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                  <text>The

Sentinel

Ohio

11 1181

ANDERSON'S·
SECOND
ANNIVERSARY
I

Ohio Lottery

SVAC honors
tts athl~tes at
banquet
•

I

Pick 3:365
Pick 4: 7315
Cards : J.H, 5-C
4-D; 4-S

Page .4 ·

Chance of showers .and
thunderstorms statewide
Sunday and Monday.

.

WE'RE CELEBRATING WITH LOW SALE PRICES THROUGHOUT
' THE STORE.

•

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a1
Opposition voiced on sch·ool closing
VoL 41, No. 241.
CIIP)rtghled 1881

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i t~ll:'!l~4 ~~~~~!::';!:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Aprll12, 1991

•

By CHA~LENE HOEFUCH
.
. school in lhe dislrict and lhat it is the feeling of the ~ts lhat it should dent said. H~ · went on to :stare lh~ lhe treasurer reports lhe district n~
Sentiael News Staff
continue to be used. She also said lhat lhe children w11l have 10 be on lhe between $350,000 and $400,000 m reduced spending 10 keep lhe district
A rally in opposition 10 the ptopos41 of lhe Soulhem Local Sc~ool Dis- bu~s longer if Iiley have 10 be ttansported 10 lhe Letart Falls school.
. solvent and that cuts will have 10 be made regardless of how the levy
The Portland school was closed in the late 1960's for ~eml years and goes.
trict's Board of Education 10 close the Portland Elementary School next
year has been set for Friday (today)at 5 p.m. atlhe school.
at that time the SIUdents were taken to Letart Falls. It was reopened, she
Currendy there are 96 children in the Portland sc;hool wilh two grades
Mrs. Charles Lawrence, who along wilh Mrs. Pam Richards, are head· said because of parent dissatisfaction and also damage which was being in each classroom. Of the 96 there are 21 students in the learning disabili.
ing. up .the move.~ the .~losing, said ~ the 'rally is one method do~ 10 the unoccupied structure.
· .
.
ty an~ developmental handicapped classes. According t~ Supt. On!, the .
which the~ IS usma to get everyone 10 realize what IS gomg on."
· In discussing lhe sil.pl!tion of the proposed closmg of lhe Portland plan IS to ttansfer lhe LD and DH classes 10 lhe Racme Elementary
She emp!lllmzed that it is not just the parents of the chit~ attending ·school wilh Supt BoJ&gt; Qrd, he said lhat the school closing is j~ .one of school and the other 75 smdents 10 the 1;-ctart Falls School.
.
scboolthere who are concerned aboutlhe proposed closmg, but olher severallhings being considered by the board 10 b)' 10 keep the district sol·
The Lelarl ralls School, Ord explained, also has two classes m each
com111unity residents as weD.
.
vent.
.
·
room, but by transferring the Portland students lhere. the classes could be
Petitions asking lhat the board keep lhe school. open hav~ been cin:u· ·
He said olher cost-saving actions to be col)Sidered by tJ:le Board at lhe ~paratcd wilh jU;St one grade in.each room. He poin~ out that the tran~lated and Mrs. Lawrence reported lhat over 300 Signatures m support of April 22 meeting are kindergarten every.olher ~Y all day msread o! h_alf· fer .would f!lSull ~~ 26 smdents m l!'e fmt grade, 27 ~n the ~ond grade,
that have already been secured.
· . .
days as a means off cutting down on ~portallon costs, and.the ebmma· 17 m the lhtrd, 17 m the fourth, 25 m lhe flflh and 23 m the s1xth.
,
The PCtitimi will be presented 10 the Board of Education at the regular tioit of one teaching position atlhe high school.
.As for how much money closinj! the Poitland school would save, lhe
April 2~ meeting when some formal action is expected ID be taken 10
Supt Ord indicated lhat .lhe cuts 'will have to be made regardless of superintendent said it had been estunated between $55,000 and $65,000.
close the ~d schOol. Scheduled 10 meet wilh the board are Wilma . whelher or not the levy on lhe May ballot passes. That levy, which is a The teachers at..lhe l'ortland school .would be ttansferred to lhe Letart
Black and, Bill Hannan.
,
~.
.
four mill, three year one, would generale $210,000 a year, the superinten· School according Ill plans of lhe Board, Supt. Ord concluded.
Mts. Lawrence .said lhat the Portland buildin1 is the newest elementacy
.

~LLOyd(~ flanders
All-Weather Wicker

QUAUTY BfRKLINE WALlAWAY
RECUNERS, ROCIC-0-LOUNGERS
AND RECLINERS. DURABLE FABRICS.

Beauty••• Comfort••• and DurabUity
Casual O~tdoor Furniture at its Finest

AS LOW AS

BERKLINE
RECLINER SALE

$19900

'.

Voluntary recycling program
begins for Mason County
.

WALLPAPER
SALE

JUST ARRI~ED .

Hundreds of patterns.
Most are pre-pasted,
washable and .
scrubbable.

su

An•lver11ry Sale-

LLOYD /FLANDERS

ER .FURNITURE

Reg•.S131 Lo-back Spring Base Chair ••••Sale s79
Reg. S153 Hi-back Spring Base .Chair ••••Sale sa9
Reg~ S289 Spting Base Lounger .......... Sale S179
Reg. S312 2~Seat Glider ........'.............. Sale Sl89
.
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''''"'·

Reg. $309
Roll-Top.Secretary Desk .... Sale $2 47
Reg. $389
Roll .. Top Desk ········~···· Sale $3l4
Reg. $469
Roll-Top o·esk •••••••••••• Sale $3 77

WHIRLPOOL AND ROPER

APPLIANCE SALE

SELECTION IS
GREAn

, v.. w.remv

FUll

saa s1o8
IA.IC.

u. " ·

SERTA. ULTRA
SUPREME
D-. Oultlftl

SERTA
PERFECT

Sl 08
FUlL.... - ....11.." $ 1S4

-..:::
,w·m..·.-..-

Pillow Tott •
1D Y•r W.MMy

TWIN .........u.."

!LEEPER

S3S4 S369 S479

QUliN SIT .........

30" Gas or Electric Range ••••5299
Undercounter.
Dishwasher .................. S269
large Capacity
Washer •.••.•••.•..••••~ ...• $339
large Capacity
Electric Dryer ••.•••••• S2'89
Frost-Free
Refrigerator ........... $499·

gaps.

·

Opiions.woulo not qualify for the '
other program."
· The creation of a· block $rant
~m. previously separate line u~ms
m the Department's budget and the
elimination of funding for senior
multi-purpose centers were olher
concerns addressed in Abel's testimony.
·· ·
The creation of the block grant
could shift the burden of allocating'
funds to counties throughout the
state while providing them wilh
less funding, causing a scramble
among local agencifeS for mo11ey
lhat is no1 available, Abel observed.
The elimination of funding
development of lhe seni&lt;l' facilities
would "pull the rug" from under
them and make improvements
impossible, Abel added.
llouse commiuces will continue
10 conduct hearings through April.
·
·
·

Ohio House passes bill addressing
juvenile felony drug offenders·
COLUMBUS , Ohio (UPI) ly by a vole of 94.(), even though sonable comprom1se he can live
The Ohio House of Representatives lhe bill approved bears little resem- wilh.
He said everyone in the House
passed a bill Thw:s«&lt;ay desi~ 10 , blance 10 1ts original fcrm. When it
stem the flow of Illegal drugs iniO was ftrSI introduced the bill calle(l .is concerned about this problem
Ohio by juveniles.
·
for all juvenile felon)' drug traffick- and hopes the Senare takes action
The bill, sponsort.d by Rep.'Ron
.
ing cases 10 auiOIIUUica11y be bcund on the bill.
"We have enou-gb juvenile
Moul, I).Puma, will require juve· over to lhe adult court
nile c:oun judges 10 review the law
Mottl said naturally he would be delinquents in Ohio. We don't need
of lhe state lhe offender lives in a lot happier wilh the original bill, . to import them inlo this state,"
before deciding 10 triiiSfer !be .case · but the pre~nt legislation is a rea· Mottl said.
. .
1
over 10 an adult coW1.
·

Our entire stock of appliencea .
Ia now on Hie. Stop In end
look ua over. You'll like our
quellty, prlcea and friendly
aervice.
·

This bill only addresses ~~ ­
related felony crimes including
drug dealing end possession by
minors. Mottl said that arowing
numberS of juveniles are belna sent
10 Obio &amp;em cidei like Detroit 10
trauport and sell drup. He ,said
tbeiC l'uveniles are beiilg uted by
~/ade~s "t.o do their ~iny
MoaliOld fellow legislators that
· thiJ bill will send a sttmg
to "tboae Detroit drug
ti1Ugs" that there is no longer an
advantage bringing drugs into
Obio.
The measure passed IIII8Jiimous.

;f

.·

I

','Eighty. percent of Sou~~ni
Oh1o ramtlies iake care of agmg
relatives," Abel said. "'ptions does
n.ot ~lace lhat, but helps 10 fill the

Abel noted lhat she had not vis·
ite.d homes where services were
bemg provided under lhe program
zens.
.
· State Rep. Mary Abel (D· and found Options to be a great
Athens) asked a Finance and help for the.elderly and their fami• Appropriations Subcommittee to lies. She listed home delivered
reconsider the elimination of some meals, medical assistance, rempo·
programs when deliberating lhe rary care and health aid as among.
lhe services provided. ·
. .
fl1181 ronn of !be bud&amp;eL
The current budget proposal
Abel said one of dte most devas·
tating cuts will be lhe phasing out eliminates programs like Options
for Elders in favor of expanding the
of tbe Oplions for Elders prosram,
funded by the Ohio Department of PASSPORT pro$!!1ffi. Abel points
out that this wtll not solve the
Aging under. Elden:are. The program providel rural senior citizens dilemma of remaining at home for
.
a means of getting assistance so . many seniors.
''PAS SPORT only serves lhose
that they may continue 10 live in
on Medicaid levels," Abel said.
their 0W11 homes.
· "Many seniors covered under

518.9.00
.

SALE!

TWIN

Calling lhe elderly a "segment
of our population who should not
be ignored," a local lawmaker
urged a House panel on Human
Resources 10 realize the effect of
Gov. Ge&lt;J'ge Voinovich's proposed
budget cuts on Ohio's seniot citi·

S169.00_:--__:~~---...;..--

~nRES

Services or Gdla, Jecboa ud Melp Coalldes
wiD be spoasorllla several p• opams to ldahllabt
Child Abuse l&gt;reVentlon Montll. Plctlired wltb
Mayor Seyler are; 1-r, Glen HW, Phyllis Hoachul
.aDd Monica Dodrill.

Budget cuts to elderly programs
would have devastating effect: Abel ,

SJ29.00
S139.00

SERTA

OuiiW T-. • I'IMI lupp.ort

,ABUSE PREVENTION PROCLAMATION·
Pomeroy Mayor Rlclwd Seyler, seated, lliped a
proda!DII.._ lbiU'Iday afternoon In oblervaliCe
or Child Abuse Prevention Month durln1 the
mnth or ApriL Community Asunlt Prevention

DESK SALE

I

SERTA PREMIER
COMFORT

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LAYAWAY AND SAVE!

White or almond flnlah metal china
cablnetl. utility cebinetl. baae cal:li· .
"eta and wardrobea. Perfect for
extra etorage in kitchen, baeementi
and garages.

A11d111Dn -~~:: ;.

plelila~

I

METAL STORAGE
CABINETS

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MANY MORE ITEMS IN STOCK AND ON SALE

C\eao\ol
SfiC\~\.S

Reg ..S) 59.00 ••••• Sale
Reg. S169JOO ••.•. Sale
Reg. S209.00 .••.• Sale
. Reg. 5229.00 ••••• Sale

By MINDY KEARNS
. OVP News Staff ·
. A vol~ntary recycling program
w11l begm m Mason County on
May 4 spearheaded br Paul Wears
of w~t Columbia Wilh assistance
from the Mason' County Solid
Waste Authority.
·
D'te 10 the garbage crisis in
Mason County, wilh the closing of
lhe landfill near West Columbia
. the authority felt an emergency
voluntary pro11ram should be
implemented. Smce v~rs over·
whelmingly supported a recycling
re{erenclum on the ballot in
~me audlori
. 'Ly .IWiiJ com-

I :

wcterlberec:f.·

cling plan pnor 10 August lhat will
make it man&lt;lalory for all residents
10 recycle.
According 10 'Nancy .AndersOn,
secretary of lhe aulhority who is
working closely with w~. if lhe
voluntary program is successful it
just may tum iniO the county co~prchensive program
Wears·will be siationed 81 four
locations, one on .each S81Urday in
May; 10 collect paper products,
plastics (milk jugs and 2-liter soda
bottles) corrugated cardboard
glass, and aluminum.
'
on May 4, Wears will be sta·
lioned in Point Pleasant behind lhe

city building; May 11, 'betwee'! be dumped, it IS lhe hopes of lhose
Fast-4-U and Mason Family involved wilh the voluntarY, recy·
Restaurant in Mal!on; l.:far 1~. in cl!rig program that less garbage
Leon next 10 the c1ty building, and w1ll reach landftlls. ·
May 25 at the Valley Fire Depart·
Anderson said once a mandatory
ment. Hours will be 9 a.m. to 3 recycling program is implemented
p.m.
. . .
.
by the solid waste aulhority~ a fee
Wears sa1d It 1S preferred lhat can be placed on county reSidents.
people sepa~ate lhe1r recyclables If enough people participate in the
~fore b~mgmg ~el!ll? the recy·
v&lt;?luntary program, however. it
cling stauons. but It 1sn t mandato· m1ght become the permanent prory . He also asks that lids be gram and wiD remain free.
removed from glass jars. and news·
The wa~tc_l authority s~c.r~tary
papers .be. bundled. .
.
added that It IS the responSibility of
Asstsung Wears will be hts son everyone, from the manufacturer to
Danny.
·
lhe youngest consumer,IO recycle.
·~Wears said as time goes bY •.. , . Anderson stated if everyon~
m~. ~swill be~en. He stated would participa.te in tile, voluntary' } '
he •r lt)'ing !lJe recyclmg m a~- program, 53 percent of lhe county's
porary .basis, to see if there IS garbage .would be removed from
enough mrerest.IO make lhe. venture our conn ty •s waste stream (or
profitable for h1m. ~re will be. no 7,932 10ns).
.
charge 10 lhe public. when takmg
In 1986, the Unlled States genrecyclables 10 the stations.
erated 160 million wns of garbage,
Accordmg to Anderson 14,967 an increase of 80 percent from
plus tons of ~aste went into the 1980. If lhe U.S . continues at this
local landfill m 1990. The landfill rate, by 2000 it is predicted 193
was recently closed down by the million IOns of refuse will be genDeJW:U~~ent of t;"~atural Resources, eratedperyear.
and stnce lhat ume. local garba~e
Wears has rented a truck to
has been trucked. to the Galha carry lhe recyclable items, and is
County LandfiU. Wllh lhe fear lhat now working on a contractiD swre
that l~dfill w1U. soon become .ru~. lhe irems until lhere are enough 10
or w111 reach tts monthly hm1t take them 10 market
before Ma!lon County garbage can

C.!!.!r!!!...'!~"!.!1.,~!'ll~?.!~!.:?l!1!,~'

who serves as county loan techni·
cian in the Athens Couno/ office of
lhe FIDIIICI'S Home Adminisll'alion,
haS received Ohio's FmHA Technical/Clerical Federal Employee of
the Year Award for Exceptional
Performance.
Mts. Calvert also received a certificate of merit for outstanding
effon in coordination and installation of computer software tluQugb·
out lhc dislric:t which handles eight
county offices.
· The awards were presente4 10
Mrs. Calven at a recent SIBle meet·
ing held in Cincinnati by Ohio's
FmHA State Director, Allen L.
Turnbull . Ohio FmHA employs
nearly 253 employees Slatewtde in
its system of five dislrict end 37
county offices.
Mrs. Calven joined FmHA in·
1974. She lives wilh her family In
Pomeroy. FmHA is the rural credit
service of lbc U. S. Department of
Agricultute and provides financial ·
assistance 'lnd counseling 10 rural
residents and communities. The
agency provides a full range of
farm, housina ancl community
facilities loans.
The Atbens County Office
serves Athens, Mei41 and VIniOn
Counties. Informauon regarding
the agency •s programs can. be
obtained by contacting the ~ounty

RECEIVES AWARD· Pamela J. Calvert of Pomeroy wai· .
selected 11 Ollio Farmers Home AdmlnblratloD tecbalcallclerk:al
federal employee or the year. Here she receives a plaque from
Allen L. Turnbull, stale direc:hlr.
·

Shoemaker keynote speaker for Jefferson-Jackson dinner
Suue Rep. Michael C. Shoemak· coach in Chillicothe aDd Waverly
er (D·Bourneville) will be the in the early 1970's and since tm
keynote · speaker at the Meigs hall been employed'u 1 carpenter
County Democratic Party's Jeffer· . In Columbus Representali~e
son-Jackson Dinner on Sa~y Sboemlker m .evCIII CIOID·
niglu, to be held 11 the Moigs miaees. He is the Vice Chairman of
County SeniorCilizensCenler.
the Education Committee, and
~maker. who wu .elected 10 serves on the Collcpa llld Univer·
the Ohio House ~ 19'!2, 11 a gnctu. sities Sub&lt;:ommiuce, tile Public
ale c:l Clpital Umvenuy in COtum· Utilities Committee the Finance
bus and Xavier Unlvorllity in and AIJili'OIIriati Comnuuee, the
Cincinnati. He was a teacher and Veteriiis Affain Committee and
the Education Finance Comrrlittee.

In addition, Shoemaker serves
on' line select commtaees.
When • home, Shoemlker is an
aetiYe member of the Bainbridge
United Methodill Church, llld is
affiliated wltll the Paint Valley
Alhletic Boosten, the Township
Trustees and Clerlta Auocletion
and the Balnbridae HiiiDrlca1 Soci.

.

Metas County Democratic
Cbainnan Sue Maison llatea that
.she is looking ·~ 10 heulng

,..

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ety.

Slloemaklir speak on Sllbl'day.
"Representative Shoemaker has
distinguished him~lf in the Gener·
al Assembly wilh his sttaigbt·for·
ward approach to difficult prob·
lems," Maison sai!f. "He is well
resp·ected by Democrats and
Republicans alike for his willing·
ness 10 listen 10 all points of view
and then take definitive stands on
the issues. •
Maison continued, "He is not
only very knowl~geable on the .

... ·-·
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status of education 1D our slate, but
he is also candid in accepting lhe
responsibilities of being a realleader for Ohio."
.
Tickets for the ham dinner, 10 be
held at lhe ,Meiss County SeniorCitizens Center, are 58 per person
and $25 per family with school age
children. The dinner beains at 6
p.m. and the program begins at 7
p.m. Maison inviles all those inter·
ested 10 anend,
•

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Comment~
The Daily Sentinel
111 Coati Street
Pomerq, Ollie
DEVOTED TO TRE
OF
TRE MBIG8-MA80N
AREA
.. INTEBEIITII
. .
. . ..
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A~

t!o!m~

qJv

.~

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......._.._.......,~ o::~..=, ;

ROBERT~:.; WINGETT

Publisher

,

.

'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaerat Mana~rer

" PAT WBITEBEAD

Aulllud

PubU1ber/Control~r

A MEMBER of The United Press Interna.tlonal, Inland Dally Press
, Association and the American Newspaper Pu~llshers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION .are welco'me. They should be lesalban 300
wonll tong. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed wltll
name, addreu aDd telephone.number. No unslped letters wUI bepul&gt;
!!shed. .Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·

• ties.

·

Po.neray-Middllf)ort, Ohio
. . Friday, Aprll12, 1991

sqdl~A appuved 'lbe Plillippine ver-

WASIDNGTON- A
bu revealed once
agaiR how mu.r!ty congressional
rules are when.•t comea to doing
fa~ for c:onshhJNJts. It ICei1IS the
K~i Five ~isode did nothing
to clarify the plc:tllre.
·
The seaweecl case has nowhere
near the glitz o~ the sav1D11s and
loan _debacle,_ which saw live senators tntr.rvenmg wilh federal regulato~s for S&amp;L owner Cbarles
~g. But !t shows that there is
~Iilla V8$UC line between perform!ng c:onsatuent services and butting
m.
.
.
Amencan producers of carrageenan were.outrued .that th~

sion. With the help of 'Congress,
they pressured the FDA to reconsider.
.
Among those going to bat for
American ~ were Senate
Majority Leader George Mite bell,
D-Maine, Rejl. 1bom8s Carper, DDel., and then-Rep. Howard Niel· son, R-Utsh. They sll asked the
FDA f~ a review cA the appoval.
All of lhe congressmen had domestic carrageenan producers in tbeir
home states or had received campaign coob'ibutions front the indJU·
try. The domestic manufacturers
who stepped iPto the debate were .
Hercules Inc. ami FMC Corp.

o~t Jack Anderson

Between them, thel handed
$358,840 in CIIIIJ'Ilgn contribu·
lions Ill congresllonal candidates .
last )'ear.
,
The Philippine produCers cried
foul when they found out that Niel·
son (who has since retired from
Congress) and Carper accqmpallied
industry rqresentatives to a meeting last fall wilh FDA reJIU)alon. .
The FDA isn't pubfic:ly complaining that it was bullied by
Con.ress, but sources told our
assoc1111e Scott S~ that lhe lawmalcers have shown an unusual
level of interest in what would nor·
mally be a run-of-the-mill approval
pi~Ji2CSSattheFDA.
·

I KNOW .QEGGARS CAN'T
BE C~~..BUT 00
WJU WAVE ANVTHING

On the threshold l!/ opportunity
.
value system. Making such
· Unemployed people in this changes in our per101181 values may
region, including miners, may be not supP.Ort the materialistic, fast
well served to belp create a local paced lifestyle that large corporaeconomy raM than uproot fami- lions and advertising agencies
lies by moviPg to the big city or would like us to enjoy, however I
waitiDj! for a large com·pany to believe we will be better off by
'move m' jobs. A local economy in spending less time in front of
which a greater portion of ttading VCR's or speeding past neighbors
is kept in this region by supporting on noisy higbways. What happened
local servi~; growing' local food, to the days wben your grocer could
developing' local goodS ·and creat- tell you abqut the source of your
illg a more self-supporting infras. produce, or wben folks would drop .
tructure. What now seems like a m on a neighbors front pon:h Sunhelp!~ situation with respect to day afternoon, or when families
the economy can be turned into a actually had time to interact wilh
good opportunity.
the elderly, young people helping
. In mlCIIl yean JIIIIJY large com- old
panies have benefited by centralizThis may sound like a dream,
mg operations and moving food but we have lhe n:soun:es in front
and goods long dislances for price of our hands to make this a reality,
ajlvlntqe. Hosling such companies if we are only willing to lower our
may benefit people in big cities materialistic standards and raise
where there is an infraslructure to our people SIIIKWds.
·
~them. However here in S.E. · This·concept of a local economy
dhio we are not well positioned to is of course not new and malJ!I'
cbmpete for ·these businesses. The · small local businesses aie succeldJ\.ppalachian highway and vast ing. We just need to upand oit this
amounts of government funding .thereby, creating jobs..We can Slart
h&amp;ve not put a dent in our need to by trading an hour in front of Jbe
bpost lhe economy.
tube for an hour with family and
· We have much of the ra;Joods neighbors and lesrn more about
PHOENIX, Ariz. (NEA) • Sudand land necess•ry to be . sus- what is available locally.
denly, it's fashionable to see the
taining~ Why truck in food .from
WonlofiiiOUihisvetyeffective, film "Dances with Wolves" and
other countries wben we can raise and clleap. Or postpone the pur- then claim to care about the condi·
it right here? Small farms used to chase cA your next elec:lricll iadJIN .lion ·of the country's only true
llourish here, until the centraliza- and inSield pay 2M&gt; more for local natives. But those wbo' re really
:Jion of food distribution. It takes · handmade products that will last concerned OUJht to lad "Fraud in
415, the consumers to be supportive
and can be serviced locally, rather Indian Country: A Billion Dollar
bf local trade if we want to succeed than grabbing some out-of-state Betrayal."
in turning this around.
chain store's sale of plastic, throw·
Published 2 1{1. years ago by
: 'A local economy will also be away junk. Think wbll would hap-: The Arizona RepubUc, one of this
'more environmentally SC!Isitive. pen if we retained an extra 10% of city';s two daily newspapers, lhe
·SmalliCale, locally owned busi- money spent right here in S.B. ambitious eifht-part report is.a
nesses are less likely to lralb the Ohio. ·
devastating cntique of the chronic
)and as much as large out-of-town
· S.B. Ohio. will reap ·what it mistrestment and abuse of native
companies that have 110 pennanent sows! Sedt out a new local product tribes by public and private interatake here. Alao, less fossil fuels or service this week and help crea11e ests throughout the West
will be consumed when goods are a local job.
Desc:ri6ed by. the newspaper as
lniiiS)IIirted fewer miles.
We are not in the circle of "its most important and startlinfi
• Small local commerce brings poverty. We are on the threshold of investigative senes in 98 years,
families and communities closet opportunity.
the powerful stories report tl)at
Ron Docie "federal Indian programs across ihe
.together. It can belp to penonalize
98SS sand Ridlle United States are a shambles,
lbe experience of livin11 and this
Millfield,
OH 4S7iil plagued bv fraud, incompetence
)IOIJielhing dearly missing from our
and deceit'
•
The report concludes that
"despite
scores of billions of dol•
lars spent to improve Indian Uves
Dear Editor.
needs to·tate a serious look w~ during the p* centuty, Washin~­
; I have received wont the Shade the cuts are being made, as not to ton has succeeded primarily 10
-River Forest funding is being cut leave the IIIIC open to disa""nlll
building the most intraCtable and
convoluted
bureaucracy in the fed·
the state budget. Tbe Shade
It is tiiJ!e our government pro;Jtiver Forest Division has only twO mote the programs wbicb teach era! ~ernment."
SmJled out for especially shsrp
·full time employees. Closing Ibis people to Work, the Civilian Con;'division would be disastrous 10 servation Corps is this type cA pro- criticism is the Bureau of Indian
:~and Southeastern Ohio. ·
gram and is bein~ cut friln the 1111e Affairs, whose ineptness and cor• Jtm Milliron, forest manager
~udget_. The pnde, dignity, and ruption have left ~ ~ are
:covers fire control for several
mcent1ve to work have eroded supposed to aid Nanve Americans
!Jecause the government chooses to "strangled by 11 morass of red tape
:southeastern counties. Forest fue
-a~~~trol is needed, the state cannot · JUSt hand money out lather than that has all but destroyed their
·
·afford to do away with it
develop job programs. Programs efiecti~ness."
Huntin' control is also· an
like CCC's and WPA, helped · Unfortunately, not enouj!b atten·
important ISSue, without the manreslml the economy in the past and lion was paid to thOse stpnes when
;agement at the Shade River Forest,
are needed today. The govern·
:CI!Dttol wiD be fOliC· This forest is ment's dollars can be spent to
•wtdely used duritJ8 all hunting sea- l:ll!op jobs and medical care for
:sons.
. mcane people insteadJ(Jf fort. Dear Editor:
: The planting of 1ree4 is impor- m11 them 10 join the welfare lOlls• •
The Bashan Ladies Auxiliuy
•tant, not only to Meigs County but
Tbe citizens of Meigs County wish to thank everyone who ·made
"the states ecolOJY balance. The need to make themselves heard. our dinner on March 17, a success.
·forestry management of the area We c:aanot afi'Oid to allow the JOV· And a special thanks to Jay and
cannot be maintained if Shade ernment to continue talrlng away : Mary Lance for the donation of a
.River Forest is closed.
from southeastern Ohio. Coollet electric roaster. Thanks everyone.
:: II seems it would be most Jm Lma. s-tar ll!ld Mary Abel,
Becky Pullins
-important to keep the .fire and hunt- Represenllllvea, State HOUle, Box
· Aux. President
; inJ eontrol as well as the forest 1001, Columbus, Ohio 43266~818111&amp;C'J1C111 in motion.
0604. · .
·
: I undentan4 it is necessary 10
. Mary,Powell. ~tor
•balance a budget, the governiiiCIIt
Metp C01mty l'l!rt DiJirict
Dear Editor:

RUBLES?
, .

and Dale Van Atta
·

. Critics of the Pbilippin~ car-

rageenan say it doesn't meet feeler·

. a1 standard as a food additive, and
they claim it msy contain contaminants becai!JIC of the way it is man·
ufactured..
But the FDA
the Pbilippine
product satisfiedsaa.'e federal atan- ,
dards and that there was no proof
offered from the critics otherwise.
The FDA has since asked for more
mete.rial from lhe Philippine producers and has yet to announce its
firlal decision. In the meantime, lhe
Philippine product can be aold in "
the United States, but lhe ,qoespons
raised by the American competitors
have Rlade it hard to sell.
. '
Philippine business interests
claim the whole affair was a ploy
by the American carrageenan
industry !0 Shut OUI cheaper foreign
competition. But behind thet!'
trade issue is a fair flay is e.
Should a member o Cong ess
intervene wilh a federal regulator
for a constituent?
··
The lawmakas who questioned
the FDA's approval of Philippine
carrageenan say they have the
bealth and safety of the consumers
at bead. And, they sav if the FDA
finally decides the Plliliwine product is safe, they'll drop dJil laue.
But the fact lbat the lawmakers
only got involved because constituents tlld C8111J111W1 contributors
asked lhem, puts thei!' motives in
question. Until Congress 'can find
some way to finance elections
without relying on the money of
special interests, then any move
they make on behalf of corporate .
int~:rests will look dubious.
•

were

they
published in the aummn
of 1987 - and claiming twinges of
compassion for Native .Americans
after Niewing an Academy Award·
winning movie is banlly an accept•
able substitute.
Invesliplllrs now report that the
BIA cannotiiCC&lt;UJt for 595.million
- almoat 10 ~t of the $1 bil•'
lion appropriated for the agency's
use last year. Moreover, nobody
knows wbether the loss is
attributable to sloppiness or· criminal activity.
What is !mown is that 12,000 of
the BIA's 13,000 employees posted
in national, regional and locar
offices and on reservations
throughout tbe country have .had
access to agency computer files
that allows them to pin access to •
and malce changes iri • financial
accounts. Indeed, some individuals
who don't work for the federal
government have enjoyed lhe ssme
privilege. ·
That's only the most recent
episode in the tawdry history of
this country's relations with the
proud people who settled tbe land
cenlllies tiefore the rii'St Europeans
"discovered" it
Beyond the horrors of. forced
relocatioo, broken treslies and military massacres is a record of BIA
mismanagment on a aca1e so vast
· that it's diffiCult to comorehend.
Even the agency's own senior officials estimate that only 10 cents of
every dollar spent by the BIA
reacbes the Indian people. The
remaining 90 cen._ supports the

ment, law enforcement, public
works, housing, health, education
and other initiatives ofllm are also
undermined by incompetence,
deceit and corruption.
Tbe victilns of those tragic cir- ·
cum stances are the nation's 1.5 ·
million Indians who are members

.Week••• Speelals

•
••

NO LUMBERJACK Ia he, tiiiJIIP It -a.at Mark McCam·
ber Is talt:IDJ allack at the tree lllatlle II rtei'IIJ llehbld In the ftrit
roulld ol Mastera TOUI'1IIIIIIftt ldioa Ia A...-., Ga. McCumber Is
blttlnll 1111 approach shot to the 18th greea, wbkh helped him to
card·a .5-l!llder 67 aad pia a lime-way tie far first .a t the ead ol the
roa!ICL (UPI)

'Portland pot holes are gone

•

:oar

wnJ111 with a liale IIClf sufticiency.
Editor.
Our
leauce is 4 incbea higb, -peas
• What used to be "Pot Hole
; Alley" in the sleepy village of Port- are up and the radishes have 2
land is now smooth as the Appian leavea reaching for the SUIL On lql
Way of old Rome. A -brand new of lhll our prize heifer IIW)IIiJed us I
•aoilla over by Tom McKay of the with a big. healthy calflat week. -~ to the national news
: M&gt;WIIIbip road maintenance depart·
one-eigbth
of Oltr children go to
~ tnelll Wll just IIIIIOIIIICed.
bed
hungry.
When I was on the
~ • Pardlnd comes in for some pretdeprived
lilt
I feasted on corn
~ !J. bid llcb news-wise once in a
•
bniad
and
milt.
wen lilted. How·
~ Wbllo bill aD in aU it iu cazy town.
ever
dill
was
before
the family cow
~ • AI die u nter wmns up h1111111
went
U.,
extin
•;,
1t.
,; iclivlty 110111111 llere increases. The
,.,.,...., the bllct-QIUJIII)'
:; illle ~ up 'rc:h Run way was lastWblle
week the paip line reporlell
'• put iJi llllpe lla ..... 'l'heri: is I
much
beavy c:a.dng iD tbaa area;
'• Dice place to while 'away some
the
c!eeiP'
cA cupid ... the aaendiJio. Tile lliry Ood. . . ICCilllto tkMII
.
,
be aboat droppiag -pavel in all
Gentle relder if you lib news
lbese drive-ways bit it il nice if
that's
iL Bdna aya if I gel in jill
• you Clll ae&amp; iL
lbe
won
'tlllil me out.
•. Raulaa T.V. say• people are
,
Until
next time.
~ -.vms 111 that eounll)r. Wbat is
Gayle Price

t

,,

--

y-.,

..

............2
..........2
........ ... .1

8-

.......... 0

W,est

Calilomia

........... 3

Chio:oJo

Kwu City

.......... 2

.750
.¥&gt;7
.¥&gt;7
.500

2
2
3
2

........ I

.,

.m

.250
.000

..

(AU Times EDT)

Chic_aa_o (Pemmdcz S·S) at Detroit
(Seucr. 2-7). 7:3S _p.m.
• .
Milw.W. tNavUIQ,I-1) e1'ToronUJ
· (Baucber o- 0). 7:3S p.m.

C•Jifiwrri; (A~ 10.14)1L!IIjn· - (raputi12-l), 8:05p.m. I
· Ylllk (C~6-12)at Konw Oty
(ll, Dovil2-7). 8:3S p.m.
BlhimGRI(Jotmiaa 13-9) at Tau

(Wio17-10), I :SS p_...
S.ale (Bm•heod 0-l) "Ooklutd
(Maol3- 15). IO::IS p.m.

Saturday's CIIDel

,NATIONAL LEAGUE
Easl
L

Pel.

GB

........3 I

:7SO
.6li1
.6li1
.333
.333
.250

Ill
Ill
I 1/1
I Ill

1.000
.¥&gt;7
.61&gt;7
.333
.333
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Ill
Ill
I Ill
I Ill
2

..........2 I

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2
2
..........1 3

StLDWI

.......... .2
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........ .I

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y~Sut- .....SI 25
!• -·~-""so, %1 t
ll': .._,49 22

.671
.649

-

.361
.342
.329
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32

PacJIIc Dhuloo
;r--....
..:. . .511 -~
,.u Lot• ....36 21 :rn

'

MJ

.64S

.........21 41
'"•t.""'26 so

·-r-·"

$ til

_!iii

..,. ......19 57

ttn2
2l

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II

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''"""""' .......SJ 25
y.QaWe SUtt ......~ 31
Y_·"'
s-lot ..........31· 31
LA. CliprMn - ...30 .n
Sw ......21 · S3

? Ill
.513 19112
.SOO 2D Ill
.390 ' 29
.671

.303 3611l

1

•

Milwa,.eeiii,Boaton92
. Minotw&amp;t 112. Adutta 91

LA.Lilun 110, ~9S

II-

Oold~

Stale 11 J , Hout10n 99 _

Sacnmento ltM, Orlando 96

.

l

,

!ultle Melp County
13 Weekl ............................ .. ,... $21. 84 '•
26Weeks ....... ............... ..... ..... .. $43.16 ' '
. 52 Weeks ......... ............... .......... $84.?6 ,

"I realize .Jack Nicklaus is the
greatest player of all time," Mickelson said. "Those are nice compH·
ments. But there will be another
Jack Nicklaus."
On a day perfect f;!!olf, Nick·
laos and Watson lea
into contention with a series of shots that
sent roars cascading down the bills
and through the pinea of·lhe Dow·
er-b'edeclled AIJIUSla National Oolf
Club course.
'
"I see the.old folks are up there
again," said the 41-year-old Watson. "I'm starting to ~et back into
a·winning frame of mind. I last felt
lilce this back in 1987 (!he year of
his last victory). I'm having to deal
with that pressure again, something
I haven't had to do for quite some

Ottl•lde Mdp County

13 Week$ ...... .... .. .............. , ....... 123.40
26 Weeks .................... .............. 145.50 • -'
52Weeu .................................. S88.40 ,

,,

,,. J··

,.
J:-

time.''

To•t•urimes
Miami
7:!0 p. ...

ClmllaadatNewJonoy, 7:30pm.
Wu!Ut&gt;pn at PbiWiolphia, 7:30
p.m.
.. ~7 :30p.m ,
Oticqoat Doooit. I p. m.
lttdiaaa 11 Now Yaal. 8:30p.m.
. .S............ IIS.ttle, IO.p.ro. •

Mil........ 11 T - . l::IS p.m.
Clowllnd · - · · : 0 5 p.m.
C.lifcwni• at M'
IM, 1:05 p.m.
Yodl 11 E.wu aty. 2:3S p.m.
BahimorcatTeau, 1:3Sp.m.
Staulc at o.klmd, 4:0S p.m. ·

NewYoD:
Pitubtqh

34

Dallaaat-10:30p.m.
O....at LA . ~ 10:30 p.m.

ODcaao atDetroil,l:t5 p.m.

W

Pet.

19

28

Thursday's results

Tonlglrt's JIIIIIIU

I

16

.494
.377
.2!19

.,......
·,...........
-·-IIIIo

s.-o

• Tomnt.o 7. Milwa'*:cc 3

.

.... ......31 39
......... 29 41
.......... ~ S4

Ilia..

I
2
2

J:)euq.it 1J, New Yott S
C._..d6,Booton4
Ooklmd3.-0

._610

.Sl2

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1.000 • ~
Ill
0 1.000
I .¥&gt;7
I

3

30

W, L

0

.... .. .. 1

Colifomil

36

DaDaa

Thursday's results

.

y-Atlanta

10 •
10

.610

Western Conl'erence
Midwest Division

Ill
Ill
I
... ll
' 2
2

....... 2
.2 I .M1
"'"""'...
........ 1 2 . .333
Texu
............0 2 .000
' Seotlle , ............ .0 3 .000
~

..........47 30

y-ltt4iana
CloYelaacl
Cltadoao

GB

P&lt;1.

I
I
I

.... .... 2

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NewYcllk

image
problem as first
lady
.
.

-

Nicklaus' shot his 68 while
making birdies on all four of the
par-S holes. It was Nicklaus' lowest score at the Augusta National
since his closing-round 65 five
Y\liii'S ago that brought him his sixlh
Masters at aF: 46.
Nicklaus round was highHghted
by an 80-foot pitch shot from
behind the fourth green which
trickled into the cup for a birdie.
• 'I know the conditions were
good today," Nicklaus said. " But
Ibis is still a difficult course. You

1985 FORD CUSTOM VAN
Well equipped. Low miles. Clean

$6,995

SPRtNtJ SALE

APRIL 11 thru APRIL 15 .
"lOWEST CHEMICAl PRICING OF THE 1991 SEASON"

, &lt;7

West
A.o. Anp ....... .2 0
CinciMoti
......... .2
Son Diqo
........ .2
Sut Pnricilco .......1
""""""
..........1 .
Atlonta
.......... .0

I
I
2
l
2

1987 CADILLAC SEDAN DEVIUE
2 TO CHOOSE FROM

o•Y S1 ~~:::::::::.

Thuriday•s results
Loo AnllJ'!at 4, Atllntal
SL Leuil s. OU..ao4
Sut FroncUoo II. Sut Di... 9, 10 in·
ru.r.-Hou.Uin •• dncima&amp;i. 1 '
New YOlk 6, M&lt;IMoeal l

Tonl2bl'•

p;used

cr.....,.

p-•

Plttoblqlt
9-t Ol " ChkoJo
(8ookio S-6), 3:20p.m.
S...IJioto (l!arria 1-1) ..... An...
- (=::.:)·4:05p.m. .
.
(Sampon 7·6) at New YOlk
&lt;Dotlittl7· 9),7:40 ......
• . SL 1Auil (MoJW 0-0) at JltUJadeJphi• .
,(Colmbo Ill- 10,, 7:lS p.m.
Atllnta (A- 3-li ) OLCiooinouti
~ 12-9), 7:3S p.m.
Sut Frat ·ro (lla&amp;iobt:l 3.6) IL

1985 MERCURY GlAND
SALE PIICI~ $6,295

Buy any above-ground pool end receive maintenance equipment and your choice of solar cover
or chemical pack FREE of charge .

"UP TO A f400 VAWr'

1990 GEO METRO

1987 MERCURY GRAND MARQUIS
SALE PllaD S8,495

AUTOMATIC, AIR

HDUCED TO S6, 99 5

""""""(Pootupiii· IO).I:3S p.m.

Salurday's p~~~es .
l'lulblqii•A,~~~
p.m.p.m.
SL Utuia IL '
, 1:35

- · - v... r:-rop.m.

Atlula aOtttdanatl. 2:1S p.m.
· SaaP-•llauatao.1:05p.m.
Saa Dlap II 1M AnaoJoo, IO:IIJ p.m.

no

~·

........... 3

' Milwaukee

1990
CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE

HOURS: MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9 :00 A.M.-6:00 P.M.

IntbeNBA...

.,.. U.t

E81tern Coalenno:t
. Allullr DMIIoD
.

lllfl:.c:..lsbed.:: ~~=·in~= ::-'a.ict

shT

W L

y-Jlloooi1

)'·Mil••'*•.... ......
47
......41

AMERICAN LEAGUE
Eut

· ·
of 462 tribes. Indeed, many of the:
impoverished inhabitants of the·
country's 291 reservations mus~
endure chronically squalid condi-:
tions and despair of ever experienc-•
ing a beuer life.
'

Nancy Reagan overcame. ,

&lt;-.e

'

In tbe m~Uors...

.Robert-Walter$ ·

Today in history

1

1

Appreciates suppprt ~~ti!~on:~=

•

Gallagher, M·c Cumber share first ::

By MIKE RABUN
di~n' t see anybody .~hooting any African Manny Zerman, ~ Tre-4- and Mudd played the fJrSt nine in
UPI Sports Writer
. Wild ~s out there. ·
·no, Jeff Sluman, Tom K1te, Ian an !tour and35 minutes.
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UPI) - The
N1cklaus turned 51 on Jan. 21 Baker-Finch, Bernhard Langer,
"I've juSI always lilced 10 play ·
Maslen somehow al~ys turns out and no player over 1\te age of 5.0 David Frost and Raymond Floyd, fast," Wadkins said. " When I was 1
to be .memorable: ThiS year, ~- has ~ver !"on a m~Jor. champ•· who lost this tournament last year · a kid (in Virg inia) me and my ;
ever•. u may provide a landmart m onship: J~ ~ •s still.the old- ill a sudden death playoff with fri~ would play 36 holes before :
the history d golf.
.
est ~ Iitie wmner, havmg Won Faldo.
lunch go swimming and lhen go •
At '!Je. end of ~ the. most the PGA title in 1968 at the age of
At the other end of the ~trum back out and play 18 more.
:
entertatnm' operung f!~Und m the 48.
.
.
.
csme Seve Balleste~ w1th a 75
" But I don't like to talk about :
tournaments 55-year bistory,lhose
The froitt-runners. along w11h a and Greg Norman, obviously frus. other people playing slow I've •
Uned up to make a run at.the title crowd of other players under par, trated with. his game, with t 78. been 18lking about it for y~ and '
· included the best from golfs recent left two-,time defending Masters Norman's score was the same one it does no damn 11ood"
:
past, an array of the g11111e's current champion Nick Faldo reeling . . posted by 61-year-old Arnold . Gallagher won hi~ way into the :
heroes .and a left-handed, _2()-year- FaldO. needed an eagle at the pur-5 Palmer.
Masters by capruring last year.'s :
old ':108teur who could nde star- · 13th JUSt"? shoot .an .e~n-par 72
Wadkins was. given the ~nex, Milwaukee Ope11 during a season •
dom ~!ito the 21st Century.
and~ decHned !!" mVItalio~ to dis· pected op~umty to play 10 the in which he won $476,000.
:
Thirty-one years ago at the U.S. cuss his round Wllh the media.
day's operuoJ twosome and he shot
"This is going 10 be a fun week '
Open. Ben Hogan. eventual winner
Although the group at 67 and 68 the best round he has produced in 110 mstter what happens '' said Gal: :
·
.
lagher, wbose father is 'a club pro- ;
Arnold Palmer and a chub~y- con~ enough s~ to make for 18 Mas~
cheeked amateur named Jack Nick· a potennally sensauonal touma"I think whoever made lhe pill"· fessional, whose younger brother is '
laos fG:JIBht for. the ~de iJ! w!Jat is men.t. lhere wen: other big names in(IS wanted me to. win," Wlllk:inS on the PGA Hogan Tour and whose :
recognized as a tunUng pomt m the lurking close behind.
slid. ' 'We (Wadkins· and playmg sister is on the LPGA Tour.
·
game's ~-This year's Masters
Joining Mickelson at 3-under 69 partner Jodie Mudd) had a perfect
" I'm probably more prepared :
could be Just such a ~nt.
were 1990 PGA player of lhe year golf course to play. We didn't see for this tournam ent tha·n any all :
Nict;tan~ is still a JDell!ber of the Wayne Levi, emergins star ~ anolher plaYer on the course~ .We
year. Aitd I'm fired up. Why am 1 : •
cast, this lime.at .the seruor .end of Brooks_and 1987 U.S. Open wmner had the course aJ! to ourselves.
fired llll? This is the Masters. .
·
the ladder and trymg to becolne lhe Scott SIDlpson.
Gallagher, w1nner of only one
·
·
l
oldest player ever to win a major
The large group at 70 included tournament in eight years on lhe ·
championship.
· four former Masters champions, PGA Tour and appearing in his
The Daily Sentinel
He gave himself a chance to do Fuzzy Zoeller, B·en Crenshaw, first competitive round at the
( UBI'S 1411-9811)
it Thursday by shooting a 4-under Craig Stadler and 54 -year-old Augusta National Golf Club,
.\·Dlvlolon of Mulllmtdla. IDe.
68 .that left him just one s~ot Tommy Aar~n. along with Ken played lhe fmall2 holes in S·under
~bind co-leaders Lanny Wadkins, . -Green,- Jodre-Mudtt;-~ndre-w- to earn hi_s share of lhe
lel!d:
Pubi!Jhed -every artcrnoon, Monday
thr011gh F riday, 111 Cou rt Sf .. Po·
Jun Gallagher and Mark McCIJID· Magee, Mark Calcsveccbia and _lhe
Wadkins is noted for his desll'e
meroy, Ohio, by tlle Oblo Va lley Pu bber.
surprise winner of last year's U.S. to play fast and since he was lhe
llahlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc ., , -,
But there are any number world· Open, Hale Irwin.
·
first player off the tee Thursday he
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992·2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
class play~ 11111\ious to keer. _him
Those at 71 included South had 110 one in front to slow him. He
Ohio.
from malcmg hiStory. 111c uded
·
Member: United P ress International. ' ·
a:mong them are the four plarers
Inland
Dally Press Assoctatton and the .'
tied with him at 68 - Aniencan
Ohio Newapaper ASSOC'latlon. Nationa l .
Fred Couples, Japan 's Jumbo
Adverttslne Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales-, 733 T hi r d A venue, ' _
Ozaki and Spain's Jose- Maria ·
New York, ~ew York 10017.
·
Olazibal and his old rival Tom
POSTMASTER: Send addre~s changes ~ '
Watson, a winner only once over
to The DaUy Sent!Jtel . Ill Court St., .
FRIDAY, ARIL 12, 1991
the past seven years but once again
Pomergy, Ohio 45?111.
1
feelmJlike he can claim a major
FISH
&amp;
CHIP
PLAnER
..............................
S3.19
SUBSaiiPTION Ri\TEB
' .
title.
JJr
Carrier or Mot« Route
• '
Choice
of
Slaw.
Macaroni
Salad
or
Baked
Beans.
And just two shots out of the
One Week ................................... suo. •
lead and one stroke behind Nick·
Ooe Month ..................... ...... ...... $6.9!1
SUNDAY, APRIL 14, 1991
One Year ......................... ...... .. $83.20
laus was Phil Mickelson, the U.S.
SINGLE COPY
Amateur champ who bas already
BAR·B·QUE CHICKEN DINNER .................. S4.39
PRICE
· :1
won a tournament on the PGA
.Dally ............. ...... ...... .......... 25 Ce nls . :
Mashed Potatoea and Gravy, Broccoli with
Tour this year and ICCIIIS to have a
Subscribers not desiring to pay thecar- • ·
.Cheese Sauce. Hot Roll, Coffeee or Small Drink.
limitless future.
rler may remit In adva nce direct to ,
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 mon th
"Yes, I would say he does have
bul&amp;. Credit wtll be gtven carrier each ·
a gmat future," said Nicklaus, wbo
week.
•:
Hours:
11:00
A
.M.
TO
8
P.M.
7
DAYS
A
WEEK
sat beside Mickelspn during a postNo aubacrtptlons by mall permUt~ tn • ·.
round interview. "But 6e must
areal where home carr ier serv ice IS1 )
learn 10 cope wilh publicity and all
available .
..'
lhnt goes wilh it if he wants to SUC•
Mall 8uboerlpllonl
ceed. "

By HELEN THOMAS
' '
UPI White Houle Reporter
·
.
;
WASHINGTON -A man is never a horo to his own valet. And perhaps fustladies may feel that lheir staffs and close friends, who'often rush:
into print, are lacking in lo.Y!!!ty.
~
Author Kitty Xelfey's btillating unauthorized biography of Nancy Rea-·
pn is a case in point Mrs. Reagan seems to have incurred more than the:
usual quota of detractors on her way to the top.
:
Ba!bara Bush's meteoric )IOJlUlarlty from the start of her reign in the'
White House can be partly be ascribed 10 her public persona as contrasted:
to her pedecesaor, wbo was often perceived as a clolhes horse who diet
not have the commcll.-touch.
·
•
Tbe former first lady can\c into lhe White House with an ~ prob-:
!em, polidcaUy speakiPJ. Sbe was depicted as a Rodeo Drive (Beverly;
Hills) matron who cared only about bjJh fashion and upi!nsive china.
·
Her fust year as mistress of the wlilte House was calamitous. But then:
the traumlllic attempt on her husband's lifq by a would-be-assassin and his'
brush with death was not exactly reassuring to. a woman who liad her
~ cA insecurities. It happened less than three monlhs after they sCttled'
in the White House.
'
..
Mrs. Reapn was not born wilh a silver spoon in her mouth and her·
actress mother left her to be raised by relatives until she was s.
:
In ber early months in the White House, she was criticized for purchas-·
ing expensive red and gold rimmed "Nancy" china and for renovating
the family quarterS to suit her cultivated tasies. Every lirst lady has done'
lhe same lhing, 1110111e more than olhers. •
·
·
•·
J\.S
time
went
on
and
ber
image
in
the
polls
did
not
improve,
there.
was'
buresucr8cy.
.
a consensus at the White House, with Mrs. Reagan's approval, diM She
One BIA office; for example,
had to have a canse, an identity with a project that was attuned to ~
nation's needs.
·
Sbe
had
been
interested
in
the
drug
problem
among
youth
and
chose
it'
blank cbecks • a 75-year supply •
to be her main point of pursuit in lhe White House. In that respect, Mrs.
that could have readily been stolen,
Reapn
struck a chord. .
·
filled in lhe cashed.
.
She
threw
herJe1f
into
the
camJM!ign
'aiiinst drug ilbliSe;·bi'oildeiliilg it .
In addition to the BIA's $1 billion annual budget, an additional to include criticism of Hollywood and television thst tended to portray '
. 'cated pastime. She told children "just saJ
$2 billion is expended on Native cocaine llliffmg as a sophisti
110,"
and
she
became
an
effeclive
advocate in lhe 'war against drug peel- :
American programs annual![ by dlers and users.
- ._..:..__ _ _ . _ _ _ _ _
various other components o the
. She had found the key and people responded, drawina a following or:
federal government
~
But those economic develop- fans who decided she was a fusi lady who cared abolit others.
. After she became a woman witb a cause. Mrs. Rea8an fOIIIId an identi- ·
ty of her pwn. Sbe was not just the wife of 1 president but SOIJICODe who :
was willing to go the extra mile for others. She was
for her ·good ~
works, and she blossomed under the self fulfillment that had come to her
in the White House.
·
,
i
.s~ also pined adm~ when ~ 1:"ent on the stage in the annual ; ,
Gndiron Show before an elite while be dinner gathering in a self depreBy United Preas Ioternatlonal
cating role singing "Second Hand Clothes," which mocked ber love of:
high fasbion.
·
·
Today is Friday, April 12, the 102nd day of 1991 with 263 to folIow.
As for' her power play in the White House, she shielded her busband :
when lhe Iran Contra scan4al broke and he basically went underground as :
The moon. is waning, moving toward its new phase. ,
the
Storm clouds ptherecL It was Mrs. Reagan who courageously faced ·
The miJII!Uig stara are Venus, Mars and Saturri.
the
press
on aevera1 occasions dming that tormented period and answered :
The eVeRIDI S18JB are Mercury and Jupiter.
·
their
many
quellions.
·
:
~ born on this dale are under die sign cA Aries. They include
S~ ~ pi\IICICtive and un~btedly struck others as dotilineeril)g. But ;
~ ~ Henry Clay in 1777: opera singer Lily Pons in
she did m many ways save him. He told intervlewas on many occasions ··
1904, IIUiger Tiny Tim~ born Hemert Khaury, in 1922 (age 69); jazz
that be could not imagine life without her. And one cOuld doubt their:
~:am player ~ Hancock in 1940
Sl); talk show host
devotion to eaeh other in lhe eigbt r--s they Uved in the White Houle. :
. Leaerman m 1947 (age 44); and actor-smger David Cassidy in
19.50 (age 41 ).
1bat the lint lldy had a SII'OIIJ will was clelr. But lhe llidfeled many ·
.
hJI!la from ber eatrlllpd boot-writinll daugbter, PaUl. Her 1tep1011, :
Micbeal, also wrote md u"'~aaerins boot. Tben there was the Reagan ·
On this date in history:
In 186I,Ibe Civil Wrte bepn wben Confederate troops opened tire
)IIIEII;
on Fort Sumrer, S.C. .
In 1945, President Roosevelt died at Warm Springs, Ga. About . decillona. But • did nudge her btubllld towlnf I fappioc:bematt tOward I
lhe Soviet Unioll.
:
three hom laler, Vice Plesident Harry Truman was IWO(II in as chief
e11e011tive.
She also fell that abe was mm ltleelllllllt and betler able dull her::
llustJMd to 1011 wbo WIS I belp and wbo W1S I hindrance.
..
I~ 1961, the Soviet Uaion launcbed the fillll1181111ed spaceciaft.
1111111
P.
ICet!nedY
-used
to
ay,
"You
don't
make
aew
friends
in
the
Yon Gagarin became the filii btiDIIIto orbit the eutb and retum safe- ·
White Houle....
.
ly.
.
But k IJil8l you can Inake a lot of enemies.
In I98l,lhe filii u.s.~
ftiaJU was~ .
-·

:~

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-'r

••

Going beyond 'Dances with Wolves'·

:from

Wadkins~

·. Page 2-The Dally Sentinel

·

Meigs citizens need to be heard

With Nicklaus.one st1oke behind in the Ma_sters,

Does pork barrel now extend toiseaweed?
ove~ seaweed

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

-Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

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'$19,900

Ga

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1990
·LINCOLN TOWN CAR

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614 .... J011

Jim Co.b b

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308 East Main
1.1

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CHEVROLET-OlDSMOBILE
CADILLAC-CEO, INC.
992-6614

Pomeroy, Ohio

'•

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�Sentinel

Ohio

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Friday, Aprll12, 1991

·&lt;

The Oally Sentlilei-P~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

&gt; fXrERifNCE THf JOY Of RELIGION
This Message and CJaureh .pirectory SpoiU)Ored By ~e._ lr&amp;~e_rested Busittesses Listed On .ThiS Pagf!.
·~. . . MEIGS nRE ··
TEAFORD REALTY .
P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
(row's Family Reslauront
. ,,.,,_, lt,,u, Frlti Cftld11"
~ CENitR, INC. .
216 s. Second
Nationwide Ins . Co .
228 W. Main St., Po1111ro'
Pomeroy

\
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.

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IO~W . Main
·992·2311 Pomeroy

~-------------+------------~

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PrescriptionS
"2·2955
Pom..-oy

•'

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•''

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

.•••'

BILL Of.!ICKEL

·SNOUFFER·
FIRE &amp; SAFID

"Dif!')ity and S~rvice Alway•"

SALES &amp; SDWICE

Established 1913

EWING FUNERAL HOME

992-7075

HEIDEMAN TOP GIRLS' COACH - Eastern &amp;iris' lie.. baketbaD c:oael Dawn Heideman (left), wlllt piloted the Eagles to an
11-3 reeord Ia tile SVAC Ia the 1990-91 lwclwoocl camDBilu, was
DIDled the courereuce's Coacll of tbe Year. Here tile foniier aDMld-Aaerlcu Conrennce selection and receat Ollio University
aradule recti~ her plaque from Oak Hill priDclpal and emcee
BW Halaes at Tllursda:p ai&amp;ht's SVAC wluter sports bauquet at
BacbJe H1111 Career Celller. .

-~

t92·332S

,

·st
.

.

'FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Hom ..it• SIWI

HALL HONORED - SU.thesten's Lisa Hall (left), wilD led
the Hlplallden In ICGI'Ing and was UlOIII the top five ID tle Soatbern Valley Athletic Conference In fteld·\C:. and foul shooting,
receives ller 'Molt Valuable Player plaq•
Oak HID prladpsl
and emcee BW Hllnes at Tllarsday night's SVAC wlater sports
banquet at Buckeye Hills Career Center.

John F . Futto. Mgr.
Pn. "2-2101
.1 _
Pomeroy

· ~!!!.

SUPPLY

992-2121

214 E. t.1ain
992·5130 Pomeroy

t72 lterth S.COIIII Ayt.

' ·-

'I

SWISHER&amp;UIISE

RIDENOUR

'
hAER BASKETBALL MVP - Southern's Andy Baer (left), a
recently retired point guard who averaged 20.3 points-per-game
avera~~! to help push the Tornlldoes to their second SVAC basketbaD title in the IMt three yean, receives his Most Valuable Player
plaque from Oak Hill principal and emcee Bill Haines at Thursday
night's SVAC winter sports banquet at Buckeye Hills-Career Center.

\

.

m

..

Ml•"•urt, Ohio

1116

MtAerry ' "·

SHOP ·
·'

'

992-6669

....,.,..
S.CIIIII

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' P-roy, 011.

Ol1lo

992-2975

171

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'

ltortlo

"

UWUNGS..C:OATS

FISHER
FUNERAl HOME

'-"""' $tr(ll

992-5141

. 264 South btl

laDd. SUpt.

.

CIIRlS'nAN
AI... CJe.
a.m.; Yawh

"':~Jt~ ~o.r110tt:

MOST VALUABLE BACK.- Ea&amp;tern tailback Tim Bissell
(left) steps forward to receive bls MOlt Vllluable Back plaque from
Oak Hill principal and emcee BUI Haillent 'fllursday ni&amp;lat'J·
SVAC winter 1por11 banquet at Buckeye Hills Career Center. BiaseD, a S-9, 160-poudjunior, led tile fraternity in rushiag with 1,404
yards In all fJI tbe Eagles' 10 games.

MOST VALUABLE LiNEMAN - Symmes Valley's Carl
Robinson comes forward for his Most Vllluable Ll.eiDID plaque
from Oak HW principal and emcee BDI HaiDes at Thursday Dl&amp;lal's
SV AC winter sporta buqaet at Buckeye Hills Career Ceater.
Robluoa, a '-3, 5pcJUDCiteDior wllo was lllltalled at guard and
llllebadler, bad a band Ia tbe VIkings' 5-2 showing In the league in
the
footiNID campalga.

1,.

sy~£-~Jhl~tt~!~!!~r~!!..~t~!~!lc~~!~..,

sell, Carl Robinson and Melynda
Oalliamo~e we~e the recipients of
the most valuable player.!fOPbies at
Thursday night's SVAC winter
SJIOliS banquet at Buckeye Hills
~Cenlec.
• Hall, tbe only Southwestern
player represe111Cd on this year's
aD-ronfereoce girls' basketball fmt
team, ave11geil ~xiraately 15
points per game m her four·YCIII'
&gt;&gt;ureet and 23.2 points per contest
in her farewell season. The S- 7
senior guard averaged -52% from
the field and 82% from tlie line in
ihe 1990-91 season. She joined
Kyger Creek's Yon Ragland and
Bobbie Jean Shaver, Hannan
Trace's Lucy Mullals and Tammy
Thomas,l!astem's Slepbanie Otto,
Symmes Valley's Cathy Krausz
and 1ennifer Owens, Oak Hill's
Galliamore and Cindy Stiltner,
North Gallia's Susie Robie and
.Southern's Junie Beegle on the
dream team.
· Baer, one of six seniors rece~
retired from Southern •s basket
program, sank 20.3 points per
game to help lead the Tornadoes to
the 1990-91 SVAC title. He joined
teammates Todd Grindstaff and
Jeremy Rose, Hannan Trace's
Todd Boothe and Craig Rankin,
North Gallia's Brian Stout and
Chris Tackett, Symmes Valley:s
Robinson, Eastern's Randy Moore,
Oak Hill's Bill Potter, Kyger ·
Creek's Sean Denney and South·
western' s Chris Metzger.
Bissell. a s~9. 160-pound junior
who flieled Eastern's rushing attaclt
in the 1990 football campaign.
rushed for 1,404 yards and played
in eacb of the EQ:Ies' 10 games.
Robiueon, a 6-3, 2'30-pound senior
who made a complete recovery

ftom a severe tcneo IJUUI}' suffered
at the slllt of the 19IS1.90 ~kct'
bill seuon in time for the 1990
football soaaon, wu one of the
influences in the Vikinp'
·offi ve Iiiio dill llllldo it possible
for ruMina bai:U KeaDy Daniels
and Ja1on Sheppard (at.o al.J·
svAC aolec:tloaa) to ucb. ••m
more IbiD 1.000 Jlllds.~Pbii!C!I
Kyp Credl:'a lett B
BtldiiUty Joe EdWIIdl. Dll Polcyn and si.ao Swilbllr, Olt HiD's
lob Adkiu, Chad Joaes, Sllue
Maynard. Allen and BID Pouec,

ley's Mark Edmunds, North Gal· Cindy Carney, Kyger Creek's Beth
lia's Jared Moo~e, Chris Skidmore Bradbury and Jody Nanc:e, Southand Casey Staton, Eastern's Mike em's Beegle and Megan Wolfe,
Smith, Southern's Grindstaff and Eastern's Lee Gillilan and Toby .
Travis Nease, Southwestern's John Hill, Hannan Trac:e's Tnlc:ey Jenll:Sites and Hannan Trace's Ron . ins, North Gallia's Deena Petrie
Lambert.
-·. and
Hall.
Galliamore, a 5-6 senior, was
of the Year
named the volleyball MVP for her
Heiefforts in leading Oak Hill .to a 120 record in the SV AC. She joined

. I

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o.t "''··

Richard Hamilton (volleyball).
Recipients of this year's $250
SVAC scholarships wae Eastern's
Mark· Murphy, Hannan Trace's
Eric Uoyd, Kyger Creek's Sbaver
andOakHill'sGalliamore.
Sponsoring the MVP trophies
we1e Bawn True Value of Chester,
the Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
O'Dell Lumber of Gallipolis, the
Ohio
Bank of Gallipolis and
National"Bank.

'

Banquet photos
by
G. Spencer
Osborn~
.

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COlONY THEATRE

•.

..........

- -

r

9 AJL.S P.M.
' Sat. 9 LIL·1 P.M.

GRAVELY
8Y8TEM

ONf fVINING SHOW AT 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50
446-0923

.

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c-0&gt;· ~

i.J DISI:'Hi
........

Ill I IJII tt I \I

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HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE
WELCOMES

TIM FAULK
.10m SALIS
. STAFF

~~Athens
"

· 1·594-IJSS

-

Honda Cars

A,_S

l:l'·lt"

17' ....

THE
WATERING
HOLE
Presents

"AMI X"
AND

Saturday, April 13
10 P.M.-2 A.M.
SJ,OO Cower c••I'JI

"
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IU I1Wtrll11

·~

Friday, April 12

Tim Invite• all Hi• Friend&amp;
to Stop in and See Him

.....

1.1\IING

'

'

.1:.!",,

Mf)jJM

M 1"11\M
11!-.lllltiUM

'"

!t "

NEW 1991 PATRIOT YORKTOWN
n.. Mig-· 3 bo$0001W, 2 ......

. .... . . . . 27,750
::rn: =~':,":.~~. . . . . . ... . ss,ooo
0.. 12110 lq.

-

17

... In,..,, . . '"'""' - · 7\.lt
.......

, . . . . . .

=-=-~=~

n. llilo -

flarnW, -

·

ftonl- R-11

'

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5

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Compllllly •t·up with concrtle loot1r1, vlnyllldrtlng, one •• of
tllpa, 4•• deck, up to 20 ft. of ·mattriat for each hook·up heat
tape llld til downt.
•

Stop

In And See John

POMEROY FIRST BAP!'IST, Eut .
Main St. Steve FuUer, paator. Georre
Slclan .... Sunday Scllool SupC!I'Inteadent .
. Sunday Scllool, UO a.m.; Mornlnl Worship 10:30 a.m.; Wednetday evenlaa
prayer and Blbleatudy, 7:30p.m.
nRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, 0872
Pom-eroy Pike. E . Lamor O'Bryant, pal•
tor and SWiclay lkbool Director. Scaclay
School, 9:30 a.m.: Morntna Worship,
10:45; Choir practice, 6:30p.m.: evenlnc
wonhtp, 7:30p.m.: Wldn.clay Pra~r
Service, 7:30p.m. MIJaiOfl Frlmda ~a1101
2-6), Royal Amboaudora ~boya.,OII'JB),
and Glrtaln Act1011 ~•a• 6-18) on Wldneo·
daya. 7: 30 p.m. Chureh·wlde Vlaltotlon
6::11 p.m . Tueaclay.
. FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bit·
ley Run Rood. Rev. Emmett Row.,.., pu''"'· Handley Dlftn, aopt. Suncloy School,
10a.m.; Sunday...,nma-vtc:.,7:00p.m.
: Blbteteacbtna. 7:00p.m. Tb,.....ay,
SYRACUSE MISSION, 1411 Brldtreman

..

Wedne~day

•r·

vlee, 1 p.m.
·
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,

Raclne. Rev. James Satterfteld, p11tor.
Fr..rnari Wu!lama. Supt. Sunday School

9: 4~

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MITlH~: !Ii

"

CO-CHAMPS HONORED - Tllese ltuketbaU
from
Kyger Creek aud Hannan Trace steplltd r-.nt
cochampionship trophies at Tbursday ill&amp;llt'• SVAC winter sports
banquet at Buckeye Hills Career Ceater. Oa the left llde are (1.-R)
Bob(at players Tonya Drummciud, Aatamu Buraett and Yoa
Ragland, aad ou tbe rlgbt an Wildcat pt.yen T. .my Tbom-,
Stephanie DUioD ud Luc::p Mullens.

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: jl

a.m.

ewnlna aervtce 6 p.m.;

Special Savings
'--J....._,._
1. . ~~, ,(,. 9
,,., ,...
' '.

day eacb montb worahJpservtc:eaatT:30p.
m.: Wedneoclay evenlnp at 7:30 p.m.
Pra~r and Bible Study.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mul·
beny Helebta Road, Pomeroy. PutfO' Bob
SnYfler: Sabbath School SupC!I'Intendent,
. Rodney Sptr... Sabboth Schoolbelrlna at 2

St., Syracu.e. Sunday ~hooJ 10 a.m.;

c

11111n

METHODIST,

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- SIJter Harrten Womer, Supt. Sunday
Scllool 9:30a.m.; Momlnl Wonhlp,IO:C!

He took the job that no one wanted
and got the girl that everyone did. ,, : .

s,,... -., Su-.- ....
, ,.

UNITED

welcome.

fra'* Whaley &amp; Jennifer Connelly
""' In ,

Ponwoy, OH.

' GRAHAM

l&gt;r..chlng 9:30a.m. ftrst and oecond SUn·
days or each mMth; tblrd aDd lourtll SUn·

p.m. on Saturday aftemom with worship
10rv1ce lolloooitna at '3:00 p.m. EveryMe

FRIDAY FHRU FtfliRSDA Y.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES, Ia SERVICE

204 Conclorlt.

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~THE

dri:J

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COEN HONORED - Kyger Creek bead football c:oacll Mel
Caen (left) gets bil CRCII of the Year plaque from Oak Hil principal ud emcee BW HaiDes at Tllanday Dlgbt's SVAC winter sports
llauquet at Backeye llills Career Ceater for his guldiDI tile Bo~ts
toil 9-1 ovenD record iUid a 6-1 showing Ia the coufereuce, wbac:ll
led to their 'wrln&amp; tbe teague title with Oak Hill.
·

(]{IJRCH
- 161 Mulbo!ny A"".. Pomeroy. Ph. 9ft.
118111. SOI1Irflly E-ma Mua. 5::11 p.m.:
SUnday MaM t; 3D a.m..ceo "'.,..· 10:30
a.m. lint, IO&lt;ODdond third Sunday~ oteach
montb. DtUiy Mus. 8:30a.m. Conleuii&gt;U
Saturday attornm, 4-5 p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS.
TOUC FAITH- NewLima Roacl. next to
Fort Melp Park. Robe&lt;t W. Richards, .
pastor. Sunday service~, 10 a.m. and T p,
m.; Wednesday worsblp, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORTOOMMUNITY CHURCH,
m ~art St., Mldcllepcrt. Sam Aader11011,
putor. Sunday Schoof 10 ,.m.: SUnday
evenlnil servtce7: 30 p.m.; Wedn-y ..,..
vic., 7:30 p.m.

a.m.; Sunday and Wednflday even-

Inc aervtceo, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT nRST BAPTIST.
Carner Slxtb aad Palmer. Rev. Jame~~ A.
Seddon, putor: Don WltiCOI, s.s. Supt.;
Beulah White, Alat.·lupt. SWiclay Scbool
9:1!1 om: n\ornt111 wanhlp IO:J8 ~m:
Sunay ewntna wonblp 7 pm; Prayer
meetlnll and lllbte Study Wotlneocloy 7
pm; Men'a Pra~r -kloat, lit SOtur·
day each month 7 am tn lellowllllp 11011;
adult choir practice Sonclly, 8 pm; radio
prcwram ' 'Preparlna tbe Way•• Saturday.
3 pm WMOV 11111 AM, Ravenawoocl, WV;
Lord'a SUpper oblervt!d 1st SUnay qf eacll
month.
·
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST.
!5th and Main, AI Hart~ • . mlalltfl':
Rlcllard DuBote, Aaae£1ate Putm; Mite
Gerlach. Sunday Scbool Superjlllftcleot.
Wcnlllp Service !, 8:15 o.m.: Sunday
Sdlool9 :30a.m.; WonlllpSorvl&lt;eU, 10::11
a.m.: Ewntnr Wonhlp, 7 p.m.; Wecln•
aay, 7 p.m.=• meotiJIII,
MIDDLEPO CHURCJI OF THE NAZARENE, P
.... Lloyd D. Orlnun.

Jr.. pall,... Jean Klme,lundl111obod SU-

IIOI'InlendenL !lundoy 1:30 a.m.;
~~or..._ Wonlllp-.11:30 o.m.: Iunday .........
-7 p.m.
· • p.m.: w~
....
,.. ........
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE,Rev.GI-Notmtn ~. JIJD
C!llldtll,
ludoy
Scllooll:30 a.m.; -~~~ waralllp, ID:atl
a.m.: Ev&amp;a~ellllle ..,..., {p.m.;
Prayer end Pralle WeclatociiY. 7 p.m.;
Youtll meettna. 7 p,m.
UNH&amp;D...........,. B-INIWIIJ~&amp;Y

s. s. luporla-.

Smith Or Dick Cole ·For Dttalll.

.'

COLE'S MOBILE HOMES

'

'

OP ...... COUN'I'i'

Locat~

5 Miles East Of At. 33
an At. 50 Eut, Atlw1s 512-1872

' .

CHURCH - ~~~~day: WCift!llp lllrVIooa
t:GO o.m.: Cllurall =:/i~

.' .

lUndaY leiloel, 9lldnll and lldulta. I to
1:45 a.m.; Wonldp _IJII'Ykle, 10 a.m.;
Voutll.....,, -•adloartll

•

J

i'

. ~~RIAN

·. '

•

,. !

MIDDLEPORT

i.l

-

-)'1.•

112·11117-

Mltltlleport

P·~RACUSE nRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN - Suaclay Scbo!ll, 10 a .m.;
Cb""'b Hrvlce, 11:00 a.m.: Youth..aroup.
nnt and tlltnl Sundays, • p.m.
. Rtm.AND CHURCH OF GOO, Putor,
Jolm F, Corcoran. Sunday School 10:00 a.
m.; Sunday Mondllf Worohlp 11:00 a.m.
Chlldl'f!ll'l Churdt II a.m. S~!l!ay E ..n.
ma Service 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. Yo11111
LacU..• Au.Uiary. Wednelday, 7 p.m.
F'lnrg:onhlp.
·
COMMUNITY CHURCH. 011
Rt, 124, 3 mU'" lrctm Porlland-Long Bottam. Edlel Hart, pallor- Simday Scllool,
9::11 a.m.; SUnday . mom1n1 · pr..chlnc
10:30 a.m.; Sunday eventna aervlcea, 7:30

. EASTLETART _; MorntngWorablp9:00
a.m.; ChurehSchool HJ:OOa.m.: UMW!Int
Tuetclay 7::11 p.m. ~Groce).
RACINE - Cllure!t SChool, 10 ._m.; Worohlp 11a.m.; UMW lourtb Moncla,y at 7: Sl p,
m.; Mf!ll'•l'rayel- Brulllut. w~. B
a.m. (Grace).

·

'

DEXTER

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST,

RngOI' Wataal, mln!Jter: !lorman Will,

aupt. Sunday Sdlool 9:30 a .m.; Wonblp
10::11 a.m. Bible otu4y, Wedneo·
dey, 7:00p.m.
SUS
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JE
CHRISTOFLATI'ERDAY SIJNTS. Port·
land·Raclne Road. WOllam Rouall, pu·
tor: Jaliice DIMer, church •chool director. Cbuldl achool 9:30 o.m.; Momtfia
wfO'aldp 10:30 a.m.: We&lt;IDOJ&lt;Iay ev•ntna
prayer MI'Ylcao, 7: 30 ~\"til
BETHLEHEM BA.
T. Rev. Earl
Shuler, putor. Worablp oervlce, 9:30a.m . .
SUnday Sdlool10:30a.m. Bible study and
prayer _.,Ice n.undoy, 7:30p.m.
CARLE')'ON INTERDENOM!NAT!ON·
AL CHURQI, Klnpbury Road. Rev.
Clyde w. Rend.,.... putor. Sunday
School9: 30 a.m. : Ralpll Cor!, SUpt. Evon·
Inti ...,..blp 7:00 p.m. Prayer meetlftl,
Wf!fbo-y7:00p.m.
·OLD BETHEL FREE WILL B...- •~•
CHURCH. :11901 Stote Route 7, Mtddl ..
rt. Sunday Schooi!O a.m.; Sunclly even·
_...... 7:30p.m. ~ ~y ..........
7
p.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH,
Bob Grimm, pa~tor. SundayScbool9:30a.
m. : Wor1blp JO:C!i a.m.: Sunday even1n1
a«vl&lt;e, 7 p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION ot Bald
Knob, loeated ca County Road 31. Rev.
Roeer W!Uford, paltfO'. Sunay School 9:30
a.m.: Momma Wonbtp 10:15 a.m.; Sun·
clay eventna worablp 7:00 p.m.: Wedn ...
clay""""'"' Bfbtt S1udy 7:00p.m.
WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEY AN . Cool·
vUie RD. !mo. PhUIIp Ridenour, putor.
Suncloy Scllool9:30 a.m.: worahtp ...-vice
10:30 a.m.; Bible study and W(I'Jblp lfl'·
vice. Weclneadly. 7 p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Eu,eM E . Undrrwood, mtnltter. Sunday
School, 9:30 o.m.; MomiJDI wcnhlp, 10: :II
a.m.: Evenlnl Woroblp, 7:_00 p.m.
RUTI.AI'IDli!BLE METHODIST. Rev.
Ivan Myers. Suaday School 9:30a.m. wllb
Sonay HudiCII, Supt.; Even!• service
7:00p.m . Prayer meettna and Bible study,
Wedneoclay, 7 p.m.
•
·RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Samuel Bu~. paal&lt;r. Sunday
School 1:30 a .m. ; Worobtp Servlc:.I0:30a.
m.; Yount! People'a Service 6 p.m.
Ev~n~eiiJtfciOI'VICd: 30 p.m. Wt!Cineodoy
_.tee 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St .. Mu111, w. Va. Sunday Blbto Study 10
a.m.; Worahlp U a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedaftday Bible Study, vocal music, ! p.m .
UBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud·
dlnli Lane, Mu111, W.Va. J, N. Tboclu!r,
p1111or. Ewnlnl JerVIce 7:30 p.m.; Women'sMinlltryThunde.y. 9: 30a.m.; Wtd·
neodoy Proyft' and Bible Study 7: 15 p.m.
IULLS!DE BAP11ST CHURCH, St. Rt.
1131uotoHRt. 7. Rev. Ja.-R. Acr&lt;eSr.,
pootor: Rev. Mlkr Wlltett. Aut. Poator:
Joe Humpltrey, S.S. Supt; S1nday School
to a.m.; Momln1Wonblplla1m.; Sunday
evenlJifiJOI'VIce6 p.m.; Wedneoclay evea·
lng 7 p.m.
. PORTLAND FIRST CHURCH OF 111E
NAZARENE, WUIIam JutiiJ, pallor. Sun·
dey Scltool Supt. SonJo Ju1t1J, Sunday
Schoof, 1:30 a.m.; morning worahlp, 10: 40
a.m .; Sunday and Weclneaclly a«vlcri,

..... _,__

s.

.....-..-...
-..,...
. .....-.en-

s.s.

SYRACUSE hRST CHURCH OF GOO.
non·Peatecoltal. Wonhlp setvlce Sunday
10 a .m.; Sunday SchoOl 11 a.m. Evenma
worship aervlce 7:00 p.m. Wedneoclay
prayer meettna:7:00 p.m.

aervtce

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Starllnl
Maaur and Oliver Swala, Sunclly Sehool
Supts. Preecblfta 9:30a.m. each Sunday;
Suncloy Schoof 10:30 a.m.
ROBSON (]{IJRCH OF CHRIST IN
p-:-IDDLEPORT FREEWU.L BAPTIST
CHRISTIAN UNION, ThOf(ll Durbun,
CHURCH. Corn• Alb and Plum. Noel .
pallor. Sunday oervtce, 9:30a.m.: eveaHerr11101111, putor. Sunclly Scllool10: 00 a.
ma I&lt;I'Vfce 7:00 p.m. Prayer meelll!a,
m.; Momt111 Wonhlp, 11:00 o.m.; Wed·
WediU!Iclay, 7:00p.m.
neaclay and Statunloy Evenlnl Servlceoat
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
.
7;30,p.m.
CHRIST, Jack Colelrove, putor. Bible
Ml'. OLIVE VNITED METHODIST Clau,9:30o.m.; Mornll!aWorohlp10:30o.
011 124, behind WUkeovUie. Chartea Jonel,
m.; Evenma Wonlltp, 6:)0 p.m. Tburlllay
pallor. SuacllyScbool,t:30a.m.; mcnlnl
Bible Study, 6:30p.m.
Wfl'lblp, 10: 30; llwlday and Thur...y
ZION CHURa! OE CHRIST, Pomeroy..,.,. ... ..........._ 'llCIO p.m.
'
Horrt-vth Rd. CRt. lei) Ro11ort E. Pul'
tell, mlntlm; Sh!W Stonley, Bible Scllool
COOPDATIVB PAR. .
Supt.; Harley JohnaCOI, Aaat. Supt. SUN·
IJNITJ:D IIB'I'IIODIIT CRIJJI(IB
DAY: Bible Scllool 9::11 o.m.; Wonblp
NOBTIIIIAIT CLVITI!B
10:30 A.M. and 7: :II P.M.: Wedneoclay 81·
.... tlluir• ..._
ble Study, 7:00p.m .
.... Qorloo Bel•
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Gr~. Tbe Rev. Liura A. Leach, paator .
ALFRED - Cburdl Scllool 9:30 a.m.;
Church o.rvtc:. 9::11 a.m.; Sunday School
Worlhlp,11a.m.: 11MYF6:30p.m.: UMW
!0:30a.m.
Tblnl Tueaclay, 7: 30 p.m. Communion,
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
ftnt SUnday. ~Haulh-n)
Tom RunyCOI, pa~tor. Sunday School 9: :II
CIIESTER - Worobtp 9 a.m.; Chureh
a.m.; Lorry Hay~~eo. S. Supt. Momflll
Schooi!Oa.m.; BlbleStucly. Thundoy, 7p,
worahlp 10:30 a.m.
m.: UMW, ftnt Tbundoy, 1 p.m.; 0&gt;114
RACINE CHURCH OF . THE NAZA·
munioll, flnt SUnday (Hausman).
RENE, Rev. Tbomu L. GateaU, putor.
JOPPA - Wonhtp 9:30a.m.; Chureh
Orallala, Sunday School Superjlltendcmt.
SchooiiO: 30 a.m. Bible Study Walneoclay,
Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; wonlltp--..lce
7:30p.m. (Johnam) .
10:30 a.m.; •"""'"' Jervtce, 6 p.m. Wed·
neodoy evenlniHI'Ytce, 7 p.m.
LONG IIO'ITOM - Church School 9: :II
a.m.; Worlhlp 10:30 a.m.; Btbte Study,
UBERTY CHR!ST!AN CHURCH, lleK·
Walneodoy, 7:30p.m.; Communion FlrJt
ter. Woody Call, pal!fO'. Servtcea Sunday
SUnday ot.Montb ~Rev. Charlea Eatml
10 a.m. old 7 p.m. Wecl.-y, 7 p.m.
REEDSVILLE- Sunday Worahlp SerDYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
vice 9: 30 a.m.; Cburoh School10: 30 a.m.; , Lloyd SOyre, Sup!, Sunday School 9: :II a.
Bible Study 7::11 p.m. Wedneoclay,
m.; momma wonhlp 10:30 a.m. Sunday
TIJPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL
eveniRJ 1erv1ce 7 p.m.
Chureh School 9 a.m.; WOI'Ihlp 10 a.m.;
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
BtbleStudy, Tueaclay, 7:30p.m.; Commu·
Deaver, Putor. Mlb Bwll«, Sunday
nlon Firat~~-~_ tH•uarnan).
School Supt.; Sunday School 9:30 a .m •:
CJ:NTIIAI. CLIIITEII
Rev• .,...,,,,..
Momflll worablp 10:40 o.m.; Sunday
f'VI!nlnl worship 7: 30 p.m.; Wedneoclay
eventn1 Btbte •tud)l 7:30p.m.
........... lmttll
BURLINGHAM roMio!lJNn'Y CHURCH,
.... ...... BIIey
11urt1nibom. Ray I oo I 11181, Putar; Jlo.
bert Qurt, . .lllont puttr. SUnday School
JD a.m.; w&lt;nblp 7 p.m.: w~. 6 p.m.
.... Pl-oolmtlll
ASBURY (SyraCUif!)- Wonblplla.m.
)'&lt;JUtb -~ Wed.. 7p.m. cflurcb-.
PINE GR VE HOLINESS CHURCH, \0
: Cburcb Sdloolt: 45 o.m.; Cbarae Bible
mne off Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J . Walta, pes tor.
Study, Wldneoclay, 7:30p.m.: UMw, ftrlt
Rober! Searl...
Supt. Sunday School
TuC!Iday, 1:30 p.m.; Choir Rebooraal,
9:30 a.m.: Momll!a Worship 10:30 a .m .;
Weclaeodoy 6::11 p.m. ~Tblltcher)
Suncloy •venlnl aervt&lt;e 7: :II p.m,; WedENTERPRISE - Wol'llltp 8 a.m.;
neaclay I«Vtce, 7:30p.m.
Cburoh School Ill a.m.; Bible Study, Tueo·
SU.VER RUN BAPTIST. BUI LIIUe,
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW, FlrltMoncloy, 7:30
paltfO'. Steve Little, S. s. Supt. Sunday
p.m.; UMYF llwlday, 6 p.m. ~RUey) ·
Scl&gt;oollO a.m.: MomlnlwfO'alp, Jlo.m.;
fiATWOODS- Cburcll School, 10 a.m.
Sunday evtllltll-lhlp 7:30p.m. Prayer
: Worabfp, 11 a.m.; Blbte Study, Thun.
meetlnlllld Blb!.,ludy Wedn-y, 7: 30
~ay, 7 p.m.: UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (Rt·
p.m.: Youth meetmaWedn-yot7p.m .
I'll).
REJOICING IJFE BAPTIST CHURCH
FOREST RUN - Worlhlp 9 a.m.;
- 3&amp;1 N. 2nd Ave.. t.uddl_.. Sunday
Cburcb School 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
SchooiiO a.m . Sundayevenma7:00p.m.;
Thundoy, 6: 3D p.m.; UMW thlnl Monday.
Mfd·weelc Hrvlce, Wed .. 7 Jl,m.
tTbotehe&lt;J
. LANGSVU.LE CHR!ST!AN CHURCH, ' 7: ::~·LEPORT &lt;XlMM1JNli'Y CHURCH.
HEATH (Middleport) -Church School,
Suncloy Schoolt: :II a.m.: Jell Smttll, au pt.
575 Pearl St., Sam--. put,... Sunciay
9::11 o.m.; Mornlnl Woroblp Ill: 30 a .m.;
; Mo'l'll!a wonlllp 10:30 a.m.; Sunday
Yooth Group, 4 p.m .: WednC!Iday , Bible
tnOI'!!II!I
· JJ a.m.:
Eventna
sunay andw-.y,
1:30
p.m. .........
evenln1 !I&lt;I'VIce, 7:30 p.m.: Wedneoclay
atucly 6:00p.m. Cbblr reheoraat 7: 00p.m.
ewldni'
I«'Vke.
1:
3D
p.m.
~Frank Smith) ,
.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
MINERSVILLE - Church Sdlool 9: 00
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, putor. Sunclly
a.m.j Wonlllp HrVIce 10: 00 a.m.; UMW
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
llchool 10 a .m.; Gory Reed,.~ t•fl&lt;r.
thlnl Weclneaclay. I p.m. (Tbotcber)
CHRIS11AN UNION. Hertford, W. Va.
Mornma IOMIUIII, 11 a.m.; s
ay ntcbt
PEARL CHAPEL - Churoh 9ehool9: 00
Rev. David MeMiniJ, pallor. Chureh
Jei'Yicft: Chrlltlan Eocl•vor 7: 30 p.m. ,
a.m.; Worahtp Service 111:00 a.m . ~FloSchoof 9:30 a.m.: Sunday morning aer·
Sonr M~VIcel p.m. Preacldn!l 8:30 p.m.
rfl!oe Smtih)
·
vtce. U o.m.: luncloy """"'"' IM!rYice,
Mlci·WHk p - m..un,. WO!fn-y, 7
POMEROY- Cburoh School. 9: llla.m,
7:30p.m. Wotln-yprayermeetlq,7: 30
; Wonhtp 10: 30 a.m.: Choir reh ..raat
p.~ISTIAN ~WSHIP CENTER, p.~AmVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, i.e,...t,
Wedn-y, 7:30 p.m.: UMW, aecond
SOlem st., Rutland. Rob., E . Muuer,
Tuadly, 7:30p.m.; UMYFSunday, lp.m.
w. Vo., Rt. I, Jam• Lewtl, putor. Wor·
putor. Sunday School 10:00 a.m.: Wor·
tNieod..,at
·
alllp....,... 9:30a.m.; 'Sunday Scltoolll
ohlp _.,Ice• .1: 15 a.m.; Suadoy even IIlii
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School, 9: I!
a.m.; Evonllll WG'ablp 7:30p.m. Tu-y
....VIce, 7:00p.m.: nui'Jday ..... lnJiaera.m.; Woroblp!Oo.m.; Bible Study, Wed·
cotlale PI'Qft' IIIHIIIII end Bible Shldy
·
vtce 7:00p.m.
neaclay, 7:30p.m.; UMYF (Seniors) , Sun.
9:30 a.m.; Wonhlp IOI'VIce, Wedn-y
NEW
UFE
COVENANT
CHURCH,
dly, 8 p.m.: (Jualon) rvery other Sun·
7
Cheoter, Gary HID,., putor. Sunday
clay, 6 p.m. iRUey).
.
LUTHERAN CroRCH,
llchool at 9: :II a.m.: Worohlp Jer'ltc:. ot
RUTLAND- Sunday School. 9:30a.m.;
WoJ•t old Henry Sb., Ravona•oocl, W.
10:30 a.m.; Sundoy eveni!!J aervlce, C:OO
WorJIItp MI'Yice, 10:30 a .m .; Bible Stuy, 7
va . Tbotm&gt;. Qe&lt;!l'l• C. Wetrlck, paatfO',
p.IJI.; Wedn-y DIJclple Ctua. 7:00 p.
Suaclay~t:llla.m.: Sunclay....,.htp
p.m. Thuncla~lf:iabtree).
m.
SALEM CE
- Church School9: 1~
lla.m.
a.m.; Monlnl WorJIIfp 10:15 a.m.
CALVAllY BIBLE CHURCH,Iocalecl on
(Fierce I
Po.-oy Pao. CWaty Roacl21! - · ......
HEMLOcK
GROVE
CHRISTIAN,
CharSNOWVIUE - Morning Wonhlp, 9:00
.... lltaclwootl. pallfO'.IIevtcea
tea Domlon, paltfO'. Suliloy Sdlool ~pt.
a.m.: mnaMh ScboollD:OO a.m. (Florent!f
on ~ottO:JOa.m. -7:30p.m. w1tt1
MorntngWon
..
pl::llo.m.;
Suadayllcllool
Smtih)
s..-y~I:IOo.m.Bib!e~.Wecl·
!0:30a.m.; Ewnlnlcoervlo!, T:GOp.m.
aOOtlay,J:IIIliJD.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, t'utor: Joe N.
~CWITD
IIPIIII'niAL FAITH CHURCH, Slate
..... lt .....
Sayn, Sunday lkllooll: II a ,m.: Eveatq
-~~
Ill, AtttiQalty, A. lt.wart, )IUior. •
WfnhlP 6:30p.m.; Prayer Mettlnlol:30
......... 0 Sunday Momlltt IILm.: luncl!l)'-1111
p.m. Wecln-y .
.... Qirt • •
7:30&amp;:-~--7:30 p,m. ·
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
APPLJ: GROVI: - Cllurob 8c:bool 9:00
Ml
DEPEfOIIlEH'I' BOIJ·
o.m.; - . ... Wonblp lO:GO o.m.; llbte
CHRIST. Robert Fotter, PMtor: -on!
.
NElli
CHVRQI,
!De.,
'lS P-1 11. Rev.
Caldwell
s_..tenolent:
~
actlool
tl1udy ~ '1:00 p.m.; Prayw mootlnl
lvut
M,.._
ootlttiJ
putar;
Jlolor Mantey,
7:1!0_1!-111. Tlluntlay. (IUdlol
9 o.m.S:nldp _..,lcel: t5 a.m . and 8:30
Sr., laday llclloOf Sup obi drt. Sun·
IIETIIANY - Wonlllp I a.m.;' Cllurob
00
clay llchoolt:IO a.m.; - . .-obtp
p.~
~aC:·oF ntE NAZA- 10:10
.,_JOLin.; -litudYWIIIII-10
o.m.; _ , . . wanltlp 'f:llll. p.m.;
RENE. !ln. Harbert Grate, putfO'. DoUI
•.m.: Doreu W'OIDIIl'l Ylllowatp 1ftd·
Wtdneecloy ....,.. Billie llludy, fll'IY«
_,.11a.m. (IIUor).
- · aupt. Sunday Schoof 1:1111 a.m.:
end prallo-....:!:_~p.m.
Wonldp o«Vtoo, II a.m. aid T p.m. Sun:
CAAIIEL - a....,h Scbool 1: 1111 o.m.;
CHURCH or ~,...,. CIIRIIIT AJ'tll.
clay. Wecla-y, 1 p.m. Prayer meotiJIII.
Wonldp. ID:M a.m . . _ and F ..rtll
TOIJC- VUZUdt and Want Rd. _ .
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METIIOO!ST
wttb Iutton
J.,.... Mllltr, [lllOtar. 1tJnc11r lellooli6
CHURCH. WOllam Wlltlama, putor: Rotlltnl 1:~ nclay. I :W p.m. ~llaller).
Ill: 3D a.m.; .r011111p_r:.;~y, T:
bert E. llorlllll, Dtreetor of Clu11110D Ed1&gt;
IIOJUIINO STAR - Churdl !lehooll: t!
p.m.:
?:a p.m.
o.m.: Wcnllltl 10:1111 o.m.; Blblolllucly,
~; Sle¥0 Eblin, aulltant. luncla_y
CALVARY
D4
&amp;nt·
· Scbooii:JO o.m.; Morallr wonldp 10:1111
TbllndiY,,T:• p.m. (SU.).
-l!*.tt.v. Vld«~ putar;
a.m.: , . _ Ill - . I p.m.: £'-1111
1111T0r. - Cllureb lldlool. 1: 1111 o.m.;
ctbt1llt ,..... ~ ..... lllpt.: ....
Wonltlp, 7:00p.m. Choir practice I p.m.
KorabiiWonlllplO:do.m.llntandthlrd
cllylldloolt:IOa.m.; m-'IIIWinidp. 11
Sunday. Weclaeoclay IYIDIII prayer uti
SuiJdayl; NlolriiiiD dlnn• wttiJ Carmel
,o.m.; ~.......,....._T:IIIIp.nt.
Blbltltudy.
lhlnl Tlaunctoy, I:JG p;m. ~llall•l ·
~yerM
, Wecla....y, 7:10p.m. .
\

.

'~tfR~vtOUR

..... ........"' - ·

.Q3.. r.l

13 MHI ltrMt
Mldtlopllft. Ohio 411710

llllllt*

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH. Located In Texas
Community oft Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
S&amp;nden, pa1tor. Jeff Holter, lay lea~er:
Ed ~ROush , Sunday School Supt. Sunday

SChool 9: ~ a.m.; morning worship and
children's church 10:30 a.m.; evening
pree.ehlftl service first three Sundays,
7:30p.m .; Special service fourth Sunday
evenma. 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday Prayer
Meetlq, Bible Study and Youth Fellowlhlp, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Located on 0 . J . White Road oil Hlghl"BY
160. Pat H~s(ll, pastor. Sunday SchoollO
a.m . ClaiJH ror all ages. Junior Churth ll
a.m.: Morntnr ' wor1hip 11 a.m. Adult
Choir practice&amp; p.m. Sunday. Young People'•, Chlklren's Church and Adult Bible
· Study, Wocl"::t:ir"' 7:30 - ·
HOPE BA
CHAPEL, 570 Grant
51., Middleport. AmHated with S¢tuthHn
BapUJt Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Ml·
nlater. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Moml1111
wonlllp 11 a.m.: Evening wcrshlp 7 p.m.;
Wednesday · @Vtnlng Bible study and
prayer meetlna7 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.
Rl. Wand Co. Rd. 5..Derelc Stump, pastor.
William Amberrer. S. S. Supt.; Sunday
Scl&gt;oo19: 30 a .m.; Mom Inti Worahlp 10:30
a .m. : E~nlna wcrllllp 7:3op.m . Wednes·
dly worahlp 7:30p.m .
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Comer Sycamore and Second Sla., Pomeroy. The R.v. Laura A. LNch Shref·
fiPr, patter. Sunday School 9:45 a .m.
Church service 11 a.m .
VICTORY BAPI'IST, 52:1 N. 2nd St ..
Middleport. James E. Keesee. pastor.
Su.aday mornlna worship 10 a.m.: Even ·
tnl: aervtce 7 p.m.: Wednesday evening
wanhlp 7 p .m . VIsitation Thursday 6: 30p.

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
•
Ave. Rev. !=lark Baker, paator'. Carl Notttna:ham, Sunday School Supt . Sunday . '
School 10 a.m. with ctaues for all
Evening services at 6 p.m. WednMday&amp;·
ble ltudy at 7:30p.m. Youth services Frt.
day at 7: 30p.m.
.
ECCLES !A FELLOWSHIP , 128 Mill St..
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPheram, ' :!
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.; SuM,ay
evenlna services at 1 p.m. and Wednesday
·
services at 7 p.m. •
ANTIQUITY BAPI'IST. Kenneth Smith, • 1
Plllor. Sunday School9:30 a.m.; Ch)lrch
service 7:30p.m.; youth fellowship 6: 30p.
m.; Bible study, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
'
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 330t!
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom KelJy, pas.
''!
tor. DaMy Lambert, S. S. ~upt. Sunday
morning lef"VIce at 10 a.m.; Sunday evf!nln&amp; I«VIce 7: 30p.m . Tuesday and Thur•·
day Services at 7: 30p.m.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE , Rev. Glendon Stroud, pastor.
Sunday School9: 30 a.m.; Worshlpaervlce, '.,
10:30 a .m .: Yooth IOI'VIce Sun clay 6:15 p.
,,
m. Sunday evening service 7:00p.m. Wed ·
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
"
7
,
SE'M'LEMENT CHURCH, Sun,
day aftemOCII .ervlces at 2: 30. Thurlday
evenlngarrvlrl!l at 7: JO.
,,
nRST BAPI'!ST CHURCH, Mum, W.
Va. Rev. W•llace Mlnp , paator. Sunday ' '
School 10 a.m.: Sunday P\lenlnl( service, 6
p.m.: Prayer meeting anCI Bible aludy
Wednetday, 7: J) p.m.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPI'IST, sa.
lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, peator. Sunday
School lOa.m.; Sundayevenlna'I:OOp.m.:
, 1,
Wednnday fvenlna prayer meettna 7:00
p.m.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT • .• •
CHURCH, Silver Ridge. Duane Syden·
atrlcker, palt(J'. Sunday School t a.m.; • '
Worllllp Service, 10 a .m.; Sunda.y eventaa •. '•
...,.,., 7:00p.m. Wldnesday nlgbt Bible
oludy 7: 00p.m.

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m.

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David .
Curfman, &amp;)astor. Sunday School, 10 a .m.;
wonhlp service 11 a .m .; Sunday nlaht
WOI'IhJp service 7: 30 p,m.; Midweek
pra)'8' aervtce Wednesday 7 p.m .
BffiLE -HOLINESS
WESLEYAN
CHURCH ol Mtclcll_. , lnc.. 75 Pearl St.,
Rev. Ivan M)'el's, pattor; Roger Manley,
Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
9:30 a .m.; Momln11 Worohlp 10: :II a .m.:
Eventna Wol'llllp 7:30 p.m. Wedlii'Sday
evtnlng Bible studr, prayer and pral•e
aervlce, 7:30p.m.
FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH , Long Bottorn, Sunday SchoOl, 9: lO a.m.; Morning
Worahlp 10: 4~ a.m.; Sunday evenlna7: 00
p.m. lsummer "'l: 30 p.m.); Wfldnesday
nllht 7:t;X) p.m. (summer 7:30 p.m. j.

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'W/;E:

NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH OF
GOD, Cheater- Gory HIDOI, pallOr. Sun·
clay School 1:30 o.m.: wcnhtp 10rvlce,
JO:IIOa.m.; evenlngHrvtc:e.6p,m .; Dlact·
ptealllp ctua, Wedneodoy, 7 p.m.
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
r.a........., Bulb, putor. Sunday School
9: :11 a.m.; Sunday oad Wedntlclay evenma wonhtp ..,....,., 7:00p.m.
· UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By-PUL !mo. Robert E . Smith, Sr,
putor. Melvin Dralce, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SChoolt:!Oo.m.: MommaWorlhtplO.:II,
Evenl1111 Worllltp 7:00p.m.: Wedneadly
Prayer Service, 7:00 p.m.
FAITH BAPI'IST .CHURCH , .Railroad
st., Mltlll. Sunday lkbooi!O a.m.: Mom·
1111 wcrahlp lla.m.; Even!Jiflaervlce 6 p,
m. Pra~r meotlnl end Bible Study Wed·
naav. 7 b.m.

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SHOCKING BEHAVIOR

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.•• tbtlr tbougbb eecllll• tr tlae t1A:aln1 them:
- ROIIIII!I 2:15
Some pe&lt;&gt;plenced olitdehelp to know how ID aclin public . So laxicab driven
in Paris came up with an idea ID help their riden behave themselves. h's an
eloctric clllhion riqed to a powerful battery. If the driver notices that his
pouenaer is about to do something unacceptable (like robbin&amp; or us111lting
him), ho puahes a button end zaps the rider with S2,000 volts of lo w .temion

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;. a llale like the ri&amp;Jttlwnma monitDr Ood hu pu1 in !Ill of 111: Each or ua is
equipped 10 teceiveallftl)s
. to worn ua when·we have dono WTOnf· lo's c!lllod
C&lt;llliCience and it WOtb in everyone - rollpout or noL

Romw 2. Paul defined the role the COitiCienco.in
believ.._ buttheaameapplies toChriiJW)J. Hec!lllodttthe

people who wer~ not
law ofOod wnu.n
in our hean(v.IS). It le,. ua know when we hove done sood or evil.. It ~ther
llCCIIIM ua (u il did for David in 2 Samuel 24:10) or ext:111e1 us
u did for
.of

(f

Paul inltcluns9:1).

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"1'1:::~ oeern ~ adrutic woy to a1ert101110011e wbo is outofline.jbut it
In

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AlthouRhourconlcienc:edoesn't•PIIIUJUifwewereoutwt J ,
vol,.
ofelectriclty, it is powerful, and we~ 10 lilten to itltcan help uoavoid 1101110

rather ahockin&amp; behovior.- J.D.B.

.

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O~~r """"'imce 11 a &amp;ill from

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God,

/r iu ruidirlg lighl;
·
A..t wlwlt aiJpU wilh God"8frote Word,
/rrelu ru
/r0111 rfihl. · Sper
·
.• Taken from tha O•r b1111 Bread, Aprl11991, Devollolltll
·

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The Dally SenUnel

Friday, Aprll12, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

-

·Barrett's homer ties game,
but Giants ·beat Padres 11-9
·
base and "'N&gt;Vin Mitchell
singled
home
Willie
McGee
to
make
a
UPI Spora Writer
1o1c:r
of
Craig
Lcll'erts,
0-1.
·
Dave Righetti made sure his
"Normally, that's the kind of
Nllional J:..elgue debut was 1 victogame
y0u IOIIC. •• ssid San Francisrious ooe 11111 Marty Bamu's was
co
maoaaer
Roeer Craig. "You can
mancnble.
see
It
coming.
They were way
Rigbelli. in his first appearance
down
and
kept
coming
bact. But
with the San Francisco Giants,
we
came
back,
too.
Righetti
gets
served up a two-out, three-run
the
fqt
two
guys
out
('m
the
ninth}
home run to Barrcu in lbe bottom
of lbe ninth Thlllfday to allow the !ben Jives up two ground ballund
.
San Diogo Padres to tie the score a home run and it's tied.
"Who
expects
him
(Barren)
to
~~~~ send the 11ame into extra
hit
one
out?
That's
why
this
poe
IDDlnp.
The Gianlll scored twice in the · is so enjoyable. you see something
lOth to 'claim lbeir first victory of different every day ••
The Padres bad bauled back
the season, U -9 over the l'adres,
and maim I winner of Ripen;. The from an 8-2 deficit to tie the score
left-haniler joined the Giants in the 9-9 in the ninth.
The Giants, who won for the
offaeuon u a he aaem lftet playing his entire nino-year car= with flfSt time in three ~es this season, collected 19 hits oif five San
the New Yc:rk y.,tees,
"We won the game and that Diego pitchers and the Padres
· matei me feel about this much bet- pounded 17 hits off five San Fran.
. ·
. ter," Righetti said, holding his cisco _Pitchers.
FIGHT NIGHT festivities, wblcb betlan Ia the win 4-1, were predpltated by a razor-dose pitch
index finger imd thnmb about an · Mitchell has homered in San
ninth ianiag of Thursday night's National from Reds hurler Rob Dibble that almost bit .
Franciaco's firSt three pmes and is
inch III*L
·
Leque game between the Reds and the vislliog Houston's Eric Yeldlng. Tills Is the result. (UPI) · · Barrell, whO was reJeued by the one game shy of tying tile major
• 'Houton Astros, which the Astros went on to
Boston Red Sox, smashed a 3-2 league record for homers in condeli'!?' OVCII' the ieft-field fence to sccutive games at the start of a seagive Righeai his tint blown save as son set by Willie Mays with the
Gunts in 1971.
a National Leaper.
''I'm being hungry up there:,
. "I'D remember thai one," Baral$ressive at the plate ••
rett said. "That was exciting. I
·
Slid
'
tltink these first diree games wiD
·
set the team up for lbe rat of the
season. We'D know to never give
In other NL ssmes: Los Angeles
up till the last out is mllde.''
topped Atlanla 4-2; St Louis edged
In the lOth, Will Clark collected Gl!ilalo-S-4;· CinciiiJIIti..defeated
runner Dan Gladden.
/, By TOM WITHERS'
0, and Toronto downed Milwaukee
his
fourth RBI when he singled Houston 4-1; New Yc:rk S, Montre·
Gladden went to third on a Oy to 7-3.
, . UPI Sports Writer .
.
hOme
Robby 11iompson from third al2.
Joe Slusarski wasn't awed by 'right by Ortiz, -but Newman fouled
Indlims 6, Red Sox 4
the Oakland Coliseum and the out and Slusarski sii'IICk out Chuck
At Boston, BroOk Jacoby drove
Min..,.aota Twins apparently dido 't Knoblauch to end the threat
in three runs, including two on a
Then in the seventh, Chili Davis wind· blown triple, to help the
iniimillate the roctie pitcher either.
Slusarsti, making an emergency walked leading off Blld went to sec- · Indians spoil Boston's home openstart for the A's, pitched seven ond on a groundouL He took third er. Danny Darwhi, m~ing his
~ni!lfS of five-hit shutout ball on a wild pirch before Ortiz drew a debut for the Red Sox, was rocked
TllljrSdaY to lead Oatland to a 3-0 two-out walk to put runners at the for six runs in one and two-third
comc:n. But Slusarsld got AI New- innings. Eric ~. 1-0, lasted six
trim;nph over the Twins.
up a new pitcher, but Raines and
' 'By PAUL WALSH
Slusanki was summoned from man on a come-backer. to end the and two-third innmgs for the win.
Davis
say there is no substitution
·
the A's Triple-A afrlliate in Taco- inning.
Doug Jones earned the save.
UPI Sports Writer
BALTIMORE (UPI)- Two · for Slelll!mg into the bauer's box. .
ma,,.'l'lash., to replace scheduled . Slusarski attributed alot of his
. Tigers 11,.Y•Dkees 5
"tfniil you get out there and see
·swtei Eric Show- out with an composure to catcher Jamie 'Quirk.
At Detroit, Pete Incaviglia, games into their American League
' 'I didn't feel out of control at signed by Deboit earlier this weclc, . careers, Tim ;Raines and Glenn what they have and see t!le way
infccccd thnmb - and anived three
hours before making his major- aU and when I maybe besan to look hit a.two-run homer and had two Davis are a combined 1 for 18 at they're going to pitch to you, you
have no clue what they'~e going to
like l was losing control Jamie singles to rally the Tigers. Travis the plate.
l~debut.
'Before lbe game I went out on would be right out there io calm me Fryman and Cecil Fielder each
"It's a just a matter of acljust- do with you 1" said Raines, the
tile field and wallced arti!md to just down with that real soft voice of knock;ed in three runs for De(lOiL ment, the new league, trying to NL's 1986 batting· champ. ··u·s
ratu loot," ~d Slusarski. "And his," he said. "He just calms you Paul Gibson, 2-0, earned the victo- learn these new pitchers and get- more like going out thele playing
I said. 'Wow it's (the Colisem) not down and makes you throw strikes, ry with three innings of one-hit ting familiar with the baliPirks," blind, )lut hoping you can do some
He's a great guy to throw to.''
a$ bil as it looks on TV"
relief. John Habyan, 0-I, took the ssid Raines, whO was 1rllded during things by them not knowing you as
Minnesota starter Scott Erick- loss.
·
the off-season to the Chicago well as
Slll81ki, a rildlt-hander, struck
not knowing them.''
out two alld wafked three before son, 0-1, hurled seven innings and
Sox from the Montreal
White
An&amp;eb 5, Marlnm 0
DaVIs said the team meets
Dennis Eckersley closed out the yielded two runs in taking the loss.
At Seaule, Mart Langston and Expos, where be played for 12 sea- before the game to discuss the
Rickey
Henderson
remained
one
Tw.ins in the fmal two innings for
opposing pitcher, but "other than
Jeff RObDISOricomliiii'aooa five- sons. "It's ~... a malll:l of time."
steal
behind
Lou
Brock's
major
Davis
home runs in his that, I iust rely off of my
his first save.
hit shutout to lead California.
~·once 1 was out there I was league record total of 938. He lc£t Langston, 1-0, gave up four bits in
seven seasons with the Houston instincts.' r
Astros. He wu traded io the Baltir~\y.. into th~ game, my mind the game in the seventh inning with six-phis innings and Robinson went
"Once I see a pitcher a couple
mm Orioles during the winter.
n~ycr dtlfted at all that I
a CllJITIP in hi's left calf.
• · · the last three for his first save.
times, you have a.gelltZal idea, or ..
"I really don't tnow what to , after you see him one time you
1emember," said Slusarski. "f was
Henderson ~hed base on an Dave Winfield mocked in three
expect,"
he said "I'm just relying can make a generalization about
reany focused in on what I had to infield single in the third inning, runs with a sacrifice Oy and a twoon my tcanlmates to help
with what you look fot.''
dp ~ I .wanted to stay away from but was caught stealing. With the run double for California.
the information and various pitch· Blue J•ys 7, Brew~rs 3
~ .~e inning where everything count 1-0 on Ernest Riles, He~r­
Raines said distinct differences
r.Jij 11*1-..
At Toronto, John Olerud, Kelly ers, fUid out what they'~e throwing. between the two leagues exist.
son took off for second and the
: .Tbinss almost got away from record, but catcher Junior Ortiz Gruber and Joe Caner drove in two · Other than that, I'm just go:!\1 to
"The pitchers .in this league
tllii 24-year-old in the fifth and sev- made a perfect throw and sho~ runs each to power the Blue Jays. be aggressive - see ball, hit ." pitch a litde different because of
endi. .
The two were on ~ sides the smaller ballparks and the (de!iToronto bas won three Sllllight folNewman applied the tag.
In
Gene Larkin singled
Elsewhere in the American lowing an Opening Day loss to this week wben Balumore faced ignated) hitter. Pitc,hers pretty
a111Uook IIICOIId when centerf'Jelder League: Cleveland tripped Boston Boston. David WeUs, 1-0, blanked Chicago to open the season.
much go at hitters a Jot more over
Davis bad only marginaUy bet- there because there is one less hit. Wwie
ovemm lhe ball for 6-4, Detroit I?ounded New York the Brewers on four singles
an error. ~ sprained his ankle 11-5, Califonua blanlced Seattle S- through the flfSt seven innings. Ron ter results. The slugging flfSt base· ter:'
man hit • RBI double in his first
on tbcf play and came out fl'f pinch
Robinson, 0-l, took the loss.
Raines, a four-time base stealing
AL at-bat, but has gone 0 for 7 champ, has to build a new book on
after that. He also made an error in g!~~ers' pickoff moves to first
the opener and dropped a windblown foui.JIOI! in the second pme.
"It goes both ways," he said.
The White Sox won both games, "Pitchers don't really tnow me
but with no contribution from and I don't tnow them, so I lhink
Raines at the plate. He is 0 for 10 we both have the same predica. '
.and bas failed to reach base.
ment.'' ,
· CLEVELAND,(UPI) - The
"If we can't do if with the is a vote of confidence that this
'.'I felt like that the first game
being traded, Davis said
flnancin&amp; shortfall for the Gateway money ":'e've put on the table from project will proceed and they're here, I wanted to do so well, I he Before
consi!Jeled how he would adjust
llldilllllllnd arena JI'Oiect is $44.02 th~.pubbc ~tor. then we can't do telling us to go ahead with -the didn't do anythinJ.'' sai4 Raines, to a new league and dozens of new
' ndllion, but oflicials with the pro- It, Hagan Slid.
. schematic design faze," said Gate- the designated hllter in the first pitchers.
ject llid Wednesday they are confiThe Gateway C~FJl· Board of way spokeswoman Cora Thomp- pme and the left fielder in the secdenllbey can make up the deficit in ~rust~s Wednesday gav~ autho- son.
ond.
the next aJuple months.
nzauon. to J?roceed wuh _the
Hagan, who campaigned last
Scouting repo~ help in sizing
G•teway's original budget schemauc des1gn for the stadium spring for a 15-year "sin tax" on
shortfall for the $349.53 million and arena.
•
.
alcohol and ci~ thilt will help
project wu $89.78 million, but that . The move· wtll talc:_e the project fund the project, said Gateway
deficit has been cut by more than mto the ,second of s1x ph~ses of faced a "very serious crossroad."
lWf IJirou&amp;h .raising donalions from consii'UCtiOn and will result m more The controVCI'Sial tax passed by a
. the priv•te s.e ctor and making deta!Jed plans and drawings of the nalrow margin.
·
reclll'14i!lll• in planned features on stadium,~~ and the rest of the "If all of us don't walk softly
the ~In"' and mna.
28-acre sue 10 downtown Cleve- here and malre an effort to commuMolt of the $45.76 million in lan~;B 'call ha
lbe
nicate, we could kill this deal,"
uvinga came from tenant cull! of
lSI
'/ W t that (
autho- Hagan said
$2.5.76 million. What that entails is rization vote) is saying is that there
'
reducing
features on the
Gateway
I;, IAN LOVE

=

·Slusarski's -debut stills Twins'
~ats in Athletics' 3-0 victory

-

hfti66

can

me

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All-Scholastic Award recipient named Xi Gamma Mu dinner/dance, May 11
~aron . B; Sheeta, senior at . ~e other ~o nom~ were
Me111 H1gh Sc~ool, has _been Jennifer Darlene Smith, daughter
selected to ·rece1ve.Frankhn B. of Darrell B. and Imogene G.
Walter AII-5cbolasuc Award for S~ Racial, aiCDiar at Solldlem
Meias County.
·
. High School, and Andrea L. ~e.Sheets W8l ICiected from DOIDI· • land, da•eldes and VIOla
from lbe three lailh ICbools by Cleland,
Bottom, a senior at
I c~mmitteo of educators on the
Eastan High
•
bun of grade tc::!~ average,
The applicatioos from the three
Aef/S~T sc:on:~~,
of recom- students, all oum•Dding academi·
mendation, a personal_~oal stata- cally, were reviewed by J.ohn
ment, awns, and acdVIUeS.
C~stanza, elementary supem.sor; ·
Bill Buctley, secondary supervJSor,

'•y

....,._
:-:
.,.....~ • 4, Braves 1.
••
In Atlanta, Ramoo Martinez:, 1· •
0, allowed six hits over eight
innings and Brett Butler JJOUnclei¥'
out three hits to lift the Dodgers. •
Jay Howell recaded his first sav01•i
Braves' starter Charlie Lcibrandt/•
0-1, took the .Joss. Terry Pendleton:;\
homered Col' Atlanta.
;"'
C:ardinab ~ Cubs~ , .
. In Chicago, Felix J!* Slllf!led m
two f1!DS _and Lee Snuth sUMved _a .
ninth:-mnmg rally' to lead SL ~ •
· Cardinals. Mark_Grace,_who earliei:
had ho_mered, smgled 1n tv.:&lt;&gt; ~ ~
off Snuth to pull the Cubs Within 5- •
4. ~ HpJ•. I-0, scatleled !QUI' ~!its
over SIX mnmgs for lbe WID. Mike
Harkey, 0-1, took the defeat.
·
Rt;dJ4, _Astros.1
.
•
In Cincmnau, Pete .Harmsch ..,
Jl!'Sted .his first National Lcagu_e ~
VICtory to help the Astros 10 thelf ·
first triumph of the season. ~ ·
!"o~m Charl~o.n. 0-1, went.eight ,
mm~gs, stnkmg ou~ ~eve~ an~
walking two. C~ :ScJUlling pitched,&lt;i
~ and ~third 1nnmp 10
hts firSt save.
1
Meta 6, Expo11J .
$
In New York, WaUy Whitehurst ;
scattered fi~e _hilll_over scven-pllllo1
1llllillgnutd VuK:e Colennar~;t
a run and drove home two more ~.
lead New York. Whitehurst, 1-0;•
struck out three and walked ooc in ·
only the second start of his majorleagi,Je career. Alejandro Pena
pitched out pf an eighth-inninl! jam
and John Fr;anco got the final out '
for his secood save.
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overhere;-American·I:;eague:peop~

··~

• co,..leto Unn of

V•tlllle and

~

leddlnt

Planh, . . .llling and
F!flag• Hanging lallrets,

,
Fruit and Flowering Tr11 1, 1 .
Shrubs, Azaleas,
,
lhotl. .•drons and
i •
. Holy Tr111.

Stadium project officials confident
$:44 million deficit .can:be erased .

Hubbard's Gr1111house. 1
SYIACISE, ,OHIO
992·5776

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L-~~~·~~-·~-~·;~s~=·~·~-~~~;; ·
II

eDEUVOa I SO UP

..URT·III STIIIO
eGUSS DOOIS AIOVE 1,1
•WAmCOTE UYING lOOM
•IIOIIOLITIIIC CIIUNG
•HAPI ,ACIAGI'IIKLIDID

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·

By-lsws of the Riverbend City

Nancy Morris was appointed
reporter and scrapbook historian.
A thank-you card was read from

Tellie Rowley for ~ sunshine gift
basket she received in Match.
The sunshin~ gift basket for
April was given to Andrew Stomp
and Evelyn Wood.
It was announced that the kool.aid for camp hu not reached the
goal. Mem ben are ·to bring in
more.. .
.
Communion for May will be
handled by OJerie Williamson.
Devotions Wele given by Char- ·
lotte Hanning and Jane Hysell.

ScriptuR: was I Cminthlans and the
tollic was "Variety is the Spice of
Lffe." Jane Hysell has the closing
prayer. .
.
The May 13 meeting will be
hosted by .Karleta Stump and Car·
olyn Nicholson.
·
Auending were Carol Andenon,
Jackie Reed, Brenda Bolin, Karleta
Stump, Carolyn Nicholsoa, Jane
Hysell Charlotte Hanniris. Suzie
Will, derry Lightfoot. Janice Fetty,
Paula Piclcmls, Diane Bing, Becky,
Ryan, Bethany Amberger, Vicky,
B.J ., Dakota Smith and Nancy
Morris.

sonality.

The "confession" was made
about 9 a.m. June 13,'1990 during a
comedy bit develo~ by Rycfer
and Baxter called ' Confess Your
Crime.''
The DJs, according to the newspaper's sources, fabricated a convenation with·Robcrts, who ackAI
like a "wacked out and disturbed"
caller confessing Ill killing his girlfiend.
Ryder and Baxter elicited a rambling murder confession from
Robats and persuaded listeners·and, until recently, everyone else
-thatthecallwuforreal.
· .. These guys did somcthin~
. stupid .and It snowballed 011 them,'
Sgt. John Yarbrough said. "They
certainly exercised poor decisionmakinginthis.''
Yarbrougb spent weeks sifting
through hundreds of leads and
coonlinating the investigation with
police agencies around the country.
Because the details of the phony
crime were vague enoush to sound
similar .to a host of other cases,
some indlvidulla and law enforcement agencies thought they recognized the circllmstances sunouncl-

'ing the !'murder."
·
After an internal investigation,
KROQ and its parent company,
Irumity Broadcasting Corp. admit·
ted th1s week th~t the call was a
fraud.
The Federal Communications
Commission Slid cues of Ibis kind
are often considered serious violalions, and that in some instances,
, broadcaslas have loll their licenses
for enpging in 1bolx thai prompt·
ed.pollce.anll public safety off'•ci•J•
toexoendtheirtimeandeffon. .
Tfie "callei," who had ~efused
to give bis name, told Ryder and
Baxter that he and his girlfriend
"were right on the verge Of getting
married.... And I came home and
2ht ber with somebody ... a
friend of mine, as a matter of
act"
After some prodding, the caller
admittad that he bad badly beaten
.the woman. "I don't tnow if she
mllde it thrOugh acblally," he mut·
tered.
He was dlen asked by one of the
deejays, "Is th~e a chance, senou1ly, that you killed her?" The
caller responded quietly: "Yeah, I
know I did."

Rivals try to topple 'Turtles'

!

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SPECIAL REDUCTION F4)R IMMEDIATE SALE

•ALL DRYWALL CONSTIUCTION
•MINI IUNDS uv•a lOOM
•UPGIADI n• PACIAGE
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wu-

LOS ANG~LE$ (UPI) - A
murder confession aired on a radio
station has turned out to be hoax
concocted by two morning deejays
whqse stunt prompted an extensive
ALL.SCHOLASTIC AWARD • Aaron Sheets has been selected
10-month police investigalion,
as the FranJrlln B. WaiCer AJI..SCbolasde Award wlnlier 10d will
authorities
said Thursday.
represent Melp C011nty •t a recogaitlon landleon to be beld Ia
Sheriff's
Department
Columbus on May 14. Here Harold Roush, president of the Meigs
spokesman
SgL
Bob
SIOneman
said
· County Board of Educadon, presents Sbeets with a plaque.
investigators have now closed their
probe uf the faked confession and
•
that KROQ will be billed for the
hours invested by the departmenL
I .
"We're still tallying it up. but
we handled 400 10 500 caUs m following it all up," Stoneman said
Station officials could not
Cliff Free Methodist Church at 7 immediately be reached Thursday.
FRIDAY
Accordmg to station so~rces
~ PORTLAND'- The Freedom. ·p.m. on SaiiJrd!ly.
quoted
by the Los Angeles Tunes,
Gospel Mission Church will have
the
hoax
was developed last 1une
RlTI'LAND - The Rutland Baserevival through Saturday at 7 p.m.
without
the knowledge of
·nightly with Rev. Ju01or Conger ball League will have a rmai sign- KROQ management
- by morning
from Sandyville, W.Va. Pastor up Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. deejays Kevj n Ryder
and Gene
R.G. Willford Sr. invites the pub- at the Rutland Civic Center. There (Bean) Baxt~r with. the
help .or
will also be a sign up for junior and
lic.
then-Mesa,
Ariz.,
radio
personality
senior girls.
'
Doug Roberts.
' REEDSVILLE - Revival
_Neither deejay has been disci·
REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
tbrougb Sundar at Eden United
phned
. by .maqagement and
Breliiren ·in €hrist Chorch. ·7 p.m, High Scbool Gl-" of 1992 will . Roberts,
had .posed as the
eiich evenina. Bob Wiseman ·will pR~~ent "Skinned' Alive~ a comedy ~utderous~ho
caller,
has sine~ been
dinner theatre. Dinner, 6:30-7 J).m.,
be the speaker. · ·
hJred
by
KROQ
as
an on-Bif perconsists of barbecued chicken,
"
.. , LONG BOTTOM • The Faith potatoes, vegetable, roll, cake and
Gospel Church in Long Bottom drink. Play begins at 8 p.m. The
will hold a hymn sing on Friday at dinner costs $8 and tickets for the
~p.m. featuring the group, "Trav- play only will be sold at the door
.
·
~m· On." Pastor Steve Reed for$3.
ipvites the public.
NEW YORK (UPI) - "The
BAS HAN' • The Red .Brush Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles" on
·I
: POMEROY - The Pomeroy Church of Cl!rist on Bashan Road CBS are tops in Saturday mOmilfg
Senior Citizens Dance Club will will have special services on Satur· kidvid, but next fall the rival netsax&gt;nsor a round and square dance day at 7:30p.m. and Sunday at 10 works will try to lq!pie "Tunics"
Qll Frida~ from 8-Il p.m. Music by a.m. and 6 p.m. with Denver Hill of with rapper M.C:Hammer, kid
tle Happy Hollow Boys of Athens. Foster, W.Va. Public is invited.
movie star Macauley Culkin and a
lhe. blic is invited. Those attend·
hungry plant from "Little Shop of
TIJPPERS PLAINS • The Tup- Honors.'·
ih rring snacks for the snack
pers Plljins Cadies Auxiliary 9()53 ·
Gone from the Saturday mom·
tfble. .
will have a spaghetti dinner Satur- ing schedul~;:S will be such favorites
I HARRISONVn.LE • Revival at day beginning 81 4 p.m. Cost is as "Dint: the UU!e Dinosaur" and
· ~e Harrisonville Holiness Chapel $3.50 foi adults and $1.50 for chil- "Pee-wee's Playhouse" on CBS;
·
·ube held Friday through SIUiday dren Under 1~.
"Little Rosey," "New Kids on the
· 7:30 p.m. nightly. Rev. Robert
Block," "A Pup Named ScoobyLONG BOTTOM • The Mt. Doo" and ' 'The Wizard of Oz" on
ilson will speak. Rev. John
Olive
Community Chunch will ABC; "Camp Candy," "Rich
eville invites the public.
have a hymn sing on Saturday at 7 Moran is in Gravedale High," and
blwrence· Bushinviles- "The Guys Nexl Door" on NBC,
r RUTLAND • The Return p;m;-Pastor
the
public.
along with "Piggsburg Pigs" and
jJonathan Meigs Chapter, DAR,
uZazoou" on FOx... Bill &amp;. Ted"
will meet Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the
LOTI'RIDoE - Country music jumps from CBS to Fox.
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber in
~udand. A program, ''The Early night will be held at the Lottridge
The "Turtles," in back·IO·back
jHiStory of ZOAR" wiD be present- Community Center on Saturday half-hour episodes, have ~n the
by Mts. Carl Horky. Hostesses from 6 p.m. to midoighL Refresh· major fprce in moving CBS to ,the
be available. All bands top in the Saturday kidvid ratings
re Mrs. Weber, Mrs. Virgil ments
welcome.
Public
invited.
Atkins, Mrs. Cecil Bl11ckwood,
war.
. Steven Jenkins, Mrs. Roben
To fight back in the lime ~riod,
SUNDAY
ewell and Mrs. Dayton Parsons.
ABC will air ''Hammerman, ' starPOMEROY - A 12-step AA ring M.C. Hammer in an animated
REEDSVILLE- Fellowship meeting will be held Sund~y at _7 series in which he plays Stanley
' hurch of the Nazarene in · p.m. at the JTPA off1ce 1n · Kirk Burrell (Hammer's real
lReedsville will have a gospel sing Pomeroy. ·
name}, growing up in the fictional
pn Friday featuring the Kelly's at 7
.
community of Oaktown, where his
;p.m. Rev.,John:Douglas invites the
POMEROY • The Meigs life changes dramati~ly when he
public. ;.;sGenealogical Society will m~et · puts on his "Magic Dancin'
l
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Me1gs Shoes' : and turns into superhero
TUPPERS
PLAINS
There
will
CoiUity Museum. A workshop for Hammerman.
1
be a round and square dance Friday beginning genealogists will foUow.
"Hammerman" will be fol·
lowed by .. The Pirates of Dark
rom 8-11:30 p.m, at the Tuppers
ains VFW Building featuring
POMEROY - Guest speaker at Water," an animated series in
oggy Mountain Drifters. Ronnie the First Baptist Church of which a yoQng hero named Ren
ood will be the calle.r. Public Pomeroy on SIUiday will be Pastor ·leads a noble quest.to save the once
Eddie Buffin""'n.
noble kingdom of Oc10pon OIJ a
VI'ted •
• - Services be'"n
o· at
10:30
a.m.
Public
invited.
I
dying crystal island on the watery
1
SATURDAY .
planet mer.
l POMEROY • A bake sale will
· On NBC, the anti-T,11111e barrage
MONDAY
held Saturday beginning at 9:30
REEDSVll.LE ·The Eden Unit·
.m. at Big Wheel by the United ed Brethren Church near Reedsville
ethodist Women of the Rock will hold revival services Monday
SPRING VALl FY r./NFMA
prings United Methodist Church.
through Sunday with Rev. Bob
Wiseman. Spec1al music will be
446 4524
·:
'I POMEROY - The Grubb Fami- pretented and the public is invited
y Singers will appear at the Laurel to aJtend.

Sentinel Calendar

over there. It's more of a mixture

NOW OPEN FOR THE
SPRINO SEASON

Chapeer,"L;

rcceat ~ and she 1e111 Co11ncil were distribucod to the
11er tbMib ror lbe them. ·
members.
.
c.olyn an-- bu a WOibbop
The meeting concluded wllb a
planned to comprise favors for · culanl rq101t by Gayle Roulb IIIJl
Founder's Dly.
Linda Bates prmm;' tho calllnl
Sandy Iannarelli JqKAkAI on the prop~~~~ on "'Odoor uvm,: a..
progress or the upcoming dinner den and Lawn Deccnt1on Ud Use~
and dance to be held May 11 at by ~eUing of their experialcea 8lld
RoyaiOaltR~
ways in which tbey bave land·
The Founder,.• Day commitiee · ~r~ JIIOIICitY~~in~
reported on the upcoming JRpara- _,_...,...,. books.,.~~ ...... ....

Radio station.faces bill for ·
bogus murder confession

'·•
"But I'm not going to let something like that affect me or bother
me," he said. "Again, I just look at
it aS a new challenge...
• r•
Orioles manager Frank Robinsoo was the marquee name in ·perhaps baseball's biggest inter-league
trade, ·in which the Hall of Farner..: . .
went from Cincinnati to the Ori~ ·
oles. He says adjusting from one
league to the other is easier nO\f',
than when he moved over in 1965 . ..;
"Players are going all over the,:
place now," said Robinson, criss,17
crossing his anns for emphasis9.
"The~e' s not as big a difference iii~
the two leagues as there used to be.
You see people in the National
League that used to be in tho .
American League .l!lld ~~can~
League people over in the National.
League. National League 'peopl~

nc;;w."

- · Members were ~M~inded to tum
in fair ada ra tliepnlllium book on
Mondiy at the recent meeti of
the Xi Gamma Mu
11
Sigma Pbi Sorority held at the
h
fL
Shul 10
·
orne 0 ynn
er Middle·
port.
The mice committee dumJred
the membcn for their pMicipation
in the fond prq~~'lllon deUvered in
the put weeks. It was noted that
Pat Arnold sent flowen during her

The Ajril meeting of the Lydia
Colincil uf the Bradford Church of
Christ was hosted by Charlotte
Haning and Jane HyseU.
Karleta Stomp opened the meet·
ing with prayer request and prayer.
The treasurer's repon was given by
Diane.Bing,Jane Hysell and Jackie
Reed.
Final plans were made on the
mother-daug!l~ banquet 10 be held .
May tO at 6:30p.m.
~ Bradford Homecoming will
be held Sept. 8 and Derek Stump
will be in charge of the programs. ·

'

~

.

KittY Hazier, talented andj!ifted
coordinator, and John Riebel,
· Meigs County superintende.nt.
Judgina was. do~ on a. point systern of the cnterta submitted by the
~ts. .
Sheets as the winner of the allscholastic award will attend a
~ilion luncheon to be held on
Columbus on Msy 14 with his ~ents and a ~boot representative.
Dr. Walter will present an a~ to
each of the students.

Lydia Council finalizes banquet plans

record·f

d:"&amp;..

1991/ 2 BEDROOM

•

!~~~y~,Ap~ri~1!12.:!199~1--~----------~--~~~--~----_!P~ome~r!OYt:~M~Id~d~le!pm~,!O~h~~~--------------------------~n.~O.~Iyt!Se~n~U~~~~p~~!l~? .

Raines, Davis having early trouble
adjusting to American League ways ;

roo

t

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I-

'

9 UL·10 A.M.
RSSION- S3600

271Yz NORTH IICONDoMIDDLEPORT, OHIO
!Next to tile Added Touchl
.
OlveD ltJ "DMICle Por ley '
JOY KING- 182·17·4- Call for Det1il1 Todlyl

begins with "Wishkid Starring
Macauley Culkin," a comedy
adventure series featuring the
young star of the film "Home
Alone" as a 9-year-old who gets
one magic wish per week. .
·
The second half of the hour goes
to "Spacecaas," from the crearor of
"Alf," in which alien cats try to
blend in with the Eanh varietY in
order 10 fight villains.
Fox will try "Litde Shop," starring 1 rap-happy voracious veggle
from outer space who batdes- the
evil Dr. Toxic. It IIOVides the leadin for "Bill &amp; ted," wbo used
their time- and space-uaveling
Ehone booth to hop over to ABC
romCBS.
,
CBS, with the three top shows
on kidvid - two "Tunic" half·
hours plus "Garfield and Friends"
- also has some newcomers to
announce.
"Back To The Future," with
the voices ·, and likenesses of
Michael J. Fox,.Christpher Lloyd
and Tom Wilson, continues the
adveniW'CS that began in the Steven
Spielberg movies.
·
· "Whc~e's Waldo?" an animated half-hour that includes interac·
live elements to let the viewer fmd
Waldo, was taken from the fastestselling children's book in bistcry.
"Mother Goose ani! Grimm,"
based on Pulitzer Prize-winner
Mike Peters' syndicated comic
strjJl...9.!fe:J:SJl.lJ!!I11T)'.!Illlili~~-~
tious dog who ves w • ilior·
oullhly modem Mother Ocoee. As
Judy Price, CBS vice oresldent of
children's programmfng, said of
Grimmy, "How can you not like 1
character that drinks out of toi·
leiS?"
"Riders In The Sky" combines

u.oo

u .oo

IIARGAIN MATINEES SAllDAY I SIMOAY
WGAIN NIIIHT TUt:SOAY

live singing cowboy stara with puppetry, animalion and Claymation m
a Western thllt could also IDDCII to
aJ!ybody who can stiff hum

Jli'OSIIDI.

Announcements
· Cemetery clean-up
·
Salem Township Trustee&amp; wiD
beinJ cleaning cemeteries after
April 25. Anyooc wishing to ltaep
Dowers should have them removed
by that date.
Class reunion
An organizational duB ICDJiion
meeting for the 1961 gradn•!IJI of
Southern High SchOol will be held
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at Soulbel'll Hi&amp;h
School.
Revival
The Mt. Hermon U.B. Church
will be havinJ. revival Monday
through Apnl 21. Rev. Joe
LciJbto.!l. Lopl, .will be the evan·
gelisl Special singing Monday by
The Harvest Trio and on Friday by
Southern Hill Singers. Locll lllent t
wiU also be featured.
Society to meet
•
The Meigs Genealogicai .Sociecy will meet Sunday at 2 p.m. It
the Meigs qo11nty Museum. A
~orkshop for beginning genealo·
gists will follow.
,

I

·TOPS welcomes;
new members
Three new members were weicorned and three memberships ,
were Ja~Cwed at the m:ent meeting
of Ohio TOPS Club No. 570.
Shirley Wolfe was 8IIIIOUIICed u ~
Miss Springtime and each member
presented hen gift.
:
A whita elepbant sale w• held ;
to raise money for Area Recogl)i· ,
ti Da ·
'
Cllh/iruit basket was wcin' by
Shirley Wolfe.
·
'
TOPS meets every Tuesday !
· from 6-7 p.m. followed by aerobics;
atSyracuseGradeSchool.

Coloring contest
set for area schools
Durin~ tbe month' of April,
CoJ11munuy Assault Prevention ·
Services will be bavinl a cubiul'
coniMt to promote April II being 1
awd Abuse Prevention Mandl. '
Some schools in Iackson, Olllla
and Meigs COUIIIies wiD be Jllltid·,1

~~~-:~sa;;

Childhood Can Last • Lifetime.
·
PiCtures enrered by IIC6cblldnn '
will be displaYed in local res&amp;IU·
rants: McClure's, Pleaser's, and:
Millies Restaurant and ClterinJ.

' 'Happy Trails.' '

Achievement list

Returning to CBS are "TurThe Achievement Lilt for wintles," "Garf~eld," ·~Jim Henson's
ter quarter at Southeulan BaaMuppet Babies" and "CBS Story·
College has been IIIIIOIIIIeed, . . I
~··
Named to the liat with a &amp;ride
New ABC kidvid shows, aside
from "Hammerman" and "Dark point average of 4.0 are BeckfBaD,'
MeiOdi Carl, Sandi Cole, Mlcbliel'
wau:n," inctllde:
.
"Land Of The Lost," a live- Flowers, Susan Glenn, Rosemary
action adventure about a single Keams; Kelly Nelson, Roberta
father, his son and dalghrer,lost in Ploscik, Belle Polcyn, Richard!
a prehistoric land of dinosaurs - a Reitmire, Tina Roltlllblmn, Dlrla·
show that has been lost since it was Roush, Rachel Sallee, Joy Tllclmp.,
son, Sheila Triplett llld Vicki W111-1
last aired twO decadts ~.
'
"Darkwing Duck' is an ani- dling.
mated adYenture-seekin&amp; duck who ~·-· s~~UJ.!lt.'*:!
goes after hU11101'0U1 evildoen with tei are Teresa Glassburn. Debra
Mills, April Shoemaker, Robin..
the sJogan. "Let's get danJerOUI.''
Wamsley
and Stephanie WIW.
;
Returning to ABC are "The
~
New Adventures of Winnie the
Pooh " "Beedejuice,'' "The Bup
Know ~~
Bun~y· &amp;-Tweety-Show-"·• and"Slimerl And The Real GhostBy United Preas lnterudoul 1
The longest fanp-of any ..te''
busterS."
New on NBC, along with are those of the Gaboon viper,
"Wishkid" and "SJ)IICCCats":
measuring nearly 2 inches Jona.
~

Now :You

,

..

•

RT. 33
MASON, WV
NEXT TO FAST 4 U AliD MASON MOTEL
Make Plalll To Rave Sund•y Dbuler With Ut
Featuring

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Potatou

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Or 2'111 One qJ'Our Otta.r Or'ecat Jlenu ,....,
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1991

Pl. PI lllnt

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
VAN PURCHASE
' MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMINT OF
HUMAN IEIIVICEI

. . . . . . . be . .
ceivM by the ...... C-ty
IOfll'd of Comm1111auter~ in
their oflicoo -ted In the

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
I A.M. Ulltil NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED suiiDA.Y

Courtttou•. IIaaiNI8.....
Pcm.oy, Ohio 41711 Wltl
on tile 24111 dey
I Z:OO Dl April. 1110 ..~~. •
p.m.
opened by the Cleoll of ulcl
• -· and , ... aloud for the
purchlou of a VAN for the
M~D• County o..-tment
Dl Human Berv"'" "JQBI"
P""'am.
Speciflclotlona lor hid
Van may be obtained fram
the C'-rlt Of the 1-d Dl
M~ga County Commllllon·
.,, b e t - 1lle houre of
8:30 A.M. end 4:30 f'.M ..
Mondlly throuoh Frtcley.
The Commiiiianert .,.
bound by F. . .IIIIW which
prohibita contrectlng from
en -ltnloh,.,..nt IIIey or a
family member may ...,. a

z

fi'OUCIUi
..., . . Mil.... - . . ....

0... .. M.aon CGWMi•

,,

•
o.,.
1
3

11.00 .
lt.OD '
113.00
.1 .30/ doy

I&amp;

10 •

1lj.

MOOIIIIy

15

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31 ~ H . . . . . . ..

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In lhMof._,.

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ful/nwitr/{ I 1'11'/lhl;llf' f'Xf'IIRIIIfi'S ...

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' Ad•...._. . .~.., p&amp;..c.&amp;• •l'tt.D...a. S..•&amp;•t.ll• ·
' cla•tuld ........ hMI••~d.M'Id ..... Mltc•l
wt1 ...u .,.,. . 1t1 IIW fit ,PiHNft'l fttD~~Wr Mtd tiM! GeM•
IH*S 0 .... Tt~Uio., N.cNnt OWt 11..000 hofll"

c ...

_. DA't IHOAE PU.liC:ATION

COPY DU.DLIN£

11 :00AM . SAlUADAV
2' •00 It M MONI)AV
~ :00 It M tuESDAY
2 00, M WEDN£SO.A~

MONDAY PAPER

flnencilllnterelt ln.

lUUOAY PAPER
WlONlSDA't ttA,f:ft
Tt4URIOAV ,APfR
tNtOAV ,AP(A
SI)NOAY PAPER

The CominfuiOIWI , ...
..,. the right to rojeot .,Y
end. all bldo end/or eccept
the,beet bid for~~ lntpurpOH.
Mary Hobetettar. Clerk
, Melga CC!Untv Soard Dl
Commllllonaro
(4111. 12, 2tc

,
12 ........ w.....
,. _ ,,.......

Gllnl• c... v
Aferl C.fllel14

...

~

317 Ch--e
Jll lilniCIII
246 ..... Gt. .

2&amp;,
..3

GuVM Dell.
.,• •

o.,,

w......

379

2:00PM tHURSDAY
l 00 PM fRIDAY

AM• Code :lOot

112 ........
PuR ..., '
116
143 ~
247 ~.. ..... , ....
141 R.-e
142 R11.._.

111 Pt. .......
171

~Gruw

1"73 ....Oft

112 ,..._H.. .,.

CoeMMe

Mil or trade tor lull IIQ plcxup,

:':=mr:.::.

304..7W111•

A-. Almond, 114-441-21147.
&amp;1--~­

11117 DodaO 1).150, I cyllndlr,
=~ 40,000 .,_ HIM, oxc.
ltlon, $4,100. 114-388-1811. :·
11117 IIUZU plck"'P truck, vory

1111

BIIIH . •net IMWI- wnpptd
lllnll: ct1• tor lendl ·r'"GL.... ~·
and .,. ..... ...... r:cn.t, ...
1111001.

Fumllh8Ct

leUlu

Plck-u~

11,000

~ t2,1150 BOll o~,'

aoad

-lion,.~000

IIIIFII -

mlloo,

. 114-1192·

=:...------·· .
1242.

Roome .

11

21 lw&amp;in. . ~·-,
lZ2 MoMr•LDM
JJ Pro. . IIONI 5erwic.

IH LM_..
tl7 .....,...,

..&lt;!

.

JT'S RAINING
a
few
pennies
spent
here
·
BARGAINS.. . ,:
~
~~~~:J.~u~day
BullETIN BOARD : lllldholdout comes back folding _money
CLASSIFIEDS
.
..·,
_B_ULLE
__. _T""'IN---~-0-~-R-D_D_E_A_D_LI_
- _N_~-1
· ~~---y~-ur-h~an-d_..._J..._ _ _ _ _..;..I...,;.;.._ _ _ _ _..J......;;.._ _ _ _....;;.~_-.--~~ ;:
~

.L.

o

m ""'

1

NOTICE OF SALE
On lhl 17111 day of April,
1981, AT 11 :00 A.M., 1
19711 Nuhue Mi&gt;b"- Home,
being the property of the iltt
Jock R. Miller. of llutilnd,
Ohio. wMI be . aold et the
C011ot HouM etepo, Second
Street, Po,..oy, Ohio, for
the but obtelna!H price.
Cuh on delivery of title.
lnquirleo cen be modi It
814-742·21103.
KarenThockar.
Admlnlltretor of the
E1t1t1 of Jeck II. Miller.
'decNMd. Mllgo County

4:30~.~~~xTBIEONFORE

•
l

·11.

B
.
Se.
r
'vt·ces
· usin.e ss

:· •~

JIL

___· ... ·"
. BISSELL

INSULATION
•VInyl lldlng

BUILDERS

..

_....;;;:;;;...

LAURIE'S
CUSTOM CAKES

CONMI'S
OliO IIYR 11115
alld IVIBASTIIIGS

. 992-6194
Fresh-baked Cakes,
custom-decorated just as
you request!
Birthdays, Weddings,
·Anniversries, Holidays,
Showers. ,

...-ecouot
C... No. 21,4111.
(4)10, 11, 12. 3tc

1 Cerci of Tha!Q '
.CARD OF THANKS

Crefl~o.

Grow you - n

dried lftlltorielo.

Open Thure. thru Set.
10-5: Sun. t2·5

247·4035

52101 S. I. SSI,
ladlle, Clio.

TII·COUtm
. IECYaiNG

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK .
9 A.M. 'nL 7 P.M.

WILSON'S CATERING INC.

"J" ellen • ,_ .
yvr • wnktndsh ..-

Rt. 62 South, Pt. Pleasant, WV.
304-675-4281

bu.r.en walkllds.

Ill-COUNTY
RE(YCUNG
loGIN Off tho ay,ou 0.

c-."

1'111
11•.7 I It; 141

,...,.,_lilr_m.
.......
..... ........ ....

In llamory

' - · · Otie

.............. - -... lteot·
.,..,
""'nMor• •d elf nonf.-routm ......

....,

IN MEMORY OF
ELSIE 0. CIRCLE

CAll FOI I'IICIS

· 614-HZ-$114

2/11/112~4/12/llt7

Wo ak Dlltllt Anlll:

Wllr dl4tt tllou cat u., shldalllloot,
T&lt;Mhil thl. lift 11111 OM

..,,
W11r

Rial Estate Gentrlll

so

ve•'• bower, ·

FOIEVB IIONIE
PROM TANNING

SPECIAl
1sf SO High School
Students
10 SlSSIONS- $10
Call 949-11!6 .
• for Appt.

FOIEYB IIONIE
IWIIIIID.,UCM
.... 1·11110.

, BISSELL
SID.G CO.
... ._Mt

"FIM Eetlmet'.."

PH. 949·1101
or let. 949·1160
NO SUiiDAY

"'
,;:

•.,.

C~UIITIY _
CLII

GOlf USSOHS- 11 0

11.

6 far 555

NEW u.s_Ohh 54
lrohn Clulls hplil'lll
110PIIES • IUCIUIS

..

CUSTOM llllT
,
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

•Replao-..t

Wlndo-

•Rooftng
•lnaultitlon

"At R11111 ..h Plical,. ;.:

Pll. 949-1101
., ····949·1160

UMUDISII
992-2772 or
742-2251

· 639 Bryan Place
Middleport.

UllftT CIIAIIIIS
allll 111 PLOOI CAll
efiMitlnabla Rlltee
•Quality Work

•F- Eatlmat•
Fast Dry

,.,

'. Day or Nigltt
NO SUNDAY CAW

.

______....
4-11-M-11•

_.....;

Til

.,

nNT•••m

HowaniLWnt.s.l

ROOFING

NEW- IEPAII

FlEE ESTIMATES

949-2161

WIIJ clio• J1 nul ••• - •
. .d ....

. . . IICI On llfth W11

GIIIIY•'IIId'-.._to .....

HOME 992-15892 .

plllt.

'

. . . IIIII tllllr sHIIII - b
wlllllp.

GROOM
.ROOM
Complete

..... 1M wilda wHI 11111tr

the mlniattrs for their
kind and thoupttul

praym and visits durlna

EMILEE MERINAR

· lollftrL

·S.: tho IIIIPI in llorlowtv
Ill"" slllliws ....,.110 111n
....IJDtoljos
,.... &amp; Clrclt

lilY recent hospillllza·
tLon end tllrolllhoul my
reeowry at home.

LIUill M•y

POMEROY -IT. 7 - Appro1. 18 acres of land, LCCD waler
&amp; electric available. WILL SELl ON LAND CONTRACT.
$20,0110

Owntr &amp; Operator

614-992-6120

,_oy,

lorry

H•rtuna Nice

liMII l'attors.....S.. lllpr

Real atata Gentl'lll

FOI SALE

lETART - lalnttn-• flit Ext11ior - 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 3 sitt&lt;ng porches, and a dinin&amp; room. Nice big level
yard. Fenced area w~h ~arn lor 1nlmlls, end 1 little house
lor children. Price was $42,500. IEDUCED TO 139.900

VEIY NICE TWO SIOIY IIOME
.LOCATED ON SPIING AYE.. POIIIIOY, 0110,
OWNED IY THE UTE-UIY VlltlfiA HR.
ucal'-"t phyalcal condition.

EASY U¥1118- In thts 4·yearcild 14K60 Sunnybrook mobile
home. It has a cathedral ceiling lr, dimension end a laundry
room w~h sltelves for storage, equirped krtchen, two bed·
rooms and II! bellts. It is bea.. ilu and in new condition.
price wes $14,000.
1101 $12.500

Contains -•n roo!M, bath. attic, ful
ba1ement.

Wos pl'lliowly ............... efftrlll fer
$40,000.00. Now Willilll to . . fer $25,000.00.
•
Shown lly IPIIIintlltlf lilly.
· Contact Richard £. J-, Executor at ·
614-992-2195 or t
614·H2-3721

WHAIIY'S
AUTO PAll'S
.....I.... lit

c........... ....
NEW a UIED f'AIITI
FORAUMAKIIa
MODELl

,,~

IICID OVBIS-SJt' • .

IISSBL.&amp; 1•0
COiniU(TION

;~

'&lt;

11

........

&amp;Auction

IIDDlEPOIT - 2 lots. end a one story home with seven
rooms. H•s 3 lo 4 bedroom.!, hup livinl rooill, big dinini
·room, newer one car pra&amp;e. and lour lirepleces. AIIO 11arae
floored attic, lronl porch 1nd a partly lenced larce lot
$36,0110

VERY LARGE 2 DAY

-ANnOUE &amp; COW(nBLE AUmON

BLOSSER'S AUCTION HOUSE
- Olil St. •ry's Pik1, Parlcarsbwg, WV
SUNDAY,AP1114, 1991 ~ 12NOON

•Roofing
•Siding
•P•Intlng

-01 TOiL FlEE

USED RAilROAD nES

•ciOWAVE

ltDno-

Wll ............. .doll. qulltl.
plotu-. llmpa. """ . . . liOn. ldv. ·l t plul ell lillie. ""' •lllllllblea.

·

"
.
....
-..C:!c,; ~
IIIII'S APPLilNCE =e;
-e:
SIIVICE
~

·

MI·SJJS or

......91S·JS61atflcel
,_ ....

MONDAY1 APRil: 15, 1991 - 11 A.M.'

po,.,. of.,_.,.,

• Will tell 1111111
qulltl, ·
1 t - jaris, platultl, IamPL nig1, plu•
collectlblll. plut 171 to 300 plecaa of
fumltul'l.,.d llrlnlldvll.
•
lEIMSc Cash - (I HillA 1t1 . ._

PA111CI ILOSSEI • AUClaBI ·

.

ROUTE 241- Asecluded cebin w~h aPProx. 3 1cres and all
on on• lloor. ilas 1 w11p-aroilrld porch; 2 bedrooms, larp
open llvine room 1nd k~chen wilh knolly pine on walls 1nd
ceilma. Appro1. 10 yrs. old.
$26,900

IIEIDA JEFFEIS.......................................... H2·1051

DAIUIIE lrEWAIT ..........................,.............112-015

.

IIIEIYL WALRRS ...................................,.".... 31?-0itl

theil 1111'-

.

•

. . . _ . . 10 lilly whh lirllrly
_., dar lhln, no lifting,

wrllo Sox BOx 178, Now Haven,
WY2UII.
Slay horrl4i ond rna"- 1100/Wk.

400

~,..,,

oomponleo

-

hOiiiiiWZrMI 1. Cllll for ·~az
,... dell m neeg·. 11

aso,m•.
snuatiDn
12

-

2417.
'
PICKENS FUIIIITUIIE .
-.cl
Hot 1 hold lumlehlng. 112 mi.
,..,_ Ad. Pl. P l - . WV,
caii10M'J&amp;.14!0.

OlllrJe..

-.ooo nrrn.

Crown
~

City, 2111', with gmge.
I Allrlaenllor. Porclor·

vllle.l-..&amp;1.

Mobile Homes

fOr Sale

MOO Downl link llecllirnld
Mabllo- Groot -ion,
Financing
Avollobll,
Fr11
O.IIYiry. Call E - Homt Con·
lor otiM-8144112.

NOOAEBATEI
·
On 1urr Homo In Stock
From .El._ Homt Center. Qre~t

Which To
ChoM. Financing Avollob&lt;o. Call
1-100-581-5710.

Soloellon

Wanted

From

behind Oril..iy,
- · ....... ftOO.
"'"'· 114-1112-2403.

WHIT£'8 METAL DETECTORS

Ron Allleon. 1210 leoond Avo,
Clllll,_, 014 114-441-4331.

Building

·

~ lar ront
In Poln1
Pl--nl. 3 bldrooml, uc loce11on, 114-441-0041.

42 Moblll Homll
for Rent

NUIIIV,

_,rrc

Supplies
Bloat, brick, Dlproo, win·
- . t1e. Claude Win·
1.... RiO Grande, OH Call IM24J.ti21.

12r1110, 2br In Ev-.rMn 114-4413117 oftor 4p.m.

1111 Sun Shln!1 141172, ollll un·
dar worronty. "'"''" wide. lur· - tzd,OOO. unlum'.,••000. 114-MM:MI PM. lludy lily 1.

a:oo

12xeo Schuhl, Good Conrllon,

WANTED: PI- 1o II,. In 1awri. $'.1,1100. .11.-448-6189, 614-:4*
- l i lnd llundrr tur- 11115

=::·--.:-.,.-...,-,-,...-

.......... 114 44e ,....

14

217L._..

, . . . . pail aut of
painting.
bt me
It fOI 'ou.
VEIY IUsotiAIU
HAVE IIRIINCES

a

We Need

(6141 915·4110

3-t·'l1 • 1 mo. pd.

12·31 ·80-tln

CillO-.

1 • Trane Am, . . ,,

117V Schuft 1211111 mobil• homo

Busllllll
Training

1~,

41,000 mlleo,
alwrlp
~ nevw In anow. 114-

ell e~rlc very good cond,
concr11tt block • und.rpemlng.

•==•

M~e:oo· 30U7!1-f133 .... 1:00

1178 VIctorian 14x70, _ ,
122,000. now will Hll for $1 0400.
Good oond, 304-175-e111.

111111111 ...
•

•

LIBorron :11,- · .... oond.
114-au.aztl

11117 Eooort OLl.~~'IOO.lri Pll,
llllllldonllhlft, . . . .75•

1tu len'tttl 14100, new tim.
Cal 11t 3111011 and INM

Scrv1ccs
81

..

•
'

Hom• •

lmproviments

oO•••g•

•Kitchens • Bath•
•Vinyl Siding
•Rtttorlltlon
•Repair Work
•Lind-ping •Grading

R. L. MASH ·

-CARPEmY
992-5526

,.. .,,OliO .

'/Ztlscu

. . WIM

Ileal eN PluclMIRI

,__
--~--···Cena• ,WOftl

'.

('IIIIISTIMATIII

V. C. YOUNG IH
992-6215

---

:.;;i;;..:..;iii;;;-i;;~R;;i: ' I

. . _ , llluol
.........
·fl·
hlillltL.alt
........
Cll ....
5p.a 111 •na1
~

;

IIN/c/1

CounlrAtr,..l.~

IENNm'S MOIIU ·HOME
IIEAYIIG &amp; CO,..ING ·

.._... 0. s.tf_. 1 1hel IlL eft It, 1U ·

Lost &amp; Found

I'OUNO -

,,

.... •tt&amp;Rw IDirlal. ~ ··

a...,~ .

SPECIALIZING IN....

•Cuatom B.m l!xhalllt lyat~ma
•Complete Une of Exhiuat Suppllo•
•Handle end lllltlll MonroeShocica
c- •• See V• rw A Pree ~wpectlea

114-441-22011.

__

o..,._ Pootalllo lewrnl111. don,

lteul JOII' -

IO the norl

OIIII3J04.171..1117.

Juot

=.=._a.w-- ~

7
Vlfd Salt
.;__....;.;;;;.;;...;,;;;;.;.

!":,

--~~-----"
Gelllpolll
·~

_In
............... .

&amp; VIcinity
==:=-::~~~==~
·~
ALLY...............
-- ,

lhe I!Qo beiiN lhe ad IIID run. ''
~
, _• ........, . ...., • a:GO ··•

Wt lint Cllana•• 0. ,_llw To
1'II ... hit • lt. , ...........

InCl.

.•

. _ , IS. o, • .

......_ ...IIUIII: -

IEWI'S CUSTOM BENDING .

-Homo

_...,.,~~- ·

e

MOIIU HOlE FUINACES - HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACE PAm

1211.
.
IMklna For A 0..1? Conoldor •
lenk Rielllmed Mobile Horne.
Loe DoWn Plwmorrt. c.u ,...,.
SIU711.
For lelo: IIlii
Community, oxctl'-' condHion.
3br, blot olftr. Ow- will fin·

.... Cleller .,....,, ••••• {\••

NIW ,,

..11·11·1-

s

70 Skyline 1btl, 0.. H~1 2br,
Vary c.d11on. 114-441·

Tick--

•Room Addltlone

- lloolnt

w

111111othy ~-- ...
af - • end . . no "'"""' be 1
rup onallllo .,. olher 1'1

t-4cheln, ber_2_,

FREE ElnMATES

992-6641 ...
691-6164

-a

P.O.-

Qal. Like nnr plno d - endaftor
of d,._IL top - r

.IIWOI • DIWOI

CEDAR
COIIISTIUmOIII

-

-·~-a...,

..-a,Golllpoiii,OH

-

• le. Col ~ .. 114-llltleltw t pm

RN'o &amp; L.PN'e Atleoot 1
YNr CUrrell1 Ell=- Should
Cell 11t 1•1 83
For An A~ 32
~-

LINDA'S
PAINTING

FREE ESTIMATES

~a

.

MI. MADS

t·12·10.tfn

S7UOO

IACIIE - ACRES - Acrn&amp;e - AlliiP - Appro•. 26
acres olilnd. Has IIIPfO~. 6 ICIIS lililbie.'Grelt piece lo !lilt
1 home.
$14,500

1\111101 "·"1'10111'.

OVEIII IIPAII
11111t It .. Or We

,....,.._. .... eun.nnr

)

.

bed•=--=

Oldar hemlln App!e Draw,.be-

·
- Inn
• A1April
Tho11thCllllljiollo
Holiday
I 11th.

':l
1G-lf.1 ... ,.,

1/11'11/1 ....

SHIUI &amp; TIEl
DIM and
IEMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
'BILL SLACK
992-2269

=:~158
Nurolng • eo., _ _
-Ohio. 8uMn
FrMOIIn
Will Be~~~~~
In-

we .., Wh8t we Do.
we Do Wh8t Wo Bey.

.

~-~~~1:~~551 ::.:-::r..oor~~= ~~

111!'1 :to INIOUII
LPN'110t21/HOUA
Southem Ohil Nureu Ale In1o ~ eo... Opporoo

.

Cuatom Drapel
36YearoExpertole&lt;e

667-61

rr.

~·~~·==~=-~---~--~

AYIIIfiblo In -Cantril Southlm

614·992·2111 '

Frw

2 ar I • I eorn houN - r hend riDDed In liquid tormlol.
~::.r"D' pnl, ....... 114- "

H1nd Tuftlitg ·

91$-4473

1-100·141..0070

NO JOB TOO SIALL

IOWitAII'S RUM ROAO - A101 hollll by Alta - Bi1 open
k~clien end ~vin' room w~h calhedral celllna. Ab1lcony
bedroom overiooll1ng •vinl room, 2 ol~er biJ bedrooms. Hu
a lull basement with utility room and workshop. Approx. 10
1cra olland w~h 2 Clves end en above ground ~-

·.

5:00PM.

.•

lee•••
.,,

l4oulr.... N.,..,_,.
Ccrr ;I 11....heml
1

2
ar I
llpolle Forry,

,.... •

.....

.........ca.,••

IIJ. ••

USED

2 _ , _ IIIIIUm- home, Lilt Clrelr, oimaet - . nloe ICJCitlon, 10M'J&amp;.7.171.
onJr 2 ,_,.... e-11184.

••

•

Plotilly

e-'1070.

i.

UPIIOLSTRY

ec:.m,hta

APPLIANCU
relrlg&lt;lnJiaro,
,..,..., SkiD fW-DII,
IJppor Rlvw 11&lt;1. --~ Ilona
CNIII-. Coli -.1111.
0000

LAVNI'IIUIINI1\IOijAiiiitJr.01
a bdrln In Pomer&amp;ll fDr ..m:. Par·
fl4.44l..
tlollr ·- - Awlllble .-. ~.,. 11-itoiVIw.le
. lid.

1\

'' MINII,.n ·

. . . . .e ....

fr• lstllllfltft

·. or 992·5553

.

tor

1 bdnn -

.....;...;;o._...... ,_ _., ·~
.

w.-. ...,_,

Re nt&lt;Jis

1u-. IU 112 rent.
!127.

....... edul Into- In Part·
limo enlmol - . . ln-lp,
1M llilll bl IMident of
...... Co. end hoWl Wor\ llnlltle houro Cell . et4toeiiCIS or 114-112-8427 for fin&lt;.
lher-llo.

•l

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIYKE

Step&amp;

992-7013

•Remodeling •nd
Hom• Repelrt

.
TUPPERS PIAIIIS- L111b.pr Rldp- Newer rtnch lype

home with 6 bedrooms, l1niily room,&lt; kitchens. d1ninaerea,
2 car ganp, enclosed porch, and a nict bigl.85 acre lot
Has a satellrte dish, atrium door, 3 sets olslidlnt doorund a
lninl deck.
Ill£ YOUI APPOIII11EIIT TO SU TODAY $51,900

Sale

10/JOflt tla •1

'

PWIIIcSalt

...

LAMGSVILL£- ST. AT. 124- A2 story, 4 bedroom h~se
w~h 1 I car prage and a cellar. Nice sae yard. Comes w~h
above ground poollhal is still in craie.
UUOO
IIDDLEPOIT - lain Stnet'- This home has nice size
rooms, 4 bedroom, 2 story home dh wrap-around porch,
lull basement. Silting on a 501100 lot.
$21,0110

i

Grooming

For All lrllds

blow "d •ill!.

AtMI tilt birds Will 11111 ltlolr

Homes for

,

-trrun.

Did .lllo1 bid 101 ootlf in,
And IIIII 111r fr01111 warld olllnl
OFFICE 992·2B88

.

~

.,_IIAfOIS-$111 .,
IIMIIS---$125 •
rMUIIIS-SIJS "' . '

991-SSSS .- 915·3561
, Acr.. ,,_ r.t Office
POIIIIOY, 01111

DIIIWII, CillO

- 4-5·11·1 .... pd.

llo-.r-•lllilwln.
11111111111 dlllllwll II•

-.:)

.~ ·

WAIII--SI• .,

413/1 ...

~

.,..

DIYIS-$6t.,

IADGIS
JOIIII1UPOID
'-tC..,Ii,01JI•

Real Estate

'l

,~

ISID APPUMCIS

on Tile

..,.,,

I ;

So llrt I blotiOI II IIIII ol
ours!

SPKill thinks is extended to the Po~~troy
fmtllfiiCY Squad, Dr.
l:entz, Dr. lsom Welbr,
to Holzer llltdiCII Center nurses1nd Vttel'llns'
Home Hulth Celi,
Chester Lodp 323 and
V.F.W.
·Also I wish to think all

•VINYL
•ALUMINUM IIDINQ
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

4-1-'90·1 - ·

Gutters
Down1pouta
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

tlldst thou plock for lit•

home.

698-6591

4/121'1, / 1 mo.

· Be a guest at your next party.
let us cater it for you:
Catering lor all occas1ons.

I would lib to ex~
press thinks to my flm·
ily, friends end ntieh·
bors for the vis-its •.
Clrds, food, flowers and
&amp;ifts durin&amp; illy stay in
the · hospitll lnd at

Quality
Sweeper .
Repair

•Harb PI-• •PeNnlll•
· •E¥-Ingo

Bouquets and Arrangements!

2

SPEEDY VAC

Now Open For Sprln111

Also available Silk Wedding

The family of Helen
Johnson Eblin would
like to thenk all the
mllt'ly frlend1 and rei·
atlve1 for their klndneu and help during
her lUdden d..th.
Thank you to ell who
lent food. flower•
endfor all the prayera. A apecilll thenk
v,ou to her mlnl1ter,
Bob Purtell, and
frlendl and nalghI!Ora of Wolfpen erea
for thl flowers and
food. .
• Husband, Hanry;
Children and
Grandchildren

8

45

Call

EmploymPnt Snrvrces

'

.

Autoe

'

11 M =at
p 'I
1,1 · W--ToDo

11M FoJd Aengor, fi!J, Pll 1 At,

lumeool200. 3t!W71-2115.

1144t.

~

•

Public Notice

Building In

Hinge,

lob-·-11-·

.-..

71 ~1 . .
71 c:.....,..llef.wHH ~

0501.

gu-..

1Im -

, . .......... .....-t

•-·

1210. 0100.140,000 BTU
Oalur dlo oontrol
1400. ~- I gu I l l - In

Went to ·IJur· llllndllia tlmbor.
f1WI2·7MII.
Vft!ried to buy, lllndlng tlmbor,

n v... a•wo·.

1.. Moterc,CI•
71 .................... .
71 ~ , .. . . Acctl . . . .

418 L.n .

c......

117

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A,.. CIMIII14

-- ~'-· mleo.

11181 l!iolon 4 w- Drlvo
Truck. Oood oondlon. Now
tlrw, MW rtm~ . 1100. 1'14-441·

?Z,OOIIITU llf!c.. ~ - 1 DM

Wlnttcl to Buy

=. 114~~ ai~

71 Tra.llls torlale

·· ' • . . . . . . . . .l .

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.

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. . . . . .. _ _. . . . ..,... . . . .ill'fCII' • •

c.• of lhlftM.

14 .....

-

72 Trucks for Sale

torRent

'

lllok-AuollonCom=
--.u,
- .
tu1 111M

y

II L..,... .

42 -Moille......_ ..,R.nl
43 . . . . . . . a.n

d..,. ICh_.
......... CaiiiMthare Z;DO p m.

..,.ce~,.cs..n

.......

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ _by Larry WlfPt

Apatbilent

Publlc,S.Io

8

.,,_,_£··
·-·
IJ ...... , ...

D ,._._llle

' .110

. 011!1rt

end 11.

&amp;Auction

_
-

.20
•310

44

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~·-·--

4:GO,. , _ , l'rt, .... April
12
••11,
1:00.

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,...,.............
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-

. RATES

LAFF·A·DAY

&amp;VIcinity

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

~

~:

Ohio

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

=··~
..,..
to'i5"",.,.~
-.

.....,._

... .,....

Pl. "Ill lilt
· &amp;VIcinity

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Mlrr'o O..lltr Child Cora: 51111,

olhwrllble, nlllrltiCJW - • ·
F - - tiM. Any lhltt. 11444M:nt. .
Mlee Pluil'o 0., C&amp;ro Clnler.

lela, 11f1Dn11111o, cltilrlolro. M-F

I o.m. • 5:10 p.m. logo! 2 ·10.
lllarw, oner . . - . lln&gt;polno
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,..._, 10 y..,. IEllprorilnOI;
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471" Sf. II. 141

1/15/tlll ...

.......... .

.:,:::..,__llllltrflll,
_ _ _1044'/1.
_ _ :I

"I hurd you had teeth knocked out In your
1a11 fight. Make sure you declare anything
the tooth lalrv.lelvee. "

)i

'

�Sund'"•

75 cents
'

Society ·
provides
•
- . servtce

Tom Greene was one of last packet boats to
be built in Point Pleasant -James Sands • A-6

'

Pictared, 1-r, troat,-lre ·Jadya Swa.rtz, Tara ·
Erwin, Kevla Loaaa, Heidi HuffmiD, Becky
Meier and Ja•ie Kopezlnsky. Back, Seienee
teaeber Rusty Boob!an, Cryslal Vaapu, Sam
Cow11n, Walt WllllaiDI, Sarlll ADderson and
Brian Smith.
.

:Meigs Junior High students recognized .

•

:.
:
:
,
•

Four students at Meigs Junior
High School have qualified to compete in lhe Slate Science Day at
Ohio Wesleyan University in
Delaware on April 20 sponsored by
the Junior Academy Program of
The Ohio Academy of Science. •
They are Becky Meier; Crysllll

·Area deaths

· Delca R. Mohler

Delca Rea Mohler. 81, Westminster, S.C., formerly of Mohler
Lane in Athens, died Thursday
· morning, Apq112. 1991, at Oconee
Memorial Hospital in Senneca,
· S.C.
.
She was born in Meigs County,
lhe daughter of tile laic Jolm A. and
· Mary Ann (Fn:nch) Warner.
She was a retired employee of
lhe Alhens Menllll Health Center
. and a self-employed cake decora-

: tor.

.

• She is survived by two daugh; ters, Palma Mohler Goodwin of
; Pomeroy and Gbida Kaye Mohler
• Barnhart, New Lexington; three
' ·sons, Manning Mohler of Pomeroy,
• John Sedwick Mohler, Nettie,
; W.VL, and Harley Elson Mohler,
; Westminster, S.C.; ·two sisters,
• Cletilh Johnston and Ina Curl, bolh
: of Columbus; 22 grandchildren; 39
: great grandchildren; and 1 great, great grandchild. . .
, She was preceded in death by
: her husband Sedwick in 1960; a
, daughla', Delores Jo Parsons; tJuu
, sisters, Mary Ann Amos..Elizabeth
: warner and Zelda Davis; lind two
· brothers, Herman Dale and John

.; wamer.

·

·

Funeral services will be at 1
p.m. on Sunday it Jagc:rs and Sons
• Funeral Home in Athens with
· Andy Benyi offiCiating. Burial will
, be in White Oak Cemetery.
·
; Friends may call at the funeral
• home on Sunday from 11 Lm. to 1
p.m.

Vaughan, who won first place in
the junior high division of chemistry and $SO for au Outstanding
Achievement Aw8ni at the District
.Science Day at Ohio University;
Walt Williams, who received $100,
the. Governor's Award out of all
students competing for the best
enviromnenllll science project and
an outstanding achievement award
from the geology department at
O.U.; and Heidi Huffman, who

Murl Irene Ours, 74, of Allen
: St., Chester, died Tuesday, April
: i 1, 1991, at lhe Holzer Med1cal
; Cent¢r following an extended ill• ness.
BOrn on Feb; 25, 1917 in Meigs
County, she was 'the daughter of
the late Lester E. Trussell and
Frances E. Ridenour Trussell. She
, was a member of the Westside
: Church of Christ
•. Mrs. Ours is survived by her
· husbaDd, Ralph W. Ours, a daughter and son-in-law, Betty aild
Richard Gaul, Chester; and a
grandSon and his wife, Mark and
Gwen Hall, and another gnmdson,
David Gaul, Chester; and a siscer,
NeU Albinger, Ventora, Calif.
, . Sesides her parents she was .pre• ceded in death by an infant son,
' Stanley Truascll; and four sisters,
, Enid Trussell, Constance Allen,
Mildred Frank and Inez Carson.
· FUIICIII services wiU be held at
1 p.m. Saturday at the Ewing
Fulieral Home. Landon Hope will
officiate and burial will be in
Chester Cemetery. Friends may
· call at the funeral home Friday
' from 4 to 9 p.m. ,

Charles L. Rutan

Charles Leroy (Roy) Rutan, 91,

, of Boulder City, Nev., died Tues. da~. Apri19, 1991 in Nevada.
: He retired from lhe Wheeling
: Steel Company', Steubenville, in

Co"ection

=s,

,

'

41tLHfi

. VDL 21, ND. 10
. Copyrighted 1111

TOP SOIL

139

SOil

ct .. ~em2 39 ,

IS1"f:.~~~92

.

"'"

' " ' " ·

Meigs elderly will.be
affected by cutbacks .

~·~ ~~r ·
Pint Bark

Mini-Nuggets

29

lco.h.

"'"

1108261

PLUS

LOOKOUT

EXPLORER

AS SIOWN

' AS SIIOWII

18010131

EAGLES .EAGLES
NEST
·NEST
CLIMBER

LOADING SITE • Clotbelloaded ooto ... vu wiD be sent to
citizens or the Soviet Uuloo, thanks to the efforts·of the ~ew Life
Assembly of, God aud the Mel11 United Metbodllt Cooperative
Parish. hstcirs and laity of both tile New Life Assembly of God In
Allla~as aud the United Methodist Cllurcbes In Melp County lt11d

•

438°

110101

'

ONLY

S2.69

ONlY

99(

HOUJtS

0

•

"SUDE SOLD IKTRA"

"Not

SPECIAL su•AY, APII. 14 T•OUGH
SAIIIDAY, APRIL 20, 1991

I .. ..._,

POMEROY - A clotlling drive
co-sponsored by lhe M~igs United •
Melhodist Cooperative Parish and
. the New Life Assembly of God in
Athens will both benefit the parish
and provide clothing and Bibles for
the people of the Soviet Union.
At least 400 trash bags filled
with clothing were collected in
Meigs County during a special
drive spearheaded by lhe parish.
Many of the items will be sent to
the Soviet Union by New Life
Assembly of God, an Athens
church which has been conducting
'a similar drive for several weeks.
Prior to sending lhe clolhes to
Athens, however, the United
Methodist-sponsored parish sorted
· out clothing that could be best used
in the local area. According to
Cootinued on A-3

COMMANDERS
TOWER PACKAGE

.

hallln •
- - . entlltot p ,, ....

•

'·

182~
.
11012101

11012101

J, REED

Times-Sentinel Staff

$1.79 EACH

COOLERS

Drive nets
400 bags·
of clothing

9200 11600
IIOIOUA

.

G'a'lila Count)' area to i'all.e' 'i witraeis of the
necessity or tissue and or1an donations. For
more lllformation, contact LOOP (Lifeline of
Ohio Ofgan Procuremeat) at (61'4) 263-54167.

B)' BRIAN

PLUS

Vanilla Frozen D•.-t. Hot Caramel Topping. Hot Fudge
Topping. Whipped er-e, A Cheri'/ and Nutsl

lltm.lllelnl.peo•all•..._·

.

..Qr a urer trau,..ilt, llr.teliKIJu •• ~.. iii the

· SCOUT
TOWER

SCOUT
TOWER

IWO TUITLE SUNDAES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE

IPEC/All

'

HliD£
UTIA

1101075

2 FOR 1 SALE

'

_

.

........

9900

ONLY I-

ITALIAN SUB
SANDWICH
A WI 111011 IIIIIIIUII . _ wllll

309

FUN!

AS SHOWN

.. ,..,. Ou"'tltlee Mey Be

Anpor~albte

um~~ec~·~

for Trpa;:wlt4•11rrqr~.··

V {\I I I Y
' II' ·1 r II

.IION.·Fa
7110-S...
SAT.
1·100-r:U-3U4
(

•

J

She explained that even though would have been required tQ
a high J?Crcentage. of lhe Options ·"spend down~· 10 S{,500.
·
clients m Meigs County are low"These are ihe people whom we
POMEROY ; The lives of many income and considered ai risk of have seen 'fall through the cracks:
elderly Meigs Countians will be institution~tion, many could not for years, and now if Options is
adversely affected if funding of the qualify for serviees under fassport P,hased out, they will continue td
Opcions for Elders program which . because of the difference in the fall through .the etacks"' she con•
:
provides a system of in-home ·ser- w.ay income eligibility is deter· tinued.
mined.
"Spending down" to qualify foi
vices is reduced.
'That was what Eleanor Thomas,
She cited an 89-year-old Medicaid and entering a nursin~t
executive director of the Meigs woman, who died this past year, home only costs lhe State more
County Council on Aging, told who existed on a $288 a month money, Mrs. nomas said, since it
slate officials when she testified Society Security income plus a has been proven that lteeping tho
Thursday before the House small interest check from her saY.. • elderly in their homes as long d
Finance Sub-Committee.
ings account of $6,000. To be eligi" possible is 1101 only !he best but ~
Mrs. Thonlas was one of several ble for such a program as Passpon, cheapest way of assisting the frail
senior citizen l!.rogram directors Mrs'. Thomas said the woman .
Continued on A·3
involved in the options propn to
testify before .lhe sub-comm111ee on ,
the program which is geared to
keep the elderly in !heir own hoJIIes
and out of nursing homes.
Studies have repeatedly shown
that older persons can reniain in
GALLIPOLIS - The man of Vinton in January 1990.
their own homes at a much less
cost than they can live in nursing accused of shooting to death an
The case had been moved to li
homes, m~g it much more cost acquaintanCe was found not guilty Franklin County Court in Novem:
by a Franklin County jury Friday.
effective to.the State.
ber 1990. GaUia County Common
The jury deliberated six and a Pleas Judge Donald A. Cox heard
Under Gov. George V.
. Voinovich's proposed budget the half hours over tho case of Jerry the case and Gallia County ProseOptions .Jl!OPII has been targeted MatJJiews. of Vinton, )Vho was cutor Brent Saunders acted u pms·ror l'llluCdan·!hill year and ·ptwod charted with the v'olll'ntary ·CCUtor.·
manslaughter of John 'Paul Jones,
cOinpletely out by 1993.
Administration officials cite
increased funding for Passport, a
home care ~ that serves people already eligible for Medicaid,
as evidence that the governor is
doing everything possible wilhin
the constraints of th'e budget
McARTHUR - A nine-mile oil Logan.
crunch, to help the elderly.
slick
on
Raccoon
Creek
in
Vinton
Officials
believe
that
oil
wa's
However. 1n her teSti!1'imY Mrs.
Thomas pointed out that while County is absorbing the efforts of being pumped from one storage
Passport is now state-wide, lhat in sevl!ral Ohio Depanment of Natu- tank to another, but lhe hose conno way minimizes the Options for ral Resources divisions, as well as necting the two tanks was corroded
and the oil flowed into the creek.
Elders program since "it serves the state and federal EPA. ·
When
a
Knox
Township
woman
Division or Oil and Gas Chief
impaired elderly, many of whom
reported
lhe
SPill
April
7,
the
DiviDonald
C. Mason s8id that between
are low-income but. not Passpon
sion
of
Oil
and·
Gas
and
lhe
Ohio
840
and
3,000 BBIIOIIS of oil ·
eligible."
·
EPA
joined
forces
to
contain
the
entered
Raccoon
Creek just south
"Options is not a duplication or
spill.
Division
of
Forestry
patrol
of
lhe
U.S.
50
overpass
and spread
Passport as some people may
planes
were
called
in
to
track
the
sduthwest
to
Vales
Mill.
The SPiU
believe, and it cannot be considered
oil
by
air
to
lhe
spill
source.
Oil
is
currently
being
contained
by 600
as a 'safety net' for those who are
.
was
found
leaking
rrom
a
raulty
feet of conllinment booms and two
10 be phased out of Options - at
least not in Meigs County." she hose leading from an oil storage logjams.
tank owned by Paul A. Grim,
emphasized.
·

Jury finds Matthews no~ :
guilty in shooting death .. :

SCOUT SWING SET
..

SUNDAyI APRIL 14

IIGIUI

'
3

I

~

BAEK-YARD

-

N ORSHIN
.I

219

NUGGETS

.21

3114 Em Main St.

rim

P1111 lark

E~~9;)/ ~:.~~~w!':':l;.;i~ 124 ·f~~intha.

Gen. Hartinger Pkwy "78 Jaaban Pike
OALLIPOUS
MIDDLEPORT
114-441-3837
114·982-11241

219

,...... Pon..G

17'

Eight calls for assislance wm: answered by units of Meigs County

•clure's Family Restaurant

'13 Sectlono, 92 Pogoo
A. Multlmodla Inc. Newepap•

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, Aprll14, 1991

..

'

a deer/car accident~ on Thursday evening.
According to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, ~ HiU of Racine was
southbound on State Route 338 near Apple Grove when a deer ran into
the p~th of her 1990 Chevrolet Cavalier. Moderate damJI&amp;e was reported to the vehicle.
·
·

.

Weatber•..__.............. A·3

•·

Cypress
Mukh .

The Meigs County Sheriff's Dej:ebuent teporled thai deputies took

~.

Rain. High today in mid 60s.

..

A. Yeauger, also of Pomer~y.; :
Linda S. Cozart. PomCJOy apmst.
Rollald C. Cozart; and Edie Grim\
Willtins, Pomeroy a,gainst Ronnie &gt;
Paul Wiltins. Gallipolis.
:
An action for dissolution of&gt;
marriage bas been filed by Terrill:
Joscp.h ~iclde and ,Wendy Jane~
McNiclde, both ofRacUIC.
.:

i CU. FT.

Deer-related accident reported

Norris, who was taken to~lzer Medical Center. At 9:43 a.m., Olive ·
Fire Department went to a bam f1111 on State Route 681.
At 3:01 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to High S~ for John Hunnell. .
Hunnell was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 3:28 p.m., Mid.
dleport fllC depanment went to FoUrth and Race Streets for a stove fllC
atlhe Kelly Holman residence. At 3:50 p.m.. Middlepon squad went to
General Hartinger Partway for Emma Ashley. She was ta&amp;n to Holz·
er. At S:OI p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Wes&amp; Main for William Van
Meter, who was treated but not transported. At 8:52 p.m., Middlep&lt;xt
squad went to State Route 7 for Harry Miller. Miller was taken to
Holzer. At 9:05 p.m., Middleport squail'iveiu to Vaughan's Cardinal
for Van Meter. He was taken to Vetmns.
.
Seven calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs .
County Emergency Medical Services on Wednesday.
At 10 a.m., Syracuse squad went to Elm Street for Virginia
Cleelt and transported 'her 10 Veterans Memorial Hospillll.
At 3:32p.m., Tuppers Plains squad went to State Route 681 for
Bonitta Sm1th, who was taken to St. Joseph Hospital. At 6:27 p.!JI.,
Middleport squad went to Page Street for Thelma Gruescr. She was
then transported to Veterans. At 6:50 p.m., Rutland unit went.to
Depot Streel for Floyd Harrison, who was taken to Veterans. At
8:S8 p.m., Pomeroy squad was sent to Spring Avenue for ·Annette
Johnson, who was sent to Veterans. At 9:58p.m., Middleport squad
was sent to State Route SS4 for Murial Spires. Spires was taken to
Holzer. At 10:08 p.m., Tuppers Plains to State Route 7 for Bernice
Mollihan, who was transported to Camden Clark Memorial Hospi-

Farm........................... Dl-8
Sports..~ ..."" ..................Cl·8

"

-----Divorces,
dissolutions·----,

.

Robin E. Slater has been returned to Meigs County from slate
prism 14&gt; answer a three-count indictment returned by the Meigs County Grand Jury in July.
·
·
.
According .to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Slater is
charged wilh lhree count of ttafficting in drugs.
·
.
He is confined in the Meigs County Jail pending his arraignment

Edltorla1---· ·-- --..A·2

.

C·E·N·T·E·~-

· In Tuesday's edition of The Daily Sentinel , it was reported that two ·
deputies from the Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment were present
when three teenage girls were recovered after being lost in the Dexla'
area. The department now reports that, though the deputies did assist in
lhe investigation, three P.COPie associated with the subjects' family
actually found the juvcrules near the Southern Oltio Coal 'mines. The
fllll!ily ich1ntifies those responsible as Matt Fry, Angie Baurett and J.R.
Salmom.
·

Slater returned to Meigs County

.•

Dealbs-..-_.......... _, A-4

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times·Sentinel Starr

do

Clarification

I

or The Ohio Academy or Seleuce. They are, 1-r,

Veteraas MemorlaLHOIDital
A dissolution of marriage hail
THURSDAY ADMISSiONS- been granted in Meigs County
Thelma Gruesct, Middleport; Laura Common Pleas Court to E. Lynn
Scott, Middleport; and William Shuler and George Michael Shuler.
Van Meter, West Columbia, W.VL
Divorce actions have been flied
THURSDAY DISCHARGES · in the court by Kimberly Sue Smilh
Laura Arnold, Brandon Kimes, · of Pomeroy against Anthony
Virginia Thoren, Cora Woodard, Wayne SIJ!ith of Oleshire; Terry L.
Maybelle Baughman;·Ralph Ours, Yeauger, Pomeroy against Bonnie
AUen Dill, and Eleanor Werry.

The Dlllghters of the American Revoltdlon (DAR)
not meet at
lhe former Meip Couuty Courthouse in Chester, as was reported in
Thursday's .edition of The Daily ~ntlnel. The orpnizalion which
meets in that building is Chest,er Council of Daughters of Amc'Zica (D
of A).

' 1962.
i He was born Feb. 2, 1900 in
: Putnam County, W.Va., son of lhe
' late James Dudley and Tressie Styers Rullo.
. He is survived by his wife,
·MarF.J Dodrill Rutan, whom he
: mamed May 12, 1921 in Gallipo-

: 'other survivors include one
'daughter, Mrs. James (Nellie
Frances) Rudich of Las
Nev.: ·one JII'IDIIson, Scott
h
;of Moyie Springs, Montana; Ol!e
•llf8llddaqhra'; one brother, Leslie
:Rutan oiColumbus; two sisters, .
:Hanna McBride If Bidwell and
'Elizabeth Woodrum of Wakeman.
: He was preceded in dealh by
four brothers, Sherman, Frank,
:etyde and Jacob Rutan: and one
sister, Hal1ie MIDI'Iy.
; Funeral services will be con·
·ducted 2 p.m. Syday at the
'Mceor·Moore Funei81 Home, Vin'ton, wtth Rev. CJ. Lemley officialina. Burial will be in Vinton
Memoiial Part. .
Friends may call at the furteral
home on Saturday from 2 to S p.m.

'Nickname' contest winners to be announced
this weekend • Atty. Fred W. Crow • A-2

-Local briefs--

EMS runs ·

Murll. Ours

'lis

a

rece~ved $25, third place Gover,
nor s Award and outstanding
achievement award.
Students competing from Meigs
Junior High were given S~Jecia1
recognition for have the h1ghest
percentage of compedtors going on
to state competition in the jljDior
high division frotn lbe entire Soulheastem Ohio Disttict. This is the
fust time lhe school has received
this honor.

Alo"'! the rlver •• - •.. Bl-8
Buln-....................... Dl
Comk:s....- - .........:. •••• lnaert

20 ·~pouored by tiM Jullior Academy PrQII'IIIl ' .;
;
Becky Meier, Crystal Vaugbau, Wall Wllllams ;
ud Heidi Hulflwl.
·,

GOING TO STATE
·These
rour llludeots at Melp Julor lnp Sebc bave
qualified to Cl0111pete In the State 'Sc:ieace Day at
Ohio Wesleyaa Uulvenlty In Delaw•e on April

Hospital n~ws

Inside
CIIM!IIeds. •• _ ••• - ••02, 7

Page B-1
COMPETED IN DISTRICT SCIENCE DAY
• These stadeats at Melp Jllll,ior lnBb c:ompeted
reeelllly in District Sdeace Day It Ohio Uaiver·
1ity. Eaeb. qudfled ror dllltrid eompetitlon by
reeelvinl a IUperlor rallq at the uaaal Sdeace
Day held at the janlor blab earner In Marcb.

Masters play continues- C-1

A BIG HELP· Clbl' n •wted t. a ..-at
'drive were 1011111 Won liNillla p11Mcllllllweak,
eaabllq the Melp Ualted Melbodllt Coopera·
tl.e Parilb tO keep ltem1 tlrey caa DR, Rev.
.Sharon lbulman,.Bob Vaa11laa, I.-a Macblr,

Helen Madllr, aad Den llarDitl .wt clildrft'l
dotbell from the mt. The New Life ~bly ol
God wiD place a Bible In eacll box bel'ore leadinl them to the Soviet Unloa.

State, federal agenci~s
combat Raccoon oil spill

"If this school closes, it
won't be for a laek of tryllll'!. ·
That wa the reaction of ·one
·parent wbo aueaded a rdy at
the Portland Elementary
School Friday arternooa. An
estlmatecJ 50 JIIU'eDII ud cbll·
drea c:onc:eraed over the pro·
posed dosiDI or the Mel11s
Coaat7 school sllowed their
IIOIIdarlty (lei'J). The Soatllern
Local
Scbool
Board ,
announced laat week It was
coaslderlaa eloaiDI tbe 40
year-olclacllool (above) at the
eud of the current aebool year
Ia aD aUeDipt to 11\'t DIODey,
'l'be ac:hool board will meet
April :Zl to decide the lane.
One board me•ber, Dean7
Evaas, bu .olced 1111 oppoll·
don.

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