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Ohio

.
; ~·India (UPJ) .;_ .
.
ben Thul'$day recovered
1111 C:OC:kptt voice and data
~~ ot the Indian Alrllnes
. ....-.. that crashed In the
IIOIItllern city of Bangalore, kll·
80 people and injuring 56
g:t ua, an airport otfl~lal said.
Tbe official 'said the battered
''black box," which contains
.se,.tls ot the night and niay help
llivetUgators determine the
~uae ot the crasli, was found in
~ . charred ·wreckage by a
.· ll!ill'Ch team from Bangalore's
Ftre Service.
Me!lnwhlle, the government

1110

find 'black box' :recorder Ui plane wreckage·

appolrited a commission to deter·
mine the cause ot Wednesday's
crash ot flight JC605 that OC·
curred moments before the plane
was to land at the Bangalore
airport, 1,0!5 miles south of New
Delhi, said N.S. Mohan Rao, the
airline's regtonlll director for
.south India.
Eighty-nine people were kUled
In the crash and 57 others were
injured. The death•toll increased
to 90 Thursday following the
death of one ot the Injured
passengers overnight.
Another official .said a high

OSUtops

court judge wou141 head the
Inquiry commission and that a
report would likely be completed
in about six months. ·
A four-man team of experts led
by Jean-Pierre Sawat · from the
Airbus Industrle Consortium in
Tolouse, France, arrived in Ban·
galore Thursday to assist the
inquiry, said A.K. Stvanadan,
chief public relations manager
for Indian Airllnes.
·They wlll be examlrilng all
aspects leading to the Incident, "
Slvanadan said . .
The Indian union mlrilster for

civil aviation. Arlf Mohammed e\1dence," Rao nld.
News nporta nld the delay wu
Khan, said the government was
·He said relatives of tile crash ~ to unipecltled tecbnlca•
prepared to shut down alr servi· victims, who arrived In two problema.
~ In some .areas If necessary, groups by a special plane tram
OHiclala ··nld the ajrcratt
saying there would be no com· Bombay, helped hospital off!· caUJbl tire before it touched
Promise on safety, the Press clals Identity at least 25 bodies down, but witnesses said IIIey
•T rust of India reported.
that were removed from the nw the landlag wbeels strike an
The minister made the remark wreckage site.
·
embankment near lbe airport,
during a visit t~ &amp;i.ngalore' s
"Only 25 bodies have been, catch fire and then cra1h.
Victoria Hospital( where rela· identified," said Rao. "Most of
A U.S. cltlzeft identified as R.
tives complained about safety the other dead were charred . Hagger was 11niong those kuied
aspects of the aircraft.
,
beyond recognltlo~"· ·
.
in the crash, thePresaTrusUald.
, At th~ crash site, pollee· stood
In some Instances, more than
One Americ!lll survivor, Cha·
guard while workers sifted , one family claimed the same rlea Mancosky; said that he and
.through the debris. : ·
victim, so otflctals ol'dered four otl!er passenger$ beard a "loud
''Th~ entire area of the wreck·
dentists to·use dental record&amp; to boomlng noise" betore ' betne
age was cordoned off to protect
help identity the bodies. ·
enveloped In a "ball of flame,"
'
Offjclals .said that 19 . Of the accordlilg to the Press 'Trust.
identified bodies were handed Mancosky .tQid the news agency '
over .to their families and were he managed to escape through a
rear door. ,
.
'
rate assets and mismanagement many people wanted gun per- flown to Bombay around noon.
in The Car Store Inc.
A mass funeral for the unlden· ,
Members of an Indian tamlly
mits," Nolley said. "Business'·
titled
bodies
was
scheduled
for
.
from
Bedford, Mass., who were
Becom later was accused of
men were coming tn llere, scared
defying a court order not to
Sunday
a(ternoon.
returning
to their hometown of
for their lives."
'
harass the Forgeys.
-ll Seven survivors with serious
Bangalore
for a visit, survived '
Nolley said Becom insisted the
burns were transferred to St. the cralh, according to a report
Becom was in a Chillicothe, lpcldent occurred because he
John '·s Hospital, · a private In the Hindu·, a New Delhi
Ohio, )all Thursday awaiting feared for his life and the safety
church-run Institution, where '' newspa~r . .
arraignment, pollee said.
of his family in connection with
more sophisticated faclUUes ' The report .s aid that Prabha
Shelbyville Pollee Chief Ro· some business dealings,,, .b ut
,
were.
avallil,ble to treat . burn and Rama.sw•mY Sridhar Srld·
bert Nolley sa.ld Becom's dlsap· would not r.e veal details lie had
cases,
Rao said.
haran ani! their chlidren, Vilas·
pearance caused a local uproar discuSsed with Berom.
Theother49survlvorswereout
and
Vlkrain, w~re sitting near ,
and dozens of rumors that sent
· "If that's true, then I'd have to
of
danger,
and
half
of
them
had
the
emergency
exit. 'TIM! tamlly
pollee chasing after possible say he had· a Jegltjmaie reason
been treated and discharged, escallfl) 'through the exit,
leads in the case.
for leaving," the pollee chief
Rao said.
'
·
steppedontothewtngandtbento
The suspected abduction also said. "If it's not true, then
The flight from Bombay to the ground, the new~paper said.
had other effects.
somebody ought to pay for this
Madura! via Bangalore departed
The tamlly escaped with only
"You wouldn't believe how entire investigation."
about an bout behind schedule. minor Injuries, the report said.

for 12th Win

'
•'

•'

ebroary

'

J•

Vol.40, No.197
c
1990

This Annual Event Will Save Yop ·T housands! · ~·
Burr~ In ~oda~. For, Best
And ·a u,e. Savl•l•!
.
..

.,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, Febr~ary "i&amp;. 19~0

EllCE

'

CARTAGENA, Colombia
(UPI) - President Bush and
three South American heads of
state signed an unprecedented
agreement to battle drug traf·
tickers; with the United States
acknowledging its responsibility
to provide economic alternatives
to the lucrative narcotics trade.
, The one-day ,SUI)IIl)it Thursday
, at a well-protected presidential
. gUest house til Car,tagEiha.'Bay did
not produce specl!lt: responses
from Bush· to Colombian eco·
'
nomic concerns, .nor ba.rd figures
on the amount of aid the Bush
administration was willing to
GREE'nNGS- state ·
olm lnehael Loq, · 11118 at ',aterday's , lnllfal meet1n1 of the
commit.
'
D.Chllllcotlle, ~ rl1ht, Metp Couty Chamber
COIUity·wtde Chamber OJ'I&amp;nlzatloa. The meeting
But it did bring together the
Prell~ ;Bruce Reed, center, alld ~ck Owen,
wu held In the cafe,t erla at Mel_p Hlp School.
leaders of the three countries
secre&amp;-,-:Ueuurer of Chamber, exehan1e p-eet· .
that produce virtually all of the
world's cocaine with Bush,
whose nation u~s about. 80
percent of· the lllegal white
powder.
In· a )Qlrit communl(jue ending
. the summit, Bush recognized the
United States . musl} redUQe its
. hunger for cocaine as it instructs
South American ' natiOns to cut
State Sen. Jan Michael Long,
role in gaining the 'a ttention of "to ride a new crest' of opportun·
production.
D-Chllllcothe, ljrged an audience
slate leaders, LOng salcl. Also, tty," Long commen~. In ridlrig
The "Declaration ·llf Carta·
of abd1~of70 people at Thursday 's
legislators , who have joined ' to- this new crest, u .wtll be neces·
gena" stressed an understanding
gether calllng themselves ·the ~ry to ~"Identity' the positive
first 1,11eet1ng·of tbe;Metgs County
that the · tight 'against lllegal
Chamber of Commerce,to "seek
Appalachian Delegation have aspects olrthe co,unty and trans·
drugs would be carrll!(l out not
out opportunities and work toalso helped attract at tentlon to late those po!ilttve aspects into only on the mllltary front bu talso
get()er ' to brlnJ· new jobs and· Southeastern Ohio and all of action." 'T he most important with economic programs.
aspect lD, the ~o 110 ty 1s hul'l&amp;ll·
"An increase. in, trade . and
,fesources:•• 1 ~~~~ , the· senator, · ptlvate lnvestJnenl'ls' essential to
~;., .,, 1 ··!'' "'· · • A:ssem~y, this "'PPallltlitan · ,wbtch"fransl8'ti!s·• lh'to:a atr!lng tacllltate sustalne&lt;l' ·economic
•• J:.QIII call!!~~ yesterday1s lnltlal · Delega,tlon oOfgllliitors dllcuss work etlllc. But, he · cautioned,
growth and .to hel,P. ottset the
meetllla 1 ot the. newly-formed
the· riletters ani! forni a position in,embers of ihe new Chamber
economiC dlskications resulting
COIJtll)r·Wide ·o~ga11tzation "1be · prl&lt;?r to any full assembly meet· will have 'to "rid themselVes of . from 'any effective prl)gram
· beglailjng of a )ruly united e(fort ' lng, Long explained. One r~ent · any lnteynal competitiveness" ' agal~st Illicit drugs," the com·
to . brlnl! econOfnlc development ·· success of the Appalachian Dele- and a&lt;19i&gt;t .the bellef that "what' . munlque sal,d .
. .
and 'reco"ery•qo Melp County.
.tattoo was to save the Ohio benefllume wlll benefit all."
, The South American nations
A i:Oun~·wlde Chambe~ will &lt;Valley Area Libraries program, ' . Ghamlil!r members wlll have
bowed fo U.S. pressure fpr more
proVIc!e means "to advance the
Long said. The Delegation has to "be- .bold" in approaches to
mllltary involvement In the drug
also been successful in directing brinjt.opportunltles to the county.
lhterests ·of the county and
~~ht, saying their arme.~ forces
communities within the county,"
' 'large chunks of highway dollars "And don't be bashful in telllng
may also participate along
'· he added.
· to Southeastern Ohio." Also, said your elected officials what you
wl,',h pollee.
,The senator said he believes . Long, "in the past two years we need . .We , have to have a · For the first time. it has been
that Meigs County and Soutl!east- have been able to secure visits of par,tnershlp," he stated.
acknowledged that drug traffic~·
ern Ohio are "as viable a part of State Development Director
Long wished the new Chamber
lng is an economtc·aspect of o~r
Ohio as any other region" and
David Baker' ' to the area sd he the ·"best or tuck" and encour·
nations and the' struggle against
t!tat tn.,the..pas.t,ll)r.ee .years, ''t.he can see the needs of the aFea on a . aged 'members• not to become
drug trafficking implies corp pen·
,eyes o! the state house have . flr~t hand l;l~sls.
discouraged. "No marriage is
satlon for the overall dtsturl;lan·
tunied to Soutjteastern Ohio. •'
''The time is rlg\lt for Meigs fr~e ot dispute, but those who
TheGovernor'sOfflceofAppa· County," through the newly· , work at their , unlo.n wlll
~cbla has played an Important
formed county-wide Chamber,
Continued on page 5

IIIlER

1
9
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I )rug summit leads
to joint·
·
narcotics
battle
..
.

~-c;.t~~ .~~::~~~ ~~~~~ fr:.:e~~ ·

'

Low tODicht In mid Z8s.
Cbaace of rain 28 perctlnt.
Saturday, partyly cloudy,
blt:b In mid :llho.

••

•

to

gets look at .

•

•

-·

•

Sen. Long ,calls for

·Roekefeller
· BENNETTSVILLE, S.C.
(lJPI) - Mllllonatl'e Sen. Jay
ROCir!::feller went to look at how
the other half lives Thursday,
leadlne a federal panel stui:lylng
the pllgbtof poor black chlldren
in the rural South.
~ckefeller, l&gt;·W.Va., chair·
man of the congressional Corrimlaslon 011 Children traveled to
Bennettsville near the North
Carolina line where 48 percent of
·tt.t 9,000 citizens are black and
one in three tamUles is poor.
"By the year 2000, one out of
three school-age children will be
from minorities," said Rockefeller, heir to a vast famlly '
, fortune. "As a nation we need to
. Increase not only our awareness
of, but our ability to respond to
the multiple ethnic and cultural
populations • throughout
· America."
The 36-member bipartisan
commission was created by
Coneress to develop a national
pollcy on chlklren, including
recommendations to improve the
health· and well-being of the
nation's youngsters and to en·
halice the capabllltles offam Utes
to care for and nurture children.
The commission is made up of
members of Congress, health
experts, chlld advocates, bust·
, nenleaders and media personal·
Idea, Including actor BUJ Cosby.
The group must submit its
recom,mendations to Congress
and the president by March 1991.
J\t least one member of the
conutiiAion blames Congress
And the White Houae for creating
some of the problema children
..r.ce by dlamantllng many of tbe
natlon'a social programs during
lhe Re•n years. .
· "Children's lnues have been
on the back burner for the past
· decide, "IBid Cheri Hayes, exec·
· lltive director ilf the Children'•
Dlfnle Fund. ''There haVe been
dlatrelllna declines . In child
' .Jievelpment as a result of the lack
of attmUoa to cblldren'•llsuea.·
. •'WIIat we IBW was a decade
lftoae tbere was total lack of
cobca u," she nld. "That Telulled In lack of Immunization,
lllcreued rates of poverty
em 111 :youar famllles and a host
01 Oilier problema that directly
Jm..ct on.children." .

••• •

antastte
•

708

9%0

.

called the store the next day and
talked to manager Paul Fair,
telling him his abductors were
demanding a $1 mllllon ransom
or they would "silt his throat."
Becom told the FBI and state
pollee Wednesday he feared for
his life. Authorities said they
were investigating Becom's fi.
nanclal troub.tes connected with
a Muncie car lot he co-owned. A
court case is pending in a
Delaware County court in which
Becom sued co-owners Scott
Forgey, James Forgey, Sally
Forgey an&lt;) Sarah Forgey, claim·
lng mlsapproprlatlon of corpo·

Pick 3
Pick 4

:Shelbyville businessman found safe in Ohk/

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) -Fed·
era! authorities are investigating
the posslbllty that Sliell!yville
businessman Wllllam "Don" Be·
-com staged his own abduction
· after he was found living in a
Columbus, Ohio, motel
Wednesday.
Becom, 39, was taken into
cusiOdy and was charged with
maklng a false statement stem·
ming from a phOne cau he mad~
claiming be had 'been kidnapped
for Sl million ransom and was In
danger of having his throat slit.
. Becom insisted after his arrest
~hat he was kidnapped from his
atore, Becom's Warehouse, on
Jan. 10, but managed to escape
his abductors and, tearlrig for his
life, Qed to Columbus.
Authorities also are looking
into why Beeom' s wtte, Terri,
offered a $10,000 reward two
weeks ago after she learned ori
Ja11. 22. that her husband was
S.ate, according tQ documents
filed In U.S. Dis trlct Court at
Indlanapolls by , FBI Special
Agent Jack Stohlman.
. FBI and Indiana State Pollee
arrested Becom In the apartment
near Ohio State University Wed·
nesday. Becom, who was renting
the residence under the name of
P . Ray Jarvis, was .traced there
a.tter pollee were allowed to
mon!tor one of his wife's phone
cil!Js, the court affidavit said.
Authorities had been led to
deduce that Becom was the ,
victim of a robbery -abduction
, scheme. About 45 minutes after
.talking to his Wife Jan. 10 about
11: 30 p.m. from his store, a
Shelbyville patrolman found the
baclc door open to the buslriess.
• Di'opa of blood were found on
the floor and $1,000 cash had been
taken from two safes. Becom's
eyeglasses were left in the store. ·
BecOm's car was later found In
a commuter parking lot about
two mllell away .
·
The atndavlt said that Becom

Ohio Lottery

.
.
W1800nsm

'

fro! wlthou,t such a review a~d ch~r~ed companies Is a subject
approval by the board wlll not be of &amp;erJQus concern: to the Legis Ia·
able to tap the resources oUhe ture," satd' Levey.
target company for three years!
Meanwhile, the House' has sent
Aronoff said the bfll Is a to the senate a resolution setting
response to the "takeover mania
up a (ask foree to study the
grlpplrig this country."
problem of zebra mussels in
"Financial plays on important Lake Erie.
cqlllpanles in Ohio and through·
Rep. Suzanne Bergansky, D·
out' the country have impaired Belttord Heights, said , the mus·
operating efficiency all.d job . sels m11ltiply so rapidly thet they
stablllty because of the debt load are t)lreatenlng the fish popula·
heaped on th~ companies In tlon, encrusting water intake
takeovers," said Aronoff. "We pipes, break the aquatic food
need more tools to preserve chain, cause water safety buoys
normal business o&amp;ieratlons to to sink, and impart a foul smell to
protect shareholders and em· the water, ·
,
,
,
' ployees and other'Constituencles
The t&amp;Sk· force ,Is to conduct a
of th.e corporation." ,
three: year study on bow to
· 'Ohlo needs to serve notice on · ~ontrol or ellmiJiate the mussels
cor[Xirate raiders that ihe flnan · an\1 prevent their spreail to other
clal and job Integrity of Ohio bodies of water. t ·
The House also "as sent to the
Senate Jegtslauon -requlring certain state employees, on a
two-year trial basil, to use
Harold D. Grimm of Racine to the report, had been contacted ethanol blend fuel In their state
died Thursday evening at his by Earl Grimm, Columbus, who vehicles.
•
·
home' of an apparent suicide.. had tried to contact his father by
The
trial
will
be
done
by
ac;cordlng to a report from the telephone and when he did not get eertaln employees of the Ohio
Meigs County Sheriff's an answer contacted Mr. and Environmental Protection
Mrs. Roush. They went to the
DepartJnen t. "
'
Agency, the Ohio DepartJnent ot
The Emergency Medical Ser. residence; uaed their key, ,and Agriculture and theO~Io Dep~rt·
vice' was ·advl~d and the Racine found Mr. Grimm, it was
m,ent ot Natural ReloUJ'!B.
1 unit ' was
cllspatched to the reported.
The fuel, which, ~ corn
The body was removed by
Grimm residence at 5: 58 p;m.
products,
ill an alternative to
, Also on the scene .-ere Shertrr s EWing Funeral Home. ,
guo~ . In motor
expenslye
Other actlvUles reported by
Inveatigator Robert Beegle and
vehicles.
·
Mella County Coroner Dr. Dou· the Sheriff James Soulsby in·
Also
aent
to
tbe
Senate
by
.the
gJaS Hdliter. wllo ruled that the . elude the ·arreet of 47-year·old Houae wu a biD ~nnlttlng
"4(!atll was by ~lf·lntllcted gun· Jam&amp;~ w.. Johnlon and 26-year- scbool boarda to waive tuition tor
old Jama E. Jolullon, Pomeroy,
sbot wolllld to the head.
any blgb achool iinlot whole
' ;~was ~potted by the'Sherltf'' on· bench. war ran II, trom the
family
111CIYI!I out of tbe acbool
deputy that Grimm had been Melp County CQurt char&amp;iaa
dlstrlet:
'
' .
tolllld by hla IIIIer and brother· failure to comply wltb a court · Tile Jloule bai
adjiiW'IIed
untO
'
111:uaw, Mr. and Mrs. Harold ordl!r. They are contined .to the 1 p.m. JlllltTuetclay. The Senate
Megls County Jan pendllll hear·
will bave ' ilo ,rollcall votes next
Contlriiaed on page II
'mr, a~d ~ra. ~oush,
acco~lng
.
.
. Wllltk;
' ·
UPI Statebouae Reporter
COLUMBUS- State senators
are conslderlrig a blll aimed at '
protecting Ohio chartered corpo'·
rations from sel(·d.e al)ng arising ·
from the financing and change of
control asscx;iated with corpo·
rate takeovers.
The blll, sponsored by Sen,
Barry Levey, R-Mlddletown, on
behalf of Senate President Stan·
ley Aronoff, R·Clnclnnatt, is
aimed at protecting Federated
Department . Stores, l,ncludlng
F&amp;R Lazarus, which are owned
by the Ca.mpe,au· Corp. that took
Federated into bankruptcy. ,
The blll permits a company's
directors to rev,ew tbe potential
Impact of a proposed control bid.
Bidders seeking to acquire con·
·

Man.'s death .ruled suicide .

~"' ·'

..

.•

Motorcycle
passenger
is injured

DEAL - President Bush (L) shakes hands
with Peruylan President Alan Garcia !'fler signing the anti-drug '
summit cl081ng slalement Thursday. (UPI)
ces and disorders that · this
struggle might produce In our
economy, " Peruvian President
Alan Garcia said at a joint news
conference.
But host President Vlrglllo
Barco came away with no
concrete assurancea from .Bush
acJdresslrig several Colombian
econdmlc concerns:TheY include
the expor~j~lton of , Colombian
coffee without an International
pact that expired last year and
threatened u.s. trade sanctions
against flower exporters for
dumplrig their product o.n the
u:s. market.
Barco also had sought a
program to supp&lt;)rt the Colom·
blan economy while the nation
wages the costly war on the
violent cocaine cartels.
A joint communique signed by
Bush and Barco promised only
that the administration would
study each of the issues .
U.S. Secretary of Sta~e James

Baker signed a "Memorandum
of Understanding" with Bolivia
to co ntrol the export ol arms that
end up In cocaine traffickers'
hands. An agreement with Peru
promised to exchange financial
records to suppress money
laundering and confirmed a
commitment to an extriicJltlon
ti"el\ty.
.
•
,No such agreements were ,
signed wlth Colombll!.
Bollvan President Jaime Paz
Zamora also hailed the change in
tone of the drug battle.
"In Cartagena, we have begun
a type of perestroika," Paz
Zamora said, borrowing Soviet.
President Mikhail Gorbachev's
term for economic and social
restructuring. "I feel all of us
have changed. "
Garcia said the summit
marked a new era In Latin
American relations wtth the
United States, saying U.S. oflt.
·
Continued on page 5

Leach outlines plans·
for highway projects

The State's plans for necessary
Leach was not sure If the
improvements near lhe lntersec· emergency declaration has .been
A motorcyle passenger was
lion of Routes 124 and 33 at officially declared, but reported
injured in an accident at 5:20
Pomeroy were explained to those that the required public hearing
p.m. Thursday on CR. 34, 1.5 at Thursday's meeting of the on the project wm be held in April
miles north ot SR. 124, in Sutton
Meigs County Chamber of Com· with construction to replace the ..
Township, according to the . merce by Joseph Leach; deputy deteriorating culvert lo take
Gallla·Melgs Post of the State director of the Ohio Department place In mid-summer. He said it
Highway Patrol.
ot Transportation's Dpstrlct 10 Is hoped that details can be
Brenda Mayes, 27, Mason, W.
Office, Marietta.
worked out whereby construcVa., suffered minor injuries. She
ODOT became aware last year tion to improve the intersection
was taken to Veterans Memorial
that an old stone culvert under· of Routes 124 and 33 can take
Hospital where she was treated
neath 124 had partially collapsed place at the same time.
.
and released.
and plans to repair the culvert
!-each als'o reported that ODOT
Troopers said Mayes was a
and improve the nearby inter sec· prOjects are in the works "west
passenger on a 1973' Harley
tlon were anticipated for 1991. and east ol Pomeroy." In partie·
Davidson Sporter motorycle rid·
However, a recentalipwhlch was \dar. he mentioned a landslide
den by Gregory A. Fields, 30,
the result of further deterioration situation along 124 In · eastern
Hartford, W. Va. The motorcycle
of the culvert has forcedODOT to Meigs Countyi the replacing of
slld under the front of a 1982 Ford
expedite project plans .
guard rail and resurfacing of
pickup truck driven by Rodney
Leach told the groUp that he Route ·7 at Five Points; and aiso
Nelgler, 34, Racine. Damage,was , ·'went to Columbus last week for joint tepalr ·a nd overlay of the •
minor 10 the truck; moderate .to
emergency declaration" to expe· Route 7 bypass at a cost of $1.5 ·
the motorcycle. The accident is
dlte plans.
Continued on page 5.
s!U'l under investigation.
Kevin Knapp, 23, Pomeroy,
•
was cited for !allure to maintain
control after an accident at 10:30
p.m. Thursday on SR. 124, at
Melp County has been granted
projects. The Ohio Public Works ,
Minersville HlU, 0.4 of a mUeea'st over $425,000 in State Issue II
Commission administers the :
of mUepost 23.
montes, according to an an·
funds. Slate Iasue II was ap. ·
Troopers said Knapp lost COD·
no1111cement today by State Rep.
proved by .Ohio voters in 1981. :
trol of his 1984 Chevro~ plcli:up M@I'Y Abel, (0-Atheu) · and
Additional funding tor the pro- ;
truck. The vehicle went off the State Sen, Jan Michael Long.
jects came from the gasoline tu •
road. striking a u ditty poll!
(D-Clrclevllle).
approved by the legislature last :
owned by Ohio Power Comp;.ny.
The co110ty has
awarded
summer.
.
Damage was moderate., No one
funding for several 'important
Said Rep, Abel, "These Issue II ·
was injured.'
·
·· '
tntraatructure projects, they monies wlll provide assiStance ;
The patrol investigated ' report.
for ourlocal townsl)lp and county .
another Metis County acetdent
Thll Includes road resurfacing gbvernment.s. Maintenance of '
at-9:25a.m. Thuraday on SR. 681,
around the county, Mill Street roadll, bi'ldges, water systems, ;
in Olive Township, 0.4 of a mOe
reconstruction in Middleport, and other infrastructures Is a ·
west of mnepost 25. No one wis
watl!r tank Improvements on coatly necessity. ·I am pleased ·
Injured.
Cherry Street1 New Highland that the state Ia able to Provide .
Troopers said a 1979'chevrotet'
Drive in Pomeroy; Seventh this type of monetary support tor ·
Blizer driven by Martin D.
:
Street aurface drainage and Melg County."
Carter, 24, NeJ10nvUie, went ott
pavtna In Syracuse, and street
Sen. Lone •lso expressed the
the road, striking an embal\.11·
improvements In Racine VIllage. importance of thll fundlng. "The '
ment. Damap wu heavy. No
Iuue II bond fundi are pro- ·types of projects this money ··
one was Injured.
vided thro\1111 lhe •tate le&amp;lsla· finances are thole that are vital
The !Nitro! cited Carter for
ture to help local aowrnmenta to the.evl!ryday operation of local
failure to !1'lllntaln control. .
fund lntraatructure lnalntenance .go~rnm~nt," a.ald Sen. Lona. .

Meigs receives grant 'funds

been

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16,1990

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Commentary

'PinpOmt stash.of · ~h.....;,.J_ac_k'_Ande_~_~..:.:..n..::.:..and~D-==ale.:......:. . .:vJ: . :. .n.:. :.A~t a_••
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The Daily Sentinel
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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo

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DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG!l-MASON AREA

"~· I"'T"&gt;-I._-r,.....,..,c::::l,o=o

IS!m~

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ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Maaqer

PAT WlfiTEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Coutroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Pt!bllshers.Assoclatlon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shou.kl bj! leis than 300
words long. All letters are·subJect to. editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues not personali-

ties.

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Bush holds more news
conferences than Reagan

WASHINGTON .- Iranian
President Hashemi Rafsanjanl
doesn't share his predecessor's
disdain for' worldly possessions.
Rafsanjanlls a Moslem fundamentalist like . the Ayatollah
Khom!linl. But unlike the ayatol·
lab, Ratsanjanl Is first and ,
for~jmo'st a man who likes his
comforts. He has bilked his
country out of millions of dollacs,
and now we know where some of
the lbot·IS bidden•.
We reported a year ago that
Rafsanjani had Invested hls
money In West European banks
and stock exchanges under dff,
ferent nam~ . We have .bee!\
pressil)g U.S..tntelllgence sources and Iranian sources to
pll\polnt where that money Is.
,Those sources now ~II us that

·~~:t n~~~~~o~~~!a~~~~sJ!:
tional Bank is 32287090. He keeps
an unknown amount of money
tl)ere.

We have llso learned that hi! French and·Swlls currency as a.
has 29 million Deutschmarks hedge against any drop tn cur($19 million) In one account at the rency ·values. Iranian rials just
German Sparkasse Bank.
. don't offer the same senSe of
Rafsanjanl has 67 million security.
Swiss francs ($43 mUIIon) In one
. Top secret Central Intelligence
s,ccount .at a Geneva branch of Agency reports say that Rats an· '
the Union Bank of Switzerland.
'jani's' personal fortune may
He has a whopping $77 million amount to $1 billion, taken
In Am'erlcan money at'a branch primarily from Iranian oil sales.
of the French Societe Generate The fact that he has salted the
cash away In foreign banks
Bank In Switzerland.
In addition,,Rafsanjanl-has at suggests that be plans to Jive the
least one bank account with life of a ·rich man If he Is ever run
Japanese Yen worth tens of out of Iran. ·
mililons of dollars.
In a twist of Irony, this
Now Intelligence sources tell entrepreneurial side of Rafsanus that Rafsanjanl seized the janl appeals to George Bush, as It
Ceausescu cache for hlinself. . appealed to Ronald Reagan,
After all, Ceausescu wouldn't according to White House sourneed It where he.was going.
ces. Ratsanjanl Is not an ultra
Idealogue as was Kbomelnl. He
An lnternattoruil financial ex· understands the bottom line: He .
pert told us thai It would not be loves money and that makes·hlm
ususual for someone with a almost Western.
Reagan liked . the look of
multi·mllllon dollar fortune to
keep the , money In American,

By HElEN THOMAS
--.,..---~
·
UPI White Ro- Reporter
WASHINGTON - President Bush has to be saluted for holding
frequent news COnferences -and of all things seeming to enjoy them.
He h~ld 32 news conferences last year. but only one Iii the familiar
prime time television pattern In the formal setting of the Easl Ro.om
for evening viewers.
,
·
Instead, he prefers to showup In theWhiteHousepress room after
giving reporters a half hour or an hour warning, sometimes less.
The prime-time news· conferences were pre-set for 30 minutes by
agreement among the networks and the White House,.endlngwith the
traditional "thank you, Mr. President."
In the free wheeling morning or afternoon news conferences that
appear Impromptu but ar~ obviously planned in advance, Bush Is
generous with his time and winds up the sessloi!S' by saying he will
take two or three more questions. Under this format, more reporters
get a chance to ask a question.
Bush Is usually on top of the news and does not have to bone up as
much as some of bls predecessors.
His takes the stance thaf the best defense Is offense. Bush, who has
been around Washington for the last 25 years or so, knows most of the
reporters who cover tlie White House regularly by their first name.
He likes to banter with them and Is not adverse to chiding them.
Bush is glib and cuts ciff the questioner when he Is not' sure of the
turf, quickly moving on to another .r aised hand. He comes across as ;
slnce~e, earnest and his. answers verge on his campaign slogan,
"Don t worry, be happy."
·
He Is rarely caught off gua~d. He's been around the track too long
for that. He often Will turn around what he thinks Is an accusatory
question to tell the.report,er he knows he doesn't agree.
At a recent news conference regarding the .changes In Europe, he
said: "I was wrong'. You were wrong. She was wrong."
By holding frequent news conferences, Bush Is living up to a high
standard that other presidents should follow. He Is being accountable.
The news conference Is the ·only forum where a presidel)t can be
questioned in our society on a regular basis. It's a iwo-way street
where the president can make his views known on a variety of
subjects, and be gets the feedback from reporters who ask the wide
ranginJr questions. It can be an enlightening forD)at that lnforms the
publiC where the president stands.
It Is also good for the people to see a president cross-examined and ·
interrogated on Issues he might nev!lr discuss If left only · to his
formalized speeches, written by his stable of speechwriters.
Actually, It is a much IM;!tter mode of communication. for the
president than a set speech written by someone else. Sl~e Bush does
not read speeches as well as his predecessor, he Is constantly
apologizing for not being as eloquent.
There Is a former speechwriter around, Peggy Noonan, who has
~
written a book and Is claiming credit for putting all the forgettable
and unforgettable statements in the mo;u ths of President Reagan and
Bush. For Bush, she claims "read my lips," "a thousand points of
light," and "kinder and gentler," among others.
It's always better to get the word from the presl.d ent himself, nofhls
speechwriter and not his mouthpiece. Bush told reporters at the
Lest we think that ,the U11lted
A4ita, 'tll.e Board took a position lsts, cartels· are growing to the .
Malta Summit, "I'm riilt an articulate emotionalist"
States Is the only major indusstrongly .OP!K!Sing 11ny efforts by point where they threaten the
But that:s all right, just so he says what he means.
trialized couniry burdenfd wltha
member governments to Individ- viability of national goyern·
significant drug problem, a reually lega,llze certain ·narcotics. ments and the safety of those
cent report released by the
Conteddlng that legallzatlqn governments' officials . The
United Nations International
would send,the wrong message to danger of undermining the politi·
Narcotics Control Board unders· .users and ·would li!ild to ·a n cal Institutions and economies of
cores the severity ofthe problem explosion elf abuse; the' Board some countries has never been
wo;ldwlde.
saw I!Othlng but negatives result- greater. The perU to the very
Dear Editor:
Board of Elections. Those attendThe report, based on findings Ing trom , such lert'slatlve lives of political leaders, jurists,
The undersigned members. of
Ing found It very difficult to
sanctions: ·· ,·
\ . '
. jo\lmallsts, and private citizens
the Committee To Restore The · accept the fact that the .old from 177 nations and territories,
· warns that the rapidly escalating .
'M()re
drug-telatea
deaths,
es'
' has also never been greater"'·t he
Reedsville Voting Precinct
Reedsville Precinct of 352 regis- use of lllegal drugs h!!$ reaqhed a
calatlng
health
care
costt;ttnd
·
report contends. The Board re·
wpuld like to give an update to
tered voters was dissolved to "new and · dangerous ·stage"
the
destruction
of
famillell
11nd
,pott
Implores governmental
thOse interested persons who
save the Long Bottom Precinct of
around
the
world.
It goes on to
basic
value.s
would
"'
the
·ium
,
leaders
to step up thetr respecappointed us to represent them In
206 registered voters and with the · Identity the .problems tbe drug
product
of
legalization
the
BOard
tive.
countries'
efforts to·combat
their Intensive effort to regain
highest number of · absentee trade Iii creating for the world mall)ta.lned:! &lt;
•
• this world scourge.
their convenient voting place.
voters In the county.
community and suggest$ steps
The major Jwarnlng contained ·
Personally, I feel that the
Since our appointment at the
A recent letter received by
that can and should be taken by In the Board's report dealt with
United
Nations Is an excellent
well-attended public meeting
Mrs. Balderson from Jane Frymthe organization: s member na- the riSing threat posed by Inter:
for.u m to address this Internaheld last fall at the Olive
yer, Director of the Meigs County
tions to address · this ·growing national drllg cartels. "Heavily
tional cancer. As a body, It can
Township Fire House located In
Board of Elections, was dis·
.
blight.
armed,
well
flilanced
criminal
and
should'.be Increasingly called
Reedsville, two committee meetcussed, The letter stated that the
Citing Increased cultivation dru11 cartels are beCOming ever
upon
to guide and orchestrate
Ings have been held.
board of elections would not be
and drug dependency throughout more bold and ruthless.
International
efforts to fight the
During the December meeting addressing the polling changes In
Central and South · America,
In
concert
with
terrorActing
drug
war.
This
problem, which
at .the Whltel)ead home, It was
Meigs County anytime during · Western Europe and Southern
I
noted that 177 voters frQill the 1990. Future action was dis· ·
southern section of the original cussi!d at length wltli decisions to
Reedsville Precinct traveled to be made later.
Long Bottom to place their votes.
Your committee plans to reTlie original Long Bottom Premain active '8nd will keep you
cinct had only 133 placing their
posted on further d¢velopments.
votes. We commend the voters
Flespectfully,
Well, President Bush's l!udaet cally, sfufie It .would h~rt. only throllib 'the four years of his
for their strong turn-out. The
Ethel M. Mundry
proposal for fiscal 1991 (wblch "the rich."· EveD so, the proposal administration.
excellent newspaper account In
Grant A. Smith
begins Oct. 1) Is now before wasev~ntdallyacuttledbycooler
For George Bush Is not only
November of the disputed action
Da Westfall
Congress, and once again Mr. heads In tbe f,lemilcratlc Party.
shrewd
but lucky. In retrospect,
taken by the Board of Elections
Margaret Cauthorn
as
good
as
his
Bush
has
proved
Bu~
the
·Democrats
have
been
we
can
see that the jerry-built
affecting Reedsville area voters
Hugh Martin
word: Tbere are no new taxes In confident, all along, that this was house of world communism had
was also discussed.
Inez Boring . lt.
'
one battle they were bound to win to collapse on the watch of some
Committee members meeting
Geraldine Holsinger
Pemocrats
h,ve
been
The
In the lana run. When George U.S. president; but It just baP:
at the Balc;terson home In Janu·
Ruth A. Balderson
more
taxes
at
least
demanding
Bush .stood .before tbl! Republi· penedtodosoonBush's.Andone
ary stodled copies of minutes of and Maxine Whitehead, Cosince
1984,
when
Walter
Mondale
can
convention In August 1988 byproduct of Its collapse Is a
meetings held by ·the Coupty
Chairman
stood before the San Francllco and made his . famous pledge, gradual but substantial decrease
convention and pledged to enact "~ad my lips: No new taxes," · In the amount of money the
J
them If elected. His subsequent the Democrats were sure he was aovernment will have to spend on
defeat, 49 Stat.. to 11 COnVInCed ly!ng, and tliey looked foJWird to deten~. This "peace dividend"
the J?emocrats that the Idea, reminding the voters . of his may never be huge, and It wtll ot
however pralsewor,tpy, was poUt· duplicity when, at last, be backed course be battled over by the
lcally lethal. Since
then tbe down. Even 'when he submitted, thousands of special Interests
.
Democratic
leadership
In Con- and succenfuUy negotiated, a that want subsidies from the
·
8)' UaMed I'IWI InteriiUioal
·.
greaa
bas
(with
one
notable budget for "seal 1990 that con'
federal aovernment. But It will .
Today Is Friday, Feb. 16, the 47th day of 1990 wttb 318 to follow.
grtlnly
·refused
' to talned no new taxes, they winced most certainly render new taxes
exception)
The moon Is waning, movina toward Ita lutquarter.
push a tax Increase unleiS but looked foJWard to flscall991
f
·
The morning stars ·a re Mercury, Venus. lifars and Saturn.
President Bush first requested .It · wben' (they were positive) new un:;!.'cia o : = s : ~~:~t
.. . The evening star Ia Jupiter.
- . which, of course, he has not · taxes woald be ~sentlal.
when Mr, Bush stepi to !be
. ·~" : ~.. TbOM born on tbla date ..-e under the sign ofAquarlus. They Include
do!IE!.
·
But now hll a!ll budget haJ microphone at the next Republl·
• ·'1: .••.•• blamrlan Henry .Brooks AdiiJIIBin 1&amp;'!8; OI'C'-trilleacler Wayne Kina
The 41XCeptlon ·was the Hou11e reached Capi!Ql HUI, and once . can natlonaiC!Onveatlontoacc.pt
.'··.•· &amp;nd ,actor Cheater Morrta, wbo created till role ot tum detective
Democratic
leaderlblp's call, again there Arft: no new taxes.
·. · lbtoa Blackle, both In 1901; vealrlllllpllt Edpr Berpn 1n 1903·
renomlnlt iOn for a MCOIId term,
last
September,
for an Increase
linpr Patd ADdrewsoftheAndrews!UIIIrlln 1920 (qe 70); singe~
Moreover. there are growing tl!ml will be a toq parqrapb In
In the top .tncorne-tax rate - an ·· slgna,lhatBu•hllaolngtobeable bls speech remlndln1 voters ot
Sonny Bono In 1940 (age 50)1 11,ctorLeVarB11rton In 1"' (age33) and
Idea supposedly harmless polltl· to keep ·hla pledge straight hll pr&lt;Jilllle at New Orleans, cJf
tennis player John McEnroe In 1959 (age 31).
·
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t
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Ratsanjanl 110 much that he ,
worked · tbrouab "Rafsanjanl to ;
sell· arms tq Iran In hopes ·o~ . ,
gettlna hostaaes In return. Rea· •
g~ saw Raflanjanl as a · man
who could soften the ayatollah. .
Bush has continued dealing ·
secretly with Ratsanjanl. In fact,
Bush provided Ratsanjartl with a '
golden opportunity to pilfer even
more cash. Last November,
Bush authl)rized the return of
$567 million to· Iran. The mo~ey.
was part of the $9.9 billion In·
Iranian assets frozen In the
United States after Iranians
Invaded the tJ.S. Embassy I~
Teheran.
Returning the money In drlbs
and drabs may be Bush's way o1
buying the .safety of American
hOstages now held by Iranian·
.supported ten'orllt groups . ..
.Given
,, Rafsanjaitl's Midas
.
touch, IUs unlikely that the entire
$567 million esca~Je~l. IIIJ grasp on
the way to an Iranian hank.
·

· NOWHERE TO GO! - White Sox equipment manager Willie
Thompson .and bls load of .b~ballgear are ready, bullbere, Is
nowhere to go due to the sprtnc training lockout Imposed by team
owners. Cam.. were scheduled to open Thursday wllh pl~hers
and catchers reporting. ( UPI)

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PON»dds MtiiJD-~JON DOLLAR DEAL- HeavyweiJbt
boxer E•uder lloiJfleld piiQs wllh an old bicycle oo display In his
new ear Ill~ Tbunday at.tbe automobUe dealel?lblphe owus
. just soldh of 't he Atlanta metro area. Meuwhlle, members of
Ho~~·s, camp are pouderlng a mulll·mUUon doDar deal
guaranteelllr 111m first llhotat the winner oftbe MlkeTy!IOn-James
"Billiter" Dou111as rematch, scheduled for this summer. (UPI)

.,

Do~glas .tide bout .in Ohio

Drugs: A worldWide problem_co....::.ng_;c_bJr_ence_M_
. let

Letters to the editor

Wants ooting precinct restored ·

"a_
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90-1 shof ehairtnan says ·.

u.s:·

Keep •read~.J:Us . lips~. No .new taxes

Today in history

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SJ)orlf briefs

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the loud scoffs of the Democrats,
and of tbe fact that there have,
nonetheless, beim no new taxeS'.
Democratic Sen. Daniel Moyn·
lhan' s propoial to cut the FICA
· tax, which Is theoretically designed to fund the heavy Social ,
SecUrity payments coming due In
25 or 30 years, would have the
effect of forcing passaae ot new
taxes, ~!nee huge FICA let· · ~
asides would no lonaer be available to help bring the a,nnual
federal budget deficits within lbe ·
Gramm· Rudman guidelines: But." ·'
that 11 precllely why the pr~sal · ~
~on' t pass Conaress or (If It ·
· does) win presidential approval. · ,.
· Moreover, I~ the Republlcli!IB · •
COIIId bring tp~lvea to Pt ~~
. down:and-dlrty as , the DemO. •
cratl Invariably ire when P~&gt;:· ' ·
lng pollUcs wltb Social ~lly.
they could scare lbedayllghta out
. of America' aelderly by aeeuslnJ
Sen. Moynihan ot ~te lalock •·
the financial .unclerplnill:ngl out
from under the Social ~rltr

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now center on arbitration.
$75,000, a second-year player
"I think it's fair to say that
$125,000, and a third-year man
most of the discussion today
$200,000.
.
• .
focused on arbitration-eligible
Meetings took place In the ~
player Issues or players who at- o.fflce of the commlssloner,,wbo !
one time were eligible for arbi - attended with O'Connor and
tration and are not under the
deputy commissioner Steve
current agreement, " Fehr said.
Greenberg. Scott Sanderson,
A two-day strike took place In
Phil Bradley, Orel Hershlser, '
1985, with arbitration one of the
Danny Jackson, Paul Molitor,
'elements In the settlement. BeRick Horton and Tim Belcher
fore the strike, a player needed
attended with Fehr and some
two years in the majors to be
members of his staff.
ellllble for arbitration. Now he
O'Connor complained th;~J fal- .;
needs ihree.
lout over Vincent's suggestions
Having yielded that Item in
had created some difficulties . He
1985, players might balk at
refused to blame the union, but '
further concessions. Yet Com·
said he had heard some unhappimissioner Fay Vincent's list of ness "In the field" over how
suggestions would place a limit players received Vincent's
of 75 percent on . any raise suggestions.
received In arbitration.
"We took a difficult situation
"Obviously it Is, as It has been . and In a sense overnight made It
in all prior negotiatiOns, a major a more difficult situation,'' O'Cstumbling block," Fehr said.
. onnor said.
O'Connor said arbitration, pen·
O'Connor satd all nine elesions and minimum salary are ments of VIncent's ·suggestions
the key Issues.
·
came under discussion.
Vincent's,. suggestions would
"We took them Item by Item .'
also Increase salary minimums and discussed them, and we'll be
as a way of protecting players not doing that tomorrow," he said, .
yet eligible for arbitration. repeating the owners' position .'
Under this proposal, a rookie that no camps will open until a
would receive no less than pact is reached .

By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sporlll Writer
For the first 20 minutes of an
anticipated homecoming, the
best guard on the court wasn't
wearing the Georgia Tech jersey
of the returning native son. BY
game's end, however, New'Yorkralsed Kenny Anderson re·
warded his 400 guests at Madison
Square Garden.
Led by the , hot shooting of
guard Jean Prioleau - who
buried five three-pointers Fordham built a 5046 halftime
lead over Anderson's 11thranked Georgia Tech.
Anderson was not upstaged l.n
the second half and finished with
19 points, 13 assists and seven
rebounds to help the Yellow
Jackets rally lor an 83·78 victory.
Many of his spectacular assists
dreW "oohs" and uahs" from the
crowd of 10,000.
After falling behind early. the
Rams rallled behind Prioleau, a
Teaneek, N.J :, product. whose
only previous meetings with
Anderson have come on the
playgrounds of New York.
With Georgia Tech leading 13·6
In the first half, Prioleau nailed
!'Ollsecuttve,~; ·'thre.e-potnters
to '
brlngthe·Ramsevenat15-15. The
Ranis again fell behind bu t.came
back as Prioleau twice found his
mark from three-point range.
Andre McCienson made a
seven-footer to give Fordham Us
first lead at 45-44. On the Rams'
ne~t possession, Fred Herzog hit
a 15-footer, Prioleau made a steal
and buried his fifth three-pointer
of the half for a 5044 lead.
"I wasn't . thinking about any
rivalry between me and Kenny,"
Prioleau said.
· ·

MayiJi:o not, but everyone else
was.
''You 'have . to give Fordham
credit," Georgia Tech Coach
Bobby Cremlns said, "for 35 or 36
minutes they outplayed us."
:I:he score was :tl~ 62-62 with
12: 41 to go beforl! the Yellow
Jackets used a 12-5 run over the
next six minutes to help the
Atlantic Coast Conference visitors Improve to 184. Anderson
accounted for four ol his 13
assists during the run.
Anderson, who averages 20 .6
points, 8. 7 assists , 5.3 rebounds
and is a shoe-In for ACC Rookie of
the Year, wasn 't as concerned
about his first collegiate hometown performance as we was
about his team's.
"I was just nervous to lose," he
said, "I really wanted the win. I
was really worried Cor tlie team
to play well. I was really excited
to see my:frlends and family, but
I dldn 't give them ail tickets,"
said Anderson, who guessed they
numbered .400.
"I think that he can get
better," Cremlns said ol Anderson, "and he needs a little work
on defense. He made some great
passes but that's what he's
supposed to do."
The .Rams of the Metro Allan· ·
tic Athletic Conference, tel! to
14·10 and were led by PriOleau's
23 points.
Also In the Top 20, No. 6
Mi~hlgan upended No. 15 Mlnne·
sota 73·7;7, No. 7 Nevada-Las
·vegas beatNo. l8NewMexlcoSt.
109-86, No. 9 Louisiana Slate lost
to Kentucky 100-95, No.l60regon
State lost to Washington 66·57,
and No. 19 Xa11ier. topped Evansville 71·52.

win the $212,800 Unocai bonus for
winning the race, he'll just have
to travel a little farther to collect
the money .
"We've got nothing to lose but
position on the track," said crew
chief Richard Broome. "That
means a lot, but It's a. 500-mlle
race and we've got lime.,to work
our way back to the front."
Meanwhile, out on the race
track, Bodine and Earnhardt
used differing strategies to win.
In the first race, Bodine elected
not to plt, going the enUre 50 laps
(125 miles) on tank of fuel. In
the second race, Earnhardt
stopped during a caution period
with 13 laps remaining and got
fresh tires which enabled him to
charge up through the pack and
win the third qualifying race of
his career:
"Why stop if you don't have
tp?'' Bodine asked afterfinlshlng
first In Junior Johnson's Bud·
weiser Ford Thunderbird. "It
wasn't very pretty, but It was
effective."

At Minneapolis, Rumeal Ro·
bins on scored 33 points and Terry
Mills added 24 and Michigan held
off a furious rally in the final
moments to snap Minnesota's
14-game home winning streak.
Michigan, 19-4 and 9-3, led nearly
the entire game but the Gophers
failed on four chances to tie the
score in the final three minutes :
The Gophers, losing at Williams
Arena for the first time ail
season. fell to 16-6 and 7-5. They
were led by 25 points from Willie
Burton, who missed the front end
of three one-and-ones in the final
eight minutes.
.
At Las Vegas, Nev .. Anderson'
Hunt scored 31 points, Including .
nine three-point shots, In a Big
West victory over New Mexico
State, which had handed UNLV
Its ·only conferel!ce loss of the
season. UNL V Improved to 21-4
overall and 13-1 in the league and
drop~d New Mexico State to 20·3
and 11·2.
Hunt's first half featured 26
points, Including eight three
pointers in 12 attempts. Equ&lt;\liY
Impressive was point guard Greg
Anthony, who contributed 10
points and six assists while
playing with a jaw broken in two
places as t~e result of a fall
Monday night during a game
against Fresno State. He was
back at practice the next day and
played 32 minutes against New
Mexico State.
At Lexington Ky., the largest
crowd In Rupp Arena history 24,301 - saw Derrick Miller
score 29 points and Deron Feld·
haus add 24 to help the Wildcats
upset the Tigers. Kentucky, 13·10
and 9·5 in the Southeastern
Conference, never trailed and
got six clutch free throws In the
final 65 seconds by Riehle
. Farmer. The Wildcats are 12·2 at
· Rupp Arena, including an 8-0 .
mark against SEC teams. Chris
Jackson led LSU, 19-5 and 9-4,
with 41 points and almost shot the
Tigers back Into the game with
four three-pointers In the final
five . minutes. Freshman Sha·
quUle O'Neal added 14 points and
21 rebounds before fouling out
and 1-foot Stanleey Roberts
added 13.points and 14 rebounds.
At Seattle, Eldridge Recasner

scored 28 poll)ts and helped hold
high-scoring Gary Payton to 13
points, sending Washington to a
66-57 Pacific 10 upset of Oregon ~
State in the ijuskles' first triumph and the Beavers' first loss
In lour games. Payton, who '
shared team scoring honors with · ·
forward Teo Allbegovlc, was ~' ·
averaging a conference-leading ·
26.5 points per game butwashel:l
to hls second-lowest production · •·.
of the season.
'
At Cincinnati. Tyrone Hill
scored 16 points and grabbed 14
rebounds to help the Musketeers
.avenge their only conference loss '
of the season. Xavier, which lost
59-51 to Evansville last month, ·
Improved to 20-2 overall and· 9-1
in Midwestern Collegiate Confer- '
ence ~ Evansville fell to 14-12 and
6-4.

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~

Georgia Tech outlasts Fordham five, .83-78

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I) . old days. All the fights now go to
The'chairman oftheOhloBoxlng
the casinos. I'd' like to see
Commission said ThUrsday lhe
(Douglas defend ))Is crown)
odds are weighed heavily against ·' anywhere In Ohio, but who have
James "Buster" Douglas defend·
we got in Ohio who's willing to put
ing his heavyweight champion· · up that kind of money•• •
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
ship In the Buckeye State.
Douglas of ColumbUs won the
(UPI) - Ken Schrader thought
As for recent calls for federal
championship this past weekend
he was racing for first. In reality, ·
regulation or the sport, Joseph ' · with a stunnl~ iO-round knockhe was racing for third.
Gennaro _Jr. of Youngstown ~aid
out of previously unbeaten Mike
That miscalculation cost him
he would be in favor only If the
Tyson.
dearly Thursday when he
"If somebody Is wiliing to put
regolatory body were staffed by
wrecked his pole-winning car on
boxing people, "not senators ilnd
up the money there will he a
the flna1 11ap of the first Daytona
congressmen who know nothing"
rtght.bere," said Gennaro. "But
500 qualifying race, won by Geoff
about the sport.
as long as Don King is th
Bodine. His Chevrolet cannot be
repaired ·a nd as a result,
"It's a 90·1 sho!,'' Gennaro said promoter, he'll go wherever h!
of a heavyweight title bout· In wants.
·
Schrader will start Sunday's
"If Don King called me and
Daytona 500 at the rear of the
Ohio. "Who's going to promote
It? I'd love for It to happen, but said be wanted to go with a fight
field In a backup car.
where~~~ money Is, tha~·s where · (In Ohio), I'd be delighted to
they go.
meet with him," Gennaro said .
Dale Earnhardt, who will start '
Gennaro spoke before the start
second Sunday. won the second
of the commission's regolar
qualifying race, but the most
monthly meeting.
Important development Thurs"Everything's In the millions
(AII Games)
' day was schrader's quick trip
today," he said. "It's not like the
TEAM
· W L I' OP froin first to last on the starting
Welllton ......... 17 3 1461 1171 grid.
·'
Mlller ............. 14 6 1277 1458
"It's tough toglveupthepolnt,
Trlmble ...... ; ... ll 8 1158 1136 butwetalkedltoveranddeclded
Bel~!fe ............ 12 8 1442 1078
It was the best thing to do," said
.
I!IDClcer
Alexander
......
12
8
'1273
'
1197
'
Scbr~der, the fastest Daytona
Kat Haasklvl, mldflelder·
Fed-Hocklna ... 9 1113li6 1329 500. qualifier for three straight
coach of the Cleveland Crunch,
Vinton CountY. 9 9 1141 1079 years.
was added to the East squad for
Meigs
........... .. 3 17 1091 · 1452
.Schrader will still be eligible to
the Feb. 21 MISL All-Star Game
Nels-York
;
...
,..
2
18
1076
1431
In San Diego. He replaces Injured
TuMdiQ''I results:
teammate Hector Marinaro.
Athens
62 Trimble 51
Track and Jl'leld
Wellston
69·JackSon 56
Romania's Dolna Mellnte says
she can break the IJOO.meter VInton County 85 M!Uer 74 .
(makeup)
Indoor record at Friday night's
Frki~Q&lt;'• came:
Los Angeles Times Indoor
Waverly
at VInton County
Games. Mellnte 'earned a
Sa&amp;urdar'•
came:
$100,000 bonus last week In New
Trimble
at
VInton County
Jersey for a record mUe time of
(mak~p)
4I17.13. Atter the receni RomanIan revolution, s)le now keeps the
. entire prize. ... Freb Lebow,
GRAVELY TRACTOR
president of the NeW York Road
SALES • SERVICE
Runners Club, 11as been hospital204 ~ lt.
Pa-.,, OH.
Ized In New York for a IJ'OWth In
. Jell I Wllf~t l11r1
'btl head. Tbe sertoume111 of the
oPiiii MaDAY Ru FJUDAv
matter II not y~t clear. Lebow;
M. P.M.
IATUIO t A.M.·1
52, entered the hospital WedHI·
CLOI:
~MONDAY
I
day, complaining Of memory
lapses.
·
Yacldlnc
The boat FIIJier and.Paykel of
New zealand leada the Whit·
bread round· the-world yacthllll
1
race after 11 days.
•

TVC. standings

'

William Rusher

progress, I'd hate to see a bad
day."'
Friday marks Day 2 of the
owners' .lockout. White Sox Gen·
era! Manager Larry Himes drew
a rebuke fr&lt;Jill management by
allowing two players to use
camp.
"I told the players who are
here that toda:Y (Thursday) was
the reporting date and tomorrow
Is the flrstofflctalday of training,
so they were free to use the
field," Himes said. "To me, if
there was a lockout, Wd take
place on the 16th...
Rich Levlneofthe commissioner's office firmly stated the
lockout was In effect Thur"sday·.
· ·"Camps are closed," Levine
said. "We heard about it, called
the White Sox and they said there
were only minor-league
ulavers."
Even If a settlement came
Friday, teams would need until
next week to deilver equipment.
Each succeeding delay threatens
th·e exhibition season, which Is
scheduled to open March 1.
Wit~ owners having removed
proposals for revenue sharing
and pay-for-performance, talks

Earnhardt, Bodine qualify;
Schrader wrecks pole car

cuts across national borders is
clearly a global problem, one
'that all nations have a commori
Interest' In combating.
The world lookS to the U.N. to
provide peacekeeping forces to
quell unrest In various regions of
the globe; the world lookS to the
U.N. to coordinate relief efforts
In various regions affected by ·
drought an~ . famine; why. not '
look to them to help quell the
escalating International drug ·
problem as well, a problem just
as threatening and just a!&gt; ·
presslllg as the others they are
accustomed to dealing with. ·
.,
Rather than requiring the
to work one ·on one with the
Colomblas and Ecuadors of' the
world, as we do now, having 11 ..
world organization to tum to that '
could spearhead the tl'ght against
International drug activities,
could prove a lot more practical
and effective 'for all concerned.

.

'

By MIKE TULLV
VJ'I Natleaal Baseball Writer
NEW YORK - Baseball's
labor talks lntensltled on what
W()Uid have been the first day of:
sprint~ training Thursday; with
arbitration emerging as the crux
and union head Don Fehr hinting
he had some things to think over.
''We went over a number of the
!Raj or !~sues," Fehr said. "I
don't know that I would categorize today as making any measurable affirmative progress but ·I
wouldn't say the opposite, eit~er ;
"We want to digest what's
happened and see how things are
tomorrow before drawing &amp;ny
conclusions. Certainly nothing
was settled today. "
Management' representative
Chuck O'Connor said talks would
resume Friday at 10:30 a.m.
EST. He ~escrlbed Thursday's
talks as "difficult."
"Beauty Is In the eye of the
beholder," he said. "I think the
fact that w.e spent a lot of ttme In
the room dlscussln~; Is progress,
but that's · the view of a labor
negotiator. I suspect If any one of
you were In the room you'd say,
~ My god, If they call that

The

e talks focus on arbitration;~.

Major

Page 2-Tha Daly Saltine!
Pomaoy-Middlaport. Ohio
friday. Febri.la'y 16. 1980

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Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

,.

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,.
-·'.

�•

Ohio

Frldly,

Felfli/• ~ 18, 1980

18,1880

I
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I

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,. .
.

. LOOSE

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.

-Ohio state's Jamaal Brown

~L) tries hla bell&amp; Tbund~Q&lt; to stop WlecoiiBin' s

1

· Brian Good from reac:hlnJ the loose ball during a

mad IIClramble. Good did .get the ball, but not
before Brown got called for the foul. OSU won.
(UPI)

I

Scoreboard ...

:

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••

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''•
•

This week's games
fta.Weetr'a
OhloC..Jt8aallltballfkllledllte

ly VaMe• P...-.lat.r..t.._.
I"RD)AV, FU II

O,ke at

urn-

SATURDAY, FU 17

Ball Stal hiNt
·
CeaiNJ Mld1 at lowln1 Gretn
Miami at Kent 8t
. ·
0•1o Unho II Ea.Wr1 Mleh

Weaien Mlel at Y•-'-• St
S.1ller• Ulaal8&amp; a1 .U.r•
Vlrai.U Ted! al Chtd..tl
Euten Dl M aew .... 8t
D-aa••llt • U.,IDa

Helcltlber&amp;at Mplll•m
Ma1ttta M Ohio Nortlern
Cap ... MMI Uakla
laldwi•Walt.ce at Ot.terbeln
Hiram a&amp; lo lin Carroll

W"*'r • Oberlin

Fr~ molll Ross'lt. F11111a.y !Mi
Ft. Rt CD¥1'!1')' 71, New a-.,...,.. I
Greta U. Huda011 f7
'
·Mu .Jacll 51, Roowr !I
Nordonlia 41, Sprta&amp;flthl Sl
St. Peler 11, Bueyrua II
Slow 1&amp;, T alrmdae fl
W...worth f.t, Nortoa H
Wettlale 12, N.OID'IIIed 45

.

TIMII'IIdq Sparta Traai•d It•

BMeb.U
BaJtlmare - Arrei d to a I· JUI'
wlll.. ct
'lleiM!r leff Ballard.
Chtcl n•ll - Slpd laft .. der Lalli
Qu IPo~n kla I· )If U't'O .araet: arrud1u
l-)1!-11' co Ill~ wttll pkht'I'JI.., RIJo,
~ouli on - i\vfll• tea l·)'f&amp;rctnlrad

w11•

rih I IM:lrtlilop Aadlljar CdtiiO.

Acrft•

t1

a I· )'Ur

I!O•ract ' wllb ... llekler Mike lA gina;
•IJHd oalflel*r Paa Sb!l'ldan to a
mleor-learw co.-net. _ ...
Milwaukee - Named Welllly Sella:
J~ral

counarl.

Oaklud - Slped ftrlll baaem• Mark
McGwlrt! to a 1- )'f'ar r.onlract .
Philadelphia - Slped ,lkbt r J eff

ParMI to a 1-Jlt•Matrad.
Ptttlbu ..h - Sfped ,lkller Stu
CIIIMN ta a Trip~A co•rad; aamed
•hcl u.. u mhtor•leape field
cocril.a•.
s .. rruc:ue. - At;rnd to I·J'!&amp;r
co•null t wttll pl&amp;claer .Jen Bru.lle)' ud
IDfteldeu Owd. .Ja&lt;.'bcNI Md GI'IPI

Uttoa.

CoUep
oJacboa\rt.Ut - AaiNII•d.r8JpMion

ol aoccer eoaelt Bill C..lltut.
Meml*k Sta&amp;t - Named Olillell
. ,..t r•IIIII•J bacb COHb aad lee
Spar•dtte•ht: aecolld11y teaetl.
Norllerltllolllllua - .ta... aud l'tiiiJ(·
atloa el IMII'I b•llttball CNCII Jay
PIYec, elfedlve
1$.
Notrt Dame - N~~~ttd Pewr Va•
n_.qbiiCkt coach.
Saa Olep - Named Stne FalrchUd
lt'CI'IIMiiJ coonll ... or.
We..t UWtr - Named •b Eatoo
tallballeeatL

.1••

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

Alt..-........., .

hid . . . . . . . . . . . . . lft.-td .. ..

elllllllll&amp;r ..... .,• .
till... - N. . .A 0ft'l . .11.. ull
Fn811 Su.teck ••tsla•t f..tball
c.e• ... Nldc Alnetrue. •• Crtrnrnel ... lleb ..,....erl,.rt-llrne..-.cut

........

f&amp;f!Mtall ~ICIW!I ,

Ku . . Clt:r - llpell •eteua.e back
WJIBe am.
MJ•...U.-M....C .. rnlpauo .. r
lblelllacken ~acit lie* IUM• .. Iaiit a

'I

Tonight's games:

I

Ellison S. M. 8eSYt r LOcal SS
JileldM, Me41a HJ&amp;fllud

Transadion&amp;

KaaiM Cit y -

Hodey
Edmltlion - Called up JOaUead er
Randy Eu lbJ from Phoealx of the
lnlerlllttt-.1 Hockey Lupe.
Lo• "'-lflea- caneclupleft wlnr S«~U
Bjup&amp;l41 anti defe~~~tman Boh Halld.11
lrcm New Ha"e~~ of the Amertc•Hockey
Leque.
'

f'.opleJ Sl, 81 ch Revere 41
1

I

"

Apedal-leanta CGith.

Coplef 11, Bnere tt

SUNDAY, FEB 18

!Uicbl1ui al Ohlost

NY Jel t - .tnnou~~eed slrellf:lll ud
conlltktnlinlcoach,JimWIIIIama will DOl
relum MXI M IUIOft.
Phentx - Named Pete RodriPII

lrookvlew U. Nlla :U
DIM'flpleaa, Hubbanlll

1

..

•mllar JDb •Mh &amp;he Nf ht•.

BaQer 11, M.aplrwotd 22
B&amp;rberiHI n. Olyallara Falls H

Bellannlne (Ky) at Alhlail•
D]'ke a1 Ceatll.l 81
Like Erie al Wllmlaaton

I

1-.

Pl.'ITSBURGH (UPI) - The else, not Mr. DeBartolo, and a
Pittsburgh Pirates Thursday sale . was not discussed," said
said the team was ''not for sale" Martha. "He was asked lfhewas
after·Pittsburgh Penguins owner Interested In ' the Pirates and he
Edward J . DeBartolo Sr. said he said, 'Yes.' I don't remember
was Interested In bai"Ytng the who brought It up.
''It was very casual, there
baseball club.
·
DeBllrtolo met with Mayor were no specifics discussed.
Sophie Masloff and Allegheny There was a little discussion of
County Commissioners Pete Fla- the subJect, but let me say that it
herty and Tom Foerester to was not th~ primary focus of the
discuss the CIVIc Arena Corp.; meeting and no financial terms
'
which manages the facUlty for . were thrown out.':
"We have been assured by the •
the city and county .. The Arena's
mayor's office that any conver·
prime tenant Is the Penguins.
Paul Martha, Civic Arena satlon between the mayor and
Corp. , president and Penguins Mr. DeBartolo regarding the
general counsel, who also at- Pirates took up only a small ;
tended the meeting, said Wedne5· portion of a lengthy meeting on
day DeBartolo did not bring up other matters, and that any such '
comments were of
casual
the Pirates.
·
nature
and
In
Jest.''
" It was brought up by someone

a

Bobcats beat .Eagles; Falcons sink Pirates

Glrll ObiO ..... khDolllu llelball
Tlla.r.dq, Feb. J$
.talwerpl7, Edprtoalt

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

l

and only lead of the eame.
For Jones It was · a lam War
story - a great game but still a •.
loss.
"It's tough to lose thll one, but
It 's always touah to
I wish
breaklq the record could have:
come with a win," he said.
Jackson said the Buckeyes
worked for the win. . ·
"
"We played a hard game for 40 •·
minutes, which we bad to do. It's
a bl&amp;wlnforus, wedldn'twantto
slip to.~. " he S!lld. "As for .my
game, my shot was on, and the
guys "'oved the ball around
really well tonight . We were
patient, and that brought some
good shots.''

'

Girls score!

SI. U.IIaiXnler

Keayo. ~ Otlto We.le)iln
DenMon al ltarlham (In d )
Case RHM• at WIUeaberr;
'lUna .a ~-Wilt
Defl~ aa 011.. Domlalcan
Nufft0111al Rio Grande

I

ServiCII.

Galllpolls at Jackson
Marietta at Warren Local
Logan at Athens
Waverly at VInton County
Coal Grove at Chesapeake
1
South·Potnt at Ceredo-Kenova
~ Wilmington at Greenfield
; Portsmouth .at Columbu~
1 Watterson
•
Southern at Symmes Valley
Point Pleasant at Huntington
East
Boyd County at Wheelersburg
·Hannan Trace at Kyger Creek
Southwestern at North GaiDa
oak Hill at Eastern
Southern at Symmes Valley .
Waverly at VInton County

Pro results
NATIONAL 8MDTI.4.LL AS!DC
TlluNd..,Gama
Se ... lfi IN, New Jrr~t)' 12

Allan&amp;allll, OrtWio 113
Houtt•n IU, New Yerk 101
Golden State 111, W_.la~ton ' 111
LA Laken 101, Sacrameat• t!
~uue a&amp;

FrldaJ Gamm
PhUadtlphla. 1: SI

p.m.

Den~r at Ch .-loire, 7: H p.m.
Allulla at ClewiMd, 8 p.m.

MI ..... at Claleaco. R: se p.m.

ladl.,.. M Mln._ula, il p.m .

Utah at IIUI AaiGIIIa, 8: • p.m.
Uolden tllale .. Plltoenb, t: )I p.m.
W_,.ln&amp;tonal LACIIppera.ll: .p.m.
lwtonat Pardud, II:JI p.m.
s~arGama

Clftetlall • New York, alp;.
Dnwr at New "eriQ, aiJI!l
Detl"'lll .a; Mlllnl, alP&amp;

8aaAM..,.MH•••a.•llfl&amp;
Orkallo • Dallal, nlpt
8ACNBIMCO at Uialt, ai,W

- -·

Nt\TIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

,.,.... .,o......

Ptllllldelpblal, Toro.tot ·
st. t..lllat,Q.ebtct
C.1~4. Cllk:apl

Mln...ca t, Loa Alll!ln a
F'ridQ'Oame&amp;

*•RaJ at Buffalo, 7:SSp.m.
NV l•ll!'fsat Nflt'lerll)' ,1: .tlp.m.
Plllladtfpllla at Det ..at, 7:a p.m.
...... IIIII M Wlanlpe~tt:U p.m.

Edmedoaaa VMt.O•wr, II: II p.m.

..._...,G.,_

&lt;*leap .. NY la•W•

lluilal'd M • • ..,.... •lali:
QN ..... Loo .......J...
N.., lei'IPJ' at "-rtwte. alpc
DlltNII at St. Lollll, .....

College 8001'1!8

By DAVE HARRIS '
three-pointers In the second half
OVJ' Correspondent
and Shaver added eight points to
It will be Miller against Kyger
lead the way.
Creek In the Championship game
Ragland led the way with 17
of the Meigs Division IV girls points, 15 coming from three
sectional tournament Saturday point range, while Shaver added
night at Meigs High School 12. Kyger Creek hit 20 of 62, good
beginning at 7: 30.
enough for 32%, and 8 of 18 from
Miller defeated North Gallla the Une for 47%. The Bobcats
61·35 In the evening's first game grabbed 23 rebounds with Lisa
and In the second game Kyger Swisher getting 10.
·
Creek pulled away from Eastern ' Ottp · led the Eagles with 18
In the Second half to post a 53-42 pobits, Tabby Phillips chipped In
victory.
With 13. Eastern hit 16·of 32 from
Bobcais 58, Eaglea 42
the floor for 50'11., and 6 of13 from
Kyger Creek outscored East- the line for 46%. Eastern had 31
e.rn 16-G In the third quarter to rebounds, with Tiffany Gardner
break open a lie game at the halt getting eight .
and post a 53-42 victory.
Quarter totals
Eastern carne out off the Kyger Creek ... ... 12 13 16 12-53
blocks fast and held a 14·12 lead · Eastern ......... .... .14 11 6 11-42
at the end of the first quarter
Ky1er Creek (53) - Shaver
behind Stephanie Otto's eight 4'11-4·12, Skidmore 4-0-0-8; Ra·
first-quarter points.
glal!d 1-5·0·17. Gardner 1-0-0-2,
In the second quarter Otto Bush l.0·2-4, Bradbury 1·0-0-2,
continued the hQt hand with Swisher 3.0-2-8. Totals -15-5-8-58
. seven more points but the BobEastern (42)- Gillilan 2.0-1-5,
cats were able to battle back and Clay 1·0·0·2, Otto · 7·0·4·18,
tie the game at 25 at the half. Gardner 2-0-0-4, Phillips 6-0-1-13.
Freshman Angie Bush came off Totals -18.0...42
the bench to score all of her four
points In the second quarter to
Falcons 81, Pirates 35
pace Kyger Creek.
In the preceding game, the top
In the ~ond half the outside seeded Miller Falcons used batshooting of Bobble Jean Shaver anced scoring attack to jump out
and Yon Ragland proved to be to toa13-7 lead at theendoftheflrst
much for Eastern. The duo quarter. All five- starters''hlt the
combined for 17 oflhe Bobcats 28 scoring· column In the first
points to lead the Bobcats to the quarter for Miller led by Misty
53-42 victory. Ragland hlt three McGrath with four.

·Miller outscored North Gallla
In the second period 18·10 to hold
a 31-15 lead at the half. Jodey
Altier led tlie second quarter
charge with eight points.
:
Miller Increased the lead to
50-25 at the end of the third
quarter, and ou~cored, North
GalUa 11-10 In the fourth to posi
the 61-35 victory.
Leslie Lytle led a trio of
Falcons In double figures with 18,
and Cheryl Dodson and Altier
added 10 each. Miller hit 20 of 74
from the floorfor27 %, and 13ofl5
from the line for 87%. Miller
grabbed 52 rebounds with Misty
McGrath graliblng 15.
For North Gallla Rita Cordell

1

was a starter who had a 7·6
record and 2.84 earned run
average In 19 games last year.
Rljo was the last of the Reds
players who had sought arbltra·
tlon to settle salary disputes .
Only one of the players' cases
went to arbitration.
Recently acquired relief
pitcher Randy Myers lost his
case Wednesday.
Arbltratror Richard Casher
ruled {hat Myers
receive the
Reds offer of $875,000 this season.
Myers had sought $1.1 mUllon.

1987 Chrvsler Lebaron ....... S5495

4 door. PB, PS. lir, low mileage, excellent.condition.

1984 Olds Toronado ........... S6495

PB, PS, air, cruise. AM/FM stereo, very nice, one local

owner.

,

1983 Ford Crown Victoria •••••S3695

Fully equipped, good condition.

1983 Chev. Chevette •••••••••• S1 095

Auto., PS. runs good .

·· Auto
1977
Ford T-Bird.•••••••••••••••••• S695
.. PB, PS. runs good.
SEE RAY RIGGS

GGS
St. lt.' 7

Plr.a•••

.....

.

L.;~~~~~~·;~-~,..Jp.. ,II

will

ac....

SUIDA", fiiBAIY ·18, 1990
IIIII SIUSM.Y. Rill DINJIII - ............ *4.79
AI

c._,•

.

. .

..

~

10115:11 UL TO 6 P17 DAYS A WaK

·

;
·
'
·
'
.

·
Elsie B. Wilson, 78, _All!any,
died Thursday ·morning at the
Alexander Grimm.
home of her son, Don Wilson.
SuiVIvors Include a son, Dr.
Born In Tar Hollow, VInton
Earl and Lots Gi'lmm, Co!um- . County; she )VIIS the daughter of
Geo
w
bus; two grandSons . and their th 1
wives, Joseph and Gall Grimm
e ate
rge · and l'/laud
Burritt Wilson.
She Is survived by two sons and
and )'Wbert and Ria Grimm, and
a great·granddaugbter, Arlanna · daughters·l!l·law, Arthur D. and
Grimm, Columbus; · a sister, VIcki Wilson, Vlrg'lnta Beach,
Olive Woodyard of Florida; a va.; and Don w. and Gracie
sister-In-law and her husband,
WUson, Albany; one grand~
Marjorie and J{arold Roush, daughter, Pamela Wilson, AI·
Racine, three sisters-In-law, Do- banyi two great grandchildren,
rls Hensler, Inez Hill, and Ora Etiran and A:ubrean 118 Wilson ;
Hill, all of Racine; five brothers, and several nieces and nephews.
In-law and their wives, Harry
In addition to her parents·she
and Kiate Hill, Clifford and was preceded In death by her
PauUne Hill, John and Erma
Hill, all of Letart Falls, Dale and husband, Woodrow · R. Wilson,
Jane Hill, Moorehaven, Fla:, and and three brothers, Fred, Floyd,
and Harry Hanl!lg.
Dallas and Donna Hill, Apple
Services will be held Saturday,
Grove, and many. Qieces and 1:30 p.m. at the Blgony-Jordan
nephews.
Funeral Home In Albany. Burial
1 c
Besides his parents, he was will be
In We Is emetery In
preceded In death by hls wife,
Pagevllle.
Violet.
Friends may call at the funeral
Grav~ lde se~vlces will be held home tonight (Friday) from 6·8.

Man's death...

Continued !rom page 1

Village funds reported
A total of $178,928.42 was In all
funds of Middleport VIllage on
Jan. 31, according to the report of
Clerk·Treasurer Jon Buck.
Balance In the general fund at
the end of the month was
$25,186.41, with $36,037.45 In receipts,·and $17,313.14 In disbursements. In the safety fund there
were no receipts and $15,696.731n
disbursements, while In the In·
come tax fund , disbursements
totaled $1,965.98 and showed no
· receipts.
. In the other funds, the receipts ,
disbursements and balance,
listed respectively were as fol·
lows : $4439 .91, $6765 .76,
$1,125.25; mlnl·golf: no receipts, ·
$345.86, deficit, $268.54; fire

equipment, $150, $1,486.11, deficit
balance, $231.19;. fire truck, no
receipts, no disbursements, bal·
ance, $66,897.57; sanitary sewer
escrow, no receipts, $2,448.84, no
balance; economic development, $1,380.03 1 $769.84, $4,504.67.
Public transportation, $3,463,
$18,318.73, deficit balance,
$14;$72.02; water system lmprov~ments, no receipts. no
dlsbunemelns, $60, 736.43; wa,
ter, $14,688.17, ' $13,218 .91,
$14,589.34; sanitary sewer,
$12,1NKl.69; $14,728.44, $5,048.49;
swimming pool, $27, S613.'18;
$288.70 deficit; , cemetery,
$1;131.15, $1;650:46; $308.04 de·
flclt; and wa!er meter trusts,
$470, $440, $16,508.65, deficit .

Leach... continued from page 1
million .
In addition, Leach stated that
ODOT hopes to hold another
publiC hearing in May or June on
the proposed connector road
from Rock Sprll)gs to Five
Points, and !rom Five Points to
tho;&gt; Ravenswood Bridge.
Leach stressed that the addl·

Ilona! fuel tax, ·" which we were
lucky to eet," has made It
possible for the State to consider
many new proJects. .
Leach commended State Sen.
Jan Michael Long, D.Chllllcothe,
and State Rep. Mary Abel,
D-Athens, for their efforts In
bringing large amounts of ODOT
1
montes to the local' area.

COURAGE
MOUNTAIN

Hospital news .

SHARE THE ADVENTURE.

V eteralllll Memorial
Thursday admissions - VIcky
Boso, Racine; Mary Bonecutter,
Middleport.
:
Thursday discharges - Ann
Davis, Helen Augustine.

Benjamin J. Sol, M.D.
Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology
(Childbirth and Women's He4lth)

Complete Pre-Natal Services
. lng In Meigs County Court. It was report. Ricky A. Methenex ,
.
reported.
Langsville,
was traveling easton'
Annual Gynecologic Check-Up
A· report of a stolen Rottweiler Paynter Ridge Road when a deer
Pap Smears t Breast Examinations
dog was given· to the.department ran Into his path.
by Helen McGraw, Gold Ridge
Sheriff Soulsby "Issued an apFamily Planning
Road, Pomeroy. She said thllt the peal to residents to take the time
&amp; Other OB/GYN Procedures
15-month·old, ·female, black and and record the make and serial
~mmissioners
tan dog with a choke chain had number for guns and oilier items
been taken sometime around In their homes . "These numbers ·
The Meigs County Commls· place a 1.5 mill three-year levy on
Feb. 8. J\llYone with lnfonnatlon or ciwuer applied numbers are a
stoners
In their Wednesday meet· · the May ballot for operating
,!JJI lhl! animal Is asl\ed to cpntact must should the guns or Items be
approved
a request from Lee funds for Melg's MRDD prolng
the.sheriff's office.
stolen. Without the serial
grams. The request from the .
Wedemeyer,
·
superlntend~nt ot
· Deputies are Investigating an
the Meigs County Board of superintendent Wl!J .m ade at the
accident that occurred on State ~~":~i~c~~~ ~en!h!~f:::::~sl·
MeQtal , Reta~datioli· direction of the MR·DD Board.
, Route338onthesharpcurvenear
Without ·t he serial num~rs ,
Developmental
Disabilities, to This Is the same levy proposal as
the Ravenswood Bridge.
Pleasant Vdey Hotpitll Meikll Office Building t Suilla 215
the d~tmenl canQot eri.t er the
~as voted on and rejected by
·. According to the report, the weapons Into the NCIC compuVally DIM, Polnl Pleasanl, WV 25650 ·
voters
In
November.
accident occurred shortly after ter, he pointed out. On Items that
, . midnight Thursday. The vehicle have the · serial number oil
South Central Oblo
' left the scene. However, debris stickers on the back, he sugCloudy and windy Friday
&gt; was left on tbe roadway, tncludgested that ,the .owner engrave night, with a low In the mid 20s.
:: lng the trunk lid, deputies repol;'t. his social security number or
Chance of rain Is 20 percent.
There was moderate damage .some other type of Identification
Partly · cloudy Saturday, with
,. to the vehiCle but no Injuries In an so that the Item can be traced In
highs In the mid 30s.
;; accident reporled to the depart· the event It Is stolen.
Extended Forecast
ment Thursday . According to the
Sullday throur;h Tu.e sday
'
'
Generally fair through the
period, with a slight chance"of
continued from page 1
,•
• "'l)
showers or snow flurries Monday
· .; succeed.''
have been established by the and Tuesday. Highs wUI range
,•
Speaking Just briefly, State board. Reed reiterated the fact from mid 30s to the mid 40s each
that the organization will be day. Overnight lows will be In the
Rep. Mary Abel, D·Athens, a
. surprise visitor to the meeting,
branching out over the coming teens early Sunday and In the 20s
:: also share her belief that ''goals · months to assl{re that all areas ot Monday and Tu!!sday mornings.
,. can be accomplished through
thecounlyare representedonthe
;. com billed efforts."
board as well as by the group ~sa
~:
The meeting was cond11cted by
whole.
Chamber Preslden t ·Bruce lleed
:: who stated pleasure at seeing
In brief business matters, · The Meigs County Common
,. , such a good turnout. Pomeroy,
Reed announced that Chamber Pleas Court has granted Timothy
: tr!lddleport, Rutland, Racine and
will be spi&gt;nsorlng a dinner· R. Priddy a11d Linda F. Priddy·a
• Point Rock were among areas of
dance on March 31 at Royal Oak dissolution of their marriage.
; ~ the county' represented at the
Resort, with musiC by the Cros• · meeting. Reed also Introduced
sover· Band. Tickets will be on
• the executive board of the new
sal~ soon for $25 a co'\ple and $15
· group, and outlined the overall
single.
.
.. : goals of the orgganlzatlon
He also thanked Meigs High
Principal Fen ton Taylor, along
. with faculty, members .Kathy
•
Reed. Becky Baer and Gloria
,1 Dally stock pricee
VanReeth, as well as Meigs
APPII. .G
• (As oi18:Je Lm.)
students, for use of' the school's
, BrJce and Mark Smllb
facilities for the meeting and the
: of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
luncheon which was prepared
and served by students.
: Am Electric Power .............3()%
; AT&amp;T ......... ......................... 40
9:30 p.m.-1 :30 a.m.
\ Ashland on ......... .............. :36%
)
, Bob Evans .... .......... ........... .12*
*2" Cower Qlarge
; Charmtq Shoppes , ........ .... .. 9%
Continued from page 1
MSI 1121
· City Holding Co ....... ...........14*
clals were no longer tak lng
' Federal Mogul ................... :17%
unUateral actions on common
; Goodyear T&amp;R .......... .. .. .... .34*
problems.
· •Heck's ............. .. .. .... ............ 2%
~ Key Centurion .... ... .. ......... .".13% ·
It's True. We're celebrating
'I
: Lands' End...... ... ................ 17%
President's Day this year by staying
• Limited inc ..................... ...35*
open to serve our BANK ONE
; Multimedia Inc ........ ,...... ..... 81
customers. On Monday, Feb 19, it
: Rax Restauran!J ............... ... 2%
will be business as usual for BANK
Robbl1111lr Myers .... ............. 16
. Shone)'! a Inc ....................... 10~
ON~.
RUTLAND and POMEROY
1.
• Star Bank ............. ........ ,...... 19%
4o-16 01. PEPSI'S
offi((s.• So wherher you're working
~t Wendy's Intl . ............. :......... 4~
cJr enjoying I day off, we'll be here
: Worthington Ind ...... ."........... 20%
for
all your banking needs. Honest.
: (FeMnP Mop! Ia ex dlv!deqd

approve levy req\test

(304) 675-3400

flfl ~~~!~~P~L~~~LEY HOSPITAL

·

Weather

;: Sen. Lonu...

rece~)'Our refund antldpation loan in a matter

of days

I no cash "'ne-eded~-all fees can be wlttlleld from
· your check .
I available ~"-rr:H.d11!1-- ~prepare your retllm qr not

MIZWAY
TAVERN

SAT., FEB. 17

HONEST!

PIZZA

.•,,,

: toda.J.)

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

'

f'OMEBOY AND MIDDLEPORT'S OM..l!:
LOCAJ.,l.Y OWNal)
. PIZZ&amp; 880~
.
.

MAIN s111n PIZZA ,."..
9ti·JIJI

J a - at Columbus WesUall
' Soulll Wet.ter at Wheelersburg
Trimble at VInton County
. (makeup) . .
. .

.

.
'

lANK ONE, ATHINI NAIA NllfOI JNICMIIJIJI FlAil
AIMfi&amp; ONo
......, FDIC •

1

L

''

J

•

Dissolution sougbt

16 INCH DELUXE

·•

'

.

II. 7/143

aPJattteS....rwltlls..er,c-,.._NIII

........
,_ ... ........ .....
mAl SA.WICH ILOJII, ..._........... ........... *2.79

'

.

.

EleieWU.On

•

costs; Stephl!n Bailey, Gnea
Sarah ,::brlsllne Peri'IIM, Jack·
Bank. W.Va ., $20 and co.II;
1101, $15 and cos ts, no safety belt;
Joy L . Murphy, Reedsville, $20 Wtntani Marple, Mocnllerd,
Ky., $21 and co.ll; Rut!l A.
and COlli; DO aafety belt; Carl E.
Putnam, Coolville, $2landco.ll;
Qual Ia, Pomeroy, $10 and costs,
Michael Larklna. GaiUpolla, tl4
.failed to yield one-half of
roidway; t&gt;avld E. Watkins, · and costs; Gina Broolrer. Ma·
rlet Ia, $24 and coati; JUOII
Middleport, $25 and costs, dlsor·
Nichols, Shade, fl3 .and eoall;
derly conduct; Stephen Bailey,
Charles
Lands, Kenna, W.Va.,
Green Bank, W.Va., $25 and
S23
and
co~ts;
Terry RomeU. St.
costs, record of duty states not
Albans,
W.Va.,
$21 and cosll;
current; Barbara A. Lllle, Syra·
William
Vauehil
•.
Guyavllle, 110
cuae. flO and costs, failure to
and
costs;
Paula
Brewer.
Reeds- ·
control; Loren Wade, Columbus,
ville,
$30
and
cosll;
Harold •
$20 and costs, failure to control;
Stockman,
GalllpoUs,
$20
and ;
Rita · Williamson, Rutland, $10
costs; Clair Nledferdt, oaeua :
and eosts. stop sign; Tom Stover,
· .'
Pomeroy, $10.and costs, expired Mines, Pa., $25 and costs.
Bonds were forfeited by Hueh ;
registration; Larry F .. Bailey,
Thompson, Langsville, S80. lor •
Athens, $20 and costs, failure to
dlSOfderly conduct; Harold Ea· ;
yield; .Barbara Hunt, Ravens·
wood, W.Va. , S10andcosts, leftof gle Jr., Reedsville, $50, expired :
center; Louis Wise, Albany, $30 • ope.rator' s license; Marcy Uye- :
noyama, Durham. · N.C., MD: •
and costs. lett of center; Jack
Dewey
Estep Jr. , Reynoldsburg, ;
Lee M!Jier, Chesapeake, $20 and
$60;
Edgar
Barrett, HlinlJnllon, ;
costs, tint violation.
W.Va.,
$60,
all
for speedln&amp;:
Fined for speeding were James
G. Mathieson, Mercer, Pa., $20
and costs; Terry M. Ingram,
, ParkersbUrg, W.Va.; $24 and.
FRI. THRU THUIS.
costs; Douglas A. Welsch, Point'
'
CHARU£ SHEEI
Pleasant , W.Va., $21 and costs;
II
Delbert F: Mltcheil, Langsvllle,
$22 and costs; Bruce Arnold,
Peebles, $20 and costs; James A.
Miller Jr., Pomeroy, $20 and
cos!J; Stephen Donohue, Pome·
roy, $20 and costs; Karl
Mcintger, Friendship, $20 and

Drug...

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

llt'*llwefOWOinaPap'a ........... ll
.... A
I u&amp;lllftY, ...... wltlll lat ....... l l l I I
1-,, .... Cutatl- .... wltlll I II 1-Y-a..PII.t
• ltlllllt•.. l• w llaan I lllaeltt. Cefhe, lag h • .....
'.

.,
Harold B. Grimm, ·85, died
Thunday at his home on Broadway Street In Racine.
Mr. Grimm ·was a retired
farmer -and member of the
Rachae United Methodist"
Church. He was born at Letart
Falls to the late Earl P. and Dora

."Disturb .The
Peace"

FIIDAY I FIIIUAIY 16, 1990
Si.LMo• PAnll PLAII ................................. S3.19
TryO.Ial II•• II

••

ee.

:stocks

1

NJICl 71, Euler aN_,._ II
llbp lN. YaiiQ .....~cu ..._ •

...

Tuppera l!la , ns Fir e ·
llepartma t.
Flfty·two cues were finalized Lolli Bottlllll, $100 and COlli, Ill!
Rutland •t 11:18 LDI. Wtnt to Wednesday by Judge Patrick ~Dwlnjall~~totluee
Route
for Deloret Donallue to O'Brien In Meigs County Court. daya, one )lll!ar probation, no
Holzer Medical Cenller. ·
Last Wednesday's regular court valid operator's license; Kar tel
Syracuae Fire Department at session was not held due to Judge D. Lemley, Pomeroy, $75 and
5:27 p.m. tranaporlled Brenda O'Brien being out of town.
costs, abc months In )all suaQuiUen from a motor veblcle
F.lned by Judge O'Brien were · pended to 30 daya, two years
accldelit on Pine Grove Road to Don Ward, Pomeroy, S300 and probatiDn, no operator's license;
Veteran• Memorial· l:bpltal.
costs, 10 days In Jail, 90 day Vincent M. King, Pomerdy, $7ll
· Racme at 5:1i8p.m. was called
license suspension, DWI; $25 and and coal*, 3d days In jail
to Broadway St. for Harold cosll and restitution on each of suspended to three days, one
Grimm who was dead on arrival.
three charges of puling bad year probation, no opera.tor's
,Rutland at . 7:57 p,111. trans· checks; costa only for left of llceDR; DaveLemli!y,Pomeroy,
ported Alvin Smith from Meigs
center; Timothy Pratt, Athens, $50 and costs, dilol'derly conMine No. 2 to Veterans Memorial $250 and costs with $150 of. fund diict; Julie Jobnlon, Newport
Hospital.
suspended If defendant attenda ·a Newa, Va., 3d days suspended to
At 10: as·p.m., Syracuae trans· · residential treatment program, time aerved. $25 and cos II and
ported Samson Hall from the fire
three days In jail, 60 day license restttlon on eacb ot 26 charges of
station to Holzer Medical Center.
suspension, DWI; $25 and costs, puling bad checkJ; Joe Gray .
reckless operation; Charlotte Rac:IDe. $50 and costa, disorderly
Patterson, Pomeroy, $250 and conduct.
costs, three days In )all and 60
Tammy J. Kauff, Lancaster,
day
license
suspenSion,
DWI;
$20
and COII8, failure to control;
Saturday at 1 p.m at the I.,etart
Allee
Chevalier,
Reedsville,
$250
Joliepl\
C. Wri1ht, ~!lmeroy, $10
Fall&amp; Cemetery, The Rev . Roger
and
costs,
three
days
In
jail
and
and
coats,
expired liCense plate;
Grace will officiate. There are no
60
day
license
suspension,
DWI;
Timothy
Kincaid,
Stockport, $10
. caiUng hours. -Arrangelll.(!nts are
Robbie
Combo,
Long
Bottom,
and
costs,
aasured
clear dis·
being handled by the Ewing
·
restitution
andcouncosts,
crlml·
tance;
David
A.
Neiamore,
BurFuneral Home. ·
nal mlschlet; Kenneth R. White, . ton,.$20 and cos II, no safe!~ belt;

--Area deaths-Harold Grimm . ·

I

Fifty-two cases pa·ocessed in· Meigs court

as

1

C..re.BMII!tball.,.••
Klnp'huNIIII•

Malone 11~ r••dtl ... a BIMe f7
Robel11 W~)eru M, IAater a CeiL 71

•

led the way with 12. The Lady ~
Pirates hlt14 of li2for23%and 5 of '
6 from the line for 83%. North •
Gallia grabbed 53 rebounds w1 th
Cordell grabbing 16.
.Quarter totals
North Gallla ....... 7 8 10 10-35
Miller ........... .. ... 13 18 19 ·n -61 •
Miller (81) - Lytle S.0.2-18, '
Hanning 4-Q-0.8, Dodson J.0.4-10, : .
Wrleht 1.0.0..2, Pompey 1·0.:1, H.. •
Compston l-IJ.lll2, mtte~ 3-0-4-to;
McGrath 3-0-1).6, Stiles ().().3.3.
Totals - UO-lUl
..
North (lallla ( 3ll) ..., West
1-0-2-4, Sallsbucy 3-il:o.s, · Myers
1-0-0-2, Dobbllll- 0-0-3-3, Co.-dell
3·2·0-12, Roble 4-0-0-8. Tvtale 12-!-5-35
.

Rijo, Quinones sign contracts with R~s
.CINCINNATI (UPI) -Pitcher
Jose Rljo has agreed to a
one-year contract with the Cln·
clnnatl Reds, avoiding an arbl·
tratlon hearing, the club ali·
nounced Thursday.
Also signing a one·year con·
tract Thursday was Reds' Infielder Luis Quinones.
Rljo's hearing had been scheduied Thursday In Cblcago.
Terms of pact were not disclosed,
a club spokesman said.
Rljo was seeking $710,000 and
the club had offered $550,000. He

At 1:05 Lm., Mlddlepon went
to Beech St. for Barbara Boltq
· who waa taken to Veterans
Memorial Holjlltal.
Rutlalld wu called at 6: Ua .m .
1 to Dye Road for Luclile Lambert
who wu taken to Veterans
, Memorial Holpltal.
·
Pomeroy at 7: 35 a.m. was
called to Caraey Road for Elsie
Wlllon who was dead oii arrival.
At 9: .. a.m., Pomeroy was called
. to a motor vehicle· accident on
Route 681 East. Martin Carter
. refused treatment 111 the IIClene.
Pomeroy was asSisted by the
,

In Mei88 girls' sectional play,

••
•••

l••

Nlae calla for u•taaee we..
anner• on Tbunday by ualta
ot tile Melp Elllel'pllcy Medical

Club officials
.
.,·confmn
Pirates "not for sait;' '

a

. r- -

''

a loss to explain the turnaround.
"We weren 't very competitive
tonliht. I'll never flpre It out.
We misled a lot of easy sbots, and
that hurll us. Ohio State was
better than we were on our own
home court. ThiJ Is just a tOiigh
time for It to come," ·he said .
Ohio Stale's tenaclous·man·tonlan defense stifled the Badgers
throughout the game. After
Jones opened the contest with his
record· breaking hoop, Wisconsin
hit Just five of Its next 20 shots
until halftime.
. Jackson scored 12 points before IntermiSsion to enable OSU
to assert control, canning two
tJaree.polnt shots. The basket by
Jones marked Wisconsin's first

1he o.ilt 81 dii...-P U

SqUidB have nine Thunday.-alla

Ohio -State evens conference
record with, 68-58 trit•mph
MADISON, Wis. (UPI) - O!tlo
State coach Randy ·Ayers was a
happy man - his. team got the
victory while a 1player he ad·
mires, Wlscollllln'sDanny Jones,
·110t the record.
Freshman forward Jimmy
Jackson scored 26 ·poln!J Thursday nliht to lead Ohio State to a
68-!18,Big Ten Conference basket·
ball victory ovt!r Wlsco11111n.
The Buckeyes' win overs!ta·
dowed the performance of Jones,
the Blidgers' senior forward who
broke the all-time JChool scoring
record on an offensive follow-up
just 24 ~onds Into the game.
Jones erased Claude Gregory's
previous mark of 1,745 points,
and finished with a team·hlgh 21
points to give hjm 1, 765 over hls
career.
''I was kind of happy he 1101 his
two right away. He.' sa tremend·
o.us player who has Improved a
lot over the years," said Ayers ..
But It was Jackson who scored
9 points during 24-9 Ohio State
run to open the second half. The
spurt, capped by two Jamaal
Brown free throws with 9:49 left
In life game, gave OSU Its largest
lead of the game at 50·31.
The Badgers Immediately re·
sponded with a run ofthelr.own to
cut the deficit to 55-47 on a free
throw by Jones with 5: 17 remain·
lng. But Wisconsin (1H3 overall,
3-10 In the Big Ten), missed four
straight free throy;s, and the
Buckeyes (12-10, 6-6) held on,
"I was really pleased with the
overall effort of our team tonight," said Ayers. "He (Jack·
son) has played that well all year
long for us." ·
WIIIClonsln had beaten Ohio
State earlier this season and
Badger·c oachSteve Yoder was at

'

. \1 .

"DriOOIM II'ICII WltNtlwiiiS Will De '""" 10 Ol'iiCtlnl
ltld UVI"f' .CC01.1nta wt"' tftt "'•I Mw'l bl.rllneu.

•··
•

•'
'

•.

.
'

l
I

�Sa Jtinel

-' •

Ul,1880

-

1

. The Daily

Sentine~

l'
,,
•l
... ,

-.

Friday, Febru.-y 16. 1990

Page-7·•w

l

-·

· .~ These moms ·don't; care how the
,FFA Week' o)Rrved :ba.b'l -gets· here, ·J·us
, ·~tl·.. it hap. pens
J'

Beat of the Bend
..

'

. Nat'i onwide

~
~.. .\
I

H2·2lll Pamfrov
'

1

'

•

l·

~

.

TRINII"i OONGREGATIONAL CHURCH,
Church School 9: IS a.m; Worship Service
10: 30 a.m. O&gt;otr A!halrlal, Tue!d'l\'. 6: 45 p.m.

MEIGS nRE

CENTER,. INC.
John F .

Family Rtstawll'lt

..,,.,, 1tu111ir Ftlti CltiiU."

Fu1t1, Mgr.

221

Ph. fl2-l101

HELPFUL ADVICE COMES FROM
FAITH AND APOPULAR SONG .

under dlrKtloll ~Loll Bwt. ·

lei'. S. S. Supt.. Sullllll,v Schocl, 9::11 a.m;

""""*&gt;g-.HpJO::Da.m.; ......,lng!II!I'VIce6.
ml~--.
p.mE.'
. p.m.;
GRACE
'EPISCOPALWedlladll\',
CIRJRCH, 7326
Main St., Pwitioy. Sullli(V Jei'VEes: ~
..~
thellrstSu..Om . ~
comm-non
.....,.weacl!molih,
Md &lt;omblno&lt;l wlh rncnlng
payer ·on the
d1lrd Su~. MorlingJQyer .,d........, on
aD other &amp;nldi\I'S ~the ,_h Church School

212 E. Main Street
992-3785. Pome1ov

P· l;h~DL EPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH,
'Corner
Ash and Plum.
H
.
· Noel

'*'

,..._ .... _
.......•·._ 6111
: p.lh.; .,.qm.,.worshlp.7;00p.

ernnann,
pastor.
Sunday School10:00a.
M
"'sill
m.; om1ng nor p, 11: 00 a.m.; Wed·
nesday
30 and Saturday Evening Services at

m. W-Ill' ni!lltp'ayerrDel!1ngandBIIie
.~. · 7111
:w p.m.
" -&gt;
11IE SALVATKlN ARMY. liS But"""''
A"'.. ~. Mn. Doca Wining In char!!".
&amp;.~ 10::11
a.m.; SU~
Sd1ool.
a.m.-~
Su~10Schocl,
.YPSM

7
' .ufpt'f:. GROVE UN~D METRO·
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
Hicks,
10Scmil'" above Racine on Rt. 388.
Su
nday hool. 9 ~.m., wcrshlp service 10

Doble Ad..., fttw. 7:31 p.m. Salvation
meeting. variousSJE"akB'Sandmusicsp:!d.als.
Thu~. U:ll a.m. to 2 p.m. Ladles HorneI.e-. . IIW'iilb!ts In charfii', all wtrnl'l\
. lnvllfd; 6c45 p.m. Thune~'~\', Corp; C.dl1
C1asss (YcXI!W Pmpie-Btl!le), 7:10.p.m. Bible
st\dy_and Prayer ineetlna. open ro the pubUc.

a.m. Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m.;
Prayer meeting and Bible Srudy Thurs·

da~: ~t~ UNITED METHODIST 011124, behind Wllkeovllte CharleoJones,
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.: morning
worship, 10;30; Sunday and Thursday

POMEROY WESTSIDE CIRJRCH OF
CHRSI', :nz::a&amp;Cbdchn'sHomeRDad (Olurtv
Road 11il. !llnJIW1. Vocal mustc. ~ilday woi.

evening services, 7:00lsm.

COOPER~fiVE PiUIISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEMT CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archer
Rev. Fran• Croloai
Rev. Seldoa Joluis.,
ALFREO - Church School 9; 30 a.m.·.
Worship, 11 a.m.; UMYF6; 30 p.m.; UMW

BII*!Stllly 11 a.m.: Worship. 6P·

m W-1111. Bttie Stilly, 1 ~m. Speake',
Landbn '!loiJe, evan(iellst. · · ·
'· ··
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH, Jack Cleland. PBSI&lt;r. AldrvGkMI,

I

·

Sundll\' SchOOilO:OO a.m.; Youth mEet·
'""'
7 p.m..,.....
w-~~~~SACRED
HEART
CATHOLIC CHURCH
&amp;!pl.

(

- 161 Mulberry Ave.. Pomeray. Ph. 992· ·

JOPPA -Worship 9:30a.m.; Church

1

m. ;

ay.wors

• p.m.

GRAHAM9:~ a.m.
UNI'I]:D
METHODIST,
Preeching
first and
second Sundays of each month; third and fourth Sun·
dayeac h mon th wors hi pservkes.at 7: 30 P·
m.; Wednetday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
Prayer and Bible Study.

SEVENTH·DAY "ADVENTIST,

Mul-

REEDSVILLE- Church St'ho~ 9:~ a.

·

m.; WorshipServlcell:OOa.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL -

Church School 9 a .m.; Worship 10 a .m.:
Blbl st d T sd 1 30

e u y, ue ay, : p.m.; Commu·
Flrst~iAt~..TJ.n:a.
Rev. Doa Me . . .ws

-Slater Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
Easl

ftn' . Robert S&amp;eele
ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship lla.m.
; Church School 9:45a.m.; Charge Bible

Ma.ln St. StM Fuller, pastor. George
Skinner, Sunday Schooi ·S uperlntendent.
Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; Morning Wor·
ship 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening

study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, first
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.; Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6:30p.m. (Thatcher)
ENTERPRISE _ Worship 9 a.m.;
Church SChoo110 a .m.; BblE-Study, Tues-·

Schooi9::KI a.m.: Morning Woi'"shlJ), 10:45

a.~ROY FIRST~ B~IST,

prayer and Blblesliidy, .7;:11 p.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN 'B
BAPTIST, Po.

day. 7; 0~. m.; UMW, Ftrst.M.onday, 7;30

Jack Needs, Sunday School Director. Sun·
day School.9:30'11.m.; Morning Worship,
10:45; evening worship, 7:00p.m . (O.S.T. )
&amp;•-700
7;30 (E.S.T.l:(DST)~7-PM
Wednesday Prayer ES
Set·

lowing; Wednesday. (Riley)
FLATWOODS_ ChUrch School, 10a.m.
; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m.; UMYF • sunday, 6 p.m.IRI·
ley),
·
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;

mt!rtYf Plk e. E · La mar O ryant, pastor:

VM.

op.m.

;

. .. • :m . . I . .

T.t: Mission Friends (ages

Ui), Royal
Ambauadon (boys ages 6-18), and Girls
in Act&amp;on (ages 6-18) on Wednesdays. 7 P·

· m. (O.S.T.i &amp;7;:1lp.m. (E.S.T.); Tuesday
V~l~'WT~:&amp;';;ACLE l111JRCH, Bal·

-. E
Ra
If'i R un Road • n
ncv. mmett Wson, pas·
tor. Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday School ,
tO a.m.; Su~yevenlnaservtce. 7: 30p.m .

; Blbleteocltlng, 7::1lp.m. Thunday.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St .. Sy·
racuse. Ma r kMorrow, puler. Serv Ices, 10
a.m. SUDday. IOven'fl aervlces Sunday'
and Wedneoday It 6: ·p.m.
'
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley, '
nnt elder; W111da Mottl .... Sunday School
~hool 9 Mn
.Su pt. SundaY ~
,_a.m.;
riling
Wors~ 10:30 a.m.: Evening Wors~ 7: :rJ
-~-•
~In 1

p.m.:

~~-..ayprayermg:"~

g : llp.m.

MT. MORIAII CHUR~H OF' GOD,

Racine. Rev. James Satterfield, pastor.
Freeman W1lllams, Supt. Sunday SChool
&amp;:4$ a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday even-

7 pRT.m. FIRST
ln&amp;MservtiDDc:osLE'P0

APTIST
B
·
Coraer Sl.xth and Palmer. Jamea Seddon.
Putcr: .~na WUsSmnd
. S.S.ScSupt.; cathy
Ri1111, ~t. 8 upt. u ay hool, 9: 15 a.

m.; Moming Worshlp,10: 15a.m.; Sunday
.Evening service, 7 p.m . Prayer meeting

ond Bible Study Wedneoday evening, 7 p.
m.: Children's choir practice, Wednes·
day, 7 p.m.; Adult choir pract_lce, "Wed., 8

p.m.; Radio program, WMPO, Sunday.

8::1J a .m .

p.m.; U YF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir ReheersaJ, Children's at 6:30 p.in. Adult fol·

Church School 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
Thunctay , 6:30p.m.; UMW third Monday.

(Thatcher!
HEATH (Middleport)- Church School.

9:30a.m. ; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Youth Group, 4 p.m.: Wednesday, Bible
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m .
(Rindnetsch).

MINERSVJLLE- Chun&gt;h School9;00
a,.m.; ·worshi p serv 1ce 10 : 00 a.IJI.; UMW
rbl d w- esd
1
Th h
r ~n ay. P·n'l· ( ate er) ,
PEARL CHAPEL - Church School9; 00
a.m.; WorshiP Service 10:00 ~.m. (Martin)
POMEROY Ch h Sch0 o1 9 1•
• ' .a.m.
- urc
: Worship 10:30 a .m.;. Choir rehearul
Wednesday 7·30 pm · UMW seO&gt;nd
' •
· ·•
' .
Tuesday,
7;:1lp.m.;
UMYFSuhday,6p.m.
(Meadows)
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9:15
a .m .; Worship 10 a.m.; BlbleSh.Jy, Wedesd
7 :l&gt;
UMYF (..;JII:ln
•· 1ors). s un·
n
ay, : p.m .:

. day, 6 p.m. ; ( Juniors) every other Sun·

day, 6 p.m. (Riley). ·
RUTLAND - Church School, 10 a.m.;
Worshtp, 11 a.m.; UMW F1rst Monday,
7;:1l p.m. (Crabtreet ·
SALEM CENTER- Church School9: 15
a,rn .;

(Steele)

Morning Worship

10:15 a.m.

SNOWVILLE- Morning Worship, 9:00

a.m.; Church SchoollO:OO a.m. (ttfartln}

SOUTHERNCLUSftR
Rev. KennSh llaltll!!l'

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Rev . llol&lt;l' Grace .
Rev. Carl Hhu
!ilh and Main, AI Hartsm, mlntoter:
APP'LE GROVE
_ Church School 9; 00
Rlcbard DuBole, Aaaodate Paster, Mike
a.m.; Morning Worship 10:00 a .m .; Bible
Gfrla&lt;b, Sunday School. Superintendent..
tud s d 7 00
Btble!lcbool9:30a.m.: MornJngWorahlp
S Y un ay : p.m.; Prayer meeting
1:00 p.m. Thursday. (Hickll)
0
1 :30 a.m. Evening Wortblp 7:00 p .m .
BETHANY - Worlhlp 9 a.m.; Church
Wedileoday, 7:00p.m. Prayer m~lng.
S&lt;hool10a.m.; Bible Study Wtclnesday10
MIDDLEPORTCHURCHOFTHENAZ- a.m.; Dorcas Wolilfil's Fellowship Wed·
ARENE. PASTOR He;, Lloyd D. Grimm. nesday ~~a.m. iBakft').
Jr.. puur. Je111 Klms, Sunday School su.
CARMEL - Churrh School 9; 30 a.m.;
.........,.dfilt. Sunday School 9;30 a.m.; Worship, 10;t5 a.m. Secane! and Fourth
MDrmniW'onNp9forvtce,10:30a.m.; SUn·
Sunda~t; Fellowship dinner with Suttat
dill!enlna........,.
._..., servl&lt;l',
~
tBaker.I
7 6 p.m.; Wednesday ·third unci ay. 6:~p.m.
evSYRACUSE ~·:rCH OF THE NAZA·
MORNING STAR- Church School9:15
t
a.m.; Worllllp 10:30 a.m. ;' Bible Study.
RENE a-. Gl n ~-MW
-··
en an, Sunday
pas tr. Thu~,
S
N7;:1ll.;m. (Btlker.l.
o1 9:30
'MIIrk .MIIIICIII,
~hooll·-a m.
rnl••Wo hi~ 10 ~
.ureh Scho , . a.m.:
- · . ~ · ·•
·~
ro • :~
MorntngWonhlp10:t5a.m,!lrsta'dtlilrd
a.m.; Ennr@lliUc aervloe,
p.m .:
Sundays; Fellowablp cUnner wttb Carmel
IPra)'OI' and Pralle Wtclneoday, 7 p.m.; third Thursday, 6:30p.m. (Bakl!').
Y&lt;Nib
meetlna, 7 P.m.
EAST LETART- Mortlln•Won~9:00
UIVII:D Plll:lftTDIAN MINlllt'BY
•
OFMaOIICOUI'I'IT
a.m.; ChurehSchoollD:OOa.m.;
U Drat
. ... O,..._llell,)o
• TueadRAI"YNE7' :II pChu.m·J!l~!~ 10
W
. IIARIUSONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
Cll ~~ """"'"' a.m.: or·
CHURCH - SUnday; Worship ServiOOi •hlp.lla.m.; UMWfpurthMondiQiot7::Jip.
t:OOutL; Church~l0:15a.m ..
. m.; Men(G'ol'nylerllreUIMI, Wem-.tlt',8
KIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN a.m. race .
Iunday ll&lt;hoal, t a.m.; Chur&lt;b service,
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, l!otg"'
n :Do.m.
gprlnJ, mlnllter: Starlln&amp;Ma..arand J.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY- lver SWain, Sundoy SChool Supto. Preoch·
TERIAN - Siulday ll&lt;hool, 10 a.m.;
lng,!30a.m.eachSunday; Sundayll&lt;hool
Clton:tl llln'lt», 10:15 a.m.
10:"' a.m.
RUTIAIID CHURCH OF GOD, Put or,
HOBSON CHURCH OF· CHIIIST IN
III)'IIICI..t Cox. SUiday ll&lt;bool10:00 a.m.;
CHRISTIAN UNION, TherCII Durlllm,
•ndor~mtna Worllilp ll:OOo.m. Chll·
r,astcr. Sunday servlct, 9::1la.m. ; ev•n- · . "lliiin:tl 11 o.m, Sunday Eveolng
ns llervlce 7;00 p.m. Prayer ineotlng,
-7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. YouDI La· · Wedneoday, 1:00 p1m.

s:lnten.,...t.

(

port. Sunday SChoOl tO a.m.; Sunday even·
tng service 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday ~rvtce,

7:30p.m.

,.,·

_1 )

HYSELL .RUN HOLINEsS CHURCH.
Bob Grlnuil, pastor. Sundny School9: 30a.

10:3D a.m.

BIIADBURY iCHURtH OF CHRIST,

m.; WorshiP 10: 45 a.m.; Sun~)' evening
s"ervlce, 7 p.m. ·
.

RACINE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA-

FREEDOM'GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
loated an Coun,ty Road 31. Rev.
Roger WIIUord, pastor. !Iunday School

Tom Runyari; pa.s;tor. SU.nda·y ~hod. 9:30
a.m.:. Larry Haynee.-S. S. Supt. Morning
worship 10::Kl a.m.

Rev. AitllurCrablree

Rev. Ba.rvt)' JUodOteach
Rev. Kath.,-n RUey
Rev. Paul Martin

OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. 2860i; . State Route 7, Mlddt ..

Grove. The Rev. Laura A. Leach, pastor.
'C hurch servlce.·9:;~ a.m.: Sunday SChool

7:00 p.m.: Wednesday service. 7:00p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
ter. Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
10 a.m. and .7 .p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m .

·

Clyde W. Hender!ICII, pastor. · Sullday
Schoo! 9:30a.m.: Ralph Carl, Supt. Evening worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7:00p.m.

DAY: Bible School 9;30 a.m.: Worship
10:30 A.M: and 7:30 P.M.: Wedneoday Bl·
ble Study,7;00 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine

Rev. w..tey Tbolcher

nlon

p .~ ..

CARLETON INTEROENOMINATION·
AL CHURCH, KlnJllbury Road. Rev.

Harrtsoovllle Rd. IRt. 143) Robert E . Purtell, mlntater; Steve Stanley, Bibl"eSChool
Supt: Harley Jobnsm. Asst. Supt. SUN-

RENE, Rev. John Vance. pastor; Ora
Bass, Chairman Of the Board of Christian
Life. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; Morntn~~:
Worshl 10:30 a.m.: Evangelical service.

berry Helattts Road, Pomeroy. Past (I"' Bob
Snyder; Sabbath Sch~ Superintendent,
Rodney Spires. Sabbath School begins at 2
p.m. on Saturday afternoon with worship
service following at 3:00 p.m. Everycae
ftiCOI'M.
·

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

.I

s unday 0 1Mon th tR ev. Ch ar 1H ·Eatoo)

prayer service Thursday , 7: JO

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pomeroy.

School10::lt a.m. BibleStuc:'yWednesday,
7::.) p.m. (Johnson).
LONG BOTrOM - Church Scbool9: 30 _
a.m. ; Worship 10:30 a.m. '; BlbiP Study, ·
Wednesday. 7:30p.m.; Communion First

Knob.

9;Xl a.m. ; Morning Wor_sh110:4S a .m .;
Sunday evening W(I'ShJp 7:00p.m.; Wed·
nesday evening Bible Study 7 :00p.m.

WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CootvDieRD.!Wv.·Phllllp RIdenour, past cr. Sunday School9:30 a.m.;

worship service 10:;10 a.m.; Bible study
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Roy W. Carter, pUtor. Sunday Morning
Worship, 10:00 a.m.; Sunday BtbleS&lt;hool
6;00 p.m.; Wednesdny Bible Study 1;00 p,
m.
RUTLAND.BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Ttltts, pastor. Sonny Hudson, supl. SUJiday
SC!I&lt;&gt;o19:30 a.m.; Morning worship, 10; 30

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH.
Sayre, Supt. Sunday S&lt;~ool 9: ll a.

Lloyd

·m.;

momtng worship 10:30

evening service 7 p.m.

a.m. Sunday

RA~INE .FIRj. BAPTIST. . Steve

.Ike Sw:l.er. Sunday
School Supt.; Su ay.School 9::1l a.m.;
Morning worship 10:40 a.m.; Sunday
Deaver, Pastcr.1

evening worship 7:30 p~m. ; ' Wednesday
evening Bible study 7:ll p.m.
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Burllnglltm. Rill' 1-audermllt. past&lt;r. fto.

bert Cozart, ..lllant pasttr. Sundll\' SchOOl
10 ~.m.: w(l'l~ 7 p.m.; Wect~~ay, 6 p.m.
youthmeettna; Wed., 7p.m.cl1Jrchservkes.

PINEGROVEHOLINESSCHURCH \!
Robert Saarlea, S.S. Supt. Sunday S&lt;hool

mUeotrRt. 325. Rev. Ben J. Watts, pastOr.

9:~ a.m.: Morning Worsh.lp 10:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening service 7:ll p.m .; Wed·
nesday serviC!@, 7::11 p.m.

SILVER RUN BAPTIST, BUI Little,
pastor. Steve Uttle, S. S. Supt. Sunday

School10 a.m.; MornJng worsip,ll a.m.:
Sunday·evenlng WCI'ahlp 7:30p.m. Praytr

meetlf&lt;g and Bible lludy Wednesday, 1: 30
p.m.: Youth mftttngWedneaday at 7 p.m.
REJOICINC LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Ave.; Mkldleport. Sunday
Si:lloot 10 a.m. Sunday evening 1:00 p.m.;
Mld·we.. service. Wed.. 7 p.m.
LANGSVlLLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9: XI a.m.; Jeff Patterson:
1upt.; Morning worship lO :l:J a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7:30p.m.; Wednes·
day evrnlnaservice, 7:.10 p.m.

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunday
School 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay tmder.

Morn1D&amp; sermm, 11 a.m.; Sunday nl1ht
servk.'el: ChriiUan Elldeavor 7 ; ~ p.m ..

Sonr iervlce 8 p.m. Preaching 8: :ll p.m.
Mld·""fk PI'IIY!!' meirttng, Wednesday, 7
p.m.

.

a.m.; Sunday eventna·servlce 7:00p.m.

Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO program 9 a.m. each Sunday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

~~~~~~~SH~O~P-+

IAWUNGS..C:OAIS ·

.. z.....

.. ______

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

17! .....

....

s.M

992-5141

........rt,

264 South 2nd

EWING FUNERAl HOME
+&gt;DiKnity and SP.rvice Alway•" .
Established 1913

992;2121
106 ·llultorry

w

CHURCH IUPPLIES • BIBLES

~VL

P-roy

Midllltpert

m. Prayer· m~ tne and Bible Study Wed·

nesday , 1 p.m.
,
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. llfv. Nyle

Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt.

Sunday School 9::rl a.m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship service ai 2:30 p.

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
a...-------~----~
Main
St., Middleport.
Rev. Baumgardn.
Gilbert Craig,
•
Jr., past(J".
Mrs. Ervin
er,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School 9: 30a .
m.; Worship service. 10:45 a.m.

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRI$T

ship, 7;30 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY . .

Located on 0 . J. White Road of Highway
1&amp;q. Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday School10
a .m. Clas!eS for all ages. Juntor Church 11

a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adul t
Choir pncticfo 6 p.m. Su~ay. Young People's, CbUdren's Church and Adult ~lble
Studv . Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.

H6PE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
_St.; MlddleP,Drt. AIIUJated wttb Sautliern 1
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Mt·
nlster. Su~day SChool 10 -.in.; Morning
worship lla .m. ; EVening worship 7 p.m.;
WednESday eYentng Bible study and
prayer mef'ting 7 p.m.-.

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CH!liST. St.

Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Derek Stump, pas I or.
William Amberger, S. s . Supt.; Sunday
School9:XI a.m.; Mornlnlt Worship 10:30
a.m.; Evening worship 7:30p.m. Wednesday worship 7: 30p.m .

.ST:

PAUL ·LUTHERAN· CHURCH,

Comer Sycamore and Second Sts., Pomeroy. The Rev. Laura· A. Leach. past (I"."
Sunday .SChool9 : 45a .m. Church service 11
a.m.
,
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St..
Middleport. James E. Keesee. pastor.
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m.: Even.
lng service 1 p .m.: Wednesday evening
worship 1 p.m .. Visitation Thursday 6: 30 p.

m.

,

.

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David

Curfman. pastor. Sunday SchooJ.lO a .m .;

worship service u · a.m.; Sunday night
worship service 7:30 p.m. ; Midweek
prayer service Wedne&amp;day 7 p.m.

WESLEY AN

BIBLE

HOLINESS ,

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Racine,

Rt. 124. William Hoback. pastoc. Sunday
School10 a.m.; Sunday evening service 7
p.m . Wt"dnelday evenlnR service 7 p.m.

CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don ChNdle,
Supt. Sunday School ':30 a.m. Morning

Worshlp·10:30 a.m. Prayer service, altern·

ate Sundays.

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd ..
next to Fort Melp Park, Rutland. Ro'tlert
.Rlchlfdl, pasttr. Servtceo at 7 p.m·. on
.W04D- aDd SuMa)&gt;o. ·
'
' HARRISONVILLE HOUN'tss ciTAP·

vice 7:30p.m.

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF

m. Thursday.

·

EAITH, .

'

MIODLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
ttngham, Sunday School Supt; Sunday

Ave. Rev . Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not·

Sehool10 a .m . with classes for all ages.
Evenlna servict'S at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl·
ble study at. 7: :KI p.m. Youth services Frt·
day at 7;30 p.m.

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP.128M111St.,

Middleport. Brotber Chuck MePhersm,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday
evening services at 7 p.in. and Wednesday
services al7 p.m.
·

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith.

pastcr. Sunday ·School9:30 a.m.. ; church
ser\llce 7:30 p.m.: youth fellowship 6: :II p.·
· m,; Bible study, Thursday, 7:30 ·p.m. ·

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St.. Mat on. W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.

tan, Sunday School , 9:30 a .m !: Morning

FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH, Long Bot·

WorsiUp 10:45 a.m.; Sunday evening 7:00
p,m. ~summer 7: 30 p.m. ); Wednesday
night 7:00 p.m . (summer 7;30 p.m . ) .

Wedneoday Prayer and Bible Study: 7:15

LMNC WORD CHESTER CHUHt.:H
OF GOD - Gary Hines, paatoc. Sunday
S&lt;hooi9;:D to.10:20 a.m.: Worship arvtce

~IY anernoon ser.uees at 2:30. Thuraiay
evening aervices at 7:30.
, . ··

to 11: 30 a.m.; Sunday evening ser·
.HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN . '10:30
vtce, .7 ·p.m.; Mldw,eek Prayer service,
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va. Wed.,
7&amp;·.m.
·
Rev . DaVId Mp~la. pptcr. Church
MT.
LIVE
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
School 9: 30 a.m.; Sunday' morning ser·

vice, 11 a.m.; Sunday evenlna aervlce.

7: ill p.m. \Vednt!lday prayer meetln8. 7; 30
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
W. Va., Rt. 1, James Lewis, pa.stoc. Wor·
ship oervl&lt;es 9:30a.m.; Sunday Sehoolll
a.m.; Evenlngworlltlp1:30p.m. Tueoday

cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9:30 a.m.; Wonblp ~rvke, Wednesday

;:~JR~VIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Walnut aad Henry Sts., Raveuwood, W.

Va. Thellfv. George C. Wetrlclt, pasltr.
Sunday SChool9:30 a.m.; Sunday worohlp

11 a.m.

.~

t,jzme

*••·

...,..p,.._lal,

oa....

i'

Lawrence Bush, pastor. Sunday SChool
9:30 a.m'.;' SUnday and Wednesday even-

ing wonhtp service, 7:00p.m.

UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Po·

meroy By-Pus. Rev. Robert E. Smlt h. Sr ,
pattor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday

School9; Jl a.m. ; Morning Wonhlp 10; :ll;
Evflilq Wonlllp 7;00 p.m.; Wedneoday
Prayer Service, ':00 p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH , Rallr&lt;Bd
St., Muon. Sunday School10a.m.; Morn·
1ng wonhip 11 a.m.; Even~lil JerVIcr6 p.

'

7:00p.m.
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURq!,Sun·

,.,i4""'. ' .....,

...~~J.•"

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W.
Va. Pastor, BUI Murphy. Sunday SChoollO

~·

'

a mother telling her children that
lheir falher is a ch!'ating, no-good,
rotten man, especially when she
continues to live with 'him.
. Living in a home where lhere is
undeclared war is tough enough on •
the children without their being ~
forced to choose sides. No mqther :
needs to !ell her sons lhat it is wrong i
to have exb'am!lrital affairs, They ·:
know it. And what sort of message ,
does a mother give her daughters: •
when she tells them !heir father is' ~
siepping ou1 wilh other women, but ~
she has no plans 10 leave? From ' •
where I sit, this rnolher is&lt; saying: .,
"Put up .with it, girls. It is OK for ·•
husbands 10 fool around. Keep ;:.
quiet, and don't rock the boat"
•·
So, what's the bOitom line? If. "
your hus band is unfailhful , ask '
yourself that well-kn&lt;&gt;wn Ann Lan-' ~ ·
ders question : Would I be beller off .. ,
with him or without him? If yoo · ~
would be better off withourllfm, tell''.
~im 10 pack up and leave. ·If yol&gt; ,'•·
would be beuer orr with him, ac·: ~
centuale the positive. Keep Ihe •
home fires burning. Don't run him ..
down to the children. Maintain your •
dignity. Don't needle or nag. Be'.~
honorable and decent, even if he .:·
isn't. Remember that when parents ·;
draw battle ' lines and the home ,
becomes a war zone, the real casu-'' .,
allies ate the kids.
.
·~ ·

.An alcohol problem? How can .
you help yowst/f or someone you •.
love? ",#,/coho/ism: How ro Recog· :.
nize It, How ro· Deal With It, How ·
10 aonquer lr" will give .you the . .
answers. Send a self-addressed; ·::
long . busiMss-size envelope and a ~
check or money order for $3.65 (this
includes postage and handling )

cannot

'

.

..

.(

Sorority chapter

'

.'

-

....
'.

_meeting held

. ,,

.'I

Middleport. The party will begin · ~~;
at 7 p.m. This will also be the "'
meetI ng.
,
The chapter will sell Watkins : ..:
products and the proceeds Will go ·:· ·:;
towarH funding the 1991 Interna- ,;·,;
tlonal Summer Special Olympics• •&gt;·"
Games. Proflls will also go to' :~
Carleton School for Jts olympic :·..
program.
... ,,
A thank you note was receiVed ~ ..!rom ' Rita Fl'eld of the soelal ', ,,;
department of the Meigs County ~ •;
Health Department.
· ·.~: ;
Sharon Pratt, last year's Val- • :
enllne Queen, presented a gilt
' n,
and a rose to this year's queen, • ,
Lynn Shuler.
,'
Hoslesses for the evening were '.:'
Sandy Iannarelll and Debbie •,
Miller. Members participated In '
the hearts and hands gift '. ~,
exchange.
•.
••
.~

Sharon Pratt reported thai
plans are progressing lor the
games party to be held April 5 at
the Old American Legion Hallin

.

a.m.; $unday evening 7:30 p.m . Prayer
meetlne and Bible studY Wednl!'lday, 7:':.t

p.m. Every me welcome.

·

· ·

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·

lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
School10a. m.; Sunday evenlng7:00 p.l'n.; · ·
Wednesday evening prayer meet: In&amp; 1; 00

p.m.

SAlfS AND IHCIAl8
MlBANO SPmAlS

1

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH , Sliver Ridge. Duane Sydenstrlclt.... pasttr. Sunday School 9 a.m.;

REV. MARSHALL AND SANDY RUTH

worstllp Service, lOa .m.; Sunday evening

MissionarieS to ·speak locally .

IM!J'VIce, 7;00 p.m. Wednesday night Bible
study 7:oop.m.

S~ertnonette ·

'.

.Rev. Marlllall and SI!J)dy
Thz publiC Is Invited to attend.
··RUth · mlaslonarlea to South , At 7 p.m. on Sunday, Lt. and ,
Kore~. ·Will be lbe special apeak- . Mrs. TlfnQtby Higgins and their
era at the Salvation Army, 115. :., ~on,, John Edward, Col'pl OfflcButternut AVI!. 111 Pomeroy on ers Of · the Salvation . Army .In
' Suitday at 10 a .m . Tbey will also . A~. will ,conduct, sing, and
·show alldea at Korea.
preacb at the local corps on
" 'Rev 8lld Mri Ruth art! pres· Butternut Avenue.
ently ~n ftir!ou&amp;h and llvlng ·ln
Tbe Publll: II also Invited to
Atllt!ns county.
·attl!rul tills fllncttouof the SalvaHe Ia regional representative lion Army.
. .
of the "Christians In Action" . ··~-~~~~~~~~~'"t
mission, and ht! has serVed. as a
AliA OST.Y AJS.OCIA11011

Aak and It wUI be gtvea to you; aeek and you wUI ftnd; knock and thi!
door will be opened to you. Matlllew 7:7
·
Tllt!lfe words bang In my liviD&amp; room ... lovely cross stltcb that a
lr!end hu given to me. AI I lhlnk o! these words Jesus gives to us I
wonder ll we really tnlat God tbatthey wU! be true? Normally each one
of us try to do tlllnp wltb our own resourees or power.
U we are not able to have what we want or need we are ready to blame
anyone the aovernment,aoclety, !be chUrch, our job, lack oljob, poor
educatloa, pareats or we feel ..., are not aoot1 en011g11. God's promises
are not just for a special group or people bul lbey are lor anyone who 11 ·
ready to trust and believe tltrou&amp;b Jesua Christ.
Tile oUter day I wu reminded o! how special It Ia to completely tnas1
God. A women had come to Ute Co-operative parish -king to receive .
clolhlnctn.a diJtrlbutioiL Tile nlabt before a tire on lhelrcar liad, had a
b)ow out. They had no resources to buy a tire and she had asked God to
show Iter. how they were to eet a tire. Iillhe olftce I have had a tire ·
waltlol( lor 10nieone ln need. She told me lhe siZe she needed .and alter
moville the tire Into better lltlht 1 fDtutd tbe tire to be the exact siZe. God
does provide In uaexpectant ways.
I haw lear~~ett thnlul(~ my 011'11 m-a. aurpry, needlite worlt,
lacklna tranoportatioJI, need lor trtentll that God t1oea provide. There
aretlmeweC811 not wtdentandbow aaolu!IODcan happeDbillwtthGod
tbe unbelleYaltleiJ pn "'• What islll!etlad!oraallourcompletf truat
In tbe power ~God aad Ill God's wladom and pldlince.
Reflect !lllwbat problllll,llll your IUe that you have been l)oldln1on to.
In prayer give tllole neet11 to God today. Be uaured the God doea bear
1 your need. 1br0Utlh God' aiOvt! for you God h.. provJded fo!'llvene11!or
your IIIli 8lld mlltruat. Fofi)VeiHils comes lhroullh tbe saYID&amp; jp'aft of
J•u• Chrllt. "
·
·
- .... •aetlr!Bf lltlt!J, PMior of ROe- ..Np-EIIIarprlle Valled
lletllodll&amp; Clutrp.
.
. . .

r

•

ZARENE, Rev. Glen.don Stroud, p8attr.

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·

p.m.

..

lng !lervtce 7:30p.m . Tuesday and Thurs··.
day S«vices at 1:30 p.m.
.NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF~ NA·
Sunday Sehool9: 30a.m. ; Worshlpaervtce,
10:30 a .m.; Youth servtee Sunday 6:15 p.
m . Sunday evenlqservtce'!:OOp.m. Wed·
ne~Uy Prayer Meeting and Bible ·st\ldy

41ng Lane, Mason , W. Va. J . N. ThackEr",
pastor. Evening service 7:30 p.m.; Women's Ministry, Thurllday, 9:.JJ a.m. ;

··'

Rev. Ivan Myers. pasl&lt;r. RoRer Manley, . Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas·

Dear Ann Landers: I am in my
ad · 1
40s and grew up on your vtce.
have profited (rom the wisdom
you've shown over the years, but I
believe you were wrong in your
counsel to 1~e woman with the
cheating husband.
It's difficult enough to raise
daugh!ers when your husband is
running around, but it is worse with
sons. Sons identify with their father
and emulate him, He is !heir role
model. Somebody has to leaCh those
.boys right from wrong.
,
Children caiCh. on to whal is happening sooner than we think. When
their father goes oul on the town
wilh olher women. they are sure lo
leani about it eventually.
1 believe that the mother who
finds herself in this awkward andu
embarrassing situatioit should tc
her children that she is aware of
their fa!her's unfaithfulness and that
it is not accepcable behavior.
The mother who remains silent in
the face of such phila.ndet:ing .sends
either of two messages 10 her chit·
drcn . .One, she is too dumb to see
it. or two, slle· sees il and doesn 't
have any objections.
Please rethink this one, and
change your advice, Ann. -- CRYSTAL M., SAN FRANCISCO
DEAR SAN FRAN: What seems
crystal clear to you, and perhaps 10
others, is not all that obvious 10 me.
We have here a mother who is
aware ihai her husband is unfaith·
· ful and she is determined to discu~s his unfaithfulness with the
children.
Since I
be a fly ·on
.
the wall; I can't predict the natUre
of the discussion, but rest assured
she wiU not give him any goodconduct medals.
Granted, he is a lowlife and a
scoundrel, but I still cannot condone

"1989, Lott An .... I'll
Tirn ... .S..,ndi.,..,.. •nd
· C"' ...;. S~' Aditllr

Lynn Shuler and Jackie
Hoover presented a cultural
program on "Women In Profes·
slonal Sport" at the recenl
meeting of the XI Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SororIty held at .the home of Debbie
Miller.
Shuler and Hoover each read
ar.tlcles on women who have
excelled In sports or a sports
related field.
A letter was read from International which held Information on
organizing a new cbapler and io
remind the chapter that the
theme to this year Is "Gilts from
the Heart."

Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday services 9: 30 ·
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Midweek service, 7:30 p.

Sr1, Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
9: 30 a .m. : Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Evening Woralllp 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
evening Bible study, prayer and praise
servl«, 7:JO·p.m .

a.m.: Wonhip 11 a.m. and 7p.m. Wednea·

Lonesome? Taa charge of jour
life and turn it around. Write for
Ann Landers' MW bookl,t. "How lo
'rfakt Friends and Stop Being
Lonely." Send a self-addressed.
long. busiMss-size en~elope and a
check or money order Jot $4.15 (this
includes postage and haildling) ro:
Friends, c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box
11562. Chicago, Ill. ~1 1.0562. (1n
CQIUI(/Q, semJ $5.05 .1 I

1

· tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
mornlq: service at 10 a.m.: Sunday even·

m.; Young people's service 6 p.m.
Evangelistic servlce6: 30 p.m. WednesdaY
service 7 p.m. .

.

amts for sever~l months,' and we
.___ tha h
·n h
now o.nuw
I e never WI ave
full use of it. Bul lhank"God. he is
otherwise healthy. Needless to say,
I was in roush shape myself after
that niglumarish delivery, and it rook
months of counseling to get me
squared away.
Any woman who is Ibid in ad·
VIUICC lhat s~ should havp a c-seclion ought to be thankful. I wi sh I
had been so'lucky. -· LAFAYEITE,
LA':
·
'
Dear Ami La~ders:J The arguments about cesarean vs. vaginal .
biiths made my blood\ boil. You .
were so righl when ydu said, "It
doesn't matter how YOJI have ihe
baby, just be thankful that it is
healthy."
,
' 1 wonder how those ladies who
were doing all the.yelling would like
to h~ve both a vaginal ,birth and a
cesarean in ooe day. I did. After
eight hours of .hard ' labor, I delivcrcil a heallhy son '"naiurally.:• I
knew ,I was pregnanl wllh twins, but
lhe second .child• sini61y wouldn't
position 'l\im5elf pr~r(y . so my
doctor had to do an el)lergency csection. I was knocked qut and didn't
ger to see my second son until the
following day. .
j
The twins are now 4· years old. I
do not feel that the bOnding with
the first cliild was an~ closer than
with the second. They are boih adorable children, and I have not given
a ·mought to the method of ~eli very
since the ~Y I left thei hospital. I'll
bet the psychology "expert" who
came up with lhat bonding iheory
w~ a man.·· J.E.IN ,SPOKANE

TER of the Wesl{lyan Holiness Church.
Rev. Earl Fields, pastqr. Henr.y Eblin,
Sunday S&lt;hool Supt.: Sunday·School )0 a.
m.; Morning Wonhlp 11 a.m.; Evening
service?: 30 p.m. Westnesday evening ser-

FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045

School 9:30a.m.; Worship service 10::11 a.

.

evenlng. 7:W p.m.; .weanE'Sday Prayer
ME'eti.ng, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·

day evening service 6 p.m .; Wednesday
evening service, 7 p.m.

~HURCH or M!ddleport.lnc., 75 Peart St ..

RENE . Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
Prentl&lt;e. t&gt;Ultr. Chari,.. Domlgan, SunPomeroy Pike. County Road 25 n,.r Fillil~~!! Schod' Supt. Mqmtrlg Worship 9; 30 a: . woods. Rev. Blackwood, puler. Servlcea
m.; Sundli!l Sehool10:30a.m.; Evenlngser·
on Sunday atl0:30a.m.IRd7;:1lp.m. with
vtce, ?:Ill p.m.
,
·
Sunday School9: 30 o.m. BibleStudy, Wed·
Ml'. UNION BAPTIST. Pastoc; Joe N.
neoday, 7;30 p.m.
Sayre, Sunday School 9;45 a."':: Evening
SPIRITUAL F AITll FELLOWSHIP.
wonhlp 6;30~ .: Prayer Meeting, 6:30
Sllite.Route 338, Antiquity. Rev. A. l. Step.m. Wedn
.
wart, pastar.!k&amp;Dday.ervlcea,lOa.m. and
TUPPERS LAINS CHURCH OF
7 p.m.; Tueoday,7 p.m.
CHRIST. Robert Footer, pastor; Howard
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOUCnl-ll, Superlnten-; Church achool
NESS
CHURCH, In&lt;., 75 Pearl 91. Rev.
9 a.m.; Worship Rt"'ice9:45a.m, and6::11
Ivan Myen, actina putar; Ro1erManley.
p.m:
wet come.
, llutidu Suportntadltlt. IUD·
CH
R CHURCH OF THE NAZA· Sr.
day
School
9::11
a.m.;
Morilbir wmlllp
RENE. llfv. llerbet-t Grate, · puttr. JO; 30 a.m.; ......, woroli!D
?; Jl p.m.;
Doup11 Bl11ell, aupt. SUnday School9::II
Wedneoday
....
taa
lllble-.i.ty,
prayer
a.m.; Wonblp tervlce, 11 a.m. and&amp; p.m.
pralle lmll&lt;e."': 30 p.m.
Sunday. \Veclneodoy, 7 p.m. Prayer meet- and
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST AI'OS- VanZandt and Ward Rd. Elder
lnf.AUREL CLIFF .FREE METHODIST . TOUC
Jameo MIUer, DUttr. Sunday School,
CHURCH. WlllllllJI WDIIams, pastor; fto.
10:30a.m.; Wonhlpllervlce,Suntlay, 7:30
bert E·. BartCII, Dlte&lt;tcr o! ChrloUan Edu·
P
. .m.; BlbleStuay, '1\'........ay, 7;:1lp.m.
catto~; St..., Eblin, asoiltant. Sund8y
, CALVARY PILGIUMCHAPEJ,II&amp;rit·
Sc1Uio19:30 a.m.: Mnrntna wonhlp 10::11 ICIIIVWeRDitl.
Rev, Vletll'llou...,putor;
a.m.; Teent In ACtion, 6 p.m.; Evening · Cllottn Faullt, Suoilay School SUpt.; SUn·
Wonhlp, 1:00 p.m. Choir pnctlct 8 p.m.
School !I:Jlo.m.; mOI'Idq Wll'llilp.ll
Sundaji. Wtclneoday eventn1 pray•r 111d daY
il.m.; Sunday ev~ ....,..., 7:30 p.m.
Bible
Wedilllday, 1:311 p.m.
DE
CHURCH OF CHRIST, Prayer
SYRACUSE I"'RSr CHURCH OF GOD.
flo,... WatoCII, mllilll!r: Norman Will,
Woroltlp IOi'VIel a.-y
IUpl. Sunday School 9;:11 a.m.; Worlhlp
10
a.m.;
lliuJday Schad 11 a.m. Ewolq
llervlce IO::Il a.m. Bible IIUIIjl, Wtcln ... woralllp _,..., 7:00 p.m. Wtcln-y
da.Y. 1:00 p.m.
prayer m... lnl 7:011 p.m.
•
IU:DRGAN!1ffmCHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LA
DAY SAINTS. Port·
MT. lfi!RMON UNrn:o BRETHREN
la~llldae Rolli. Mike Duhl, pastor;
IN CHRIST CHURCH, LDaoted In Tna
Janice
cbtin:tl ll:hool cllrectcr. Commuidty oil CL Rt. 12. ·Rev. JIGtiort
Charcb ocboolt::IILm.; Mol'lllngwcnltlp Sutllra, .-aor. Jllft lfGita', ..., leader;
10:30 a.m.: Wediillllll!l evenJna Pf'yer Ed Raua •..., lkllool Supt. lltanday
......~.7:30p.m. .
khool f; II LDI.; DIOI'IIItil WCII'IIIIp and
11ET11LE11EM BAPTIIIT. Rev. Earl _..ldreit'o o.bureb 10:30 o.m.; evea!tlt
Slttilfr, putor. Woralllp ttervl&lt;e, 9:30a.m.
-chiDI llfl'VIce ftrll lllroe SUnclaY1,
Sunday SChool IG::II a.m. Btble!tUIIjl and ' 7: 3D p.m.:_ ~· ~ foi!rth Sunday

:\'m'i

83 MNIStrMt
Mldtleport. Ohio 411710
!1141112-11117 -IIIB·OOKSI

- Joseph B. .Hoskins, evanQ:eUst. Sunday
Bible Stu~y 9 a.m~: 'Worship, 10 a.VI.; Sun·

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Joseph B. Kosklnsr pastor. Blbl('
Class, 9:30a .m.; Morning Worship 10: lOa .
m.; ·Evening Worship, 6:30p.m. Thursday
Bible Study. ·6: XI p.m.
,

Third Tuesday, 7: Yl p.m . Communion,
first Sunday. &lt;Archl"'")
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Church
&amp;.nday Mus 9:10a.m. CCDclasses.10::D Sch 110
Blbl s
Th
a.m. ftrst. ~erondandthlrdSundaysofeaCh ·
oo
a.m .:
e .tudy,
u~ay, 7p.
month. Dally Mass. 8:30a.m. Confessions
m. ; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; ComSaturday afternon, 4-Sp.m .
munlon, nrsl Sunday \Archer).

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·

716 NOITH SE(OND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT, OlfiO

I

:t8!ltl Sat rd
E
1 M
5 :r1
·
u ~ ven ng ass, : p.m .;

TOLIC FAITH- New Lima Road , next ro
Fort Meigs Park. Robert w. RichardS.
paslor. Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7 p.
Wednesd
·· hlp 7

r'

dies' Auxiliary. WP(ine!day, 7 p.m. Fam·

9:30 · a.m.; Sunday morn1111 . preaching
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening serviCes, 7:30

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST. 212 W.
81
' 9:Jla.m.;
Mnln St., Leo
Lash. ovan~P~oL
Mori'Ugv.usb,p,
~.JJ, a.m. ; School
Youth

ship to a.m.;

song last fall which became an instant
success, and not entirely because it ~
catchy and cleverly written. What really
made it such a tremeAdous hit was the
goQd advice It ·contained,. simply stated In:
four words and repeated. througtlout. It
told us nono worry about our problems,
· giving examples of some of them, but .
instead to "be happy." Of course, many of
our woes require some action on ou~ part
to solve them, but just showing our anxiety
wiU only upset those around us. Pe(haps
the best way to foUow the song's advice is
to attend our House of Worship and trust
the Lord to provide the answers. Worry will
not solve any problem, and we should be
grateful to that song ·writer for . ·
reminding us of this fact.

lly Worship. ·
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. 01!
Rt. 124, 3 mUes lrom Portland·Long Bot·
torn.- Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday Schdol,

il'ld Nv,..-y c•e ~- Cotfee.hour In tre
Parish Hall mnedateti foUowtngf:he,lefVIc.ie,

~ml !8...~,

As you probably remember, there was a

'------------..J
•

w. Mail! St~ P-r•r
. 992·54.32&lt;

Pamfrov

K&amp;C JEWELERS

POMEROY CHURCH OF 111E NAZA·
RENE, Qr,... Union and Mulherry, He;,
'l'honu Gllst III&lt;.QI • • pastil". Norman Pres-

BobByer, dlrectoroftbeM!!Igs
Meigs County Chapters olthe : County Emergency Medical Ser- 1 Dear Ann Landers : 1 became
Future Farmers of America will vices, repoFts that the services
made 247 runs In January which r!'llllY angry when I read tho letter
· be . observln1
Included two by Columbia; 52 by from lhe r!'llder wbo said women
National FFA
Middleport; 85 by Pomeroy:'. 31 1who have cesareans feel "less wom·
W,eek, Feb. 18
-by Racine; 28 by Rutland; 16 by
anly ," because IIley are unable to
through Feb.
Syracuse, and · 33 by Tuppers l give binh in the way nature inwith the theme
Plains. Squads took 11~ patients 1tended. Subsequent letters argued
Lead lilg the
Challenge to Veterans Memorial Hospital; ·the pros and cons of natural birth
FFA:
34 roHoizert.ledlcaiCenter; J8to
vs. cesarean. They went on :and on
The cow •and , plow Image of Pleasant Valley Hospital, and 17 until! was ready to scream. '
al!l'lcultural education In the
to·Oth4tr hospjtals. In addition.
I am 23 and .have been an insu· schools )las made an exit. Al!l'l· the transfer runs for January i lin-dependent diabetic ever .since I
.C\Iltural topics 11re now In the totaled 86. 1\nd, !Yialn,.llwonder · j was II. My doctor advised ~e not
DeWs on a dally basis as agrlcul· ' what we would do withOUt the · to become pregn11nt. but I was detural orlerited people atll!mpt te excellent JI'OUps which ma~e UP j termined to' have ·a child ·and was
help ,solve the. problems of soil
the services.
1 willing to face the risks. My pregerosion, air pollution, animal
-------'
l nancy was extremely difliculL When
rights, living In space, the
A little early to lnforl1'\. iV011 • · J my kidneys failed, the doctor adl!l'eenhouse effect ; c hem leal pol·
probatily, but better early ·than , vised me 10 have an abortion. I re·
ludon, and water quality. In the never- now that's· a switclJ, , • fused. Our lillie girl was born one
Former resident, s,dte 1
Bl!l'icultural classes of Meigs
county these days students are Turner, will observe her .95th month ahead of schedule. She was
1 1
healthy and perfectly beautifu ·
being cballl!nged to come up with birthday on . March 2. _,
1.
pos!ilble. solu Uons to these prob- Turner. doesn't write letters lillY , wouldn't have cared if they had
'
lems lind these students, hope- . -more _ and I can 11nderitapd ·; pulled her out of my ear. .
ftiUy, w!ll be better equipped as that·- butloves to gel mall. I.e all 1 The c~perience qf gi.ving birth is
also undentand that, can't you?
so un~quc thatl _cannot trnagme why·
the~ take over leadership roles In
Her
address
Is
Brenn·
Field
·-'
any woman would make a big deal
the community.
.
·
'
'
' ...... .:.....
N\I.~Ina,
C!!n.ter,
191j0
tynn
Drive,
~~t o~,the ~'e~od of dclive.ry. ,As
..,.
'
'
.
. ' Tc;~ ·update '· you nn Del)nls
OrrVIlle; 0.1\lo 44667.
.
· always, arnvmg at 'the desunalton
Gl!fuOre of Pomeroy. , · · •
'.
...... __ ...;._. __ ...;
,
is far more 1mpor,tant thJ!Ilthe road
·He Is . confined to the Cabell
By"''the way, the Ann Barnltz
traveled to get there. -' G .M. (NEW
Huntington Hospital as the result that you keep reading abOut for ORLEANS)
of Injuries received In an auto .her excellent performances with
DEAR G.M.: Hundreds of women
accident. The room number Is
the Unlverslly of Rio Grande's wrotn to express themselves on ihis
4354 and of course, that hospital
women's basketball team Is the
intensely (lcrsonal subject. Some of
Is·located ln Huntlniton, W.Va.
granddaughter of Mr. and Mr~. the lcuers were too hot to handle,
And BQh McDaniel ol Middle- Hayman Barnllz of Pomeroy and so 1 hauled out my asbestos gloves.
port has undergone major Mrs. Vl!)tor Bro.wn of Miners·
Here's a sampling:
surgery•. at the Holzer Medical vi IIe. P rou· d 1fand paren ts ' I' m
Dear Ann Landers: It burned me
Center In Gallipolis. Cards" will
sure.
up when 1 read !he leners from
!'each Bob at room .208.
. Betiy Ke;;-;.,--;n.;-1)-; having a
women who thought they were misst·ng sometht'ng b•"ausc
.lh.ey. had
,.,..
l,ong-.time Pomeroy and Meigs· . blrthdiiY this year. Sh e •,s o~e . of
tl\ose
F:eb.
29
people
so
only
bas
a
their
babies
by
cesarean
tnstead
of
Cpunzy resjdt!nt, Olive Weber, Is
cellflned · to the Cedar Grove birthday every.tour years. Betty "as God intended." I wish I could
have ltaded places with them.
Personal Care Center and I'm says, ac~rdll)g to that .:she's,now
I am a small person. 5 feet I inch
sure would- appreciate hearing 16 1~·.
from you now. She really can use
-------and 105 pounds.' My doctor knew
som!! enc;ouragement. The adWhat happened to all that love 1111en in advance l)latl was carrying
dress Is P.O.- Box 1142, Parkers·
that was everywhere Wednes- ,a large baby. At the lime of the birth,
burg, W.Va., 2&amp;102.
day? Do keep smUlng.
he musl have had other lhmgs on
his mind. becauSe I labored for far
! too many hours before my 9-pound,
10-ounce·son was born.
The baby did not move one of his

g

'
,
)
i.
1

ln.s. Co .._ ,.

of Columbus, 0 ; "
. . W . Matn '1

I

LANDER~

By BOB HOEFLICH

·P. J. PAULEY, AGENT:

'·

Ann
Landers
.\NN

:::to~la:=~~in:et:::

marrtace In 19'10, They brln&amp;
with them thtilr aona, Andy and
Matthew. ,
.,
•

PRESCRIPTION
SH4)P
OHIO . .
MIDDLIPO~,

"FLU &amp; COLD RELIEF C
-·

. ·'

. . ··-

"Ptft:cll•• of..,.
.

.

-·

'I.IJ

••

•

j

,;•L'
'

..

·: _~

•••e:..,
,'' I ""'•

..,...... .

WINTER
MERCHANDISE

... =

'

1 2 PRICE
S.we ••••••·

Fl•~•l SIMpwear,

l•••a. S._ten, Etc. lxd1A21
Ca INrtt and Wortc Clotlsts
I

'

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'

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ttlio661t

:•

' . 271 No; lla S1cond

t'

! • •..._

t" "- ,.

ON T..E "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

RE.NT
TO OWN

. .,

AND

(( ~ iJo1,T;:

P.V.&amp; f07"1•YY . . .
. ••••"

.
.'

•HIIN~IIA~~~ti~i~~..:·~~~....

. ltp~c
..

SATUIDAY, FEBRUARY 17th

•''

MONDAY, FEBRUARY 19th

j

••
••••

\

AND~

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' ..""'e._·'-·!"

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�=PIM~~g~:~u~bl~ic~;:-~ot~i~c~~·~·ly1S~egnt~:~~~b~lic~~~=l=:~P~u~bl~ic~N~ot~ic~e;=l~=.~P~u~b~lic~N~ot~i~c~a~1~~P~u~b~IOhio~ic~N~·ot~ice~~r-=iP~u~blic~'~Nij_;ot~ic~e;:=9f=i~~~~~~fr;e~bn~U~fiY~~~~·~~~~ .'
1 8 1 990

8

PI.ICIOLIC NOTICE
UIIT OF
PLEAS
COMMON
' MEIGS CO UNTY. OHIO
CHEMICAL MORTGAGE
COMPANY
PlointiH
VS .CHERYLLY
.
NN POWELL
~
••• ChoryiColllgon
Kropko, 1111
,
Dofendont
NOTICE IN surr FOR
FORECLOSURE
OF MORTG AGE
Powell, Ike
ChCheryl
I CLyrin
I
ory
o ligon Krupka,
whooolootknown oddreoo io
1170 South Second Strollt;
. Mldcleport. Ohio 467.80, ·
.,d
the unknown ·hoiro.
'-..- . OXOCU·
-• - · -• ....
torL odmlniltrotors. IPOU811
lnd oooigno ond tho u"'
known guorddlono ill minor
end/
or incompotont
hoiro of
•
L
Powoil,
Ch-•· , ynn
fko
Cheryl Colligan Kropb oil of.
whooo rooldonceia ore u"'
know.n ond connot by r11·
oonohlo dlllgonco be oocor·
llinocl, w11 Illite notice thet
on tho 29th of November,
19119, Chomlcll MortCompany filed ~~ corllin
COf!lpltllnt In the cG.mCourt of Molgo
County. Ohio .In Ceoe no.
89CV2811 on tho dockllt qf
oold Cotirt. end lh• object
ond dornond for ntllol of
wtoich plooding ;1 to foroclaM tho lion of plaintiff' •
mort-orecordtduponthe
following doocribod rool 01•
Ut
It
n;:~:..o;.,lng
rool 811110
~uoted
in
tho
county
1Molgo, Sbto of Ohio, and ofIn
tho Vlllogo of Middleport,
bounded end doocrlbod 81
. follows: 33 r.ot fronting on
Second Strollt altho Village
of Middleport, being onefourth
of Lot No. 60
purch•ed by L. c . Dovio
from Jonni8 Hoyeo, Chi~rloo
Geiger and Elli Geiger, tho
oomo being the oouthwoot
quarter of llid Lot No. eo,
Sold one-fourth beginning
11 tho northwoot corner of
tho Cronz lot running parol·
lei with tho oomo about 98
fHI; thMCO Eoot 33 !oat;
thence-~ obout 98 foot
to Second St,.llt; thence
along Second StrOll In
1 oouthwootorly direction
olo.ng Second Stroot 3 3 foot
toCronz lot, thoplocoofboginning.
All of tho obovonomoddo·
fendants an~ required to Inower within twenty·oight
doya after 1!lllt publication,
whiCh oholl be publiohed
onceowoolcforoixconoocu·
tivo woolco, or they might be
denied 8 hearing lnthiiC:Me.
LERNER , SAMPSON &amp;

ROTHFUSS
A Legal Pror.ooionol
iation
Anornoyo Assoc.
for Plili•
1ff
''1
(11 12 • 19. 26;
·
(21 2 9 1 8 6
• • · tc
Public Notice
• LEGAL NOTICE
In' compliance with 21

u.

S.C. §863 (n) (1), notice io
hereby given thet on October
2. 1989, in the cao of
United Stat• of Am•icll v.

Fred Priddy, criminll ceoo
number CR-2-89-167, the
Un~ed St.teo Dlotrict Court
lor ,the Sou-n District of
Ohio eni.,ed en order forfeit.
ing ~he following propertiol
to 'tho Unhed Stlltoo of
· Am•D:
1. land ·llf'ld structure in

name of Uoyd M. Priddy end
Fred M. Priddy, referenced
by Volume 311 , page 83, in
the Molgo County Record·

•'• Office and de~cribed n :
Sltu1te in the Townahip of

Rutlond, In tho County of
Meigs and St.te of Ohio end
aituate in Section 8, Town 6

North, Range 14 Weot and
being more fully deocribod
as follows:
Beginning for reference It
en iron pin et the northeut

corner of the

aouthe11t
quarter of said Section 8;

thence South 88 dog. 67'
31" Weotolong tho hoi hoc·
tion tine of said Section 8,
439.78 feet to en iron pin in

the centertlf'!• of Townthip

1 Card of Thanks

We would like to
thank everyone for
their help, visits and
prayers during the ill·
ness and death of our
brother and uncle,
Garth Smith.
Special thanks to
Americare • Pomeroy

staff, Dr. Villaneuva, Ve-

terans Memorial Hospi·
tal nurses, White's Fu·

neral Home. pallbear-

ers, church, friends. and

nei&amp;hboB for foOd. Your

kindness will never be

forptten.

Family of Garth

Smith

Rood 174 wblch iron pin ill
on the.woot KnoofthoOron·
tor'o proporty:
thence SOuth
27....,
-... 01 ' 57" Eoot31 .91i
feot: thence South 44 dog .
10' 47" Eut 117.74 ~
t hMCO S outh .47 "_,. 47';
1h4" EeoSoutth200.31 1111;
I ence
21 "-, 30'
WMt 200 -:thoncoNorth
_,
47dog. 30'Woot288r.otto
.
• ' weat proG'""'"'"
-··•
II no; t hen co North 2.noP'
• dog.
30' Eoat along Grontor' o
Wool pr-rty line obout
2201Hitothe
. plocoofbl·
ginning, contolning 1.4
ocrM, more or 1111.
2. Land an.d otructunt in
nome of Uoyd M
. . Pri••·.and
-•·
Fred M. Priddy, refer-cod
by Volume 311, Pogo ~·
81,ln
the Meigs County Record·
or'o Office and loglily de·
ocrlbod u :
Situoted in tho ·Townohlp
of Rutland, County of
Meigo, and Stole of Ohio:
Parcel 1: Tho following
deocrlbod property oituotod
In Section Number 8, Rut·
land Township,
Meig&amp;
County, Ohio, end boundod
ond deocribod • followo:
Beginning In tho cantor of
tho oat Hno ohlld Section
No. 8; thence ·- • 20.81
chlinoocrooo thooeotholfof
tho Iouth quarter of.Section
No. 8: thence South 10.58
cholno to top of ridge:
thence North 86 dog. Eut
8.26 cholno; thence South
81'11 dog. Eoot 2.18 chlino;
thonco9outh 21 Dog. 0 Eut
8 .96 cholno: thence South
13 dog. 0 Eoot 4 chlino;
t~onco South 38 dog. 0 Eut
3.21 choino; thence North
83 doll. Eoot 7.09 chlino to
Eut line of uid Section No.
8: thenco North 20.33
cholno to tho ploco olbogln·
nlng, containing 30\0 ocroo,
mon~ or le11.
Except 10. end % ocr•
horatoforit ooldto Joa. Shir·
koy by dood doted April
18th, 1885.
.
Excepting end reoorvlng
2.199 ocroo aold to Carlos
S. McKnight and Betty R.
McKnight by dHd datod
September 22. 1976. ,ond
recorded in Vol. 281, pogo
819, DoodRecordoofMIIgo
County, Ohio.
Aloo, excepting and ro·
eorvlng to Gory McKnight
and Noncy McKnight the
folltiwing rool oototo o~·
uoted In Rutlond Townohip,
Moigo County, and Sllto of
Ohio, eituate in Section 8, .
Town 8 N. Ron go 14W. Rut·
land Township, County of
Mel••. and St.ote of Ohio,
and - being more fully do·
ocribod u follows: Bogin·

212. • follt to on Iron Rod
(Mi):

77.of,3H7043_o.,~lointhonomo
ony ~ . ~•·
D.
I ,' _1888
hom. Codilloc
VIN
DWii1YJU8732311,
pu~h•ed on Morch
1&amp;.
19al• by F~
· - Priddy·

. 3. Thence N78A-,
33'W
'""'(oat)
Pilling on Iron Pin
ot
15.71-llt the NE corof the Ohio Power Co. 0 .82
Ac&lt;e Parcel (0 . V. 244. Pg;
10411. th""oo oontlnulng
EF. 1 8 8 2~!!!ocDoSevldtlllo '
pll•""' o Cop-""'d Rod
·
~·...,
v on
-..
,....-~
Mot---'
Ohio(oat) lnConcrotoot200.11S
-~...·L
·.,,lo II
1 - thMcOntlnulng 151... 270424340, Sortllll
1HD111KL17JY011241 .
inoll230.80-tot~-con'""
1!1 18•• Ch
_,_
tor-line of t!&gt;o oold Townlhip
...
ovr._.
Rood;
.
Motor Homo, Ohio Thll
.. f t Serlol
4. Thence N. 20 dog. 46' E 11&amp;3o280..._,
with the CMter· Uno of the •P-1119J820788,
tltlodto
Fred M Priddy
llid townohlp Roed 223.64
·
·
IHI to the ploco of BEGIN·
H· 1918 Ford 1 81
NINO,
contoinlng 1.38 , Ch•oio Cob, Ohio Title
Public Notice
ocrM, more or •~ 1 .
112704247811, Sorlol
4. Lind and- bulldin~ In "1"DKF3
• 1
710GNAIS2132,
.._..
-•-- lgnated
Rutland, Ohio, titled to .,. t rano...... to u......
ORDINANCE
blri J . Priddy, referenced by purph- on bock of title
NO. 1221·90
Volume 304, pogo 677, In by tit.. owner S.F.S. Truck
An Ordlnonoo to Anna
the Moigo County llocord- loloo, Inc.
Certain P,.ojoortleo Into the
or' a Officio end l-olly
d• H'I, 1973
Vill-e
·•
Oh'Superior
~~ Motor
- or M.l ddl-.
_,......
ocribod 11:
. omo.
IO "'~
lo It orilllned by tho
Situated in tho VIII ego of il530283448, Soriol
Council of , the Vllogo of
Rutlond. County of Meigs •22H22002374, titled In
Middleport 10 followo:
end Stoto of Ohio:
tho homo of Fred Priddy.
Sec. I. Th,l l 'cortoin 11'111&gt;'
Sltuotlln Bl\ctlon B, Town
J. 1987 Ford Cob end
ortloo IOUifi of tho pr..,.t
8, Ron go 14, boglnlng 47'h Chllioio Truck, Ohio Title
corporetlonlimho of tho vn.
feet South of tho Northeoot :!5;~~~;.~~lf~~Sorllll
logo of Mldol•ort. u op·
corner of Froction 7 of uld
titled In
proved by tho Mlllgo County
township; thence Eut 9
Priddy.
Commloelo-1 by Rooolu·
rodi: thence South 27'h ·
MO Low
lion dl1od NCIV.,bor 22,
- : thence w- 9 rodo:
1989 end rooordtd In Com·
thence N~rth 27'/:o feet con·
mloolonoro Uournol No. 19,
llinlng 16 oquore rodo, more
Pogo 230, oro horeby op·
or looo.
proved for : onnoxotlon Into
•5. Any lnte-t In 49 ocroo
. tho corp-• llmlto of thO
of land t"lod to Geoffroy
VIII ego of Middleport.
Word to which Mr. Word will
Soc. 11. That 1 comploto
tranofer ouch property to
doocrlptio~ of the property
Fred Priddy, witlch property
nome
along with o copy of Rnolu·
i1 mer.,ced to Volume
M. 1878 Dodge Cob
tlon of tho Mei- County
306, Pogo 726; in the Moigo Choooio, Ohio Thlo
· Commloolo-o, ;:-,. hereby
Cqunty Recorder' a Office II630 2 866B3. Sorlol
included eo 1 port of thlo or·
end logllly dMcribod oo:
IID~19FBS1 13020, titled
dlnonco end llttlchld u Ex·
Situated in the Township~ in I~ nome of 'red Priddy.
hiliito A end 8 roopoctMoly.
of Rutlond, CountY of Molgo
N. 1984 Chevrolet
Sec. 111. That tho council
and State .of Ohio and Truck. Ohio Tille
of the Vlllogo of Mldoloport
bounded and deocrlbod •• #&amp; 3 0 2112.8 37, Serial
ogrooi to ..vlcothl111111n
lollowo:
# 4 C144F1 10381, titled in
tho oomo monnor u other
Situated in the Town1hip the n•m• of Dennis Wilt.
are.. of the v~lllll• a're •rof Rutlond, County of Meigs
0. 1963 Ford Falcon, ·
lor oo 1o fo11lbly
obo
.nd Sdtote . of Ohio end SOhlo TI#t1eH11 &amp;30F 28 &amp;3 3 e.
l · po~oible':..
undo end deocribod oo
!H' 1111. 3 2 7 2 28 8 3 9 •
Thlo Ordinoncil
follow a:
titled In tho nome of Peon
offoct and be In'
Baing part of Fraction No. Whittington.
·
force from and oftor tho ur·
3, Town No. 8 and Rongo
P. '1187 Harley Dovldoon
lllllt doll provldod by low.
No. 14 of the Ohio Com· Motcircyclo, Ohio Thle
Puled tho 12thdoyofFo·
pony'oPurchooo, and begin· #27G419176, Seriol
brull"{. '1,990.
ning 66 rode Eoot and 12 #1HD1CAN21HY130411.
ATTEST: Jon Buck. Clerk
rod• South oftho North-t 1"1"" in tho nome of Eric
o_.., M. Horton,
corner
of 11id Fraction: Prld&lt;!Y·
PreoldontofCouncll
t.hekncothEoot 12Nrodo and 18 MQI. ) ~I8cl7 Honhdol T
(2118, 23, 2tc
'
11n 1: .once orth 8 rode;
o
o, 0 () ltle
thence North 74 dogr- · 112704 7898.
EMt 37 rodo to 1 point 8
R. 11987 AMC Romblor,
rode North of tho Fraction Ohio Titlo#630282791.
line: thoncoEut 16rodtond Sorl'!l #A7KM77C1288&amp;6.
16 linko; then co South 79.6 titled; In tho nome of Eric
rods; thence E•t 6 rods;
M. Priddy.
thence South 58.&amp; rodoorto
S. [1 983 Chovrolllt
tho center of a public roed; Fleetloldo Pickup, Ohio Title
the. nco Wooterly w
, lth .. id #530291421, Sorlol
·
road obout38 rode t.o Iandt # 2G CEK14HOD1'183117.
of John Stiff: thence North tronlirerred on bock by Jim
nlng for reference at an iron 158 rodl to a 3 acre lot;
, Chev-Oids-Ced. , Inc.
pin 11 tho northeoot corner thence North 86.6 dogrooo
Highlino Moof tho Southooot quarter of
3' roclo ond 22 linko;
•
. 1979 Ford Bronco,
llid
Section 8: thence
Weot 42.6 rodo;
South 88 dog. 67' 31" Woot
South 46 dogr001 Ohio Title #630288818, .
along the half ooction line of Woot . 19 .&amp; rode; then co Sorlol IIU16HLFE4279,
11id Section 8: 439.78 fHI North 4 rode and 18 llnko; t"led[ln tho nome of Fred
·
· 1n
· t.n:~
~- center
No.rth 47 dogr... Priddy.
to an 1ron
pm
U. ~986 Hondo
I'one ofTowno h'1p R01 d 174
8 ·
-~
- and 4 llnka;
which Iron
it on the wollt
N - 4 dagr001 EliOt Mot~cycle, Wen Virginia
lino of tho
end 1 link; thence Thlo #N927027 VIN
orty: then co
3. II dogr- Weot a
noma of Dovld
01 ' 67" Eoot 31 .915 f...:
end 1 Hnk; thence
then co South 44 dog. 10' North one holf dogr- Woot
47" Eoot 87.741001; thence 8rodoindollnk: North22.6
.
.
South. 47 dog, 47' 14" Eut dogroeo Eoot .8 rodo and 1
200.31 foot; thence South link; thence
North ·48
29 dog. 30' Wait 200 foot; dog1001 Eut 8 rode ond 1
thence North 47 dog. 30' link;
thence North 61.6
Woot 298 feet to Grontor'o
Eoot II rode ond 1
- • property line; thence
thence North 60
North 21 dog. 30' Eeot dogr- Eoot 3 rode end 111
' I
serial
along Grantor' 1 - • prop· · linko: thonoo
north 117
IISTRE311 178F9.
orty line about 220 fHI to dogr- Eut I rode and 1
~otor 116212433, t~led in
tho ploce of beginning, con· link; thence North &amp;7.26
the .name of Roger Lee
taining 1.4 · acra, more or clegr... E•t 12 rocia and 2
le11.
llnka;
thonilo North 28 Atlclno.
S. Equity voluo fn o J.O.
Porcol 2: Aloo tho follow· dog,... Eut 4 rode ond 8
460 E. Crawler Dozer and •
ing land situated in Section IInke;
thence North 28
'
2. Rutland Township, Molgo dtgr- Eoot II rode end 1 J.O. 310 C looder.
Tho United Stoteo of
County, Ohio, to-w~: Bogin· link;
thence North 47.&amp;
Anierlco hereby givoo notice
ning 100 rodo north of dtgr- Eoot 8 rode and 1
oouthweat corner of Section link; thence North ii0.6 of "• Jntentlon to dlopo• of
No. 2; thence North 160 dogr- Eut 8 rode and 1 tho. forr.itod proportleo in
such li manner u the United
rode ond 8 linko: thonoo Eoot link to the ploco ol begin·
Stotoo Attorney General
•VINYL SIDING
49 rod•; thence South B nlng, contolnlng 69 •c-.
moy direct. Alfy person hlv·
•ALUMINUM SIDING
dog. Wilt 18 rodo and 23
or looo.
llnko; thence South 9 dog.
Aloo. tho lol....,ing land lng ort cllimlng ologol inter·
•BLOWN IN
East 26 rods and 1 2'h links; adjoining the above and oot In ony oltho 11id properINSULATION
thence South 19 dog. Wlllt ~uoled In the 11mo Town· tiM mull within thirty (30)
doyo
of
the
.finol
publication
19 rodo and 5 linko; thonco oiolp and Rongo
and
South 7 dog. West 28 r~do bounded M followo: Bogin· of thl1 notice. or within
ond 18 links: thonco South ning 38 rode and 9 linkl Eoit lhlrty ;(301 doyo of octuol
notice,
25V. dog. Wilt 8 rodo and' of tho Northweot corner of receipt of thlo
llow H - hilt
18 linko; thence South 18 eold Fraction No. 3; thence whichever ie earlier. petition'
dog. Woot 54 rode end 20 Eoot 18 rode ond 16 llnka; the D(llrict Court, c/o Df·
"Free E111m11es"
&amp;nko: thence Woot 22 rode thence South 12 rode; fico altho Clerk. Room 280,
PH. 949·2101
ond 18 link• to tho piece of thence Nort-torly along 85 Marconi Boulevard, Col·
beginning, contoinlng 33'A tho crook to the p i - of be· umbuL Ohio 43215. lor o
or Its. 949-2160
acrM, mara ar
except ginning. containing 1 acre. hoorl11f1 to odjudlcoto tho
validity
of
hlo
alleged
Inter·
NO SUNDAY CAllS
the cool ond ollrighto to mine Sl¥0 . Md uctpt tho coli
4-16-86-tfn
tho oomo of tho Pomeroy underlying the obovo trocto lilt In tho property. The pot I·
No. 8 vein underlying o port ~f land; E11Cop1 eloo obout 1 tlon 1h11t be in conformity
of llid deocribod promlooo. ocro from flrot obovo do· with tho proviolono of 2fU.
Roforenco DIICI: Vol. 2&amp;4, ocrlbod tract; 11id 1 ocre ly· S.C . §1153 (n (31ondeholl be
Pogo 419; Vol. 264, Pogo ing North of end 14Jocontto ligned by the petitioner
397; ond Vol. 192, Pogo 27, tho roed running Eeotorly under penalty of porlury ond
ohollollt forth the nlltunt end
Deed Recorda, Molgo Cou"' through 11ld Iondo. llid 1
W. Ya. Chipping, Inc.
utont
of tho petitioner' 1
ty, Ohio.
ocro being bounded on the ·
.....prints ld.
right..
Iitie
or
inter•t
in
the
Excepting end roo. .ing Weot by lendt lately con· property, the limo ond clr·
to Willllm D. McKnight and veyodtoFrenkM. Wholey by
Oltlo.
Vlolot McKnight, jointly for Joooph E. Young; on · tho cumlllonca of tho plltition·
PH. 992·3561
their lhroo end upon tho South by 11id rood running er' 1 oequioitlon of tho right.
doath of one of them to tho Eeotorly through llid Iondo t"l• oi lntoroot In the propS15 50 Jill' ton
ourvhror, the rlglrt to rwldo end bounded on the E.,.orly erty, ony oddltlonol fer;u
euppoi11ng
the
pot~ioner'o
Buying Hou ra;
In the rooldonco and occupy lido by 1 rold running
cllim. lond tho rollof sought.
ono ocro of ground upon Northerly through the oomo,
7:30·8:00
whlch tho r•ldon,. 11 11. . ond on the Northerly oldo by A cow of tho plltitlon ohell
Mon.
thru Fri.
tuoto, lorond during the na· • llno oubotontlllly Jllllllol be oorved on the United
7:30-4:00
Steteo
Anorr&gt;ev.
Room
200,
turolliveo of tho olid William to llid roed oo rul\fting E11·
86 Morconl Boulevard, Col·
D. McKnight and Vlolllt
ond being for enough
McKnight.
ofllldroedtoen'clooo umbuo, Ohio 43216.
ROiiERT FOSTER
Relorenco Deed: Vol. 281,
whh other 11id
United Slltoo Morohol
Poge 981. Molgo County
llno1ICI'ooflond.
SouJhorn Dlatrict of Dhlo
Deed Rocordo.
EXCEPT 10, 34 ecreo con·
Columbus. Ohio
3. Lind end lltructuro In VIIYed to Dovld 0 . Potiroon 121 9. ,~ 8, 23,
3tc
name of Lloyd M. Priddy end ond Uncle Plltoroon IIY tlood
!
Fred M. Priddy, reforenced dated Morch 23. 1978, M1d
by Volume 311. pogo 71, In
recorded In Volume 273,
tho Mllgo County Rocord· Pogo 9411, Meigo County
· HOMIS &amp; GARAGES
or' o offloo end logolly do· DIOCI Rocordt.
..., hasoaalds Prict•''
,LEGAL
ocrlbod •:
8. Trlilor, being. o 111SO,
Sltullto In tho NW'.O of 14x70 Voguo Molollo home,
TO:
Motor
Vlhlclo
PH. 949·2101
Tho
BOARD
OF D~~~~rcJ
_I
Section 1, T8N, R14W, Rut· Sorlol No. 2791 , Model No.
AFFAIRS, Vlllogo of Rllllno
lind
Townohlp,
Moigo 70141320. end rill or 111. 949·2160
Oh~~ Inviting bide for 1 '
County, Ohio, end ~'I" t"lodtofredPrldclyendBor·
Day or Night
No:n 19S8 or NEW 1880
Jllrt of the Iondo rocor
to biro L. Priddy, reforMcod to
Cart L. Wolfe In DIOCI Vo· Merion County DHd VoOnp (1 I ton cob • cheoolo
NO SUNDAY CALlS
D.-. whoolo
.
lume 3015, Pogo 731, end lume 477, Pogo ,308, end
more pertloulorly doocrlbod dtoilrlbod 11:
lSI': of,.,
from ,..,.
of O&lt;ib to: ·
eo followo:
lltuoto In MeriOn County,
-~
whoolo
tronomloolon (4
1. BEGINNING 11t 1 point Fforldo. vii:
.
In tho contortlne of the
Tho - • 214.B7 ,_,of
lpood'
Hoppy
Hollow Townohlp the Eeot 4119.B7 .... or
He"""wll
ckdybe- rooolved by
lldl
Roed No. T174N, llld 110int
~of NE '4 of -•4,
-lng 119 dog. IllS' S2"1
18. T-nohlp 14
the Cllrll untl 1:00 o'olo"
A.M .. Mondty, Morell 12.
,.__ofll2fMitrorna
24 !111.
1110
Poot (loUndl It the
Milt&amp; on MIVIIop: "BIDS
~::,,:or tho 11ld leo·
FOR ~ATER
DEPART·
1,
81
152'
IIOutft lln11 ot RoME~UCK"
Tru
- • tho right
to Nj
ony ond II bldlf
JeneC .......
.
VII. . Ciwk
POioxm
12
IIIIth ltrMt
.d
~ Roolno, OH. 411771
121
23: 13) 2. • 4to

1 1 18

"':'1

I~;~~~;a~

Conlnton' " - Court of
Moito County, Ohio, in ,._
cao of Formoro lonlo Md
•-·
c om-. Plllntlff.
_.Jngo
oaolnllt-ryL.M..-..,ot
of., - - L u~
~.. e
luclg- thorlln' rondoNcl
ogolnot DoWovne Stutlor
end Morthl - ·
CoOl No. 11-CV· 1481n
Court. I w l l - for oolo. ot
th1 fr0111 door of tho Court
Houoo lri -• ....._
,_,_...,
~..
County, !)hlo, on the 23nl
dey of
1110, at
10:00 O'Clock A.M , thl
following , Iondo end ten•
m.,ll. to-wit :
lolng In Rongo No. 12,
Section 33, Town 4, of the
Ohio Coln-'o Purcheoo
i""d boufjdtd .,d dtoc• fo"owo:
Beginning at the Sou·
,.,_ cor- of .t he IIndt
formerly 1owned by J, A.
W•r.ll I" Boctlon NC!. 33; ·
thene» Niorth 101 nodi to tho
Counly ROod: thent»northU
dogr- _ , 11 node end 18
Mnkl; thehce South 71 dog,... _ , 111 node end 14
llnkl; th...co South 48'h
dlfll'- 21 rode end
23 llnka; !thence South 17
dtgNM Woot 37 rode end II
llnka tot~forka oftherfll!ll;
lhenco -th l'h dlfll'Elll1 41 roclo end 4 links;
thenco Sputh 8~ dotnoo
Eeot 27 i'&gt;dt end 11 llnka;
thenco Elllt 70 node ond
11'h llnkl to the piiCI of
btginnlng; contolnlng forty·
flvo 145) ocr•. fi!!ON or leoo.
Roforon.c e DIICI: Volume
133, P••• 2815, Melgi
County DIOCI R -.
Sold porcll- opprlllaod
It •17,DOP.OO.
Torma of 11lo: C..h
Real....- a.nnot Maold
for loll than two-thlrdt of
the,epproiJioed VIIMuo.S
.
111101 · ouloby
ShoriH of Meigs County,
Ohio
(2)-18, 23: (31 1 3tc
Public. Notice

boi.,:S

-oh.

~UBLIC NOTICE

Racine ,VIHogo ;1 lntor·
eoted In heving body wOrk

WANTED /
LOW GUDE OAI

SAW LOGS
S160n.!:....
DEYYEIED TO .

· OHIO PALLET
COMPANY
POI!IIIOY, Dl.

111/'lt/1 mo.

'

~---

~- PIOO

I---PU-IL_I_C_N_OT_IC_E:-1884
....,.
VIII
of lloolno hoi
fortl
.
.
.
.
trualt.
Thlo
truck
for lnor
......_ ..........
to rnonItor
-_~-•ndlt~"
•
chomlclll
lntho-. •
oxpoclld tho . _
11 ,.qu.....i
motor, dump bod end other
ou,.,...
porto end wortclng ,.....
-~L lng -lewo.
the .,...., drink·
~. orefrornln=-·-~::! Rule 37411·81·23(AI 131 of
--u.~ 1 h 8 Ohl 0 Ad ' lotrotluo
~lon t o·~
- Code
min
•
- Md co
r.ocommunlty
00
mlln
they . .. If not. they ~ roqu
-••ound
···
~--.............
- · · IUPPY u...go nit ·..
r:o•olr end replocomont w.t• tourca. D ·· mD or ~
....:;_,
.
once ...,., th,.. y-• for .,
--•
~- In
1c ~--'-'o or •
dtolrouo of hov"'• -lc.
orelum,
...,..._
~-W.-~-,.~-~lit::...'!
- - . , ,• .
,,..
c1w
1u
111
..
- · r y'
tiiMiftd. ooereoull. bide for
om m,
"' · ,__
n~o 101-'um -d • d'"':'' 1'" being ,.. u;;'~ b.tn;nnotlfi';.j of thli
c ve
Y ~bruory 19. violation by tho Ohio Envlr·
1990, It 1:00 A.M.
·
t 1 1 p.ro 11 ct 10 " 1···• .
We ore olio -~lrouo of onmon
A
tho Vlllog0 of ' Ro ·
~-·lng-·~
you Lbid on-goney, modlorrlngornontl·
u~ rop~r.
•
olnoheo
0 , , , _ • loollted It ,._
for the drinking-tor to be
-tor bulclng on tho CO,_ enli'tl*t for the obovo mM· '
of '1'hlrd Md VIne lltr.to In tloned
Tho VII·
RICino
Vlllogo. Ploooo fool 1ego of
frwtovlowthet-~to·your
now11'-keo•-o
-..
llf
·to enouro that edoquoto ••
1
. , octlon before piiCing
monitoring • will bo por· •·
bl~• .,1 ·int-·~ In ~-·. formed In the futuro.
,...
PWS 10 #5300312
ingi'!Vo prlcoo on the ropolr: (2) 14, 15, 18, 3tc
1 · Uling now end/or ulld
Jllftl
.,d lobor.
2 · Uolng
now porto ond
lolior.
1--~----"""'-- · quota the obovo
Public Notice
prlcoo which wll !'OVer thO
folowing repliro:
·
1. Front ·ond flberglooL ORDINANCE NO. 1222·90 '·
not Including tho grill inoort
An Ordinonco to Amend .,
(on.hond.l
Section V of Ord. 1211·88.
2. Loft door In place end In
Be It ordained by the
p r - wortclng order.
Council or the Vlllogo of
3. Right door In piece and Mlddloport 00 follows:
In p r - worldng ardor.
Soc. 1. That Section V of
0 d 1211 89 '· hereby 1
4. Right fonder In p r - • .:,,;.,dod to ·,..d; followo:
IOC8tlon.
That In tho event that oor·
5. Lift fonder jn ·'propor vice II dlecontlnued • proloootlon.
vldod herein, 1 chorgoofton
8. Hood In proper location. dollor• (nO.OOI oholl bt
7. Wlndlhlold roploced. . mode by tho Villogo for,...
8. Door
ropl-.i, loring oervlco. Sorvlco oholl
•d in worlllng order, if not be reotored untM the fuM
needed.
emount of the delinquency
· Ploooo ,oend your bid ;1 pold Including thochorgo
.morked ·qn th!t , onvllopo
above. .
·
cover ; 'Bid on Dump Truck ·
11. Thlo Ordlnonce ,
Roplit'' 111 be opened Fobru·
toko effect end be In
ory 11. 1880.
force from and oflor the ur· "'
Bond bid to: Racine VII· lioot dill provided by low.
logo, Box 371, Roclno, OH.
PMoodtho12thdoyofFI·
4&amp;771.
bruory, 1190.
Thonk You for Porticipot· Atteot: Jon P. luck. Clerk
lngln tho Bldolng.
Dowoy M. Horton,
FrenkCiolend, Mayor
p, 01. . . .t' ofCouncil.
(21 14, 16, 18, 31c
FE8 . 18, 23, 1990
011

-

..,

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM lUll

1::========:
GUN SHOOT
UQII .
Pill DIPI.

.............
IYIIY

'-·

,r .

,.r

SAT. fiGHI
6:30 , ...

.=tlyE

··~r a.tr

-. -

Jllln!J --

· 12.100.
........
1.._10.1.0.
.. -

,..,..,

onlhOiol,ln_crl....,...
..... In ... and- ... alhor•

.

tti,IOO.

'

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

4p.no.

.

35 Lota &amp; Acreege

v•

1.211 ..,. lot on At. tiD, 4 frDnl ....._,.. em
of tM

aou'*J - .

r

an.

llnfllrnllhod ..... . lot

M-~1~~~-':!i
iN!:'
~·

sa,ooo...........
.
45

ci'lfll-1.

1111 Food

•• ~iii

81-- -

-

••••
'1710:..'100

...-.g,

AloOirollor-oo.AII-~
~
48

I-----------

tt4....,74'1W.

49
' Malo III)O"'IIk loComd.'no1;....;;,,
Southoldt oroo, SOW7S-7414. ••_

7

EARN MONEY Aloolng - 1
.,,_,. jleilontlol. 12
l:ltltolltl. t-IOHI7.- Eat.Y·
1018t. .

ul••

unlurnlohod OnHir, IDI. ~~~end rolrtgorotor. No .,....
Oopoolt oi'ld · ,.
quiNd. ($til per -.th, wotoi
anrl goo ~JW5 Jill'
rnontli, wotor
I· Coli

lt4-l-.

· · Sltuetlon

42 Mobile Homes

18 Wanted to Do

14170
both, It·.~.::a.~·
. 3br, 1 112

-'a Lawn Coro, groo~ cuaing,
work.

tnononlng,

landrc ping, frM Mdrutn,
:1Q4;17S-218t.
.
lElA Troo Sorvlco. Topplni,
trtmnolna, ....... I
troo
=·Pruning !looJgOo. 114-

- 1 Hauling, ·- .
cloonlng,10111.114.,_;,

-Oon'i" HoutPortSow
Your " - To

Mill.
Mill,

Wo'll coma to youl 304-el'S-

111117.

..

.

Hout ..., ony 1101h.

...,..nled

.lunk cora wlh or without
moloro . Coli loNy Llvoly t11-

tor Rent

bruoh,

~

hMM. RHMnllm.

ratoo. Noaotlobio. Coli """'"'"

,

Me1chand1se

51

Household
Goods

LAYNii'S FURNITURE.
SOfia and cholnt prtcod lnoln

$3gS 10 $gg!.'Tobloo 1110 and up
2 ._,._,. rllnOdtled, docu to S121l. Hldo+bodo $310 to
buln around. 114-742-:ztn· olll 11&amp;11. Roclinari $2211 to me.
lor Bolli or 114-lltl2.eG21 Albor- LomJII $21 10 •128. - 1101 and up to $411. Wood
tho.
toblo ... ehelro . . . to ms.
2llr M.H. lot - . $175/mO pluo Dooh •145 upto$375. Hutcheo
ttoo clop. 114-:zM.toao.
$400 • up, llunk bode -.Jot•
For Alnt: 211r, trollor In clly. 11i0 wHh -~~- $211 and up to
$3115. llllby bode •no - - or boil oprlflll!l lull or twin
178, ftnn tae, oriil .... au-.
up, King aeo. 4
draw• cheM 111. Gun CMinlee
Nlco 211r, Z both, Apptloncoo •• 8, • 10 gun. ......_
Jurnlohod, o- School. 114- $31 I ..5. 8oc1 lra..,. PI,
.....,. If' no.,... IMM

. .

- •m •
a.-

Slzw $31 &amp; ldng lroono

*SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and . REMOVAL ·

Nloe 2br,

fumw..d,

,;.74::-=·~··-:::-~--:-::--:cc-:-::-

t5 cublo .._. , typo - . . .
Good _,..Mion. Col oflor 8:00
p.m., ·ll4-742.zt53. .

t

•175.

Alwlyo
proocrlptlon
,._, the
at K·M•~··
Phormaey,
ealltodiJ lor price ~11011. 5t4"'""'3M.
lor ut·--ulo
Dl.oc ....,
,_yor
• ·
1200. 814-141-ootl.
Kl~. wood I -1 Burner, uood

~. wl:i':.1N.';;~.~~=

2134.
Porllblo lighted olgn 1211. Froo

clollnrY/IOft11'11. l.iltera $47.1141

•nrt-•1

box, 1-800-e33-3453
Surlll,., onny, denim,
-hlng. 1011o dtocounl on
helvy and Corhart
elalhlng. Soim s-MIIo'o,
Junct. Indo-nco Ad, At. 21,
- Ero,~wv. Noon·7:00 P~·.:'ol
Sot, liUn. Union lo
buol,_, potHical odvorttlllng
-loHioo, appoint-• 304'
304 75-4831 oftor 5:00.

nla. y•rd.

ILOO.

SPECIAL:

_ ....... - .S5777·332..741.

110 pnlo carpot Dod, Labor,

BILL SLACK

F;nanc;al

f

S I

S525, - k Ul out lor qOMiky lS6
-.:._.,;..Pe;;,t;;:S_;,:.O;_r.;.a;_e~,_
low·orlcoo. llallohon RUN. 114- 441-7444.
AKC !loll'od Amoolcon -Doj.I100.114-141-?CJ71.

992-2269

Bualnesa
·apponunlty

mNINGs ·

AKC ' Rog\lllnd
lo-o
Hound puoilloo. 4 maloo loll. I
ft21. 1 1 _ , _

-old.

:i!:O37·2011 ,

,... Dodao c..p Yon; 11,1100
mlloo, · saao,:u~aatollo over
40 hey, 1000-111. - · AI- ....,_..., 11
7.
fllllio and .....,..., - · mhred.
•.
wtl. $20 bilo. 11_,-. till lronco II, XL1j - ·
3074orlt..._.,4 ...nlngo. 7720
mNoogo, mutl 1011. I . - . . :
..
.
· 111.
For Your P - ·
- . . .... ,=Poll 24th. 74
Motorcycles ,
contllet Tim M
, 114-3.,. .,.,~-:-:--..,-~~=~~
me. or .Aob • - : 11~ tm Honcho 3tiO Joe~ •
7211.
.......,, IIUIOmltla, hMvy
, •
30~11!0..:::', uol mllol, 11,000
, ,
:
Oood
mloed ~ 1 , ......
11
~ lt.ZI por bolo.
1111 Yomaho ¥;, 210, """' · ·
oand, I'VI'W wen,·saoo. t1.-.. ·.
Hoy tor . . .. CAit 114·742-2013. 11131• .
Plonoor- Corn, $43 plr boa 1. . Y1mahl, Vhgo, mwt . .,
I Up. Volu . . d~ oluo I'll&gt; l bollirY, oorvloed
to Fob 21th. • Nool TaYlOr, •1.100llroo
o.a.o.
114-24UIS7. .
114-e.g.ZIM, or t14+1S.22f•.
wtwat ...... .., ..... 304-171- 1117 Yomahl 350, 4 - ·
30WJt.21tl.
·
m4.
1111 CA210 - . 110 oond,
$t,IOO. SOM7W848.

•·

-·lon

••no.

Transportat;on
Autos for Sale

71

-·

m.aeas.
1. .
Two~ tvomalo NO. and 110. rune

tocl. IAON HOASE ILDOI. 114-

Employment Services

OXC CORd, N,IOO.

64 .Hay &amp; Grain

Alii lor Polo 12-lp

I/TIUTV

*FIREWOOD

tteJ Chevy truck -.....,
114 ton, 4 whoo! drlvo,U ;
~~~~~~;:::~~ i•uto, now llroo,
miiH,

:

C:T~koohi t':.1:

30xl0ilt0' with t5X10' eliding

*LIGHT HAULING

~.

- . . ..,
ohort
bod.
.... 4opd,
...~. $2.100
.....
tt447:
ChovJ ..··
·4x4,

NO. Good ooloollon or tiidroom 55
Building
.....
motel
-liltlo Poulo'o Ooy· Cora Cantor. CHy oehool .dlllrlct. 210 Pooch - - $30 ond up ID taL
Supplies
.10 dtp ooma ao cooh with opo
llflt, 1tfordllble, -ohUdaiiN. fll..~ Bt . ~nougo.l1~74r.L
,...... credit. 3 mi. out 8uloVIIII Block, brlcl&lt;, lliJIII, oolne o.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agio ZIHO.
lid. Opon I A.M. to I P.M. lion, -L.IIntolo, - ClaUde Winloloro, oftor ochocr. OIOp-lno 44
thru Sat. Coli 114-146-0322,
,..., Rio orondo, OH eon 114wolcomo.l14-441-1224.
Z4Ht2t.
114.:1~21 .

3Uoll303.

muoh ID llot . . -. nogottl14-fiNI1t .
.

~63~~~LI~v~est~oc~k~~~~1m

54 Mlscellanaous
Merchandise

114~.

Will do • - In my homl.
Mon.
thru l'rt. Oiyo oriiJ. Coli
114-lt:l.eeot.

..... Lato,

OIIC,a.ooo.
"h4, 114471'171t
ru,. .,...,
::loo::;:":,:.::m~•::":::!•!:·:,....,...,....,,.,......,.....,.

·
'
.m.
I .,._ 11111ngrorn oulo.
- n lompo $21. 814-882·
et........-1, 3et4.

Wanted

,,..

.

For LIBM

I"'A LEASE: 'IWo -

YarciSale

vans &amp; 4 wo·s

"oo .,., l·..!========::;r;;;;;e;·~"';"';,...;·"';~ ,.,.,

- porto,"'
"Porte.
LoiD.
."'
-..
......
Cd
Country
H-

'

"

now'*" ~'J·:J'o* Nogotloblo. 11 4
1m Ford Ftao. •lnoh lit.,.,.;

~ 1lo

space lor Rent

Ford. 1.1 --tl.

tin ChlorY -

JA

:

1 _ ,Allo111oo
lor 1111.
,_,
utlltlollncl-.
Coil
l.allyolte Moll. 11 ~.

11 Help wanted

· 114-37N111Z.

1111 Chevy e.1a, ,...... 114-

73

Coil oft or 2:00 p.m.,
1111.-wv:

,.,aq.....
""""·
.eoo.• -

lcyl, 4014, .......

Fumllhed
Rooma

c:-.11 ,....,
Mof

1.U .... .In Crown
At. 7, $1,000. :IOMZI•
1ftera..m.

Th.

motor,
1,210. f l . _

Ford Felrtand, good,

*

tm Iuick Urnltod. $310. lt4-

-.3m.

Kl 1:111 ~~~~ llilll. lliolono I
lug ...... t14-141oGOtt.

•

75 Boata &amp; MOtora
tor Sale

··-

tm t7 ft. Trt-Hutt
- . .· 125
HP, Evlnrudo
Engine,
_
. . top,
... Ujlhololory.
Coll.t4-211-1311 otlor 7:00 p.rn.
Atv.r.w. llarlrMI, Rl. 7,

o.a..

llpotltl, oc.- hom K-Ilo~. It 4tm ca.Yotto. rod/rod loOihor, 441-2424, 1_.tJ0.271.0274.
outo. ohlR kit, PS. 'Pl.,
PW, AC (no _ _ , , 79
campers&amp;
c h - lido o - . Ol...lont
Motor
Homea
1rM1o,
JU111 .-y - · Firat
~....... Aloo 111t CDr·

1114 JhycoJ 2150 TroVOI Troller.
· cretd wtth
-........
clath, 21 ft., owning, uOid 3 tiiMS:~
4+3, g -·
top,
Oooclyoiro, 3:1,000 IOIUII torior mint
010. Muotllll. 114-247-lltlt.

_,.."ion.

di-·
l on. 11''llf·7-

.

E&gt;ccollo,.
• .,..
1'
1Nt Polomlno fold - . ....,.
1111 Buleil eonturr • II, :1401 llinu .· trolilr. 12000. 114-112- , ::
Frw*ln Avo., Pal,. P-nt.'
3tt7
.
For lolo: llalor -.._ 24ft,
11711 ~.. talon, ~
1111101', 1m Dodgo, 1uny oqulppod, gononotor, · - I . Coli after
- . and loiC - - · llpJII.
ltWII-1t10.
.1111..11t1tl0f77.

·-p, .._-

4-6-IS.tfn .

•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT

USED APPUANCES
90UYWAB_.,

aft• o:30p.m.
, ... vw Jltll,

IE~RIGIRATOR$-$100. up
IANGIS-Gas-Eioc.-$125 up
FRE!liR$-$125 ~p
IIICIO OVEN$-$79 up

$t2t5. 1m Buick Orand SDort.
fiH, 1171 Co1111ro. 4 IJIIOd, VI.
ms. ltlot92-7114.

985-4422

POIIIIOY, OliO

.,

1112 Cl'llller 2 door, H'Mf'll

V.-, 11110. 4 - · mallo oflor,

..

10/30/'19 tin

Howlll'd L Wrlttsil

ROOFING

IEP~II

NEW, -

Gutters

Downspouts

DOZER
SITEWORIC • ROADS
CLEARING

NEWUND
ENTERPRISES

. FURNACE
PARTS AND SER~ICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

Gutter c•ning
Painting

DUMP TRUCK
Sand·Stona-Dirt

FREE ESTIMATES

lEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVJCE

16141 667•3271

992·5335 or 915-3561

949-2168

2·1-'IIJ.IIIO. pd.

· Grant A. Newland

7-JI.'U,tfn

PAINTING &amp; CO.
INTEIIOI EITIIIOI
FREE ESTIMATES

Tab tht poin out tl
~ainting. .
Lot us do it far pou.
VIIY 1lfASONAILE

HAVE RIFEIDKIS
AnD6P.M.

(614)915-4110

ltlon6 ,.,.,

11

I

Hysell

. Garage
lt.

12~

, _ . , Olie

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .

~EPAIR
AI" Tr~s..lnl"

PH.,92·S612
or 992-7121

SER~ICE

Wt can r~r and rt·
Clll't rad1aton and
hlat.r cortL Wt can
also acid bail and rOd
out' radiatan. We alsu
repair Gat Tanb.

PAl HILL FOlD

992-21
Middleport,

ROSES'
EXCAVATING
&amp; TIUCKING

TOP SOIL.
FOR SALE
949-2493
Jnl str..t, 1ac1.,., Oh.
1...&amp;1111.

....
l_........,l

NOMIPAIIC

........

•Mollllt Home
Rtntllo

HoiMlllte, W.Jdll. .,

•Lot 111111111

-All

ll
It! W)llp 11, Olt.
MilTS·AND tiiiiYICI

For Molt 2 Md 4-cyalo

· s..iclc ,.,, for
T...,IIINII. lrl8ll •
ltialtun.

l::t.

21H Blrdo Avo., -nt.
4 blidfOOIII, llnWMd hu meut,

1·15.'IJO.Ifn

~"''rId $74,500
•2 Cit·~·
-floi ....
000 for lp-

p o t - 114 21~

CONSTIUCnON •••'
CIEOII, 0110

I

915-3365

.. '

36629 517
POMEIOY, OHIO

•Molllla Home
Pine

99J·7C79

. . oral

11171roH:, 1

.Veterans Memoriai 'Hospital

Ill -

.M~IJtiiY
· Jfcts,
o'

' 1a,ooo.
1. . Chow -

Pomeroy,

1t74 lbr,

..

STA~R·· ·

ETC.
1-31-'t()..tfn

.

.lt.JS .... af
, ......,. Ohla

IYEIY SUNDAY

!·

S'-'tat hOOPA

'
••

_.,.._.

:.

___ _

nlo:".llrol ...... ,.

~nt::..;.-

1·12·'10-1 - ·

RACINE
f
GUN CLUB ~·
GUN SHOOI ·1

..

Cat••··· ,.... ....
1-............
, ,,.•.
,,. euu-• ,...... . . _

'

••
••
,,
~j

IIIICIS
lUMITY

flEE LOCAL·~

.. PORQJY IND..UPOIT'SOIIY
LOW1 Y0 - PIZZA SHOP.

Pizza-Subs-SaiCMII·Daily 'Specials
992·2.28
.
,..

,.,.......h

·'

•

.
.
.
.
.
-·-............
-··-port
'•

Wltl

1.

Or .,..

.

E',_,
.....

r
·
tca1

&amp;

Rt1rlgeratlon

'
. .•

ond · :

O l d -.... IIIW?&amp;ot'IIO.

••4-14M11

1114301.

·~

-

'.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

Loblmill, 1
uo. oond.

OT, ........ _,
.._ ·....
IIIIo,M,t?,lll.oonlnoo,

••,.

209 South 4th St.
MitWitpllrt, 011.
"lOW MCGill NOMI"

82

_,..,lon. -·-·
taloo t-. •· ....

•, .•

.•
'•
••.

-m

CNol'o lllallnfl, NC
-~-and

".,••

992·61

,1,400.

......

'

.,
.,•'•

Factory Chokacl
12 Gauge Only
9-6-lt-lflt

-cor
..

, . . Clwyolor

~

GoodRotoo
T.L.C .
27Yro.bp.
Roloren-

t=CnM Ad.Pirta,e. .
lnll tWiua,. 11 ...

1111 Comono, low mlloo, rod. T·

t-, N,IOO. 1171 ~Mil
0W1181',

z iGallipolis.-OIIio 45631 '

-- :

1

~lu,.,

AYIIIUI,

Remodeling &amp;
Rapair Work

wv ··

lt++lll- -

f3100, Aloo, · llor!Hn,
. - · .. ~
1021.

'~""·--·------- "/

1101111

0

.,..

~ ·usA M. KOCH •.M.S.
if Ucensed Clinical Auilologist .

::i .(614}
446·7619 0r (614} 99~·2104
417 Second
Box 1213

Culltom Built
Homea,

•*·

. Dtpendlble Htarin&amp; Aid Sales &amp; Ser~ial
Htirin&amp;
Evaluations
For All A&amp;es
r ,
,
,

•

Ohio

,.,.. . -.v.o .........

31 Homea for Sale

MAIN 0 ., IIUn.AIIf

'

Pointing, Interior end lllorior, '
lroo-11,SOW'IW18t.
Aon'o TV - . opoollllzlng ·•
In Zenith olio oorvlclng --Houoe-.aleo

Rotary or eoblo tool drltlng. "
wllltl-pllled- deY•
-~ ..... 11\d ......... •' .
IMA02

Real Estate

·•Oil Change &amp; Lube
•Brake Work

••

2.·6·'IJO.l mo.

'n 111!14Nit.;··..

2414.

•Front End

'

ElWIN

F- olltlmat11. Coli ........ 1· ·..
lt4-217-. doJ ., night. •

304.. ~2311

•Tire Sales

•
'

IV 13/'lt lfn

A= . ,..
_____

, ... Locll ,.,.,.,". furilllhM. ;.;-

.... rnA,. ......

. Alignment

Aaon from Pill Offla
· 217 I. Sec. '-•Y
.

1112 Plymouth Chomp, 4opd.
running cond. 814-441o

7C2·3088

.'··'

FUINACI

::11oocruloo,
• 114-

AC., loathor lnlorlor.
-4111.

RUIUND TIRE
. SALES·and
SERVICE

''
•

FURNACE

IUI!MENT

WATERPAOOFING
" '·
~lllonll llllllml guoron- . •

1-~1.-.n-·

tlblo. P8
. .. Pl., PW.,

.•
'

lmpi'OVIRIIIIII .

304..Q6.3120.

Aaon frot11 Pill Office '

1·11·90-tln I

St,lrs. 1m lmPIIo •oo

-

81
-------------------"
Home

5IJIIIId. ,,.,5,

1878 El C.mlno, va. . lutO.

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 ... 915-3561

1511M1, good
i. A¢, ••ooo. 111 u1 4301

1111 Toyoto Cllica,
-

.IIASHEI5-SIOO up
onus- $69 up

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

CHIPWOOD

•-••Y•

-

TnM*-. -. •

l'or-1---.

":f"

•GRAVEL ,

992-215

WANTED

.•. .... - .., ___
=-.. . _,..no
-...,_
.......... . .
-.

,.

CHEml, OHIO

yoo?
. CI.ASSFIED .

I••·

1m-

CAIIIf.-.tT.'

...!.

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

can~

BISSELL
.SIDING CO.

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

.
.
,..,. , .......... Mill....

'"'y"" -

72 Truck1 for Sill

Apartment
for Rent

44

Se;v;ces

ADS

s

J

lllo lllltlod out of the

Woo-o.a-o

l

992-~156

NOTICE OF IALE

ey vlrtllo of., Otdor of .....,.

Business Services

SC.n..,..

OFSnJF

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCI•RY
On Fobtuory ~IS, 1980, in
the Molgo County Proboto
Court, C.o No. · 28122,
Richard GQkoy, P. 0 . lox
101 , Clifton.-· Virtl•
28237. -polrrted XI·
~
cutorofthe-eo!John
Stohl, ,. _____ ed, Iota or
40482 ....
•-ur~
.. Clift Roed •
Pomeroy, Ohio 415789.
Ro~-- E. B·~
uen Judge
--.
Problto
LonoK. Noooolr...d. Ciork
121 I. 18, 23, 3tc

LAFF-A-DAY .

.•

�The

;.Knight birthday
A.R. I&lt;DIIbt was honored re·
a 1urprise birthday
• " " - by members of the XI
Mu Chapter. Beta
i Pili • Phi Sorority at hts home In
•4M'Ioy.
.
Refireahments of a decora ted
CU., bUed by Gayle Roush , Ice
cnem. and soft . drInks were
• Vi1Nt to Kathy Johnson , Niese!
Gerard. Lynn Shule~;, Jackie
•Ba D'lfr, Maurlsha Neloon, Kay
:Lopn, Kay Adkins, Mary
' !Woada, Carolyri Grueser, Ca. rolyn ColHns, Sharon Pratt,
· Olariotte Hanning, Linda Bates,
ud Barbara Welsh.
Kllllht was presented gifts and
~by the group.

Comrilunity calendar
•

c ,._. with

Cheshire.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT -, 'l'he Evangeline Chapter· No. 172, Order of . HARRI~ONVILLE -There
will be a revival at the Harrisonthe - Eastern Star will have a
chicken noodle dinner ·on Friday ville Hollne_ss Chapel on Friday,
from .11 a .m . to 7 p.m. 1,1t the Saturday aild Sunday at 7:30
Middleport · Masonic Temple.' p.m. nightly . Rev: Robert w.
The .$3 menu wllllnclude chicken Wltaon·wm be the evangelist and
noodles, green beans, rolls, Rev . • Earl Fields Invites - the
c berry pte, coffee or tea.
publlc.

•guam-

There will be a house )Warming
, sbower for Phyllts Morris on
• J'eb. 24 from 1-5 p.m. at the
Bradford Church or Christ.
, Mrs. Morris lost her home and
- · , belongs on Dec. 13.
All friends and neighbors are
' Invited to attend.

: Carmel news
•
. . Mr. and ··Mrs. Robert Watson,
· Kent, spent the weekend wjth
:· Mrs. Mary Roush.
. There were 53 present for
. Sunday School on Fe b. 11.
, Lula Circle was a recent guest
· of Mr. andMrs.RobertHardenof
: Morning Star.

.

CHESHIRE - There will be a
tree clothing da~ on Friday at the
Gallla Meigs Community Action
Jerry and Charmele Spra- Agency from 9 a.m: to noon at the
dling, Rock Springs Road , Pome- - old high school buDding In
roy. are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Kaylyn Renee, on Oct.
27 at the Ohio State University
Hospital ln Columbus.
The Infant · weighed ihree
pounds and six ounces and was 17
and one half Inches long.
Maternal grandmother I&amp; Dot•
tie Turner, Pomeroy. Maternal
great grandparents are Alka
Marllle, New Haven, W.Va.;
Willard and Jerry Lucas, Pomeroy; and Henry Turner ,
· Middleport.
Paternal grandparents are
Frank and Lorene Spradling,
New Haven, W.Va. Paternal
great grandparents are Ida Spradling , Chesapeake, W.Va., and
Goldie Allen. Beckley, W.Va.

Spradling birth

There wlll be a special meeting
of the Meigs County Mental
Retardation Board on Friday at 5
p.m. at lhe Board of Mental
Retardation, 1310 Carleton St. In
Syracuse.

Birthday party
The birthday party for residents of Overbrook Center will be
held Thursday at 2 p.m .
FamUy and friends are Invited
to atmnd.

Couneil to meet
The Racine Vlllage Council
. will meet Monday at 7 p.m . at
Star Mlll Park. .

'

''

VOL 211 NO. 2

'

.
,..

.

•

..

'

'

..

Crutch Rental·
-···

.,

-

',,

$20 Deposi-f.. '
Deposit Will Be Returned When the Crutches Are
Returned
l·

'

,•

\

'

•••
'

.. ,, •v . ... ' '

QUESTION AUTHORITY: Reformed LSD guru Timothy

"Timex
·Watches -·

'

SUNBRELLA SUNGLASSES

-'

2-. 0OFF°/o..

30°/o·o••

·'EVERYDAY .,.

"
' '

.

.GOLDEN HARVEST
. .
.GLASS CANNISTERS

WOOD PHOTO FRAMES

WI~HLIDS

X

X

'

7"
10"

1

UTER

1.5UTER

·,·$139·.

99~
'

$399
f

•

'

Amity
Wa_llets

'

'

'

j

.

Zl-Ciulch

'

25°/o

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

OFF

EVERYDAY

...... L.A. Dllldl\le

_.,...

· HURRY ·-:
QUAIITITIES .
~ AlE

LIMITED

PIICES
GOOD AT •
MIDDUPOIJ
STOll
ONLY.'

It's time 'to wde that book
we've

Deaths .... ... ................. A.-3
Editorial .... ....... ;••.••..•. A.-2

B-3

Farm ........ : .......... :... D·l-8
Sports

·Sunny and warmer. Hlp In the
408.

11 Sections. 96 PogM
A:Multlmediotnc. N--por

Middleport-Pomeroy-.Gallipolis . Point Pleasant, February 18, 1990

By NANCY YOACHAM
. Tlmes-8enlin¢1 Stall
POMEROY ....: At least some
area envlronmentallsts are
against the building of any
.landfill at , all within the slx.county solid WI\Ste district which
Includes Athens, Gallla, Hock·
lng, Jac.kson. l)lletgs and Vinton
Counties. Many environmental·
isis-from allover the district, but
mostly Athens County, attended
a WednesQay night meeting of
the district's policy council,
~ports .Meigs County Commls·
stqner Manning Roush, a policy
~ouncll member. The meeting
'
I
:was held at Jackson.
· "Tl)ey (theenviron111entallst's)
'don't even want a landfill," says
l«&gt;ush. Apparently, from what
Roush says, environmentalists
'want tp ·r ecycle the district 's
•so.lld 'Mf!Ste, and what can't be
.recycled they want compos ted.

'The district has already set
district, • In-state but out-ofrealistic recycling goals, Roush
district, or out-of-state.
At the Febr.uary meeting of !he
points out, but those proposed
goals do not satisfy envtronmen- district's executive committee, It
tali&amp;ts. According to · Roush,
was proposed that tipping fees be
during the first year of operation,
Increased to $3 for ln-dlstrlct, $6
lor In-state out-of-district, and $9
the district hopes to recycle 25
percent or It&amp; solid waste. ''If we
for out-of-state. The proposat' to
could meet that goal alone," said . Increase Upping fees is the result
Roush , "11 would be wonderful."
of the discovery that exls tlng
Upping fees are not enough to
Over ten years, the district hopes
cover ' operations expenses,
to. Increase recycling to 80
percent, with only 20 percent of
which· ls what tipping fees · are
the diStrict 's solid waste going
supposed to do .
Originally, llwas,belleved that
lnt.o the ground, Roush adds .
But besides the environmental . the Upping fees for out-of-state
Issue, the district also faces other dumping would create the
needed revenue for operations
difficult problems.
costs.
However, ln one recent
It appears that exlstlng·landflll .
month,
according to Goush, the
tipping feeS per cubic yard of
garbage are not high enough to district collected only $12 in
meet the district's financial out-of-state tipping fees. Apparneed&amp;. Tipping fees vary accord· ently, out-of-state haulers are
tng to whether garbage coming discouraged by the per cubic
Into district landfllls Is In-

yard tipping fees- since a semi days, Rou&amp;h says, at a March 8
truck holds a lot of cubic yards- mee ting of the district's execuand are taking their trucks tive committee which wlll be held
elsewhere .
at the Senior Citizens b.ulldlng ln,
For example, a local trash Pomeroy. If approved at that
haule r who utilize&amp; a landfill at ineetlng, the increases would go
West Columbia , W.Va. , reported · Into effect 60 days -later .
that when he left the facility one
Current engineers' estimates
day las t week, nine out-of-state to build a new landfill somewhere
semi trucks were wat ling to wltl\ln the district are _at $123
unload. Apparently, fees -at West million over a 10-year period.
Columbia are cheaper than · re~s · According to Roush, . the engiIn the AGHJMV Solid Waste neers " hope to have everything
District.
ln place by June 24" with regard.
So even lf the district Increases to the dl&amp;trlct's 10-year plan for
Its tipping fees, the problem may operations. The engineers were
not be alleviated, or If It Is, .it hired to develop a 10-year plan ,
would apparently be at the for the district, as required by
expense of local and In-state State law.
hauler's. and ultimatel y, at the
However, Roush pointed out,
e&gt;\pense of tlte t .ustomers of local engineers still haven't decided
and state haulers.
whether a new landfill Is needed, ,
The pr\)posed Increases In or whether to co ntinue opera.tipping fees will be voted on ln 30 tlons and make improvements at

"
. 99!-Mtt
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.,.716.•asth

·second
. ~' •N'111i.a1,-, Ohli

existing landfills In· the district,
or whether to build a new landfill
with transfer stations ln each of
the six counties.
Some people serving on the
district policy and executive
boards feel the $123 m!Ulon
estimate ls too high, even though
the e&amp;tl mate Includes costs for
building, operating, buying
equipment and closing a faclllty
over the 'nex t 10 years .
A public hearing wll i be held
Feb. 22 , 7 p.m .. at Wilkesville ..
where engineers wlll explain
their reasons for the high est!·
mate, Roush says. Environmentalists are also e)Cpected at the
public hearing In Wilkesville to .
explain their feelings In the
landfill Issue. Other public hearIngs are al so to be held prior to
the final report of engineers,
which Is expect ed by June 24.

Meigs gets $120,000 from Issue II

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$299
8"

In Our Town:

The funds wlll oecome avalla·
ble to the county as soon as the
agreement with' the Ohio Publlc
Works Commmlsslon ls signed,
Roberts said.
According to Roberts, the
projects for whlch1the money wlll
be used Include:
-Resurfacing County Roa\117
(Cot.terlll Road) , runnl!lg from
SR 143.to County ~oad 10.
.-Replacing the Mount Ollve
bridge In Chester Township on
Township Road 114.
-Resurfacing County Road 76
(Children's Home Hill . Road )
from the Pomeroy Corporation to
County Road 22.
·
Roberts said that It Is anticipated the projects wlll be completed this summer '
Announcement or this $120,000
award came just hours after lt
was report~d that $425,000 In
State Issue II money had been
awarded for five other projects,
Those included road resurfac-

ing aroUnd the county. Mill Street
reconstruction In Middleport,
water tank Improvements on
Cherry Street and New Highland
Drive In Pomeroy, drainage and
paving or Seventh . Street In
Syracuse and street Improvements ln Racine Village.
Applications for the next ro11nd
of fund! rig, according to Roberts:
will be made in September and he
encouraged villages to begin
thinking about projects which
th!')' would like funded.
Roberts said that the Small
Government Commission. project money has not yet' been
allocate&lt;l. A member or that
commission, Roberts announced
that the first meeting on alloca tions ls scheduled for March 71n
Columbus. He noted that Meigs
County has applied for several
programs through that commlsslon .and he antlclpates some w!ll
be funded.

Evans is featured Chamber speake.-

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DECOREL
MAPLE STAINED

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Along the River ......... Bl·8
Bualness ................... D-1-8
Comles-- ................... lilaert·
Clulllfleds ................. 02--7

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times--Sentinel Slaff
POMEROY - Meigs County
has been awarded $120,000 for
three local project&amp; from Issue II
money In theOhld Local Transporatlon Improvement Program.
Announcement of the grant
was made Friday afternoon by
•Engineer Phil Roberts na Meigs
!eounty -' Commt~sloner Richard
Jones , both members of the
Dlstrl.ct 18 Integrating
Committee.
Roberts Is the Meigs County
vlllage representative on the
committee which is composed of
representatives from a 10-county
area. The Ohio Public Works
Commission administers the
funds from State ls&amp;ue II.
As explained by Roberts, the
money comes from the 1 cent of
the new gasoline tax , which was
_PUt Into Issue II money and Is
designated strictly for roads and
bridges.

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Inside

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Leary Is urging everyone to raise a little rabble. Leary spoke

this week at Fresno Stale University despite the protests of
several faculty members. "I am deeply sympathetic with these
!JI!Ople who were concerned when they saw that my lecture was
entitled 'Think for Yourself: Question Authority,"' Lea ry said
of the dissenters. • 'Their concern is typical of Americans ~ver 50
because t.he world changes too fast for their comfort." Leary,
who now makes a living with a computer software company and •
speaking tours, doesn 't promote drug use any 1110re but says
people shouldn't be too trusting and docile. "Don't just assume
that those running America have all the answers," he said.
"Force them to expand · their brains by questioning their
motives and Intentions. Not only I&amp; ttfun to question authority, It
keeps the establishment honest. "
TRUMP VS. TRUMP: Who gets the friends In a divorce? The
New, York Dally New&amp; drew up a list of how Donald and Ivana
Trump~~ ' rich and powerful pals might just choose sides If it
comes down to lt. In Ivana's camp, the News listed Prince
Cbarles and Princess Diana, designers Bill Bias and Calvin
Klein, Oprab Winfrey. Malcom Forbes, socialite Cornelia
Guest and Mardna Navratllova. On Donald's side are Don
.Jolmlon and Melanie Grlffllh, Mikhail. Baryshnlkov, Oscar de
Ia Bepla, Cher, Uza Mlnnelll, Frank Sln81ra, Elton John, Mlke
1 ) - and everyone In Atlantic City, N.J.
ASNER ON THE LINE: ACtivist actor Ed Asner was arrested
at a protest at the Concord Naval Weapons Statlonin California.
Asner and 26others were In custody about two hours Wednesday
while they were fingerprinted and booked Into a jall on trespass
cl)arges. The protest, organized by a group of Jesuit priests and
seminarians In Berkeley . was against the U.S. shipment of
weapons to El Salvador. "Peace is breaking out In world now,"
Asner sajd after being released. "It's shameful- where 'd eath
·1s Involved, we are the purVeyors of the tools."
·
MANOELA'S MERCEDES: ' Nelson Mandela may soon be
tooling around in a new Mercedes-Benz, courtesy of South
Africa's National Union of Metalworkers. The union asked
Mercedes- Benz of South Africa to build the car for -the recently
treed apartheid fighter and the company wlll comply. 'We
recognize the high esteem . In which the majority of our
eniployees·hold Mr. Mandela and ln the 's pirit of this we have
agreed to !be request," a company ·s pokeswoman said. " The
release or Nelson Mandela ls welcomed by Mercedes-Benz of
South Africa. We acknowledge the significance of this event for
all the.people of Sol!th Afi·tca and It marks an historic moment In
the II'BIIsltlon to a non-racial free society ." The specifications of
the car and the price are stlll to be determined but workers have ·
decided the car will be red. Asked whether the company would
- contribute to paying for the car. the Mercedes spokeswoman
aald, "It was obviously a gift from the union and the employees
but that Is still all under discussion."

'

Deal of the Bend:
'President'8
wnlbe
B-8
oheerved

C-1

,.

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TheAizhelmers Support Group
meeting scheduled for Tuesday
has beeri cancelled arid wlll be
rescheduled at a later date.

Eastern_cops ~VAC c~own

Environmentalists· oppose.building ·landfill

---.People in the _n ews__,

I

B-1

IN MIDDLEPORT

Meeting cancelled

(

recognized

I

AT' FRUTH 'PHA

There will be a baseball card
show at the Old American Legion
Building hi Middleport on Aprll7,
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. .
The admission price Is $1 with
table rental $10. The day of the
show, table rental will be $15.
.For Information contact 9927055 ot 992-7341.

education

COI"Jtlgi*'&lt;J 1990 '

FOAM
DRINKING CUPS

· Baseball card show

..... -"' -•·no

Vocational

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FEBRUARY
.

50 cenh
..... -

SALEM CENTER -'l'Jie Stat
Grange wl't· meet &amp;at~ at., .
6:30 p.m. at ·!he Salem Center •
j'lre Station. .A •potluck d~
will be served at 6: 30 p.m. All
members i.re Invited to attend,~
POMEROY ..,..be aei~_- Q!! ·,
Beaus Dance Club Is spilllsorlng .
an open dance on SaturdaY at tht'• SeniorCiti:zen&amp;nterlni"'mer~ ·-.
rrom8-llp.m;xlli!cailerwtllbe
Billy, Gene' Evans. ~.AA !lie da!"et:
Is open to all western square
dancers. Refreshments will bil
·served.
_;
. •
SVNDA¥
.,
~ I l ,,
· CARPENTER -There Will be!
a hymn sing at the Mt ~. Union'.
.,
Baptist 'church on Sunday at. I ,
p.m. Singers will ...be Jen La-:·~
vender and.Kathy McDaniel and'
the Gabriel Quartet : Pastor J~
N. Sayre t.ilvltes the pllbllc-.
, ··

SATURDAY
PORTLAND -The Freedom ·
Gospel Mission Church, Basban-Stlversville Road tn Portland, .
will have a hymn sing on
Saturday at 7 p.rri. Russ and the
Southern Hills Singers will lead
the singing. The public Is Invited ·
to attend.
.

'PKG.OF50

: Special meeting

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· HENDERSON - The Gallla
DANVILLE -Weekend youth Twirlers Square Dance Club,will
revival will .be held a.t the - · hold .a dahce on QaturdaY frO!ll
Danville Holiness Chapel Friday - 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
through Sunday at 7 p.m..nlglitiy Commimlty ·· center In Hertde·r ·
wlththeRev. RobHartman. Rev.
san, W.Va. The caller will be
Rick Maloyed Invites the P bile
J
0 h n. W
.
. u
·
· aug h an d · the d anCe Is
open to all square dancers.
POMERO):' - The Meigs
County Derhocratlc Executive
RUTLAND - There will be a
Committee will meet Friday at
round and slow dance on Satur7:30 p.m.-at the Carpenters Hall day at .the El!DenlsonPost4671n
In Pomeroy.
Rutland from 8 to midnight. The
public is Invited to at.tend. · · ·.

RUTLAND -There will be
sweetheart dance on Friday
from 9 p.f11. to midnight at the
American Legion Hall In Rutland. The admission Is ·$2 single,
and $3 couple. 'The public Is
Invited to attend.

KAfLYN SPRADLING

. House warming

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11.11810

Friday.

Pomeroy-Mktd'sport. Ohio

Sentinel

,.

GALLIPOLIS
Daniel E.
Evans, chairman of the board
and chief executive officer of Bob
through Ohio. Miller, who wrote and directed the
·Evans
Farms, Inc .. will be the
adaptation, Is In the forelfOund, second. lrorit ,
featured,
speaker at the 53rd
rtrht, In the role of narrator Bill Brennan.
GalUpolls
Area Chamber
annual
Surrounding him ·are members of the "~ed
of
Commerce'
meeting
on March
Brush" louring company.
22.
· It will be held lh Rhodes
Student Center at th~ University
of Rio Granqe. A reception to
honor Evans will start at 6:15
p.m., followed by the dinner at 7
, .
p.m.
.
. According to Tom Wiseman.
cltamber 'president, Evans
g-Utaes a :food company , known
throughout· the Midwest and
beyond, for its farm -fresh sausage and family restaurants,
From· tts corporate headquarters In Coluntbus, Ohio, to tbe.
five sausage produ~tlon·plants, a
. family . atmosphere prevails, at
all levels of the company, he said.
Cpmpi'lsed of two complemen. tary ··11nes ·of business, sau5age
and res Jaurant o~ratlons, 1988·
89 sales reached $419 mUllen; a
figure more than ~ouble what II
was ju~t -five yeats ago. Bob
Evans Farms Sau1111ge IS sold In
17. states and ' tile District ' or
Columbia ; while Owens Couritry
Sausage, a s~bsldlary based In
Richardson, Texall, distributes
sausage ' ptoducll , 'ln etghl
sOuthwestern stat... ·
More than 220 Bob Evans
' Farms Reitaurlinls operate
through a 12-state area. Owens
·Family restaurallts, patterned
after the Bob Evans Farms
concept, operate 11.1 tJiree locations In Texas. ·
ban · Evans s(JrteCI with Bob
Evans Farms In January, 1956,
working In the company's sausage production plant In Xenia,
Ohio. In 1959 he was promoted to
manager of the production plant
In Bidwell, and five vears later
moved to tile corporate head. quarters; then locat~d In Galllpolls, as executive vice president.

Elected chairman of t he board
and chief executive officer ln
1971, he &amp;ucceeded hls father ,
Emerson E. Evans, the company's first board chairman and
chief executive officer.
Born In Gallipolis, he graduated from Gallla Academy High
School In 1954, and attended Ohio
Wesleyan ·University and Ohio
State Untver&amp;lty.
.
Evans and wife Charlene live
on a ranch ln Canal Winchester,
Ohio, where they raise registered
Quarter Horses, which he rides In
cattle cutting competitions.
In addition to his responslblll·
ties at Bob Evans Farms, Inc.,
Evans serves as chairman of the
board of Rod's W£stern Palace,
Inc., Columbus, and Ledaro,
Gallipolis. He ls vice president of
Evans Enterprises, Gallipolis,
and a board member of BancOhie National Bank, Columbus;
Motorist Mutual Insurance Company, Columbus and ls secretary
of the American Meat Institute.
Tickets for the annual dinner
meeting are available from the

DANIEL E . EVANS
Chamber office. Reservations
must be made no later than
March 15. Call the CHamber
office at 44&amp;-0596 for additional
lnfonn-atloit.

p---------------------------------~ ·

Man guilty of drug .charges '

GALLJPOLIS - .The first jury trial for one or tbe S8 people
Indicted by the Gallla County Grand Jury In December 1989 o.n
(!rug charges hu ended In a verdict or guilty.
Steve Novak, 38, Rt. 2, VInton, was declared guilty by a
. ·slx-1'11-an, six-woman Jury In Gallla County Common Pleas Court
· Friday after 45 minutes or dellleratlon.
. Novak waa Immediately sentenced to the maximum penalty .
• allowable by law- a 1~-year prison· term and fine or $2,500.
He' wu remallcled to lhecustndyofthesherl(f'sdeJ)artment to
. awal't 'traspo~tloll to prison.
Three others ot those S8 Indicted were also lb- court Friday.
-Bruce Galllamore, 26,·811!-ck Fork, pled guilty to traffiCking
lndrup;
. -CurUs Lambert, 23, Rt. 2, Bidwell, also pled gilllty to
traHickt.ng In dncs; and
-James Duty, 24, Uncoin Aven\11!, Galllpolls, pled no contest
to traCftckllla ID drugs. He was round aullty of the charge.
Each are fourth degree felonies, punlsh~ble of up to 1Y..·years
In prison, and Judge Donald Andrew Cox ordered pre·~~entenclng Investigations lor Galllamore, Lambert and Duty .

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