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a·

14-lhe Daily Sentinel

Pomeloy-Midl:laport. Ohio

Local news briefs... -__,
Continued from page 1
lpelilnl bee to be held on March 12 at Southern High School.
Runner-up in tbe contest held Monday for fourth, filth and sixlh
aradera was Tract Heines, daughter of Larry and Susie Helnet,
State Route 7, Pomeroy . Twenty students Pllrtlcipated in the
school's spelUng bee.

Car bash scheduled .Saturday in Pomeroy

Workshop scheduled March 28 ,
A workshop,• 'Teaching People with Developmenlill DisabiU· .
ties to Live Independently: Basic Nutritional and Homemaking· ·
SkUls". will be offered March 28 at lhe Sou !beast Region or the
Ohio Interagency Training Network for Developmental
DlsabiUtles, at the Ohio University CoUege of Osteopathic .
Medicine.
·
•
The program will be held In the Ind,ependent Living SkUis·
Center, Tupper Halll02, Ohio University, with the program to
last from 9 a.m. to 3:30p.m.
The program Is designed for staff who teach adults with
developmental disabilities. Partleipants will see how to assess
and teach home management skills, Identity nutritional
problems, improve diets and design kitchens
The fee for the workshop is $20 per participant. To
pre-register residents may call the Consortium for Health
~ducatlon . ln Appalachia Ohio at 593·2292.
·

'

,EMS luJs three Thursday calls
.Three calls were answered Wednesday by j\1etgs County
. Emergency Medical services.
Middleport at 9: 30 a.m. transported Maynard Bahr from the
Overbrook Center to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
' ' Rutland was called at 9:32p.m. to White's Hill Road for Aaron
Krautter who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At U:f9 p.m., Pomeroy went to Route 143 for Mary Hysell to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

"Bash" part?
· That's where four sledge
hammers come in. Get the
picture?
.
Throughout the day, anyone
who would like, may pay Just $1
to take a hit- eJther an ''honored
hit" on a favorite school, or &lt;1n
"abused hit" on a rival schooL
Also, area companies and bust- "

announcements .
.Meigs
•
Lellders &amp;o meet

•

Trophies. .
~
In addition to all tbe buhlna
that tbat will be aotna on. about •
100 prizes will be awarded ;
throughout tile day ,In addition to
•large giveaway pJ;Ize.
•
Anyone wanttne lnfonnatton
about . Saturday's Car . Bash .•;
should call Meigs Indus~es at,
992.se81 oo}'riday.

~--Area

...

SALE

WALLPAPER·· SALE

.

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BEDROOM SUITES

S4.7700

CHOICE

606
Pick4
7372

..
• .Cloudy lonlghl. Low In mid
lilt•. Cll~nee of rain • percent..
Moetly sunny Saturday. Wgh
lnm!d 408.

•
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V9~ov.i,ch says .he .will . not
tak~::· ~.;nations from workers
.

'SS6900 ·

WISell

House...

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•

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SERTA

Ultra

Sl08.· 5154 S354··
SERTA

Perfect Sleeper

'l:~~vr:_rv"/-

'.·.~_.E•A.•P•C FU_~_~_·_·'.L----.U--N•I•n------------------·-~~J(H

Ml-f'&amp;IOl

TURF ,SALE

FLOOR

$699

. SAU $ 49

lfrfei"~Oir ~

992·3671
DOWNtOWN
r

OliO

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l

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:u sa es d
.. . ·.J
.
R.. 0., "'~:t:;~n·~o.,,:,,
. ·, . ro,p. agar.n
r.n Januar:y
.

.':V·ASHIN~:t'of..! (UP})- ~ales safes price or $127,000, according
or · new singie·tamily home to th
t
Ued b th
plunged by 7.1 perceni in Janu- cdmr::e~~&amp;.:,~ent a~ ~
ary to an annual rate of :;89,000 · ,Depariment or Housing and
from 634,000 in December; While ' Urban Development. ·
the median Price jumped. by
January's average sales price
nearly · $2,000, a government was $152,600, the report said. ,
report said Frldi!Y.
.
.
.• ".At tbe end of January, there
. Home sales ~e~e a)so ·ort by a.4 · were. 365,000 aew bouses for
.percent ill Decelh,b.l!r, ,from · s.a le,"· lhe deparQnellta said.
692,000 In November, the repqrt
"Aft..- a. se~l adjustment,
said. The i'evlled rate for Janu- this represents a IUI!Piy of 7.3
ary ~989 w~ 704,000, the ~eport ,months."
.
'
C added.
· · .
·
)'41Ckey Levy. chte(ecoruimlll~ ·
The fipres were adJusted for ·for·. First tldellty Bancorp tit
seaional factors such as tbe , Newark, N.J., blamed the poor
weather.
lllowing 'on America's sluggish
Before these adjustments, an
economy.
esdmatedH,OOOnewhomesw~re
':The houslq marlret .is very, ·
sold In January, at a ·median
very weak. . There's Just a very
~

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·Ohio House .acts .
~

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'o prote~t ·"'om~n
;'t

t

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~:~f~i=,f~:~:!n~r~~

.figtlres unchanged
·,

ral Resources; Division of Watercraft In regard to completing
deficiencies at the marina .s ite.
Council discussed at length
various ways to correct the
problems and hope to have the
situation under control In the
very near future. Wingett. a\so
~uggested that council purchase
crownvetch for planting on the
river banks near the marina site.
He suggested that. a contact be
. made with the Soil Conservation
Service to purchase the necessary seed.
Council also discussed the
operation of !lie swimming pool,
dutl.es of lhe manager and life
guards . Applications for a man· ·
ager and guards are now being
accepted and may be sent to
Janice Lawson.
Attending In addition to those
named were . Tyson Drummer
Kenney Buckley, Jim Hill. Min:
ter Fryar, Jim Pape and Kathryn
C:row, council members.

Athens· police.
arrest man
wanted here

tC ·

, WASHINGTON, ii,JPI)· .- The' c~ilsHmer goods.
.
· In .. November, I he closelY,
. Index of !~ailing economic Indicators 1 saved by a surge In bulidlng
watched gal!ge of economic
permits, was unchanged tn Janu·
activity edged up by 0.1 percent.
.ary after two consecutive
During January, three of the 11
monthly tncr,e ases, . the ComIndicators scored increases,
merce,. Department: announced
seven showed declines . arid the
Frllla)'.
·
·
.
. . cat~gory of the average work·
The government uses the in·
week remained the same, the
dex, which studies 11 areas of the department's l3ureau of Ecoeconomy, to predict future'activ·
nop11c .An!IIYsis said In .Its
tty . . P.rivate analysts had exmonthly report.
Building ·permits - reflecting
peeled a gain pf between , 0.1
percent and Q.3 percent for last
the warm January weather after
month ,
, , • ,,
, 1
Decem~r·s . paralyzing deep
Norman Robertson, chiefecon- freeze- led the way, follPw"d by
omlst for Mellon Bank in Pitts· vendor performance and ·m;lnuburgh, warned against placing facturers orders, the Commerce
too much weight on the data.
Department said. ·
"We )\lSI continue to see an . ·v~hdor peiiormance tracks
endless narade of conflicting and delivery time.
r
0 n the downside, from the
confusing
economic signals,"
Robertsonsald. "The economy Is large~t negative contributor to
the smallest, were manufactur·
still on the weak side, but It is on a
positive growth track. ··
ers; new o,r ders for consumer
, 1&lt; .
~ · gOOds; money supply; contracts
T.he Commerce Depilrtment . and orders for plant and equipalso revised ltsDecemberln~lca- ment; stock prices: . chaQgi! in·
tors lnd!!X down to an increase of sensitive materials prices; index
0.6 percent from ' an increase of of ·consumer expectations and
0.8 percen,\, b'~s!i!Jl o~ ord~rs for · ~vera~e weekly,lnillal claims for

Pickens also reported.that the
lowering of gas lines in the above
named .a rea has been completed
by the National Gas and on
Company . ·
·
Meeting with council was Faye
Clifford lri regard to the proposed
construction of apartments for
the elderly on the 'Lawrence
Grueser property which \vfU be
known as Water$ E:dge Apartments.
·
According to Mrs. Cliffored
and informallon received from
Greg Ba'Uey there will be 20 units
for the ·first · proposed phase.
Work on the proposed construe·:
lion will begin as soon as the loan
Is approved ·through· FmHA . .
Construction Is expected to begin
by next year .
It was stressed by Mrs. Clifford
and Batley that the apartments
will'.be for elderly only.
Also meellng with council was
Bob Wln~ett, grants admin lstrator In regard' to a letter received ·
from OIHo Dep~rtment of ,Natu·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) · Increases the penalty for reckThe Ohio Hou5e of' Represent&amp;·
less operation· of ·a boat from a
tives a~ted Thursday to help
SlOO fine t.o a maximum .30-day
protect women who kill their
jail term and $250 fine:·
mates In self-defense because
Sen. Robert Boggs, o.
lhey are the victims of chron'IC
Jefferson, said the bill also
abuse.
allows . watercraft officers to
At the same time, the Senate
enforce the state's drug laws. He
;~dopted the first comprehensive
said drug offenses have become
revision of the state watercraft
prevalent on Lake Erie and other
law in etghi years. ·
major· boating sites.
Returned to the House on a 24-5
Before joining the House In
weekend adjournment , the Sevote was th blil giving boat
nate' adopted lol!glslation allowing
owners a ~a les lax break through
people who buy new boats to
their trade-in.
reduce their sales taxes by
Sen. Gary Suhadolnik, Rdeducting their trade-In auo:
Parma Heights. sald the reduced ·
wance
'from
the
price.
·
·
sale
tax applles'tn Pennsylvania .
·
According to information from
House Bill 484; sponsored by · ' Indian~ and Kentucky, pu lUng
state unemployment insurance.
Meigs Sheriff James M. Souls by, ·
Rep. Joseph Kozlura, D·Loraln,
Ohio boat dealers at a competiFor lhe 12-month period ending
the Indictment against Cole
permlts expert testimony on the
tlve disadvantage.
.
in January, the overall Index was
charges ·lhat on or about June 30
"battered woman syndrome" to
Suhadoinik said the Ohio De·
down bu 0.5·percent compared to
1989, Cole did have in hi~
be IntrOduced· In court . as a ·partmentofTaxattonfavoredthe
an increase of 4.8 percent for the
possession a dangerous Ord·
defense.
It pased, 82·9, over tbe change, and that the revenue toss
period a year earlier, the Comnance, specltically, a 'military
objections
of county prosecutors . to the state would be pegated by
merce Department said. . .
hand grenade. The hand grenade
Kozlura
'told his colleagues · closing three other tax loopholes
For six months, I he Index was
was found in a vehicle that had
on boats.
about Kathy Thomas or Cleveup by 0.8 percent. compa~ed to a
bee h d
drop of 0.7 percent .for . the
Pat~ ~~ :%u~e~h~on~igs~::~ land, who killed her partner after , Casual sales of watercraft repeated beatings, and .. serwed from on~ Individual to anotherprevious six months~ the depart·
Ridge Road.
nine years In prison because the would be taxed from now on, as
ment said.
Sheriff Soulsby reports that lhe
court declined to hear evidence would the purchase or a boat by a
The composite Index of coinclAl!lens Police had been alerted
·
.
corporation.
.
dent Indicators, a monthly aplhat Cole was In Athens after bing of the abuse.
The
Ohio
Supreme
Court.ruled
Sen:
Charles
Horn,
R·Dayton,
proxlmation of aggregate ecospotted by an off-duty Middle·
in
the
Thomas
case
that
"bat·
·
a
uempted
without
success
to
nomic activity, fell by 0. 7 percent · port police officer who was was
tered
woman
syndrome"
was
not
apply
the
same
tax
benefit
to
the
in January to 133, after lncreasshopping in Athens.
scientifically developed informa· sale of used cars.
ing by 0.2 percent In l?ecember
Cole was brought to the Meigs
tion and therefore expert testlm·
"I flnd It difficult to alford this
and 0.5 percent in November.
County Jail Thunday evening.
ony was inadmissible.
benefit to the affluent when not
Tile composite of lagging indl·
He will appear in common pleas
Rep. Katherine Walsh, I&gt;· offering It to those who . need It
cators dropped by 0.5 percent In
co t
J anuary to 119.• after increasing
ur .Thursday afternoon,
,
most - the working poor, " said
on
Dep- Oberlin, a lawyer, said some
domestic muroer trials do not
Horn.
by 0.2 percent In December and· uty Harry Lyons was enroute to
allow testimony on anything that
Tlie Senate adopted another
decreasing by Q.l percent In
the sheriff's office when ·he
occurs
more
than
·
two
liours
House-passed
b(il,. requirtng the
November.
. discovered a farm trailer with
before
the
murder.
·
Ohio.
Department
of Educatton to
The ratio of coincident and · three Jar- bales of h
11
lagging indicators Mood at 110.9 The
· Rutland
...
ay
on·
re.
''This . bill brings justice to recognize. American Sign LanFire Department
those women · who have been guage as an elective foreign
for January , after finishing at
responded to the call on New
111.1 in December and NoLima Road.
beaten and tortured ' and language and reqWre pllot pro·
abUsed," sal~ Walsh.
·. .
Jects in,'lhree school districts . •
vember, the dePII~tment said.
curtis Dalton, Rutland, was
Rep. Steven Williams, R·
· Sent to Gov. Richard Celeste
·
the owner of the trailer and the
Lancaster,
one
of
the
oJ!pOnents·
.
.
by
the Senate were a pair of bills
hay. It is believed lhat the hay
said there Is no need for such.•· making it easter to convert a
was rubbing one ot the wheels
expert testimony becaute ' J,ay . cliSsolutlon of marriage trito a
witnesses could provldetbi~!pe divorce and vice versa, · and
information.
·
giVIng ltidges more , leeway In
· destroyed.
.
·
The
new
wat~rcrafl
laW;·
&lt;lec!lcling
whether·a firearm was
large inventory of . un~qid
Cbwi'Jes of petty theft have
House
unanlniellsly
operabl!!.
turned
to
the
houaes," . Levy· .said. "The. eco- been filed against two people for
for concurrence in amendments.
·
nomic factors that support thl! steilline two ceramic cats from a
market .In lhe 1980s have .eyapo- gtal('e site at the Letart Fa! is
rated somewhat." · ·
Cemetery .
ACC!)rdlq to the report, the
,In Qecember, ~ revised median price for a new. allleJe- cat• were taken aro~ Feb. 1., •
ramUy home was $125,200ancl the but have since been returned .
...
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averalepricewasat57,200,comCharpd with petty tlleft are
pal'l!d to at25,000 and at51,800 In 1!1-:year-oid Robert C. Saltamaa
Evelyn Clark was re-elected chainnan of the Meli&amp; County
November and $129,000 and and 30-year-old Edith Watson,
Board of ElectiOns at tbe oreantzattonal meeting held Thursday
$U7 ,JlO in October, tile aovern- botb of Racine. Each admitted to
at the'Board office.
·
·
ment said,
Sllerlf!'s lnVftdgator Robert
Jane Frymyer was appointed director and Rita Srilltb
Ia Jan~ 1989,, the l'evlsed Beegle of thew Involvement In
asllatant director, both for two year termi, and Barbara Smith
median price was $113,000 and the tbeft.
was hired as • clerk.
·
·
the averaae price was $138,&amp;00,
· SullllJ10DS In Ueu of arrest were
Allot the petl~ns of candidacy and resolutions to place levies
the 110vernmeot said. For all of liaued tbe pair. They are to
on the Ml)' primary·lianet were verified.
.
1988, the revised !!pres are . appear In Metaa County Court
Attending·were new bOard memtJei.a, John Ihle, Democrat,
$120,000 and $148,800, compared this comlq Wednesday to !ace .
CoaUnuecl on pace 10
. tbe charges.
Condnued on page 10

is

~~nohtic

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5163 5214 $535

~ycheck

will

SERTA

Premier Comfort

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sollclted.fOrl!liiJH~al'i'O'tm'lbu'~ ~i':f:nent tbat-!c!O¥'~f,~~~-~lnU::J:Oelil
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p·~ 3

By KATm CROW
Senllnel Correspondent
Issue II money will be available as soon as the necessary
papers are completed and bids
' accepted Syracuse Mayor Eber
Pickens told village council
Thursday night.
The · first phase of Issue II
money
will be spent on Seventh
GOOD WORJ(, IUDS -Third grade aludenla lot
In tbe purchase o,ftbe .chairs, tbe class didn't have
Street In front or Syracuse
Chester Elementary School have learned linta special readll!l area. ~m left 1o rl1llt around
Elementary and Bridgeman
hand tbe Importance of recycllag. Sludents
the table are tome of.the third eraden, Wesley
near tbe Municipal Building.
recycled aluminum cans lo .ralile II)OIIeY 1o
Karr, Matlbew Kine · and .Jenalfer Starcher,
Mayor Plck.ens was given
purcbaae chairs for their clua,oom. The chairs
aeated, Radley Faulk and Je111lca Marcum,
perm.lssion
to advertise for bids
are being uaed atl!te classroom readlng ·a~livltles
standing, and Valerie Karr, seated. Third grade
as
soon
as
the papers are
table. Prior lo lbe recycllnl! drive wblch' resulted
teacher Is Marlle Baum.
•
completed.
The area In front of the School
has been a bone of contention for
some· time as water covers the'
area and sidewalk where school
· bUsses load and unload. The
situation in front of the school
poses a bad situation for
students.
.
.: ,, ,
. \.
~
II
money
for this project '
Issue
COLUMBU~, ;OIIIo "!UP.IY ':_ . over lhe past seven years.
to contribute to · R bl
The secretary of state's office
coffers.
.epu ,I&lt;; an amounts to $15,804. Mayor
Republican gu'!!!tnatorial candl·
date George •yotnovich sal~ . , dOCUI)'Iel\ted $150,526 In such
"Since he~s the leader cit his Pickens also reported that the
Thursday O~kV '' 62,~ stat~ . ,,donations last yea~ alone, . he party, he should have demanded lowering of the culvert at the
intersection of Seventh and
employees c~.~ ; all .expe~ more, said.
' •
. · I •• . · that 'H lito Co
. ·
am n
ijnty Republl· Church Streets is n~w underway.
take-home Pll)'·l!, he's eleele!\. · . ., .. r· 1'WII'IIll r first brou'~&gt;bf tbls up 1
"Because ~ ·PotiOIQa:'toi
· ·
. ~li11PO
1 cans
stop their practices of ije . ~ao reported that tbe culvert
in tbe curve al seventh' and
'Ji
ot.tbe
1
11
College
Street Will bl!·'~lil'cf!d.
tiohs," the foi'll'ler CleVeland
employee conlribu dons," said ' ~h~ t&gt;'c-"' ~~ '
The
expense
of lowering the
mayor told a monthly Press Club
Votnovich. "If he doesn't solicit,• in his ~ ~:~ret~~~~e:;t~d
culvert
·at
Seventh
and Church
of. Opio to~. "We're g9tng. to ' then Un~ted W~y ought. to hire trying to tie him 1~ Gov. Rlc~arJ
and
replacement
ot
culvert at
tell them, \'.e don'l ·want your
hlin to see how he gets all those Celeste, whose admintstr 11 ·
Sevenlh
and
College
Streets
mone~;. We want ·your good voluntary contributions."
has been ·dogged by charg!s ~~
be absorbed by the village.
w.ork.
._
..
','.George Vol,novich Is contlnu· corruption
yoino~lch •said he will even tng Ills ,hY,pocritlcal ways.'' said
"We're going 10 eliminate th
tUrn down voluntary donations state...-Sen. Eugene Branstool. corruption tax and mismanag:
b;y,.sta.t e worl«lrs.
:
.,
Celebrezze's. running mate for ment iax we've all been paying
I . know som~. of my. staff Is
l·le.11tenant governor. "He tbe last eight years," Voinovtch
~ringing ~t. ~at, he said. .
p~ea~hes one message against said. · "We're emphastzln ver
Votnc;lY\Ch Ctjii~!Zed his Qel!l()o
his; opponents, lJU t protects the strongly that what tbls stafe doe~
f!tlc, 9pponent1 Attorney, .G~n:
fund•raising practices which be· not need a retread of a flat tire
·
eral A!'~hony Celebre~lll! .. for
nefit h)m and ois party.".
We need tours an kin new lire~
~ccepH,~g mote th'!n ,5800.000 In
Brans tool said Hamilt,on to get lhe stateprollln g a aln "
Christopher Cole, 30, of Cool·
~W~ employe~ contrlbutlpns Cou.nty ell)pioyees are solicited.
Continued on pag!
ville, was · arrested Thursday

*Hundrecls of Patterns
*Most Are Pr•-Palt~ &amp; Washable

YOUR

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Piek 3

Issue ·II·· fUnds will
he available shortly

COLOR CONSOLE
'TELEVISION.

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SYLVANIA SUPERSET
REMOTE CONTROL

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~SyracUSe mayor.says

PRICE~

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Two Pomeroy men were fined
·Country, ·Early American, Cont1111porary
on four charges eaeh when lhey
. appeared in.thecourto!Pomeroy
· O~k, Pine, • • and Ch,.rry ,
'·
Mayor Richard 'Seyler Tuesday
night.
Hollis E. Peguese was fined
SAL£
$313 and costs on resisting arrest,
START AT ONLY
$63 and costs on a charge of
5 PC. SUITE
disorderly conduct, $163 and
costs on interfering with a the
duties of a police officer, and $213
and costs.on menacing threats to
pi&gt;lice officer.
a
·1
Kenneth Ma,n,k ln was fi~ed $375 ·
and costs on a DWI charge;· $263
and costs for leaving the scene of
an accident, S63 and costs for no
valid driver's license, and $50
••
.and costs for no Insurance.
· Others filled were Tony Roach,
D~g. Picture , '
Columbus, $43 and costs, stop
,
Tammy
Bush,
sign
violation;
more, Mich.; Elizabeth Deuser,
!I'On-$crten Displays
:Gay Bush
Racine,
$63
and
costs,
di~!'der ly
St.
Peters,
Mo.;
Helen
Maj
rs,
0
,.·
*(able Ready
•~&gt;'· Funeral services for Gay Bush, Morning Star, Md.; and freder· · conduct and $375 and costs, DWI;
Eimer
Conley.
Portland,
$163
lck David Zuknick, Crownsville,
*ltmott Control
: 51, of Grove City, who dled on
and cpsts, reckless operation,
Md.; two sisters: Alice Hill,
:Feb. 19 at l,tlverside Hospital
3 GREAT CABINO STYLES
Rockleqge, F1a.; and Ethyl Orr; and $63 and costs, 'drMng under
· , were held Friday at the Miller
suspension; . Michael Mullen, ·
Long Bottom; , one lbrolher,
; Funeral )lome.
·
Blylhe Theiss, Racil)e; 13 grand- ·Pomeroy, $43 and ,costs, left of
: ~ Rev. Edward Milanoi children and 17 great
center.
officiated at the service. Burial grandchUdren.
Also fined were Wayne Allens: was In Concord. Cemtery, Grove
Mason, W. Va., $231 and
worth,
Services will be held Friday, 2
'.
~ City.
.
costS,
with
one year prob!!tiOn,
p.m. at tbeB.D, Holland· Funeral
-·I' \
'· Buill was employed by Scho- Home in Nassawadox, Va. with
assault, and $313 ·and costs,
Our
Entire
Sto~k of Syl.v ania TV's at
: dorf Truck Body and Franklin the Rev. Stephen Nelson·officlat.
destruction of property; William
.: TraCtor Sales.
March Sale Pri~es··-Stere'o Ra~k ·
Eakins, PomeroY, $U3 and costs,
ing. Burial wiiJ be in Franktown
: He It the son of Lucille Clay • . Cemetery, Franktown, Va.
public intoxication; Robert L.
Systems, Too! .
; Pomeroy, and the late Marvin
Riffie, Chester Rmid, Pomeroy,
Callfng hours ·at lhe funeral
: Busb. Besides his mother, ·he Is
$375 and costs, DWI and $63 and
home are 7·9 p.m. Thursday.
• survived by sons, Rick (Susan)
costs, operating under
!:and Gene (Mary) Bush, both of Maynard Bahr
suspension.
~ Colorado; a daughter. Marsha
Forfeiting bollds were Michael
: (Jeff). Bush-Cowans, WorthingMaynard L . , Bahr, 89, o! Smith, Pomeroy, $63, expired
•· ton; grandchildren, Jessica and
Middleport, formerly o!theChesregistration; Mark Beegle, Ra·
: Jeremy; brothers, Roy Bush,
ter f1rea; who died Wednesday at
cine, . $43, stop sign violation;
: Tenn., Dewey (Sharon) Smltb,
Veterans Memorial Hospital, , Ralph Gueltig, Vintpn, $63, ex: Syracuse; and sisters, Gerty
was preceded in death by his
pired registration or vehicle; and
: (Kenny) Brewer, Araw11na (Bill) . wife. Shirley M. Bahr, in· 1985.
Jacqueline Guinther, Portlapd,
• Tye, and .Dorothy Smith, all of
Mr . . Bahr had served tor 17 $43, Improper backing.
; Columbus; and a special friend,
years on the Olive-Orange and
; Janet Ray and sons, Paul and , Chester Township Scbool
; John Ray, Also surviving are his
Boards. He had 16 great great
Coqtlnued from page 1
· , former wife, Beatrice Bush,
grandchildren.
.
officers had no power to make an
! aeveral nieces and nephews.
· Services for M~ : Bahr will be
arrest for operating a motor
: Attending the funeral services
Saturday, 1 p.m. ; at Rawlingsvehicle while Intoxicated unless
; were the Rev. and Mrs. Robert
Coats-mower Funeral Home
tbey ac.tuaily saw the Infraction.
· • Sanders, ,Reedsville: Russell and
with AI Hartson officiating. BurAn amendment was slipped
. ~ Jqanita Spencer, Pomeroy;
Ial will be in Tuppers }&gt;lains
Into
a HouSe-passed bill In the
~ Loul.l and Wilma Lazartlc, Wll·
Christian Cemetery. Friends
Senate
. Wednesday permitting
" miqton, Dela; Rick and Debbie
may call at Rawling-Coats·
the
PUCO
Inspectors to detain
Stocking, Perry, Mich.; John
Fisher Funeral Home on Friday
bils
and
semi-true~
drivers for
Ray, Ashland: Paul, Sue and
from 2 to 4 and 7 to9.
Highway
Patrol
if
the inspec.
the
Betsy Caldwell, Fredericktown;
Eleanora
Redman
tors have reason to believe the
.Paul Ray, Sparta, Wise .. James
drivers are violating the law.
and Charles Tye and Jean
'
Eleanora Louise Redman, 69,
.. strong, Barboursville, Ky.;
1 ,,..
of Welsh Town Hill, Minersville,
.Harry and Mary Taylor, Glousdied Wednesc;Jay at . Pleasant
Warranty
. ter; .MerrUI Young, Janice TinkContinued from page ].
Valley
Hos
pita!.
·'
, ham, Jeff and Candi Bush,
businesses . with . gross annual
Born
Aug.
30,
1920
at
Dexter,
-Sbelton and Clara Rowan, Bill
she was a daughter or the late· sales of less tban ~.000.
smith, Athens.
Rep, Ross. Boggs, D·Andover.
Supre~
Floyd and Neva Blanche Romine
.
said
it
has
been
13
years
since
Cleland. She was a homemaker
.·Clara Griffilh
and attended Rutland Freewill Ohio increased Its minimum
10 Yr.
wage.
Baptist Church.
Clara L. Gri!!itb, 87, ColumTWIN, EA. PC:. lUll.. EA. PC.
QUEEN srr
Warranty
She IS survived by her hus'
!NS, died TUesday.
Bqggs said claiJ:9s that unemband, Herman Redman, at ployment would rise were disBorn in Pomeroy, she was a
.loq-Ume ·~ident of ColumbUs,
home; seven sisten, x _Helen proved 'In 13 states that raised
Gardner; of Rutland, "'Janice their minimum wages above the
·and llhe was tbe daughter of the
Hampton, of Langsville, Frances federal level. In all of !bern, he
· late Frank and Kathryn Godfrey
' Meyer.
.
Cotterill. of Columbus, Jean said, unemployment was below
1nr.
' She Is ' survived by a sister,
P!!rsons,,o! Dunbar, W.Va., J~~ne tbe u.s..averaee.
·.
Redman, of Charleston, Aundene
. Marguerite Meyer, ColumbUs; a
''The state minimum wage law
__ant._'...
....
- niece. Vivian Poston, Columbus,
Wheeler, of Dexter, and Maxine has gotten too far out of touch," . ..•W_arr
Wheeler, of GuysvUle; three agreed Rep. Robert Corbin,
aad numerous great nieces and
1
.
brolhers, Wayne Cleland, of R-Dayton.
'
· nephews.
COIIGOUUM
Rutland, Wendell Cleland, of
; PriVate services will be held
: aDd burial will be In Beech Grove
Gahanna. and Wayland Cleland,
~"---~ion
: CemelerY. Arrangements are of Buffalo, N. Y.; and several ~
r
*12FT. WIDTH
• belq bandied by Southwicknieces and nephews. '
The amount of bonus money to
FLOOICOVRING
"ACTION BACKING
.
: Good Funeral Home in
In aaclitlon to het parents, sbe Meigs County lhrouab tbe tncai
•12 FT,
· "EXCELLENT WEAR
"BROWN, GREEN OR GREY
:'.COlumbus.
was preceded In death by a JTPA proeram was $1,600, not .
•MANY PATTERNS IN STOCK
sister, Jeane!• Clela:nd, and a $16,000, as lncorreC!Iy reported
brolher, Donald Roger Cleland.
!rom last week's m~q of tbe
SQ, YD.
·1lMllma Waleh
YD.
Services
for
Mrs.
Redman
will
Meip
Couaty
Comnliuioners.
.
beSunday,2p.m.,withRev.Paul
The bonus money comes
: Thelma Thelsp Walch, 78,
Taylor and Rev. Rick Maloyed · thrOUJh the re,lollal district
Noftll Hampton County, Va.,
botb officiatlilg. Burial will be in which overaeeaJTPA: TheJTPA
-'dlld Tllelday at her residence.
Mllet
Cemetery. Calilrte boun at program recel'llll bonua money
• Born In Metaa County, she was
Rawllq-Coats-Fiaher
Funeral b.ued upoa effectlv~ yearly
tM dauehter of the late Edward
STORE HOURS
HomewUlbeSaturdayfrom3to5
operatlo•. '
..
;Mlc• and Mary Aumiller
MO..day
and 7 to 9.
•'J'belll. Sbe was a retired mer:Cllatlt and ahe operated a general - - - - - - - -· Olpl
l:t0-8:00
neWIJ.;.•- - - dllll'l at Gambrilli, Md. She also
F-IIUII, APPUAIIICIS, IV'S, PLOOI COVI. .G
v...... ~~emor~a~
Hewlett. Loq Bottom; RJcbard
Tueldly·Saturdey
: atlelldecl the United Bretbren
Wednesday admliaiona Thorntoa, Middleport.
,
8:30-1:00
·Cbarc:b In Racine.
.
Meda Watkl ... · Pomeroy;
WednelciBf dllc~- MarCit. .
:. Sbe Is survived by four child- ' Dwl1ht S~cer, Pomeroy; garet Priddy..
.
· •
~~
nn, Esther L. Lux. New Baltl·
James Bentz, Sy,-cuse; Ro111ld
will also explain how to pl!lnt and
· Girl Scout leaders in the Big develop an herb garden and
Bend Service UnIt are to meet
herbal refreshments will be
tonight (Thursday), 7p.m.,at tbe · served. The public Is invi ted to
'. Syracuse United Methodist attend.
Cbureh.
Cemetery books ready
Renal preaeata&amp;loll
Sutton Township Cemetery
The Meigs Pioneer !lnd HistoriBooks have been completed by
cal Society Is sponsoring an event
the Meigs County Genealogical ·
.' thlll Sullday which they hope will Society and are available ·for
attract many local residents who
purchase at the Meigs County
have an Interest In herbs. Connie f&gt;fuseum. Cost per book Is $12 if
·Bill and·Janet Theiss of the River picked up at tbe museum ilnd $14
Valley HerbaliSts Club will be at
if mailed. Anyone wishing ' to
' the Meigs County Museum at 2 orde~ a boQk by mail may write
·p.m. Sullday to present informa·
the Genealogical Society at P. 0.
tlon on the different uses of Box 346, ·Pomeroy, 45.69.
:hei\IJS, : Including coo~lng. They

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PRE-SPRING ·
FURNITURE

Pomeroy
Court news'

nesses may "bid" for abused hits
on the school or schooli of their
choice, or " pledge" for honored
hils on tbe school or schools of
their choice.
At lhe end of the day, trophies
will be awarded .to the schools
·which receive the most honored
and abuSed hits. The trOphies are
being provided by Middleport

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'

Feeltna frustrated?
. Would you like to takeoutth!)se
frustrations on an Inanimate
object?
·
Then Saturday is your chance
to do just that -at a Car Basbin the parking lot of Pleasers
Restaurant in P!&gt;l'l)eroy- from 9
a.m. to 2 p.m.
The car Bash is being co·
sponsOred by Meigs Industries,
the Eastern Sophomore Class
and the Soulhem Career Education Clasiles.
Two vehicles for lhe Basb have
been donated. by Whaley's Auto,
Darwin, and those two. vehicles
are going to rec~ive special paint
jobs by llie Easternsopbomores.
One vehicle will be painted balf
maroon and half purple, with a
gold stripe down the middle. The
otber will be painted half green
and half red, with a white stripe
down the middle.
Sound Interesting? Obviously,
.the vehicles will represent the
f9ur area school di~trlcts, Meigs,
Southern, Eastern and Wahama .
The' two vehicles take care o(
the "Car" part of Saturday's
unique event. But what about the

OhJo·Lottery

.. SP"rtans
· knock off
W.olverines ;

:1t~~~~~~~;!u-::!f::h:~

n:- .

LoC8I ;.;ews .briefs-~·

Election board reorganizes

,·

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�Ohio

Commentary

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tll CoUrt 8tniel
l'omet'OJ', Oldo

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DEVOTED TO THE INT&amp;RE8TS OF THE MEIG!I-MASON 1\BEA

~lh r"T"&gt;....,__...,..,......,.c::l,,...
Bml\l
.

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publllber

CHARLENE HOEn..JCR .
General Maa•er · .
''

·.'

PAT WHITEiiEAD
Allallltut Publlsher/ControUer
\

A MEMBER of The United Press International,·Inland Dally Press

.

Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

.

.i
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shOIIId be less than 300
words lollf. All letters are subject to edlttn1 and.: must be ,)ID,e d with
name, address and telephone number. No un5lgned letters wUI be pub·

Us bed. Letters should be In lood taste, addressing Issues, not personali-

ties.

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Communism collapsing
·· in Central America . .

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Berry's World.

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olll·

rea~c!~ c:ar~ f~lgJI servt~

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~~'i';Amerlca;le~dl!l'l wer; I~ .

officer. refu.ed to back down . .. , • · liea!Jii for !~~:Cella.-· · ~· •··, , , .
Wben Schlfter couldn't shaJte
If Baker bad 1111 Wlly,lie~ld
the I acts. he tried another tack-. put off . mention· 'of ·.the ' ell~
contt"Astlng Israel'S' recofd to 'Mt~dle East iuitD a IM!tter;tJrlii. ·
that of Its · Arab \l!!ighbors. '·· q s;,lttc!Jm of elt.ber tlde~a~n•
' Including some· of . ~be ' moat : todamagetbedellca~pi'OII~S
ruthles.s l)espots In tlie wo~ld. But 1 for_ !ie!lce,·,whlch a!lker.'ls ll}'tiig·
the Israelis dldn'! · Uke tll_l;lt .gtn.serly,~ ,adv~ee. '
'either. They prefer to be ranJt~
.. ·
·.·.
t
•• ,. .• ,
·'·: .1
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B7TOM -WITHERS ·
UPI Sporta Writer
Michigan State baa been keepIng a secret and Thursday night It
let No. 8 Michigan In on it.
The Spartans lntrocjuced-Steve
Smith to the Wolverines.
Smith, one of America' s most
·unheralded players, scored 25 of
his career·hlgh 36 points In the
second half and Michigan ·State
r!Jbl: .iud1e Buck; Aaroa Sbeeta, eeetlonal
GOING TO TOtJBN.\QNT IN STYLE -:
posted a 78-70 victory. over
champiOn In lbe heaV)'Welcllt ellA; Eric Reck,
Robert Buck Met•· ColllltJ 'Jwvenlle .ludce wftl
Michigan, taking over sole pos·
r11111181'-DP Ia the Ut-pound ellA and David
prOvide ll'llll•portlltloQ for three Marauder
·session of first ptace hi the 'Blg
8w.. . . ., tblrd place ID lbe toa,,pound
class.
Wreellen to I~ Dlltrlcl Tolll'IIAiiiMII w.
.
Ten.
weekelid aiSI. Clurmtle. Pldtired troin Jell to
· Matt Stelgenga jammed home ·
two baskets and added two free .
throws In the .final 1: 50 to put
- Michigan State, 23-5 and 12-3 In
the conference, a hall·game up
. .
•
on Purdue. 12-4. The Spartans
.
.
~· '
·~
',... :
.host the Boilermakers In the final
gi!me of the regular seijson.
Michigan State, which along
with Purdue have been the
surprise teams In the Big Ten,
his opponents to win the sectional Heck fell to 26-6.
Aaron S,heets, Eric Heck and
was playing Its first game
championship.
·
David Swanson of the Meigs
David Swanson became the
without outside scoring threat
Sheets, a junlor,ts·31·0 heading third Marauder wres tier . to ad·
.Marauder Wrestling team have
Kirk Manns, who will miss the
Into district competition with 21 vance to district action on this
advanced to the district touma·
rest of the regular season with a
ment this weekend (Friday and of those victories coming by pins. years team with a third place
stress
fracture In his right foot.
EriC Heck lost · a very close finish. Swanson ·Jost In the 103
Saturday) at St. Clairsville.
"Even
though we didn't have
'
match to J . Morosko of New. pound class to G. Fender (20·9) of
Manns,"
said Michigan· State
Sheets, a heavyweight, was the
Lexington to place second In the Athens. Swanson came back to
c.
o
ach
Jud
Heathcote.
"a lot o!the
only wrestler In last week's
llZ weight class. With the win win the _third place honors and
plays
we
run
for
Manns
we ran
sec(lonai tournament to pin ail of
Morosko raised his reco'rd to25-0. advance to the districts.
·
for Steve Smith. · He came off
screens ·and he was open ...
· Mark Montgo~ery. taking
Manns' spat•ln the lineup, scored
13, Including a pair of threeRALEIGH, N.C, (UPI) "'-The
Pollee In Orange, N.J . ,. pointed' ' about the accusations.
pointers at the siart of· the game
"I
suppose
that
my
feelings.
I
athletic director at North Carol·
charged Shackleford with simple
when Michigan ' came out In a
tna State unlv.erslly says notions
surprise zone.
marijuana possession late Thurs· have feelings, I couldn't react to
Stelgenga had 12 for Michigan
about termlnat!ngthebasketball
day. PoU~ say they received an the content but I had a &amp;Teat
· program at' the beleagured col·
anonymous tip and stopped the sense of disappointment," lnte·
State wblle Ken Redfield did an
excellent defensive job on Michl·
lege , In lig~t of po~I·Shjlvlng
player while he was driving. rim Chancellor Larry Monteith
.
allegat_lons are untimely.
Shackleford was released after said.
gan's Rumeal Robinson and
When asked If the allegations
The Idea was broached by
contributed 11 points.
he posted $250 ball.
had marred· the university's
Brian , Nixon. ·the university's
'
'
"We miss Kirk Manns," Heathstudent body president, after an
Published reports allege that reputation, . Monteith said, "I
cote said after his team broke a
ABC Ne\vs reporter' Interviewed
S)lacklelord used some of the don't think the allegations necesfive-game ltmlng streak to Michl·
ali anoriymQus ionrier Wollpack money to pay other teammates to sarily make the scar. I think the gan, "buta lot of guys took up 'the
pljlyer who . said lte and teamdeliberately play poorly so game finding of facts makes the scar.
slack."
' mate Charles Shackleford were
scores would fall wltpln betting We have to walt'for that/'
·
1'speclally Smith, who equaled
Rotenberg was named Interim
lines. Gamblers can make big
paid to shave po!Jits in basketbal~
his career high. Smith made 13 of
games, ., ., ·
.
:
1110ney by bet!lng that an under• athletic director last year after
21 shots and had eight points In a
dog team will beat the point Valvano was stripped of that title
. ''That ·quesllon Is premature.
l,O.poln't run that Included two
.. We are dealing wjth anonymous
spread·IM!I by llQokmakers.
when the NCAA placed the school
cr!Uc:al three-pointers midway
ailegatlohs, ·~ Hal Hofenberg. the
Hofenberg said he had not on probation for allowing players
through the second half that
talked \fllh coach Jim Valvano to sell athletic shoes and game
Interim athletics director, said at
turned back a Mlchlagn rally.
about Valvano resigning, how· tickets.
. '
Smith's 12·footer gave Michl·
a .news ~nfetence Thl!rsday.
Ray camp, chairman of the
Theunlveultylsconductlqgan ever. Hofenberg said be did talk
gan State a 50-47 lead, he then
Faculty Assembly comprised of
Investigation Into admissions by
followed his own missed, shot
about firing Valvano.
Shack:leford; .now with the Ne~ , , "l told 'him · tl)at I would be senJoP faculty members, uraed , With a ·tayilp, then added a lr.e
. Jersey Nets, that he received having conversations With the that Valvano be fired. He said the
throW 'when fouled to expand the
$65,000 In cash transfers from
chancellor and that would be a
group .finds It hard to beliel(e lead to 53·47:
.two people durlng'h!s sophomore significant · component of the Valvano knew nothing of the
Stelgenga's reverse lay~p
and junior years ' at NCSU.
COIIVj!rsatlon," Hofenberg said.
alleged point-shaving by players.
made' It 55-47 and Sm lth made a
"There Is a number of senior
Rotenberg !IBid •. however. the
The State Bureau of ln;vestlgathee·polnter from the top of the
faculty who want Mr. Montieth to
· tton officially started an Invest!- decision about Valvano's fate
key to complete a 10-0 Spartan
gat!on late Thursday wpen Wake depends on the outcome of remove Jim Valvano," , Camp
run over 2:49. Smith' s three. County pjstrlct Attorney Colon lrivestigatlons Into the point· said. "'I:he only question Is !IOinler made It 58-47 with 9:25 to
Willoughby ·a sked the agency to shaving allegations.
.
whether he should be removed.at
play.
.
Smith stayed up late to review
Investigate ·:allegations ot gam- '. . "We will reserve judgment the end of the year or If he should
be removed Immediately,"
.bling and point shaving,". SBI until all the facts of the unlversl·
films of the Wolverines on
spokesman Charles Dunn said.
t:y's ' revlew ·and.expe¢ted NCAA!
On Wednesday 1thr!:e people; Wednesday night.
' New Jersey businessman Cha: Investigation and, expected FBI lncludl.ng one of his Wolfpack
Mlchlgan. which fell to 20·6 and
rles Kramer ~dmltted giving Investigation are complet.e d," he teammates , told ABC News that . · 10-5, was paced by Terry Mllls,
!I./IOU I $6,000 In cash to SMc:kle·
said.
· · ·
·
Shackleford·, a star center on the
who scored 31 polnts,lncludlng13
ford during the 1987-88 season,
Valvano has· said he did not
1981-Ss squad. and three team·
of~ 13 from the free·throw line.
mates conspired to fix a game
'l;lut he Insists It was to help ~lm _kn6w about Shac)&lt;le!ord recelv·
Loy·Vaught and Ro\Jinson had 12'
resist an agent who was pressur- ing the money ' or the point-- between N.C. State and Wake
each for the Wolverines .
·
Ing Shackleford to leave school shavi-n g allegations. Valvano Forest.
Elsewhere In the Top Twenty.
In the game between N.C. State
and turn professional.
said ·he was "bitterly dlsap·
Nevada-Las Vegas nipped Utah
and Wake Forest, N.C. State was
St. 84-82, co.-No . 15 bregon St.
favored by 16 points but. won by
downed Arizona St. '73-59, No. 19
only lour.
New Mexico St. defeated Pacific
Shackleford left the school at
68·55 ,- and No'. 20 Minnesota
the end 'of his 'junior year to turn
topped Indlana' 75:70.
pro .
At Logan, Utah. Larry Jo)mson
31' points, Including 'the
scored
world Is working, · Cbtclnnatl Is ~Sports
CINCINNATI tUPI) - Folks
f9r
Runnln' Rebels
last
four
tl)rowing a basel:!all party ..
In ba~ball-dalfy Cincinnati are
who
avoided
the
upset. David
.Soccer
"I'm a native ani! I can.
.f·lnally beginning 't o take' the
scorer
Tatu
of
24
points
f9r UNL.V,
League-leading
Butler
added
rememl?er getting out of school
baseball lockout seriously. After
and
the
~ebels
escaped
with the
Dallas was named MISL Offen·au, a city tradition, Open in&amp; pay. for Openlrig Day and It wasn't
victory when USU missed three
sive Pla}'er of the Month and
any problem with anyone," says
Is now In jeopardy.
shots
In the closll)g 17 seconds.
Baltimore
goalkeeper
Scott
ManUntil now. the squabble over Ruhl. ''We took our daughter out
ning
was.
named·
Defensive
Vegas
Is 25·5 overall and 15·2
Las
!JlOney, money, money between of school arid It was the same
In
the
B)g
West. The Aggles
Player
of
the
Month.
...
The
thing. Downtqwn takes on ;a kind
rich owners and rich players has
dropped
to
14-14
and 8·9. The
Belitan
Interior
Ministry
would
·
·
'l)een greeted with a "Well. these of holiday atmosphere."
second
half
of
the
game was
not
allow
KV
Mechelen
qf
Bel·
Many Cincinnatians bitterly
things happen" attitude. That
delayed
10
minutes
when a
glum
to
sell
tickets
beyond
remember the 1981 season which·
was when 1t looked like the only
device
containing
green
dye, and
ChamMarch
2
for
.lts,European
·fans to suffer would be some was rudely Interrupted by a
hidden
In
a
floor
grating
doused
"&gt; pions C\IP quarterfinal match
sun-drenched fo.lks , In Florida 50-day' playera' strike.
coach
·
Jerry
Tarkantan.
Rebels
agalnat 'AC Milan of the Nether·
"I wa.s · with the Downtciwn
and Arizona deprived of some
lands. Security problems are
at
the
lime,"
recalls
Councli
spring training games.
.
believed to be the reason lor the
, But hey, ,all of a sudden this Is Mike Rozow, now of the ClnclnCOl ONV THEATRE
decision
..In 1985. ,39 people were
' getting serious for Cincinnati's natl Convention and .VIsllors
crushed to death at' Heyse!
thousands of serious baseball Bureaq. "The Reds had been
Stadium
In a European Gup final
fans . .Baseball commissioner drawing 25,000 fans a game.
Liverpool of Englan~
between
' "People In city government
.Fay VIncent says the start of the
and
Juventus
of Italy.
were saying, 'What can we do-tl) .
cegular&lt;Season Is In ieopardy . .
Tennll
And the start of the regular bring that many peilple Into
Magnus Gustafsson and Jonas
season Is only the blgges t day of ·town?'' The answer \vas, 'Not
" ,, B. Svensson of Sweden advanced
h
muc
.•
the year In Cincinnati, the
with Jakob Hluek of Switzerland
Now·, . ,the bUeball season Is
.b!rthpla¢e of pro'fesslonal
to
the quarterfinals . of tl)e
aga~n ln.Jeopardy an~ Cincinnati
·baseball.
·
$!100,000
World Tournament In
· .. Just as · Easter parades or fallS llk4! Marlall Fox are tired ri
Rol~rdllm.
Netherlands. Swede
flower shows other places sym· hearlng·ownera and players say
Tb6ina.s
.Hop
ted! Ia tht lo_urth
.bouze the end of cold weather and thll!is Ue, "They won'l 111111 us
quarterfinal
lit.
the start of warm weather' thil" and "We mUJt have that."
Fox ·bas a •lmple mt!Uage tor
.Opening Day In Clnc!Mall ,has'
ljoth
owners alld players: "Do
come to represent the blo..om·
'
wJaat
YO\I are,supJlO¥&lt;! to d~lng of the. city.
Play Ball! "
·•
'!To a city like Clhelnhatl, It's
one of the things that makes -~
'
-major legue," says Roger RuJI1,
I
'1990
a Cincinnati Chamber of Com· '
merce execu tlve:
~OLCAPQIIIA
. This year, that's supposell to
•
·.
happen AprU 2, when some5li,OOO
' '
f' ~
•
• - . - .I
tan• d~ out In red lnMild 19
:Jam 110111-out Rlverii'OIIt s~um
A'dmllllon.•1.00 Aclutt.
to cheer · the hornet~ Rella on
· 12 • Under 100 '
agalnat the Houaton AJtrOB. '
Dr·a.uwlllli•lll• t. It• frill ..., ...
u•••IIIIJitt .....
Thouands of other people who
IIIII
,
.....
&amp;
tilt
Mullet
..
;lltiMIH
lnave.
couldn't get tickets plan to line
.
8111Dn80Nd by the
. ••
downtown streets .to,r the annual
Melgt Hlih 8oh9GIIInd loolt""'
preg'ame parad'e. The whole day
11' a holiday. Wlllle tbe rest of tbe

.

.

Three MHS .wrestlers to. take
.

tQ.iti·~ey

'

today

Shackleford ·charged with po$session

'

Columbia· rate hike concenis ·.· ~ng
Americans have a tradition of
respecting competition and fair
play. Wbether It Is on the athletic
field, or In the business world, we
all like to hear stories of the little
lighting' his way to the top,
overcoming adversity · through
sheer determination. and win·
nlng lair ly.
Columbia Gas of Ohio, ·. by
contrast, Isn't a little guy. It's a
big ututty monopoly that provides service to nearly 1.1 million
Ohio .customers, with 1988 In·
come of $48 billion. We also
learned this week that while
Columbia may be playing by the
rules, It Is willing to take steps
that most of us would consider to
be unfair.

S

1 '

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'·..

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.'

This week, Columbia became
from now. The PUCO' currently
J · r l_ ·
the first. utility to raise without
takes an average ol10~ months; ·:&gt;
~n.
LUJ1.g
first getting the approval olthe
todec;ldeltscases; so Columbia's
··
Public Utilities Commission of situation Is hardly unique. · · ,
' in 1988, acc;ordln~ .to th~ Office .
Ohio. An Ohio law passed In 1976
Columbia can afford · to waft
ol Consumers' Counsel, Golum·
allows proposed rate Increases to
another month. Howevei',l'm not · bla earned :!I r.etum. ' '.of , 21.8
be put Into effect II the PUCO
sure the same thing can ·Jle said
percent. well atxive the na!IOnal
falls to act on a rate request lor the majority of Oh!o .custoaverage. Just last October. the
within 275 days.
mers who wUIImmedlatel~ have . P'!./CO awarded Columbia $J!i:5
While I agree that 275 days Is a
to pay higher gas bills. Average .,, million rate hike. The filet that.
long time to walt for a · PUCO
monthly Columbia ·Oas ' bllls.' Columbia now Is tmp~enting, .
decision on a rate Increase. I
previously $53.64 statewide, .now .· without walling for PUCO approbelieve Columbia could have
will ~ange from '$52. 73 to ~).52 a .. val, an()ther $42:6 mUUon r11te
waited a little longer before month. d,ependlng on .whertl .! he j\l&amp;t does.noi seem l!lir: ' . . . .
Unilaterally deciding to go ahead
customers live. Ratepayers· In , '" As always. · I welcome yOiir
with Its rate hike. PUCO Chair·
the Lake Erie area will see.an · comments by writing me, Sena.
woman· Jolynn Barry Butler has
average 91-cent drop I~ montl)ly . tor Jan Michael Long, In care ot
said she expects to have a
bills. But residents In southeast
the Statehouse, Columbus; Ohio
decision on the Columbia Clll!e by · Ohio will see their monthly bills
43215.- or by calling ' me at (614}
Aprll1, a ljttle more than a month Increase $6.88 a month.
466·8156. '
.
.
· ·
..,,

Jan.

a

•.

C~tro last~-"':'"':"
. . -·· _

&lt; ..

·_W_ill_iam_R--,:..us:...:.::..:
''' he.::.::..
,r

but that could disappear at any ·
Last December I bet a friend a
What should Washlnaton'•s pol;
Asserting that Cuba had ~an:.'
lunch that Romania would blow ·moment, either because Mikhail aged to avoid making the mls· Icy be? Thete's . no partlcut&amp;r .
Gorbachev has better uses for takes that have bedevUed other need lor hurry, so why not sit
before Yugoslavia, did. He bet on
Yugoslavia, because he figured
the money or because subsldlz·, communists regimes, the state· back ·and watch lhe fun? When
lng Castro Is Inconsistent with ment went on to admit that "we. the tl!lle comes, there will be.
Ceausescu had the lid screwed
the broader directions of his can and must · stop ourselves P,lenty of ·Cubaps. bo~JI In Cubl!
down so tightly on Romania that
foreign policy.
It would be a·longtime before the
making other mlstak·e s." I\ ttien and ldlterlng ' (shall we· say?)
necessary pressures could build
pledged Itself I&lt;! ",t he perfecting nearby. ready to participate , In
up.
Fo~ another, the smell of cif a single, Lenln)st party based the restoration of ' a free· and
I bet on Romania, precisely
carrion always attracts vultures. on the principles of de!Jlocrati.C prosperous nation.
because Nlcolae Ceausescu's
There are plenty of Cubans ,who centralism" (I.e., dlc!atorshlp) .
'
..
&amp;T lp on It was so ferocious. Even
know that Fidel's days are
Sll, I'll admit that I had no Idea
nUmbered, and some of them are
.,
the end would come so quickly .
.•.
In the Cuban government ,and
At my old magazine, National
armed forces. They are undoubt·
Review,' they announced a pool
edly planning hls overthrow on when Romania would explode. · probably his assassination. But
Unfortunately the deadline lor
they must, of cour8e, make sure
'
submlitlng entries was Dec. 31 that theirs Is the final coup and
'
By United Preu International
and Ceausescu was gunned down
not (as In the case of those
Today Is Friday, March 2, the 61st da&gt;: of 1990, with 30Uo loliow.
on Christmas Day.
uplucky Panamanians last Oc·
The moon Is "!BJ!Ing, ino,ving toward l~s · flrst . quar!fr,
,
. All of which Is by way of
Iober) the next·to--last.
The morning stars are Mercury, Vl!nus, Mars anCl Satutn. ,'
Introducing the fascinating ques·
Fdr his part, Castro Is openly
The evening star Is Jupiter.
',
•
,
lion: How long will Fidel Castro
disgusted with Gorbaehev'~ per·
Those bOrn on this day are under .the sign of ~aces. ~ Include .
last?
estrOika&gt; which the Cuban dicta·
statesman DeWitt Clinton, chlelsponsor of the Erie Canal ptoject, In
To begin with the obvious,
tor apparently regards as the
1769j Sam Houstol), first president of ihe Republic of Texas, In 1793;
there Is no poulblllty whatever
fainthearted policy Of a Johnny· . journalist, politician and refor:mer Carl Schurz In 182!1; Pope Plus XII
that the old 'n!underblrd of the
come-lately who was stU! In his
In 1876; publ~her Max Schuster In 1897;. ~an COI!\poser, Kui't
Caribbean can last Indefinitely.
20s· when Castro IM!Ized power In
WeUlln 1900; children's author "Dr. Seuss," Theodor Giese!, In 1904
and die with his boots on In a
Cuba 30 years ago. In recent
(ale lit\): entertainer Des! Arnilz In 1917; actress 'J~erJ&lt;;~nesln' .
Cuba still faithful to commu:
weeks be hal blared his defiance
1919 (age 71) and pop slnger.karen yarllenter In 19!50.
·
rilsm. Communism as a viable
of the United Stat!!l. and pledied
poUt leal philosophy Is u dead as
In tones reminiscent of Winston
On ihts date In history:
.
Tyrannouurus rex (to which It
ChurchiU tlul.t Cuba will stand
In 1836, Texas proclaimed Its Independence from ¥exlco.
,
bore a strlldni resemblance),
and llebt on alOne, If need be, lor
In 1945, toward the c1011e of World War Two, units 111 the U.S. 9th · .
and all that remains 1.1 the mauy
the aac:red cau~e of communism.
Army reached the Rhine River opposite Dus~~eldorl, 0el'lllany.
job of clellnlni out pockets ofAt tbe arne time, there are
In 1949, a U.S. Air Force plane pUo!ed by Capt. James Gllllagher '
reelltance like Castro In Cuba,
algna t1tat Cutro realizes all Is
completed
the flr't non·I!OP around·the..livorld fligbt I~ a little more
Ramlz Alia In Albania and the
not neces~~rUy for the bftt In his
than 94 hours.
"
.
·
elderly clique .that
the
belt or all po~alble Cuba. On ·
In 1981., the United States announced It was sending 20 mUitary
People's Republic of China. ·
Feb. 17 the Ceatral Committee ol
advlien ancl125 monon In equipment to _EI Salvador,
'
Ju1t for one tbln1, the econorily
the Cuban Conilnunlat Party
In 1986, Philippine Presld,nt Corazon Aquino ~tored F!Upin,ol'
of Cuba, !lice communiSt ecofto.
announced !bat It ·wu launcbJna
prbtectlon agalnat arrest without chargee.
mles everywhere, !J.too feeble to
"a concrete and practical prof
--survive. At the moment It Js·ltlll
CHI or perfactbll tile political
A tho~bt for the day: Theodor Giese!, the man known al "Dr. , ••
belq aublldlzed by M - to and lnltltutlonal IJYIII!m or the . · seuu," 'wrote, "Adults are oblolete clilldren." , .
.
, ,· .
the tune or 110111e S5 million a day,
natJon.''
Jl
0
\.
.. '·'
v
f•
r,

Today in histQry

'

.

sltlecl reporta on the human ' In a league , with tbetr peer a rights slt~~&amp;tlollln Israel and the other democratic natlona ~
occupied territories. Our sources except In that company, their
tell us his reports detall'a pattern human righta recOrd doesn't look
·
:
of vlolatlona !bat have Intensified very aood.
since last year's report ·
Schlfter comprOI)tiSecl by wa·
Schlfter and his II~ quest(.' · " .l 'lni down tl)e Is._eu vlolatlop
oned everything · IIi WUcox's (li_n d lncludlne comparable crltl· .
reports and spared no ·eftClrt to clsm of abla. .. by, the Pales~· •
protect Israel's Image. "It was all•. A spo~te~p~an tor Schl~r
all bureaucratic foot-dragelt~J to denied that larael had-been ilven
wear down those In the Near East . prefere~~tlal treatm,f;Qt. ,
Division and get them to back off '
Now no one Is jlappy ~lth tbe ,
the .solid Israel! stuff," . one ,, report, lncludlq the .Jewl8h_A merican leadirs wh9 -nre .
hlih-level State Del!artm~t
cal told us. Wilcox; a· hlebly· · aecre~ly {,ftetecl. on I~ . wblle ·

·•.

How, long can

,.

•

Michigan State posts 78-70
vict~ry over .No. 8 Miehigan-

'•,1

•;

•
'

facta on larael hal had to defend ·
every punctuation mark. He may
have rutned his career by refus·
lilg to tone' down his repo.r ts on
human rights abuses by the
Israelis.
"
No other section of the world·
• wide' human rights report, In·
eluding criticism of ally Great
Britain loi' Its I!Ctlons In Northern
Ireland, has received so much
polnt·by·polnt attention or dispute~ aCcording to our sources.
The man who took It upon
himself to make sur.e Baker got
no surprlies was Richard Schll·
tar, assistant secretary of state .
lor human rights and humanllar·
ian affairs: Schiller and his atdl!s
demonstrated from the outset •
that they Intended to diffuse the
Israeli section. •
That hasn't beenan easy tasJi.'.
Phlllp Wilcox; the U.S. ·consul
general in Jerusalem, submitted
dozens of wel'l·researched, clas-

~.

Karl Marx Is the big loser arid by early In the 2i.st century: his
political pqllosophy may be history. China and Albania are trying to
hold the fort, but It's doubtful that they can withstand the democratic
juggernau! sweeping the globe.
.
. ,
All over the world, the, people are turning the rascals out. They are
able to do so because peaceful revolts are being allowed to prevail. It
Is a remarkable turn of events wnen gunS ar~ sllent and decisions are
· allowed to be made at the ballot box. ,
i

WASHINGToN- SeCretary of
State. James Baker had hardly
unpacked his ciesk blotter last
year when he found himself
under attack from · Capitol Hill
and the Israeli government. The
1989 State Department report on
human_rights around the world '
had criticized Israel lor .abuse ·or
Palestinians, Israel and Its
It lends In ·con&amp;Tess weren't
pleased.
And Baker was furious. He
Issued the wilrd to his troops :
"No more surprises,"
The underlings at th~ Stale
Department ·took him seriously.
·That Is. why the 1990 human
rights report scheduled for re-l~ase Wednesday, Feb. 21, treats
Israel with kid gloves.
The preparation ol that report
has caused a battle roy ale Inside
the State Department lor !be past
four months. The career foreign .
service officer \Vho _compUed the

SentiMI-Paa• 3

With 36 pOints from Smith,

~

.

.

I

By HE~N. THOMAS.
UPI White Rouae Reporter
WASHINGTON - The collapse of COII1IDUn!s"m In Europe Is
sending shock waves through Central America.
And the same reasons appear to apply for the rejection of Marxist
governments In both regions. Top among them Is the depressed, an\1
often desperate economies of the countries that are falling by the
wayside.
·
·
The Soviet Imposed system of gove~nmeritC:ontrolof all gOods and
services over a period of 40 years brought little prosperity and much
sacrifice. The economic utopia that was supposed to einerge from the
dlctatorslilp of the people was far lroni that.
·
The Communist Party elite In Moscow and the sate!Utes In the
Soviet sphere, Including Poland, Romania, CzechOslovakia and
Bulgaria. thrived and lived high on the hog.
But the masses, who had nothing to lose but their chains as ·the
communist battle cry claimed, were &amp;TOUnd under oppressive ·
regimes that produced only the bare necessities and little consumer
goods.
·
In the last year, thOSe governments hit rock bottom, leading Soviet
lead~r Mikhail Gorbachev to Initiate re(orms that led tQ the beginning
of the end of communism In Eastern Europe.
' In Nicaragua, the Marxist government of Pre~! dent :Qanlel Ort~ga
was subjected to a relentless U.S.·backed mllltary an~ economic
assault lor eight years. From tile moment became Into office, former .
President Ronald Reagan threw . do~ the ga4nt1et against
communist expansion In the hemisphere. targeting Nicaragua and El
Salva~r at a heavy price.
·
: Nicaragua reeled under the (wo:prong attack of economic
sanctions and guerrllla warfare by iJ.S.-tralned and backed rebel
tontras. The b.loody skirmishes left hundreds dead on bOth sides.
The United States poured untold · millions · of dollars lrito the
guerrUia effo~t. At onetime the CIA \Yerit beyond the pale by Issuing
ari assassination manual. The' Illegal backing of the tontras with
funds from . the covert sale of arms to Iran also created the
Iran,Contra scandal that plagued Reagan In the final years o{ his.
· ·
· .
presidency.
: The election of a democratic regime under Yloleta Chamorro In
Nicaragua opens a new chapter and Is -expected to result in'an Influx
of U.S. aid to the new government as.we lias a quick lifting of tile U.S.
embargo.
·
,
The Nicaraguan election also further Isolates Cuba as the only
remaining communist government in the Western Hemisphere.
President Fidel Castro Is finding II Increasingly difficult to rely on
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev for arms al)d ald.
·
Corbachev, who visited Castro last. year,' tried to deliver the
message that Stalinism was out and that his peresll'Qika and glasnost
reforms were the wave of the future. The Cuban leader was not In a
mood to accept the admon.itlon at the time. But now the handwriting Is
on the wall.
.
.
· .
With the fall of the Berlin Wall, the peaceful rev.olutlons lrl Eastern
and Central Europe, Castro will be feeling the pre~su.re more and
more, and his remaining allies a!Jd friends '!re bec~Jmlng more

remote:

··t ·

Page 2-Tht Dlllty •• 111111111
Poli .. Or' MiW'tp ·~ Ql.*» .
Fitdlty. Mach Z. 1180 '

Israel ~ miffed . abOut ; reporl'~'Ande_rs_on_a_nd_.·_van_·. r~.t:--UJ

The Daily Sentinel
~I(

'

•

The Daily

•

runa

.i

Reds fans llegirt to take . .
baseball problems serio~sly

briefs-

'

tne

CARD SHOW .
MCH J,

A£J:IIP&amp;

. .

1----L- - - ---_..:.,___.;;,--:.::.,.. _ .........._--:-_....._ _____~-+-- -

GOES FOR TWO -Minnesota pard Melvin Newbern C110) IJOeti ;
for two ulndlana cuatd Jamal Meelul (23) can only watch durlnc
first hall action Thursday. (UPI)
The Incident resulted In a technl· Graham had 21 points and
cal foul on the USU bench for Calbert Cheaney added 18 for the
6-9.
.•·
delay of game, and Johnson hit Hoosiers, 16-9 and
•
both free throws, the margin of
victory .
The Daily Sentinel
At Tempe, Ariz .. Gary Payton
CUSPS ) 45-9110)
scored 12 of his 22 points In the
A
Division
of MuUlmedla. Inc:
second half to help the Beavers
rally and clinch at least as hare of
Published every alt e rn~ . Monday
thr~gh Friday, 111 Court St ., Pothe Paclflc-10 Conference title.
merCJ!i, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley PubThe vlciory sets up a showdoWn
U.shtng Company /Multimedia, Inc.,
with second-place Arizona at
Po111eroy. Ohio 4571\9, Ph . 992·2156. s.,.
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy, '
Tucson Saturday. Earl Martin
Ohio.
had 17 pob\ts for OSU, which
Member: United Press lntcrna1\onal,
boosted Its overall record to22-4,
Inland Dally Press Assrelation and the
15·2 In the conference. Arizona
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
State, which lost ' Its sixth
AdvertiSing Representative, Branham
~spaper Sa!es; 733 Third Avenue,
straight. dropped to 12·14 and
New York. New ,York tqot7.
5-12. Alex Austin led the Sun
Devils with 23 points and 10
POSTMASTER: Send addres.'l c hanges '
to The Dally_ Sentinel. 11l Cou" Sr.,
rebounds.
.
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
AI Stockton. Calif.. Michael
New scored.16 points and Keith
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Ciu'rln or Mot« Route
Hill added 11 to lead New Mexico
One Week .... .... ...... .. ........ .. .. .. ..... $1.40
State to the Big West victory. The
One MOnth .. .1 ...... . .... . . .. .. ...... ...... $6.10
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Aggles, 24-3 overall and 15-2 In
SINGLE COPY
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Subscribers not deslrlng topay the ea rdropped to 14·12 and 7-10.
Tier may remit In advanep direct to
At Bloomington, Ind., Willie
The Dally Sentinel. on a 3. 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit will be given carr ier each
Burton scored nine of his 20
week.
points In the f-Inal three minutes
No subscriptions by 'ma ll permitted .In
to help the Golden Gophers gain
aroos wh ere home carrier ~ rvtcc is
their fifth 20-wln season In school
available.
history. Burton hit a threeMall Sut.erlpt knw
pointer from the right wing with
IHide Melp Count,
1:50 remaining, giving the
13 Weeks ... .... ..... ........... ........... $19.24
26 Weeks ...... ...... ...... .... .. , ...... .. . $37.96
Gophers the iead !or good at
52 Weeks ... .. ........ .. ................... 174..36
70-68. Minnesota Improved to20~
'
OUtside Melp Cou•y
13 Weeks ........ ..... .. .. .... ..... ........ S20.80
and 11-5. Kevin Lynch had 15
26 Weeks , ........ ........ .. .... .. ......... 140.30
points and Melvin Newbern · 52
Weeks .. ........ .. .. .. .. ......... .. ..... 175.40
added 14 for the Gophers. Chuck

·' )- •""'-'

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~
I

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'

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MANY MOill fUel UTE MODEL USED CAIS

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. Ohio

.4 The Deily Sentinel

~Sixers cut Knicks' Adantic ·Division
.
.
·
.•
••

.

By TOM WITHERS
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
• Tile Phlla~lphia 76ers are
having fun. Winning will do that
to a team.
.
Smiling and talking to apyone
within earshot, the Philadelphia
76ers moved a step closer ~o the
top of the Atlantic Division
Thursday night with a 105-100
~otory over the New . York
~leks.
. .
,
'This Is a fun season. We bad
so mucb fun

doesn't pt ~II'." laid Bark·
ley wbo ~ied 1 pme-bllb 32
points and puUI'!I dOWD 15 rebounds. " Wbell he hlt1 hll shots
he take$ the preuure off me and ·
ma.kes Jlfeealller. Hell the key to .
the team thla year." .
Hawkins sure was the key
agalnat the Knlcks.
Hawkins scored 18 of his 24
points In the 1ee0nd half, lnclud·
ing eight durinjt a four-minute
stretch of the third quarter that
keyed a 13-4 run that put the
Slxers ahead to stay.Hawkins, who came under
criticism after a poor playoff
performance IIIII year when the
KniCks sWept the Slleers, looked
like the same player that led the
NCAA _In scoring as a· college
senior. ·
He made silme sPectacular
drives to the basket, · drawing
fouls and converdng all eight of
his free throw attempts.
''They told ' me to shoot more
and I'm dOing that ," said
Hawkllls.
· After the Sixers liad taken an
82-73· lead early In the fourth
quarter, the KniCks closed to
88-84. with 3: 49left.
Patrick Ewing, whO led the
KniCks with 30 points and 18
rebounds, brought the Knlcks to
within 88-86, but Barkley com-

talking to the fans as well as' our
opponents," said Sixers guard
Hersey Hawkins, wllo p&lt;iured in
24 points.
Maybe the Sixers · thOught It
was funny, but the Knlcks
weren't laughing. The win moves
the Slxers to within one-half
game of the first-place Knlcks.
The two teams will meet for 't he
final time next week In
Wednesday .
.
• " Me and Mahorn get too much
of the cl'edit and

.

,.---.-

'Ill

.,..._

.

.

-

.,

TeJIIU-8A !It, GeoqlaSoutherniO
WKt
.-lrb:ona U. O~.,on 58
Bel ~ Sl. li, S. Art:tona Jt
Co l or-o~. do St. S,, Brl•ham l 'oUIII' 5'7
Hawa ii ~.f , S an Dh•r;o St . 61
Idah o '72. E . \hshlftllo n 51
Idaho st . 9-1 , i'l:f'vnda Reno !10

&amp;)' II Ohle Bltfi,SebaOI BMiethall

Tlttn'IMhay, March I
Tour111.ment
Df•l&lt;llon I
Akr

Bulc~l

U, O.yalto.Ka

Fall!13~

Barberlon H. Akr GarNrid t 2
Boardman Sol, You WII !IOn 36
Can McKinley H. WoOMU-r .'li ·
Can G(enOak $2. U n ... ntown Lakf U

Feh~

s~· Me:.: tco St. 68, P aclftc $5
Oregon St. 73. Arizona St. 51
S. l-'lah St. 91. i\kron 83
.San .foi!IC St.-11-1, Cal•lrvtnto 1'8
So udu~rn Cal jJ, WahlnJIGn 15

Division II
.JelferiOfl 84, Allh Harhar ffi
Oak Harbor 51, Galion :til
Rlc:hfteld Rever~ 81, N Royall on 66
V.' Geqa.fl, Sm VIUa AncriM33
· ~' IIIIard It, Norwalk :JR
DI"Wirda•lll
Akr St VIncent 51, "Md!.¥QP Mllt0fl .55
Avn n . Bl adt Rh'~r :n

UCLAt6, Wublllldon S&amp;. !It
\\'t'lw!r st. 91, MoNana st . lol

This week's gaillllS
Ohio C:ollf'Je BaskrlbaH &amp;tht'ttale
By Unhed Pre~Ji lnter•tio•l
Friday. March 2

BrooWield n, Ch.: FMIII LIIUrel -1'7
Ch11111pklnU, Hubbard :14 ·
Oar~n Fallt; -18. Pym Va.lley -li
'Ch I!!IIIPelkf' 53. Al eu.nlkor .u!
Cor*'&gt;' 1'.!, Can&amp;on CC 3:1

1'\o

s Ran ~ u . E Canton l!

Akron'at U.S. blteu•l.,ral
i\shland at IUPU·Ft Wayn P

li pp·r ~udu Mky ..a. Sandu,.ky Marydfi
M'oadrldj!: l! .f7, 'hlerloo 39

Transactions

•
Dl vl~ lo n f\1
Buc ke,'f' ('rnlral -1-1. Sr"' Rlr_~;l'l a3
Fon RrL'Il\'ef)' &amp;M. Mlnlltt•r :15
Ftf'moi'M -lot' 61. Rld~rm~nl: 3'!
Gati'!O ~Ill ~ Gilmour 51, Ri chmond Ht !i

Thul'!ldQY S pol'ls l'Tiln!IIU·Uor~~
BMtba.ll
Ch h· a~o {,\LJ- SII!:Df'd pllc her11 Sc•U
Rudln!!ky Mnd Roberto tlf&gt;rnandf'! to

"

Ka lld ll ~~. Oel pltn.'4 ,lf' ff('I' IIIOft 13
Len:b1tuwn U. ,\rlbtabu .. -John 36
M4!DoMI li to. fo l..-nhhuta Cr~t \1~· 38

l ·yt&gt;IU' COnlrii.Ct s.

('h leaKQ (NL )'- Slped llrM b•m.n
Mark Grace, p itc h"'" Slt&gt;\'f' Wi1110n and
·IO!W' NunPz, oudleldtrll Dwl~ttll SMih,
Dave Cl lll'k a nd Gary Varaho an41
t·ate her!l .fOf' Girard land Ri ck M'rorilllo
J. )'f'ar.-nMrac-1 !ol. a nd plh·herl.eft LaarMIt'r lo f. ~ar part: namtd PhU Roof
hullpt'n cll)ac h.
•

Glr .. Ohio HI~ S~bool 81l.'llr.tllllll
By linltf' d rret8 lnlf'r ntlkina.l ·

Thun;du_v , ~hrdt I
Tourna.menl

a

Clnl'l-al -

IMfblku• ll
('ol l'r nk'nllll n Col H 'ht&gt;l!ilolll! SO
Sllll' m ~t: ltawr Local-t3

~ew

Slpt'd Cak'ller

~r w u to a l· ]'!!ar co•ract.
Se. \'ork!NLl -i\«r1'dlollerm.wtth

pitcher" lf«'lllli BrO"N., ,Je H huilla. Bren1
· Knadert. Ju llo Mach,a do. c Mt'b.,. Pllll
Lomhartllalld outfldder Keith MIIIP.r.
Ra01~1baJI

:o\ 8 ,\ -

Ret;uJt,.

Sa m r, dJ n»hfttl ~ nttlddii'E'ct W

ol lnt«-r ,., loTMI plillk· relatkl-.

Toumam r ntll
81.-Soulh
FirAt R4Jund
NC-.blwvlll• 71, Aup11t11 7:1

Co lleRe
Ahlll•ne Chrllill.an 'Gllhreth·b-ha.ll coach.

S•mf'd

1111

Bethany C" '.Va.)- i\p!*n&amp;ed Do laid
Tumr.r athleti c dlr.l'lor l nd head foolhaU

" 'lllltw op II. &amp;.ptiJil 53

AtYf'tlt· Co nf ~'"' "''"

t'OII Ch.

EaJII Cu,cll,. -Named Mike!

84-tbunr-

Ca~~!My

dtfrn!ilt•t coordiiWor.
·
l\'eo t \'lfll:liwla Tl't·b - Appotnledllke
\\'hlff' ,Jr. 'hallf'hi&amp;JI COill' h.

S . Carotl .. ,UrT !Ill, Delawarf' N . 111

Copp6n St. tl. Moraan Sl. i1'

Football

Floridll A.o\M 1!, Heward ;J;j
St\IA. Dhttrlt.1 31
S.c:oflll Round
Klntf" foil. j !\'\' ) •-:. St. ThOmot!l ~

S lpw&gt;d Plan 8 ll'i'f' llll:el'll

,\tlanta -

tu.ckle Rorvd e Lee.
·
N\ " .Jt&gt;hc Named ,Jo., lbnkol•

q uar &amp;erb llCkA eoac IL

E .. I

rtt t!lbul1(h- PromoteciDavldlnulllo
dt'femll\'f' ~tll'd hatGI'.
'

AJ.a..nplk)nli. Bf!ntlf'y M
DMemen t1, \\'"llt'llbu I"J (PII) 1M
'fulnnlpiac "" Sprta..ld4. 71

San Ole KG - Sl pd Pl• 8 fl'f'e &amp;Jftll
Cf'lltt&gt;r Mark Rodf'nllaawr.
,
Tam.- Bay - SiprdPianll~f'aJI!ftl
dri'ea i4wf' t•man Tim Nf'Wiolt •II
uneo.Udo_. fJ'I't' •~tnt dt'frtt.. Vt' b.rk

Roclte!llrr 72, Nsaredl IN.\' , J ~~

SL All_.m 11. ,\m,.riu n·ln11 N
St. Mlf'lwi'II Vll 8-1, Mtrrlmack ti
StocktoaSC . Jtt, ... n&amp;etll-t
Ttmple n , Ra&amp;~ft'r~fl 1 20T

Eric EurtU.
,

H't'tl lloyan 1S. Tuft• U
M'edmln~~ter

York (AL) -

llr!an

College scores

Flr!lt Round
Multi CaroU• St. fil,
foo kmillll '71 ..

Slpd fll'fll hMeman

To4d .-Bfnzlarer and •pMcher Scetl
St.ull df'l' to l ·,year co nlradS:
'

Wcteldn!O Mf mortlll 8-1, Tr")'M Valli!
\ "ou RQf'ft 70. \ ' 011 MOOI"'Y 50 .
[)lwhdon 1\'
M juud'lf'ld Pl'leh f8, Norwalk P&amp;WI 8-1

Mid-~...-.

M:hcduWd

Slll urdiQ·. Mllf'("h 3
Ohio Sl a1 Nonhweslern
W e~~t.ern Ml chiiii:'IU1 at Toledo
Ohio Unlvr r lllt y 1\t Mllml
Bowllftl' Green a t Ke nt st
E~tern Mlt'l\llllft 1M Voun•IIIO\Io11 Kl '
Xavlt&gt;r at Day ton
\\'riKht st a1 C hl ca~~:o St

E Pl&amp;lrMIIK' 51, l 'ou MOOIIf')' .U
Gl..ard .fD, SIN;hft'M H
H•ron 5$, Ontarlv 3t
Keylllollf' .ft. Lnraln Cath -1 5
Lou !!vlllf' n. " 'o.tt'r TrhrllY 39
Ro"'" SE , .., 1\' Adamll il'

Col~l" Bullrtball

~~~: am e~~

71, Politi ParUI

~ul.,_f'

s...

Trac k .4Jid Fltld

fu~,

lit. GHJKI• 811 . N
Emorr .t Hnry II, Chr .... New pori 81
~hNifMt' II. 1'1. ~-~~ A..aln •1
H4. ·1Wilm•r. Co.
C.C.... dle.l'ft
N. Car Ill• MT • • Delll.watl' 81-. 71
NE Lo.laaa U, Nol"'lrrwftlet 11S. 11
s.
H. Tlllue M
Vbwl . . Tft:lt.,l. Car all• ft

The: Alhlf'llcl

.... . . .

IM~.,.f•r•h•,....aw. ror-a

Pro results

lit••••,.

" "alllf' POMtlll, \ ' lrtlli.i: II

Mllwal

CI.-IMIIII. tt, DI.Okap 7t

.,.
··=
.
.
.
.
=
.. ..._lll.ll_
.
.
.
_ -..._.,. ... a .....un

Conpe~~a

•
- S..Mif'd

mi...._ "•lance r_.., M•lt Roft for

'*·

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

frem BlnpamttMI of A.mHicu

Hoclt~Lr..,.

..v•. lrOild••"· W. VlralalaTec:hn

Or••
vaner •. Wk ·~·r
Huoowr-. iwllltiTr,
01. ·-~No
.,.
._.

Rockey

HMrtfont - R•called defnat'llllll .Jim

'

~

b•••

ROCKINGHAM, N.C. (UPI) 'Kyle Petty claimed the first pole
position of his NASCAR Wlilston
Cup career · Thursday during
qualifying for this weekend's
Goodwrencb .5oo at North CarolIna Motor Speedway.
Petty, driving a Pontiac, recorded a lap of 1«8.751 mph on the
1.017-mlle track to give Pontiac
Its first top stardng spoi since
August 1989 at Watkins Glen
N.Y.. when Morgan Shepherd
captured the number one spot ..
"''m surprised I didn't beat
myself," said Petty, who makes
his 277th Winston Cup start
Sunday In the 12: 10 p.m. race.
"They (his crew) did a ton of
work on this car Monday and
Tuesday . I knew they had put In
210 percent, worked their rear
ends off. We unloaded fast so I
knew We were going to be fast
That meant If we didn't run fast.
It would be because of me. So all
the pressure came back to me to
go ou't and drive the car."
The only other time Pet'ty bas
qualified on· the front row was
July 1988 when be started second
at Daytona Internatlon!ll Speed·
way. In addition to being the first
pole for Petty, It was tbe first pole
for Sabco ,Raclrig, which Petty
joined last year. For crew chief
Gary Nelson, It was his first pole
since November 1987 at Riverside, Calif., when Geoff 'Bodine
· captured the top starting spot
Pe~ty. like his father Richard,
doesn't consider himself a good
, •
· ·
qualifier.
"I learned from !lim," said
Petty, 29. :'From the lime we got
to the race track, It was like a
waste of titne to COJICentrate on
qualifying. They used that whole
first day to , CO!ICentr,ate ori
getting the car ready to race. I
learned that approac)l early and
I've Just always kept lt.'' ,
The last Iinne the .~ldc:r Petty

headlines but don't have much
relevance to the bargaining
process.
·
·~here has been some communlcatlon on a staff level about
some of the outlying Issues and I
expect there will be more tomorrow. I'm going to Tampa for
another meeting of this type
tomorrowandl'llbebacklnNew
York over tbe weekend.
"I would hope that we'.JI be able
to schedule at least a meeting or
two Monday or Tuesday before
the owners go to their meeting
(Wednesday) In Dallas. The trick
Is to find a way to reach an
ag~eement. If It was easy ~ we'd
have done It a long time ago."
Fehr said be has met with no
resistance from tile 'uniOn's
members.
·
"l'he players, In my judgment,
are no c;l ltferent now than were
two weeks ago or fou~ weeks ago
or eight weeks ago,'' ' he · said.
''One ofthe things tile oWners did
by announcing the lockout, talk·

w()n il pole was 1979 at Bristol.
Tenn. The seven-time series
champion's last pole at NCMS
came In 1974 durtng qualifying
for the American 500. .
When the younger Petty was
asked about his father's reaction
to his son winging the pole, Petty
said, "I hadn't seeri hinn. He
might be In shock."
Petty said. there was nothjng
unusua.l about hls two qualifying
laps except he was llyperven til at·
lng from nervousness and he·
couldn't get his breath:

TVC standings

(All Games)
TEAM
W L P OP
Wellston ... ....c. 18 3 1415 1154
Miller ............. 15 6 1335 1515
x-Aiexander .... 14 9 1464 1359
x-Belpre ......... 12 9 1515 1154
X·Trinnble .. ..... 11 10 1276 1256
X· VInton ..... .. .. 11 10 1330 ·1265
x-F-Ifocklng ... 10· 12 1493 1480
x-Melgs .......... 4 18 1203 ' 1567
x-Nels-York .... 2 19 1129 1501
x-Comple&amp;ed lll!uon
Tbunday'• result:
Chesapeake 53 Alexander 48
Tonllht'• &amp;ames:
,(Divlllon I Sedlonal Flil'las)
. Logan vs. Lancaster. at
Athens, 7:30p.m.
,
(Divl81on 10 District)
. Wheelersburg vs. Unloto, at
OU, 7p.m . ·
Paint Valley' vs. Peebles, at
OU, 8:45p.m.
Saturday's 1ames:
(Divlllon II Dlatricl I
· Porlm!outb vs. New Lexington, at OU, 3: 30 p.m.
Fairland vs. Sherldan,'at OU,
5:15p.m.
Greenfield vs .. West Union, at
OU, 7p;m .
·
Wellston "s. South Point , at
8:45p.m.

ou.

I

If.-...

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

~

___
..............
..•..

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

.'. ,...... lit, _ _ ,

.

.

••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.

USED
.
CAR·
·
c
CoP, s· CLEARANCE!!
UNDER

ss,·ooo

·

a4 Mercury Marquis Brougham ...... S4695
a4 Mercury Marquis Brougham ...... $3995
· SW. Good 't•mily car. ·..
·
··
82 Honda . .CiVic •••••••••••••••~.............. ~. 52495

•

$51000. SPECIA'S

•

,

19 Cavalier 4 Dr····-··~.................~~1,.q;,.f!!;•••.'. Sl49 5
,. 19 Olds Cutless Citra 4 Dr.........~~M;........ s9,9S
I 7 Chevrolet Celtbril&gt;( Eurosport lSMl9.9.ml... Sl99 S
17 Olds. 91 .......................~..................~.......... 19995
17 Pontiac Safari 'SJI.~!!&amp;.~.~!!'.';..;... S10,995
15 O.viollt '"- Ton Sllv~radi;.....,.....................
'1495 .
. .

, ...

'

...

'

.

..

•

••••
(JISt

IJJI ...

",

·---···.-•.,._
r
r

"

j

LOW CASH PIKES

RENT
TO OWN

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

SOfA I CJWI
.. t't0.95 ••
IIPOAIII
• OIUIS

---

·----..... -'-""---"
·

AFTER 50 YEARS
Ladies Pocketbooks .•••..•••• S4.S6.S9
GIRlS ~ LADIES

Fashton Snow Boots..............

MEN'S 4U lEATHER

.

·

$
Tube Socks ................... $95_&amp; 695
IOYS &amp; MEN'S

ft. lt. 7

..

$

6 PACK

lADIES IIGH STYlE

$

.

Pumps.~ .............~U.Si'!«K\.............. 1200

GIRLS lEATHER

.,.....
.

$ .

Ill New Balance . &amp;, 13 Sizes. .

1983 Lincoln Mark V•······ S5895
1985 Mire. • ,....................S3295
V.f1 • Dr; Gold aalldlllon.
.
19.1 6 Chen Ch~weHe ...... t1795 ·
!

$

2
5
'
ur
,By Converse, LA Oe'lr. A.dld81, McGregor, Ponyo

MEN'S lEATHER

SEE RAY RIGGS

·

High &amp; Low Joagers ••••••••.••••

1984 Ford Tempo ••••~.~•••••.S1895

·

$

5• 6

·

MEN'S lEATHER

PONYS &amp; KANGAROOS

2 Dr., 111 ,000 mill~ A- 1 condition.

$

Dress Ties &amp; loafers ... U\\I.A.•I••l.l.. 29

1915 Mere. Grant~•..,• u_.. S3695

• CefhiiWY..... .

PO"BtT OliO
'

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

·Oreat Bargains!

,.

CIIIVIOLn
·OLDSIIOiaE.
,
Clllu.AC·G·O, IIC•
992-6614 .

e
·n....

'
;•,.

..

·- .. ,.'-'.

REMWIER
WITH FLOWERS

.

.

'.

II Cadillac Brougham ............t219.~.m~~;.,S20,995
19 Olds Cutlass Supreme ....:....................... S10,995

i't .•.

will

.

79 Buick Century Station Wagon .. $2295
79 Ford Ranchero ............................. Sl S9S
78 Chev. K Blazer •••••••••••••••• ~..-$3495

·.· 301Q; IIAII

MIDDLEPOR't -Sign up for
the MlddleportbYouth League
will be held Saturday from 9 a .m.
to noon at tb.e VIllage Council
Office In Middleport The cost Is
$10 per c~lld not to exceed $25.

COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
-Tile Board of Trustees of
' RACINE-TbeSoutbernBoos- Colum.bla· Township will meet
ters wlllbave a cblckendlnneron . Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the fire
ststlon.
, :,
Sunday at 11:30 a.m. Menu Is
$3.75 an( Jncllldes, bar-~cued
spare ribs ,. , .creamed · bake
POMEROY.,- The Meigs Lochicken, mashed potatoes, green cal Band Boosters will meet
beans, · cole slaw, dessert and Monday, 7 p.m. In the band room. •
drln~. ·
CHESHIRE' -Women Alive
MONDAY
will meet Monday, 7 p.m. at the
REEDSVILLE - The Olive Kyger Creek Clubhouse. Speaker
Township Trustees will meet will be Cat by Howard. There will
Monday , 6: 30 p.m. at the Reeds· be a quilting demonstration and
viiJe Fire House.
refreshments will be served.

'

Clean.

.,

RIPLEY -There will be
:: square dance and clogging 9n
·.: Friday at 8 p.m . at theSkate-0&gt; -Rama near Ripley. Cost Is $3
· · for adults and $1 •for children
: under 12. ,Music b:i Llbery
:: Mountajnee~s. The public Is
• Invited to attend.

Invited.

.

Loaded. low milea.

•

a yard and .bake sale on Saturday
at the Reedsville Firehouse from
9 a~m: to 6 p.m. . The event Is
sponsoted by the Faith Gospel
Ladles Circle of-the Faith Gospel
Church In Long Bottom. There
)Nill al•o ~hot soupandbotdogs
available.
-

.

84 Podge .Aries ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •• S3695

Jim
Cobb

. ' ROCK SPRINGS -Tbe·Melgs
,; CouJJtY Pomona .· G,range.,. will
· , meet Friday at the Rock Springs
grange hall. Tile Harrisonville
. · Grange will served
· ' refreshments.

SALEM CENTER -The Star
SYRACUSE - The Sutton
Gr811ge and Junior Grange
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
meet In regular session on Township Trustees will meet port .Garderi . Club wlil meet
Satur4ay at 7: 30 p.m. at the Monday, 7:30 p.m. at the Syra· Monday, 7:30p.m. at the home of
Grange Hall located on Cqunty _c use Municipal Building.
. Mrs. Wllllam· Morris. Hostesses
.
"
Road 1 , near Salem Center. A
will be Mrs. Morris and Mrs.
RUTLAND -Meigs Area Holi- David Bowen. Program will be
potluck supper will follow the
." POMEROY -There will be a
weekend revival beginning Ftl· , meeting. All members are urged ness ASsociation wlll bold Indoor by Mrs. Paul HaptonstaiJ, Arran·
camp, .Monday through Sunday gement by Mrs. G.E. Schaekel .
to attend .. ·
,day at the . Faith Tabernacle
'
.
with services nJehtly at 7 p.m.
. 'Church on Ba!_ley's Run Road
•
·.;with David Wedlund. Columbus,
CHE;STER -The Racine Bap- and 6 p.m. on Sunday. Special
: • as evangalist. The revival runs
tist qfurch ,will have a skl!tlng speaker Is Rev. Gene Grate and
." thl:ough Sunday and services
party al the Chester $katlng Rink song evangelist Is ••Tile DumIres" from Tennessee. The public
.''s.tart at. 7 p.'m. nightly. Emmett
OD Saturday·from 2-4: 30 p.m.
.
'
'
'
Is Invited to attend.
. • Rawson, pastor. Invites the Pl!b·
To,:'..,:..'i,.'::jDr
•' lie
POMEROY .-Meigs County
!'
FOREST RUN -Forest Run
. Law Enforcement Explorers
SATURDAY
Methodist
Church will have a
Post 2230 meet Saturday, 2,JI.m ..
POMEROY -Tbe Mothers 'o f
'rummage
sale
Monday, 9 a .m . to
Me lis County Court House, Com; , Twins Club will have Its annual
3
p.m.
and
Tuesday,
9 a.m. to
mon Pleas Court Room, third
noon.
: · Inside yatd!Jale on Saturday from
floor, to ~lscuss status meeting
, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at · the Trinity
on the election
of bfflcers.
.
.
.. Church.
· ·
··
LEBANON TOWNSHIP - The
RACINE ~The Southern Boos- . Lebanon Townablp Trustees will
• ters will spqnsor an Independent
have a special meeting on
~ · Mens Basketball Tournament on
f.aturday· at 2 p.m. at the
Saturday and Sunday. ~ntry fee
township building. •
: . Is $100 per team-. Call Dave
; Grlndstsff at 949'-2025 for
SUNDAY
4 ,DR. Pully equipped. I
.
••
:
•. lriformatlon. ·
POMltROY - The Meigs Pior .,
.'
,
neer and Historical Society Is
: 'rtlPPERS PLAINS - There spo1180rillf an be'rbal w.o~kshllp
4 DR. PB, Pl. Air.
·
&lt; will be a bake sale 't the StiPaul lh:ll SUnday, at 2 p.m,. at tbe
~
'
'
; : United · Methodist . Church In ~elp County Mu11C1Uir) on.Butter·
• · Tup_per.f Plains on Saturday from
~ut A.ye., ,Po!Jiet'oy. Connie Hill
.
Fuly equlppecl. C. .n Cer.
.
' . 9-11 ~.m.
8nd Jalll!t Tflel8a. of tbe River
.•
Villey l,ler.,.llatl ~ub will prel·
l · REEPSVILLE -Til~ will be !nt the prqp-am. Tilt public II

as4Chevrolet
(hevette.~ .................. $2495
Speed.
.

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

_Community ealeqdar

; . · CHESTER .-The Shade River
· Lodge will have a special meet·
lng on Friday at 7:30p.m. Work
• in the ~ellow Craft Degree. · ·

{

•

.

'

Sunropf.
. caasette.
.

Bucket eeta. toede.

Lottridge center
h'am dinner slated

---------

'

85 Ford ·EXP •••••••••••••••••~ ...........~ •••••• S3695

OYER

·Reedsville Community Builders
plan for spring .fund raiSer

FRIDAY

SPECIALS

asNica
Ford Crown Victoria.................. $499·5
car.
asLoade;r.Dodbe Lancer ................
·............. $4495
•
.·
as vw. Golf ...............~Hil.flt';~l(ta...... $3995

·".::&gt;:

Baseball charter reservations
being accepted by Athens church

·

8.5Loaditd·
Caprice
4 Dr .........~.....~.............. $4 99 5·-··.·~, one ownar.

87,000 milea.

Rutland Gaide.n .Club topic sffiall houseplants

'.

'

··a7 Plymouth Caravella SE..•••:.......~ $4995

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Pegll 6

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Automatic, air.

Friday, March 2, 1990

clay pot and ·pl!t this In a plastic
" Diet for 'Small Houseplants" valentine plates take!) to the traveling prlzz furnished by
freezer bag until the cuttings
was the theme of the program County Home. Qhe and Ruby Margaret Parsons. Eva Robson
root.
presented
by
Margaret
Belle
Diehl
prepared
llplates.
·
the
prize
tor
the
will
furnish
, In cpMing back for any of the
' BJ BOB ROBFLJCB
Ruby Diehl bad the hint for the
r
Weber
at
the
recent
meeting
of
.
It
was
decided
to
go
In
with
the
M~p"ch
meeting.
The
door
prize
s~lal events. pleue ·g et the
'
Wl!'ve got trouble -:l&amp;:ht here In
day
on "The Cheaper Lillie
·the
Rutland
Garden
Club
held
at
,
other
two
Rutland
clubs
·
for
a
by
Paullne
Aktlns.
was
won
River City and I doll't 1u1ow how names and addresses to.PomeGreenhouse.''
The cheapest little
Stella
Atkins
read
an
article
on
the
home
of
Marcia
Denison
with
combined
flower
show
In
the
roy Chamber of Col'nrllerce Of·
we're golllg to
greenhouse
ls
.a
clear plastlcbl!g;
Mrs.
Weber
as
co-bostes'
s
.
spring.
Houseplants
,
~·
.
"propagation
of
·. flee; 2Q4 J:. Main St. You can.call
cope with it.
In
ber
prOgtam,
Mrs.
Weber
·
·,
Put
three
to
tour
Inches of sand In
She
stated
that
most
houseplants
U you'd like. The numbe? .Is
A alate .leilathe
bottom
and
dust the roots
ca
n
be
propagated
by
cuttings.
noted that houseplants .n~
Arrangements for the
lator Is prCJI*·
992-5005.
' .
hormone.
Blow
up the hili
.
with
a
This
Is
done
by
.
t
akl!lg
the
cutting,
mol'll than sunshine, air. and churche$ were !llBde by Stella
ing· a new law
so
leaves
do
not
touch
the·sldes
.of
containlllg
four
or
·
five
ll)aves,
water. They must have JQme Atkllls and Pearl Ca11aday.
.
~ry Fobner, president, remaking jt neceJ·
the
bag
and
tie
tightly
.
Arril!lgem'ents were made for from the · growing point ·In the
sary for us to
pottJI. th•t fhe hU II'CIIi-e!l Bob. kind of fertilizer and a peat .bale
The March meeting will be
.
mixture
for
,P.Ottlni
should
also
the
group to go to GaiUpoUs plant and cutting It just below the
SUcluilfQrd, putot of Believers
. llce~J&amp;e..and c:oJi.
held at the home of Ann Elizabeth
joint. Put the cutting In a moist
be used becau(le It provld~inOre Developmental ·Center for a
trol our cats. Now llcensin&amp; ~~~ . In Qelaware, Ohio, as
Turner.·
·
perlite,
sand
or.
vermiculite
In
a
nutrients.
·
'
·
,
garden
Club
therapy
program
on
proljably some of 111 can manage apeaker for a meetlnr of the new
Devotions were elveh by Mrs., March 15.
- ' but control? · ObVIously •.the . Pomeroy Chapter of Fla!Jie Fe I· .
Denlsonandthecree'dandcoUect
· Pearq:aaaday, Neva Nlchollowshlp.
legislator hasn't had much expe.
.
were
given
·in
unison.
RoD
call
&amp;Oil,
ADn Elizabeth Turner, and
The meetJna will he held at 7
rience with cats. You don't
president. An a uction was also
A surprise layette shower was
control· cats - they are the p.m. on Marcil 13 'at tlle' Melgs was answef!!d wll~ meMbers· . Mrs. ~nslon toured the green·
held with Mrs. Mary Allee Blse
held for Mrs. Nancy Wachter
epitome of llldependence - ex- Seliior Citizens Center In Pome- naming ''My Houseplanl · houses a.t.0e~by· Park In Wheel·
Problem.''
·
· lng, W.Va. . .,;,
as auctioneer.
when the Riverview Garden Club
cept Maybe at chow time-. Cats roy ·~d. ~ ,open 'to ·a lllnteresll!d
reported
on
.'the
.
Dorothy
·
Woodard
won
the'
Stella
Atkins
•&gt;PriODI.
•.
met
for.
Its
February
meeting
at
Refreshments and favors of
. get to .the hlghes t piece of . , . .. I •·
"'• '~
,
A
graduate
of
the
University
of
the
home
of
Mrs.
Pauline
Myers
miniature
baskets filled with
furniture In the house, walk the
potpourri were served to the
with Mrs. Nola Young and Mrs.
kitchen · counters and dlnlllg Oklahoma, Shackelford was a
above named and Betty Boggs,
Marlene Putman as co ·
room table and for the m'os t part certified public accountant beMary Grace Cowdery, · Delores
hostesses.
are COir)pletely unmponslve to fore helrtk called to tbe ministry.
.
.
Frank, Margaret . Grossnickle,
Devotions, ' ·A Breath of
efforts of communication. How: AlreadY, .he bas authored three
Spring'
·
a
nd
"The
Gift
of
FriendMarilyn
Hannum, Phyllis Larever. the ' proposed legislation books.
Mrs, Joim Lawrence and Patty devotions using the topic "God is
kins,
Ella
Osborne, Gladys Tho·
ship"
were
presented
by
!Yirs.
lsn'.r expected to fly In Its present
--~----Henderson served as hostesses of . Love."'
.
Scott Lucas, administrator at
Janice
Young.
mas,
Grace
Weber, Maxine
form so we, and the cats, get a
Favors of lace valentines and
the Febr\llli'Y,.. meeting of the
Whitehead,
and
Rutb Anne Sal·
Veterans Memorial Ho~pltal,
reprieve. ·
ReedsvUie United Methodist refreshments using. a valentine
Roll
call
was
answered
with
derson.
Mrs.
Grossnickle
re·
and
Mrs.
Lucas
send
!!long
a
big
Be not dlsri)ayed though, the
Women held · In the church theme were served to those
members
naming
tlieir
favorit
e
ceived
the
door
prize.
thanks
to
awl
of
you
for
your
new~ Isn't ·au bad. One of our
namj!d and Manile Buckley,
basement.
stores, ljas. UIUe· .Debbie snack many . kindnesses and prayers
Pearl
Osbornj!.- Nina Boston,
Mrs. Nancy B\ICkley presided
cakes on sale, six for a dollar. It d\Jrine Scott's health problem.
Grace
Weber,
Tammy Cowdery
at the ·business meeting. New
He has returned to part-time
just proves that wecan'tlose 'em
and
Christopher,
Denise West,
letters for the church were
;Ill. '
.' . .
. .
duty at the hospital and although
Frances
Reed:
and Lillian
discussed and the group voted to
he ada,lts that It sdll takes him
Pickens.
A
game
was
played and
buy two new flags. Forty shut In
just a wee bit longer to do things . calls were made.
prizes were given with Mrs.
·these days, he II gaining ground.
Boston winning· the door prize.
,yard
and
bake
sale
was
A
The East Athens Church of
slble for their own meals.
M~. and Mrs. Lucas feel that ·
•'
Do you know of any Pomeroy
The next meeting will be held
planned for Aptll 7.
Christ
Is
now
accepting
reservaReservations can be made by
famUies ~ho have moved away you did so much in keepl!lg up
Mrs. Sandy West led the with Mrs. Pickens as hostess.
lions
for
Its
annual
Christian
calling
593-7414 between 9 a.m
Qver :the y(!ars and might be their spirits durtng their time of
Baseball
Charter.
This
year's
and
noon
any weekday.
In teres 1e11 In coming home to great concern. Just on one day
trip
Is
planned
for
Julyl3
to
see
A
$15
deposit
Is required to hold
participate In th~ sesqulcenten- . alone after returning to their
the Cincinnati Reds p~y the New
a
reservation with full payment
home In Cheshire following
nlal celebration of the town?
York Mets in a 7:30p.m. Friday
due June 15. Reservations may ·
Scott's heart surgery at Riverevening game.
·
~~ be mailed to East Athens Church
Mary ·Powell' of tile planning side Metliodlst Hospl1al, Scott
The bus will leave Athens at 2
of Christ, Baseball ·Charter, 1
received almostlOO cards many
committee for the obs'ervance
p.m. The cost Is ·$30 per person
Townsend Place, Athens.
hail prepared special Informa- containing notes of enco~age­
and includes the bus charter and
tion wblcll C811 be sent to the ment. Scott was still prettY worn
reserved seat ticket for· the
sh~ubs
at
the
entrance
.
to
the
Dues
were
collected
·
at
the
out after the surgery so the cards
'. ~amUies to glV!.! them tile dates
CRIMINAL RECORDS
game.
Individuals will be respon·
cemetery
with
money
In
the
Febnlary Meeting of the Reeds·
44..110!
41 COUll ST.
and highlights ofthet!Vents being and notes bad,tci be read In shifts vllle.Communlty Builders held at cemetery fund.
Acr•• from Dow• ................. . . . . .
planned. ·Mary thinks there - bu ~ really what a wave of ·the home of Ronald and Ella
.
NEW ARRIVALS
Ham sandwiches, chips,
mtght be qulte a fe~ Interested In encourageme11t.
Su.ndlna" Countrv
Exllo
"StU!
Osborne.
·
cherry dessert and soft drinks
Mldn~ Oil "Blue Si&lt;y Mining" Pop
coming back especially for tqe · So - thank you.
Osborne presided at the meet· were served to Grace Weber,
Son&lt;t. .ry "Into tho Minor'' -.,.
• Founders Day dlrmer to be held
In which Grace Weber gave Donald and Pa)lline Myers.
Ina
We'll
be
celebrating
St.
PaChtd&lt;out
our mvsi&lt; ¥1"- hntoh C•· · . at the Pomeroy Elementary
Warren and •l,.llllan Pickens, and
the flower tund report,
MII~ co·~ c...;•.-.......... s.. 1
trick's
Day
this
month
so
you
'll
A ham dinner will be served at
, · School on April 28.
.
Ernest and Maxine Whitehead .
loolu, T-lhlrt~ PMton, Gu~•l•-..
'Members decided to have, a
....• · ' It you
.
'"
want to be Wearing some greenthe Lottrldge Co.mmunlty Center
knbw of IndiVIduals or a · ' and keep. In mlpc!, envy .doesn'.t fund drive, In the sprina. It was
rl&amp; 45'• &amp; AI.._ c...-.4 .Or4of.,.
. The ·"ext meetln11.. will be · Sunday from noon to 2 p.m. The
family who mlgllt be Interested ·, count Dei keep smiling. :
M Ml YOIII
NM - .,.....
ON fll 110C11
announced later.
also decided to ~epllice dead
Cllllllll1
.......
. ·
center Is located · on Athens
·".
- - Iiiii rt4 Cor SJ.OO elf.., f·olirt"'
County Road 53, five mlles west
,,..._ 01!• ..... J-S-10, wo ..... " '
of Coolville. The public Is Invited
... 0,.. """'" . . . ,... 00.. ....,.
to attend.

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The Daily Sentinel

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Reedsville UMW to buy flags

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Riverview Garden Club meets

: MORRIS EQUIPMENT •:

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........ IM. ......•Cik ) III,OT
•.._11,1.11-81

IN STOCK

'cat.:aSrropHy,

· A ·real

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Beat of the bend'

•.......•...........•..•

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r.fhe.·: ae·na

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Fehr said he would Instruct the
ing about the lockout, and.sort of
insisting on It was to In essence
players to report to training
tell the players a long time ago
camps If the. owners lifted the
that they're golllg to have a fight · lockout.
on their halfds. That makes my
~
job easier.
·
•
· '1'be players' mood hils not
changed very much. There certainly is no sentiment to suggest
: •INTERSTATE BATTERIES :
that our overall bargaining ap•POWER START
proach or the Issues we:ve raised
should be varied In any meaning: ·, IATTERY-48 MONTH ·:
ful respect." ·
: · WARRANTY
(Special)
•
.
.
New York Yankees second·
baseman Steve Sax agreed. "We
: . •WE REPAIR ALL TYPES ;
are united hi stone," he said.
: OF FARM . MACHINERY, .:
Los Angeles Dodgers catcher·
: ·. lAWN MOWERS, CHAIN .: .
Rick Dempsey said Informational sessions like .Thursday's
: SAWS AND WEEDEAURS ¢
bring the players closer.
:
-~PEN EVENINGS--: • ·:
"Once we understand the
facts, we're prepared to stay
••
together for as long as It takes to
742-2466
,.
get what's fair, be said. "There Is
• · location: Tlko New Umo Rood '·:
: to loop RHd to Side HUI Rold Ill ·e
a sense of embarrassment como mil• out ol Autt.nd, Ohio)
. •0
Ing from this, but It's
'necessaey ''

lt,Jioi ..... OT

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says ~no

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pleted 1 UJree.piimt play With . beat Plloenlx 112-lOC, Cbarlotte · Tlleul..
2:21 to go.
clipped tile L.A. Clipper11J8.109
81 ekek Ill,.._ lM
The SJxera thl!ll cJOII!d with an Ill OYertlme, O.nver outscored
At Hou1t1111, Akeel'll ,O iajuwon
11-6 . l'\111 over · the III!Xt two : Cleve!and ,131-US and Utah ICOred aevea of bll 41 pilblta In
lnlnutea, bittlna ellbt straight jauled Portlallll119-102.
the fiJJall:O'ItcileldtbeRoekets, ·
free throws.
..
N•ne&amp;a lSI, C.Vallen 111
Otis Tborpe addecUI points and
Mille Gminskladited 16 points,
At Deaver, AJex' EngUah led six .. 15 reboiiJICll.wl)lle Olajtlwon llad
Rick ¥1bom .15 and and Derek Denver players In double figures
14 rebounds"u the RoCketa, 25-31,
Smith had 11. for the Slxers. with 26 ppints and tbe Nuggets ended i1 aiDe-game Phoenix '
Cbarlel· Oakley ICOred 18 and outlasted the (:avallers. Mark wlnlllq streak. · ·
·
. puUeci. down 11 ' rebounds and Price , led Cleveland. ~tb 31
Renlit•t'a, Cllppenl" (0T)
Joluuly· Newman had 19 points pointsbuttheCavswereplaiUed . At Charlotte, N.C., Itex Chap·
for New York;
by poor shooting In the fourth . man ICOred 21 points, lncludlna
".• tbougbt we played eXCI'J" quarter (7-21H. Joe Bl\rcy CarrOll the l~st fiVe points In l'efllla\k&gt;n '
Uonally hard," said New York . scored 23' points, Fa:t ·L ever' 22: and. siX In overtime. Randolph •
coach Stu Jackloa'... •·we dldn' t and Danny Scbayes added 21 for
Keys and . Dell Curry JCOred 16 •
shoot the ball very, well tonight the Nunets. Cleveland got 23 polllts each for !be Hornets. The ..
(42-88) . That ·was one key. Then (19ints from Craig Eh!o,19 points Clippers were led by Charles ~
down the stretch, Ph illy came up from Brad Daugherty. 18 points Smith who scored a g,!lme-II(Jb 29 ~
with the big play that we couldn't from John Williams and 12 from
points, lnchldl!lg 17 In the fourth
seem to muster at home. Haw- Steve Kerr.
quarter. •
·
ktnS took the ball to, the hole very
. flatoas 18, BU!Iels 85
.
. Jazz .ll9, 'J'rall BIQ!n 10~· · ,
well . dOwn th.e alretch, when'
At Lalidover, Md., reserve ~ , At Salt Lake Cjty, Jolu! Stock·
things could have gone either Mark Aguirre scored 12 of his 18 · ton coUected 26 pofuts and 21 •
way."
.
points In tM fourth quarter as · assists to help the Jazz ·io their
"We're big time . now," Jald Detroit-extended Its dominance
sixth . straight victory. T1111rl .;.
Barkley. "If we win tomorrow overtheWashlngtonBulletstoll salley contributed 18 of bls ·24 .
(Detroit), I can see us In first str~lght victories. Jeff Malone. points In the third quarter and •
place In a week or SQ, we're going· scoi'ed 19 points, and Darrell
Karl Malone finished with 17
in with confidence."
. .
W~lkerapd-MarkAlarleadd~d14
pblnts and 12 rebounds ' as Utah
Barkley scored 14 points In ~e apiece for the Bullets.
rolled to (Is 1Sth stialgbt victory
first half and Gminskl added 12 to
Klnasll4 Mapc 100
at the Salt Palace. Jerome ·
pacetheSixerstoa43-4211alftlme
At Orlando, Fla .. Wayman
Kersey and Kevin Duckworth •
lead. ·
·
'Tisdale led Si!cramento on a late
bad 21 points each for the Trail
.Elsewhere, Detroit dumped p-4 scoring spree . to lead the
Blazers, who lost their fourth '
Washington 99·85, Sacramento Kings. Tisdale totaled 24 points,
consecutive road ·game.
stoppe Orlando 114-100, Houston · the same as Orlando's Reggie

Petty·earns ·GoodWt-ench pole

l.o fl( Beach !\t. HI, Fr~nd ~. 7~
Nt'•·a da·LilM \-' C!RM K.f, Utah St . 11:

Krnl RoMtv~t IS, SliM' ~"
Rof: Rlv Maanlflclll 5-I, LonUnU
" 'estla.k t 5~ . Lt,.l n S.udlvlew flO

Dlw bJio •l ·
Y.o O..C~Pr 11-1, ('an Gl,.nOak

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lead to half a gan1~

Egos halting negotiations?
By .JEFF HASEN
UP' Sporlll W~ller
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Union chief Don Febr briefed 53
players Thursday on the 15-dayold baseball lockout and casU·
~rated others ,who say negodatlons with owners have ceased
because of egos Involved,
"If we are negotiating about
~·/
·~ ~ ·~~-··tt ~-+ so~ebody saving_ face, then
we reIn trouble," Fehr said after
~- _, ... '
"\
'~ ...r·
.•
• .
a
2% -hour meeting at an airport
• ,,.;w
. .,Y,
~ i.. i
hotel. "I choose to believe we are
.
.
.
.
·
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:-...
..
·~ i.
...
~ if;.~·:.
nov·
.
·~~
~.~~
"
"What It would amount to
•'
woulc,l be me gotni to the players
PRICE FLYING HIGH - Cleveland Cavaliers' guard Mark
and
saying, 'Take a subStandard
Price (center) goes up for two points. minus the ball between
because Joe Jones .
contract
Denver Nuggets' Eddie Hughes (L) and Alex EngliSh (R) durblg
Owner
looks
bad.' If I recom. first quarter action Thursday at Denver's McNichol's Arena.
mend
that,
I
'll be. looking for
.: (UPI)
another job. ' 1
·
There have been no negotiating
sessions since last weekend.
''Is the ball In tbelr court? In
our- court? Who cails tbe next
meeting?" he said. "Those are
81M IIOD H, Ji:ardla-81mme• It
Toqmey scores
Tnu Arllftll•• 71, N. Tnu "11
sort of niceties that make for

~ ...__..
f•-r•
· 2 • ,_..,

•

Boys'.Leather Joxs ........,••~ ••••• S9 ., ur
· .

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Work Shoes .............J 1QOO .Off PEa Pl.

High Top Joggers.:.......... S12 &amp; S14
.
. . $600
Infant Joggers
.........................
Ladies. Flats &amp; Casuals••••••••••• S1200

LADIES . .HTOP

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$

.

Leather Joggers .......1,\!lldt••NOw 19 ·
Men's L..-ther Joxs ••••llf..IU••NOw S14

Simons·•n
Pick~A-Pair
OF,.,...,
• '1111

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Pomeroy-MidclllpOft. Ohio

Fltday, MadtZ, 1810

Visit from the Turtle------. G,reyhound bus workers walk
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This Message and Church Directory
Spori.Rnred Ry The
lntere&amp;ted Rr~ine.sa
Page.
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SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

. Veterans ·
Memorial Hosj.ital
115 (.

llltllorlal Dr.
ffJ·2.104

we Fill Doctors·
Preuriphofts

Pomaroy

172 ll•th *"""An.

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P. J. PAULEY, AGENT ·
Nationwide Ins .. Co.
ol Co1umbus. 0 .
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TRlNli'Y CDNGREGATJONAL CHURCH.
Clll"'h Srltool !:15 a.m.; WonNp Service
10:30 a.m. (II* l'flltciOI. ~. ~ t5 p.m.
cllnll'!lon &lt;f Loll Dirt
POMDIOY CHURCH OF 111E NAZA·
!IDlE, Olmr Union llld Mulb!ny, Rev.
'lboor8l Gllll M&lt;QJ ........... Norman Pres- •
toy, S. S. ~ .... SUJidaty School. 9::1) a.m.;
-•MnllpJO:JJLOn.; evatlngll!fYI&lt;e6
p.m.:~--· w~. 7p.m.

GRACE ll'&amp;X)PAL CHURCH, :1'16 E.
MolD St. l'omoi&lt;Jy. SUJidaty lll!fVIces: Holy
· -colllellntSUJidatyofe.,tunodh.
·' l l l d - wllh 11'10rdni.._ mille
.. !lin~ SU• . Mordng . . _ and oennoo on
IOotlt!rSU. . &lt;flheiiiOiliL&lt;lllrd!School
adNu.rlerycareiJI'(Widl!d.Cofleehour~the

Parkhllall Dmedl_. ~gdrJel'\lioe.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
MolD St., Leo l.aob, evlinll!ltlt Bille School
t.:t)a.m.; Mm*l&amp;wcnNp.lO:l)a.m.; Youth ,
meetlna~OO p.m.: Evening wcniip. 7:00 p:
m. ......... n1&amp;111..-11101!U11aandB!IIe
!hlly. 1:00 p.m.
•
11IE SALVATIJN ARMY, U S Aw., PPI:umiB
..Itlt'. Mn· Doca W1nJiig In Chlrfll!9indlir liallns meetln&amp; 10 a.m.: SUJidaty

SdK:d. ».00 a.m. SUadaff Sctacxi YPSM

Eloloe Ad-. Je.-. 7:ll p.m. Salvation
JMlllln&amp; wrklui'P!*enandnu&amp;lk:apedal:s.
'DIIJ'Id.v, ll:JJ a.m. to 2 p.m. Ladlel Heme
..._. " " " ' - In c.._. au lnYiled; 6:tl p.m. '1111,...., Qrji1 Ctdel
(Y'"'IW Paipe-B!IIel. 7:30p.m. Bite'
' stalv .,dl'raytormeettn&amp;
til! public.

.....,to

POMERoY WESTSDE CHURQI OF

CHRIST, a:m&amp;Odl~dbneRoad (&lt;b.lrty
Jl,old '1'6) . - · Vocal music. Sunlay Wor·
sNp!Oa.m.; BlleSIIIIyllLm.;. Wcrshlp. 6p.
m. WeGieldi!Y. Bile Stilly, 7 p.m. Speaker,

Hope,..........

Lana
OU&gt; OEXIER maE CIIRIS'llAN
CHURCH. Jack Clelmd. JiU1&lt;r. AI.,. a._.

•land. ~ SUJidaty Scboci 10:00 am.; Youth

7 p.m.ewsy W-'1'
' SACREDHEARTCA1110UCCHURCH
- 16l Mulberry Aw.. Pomeroy. Ph. 992·
- . Situ"'- ii:-lnl Man, 5:Jl p.m .;
. SU!idq Mua 9:30 l'.m, CCD c t - . 10::1!
a.m.- ..,.iillandtblrciSuncllyao!each
-

' ~.. Dally Mus, 8:00a.m. CoDieulons

saturdU .aliernon, t-5 p:m. .
CHUI\CH OF JE:SUS CHRIST APOS·

'roue FAlTII- New Lima Road, ..Xt to
Fort !oleiP Pari!. Robert W. Rldiards, ·
po.olll'. SUnday terVtceo. 10 a .m. and 7 p.
m .; Wedfteld.:y wcnblp, 7 p.m .
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Preechill.r 9:ll a.m. first and second Sundays of tach inontb; UUrd and fourth Sun_
•• --a.•
da yea,.,mon
•• wwMupservlcesal7:30p.
m.: Wednesday evenings at 7: :1&gt; p.m.
Pr.ayer and Bible Study.
,
SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST. Mulberry lle!ghts Road. Pomeroy. Past or Bob
Snyder: Sabbath School Superintendent,
HodnO!' Spires. Sabbath School begins at 2

p.m. on Saturday afternom with worship
service followln&amp; at 3:00 p.m. Every me

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K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. llaln Str11t
992·3715. Po•ro,
dies' AuJdllary. Wedneoday, 7 p.m. Fam·
Uy Worship.
•
·
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rt. 124, 3 mil eo !rom Portland·Loni Bot·
tom. Edsel Hart, pa~tor. Sunday SChool,
9::1) a.m.; Sunday morning pr1!8chlng
10::1) a.m.; SUnday evening service&amp;, 7:~ p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPI'IST
C~RCH, Corner Ash and .Plum. Noel
Hernnann, pastor. Sunday SchqollO:OO a.
m.; Morning Worllhlp, 11:00 a .m.; Wed·
nesday ahd Saturday Evening Services at
7:30p.m.
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO.
DIST CHURCH - Paator, Rev. Carl
Hicks, to mila aOOve Racine on Rt. 388.
Sunday School9 a.m., worahip seivlce 10
a.m . .Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m.;
Prayer meettng and Bible Study Thura.

day, 6::1Jp.m.
'
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST 0!! 124, behind Wllk.,.ville. Cbarii!SJon,.,
past&lt;r. SundaySchod, 9::1Ja.m.; mornlilg
worship. 10: 30; Sunday and Thursday
evening services, 7:00p.m.

MEIGS

COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CBURCB
NOBTIIEAIIT GLUIITEII
Rev. Doo Arcli,.
Rev. Fruk Croloal
Rev. S.ldoo .lolilll•
ALFRED - Church SChool 9:30 a .m.;
Worship, I! a.m.; UMYF6:30p.m.: UMW '
Third Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m. Communion,
!lrst Suilclay. (Archer)
· ·
CHESTER - Worship 9 a .m.; Church
SChooi!Oa.m.: Bible Study, Thuraday, 7p.

m.; UMW, tlrst Tburlday, 1 p.m.; Com-

munton, Urat Sunday (Archer). .

JOPPA - Worllilp 9:30 a .m.; Cburch
SChooll0:30 a.m . BlbleStudyWedneoday,
7: Jl p.m. (Johnsm) .
LONG BOTTOM - cbureh School 9:30
a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Wednesday, 7: 30p.m.; Communion First
Sunday ot Month (Rev. Charles Eatm)
REEDSVILLE - Cliurcb School9: :41 a.
m. ; Worship Service ll :OOa.m .
TIJPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Church School 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.;
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m ,; Commurilon First Sunday !Archer) .
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. n.. Meadow•
, Rev......., '11111&lt;h ..
.•. Jtn. ~.:;:~ IDla,clll·

IN

~CLES,

woman,

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992-5432
....,_ _. . .~~------'-'':"'"-~-1

BELIEVE

"'"'" !&amp;.o~,

716 'NOITH
MIDDlEP~T.

'

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992-5141.

264 Seuth 2nd

......,.,.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dipity ond Sorvic• Alwoy''
Establllhed 1913

••

992-2121 .
106 MtAI"J AwL

'

BobG~rmm.

n~ov:~~.&amp;~i:oot-

vWo RD. Rev. Pbi!Up ftldtl!aor, .-tor.
SUnday Schoal9:30a.m.; wa,~~t~p oervtee
10: 30 a.m.: B!bleltlllly llld wcnltlp - ·
vice, Wedlleodly; 7 p.m.
RUTI.AND CI!O~ OF CHRIST, Roy
w. caner. patcll'. SUnday .llondtoc wor.
s~ lO:OOa.m.; SU!idq Btble!ldJooi&amp;:OO
p.m.: Wedlleodly Bible Stilly 7:00p.m.

RUTI.AND BIBLE METHQDIST, Amos

TUIII, pastor. Sonny Hudl•, 111pt. S•nday
SChool9:30 a.m.; Moralnl WorU!p. 10:30
a.m., Sunday evonlnt aervro. 1; 00 p.m.
Wedneoday lei'VIce· 7 p.m. WMPO program 9 a.m. eaeb Sunday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF Til!: NAZA·
~NE. Samuel Blilye, po.otcr. SUnday
!l&lt;hooi9::1Ja.m.; WonhlpSerYice 10:30a.
m .; You111 Poople'a lerYice 6 p.m.
Evanlellllfc-.l&lt;e6:il0p.m. Wedn.aay
~«VIce 7

•

ASHER ·
FUNERAL HOME

s.-1
IIJJ part,

Mlehaelaoplo, one of the popular "Te-le
Mutant Ninja Turtles" a televlalon cartoon
character for today'• youth, was al Kroeers on
Tbuntlay to meet the children of the area and ·
pus out coollles: It aeemed the character, which

;

Un&amp;Uipectlng student riUUI for

•

lA. Gov.

!.

HYSELL RUN HOJ..INESS CHURCH,
pootor.SUndaySt:lloal9:30a.
m.: Worthlp lO:~I a.m.: Suilday•eveDIDI
,1
terVIet, 7 p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION 11 Bald
Knob, tocatlll on COwlly.Rold '3L Rev.
Roi&lt;r WOlford. p&amp;ltll'. Suoclay· !Jchool
9:30 a.m.; Momlnl WOrlltlp 10: 45 a.m.;
Sunday evealnl wonblp 7;00 p.m.; Wed·

Grove. '111e Rev. Laura A. Leach. pastor.

.

UWUNG.S.C0l1S ,

271 thrth

Cburch aervl&lt;e 9::1! a .m.; Suaday SChod
10:30a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Tom Runyoo. pastor. Sunday School 9: Jl
- .;;,;..,·IDLarry Haynes, s . s. Supt. Morning
,.
IO:JO
;:.u;:;;;,.u
THE. NAZA·
Ora

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11141112·1117 -1111-00KII '
CHURCH IUPPLIEI a IIILEI '

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OHIO

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-prayer serv!ceThuraday.
CARIEI'ON INTERDENO
ATION·
AL CHURCH, Klnplllry ·
. Rev.
Clvde W. Hendel'am., pUt... SunMy
School9:30 a.m.; Ralph Car~ Supt. E..,alng wonhlp 7:00 p.JII. Pra)'er meetlq.
Wedntlday 7:oop.m.
·
OLD BETHEL FREii: WILL BAPTIST
. CHURCH, 28C101 Slate Rooite 7, Mlddl~
port. Sunday !l&lt;liool !Oa.m.; Stniday &gt;!ml·
Inc ...,Ice 7:30 p.m.; ~ III!I'VIce,

7:30p.m.

••

13 Mlllln.t

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Joseph B. Hoaklns, po.otor. Bible
Cluo. 9:JOa.m.; MornlliaWorllltlpjO:JOa.
m.: Evening Worllhtp. 6::.1 p.m. 111uroday
Bible Study, 6:30p.m.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
HarrtalllviUe Rd. (RLlta) Robert E : Pur·
tell, mlnllter; Steve Staal.,., Bible School
Supt.; · Harley JohDidll, Aul Supt. SUN·
DAY: Bible Schoci 9:30a.m.; Worllltlp
l0:30A.M.Illd 7:30P.M.: Wecltleodly Bl·
• ·
.,
lite Study,7:00 p.m.
ST. JOHN LU'I'flli:RAN CHURCH; Pine

1:_..,...

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. I

A
shopping on her lunch hour, nodced
that she wu running late. At the supernwket,
her last stop, she put the tpooetlelin her
?!'• left the shopptna' c;art in the~ lot
and drove back to the oftl&lt;=e. Then she realt'ied
that her pune wu· missing. She ran out t() the
car. No pune. She taced baek to the mliiret,
saying etery prayer she had etet learned. There
We.re vehicles parked all around where lhe bad
left the can a half hour befme. Not only _
Wa.
the can: stW there, her purse was still ln.it;
on dle top shelf, tialble to the world. NOtbina.
Including money, ch~lrhook, Insurance card,
etc., had been touched. At her HOUK of .
'Worship, she thanked the Lord for fol'JIWII her
carelessness and surrounding her property ·
with the most h9nest (or unoblertant) people
·
• He oould find.
•

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221 W. M11i1t

READ THIS tRUE -STORY

.,._

cHll'!ICH

sta.••
'1•"'"' ~-~~~ F~ C.lll~"

(row's fanilv ..

9~2·2975°

wetoome.
·
Rev. J'ullllanln
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. Arililor Cr&amp;lilr..
...- Sliter Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
JleY. Rebert !Meele
SChooi9:J) a.m. ; Morning Wonhip, 10:45
ASBURY .(Syra~te)- worship 11 a.m.
a.~MEROY FIRST BAPTIST, East
; Chureh SchQol9:4ll a.m .: Charge Bible
Study, Wedneod,y, 7:JO(!'h,m.; UMW, ftrsl
Malo St. Steve FuUer, pastor. George · Tuesd
1 30
01r Reh earsa1·
Skinner. Sunday School Su,..,.lntendent.
ay, :
p.rp.:
~·
Wednl!Silay 6:30p.m. (Thatc:heri
••
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Steve
Sunday School, 9::1! a.m.; MOrning WorENTERPRISE - Worsllft 9 a .m.; ·
Deav~r, Pastor. Mike S~lger, , -Sunday
ship 10::1» a.m. ; Wednesday evening · Ch h Sch 0o110
Blbl
lid ~·prayerllld Bible study, 7:30p.m. . .
,
a.m.:
e t y, • - ·
School SuJit.; Sunday SChool 9:30a.m.;
nRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Porn· · day.uro7:00p.ili.;
UMW, First Monday, 7;JJ
Mominc w&lt;rshlp 10:40 a.m.: Sunday
Pt•- E La
O':'fi
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Cbolr Reevenlnc wonhlp 7:30 . p.-m .; Wednesday
eroy . -.. ·
mar
ant, pastor;
hearsal. Children's At 6:30p.m . Aduh rot·
lowing: Wednesday. IRIIeyl
Ja&lt;k Noedl, Sunday SChool lrector. Sun·
day School, 9::11 a .m. : Morning Worship,
FLATWOODS- ChurchSchool.10a.m.
lllirlnlham: ~ 1.-...at. puler; ~
10: 45: evenlQwonhlD, 7:00p.m. {DS.T. )
; Worship. 11 a .m.; Bible Study, Thurs·
berl Cozart, . .lltant puler. SUadaf School
7:30 (E.S.f.); Weclneoday Prayer Ser·
day, 7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday. 6 p.m. (RI·
lOa.m.; Wlftlq&gt;7p.m.; w-.,,6p.m.
leyJ.
•
vice, 7:00p.m. (D .S.T. )67::1J~.M . IE.S.
).'lUtbmeettnr: IYed.~llirdiiii!I'VIoes.
T.l: Mlllloo Friends (ltg., 2·6), Royal
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
PINE GROVE H
CHURCH,\!
Amblludors (boys ag., 6-181 , and Girls
Church School 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
mUeot!Rt. 325. Rev. BeD J. Wallo. po.olor.
In Action (ags 6-18) on Wednesdays, 7 p.
Thuroday, 6: Jl p.m .'; UMWthird Monday.
(Thatcher)
·
·
Robert Searl.., S.S. Supt. Sunday School
m. (D.S.T. )l7 :Jlp.m. (E.S.T.t; Tuesday
9:30a.m.: Moralnl Worllilp 10::1! a.m.;
VIsitation, 6:30p.m.
. ·
HEA111 CMiddleportl- CburchSchool,
Sunday ....... aervtce 7:311 p.m.; WedFAITH TABERNACLE CHURC!I, 801·
9:Jl a.m.; Morning Worllhlp IO:JO a.m.;
neoday aervlce, 7:30p.m.
ley RUin Road, Rev . Emmett Raw sm. pas.
Youth Group. 4 p.m.; Wednesday, Bible
SILVER RUN •BAPTIST, Bill Lillie
tor. Handley Dunn, tupt. Sunday Scho&lt;i.
study 6:00p.m. Cholr rehearsal 7:00 p."m.
pastor. Steve ,U ttle, S. S, Supt. Sunday
to a .m.; SUndayevenlngservlce, 7:00p.m .
!Rlncl!leCschl.
School .10 a.m.; Mortdni wcntp, I! a .m.;
; Bible teaehlai. 7:00p.m. Thursday.
MINERSVij.LE - Cbureh Schbol t:IXI'
SUnday ...,..na Wll'llltlp 7:30 p.m. Prayer
SYRACUSE MISSION .. Cbe&lt;ry St.. Sy·
a.m.; Wonhlp oervlce !O:OOa.m.; UMW
meet• and Bllilethilly Wedneoda)', 7:30
racuse. Mark Morrow. pastor. Services. tO
third Wed.n~y. 1 p.m. (Thatch« I
p.m .: 1!'011thmoettnrWednetulayat7p.m.
a.m. Sunday. Evenlgs tervices Sunday
PEARLCHAPEL"- ChurehSchooi9 100
LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
an:==~'~irulc'll' OF CHRIST ~;\;'·' Worship Service 10:011 ~. m. (Mar· - REJOICING
383 N. 2Dd A11e., Mlddloport. Sunday
SchoallO a.m. Suaday-eventng 7:00p.m.;
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley.
POMEROY- Cburch School, 9:~a.m .
Mkl·-~ Wid., 7p.m.
Drll elder; Wanda Mohler, Sunday School
~orshlp 10 ~ a m Cb 0 1r eh
1
• r eeru
Supt. ~SUnday SChool 9;:J) a.m.: ·Morni1 ' ;Wednesday,
..
:IN
• .; .
7:
30 p.m.;
UMW,
secOnd - LANGSVIL~E CllltJSTIAN CHURCH
Suatlay !i.c:hool ;9: 30 a.m.: Je!I,Patlei'IOII:
Won,.p 10 :30 a.m.; EvenlngWorship7:
Tuesday. 7:Xlp.m.; UMYFSunday.6p.m.
. supt.; M6hdtal Wonhlp 10::1) a.m.; Sun·
p.m.: Wednl!ldly prayer meetlng7:llp.m.
(Meadows~
day evea1n1 oervtce, 1::1! p.m.: Wednes·
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: l!
dayevealnl....,..ce, 7:31p.m.
Radne. Rev'. James Satterfield, pastm-.
a.m.; Worship tO a .m. ; BlbleStudy, W@d·
EDii:N liNrrED BIIE111REN IN
Freeman WUilanu, Supl. Sunday School
n~ay. 7:30p.m.; U~YF ~Seniors) , Sun·
CHRIST, Ekl.., R. Blake, PQtll'. Sunday
9:t5 a.m.; Sunday and Wednmday even• . day, 6 p.m.; (Junton) every other Sun·
Sclioal 10 un.; , ~ Reed,
loaller.
tngaerviC8, r p.m.
day, 6 p.m. IRI1 ey).
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPI'IST.
RIITLAND- Chureh SChool; 10 a.rh.;
Mondnc -~ u a.m.; S
oy nJtht
oervtce~: Chrtatlu EndNvCI' 7:30 p.m ..
Corner Sbth and Palmer. James Seddon,
Worship, 11 a.m.; UMW Flrsl Mondly,
SOna aervl&lt;e 1 p.m. Prettcldng 1:30 p.m.
Past«r. Edna Wllsm. S.S. Supt.: Cathy
7: :«a p.m. (Crabtree)
.Rigp, Ant. Supt. Sunday School, 9: 15 a .
S..,.LEM CENTER - Cbureh School9:115 ' Mid-wHit prayer meot1n1, \VI!dt!etulaY, 7
p.m.
' ..
mE.; MomtngWorshlp, t0: 15a.m.: Sunday
a.m.; Morning Wor"shlp 10:15 a. m."
venlnl H'I'VIce. 7 p.lf\. Pr•yer meet:lng
(Steele)
~
,
IIQI OCK GROVE ClquJJTIAN, O..lcl ·
and Bible Study Wednetulay evonlng. 7 p.
SNOWVILLE- Morning Worship, 9:00
Prelltkl!, puiCI'. Chlfls Dilmtgan, SUnm.: Cblldren's choir practice, W~nesa.m .; Churc~ SchooiiO:OOa,. m. (Martini
d't' Scliool SUpt. Martdna Worslilp 9:30 a.
day, 7 p.m .; Adult choir practice, Wed., 8
m.; lliliilltt' scboal tq,ao••m.;
p.m.: Radio J"'ogram, WMPO. Sunday,
80U1111ERN CLUII'n!R
vtce, '7:00p.m.
,
B:JJ a .m .
Rev. Kn•«IIIBaker
MT. UIQON BAPTIST, Putor: Joe•N.
MIDDLEPOI!T CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Rev. Bor• Gran
School II: I~ a.m.; ·E ..,ntng
51h and Main, AI HartSGI1, minlster:
Ret'. C.IBidcl
,
; Prayer MHIIDI. 6: Jl
Richard DuBose, Associate Pastel'; Mike
APPLE GROVE- Church School9:00
Qerlaeh, Sunday School Superlnlendftlt.
a .m. ; Morning Wonhlp 10:00 a .m .; Bible
B!bleScbod9::Jla.m.; Mo~nln.Woriihlp
Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Prayer meeting
10 - 1 m E nl
w ••1
7:00p.m. Thuroday. (Hicks)
,
: ~ · · ve ng
or •• P : 00 p.m .
B)!;l'HANY - Worllllp t a .m.: Chu"'h
Wetlneoday. 7:00p.m. Prayer meeting.
SchooiiOa.m .; B!bloSI•""•WetlneodlyiO
_,
MIDDLEPORTCHURCHOFTHENAZARENE. PASTOR R2v. iJoyd D. Grimm,
=~~~r;•;, ~=i Fellowlltlp Wed·
Jr.. po.otor. Jean Klrneo. SUnclay SChool su_.
CARMii:L _: Cburch iJchoo1 t: 30 a.m:;
perlntenclelit. Sunday SChool 9.30 a;m.,
worship, 10:4!1 a.m. S.oond llld F011rth
tdorniDr WonNp Service, 10:30 a.m.; Sun- • ~WIIIay~ Fell.....,lp dtaner with Sutt.,
::.;n~;:rrce;.6 p.m.; Wedneoday ' third Thuraday. 6;30 P-!11· CBikerl.
.
SYRACUSE
OF 111E NAZA·
· MORNING STAR - Chu"'b School 9:45
RDiii:. a.v. Glenn McMillan, poot&lt;i-. . a.rll.! W'o........p IG::III a.m.; Bible Study,
Merk Malam Su~lntendent. Sunday
Thu~~1.311 p.m. CBikeri.
-·-~ t·30 am.' · ornJ 1 wo hi1 10. 30
S
·- Chureb Scllool. 9:30a.m.;
~~ •
; •
n
n P. · . d Mol'lllnl
_ . , IO:t5a.m. ftrotaddthlnl
a.m.. Evan~lc oervh!r, I _.,nt.,
·Suntlbt; Felloorlilllp dlaner with Carmel
" " - and
alae Wednesday , 7 p.m.;
third'l11uraday, 6;30 p.m. IBik•).
Y...h""'"rd.?~
EASTJ.ET,\RT-Mornlftl- 1:00
lJNIRD OFIIDG11cck~MIN8'ftlf
111m: lllliroll!k:I\OOIIII:OOa.m.; t:=nnt
an o,..._ llolb
,.._., 7: 30 p.m. IGra&lt;:e) .
.
BARRIIIOIMLLE PRESIIYTERIAN
RACINE- a....,~ !lchool. 10 a.m.; WorCHURCH - !luiil!lr' Wonhlp Services , olt!pULIIL.i, ~-hMoilllaral7:311p.
t:toLm.: Cllarchs.hooi !0:15a.m ..
m.; lloa'arr.,erllnollflll.
IGDIILEPORT PRIEIIBY'n:RIAN · a.m. (!lrace).
lltntday lohool, I a.m.: Cbureb ....,.let, •
J(QIQmlnCHUII~S OFt ~~· lloltulw
•
1J: l5a.m.
lorlaO. 'n
~·: tar lnl~aaratul,llSYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PR!;SIIY·
tftr linin, Sunday !l&lt;hoalllapea.l'rtldtTERJAN SChool. 10 Lm.:
lart:30o.m .eacbSUndar. SUnclaT.,_
- - - - • - 1 0 · 1 am.
ll:30a.m.
~··- ·--~ .
.
ROBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
RUTlAND CJIIIRCH OF GOD, Pater,
CIIRJS-•M UIQON Ra,_.CIL lllltllw !li!ltoot !O:OOa.m: .
,.....,
, ......
•-"·
• ..., ....._florilttJ&gt;II:toa.m.Citll· 1181«. SUnday oervlce. !:30 e.m.;..,..
- · • Oltlrdt 11 e.m. ......, - . ,
1111 oervlc» 7;00 p.m. Prayer mi!elllf,
-7:00p.m. Wed.. f) p• mm • Y 011111 Lit·
Wedlteoday. 7:00p.m.
•

1

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... _

Pomeroy

'

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(6 141"2-~39 or

Futt1.M9r.
Ph. H1·1101

Sttadaf

, 216 S. Second
, POIMfOJ
M2·3325 ·

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MEIGS TIRE
COOER, INC.

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992-5130 Pomeroy

........... Oltit

IMW. M•i"

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Syracuse

INSURANCE
I SERVICES

SAUS &amp; SOVKI
992·7075

a-

Cabin1t llllinr

Brogan-Warner

H1·UII Pomeroy

RACINE PlANI8G MILL
lUI f(ork· • t.,
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SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

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PHARMACY

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MASON CHURCH OF CHIIIST, Miller
St., MMm. W.Va. SUnday B!bleStwty 10
a.m.; W........p llA.JII.Illd 7 p.m. WIIIID•
day Bible st.dy, YOCal ,JliUdC. 7 p.m.
LIBI!:RTY AMEMBLY OJI' GOD, Dud·
diDI Laae. Muoa. W. Va. J. )1, 'lbadttl',
p&amp;Otlll'. Ewtllla llfi'VIce 7:30p.m.; WomOII'I Mlllltry Thuraday, t. :JQa.m.; Wl!dnotday Preyer atu1 Blblo Study 7: :15 p.m.
. Hill SWE BAPTIST CHURCH, 81. Rt.
143 ju.. off RL 7. R2v. Jim• ft. A&lt;!ree Sr.,
putor: Rev. MUte WUiett, ARt. r ..tor;
Joe HvmphrO!'. S.S. SUpt; llltada)' ScMol
lOa.m.; MoraJncWorllltlpUa.m.; Iunday
&lt;Vflllliltl'vlce 6 p.m.; Wediteodly f!Vt!D·
tnl7p.m.
·
,
•
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'-Of

!aortb

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MT. MORIAH BAP:flST, Fourth and
St., Middleport.
~- BaUmgardner.
Gilbert Craig,
. ~;:;::::;:~fi'(~;:-;~::'";;:~ Main
Jr., putCl'.
Mn. Ervin
Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. "-Iibert
SundaySchooiSupt. SundaySChool9:00a .
,. ._.~cc.c;. ::::; Jeff Holter, lay lsder; -. m.; Wonhlp SPrvlce, 10:«5 a ..m.
School Supt. Sul)day ' • SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
mornlnr·wOrshlp and
- Joaepll B. Holklna~ ~angel~t, $Unday
10::1&gt; a .m.:· evening
BibleStudy9a.m.: Worship, lOa.m.: Sun·
preachl"' service first three SUndays,
day evening afto\rlce 6 p.m.; Wednesday
7:30 p.m.; Sprclal sefvlce fourth Sunday
evealngservl(e, 7 p.m.
; ~· .
evet~lnl, 7:llll p:m. ; Wednesday Prayer
PENTECOSTAL ,\SSEMBLY, RaCine,
Me~lnr. IIJble Study and YQUth Fellow·
RL 124. William Hoback, paata:. Sunday
..
Srbool10 a .m .: SuhUy evening '""let' 7
ship, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF; PROPHECY.
p.m. \Vednetulay 0Yelllngaerytce7 p.m.
Located on 0. J. White Road ol Hlthwoy
, CARPENTER BAPTIST. Doa Cheaclle.
160. Pat H011sm. pasta:. Sundav SChoollO
SUpt. SUnday School 9:30 a.m. Morning
a .m. Claaoealor all agel. Juntoi&lt; Cburch II
Worlltlp 10:30 a .m . Prayouervtce, altern·
a .m.; Morntng wonhlp 11 a.m. Adult
ate Sunday..
,
Cbolr praellcd p.m. SUnday. You1111Poo'I1IE CHURCH OF JESUS C!ffliST,
ple't. CblldreD's Cburch and Aduk ljlble
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd..
!lludy, W-esolayat 1 : 30 @:1ft.
natto.Fort Melp Part&lt;; Rutlalld. RObert
llO~'BAP11ST CHAP,t:L. :riO Grant
· Rldtanla, po.ota:.
at 7 p.m. on
St .. Middleport. Afltllaled wnh·. Southera
Wetlnadayoand SUiida'Yo.
Baptllt~tiOL David-Bryan, Sr.• a!l·
HARRISOI!!VILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
n!ster. SUida,y School 10· a.m.: Momlnl
TER o! the Wesl.,.an Holln.,s Chureh.
wonhtpl14.m.; Evenlqworlh1p7p.m.:
Rev. Earl Fields, palter. HenrY Eblin,
Wednl!ldlll· eYeoln1 -Bible study and
'SUnday !l&lt;hool Supt.; SUnday SChod 10 a .
pnyermeettng7p.m. ,
m.; Morning Worship 11 a.m.; Evening
BRADF.ORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St.
servlc:o 7:30 p.m. Wednetulay evening ser·
Rt. !2tandCo. Rd. 5. !)Prell Stump, pastor.
vice 7:30p.m.
William -Amberger, S. S. Supt.; Sunday
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF , FAITH,
School9:30 a.m.; MorniDJ Wor.ahlp 10::1!
Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday servtces9! JJ
a.m.: EYftling ~CI'Ihlp 7: :l) p.m. Wed.nes·
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Midweek service, 7:ll p.
tt-y-worship 7:30p.m.
~ ~
m. Thuuday.
ST. . PAUL LU'111ERAN CHUROH.
·
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL: Third
Corne&lt; Syr.mort! and Seoond Stl.. pg.
La
A •- h
t
Ave. f¥Y· Clark Baker, pastor.. Carl Notmer -.,,~ . -.loft b-.
ncv.
Ud '&amp;.oe8C 'pas cr.
t•••bam S nd
School S I S ~
SUndaySchoolt:t5a.m.Churchservl&lt;ell
...
• u ay
up· u.~ay
a .m.
School 10 a.m. with cl.ulll!l for all age.
VICTOR'f IIAPT!ST 5- N • d s
ii:venlng servtcet.a! 6 p.m. Wednfilday 81·
·
~ · - npaatcr.
t..
at 7::1! p.m. Youth services Frl·
Jam,. E.' Keesee.
dble study
Middleport.
Sunday momtn1 worship 10 a.m.; Even·
ay 8 17 : 30 p:m.
'
lng SfiYI&lt;e 7 p.m.; Wednesdav evening
ii:CCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St.,
worihlp7p.m. VlsllationThursday6:30p.
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson,
m.
past«r. Sunda)' Sc!hool 10 a.m.: Sunday
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: Davkl
evening service~ at 7 p.m. and Wednesday
~urlman. pastor. Sunday School, 10 a .m.;
~A'Il?rcRJ~·~.i;PTIST. kenn~hSmlth,
worship serv!CP !11 a.m.: Sunday night
past&lt;r. !kindau Srhool 9: 30 a.m ... chu...t...h
,worship service 1:30 p.m .; Midweek
3
11;
prayer servlef' Wednesdav 7 p.m.
tervice 1:30 p:m .; youth felloWihtp 6: 30 p.
WESLEYAN
BIBLt · HOLINESS
m .; B!bleotudy,~.Thurtday.) ; 31Jp.m. ,
ClHURCHo!Middleport, Inc., ~Pearl St..
FULL GOSP,;L LIGHTHOUSE. 33045
Rev. Ivan Myers. pasl«: Roa-er ~nley,
Htland Roid, PomerOy. T9m Kelly. pas·
Sr.. Su,..ay School SUpt. Sunday School
tcr. Duny Lambert, S. S. SUpL SuD&lt;Iay
t· 30 a m · Mornln •• ·•t 10 30
mornlilglervlce at lO a.m.; Sunday even•
· ••
K nOhuP : a .m.;
IDR.servlce7:30p.m. 1TuesdayandTinlrsEven• Worship 7: 30 p.m. Wednetday · day Sftvlcesat 1:JO p.m.
evening Bible lludy, prayer and praise
NEW HAVI:N CHURCH 'OF nn: NA·
s«vlce, 7 : ~~-m.
"7 .. o~ro
R
Gl do S
F.AITH GO!;IIEL CHURCH. Lon1 Bot·
-"~• 0\1.
ea n troud, paat&lt;r.
tom, Sunday SChool, 9: :1! a.!ll.; Mornlnl , SU ~aySdtoyoi9;:1Ja.m.; WSuonhtpsi!rvlce,
10 :-a.m.; outb service nday 6:15 p.
Worship 10: &amp;!a.m.: Sunday evenlng7:PO
p.m. (oummer
p:m . t; Wetlneoday
m.:.~ndapYemtlniMeiitrVIce?: .OOp.m. Wed·
nllht 7:00 p.m: (summer 7::1! p.m.).
n - y royer
~lnl and Bible Study
7:00p.m.
NEASii: SETI'LEMENT CHURCH, Sun, LMNG WORD CHE:STER CHUHCH
OF GOO - ·Gary HIDea, pastor. Sunday
day afterDOCIII services at 2: ~. Thursd•Y
eveniDIIervlces at 7:30.
•
School9::Jl to,10::1l a.m.; Worship arvtce
10:30 to 11:30 a.m.; Sunday eveidq: aer' rFIRS'I" BAPTIST CHURCH, :Maaon,'W.
vice, 7 p.m.; Midweek ""eyer Service,
v,. Pul,ll', Bill Murphy. Suilclay Schooi!O
~
a.m.; Sunday eventnr7:30 p.m. Prayer
Wed .. 7&amp;-m. .
t.a':mreur.:iih.copo.o~~CHU~~
meetlni and Bible study Wedneoday. 7: JJ
p.m. E:veryme welCome.
·
9;30 a.m.; Sunday and Wedfll ay even·
. RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
IDt;ffi:~~"1:~f::.·Rt. 7 on Polem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, po.otoi-. Sunday
~ E S t•Sr
Schooi!Oa.m.; Sundayevenln87:00p:m .;
P
Rev
Ro
·
~t · mt,. •
Wednetulay .,enlng prayor meettng7:00
mer11iBY· as~
pastor. Metvln DrMak_t, S, SW.Su~; S~ODdaJOY
p.jll.
30
School9 : a .m.: ornlnl or.rup • : :
SOUTH B)!;l'HEL NEW TEsTAMENT
i:Vflllnl W~rship 7:00p.m.: Wednetula~
CHURCH, Sliver Ridge. Duane Syden·
Prayer S.!]lce, 7:00p.m.
atrlcter,~tor: Sunday SChool 9 a.m.;
CHURCH,
RaUr,.d
Worship
Ice. 10 a.m.; SuadaY ev,nlng
' li'AITH DAPTIST
•
School
10
a.m:,
Mom·
St .•
Sunda '
serviCe, 7:00p.m. Wedneoday night Blblo
tna wonbiD lla.m.; Eveatnuervtce 6 p.
atudy 7:00p.m.
·

Services

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-on.

Sermonette

a~~'tlhiDk tbla Ia the klndofaacrlflceJeauahas.ID mlit~. ~/ '

' ~aerllccHte looks for Ia repentance - a complete turnlnl
lfllllllll Tbe iacirUlce be wanIa Ia for u to let our bearta «atone
be tiamed Into beartl ol fleab. AI Ute time of lbe prophet Ezekiel,
tile tartelltea ftl't ID eadle becluM IIIey repeated~)~ turned
aw~from God. 'ADd
tile Gild wllo keepl loviDI and
tor
nw pa'OI1IIM lill cblldrell tllat bewllllivetltema alew
beart ol •II and a 114'1' 1plrlt. H weaacrlflce ou._lvettO Giid,
Ht will talli our 4tY bOllel aDd breatbe neW .life Into them. Wbat
a Joy 10 DoW' ell Leataft .UOII tllat our tnulire lies wltll tbe
One whO 1111 bOrne our lrtefl and can1ed QUr IOITOWI!
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- Paal« Laura Lt!a!!ll

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governor.

c · Attla, contactedbyTheYoung·
:, stown VIndicator, ·said If Shu·
; trump doe,s n't want to be a
candidate, he has another pot.en·
·: ual candidate In mind .

.~ People
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neWS--.;..._...;.,..__ __

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"Do I have a chance?'' Shutrump asked. "What happens•
What If I win?''
His parents, however; said he
will withdraw.

Lottery winner Ia reluctant
mWionalre
.
. SAN DIEGO (Uj&gt;l) - A U.S.
Marlne who apparently won $3.24
million in the California lottery
has nof yet chilmed his prize
because he Is going through a
dlvoree and wants to talk to his
lawyer first.
Kamll Arabo, owner of Ute ·
Fiesta Liquor-Dell. In Carlsbad,
Calif .• said the holder or one or
the winning tickets Is a regular
customer who k,new shortly after
Saturday night's drawing he
correctly picked ail six winning
numbers.
.
LotterY . officials confirmed
Thursday that one of.twowtnning
Lotto 6-49 tlcketi·elllible to spiH
a jackpot wortb nearly Sp.5
mnllon was sold 'a t ArabQ'sS!ore.
"He's · played the same
numlters for two years." Arabo
said. "He came In after the
drawing and showed me a ticket
from the week before with the
same numbers. He told me the
winning ticket was at his bouse. "
Arabo would not disclose the
winner's name but said he is a
45-year·old Marine stationed at
Camp Pendleton. .
.
After the two men compared

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
•·• United Presa International
v
PAUL .IS FORGMNG: Paul .
•McCartney returned IO' Japan
' Thul'sday for the first tl.me since ·
.•he was busted there for mari· jua~a . possession 10 years ago
rand said he had ~o harsh feelings
.about the arrest. "I went against
•'the law of the land and If you do
,that in any country, you get
punished for It," he told repor·
ters ln Tokyo. " I don'l have any
.:bad feelings about that. It's
. finished." Because of the arrest.
J•McCartney hasn't played Japan
.since 1966 with the Benlles and he
•had to · gel special permission
. .from the Justice Ministry for his
six-show tour. McCartney and
', band pefiormed a song at a news
conference and the subject of
.'drugs came up again. " As far as
"I'm concerned, alcohol Is often
~'o re dangerous than pol." ' he
, sald. " I think mediCi!! people

'

cursed her, crudely grabbed her
should draw up a list for the.youth
breast and threatened to kill her
of the :.vorld to explain what are
she spurned him atter a
·when
the most dangerous substances
las'
week. Authorities also
party
that are available. I don't think
suspected
· cocaine, marifound
pet would be high on the list
juana, hashish, drug paraphermyself. I'd advise anyone to stay
nalia and explosives when !hey
straight. Stay nl!lural. non:t use
searched Thompson ·s house bu I
any drugs or stimulants tir booze
no additional charges have been
or anytblng."
filed yet.
GONZO CHARGES: Gon2o
Journalist Hunter Tbomp110n·
CUOMO DAUGHTER SLIDES
, goes to court March 13 to answer
BY: Madelln• Cilomo , thPrlaugh
to misdemeanor charges flied by
ter of New York Gov . Marlo
a woman who claims he sexually Cuomo. dldn' t get a licket even
though police in Albany, N.Y..
assaulted her at his Aspen, Colo ..
home after slie refUsed hls hot discovered her driver 's license
had expired . The matter came up
tub lnvltar ion. Thompson, 52,
who Is free on $2,000 bond, claims Tuesday when another woman ,
the charges filed by Gall Palmer· I Karen .Bellamy , 28, of Buffalo,
Slater, 35, a · writer from Port
backed into a car driven by
Huron, Mich.. are just . to get
Madeline, 25, a Jaw student. The
pub!Jclty for a new business
New York Post said pollee
Investigated the smas h-up, In
venture. whlclt he said was
selling sexual aids and lingerie.
which Madeline suffered a cut
Palmer-Slater, who had planned
lip. · but issued no citations to
lo Interview Thompson, says he
either Bellamy or Cuomo, whose
license expired on Aug. 23.

1Trinity Church Lenten
lbreakfa~t held ;recently
'l

A crpwd of approximately 120

l people at tended the Lenten
j breakfast

a~ quiet hour :.at the
Trinity Church wbl~:h was hosted
: by the wornen ot the church on
' Wednesday morning. The pro1

'
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l Mary
~r::ot:rJ'=~~E1l':a ~=:.
VIrginia Reibel, and Neva

Seifried.
The welcome was e1ve11 by Gay
Perrin and unison grace by all .
proceeded the·breakfast.
·! Special music was provided by
: the Women's ChOI'UI whiCh sane
1 · 'At the Foot of the Old Runed
: Cross,"
Pat Holter ~~erve~ as
• j,
accompanist and cbolr ll)t!mbera
lncltlded Lola 'Ann Burt, Mary
~ Skll\Der, Dianne Hawley, Mary ,
, v. ,Stewart, ·Allee · Globokar.,
~ Irene Salley, C8ralyn Tltomu,
• Linda Mayer, DotdeMusaer,and
l Gay Perrin.
' Lenten reflections was con·

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the numbers , Arabo said, he
congratulated the winner and
gave him a claim form . Thema·n
said he was In ,the process. of
divorcing his wife and would
consult a lawyer before picking
up the prize.
"He looked nervous," Arabo
said. "He wasn't very happy ." ..
The man did no t tell Arabo
when he would claim the prize or
what he might do with the money .
. "But he's nol going lo le t $3
mUll on sit there, even If he has to
share jt with his wife," Arabo
said. "Her attorney will make
sure of thai. "
Suspicious bag proves to be corn
chips
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP !\ - A
suspicious looking lunch bag !Pft
on a city bus proved be a pack of
corn chips and not a bomb.
An anxious driver with thE&gt;
Memphis Area Transit Aut~orlt y
called poljce on his bus radlo
.Thursday to report the objecl,
which pollee described as a bag
wrapped in aluminum foil, said
P.olice Capt. G.E . .Jordan.
Jordan said officers ca,lled to
investigate determined thar the
package was a commuter 's
snack.
' 'There wasn't anylhing to It,'
Jordan said. · 'Som~ one \Pft a
sack on '(he bus and he (t he
driver) assumed it was a bomb.
It was just a simple mat lE:I' of
·corn chips len on the bu' "

in the news,_________

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"A new heart I will give you, and a new 1plrlt I will put within
you; at\d I wUI take out ot your flelh the beart of stone·arid give
you a beart of nesh; " - EZekiel 36: 26
• ,
· Wben I waa jp'owine up, Len I was a time of "giving up.:: We '
gave up candy, Ice cream and IOda pop every year, and even .
thoqh we never had very many sweet1 the rest of the year
. anyway"' those HYeD weeks were agonizing for me. La1t-year,
when I waa a dt~~PiaiD at Ohio State Onlverslty HosPita,ls, I
cleclde4 to give up IIU! dellciOQ fror;en yocurt 'In the hospiU\1
cafeteria. For . ieVen weeks, I craved that YOillrt. but the
Monday after Euler, when I equid eat It again, I almost foraot
· even to 10 to the yocurt machine. .
,
.
.Many of ua bave "liven up" aometblng for Len't- choColate,
11111oldq, aleobol, cleilerts-ln remembrance of Jesu• Cbrllt;s
~acrlflct! for us on the Crola. I wollder IIOilletlmel If that sort of
"lfvlq up" cmly mail!tt us crave m.o re. For aa Maitbew wrltel,
"Where your treuure Ia, tbere your beart wDI be 8110." Do we
· walt brqllltlelltlylor EUIA!I'IOWI! can retum toOIIr "trealiurea'' '
.

BOARDMAN, Ohio (UPI)- It
· took a telephone call from his
motber for a 20.year-okl Ohio
. State Unlv.erslty sophomore to
~ learn '· he Is a candidate for
• lieutenant governor.
, Christopher Shutrump's par·
i!nts learned or their son''s candl·
· dacy when a-newspaper reporter
' called with qul!stlons. They had
' no Idea what the reporter was
· talking about; so they called '
·
.
. their son.
"I hear you're running for
.. lieutenant governor, " Jane Shu, trump said.
"What?" exclaimed the son.
• As It .turns out, his candidacy
' was filed by a man he met briefly
.. In a bus shelter. That man Is
' write-In gubernatorial candidate
'."James ,E . Attla of Columbus.
.. ShutJ'ump said he signed At··tla's Petition for ·governor. and
' then signed · 'a notber piece of
:~ paper, , beltevlng he wa~ reglster"' ing to vote In Franklin County.
That second signature appar- .
, ently was used by Attla to file
'' Shu trump's name with thesecre·
' tary of state's office as a
, candidate for lieutenant

on T.\1. flpta lor pod and justice, was a bit with
the youapters of the area. Rlclured here are just
a few of those youngsters. Michaelangelo will be
at Kroeers a1Jaln today &lt;!friday) 4-8 p.m.

dueled by Mae Mora who read
from Luke 18:42 and Matthew
16:1&amp;.
The group sana "Wounded For
Me" and the service concluded
wllb an ancient collect.
Chairmen for the breakfast
were Marie Hauck and Pauline
Mayer. Clarice Krautler and
Gay Perrin aerved as greeters.

step In for tbe 6,auo' c:Qvered b)
. SCOTTSDALE , Ariz. (UP!) union contracts.
More than 9,000 unlon employees
The slrlke caueht some travel·
of Greyhound Lines went on
ers by surprise. In the Jackson,
strike Friday after a diiY of
Miss., terminal. Flossie West·
marathon negotiations failed to
brook, 64i, said she was not told of
produce a new contract with the
the
strike threat Thursday morn·
nation' s largest lnterc~ty bus
lng when she purchased a ticket
line.
·
to Chicago.
Picket lines went up at 12:05
"I'm shocked, but where else is
a.m. MST outside Greyhound ·
there
for me to go?" she said,
terminals . across the country.
"
I
've
got
to get to Chicago. "
Drivers were toW to park their
She·
said
she contacted Am·
buses at the nearest terminal.
trak,
but
was
told all seats to
"We are on strike for two
Chicago
were
booked.
..
reasons," said Jeffrey .Nelson,
In addition to. the drivers, the
spokesman for the Amalgam·
a ted Council of Greyhound Local contract tbat expired at midnight
Unions. ·'The company has re- Thursday covered 1,475 malntenance workers and 1,660 o.fflce
fusec) to bargain in good faith
with the union and. number two. workers In telephone lnforlna·
lion cenll!rs In Omaha, Nell., and
because the company at 12:01
Charllltte, N.C., and the account· .
a .m. unilaterally Imposed lis
lng center in West Des Moines,
Jan.10 offer for a contract. It was
Iowa.
a u11anlmous vote to strike."
Greyhound serves about 9,500
Edward M. Strait, president of
communities
ln the 48 continenthe Amalgamated Council or
tal
states
and
says
It provides tlte
Greyhound Local Workers, said
only
public
transportation
to
job securtiy was one of the maJor
about
·
9,000
communities
that
issue$ that s,talled negotiations. ·
have no airlines or rail passenger
Greyhound spokesman George
service.
Gravley Sl\1~ replacement drlv·
P. Anthony Lannle, Greyhound
ers, hlred through newspaper
advertisements In the past executive vice president and
month, . were In place and the head of the company's negotlatcompany would maintain limited · ing team, said, "We offered a
package wortb $14.1 million. or
service, aiming to restore full
6.9 percent, In the first year. That.
!iervlce by the end of March.
Is an excellent offer !rom a
"All the replacement drivers
company
that lost almost $20
who have finished training have
mtlllon
over
the last three years
been given assignments. told
\s
far
above
the average of
and
when to report and where, "
company-union
negotiated
set·
Gravley said. The 's pokesman
tlements
of
the
last
two
years."
~aid he did not know how many
Greyhound said Its package
new drivers had been hired · to

was worth $t&gt;l mUllon over tbree
years.
.
"That ls all this company can
afford." Lannle said. "and the
uniOn did not dlspull! the com·
pany's Inability to Increase Its
offer. Instead, they wanted us to
Increase fares lor our passengers
by 10 percent and we refused to
do that ."
Nelson $aid the ulllon 's last
counterproposal. made Thurs·
day, would have cost the com·
. pany no more than $20 million In
the first year and provided wago
;lnd benefll increases averaging
between 4 and 5 percent.
About 70 drivers hit the picket
lines In Portland. Ore., as o!fl·
cials of the 19 local unions
emerged from a closed meeting
at a Scottsda)e hotel to announce
the strike had begun.
.
' 'We have been pushed right up
to the wall as to trying to get this
thing resolved," said Davl)l
Moon of the PorUand local of the ·
Amalgamated Transit Union. ;
When it became apparent a
strike was possible Thursday,
the· Greyhound ticket office In
Champaign, Ill.. started restrict ·
lng sales to rout.e s where It was
· known Ihe bus was one depot
away, said station supervisor
Rosemary Newby . .
"''ve just bought a big bottle of
Tylenol;' ' she said.
Passengers were not happy.
Mike Garnsey , one of those
caught in Portland, said, "A
flight costs $400, a car is S200or so
and I have to be In San Diego. so
I'm stuck nght here. "

.

!

Andy Rooney back on '60 Minutes'
NEW YORK (UPI) - CBS,
concluding Andy Rooney "is not
a man who holds 'prejudlce in his
heart," has given the crusty
commentator a reprieve from his
thrt:e-month suspension and will
allow hlrri to return to "60
Minutes" Sunday . · ·
·
Rooney will ·discuss the re·
marks he made concerning
blacks and homosexuals that led
to his removal from the popular
televlsloll magazi ne on the next
show .
CBS News President David
Burke, 'who yanked Rooney off
tile air Feb. 8 after publication of
an. Interview he gave to a
newspaper with a homosexual
readership, said Thursday that
the one-month banishment from
tpealrwaves was long enough.
''It Is time Andy returned to his
proper place on '60 Minutes...,
Burke said.
During his absence, "60 Minutes" slipped In Its overall
.ratings. It had he!(! the ratings
for Its time period, but last
Sunday evening losl to ABC's
"America's Funniest Home
Videos."
The crusty essayist was sus
pended without pay for remarks
about blacks he was quoted as
making during atelephone Inter·
view with Chris Bull. a reporter
for the Advocate, a biweekly
hqmosexual newspaper pub·
\!shed In Los Angeles. Rooney
denied making the remarks and
Bull said he did not tape the
interview.
"An(ly Rooney and I have
discussed at length the events
thai led fo his suspens,ion as well
as. the debate that has ensued
over the past month." Burke said
In a statement.
"Andy has consistently stated
publiCly over tills time that he is
not a &lt;man who jtolds prejudice in
his heart and ilnlnd toward any
group ln our society.
' 'Those of us who know him and
work with him. know two thingsfirst, that Is true, and second,lt is
time Andy-cetumed to his proper
place on '60 Minutes," ' Burk~ ·
said.
Last week, a militant gay
organization expressed anger at
reports that Rooney -might be .
reinstated before the three
months were up and accu5ed the
news me&lt;Jia of Ignoring Rooney's
earlier blast at homosexuals and
focusing only on the anti-black

allegations.
But Benjamin Hooks, execu·
tlve director or the NAACP. said
last Friday his organization had
"no problems" with the early
return of Rooney, asserting the
commentator had "personally
assured us· that he did not m'a ke
the alleged statements relative

to race.''

·

Homosexual activists had tar·
geted Rooney following a statement ·he made in a Dec: 28
commentary hi which he sai!l
"homosexual unions" cause pre·
mature death.
Later, In a letter to the
Advocat.e before his Interview
with the paper , he explained,
somewhat graphically. why he
tho~ghl homosexuality "was In
bad taste."
, ,
Thursday. the Gay· &amp; Lesbian
Alliance Against Detamatlon
issued a statement saying It felt lt
"has achieved Its goals of creatIng a positive dialogue with CBS
through which we can work to
prevent homophobic remarks
.s uch a's those made In December.
by Andy Rooney from slipping
through the network's exlsdng
standards of broadcast
acceptability ...
However, the group said It has
not heard from Rooney
"We hope to flnd a new
sensitivity to these issues evident
In his broadcast this Sunday,"
the statement said.
Burke, In his statement, said,
"Painful though th ese ·events
have been, we have all learned a
great deal about how senslllve
and fragile our society ts - how
thoughts and words c an be
misunderstood. how deeply peo·
pie and .groups can be hurt lf
great care is not laken lit
conducllng public discourse.
·.'While I have not spoken
publiCly on the matter, I have

listened to the opinions and
comments or various gay and
lesbian organizations, the
NAACP, as well as many Individuals whose judgments 1 also
respect.
"I am concerned that the
balance between the needs of a
news organizat'lon to maintain Its
reputation for fairness and objec·
tivit y, free of an Inference or
bias, and the ability of comment·
ators to speak without undue
constraint be maintained," he
said. ''I believe that balance has
been maintained."
In the interview in the Advocate_, Rooney was qu_oted as
saying, "I've believed all along
that most people are born with
equal lnteiHgence, but blacks
have \llatered down their genes
because the less Intelligent ones
are the ones that have the most
children.·"
Rooney hotly. denied having
made the statement after Its
publication.
"I not only deny the quote
artrlbuted to me, I say the
quotation was made up by a
young reporter who couldn't take
noles," Rooney said after his
suopension.

Interested in
· buying or selling a
prom gown?
Contact...

FOXY LOCKS
BEAUTY SALON
304·112-3794
NEW IIAYIN, WY. ·.

Attention
Meigs

•EEKEND SPECIALS
FIIDA'I IUICH 2, 1990
CHICKEN NUGGO PLltTII ....;,.................,_ *2.51

A Qon....,s Sta PI- SaMnt ot 0.. All-- Moll Chi.. ., N....... ( - 'n'
Sour • lllrbeque IMinl, ~ot Golden PrMm Frl• andYourChoi-:-ot ~mtm•
Cole llaw, M101r0ni I .. ad or Wild leMI.

SUNDAY I IUICH 4, 1990

HO.IAICID HAM DINNIIt ............................ s.e.7t

A aon ..... ....,ln(l of Homo 1111111- l'ootullot Our Own liorn..,...oiiWalnul-. Wllh lollloped
1 - Corn 811d Mol lui·
torotl 11o1 oo H--ada · - · (With H..arl. CoH-. - - or Deul!lw-. .
...~ Pr~~!i~Y · -· (A lmllt Drlok ot ~ot Taa May le Jloiiot-.1
'

-•-.HOt

C.LI'S P.OmoN ..............................- ..................... •s.st

lAM SANDWICH ALONE ..................................... *2.49
HORS; 11 A.M. TO 6 P.M. 7 DAYS A WDI

THE DAILY SENTINEL WILL
PUBLISH A. COMMEMORATIVE
.
ISSUE OF THE VILUGE OF
POMEIOY'S 150 YEllS OF
INCORPOIAnON ON
THUUDAY, APII126, 1990.
IESEIVE YO. AD SPACE. TODAY..__
•

992-2156
ASI FOI

IMANIIUIISorDAVEHIIIS

�•
The Daily Sentinel
NOIIce

Classified

PUILIC NOTICE
In accordanc.wrthtt.er•
quiriiMfttl of the Job T,._
;ngl'lftMnlllp Act of 11.2.
S...ion 104. tho folowtnt
Job Training flrrotr~m il
avail_,. f'Or publla rwiM.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD CALL '1'12·21 Sb
MONDAY. thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

., '

DWUIC:I .. M• 191 &lt;&gt;.1111 0 1 f'tll•ton 1:9Unll.. l'l"lull O!l l:llt -

I:I.I C:

' Rtc-• I 50 clucawnt fa• •a• OI •D ;f"l tCI¥ t nct
' f191 •Ot - Q 111·-·y t nd FOUnl:l tdl UnCIP 1§ WI'IDI Will Bf.
' "" 3 ON II' no en•ot
' P11ct a t tel tor t l• .;aon.•t , ..1• •• •• oowbl e cm ct ottO cot:
" 7 po•nt ""11¥PI oruv u•c
'Sen1•nt1 11 ~1 rnoonJJb{l tar 11rou 1tt11r l1r11 o..- ! CI'IIt~
lor.,.., .. 1o,., a., tCIIuns on OtiHI I C•ll ll..tole 2 :00 D m

a.. tn .. Publlc•oon totnm••
COIIIttoon
•.o..ds 11111 musl D• .•
10o11nc• ,,.

RATES •
., s

'

II• ·

Annnuncemenls

cnr~r I he

Classified pa/!e·'

Mllon· Cc. WV
At .. Coae JO£

MtiQt ca ... n~v

AruCooefi1-'

Aru·coae &amp;1~

446 - GthtDD-111

i!il :l- Mtcldl .,Ofl

6.&amp;:0 - Arla,. Dol l

6 76 - P: P ltl. . n\

4!i8 - Lto r

Pom ... oo

36 7- Ch• nor ~

143- Doru•nc
l•?-L1!111'1 FillS

57i - Aap•t Grovt
773 - MIJon
11112-hew Htve n

1 .•!1 - Atc •nt
742-Rulltnd

i37-Bulltl&lt;l

185 - Cne~t• •

89S-LIItrl

2- 1" MeMot 1

.30
.42

.eo

.O!i l diV

( 52 - SDOrtlflg Goocn

~ 53-AniiDUII
I &amp;.&amp;-MIIC MltCntnG•Ie
••. - Bull(ltng $uppl••.
1 5&amp;- Ptu totS-"" .,.
I 67-MuMC:el lnllrwnt'"h
~e-J.r ..jiu
v,9 .. 11M"•
59 - For $111 or ltUt

4 - G•v•-· ~
!lo - I"IIPP¥ ACi t

10 a ...

·I

a.

tm,Jinymenl

Sr.rv1r.r.o::

i tl 1 -

hom f.QI,IIftlniJI"II
10 su~
63 - ~.Vettoc~

I e2- w"'""a.
e~ - ..,..,

2,-1011'"•• OllPOIIUn•t l
tl:l LOI ~

23 - Prai•••Onlllill'voc:81

Real Eslale
31 ..- Homn lor St•t
32 - MoO•II"'OI'I'IIIIOI 5•11!

33-F'"'" lor s .. ~
34-&amp;us•n•l Bulltltng ~
3S-- Lau &amp;. Acr ..tllf

,..

Grt• n

I 65 - !iltd &amp; ~IP1illll '

Trans DOrl allo 11
) ? 1 - Autot tor Stlt

36 - llnl t:nlll....,lnttc:

MNhli4'

~en:

42 - Moblll! hom., tor Flen1
•J- ~trmt- tO r F11n :

•• - AI""""":

to•

Ren t

B1 ·· Home. u•nor01111m.,., • ·

·

82 - Piuma•nlil •

t1uun 11

! 8J ~ EilC.,IItnG ·
I S~ ,... EieC'Ir~.;ll &amp; Rclrlflettuon

•!5-Fu&lt;nltrted Aoom t
46 · !ioue t o • lll1n '
47-V'tlnlte 10 11en:

l"f
; e~-G•n•••.,•uun~
Gef Re,.."UitS F
. ,..
48 - f.,~m•""'' ''"'
86-Mo•" •omo ""'''
1 7
--~~~~~~!!!!!!~!!~~~~~!!!!~ ••~-~'i'l''i'l-1'111111111111°1-lul',~i"i"i"llllllll.
&gt;

Public Notice

ro~o~etoh~c~uetotundllm~
-~

IOt-.1

~--·

Length of
Timet
·
A. lido HA 71!1: 111.Job
PV'SIO
Club. 2· 3 - · · 121 Cl11•
GAI.LIA COUNTY.
roori&gt; Troinlntl ICIIT), vorieo·-J
MEIGS COUNTY PlAN.
to 1 mulmum of 52 - •
11} 1'he 'lromon-LawNnc:e ,_. ~:Jrogram " " ' but not to
CAO ts the AdminimMtve exca.d 104 Wftlls. Firat
Entitv of SOAll24 JTP.Ohio OOnlideration WIA lte gtven
Fundt. . Tht G•li•M.tp to funding CliMltl poa...
CAA is the Subrecipiem: of sinv ••• thlft 1 Bacu:eiMI·
JTPA funds for GiHiil and rMto, 131 On·tllo·JoJio Troin·
M.tigs Count-..
'
' lng, veri• pet cantr8ct:. 141
121 Tho Qlljii.. Meill CAA · Youth Try~ Out. 2!0 hours
will deliver Pf011'1ft1 lctiYi·
maximum. Special conlid·
~~~ for tho following JTPA· el'lltlon will be given to vet~
TitiM : Title IIA 78!1: TkleiiA lfllftl and hendcepped indi·
3!1 : IIA 8!1: Title Ill: 1% ' vlduolo through thO "10%
lnc.,.tiYe: and EQWAA .
Window" with eiJg;bllky
(31 The ' Ohio BU,..u of' .,.rffitd b,- OIES .
·
I . Tkle IIA 3!1: Thio pro'
Employm- ServicM wil
grem wll MrW Oldtr'Worit·
prDYfda intake and rtftfrat
"" , "'" 15 end wMh
•rvk:• to dettwmint and .'ICIIvklel
llin~w to tiiOM for
verlfit th• identHICitlon Of
IIA 7811 but wltli tho oddl eligible epplloento. .
.
tkJn
of Work ~l!llllilnca •c·
141 'Geiii•MIIIp CAA d..
ltv.1'1·it1 Proof8ml in ICCOr·
Title UA IIi: This "'"'
dance with the poUcy ltated
;n ~~· Merch 18. 18SI,pubo gram will lllrW ...... m
llahed . E!O/·AAP Stet• lo~!:"" trolnlng ot pulllloly
inattrankltnl for
lnOnt. All Fildorll(.ond Sllto fu
LAw1 · concerntno
Civil -·high lchool trelnlne.
~lgtiio end .Equel Oppoitun· Perticip1nts If'! thi1 . ttainlr.g
lty orelollowod end-~IN{od progl'llm mutt bt In lor.g
t•m training. Four (.tj ve•r
to.
.
_
15) Qolllo•Miigo CAA u101 degrft programs a,. pr•
.
a ~o,bl~entrv acaoun:ting eluded .
0 , Tnla liB: Thla p&lt;ogrom
syltem to inaurw •ounctfll·
Mrv.. aUgibae youth 14-21
Clll 'control. ICCOUntiftQ. IU•
dit. and debt coiiKtlqn pro- yean •of age during the sum·
through
c"uret and the proper dis~ mer achool
burul and accounting ot Work Experience, Job Club.
fundi received in ·accor· other career plaMing ppto..
dance Wrth required l•w• ,.tion acttvh•. end Nme·
dial ectucaUon.
and rttulations.
E. Thle I% 1..-tlve: lo
161 Proa...,., actNitiel per
title' 1ra u follows: !NOTE: funding In eddition to thoae
All appUcants/peniciPintl above th" is eamed b•ed
racliv. UHitment .. p.n upon the performanca of the
of the JTPA outreach effon. previous year. PrOgramming
AIMsiment is ulld 10 htlp is contingent upon 1pecifled
'
e_ach client plln the achleYe~ guidelin•.
F.
EDWAA:
This
program
mem of carMr / job goals:
and ,11 a first step to. tM- • , . . disiOCitted worktrl ·
county ciusroom training who are unemployed due to
waiting 'list. A ..••ment is a me11 layoff or piln1 clo•
uaed 10 help applican1a/cll· ing. Acctvhies include A•
Inti aCCIII Olh~ funding ee~amern. Job Club, and

-..,e

b.....,

, 72-Truc~&lt;t to• ltti~ ·
,. 73 - V•n1 &amp; • WO 1
! 741-MotarcvetetO ·
· 75 - Jia•tt &amp; Mol art lor Slit
1 7e-AIIt0 P1r11' Ace• to"*
I 7 '? •• Aul0 Fltott'
! 76 - Cemoonc f.o,upmt nt
. 79-Ctmp~$ 5 Motor l'lomn

I;MJIM.f

&amp;Ourc• Md llfVfoll ill fhA
1¥0nt JTPA funding io u.,.

"";:tv

Fum Supp hr. s
li. l1vesluck

ll!.ij!Ugijil

41 -'I'IOUHJ tor

liG? - Cootv~ l t

.20

I 5 1- .houNI'Iald Gooo•

3-Annoucorml'l'n •

2.; -Mon..-

fol/olrin/( IPlc•phone exchiln[!e&gt; ...

.·

Merchandise

'

1-Catct o r Th.,lr5

14-&amp;ultn•• Tt~tn•n~
16· Scr&gt;ooll a. ''"''''"l!ua"
1 6- lltd•o T\1 &amp; CB RtDt••
1 7- MIIC:IIIen-au l
1 8-WtntiCI 1o De

lUESOAV PADfA
WEDNf.SOAV ·fiAPUI
TI1UASDAV PAPER
'AtD•v JIIADER .
SUNO A¥ PAPEfl

37S- WII!"Iu1

15
15

13-tnlu,.ncl!

MONCA¥ PAPfR

256 - GuYin 011 1

1&amp;.00
S9 .00
s13 .DO
$ , , J01d1 y

1 1 -tMIC Wtnttrl
1 2 - S JI UihOn WIO!el!

COPY OEAOLINE -

Over 16 Word1

101 CIII"MCUI..,.. r~nt. brO ....... UilCI~ t Wdl.be Ch.-ped
n ·,... iiJ MOiflle till

In•

s-~M't.a

' A C!tUII •t&lt;l
pllced ' "Tnt Oto,. $1nunei
t iOI - Cl.lthtcl CIIIDI ... Bul'"•l C.. d tnd 1.,11 noi:ll:tl)
woll tii O tpp .. r ' "I'M~ ,. •••lfll "'•v•t lf •nd th1 G• ll •
POitl Dtotr l robunc. nllth•ng CIVI' 111.000 1'110m11

31&amp; -vo .,t O"
24S - A•o G11ndf

u .oo

,5
15

3 '
E
'0
MonthlY
Rill .. tot

1nc:1 F'ounc
1- 't'ard &amp;t•I IIU•CI•n IOVInce
1-""'bhc: '-••• 6 Awc loD.,

C1u' a t 1"''""'
' " Memo,..,..

G1tlo1 C.ounh

Rate

Worcts

Oa vs

6 - ~o5t

~Y i d

!'CIII•""•m.-u

2.1810 .

Fridly.

•

Public Notice

Marc:h 2, 1990

..-

T..._._.
- - · - - •·
0 "::

.....

::'C;,u-

m

-lol-•

IDA 114 _ , _ _

i!ntky ""' """"
PloiiW . ,
eppMend
to t h o - to' -oh !hi
..,lvMieo meet till . -

perto..._,oo - -· -

111 All p r - tunCung

end
~
11111cllnb are eubjtct 10
fedeill. &amp;Ute, end IDA

..,..,

•2&amp; directives.
TIMi above •• .ummery ot
CIIIIIJI.Molgo
CAA JTPA
~Mmif18 for PY'IO.
Complete progr•mmlng ca.
uMs .,. W81teble for rev'-'
by the public. For further m.
tonn*n. " ' - a 0111 the
Qellio-MIIip CAA JTPA Acirntniotmlvl
011101
In
Ch11 hi 1 387 7342 882
'
.
or
1828·
".
GoiU•Miigo CAA 'Ia en
Equel Opportunity /Affimietlve Aotlon E m f3) 2, 1to

-"'·"p='u""bl~lc-N,..,...CII-1,...~-.,PuiUC NOTICE

~II honbygltron that

on till 14th diJ of Meroh.
I HSIO. ot I :00 p.m. the
ao.d of Tho Melli' County
Commie-. w11 hold •
...,... for the prapalld
Gillon of .Rood In
1c1t11o
T451. Tho
.... bo hold In the
Offloo of tllo MillgoCoun.
ty ~- .. Court·

v•

r--...

Pomeroy.

lroioM.

417U.

Ohio

Tho p u - of tho ofor•
Hkl -Inti 11 to dotormlne
whott. tile - i o n of

. ._

T4181o for tho public'$-·

-=·~ tho

- i o n of lclplo

~-

. ..,.,....

r.wnotiiP

" "' ot
moy
end co~
thoboCommloaionlrt Ottloe. Melal County
PO-oy•

Cou-•·
Ohio.

MlipCounty
Commio-•
Mery Hobot-. Cleric
121 23: 131 2, 2tc

IIWI--.:: •f

12:00 ,,..,, Meroh
11.1-lntlleoltlotolthe •

T- a-...................
-p

~

... 4a4

..

--·--- ·
••••&amp;.,

'Junk caN wlh or without
IIMMra. Clll Llrry Uvllly 114111 1103.

ISO. Call
Spm
. 114--441--ch•
long. after
4 draw
rods.
All for
8320.

-=·lolclmult contain tho -,.
lul-ofw.y-or

::J:.'&amp;.

MtOOmpeniMI " ' 1 ohlc:lk or ~,
bond l.n t11o ..,..... of

tiOO.OO to tllo _.,lOtion

Z,

manoe prop.._, 810Urtd.

Th111 oil- or bonllll will
bo ....,.... to Ill Moept t11o
ohook or

wll

Ia q
propiorly uoc:utod by him.
•
I I - Ia
to oubmlt '·
d-od orpeclfl..,lono on ..
aquipment otter• with hil fQ
bid.

'

AYOH • All ~ ~ llorllyn
W...H4- .4
lulld tor pur ""'-. Lam

'

-= -= ::::..
ton ..,.. up tire

1614191S-.t110

·-~­ 18 Wanted to oa·

...
., .

~

Orlen!Od·lndlvlcluoltill. ..._,.,.
................
Tlolptul.
_,
Dl• oommllliil!'f send r~~ume
to: P.O. loo 110, lldwlll, 011
4Mt4.

'

. PH. 992-3922

·Pet"""·

. STREET
:PIZZA

.,
..
Coolln1, '"

Refrltleratlon
Service

e..,,

.....

BILL SLACK

' 992·6873

992-2269
EVENIN.G.S ·

· Pizza-Subs-.Salads-Daily Specials

CALL

•

992-5519

..

..

••

APPUANCES

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EYDY SUNDAY

In Loving
Memory
Of My
Mother
Marie
Caruthers
Who Died
March 2,
1989
Linda

1

Card of Thanks

Forgotten"

'Cau• you•,. olwiYJ
ill our heorto and on
our mlnd1.
RIDE FREE, C. D.
Sadly miiHd by
your famHy and
frtendt.

992-7479

FURNACE
'FUINACE

DN'S APPUANCE

-

..

SEIYICE

PH. 992·5612
or 992-7121

RUTLAND ORE
SAUS and
SERVICE

GUN SHOOT

742'"3011

...... lulhllntl

The family of
LEONA

•Tire Sale•

EBERSBACH ·

ofront

End
Alignment
•.Oil Change- • Lube
•Brake Work

wiohH to thank the
friends end
neighbors who heve·
helped them during

MAIN

their loss. The food,

st., IUIUIID

1·15-'90-lfll

c.,do, flowers, visito

thio time were
greatly IPP111Ciotod.

cloa
to the ground.
"Gone But Not

KEN'S APfiUANCE

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

FURNACE

r.c.......,

..

"*-. 2 ............... ,

CHARLIE FRYE
who paned away

flying too

AUTO &amp; TRUCK .
REPAIR
AI•• Tr11..11elee

a.....

In Memory Of

you.
Angel

HO. PARK

:00

.:.~: :.::sd:~u

March 3, 1988 dw·
ing Bike WHk in
Oaytona Belch, Fla.
Fly on, fly on
Peat the 1peed of
sound.
I'd tether- you up,
Then - you down.
So 111ve me. if you
nlled to,
I will otill remember

MOBILE

Roger Hysell
·Garage

WANT ADS bt.ing
u......
.
Money
lift.11

POSITION
AVAILABLE IN
. MEIGS COUNTY
RECEPTIONIST POSITION
NOW AVAILABLE ·
Experienced in Typing,' Filing.
FULL
.PLOYMENT
.
.

n•...,m,

99 -744

EYEIY·
SAT••GHT
6:30P.M.
fa&lt;lory drolto
12 Gaugt Shot.... Only
Strk·~J lnftrlltf

LO·!I-tln

Ooi.I1441WI74.

•
OM black 1om killen, 1 ....., . ~~ ,
olcl. To good horno. IJttor ,,
,.....,.., LAi¥el eUttjOI .. 114-

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUH.T
HOMES &amp; GARAGE.S
"At

••••n..la Prien"

Pll. 949-:tl01
~Res.949·1160

., Day • Night

··-

'
Po~ .............. HWJ11.7117
•

"":••

Po~

·~

Slro]Jhorll - · lllll.ltof.74Ntll-lljo.riL

......

Port -.
........................ -.
La, ..... -

4-16-lf.lfll

..'

,...... to good homo. Po~ t!
AlrOirelon ShOphonl. I - old. •

114-7111.

NO SUNDAY CAllS

10 :;:

•

'~

tllll7• .

Eoootlerw . lncomo irotonilol. .llln plono, orpil and ~-rd
Oeilllo, 11110!1-1117...00 Ext. Y· 111110111 In rny home. To blain,.,., advlricW 1nd aiun:
4M2.
.

•.
....., .-h.

EARN JlatEY Flooding Boobl

lnd I,.RI;wlt:a.
ailed",
·
- If Int.
cllonltng

,.,

Heul • - ony lrlll!,

pO,IIGCIIyr.

.......

_

...

- . 1 1 1 - - Ext. y.

"""' otyllat .-dod, .... ,...,

work ~ ~-... DIOign, 3Q4.

llnoe
p1

~

....,....-z.uos.

bnllh+
&amp;
...
~~·

....nl«f .......
ralel. Negotil.bla. CeU anyllma
114~21 •

s._

' 111Jp - l d :

lo put
and wOrt. II'DUi'ld farm

aJ• na. 114-241-U71.

. . . Paula'a Day CaN Center.
S.,., 1Hordabtt, ohHdcaN. M-F

I Lnt. .. 5:30 p.m. Aaal 2*10.
- . ofter . . - : Onlp-lno
w I n-. 114 HI 12M. .

=. ""'--.-. ·-.";".
&amp;·~--·Ill

lnerl 11 te opening far_,_rtoflf'MI

'

llulblli
work ...
all
"""""' ad
-willing
- ·· tolluot
- . . Trolnlng -loblo. Apply
. In
peraon at
Aintrtc.re

·
31711 Aockaprfnp
, Rd.. P_..,,Oh. E.O.E.
P.on•o~ 1

- •

Job ~:!',:\!' tDr jobe lklli?
Wo
tNin
a A~o
M e c h a n i c ·• ,

Aooounttne:'utlnt

lpec....._,

an, CcMi-

'""'lioglota, EIMI1folono. Food
·llorvlcri Worltore. Ttohnlciana,
lndufttll
MIW.enanol! WOrkera, Nur.
AJdea;, llachlnlm, Para-pie,

......erlllondWIIIdori.RogJo.
ter rKifli tor ctuHI btalnnlng
Mlrch 21. tHO: Coli - n t y
U:n•allll Aduft Cere• It 1·
lltiM37-tiDJ. A Vlt'lely ol limding ........, lo poy Joi lrolnlng

__
,_.
.. -·
......... tor thoee tflglblll.

driver. lotilnnlng -ry lll.IIO

lrlvlng
Cheuftew'aOn~=-·
or tM
new

..--·£r?.i.,..._

Olio

Carr!IMrdal

~

Bullville Road. ExPIM'ience •

rellreuc•. lt..........,141.
WIH do .'OIIo .. ng, homo'&gt;o "'
offlcn•. Day1 or ewnlnga. b _...
245-1171 ;
WI" do wo~•roor~ng. "· ...

c. .,. -.....
=~~ oftor tlp.m. or....
,. .... Cll.

I!Owera.
Ollanlna wt~. H.OO hr. Ca~
614.ftl2'200e ofter tlp.m. or 11..

912·7481.

'

21

Ft11311CI:ll

Business
Opportunity

bulln.. wllh ~· you

111111 le - · llriahlon rour job

""'
NCJ1'
•• until
through
tht mall
you- have

w.

tflfn ~ for

l:;;,~p:=.dmO.:::;
ftl
"'"oomponont•

Ill, .... thll
• tJuauah
-.,..
....
. rr,.._
end
.... ~ lflctficlanl.
tor till Adult Elootrfclot~
• Tri'Ccrunty lllgln- 2111L To

c ...

-Ja:
tor more lnfonnltlon, cJit 1'"

__

m ..-

You rniy 11o eligible
"" monill to pey tor , _
training, nk aboUt our tlnltnc•l

_.

ltyllot - : W•h mo_.o
lloo... prelorred .... n o t .
, . - - ....., "'lo
Quale"'. Futl Of. ,p~rt time. 114ttl 1122 of· atop In at FIM11

lltyltnv ...... 1:110 e..,.,.

Avo., Clrrillpolll.

~PPNClit•. 114-4
50, 814.....01tl.
1m Scht,~ltz. 12xe5 w/ex.ndo,
CIA.
wood bumer, appllancel,
11orag1 bldg. 304.175-3011 or
8751.,15.
·
1173 2 IR, Good condition
par!ly fuml1hed, parch, vinyl
undli,.,.nlng, axa born bldg.
$1100. 81~5.
tl71 Shull Wllimlnaton, an elec,
1Zdl, naw Hot l'lolnt rtnga,
houH door8t· calleltr 1:00 30of..
8114Ml.
2 bec1Foom1, lurn·h~J AIC,
- . lot, 111 itleotri&lt;l, 304-882!1567.

3 ICNI wllh 12J:IG lrtllor with
1212• roorn acldltlon. Second
trallor hook·up on lol. Phone
11_..70-2413 My•; 114;-742-

2t14 evenlng1.

CASH IN ON IJULTHILUON
OOLLAR IIARKET RESEARCH.
frw.lnfa. 011. . . . tape br ,..11.
Write P. 0. 1101 214 Ollipolla,
OH4M,.,

'

Real E&lt;;tate

,_,.btl
ITom

Skylne · Hom11 el
2
miiM
bridal,
n•Rt. 2. :IQ4..27~51JI.

rc.v.newooct

Jet.,&amp;-

1

udld. .801).

SER~ICE

Wt

ca" rtlllllr and rt·

cart radlaton and

httlflr cor-. Wt •
. . •ill bell Jllld l'lltl

... rllllat.........
r~GasT-..

f,AI HILL •olD

' 892·21
Middleport.

'

nw•

CONSIIUCnol
CIIIS1D, OliO .

CUitOm Bulh
Homes.
Remodeling •

Re.-lrWork•

.,

915·1165

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN
INIULATION

R..L."OLLON

TIUCIING

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

CMSID, OliO

.... 9.t9-1101
or 111. 949·1160

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

.... ....

••, _ Estllaltel''

.

NO 51lfiU YCAliS

•GRAVEL

For Rent: FumlahH Aat. 4
roome &amp; blth, cenfarally
locatM, MCurtty d•pblit 1
~~ ~Wqulr,G. 114-446--.

304-175--14150
Bunk beda, 5 baby~•• com·
pitt•, extra nlca. 3 pc. bedroom
suit•, new, uted bedding,

N•w!Utld

Fum. Apt, All utilttiH paid.

chlll"ls and d,. ...,., living
_ , oult.., e po wood group,
anttqu. 10 pc. dining room

Upatal,., 61C-4415-1523.
FumW!ad Apt. 241 Jacklon

ault•, nrty 1100'1, m•ny more
llemt. 112 I'J'II• Jarrlcho Rd. Pl.

P4kt,

G111ipolls,

UUih... pd.

:P~1::11::11
="':;,·WV::::,A::·= =::------

$250.

1br,

114-44ei~11 after

E7P~·~m~.~CJ:!iFi~~-=§ ,
11
attar.7p.m.

Fumlat.td oM l»droom epl,
d-.otolro, 400 2tot. St. prelor
~.!f.. ldu111240. piUI
eleCtric.
$221. plut

.ano•

,!'.:-,;;',.

alectrlc,
fWfH* •nd depOeh.
304,.75-2161.
·
Greclout Hvlng. - 1 a_
ncf 2 bid·
room epartmenls at VIIIIOI

I l l - · end
·Rivorslill
Ar:~mo.. o In lllddl";'_~· From

t 84. Now through

rch HI.

Flrwt month . rwd tr• lo thoee
who qudty. Call 114-112·7717.
EOH.
. .
* 1 • 2 bedroom tumiahed

Pl'll, c....,
30oM7J.1400.
....,
and nlcli, eduft1, no
Tarl Townhoull Apartmente.
El_.. 2br, 2 floor, nee oq. ft. •

dleltolll, _,..roung, .2 ~...
::"'~~~~,!:[~dod. Stan

Furnished

T.V. 14 4 - 1 ,
Aooma lor Nnt • Wlllll. or monCh.
lterllng .. .120/j!lo. Glllll
Hotel. l14-441 11110.
law a 11000 naw Ctayton,
· - 2br1 ' 1i:l both, doltior a SIMPina rooml: wHh cooklng1
lot, Froncn Clly UO~!Io Homeo. AIIO- tnilttr epa ca. All hook..up1.
114-440-11340.
Cell after ,2:00 p.m., 304-7'731111, MIICHI 'IN.

46 Space tor Rent

2

1 room oftAoe for l"'nl. $100 per
room, AH ulllttllll included. Call
Lelrlilotlolloll. 114-441-42ZI.

112 ac:rn,

oounly

Wiler

lvilllobll. Looolod 1100 lo lOOft.
lrorit' Volll'i'VIow Drlvo, 3 itiiiM

SUh ot '-uraU Dim. 814-2511774, Jonwo E. )'laugh.
_
... _ _ _ ...p

RENT TO OWN

Top QLiall1y Brand Namn
room IUIIH $10/Wk.,
rocker $3.50!Wk, dlnnll·
le/4 Chilli $7.50/wk,1 bunk
btds, cOmpllte $10/WK., Low
cosl cash prlc"lvlllabiJ. VI'Ra
Fumtlurt.lH.141, 4 mlln. Open ·

7 d•Y'I • wllk. Mon. thru sot. a
a.m.• 8 p .m., Sun. 12 Noon • 5
p .m. 614--44&amp;--3151.

Refrtg., wooden dln.tte Ml,
coucfl, fW'In bid, .wive I rocker,
hid•;: bed, like n.w. 814.:.448c:..:-3::::.c.·---,;;;;;r,--------

•••4

Country MobUI Home Park,
Route !IS, North ·ot Pomtroy.
Lc4el~·· partl, •'-· C.:ll
-14......7471,

47 Wanted to Rent

i::'
~~~.~~:.~~
aood
45 \t
!I
hu new
attar
John.on
lor $1,000.
l14-446o1930

~:o:

AKC Chlneu Puga Clll 304S71-2207untl1111 !00 ~U.

AtCC Regletered Cocker Sptnlel

Puppi ... Vet chtclted, wo~ .

Femlly eOt:lallzN, $150. 814-

.

~1=· ~~: i~00~ 1c~..,:;:

4418

•

AMIFM radio, 1lr, 95,000 mlln.
For mon lntorm•tlon or to • •
1'\&amp;
11
1 ct p 1 1 rh
cTo,1nbu•no. 61 :~ ... 342 , • ~ y
_,___,

=

Get your plot tor the Fair, bom
1•22-oo. $30. each. Alee'• Pig
Farm, »4-458·1583.
Rtglat.,-.d Polled Hareford
euno, Most AI &amp; 100.,. E~~
Calvn. Taylor&amp; .T•ylor, 61
2285, or 614-643-2214.

64

1118! Y11milha, VIrago, mu.t HI!
New tlrH &amp; battery, IINiced
t1 ,BOO O.B.O. 1514·24&amp;·.5637.

75 Boats &amp; Motors
for Sale
1972 17 ft . Starcratt: Tri·Hull
Boat. 125 HP, Evinrudt Engine,

Hay &amp; Grain

9001 Round Bal. ., Baled Dry,
klpt lnoldo, 115 Nch . O.llvory
IVIIIIblti. 614-379-27SB.
.
Ear Com lor ale, 3G4-e75---4308.

Good clun ur cam far ul•.
814-2C5-55111.

Qood, clean Timothy hly. $1 .25
per bile. mljld hoy $1.00 per
bal•.

74. Motorcycles
11175 Hondl motorcycla CB 350.
Good condition. 9000 miles.
SS!O. 814-V85-4418 .

Livestock

63

814--~-4127.

Hary lor 111e caU attar 6:00 P'-'
304;&amp;75-2191 or 875.-4006.

compl4rte lop, new uphotst•ry.
Call 8t4·286·1318 alter 7:00p.m.
RIYitlldl Marin•, Rt. 7, Gal·

liJ)olisJ acrota from K·Mart , 614·
446·2424, 1.aoo--279-0274.

76

1976 Chevy lmp1la for parts or ·
111. CIII&amp;HI-992~2591 .
' .,

Tr.nimlsllon

Automatic

'

'

Y1ry ~ mixed hay tor 1111 In
Racine . arM. $1 .00. 61c.M•
2SI3.
·

11''

Campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Yellowtton• C.mp.r, Fully
Equipped, 11000, or belt otter.
814417..0187.
.

·~

1180 , Nomad Camper. 2t1 ft .,
llrNpe 8. V..-y good condition.

Complelaly ..It conlalnad. &amp;14912.e1 7'3 or 81C·992-6l06.

..

."

Serv1ces

81"4-445-

compltt• $43.25.

ttei AMC, 5ph11 I

~.:.

cyl., Autq,

eunrool, $1,000. 114·251-

1'11117.
1181 Chiv1H1, ,4 cyl., 4 apd.;
runs gNJI, aome new parte.
$450. f982 3 whHier, new tires,
t300.114-388-1708 .

wheel

~

old. nkt offwr, 30
I o•or
3·00 PJ1
11
•

~

•

buMII,
t21.00150.
Olhlir
motorlll onlloble. Kon &amp; Ed's

~~0:.. ~~~"J.:.;:~:.

Rd.
1110 Metal .llltbed for • 1 ton

1184 Buick Regal Llmfltd, PS,
PI, PW, elr, tiM, AMJP'M ILKiroOI,
naw .-lnt, 'qlne u:o. 13800.
I1C-446-i27hfter ep.m.

1984 Cutla• Clere I;IIIHI, t1

114-4~

118C Monte CarlO, 1xt11 nice' Rooting and remodellnQ, he
cond., white llilher, ratcl•l•, low ntlm•fn, work fuarantlld,
mllllgo, ~75-7980.
Robhwttn, 304-675-- 454.

, MUSICal
Instruments

For Sale: U..,:l Klmblll Spinet

plano.

EXcaNant

condHion,

nMds tuned, call 304o675-3025,
Mondly·Frld•y 8:30-4:!10.

••rktu•

lndlwldual

gutler

bealnrterl,

alter 3p.m.,

tta5 C.VIIIIr. Auto., tin,

cnA••·

111. Front wh111 di'lve.

moo.

racHo, Clllltfl, air, !Wir defr"Qeo

lenona,
gfolltart.t:,

fltC-tB!-4411 .

Rot1ry or cable 1901 drilling.
Molt w-111 completed Hme day.
Pump uta •nd MrVIee, 304·
895-3102.

1185 Pontll'c Grand PriJ, good
cond, new tim, bllttlry I •H•r·

nator, 614-441·1055, 11._...
2082.

Jeff Wllllllev lnatructor, 1144411..077, lfm•ld _,lngo,
llon-lhun, S.t;
PIANO CARE
.

::~~:~ rm~~n~.;~~h~

,..glect J&amp;M . Plano Servlc•,
304"71-1133 Wlllu; . 304-M2·
2325, BiH W.rd: 114 4111110,

"&amp;:,'

Plttlburgh Point Sole, now In
progrooo. Sove 13.00 now on

Fofth - . ; 514·912-7, UMI

24.,

Phil, 241C _Jackton Av.., Point

SNAFUIZ by Bruce Beattie

Ron's TV Service, epecllllllng
In Zenith 1110 •rvlclng mOll
other brands.' t-!OUM calls, 1lwo
10M appliance Npaira. wv
304-57'11-2318 Ohio 114-44&amp;. ~
:Z454.
.
.

moJo pup. SoiVpeppor. $200.

fil

at .. - .

·

Yamlhl SpNklr 9ysl.m, 2
. maine, 1 mOnttor. 1144....,.31.

1187 Ot*mobllt Cutlln Cllir.-·
Broughlm. 4 dr. only · 24,682

mllel. JUII llk1 .new. Sailing tO
little e.t.te of my mothlr. lt4-

448.aotl7.

'"tl.

IHded,l!~~~~~~~:.___

t10,.t00.
111111 Corsica,
·illl
·eamaro,
:105, Cruise,

lift, olr,
•••

445 1054

lot~ low mlloo.

'

tllltl PorOioc Orond Arn!t.~

· rocllo, 1111 •od crulle,

F·aJill Supplte'.
&amp; l IVC,IOCk

·-~Fr~ncl1 AI...

-1

11-

7181.
It Chavy ploltup.__ lc ana date

""*tt4oo.Faol:ary
lt..

=~ 24 000
..~-.

oriU Ill •10

81 Fann Equipment

Eleclrl~l &amp;

Refrigeration
or
cornmerctat
MrYice or rtop~lrL
Mctrlclan. Ridenour
:104.. 7S.t711tl .

hiJ
lllndt, toota too nurntr'OUI
I r...tore.
-··

114--

=
c..-.·-

tlltllnl1
Troctor _...,
RoundTNclor
-·
; Mt
424 1lr01
..'1 ~
-.lni1;--

OiiiMr
J:!ot, - ........... .,.,...

L W.llml

-...;.-IOOFING

1 Nhrd-,4epotd-

~~~=
r;-....
' .

_ ..... !'SJ ...

·

a~::U:~
. Plllntlng

1'lfacMiws
!111 ..... - 1111111
f1lll .....
l.r
......1••• Ill
.

"Alter we steel Ihe ttereo, let' I rcill up.of the windOM •lid emuh II anyoqy."

\l

_

EE~
.,._I
I I
6. llorr.
.... I ..'...

......

I

..,..

\

'
'

Painting, Interior loci exterior,
,... eitlmlln, 304-675-2181 .

c81h. No checkl. Call 814·992·
2607.

truc:k. l 14-448.a1a 11 •.

"-nt, 304-175-4084.

newlraplllr,

175--2215.

~at111~e aylt.m. "114- Aealattrtd Miniature Schnauzer moe. on lrto•t.rrabl• warranty,

car, EncyclOpedia Brftlnn~ga{

Maintenance: •
aiding, ..
new/repair, urpentry, odd jobs. ~

Houeehold

Interior Plintlng, . lor tr" n·
tlmate call C1pt. st..tMr
Clllnera, 114-44e-.4104 or 304-

0

On• 1 ·
Crowntd AmlllOn
•• Ot 4.fo•.. ._.....
·cogo. Terrier,
$075. S10tt
Ono ean 114-111&lt;1·
ter 4 :...,,
c.Tm
I lnc:h stNI H·belrna. 3 pl.c.. 5320.
12 ft.long, 1 plotel 11ft.• 1 ptlcl Poodl• puppl••· Toys 1nd r ..
11 fl. 8l-4-9e2..UI4 •Iter 5:00 Cupe.
AIIO
mlnlalure
p.m.
Schn1uz.era. Sin and peppat.
111 wood Ullllty building &amp; AKC. Coolville. 814-667·3404.
cond cab off 1881 Chivy
truck. Super hHvy dutY RMII
hhoh wtlh hud. 454 truck

moll

HtiMitft. 614·379·2120, nk tor
Mftch.
'·

trailer. ' 2 Aoto Tillers. 3

==

on

Roofing,

to me ..lon.
441o4Htl.

FREE EITIMATEI

tor

Chevrolet Plcltt,~p. 61~41--8S28. ,.,

79

=----------'------

Auto Pans&amp;

Accessories

• up. Volume diiCGUnt rlul l'i
to Feb 28th. Bob &amp; NM Taylor,
614-643-2285, or 11 4-e43-2214.

Transportation

Shoemaktr,

§al puah mawen. 1 electric
mow~r. 5 metal door frlme1, 618
• 3. One v h1u1 aluminum
llehlng bOat 12 h. All priced tar
quick ule. (r lnttrtlt.-f, Clll If·

49

!$1M pe~=i :eilr
lr1d ... JWoYklod).

-

:~r~.nca 11 , XLT, - ~200. 61 4·

11C.)JI.2e71.

31 Inch, 11 HP rklng mower. 2

yr. olcl-114-367·7374.

lilflitF.Itor. No pelt.
end 1elwenc•• ,..

,_.

7°·-;::-,----::-:-:--;;"---=:=:1984 Dodge Ram Van $3000.

Tr.ctor. Farmtll Super 8 wtth

PionHr Seed Com, S43 per baa

56 . Pels tor Sale

1110 Clllca
paint job,
5:30PM.

=
·l~-~~~wot~. ~~;~·~~~jJ'""~~.~I~Into~rtor~~,.~lni~.~Po~lnt~
.

month. 11...,:•••· Jiok Nell.
Coarrt&lt;y Hl!fllll 1'or •8olo: ~.
~~0.000, nego!fonoblo. 114-

332-V745.

~~Meet. 614-441--3144 ener 7
H.P. Myert Submerglbll p.m.
pump with tank, pipe 6 Wire
Fiah T1nk, 2413 Jacklon Ave.
uMd 1yr. $250. 614-3?t-2768.
Point P11a11nt, 304-675-~ 10
1110 Chavy truCk c-10 tor mo, 'gal Ml: ·up_ $14.99 end 1«:1· 01:1

OrMnhouN . SupPiill, pro-mix,
fills
l17.0014o,
l111erta
p0,00/100, 10 Inch honalng

11

BLDG.
SPECIAL:
30xCOX 10• wl1h 15x10• sliding
door lllrvlc• doqi'.$5717 erec·
ted . IRON HORSE BLQOS. 81··

112

Rentals

tar11t11 I buunent. FUll oil 114 UI142S,
rumlol.
RNdr- 111 111
ot Uta 114 ttl "2'.
Rio Orondli,
......

245~121 .

UTILITY

=

SllrMII
tnd
Hlmall'fln kltttne. Chow ltUd

1114".
For ule or tr1d1 tor good UMd

end

Ue

upp S
Block, brick, ....,.,. pipe a, win.
dowt, lintels, etc. deucla Wlnters, Rio Grand•, OH Call 814-

1984 Dodge MinJ V.n, good
corid,J.'I;eed reduced, F,.nch
~
lie Ho--. 614 .. 4•

Perllln.

Merchandise

ler I:JOp.m.
3 bedhMh hoUM oi · tNIItr.

FOR LEME: 1WD BaconO-ffoor
Unt.wnllhM ona-br, apt~ ·!love

s

or

Orag:onwynd CBtt•..Y Kennel .

54 Miscellaneous

hucloro &amp; mufflers. Plio of ulld

FOr l81188

Building

55

wayne

0.111~11,.,...114 t4&amp;815M•J.

2
-~~.~IJI
....d:i =:-.
1'111
. 117,100. 114-

Still In lactory carta;n, 614---4468598.

0583.

paneling &amp; trtm . a n whM• flblr
~tan truck I9PI*. 114-318-

- · 11d2 Jn.ground -

Wood or COli ltove, can bl
UMd ffH atandlng or llrepllce
lnHf'l COII$1,100; Sltl tor' $500.

•v•nlnga

[)og HouNs For Sale: Several
Sizes. 1 112 mll11 out Rt. 141 •

2 to 3br, houll or •·· In Ute

Room A board IMurtion tor 25

S1m a~c;:.rr.~:.

:~~ng.

h. .
Juncrt. lndeJMdanc. Rd, Rt 21,
New Era.J WV. Naon·7:00 PM, frl 1
,
::.un, Union l•belea
political advotnlllng
•ppol,.m«~ll 304-

131~"

AKC r.glllt.,., Slbari1n Hu•
Old Hot:.rt mut allcer, works kin allo Cooklr Sp1nle11,
line, 1250. 304-875-1620.
ahOte, wonnad and helfth
gUirlnl.., 3Q4.87S.Z113.

ond t Inlier. Aodno Vblegl.
114-Mwnt. ..

PreW
Mkldlepaft
locltton.
CtMn, ,..!able ttntnta. 2
chlldNn. AlferellCt IValle~.
114.ftt2.7172.

Surolut, army, dtnlm, Nti'ltel
clothing. 10% dlacount on

gru.t,

Buy or Hll. Rlvetinill Ant~UII,

1·11·10-tln

GutWI

w..klndl au4-675·3064.

1124 &amp;,., M1ln strHt, Pomaroy.
Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00
p.m., Sundlly 1:00 10 1 :00 p.m.
614-H2·2524.

915-4422
'

1984 Kabbti iiactor and •quip!Mnl, 304·7434323.
. .
·
ute moclttt 2000 Ford Trltetor,
13950. 100 Ford wi'ptowt, Cui·

Antiques

.....=.::=·No . . . .

•FlU liiRT

Merchandise

owner, 300 alx cyl, 4 apeed,

w"•• 0 I'~
-rg.... 10 r,'; r, 0 Iumn
turbine whMII, loo 1 aJld run•

Wort!. booll. l14-44&amp;-3t5t.

53

PS, PB, new llret, $1,000.

61 Fann Equ1pme nt

Olive 9t, Gtlllpolla . N..- I UMd
furniture, htaters, Weetam &amp;

. . _ tor Nnt. 2 blldaoam, unIIAotlll,..,
~
end

•UMEITONE

54 Ml SC811aneous

SWAIN
4411-3177.
AUCTION • FURNrfU~E . 02

1 112 blllh, CAICH, dllhw11lter,

Roomt tor R.m: Clrolt Mot•l.
Slngte tor :z people, 117.10 plus
~~ '":zJ75 • up
•
·

Lota &amp; Acreage

-

Living
1.wlvel

Rooms

of . . _

Autloncl. 23 ..,. lot. '17,1100.
· Call 114-7.U-2MD ••• a.

J1rrlcho Rd. Pt. PINHnl, WV,
till 304-675-1450.
Plckono Fumhuro

45

•·

S lA, Ul. f'!, 11!1._2 bllhl, -

:t b 11 oom houla, Salam St., In

Compl.t:.Jy Fwni1Md 1m1N
houM, euMebll lar 1 or :Z
r,"~~M &amp; ro'-nc•.

KINGSBURY . HOllE IW.2S.
t13 1toO will buy 1 MW 1 4x10, 2
or 1 bedroom homl, lumiahld, Un~_.- 2 br, fully e•~·
u"'""" ""......... - ..... 11o - · ... Third Avo., 1..
VI~lldrtl~. del~ ... 44141"· 11 .....1003.

31 Homei tor Sale
'-! _, A,., -

v.e.

Hou11h~ld furnishing , 112 mi.

For, Solo: t2x50 mobile homo
'
• ,_
--·
,_,ill 1dl11d on 1.1 _..lot ~nl Yellei' ~. 304-171lt adgl of 1aWn. Alao • hot.. 4100 •ra 17~ttU or 1.,....11
on the lol, In neacl ol ~Ira. n1g1a
Live In - ond ron1 lhl other.
'
$115,100. ,,. 441 0231 afl1r One badroom tumlahed apt,

know, 35

lnvootlplld tiJI O!lortOf.

PICKENS FURNrJURE
N1w!Used

$2014211. per month I)IUI

planting

·brulti,

.......,ov PUblic Library.

. Oultook.

1••10. furnllhed, ...,.;c., 2bt,
pM:IIIty, luml1hed4e~UII aea to

wtll do yord ·-rtt ouch u
r11klng lu.VH. · ciHnl~ up

... ' """""·
ppllcollonl
bit
~ up
at , the

-~

171-4308.

Win llobyo• In my homo on oriCeo.

Driver

vohlolll

1:z,:10 mobile home $3,000. 304-

~::·=.·~
Wanlltd
Ia do:
~ ·'"_,.·-,...,-:,-:.,--,-:;:-:::~~~~£~~~ffi~i
4_,P_
Have Aatersnc•.
Oenl's Mobile Homa'e. Quality

IHOTTCI!I
OHIO VALLIIY PUIUIHINCI CO.
,....,.tMncll that you do

. With ...... .

for Ssll

llor,-,.7-IA-

IIOII'

~s==~~~Ad~a====~~a;A~n~rnN~~~~m~-~m.~;J~~~~;;~~~

IACINE
FilE DEPT.

. . . . ... .
!!biped, ...... 1 - · ...... .

Rat.ranc•

EARN IIONEY Fielding Boobl

H..MPHIEY'S
CUMATE
CON1'10L

Cltlld Core In nry - · · muot IJo
Wllldna.
ftl'llt or ucond ahlft,

Chrtetm hDrna.
114-4....2131.

32 Mobile Homes

lrtmmlng.

Portable • Saw Mil.
Oon1. Heul Your l,oao .To IIHI,
We'll come to yowl :IOU71-

"!!!'

KOUNTRY

Core,--·
...
nii-

:IOU'III-2111 ' -

0

..
..

16141 667-3271

-'I lAwn

....
-ping,

~· Z

127 3rd. Ave. Oat·

s:ooP... ·
New 'lll!atlrbld, $200. :z oven
elitctrlc slon, $100. KIII'OIInt
Mater. t100. &amp;U·24S.IS783.

lrookeldl Apartments, 1 BA,

group
To

Of building
lllin:llllth,
..1101[
Mietlr tor Cllll 1
Aek tiiMM cur vtrlltY of fundi~
eoui'Oft 1valtltile to JMlY tor
trelnfng.
.

•

. 992-6215

~

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
187'1 JMp Ch•rokM W•Fn 4x4,

$3,1100.
~~~&lt;&gt;~"~"";"";·'";;;;~~~==~=;;=~i air,
1884
Chevy304-882-2387.
C.IMI'o V.f, erul. .,
1DN . Ford F·t50, 41:4, one

H.w ao/ld oak ta~e end c
chan. $475. 304·875-3000 un1111

·•it" hook
I
kJtctMn
i14l'41-813r~' •'91
'

t---

Tho Vlllego of Pomeroy
· ,.. • ..,. the right to acoept . :;,
or rejocuny or 11111111111.
"
·
John A. Andlfoon.
Admlniotretor •
, VIH- of Pomoroy ., '
12) 23; [31 2. 2tc
•.

,."'
N...fiLAND
ENTERPRISES

9,2-6421

myhomo,-..ownoreo.li..

31'7·7440.

1

0325.

.. 2

Orfwlftt Fif'lt A..e Chlkl Clreln

t.""""
~.:..,
~~:=:.:::=
;r.r.;;.rr....... tltet ,..,....

'·

,., s.

Wanted

IIdia • tho Athrtt - ~ \"nltiOdll

,,

DALE Hill

a

bed. C.llaft•I:OO pm 114-251-

11::'·

Situation

_....,orMIIIniollcorpen~ry

;

YOUNG'S

12
Shl~.,

AYOH I All A - I
lpMro,SOW75-141t.

Business Services . ;.
DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
IEPAII

Help Wanted

) 1

,.

.-oful
~~~-. IJo·bo!ld
hold "
until thl wnbild or bid

11'77 GMC Trf.aKia 5/4 II"IMft'ti..

GOOD , USED APPLIANCES · Commercial Air Comw:;rlltor ..
WaWJ., drytre, ralft.ooo.trltort, 10 .... 1 tonk 11 • .... .
'
ra-"
Skaggs APPliance•
- ·
' ._._...
·
uPP.r .Rivw Rd. BfthM Slon~ SWIMMIHQ POOLS $1188. New llvator, 2 row Ford Com P.. nter,
Crett Motel. Call ti14446•7U8.
laflo'lll" 1181 modal pools. Hug• 3pt. Spray Outfit, .,_.an. Bu..,
19x31'
lnclud• declc, tfog, $3,450, &amp;14-28&amp;6522.
Llkl new ll11lngroom euhe, gla11 fonco 11 ., &amp; worronty ln~ 11
top tnd tables fnatchl~ coffll
•
· •• • Skid 9t..-. Loect.r. O.M.C. Mu•
tplt~'".·. !"~·~ k.l~ 's'.u bed com~. latlon I lln•nclng •vallltb51. C. II ,tang 1700, nllda n1palr, part. &amp;
.. .,..,.._, 222
24 hn : 1-800~345.0948.
manuals Included, priced right!

ctnployi'WIII SctVICCS

of Ylloge Counoll · · - "
-thltHthebldlleooeptod, I 0 1 - wtlillo ..,_ "
Into llld Ito pertor- .&lt;

F-. Ford Truck, hoo 10ft.
tlltbed dwop. s.ll or trade tor

-'On, 11 ft. alum, d1.1Mp b«',
(llonoon) Sell with or wRhout

County
Appliance
ulld •pplloncn,
T.V.Inc.
ooto. Good
0~
a a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon ..Sat. 14-

wmpeny laltww~ In the
_,.., end HCh bid mull be "

AJC,

linn t,.ctor. &amp;14-44&amp;o;'1146.

$31 &amp; .... 8ld 125,
Qu.., SiH 135 • ld~ fr•m•
$60. Good Mllctlon of biadroom
WU....
IMIII
Clbinlll,
h11lll ardt $30 and up to SIS.
iO dlyl Hml II Cllh with ipo
proved cNdll. 3 mi. out Bullville
Rd. Qpeon I A.M. to I P.M. Man,
lhN Sit, ~H 61 ... 46-0322.
4 pair drapes 1. ..,..,.., 45 In·

oonllllilllletoru·--

..... . - , duty bot· .•
...,, ~clutyM•IIIIor,l
- . . bill fladlli thl. on 1I" -J

1W7 Nl..on SE, - auta

ou• dll11e, radio, price k ,ooo.
nogoollble, 304o07a.tm .

*"•'

t,

='

2M 1154.

Ml• t275 • ~p_. King PIG. 4
d....., cheet ' "· Bun c.blrtlll:•
&amp;, I, • 10 gun. Sob¥ rnott-

to Ill.p. .I.stwd
low
. _to
, .INiafl
. _tM;k;
_

~bo~·~;'~.:"

1•1 ChlyY ·&amp;·10, pickup. f14-

.,...IIlii'-bOX
- $..,.,..
110
-·
...
full ot twin
$71; llrm
anti ttl. OuMt1

bum.,. wlh pintle - . ..

...

UNDA'S
PAINTING &amp; CO.

. , , 1 112 bath, t•x'ID win·
...... 2 mi... from lawn. 11~

. . ....... AUDtlerl Oil 5 ..
,... lull• r "11-., ...

tl04 Ford F·1 50, PS, P8 , AJC,
304..71-2414.

• up. bunk- oompleto
with Mitt._. 1211 and up to

~ ~-'

llocfv, ........ ~ .,.

.., or-112-ton exc·. I1C.7112·2313.

Lempe m to t12e. Dl-•
1101 ond up to l4M. Wood
111M w-1 chan $215 to 1'715.
llllltl$141uptofm.-

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

1---...;;..;..._

Stop In and See

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

... troilor', Soc. OOpoolt. lt4-

&amp;Auction

rnll't- ; .

tt7t Ford Bronco XLT 4x•. 480,
,_II IIUia. tranamlllion wtth
lhtft Ill. TWI, cruiM, air, I Inch
ltft kif, Many tx'tta'l , SIOOO or
trede to.- 1111 model Ford Ran·

lotu lnd .Chilli priced from
tltl t o -· T - $110 end up

-·
....... .

PubliC Bale

•

~·

GVWII II 1.100 Ilia.. , .
, . . , _ lutavl llody with •

Ia 'tHe oou:

HousehOld
Goods

~'~=:.· ~~ .~.,~ -

=;~ ::::,~·

with • ..,. . . .

mM'tUIII tiWI. . ...._

51

1Wll
. ._. on lend DDnlr.at.
P,IIOO.
114-

-~~'"'!t~DaaiP ,~'i"

-...of
One 11110

72 TnJCks for Sale

t---.
--.

~NOTICE ·'

_..._-;--_;_--::~---;--:--L-------L-~--..L...--_...;..;;._
NOTICE
·PUBLIC HEA~ING
The Meigs County Com·
mlttlonen Invite 111 lnttr4
llted citir:ens lnd organiZI·
t1l grant under th1 provision
tiona to attend the first of
of Section 1B(bll21 of Urbon
two hoerlngo which wll bo
Mau; Tr•nsport1tion Act of
held concernl"g economic
1984, as •mended, to pro-- developmentlnttt.officeof I...._~-:---r----..,.---.----r--~..;.._--,----~--...;_;,..;....;o.; ",
vide transportation Hrvioe the Commlt:iionert, Mllp
for the etdtrly and hendl·
County Counhou•. Pom·
copped within tho following oroy, Ohio, 11 1:00 P.M ..
DOZER 0
countktl: Melp, Gallia, Vin·
Merch 7, 1990. Thepurpo11
ton, Athens, end Jackson.
of this mMting wll be to tol· .
SlTEWORK , ~OADS .,
CARPENTER SERVICE
The grant Appliation will left rtqullts for economic
-~oom Adcltiona
INTIIIOI IITIIIOI
-.
request one converted, ten development projects to be
CL~ARING
-GuttorWork
AT
FREE ES:riMATES
l-W
at
Veley
Lw
l
r
putenger van with wheel· funded bY the Mlllp County
-Eloc:trlcel
•
Plumbing
Talco tho pain out of
I• lill.hpu I, Oh.
·ch1ir lift and tir condition·
Commialioner-1 through the
-Con...,.Work
.
paifttiag.
PARTS AND IERVICE
ing.
c..,.munlty Oovelopmont
.-Roolng
·
For Moot 2 end 4-cyclo
{t is projected that 176
Block Gl'lnt Economic De·
lot UJ 4o It for roo.
-Interior • E-ior
en gin•
elderly and
h•ndlcapped velop"*'t Prog,.m, Ohio
Pointing
YIIY tfASONQIE
,
Stoc:ll Pone for
people will u11 the III'Yice Department
of Dev..opDUMP TRUCK
IFIIEE UTIMATESI
·DODGE
HAYE
IERIIENaS
Homellte, W11d1aur.
which wll be provided 7
ment, Office of looal GO·
· Y. C. YOUNG HI
Sand-S,one-Dirt
tltlrd, lll&lt;ldlepart
AnD6P.M • .
,. TecumHh. Br••
day1 per week for verious vernment Servic•. Chlztnl
Stratton.
activittll induding employ· and organizatlona are urged
ment, recrHtion, and 'ap· to anend this Important
llofon6p.nr.loouMot1111
lrant A.
pointment keeping.
. · meeting. Wrhtwn commtnti
'
2·28 ·so-1 mo.
Ohit
.
t1-16·'18-1 ~·
. .
1·30-'lf.liiO.
' \
f.21·'1t-tfn
The Meigalndustri•,lnc., mey be eubrhttted to the
invited comment• 1nd pro- Commi11ion•• It their of·
poNII from aU lntert~ted fica It the Melfi County
public. private and peratran· Counhou•, Pomeroy, Ohio
"SHRUB • TREE
lit ojMratorl including 11xi 4&amp;789.
"'
TRIM end RE·
operators. for the provillon 13) 2·1tc
20'1. OFF ON All
of trilnsportlitktn ...-vice to
MOVAL ·
.;.•
GOLF EQUIP.NT
the elderty and handicapped
•Engrevlng,
Trophlll,
LOWEST
PIICES
within our sarvlce arM.
Htotlnlr
Good Rata·
*UGHT HAULING
Ploquoo r, 8od8M
Public NOiice
Operators who .,. inter·
HIGHEST QUALITY
T.L.C.
•New Gripa
nted in offering propoala
*FIREWOOD
FREE LOCAL DELIVERY
oCfubl Shon27 ·Y••·
to provide wvice 1houkl
onocl
LEGAL
NOTICE
contetCt Todd R. King of
Re~ooiooo
Reaidentiol &amp;
-I.D.
POMEROY AND IIIDDLEPOIT'S ONLY
Meigs lndulltriea, Box 307, TO: Motor Vehicle Dealer~
•
Togo
·commercial
Tho
BOA~O
OF
PUBLIC
1310 Cerloton St .. SyreLOCALLY
OWNED
PIZZA
SHOP.
AFFAI~S.
VIII-of
Recine,
cu 11, OH. 45779 to obtain
2.,·Sovth 4th St.
TEAFORD
"'
full detollo of tho type of Ohio, Ia lnv~ing bide for •
INddlepart,
Olr.
NEW
1989
or
NEW
198U
trensporUidon Mrvice thet il
On• 11) to.n cab • chMsia
"LOW IIKOME HOllE"
needed prior to preparing a
992-22~8
Dual whell•
'--..,;;;2-:;2-'.,::;90-:,;;l:,:m:::o~.::;d.,. ~~
4·6-l.lfl
1·12·'fl0.1
pro poll I.
69"
from
rur
of
ceb
to
Written commlintl of pro·
pauls mult be aubmitted center of rHr wheels
'
Standard transmiulon (.t
Annnu ncemPnls
within 30 days to the -.;~ency
'·
at the above addr•• with a opeN I
He8Y'f duty 118t
copy to the Ohio Depart·
DAY WUIAIII''I:
Bldo wit . bo r-vod by
3 · Announcement•
ment of T{tnsponation. Di·
vilion of Public TrMiporta· the Cllfk untH 9:00 o'clock
How to Dlcl
. ate _yaur nMIIIItlc ;.,"i
tion. 26 S. Front ,t.• Room A.M .. Mondey. March 12,
dlltl~. Wrtte: For , ... con. ,..;
111._ Cofumbua,
Ohio 1990.
•Mobile Homo
lt. 124, "'··~ Ohio
lldontliol, dlllllo lo .......'!!!. ~
Mark on en"etop: "liDS
43218-0899: Attn: Ooputy
PARTS AND SEIIVICE
P.(!. lox 1043, Clrrllpolo, "" ,~ ·
Porto
FOR WATER
OEPART·
Director. ·
ALLMAKEI
up
•Mobile Home
MENTTRUCK"
121 23: 13) 2 21c
GAl 011 ELECTIIIC
~
Rupe_
will_
1111 by
1111 ,.,.
TtultMI reaerve the right
Rental•
_ lonn..,
........
_
to rlljKt any and all bidll
•Lot Rentals
:
Halla flr1 dv1oll Rupe.
Starts at 1
P..M.
SEIYICE
JenoC .....Ie
VHiegoCierk
992·5335 or 915.3561
4
GiveaWay
_;,
Factory Choked
PO Box. 37&amp;
lt. 33 North of ,
992-5335 or 985·3561
F.Office
Awon ,,.. r.t Dlfka
811thlt2 r•r o1c1 maae Chow to oountr'¥ ~~
12 Gauge Only
P-roy,
Reclne, OH. 41771
117
••
·With ohlldron, 10(. ..•...·
!1-6·89-tln
1'111-nG.
4-25-tfn
121 18, 23: 131 2, 9 4tc
.
1111:11'19""

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Molgolnduotrioo,lnc.
which ill private. non-profit
corpor1tktn. inten• to sub·
mit •n 1ppUc.tktn forli capi--

42 • llrloblle.Hornee
torRent

Tile . . . . of .......

Ylllege
- -·
120
loot Moln-.
oy
. 'I,
Ohio 41781 for tho pur· •
the following:

The Daily

Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

C•-

r

•

~

�10-lhe Dlly 81 lli1tl

I

.-.---Weal news briefs...---eontlllued from page 1
and Henry .Wells, RepubliCan, Clark, and~ Hunter.
The new board members were glven .the oath .of oHice by
Secretary of State Sherrod Brown last Friday at the HoUday Inn
In Lancaster. Others altendlq that meeting were Mrs. Hunter
and Mrs. Frymyer.

Squads make_5 Thursday

runs

Five calls were answered Thursda~ by units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services.
· At 1:33 p.m., Pomeroy went to Court St. for Jack Lance who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland Fire Department at 3:04 p.m. was called to New
Uma Road extinguish a hay wagon. At 4:36p.m., Rutland Fire
Department was called back to the hay fire.
·
Middleport at 7:20p.m. went toRoute7forEariWinesJr. who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
· Racine at 10:13 p.m. was called to Sharon Road for Dennis
Irwin to Veterans Memonal Hospital.

Panna. couple claims $3 million prize
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
_w inners of Wedresday night's $3
mUIIon Super Lotto jackpot
wasted no time In claiming their
grand prize,. surrendering their
tiCket Thursday.
Marlene and Norman Pa·
cholskl of suburban Parma went ·
to Ohio Lottery Commission .
:headquarters _T hursday mo111·
-lng. They will receive the money
over 20 years, In annual Instal·
bnents of $114,750 after manda·
· tory federal (20 percent) and
state (3.5 percent) withholding.
The Pacbolskls,' who have
:three children, told Lottery off!·
:clals they will use the money to
yay off their bills and to purchase
-a new car or pickup truck.

Pacholski, 42, Is a foreman for
, Cleveland Pneumatic Co., which
makes landing gear assemblies
· for airplanes, while his wife: 40,
Is a file clerk at Fo~t City
Enterprises Inc., the developer.
-· . Lottery spokeswoman Anne
Bloomberg said they bought the
winning ticket al Dairy Dell on
State Road In Parma, letting the
computer pick the numbers. .
Bloomberg said there's still no
sign of Saturday's $3 mliUon
winper, or the person who had the
single jackpot ticket In last
Wednesday's $15 mllUon drawIng. Saturda~·s winning ticket
was purchased In Orrville, whUe
the big winning ticket was sold In
Cincinnati.

.
h

----- Area deat
Vivian Titus

Margaret Priddy

Vivian K. Titus. 74. of Pomeroy, died early Friday morning
at Veterans Memorial Hospital
following an ex tended Illness.
She was a former employee of
~I berfelds and during World War
II was emploj&gt;ed by the West
Virginia Ordinance Works. Born
on Sept. 6, 19151n Mlddlepor(, she
' was the daughter of the late John
Allen and Carrie Massie Knopp.·
She Is survived by three sons,
Frank Allen· Titus of Columbus;
·Stephan Edward TliUs of Chilli·
cothe, and Robert Bruce Titus of
Pomeroy; four sisters, Mrs.
Wlllhim (Nola) Swisher, Middle·,
port; 'Mrs. Harold (Lera) Jones,
Syracuse; Mrs. John (MarUyn)
Fultz, Middleport; and Mrs.
Harold · (Evelyn) Vogelsong.
Wheelersburg, and several nleo .
ces and nephews.
· Besides ·her parents she was
preceded In death by her hu s·
band, Frank E. Titus In 1972, and
two brothers, David Allen Knopp
and Marcus Delos Knopp.
Funeral services will be held
Sunday at 4 p.m lit the RawlingsCoats-Fisher Funeral Home with·
the Rev. James A. Seddon
o!flclatlng. Burial will · be In
Riverview Cemetery. Friends .
may call at the' funeral home
Saturday, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p:m.

Stocks
Dally stock pried
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark SmHh
ol Blunt, Ellis 1: Loewl ·
Am Electric Power ............. 30')1
AT&amp;T ... ............................ .. 40%
Ashland Oil .................... : ... 35%
Bob Evans ....... ............... ... .ll%
Charming Shoppes ............... 8%
City Holding Co..... ,. ... ......... 13
Federal Mogul. ................... 17%
Goodyear T&amp;R ... ... ... ....... ...33%
Heck's .............. :....................3
key Centurion .... .. .............. 13~
Lands' End ........................ .. 18
Limited Inc ....... .......... .......36)'e
Multimedia !nc ........... .. ... ... 75~
Rax Restaurants .. ... ... ........ .. 2~
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... ......... 15%
Shoney's Inc ... ...... .... .... .... .. 11~
Star Bank ..... ............... ;.., ... 18%
Wendy's lnt'l .. .......... .......... .' 4~
Worthington lnd ........... .... ... 20%

Margaret Pr kldy of Pomeroy,
Route 4, died late Friday mornIng at the Holzer Medical Center.
Funeral 11rr;mgements will be
announced by the Rawling·
Coats· Fisher Funeral Home.

V eteranJ Memorial
Thursday admissions - Guy
M. Thoma. Rutland; Mary M.
Hysell, Pomeroy; William
Pickens, Racine; Francis An·
drew, Long Bottom; Dennl$ R:
Irwin, Dayton.
Thursday discharges - Dale
Smith. Ernest Brewer.

.

To bury phone drops
•
· ·GTE North Incorporated has
announced that they are ln. the
process of bu rylng all telephone
service drops that werepl!lcedon
top of ground during the winter
I)'IOnthS.
.
• Occasionally, said a company
spokesman, one II mlued. To
ensure thll does not hap(len, any ·
GTE customer In Pomeroy,
Racine, Rullud, Letart Falla,
Portland or WllkelvUJe· areas
lfMa k!Jepbone lervlce drop
1flrt ll on the ~. Is reql811d to call 1192·2510~Lea
)lOUr name and te
on
Dumber, tbe Jpokesm
.. •
IIIII OTE wtll follow up to ensure
wrk Is compll!led.
·
1

Frldlly, PMdiZ.

•

· By United Pnu lnternatloul
With the mild air that cowred
most of Ohio this week being
pushed south; It looks like
another cold weekend, but certalllly nothing like last weekend's
blizzard
A large arctic air mass Is
poised across soptheril Canada,
ready to drop south and across
the Great Lakes region and the
Mldwes t. The edge of the colder
air Is marked by a cold front that
will move through Ohio tonight.
Meanwhile, conditions were to
be quite mUd today across Ohio.
High pressure that dominated
the midweek map has moved
east and a _southwest flow of
milder air from the Gulf stales
was to push north and across

Ohio today.
Some coudlness In this now
covered much of IOUthem Ohio
early in tile momma and radar

Indicated 10me shower activity
In the extreme southern end of
Ohio.

'-)
I
.._

' I. '

••••

I

I

c,
0 l . '. n.t ~)
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'

l

~GAHS

Cottrell

The high temperatures across
Ohio were expected to reach the
50s by Jate afternoon.
;

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~~~~----------~

Voinovich...
Continued tJ:om page 1 ·

'

I

Continued from page 1
to $112,500 and $138,300 In 1988.
In an earlier· report, the Com·
merce Department said Thurs.
day new construction jumped by
1.8 percent during January's
warm spell to an annual rate of
$424 b!Uion - the biggest In·
crease In 13 months.
That report said private construction, which Includes new
homes, Increased, In Jan11ary to
$333.1 b!Uion from $321.7 bllllon In
'December, or by 3.5 percent.

II·.

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FREE TRAVEL
MUG INCLUDED
WITH PURCHASE

~eQt~
.

Stall
,
' MARIJ;:TTA - When the Vln·
ton bddge on State Route 160
, closes June 1 for demolltloh,
' there will n9t be a temporary
. span to accommodate drivers,
according. to state highway
officials.
Joe Leach. District 10 Deputy
Director, said It became ODOT
policy Ill 1987 to eliminate temporary bridges from Its budget
except in certain circumstances.
''We ~ound there was not
enough money to maintain the
bridge construction" at a good
level with funding temporaries,
Leach said last last week from
his offices In Marietta.
Each temporary bridge ac· ·
counts for between 30 and 50
percent of the total project cost.
Leach said .
There have been grumbllngs
from local residents as to a
temporary bridge being placed
at the site, but according 'to
Leach, there will not be one built.
- To add a tem~rary · bridge,
Leach said It would cost an
AW'AY - .As Athena forward _Becky Sostarlch watches
additional $300,000 and delay the
a&amp; left,
Academy ·forward Krlstl Thomas (28) shoots from
project for up to two years. There
tile buellae during ~he seeolld qUIU1er ol Friday niKht'sDivlslonll ·
dlsA'Ict toumameJJt . c.llll!nplojullllp gaine at ChUIIcotlu\
· would have to be · additional
rlghts.:.of-.way . acquired and.
In
another el\lrlronmeftllll Impact
study completed, he ~ld ,
. At ihe pre&amp;ent tlrrie, tlie brldge
proj~t Is estimated' at $500,000without the temporary bridge.
'
e'
.
I
e
Trame will be detoured via
State
Route 325 at Rio Grande or
I
•
State Route 124. ODOT will not

CANOI..ES

(304) 675-3400

tzes conttnue
search for suspect

i

.. car pulled up alongside Jol)nso?.

:e

a 33-year-old WilkesVIlle man
0

~':;~!~Y f~~oo~:::';tld e~~; e~~lle~

An occupant of the car fired ;a

~~~~g~,e f~~:~~w~':sd~~~;noh~

In the week.
LlfeFIIght to Oak Hill Commu11·
. Lt. Ron Klier of the Ohio
ity Medical Center, where sl)e
Highway Patrol's Jackson Post
was pronounced ~ead.
1•
said the patrol Is looking for
The patrol ·has Issued a threeRlcl!ard Butcher in connection
state alert in Ohio, West VIrginia
with the ~ealh of Melinda John·
and Kentucky for Butcher and
59n, 24, Oak Hill, op Wednesday.
the maroon 1979 Oldsmobile
No warrant for his arrest has _. Cutlass he was reportedly drilv·
been Issued, Klier said.
lng at the time of tire shooting.
Johnson was reportedly shot
Butcher Is described as 5-10 iln
sometime betweep 6 a.m. and 7
height, welghlng-185 pounds and
a.m. Wednesday as she walked
having brown hair: He posslljly
along State Route 32, just east of
has a moustache, the patrol said.
the U.S. 35 bypass. Johnson hail
Hlsvehlcle'sllcensenumberWas
been a passenger in Butcher's
given as 828-SXV.
·
!
car and was either ejected from
The J.ackson Journai-Hera)d,
the car or · jumped out of it
quoting Klier, said In Its FridiiY
edition that Johnson was ' a
foUowing an apparent argument
between her and Butcher, report·
student at Hocking
edly Johnson'sformerboyfrlend.
College and was scheduled
·
Johnson was seen limping
attend classes
along the highway by two motor·
car was disabled and
IsiS who stopped to see If she
(See AUTHORJTJE8, pa11e

through that route. The$4,525for
By LEE ANN WELCH
the trip has been raised In the
Tlmes·Sendnel Staff
private sector - local businessGALLIPOLIS - The face of
Eastern Europe Is changing . men and community leaders who
see this as a good opportunity for
almost dally, and a group of 35
Ohioans will have the opportun- the city.
Ity to view It first hand in May. , What's happening In Eastern
The State Leadership Initia- Europe Is a "new threshold In
world poUtlcs," and I man said
tive Is a program that sends the
the Interaction with officials
brlghtes t and best local leaders.
there may bring new understand·
businessmen and state officials
lng and problem solving methods
abroad to exchange Ideas and
to Galllpolls. He also expressed
expand the economic bases of
hOpe In expanding the economic
·
their regions.
base
of Gallla County, but added
Gallipolis .City Manager Dale
may
not be realistic.
that
E. !man Is one. of those 35 from
Nevertheless,
he will be armed
Ohio who wiil be venturing to the
with
the
surveys,
sitings and
Eastern Bloc In May, along with
other
Information
about
Galllpo·
Lt. Gov. Paul R. Leonard.
Us and Gallla County to present
"It's . a tremendous opportunto the buslneess community in
ity," Iman said of the 15·day trip
Eastern Europe.
that w_!lllnclude stops In Russia,
The trip will also give !man the
Yugoslavia and Poland.
opportunity
to- get acquainted
Although lman Is city manwith .state leaders - like the
ager, he will not ~ financed

Director of Development. David
Baker, as well as others.
That will help in the long run
when the city approaches the
statehouse for projects. State
o((lcials will know who they are
dealing with on a first name basis
and be able to attach a face to the
proposals.
Additionally, lman can get
ideas from other state leaders
and officials to bring -back.
"With this kind of caliber
group, It can't help but rub off,"
he said of the learning opportuQ·
lty the trip presents. ·The delegation will leave from
Columbus on M-ay 5andreturnon
May 20. In between, !man said 70
pE:rcent of their waking hours
will be spent In meetings.
They will visit Moscow and
V&lt;ilgograd (SIElingad) In the
Soviet Union. War w. Poland
and Belgrade,
avla.

Among- discusSions with the
Soviets will be the recent innova(See Crt'Y, page A3)

DALE E. IMAN
To vl&amp;H Eastern Europe

Newly-formed arts council's goal
is providing cultural opportunity

1983
Mercurv
Lvnx
.....
$1695
Station W•gon. Auto., Pif, PB. "lr.
1983 Chev'ette
............. S1495
'

Auto .. Pl. PB. Air.

JUt!.~!. 5.~~~,~itation •• S1695
1973 Ford F·1 00 •••••••••• •795
V-8, Auto., PS.
.

ODOT ofllcla:Is, there will be no temporary brld11e
for tratnc, and detours will be set up lo 11et'people
In and out of VInton. (Times.Sentlnel photo)

City official to ·visit· Eastem Europe

Pleasant Voley Hoopital MldCII Olfica Building t Suit8 215
·
Voley Drlw. Point Pieaant, WV 25650

........

REPLACEMENT SCHEDULED -The bridge .
at Raccoon Creek on Slate Route 160 Is scheduled
for replacement thla swnmer by the Ohio
DepiU1ment of Transportation. AccordiDII to
.
I

'

llff ~!~~~~P~t~~~LEY HOSPITAL

1988 Cant•r •••••••• ~•••• S9,000

route traffic on county or town'
:,apt. 15, and tor each day the would have been tremendous,
'ship roads, Leach said.
contractor Is not finished, they and the only detour route for
Although built In 1928, Leach
will be assessed $1,500 (n liqui- commercial trucks was W.Va. 2,
Which entailed cross.lng the river
dated damages.
sal'd that while the . Vinton
bridge's trestles are structurally
"We have to look at the overall at either Point Pleasant or
sound, the deck rs Inadequate and
responsibility as to the state's Huntington.
In addition. Leach said the.re
Its width and . helghth are not
bridges," Leach said.
was
no convenient ·d etour for
large enough.
Each year, ODOT Is rebuilding
loca,l
traffic. The number of
The project was bid last 130 bridges, and Leach said
people
affected was too great.
October and completed to give
they'd like to finish 300, but the ·
With the lack of a temporary
the contractor adequate time to
funding Is not available.
bridge; there will bean Impact on
order and acquire materials for ·
There was a temporary span
the people of Vinton, especially in
the project. so the job can be
constructed at Raccoon Creek on
terms of emergency services.
·finished quickly.
State Route 7, but Leach said that
According to Gallla County
was an exception.
Leach said the construction
time Is scheduled from June 1 to
(See BRIDGE, page A7)
The Impact on the community

u

~el~~~~i~ ~ tnei!ded help. Soon afterward, /1

MAXWELL
' HOUSE
FILTER PACKS

••

-\NN WELCH

Tlmes~enUnel

7 ·oz.

1-

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

A Multimedia Inc. New~~MPer

No. temporary- span for Vinton

'

SHAVE GEL

•GEWNG CURLS
•a.EAN GEL-MAXIMUM HOlD
•CLEAN GEL·EXmA HOLD .

·:::&gt;

=

13 Sectiona. 86 PotiM

· Bridge would delay project 2 years: ODOT

Burlingham.
Meat will be provided and
coffee and rolls will be free.
FollOwing the dinner, there
Will be a safety program lnclud·
lng a flbn by Columbus Southern
Power.
Syracuie Youth Leape
The Syracuse Youth League
will have an organizational meetIng on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
Syracuse Elementary School.

24Ft. Long, s.tf-Ctilbined, Awning. Pullecl18•than 100

onals·-

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallip(,lis Point Plaalant. MarCh 4, 1990

Corr.fllulad1910

~--Meigs announcements----

Complete PTe-Natal Services
Annual Gynecologic Check-Up
Pap Sm~ars +Breast Examinations
. Family Planning
&amp; Other OB/GYN Procedures

m

'

•
t

I

I

Volnovlchoutilnedplansforan
,, "Ohio Tomorrow" program
under which the state's top
corporations would help him
reorganize government.
"We'll get them Involved In
education," said Volnovlch.
"They're the ones who are
complaining• • about poorly edu·
cated workers.

Graveside services for Carl
Dawn Partlow, stillborn Infant
daughter of John and Tresa
Kuhn Partlow, Feb. 28 at the
Holzer Medical Center, will be
held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the
Rock Springs Cemetery .
Besides her parents she Is
survived by a s Isler. Mary Jane
Partlow and a brother, Jesse
Levi Partlow. Arrangements are
being handled by the Ewing
Funeral Home.

Blue

D-1

Weather
South Central Olllo
Cloudy Friday night, with a
chance of showers toward mornIng and a low between 30 and 35.
Chance of rain Is 30 . percentMostly sunny Saturday, with
highs In the mid 40s.
Extended Forecaat
Sunday lhrough Tlieaday
Fair through the periOd, with
highs ranging from the mid 20s to
the mid 30s Sunday, In _the 40s
Monday and between 45 and 55
Tuesday. Overnight lows will be
between 15 and 25 Sunday mornIng, In the 20s early Monday and
the 30s Tuesday morning.

•

store to
close March 15

'

Housing...

Eutera Board to meet
·The Easrern Local Board of
Education' will meet In special
session on Tuesday at 6: 15 p.m.
In the high school cafeteria, to
deal with personnel matters.
Modern Woodmen to meet
The Modern Woodmen! of
America Camp 7230 will have a
potluck and famUy life activity
· on March 10 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Modern Woodmen Hall In

'M

Ohio ·braced ·for another cold weekend

Cari Partlow

Hospital news

•

8-----

•

· lng the Ml,ddleport Arts Council.
treasurer.
By C~LENE HOEFLICH
According to the ordinance a
As for donations to the group or
Tlm.Sentlnel Staff
special fund was created lor the
funds earned from any activities
MIDDLEPORT - Mary Wise
Arts Council monies within the
of the group, all will be deposited
has been n~med chairman of .the
vlllage
treasury.
It
provides
that
in .the Middleport Arts Council
newly organized Middleport Arts
all- expenditures of the Middle·
Fund with the clerk-treasurer,
Council, a new department of
port Arts Council shall be ap·
just as with . all other village
Middleport VIllage Council
.operations.
proved by the board of directors
funds .
·
and then submitted to VIllage
The new Council will also be&gt;
Primary goal of the new
village department Is to promote Council ffor consideration and
required to submit to MiddlepOrt
(See NEWLY, pa1e .U) ·.
and provide cultural opportunl· · payment through the clerk·
lie$ for the community.
Meeting at Middleport Village
Hall Thursday ntaht, the sevenmember board of ddlrectors
appointed by Middleport Village
POMEROY - Family histories. are now heiDI compUed for
Council, alOIIJ wttb a group of
the commeratlve edition of The Dally !Sentinel to be published In
charter members, elected offlc·
April as a salute to the 150th anniversary of Pomeroy's
ers tor the new organization.
Incorporation. The major portion of Information for these
Besides Mrs. Wise, the other
hlslorles Is coming from the Meigs County History Books,
officers elected were Dewey
Volumes 1 and II; and Edgar Ervin's Pioneer History-of Me~
Horton, vice chatnnan, Shirley
County.
Quickel, secretary, and Bob
Families ln~;luded In the special ~Ilion must have lived In
Glbnore, treasurer.
Pomeroy either betore or at the time of the Incorporation of the
Both Glbnore and Horton are
village In 1840.
·
members Qf Middleport VIUage
There may be some families who )Vere In Pomeroy at that
Council which Monday night
time yet not mentioned In any of the above hlatorles. If 10,
dilouued at length the purpoae,
descendanta of thoae famWes should contact The Dally Sentinel
goals and objectives of · the
with the Information as soon as possible. Hopeflllly,'no fimlly
proposed Arts Council before
will be missed.
.
adopting an ordlnanca establish·

Histories being compiled

..

,PIICIS.
GOOD AT
'

992·6491

•IDLIPOn

.786 l!llorth
C!-, ....
ond, I :;'

SIOII
OILY.

Ml~leport,

Ohio

GIBBS MltiiOBLU. &amp;oii1DI 11M a . . ' ld db
bJ lit late tllarlea
wa • fonner
1aperlatelldent of tile Pomeroy Exempted VJIJap
I'

8eiiDoll
1111 wile, lit late EDell Glllbl, wu a
lo•athne
u lit ..._rOJ ICllooL JoM
U.le,, PttmerOJ prlllclpal1 dllp1871 here two
apeaken,and the lOud box of the new sylltem.

~.

...::-----------.:..-~-----..........,.1-~-~~·~.

-----··--- --- -· -

. '/

•

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