunday aervlcet 9:30
M!'VIcet at 7 .p.m.
a.m . and 7 p.m .; .Mtdw~k service~ 7: 30 p.
. ANTIQUITY BAPl'!ST. KeMotiJ Smith.
!1). Tburaday. . •
·
·
putar. Suday Solto019:30· a.m.; church
COOLVR.LE UNITED METHODIST
aorvloe 7:30p.m.; youth feDowlhlp6: 30p.
PARISH- H. E. Allay, pastor. Ml~eand
m.; ablettudy, Ttlul'lday, J: 30 p.m :
Jane Ktna, lay supply patter• at Torch
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, Chur&lt;h. COOLVILLE CHURCH, Main
Hlland Rood, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly. pas·
and Flftll Sta. Wortblp Service, 9 a.m.;
tor. Dully Lombl!l't, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SundayllchooiiOa.m.: BtbleStudyTues.
momlq l""'lcett!O a.m.; Sunday even·
day, 7 p.m .; BETHEL CHURCH: Townlnetervlce 7:30p.m. Tuesday •Ad. ThursthJp Road HaC: Sund.i.y School 9 ·a.m.;
day Sorvloll at 7:30p.m.
Chureh Servlce,10 a.m .; Btble5tudy, ~0
NEW HAVl:N CHURCH OF THE NA·
a.m.
WednMday;
HOCKINGPORT
ZARENE. Rev. Glend&lt;XI Stroud, p..tor.
CHURCH; GrandSt'"t: SundaySoliooliO
SUDclayllchool9:30 a.m.; Wonhlpaervlce.
a.m.. Church Servloolla .m.; BlbloStucly,
10:311 a.m.; Youth oervlce Sunday 6:15 p.
Wedneod,y, 8 p.m.; TORCH CHURCH,
County Road 63: Sunday llchoo19: :tO a.m .;
m. SUnday evenlni _,.Ice?; till p, m. Wed·
naday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
Worlhp Service, 10:30 a.m.
7:00 p,m._

-

••ta.

992-2121

CIIRIII'nAN UN!Oif, Theron Durham,
put«. SUDclay eervloo. t: 30 a.m.; even·
biJ oorvlce 7:00 p.m. Prayer meetlq,
7:00p.m.
·
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Jack CoiiiP'OW!. putor. Bible
I;Jau, t:JOa.m.; MomtnaWol'llllp 10:30o.
m.; .:-~qWol'llllp.I:)Op.m. Thurlllay
Btblo Study, 1: 311 p.m.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Poml!l'oyHaniiCXIviUoRd, (Rt.lfll RobortE . Purtell, ntiDiab!r; smve Stanley, Blblellcbool
Supt.; Harloy J-cm, Aut. Supt. SUN·
DAY: Bible Sdloo1 t: 30 a.m.; Wonhlb
10:30A.M.ond ?:ill! P.M.: Wedn-yB{.
ble Study,T:IIII p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
G...... Tbo R.,.,. Laura A. Loaob. putor.
C!Nrob oervtce t:30t.m.; Sunday School
10:30 a.m.
BRADBURY CIIURCH OF CHRIST,
Tom RuayCII, putor. Sunday School 1: 30
a.m.; Lony lfayneo, S. S. Supt. MombiJ
wonlliP 10: 30 a.m. ·
RAct!IE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Tbomlll L. Gab!i II, paotor.
Ora But, luaclay ~ool Superllltendeat •.
SUDclay School, t: 30o.m.: woroblp oorvlce
10:)0 a.m.; .,.,.IDJ - · f p.m. Wed· ,

.... ( l w l _

-

Craw's Family Resta•ant

Established 1913

APPLE GROVE- CINN. ldtool t:•
. a.m.; MorniJII Wonblp tt:• a.m.; aJe
Stndy Sunday 7:00p.m.; Proyor Wille
7:00p.m . Tbarldoy. (Ill.,. I
III:I1IANY - Wonltlp I a.m.; Clnudt
· llchool10o.m.; BtiJio ~hiD Willa lay 10
a.m.; Dorou w-·1 J'-tltlp Wtd·
Mlclayllo.m. = l ·
CARMEL-1:311 a.m.;
Wonbtp, 10:8 o.m.
!'lMirlb
SUnclayo: reu-tp ~- Bun..
thlniTbllndAy, l : Wp.m. (. . . .I.

\

_.,.·"

BILL QUICKEL

EWING FUNERAL HOME

SNOWVILLE - Monollll Wonblp, t: CIO
a.m.; Chureb llchooiiO:OO a.m. &lt;Fioreaoe
Smith)
.

r

.,.../

P0ft1EROY, OHI0-992-6677

264 Sol!flt 2nd

oflhis cquipmenl is ued by

morellld more people, the!-' for
qne'ified peo-. 10 aervice,
lllliallin, !lid operere il becomes '
e¥ell more impol'tlnL
.
.
HeiJJiq to .llU the ~ fur
tqjncc} leCbnici•• for the coming
een is the voc:aticnal electtonicl
~at Meip HJab ScbooL
CAREER ORIENTAnON • lt'1•.amr too
1be JXQIIIID il open to l1llClcnls
VOCAnONAL OPPOin"UNITIES • ne 110 eiPtll II eden
from all dno bllb ICboOls in
e•ly ror lltlldallto *lU about - n udal •
Moip Colllty wbo fir;;e ~
part ol tine ·M elp Local Sdzool District'•
rr.z MelpJ.alor
~ dlflcled lllto.-.11~
•
tbe tbe ...p...ore year. Sllldents
visited !loG • cl
ud 111eadolnal cllelll It
HIP
pn'Op I&amp; of up "!lltadeats to tile variotll CJII•
Tbanday. Ml$lle LUCII, Kevla Lopa, ...S lrlb
.
ll1ould ..ve 111 everqe ability in
tJolll, I caner
DtatloD IMIIIioD for ei1bt11
looked 011 11 RoW!! PoleJ, IIIII c1 rtpt, pw a allllllatn to Rebecca
'-ic medwniiV'.I llld die iDiemii
llnnden was lneld Tbunday at Melp Hlp
.
IIIII delile 110 lclm • die field of
WDea. ...._ Filley aa4 Wiles are julor c a•lt.~llu
Tile
·~"o'
Cllftft' pnpaaz ror etptln a• acltri 11 a "'lnt"
Melp HJall · elcc:lnlail:l. Counell 11W IIi t:OOsellool, IZCCOI'Ciblj to Fa• Taylor, prbnc:~.
• ... ::1
Iidlred helpful - iDdullrill 11'11,
....... scilllco llld !llllbcnzllics•
1be IWO ye&amp;r''I'OC'doael JIIOII'IIII
il lira~ to pUYidc tbe IIDdent
wldl till I 00113 llld llboraiDry eltDUBLIN (UPI) 7 Wendy's
pabacea !lOCI JNJ 110 gain the International Inc. uld
·ltiiiJ llld knowJeclle requlred for It has granted exclusiveThursday
rights to
InC CII I M eatry level employment
a
Connecticut
company
to build
· Run.AND • 'l'hae will be a in die lleld of eleciiOIIk:l. .
. c-lll!i;r.Calel!dlr ltanJ
.
the
ham~urger
chain's
first
ap~ tWit
before 111 emnt Volley Bl111'otna~Bent It tbe Rul1be em.,._. il 011 CIIPCh student restaurants In Poland.
IPIId tine daJ
tlnat eWDt. Items lalld Civic: Ccntet 011 Saturday. Tile oblllniDJ e tborou&amp;h knowledge of
Wendy's uld the · decision
mast . be realwd Ia admnce to cntty fee will be $2S and Dopbies blsic: electronic JXU!ciples and
provides
a stepping stone !or
llliaft .pabllcatloa . iD tbe caleD- will be aWarded. For infcxmldoti tbeory, lbe applic:ation of this
planned Eastern European
dar,
call 742-2279.
~ to die verioua t;Oinponenll,
expansion.
.
fRIDAY
citculay, and l)'llails, and the
Wendy's and Chase EnterLONG .BOTIOM - The Failh
I..OTIRIDGE - Collttry MIJSic development of the necau y prises
said work will begin on tw_o
Gospel Cllurch in Long BOIIOIII NiJbt will be held ll the l..otlriilge 1tllllipUIIdYe and .wyticll skills
will bolcl SDOCialiiCrVicel on Friday Community Ccater on SIIUtday u well • safety' bebita Jeqllired in restaurants In the next18 months
with a minimum of 10 restauat 7 p.m. 1bcn will allo be special from 6 p.m. to midni&amp;hL All binds tbiJ llo'ld.
sin . · CellUlin&amp; the Dailey • welcome and n:fn:Jiunents will
Sllldenll .e CIICCIIJIIICd to rants to be opened during the
P,IJ Rev.
• Steve ._.
D--A •
•
•"Family.
mVileS
u"' be available. Tbe public is invited. develop die lttitudes, waR habits, next 5 ~ years. Initial work will
public. '
reclmicel knowJed&amp;e, eppcet iarion begin Immediately on location
MIDDU!PORT - Bethel 62, ln- for the care ofiOOII and eqqipmcn1, and site development and on
POMEROY - The POineroy temlllional Order of Job's lllld skilis lhll wjll enable lbem to menu and SIIPPIIer specifics.
Senior ·Cilizcns Dllnce Club will Dliuahters will hold initiation ~ in die eleclronic indusll)'
have e dance Friday from 8-11 p.m. SaturdaY It 1:~0 p.m. at IF Mid- ICCOI'diJI&amp; 10 dlclr lbilitiel.
parents of sophOmore students atwitb .music by die Happy Hollow dleport Masonic Thmple. All past . Tbe pcopwn c:alllists of a con- tendin&amp; Eastern, Meigs and
BoyS of Adlens. J'hoee atteoding honored quwns lllld otber .adults limlout duw bour block of al!op or Southern Hip Schools . .
bring snacks. Public is invited to It- witb Masonic relationship are in- leboniAlly experienc:el !lid one and
Atlcndinil the open bouse will
ono-helf boun of relaled theory give parents and students an oppor~- .vited to attend.
'
daily. lllllniCiioa il IICCOIIIplilhccl' tunity 10 sa tbe scdvities of die
·r ~)
1UPPERS PLAINS - 'l1lcR will
SUNDAY
by poap lll4lndivlduel !nslntclion. various vocational programs since
' ' !V J
be a round and IICIUII'C dance at the
LONG BOTI'OM - o. Evangelist · dlinlonltadon, and pnclical ap- students will be demOIISII'IIins their
· Tuppers Plains VFW Pos1 No. 9053 Bill Vtllers will be at die Mt. Olive . plk:ldM.
skills.
SELECTED POR ALL-STAR· lt,7ID
Melli ••• f ._:.
on"Aiday rrom 8-11:30 p.m. featur- Community Cburch in Long BotEmployment ~unities ~
ber, partldprted Ia ... -kacl'l Kat ·AD-Star .,_. pw f41t:-uf.
Durin' the evening local school
ing Specks of Bluegrass. Ronnie 10m on Sunday at 7 ·p.m. l'asror pcojectcd 10 conlinue 10 grow m competiuons will take place with
maace belclat Stulp I tnt .. tile Keats.... u.lv•Jity _,.....,
Wood will be the caller. The public Lawrence Busb invires lhe public.
thiJ lleld throush the year 2000, ac· advi~ personnel from industry
Tine tft!lt 1P or ed by tile Schell of Mille at Kftt. Slrlie\ "
is invited.
conli1l&amp; 110 goyemrneat Sllldies. It iudging tbc WQr¥ of the students. At MeanHrl ol tile AII-Sirr Bllrd MIMI. ,._ 2lO ~'~
•
POMEROY .• 'l'hae will be 12- ·. can safely be MSumed dill man: 9 p.m. an awards ceremony will
plklatl ud np1 111 I . . . . diu M WI' M Nil lin OW. 11!11_.
. SATURDAY
11ep A.A. meeting It die J.T.P.A. IIIined tochnkltm .e going 10 be
take place in the cafeteria witb
~IIDI71"aall. Coaductala-. WaJIPI Gorder, .. «1111 o1 ~ 1
BURLINGHAM - 1be Burlin- office in Pomeroy on Sunday at 7 n~quired 10 kiap our electronic prizes from businesses being
orpiZIII!tiou It Keat State Ual¥11'11tf, ud .-t e.ciiJCtor, MUII,1
gbam Junior MOdem Woodmen
10 die winners. .
H. Jolmlaa, director ol buda at St. Olaf l:oleje. Tine lhlllt*f:!-n
.
. . ~~at anpual \bcalione1 presented
No. · 7230 will have · a Family p.m.
WUIIters of tbc local com~laded tllelr two daJ aperleizce wltll a COla!II t.
·~ ·; ··~
'J'oFibcr mcedng on Salurday It 7
· ~ 'i..l
POMEROY - Thete will be an Open House will be beld from 6 to petitions will compete in regional
p.m. Members will tell how they 110!11' of prayer for peace at Samd 9 p.ni. at lbe blsb scbool. \VIIile all . contests in Pike 111d Scioto COunty
" _:~
help keep families qetbet. The Heart Cadlolic Churcb every Sun- p.enll and otber ialllelled in- in early Fe~. and die winners
Bedford Lodi Hillorice1 Society day lftemoon from 4
dividuela n ilnvlled 10 lbcad, a emerJing frorii thole c011tests will
(UPI) - Roseanne Barr and . nated :5500 to SUpport Our CoiW,
will e1Jo meet and Betty MiJIIoan the c:onlllct ia die · e 111til
EISI IJICCiel.iavillliail ._ been ilsucd to go 011 to Stile competition. ·
her.
husband, Tom Arnold, c10- try's Military group Wedntld~
will discuss die use of herbs. ends. 1be public is invited ro at·
·
In MlaneapoUs. Barr and Arii'ol!l:
Juniors will serve . refreshments. tend.
were shoppinl when they hiP'!
, The public is invited to attend.
pened upon a rally sponaofee!~;
MONDAY
SOCM, an OJ'Ianlzatlon !ol'lfi!IIIJ,IQ
CHESTER - AMual inspection
MIDDU!PORT - Installllion of
support ·military personnel!
of die Shade River Lodge No. 453 ollicen of Belhel 62, lnlalllli :Jile1
abroed and tbelr famiU• !lid!
F and AM will be held Salunlay It Order of Job's Qqhren, will be
fi'lends.
Arnold said he and'ldl:
!be lodac ball in Cbeltcr. A ham1oaf held • 7:30 Monday ~g ll the
wile
"Justwanttowlshtherill~
dinner will be served at 6:30 p.m. Middlepon Masonic ~pie.
and support thltn" ... Wlil!D!i!
I.odle will open at .7:30 p.m. w_itb
Goode Jr. has political asplra..
work in tbe Entaed AJIIRilbce
RU'Il.AND - Tbe Rutland Gar·
lions like his father. Tbc!25-ye~r1
DelfW. All masons invited 10 at- den Club will meet Monday atl:30
old
son of PhlladeiPIIIa Max~
tend. All Shade River members p.m . It die borne of Mrs.. Chris
Wilson
Goode aaya he will ell!'f.
bring a homemade pie.
Diehl. A progr1111 . on "Fiowerin11
the
Democratic
primary fol;~
}iousej!llnts lllld HanJing 8~11
seat
on
Philadelphia'&amp;
City
POMEROY • "Cougar" · and will be pcaented by Mn. Vernon .
Council.
,,.,, -1
"Golialh D" will be presented at the Weber and Mrs. Curtis o.lton.
' '
Meip County Public Library on
Salltrday 11 2 p.m. All children are
RACNI! - 'The Soutbem Loc:ll ·
inviled.
ao.d of Education · will mat
Monday at 7 p.m. at the hi$11
BURLINGHAM - The Bedford school.
Lodi Historical Society will ~
Salltrday It 7 p.m. at tbe !-fodmt
MIDDLEPORT - Revival witb
Woodmen Hell in Burlingham. .Nonnan ~ylor belinJ Monday
Betty Milboln, River Valley Her·
525 N. 2ND ST.
tbrou1b Feb. 2 at die Alii Suwt
belists, will present a )11'0(1111111 on Free WUl BlpCist Cburcll in Mid_.IIPOIT,
OliO ' •
1
''Our Anceston and Their Use of dleport It 7:30
ni&amp;bJiy. Special .
"Everyone Welcome"'
Herbs."
siJialnl will be
IICin aJabL
/

"Dignity. and Service Always"

cnorcel

(Grace).

. ''•• .. ~!," '

992-5141

llcldloport,
, Ohio

rm.

Lm.

,~,_,...

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

271 llerth

Rft.l'l_oe_
aJRIJNGIIAM &lt;DIMUNri'Y aiUROI,
ASBURY (Syr...,e)-WonblpllLm.
lluJ!•p I Roy
fto.
School
: Chureb llchod t:fli Lm.; Cbanle Bible . t.rt Coart. wtatanl putor.
Study, Wedlladly, 1:30 p.m.; UJIW,Itrtt
10 a.m.; -&amp;.~: w-.y, 6 p.m.
Tueoday. 1: 30 p.m.; Choir
Wedneodaf 6:30p.m. (Thatebtr)
BonJ. Wotto. paotor.
ENTERPRISE - Worwl!lp I a.m.; '
Supt. Sunday Scbool .
Cbureb Scltool10 a.m.; Blbtolltudy, Tun·
clay, 1:00 p.m.; UMW, F1nt M~. 7:30
;,;~~i.~~~~:v!W"!orwl!lp
30 aWed·
.m.;
::
1:30 10:
p.m.;
p.m.; UMYF SUDclaO, I
(IIIIey)
·
FLiioTWOODSb ...-,10 a.m.
; Worthlp, II a.m.; lllblo ~. Tllun·
day, T p.m .; UMYF, Sunll.ay, 6 p.m. (RI·
. ley].
FOREST RUN - Wortbtp t a.m.;
Cburob School 10 A.M.: Cbolr proctlco.
Thuraday, 6:30p.m.; UMWtblniMonday.
(Thatcher)
HEATH (Middleport)- Cburdl Soltool,
9: 311 a.m .: Mombli Wonblp ID: :110 a.m.;
Youth Group, f p.m.: Wodaaday. Bible
ttudy 6:00 p.m. Cbolr moonal 1: ao p.m.
(FroM Smltlll.
1:00
MINERSVILLE - Chllldl a.m.; Wonblp IIO!'Ytce 10:00 a.m.; t1MW
thlnl Wedn-y. 1 p.m. iTUicbtrl
PEARL CHAPEL - Cburob SObool t: 00
a.m.: Wortblp S.VIce 10:1111 a .m. (FiorftiOO Smltll)
POMEROY- Churob-. t: 15a.m.
; Worlbtp 10:30 a.m.; Cbol~ nlloataol
Wedlleoclay, T:!e p.m.; UMW, Tuaday, 7:30p.m.; UMYFiuaclay,lp.m.
CMoadoortl·
ROCK SPRINGS- Chllrl*llcbool, t: 15
a .m ,: Wol'lhlp!Oa.m.; •lllolltudy, Wed·
neoday, 7:30p.m.; UMYF (Sealon),Sun·
clay, f p.m.: (J1mllwl) e..i'y otbor Sun·
day, I p.m. (Rlley).
Rtrn.AND- SUnday llcbooi,I::IIO a.m.;
Wol'llllp torvioo,I0:30 LIIL; -ellluY,T
p.m. Thundoy. (Crallt-1 .
SALEM CENTER- Cburoh Scltool 1: U
a.m.; Momlq Wortltlp · 10:15 a.m.

m.; Mlll'l

rit!NiaAIUI'VI .~,.

~
_,.._

SHOP

RACINE .FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Doaver, Putor. Mike ..,11«, Sunday
Sobool Supt.; SuJiday llcbool t:30 a.m.;
Montlltl -tltlp lll:ftl a .m.; Sunday
r·l•l ~ 7::110 p.tq.; Wedneoday
-..Bible lltUdy 7:30p.m .

'

......... ftaldtto

ta Rood, Pomeroy. Putor Bob

-.eyiiD!nl. . _ t b Sobool botrtaa at 2

-

...............
...........
___
........
....
lloDrn...,

()

..

.Sireet

. SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PUUY·
TERIAN - SUDclay llcbool, ld a.-.;
Church tervlce, U:OO a.m.; YOI.tb lfOUp,
tint and tblrd SUndays, • p.m. ·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Putor.
John F . Coreoran. Sunday llcbooiiii:OO a.
m.; Sunday Momtna Wortblp II: till a.m.
Cblldr""'' Chur&lt;b 11 a.m. Buday Efta.
biJ SOrvlce 7:00p.m. Wed .. 6 p.m. Youna
Ladleo' AuxUIIry.. Wedoaday, 1 p.m.
FamUy Wortblp.
.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rt. J2.i; 3 mll• from PortJandol.olli BOt·
tom. Edael Hart, putor. SWiday llcbool,
9:30 a.m.; SUnday mornt11 -cblna
10: II a.m.; Sunday ....,~q a....t001, 7:3t
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
· CHURCH, Comer Alb and Plum. Noel
Hemnana, pallor. SuUoy llcbooiiD:OO a.
m.; Moi11111 Wonhlp, 11:1111 a.m.; Will·
ilelday and Satunlay E f t n b i J - at
7:30p.m.
MT. OLIVE UNri'ED METHODIST Ot!12f, beillncl WUIIHvllle. Cllarl• Jon•.
paotor. Suoday!lobool, t:illlo.m.; m .......
WU'Iblp, 10: :tO; SUnday and Tbunday
evenma Rrvlc,., T:OO p.m.

clayooob-•:,t:r,:nloe~at7: 30p.

JJ___

-

DAlllsooiCKEL
.••·•·•••••
AGENCY INC. ! ~\

$..w
Q3••,;,
· 93 Mill

212 E. Main StrHI
992-3715. Po•rey

"'"'''· "-p.m.
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
Pli'HciiiJII 9: 3D a.m. nm and HCOnd SUn·
d,tn.af oodl m-; tlllnlan4 !011rth SUn·

R£ALro•·

' 992-3325

992-2975

Pomtroy

~

IDrn(ti .

p,,,,, Flow, Shop

.Brogan.-Warner .

~~. SALES &amp; SEIYKE

~

992·~978

Pomeroy

'

Thday's world is dominated by
devices for convenience, borne cnICIIIinmenl, and productivity which
• connoUcd by declnllli&lt;:s.
Everywbere we IUm we see new
llld illlloYalive epplicllliom for
elocaalic equipmeal AJ and

c-.

l

·.

l

n

People in the news

'UJdf·

VlaOIY
BAPTIST

CHUICH

t:l!;

.

'

GOD'S SIM!'LE
OF SALVATION ·
•·

'

.Another multiple birth
( UPII - Patti Fruatacl, who
eave' blrtb six years ago to
ltptuplets alter taking the fertilIty drua Perconal, now has twins .
concelwd with the help of the
•me drq. .Frustacl ancl her
hua~nd, , Sam, became the parentJ of a boy ud girl Dec:. 21 In
Rlwnlde, Clllf., their attorney
aaya. Last year the Frustacta
received a •2'.7 mfillon settlement of il wronatul deatb suit
aaalnat the ·fert!Uty clinic that
helped In the conception of the
~eptuplets - four boys and three
alrls.

NTUCKY
FRIED
CHICKEN LIVERS ·

, .., \

�I

..

---·

-

... ,

.

25, 1991

!!~!a~B!:!The~~o~~~s.mn~~
·~~!_________~----~~---------1P~w~m~·~o~y~-=M~~~~~~e~~~~~~~~~----------~--------~--------F~~~d~•~v~u~~~w.v~~2~5~,!19~9~1~-~~~:

-

Chemistry s
By LISA JIABRJS

'

UPI Sporu Wrller

TAMPA. Fla.- When training
camp began, Buffalo Bills Coach
Marv Levy beseeched his play·
ers to get along with each otl!er.
At the lime. down In New
Jersey, Giants Coach Bill Parcells probably was Insulting
somebody- no surer sign all was
well on the squad. . ·
The Bills claim last year's
Infighting was overblown, but the
!act is they weht 9-7 and this
s quabble-free season . has
brought them to Super Bowl XXV
Sunday against the Giants . .
"We were so anxious to get to
camp ," Buffalo receiver Andre
Reed said . "We wanted to put
las I year behind us. This year, we
wanted to come together as a
team . Not getting here sooner
was frustrating.· I think If you
talk to a lot our guys, they'll tell
yqu we had the talent to be here,
and It was just a matter o! us
pu ttlng It together."
The Giants' road to the Super
Bowl was paved with draft picks··
and Plan B acquisitions. The
~oncept of team unity as a goal Is
difficult to contemplatec
"As long as we don't have any
problems, that's an. I care
aboui, " said New York's Mark
Collins - and Lawrence Taylor,

.

.. .

Carl Banks, Parcells ...
The Bills' history Is well·
documented: receivers Chris
Burkett and RoMie Harmon
outraged Bills quarterback Jim
Kelly with dropped passes.
Kelly, In turn, alienated his
recelV!!rS. .
Burkett \Vas traded and Har·
mon was left unprotected. In
between those exits, Kelly In·
jured a, shoulder last year and
blam!!d tackle Howard Ballard
for miSsing a block. (Ballard IS
still a Bills starter.)
Star running back Thurman
Thomas :... speaking tor several
Bills on national television- had· ·
enough and let loose about
Kelly's whining.
Retired tackle Joe Devlin Is the
Bills' all-time leader In games
played, but along with .Harmon
was viewed by teammates as
·dlvis lve.
,
Two assistant coaches had a
fight.
An clubhouse argurtlel)t took
on racial overtones and led to a
boom box tieing ripped from the
wall.
,.
They were soon nicknamed the
Bickering Bills,
Imagine the Giants' equivalent: Phil Simms blaming Mark
Bavaro !or dropping a pass and
Jumbo Elliott !or miSsing a

....

block? OttJs Anderson publlclz·
lng It? Lawrence Taylor resented? LucltcroUI.
·
WltnesatheGiantsllnebackers
three days before the game
maklngahomemadeSuperBoWI
Week video - "Independent
Players Network."

MELBOURNE, AustraUa
. With the fourth set and tile
(UPI) - Defending. champion match In his grasp, a muffed
IVan Lend! fq!Jght off a temper ·volley and then a dOuble ·fault
tantrum · and two match points ·took the match to the fifth set. '
Friday to defeat No. 1 ranked
"It was a couple of Inches
Stefan Edberg In five sets to below the tape and he was bold ·
reach the final o! the $4 million with It," Lend! said o! Edberg's
Australian Open.
first match point. •'It was a brave
Lend! rallted to defeat Edberg shot be was piCking to play.
6-4, 5-7, 3-6, 7-6 (7-3). 6-4 In the There wasn't much margin for
!our-bour, two-minute match. He error."
·.
will meet Boris Becker, who
· The double fault on' Edberg's
defeated Patrick McEnroe 6-7 secondmatchpolntwasoneofU.
(~·7), 6-4, 6-1, 6-4 In the otl!er
"One every second service
semlllnal Frldav.
game, not counting tlebreak·.
McEnroe, thll younger brother . ers," Lend! said. "I don't think
o! tennis giant John ~cE;nr!)!! but It's so bad. He always goes tor his
.
himself rank!!d just ,114th In the ser\te."
Edberg said he couldn't recall
world, split the first two sets with
· Becker, the world No. 2.
a ctoulile fault at such an
Lendl's trip to the final Is his Inopportune time In such an
fourth, and he'll be seeking his Important match.
"I'm sure It has happened
third consecutive Australian
tlt:dberg's biggest problem
seemed to
tiredness.

POLICIES
' Ad 1 outa-d~: M•ngs.. G..lli1 or MMon counti• ltl\111 be pre

.ctt ••d '" I!NMnce.

~~~~~d~~=~!~h~S:rlflnalof

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
. 2 .00 PM MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
2 :00PM. TUESDAY
WtDNFSDAY PAPER
2.00 P M. WEDNESDAY
lHURSOAY PAPER
2 :00PM . THURSDAY
t-HIUAY PAPER
2 I'JO PM . FRIDAY
SUNOAV PAPER

COPY DEADliNE

IIJUIW._. .._

..

Br~ndeiii4,WPIM

COnt. Oollllldlellt7f, Rider 69

CIHk f'T, W11Joyu 66
mu--..micn 19, Soaquobanna 68
!'alrltlah Dldducll ll9, LIU-BroolciYJI 70
f'redOIIIa St. n, OlwtiO St. 67

J
r

i'•

r.tuMCI. Will contldtr

16
16
15
16
15

3
6
10
Monthly

R•tes Me fOf con•wtiwe runs. t.rot.n upd-vs wt11 be c:e.•gld
for e.ch d~ ••
ads.
.

sep••••

Evangel 82, GracelaDd 67
Findlay 82, Ohio Domlnlcan 75
Greenvute 75, McMurray 61

~··

"'f ~ .

• • :;..

I

,., .• .w •

Ullnoii-Chlcogo 61, Northern Iowa 59 OT ·-,. ' Indiana 70, Michigan 60 ·
·
••.,i1
·· Lakeland 69, Northwestern Coli. 65 .·~~:k
LeWII 81, Southern lnd, 77
·
LOyola (Ill . ~ 102, St . Louis 7l
a:,f·
Malme 115, Lake Erie 61
,..........,,

.:

-

'

1 C•d Ol •Th•b
2

I

'\Qe'•

Marquette 68. Evansvtlle 57
Ohio St. 80, Minnesota 70
Oral Roberts 84. Drury 74
Southern DIIDols 79, Bradley 69
Tulaa 70, IJidlana St. liB
WIYJIO St. 8:), Mlclllpn Tocll73

, \!"•

I

F,. Pllflllltl, a.....,_ CGINo 11- Help Wanted
Milt, 7 old, I'MdJ to gol
1111.
1 for vl08t:k:.n 1 work own houH.
.......... bt .... _ , SoH A-. FrM atft with algn:IQ4:e7S.'n15511ttt f:GO llll-ldt. up. caH Kt!J, 8tWII:I-neo.
AVON • All .,.., Clll Mtlrltyn
waav.-.214..
6 Lost &amp; Found

"',,,-"'.
......,V'

fM.•

,.

WIEonatn 7~ . Nortllwestern 57
Xavier (Ohio) 69, Detroit 67

·.::: ~t,
ottllfllll'

. . ..

·~

..

..

1185 Ford R1nger plck-ilp In
good condhlon. $2250.00. 114·
1112·21211. .
19M Fold Rtngar, - 4 wheel
drlvt, AMIFM Clutttl, AC 1 tilt
wltNI, low m!l"!'Qe- 114-441-

·vans Sale

7

32

Amtouum ..u

l

4 Gi¥eawav
5 H•py Ada

I Loat •nd Found.
·1 Y•d Soltlpold ln odv•ncel

pagc•s I'UI'I'r I lu•

Mtlta County
Ar.. Code 114

GaHipolis
Ch•hlfe
Vhlon
Rto Grw1de
251 Guyen Diu
143 Arabi I Dist.

U1aon Co .. WV
Ate• Code 304

446
367
388
24&amp;

843 Portltnd

379 Walnut

2&lt;17 letert Fells
••• Aadne

~

952 M - -

II&amp;

175 PI.·PI.-..nt'
458 l.an ·

-oroy

c....,

57&amp;

742 Rutltnd

w..ted to luy

.

117 Cootville

sI - \1 II; I~:-;

11 · HeloWIMed .
12 SilUiilion WantM
13 . lnturanc.
14 Butln•s Tr•nHlg

15 Sc:hool1 •

61 ·· Farm Equepmont
6 2 . W lilted lo 811y
6 3 Li\leslock
64 H1y &amp; Gflin
66 · Stted • ferhlil'er

II@I I

8 Pubtic 181•• AltCtkln ·

41
42
•tl
44 ..
41 ·
4&amp;

16 Radio, TV &amp; CB

ttou•• tor Rent
""obile Hof'fl" for A'"''

71 · Autos for Sale

Ap1nmn for Rent

72 . Twcllslor Solie
73 Van1• 4 WD's

Farm• fOr ft1n1

Furnilhld Rooms
Sp&amp;ce tor A tnt·
47 W.med to Rent
41 •.. E~uipment for Aent
41 Fora.. . .

1~

76
76
11

78
79

Rttp111r

11 Milcehneou•
1" Wanted y_, Do

773 Me1on
812 N.wHewen
I l l Lttatt

21 lutin•sOpportunity
22 Monay to loen

137

23 Prof•atonll Servic:•

61
&amp;2 63
14
lfi
51
57

--·
' .:.fioi'l

•..
··~
IU'!~··'
" f~

·-

I

Motor.:ycl•
Boats&amp; Motors tor S;~le
Auto PAlla &amp; Aecesso"as
Auto Rep;tir
Ca ,npmg EqutpmtlfU
CMmpeta • Motor Hom~s

81

Humelmprowmenh

, SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
riEMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
-•FIREWOOD

85 Gtmwll Haultny .
86 Mobil• Home RlltPillir
8 7 Uph0111ely

68
II For Sale Dr Trade

, PubUc Notice

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Public Notice

USED RAILROAD TIES

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

•Remodeling and
HomtJ Rapairs
•J'Iooflng
·

ELECTRICAL SERVICE
Residential and

•Sidi?l!

Commercial

•Painting

REWIRING AND
TROUILE SHOOTING

NO JOB TOO SMALL
I FREE ESTIMATES

Certified Elactrlda•
FrH Estimates

' CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
992-

992-6648 or
698-6864

12-31 -BO·tfn

31 Homn for Sale
5 room, bath, 3,000 down, $200
month for 5.yNrw lntertt1 Included, morw lnto1 114-912-2440

GOVERNMENT HOMES from $1
(U repal!l. Dotlnquent tox
pt"Opertr· Aepoee...lon•. Your
Irati 111 IOHIHOOD Ext. GH4112 fa' cilmnt -1111.
For ule or rent. 3 bedrQOm

houte, 40! Spring Ave.,
Pomeroy. 114144a-73Bt day1,

8141448.a325 tvenlngt. Far further

Information

Cllll

ue o.M4.

2 bedroom tUmlahed In Now
Htvart, WV. SoourHy depoe~

Rea l Estate

'

44f-4222.

1 lumlahtd, 1 unfumlahod;
aach 4 rooma '&amp; bath. No pate.
Refartnca &amp; Socurtty Dapoalt
e14

Business Services

8 2 Plumbing • He •mu·
83 E J&amp;C.vating
84 EltiCirical &amp; Retug••hon

qulrM. Call Lafayette Mall 814·
44f·TT3~ 0&lt;

collect

601/7115-21111. Will finance.
Quaint 2 bedroom home In

111c

cond, mkt 20'a. 304-175-1370 af.

ttr4:00 PM.

and reterenc11 required. 304·
812-32t7.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES 531 . Jtockaan Plko
tram $1i2tmo. Walk to 1hop &amp;
movln. Cell li4-4411·25155. EOH.

Fumlatt.d
utiiHIM
Second

Apl"llltnl,

pakt,

~~'J

GROOM
ROOM

FOR SALE: 69 Ford ~ Ton P.U.,
·very good condition; 75 Cadillac
Cpe., good condition; 65,000
btu electric furnace, used 2
winters; hay, small bale.
992-5888

Con~plete

Grooming

For All Breeds

EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Operator

.614-992-6820
Pon1era,v. Ohio

YARDMAN &amp;
ECHO DEALER

length IIW
chains and acce8IO·

riel
, I
eKeroaene S1oves &amp;
Wick a

205 N. Saclllll StrH1

We Do Wick Repair

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
742-2455
Sidthill Rood, Rutland

THIS l"xl"
....... BULLETIN BOARD
I SPACE AVAILABLE I
- AT •5.00 PER DAY' ·.

MIDDlEPOIIT, OHIO 45760
'Olflu 614;992-2186
HOME 614-992-5692
DOTTIE S. TUINU, IROKEI

11179 Llbtrtv moblla homo,
141!1, 1 btth wlgardan tub, 2
bodloome, good cond. S7,200.
304.f71-721T or &amp;7!1-7337 after
1:30PM.

HOUSES•LOTS#FARMS
COMMERCIAL

Metric, w8thtr dryer~ AC, gOOd
condMlon. I14-258-T667.
1115 2br 14xl0, HOllY Park for
ule. Excellent condhlon. May
conaldar land contnct. ft4-441·

' We Need Llotlnt!•!
l
11·5· '11-fln

12-24-90-1 mo.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

-

1110 12d0,

Commod~~

tot11

1405.

: USED APPUAJICES
90 DAY WAIUIIn

WAIHRS-$100 up
DIYIS-$69 up
.IIFIIGEIATOIS-$100 up
•IANGIS-Gas-Btc.-$125 up
' fftEUIS-$125 up
OVENS-$79 op

'

•oo

: KEN'S APPLIANCE
.
SERVICE
992-5335 .. 915·3561
Acrooo frotW Poot Olfkt
POMUOY, OHO,
I0!30fl9 tfn

HELP. WANTED

BISSELL
IUILDEIS ·

Public Notice
.... .. ....... 11,710

............. 1.000

'

.:lit: . ~ ......

201 NORTH IICDND AVE. '
MIDDLifiORT. OHIO
OFFICE 112-2111/HOME 112-1112
DOmE 8. TURNER, BROKER

IIDOLEPOIT- AIIIIYa ..W llol.._,_ This one is
wox. 10 ,n. old and he been r...ild., 11 over. 11112
bedi'OOftll dtnm and I loll bedroom up. Cltl!lllral ctlllnlln·
livlnl raamt new IIIJII front and rw pon:h111. Grell view of
riVIt'. MUS S(f TO SEE HOW CUTE.
S2UOO
FIATIOODS lOAD - AIIOWlniiiM. Approx. 3 acres with
111'111 Iarine bulltlln1 111 • moiiHe home sill. TPC nter
IVdlblt. flll:trlc lin• ICIWIIII praflllty. flrmttn Home

Appre l!ld AI- l'lld)fO ... jtllt naeda ,_.,,
'

...000.

IIDIKIPIIT -l'tlul MlnMt- Alli ~hoint wlllt
¥inyllldiR&amp;Itllulltion; 3 bedt
ltrllllvilli rooi!hdlnln1

••w.

- · 1111 -

-

Plllllinl

tR,OOO.
I.OIIImllt- t:rlt.ll Cllw- Appm. hcrdtl wfth

250"" ol rMrfrlnllllollalldot*.llllllltlc ... and 115

yr. old rlfiCII w111t 3 tadrOOIIII, llld 1 flllly roam. A21i Cll
111111 11th vilyllidln~ end IIGDdburner.
152.000

CUSTOM llaT ·
HOMES &amp; GAIAGU

"At It

Mil

'I Prtc."

~1.

tct-1101
or ln. 949-1160
Day or NJpt
NO SUNDAY CAllS
4-11-H-1111

....

•etOWAVI
OVII-AII

...........
IlL M• I

DR'S~CI
Ah'ICI
Ht·SIIS er
tii•IS61

__ ,_ ... ......

. ···-

117L ...... It.
1/

RETAIL SALES
PERSON

•

... . . if
~

a growlntl

•

,.,
~

o\
•1
,..
.~

.~

tr

·"
•'
,.r:

. .....ny.

THOMAS DO-IT
CENTER

,.,.

(814144~-2002

••
,,""

Mr. Thomaa
lltE HARDY OUTSIDE WOODBURNING
H~TER WITH INSIDE THERMOSTAT

.........
....................
_
.....
_..,
.......
_
............._

(PAI . . IEII)
11"1&lt;~---

..-.~,_

Construction

.u.,..,...._
...,.....
....,
................
4IIMIII-.t- d

992·5009

I.CWIIVDY 11 1101111

.

e.w.

...................

~Gutter

VICrrtKERtmte'S WOOD HEATING

Helmet

. "'-l*lAMIIIiilleriPA

IUTWID - .,.,_. St. - Alll'ltlaiWIIIt I niWIICtionll
lhllla 21x52. Rlllr lllltllilulwD Clllllllrll Clillnp, akyl,..._ bly wtndow,~.llrdlllllllll "~ 311111,..., diniiiiiGOII
and two 1111111. 1ne ~- h• PIIIOUI Oil Clllillll.

SPECIALIZING IN ....

•Custom Bent Exhalllt Syatame
eComplate line of E11haust Supplies
•Handle and Install Monroe Shock•
Come and See Us For A Free lnapecllon
and Eallmate
PH. 614-915-3949 IODIIEY UUII
. 1- lottom. Oh. 45743 ·
472.9 Sl II 241
'

' ·

·

·

..,

.

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•ReplaciiiMftt
Wlndolivl

•Roofing
•lnsuletlon

JAMES 111511
992-2772 or

'

'I

••
:-

..... ....,.

742-2251 -

1139 Bryan Piece
Middleport. Ohio
11-14-tfn

tn •·

s.c.-

Midlllaport

Hand Tufting
Cultom Dntpal

v.... Eopori.....
614·991·1321

36
We

s.,. Whit We Do.

We Do Whit We Sty.

Uomu ,,.,, 1-8M4112.

tNT 14111 mobile home In
Mlddl-rt. Celt Tom AndertOn
114-1112·3348 after 5:00 p,m. .

-

35· Lots &amp; Acreage

·.

LOTS FOR SALE In Clalllpolla
"':"~::::':"::~::-::~ Ferry. Will tccept tnllera, city
=~ •••ll1bl1. Phon~ 304.f75-

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOLUTIONS, INC.
•ON -SITE S,ERVICIJ f lli!PAII\
•CUSTOM PROtiRAMMIN&lt;i
, SALES
•ON-SITE CIISTOM TRAINiNli

Route 2 Aahton, I •cra lotak 3
mllaa t10uth Gllllpotla Loc a,
public will•, no r,ltrlctlons,
tome with rtver trontagt, 304571-2338.

' .
..:v-, ......

....:,.~·...-..,, (

lluiiiQI

......Ia ....,
U - RIYit' Rd. ltal&lt;la Stone
C:O.II-1. CtiH 814-441-73VI.

lllng 11B Wllor bad whh -

-

IOMI, 304-815-1781.

Manor

and

1188 S..10, 4 cyl1 5 epeed 1

.,....

1112·2214.
1981 Ninon P.U. $4,900; 1911

Nluan P.U., auto, low mila,
$4,100; 1988 Nloaan P.U. 84,000;
1880

$11100i

Finance. &amp;14-28e.flo:a.

·

PICKENS FURNITURE

11118 ·1!10, 330 ....... •x·
oelient cond~lan.~,IOO; S{ngla
IIHotO&lt;u•uolhoooldld tumlahlng. 1!2 mi. lot1om II lnoh ,...,., S110; &amp;ft.
Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WV, b&amp;MM1 $110. IM-441·7M4.
ctll -..71-1450.

CMYI'CH~

~

3411. Dual Ttndam Alt1e Troltar
wtth Hydroullc Neck •
Hydnullc Wtneh. 114--22.
U 5-TO llutr, V.f 2.e lhar eng,
4x4, air, auto trana, tltt, AMFIII

cond, 72,000 ml•a.

want J)iiW' ott 114
1112-Stlltl.

ue 8227

or

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD'a
1182 Datlion King Ctlb tNck, 4

whHI drtv•, toob a.ood runt

good, now 11-1 $1,1150. 304-1'111- .
2217 or 5'111-238&gt;.

NEWLY
REMODELED with
RENT and • low dt-'1 to fh
your budoot. 1 ,_.oon tnl.
p1u1 utlllfln, 2 "lllrga" bodrooma $185. plua utiiMIM. ldaal
for tlngtt pa110n, .,.nttd
couple, conllructlon - . . .
neodlng to tvoid h!ith m0t111. For mCHW lntormlillon
call 304-8'111-4100, 171-2053 or
175-3411.
Tara TownhouM Apenmenta,
E1111ant, 2br, 2 f-, 1Ill aq ft. T
112 bllhli CA., CH, Dlehwuher1
Dlapoaal, Playground, 2 - ·
Water I G•rbage lncl~ In
Rtnt, Start II S2fi. e14-3117·7850·
Unturnlahed one beclrODm 10111
el1ctrk: 1p1rtment. Me•lmurn

1181 Honda, XR-10, o...t eon..
dltlon, New Tl,.., C.rbur1tor,
Chain and Me&lt;el 1400 llrm. 114-

15151, IMn WV.

75 Boats &amp; Motors

W.gon Wball bunk btd1
wllrilll- • box aplinga. »GG.
304.f'III.:Z4111.
H11y For Sala: Round Bal..,
W.tklna Produdt.Ctlll ,.....,_ Delivery'• Av•llable. 614-446·
302'1, an. 1:00 p.m. -dayt, 10!2.
Hay1
IHIItt, $1.00 e~~eh ,
:53:.__,:.A;;,M;;,I~qu::.:e.:.S.,.....,,.-- 304-4182-2537.

.,.ua,..

54 Miscellaneous
MI!'Chandlae

11111 01c1o CUIIaaa, low mlla1ge, '
no r~.L.cleln1 _w•ll rMintalned 1

M K Yellow aold, 112 c Mtoqula
diamond. witT! 5 dl1mond chiPI
on aach llda ot IIOIMI. 11200.

~oelnMrt, tDO; 8x10 CU•

·-31.

...ked,

-

-hot

$200. -

Building

Supplloa · .

AC, or,wl, te... 114-441-4503.
11111 EICamlno SS 114·185-4308,
aatttarJim. ·
11177 · Plymouth, I cylinder
......, $32!. Rune Good. 114•
4411'.0433.
11111 camaro V.f tuto, !'!L pb,
tlr, tift, very ~ C() .....lon,

-.114-1112-2171'

11179 Ptymouth Hor11on, ·Good
llhapa, fotr mlln. A1klng $!500,
114 141 0152 1ftorlp.m.
tm Volkawogon 1550. 19'111
Chevrolet trucli $800, 198!5 Cutlltl $2,800. 1988 Ford Mar·

~

•

''
Services

••

..
•

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondltlontl llfltlma goarontM. Local refennctl tumllhM.
F... tallmttH. Cell ootttc1 1•
114-237-o488, dar or nigh!.
Rog.. IIMmlnt Wll.,prOI&gt;flng.
Compllle Mobllt •Home all up~~&gt;
&amp; rlaalr1, alto plumbing •
.a.ctrle~~l, rooflna, . r•n••9illna,
patloa &amp; clackl tlc. REIIQOEl·
' INGI Reflr-. Elllmot...
f14-258-111T.
'
Ron'a TV Sorvlct, .-ltlllllng
In Z.nfth eleo MI'Yk:lna moet
other br~nde. HouM celf1, 1110

_ . aootlanco ,...,., WV
304.alW43tl Ohio 114'441-24114.

Sopllc Tank Pumtllng $110~Clalli41
quia $1,1100. 304-175-2440.
Co. RON EVA~S ENTERPHISES,
TIIO Ford F·TIO Pick-up, 6 Jtokloo, OH 1-IOD.a37-H21. .
oytlnder enatne, run• good, car
0.¥11
llw·Yac
llrvle11
. . . n, $1,000. 614-!!157-7!104.
a-goa Crltk Ad. Part., aup1111 Che'll'.., new p•r1• $800 pl'"., pickup, and dellvwy. 114441&lt;~294 .
114-1186-44114.
1187 Chovy Cavolltr, AC, tilt
wheel, AMIFU caiMttt, low
mlttage. 114-441-11112.
Tl87 Olt!t Roy1l 88, 52,000
mU•,
exc.llent
condition,

lOaded,

11._.....2251

IHtr

1•

1100; 1170 Oktti CUILI• 1850:
NO Auto laloa. 4 mltta N. of

-

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Ctlrttr'l Plumbing
andHaatlng · ·
FourtllondPfne
Gtillpotlo, Ohio
1111 411 5811

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

'

..

.'
.,
'' ......

85 General Hauling

11M . - Dodae

DaW(OM,
Tin, Bun.
Root, 1 OWnar._!4,.... 114-381-

Autet~urUc, Alr,l:N~J

11$1, ............111.

..

111i Unooln Town car. Lo.adod.
Laathtr - · · t . m~::c Ex•
oetttnt condHion. 1
157
."tr 5pm.
Jt' .

.,•
'

Auto Pant &amp;
Accessories

•-• w•-· Hotur. ll4-4-.e!l.

=:n*"

LocatM On Saffan khMI ltl. eH lt. 141

-.-.

marine l'lldlo!L Fwuno radar.

Improvements

lp.m.
Aew a If: Aah, oak, hJtkory, 1eee lor-. a.e MFI, 1 apeod,
Plnotd. d e l - 114-2411- dlghtll d11h, low mllta, nee!lint condHion. 17,200. 304-882·
lllt.
2351 """"5:00PM .
Mixed hlnlwood tlaba 110.00 1·
Chevrolat · Spectfom
buntlta. Waakdayo 7:30 t.m. • Ttll
1;30 ~.m.... .,Ohio Pllllat Co., IZ.500: 1111 PontiH, 6,000
PooMtY,unoo·114-112.f.411. . $3,100~111 !lodt• 100 $3,200;
1111
Fta!lvt 82,100; 11118
~-hero, DryttL Pontleo Or1nd Am 82;!:_~; TIM
Q-tad - p i IWYloO for lololl -~~ 821~ ; . 191S
Pard laoort S.W.; tN3 Dodge
.........
- ·141
ThtlH44.
Orytr.._.ITI
Omnl, tiJOO:
A1na~n

.IENNm'S MOilLE HO..E
HUnNG I COOLING

\

..•"

Home

-1'111. 840.

MOilLE HOME FURNA(ES- HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNA(E PAm
.

~

COif 61~1-6""" ofttr 7p.m,.

Buy "' - · Rlvwlna Anti!!,.., Ml.:ed gra.. h1y For ule, $1
1124 E. Mtln St-, P-roy. bola. IT4-9112-37011.
HouN: M.T.W. 10:00 t.m. to 1:00
P;~~nclor 1:DO to e:oo p.m.
Transportation
I
·211211.

. .. 114 • 11 ,.,"·
PLea ad,
aDitt.

Nott /11
Sto6UI

~

•
"
..."
:

Bluewater Yacot 1f78 3511. Ttrnl ·
CniNd.rl Kohl1r Gtn., Snlfftr,
AJC, Hut, Very nlca lumhurt
tnd tuk.lnt., Blttary ehlirgtr1 2

76

fi7
Upholst...,
::::=~~~·:-:-·

·--

!lowrtr'a Upho(ll!!!ng inti InIn-.nly
21 ,..,., Thtl
lllmftu.. utrot.torlntl.
Cell 304-8'71-4tllol for ..... ...
tlll!atta.

.

.

~

for Sale

tom Ut1111)' Tralie'rL 1800. e14-245lfiii,E-ngunorlp.m.
-'II......~~1"11111 Conolwl•
• ....- aapllc tonkt,
Aot1 l¥1,.
Ente- Jtck·
- . OH 1-.t,.f121. .
FLea ad, lAra- pickup kiM,

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

i
•'
••,•'
,

448·11134.

two - " 1 . Socurtty - " a
,.,.,.,... requbed.. tl41112· 81t ... 0305.
20114.
4ftr lil.fold mtnowod c Vacanoy • Twin R._. T-, clocira, nw, $1211. llaod elec,
ltoualng, lor tho aldartv1 Mn- Wlllta Wutlnghouaa •ova, tea.
dlcoppid, dlttbled. Renllna. tor ~304::.f:::7&amp;'::::'11,::111:::;1::._·...,.---,--:--::-1 311'1(, of td)ulltd 1 - . tl
·
·
utun~aa tnalildad In ..... """"' · AAA Por!IW """' 1nd ''""'"·
ho,.lna -unny. F• - r y. T-100-~34113
304~7USTI.
::an:!wt:::lma::::_. .:..
· ---.,--.,-.,- - - - . . : . .·.- - - - Aqua~um, 155 and 40 gal coin45
Furnished
. blnotlon, wlllend, flah tnd all
Rooms
... _. ... 304.f71-'INT.
Bl• 4br firm houM buln lot
· ·
• ••• tll6
Soa our,_
Slooptna rooml with -lng. you. -~
~
Al10 lf'tlller apace. All hooll:~ iMdlts. 14-881· 1.
Cd •Mftar a:OO p.m., :IQ4.
BlOck
Ia~
W-mlng .

11·---------....1.-.;________,

'

~

,._

milt btlow townO:;.:'t*lng
river, CA, hNt,
, R•f.
611 Ill 0338.

•

window• 5000 mQea 114-la!225.

aXe-l~

apt~

NlctiW turnlthed mobile home, 1

•

camino P.U., 12,000; 11&amp;0 AUio
SatH, Hwy. 110i._4 mltta N. of
II! MF DieHl Tract"!j $3_,950;· Holzer 814 4te !R!I.
10811 MF ll,850; 100 rord with 1190 Ford 4x4 XLT Larlll,
Ford Lalder, 82,ft~j_OWnor Will AMIFM eu..nt, pe, pb, P"f'r

All

qulrad, 3~·25JII.
Llrgt 2br, . partl1lly fumlalltd,
wtter paid, $200/mo. Main
Slraet, Chaahil1, 6T4-24H811.
Now 1 bedroom funilahtd tpl In
middleport call 114-llt2•11304 or
992.a225.
.

•,

31:::"::.·- - - - - - 1:;

Al.,.rslile

reterencee

•

61 Fann Equipment

Aplrtmantt In Middleport. From
$1111. Ct111114-11112·TIIIt EOH.
lri Middleport, Ohio, N. Third
and

-

1981 Nl-n, 4x4, P.U. M,400;
1912 Dodge P.U., V.f1 0111!1.

upeta!n,

1br,

tJh

Gracloua living. 1 2 bodroom apflrtment8 at Vlllega

) 446 -6000

\ '

.......

tnnamlnlon 1

whool, AMIFM Starao EJtCellent
condHion, 72,000 mhn. Want
Pay-Off. t14-44H227, 114-1112-

1 poraon. 114.,141-GUB.

10·111-1 1110.

MUOO

OOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wuherl, d,_., re_trtaeraton,

Llbrlry, Plrklng, centl'lll hut,
rtference required, .unable tor

mlfN(i VAUlY PIIOFESSIONA~ BUILDING
106 JACKSON /!IKE · SUITE 20J
GAWPOL/S, OHIO 4J6JI

ol Mli/11''"

UPHOLSYEIY

1/3/9111 mo.

_.,

r~------~.....;,·..!.,__

I'

/tltl

· We HaYI Changed Our Location To
1tf2 MiiH East on Rt. 248 through
(hester, Oh.

I

HardWllre, Lumber,
Building Mlterille.
Mlllt hlive operlenDII
In theM lln1111. FuN '
time with benaflbl .
J~ln

KELLER'S CUSTOJt'l BENDING

1190 Clayton T4x5f, 2 bod·
room•, cMtnl •1~11 electric,
prlcad to ull, ~4-r r...llse.
2 lA 14x70 1110 Norfle. lola o1
mna. 114-211-IIOel or 304.f'lll•
T..,O.
For .... ,.nd or tr.ller or both1
located on Rt. 2 nur Flotrock,
304.fll-3314.
Looldng For AOUt? Conalt!tr A
aank Radalmtd lloblla Homo.
~ 0... Payment. Clll Elaaa

llpotia, ....

qulrtd. l1""""!-e523.
Fumlehad .i.p1rtmMd:, next to

depo11t

•Any .

&amp; Livestock

A•ferllnc• ,...

Ava, 1 bedroom fvmlahed

THE

Instruments
1112 ....,.. ..... tea. Kltehtn
oarPI'! II wd. lllollohan luml- 83 Klmbal Org1n M50 114-387turw. A. 111 North. ~~~44.
7132.
COUnty Applla-, Inc. Good
uatd tpptla.-, T.V. uta.
1 a.m. to I p.m. Mon•.&amp;d.
Farm Supplies
44f.1H!.,. m Std. Ave. o.t-

0::

1 BR, $300/mo.; 2 BR, $400/mo.;
2 roome &amp; bath. $1~ . All
utliHIH lncluclod. DoJ?Oilt ...

Professional ·
Services

Servrces

Hou•hokiOooda
Sporting lloodl
Antiques
Mile. Mlfchandiae
8uilding'Suppli•
Pets tor Sale
Mutical lnstrum~tl
Frwit1 &amp; YegMabl•

Apartment
for Rent

44

"""~

1

Trdrlspo rl aiiOn

lnsuuc~ton

Apple Gtove

BuffalO

Mobile Horn• tor Saltt

automatic

Musical

57

GoodI

1

33 Fams lor Sale
3 I 8Ysin•e 8uild'ngs
35 Lois • Acreege
31 Rul E1111e W.med

gina. 4x4, wtth air conditioning,

Household

,\ L vl!stuc k

31 · Hom• lor ....

In Memory

Ellltlll'lli 'l' lll

Gelli• Counly
Are• Code 614

ln.

$3,100. 304-112-3311.
For Sala Or Trtd•:. 1U'I Dl.ttun
280 Z·X Good COndHion, 82,400.
114-44&amp;-0840, after 5p.m.

..

F&lt;illll ~IIOI,l i"S

g·

C/a.~sifi••ll

tr~de

8Uk:ka ftneet 1D83 Park Avanut,
4 door, lOaded IncludinG crultt,
l!ir tnd " 00. Exc concf, 18klng

11· 12·90·tfn

.... 20.710

1190 D1ytona ~s. 7800 mlln...VI , 1lr,~ CNIM, tilt. wh..l, AMif'M
cuutt". No ruiONble afMr

12

Muit Still 304-t75-3000 or 87531111.

a·uLLETit4 BOARD_

.......... 1,000
FIN·
IOUIICII

=.!f:'·

1892.
1tU 5-10 81110r, V.f, 2.1 on-

o,.r ~ 6 Words
Rt1t
.
.20
t4.00
86.00 .
.30
89.00
.42
113.00
.60
• t1 .301day
.06/d.,.

Words

.Days
1

.

1111 Gnnd Prlx1 !.. clod. Twotoned groy lnttnO&lt; 6 eliO!iof.
U1,4DO mit- Ctll 114-441-7307
or tnytl~ on

~, .., ,. , ,

Culver-Stcrkton 87, Baker 55

All&lt;e Uoyd 7!1, Ulllall (1()'.)72
CIDOiaD~tiiO. Tulane 56
Cou!ll ear&lt;ttu 115, C&amp;mpbell62
Coppin St. 85. Mo111an St. 1111
Evlnptl 82, Graclllncl 67
Geoi'JI• Souiii. . IN, Ta.-san All1cnlo B7
Geol'll• Tecll 89. Qsnom (18

,.llc Nallce

Public Notice

'11104.

·'·

.reo

•

following lf•l••l'·hclm• ••xf'ltatl/{1'.~ ...

das .. hud d1spl;~y . 8u1•••• C81rd and lugll not1cn)
w111 ..110 •PP•• 1n thu PI Pl~~taant Aeg111vr •nd thtt G_.h
puha Oalty Tr~bun.:. •u..ctung OVVf 18.000 hon, ..

TIIB2 Trona .~!.", rod, T~op,
83,000 mllee, ~75-3011.
1111 Cll•ro RS, Blue, auto, 1lr,
crufw, Utt, c1111tte ltiNO,
-rlocikl 1 ow"*l
with
..,..nty,
M,4ii.
Neaot obie,
mUll-· e-..711, 1114-441-

RATES

.
'Stttn Mutl t1 1101 rnpon1lble tor eriott ;,ttttr tint dlfWI . !Check
tor error S httl diV ad runs ·n\ pipurl . C11ll bllfore 2 .00 p ftl .
diff' •fl•r publtcalton to mak 11 correchun.

c~l

' .,.. . .

71 Autos for Sale

RenL1Is

Ra.. 111101-· Caft.

1£t .
...;mar 88, Louisiana Tech 77 .
..........
Momphla St. 61, F1ortda St. 66
.......
Morohl8d St. 88, Southern Utah 7~ .
··~
~·
NE Loulllana 96, SW Tex.a~ St. 76
RlldlOld 611. Charle$tcn Southern 57
~ .
South Alabama 88, Old Dominion 80
.t~ "'
Southern Mlsoisslpplll4. Louisville 81
StetiCII 93, Centenary 63
Swarthmll'&lt;' 87, Washlngtm Coli. 73
Te•.·ArliJIItm 64, McNeese St. 6J
Tu~rulum Col. 715, Warren Wllsm Col. 73
West VII'JI(nla 84, Geo111e Washlngtm 80
Xavier (La.! 69. Mobile 65
.. .....,; .
'
Ml.._l
py_,(l,
Butler 100. Dayton 95
.

'1'111~'• C.hae

.• The ·Area~s Number 1 Marketplace

' 7tK~m1 line .IYIHI only u...,d.

·A c: •-- ~··lod advtrrlilen'oot plo.c ed IP lhllt oa.ty Suntln .. tu .

rm~l
!
·~1

....._

IJ

'

;tds Give.way and found ads und• 1&amp;wordlwill btt
mn 3 d~s al no 'eh•ge.
• Puce 9f ad to• 111 capitltl•twa is doublu PfiCit of afl cost

'Ads th.. must be J*d·•n-.dvence •"'
Ctud ot lh.nluo
H..-pv Acb
In Mvmor~u
Y •d Sii&amp;UI

...-··
·
-

lf..J.-....c\

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrl1ht

HelpWantld

. ~ ''"t&gt;t')

'ffH

•

•
j

·1'

CoUege scores

Geoe\ol 83, Wheellna Jeslllt 75
RllmUtm f'T, llartwlcll: 56
Hofltn f7, w...
Howord IT, Md. Eulerll Sholl! 80
Kinas Coil 10.1, AtlaDtlc UniOD55
La Salle II, CaDIIAII 84
Naaamb 91, KlftCI Point 65
Rhllllollllacl 81, DuquenE ~
Rober! Morrtall9, Mt. St. Miry'S 71
sa .... 90, Manhattan 55 ·
Soutllem Mal10715, MOIL ·ShStM 6~
St. FrllldiiN.)'. )80, Marllt 63 ·
st. P'""ra 12, Ntoaara 10
·
Telllyo Poot 82, Alber!llo Mapus ~8
T4!111Pie 5!1. Mu•dnaaetta 53

LAFF-A-DAY ,

"Kl!lly's got a ·great ra~:~! ;_[:;,
offensively with. Ills play • - ~:
Taylo~ 58~-Js' bl h-strung talent ·-:~:
So e
B · · shar· ' ;.t_.
re::SU::~u~g~l!ea::n.ppa-~~pe
.
·
· d
r ,,. ~
ble ~lants b~~dp'::y arece~s· ·•:·:
seco ary,
•In b ks
•·•
and more runn g ac .
""" .

The Bills' low point came In the
ulde wileD you walk out on the
first round o! the 1989 playoffl
field and thlt'a wllat we did this
with a loss to OevelandJn wblcb
yeu," BUll All-Pro defensive
Harmon dropped !I pus with
end BrueeSmlthsald.
eight seconds left. 'Ibe turning .
'IbeyaiiOputtheballlntheend
point came whel) the Buffalo
zone more tllan any team In
P~yers left holding hands.
football, and that's all the Giants
You put your differences
care about.

l.endl gains finals in Australian Open . ·I

---Classifi

TO PlACE AN AD CAU 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.
1 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
'Rucvnw s.&amp;O dtscount tor

science for Bills, Giants

The

Ohio

•

�l
Page 10-The Daily Seutinel

'
Friday, January 26,' 1991

Pomeloy-Midclaport. Ohio

Expect more snow in (\)hio this evening.

.

By United Pl'eu IDternaUo.U
Snow is expected to return to
Ohio Friday night.
Lake effect clouds and a few
flurries were persisUng in the
extreme north Friday morning.
Otherwise skies were clear.
Overnigl!t temperatures ranged
from near ~ro to 15. The
warmest readings were in the
·extreme south and the cloudy
• northeast.

..

'

•.•.• .._

!?.fi',-1 ,"-"

._ ....&amp;a_...,.Wh
.

.,.,_.

~A

~IW"A

"Y"9" r.-

-

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,._

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..,..a F~

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,.....,.1\\\

-

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

,

High pressure was over Ohio Snowfall accumulations will be
Friday morning and the high will generallY one io two Inches. .
weaken Friday night as a low Highs will range from 25 to 35.
pressure area over the southern ·
Another weather system will
Plains moves through the Ohio move in) for Sunday, causing a
Valley.
threato!snow.Highswillbenear
.
, normalln .the 30s.
•
Snow will spread Into western
The extended forecast calls for.
Ohio Friday evening and reach
a chance of snow late Sunday,
the eastern co\llltles late Friday wtth1ows 10to 20and higl!s In the ·
night. Some flurries or snow ·JOs. There is a chance of snow or
co••ld l!nget Saturday morning.
1..
·

.Econ~mist says.only

~-

WEATHER lllJ\I' -It will be eold with a cbuce oJDurrles Ia ilie
northern Pial• and Great Lakes rellon. The ceatrat Rockies
could also aee a few flurries. Most of tile ilouthem llall of the
eountry wUI be matnly dry with warmer ~perature• under hlr;h
pressure. tbe Pacific Northwest will be m011tly cloudy with cool
templ!ratures. (UPI)

'

mild.

•

C,LEVELAND (UPI) - The projects hl!ve been cancelled. ·
chief economist of Society Corp.
"Capital goods manu!actur·
said that even though the Midw· lng, upon which Midwest busi·
est is In a recesSion, a survey of ness Is heavily dependent, should
business executives finds the hold up better than average
region should ex!Hlrience less durlng 'this· recession," Mayland
distress than in the past. ·1
said.
Sunday through Tuesday
Economist Kenneth T. MliY·
A chance of snow Sunday, ;md land said Thursday the Middle
The survey also ·found that
a chance of rain or snow Monday, East crisis remains In the fore- · : more than 85 percent of the
with fair · weather Tuesday. front of performance prediC'
business executives responding
Highs will be 111alnly in the 30s lions. But increased military believe they are experiencing no
Sunday, ranging from 35 to 45 spend!ng·could give the economy · difficulty in ~ecuring ci'edlt for
Tuesday, and from 30 to 40 a boost, he said.
·
new projects. And mote than 90
Tuesday. Overnight lows will be . . A December suzyey of 655 perce11t had no difficulty 111
between 10 and 20 early Sunday, Midwest busin.;oss execuUves on securing credit for cuqent proand in the 20s Monday and the outlook for 1991, detailed in jects. "There appears to be no .
Tuesday mornings.
the Society Economics Depart· pervasive credit crunch In this

-----Weather· ----I

~

Il

I

Soulb Central Ohio
Snow likely late Friday night,
with a low between 15 and 20.
Chance of snow is 60 percent.
Variable cloudiness Saturday,
with a chance of snow flurries
mainly in the morning, and highs
between 30 and 35. Chance of
precipitation is 5I) percent.
· Extended Forecast

Allies... ConU~ued from page 1

~~~~ ~~~~·~:::~;~~:~~~: ar::a~~;::::t~~:.ed~r~es

..
on capital spending plans Is
In the U.S. dollar could boost
no reports of casual ties.
and south ·of the country.
limited,
international sales, as competi·
Italy announced it has de, Allied comma!lders insist only
The survey sB.ld the Midwest
tors seize the opportunity to raise
; mUitary and strategic points ployed 62,000 troops and pollee
region has a number of things
prices. The survey found 52
across 4 he co\llltry to guard
have been targeted.
going for It in the coming year,
percentoftbeex~uUves!eltthat
· · "The enttre campaign is being against possible terrorist
lncl1Jding
strong export base
international sales of manu!ac·
conducted against the military attacks.
and cheaper _d ollar, an expanded
turing goods would rise, while 36
And the U.S. Embassy in New
, infrastructure with the express
and more stable service sector, . percent anuc,pate more domes·
: directions tliat they should avoid Delhi Friday advised Its citizens
and the absence of the dlsas-ttous
tic sales. .
.. ; causing any avoidable civilian . to leave India temporarily bereal estate problems plaguing
Findings of the Society survey
• casualties," Sir Peter de Ia cause of possible terrorist other parts of the country give
indicate that pre-tax J)ro!its
: Billiere, commander of British threats from Iraqi or Palestinian
credence to the region's ecoprobably will not show. robust
agents.
· forces, said Friday.
nomic and business success.
growth in 1991, but there should
Mosque preachers in Jordan
"The civilian casualties, and of
"Based on our survey, com·
'be some expansion in 1991
stepped
up their attacks on the
course there'll be some, are as
panies are not slashing their
profitability among Midwest
low as you can possibly expect in United States Friday and called
~apital spending budgets," said
firms.
: a war of this magnitude," he the leaders of the U.S.·led cosli·
Mayiand.Morethan77percentof
The survey respondents belion against Iraq the "wolves'' of
: said.
those execuUves surveyed felt
lleve the Midwest region ' has a
De Ia Biillere said lraqi leader the 20th century_
the Middle East situation would
: Saddam Hussein~s navy "is be- · "The infidels of the 20th
have no major effect on Midwest
• ing destroyed piecemeal." his air century's so-called civilized nacapital spending plans during ·
. force is "condemned to .Its !lons are killing the children of 1991. Delayed projects were
. • bunker, being picked off one by Baghdad," said Ibrahim Qatan, anticipated by less than 20
By United Press International
• one.'' and . his army is being preacher at the state mosque in . percent and o~ly 2 percent said
WASHINGTON- Planes were
: "degraded before our eyes." He Amman dUring Friday prayers.
sent
last week to bomb a site
· said communications between The sermpn was · brosdca,st on
where
Saddam Hussein was
Iraqi ground troops and their Amman Radio.
staying
but the mission was
In Moscow, the Independent ·
central command has been "seContinued
from
page
1
scrubbed
bec.ause of bad
verely degraded."
· lnterfax news agency reported
weather,
a
newspaper
says.
Tehran Radio, whleh has been that Saddam ordered the execuby Brenda Morris. Mtwris was apEASTERN SAUDI ARABIA _
giving details of allied bombing tion of the chiefs of his air force
pointed to that position after the
Allied
1
kill th
I
1s· d
and
anU·aircra!t
defense
forces
: raids, said Basra, which hosts
retilment of J111111 Walton, lmd the
orces
ree
raq an
their
apparent
inepti·
because
of
• important industrial, military
capture 29 in retaking a tiny
term is now expiJed.
: and oil targets and is Iraq's tude in the early stages of the
Middleport ·council seats now
·Oil pricee barely-- '
: second largest city, continued to war.
occ~ by J--. Clatworthy and
·But the press attache at the
reC'elve a heavy poundiruz.
William Walrers will ~ voted upo1i read to mis8ile attack
; Iraq also reported that cap· lraqi embassy categoricallY dethis year, and council member 1udy
lured all.ted airmen would not be nied to Inter!ax the reports of the
Crooks, by law, must. run on the By United Press Iliteraatlonal
, paraded for the tiine being on execuUon of the two mUitary
Awar-wearyoU market barely
ballot for the unexpired council
men, characterizing it as "part
1 Iraqi television. The tactic had
term to which she was appointed in reacted to Iraqi missUes landing
angered Western leaders and of the propaganda campaign ·November. (Crooks waa appointed in Israel again Friday with
: prompted cries of violations of against Iraq."
to fill the UIICltPiml term of prices settling back after a brief
; the Geneva Conventions.
Iranian President Akbar' cowx:ilmember Bob GilmOre, who rise.
.
· Tehran reported the sky in Hashemi·Ratsanjani said Friday
ltlSigned
hcalduasons.)
U.S. crude prices "popped"
: southern Iran was covered with his country would !'lot "commit
Jon P. Bucks clelt/treaiiii'CI' seat · about 15 cents to 20 cents on the
' thick columns of black smoke suicide" by entering the Gulf
in Middlepcxt is also up for a vote New York Mercantile Exchange
possibly caused by explosions at war, the official Islamic Repubthis year.
immediately after the missiles
oil wells in southern lraq and lic News Agency reported.
were reported .landing in Israel
· Kuwait.
Rafsanjani's remarks came a
shortly before 11 a . m. EST, said
: One Saudi pilot became "a day after Iran's Spiritual Leader
Tom Bentz, director of trading at
•
; national hero Thursday when he Ayatollah Ali Kharnenei said the
United Energy Inc. in New York.
: shot down a pair of Iraqi planes in Gulf war was not a Jihad or holy · DallY stock prices
He said the benchrriark West
· a dramatic aerial dogfight over war and had nothing tQ do with '( As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Texas Intermediate crude for
Islam.
: Saudi waters.
Bryce aad Mark Smith
February delivery was t~adlllg
The Washington Post, quotirig of Blunt, Ellllllo Loewl
Also Thursday, U.S. forces
around $21,70 a barrel, a penny
a senior U.S. ·government offi1 killed three Iraqi soldiers and
less than its Thursday close on
, captured 29 others in liberating cial, reported Friday that warAm Electric Power ............. 27%
the Mere, and moved up to nearly
the tiny Kuwaiti island of Qaruh, planes were dispatched last week . Ashland 011 ............ .... .. .. .. .. 29%
$21.95 a barrel after reports of the
: a small track of land with no to bomb a site where aiUed
AT&amp;T ..... . ............................31\i
mIss lie strike.
: permanent residents and which intelligence officials believed
BOb Evans ........... ......... :..... 1!1¥., .
Prices then quickly set tied
is often under water.
Saddam was holed up, but that a · Charming Shoppes .............. 11%
back to around $21.75 a barrel on
"It's not important, but it is storm over central Iraq forced
City Holding Co ........ ... .. .....14¥.,
the Mere, 4 cents higher than
slgnUicant that it is liberated," the mission to be scrubbed.
Federal Mogul .................... 13lj, Thursday's close on the world's
said Hasan Abdui-Aziz, spokesThe Pentagon insisted alUed
Goodyear t&amp;R ... ..... .. .. .. .......19¥., largest oU- trading excha'nge.
'. man for the Kuwaiti Information bombers are not hunting down
Key Centurion ... , .......... ... ...10*
An Israeli army spokesll)an
Office. · "It is the first piece of Saddam, but said the Iraqi
Lands' End .. ........................ 16% · reportedly said "a few missiles''
·land liberated from -the Iraqis," . president might find himself in
Limited I!!C ....... ..... .......... .. 21%
had landed, but provided no
·since Baghdad's Aug. 2 takeover the . wrol!ll place at the wrong
Multimedia Inc ........ :....... ... 59* specifics.
of the emirate.
time as warplanes zero· in on
Rax Restaurants .... .. ......... ... %
"I think the market is warIraq Friday belittled allled command and control faciUtles.
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. .. 21¥., weary and is starting to realize
claims to have liberated the
"If you were attacking the
Shoney's'lnc ....... .. ............... 12% that It's going to be a long, ·
island, and challenged the United United States, wouldn't you
Star Bank .......................... ... 17
drawn-out war," Bentz. "The
States and Its aiUes to. launch a target the Pentagon, where the
Wendy's Int'l. ...... .. .... .......... 6'h
market is starUng to discount
ground attack "if they dare."
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Worthington Ind ............... ....22%
some of the Middle East war
u.s. Lt. Col. Greg Pepin said Staff works? Would you be
news.
coslltion forces have shot down accused of attacking the Pen19 Iraqi planes In the war. More : tagon ot the ~hairmali of the
:than· 15,000 sorties have been Joint Chiefs of .Staff?" one
flown, including 8,000 combat .official said.
missions, he said.
White House spokesman Mar·
A Long Bottom woman was
U.S. officials said American lin Fitzwater said President
cited for failure to control Thursforces · were holding 80 Iraqi Bush and Secretary of ·Siate
day following a one-car crash on
.prisoners.
James Saker were both sorrieState Route 7 in Meigs County.
: In Athens, il Greek terrorist . what concer.n ed about the gen·
Pearl F. Edwards,. 51, was
;group claimed responslbiUty for eral mood of Americans.
cited after the crash In Chester
•exploding bombs at British and
''They shoUld not exP.CCt ·this to
Township. According to a report
:American banks and near a be over in a matter of days,"
from the Gallla·Meigs post Of the
French diplomat's apartment Fitzwater. said Thursday. "We
State Highway PatrOl, Edwards
. early Friday to protest aiUed need to get on an even keel in
was northbound when she appar·
attacks against Iraq. There were terms of the public psyche.
ently fell asleeP. at the wheel. Her
"There are going to be enemy
1986 Dodge Caravan went off the
victories. There are going to be
left side of the road, striking a
enemy surprises," Fitzwater
driveway culvert and traveling
said. ''There are going to be days
\nto a ditch. The van then flipped
when we'll see a!Ued losses and
over and carne to rest on its top.
'
: The · Meigs Counlf Sbtriff's we need to get into a frame of Edwards was traveling at apDepartment is iD~dna the mind that allows us to accept
proximately 55 mlles per hour at
theft of a stove at I cabin iD Mid- those reverses and surges but
t11e time of the crash, the report
sun keep track of the main thrust
said.
·
and
our coi!VIctlon that we will
.....•-- to Sheriff Jamel M.
Edwards was not hurt in · the
souli;,'Wes MUley •eptilal win, that we are being successful. accident.
earlier this weelc diiiiOIIIeOIIO bid at . this point· and in the final
broken into bil Smith Road Clbin analysis we wtll Drevail."
and stolen a ps SIDVe.
Soulsby abo iepoitl that the
. 1Wo calls fCI' •S'istmc:e ·depailment wu noriW on
answc:rM by unitJ of Meigs Couilty
Emerpncy Medical Services.
Thlnda.Jie.eveaina dill !ben Vetei'UI MeJDOrlalllololtal
twO
holes in a m!ljJbo"
. AI 2:41 p.m, Rutland sCpud 1D
: belonging to Tbm Soubby of Rock- . nruRSDAY ADMISSIONS
Hill
ROid Ccr Buddy ICuJn to PVH.
None.
springs Road ill Pllmeaoy.
. AI 6:32 p.m, Ruitaacf IQIIId to
nruRSDAY DISCHARG~ • Main Street fCI' Candy 'IUtis, to
The dqJ&amp; biiCiit reports dlat the
ThliiliiOii
Stone.
PVH.
.
time of the inc:~t ii IIOl known.
•

a

1

·

than .week

1

due"!

Stocks

Woman cited.after
Thursday. accident

•

'

.

::

A. '

dead :;

family to find him, the field ••
where Evans was found had been:
over looked..
·:;;
"The area is open and brushy ,•
and is really just the next:
residence over and back some,' :;
he said. "The area was not reaiiYt: .
well searched."
·
·•
Evans had been reported miss!:
log Jan. 21, and h~d been las(•
seen in the Bidwell area Jan. 1s::
The sheriff's depariment had at~
one time used bloodhounds an&lt;!:
had patrolled the area with a .
helicopter during the search fot·

t .,· .,.! "~;-'f'.·+'~

,.

~vans.

1•

The body had been coverect:
with snow, Indicating that it had•
been in the field for some Ume ; ~
Salisbury said. A .local funeral:
director had positively Identified·
Evans at the scene.
::
. Salisbury said the body would:
be transported Friday by McCoy;.
Moore Funeral ·Home .to thE::
Franklin County Morgue. An:
autopsy would be performed.
there to determine the cause o(;
dea_th, he said.
,.,.

.

Mystery farm
·winner announced.

I

I

Thursday two of t!Je cases were getUng hit by influenza, Halp~
in Franklin County and two other said.
were in the C~"ton area.
Common-sense precautions lnj
"It looks lyte the very, very elude regularly washing hand,
beghlning of I a flu outbreak," a!ld not sharing drinking glasses
1
Halpin said. · ·
Halpin said an anti-viral drug
Halpin said influenza can be called Symmetrel can be e!fec•
particularly lhreatening to el· tlve against Type A influenzas
derly and disabled people be- but it has to be given very early.
cause second4ry infections such
Type Bflugenerally tends to be
as pneumonia can · develop. less serious and causes smaller
Health officials recommend that outbreaks. However., "it's waY.
most elderlY and chronically ill too early to say" what to expec6
people receive flu vaccinations.
this year, Halpin said,
:
The state ha,ki prepared for the
Halpin said several school~
Type B Yam~gata flu . Health . around the state have reported
officials expected it to be among unusually high ai;lsenteelsm:
the strains to s\J'ike the state, so a Schools are required to report to
the deiJartment if 15 percent o~
more of stUdents are out sick. :
last year.
He 5llid about 20 percent or 250
1
Other than getting a flu vac- students at Heidelberg College in
cine, "there's really not a whole Tiffin have been out sick this
·
lot a person ·er n do" to avoid week.

~~c~~~~~:!n~~~~:~~~~~of1 ~~=

RAC accident lead~..
tq $27'100 in fines \·
.

'

.

1

·

POINT PLEASANT· - A fed- ·
E'ral investigation into an electrl-

_ ...

~-

·.

(

•

thellilestlines,spokeswomanDebbie Boger said. Ravenswood

·y;_
·u ng·
0·_.
.

is

. .

·'

a/. 'vicious _victimizer,' ·prosecutor say.'S ·
. "

a

·returned

felony convictions '!'as tried llefOJe timizer of the ·weak, who has no
on Friday, and ~se sense-of socialiesponsibility or sdf
u
Ia ed a IIU\JOC control
1
:'a~~ i::Ov ~eonss!~ce-· Young ."Hopdibe..~~Y·.::...Story
f ..~'!;
rece1ved. He was conviCted of ar· w1 11 _ u"" "'~ 0 ~"· 'oung_ s
med robbery in 1970 and of the preying on IIOCJety, sm_ce ~ St!D
murder_ of Mary Berry in Mason, ~~r ctwrs..{:,ng b1m m
W.Va,m !981.
we coulnd onounl ty~.
himort~lhte1y,
.Young mfonned the court ~ he
.
&gt;: "
. wt. one
. wished .to appeal the conv1cuon, '· f.cl~.m.,OhiD,.
-CQMJDI!"''f
and his auomey, Meigs Co~nty ~ he did rece1ve the llpJI'Opnate
Public Defender Char~ H. Kmght, maxunum sentence. He should
was appointed to prepare that ap- . nev~r be allowed to walk the SIJ"ec!S •
peal. .
.
agam as a . free man. ~ cage ts
Ne1ther Young nor Knight would wb~ an am~ b_elongs..
comment on the convi~tion, but
This week s trial, wh1ch beaan
Meigs County Prosecuung Alto~· o~ Wednesday, was lhe second Jury
ney Steven L. Srory ex~ressed h1s ~ :Jh.e cDeceharge 10 the coun. !he
satisfaction wilh the verdict. . .
t . m
mber resulted m a
"I am vety glad that the JUlY hung Jury•. and attemptS 10 reach a
convic~ M:r· Young," ~':Dry ~ plea barg_am a_greement prtCI' to the
Friday. He 1s a cruel, VICIOUS v1c- second lrial.fwled.

1u~ge c~

"til!'

=~o~~a ~o~ir~t:C~ ~~\!!~r=~==lo~~
$3· millip.n·save_d .from fire .damage: re_pork_ ~ . h ·
$800 for alloWing
to drip on
the company $4,000 after security
fro
· ooditi ·
B MELINDA POWERS
contains Information on the clty 1991hstructures, m~ ing 1t t e most
guards Peter Baltic and Curtis Me·
: r : : l faili~ga::, ';;:~pair C::J
Tl~es.Sendnel New$ Staff
of Gallipolis and four area
In the city of Gallipolis, the · expensive fire in the Gallipolis'
wire and $500 fCI' sending between
·
townships that the GFVD serves. department was dispatched to 12 area,- the report stated.
:
Clain were overcome by carbon
potroom June 16. OSHA also fined

water

H

dioxideaild died June 17.
Company officials plan to meet
with OSHA next week to discuss

630 and 700 volts dlrough condUC·
tors with i maximiDII Jating of 600
(See BAC, par;e A3)

Local doctor activated
.

Desert

for

_______

CAPI'. JACK BAILBS .

••

'?

••

.,.._

__.._

.

_,

S t o r t n ··

GALLIPOLIS - Capt. Jack
-Bailes, 42, Gallipolis, a member
of the907th Tactical Group, U.S.
Army Reserves, was called to

1

1

~··1!.

Ia flanlial tllelr 111rte
.
oa Prlcla7llflei'BOOJI. Sl'acey Sllaak
tile
. .• • wlllcl, l!ccordlna jo lbe bank's co-manager MOlle

w.

786 North Second Street
Middleport, Of(. 45760
' 614-992-6491

r .

•

in honor of die lrOOpi leniDIID lbe ·Gult Will'. The la1
. II a . . .
mer tradltloa In Pomeroy • Installed eacll Jell' for the
Cbomm(OunVPIYePnlbty Bb1111Bd CGIIIaceJ ~:;t) rema1Din1 up for JndeJ)elldenee
ay.
oto y r n •

• Tile
olllee

!obn

.

·
EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY ·4, 1991. .
FRUTH PHARMACY WILL OPEN AT 8:00
A.M. MONDAY THRU FRIDAY FOR OUR
.CUSTOMERS'
CONYE
CE.
. l·

TO HONOP." OUR
Departmeat usllted

cal accident that led to ihe death · ~~conin~.~dthetheS$4Io,'oooOOO lin
,
By BRIAN j, RE~lo
The jury, conSisting of eight men
60ee ~or·
of a Ravenswood Aluminum
,..,
"""""
"
Tlmes-Seadnel News Staff
and four women, deliberated for
Corporation worker has res~lted
Ridei's death, Boger said.l
fi
hOurs ·
1
in RAC facing $27,700 in fines. . , .· .:Thee
·.ved
. Gazeancltte~torycal sSIIhock.d !vhaniles con~=~~·
~~~is J::~ :x:;:~ th;;; guilty v:rct.10
1
Four "serious" and three "will·
·~
"
Common Pleas Court jury on . Young, 46, had been charged by
ful" cilations have been issued to
changing a fuse in an electrical box Thursday of kidnapping ·~ Meigs the Meigs County Gmnd Jury wilh
the plant by the Occupational, in the plant's fabrication mill. County Common Plw Qoun. was the kidnapping of his 17 .year-old
Safety and Health Adminisualion. OSHA fQUDd a series of violalions .sensenced 011 Friday by J·~e Fred . niece last August from her home in
OSHA levied the $27.700 fine after of normal safety piliCtices and fined .
Crow m.
Middleport. It was also alleged that
investigating the death of David L. the company: $9,00() .for . willfully · Commel)tin8 tllat he ished the the girl was taken to .. Mason
· · Evans;-5:'1-;- of'Bidwen•on·Jul)' 18. Jailing to train supe!Vlsors to shut sentence Could by IIIOI'C severe, COtDlty, w. Va. w~ she was
Evans died in a Huntington hospilal
off power to the panel before per- Crow seillaiCcd Young 101the max- . repeatedly raped by Young befOJe
"dummy load te$1"; . imum tw'llliltcd by law, = o f
an being
a week after he suffered 2nd and Conning
10 Middleport. The
3rd-degree burns in an accident at· $8,000 for willfully _failing .to make inclctinftC'tt;m of actual i
.
• • rape cllaJle; as nsmcd in the inthe Ravenswood plant.
sure wmkers wore protccuve rull- tion of not less than IS , ears nor dicblient, IS an aggravated felony of
The total lines OSHA has ber gloves or sleeves while wCI'k· more than 2S years.
i
the first degree.
brought against RAC comes 10
ing around live wires; $8,000 for
According to Judge 1 Crow's
Young is also charged wilh 15
$41,700 in connection with the
wiDfully failing to make sure office the effect of the actual incar- related counts in Mason County,
dealhs of four plant employees last
workeis wore protective face ceratiOn is that Young will not ·be and be is expected to be transported
year.
shields while working around live eliJible for probation, sho(k proba· there early this week to race those
The Charleston Gat.ette reported
wires; $700 for failing to set up tion, jlarole or Olher earjy rei.ease charges.
OSHA fined the comJI!Iily $10,000
JliOiiCr safety procedures for per- programs.
..
. The issue of. Young's two prior
1
after Jin)iny Lee R1der, a crane
forming load tests on the panel;
0

EMS has two calls

....

J

,.

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-

1 3 Sectlllno. IZ Pageo
A MultiiMdla Inc. Newop-

Noted Legionnaire·to .
speak at Point P!easant
candlelight ceremony

••

ahd
CAIRO, Ij:gypt - Iraq ·said
alUed bombers exploited im·
proved overnight weather condi·
tlons to launch 111 raids on Iraqi
territory bu~ Claims to have shot
down U planes.
·
EASTERN SAUDI ARABlA The Saudi pilot who shot down
two Iraqi jet fighters said there
!.
,.'"
was "no tim)' ... to feel fear" in
his co'uiltry's. first successful air
confronlatloq with the other
Arab nation. J
WASHINGTON - The White.
Frances Roberts of Racine Wllr"'
House cautioned that the Persian
the winner in tbe mystery fann conGuU war wlll 'no tend quickly and
test in SlDiday's .Time-Sentinel. Far
not before tile enemy launches
correctly identifying the fann as
some surprises and makes some
that of Charles N. lhle, Morning
gains.
i
Star Road, she will receive a check:
ATHENS, Greece - Bombs • for .S5 from the Ohio Valley .
exploded at ~r.ltish and Ameli·
Publishing Co. which co·
can bank~~defplle tight security
the contest with the Meigs~
but II' was · not immediately Water Consecvation District. ~·
known if the blasts were linked to
Roberts was one of 16 who COl)'
the gulf war. 1
. rectly identified the fann . .She was
'
. selected as the winner in a drawingi
.. I
Flu.. Continued from page 1 .

Hospital news

in;

Pleasant, January 27, 1991

THE .PHA.RMACY WILt·CONTINUE TO OPEN
.AT 9:00A.M., .UT ~~ESCRIPTION CAN BE .
DROPPED OFF IN ADVANCE FOR PICKUP
· AFTER
A.M.

:Meigs deputies
probe.incidents

Along the River ......... Bl·7
Blilllness ...... ........... ... D1·8
COmics- ... .... ..... ....... Insert
CluSI!Ieds ......::.... . .... D2-7
Deaths ............. ............ A6
Editorial .... ......·.. ..........A2

During 8e88ion
Columbus:
Weather
Gallla,
S&amp;l'CD supervisOrs sworn
Farm ......................D1·2-8
~!J~~~;:~~-------1~s~p=w~w~..; ..:":";"·~·~~...~..~··~..~c:t·:6__.1~uswa~~~~~W..-.J

Page &amp;1

•

.

Inside: ' .

James Sands:
1
. Gallia County hadl more ~·'8111~

•

mo~e

found

By MELIND~ POWERS
OljP News Staff
A body was discovered in
Bidwell Fr)day morning and was
ldenti!ted l\S being that of a local
man )hat ~ad been missing for
more than a week.
· The body, identified as James
F . Evans! 59, Bidwell, was
· located arqund 10 a .m. approximately 70 1yards from Evans'
Fifth Aven11e residence, Galila
County Sheriff Dennis Salisbury
said.
Salisbury'said that despite the
diligent efforts of the man's

.

.rmt authorized
June 14, 1777

leading indicators show dis·
tlnctiy different behavior during .
·the second half of recessions.
''Watch them.'' hesald."When
their behavior Improves, the
economic rebound Is imminent."
. Society's survey board conslsts of Midwest business execu:
tlves from manufacturing, con!
struction, whOlesale trade, retail
trade, finance, Jilining a11d ser;
vice sectors tl)roughout . Obio:
southern Michigan and northern
Indiana. ·
·
·
:.

. Ma~
l rm·ssi·ng
••

Gulf war at Kauwagltl.llsia~dn.ce__

February 21 .. ~

rain Monday, wllh lows In the 20s
·and highs 35 to 45. It is expected·
to be fair Tuesday, with lows in ·
the 20s and highs 30 to 40.
,.
On the . Friday mornlnj: ·
weather map, high pressure ·
extended from Montana acroo~
Iowa to OhiO. Low pressure was
over the Texas Panhandle. The
high will weaken as the loW
moves into and through Ken- ·
tucky Friday night.

~ecession expected .

number qf strengths. For 1990,44
percent ~f the board believed
their business success was
hinged on the region's superior
performance to other regions.
Looking ahead, 45 percent of the
responder\~ think a decline of
interest r•t!!S will be 1991's most
positive ~nomic factor.
Other iljdlcators such as stock
prices, h?.uslilg starts, money
growtb, 191t!al claims for unem·
ployment compensation, Treas·
'u ry biU -rlltes and the Index of
·

C-1

u.s. Flag

.

active duty Thursday night.
Or. Bailes, local optometrist,
reported to Rickenbacher Air
National Guard Base, Columbus,
at midnight f"rlday,
The 1966 Gallla Academy High
School graduate · and a 1978
graduate of .the Pacific University Col ieee of Optometry, Balles
has 'been a member of the 9()7th
unit four years.
After college, Or. Bailes spent
a year in· Tennessee before
returning to his native Galllpolis
where beset uppracticewtthDr,
Jay Bradshaw, 250 Seconcl
Avenue.
.
Dr. Balles purchased the busl·
ness from Dr. Bradshaw after
Bradshaw's retirement on April
· 15, . 1989. Dr. Bradshaw will
maintAin . the office while Dr.
Bailes is on active duty.
Baill!ll, first vice presi~ent of
the GaiUpoU&amp; LJons Club, and his
wile Mary reside on Rt. 1
GalllpoU&amp;. They are the parents .
of two dauehters, COurdiey, 11
and ·Katie, 9, both students at
yyashington elementary,

GALLIPOLIS_ ihe p alUpolis
Volunteer Fire Oepartptent responded 10 105 alarms 1~ Gallipo·
us in 1990 and saved more than $3
mUiion of properl:)i from fire
damage, according to Ja recent
report.
.
. The year-end
by GVFD

The department also lent mutual
aid four area fire departments
during the year.
The . GFVD answered 210
alarms and saved $4,506,175 in
property, while incurring
$2,194,375 In losses, according to
the report. Six firefighters and
two residents were injured in

structure fires, 11 vehicle fires
and nine misceiianequs alarms.
Approximately $1,776,650 worth
of damage was done by blazes
over the year._
.The Dec. 14 fire at the BOb

Evans ·Farmspackagin~planton

Texas Road damaged approximately $1.75 in equipment and

·u.s. shoots.

.T
WE ltRIE . 131!.1 INil

STORM
l(l(J'K,
GO (;t::T 'M YI•NI(S

ON TilE BOMB -i1NT- The GaiDpollll VFW
Polt t4lt
. their support for
troopa
In
DeHrt
storm in the
1
Middle Eut.
Joh1110n (Jell~ and VFW
Commaader
1Stelnebruaner add 10111e
',
. ~- . .

=··1

8

l

~-·""'p,__.;_:...... - - - -

In Galllpoils Township, $51,475
worth of property was lost, while" .
$682,025 worth of property was
saved in 20 alarms.answered.
Two· major fires in Green
Towtlship did $74,000 damage In·
1990, the report said. A house !Ire.
on .Route 3 in Gallipolis did
(See S3 MO.LION, on A&amp;)

!lnlaiiiDr; touche~ to their slr;a oulllde die ~t.
The VFW 1.1 abo bellnnlilr; a bulletin board

·dtaplaylq pictii'H of locat servicemen and
women oveneu. (Times.SeaUnel photo by Krll
Cochran)

.

~- ----~I

I

.,.

down three ·
Iraqi 'planes
I

RIYADH , Saudi Arabia {UP!)
- U.S. Air Force F -15 Eagles
shot down three .h'aqi MIG -23s
Saturday, military officials said,
and experts considered how to
handiea 30-mUe-long oil slick
spewing out of an off. shore
·
Kuwaiti terminal.
"Earlier today, u.s. Air Force
F -15s shQtdown three Iraqi MiGs .
... believed (to be Soviet-built) ·'
Mig23s and they've gone (lown :
over ~raq~ " U.S. Air Force Lt.
Col. Mike Gallagher said. He
could not immediately sa how
many F·15s were Involved in the
dogfight .
Meanwhile, U. S. Air Force Lt.
Col. Mike SCott ssid Iraq con- '
tinued to dump oil Into the •
(See U.S., page A•)
• :.

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