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1a-n. Delv Sa tlintl

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

.J ackson to de Klerk: 'Go all the way' on democracy

.. . .·

Mandeta· while Jackson Is In the Mlnlater Margaret Thatcher In aeatut South Africa despite ' made by Jackloa to the Sovtb
iJOHANNESBURG, South timing of his visit wu poor,
LoDdQn Monday, Jacltson advo- .I Friday's reforms. Botha said African arnbauador ln .
Africa ( UPI) - Civil rights fueling speculation the govern- country.
In
talks
with
British
Prime
cated
continued sanctions ' that contradlcted statements Wublneton.
·
.
ment
Is
unlikely
to
release
actlvllt Jesse Jackson urged
Praldent Frederlk de Klerk
'l'bunday to ''go all the way" and
replace four decades of apar- ·
theld rule with full democracy to
prevent further turmoU In racially divided South Africa.
· Jackson began his flrstrullday
In South Afl·ica .since 1979 by
attending a prayer' breakfast
With senior South African church
leaders, then prepared to tour the
black satellite city of Soweto
SOuth of Johannesburg.
The two-time presidential candidate said de Klerk's reform
package unveiled last Friday
was "marvelous" butpoilitedout
that black nationalist Nelson
prison and a
Mandeta ·is still
43-month-Old state of emergency
Is -still partially in place.
· "He offered hope to those who
have been disenfranchised. hope
by unbannilig various organiza· .
!Ions, hope by repealing restrictions on the press, hope in the
release of political prisoners
even It It affects only 5 percent,
and hope for the release or Nelson
Mandela," Jackson said.
·. But he urged de Klerk, Whose
National Party has ruled the
C!JUntry since 1948, "to seize this
great moment in history and go
1\11 the way" by abolishing the
country's racist laws and implementing multi·raclal democracy
to bring th.e ·country out or
international isolation.
· ·"South Africa cannot go back·
•.
wards," Jackson said. "It will
f4nd chaos. It cannot stand stl)l,lt
wm find tension. It must go
forward to a filial, peaceful and
j.tJst solution."
Jackson is on a 10-day tour of ·
South Africa as a guest of the
South African Council or
Chuifhes. On hisarrival Wed!leSday, anti-apartheid cleric Allan
Boesak hailed the American as
"a campaigner, a comrade in the
struggle in .his own right ."
•
· "We are living in exciting
times tn· this country, times or
great change, wehere we may
even find ourselves on the verge
of a historic breakthrough in the
political situation," said Boesak,
_STOCK NO,
whO embraced Jackson and
9865
called him his brother.Jackson, .
UP TO 60 MONTHS
whose only other trip to South
Africa was in 1979, said the world
TO QUALIFIED
ts· waiting with "bated breath"
for Mandela' s release.
APPLICANTS
Asked whether he wanted to
visit Mandela in prison, Jackson
said he hoped to see him free
walking down the streets of
Johannesburg, but added he had
•
received no commitment from
MANUFACTURER'S
SUGGESTED
RETAIL
the government he would be able
to see Mandela "in his present
SVPFORD
status.''
STOCK NO. 106
M!lndela, jailed since ~962 and
TURNPIKE DISCOUNT........;.................."'.............................•
convicted or acts or sabotage
against the government In 1964,
is being held In a suburban-style
WAS
house on the grounds or the
minimum-security prison in
*11,50SOO
Paarl, set in the_ Cape winegrowing region.
De Klerk lifted a 30-year ban on
'DEALER TO RET... REBATE, TAX, TITLE AND FEES EXCI,.UDED
the African National Congress,
suspended judicial executions,
· lifted restrictions on more than
370 activists and eased the state
or emergency In a bid to lure
black leaders to the negotiating .
table and .persuade the ANC topublicly abandon Its guerrUta
war tactics.
Since 1961, a year after Its
1990 PREMIER...................8TOCKtll7 1990 TBDNDERBJRD.. ,....srocs: t 292 l990 WRANGLER. ...............arrocs: t
banning. the ANC has waged a
1990 SUMIIIT...........•........•STOCK. t 124 1990 TBmfDERBJRD.......srocs: t 297 1990 RANGER~...........ST0Cit t
ltmit'ed guerrilla war of sporadic
bombings and S(lbotage that
1990 COUGAR. ...................STOCB: t 282 1989 RANG81
4 .........&amp;TOCB: t 90.81
1989 PROBE......................STOCs: t
cttmaxed In 1988 with numerous
COUGAR. ....................STOClU 224 1990 RANGER 4X4...........STOCB: t
bombings in white urban areas.
1990
srocs: • 22s 1990
1990LTJ:SDWL;.................STOcs:tsol 1990 F·USO 4X4................STOCB:t
Jackson would not comment on
.
1989
MUSTANG
....
;
..........
STOCs:
t 99411
·whether he had applied for
F-150 4X4.................STOCB:t
1989 MUSTANG...............STOCB: t 98815 1990 GRAND MARQUIS..STOCK~ 257 1990
official permission to see Man·
1990 F-150 .&amp;X2.................STOCs:t
deJa, and refused to answer
1,9 90 TEMPO •••.......•.•..•.•.......STOCK 1201 1989 TAtrRUS SHO...........STOClU9702 1989 AEROSTAR. ............STOCB: t
repeated questions regarding
statements made TuesdaY by
1990 'I'EIIPO.......................STOCK t 218 1990TAURUS......................BTOCKt361 1989 AElt08TAR. .......,.....STOCB:t981
Foreign Minister Roelof "Plk"
TEIIJtO•.........•............STOCK 1 ·202 1989 SABLE......................STOCK t 9317 1990 AER.OSTAR...............BTOCB: I
Botha.
~~~~~~·9369
Botha accused Jackson of
taking both sides on the issue or
economic and cultural boycotts
of South Africa, and said the

Missouri·

Ohio Lottery

upset by
Kansas State

Pick 3
544
Pick 4

2770

Page 4 -

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) President Bush told Ohio Republicans Thursday evening that the
Buckeye state Is most critical for
GOP political fortunes, both this
year and for the entire decade.
The president addressed a
$2,500 a plate fundraising·dlnner
tor the Ohio Republican Party,
which is struggling to assemble a
ticket for this year's statewide
elections.
''This Is critical year, and Ohio
is a critical state," Bush told an
-~tfniated 500 people. " What
· happens here is key to . tl)e
Republican majority. Wewant1o
build all across this country." ·
The president told the Republl·
cans he wants them to work hard
to elect not only a governor In
Ohio, but to take control of. boft!

This Annual Event WID Save You
Thousands .on Select New
· Demonstrator
Units.
.
Choose From Ford, l,ln~oln,
Mercury And JeeJ' Eagle.
Rura 1 In Now!

NOW

10,31

8

SAVE OVER • •

9eso

ESrF.tfL.................

One winner in the
· Super lotto game
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
Super Lotto player has a ticket
bearing the six numbers chosen
In Wednesday night's drawing,
making that ticket worth $6
million.
Numbers are 2, 7, 9,14,18, and
39.
The holder or that ticket. can
redeem It and become eligible for
$300,000 a year for 20 years,
before taxes.
Ohio Lottery officials Sl!ld
Thursday morning that out ol
$1,586,874 worth of tickets sold,
168 had five or the numbers lor
$1,000, and 8,362 had lour the
numbers for $75.
The Kicker game produced the
combiliatlon 994129, but none of
tbe $781,012 worth or tk:kets had
the aumber.
.
LOttery officials said three had
the nnt five numbers for ~.000
each; 63 had the first four
numbers for $1,000;_68() had the
first three for S100, and 7,129 bad
the first two for $10.
saturday night's Super Lotto
jackpot reverts to $3 million. :~

•

1986 CHEVY C..10

1983 CHEVY c-20

SlockU7641, V-8,1ir,IM*&gt;., PS,
PI!, power windows, power .....
power ~em. ill whool, ......
rldilll, AIIIFII1- .... while

S1oc:11 t 3721, H air, IWto., PS,
P8, ~·windows, power lodls,
til whool, &lt;;NiH, AM.f'M sloniO

Wlll,1/2ton,u. fullllnil.llicintl
IWQiln.
NOW

1985FORD
· TEMPO

VAN

Sloc:ll , 2881, 4 ...... ""·
PS, P8. M&amp;fl.l radio.

llpo, bucllat ...... Qougal.

-·

NOW

'

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

Slock' H212. 4 doOII, .... 4
cyl., lir, IUIO., PS, PI!, AM.fll

NOW .

WAS

·1979 MERCURY
MARQUIS
Slockl 111127,2clocn, t.d lOp, &amp;
,.t.,lir.-.,PS,PB,AMA.IIIdio,

_-.wlill ......

J

ACCEPTS AWARD - Oa behalf of the Meigs
County. AgriCultural Society, Ed Holter, left, and
Bill Radford, ~lght, accept a "Certificate of
. Achievement" lor succes!jluUy planning, organlz·

· 1985FORD
'RANGER
Block 13811, 8•. 4tplld I lind.
lrllll, AM.flllldio.

------ --·--·-·--------------------.....,-"------- -----·---·--------~-------~----7"'"'' "'----·-~"""--·-- ~,....;..-

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chambers of the General Assembly . · This. he explained, would
permit the legislature to draw
new congressional boundari es,
which would affect the complexton or Congress for the balance of
the 1990's.
"I want to come back and
help," he said , promising to
assist the GOP in this year's
campaign.
Both gubernatorial candidates, George Voin.ovich and
Robert Tilft II, were .at the
dinner, but neither s.a t at the
head table.
It had been speculated that
Bush or Republican National
Chairman Lee Atwater would
attempt to intervene and con·
vince Tart to run for a lesser
statewide otrlce. Apparently,

they didn 't.
The Republicans at the dinner
sat beneath a colorful ceiling
ador ned with red, while and blue
balloons and streamers. They
listened as the O~io State Unlver·
sity alumni band, clad in red
jackets and berets, played 1 a
spirited medley of !ootball
music.
..
The head ta ble included Ar~hie
Griffin, the two-time Heisman
trophy winner, who led the
Pledge of Allegiance.
In · his speech, Bush refered
·several times to Griffin's coach the late Woody Hayes whom he
described as "one of the great
field marshals of the 20th
century ."

'

:Meigs fair board .recognized
The Meigs County Agricultural
; Society was awarded a "Certlfl. cate of Achievement" for sue. cessfully planning, organizing
·and presenting an outstanding
fair In 1989. Ohio Department of
AW,,.11%itlj&amp; tQ.9M O.®!lt\lr
St en . aurer p~ntelt' the
award on behal! or · Governor
Richard ,F. Celeste and ODA
during the 65th Annual Ohio fair
Managers Convention held Jan.
3-5.
", ~~;
·.'
. ·The award was accepted on
~Jjalf ql the .fair board by B111
Radfor.d and Ed Holter.
The annual convention. at·
tended by fair board delegates or
Ohio's 94 county and independent
fairs, was held at the 'Hyatt in the
Ohio Cente~. Columbus. Maurer

honored the fair ·boards for their
hard work and d~dlcatlon during
a special luncheon on Jan. 4. ·
County fairs · began as the
ultimate showcase o! Ohio's
agriculture, , bringing neighbors
together to exhibit their .Products .
and show off their hard work and
skills, Maurer said. ' 'Today that
tradition · continues with the
added" emphasis of educatilig
.people both young and old, a bout
the Importance and wide spread
Impact of Ohio agriculture."
"I applaud and commend
everyone involved in the fairs
this year for their tremendous
efforts lri overcoming the last
couple of trying years brought
about by bad weather," Maurer
said.

Fred Arnold, ODA .Falrs DivIsion Chief, said, "! found every
one or our 94 fairs to be running In
top notch form at a very high
emotional level. Many or th.e
stands and concessions were
bdi:l!tl)t pa,tnted,. Jarsa -crow!)&amp;
roamed the barns and midways,
· and outstandl~ examples .of
produce, homemade goods,
flower arrangements and lives·
tock filled tll,e exhibit area."
Both Arnold and Maurer also
praised young people involved In
the Junior Fair prol!ram.
Maurer said, "The future of
Ohio's agricultural industry is
secure in the hands or dedicated
young people who are learning
the significance of discipline,
leadership and sportsmanship.''

~~Jd.

snap .causes whotes·ate
•
pnces to surge in January
"wASHINGTON ('UPI)
'" cent Increase In energy prices said automotive and other major
WholeSale prices surged by 1.8
was the steepest since the go- categories ill the report shOwed
percent in Janu~ry In the biggest
vernment star ted tracking ''there was very little to indicate
jump since the 1974 energy crisis,
wholesale gasoline and oil prices that inflation was heating up,"
Fuel oil 'prices zoomed 25.3.
fueled again by a huge increase · in 1974. The overall increase in
in oil and gasoline ·prices, the 1 \he producer price lndex was the percent and gasoline prices
government said Friday. .
largest since 2 percent in No· jumped by 16.7 percent In JanuVegetable prices also took a
vember or that year in the wake . ary, accounting for most or the
energy price surge. Natural gas
beating, but analysts placed the .of the Arab oil embargo.
blame on the brutal winter .
The Index stood at 117.5. which was up 3,2 percent. ·
A 2.1 percent jump in food
weather this time- not lnternameans that an item that cost $100
prices
also contribute~ to the
tiona! tensions - and predicted
wholesale In 1982 cost$117.50 last
·
January
surge, following an
moderate Inflation for the year.
month.
overall
0.6
increase in the index·
The Labor Department said
· B1,1t economist Robert Diell, or
in
December,
0.1 percent in·
the "unusually large" 13.6 per- Northern Trust Bank in Chicago,
crease in November, and 0.5
percent increase in October, the
department said. Those numbers
were revised to reflect updated
•
data.
If America's wholesale prices
- which Influence prices consu'The amount of Income taxes collected during 1988 in the 501.
mers pay - continued to gain at
municipalities or Ohio in ·which a tax was levied totaled
the current rate, the producer
$1,732;675,054, according to a report released by the Ohio
priCe Index would finish the year
Department of Taxation today .
with. a behemoth 24.1 percent
The list shows that. in Pomeroy where the tax rate Is 1 percent,
increase, the Labor Department
a fatal or $194,323 was collected while in Middlep~rt where1he 1
said.
percent tax did not go Into effect until July 1, 1988, the collection
' But the January surge ap·
totaled $30,401.
peared to a one-time shot.
Muntciapl income taxes are generally imposed on wages,
"We had the cold weather hit
salaries,. and other compensation earned by residel)tS and on
and nobody In tile northeast was
non-residents who work In the municlpa1ity. The Income tax Is
prepared for It," said professor ·
also' applied to business net profits which are attributable to
Donald Ratajczak, director of
. activities In th~ municipality. Many municipalities allow a
the economic lorecas tlng center
partial or full credit to residents tot taxes they have paid to the
at Georgia State University.
municipality In which they are employed.
"All the homes llad low (all)
Rates in Ohio r11nged from .25 percent to2.5percent. State law
tank levels. They thought we
· requires t~at the rate must be uniform within a municipality
were goilig to have another mild
and cannot exceed 1 percent without a vote of the people.
winter," Ratajczak said. "They
all scrambled to buy fuel oil and
the price roCketed."
The coilS also wiped ou tcraps In
'
critical winter growing reelons
The senior class at Eastern High School will sponsor a donkey
iii Florida and the Rio Grande
basketball game on Monday at 8 p.m. ·at the high school.
.and caused equipment failures at
The event Is a senior class activity that will help.ratse funds
aeveral refilierles, he said. A
for the class's graduation lind senior trip to klng't Island.
cr,lppllng fire at a maJor fuel on
Opponenls featured ·will be the WMPO disc Jockeys; the
refinery also· hurt production.
·Jaycees, and the Young Farmers from thll,area.
.
Aside from the traditionally
~d11a11ced tickets may be 1\UI'Chased up until 3 p.m. on
volatile
energy and food prices,
Monday at the high school at a price of $3.50 pee person with
the Index for other fililshed goods
elementary students and senior citizens, $3. Tickets at the~
edged up by only 0.1 percent In
will cost S4.50 for the general public, and ~-50 for elementary
January, 'following a 0.5 percent
. students and senior cl tlzens,
Increase In December.

Local news briefs---..

Donkey cage tilt set Monday

I

.•

. lng and preeeallng an outstanding lair In 1889.
Presenting the award at a recent convention· Is
Oblo Department of Agriculture Director Steven
D. Maurer.

Tax collection totalS announced

1983 BUICK
CENTURY

A Muttimedie Inc. NtWIP8Pttr

President Bush exorts·
Ohio GOP ·to victory

:It's Fantastic February •••

1881 ·MUS-rANG GT

2 Sections, 14 Page• 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday; February 9, 1990

In

JEEP·

Low tonight Ia mid BOa.
Chance of rain 60 percent.
Saturday, high mid 40s.

BUSH MAKES A POINT- Bush mlikes a point
dUring the grand klck·off of the Ohio Republican
Party's 18811 campaign efforts in Columbus
Thursday. This fund raising stop was designed to

raise Sl mUUon. Seated left Is State Chairman
Robert Bennett, GOP Finance Chairman W.R.
"Tim" Tlmkin (R-C) and Mrs. Bush. ( UPI)

Taft will remain in governor's race
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Republican gubernatorial candl·
date Robert Taft II met privately
Thursday with Republican Na·
tional Cl!alrman Lee Atwater,
and afterwards declared he's
still in the governor's race.
However, Taft left .a tiny
IOO!lhole, and speculation continued to mount in GOP circles
that he will abandon the governor's race' In favor of seeking a
Jesser statewide office, which
many party leatlers want him to
do.
'
One Republican with top connections predicted that . Taft
would drop out or the governor's
race "within 48 hours."
Former Cleveland Mayor
George Voinovich is viewed as
having the betterflnanclng and
organization, and is ahead of
Taft, a HamUton County commissioner, in the polls.
Taft and Voinovich and their
wives sat at the same table
Thursday evening at a $2,500-aplate fund-raising diMer leatur·
lng President . Bush as . the
speaker.
.
,
As Taft bo Ited toward his car to
evade reporrers afterwards, he
revealed thai he had met with
Atwat!!f, at his own request, for
about 25 minutes earlier In the
day. ,
'· ·
"We had a good meeting," said
Taft. "I'm In the governor's race
to stay at this time."
•'He bliliked, '' Sllld one Republican when read Taft's quote.
Taft hu until Feb. 22 to decide
whether to drop down and run for
secretary or state, u Republjcan
State Chairman Robert Bennett
would prefer that he do. .
"There's stUI time to derail It
(the move to get Taft out of the

governor's race)," said Rep. Bob
McEwen, R-Ohto, who spoke at
the GOP dinner and who under·
stands the pressure Taft has been
receiving.
McEwen, a conservative like
Taft, was an earlier victim of the
Voiliovich forces. In late 1987 he

.

dropped out of the race for the
U.S. Senate and left.the nomination uncontested lor the thenmayor of Cleveland.
Taft told reporters he has had
"a lot of encouragement" from
Republicans to stay in the
Continued on page 5

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·Commentary
The ·Daily Sentinel u. s. needs
111 Court &amp;reet
Ponieroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASO~ AREA

~'?A
ts:ml!:!

............,.._-,-,,.......,.c:~,

'qlv
ROBERT

Publlober

.

L. WINGETT

....

.

CHARLENE HOEft.ICH
General Maaqer

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publlsher/ControUer
(1. MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers AsSociation.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shoold be lesi than 300
words long. All letters are sul&gt;tect to editing and must be sign"" with
name. address and telephone'number. No unslgn"" letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·

ties.

Bush faces tough selling
:job on military budget
By HELEN mOMAS
UPI While Hou~ Reporter
WASHINGTON - President Bush Is going· to have a hard time
defending a $295 billion military budget for the 199.1 fiscal year with
the communist world falling apart.
The White House pitch runs like this: Granted there Is a lessening of
tension and a weakening- If not destruction- of the Warsaw Pact,
made up qf Soviet and former satellite nations, but the United Sttes
. cannot let Its guard down.
The key reason, according to the president, is that the Soviets are
continuing to modernize their military technology. No one can
challenge the administration's word on that, since the Pentagon, the
, CIA and other government Intelligence agencies are suppoSed to be
. the ones privy to the facts.
No one wants the United States to fall behind In Its ability to protect
the nation.
·
Amid talk of troop cuts and peace.dividends, the president defended
: .: his military ,budget on his recent Western swing, pointing to the
· :" invasion of Panama as evidence U.S. forces must keep up a post-Cold
: War guard against "uncertainties and dangers" even In a safer
world.
.
.
•'•we see our armed forces smaller but more agile and flexible,
well-suited and ready for the demands of likely contingencies," Bush
. · told the troops he visited at Fort Irwin, Calif. ''When I decide we must
use military forces to·protect American lives and interests, I nl!ed'to
· know - as I did in Panama - that you are ready and you are ready
now," he sa td.
Still, the president seems to be trying to hold back the dawn in terms
of facing the new reality of a unified Germany and eventually a unlied
cohesive continent where East-West divisions and hostility will be
considerably toned down.
·
, All the political moves are in the direction of Western . values.
· Democracy and capitalism are the new battle cries In Eastern
, Euro~d even the Soviet Union. It is true there Is a lack of stabiltty.
that could justify the U.S. troops remaining on the sc41ne for the time

l

WASHINGTON - By' all outward· appearances, Mark Morgan was simply a good samaritan
who went to Bangkok, the sex
capital of th~ world, to start an
orphanage for l!oys. Now he
·faces allegatloos that he sold
those boys for sex.
Thai pollee arrested Morgan
last month on charges of running
an illegal foundation. A police
spokesman told us that Morgan Is
now being investigated for allegations that the orphanage was a
front for child sex. · U.S. law
enforcement offlciills have received i-epor~s In the past alledglng that Morgan was a contact for
American pedophiles looki,ng for ·
children in Thailand.
Federal authorities say Thailand Is a vacation paradise for
pedophiles -a prime market for
child peddlers and· smut mer-

Paga 2-The [)lilly Ss•tfnel

Pomsoy-Mklll lhll1o Ohio
Friday,

,· f
help . from Thais

chalit~ Americans go to Bang-

kok for a sexual romp with
children, and they often photogtaph or videotape their exploits
or·buy pornographic materials.
Bangkok police are slow to act,
and U.S. pollee have no jurlldlction In Bangkok, so AJ:nerlcan
pedophiles feel safe there. But
ihe FBI, the Customs Service and
the Postal Service keep their
eyes on the situation anyway.
Eventually, a pedophile will slip
up and mall or smuggle pornography into the United States.
· Then the U.S. authorities can nab
him.
One man took plcturt!$ of boys
engaged in sexual activity and
made the mistake of sblpplng the
photos · to a buddy in Nevada.
They were .intercepted by Customs. With the help of Thai
police, Customs agents searched

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Jack Anderson aru! Dale VanAtta

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FLU MAN strikes agatn!
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Rice winner of lift-a-thon

Soutbera'.a Todd Rl~ was
proceeds will go Into ttie weigh·
, njltn~ the o'veraU champllla In ' tUfting program for more weight
'• the ' ~nt llft·a-tbon held at
equipment and equipment
·
Southern Hlgb ~llool thbl week recQndltloning.
according 10 'varsity football
Gaul said, "This event was a
Coach Dallld Galli.
huae success and I'd like to thank
A large conttnaent partici- tbe participants and those who
pated In the event, whlcb has cpntrlbu led to the program by
•
alrealfy raised $800 In p~es. , sponsoring a student-athlete and
with an ex~ $400 moie to be thank those who took part In lt."
coUected: Pror:;eedJ will go to the
In addition to Rice, a senior,
So\ttl!ern High football team for who was overall champion with
r' ·
maintenance and new 575 total pountls lifted In both the
bench and squat, senior Chuck
Buckley was Most Improved

Utter, Sr. · Gary Freeman was
overall winner in ~he 164 wund
and under division with 495 total
pounds lifted. John McClintock
was champion In the 165-185
pound class with 5-ll total pounds,
and junior Jerry Hayin11n was
first In the 185 pound and over
class with 470 pounds.
Melanie Lyons won the girls'
division wlth220 pounds total lift.
Jason Powell was also an
overall winner In his class.
Prizes were awarded to the
winners of each class.

r.;::::3~~~~!:::iC:Z::;c;
1o
.

SHS Llft-a-thon held tlilo week In Racine. While

.-

TOP LADY LIFTER Soulhem's Melanie Lyons
fle!l'ed her mlltiCie ·for first
OVERALL
,
.
flnt l!laee !a reapecplace In lhe clrls' diVlslon ,of
'•dve 'd"""lonsln lhlll w~ek'a ..!loullaj!l'n ·
'.'L!ft-a-thon•: were
the
Soutliern Hlp Uft·a-lhon
· .freshmail,.Jason Powell, and senior Jerry Hayman, front,' 1-r; ·
held
t-Is week. Lyou, a
~lie Ia back
.Jolm McCIIJttllclf, 53&amp;-pound lift 115-185.
meJI!Iber
'of the glrll hasket· dlvlalon;
lift, 164 and under division;
···-'111111 .
''
'
...
' was top ga,J Urtbig a

running an Illegal foundation. A
pollee spokesman in Bangkok
claimed that the arrest stems
from allegations that Morgan
was using children for sex.
When Morgan was arrested on
the charge of running an Illegal
foundation, the Thai Judge ordered police to Investigate the
allegations of child abuse, procurement and prostitution. ·
Morgan ts free. on ball. We
attempted to call him at · !he
orphanage, but there was. ·no
answ!!r, That pollee told us they
didn't know I !the orphanage was
still open.

"

:, .
..

}

,.,

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1\ UOiOn Strong .and OptimistiC-:--.--"C141la4LSre~nclt£.,e.~'!-.!:U! ~l~:E!. .!;

OVERALL CHAMPION Southern senior Todd Rice
was the overall champion of
the SHS 'lift-a-thon' with over' all welilht tOtals of 575 pounds.

.

gram areas ·that have broad increase In Justice Department
support with 'the American pub· spen.dlng, with much of the new
lie. Cognizant of the growing monies to be devoted to the war
concern ·with the environment, oh drugs and the prosecution of
both domestically and globally, organized crime and white collar
the new budget proposes a 12% criminals. Other major social
Increase In the operating outlavs concerns promised new dollars
of the Envti-onmentlil Protection in the President's FY91 budget
Agency and a 20% Increase in the . include Medicaid where spendmonies ·allocated for cleaning up. ing ts slated to Increase bJ&lt;: $4.7
the numerous nuclear weapons billion. and low income housing
produ~tlon and waste sites
where a $1.5 billion tncrease.has'
around the country. In an effort been proposed.
to enhance the ability of our
A proposed increase reflective
ecological systems to better of the changing world scene,
thwart the problems of air which Is not'ne~rly as popular as
pollution and ozone depletion, the the other increases put forward
President proposes $175 million by the President, is the $3 billion
in new spending 'to begln·a major · In foreign aid spending. The
reforestation program with a situations in Eastern Europe and
goal of planting over a billion new In Panama form mu~;h of the
trees annually.
basis for the requested increase,
Another priority area and one but It rem11lns to ·be seen if
the President views as a corner- Congress wtll be receptive to the
stone for our future is education. new numbers proposed. Another
Overall federal spending on area that fared well in the
education is projected to in- President's budget, was __ our
crease by $1.2 billion and would nation's space program and
. Include $500 million for an -research and development in
expanded Head Start program general. Acknowledglpg the need
for low Income pre-schoolers. It for pur country to maintain its
should be added that though the p~eemlnence in technology, the
President acknowledges the President called tor a . broad
need for an expanded federal role range of tnttta.tlves aimed at
In education, he still believes·the stimulating such development.
primary responsibi)lty for educaThe primary program to be
tion rests Jocallv.
·
pinched in the budget battle
In response· to the rampant continues to be defense, and with
drug problem afflicting,the coun- the easing of national security
try the new budget calls fora hike concerns, as reflected by the
of $2.8 billion In outlays for changing politiCal scene in Eastfederal drug control and a 4.2% ern Europe, many feel this is as It

should be. The · President's
budget calls for a major cutback
in mUttary personnel and for the
closing of an addltloilal 35 mil'
ltary bases . that are no longer
needed.
In presenting his State of the
Union address to the Congress
and the nation, George Bush
appeared relaxed and assured,
confident that the course he was
setting the country on was a
sound course, albeit a challenging one.' Personally, I wi!S
extremelv pleased with the Pres-,
!dent's presentation. ·His manner
was genuine, and his comments
concise and constructive. He
made those In the audience feel
that each had an Important role
to play in forming America's
future. One couldl\'t help .but
come a way from the Congressional chambers that night, with
the feeling that our country's
Commander-In-Chief Is extremely comfortable with ·his
duties as President, and extremely comfortable with his
duties as President, and extremely capable in tlie administration of those dulles. He displayed all of the qualities we
loook for in our leaders -vision,
courage, compassion, concern
and the Intellect to lead. For
George Bush, and the country,
1989 was a momentous year, a
year that will hopefuily set the
tone for peace, progress and
improved International understanding for years to come.

Has science reached its limitS__w_ul_iam....:....·R_us_he_r
creation, or the origin of life on
It' s time to stand back, for a
Earth .... The m~stery of creamom~nt, from tl)e astonishing
events that are shaking the
tion, as every real scientist is
quick to admit, Is not one thai
communist ~mplre and note a
science Is capable of solving."
little concession that appeared
Now that Ill a truly extraordirecently In :rtme magazine. In
nary admission. FC!r Dunne Isn't
the long run, it may prove even
more impOrtant.
talking about some temporary ·
Time, which is evldentlv deterlnablllty: He means that the
whole
subject of ultimate origins
milled to wrest from N.Wsweek
Is simply, and permanently,
the title or Most Liberal Newsmagazine, ran an essay by Phlllp
beyond the ken of science.
Dunne in its Jan. 15 Issue.
To be sure, he carefully rejects
Dunne's subject was the o'ngolng
any attempt to offer a religious
battle · over school textbooks
explanation Instead: "Neither
belng waged between evolutionscientists nor religious folk can
ists and cr~atlonists. I hardly
know why the miracle we call life
need add that Dunne Is all for the
happened." But the news lsn'i
evolutionists.
that secular bumantlts have no
But what caught my eye was a , use for a religious explanation.
seemingly casual remark about The big news Is ·that they're
three-quarters of the way
beginning to admit that they
through Dunne's essay. He bas
don't, aDd can never, liave an
been discussing the dispute over
explanation either.
whether the foasil recQrd yleltls
In the 19th century, when the
sufflclent evidence of the "Interaf)erglow of the Enlightenment
mediate types'' (between species wu still brteht In the skies,
one of which allegedly evolved secular humanists wete a rood
froni the other I that evolutiOnary deal chestler. Brownhig, noting
theory would seem to require,
the growth of iluch . secular
but then changes the subject:
sciences as biology, geofoay, .
"But none of that, pro or con, . psychology, and a Dock of other
has a thing to do with theories of l('ologl~," taunted religious be-

lievers In one or his poems:
"Greek endings, like a little
leper's beii,/That signifies some
faith's about to die."
The giveaway that Dunne is
making,a major concession is his
brave effort to slip past It
casually: Science is Incapable of
solving the mysil!ry of creation,
"as every real scientist 11 quick.
to admit."
If they have been "quick to
admit" It, It's news to me. ,An
inspection of back Issues of Time
Itself, over the decades, will turn
up story after story about this or
that apparently respectable
scientiSt who was mixing In
laboratory Oasks the presumed
lngredl!l!lts of Udal pools on the
surface of the early Earth. Then
he would subject the flasks to

eleetrlc discharges (to simulate
lightning) and peer into a microscope at the result, hoping to
detect life, or at . least some
progress In that direction.
What Is really happenlhg Is
almost breathtaking In Its Implications. At one end of the
observational spectrum, cosmologists have traced ' the origin of
th' universe backward to a Big
Bang which they can never press
on "beyond," so to speak. And at
the other end, scientists probing
the.world of the extremely small
find themselves confronted by
phenomena that simply defy '
explanation, or even observation, In any terms that can be
called aclentltlc.
It looks very much as If aclence
Is reaching Its permanent limits.

Today in history
By Valled ,.._ bter. . .lllal
Today Ill Friday, Feb. 9, the 40th day of 1990 with 32~ to follow.
The moon Is full.
The morniDg stars are Mercury, Venua, Man and Saturn.
The eventng star ta Jupiter.
·
Those born on thladateareunderthellgnofAquarl118. They Include
WIUlam Henry ~rrtaon, ntath presld.e nt of the UnlledStatea,ln 1'1

Freeman shows his fonn, spotters .John McClintock, -left, Jerry Hayman, back, and Chuck
Buckley, left, loo~ . on.

BENCH STRENGTH - Sou!jlern High athlete
Gary Freeman Is sliown here benching In the form
that won him the 164 pound·and under class hi the

:~ ~!~~:!~~ '!:!:'~~o:!:

Tile state of-lhe union and the
state
of the budget are two
· The president, reading the handwriting on the wall; and definitely
matters
that go hand in h~nd, so
still behind the crowd In the .breathtaking collapse of. the Marxist
discuss
both these lmp&lt;irlet
me
world, has proposed another cutin American forces in Europe, down
tant
subj~ts
jointly.
Last Mon· to 195,000 on each side.
·
.
day,
President
Bush
sent
to the
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev has welcomed the suggc·stion. At
Congress
his
budget
for
the
the same time, all the betting is that Bus.h 's move t•: "only the
coming
fiscal
year
and
on
Wedbeginning. As time goes on there wilt be more and more proposals for
an even larger draw down and it will be a lot tougher for'thepresldent · nesday, he came to Capitol Hill to
personally deliver his Stateofthe
explain why it shouldn't be done.
·
Union
speech to a joint session of
Nevertheless, Bush says "this is no time for complacency."
Congress. While the one presen;. The hardllner5 on both sides are still in a ." say it Isn't so." mode. But
tation, the FY91 budget is essen· they too can only sound their warnings of an outside threat.
tially a projecilon or what Is. to
But their voices are becoming dimmer as the din for democracy
come,
the State of the Union
grows louiler.
address
on the other hand Is a
Bush insists on pursuing the "Star Wars" space defense althouglt
review
of
where we have been
many scientists doubt Its feasibiUty. Nobody doubts its cost, In the
and
an
assessment
of where we
multibillions. 1\nd whether the research .on "Brilliant Pebbles" will
are
now.
Additionally
however,
prove productive and wort)! the gamble.
this
speech
Is
often
used
by a
The proposed base closings and the shut doWn of defense plants Is
President as a sounding board
going to cause hardship and disruption as the United States moves
and
as ·a billboard to share with
into the post-Cold War world.
the
country
his plans and proMany members of Congress will fight base closings in their areas as
grams
for
the
future.
part of pork barrel politics. But no one can deny that more money for
This
latter
function
of the State
domestic needs. from the social programs to road and bridge
of.
the
Union
address
is bv
building, would be more worthwhile in the short run and the long run'.
necesslty·a
close
reflection
of the
The president recently added $500 millloll more to funding for the
budget
document
that
precedes
Head Start program, bringing the total appropriation· to $2 billion.
it, so lets start by looking at the
Under that funding so·percent of the disadvantaged 4-year-olds in the
spending priorities the President
country can go to preschool. Why not make It 100 percent? No change
has set for his Administration.
is easy, but the United States has to be as ready for it as the
The
1991 fiscal year budget
communist world. Retrenching the war machine after 40 years won't
submitted
by the President probe easy. But neither is it easy for Gorbachev to stand aside as the
vides
for
$1.23
trillion in federal
Soviet empire disintegrates, apd to even spur on the process for the
s'
p
endlng,
$1.17
trillion in regood of the people.
venues and a projected deficit of
$63.1 billion, $!!()() million under
the deficit ceiling Imposed by the
Gramm-Rudman deficit reduction law. The major spending
Increases and new Initiatives the
President calls for are in pro-

Berry's
World
. .

.

the. man's home ta Bangkok and , Ruff was impressed wltb Mor·.
confiscated more than 500 pic- .gan' s plan for the orphanage and
tum. Both men were convicted railed $65,000 for it. But before
of smuggltng child pornography. Ruff turned the money over' to
It's easy for pedophiles to prey Morgan, someone who knew
on Children In Bangkok. Poor Morgan called Ruff and warned
families abandon their children him that things may 'not be as
or sell them Into labor Cjlntracll. t~ey seem.
The· labor often turns out to be
Ruff put an investigator on
prostitution. Runaways and or- .Morgan and then began a relentphans live · on the streets of Jess campaign to get Thai and
Bangkok, surviving on their Wits U.S. authorities to arrest him.
or the charity of others. .
·Ruff called Sens. Je!lse Helms.
Mark Morgan went toBangjlok R·N.C., and Orrin Hatch, Rfrom his home In Utah, saw the Utah, who both asked the Justice
·boys and told his family he was Department to Investigate.
moving there tp start an orphan·
A spokelwomu at ·the Thai
age. He left ,. a wife and two Embassy In Washington, told oilr
children In Utah. Morgan looked
associate Scott Sleelc !hat It was
for generous Amtli'leans to fund
Rutr s pressure on the Thill
the orphanare and fo!lnd Howard
~vernrnent ·that Jed to Morgan's
·
·
'Ruff, a Utah businessman ,and arrest. '
financial publisher.
Last year, Thai authorities
arrested two Americans on
charges of commlltillg Indecent
acts with teen-agers. Both men
claimed to have. contacts with
Morgan's orphanage. And seve~al men who were arrested In
Northern California as part of a
child sex ring have ties to
Morgan, and one of them told
pollee that Morgan used' the
orphanage u a front for ' child
prostitution.
. But U.S.Iiuthorlties had to walt
for Thai police to come up with
the evidence to arrest Morgan.

.
·
·
I

. bellig.

FebrU.-y 9, 1980

SoutMrn~

Pomerov-Uiddlaport. Ohio

'

''

Meigs girls drop !ilt.
to Federal Hoc~ing
.

'

By DAVE HARRIS
Stacie Glass hit six foul shots in
the last three minutes and the
Federal Hocking Lancers were
able to hold off a Meigs Marauder '
upset bid to down the Marauders
51·45 In girls. ;1ction Thursday
night. ·
.
The win ended the Lancers
regular season with a record of
19-1. Federal Hocking is ranked
7th In Division Ill In the state.
The Marauders record fell to 14-5
overall and 11·5 in the TVC ,
Meigs will host Southern Saturday ,at 2 p.m ..
In Thu~sday night's matchup,
.both teams stared out slow . Glass
8COred 7 of her teams . 11 first
quarter points. But Jennifer
Taylor led Meigs with 5 first
quarter points and both teams
were even after 8 minutes at 11.·
Glass continued with the hot
hand In the seclnd period scaling
S. Marauder center Kelly Smith
picked up her third foul with four
miputes to go in the half, but
Glass joined her on the bench
about a ·minute later with her
third foul. The Lancers held a

'

'

25-21 lead at the half.
In the second half Federal
Hocking started to pull awy and
held a 40-32 lead at the end of the
quarter despite Glass sittlngout
the final two and a half minutes
with her fourth fouL Lauren
Wetib had the hot hand for the
Lancers in the third quarter with
8, all from deep in the corner.
The Lancers built up an 11
point lead with just over six
minutes Jell in the game. but the ·
Marauders came storming back.
Continued on page 4
·

The Daily Sentinel
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A Dh·l!llon of Multimedia, In c.
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•

''

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FRIDAY, FEB. 23
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52 Weeks ................. , .... :: ........ .. $75.40

..

'

'

-Sports briefs ...;....... Vo_u made January one of our best sales months ever, so. ..

portloa of.t)Jj! So,u,$bera Hlclr"Lift-a-thon" as spotter J35on Powell
lookS on. M~Cita&amp;~ll won the 1~5-185 pound class:
,·
·
' .
•
·

;,r~a'S:· De·bbl"e rDre·derl"ck
named
R liU'
I ,
·
,.( h W/ k
N-,/:1.. 4'JA p•l'...
wyer
OJ t e w ee

•· .
: · ;.
,
.: Rio Grande's Debbie Fredrick
was named the NAIA Dlstrict'22
Player of the week for women's
basketball for the week of Jan.
28-Feb. 3.
FredriCk, a 5·6 freshtp'an
guar&lt;)·; scored 79 i&gt;ollits In the
.Redwomen's last three games.
• In those games she also had 20
'a ssists,13tebounds,llstealsand .
one blocked ·shot. In Rio's wins
; over Ohio DOminican (85-76) and .
'Walsh (84-521 1 she ~cored a total.
• • "
I t •.
of 59 pan
.
. In the statistical ran kings, she .
'Is tied for fourth with Defi11nce's
. Brenda ·Evails and . Flm,llay's ,
, Tammy Lo'rton In assist average
after 23 games ( 112. or
4.9/ glimei. ·
. In 2.5 .. games RG's Mindy
Mon.tgomery. a 5·6 freshman
guard, leads the district In '
three-paint sbooting ( 48-97,
'· 49.5'~ ) '
. ' :., .
. In 25 games ,\nn Barnitz·, all: 11. .
·sophomore center, I~ eighth in ·
flel~-goal shooting ·.:1~3'( -28'( ..
. 47.7(&lt; ).
.
' ) ' '
Harrlllo"•· Browa Ia top live
· In 22 games Gary ~arrtson, a
5-11 ,junior guard, l~ads the
'district in assts t average (285, or .
'

\1

•

••

SA/ game) and is seventh in
scoring (18.8 pts./game) .
· In 22 games Jeff Brown, a 6-5
freshman forward, is fifth 'in
rebounding (182, or 8.3/ game)
and eighth from three-point
range (49-113, 43.4'!1 ). while in 23
games Mark Erslan, a 6-3 freshman guard, Is seventh from
three-point land (62-141, 44'1i).
In 23 games Brad Schubert. a
6-3 sophomore guard, is eighth in
scprtng (U\.9 pts ./game) and
ninth in three-point shooting
(90-210, 42.9%). while In the same
span·of games Troy DOnaldson, a
6-7 freshman center, is 13th in
scortng with an average of 6.4
pt,s./game.

Politics
South Korea blamed North
Korea for the failure of negotiations ajmed at forll'\ing a unified
Korean team for the 1990 Asian
Games in Beijing. The two sides
now will field separate teams in
the competition.
Skiing
Austri~'s Bernhard· Knauss
postedttiefastestquall!ylngtime
durtngthefirstroundofthe1990
Pro Ski World Championships at
Nagano,. Japan. American Phil
Mahre also qualified. A supergiant slalom Is scheduled for
Friday. with a glant,slalom set
for the weekend.

t

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POMIIOYI OliO

APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE
HOURS: MONDAY·FRIDAY I A.M.·I P.M.
SATURDAY I A.M.·I P.M.

--lllilil

·

· PAT BILL

.

·

CHBYSI.IER-PLYMOUTH-DODGE

399 SO. T,_.IRD

M2-M21

MIDDLEPORT

�&amp;;1990

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page 6

Kansas State knocks off _ No. 1 Tige~
Eight · games. Mls~uri
!be t9p s~t In the UPI
Kanalis Slate sUCCelllflaUy used ratings f~r the last three weeks
a slow lem~ and aggressive bel~re suffering Its first loss
since a December game with No.
defense Tbunday night to regis.
ter theli aecond major upset ~t a U Dlinols.
··we didn't get good play, but
Top 3 collference foe.
Steve HeDIOII, bekl scoreless In give them a l~t of credit," ,.
the firlt half, scored alll8 ~f his Mls~uri Coach N~nn Stewart
said. "We bad the ballgame and
~lnts In tbe flnal14: 15 to Uft the
even though we weren'lplaylng
WUdcata· to a 65-58 Big Eight
very well, I stU I thought we had a
victory over top-ranked Mlsourl.
chance
to win . .
· '"I'he fact that we didn't shoot
"l'hey Just kept playing and
the ball well and Mls~url didn't
playing harder and got a break
shoot the ball well indicates both
teams played good defense," · and they got hold of
It was
their ballgame."
Kanau State Coach Lon Kruger
Henson had even more trouble
said. "Tbat"s what we were
than Mis~url did In the first hall,
hoplni for.
miSsing all sl)( of his shots. He
"In the second half. our dewas scoreless until given a
. lense picked up and we got a goOd
basket on a goaltendlng call.
run at tbe right Ume. All of our
~ 'In the first half, I continued
bla people did a good job.''
Tbree weeks ago, Kansas State struggling," Henson said. "A few
of those shots In the first half
used the same· phUosophy to
weren't shot with' a lot of ..
'register a 66-51 triumph over
collfldence. But whatever Ilost In
Oklahoma, at the time ranked
third in the nation.
Kapsas State Is the best defensive learn In the league, allowing ..
just 67.1 ~illts a game.
Against Missouri. aggression
In the key helped the Wildcats
li~ld Doug Smith to just nine
shots, hitting t11ree. T,he rest of
the team fared worse, g~lng 17 of
59 lrcim the floor.
The decision snapped a . lJ.
game winning streak for Missouri, 21-2, and gave the· Tigers
their first Big Eight loss In eight

· BJDPFIDWN

Big

~wned

· UPIIporaWrtter

u:

HENSON TOUGH
Kansas State University guard Sieve
Henson. pulls ar~und Mlssouril9rwar~ Nathan Bundn In the llrsl
hall of Blg-8 play In Bramlage Coliseum Thursday. The WUdcala
whopped lhe Tigers 65-58, breaking the 'Cals three game IM!ng
streak. (UP I)

the first half, I got It back In the
aecond.
''When· w~ weren't sco!llng, we
held them on their end. We Just
tried to t11ke away their
strengths. We at least needed to
contest every shot."
Missouri got 18 points fr~m
Anth~ny Peeler; while Smith
finished with 13.
Elsewhere In the Top 20 Thursday night, ·Virginia upended No. 4
Duke 72-69. No. 7 Nevada-Las
Vegas hammefed Pacific 116-76,
N~. 8 Michigan held off Indiana
79-71, No. 13 Illl!tols blasted N~.
18 Minnesota 99-72, No. 14 Louisville thun\ped South Carolina
!r.&gt;-77, No. 16 La Salle whlpP.e&lt;f
Fairfield '18-51 and No. 20 UCLA
beat Arizona State 80-72.
At Cha'rlottesville, Va., Bryant
Stith scored 23 pplnts, grabbed 15
rebounds and c~nverted a pair of
crucial free throws with seven
seconds lett to lift VIrginia over
Duke. VIrginia snapped a 16-

Beat of the Bend ·

Bffi uheW- recovering '

game losing streik aaatnat the
Blue Oevlli. Duke, whlcb ,made
only 35 percent ·of 11~ fleld·goal
~ttl!mpts, lostforonly,the second
time In Its past 1'{ starts. "
At Las Vegas, Nev., narry
Young scored 20 ~lnts - 18 on
three-pointers to power
Nevada-Las Vegas past Paclftc.
. UNL v·. has won four straight
games and nine ol' its last 10.
David Butler added 16 ~lnts,
Larry Johnson had 15 and Stacey
Augmon 14 for the Runnln'
Rebels. Dell ·Demps 'led the
Tigers With 15 points. · '
At Ann ArbOr, .,!VUch., !,J..oy
Vaught and Ter}'Y.".•t.fllls combined for' ~ points 11~ th!! final
nine ,minutes to lead Michigan
paSt Indiana. Vallghl sc\Qred 19
~illts, Rumeal Roblns~n 18,
MluS 16 apd'Oemetrius Callp 12
fQr Michigan. Indiana was led by .
foM¥ard- Eric Al!derslin and
Chris .I.,awson~ w~o scored 20
po!Jits 'apiece.
'

· Good n!!W&amp; from Bill LebeW,

long-time P.o.meroy ~ldent,
woo receJJIIY underwent a quadruple heart bypas ' s · l
, Columbus·.
It WBI tough
for a few daya,
bul now Bill II
getting along
line and making
goOd progress. ·He's been moved
' inlj&gt; a room. The address Is Doan
· Hall, Room 917. University H~s­
pltal, 450 W. lOth St., Columbus,
Ohio, 43210.
And ·recfntly, It was repor.ted
that another long'-!lme resident,
Helen Neutzllng, had undergone
major surgery .at a . Columbus
h~sp)tal. . ,
·
. A resident of .Ant\ St., In
Pomeroy. Helen Is now at home
recuperating.
H!!r daughter,
)~(Ia Dav)s of South Cal"ollnll, Is
here to. be with Helen while she
moves ~long In recove~lng. By
the way, Helen sends along a big
thanks f~r all of the O!lrds you
sent dUring her b~spltaltzatlon
and especially appreciates your
prayers.

..

, And Veterans Memorial Hospl' tal Administrator Sccitt Lucas•of
Cheshl~ who also recently underwent heart surgery at Riverside Methodist Hospital In Co, lumb!ls Is !folng well. He was able
to attl!nd a ·meeting held at the
hospital this week and will be
getting back · Into the swing of
things as he continues to
progress.
· ·
·

. tak~ part in meet
Frank. II Marsh. 3B, Wldeltei- S3
GordonR5,

Kin~ CGIIelf' 81. Caldwell71
La Salle 78, Falrll eld: 51

By Unkrd Pl'ft!llnler ratloral
NATJONAL Bt\SKETBA.LL AS !iOC

.vm,.

Nlaran 811,
111 OT
N)·ack !12, Polll 52

Eu&amp;rrnCorllereac~

Atlantk IHvtslo n

,

w· L

Penn&amp;, 7-1. Rhodt Is land 67
Plymo•lh Sl T2, Mu•cliul!ldt•llo~Jton

GB

Pet .

Nf'W York .... .............. :.n 111 .111~ Phlladl'lphla ................161 lH .n:l :!
Bofltoa .... ..... : ......._....... .28 18 .ltll 3
\\'MII1a&amp;ton .................18

:n

"

.3t7 1-1 4

New .Jeney ............... l:e 35
Mlamt ,.. ....... ................ lt 31
Central Dh· hlon
Oecrott ....................... J$ H
Chic••• .......... .............'9 18
MII•'V.•Iu~t'.. ........ ,........ti %:!
ln•ana ....................... u !3
Atllull.lll ............ ............ %% %'1
Cl"elar)d .... ......... ,......u ~

.511

.

~

Mi!lw8t Dlvltll••

Pel . GB
.712 .IH
I'!

.5t.J

s•,;

;$-U 7~':
.-188 W
.ur r.21'f
.1711 !-t

.1&amp;1 .717 t
.622 s•,,
.us tt~rt
.U9 ~2•--:
.l-t1 ~~ ~
. ~17 :.!~1 .,

Thu.,..-.v Gam8
NN· l "Drll 1!::, Golct.a !hal• Ill!
1A Oipper~ liS, W~~ttW•«ton 103

"1\uJUIIUI 73. CHI.-! Flortda IS

O.arleMon 91, Cou•J CaroiiM 6i

Orlando ......... .......... .... 1-1 S3 .UR ~
We~~tern Conlei'f'nce

U&amp;ab 14.

StoiQ' Brook 81, HUIIler 81

.5! 1 t ';r •
..178 ll!ft
.u1 121,

"' L
Utah ..... ...................... .33 1-1
San Antunlo .............. ;,.32 U
Denwr .....................•...%&amp; ~
Dalllqt ....... ,............. .. .. .!&amp; 1'!
tlou.Mon .................... ..:23 .. U
MlnnrP~:ot. ................... 10 31
Chatlotlt' ............. ,.... ... JI l7
Pat'lftc Dlvlslotl
LA Laken. ...................SS II
Portland ..................... ..l;J 13
PhDI'ftb: ... ........... ,....... .28 17
~lden st.tr ........, .......u u
Statlle ...................: .... .%2 ~3
1:"" Clipp!&lt;r~ ............... ,.21 Wi
S~eramento ................. 12 33

.....

Sl . Jo.epb'll (PL J8J,Sia.•"enturt 511

~~·'t

.7H .lilti 6

Robert Morri!i 110, lAq ktand 10
Rollens Wftiieyan ID, Elmtn Coli 71
Ru~enlll, M••d~~o~Mth;tl

.Uii 19 !ft

.ttt

Tbe Meigs Wres tllng team took
part last week In the Nelsonville
Invitational. Besides Meigs and
~he host, Jackson, Vlnt~n County, .
Maysville and Marietta also took
pari.
.
Meigs had live medal winners,
Aaron Sheets and Burt Kennedy
each pla,ced first, and David
Swanson, Eric Heck and Joe
McElroy each placed second.
Tile Meigs Mat Men will be at
the TVC league tournament this
Saturday at Belpre with wrestling to begin around 11.

Curry7~

•

o.,arlctttf a .

E . Tt'IUI!IIJeiP

sc. .... Uberty .u

FU nnan .17. Da\1 kilO II 7i
. Gt&gt;OIJe W.a.lnlfon II, 'h•t VII'JIInla

"

Hamil., 53, Macalaler If
Hardln!\lmmo ... IIS. Ofll'llaSI. 9!, OT

·famt"!lown KS, Vallt'y CltyK'2
LoliNvi!ll' 91. SoWII Cartlllna 71

:::Jt": :

:;·,:;:.o::~ st .. Kl
Sillem-Telkyo M, llhttfltold tjJ
So. Vtah St. 83, Ctllcap St. ;K
Vlr!Q nla 7Z, DuiM!o 61
Vlrslnla ..tt&gt;rmont IJ.I, Bluelleld 75
Vlr~nla Ualon 1%11, SC. A.ul\illliiM''IINI
WIWII.. oa &amp; Lee Il-l, MM')' \hlllllnr· '
ton68
MidWest
Central Statf' M , Lake Erie I:J
Columhla 1%2. Hu•bal LaGranp lllfl
~trOit 1M, Ennlll\lllte 77
Evanarll2, Mid--America Naaerent- :u~
Fer riA Stair 11. Mlc:hlau T Eic:h II
Green•.tlle "2. Principia 7i

64

UJ._.ti.,MI•nPHhl':!

w.,. ..

lnd-fllrdue Ft
Itt. ·w.-~s 3t
KanMM Sl. 1~. !Kiuourt 5A

Lo~KYilk&gt; 1$, South C•roll• 7"
Lo5rola {Ill. ) 91, Di,)-Mtn 1-1
Mlchlpn i9,1ndlana '71
,
Midllpn State 10, \\'J~o...- • n 5i'
S. tlllnob 8-1. F1ortUIIIIL .,2
Sordlrralllclltpa I'll, G,.ndValleyU
S.rthwood 118. SprtnK ,AitJor '1S
KloGI'I.IIft H. MI. VerMnNu.t4
S l - His. 10!1, CoN:oldla 'U
Soudu·.r n Utah 8S. ollup Slate 7!1
Wlll..m .tewell 100, Gracf'laall 12 OT
Xavier (OIIIol83. Mat91f!fle 711

Or ..JMio Ill. Pblladclphja t!1
Cleveland lOG, Miami M:.!
Atlanta Ill, HolM on lOX
D"lla!i Ill, Mht~ati77
l.tetroM 11-t, Mllwauller 101
In IIana 103, San Antonio 100

Denwr IU. Chl.c.qo tA
Frid.,- GaJDe~
No l(alnt!l'i !Chf'dultd
&amp;.turd.,- Gamt'!&lt;l
NO•A;wne!i JtC:htdultd
SUnd.Y Gamf'
.tiJ.Star Ganw at Ml.-ni

....hall
flfk'I•IDll - Sl,.ed oudlelck&gt;r P:WI
J'N4'111 to a Z. )'f'ar ('ontr•d and llr'l'l

IMrmut

Kt&gt;n Grl.ffry

to a

1· )1'11'

.-o .. rat't.

Kan!MM Cll y - Sl ~d oudldck'r ll:anru·
rutahuU to a I· year cnntra•1 .
MI!Wl&amp;UIIel" - Slprd lnO el der Gtuo •
Polldor to a I· yt'U co nlra cl .
Mo .. rtld - Ar:rt"t' d 10 tt&gt;rm11 ~· hh

outflehter· 0111; Sb:on on a
eontract .

l·yell'

'

Sew \ ' ork ' iAL) - SII.Til'd pltt·hrr
McCullt&gt;u •• 11 •-yl'llr contl'llt1.

\\'f:SI

~

~ ..nwr

Roy

Hln!!OnWI•.-uard Moold.-Biaylock 011lh~·
I!\Junod lhol .
f ullrl(t"
Bo11t0n Untverllil)'- NamcodDan ,\Jk&gt;n
foothall c.. ~ h.
"*4:bcnn11k' - Annoanud Jrf'!i hm;&amp;n
t·f'n&amp;er AI Powell will ml~!i thf' l'f'!ll of th1•
1M' -.n with a broken wrbot .
Football
N"· En aland - Nanwd .Jim 01 dluun
dlrrclor of ml'dla rtlati4M.
S\' """- Samed . . ,. Cohfon dlrN1ot
ot pr.modoM. loll Parnw dln'ctor ol
hu~lfle,i11 rt'llliM!M. Gforry Parranno
cleiiM maaa.A:I'r 111d Carol An• Ficken
tkkl'l dt!purtnM&gt;nlllll . . tant .
s.u Dll'~ - ~amed .hell Rtllley
P lliatant Coa.:h.
Hockry

s_. ,Jt'rsey -Cal ltd •Prilht wtnr.Jim
Thom!lOn lrom Utlu of chr Am erican
' Hot•kf'J Wai\W.
&amp; . t.ouB - cane~~•r•{'•f!n*'man Tom
111k•)' hom P"orh o tb~· lnterratloMI
, Hoell"'' 1-A"a«Ut': ~nl dl'fl'n!ll'man Tony
Twb;t to Pt"ortL

C•londo Sl. U, Sew Me~ko 71

FTI'!I no Slat~ a. F\1 Uerton 1:.
ldl&amp;ho St. 'T-1, N. 1\rb. 72
Idaho Ill , )Jnntan.a Slate It
:'\i~\· allla

' '

Rrno 7t, " 'cohn SC-atf' 71

S evada-Ll&amp;!i \ 'f A;b Ill PadDc 7i
Portland 71, hnta CHu-a U
Stanton! !ill WuNqton Slate :iol
U(' Sanbi Barbara 11-l. f'S Lon111f&gt;•hll1
U( 'L.-\ tltl, Arlzou St. 72

This week's games
FKWA.\' 1 FEBt

te

Urhana a1 Summit Chriall•
SATUKDA \', FEB II
Stat OhloSt
Olllo IJntv at Cll'ntrtJ Ml ch
Ml~hllan

M'e1eaer1 Mid• at Bowlnr Gt-een
Ke-nt St at ToledO
Miami at EMitrn Mlcb
( 'f'ntral Florid' at Akron
Soudli CarllliMIIJ. Cift('ln..UI
Day too at Marquet.,_
You...-own SIIIJ. " 'rllhl St
Nihlandat L~i!Wbt (DI)
Carroll at Martella

Ohio Nerthern M BaldwiD-Wallace
Hlr•m at Otterbein
·
Htldelbeq al C1pMal
Mounl Unkla at Mullldnpm
Alle1t1eny !Pal a&amp; Dull;on
Ohio Wf:Sif)'an at Wo.aer
Earllwn (lad) a1 Kenro•

ThomM Mo,-. (Ky) II ltltttrnbel'l

Cue Relerw M ,Johna-Hopkln (Mdl
CedarlOille .il um.,.

Mt Vermn Naz at Ohio Domlalc•
R.lo Grantl! at Dyke
Walsh at Tiffin

•

. Bhlllft ... at Fl,.ar
Centra.! Stat Mal••
Wllrnlnllon 1111 DetiMce
Shall' nee St at Lake Erie

•

' College scores
'

Colle!('! lu'-1ball Re-tulh
B)' llnttrd Pl'f111laWt",.. tall&amp;l

Euc
Alfftod M, Keuka U

Can a .. -. 72. Sl~ 71
DomiDkM llol, VaUey Forp It

"'

flt~htllra'

81 M. Me!hohr4"

again the Marauders went most
of the game with~ut soph~more
· ~lnt guard Kim Hanning who
was 111. Hanning played briefly In
the third quarter. Missy Nelson
did a good job flllpng In for
Hanning.
Meigs will bost- Silutl\ern on
Saturday at 2, . the game was
originally scheduled to be played
on Saturday evening.
In the ,reserve game Meigs
closed out their with a 55-14 run
away over the Little Lancers.
Mary Cremeans led the way with
15, Verna Compston added 14 'and
Karl Black had a goOd game with

The Southern High School
freshman basketball team upped
'Its record to 10-3 on the seas.on
with a 38-18 victory over the
Gallla Academy freshmen here
recently In a lrosh boys' basketballgame.
With the win SHS avenged all
three of Its three losses of early In
the season.
· Southern led after one quarter
11-6, and Increased the leaa to
23-8 at the half. Southern outscored GAHS 12-4 In the third
frame to take a 25-12 lead,
heading lnto·the final round for a
38-18 win.
Mark Allen led Southern In
scoring with 9 points. Miller led

Logan at Galllpolls
at Marietta
Athens at Warren Local
Fairland at South Point
Washlngl~n CH at Greenfield
Boyd C~unty at Portsmouth
Point Pleasant at Wahama
Waverly at Wheelersburg
Southern at Southwestern
· North Gallla at Hannan Trace
Kyger c;:reek at Oak Hill
Eastern at Symmes Valley
Meigs at Federal Hocking
Trimble at Wellston
'
Nelsonvtile-York at Alexander
Miller at Belpre
8aturday'a1a,mes:
Wheelersburg at Galll~lis
Tug Valley at South Poillt
Brookhaven at Portsmouth
P~int Pleasant at Parkersburg
Catholic

Nr4.TIONAJ. HOCKD' U:AOtlE
Saturdar
PIIUadelphla 7, MI . . . . . . 0T
N\' .... pr.t ...... .
Hartford s, Quebec 1

Fed Hock .......... 11 14 15 12-51
Meigs ........ ........ 11 10 11 13-45
FEDERAL HOCKING Christi Tate 2-0-1-5, Jenl Perslon
0-0-3-3, Lauren Webb 7-0-2-16,
Stacie Glass 7-0-8-22, Teresa
Hines 0-0-0-0, Mary ·Maxwell.
2-0-1-5 TOTALS 18-0•15-5i.
MEIGS ·- Kelly Smith 3-0-1-7,
Trlcla Baer 5-0-1-11, Shannon .
Newsome· 7-0-0-4, · Missy Nelson
1-0-2-4, Amy Rouse 0-0-0-0, .Jen- •
nller Taylor 7-0-5-19 Marsah King
0-0-0-0. TOTALS 18-0-9-45. ,

Galllpolls In scoring with · 8
points.
Southern Is coached by Jimmy ·
caldwell.

V•lentlne. .P•rtv
'

FEB. 10~

Track and F1eld
Friday night's Meadowlands
I nvltatlonal In New Jersey will
offer $100,000 to any man breakIng EaiRilnn Coghlan's Indoor
mOe record of 3:49.78 and
$100,00o to any woman breaking
Do Ina Mellnte's mark ol4: 18.86.

·

WYOMING' WOLF
"
. BAWD ·
' . !I J.

~

')

;

9:30PM-1:30AM
DOOI PIIZES
s2.00 Cover Charp
•
Must .Be 21 Yea~s Old

.RT. -7 &amp; 143 .

POMEIOY. OHIO

·car.
Buy~rs

IF· YOU'RE·

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4 n.-'26 · 12 n.-'39
1 FT.'- '33 14 FT.-140
10 n.-'36 16 FT.-146

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•

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Sponsored by JeH Montgomery Fan Club

SUNDAY, FEB. 11, 1990
• 12 NOON to 6 P.M. .

RmAND CIVIC CEN1EI
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for A LfHie "SttV/gllt T111k" From

Pleasant Valley Hoephal Medical Office Building + Suhe 215
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.I.

Kl!j

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith .
of Blppt; Ellill.t Loewl
Am Electric Power ... .. .... .... 30%
AT&amp;T .... ...... .......: ... .... .. ..... .40%
Ashland on ..... ... :... .... ..... .. .36'Vs
13ob Evaqs ...... .. .................. 12',4
Charming Shoppes .... .. ... ...... 8Y,
City Hold In~ Co................... 14
Federal Mogul. ...................18%
GO(xjyear T&amp;R ..... .... .. ... .. .... 36
Heck's ........ ......... ................ 2%
Key Centurion .. .. ....... ..... .... 13~
Lands' End
17
......... .. .... .... .. ... ..
Limited Inc ...... ... ...............35%
Multimedia Inc .... .......... .. ...75:Y.
Rax Restaurants .. ............. .. .. to/.
Robbins &amp; Myers .. ~ ........ .. ... 16%
tO•t.
Shoney's Inc
· ... ... .. ..... ....
... .. 19~'
Star Bank ...................
.........
Wendy's Inti. .. ..... ... .... ..... :~ . .4'&gt;8
Worthington lnd·............ ......22')8

EM'S.'has 10 calls
f9r assistance

A fish consumptlon advisory
lssue.d last summer lor carp and
AhumdDs.... ·'
.
ttl h
ht 1 h Ohl0 R
Tbi!re will be an Eastern High
ca s - ca.ug n 1· e
lver
School alumni buketball game
continues to be In effect, based on
•ece
·
nt test results released by
on Saturday at 6; 30 p.m. lor the' '
women, The n'len'f ga,me· will
the Ohio River Valley Water
follow . All proceeds will g~ 10 the
Sanitation Commission.
.
Eutern athletic department.
Fish Wflre collected during
. lu~a w he held
.
September and October. 1989 at
The Shade RIVI!F- Lodge will 16 · locations along the Ohio,
·.Allegheny, and Monongahela
hold It$ annual Inspection on
Rivers. Species submitted for
Saturday at 7: 30 p.m. · A dinner
analysis Included carp, catfish
will be served at 6:30p.m·. and all
(channel, flathea(j , an&lt;! blue,
members ar~ ui bri!IJ·!I pie. A}l bass (white, striped and hybrid)
masons are lnvllellt9.altend.
white crappie, sauger, walleye,
Cbolr. meetfllc
r
small and blgmouth buffalo and
Choirs·Interested In joining the freshwater drum.
Trinity Church Choir lor a Palm
The composite fillets of each
S\lnday service are Invited to speclesweretestedtorpotychlorattend an organizatlonalmeetlthng Inated biphenyls (PCBs) , seto be held at 2 p.m. Sunday at e lected pesticides, mercury . lead
churcl).
.·
and cadmium, all of which are
Youth v~up
known to accumulate In fish
. Trinity Churcp youth group tlssue.The ·analyseS "evealed the
will rileet at 4: .30 P·Ill· :rhursday · continued presence of PCBs
at the churCh. The regular · andor chlordantee in carp and
. meeting will be followed by youth ' ch~nnel catfish above the U .S.
ch~ir practice at 5: 30 p.m and a
sup~r to be served ai 6:15 p;m.
The ~egular ch~rc\ ~h~~ will
meet or a pract ce a : P·~·
GALLIPOLIS STOCKYARDS

,.,a,
It
I l ';/
1

''THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"

__.~:- ~

' llq-- ._
......:.
., . o•~An1111En1IIIIHOW
7:JO
llllt11 11.50

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~nth Central Ohio
Showers .likely early Friday
night. with a low between 30 and
35. Chance of rain Is 60 percent.
Partly cloudy Satu,rday , with
highs In the mid 40s.
'Extended F~recaat
Sunday through Tuesday •.
A chance of snow Sunday, with :
fair weather Monday, and Tuesday . Highs will be In the 30s'
Sunday. between 3~ and 45
Monday. and between 45 and 55
Tuesday . Overnlghr lows will be
mostly In the 20s Sunday and
Monday mornings and between
25 and 35 early Tuesday .

'
Trenlh-Feeder Cattle-Stead)'. Velll
Calves-Sieady•• utcher Cow...Stea&lt;tY.
Medium Frame 1 &amp; ! Steers:

,,

UO.. . Ibo ...... ....... .......... ... 88.011-lilft.OO
- l b o ...... ........ ....... .. ..... 8UO·I1.11
!H-MO Iboo ....... .......... .. ......... 83.!10-H.OI
_
..... ........... ............... 82.00.91.110
lbo ............... ............. 711.00-88.110
,... ................ ........... ...... 67.00-1141.110
Medium Frame. I &amp; 'l Heifers:
%!10-ltO ltao . .... ......... .............. 18.00-92.00 ·
_ ,... .. ., ..,.............. ...... 15.00-84.110
400-lllllbo... : ........ ................ 10.00.83.!0
510-!00 IIIII. ......... ............ .... .. 67.00.80.00
-100 lbo. . ... ..... ............. .. ... 65.!10-18.50
'iii0-800 lbo... ............... ..... .: ... 83.Ji0. 78.50

governor's race.
·
He said he wanted to talk with
Atwater about '"the 1990 elections,' the Ohio political scene and
the attitude of the Republican
National Co'mnilttee about the
Importance of Ohio to the
president."
Bush has said congressional
redistricting Is lm~rtant to
Republicans. and thus control of
state legislatures.
Republicans believe they can
~nly control the Ohio House If
they win the Ap~rtlonment
Board. To do that, they must win
two of , these three olllces:
governor, secretl!ry ~I state and
auditor.
·
"Bob was very happy with the
outcome of the· meeting," said
Dan Schnur

-*

Holstein Steen and Bulls:

301-8110 , ............. ....... .... ...... 51.0()-81.00
But.chw Cows ;
Vtllltle~ 47 .58·59.00; Canner/ Cutter
-15.00-5$.00: LlR:ht weight low grade cows
48.00--down; Hellerelte up lo 68.00.
Buh:ller BuU:
lltllltles 59.00·85 .00;· Canner/ Cutt e r

Lottery numbers ·

5UI~6UO .

Veal Calves:
Choh:e/ prlme Sl.D0-94.00; M edium i-t.oe.

90.oe.

. Sprlnl(er Cows: 675.00--down: Cow/ Calf
Com. 725.00-down; Baby Calves 160.80--

down.

Butcher Sows:

- l b o. ......... ................. U.OO-f.t.50.

,

Butcher Boars:
sot ltao.-... ...... .. ........ ........... 35.110-Sll .75.
TopHop:

:Jaymar golf club

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2'5-250 Itao ............................ 44.Ji0.45. 25.
Pip by Head: ~5.0G-Oown.

dance set Mareh 10
The spring kickoff dinner .
dapce pi the J aymar Go!J' Club
will be. held on March .10 at the
Senior Citizens Center. There
will be a social hour from 6 to 7
p.m., dinner from ·7 to 8 p.rri, and
a dance from 8 to 11 p.m. Music
will be by Glen Aldon of WMPO
and will Include blg"band·s of the
30's and 40's. Cost Is $25 a.couple
and ·$13 for lingle!!· Rese~vations
are to be made by March 5 with
Bob · Freed, Nonna Custer or
Velma Rue.

IEMEMBER
WITH ToFLOWEIS
llf'ftd a IM'•IIfulk-

1968 Che.vy C-30 •••••••~ S895
1973 ·Ford F-1 00 •••••• ~. S795

Auto.

1976 Chevy C-1 0 •••••••• S795

Auto.

·

.1979 Ford LTD •••••••••••• S595
Auto., PS, PB.

1984 Fo~d Tempo ••••• S2195

.

Auto. PB, PS, atr.

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POMEROY
'

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PICK-3 .
544.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1 ,360.391.00, with a payoff due of
$391,102.00.
PICK-4
2770.
PICK-4" ticket sales totaled · .
$248,438.50, with a payoff due of ·
$119,900.00.

Auto.

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arnn""'""'t. ~· .. ull

or vllii

FLOWER SHOP.

"Thf' Wtrv Am rrinr S..nd. l..otl~
"'- "~·IOH II' "1·5711

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Surprise your Valentine with
VAlENTINE LOVE LINE!!!
•• .··
Colllpoee your own Valentine Me•••1•
••
uelnc our Cupid'• co..pon ltelow•••
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E.t-~Pt-f'iltllfi~IP,.,.ul... .
:
VALENTINE LOVE I.lNE!

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COMPG• TOIJa OWN M!MAOE aaow

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RIVERSmE
MOTORS
;110 W.llllt
(6W ........
POIIIIIOY, OHIO
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Valentine's Da~
Fellruar~ 14th

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CIC'Il.IGIUD

Weather

Feb, 3, 1989
•••

Continued from page 1

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Food and Drug AdminiStration
guidelines at certain locaU~ns.
Flathead catfish, tested for the
first time this year, sh~wed
levels above the FDA guidelineS
at two locations. Contaminant
levels In sauger and white
crappie, however, were well
below the guidelines.
Levels of mercury, DDT' .and
other pes tlcldes were also below
regulatory guidelines In all sam·
pies tested.
Accordlt]i to a summary ~lflsh
tissue sampling results at the .
Racine Lock, the PCB concentration was greater or equal to 2.0
ppm andor the chlordane concentration was greater or equal to0.3
ppm In on~· of. rnore species
tested. In both the 1987 and the
1989 testing program. The location was not sampled In 1988. .
At th~: Belleville, Lock In 1987
the results did not exceed FDA
guidelines lor PCB and Chlordane In 1987. but did exceed the
guidelines for safety In last fall's
sampling.

livestock report

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Fish·advisory stiU in effect

Butterlg!l . Avf:. In Pom&amp;py.
Retrelhments will be served.

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u/~5 ·

ALL PAID ADMISSIONS WIU IECEIVE OME Fill

JEFF MOJIIGOMUY IASDALL 'CAID
JIFF IOIITGOIIEIY t -s•m S1C)H
fiB DIA. .GS
tl.OO AMISSIOJI

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,

"StocL- .

Goldie (Merna) Roberts, 79, of
Racine; died Thursday at Vetl1'
rans Memorial Hospital.
A homemaker", Mrs. Roberts
was born Oct. 7. 1910 at Linc~ill .
County, W.Va. to Thomas and
Hattie Turley Hill.
·
· Survivors Include a daughter.
Wanda Thompson, ~f Tampa,
Fla.; two sons, James Roberts.
of Goodview, Va., and Bill
Roberts, of Racine; eight grandehilqren; ·seven great' grandchildren; two ·sisters, Erma
George, of South Charleston,
· W.Va .. and . Ellen McKee, ·· ~f
Fairview Heights, m. ; and sev-

LOT·Of

11 n.-:'49
IOUND IAU FEEDEI-*69

}t

Goldie Roberts

TIRED·OF A·
;f.

. lrl d ·.Jl
L
1
Old
.
e,n ,
m ucas, · n
notlngtherecentmentlonofaplll '
for dinner In this column, reports
that the Japanese are getting
there.
Jim says that the
Japanese have come up with a
lat t be sed In fast food
P e 0
u
businesses · alter youla ea\
foOd, y~u then eat the P te. m
calls It a ~llutlon solution."
Also Jim reports he sees a.ll
kinds 01 good signs of spring at
his country place. We love II
when you talk !Ike that. Jim.
,
And we're still getting volun~eers for the "Revolution": the
-' Iatest being Mary Skinner and
BruceTeaford. IlookfortheFBI
. to darken my door any day
armed''wlth ~barges that I have.
this big plot going to overthrow
the government. I'm going to
blame, Pomeroy Mayor Dick
Seyler for the whole thing. Why
.not? He should b.e used to taking
the blame for all of this good stuff
. by now.
"'
Since It Is supposed · to get
colder, perhaps, you will be
Interested In at tending the soup
supper to begin at 4 p.m.
tomorrow, Saturday, at J)le Sutton United Methodist Cliurch:
Spons~re(j by the church trtistees. money r·atsed from the
supper will go towards repairing
the basement walls and building
a vestibule onto the ·frmit of the
church, this Is the first major
building · project the trustees
have undertaken since 1971 when
I)I!W steps . were placed at the
front of the church. By the way
the church Is loci iled on County
Road 28, five mijes ·from Racine.
And, you are Invited to attend
Saturday's soup supper which
will feature lwmema(je vegetable and potato soups, chill, hogo
dogs, sloppy joes and homemade
I
.
p e.

--Area deaths--

199Cf

APPEARING·

GATES- HAY FEEDERS

Sports briefs

'

·.· SATURDAY

TRUCKLOAD SPECIAL

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

..

MIZW4Y
TAVERN ·

10. Me Grill and Morgan led
Federal with 4 each.

Southern frosh cagers up mark to 10-3

Jacks~n

Arizo• 93, Soulhern Cal 7G
California Ill. " ' ..tllft&amp;l•n 1-1

on a 3-)'l!&amp;r C9•n.ct.
Torunlo- ..\Jf'l'e d to tr rm" wll h plk·hr r
Prank " 'lib; on a I- )'Par L'OnlnL1 .

llaiiWtb aU

A three ~tnt play by Jennifer
Taylor cut the Lancer lead to lour
with 3 minutes remaining. Trlcla
Baercameupwith a blgstealand
layup to cut the lead to two poillts
with 2: 30 remaining. But down
the stretch It was Glass hitting
lrore the foul line that was the
difference.
Glass took the games scoring
honors with 22, The Lancers
placed one other girl In double
figures, Webb with 16.
For Meigs, Taylor led the way
with 19, Trlcla· Baer continued
her steady play with 11. Once

Tonight's games:

Sot~ Damt- 1!1, Soudlern Melhoc.. l-19
Panhandle S.. It IM, Lab~k Cllrlllit. 17
Te"_.Arlln~ton el. S, F . Au Min Sl

- AJrt't&gt;d lo term~ with ft'llt"\ l' r

Nl!'ll' .Jerwy - P'lact&gt;d

~·

..........

TbuMia.t· Sportl&lt;l TranSIIctht ll'l

lee

I

DanceCiublrlllba~gra(Juatlon

on M~nday al 7 ~1 m. Those
·,"w
t b
d
attendu . . are ~ r g a c~vere
dish
. , . . - . &amp;emeet
'•
The Seaford Towilshlp Tr\IS·
tees will meet In regUlar sesslpn
. on ~ndlly at 7 p.m. at the town
ball.. . , ,
..
•
l~b'• Deulhter• w meet
The International Order of
Job"s Daughters will meet M~nday At. 7:30p.m. .at the Middle~rt Masonic Temple. Members
are to bring tbelr Watkins and
Avon orders.
DAV to meel
Tbe D
. lsabled Amerl'can Vete. rans and the Ladles Auxiliary
will meet Monday at 7 "'.m. at 124
"

This Is the year that we again
count heads In the United States
so you will be getting a census
fonn about the middle of March.
The government I~ asking your
Ten calls for assistance were
T
d b
cooperation and you are asked to
answwred
on
burs
ay Y un 11s
complete the form - 14 quesdons
of Meigs Emergency Medical
on the shortie and 59 · on the
Services.
And you may have noted. Some
longle, with tne Iongte to be filled .
At 5: 22 p.m., Pomeroy transof our state elected officials are ported Leona Krautter from
·out by · one out of every six
objecting .to paying out tbe Pomeroy Pike to Veterans Mempersons.
.
million bucks of our tax money - 9rial Hospital and at 9:20a.m.,
It might be ·easy to disregard
we pay too, you know - on the ,transpOrted Helen . Miller from
the·whole bit. However, let me
deficit · created by the Son of Mulberry Ave. to Veterans Mem•
give you a tip. II your fonn Isn't
Heaven Exhibit In Columbus. orlal Hospital.
returned then you get a personal
Now Isn't that refreshing? B1,1t
visit from a census taker. Better
Racine at 9:30 a .m. went to
they 'II pay - that's the way It Is In Letart Falls lor Lois, Bell who
just fill out the form.
politics. But do keep smiling.
was taken· to Holzer Medical
Center.
Pomeroy was called at 11:28
a.m. to Laurel Cliff for Tina
.J acobs who was taken tq the
eral nieces and nephews.
In addition to her parents, she Veterans Memorial Medl.c al
was preceded"tn death by her Plaza.
Lennie Olive €asto, 7~. of
The Middleport transfer squad
husband, Richard Rot.erts, in
VInton died unexpectedly at her
was
called to Chester Elemen:
1965; three brothers . • Hobert,
residence Thursday evening.
tary
at 11:58 a.m. lor Patsy
Paul and Clyde Hill; .' and three
Born June 2, 1915 In Ironton,
sisters, Rena George, Vesta Hill Aelker who was taken to Vetedaughter of the late Jay . and
rans Memorial Hospital.
and Esta Hill.
Lydia Matney Shively.
Middleport at 3:19p.m. went to
Services lor Mrs ..Roberts 1:1'111
She Is suivlved by her husband
South
Second Ave. lor Emma
be Monday, 10 a.m., at Ewing
VIctor Casto whom she married
Jacobs
to Veterans Memorial
Funeral Home, with Rev. Roger
, May 12, 19J:IInCattfetlsburg, Ky.
HospitaL
.
.
Grace officiating. Burial will be
' She was a 1933 graduate of
At
3:28p.m
..
Pomeroy
went
to
at Montgomer.y·Memorial Park,
' Vlnt~n. High School, a member of
Bailey
Run
lor
Keith
Phalin
to
the VInton o :E.S. 375 and at - Montgomery. W.Va., )II here Veterans Memorial Hospital.
graveside services will be held at ··
tended the VInton United MethoRutland· Fire Department was
2:30p.m. Friends may call at the
dist Church.
called
at rr.'t4 p.m. t~ a brush fire ·
funeral home f~om2 to4 and 7io9
. · Also surviving along with her
at
the
Eads resldimce on White
on Sun(jay .
husband are two daughters, Mrs.
Hill Road.
· Stephen (VIcki) Houchins of
At 5:49p.m., Rutland went to
Veterans Memorial
Middleport and Mrs. George
Route 143 for Nellle Lowe
Thursday admissions
'(Karen) Tripp of Carrellton, . Amber Warner, Pomerqy; Anne
who was taken to O'Bieness
Ga .; . four g~anddaughte~s and rl$vls, Middleport; Emma J a cMemorial Hospital.
two great-grandchildren.
Tuppers Plains at 6: 29 p.m.
obs, Middleport; James Heaton, ·
She was preceded In death by Pomeroy; Ann Sprague, Dexter.
went to Skinner Road for James
.one brother.
Heaton to Veterans ~emorlal
, 'Thursday discharges - WilFuneral services will be con• liam Carswell.
Hospital.
ducted~ 1 p.m. Sunday ;it the
McCoy-Moore Funeral . Home ·
with the Rev. C.J. Lemley
officiating. Bur!al will be In the
VInton MemQrlal Park.
. Friends may · call the funeral
horne from 7 to 9 p.m. Sa! urday . .

Swanson (2nd), Eric Heck (2nd),
McElroy
(2nd), Burl Kennedy (lsi) andAaroaSb~a. (Ial) ~

Continued from page~
Me i.us....---------.-------.,......._..

Arlcan!RA SWI' M. a..h.r '7R

Ce•teiiU')' 8S, Ar ... _·Lilde Rock '72
Nof1bwe!Utrn81. lot, Swn Hou•oR H ~

•
•

INDMDUAL WINNERS - lor lhe Meigs
Wrestklng team last weekend In tbe Nelsonville
Invitational were from left to rl~hl· David

Duee poadu&amp;IDD The Belles and Beaus Square

. . ' htaMI• bft\888
8ll'ratory
J I'
- ~~

MHS wresilers
NBA results

Meigs announeenw:a18---

~~~NEH~~g~

•1

' IWE/1!1NE.W111116E,Pf1611!K£0ff8R((tflf 1fTH.

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CUp . .
t.Ye u=e ........AD Ade 111111t.,. 1'11111 Ia Mn••·

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PONDOY n.AD.Y IENTINEL
;' .IU COURT I'I'RimT
' - .POMDOY, OR 41'769
aaeo~tos:ooP.M.

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MAD.,.... oa aaJNo AD TCh

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Pea•

6-The Olily Sentinel

Pome.ov-Midti~PCJ~t&lt; Ohio

7 fXrERIEN

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Fridly, Febru.-y 8, 1890

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,RIE JOY Of RfL

'

By The'BeDa

The Daily Sentinel.

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Friday, Febru.-y 9, 1990
Page 7

Message and Church

·"'

(row's Famill •estouranl
"FIIIIflllf ICHIIe f Fflfi Clrle•11 "

•

MEIGS nRE ·
CEN1ER, INC.

221 W. Main St., Pomeroy

John F FuUr . Mtr.

992-5432

Ph. "2·2111
PomerOy

PI:IARMACY.
We Fill Doctors

SUPPLY

1

Prescnpttons

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Horn~Ue Saws

"2-2955

ol Cotutltbjls, 0 .
104 w. Ma1n
"Hill Pomeroy

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ft.h\

-=Veterans
'b"Memorial Holpital

·m·
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SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

RIDENOUR

(I

Natt~wi~e' lns. Co.

216 S. Second
Pomeroy
992 JJ2S

.

11S1 Metnerittl Dr.
-2104

Pomerop

FiOWIII f01·1¥11Y O&lt;CAIION

16141992-2o39 or
16141992·5121

,_,.,

106 luUifnul An., Po-oy, Oft.

•

SNOUFFER
RRE &amp; SAFETY
SAlES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075

PRESCRIPTION

TRINlrY &lt;XlNGREGATIONAL CHURCH.
OJurch School 9: l5 a.m.. Worslip 5ervict&gt;
lO:l&gt;a.m Choir rehear.;al. Tuesdff!/, 6.45 p.m

992-6669

uNier dlre&lt;tlon d l.o~ Bun
' POMEROY OIURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE. C0rl'l!f Union and Mullrny. Rev
Thomas Glal McClurtt. (llS1tt. Norman Pres

271 North

Socond
llitltlltport,
Ohio

S S- Sup..' Surday School. Ul a m..
mori'Uigwors~p lO:lla m : eveningservice6
p.m.; mid-111ftk service. Wednesd~·. 7 p.m
GRACE EPIS£XJPAL OIURCH 326 E
Main st.. p"""'""'. Su !day ..rvn. Hnt:comrmuion on the ftrst Sulliay Oleat&gt;h month.
and ccmtmed with moning prayer on th('
third Su~ Mor:nlng prayer and sermon on
all """" Surdays of tlr month. OlurchSchool
and Nursery care proviiBi Coffee OOur in the
~Eli.

:.

RlWUNGS-COlTS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

Parish Hall lmrnedlaretv lolloWingtheservlco.
POMEROY OIURCH OF CHRIS"!~ 212 W

992-5141

Main St.. LEo Lash. t&gt;Van~elis1 BH:ie School
9::f)a m . Morringwrnhlp.lO:ll a m · Youth
mEEUn"' 6.W p.m.: EvEI11ng """'hiP. 1-lXl p
m. We&lt;rlesday nlghl praver meet:in2and Blbll'
stlllv 7· 00 p.m
ntE SALVATION ARMY US Butternut
Aw . Pommly. Mrs Dorn \VInmg in char~

264 South 2nd

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off

Rr 124. 3 m ues from Portland·Long Bot·
Edsel Hart, pastor Sunday SChool,
9 30 a.m.. Sunday morning preaching
10 30 a.m , Sunday evening services. 7. 30

Ek:Mieo Adams. leader 7.lJ p.m Salvation

1om

meet.lng various sp.:&gt;akers an d music sl1"d als
"nn..r.;day. 11· :Jl am to 2 p m Lades HoiN'
char~.

all women

p.m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

lnvtted; 6: l'&gt; p.m Thur.day. Corp; Cadet

tYOUJll I'Oople-Bit:iel. 7.11 p.m. Bitio
St\II:.V and Prayer meet:lng. opm to tre public
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHUROI OF
Classs

CHURCH Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrma nn. pastor. Sunday SchoollO·OO a
m .. Morning Worship. 11:00 a.m. : Wed
nesda y and Saturday Evening Services at
,7 JO p.m

CHRSI', 3.12:!6 Orlldren'sHome Road j&lt;!'.Qurrv
Road 761. 992-:1147. Vocal muSic &amp;l.nda,v Wor
stjp10a m.: BtbleShxtv na.m.. Worship 6p
m W-a,v. Bltle Stl.l)y. 7 p m Speaker.
Lanclln Hope, EYan~t

OLD DEXn:R Bli3LE OIRISTIAN
SI):L Suntlav School10.00 a.m. Youth mE:.t
lng. 7 p.m. everv We«tesda,.v.
SACRED HE.'\RT CATHOLICCHURCH

APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·

OIST CHURCH - Pastor. Rev. Carl '
Hicks. 10 mil es above Racine on Rt. 388
Su nday School 9 a .m .. worship service 10
a m Sunday evening service, 6.00 p.m.;
Prayer m eeting and Bible Study Thurs·

CHURCH. Jack Cleland past cr. A\.~by Gl~

- 161 Mulber ry A~ , P omt:'roy Ph 992·
M98. Satun:J.ay Evenln~ Mass. 5 ll p m ,
Su ndav Mass 9 :I) a.m CCD cl asscs 10 :ll
a.m. first. second and third Sundaysofl'ach
month. Daitv Mass. 8 30 a.m. Confessions
Saturday afternon. 4;5 p m

da~.

~

6:30 p.m
,
MT. OLIVE ·UNITED METHODIST -

Off'l24. behind Wilkesville. Cha r les Jones.
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m .. morning
worship, 10:30; Sunday and Thursday
eve-ning serv!ces, 7 OOp.fTI

MEIGS
COOPERATrvEPAB~H
UNlJ'ED METHODIST CHtlRC.H
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don ~reher
Rev. Frank Croloo:

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·

•
'

TOLlC FAITH - NE"\\ Lima Road nP.xt tr;.
Fort Meigs Park. Robl&gt;rt W Rich ards.
pastor Sundav servires. 10 a m. and 7 p
m : Wednesday worship. i p m

GRAHAM

UNITED METHODIST,·

Rodney Spires Sabbath School begi ns at 2

Rev. Seldon &lt;Johna•,•
ALFRED - Chu~h Schr S1·9· 30 a'.m ,
Worship, II a.m.: UMYF6 JO p.m : UMW
Third Tuesday, 7 30 p.m. CommUnion.
first Sunday (Archerl
.
CHESTER - Wonhip 9 am., Church
SchoollOa m. , BibleStudy, Thursday, 7p.
m : UMW. first Thursday, 1 p.m; Com·
munlon, fll'6t Sunday iArcherl
JOPPA - Worship 9. 30 a.m.; Church

S«VIce follOWing at 3 00 p.m . Everyone

7:30 pm. (Johnson) .

Preaching 9 · lJ a .m fir st and second Sun
da'ys of earh month; third and fo urth Sun
day e-ach month worshir, servtcesat 7.30 p,
m., Wednesday Pven ngs at 7·:1) p m .
Prayer and Bible Study

SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST. Mul·

bfrry Heights Road. Pomeroy. Past or Bob
Snyder: Sabbath SChool Superintendent.

.

.

••

·'

p.m. oo Saturday afternoon with worship

we-lcome .

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

- Slater Harrleft Warner. Supt. Sunday
'ichool 1:30 a.m.: Morning Worship 10:4.5

a.m.
POMEROY FIRST llAPTIST. East

Main St Steve Fuller. pastor Geor~ e
Skinner, Sunday School Su perintendent.
Sunday School, 9: 30 a m .; Mornln$: Wor·
s hip 10 30 a.m., Wedn esday ('veni n~
prayer and Bible studv. 7.30 p.m

FIRST SOUTHERN' BAPTIST. Po·

meroy Plkt E. Lamar O'Brvant pastor.
Jack Needs. Sunday Srhool Director. Sun·
day School. 9 ·30 am., Morning Worship.
10:45. evenin~worshlp. 7 OOp m tD S T 1
&amp; 7. 30 tE .S.T I. Wednesda ~ Prayer 5Rr·

vlet'.7.00pm ID.S.T.l &amp;7:30PM. IES

T . l; MiSsion Friends tages 2·61. Roval
Ambal53dors (boy s 38t'S 6·18 !. and Girls
In Action jages &amp;.-181 on Wf'dnesda vs 7 p .
m tD.S.T . \&amp;7 30p.m. IE ..~.T I:Tul'sdav
VlsllatlOn. 6:.ll p,m

!fAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Sal·

..
,.,.
';

.

.'
...••.•

.;

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•

.•

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.:
'•

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"•••

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Middleport

dren's Churcn u a Jn ~unday £venlng
Service 7·00 p m Wed, 6 p m Young La
dies' Auxlliarv. Wednesday. 7 p.m. Fam·
llv Wo rship.

Surday holiness ~In!&lt; 10 a m, Sunda,v
School. Hl:11 a.m. Surday School YPSM
League, memtl:n In

WHEN YOUR HOUSE OF
NEEDs YOUR HELP, OFFER IT

214 E . Main
992·5130 Pomeroy ·•

172 Nerth Socatiji lVL
Miohll-t. Ohio

leY Run Road. Rev Emmett Raws oo. paslor. Handley Dunn. supt Sundav School.
10a.m .; Sundayt&gt;venlngservl ce. 7 30p.m
: Bible teaching. 7. 30 p m Thursday

SYRACUSE MISSION. Cherry St . Sv·

racuse Mark Morrow, pastor, servi ces. 10
a.m Sunday Evening services Sunday
and Wrdnl'Sday at 6·00 p m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRL~T
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Hal&lt;')!,

tlrtt eolder; Wanda Mohler. Sundav School
Supt Sundav School 9 XI a m .; Mornlnf{
Worship 10· :VI a m ., EwrUng Worstip 7 lJ
p.m , Wednesdayprayermreting7ll p.m

MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.

Racine. Rev. James Satterfleld. pastor
Freeman WUIIams. Supt. Sunday School
9:45am.: Sunday and Wednesday even·
Ina services, 7 p.m .

MIDDLEPORT

FIRST BAPTIST

Corner Sixth and P al mt'l' James Seddon
Pa~tor . Edna Wlls m , S S. Supt • Calhy
Riggs , Asst Supt Sunday School, 9. 15 a
m .: Mornlng Worshlp.10·15a m , Sunda y
Evening service. 1 p m Prayer meetlnlit
and Blble Study Wednesday P\'£'nlng. 7 p
m.: Chlldr~' s r hoir practice. W£'dn es
day, 7 p.m.; Adult C' holr pract lre. Wed. 8
p .m .; Radio pr ~am . WMPO. Su nday .
8: 30am.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST

School10:30 a.m BlbteStudy Wednesday,
,

LONG BO'M'OM - Church School 9: 30

am.; Worship )0. 30 a.m: Blbleo Study.
Wednesday, 7:30p.m .; Communlon ·First.
Su nday of Month (Rev. Charles Eatoo)

REEDSVILLE - Church School9. 30 a.
m , Worship Service 11:00 a m
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL -

Chu rch School 9 a .m .. Worship 10 a m ,
BlbleStudv. Tuesday. 7i30p.m Commu·
nion Fi r st Sunday !Archer\ .

CENTRAL CLUSTER

Rev. Don Meadows
Rev. Wesley Tha&amp;ther
Rev. Harvey Rlndfllsh
Key. Kalhtyo RUey
Rev. Paul Marlin 1
R~v. Arthur'Crablree
Rev. Robert Steele
ASBURY i Sy racu se • - Worship 11 a .m.
; Church SC hool9 :45 a .m. : Charge Bibl e
Sr udy , Wednesday. 7·30 p m .. UMW. first
Tuesday. 1· 30 p m • Choir Rehearsal.
Wednesday 6· 30 p m tThatcherl
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m ,
Church School 10 a m . Blbl e Study, Tues·
day. 7:00 pm. , OMW. First Monday. 7:3£.
p m : UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Rehea rsal , Children's at 6: 30pm Adult rollowinR. Wednesda y CRiley )

FLATWOODS- Church &amp;hOoi.IOa m.

. Worship, 11 a .m ., Dible Study. Thurs·
day, 7 p m ; UMYF. Sunday, 6 p.m . (RI·

ley)

FOREST RUN - ~orslllp 9 a.m.;
Chu reh School 10 AM· Choir practiCE'.
Thursday , 6:.ii!p.m .• UMWihJrd Monday.
~ That c h er)
'

HEATH tMiddloportl- Church School.

9 M a m .: Morning Worship 10 30 a.m.,
Youth Group. 4 p.m ; Wednesday, Bibl e
study 6:00p.m . Cholr rehearsal 7·00 p.m.

IRindnelschl.
MINERSVILLE - Cburch School 9:00

a m , Worship ser vice 10.00 a. m .; UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p.m (Thatch«l

PEARL CHAPEL - Chur&lt;:hSchool9:00
a.m .. Worship Service 10·00 a m . (Mar·
tin)
POMEROY - Church School, 9: l5a.m

: WQrshtp 10· 30 a. m -; Choir rehearsal
Wednesday. 7:30 pm.; UMW. second
Tuesday. 7:30pm . UMYFSunday, 6p.m.
!Meadows)

ROCK SPRINGS- Cburch School, 9: 15

am .; Worship 10 a.m.; Bible Study. Wed·
nesday, 7· 30 p.m , UMYF !Senlo rsLSun·
day. 6 p.m; {Juniors ) every other Sun·

day e-wntng service, 6 p m .: Wednesday
evening service, 7 p.m .

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE l'li\ZA·
RENE. Rev. Glenn McMillan. pastor.
Mark Mats&lt;ll. Superintendent. Sunday
SC:hool9:30 a:m.; Mornlne Worship. 10:30
a m.: Evangelistic service. 6 p m ;
Prayor and Pral.., Wodosday, 7 p m.;
Yooth mftlln&amp;, 7 p.m.
IINII'BD Pllllli8YTEIIIAN IIINI8TRY
OFIIIII:IOIICOtiNTY

.... O'lltoloo ~Ur

HARRISONVII.LE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sullday: Worlhlp Servlet'S
t:OO a.m.; Cllurcb Sehoal10:15 a.m..
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN
•
luadlty Sebocl, t a.m .. Church HrVIc:e.
U:15a.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
TERIAN - Suaday Sehool, 10 a.m.;
•• Clttndt ltfVIee,10:15 a.m.
•
RUTLAND CJIURCH OF GOD, Putot,
• .J~Qmaad Cox. Suadlty SehoaiiO:OO a.m.;
lullday ~r~ ~onbiP,_Il : OO a.m. Chll·

..

Whenever a friend does you a favor, you sh9illd :
reciprocate it. Your House of Worship is the best
friend you 'II ever have, and if you have been attending
it regularly you ·must have done so because of. all the
blessings it,has brought you. If you·or any member of
your fiunily have been ill, had surgery·or lost a loved
one, you know that your clergyman .and the entire.'
congregation have been a tower of strength fo~ you.
J •
Whenever you come to a fork, in t4e ~oad where a
· · diffitult decision must be made, yow: clergyman is ·
alway5 ready to listen to your problem and give you •
the best advice that his experiep.ce. can prpvide. In ~
return for these benefits and many others, be prepared
to seJVe your House of Worship to the best of your •
ability, even if only by dialing a few phone num~
•
.You have received so much there; now it's your
tum to help.
.

,

EAST LETAJ&lt;'J -Morning Worship ,:00
am.; Church SchooiiO OOa.m: UMW first

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Roger

CHRIST. Josepll B. Hoskins. pastor Bibl e
Class. 9: JOa m .; MornlnaWorship 10l30a ~
m. , Evening Wor!.thlp. 6:30p.m. Th1.1r.sday

CHURCH, 28l.Ol Stat£&gt; Route 7, Middlepon Sunday SchoollOa .m : Sunday even·
lng service 7:30 p m ., Tuesday serVICt'.

7: 30pm.
.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.

Hft rrlsmvUle Rd. IRt. 1431 Robert E. Purtell. mlnlster; SteveStanlev. Bible School
Supt Mar lev Johnsm. Asst. Supt SUN·

Bqb Grimm. pastor Sunday Sl'hoot9· 30 a.
m.; Worship 10 .45 a .m : Sunday evening
service, 7 p.m.

10.30. A.M. and 7:30 P,M · Wednesdav Bi·
bleStudy ,7·00 p.m .

Knob. located on G:ounty Road 31. Rev.
Roger Willford , pastor Sunday · School

denour. pilstc:r. Sunday School9· 30 a m ,
worship servicE' lO ..'ll a .m ., Bible study
and worship service-. Wednesday. 1 p m

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL 570 Grant

St .. Middleport. Atrlliatf'd with Southe rn

Baptist Convention. Dav id Brvan Sr Ml·
nlster Sundav School 10 a .m. Morntn,.-:
worshlplla m. : Eveningworshlp7p m ..
Wf'dnesdav PV('n lng Bibl e st udv a nd
prayer meetlnJi!! 7 p m
,

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St.

Rt 124and Co Rd 5. Dere k Stump. peosr or.
Will iam Amber~(-"1". S S. Supli: Sundav
School9:30 a.m : MorninK WarShip 10: 30
a.m., Evenln2 worship 7 30 p m WednP.i·
da y worship 7 ao p m
i

ST

a.m.

&gt;25 N 2nd St
Middleport JamC"S E . Kcesf'l' pa st or
Sundav morning worshiP 10 a m .. Eve n
In~ st&gt;rvlcl' i p.m ; Wed ncsdav t:'vening
worship 7 p.m VisltntlonThursdav fi ' lO p
m

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH· Da\•ld

Cur1r:nan, pastor Su ndav Srhuol. 10 a.m :
wors hip srrvi rC' 11 a. m : Sundav night
worship service' i .lO p,m . Mtdwc ~k
pravcr Sl'rvJ('(' WC'dnf'Sd av ,.7 p m
WES LEYA~

tm\. Sunda~· Srhool q

gram 9 a.m each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Samuel Basye. pastc:r 'Sunday
School 9:30a .m.; Worshipservicel0. 30a .
m; Young people's service 6 p.m
Evangelistic servl«""6· 30 p m. Wednesda y
service 7 p.m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St. Mu~. W.Va. Sunday BlbleStw:ly 10
a.m.; Worship II a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday BibiPSI"dy , vocal music, 1 p.m

FAITH GOSPEl. CHIJRCH. Lon" Bot

JO am.: Mo rnl n~
\\o o r shlp 10 45 a. m Su ndaY ev€!ninR: 7.00
p.m . csumml'l' 7· .10 p m t Wedn'-'Sdav
nt ghf 7. 00 p.m . Is ummer 7· :10 p m 1 '

Wednesday servll'&lt;' 7 p.m. WMPO pre&gt;

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH

OF GOD- Gary Hines past or' Sunday
School9 30 to 10 20 a m , Worship !rvlce
10· 30 to 11 30 a.rn , Sunda;.· evenln~ ser. •
viet". 7 p m , Midweek Prayer Service.-•
Wed 7 pm

MT. OLIVE &lt;XlMMUNITY CHURCJ;I'. ·

Lawrenre Bush. past or Sundav School
9 :k) a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday even·
inR worship Service. 7' 00 pln
UNITED FAITH CHURCH. R! 7on Po·
m(!l'oyBy-Pass Rev RoPertE .Smlth.Sr.
pas roT MelVIn Drake, S . .S. Supt. Sunday "''
School9 aDam.: MorningWor!lhtptO .~.

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud·

ding Lane. Mason , •W. Va. J N'. Thacker,
past?"· Evening serviCP 7::1) p.m .: Wo·

PINEGROVEHOLII'IESSCHURCH \1
mens Ministry. Thursday. 9:30 a.m;
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7 15
Robert SearlES, S.S. Supt. Sunday &amp;hool • p.m.
9•30 a.m.: Morning Worship 10:30 a .m 1
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Sunday f'venlng se-rvice 7.:KJ p.m.; Wed·
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartlord, W. Va.
nesday service, 7 30 p m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST. Bill LUlie. Rev. Davkl McManis, paltor. Church
mile ott Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J . Watts, past'or. ,

Mld·wef'k S('fVlce, Wed , 7 p .m .

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.

Sunday Schod 9:30a.m : Jeff Patterson,
supt; Morning worship 10·:.1 a .m.: Sunday evening service. 7:30pm.; Wednesday evening Hrvlce, 7;:. p.m.

EDEN UNITED ' BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pastil'. Sunday

SChool10 a fJl·i, Gacy Reed, Lay leader.
Morning sermon, 11 a .m.; Sunday night
services· Christian Endeavor 7:~ p.m .•
Song aervtce 8 p.m . Preaching 8: 30 p.m

Mld·,..ek prayer me.tq, WednESday, 7
p.m.
.
HEMI.OCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
Prentke, puler. OtarlM Domlgan, Suadi\V School Supt. Morning Wortthlp 9:30 a.

W. Va , Rt. l, James Lewis, pastor. Worship service~&amp; t : 30 a.m : Sunday School U
a.m., EveDing worship 7· 30/.m Tu.tsday
cottage prayer meeting an Bible Study
t :SO am.: Worship service, Wednesday

7:30pm.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and •Henry Sts , Ravenswood, W.
va. '1'11• s..v. George C. Weirick, putll'.
Sunday SChoqi 9•30a.m.; Sunday worship
lla.m
CALVARY BIBI.E CHURCH,IIICIIIodon

Pomeroy Plte, County)toad ~near Flat·
woods. Rev. Blackwllid, pastor. services
on Sunday at10·:.) a .m . and 7:~ p.m with

Th=,

'

·- ---· ....

•

-~ t -

EvenlnK Worship 7 00 p.m.; Wednesdey
Prayer Service. 7:00'p.m.

--

·-

•

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Rallrmd

992-2121

St. Mason. Sunday School.10 a.m.; Morn
ing worship 11 a.m.; Evening service &amp;p
m. PraveP meeting and Bible Study Wed·
nesday 7-pm
,

FOREST RUN BAPTisT. Rev Nyle

Borden, past or Cornelius Bunch, supt
SUnday School 9· JO a.m.; Second and
rqurth Sundays worship aervicEo at 2:30 p.
m
,
-J

·MT MORIAH BAPTIST. Fourth and

- JoSl'ph B Hoskins P\1angei1Jt Sunday
BlbleStudy9 !1. m.: Worshlp, 10a.m; Sun·
day t'Venlng servtCP 6 p.m ; Wednesday
evenln~t service, 7 p.m.
,

PENTE&lt;XlSTAL ASSEMBI.Y, Racine,

Rl 124. William Hobac;k.. pastor Sunday
SchoollO a. m ; Sunday evening sertlce 1
p .m. Wednesday evenjng service 7 p.m

CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,

Supt. Sundaj: School 9: 30 a .m Mo'rnin g
Worship 10 · 30 a m. Prayer service, alt ern·
at«&gt; Sundays.

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.•

next to Fort Meigs Park. Ru,lland. Roben
Richards, pastor. Services a1 7 p.m on
Wednesdays and Sundays.
·

HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·

TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church
Rev. Earl Fields. past or Henry Eblin,
Sunday School Supt : Sunday SchoollO a
m , Morntna Worship J1 a.m , Evening
service 7· 30 p m. Wednesday evenlng.ser;
vice 7· 30 p.m

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,

Gary Holter. pastor Sunday services 9· 30
am and 7 p m , Midweek "Service. 7 ·,30p.
mThurav
r~·~

MIDD

I

·I

-

PORT PENTECOSTAL. Third

Ave Rev Clark,Baker, past or. Carl Nol·
tlnf{ham Sunday Srhool Supt Sunday
SChool 1 a.m. wnh classes for all ages.
Even in services at 6 p. m Wednesday Bi·
bll' st vat 7:30p.m. Yduth Jervlces Frl·
day a 7 JOpm.

.transfers--:~-.;....

, ColDpBe4 By: ' ,
,
~mopae BollteiD Con1o
:\ • Recorder, \Welp Coun~, Ohio
,.
- Ferrel W. Day and Patrlllla K.
1
Day,byP.O.A.pt. lots80and81.
to Jam~s W. Casey, Jr. and
:
r
Rhonda L. Casey ; Middleport
VIllage.
•
Horace Karr and Dorothy
l J(arr, 1.59 A, !o Jack cl'axton and
,
, •SheUa Claxton, Chester .
~ Evelyn B. Tliomas, parcels, to
·• Dennls E. Glaze and Merlam
GI9Z'C!, Salisbury .
,
JosephW. Davts ·andLauraM.
.. , Davis, rlght·Of·way ease~ent. to
·•. Dennis E. Glaze and Meriarn.
! Glaze, Salisbury.
•
•
'
Leta L. Goodw~nHaU, pt. tract ,
to Rebecca Ann Ward, Salisbury .
Rodney Howery and MarUyn
Howery,' parcels, to Dolphus
Burke, Jr. and Wanda Burke,
',. Colurflbla.
,_ Oris A. •Roush, Dorothy . G.
,.. 'eRoush, Orion W. Roush and Qlxte
,KatefWush,easemenl ,toG.T.E .
North Inc., Salem.
1
• L. Patro Aelker. Andy R.
', Aeiker, Pt. •Lot 13, to Harry ·S.
- ~· ).'aJ:brough .'MiddlEWort VIllage.
:. Ge~;ald'Ha.yman, af!ld, toFocle
• '.Havman, Letart .
"' Focle'Hayman, 2.87 A, to Ketth
' : Allen Hayman and Le, slle C.
'·
,,. ~Hayman. Lelart. ·
.
• . Harry R. Mozingo and Bertlna
· "· M. Mozingo aka Bertlna M.
.: Jacks, easement , Olllo Power
.. Co., Rutland.
• . Harold E , Dewhurst and June
:- Dewhurst, easeml!nt, Ohio
I
., ' Power Co. , Rutland.
,. Gl!ll
,
I!"'McQuatd and Geraldine
,
Ohl 0 p
'. '' McQuaid, easement,
ower ,
, . CoRa~~~la~~~ &amp; Servlc~ Co.' Inc.

and Syracuse Home Co. 'Iilc..
tlght:of·way, National Gas &amp; du
Corp., Meigs.
• Rutland Fue1 Co .. Inc. rlght·of·
way , NatiOJJI!I Gas &amp; 011 Corp ..
Meigs.
, ·
Glenna Davis by P .O.A., pareel to Mildred Hamm, Syracuse
VIllage. • ·
• Maggie L. Nelson, dec'd, cert.
of trans , to Arlene F . Krautter,
'·
Middleport VUlage.
• JWbertMolden, dec'd, a!fld. to
Gladys Molden, Salem.
11homas .Tucker and LOri
&gt;,T ucker, parcel. to Donald R.
Karr, , Jr. and Edrlces~ Kat;:~. '
•) Scipio. •'
.
·
Richard A. Flnlaw and . Ger·
trude : Flnlaw, easement, Ohio
Power Co., Sutton.
1Jane A. Rupe, 'easement, Ohio
Power Co ., Rutland.
Don ' Roger Smith Sr. and
Sandra K. Sl}ll\h, easement, Ohio
Power. Co., Rutland.
,
• •

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,

~I

FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 330«&gt;

Hil and Road, Pomt""rov. Tom KeUy 1 pas·
tor Dannv La mbert. s. s. Supl. Sunday
morn ing service atlO am., Sunday even
In ~ servlcl' 7· 30 p m Tuesday and.Thurs
da v Serv ice!' at 7: 30 ~m

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Rev Glendon Strood. !&gt;astor

Sunday School9· 30 a.m : Worshlp ,s,erv lce,
10 30 am . Vouth •service Sundav 6: Hip
' m Su ndav Pvening service 7:0op.m. Wed·
nesdav PraYer Meeting and Bible Studv
i. OO~m ·

·

·

NEASE SE'M'LEMENTCHURCH. Sun·

, day a flernoon servi&lt;'l'S at 2
(&gt;VOning ~er\'ices at 7. 30.

:«&gt;. ;T'hursday

F'IRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Mason, W

Va . Past or. Bill Mu rphy Sunday SchoollO
a.m ., Sundav eve nmJt 7·30 p.m. Prayer
meetini and Bibl rsiudy Wednesday, 7:30
p m Evervone welcomE'.
~UT LANIJ FREE WILL.BAPTIST. Sa·
le,n St Rt'v P a ul Taylor, past or. Sunday
SC'hoollOa m. , Sunda:vevenlng7 .oop:m;
Wednesdav Pve ninR prayer meeting 7: 00
pm
,
, •

J J.,

Mike a nd ·Cheryl Willfo rd ,
' Rutland. are announcing the
birth or their flrsJ child, a son,
Craig Austin, an Nov . 6 111
Pleasanl Valley HospitaL
The lnfanl weighed slx pounds
and one ounce.
Maternal grandparents are
. Beverl Roush and· the lale
·· wuronl "tee Roush. Maternal
great gr81!.dmother is Mary
Roush, GaUipolis. and Mr. · and
Mrs, Henry Eblin, Pomeroy.
. Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Wl11ford, Rutland
Great grandmo.ther Is Bernt~
Willford, Rutland, and Mr. and
Mrs. Emmett Lightfoot, Middle·
pori . Great great grandmother is
Mae Ltghtfool, Middleport.

'.

Q refiner
'
"b'lrth
•

.

.
L
• C I Darrln W. 'and Amy
ance P ·
Drenner, are announcing the
birth of a daughler, Jennah
Nicole on Dec 23 at Fall Brook
·
"
CDals 0'f.lct Hospital In San Diego.
11
The · lnfanl weighed seven
,pol!,nds and five ounces.
GrandparenJs are Kay and
George Willis, RObert and Carla
McClellan, and Gary and Becky
Drenner,
Palatka /
• Great grandparen~s are Betty
Sch'neeman of Palatka, and
Dwight and Eulanda Haley,
, Middleport
.
·
·
'

an

1984 Olds Cutlass Calais .... l5895

Sunreof, PB, PS, air, crulu, new tire, low mil••••· 1
OWI\IIr.

(

1984 Olds Torn~o ...•.....:... S649.5
PB, PB, air. cru111. AMIFM ltereo.' very ,11ice, oneloc_al
"

owner.

'

'

'

~

I

•r..-

t•

Auto ., PB, 'ps, runa 99011·

.

"

'

,

·

. ·

' SEE RAY RIGGS

Public N otoce

Public NCIIicl

'

30 ' bat
llong Une
o:ts::r~::l
W..t
pteperty
220~1btlteploce

.

containing
orlftL

•
~'

" :, ' ~/.;

446 4524

FEIIAUARV 9 ttvu t5

FRIDAY thru THURsDAY!

....

1 .4

.'

mmm

.

IUS SILL

huo oil \ \ looflri'.alfolll'

~••111( ' " ~~~ &gt; li&gt;1\Uf'~ iii(CI).-r ,_
b~n,tu lo •H• tlwm

The Appalachian Peace and
Justice - Network Is silonsorlng
Earth :Oay 1990. a workshop for
teachers and parents 10 be held at
Ohio Unlverslly on Fe b. 24.
:rhe, workshop wl11 be he ld from
9:30a.m to 2 p.m. in Morton Hail
and · y;Hl deal wlth the global
crisis e•and offer solullons lo
alleviate the problems.
Paul Knoop. Jr., gradual e of
Ohiio Slate Univprslty with de·
grees In dairy technology and
biology , will presem a program
caHed "A Uvfng Planet" which
looks at the,earth and how pe6ple
and ' technology are affE'ctlng the
ability of the plane! J'o support

life.' , •

lUI!

SIILLOII

M

Earth day
is Feb. 24

··

T~e ' regislrallon ·fee is S15

which Includes lunch and child
care.,

Your Hometown Bank
Hires Hometown People!
In our community, we're committed to offer
I the kind ~f ServiceS and eersonal allen•
lion you want and need . .Whe n you hank .
with us, you'll find that we're much more
than just a finanl'ial institution, we're a
hometown t'riend.
MEET DONNA~_...

Donna Schmoll hilS been em·
ployed with Farmers Bank lor
12 year•. She Is supervloor of
the Bookkeeping Department.
Donna Is married to Rober! 0.
Schmoll Jr. Donna has a
Bachelor's De1ree In Com·
merelal Science In Business
Management. l&gt;he Is a 19118
Kraduatc of the Ohio Sch110l of
Hankla.-. She Is ll(!llvely In·
volved and setves as VIce Pre·
sldent.of Eilucatlon ol the HUis
of Ohio Chapter American In·
stllutt&gt; ol BankinR. Donna Is a
member of the Trinity Congre~atlonal Church In Pomeroy.
She also enjoys ralslnR old En·
t~ll•h Sheep Dogs.

Ho'nor .list named
The .names of area resldenls
listed on ·lhe Mountain Stal e
College president's lis I and honor
roH have been announced.· All of
the · honorees are full-time stu·
jlents l,n':"llher lh~ day or even lng
school\· • .
,
·
! Included on the presldenl's 11s1
where sl udenJs had to ea rn a
grade polnl average of 3.5 or
ahove were Carol Clem. Cool·
\'il le. executive secr!'larlal wllh
wuod processlng, Stacy Hysell,
Pc.meroy, hlgher accountong
m o~ nag'rment ;
and Angela
Da mew,olid, r Reeds vtile. ,Iravel
an d tourism wllh accounting.
!.t" ted on the honor roll where
1he requirement is for a 3.0 or
higher grade point average was
Janelle Hysell, Pomeroy, in
medlcal ,transcrlpllonlst :

Tlmes·Sentinel. The farm pic·
lured was that of the Rex
Shemitield fllmlly near Salem
· Center. The mystery farm cqn·
lest Is sponsored by the Meigs
County Soil and Waler Conserva·.
" '&gt;n District.
I

91$-4200

distOPiineclion. lhreat or dlscon·
necllon.. or less than a 20 day
supp ly of bulk · fuel. Regular
HEAP is a non·emergency heat ·
ing asslslance which ~elps defray a porlion of healing ex·
penses for eligible households.
Applications must be made In
person, but Inqui ries are ac·
cepted b~' phone at 446,()611 In
Galli polis. 367·7341. 992·6629 In
Cllesh1re. or 992·56061n Pomeroy.

SPRING VALHY CINEMA

""We're Committed To Our
Hometown... "
The Shlnl11g Light 111 Bt~tkl•g

IFB J

Farmers
· Bank

&lt;:;oun~y

The Orange Township Trus·
lees, at' thelr organizational
· meeting held recently. set the
,; ' l'fgular meeting dates for trus·
rees me_e:llngs on the first Mon;·,day of#a~h -month al7:30p.IT!. If
-.a meeting, falls on a holiday, It
wiU be held the following night

Public Notice

time have received their enlille·
men! for thls heating season
The Emergency HEAP pro·
gram Is still In progress and
appUcaltoos for II ca n be ac·
cepteil through March 30. Ass ist·
a nee from II Is also Iimlted 10
once per heatlng season which
began Oct 3().
Emergency HEAP 1s d~s1gned
to res olve a heating crisis of an
e mergency nature crea1ed b~

llN

;1983.Ford Crown Vidoria ••.•• S369~
Fully equlpe&lt;!. good condition.
. ...
1980 'ford F-150 •••.••.••••.••·.~ Sl 595 No w,inner .
302, PB: PS .
,
. ""'
No one correctly id!'ntifled I he
Meigs
farJTl
1977 Ford T-Bird ... ~.~.••••••••••• $695. which appeared mysterv
In the Sunday

•1

CHURCH, Silver Rtd~e. Duan~ Syden·
srrlck,er, pastor Sunday Sc hoOl 19 am.;
Worship Setvl ce. lO a m . Sunday t&gt;venlng
servlre, 7.00 p .m. Wednesd ay nlKht Bible
~ttudy 7:00p.m:
·•

will

RevolvbJ&amp; ltwH
,
• '
.
Built by Ricba~ Fo8ter m Wlltoa,
Conn.,tiJeRevolvlrJ&amp;HOUielsacln:,u·
lar-lhaped boUle wltla rooms lbaped
I!Q ~ af1~ pie. Tbe boule _.. 111
a 3-toil baD bearilJiaad rewl- by
the = r of a 1~.borser,u:r motor,
exp Ins T1Je Kldl Worl Alrnanac.lt
was completed Ia IJ8~.
;.

Orange Trustees
,; set meeting dat'es

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT

ARE YOU LISTENING
'
How many limes .can you remember someon£' saying, " How
much better off I would have been, I! I had only listened?"
'
In the Book of Revelatklil c~apters 1·3; There are outstanding
things revealed about JeSus Christ and His Church.
The Spirit speaks to the Seven Churches of Asia Minor.
.,
God· Is faithfully warning, and also promising Eternal
Rewards to th?Se who OVI!I' come the evil of this world.
.
Again. and again In the Scripture He reacl1es out In Love to
help lhose In need. Even when we have problems and difficulties
In fulflllna His Goals !or our lives.
.
.
To the Churches He War!IS, "I know your good and bad points .
He complimented the good and straitly warns o! the bad
tendencies to evil. He also recomends solutions, and courSf!S·tO
be taken for Success. In each case for those who overcome, God
promises a reward.
•
'
Please note: There Is always an appeal to those who
Hear; Anyone, Everyone, you are given permission to hear.
Note: "He that hath an ear to heir let him hear, wh·at The Spirit
Salth lo the Church~ ,"
How lona has It been-since you ~lstened or- evep attended a .
church service?
•
·
' · ·
,.
The Church 'Is a VItal Part oft~ community. When have
pattlelpatecJ, or- alven of your ,falents or lncdme, to heiR. tl)e

Willford birth

~ •
·
·
' ·.Dav id Fet tif, a,seventh grader .,
.at ·Me•gs Junior High • School. Imide .(he horior. roll 1 ~\' lhe last
• ·siX. weeks' gradlng pertod . H1s
e was not Included on an ·
nam
.
h
.earher hstlng ot students w ~
made a " B" or above In all their
S\l,b !ects to make l"e honor roll.

. Country ~uslc Night wUI be
'• ~-lield al the Lottrldge Community
CenterSalurday !ron\ 7p.m. to12
mldnlghl . All bands are Invited to
,, participate. Refreshments Will
. be sold and there wiU be a 50 cenl
donation for admission. The
·center. Is located on Athens
County Road 53 South, five miles
west of Coolville. The public is
.Invited to aljend .

past or. Sunday School 9.30 a.m, church
serv~ 7 30 p m., youth fellowshtp 6: 30 p
m .. BibiP sfudy , Thursday, 7:30pm

CRAIG WILLFORD

There are only 10 days lefl to
apply for regular HEAP during
the 1989-!10 wlll.ter· heating sea·
son. accord I!Ill to the Community
Action Agency. ,.·
The deadline has been ex·
tended from Jan. 31 to Feb. 23 by
Gov: RlchaJd Celeste and those
.who have not applied are encour·
aged to do so Immediately.
However, those who have al·
ready applied or have been
assisted for thls wlnle r should not
reapply as assistance can only be
1 granted once. It was· noted.
'!\II
The application perlod for
I Regular HE,'I.P encompasses the
later partofl9891Sept.11hrough
Dec. 31) plus January to Feb. 23.
1990. Therefor~. accordlng to the
agency. those assisted during I he
last part of 1989 to the current

&lt;

•

Country music
,night scheduled

Ml IE1Jort Brother Chuck •McPhersoo.
, tor. Sunday Schoo! 10 a.m., Sunday
evening s('rvices at 7 p m and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m.

•

•

Ori honor roll

.

'

E LESIA FELLOWSHIP,I28MIIISI.

10 rklJJ left to apply .for HEAP

' terdly.
second to Mary Eas
I~ was noted that Chuek and
Nlta Yost's home suslalned
heavy 'dam'a ge In a recent fire.
It•was also reported thai Anna
HIUdore has Improved In hea•th
and has returned home !rom the
hospllaf Gene Yostls a pat1e11t at
PleaSlfnt · Valley HospllaJ . and
Lucille Morris Is confined lo
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Following the meetlng, re·
freshments were 'served. ,

t:--~Property

Sermonette

p.m.
•. AIRVIEW BIBI.E CHURCH. Letart.

Millo

.

~

School 9 30 a.m : Sundav morning servJce, 11 a .m:; Sunday tvenlng service.
7: 30p.m. Wfdnesda~ prayer meeting, 7: 30

m...

. ----·

HOLINESS

School 9· 30 am, Morning worship, 10 30
a .m. ; Sunday evening seorvlce- 7.00 p.m

Llovd Savre, Supt. Sunday School 9· 30 a
m : m ornlnR wonhip 10:30 a m. Sunday
eve-nlnl{ Sf'r"VIC(' 7 p.m.
RAClNE FIRST BAPTIST. Stev~
Deaver. Pastor. Mike Swiger. Sunday
School S.,.pt , . Sunday School 9 30 a m :
Morning worship 10:40 a.m.. Sunday
evenlnp: worship 7·30 p.m; Wednesday
evenlllR Bible study 7· :1) p.m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHUR&lt;;:If,
BurUngham. Ray Laudermi1t, pastcr, Robert Colan, asslstam past&lt;r Sunda,v School
10 a.m : wcrshlp 1 p m.: Wednesday. 6 p.m.
youth meeting: Wed. 7p.m. churchsfi'VIces.

School tO am. Sunday evening 7.00p.m .;

,BIBLE

Tillis, pastor Sonny Hudsoo. supt. Sunday

Roy W Carter pastor Sundav Mornln~
• Worship. 10:00 a m., Sunday Bible School
6:00 p m., Wednesday Btblt' Study 7 00 p
m
RUTLANOBlBL.EMETHODIST.Amos

REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Ave .. Mlddlepon Sunday

'

VICTOR\1 BAPTIST.

CHURCH of Mlddlc&gt;port. In&lt;'.. 711 Pearl St ,
Rev Iva n Mvers. pastor. ROJ:t(&gt;r Man ll'V
Sr .. Siindav Srhool Supt Sundav School
9. 30 a m. : ' Morning Wnrshlp 10.1:1() a m ..
Evt:'nlnR Worship i·30 p m Wt'dn esdav
('\'C'nlng Blblf' st udv. pra vPr and p raiSl'
service. i · :W p.m.

RENE. Rf'\·: John Van('(&gt;, pa~tor, Ora
Bass. Chairmari of rhc Boar d of Christian
Life. Sundav &amp;;hop! 9;30 a m ., Morning
WOrshl 10· 30 am. ; Evangelica l sl'fvlet'
7:00pm ; WNtnl'SdaV service, 7 OOp.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, O.x·
t('r, Woody Call . past or Services Sundav
10 a.m. and 7 p m. Wednesda y 7 p m

pastor. Sreve Little. S S. Supt Sunday
School10 a.m. ; Morning worslp. 11 a.m.;
Sunday tvening worship 7. 30 p. m . Praye r
meeting and Bible study. Wednesday, 7: 30
p.m. ; Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m .

PAUl. LUTHERAN CHURCH

Corn£'r S~camorc a nd &amp;&gt;cond Sis, P o
m erov The Rrv L.a u ra A l:A?ach past or
Sundav School9. 45 a m Chu l'('h serv iN•1l

RUTLAND CHURCH Of' CHRIST.

o,....

--

Located on 0 J Whlfe Road of Hl~hw ;:~ v
160. Pat Hcnsoo paM or Supdav Schoollh·
a m 'Classes fo r ull ages JulflorChurch 11
a m , Mo rnlnf;? worship 11 a m Adult
Cho ir practl&lt;'&lt;' 6 p m Sunday . Young Peo·
piP's Chlldr£'n's Chu rt'h an d Adult Blbl£'
St ud y. Wedn esday at 7·30 p.m

Sunday even{ng worship 7:00p.m. , Wed
ne!day evening BlbleSrudy 7 00 p.m.

Tom Runyon. pastor. Sunday Schod 9· 30
a .m : Larr:v Havnes, S . S Supt. Mornln~
worship 10· 30 a.m

.OYESVILLE COMI\IUNITY CHURCH.

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

The ' Racine Graqe No. 2606
1
met lot, Its February meeting at
; • the )lome of Earl and Geraldine
Crou.
. Cross, master, conducled the
meellng In which Pal!)' Dyer, a
.... dele;ate tP. tlleOhlo State Grange
'lCoriVentlon. gave a report on that
,,.mat~er, Maxine Dyer. Patty's
mofher. was a JUe&amp; t.
The baking contest ·'Black·
berry Cake" was held with first
' -place goJng to Emma Adams and
j

!

Established 1913

Jr. pasror Mrs Ervin Baumgardner,
Sundav School Supt . Sunday School9: 30a
m.: Worship Servl~. 10:45 a.m.

SC hool !+ 30 a .m. mornlnJ!! worship a nd ,
childre-n s cllurr-h 10 30 am : evc nin f!
preochlnJ!! servirc first threl' Sundavs-:
1. 3CJ p rn : Special sc.-rvlcC' four1h Sundav
I!'VPnin ll'. 7 30 p m · WE'dnesdav Praver
Meetln~. Bible St udy and Youth Fell ow·
s hip. 7 30 p m.

9; 30 a.m .. Morning Worship 10:45 a m :

WHITE 'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvllleRD REv Phillip Rl·

" /Jil{n i h · nn ;l Sprd('l' A lw~vt"

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION al Bald

10.30a.m.
BRADBURY· CHURCH OF CHRIST.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

=:il'-..1 Main S1 , MiddlEPOrt Rev Gilbert Craig,

..

OLD BETHEL FREE WILL 'BAPTIST ,

BlbleStudv 6:30p.m ,
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pomerov·

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

"
Mldtll..,ort, Oh)o 41171D
(1141992· illl7 -' (I~II ·OO&gt;KSI

CARLETON INTERDENOMINAT!ON·
AL CHURCH. Klngsoorv Road. lle\'

Clyde W Henderson, pastor. Sund.iy
School9. 30 a m , Ralph carl. Supt. Even
lng worship 7:00 p m Prayt'r meeting,
Wednesdav 7.00p.m.

Grove The Rev. Laura 'A. Leach. pastor
Chureh sen•lc~ q. 30 a J!t.; SupdaY School

83 MMI StrMI

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev, Earl

CHRISTIAN UNION. Therm Durham ,
.pastor Sunday service. 9. 30 a.m.; even-,
lng ·service 7·00 p m Prayer meeting.
Wednesdav, 7.00.pm

BILL QUICKEl

106 MUlberry lvt.

l\\\;CI S••(JI"!Boor.,.

Shuler. pastor Worship SPrvice, 9 ~a m .
Sunday Schod 10:XI am BlbleStudv and
prayer servlre Thu.rsdav , 7 30 p.m

10 30 a.m.
HOBSON GHURCH OF CHRIST IN

ST. JOHN LUTIIERAN CHURCH Pine

992-2975

land·Ractnr Road. Mikt&gt; Duhl , past or.
Janice Dann«, church school director
Church school9.30a m.; MOrning worship
10 30 am; WedneSdav eV~p ing praver
services.. 7· 30 p m.
•

Spring, minister; Starling Massar and 01·
lver Swain. Sunday School Supts P rl'a c h·
ID!il: 9:30 a .m each Sundav: Sundav School

DAY: Bible School 9· 30 a.m : Worship

204 Condor St.
f'-roy, 011.

REORGANIZED ' CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LA'M'ERDAY SAINTS. Port

Tuesday•7•l) P~mr lGrace-1 '
RACINE -; Cburch SC'hool.10a.m. ~ Wor·
s hip U a.m , UMW fourth Monday at 7·~ p
m .: Men's Prayer Breakfast. Wednf5day, 8
a .m (Grac£&gt;1.

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

-

.. .....GRAVELY .TRACTOR SALES

dav,7:00p.m.

Sunday Sehool9:30a.m. Bible Study, Wod·
nESday. 7::ll p.m. · '
SPIRITUAL FAI'I'H F.'ELLOWSHIP,
State Route 338, Antiquity. Rev. A.l . Stewart, putcr. Sunday ~ervkes , toa.m. and
7
p.m.; Tuesday, 7 p.m.
m .: SundaySchooll0:30a.m. : Eveninrser·
SALE!M CENTER- Church School9: 15
MIDDI$PORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
vice, 7:00pm.
a.m. ; Morning Worship 10.15 a. m .
NESS CIIURCH, Inc.. 75 Pearl St. Rev
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Past&lt;r: Joe N ' Ivan
Isteele)
~yen,actlnlpuiCI': Ro&amp;S'Manley,
Sayre,
Sunday
School9:
4~
a.m
..
Evon
Ina
SNOWVILLE - Morning Worship, 9•00
Sr.,
Sunday
School Superintendent. Sun·
6:30p.m.; Prayer Meetlag, 6·30 day School 9:30
a.m
a.m.; Mornlna W«ahlp
. ; Church School10:00 a.m.
. (Martin) worship
p.m. Wednooday.
a.m.; ....,.Ina wonlttp 7:30 p.m.;
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF 10:311
Wedn...!lf l'\'OniDa Bible ltudy, prayer
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
CHRIST. Robert Fosler, paator; Howard and
PI'IIH HI'VIce.7:311 p.m.
Rev. lleton.,..lloker
Caldwell, Suporlalendent: Church ~&lt;hoal
CHURCH
or JESUS CHRIST APOSRev.Ra 1 ...
9 a.m., Worahlp ~!~'Vleet: 4~ a.m . and 6: :Ml
TOLIC - 'VaJtZUdt Ud Wll'll Rd. Elder
Rev. Carl Hlc:b
p.m. ~1~me • I come.
~t..-. Sunctay School.
APPLE GROVE - Church Sctlioal 9:00
CH · R CHURCH OF THE NAZA· J ......
lp.m.;
D:ill"iiWlltlllp llorvl.y,T:
30
a.m.: MornlngWorshlplO:OOa m.: Bible ( RENE. Rev. ~bert Grate. put..-.
1:llllp.m .
Study Sunday 7:00p.m. ; Prayer m..tlnF, Doupa Blloell, supt, Sunday Sehoul 9:30
Clt,J.V
Rarr~
7 00 p.m. Thursday IHickJ)
'
a.nt.; W-p IOI'Yice.lla.m. andlp m.
atiiiVDieRDIIII.
•VltlorROu... J*tor;
BETHANY - Wortthlp 9 a.m.: Church Sunday. Wedneodly, 7 p.m. Prayer mftl• CUniCII
fall..
Seltool Supt.; Su..
SchoollO a.m.: Bible Study Wedn-y 10 1...
clly
Se"'!&lt;i
:IIOo.m.;
morniJIJwll'lftlp,'
ll
• .m .; Dorcu Women's Fl'llGWINp Wecl- . LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
Lm.; S
IIYeniDJ MI'Vi&lt;e 7:JO p.m.
n..tay II • m. (BokS'I .
CHURCH. Wlllllm WDIIama, putor; flo.
Prayer.t
• Wetll..tay, 7:30p.m.
CARMEL- Church School9:30 a.m.;
bert E. Bartoo. DltwctCI' of Chrlltlan Etfu.
SYRACUSE
CHUIICH OF GOD.
Worlhlp, 10:15 a.m. Secoad aad Fourtll cation; s._ Eblin, asalalattt. Su-y n.,..Pen._llfll.
Wonltlp
SuiMiay
Sundayo; Fellowtthlp tllnDW with' Butlat llehoal t:30 am.; Mo,Naa wonblp 10:30' m a.m.; Iunday SettoGIIloorvloe
Ewnlna
third Thurldoy, 6:311 p.m (IIU•l .
a.m.; Te0111 In Actloo, I p.m.; Ewnl.. wonblp oorvi&lt;O 7:110 p.m.o.m.
Weotn.,.ay
MORNING STAR - Cluol'Ch Sehool9:15 Wonblp, 7:00 p.m. Choir practice I p.m.
a.m.; Worttltlp 10:30 a.m .. BIIJI• StUdy, Sunday. Wedn..tay ...nina pro)'fl' and proyer meellnl 7:110 p.m.
7·:11 p.m. l&amp;ok.,.).
Bible at~
MT. IIERIION UNri'ED BRETHREN
DEX I
CHURCH OF CHRilJT,
IN CHRIS'!' CHURCH, J..oeattd 1D Texu
s
N - Church Sehoul, t: 30 a.m.;
MorftiiiJ Worship 10: Da .m.•llratand Udrd Roaer Wats&lt;11, minister; NorrnaJt Will,
C~ ott Ct Rt. 82. Reo. H-.
Sundays; Fellowlhlp d.,.n.,. With Carmel
SUpt. SUndllf School 9:30 a.m.; Worahlp
Sanders, putor. Jell Holter, lay IMdll';
third Thursday, 6:30.p.ln.
.
Ed Rou.ttlt, Stlnday Sebool Supt. Sunday
'Strvl.. 10:30 a.m. Bible study, Wedn.,..
.. IBalt•)
.
'

5th and Main. AI Hartsoo. minister;
Richard. DuBose. Asscriate Pastor, Mik e
Gerla ch. Sunday School Superintendent • day, 6 p.m. IRih:yl
RUTLAND- Cburch &amp;hool, 10 a m.;
· Blblt School9: iJ a m ., Morning Worship
Worship, 11 a .m.; UMW First Monday .
10· 30 a.m Evening Worship 1·00 p m .
...- 7· 30 p."'· (Crabt ree)
Wednesd&lt;Jy 7·00 p.m . Prayer meeting

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE I'IAZ
ARENE. PASTOR Rev Lloyd D. Grimm.
Jr .. post«. J. .n Klmt!6, Sunday School Superlntondrnt. Sunday School 9:11 a.m ,
Mornlnl Worahlp Sorvlco, 10:30 a.m , Sun·

'

'
POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

1-;
R
at:tne
Grange meeting held
I
.

Your Community Owned Bank
.

MEMBER FDIC

992·2136
221 WEST SECOND
POMEROY, OHIO

915·3315
STATE IOUTE 7
TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

I

~nesday' s Foodland

Ad Should Have Read:

"

' Pub II!: N o&amp;ice

--t

Labels For

nlng 100 rodl north of
corn. of . .clion
No. 21 a-oe 110
rode .,d I Dnko; lhenoe Eut
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deg. Wut 11· rocll and 23
Nnk~; thenoe lOuth I deg.
Eeot 21 rodl ond 121'1 llnko;
thence South 19 dog . Wut
19 rodo 1nd II llnko; then ..
South 7 dog . Wut H rodo
18 Rnko: lhlnoe South

EDUCATION
PROGRAM

Marcal
Facial Tissues

Wuti-Md
South 11

•••

'

3

along wdh proof of DlrtJctpahon '"the Labels ror

£dUCIItOn Program L•m•! 0/"'t ptf !ChOO!
Nl- of SI;IICI(It&gt; _ _ _....:.__

_,,.,
.,,c-,•"'~,------

BOXES
I '

FOI

yw

Chun:b S~ve?

-

'

Do you care what Eternity holds !or you and your family? Put
away, the evn from you and begin to listen to the Voice of God .
Look Into hla Word, Read lt, Study It, Hear It expounded. Com
on, Get Involved In the Right Way, or The Way Of, Rlaht . .
Remember God Promises EI~JII!l Success, to thoae who Listen
and work Hla Plan for th~lr Lives. He has established These
People,·wlll be better o!! In the End.
.- Rev• . Glen McClunJ, Pulor, Pomeroy Church of TI!.e
Nuarene. •

-·-"''.-··'

..

f

Schools, ~

Eilttr F•r ...-1 Drawing ·
ht PIIZE-S.AIO l1ll'als
2nd PIIZE-25,000 Laltels

.

.3rtl PIIZE-10,110 Llllah
4th PIIZE-5,000 laWs

�Public Nllllce
IContinu..t tram Pogo 7)
thMce South 12 rodo;
by Volume 311. poge 79. in ti!Mc. North-torlv olong
the ~~~~ County Rooord- tho • • - to the piece of betr' o office ond logolly dt· ginning. containing 1 acre.
acrit.d a :
Save and ucept the co•
Situate in tho NW'.-1 of underlying tho . - . tract•
S.ctlon 1, TIIN, R14W, Rut- of lend; Except oloo obout 1
Townohip,
Meigs acre from firat at.c~ve de·
lend
County, Ohio, end being • ocrlbtd troct; uld I ocro lyPlrt of the Iandi recorded to ing North of end ldjecontto
Corl L. Wolle in Deed Vo- tho rood . running Eutorly
lume 306. Pogo 731, ond through llid Iondo. uid 1
more particullrly described acre Ming bounded on the
WMt by Iondo lotoly con·
utollowo:
1. BEGINNING oi 1 point voyod io Fronk M. Whllioy by
in the centerline of the JoMph E. Y(/ung; on t!le
H.;ppy
Hollow Township So ..h by uid road running
RO.d No. T174N, said point Eooterfv through uid Iondo
bearingS 89 dog. 55' 32" E ond bounded on tho E01torly
1 diottnce of 6621ootlrom.l lide J:IY a road running
Corner Poot (found) ot tho Northerly through tho 11mo.
NW corner of tM nid Sec· end on iht Northerly lide by
tlon 1; thence S 81 dog. 52' 1 line oublltontillly porlllol
E wi!h the South lino of R~ to •id rOad so running Easbin Phalin ID .V. 305, Pg. terly and being for en"'!gh
773) I. 74 Aero Porcol poo- North.of 10id road to encl&lt;loo
ling an Iron Rod !found) at toget"'r w~h other ~id
30 · feet, ~en continuing boundory line 1 aero of lend .
268.83 f -. in all 288.83
EXCEPT 10.34 acrllconfeet to an Iron Rod (Jet);
voyed to Dovid 0 . Poteroon
2. Thence S 32 dog. 21 ' W and Undo Poteroon by deed
with an Old Fence Une doted Morch 23, 1979, ol!d
282.63 feet .t o :an Iron Rod recorded In Volume 21~.
(Mt) ;
,
·,,
Pogo 948. Molgo County
3 . Thence N 76 dog. 33' W Dood Rooordl.
passing an Iron Pin (set) at
6 . Trail.-, being 1 19BO,
15.76 f"' et tho NE corner I 4x70 Vogue Mobile homo.
of tho Ohio Power Co. 0 .82 Sorill No. 2791. Model No.
Acre Parcel ID. V. 244, Pg. 70148320, end rool ootote
1041), · thence continuing titled to Fred PriddY end Borpaning o Copperwold Rod bora l. Priddy, reforencod tl&gt;
(set) in Concrete at 200.15 Marion County Deed Vofeet, then continuing 15 feet lume 477, Page 309. end
In all 230.90 feet to tho cen- described as:
ter-line of the taid Townahip
Situate ln .Marion County,
Road;
Florida, viz:
·
4 . Thence N. 20 dog . 46'
The Wost 214.67 teet of
with the center-line of the tho Eoit 489. &amp;7 foot of
10ld lownohip Rood 223.64 South Y1 of NE 1A of NW 'A.
foot to tho pillet of BEGIN· Section 16, Townohip 14
containing 1 .38 South, llongo 24 E111.
NING,
acres. mora or less. ,
VEHICLES:.4 . Lend ond building in
• · 1955 Ford Thunderbird!
Rutland. Ohio, titlt'd to Bar· Florid• title # 1 +533268;
boro J . Priddy. referenced by VIN P6FH124889, titled In
Volume 304, page 577, in the name of Margaret W.
the Meigs County Record·

er' 1 Office end !ogolly do·
scribed as :
Situated in the Village of

Ruttond. County of Meigs
and State of Ohio :
Situate in Section 8, Town

8 , Range 14, !legining 47Y•
feet South of the Northeast
corner of Fraction 7 of taid

township; thence East 9
rodl; thence South 27'1•
teet; thence West 9 rods;
thence Nonh 21111 feet con·

raining 15 equere rods, more

or te...

.

5. Any interut in 49acres
of lend titled to Geoffroy
Wird to which Mr. Ward will
transfer such property to
Fred Priddy, which. property
i• referenced to Volume
30&amp;, Page 726, in the Meigs
County Recorder' a Office
.and logolly doocribod eo:
SitUIItad in the Townahip
of Rutland, County of Meigs

and State of ' Ohio end
bounded and described ..
follows:
Situated in the Township
of Rutland. County of Meigs

and State of Ohio ·and
bounded and described aa
fOIIOWil

Being part of Fraction No.
3, Town No. 6 and Range

No . I 4 of tho Ohio Company's Purchaae. and begin·
ning 66 rodo Eolt ~nd 12
rod• South of tho North-t
corner
of Hid Fraction;
thence East 12 rods and 19
llnko; thence North 6 rodl;
thence North 74 dogrEut 37 rods to a point 8
rods North of the Fraction
line; thence East 15 rod&amp; and
16 linko; thence South 79 .6
rods; thence Eaat 6 rod1;
thence South 5B.6 rod11orlo
the center of 1
thence
rods to Ianda
Jolhn ' 5ton;· thence :North
~dr. to a 3 acre lot;
thence North 66.6 dogroto
Wool 3 I rodo and 22 llnko;
,· thence Wnt 42 .6 roda;
thence South 46 degr111
W01t 19.6 rodl; thence
North 4 roda and 18 links;
thence North 47 de~r­
Eaat 6 roda and 4 hnka;
thence North 4 degr111 Ea1t
6 rods end 1 link; thence
North 3.5 dogr- W01t 6
rods · and 1 link; thence
North one halt degr~ West
8 rodo and olink; North 22.6
degrees East .6 rodi and 1
link: thence
North 48
dour- Eut 8 rodo ond 1
link:
then co North 61.6
degrees Eeat 6 rods and 1
link;
thence North 60
dogr- Eoll 3 rodl end I 6
llnko; thence
north 57
dogr-· Eut 6 rodo end 1
link: thence North 67.26
degr- Ea1t 12 rods and 2
linko; · thence North 2B
·tlogr- E11t 4 rods end 8
llnko;
thence North 26
dogr- Eolt 6 rodo end 1
thence North 47.6
link;
degr. . Eaat 6 rods and 1
link; thence North 60.6
dogr- Eolt 6 rodo ond 1
link to the place of begin·
ning, containing 159 acres,
more or teas.
Allo, the following land ·
ldjoining the above and
.-.uated in the aame Town·
ship end
Range
a'n d
bounded ao loUowo: Bogin·
ning 31 rodo end 9 linko Eoll
of the Nortttw..t corner of
uid Fraction No. 3: thence
Eut 18 r~ end 18 links;
Ad&amp;

Kuchar.

b. 1963 Chwrolet Cor·
vette convertible, Ohio Title
# 630282986.
Seriol #.
308676107669. titled in
the name of Max Hill.
c . 1933 Vehicle, Tille #
77370430, title in the name
of Harry A. Le8. ,
D . 1988 Codllltc
Broughom. VIN
·
DW61YXJ9732316,
purchued on March 16,
I 98B. by Fro~ Priddy.
· E. 1982 Codlllac Stullle
F. 191!8 Horley Davldoon
Motorcycle, Ohio Title #
270424340, Seriol #
1HD1 BKLI7JY015241 .
·. G. 1969 Chwrolot
Motor Home. Ohio Title
#6302110440, Serial
#PS169J8207B8, titled ID
Fred M. Priddy. ·
H. 1986 Ford 161
Choosis Cob, Ohio Title
#270424796, Seriol
#1 FDKF3710GNA62132,
tranaferred to undeaignated
purch•er on back of title
b'fi title owner S.F .S. Truck
Sales, Inc.
I. i 973 Superior Motor
Home. Ohio Title
#530283449, Serial
#22H22002374, titled in
tho nome of Frod Priddy.
J . 1967 Ford Cob end
Chuois Truck, Ohio Title
#530276962. Sorlol
#F80FUA89562,titlodin
tho nome of Frod Priddy.
K. 1951 TroUer MO Low
Boy. Ohio Title
#53027~235, Sorlol
#4 190209894, titled in
the nome of Fred Priddy.
L. 1979 Chevrolot Dump
Truck, Ohio Title
#630271934. Serial
#C18BD9V130370. titled
in the name ·o f Fred Priddy.
M. 1978 Dodge Cob end
Chooail. Ohio Trtlo
#630285583. Serial
#D31 BFBSI 13020. titled
in the name of Fred Priddy.
N. 1964 Chevrolet
Trucl&lt;, Ohio Title
#630262637, Serial
#4C144FI 10391 , titled in
the name of Dennis Will,
0 . 1963 Ford Feloon,
Ohio rrtlo #630265336,
Serial #3H27F229839,
titled in the name of Dean
Whittington.
P. 1987 Horley Davidoon
Motorcycle, Ohio Tnl1
#270419176. Serial
#I HD1 CAN21 HY130411 ,
titled in the name of Eric
Priddy .
0 . 1987 Honda

T. 1971 Ford a._,
Ohio Title 111130211116,
Serlo! IIU15HLFE427ll.
titled In tho nome of Fred
Priddy.
U. 1115 Hondo
Motorcycle, WMt Vlrglnio
Thlt #Ng27027, VIN
IHF8C1428FA104746.
tho nllmt of Povld
1,,_

LAFF·A-OAY

72 Trucllt for ....

41 Hou. . for Rtnl

_
~-

Qllowy

111 ,..,..,

_, ~t=--=
:0!.-==-

c.....-

~-.,

ta--.1

'

.

1 - Chooy SID. 4 ""'' 4 .....
AC. ' - - . IIIII , _
fOOII. fMM, I14-74NM.

.\

\

old,

ond

-·

-

I'IMion- ....

~~

QII.

.

"'""' '1
..-·r~.·--­
_,.,, - h - · · COrpll I

gor XLT,

'

-..n.

with

.. AC, dtrk -

I

Houtthold

Goods

•'

........ i1.....-..o747.

Tratler,
ret. ' -

'

••c.oond tall/mo. ph•

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

7a-t.

Lost&amp; Found

..

.......-! . ....-. --

'

_ , "'"""""' typo dog.

.... ~... --It~.

six 'ayes,' ~it, and

''

7

2 bod,_,. troller lor 'i:l~a
~(lalo)lor-,
1-

rPI in~ tomorrow
so yott 1·an droj,

llltll'llillJ!

· ........ Oln ..... with

42 "'«~bile HoniH.
for Rent

'

" That·~
lllt('

27. lltcond

"4-446-2Ml. .

lllrthdoy -

51

I

Molhtr-

l'upflito.
7old. Holt dtr
Collllo,
...
aorehophord. W01nod IIIII good
nol-. 114-742-Z. or lt4-

~tnUiry

.....~
.~
. t.-. .

-

Ooltl.,..,
.... le 1:00,
l'trry 1044111lw
,.,..
0111

0"'-ty· puflfliol, I - ~.IOW?Ntal.

--__........,...
~---IKL.4=

..

,\

Fnoo .........
........ blloll, 112 loll,
....,..,.1 .. 114411-4m.

c-..

lbr Mobllt HomO lor ronl, In
• ..,._, lt4-3f1.2!171.

dPild.' "

Qulllo
Prt 11140 qulllo. Any·condblon.
Coal! Pilei. Coli II 4.ft2-Ma7 or
114-IN-.2411.
Wllnlod To Buv: Plno Poet, Opr

ERWIN
CONSTRUCTION

985-3365 .

a,..,

4p.m.

WANTED
Foster-Care Worker: Provide Long-term residential services to 1 or 2 Meigs County
adults who have mental retardation/devel ·
opmental dill8bilities (M.S.P.R.) Must be·
willing and able to have your home. (no traU·
era) meet Ohio Department MR/DD licensure requirements .

.

GUN SHOOT

USED APPUANCES

RACINE
FIRE DEPT,

IIASH!R$-$100 up
DRY!RS-$69 up
REFRIGERATORS-1100 up
RANGIS-Gas-EIIC.-$125 up
FREEZEI$-$125 op

lashan

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

:

6:30 P.M.

Please send all inquiries, resumes, etc;. to
c/o Meigs County Board of MR/DD: 1310
Carleton
P. 0. Box 307. Syracuse.
Ohio

Focllory thoko .

-12 Go..

Now l.omtion:
161 North Second
Middloport, Ohle 45760

SALE-S &amp; SERVICE

· W. Carry Fl•hlng Suppli•

Your Phone
Billa Here

llniNESS I'IIONE
"2-6550
PIIONE

11 ·

''

POMEIOY, OH.

304-ee3-8811 or
304-428·72411

f
...__"'.....,..._

....

*SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL
*LIGHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

.....;&amp;_ ..,~--

...~..-,.. _ _

Do

7C2-3011
•Tire Salsa
•Front End
Alignment
•Oil Change &amp; Lube
•Breke Work

MAIIII ST., IUILAND
•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOW~ IN
I~SUI,ATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

.... ._ ....

"Free E111mlll•"

PH. 949~2101
or Its. 949·2160
NO SUtiDl Y CAUS

4-16-16-1111

317-0U1.
T~r tor aman pickup truck. 5
~P roto lllltr. John Dooro dreg
typo plowo. 304-i8Z·323t.

31 Hotnea tor sate
2t2S llrch Av.., 4 bedroom,

TrM
&amp;
Stump
A1mov1l
MIIOn.c:l oek &amp; hickory, uh,

flnt.t.cl 1111...,....., 2 car
garage, •PPNII 1 d 174,800 •
-rllloo ~}lOO, lor op-

llrewood, and mulch, S50 pickup lood.l14-4*--·
Wedding trio: wltlll _gold, ring

pol-11-118-4214.

"'3

3yr old, 2br, llrgollvlng, dining

Mt for Ala. $121. NegOtlab...

oroo, kitchen ( lltlh,
· ac,.,
Wrtp chain
oround
.......
Fourth
link,
,.,. .
In prd, =hooll, IIIUmtble
loen, • .
doWn, ., 4-3170t1t.
Appt:a1. 12 acrn, 3 bedroom
ronch In COIMIIry. FrM · IJII.
Prlood In mid IIO'o. II 4-742-

114-44f-6211 .
Wove,n

Block, brick, aw•r olpee. wtn~
- · llnltlo, ojC. Clouclt Wlnltro, Aio Orondo, OH eon 114245-1121 .
UTILITY BLDO. SPECIAL: Z7l131'
wllh 1txl' Jllrogo I -. . •
vice door. ..eel ereot:M. IRON
·HORSE ILDGS.II4-3:12·1741.

-llul 3br brick, 4ml. from
,_, on St. Rl. t4t . Nice 1111

992-2196

ll'wn,,l14 441 .... ..,.lme.

OUI of hlah wllor. ExooJIMI
condition. Dn IOx23ll lat. Aloo
lnoludtd In ale: 2
compltx, rontod 11 $300. month.
Contoct lt4-1112-Wt tor .,..

""""mont

-

PH. 949-2101 . ..
or Res. 949-216o· ', -;
Dar ar Night
NO SUJfDA Y CAUS

'"

4-16-16-Hn

Roger Hysell
Garage ···
Rt.

124,

.•-••J Oltlo

'

FURNACE .

'·

FURNACE
FUINACE

&lt;"I!

AUTO , TRUCK .
REPAIR .

PART:L~':.~~~r~E

Alto Trllt•lulo1 .

KEN'S APPUANCE ·;;
SEIVICE

PH. 992·5682·
or 992-7121
4-25 -tfn

GAS OR EL

;
,,

RIC

992-5335 or 915-3561 . .. ;
Acron ,,.. PHt Dfflw ,c.

217 E. S.C. P-ey '
·

V13/'lt tin

i
t·'

---===::;~1~:::::::::~
..,
tDOZER ..."··
SITEWORKc~::~

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES

DUMP TRUCK

RACINE .;~GUN CLUB ~:·:
GUN. SHOOT .,•
EVElY SUNDAY "'

Sand-Stone-Dirt

Starts at 1:00' P.M.

(614) 667-3271

Fectory Choklld

Grcm A.

12

Geuge Only

-~

raferencaa,

cltlnlng,

30W71-27U.

•

IEin wor111 lixootltnl Peyl AI-ttmldo Prod..lt 11 Homo. Coli
for lntonnotlon. 1104 141 0170
Ext.313I~BundlyJ
HELP WANTED Slvoral lflt.
p11on1 oportloro notdod. No
oxporlonco neco-ry. N to loki on1tr11 llvor lht phoril.
Tomparory worll, dly or tYtnlna
lhilll ovollobll.. Guorontteil
aiory piUI lncentl- pold
dolly. Avorogo $5. to $7. per
•PIIIV lmmolllllly LoWe'•
llolorlnnlloom311.
Heir Slyllll Nlodod, Solory i
Cornml•loni. Pold Holldoyo,
llonogoro 1contt ProterNd.
114-441-3313.
Holr Sfyllot nttdtd lor growing
Ilion,
g_,llllod
-ry.
lullllmt( Pl!rl;4_~m!1 • como arc:wHh uo 1 1 - 2 .
lmmodlllo oponlna lor Hair
Strfltl. Prollrlb!Y With lllnogor
I.IConM. A - lri .......,.. lhior
1uua~ono,__~- s . 8ocond, 111c1diopM, ""·
llelgo
Anlrnol Wellore
Attli1l
· lluol hovo Nhlclt ond willing to wor11
llnlblt houri. Calltl4-11112or 114-112-1427 tor further In-

n":::.1 ·

Poulll'o Dlr c.ro Center.
Slllo, ottoidlblt, c h - . 11-F
5 o.m. • 5:30 p.m. AGIO 2\1-10.
lltloro, oftor ochool: ~no
114 Ul 1224.
OU.IIIy Child Core In my homo,
5 doyo • Cjluri Stonoo. lf4-441-0315.

w-.

W1H Bobylft In my homo, on
Bullville Aood, Exporion&lt;:l and
Rot0roncM, It4 4~1 - ·
.........
h
, 11
Wlllbe.,- my
'"
...,. ·
~nc•
Aliollobll. 4-317-0114.
Will do bo
lng In mlo.~o,
inllntl up o 4 yooro,
752144.

- -·V

CIOV'T SEIZED
HOlliES FIIOII$1
IIJ.rtpllr! .... 111 doll~
-~~~ nw nollllblt. l'or
lnhi ... t-7111-IIWUII -.e.
HI71A

32

Mobile Homes
f
Salt
Or

1211 -~
$3,1100.

:z:7'; _.. -- ,

~

One bedroom, upotalro. Nice.
402 112· --tourlh lt., Point
P l -. 114-0IZ-aut.

71-43C111.
••1y

-od
14x70 ~ 1 rmont. co.,... •
lrklgo I • - Illy. S.re CA,
gu holt, lmlll outbulldl~ I
pon:h. Exc. Cond . .,.._. 50
ro 446-0tll.
1101 t4x7V wft~ llid. A - . In
K.C. lchoolt. t12,ggg, on lllnd
controct. Evonglno · 114-7~22387
·
tlt4 lloon, 1Zit'IO, good
cond, wllh 12xtl odd on br.
Furnlthtd, - ' " " ' · lt4-.114-311 IIIII. .
117211ohuftz t2dl W/tlpondo,
CIA, buR*, o!lllllllncoo,
:104-57&amp;;30M 0&lt;

Buy or .... Riverine Anllquoo,
tiM E, lloln SII'MI, P -.
Hoare: U.T.W. tO:OO o.m. to e :oo
p.m., Su= 1:00 to 8:00 p.m.
814-et2·
.
Top C..h pold. Old tumftwt
cubOIIrde
qulne,
ortantll,
'JMintl,...; toya, or •ntlre nlllta
c111 colleCt 304-525-3275, ar

304-123-AII.

54
TUio -

....- . Primo
beth. Slooplng
, _ lhoro
both. One tlliplng room with
prlvolo beth. Atuon11blt. lt4iln-11191l.

MlscellaniOUI
Merchandise

I. L'HOLLON
TRUCKING
CIESlEI, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422
1-1 1-IO· tfn

24 bulb wolfo tonnlng bod,
$2100 1 :12 b!lll -~~ lonnlna
bod, $3,000, or olllr. 114'
311!-0274.

liner tnlri.d, 114-367·7701.

Groom end Supply Shop-Pot
Groornlna. All brtlda. Alfotylo~ .
..... POl F - · Doollr. Jullt
Wtbb. Cl11114-441~23t.

•Mobile Home

'

Part•

, •Mobile Home
I
Reritel1
•Lot Rental•

!

~ ·9-·7479

4t.33lllertllef

, •••,.,,ow.

1·12-'11-tfn

l
•

. Buying Hours;

7:30-8:00
Mon. thru Fri.
7 :30-4:00

--

Downspouts
Qutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2161

2·1·'!10-1 •o.

1510 afl•5:00 PM.

1MB

Town

Cllryolor

end

Counlry, red, front wheal drive,

47,000 mlloo, A-1 cond, M,400.
304.UZ-2114.

1111 CultoN VI, lotdocl, 3045711-e3311 1111' l:gg PM.
till Nlooon Pick-up, 11c. cond,
tm Chevy v.n, t9112 11trcury
comtt. tt&lt;l-.245-1114 olllr 4p.m.

•*··

114 311 IDU.

Serv1ces

1117 lroc.Z, t owno' lilnod port

Home

81

Improvements
BASEMENT .
WATERPROOI'INO
Unoondltl0n1l lllallme gu1,.,..

lM. Local reflrencee fumllhM .
FrM Hllmllll . Coli Collect 1•
114-237-0418, dly or night.
Rogerw

8111m11d

Wolorproollng.
Painting, l,_arlor 1nd 1xtet1or,
trw ...1,...., 304-675-~111.
Ron't Clllmnoy S-p II•
Dorionco cltonlng and relining.
Wo koop tho bur- •
not your homo. 304-m.

=·

Ron'• TV 'Sorvlce, opoclollzlna

In ZMfth ateo Hrvlclng mOiif
othlr brend1. HOUM calle, 1110

-304-671-2311
· - -Ohlll- '~~... wv

2454.
Rolory or coblt tool drlllrig. ·

MoM Wllll8 comp...lld 111M :Z.·
:M"l.c:._
and MrY•,

Dovll
Sew-VIc
-..
G1oro- er.H Ad. P1rt1, sup.
plloo, pickup, and deiiYir)'. 114-

4441-0214.

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
C.rt•'• Plumbing

and Hilling
Fourth ond Plno
Glllipollo, Ohio
lt4-441-31U

!uti I...,. ion. llook i. suvor,.••·
tre · WIH IIIIo ,.-, Or

.12,000. lt4-441-e7111.

1111 C""' OT, rod-aroy
Interior, auto, cwiee conlrol,
• - topo, v-a, M.ZOO. 304IU-3301.

=-

.
servtces
. .... ,,..~ .'llt ...
8 ustness
.:t ....:.....· ...

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

..,'

i
,
GOYERN!IENT SEIZED-

tr0111 •100.

c-tiM.

f ''('1
'

Butlntu
Building

~tori~~.

Chovyo,

MIICtdle
Surpluo.

1o1oe tor ••• lll•lnn•
. . . _ _ - t1-.t107.

~rina Enlllltlons

I.OWEST PIICES

IIGIIIST CIUAUTY
FIR LOCAI.IIUVDY
I'OME~Y AND IIDDIIPOif'S ONlY
LOCAU YOWNED fiZZl SHOP.

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
992-2221

liSA M,

luH,

-liM

Dill ,_. CuunMer' Pn fue,
t'ul .... ....... IIIII lint,
oood dollu•r ....... " .... 122

01

35 LDW&amp;

_,....,

tm ~ 11o1 bod 111
. . . 01
Good truck. . . . .

,.........

1
I:~S:T~A;R;Tl;R;·~·~~~~~~~T~E~R~N=AT~OII~··
PI:ZU

Sutn

'• ~ '): \, \ 1

11 Farm Equlpmtnl·

a

ICor 1 . : 0H LolA

1-ll·'oo-ttn
ETC.

Guttera

t177 Ford LTD. 4 dr. In oxctlltnl
ltoutllul, woll llmlly cor. $17110. t14-11112-13t5
from 4-7 -kdlyo.
1179 Flol X-19 $500. 304-175cond~lon.

t117 Chovy S-10 plc~-up. 4 CJI.
4 opoj., :lt,OOO . - . $4,UO.

-::=lon=•nd=lni=•:•:,_:·==:JL'~n-;~Ugot:od=lht=o:tto:~:n~g:
. =~ llklat.
t117, t4x7V Skyline s,.,_
3 '*!~2. bttho,
:

POMEROY, OHIO: 'Rt. 7 . S .R. 143
ALIANY, OHIO: Rt. 50. S.R. 143
HENDERSON. WV.: R1. 31 Adj. to Sldero Equipment
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY: B o.m.-7 p.m. 7 Doyo
' ALBANY: 10 e.m.-5 p.m. I Oovo. Cloo..t ·~~~~~~c&gt;n.l
HENDER$0N: 10 o.rn.-5 p.m. II Dovo. CIOo..tl
PAYING AS OF TODAY. JAN . 30, 1990
111 Coppe~ 700 par lb.:
Cl . .n Dry Aluminum Cent. 38C per lb.
' WE BUY ALL NON FEIIAOUI ICAAI', IATTEIIIES,

•u• ,.,t..

NEW -1•111

hardtop. 283 - • glldt. HOG. tvtnlnp, M~Rockwood Foldown. Ukl
hardtop. 350, 3 opood. $750. tNI
AM, Jteepl I. Awnl~ and IX•
8t4-742·2710.
lrol included. $1150. 814-74219118 Ford Goluy 500, 3110 2710.
malar, good 1hlpe, &amp;1,000 or For Solo: Mocor HOmo, 24ft,
t_rodo lor plck-vp.I14-381-1184Z.- 11n Dodgl, tufty oqulppod,
1970 vw· Compor. Vtry- g - QIMrltor, eleiiMi I . Call ifter
ap.m, lt4-288-ta10.
cond~lon. SBOO. Coli 114-1121171. .

AIIO, 11163 Chevy NOvo 2 door

5:00p.m.

OffiiiS I LOCAftOitS TO SRYI YOU.K.

PH. 992·35•1'

•ooFtlfG

All.fll 01-t• • .._ bulll~n,
opere lire, 2-:tOgol. goa ltnkl, .
ltvollng ltciiL 11W4:1-5a40 ·

, Til-COUNTY IECYCUNG

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

.. MOilLE
HOME PAll

1M2 Cotchmon Motor - . . ·
Exc. cond, &amp;1....._1175, 114- .
4441-1288.
1M4 lholtt 21-112 1., Room

B - ·- . r t i - Ex1. B-tOtH.

W. Ya.Chltlllna,lnc.

Haw.rtiLWrlt...

1968 Chavalla Mtllbu. 2 door

1117 Chtvroltl ZZ4. PI, P~::~
condftlon. 114-742-2171 after

Opponunlty
.
IN011CEi
.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CD. 11111, tzxeo two -orn IH
rocommtndo lhot you do lltCirlc hDml con - 2
- - wHh pooplt you-· out J1on Hill lid, HtrHftr.
ond NOT to Mnd 1110118'(. oon, with -trim, 11,710. 304through tho 111111 until you hovt 1711-ttt3.

ooilfroJ

71 Autos for Ssla

tltt, oN ..., aun-root,

9-i-U,tfn· . ~

CHIPWOOD
WANTED

COUITIY

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Mount air conditioner, antiWIN,

bloodiM:I Choc. Polnl Slam• ..

Killen, 12wkl. old, Wormed I

1m Mobllt Homo. t4x70. tur·
. -. I.Mtlod In Hyltll Run.
$4200. et4-HZ-114I.

Bualness

TransportatiOn

56 Pets for sate
1MO Chntllo. 4 · -· omllm
AKC Cocker Sponlti pupo, buff Cllltlll pltytr. M$0. II 4·112·
end whhe, ahOia 1nd wDRMd, · :111::_:1:..
.
$150. ooch, 304-576..2223.
tilt Codllloc S.vlllt. Good
AKC Roglottrod Slborlln Huoky condMion. .CAll 114-742·Idly, llon.frl.l 514-112-5N5
puPI tor Nit lt4-IIUG73.
·
evenlnge and week.,.a
Dnlgonwynd eon..., Konnol.
.
2d ._...
PorWI.In,
Slomol&lt;i
end 1112 DodgO Arlto, r, '""'i;il
Hlmoloyon kln.no. a- atud 4CYmll1., gogocid$!100 ::".a~~~ h
HrY~. ,,......._3844 etter 7 mllM '
,
. .
p.m:
,. tll3 Ford Eecortollck lhlft, 2dr,
Fllh T•nk, 2413 Jack10n Ave. rune 6 k)oka aood lnlkle, &amp; out.
Point PloiNnt, 304-175-2013; 10 $1500.114·241-11451.
gal 101 up $14.119 and 10 aol 1114 Ford . IEico!l Sltllon
complttt$43.25.
.
w.gon. eon 514-192·7415.
For Solo: Vory · Gonllo Full . fM4 llonto Corio, :104-575-7181.

:=..bldg.

21

Wt.at si1'8W far ulll, :104-875-

5724.

-=-=-==-=:-::

poinlmtnl.

'~

far ute. Will do

Building
SupplieD

:mo.

PAT HILL FOlD

rua•

WNvlng, 8l4•tfZ•:IOIO,

•

IOillfil•:ss-·· '

·---~-

WantBd to

Tanks.

nAt IHsordtl• Prices"

Oh.

1-15-'!JO.tlft

CASE WAGEIS: lltsponslble lor homo care clilllt a . .:
...... , _ •d lllllllit... - - - Alll!lly lo ldllltlly
IIIIIIIMdwll.f. .ltl
6-1 ...... llltdttlto-Me.a.
' .. Monroe.
..... llollle, "'"'· ....... •d
Coullllts.
or I_,~ Wlrin wllll Clll- IIIMIIIIUptri111.. llrcqy JRIIIrtd.
IIRJIIIATIOII MD ASSISTMCE SCI£81- 2 PGIIIIons 111IIOftllllle lllr prw:t:uwnlly • ....._ c11tttt lllenlls
•d-itllllr
.......dCIII_.,... _ _ _
UCI/IIId social warlilrs or ~11"•111111 lnOIIIIdet Ill ~nlty
serviCII pni4!Dd. lA In NIMIIIIItld with .,..,._
ras•~ot~s Mlllfllu...llllallnll15. . ._ •d IIIIWY,...
. . . . . . IIIUII N ...-m.tl Fttn.J 11. 1110.
Send

PATRICK BLOSSER,
AUCTIO.EER

3rtl Str11t, Racine,

SALES and
SERVICE

OHIO PALLET
COMPANY

FOR THE RURAL ELDERLY
Pos~ioM •• mlleble in ellaritlll filled ArteA&amp;taey on Alina
to dtvelop a coordinated colllltllnlty cnsy. . tor !lie elderly.
This stile funded projtc1-11 Ollidspi!ot prCI(rOIIIorioordilllled nnl servias for Otdlr Olliolns.
HOME CARE DIRECTOR: Directsprpp11s wHh raponslblllty
for prop~~~ poliey. provid• itllllonsend ~let procur•
m•t. fiscal system end community c•osysltins dtvtlopmlllt. Admlnislrtlil't experl•ca iltltdictid certllltd h0111o
htahh or human strYica orpnizltlotl. 'Advanced llf&amp;rH in
nursina. health ca-udminislrttion 01 rllllld lilld prll~rrld.
Dtmonslrtted uperience mer bo sullstlllttd lor some tduclliollll requlrem•ts.
1
OPERATIONS IMAGER: Rllponsibltlor compui.r inlormtlion systems. eli lilt billinaond pro¥id• peymttrt systtms. B.
A. in eccountina. businas or rtllled. Req1lred t~owltd1e of
IS DOX tm~lronm•tend micro computer baled n11W01b.

•s

18

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES .,

949-2493

· LOW GUDE OAI

BE PART OF A NEW COMMUNITY CARE SYSTEM

150

=-,....,.....;,..,.......,,.......,...,.-

BISSELL
BUILDERS

TOP SOIL
FOR SALE
RUTUND TIRE

DEUYEIED TO

. I

Will hive
plus
pieces of oak. walnut,
cherry. mlhopny, PGr
plar, primitives. plus
quilts, stan• jars, pic·
lures, &amp;tasmre,lintns.
toys, tools, plus much
more.

Gas

SubmeralbMI water well pump
and air tank ~me wiring and
fhUnga. Good condiUon . I14-

Real Estate

Help WlintBd

AVON ' I All Aron I Shirley
WAirTEII Llconood
8pollro, 30W75-142t.
Kanawha River, dinner ·
AVON - All • . _ Clll llorliyn - · 12 hr ohlll, 4 to 5 doyo por
- . hoooltollrotlon, opply P.
w---·2145.
0. a- 7b4, Croufane, WV.
21381 or call :104-778-3025. ·
-~
·
eou-lor
·
IO
pnwkll Cooi-ng, odUCIIIIon,
prnonllllont, ••· In on out ·
Situation
DOIItnl -1!11- QuoiiiiMIIouo: .
WantBd
lf,cMkw''a ~; a.,_ r 1
dogrw protomd. lxporloneo
• doilrod. Send by Wll do bolyo~ll"' In "lY homo•
Z/23110 to: F.A.C.T.S. Rl. 2 .,!Di lion. lhru F~. Diyo only. Coli
~- B-1, OH 45814. 1111'111, tt4-HUIGII. ·

Wt can r~ir and rt·
cor.i radeators and
hlattr cares. Wt can
also acid boil and rad
'"' radiators. We also
r1p11ir

........ t 100 •• 2221.

Employment Servrces

Four bldroom home. 1 112 blllh.

.
EXCAVATING
&amp; TRUCKING

WANTED

SAW LOGS
S160 n.o':-'

For more informati.o n please contact Mrs.
Myra Bolden by February 12, 1990, from
9-6. at 1-800-282-4163, ext. 2667.

bq,WV.

la-Od FN!!II Ptlt Dffleo

Stock Porto for
Homlilto, Weedeller.
Ttcumtlh. Brltgo •
8trotton.
·

1-1·19-1 mo.

I

SUN., FEB. 11,

992-5335 or 915·3561

anginea

·

POIIDOY 0.0 '

PUIMIING &amp; HEAnNG

ATTENTION OHIO WOMEN
D
OTHER MINORITIES
Hocking Technical College is currently re·
cruiting Ohio women and other minorities,
for a specially dflaigned cooperati.v e between the United States Dept. of Agriculture/Forest Service and HTC . This is a two
year progrem with paid practicums, tuition
financial essistance and guaranteed placement upon completion of the program. Applies ntl must demonstrate an interest in
the outdoors, natural retaurcea, and the
environment. Successful candidates will
be treined to be Forest Service , Technicians.

COLLECTIBLE
AUCTION

liN'S ..APPUANCE
SERVICE

PARTS AND SERVICE .
For Moot 2 and 4-cyclo

ROSES~

Contact:
Rhonda dailey, R.N., B.S.N . ,
Director of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital ·
116 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, OH. 46769
(6141 992-2104, ExtBn9ion 2' 3

VERY LARGE
ANTIQUE &amp;

MICRO OVENS-$79 up

L-lttl atv. ., L.....,.
In Mllhlleport, Oh.

--~~~·

prtoe
......
- . 11~7241 oftorlor
!Jp.m.

&amp;a.m. to

tb/30/'19111A

Immediate openings are available for
registered nurses to work in the Spacial
Care Unit and the Operating Room. Sala,Y commensurate with experience.
r Excellent fringe benefits.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Only

Stridctly

REGISTERED NURSES .

S . 1983 Chevrolet
Fleetoido Pickup, Ohio lilla
#530291421, Serial
#2GCEK14HOD1163117.
tr1naferred on beck by Jim
Cobb Chov-Dido-Cod. , Inc.
to purchooor Highllne Motor•.

luildlng

901AYWADAJm

DAVE'S
SMAU ENGINl
IIPAIR

11......a~1117

Eotlbllthtd Corry oull doll lor
~·, all oqulpmofll, In tlock. lnCRIGI"I ' glmt room, f11,&amp;oo,

Yendlntl
RoUtt
- ....
'
IEity. tlokn
tiiO _
, ,..,,

usiness:s ·e rvices

M . Priddy.

_

end.,___
be,....,
.. with

ertv.

#&gt;270427899.
R. 1967 AMC Rombler,
Ohio Title #530282791.
Serial U7KM77C126866.
titled in the name of Eric

--

.,.

Public

I;:.;:;::;::;:;;:::=:;

1.8 mile from
Ave. on old St.
Mary's Pi~. Parkers·

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY,

Nadce.

w-•·

Located
Emerson

Sad at forty!

NOTICE TO IIDDERS
CHILD SERVICES
AUTO LEASE
MEIGS COUNTY
DEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
8ealtd bldo will be ••
otivtd,by the Meigo County
lotrd of Cornmloolonort In
- r offtc. loclled In tho
CounMuM, ' - n d l ' - o y , Ohio 417U until
1 2 - on tho :not dtv of
Fobruory. 1990. and ot I :411
p.m. _,ed by the Clork of
aid loord ond - d oloud
for the l-Ing of o Von fof
--P~iiCN'Oti~:--j the Chil- Borvlce Divllion of tht Mllgo County
Deportment of Human Ser-

Public

II!•:··

Blossers
Auction House ·

IUIJ!n

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Ftbnuory II, 1990. in
tho MeiDl County ProCourt. C..o No. 2111122.
Richerd GUkey, P. 0 . Box
101 . Clifton. Wool Vlrdinlo
2&amp;237. appo)jjr~ 1:...
cutor of tho .,,.,. of John
Stohl. docelted. leta of
40482 Lourll Cliff Rood.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
Robert E. Buck.
Proboto Judge
Lone K. Nt~tllrood, Clerk
121 I , 18, 23; 3tc

Public

10:

Motorcycle, Ohio Title

8

Public Notice

ORDINANCE
2lhll of NcMUor.
NO. 1223-80
Cfllmloll ......... '
~10 the..._.. , .
An-or.-1o Amlnd
~,;p... •• ....,._
"""" to be Plll'dltted •
....iaftlof0rd. 1204-U
in 1 h t c -.
-ldod by the ............
lelt-bylhoCourt
of ........
1lono. lpaolflcotlont lind lnCouncil of the VII... of ~. Olllo in Coote no.•
.... 10 b l - . moy be
Middleport.'Ohlo oolollowo: JICV211 011 tho dooUt of . •
obtained It the ciffJGe of tho
-he. I. n..t 1ht following llid Court. end 1ht ollleGI ;
Clerk of th8 Meiga County
line '-o In S.C. I of Drd.
dllmMd for rollo( of
~.. .Pomorov.
1204-. . le htrlllv ornendod 1wlhloh ......,. It to hN- •
Ohio.
Sold loard of Commis- to oo - • :
1ht 11en of plolntltrt:(
Ohio
Md
rnongege , _ . . , ufl0"1ht
liot_, - - tho rloht to Aut Serial
lormllltlot to accopt · ' - " luportnfollowing doocrlbtd rMI • • '
titled 1n the name of Jam•
•ndont
tl.ll per hour 1110, to wit :
roloct porto or oil of onv
H. Starcher. ·
.
1.00 por hour
Thl following .... - t • .
oil bldo.
·
·w. 1979 Storcrolt
Thll- o - - l o her- altutted In the COunty of
Mory E. Hobotm.-. Clerk
MorcrviiOr. Ohip Tille
Me1111 County 8otrll
ollv declerodto be ' " ' - - Mtigo, s - of Ohio. 111d in •
Mercruta•. Ohio Title
goncy In thtt e ciiiM-ont pay tht Vllloge of Mldcloport.
of Commia•n••
#WII302964, Borial
2. 9. Ztc
ICIIo il - e d far lmmtdl- bounded end doecrlbtd •
#STRE31131178F9.
eto u-oln thole two pool- follow a: 33 feel frontlrlll on •
vice..
·
Motor #6212433, titled in
Public Notice
tlono.
·
&amp;ocond &amp;trMt of the Vlhge u
Sptclfl...lona lor Mid
PUBLIC NOTICE
the name of Roger lee
he. Iii. Thit Drdinonot of Middleport. being ..,.
Von
mey
be
oblllntd
from
Notice Ia hereby glvon that
Atkino.
aholl tetoe off..,. end be In of Lot No.
ORDINANCE
tho nogulllr mOIIIngo of tho the Clerk of tho Board of
• S. Equi!y value in • J .D .
lorco
from
end
eft.,
Jon.
22.
purch•ed
by L. C. Devil •
Meigo County CommioolonNO. 1224-90
County Boord of
450 E Craw.., Dozer •nd •
1110. ·
tram
Jennie Hoyo~, C h - e
••
between
t"e
hour~
of
An Ordinenoo to lotoblloh
Rotordotion / Oevli·
J .D. 310 C loader.
Pooo..t the 22nd 'dey of Gilger Md Ello Geiger,
8 :acl A,M. end 4 :30 P.M.
Sowogt R - for
Tho United Stottl of DRmlnlll Diublllt!eo wUI be Mondey through Friday .
Jonuory,
1910.
11m 0 being tho • - .
Domlfto' o end 8i.obwoy.
America horolly glv01 notice hold on tho MCond Mondty
Attoot:
Jon
P.
Buck,
Citr!&lt;
quorttr of uld Lot No. 110.
The Commiuion•• are
Be lt. ordained by the
of itl intention to dllpoM Of of eoch month. beginning 11 bound
Dowev M. Horton. Sold one-fourth beginning .!
by
Ftdtrollow
which
Council
of
tho
Villogo
of
tho forfeited proponlto in 7:00 p.m. MOIIingo will bo prohibita controctlng tram
P-idont of Council at the north- co"* of ~such • manner 11 the United hold ot the Molgo County an •tabliatwnent they or • Micldlepor1, 01119 eo followo: 12) 2, I, 2tc
tho Cronz lot running parol- '
8oc. I. Thll Sow,e rotoe
Stet• Attt;lfntv Gonorol Boord of MR'/DD offlcoo famMy member may have •
Ill
with tho ..me •bout 18 ~
tor PDmlno'• and ubwlly .
may direct. Any peroon hov- locoted 11 1310 Cerleton flnenc!al inter•t in.
'-':
thlllce Eoet 33 feel; ~­
ohall
bo
•
toll-•:
. or clolming alogll Inter- Strtel In Syracuoo, D/lio. i
thane. _ , obout II foot
The Commlotlonoro rto·
For
tho
period
Jon.
1,
Notice
of
Special
meet.l
in any of the uid properorve· tho right tcr reject ony 1989thruAuguot31 , 1189. 1--~;bjiCjNc;;tii:;'"­ to &amp;ocond 8trwt; thtnot •
muot. within thirty 130! lngo will be given in ac,.,r·
along S.C:Ond 8ti'Mt In end
ell bldo end / or occept
of tho final publlcotic!n donee with tho RuiN of th~ tho boot bid for tho intended •50 per month lor Domlnoo I
1 oouth-rly direction
end
tiiO
per
month
for
Sub·
of thi1 notice, Or within · Ohio Department of Mental purpo11.
olong 8ocond Strtel 33 foot
w,.y,
thirty 1301 doyo of .octuol Rottwdllion I Devtlopmentoll
·to Cronz lot. the piece of be'
Mary E. Hobotttttr, Clerk
Beginning
Sept.
1
,
1989
Dlatbilhltl
arid
tho
Ohio
Ro;
receipt of this
notice.
ginning.
Mel111 County Boord and continuing untl auch
;
whichever it earli•. petition viaed Code.
All oftheabovenamedde- ....~.
of Commlotlonero time • this ordlnMce 11
All
meetings
are
open
to
tho Dlotrlct Court. c/ o Offenct.nt1
are r~ulred to an· .~1
121
2,
9.
2tc
emended.
the
rote
oholl
be
·
fico of tho Clerk. Room 260, tho public.
•
Within
-ty-eighl .
$65
per
month
lor
Domlnoo
Boord
of
Meigo
County
85 Morconi Boulevord. Coldey• alter 1111 publloet.,n, . •
1nd til per month. for SubMR/DD
umbua. Ohio 4321&amp;, for a
Plolntiff . which ohllll be pubJiehtd,&lt;
Wiy .
Leo Wedemeyer,
hearing to adlu~cate the
once 1 week for aix COMHU· ":'
---::P:-u":'bl":'i~c~N::-ot-:-:i-ce---1
Bee.
II.
Thll
poymfor
Superintendent
validity of hio ollogod interllvt
or they might be "
both
Subwoy
end
Domlno'o
12)
9.
11c
oot in tho property. Tho petidenied o hoorlngln thi1 coeo: . ·
1
•-•ge
oorvlco
·
oiMIII
be
tion ahall be in conformity
LERt~ER. SAMPSON • .;_
m..to monthly: by the propNOTICE TO BIDDERS
with tho provillono of 21 U. 11
Help WantBd
IIDTHFUSS '.
erty
ownoor,
William
HeptonPURCHASE OF
A' Legal Proleo~lonol
S.C . §863 In 13) and oholl be
I~SURANCE
signed by tho potitionar
8ec. Ill . Thot 'thia ordiMEIGS COUNTY
LICENSED DIETICIAN .
under penalty of perjury end
Att~rneya :::;r:.-~~C: ~·
nance is h•eby declared to
DEPARTMENT
OF
11112, 19, 211:
lholllot forth tho noture end
Wlnlld to cOOtdinate a Mabe
an
emercjeney,
in
thlt
HUMAN SERVICES
extent of the petitioner" 1
(21 2. ~- 16. 6tc
Seoled propo10lo will sewaae lervict is alr•dv In
right, title or interOit in the
rietta biSed recjonal nutriu.M
at
thea:•
locations
an4la
bythe
property, tho time and cirtilln pro,-am
. lor t~e
Commia•ion- ·. rate for .billlng.,purpo111 i1
cumottnCOI of tho pothlonelderly. Job includes rrieilu
Ohio at the required.
or's ocquilitlon altho right.
p!epanJIIO
' n, monitorin•
Soc. IV. This Drdlnonco
12 noon
thle or lnter•t in the prop..
ohell
toke offoct end bo in
of Fobruory,
ony additlonol facto
technical asistlnce Mid
Ioree
from
end otter Jon . 22,
and
1:30
p.m.
CHESTEI, OHIO
oupportlng tho petitioner' •
PI~ development. A
1990.
claim, end tho relleloought.
de&amp;I'H in home economics 1 :~~:":~~- by tho Clerk of 11id
Poued tho 22nd day of
Custom Built
lor Mercontle Rob·
with food serviC·e ••perL
A copy of tho petition oholl
Januory,
1990.
end Burglory Food
be aerved on the United
r
Homes,
to protect Attftt: Jon P. Buck, Clork
Statoi Attorney. Room 200.
ence lillY be considered.
Dewey M. Hortqn,
Remodeling &amp;
robbery
85 Morconl Boulovord. Col·
Resume must be submit,
Prooldtnt of Council
0
Repair Work
(2) 2 . 9, 2tc
umbua. ~~a'ti~ ~OSTER
tid by February 23rd. .
oonoblo diligence be United Slltoo Morohol
Send resume to P.O .. Box
Southern Dillrlct of Ohio
B-9 c/o this newspaper.
36629 517
Columbuo, Ohio
AN £QUAL OPPORrUNITY
POMEIO,, OHIO
121 9. 18, 23, 3tc
EMPLOYER
'
2-S-'90-1110. •

1990
12:30:P.M.

It

Public N Ill ice

Public Notice

__

9. 1980

Pomeroy-Midclepon, Ohio

Illes I SINICII
.All Aatl

K~CHL~.S.

'llcensed Cliniclf ,u!oloailt
416141441-7619

or (6141192·2104
'.17 Sacond Av8lt. .. 1213

Z jGIIHjiOIII..otia 4!131 '
-

.

• oret

lllmorlal Hospltll
·· . ,llulbeny lilts.' Pomeroy,
: Vttll'llll

'.
"Aren't you the woman who~· Whet a
my wile 11or11 her mlrlk? ~ IOokl
exactly !Ike yours.··

'

'
''

.

�Friday, FebR.Iery 8~ 1880

Pomeroy-Middaport. Ohio

OU seminar set for freelaneers
A. one-day seminar on bow to
become a COJ18ultant or freeIBDCer will be offered Saturday at
Ohio Unlvenlty.
James Murray, PhD, a professional consultant for over 10
years, will discuss with the class
Information on how to get started
Ill freelancing or consulting, how
to find ellen IS and what to charge

consider consulting or .
freelancing.
The program will be held
Saturday from 9 a.m to 4 p.m.
Cost is $56.
'
For more lnfo.rmatlon Qr to
register, residents may contact
the Office of CoritlnQ!ng Educa- ·.
tlol\o Memorial Auditorium, at
1-81Kl-336-5699.
.

them, what to do for the IRS ahd
how to draw up a contract.
'
According to the Office of
Continuing Education, the seminar is the perfect opportunity
for graphic artists, engineers,
Interior d~lgners, travel agents,
accountants, chefl and anyone
who Is tired of working for
somebody else and Is seriously

NBA-All-Star

C-1

Beat of the Bencl:
'Proteet movement' underway
against man'• beat friend. ..B-2

llllide
Alo.ag the River ... ..... . B1-6
BUilMI&amp; .•.•...•••.. ...••••••. D~l

Comics- ................... lnsert
Clullfleda .............. ... 02-7
Deaths ................... ;..•. A.S

In Our Town:
Area around Doughboy monum'erit should
not be cluuered wkh anything...Page B-2

B-1

Mostly doudy, hllh Ill mid 401.
.
or preclplta&amp;ion 20 per-

EdltortaJ .................. ... A-2

Sporlll ................. ..... C-1-6

•
t
'

New C4amber may lead.to county growth .

.
CHRISTIAN MUSlCAL - The Middleport
Church of Christ teea choir will present a
contemporary Chrilltlan musical, "Uve It To the
Max" Sunday and Monday evenings, 7 p.m. at the
Middleport Church of Chrillt; The public Is Invited
to attend the performances. Making up the choir
are left to right, front, Missy Wilfong and Held!
~aruthers; second row, Heather Burch, Heather

Davenport, and Tara Gerlach; third row, Bridget
Powel~ EmUy Heighton, AprU Hudson, Sherry
Johnson, and Michelle Grimm; and fourth row,
Chad Carson, Eric Heck, Chris Stewart, Jared
Stewart and Matt Benson. Not preseat for the
picture were choir members, June Buck and
Dawa Hockmaa.
.

By NANCY YOACHAM
' body of the group should reflect
representation _from each of the
'llmea-Sentlnel S&amp;aff
different areas .of -Meigs Col!nty·,
POMEROY - Hopes are high
and not Just Pomeroy and
among Meigs County governMiddleport.
·
ment and business leaders that
"We've tried to keep everyformation of the -. Meigs County
thing on an equal basis," pointed
Chamber of Commerce is the
out Bruce Reed, "and Midqleport
rirst step In the direction that
has had as much Input In the
could lead the county to greater
establishment of the county-wide
prosperity.
The first meeting,of tHe newly - group as Pomeroy."
·rorrned county-wide gro)Jp will
Reed was formerly president
of the Po.m eroy Chamber or
,be tHis Thursday, 12 noon, in tile
Commerce and was elected to
llbriirY of f\1ei~ High_· ~chQOl,
serve
in the same capacity tor
State Sen. -Jan Michael Long.
·
the
new
organization.
D-Chiliicothe, will. be -(he
· Presently, there are 12 board
speaker. , ,
·
rn~rnbi!rl ' overseeing the new
Creation ·. ~f . the ' cp)lnty-wlde
Chamber l&gt;ecame official on Jan . . Chamber organiZation. Those 12
1 and carne only after several . have been meeting every other
months of discussion between · week since the first of January,
then-exis ling Middleport ·and
said Reed, to establish a set of
"at(lllnable, realistic ,goals for
Pomeroy ' Cl)ambers of Corn·
this firs~ yea~."
rnerce. Members of Middleport
A desire to reach a memberand Pomeroy Chambers voted
ship ofl50i to research and select
last fail to eliminate their separate organU;atiom and unite' on three or four proJects which
Jan . .,1 ~~ a county-wide group: w_oold enhance th~ Meigs County
. Within a'· year, tlie e:&lt;ecutlve · area; to establish ·and flU an
·board as well as the membership executive director's position;

'D.. MFQQ.~
~CANDIES IS

People in the news ____~----She'll be behind the wheel' for the Sinatra and Don_Rickles will play
By WILLIAM C. ~OTT
pro-celetlrlty Grand.P~ix of Long a Sept 2 fund-raiser tO benefit the
Ualted Press IDternatlonal
Beach, along With "La Ba:mba"
DAVIS DIVORCE IN THE
new Italian Community Center in
star Lou Diamond PhiUips,
WORKS: Patd Davis, Ronald
Milwaukee ... Tennis ace Slefft
and Nancy Reagan's estnnged
former Miami Dolphin Larry Grat ·or · West Germany tore
_daughter, is now estranged from
Csonka, retired baseball star ligaments in her right hand while
·her husband, according to the
Rod .Carew and Greg Evlgan of skiing In St. Moritz, Switzerland,
"My Two Dads" . .. Frank and will beoffthetouruntiiAprU.
:New York Daily News. Davis, 37,
-has been living apart from yoga
instructor Paul GrDiey, who she
married Aug. 14.1984, for about a
. month, the News said. "They are
SOFA &amp; CHAIR
'divorcing," a friend of Davis's
LOW CASK PRICES ·
S1G.95 wk
-'told the newspaper. Davis's
~
4
DIAWa
REPO DINmE
acting career failed to take orr
CHEST
4 CHAIIS
·and she turned to writing novels
13.50 wk.
'
$149.00
·- !irst wit~ "Home Front," an .
IUNK
•unflattering parallel of her fam•os
•IJy, and then "Deadfall," a
139.10 mo.
· thriller about Nicaraugan policy
.DIOOM
Qu- AMI
·- and nejther pleased her
SIII'ES -CoHee &amp; End Tables
· parents.
,
sao mo.
$191.00 Ill
lllllling
ACTING LIKE A CHAMP:
.Boxer Mike Ty110n was In a surly
lndUIW
· mood for his Tokyo news confer"ence to promote Sunday's light
a gains I James "BWiter" Douglu. The heavyweight champ,
• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, ·1990
who showed up 30 minutes late
and in Jeans and a T-shlrt,
DOUBLE CHEESEBURGER PLAnER"......................... S3.18
bristled when a reporter asked if
Ow ~ Cheuoburgol (GIIIists of Two Juicy lltf ~allies, Topped wlth
he had really hired a psychiatrist
Cr111my Mtltool (hetn ,-.dd Str.¥111 on o Double Docker lun, Acc.......,itol lly
to help him prepare for the fight.
Hot GeWtn Fr•h Friis Gild four Choice of H-ade Colt Slow, ....,...;
"Psychiatrist?" Tyson snapped.
Salad, or ...tdlians.
"I'm afraid -y ou're wrong." The
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 11 I 1990
reporter assured him that she
meant nothing derogatory and
3 PIECE CHICKEN DINNER ................................;""" S4.99
pointed out that plenty of athletes
Thr• G-ous Slzool Plects of Galdtn Dtep-Frittl (lie""' Sontd with Mashed
use therapy. "No, I Just fight,"
Potat- I
G""' 01111 Doiicious tt-aokiMI lutt•ool Limas, A
Tyson said to start a senU!nce
Hot lutt•lll ltl or !l_m..o lisc"uit (with "-fl, (off•, hgoolar or Dothat he finished with a four-letter ·
cafftinatool, lath Froshly lrowool (A Soft Drink or Till May It Subltltllool). ·
. . DINNE. _...,..............................................
.
.
'2 .99
word. Sources In the Tyson camp
CHILD•S SIZE
later confirmed he .does indeed
have a psychological consultant
in his entourage but Is sensitive
HOUIS: 11 A.M. TO 6 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK
about it ever since his ex-wife.
Robin Glvena, said he was
emotionally unstllbie. Promoter
Don Klag_ confirmed recent talks
about Tyson taking on wrestler
Hulk Hogan but played down the
matter, saying It won't happen
unless big motley is .involved.

EACH

.1-(ave a -

RENT
T-0 OWN ·

HOWARD AND THE TOWER:
Director ·Ron Howard and his
wife, Cheryl, are asking lots of
questions about the microwave
tower that officials want to build
near their horne in Greenwich,
Conn., to improve emergency
communications. Howard, a television actor before going on to
directing hits like "Parenthood"
and "Cocoon," Is not opposed to
· thetowerbutwantstobesureit's
safe and not too obtrusive, says
their lawyer, Stephen Sugrue.
''l'he Howards tully understand ·
that the need to improve radio
communicatiOns, for the police
and fire department is a priorIty," Sugrue said. "They do not
have a 'not-In-my-backyard' attitude. They Just want to ensure
that as . minimum a. tower as
po~sible Is put up. Presuming the
safety_issues can be put aside,
their concern Is the aesthetics
because this· would be a pretty
large tower." The propo~ed sl~
of the tower is 260 feet from the
Howards' property.

.'

CAPITOL OAU: The Oak
RlqeBOys had a different kind
of audience Wednesday - the
members of the Tennessee General Assembly. The lawmakers
g11ve tbe Oak Rldgen a standing
ovation and puled a resolution
that congratulated them for
prqmotlng "wholesome· family
values." The gr011p recently
voluntee,-ed to belp !he· state
promote ltudopt-a-htghway proetarn, under wbk:b buslnel~es
aJid OfiiDizatloaa pick ·up Utter
aJcJae · dellpated stretches of
•tate bllhway1.

••

aaFobnmr 14. Romombor nuupoda!Valontin11 with opltol' RuaoiiSIOIIJr I
C.ndiH. W. hon I wiolo Nritty of tuditionolliOIIl b0111,. well• your fororill bond
JIIIDitmtotll; tptcially d1eorited for lht holida~. Foil. Suin or Vel¥tl Htu&amp;shelp JOU
trpms younolr lo rriando. rolotim ond thotljla:ial Valentino. Hnoo hnri•PNtht
fin•~ in chocoltlll and b1atltr bona· qttllll)' you've Uown and lovtd fnr om 60 fl&amp;n

.

rrom

":fi!IICJ

tDILM

. Willi FlEE SCOTCH·GAID
PIOTECTOI FOI CAIPET ·

14 oz.
' flct my llcl

·ENERGIZER.
...........

99*
f« hindi that look younger.
r.eJ softer. ..

or D
PACK

$199

AGE SHIELD"
AASIZE

8AU PRICK -s.99
AIID*4.99

i.aa':I.OO

~--_!8~PMZ~~~~~~

Moisturtli1atrnent fur Hands
this non-oily, -•uoltd-lotion
holps ptOII(t hinds oplnst ll1o
...... rtd.llntd skin tl1lt 11111111
florii -clrynoss.
'.rltllps ................. signs
I

oz~

.~

PUMP

Aut". trans., air cond .. cloth 'Interior; AM-FM-Stereo,
new tires, &amp;8,600 mill. Nice car.

$3990

Bush trip

0

Auto. tr-.. V-1 onglne, air cond., AM-FM-Sterao.
Lo• than 55,000 milaa. New Dodge trade.

H.Y,

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY
FRIDAY 9:30·1:00; SATURDAY 1!:00·1

QUANIIIIS ARE
li:UIIDI ·
PIKES GOOD
·AT......,_

BANK

~ONLY.

OIJMPIIIII: Olympk: sprln.t
champion 11oreace Grim&amp;•
, . , _ will be experleDCiq
dlffemlt kllld of speed AprU 21.

992·6491
716 North

Second '
Middleport,.
Ohio

ever

.a

,•

··~..

f

I
i

•

'

'

. ,J ANET HOWARD
of Commissioners.
A Democrat, Howard has
served on the Central Committee
for five years as a representative
of the East Rutland precinct. .
Ernploy~d at Krogers in Pomeroy she is a member of Local 347
of the United Food and Cornmerc(al Workers. She Is the daughter
of Giispie and Christine Howard
and. ·has one · son, Kevirl B.
JJpw,arp..,.,

a potential jot danger

WASHINGTON (UPI~ -Fed·
eta! law enforcement authorities
are g\Uirdedly optimistic tbat .the
MedelUn coCaine carU!J will keep .
its word this week and not try to
.
shoot President B~sh.
But they are taking no ehances
and plan massive security for
Bush's trip Tbunday 'to tile dl'lli ·
siunmrntt tn"carta~ena, Colom- ·
bla, which baa the potentl.al-to be
one of the IIICIIIt claqerous
for an American president.
,
•ln recent months, there have
~ unconfirmed reporta that
tbe cartels have placed a $30
mmton·
,, bounty on' Bullh' s heed

•

SAU PRICE $3990

J

i

GALLIPOLIS - Fire losses
estimated $198,800 compared to
Reva Crooks, 238 Fourth Ave.,
were down "in 1989 for the
burned with an estimated loss of
$260,400 worth of property saved·
GaUipolis Volunteer Fire Depart- $14,000 with an estimated $26,000
In 1988.
ment, accoPding to the depart·
worth of property saved.
,
The maJor blaze last year In
ment's· annlial · report , released
Gallipolis firefighters' · ans- Addison Township was on Aug.
by GallipoliS Fire Chief "Ray
wered 15 alarms last year in 12, 1989 when the Upper River.
BuSh.
• . ~
.•· . ·
Gallipolis ToWnship compared to
Night , Club b1.1rned • With . an
In
areu qver~d by Galllpo18 In: 1988. The estimated propesllinated losa· '6 f • . 000~ '}jaw;' ..
lls flte!lg,htflrs, the !9~!Uire loss
erty Joss last year was . $71;500 ever, \he value of property saved
. was elltllltated at ~26,320) wlth
was an estimated $85.000.
.
with an estimated $586,MIO worth
an esttmaled $2,022,480 worth.of of property saved. The maJor fire
Clay Township had fewer
property saved. In co~parison,
loss in Gallipolis Townshfp last alarms last year, 14 compared to
the 1988 estimated loss was
year was Powers Enterprises,
25 In 1988. The estimated fire loss
$672,020 with an estimated 410 Fourth Ave., Kanauga, an last ·year was $56,700, with an
$1,359,500 worth of property estlrnatfd Joss of $30,000.
estimated $48,200 worth of prop·
saved. In Green Township, GaiUpoUs erty saved. With 25 alarms In
Ga1Upolis firefighters ans - firefighters answered 65 alarms , 1988, the estimated loss was
wered 210 alarms last year
down 27 runs compared to 92 $30,000 with an estimated $94,600
cornpared 'to 266 in 1988. In other alarms in 1988. Green's esti· worth or "p roperty saved. ·The
co·m parisons. firefighters
mated fire loss last year was maJor fire loss last year in Clay
worked only .3, 777 man hours $134,560 down $17,230 from an was on Jl!IY 2, 1989 when fire
compared to 5,299 in 1988 and -estimated Joss df $117,320 in 1988. destroyed the residence of John
traveled 892 miles compared IQ Major fires last year in Green Johnson, Rt, 2, Gallipolis, with an
1,181 miles in 1988.
·'
Township were: Jan. 24, 1989, the estiQ"~ated loss of $40,000; no
The Gaillpolls fire department residence of Robert Berry. Pa- property saved.
·
is responsible for fire protection trio! Star Route, Galllpolis, an
Gallipolis ' firefighters ansfor the city of Gallipolis and the estimated loss of $35,000 with an wered :;avera! cails for mutual
townships of Gallipolis, Green,
estimated $11,000 worth of· prop· aid assistance lastyearlncludlng
Addison and Clay. · .
erty saved; and Dec . 23, 1989, the five from tlte Guyan Township
The area is comprised of 96.25 . residence of Leo Johnson, Pa- Volunteer Fire Department; two
square miles, has a population of trlot Star Route, an estimated . from Middleport and one
16,215 and an estimated loss of $50,000 with an estimated · from the Vintoll' and the ,)~,:; '..
$557,429,912 in property $15,000worth of property saved . · Pleasant Volunteer
·• valuation.
Firefighters answered 13 departments.
MaJor fire losses last year in alarms last year in Addison
In turn, Gallipolis firefighters
the city were on Nov. 12, 1989 Township, down 14 from the 27 received mutual aid on three
when the house or {?lan.a L.
runs· in 1988. However, fire losses occasions last year; ·once earh
Saunders, 234 Fourth Ave., were up with an estimated loss of from the Point Pleasant, Rio
burned with an estimated loss of $68,750 compared to $22,000 in Grande and VInton volunteer fire
$30,000; no property saved; and , 1988. Property saved totaled an departments.

ail

By LEE
WELCH·
program from the Ohio Depart- to some businesses. she said.
nient of Natural Resources.
The program starts up Feb. 24,
Tlmes-Sentlael StaU
~ALLIPOLIS One long"We're pleased to worll with .with the regular Recycling Day
running environmental impact
something so yital to the com- at Sliver Bridge Plaza, Belville
has been the disposal of paper, . rnunlty," proJect coordinator said. Beginning the next Mon- ·
glass and aluminum, and the
Marilyn Shealey.
day, Feb. 26, items may be taken
Ga!Upolis Developmental Center
"When . residents are involved directly to GDC, where residents
is taking strides in correcting the
and work with tbe community, , will sort and prepare them for
problem of waste.
IIley gain sel(-work and their recycling ..
· ·GDC, along with the · Gallia
lniage of ihemselves Increases,"·
The primary drop is adJacent
County Litter Control' office and · she said.
ot GDC's warehou~. and al·
the University of Rio Grande, are
-The proJect has been named though items may be left any
combining strengths in an effort
Riverview Recycling, and a time, employees will be at work
to widely recycle products WI!
drop-off poln't will be open Monday through Friday from
tl\fow away in mass quantities.
24-hours ·. dally on "the GDC 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m.
At the same time, clients of the
grounds. · .
People may bring aluminum
center get a feeling of self worth
Additionally, there will be a and tin cans, glass Jars and
and greater self image by workquarterly drop-off from Litter bottles, a newspapers (no maga·
lng for wages.
.
Control and cans may ·b e taken to · zlnes or phone books~: EveryTerri Belville, Litter Co,ntrol
tbe , Jay~e Building, Belville thing should be bundled and in
DlreelorforGalUaCounty,•alda
said. Th~areaisoplanstohave grocery bags.
$7,35Q grant was recei~ for the
pick-up trucks for the elderly and

1915 TOYOTA COIOLLA 4 DR.

"1

~

way."
Hopefully, the new countywide Chamber will be that
necessary first step.
The former Pomeroy Chamber
office on East Main St. will
continue to serve as headquarters for the county-wide grou·p.
Reed explained, simply because
the rent for the orrtce is subsidized by the Meigs County Park
Commission, and telephone lines
and· the address have already
Qeen establl.shed. The group has
not yet decided wqether it would
be best to rotate regular meetings throughout the county or to
establish a centralized location
for meetings. Starting in March,
regula~ meetings will return to .
the second Tuesday or each
month, Reed said, adding that
this mont!)' s meeting is being
held on Thursday to accommodate State Sen. Long's schedule.
Anyone planning to at tend
Thursday's meeting Is asked to
contact Chamber Secretary
Sherry Hart at 992,5005 In
advance .

Fire losses down \in 1989: Bush

Recycling proj.,ct will benefit
envin,nment,
-GDC
residents
ANN

oging_..,_

3.5

· By~~ HO.EFU.~ .
the Republican ballot in the May
p. .Tli)lea-Sentlnel staH
Primary, .
. P&lt;'i\lt.R~Y:. -~ A~ ·, ~f late . . To date no one has filed for the .
Frl•as alii!: jp 111 four l'esildllllt&amp; · 'post of coroner, the unexpired
,.
had !fled ~tltlp,ns of caJII!Iftacy: . term ending Jan. 3', 1993. ·
fo,l'·,nPh:!litilllon •by tlielr respecIt was . no~ by ' FryrriYer, ·
tiy.e 1·~es' to the four county ' however, that several petitions
jlos$ · to be '' fiUed this year,
on thefourcountypos"itlonshave
a~:c&lt;il-dlng • to .J ane · Fryni)(ei',
been picked up and are siln out
d!recto~ ' Of the. Meigs County
for circulation.
Board of Elections.
As. for levies, the , Orange
· · The filing dead lin~ is Feb. 22 at -· To\VDShlp Trustees have already
4 p.m. at tM Board of Elections fli~d the necessary papers · to
Qf!ice ' on Mechanic Street In place an additional 2-mliis ror
. Pomeroy.
.
fire protection before voters in
F;lllng ~titi?n!l of candidacy . the May Primary.
.
Also .several candidates for
for the one four-year term to be
filled on the Meigs County Board Central Committee have already
of Commissioners have been filed, Fryrnyer f!!ported.
Petitions of candidacy can be,
Manning Ro~sh, _Pomeroy, Repli_b llcan incumbent; and Janet picked up at the office anytime
Howl\~d, Pomeroy, Democrat.
between 8: 30 and noon and 1 and
· WIIIIUrn Wickline, Racl"e, has 4:30 p.m. Monday. through Frifjled for· the four-year term as day, according to the director.
auditor, and RObert E. Buck; . Janet L. Howard, Pomerqy,
Pomeroy, for a six-year term as has filed her petition of candiprobate and Juvenile lodge. BOth dacy to run for the nomination for
they ....will
appear on a seat
on the Meigs
County Board
incumbents,
,J.f..J
........
....
'
•
,,
••.
~,..,

IDtMWn
'
•sotrons rough, dry hoods up to
8'-s
•I&lt;Wisiblt """""" shiold ISPF 41

ONLY

leave here and relocate in other
and to continue to work with parent over the next 1U years."
places simply because a developcommunity leaders in the Mason, He expects to seethe county-wide
ment director. from some other
W.Va. area to try to secure · Chamber benefit local areas "In
place has come here and urged a
toll-free telephone service be- . many different ways" as the new
business.
over and over again, to
tween the 992 exchange In Meigs organization takes shape and
reiocailng,"
he added.
consider
County and the 882 ahd 773 begins promoting all sections of
"That's what it · takes," Reed
exchanges in Mason County, are the county instead ·or limiting
said. "and I'm convinced that
among .the goals which the support mainly to Pomeroy and
Meigs County can get jobs too,
executive board has selected for Middleport.
along with retaining the busithe coming year.
·
Although the new Chamber
nesses it ·has. But it takes
The county-wide Chamber cur· will still sponsor fund raisers
organization a.nd a united effort,
rently has 68 paid members,
from time to time; beginning
and someone to knock on doors on
with a dance on, March 21, the
reported Reed, "butwe'rereach·
our behalf on a full time basis."
lng ou(," he said.. ' 1We'relooklng primary concern ,of the 'group
With this belief in mind, the
for membership from outside the will be to promote Meigs ~ounty
Chamber
Executive Board has
Pomeroy-Middleport areas and
and e11cour-age the development
1,
1991 as the target date
set
Jan.
we've ,!!let y;lth the Meigs County of business in Meigs County.
for
having
a -full time executive
Commissioners and have their
. "In the past couple months," ·
fl!.!l support," he added.
said Reed, "I've beer\ out repres - director on board to actively
solicit development throughout
"1 think the formation of the
enting the county on ' d!Uerent
Meigs County.
·
county-wide Chamber is proba·
Issues and I've learned that
"There's a lot of potential in
bly one of the more progressive Meigs County is severely flicking
this county." said Reed . ., And,.
moves made in this county In my in representation throughout the
what's good for one part-of the
·life time," commented Comrnisstate wh·en It comes to developcounty Is good for everybody. But
sloner ·Richard jones.
men! projects. I'm not putting
the county has lo take the flrst
Jones foresees the "wisdom of the blame for that on anyone," he
step.
We can't expect businesses
the decision" toellmlriatethe two qualified, "but as a result, Meigs
to
come
here unless we go out
Individual Chambers and , unite County has rallen behind In some
projects that could have come looking for them," Reed . said,
with other comtnunities a's a
"and at least meet them half
co~nty-~ide group "will be apthis way. I have seen busine~ses

Four ·ca~tdidpte8 file
for Me~s_ p~s~tions ·

n.
Pi C'L _'_-· G'--J...
~!Mf C)UlllfJt, II4WWI

SCOTCH-GIRD
'PROTECTOR
FOR FABRIC

H-•••

'

12 Soctlono, U Paig•
A Multlrnodlo Inc. N_,.,IIPIIPif

and obtained shoulder-fired anti·
late public opinion as the cartels
aircraft mllllles to shoot down
try to drum up support against
Air Force One.
extracl:idon' of druglords to the
On Jan. 29,11ia battle of nerves, ·United States. It doeln't tell you
the MedeiUn cariel ·issued ·a
wllat they are necessarily think·
coDCI~tory communique, purtna other than It would be bad for
portedly •taned by ru,ttlve kina·
buslnei1 to try to harm the
pin Pablo Escobar, saying It had
prelldet.
110 Intentions of llarinlng. Buah.
'1 don't believe the cartels ·'The cariel aliO reiterated its
the Medellin or the rival Call plea for • neaotlatad peace with
will do anything," be said. "But
the Colllmblan · IIOWI'nment,
pj!rllaps a group of youna tOIIghs
turned over a ton ol tlynamlte·to · who want to make a name for
themselves might try."
.
poUee and released · kidnap
vlctltnl.
The .one-day summit will bring
Said one u.s. offtclal, '1 think
Bush together with presidents of
this was an attempt to mantpu(See BVSH, pap .U~

;t

-•

~

~!.~""'

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