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The Daily Sentinel

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.JMurt•.
----Local n~s briejl...- - _ Ra~~e woman ·s~ks .surn in daniage 'suit
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,·a:-

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Pomeeor-Midclaport, Ohio

T1\Uncl.y,

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SqJUJd$ .have ·6 Wednesooy "calls
Meigs Emergency Medical Services reports six calls were
IIIISWered on Wednesday.
_
At.6: 41 a.m., Pomeroy was called to Route 143 for Dale Call
who was taken to Veterans Memorial• Hospital.
Racine was called at~: 16 a .m .to an auto accident on County
Road 35. Junle Beegle was transported from the,scene·ta Holzer
Medical Center.
Middleport at 6: 41 p.m. transported Vicki Schar lager from
Front St. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.•
.
Pomeroy · at 7; 03 p.m . transported Clara Braden from
Tuppers Plains to St. JoSeph's Hospital. At 10: 04 p.m. , Pomeroy
went to Old Chester _Road for Kenny White to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
:
AllO: 52 p.m., Tuppers Plains was called to Route681 for Ruth
Ann Smith who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Judy L. McDermitt, of Racine,
- has flied a damage suit In Meigs
Common Pleas. Court against
James Woodyard;alsoof Racine.
requesting compensation for
damages for Injuries allegedly
sustained when the plaintiff was
a guest· In th~ home of the
defendant. ·
·
· According to the complaint, on
J~n. ~. 1988. McDermitt was at
the home of Woodyard when

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deaths.........._
__
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Shirley Graham

Charles N()rris was elected president at, the organizational
meeting of the Southern Local School District Board of
Education neld Tuesday night In the high school cafeterl!l. .
Elected vice president was Denny Evans. Meetings were set
for the. third Monday of each month at 7 p~m. at the high school
cafeteria. The board renewed membership In the Ohio Schoool
Boards Assocaiton and the bonds on the treasurer, superintend·
ent and board members.
Ron Tupps of J . W. Dldloo was pres~nt at the meeting to
'
discuss self-funding medical Insurance.
·
·
A special meeting was set for Jan. 11 at which time th¢ budget
will be approved.

'
VInton; and
Mlna Mae Ackley,' Pickerington,
and several nieces and nephews.
Be_sldes his pa~ents, · he was
preceded In death by a sister. Ora
Mae Berry, and two brothers,
Jake George and I;on George.
A n·ephew, the Rev. Jack Berry
officiated at the Shoemaker
Funeral Home In North Linden.
Burial was In Kingwood Memor' lal Park.
Area relatives . attending the
funeral services were Mr: and
Mrs. Osby Martin and Edna
Martin. Mld~leport, Benny· a.nd
June George, of Gallipolis, and
Janice Roush of Huntington. W.
Va.
·

.

Mrs. · Shirley Antrltt Graham,
51, or Sum pte~. s. C. died
Tuesday atjhe Tuomey Regional
.
M_edlcal Cinter.
Born In Newark, she was the
daughter of the late Julius P . and
Anna L. Thornton Antrltt. Mrs.
Graham was a Catholic. a !956
graduate of Newark High School
and employed by " The Item." ·
· She Is survived by her husband. Darold Graham. six sons,
James Corsi ·of Tennessee. Robert and Se!lD Corsi of Sumpter,
s. c...Darold Granam of South
Dakota; Michael Graham and
PhlllpGraham ofSumpter,S. C.;
two daughters, Julie Glmse Of
Nevada, and Terl Ross of Ohio;
two brothers, Richard and Terrence Antritt of Ohio, anp three
grandchildren.
.
Funeral services will be held at
4 p.m. Thursday afternoon In the .
chapel of the Elmore Hill .Fun- eral ·Home by the Fr. Richard
Sud! II&lt;, OMf.HintetllJllenl will be
In Wells Cemetery at Pagetown
in l\1elgs County.

Norris to head Southern Board '

.

Woodyard's dog jumped up on
her and caused her to fall. ·
McDermitt .allegedly suffered a
broken .leg ;md otlter serious ·
. disability as a result of the fall.
· The defendant, as owner, of the
dog, Is responsible for the lnjur·
les, the plall!llff charges.
McDermitt Is asking for "!air
and reasonable compensation"
and a trial by a jury of eight.
I.Jpon application of Meigs

cOunty Special Prosecutor . Robert Toy. a sesslqll of the Meigs
County Grand Jury bas. been
scheduled for Monday, Jan. 29,
starting at 9 a.m.
·
In a matter regarding Leading
·c ree_k . · Conaerv~ncy District,
Meigs Probate·Juvenlle · Judge
Robert · Buck has relinquished
.any possible authority over the
conservancy district to Common
Pleas Judge Fred Crow III.
In another matter regarding
the conservancy district. a pro. posed budgetary transfer of
142.626 from the district"s bond
retirement account to. the opera:
t!Ons and m~lnten11nce 11ccount
was apprOved by the court.
The: 'following common pleas

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1990

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li'"llnn, Jr., 41J, Portland, and a 1985 Chevrolet Spectrum driven
by flOnald D. Roberts, collided on .a curve. Damage was
moderate to both vehicles.

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A salute

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J 0· {{"ICe .'b k}

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anmve~ary.

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LADIES COATS
&amp; JACKETS

LADIES CAPES

3oo'

LADIES SLACKS

.Knight

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - Ell- ·
zabeth ' Cremeans, Pomeroy;
· Clara Gilkey, Pomeroy.
' wednesday discharges - £va .
. Norris, Delmar Alexander.
'

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The . Meigs County Commts- and. on the county court and
stoners and the Ohio St~te Public common pleas court benches will
Defender's office have an- •be of· great assistance to the __
nounced an agreement between provision of a strong public
the two agencies to provide legal defender's omce."
services for Indigent defendants
Knight stated that Commls·
·
stoners Manning Roush, Richard
·In Meigs County.
In conjunction with that agreeJones and David Koblentz had
men!, Randall M. Dana, state reviewed a substantial number
public defender, bas announced of possibilities ·wtth the county
an agreement between his _ prosecutor and local judges, and '
agency and Charles H. Knight, had chosen '1!\e',alternatlve that
:' roJitea ,Qj :~JIP ney, • ~ proVIde' .... ·Provided a '•et'lllpetenr deffll,e.....
these ael'lil~. •
_
mecha'!lsm while clearly ·preState -;Defenl!er Dana reserving local financial control. :
The comll)lss,t?ners stwted, In
. marlced 'that , ''TheMetgsCounty
Commissioners -are to be ·com- a joint release, Meigs County Is
mended for their understapd(ng only the sec;ond county In Souof the difficulties In providing theastern Ohio to develop Its own
public ~fender's system. The
competent legal -services for
Indigent defendants while .preever lncre•_lng cost of legal
serving and protecting loca)
services, cpmblned with the ·
Interests."
constantly broadening need for
CHARLES KNIGHT
Dana further commented th.a t . appolnte4 Cl)unsel led us to .the . •
'
he was "pleased to welcome .deciSion to contract with the
Chuck Knight to . the public
State Public Defender's office. defender are willing to agree to
defender's organization. His
We are pleased that former provide this representation to
expzrlence In private practice
Judge Knight and the state public Mel~ County."

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Me.,.

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Stock I 96061, 4 dool'·- ~"· front .
wheel driw, 4 cyt., alr;1autO .. PS, PB.
tih wheel, auise, AMIFM 1111180 tapa.
bucket seats, rear window dafag .

20°/o

,_N'S

SWEATERS

MEN'S

REDUCED

TAURUS
Stock I 92161, 2 iloors, sedan,~ cyl.,
aUlD., PS, PB, cruise, AMIFM radio,
rear window clafog.

.JACKETS

30°/o

REDUCED

40°/o

MEN'S LEVI'S

MEN'S

HATS"··
REDUCED

COATS

29°/o

20°/o'

AIL STYLES
' ,

MEN'S

MEN'S LONG

40°/o

REDUCED

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

30°/o

mnPIS

SHIRTS
IIEDUaD

20°/o

;

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Slack I 2681, 2 doors, hardtop, front
driw, 4 cyl., air, auto., PS, PB,
cruise, AM!FM radio, radial
I *rao,IIUckAit seats, rew window defog.

.N'S

LTD

'1983 Ji'ORD LTD
CROWN VICTORIA
/
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&amp;look 4 1302t, 4 doo... sedan. v:a.
air, vinyl root, auio., PS, PB, power
pow.- - t pow.- lod&lt;s. Itt
cruite, AMIFM ·1111110:

NO~ $2695

NOW

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5
"'269

1983 MERCURY

·couGAR

Slack. 181173, 2 daorl, oaUjll, • cyl .•
air, a~to .. PS, PB, AMIFM radio, l'ldlalo, whitt walla, budcet ,M all.

NOW$3495

SWEAT SHIRTS
REDUCD

·2Q0/o
...

·
Dealer reported Friday the five County coroner's office In
people might ha'(e been victims Cleveland.
·
of a religious sacrifice.
lie declined to say whether the
George Rodriguez, a special dead were members of one
agent with theBureauofAiccihol,
family. He would not discuss _the
Tobacco and Flrea.r mslnKansas cause of the deaths.
City, Mo., said early Friday five "I'm not going to mention any
people had been arrested In names at this point until we have
Mlssourlln the case.
. · a positive Identification," Ya~bo·
Rodriguez declined to release rough said. Asked how long the
additional InformatiOn, saying ·bodies might have been In the
officials planned to ho'ld a n~s barn, Yarboroug!t would only
conference In Kansas City at 10 say, "There was quite a bit of
a.m. CST Friday to discuss the decomposition .." .
ca5e.
It was widely reported, howKirtland Pollee Chief Dennis ever, that the bodies were those
Yarborough said the bodies of ofonefamUy-DennlsAvery,49,
two adults ,and tb'ree ,"smaller': his wife, Cheryl, 42, and thelt
people were sent to the Cuyahoga daughters, Trtna, 15, Rebecca,
13, and Karen, 7·
The Avery family was bellved
to be ·part of a group of people
that hac! broken away from ·the
Reorganized Chu~ch of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints.
William Wood, special agent In
1
char~· of" the Cleveland ATF
dl1!er niucli from Friday's
?!flee, said the leader ~f the
readings .'
.
'!ahatlc rell&amp;lous group was
On the early morning weather
Jeff
Lundgren, who recently had
map. weak high pressure was
been
Jiving with a group of
centered over southern Dllnols
followers
near Chllowee, Mo.
and was dissipating. A stronger
Lt. Rick Ring In the Johns~
high was over the Rockies. A
q&gt;unty, Mo., Sheriff's Depart·
weak cold front was perched
trorn New England across the . men! said the ii'OUP left the area
about two months 11go.
northern Lakes to the Dakotas.
Thla front will drop southeast·
'l'he ,Plain Dealer reporteCI
ward thfoqh Ohio Friday night . 9uoted ~~~ · unidentified pollee
while the wl!ltern h(Jh prestlllre aource as saying theAveryswere
kWed Ina sacrWce that had to be
air mas• puahes In behind It on
perfoaned before the rest of the
Saturday.
Looking ahead througli Tuescult could .travel to the wilder·
day, lt'wlll be mainly fair Sunday
nesa. where they would be
and Moliday, except for a chance
cteanled and could earch for a
of a brlef·perlod of rain or snow
golden sword.
late
or early Monday,
The source t91d the DI!Wipaper
and there
be a chance of r-ain
the Avt!Jl'l once I~ with
will be In the
J..undaren on the farm ~here the
Till!lday.
·
mld-301 to
SUnday, Wltll
bocllel were found. Stan Skrbla of
moatlyiOI
andTu11day.
RlcbmOIIIIHelJI!IIaaldherented
Lows wlll be
20• Sunday
th~ ~k~!,0 Lulldgrety
Obion. Co
...- e ..,..un • .
•
roner
ana Mollday·
~ to 35
William . Downlq said •the In·
TuHclay.
Continued on page 10

·to last jew -· more days

'v.a,

Stock 1 87563, 4 dojlra.' hard tOp,
air, a~to., PS, PB, pow. windowl,
power -~~. power locka,•tilt wheal,
CNise, AINFM • - llpe, ........

13495

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walla.
WAS
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REDUCED

.BAHR .CLO·THIERS
MIDDLEPORT, OWO

SKY HAwK

DENIM JACKETS
REDUaD

b
. een

Warm Ohio weather

MEN'S All WEATIIR

,.,1ft

c........ &amp;

F-150
Stock I 3013, 2 doors, alJIO., PS, PB,
AM!FM stereo tapa, racials, 112 ton.
wida ~d. rear step bumP.,.,

hau11••-

LADIES SUITS
REDUCED 30°/o

;,&lt;•

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TEMPO
~ow$S7

KNIT SHIRTS FLANNEL StiUS

To end marriage ·

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.seats.

1 LOT DF

REDUCED

Marriage llcenses.lJave ·been
· lulled In ,Meigs Probate Court to
David Allen Hobbs; ~4. Dexter,
Ud Mary EllelJ ~alnard , IS.
· Middleport; Michael Wayne
HUIIter, 32, Ne!W Plymouth, and
Karla Jo Robbins, 31, Point
Plruant. W.Va.; Jeffrey Ed·
ward Brown, 21, Middleport, and
Vaa .. aa ~y Young,19, Rutland.

Unda Kay Carpehter, Jack·
loa, aNI Rorer E"iene CarpenLupvll~. have flied In
Common Pleu Court for a
dl.lloludotrof their marriage.

StOCk I 92391, 2 doors, hllld top. 4
wllelt driw, 6 cyl .. air, aland. trans.,
PS, PB, AMIFM ,.Ooo, radials, bucket

LADIES BLOUSES
REDUCED 30°/o

30°/o

•

· KIRTLAND, Ohio (UPI) Authorltlesactlngonananonymous tip found five bodies burled In ·
a barn near Cleveland In what
may have been a cult-re)ated
murder, and officials said five ..
suspects were arrested In
Missouri.
Officials In the rural communuy of Kirtland 15 mlles east of
Cleveland found the fll"$t body
Wednesday night after a tipster
called the Burellu of Alcohol,
Tobacco and Firearms, claiming
the deaths were- the result of a
fight between religious factions.
Theother!ourbpdleswerefound
Thursday.
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And the Cleveland · Plain

198Q FORD

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SUITS &amp;
SPORT COATS

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U)86 FORD
BRONCO D

LADIES DRE$SES
REDUCED 40°/o

1990

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2 Section, 14 Pagea26 Cent.
A Multimedia Inc. NIWIIJeper

Sy KATIE CRoW ·
SentlneiCorreapoadent
Carson Crow was appointed
village solicitor and Jim Hlll was
elected president of council when
Syracuse VIllage Council met In
regular session Thursday night.
Welcomed were the · two
members of council, ·Tyson
Drummer and Jim Pape. The
two members, along with relected ·members KathrYn Crow
'and Kenny Buckley. were sworn
In last month.
.
-' Mayor Eber Pickens stated
committees will be named this
month and presented to council.
Council approved a temporary
budget of $5.000 for the village
and $5,000 for the Board of Public
Affairs.
Mayor E;ber Pickens reported
there are two problem areas on
the highway In the upper end of
Syracuse 4ue to water spillage.
One has' been taken care of and
the other Is expected to be

.

There were comments made
repaired soon.
Council had planned to bave that cable reception Is very poor
ditching completed and culverts . and suggested a contact be made
laid, but due to the Illness of Joe with thecablerompany. Pickens
Lynch, hired to do the work, an~ reported that the State Fire
weather conditions work has not Marshall will be. i'n Syracuse
yet started. It is hoped the work sometime next month to discuss
will be completed by spring.
the condemnatlbn of properties
Mayor Pickens also reported within the village. • :
Sampson Hall caretaker of the
that sealing of cracks on village
parj(s
reported that he ordere~ a
streets must be done as soon as
po861ble to avoid further muffler tor the hand mower In
August but It has never arrived.
damage.
Drummer reported she had . II was suggested that all lawn
talked with Mike Swisher In mowers and weedeaters be rea··
regard to GR workers. Add!· died for spring.
It was announced that
tlonal workers are avalla 'lle
Drummer reported. Drummer Is Codner's Exon Is now being
to set up a meeting with Swisher operated by Gallipolis City Ice
and council to wogk Qut a and Fuel. and .Is known as
~:
program that wlil benefit all Syracuse Food Mart.
Hill
commended
Minter
Fryar;
those concerned ..
Council agreed to ·increaw councilman ·for a - good job on.
wages of snow removal workers keeping streets cle.a red when II
to $4 per hour and discussed what snowed.
wor-k must be completed at · · Also 'attending the meeting In
London Pool before the pool Is addition to those named was
Janice Lawson, clerk-treasurer.
opened for the sea~on .

Nation's unemployment rate
stays at 5.3 % in December
. WASHINGTON· IUPI) -The
nattori's employment growth
slowed In December, despite a
ret~n o! more than 55,000
-striking NYNEX workers, while
unemployment levels remained
unchanged at 5.3 percent, the
Labor. Department said Friday.
Janet NorwOO!I, commissioner
or the department's Bureau of
Labor Statistics, said the December fi&amp;'!lres were coi!Sis't ent
with a ':general slowing"
the
rate o! job growth during 1989.
For the year, the unemployment
rate totaled 5.3 percent.
·. ·'Employment · gains In 1989
were much slower than In 1987
and 1988," Norwood said. "Cut·
backs occurred In factory employment, and the pace of job

In

~mployment In the transportation and utilities Industries In·
creased by · 75~000 ·during the
month. Employment gains also
were posted In the wholesale
trade and finance, Insurance and '
real estate Industries.
The department noted a .Jess·
tllan-qsual lncn!ase In employment In general merchandise
·
stores during the month .
Construction employment ·fell
by 40,000 In ~ember. due
largely to especially harsh
weather In December that curtailed work activity, the department said .
Mallufacturlng employment

·· continUed Its ,doWttwaf d Tre'n~,
falling by 25.000 In December to
19.5 million jobs . Since March,
factory jobs have deClined by
195,000, the department said.
Employment declines were
posted In the electrical equipment Industry but the auto
Industry remained stable.
The average workweek for
non-farm production and non·
supervisory employees declined
by 0.1 or an hour to 34.5 hours In
December. The factory work:
week and overtime levels were
unchanged at 40.7 hours and 3.1
hours respectively, _the department said.

• suspec
• m urders;
· · he Jd ·m
FJVe'
·
Noriega,
attorneys
plot
·. ~~ings may have · ·c u1t·re1ated · ~;;;~\~ ~~~~=~~!ce-produclng
legal strategy in .court
(. 8

1/2 PRICE

REDUCED

to ~e public defender,

.

REDUCED

·oh'IO; Friday, January&amp;.

we~ welcomed. Left to rilitl _. are Crow, Mayor
Eher Pickens, and new members Tyson
Drummer ud Jim Pape.

SOLJCft'OR AND NEW MEMBERS- Canon
Crow wu ,named Syraeuse vlllare aoUctlor
ThunidiQ' aJcbt. Two new memben of coUDCII

•.

LADIES SWEATERS

By Arrow-long SIHve

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Hill .to head Syracuse
Counell; .Crow solicitor

1 RACK,.

DRESS SHIRTS

Hospiial news

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Copyrighted 1890

,

. MEN'S COI.OiED .

.

Vot.40. No. Ul7.

Arnold Bernard

LEARANC.E.!

Continued from page I
Winners of the Good Citizen· ·
slllp Awards from Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter, Daughter of
(he American Revolution , wer.e ·
David ~Ice of Eastern High
School, and E!!zabeth Smith of of
~uthern H}gh School. The two
were honored at the chapter's
Charter Day luncheon.
·
REDUCED 30°/o
. • Meigs Mine 1 arid 2 were joined 1
making It one of AEP's largest
2 IACIS
underground - coat prod11clng
·LADIES SWEATERS
linus.
&amp; KNIT SUITS
· Most of Pomeroy village em- ·
ployees got a spring r aise. ·
REDUCED 300fo
Council approvl'd a five percent , ~-..;;;;;;.~::.,~.=.,..:.::....__
icross the board raise for all
iourly non -s upervisory
~mployees.
..
.
.
. After I~ years as pas tor' of St.
REDUCED
/0
Paul and St. John t.utheran
Churches, the Rev. William
Mlddleswarth retired.
' Charles Moore, Eastern High
School principal, was given a
REDUCED '20°/o
new two year contract.
(To be conllnued)

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- · Low tonight near 30. Chance
or !IDOw zo percent. SuDDy
Saturday. Hlrh In mid.tos. -

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·-JANUARY

Meigs ...

Pic* 3
555
fSQ4,
1652

.' 150th

·

. CommtSSJOners

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__to ·Po~eroy's

court actions have been dismissed: · Midwest Corporatlop ~ ·
verslll Robert Cunningham, do· :
lng business as Bob's Heating',;
and Cooling; Hobart V. · Newell ~
versus the State of Ohio Unem--·
ploy!llent Compensation Board of Review and Chester TOW11Shlp' :.
Trustees; the State of Ohio ·.
· versus Mike Henry; the State of :
Ohio versus Jol\11 Coffman; and •
the State of Oh.IO versus Donna
Ross.
'
. Another case, Keith Powell )
versus Easte~n Exterminators,
et Ill, has also been dismissed . •
. According to the ·coutt entry Oli;
this case, jurisdiction should be '
In Washington CountY, n'ot Meigs :
· County.

Arnold E . Bernard, 84, or
Guysville, died Wednesday evening at the Overbrook Nursing
Everything seems to be back to normal with Racine VUlagifs
Center, Middleport.
water supply.
·
'
Mr. Bernard was born· Dec. 4,
Apparently , a leak found and repaired on Christmas Eve on
1905 at Jacksonville, Ohio to the
. Tyree Blvd. was the only major leak In the village . However,
late George and Sarah Ellen
due to el~trlcal power outage_s In Racine over the New Year's
Bernard. ije was a retired
weekend, the pumps did' not pump to keep the village's water
Athens Mental Health Center
storage tank filled, reported a spok~sperson for the village.
employee, and was also a former
When Glenn Rizer. water supervisor. discovered on 'f\lesday
coal miner and farmer.
morning that the storage tank was empty, residents were asked ·
Survivors Include three sons,
Floyd George
to conserve water and schools In Racine were closed for the day.
Ralph Paul Bernard, of Coolville,
F
Richard Bernard, of SteSchools were back In session on Wednesday.
·
unera 1 serv1ces were held Daniel
wart', and James Arnold Ber·
Saturday at the Shoemaker Fun0
0
nard, of Reedsville.; one daugh·
t o l d computerseral Home In North Linden for ter, Ruth Mary' Stephenson, of
.
- .
·
Floyd Morgan George, 72. of
New Marshfield; three grand£
•
Columbus. who died Dec. 28 at daughters and one grandson;
· ,~.or t i t e
ac
ogge
. Riverside Hospital.
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,
Mr. George, formerly of VInton four brothers. Robert Bernard, ·
In Gallia County, was the son of of Coolville, Herman Bernard,·of
Larry Spencer, Meigs Clerk of intercounty communication bethe late . Ben George and Mary Miamisburg, Wllbur.Bernard, or
Frankllit. and Vern Bernard, of
. "tourts, apprised the Meigs tween Iitle · offices ·Is vital, Swick George of Vlntqn. Hew as a
Athens; two sisters, Althea Wha·
Coqnty Commissioners during Spencer said.
veteran of W.W .II and before his
their regular Wednesday meet - I· The commissioners discussed retirement worked at the 3C ley, Guysville, and Gertrude
lllg of the proposed c_o mputerlza- snow and Ice removal problems · Lumber Co. for 22 years and the Morgan, Akron.
Besides his parents, he was
-tlonoftltle offices throughout the . on county roads in a brief J . H. Zimm Lumber Co. for 27
preceded
in death by two grand -.
state.
discussion with County Engineer
years.
children
and
two brothers.
Spencer reported he had talked Philip Roberts arid Highway
He
Is
s
urvived
by
his
wife,
Services
for
Mr. Bernard will
recently with stale officials who Superlnteliderit Ted Warner. Sylvia Martin George, a daugh·
b S
now Indicate that "everything Is Warner said that ice had to be ter and son-in-l&lt;~w, Lorraine
e aturday,_l p.m . .- at the White
Funeral Home, Coolville, with
backlogged at least six weeks·... removed from many county K and James ·B . .Northrop of
Spencer had a few weeks ago roads over the weekend, and Powell, Ohio: a granddaughter,
Rev. Cecil Morrison Clfflclatlng..
. anUclpaled that Meigs County's most rec.e ntly, on County Road Kimberly su·san, and grandson , . Burial . will be -In the Athens
·
title office would be computer- 10.
Stephan David .
Cou-n ty MemorY, Garl)ens .
.
.
.
B
d
Friends may call at the funeral
lud In ·the near future. He now
Finally, the commisslo,ner s
Also SurviVln g are en an
believes .lt could be some time established Monday, 1 p.m .. as Martin G~ g
r G IIi 1•
homeafter3;30Fridayafternoon
.
~or e 0
a
po
IS ,
. 'til ' th f . II
b
before the computerization takes the tlate and time for their 1990 sisters, Armenda Russell, Buck- WI
. e . am_ Y to e present
place.
·
organizational meeting.
eye Lake, Brevlna Russell ~- from 3. 3~ to 5. 30 and 7 to 9.
'' The'county must front the,bills
for computerization of the title ·
otnce; but will be reimbursed by
the state for all cpsts except
additional office space if additional office space Is needed. The
- state Is computerizing title offices .throughout · .Ohio because

Water supply back to normal ·

Ohio Lottery

•

By Unlled Pre111 International
Ohio's quiet weather Is expected to las.t through · the
weekend,
·
HI~ pressure bas been In
control of the weather situation
since the, r.tln ·ended Thursday.
although cloudiness In the sou·
the as t half of theatatewu rather
stubborn In departing Ohio.
· Satellite Images early Friday
showed the trailing edge of the
clouds from west of Cle\telatld to
near Dayton. Thill clearing line
was continuing a slow soullleastward trek.
HIJba today under sunny to
partly cloudy akll!l were forecast
to be aboutlSdegreescooler than
Thunday's readlnp, raagJDg
from tile mld-30s to mld..fOI.
A weakening front Frld~y
ntaht wtU 11rtn1 ICDIIe more
cloudl to tile state but no
precipitation '- anticipated.
Low1 will drop well Into the 201.
Sunablne will retw-n to the
1tate Saturday and h(Rhs will not ·

' .i,

: Norwood noted that at year's
end 63 percent of all Americans
were employed and there were
2.5 mllllcm more jobs In the
Urilled States than the year
before.
"Unemployment was unchanged In December. Employmen! growth was very slow with
the goods-producing &amp;eciDr expe- ·
rtenclng job losses,.. Norwood
said. "The labor market In
December continued along the
courseo!recentmonths,wllhthe
unemployment rate holding at
5.3 percent." '
.
Steep employment declines
were .posted during the year In
such manufacturlng Industries
as automobiles, metals and electrlcal equtP.ment. Jtetall employ.• ,ment.durlng1989was iheslowest
. 11 has been for any year since the
economic expansion bl!gaq at the
· end of 1982, Norwood said.
The number of unemployed
. tood af 6 7 million during
~cember ·-rhe Jobless rate for .
adult men tolaled 4.6 percent;
adult women, 4.8 )l!!rcent; lee'
nagera, 15 .2 percent; whites, -~-6
percent; blackl, 11.8 percent;
and Hlllpanlcs, 8.5 ~t.
The depattment said these
categories ·showed little or 110
change during. the !IIOnth . and
held steady on the year.
·
· Non-farm employment In·
creased by 140,000 J&lt;fi durlng
December to 109.5 million ·
workers but thedepartmentaald
55 oooor'tbele Jobluepruentecl a
retw-n of tJVNEX communlca·
ttons workers who had been on

.strike.

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Molt of the" emploYment
growth wu In 114!f111ce-relatecl
Jollt. Employment In coutruc·
tlon and manufacturing con:
llllued to 111de clurtnr ~mber,
the 'department IBid.
A_ total of lll.OOO lobi were
ldded In wrvict-related bull·
nealll!l, with mOitoftbelnereue .
In the health aervtcee ~1try.

MJA!.u CUP!) - A strategy numerous motions to dismiss the
session with defense attorneys Indictment on te~hnlcalgrounds,
was the first task facing jailed alleging that the court does not
Panamantan dlctatot: Manuel have jurisdiction anti that the
Antonio Noriega Friday on his lndl.c tments are politically mot!·
second day In the United States to vated," Rubino said !oUowlng
face drug charges.
the 20-n\lnute court appearance.
A closely &amp;'!larded Noriega during which he argued that
made his first appearance Wed· Noriega's cap!ure In a sovereign
nesdily In U.S. District Court, · nation was lllegai.An Impassive
where he claimed he was a Noriega, dressed In a military
political prisoner 'and refused to uniform complete with four stars
enter a plea or to acknowledge on each shoulder, was led from
the jurlsldlctlon of Ule court.
the courtroom by several U.S.
U.S. District Judge William marshals withoutbond.belng set.
Hoeveler entered a plea of hot Authorities refused to say where
&amp;'!lilly for Noriega at the request Norl~a w4s.being held. ·
of U.S. Attorney pexter
The Miami Herald, clUng goLehtlnen.
·'
vernment sources, .reported FriDe!erise Attorney Frank Ru· &lt;Jay that Noriega was 1!1:.11111 held "·
blnosaldheplansiDbombardthe fn a 10-by-12-!oot ceii •. Kiiown a$
court with motlonyo dismiss the the "submarine" beneath the
drug-trafficking charges against federal· courthouse building In
Noriega because he says they . downtown Miami.
were part of-a poliUcal scb!!ffie to
The secret cell Is located
ouat the Panamanian strongman ~neath the . old l&gt;ortion. of the
from power.
courthouse lind Is connected by
'We're iotng to l!e filing
Continued on page 10"'
'•

Local ·news .briefs_- Driver cited three
charDYJ.
_c·.
.
e~

Donald E. Stobart, 48, Pomero)., wu cited fofdrlylng unde~
the Influence; no operator'a license and !allure to yield the right
of way' u result ofanaccldentaU: .Op.m. Thunday on CR. 26 at
.tbe'lntersectlon of Cl'\. 25, In Metp County.
.
The Gaiiii·Me.,. Post
tbe State Highway Patrol said
Stobart, driving a 19113 Ford Mustang, pulled ~to CR. 26, and
collided wtth a -1913 Chevrolet pickup truck driven by William L.
. Buckley, 39, also of Pomeroy. Damqe wu minor to both
vehlcla. No one wu InJured.
.
One driver wu cited In allother Melp County accldentat7: 10

or

p.m: TiiundayO!ISR.7,0.&amp;olamtlen~rthohntlepoat21.~oo~~e

wu lliJured.
·
· · ·
Troapera said Brian w. Nickel, 18, Rt. 2, Coo Mile, drMqa
19f7 Ford Tempo. pulled to the rllht aide of the road. Beblnd
him, bonald A: Welch, •· Rt. 1. CooMlle, drlvtna a 19115
Chevrolet ........ f t . . . . . . . .
ai'OIInd Nlft"•l d made ,....t
. p,..,... "~~on p~,e10 -r 1!1
ar..u

-·•led

.L-_......,_ _,_.;...;;;;;;;;;;-.-~--------....1
---

_...... -

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F.w.y, Jenu.y' &amp;••1890

•

1

.C ommentary

Cleveland, Buffalq,sh9uld match up even de·fensively

,

.

•

Ill Court Street
.

Pomeroy, Ohio

.

.Air Force's workhorse should be
}aek Anderson .and Date VanAtta
-~!~n!!~
•

Last AprU, we told the story of
the biggest crac~ Ill their wings. cracks In the wings, our htght to
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 'tHE MEIGS-MASON AREA
Chicago
will
arrive
two
hours
one
C-141 that doesn't · fit the .
'
Force ls.f.lylng on some cracked . The Air Force does not deny late today, just to tie on the safe profile. It Is a well-tuned, deluxe
~~
.
that the plane has problems, bu~
wings. '
,
model with a gold-trimmed blue
the
military seriously dowuplays · side."
!Slm~ ~~--r•I'T"'!!!!d,.,.
That's the word from the
~v
,
.
the gravity of the situation, . Veteran Air Force pllot!Nsay Une of paint running ~long the
alarmed pilots and mechanics
according
to knowledgeable that flying the.·C-14ls feels like a fuselage and extra . large
who work· on the Air Force's
ROBERT L. W~GE'i"f
sources. Many pUots are scared· game of Russian roulette. About · numbers pn the tall bordered In
.C-~41 Starlltters.
·
Publisher
that the Air Force will walt until half of the fleet has not been gold paint. "You could eat oft the
The C-141s are flying mules,
wheel wells," one mechanic told
a C-141 crashes before the planes througllly Inspected fo~ ·cracks.
,
PATWHITEHE;U&gt;
used~o carry troops, supplies.
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
An
Air
Force
spokesman
told
·
us at the time. This plane
are made safe or replaced.
.
Assistant Publlsher/ ControUer
and eapons around the world_.
General Manager
us
that
the
cracks
are
par
for
the
definitely
had no problems with
·As It now stands, pUots have
The eavy payload Is beginning
course
on
25-year1)ld
planes,
a!ld
cracks
.in
the
wings.
•
been told that If the wing cracks that the Air Force Is taking. But ·the· pampered
to tak Its toll.
A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Assoplane
was
are longer than 1.1 Inches, the
ciation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
A high ranking official at the
phine should be grounded and measures to ensure their safely.. not used for the usual military
McGuire Air Force Base In New
Regardless of what the Air ' airlift missions. It was the
LEITERS OF OPINION ate welcome. They should be tess than 300
repaired. Anything smaller and
Jersey recommended to the
words long. AU tellers are subject
editing and must be signed with
Force
says publicly, privately lt private jet of the head of tlie
the plane should be fiown at
Pentagon that Its 266 Starllfters
. name, address and telephone number. No unsigned JeU ~rs wUI be pubshould
be alarmed by the disturb- Military Airlift · Command, a
rel)uced speeds.
should be grounded. But the Air
lished . Letters should beln good taste , addressing Issues, not personal I·
1
That's akin to a11. airline pUot lng pattern of cracks found on three-~tar general.
ties.
·
Force brass Instead put flying
· ~on after our story ra~, the
telling his passengers, "due to rear wing joints.
restrictions on th~ planes wlth
'•
Most of the planes are ·near or . ,4.!r Force repainted the generbeyond thelrl!feexpectancy. The • at's y·14lso It would blend with
. C-141 has been the · vital but the rest of the wounded fleet.
unglamorous, tool of th~ Air . That declslort was · privately
.
.
Force. Operated out of the a11plauded by the ran~s. but the
MIAMI I NEA) - ';Override"
them.
would give firms paying $750 to ship bookings allow agencies to Military Airlift Command, It was ranks would -feel even better If
Is the travel industry's euphemItem: In 1988, the Hertz Corp., •$3,000 apiece priority access to "make up to 12 times the profit of · recently used to deliver military the rest of the fleet was treated
supplies to Colombia. ·
wlth .the same care....
ism . for a kickback - an
the nation's largest auto rental the press room. After the un- a typical tour package." .
undisclosed paym!!nt made to a. company, was fined almost $7 precedented ~cheme was re·
Indeed, the agents owe their
travel agent who provides famillion and agree~ to pay de- vealed, the .embarrassed trade primary allegiance to those
vored treatment to a particular frauded customers and insu- association hastily abandoned It. suppliers of goods and services
' alrllne, resort, hotel chain, rental
rance companies an additional
Advertisements In trade publi- · who pay their commlssloris car company or other supplier.
$16 million after it was found to cations crassly promote tour and their overrides. Vacationers
• Corpora lions have iired purhave inflated repair costs 'for packages as "money machines" are at best customers and, at ,
chasing agents·'for .accepting damaged autos through phony for ')gents or claim'· that cruiSe· worst; victims . .
· such payments . Radio disk jock- appraisals.
eys have found themselves en"
In 19S9, Hertz agreed to pay $1
hngled in major scandals for . million to $2 (Dillion in restitution
accepting "payola" - the specosts to resolve litigation l11•
cial name for kickbacks In their
ltlated by the district attorney in
business.
San Diego, Calif., who' charged
But, as far as the travel agency
that the company sold wrfcked
is concerned, · overrides (so
By United Press Inlerna&amp;lonal
autos from its rental !leetwlthout
named because they are paid In
Today
is
Friaay,
Ja.n. 5, the fifth day of 1990 ..wlth 360 to follow.
disclosing that they had been
The moon is waxing,. moving toward Its fu!l phase.
addition to standard commls• salvaged.
The morning star Is Mars.
,
sions) present neither ethical nor.
Also in 1989, the California
legal Issues. "They're a way of
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn·.
Court of Appeals ruled that
life," American Society of Travel
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn: They
Dollar Rent-A-Car . Systems
Agents President Volt Gilmore&gt; made false and misleading stat e- include Zebulon Pike. discoverer 'of Pike's Peak In Colorado, and
blithely explained dur!ngASTA's
ments to defraud 'its customers, Navy 9Pt. Stephen Decatur, both .In 1779; King Ca~p Glll~tte,
of the
safety razoc, in I1~55; West German, statesman Ko!lrad
recent annual convention here.
charged grossly inflated prices Inventor
'
.
.
. The major problem posed by
Adenauer
In
1876;
1984 ·Democratic presidential candidate Walter ·&lt;·
for repairs and issued more than
what Gilmore characterized as
5oo;ooo "&lt;;lecellful, misle.adlng Mondale in 1928 (age.62): actor Robert Duvall in 1931 rage 59) and
actress Diane Keaton in 1946 (age 44) .
. innocent "sales inducements" is ... and ambiguous" contracts.
Auto. trans .. air ,c:ond., AM/FM stereo. cloth interior, le11 than
obvious: They encourage·travel
When ASTA delegates had an
66,00(1 miles." looks and driveaJike new.
On this date in history:
.
agents to steer customers to an
SHOP AND
E ONLY
opportunity to question execu·.
In 1914, Ford Motor Co. Increased its dally wage from $2.34 for .a
airline that pays kickbacks even· tlves of rental car companies at
If that carrier' s s~hedules. fares
the convention, however, there nine-hour day to $5 for eight' hours of work.
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 9:30-6:30
or routings may not best suit the
was no expressed Interest in any - In 1919, the National Socialist INazl) Party was formed In
FRIDAY 9:30·5:00; SATURDAY 9:00-1:00
·
·
.
·
·clients' needs.
of the industry's ethical or legal Germany .
11A111 SEAIUS
BANK FINANCING MAll DAVIS
For most people, the travel
In 1925, Nellie Ta,¥:loe Ross of Wyoming was sworn In as 'the first
problems. The travel agents'
SllESIIAtl
AV
..
.
Industry Is a source of enjoyme"t
principal concern was securing woman gove~nor in the United States .
- ttie means to cherished vaca·
In 1964, Pope Paul VI and Greek Orthodox Patriarch Athenagoras
larger commissions for
met
In Jerusalem, the first meeting of a pope and a patriarch In more
!Ions that provide an escape from
themselv~s . ·
.
than
five centuries.
stress and boredom. But It also
Item: ASTA planned to offer
can be an . amQral business. In
605 IIJIRAL
· · 992·3011
companies in the ~ravel indusli'Y
which avarice Is the primary
iiAU.GEI PAIIWAY
.
MIDDLEPOn, OHIO
"press sponsorships" at · !he . A thought for the day: Politidai Wati~~ . Mondale one~ warned,
motivating f,orce for Its
convention - .an Initiative that "There will be no veterans of World War Three."
practitioners.
Item: Only a few weeks before
.
the ASTA convention, a federal
grand jury In New Haven, Conn. ;
Indicted officials of the. Jamaica
Tourist Board and the New York
advertising agency of Young &amp;
Rubicam on criminal charges of
racketeering and bribery'
'
l'he ad agency Is acc1,1sed of
paying almost $1 million In
br.ibes to secure the ·tourism
DR~
account' in the early 19Bos.
According to the indictmept, the
QRTHOPEDIC and GENERAL SURGEON
money was paid to ·a Jamaican
'
advertising • agency 'executive,
who then passed it to · his
.
,
~~
I
cduntry' s minister o( tourism. ·
· The Jamaica Tourist Board
Dr. Lentz, Board Certified General, Thoracic and Orthol!edic Surgeon willl&lt;on·
served a free continental break·
tinue to serve on the itaff of Veterans Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
fas t to the 6,000 delegates on all
Dark Blue, V-6, 5-Speed, 00, Air Cond., PS, PB, AMIFM casfour mornings of the ASTA
sette, Custom Wheel Cov~trs, Cloth Interior, Chrome Mirrors,
Dr. Lentz earned his medical
from the University of Pennsylvania in
convention. Jamaican officials
L,uggage
Rae~. Spare Tire Carrier.
1951. His internship was at the University of Pennsylvania· Hospital. He has had
said they were "not familiar"
with the criminal Indictments
separate surgical and orthopedic residencies at the University of ~ncinnati Hospibut noted thai none of the travel
tal• .,r, Lentz is a fellow of the American College of Surgeon$ ~nd a member of the
agents seemed to be bOthered by
Ainirican ~allege of Chest Physicians.
•
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.

NEW YORK tUPIJ - Stanley
Wilson, the disgraced tullbilck of
the Cincinnati Bengals, says
some of his' teammates used
cocaine the · lllght before last
· year's Super Bowl.
However, all the players
named by ·Wtlsc)n deny his ·
allegations and Bengals ·coach .
Sam Wyche says he doesn't
believe WilSon.
· Wilson says 1~ February
Issue of Penthouse magazine that
. a cache of cocaine came · to

to

•

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-Today in history

detir•

OUBPJUCE

•a,a•.oo

j.

I
I

DR ..LEVINE

'

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Vance _Walker has helped
third In the .\'!AlA, that won the points. 9 assists per game). with
make things. happen for '·NAIA . champlopshlp of the Bevo Fran· Brad Schubert (14.5 points, 3.5
cis Classic with an 82-69 defeat or rebounds J as the shOoting guard.
Dis trlct 18 powerhouse Waynes·
burg (Pa.) in the last two
the Redmen pn Nov. 21, 1987. Schubert will face Walker on the
Walker scored 10 points tn the court, while Harrison pairs off
seasons. Now In his final cam·
palgn with the Yellow Jackets, he contest, the last meeting between with ;Eric Waterman 13.9 points) ,
continues to be the sparkplug Waynesburg and Rio Grande.
a 5-8 sophomore.
that powers tll~ team's fortunes. : Saturdjly's game will be 'the
Waynesburg' Is expected to
As the Rio Gran~ ~Redmen
YellowJackets'ffrs.toutlngslnce field as smallforwardRonMoore
19-3) lrllvel to Waynesburg Sat· Dec. 18, when their record fell
(6-3, senior, 15.6 polnls, 7.4
urdayforan8p.m.D:~eellngwlth
below the .500mllrkwlth a 99-85 rebounds) and Joe Johnson (6·5,
Walker and hj!i teamm;.tes; their loss to West VIrginia Wesleyan. . sophpinore, 11.8 pi&gt;lnts. 7.5 re·
thoughts will probably focus on W"ynesl)urg,.llke Rio Grand~. is . bounds) at power forward . Fachow . to contain the 6-4 shooting · hunting another 'opportunity to
i.. g Moore will be Darius Willi· .
guard's.. 24.4-j\olnt, ·8.7-rebound' participate In tbe NAIA Nation- · . ams\ the 6-3 freshman whO is
per game ·average, which led • ats; since Mar !sa took the team to · averaging 8.1 markers per game,
while Jeff Brown. tile former
Waynesburg to a 4-5 standing Kansas City seven times In the
prior to Christmas.
1980s.
• .
Newark High School standout
The Redmen will rollin with a •' who is credited wlth1U points, 9
Termed a "leader ~flth pr'!ven
i'CCOrilpUShments" by his coach, strtng of four consecutive victorebounds and 3.1 assists a game.
21-season 'veteran .Rudy Marlsa.
rii!JI, the las I two In the North
Walker scored 575 points. In Canton Ellis Classic at Walsh
1988-89, opened lhe current sea- College Dec. 28-29.
'
·
Rio Grande defeated the Unl·
·son with his 1.000th career point
. 'and Is headed for the top 10 verslty of Guelph (Canada) 103·aU-tlme scortng. llst a\ Waynes- 81 and then rolled over ano~ber
116Jrg. Already this season; hP Canadian team. Brock Untversi·
n1ckecl up '42 points . against ty's Badgers.. '138·91 for the
·.saleni-Telkyo rw.va'. J and 41 . classic's champtonshlp. The. trip
markets over Ohio University· boosted Rio Grande's per-game
Th~OakHillLadyOaksplayed
Belmont. ,
., ,
·
s~;orlng average ·to 104.1 polnis a super offensive game to defeat
· "We-countonVancetoprovlde · per outing. The ,.Redmeh have the Southern Tornadoettes 64-26
leadership for our team," Mar !sa surrendered an average or 85 last night In area girls high
adde'd.
points a game.
·.
school basketball action. ·
'
Walker was a member of the
Leading the · way for Rio
Oak Hill zoomed to a 21-5
Waynesburg sq)lad, the!l ranked Grand~ wlli probably be point advantage, then blitzed on to a
guard · Gary Harrison (19.1 37-14scoreatthehalfasSouthern .
.
continued to have Its offensive

•'

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.*=:""~•or
Nt-a
~*••

J Cento

Suboorlbori IICII dooJrtna to pay tbeCif·
rler !Tl8Y remit' In advan~ dlr~ to
Tile Dally S..ttnet 011a 3, lor 12 montft
blllo. Credit wW lie llvmcorrter Nch
wek.
•
.
No aubtcrtpttoao by moU pem\Htod In

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

areu where hoi'N! carrier Jer.~tce •
avafiable.

T__.IIP•., ~ JIM'IIr( . . . J.

.

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74 2 •2 4 5 5

CASH

UP
10

BACK!

0150."Drive ~ in a Dodge lull-size pickup
and get the highest truck cash back around .. .$2000!
Excluiles diesel models. $1500 on D150 Club Cabs.

·cARAVAN. Get the beSt~ting Caravan
now with $1000 cash back!

•

..

DAKOI'A. Our poputar mid-Biz8 Dakota

now has St500 cash back. $1000 on Dakota Club Cab.
·

..

· ..,

Ottlllde lllelp C..IIIJ

CASH

UP
10

UP
10
Excludes Dakota S.

··

'MUll buy from.stock by January 31st

DAY10NA SHELBY. Gal into • sporty •
Dodge Dayb1a Shilby, and get $)500 cash back. $1500
on Daytona ES Turbo. $1~ on Daytona &amp; Daytona ES.

qat details,lind Q118;!8MHclalm ..·nn ~ .dealer.

,,

'

The Gual1111188d Rebate. Only 1rom your Dodge deller. There'&amp; IWMif bean an olflr llka
·
this beloNI. Hurry in for the biQQIII cash back on Dodge's best now1 .

JN

_ , , __

IVMfiMfWRr.

PAT
I

CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE

399 SO. 'IIIID

"

IIACI(J

. Nobody can match- Nobody.

~2Weekl .................................. f7U6

112Weet&lt;s ..·........ ,....................... m.40

)t -

For More Information Call

CASH
BACK!

:Ill Weeki ........... ....................... ·137.96

26 Weeki ............. ;....... ............. N0.30

-

We Will Continue To Offer All Of Your
Equipment NHd$.
MORRIS EQUIPMENUNYITES YOU TO
.COME VISIT OUR NEW SHOP AFTER
JANUARY 15, 1990

I

-lletpc-,

13 Wteltl .............................. .... aJ.ao

.

IBACIC ON THE FARM)

•

13 Week1 ........... .... .. ... .............. $19.U

••

·is moving their business
EFFECTIVE JAN. 15, 1990
Our New Location Will Be ~ ·
SIDE HILL ROAD (6 Mile• Out Of Rutland)

Now, you don't have to wait to see when rebates will gel bi~r.
We're giving you the biggest cash back·you'll find all model year, nght now,
on many of our best 1990 cam and trucks. we _guatantee 11.
· No other car company has ever done that. Nobody can match us. '
Not Foret Not Chevy. Nobody.

~

RATES
. , eant............ .

OoeMontb ... ., ... ,., ,.,, .... .. ............16.10
()ne Ytu ..... .:...... .................·.. . m~I;JO
I•
SINGLE COPY
I
PRICE

•......-w.--·
~--·--·~

MORRIS EQUIPMENT CO •..

If rebates on these vehicles gc) up this model year,
we'll pay you the iJitference! ·
.

S~CRIP'I'JON

~

_.

•

Your Dod~e Deal~r Announces

ch""""
to Tile Dally Sentinel. Ill Cour1 St ., \
Ppmeroy, Ohio ~'lli9.

'Ia ......,.,. .

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. ... Jtjl.. .,.....

..

The Meigs Marauder· Wrestling teams will be in aetlon this
weekend.
The varsity team will host the
Melgs Ro.und Robin Tournament
at Meigs High School. Also
participating In the tournament
wUJ be ·warren Local, Jackson
and vinton County. Weigh-In~
will be at 10 a.m. with wrestling ·
to begin around 11.
·
The newly developed junior
high teain will be tn. action at
Point Pleasant In a 14 teain
tournament on Friday evening
am!. Saturday. The Little Ma·
rauder~~ooWIII have 14 kids taking
part In the ]unlor high tourna·
ment. The finals for the junior
high tournament wllf be at 7:30
Saturday ~venin~!:'.

~ Send addr.,.

....:;:.....
...:.=, .... "
...................
............ .,
"•••-c.:;..... .
a_,,_llill
--"·'~''"''
.,_.._
.....
•

;• ATTENTION • .·

Wrestling action ·
set this weekend

Memlf.r; Vrtlted Press International,
Inland DallY Press Aaa'oclallon and the
Ohio Newspa[i ANoclaUon. National
Advert.lllng
retentattve, Branham
New!IPIIper Sa es, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017,

Caroil Milt

Poiii••II.Ptllree14111
l'i-uMI• A
ll~q~~tllM•

7. MlsiiOtU'f ilf.l) ....... .. ................ Itt I
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.

......

/'

Publllhed everY afternoon, Monday·
lhrqh Friday; 111 Cour1 so., Pol!l&lt;roy, .Ohlo, by the Ohio VaUey PubU.hln'a (;ompany/ Multlmedl•, Inc.,
Pot)&gt;eroy, Ohio m&amp;!l, Pb. 992·2156. Se·
co.nd &lt;luo pootage tiald at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
·
·

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certainly have noticed somebody
who was out of sorts. And we
didn't notice anybody.
"It's almost tni!iosstble for me
to believe that anybody (In the
meeting) could have been using
drugs before that meeting. ·
Later, whim I saw Stanley and
the state he was ln. well, he
couldn't have been In that meetI-ng room and us not knoWn he
was In trouble. No way.
"Whereas, everybody else ·1n
place. ''
I hat I meeting) room seemed to
Wilson was the .only player to be ready to play football. You
miss a team meeting on Super . could have spotted drug use. I
Bow I eve and after the meeting jUst don't think It could have been ·
Wyche found Wilson alone In his hldden at that time. Nobody w.as
room suffering froll) coc;~..lne use. in the state that we found Stanley
Wyche said he observation ·or tn."
all the other players at the
Wilson says no one stopped him
meeting, coupled with his later as he walked away from the
observation of Wilson, made him · Bengals' hotel, checking Into a
believe that Wilson conducted his fleabag hotel, where, for two
days, he used cocaine and
own private drug party.
·,'Everyone was In that meeting patronized prostitutes. Wilson
but Stanley and. they all had says he paid with money made
arrived early for the meeting," through scalping the free Super
recalled Wyche. "We would Bow.! tickets given to players.

I
(USN 1411·. . )
-\.IHvloloa of !ll•lttm..la. Inc.

4-,L •

17, _..,,.

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.

NEW YOa&amp;t{JPJJ-TlttUnjle~P,_•
lt1&amp;er ...
~·~-·Top •
c:olk'p .......,all raa -.. wldl llnl'·
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........ rflrtl place, 14 for...-. .., etc.)
...........k'lrutlllll:

.

.

opposes Johnson at the start.
Troy Donaldson. a 6·7 freshman center fr6m Sebring, Ohio,
has already left an Impression
with Redmen fans wtth his
28-polnt performance over Brock
last week. Donaldson, averaging
8.6 points and 5.5 rebounds, is
expected to continue at the post.
He will confront another fresh·
man, Shaun Koontz t6·3), Who Is
contributing 8.9 markers and 4.7
rebounds per game to the Yellow ·
Jackets' offense.

The Daily Sentinel

._.eo.
Dolule" c...... v ......

twie.:e lu~~ethll

..

"'·2104

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.UPJI'IIInp .

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VETERANS
RIALHIVEHOSPITAl
POMIIOY

.

ae:-.-64

.

'

Brown, theBengals' All-Pro wide
receiver.. who was from Mlaml, .
would ·supply the drug from local
connections . .
All players named by Wilson
deny his account and Wyche said
he was very suspicious of Wll.
son's claims.
"From · what I'm hearing,
Stanley Is claiming they were
having a pot party, " said Wyche.
"There's something amiss here.
My belief Is that It did not take

:o...

·Dr. Levi• received his Doctor of Ost.Opathy Meclical' DetrH from the New
York College of Osteopathic Medicine in 1912. He did his internship at the Detroit
Osteopathic 'Hospital ancl .the li-Community Hospital, both in Warren, Mich., in
1913. This was followedlty a residency in general surgery at thtse two hospitals
from 1914 through 1911.
. .
. · ., , . .
·
He ~~ done additional course work in trauma, abdoml~al. and pelvic anatomy; dill!lses of the pancreas, genera.lsurgery a?~ post:operatjv~ ma.,agem~nt.
The tellphone .nunMr for r1CKh1ng Dr. Lev1ne for 1pfor.,{at10n or appoint, rnents is 992-3632.
,
· .
· ·'
.

..

'

S:

1181 FORD BRONCO II 414

Dear Editor :
This may be a little late, butthe
worps are. very much meant. 1
We the merchants would like to
thimk everyone who :helped to
·make our "Kids · Parade" a
success. Special thanks goes to
IV~n&gt;-Powell who provided our
sound system, and music for the
yo'ungs ters7 The clowns who
enJertalned both young and old
with their very special message.
Santa Claus who knows he brings
joy to the young and young at
heart we thank yo,u. The biggest
thanks has I() go to the children,
all 89 of you. You braved the cold
and showed . this town-. more
support than ·tt ev'ery thought ,
po~slbl~. We only hope you ,
enjoyed having a parade "Just
for Kids", half as much as we
enjoyed watching lt. We .ltope to
see you again next year. We .
·
won't forget you. .
· We also need to ihank the
people who parttclpa ted In tbe
bouse judging. We llnow much
work goes Into making these
houses so beautiful. Prizes were
..awarded to Joe Kirby Jr., Harold
Bird, Hazel pUdding, Larry
Wolfe, and David Crlnclsllirt. .
The Racl!le Merchants
Beverly Moore

' J

Pasi.

On Our Hospital Staff

'

-

Beegle, who was Injured In a car
. Aj,tltough botli teams first met ·• r~matik 11.1 the
less'' than three · weeks ago., the
Returning as point guard for
ac~'!~':: ~~~~~~d~.lllamore
fledghng Notre Dame (Ohio)
Doug Foote's Redwomen Is Debwomen's basketball · program ble Fred 1 k who netted 23 led Oak Hill with 12, while Jones
encounters the Rio Grand'e Red- . points ag~~si Tiffin and 21 over an~ S~tner :~~d 10 af~c::ii 'oi 22
women aga'in Saturday at 2 p.m.
Bluffton to become the team's f uth e~r
;j mt~ n
, in Lyne Center.
second-lilghest per-game scorer
rom e ne an us o 51rom
'· Blue Falcons· Coach Roxanne at lleach outing, Fredrick Is also ' ~~~!~~~ ~. hb~~~~~~~~~i! ·
Allen ~as made some adjust · supplying .3:3 ~~bounds and 4.4 and Jane Ann Williams with 7
ments m her lineup of probable assists a game. Jenni Couch each and had 14 fouls.
starters due to Injuries, but she opens as shootln! guard with 7
Oak Hill hit 29 of 58 from the
has two of~hem already averag.
points and 2.9 rebounds per f)oo
d hit 2 f 4 at the nne
lng in double figures.
game.
,
ran
o
,,Jacqule.Filpse (5:5, freshman,
At small !orward' Is Kerr!
~o~H~; ~':!;~!~~s.
I.
10.2 points, 4 assists per game)
KldweiJ.(Hpolnts,5.7rebounds)
kHIII
~
s
3-64
and Hollie. Kstezyk (5.10, freshwhile Kathy Snyder (6.6 points, 0 th
· .. ........... 11 14 16-26
5 9 6
map:,n points, 9 r~bounds) are
4!9 ._rebounds) continues .as the
:O~~RN.. ·:_ Mica Jones
lead~ng the visitors offense.
other forward. Ann Barnltz n3.9 3_ 3_ 9 Jane Williams 1-1-3,
Fhpse, who had been a starting
points. 6.2 rebounds) is at center. Ttlcla ·'·wolfe 0-0-0 Wendy
Rio Gr~~onde enters the contest Wolfe 0-0-0 Tony~ Ingels .
shootmg guard. may switch to
~lntgu:dbagalnstRloGrandelf
after playing at Cumberland 1_0-2, Jennlf~r Cross 0-0-0,
. ssa
u ak (5-3, ,f,reshman),
!Ky.) on Thursday. Prior t&lt;flhat Melanie Lyons · 0-4-4, Sarah
wh?,ll1 Allen labeled questlona·
game, Rio Grande was_7·6. Notre Dubl 2_ 1_ 5 Heather McPhail
Dame plays· at Shawnee State
•
·
.
ble Thursday, does not play.
today, entering with a 3-5 record · :i:t~· ..:i~~t..~~~::. !hers ·
Kstezyk, who suffered a conc;us·
slon. In an earlier game with
against-four-year schools.
08 · · HILl. _ Galllamore
Malon~, recovered sufficiently to
Notre Dame•.ln Its first year of 6-~12 , . Lloyd 5_ 2_i 2, Sharp
continue as power forward.
competition In District · 22, fell 2 - 1 5 Adkln 2 0-4 Fl h
Taking Fllpse's place as the off Ill-50 !o th~ R~dwomen on Dec. 1
2; ~ms~ l-0-2, r:a~~·
guard is Michelle McHenry (5·6, 16. ~rnttz ~cored 13 points, sey 1-0-~ Welvh 0-0-0 Morf:eshman, 4.4 points, 2 assls ts l. Kidwell 12 and Fredrlc,k 10 tor the gan 1.,..o-2', fllsco 0-4-4,'Jones
A:ngela Neff 15-7, freshman, .5 win, whlleFllpseandR!chledthe 5-0-10 Stiltner s-0-10. TOpoints, 5 rebounds) Is the, small hosts' scoring with 13 and 12, TALS
forward and Selene Rich 15-11, respectively.
· •
junior, 6 .polnfs, 13 rebounds)
, .

Is Pleased To Announce
The Retention··Of
MALCOLM W. LENTZ, M.D.

·Veterans ·Memorial Hopsital ·
Is·Also Pleased to Announce
. .
The Addition 'Of
;. Another Surgeon ,fo the
·Associate Medic~
I Staff
:' '.
DR. tACK M. "L~VINE

•

story, accuses the NFL and the
Bengals of falling to ensure the
players would remain dr.ug .free.
He also says the Bengals did not
.Investigate to learn If other
players were Involved.
The -week of the Super Bowl,
Wilson said, he- began .making
pll!ns to buy cocaine with cornerback Daryl Smith, defensive
back Rickey Dixon and several
other players. Smith would col-"
Iect the money, and Eddie

Notre Dame (Ohio) confronts w~~~a Jones led Southern with
. "" .. -~ ...
· ; S~.QtUt
, ~''-tdtzy
· _ ~..,
•:l:;t · ·.· 9,Sarah
Duht had 5, and·Melanie
R'· e, d,·. WOmen
•n
tlLyons 4. Southern was playing
,.
" ·, ,
: . .·
..
without season high scorer Junle '

VETERANS MEMORIAL H

Supgorters praised
· by merchants

c&lt;icalne u~.
He had been suspended . twice
before for drug use, WheJl,
Interviewed for.the story, Wilson
was a s'tock boy In a Phoenix
grocery. He refers to himself as
"the most .chemically dependen.t
person there Is ... . You could drop
me by parachute anywhere In
LQs Angeles and I could find coke
lnJS mlnules."
'Author Wllltam Sh~rman, who
spept six months researching the

1'!Uaml on the same plane that·
brought the team.
,
·
Wilson was paid bY Penthouse
for the story, butaspokesmanfor
' tile magazine said It Is Pent·
house's policy to not disclose
financial arrangements.
·On the eve of last year's Super
Bowl, In whlch·the San Francisco
f9ers defeated Cincinnati 20-16,
Wilson was- found hiding behind
the shower cu rtaln In his hoiel
room. .He was suspended for

.

this year, compared to 46 a year
ago, butwltbeveryonehealthy,lt.
can be devastating. Buffalo likes
to blitz, especially with Its Inside
linebackers, and the Bills move
Smith around · on the line to
confuse the offense.
Continued on page 8

by WilsQn they . used cocaine

top Southem ,
quintet, 64-26

MARIS AUTO SALES, INC.

Letters

and strong safety ;Felix Wrlgl)t AA look at the,li:ey matchups:
·had Pro Bowl-callller years as / 'Buffalo's pass rush vs. the
welL
.
Cleveland gftenslve line.
Both clubs.have good offensive • Smith Is the best pass-rushing
'players, too. How they petform lineman In theAFC, andBennett
will delermlne the winner ' Is hard to stop as well. The Bills
Saturday .
sacked the quarterback 38 times

Oak H_iU girls

$390' 0

Dr. Lentz' I patients at.Veterans Memorial Hospital will still see him as usual
at the hospital on Tuesdays, Thursdays l!lld Saturdqy mornings. The telephone
number far information or appjtintm,nts is 992-3632. · •

Fred Smerlas and Art Still are
battle·proven.
Cleveland bas tackle Michael
Dean Perry, linebacker Clay
MatthewsandcornerbackFrank
Minnifield going to Hawaii, and
Inside linebacker Mike Johnson
·
·
•

N~~A · ppwe~house ,is Redmen's next .opponent

Travel agents trip up on ethics_Ro......::...(Je_rt_·w;_a_lte_~s

..

Shane Conlant but outside llnebaclcer Cornelius Bennett Is a
Pro Bowl-calller player when
he's healthy, which he II now.
The Bills believe Darryl Talley
had a Pro Bowl- type year at
outside Unebacker, and linemen

·Berigals deny accusations

, .

·~
'

'

CLEVELAND (UPI) - . The
Cleveland Browns and Buttato
Billa have some of the best
defensive players In the AP'C. ·
Buffalo's Pro Bowlers this
· year on de!enfl! are end Bruce
Sm lth and Inside linebacker

'

·.The Daily Sentinel

The Deily Sentinel-Page 3

Pontlloy-Middlaport, Ohio

991·64·1

-.oa

,

·

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Paga 4 The Daily Sentinel

.

hlebach ICOred 13 polnta and South Florida 891 North CaroUna·
Sean ROOIIs added :IT u Arizona Cllarlotte86; BradleyU7,Laii!,IU'
Improved to 7·2 and 2·2 In the 89; and Louisiana Tech 91, Tulsa
.
.
Pacific 10. Eldrlctae Recasner 82.
17
points
for
tbe
Huskies,
scored
blned for 35 poln ts to lead Cardinals to 9·2. The Cardinals
Also, It was: NewMI!xicoState •
6·5 and 1·2, and Ed Meekins came 81, Pacific 60; Texu 109, Texas
Kansas . The Jayhawks set a were led by Felton Spencer's 19
ott the bench to score 14 pOints Tech 7l;Wyomlni 89, New Mex·
school ree,prd tor 3 point-shots by points and 11 rebounds.
· ' leo 87Jn overtime; Arizona State
hitting 11 and w~re led by
· AI Starkville. Mls~ .. Greg . and grab 6 rebounds.
In other ,scores, It was: ~high 75, Wuhlllllon State 64; Ha~all
Gueldner's tlve 3-polnters. Kevin Carter scored 20 points and
Pritchard sco'red 13 ~for Mississippi State hit 12 of 12 free 94, Army 82; Loyola MarYJ11ount 80, Brigham Young 71; Idaho 79,
Kansas . John Cooper led the throws In overtime. LSU, 7·2 and 99, S(; Joseph's 96; Macyland 88, · Boise State 61; Long Beach State
Shockers with 17 points.
0.11n·the conference, received 40 Wake Forest 82; · Massachusetts 66, Fresno State 60; Montana 68,
At Champaign, Ill., Kendall · points from Chris Jackson, In· 84, Rutgers 73; West'Vlrglnla 97, _Nortllern. Arizona 67; San 011!19
Gill scored 20 points to lead ' cl"dlng ll .ln overtime. M!gsls· Duquesne 60; Alal!ama- State 67, Utah 60; and San Jose
State 75, Cal· Irvine 69.
Illinois In the Big Ten openerfor sippi State, 8·2 and 1·1 In the Birmlngham 77; Jacksonville 61;
Florida
State
92,
Tula'le
68;
bot!t teams. Illinois, 11.(), shot 46 Southeastern Conference, got 18
percent · from tile field and points from Cameroll' Burns.
At El Paso, Texas, Lynn Tryon
committed 17 turnovers. Wlscon·
-sin, 9·4, received 21 points from scored 18 points to lead Colorado
Danny·Jones.
·
State In the opening Western
At Louisville, Ky., Louis Banks Athletic Conference game . for
66,000 miles. Auto., PS, PB.
scored 18 points to lead 'Cincln· hotli ·teams. The Rams . . 11·2
natl over Louisville In the.Metro overall and 1·0 In theWAC, got15
Conference opener for · · both poinfs from Mike Mitchell. -The
teams. The Bearcats, 8·3, Miners. 7-5 and 0·1, got 10 points
snapped Louisville's eiQ:ht·RaJrne from Marlon Maxey.
Auto., PS, P-8 .
.,'
At Tucson, Ariz., · Matt Mue·
wlnnln11 streak and dro'PPE~

..

1976 .-Chevy t.-10 .......... S795

'"

~~~·,":/ ..~·

Auto., PS, PB.

MHS f.-osh hike

reoonJ to

89~~

Pennzoii10W30
. MotorOil

-!5

. .·

"""

STPGas
Treatment

799

&amp;99
California cushion
AJr Flow Deluxe
cushions

Pylon washer
Pumps
•5101

Jlli!:JC)-22

castro! 10W40,
Motor Oil
20

wso

lft\11 12

992·3325

172 North Sec.,. Au.
Midolltpart, Olio

flOWERS fQI IVUY OCCASION

(6141992-2039 or

214 E. Mai~
992·5130 Pomeroy

·

·
•

~ ..

~

)

}~

•
·

•

1.06

161~1992-5721

lutttr~~Ut .An~ . PD1111roy,

MEIGS nRE
CENltR, INC.

Oh

BILL (U;JICKEL .

(row's Family llestaurCIIt
..,.. ,.,,;,gK•~~~~~v Ftltl C61•b•"
228 W. W.in St., Pe1111rty

204 Condor
St•.
' .
P~y, OH.

John F . FuiU, M9r.
Ph. 992-liOI

POMEROY, OHI0,-99~-6677

992-5432

992~ '

, Pomerov

K&amp;C JEWELERS

WHENEVER IT NEEDS YOU ·

0\\;rt

The word "help" is one ofthe most
versatile ones in our language. It can
mean something as little as holding a
door open for someone, or as much asoffering your services as a full-time · .
volunteer to help the poor. Your local
community is full of people and
organizations In need of your
assi$tance, and this list lncludes'your
House of Worship. When you think of
all the blessings you have received
there If you have been attending the services regularly, you will be filled
with a natural desire to do whatever
you can in return. This might Involve ·
making phone calls, typing the
bulletin, baking cookies, painting the
s~pes In the parking lot or performing
some other needed job. You depend
on the Lord for many things; show
Him that He can depend on you to be
there when you are ·needed.

212 E. M1in Shut
992·3785: Pomeroy

P.m.

5••w Q3.,.,~s

93 Mill Street

Middleport, Ohio 467110

786 NORTH SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

18141992·8867 -199B·OOK8l
CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp; BIBLES

........~~~~S~H~O~P-t

· FISHEit
FUNERAL HOME

s......

"

. 992-5141

EWING FUNERAL HOME

------..------...1

..•.

9 30

0

CENTRAL TRUST
Giant .

sure Start
BatU~rles

p,;ces~....,me~

•om

4797!aa.

.

Serrnonette

"6297,aa
§&amp;97•ER

575
/JJioY Universal
Joints

1 yea-yjarr~

..

...

•..

..
.If you've been ·
holding back wait·
ing for a great rate.
this Is it. But you've ·
This offer from
Central Trust

·Pomeroy •

7

FROM

got to act fllst.

216 S.·Second

992-ms

Pomtroy

INSURANCE ---SERVICES .

992-7'075

ot Columbus. Q .,
10~ W·. M1in
tll ·UII Pom•r~v

-

J

99~~

'

;

Pre~crlptions

_,,,.,,ss

~\UJr~lWI
.

Brogan-Warner

SAlES &amp; SERYI(E '·

•

Mill Work·
Cabinet Making
· Syracuse

dies' AuxUiary. Wednesday. 7
FamIly Worship. ·
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. 011
and comlined wtth mcntng prayer on the ·
RAWUNGS.(OATS
, t111n1 Sundl\\'. Mornng prayer and IIE!ITliOI1 on · Rt. 124, 3 miles trOm Portland-Long Bot·
tom. Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday SChool •
. an Olll!r Su!Kiays &lt;1 the molt h. O!ureh School
9U-6669
9:30 a:. m .; Sund!IY morning preaching
··· and Nunll!l'y care PrOVided. ~flee hour tn tiE
10:.30 a.m. ; Sunday evening services, 7:30
2'71 North
• Parlshllallimledlioelv!ollov.ingtlle~.
p.m.
,
: POMEROY CHURCII OF CHRM, 212 W.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
Main SL. Leo Lash, evan IJ!Illt. Bllio School
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Noel .
Mlddloport,
9: :n a.m.; MorrUigwtn~ 10: :tl a.m.i Youth
Hernnann, pastor. Sunday SChool10:00 a .
meetln~~S&lt; 6:00 p.m.; Evenlng wonhlp, 7:00 p.
Ohio
'
264 South 2nd
Middleport
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wedm. W~8Jdo,v nl8ft p-ayer meetlngapdBible
nesday and saturday Eventne Services at
stuly. 7:00p.m.
.
7:30 p,m.
,
TilE SALVATION ARMY. 11!1 &amp;tlenSit
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·
Pra yer-meeting· and Bible Study Wed·
Ave., ~- Mn.ll&lt;:n Wining In Char!!".
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
nesday .. 7 p.m.
,
Su!Kiay hoiiDess """'"'g. lO a.m.; Su!Kiay
Hicks, 10 rnlles a rove Radne on Rt. 388.
Sd&gt;oci. II&lt; :ll a.m . Sunla.Y School. YPSM
..Dillnily and Servi£'e· Alwa:vs"
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Sunday School 9 a.m. , \f01'8hlp service 10
Eloise Adams. leadE!'. 7:~ p.m. Sahratk&gt;n
Bofden. pastor. .eornellu$- Bunch, supt.
Established 191.3
·
a.m. Sunday evening service\ 6:00 p.m .;
Sunday School' 9:30 a.m.: Second 8nd
meeting. various SfEakEn and music specials.
Prayer meeting and Bible Study ThursThurscifrt. 11: :ll a.m. to 2 p.m. Ladies Horne
fourth Sundays wor;;hlp service at 2:30 p.
992·2121
day, 6:30p.m.
- .
m.
League, ·members In charge,, all WCI'T'Ie'n
1\IT. 'OLIVE UNITED METHODIST Invited; 6:45 p.m. Thur.da;v, CnrPI CadEI
.106
Mulbtrry
Au.
Pomeroy
MT.
MORIAH BAPTIST. Fourth and
Off 124, behind WllkesviUe. Charla Jones,
Classs IYoure PeoP..BIIlel, 7::1l p.m. Bible
Main St .. Middleport . Rev. Gllbei'fCralg,
pat tor. SUnday School, 9: JOa.m.; morning
L
Jr .. pat( or. Mrs.· Ervin BaumgardnB',
Stilly and Prayer f1]EEIIDg. opm tot !I! oubllc
t POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCfl OF worship. 10: 30; Sunday. and Thur~ay
Su nday School Supt. Sun~ay School9;30a .
eventnaservtces, 7:00p.m.
m.: Wbrshtp Service, 10 :45 a.m:
evening, 7:30 p.m .; Wedn esday Prayer
l CHRIST, 332260dldren'sHomelload ICcuJlY
•
. MI!IG8
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
SUC,CESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
1 ROod 1!i). !IJ2JIM7. Vocal music. Sunday War·
COOPERATIVI! PO ISH
,!lip IOa.m.; Bible Stilly ll a.m.; Worsijp. 6p.
- Joseph•B. Hoskins , ervangeUst. sunday
ship, 7:30p.m.
UNli'ED METHODIST CllllBCH
CHYRCli OF ~00 OF PROPHECY .
Bible Study 9 a.m.; Worship, 10 a .m.; Sun. m &lt;W-o,y, .BIIio Stilly, 7 p.m. ~al&lt;..-.
NOBTIIIIAIIT CLUSTI!B
· Land::ln.Hope, evan~.
Located on 0 . J . White l\.oad of Highway
da:v evening ·service 6 p.m.: Wednes&lt;tay
Rev. DH Ar~her
!60. Pat Mensm, pastor. Sun4ay School10
evening serv'lce. 7 p.m.
OlD . DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
Rev. Prank Crofoot
. CHURCH, Jad&lt; Clelan~ ]BS!or; AlJI!y GIQY&lt;~,
a.m. Classt&gt;s for all ages . Junior Church 11
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Racine,
ing service. 1:00 p.m. Prayer meeting, · Sunday School 10 : ;m a.'m. Bible Study and
Re\1. Seldon Johmm
Su!L Sundl\\' Schoallll:OO a.m.; Yooth mEet·
Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
.
· -, prayer service Thursday. 7: 30 p.m .
a.m.; Morning woi'shlp, 11 a.m. Adult
Rt. 124. William Hoback. pastor. Sunday
ALFRED - Church School 9:.30 a.m .;
lng. 1 p.m. .....-y Weme.do,v.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE cmJRCH OF
CARLETON INTEROENOMINATION
Choir practice&amp; p.m . Sunday. Young Peo·
School10 a.m.; Sunday evening service 7
Worship. II a .m :: UMYF6 :J0p.m.: UMW
SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
CHRIST. Joseph B. Hoskins, pastor. Bible
At CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev :
Pit&gt;'&amp;, Children's Church and Adult Bible
p.m . Wednesda y evening servlce7 p.m.
Third
Tuesday,
7:
:JJ
p.m.
Communion,
-Pomeroy. Msgr. Michael HeUmer, Ph.
Class 9· 30 am· MorntngWorshi¥J10·30a
Cl·~ w Hendersoo &amp;•star Su da y .......-Study, Wednesday at 7; l) p.m.
CARPENTER BAP'l'lST. Don Cfleadle,
Jlrst
Sunday.
(Archer)
' '
' '•
.
'
.l'""e . ·
• _- ' 11
·
n
HOPE DAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
Supt. Sunday SChOol 9:30a .m. Morning
992·5898. Saturday evening Mass. 5: ll p.m.
m.; Evening Worship. 6 : ll p. m. hursday
School9. 30 a .m., Ralph rl, Supt. Even·
St Middl ort Arflll ted Uh So th
W9rship 10:30 a .m. Prayer service. altern·
CHESTER - _worship 9 a.m. ; Church
; Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. CCD
Bible Study, 6:30p.m.
_
.lng worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meectng,
:·
C ep ·
a
w
u ern
S d
.
Sc~o110a . m.; BlbleStudy, Thursday, 7p.
dasses, 9 a.m. 1st and 3rd Suliday of each
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. PometoyWednesday 7:00p.m.
Baptist onventlon . David Bryan, Sr .• Ml·
ale . un ays. .
'
•
m.;
UMW,
first
Thursday,
1
p.m.;
Com·
· month. Confessions: One-half hour bffore
HarrlsmvUieRd. (Rt.l43i RobertE . Pur·
OLD BETHEL -FREE WILL BAPTIST
nlster. Sunday SchoollO a .m .: Mor~ing
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
munlon, tlrsl Sunday (Atcher) . ·
t• tell, minls~r: Steve .Stanley, Bible School .
each Mass.
.
CHURCH . 1286t)l State Rollte 7: Middleworship '1 a .m .; Evening worship 7 p.m .;
1\..POSTOLIC FAITH - New ' Lima Rd .•
JOPPA- Worship 9:30a.m .; Churt'h
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
Supt .; Rodney _Howery, AsSt. Supt. SUN·
port. Sunday SC:hool. 10.a.m. ; Sunday evenWpraedyneesr mdaeeyt lne~e nplnm
g Blbil' st udy a nd
next to f'ort Me igs Park. Rutland . Robert
•-h 0 o1 9 JO
wors hiP i~g service 7:30 p.m.;
,.,
Richards. pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
TOLIC FAITH- New Lima Road, next to . School10:~ a.m. BlbleStudyWednesday,
DAY : Bib! e .x
:
a.m.;
Tuesday
service,
BRADFORD
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
.
St.
Wednesdays
and SUiu1ays.
7:
:11
p.m.
IJohnsollli
'
1 FOrt Ml"fp• Park. Roben w: ~ Richards ,
l.ONG BOTTOM '- Church School9:30
IO: 30 A.M . and 7' 30 P .M.: Wednesday Bl7. :II p.m.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd .-5. Derek Stump.rv_stor .
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHi\P·
pastor. Sunday services. 10 .a.m. and 7 p.
ble Study,7:00 p.m .
HYSELL R
O
·
TER f
.
a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m."; Bible Study,
m.; Wedn,e sday worship, 7 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
UN H LINESS CHURCH .
William Amberji!:er, S. s,. Supt .: unday
. o the Wesleyan Holiness Church,
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; COmmunion First
Grove. The Rev. Laura A. Leach. pastoc.
Bob Grimm, pastor. Sunday School9:30 a .
SchOol 9:'30·a.m.; Mo'T-nlnjl Worship 10: 30
Rev . Earl Fields, pastor. Henry Eblin.
GRAHAM
UNITED METIIODIST.
Sunday ()f Month ·(Rev. Charles EatonJ
Church !ervlce 9:30a.m .; Sunday School
m.: Worship 10:45 aJf1.: Sunday evening
a .m.; Evening worship 7:30p.m. Wednes·
Sunday School Supt .: Sunday School10 a.
Preaching 9:30a.m. !Irs! and second SunREEDSVILLE- Chun:h School9: 30 a .
10:30 a.m.
_
service, 7 p.m.
". •
day worship 7:30p.m.
m.; M'or:nlng Worship 11 a .m.; Evening
days of each month; third and fourth Sunm.; Worship service ll :OOa.m .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRi$T.
FREEOOMGOSPEI.MISSJONatBald .
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH .
servlce1:30p.m. WednESd.lyevea'"goer·
day each m~th worship services al7: 30 p.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Tom Runyon, pastor. sunday School9:30' \ Knob. located ·on County Road 31 . Rev.
Corner Sycamore and Seoond Sts., Po·
vice 7:30p.m.
m.; Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
Church School 9 a .m.; Worship 10 a.m.;
a.m.; Larry Haynes, s. s. Supt. Morning
Roger Willford, pastor. .Sunday School
meroy. Th~;' Rev. Laura A. Leach, pastor.
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH
Prayer and Bible Study,
Bible Study, TueSday, 7:30p.m. ; Commu·
worship 10: ~a .m.
9; 30 a .m. ; Morning Worshi 10:_45 a.m. ;
Sunday Schoo\9: 45 a.m . Church serv lcf 11
. CarY Holler. pastor. Sunday services~ : ...;
, . SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mulnlon First Sunday (Arcberl .
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Sunday evenln&amp; worship 7:00p.m. ; Weda.m.
a .m. and 7 p.m .: Midweek service, 7:Xlp.
l
berry Heights Road, Pomeroy. Paster Bob
CENTRAL CLUSTER
RENE . Rev. John Van~. pastor; Ora
nesday ev~nlnA: Bible Study 7:00p.m.
SACRED
HEART CHURCH. MsgT .
m. Tllurlday.
,. Snyder; Sabbath School Superint endent.
Rev. Doa Meadows
Bass, Chairman of the Board of ChrlstLart
. WHITE S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
Anthony Giannamore. Ph. 992-5898. SalurMIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
~: Rodney SPires. Sabliath School begins at 2
Rev. We~lt!J Thlkher
CHURCH- CoolvuteRD.Rev. Phillip Ri·
day Evening Mass 7: :1) p.m .; Sunday
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker. pastor. Carl NotLife. Sunday Schopl 9: 30a.m.; Morning
~
p.m. on Saturday afternoon with worship
Rev. Haney RlndDl~J~Ch
denour, pastor. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.l
!'Yfass. 8 a.m. and 10 a .m. Confessions one
tlnA;ham. Sunday • School .Supt. Sunday
Worshl 10:30 a.m. : Evangelica1 service,
service following al 3:00 p.m . Everyone
·
Rev . Kathryn RUey
7:00 p.m.: .Wednesday service, 7:00p.m.
worship ~rvlce 10:30 a.m. ; Bible study
half hour befor:e each Mass. CCD classes .
School 10 a.m. with classes for aJJ agea,
weloome.
Rev. Paul Marlla
11 a :m. Sunday.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH Oexand worshJJr service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Evening services a16 p.m. Wednesday·Bl·
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH .
Rev. An•r Crabtree .
ter. Wondy Call. pastor. Services S~nday
. RUTLA D CHURCH OF CHRIST,
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd Sl.,
ble study at 7:~ p.m . Youth servl ... Fri·
- Sister Har.r lett Warner, Su'pt. Sunday
Rev. Robert Sletle
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday. 7 p.m.
Ray W. Carter, pastor. Sunday Morning
Middlepon. James E . Keesee. pastor.
d
,
SChool 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship, 10:45
17 30
ASBURY iSyra~sel- Wor!ihlp II a.m.
~orshlp,
_JO :OOa .m.; Sunday Blble~hool
Sunday m orning worship 10 a .m.; Even·
atCn£s&amp;'F£LLOWSHIP, l2SMIUSt. :.'
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHT..1RCH.
: Church SChool9:45 a .m.; Charge Bible
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Suiiday School 9: 30 a.
6.00 p.m. , Wednesday Bible Study 7.00 p.
lng service 7 p.m .; Wednesd ay evening
Mlddlepor1 . Brother Chuck McPherson,
a.~MEROY. FIRST BAPTIST. East . Study,
Wednesday. 7:30p.m.; U~W.'flrst
7·p.m. VlsltatlonThursday 6: 30 P·
m.
;
morning
worship
lO:XI
a.m.
Sunday
mRUTLANDBIBLEMETHODIST.
Amos
;~rship
pastor. Sunday School 10 a .m.; Sunday
Main St. Steve FUller. pastor. George
Tuesday. 1:30 p.m.; Choir Rehearsal,
Skln'ner1 Sunday School Superintendent .
evenln~servtce7p. m.
.,
TUU
· t So . H d
. S d
, MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
evenlngservlcesat7p.m.andWednesday
Yfedl')esday 6:30 p.m. (Thatcher)
0
Sun(\ay· School. 9:30 a : rri. ~ .Mo'rnlng WorENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a·,m.; ,
DeRA\:lNE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Sch~~l'::3o ~'.m.~n~or~~:n,;,~~~·lp~lo:Jt Curtman. pa:~tor. Sunday School.10 a .m .; se~';J*iQ~J{·r;APTIST. Kenn~hSmlth,
ship 10:30 a.m.; Wl'dnesday evening
Church School10 a.m.; BlbleStudy , Tues·
aver. Pa~tor. Mike Swiger, Sunday
a.m. ; Sunday evehlng service i:OO p.m .
worsh.ip service 11 a.m.: Sunday night
prayer and Bible study, 7:30p.m ..
School Supt., Sunday School 9:· ~ a .m.;
Wednesday servl~ 7 p.m. WMPO proworshtp o service 7: 30 p.m. : Midweek
pastor. Sunday Sch.ool9: 30 a ;m ,; leburch ·
day. 7:00p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7:30
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. PoMorning worshJp 10:40 a.m.: Sun(lay
gram 9 a . m . each Sunday.
prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m.
service 7!30 p.m .; youth fellowshlp6::K)p. ,
p.m .; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Remeroy Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
evening worship 7: 30 p.m. ; Wednesday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA ·
WESLEYAN
BIBI.E
HOI.INESS
m.; Bible study, ThurJtlay, 7:30p.m.
'·
hearsal. Children's at 6:30p.m : Adult fol·
Jack Needs, Sunday School Director. Sun7MM
lowing: Wednl'S4ay. j,Rileyl
:
·,
evBURUenlng
BNIGbiiiAMe
studCOy
' :11,!',:~, ClruRCH
'RENE.
_samuel_
Basye,
pastor.
Su_
nday
C
_
HURCH
or
Middleport,
Inc
..
7H'earl
St..
FULL
GOSPEL
LIGHTHOUSE,
3:1145
•
day School, 9: 30a.m.; Morning Worship,
v 1·u 11
Hiland Road, P'&amp;meroy. Tom Kelly, pas . .._
FLATWOODS- Chun:h School. 10 a.m.
Burun-am Ra•· L d
nt
D .:. '
School9.30 a .m .• Worship service 10.30a .
Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor; Roger Ma nley,
tor. Danny Laml)ett, s . s . Supt. Sunday~·
10:45; evening worship, 7 ~00p.m. (O.S.T . )
; Worship. 11 a.m.: Bible Study. ThursN•
•
'
au
erm
•
pastor;
rv.r
m.:
Young
people's
service
6
p.m.
Sr.,
Sunday
Sc
hool
Supt
.
Sunday
School
•
&amp; 7:30 jE.S.T.l; Wednesday Prayer.Ser·
ben Cozan asslstant pashr Su~ School
E
ell 1
morning
service at 10 ~ . m .; S'unday even- ..,
day. .7 p.m.; UMYF. Sunday. 6 p.m. lRI6: 30 p.m. Wednesda y·
am
.
wcJ.shlp
Wedn
.
-•
vang
st
cservlce
9:J:I
a
.m.;
Morn
in~
Worship
10:30
a
.m
.;
Ina
service
:
p.m
.
Tuesday
and
Thura·
.
7 30
vice. 1:00 p.m . ID.S .T. I &amp; 7:30 P .M. (E.S. '
10 · ·• .
7 p.m.;
UIUay, 6 p.m.
servl~ 7 p m
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
!!'
Iey;l '
T,) ; Mission Friends (ages 2-6}, Royal
!f'OO,th meeting Wed., 7 ~.m. ctl.lrch servk:es.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Miller
evenln~ Bibl e study, prayer and praise
day Scrvl&lt;'l'll at 7: 30 p.m.
•
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
Ambassadors Iboys ages 6-181, and Girls
Chun:h School 10 A.M.: Choir practice, .
mft!N~~~?~L
NESS
CHURCH
,
1\
.St
..
Mason,
W.Va.
Sunday
Bible
Study
10
service,
7:30p.m
.
•
:J'lE~:.A~!;,N
&amp;'.!::!:;~t~!.t~u~:.·
:·
ln Action laKes 6-181 on Wednesdays, 7 p.
Th.u rJday, 6:30p.m.; UMW third Monday.
Ro e 0 Se · ·
·Ben J. Watts, pastor.
a.m.; Worship 11 a .m . and 7.p.m . WednesFAITH FULl GOSPEL CHURCH , Lon~ ... Sunday Schoo\ 9: 30a .m.;' Worshlpservt =-~
' tn. I!J .S.T.I &amp; 7 :30p.m. fE.S .T. i ~ Tuesday
·· '
(Thatcher)
, bert _aries, ~.S. Supt. Sunday SChool
day BibleS~udy , vocal music, 7 p.m :
Bottmi , Sunday School, 9:30 a.p1.;. Morn~ •.
. VIsitation. 6:30p.m.
9· :1) ~;t.m .• Morrtlng Worship 10:30 a.m.;
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOO Dudlng Worship 10:,45 a.m.; Sunday evening
lO: 30 a .m.; Youth liervtc~ Sunday 6:15 p. ~
HEATH (Middi"!&gt;Qrtl- Church SchOol.
FAITH TABERNACI.E CHURCH. BaiS~~ay even,lng7se30rvlce 7:l) p.m. : Wed·
ding Lane, Mason, W._ Va . J. N. Th8cker,
7:00 p.m. jsu'mmer 7:30 p.m. ) ; Wednesm . Sunday eveningservlce7:00p.m. Wed- "
9:Xl a.m.: Morntn~ Worship 10:30 a.m.;
ley Run~. Rev. Emmeu Raw sm, pai!in~ay serv ce ·
pm
·
nesday Prayer Meettna: and Blbje S,tudy •
Youth Group, 4 p.m .; Wednesday, Bible
SILVER
RtiN
·
BAPTisT
Little
,
past?".
MEve
ntlng
seThrvlc:_
7:~
p.
rp.
;
Wo·
day
night
7:00p.m.
(sum
mer
7:30p.m.
I.
.
~
7: 00 p.m.
ICI'. Handle')f Dunn, supt. Sunday Schad,,
8111
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m.
1
1
.
·
'
•
mens
n S ry.
ur~ay,
:
a.m.;
!.IVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
NEASE 'S ETTLEMENTCHURCH ,Sun- ;
10a.m .t Sunday~lngservlce, 7:30p.m.
IRind!lelschl.
pahstoroi.ISOteve Ltttle, S. S. Supt. Sunday
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study 7: 15
OF GOD- Gary Hln"". paStor.. Sunday
d
f
1
t 2 30Th
·
; Bible teaching. 7: 30p.m. Thursday. ·
Sc
o
a.m.; Morning worslp, 11 a.m.; 1 P m
·
'
..
ay a ternqon serv ces a : . ursday ...
MINERSVILI.E - O!ureh School 9:00
SYRACUSE MISSION. Cherry St., Sv·
Sunday evenJng worship 7:;k) p.m . Prayer
· ·
.
SChool 9: 30 tq,lO: 20 a.m.: Worship srvice
evenln~ services at 7::K)_
.
,...,
a.m.; Worship service 10:00 a.m.: UMW
racuse. Mark Morrow, pastor. Servlet'S, 10
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30
HARTFORD CHURCfl OF CHRIST IN
10: 30 to 11 :30 a.m.; Sunday evening scr·
FIRST BAPTIST ·CHURCH, Mason, W1. '
third Wednesday, 1 p.in ..rhatcher)
a.m. Sunday. Ev~ntng services Sunday
p.m. ; Youth meeting Wednesday at 7p m
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford , W. Va.
vice, 7 p.m.: Midweek Prayer Service.
Va. ?astor. Bill Murphy . Sunday SchoollO •
PEARL CHAPEL- Cf!ll'rch School 9:00
and Wednt'!lday at 6:00 p,tfl.
.
·
REJOICING LIFE BAPTlS...WR'cJi
Rev. Davkl McManis, ~stor. . Church
.Wed., 1 p.m. ·
a .m.; S~nday evening 7::JJ p.m . Prayer :
a.m.; Worship Service 10:00 q.m. (MarMIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
- 383 N. 2nd Ave .. Middleport. Sunday
Scl)ool 9:30a.m.; Sunday morning ser·
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
meetlng and Bibl e study Wednesday, 7 : ~ ,
tin)
. !
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight HaiOI',
School10a.!tl.Sundayevenlng7:00p.m. ;
vice, 11 a.m.; Sunday evening service,
Lawrence Bush. pastor. Sunday SChool
p.m. EveryooewelcomP.
..
POMEROY- Church SChool. 9:15a.m.
nrst elder: Wand~ Mohler, Sunday Sch!)ol
Mid-week service, Wed.,~ p.m. .
7:30p.m. Wednesday prayerm~lng. 7:.'\Q : 9::11 a.m.: Sunday and Wednesday evenRUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa- "
; Worship 10:30 . a.m.; Cholr · rehearsal
Supt. Sunday SChool 9::1) a.m.; Morning
LANGSVlL;LE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
p.m.
lng worship service. 7:00p.m.
!em St . Rev. PauL Taylor,' pastor. Sunday ..;
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.: UM\V. second
Worship 10:30 a.m..: EveningWorshlp7:30
Sunday
School
9:30a.m.;
Jeff
Pattersm:
FAIRVIEW
BIBLE
CHURCH,
Letart.
UNITED
FAITH
CHURCH
.
Rt.
7
on
PoSChool 10a.m.: Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
Tuesday,1 :30 p.m .; UMYFSundoy,6 p.m.
p.m .; Wednesday prayer meettng7::Klp.m . • (Meadowsl
supt.; Morning worship lO :Xl a.m.; sunW.Va .. R1 . 1. James LewiS. put or. Wormeroy By-Pass. Rev. Robert E .Smlth. Sr. . Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00...
day evening service, 7:30 p.m.; Wednes·
sh&amp;servlces 9::ll a .m.; Sunday SchOolll
pastor. Melvin ~rake. S. S. Supt . Sun_da~
p.m.
. . ...,.
MT . MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO.
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School, 9: I~
a~ Evening worship 7:30p.m. Tuesday
School9:a.) a.m., Morning Worship 10. 30.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT .....
Racine. Rev. James Satterfield. pastoc.
a.m.; \\'orshlp 10f.m.; Bl~leStudy, Wed· - d.ay evenin1 service, 7: :f1 p.m.
EDEN UNITED . BRETHREN IN
cottage prayer m ... lng and Bible Sttldy
l!:venlng Worship 7:00p.m.; Wednesday
CHURCH . Silver Ridge. Duane Syden· '•
Freeman Wllllams. Supt. Sunday School
nesday, 1:30 p.m., UMYF cSentors), Sun9;45 a .m.: Sunday and Wednesday even- , day, 6 p.m.; (Juniors) every other SpnCHRIST, Elden R. Blake, put or. sunday
9:30a.m. ; Wor~p service, Wednesday
PrFaAITHyer
SerBvAPTlce
, t7S:TOO p.HmU.RCH. 'Railroad
striCkE"r, pastor. Sunday, School 9 a.m.; '
Ing services,' 7 p .m.
ScboollO a.m.: Gary Reed, Lay leader.
7:Jl p.m .
, '
C
Worship Service. lO.a ..m.; Sun~ayevenlng ....
. day, 6 p.m. (Riley).
.
. MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
Morning sermon, 11 a .m.; Sunday night
OUR SAV'tQ\JR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
St , Mason. Sunday SCilod 10 a .m .; Morn·
servio:e, 7:00p.m. Wednesday night Bible ,
RUTLAND- Chun:h SChool, 10 a.m.;
Corner Sixth and Palmer. James Seddon,
services: Chrlltlan Endeavor 1::1t p.m. ,
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.
lnR worship 11 a .m .; EveninR Rf1(lce ~A.
study 7:00p.m.
' '"
Wor&amp;hip. 11 a .m :; UMW First Monday ,
PasJor. Edna Wllsm, S.S. Supt.; Cathy
Sonr service 8 p.m. Preaching 8: ~ p.m : ~. Va. The ~- Geor'le C. Weirick, pastor.
,_-....;.~-----------------....;,----·,.·~
7: ~p.m. (Crabtree~
Riggs. Asst. Supt. Sunday School. 9: 15, a .
Mid-week prayer meettna. Wednelday, 7·'
Sunday SC'hod 9: 30a.m.; Sunday wcnhip
SALEM CENTER- C~urch Schoo19: Ill
.
m.; Morning Worship, 10: 1~ a.m.; Sunday
a.m.; Morning Worship 10 :15 a :m.
'
u~
.
Evening &amp;ervlce. 7 ·p.m. Prayer metring
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH. loeated on
· (Steele)
'
"
and Bible Study Wedn8day E"Venlnl, 7 p.
Pomeroy Pike. County Road~ n•r Flal·
, :HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. David
SNOWVILLE- Morning Worship, 9:00
m.: Children's •Choir 'practice. Wedneswoodl. Rev. BlackWood, pastor. services
Prentice, pastor. Charles Domigan, SUna.m .; Church SchooiiO:OO a.m . !Martini
day, 7 p_.m.; Adult choir practice, Wed., 8
on Sunday atlO::I)a.m. and7 ;:l&gt;p.m. with
dsy School &amp;pt. MorniJII Woraldp 9: :I! a.
IIOV'11111BN CLUSTI!B
LOOK FORWARD, NOT BACKWARD
su~day School9: :I! a .m . BibleStudy, Wed·
p.m .; Radio progr~m. WMPO. Sunday,
m.; SUndsy Schooi!0:30a.m.; EVftllngaerRev. llea-Ballfr
£1 :30 a.m.
nflday, 7::11 p.m.
So
many people are always looking back andregrettlngwhatthey • :
,
vlce. 7:00p.m.
Rev. 8e&amp;ll' Grace
FJ,ITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR"
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Pallor: Joe illhave done. They spend so much time worrying aboutthelr mistakes •· ~
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF GHRIST
Rev. CariHiclao
CHRIST, St. Rt. 338, Antiquity. Rev.
. Sayre, Sunday School9 :45 a.m.; Eveillng
5tti and Main, AI Hartson. miniSter:'
and
errs they·don't give today a chance to do good. Just remember ·; ~:·
APPLE GR.OVE - Chur&lt;h Sc~ool 9:00
Franklin Dickens, pattor. Suftd4y mornwcn1tfp 6;3) p.m.; Prayer Meeting. 6 ! ~
Richard DuBose. Auoclate Pastor: Mike
a.m.; Morntne Worship 10:00 a .m.; Bible
tomorrow
never gets here and yesterday Is history. We can't live It '' lna
10
a
.m.;
Sunday
evening
7:30
p.m.
p.m.
Wedlleaday.
Gerlach, Sunday School Superu\tfndent .
Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Prayer inerettng
Thunday
evi!nlni:
7:30p.m.
over
to
correct
our errors and goofs.'Today Is the only time we have
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
BlbleSchooi9:JO a.m.; Mornlnlr Worship
7:00 p.111. Thunday. IHicks)
•
MIDI&gt;LEPORTlNDEPENOENT HOLIcontrol
over
CHRIS'r. Robert Foawr. ~&gt;ntor: Howard
In
our actions. If we spend our time looking backward
10:30 a.f11. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m .
BETHANY - Worship 9 a.m.; Chur&lt;h
NESS CHURCH. Inc .. 'm Pearl St. Rev.
•.
Caldwell.
S&amp;ID«&lt;ntendent:
Church
achool
Wednesday, 7:00p.m. Prayer meeU.q.
we will not be able to walk a very straight line. The farmer knows
SChooiiO a .111.; Bible Study Wednesday 10
Ivan Myers. actina putcr; Roa:w Manley,
9 a :m.; worohfp aervlce9: C5a.ll1. and 6::11
MIODLEPORT CHURCH OF TilE lll'AZ·
:that
If he Is looking backward, he can not _plow a st!"lllght furrow.
~
a ,m.: Dorea• Women '·a Fellowship WedSr
..
Sunday
SchOol
SUperlatendeot.
Sun· p.m. E~!21e welcome.
•
ARENE, PASTOR Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm.
neodoy II a .m . IBakt!f) ,
·
We are Into a new. year, a new decade and In 10 short years a new
day School 9:30 a.m.; Mornlnl wonhlp
. CHESTER ClruRCH OF THE NAZA·
~
Jr., paJtCI'. Jean KimEl, Sunday School SU·
CARMEL - Chur&lt;h School 9:.:10 a.m. ;
century. It maybe a'good thlnglfweall makethesameNew Years
RENE. IU-v. . llerbert Grate, paator, · 10:30 a .m ,; ovtnlq wonhlp 7: :II p.m.;
perlnt..dont. Sunday SChool ·9::11 a.111.:
Worlhtp, 10:'5 a.m. Second and )'ourth ~ Fraak RlfOe, oupt. Sunday SCboo19:30 a.
Wednflllay evonta1 ' Bible 11\ldy, prayer
Morning Wonhlp Servlre. 10;30 a.m.; SunResolution. "I will look fo..Ward and not backward this New YeiU'."
Sundaya; 'FetiDWihip dinner wttb Suttm - m.; Wonhlp oervtre, 11 a .m. and 7 p.m.
and praite stirvl~: 30 ·p .m.
d-.y evening aervtce, 6 p.m. i Wednmd.y
thirdThul'llfay,_l::llp.m. (Bok8'l- ,
I
think we can all make where we ilve a better place If we do tbat ••CHURCH OF
CHRIST APOS- .-:Sunday. Wedllflday, 7 p.m. Pnyer moet·
evening service, 7 p.m.
MORNING S'I;AR-- Chur&lt;h Seh0ol9: 4~
Wake1each day With a smUe and say to ourselves "Today I am going
'•
TOLIC - VaaZantlt and Word ~- El~
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
a.m.; Woralllp 10:30 a.m.; Bible Slud)'.
Jam'" MOler, paaf..-. Sundoy School,
lnf.AUREL CLIFF FRE~ METHODIST
to
do
something
good
for
everyone
I
meet.
I·am
going
to
live.
a
live
a
•
RENE, Rov. Glenn MeMUian, p,uJor.
\· ··,
'1'1111~. 7:30p.m. (Baker~ .
IO:!Oa.m.; WorohlpServleo,Sunday,1:30
CHURCH. Willlatn WUI~ paalor; RoMark Mlltsm, Super'tntendent. SUnday
life eacb hour u If It will be the last hour of my life. This way God
S
N - Chan:b School, II: 3tl ... m.; '
p.m.;
BlbleSiudy,
Wedlllldl)',
?:30
p.m.
•
bert-E. lllrlm. Dlndor at Ot'loUlD Edu·
SChool9:30 a.m.; 1\!MmJta W0 rlblp,I0:30
and my fellow man will all be thinking, well done Wlou good and
llom(MWarablp IO:Ch.ni. ftrllandthlrcl
cation; St... Eblin. utii!Ul. Sunda~ .- CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL. Harrl·
a.m.; Evanaellatlc aervtcr, 6 p.m.:
SUndayo; Fellanblp dinner whb carmel
'
faithful servant." '
.
oonvWeRoad. ~- VJ.-..-Rotaoll.pulor;
SCbool 9: 30 a .m.: Montlar wanllfp 10: !iJ
Prayer and Pralle Wednmctay, 7 p.m. ;
third Thtlndoy, 1:30 p.m. llllk•l·
Cllrtlm
Foullc,
Sellool
SUpt.;
Sun·
U we look back I am sut:e we will lind as much delight, pleasure
a.m.; TfOIII In Attfon. 6 p.m.; Eventar
You_th meetlna, T p.m.
EAST LETART- MolillarWorahlp 11:00
4oy Seboall: II a.m.; montq wCI'II!Ip. ll
Woralt!p, 7:00 p:m. Chottr,raelloe B p.m.
and
happiness and more than all the grief. The future alao wOI give
UNli'ED J'!iUIBII't'ftiUAN MINimiY
a.m.; Ctun:b_,hool IO:OOt.rn.; UMW ftrlt
a.m.; SUndoy tvllllill III'VIce ?:30 p.m .
&amp;lnday. Wedllaodoy ewt1 n1 prayer and
, OFIIII:IGICOUNTY_
'l'ul!adq 7: II p.m. IGrace).
us
more
pleuure, joy, happiness and contentment than grief and
Prayer Meetlna,Wedllaoday, ?:30 p.m.
.... O'q.Ju lllelb&lt;
,
Bible
~
LETART FALLS - Worohlp. 9 a.m.;
unhappiness.
All we need do II faee today with conlldeace, eourage
SYRACUSEFIRSTCHURCHOFGOD.
DE
ClruRCH Of CHRIST,
HARRISONVILLE PRESliYTERIAN
O!urch SebooiiO a.m. (Grace).
'"""Pente&lt;uolal. IYorahlp ..mce Sunday
and
dof!liour
belt, make our lives of much value for thosewetoum.
Ropr
Wata111, mfnlaiOr; Norman Will,
CHURCH - SUnday: Worahlp Servlct!ll
RACNE- Chun:lt Soboal, 10 a.m.: Wor10 a.m.: Sunday School ll a.m. Ew!ttnr
aupl. Sunday SChool 8:30 a.m.; Wnnhlp
Looldnrback with ~tsls foolish and a wuteoftlme. The put
9:00 a.111.: Cburch Se~ 10: 1!5 a.mi.
·oldp lla.m.; UMW!olll1hMoadoy al7:30p.
.-vloe 10:30 a.m. Billie atudy, Wf\1111,.. • worShip aerviCO! ?:00 p.m. Wedllaoday
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN 11 thll pqe already wrlltell. TOday the paper of time fot our Uvlq'm.: Moo'o Prayer llrtildllt, Wemao!o,v, 8
· '
pra)'or meotlq7:00 p.m.
day, ?:00 p.m.
·
·
Su,n day School. 9 a.m.; Chttr&lt;h oorvTce;
a.m. (Grace).
,
,
blankand needs deeds to be put upon lt. We can notadddeedl (liiDd ,
• REORGANIZED ClHURCI!' OF JESUS
ll:l5t.m.
MT. HERMON UNITI:D BRETHIIEN
KENO
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST,
ito1er
or
bad to yeslerdays book ofllfe. So I simply tell you all, dowbatGod
CHRISTOFLATTERDAY~Porl·
' SYRACUSE FIRST UNrrED PRESBY·
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Loctttd lrt 'l'txal
9prlila. mlnlller: Slarllng Massar and Olland-Ractne Road. Mlkt Didll, paator;
wanta
you to do, look forward and serve Him and your fellow man
~·
qmmuntty ott Ci. Rt. 11 Rev. R~
TERIAN - SUnday SCbool, 10 a.m.;
Iver Swain, Sunday School SupiL PreacllJanlet DlMer, cbtlrch acltool dlrt&lt;lor.
Church aervtce, 10: Ua.m.
:
llonclfro, pall..-. Jeff Holtt!l'• toy l•der:
and
don't
look
backward.
·
Backward
Ia
past,
done
and
tlnlsbed.
..,
lal9:
110
a.m.
each
!londay;
Sunday
Scbool
Church acllool9: 30 a.m.; Mornla1 wen hip . Ed Roush, Sult(ay School aupt. Suatlay
R,UTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Put,.-,
TOday the page of your book of
Is walling for good deedl'. Look
!0:30a.m.
,
10::11 a.m.; Wedntllday tvfltiDI prayer
• School 9: 3D a.m.; mo!'tllar wonhlp and
Raymond Cc•. Sunlloy ~allD;OO a.m.:
llO.ON
CHURCH
OF
CHRIST
-'IN
forward,
not
backward.
·
.1\
ehlldren's chure~ 10:!0 a.m·.; evealrta
Sullday Mornllla Wonhlp 11:00 a.m. Chll·
oervtCOI, 7:30p.m.
~
CHRISTIAN UNION. Therm Durham,'
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rov.
rt
praebtn1 aervtce Drat tltreo Suadaya,
dnm'o O!urch 11 t .m. SUnditY Eytalnl
tllllor. Stultla~ aervl&lt;e. 11:3il'a.m.: eveo·
Shuler, Pill«. WonhiD aervlce;9:30 m.
'
?::II p.m.; Spedal service !ourth SUnday
?:00 p.m. Wed., e p.m . Younsr La·

99~

,
GRAVELY
SYSTEM

A SPECIAL. 60NTH C.D.

.

SNOUfFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

~!2 .1~1

POMEROY ClruRCH OF 'IliE NAZA·
RENE, C'.orre- Union and Muttony, Rev.
Thomas Glm Mcaurw, pastCI". Nctman Pres, ~- S.· s. Su~t-. Sundl\\' School. 9:ll a.m.:
morringMnttp lO:Jla.m.; eYE!I1lng~6
• p.m.: ll)ld- service, Wedneoll\\'.1p.rn.
• GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH. 326 E .
Main St. Pomercy. Su!Kiay """"""' Holy
oommulionon the 11rstSu.n:lay bleach month.

IG·LO .
Scrape-top
De-Icer

Starting Auld

Pennzoii10W40
Motor Oil

. 992-2104

RACINE PLANING Mill

u. - rllrectlon &lt;t Lob Burt.

149

9!r
.
,
•
SOlder Seal •

Lmll2

Pamtroy

TRlN:ri'Y OONGREGATIONAL CIIUltCH.
School 9:1!1 1.1n: Wcntip •Service
10::11 a.m. Cbotr reheonal. ·'l'ueodl\\'. &amp;45p.m.

·19 78 Cougar .........~•••••·•• S89 5
.Coach · Jimmy_ Caldwell's
Southern Freshmen captured the
Trimble Holiday freshman boys
• basketball tournament with a
convincing '57·42 Wtn over the
Warren Local .W arriors at Jack·
sonvllle.earller this week.
Southern came out running and
gunning. playing a full cour
pressured defense to !like a 10-12
first quarter lead before advanc·
lng to a 35-20 halftime marglri.
' All thirteen Southern players
saw action In· the first half.
Third quarter action saw Soutehrn outscore Warren by an 18·8
margin to take a commanding 25
point lead, 53-28. SHS substituted
freely in the final round and
cOasted to the big ·win.Southern
had 12 turnovers and WHS '22.
Mark Ailen led SHS with a
game·high17 points. four of
which ·were three pointers; Mi·
chael Evans followed with 12,
and Russell Singleton had 11.
Kyle Wickline had 6, Ed Sawyers
2,
Nick Adams 5, Weaver 2,
8..() .
Porter 1, and Arnott 1. ·
·
•
Warren was led in scoring by .
Bobby Johnson, Shaw-l!""'
Dave Kes Ietson with 14 points
Hamon, and Jay Cremeans com- and Jim Pierce with 10. South·
bined for 29 points to lead the ern's next game Is with Wahama
Meigs Marauder Freshman at home on Jan 8 at 5:30.
team to a -42·38 victory over the Southern Is now 5·2 on the year . .
Belpre GQ!den Eagles at Belpre
recently. The victory gives
Meigs a perfect 8·0 record.
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Johnson had another outstand·
SALES &amp; SERVICE
ing game with 12 points and 12
204 Condor St .
Pomeroy, OH .
rebounds, Hamon added 9 points
Fall &amp; Winter Moun ·
and 8 rebounds, while Cremearv; .
OPEN TU~SDAY THRli'FRIDAY
added 8 P\}lnts.
9 A .M .- 5 P .M .
Also scoring for Meigs was
SATURDAY 9 A.M .· I P.M .
CLOSED MONDAYS
John Bentley with 5 points, Gary
Adams added 4 and Kevin
Lambert and Mike. Welch each
~THE
had 2.
· Marauder Coach Gene Wise
also credited Adams with playing an outstanding floor game.

115 I. Memrioltli.

Orurc~

66,000 mi_les. Auto., PS, PB

·-

•

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

.

. Veterans · ·
Memorial Hospital .

-

1979 Pontiac Sunbird ... S895

"

The Daily Sentini!I-Page-6

This Message and Church Directory Spommred Ry The Interested R•u~inesses L~ted On Th~' Page.

. Nationwide Ins. Co."

Automatic

•

.·

P•. J. PAULEY, AGENT'

1968 Chevy C-30...........

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA

~

Pqmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

F~ 100 •••••••••• S895

1973 Ford

446 -4524

.

Fildey. Janu.v a. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

~Ohio .Slate upsets.

'

is.available for a
limited time only.
For more
. inlor- .
.mation contact
your nearest
Central Trust office
• cal Galpals 446-0tOi

---••..
-.
-

'""US

Su•

.

. SEVEN DAYS A WEEK·
0 PENsioi-e houra: 9 a.m.. to 8 p.mdM1gnda
throuth Friday
'·
a.m~ to 5 p.m. sunday

Middleport H2 -6661

9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Slltutday, an . ,

THE CENTRAL TRI..Sf C0\18\NY
The~77wlt Mc*s~ ~-

.

~
209 UpPer Rlvar Road' "
(614) 446-3807

GALUPOUS

:\1Jt

•

.'

Ute

f

.
..

·•·

If

~"'--;---

--

-~tor.wliuam HIM••=• '·

.\'

.

-

f•
.-

-

:;'J

.-;.

·-

�.'
.,

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•

''

·Friday,~&amp;. 1910

.:fhe Daily Sentinel

By The,. .Bend ·

-- ..

·-

:~ .

Beat of the bend

Everybo,dy,s doing ·
clances Locomotion '.

at

the hall on. Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. Refreshments will .be .
served.
·
.
KYGER CREEK -Women
Alive Will meet at the Kyger
Creek Clubhouse Monday at 7
p.m Becky DeLOng will be the
speaker. There . will be a CPR
demonstration. Those attendlog
are to take homemade cookies.
POMJ;:ROY - The Meigs Lo. cal Band Boosters will meet In
the high · school band room
Monday a,t 7 p.m,
EAST MEIGS ..,. The Eastern
Academic Boosters will met 84t 7
Pin. Monday at the Eastern High
School. The publiC Is invited to
attend. ·

mow:·
•, info~atlon coen ~ ~ :Jearn

MilWAY
TAVERN

----.1.----·

-

SATURDAY,

1

1' ,

7
POMEROY OHIO

. ; As the focal area of the floral
· design, she sal~ , tbe Ml!donna
.• should not be pia~ with feet In
water, · though materials may
· ' · touch · the statue. Fresh pl;lnt
· . m~terials should 1be u~ In a
design featuring, a madonna
. which is not suitable for use on a
.
.
.. dining table or any place where
· food ·tspresent.'Shj!coilcludedby
''. stating that the approprlale
colors- for the 'tlgure's robe
Include red, blue,• or white and
· · shoulctlnciUde some gold; since
··, each color " Is ·of ' symbolic
· significance.

Hires Hometown People!

., ·Qu
- 1[kS'
. 1n
.l.'-':
0

·: · ,

· ·

o

JF~j Farm~rs·
~*~ • • ··

.

FAC exhibit
in January
is pho.tographs

.B ank

wm

Faith Gospel
lAdies Circle
has

meeting

HOLZER CLINIC
..
To Welcome ·

I

MALCOLM W. LENTZ. M.D.

P~pe

birthday
is·celebrated

General Surgeon·

.To The Clinic Staff ·
.

will

j-

1986 Ford TemD ............................:. S38t.S

J

1983 Ford F-150 4x4 ......... ....:..:... S399S

1987 Yuao ••• ~ •• ~.................~.~ ••••••••••~·•• sl 095

Trustees elect
ne-W officers

2 door. Gooil' condition.

·

,

'

.

.

.

New officers were elected at
the organizational meeting of the
Bedford Township Trustees
Wednesday.
'
Elected were Robert F. Hawk,
prelldent; Elmer F. Bailey, vice
Pil Ident, and VIrgil C. King, fire
prevnUon officer. llfonlhly
meetings were set for the second
Mollday of each month at 7 p.m.
ud It was decided to continue
wltll IJie Farmers Bank 'and
Slvblp. Co. u depository for
~blp funds '
.

1986 Ford .Crown Victoria P.e.!l.t!J."., S669S

One owner. Very nici. PS, PB. 1lr, cruiH, AM/ FM/Stern

SEE RAY RIGGS
•

St. Rt. 7 .

•I

'"

•

t

......

...,..,,,
1

i'

---·

,

-

Dr. Lentz's patients at . v...,ans Memorial Hospital in
.P0111eroy wl ltll• him ·as usUiil at tho holpital on Tulldays,
thursdays_. Saturday monings. 1ht telrphone IIUIIIbtr for
lnfotmallon or ·~LfiDinlaantl at' .,Vlf~ · Is "2,-3632.

laltlnl High Scheel 9,15-4200

'

...

Paftents w..o hGv~ ~n' appeintm~t with Dr. Lenn at hi~ Hill•
crut location aft.,- January 1, 1990 shoultM~eep their ap·
polnt-t date and time at his new office in tho OrthOpedic
D.,.....tnt of Halzer C~. FOI' more infor.lllafion or to
· IChethile an appointment, call t.W Holzer CRnlc Orlhpedlc.
Dopartaaaent at 446·5401.

.

1983 Ford Crown ViCtoria LS .~....... S359S ·

Fully equipped. 87.000 miles.

.

.a

1984· Ford F-150 ............................. S299S

'' ·,

... .. ·-· ·- _, ......i

____ ..

'\

•

-~~ .. ~~-__......

__-.., •

·--

,.....,_ _ _ _

.....,.j,.~

.

-~ (

_

'

'

'•
\ '

••

,
'. ~
'

.

·' ·
t he news
.
,

-..,..~~------....;,____

. approached Martin Montano on a ·
A baggage handler nottced the ·
sfreetconier and asked him for ac ·noisy suitcase as he was unload·
·B itlug bandl&amp; paw's oa Ylctlm•
cigarette. Montano produced lng luggage from a Delta Airlines
·.· HOMESTJ)AD,tla. (UPI) ~A
one;and the .liandlt asked him If ground cart onto a conveyor belt,
.. ' robber dubbed "the biting banhe spoke
Ish.
Anchorage Intetnatlonl!l' Airport
• dlt' • has struc'k siX times 111 two · · Montano nodded, and the ban· manager .Ken . Burdette said
· · ·.· weeks, chewtngtbf ears, cheeks, dlt punched Montano In the face, Thursday.
·
· · . , fingers and should'ers of his
kl)ocked him to the ground 1!Jld
In the end, a total of four
. . : victims while stealing their mo· clamped his teeth around Manta· . suspicious bags were set aside,
··. ney. pollee said.
no's left ear, PQI;Ice said. •
said . Capt. R. W. Leger, a
Monta.no •qulckly handed over member of the airport's security
· ·· · · The thief has gorle so far that he
·. ·. ,gnawell·off tMrlng finger of one . his wallet, which contained $70. staff. Two were opened manually
· : · victim and bit off ;mother's ear, . ~urled In pain on the sidewalk, and contained nothing unusual.·
· police said Thursday.
,,, · Mc;mtano, ·27; asked the robber The third was claimed by a
' Five vlctin1s , we.re· SpaniSh, · not to .S'teal Ills Identification : P!lSsenger; leaving the fourth
, speal!-ing farm workers, All six papers·and t~e bandit.complied.. ·suitcase in question, said Leger~
· .. · attacks occurred at night just a
"He; S&amp;¥!: th~t ~rhen the guy.
The Anchorage Pollee Depart·
· few blocks from the pollee station finally ran away, he had,blood all ment's bomb squad and specially
, near downtown Ifomestead, 20 over his shirt and dripping from : traJned dogs from nearby Elmen·
·miles southwest of Miami. .
his mouth, ju~t like a damn dorf Air Force Base were asked
· Victims told pollee the bandit vampjre," Pruneda said .
to check out the humming,
appeared rational and calm as he
Doctors .at James Archer nondescript,. hard side suitcase;
attacked them, said detective Smith Hospital sewed Montano's said Leger. When a portable
Jim Pruneda.
:
.
mangled ear ' back together. X-ray machine still left officials
• 'This • Is strange, very
Montano told · detectiVes the · with questions, they decided to
bandit has a sev.ere overbite. .
blast the suitcase Ope!! with a
str!'nge," Prun~da said.
The latest . two ' robberies ·pcJ:,•·· •t
, :....:...- ,
water canon. Tllat failed and so
cur.rell .. Tuesday.' The bandit Sul&amp;cue .'bomb' tuma out to be the . suitcase; which did . not
gra_bbed Cornelio' Ramirez, 50., chUd's toy •. '
•·, '
contain a name, address or claim
from beh!hd • ~ he crossed an
ANCHORAGE. Alaska (UPI) ticket, wanl•ited and 'exploded.
open field·earlyTuesday, bit hhn - SeC:urlty gilards who blew up a
And what did they find? ·
on the chOOk .. shoUlder .and ear,. suitcase they thought contained a .. "I saw a lot of clothes, .a large ·
and tookthe$5001~cashRamlrez bOmb got a surprise when they tape cassette player and small
carried In his shlrf.pocket, pollee realized the only suspicious ob· packages," said Leger. But no
said. .
·.
jectln the.luggage was a child 's bomb. · The cassette player ·
.Tuesday night,, the bandit 'tape recorder.
wasn't ·even humming.
·
1
.)
.
•

Spa~

"'!

.,

By WILLIAM c. TRenT
weeks earUer. "He did not,belteve who 1 was and ·
United J're. lalerllllilonal
he grabbed my credit cards' and cut them in half
DRINK~: The cola war Is heatlngupagaln. A
rlgbt In front of me," Carter said. "Tile next time
Diet Coke teleVIsion ad campaign 1s starting
I'm In the store,'I'm with the store manager or the
Sunday wltb model Jerry Ball, retired tennis star · department mana ger looldng lor cards lor my
!;brla Evert, Pbyliela Ruhad of "The CosbY
gifts and this security guard grabs me as 1 step
Show" and "Wheel of~o'rtune~s" Vanna White In
outside the pavilion." Carter has a Jan. 11
the starring roles. E;ach 30-second commercial
arraignment date.
•
KAZAN'S SON DISCONNECI'ED: The son of :
will feature one of the stars switching from Pepsi
to Diet Coke- with a twist. 'This Is It, honey,"
director Ella Kazan was tined $2,265 andglven11 · ~
Hall says In her spot. 'Tm leaving you. I don't
suspendeli 90-day sentence tor making hundreds
care how cool or how smooth you th ink you are or or obscene telephone .calls to Yale Un lverslty
I
how many generl!_tions you.say adore you,.':' Turns
students from hiS New York apartment. Court
'
out sbe:s speakllig to ,Pepsi, not boy:filend Mlcl&lt;
records showed that Leo Kazan, 28, made obscene
Jaeger. Rashad's c()mmerclal Invokes BIU co 8 by
and harassing telephone calls to 23 female Yale
In similar fashion·.
.
students. ·between . September 1988 and last .
KOCH ON DIET: . New York's former mayor,
Octobe~ as par.t of more than 13,000 phone cAlls he ·
Ed Koch, .posed for ,a ''before" picture .ThursdaY
made to ·universities .around the country since
bY turning sftleways so photographers could September 1987. Mechanical equipment will be · ''
capture his bulging belly tn .proflle and promised
installed that will block outgoing calls on Kazan's . ·!
to lose 35 to 40 pounds by using a diet drink. Koch,
phone but will allow him to receive cal is. The
'
who weighed In at 244, said he's getting paid to use
judge said he was Inclined to jail Kazan, who Is
unemployed, but took into account that Kazan Is
the Ultra Silm-Fastdletprogrambutwouldn't say
how much. "In the private .sector you have to be
under psychiatric care and does not appea( to
pose a physical threat to the publiC. Ka~an was · J
lean and me!!.Jl," Koch, who left office four days
ago, said a!"'a news conference. "It'.s ·gauche to
convicted of similar charges in 1986 and given a · ,. ~
talk abo11t money. When. 1 was In government 1 suspe11ded three-year sentence In New York,
:: .
)!sed to tell you everything. Now that I'm in . where he laces charges.of violating his parole.
priv&lt;~te life I don't 'have to tell you anything."
~o TRUMP TRADE: Donald Trwnp denies . ,:,
.Koch sipped some of the diet drink and also spoke he s going to get rid of his Trump Castle cash10 in" 51
on the phOne with Los Angeles Dodgers Manager
Atlantic City, N.J. There had been speculation '
Tom Lasorda, whosewalstwentfroni 40incbes to · that Trump was. planning to sell the Castle or :'.:
35 on a liquid diet.
trade It for Stephen Wynn's Golden Nugget in Las
··
CARTER DENIES CHARGE: Comedian Jack · Vegas, especially sine Trump has been interested : •:•
Carter says a running feud with a security guard
In getting into gambling in Nevada and recently ' '
hasbecomechummywlthWynn, aone-timertval. '~
led to ' hlm being accused or shopUftlng from a
department store on Dec. 21. Carter was freed on Trump Issued a statement Wedne~day to put an •
$1,500 ball after he was charged wtth grand thefl end to such talk and pointing out that he ha'd just
lor allegedty ·taklng a sweater, earrings and a
finished a $100 million renovation on the Castle.
•'
frame from .Nordstrom' sIn Los Angeles. ''I had a
"He Is extremely proud that all construction and
battlewithasleazysectirltyguardandhecharged the expansion at Trump Castle Is finally-· ·•·
me with shoplifting the next time I was in the CO!l!pleted and It is the successful operation he r. '
store," Ca.r ter said. "l have been a customer for
knew it co uld be," !he. statement said. It Trump ·v
10 years and ·the 'Incident was ,.a complete ever does get rld ofthe Castle, he may have to find '·,
l!llslflcatlon. We're taking legal action." Carter. a new ·home for his yacht, the Trump Princess,
said his ,Probleni With the guard started several wj11ch uses the Castle's marina as its home .port.
''·

Hospital for a party In De·
cember. Patients made pine cone
'carmttons, leather teaffern and ,bird nest ornaments. The also
taxUJ yew SIIITOIUidillg a rna· decorated Ute unit wtth plonset
·donna' and chlid wltb adoration t1as and Ms. Carpenter took he;
enaeJsln tones·of.blue, pink, and Pomeroy second graders on a
gold. MemJ;Iers displayed favor· carollngtrlpthereandalsotothe
lte ma~nna f'RUrlnes for the roll Metp County Infh711ary as a
call. ·
sunshine project
During the Jitl exchange sePlans were made for the club to
cret pals were revealed. Gift have another garden therapy
.wrap!Jinp featuring fresh plant , project at the extended care unit
materials In novel designs were In January.
.
Judged by popular vote with·Joan . As. another $pecllil )tollday
Stewart, ,Judith Htll and Judy project .the Rutland Cub Scouts
snowden wining the first through led '!Y 'Mrs . .Hill decorated the
thlrd prize$ for creativity.
town ChriStmas trees at the Civic
·Kimberly Willford ga11e cievo- .C enter with natural materials to
ttons on tbe holiday theme and feedthebirdsaspartofttieclub's
Joanne Fetty, •president, won civic project. Various club
both the traveling. and door members also helped to clean
prizes.
and mulch the flower beds there ·
Ms. Carpenter gave each for· winter.
member a personally Inscribed
Margaret Edwards thanked ·
apple ornament as a favor at the' the club m~mbers for flowers
holiday table which was centered sent during het recent hospltali·
with a tree . featuring dolls, zatton. Members were reminded
soldiers, angels, and doll-sized of the spring planting bulb order
toys . In, a Victorian moll!. !lve , deadline of Feb, 15. New secret
pink nn( ttl
hlghll ht
'
.
"" nse as were . g ed pals were drawn. '!'hE! Januaryh·
among the doU and bear collec- meeting will be held . at the
tion displayed and •the large tree Edwards home.and wlll feature a
In thelivlngroomfeaturedblrds video on lawns and ground
·and natural feathered covers with Joan Stewart to
ornaments. .
discuss new grasses tor easy
Janet Bolin reported that she, lawn care. Mrs. Edwards wtll
Marie Blrchfie)d and Kimberly dl~play a floral design including
Wlllford had visited the extended dried grasses .
.
care un.lt of Veterans Memorlill · ·
, ~· ..

... • .• _..:_.J.

.

e ' re omm•tte d T o· · u:r
:· Hometown ... "
The Shlni•g Light ht e..kint

0

.. ,
· ''':
•
By United Prel.alnterJ1811onal

)OVAL completes rdailing

•

:

. .

'

•

0

1"':

.· Your ·Horneto~·n Bank

c·

0111

• Dea 1 al d ml!
Y tty
· mad~ oc
estaner~ho studies
Chris nnas, and ~0
that the
or wit=(:~: mah ~with
0 1li
with
•
eone
. the ~ht~d~uallyclothought of as
r
rna nna.
wt'f~u~~~fid~a':tnna ';:1 5
sal
. •. - 11.
ow n
d, noting that• the fli\ltlne
. ~~~~d ~ ~e :ost prorotnent
·.. : part ~f lte . w7th n,t an h~~'::l
des•~ will'
oul w
e
•
'6"
appear ncomplete.

APPEfi.G

..........People in _the news-..:..--:------../

meet

Mi . .Carpenter dlsplayecf a
desilll of fresh pink mln~ure

was Ute them f t~
tgns
presented by ~ ody. e Procram
the
t
u 5 Dowden at
Frt!:~ =ln,ora:Rutland
Suzy Car
eners
sled by

Mrs

party came to. take part In
By BOB HOEFLICH
Saturday
night dancl!!g: · Of
JAN. 6, · 1990
lt was a big holiday weekend.at
course,
the
newlyweds
were
~motion - and In case you
"Disturb The ·Ptclct''
given special attention Including
need reminded
a spotlig'ht dance.
· that Is theyouth
Band
center located
.9:30 PM·1:30 Gill
By the way, Bob, Roy who
on Mechanic St.
$2.00 COVa CIAIGE
recently underwent major
in Pomeroy.
MUST IE 21
surgery at a Columbus hospital
On Saturday
really appreciates your show of
evening, 350
At and 143
concern. Bob received ovzr 300
young people at·
tended a dance and then on New cards. He thanks you. You did
I
that well - and :-'- I thank you ..
Year's El(e 240 were ori ·hand for
the ann11al New Year's Eve bash.
Gloria peveller, d.aughter, of
· · On Sunday 'evening, It was free
Mr,
and Mrs .. Leo Taylor, Rafood time. Can you Imagine
., .,
cine.
has just received the Good
providing pizza and softhdrlnks
lor 240 young people? n really Conduct Medal as she continues·
her work In the armed forces .
kept the chaperones busy even
GI orIa has been promoted to
though the pizza did come from
the rank of petty officer, third
,In· our community, we're committed .to offer
Dominoes and the Pizza Hut.
There were 52 large pizzas and 78 class, and Is currently stationed
t~e kind of services and eersonal atientwo-liter bottles of soft drinks at the Neva! Base Dental Clinic In
.
ll?n you wa~t a.nd need. When you barik
consumed- all free of charge to Norfolk, Va.
Gloria
.has
been
nomlilated
as
the young people on hand to
wtth '!s, you II fmd that we're. much more
dental technician of the quarter.
welcome in the New Year. At
than JUSt a financial institution we're a
. mldnigh,t some 2,000 balloons This marks h~r third nomll;Jatlon
hometown friend.
' ·
and
she
already
has
won
the
were released from ov.,rhead to
.
honor
once.
·
·
provide a nice highlight for the .
'
.
;
:MEET VICKI
evening.
. .
. .
Did you see .ihe staie Clirist·r
Vicki Hoffman works In
Iva Sisson who heads the
mas tree In Columbus this year?
the Proof Department of
.activities lor young people at
If
so,
perhaps.
you
noted
that
Locomotion has only very posi·
Fanneni Bank. VIcki has
The Meigs· County Public LI- by Ed McBain.
live comments to make about the Meigs County Is represented In
been employed with :
th'e ornaments which trim the
Children are not foJ;gotten 'tn .
brary and the Oblo Valley Area
behavior or the young people at
Fanners for 21h yean.
· Libraries !OVAL) recently com- the catalog either. There are
the weekend events. Officers tree.
She
and her husband,
There are five ornaments on pleted the mailing of7,399 Books hundreds of books for all ages,
Huddleston and Rought were on
Mike,
reside on Rock
the tree representative of the by Mall catalogs to rural resl· Including a new section with easy
hand to patrol the parking lot and
Springs Road, Pomeroy,
· readers for those just beglnnlng
did a super job, Sisson reports, as county and these were produced dents of Meigs County.
She Is · a gradUate of'
through
the
efforts
of
The
Dally
Books by Mall Is a service to read.
did some 25 adult chaperones
Meigs IDgh School and
There is no fee for the service.
provided by the 16calllbrary and
' who turned out to help oversee Sentinel's Nancy Yoacham and
OVAL which allows rural resl·' If you did not receive a catalog,
enjoys watching · foot·
weekend activities. Flashback of Charles Hall, husbaild of Angela
'
baD, basebaD and basMason provided the music one of Hall, also of the local Sentinel dents, the home bound, and those you may pick up a. copy at the
who have difficulty getting to a Metp County Publlc.I~Ibrary or
· the evenings and Jack Horton of office. ·
ketball, and taking care
Nancy
designed
the
ornaments
library, to check out , books call OVAL at 384-2103 or write
•
WXIL In Parkersburg was on
of .t heir ·two dogs, TYle~· ·:.
which
are
in
the
shape
of
the
through
the
mall.
.
,
OVAL
Catalog,
242
'W,
13th,
hand for the other evening. By
and Sam.
•
There are over 2,000 'titles In Wellston, 45692, for one to be sent.
the way, chaperones are always county. Nancy · painted them
Established In 1973 as the first
needed and all you have to do Is drawing In special emblems to ·. the current catalog from which to
represent
the
coal
industry,
choose.
All
types
of
books
are
state-funded
.regional public
show up on Saturday nights.
and
-other
vocations.
farming
avalla ble, Including the latest library agency In Ohio, today
The next speclal dance will be
~'w
Charles did the required cutout · paperback bestsellers, myster- OVAL administers through 'local
the Valentine event bu ( of CO\Irse,
· I ·' •
ies, westerns, and all kinds of public libraries a · variety of
weekly dancing wm continue on work.
."how
to" books. "Patchwork programs designed to Improve
Saturday nights at the location .
.
It
is
a
·
relief
to
see
the
Made
Easy"
will help one create and extend services to local
Iva says It Is planned to bring in
temperature
come
up
surely
a
beautiful
quilt
and If training residents.
some new disc jockeys in 1990.
.
makes
II
a
bit
easier
to
keep
the
dog
Is
on
your
list of things to · OVAL Is made up of publiC
Iva ailiQ reports that Kim Cline
do, "Dog Tales" will show you libraries In Athens, . Hocking, .
• who has- been · a regular at the smiling.
how to solve the most trouble- · Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, PICk·
dances which have been held for
some
behavior problems of away, Pike, Ross, Scioto and
· aimost two years now •was
'
man's best friend.
VInton. The OVAL Board of
recently married and
·her
t
•
This Is the tlrrle oi year that Trustees which consists of one
1rr110m·
the whole ~d!!!!!B
curling up with a good mystery trustee from each member pubY o~r Comm~nity OWned Bank
and romance Is just the thing aad lic library board, determines
MEMBER FDIC
' t.here are hundreds for you to policy, controls finances, and l
9.92-2136 ~
915-3315
choose from Including "Ttlcks" . makes final declslon.s on what
221
SECOND
STATE ROUTE 7
services will be offered. Wanda
PO~ROY, OHIQ '
Eblin represents the Meigs
• TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO
County Public Library · In
Pomeroy.
·
The French Art Colony's January Exhibit will be Winter photographs by Don Mathews.
Mathews has been a news. paper reporter and photographer
The new year's first meeting of
covering a dozen Southern Ohio the Faith Gospel Ladles's CirCle
•i
counties for the Columbus Dis- was held· at the home of Pat
,.
patch tor 24 ye;us.
Martin with Erika Boring as
He is focusing this exhibit on a co-hostess.
.
winter landscape that Is to often
Present for, the meeting were
neglected by other artists. His Mary Allee Btse, Dolly Reed,
· photographs, in· color and In Emma Durst, Audra Ruckman,
black and white, are tor sale and Sandy CoWdery; VIrginia Walvery reasonably priced.
ton,' VIvian ' Humphrey.. Neil
Mathews won many profes- Wilson, Debbie Barringer,
"'
sional prizes .and awards during Tammy Cowdery with Chrli. • .JOIIHUA PAPE
his newspaper career: Presently, topher, Verna Rose, Diane White
Orthopedic And -··
he \S exhibiting and winning with Lynn and Thomasina, Mary
recognition In line art exhibits Folmer and Bobby Reed.
and festivals throughout this
It was reported that 27 shu t·ln
region.
calls were made over the last
Mathews will he in the gallery month. .
·
The second birthday of Joshua
for
a
reception
on
Jan.
20,
from
3
•
Pape, son of Allen ·and Carol
Sandy.Cowdery led devotionals
•
Pape, was observed with a party to 5 p.m.
entitled "Turn A New Page."
on Dec. 30.
A Big Bird theme was carried
out: with a Big Bird cake and
MalcOlm W. Lenn, M.D., hard Certified General, Thoracic,
other refreshments being
START THE NEW YF.L\F~ OUT
served. Attending were Joshua's
and Othoptdic Surgeon
ioin .the Clinic Staff on January
'
t [ •Jf. If
i !\
grandparents, Larry and Phyllis
R I G H ,.. \~I
VY I T'; fl :, ./\. :c):...
r
, ,
3, 1990, having previously been in private practice at H•O'Brien and John and Patty
~~f''.··
.
''
~·
;
;/I
·.;,.1
Pape, his great-grandparents,
LJS L.t....... · .•. ,_--;I , ' , t . i ; J ·
crHt CHnic. Dr. Lentz larned his medical degrtt from the
Bob and Florente Adams, Rex
and Mary O'Brien, Nlal and
R I G· ( ,~ :;" U c:;. ; E~...U~ ' · ~·. A· n~"' :)•·
Univenity .of Pennsylvania in 1958. His internship was at . ' ....,.._.,
VIrginia Salser, and Eileen
the Univta:-sity ofPennsylvania Hospital. He has had separate
ft9ush.
.
Others a1 the party were Jim .
sul'flkal ~•• orthopedic rHiilendes at tho Uni~trsity of CinO'Brien, Llsa'Pape, Linda: Dale,
4 dr .. auto .• PB. PS, •'r. AM/FM. Good cond .• very clean,
Derek and Darin Teaford, Lori,
dnnati hospital, c,mpleting orthopedics in 1978. Dr. Lentz
one owner, Fla. car. Never been in Nit.
Jessie and 'Stephanie Sayre. ·
Sendlng cards and gifts were .
~s a follow of the American Col• of Surgeons and a mem~
Earl and Doris Adams, Kenda
4 wheel drive, 4 apd.', PS. Blue.
· ·
~r of the American Colltge of Chest Physidans. He has on- ·
and Kelly RIZer, Raymond
Adams, Tomy and Sally Hill. and
lOY~ very lli«tssful practice in tht Gallla, Jackson, Ma'
John, Rae Jean, Krls, Randy and
8 cyl .. automatic,
.·
Andrea Pape.
son, and Mtigs County areas.
, ·
·
. ·

--------

a~~:!S:O~~~o,raa{t!'lnes

.,

Co~unity·.calendar
. 111URSDAY
POMEROY
The Melp
POMEROY - The Pomeroy County Pomona . Grange will
group of AA and Alanoil will meet nieet at the Rock Springs Grange
. Thursday, 7 p.m. at the Sacred . Hall Friday at 7:30 p.m. Star
Heljrt Catholic Church, For more Grange wil 's erve refreshments.
lnforma . tloil call .'
·
'
.
1-800-333-~51. .
SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT- Evangeline
!jtar Grange and Star Junior
Chapter172,0rderof.theEastern Grange will meet In regular
Star, will meet at the Middleport session Saturday, 7:30 p:m at the
Masonic Temple, Tburlday, 7:,30 grange ball, located on County
p.m ..Offtcers are to wear chapter Road 1 near Salem Center.
dresses.
.
Members are reminded to pay
· POMEROY - XI Gamma their 1990 dues. ~ •
. Epsilon Chapter. Bzta Sigma Phi
.
.
Sorority, will met T!trusday ill~7
· ·
.SUNDAY
.
p.m. at the . Senior Cltlze
LOTTRlr:iGE - · A chicken
Center. '
·
· . dinner will be served Sunday ·
TUPPERS l"LAINS - · The from noon to 2 ·p.m. at the ..
Ladles A.uxlllary , at Post 9053, • Lottrldg~ Community' Center.
VFW, Tuppers Plains, will meet. CostWilll:!!!$5for.adU:It~and$2.50
at 7: 30 Thursday at the hall.- · · ' tor chUdren . . ·
RUTLAND · - The Rutland
.
MONDAY
Township Trustees will hold Its
organizational meeting foUowed
MIDDLEPORT- The Mlddle· by a regular January meting . polft Garden Club . will meet
Monday, 7:30 p.m., at the home
Thursday at the Rutland fire
station. The meeting Is open to of Mrs. Daniel Thompson. The
·
the public.
evening's program will be pres·
en ted by Mrs. Ron Reynolds.
FRIDAY
SCIPIO- The Scipio Township
POMERO't - The Disabled
Trustees organizational meeting American Veterans and Ladles
will be held Friday·at 6 p.m at the . Au.!llary will hold their regular
meetin11., on ·Monday at 7 p.m. at
Scipio Township building.

Rutla~ Friendy Gctrdeners

.-

Friday. January 5, 1990
Pllge-6

.

t
'

Priest ,who -er~:fotjced code; removed

- ·rne~ord
r·e'·• followed
·
, · ·
.
a t~ ._ · Pi'1arczyk, in his letter, said his

DAY'i'ON,' Oh.toi · (UPI) _ _ A

"'I)

.Prle!st whl1se ,zea)ous · enfo~:,Ce-.
ment
of .aval
strlctdl'ess
ledhts
to ·
his remo
a'S 'pa's tarcode
from

r,r.o1,1th .exchange Of letters
-decision was based. on Griese's
'
which
Plla
k
1
d
.· '
.rczy , , nstructe ' "public challenge of my rightful
Prtese, 73, to curb his enfo-:ce- ·. authority as diocesan biShop, "
church Friday del~tnded the code tnent of 8' ch!lrch dress code and and Griese's refusal to foUow
as ·'reverence and respect" to urge(j ~im to -resign. A prlestfor ' Pitarczyk'·s Instructions on how a
• i
47 ye81's, Griese Is two years dress code should be maintained.
God. :
The Rev. Roger Griese said away from the c;~urch's manda· ·:
Grl~se has been outspoken
Archbishop Daniel Pllarczyk of tory retirement age.
. .
throughout his career, sending
, In September, Griese critic· numerous letters to the Dayton
Cincinnati this week ordered him
,decades
to leave as
afterpast
m~'rre ofthan
two
iz
Sacred . ed p llarczy~ tram the pulpit Dally , News,· often criticizing
during Mass over the dress code public officials on such Issues as
Heart Church In ,downtown .disagreement. Earlier that abortion ~and homosexuality. ·
D~~~~~.
yea~s~ an~· all .of a~ month,Grlesehasretusedtoglve
The Equlre~ said a fetter Is io
21
Communion to a man who came be read Sunday to Sacred Heart
sudden I'm not W,orthy to.. say rto Mass dressed In shorts.
parlshoners, ann!)unctng
Mass publicly at this church," ' , During the summer ' months, Griese's removal and his re·
Griese said.
·: .
the church was posted with signs plac~ment by the Rev. Francis
, The archbishop 'could not be saying people wearing shorts , PUled of Dayton.
reached for comment. However, tank tops, miniskirts and other
The Cincinnati Enquirer s~id It clothes considered Immodest
obtained a letter by Pllarczyk in were not welcome In the church.
which he informed Griese he had
Griese, alone In the churcll
been removecj as pastor of . early Friday. at first declined an
Sacred Hear.t ' effective Interview, saying the media
ina tOWn cops'
Wednesday·
~,
"ruined my character publicly.
•
·
''Thr.ee month5 , ago, I COD· ' It's character assassination."
. Wfl
ffiany tiC etS
.
'
eluded that you co,.ald no longer · Tbe naves In sacred Heart
.
NATJONALqTY,JII.(UPHfulfill effectively your office as · were decorated wtth polnseltl~ts
pastor." Ptlarczyk WJ;Ote. "Since · and pine trees ~trung with . 'the village has' only 100 people
then ·.. I have several times Chl'istmas lights. A creche of the but Its, enthusiastic pollee force
· encouraged you to resign from Ho)y Family tn the manger was has been busy earning extra cash
for lite tl":'asury by writing more
office or to offer concrete evl·~ at the altar.
.than
their sha~e of mittie tickets.
dence that I should not proeeed
"I'm forbidden to say Mass
Just north o(East St. Louis
with removaL YQu have re- publicly at Sacred Heart, " said
City has a pollee force of
National
sponded in the negative to both Griese,' adding that he was ·
12
officars
five of them
requests."
t•
11acklng hla belongings to leav.e full-time - -butonly
the 5,000 tickets
•L.:
,
the ch11rcb jlarlsh.
•
!hey wrote in 1989 brought In
Ia
In tlie rectory, he showed a abotlt $122,000.
,
,
photllgraph be said wu of the ·
An offiCial said the Vllllige's
COLUMBUS, O~o (UPI) .._ troni of St. Peter's Basilica In
Here ·are :P'rlday s Oblo ~I Rome. The photograph showed a . annl$1 budget Is about$40p,~to
$45o,ooo.
.. .
'
~ condUion reports, as C&lt;lmpUedby , sfgli banning ~hart skirts and
, Most of the tickets ·were ·
the Ohi.o · Department of ~ tank tops. ·
Development:
·
·
He also showed an editorial written on a s tre.tch ·of Illinois
Route 3 that cuts t)lrough the
Boston Mills, : P,e.nlnsula:
trorn th~t Catholic Telegraph, village but Pollee Chief Edward ·
Groomed gran~lar surface. 20· which referred to the Sacred ,
to-40-lnch base. Open 9:30a.m. to · Heart . controversy and· "thi! Daubach Insists the town is not a
speed trap. ·He said tickets are
1 a.m.
.
.
ldiosyn()!'isles of a septu:agenar·
Brandyl&gt;ilne.' Iilorthfleld:
tan,:' Cilncludlng the lrnedla en· notwrlttenunlessdrlversexceed
Groomed surface, · 26-to-32·1ncb Johd exploiting "fUawed thespeedllmltbyatleaatlOmph.
baSe. Open 3 p.m. th 3 a.m.
. indl~dWI.:_'
·
.
'
Cletar Fork Valley, Sutler: , ''lfl( tile b&amp; Um'e In the.
Groomed granular· surface, 24- · blaiOI'y If tbeQatwllc -Jegraph
to-38-IJ~Ch'bue. Open lOa.ni. to 10 Gley IIIIICired 1111 ~emned a
p.m.
Clltholle P'l'l•t" Grlele said. .
Mad River. Bellefontaine:
He remellled adament about
Groomed granular. surfactl. 18- bla decision to en!otce the dress
to-28-lnch bAse. Ojlen 9:30a.m. to code.
10 p.m.
.
"It's reverenee. , The First
Snow Tra~lls, . Mansfield:
Commandment of God demands
Groomed and ' loose granual . reverence and respect ... for ali
surface, 14-tG-30·1ncll bai!t· Open thinp dedtcate8 to God;" he
10 a.m. to 10: 30 p.m.
said. •.• ·
·
~
. I'

S

,,

Doctors 'affl about low calorl'e d • t
le S

'·,·':'
;~

1iil

•

VY

BOSTON (UP I) - Very-lowcalorie diets made popular by
_televlslo~ star Oprah Winfrey
can cause serious health problems- and even possibly death If
misused, ex perts warned
Thursday· .
Thedletscancauseshort·term
health proble~s such as dehy..
dratlon, nau~a · and muscle
cramping ~nd · possibly . more
serious long-term problems, In·
eluding severe heartbeat lrregula~~ties, the ~xperts said.
We are particularly alarmed
by the poss(ble consumption ·of
very-low-calorie diets by persons
· who are not severly overweight
or do not receive ~ppropriate
.medical supervision, said Tho·
masWaddenoftheUnlversityof
PennsylvanjaSchoolofMedlclne
In Philadelphia and two
coUeagues. ·
Winfrey triggered '.'a frenzy of
fnterest"ln the diets In 1988 when
she announced·on.her nationally
televised talk show that she had
lost 67 pounds In four months
.using a very-low-calorie diet
under a doctor's care, the.y said.

~~:eo~;:~~r ~f~~:?:~~ .
water and consumed threeioflve
tl!lles a day,for 12 to.~Gweeksand
• •supplemented with vitamins ~nd
' especially postasslum,
,.
mliterals,
'Ail o!)ler foods are prohibited.
Studies have shown women
lose an average of 3.3 pounds a
week on the diets while men lose
an average of 4.4 pounds a week,
the researchers said In an article
reviewing their safety In the
Journal of the American Medical
'Association.
When 'used properly the diets

appear .to be sale the experts complete program " sa,id Dr .j
said. But the diets should be used . George Blackburn 'of the Ne,.; " '
only by those who are at least 30 England ~aconess Hospital In : ~.
percent overweight. who were Boston, one of three authors on .,
recently examined by a doctor, the article.
·. '
wh~ passed a hea rt tes t and are'
The third author was Dr . .. ~
o·therwtse hearthy , they said.
. Theodore Van Italle of St. Luke' S· , ,
. · The danger occurs when the Roosevelt Hospital Center in : ·:
diets · are not used under a
·
·:,
doctor"s guidance, by people who·
are not severely overweight or
pres~rlbed by doctors who are
not .properly trained on how to
use them, the researchers said.
Although ·the diets ·may appeal
I, .
to people who an! not overweight
They're on a i:rott~-country
"
but~ just want to shed a few
adventure to the wortd's greatest •.
pou.nds quickly, that would bean
video champlonshlp.
"alarming practice" that could
lead to . heart problems and
It'• more than a game .. .
· damage to other organs they
It's
the ~hance of a llfellme.
•
said.
'
..
If not. used carefully, dieters
cduld end up los In~: large
amounts of weight only to gain 11
back again,. which can have
severe health effects, the re·
searchers said.
·
''The message we wanted to
AIJNI\mllRfli.Ai
. . . .. . '"'"
............ , ' .
send Is for physicians to use this ' IPi!l-··,~·
therapy prudently and for the
ADMISSION $l50

.

SHOW fiiiE 7:30

consumer tomakesuretheygeta
DANCE FOR .lOY
AE RUBiC DAN( l Cl A c,S

9 WEEK WINTER SESSION
BEGINS JANUARY 8, 1990
18 CLASSES •39.00
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS •36.00

'

.,
-·~"

.'· ~....

,.,

. CARLETON SCHOOL-SYRACUSE. OHIO
CLASS TIME
MON. &amp; WED . EVENINGS 7:30P.M . &amp; 8:30P.M.
TUES. &amp; THURS. EVENINGS 6:30P.M. &amp; 7:30 P.M.:
For clan Ngiatrltion or information call
Instructor, Joy King 992-3794
A11i1t1nt Instructor. Jeannie Owen 112-6883

riii"liiiiiioiii--.iiiiiiiiiii'..;,;;.,;;iiii.;.._"""_____________....;,_______-it

NEw
·. .- YEAR
· -KICK 0 FF "
'

0

·

·

·•

•

';'\

••

-

•

·

NEW ARRIVAlS

DAILY
OPEN
MONDAY ·FRIDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
. SUNDAY 12 NOON-S P.M.

ll

te

S report

lhe Daily Sentinei-PIIge-7

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

k ·

'

I'

,,'

YIRA J'
.......

liNT TO
OWN

j

.

'
- '•·'

·SJQ75
WEEK

. TWIN

MAmESS

I(

. WBI

.: t

~-

•

..

l

J' ,

.. . .

.,,

,.

• ••
'4

EVEN LOWEI IENTAL IATES ON IEPO ANi IETuiNED ITEMS.

VI'RA
FURNITURE
0. 141, 4111US • GAIIIPOUS, . . o (614) 446·3151
•

•

'

,

Yl\

'

Q •

..·-,

....
..

...

..

'

.:

:

4 DIAWEI CHEST

SJ70
.

..'

•

IECUNEIS

QUEEN ANJIIl COFFEE
AND END
TABUS

.

q

•'

MICROWAVE
HUTCHES

$660'
. w· a

'..

.'.OO

I

Will

.

..

CHINA HUTCHES

TWIN MAniiSS SET
$§25

."'
..•·
\(

•

.

~

�•
.I

lr·"

Pllge 8-The Daily Sentinel ·.

•

•

.

j:)omeroy-Middleport. Ohio

r

Fridely, January 6, 1990

(:Z~4elall£l... __~~~C~on~ti~n~ue~d~f~ro~m~pa~g~e~4~--~--------------~----~--;~--------------------~----~----------~----~---------------

The Cleveland offensive line- heavy pressure for most of the will depend on what side of the
men believe the game Is theirs to year , but the pass protection llne· they come out on. When .the ~on's return after missing five- to control the Clevelani;l tackles,
win. They wlll have help on lmproved.ln the last month of the Browns have their dime defense weeks , gives the Srowns a who llke to llne up at an angle on
stronger pass coverage linlt.
•• the center reminiscent of Pitts·
passing downs from the fullback, season. How It performs Satur· In, the job will fall to Matthews.
Jim
Rltcher
~ "llurgh's Joe Greene.
·
'
Buffalo
guards
either Tim Manoa or Kevin day wni go a long way In
Thomas Is a strong runner who and Joe Devlin and center Kent
Hull Is going to the Pro Bowl,
Mack, l;loih . outstanding .d~termlnlng wh,lch team· advan· ran for 1,244 yards and caught 60
Hull
vs.•DTs
Michael
Dean
Perry
.
·and
If heoroaeoftlleguards can
blockers . The offensive linemen ces to the AFC Championship.
pas&amp;es for 669 yards. The return • and Carl Hairston.
handle
Perry · one-on-one, . the
say their most Important task · · Cleveland's linebackers vs. of Cleveland linebacker David
Perry
,
the
younger
bro'ther
of
Bllli'wlll
be able to run the ball
before each play Is to see where Buffalo running backs Thurman GraySQn, who has excellent
"The
Refrlgator,"
possesses
·and
control
the ga111e. If Perry,
Sm llh Is lined up and react Thomas and Ronnie Harmon,
speed, will help In covering the · , great quickness 'and can disrupt and to a lesser extent Hairston,
_jiCCOrdlngly. ,
,.
Thomas ·led the NFL In yards Buffalo backs. Harmon ran just
an offense by getljng In the can create chaos In tbe Buffalo
. Altho'lgh the line . Is inlsslng from scrimmage, and Harmon Is. 17 times, blilcaught29pilsses for
backfield before anyone can ' backfield, .Jim Kell); and· the
starting r.lght guard Dan Flke, · an outs'*lng · backup '·with . 363 yards and four touchdowns.
block
him. Hairston, although 'offense will be In tor a long day.
out for the year wttti a knee excellent hands . When th e
Teams have been able to
he's
37.
has played well this
Cleveland FB Kevin Mack vs.
Inj ury . It has played well tile last Browns are In their base defense . . ' exploit the Cleveland line·
season.
If
the
BillS
are
to
have
Buffalo
LB Shan,e Coqlan.
two. games. Kosar was under the job of tracking the halfback · backers via th,e pass, but Gray.
suj:cess running, they wlll have
The Cleveland offense has been .

1

rejuvenated since ·Mack's retum. and the big fullback has
. carried the load In tile final
game-winning drives In the last
two games. Conlan, recovered
from the . knee Injury that
kJlocked him i&gt;ut pf the llneup for
nearly half a season, Is cine of the"
AFC's best inside linebackers. ·
When the Browns run Mack,
they'll do It mostly between the
tackles. If Conlan can keep Mack
from controlling the game Inside,
the Browns will be forced to
throw and the Bllls can· unleash
their pass rush.

;

The

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F' '
•

•

--

6

'

Ohio

980

LAFF-A-OAY

'

51

Household
Goodl •

KIT 'N'

CARLYLE~

tt~~R

1£1' A CA"f

p~To(41ZM?H

-I

Yov

•

by Larry Wright

~'idt4

l,lltfH

!•

. .

.HEP--.CP-1.

Glveaw.y
11 1110. . . Clonnon ...........

-·-·114-MMNZ.
2 -~~~-.sm.

..- . "

I - 1 pupplu, 1 -

•

I

mollwtab0- .... 1111-

•net

.·

..

Cutolona hohdldtlon, l 'woob
old, 301-I7W714.

'

Classi
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992 •21 Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

• The. Area's. Number 1 Mar.ketplace

·'Ads ou t s•de M'e•gs,' Gallla or M&lt;~son cou nttes mu st be pre·
patd.
·
."
·
'Re&amp;t!lvu S 50 dtscountfa.r ads pcud m ad\la"-ce.
· Fn!e ads
G•vuwav anO round ads undet 1 5 words w•l l be

run 3 days at ntJ: charge
' Prt ce o f an tor all cap •talletter s •s d(lu.b le
'7 poml hne tvpe ontv usl'!d .
.

puc~ of .ad

Words

Days
1
3

15
16
. 15
15
15

6

to

Ovll)r 15 Word 5

Rate
$4.00
S6 .00
$9 .00

.

Announcements

20
.30
.42
.60
.OSi day

$13:00

S1 .30( day

..

Card o f Thank s
In Mem o rta m

1 ~ Card of Th~rtks

•

t-H IOA V PAPER
SUNDAY PAP ER

Clu.,~ifil'tl f'UI{I'.' cor 'l'r
•

DAY BEFORE fi'UBLIC ATION
1 1·0 0 A.M SATUADAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
2 00 P.M TUESDAY
2 00 PM W EDNESDAY
2 00 PM THUR S DAY
2 00 PM FRtOAY

Gat Ita County
Area Co de 614

Metgs County
Are•Code614

446 - Gallipolis
Jf,j 7 ·-'.GhUtJ;};Iir e
388 - Vinton

245-· Rio Grande
256 - Gtiyafl Oist.

992 ~ Mtddl.ep or1

Pomarov
· 985 - ChMter

675 ..... Pt ..Pleasant
4 &amp;8 - l eon

643 - Arabia Oist.

949 - R•cine
742 Rutland

379 - Walnut

89 &amp;- Letart '

PARTS AND SERVICE

New location:
I~~ North S.Cond
Middleporl, Ohio 45760

CLRSSIFIED ADS

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PARK ·
•Mobile 'Home
· ·Parts
•Mobile Home
·Rentals
•Lot Rantala.

•

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE

PUBLIC NOTICE
' NOTICE io he!ebY given

t

tions and issuance dates of
actions and of
draft actions are staled. Final actions may be appNied,
in writiog, within 30 days of
the'date of this notice, to the
Environmental Board of Re·

proposed

that on Saturday. January

6th. 1919. at 10:00 a.m .. a
public sale will be held at
106 Union Avenue. Pome·
roy, Ohio, to un for cash t"'e
following collateral :

1987 Chovrolot Spectrum
S# J81RG6170H8406123

992-7479

Rt. 33 North of
· P-roy; Ohio
1·12·'88-tfn

RUTLAND TIRE
.SALES and

The Farmers Bank and
Savings Company , Pame·
roy. Ohio, rnerves the right
to bid aJ this aale. and to
view. Rm. 300, 238 E. wit.hdraw t he above· colla•Tire Sales
Town St., Columbus, Oh .• teral- prior to sale. Further,
•Front
End
432.1 5. Notice of any appeal The Farmers Bank and SavAlignment
s hall be filed with tt\8 direc - ings Company reserves · the
tor wrthin 3 days. Proposed right to r&amp;iect any or all bidJ
•Oil Change &amp; Lube
actions will become final un· submitted .
·
•Brake Work
less a written adjudication
Funher, the above coila·
hea ring request is submitted teral will be sold in the conMAIN ST., RUnAND
within 30 days of the is- dition it is in with no ex·
·
12-7.'89-J mo.
suance date: or the direct or P.ressed or implied warran·
revises / withdraws the pro· "ties given.
posed actiQn. Any person (1) 3 , 4. 6 3tc
mav submit (Com menu and·
Public Notice
l or a meeting regarding any
draft action wrthin 30 days
P ubi ic N otice
of the date indicated. " Ae·
t ion", as used above does
NOTICE OF
not include receipt of a veri·
NOTICE OF
APPOI.,rMENT OF
fied ·complai nt . lfsignificant
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
-public interest exists. a pub·
FIDUCIARY
On
o-mber
18, 1'989,
li e meeting may be held. A s
On Docombor IB, 1989,
to any action. including re - in the Meigs County ProHte in the Meig~ County Probllte
ceipt of verified complaints. Court. C11e Nl). 28449, Court, Coso No. 28469.
any person may obtain no- Cert NeutzNng,. 201 Orun· Corotyn S . Pot~•. 33394
ti ce of further actions, and field Avenue, Newark, Ohio. · SUite Route124, Langovllta,
additional information. Un· 43061, wu oppolntment Ohio 41741, woo appointed
less otherwise provided in Executor of the 81t8te· of Adminittratrix of the estllte
nr;1tiCe of pa rtic ular actions,
Mergaret A. Lallence, de· of Mary.. Olive Pogo, dO·
all communicat ions shall be Clllad, loto of 320 South GBUed , toto of Box 34, Pogo
sent t~
'Hearing Clerk, Second Avenue,
Middle· Road. LangovHie, Ohio

OEPA~ . O .

Box 1049, Col·
umhuo. OH . 43266·0149
Ph. 16141' 644-2115. Con·
suit ORC Chap. 3746 and
OAC' Chaps. 3745C4-7 and

3746-5 for requirements.
Final i~Suanca ' of Notice of

SERVICE

742-3081

port. Meigs County, Ohio.
RoiMirt E. Buck.

Probate Judge

Lena K. Nenelroad, Clerk

(12(22. 29; (116, 3tc

46741.

'
·Roblt1 E. Buck.

Probata· Judge
Lana K_ NHselroad, Clerk

1121 22, 29; 11 16·. 3tc

Regiitration; TupperaPiains
11 Help Wanted
Ganorot
Stor,, St.Oh.
Rr. 681
8o IIIr-----==========---.;...-~
7
, TUpper•PIIIins.
Effec~.
tive dote: 1~ · 29-89 . Appli·
CLINICIAN - P.8rt·time position available
cation No.lol 0663009997
with a flaxible schedule . lnl!ividual who
Q.QQ1.
111 5', 11c
posseases !I l\llaster's Degree in Guidance
and ·counseling, Peychology, Social Work
wi1h. a documented post 2 years clinical ·
1" Card of Thanks
.supervision track·preferred . Work available
· in residential site ~ith adult women in ..rly
The femily of
recovery._ Preferreil certified addictions
PLEASANT .
counaelor or eligible for immediete certifi .,. ·
ARTHUR ELLIS JR .
cation. Must dema'nstrite strong commit· ·
mant. to i!ccauntebillty, peer revillw sys·
wishes to t~ank '
tema
and subltanceabuae fiCOvet[Y· Nego•
everyone who
Hle(Y range dependant on' 'axperi ·
tiabfe
helped in any way
ence and eclucatlon. Ple81e reapond ta Lea·
during our time of
ley Pickering. M.H.S.A., C.A,C., D1riC1tor
sorrow. Thank you'.
of.Operations with 're.Ume, cavar lettar end
all fdr making
three profetlll.onel mlfiRCII toP. 0 . Box
things easier l or
724, Athena. 01:1. 411701, 814·1194-3611.
· the family.
E. 0. E.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Ca~ry Fishing Suppli•

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Sitts Here
IUSINESS l'tiONE

Services

Household Good s
52 - Sporting GOods
53 - Antiques
.
54 -- Misc. Me rchandise
.55 - Building Suppl~es
56 - Peu tor Sal a

Bl ..

Hom~

Improvements

82 - ·PI'um6ing &amp; Huting

83

~ hcawat m g

·

Employmenl Servtces

84 -- Eiectricltllt Refr igeration

57 - Mu aicat lnatruments
58 - Fmits 6 Vegetabl•
59 - For Sale or Jrade

8&amp;·- GtJneral Hauling
86 ·Mob•le Hom e Repcur
B 7 -- Uphol ster"

11

Help Wanted

New H-s Built
"Free Estimates"

PH, 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan

lulding

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

.··. RACINE·
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Starh at 1:00 P.M.
'

·USED APPLIANCES .
90 DAY WAIIAifh
WASHERS..$100 up
DRYER$-$69 up
RHJIIGERAIOR5-$10011p
, RANQES.:..Gu·Eiee.-$125 up
FRHZER$-$125 up
MICRO OVENS- 179 up

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

. Factory Choked
12 Gauge Only

Garage

DOUBLER
TACK SHOP

*SHRUB &amp; TREE
TR.IM and REMOVAL

RACINE
GUN
SHOP
49919 NEASE HOllOW RD.
IACINE, 01110

lit. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

ALBANY, 0110

•LIGHT HAULINIS

1~14) 992- ~550

UStDINCI PHONE
~~ 141

. NO SUNDAY CAllS

992-77 54

4-16- 86-tfll

1128/ tfn

Roger Hysell ·
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al•o Tr111111111io11
PH. 992·5682
. or 992-7121

6.98-6500
Western Boots, Hats,
Shirts. Belts For
Men, Ladies &amp;
Children.

SADDLES &amp;
HORSE EQUIPMENT

4· 25-tfn

11·24-1 mo.

UNDA'S ·
PAINnNG &amp; CO.
Rental Cleanupt &amp;
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES
Take tht pain aut of paintin~
Let us do it for you.
VERY REASONAIL£
HAVE REFERENCES
AFTER 6 P.M.

(614) 985-4180

Iefort 6 p.m.loavoMossago

' .OPEN 9 AM ~7 PM Moncj~y-Friday
. · · Saturday 9 am-5 pm
.

949•21

.4·6·19-dn

-

. AVON I All I llltrtor
Spoon, 304-875-14211.
AVON • AU orou, Colt llorilyn

OFFERS 3 LOCinOIIS TO SEIVE YOU....

.

POMEROY, OHIO: Rt. 7 I S.f' . 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 50 I S.R. 143
'HE,NDERSON, WV. : Rt.'35 Adf toSidorsEqulpmant
'
NEW HOURS ;
. .
,
POMEROY: 9 o.m.· 7 p.m. 7 Dayo
ALBANY: tO o.m.·l p,m. 8 Days,
Sund••Y
HENDERSON: 10a.m.· l
6Days,
PAYING AS OF
DEC.
N1
77¢ per tb~

992·5335 or 915-3561
Across From Post Office
21 7 E. Sec. Po11orov

.ow.LPNonooi.I.Dw
-home.
t:att114-illlt-1173

'""' 7:00 p.no. lor -

-

·-

Aluminum

C.manl? If yau 1nawer..:l pe to
1ny of the above quntiorie, we
1re lntmstad In youl Scenic
Hilla Nul'llna Center • now ot-

tertng exchfna new WllgH and
bonolltst 11 r_ _,..,, pllloe
oama to Sctn}.c Htlto It 138

• ·

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESTER, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
· •FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
A'r ALL

985-4422.

11 ·8-89-tln

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
~' Af RtaiOII. .It

Her Folhll
MILUE'S
RESTAURANT

Is itill awned and
operated by Millie
Duncon~

. For Good Home

Cookin~

Comr See U&amp;!.

HOURI; I AM -9 PM Dolly
CLOSED SUNDAY
'

99%·7713

........., ld. Midtlt..
. I

,, _,30~ fmo.

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

w: Va.; Chipping,
Inc.

locksprlnas Rd.

Prices"

P-rey, Ohio

PH. 949·2101
,, .... 949-2160

PH. 992·3561

Day or Night

NO SUNDA.YCALlS
4-16-16-1111

lluylng Hours:
7:30-11:00
llllon. thru Fri.
:3&lt;11-4:00 Sett,ndey

15

1····
MY·I·SHOP

.

SER~ICE

WINDOWS

Wt can repair and rl·
core radiators ond
heater carts. Ws ctri
also acid bail and rod
out radiators. Ws also
repair Gas Tanks.

CUSYOII SCIBN
PlltmiiG
HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS

FREE .ESTIMATES

PAT HILL FORD

c•mi,OHIO

Middleport, Ohio

985-4300

....VINYL., ·~··1•1 o.
SIDING

VINYL REPLA(EMENT
•

992 -2196

992-2772
12-1 '19-1 mo.

·

1·13·1fc

'

-·--- ......f
•

_____

-....,..

---

1185 Astro Converelon vana,; •
v1ry good, cori'd itlon, all opllon1. -11

- --- ~

114-446-1358.

'

111117 Dodge Dakota,

4x4,

Rod,

• •• . cond., $8950. 614-38W5t1.

mlloa,

4x4, 38,000

one owMr, chrom• .raw liter,
bedlln.r, extra eharp, warranty,

$7900. 114-441H17!1.

iluckrldgo Rood, Gotllpolio, OH 111.. Pauta'a Ooy ca.. ~-~
S.le, etlordlt-.. chlldcare. ..-r
1o opply.
1 a.m.• 1:30 p.m. Aa• 2'-'i·10.
EARN MONEY Roo41ntt Bookol Bolorw, aftor oohoor. Doop.tne
$30 1100/yr , _ I&gt;OIIfltlat. WIICQfN, &amp;14 tte 8224.
.?
Ootatto. (1) -1«100 Ext. Y·
fltall.up lot Htt.: will haul •~
10111.
•
onythtng, coal, - i
EARN MONEY typing II ~. grovel, oppll-.
etc. Alao wtt
130,000 yur lni:omt I&gt;Oiontlfll. ellen oUt ~~~-, llltk:a.
Oototlo, 111 -7-40CIO Ext B· · - . .
bofno,
etc.
. 10188.
R-IM
p~cod.
Coli

R--

1·

Eom aGO • t500 PI' -k,
oi r-. QoU

onyt[ml. 114-37NI73.

Will~ tn ..,r-.tnlonto
thru 4 yn. ot~ICI!foncl
- ..... . ,
2845.
.
'Eom AOHIIOO PI' ...... ng bookl • t:att 1· Will - · aut building f':ltl'"
111-473-7440 Ext. 1111.
1 baumente, bur 01 ·ecrap
IIANAOEIIENT ' . POSITION
AVAt~ILE
WIN do bobyoltllng, my hOme,
A ,.,..._ - a t lnothutlon tntanlo lhrouQh 4 yoan. H..o
1o
-ldng
•
mo-. vory good rotoroneo. 614-441·
,. Knowltd{ll cit poroonot ttnonoo 0107onyttmo.
.
· u well • -rldng - g o
of thll fNnclal lncf'Uilry, M .,..
• • onct modo ot _.uon to
Fmanc1~1
-trod. Mull llavo oblthy to
lltoblloh roppott oncl tNOI wllh
cuotomot'l potonllal CUll_.
and 11111. \mortotod appttconto 21
Bualneu
· tahould Hnd cLM"Nnt reeurM
OpportUnity
and cover litter to: Boa 920 olo
Oalllootto Dotty T~bUna, 121
tNOncer
Third A'fenw, Clalllpolll, OH OHIO VALLEY
PUBUSHINO CO.
45831. Wo oro on equal~
that pu de
tunlty omployor, oncl WI do not
you k,_,
diiCI'Iminllte agalnlt n101, oolor,
aox, rwllglon, natlonol origin, oncl NOt' to oenct me&gt;noy
VIetnam .,....,..., or Mn- l h - the mall unlit you ....
tn-flgatod tho ollll~ntt ·
dlceppotl-.
,,
EARN MONEY Roodlntt Bookol
11~)1.7440

&amp;Iii. 'e .ID3.

Iron.-,...-.-

15xl 5 tug Chovy truok roily
•'*'Ia. Complete. Excellent
condition. 114·142-2078 or 114- ·

8124:194.

POOR BOY TIRES, :IOU75S331
oncl ...a
·"
$18.95, lront
4,000 good
tlroo,

Eocotllnl tncomo I&gt;Oionliat.
Ootlill. (118111-117«100 Ext. Y•

eeml-t.,.., new lhl.

..

v..
great
tNnunl..lan. nHdl
qln1, runa

.•.
~

1 lrH
worK. For

·Soli or trade. 1211pd1 blkl,

·

~5.

114-211-1731.

Serv1ces

Real Eslate

••

4582. '

Home'
Improvements
BASEIIEifT
,
,
' WATERPROOF! NO
"· •
U.-c~ttlonst ltlltlme guaron- •
too. ~~ rotor..,... lumtohod. .

Ownor, Oporotora, whh Triuloo 31 Homes for Sale
or lractor tral• mu.t btl framed
a contiOIIIow lor l o c a l - 2 ICNI houM, I. church, VInton
area. tt.1t11 to een, 18,000. 114work, ' - 481 4211. ' .
4441-4110.
.

PhQnl

44

Frao ootlmOioo. ·Call collocl 1· ,
it4-237-0411, dly or night• . ,

Apartment
. for Rent

Rogn

Wolo!llf""'llng.
............

IUit'Mnf ,

"' ,'

'

111r 142 Fourtll Ave. - A;{. ltll/mO. Dop ol NqU!nd,

ONn _ , llundoy, .ron. 71
l :b0-4:00p.m. Rl. 51f nof1h 01
l'lgowttll on atboon Ad. 4 bodroom, 2·1111 bath, sptM omry. On

a.112 ecrea. R•*

d tothiiiO'a.

Colt Comtl, Conlry
lloolly, 11~-4111 .

:n,

PloutZ

114 4413117.

111r

Merd1ond1se

torge 'kllohln, _ . . ,

i.OOlcup,

'

-.2:30p.m.

51

Toto!

ilduMo onlr· No polo.
IIICtrio. Coil 11 t 441 R27

2 lodiiiOIII AJII. $200 ,... .-11,
•110.d1p a•• »W7WOOO.
2 llldroom ap1o. lor Nnl. C...

r.=..'::u,.~.

·=

37.11 EOH.
3 llldroom .,..,......,..

lllonlh, 1100 tlipooll.
114.etlil41at.

aoo

tn -

..

·

g_,._,....,...,.r__
II W. apl. 2 llr., 1 ~h,

MANLEY'S IECYCLE CENTER

'inalaud

97 IEECI maT, .DDUPORT, OliO

~

to

'

-.L.-

for, - .......
ICMidld ...-n~;.&amp; ~ I14441-G213.

Lo•tecl 'lltr" ·IIedei ...111! S..... AIMrlca Noxt
·to IIIM.,...t YroitJIIos
BUYING ALUMINUM CANS. GLAS$,
PL48TIC, COPPER. BRASS. SHEET
ALUMINUM. RADIATORS AND MORE

t:artor'l P!UIIIblnt

anctHoottng

.,_
... •'

FourtllondPr111
OoUI!Iallo. 111111 .
114-4...,....

.'

••.

'
....-.,

~=,;;_--:-:---,

84

Electrical &amp;
Raftlgeratlon

.....,....

...

Elootrlcl~ 1104-111-1711.

'

--;;;~-=·
• ' ~ ·.·'

•·

· HUURS: Mon.·Frl. 12:00 to 6 p.m.
latunloy I a.m. to 12 noon
fOR IWORMAnON CAll n:r-31194

'""""·
- etac111a11n.
...... "'Rktinour
ropolro.
Ll 1n11d

loti-·

lltpendlblt ._,in&amp; Aid Sales &amp; Servii••
Hearin&amp; Evaluations For All ~es

f

IIRWislll . . li... ~·

I

llouilf!g. -

11~·7ll0.

'11•1,1 ... .
......
ca~~ ... .

.._A
·
-. ..•M• .
•

LISA M. kOCH, M.S.

.

wr .,,._ .

Ucensed Cfinical Audioloaist

.....'" .................
,...,.

1614)44&amp;-7119 or (614) !192·2104
'417 Slt:ond Avenue, Box 1213 ·
lliiHpolis, Ohio 456:11
or at
Veterans .Memorial Hospital '
Mulberry Hils: Pomeroy,

'·

z

----~------------------~'·--------~---,~-----------~·~

....

Alhof -

Listenine

.

"

85 General Hiullng
/

,

114-31r.otlll.

'

.

body, ·

1114.

Ollllfllllrilnt.,.,.. I ropot.._
olaol"'!, otumblnf I oiupontry.

Pizza-Subs.-Salads-Daily Specials
992·2228 . 11-16·'19·1 mo.

I

&amp;

Fetty Tre• Trlmmtna1 •eiUmp ,
remoVII, call304-675-fS31. , •·· :

LOWEST PRICES
HIGHEST QUAliTY
FlU LOCAL DELIVERY
POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY ·
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

SPECIAL AtCOUNTs.FOR
· . ·~N.PIOFII GROUPS .

mechanlal

111111 8-10,

1

INSULAnON

A·1

ehowroom condition, 304..a7&amp;:.

18 .wanted to Do

"""'

N STREET
PIZZA

I

•·•

.;1:;87:-:4-:C:O:J~5~.7co:=:m::p:;:tot:::ot:;:y:-:r::..,=:o...r::
·::-. :-

lltl3/'891fn

Grant·

J&amp;L

73 vans &amp; 4 wo·s

lnlor-

m,.ton.

,.ca.......,.
-po.,..

Til· COUNTY RECYCLING .

KEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE

·3271

SHOP

EVENINGS

PART;L~~~~~~\(tCE
GAS OR ELECTRIC

DUMP TRUCK
S!lnd.Stqi'le-Dirt

KOUNTRY KtUB
GOLF &amp;
TROPHY

·

FURNACE

NEWLAND
'ENTERPRISES
(6141

992-2269

.

FURNACE··

11 · 1 5· ' 89· 1 mo,

SITEWORK • KOAIIJ:!I
''CLEARING

BILL SLACK

.

FURNACE

INTERIOR EXTERIOR

9·6· 89-tln

992-5335 or 985-3561
Acroil From PHt Offko
POMEIOY, 0i110.
10!30/'19 tin

GUNS· AMMO
12 ·Ga. DE~R SLUG$ ... $2 ~2 0 Box
GUITARS &amp; GUITAR STRINGS

*FIREWOOD

-=ln--21We ... lol: •ldlitr oncl -

Schools&amp;
Instruction
Anontlon RN'ot Ano you llr811 ot
the am• day lo day ruehld
, RE·TRAIN NOW!
routlno? Do you IMI 11111 no one SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
appnclotn your hord wolt? COWOE, 5211 Joek- P!ka.
Are
you looking
lor """" adVIIrt· Coli 114-441-4317. !loti· No. ...
tunlt!M
tor CarMr
11-101118.

Factory chollt ·
12 Gaup ShOtguM Only
Stricktly Enfarctd
·
10-9-tfn

6·21·.'19-~n

Read the

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM,SIDING
•BLOWN IN .
INSULATION

SALES. &amp; SERVICE

We

• PH. 992-3922

Effective dates of final ac·

75 - Boats • Motors for Sale
76 ·- Aut o PartS &amp; Acc8uories
77 ~- Aut o F:~ep~ur
·
¥
78 Camp1ng Eqvipmam
79 · Campen 8. Motor H_~Jmes

Busiriess Services

·-

For Most' 2 arld ·4 -cycle
engines ·
Stock Parts for
Homelite. Weedeater.
· Tecumseh. Briggs &amp;
Stratton .

Agency (OEPAI last week.

•'

&amp; 4 WO ' s

Mo.torc v C i t~~

74

w..v... 2fM.112..2145.

Lomted at Valey L......r
In Mltldleport, Oh.

The following were · received / prepared by the Ohio
Environmental Protection

73 ~ Vans

.

'

.

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

'

.

51 -

..21 BusrnttSs Opport untty
22 ·- Money to Loan
23 · Profauronal Servr ces

937 - Butt•o

667.-Contville

·

Want ed To Do

or Alloy, II 4-441-0111.

711- Autos tor S1le
72 - Trucks for Sare

Merchandtse

'lihijhi46fl '

576 - AJ,pte .G rove

84J- Por11.1nd
773 - Mason
247 -..letar1 hila · 882 .. New H aven

Read the Best

' '.

17 -- Miscellaneous

Loll:
""""
Pulolr - W.tot~
WIIGII,- 1011 In
or
near Central Tru.l ~ Lot,

Transpor1a11on

.49 - For Le-.a

16..!- Rad•o. TV &amp; CB Repa tr

18

63 ~ Uvellltodt ·

64 ·- Hay i. Grain
65 ·· Seed &amp; Fertilizer 1

41 - HouS.s for Rent
42 ·- Mpbite Hom• for Rent.
43- F•;m• for Rent ·
44 -. Apartment for Rent
45 - Fufllilhed Rooms
'
46 Space for Rent
47 - Wan1td to Rent
4&amp; -.. E:quipmant tor Rent

14 ~ 8u sinets Traintn g
15 ~ Schools &amp; In st ruction

M ason Co. Wv
Are• Code 304

62 .-Wan,ed t o Buv

'

11 ' Help Wanted
1 2- Stt u•tion Want!d
13 - lnsura·n ce

Truck - . • ·
lllrllhOn 81olton, """
tlpollo,II4411-DJ1.

Loll:

Foadlend, ,..._,. PUla, Qat.

61 - F1rm Equtpment

36 - Lou&amp; Acr ..,ge
36-· Aelll bt•te W.nted

Servtces

thl'

&amp; ltVI'SIIlck

33 - Farm1 to r S'ale

Happy Ads
6 -lost and F!}und
7 - Vatd Sale/paid in .advance)
8 - Publi c Sale &amp; Auct KJn
9 - Wanted to Buy

followiTJI{ 11•lq1hont• l•xcltarr/{1'~ ...
a.u •.

Pon-

Loll: Snl bllicll I while bor(lot.. Yldnay
' 8ottll111 on SM. llloilntt • Sundoy. llo•nl. 114-317'-

FMnt Suppltes

Estate

3 &amp;- Rutin• • 8Uilding.l

6~

Employmenl

•

Ads ·
Yard Sales •

~oot:

32 '- Mobile Hom• tor Sale

4 - Give~ay

Rates are tor conse~tiva ·Nns . bro~enupdayswill be ch arged
t or each daY as separate ads.

·

H;~ppv

t._ Itt ttl 4820.

31 - HomestorSale

cos1

"A ct 'itSs•hed acherttsoment placed m Th e Oatly Senttnel (e• ·
c t!pl , class•f•ed drsphry. Bus •n i:ISs Card and legal notices)
. Will also appear tn th e I • Ple.aot Reg•ster and the
pohs D ally Trtbun e. reachrng O\ler 18.000 homes

COPY o t ADLIN E .
MONDAY PAPER
TUES'OA't' PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

Rt:~l

2 - In Memorv ·
J - Annoucemants ·

'Sen! on e! is not respo nstble tm errors a h er tirsl, df.ft (Chedt
too eqor s hr st dit'jl ad runs m paper l Cal l be fore 2 :00 p.m .

day a tier publt catoo n to Fnfke correct ton
'Ads ttl~1 must bt pa•d •n adva n ce atP.

Lost&amp; Found
A llub oop lor INS

der cottto type

Monthly

.PQLt CIES

6

.

'

~

Ftwlo good...._., I, 14 wMk.
old fiUPII[H, port O.rman
Sh.......d. aood dlo~iono:
l14-441o771l

,=.,. . .

w
Qof...... P'ln'Y,

'
.-' ·
000. ......

.....,s;

.

'

�.

...

.

P111 10-lhe Dilly Sa otinel .

Friday,

•

Jf!nu!y &amp;. 1910

Local
news-briefs-...- - - - . More_ col~ weat~er o~ way ~er . warm spell ··
.

ance

.r..~

'.

tllnl,. Nickel also attempted to make a right turn and the
vebJcles coWdecl. Damare waa minor to both vehicles. · . .
Tbe patrol cited Nickel fQr failure to yield the rJrht of way.

EM~

has eight caUs Thursday

Eight calls tor assltance were anSWered on Thursday by units
ot,the Melp COUnty Emergency Medical Services.
At4: 47 a.m., Rutland was called loMelpMlneNo. 2forTerry
Searles wbo was taken ·to Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
Pomeroy at 5:29a.m. went to Cave St. for Avonelle Petdt to ·
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
At 5:51a.m., Pomeroy was called to Hudson St. for Florence
Custer who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. .
Pomeroy at 8:.11 a.m. transported William Watson from OWl
Hollow Road to HolZer Medical Center.
·
Middleport at 9: 35 a.m. was caited to OverbrOOk Nursing
&lt;;enter for Raymond Kerns who was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
·
Rutland was called at 9:36 a.m. to Main St. for Harvey
Erlewlne who was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Racine at 7 p.m. went to Bald Knob-Stlversvllle. Road for
Zelia Coppick who was treated but not transported.
· · .
At 8: 48 p.m. , Middleport weil_t to OverbrOOk Nursing Center
for Dorothy Roush who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital,

D've

ContinUed from page 1

-:::--::---:--:-----:....-.---:-::-----:7--...---..,...:..
former told pbllce . the deaths
people at the residence· against
were t)le result ot a fjgbt between
Reorganized .Chuti:h of Christ

..... f,

•• :

religious groups and that the
barn was used as a commune.
The FBI In AprU found hand·
runs. rUles and semiautomatic
weapons after going to the
Lundgren home to lnvestlgllte
rePOrt$ of death threats from

leaders In Kirtland and oiher
states.
·
Pollee said as many as 17
people lived In the farmhouse.
Following the search, bowever, the residents of the home
vanished. Neighbors said they
lett behind chickens and rabbits.

By V11118!1 Preu lllterlllli.,IIIIL
many northwest valleys, the ·
A long-awaited IDOWito1111 In National Weather Ser'Jice said.
the mountaiDI ot eastern· Or~n
The long-overdue snow In the
Friday eased a threat ot droug~t mountains of OreJOn lett behind
. , and gave a .boost to the regions snowdrifts . and jackknifed
snow-starved skiiDcluatry, while trucks, but pleased those who
up to a foot of new snow fell on the have been waiting for a long dry
Rockies of northern Utajl;
spell to end. ·
Heavy snowfall tapered oft as
"I was glad to see Its timing,"
temperatures plummeted In said Walt .Sullivan, a state
much of the rest of the Rocky Highway Division engineer ill La
Mountain region. Rain m~ved Grande.
.
out of New England a.nd clear but
The Oregon mountains have
cold skies prevailed through the 1ess than one-fourth of the
·
normal snowpack for this time of
· Midwest.. .
In Wyoming, temperatures year, prompting worries that
early Friday ranged from zero to there could be a shortage of
10 degrees. With the snciwfall water later In the year after the
usually bountiful spring thaw
over In the mountains, temperaOnly two Oregon ski reso~ts
tures In -Colorado were 10 to 15
degrt!!!$ below normal.
. llad opened before this week, but
Snow continued, however, In mos\ of lJ!e ·rest ot the Industry
. northern Utah, where a rela- was preparing to swing Into .
lively weak storm produce.d somethlllg approaching · normal
. more than a foot of snow In the activity this · weekend, almost
mountains and 1 to 3 Inches In two months later than usual. •

'

Deal of the Bend:
Lock baek, and. fO..Ward ...B-2

· Plan Gospel ·l lag
The P!elters of Washington
C.H. will present a gospel sing at
the Fellowship Church of the
Nazarene at Reedsville Saturday
at 7 p.m. Refreshments will be
served following the sing. The
public Is Invited to attend.

Ulem witli tbe representative.
DAR to meet
Chapter Report Day of the
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters of the American Revolutlon, will be Wednesday at 11
a.m. at the home of the regent,
Mrs. Rolll!ld Reynolds.
•
All chapter officers and chalt·
men are requested to attend to
fill out all annual reports. Also,
···membersareaaked tobrlngsoup
labels for the schools and can·
celled postage stamps tor the
veteran patients,
·
.
Anyone planning to attend
should notlly· the hostess by
Tuesday.

..

James Sand8:
1939 w1111 a good xear for
Gallia merchants.,.Page 8-5

tlfb

Vol 24No. 41
CopruliJIIIICI 1810

--

By NANCY VOACBAM

.

~endael~

LETART FALLS- AlthOugl\
· Letar\ Township Trustees hope
to sign a . contract fqr tire
protection from Racine .F ire
Department for one-half of the
revenue from a one-mUllevy foJ'

•

f.::!i1SHPW
FRONTS: "Warm

-MINi · ~SHOWERS ..
Oofct · "'Sialic 1·ft Occluded

W

WEATHER MAP - D!lriDg early Saturday monilia:, snow 1a
forecaat· for parts of tbe lntermo,.nlaln Region and parte of tb~
Nortll Atlantic !iPII81 Stales. RaiD/showers are lorecutfor parlaof
the aouthern Plfllns, lbe lower Millllulppl Valley and m•t of t&amp;e
Gulf Coul Slates aa well u the mid Atlantic C9aal Slates. Snow Is
JIOI&amp;Ible Ia part of lhe Great Lakes Region.

'

fire protection, the proposed 50
percent contract could go up In
smoke.
At their D!i'c. 29end-of-the-year
meeting, Letart ':township Trustees voted·unanimously to divide
between .Racine and Syracuse
Fire Departments the revenue

from a one-mill levy for fire
protection.
The one-mill levy lor five years
was renewed by Letart, Suttori
and Lebailon Township residents
In November and It appears that'
Letart Township residents assumed their money would go to

•

Racine Fire Departmen,tas It has Syracuse VIllage and !Ire depart·
In years past, since Racine Fire ment . Syracuse Mayor Eber
Depariment Is several miles
Plcklins, who Is also Syracuse
closer to Letart Township thah Js Fire Chief, was lit the trustees
Syracuse Fire Department.
meellng with a prepared con·
· But at the same Dec. 29 . tract In hand. ·
meeting, Letart trustees signed a
·Racine Mayor · Frank Cleland
contract for fl~ protection with
also a I tended the meeting, but

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - It the Initial
figures from a· consulting firm
are anyways near 'accurate the
..cost of developing, con5trucllng.
and operating a regional landfill
wlll·cost everyone lots of money.
The SCS Engineers. the firm
requested by the Solid Wllste
Management· District of Athens.
GaiUa, Hocking, Jackson, ,Meigs,
and Vinton Counties, set the
estimated cost at $123 million.
Tile consultant's ln!ormallon
and figures' will be discussed at a
meeting of c.o unly representa·
lives to hi! held Tuesday at 7 p.m .
at l)le Vlnion County Commuplty
Center, McWrthur.

\

NEW 1989 RANGER ·PICKUP

..

$5.4 9 500

ONLY

12

01

$6 8" ~
.

$15503

DIALEI IOAINS
. IRATE

ax · Title Not Included

· IRATE DOWN
60 PAY•m

'

lrack.
Street. the men will move to th~
The weather took a turn toward Court Street side of the city park.
snow , Ice and sub-freezing Brush estimates that wi!Hakeslx
temperatures In the past few
to seven working days.- but that
weeki, and work stopped on the hinges on the weather'
.
.
I,
nearly Sl·mllllon project.
The project's progress de. With tetrlperll~llr.!!~ .,hl)V~!I!\&amp; • .,.pends on.JNeather .. According to
B..udgeuror..k .~_:__.
around50degrees,AGEContrac· City Manager Dale E. Iman.
tors have· been back on lhe weather has not been good
streets of Gallipolis since Thurs-. overall · tor this undertaking.
GALLIPOLIS- Budgel study day. 'taking up where they left off During the summer, rain was the
holdup. At one point, It rained 19
session for the GaiUpolls, Clly ' four weeks ago.
According
to
AGE
President
of
21 days, he noted.
Commission will continue next
Brush,
they
hope
to
Brush
said the weather should
Richard
. week, with meetings Tuesday
and Thursday at 7 p.m. 11,1 the work through the erid of next remain workable · thfough at
municipal building. Tuesday, week, and then see about the JeastWednesday,wlth.onedayof
·
they ·will take up the Municipal , weather, Everything depends on rain expected ,
For now, at least, the temperaCourt, pollee and fire c;)epart· the weather, he noted Friday
tures are keeping the ground
ment budgets, and Thursday will afternoon.
"If
·
the
·weather
cooperates,
warm
enough to work, and work
be those of the•sanitarian, city
we'll
go
beyond
(neXt
week),"
he
they
will
to get as much done on
building, planning commission,
said.
•
.;.
the
project
as possible before the
,parks and recreat ron and the tax
When
!bey
complete
State
weather
turns
foul again.
department.
·

By LEE~ WELCH

,. Tlmes-Senllnel Slaff
GALLIPOLIS - After being
Idle for tour weeks, the Gallipolis
streelscape_ project Is back on

•'

__

session set

: CLEVELAND (UP I) .,.. Thurs.
Veter
emorlal
:day's winning Ohio. Lottery
rsday admissions - Har·
:awnbers: ·
'
vey Erlewlne, Rutland; Ruth
PICK-3
· Smith, ·Reedsville; James Lan5511.
guell, Racine: ·
·
• PICK·l ticket ~es total!!(!
Thursd~cy discharges . Rl· ·
.$1,293,2511.00, with a payoff due of
chard .Randolph, Clara Davis,
:u,207~.00 .
Elizabeth Cremeans:
PICK-4

OHP to admJnistrate commerciql. ·
drivers license program in. state ..
r

• 1652.

PICK-4 Ucket .sales totaled
$231,747.00, with a payoff due of

. ,

...-,.,

Here for funeral

- .. ,
•

•e" ..... tu ·

f':allt'Down Oi' Net
'

c..... Ort' , ....., ....

aeons

u- ................ .
"'·3302
cw ... - ....... .,

11

1111,

n an'

....

· , rw:tukr,
. . .(D's.
(

'

'

SEE RIC¥ TOLLIVER, JAY HUJ~ or PAT-HILL

PAT
HILL
FORD,
INC.
SO.

461

THIRD

..992·2196

(

I.

..

all paymanta baNd on •1100.00 to •1000.00
12.21" A.
. P.R. Fl111d rate. With Approvacl Cradh.

.MOfi)AY, WEDfiSDAY and FIIDAY OPEN 'D, 7:00, TUESDAY &amp; 1HlltSOAY OPEN 'nl5:30 P.M. , •
.
SATURDAY OPEN 'nL 4:00 P.M..
:

... CMrt St.

...... ow.

"

Streetscape prQject -gets· back ·
on track after weeks.on hold

'

AMN110N DJ's

lbll sepnenl of the work, and move on to the Cow1
Slreet side of the city plirk nex 1week lometlme,lf
the wealher remains good. (Tif1\I!I.Senllnel pboto
by Lee Ann Welch)
·

· 8,\CI!. ·
JOB ..:. Work on the
·
Atreetacape projed restuned last T~nday, alid .
AGE Conl!'acton of Portamoutb begaa poltrlng
coacrete alld placing pavers In the proJect on
Stale Slreel. Tbey expect to be ~ble lo complete

•

'IAttery numbers

Friends and relatives here to~.
, the funeral· aervlces of Arthur
VernonNeaseofForestRun,Rod,
~. were Mrs. Ruth Powers, ·
Grow City; ~~ SuAn Powers,
aeveland; Mr. and Mrs. Rl·
· cUrd Power1, Baltimore, Md;
MJchlel Powers, · lndlanapolll,
lad.; Mr. and Mrs. Carl Nease, .
W•lmlllle; 'Jobn Nease, we.
WVI.IIe; Pbllllp Nease •. Denver,
Colo.; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde
Hamptoll, Westervtlle, Mr. and
, Mra. Leiter Olck and Mn. Ruby
Qlck, Raveaawood, W.Va.; Mr.
81111 Mrl. DeaJIII Click. Mr. nad
lin. Harold Click, Mr. and Mrs.
· · Altoer Olck. and Mrs. Effie
Rowan, Columbu1. ·

A Multimodio Inc. -IPIP• ·

was not prepared with a contract
since the 50 percent deal was not
of!ered lo him until that night.
Contracls are usually prepared 'by thevlllagesollcllor, and
then signed by the trustees, tlie
mayor and village clerk on
(See FmE, page A&amp;)

In a letter to Athens Mayor
Sara Hendrlcker who chairs the
committee. John S. Van Volken·
burgh, project manager, pol~te~
out that the estimates are not site
specific to the AGHJMV District
and should be used only for
estimating the magnitude of the &lt;
cost.
Actually costs for new landfills
In the District. he said, could
vary considerably due to topo·
graphy, geology, hydrology, size,
receipts, and a number of other
!actors.
It was further pointed· out that
ihe estimated costs do not lake
Into account engineering design
requirements, curre~t operatiOns, closure requirements, In-

teres!, Insurance. bonding, laxes
and other contingencies which
could Increase the costs by
thousands.
A breakdown of the estimate
Includes: $7 million for predevelopment; $25 million for
construction; $84 million for
operation; $2 million for-closure,
and $5 miiUon for post-closure,
making the total of $123 million.
The estimates do not take Into
account profit!; which the land'ftll
would generate.
· The estimate is based on an 80
acre landfill with a 20-year life
that takes In 1,000 tons of solpd
waste a day on a 560 acre total
site.

k

•

',

'
16 Stctiono, $6 Poe•

Child, regi,stry p-rogram ·estqblished;
t~njo:t;;~i~~~if :meetin~ . ~qq~~uleil':

Weather

'

Sunny. High 45 to 50.

.Landfill estimated at $123 million;
facts, figures to be discussed again··

'

$llSI,OOO.OO.

•

ru-e contract may 'go up in·smoke

..

flown

•

o ...... . .. . ... . ..... .

----------

---~---

'township

NEW 1989 FIESTIVA L PLUS

j

Along the River ......... 81·7
BUIIlDft.l ........ ' •••••.
oO ·I
Comlct- ....... o . . . . . . o . . . . 1a.ert
0MIIflecll ................. 02-'J
Dealhs ...
A--3
Sporta .... .. :............... C-1·6

Mlddleport-Ponaov-Gallipolis-Point Pln•ent; Janu!WY 7, 1990

PAT HILL FORD, INC.

... .

Inside

20

AT

Am Electric Power ........ ..... 32~
AT&amp;T .. ....... .. ..................... .45\i,
Ashland Oil ....... :................38'4 .
.&amp;oatil Ceatral Oblo
Bob Evans ........ .. ........ :....... 13)(,
Variable cloudiness Friday
Charming Shoppes ..............10)(,
nlrht, with a low near 30. Chance
of snow Is 20 percent. M tly City Holding CO.............. .. .. 15'4
· sunny Saturday, with highs ,be- ·. Federal Mogul. ..... ... ........... :21
tween 40 and 4!!.
' Goodyear T&amp;R ............ ...... :.45
Heck's ............. :........... ........ 4%
Ex&amp;eaded Foreeul
Key Centurion ... .. ...............13¥.!
&amp;iw!ay IUoqb Taeacl
Lands' End ..................... .... 20'4
A chance rain or snow nday
Limited Inc..... .. .... .............36Jl
nlrht or early Monday and a
Multimedia Inc ......... .... ...... 93¥.!
chance of rain on Tuesday. Highs
Rax Restaurants .... .......... :..... 2
will raniJe from the mid 30s . to
Robbins &amp; Myers ..... .. ......... 15%
mid 40s Sunday, and mos t1y In
·the . 40s Monday and Tuesday. Shoney's Inc. ......................12%
Star Bank ............ ......... ....... 21
Overnight lows will be In the 20s
Wendy's Inti. .... .. .. ... ............ 4%
· Sund1y and Monday mornings
and between 25 and 35 early Worthington Ind. , ............ : ... 22'lj,
I
Tuesday.
.
.
.

.

NATIONAL WEATHeR SE!RVrCE FORECAST TO'/' AM EST 1·6·90

CLEARANCE s·A LE

Stocks

.'

0 • 0 ...

Meigs announcements

Representative due here
· A representative from Con·
gressman 'Clarence Miller's of·.
______ flee will conduct an open door
session from 11 to 1 p.m Wednes·
tunnels to the new courthouse,
number ...,. 41!j86 - and the words day at the court hOU!!e' In
where Noriega appeared for his . "U.S. Marshal" and "Miami, Pomeroy. Anyone having quesarraignment ThurSday.
lions concerning the government
Fla." He was expressionless a9d
The U.S. Marshals Service has wearing a green T·shirt lri the Is InVIted to stbp by to .discuss
refused to conttrm the existence Jusdce Department photograph
of the cell, or the whereabouts of released by the U.S. Attorney's
Noriega. The Isolated room baa a
Office.
toilet, televiSion set · and a bed,
,The deposed Panamanian
the Herald reported.
leader's surrender came 10 days
Lehtinen dismissed Rubino's after he took refuge In tbe
claims about the legality of Vatican Embassy, or nuncla·
Noriega's capture.
ture, In Panama City, following
"The government will, at the the Dec. 20 U.S. attack on the
appropriate time, demonstrate. Central American nation. .
the legal International and do,Rubino said Noriega decided to
mettle foundation of Its case," surrender to U.S. authorities
Lehtinen told the judge.
after. Vatican officials told him
Noriega faces a maximum 145
the papal nuncio would be
years In prison on the drug · moving as of poon Thursday,
charges brought against blm by
leaving him without protection.
U.S. officials.
"He was concerned about the
No trial date has been set.
people Inside the papal (nuncla·
. Noriega surrendered to U.S.
lure)," Rubino said. "He did not ·
autho.rltleS In Panama Wedneswant any more blood to be shed.''
day nliht and · was
to
In February 1988, Noriega and
Florida. He arrived at Homes- · 15 others frcm Panama and
tead Air Force Base south. of COiornbla were charred In a
Miami before dawn Thursday
12-count racketeering and co~waa spirited away to face the
caine conspiracy Indictment
drur·trafftcking charges.
handed down by a Miami federal
· After walvlni Noriega's right
grand jury.
to seek Immediate release 011
A second lpdlctmen t by a
bond, Rubino told the judge .he Tampa grand jury charged Nolleeded at least nine months to riega and a Panamanian 'busl·
prepare his case.
nessman with marijuana
Tllrourb a transla"&gt;r, Hoe·
smuggling.
veler asked Noriega. whether be
understood the charges agajnst
DEALII IOAINS
him.
.
'
ONLY
.
IRATE
"Yes, the attorney has ex· .
·PER MONTH 60 PAYMENTS
plalned everything,'' he said.
$
394
01
. IIlAH DOWII
Noriera was photographed
·
·
·
Tex It Title Not Included
Thursday for a mugshot, holding Dally Nock,prlces
a plate II! front of him .printed . IAs ofJO: 38 Lm. )
wlth bls pr\5oner Identification Bryce and Mark Smllb
of Blunt.
. Ellll &amp; Loewl

/Vorie~~···--..............._co_ntl~n-~_d_fr_o_m~pa-g~e-1

Even more snow may be to the region.
· coming. One ot the strongest
Skies were , clear In Boa!Dn,
weatl!et fronts In some time was where temperatures were u111ea·
approaching the Oregon coast sonablY mUd, In the mid. 4011.
Friday, expected to bring more Haze covered Rhode lslaJI(I,
rain to the Jowlancla and 1now In where the-mercury rose to the
the mountains over the weekend. . upper 408, and overcastskles Iii
· Southerly winds· were expected Maine kept temperatures In the
to gust to 55 mpb alCIJii the upper 30s.
,
northern coast around nightfall
Vermont and New Hampshire
and 25 mph or so Inland.
reported light rain under cloudy
Damp, dreary weather moved s~les, with l!!mperatures rangout of New England early Friday lng from the mid 30s to the low .
as thela$trem~tsofa.:January 40s. ·
·
thaw brought mild temperatures
'
.

'(

~ ·~ '

'

trol' s 10 dlstrlctsacroaa,the state,
qulr~ every state · to meet
COLUMBUS - Sergeant El·
the Colonel said. Written teJts. '
minimum
commercial
licensing
bert w. 'Kelly of the Ohlo State
will
be scheduled at exls dnr
standards.
,
Hlgh':"'Y Patrol has·been chosen
driver
examinatiOn stations and ·
The
purpose
.
o
f
the
satety
a.
c
tls
·
to administer the division's comtemporary
faciUtles to be 4111·
to Improve driver quality, relllerclal driver licensing (CDL)
nouned
on
a
regular basis. The , ·
move problem dr!V~s from the
program In the Jackson district.
COL
sergeants
will al80 cl~ly
road, andestablllb a system that
Beginning In Januarr 1990, all
monitor
contracted
thlrd·party
will prevent drivers ot commercommercial drivers will begin
cial motor veblclaa from having testers; or tboW large fife!
taking testa .to be licenled to
organizations who wisb to ma'Jnmore tban Qlle clrlverlllcellle.
drive specific claaslflcattons of
Tea blglnvay patfQI seraeants taln the!l- own testiJII' 11te ·and
commercial vehicles. All j!Om·
throughout the •late bave re- administer the akllll teata.
mercia I drivers must pones• one
'l'be COL seraeanta a.-e a11o
ot the new classified commercial ceived In-depth tralntnr to adresponsible
for lnapectlna all
mlnlater the · written and road,
drivers must pone~s one of· the
commercial
· drivers tralatnr
new clasllfled commercial drlv· skUll test battery eacb ~mer·
scbooll
within
their retpeetlve
clal driver muat take. Tbeee JO
ers llcenaes ~ Apru 1, 1992.
·
dlatrleta
to
ln~ure
coatormlty
Acc;ordllll tO COlonel Tbomas sergeants will [)j! aaalrted by 30
the rules aad replatlllna 11411
w. Rice, blahway patrolluperln· driver• elllmlnerl, all of whom . with
forth
In the Jaw.
bave paslld tbe "Ciaaa A" reqUirtendeR!, total restructurtna of
•
'Becaull!
thll prorram 11 80
the commerclll driven teatlq menta ntce181l!'Y to drive vehl·
new
and
requlrea
Ohio
alld Uctulnll)'ltem came as a cles we!ptnr 26,000 pounda or commercial driver tof!Yel')'
teat
tor
a
result ot tbe Commercial Motqr more.
clasllfled
commen:lal
II·
new
Tile seteeants will coordinate
Vebtcle ~fatY Aet paaled by
(8eeOBP;JNIJeAf) ' .
_
tes
dna wlijlln the btgbway paCODIIJ'Itl ' In 1986., The law re-

·.

••

•

}

.'•

:POMEROY- ~ Local 8\-~bj)s
are combining efforts to promote
the Child Registry Program In
Meigs County. Child Registry Is a
finger 'p rinting . network that
works~ through law enforcement
agencies to protect children, and.
should the worst happen, loca(e·
missing children.
At · 4 p.m. Monday, In ·the
'gymnasium of Pomeroy Elementary School, members of Pomeroy Cub Scout Pack 249 will be
·presenting . Information about
Child Registry .
A&amp; plans for this special'
Information• sharing · session
evolVed the presentation grew to
Include • messages on personal
safety from several knowledgeil·
ble speakers, Including Meigs
Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Meigs
Deputy Tom Smith, Pomeroy

Pollee' Chief Jerry Rought ,andt.'
Pomeroy Pollee qtflcer Jim
Stacy. Stacy Is also a member of '
the Pomeroy Cub Scout Pack
Committee.
.
Thepubllclswelcometoatlend
Monday's session al Pomeroy
Elementary where Sheriff
Soulsby will speak about safety ·
In the county, as well as the
Importance of !Inger printing.
Chief Rought will speak about
safely In the Village of Pomeroy;
Deputy Smith will speak about
safety In the home and finger
pi-loting; and Officer Stacy will
explain about plastic casting
durtng Investigation procedures.
Any youngsters atten&lt;;llng the
presentatlo.n will be !Inger
printed, If desired, and Child
Registry booklets will be dlstrlbuted. The Meigs County JuvenUe

Court· Is donating ' lhe Child
Registry booklets.
.
Much hard work llas gone Into
the plans for Monday's presenta·
lion. The Idea for the public
presentation stemmed fr!!m
tladge work In Which the scouts
were Involved. Badge require·
menls are often very detailed
and time consuming and scouts,
along with their adulf,advlsors,
decided "If they were going to do
all Ihis work. they should share
their Information with the publie," says Lisa Roush, of Pomeroy, who Is also highly Involved ,
with lhe Pomeroy seoul
program.
The program Is ·being sponsored by the Fraternal Order of
Eagles, Aerie 2171, and . the .
Farmers Bank and Savings
COmpany.

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