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of rain is ~ percent.
Extended Forecast
Saturda)' tllroush Monday
A chance or rain or snow
Saturday and Sunday, with fair
weather on Monday. Highs will

Soudl Central Ohio
Increasing cloudiness Thursday night, with a low In the mid
30s. OccasiOnal rain Friday, with
highs between 50 and 55. Chance

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Page 3

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flood warnings for the Rio
Grande plains, Austin, the hill
country and much of south .
central Texas.
Rainfall of 2 to 3 Inches was
possible throughout the region,
parts of which had received an
Inch of rain In the past day. The
storms In New Mexico and Texas
were on a ·collision course, and
could bring In ore bea vy rain to
Texas.
Strong winds'gusting to 45 mph·
caused blowing and drifting snow
near Casper,Wyo.
In the Northwest, a small craft
advisory remained In effect
along parts of the Washington ·
coastline, while high winds eased
along the northern front range of
the Rockies and_In upper Yellowstone Valley In Montana.
Clear skies and cold tempera- ·
lures covered much of the east,
with lows In the 30s In parts of
Virginia and Maryland.

t
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PLUSH
CARPET
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Foot Wldal•

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Uulted Press International
Crude on shot up by more than
$2 a barrel and heatingoU by over
6 cents a gallon as statements by
world leaders reignited financial
and commodities markets' fears
of a war In the Middle East.
British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher Issued her sternest warning yet to Saddam
Hussein, demanding the '-Iraqi
president withdraw his troops
"soon" from Kuwait or else the
multinational force assembled
against Iraq would "remove him
bY force."
"I thiDk that started the ball
rolling," said Ed Kevelson of
Dean Witter Reynolds's lnternaUonal Energy Futures Group In
New York.
On the New York Mercantile
Exchange, the American benchmark West Texas Intermediate
crude for December delivery
roCketed $2.68 Wednesday over
Tuesday to $35.31 a barreL
Volume was a healthy 94,954
contracts.
:'Once we broke through the
$33.90 resistance level, we hit buy
(orders). I don't think we ever
looked .back after that," Kevelson said.
The trader said Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was also
reported as warning Saddam
that a countdown to war had
begun.
Kuwait's exiled premier.
Sheikh Saad al Abdullah al
Sabah, told a Bahrain newspaper
the United States should strike
militarily against Iraq and rej~ted any territorial comprom·
Jse with Baghdad.
"The only option available now
IB the military one, because the
Iraqi regime has Insisted not only
on challenging the will of the
international community but
also continues to hold the foreign
hostages~ "Saad said.
i 1 ~l
Soviet envoy Yevgeni Prl·
makov described Secretary of
State James Baker's eightnation tour of the Mideast and
Europe as crucial to develop-

ments In the Persian Gulf, In
crisis since Iraq'sAug. 21nvaslon
of Kuwait.
"Generally, there's a feeling
permeat lng the market . tba t
something's going to happen,"
said Peter Beutel of the Pegasus
Econometrics Group in Hoboken, N.J .
December futures contracts
for home heating oj) zoomed 6.33
cents to 92.71 cents on the Mere,
while unleaded gasoline jumped
3.44 cents to 91.19 cents a gallon.
Technical buying and selll!lll
based on the "spread" between
the price of crude and the
products also played a role In the
market, Kevelson said.
There was buying of heating oil
vs. both crude and gasoline and
selling of gasoline vs. crude, the
trader said.
·
The market virtually ignored a
late Tuesday report of the
American Petroleum Institute
· that U.S. crude supplies .grew 5
million barrels last week. It
marked .the weekly Industry
survey's first Increase In two
· months.
Normally. such a report would
depress prices. But Kevelson
said the market largely discounted the Increase anyway
since It was mainly confined to
the West Coast, which receives
much of Its supplies from Alaska.
On the European spot market,
where crude Is bought and sold
for cash, Britain's widely traded
North Sea Brent rocketed $2.75 to
$35.95 a barreL
·
The United . Arab Emirates'
Dubai Light, thekeyOPECcrude
from the Middle East shipped
mainly to the Far East, ·jumped
$2.70 to $30.50 a barrel.
Three refiners - Houston's
Conoco Inc. subsidiary of Du
Pont; Marathon 011 Co., the
Findlay, Ohio, unit ol USX Corp.;
and Sun Co. of Radnor, Pa. ~alsed the posted price they will
pay for crude at the wellhead.
Conoco and Marathon raised It
$2.50 barrel to $34 a barrel for
WTI. Sun's $2.45 Increase
brought Its WTI price to $33.70 a
barrel.

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prlllluct tf filllr IKhl;t~otr s ucially ...laptd

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OFF .OUR EVERYDAY
LOW PRICES

-TELEVISION SALE
SVI.IIANIA

Elitr lilt,.. ,.m 11141 •• ,..,. .....-. 1991 sri•=• c~

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$299

Now's the time to buy! Our,_,ale prices are
and the extended warranties are FREE.

"Prices for both gasoline and
home heating· oil continue~ to
rise at a · rapid pace, but the
change was Jess than In either of
the two previous months," the
depariment said. ''The Index (or
nat ural · gas turned down
slightly."

Butcher, Tara Gerlaeb, Heather Davenport,
Barbara Anderson, Tammy Miller, Joe McElroy.
Back row, Jert to right, Robby Wyatt, Tricia
Baer, Chrissy W~ver, Bobby V!Ulce. Mel~
Rollins, Dari!J~Lclpn. Advisors. tor tbe ~up are
Dana Kessinger anaCilrls Wfl!e.field.

By Charlene Hoeftich
More than 200 parents and
friends turned out Thursday night
for the second annual Meigs High
School open house.
Extensive displays from various
academic and vocational programs,
presentations IJY members of the
National Honor Society, im excellent ~lide presentation of classroom
scenes and entertainment by the
Meigs Band and Chorus were
featured.
Amy Wanh, president of tile Na•
tiona! Honor Society, extended the
welcome and then presented members who told of the -academic, athletic and vocational programs, as
well as the extta-curricular activities offered to sruden!S.
Aaron Sheets talked about the
math and computer programs,
· noting that already this year over
.400 students have completed a
compUler litenley course. The

language· program at Meigs was athletic programs, to conclude ibe
explained by Jennifer Taylor, Darci overview of Meigs High School.
Under the direction of Toney
Wolfe told about the social study
Dingess,
the Meigs band played
courses offered, and Kristen Slaw·
several
selections.
The choir djrecter talked on the vocational classes.
ted
by.
Thresa
Davis
presented a
The electronic program was dispatriotic
medley
and
then
moved
cussed by Eric Heck, Missy Nelson
lively
modem
number
with a
into
a
explained the learning disabilities
offerings, and Heather Davenport dance routine.
Students from the school's riurs·
talked on the choir and band
program. The role and activities ·ing progrlun. now in its second
sponsored by the Student 'Council year, took blood pressures during
and the FeUowship of Christian the evening. There was an extm·
Students were outlined by Thra sive di$play of artwork, particularly
Gerlach, tluisty Weaver ialked sculptures, from the classes of Jack
about the newspaper, Tricia Baer, Slavin, along with trophies won by
the yearbook, Misty Butcher, the the school, . home economic ·
Spanish Club, Barbara Anderson, projects, and several academic and
·
- the quiz team and National Honor vocational areas.
As
a
pan
of
the
open
house,
the
Society, and Thmmy Miller, the
Band had a soup supper, ' and
DECA and VICA programs.
Business club activities and FHA visitors were taken on a tour of the
progr:ams were discussed by .classrOOms where teachers wen; on
Melissa Rollins, Robby Wyau and hand to talk abput their respective
Frank Blake talked about the strong programs.

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

-Riffe will ·remafu Ohio House
speaker 'as long as possible'

6-GUN OAK ••••••• SALE 5269
6-GUN PINE ...... SALE S309
8-GUN OAK .......SALE S349
12-GUN PINE .... SALE S399
OAK ••••••• SALE S449

"I was thinking very seriously
By LEE LEONARD
of
retiring (after 1992) ," Riffe
UPI Statehouse Reporter
told
a luncheon sponsored by the
COLUMBUS - Ohio House
Ohio
Council of Retail MerSpeaker Vernal Riffe Jr. , Dchants.
"I am not going to retire.
Wheelersburg, squelched all
I'm
going
to be here as long as I
rumors Thursday that he will
walk."
can
retire after 1992, saying he plans
to remain speaker "as long as I
Riffe said Bennett was reponslcan walk."
ble lor a v!clouscampillgn waged
Rifle, 65, who has served as against his re-election in the 89th
· speaker longer than anyone In Dis trlct by Republican Phil
Ohio history amj was . just re-. Short, and for acts against his
e lee ted to his 17th term In the son, Vernal Ill, who won a race
House, said·he wants to stay on to . for Scioto County commissioner,
ensure that Democrats retain and his family.
control of the House.
The speaker said dead an lmals
Red-laced and shouting during were thrown In his son's yard .
a luncheon speech to a gatl!erlng and his son, his son's wife and his
of Statehouse Insiders, Riffe said son's mother-In-law were folhe Is angered by events of the lowed. Rifle said he had to hire a
recent· campaign.
·
bodyguard for his son.
He said he wants to lower the
Rifle said he believed Bennett
cost of campaigns, eliminate was behind It because "the
negative campaigning and get people that were doing It said he
even with Republican State was responsible, that's where
Chairman Robert Bennett for they got their orders."
· personal attacks on Riffe and his
''l am goiDg to find out why he
family during the campaign.
attacked me personally and my

BERKLINE
'RECLINER
SALE
WAUAWAY
IECI.It£1,
. ROCII-0-LOUNGERS
and SWIYR lOCKERS

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

19" IIMOl't
COLOI POITAilf

.

..d;~..;..

REG. S329
REG. 5389
REG. S429
REG. S4t9
L..I"""-'P.-"!------------t._,r.:-~---· REG. SSS9

TAKE

,

MEIGS INDUCTEES • Fall induction
ceremonies into tbe Meigs Higb School National
Honor Society were held on Friday morning.
Tbose new NilS members are pictur.ed bere.
,~,. ~~..:~~~~g~!:. Frank Bla!te, Misty

Hunting season is here end we've reduced
the price. on our gun cabinets. Oak, pine
end cherry flnl•h••·

Our •tection hila never been better. we hive tile top t1ble1, trestle table•. f•rm tlbl••·
round lnd Netangullr tllblea. buutiful chiM C8binet1, hutches end corner cupbo1rdd1.
For""'l ond overydoy 11'/lel.
·

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u~~: -CABINETS

DINING ROOM

A Muhl!Mdlo Inc. New-or

More than 200 on hand for
MHS ,o pen house ··T hursday

"Anti·Stat "24 Colon

1

$2 49 .~............. SALE $199
$2 89 ............... SALE $2 31
$339 ............... SALE$271
S399 ............... SALE$319

family, " vowed Rifle.
Benneti denied the allegations.
"I had enough worries on the
statewide level," be said. "I
know nothing about what happened In those county races.
''The election was over Tues·
day," .said · Bennett. "The
speaker Is a great American:·
Rifle was not amused. "You
know, down home we say ·'Don't
get mad, get even-:' Well, J'irr
mad and I'm still going to get
even." Riffe declined to say bow
he plans to get even.
''There's ways I'll deal with
Bob Bennett when the time
~omes ," he said. 11 YOu know,
there are times when the party
chairman comes to you and
wants to work things out on some
matter. I don't Intend to work out
anything with Bob Bennett."
Rifle has said he wants to leave
Democrats In firm control of the
House for the 1990s. Republicans
won the siate Apportionment
·
Board Tuesday.

-------r-----------.

HEALTH CHECK· Tara Humphrey, a mem· .•
ber or tbe oun;ing assistant class at Meigs High
School, now in its second year, checks Linda
Haley's bloocl pressure. The students were on

band aU evening to do blood pressure checks for
tbe visitors at the Meigs Hillb School open house·
Thursday night.

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

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS!

Beautiful Furniture Doesn't
Have to Be Expensive...
·

a

Nosalr, under heavy pollee
guard for fear of reprisals, was
arraigned by Criminal Court
Judge Harvey Glasser In Bel·
levue's Intensive care unit,
where he was recoverlnl from a
gunshot wound suffered when he
tried to nee the scene of the
shooting. No ball was set, and
Nosalr's next court appearance
was scheduled for Nov. 13.
Dozens of ponce officers, some
armed with automadc riQes,
patrolled the baliB and the room
where Nozalr lay amid a maze of
tubes and a blue mask covering
his face.
Nosatr waa charged with
second-degree murder, attempted murder, .assault, criminal
possession or a weapon.

"12' Width

"10 Yr. W..r W.,..ty

...r. c ..... Carpet ctrtlfW by Amlct is tht

2 Sections. 1 8 Pog• 26 Cents

Invasion of Kuwait and - the . factors, since the beginning of turned up broadly after Sep. tember decreases." ·
the year.
massing of u.s. and other forces
By category, wholesale energy
"Large advances In Indexes
in the embatUed region.
A spokesman for the depart· lor energy goods accounted for prices were up 8 percent In
ment's Bureau of Labor Slatis- most of the October rises at all October after rising 13.8 percent
three major stages of process- In September and 9.5 percent in
. tics said wholesale prices for
Ing,"
the Labor Departmeni August.
finished goixls have increased 7
said.
"Also,
prices for food Items
percent, adjusted lor seasonal

other llellng stlin-relistant mn..h..

Accused assassin arraigned
at hospital bedside
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Egyptian-born baUer repairman
acculed or assassinating right• wing Rabbi Melr Kahane was
arraigned Wednesday at his
hospital bedside after denying .
cbarp~ he murdered the antiArab firebrand.
·
El-Sayyld Nosalr, 34, did not
eater a plea to charges that he
fired the bullets that killed the
controversial founder of the
Jewish Defeale League Monday
nlaht. But pollee said he voluntarily 1ave "8 wrl!ten statement
tate Tuesday from his bed In
Bellevue Hospital In which he
denied the shooting.
· "He asked for a piece of paper
Blld just wrote on It," Chief of
Detectives Joseph Borrelli said.

an Increase .of 0.7 perc(!nt In the
government's closely watched
Producer Price Index for the
month.
The 1.1 percent jump follows
leaps of1.6 percent In September
and 1.3 percent In August In the
aftermath of Iraq's Aug. 2

THICK PLUSH
CARPET
·
•Saotchguard

S Yn. =~~
Az I I S. .IMIED
. S Yn.WAIIANTY
~ ....
10 Yn. ..... . _ • 10 Yn. Azo1a1 AIIII·SIIodo

•12 Colon

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. November 9, 1990

. INCIIIIIS PAD &amp; W01

SCULPTURED
CARPET
•Dupont 81ilnmaeter

•

at

SAl£ $1799 so."·

Sq. Yd.

Oil prices shoot up
.BY WALTER ANDREWS

"20 Colon

MSJAJIII Wlt/16 liM

•n· Wldttl

WASHiNGTON -Wholesale
prices soared 1.1 percent In
October on another huge jump In
energy prices as war fears
gripped Middle Eas t. oil fields,
the , Labor Department said
Friday.
·
Private economists expected

.

TRACKLESS
SAXONY
CARPET
"Dupont Stalnma•er

' .&gt; '

Low ionlghi In mid 3011.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Partly cloudy Saturday. High
near 50.
·

WhOlesale ·prices up 1.1 percent in October

.&gt; SAME AS"

DAYS!

East; snow reported
By United Pre_
s s Int.eruilooal
Storms dumped snow on New
Mexico Thursday, brought heavy
rain that CI\Used lloodlng In
Texas and brought high winds to
Wyoming, while cold weather
covered the East.
A winter storm warning was In
effect for the south central
mountains of New Mexico and
snow and freezing rain hit ttie
southeast . and east central
plains, while Albuquerque received more than 4 Inches of
snow and nearly a foot fell on
Quemado Lake.
The storm was moving through
the south central mountains,
brlngiDg accumulatlons of up to 8
Inches, but weather was clearing
over much of the state.
Very moist warm air from the
Gulf of Mexico confronted colder
air moYIDg In from the wes t In
central Texas, bringing steady
.rain .to the region and prompting

Vol.41, No. 142
Copyrighted I 990

).~"''
90 DAYS-,

Cold weather covers

•

e

WEATHER MAP - Suany skies and warmer temperatures will
p-eet tile Soulhwl!tll iO!Iay. There Is a chance of showers in lbe Ohio ·
ud M!eeJnlppl Valleys u a storm syatem movea eastward. The

will

Pick-3: 482
Pick-4: 8827
Canis: 9-H; J.C;
IO.D; 4-S

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1101111era Rockies wiD·atao see scattered rain showera wlih snow Ia
llle ~~~Per elevallou. Tbe East Coul will have Jocreulog
cloudlaeu and aeuouble temperatures whUe li
be sunny and
cool Ia ihe Midwest. (UPI)

Ohio Lottery

grid team
announced

~

R(APY"C'Mlt

'

Ali'SVAC

A

range from the upper 30s to the
middle 40s Saturday and Sunday.
and in the 30s on Monday .
Overnight will range !rom the
middle 20s to · the lower 30s
through the period.

..

.

.

Many Other Accent
Pieces In Stock
.
And On Sale!
REG. 389
SALE

$319

REG. S299

REG. S359

~ALE $289

SAl£ $239

STOlE HOURS
Monday 9:30-1:00

Tuesday-Saturday
9:30-5:00

REG. S369 ·. ·

SALE $289 .

Andelll_fl_'1

Don't Forget

FUINITUII; APPLilfKISr TV'S, FLOOI COVIIING

Christmas

992·3•n

Layawqy

To Ust Our

• • ••

MHS COURSi: OFFERINGS • In-clepth
or the lademk, apora aad voca·
donal conne olferlnp, -u well u extra-cur·

-cle&amp;c:rlptlou

DOWIITO. . POIIIIOY, OliO

"To Qualified ApPIIConft

I

'

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.•

- ~--- ; ular

actlvltlts at Mel&amp;s Hlgb Scb(IOI were . ,I

I'~ b7 memllen ol die Na$1ooal Honor

Soe1et7 u a part ol ·llle opea bCIIR program

Tbunda7 algbt. Here Krlltla Slawter talks
about tbe vocadooal oll'erlap.

RECOGNIZED FOR CONTRDUTION8- Bob
Evaa (left), preUie.&amp; of ihe Soutlleut Ohio
BeliHal C~ll, pNHDlB LarrJ Powell a plaque
deemlnJ him Help Couty mao of ihe year
Tlluriday nip&amp;. Powell, owner of Powell's

SaperValue 1tore IInce 187t, wu recopbed for • .
bla l•volvemeat In lhe ecoMmkr ud MCiaJ.'
developmeat of llle Melp Collll&amp;y area. More ihaa · • •
1110 people UtBnded ihe .--pttlon btiiiCiaet at tile ·
Oblo Uatvenlty ... Ia Atbeaa. (OVP pheto br ,
Krll Coehrau)
..
.
,

�Friday, November 9, 1990

.·•

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

.Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Four M:eigs players
on SVAC first team

Page 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomafoy-Midcleport. Ohio
Friday. November 9. 1990

Commentary
.

.

..

Scrutinized for racetrack deal_.;__]ac_k_Ande_rso_n.

Ill Court S&amp;reet

J'omeroy, Ohio
, · DEVOTED TO THE IN'I'EBI!liT!I OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
A~
~m~ ~._""T",~c::t·-=-

q,v

ROBE~T

.

L, WINGETT

.Publlsller

CBAKLENE HOEFLICH
G...eraJ Maoa1er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslolul P•blloher/ Coalroller
. A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the AJ!!erlcan Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION arewl'lcome. They should helessthanJOO
.. won!s long. All letters are subject to edltllllf and must be signed with
. name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wtll he pubIts bed, Letters should be In goo4 taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties.

'Bush ·being told to ·
hold off war
By JO!:LEN THOMAS
.
UPI White Roue Reporter
· WASHINGTON - Once upon a time a politician could break a
camPaign promise and It went by the board.
: But In tllls day and age, With Instant communications and the high
woflle that television and electronic journalism gives to any
ca)ldldate, tqe vo~rs have longer ril!!morles, .especially when It
cbmes to their pocketbooks.
·
·
·· President Bush Is suf!erlng'from the backlash o( his decision to seek
t8x revenues to reduce the ever growing federal deficit. His ·'read my
Ups-no new taxes'' was music to the voters' ears.
Those most upset now are his very tenuous conservative
rollstltuenis who were never totally In Bush's camp anyway. Where
tc) go was the question for them after the presidency or Ronald Reagan
who cut taxes and promised a balanced budget by 1984. The deficit
tripled under Reagan who never was held to account for a broken
p)'omtses on many fronts.
•Maybe nobody ever remembered what Reagan said, but only bow
he said lt.
.
·S.tlll he had to take It on the chin from the ultra right when he
d~lded to do business with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The
screams !rom whe conservative leaders could he. heard coast to
coa.s t.
. . .
'Reagan was not always,a winner. Frequently heiost ground as he
dfd In the 1982 congressional races. But someho"" his Image makers
were always able to put their own spin on It and to finesse the setbacks
(Jitti perceived victories.
.
.
·
.
• He was not held to the same standards as other politicians, and was
abOve the crowd, as long as he kept reassuring a certain wing of his
garty that he was one of them.
. ·
• Bush does not have that luxury. His biggest detractors are In his
4wh party , and they appear to be unforgiving. At the same time, they
l!a'\'e not come up with bet tl!r Ideas on how to solve the deficit problem
wxoept to cut social programs. And those proposals are even less
4ceeptable as a deep recession sets In and more and more ~erlcans
!;pll .~low the poverty line,
.
.
• With his 20 percent drop In the polls to around 52 percent approval
$Ung, Bush Is being compared to Jimmy Carter. Certainly there are
!llmliarltles In that Carter did not have the full backing of key
Oeinocrats.when the going got toUgh. His White House was a tight
llttle Island, and Democratic leaders such as Sens. Robert l;lyrd of
West VIrginia and Edward Kennedy of Massachusetts pulled the rug
ciut:from under him politically.
~ \VIlli friends llk.e that, Carter did not need any enemies on the othe~
. side of the political spectrum.
·
· : sO Instead of the party rallying together at a time when a president ·
IJ beleaguered, It has become a case of every man for himself. Party
loyalty Is skin deep.
·
! f'lothlng could be more Illustrative than when the Republican
eongresslonal campaign director, Edward Rollins, told the GOP.
laWmakers running.for Congress this year not to hesitate to distance
1)\l!}nselves from Bush on the stump.
1 t.s for the voters, the choice seemed to he the lesser of two evils.
' hey wereturned oft by the perfonnances of both parties and there
;(my be a lot of renee mending to do In the aftermath or the elections.
:. 1'he credlbl!lty of many Is on the block and the atmosphere of
liegatlvlsm toward politicians In general appears to be all-pervading.
: 111uch of It has to do with whal Is happening In the country today
between a shattered economy and the growing possibility of a war In
tlle:Perslan Gulf which nobody wants.
; l'{hlte everything was coming up roses for Bush during his first two
)'E'ats In office with a longer honeymoon than any president In recent
l!tstory. His remaining two years may be the toughest going.
• u : ile can avoid a war, and put the economy back on the road to
recqvery' he can pull out of· tile hQie he's ln. The deficit cu ttlng may
lfelp and the sanctions against Iraq may force Saddam Hussein to
zrtreat . Those are Bush's best hopes.
• Bpt hi: better not count on his own party or Congress to help hlm.
With their own axes to grind, they may not be there.

WASHINGTON- A questtona·
ble racetrack deal In New York
has been run through the gamut
of local criminal Investigators
who pronounced It legal. But Sen.
Alfonse D'Amato, R·N.Y., and
his frtends who own the lr ack,
have not seen ihe end of tills case
yet.
We have learned tilat the
Senate Ethics Committee, whlcll
Is already Investigating D'A·
mato for allegedly helping steer
federal housing gr,Pnts toward .
his political supporters and relatives, also has the racetrack deal
on Its list of particulars against
the senator. The Ethics Commit·
tee Is scrutinizing .D'Amato's
role In helping · the buyers get
tax-free bonds to buy the track.
The case centers on ROosevelt
Raceway, a harness racetrack
on Long Island In New York. In
1984, four men bought the track
from Gulf and Western Corp. and
financed their purchase with $54
million In tax-free Industrial
development bonds. Such bonds
are a creation of federal law and

•

.•

f.Foday in history
.
By United Press International
: Today Is Friday, Nov. 9, the 313th day of 1990 wltil 52 to follow .
·' The moon Is In Its last quarter.
}
: The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
;: The evening star$ are Mercury and Venus. ·
.
·: T.hose born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
~ tronomer Benjamin Banneker In 1731; Russian author Ivan
'Fupgenev Iii 1818; architect Stanford White In 1853; actor-comedian
td :Wynn In 1886; actresses Marie Dressler In 1869 and Austrian-born
~c!Y Lamarr In 1913 (age 77); Sargent Shriver, first director of the
Peace Corps, In 1915. (age 75) ; Spiro T. Agnew, the only U.S. vice
(1i'esldent forced to resign because of criminal acts, In 1918 (age 72);
aJtrooomer Carl Sagan In 1934 (age 56) and muscleman-actor Lou
~rrlifDO In 1952 (age 38) .

.•

.

'• On this date In lilstory:

: In 1933, President Franklin Rooseveli set up the Civil Works
Aiimln!stration as an emergency depression agency to provide jobs
(9r the unemployed.
. Jn 1953, the Supreme Court ruled major league baseball IS not
l(lthln the scope of federal antltruJt lawa.
·
• In 1984, the VIetnam Veteran.• Memorial In Washington was
~mpleted by the addition of tbe Frederick Hartstatue called "Three
strvicemen."
·
•In 1985, 22-year-old Gary Kasparov became the youngest world
cifll cbamplon, ending the 10-year reign of Anatoly Karpov . In
~OICOW.

.

•In 1989, Eut Germany announced free pasaage for Its citizens
tlro~~P border checkpoints. The announcement rendered the Berlin
}!all, the mastrevlledsymboloftheCold War, vlrtuallylrrelevant28
· ~ars after Its construction.
!Also In 1989, aging Chinese leader Deng Xtaoptng resigned from his
1451 official position u chairman of the .,powerful Central Military
· Oomm!sslon.

•

. :A thought for the day: In an address at Philadelphia's Temple
dftJverstty, Presldl!l!t Franklin Rooaevelt said: "The trutll .ls found
when men are free to.pursue lt."

wllether the regulations over the
money are too loose.
Having Congress snooping
around the deal can' t be anything
but bad news to D'Amato. The
Ethics Committee ts already
probing his role In the ·baCk·
scratching that dominated the
Department of Housing and
Urban Development during the
Reagan' years. The Investigation
centers on whether he got federal
housing grants for relatives and
political supporters.
But the Roosevelt Raceway
case goes beyond D' Amato. We
ilave learned that the' General
Accounting Office Is InvestigatIng tile bond program also to see
wilether the Roosevelt Raceway
Is an Isolated case or a mushrooming problem. There are
about $170 billion In outstanding
balances on Indus irlal development bonds nationwide. Sources
tell us that the early Indications
are that tax oversight of the
program may have allowed
abuses.

TIM BISSELL
.

KNOXVILLE , 'fenn. (UPI) The Big Orange "T" adorning
the helmets of No. 8 Tennessee
may st.and for trouble for No. 1
Notre Dame. .
Notre. Dame puts Its newly
regained top ranking and 7·1
record . on the line Saturday .
against Tennessee, and the Volunteers, 5-1-2, are favored by
three points·at home.
"It will . be the game," said
Tennessee running back Roland
Poles, who had three touchdowns
for In last week's 41-20 rout of
Temple. "It we beat Notre
Dame, It's got to help us In the
polls and the bowls. "
Tony Thompson, who added
another two TDs while rushing
for 120 yards against ~he Owls,
called the Temple game . a
"sleppllig stone."

TRAVIS NEASE

ToDD GRINDSTAFF

football team If you don't play
"We'll be ready for Notre
great defense," Holtz said.
Dame," Thompson said.
Johnny Majors' Volunteers " That's what I've said all along
and you've got to do lt. That's
have not lost a November game
where It all starts. The reason I
In six years. But Notre Dame has
some history of Its own, Including · say It· Is because I know what's
lying ahead of us ."
three national titles, seven Hels·
What's lying ahead Is a Tennesman Trophy winners and 89
All-Americans since 1926: The see team that has outscored
Fighting Irish has won 76 percent opponents 300-130 this year, and
of their games In 101 years of will be backed by more than
playing football. That percen- 90,000 orthe most dedicated fans
In all Of football. ·
tage Is the best In the nation.
"Notre Dame Is a glamorous
"I don'.t know lfl've ever bad a
opponent loaded with talent, and
football team go Into a tougher
certainly a dominant name In
situation," Holtz said. 'We're
college football," Majors said.
going Into the worst environment
But tradition also leads to high
you possibly can. Tennessee Is
expectations, and that's what
looking forward to tllls game and
Lou Holtz Is lighting this week as
now we go In with the albatross
he prepares . bls team for
around our neck. " ·
·
Tennessee.
.
.The Irish last played Tennes·
"I think you cannot he a great see In 1979, exactly 11 years from

With Floyd's clutch free thraws,

Rockets hand Magic 103-89 defeat

1Nftl/

•

By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Wiiter
If free throws are any Indication, the Houston
Rockets should be In for a better season In 1990-91.
Sleepy Floyd sank four free throws In the final
13 seconds and Houston scored Its final10 points
from the line Thursday night, holding on for a
103-99 victory over the winless Orlando Magic.
· The victory marked the second straight game In
which the Rockets wort a game based on tlle!rfree
throw .Proficiency down the stretch. On Tuesday
night, Kenny Smith shot six free throws In the
final 1:09 to help Houston bang on lor a 145-135
victory over Denver.
·
"All In all, our free throws have Improved,"
Houston head coach Don Chaney said. " We lost a
. lot of games last year that we would hav.e won If
we had made our free throws."
Akeem Olajuwon, who grabbed 19 rebounds,
scored 13 of his 25 points In the fourth quar~r •
Including s.e ven .free throws at the end. Overall,
Houston scored 12 of Its final .l4 points at the
free: throw line.
"It was ugly, but It was one we needed to win,"
said Vernon Maxwell, who bad 16 points. "We lost
a lot of games like this last year.''
Smith added 17 points and 10 assists for the
Rockets, while Otis Thorpe scored 16 points.
Orlando, which trailed by 16 points in the first
half, led 78· 77 entering the fourth quarter and still
led 92-91 on a three-point jumper by Scott Skiles
wth 4: 50 left.
Olajuwon then scored t!ve of Houston's next six
points over the next 3: 36, while the Rockets held
Orlando scoreless In the same span, for a 97-92
lead.
The Magic trimmed the deficit to three twice,

N~W
TAXE~.

CJ4H~R.

· ~~~fffJ

Don't bet gambling· will cure ·economy
growing at a phenomenal pace anywhere In the country (In NeW
LAS VEGAS (NEA) - As this
during both good and bad times Hampshire) but today they are
neon-washed gamblers' mecca
ln.recentdecades. The amount of well on their way to becoming
revels In a boom of awesome
money wagered legally through· . \llllversal. Even more ubiquitous
proportions, some skeptics are
posing provocative questions
out the country on all "ames of are church-operated bingo
chance now Is approaching an games.
about betting here - and else·
That leaves critics of gambling
awesome $300 billion annually.
where In the nation- as a source
to
ask .several Impertinent
three:!ourths
of
that
More
than
of economic growth.
questions:
total is bet In casinos, but It's the
Capping tilree decades of virtu·
- If churches and governproliferation of wagering oppor·
ally uninterrupted expansion,
ments- supposedly the society's
!unities elsewhere that many
Las Vegas and Nevada were tile
SO\II'CeS of spiritual and secular
knowledgeable observers be·
country's fastest growing city
leadership - aggressively sponlieve has fueled the Las Vegas
and state, respectively, during
sor games of chance, Is It
boom by providing gambling
the 19808 - and are expected to
surprising that people are In·
with the broad acceptability It
retain that cherished position
creaslngly less Inhibited about
once lacked.
during the 1990s.
betting In Las Vegas casinos?
Contests that encourage bel·
Moreover, even a severe reces- Could that trend lead to the
tlng
upon
the
performance
of
sion elsewhere In the nation could
emergence of "compulsive gamhave little or no Impact upon Its ,humans (Jalalal), dogs (greybling as the mental health
victims' proclivity to bet on
hound racing) and horses (thoof the 1990s?" (That
epidemic
everything from the spill of slot roughbred, harness and quarter·
prediction
Is offered by the
machine reels to the outcome of horse racing) are sanctioned by
executive
director
of the Na·
many states.
the Super Bowl.
tlonal Center for Pathological
Undeterred by New Jersey's
That's because during depress·
Gambling.)
tng economic periods, many. Increasingly negative expe·
The most blatant mantfest'apeople tum to gambling as a rlence with culnos In A'ttantlc
tlon of the gambling Industry's
fantasy experience that allows City, several Mid-western states
growth here has been the opening
them to tempot;arlly forget their are preparing to offer launch·
during the past year of . two
troubles and could even provide a waterborne cutnas for riverboat
windfall to permanently end gamblers on the Ml..tsslppl.
cutno-botels that reach new
As recently as 1964, tbere was
heights (or depths) of the
their difficulties.
wretched excess tor which · the
· Indeed, gambling has been only one state-operated lottery

MIKESMrrH

No. 8 Tennessee ready for No. 1 Notre Dame

NO

•

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•

are designed to provide .cheap
the Ethics Committee will exloans to · local developers for
plore the other side of tbe coin projects that will stimulate local
whether D' Amato broke the
·
· · ethics rules by furnishing the
economies.
loophole.'
.
Three of the track · owners,
Charles Evans, Bllrry Goldstein
A spokesman for tbe · four
and William Hopkins, are cam- buyers told us that they did
palgn contributors to D' Amato.
nothing wrong, and that other
The fourth owner Is David
tracks, not just Roosevelt, bene· ·
Stevenson. The law firm of the
flted!romD'Amato'sleglslatlon.
D'Amato refused to talk to us
senator's brother, Armand D'A·
mato, now represents the four,
about tlle deal.
The Industrial development
although It did not represent
them wben they negotiated the ·bond rules also saY that the bonds
·
.. can only be used for projects In
bond deal.
Just before the purchase In
which tile value of the raw land Is
1984, Congress changed the Jaw
no more than 25 percent of the
governing tax·fr!!l! development
total project value .. The regulabonds to prohibit their use for
tlons are destined to keep people
from using the bonds on Specllla·
gambling enterprises. .D' Amato
pushed for and got a clause that
tlve deals.
.
allowed the bonds to be used for
Our associates Amy ·Simmons
some gambling operations for a
and Scott Sleek have obtained
limited lime. The Roosevelt
congressiOnal Investigative documents that Indicate that the
Raceway fell Into that loophole.
That's why, wilen the FBI, the
land was undervalued when the
Internat Revenue Service and
buyers applied for the bonds. The
the Justice Department looked
congressiOnal committee that
Into the dea:l, they found no
oversees lndustrli.J development
bonds Is now Investigating
criminal wrongdoing. But now

and were within 99·98 with 14 seconds left alter
free throws ' by Sam Vincent and Dennis Scott.
Floyd hit two free throws for Houston, Scott sank
one for Orlando, then Floyd sealed the victory
with two free throws with eight secollds left.
Scott, the fourth player taken In the draft , pa~ed
Orlando with.28 points.
·
.
In other NBA action Thursday night, New
.Jersey beat ~ami 114·103, New .York dumped
Washington 114·103, Milwaukee blasted Phltadel·
phla 141-111, and Utah pounded San Antonio
103-94.
. Nets 114, Heat 103:- At East Rutherford, N:J.,
Mookle Blaylock scored 11 of his 22 points In the
fourth quarter to lead the Nets. Reggie Theus
scored 24 points tor the Nets, who won their home
opener after dropping their first three games on
the road. Sherman Douglas led Miami with 24
points. .
· Knlcks 114, BuUels 103- At New York, Patrick
Ewing scored 32 points, pulled down 15 rebounds '
and blockled sev~n shots to lead the Kn!cks. New
York posted Its seventh straight victory over
Washington, Including all live games last year.
Ber nard King led the Bullets with 30 points.
Bucks 141, Slxers 111 - At Milwaukee, Ricky
Pierce scored 28 points and Jay Humphries added
13 of his 25 points In the third quarter to lift the
Bucks. Frank Brlckowskl added 18 points for
Milwaukee, which outscored the Slxers 41-19 In
the third quarter. Charles Barkley paced
Philadelphia with 27 points.
Jazz 103, Spurs 94 - At Salt Lake City, John
Stockton recorded 24 points and 17 assists and Jeff
Malone scored 17 of his 19 points In the second half
to lead the Jazz. The loss W\IS the 13th straight for
the Spurs at
to February 1986.

Saturday , and lost 40-18 In
Knoxville.
"1 would Jiave \O say we're an
underdog, " Holtz S!lld. ''For us to
wtn the game would be an upset.
We will learn somelblng about
ourselves.''
·
Tennessee has the nation's top
rated pass defense, allowing only
140.6 yards a game. The Volunteers are rated sixth nationally In
scoring detense , allowing 12.9
points, and lOth In total defense
with a 275-yard avearge. Tennes·
see's defense bas not allowed a
rushing touchdown since the
season opener and has forced 30
turnovers, 17 of them
Interceptions.
.
''This Is the best defense we've
faced," Holtz said. "Tbey get
turnovers and they don't allow
you togetanyrhytllm. You can't
get In ·a high-scoring game with
them. We have to have · some
help. We 've been to the dance
before. We know we bave to be
patient because Tennessee can
make you .look bad."
The Volunteers also rank sev·
entllln scoring with 37.5 points a
game,
''Tennessee Is a fine team,"
. Holtz said. ''This Is the best
offensive line we've played
against."

where and when be wiota to,
particularly If h!s decisiOn Is In
urgent reaponse to some provocation - e.g. mistreatment ot ·
American hostages by Iraq. He
has generously promised to con-.
suit with the leaden of Congress
on a continuing basil, but that's
alL
On the other hand, ArtiCle I
says very clearly that "The
Congress shall have power ... to
declare war." But wars nowadays don't follow the 18tbcentury
rules that were in effect when the
CoQitltutlon was written. For one
thing, they are often not even
"wars" In the classic sense. An
overwhelming attack on Iraq,
like the ones on· Grenada alid
'Panama, might better be des·

crlbed simply as a "military
operation," rather than as a

by C-Span.

These are among the reuons
why P!'l!lldentJ .have avoided
seeking delaratlons of war ever
since Harry .Truman, not bother·
lng to uk for one, ordered
MacArthur to resist the North
Korean Invasion of South Korea.
(He called that lengthy war a
·"I'Dlice action.")
.
·
In. an effort to 1et at least a

Symmes Valley senior Carl
Robinson, who battled knee
surgery following his Injury
early In basketball season last
year, was the Lineman of the
Year. Eastern junior Tim Bissell, who racked up 1,404 yards
and 24 touchdowns to lead all
conference ·· rushers, received
Back of the Year honors. Kyger
Creek head coach Mel Coen was
named Coach·of the Year.

:
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·
:
:
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i
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·
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•

The Daily Sentinel
(VSPSUU.) . . '
A Jlho- of Mlllllmedla, !110.

.
..
''
Mond4Y ;

Published every anemoon.

'!

throu1h Friday, 111 Court St. , Po·

merO)i', Ohio, by tht Ohio VaUey Publishing Company!MuiUm~ia, lot!.

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Pomeroy, Ohio 4!rl69. Ph. 992·21:16.
cond class postaae paid a~ PomerO)It
Ohio.

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Member: United Preis lrlternatt~ar.
Inland DaUy PrHs Alloclatlon and the
. Ohio Newspaper AaoclaUop.,Nallonal
Advertlsln&amp;: Representative, Br.,aba)n

Other first-team selec.ttons
were:
Symmes Valley - Kenny Da·
n!els, Rick Edmunds, Carl Robl nson (Lineman of the Year)
and Jason Sheppard.
North Gallla - Jared Moore,
Chris Skidmore and Casey
Staton.
Eastern - Tim Bissell ( ~ck
of the Year) and Mike Smith.
Southern - Todd Grindstaff
and Travis Nease.
Southwestern - John Sites
Hannan
TraceRon Lambert
.
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Newspaper Sales, 733 Tblrd AvenUe,
New York, New York 10017.

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, week.

Receiving honorable mention
were:
Kyger Creek - Sean Denney
(sr.) , Bryan Hall (so. ) and Scott
Newell (jr.).

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Oak HID · - Pilllllp Kuhn,'
Shawn Reese and Bryan Stewart
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Symmes Valley - Joe Cook
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city bas long been notorious.
The $630 mUllon Mirage Is best
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volcano, In front of the 3,000room hotel, that spews flames
and plna colada·sceilted steam
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rooms and a casino the slze of
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Obscured by the hoopla sur•
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the owners of the Aladdin,
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In addition, every major oper·
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piece of the action, Congress In
1973 passed (over Richard Nix·
on's veto) the War Powers Act,
under which presidential deploymenlll of U.s. forces In poten·
tlally hostile situations abroad
must be reported to Congress
promptly, and approved by It
within 60 days. U Congre.. fa111
to approve the prelsldent's action,
tlle forces must be withdrawn.
No prealdent of either perty,
however, bas ever conceded tJrat
the War Poweri Act ta co•t:ttu·
tlon_., or acted In accol:dance
with Its proVIsiOns.

'•

V-6

"war."
Besides, modern commanders
sav~ many lives by the use of
surprise. There would be pre·
clous little of that, If Saddam
Hussein were first ·t reated to a
three-week congressional debate
on a war resolution, fully covered

~Jc

•••
••
••

. ' '-~•

Who has the power ·to declare ·war?
The odds appear to be IncreasIng almost dally that the United
States wUlsoon go on the military
offensive against Iraq. And that
rallies an Important constitutional question: Who, precisely,
haa the authority to Initiate ·
hostlalltles?
·
Once aifaln, as in thecaseofthe
bUdget flalco, the basic problem
II tbat the Americian people, In
their dubloua wisdom, have
·• given possessiOn of the White
House to one party and control of
Congreu to the other.
·
Under Article II of tbe Cons tl·
tutton, the president Is commander In chief of the armed
forces, and Mr. Bush has made It
clear that In b'ls view be can, as
such, .set those forces In motion

.•

••

Southern Valley Athletic Con· Wilburn (fr.) .
terence · football co-champions
North Gallla
Chris AlderKyger Creek and Oak Hill man, Brian Llevlng and Clay
dominated tbe all-conference Smith (all seniors) .
Eastern- Jason Hager (sr.),
first team, as the Oaks had six
and the Bobcats had five . ·
James McDaniel (Jr.) and Doug
The Bobcats (9·1, 6-1) were Miller (sr.) .
represented by seniors Joe EdSouthern - Jarrod and Jason
wards, Dan Polcyn and Shane Circle (both seniors), and Ronnie
Swisher, and juniors Jeff Birch· Wagner (Jr.).
.
Southwestern - Keith Carter
field and Phil Bradbury, while
the Oaks (7·3, 6·1) 'had seniors (sr.), Kevin Gillman (Jr.) and
Rob Askins, Shane Maynard a_nd Kevin Kiser (sr.).
Mike Slm~on, and juniors Chad ~ Hannan Tr~ce - Chad Barnes
Jones, Allen Potter and Bill (!r.), Dean Cremeans and Shane
Potter.
· Wells (both juniors).

.

The Daily Sentinel

•

---Sporl8 briefs'-

·

Tennlll
Jennifer Caprtatl, the 14-yearold sensation, drew · U.S. Open
champion Gabriela Sabatini as
her opening opponent lor the $3
million VIrginia Slims Ch,am·
plonshlps, starting next Monday
In New York. Defending cham·
pion Stefn Graf will open against
J ana Novo Ina and No. 2 seed
Martina Navratllova faces Con·
cblta· Martinez.

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Friday, November 9. 1990
P.111

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The o.lly Sautiuel

Friday. Novembl!r 9, 1990

Pomtloy-Middlaport, Ohio

Ball State to host OU Saturday

In the Big Ten Saturday,

By United Press lalerna&amp;loaal
.
Ball State's 13-3 win over Central Michigan last
. week.assured Toledo a share of the Mid-American
Confl'rence championship. It also made things
that much tougher this week for Tom Llchlten·
berg's struggling Ohio University tearn.
The Bobcats, H·l overall and'0-5-1 tn the MAC,
have the dubious distinction ot being the only
roadblock standing In the way of Central
Michigan and a trip to the Call!ornta Raisin Bowl.
U the Chippewas beat OU, they tie Toledo tor the
MAC title and, by virtue of a 13-12 win over ihe
Rockets, would get the bowl.trip. An"OU win would
send.Toledo bowling.
"Tbls" Is a must.wln game for Central
Michigan," said Lichtenberg. ''They will come
after us because the championship and bowl trip
are on the !IDe tor !bern."
Central Michigan Is 7·2·1 overall and 6·1ln the
MAC. The Chippewas' qnly other loss was 20-17 to
Kentucky the opening week of the season and they
a!SQ were tied 14·14 by Akron.
.
OU has dropped four .In a row since a lQ.lO with
Bowling Green. Tl1e Bobcats have lost nine
straight to Central Michigan and 13 of the last 14
games played between the two teams.
Central has allowed MAC teams onY three
touchdOWII$ In seven games, all of them through
the air.
"They (Central) are a very physical ballclub
with an outstanding defense," said Lichtenberg,
whose team was blanked 27·0 . last week by
Youngstown State. "Tbey are a very good football

No. 5 Iowa meets No. 24 Ohio State in Big Ten game
By CARRIE MUSJtAT
UPISpoN Wrller
CHICAGO (UPI)- No. 51owa
may be the only unbeaten team In
t,he Big Ten, butlthasn'tcliDchl!d.
a trip to the Rose Bowl- not with

NBA action
llyUelod,..obtorMUoeal
(Allllm&lt;oli8T)

.

Eueere o.•erHee
Alludc!llvtololl
Teom
W L Pel. Gil
Bostce . ., .............. 3 .o 1.000 P!llladelphla ......... .2 ·1 .6&amp;7 I
New York ..... ....... 2 2 .!00 1\!
Miami.. ............. :.... ! 2 .333 2
w..ht,.. ............ .. l 2 .333 · 2
New JerEy .......... 1 3 .250 21!
0
1
1
1
2
2
3

1.000
.7!!0

.m

1!

I!

.&amp;67

1
.!00 1\!
.!00 1\!
.250 2\!

Wflllera Coaf~t
Ml-llllvlololl

Team

WL

Datlas .................. a 1

San Antonio ......... 2 1

Ulah ...... .. .. .. .. .. .... 2 1

Pot. 011

.m

.667
.667

I!

\!I
Houston .... :...... ......2 2 .!00
Minnesota .. ............! 3 .250 2
Donver .............. ....0 I .000 3
Orlando ............ .....0 1 .000 3
PacifiC Dtvlllc•
Portland .. ............ 3 0 1.000 Seattle .. ....... .... .....2 o "!.000 l!i
Phoenix ................ .2 1 .667 1
Golden State , ...... . 2 2 .500 1\!i
L.A. Clippers .... ... 2 2 .500 1\!i
L.A . Lak..-s .... ..... 0 2 .000 2\!i
Sacramento .. ...... .. .0 3 .000 3

'l'llllnday's rHulh
New Yori&lt; 114. Washlngtm 103

New Jersey 114, MJamt 103

Milwaukee 141, Pblladelphla 1ll
Houstce103, Orlando 99 .
Utah 103. San Antmlo 91

Frlday'••un• ·

Chicaao at Bostoo, 7:30p.m.

MUwaukeeat Washlngtm, 8 p.-m .
Cleveland at Indiana, 8 p.m.
Charlotte at Minnesota, 8 p.m.
Orlando at Dal.las. 8:30p.m.
Seattle at Denver, 9: 30p.m.
Sacramento at L.A. Laker~J,10: 30

p.m.

Atlanta al Golden State, 10: 30

p.m.

-J-1

Philadelphia 48. New England 20
Mlam123. Phoenix 3
Kanau City 9, LA Raiders 7
New Orleans 21. Clndnnatl7
Plttlbll Ilh 21, Atlanll 9
Wuhlngtm 11. Detnil 38. OT
San Franclaco 21, Green Bay :II
NY Jets 21, DailaJ 9
Bulfalol2,
!and 0
San 01080 31. SNttle 14
Chicago 26, Tampa Bay 6
LA Rams 17. Houatoo13
Minnesota 27. Donver 22

a ...

Mo..., Game
NY Oiants 21. Indianapolis 7

~ntrallllvllloll

Atlanta . . .. .. .... ...... 3
P.trolt ......• ... ....... 3
Mllwalikee ........ ,.• 3
Indiar,.a . .. .............. .2
Charlot11e .. ........ .. . 2
Cl....,land ............ 2
Chicago .. ......... .... !

Ohio State next. said Hawkeyes
head ooach Hayden Fry.
"Oillo State has owned me,"
Fry said. "Those rascals have
had our number bet11et than
anybody In the Big Ten. They've

.

Detroit al Portland, 10:30 p.m .

Sa&amp;IU"da,'• lamel
Bostm at NeW Jeney, 7:30p.m.
Indiana at Mlarn~ 7:30p.m .
Philadelphia at a ...land, 7:30

p.m.

.. Charlot1e at Chl~go, 8:30p. m.
Houstm at San Antm.lo, 8:30p.m.
Den\er at Phoenix, 9: 30 p.m.
Atlanta at L.A . Clippers, 10: 30
p.m.
New Y'ortt at Sacramento. 10: 30

p.m.

Golden Slate 111 Seattle, 10:30
p.m.

UPI ratings

Suod01."Nn.11 .
Atlanta at Chicago, 1 p.m.
Indianapolis at New Enlland. 1
• p.m .
.
Miami at NY Jets. 1 p.m .
MJnnes&lt;U at Detroit, 1 p.m .
Phoenix at lllaflalo, I p.m.
~ltle at Kansas City, I p.m.
Tampa Bay at New Orlean,s, 1
p.m.
NY Giants at LA Rams, 4 p.m.
Denver at San Dleeo, 4 p.m.
Green Bay at J,.A Raiders, 4 p.m.
San FrancjSCQ at Dallas, 8 p.m.
Moadll)', Nov. 12
Washlngtm at PhUadelphla, 9

p.m.

This week's games
Thla We'**•
Olllo CoDece Foolball !lclo..,.le
8atunlll)', Nov II
Ohio State at Iowa
~
WnB'a Michigan at Blwling
Green "
Central Michigan at Ohio Unlv
Kent State at Miami
Navy at Toledo
Akr&lt;ll at Louls1Bna Tech
Cincinnati at Florida State
Younptown Sf at TOws«~~ St (Mdl
Northern Mld&gt;IJllln at Ashland
Heldelber&amp; at 8aldWin·WIIIace
capital at Marietla
.
Hiram at Mount Union
l'iluskltllllm at John Car roll
Ohio Northern at Otterbein
carneete-Melloo (Pal at Case
Reaerve
DenLsm at Wooster
Earlham (lndl at Ken:yoo
Oberlin at SwarthmQI1! (Pal
Ohio ·w esleyan at WU1enberg
West Vli'Jlnla Stat Centnl St
Fernun (Va) at Daytoo ·
Urbana at Blufnm
Oetlance at Thomas More (Ky)
Mount St. Jo~eph at Wllmlnetcn
Tlllln at Lindenwood !Mol
a-nllhtl~

Pairings
Foolllllll playotrplllr.,~
Pairings for this weekend s Ohio
High School Athletic Ass&lt;rlatlon
regional football playoffs:

NEW YORK IUP1l- TheUnl11ed
Press lnternauonal Board of
Coach• Top 25 «!lleee football ·
rattnas. with record and tlrst-place
votes ' In parenttleees, total points
Ibaled on 15 pcints lor lint place,
14 for second. elc. l, and last week's
ranldq.

Team

Paint•

I. Notre Damel38l IHl .. ..... 828 3
2. WashlngtmiiSl IS·U ........805 5
' 3. ColtJraclo 121 IS·H l ....... .. &gt;.697 7
• 1. Miami 16-21 ........... .... ........ 6218
5. Iowa 17·1) .................... ... 55113
6. Brl!lham Yo- 17-11 .... .....1979
7. Geoi'JII Tech (7.0.11 ........ 49114
8. TennelleeiS-1·21 .... .. ....... 11910
9. VITJinla !HI ................... :407! "
10. N-aska 18-1 1 ................ .3982
"11. norlda State t8-2&gt; ........ . J,"lSll
J1 T .... 16-1) .............. .. .... 29712
11 Auburn (6·1·11 .................. 177'
14. Mlsstsslppl (6-li ............. 17615
15. Illlnolat6·2) ........ ........ ..... 122 6
16. Clemson 18-21 ..................50 17
17. Mlclllpn (5-31 ................. 3518
18. Oreflon 17·21 .............. .. .. .. 20 20
19. Penn SO.te !6-2! .. ........ ..... 19 21
20. Loulsvlllet8-1·li ........ ..... .1022
21. Wyoming !9·1i .............. .... ; 16
22 Texas A&amp;M 16·2·11 .. .. ........ 3 24
23. Fresno Stale {7·1·]) ... .. .... 2 NR
24. Ole) Ohio State !6-2-11 .... 1 NR
21. !tiel Artzma ·t6-3! .. .... ..... .. 1 19
NR - not ruked
Others "cetvtng votes; None.
The natloll!l champion wtll reeetvtt a $32,000noo-athletlcscholar·
ship frcrn the Gerrits Foundallon
and United Press International.
By a~ement with theAmerlc.n
Football Coaches Association,
11eams barr!d turn television appearances or postseasm play or
havtng lost more than 20 percent ot
their football · scholar!dtlps arE'
Ineligible for the Top 25 and
national champlooshlp consideration by the UPI Board or Coaches.
Thoae schoc:is are F1ortda, Houstoo, Memph.ls State, Oklahoma and

Oklahoma Stale.

NFL results
JIJ Uelod ,_olnteraotloul

-·

NATIONAL P00TaALL LBAGUE
Amtrk'.U Coafereeee

Team

DIY.... I

Sal•nt.,, Nov. le

('AIJ pm• at 1 p.m. uiM8
noted)

.......

Bowl.

RepseS
·
Ollumbus Brookhaven 110-11 vs.
f'lqua ( 10- 1) , Troy Memortal
Stadium.

...... ,

Ctnctnnau Prlncetrn 19·21 vs.
Middletown 19-2), Daytm Welcome
Stadium, 7:30p.m.
· Division D
Frld&amp;)', Nov. &amp;
(All....,,. 1M 7:111 p.m. )

.......

Unlont~n Lake (7·3) vs. Steu-

benVille 110. ]), Cantm Fawcett
Stadium.

.

w...

LA Raiders .. .. .. ....6 2 0 .750 1:51 1118
Kanoao City .........53 0 .625176121
Son DleiO ... , .... .. ..t 50 .141195156
Denver ...... .... ......3 50 .315190 205
Seattle .. .... ,..........3 50 .37ll158 166
Nllii-C.a,_t

-·

Team
WLTPot.PFPA
NY Giants ......... 8 0 0 1.000 19&amp; 103
W•hlngtm ........ 5 3 0 .62:1 ~ 141
Phlladelpbll ...... f f 0 .!!00 199172

Dalllla........ .. ., .... 3 6 0 .3.13119180
PhOOIItx ......... .... 2 6 0
Celllral
Chi CillO ............ . 7 1 0
Tampa Bay ........ t 5 0
Dot rolt .............. . 3 5 0
GrMn Boy ......... 3 5 0
Mln-ota .......... 2 6

....

o

.250 103 195
.87ll199 102

.Itt 163 208
.375 :106 220

.11Ht7 180
.250177181

Son Frandlco .... B 0 0 1.1110 1•138
Atlanta .............. 350 .375:11111221
LA Rams .... ....... 35 o .m lll227
Hew Or•no._. .... 3 5G .375 Ull157

llqloo6

Fostoria (&amp;.3) v_,. Maple Heights
(7-4), Mansfteld Arlin Field.

llqlon7
Columbus DeSaies 19-2) vs. Co·
lumbus Briggs (]0·1). Gahanna
Uncoln Field .

llqlon8
St. Marys Memortal (ll·OI vs,
Dayton Dunbar (9-2), Dayton WelCQme Stadium.

Dlvlllon Dl

.......

s.ta-:dAJ , Nov. 10
(All ramoa &amp;17p.m. )

Youngstown Moooey (10-1) vs.
Menter Lake CathoHc 111.01 .
Warren Mollenkopf Stadluni..
Refll ... ll
Richfield Revere (11-0) vs. wu.
lard (]1.0), Berea Georae Finnie
Stadium.
.
Refi(IIDIJ
Ucklng Valley (10-1) vs. lrmtm
(9-2), Lancauer Fultm Field.
Reel• 11
St. Parll Gr&amp;ham (9·2) vs.
HamlltCil Badift. (9-2), Centervnte.,

lllvllloiiiV
.......
.,..Nov. I
IIIII pm• ol 1:• p.m.)

W LT Pot. PF PA

Buffalo .......... ......71 0 .87ll22!1136
MlamJ .. ................7 I 0 .87ll175 93
J&lt;Y J•u .. .............4 5o .141175199
1ndlanapolls .. .......2 6 0 .250 112 186
New England .......1 7 0 .125 120 241
Ceolral
Clr&lt;:lnnatl.. ..........5 4 0 .556 212 225
PlttJburgh ...........5 I 0 .556171 147
Houston .. .. ...........4 50 .141191 169
C!....,land ............2 7 0 .222128 235

)

Austint own Fitch (9-21 vs.
Warren · Harding 111.01, Akroo
Rubber Bowl, Frld~y. 7:30p.m.
Repon 2
Massillon Washlngtm ·(8-3) vs.
Sandusky 111-0), Akron Rubber

Rell•ll

Missouri basketball
program on probation
By JOHN HENDEL
UPI Sports Writer
OVERLAND PARK, Kan.
(UPI) · - The University of
Missouri basketball program
was barred from the 1991 NCAA
Tournament and dealt a series of
recruiting restrictions Thursday
In a two·year probation handed
down by the NCAA.
Tbe · men's team may not '
provide any expense-paid recruiting visits during 1991 and
only one member of the coaching
staff will be allowed for off.
Cll!llpus· recruiting. Tbe school
was limited to one basketball
scholarship during the 1991-92
academic year and two djlrlng
1992-93.
The penalty came one day
after the University of Illinois
basketball team was banned
from postseason play for one
year and placed on three years'
probation for recruiting viola·
tlons that Included providing
cars for recruits.
Missouri ,head coach Norm
Stewart and assistants Bob Sundvo~ and Rich Daly were mentioned, In charges of unethical
conduct or providing false or
misleading Information to Investigators. Stewart Is also ~barged
with a lack of Institutional
control.
Stewart remains under his
usual contract . Sundvold and
Daly are working under open·
ended contracts that are renewed on a monthly basts.
The NCAA Committee on Infractlong.found Missouri guilty of
giving financial aid to player P .J.
Mays even though he was lnellgl· ·
ble under the university's admls•
slons policy. The NCAA charged
the Missouri basketball start
Ignored a letter lntormiDg them
the player was Ineligible.

The case against Missouri was
opened when the school reported
a possible violation assistant
coach Bob Sundvold paid for a
plane ticket to send Mays home.
Mays was to try to straighten out
his high school transcript, which
had left him a Proposition 48
victim and thus ineligible to play
as a freshman.
Other charges Include grant·
lng Mays scholarship money for
which, as a Proposition 48
non-qualifier, he was not eligible.
The Missouri Investigation Is
SlmUar to DIIDols' only In the
timing and that basketball was
Involved. Illinois was handeq~
third probation In six years (the
other two were related to toot·
ball), but Missouri had never
before appeared before the In·
fractions Committee.
On Wednesday , llllnols was
docked three basketball scholar·
ships In eacli of the next two
academic years. The NCAA also
adopted several penalties that
were Imposed by the university,
Including the freezing of salaries
ot.two assistant coaches and the
dental of bonuses to the coaching
staff for the team's participation
In last year's NCAA tournament.
The announcement came !ol·
lowing a 17-month Investigation
by the NCAA.

more than 50."
In fact, Minnesota has outscored opponents 107·51ln Its five
victories and has been outscored
143-52 In Its three losses.
Scott Schaffner will get bts
second start at quarterback for
the Gophers because of the
shoulder IDj\[ry to Marque! Fleet·
wQOd. Schaffner and Fleetwood
&amp;ach have live touchdown passes
and five Interceptions.
'
And Gutekunst's Gophers will
match defenses with George
Perles' Sparta~s, having stolen
the Michigan State scheme after
Intensive fUm work.
"The credit goes to them,"
Perles said of Gutekunst and
staff. " I thought maybe someone
here had taught them but that's
not the case. They did It strictly
from film ? '
Perles Is looking !qrward to the
return of Courtney Hawkins, a
talented wide reeelver who has
been sidelined with a shoulder
Injury. He caught nine passes for
197 yards In last year's 21-7
come·from-beblnd victory. The ·
Spartans lead the series 17-11 and
have won 11 straight, dating back
to the 1976 season. ·
' 'He (Hawkins) Is wbat we
have not had," Perles said. "We
didn't itave that deep threat and
we've been monkeying around,
going deep. This Is the guy you've
got to go to a few times a game. ••
Purdue head coach Fred Akers.
was glad to have linebacker
Darren Trleb back In the lineup
last week, although he couldn't
stop the Wolverines who won
38-13. But Trleb, who had 26
tackles, 16 of them solo stops, Is
expected to be sidelined against
Northwestern.
Tb!s could be the Bollermak·

Reel• II

Verallles (lD-1 l vs. Wett Jetter·
101 19-21. Claytoo Nor&lt;hmmi
Stadium.

lllvlolaeV
Nov. I
tAll ,.,_1M , , . p.m. uel&lt;aa
n...d)

Fr...,,

llefll•l1

.

Fremmt St. Joltl'flh 1~1.0) ••·
Sanduoky St. Mary (9-2), Bellevut.
!tala II
Archbold (ll:0) vo. Mblo11er 110·
. U, "Urns SO.dlum.

llefll• II

,.,.anldln FtHIIace Grten 111-01
vs. N....,.kCatboUc tWl. Waverly
Raltllrer Field, Saturday. 7 p.m.

Marlem()ll~ ~

• • St. Heney
(ll.Oi. Piqua Wertz Stadium.·

Tbe NCAA also charged the
baSketball program had an un·
monitored expense fund that was
used In violation of university,
titate and NCAA rules, bad set up
a "easlno party" for recurlts and
was guilty of bringing recruits to
campus In the summer before .
they enrolled.

CHRIS
SAT.~

ers' best chance-at their first BIK"" ·
Ten win of the year.
"We' ve bad tliat opportunity
(to win a Big Ten game) every
week," Akers said.
Northwestern, which Is 14 In
the conference. 2·6 overall, contbtues to be on the plus side In the
turnover department with 16
takeaways and .10 giveaways for
a plus-6 mark.
'The most pleasant part of the
surprise Is that our defense has
caused some turnovers." Wildcats l)ead coach j!'rancls Peay
said of the.12 fumble recoveries
plus four Interceptions. "Unfortunately, they haven't caused
any In the last two weekS." .
Indiana bas committed enough
turnovers to last a lifetime, said
bead coach Bill Mallory. The
Hoosiers fumbled the ball live
Urnes In the second half of la.s t
week's 45·20 loss to Michigan
State.
"We shot ourselves In the
foot," Mallory said.
Wisconsin bead coach Barry
Alvarez Is trying to keep his team
from falllng deeper In to the Big
Ten basement.
"It's (winnllig attitude) an
attitude we've had a dltflcult
time with," Alvarez said, "I
think the kids are s IDrtlng to
understand what we're talking
about but It's been an ongoing
thing for us."
Wisconsin tal.Iback Robert Wll· ·
Iiams leads the team with 432 .
rushing yards, which Is six more
yards than the leading Badger
(Jimmy Henderson) rushed for
In all of 1989. Meanwhile, WlscOn·
sin defensive tackle Don Davey
leads the Big Ten with tackllisfor
a loss wllh 17 for 79 yards.

team."

Toledo, which wound up the MAC portion of Its
schedule last week :with a 37·~ win at Western
Michigan, hosts Navy this week. The Rockets are
8,1 overall and 7-1 In the conference.
Tbree other MAC games Saturday send Ball
State to E:as tern Michigan, Kent State tp Miami
and Western Michigan to Bowling Green.
Kent State has lost two In a row since snapping
Its 17·game losing streak three WeekS ago. Miami
has three wins and a tie (agalnst ·BowliDgGreen)

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (UPI)
- Middletown High School toot·
ball coach Jim Place has re·
moved himself as coach of the
Middles for the remainder of the
state playoffs because of a
controversy over the use of an
Ineligible player.
Place, 43, said Tbul'$day his
longtime asststan t Bob Thompson will coach the Middles In
their playoft game against Cincinnati Princeton Saturday night
In Dayton.
·
Place said he took the action
because of the controversy sur·
rounding his failure to report the
IDellglble player who participated In the team's second game
of tlie season when the Middles
defeated Kettering Falnnont,
56.0.
Middletown officials notltled
the Ohio High Sc!;lool Athletic
Association of the Infraction
Monday, but Commissioner Clair
Muscaro ruled the Middles may
remain In the DivisiOn I playoffs.
Place said he didn't know the
player was Ineligible when he put
him In the game against Fair·
mont. He said he was lnfonned of
the Infraction three days after
the game by the school's athletic
director, Buddy ·Moore.
Moore, a Middleport. native
who was a GalllpoUs teacher and

By PAUL WALSH
'UPI Sports Writer
The NFL's recommendation to
' strip Phoenix of the Super Bowl
may have a bearing on whether
the University of VIrginia accepts a bid to the Fiesta Bowlin
AriZona.
The Nq. 9 Cavaliers, wbo·were
No. lin the nation until their loss
last Saturday to Georgia Tech,
are among the leading candidates to be Invited to the New
Year's Day howl in Tempe, Ariz.,
near .Phoenix. Bowl Invitations
may not be extended until Nov.
24. ' .
.
Voters In Arizona Tuesday
rejected two ballot measures
that would have created a
holiday In memory of Mariln
Luther King Jr. NFL Commissioner; Paul Tagllabue said he
will encourage club owners to
" move the 1993 Super Bowl from
Ar\Z~PB: .1'? .!!-nother.Jocatip!l becau&amp;ll of the votes. ·
·
"We are aware of what Is
happening out there, •• sa'ld VIrginia athletic director Jim Copeland, who declined to speak
directly about a Fiesta Bowl b!d
for VIrginia, which Is 7·1 and on
course to finiSh 10-1. He did say
the situation "looks good" for
VIrginia to be playing In a New
Year's Day bowl.
Don Meyers, head of the Fiesta
Bowl selection committee, said
his panel would use Its ·"best
shot" to get VIrginia to aceept a
Fiesta InVItation ..

assistant and head football coach
(1970-78), called Sberm Bowser,
Fairmont's athletic director, and
told him about the rule violation,
but he did not report It to the
OHSAA. Bowser said he didn't
want a forfeit, Moore said.
If the violation had been
reported during the regUlar ·
season, Middletown would have
had to forfeit the win and would
not have qualified for the
playoffs. .
·
Cincinnati Moeller, which lost
21·17 to the Mtddtes In the
opening round of the playotis last
weekend, and Oxford Tala·
wanda, which would have qualified for the playoffS had Middletown 'forfeited the Falnnont
game, are calling for Middletown
to withdraw from post·season
play:

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Saturday, Nov. 17, 1990

By ·RICK VANSANT
the Bengals to the Super Bowl
While Eslason passed 32 times
UPI Sports Writer
two seasons ago, Is again running
(completing only 15 for 138
CINCINNATI (UPI) '- Jim with strength and confidence
yards) , 20 runs produced 136
McNally's favorite phrase when after a knee Injury sidelined him
yards -an average of 6.8 yards
the Cincinnati Bengals were tor a year. Since returning three
per carry.
he.adlng· for the ·Super Bowl two weeks ago, WoodS has caught 11
"At least we showed one
years ago was, "Run the ball."
thing," said McNally. "We Cln
passes !Or 99 yards and carried 18
run thj! ball."
Late In that brUllant 1988 times tor 68 yards.
season, with Ickey Woods and
Woods, who has taken several
The Steelers may not have to
bard
bits
and
bounced
right
up,
work
too hard to figure out the
Ja,10~ Brooks running more and
.
appears
ready
to
take
the
pres·
Bengals'
game plan for Nov. 18.
more and Boomer Estason pass·
But,
the
question
Is- with Woods
IDg less and less, McNally- the sure off scatback Brooks, who
back In good health, with Brooks
has been a prime target for
Bengals' offensive tiDe coach still able to scamper and with
could often be seen smlllng and defenders In Woods' absence.
McNally uttering his favorite
Despite a 21-7 !&amp;ss to New
repeating his pet phrase, "Run
the bali, run the ball...
.
. Otleans last Sunday, the Bengals phrase - can Pittsburgh stop a
Now. wit!) Eslason unable to bit proved they can run the ball - If Clncy return to the hastes?
the side of a barn and the Bengals they will only do It.
unable to tlnd a winning strategy,
McNally Is once again advocat·
Ing, "Jlun the ball."
.
"Tb·ls may be the approach we
KAPALUA,
Hawaii (UPI) -David Peoples fired a 2-under-par 69
should take, " McNally said as
Tbursday to forge a three-stroke lead after two rounds of the $700,000
the Be~gals used this week's bye
Kapalua Invitational golf tournament.
In the schedule to step back and
Peoples, who carded a 63 Wednesday, tlnlsbed with a twa.day total
take stock. ''Maybe we should go
of
lO:under•par 132 to lead Tom Purtter. ·
back to th.e basics and run the
"I
hit the ball really good out there today, bu tl'm not satistled with
ball." .•
the
score
I bad," Peoples said. "I felt that llett about three shots out
Fans will tlnd out If McNally's
there."
rec:ommendation Is accepted by
~tar!lng on the back side, Peoples carded birdies on the lOth and
head coach Sam W.yche when
11th
holes to go to 10-under-par, but missed 6-!oot par putts at Nos.15
Cincinnati returns to action Nov.
to return to even-par on the day. He birdied Nos.17 and 18, then
and16
18 agaln$1 Pittsburgh. It's a big
carded
two birdies and two bogeys on the front side to finish his roupd.
game tor ,t he Bengals for a couple
At
the
par4 ninth hole, Peoples hit his tee shot within 120 yards of
ot reasons - GJnctnnatlls trying
the bole but wound up with a bogey.
to halt a:skld In which they've lost
"When you play a hole like that, you feel that you've lost a shot," ·
tout ot th~ last six games and the
Peoples
said.
Steelers••re !led with the Bengals
One
stroke
behind Purtzer waa Nick Price, who shot the day's tow
for the~ ~FC Central division
round
of
67
tb
stand at 6-under·pllr 136.
lead.
"l teally played well the last two days," Price said. "I was
'
~· ~
Tbere ·, are sev~ral rea59ns to
bogeylesa until I reaohed· the 18th hole today."
believe -the Bengal a will Indeed
Price hit his tee shot out·of bounds at the par-5 18th, leaving him
come our running against the scrambling to make a bogey.
•
SteelerS'.1, Eslason's passing bas
. ''I tried tohlta long one down (No.)l8andlcameoverthetopoflt,"
been hol"tlble 'he past month. 2, · Price said.
Seven players were five shots back of Peoples at 137, Including
Woods Is' 'again ruJtniDg strona
defendlna champion Peter Jacobsen, U.S, Open tltlelst Hale Irwin
atter knee su111ery. 3, Umlted
and 191M Maa11ers champion Ben Crenshaw.
running •Ill the lu t game waa
''The lfeelll here are 10 good - that's the reason the scores are so
· very successful.
"I'm In a slump," admits
low," Price aald.
.
E;s~son , "I'm either throwing
Tbunday was the second of two pra.am days In the tournament,
over a guy's bead or at hla feet." . with tbe. proteslllonal'~ score counting toward his 72-hole total. The
. Woods, who "lckey Shutflec!" · flnil two rounds will be played without amateur partners.

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FOil FACED

Slumping Bengals may retum to .running ·

COLONY THEATRE

ONE EYEIING SHOW 7•SOP.M.
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While not encouraging schools Tagllabue to re.verse his position,
to boycott the Fiesta Bowl, claiming there Is "an unfairness
NAACP spokesman James Willi- being created here."
ams said Thursday his national
However, Los Angeles Raider
civil rights organization "would receiver Willie Gault said he
support any . .. college team thought Tagllabue' s message
deciding that It would rather not was "right on. I applaud the
participate" In the Fiesta Bowl.
commissioner for this."
,A son of civil rights leader
The cities of Phoenix and
Jesse Jackson, Yusef Dubois Tempe have their own King
Jackson, plays for the Cavaliers observances on a municipal
as a linebilcker. Neither Jackson level. Along with Arizona, New
could be reached for comment on .Hampshire and Montana also
whether VIrginia should accept a · have no King holiday.
Fiesta Bowl bid, If one Is offered.
San Diego Is the top candidate
Fiesta Bowl spokesman Brent to be the new host of Super Bowl
DeRaad expressed concern XXVII, should Arizona· ultiabout how the referendum votes mately lose one of the world's
would affect his event, acknowl- mo~t popular and financially
edging the bowl "could have lucrative one·day sporting
· events.
problems briDging teams ln."
However, the Martin Luther
. "I fuUy expect Notre Dame or
Florida State or any team to be King Tribute Coalition urged the
concerned about the way the vote NFL to pass over San Diego In Its
turned out," DeRaad said In an search for a new 1993 Super Bowl
Interview w.lth the 'Washing\on site. "' ·
Coalition spokeswoman Bar·
Post. "It worries us, obviously.
bara
Gartner said letter's were
This afiects . the Fiesta ~owl's
being sent to Tagllabue and other
entire future."
Selection committee chief league officials pointing out that
Meyers said he Is sure Individual twice the city stopped trlbu tes to
schools are paying attention to the slain civil rights leader.
In 1986, the city council re·
the. King holiday rift.
"But I· don't think It will have named downtown Market Street
an adverse effect" on the Fiesta after King, but voters over·
wbelmlngly approved a re!eren·
Bowl,' ' he said.
Meyers said he Is confident dum canceLing the honor and
state lawmakers would reach a · restoring the original,name. Last
compromise, · "something like a ye·a r, after heated debate, the
PoPt Commission voted 4-3
Llncoin·Klng holiday."
against
naming the city's new
Phoenix Mayor PaL _. Johnson
said his city would appeal to Convention Center after King.

799

24'x32'

~THE

Autci. trona., •lr cond ••

..

King vote·could hurt Fiesta Bowl

Place steps d~wn ·as Middies'
head )coach; cites controversy

,

Campbell Memortai 1U-0) vs .
War.en Kennedy (9-21, Boardman
Spartan Stadium.
Refll•1t
LoUdonvUie 111.01 vs. Elyria
C.tl'lol1c UJ·3), Alhl&amp;ndCommunlty
Stadium. '
&amp;elf• II
Coal Grewe DawJcn.Bryant (10·
11 vs. Heath (10.11. Portsmouth
Spartan St.t.dlum.

··

been extremely difficult for Iowa - four times this year, · plus a
confident Matt Rodgers, who Is
through the years."
third 1n Big Ten total offense with
Tbe Buckeyes, who sneake!l
a 194 yard per game average.
Into UPI's coaches poU at No. 24
Both Bell and Stewart are
this week, hold a 33-12-3 advan·
averaging 6.1 yards per carry.
tage In the series. That Includes a
"It's hard to figure out how to
~ win last year, which Fry
stop that potent offense," Co!lper
called his most disappointing.
Tbe Hawkeyes ."7·1 overall, will said. "Then I go Into the other
seek revenge' and their silcth film room and face the same
thing: how do you ·stOp their
straight Big Ten win Saturday
when they play hosttoOblo State. defense?"
Iowa was able to run at "will
In other conference games
Saturday, No. 15 llllnols tra-v els against Dlinols' vaunted defense,
to No,. 17 Michigan, Minnesota
totaling 335 yards. The bruised
entertains Michigan State,
IIIIDI will face another high·
Purdue plays Northwestern, and
powered back In Michigan's Jon
Wisconsin visits Indiana.
Vaughn, now fourlb In the nation
Fry enjoyed his most gratlty- ·In rushing with 1,142 yards on 172
tng win as a coach last·week In · carries.
the 54·28 romp over Illinois, now
"We have to play a better run
6-2 overall and 4-1 In the confer· defense," said Dlinols head
ence. tied for second with coach John Mackovlc, whose
team ranks seventh In the league
Minnesota. .
"I know llfinots fans are smart In rushing defense. "They'll test
·
enough not to get down on .them us.''
because they lost one football
"Illinois will be the best team•
.game," Fry said.
we'll play since the Iowa game,"
llllnols Is hurting - which Moeller said. "We've got to play
Michigan head coach Gary the best game Of our season this
week If we're going to win this
Moeller said will be a factor.
"I know that (team that lost to game.''
Iowa) won't be the Dllnols team
The odds favor the Wolverines,
that we'll play this week." who lead the series 55·19·1 and
Moeller said. ''They'll have a have won the last four games.
different attitude when they Illinois has not won at Michigan
come to play.' ·
since 1966.
SO will Iowa. Boasting a
Minnesota head coach John
certal!l post-season howl game
somewhere - preferably Pasad- Gutekunst also ha~ a tough
ena, Call!. - the Hawkeyes are backfield to deal with" In Michl·
on a mission. They want to erase .gan State's T!eo Duckett and
last year's 5-6 mark which left Hyland Hickson, who have to.
taled 1, 794 yards on 349 combined
them at home In the winter.
carries
- each scoring eight
"At that point, they were out of
.
touchdowns.
Then, the Gophers
the conference race and we were
play
at
Michigan
and hostlowa In
going for a bOwl game and we
the
season
finale.
It won't be easy
played rather well," Ohio State
bead coach John Cooper said of to keep pace In the Big Ten.
"The kids are calling the next
last year's win. "We've been
playing better but we haven't three games 'Murderer's Row.'
played the caliber of team we'll and I sort of agree with them,"
Gutekunst said. "I'm hopeful we
be facing Saturday."
Tbe Buckeyes will have to won't be awestruck. We've had
contend with Nick Bell and Tony . four games where we've given up
Stewart, who have gained more less than seven points and tWo
than 100 yards In the same game games where we've given tip

In Its last four games and now stands 4·4·1 and
3-2-1, good for third place In the league.
Miami beat Eastern Michigan 34·14 last week,
while Kent dropped a 20· 16 decision to BG.
A spot In the first division will be on the !IDe ID
the Bowling Green-Western Michigan game. The
BrolJCos currently are tied with Ball State for
fourth at 3·3 (54 overall) , while BG Is 2-3·2 and
H-2. The Faicons beat Western 31-30 last year In
Kalamazoo.
Toledo puts a 14-game home winning streak on
the line against Navy (3-5) lna4: 30p.m. start. Tbe
Rockets have won 25 of their last 28 games at the
·
Glass Bowl.
.
Tbe Midshipmen lost 52·31 last week to No. 1
Notre Dame, but the game was tied 10-10 at
halttime. Navy's · wins have come against
Richmond·, Vlllanova and Akron.
In other games SatW'day, Cincinnati (1·8) tries
to snap a !our-g arne losing streak at No. 11 Florida
State (6-2); Akron (3,6·1). which has lost six Ina
row, winds up Its season at Louisiana Tech (6-3);
Upbeaten Youngstown State (9-0) playsat ·Towson
State; and Ohio State visits No. 5 Iowa In the Big
Ten's top game.
Mount Union can win the outright Ohio
Conference championship and complete Its "t!Jird
10.0 regular season In the last six years with a win
over last place Hiram.
In other OAC games, It will be Heidelberg at
Baldwin-Wallace, Musklngum. at John Carroll,
Ohio Northern at Otterbein and Capital at
Marietta.
In the North Coast Athletic Conference, Denison
plays at Wooster, Earlham (Ind.) at Kenyon and
Ohlo .Wesleyan at Wittenberg, with sec011d place
up for grabs In the Bishop-Tiger game.
Rounding out Saturday's Ohio college schedule,
Its Carnegie-Mellon (Pa ..) at Case Reserve,
Oberlin at Swarthmore (Pa.), West VIrginia State
at Central State Femun (Va.) at Dayton, Urbana
at Bluffton, Defiance at Thomas More ·(Ky.).
Mount St. Joseph at Wllmbtgton and T!ftln at
Lindenwood (Mo.).

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�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Friday. November 9. 1990

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

Friday, November 9, 1990

Eastern student preliminary winner

Community calendar

A Special Thllnks .
To All Our Veterans

Community Calendar items ap· p.m. Others singing will be The
pear two days before an event and True Gospel Sounds, Charity, and
the day of that evenlltems must be Jan and Kathy.
received in adviince IQ insure pub·
lication in the calendar.
POMEROY - A kid's festival
FRIDAY
will be held at Pomeroy Village
LONG BOTTOM · The Faith Hall on Saturday at noon. There
,Full Gospel Church will have a will be games, prizes and refreshhymn sing on Friday at 7 p.m. with ments. The event is sponsored by
the tuye Gospel Singers, the the Midnight Cloggers and all
Dailey Family, and other local proceeds _ will go towards the
talent. Refreshments will be served group's 1991 California Tour.
an.d the public is invited to attend.
· POMEROY - The Senior
RACINE -The Racine American
Citizens Dance Club will have a Legion Post 602 will hold its andance Friday from 8-11 p.m. Music nual beans and com bread dinner
is by the Happy Hollow Boys from . for . Veterans Day on Samrday
Athens. Bring snacks for the snack beginning at 11 a.m. The public is
table. The public is invited.
invited.

BURLINGHAM - The BUrlin·
ghain Modem Woodmen will eat at
Dale's Smorgasbord on Sunday
from noon to 2 p.m. Members and
their famlies and guests are invited.

LOTI'RIDGE - Country 'Music . POMEROY - ''Puddington Goes
Night will be held at the Lottridge to the Movies" will be the movie
Community Center on Friday from .shown at the Meigs County Public
.6 p.m. to midnight. Refreshments Library on Saturday at 2 p.m. All
available. All bimds welcome.
area children are invited.

POINT PLEASANT - Dan
Hayman and the Faith Trio wiD
pet!onn at the Gospel Lighthouse
m Point Pleasant on Sunday at 7
p,m.

niPPERS PLAINS - There will

POMEROY - The Fifth Annual

be around and sqaui'e dance at the Coal Miners Jamboree will be held

cm

We owe our freedom to
you -the fine men and women
who've served our country
with bravery and pride.

Tuppers ·Plains VFW Post 9053 on
Friday from 8,ll:30 p.m. featuring .
the Rocky · Mountain Bluegrass
band. Caller will be Red Carr. Cost
is $2.50 for adults and $1 for
children.

And now more than ever, as
so much of the world discovers
the shining beacon of democracy, we owe you a special
·debt of gratitude.

WE ARE PROUD TO HONOR ALL THE MENAND WOMEN WHO TOOK
·TIME UUT OF THEIR LIVES TO SERVE IN OUR ~RMED FORCES,
AND ESPECIALLy ALL THE VETERANS IN OUR AREA ~HO ARE ,:
OUR FRIENDS, RELATIVES, NEIGHBORS AND CUSTOMERS.

~efil'ans'

992-7075
172

Ohio

Second •

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.
!ANI( ONE. Ar"ENS. NAIA ~Afff 01 fHf CAJtiHG rfAM .

Pomeroy Flower Shop
992-6454

Pleaser's

Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy

Brogan-Warner Insurance

'.

992-2057

992-2955

992-6687

•

698 West Main • Pomeroy, Ohio

112 East Main • Pomeroy, Ohio

214 East Main • Pomeroy, Ohio

I

Ewing F

'•
•••
••

Home

992;.2121

•

108 Mulberry ·e Pomeroy, Ohio

•

I
'•

House
219

-u--~~cr-~

lOt

992-5627
Second Avo. •

---

992-3785

992-2104

992-2115

212 East Main • Pomeroy, Ohio

115 'East •morial Drive • Pomeroy, Ohio

180 Mulberry Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2196

MONDAY
BEDFORD - The Bedford
Township Trus~ will meet Monday at:? p.m. at the town hall.
RUTI.AND- The ~g Creek
Conservancy District will be closed
Monday in observance of Vetemns
Day. Water bills due Saturday
would have been considered as on
time that date. Therefore, payments
received Tuesday will be on time.

Quirks in·the news

Girl ~eta homework
HARRISONVilLE - Harrisonville Eastern Star will meet Friday
EXETER, Rl. (UPI) - A
POMEROY - Portland basketball
at 7:30p.m. at the Masonic Temple.
9-year-old girl was given extra
Officers will be installed. Bring a players and cheerleaders will sponhomework because her parents
sor a bake sale at Kroger in
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs did not vote In Tuesday's
poduck dish.
Pomeroy on Saturday beginning at Junior High Academic Boosters elections.
DORCAS - Dan Hayman and the 9:30 a.m. Proceeds will go toward will meet Monday at 7 p.m.
Shannon Christman was upset
Faith Trio will sing Friday at 7 p.m. shoes ancl new cheerleader Officers will be elected. Anyone in- by the assignment and has since
terested in . becoming a member received an apology from her
at ·the Bethan United Church in uniforms.
shou)d contact the school.
Dorcas.
teacher, Elizabeth Chan, and
SYRACUSE -The Syraeuse Fall
learned a civics lesson In the
ROCK SPRINGS • The Officers process.
ATHENS - Ewing Chapter; SAR, Carnival · will be held Saturday
annual b;mquet, Friday, 6:30 p.m., from 6-8:30 p.m. Entertainment by Grange Conference will be held at
Chan said the episode taught
Johnny Belinda and Dan Hayman the Rock Springs Grange Hall on Shannon that people In a demoBaker Center in Athens.
and the Faith Trio will perform. Monday at 7:30p.m.
SATURDAY
cracy are free to protest the
niPPERS PLAINS · The '):up- Public invited.
things they do not like, just as
POMEROY - The Pomeroy PTO Shannon's mother had protested
pers Plains Ladies Auxiliary will
RACINE • The Southern Junior will meet Monday at 7 p.m. John . the homework assignment.
have its annual turkey dinner on
High
Boosters will meet Saturday Costanza, superintendent's office,
Saturday at the fire house at 4 p.m.
"It was none of (the teacher's)
at
2.
:
30
p.m. District athletic direc- is guest speaker. The public is in- business whether we voted," the
Cost is $4 per person for turkey,
dressing, mashed potatoes and tor will speak on funding for vari- vited.
girl's mother, Karen Christmangravy, homemade noodles, green ous athletic programs.
Pbllllps, told the Providence
POMEROY - The Disabled Journal- Bulletin Wednesday.
beans, cole slaw, roll, pie and drink.
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Fire · American Veterans and Auxiliary "She fei! she was being punished.
MASON - The Ladies Auxiliary Department; fundraising auction will meef Monday, 7 .p.m. at the Sl!e was very angry at us."
hall. All members urged to attend.
of the Mason Fire Department will Saturday at 7 p:m.
Chan had made a homework
SUNDAY
hold its annual Christmas bazaar on
assignment Tuesday and then
CHESTER - New Life Covenant
POMEROY - The Meigs County told Shannon and her fourth_.
Saturday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Call
773-5437 or 773-5414 to rent a Church of God, Chester, special Public Library will be closed Mon- grade classmates that they could
Sunday program, I 0:30 a.m. Junior day in observance of Veteran's Day. Ignore It II their parents voted.
taJ&gt;Ie.
church presenting "Dressed and The library will be open Sunday.
Chan, who has been a teacher for
TUPPERS PLAINS - The VFW Ready to Go" directe4 by B~v~rly
20 years, Is a member of the
Post 9053 in Tuppers Plains is Rupe with Andrea Powell asstsbng.
League of Women Voters and
having a turkey supper on Saturday Public invited by the Rev. Gary
spent Tuesday night helping to
at 4 p.m. Cost .is $4.50 for adults Hines.
An open house for the new count votes In Providence.
and $2.50 for children · under 12. ·
offices of Soil Conservation SerChan admits she made a
The Buckeye TmveltzS will enterMIDDI.,EPORT - A Veterans vice, the Meigs Soil and Water
mistake
, In tying ., student
The public is invited. .. ·
Day Dinner willi be held Sunday for - Conservati'on .. District and the
homework
assignment to the
·
American Legio~ Post 128 mem- - Agricultural Stabililzation ConserREEDSVll.LE - The Eastern bers at 12:30 p.m. at the American
vation Service located on Hiland voting habits of their Pl\rents but
she did not act mallclously.
Band Boosters will have an arts and Legion Annex. Speaker will be Road in Pomeroy, will be held on said
·
School
Superintendent Walter
crafts fair on Saturday at the high Ruth Crutcber, district second vice Nov. 20, 2 to 7 p.m.
Gibson
said
Chan apologized to
school from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. There commander. Hymn singers, Heaven
Plans for · the open house were
Chrlstman-Phllllps
and her
will be food and entertainmenL
Bound Four and The Chosen at
made at a recent meeting of the
daughter
and
will
not
be sub- ..
I :30 p.m.
Water Conservation District Board jected to disciplinary action.
MIDDLEPORT - The Gabriel ·CHESTER - The Ken Amsbary
of Supervisors..
But Chrlstman·Phllllps, who
Quartet will have an anniversary Chapter of the lzaak Walton
In other busmess the ~ com- sent her daughter to . school
sing on Saturday at the United League will begin slug shoots on
pleted plans.for the Metgs SWCD Wednesday with a letter of
Faith Church in Middleport at 7:30 Sunday at 1 p.m. at the club house.
annual meebng and banquet to _be protest to Chan, was not Inclined
•
held Tuesday at 7:15p.m at Me~gs · to see any bright side to the
High School. Program assignments Incident.
were made and tickets distributed
"She learned to be embarfor sale.
rassed about her parents, about
Multiflora rose cost-share signup
was set for Nov. 19-Dec. 18. Persons owning propeny in Meigs
County who would like to signup
' are invited .to s"'p by the Meigs
SWCD office between those dates •
Further infonnaton may be obtained by contacting Blair Windon
or Opal Dyer at the office, 9926647.

Furniture &amp; Jewelry

992-6128

992-2635

786 North Second • Middleport, Ohio

. 106 North Second • Middleport, Ohio

By WU..LIAM C. TROTI'
Ual&amp;ed Preis International
THE P~CE AND THE PYTHON: Former Monty Python
s)ar John Cleese has a new
co-star - Prince Charles. The
two made a 25-mlnute Instructional videotape, "Grime Goes
Green: ~our Business and the
Environment, " a light-hear ted
look at how businesses can help
the environment. In the tape, the
prince catches John Grime, a
businessman played by Cleese,
In a variety of environmentally
unJrlendly acts and teaches him
a lesson. ''.'Having thought and ·a
care for the environment must
become an Integra ted part of
good business practice and each
of us must do all we can to
address one of the greatest
challenges facing us today," the
pr!llce says. Making the tape was
the prince's Idea and he did well
In his role. "He knew Instlnctly
how to play comedy," said a
spokesman from VIdeo Arts,
' which produced the tape.
TREBEK 'l'RMA FOR Slot:
As the host of ...Jeopardy," Alex

992-3345
Ohio

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not."

War Cry available .

Plane makes emergency
~·
Iandin( on Interstate
MONTGOMERY, N.Y. (UPI)
The Christmas issue of The Wat
- A state trooper on the lookout . Cry of lhe Salvation Army will be
for speeders on Interstate 84 got a distributed in Middleport next weelti.
big surprise when a light plane and in Pomeroy durinJ! lhe weelt o(
was forced to make an emer- Nov. 19. Anyone who tS missed and :
gency. landing on the road and desires a copy may call 992-5472 :
wh~dbyhlm .
or992.Q917.
:

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DELINQUENT TAXPAYERS
NOTICE

In compliance with provisions of Section
5721 .03 of the Ohio Revised Code, there will be
published in a newspaper during the next few
weeks a list of those persons who are delinquent
in payment of real estate taxes in Meigs County.

.

'

If delinquent taxes are paid in full or arrangements m~tde with the county treasurer to pay not
later than 48 hours before said publication, the
parcel will be removed from the delinquent list
before advertising.
·
closure by the county auditor unless the taxes,
assessments, interest, ·and penalties due are
paid.
The said list will be ready for publication on
November 15 and 29. 1990.

William R. Wickline,
Meigs County Auditor .

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I
EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD

RATE COMPOUNDED MONTHLY

If youve been holding back waiting for a great rate, this is it But you've got
to act fast. This offer from Central Trust is available for a limited time only.

•

For more information contact your nearest Central Trust office.
Middleport
Gallipolis
97 North Second Avenue
354 Second Avenue
992-6661

-.

446.()902

'Minimum depolit for theM special ratas is $500.00. Subotantial penalties lor eatty willdrawals.

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Rates elfecdw Nowmber e. 1890.

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CENTRAL TRlNf
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POMEIOY

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3 -Year C.D.

Trebek has a natural tendency to
phrase things In the fonn of a
question. "My worries are: Can I
be a good husband?" he says.
HOMETOWN • HERO
"Can I be a good father? ... Can I
Frederick ·J. Smith, Jr.; who is
deal with an Infant?" Trebek, 50,
stationed
wilh the 82Dd Airborne
says he Is concerned a bout the
Division
in
Saudi Arabia wll be
age difference between him and
decorated
for
meriiOrious service
his seconnd · wife, Jean, 27, and
during
Operation
Desert Shield
the child they are expecting In
and
receive
a
prumotloa
at the
February. "I worry what's going
same
time.
Smith's
cllvlsloa
WI,S
to happen down the line," he said
.
the
first
to
bit
the
1111d
iD
Saudi
In an Interview IIIIth The Basion
Globe. "When I 'm an old man, Arabia, ac:cordin&amp; to his rather,
some young stud might want iny Frederick J, Smith, Sr. of Mid·
wife! ... I don't want to screw this dleport. A letter retarclinl
up. Nobodylseverpreparedtobe Smith's decoratloa and promoa parent. This Is ,my first child. lion was received this week by his . ·
I'm going to deal with sameone father.
who's completely new."
Trebek also said he and his
wile had been hoWided by threatWilli PLOWIIS..,u,.
ening .phone calls and letters
from an obsessed "loony-tune
d........ , ....ll
lady." The woman, who he
.............~Ju ..
described as "a highly placed
eallw.ialt
executiVe," Is now In therapy but
Trebek suspects her of feeding
FLOWII SHOP
the National Enquirer 11 !alae
"TToo F!f A..ori.&amp;Mdo to..•
story saying Jean wu pregnant
when they were married lnAprU.
'"· 992- 54

'•

All delinquent lends will be certified for fore- ..•

People in the news...

Farmers
Bank·
'--""' &amp; Savings Company

•

feeling she's not up therewith the
other students because her parents don't vote," she said.
•'Voting Is a privilege and It's my
right whether I want to vo«. or

The Bank One Senior Champs
program bas joined with the
American Association of Retiml ·
Persons to offer a 55 Aliv~
Driving Course.
AARP developed the 'eight-hoUr
classroom refresher coune to help
drivers 50 yean of age or oldec improve theii skills and prevent traffic
accidents.
.
The course will be held on Nov.
12 and 23 from I to 4 p.m. aa the
Ohio University Inn, Athens. Participants should plan on auending
both sessions. The fee for the
course if $7, arid checks should be
made payable to AARP. Refreshments will be served both days.
Maxine Griffith, director of the
Bank Otie Senior Chaps program is
handling registtation and may be
conlaet at 593-6681. Class size ~
limited.
The 55 Aliv~ Driving
Course is designed to meet the
specific needs of oldec drivers. It.
covers age-related physical chan ~
g~, declining percepnal ~­
rules of lhe road, local drivmg
problems, and license reQewal requirements. Volunteer instructors
recruited and trained by AARP
conduct the course, which iJ.
presented through a combination o£
slide presentations and group dis-.,
cussions.
•

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IS

HILLSIDE BAPTIST TRUSTEES - Trustees of the Hillside
Bapllst Church are from left: Joe Humphrey, Ron Clonch, Dan
Hood, Pastor James R. Acree Sr., and assistant pastor Mike
WIUelt. The church will celebrate lis flrsi anniversary on Sunday.

F8

25 5 Mil Street •

RACINE - Thert: will be a rummage sale at Southern High School
on Sunday beginning at 11 a.m.
sponsored by the Southern
cheerleaders.

Sugar

Veterans Memorial Hospital

~~~------+-----------~---------.Fruth Pharmacy

on Sunday at II a.m . at the
htgh school. Prices are $3.75 for
adults and $2.25 for children. Craft
table space available for $5.

570

·K.&amp; C Jewelers
~---

n~r

Course offered for
senior drivers

----------------'"!""'---------....

106 Butternut Ave. • Pomeroy, Ohio

••

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Career Committee will serve a din-

wn..

THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE MANY FINE BUSINESSESS!

·BANKSoN£

Saturday at 7 p.m. at Meigs High
School. The ct&gt;st is $5 for adults
and $2 for students with children
under six admitted free. Music will
be provided by The River Junction
Bluegrass Band, Country Blend,
The Rarely Herd and other local
talent.

RACINE - The Racine Elementary PTO and Southern Local

Mark Mwphy, an Eastern High those eligible for the final round's
SchoOl student, was the only Meigs three-question essay examination
Countian to make it into the include the highest scmer in each
preliminary round winnm circle in of Ohio's 88 counties, and Ill
Ohio University's 1990 American · cOUilty scorers in the 99th percenHistory Contest.
,
tile or scores for all entrants, or the
The final round in the 44th An- second and third hig~sl scorer
.nual American History Contest is from each county .if lllnked in the
scheduled for Nov. 30 on the 95th pen:entile.
The .1990 second-prize winner
Athens campus with the first-place
winner to receive a four-year full- will receive a one-year $1,250 Ohio
tuition Ohio UnivtzSity scholarship University scholarship ll!'d S?S.
and$100.
Third through seventh pnze wm·
More than . 16,000 students in ners will receiVe: $1,000 scholar440 Ohio high sc.hools took the ships, with $50 cash prizes for third
preliminary multiple choice ex- through fifth place · and ~ for
amination at their local schools in sixth ilnd seventh place. Eighth
' October.
through lOth prize winntzS . will
In ihe preliminary round, receive $750 scholarships and $35.
Michael Simone from Holly Name
Oiutstanding high school awards
High School in Cleveland was the of$200 and $100 will go to the twO
top scorer, answering 73 out of 80 schools with the largest number of
questims correctly. He will receive winners in the two roWids.
the Carl Gustavson Book Award,
Panicipants will be notifit;d by
·named in honor of an Ohio Univer- Jan. 10 of the results of their essay
sity. ' Distinguished
Professor examinations. The cmtest is sponEmerims of History. This year's sored by Ohio University's College
book is "'n Our Imaj!e: America's of Arts and Sciences, the DepanEmpire in the Philippmes" by Stan- ment of History, and the Admissions Office, and is directed by
ley Kanlow.
Professor
of History Marvin
Iri addition to the top scorer, .
Fletcher.

Open House

Day, Sunday, o"ember 11, 1990

Blue Streak Cab Co.

The Deily Sentinel-Page 1

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

APNCBANK
Mtll!blr FDIC

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Pege-8-The Daily Sentinel

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friday. November 9, 1990
·Friday, l\lovember 9. 1990

.Contemporary Living...

Consider This~..

_' By BeiJeeca A. Culberllloa
Colltdy ~aaloa Aceat,
Home Eeoaomlce

(row's Famill Restaurant

K'"'e f Ftll~ C~d,."

"F~tllll•f

228 W. Main St., PomeroJ

992-5432

+ RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Hamelite Saws

\
I14
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_• MEIGS nRE ·
~. . CENTER, INC.
1

TEAFORD REALTY -.

•

m s. Second
Pomeroy

John F . Fullz, Mgr. ·

·

992-lllS

ol CotumiWs, 0 .
104 W, Ma1n

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992·2311 P~merov

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SALES &amp; SERVICE
992-7075

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

172 North Second An

Middl-1, Ollio

ley, S. s. !;~!pt ., !;llndaY Schoo~ ~:ll a.m.;
mon11ng l«lrshlp1fr :J!a.m.; evenJng S&lt;!!VIce6
p.m.: mitt-week~. Wedne9day, 7 p.m.

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.

SHOP

TI10

11Ktrnas Glen McOu~. pastor. Nonnan pres.

,
IIJ ,

PomBtog FlowBt $6op~

SNOUFFER
. FI.RE &amp; SAFETY

rniNITY
RA!v. Roland
. Church
School9:15 a.m Alia&gt;
Supt.: Wf:l·
ship Servk:t- 1&lt;t :ll a.m Choir rehearsal.Thursday, 7:00p.m.; Lois BUrt, Director.
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, Orner UniOn and Mulbeny. Rev.

·

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

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
·m·x.-we Fill Doctors'
991·2955

[B

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT :
Nationwide Ins, Co. ~~ ·

IIUI.TOII

Ph. "2-1101
. Pom•roy

Prescr-iptions

families plan for that change.
QuaUty lime u a family
Families need time together,
In one-to-one relationships and as
How healthy Is your family?
an en tire family unit. This leads
Most Americans view the family · to a seDl!e of unity, family
~~ the cornerstone of society. No
Identity and pride and allows
~umaa Interaction has a stronger
family members to get to know
)nfiuence on a person than the each other. Quality time does not
J,xperleDces within his or her have to be "'playtime" (although
~ousehOid .
It certainly can bel and It doesn't
·, Families can be equipped With have to cost anything. The only
jhe skills needed to face lite and Investments need to be time and
!)eal with common problems. self.
these abilities make famllles
Teamwork wUhla
•tronger, more self-sufficient
the famUy Ia encourqed.
,
~nd more able to .deal with
Components In a strong family
fhallenges Blld opportunities.
team are: Trust, commitment,
1 Here are some of the characpositive relationship skills, car·
lertstlcs of a healthy family:
lng, "give and take", effort and
; Comuuudcutoa II opea
realistic expectations. Team
: Stroag famllii!S find time to members need to "teed" the
alk about things that are lmpor- family. Members cannot just
ant ..In good communication, the "take" but they must also
lnessage received Is the same as. ••gtve".
lhe message given. Tbat means
fll people Involved must comTraditions observed
municate well, both verbally and
new ones are created
lton-verbally, and must be able to
Every family carries on tradl·
~·read" tbe messages being sent.
Ilona! rituals of previous generalions, then adds some of their
f.eedbac)r Is Important.
own. Whal are traditiOns that
' · Coallle&amp; II eonfroated
have been In your family for
aad 1Diutl- worked out
Conflict Is natural and lnevlta· years? What are some new ones?
What are some that are no longer
~le. What can be unhealthy Is
practiced?
~ow fammes disagree and the
Rituals and traditiOns are
~hav1or that results. 'A key to
avoldlng destructive conflict Is to much more than words. They
give ·those who participate In
~k an acceptable solution Instead of someone "winning the them a chance to say nonverfight." Tbls may require select- bally, "I love you. I like being
11)1 tile best time to talk, with you. I want tosharewlthyou
recognizing the specltl~ eonfilct wl!at's Important In your Ute .
Issue and alternative solutions, because you are Important to
nl!gotlatlng a mutually accepta- . me."
Traditions can be discovered
ble solution and Implementing a
behavior.
and developed to make families
strong to withstand whatever
Balea, replatlou
new challenges the years bring.
expedatlou delbled
Doesn't all this sound IdealisOne way to use confilct management skUis Is to set family tic? It Isn't! Every famUy can be
rules. All members should be healthy. It takes time, effort, and
Involved In setting those rules patience. It means recognizing
and show courtesy and respect to strengths, facing problems and
others. Good communication Is a having a willingness to work
key. Families can adjust rules as toward Improvement. It can be
situations change. In fact, strong done!

Th.:e. lnte_rested Bwittesses Listed On _This Pagt!.

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By

P.OMEROY, OHI0-992-6617
.

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

992-6669
He ..... .
Mw.llaport,

"Dip:nily and Servict Alway•"

Establlshed 1913

Pomeroy, OH.

. 992-2121

992-2975

Ohio

I

EWING FUNERAl HOME

204 Condor St.

271 North

BILL QUICKEL

106 Mulberry Au.

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH. 326 E.

Main St.. Pomeroy. the Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myers,
record. ~nda..Y services: U a.m. June through

August; JJ:30 a.m. September lllrough May.
Holy Cominunlon .. llrst, second, third and
fow1h Sundays of each month; Morning
f'rsyer on tilth SUndays. Church scOOol and
I'NT'S8'Y care provided. Collet' hour In t.he- par·
bh hall tmn'&lt;!dlately following the service.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIS!'. 212 W.
Main St .. 1.&lt;'0 Lash. t"Vangellst. Bib"' S.hool
9:.J)a.m. : Mo~worshlp, IO:lla.m.; Youth
rneetlni!S. 6:00 p.m.; Evenlzig worshlp, 7:00 p.
m. W-y night prayer~ and Bible
sllldy. 7:00p.m.
THE SALVATION ARMY. JJ5 Bunemul
AVfi., Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wining In cllargo.
!;llnday holines&lt; """'lng, 10 a.m.; !;llnday
School, 10: ~ a.m. Sunday Sctml, YPSM
Etoile Adams. leader. 7:30 p.m Salvation
mee!!ni. various speakm and music speCials.

Thursday, U::Jl a.m to 2 p.m LacDes Home
League, members In charge, aD women
Invited; 6: l'l p.m. Thursday. Corp! Cadof

C1assO !You'* Prople-ljlblet.

7::JJ p.m. Bible
Study and Prayer mee~. ~ to tre public.
. POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CIIRI5I'. ll226 Chlldren's Home Road !County
Road '16).!112..1117. Vqcal music. Sunday Worsh!plOa.!ll.; llbleStudylla.m.; Worshlp.6p.
m. w~. Bible Study, 7 p.m. Speaker.
Lancblllq&gt;e, evangelist
OUl DEXTER BIBLE CHRISI'JAN
CHUROf, Jack Oeland. pastor, Alana OeJan4 Supt. !;lindaY School 10:00 a.m.; Youth
Meet~ 7p.m every Wednesday.
5.ACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
- 161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Ph. 992·
5891t Saturday Even ing Mass, 5: 30p.m .:

Sunday Mass 9::l) a.m. CCD classes, 10: 30
a.m. flnt. second and third Sundays of each
month. Datly Mass. 8: :Jl a.m. Confessions
Saturday afternon, 4-5 p.m.

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·

TOUC. F:~TH- NeoN Lima Road, nexf to •
Fort: M'Eolp Park. RObert w. Rlch.Srds.
putor. ~unday services. 10 a.m. and 7 p.
m.; W,edneSday Worship. 7 p.m.

'MIIJDLEPORTOOMMUNI1YCHURCH.

57, Pearl St.. Mld'CUtport. Sam Anderson.
pastor. Sunday School 10 a .m.; Sunday
f"'mll~ service 7: l&gt; p.m. ; Wednesday service. 7; 30 p.m.

GRAHAM

UNITED . METHODIST.

~eactung

9:l&gt; a.m. first and serond SundaYs of each month; third and fourth Sunday ~ach month worship servlces.at 7:30 p.
m.; Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m .
Prayer and Bible- Study.
•

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST. Mul-

berry Heights Road, Pomeroy. Pastor Bob
Snyder: Sabbath School SupEI"Intendent,
Rodlley Spires . Sabbath SchOol begtns at 2
p.m. on S81urday afternoon with worship
tervlce tollowlng a,t 3:00 p.m. Everyone
welcOme.

!IUTLAND FIRST BAPI'!ST CHURCH

- Sl1ter Harriett Warner. Supt. Sunday
SC:b0oi9:Jl a .m .; Mornln~J: Worship, 10:45
, a.m.

POMEROY FIRST BAPI'IST, East

Main St. Steve FuUer, pastor. George
Sklnnft', Sunday SchOol" Superintendent .
SUnday School, 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a .m. ; Wedn~Sday evening
prayer and Bible study, 7: :It p.m.

FIRST SOUTHERN BAPI'IST, 41872

Pom-eroy Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant, pas·
tor and Sunday School Dlrtctor. Sunday
SChool 9:30 a .m.; Morning Worship,
10:45; Choir prac11ce. 6::1) p.m.; evening
wonhlp, 7::Jl p. m.: Wednesday Prayer
service, 7: 30p.m. MissiOn Friends (ages
2·6l. Royal Ambassadors (boys ages 6-18).
and Girls l,n Action tages 6-181 on Wednes-.
days, 7:00 p.m. Church-wide VIsitation

6:30p.m. Tueaday.
F.IUTH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bat·
ley Run Road, ReV. Emmt'l:t Rawson, pastor. Han~ley D~nn , supt. Sunday School,
10a.m.; Sundayevenlngservlce. 7:00p.m.
: Bible teachlna-. 7:00 o.m. Thursday.
SYRACUSE MISSION , 1411 Brtdgpman
St .. SyraCUse. Sunday School, 10 a .m .;
Evening service. 6 p.m.: We-dnesday
sen&gt; lee, 7 p.m.

RAWUNGS.COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

Strtlf !Boo/is .
93 MIH Streel
Mlddlepot1, Ohio 46780
112-8867 -IIIB·OOKSI

992-5141
264 South 2nd

Middleport

9:00a.m .: Church School 9:45 a.m ..

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN

a .m.; Worship 10:30 ·a.m.; Bible Study,

Sunday School, chUdren and adults, 9 to
9:45 a.m.: Worship service, 10 a .m.;
Youth group, second and fourth Sundays, 4

p.m. .
SYRACUSE FffiST UNITED PRESBY·

TERIAN - Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
Church service, 11:00 a.m. ; Youth group,
first B.Dd third Sundays, 4 p.m. ,

RUTI.AND CHURCH OF GOO, Pastor,

·John F. Corcoran. Sunday SchoollO.:·oo a.
m.; Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.
Chlldreri 's Church 11 a.m. Sulday EvenIng Service 7:00p.m. Wed .. 6 p.m. Youne
Ladles' Auxiliary. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Family Worship.

!f.rd' s Supper obe:erved 1st Sunay of each
h.

'tnt

tMIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,

lith and Main, A1 HartiGl, mlnlater;
dlard DuBote. A•oclate Pastcr: Mtke

aeft, Somday S&lt;ho.ol Superintendent.
onhlp Service r, 8:15 a.m.; Somday
hoolt:IO a.m.: Woraltlp !lorvlcell,lO: 30
m.; Evenlnl Wol'llhlp.7 p.m.; Wednellri&gt;~i:~:G'
m'M:I!lfoFTIIE NAZENE PASTOR Rev. IJoyd D. Grimm,
........... J... Ktmto, Sunday Sdlool Suat.ad•t. Sunclay !lchool 9:30 a.m.;
Wonlllp !lorvl&lt;e, 10:30 a.m.: SUII'"""Inl - · 6 p.m.; WedJtelday
-lntr
- ·CHURCH
7p.m. OF THE NAZA' SYRACUSE
Re¥. Gl- McMillan, pa1tor. Jim
11. s. s. Suporllllencleal. Sunday
t: 30 a.m.; momtna wcrablp, 10:30
Evanpllllk: ...-vtoe, 6 p.m.;
od l'raiH Wedlleadoy, 7 p.m.;
mat11t1. 7P·""- ~ -- __
.

'
r=
·

a

~illNIIIAY

OF MaGI COUNTY

, HAR~EI•~RIAN
- Sunday: Wonblp SorviL'ft

~RCJI

I
' ..

'

t•

r

a;m.

~Grace) .

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST,

Rog•~

CHRISTIAN UNION. Theron Durham,
pastor. Sunday serv&amp;ceo, 9:30 a. m .; evenIng service 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corn..- Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, pastor. Sunday Schoo110:00 a.
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wed·
nesday and Saturday Evenlne Services at

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

Wedneaday, 7:00p.m.
··
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

CHRIST, Jack Colegrove, pastor. Bible
Class, 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30a.
m.; Evening Wors,h lp1 6:30p.m. Th.ursd.ay

7:30p.m.
Blbl• Study, 6: ;ID,p.m. .
.
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST ZION CIWRtl! OF CHRIST, Porn eroyorr m. behln4 WUti!IVille..Char,..~...., ,1 H!"flionvtll• Rei. (Rt. 1431 Robert E; . Pur·
pasta-. SundaySch~ ; 9:30a.m.; mondng
tell, mlnllter; Steve Stanley, Bible School
wocshlp, 10: 30; Sunday and Thursday
Supt.;
""rtey JohDSoil, Asst. Supt. SUNevening services, 7;00 p.m.
·
·
DAY: Bible School 9:30 a.m.; Worship
10:30 Al.! . and .7:30 P.M.: Wedneaday Bl·
MEIGS
.
COOPERATIVE PABJ!III
bleStudy, 7:00p.m.
·
UNn'ED METBODI!T CII1JIICB
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
NORTHEAST CLUSTIEB
Grove. The Rev. Laura A. Leach. putor.
Rev. 8bare11 BaalmMI
Church service 9:30a.m.; Sunday SChool
Rev. Frlllk CJ'GIOGt
10:30 a.m.
Rev. SeldoalobM•
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
ALFRED - Church School 9:30a.m.;
Tom Runyon. pastor. Sunday Scbool9:~
1

Worshtp, 11 a .m .; VMYF6: 30p.m.; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7: XI p.m. Communion,
first Sunday. (Haushman)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Church

SchoollO a.m.; Blbi•Siudy, Thursday, 7p.
m.; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; Com·
munlon, first Sunday (Hausman) .

JOPPA- Worship 9:30a.m.; Churclf
School10: 30 a.m: Bible Study Wednesday,
7:30p.m. (Johnsoo).
LONG BO'M'OM - Church School 9:30
a.m.; Worship 10: 30 a.m. ; Bible Study,

Wednesday, 7:39p.m.; Communion FlrSI
Sunday of Month (Rev. Charles Eatoo )

REEDSVILLE -Church ScHoolS::rt a. .
m.; Worship Service II:00 a.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL -

Church SChool 9 a .m.; Worship 10 a.m.:
Bible Study, Tusday, 7: 30p.m .; Commu·
nlon First Sunday (Hausman) .

CENTRAL CLUSTER
Bev.DoaM.-wa
lie¥. Woole)- Tloal&lt;ber
lie¥. Frlllk Smllb
11n. Jlaibrp au.,.

; Worship, 11 a .m .; Bible Study, Thurs·
day, 7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. {RI-

Smith)

LIBERTY CHR!STJAI'I CHURCH, O.x-

ter, Woody Cal4 pastor. Sei'vlceo Sunday

10 a.m. ·and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m.

DYESV!LLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,

Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School 9: 00 a .
m .; morning worshiP 10 :30 a .m . Sunday
evening service 7 p.m.

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Sieve

Deaver, Past«. Mike Swiger, Sunday
School Supt.; Sunday SChool 9: 30a .m.:
Morning worship 10: (() a.m .; Sunday
evening worship 7; 30 p.m. ; Wednesday
evening Bible study 7:30p.m.

PINE GROVE HOLINESSCHURCH,\l

ASBURY (Syracuse)- Woraltlp JI a.m.
; Church School9:45 a.m.; Charge Bible
Study, Wednelday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, ftral
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.; Choir Reheoraaj,
Wedneaday 6:30p.m. (Thatch..-)
ENTERPRISE - Worsblp 9 a.m.;
Church School10 a.m.; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:00p.m. ; UMW, Firat Monday, 7:30
p.m .; UMYF Sunday. 6 p.m. (RDey~
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10a.m.

ren~

RAGINE CHURCH OF mE NAZA·

RENE, Rev. John Vance, pastor: Ora
Baas, Chalrmaa of the Board of Christian
Llfe. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Morning
Wouhl 10:30 a.m.; -Evangelical Jervlce,
7:00p.m .; Wednesda"y service, 7:00p.m.

bert Cazart, assistant past&lt;r. S.Unday School
10 a.m.: wocslip 7 p.m.; Wedn(5(jay, 6 p.m.
youth meeting Wed, 7 p.m. church service&gt;.

Rev. RnFieree
Rev. Artllar Crabtree
Rev . . , _.. Smltll

a.m.; Worlhlp Service 10: 00 a.m.

a.m.; Larry Haynes, S. s. Supt. Morning
wonhlp 10:30 a.m.

BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CJtURCJ!,
Burlingham. Ray LaudermDt, pester; Ro-

(~lo-

·

. POMERO'Y- Church Sdlool, 9: U1,1'\,
; Worship 10: 30 a.m : Choir rehe~rul
Wednesday, 7:30 p;m,; UMW, second

Tueaday, 7:30p.m.; UMYFSunday,fp.m.
(MHdOWII
ROCK SPRINGS- Churdl School, 9:15
a.m.; Wonhtp10a.m.; Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 7:30p.m. ; UMYF (senton), Sun·
day, 6 p.m.; CJunlon) every other Sun·

day, 6 p.m. (Riley).
.
RUTLAND- Suaday !lchool, 9:30a.m.;
Wonhtp .ervlce, 10:30 a.m.; Bible Stuy, 1
p.m. Thunday. (Crabtree! .
SALEM CENTE~- Chun:h Scbpctl9: 15
a.m .; Morning Worship 10:15 a.m.
(Fierce)
·
SNOWVILLE- Mornlnl Worolllp1 9:110
a.m.; Church SChool10:00 a .m. (Florence
Smith)
SOUTHERN CLUII'J'ItR
Rev. Rnalillllall..-

ae.. Roaer Grace

. .... c.........
APPLE GROVE - Chun:h School9:110

a.m.; Morning Worship 10:00 a.m.; Bible
Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Pray~r meetmr
7:00p.m. Thursday. (Hicb)

BETHANY - Wotsl!lp 9 a.m.; Churth
S&lt;hooiiO a.m.; BlbleStucty WednOiday 10
a.m .; Dorcas Women's Yellowlh.lp WE'dneaday Il a.m. (Baker) .
'
CARMEL- Chun:h School 9:30a.m.;

Worship, 10:45 a.m. Second and Fourth
Sundays; FellOWShip dinner with Sutt&lt;11

lhlnl Thursday, ij; :Ml p.m. (Baker).
MORNING STAR- .Church Sehool9•1l
'

'
'

Tuesday 7: 30p.m. (Grace).
, RACINE- Om reb School, 10 a.m.: Worsblp U a.m.; UMW follrth Monday at 7:]) p.
m.: Men's Prayer Breakfast, Wednesd~. 8

9:30 a .m .; Sunday momlng preacblq
10:30 a.m.; Sunday even1ng servtcts, 7:30
p.m.
.

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. 011
tom. Edsel Hart. pastor. Sunday !lchool,

~

ltOII'am "Preportnc lh• Way" Saturday.
!lpm WMOV 1360 AM, RaVPnSWoocl. WV;

lhlrd Thursday, 6:30p.m. (Baker) .
EAST LETART- MornlngWorshlp9:00
a.m.; Chun:hSchooiJO:OOa.m.; UMW!irst

Rt. 124, 3 mOes from Portland-Lone Bot-

ley).
FOREST RUN - Worsl!lp 9 a.m.;
Church School 10 A.M.: Choir praeUce.
ttnt elder; Wanda Mohler. Sunday SChool
Thursday, 6:30 p.m.i UMW thlnl Mooctay.
SU.pt. Sunday .SChool 9: :m a.m.; Morning
(Thatcher)
'f9rthiP 10:30 a.m.; Evening Worship 1::1)
HEATH !Middleport) - Chureh Sehool,
a.m.; Wednesday prayer meettng7: :1) p.m .
9:30a.m.; Momtng Worship 10: 30 a.m.;
~ MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Youth Group, 4 p.m.; Wednl!l&lt;lay, Bible
c!ne. Rev. James Satterfield, pastor.
study 6:00p.m. Choli" rehearsal 7:00p.m.
eema:n Williams, Supt. Sund.ly School
•
4:. a.m.; Sunday and .Wednel!day even- (Frank Smith) .
MINEljSVILLE - Church SChool 9:00
Ill 1erv1ces. 7 p.m.
,
MIDDLEPORT
FIRST IIAPI'IST. ' a.m.; Wonhlp .ervtce 10:00 a.m.; VMW
third Wedneaday, 1 p.m. (Thatcher)
ner Sixth and Palmer. Rev. Jamea A.
PEARL CHAPEL - Church School!: 110
don. pastor; Don Wilson. S.S. Supt. ;

~

SUTI'ON - Church School, 9: 30 a .m ..;
Morning Worship 10: 45a.m. nrstandthird
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Carmel

Sprtng, minister: Starling Musar and 01·
tver Swain, Sunday SChool Supts. PreachIng 9:30a.m. each Sunday; Sunday School
10:30 a.m.

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNlON. Dwight Hate-,

lab White, Asst. Supt. Sunday School
5 am: morning worship 10 :15 am;
SUnay evening worship 7 pm; Prayer
.,_K"tlng and Bible Study Wednesday 7
itn; Men's Praypr Breakfast, 1st Satur·
~Y each monrh 7 am In fellowship ball;
Jl!ult choir practice Sunday, 8 pm; radio

Thursday. 7::ll p.m. (Baker).

i'nlleoff Rt. 325. RE'V. Ben J . Watts, pastor.
Robert Searles, S.S. Supt. Sunday School
9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30-a.m.;
Sunday evening service 7; :» p.m. ; Wed·
nesday service, 7:30p.m.

SILVER RUN BAPI'IST, Bill Little,

pastor. Steve Little, · S. S. Supt. Sunday
School10 1.m.; Morning worslp.-11 a .m. ;
Sunday eventn1 worship 'l: 30 p.m . Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
p.m,; Youth meeting Wednesday at 7p.m.

"J~~:~~~·~~~CHU~
RCH
OF JESUS
~
5.AJN'I'S. Port·
land·Ractne·
vice, 7: po p.m.

Du)ll, pastoc;

NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH.

Chester. Gary Hines. pastor. Sunday
School at 9:30a.m.: · Worship service at
10:30 a .m. ; Sunday ~enlng service, 6:00
p.m.; Wednesday Disciple Class, 7:00 p.

m.

.

JaniCe Danner, church schOol director. '
Church schoo19: ~a ."m.; Mornlngworshlp
10:30 a .m.; Wednesday evening prayer
services, 7: ~p. m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. llt!v . Earl
Shuler, pastor. Worship service. 9:30"a .m.
Sunday SChool10: 30 a .m . Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7:30p.m.

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH. Kingsbury Road. Rev .
Clyde w. Henderson. pastor. Sunday
Schoo19 : 30 a.m.; Ralph carl, Supt. EvenIng worship 7:1)9 p.m. Prayer meeting,

Wedneaday 7:00p.m.
.
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. 28601 State Routo 7, MlddleSunday Schod lOa .m. ; Sunday ~en­
r.ngort..servlce
7:30p.m .; Tuesday ~ice,

7::ll p.m.
·
.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH,
Bob Grimm, pastor. Suallay School9: 30 a.

m.; Worshtp J0:45 a.m.; Sunday evening
serviCf", 7 p.m. .
,

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald

EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden-R. atake, pastor. Sunday
School10· a.m. ; Gary Reed, Lay ll'Bd..-.

Morntna sermon, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
servtces: ·Christian Endeavor 7::1) p.m.,
Song service 8 p.m. Preaching s·:·30 p.m.
·Mid-week pray~ lneetlng, Wednesday, 7
p.m.
.
CH~JS:I1~ FELLOWs.HJP CENTER,
SAlem .St., Rutlaod. Robert E. Musser,

pastor. Sunday School10:00 a.m.; Wor·
sblp service, 1:15 a.m. ; Sunday evening
service, 7:00p.m.; Thursday evenlngser-

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David

Prentice, paator. Oaarles Domt,gan, Sunday School Supt. Morning Worship 9•30 a
m.: Surday SchoollO::rla.m. ; Evenln.gser~

vice, 7:110 p.m.
·
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Pastor: Joe N.

Sayre, Sunday School9:45 a.m .; Evening
, worah.lp 6:.l&gt; p.m.; Prayer Meeting, 6:30
p.m. Wednesday..
,
•

·TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF

CHRIST. Robert Foater, pester; l!owai"d
Caldwell, Superintendent; Church school
I a.m.; ·Wonhlp aervl.eto9:f5 a.m. and 6:30

p.m. EveryGl'ewelcome.

CHES'J'ER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE. , Re¥. Herbert Grate, PUler.
Doqlu Blsoen, supt. SUnday Scho~ 9:30

a.m.; Worahlp eervtce, 11 a.m. and 6 p m
Sunday. Wedneaday, 7 p.m. Prayer

meet:

lnJ.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. William Wut!ams, po!lcr; .Robert E. Bartm, DlrectoroiChrlstlao Edu·
cation; Steve Eblin, aulltarit. Sunday
School9:30 a.m.; Mo-r worship 10:30
a.m.; Teen~ In Actlo~. 6 p.m .; Eventnc
Wonhlp, 7: DO p.m. c!totr practl«' 8 p.m.
9uoday. Wedlteaday eventn1 prayer and
Blblo~\~~
DE
CHURCH OF CHRIST
Roler WaiiCII, mlnllter! Nonnan Will'
· oupt. Sunday School t:ila.m.; Worahlp ·
&amp;ervft 10:30 a.m. Bible study, Wednoo·

10 a.m .; Sunday
a.m. Evening
worahlp' service 7:00 p.m. Wednesday
prayer meeting7:00 p.m .

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN

IN CHRIST CmJRCH, Located In Texas
Community of( .Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
Sanders. pastor. Jeff Holter, lay leader;
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
SChool Y: 30 a .m.; morning wofshlp and
chtldren's church 10:30 a.m.; evening
preaching service first three Sundays,
7:30 p.m.; Special service fourth Spnday
evening, 7: 30 p.m.: Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellowship, 7::KI p.m .

CHURCH Of GOD OF PROPHECY .

Located on 0 . J . White Road of Highway
160. Pat Hensoo. pastor. Sunday SchoollO
a.m. Classes for all ages. Junior Church 11
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
. Choir practice6 p.m. Sunt1fly. Young People's, Children's Church ··nd Adult Bible
Study. Wednesdav at 1:.-J p.m.

HOPE BAPI'!ST CHAPEL, 570 Grant

St .. Middleport. Affiliated with SOuthern
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., MInister. Sunday School 10 a.m .; Morning
worship 11 a.m.; Evenlng,worshlp 7 p.m.;
Wednesday evening.- Bible study and
prayer meeting 7 p.m. •
.

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St. .

Rt. l24andCo. Rd. 5. Derek Stump, pastor.
Wllltam Amberger. S. S. Supt.; Sunday
School9:30 a.m .; Morning Worship 10:30
a.m.; Evening worship 7:30p.m. Wednesday worship 7: 30p.m.

Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
Roger Willford. pastor. Sunay SChool9:30
a.m.; Morntnt: Wonhlp 10:45 a.m.; Sun~
day evening worship 7:00 p.m.; Wednesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEY AN. Cool-

Corner Sycamore and Second Sts., Pcmei'oy. The Rev. Laura A. Leach. pastor.
Sunday School 9:45a.m. Church serv ice 11

Sunday Schoo19: 30 a.m. ; worship .ervtce
10:30 a.m.; Bible study and worship iervlce, Wednesday. 7 p.m.

Middleport. James E . Keesee. pastor.
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m. ; Even·
lng service 7 p.m.; Wednesday evening
worship 7 p.m . VIsitation Thursday 6:30p.
. m.

ville RD. Rev. Phillip Ridenour, paltor.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, EuSchool, 9:30a.m.; Morning WOI'Ihlp, 10:30
a.m.: Evening Worshtp, 7:00p.m.
RUTI.AND BIBLE METHODIST, Rev.
gene E. Underwood. minister. Sunday

IYan Myers. SUnday School9: 30 a.m. with
SOMY Hudloo, Supt.: Evening 1erv1ce
7:00p.m . Prayer meeting and Bible study,
Wednesday, 7. p.m.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

RENE. Samuei Buye, pastor. Sunday
School9: 30 a.m.; Worship Service 10: SO a .

m.; Youag People's Service 6 p.m .

Ev8lflellltteservtce 6•3D p.m. Wedneaday
...-vice 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St.. Mao on, W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
a.m.; Worship u a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednes ·
day Btble Study, vocal musle, 7 p.m.

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOO, Ou4-

dlng Lane, MasCI\, W.Va. J. N. Thacker,
pastor. EVfnlng service 7: 30 p.m .; Wo-

men'a·Minlatry Thunday, 9: 3D a.m.; Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study 7: ~p.m .
IDLLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH, St. Rt.
113 Just off Rl. 7. Rev. Jam.. R. Ai&gt;ree Sr..
platori Rev. Mike WUlett. Alat. Putor;
Joe Humphrey, s.s. Supt; Sunday School
lOa.m.; MomtngWonhlplla.m.;Sunday
eventngaervlee 6 p.m.: Wedllmday even-

"'f.~I.AND FIRST CHURCH OF THE

NAZARENE, WOllam Justll, pallor. SUD·
REJOICING LIFE BAPI'IST CHURCH day School Supt, Sonja Justis. Sunday
- 383 N. 2nd Ave .. Mlddi"P."rt. Sunday ·School, 9:30a.m.; momlngwcnhlp, 10:40
SChOollO a.m. Sunday evening 7:.00p.m.;
a.m.; Sunday and Wednelday servtces,
Mid-week ..rvlce, Wed., 7 p.m.
·
LANGSVI!;LE CHRISTIAN CHURCH ,
LEFORT COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Sunday Schod 9: :«ta.m. ; JeftSmlth, supt .
; Mor.nlna worship 10: ~ a.m.; Sunday
evening service, 7: 30 p.m. ; Wednesday
evening service. 7:30p.m. ·

~~~~~~~~~~~

:ll p.m.
OF GOD.
p.m.
Sunday

7::re·

575 PNrl Sl,

Sam-·

pul4'. Sunday
~~~~~-·II a.m.; Evmlngservlcel,
"91nay aod ~·rr 'ay, 7::ll p.m.

ST.

PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH , ·

a.m.

·

VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St ..

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David

Cutfman. pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
worship service, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
worship service 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m.

WESLEYAN BIBLE HOLINESS
CHURCH of Middleport, Inc.. 75 Pearl St ..

Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor. Roger Manley,
Sr., Sunday Schod. Supt. Sunday School
9:30 a .m .: Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
evening Bible study, prayer and praise
service, 7:XJ p.m.

FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH, Long Bot·

I ern, Sunday School, 9:30 a .m.; Morning
Worship 10: 45 ·a .m .: Sunday ~enlng 7:00
p.m . (summer 7:30 p.m .) l W,.ednesday
night 7:00 p.m . lswpmer 7:&amp;1 p.m .) .

NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH OF

GOD, Chester- Gary Hines, pastor. Sundiy SChool 9: :Jl a.m:; worship service,
10:30 a.m.: evening service, 6 p.m.: Ol~el·

pleshlp etus. Wednesday. 7 p.m.
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,

1:30 p.m. Wedneadoy prayer moottna, 7:30
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
W. VB., Rl. 1, James Lewis, pastor. Worship senolces 9:30a.m.; S.Unday School JJ

a.m.; Evening worship 1:30 p.m. Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9: :lJ a.m.: Worship· service, Wednesday

7
' ~Jit't..viOURL~ERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sts.. Ravenawood, W.
Va. The Rev. George C. Wolrlclt, pastor.
Sunday SChool9: 30 a.m&gt;; Sunday worship
na ~ m .
.
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH,Ioeated on
POIIIOI'O)I Pike, County Road 25 natr FlatWOOds. Re¥. Blaekwoocl, pallor. Servlceo
on Sunday at 10: :lla.m. and 7:30p.m. wllh
Sunday S&lt;hool9:30•.m. BlbloStudy, Wednelday, 7:30p.m.
SPffirnJAL FAITH FELLOWSHIP,
Stale Route &amp;18, Antiquity, Rev. A.!. Stewart, pastor. SUnday JerVIcel,10a.m. and .
7p.m.; Tueaday,T p.m.
.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH, Inc.. 75 Pearl St. Rev.
Ivan Myera.aettaapostor; Rolti'Maoley,
Sr., Sunday !lciM&gt;ol !illpertatlodent. Sunday
Lm.;wlll'llllp
-·
10:30School
a.m.; t:30
.......,
7:30Worablp
p.m.;
WedltOiday evoalJII Blblo study, prayer
ud praise JOrVtee, 7:30p.m.
CHUP.CH OF JESUS CJIRlST APQS.
TOUC - VanZbdt IIDd Ward Rd. Elder
Jam• Mill•, puler. !illllllay SeiM&gt;ol
10:30a.m.; Wol'llltp lontee,SuttCitty, 7:il
p.m.; Bible Study, Wtdtiiii!Q, T:allp.m.
CALVARY P1t.GRIM CBAPii:L, JWorJ.
ICIIVWe Rood. Rev. Vlelor Roulll, pallor:
Cllnt(ll Faulk, S.oday So- &amp;apt.; suD.
day SeiM&gt;o1 _9:30a.m.; momtn,worll!lp, ll

601 EAST MAIN

new

9U-225'
· nesday; 7 p.m.

FOREST RUN BAPI'IST. Rev. Nyle

Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt .
Sunday School 9: 30 a.m.: second and
fourth Sundays worship service al 2: 30 p.

m.

't&gt;
' \1

MT. MORIAH BAPI'IST. Fourth and ,. 1
Main St .. Middleport. R•v. Gllhert Craig, "

Jr .. pastor. Mrs . Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday SCbool9 : 30 a. ~
m.; Worship Servtce, 10 : .4~ a.m.
......,.

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST

-Joseph B. Hoskln·s. evangelist. Sunday

' .tt

Bible Study 9a.m.; worship, lOa .m.: Sup·
day tvPnlng service 6 p.m .; Wednesday \
evening servlcP. 7 p.m.
~
-.

Rt. 124. William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
SchoollO a.m.; Sunday evenln~~t service 7
p.m . Wednesday evening sPrVIce 7 p.m. '
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle• . :,
Supt . Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning
Worship 10: 30a.m . Prayerservlcre. altern· :.~:
ate Sundays.
.
.

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, ,

APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd .. next to Fort Meigs Park. Rutland. Robert -~
Richards , pastor. ServlcPs at 7 p.m . on .' .
Wednesdays and Sundays.

HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP· .

TER of thP - ~esleyan Holiness Church. ,:

·Rev. ~Earl Fields, pastor. Henry Eblin, , ·
Sund8y School Supt.; Sul)day SchoollO a. ' ,
m.; Morning Worship 11 a.m.; .E vening .. ·
. service 7:30p.m. Wednesday evPnln« ser- ·· •
vice 7: 30 p.m.
, ·~

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH.

~

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

·MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third 'c.

Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not·
tlngham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 10 a.m . wlt)l classes for all ages.
Eventng services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl·
ble study at 7:30p.m. Youth services Frlday at 7:30p.m.

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ECCLESIAFELLOWSHIP, 128M111St., ., '

Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherscn , , ,
pa•tor. Sundar Scbool 10 a.m.; Sunday .. ..
eventng services at 7 p.m. and Wednesday 1
serviCes at 7 p.m.
·
•! •

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith, -;
,.
,·..
m.; Blblfltudy, Thunday,_ 7:30p.m.
•·
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTI!Ous.E, 33045 ·' •

paator. Suaday School 9:30 a .m.: church
...-vice 7:30p.m.; youlh!ellowll!lp6:30p.

Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pl,s . ' ,
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday ; ~­
mOm In&amp; service at 10 a.m.; Sunday even· , ,_
lng 1erv1ce 7:30p.m. Tuesday and Thursday Servlcee at 7:30p.m.

NEW HAVEN CJtURCH OF THE NA-

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Sermonette

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The children of my Internship parish on Staten Island had ·a
favorite song they 111\ed to sing In Sunday School: "We love because
He flr$1 loved us; we love because He Hrstloved us: we love; we
love; we Jove.because He fll'llt loved ua." Simple, and yet, tor them,
......,
a pro!Oillld truth In the ·song's simplicity.
ID the Lutheran churc~es this Sunday, the Gospel lesson Is the
Great Commandment Ia Matthew 22: "'You shall love the Lord your
God with all your bear\, and with aU your soul, and with all your
mind. Th!A Is tbe great and tlrst commandment. And a second Is like
,,
It, "You shall ·1ove your nelihbor as yourself.'" Jesus was quoting HI\
thele two lll"e&amp;t trutha from the Old Testament ·- the Shema In
Deuteronomy 6 and the second from Leviticus 19.
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You cannot profess to love God and hold a grudle against your
nelgbbor. It Is as simple as tbat. Even the children ~taow II: '"'We
1(~;
love because He tlrst'loved ua." I cannot say this enough- We show
our love of God through our tr,Jita. Tblak' of the love our God bas
ihown ut• .Qod IJ .the&lt;falher who walla wllh oulatretched arms and a
fatb¥! calf-W Hili prodtpl CbUdren. God Ia a mo\ber bel) wllo !NQUld, :·W·.
rbelter ut under lte wlnp. Tbls Jove IJ overwbelmlng. Martlit ~.~;'(
Luther •etened io It as a quellende IIebe, a "bubbling-over love." .u_......,
Yet, 'we 'retu,se to love our netgh)!or. We retue to see tbe chlld of
.'
God In each human· being. Sometimes we atQp 101n1 to church
becauae someone offended ua. Thil.ll 1101 a perfect wbrld. No cburch ~~~~
--:·rt:
· 1wt a pe1 teet eoniiJ'tllatlon. Heaven knowa, no church baa a perfect
pastor. WJIYdolftatopclolngthat wblcbpve ut pleuure? Who are
we really lturtla&amp;? Or Is the pJ'OI)Iem Ia loving our neliltbol'll as · ~~
OUI'IIelvettT How many of ut truly love OUI'IIelves? How many of .ua
see ouraelva with the lUIIe eyea as the God who created ut aacl
love~ tbe alnaer even while He hatea the aln?
.
~ In the mirror. There Is a chlld of God. Look at your Delfhbor.
II child of God. Stretob out your baild In reconcWatlon.
. ~ to love the Lord with all ~r heart, soul and mind by Iovin'
your netehbor.
·
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- Pailor Lava Leacllllllnller '•r
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Judging for the show will begin
at 1 p.m. on Nov. 17 in accordani:e
with the Ohio Association of Gar-·
den Clubs ExhibitorS and Judges

neaday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study , .
7
'~i.SE SETI'LEMENT cHURCH,Sun- -''t
FIRST BAPI'IST CHURCH, Masoo, W.

The Meigs CoiDity Garden Clubs
will present their annual Christmas
Aower Show at Royal Oak Reson
on Nov. 17 and 18. The theme for
this year's show is '"1lle Poems,
Books and Songs of Christmas."
Chainnen for the show are Alice
Thompson and Peggy Crane.
Other commitleCS include Rutland Club, entry decorations; Shade
Valley Council, staging; Wil~ood
and Chester Clubs, entry, classification · and placement; Fernwood, ·
class signs; Winding Trail, ribbons;
Friends and Aowers, judges and
clerical; Middleport Amateur and
Bend o' the River, registration; and
Slar ·and Middleport, hOSiesseS. All
clubs are responsible for clean up
following the shoW.
· General rules for the show state
that entries in all sections are to be
staged under the direction of the
placement and classifie~~tion commiuee. All entries must in place by
noon on Saturday, Nov. 17.
Placements ·will be checked bet·
ween-noOn and I p.m. and the show
will be open to viewing .by the
public from I to 9 p.m. on Nov. 17
and from noon to 4 p.m. on Nov.

m

ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, pastor. N,
Sunday School9: 30 a.m.; Wonhlpaervlce, ,::,..
10: 30 a.m.: Youth service Sunday 6:15 p. ,
m. Sundayeventngservlce7:00p.m . Wed - 4 •

day afternoon services at 2:30. Thunday
evening services It 7:30.

Handbook.

.

Classes in all ~lions may be
added, . deleted. subdivided, or
combined at the discretion of the
placement commiuee.
In the artistic division the arrangements' must be the work of the
exhibitor and no artificial plant
material wiU be permitted. In no
case should fresh plant ~ be
painted or dyed or artificially
colored in any way. Dried or
treated material may be used in ~y
class. Painted. sprayed and dried
plant material may be used in all
classes if the arranger desires.
Only one enlry ~r. exhibitor i~
permitted in each artJsbc class. Any
~essories are permitted ~n . all
classes, provided they add disbnction to the design. Section II of the
· show · is ilpen to Meigs County
Garden Club members only.
In the horticulture and educational division, planiS must be
owned and grown by the exhibitor
for at least three months prior to the
show. No oil or polish is permitted
on foliage. Plant names must be
furnished by the exhibitor and writleJI on the en1ry iap. Exhibito11 are
eliCOuragedjo use the botanical and
common name where possible. All
of these classes are open to the
public.
An exhibitor may enl« IIIOIC
Ihai\ one specimen in a class in the
horliculiJJre. ~ providing each
CD~~'¥ is a different variety. Con·
lliDen for the l!)eCimenl will be
I*OVided by the conuaillee. An exhibllor may enrer 11101e dian one
i - ill educational provided the
illlllllft not alike.
Sweecll'lm will be awarded to
llJc exhi 'tor aceumulalins the most
DOints. Points will .be white. one
pelnt; yellow, two polnll; red, three
JIOiAta; Md blue, live points. ·
Awards .
lbd will include
of s~Re8eM Beat .of
Blld ~vjly. The creativity

doorwall.

Division B: Artistic Design, Section I - ""Over the River and
Through the Woods," using two
containers. "Babes in Toyland,"
using a toy in the deSign. Seclion II
• "Oh Holy Night," using candles.
"Stopping By the Woods on a
Snowy
Evening;·
featuring
weathered ·wood. "The Litllest An·
gel," miniature arrangement 10 inches or under. •·A ChriSbnas .
Carol." still life. ""Oh, Litlle Town
of Bethlehem," using a holy family.
"Silent Night," madonna, 11'8di·
tiona! widt child; and Madonna,
modem with child. '"Frosty the
Snowman." including snow. '"Win·
ter Wonderland," modem. Section
III, junior artistic, to age 18 -· "'The
Night Before Chrisonas," using
evergreen material. "Away in a
Manger," a favorite design. "How
·the Grinch Stole Christmas," a contrived animal or crilter.
Division C. Horticuhure, Section
I, _ junior SJX7imen - "Dried
Roadside Material, one stem; "Potted Plant'' and "Seed Pod Collection,"" to be shown in a basl:e~ at
least three different pods, each
must be named. Section II,
specimens - "Evetgreen,'" narrowleaf evetgreen, one branch, 1224 inches; broadleaf evetgreen, one
branch . 12-24 inches. "Berried
branch' other than holly," 18-24 in•
ches. "Holly," 18-24 inches; Section m; .potted planiS • "Christmas
cactus "' musl have at least one
bloom: "Folia&amp;e ' HouseplanL"
•African violet," one crown.
"Bioontin bouseplaniS,"" may in·
clude
violeiS with more
than one crown•.
. Division D, Section I, educational-competitive • ""1lle Gift of
the Maji," gift wrapped pacl:lge.
"0 Cltrisonas Tree." ornament
from naturllllllterials.
Division F, Educalional. non
competitive - Ohio River Valley
HCJbalists. Bobbi Karr, cbainnan.
DivisiOn G, 'Educational. Meigs ·
County Garden Clubs only, non
competitive. All clubs must partic~. Chrisones luncheon table
selling. Card llble 10 be provided
by exlubitor. See Jlllle 181 of~
Exhibitors and Judgea Handbook.

.u.\:an

MAKE II ARilE...
Ill WAIJADf
AIWIV

i

By BRlAN J. REFD
Sen~ DeWS stall'

you can take your bottles baclc. get
credit for your deposits, and
eliminate more 11'8Sh.
CUrbside recycling programs are
springing up everywhere. Suppon
them.
I am loathe to sound pessimistic,
bul the world IOday is in !be midst
of an environmenJal crisis that.
lhreaJens our lifestyles and ultimately our species.
We must make some sacrifices, .
such as laking the time to recycle
or re-using PfOducts that we have
been taking f&lt;X granted. .
Now that you and I have ~;~St our
ballots and elected our legislators,
we -muSt make our environmental
concerns heard. We must also vote
only for those candidates who exhibit a concerti for our earth.
We can no longer just talk about
our environmental concerns, we
must now act on them.
·
Now, let's you and I put these
tips to use. Have a good weekend!

'

ITEMS DISPLAYED • Janet Bolin, a put presldeat of lilt Oblo '
Association of Garden Clubs and very active garden club member,
displays a rew or the Items that may be seea at tbe aan1181
CbrlsliDas Flower Sllow 011 Nov. 17 and 18 at Royal Oak Resort. :
From left sbe displays an ladoor-ouldoor wreath, a modena •
Madonna made or chlc:ken wire, and an indoor waD banging whlc:b
she made.
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Sex hotline to help teenagers
I

Film to be shown

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In an effon to combat increasing. mother every 23 minutes. ~
rates of ten pregnancy and sexually than 11,000 cases of gonorrhea
11'8nSmitled diseases. the Ohio were reported among yOIDig people .
caught'', dte newest film from Deparllllent of Health has cs- under age 19 during 1989, and the
Billy Graham"s World Wide Pic- Iablished a free information botline number of gonorrhea cases intures will be shown on Wednesday to help teenagers in making healdty creased more than 43 percent·
at 7 p.m. at the Middleport First decisions about sex.
during the first quaner or 1990 ...
Baptist Church. Sixth and Palmer
·
"'The Teen Decisions project tar- compared 10 1989. .
SL, Middleport.
The theme of the Teep Decision$ .
gets young people ages 11 to 14
The film is a bUe-toolife dramatic who are forming crucial opinions project is Your Decisioas About.
story porttaying the power or one · about their own sexual choices, " . Sex Chang~ Your Life 'Forever. In
person caring for another. It is the said Dr. ·Ronald L. Aetcher, state addilion 10 dte inforination line and story of an American born il· health director.
brochures, announcemenrs have .
legitimately out of a college
· According to · Fletcher, callers been placed . on Ohio radio and .
romance and the youdt 's search for hear a recorded message on issues television . stalions, and postcn,
the father he has never known. In about sexual aclivity. If callers movie theater · slides and other
his search far from home he slips leave a name and ilddress, infonna- materials have been distributed. ..
into the self-destructive drug cul- tion will be sent to help them make Programs in school include discus- ;·
ture when he encomuers a caring
sion groups titled, ..Let's 1ill: ·.
an infonned decision about sex.
person of deep faith who shares
"'This information helps teens AboutiL"
Christ's message of love. hope and understand how having premature
The Teen Decisions program will ::
foregiveness.
sex can affect their lives forever," contioue through dte spring of.The public is invited to attend said Fletcher. '"The possiblity of 1991. Additional information may ·
the showing of the film.
pregnancy and sexually 11'8nsmitted be obtained .by coruacting Teen :'
disease are included in the informa- Decisions, 145 North High SL, ·
tion-informaton these kids want Columbus 43215, telephone, 224'- ,
and need." Fleleher cited statistics 8023.
'
showing 22,469 · births to 1een
Know
mothers during 1989, up 786 from · Now
the year before. He also cited continued increases in cases of By Ualted Presslnternatloaal 'i
Glt Kaur Randhawa of Hayes
sexually transmiUed diseases, such
In
Middlesex, England, finally
as gonorrhea as examples of the
dangers facing teens who have sex passed ber driver's test on the ·.
48th try on June 19, 1987, atter
prematurely.
'len of every 14 births in Ohio more than 330 lessons. Fannie during 1989 was to a teen mother Turner of Little Rock, Ark., ~
wbo was wasn't ·married, Fletcher passed her written test on the •
said, and a baby was born to a 1een 104th attempt In October 1978. ·~

HoBday Treasures VI
'
Craft Sbow and Sale :
l .
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S.tul'da~,

, . ........ 10, 1990

l0a.&amp;•6p.~

Help The
Birds Out
· This
Winter!
·SEE US FOR ALL YOUR BIRD FEED

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Sunda;r, Nov...,_ 11, 1990
1p.ai.•SP·IIl·

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Point Plea'unt Junior lll&amp;h Sch.OI
Rt. h North, Polat Pl'ua1at

•Smorgasbird Wild Bird Feast
•Black Sunflower Seed ··
•Stripped Sunflower Seed
•Nigra (Thistle) Seed
eWhite Millet
•Fine Cracked Corn

'I
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Spon ..... . ,

oMUon COunty e..,..

....,_ItS

c.o...... -

SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILLS

'"'" W&gt; . - '

I'D-'"" c-

Coutty

&lt;lflit·Poont-.•i)otlr PlelsiN ~

110 MUUEIIY

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992-2115

lntro~ucing Dr. E.

Neal .Ort~za
and Dr. Emy Olivarez·Orteza
.

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1easant Valley .Hospltal _ls pleeed to welatme E. Neal Orteza. M.D. llid Emy L. OllvaraOitaa, M.D. to Its medkaJ stalt. The husband and wife pediatricians open thelrol'llce atl907
Jat non AW...ue. l'olnt Pleaunt on Nov. 1. Prior to CIOI1IIn8 to I'Oinr " - ' t , the doaotS
CXJmpleted three year reslclendes with the DepMmel'lt oiPedlatrtcsat l.lnooln Medical and Mental
tteilth Centet In New York. Dr, Nell Clmu. who IIIIlS II I tint cNef resident dw1n&amp; the 111111 yac
of hll I Ilanty JliOBIWII. his I special biterelt In neo~lltO!osY IJid endoabiUiol)l. Dr, Emy
~hlsaspedtl ~INNitlnaller&amp;YII'Id clennatolo&amp;Y.Ioth dot IO.'SR boaldqulllled
, In ~ IIIII be1on8 to the American Aoadany ol 1"eiilllltccllld the Amerlatn M I dl :II

Nl'rllt'm.lhe J1118*ola16-moilltH*I cJauslller, M liM· llcM, theyenjoytwmls. the ma..._
llld the thardttW. Appollilllllflll bcNidlenand Idol IS *DRIIIY be made bqlnnlna'Diunday, Ckt.
2.5, by callns(304) 675-4107. Olllc:e hows 1re 9 Lm. to 5 p.m. weelldays.

Dd

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PUASANT VAUEY HOSPrrAL

IVJ ·The family of pro{euiono&amp;

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award does not have to be .a blue
ribbon winner. ! blue, red, yellow,
and white ribbon will be placed in ..
each class. In junior classes, the
judge mar. place more honorable
mention nbbons. Juniors will also
receive Best of Show, Reserve Best
of Show and Sweepstakes.
It has been noted that all clubs
are to ·participate in the Informal
Table Setting class.
,
Thirty _classes are offered to the
exhibitor. Classes 5-12 are for garden club members only.
Division A: Anistjc Hanging
Decorations, Section I - "Deck the
Halls," indoor wreath and outdoor
wreath. "We Wish You a Merry
Chrisunas," indoor wall and out-

•

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With last wedt:'s news that our
friends at the McDonald's Corporation would begin eliminating its
polystyrene (styrofoam) pecl:ages
in the months ahead, it is apptRI!t
thai llllge corporations are becom·
ing more aware of the "environmental agenda" that we now face.
As I have mentioned in this column
before, polystyrene and other plastics make up 25 percent of our gar. bage by volume, so it's imponant
that we find altemariv~ to these
packages and avoid purchasing
products that are packaged in plas. tic and ptllystyrene.
An 01ganizalion called "Eartb
Care_Paper" has IJiailed some ititeresting environmental lips to its customers and I ~ht that you might
find them interestmg and helpful in
your quest to save our planet
Firstly, we should REDUCE the
amount of garbage genelllted. This
can be done by purchasing arid
using products wisely.
How? Begin by avoiding plastic
and polystyrene. · "Earth Care
Paper" also suggests that you borrow items instead of purchasing
them.
.
When asked whether you prefer
paper or plastic bags at the grocery
sto~e, tell them you brought your
own reusable bag. That's the best
choice of all.
REUSE products whenever possible.
By using products that are made
to be used many times, such as
cloth diapers, napkins, towels,
dishes, and silverware, we can
reduce our garbage immensely.
Use the blanlc back sides of
paper and photocopy on both sides
of paper. (bid you ever think of
that one?)
.
Also, purchase used goods when
practicable and if available.
RECYCLE. Let's urge our legislators to suppon a '"bottle bill" that
establishes a deposit on bevelllge
containers. In the same vein, when
you purchase soft drinks, consider
buying in returnable bottles. Then,

Annual Christmas show Nov.17 and 18

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Racine.

Va. Rev. Wallace Mings, pastor. Sunday .
Lawrence Bush, pastor. Sunday School School 10 a.m.; Sunday eventne•ervlce, 6 , .~.g
p.m.; Prayer rneeUq: and Bible study · ·~
9; 30 a.m.; Sunday and Wednes~y even- .. Wedneaday,
7:30p.m.
•
tng worship service, 7:00p.m.
RUTI.AND
FREE
WILL
BAPTIST,
Sa·
•&gt;o!\
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7on Po- Iem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, putoc. Sunclay ·• 'cmeroy By-Pass. Rev. Robert E . Smith , Sr, School10a.m.;
Suadayevenlng 7:00p.m.; ,..,
pastor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday · Wednesday evening
prayer ~eetlng 7:00 ·.
School 9:30a.m .; Morning Worship 10: 30;
p.m.
'' ~
Evening Worslilp 7:00p.m .; WN!nesday
SOt.TI'H BETHEL 'NEW TESTAMENT . ,~
Prayer Service, 7:00p.m.
CHURCH, Silver RJdge. Duane Syden- , ~
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad str1clcer.
pastcr. Sunday Scbool 9 a .m .; . .$1
St. , Mason. Sunday School10 a .m.; Morn·
WorlhlpServlce,
lOa.m.; Sunday evening ·.~·!
lng worship 11 a .m.: Ev~ing service 6 p.
7:00p.m. Wednesday night Bible ·., :
m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed· "•rvlce,
'v7:00p.m ;
·
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.HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. HarUont, W. Va.
Rev. David M&lt;oManll, pastor. Chureh

School 9:30a.m .: Sunday morning service, 11 a~m.; Sunday evealng servtce,

;

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9'

Ohio

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�~~~~ga~1-G-~n.~~D~~~
· ~s~~~m=in~~~-----------------------P~~~~~M=~~~~~:rt~-~O:h:~~--~~------~--T-------~F~~=
· ~~N~ambw9.1990

Meigs County
. C OUrt neWS

$50
and costs;
Darwin,
(ailure
to register,
$55, and
Muy's,
W.Va., safety violation, bond
were
Richard
A. Barnhart,
Jailles L. Mash, Athens, DWl, Toby Hysell, Lancaster, lliscr¢rly
5300 and costs, license suspended conduct, $80.
for 60 days, three days in jail. upon Water to
completion of RlP program, $150
and jail lime suspenl!ed, no
registration. $10 and costs; Menif~
Blevins, Pomeroy, DWI, $350 and
costs, 6 months in jail, license
The Tuppers Plains Chester
suspended for two years, counsel· Water District is doing necessary
ing ordered, driving under suspen· rounne mamtenance 10 the Jines
sion, $100 and costs, six months in that cross creeks. Water will be sbut
jail concurrent with DW1 c"!UJ~e; off all day Tuesday from the Old
Jerry Gilkey, Pomeroy, receiVIRg Bedford School north on Route 33
stolen p~y, $75 and costs, 30 to Burson's Fruit Farm and east to

·.,

off temporarily

Hamilton, Langsville, domestic
violence. $200 and costs, 10 days
in jail, suspended. two years proba·
tion, resuaining older issued;
Byron S,. Mitchell, Athens, speed,
S22 and costs; Gregory W. Knapp,
.Pomeroy, speed, $30 and costs;
Nicholas McKnight, Middleport,
failllfll IIi contrOl, $30 and costs,
hit-skip, ten days in jail suspended, Racine, reckless operation, $100 Route 681 from Route 33 IIi
$100 and costs, one year probation; and costs, $500 to Law Enforce- . Thwnship Road 235. Rain will canMichael Cleland, Middleport, ment Tl'ust Fund; Michael W. Price, eel the repairs.
office will be closed Monfailure to contrOl, $30 and costs; Rutland; public intoxic:alion, $25 dayThe
in observance of Veterans Day.

:ncg~~~~teG~~~=~ s:

~~s ::;j~es~~~:~

GUN SHOOTS
1:00 .... .
SUNDAYS
12 o .... ftKtory
Cholle lilly

SHOOTS STilT
SEPI 16, 1990

Sopt, 4,tf!1

'

3
6
10
Monthly

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

·

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'·· ~

•Aec.ive !J .50 dis co unt .t 9r ad s pa id in advance
•Free ads - Gr.teaway and Foun,d ad$ unclfl' 16 we~rdt w•ll be
run 3 dJYS at no ch•gt.

3- Annoucements

4 - Givuwav
5 - H•ppy Ads
6 - Lost erTd Found
7 -- V.Itd Sale (paid in advancel
8 - Public Sille &amp; A~o~ciion
9- Wanted to Bu'r'

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

- 11 :00A M . SATURDAY

- 2'00 PM . MONDAY

WEDNESDAY PAPEr:.
T~URSDAY

PAPER

FRIDAY PAPER

-

,2 :00P .M

, 5 - Schools &amp; lns1r1.1c1ion
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB. Re~ai r
1 ?-Mi1cellaneou 1
1 8 - W1n1ed To Do

TUESO~Y

- 2 '00 PM . WEDNESDAY
-

2 :00 P,M . THURSDAY

- · 2 :00P .M . FRIDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

Classifie1 paf{es corer the

21 - S~o~tin•• Oppo,tunity

foUtm:infi
telephone exchanf{es ...
.

22 - Mdnev Jo Loan
23 - Prof••ional Servicn

Real

'

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Ar.. Code6,4
446- Gall ipolit

367 - Ch•hirc
318- Vinton
245- Rio Gr•nde
2&amp;1-Guyan Oist
•43-

"'•bl• 0 111

379 - Watnut

M1soro CO , W'V

County
Are• Code 614

Mei gs

Galli• Count'f

67~ - Pt

773 - M•son

882 - New Haven

§ 67 - Cool~o"ille

out radiatars. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

5, - Hou...,old Good,'
52- S,orting Goodl
53- Amtqua
54 - Misc . Merr;h~ndise
55-Building Suppli•
56-Pett for Sail!

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41 - Houses for R8nt
42 - Moblle Homes for Ren1
43 - hrm s fo r Rent

44- Apa,tment tor Ren t
45 - FUrnished Rooms

46 - Sp•c• for fhnt
47-Winted to Rent

Set Ruuffc Fact.

48 - Equipment tor Flent ,
49 - For

l•••

992-2196
Middleport; Ohio

. •

CHECK THE

1:&gt;

.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE'
PUBLICATION

DOMINO'S PIZZA
POMEROY, OHIO

NEW WINTER HOURS

Sun. thru Wed. 4 pm-12 am
Thurs.: 11 am-12 am ·
Fri. &amp;Sat. 11 am- 1 am

FULL ·TIME OFFICE
POSITION
Typing, Some
Bookkeeping. Must
·meet public well.
WRITE BOX 333

THE DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY

64_: M•v • Grain

Tran suort alion
7, - Autos for Sale
72-Tn,ck• fo' 5•1•

73- Vans &amp; 4

~o ·s

74- Motorcvcl•
76- Bo•t• &amp; MotOfl fOf 5111
76- Auto Pans&amp; Acc••oriM
77·- Auto R•p•r ~

78-Camping Equipment
79-Campes &amp; Motor Homes

81

~- H~me Improvement~

82- Piumbing &amp; Healing
83-hc.Vating

84-Eiectric.l &amp; Aefriger1tion

85 - General H1uling
86- Mobile Home Repair
87-URhOIItery

Public Notice

ORDINANCE NO. 182
WHEREAS, o rr.tltlon W81
flied with thlo Council ,..
quootlng thot Vlllego Coun·
dl VICOCI tho known
oo Steep oltuoted In tho
Monkoy Run • - In tho VII·
~~~~ of Pom«oy.
WHEREAS. oil eflectod
ond odjolnlilg ptOpooty -n·
on of S t - St.-tlolntedln
tho petition to vecott 1nd
further conoont to tho roquooted voootlon of StStroot.
WHEREAS. tho Vlllogo
CCM~ncll Iindo thot tho voco·
tlon of S t - Stroot would
not bo dotrlmontll to tho
~norol lntoreot of tho od·
joining property -noro or
tho _,...... public.
. WHEREAS, tho Villa~
Council further llnd1 thot
the luthorlty 1to VIICIIU Iii
pr-rlbod by_tho Ohio Rovlood Codo loctiono 723.04
to 723.12 lnclullvo hove
complied with ond thot
notlco by publlcotlon lo nat
n•; I ryfortMtectthlltall
propony ownore htvo con·
-•ocr by tholr petition to
thovecotlon of Stoep Stroot.
BE IT ORDAINED by tho
Vlllogo Council oftht Vllege
of Pomoooy, Stoto ot Ohio,
by 1n efflrmo- vote ol oil

.,m of Ono Hundred Twon·
ty·Fivo Dollere lf121.001,
ond - h porttlmoomployoe
In octlvo -ploymont 11 ol
Novombor 1I, 1 890. the
oum ot Fifty
Doll•••

Get your carpet Cleaned for

the holidays.

You'll love Dave's Professional
Carpet Drycleaning
FEATURES: Quick· Drying; Leaves
no st1cky residue to attract dirt;
Reasonable rates (you'll be sur·
prised); Free estimates; Recam·
mended by carpet manulacturers.

A -:

Brencto Morris. Clolk
Vlllogo of Mombol
Molga County, Ohio
loin -ry. Wllllom
Young, Bn1011 RHd,
Bryon Shonk,
Mombero of Pomeroy
Vlllogo Council
11119. 1tc

CALL DAVE SMITH
992-5984

PubliC Notice
PubliC Notice

ADVERTISEMENT
I . Fire
•
FOR BIDS
e. FIMt lnaur.nce
' Tho Vllo~ of . Pomeroy
Spoclllcotlono may bo
wlloceopt -lod bldl It tho plclcocl up ot tho CIOik'o Of·
CIOik'o Ofllco. 320 E. Moln fico. lido moy bo IIUbmlttod
Stroot, Po,.oy. Ohio· ID1 untH twolvo o'clock noon,
Elotom St.,dord
on
tho follo'1;~ouroncn :
1 . Public
1111 ond Em· D-mbor 3. 1 110. TIM VII·
ployooo Ll•blllty
lo~ rooorvoo tho right to '"'
2 . L.w Enf.,aomont Offlc· ject oriv or oil
·
Richerd Soylor, Moyor
Oil Lleblllty
3 . Wotor D-rtmont
BIOndl Monlo. Clolk
11, 2tc
{1111.
4 . V..... Inou-

n...,

bldo.

ORDINANCE NO. 110
An O•dln-• ta provide
ocldltlonol COmpontltlon !of
VII logo Employ- tor 1110.
lo It · orclolnod by tho
Council ol tho Vlllloo of Po·
moray, IMI·thlrdo of II
mombolo concurring thor·.
oto:
• ECTION 1: Thot fo• the
1110, tho Vlllogo ohotl
poy ooch ful tlmo omployoo
In eotlve ornploymMt 11 ot
Novombol fl. 1110, tho

ltiO.OOI.

MOilLE HOME FURNACES· HEAT PUMPS
AU FURNACE PARTS

11118. 1tc

Vlllego Council
·

Public' Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 111
WHEREAS, in on1or toot·
lroct •nd rotoln o quollflod
ond compottnt lndlvlduli to
...,. In tho pooltlon of
CIOik·Treolu.., of tho VI·
11110 of Pomon~y, It Ia -••·
Ary to lncru1e thl lftftUAI

oolory of t10,000.00 to
t1 1.000.00.
.
WHEIIEA8. thlo octton lo
pormlttld Md outhorizod by
tho Ohio llovr.ct.Cocto Section 733.211.
THEREFORE: bo It 0•·
dolned thot:
Tho oolory !Dr tho po11tlon
of Clort&lt;· T-ourer of tho VII·
II~ of Pomeroy bo tho oum
of t1 1.000 por yew. A!tor
Ooc. 31, 1111. oold ulory
- 1 thon bo tho oum of
e1 0,000.00 . 10 It - • prior
to lhla ordln1nce.

A._:"

.

B~ Morrlo, Cleric

Vlllogo "' lqmbof
Molgo County. Ohio
Lllrry Wohtutlll. Thomoo
Wony, Wllllem Young
INCO lllld. Bryo~
Shonk, Iotty lo10nlck
Mombora of Pamorov
VHiogo Council
111)1,1tc

PI-nt, ~1011 .

Commereitl
Relidlntltl
•Roofing
•Siding
•Window•

·Isn't II Worth

a.

Doiov light

BANKS

CONSTRUCTION

nur HMC,

IN MEMORY OF
NORMAN M.
HYSELL
I cannot eoy ond I will
not MY ·
Thot he 11 dead - he 11
· juet awoyl
With a cha.y emile.
end e weve Of hit
hend ·
He hll wondered Into
• en unknown lend.
Think of hlm·fering on.
•• dear
In the love of There 11
the love of Here.
Mild end gentle 11 he
wee breveWhen lhe • - e o t
love of hie life he

Mme, I aeY;
Ho it not deed - he 11
juot IWeyl
DEPARTED THIS
LIFE NOV. 9, 1989
Sadly mi-d by
wlfo, dough1er, oon
and flmillee

~

~
~

MICROWAVE .
OVEN IEPAII .
ALLMAKIS
.
Bring lt,ln Or Wit '.

4 TON MIN. LIMIT

Pick Up.

sso.oo ........

lEN'S APPUANCE
.
SERVICE

Lump or Stoker

992-5335 or ~85·3561
~- F,_ Poot OHico
217 E. s.. , __,
. POMEROY; OHIO ·

286-2689

10-24 I mo. pd.

BISSELL I BUllE
CONSTRUCtiON
•New Homes
•Garages
•Complete
· l,emodellng
Stop &amp; Compare

"At lltaiOIIOble Prictt"

Day

or

Night

1 mo.

GUN SHOOT

Fll&lt;hlfY C....o

12 Ga. ~=~Only
Strlcttp I

,_,

992-6009

10.11MO.

up
up

KEN'S APPUANCE
. SERVICE

992-5335 or fl5·3561
Aa- FNM Post OHict
. .~OY;:&lt;OIIO .
· · ,•

10/30/'19 Hn

RACINE.
FIRE DEPT.
lashan •Hdlng
EVElY
. SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

BANKS

•

WRAPPING

949-2206

,,.. ltltwtll

'

'•
l

BISSELL
,..
SIDING CO.

.... ._ .....

-'Free

•

Eatlmate~• •

Nnr lomliott
t61 North Second
MioWiopart, Ohio 45760

SALE$ &amp; SERVICE

·W. C..,.., Fishing 8uppU•
.
Your Pho., .e
Blllt Hero

, IIISIIISS

PH. 949·2101
or ReS. 949·2160·
NO SUHDAl CAUS
4-t&amp;-H-tfl

····-

OPitORTUNITY

1!!.....__ _

206 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT. OHiO
OFFICE 992·28811/HOME 992·6692
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER

BAILEY RUN AD. - BEAUTIFUL STAAT- This 1973 Kirk· ·
wood mobile home has been retondHioned. Has new carpel·
In• throughout, new outer doors. looks like new. Nice bay
~1ndow and lwo bedrooms. Plusapprox. one acre of nice laJ:
mg land.
MUST SEE S14,500
RACINE ~ACRES- ACREAGE -ACREAGE- Approx. 26
acres,olland. Has approx. 6acres tillable. Great place to put
a home.
·
$14,500
MIDDLEPORT:- RUTLAND ST.- Anice big lot with al973
R1tz Craft mobile home. Home has 2 bedoroms large living
room, factory made awning, wrth alrealed wood deck. Star·
ase building" and small' garase.
·
.. S9,000
MIDDlEPoRT- Gmt n1ipbortiood- Corner lol, all on
one floor plan. 21o3 bedrooms, large pantry and apart base·
menl. Enclosed nice Iron! sillins porch and a nice lot.
$27,900
· POMEROY- LINCOLN HTS. - 'tuteasa button- Neat as
a.pen" describes this lwo-bedroom home wllh an equipped
krtchen, carport, and .part basement. Has alloored attic and
50x288 too~· tol.
$25,000
NAYLDRS RUN- Beautiful, corner lot wilh 2.15 acres. Has
natural gas across the road, eletlric anilable. Older drive
way.
$8.000
LETART - llalntenlnce Frt1 Exterior- 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, 3 silting porches, 1nd a dinine room. Nice bl&amp;level
yard.-Fenced area with bam ioranimats, and afree hou!llor
children. PRICE REDUCED ~ Ws $44,900.
·
MUST SEE $42,500
MIDDLEPORT - Hmoricll looltins comer store. H11 6
apartments up and onalher store down. Sllrt your own busi·
ness. Has lots of room, and has an ineome. Call for more de·
llllst
•

LETART- BET lOU'lllOYE IT -Just rilflt tor 1family. Has
4 bedoroms, dinina room, new kitchen cabinetS. new r1np,
and entire home has been remodeled .nicely - inside and
out. Alsa hiS i view of the river.
SZUOO

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;
SUPPLIES

S. .. For

Your .

Sportlny ...s
Buy, Selt ·or Trade
Gun•

BILL SLACK
992-2269 .

''

IIU · t- ~

OPEN ION.·SAT. 10.5
742-1421

*"•mu.

511111 1111 ...

·

OliO

10·01-'110-1 mo.

•Remodeling •nd
Home Rtpelra
•Roofing

•Siding
•Pal~~ting

NO JOB TOO SIALL

FREE EsriiATES

CEDAR .
CONlTRCnGN
99f-6641 or
.,••6164
10·12·'10·.1 ....

1-\nnouncemenl s
&gt;

-3-A------;: .~
• ••·

~A'"boo....,.lut..,.oty.,....-no-..,h-=..,...;.·.,""' ~

t'""l"'-g an P"'l
ot:&lt;,
HarOld A_, Rt. 1 11cH1
,
llpollo Forry, WV. 25!15, wtll n;. ·

Qoh,.:

proMDute.

-

'

nlohocl or unlumlohod. COtloHar

ott...

~

Rw-1130. 3041271-:1111.

73

dey, aunda.r. Produce and Iota

At&gt;ortmonto.
2 - - nlct,
304-1~04.

32 Mobile Homes
tor &amp;ale

from

$500 DOwn On Soloct , Uood
Hom", Plrmant• Aa Low As
$125/mo. 0111 EIHa Home C.n·
ter at 1..aoo-58ti..S'T11.

441-ltHIO.
Magic Yurt Dar Care Canter

12:165 tr1llar for ula, 304.&amp;7$.

BNutlfv your car &amp; protect It
wfnt• 111t " grime. Expert
auto clunlng lnaldl a out.
H~rae• a -P,onlta; ~6-2107, Riverside Aufo Detailing. 614l'la.onable, .
depandablt,
llcenu, qualhr child carw. Man·

7211.

t989 Schuftz 12ldl0, complalatv

tumlshld, window air cond,
wash« &amp; dryer, drape•, etc.

BEAI1TFUL APAIITIIENTS AT
BUOOET PRICES AT JACICSOH
ESTATE!,, 531 Joclcaon Pille
lroln 111.wmo. Walk to ohop &amp;
movl•. Celt 81~-25ea. EOH.
Fu""llhed Apar1ment, 1br,·ms,
Utllftloo Pold, 839 Socond, Go~
llpoll1, 814-446-4416 •fl•1p.m.

Fumlohod Aportnwd, 111&lt; $185,
Utllftloo PoldJ. ~.ho .. bot~, 7111

Fourth An, ....ulpolil, ,......._
4411afltr 7p.m.

hunllng, Tom Roach, ~04-675--

63

. 1£,

Unotttchocl? Aroa !llngtoo _
_, ;.
Communlcotlon With You. Can,.,&lt;r
fldontlol
.Info. · ·'
HNrt-rchc~cO. Box 1041, Qolo ,,;
llpolla, OH 40031.
•;
. ''II\

PICKENS FURNITURE

Houuhold~ng.

1J2 mi.

Jorrlcho Rd. Pt. PI-nt. WV,

ooll304-1711·t410.
A~or.

2dr,
$05;
Refrll-rator:
'roat
Free,
A-.
Rolrlgorotor, 2dr,
Whitt, ll5i •trtaei'ator, c::op.
pon
. 'ono, Froot Frio, lllle - .
$250;
Aefrlprator, Harnet
Gold, Frost Frwa, $175; Kenmore
Waohor Horvoot Gold $95;
Kenmore Waahar, Avocado, $95;

"ail·

G.E. Dryer, $11; Kenmore Port·

iblo Wuhor, $150; Moytog
Wringer Wuhor, $150· Goo
A1ng1, 38, Inch, $75; E1~rlc
Rafl911,

Whtta

115;

Cheat

F....... $125: Up~ght F......,
$150i.!~fiV• Applfoncoa, 614·

Ono block Anguo ot-. ...
Holataln ltMr, ona Umo. Filth
Cho~oy Bull. Uma. Chortoy
Cloldon Boy.lt4 f43 5311.

room aulte, good eond. $250. or
bHt: offer. "Ex~rciM tr~~mpolln
$20. Old loohlonocl puoh mowor

Sar·
Sto. 30~e-m4.
-Oullrter Honea
Quollty}:eb 7.-1f1t
·'"
"
roll Filly, 11110 Fob 22~ 1HB
Popo Boor Flohor . - burning Chootnul Filly, SUnltY u. Bor
atovo. Fire bride lintel. Uood 2 Blood n. .. S2,000, wall broko·
yooro. SIIOO now, will nogotlott. Fob 15, INg Ooldlng, 4 112
lt4-16T-3935;
Halt• Pointe, l2,7SO A:prl 2,
11B8 Big Chootnut Moro, hH
Pont_, boot 13 112 ft . won
~•nr .,... ,u,. c......
$4!50.00;35,000 BTU warm morn- $3,7&amp;0.
lf4,28t.f522.·
Ing gao otcwe. $85.110, Uood
prfma doora;Pnve~ _guitar T-eo Will do CUstom Llv.-tock Haul·
whh herd -lcooo $125.00 114- lng. (11ft. Goottnock Trollorl
1112·2445.
Cliuck Wllllamo, 1'14-24~.
Rocondhlonoct Wuhora, o..,.,.. 64
Hay &amp; Gra
· In
Guorontaod
prompt
_,leo lor -::::::-:::::=::::-::=:~::-::::::-:­
oil mokn, modolo. Tho Wuhor •
Dryor Shoppo 114-448.:1144
Allollo, CioYor, Orchord Grill,
·
·
Mlxocl Hoy lor Solo: Squuo I
Roinlnalon 22 riflo $150. Mo~ln Round B-. 114-448-3845.
door
with ·
- Ill•· Ground, -loci corn, M. por
Shot rtDo
gun 30130
B""'nlrw
&amp;woo!
toon 11300. Old gun 12 100 lb. t:i% cottlo food $1.50 par
Control Arm ahot gun $10: 1110 lb. Allollo hoy. Morgon'a
875-1142.
Form, Rt. 31: 8:01).12:00 ,_,,
lion thru Sal304-13'7-20t8.
Wlntocl to Buy: Stondlng Timber, Small or large ac,..., I'M- Hoy &amp; Grain: Good Hoy:
*Itt por bolo. 114-256-1112.
317-7510, after 7 p.m.
Hoy lol Solo. cio ... &amp; Tlmotlty.
Two Burlol on Mound Hll Round
In
w.ot -114-3711-2732.
-ton. IDiolror 248-11111Botoo In tho Flold. 114Addftlon)

uoo.

.90

Transporlation
71

=---.,..-=:-:..,.....,-.--

plorr· ....

-mont -

w/alr,

812-ISOOI

gino I Tra,.mlnlon, body
nMigh, 114-441-0271.
1192 Ford EXP, nooclo onglno
wort&lt;. $450. 31J41773.!1305 oftor
8:00p.m.

~Gutter
~ H-:lr!!et

fCo

0~

*1 .......'

,.m..... .,....,...,

"
""""'
e - -;.,.both, on 2
1 ,.. ..,lipiWI, ...... 1lrolaalonaJ 111 . . . . AuctNr ' ·~
'Wsi• Cll requiK 1Ma241- fl It IGit w.l PDint Rd.
IIUI &gt;
Hwltord.L~~N.IIIIO. eotl

-o-....-.t.

=·

==-~= utllltloo;

l'ort N l'onl-~
-.~~~r-....-.

.....

I houMe for ,...,
nq.-. c.rt • -

.

For Sale: 1990 Model, 5 horae

powtr, ~';~ ~;m• 11ahar Motor,

1100.81

53.

Wa eJ11 nowWINTEAIZING.-rta,
~.

occoaoorloo. We lnotall
SHRINI\WRAP.
RIVERStOE
MARINE OoHiprllo, 011. 114-4462424, t-IOD-729o02l'l.

76

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1 y.o old ,Century lll&gt;argt..o
plc~up topper. GNy, langbod,
$300. 30U75-3104.

VInton Auto S!llvaga. Foralgn 1
Dam Porta buying lunk co,..
114-388-11082.

79

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

new. $1,000 linn.
4Ztl.

Services
81

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATEAPROORNG

Unconditional llt.tlme gual'lln•

I ~Foam

IMMM.

'

IH. Local rer.r.nc• fumlaMd.
Fret MtlmatH. Call collect 1·

114-237-0488,
Rogtni

ling.

day ·or night.

Blllment Waterprao.

custom

CoMn'a

CllbiMI:a

-lotlzlng In country atylo

khhans and eablneta. 614-314- ..

2570 or 114-1112·2578 lor fret- ~

tlmatM.

Comploto Mobllo Homo 101 upa

&amp; repelra, also plumbing 6
a..ctrlclll, roofing, remodeling,

palloa I clocka ole. REMODE(.

lNG!

Atferancea.

, Ranaull

iutornalle

QDOd

Alll•nce
candttlon,

111,350. 114-241-ISIII or 814-24511542.
tiM Dodge ·omnt; groat cond~
tlon, loW mlloo, $2,500. 114-245-

Eatlmalet.

8434.

1885 Ch.,- Fifth A - .
- . Bfock whh rod toothor
Int-. 114-1112·2311 oftor 4 pm.
18B8 Dodgt omnl, 21,000 actuol
mlloO, I ojlood, vory aood cond,
304-t'IS-2118
.,...;;tngo or
...ntngo.
1881 Ford Eocort, vory good
cond,lt4-448-1112.

11aa Ford ur-::11

ut, 5U31
mltoo. COIII1
. 012.
·
1tB8 Pontiac Floro. GT. V-1,
otandanl, rodlg"'l'_ tntorlor,

:\~n:·5~ oBo.

Rotary or ooblo 'toor drilling.
Moat weltl complelad .. me=·
Pump ..... and urvlca,
885MOZ

Septic Tonk Pumping l90~,Golila
Co. RON EVANS ENTERP•ISES,
olocilaon, 0111-100-137-1528.
Davia
S.W·Vac
Service,
Goorgoa C-k Rd. Porto, ouppiiH, plokup, ond rlollvory. 114o
441.02M.

82

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

co::;"tt:.i,'ll

Fourth ond p no
Golllttoflo, Ohio
!1~14~4~41~31~1!1- - - - - 84 Electrical &amp;

Rttrlgeiatlon
Atoldtnllol or .... .....,..,
.wiring, , _ or -IR.
LloonOod oloctrtelan. Alclonour
For Solo. tm Dod!lo, 2 - · Eloclrlool, :ICIW'III-17111.
Goad running condition· QIIO.
c.t1 114.f82-lllli2 or 114-1112- 85 General Hauling

• • Pontlao GnndAm . ..r-,
allvlor. ~!':e mltoo.
M,IOII. I
21110 or 114-14

-·

Aoklnl

-PII.

=

!Wif'&amp;

Mlcldllf ,.,. 4 t

C.ll ~U4-446-

1113

.........-.

Farm

ltOT.

Ron's TV Sarvlce, apadallzlng
'
In Zantth alao urvlelng moll :·
other bflnda. HouM calls, eleo
aom• eppllanee repalra. WY
.304-a'lt-231111 Ohio 114-446-2454.

rn~~roon, ~ cond, naw 11,.a,
Will Molle ortor. 114 38B 111157.
11182 Toyolo Torcol, cloponda~lo,
loW mltoo, 114-441-211tl.

=

.-o

1172 17 ft . Starcflfl Tri·Hull
8011. 125 HP, Evlnrude Engln•,
.compltta top new upholtlery,
COli lt4-281-1W oftor 7:110 p.m.
1973 BumtiCI'IIft 32 ft. houaoboot
and lrollor. 1711 hp Chryolor
Volvo engine wHh 2 ·~,. .,.
glnaa tor Pllr'tl, complalely Mlf·
contolnod. Sloopo 9. 114-992·

114-256-1111.

:•m

-

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale

1112 Z·28 Camara, low millage,

s - , .... vrouncr.

:.:.:===:::.;""="_..,...._......,,..
.._.o,.

'

1111 Ptymouth Duwt•, Sll:nt li
1t"N Olftmobila, Excellent. En~

a-.

:Co:-;•

saoo.304-171-1031.

tm Ford Gnndatl ~oor, I cyl,
AC, PI, PI, 304-1 4 52.

*-

"""'· .

1918 Hondo Mognl;-rt',400 ocutol
mi._,
mint
· condition,...
wlndohlold. Prlcod tQ ooH. 1142811-3373.

10 ft. tUd-..ln truck· camper, like

1W8 Tllu-rd. pb, pa, bW,
ec. cruiM. arnltm n~clo, tapa
aaoct, .... tn color,
roo oholp, $'/SO flmt . .Boo ot
Hockingport, Oftlo on Sr 124.
114-IIUlU.
1W11 TrontAm. Juot ,.prococl fV·
8)
angina, new •xhl•l·
lranomllalon~ _chi.,_ - " ·
.... good. - t - - 614-24'73B8t.
tm
Comoro
B-•·
Automotlc, 305, powlir·wlndowo.
$!100. lt4-Mf.2S33•
19'71 Chivy C.maro, 301 aula,

-

••-100

MotorcY4)~s

74

Autos for &amp;ale

1111 Buick, low mlloogo, good
cond, 304-l'll-aOT.
1961 ~ Coronot 318 on91ft!1_ "!'J 141!110 mlln. Wao
$2,i01U I'IOW .,,2110, Mull Hll.
614-1'12-ZIST.
11170 Chevy 3 Quortor Ton Pick·
:.:uno good. 11110. 114-44&amp;-

.-oc1

Banks
Construction

Uvestock

tan. Ohkt P.n.c Co., Pomtroy,

Ohio. 114-t1112-1411.
Mowing m..r 1011 3 pc living

•90,_

b

4082.
1W8 Plymouth Voytgor. Bluo,
31B anglnoil omllrn .,...,, po,
pb. $1,200. 14-192-2108.
1DB5 Blaur S,O, 4x4, •uto, AC, ·
IIH, AM.fll, "'-200, 304-875-8373.
1867 Joop Wrailafor, Vlry good
cOnd. 304-1'/S-1884.

MIKod htrd Wood oloba. f13 par
bunc:Ut. ContaiN epprox. 1 112

$5,500. 304-175-1810, 8:00 till · ;::c.;:.~:'-"'::::.,-=-=::4:00,404-171-6411after 1:00. .
Fumllhed Apt, 1br, 1200, 441•/DII,
Utll«loo Pold, 7111 Foll'th, OolPaula's D•Y Care canter.
AENT20WN
Sit., affordable, chlldcare. M·F 1911 Monarch Skyline Tralltr llpollo, 114-441-4411,.ttor 7p."'.
F:mployment Services Mill
114-441-3151
.
1 a.m. ~ 5:30 p.m. As-• 2 ·10.
12X80, good oandhlon, , fur·
Fumlohod
EHicilllcl.
All
utll~lto Solo and Choir, ~-IS por -11.
Beforw, after echool. Dro~lnt , nlah.., on Clark Chapel Road. oold. Stwe both,
118 I Potc.o Woodgroup, $14.01 por
wtlcomo. 6t4-446-8224,
.:6t4-::..:3=BI:.:B:.:4.:.:73::.·- - - - - - 9econd AV'MUI, lf4..4t41-3145.
weak. L.Sha~ Bunk Beda,
Help
Wantacl
1!
-•na oncr ChoOI or Draworo
19B2
t4x60
Buddy.
2
bodraom,
Grocl...
living.
1
ond
2
bod-~~~.!?"II lio•llyn S &amp; S Cloonlng. Lot uo ciNn cantfllalr, aklrtlnQ, 10X12 metal
lnctudM $13.14 pot -11.
~
your home In time for tht
ap11rt1Mn111 •
Vlllaol Swlvol Roct..., $4.44 por -k.
building. $9,300. 614-1112-11179 or room
.~~!l~aye•. Wt aim to p.....
. · ! ~~ 614-992-6843.
Moond
Rlveralilo Rocllno&lt; 17.71 ~r- _... Dlnolto
.
3
~l'lrtmontl In Mlddlooolt. From will'! 4 Chelra, JZSO per week. 4
2! part~l... omployoH.' lluot ~303
t,.naportaUon to ind from
Pa,tar Bra• a•. $12.20 per
2 btc:lroom tl'llllar, air condition- f196. con 114-192·7711. EOH.
GtfUDOflo. Doy ator nlghl work. Will boby olt In my homo, clooo Ing, carport, anachld building.
-k. 4 DroMr Choat ol worm Momlna goo otove with
Lolao Socond Aportmont, Droworo, $3.10 por wook. At. 141, blower $125. 304-182-2878.
tt!f:zd houre por monlh only. cto;_oc:.;:_hooi__:•;_304_-1:.:7S~-2:.:·7:.:84;_·c,...,__ 61~·8568atttr7. p.m.
_
Kitcltln Fumlahed, 231 .Firat 4
Ulln Off Rt. 7 In Centenary.
Could bo more haura lotor on. Would llko to do bobyolttlng In
Avonuo, IZIO/mo. pluo utllhloo, HOURS:
SPECIAL, Foctory to you1119t, 2 deDoell
Mondoy thru Soturdoy, Wood burner lor Nlo. Phono
~elnduetry. Frontier Claln- my home. AU ahlfl•, all agea,
a
,...tee,.
no
peta,
k.m.-lp.m.; Sunday, 12 Noon· 8M..002·7688 aft•r 5prn.
lnQ. COl botwoon 1 a.m. &amp; 12 ho.. re~oron ..a. con 114-388- or 3 beclrDOm14x7D model8 · st ·~021.
noon. 114-446-"1117'0.
8515 (If no anawer, call SM-387- the unbelltvablt prk:a of
Sp.m.
$12,g()O d.alvered and Ml up. Modem 2 end 3 lwlr«&gt;m
Building
55
20 motlvotocl _ . . In 1oco1 7HOI.
COII1.SOO.T29-4045 foldolallo.
apartmanu: In ~. c.p.t, AUCTION &amp;SWAIN
FURNITURE. U
aru, uparitncetln aaJa, paid
Supplies
, t/2 - . oqulppod ldt- Olh1r St., Clollpolla. Now a Uaod
Signet 12xSS: ·2 bedroom, gaa
th- .'!!~! will troln, oppolnt·
Financial
.141111-4448aftai •:oo p.m.
heat,
air
cond,
vinyl
eklrtfna.
fum"urt,
helten,
Wnt•m
&amp;
nwd ......1-2418Block, llntelt,
brick, -ate. ClaUde
- · · Wlnwin·
n•w wlndowt: I pillnt, porcl1 Nlcoly lumlohod mobllo homo, 1
dowa;
boola. 114-441-3158.
A'{ON I All A,_o I Shlrloy
W/llt.~mn awning 8x16, rentlllot,
ltl'l,
Rio
Grende,
OH
Call
114mill t-._ ~Ina
304-675-7328 oftor B:IIO Pll!.
sP.H ... 304-175-1421.
21
Business
245-1121.
riv~ ca. hNt, - ' Ror. 53
Antiques
ClrMr Oppartuna,'-, On River.
0 ' n It
Windsor 14x?O, 21&gt;1, CA, build- 114 ... 0331.
Pets fQr Sale
Good p~y bonotHo, - ppo un Y
ing, sklrtlna, on lot In Quail Hont1 Third Stf'Mt, Mldrlap rt, Buy or - · Rtvortno Antlquoti, 56
1124 E. Main Street, Pamaray. '7.;;;;;;;-;;;i'&amp;;;j;j;i;-iih:;p:ji;j
Creek. Gooil condition. Frwnch
M.K.CI. Sorvlco lo lor you.
INOTICEI
Ohio.
2furnlohorl
opl, H -: M.T,W. tO:OO o.m. to 6:00 Groom and SUpply Shop Pot
._
ondrlopotl
roqulrod,
FO[ !"""" ln""'""tlon fliO OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH INO CO. City Mobile Hom•. 114-441- ,
p.m., Sunday 1:00 to 6:110 p.m. Grooming. All bloods. Allatyloo,
lo,...K.CI. Job Sorvio!!', 14 Cloy
lhol you do bull· 9340.
304-182-211M1.
114-1112·2528.
lomo Pot Food Doolor. Julio
Uok Rood, Northup, ""45656.
, _ with _ . . you know ond
Wobb. CON 114-446-4231.
Eoin · ...,.. Chrlolmoo m - NOT to otnd monoy throUJI~ tho 33 Farms for Sale
~~:!:."'~it
!:ru~':l:
54
Miscellaneous
'
loltlng a - ordore !rom lomlly, moll until yoU hon lnvMtlgotod
• AK.C ShiiiiH. Molo I Fomolo.
tt4-1112o2218 oftor 1 p.m.
Merchandlae
Two 010 5 yooro old, Fomoit
rrt..,do, oncr _,._Cotl Koy 114- 1 ~lho:.:,:o::"-:;r:.:•na='·-----:--::Prognont. lt4-379-2W8• .
Ono
bod,_
fumlohocl
1111,
992·1180.
Notlonol Cominy -ka dl•
11111
Ford LTD olatlon wogon,
outtldrta
Hendlrton,
all
ututtr.
'
•- 1ribulor to on
tho Froodom
very c,_n, no ruat, mutt IM to 2 run dog llennol, IX12 ft., 304Eooy Wolle! Exooilonl Ptyl tnd ProfHabl Hy of vending
~chdad,t300. ~h, ~~
-!ott,
Hklng $1,100; 24 ft. 671-2111 or 675-2152.
ltlliblt Product• ot homo. Coli tOCW. pure lruh Julco (Troplcona, 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
7344.
wood
oxt.
loddor
110: HOmolho A.K.C. Roglot- Alrodolo Pup1
tor~ lnlormatlon. 504-14 ...aoo3 SUnkltl, etc.b!Cerllca locations Approx. 1 acrw, oaded Iota,
Smoll Fuinlol!ocr Entclorq XLchalnuw2r4200i 14tno,... ~'1elor oolo, 1 woob old, 114Ext. 313.
101 up by ompony (Holiday
chy wotor ownor fi'J:".!:t. Jor.. ..~ro~r~o far t ...............1 tod blcycloo, toto or parto-4200:
413 onytltno.
ExcolloN ~-~ world IIHI, Romodot, otc.t Complola rtco Aaaa,1 Point P
, WY hoot,porldna.~&amp; .LIIIe now VIctor orldlng mochlno
AtMmbla slmltlll
uc:t• at 1urn-k1Y buelnaai requiNI ap- 304-372-1405 or 372·25'1t.
Adortblo
fox T~r~lor pupploo. a
uo. 114-192·2905 oftor 5 pm.
Nflrenc., 1'14oof41-0338.
_
_. t'10444i•7
Ext. 5214. prox. t1a,OOO ond mini·
-lie old, wonnod arid roody Ia
24_~
- •.
-m ol I hau,.. por -k. No- Rout• 2 Milton, 1 acre Iota 3 Upetalra, 2br APartrr.nt, watar tWI lntornotlonol achool buo, GO. Scali LUCII. 614-317·7511.
~
llonal c.neua ahowa tvenge mlln -'h Golll~lo GiCI.o, &amp; truh lumlohod. .,..-441-3!140. full al•, 312 englnl, euta
Griiwlng ComC"ny Sook OX· monthly profl1 ol $3,411. Expan· public water, no ,.llrlctlona,
l,.namiHion, oood eond, rune AK.C Chlhua~'!". moJo, long
ooilo'- or wl 1raln tho right - 01 no oddllonol coot duo to eoma with rlwr frontage. 304--. 45
good.
$800. ~~687.
coot, 11150. """'uahua pupo
Fumlahed
lndlvlduol for
Company participation. Coli 24 a'll-2336.
duo: Noo 21.114-379~W8.
2
comolory
tot,
Molaa
llomorlol
llttMit, a maMIIIIMI'I ' ..... hoLn/7 days 1-800-800..3688 or
Rooms
Rout• 7, 12 1/2 ICf. ., 10 ~en~:
Gordono. 114-115-31U.
AK.C
Roglolorod
Brfttony
for tfie OoiHpollo I HI00·8D0-3948.
tobacco baaa, 2 large bama, ADOIM available for 2 or 3 eon..
U.lao c..unty, OH orea. COli lor
Spaniol Pup. 5 mot. old, All
31
mm
SLR
camera,
2
Ia.-,
on•
troller hook-up, $37,11110. 304-1113- ltructlon WOfklrl:, 304-112·
wtrecordt. Excel••
~ndl!l lntorvlow. 114-441- 22 Money to LOan
- . zoom. flaah, 2x ond 3x ahot1.
8196.
2511.
convartora, carrying cu., 304· Podlgroo, $125. 114-441-7383.
1.oM1 nightclub oxpancllngl- CREDIT PLUS. GOLD CREDIT
INglo pupo, 304-1711-20711.
Roomo !Dr ronl· - k or month. l~'lt.
lnl.-vtMitng: W111rM ..., Door CARD. Vlaa!Maatercard guaran·
Renlais
Stortlna ot $T20/mo. Oolllo Hotel. 4 llltol gino olzo, a
Boautllul Sis- Kltlono, 114PeNOn, P..ce K..,.,... a Ex· teed. Cash Advances, no
114 44f"·t5BG.
Chrlatmu traae. 304-171-1484.
441-0231 Tho Groom Shop .
p....11 c1d Barttndent. Inter- aecurtty deposit, no credit
v - : Tlluro, Frl &amp; Sot. F""" 2- cllock. 1-901).225-11048. $19:95
Slaoplng roomo with - n g. Alumlnum.Aaphoft .,ool -'lng, Drlgonwrn&lt;l COnery Poroltn,
41
Houaes
tor
Rtnt
Alootnllor opoco. Allhook-upa.
4, ot tho - - cr..,, 568 Up- :f..
:::..·--=--~-lor . . - homn, "5 SltmOH and Hlmoloyln kltt....
Call
aft• 2:00 p.m., J04 ..77:1- gol. $21.95.
Paint Plua, 2415 114 441 3144 aft• 7 p.m.
por Rlvw Rood.
LOANS BY MAIL
3 · Br,
oplh·lovol,
newly 565t,U.oonWV.
Jacbon
Ava,
Palnl: P.. •sant,
M~LS: 2· ,_,. to adUtt. No Up to $5,000 In 72 hours. We ,.modalod, 8425/mo.. Dopoah
Floh Tank, 2413 Jtckaon Awo.
304-1711-4084.
~SolocUna can holp you gol • algnaturo rtqoolrod. 114-4411-4222.
46 Space for Rent
Point PIHN rrl, 304-1'111-2012,
neW .._.lor
to toc.l Loan Br Mall. 1 ·900~246-6500.
Btri Frenklln , hootl~g ' otovo, full llno Tn~plcol ::~-blrdo,
houat, unfumllhld.
40:140 Mf· fl. oam,.,.rclal s,_ca good ohopo, $100.; 41oillal wldt aman anlmltand • 1
~~~
looN.~ ::~=.9~5~fN~----· - - - - - - - -2 IHM:Iroom
•
point, ........... Dapoolt 0¥1lllblo In Crwn City. Moro ona 13 Inch, on Ford rima, good
lotiont 01 flp.m. cw Tp.m. ohorp
..aulrod.
No
IMido
polL
Professional
...,. V'o* •::y, . 14th, .. 23
0¥1lllblo. 61421U496.
PJJdloo: loyo..:.__~..'.~~ Mini
·• now $125. lt4-341l10124.
eMIII2-3080.
ScmoUloro • ......,... g,..nd
lidlldoylnn, Huntlnat:..C!" t-e4.
Services
Concnlo I P!!dC ooptlc tonko, alro. AKC. Tiny maiN, boriiltlful
Ml,.... mull bo
logll
3 . Bodrwm ~ aood
Ron Ev.,. EntafDI'IMe. JacklllahiMo Ma-, Plano tuning end repair. Call notahborhood, 30...,,.,.. or
· Aloo oduft dogo. Lorge
_,, OH 1-ION37-46211•.
N'r'C &amp; lorarilon, P8 711-341- Lana Daniels, AUIIand, OH., e-ns:uaa.
- · Coolwlllo 114/111-3404.
3111.
6141'1112·21St.
Flbort- t - r lol omoll
3 bedroom houat, cJaan, nice
Hlghilnd
truciL (IIUIW or 8-10 thort bod) -pupploo.
AK.C -mouo Tonto•
ldool
neighborhood, no pato, will $250.
3041T7N301.
hoi.rlo
pot.
11100 • 11125. 114-341'7copt
Hod,
ctor&gt;oth
ond
rofo!onReal Estate
Trolltr
0124.
- · 304-17S·t301.
. - . ptua rlopotlt, · - nilWOOd lol t!ilo. Hoop Musical
3Vernon
bodroom,
btth, P!Q.
_wlgaroao,
MI. ~-=:_----~---..J..:'ocr;:·:;;l;t4-;IB8:;:*:;:7.:::::::::;::!...,
HOllE TYPIS'ra,
,_.
AYI INa,
JCM.e7l..
..,,
31 Homes for Sale
2331.
.
lnstniments
- · 1 :::J.onllol.
~::"· f 1
. · Ext. B- tiM SchuM 14x711, wloxplndo,
WE CAR!-.1&amp;11 1.-.o l Mtol
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
:1111, 2 both, Iorge porchot, CA, 3 BR, It;~ :o 1123. ldtchon, olcy
PIANO SERVICE . , _ EXPERT
lraELUCIINCI JOBS. CIA. us on 112 ••,.. At. 2 North or Pt. llmhl. I
D1ono "CARE" lor who
Cull..,., DEA, 010. Hfrlng. PI-nt. Excollont Condhlon. 3
BR, oplft•lovol, d:';:'.'X
"CARE" obout lholr pit,_, 8111
Co~ (1) ~ Ext. K· FIWOCh CHJ:.:bilt Homoo, 114- rwnkldalad, $425/mO.,
W.rd. 304-112-Z125 fl'rov 22:1).
101,
·
441-1340,
· 75-1898, or 904- requlrod. 114-441-4222.
1'18-s;rt"
l=ntlts &amp;
No Cillo piooool Ex· ;;..;..::...:;;:=------- 31&gt;1, !togo lomiiY 100m, North ,
58
PlfP,nctd Cook. ....,_.,. Inn. 3 btcfroorn houH, one acre Qallll ,,.., available, 11!1tJIO.
Vegetables
~-lot. Raclleprin~, Ohio. S400/mo.l14 3111B87.
·---.-·
114-112-1221 oftor lpm.
Dunrovln Frul Fonn 1uot all lr
Port· for S bodraom, 2 •1ho, 2 cor 4
- aboth
.., ..... ......,. Wt _,e
. ._
ocroo,
.
1e..........210. 2
Clooflrltl lndulllrlM In Polm ..,._.., 1.1 ecrwa, owner 1111..
food otompo. VortOty ol · omloh ond butter, irilud
-n:l.t.~"'r..
'"'",..r
iroc1~
lllitl~ncf~ng~,
304-I~;;'IS~43~72i;,
.
;;;;:
4br,
a
both,
In
f
Sauthwtotom 8cllool Dlolrlcl.
nuto==
or N ..,Pum.
..,...._ -king With 3 bod_,, oil -lrlc, Moton, ft4-24W56f.
TUo
dolly,
lomo troval . . - prloo, low UO'o. 304V/H. AOIIIY IN 1041.
Fo1 Ront: 3br In
t
P. o . lloi
114-446-'7311, Of att.r
I
~jtunllnglon,
21771.
3 bodlw•• - · tond can· 5Sp!!;·~m~
. l~14~4~4~1~13"~~-~1· wn "1'ppt ",
t-.~04.
Poll- ....lon ...lloblo lor
For-: SmoU 4 - houoo,
:'; t 1,. ':,f,Jci·
Mot
~R.T. w R.R.A. to do 3 , _ lit. 31 Pliny, rench 25 MIN Croo11 8t. Ref a 11Conlulllng lor tiOO oq. f t . - yord on , _
....,.,
p1u1
Nurlltotl
1n .Qolljoollo u 3 a
dopotll. lultllllo 1or 1 .,a poro
n11 ,, . _ ra:
2,!!-r f."~~~~otllfto 11oyo- ...,.,114-448-1:140•
81
Equipment
P.O. .lin 1011, Ollrlt, ArU..u lllliiO"' W or,
IO 00 , Of•
71141..
t•
Purnlthed Houaa, 31M', II Nell,

.=.

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

1858 CJ5 loap, good for lonn or

s:~~::n

ol) nlco llomo. Dtotor'a Wot· 18 Wanted to Do
como. COl 304-137-2581.
,......,.,..._;.:.....;.:...:..:..,__

614 3BB B504.
Wonlod To Buy: Junk Autoa
with or wtthout m01ora. Call
~ Lively. 114..188-1303:

'

Mobllt homo lor ronl, ~-

_,g..

Busln... College, ~f~~~ Valley
FlEA MARKET ot Old Arbuckle Prill.
COli Today, 6
-436711
StON~, Leon, WV, Friday, Satur· A-slst•.tlon f90.05.1274B.

Wantacl to Buy

·

304-1'/S-

,._.,.ndi

•FIREWOOD

nnouncements

$271Smonthly.I14-H2-1IIor.

3br llobllo Homo lol Aont Fur-

1

P, ,, ~

iUiiia: R Rr ~ 1TT

~· refo,....., I .
,.,........25!1.
·
3 bedroom tloublo wldo. '3/4..
mliaolrRt.7on143.Atltroncoo
ond _,rlt, ~ nqulrod.

w""'

REMOVAL
·uGHT HAULI

USED RAILROAD

t;:U':~~';.

SUndoy,
, Novombor t1, t :110 p.m.,
Hartford Communhy Building.
trueD, Clts, tr~~lnl,
rodeo, .-purorw, com• o l - rodlo c:ont!OI
' 3 po. plctu,., mlrron, X·
Me:• paper/canfl, watchla.
LAlla or mdoo. Como oo~y. otoy
~··
Auctiontor
Richard

. Goods

h.-•

SHRUB &amp; TREE
PI.UMIING &amp; IlEAnNG

=
9;

HousehOld

5J

pal•, $115/mo.

0101 or 446-0TIB.
·
Social S•rvlcn Dlreclor, Social ' GOVERNMENT HOMES !ram $t
Workar lor 62 bod facllhy, Iicon- (U r. .lr]. Delinquent tax Two :lllllloblfo homos, 304-171... or BSW required, . ben•flla property. Repou...lons, Your 57QI.
and
to eommeneur~ta aru (1) 8()5...687-6000 Ert. GH·
with experlanc.. CoN:act Frank 45621or current ropo llol.
44
Apanment
Topping Admlnlltr.tor Care
Haven of Point P... unt, 304for .R ent
1'/S-3005.
1 BR, $300&lt;mo.: 2 BR, $-o.·l
$171'/S. AI
2 r_,. &amp; both,. $t
Vlouolly lmpalrod Cortlflod
Pro-lonol wllh prolicloncy In
ulllftloo Incl-. Oopooft ...
For
Nit
or
nnt.
3
bedroom
Brolllo for tulortng. Contoct Tlno
qulrod, Cotl Lolayotto Mall.lt4Ava., 441·TT33 or 4411-4222.
Cotton Mason COunty Board of - · 405 Spring
Educot\on, 307 Eight~ St, Point Pomeray. 1141448-730 days,
ovonlngo. Will lin·
PINanl; WV 25550. 304-875- 1141441-1325
once.
4540.
Homos For Solo! In Golllpolls,
welk to tYirythlna. mov•ln 2 hl*oom •partiiW'It, N.w
condition. On•t nilghbors. 1 Haven,
wv. LlwiiMtd
112 baths, g'a rage. 114-2~1 185i.
Apartmonto, lith ond G-vo
..,.... Und., new Nnapo
12
Old flshloned country hom• mom. Kitchen lumlohod co~
,....---~:::.:.::.::__ __
with 5 bedrooms, MW tumact,
Would lllle to do h....-nlng 20 sc:rts on ec.nlc Cherry potod, ployground lol chi....,.
CION to g,..do ochoolo I
&amp; ottlea ciMnlng. 614-44&amp;-471t8,
Rldgo. $44,11110. 1141992-5348.
114-256-15111.
·
- · • • • ""' . . .. Coli
Older horne, one acre more or 304/182-37.111. Equot -.rna
Opporlunly.
IHI, commercial .,o.albllitlts
14
Business
br Apple Grave poet office. 3 fum- .....,. &amp; both,
Days 304-578-2154, evenings
Training
clotn, no pota. Rolo- I
5J6.2154 or 814-4461850.
d-h nqulrod.l14-441-tlltl.
Retl'llln
Nowli!Southaastem

doy thru Friday, 7:30 till 5:30.
For mora Information or to
regtater 304-675-584Z

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

SKINNING,

. PubliC &amp;ale

&amp; Auction
Rk:k Pea,... Auction Compony
~na ouotlono, OX·
,._ makea thl clffwllnce.
. . .... Oft~ ~"!!JCicy. -

CONSTRUCTION , ·

.

CUTIING,
BASHEN RD.,
RACINE

1t

IIEWIIING AND
TIOUilE SH0011NG ·
CertlfW Electrlda111 -:

4-16-16-tfn

HILL'S DEER
cuniNG

It~

'·'

'"· 949-2101
les; 949·2860

1_1_H...;e...:IP:.....;.;W.:a;.:.nt:.:e.::d_ _ · 31 Homes for Sale

Stout

"·~··------'_ _ _ .

3/&amp;f90/Hn

or

Joon

t_nlar. Lots of women s cloth~-- FirM and only 1111 of the

Reeidentlal end
Commercial

HOMES &amp; GARAGEI

..

no

~_:::=:::::=~====:r=========='12p.m.
- . .114-448-01127.
homo 14x70,
7111

*RD BALi Soturctoy, I ·? Ono
doy ontr· 341 _ , Uoln St-.
Pbm•or..,.•Jt to ~· Tire

ELECTIICAL SEIVICE

Real Estate General

eou.u HOUSING

Pomeroy,
Middleport
· &amp; VIcinity

·

-

r

CUSTOM lUll

$11011. 11'4-379-2t52.

Merchandtse

~ •..r.pl-: ; , ;

, ust remember .. .the opin·
•
lOllS eX()f_
essed by M.om are
not. necessarily those of
n rand m a.!"

!!.Sidence, ?l:h SlrMI, Sy,.CUH
¥ s.turdly, November 10.

---------t'·
·
COMPLETE

BISSELL··
BUILDERS

11171 Ford F·tiiO, 15,000 mliH.
Auto, oaod tina, fair cond.

:1111,
mobllo
homo
In -9604.
· You
poy all
utllltloo,
114-318

p.m.

Drapes

COAL
UNLIMITED

10:1·1

211 2110.

t'IOOdlpolllt,IU 118 3117.

Cuatom

Wt Say What We do. _We Do What We Say.
36 VAS . EXPERIENCE

992-6009

72 Trucks for Sale

tiiOO oq. ft . - h. Mao t ..-h.
JMUon, Ohla. · l'toW:M-1044,

2br unfumlohocl, Mobllo Homo,

Mondty tdhlon • 2:00

'lllrd. Nit

BUILDING &amp;
REMODELING

2 newly buill comnwctal unl•.

~

qulrod. Rt. \ l.DcUot Ad, Point

Galli palls
&amp; VIcinity

")

614-992-2328

Autos for &amp;ale

.,49~..,.....;F~o~r~l~aa~se~_:.,...
=

2 mabUt harnH, .....,. end

~m. Saturdly.

Tuftlnr

upando,

wattr tumtehed, retiNnCM

~oy.

71

Smol lumlohod ~-nd floor
apt Of t,.l._, 114 41 4012 ·.u
lol Eotlo.

month .. lfltloo. · .- ·
21111114441-2431.

Sunday edition • 2:00

A.-:

Mern1ter1 of Pomeroy

Yard Sala

•

wllh

14d0, Z bedroom mobile homl,

4dvon... DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
lllo dly bo""" tho od lo io run.

Baud

2br,

Wettr 1)1111,. 114 t18 11tl.

HEAtiNG I COOLING

NO SUNDAY CAUS

SECTION II: Thl1 Ordl·
nonce oholl tlko of*t ond
bolnforcoonNovombor 18.
1990. .
B10ndo . Morrlt, Cleric
VllloaeofMtmbol
Mligo County, Ohio
Btuco Roed, Bryon
Shonk, Tom wet-ry.
Wllllem Young,

12180

woohor,
dryer,
hooll-up, Rood,
woot
end
Ql Bob
McCormick
Raotnl lfM. No . .. $'1'75.00 I

. Lot:ah41 on SaH..-4 Sdlo.l ltl. eH lt. 141
. 16141 4t6-t416 or 1·100·872-S9U

KIT 'N' CARLYLE&lt;Il by Lany Wright

1fT Wantacl to Rant

St,.....
Rew•rdl

MOilLE

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Oh~

46 Space for Rent

42 Mobllt Homes
torRent

..,., 3rd · Aven.,. ""' Vine
;curt:
Famllr P,M.

10·1 1

65-Sted &amp; Fertililer

PUblic Notice

thot:
- - · - thomo,
Tho vMiooo- kno- 11
Steop 8t.-t oltultod In tho
Monkey Run oroo to horoby
vocttld by tho VHiego of Po·
moray ond lllioll ,..... bock
to tho odjolnlng proii"'!Y
ow-• ocoonllng to low,

DIRTY CARPETS?

Pomei'Oy, Olio ·

985-4473 .
667-6179

81·- f•rm l!quiprneru
62- Wanted to Buy
63-llto•e•tock

gil VI.

'

Oplrator
614-992-6120

Owner &amp;

FrH Estimates

Livestock

Think of him otlll81 the

BULLETIN BOARD

Grooming
for All lrltds ·
EMILEE MEIINAR

t-1.3-Hc

F~llll ~IIPIIIIP.S

'I --

Public Notice

PA'I' HILL FORD

57 - Mulicellnstrum.,.ts
!58-Fruiti &amp; Veg~~tebl•
59-For Sele or Trade

. IU§Uijll

- Buffalo

c.._~,__ _ _ _ _ _ _..;·~;;.·.
·

r- "

34- Busin•s Buildings
:l5 - lots &amp; Acruge
· 3&amp; - A..I Est•ut Wanted

895 - ltlllfl
~J7

Eslale

3, - Homes for Sale
32 - Mobile Homes for Sale
33- Fifms for Sale

PleiSit'l t.

•sa - Leon
' ,
576 - Apple Grove

247-Lelln Falls
9•9 - AICine
7'42-Rutl•nd

-

Area Code 304

992- Middleport
PomtJoy
98!5 - Ctlester
843- Por1land

.60,
.06/ doy

. 4~.

Mcrchandt sc

E11111 !!, y 111 ent
Servtces
1 1- Help Wan1ed
, 2 - Situ•tion W•nted
1 3 - lnsurenee
14 - Busines• Training

racbators · and
htatar cores. We can
also acid boil and rod

NPatate ads.

2- ln Memory

•A c:lnsified 1dvert ilement piKed In The Dlily Sent1nel 1e• ·
cepl -:" cl•sified displl'f, Business Card and legal nolicasl
will also 1ppear in thr: P1 . Ple••m Regl•ter and ttle G1 lli·
polis Dailv Tribune. reaching over 18 ,000 homes

TUE~OAY PAP, E~

lt.w ••

1 - C1rd of Thanks

• Ads that must be ~aid .n advance are
Happy Ads
C1rd o r Thlf1kl
¥ard Sales
In Memor1am

MONDAY PAPER

15

Announce men Is

•Pric• o lad tor all c aprt.1l lett ers ts doubl e ptt ce of ad cost
•7 point line type only used .
•Sentinel is not responsible for enOfS after first day . I Check
for errors tir U d.y ad run1 in paper}. C1ll befOU! 2 :00 Jl .m
d~Jt aftfll' Jltiblicat •o n 10 mak e correc1ion,

COPY DEADLINE -

15

~on

ov,r 1 5 Words
•
.20
.30

Rate
14.00
$6.00
f9.00
• 13.00
$1 .30 / doy

41 Houses for Rent

LAFF·A·DAY

e

GROOM.
ROOM

TuiiHcuRc.;ny

SER~ICE
We tan repair and re·

R11n .,. for con .. c~o~tNe runs, broken up d~•will be charged

tnr ••r:l'l

•Ads outside Me igs. Gallia or Mas.o n count ies must be pre ·
paid

10·10-:90-1 ....

. 11+90-Hn

Words
16
15
15

1

614-915-41•0.

LOst &amp; Found

1.1&gt;01: Soblo ond whllo Shonto
lnloiU,. Colllo) Syet .....,
...,h A-uo Ano 10-20-10.
blo hair, tlppod In block. No
•g.. Vory timid. Homo Jock.
~0000 co
. II lt4-441-310a, 1141"1-1847 with lnfolmatlon. Loot

The

HOUSESot.OTS•FARMS
•C.OMMERCIAL
WE NEED USTINCSI

RATES
Days

Take tht pain out of
painting. let me do
· it for you.
Very lto_.lt
hawhflr-

Pomeroy- Middleport,

ALL Yard Slle1 Mullt It Paklln

MIDDlEJiOIT, OHIO 4576
OHict 614-992·21111
llomt 614·992-5692
101111 S. TU. . . •01111

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACf AN AD CALL 992·2156 .
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

FREE ESTIMATES

9. 1990

I,QST, n\llo Brittany Sponlol,
len Mile Rd . 1re1. At 12 akM,
~WARD, 304-451-1727. -

Stoe~ll

205 N. S.Md Strlet

Classifie

6

II

INTIRIOI • EXTDIOI

.

~riday, N~amber

B. u·sl· nes· 8 Ser'VI. ces
t;======~:t;::======~t::=======:t=======~
UNDA'S
RACINE
.
.•..
be turned GUN CLUB
. PAINTING

COSIS, bale
parkin&amp;
roadway,
$25
BDd cosu.
E. in
WaJCon,
Tuppen
Plains, $25 and casts.&lt; Posting

Catherine
discar·
ded trash Day,
alongMiddleport,
the roadway,
$50
BDd costs; ~ston T. Dabbs, St.

Meigs County Court I~
Patrick H. 0 'Bnen ptocessed 18
cases on
Wednesday.&lt; F'lned
were: Henry Hatfield, Gallipolis,
speed, $30 and costs; E. David
Averion. Pomeroy, speed, $20 and
costs; E. David Averion, Pomeroy,
speed, $20 and costs; Richard

'

"Thle 11 whit you did with the one call

you'resllowed?l"
t

\

'

�--Area deaths-'

: Junior HUI
Junior A: Hill; 69, of Foster,
W.Va., ·formerly of Lol1g Bouom.
;: :::died Wednesday following an ~x­
tended illness in Boone Memorial
Hospital in Madison. W.Va.
He was a retired schoOl custodian, a lifetime member of the
VFW. a member of the American
Legion and a veteran of the U.S.
Army during World War U.
He was a member of the Foster
Church of Christ.
.
Surviving are IUs wife, Doris
White Hill; a daughter, Janet Baker,
Akron; six sisters, Gaynell Dolin,
Danville, W.Va.. Mazie Dallon,
Danville, W.Va., Darlene Hill,
Madison, W.Va., Juanita Hill, Twila
Dolin, and Yvonne Pauley, all of
Foster, W.Va.; six brothers, Charles,
Denver, Harley, }iildree, all of Foster, W.Va., Arthur, Madison, W.Va.,
and Norman of Ridgeview, W.Va.
. Services will be Saturday at 11
a.m. at Handley Funeral Home in
Danville, with Evangelist Vernon
Dolin officiating.
Burial will be in ~te Cemetery
in Long BottOm. ·
Graveside services will be on
Saturday at3 p.in.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 6 p.m.-9 p.m on Friday
night.

Virgil Yarbrough
Virgil Yarbrough, 75, Rutland,
died Thursday at Ohio State
University Hospital following an

Dates extended
to join Legion

Friday, November 9. 1990

Pon tarOV-Midrleport. Ohio

Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

extended illnesS.
Born in Heflin, Ala., he was the
son of the fate James Ollie and
Cindy Huckaby Yarbrough. He was
a member of the Rutland Church of
God.
He is survived by his wife of 50
years, Glema Yarl!rough. Rutland;
four sons, Vernon F., Ranburne,
Ala., Charles . Yarbrough, Aiken,
s.c.:Harry s. Yarbrough, Rutland,
and Danny . R. Yarbrough,
Wadsworth, Ohio; six ~sters, three
brothers, foiJ! grandchildren, three
step 8J11!1dchild!en, two Step ·g.reat•
grandchildren; and several meces
and nephews.
He was preceded in death by his
parents, IWO sisters, and an infant
son, Fred Douglas Yarbrough.
Funeral services ~ be held '!n
Thesday at 2 p.m at W~ Chapel m
Trickem Valley, Ala.
Burial will be in the Wise Chapel
Cem~tery.
.
Fnends may call at the Rutland
Church of God ftQm 6 p.m. until
8:30p.m. on Saturday.
Calling hours will also be obser•
ved at the Rainwater Funeral Home
in Bowdon, Ga. on Mond;ly from 6
p.m. until8 p.m.

EMS has 5 calls
Five calls for assistance were
answered by units of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services on
Thursday and early on Friday.
At 10 a.m., Pomeroy squad went
to State Route 33. Mabel Moore
was taken to Pleasant Valley
Hospital. At 12:58 p.m., Syracuse
squad W!IS sent 19 Stiversville
Road. Richard Ables was transported to Holzer Medical Cenrer.
Pomeroy squad was called to
Memorial Emve at 4:05 p.m.
Dorothy Neutzling was transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 1:31 a.m. on Friday, Pomeroy
squad and fire department went to
Peachfork Road to an oil well fire.
That call was cancelled en route.
Middleport squad was called to
Nobel Summit Road at 6:45 a.m.
and
transported
Robert
Moodispaugh to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. ·

License bureau
to close Monday
The Ucense Bureau on Mulberry
p
will be 1--'

Stocks

Road to close

DallY 1tock prlcee
'( As of lO:st a.m.)

aad Mark Smith '
Avenue, omeroy,
c.-. Bryce
Monday foc the observance of ef Bluat, Ellie 6 Loewl
•.
Veterans Day.'~-~~
also Am Electric Powen-.............
27')4
be clo~ on ...........,....y .or comAT&amp;T .......... ........... ............ 32~
J!U!er mslallation: On Tuesday the Ashland 011 ........................29~
license bureau will be open from 9 Bob Evans .......................... 1P4
a.!'!· . to 8 p.m. and regular hours Charming
Shoppes .... .. .. .. .. .. 8')1
. will re!""e on Thursday.
City Holding Co . .................17'h
Federal Mogul .......,............ ll~
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................14'4
Veleraos'Memorlal Hospital
Key Centurion ................ ..... 11
TIIURSDAY ADMISSIONS • Lands' End ....................... .. 9~
None.
Umlted Inc..... ........ ...........14%
THURSDAY DISCHARGES. Multimedia Inc . .................. 54%
Gerald Moore
Rax Restaurants .......... ......c 1J1,
·
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... ....... . 17
Shoney's Inc ....................... 9%
South Central Ohio
Star Bank ........................... l5%
Occasional rain Friday night, Wendy's lnt'l. ...................... 6
with a tow In the mid 30s. Chance Worthington lnd..................l9Ye
of rain ts 90 percent. Partly
cloudy Saturday, with highs near

:nn

Hos
' pt'tal news

weather

50.

Ohio extended torecut
Sunday lbrou&amp;b Tuesday
A chance of rain or snow
Sunday, with fair weather Tuesday and Wednesday, exceptfor a
chance 6! In northeast Ohio on
Tuesday. Highs will be In the 40s
Monday, In the 30s Monday, and
rangtng from the upper 30s to the
middle 40s Tuesday. Overnight
lows wlll be In the 30s Sunday
morning, ranging from the mid
20s to the low 30s early Monday,
and In the 20s Tuesday morning.

Name eontest winner
Juanita Humphreys of 39149
State Rouie 14'3, .Pomeroy, correctly identified the mystery farm
which appeared in lhe Sunday
Times Sentinel as that of Cecil C.
Heilman, . 37400 Hemlock Grove
Road. She was one of three who
correctly identified the farm. Mrs.
Humphreys will receive a $5 prize
from The Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. which co-sponsors the contest
with the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District

Sutton 'lbwnship Trustees have
announced that Township Road 604 repairs can be made to a ma)Of shp
(Welshtown Hill Road) IS offi~CiallY there.

1987 CHEV. CAYAUER 2 DR.

$4795
1986 OLDS CUTLASS CIERA
$5995
!~n~~o~~~!t~~~!~.~~ERWAGON . $89.5

Sharp .

One owner. N- car trade. air con d.
, atereo, more.

Weekend

'

· Page A·2

IAII DAVIS

SAU.sMAII

OWIIEI

:

Vol. 26 No. 40
Copyrightlld 1990

605 Gen. Hartinger Pkwy.

Middleport, Ohio 45760

.Cash &amp;
Carrv

were: · (left II! right) Rev. John Jackson; Danny
Bays; Paula Thacker, exej:udve MCretary of the.
GIIJI!pel•,~~ ~hamber !If .c..merc.t, Wayoe
Ven5on, manager of the IQCal HID's Department
Store, Gelsela Alonzo, Dale Inian, city manager, .
·Pat Mills, Tom Hopkins, parks and recreation
director, Beth Cherrington, and Lee Mooney.

.. PROJECTS UNDERWAY • 'Memllers ..of the

Keep GaUipqlis BeaudM Committee turned out
to the city park Friday I'll sel !heir trademark
stOJJe in the ground. Upcoming projects; like
·. planting . ~dOowers along the toaclside,· and
supplying garbage . containers to local scboo~,
wiD aU be marked by the "Keep GaUipolis
Beautiful" stone. Those attending on Friday

L,

"

WISE GUYS
BAND

By .training, education

JOBS program goal .is .to
reduce area welfare .rolls

Rock·n-Roll
'2.00 COVER CHARGE

Mu1t Be 21

CORNER OF STAR ROUTE
7 &amp; STATE ROUTE 143

MIDDLEPORT • Education,
aaining and job placement skills
are the key factors in the Job Opponunities and Basic Skills (JOBS)
Training -program now being initiated by lhe Meigs County
Department of Human Services.
The program goal is to reduce welfare rolls through education and
aail)ing.
·
Barbara Chapman has been
named supervisor of the JOBS
program, which went into effect in
Meigs County this month. The
progrllll!. will include . components
of edu1=ation and trammg and subsidized employment for welfare
recipients. All recipients of Aid for
Dependent
Children
(ADC),
General Assistance (GA), and Food
Stamps (FS) will be required to par·
ticipate in the program to remain
eligible for assistance.
Each individual. unless exempt
under stare criteria, will be requited
to participaiC in an assessment interview to determine placement in
the JOBS program. Thsting will be
done for those individuals who
have not completed high school.
These people may be placed in
Adult Basic Education classes and
encouraged to complele General
Education Development (GED), as
a means of mereasing their
employability potential. Help wiD
also be available for those individuals who are in vocational,
technical or post·secondary education.
.
Other individuals may be placed
in the Community Work Ex·

Spt~ials

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1990
SALMON PAniE PLATE ................................. 53.65

Ou• Dollc:iauo Sol""'" Pllttloo, Sotvod With Croomy Mocoranl&amp;. Choeoo,
AI Homomodo, Hot Gold., Fronch Fl'loo ond A Hot.Buttorod Roll .

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1990
NOMIIliED

PORK CHOP &amp; DRESSING DINNER ................ $4~54

A l.f•ge Juicy Pork Chop, Propt1rod Frooh In Ou1 Kitchen, Betvod With

Oellclou• Homem•de Drnllng, M•ahect Potetoea• Ham•lft8de Dna·
ing, Moohocl Pototooo ond Homo""'do Grovy, G,..n BNno With Muoh·
100mo, A Hot B.-od Roll, Coffeo. Regulor 01 Decof11nttod, Both
Froohly Brewed, Toa o• A Small Soft Drink.

,..'~
-.\ L

OPEN 11 A.M . DAILY: SUNDAY 10 A.M.

..

z•il ·

LARRY'S
WOODWORKING SHOP
Place Your Special Orders
Now For Christmas

CALl AHEAD FOR .APPROVED CREDIT

CABINETS, JEW.ELRY,BOXES,
SHELVES, SHAD'O W BOXES,
PLUS MOREl

446~8051

We Make Picture Frames - All Sizes.

i

;'

Quality AvaUable. At A Fair Price.

I

OPEN TUESDAY THRU SATURDAY
10:00 A.M.·
6:00P.M.
•

.
olii.O
'.

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA
GALiiPOLIS, OHIO

We gladly ~~eoapt IMior creclh urdl llut
due to the low proftt merlin ·..._ wiU
be • " ' addltloMI
If you - a

I

MosUy cloudy, High In
40s.
.

) &amp; Soctlono, 134 Pagoo
.
A Multlmtidill Inc. Now..,apor

Solid waste plan gets
tentative approval by
district ·policy group.

·

OVER ·
DEALER
COST!

9:30-1:30

,:£d.Jtorlal ..................... A-2
Sporbi ...................... C-1·8

Middleport-Pomaroy-GaUipolis-POini Pleasant. November 11, 1990

992-3011

SAT., NOV. 10

. 222 EASY MAIII • POMIIOY,

Julie E.

Comics- ................... la~~ert
Classlfteds ..... :.......... D-t-7
Deatll8 ......... ............... A-3

Mark's Auto Sales, Inc.·

MIZWAY
TAVERN

99.2·5492

Alonglhe River ......... Bl·S
Bwd-............... ~ ......D -1

Inside

•
l

1986 FORD f150' PICKUP, LOW MILES.....SS995
1983 CHEV. S10 PICKUP, s SPD...............$3295
1979 DODGE RAMCHARGER 4x4 .... $2250
1981 GMC JIMMY 4x4,;.,.~................ S3995
1980 CHEV. C20 4x4 PICKUP......... $2995
1978· DODGE VAN, 15 PASS., LOW MILES, ... $1695
1979 FORD f150 PICKUP, AUTO..... S1695
UB SEABES

James
. In the early 19008, city school pupils
we~ taught thrift and economies - · A-6, 7
There is always plenty of love to go
.
around at the ~e home in Pomeroy ~ B-1

TRUCKS &amp; 4~WHEEL DRIVES

Closed Monday

Meigs County "Scouting for ·
Food" will begin on Saturday with
,scouts distributing bags f6r collection of food.
Local residents receiving bags
· are being asked to fiU them with
canned goods and ·other nonperishable food items. Scouts wiD
' then pick the filled bags up on
November 17.
All food collected will remain in
·the county, going to the Meigs
CoWJty United Methodist Coopera' tive Parish.
The items will then be dis·
tributed to needy Meigs County
families.

Day1990

'

C-1

OSU defeats Iowa, 27-26

Veterans

Tutone paint. AM-FM-CaAette.

J. P. Hone, Depanmem of Ohio
Adjutant, advises that Pres. George
Bush has signed a bill authorizing
· new eligibility dates for membership in The American Legion. The
bill was signed Oct. 30. Effective
,.; Jmmediately Posts may accept
present and former members of the
Armed Forces who served on active
duty Aug. 24, 1982 through July
31, 1984 and/or Dec. 20, 1989
through Jan. 31, 1990. Location of
•·active duty has no bearing, Hone
reports.
Eligibility is extended to those
persons producing a DD1214 or
All Middleport village offices
those still serving who meet the will be closed on Monday, Nov.
new eligibility dates requirement
12, In observance of Veterans
Day.

Scouts to distribute
.bags for food pickup

75 cents

Sunday

'
closed. and will remain cl~ ull~

By Charlene Hoeflich
POMEROY • Tentative approval
of a solid wasre management plan
for the Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
Jackson, Meigs and Vinton
Counties Joi,nt Solid Waste
Management District has been
given by the District's Policy
Committee.
Final approval is pending the additian of two changes recommcnded by the committee.
Meeting Thursday night at the
Athens County Extension Office,
the Committee authorized Van
Volkenburg of SCS Engineers, lhe
firm hired by the district to prepare
the plans, to· make the necessary
changes in preparation for submitting the plan to the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency. The plan
must be received by the Ohio EPA
by Dec. 24.
.
The changes recommended by
the pOlicy committee are: ·That
the llistict have the power to li,mit
acceptance of wasle generated qut,
side lhe district to the full extent of
the law.
-In addition to a transfer station
planned for Meigs County, that ad·
ditional transfer srations, if needed.
could be built, with funding arrangements to be made outside planned district funding.
final review of the plan with the
recommendations of the policy
committee incorporated will be at a

meeting scheduied for Dec. 4 in
McArthur at the Community Build·
ing on Stale Route 93, north.
As for landfill use. the district
has already contracted with three
private facilities for capacity in
new laildfills to be constructed
within the district Accerding 10
Kenny ~iggins, a ~eigs membq'
of the policy Comm1ttee, there IS a
fixed upping fee of $13 'a ton for
the rerm of the contract Each
facility, he explained, is to have
sufficient capacity for at least one
third of the district's waste fo! 20
years.
Since a moratorium on new construction of landfills is in effect, the
policy committee authorized the
district's legal counsel to submit to
the EPA a request for a waiver of
the moratorium. The district will
. also continue to -use the Gallia
· County landfill.
In addltion.·the district wiD begin
an t aggressive recycling program.
The .plllri calls for 1mplemenung or
expanding seven curbside recycling
programs in the district's most
populous municipalities and es:
tablishing 17 drop-off locations
throughout six-county area.
These recycling efforts wiD be
supplemented by three processing
centers for the recyclable-materials.
The processing centers will be
located in areas convenient to the
entire district and have tentatively

been scheduled for location in
Cheshire, WeUston and Atllens,
Wiggins reported.
He also noted that the District
will have a transfer station in Meigs
County to serve Meigs and Athens
Counties. Wiggins believes that the
location for that wiD be at the site
.of the old Meigs County landijU
located off State Route 7 bypass
near Pomeroy.
:
Wiggins explained that in order
to keep the rale as low as possible
for residents within the district, the
wasle management plans calls for a
three-tier charge for landfill use by·
the District Those fees are $1.25
per ton for in-district dumping,
$2.50 per ton for out-of-district
dumping, and $3.75 per ton for out·
of•state dumping. Those fees will
be used toward the costs of ·the
operation of the Solid Wasle
Management District..
In order to fully fund the imple!llentation of the rec;ycling.
programs and pi'Ofessing cente~,
the district will issue $1.5 miUion
in bonds in. 1991. In 1992 the dis·
Diet plans to impose a fee on all
improved property 10 assure that
the district IS adcqualely funded.
Plans now call for a coordinator
of the program 10 be on board in
January with the new facilities and
program to be brought on line next
year and be fully operational in
Continued on A·3

During holiday season,

.U. S. military personnel stationed in
Saudi Arabia will not be forgotten
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
TUDes-Sendnel stair
POMEROY - As the war clouds ·
gather, it's generally agreed that
most U.S: servicemen and women
taking part in Operation Desert
Shield won't be home for
Chrisunas. .
.
Seeing that they are not forgotten
is a cause of the American Le$ion
and with that in mind Legionnaues,

joined by Auxiliary memtM:n,
across the country are prepanng
holiday boxes to be shipped to
Saudi Arabia.
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 ?f
Middleport set as1de $3,500 for 1ts
project.
·
The names and addresses of 39
Meigs residents in the Middle East
came in once the holiday
remembrance project was an- .

noWJced. Those addresses are
available to others \\lho might like
to send gifts or cards. The Middleport Legionnaires and Auxiliary .
members have put lots. of effort in
addition to money jnto the project.
Businesses and many individuals
have contributed and last week SO
boxes containing a total of 468
dozen \ cookies were shipped 10
Continued on A-3

•
, "JO.BS" UNDERWAY • Melp County Department ol Human
Services Director Mlcbael Swisher, left, and Barbara Chapman
review plans ror lhe department's new "JOBS" program, which
will provide education, training and job placement services ror wei- ·
rare redpieniS. Cbapman hilS been named supervisor of the new
program. . ·
, . _"
perience Prognun (CWEP), where
they will be placed in public jobs
and aained for work which could
qualify them for private employment

On the Job Training (OJT) is
desi~

to assist recipients in
rece1ving training needed to obtain
unsubsidized emolovment. The
Continued on A·5

·MRDD ·cutbacks underway,
after defeat of 1.5 mllllevy
'

POMEROY • The Meigs County
Board of Mental ReWdalion and
·Developmental Disability has
begun planning the cutbacks in services necessary following .tho
failure . of its l.S miD · conlinuing
levy on Tuesday.
In ·a hews release, die board
slates that it wan!B 10 assure voterS
that ·tho comm~nt of support
will be honored by the effort 10

'·

maintain the highest quality 1«·
vices possible to people with han·
dicaps.
.
The failure, however, will req~ serious cuts in ~s.
'It is a simple fact. says MRDD
Board President Robert Eason.
"that current service levels will require $270,000 in cu!B in order to
meet projected revenues."
..
The board will begin ~

these decisions at its regularly
scheduled meeting on Monday.
Some of die most serious actions
under consideration, according 10
Eason, are. closina the Bf"'CY for a
part of the year and clOSIIII of Carleton school-age programs in tho
fall of 1991, which would result in
children aileading public school
facilities. Oth~ dectslons will in. , Con\lnued on A· 5

...........:·,

·~

IIOLIDAY HAPPINESS • Sure to brina
boliday happba• to u.s. ,._taervllla in
Salidi Arabia 1ft d tllele 11J0C1111 wbJcl wW be
shipped this -k. Tile prOject COlt will ld at·
$3,500. The m.Uiwa charae aloBe was over $600, ·

a«&lt;nlinl to Howard PinneD, post commander,
pictured leCOIId trom left. A!DODI the many
others wbo devoted ltoan ud boun to the
hollda7 project were from lbe left, AnleDa
JOhnson, (PinneD) Llo,d JobiiiOD, ·and V!raU
Parsons.

·

··

I

'j

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