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                  <text>Page 1 6-The Daily Sentinel

1

Thursday. Dacamber 6, 1990

Pomaroy-Middlapot1, Ohio

Farm Bureau delegates attend annual meeting

ATI'END MEETING - Gecqe Holter, Racine, left, ad Rex
SheQefteld, LangsviUe, recently alteDCled tbe Ohio Farm Bureau .
Federation's 72nd Annual Meeting iD Columbus. Tbe theme of the
'AtiO"
meetiDg was "Farm Bureau- "
u=&gt;ocracy
tn
c u.

:Teens do good works
as often as adults .·
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Despite their somPtime• being ste·
reotyped as selfish and selfceniered, American teenagers
do voluntary charitable work at
about the same rate as adults, a
new study reported Tuesday.
, And, between trips to the mall
:and the movies, teens a lso dig .
Into their pockets to do good, with
'· 48 percent of teenagers contributIng money to causes last year .
The average contribution was
. $46.
The findings, by Independent
Sector. an umbrella group of
voluntary, non-profit groups and
big donors, come on the heels of a
mid -November survey that
found a marked in~rease in
giving and volunteering by the
adults of the "baby boom"
generation .
"This news (about teens),
coupled with that of the ·adult
survey, paints an optimistic
picture of the future capacity lor
volunteering and giving In ArTier·
lea ." said Brian O'Connell, pres I·
dent ~f .Independent Sector.
' 'These findings certainly fly In
the face of those who say that
philanthropy In America is erod Ing with each generation."
The survey of teens found that
58 percent _of American teenag·
ers volunteered In· 1989, compared with 54 percent of adults.
Teens averaged 3.9 hours of
volunteer time each week and
over one fourth ·Of . the teen
volunteers gave five or more
hours each week.
According to Independent Sec·
tor, that meant a total of 1.6
billion hours of volunteer time by
teens in 1989.
" One of the reasons lor the
specific study of teenage charitable behavior was our concern
that those who came before

them , the 'baby boomers, • were
nott showing up in surveys as
particularly generous of time
and money." O'Connell said.
" Independent Sector .w anted to
see if the problem began at even
younger ages."
But he noted that the report
released In mid-October showed
that the " boomers" have now
caught on arid are contirlbuting
time a nd money in generous
degrees.
" With this second study,whlch
now indicates that the younger
generation Is even more Involved
In service, we can be relieved and
encouraged about the prospects
of active citizenship and personal
service lor many decades," he
said .
Schools and religious organizations emerged as the primary
institutions that get teenagers ·
involved In voluntary activities,
with 52 percent of the teen
volunteers indicating they got
lnvolv~d through their school and
50 percent citing their church or
synagogue.
Through the schools, teens
were most likely to get involved
as volunteers In areas of arts,
culture and humanities (78 percent), education (74 percent) ,
human services (55 percent ),
and environmental causes (52
percel)t).
. A growing emphasis on community service by schools (s
apparantly having a positive
Impact on teen volunteering,
accotdlng to the survey. Among
the 61 percent of respondents who
reported their schools encour·
aged community service, 69
percent actually volunteered.
Among the 28 percent who
reported their school did not
encourage community service,
howeve r . just ·44 percent
volunteered.

Delegates liom Meigs County
Farm B1m111 joined nearly 300
official delegates a1 lhe Ohio Fann
Bureau Federation's 72nd annual
·meeting in Columbus. Members of
lhe Meigs de~galion included
Gecrge Holrer, Racine, and Rex E.
Shenefield, Langsville.
The meeting camed lhe lheme
"Farm Bureau -· DemocraCy in
Action." The delegates auended lhe
annual meeting to determine stare
and national policies for the coming year. The policie$ will guide lhe
federation, which is lhe largest
farm organization in die slate wilh
over 112,000 family members,
during lhe coming year.
Delegates heard Bob Vice, president, California Farm Bureau,
speak on "Agricultwe, Environmentalists and Politics.• Denis
Avery, director, Center of Global
Food Issues at lhe Hudson Institute,
~ve his views on "Global Treiuls
m Food, Farming and 'Thchnology.•
Peter Neckerman, . vice president,
economic and irlvesanent services,
Nationwide Insurance, gave a
"World Economic . Overview.•
froiD
· Soviet
"Greetings
Cooperatives" were given by Pavel
Fedirko,
Soviet
Consumer
Cooperatives.

•
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18 days
until
Christmas

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Ohio Lottery

t .

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Pick 3: 777
Pick 4: 5995
Cards: 3-H;
A..C; 2-D; 9-S

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Partly cloudy Friday, fair
and cold Friday nlr;ht.

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Vol.41, No .l·&amp;t
: Copyrighted 1990

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JOI?.[7

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CO!MNI

Syptcuse garbage·rates
•
to Increase ·on Jan. I

JOJJ
COLOJUNG CON'il:ST WINNER - JeliDy
Cllll'ord, the daughter of Jilll 8Dd Faye Clifford
of Pomerw, Ia the district winDer of a coloring
CODtest held In conjunction with tbe video re1aa
or ~AU DOgs Go to Htaveu". Jeur will now ad·

vance 10 lbe state level J.1or winning in the dis·
trld contest, Jenny Is the willuer of a new·Mag-

navox videocassette morder. Here, KeDDetb
Searles, left, VIdeo Manager of Vaugba'&amp; Car·
diDal in·Middleport, presents the VCR to Jenny.

By KATHRYN CROW
West Coliunbia. If an individual
Garbage rates in Syracuse wiD dumps two bags a1 lhe landfill, it
be increased beginning Jan. 1, still costs $15.50, he noted. Eblin
Henry Eblin, · collector, told used the West Columbia facility
S~use Village Council Thursday due to its closeness to Meigs
mght. .
County.
Mr. and Mrs. Eblin and son, · He explained that he nm:mally
Mi1re. met with Council to talk hauls whatever residents put out to
about the rate increase and explain be picked up. Council told Eblin
. why it is necessary.
they appreciated his. iltlending lhe
Eblin slated thai due 10 the $3 meeting and explaining what is to
incre;~SC on dumping imposed at · occur. He is the only authorized
lhe West Columbia dwnp facility, trash hauler for the Village of
and the high cost of gas at lhe Syracuse.
pumps, he was increasing regular
Jim Pape, Council member,
rateS $1.50 per monlh, and senior stated thatlhe viUage be required to
citizen rates $1 per month.
begin a recycling program in 1992.
Regular rates wiD increase from
Mayor Erer Pickens announced
$9.50 a month to $11, while die that dogs cannot continue to run
senior citizens rate wiD increase loose in the village. He said lhai
from the present $7.75 to $8.75.
owners must confined lheir dogs or
Eblin explained that it costs · they will be cited to court. Both the.
$15.50 a ton or less to dump at mayor and Council members iii-

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CHRISTMAS

Hostage ~lease offer
.conrmned by.Iraqis

·I

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II
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•Remote Control
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Graphics
•Cable Ready
•3 Cabinet Styles I

Old pals in London town
government out of the wa'y and
the people did the rest, " he said.

Public Notice

YOUR

CHO~CE $549

CRAFTY
GIFTS

WASHI NGTON (UP!) -]'res-!dent Bush and Secretary of State
James Ba ker welcomed Iraq 's
announced Intention to release
all hostages in Iraq a nd Kuwait,
· but said the United S tates will
co ntinue to demand uncond!tiona! withdrawal of Iraqi forces
from Kuwait .

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992-3671
DOWNTOWN POMEROY, OHIO

fundin g for the !Joat launching fa cility for the past several years
and ex pressed appreclatllon to
all who have ass isted with this
project. He stated that a meeting
which was he ld last year with
boaters, village officials, and
E ric MetZler of ODNR had been
very Instrumental In obtaining
additional funding for this project a,nd e xpressed thanks to
those who attended this meeting
and expressed their views to
ODNR on the Middleport facil Ity.
Hoffman stated that he anile·
!pates aU paperwork being completed for the project during the
winter months with the construction to be completed In 1991.

Deer accident investigated

I

STORE HOURS
Monday 9:30-1:00

1be51l Improvements are to In.Middleport Ma)l!i\r Fred J{off· .
clude bank protection from eroman announced today that the
village has been. awarded a sion, ·launch site paving, new
v.nderwater launching pad, guard·
$50,000 Waterways Safety Fund
rail, steps to provide easier · ac·
grant lor Improvements at the
cess,
courtesy dock and landscap·
boat launching site near the old
of
the area around the launchtng
railroad depot on the Ohio River.
Ing
facility
.
·
The mayor stated that this
The
only
portion
ofthe
grant
ap·
grant, along with a previous
plication not now funded Is the
award of $25,000, will mean that
proposed renovation of the old de$75,000 In grant funds will be
pot. It was suggested by ODNR
available for this project along
thai the village seek other sources
with the required local funds of
of funding for this portion of the
$37,500, bringing the total cost of
project since they did not feel this
the project to $112,500.
would be of direct benefit to re·
With these additional grant
creational boaters.
·
funds available, Hoffman stated
The mayor staled that the vii·
thai substa ntial Improvements
lage had .been working to obtain
can be made at this facility.

Shock probation granted

Picture rent•

Cherry, oak ar pine
finishes.

Slit /~UII

·Middleport IS awarded
$50,000 ODNR grant

Local news briefs----.

Cabinets

,,,.,

Baker :told' lhe House Foreign
Affairs Committee on Thursday
that the Iraqi Foreign Ministry
had confirmed otrlclally that all
foreign nationals will be permitted to leave. ·
Tl)e Iraqi ambassador to Wash lngton, Mohammed alMashat, in an Interview on Cable

•

News Network, said, "All our
guests once again will be in their
·h omes well before Christmas. "
But Baker, testifying before
Congress, and Bush, at a news
conference In Santiago, Chile,
both said freeing the hostages
would not soften U.S. Insistence
that Iraq conform to all U.N.
resolutions demandllig fuU withdrawal of Iraq from Kuwait.
Earlier, Baker had expressed
reservations· to the House Foreign Affairs Committee about
Initial broadcast reports that
Iraqi
President Saddam Hussein
Becky Davidson has been·rewlned from lhe State Correctional Inhad
asked
Iraq's parliament to
stitution on Thursday afrer her release .on shock probation by lhe
approve
the
release of all foreign
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
natiol!als
.
According to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department, Mrs.
But In the course of2 'h hours o(
DaviCison had been in the slate institution on a drug charge.
testimony, Baker learned that
David Lawson of New Straitsville was returned to Meigs County
''
government-to-government' '
on Monday from the Alhens County Jail to answer a bench wanant
confirmation
of the report came
from Meigs Cqunty Court. Lawson had apPeared in County Court
In
a
telephone
call to the State
earlier this year on a charge of stealing a aailer from Mike Appel.
Department
from
acting Ambas. Lawson will be "laying out'' his fine and costs in the county jail.
sador Joseph Wilson In Baghdad,
who had met with officials of the
Iraqi
Foreign MiniStry.
Meigs Couniy Sheriff's deputies investigated a deer accident on
The
exact number of foreign
Thursday. According to lhe accident report, Tanothy B. Bowen, of
nationals
In Iraq and Kuwait has
SistersviUe, W.Va. was southbound on State Route 7 when he struck
never
been
precisely es taband killed a deer that ran into lhe path of his 1981 Plymoulh.
But
It
Is
thought there are
llshed.
The accident took place at lhe Texas Road intersection shortly af.
around
900
Americans,
Including
ter 9 p.m: Modcrate damage was rePOned to Bowen's vehicle.
·
88 held as human shields at key.
Mike Sigler of Beech Grove ~mid reponed a vehicle fire on
Installations around Iraq, plus an
Thursday, as well. .
· · · ·
estimated
5,000 o11ter foreigners.
Sigler was working on his 1974 truck when lhe fire Slartcd under
Opening
his testimony before
lhe hood. Dainage to both lhe engine and lhe cab were reported, Rutthe
House
panel, his second
·
land fire deparunent responded to the fire. ·
appearance on Capitol Hill In two
days toexplalnthe Bush administration's Persia n Gulf policy,
. Eight calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs
Baker
said, "We should acknowl,, County Emergency Medical Services on Thursday.
edge
that
this (hostage report) Is
At 8:21 a.m. on Thursday, Pomeroy squad and fire department
a
welcome
and significant develwent to State Route 681 east to a motor vehicle accident, and
opment. But we do want to see It
transponed Many Bailey to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
actually
happen.
At 12:05 p.m., Middlepon squad responded to Soulh Second for
"S~ondly, let me say that It
Homer Moodispaugh and transported him to Holzer Medical Center.
does not lessen nor should It
At 12:37 p.m., Rutland unit went to Smilh Run Road for Miclure1
lessen our determination that
Bissell and took him to Veterans. At 1:13 p.m., Racine fire depan- . Iraq's aggression against Ku·
ment went to State Route 124 at Portland for a buement fire atlhe
walt must be reversed by full
Schuler residence. 'At 6:26 p.m., Rutland fire dcpaibiteDt went to
Implementation of all of the
Beech Grove Road for an auto fire at lhe Zigler residence. At 7:10 ·
Security Copncll resolutions.
. p.m.' Syracuse squad went to Sb!-te Route 124 for Carl Weiss. He
"And, third .. . I think tha t this
was 1ta1cen to Holzer Medical Center. At I 0:20 p.m., Rutland squad
Is a sign that the strategy of
went to Pageville Road for BOnnie Quivey. She WjiS traDSpOrted to
diplomatic and military pressure
VeteranS. At 10:39 p.m.,
squad went to North 'Third for
Is working. It seems to me no
to Veterans.
Lois TeiTCII, who was tran
coincidence that this announcement comes just one week : ..
- after the International common·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
lty has authorized the use of
TIIURSDAY ADMISSIONS -Pauline Barber, Reedsville; Zeva .
force. "
Kitchen, Albany; and Ellen Young, Racine.
..
Bush also said Saddam's offer
.· nruRSDAY DISCHAROBS - Mabel Tnlcy and . Mary Ann
to free the hos1a11ei "would be
Myers.
·
·
· welcome If true, bu 1 It will not
Continued on page 10

On-.crwn graphle diiiU¥• •

6, 8 and 12 gun

REG. $89.00

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ASSORTED FAIRK
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BASKETS, QUILT
RACKS, CHRISTMAS
SANTA$, POnERY,
MIRRORS, COAT
RACKS, PLACE MATS,
CHAIR PADS, COnOM
THROWS and· Much,
Much More.

Love 'EIIIf

'
WINNERS - Scott Lucas, Administrator of
Pomeroy; Pauline Barber, Reeds yille; Dortha
Veterans Memorial Hospital, aided by Ad·
Handley, . Langsville; MicheUe .. L. Taylor,
mini.s tr ~tiv e Assistant Dor~s lble, selects winDers
Pomeroy; John Corcoran, Rutland; ·Betsy
in the hospital's Beary Christmas coates!. The
Weaver, Middleport; DeDDis Gilmore, Route 2,
hospital is giving away 10 or the white, plush,
Pomeroy, aad Reggie Pratt, Pomeroy. Winners
musical bears in a contest opea .. to all restdents
may pick up their bears·at the Gift Shop couater
free of charge. Drawn as winners among dte 366 - ..... in the · hospital lobby.' However, they must
· entries were Carolyo Bissell, 'l)tppeis . Plahi~;
provide proper ldentUicatioo. ,
Pauline Morarity, Syracuse; Candy . Bachtel~
.
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SYLVANIA
25" DIAGONAL I

COLOR ~
CONSOLE I
TY .· I

dicated that they are "fed up" wilh
dogs running loose and have every
intention to stopping it.
Pape also announced lhat Meigs
County wiD sponsor a soapbox
derby in June at Middleport. They
need manpower, money, and media
coverage to l'romote lhe event, hl:l
said. Pape explained that lhe jleopld .
involved in the event will be meeting wilh village officials. It will
cost $300 to $350 for a yoWlgster
to purchase a kit to participate in
the event, he reported.
Mayor Pickens announced a new
radio has been placed in the police
cruiser and worlc on the new addition to the fire station will begin
Monday.
Others . attending were Janice
Lawson, clerk-treasurer, .Teresa
Tyson-Drummer, Mintor Fryar, ·
Katie Crow, and Kenneth Buckley.

•

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 7, 1990

Hospital news

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created by Chadwell's students in grades three
throuFh six, will be mailed out to the servicemen
on Frtday. Pictured, left to right, are Robin Barringer, grade 3; Angie Bissell, grade 6; Wesley
Kanawalsky, grade 4; Matthew Marcinko, grade
S; and Adam McDaniel, g~de 6.

SOLDIERS HONORED - These students at
Riverview Elemeatary Schnol, under the direction of teacher David Chadwell at Riverview
School have been hard at work--oa letters and
Christmas cards for local soldiers on duty in
Operation Desert Shield. The cards and letters,

FmHA to grant .fewer direct loans
CINCINNATI ' (UPI) - The
administrator of the Farmers
Home Admlnistr.a tlon says the
federal budget crunch means
fewer farmers will get direct
loans from the agency .
LaVerne Ausmail ·told a meetIng of FmHA state directors
Thursday thai more borrowers
will have. to apply to commercial
banks for loans. FmHA Is a farm
and rural housing lending
Institution. ·
• 'Since 1985, we have moved to
·guaranti1E' loans that are made
by other lenders," said Ausman.
"This year , 58 percent of our
loans were guaranteed . The 1990
farm bill continues that trend
with a few new wrinkles."
Ausman said the agenpy Is
"burled with new regulations
from the 1990 farm bill." He

t"

estiamted It would take about much as 4 percentage points for
20,000 man-hours to perform all qualify ing applicants.
Another c ha nge would ex tend
the regulatory writing required
reduced-rate
r ural home loans to
to clarify the new rules.
The FrnHA has been called the median· Income !amllles . Pre··
"lender of last resort," because vlously such families earned too
It finances farmers who cannot much to qualify for FmHA loans
qualify for commercial loans. and too little to receive commerAlthough It provided about $22 cial .loans, Ausman said.
''This is a $100 million pUot
b!Uion In farm loans last year, ·
program
," he said. "I don't see It
the majority of Its loans are
bringing
a lot of new people to
made for rural housing.
·
areas,
but it will help those
rural
Housing's share of the agen·
who
are
already
there."
cy's loan portfoUo Is $:.8 billion,
He said some loopholes In the
Ausman said. The organization
also has $4 b!Uion In loans to write-down process also will be
facllllles or businesses In rura l closed by the new rules. The
regulations will put a $300,000
communities.
limit on the amount a farme·r .can
One new rule will allow the
write down and will requite the
len!ler lp bi!Y down Interest rates
Iarmer to lncluC\e all his or l)er
for farmers and rural housing
assests when filing for a write
borrowers. The agency can use
down.
·
funds to reduce Interest rates as.
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Friday, December 7, 1990

.\

In SVAC girls' hoops,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pornerov-:-Middleport, Ohio

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o_._m m.~ent_ary·.·

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The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
J'omeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

' Aj;b

~m~ ~~-r• r'""T""'e=!c::::t.~

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'q~V

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Pu!JIIsher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Maaaret

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aul5taat ·P ublisher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

Association 3nd the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subJect to editing and must be s lgned with
name, ~ddress and telephone numher. No unsigned letters will be pul&gt;
llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Jssues, not persona II·

~:v_:;~~ - .

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By Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta :

ANoTHeR ;T~ Tw1~T ~~ Fe~lAN

GuLF

CRI~I~...

Cracks in alliance
emerge at crucial
time in gulf crisis

years.

.

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Interestingly. Palestinians arriving In Jordan from Kuwait watch
pro- Saddam demonstrations with disbelief. "Kuwait was a home but
we lost everything. There,is no more Kuwait- itls all Iraq,'' one was
quoted as saying.
.' Far from promoting a solution to the Arab-Israeli problem, even
staunch supporters of the PLO point out that Saddam's Invasion has
damag!d the peace process.
Swedish Foreign Minister Sten Andersson, a staunch supporter of
. the Palestinian cause, said Arafat's refusal to condemn Iraq
undercut his efforts to secure a place for the PLO at the negotiating
table.

,

King Hussein has ~ontinued to · ..
talk about Saddam as though the
king were a lawyer for the
despotic Iraqi Invader. He even
perilously talks about Saddam's
h istorlcal claims to Kuwait.
In the past , Jordan has supplied intelligence to Iraq, and that ,
arrangement may be continuing.
Saudi Arabia expelled some
Jordanian diplomats In Sep· .~ ••
tember on suspicion that they ·
were photographing oil facilities
and then passing along the
pictures to Iraq .
Our Intelligence sources be- ,.
lieve the niost significant collu·
sian. If anY exists between Iraq ,
and Jordan, has to do with Hawk
missiles. When Saddam seized •
Kuwait, he found about 150 ~
American-made HaWk missiles 1
there. The U.S, Air Faroe Is
virtually defenseless against
them.
The Iraqis don't know how to
use the Hawks, but the Jordanians do. According to one highly
classified CIA report, there are '
significant indications that Jar·
danian military technicians have
been teaching the Iraqis how to
use the Hawks.
'
'
The Jordanian government
denies that, but our Intelligence
sources say Jordan Is just ,,
looking the other way while
Jordanian military people get .
paid by Iraq to explain the 1 .,
Hawks. Some Jordanian military
personnel, who are experts on the
Hawks, have been given "tern·
porary" retirement, according
to our sources. That way Jordan
can claim that none ollts active
duty military people are helping
the Iraqis .

can u s au-ports
• ' ' 01•1 terronsts
• ?
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e

e

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GLEN BURNIE, Md. (NEA) ·, onstration . Project . has been movement - except in cases
- To the casual observer or completed, BWI will be the when a .s erious threat Is posed.
harried traveler, Baltimore· nation's most terrorist-resistant
The BWI experiment seeking
Washington International Air· commercial airport - and the
to strike that balance is a joint
port appears to be quite similar federal government will have an ~ project of the Federal Aviation
to the country's other big-city operating test site to assess
Administration, a component of
airfields. Buttheinltialmodifica·
various measures that could be
the Department of Transporta·
used to make other fields equally lion. and the Sandia National
. lions that will make BWI unique
already are in place and others safe.
Laboratories, · a unit . of the
will follOI" soon.
Securing a field against air·
Department of Energy.
As at other airports, there are craft hi-jacking, bombing and , Perhaps the most Important
locked doors at each gate posi· sabotage is a relatively easy task
element in designing the BWI
lion in the passenger terminal,
with severe controls In place. But
test is the concept of the "Sterile .
providing access to the jetways drastic me!lsures conflict with an
Exclusion Area" that places the
that stretch out to the parked airport's primary function planes in a protected environ·
aircraft . But the locks at BWI are quickly and efficiently moving
ment where everything and
specially designed .
large numbers of travelers.
everybody reaching them is
Airline employees attempting
"Absolute security" Is a read·
screened first.
to open the- doors must follow a
ily achievable goal, notes one
That Includes examining pas· ·
two-step procedure: First, they
official - working on the BWI . sengers, crew members, airport
P/"Ce a personal identification project, "but those kinds of
employees, baggage, cargo,
badge in a slot on an electronic practices don't work at
mall, food, ramp vehicles and
device that " reads" the informa·
airports."
service trucks before they come .
lion encoded on it. Then, they
For example, a change as
in contact with the planes.
enter a secret mulli·diglt number simple as increasing the sensltiv·
In addition, federal officials
on a keypad similar to those on
ityolthemetalt;letectorsthrough · have constructed profiles of
telephones.
which all travelers must pass can
potential troublemakers, In an ·
Only badge-holders who have
produce delays that both airlines
attempt to classify them· into
been
·authorized to enter the and passengers find Intolerable.
three categories:
.
]etway and who know the code Thus, acceptable security mea- ·First Is the amateur, possi·
number can open the door and
sures invariably represent a
bly a homesick person acting on
gain access to the aircraft.
.. compromise between protection
impulse, who attempts to hijack
When the three-year-long , SlJ
against terrorists and freedom of
a plane or otherwise disrupt
million Enhanced Secu.rity Dem·
operations.
·

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Southern hit 15 of 63 from the
field, was one of one three pointers,
and 9-19 from the line. SHS had 40
rebounds led by Beegle's 15, Wolfe's 10, and Cross's nine. Cross
also had three steals. Hall and Hale
had 12 and 10 rebounds respectively for SWHS.
Score by Quarters:
Southera 10 15 4 1342
SWHS II 12 15 8-46

Southern played without the ser·
vices of two starters as Tonya ,In·
gles has not yet returned to the line·
up and Sarah Duhl is out with an
mjwed knee suffered in Monday's
game.
Junie Beegle led the · Tornadoettes 'with 23 points, Mica
JoneS had 8, Jennifer Cross six,
Wendy Wolfe four, and Amber Ohlinger 1.

The total broke Rio Grande's of the Bevo Francis Classic.
•
The Redmen jumped out to a
three-week-old new record for
the highest margin of victory 14-4 lead In the game's opening
five minutes and never let off the
within the athletic complex at 83.
pressure. Cincinnati Bll!le did
The previous standard, 82, was
not break out or the single figure
set Nov. 16 when the Redmen
Rees and Bryan Colwell. Pictured in the second
JUNIOR IUGH· WRESTLING - Members or
d·e reated Summit Christian . column until 10 minutes had
row are: Donald Goheen, Jeremy Hartson,
the 1990-1991 Meigs Marauder Junior High
largely
upon
the
efforts
passed,
(Ind.) 124·42 in the opening round
James L. White, Michael Jarvis, Travis Gilmore,
Wresllin&amp; are (front row 1-r): Nicky Mills, Janies
of guard John Garrett, who
Pat Young, Paul Searls, Adam Sheets and J , D.
D. White, Chris Chapman, Cliff Thomas, Steve
scored 13 out or his team-high 15
Amott, Jerod Cook, !)odger Vaughan, Danny
Keesee. Not pictured is coach J~m Sheets.
points In the first halt'.
·
Brown and .Mark Ersian, each
hitting 11 points and backed by
10-marker performances from
(See REDMEN on Page 4)
78-50; Transylvania (Ky.), 61-56;
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
that stood for the rest of the the Hill's lead to one. That laid
Taylor (Mich.), 75-74; Marian
OVP Stan Wrller
quarter.
the groundwork for Meigs
(Ind.), 79-60; Hanover (Ind.),
"We had to hustle on the
In
act
two.
Ragland
sank
the
transfer Kerl Black, a 6·0 junior
78-32; and Earlham (Ind.), 92-56.
boards, and I was pleased with
first
but
missed
the
second
shot
who came In to relieve Swisher lnj ...
Probable starters against Rio
our effort, but they kept running
In
a
one-and·one
situation
40
.
the post, to take a pass from ·
Grande are Wray-Jean Connor
people In and out, and we got
seconds
into
the
quarter
to
cut
The
Meigs
Junior
High
wrestling
(See
(5·6, sophomore, 5.3 points, 3
. BOBCATS on Page 4) . ..
outmanned," said Oak Hill cage
team
started
its
season
on
a
sucassists) at point guard and Amy
f'£1::11&lt;=&lt; B:&lt;Jjllt- - - G:t£Colgllt- !i!I:II!ECOI!i!l:ll!i!l:ll !i!I:II!ECOI!ECOI ~!i!I:II!ECOI !1!1:11 !i!l:lli .
boss Scott Cayton of his Oaks,
Sutter (5·8, junior, 8.9 points, 5.1 cessful note by defeating Gallipolis who dropped a 39-28 decision to
rebounds, 3.4 assists) as the in a match this past Tuesday, 52-24. Kyger Creek Thursday night at
W·
other guard. Michelle Nader · Winning individual matches for Cheshire.
(5·10, senior, 6.3 points, 3.3 Meigs were Bryan Colwell at ·80
This was the second straight.
poiJIIds; Danny Rees at (90); Jerod
rebounds) Is one forward and
Cook at (100); J.D. While at (110); time the Bobcats, who boosted
Libby Stephenson (5·11, senior,
Nicky Mills at (115); Adam SheeiS their record to 4·1 overall and 3·1
12.1 points, ·6.4 rebounds) takes
at (120); Travis Gilmore at (132); In the SVAC, won by this score, as
the power position. Center Is 64 · and J. L. White at (145).
Tom Weaver's crew knocked off
·junior Dee Ann Schroeder, aver·
The next match will be on · North Gallla Tuesday night with
OnlyTngley's100%sbetellyrubber1G-inch
aging 6.9 points and 3.9 rebounds. Tuesday Dec. 11 at Nelsonville.
this photocopy finish. But
Button Boot oilers
allhese beuefits.
tl!
Last season, the Mountie Lions
Weaver Indicated thl!t though his
I(
• TinQIIy~ opecill rub11er fori!UatiOn provictOS
I(
MEIGS JUNIOR mGH
handed the Rio ladles a 67-48 loss '"
cagers weren't always as sharp
WRESTUNG ScHEDULE
tl!
thebeSt tractiar1. the longest wear and the
at Lyne Cen~r. Fredrick was
as. he would have liked them to
;
finest (Jlllty '(WI money can buy.
high scorer for Rio Grande with
Date
Opp•ent
be, better days are ahead.
Dec. 4 .... .... .. ............ ....... .. ,.... . Galllpclis
15.
"We had a mental letdown,"
Dec. n ..... .. ... ....... at Nelsoovllle (6 p.m.)
or aaci&lt;Wu:old -lher
Following. Saturday's game,
Weaver said, pointing to the news
Dec. 20 .:.... ................. at Belpre (6p.m.)
• Eaay on. Easy oil.
I(
the Redwomen travel to Shawnee
Jan. 2............. .... .......... Federal Hocking
that Oak Hill point guard Me·
II!
• EKtrll iight·Wiigllt for tatigueoreSistene
(Parents Night I
State Tuesday lor a 5: 30 p.m.
lynda (ialllamore would not play
Jan. 4·5 .. .. .. ....... .. .. .. ... Pt. Pleasant Tour.
contest and play their final
:
•
U1lined w WUhable
because of a leg Injury. "We
Jan. 8....... ..... .. Warren Local (6:30 ~m. I
:
•
One-piece injecticu rnclcled:
peel
W
outing before Christmas break
Jan. 12 ............ ..... at Warren Local our.
missed a lot of field goals In the
Jan.
19
..
..
.....
....
.....
..
....
at
Martetta
Tour.
Thursday, Dec. 13 at Concord
Thiclubrllion resistant tread:roiulotc:ed at
If
game," he said, and (referring to
Jan. 22G:-. ............ ...... ... :.... Belpre (6 p.m.)
(W.Va.), starting at 7:30p.m.
.,;
.
pptnts
.
II!
KC's 5-for-17 elfort from the
Jan. l3 .............. :...... al Federal Hocking
II!
•
"...-...nt
gyarantee
on
wort&lt;tnanst&gt;p
llld
I(
charity stripe) that will haunt us
~-again. We have yet to play our
AlsoMIIabletnt~•-•e
best ball," he added.
It took a long time for anyone's
shooting eye to become acti·
vated, though Oak Hill center
Cindy StUtner had a hand In the
game's first three shots, as
forward Tara Fisher grabbed a
rebound off a StUtner miss and
hit the layup 15 seconds Into the
game before Stiltner, a 5·11
senior, ended the 3~·mlnute·plus
scoring drought with a pair of
110 MULIIIIY AYE.
.POMEIOY ~
foul shots (4:11) and a baseline
992-2115
w
jumper (3 ;40) to put the Oaks
i•
'
.
M.
... ---~~---~--~!i!I:II~~-~!ECOII!I¥~!1!1:11!1!1:11Jo':l 'i
ahead 6·0.
Kyger Creek had a hard time .
tinding the nylon, as shot after
shot failed to reach the mark In
the early going. But after senior
forward Beth Bradbury missed a
pair of free throws, Bobcat guard
Yon Ragland, who led all scorers
with 11 points, shot her 5-10 frame
upward for the rebound, passed
off to forward Joy Skidmore, who
went In for the layup, cutting the
Oaks' lead to 6·2 with 3:18 left.
The Bobcats got a layup from
center Lisa Swisher (2: 39) aild a
17-foot jumper from the right
wing from Skidmore (1:29) to tie
the game at 6·6, but after
Ragland missed the front end of a
one-and-one (:56), Oak Hill
guard Holly Sharp sank a pair of
which tlie Redmen won 195-52.
BOMBS AWAY! - Rio·
one-and-ones five seconds later
(Photo by Kazumllwase)
Grande pard Kyle Schroer
to give the visitors an 8-6 lead
(42) sends his shot on Its way
to the aylon during Thursday
Dilbt's ~tame at Lyae Center.

Redwomen to face Mt. St.
Joseph in Saturday encounter
Rio Grande's Redwomen (5·3)
will be packing their bags In the
coming week for a series of three
road games, starting Saturday at
2 p.m. in Cincinnati against the
College of Mount St. Joseph (7·1) .
Carrying Its first District 22
victory - a 65-64 decision over
Cedarville earlier this week Rio Grande will employ Its press
and defenslcve techniques
agalrist Jean Dowell's Mountie
Lions, a regular contender for
the district playoffs.
Starting .for Rio Grande are
Jennl Couch (6.3 points, 3.1
assists per game) at point guard
and Debbie Fredrick (12.1 points,
3.3 rebounds, 3.4 assists) as the
shooting guard. Taking the lorward positions .a re Kerr! Kidwell
( 11.4 · points, 6.6 rebounds, 3.8
assists) and Kathy Snyder (7.6
points, 6.7 rebounds) .At center Is
Ann Barnltz (14 points, 6.9
rebounds).
Mount St. Joseph has endured
a single loss in its young season,
79-66 to Georgetown (Ky.). Its
victories have been over Wilber·
force, 95-20; Ohio Dominican,

- Next Is a more sophisticated
individual whose actions .are '
carefully planned but who Is not
necessarjly a fanatic.
-Finally, there Is the profes·
sional terrorist - possibly a " •
member of a larger organization · . i.
- dedicated to exploiting the ,. ..
weaknesses of the air travel
system to promote a political ·.
cause.
One new approach to screening . ,
passengers Involves . extensive · .-.
use of revolving doors that would
prevent travelers from leaving
the Sterile Exclusion Area after
being checked. Moreover, the
doors could be locked by remote
control to trap suspected
terrorists.
Elaborate security measure
already have been Imposed by
the operators of many airports in
other nations, and by airlines
such as El AI, Israel's flag
carrier.
This country's airports have
been free of terrorism until now,
but they are not likely to remain
so unless preventive action Is
taken.

I
1t
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!=

~R:

j

. ,
•
.I have not had the pleasure of
affect speech restrictions en·
on ocean waves, around the
.
v~s1tmg the new R1cha~d Nixon
forced by private institutions.
mouths of rabid dogs or on the
·
rL1bra1:y and Birthplace m Yorba
Thus, the only redress availa·
heads of beer. Where is he getting subjects about which Mr. Nixon
Linda, Calif. , but i udglng from
ble to those he abuses Is public
this stuff?
seems to have distorted the truth.
what I have.read, there are four
exposure. It Is lor this purpose
3. Nixon Implies that the media A lew of the White House tape
untruths In II about me alone that I hereby enumerate the . treated him unfairly because recordings are played In the
and I never even met the man. If trespasses he has made upon my
they hate him. Mr. Nixon, please. "Watergate room, .. but they are
this is a measure of the general ,. character :
I don't want to exchange Christ · edited and narrated, and some
·,
1
veracity of the place, it is truly a
1. Nixon states -inoneofthose
mas cards with you, bull do not who have heard them say they
mendacious museum. .
.
exhibits where you press a
hate you. For example, I have tend to exonerate Nixon of
'1
1
You have heard of this reposi· fingertip next to a question and
heard others describe you as a charges leveled against him.
1
tory, I am sure. It was built with his visage appears ana television
pathological liar. I have under· , Worst 01 all, those associated
;
private funds to house the 37th screen to answer 11 _ that the
taken a personal campaign to with the Nixon library, do not
,
president's . papers. The little media .gave him a hard time
have you depicted more posi· even deny they are trying to · ' :·
frame dwelling where Nixon was because "they like fashion , and
lively, say as a "pithy, logical scrub up the foimer president. A
'
bar~ IS part of the complex, I'm not a fashionable person."
prevaricator." See? A perso.n
top Nixon aide has openly admit·
'
'
'
I
which Is located just seven miles
Now to accuse me of liking
who hates a person wouldn't seek ted that "our business at the • ., I
from Disneyland.
fashion is next tp b)asphemous. 1. to Improve their Image.
library Is doing interpretive
_,\
Because n? federal money has regard Perrier as polson, 1 grow
4. Nixon says that when ·he exhlbltry ." iGeorge orwell,
been comrt,utted to the pro!e&lt;;t. faint In the presence of Bur berry
gives his "farewell address," he
w)lere are you when we need
Nixon retams total control over coats and r razz Jaguars. Indeed,
will "warn against the elitist ~ you?)
it. The claims made therein do to accuse a curmudgeon of
media complex ... and its
1 think we need to rename the
not ha~e to meet any test of favoring fashion is -to attack his
power." Power? I recently listed
comPlex. .. N 1 on Ia nd .. ?
credibility. Protesters can · be livelihood, and I believe 1 could
19 senators and members of
"Tricky's Fantasy Park''? I kind
banish~ from museum grounds, show actual damages.
·congress who should not be · of like "Pithy-Logical Prevarica·
as the F1rst Amendment does not
2. Nixon says that he Is "a
re-elected. Precisely one was tor Farm," with billboards blar·
person of substance" but the
defeated. I sometimes get giddy'
lng for miles around: "Come
media prefer "fro1]1." That Is
but It's not from power.
watch the Plthy-Loglcal.Prevar·
just not true. I detest froth- be It
There are numerous other
icator Wrestle the Media."

By Joe Srwar .

t
'

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KCHS dawns Oak Hill39-28

Meigs junior high
tops GA grapplers

The Oaily Sentinel

''
'

x

25-.23 advantage at the h;llf. The
third period was a disaster for the
Tornadoes as they were outscored
15-4, allowing Southwestern to
take a 38-291ead.
Southern made a dramatic finish,
but their bid feU short 46-42.
Lisa Hall lt:d Southwestern with
18 points, while Renee Hale had
15, Amy Metzler nine, and Jennifer
Donta four.

a

Notching 19 points and 10
rebounds, Rio Grande forward
Jeff Brown led a total of' six
Redmen players In double-digit
scoring Thursday that led to a
135-52 wipeout of Cincinnati Bible
before a Homecoming Weekend
crowd at Lyne Center.

a ters •·

-

widened their lead to 47-32, then leading, 57-56.
Otto had 10, Gardner II,
coasted to the finish at 63-48,
Eastern was led by an outstand- . Metzger two, Phillips a team-high
ing effort from
sophomore 15, Gillilan nine, Roush and Burke
Stephanie Otto who llOIChed a two eacb, and Clay four.
For Trimble, Fouts had 19, Peart
game-high 26 points and 13
11,
McClelland eight, SkiMer two,
rebounds. Ttffany Gardner had I0
points and seven rebounds, Amy and Downs four. .
Eastern won the battle of the
Metzger and Lee Gillilan each had
seven, Tabby Phillips eight, boards 36-30 led by Otto with 16
Suzanne Clay three points and a and Gardner with 11. EHS had 43
game-high seven steals, Karen turnovers and 32 for Trimble.
SuzaMe Clay had folD' steals. .
Morris one and Jamie Wilson one.
Eastern won the reserve game
Ruby Burke and Lorrie Balcer also
contributed but did not hit the scar· 29-17.
ingcolwnn.
Owens led the Vikings with 20,
Wghlanders edge Tornadoes
Krausz had 10, Conley seven,
Schneider six, McGuire two, and J.
Overcoming a 25-23 halftime
Wilson three .
deficit, the Southwestern Lady
Eastern hit 21 of '36 from the ·Highlanders scored a 46-42 comefloor and hit 21 of 64 at the line. from-behind victory over the
Southern
Tomadoettes
here
SV hit 8·17 at the line.
Eatem won the battle of the Thursday in girls' high school basboards 32-28 and had 22 turnovers ketball action.
to SV's 18.
Southwestern took an 11-10 lead
Wednesday at Trimble, Eastern in the first quarter, but Southern .
lost one point heartbrealcer afi,Gf had a big S~;Cond frame 10 take a

Rio crushes Cincinnati Bible

l

f
Is the NIX.o· n Lt.brary a· antasyland?.

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TINGLEY

1·

II

SUGAR RUN MILLS

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BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY
BARGAIN NIGiiT TUESDAY

Berry'S World

PubliC Notice
ADVE"TISEMENT FOR

liDS

Melga County De!Nirtmtnt
ofHuman....,icH

1711 Roco Stroet

Today in history••.
Today Is Friday, Dec. 7, the 341st day of.199o with 24 to follow .
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars Is Jupiter.
Tile evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Thole born on tl)ls date are under the slgil .of Sagittarius. They
IDclude Italian sculptor Gian Lorenzo Bernini In 1598i waxworks
mUJeUm founder Marie Tussaud In 1761; German physiologist
'l'bellclor Schwann, co- orl&amp;lnator of the cell theory and the first to use
'Uie term, in 1810; novelist Willa Cather In 1876; composer Rudolph
Frlml ("lndtan Love Call") In 1879.
·
.

The Eastern Eagleaes of Coach
I&gt;:!wn Heideman continued to
· claim at least a share of the SVAC
lead and have already won more
games then the young rum of one
year ago. ThiD'Sday the Eaglettes
captured a 63-48 SVAC win ovtz
Symmes Valley · to boost their
record to 4-2, ~-0 in the SVAC.
Heideman said, ''That put's us
over last year's mark so we're excited about that. The victories have
put a lot of excitement in the
Eastern gyni and should at least tie
us for the league lead. As long as
we win the other teams have to
keep winning. We were lcind of
down after last night's one-point
non-league loss; but we quickly got
up for this league gaJI)e. It would
have been nice to have one it, but
the girls played well. Tonight
everyone played and did well."
Symmes Valley took a 13 -12
lead in the first qilarter, but EHS
had a big second canto and went up
31.-21 at the half. EHS had a l!ig
third quarter also in which they

Does Jordan want Mecca arid Medina? . :

ties.

CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) - Cracks are emerging in the alliance
. between Iraq and the Palestine Liberation Organization at a time
when Iraqi President Saddam Hussein wants to exploit the
Palestinian cause in talks with the United States.
Although PLO leader Yasser Aralat · foUowed mainstream
Palestinian public opinion and backed Iraq·against the West after the
Invasion of Kuwait four months ago, the cost of this support in both
·
political and monetary terms has been enormous.
Ararat appeared to have burned his bridges behind him when he
openly sided with Saddam against Egypt and the wealthy Persian
Gulf states that have been bankrolling his military and political
operations for millions of dollars a year.
But despair among Palestinians, especially those in the Israeli·
occupied territories, about a solution to the Arab-Israeli conflict has
driven many into Saddam's camp for the sole reason that he has stood
up to the West and claimed to have espoused iheir cause.
.Iraqi officials made it clear that when senior Iraqi and U.S. officials
meet In Washington and Baghdad soon for what many see as the last
dltect talks between the two sides before the O.N. Security Council's
Jan. 15 deadline for Iraq to get out of Kuwait without the use of force,
they will broaden the talks to Include the Palestinian issue.
The U.S. side has already rejected discussions on anything other
than Iraq's Invasion of Kuwait. And small signs of Palestinian
discontent with Iraq's position, such as Arafat's recent admission in
Geneva that the invasion of Kuwait cost the PLO and Palestinians
mUUons of dollars, offer a picture of Increasing tension in the shaky
Iraqi· Palestinian altiance. ·
One moderate . PLO official in the Middle East said Ararat' s
decision to side with Saddam was politically necessary at the time to
enable the PLO leader to go along with mainstream Palestinian
public opinion.
But he admitted that Palestinian opinion is slowly beginning to
change and turn against the Iraqi leader- with the danger that it
might also cause a backli.sh against Arafat hlmself,unless he repeats
·
one of his famous political U-turns.
Despite Saddam's avowed espousal of the Palestinian cause, one of
the first things the Iraqi leader's cousin, Ali Hassan al Majid, did
when he was governor of what Iraq now calls Madinat al Kuwait al
Iraqleh (the Iraqi city of Kuwait) was to order a mass round-up of
Palestinians suspected of hot supporting the Iraqi InvasiOn.
Iraq's decision to single out the Palestinian community in Kuwait
was a cruel paradox given Baghdad's pro-Palestinian stance, but no
surprise given that Palestinians did most of the important jobs In the
1
emll'ate.
.
,
Before the Invasion, the Palestinian community of 380,000 .
prospered in the oil-rich state, accumulating wealth and influence out
of proportion to its size.
Tlie community controlled most of Kuwalt's publishing houses and
newspapers. Two of the dailies, AI Watan and AI Qabas, reflected
Palestinian aspirations and were sold throughout the Arab world. AI
Watan ceased publication alter the invasion, depriving Palestinians
., of an important outlet, and AI Qabas is a harsh critic of the invasion
from the haven of a European printing house.
Palestinians also controlled the mass circulation magazine AI
Arabi, Which Saddam's Invasion closed.
They controlled most of the trade and finance In Kuwait, which
enjoyed one of the world's highest standards of living. Palestinians
even controlled the Kuwait Petroleum Co.
Ironically for Arafat, the earnings from Palestinian:managed
enterprises in Kuwait was the single most Important so.urce of
revenue lor the PLO and Its loss forced the organization to implement
35 percent pay cuts on bureaucrats, officials and PLO fighters.
All Palestinians who lived In Kuwait contributed 5percent of lhgelr
income to tbe PLO and remittances to families living In Jordan and
' the Israeli-occupied territories alone amounted to $450 million a year.
Saddam's invasion of Kuwait and the ensuing embargo on Kuwaiti
aU cut at a stroke the livelihood of Kuwaltl·Palestlnians and deprived
the Palestinian people as a whole of their economic clout.
Relations between the PLO and the rulers of Kuwait before the
invasion were considered mutually beneficial, given that the emirate
supported PLO positions politically and financially, and the PLO
encouraged Palestinians to live and work in the emirate.
About 20,000 Palestinians able to do so left Kuwait In the first few
days after the invasion and more have followed as Iraq continues to
loot and depopulate the emirate.
Saddam's aim of unifying Arabs, Including Palestinians, is
rejected by many of the very Palestinian refugees the Iraqi leader
. · claims he supports. " We support Arab unity, but not by force. It must
·be by consent, by all Ar~b leaders," said a Palesti.nian refugee from
Kuwait.
·
Though Palestinian refugees In camps and In the occupied
territories feel they have nothing to lose by supporting Saddam,
Palestinians In the Persian Gulf fear that what Is left of their
community In Kuwait runs the risk of being branded traitors by a
country that has been a second home for so many for more than 30

Eagles beat Vikings to keep first-place tie; .Tornadoes fall

Friday. December 7, 1990

WASHINGTON - One week · that , in the time of his great ·
after the Iraqi Invasion of Ku· grandfather, was the guardian of
walt, King Hussein of J ordan
Mecca and Medina, now in Saudi
would get involved In such a plot .
began hinting broadly that In· Arabia.
Intelligence sources acknowl·
stead of " king,". his people
In an emotional speech before
edge that Jordan has done plenty
should start calling him Sherif the Jordanian parliament on
to fuel the Saudis' suspicions .
Hussein - the title of his great
Aug. 12. Hu'sseln recalled his
The Saudis and some Israelis
· grandfather. Hussein's neigh· family's historic role as protec·
and exiled Kuwaitis believe that
bors In Saudi Arabia raised their tor of the holy cltl'es before the
King Hussein had early notice of
eyebrows.
Hashemites were driven out by
.Saddam Hussein 's invasion of
For the Saudis It was one more the usurping Saud family In 1924.
Kuwait. King Hussein claims he
piece of proof that Jordan was In memory of that time, Hussein
knew nothing until King Fahd of
part of a conspiracy with Iraq to said, "He who wants to honor me
Saudi Arabia called him at 6a .m.
invade Saudi Arabia and seize shall call me by my name, and he
on Aug. 2, the day of the invasion.
the sacred cities of Medina and who wants to honor me more
In the wake of the invasion ,
Mecca. Hussein is a 33· shall call me Sherif Hussein."
· King Hussein called ·saddam
generation · descendant of the
While the Central Intelligence
" trustworthy'' and an " Arab
prophet Mohammed and a Agency is skeptical that Hussein
patriot. "
member of theHashemitefamily

•

Mldclloport, Ohio 411760
Sap obi....,_lorlllo
COMUUctlon of en 1dJIIIun to
end the
tlun of the
Melga Countv 0 $ I bi&amp;aft of
Acu wll be ,.
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Public Notice
dude the foBoWing ltliimalor
which bldo wit t. oc-tod:
Addition 10 tnd RenCIIIt·
tlon of 1M Melga C011nty
Doportmont of HIIINin Str·

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the aaiollng llopartmant of
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ltplriltil ConttOCto For
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Ardllt- Eot-o For

UI,MO.IJO

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maybe•·ntee~81:

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C~nty

Comml•lanera

Moiga CoUnty Courthouao
PomOtOy, Ohio 411718
lurgeu • Nlpte, Umitod
4424 !moroon Avenue
Poltltroburg, Walt Virgin·

.1985 MONTE CARLO SS

PUblic Notlca
NOTICE Of APPOINTMNT
OF FIDUCIARY
On No~ambar 11. 1110.
In the Meltlt County 1'-~

~

~
~

·
No. 21121. •
Coploo of the . Cont•ot Jennifer L. lheetl. 211-113 , ;
Eott 8-nd 1 - . loa v

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d e - . to• ol111 Union '
upon~::-" of Fifty Dolloro Av.,UI, P-oy. Malgo
(. .0. ). NONE DP WHICH
County, Ohio, 41711.
WILL I! IIEPUNDIEO.
lloliertl!. luct,

It the olltce Ill
pto, Ui'iiltitd, -

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County Commi--t.
lliohord E. Jontt

Commlotio(11} 23. 30; (121 7, 14 4tc

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Power windows, power door locks. tilt wheel,
cruise. rear defogger, cassette. super sport
clean.
SALE PIICE

$6495

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC.
992-2174
500 EAST MAIN STREET

Retreat C

$30,018.00
ADDITIONAL WINTER DISCOUNT
COME IN FOR DETAILS

~
C.::1'..:'=-' Dnlbllt'Hanll~5
....111 ... 81-1741
Homes Priced With All Standard Features. Oecils Not lndudod

POMEIOY, OHIO

Ftbru1rv IIIII M1rch

.

�Friday, December 7, 1990
Friday. December 7, 1990

POmaoy-Middleport. Ohio

Bobcats

•
Win
•••

Bobcat guard Angle Bush and
score her only points or the game
on a layup that gave KCa 9-8lead
with 5: 57 left In the half. And
though Fisher grabbed a rebound
and temporarily retook the lead
for the Oaks with a 10-foot
jumper from the left wing, Kyger
Creek began playing inspired
ball and started to execute
pressure defense -agalnst Oak
Hill players that at times seemed
hesitant to make their next
move. It didn't hurt the Bobcats'
cause that Stiltner received her
third traffic ticket on a charging
foul with 1: 27 left in the half.

WHO'S OPEN? - Kyger Creek guard Angle
Bush (22) seeks an answer to that eternal
hardwood question as she scans the middle of the
court for an open teammate, as Oak lUll's

Amanda Clagg (25) drops back Into the zone
defense the Oaks are playln~r In the first qu&amp;J'ter of
Thursday night's SVAC conte.t at Cheshire,
which the Bobcats won 38-29. (OVP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

•

North Carolina, Villanova wm;
Pitt hammers Marshall I 05·75
By United Press International
The North Carolina Tar Heels
justified their place in the ratings
and preserved some measure of
pride for the ACC on their home
court.
Senior forward Rick Fox
scored 18 points and sophomore
forward George Lynch added 12
Thursday night to lead No. 10
North Carolina to a 79-64 win over
No. 11 Connecticut in the ACC B!g East Challenge.
It was only the second victory
for an ACC team in the four-da)i ,
e!ghl-game matchup between
the two East Coast conferences.
Tar Heel head coach Dean

Red-m en...

Smith used his tall, deep bench to
wear down the Huskies, who sen I
the Tar Heels Ia the free- throw
line 32 times, and North Carolina
converted on 25 of the attempts.
The Huskies, 3-1, were led by
junior guard Chris Smith, the
game-high scorer with 21 points,
and senior guard John Gwynn,
who added 11 points.
The Huskies blitzed to a 13-1
lead before North Carolina, 4-1.
flnally got into the game. Freshmen Eric Montross and Clifford
Rozier paced an 11-5 run and the
Tar Heels cut lhe lead to 18-14 at
the 9: 59 mark.
Gwynn hit two jumpers and the

(Continued from Page 3)

Darius Williams and Troy Donaldson, helped build a 43-point
Redmen advantage going into
the second half. Within 10 min·
utes, Rio Grande outscored the
Golden Eagles 45-12.
Retiring hiS first string, Redmen head coach John Lawhorn
insertect every player on the
bench to finish the contest, which
occurred when freshman guard
Chad Shumate stole the ball,
skipped downcou~t and went in
for a two-point dunk to set the
new record.
Backup center/ forward Tim
Christian, who had 15 points for
Rio Grande, had one of his best
nights on rebounding by recording 12. Gary Harrison dominated
the assists with eight.
The Redmen shot 58.2 percent
on 53 of 91 attempts and were 62.5
percent from the free throw line,
sinking 20 of 32 tries . The team
held its turnovers to 15 while the
Golden Eagles lost the ball 27
times. The Redmen also dominated lhe boards 69-35.

In the NBA...
• Thurtday's resaults
L.A. Lakers 83. Minnesota 73
Sea ttle 105. Mtaml103
HQu ston 116, ,Charloru- 110
Sacramento 104. Washlng1cn 86

Friday's games
Phoen lX at New Jersey. 7 30p.m .
Denver at Phlladelphta. 7: 30
p.m.
Seattle at Orlando, 7.30 p.m.
Milwaukee at Atlanta, 7· 30 p.m .
Portland ar Indiana, 7:30 p.m.
New York at Chicago, 8: 30p.m.
Boston at Dallas. 8 p m
L A. Lakers ar Utah. 10:30 p m.
~troU at Golden StatE', 10: 30

pm

Saturday's &amp;ames
Denver ar Charlot If". 7:30pm .

Phoenix at Orlando. 7:30 P·"l·

New York .at Atlanta . 8 p.m.
Cleveland at Indiana , 7. 30 p.m
Portland at Chicago, 8:30pm.
Houston at Dallas, 8:30p.m.
Boston at San Antoo lo. 8.30p m .
Utah at L.A Clippers. 10 30 p m .
Detroit at sacramento. 10:30

Jeff Curry was CB's only other
high scorer with 11 polnls. and
Paul Carpenter led on rebounds
with six. From the floor , Jim
Corrona's club was 29.4 percent
(20-68) and netted n lne of 18 free
throw attempts for 50 percent.
Now 7-1, the Redmen head to
Ashland University Saturday for
a 7:30p.m. contest. CB (3-9) will
play at Cedarville on Saturday.
RIO GRANDE (135) - Chad
Shumate 4-1-9; Gary Harrison
3-1-0-9; Jawanza Childs 1-1-1-6;
Mark Erslan 3-2-2-14; Brad Schubert 3-2+16; Terry Farley 2-0-4;
Joe Edwards 1-1-0-5; Clifford
Brown 3-1-7; Kyle Schroer 0-1-03; Darius Williams 5-6-16; Jeff
Brown 8-1-0-19; Tim Christian
6-3-15; Troy Donaldson 5-2-12.
TOT~L'l 44-9-20-133
CINCINNATI BffiLE (32) Eric Gilpin 2-0-4; Rob Payne
1-1-3; Lance Bright 1-0-2; Greg
Zimmerer 1-0-3; John Garrett
6-3-15; Jeff Curry 1-3-0-11; Jack
Kegley 1-0-2; Paul Carpenter
3-1-7; Denny Jenkins 1-0-2; Adam
Granger 0-3-3. TOTALS 17-3-9-52
Halftime score: RloGrande66,
Cloo!nnati Bible 23.
REDMEN NOTES: Ashland,
Rio Grande's weekend opponent,
is 5-0 after its Wednesday night
knock-off or Oberlin 110-55.
Second-year Coach Keith Dambrat's Eagles have also defeated
Wayne State (Ind.) (103-79),
Central State (117-72), Capital
(95-54) and Mount Union (105-73) .
The leading scorer appears to be
Bernard McGuire, a 6-2 junior
and first substitute for the
guards, at 12.6 points and 3.4
rebounds per game. But two of
the projected starters and the top
replacements for forward and
center are also hitting in the
12-point range this week.

Huskies went up 25-14 with 7: 15
left In the half. North Carollna 's
depth look its toll and the Tar
Heels were 9-11 at the free-throw
line and cut the lead to 28-26 with
3:55 left In the half.
Lynch scored five polnts for
North Carolina and the Tar Heels
r !pped off a 15-7 run to take a 69-59
lead with 2: 36 left in the game.
Connectlcu t was forced to foul
from that point and North Carolina was 6-7 from the line in the
last two minutes of the game.
In another ACC-Big East Challenge game, Lance Miller scored
23 points and forward Arran Baln
added 21 to lead VIllanova to a
91-82 victory over Wake Forest.
The Big East dominated the
series G-2.
In the VIllanova-Wake Forest
game, Rodney Rogers nailed a
three-pointer to pull the Deacons,
3-2, within 74-73 but Miller and
Ba!n led a Wildcat charge and a
23-18 run to end the game.
Villanova raised its record to 4-1.
Chris King of Wake Forestled all
scorers with 26 points and Rogers
hit for 20, all in the second half.
In other games Thursday
nIght, No. 13 PltiBburgh trounced
Marshaii10J-71, Tennessee Tech
defeated No. 16 Southern Mississippi 84-78 and Purdue nipped
California 66-65.
At Pltl&amp;buf'Kh, Brian Shorter
scored 17 of his 20 points In the
second half to lead the 5- I
Panthers. Pitt started the game
with lull-court pressure on defense, Jumpbtg to leads of 18-3
and 27-7. Marshall, 3-3, turned
the ball over 10 tlliles In the first
half. Darelle Por.ter had 17
points, 10 rebounds, eight assists
' and three steals.

COLON\' THEATRE

FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
DAIINY GLOVER Ill

Sn un
H1

ltJVISI!lU INWJCIBI F.
s I~J Tu\'m W1 rH

A h ·:; 0:1v'; fll

KC returned to the floor in the
third quarter with a four-point
lead, and the Oaks would
threaten one last time when
Fisher scored on a layup after
rebounding her own missed attempt, which knocked the hosts'
lead to two. But then the Bobcats,
who witnessed the Oaks' taking
charge on the boards in the first
half, kept the south Jackson five
at bay by forcing numerous
turnovers and eventually keepIng enough defensive pressure to
Induce Stiltner to foul out in the
first minute of the final quarter.
With 5-7 freshman Jennifer Ad·
klns being sent In Stiltner's place
and Fisher, who finished to lead
the Hill with 10 points, as the only
effective weapon remaining in
the Oaks' forest, the Bobcats
padded their seven-point lead
and walked away with the win .

ONI EYIIING SHOW 7:30
AD.SSIOII S1.50
446-0923

Toronto 2, Minnesota 1 (0T )
Chicago 5, NY Islanders 2

Frklar's ramee.

Pltllbulllh at HarUorcl, 7: J5 p.m.

Washtngtcr'l at New Jer!JtY, 7: 45
p.m .
Philadelphia at Minnesota, 8:30

p.m.

aatcaao ar Torauo. 7J35 p.m .
0!1 roll at St. Louis, 8:35p.m.
Winnipeg at Los Angeles. 10: 35

1986 PONTIAC 6000 ·4 DR.

Looking for a clean. low mileage UHd car, then
check this one out. Wall equipped • good gas mi·
leage.

$4995
SALE PIICE OM J
.

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC.
992-1174
500 EAST MAIN SREET

"F,.Irtlllf ICt~l•ekg '"'' CileAtll"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

204 Condor St.

SUPPLY

'

POMEIOJ, OliO

~THE

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RI.IUOW

992 ·13 18 Pomeroy

\S) Veterans

'. FLOIIIIER! fOR EYIRT OCCASION

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992-2104

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Pomeroy

~--~~

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FIRE &amp; SAFETY

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PRESCRIPTION SHOP

Holy Communion. llrst, second, thJrd and
at each monrh: Morning
Prayer on Mh Sundays. Otw-ch school and
nursery care provided. Coffee how' In Ott&gt; parIsh hall 1n:U'nf'dlately foUowtng the service.
FOMEROY CHURCJI OF CHRIST. 212 W.
M8Jn st .. Leo Lash. I'VaJI8!'llSI. Blbk&gt; Sclrol
9:Xla.m.; Morning worship, 10: :rla.m : Youth

~=;";~.:".:.~~· -~~~~- ~~~~~~~: ...

. . . . . $2930

outomotlc. Am/ Fm. ono owner . .. ..

S3287
.. ..

1985 Dodge Charger Shelby,

#1.23 Sliver a. black. n.nderd.
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down rur

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1986'12 Ford Eacort, #1727.

1986

THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 &amp;Jnernu1
.Ave., Pomeroy, Mrs. Cora Wining In charge.
9Jmay holir&lt;'ss mee11ng, 10 a.m.: 9Jnday
• ' School. I~ 30 a.m. 9Jnday School, YPSM
Eloise Adams, leader. 7· :M p m Salvat1on
meeting, vario\.&amp;s speakers and music SpPCials
Thursday, ll:.D a.m. to 2 p.m. LadJes Hornt&gt;
League, members fn charge, au women
lnvlloo; fi:~ f&gt;m. ThUI'!lday. CorJ;o Cad&lt;'t

Halt .......... . .

CIIISSS (YOW¥ Prople-Biblel. 7:30pm Blbft&gt;
study and Prayer meeting. open to the public.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
,CHRIST. 33226 Clllldren's Home Road iCoWtty

5399 5 sasoo
sjMo S7100

Road 76). !lt2-:J347 Vocal music Sunday WorshlplOa.m.; BibleStulylla m.; WorshJp.6p.
~ m. Wednesday, Bbk! Sttxly. 7 p.m . Speaker.
La.- Hope, evangelist
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CIIRISTIAN
' CHURCH, Jack Cleland, pastor; Alana Qp.
land, Supl. Sunday School I~ 00 a m : Youth
Meetln!&lt;. 7p.m. eYei'Y Wedneoday.

$4040

SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH

- 161 Mulberry AVI!., Pomeroy. Ph. 992·
589fl. Saturday Evening Mass. 5:30p.m.:
Sunday Mass 9: 30a .m. CCD classl.'s, 10· 30
a.m. first. se&lt;:ond and third Sundays of each
month. Dally Mass . !!: 30 a .m . ConCessions
, Saturday afternon , 4·5 p m
r ' CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOLIC FAITH - Nl'W Llma Road next to
Fort Mf;)igs Park. Rob('rf W. Richard s.
1 pastor. Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7 p.
m.: Wednesday worship. 7 p.m .

• MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY CHURCH.

575 Pearl St .. MlddiE"port. Sam Anderson.
• pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m .. Sunday
... evening service 7: :It p.m.: Wednl!sday ser·
vtce, 7· 30 p m

1987 OLDS
TORONADO

Sl 0,395

.S9995

,

GRAHAM

SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST.

0

Mul·

... berry Heights Road, Pomeroy. Pastor Bob
~ Snyder: Sabbath School Superintendent,
·· Rodney Spires. Sabbath School begins at 2
; p.m. on Saturday afternoon wnh worship
servlre following at 3:00 p.m. EveryonE&gt;
:~ welcome

,

r:~ _

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
+.School 9::.&gt; a.m . , Morning Worship, 10:45

Loaded, low miles.

~ a.m.

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. Easr

, Main St. Steve FuUer, past or. George
. Skinner, Sunday School Superintendent .
Sunday School, 9· 30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a .m.; Wednmday Pvenln~
. prayer and Bible study, 7. 30 p.m.

• FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 41872

1987 CELEBRITY

, Pom-eroy Pike E . Lamar O' Bryan t, pas·
tor and Sunday School Dlrf'C'tor. Sunday
SchooL 9:30 a .m ., Morning Worship.
· 10:45; Cholr practire, 6:ll p. m .; evenln~
: worship. 7:30 p.m .; Wednesday Prayer
, service, 7· :Kl p.m. Minion Friends !ages
2·6), Royal Ambassadors Iboys ages 6--18\ .
·· and Glrl!l kl. Action (ages 6--181 on Wf'dnes: ·days, 7: :m p.m. Church·wlde VIsitation
. 6.XI p.m. Tuesday.

19_
88 DELTA 88

V-6, auto., air. stereo. low miles.

Loaded, low miles

$5995

S8995

• FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bal·

··ley Run Road, Rev . Emmett Rawson, pa:;.·
·· tor Handley Dunn . .supl. Sunday School.
':lOa.m. ; Sundayevenlngservlce. 7:00p.m.
; .: Bible teachln~. 7:00 o.m. Thursday.
,• SYRACUSE MISSION. 14ll Brld~eman
·"St .. Syracusf'. Sunday SChool. 10 a .m .;
Evening servlc£1'. 6 p m .: Wt'dnf'Sday
.,service. 7 p.m .

1987 £HRYSLER
FIFTH
AVE.
Loaded, low miles.

1988 SILVERADO
414 BLAZER

• MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
. IN CHRISTIAN UNION. Dwight Haloy.
"first Pl.der; Wanda Mohler, Sunday SChool
)upt Sunday School 9· ~ a m .; Mornln~
- Worship 10:30 a.m.: Evening Worship 7: :J)
-.p.m.; Wednesday prayermtoetlng7: :1) p.m.

Full sized, loaded, low miles.

$12;900

$7995

• MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.

· Racine. Rev . JamPS sanerflttld. pastor.
')"rft"man Williams. Supt Sunday School
:.9:45a.m.; Sunday and WPdnesday even·
,..(ng setvlces. 7 p.m.
,

.• MIDDLEPORT

1986 BUICK
RIVIERA

·1990 DELTA 88
REDUCED TO

79 9 5

S11~900

$8 ·999
I

BAPTIST.

•. MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST.

: stb aftcl Main, AI Hart~ew~. minister:
1 Richard DuBose-. AuiXI.ate Pastor: Mike
Gerladl. Sunday School Superintendent .
~.. Wonhtp Servlce I. 8:1.5 a.m.; Swaday
, Schoo19:30 a.m.; WonbtpServtceD,10: 30
. a.m.: Eventna worahlp,7 p.m.; Wedne--

1

90 BEREnA \. 90 GEO PRIZM

FIRST

·'Corner S{xth and Palmer Rev . James A .
·~ddOn, pastor: Don Wilson. S S Supt.:
'.Beulah White, Ass1 Supl. Sunday School
:~:15 am: morning wors hip 10 :15 am,
iSunay ~entng worship 7 pm; Prayer
·Meeting and Bible Studv Wednesday 7
·:Pm: Men's Prayer Brpakfast . lst Satur'.day each month 7 am In fellowship hall:
: adult choir practice Sunday. 8 pm. radio
. proaram "Preparing the Way" Saturday,
·5 pm WMOV 1360 AM, Ravf'Jiswood, WV:
•Lord's Supper observed 1st Sunay of E"ach
: montb.

' oay, 7 p.m. Prayer meetln&amp;.OFTIIE. NAZ
• MIDDLEFORT CHURCH
' ARENE, PASTOR Rrv. [Joyd D. Grimm.
:Jr., puler. Jeon Klmet. Sundlly SChool Su;
. ~lntel&gt;dent. Sunday !lc...,. 9:30 a.m.,
,~rnllll wonldp Servtce,10:SO a.m.; Sun' ,day OWDfnl ...-vtce, 8 p.m.: WednsdaY
evenfllloervlce,7p.m.
'. SYRACUSE CHURCH OF 111E NAZA·
' RENE, Rev. Glenn McMillon, paator. Jim
,'Cwulur, s. s. Supet111tendent. Sunday
'scbool 9:30 a.m.; morn Ina wcrohfp, JO: 30
•'a m.· Evaaaellstlc aervll'@, 6 p,m .:
, Pro;... and Pralle Wedneoday, .7 p.m.;
,:YtJUth ~AN IIJNII'I'RY
' IJNJ'DD OP JIDIOI COVIft'l'
•:•, HARRJS0NVn.LE
O'q.tloPRESBYTERIAN
Koll7
·:.CHIJRCH- Sanday: ' Woroh!P Servl!'ft

90 CALAIS

CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE
CADILUC·GEO, INC.
9'9 2-6614
POMEI01
·:

'

'·

992-2121
106 Mulberry An.

Pomeroy

RAWUNGS-COATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

Otrl!f .CBoof.s
93 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 46760
41992-66&amp;7 - (998-00KSI

992-5141

264 South '2nd

Middleport

~~~~~~~~~~
~

9:00a.m.: Church School9:45 a.m

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN

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

SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
TERIAN - Sunday School, 10 a.m ,
Church servl~. 11:00 a .m . ; Youth group,
Urst and third Sunday_s.z 4 p.m

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Pastor,

John F. COrcoran. Sunday School10; 00 a.
m.; Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.
Children's Church 11 a.m. SuMay Even·
lng Servfce 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. Young

Ladles' Auxiliary. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Family Worship.

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. 011

Rt. 124, 3 miles from Portland-Long Bot·
tom. Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday School,
9:30 a .m.: Sunday morning preaching
10:30 a ,m. : Sunday evening services. 7:30
p.m .

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

CHURCH, Comer Ash and Plum. Noel

Herrmann, pastor. Sunday School 10: 00 a.
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wed·
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at

7:30p.m.
· MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST O!I 12.1. behind Wilkesville. Charles Jones.

pastoC'SundaySchool. 9:30a.m.: morning
worship, 10: 30; Sunday and Thursday
eveqlng services, 7:00p.m.
MEIOII

COOI'ERATJVE I'ARJSH
UNITED IIIETHOD!l!T CHIJRCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Shar• RaUIIman

UNITED .METHODIST.

,. Preaching 9. JJ a.m. rtrst and second Sun... days of each month: lhlrd and fourth Sun·
.. day each month worship SE'l'VIces at7: 30p.
•• m.: Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p m
-~ Prayer and Blbl P Study.

A lu ·a:-, ~"

Established 1913

992-2975

mee~mg,,

PYMT.

PRICE

!:~~M~~·~~~:.~~:.~~~~:

6:00p.m.: l:verurv worship. 7.oo p.
m. Wednesday nlght pra)'t'l' meeting and Bible
stilly. 7:00p.m.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
..llil!riii Y and S(' rt ·icP

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

271 North
Soconol
Mid.oport,
Ohio

towih Sundays

With any vehicle over $2,000 you have a choice
of a FREE Nintendo set, Microwave or VCR. Does
not apply to prior sales.

BILL QUICKEL

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

992-6669

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 3:26 E
M8Jn St. Pomeroy. the Rev. Dr. Roy C. Myers.
record. ~ servtces: 11 a.m. June through
August; 11:30 a.m. Seplember throu!&lt;h May.

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

7811 NORTH SECOND AVE.

214 E. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy

TRINrTI' CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

1987 S-10
TAHOE
BLAZER
Auto., air, low miles

301 IAn IIAIN

Pomeroy

John F. FuiU,Mgr.
Ph. 991·1101

We F

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE

[H

ms socond

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PtiARMACY
~
11t

RIDENOUR

TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
9A.M.·&amp; P.M .
SAT. 9 A.M.-1 P.M.
CLOSED MONDAYS

FABULOUS USED CAR
BARGAINS AT JIM COBB

COBB

I

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

TEAFORD REALTY

Pomeroy, OH.

Fall &amp; Winter Hours

1be Rev. Roland Wildman, pastor. Oturch
School 9:15 a.m. Alice GloOOkar, Supt.; Worship Sen1ce 10: :1) a.m Otolr rehl.&gt;ar.l.al, Thursday, 7:00p.m.; Lots Blrt, Dln&gt;ctor.
FOMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Corner Union and Mulberry, Rev.
Thomas men ~cClurv. pastor. Nonnan Pr£as..
ley, S. S 9Jpt.. S&gt;.n-.Jay SclxJol. 9: Jl a.m :
mcrn!ng ..wrship 10: lJ a m ; evening servicE&gt; 6
p.m.; mid-week sef'\ltce, Wednesday, 7 p.m.

Quarter totals
,
Oak H!11 ................ 8 7 8 5-28
Kyger Creek ......... 6 13 12 8-39
Kner Creek (39) - Ragtan'd
2-2-1-11; Skidmore 4-0-0-8; G!ndlesberger 3-0-0-6; Swisher 3-0-06; Black 1-0-0-2; Shaver 1-0-2-4;
Bradbury 0-0-1-1; Bush 0-0-1-1.
Totals - 14-2-5-38
Free throws- 5-17 (29.4'li)
Oak lUll (118)- Fisher 5-0-0-10;
Sharp 2-0·3· 7; Stiltner 2-0-3-7;
Adkins 1-0-0-2; Carney 1-0-0-2.
Totals - 11·0-8-28
Free tbrows - ·6-17 (35.3%)

JIM

'
a

·" . MEIGS TIRE ·
' \ CENTER INC.
·~~'

172 North Second Ave.
Middl-rt, Ohio

SPECIAL FACTORY
PURCHASE CARS....

Buffalo 4. Phlladelph'• 3

New Jersey at Washlngtoo, 7· 35
p.m.
Vancouver at Pittsburgh, 7: 35
p.m .
St. Louis at Detroit. 7:35p.m
Salurda,'a pms
Botton at Montreal, 7:35p.m.

(row's Family Restaurant

SALES &amp; SERVICE

~COres

p.m

This Message and Church Directory Spont;ored By ~e. Interested Bwiuesses Listed On This Page.

. 992-7075

On Monday's calendar, the
Bobcats will host Southern, while
Oak Hill w!!! travel to
Southwestern.

REDUCED ·To .$

Montreal 6, Boston 4

p.m.

At VInton, sophomore guard
Lucy Mullens outran the rest of
the pack with a game-high 17
points to propel Hannan Trace t~
a 14-polnt victory -the Wildcats
fifth straight.
The Wildcats shed a two-point
deficit at the end of the first
quarter and outscored the Pi·
rates 14-6 in the second frame to
take a six-point lead at halftime.
and as North 's offense failed to
keep pace with the Guyan live,
Hannan Trace locked it up at the
end of act three by doub!!ng Its
halftime advantage.
Beth Salisbury led the Pirates
(1-3, 1-2) with eight points.
Hannan Trace (5-0, 4-0), which
has won Its last six conference
games, will travel to Aid to face
Symmes Valley, while North
Gallla will take on Easiern at
Tuppers Plains.
Quarter totals
Hannan Trace .... 8 14 14 11-47
North Gall!a ........ 10 6 8 9-33

1986 Nioaan &amp;entre. #1701

REDUCED TO

In the NHL_.

Hartford ar Buffalo, 7· 35 p m .
Qut&gt;bec at Calgary, 9:35 p.rn.
N.Y. Rangers ar Edmooton, 9· 35

Hannan Trace (47)- Mullens
7-0-3-17; D. Nelson 3-0-1-7; Thomas 3-0-1-7; Dillon 3-0-0-6; Ours
1-0-4-6; Triplett 2-0-0-4. Totals
18-0-9-47
Free throws- 9-21 (42.9'!!)
North Gallla (33)- Salisbury
4-0-0-8; !Wl&gt;ie 3-0-0-6; Dobbins
2-0-0-4; McCormick 2-0-0..f; West
2-0-0-4; Twyman 1-0-1-3; Hill
1-0-0-2; Myers 1-0-0-2. Totals 16-0·1·33
Free throws -:- 1-2

Haanaa Trace 47, N. Gallla 33

In the junior high game, lhe
Oaks edged the Bobcats 21-20 In
overtime on the strength of a free
throw by Fr~nch with 11 seconds
left In overtime. KC's Stephanie
Jones, who led all scorers with 11
points, was responsible for the
extension of the game by tying
the contest at 20-20 with a field
goal canned with 25 seconds left
in the fourth quarter.

pm.

Tbunday's

l fXrERIENCE 111E JOY Of RELIGION 4

(Continued from Page 3)

K!!l

PR~DITOQ'

The Daily Sentinel Page 5

Pomaroy-Midtlaport. Ohio

Rev. Frank CreiOGI
Rev. Seldoa Joh111011

ALFRED - Church School 9:30a.m.;
Worship, lla.m .: UMYF6: 30p m.; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. Communion.
first Sunday. (Haushmant
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.: Church
Schoo110a.m. ; BlbleStudy, Thursday, 7p.
m.; UMW, tlrst Thursday, 1 p.m.: Com·
munlon, first Sunday (Hausman) .

JOPPA- Worship 9:30a.m.; Chur&lt;:h

School10:30 a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
7:30p.m . (Johnson) .

LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9: 30

a.rrf:; Worship 10: 30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Wednesday, 7: SO p.m .. Communion First
Sunday ot Month iRev. Charles Eatonl

REEDSVILLE -Church S&lt;hool9: 30 a.

m.: Worship ServJce 11·00 a .m

TIJPPERS

PLAINS ST. PAUL -

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

CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. Don Meado...
Rev. Wsley Thatcher
Rev. Fr""" Smtih
Rev. Kalhrye Klier
lk!v. Ron Fteree
Rev. Arthur Crabtree

Rev. Florea ce Smith
ASBURY (Syracuse) -Worship 11 a .m .
: Church School9: 45 a .m .: Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.: UMW, first
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.: Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6:30p.m. !Thatcher)

ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;

Church SchoollO a .m.; Bible Study, Tues·
day, 7:00p.m; UMW, First Monday, 7:30

p.m.; UMYF Sunday. 6 p.m. tRiley\
FLATWOODS- Church School, IOa.m.

: Worship, 11 a .m.; Bible Study, Thurs·
day, 7 p.m .; UMYF , Sunday, 6 p,m , IRI·

ley).
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.:

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

(Thatcher\

HEATH fMiddleport ) - Church School,
9: 30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10: :J) a.m.;
Youth Group, 4 p.m.: Wednesday, Bible
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehNrsal7: 00 p.m.
(Frank Smith}.

MINERSVILLE- Church School9:00

a.m.; Worship .ervlce 10: 00 a.m.; UMW

third Wednesday. I p.m. {Thatcher!
PEARL CHAPEL - Church School 9: 1'0
a.m.; WorshiP Service 10: 00 am. (Florence Smtih)

POMEROY- Cllur&lt;h School. 9:15a.m.

; Worship 10: 30 a.m.; Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m .: UMW, second
Tuesday. 7:30p.m.: UMYFSunday, 6p.m 1
(Meadows)

ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: 15

am.; Worship 10:30 a.m. : Bible Study.
·Thursdav. 7:30p.m. IBakerl.
SU'ITON - Church School. 9: 30 a m :
Morning Worship 10. 45a.m. fir stand third
Sundays: Fellowship dinner wllh Carmel
third Thursday. 6·JO p.m. 1Baker).

EAST LETART- MornJngiVorshlp9:00
a.m.: ChurehSchoollO:OOa .m.; UMWfirst
Tuesday 7: :JJ p.m. IGrace ).
RACINE - Olu rch School. 10 a.m ; Worship 11 am.; UMW fourth Monday at7:~p.
m.; Men's Prayer Breakfast, Wednesday, 8
am. (Grace)

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Roger

Spring, minister: Starling Mas~ar and 01·
iver Swain, Sunday School Supts. Preech·
lng 9· 30 a.m. each Sunday: Sunday School
10: 30 a.m.

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

CHRISTIAN UNION, Theron Durham.
pastor. Sunday service. 9:30a.m.: even·
lng serviCE' 7:00 p .m Pr'ayer mft"1ing,
Wednesday, 7:00p.m.

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

CHRIST. Jack Colegrove, pastor. Bible
Class, 9:30a.m.; MornlngWorstup 10:30a.
m.: Evening Worship, 6:30p.m. Thursday
BlbiPStudy, 6::11 p.m.

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pometoy·

HarrtsonvUieRd. IRt. U3l RobertE . Pur·
tell, minister; Steve Stanle'f, Bible School
Supt.; HarlpY Johnson, Asst. Supt. SUN-

DAY: Bible School 9:30a.m.: Worship
10:30 A.M. and 7:30P.M,: Wednesday Bl·
ble Study,7:00 p m.

ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pin•

Grove. The Rev. Laura A. Leach. pastor.
Church service 9:30a.m. : Sunday School
10:30 a .m.

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,

Tom Runyon pastor Sunday Scbool9:30
a.m.: Larry kaynes. S. S. Supt. Morntnp:
worship 10:30 a.m.

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

RENE. Rev John Vance, pastor: Ora
Bass. Chairman or the Board of Christian
Lite. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Morning
Worshl 10; 30 a.m., EvangE"IIcal service.
7:00p.m.; Wednesday service. 7:00p.m.

LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. O.x-

tPr. Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p. m.

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH.

Lloyd Sayre. Supt. Sunday School 9: :ll a.
m .: mornlnJI: worship 10·;10 a .m . Sunday
E.&gt;Venlng servicE' 7 p.m .

RACINE FIRST

BAPTIST. Steve

De::tver, Pastor. Mlkt&gt; Swiger, Sunday
School Supt ; Sunday School 9:30 a m :
Morning worship 10:40 a m .; Sunday
evening worship 7:30p.m.: WednE"Sday
evening Bible study 7:30p.m.
·

BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH.

BurUngham Ray LaudermUt. pastcr: Robert Cozart, asslsrant past(J". Sunday ,School
10 a.m.: worship 7 p.m.: Wednesday . 6 p.m.
youth meeting: Wed. 7 p.m. church services.

PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH. \!i

mile of{ Rt . 325 Rev . &amp;&gt;n J. Watts, pastor
Robert Searles. S S. Supt. Sunday School.
9:30 a.m.: MornlnJl Worship 10. 30 a.m.;
Sundav evenlnR service 7. 30 p. m .: Wf'd·
nesday servtcl!. 7:30p.m.

SILVER RUN BAPTIST. Bill Little.

pastor Steve Little, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SrhoollO a.m.: Morning worslp. 11 a.m.;
Sunday pvenlngworship 7. 30 p.m . Prayer
m('("tlng and BiblE' Study Wednesday, 7 30
p m : Youth mE'E'tlng Wednesday at 7 p.m

REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd A.,. .. Middleport. Sunday

SChool 10 a .m. Sunday E'venln~ 7:00p.m.:
Mld·wt"ek Sf'rvlce. Wed .. 7 p m
.

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH .

Sunday Schoal9· 30 a .m .: Jeff Smith, sup1
; MorninJ;: worship 10:30 a .m .: &lt;Sunday
evening SE'rvtce, 7:30 p.m .. Wednesday
evening servlcr. 7· 30 p m .

EDEN

UNITED

BRETHREN IN

CHRIST, Elden R. Blakf', pastor. Sunday
School 10 a.m.: G!ry Rerd, Lay leader.
Mornln~ sermon. ll a.m .. Sunday nlp:ht
services: Christian Endeavor 7:30pm ..
SOng serviCE' 8 p.m . Preaching 8· X. p.m
Mid-week prayer meetinJt:, W('dnesday. 7

p.m
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CENTER.

Salem St., Rutland. H.obl&gt;rt E. Musser.
pastor Sunday School 10:00 am.: Worship Sl"rvlct&gt;, 1: 15 a .m .: Sunday evening
service, 7· 00 p.m : Thursday evpnlng ser·

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David

a.m .: Worship 10 a.m ; Bible Study, Wed·
· nesday, 7: 30p.m.; UMYF (SenlonJ. Sunday, 6 p.m.: (Juniors) every other Sun-

Prenllre. pastor. Diaries Domlgan, Sun·
day School Supt. Morning Worship 9:30 a .
m :Sunday School10: 30a .m.: Evenlngser·
vice. 7:00p.m
.

RUTLAND- Sunday School, 9; :.1 a .m .:
Worship .ervlce, 10; 30 a.m.; Bible Stuy. 7
p.m. Thursday. (Crabtree\ .

Sayre, Sundav School9: 45 a .m.; Eveninp:
worship 6:31)p.m.: Prayer Meetlng, 6:30
p.m Wednesday.

day, 6 p.m. (Riley\.

SALEM CENTER- Church School 9·15
a.m.: Mornlft.l Worship IO: 15 a.m.
!Fierce)
SNOWVILLE- Mom1D1 Worship, 9:00
a.m.; Church SChoollO:OO a.m. (Florence

Smith)

MT. UNION BAPTIST. Pastor: Joe N.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF

CHR,IST. Robert Foster, paste.-: Howard
Caldwell. Superintendent; Church school
9 a .m.; Worship servlce9:45a.m.and6:30
p.m. Evervooe welmme.

CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA-

SOUTHERN CLUSTJ!R
Rev. Kenneth Baker
Rev. Bo1er Grace

Rev. CariHieb
APPLE GROVE - Church School 9:00
a.m: Morning WQrshlp 10:00 a .m.: Bible
Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Prayer meetlng
7:00p.m. Thursday. (Hicks)
BETHANY - Worship 9 a.m.; Ohu l"('h
School10 am.: BtbleStudy Wedntmay 10
a.m : Dorcas Women's Fellowship Wednesday 11 a .m . (Baker) .
CARMEL- Chureh School9!30 'a .m .;
Worship, 10:45 a.m. Second and FoUrth
SundatYt; Fellowship dinner with Suttoo

tldrd hunday, 6:30p.m. (Baker&lt;.
'
S&lt;hool9·. 45
\ MORNING STAR -Church
.

RENE . Rev.

Herbert Grate.

pastcr.

Douglas Btuel~ oupt. Sunday S&lt;hod 9:30

a .m. ; Worship ~ervl~. 11 a .m. and 6 p.m.
Sunday. Wednesday, 7 p.m Prayer meet·
In!(.

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. William Williams, polla-: Ro·
bert E . BartM, Director of Christian Edu·
cation; Steve Eblin, asstatant. Sunday
School 9:30a .m.: Morning worship 10:30
a .m.; Teens In Action. 6 p.m.: Evening
Worship, 7:00p.m. ChOir r,r~ctlce 8 p.m.
Sunday. Wednesday PVPn 11 prayer and

Blbl..ludy.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,

Roger Watson. mlnllter: Norman Will.

supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m.: Worsldp
service 10: 30 a.m. Bible study, Wednea·

"J\f;~~~~~i~~~~~~CHURCH
OF JESUS
r
DAY SAINTS. Port·
Mike Ouhl. pastor:

Ch,.;;ter.,

COVENANT CHURCH.
Hines. pastor. Sunday

9: a.m.: Worship service at
10:30 a m., Sunday evening servlct&gt;, 6· 00
&amp;t

p m.: Wednesday

Di s~ tple

Class, 7·00 p .

m.

Janice Danner. church school dlrpctor
Church school9: 30 a.m.: Mornln~ worship
10.30 a.m.: Wednesdav evening prayer
services. 7· 30 p.m.

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev . Ear•

Sh'uler, pastor. Worship .service, 9· 30 a .m
Sundav Schooll0:30 a.m. Bible Study a nd
prayef service Thursday. 7:30p.m.

a .m.
worship service 7 00 p.m. Wednesday
prayer meeting 7 00 p.m.

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN

IN CHRIST CHURCH. Located In Texas'
Community orr Ct. Rt 82. Rev . Robert
Sanders. pastor. Jeff Hol ter la y leader:
Ed Roush. Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 9.30 a.m .. m orning worship and
cttildren's c hurch 10 30 a.m .. evPnin.'{
pr each tn~ service first three Sundays
1 30 p.m.: Sp('('lal servl('(' founh Sunday
evening. 7:30 p m .. Wednesday Prayer
Meetmg, Bible Study and Youth Fellow shi p. 7· 30 p.m

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

nesday, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN
992BAPTIST
-2259
Rev . . Nyle
Borden. pastor Cornelius Bunch. s upt.
Sunday School 9: 30 a.m.: Second and
fourth Sundays worship service a t 2:30 p

m

,

MT . MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and

Main St .. Middleport. Rev . Gilbert Craig,
Jr .. pastor. Mrs . Ervin Baumgardner.
Sunday School Supt Sunday School9: 30 a
m.: Worship Sf'rvlce, 10 :45 am.

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST

-Joseph B. Hoskins. evangelist. Sunday
BlbleStudv 9 a .m., Worship, lOa.m.: Sunday evening Sf'rvice 6 p.m.; Wednesday
evf'nlng servlcf' 1 1 p.m

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Racine.

Rt. 124. William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
School10 a.m. : Sunday evening service 7
p.m Wednesday f'venlng service 7 p.m
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Supt Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning
Worship 10 . 30a. m. Prayer serv ice, a lt ern·
ate Sundays.

CHURCH. 28601 StatE' Rout~! 7. Mlddlerort Sunday School10 a m.: Sunda~· even·
ng service 7:30 p.m : Tuesday service.
7~pm
•
~

Located on 0 .J WhltP Road of Hi ghway
160. Pat Henson. pas tor Sunday SchoollO
a.m Classes for all aJl:es. Junior Churc h ll
a m ; Mornin2 worship 11 a.m. Adult
Choir practice£ p m Sunday. Young Peo·
pl(''s. Children's Chu rch and Adult Bible
Stud:-' . Wednesd ay at 7:30 pm
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Gran1
Sr . Mtddleport Affiliated wllh Southern
Baptist Convf'nllon. David Brvan. Sr . Ml·
nlster Sunda,v School 10 a m : Mornin g
worship 11 a.m.; Evening worship 7 p.m ;
Wednesdav evPnlng Bible slud v and
prayer meelln2 7 p m.

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.

Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Derek Stump. pastor

TER of thC' Wesleyan Holiness Chu rch.
RPv . Earl Fields. pastor. Henry Eblin.
Sunday School Supt.; Sunday School10 a.
m: Morning Worsh ip 11 a m.: Evening
servlet' 7· 30 p m Wedn esday evening service 7· 30 p.m .

William Amberger. S. S. Sup! . Sunllav
School 9· 30 a m : Mornin~ Worship 10. 30
a m ; Evening worshap 7· 30 p m Wednes·
da:.' worship 7· JO p.m

Gary Holler, pastor. Sunday se rvi ces 9· 30
a m. and 7 p m : M!dwe£&gt;k s~v lce , 7•30 p
m. Thursday

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·

AL CHURCH. Kingsbury Road. Rev.
Clyd~ W. Henderson. pastor Sunday
School 9:30a.m .. Ralph Carl. Supt . Even·
lng worship 7.00 p.m. Prayer meeting.
Wednesday 7:00p.m

OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST

r.

Bob Grtmm. pastor. Sunday School9: 30 a
m.; Worship 10: 45 a.m.; Sunday evening
service. 7 p m.

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald

KnDb, located on County Road 31. Rev
~er Willford, pastor. Sunay SchoolS: 30
a.m.; Morning Worship 10:45 a .m .; Sun day eventng worship 7:00p. m : Wf'dnes day E"Yenlng Bible Study 7:00 p.m .

WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN. Cool-

ville RD. Rev. Phillip Ridenour , pastor

Sunday Scbool 9: 30a.m .: worship service
10·30 a .m .; Bible study and worship service, Wednesday. 7 p.m.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Eu·

aene- E. Underwood. mlnlsiE'r. Sunday
School, 9:30a.m : Morning worship, 10· 30
a.m.; Evening Worship. 7:00 p.m.

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Rev.

Ivan Myers. Sunday School9: 30 a.m . with
Sonny Hudson, Supt.; Eventna: service
7:00p.m, Prayer meeting and Bible study,
WPdn@Sday. 7 p.m.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA -

RENE. Samuel Basye. pastor. Sunday
School 9:30a.m .: Worship St&gt;rvtce 10 30a
m.: Young People's S.rvlce 6 p.m
Evangellstlcservlce6: 30 p.m. Wednesday
SE'I'VIC£1' 7 p.m.

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller

St., Mason, W Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
a.m.: Worship 11 a .m . and 7 p.m Wednf'S ·
day BiblE' Study, vocal music. 7 p.m.

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·

dine Lane. Mason. W. Va. J. N. Thacker .
pastor. Evening service 7:30 p.m .: Wo·
men's Ministry Thursday, 9:30a.m.: Wed nesday Prayer and Bible Study 7:15p.m .

IDLLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH. St. Rf .

143just on Rt. 7. Rev. James R. Acree Sr ..
pastor: Rev. Mike Willett, Asst. Pastor:
Joe Humphrey, S.S. Supt: Sunday School
tO a.m.: MornlngWorshlplla.m.: Sunday,
evenln, servl~ 6 p.m. : Wednesday evenIng 7 p.m.

PORTLAND FIRST CHURCH OF THE

NAZARENE, William Justis , pastor. Sun ·
day School Supt . SORja Justis. Sunday
· School. 9:30a.m.: morning worship, 10: 40
a.m.: Sunday and WednHday services ,

' ~J'i8'LEFORT COMMVNrrY CHURCH .
575 Pearl-St .. Sam Andenioo, pastor. Sunday

7

ST.

a.m
VICTORY BAPTIST m N 2nd St.

Middleport . Jam es E. Ke est't'. pastor.
Sunday mornln2 worshap 10 a. m .: Eve nm,e servtrc 7 p m : Wednesdav evening
worship 7 p m VIsitation Thu rsdav 6: .'\0 p.

m.
MORSE CHAPEl. CHURCH. David

Curtman. pastor Sund.w Sc hool. 10 a.m ,
worship sE"rvlcc J I a m: Sund av night
worship servicf' 7:.10 p.m : Midwe ek
prayer ~P1vlrr Wl'dnesdav 7 p.m

WESLEYAN

BIBLE

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.
Va. Tbe Rev GeofRe C. Weirick. pastor.
Sunday SChod 9:30a.m .; Sunday worship
11 a.m.

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on

Pomeroy Pike. County Road 25 near Flat·
woods. Rev. Blackwood, pastor. Services
on Sunday at JO: SO ~ . m. and 7:30p.m. wltrt
Sunday Schoo\ I: 30 a.m Bible Study, Wed·

nt!lday, 7:ll p.m.
SPIRITUAL FAITH FELLOWSHIP.

State Route 338, AnUqutty. Rev. A. I . Ste·
wart, pastor. Sunday servlces,10a.m, and
7 p.m.; Tuesday,? p.m.

MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH, Inc.. 7$ Pearl St. Rov .

Ivan Myers, acting pasta-; Rorer, Manley ,

Sr.,

Sunday !lcbool Superlnlencleot. Sun-

day School 9:30 a.m.; Morning worship
10:30 a.m.: evenlna warship 7:JQ p.m;
Wedaaday evenlna Bible study, prayer
and pralle servtce, 7:30p.m.
~

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS-

TOUC - VanZandt and Ward Rd . Elder
James Miller, p.at(l". Sunday SchOol, .
10:30 a.m.; Worship Service, Sunday, 7: 30
p.m.: Bible Study, W-Oiday, 7:lJ p.m.

CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harr~

aonvOieRoad. Rev. VIctor Routh, pastor;
Clint Cit Faulk. Sunday School Supt.: Sun.

day School9:30a.m.; mornlntworshlp, II

HO LINESS

CHURCH of Mlddl eport. Inc.. 71 Prarl St ..
Rev . Ivan Mvc&gt;r s. past or: RoJtcr Man lev.
Sr . Sundav School Supt Sunda v School
9:30a.m: Mornin g Worshi p 10:30 am;
Evening Wors hip 7: 30 p.m . Wcdn esdav
evenin g Bibl e studv. praver and prais e
SC'rvlce. i&lt;lO p m .
FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH. Long Bot·
tern. Sundav School. 9: 30a.m ; Mor ning
Worship 10: 45 a .m.: Sunday evening 7 00
p.m !summ er 7 :w p.m. 1. WC'dnt'Sdav
night 7·00 p m . uummer 7 30 p.m 1.

NEW LI FE COVENANT CHURC H OF
GOD, Chester- Garv Hines . pastor Su n·
day Sc hool 9· 30 a m i worship servll'f',
10: 30a .m .: Pvenln~ service, 6 p.m .: Di!&lt;!cl·
pleship class. Wednf'Sday. 7 p .m.

MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH.

Lawrence Bus h, pastor Sunday School
9·.10 a .m.; ~unday and WednPsday evenInS::" worship sPrvlcE'. 7. 00 p m .

UNITED FAITH CHURCH. Rf . ?on Po·

meroy By Pass Rev . Robert E . Smith. Sr.
pastor. Melvin Drake, S S Supt Sunday
Schoo19· 30 a m .. Mornln10:: Wors hip 10: 30:
Evening Worship 7:00pm: Wf'dn E"Sday
Prayer Service. 7.00 p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH , Railroad
St . Mason. Sunday School 10 a .m ; Morn.
lng worship 11 a m : Evf'nlng SE'rvlce 6 p
m. Praver meeting and BlblP St udy WPd

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker. pastor. Carl Nottingham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 10 a m. with classes for all ages .
£venl ng services at 6 p.m . Wedn esday BJ•
h!e srudy at 7·30 p.m . Youth services Frl·
day a17:30 p m.

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. 128 Mlll St.,

Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson .
pastor Sunday School 10 a .m.: Sunday
eve ning services at 'lp.m and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m .

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith.

pastor. Sunday School 9:30a.m.: church
serv ice 7:30p.m. ; youth f ellowsh ip 6: 30 p.
m: Bibl e s tudy, Thursda y, 7·30 p.m

FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 33045

Hiland Road, Pom eroy. Tom Kelly, pastor. Danny Lamber t, S. S. Supt. Sunday
morning service at 10 a.m., Sunday even
lng setvlce 7· 30 p.m . Tuesday and Thurs:
day S£"rvlces at 7· 30 p m.

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA -

ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud. pastor .
Sunda y School9· 30 a m.; Worship service.
10·30 a .m ; Youth service Sunday 6:15 p.
m. Sunday evening serviC£1' 7 00 p m. Wed·
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
·
7·00 p m .

NEASE SETI'LEMENT CHURCH, Sun- •

day afternoon services at 2· 30 Thursday
eve ning services at 7. 30.

~
~

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Ma son, W. ,

Va . Rev. Wallace Mings, pastor. Sunday ,
School 10 a.m. ; Sunday evening service, 6
p.m.; Prayer meeting and Bible s,tudy
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m.

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa-

lem St Rev Paul Taylor. pastor. Sunday
Schoo110 a.m.; Sunday even ing 7·00 p m .;
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00 ,

p.m
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT

CHURCH . Silver Ridge. Duane Sydenstrlcker. pastor. Sunday School 9 a. m .;
Worship &amp;&gt;rvlcE'. 10 a.m .; Sunday evening
service, 7 00 p m Wednesday night Bible
stuct y 7· 00 p m .

Sermonette

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

7:30p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH.

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,

PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH

Corner Sycamore and St&gt;cond Sts. Pomerov. The&gt; Rev Laura A. Le ach. past or
Sunday School9 · 45 a .m Churc h sNvlcc&gt; 11

CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va
Rev. David McManis. pastor. Chureh
School 9· 30 a.m., Sunday morning ser·
vice, 11 a.m.; Sunday evening service.
7:30p.m. Wednesday prayer meetlnp:, 7:30
.W. Va., Rl. 1, James Lewis. pastor. Wor
ship services 9::.) a.m.: Sunday Schoolll
a.m.; EvPnlng worship 7· 30 p.m. Tuesdav
.cottage prayer meeting and Bible Studv
9: 30 a.m.: Worship service, Wednesday

HARRISONVILLE HOLIN ESS CHAP·

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St '

momlng sevlce. 10 a .m.; Evening servtces. ·
9Jnay and Wednelday. 7· Jl p m.

p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart.

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.

APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,
nl'xl to Fort Meigs Park. Rutland. Robert
Richards, pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
Wednesdays and Sunda ys

THE SEASON OF ADVENT
Many ques tions have

been rai sed regarding the season of Advent.ls II

more than a lighting of purple and pink randles In our morning worship
servlces? What significance does it have m o ur per'son&lt;:~l live s·~
The season of Advent Is meant to be a time for C h r1stains to prepa re
themselves to celebrate Christ' s co ming to earth. The word " Adve nt "
comes from a Latin word which me a n s "arrival" or "coming into
being' ', This is the time of year when we celebrate C hrist's first coming
as a babe In a Bethlehem manger and look forward to Hi s seco nd co m in~
as our Victorious Klngl
The AdVent wreath wlth Its five candles is one of thP most fa miliar
symbols of this season. The wreath it self befng cJrcular and unending.

represents God's unfailing love to His chtldren. The greenery of the
wreath represents everlasling life. such as Is available lo us through
Jesus Christ. The color of lhe candles Is symbolic also The purple

'

candles represent r oya lty and expectan cy. The pink candle that Is lit

alter tile three purple candles represeniS the firs! faint lighl of dawn
breaking on the horizon. The white candle in the center of Ihe wreath
represents Chris!, the pure son of God, the Light of the World .
So how does all of this af!ecl us personally? All of us make gradiose
plans for Christmas: shopping !ISis, three feet long menus for the

•

~

Christmas feasts that would embarrass most chefs, and d~oratlons for
our homes to make them more festive. This year perhaps we should

should also \nclud~ In our preparallons splrilual lists and menu s lhat
will cause us to be really ready for receiving lhe Ullimale ChriSimas
Gift, Jesu's Christ!
" Joy to th e World! The Lord ls Como-: Let cat 111 ICCl'!VC' he r l\ lNG!

LET EVERY HEART PREPARE HIM ROOM! And heaven and nature
sing! ''

- Rev. James A. Seddon, Middleport First Bapllst Church

•

•

•

••

�........, I

~~Beat
•
•

~the

of

By

Bob
Hoeflich

Bend..

;•· By BOB HOEFLICH
are heading the tour which may
• can tell it's the Christmas weU become an annual event.
sf on bee~ it. IS beginning to
liOk a lot like luistmas.
Modem Woodmen of America
; ¥y beaten path, so far, takes me Camp 10900 members will be stagfl!f the most pw1 only fmm horne to ing their annual Family Chrisunas
. . - Memorial Hospital, but
i'~ iJnpm~sed. Most of that path is
t.6Jberry Ave., and the street looks.
There are numerous lighted
from the Bob B~k .
e through to the hosp1tal.
yne Davis home along the
dY looks like it's right out of a
~ England seaing and the Roy
Betzing home is really welllighred.
Residents of Mulbeny Ave., are
really lighting up my life. Thanks ·
I 'preciate it.
The relative new Middlepon Ans
Ccluncil is sponsoring what could
~~ nice program on Sunday, Dec.

·,.The program is called "A
Christmas Celebration • The tint
.A:Rr:tual Village Church Tour" and
liOjJrs wiU be from I to 4 p.m.
'the tour is to permit area
to appreciate the natural
lle"auty and warmth of the Middlepon churches during the holiday
season.
, Churches of the town have been
i~ted to particiate and the council
i~·· · suggestmg !hat IJ:le ch~h
provide greeters and IS offenng
s11ggestions that the churches might
~~ to mclude bght refreshments,
l!r,ing ·trees, music and other
f~s to enhance the public rour.
AJ!d cenainly the paruc1paung
churches will come up with some
ori~inal ideas to add to lhe rour.
~ ·Mary Wise and Shirley Quickel

#ldents

Fri~y. December 7, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pllge-6-The Daily Sentinel

Party this Sunday from 4 to 6 p.m.
at the Lion's Club hall, Main and
Third Sts. in Coolville.
The camp will provide oyster
soup, c~ackers, relishes, hot dogs
and beverages free of charge with
each family auending ~ing asked
to take a dessert 10 share.
The Camp will present its Community Service Award during the
pany and there will be singing of
carols plus a visit fCQ!ll Santa who
wiU have treats for the children.
Members will also be pro~iding entcnainment and a Christmas sharing collection to provide food baskets for the needy will be held. ·
Rounding out the event will be
·election of officers for 1991 and the
presentation of awards to 25 and ·so
years members. The party is Opel]
to the public.

u

Donna Wright, the former Donna
Sidders who used to reside in the
Darwin area of Meigs County. underwent open hean surgery on Nov.
24. She is currently recouperating
at horne. She would love hearing
from her Meigs County friends.
"The address is 35 Heffner SL
Delaware Ohio 43015
'
·
'
·
Take a positive approach on that
Christmas gift exchange at .the
office . after all, you 'II need swff
for nex t summer's yard sale. Do
keep smiling.

Local AAUW member chosen to travel in delegation
Rachael E. Downie, Racine, a
member of the Middleport·
Pomeroy Branch of the American
Association of University Women,
has been offered the opponunity 10
senoe as a team member of a
delegation of American women by
the Citizen Ambassador Program of
People to People Inremational to
visit the Soviet Union this sping.
'The Citizens Ambassador Program
is working in conjunction witli the
Soviet Women's Federation of the
USSR.
· The selecred team will examine
the social status of women in the
Soviet Union and their roles as
business, educational and political
'reP.resentatives. Team members
w1U also meet . with women in
government, business and educa-

Officers elected
by fire department
The Rutland Volunteer Fin:
Department met recently at the fin:
house to elect officers.
·
·.
Elec.ted were Bill Williamson,
chief; David Davis and Dan Davis,
assistant chiefs; David Willianlson
and Mark Richmond, captains; ·
Steve Morris, tint lieutenant; Ray .
Willford, second lieutenant; Charlie
Barren III and Mike Willford training officers; Charles Bam:uJr. and
Dan Davis, presidents; Ray
Willford, vice-president; Fred Wiilianlson, secretary; Bill Willianlson, treasurer and reporter.
Members of the lloard of
Trustees are. Bill Willianlson and
David Willianlson.

tion who are providing leadership
in lhe Soviet Union .
According 10 Sharon Schuster,
president of the American Associa·
tion of University WOOlen, the opportunity for American business
women and community volunteers
10 meet with their Soviet counterpans is unique since it will taice
place in the Soviet Union, the industtialized nation with the highest
percentage of women in the
workfon:e, and one that employs
high pm:entages or women in
professions that are traditionally
male dominared.
The delegation of team members
will meet with representatives of

A Christmas potluck dinner and
gift exchange was held recently by
the Busy Bee Class of the First
Baptist Church.
The meal was served and followed by devotions b)' Sharon
Seddon
entitled
"Christmas
Journey." The scripture was from
Matthew 2:7.
Community Calendat items ap- 6422 or 378-6371 for information,
Gifts were exchanged by mempear. two days before an event and
bers and the class presented gifts to
the day of that event Items must. be
RACINE · The Racine Baptist Rev. and Mrs. James Seddon and
received in advance to insure pub· Church BYF will have a skaling Jerry Pullins class teacher.
A social time followed and was ·
licalion in the calendai,
party on Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
enjoyed
by aU present.
·
"
Skate-A-Way
in
Chester.
The
;i ll
Auending
were
Caroline
Miller,
public is invited.
'
.~DAY
Pooch
Brewer,
Lillian
Demosky,
i'MIDDLEPORT • Revival at the
Elizabeth Slaven, Nora Jordail,
Oil! · Bethel Freewill. Baptist .
SUNDAY
Gwennie
White, Betty Gi~
Chlirch, south of Middlepon, will
CHESTER · The Ken Atnsbary Dorothy Evans,
Beuy Denny, F
ll('.lJeld through Saturday at 7:30 Chapter of the lzaak Walton Edwards, Rosemary _Lyons, Ruth
p.gr,, Rev. Miles Trout wiU be the League will have a muzzle loader Ebersbach, Beulah White, Jerry
rine shoot beginning at I p.m. on Pullins, and guests, Rev. and Mr.l.
e~gelist. Special singing nightly.
Sunday
at the club house. There Seddon and Ginger Darst.
f ·~
· RACINE · The Southern Local will also be a 22-rifl e shoot.
Chapter of the National Honor
Society will sponsor a toy drive
RACINE · The Southern High
lhill!gh Dec. 14. New or good used School Choir will present its annaul
tOfs may .be contributed. Toys may Christmas musical on Sunday at i.
The honor roll for l.etan .FaUs
lJel:taken to Southern High School p.m. at the high school.
Elementary
School has been and~g lhe hours of 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
nounced.
.
~ toys will be given to lhe Meigs
MONDAY
grade·
Janet
Cniig, Roberta
First
Coonty toy bank. For more inforRUTI.AND · A final meeting on Forrester, Lori Sayre,
Crystal
mation call Kim Phillips, 949-2611. easements for the planned sewer
Ian
Wise.
South,
•
system in Rutland has been
Second grade · Kati Cummins,
:VINTON • The Pine Grove schedule(! for Monday at 7:30 p.m Hotly Hannan, Jessica Nance, Fal·
Hc&gt;liness Chapel, Route 235, Yin- at the Rutland Civic Center. lon Roush."
toO, five miles from Route 124 Residents with questions or in need · Third grade · Alex Chaffee, Alex
R«wlesville Road, wiU have revival of additional information regarding Dowler, Brawn Herman, Ryan Hill,
Chris Jones, Misty Sellers, Mandy
~ugh Dec. 16 at 7:30 p.m. installation of lhe system are ,en.
nifhtly. Rev. and Mrs. David Light, couraged to attend the meeting. , Spaun.
Fourth
grade
·
Daniel
Hannan,
e'18gelists. Public invited.
Jane
'
Hillj
Mike
Johnson,
David
•
POMEROY • The Disabled Nance,
oshua
Whitley,
Jody
'~TIVERSVll.LE • David Car- American Veterans and Auxiliary Wolfe Rebecca Wolfe.
pen.ter, Bellville, W.Va., wiU con· wi ll meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Fifth grade • Dean HiU, Jennifer
· due:t revival at the Stiversville hall on Butternut Avenue. A Roush 1 Ranetta Wheeler.
W9fd of Faith Church on County Christmas dinner will be served
Sixm grade • Trudy Justis,
Rdad 31 through Sunday at 7:30 prior to the meeting. Men bring a ·Jeremy Lyons, Ryan Norris, Adam
p.m-. nightly. Pastor Gary Holter in- man's gift, women bring a woman's Roush, Kimberly Roush, Jessica
Sayre, Lora Sayre, Vanessa Shuler.
vites lhe public.
gift.
~ MIDDLEPORT • The Evangeline Chapter No. 172 Order of
tije Eastern Star, Middleport, will
meet Friday for installation of
officers. Installing officer will be
lfary Poner, past grand matron. .
SUE ENDS DEC. 24, 1990
Refreshments will be served.
1\lembers bring sandwi~hes and
rqlish
,. trnys.

POINSETTIAS

$299

FRUTH PHARMACY

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9
BAING YOUFI CAMERA

· The Ewi~~ of the Sons .
of the
·
Revolution
recently dedicated a new vetman 's
grave martt.r at the Chester
Cemetery for Meip County
Pioneer, Peter Grow.

VIDEO
TOUCH

SANTA WILL BE AT

2 P.M . TIL 4 P.M.

SAR dedicates
grave marker
in Chester

Xeitb Ashley, chapler president,
conclucled tbo cauooolea which
bc:pn witb a hiS1IirY of Grow. He
wu the 14111 of 16 cbildrell ~John
and Mary Farrington n....... Or·
J)llaDed w11en his
his
f8lber WU Itilled from I fall from I
1!*1 of hay, he eallsled at Dudley,

Middleport &amp; flomtro'

r*·;x:-

1990

Mus.,

CHEVY
CORSICA
PRICED

PRICED

Al$799 5

AT$999 5
CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC·GEO, INC.
992-6614

Community calendar

'

'

308 EAn MAIN

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Dec. 3 came and went and the big
oae didn't rock the Midwest.
While scientists continue debating the probability of In·
creased seismic activity In the
region, a!lotber debate Is brew·
lng In the Insurance Industry.
Is earthquake Insurance neces·
sary! Experts at Ohio State
University generally agree that
homeowners should consider lt.
•"'''lere Is a real risk," geophysicist Hallan Noltlmler said
Thursday. "I believe that having
earthquake Insurance Is a slm·
pte, straightforward, long-term,
responsible thing to do because
It's cheap.
"You have to weigh the riSks,"
said Carolyn McKinney, family
resource management specialist
at Ohio State. "Is there a riSk of
enough damage to your property
from an earthquake to justify the
expense you'lllncur from paying
bOth the premium and the
deductible If you have a claim?"
The chances of a quake happening on Dec. 3 were only about

&amp;§4·'

POMEROY, OHIO

~·
I-ENTERPRISE • The Enterprise.

U)iired Methodist Church will have
a!Oirisunas bazaar and bake sale
"Friday from 8 a.m. to 9 p.m . at
ll:Z. W. Main St. in Pomeroy, formally Corky's Classics.

~

I TIJPPERS PLAINS · There will

b4 a round and square dance at the
Tfppers Plains VFW Post on
. F~day from 8-11:30 p.m. featuring
Tlue Country Ramblers. Ronnie
~ will be the caller. Cost is
for adults and $1 for childen
wider 12. Public invited.
. ~
· SATURDAY
t;POMEROY • The Belles· and
~us Western Square Dance Club
wPJ sponsor an open dance on
~ . from 8-11 p.m. at the
se~nor Citizens center m Pomeroy.
($1er will be Sonny Bess, HunW.Va.

The BOSS .• Upright

• Carpel Height Adjustlnent
• Edge Kleanar" On Both Sides
• Power Driven Beater Bar
Brush Roll
• Top-Fill Bag
• Powerful · ·
Lifellme lubricated
Motor

Lowest Priced ESP"
Ever From Eureka

$69

95

uuron.

;:BURLINGHAM • The Burlin·
. ~ Modem Woodsmen will have
,(j Olristmas pony on Saturday at
6~ p.m. 8l the hall. Bring a
dish and table service.
~ beverages will be furMeals will be delivered tG
elderly and shut-ins before the

i

Jl4ty.

~MEROY • "Star Trek-Space

Stled" will be shown at lhe Meigs

Qmty Public Library on Sawrday

~

• Cutl CleanlliG Time In HaHI
• 6.~ Amp ESP' Ellra
Suction Power' f!loiDr
• 6 Polhton Clrpet
Height Adjllllmant

.......

"

. - Ill* WIWIIIII 1t111
dltfl clllniA QfD01ft1

Moclel2134

Eureka Rallf
Power Team
3.5 Peak H.P. Motor

'::!%~~lean
• Tool f'lk&lt;l'

l1a
$1
190

OFF'

EDSVD..LE • The Fellowship
h or the Nazarene in
~ille wiU have a bazaar on
S~ at the church, Call 378-

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung
by the fire and scenes blanketed with snow,
Christmas encompasses warmth and good cheer as we
cherish the blessings we've shared this past year.
For us it means saying "thanks" to you, our many
friends, old arid new, whose kind support we'll always
treasure. Doing business with you is our
greatest pleasure!

, L. ..... .

, ,.,

GRAVE MAlUIDIG • Tile Ewings C~pter or . Chester Cemetery for Meigs COUIIty ~oneer,
the SoliS rl ~ ADieriCIIII Revolution fi!CeDtly Peter GnJW. The ceremOily eo!lduded by
dedicated a DeW veteran's 11'11¥1! marker at tbe Keith Ashley, chapter praldeliL
· · ·.
1830's.

"e

Grow died March 13, 1837, at
Chesler at the
of 73. He was
inlluential ill gelling other members
of his fainily to come to Mcip. .
Among those were his nepbew,
Philo Shumway; hia niece, ~
Grow Cunis; and his nephew,
Henry Reynolds of Racine..
Olher laking part in the
ceremony wem .Mrs. Mlugaret
Parker, president of the Meigs
County Pioneer and Historical
Society;
Mrs. Eileen Clark,

Syracuse Council Daughters of
America: · Richard Jones, Meigs
County
Commissioner;
Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds, regent of Return
Ionathan Meip Chapter Daughters
of the Amencan Revolution; the
Chester Cub Seouts; Richard
Vaughan Sr., Drew Webster Post of
the American Legion; and Whitney
and Rachel Ashley of the Children
of the American Revolution. .
Drew Webster post eonducred a
military gun salute and the Chester
Cub Scouts presented Hags. Keith

Ashley, lifer of Ewings Chapter,
played "Chesler" which was the
song used in the Revoludon in
place of a national anthem. Over 20
collaleral relatives present were
recognized.
The grave marker was donaled
by Dr. Stirling Huntley, Californi,a.
who is a direct descendant of Peter
Grow. He is also the great Jllllldson
of two of the first graduates of
Poineroy High School.
Following
the
ceremony,
refreshments wen: served at the
Chester D. of A. Lodge Hall.

gradual~
1M United in~he

is now in idYancecl ~-;
dividual ttaiilin&amp; at Fort Blisi; ·
Texas, SJ~CC;ialiiing . in balllsiic
roWies II'Bining.
,
She giaduates from AIT in eady
Februaiy and will then JO to heir
permanent swion. She IS I 1989
~UIIe from Eastern Hig!l SchOol
and is the daughter of Qlen
Naomi Bissell, I:ong Bot!Om.
_.

from basic training in
States Anny at.Fon Jackson, s.c.
on Nov. 1,
· She qualifi~ as, "ex~" on
hand gJJ:iJades. and "~shooter"
4

lin ll, 000, Noltlmler said. But a
study reported In the Sept. 21
Issue of Science magazine said
there Is a 40 percent to 60 percent
chance of a major earthquake In
the eastern or central United
States during the next 30 years.
In earthquake terms, that's
substantial, Noltlmler said.
"My view Is the prediction for
the lhtrd received far more
attention than It deserved, but
there Is a real risk over the long
term, •• Noltlmler said. ·
Yet few homeowners In the
Midwest have earthquake coverage, according to Alan C. WilD·
ams, director of Ohio State's
Griffith Foundation for Insu·
ranee Education. He estimates
only a few percent of an ho·
meowners policies lr:tcludes
earthquake coverage. Nationally, the percentage Is about the
same, with two-tbli'ds of all
policy holders located In
California .•
McKinney said homeowners In
the Midwest may not think
there's enough risk of earth·

U!!lted Preu IDter!IICioDII
WINKERBEAN CARTOONIST IN AFtJNit: Why Isn't Funky
.Winkerbean as big as Zlggy or Garfield the cat? Cartoonist
Thomu Bathlk, Funky's creator. suspects It might be because
his distributor, North America Syndicate, hasn't properly
promoted the comic strip through merchandise and books and
he filed suit In Medina, Ohio. Batluk also claims that his llf~tlme
eontract with North America Syndicate Is Illegal. "It's a deal
wbere they have no Incentive to do anything bu Is tand there and
eoUect money, "said Nlld Schwartz. Batluk's lawyer: "It's a
very unfair and unlawful arrangement. His (Batluk's)
unhappiness, of course, Is they do more for some of their other
cartoonists who they don't have locked In In a slave contract."
"Funky Wlnkerbean •• IS published In about 375 newspapers and
Batluk, whO created the strip while teaching junior high school,
recejves 50 perce!lt of the net revenues.
·
EYE TO EYE: Mademoiselle magazine looked Into the eyes
of seven ceJ,ebr!Ues and learned quite a btt. A behavioral analyst
says that Tom Cruise's left eye Is bigger than the right one,
showing a sense of spirituality, and that hiS strong eyebrows
Indicate vlrUity, while Jullil Roberts's long eyebrows mean she
Is artistic and Independent. Wlll'ftn Beatty's eyes reveal that he
lacks commitment and A111ellca Huston's powerful gaze says
that she Is straightforward while Meryl Streep shows
Intelligence and dedication to famUy. Paul Newman's
trademerk blue eyes haven't faded, a sign of good health, and
his drooping lids Indicate he Is Impatient with stupidity and the
downward slant of Goldie Raw!l's eyes means she Is reluctant to
lfOWUp.
.
,·
MOVIE WORK: Former Miss America Van- WUIIIms has
bad a spate of movie work 'lately. WW!ams, who had·to give up
her beauty crown In 198!1 when a ma~razlne published nude
photos of her, plays Richard Pryor's love Interest t!l "Another
You," bls latest movie with Gene Wilder, and she also has a role
. . 1 !!llhtclub slnrer tn "Harley Dav)dson and the Marlboro
Man," Which stars Du Jolmloll and MlcR)r Roarke. In
betweell, Williams sang the title song for Pllll Ropa's new
fUm "Almost an Angel," and has been working on a follow-up to
laat year's lfllld record, '"'''le Right Stuff.'
MONEY FOR ANIMAUI: Britain's Prblee PbWp stopped
briefly at Orly Airport outside Paris Thursday to lnaUifllrate an
expolltlon of the World Wildlife Fund dedicated to savlnlf
endangered a!llmal and plant species. ••ourplanet's population
lncreua to the detriment of other fonns of life," the prince said
In French. "Travelers In search ol adventure are one of the
causet~ of the extinction of rare animal and plant species." The
.exhibit, which hopefully wiD rnerate f11nds to save endangered
apeclel, wiU be on view atOrly Alrportunti1Jan.l5. Pas~~e~~prs
at both Orly apd at Cbarlel de Gll!Ue Airport, wblch qether
h•mlled emtWon traveleni laat year, cu place thelrcolnllnto
1 traDIJIBrent Jlabe of the world beld up by a model of a panda,
tile World Wildlife Fund'a emblem.
I11D1' ON INK SPOT'S BBCOaD: A Milwaukee woman
clalmllo.. TI!Jior, a member of the lallllfOII alnilnl group
from 19!!8 to 1986, OMII
I• cblld support payments for •
cblld abe c1a1m1 he fathered ID 1963. Taylor, 52, appeared I!!
eo11rt on the child support compiiiDI Wedlleaday and a statUI
ltNriDI O!l the cue wa• IChedllled for Ju. 24. The complaint·
wu flied by Ruthye Beauelwnp, wllo allepl Taylor fathered
lllecblld, who Is IIOW27, but had :rJ:Iduychlldaupportllllce
Ju. 1, J.m. '1Juat want lOUie
of !l!eelsloll made OD thll,"
~aylor uld. '1 do!!'l lmow IDythlng about this."

.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
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quake damage to justify special
Insurance or, more likely; they
think they're already covered.
"A lot of people naively think
homeowners' coverage Is
blanket protection," ~cKinney
said. "That's Just not so. H you
want coverage against natural
disasters such as earthquakes or
floods, ·you generally have to add
It on by buying what Is called an
endorsement."
So how much does ·an earthquake endorsement cost? Insu·

•

•

•

•

Winkerbean
creator sues

alld:

LonJ

MEDINA, Ohio (UPI) - The
creator of the comic strip Funky · Pvt. Jonathon E. Bissell,
has recently Jl'll!!l•..•
Wtnkerbean Is suing North Bottom
from b&amp;sic training in t1il United
America Syndicate Inc. , alleging State1 Anny at FOrt Dix. NJ . on .
the company bas failed to pro- Nov. 9.
mote Funky properly through
He qualified "exoert" on bOth ·
merchandise and bQoks.
hand gi'enldes and "M·J6 trainiilg
CartooniSt Thomas Bat111k also during basic traininJI. He is now in '
claims In the suit filed In Medina advllli;ed iildividuaftraining 11 FOrt '
in light wheel vehicle
County Coinmon Pleas Court the Dix
m~L
·
:
.contract that binds him to North
He
gradwues
from
AIT
in
eir1J
America Syndicate Is Illegal.
Febru&amp;Iy and wiU then &amp;0 to h1s
"It's a deal where they have no permanent duty swion. -He is a .
Incentive to do anything but 1990 graduate of Eislcm High
stand there a!ld collect money," School and is the son of Glen aile!
ranee Industry representatives said Nlkl Schwartz, Batluk's Na001i Bissell, Long Bot!Om.
lawyer.
quote a range of prices based on
the type of borne and amount of
The contract requires Batluk
coverage you c~rry.
to provide seven strips a week
Basic premiums are generally .forever, the suit 11ld. The strip Is
'
reasonable- 40 cents to 50 cents published In about 375 newspap- '
per $1,000 of coverage for a ' ers across. the country. Batluk
The First Marine Aircraft Wmg •··
franwstyle house In central Ohio. receives 50 percent of the net Vieblam Service will have its third
Brick or masonry construction IS revenues generated by the strip . National Reunion in San Dieao.
more expensive to fix, and
A spokeswoman for North Calif. on OcL 11-14, 1991. All .
therefore. costs sUghtly more to America Syndicate declined pilots,. air lll!d ground. .crews.'·
opelllttons, lllllllrenanee, ~.
Insure.
comment Wednesday. The com· medical and aU fixed wmg, ~
It's the damage deductible that pany must respond In court by
and suDPOrt P.ersOJlnel aJe ~vi~ '
gets expensive, McKinney said. the end of the month.
For irifonnatioo call 1-516-868- ·
Schwartz said Batiuk decided 3276 or write: 1st Marine Aira8ft
to file suit after failed attempts to Wing Assn., P.O. Box 7240,
''
renegotiate or cancel the con· Freeport, N.Y. 11S20.
tract, which he signed In ·1971
when he created Funky Winker·
bean while teacbtng art at a
Wallet stoien laat year reJunior high school in Elyria.
turned by mall
.
"It's a ~ery .unfair and unlaw·
PLA'M'SMOUTH. Neb. (UPIJ
ful
a;rangeroent," Schwartz
..- An elderly widower received
an unexpected girt on his 86th said.
Schwartz claimed North Amerbirthday - a wallet stolen from
Ica Syndicate has done more
him last year and returned In the
promotional and merchandisemall with four times more l!lOReY
licensing work for cartoonists
and an anonymous note of
1f
Who are not locked Into lifetime
apology from the thief.
contracts such as Batluk's.
SATURDAY,
· I~
Rudy Zajic, 86, said Thursday
"His
unhappiness,
of
course,
Is
the billfold was giftwrapped like
DECEMBER I
a birthday present when It .they do more for some of their
'
other cartooniSts who they don't
arrived at his horne on Nov. 29.
9:30-1:30
have
locked
In
In
a
slave
When he opened It, be said, he
$2,00 COVER CHAiGES
contract," Schwartz said.
thought, "aU I need Is another
The
suit
said
a
representlve
of
billfold." Then he discovered It
MQST IE 21 YEARS Of AGE , ...
Field Enterprises, ivblc)l eventu·
was the same brown leather
STATE ROUTE7
, "'
ally went under control of North
w~llet stolenfromhlmmorethan
&amp;
143
America Syndicate, told him
,·
a year ago.
POMEROY, OHIO
cancellation would be a mere
"l could hardly believe II. I
formality.
never expected to see It again,"
.,
he said.
The wallet was stolen while
Zajic was In Clarkson Hospital In
Omaha recovering from a
broken hlp, he said. ZaJic said he
.was out of his hospital room often
and didn't notice It missing for
FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABlE OR CUT YOUR OWN
three or four days.
CRAFTS· &amp; TRIM SHOP
When It was stolen, the wallet
contained $10, some ldentlflca·
Locahd on Cherry lidge:
tlon cards and some family I lwn last at Darwin onto It, 611, 10 4111ilet to Mllapott -W.
pictures. When It was returned,
13; turn South on Ora•el load, l'IJ llllln to 1ro•e.
·
everything was still there but the
WATCII
fOil
SIMS.
$10 had been replaced with two
HOUR!!: 10 'TIL DARK
J'
'
$20 biOs.
A anonymous handwritten let·
i
ter tucked Inside the billfold
Indicated the thief was a visitor
to the hospital who needed the
I
money. The writer asked for
forgiveness and decided to return the wallet "because he felt
••
so guilty abQutlt," ZaJic said.
ZaJ lc, whose wife died In
February, said he did not mind
&gt;
losing the $10 but he hated losing
' 10 · .
•• ' ! '"
baby pictures of his two da~&amp;gh·
ters. He said he was glad to get
the pictures back.

Freed Auaalea Wltbout beer
SYDNEY, Australla (UPI) A handful of Australian hostages
boisterously celebrating the
news they would be allowed to
return home had only one complaint Thursday - . the Austral·
ian Embassy In Baghdad was out
of beer.
The 23 Australian hostages still
held In Baghdad bid farewell
earlier to six of their mates, who
were relellsed by Iraqi au thorl·
ties Thursday ; nd flew to Am·
man, Jordan-:-'
"The hostages that have left
are In a state of elallo!l and
e;x:haustlon," a spokesman for
the Australian Embassy said
Friday after their departure,
which followed a raucus sendoff
at the diplomatic mission.

beer."

Nevertheless, · the six freed
hoslliges shared "a few . pale
ales" at Baghdad airport with
the Australian ambassdor, Peter
Lloyd\ before their trip, the
spokesman added.
The six· are due to arlve In
Sydney on Saturday, and the rest
are expected to be released In the
near fu lure.

Convention
announced
On Thunday at 10 a.m. · in the
ASCS Office on HUand Road in
Pomeroy, the LAA ConventiOn will
be held. At this convenbon the
members of the Comrn~mlty Com·
mittees from Olive and Orange and
Bedford and Salisbury wilf vore
upon one· member
two alter·
nates to senoe a three :;ear term to
the County Committee.
AJ. 10:30 a.m. the Community
CommitteeS from each township
will vote upon chairman and vicechainnan fOr the County Commit·
tee 'for 1991.
· Both the LAA Convention and
the County Convention are.open 1D
the public,

ana

'

Reunion planned

·.

Quirks . in the news .

."I thought the roof would fiyo(f
the embassy," the spokesman
said. "The only problem we had
was the embasssy was out of

MIZWAY '
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Chamber to meet
The Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Will meet Tuesday .at
noon at Overbrook Center in Mid·

die~ Meigs

Him School Choir
will present a "brief Christmas
progr:am ror the Chamber. All
members are urged to attend.

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POMROY,

on M,16 naining diD'IRg baslc 1nWI·

Pvt. Melissa R. Bissell, Lon

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J!y WILLIAM C. TBOTI'

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR "RIAN OR DAVE

.m .

·. Bissells finish basic training

.

People in the news

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Meljry Christmas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24th.

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JONATHON BI88ELL

MELIBSA BJ88ELL

CornoanY.

Is .earthquake 'i nsurance really worth it?

H o"'or roll

O'DELLS

8l Capt. ~·s

CoL Manhall's Re"""ent ot die
Massachuaetls Milill'i"in the war.
His records illdic:e his change of
spelling of his name to Grow.
He lived in Tunbridge, VL,
where he fiiBI married and had five
cbildmJ. He WIS married four
limes: Diana Tracy, the ·motbet of
his childJen; Deborah Tracy, sister
to tbo first wife; Mrs. Eddy, who is
believed to be Lucy Branch Eddy;
and Mrs. Euphemia Brown. He
migr8led lint to Be!J1re and then to
a-etin1798.
Grow along with Levi Sltadman,
who founded Cbesttr (then Cllled
Steadman's Mill), and David Bar·
ber as the first trustees of Olester
Thwnsltip in 1824. He wu also i
t.leigs County Common Pleas
Iudge in 1824 for two yearS. He
wu a cbartel member of Chester
. ~No. 71, which clOsed during
the anli-Mastinic panic of the

1990
CUTLASS
S·UPREME

Busy Bee Class
has recent meeting

the Soviet Women's Federation, the
USSR Chamber of Commerce, and
the All Union Economic Society.
Also planned are visits to primary
and
secondary · eduCational
facilities, 10 local enterprises and
businesses managed by wome~.
and to lhose ·that employ women m
middle and upper management. In
addition, the delegation will meet

Friday, Decamber 7, 1990

wilh academic leaders ro discuss
educational
opPOn~IUes
for
women in the Sov1et Umon.

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11'1D.CII ~ NrTMI ...,,_.,, {5) co.nt c:ontrlle blcKk, (4) ....,., {1)

COME IN ... COMPARE AND SAVEl

COLE'S MOBILE _HOMES ·. ~
Phone 592-1972

�•

Friday.

Page- S - The Daily Sentinel
Put!llc Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTIC E
To C•a Cooper Home-dow, wlloll 1eot known
place of realdenc:e
wu
~ OIOVI Road, Rulllnd,
Ohio, atMr.._ unknown
and H dM111ed. tO the unknown Mi,.·at·IIW. ftiXI to

ttln. legoteoa. d..,l- . ad·
miniMretor~; , eaecuton and
dlatrlbutort.. tf any, of -.ch
of tho following :

1. Core Coopor Homa-

dew, d8cuaed

2. Emmo J . Stonabury,
..._
.....
3. Harvey Stonoburv. do·
ceued ·
You .,. ilenby notlflod
that on the 20th dey of No·
......,, 11110. Rtchol Hut·
toft , guardlain of the p.r110n
and estate of Virg.. R; Burford, an inc ornP,etent .,.,.
oon. 1nd Rachel Hunon; In·
dlvtduaUy, filed their complaint against each of you in
Coso Numb01 90-CV-259 of
tho Court of Common Ploao,
Moigo County, Ohio. allog·
ing th•t RaChel
Hutton,
guordlon of VIrgie A, Burford ia the owner of the fol·
lowing tlaocribod trlcl of
rMI estate designated as
Parcel Number 1 In nld
complaint •• follows:
Parcel No. 1 :
The fallowing Real Estate

situoto Section 36, Town 8.
Range 14. Townohlp of Aut·

land in '"" County of Molgo
and State of
Ohio and
bounded and doocribed 11 fol·
lowo: Beginning
at 111e
IOtltheflll com• of Fraction

(No. Eight-) 18, Town Six
Range Fourt- of the Ohio
. Compa ny'• purchae: thence
West sixty rodl:; thence South

-'xtv

rods; thenm EMt ~e
hundred rodt to tho Contlr of

t"" road; ,.,.,.,. In a North·
woslltrty dinoction along 111o
centM of the rood to tho place
of beginning,
co.nteining
thirty acra, more or lee:a.
Ea:cept 2 acrea 1old to the
Ptaintrtf A1chet Hutton al

described in Volume 289. at
Poge &amp;2&amp; of tho Dood Ro·
cords. Melg1 County, Ohio.

Tho Plaintiff Rachel Hut·
ton is t he owner end in fee
simpte of the rMI eltlte dl·
scribed •• Parcel Number 2

in same complaint, bounded
and described as follows:

theclaeda ln tllachiiMof
tldoof_h,....,..afral . .
lite. For complnt daurip

BUJ,.LE'fiN BOARD DEADUNE
·4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

tion of Nme. ,.,.,.nee i1 ·

had to Plointlff'o -lolnt
fitedlltar,llid . .
Tha objoct of the com·

plolnt ;, to

""lot PlalniHfa'

Iiiio to ooch po..,., of ...las·
lltil end for Nfortnltlon of
claedo. affldOYha and other
lnotN.....,Ia In oold chlln of

Valley Hospital Admin·
islrative Conference Room.
For information 675;4340.

domond thot lila PlllntHf

BOB'S MARKET &amp;
GREENHOUSES

title be reformed to provide
their ccrroct tlaocrlptlona

and 111ot both Pltlntltlt ID
have -t,.,lr lilies quloled 11

agaln8f: any adver• eltate,
lntenot. or claim of defend·
ante..,d for other proper rei·

let.
You ai'e hereby required to

en•w• thla
complaint
within 2B dlyl- tho loll
publication of notice of thia
which wll bit publilhed onco

ooch wool&lt; for olx (81 con·
SKUtiYe WMkl lnd the laat
publlcotlon wll. bit modo on
on.January 11 , 1181. ·In tha
event you aro In tlafiMIIt of
tlmo, In that evant judgment
will ba tlkon ogelnll 11ch of
you 1nd Plalnliffa will bit ed.
judged by 111io Coun tu bo .
thoo-oroofuldpercoltof
real lltltl 11 deacribed in
sold compillnt. ·
By: Marlene Horrloon
Deputy
lorry E. Spenclf.

at

the

Public Notlca

Southeast corner of Freelion 18. Town ·&amp;, Range 14
of the
Ohio Company's
Purcha•. thence Welt 60
rod~; thence south SO rods;

thence Eut 100 rodo to tha
rood, tho ptoco of .beginning
for the·realastate de1cribeid;
thence welt along the Bur-

ford·Parlcot' (Ferlett bordO&lt;
line 300 feet; thence north
peraUel to the West bor:der of
the County Road . Number

18. 30Q foot to o stake,
thence East parallel with the
Burford-Parker
IForlot)
bCKindary lino 300 feet to
'"" Weal aide of County
Road Number 18; thence
South alonn tho Woot oido of
Coonty Road Number 16 to
the place of beginning containing two (2) acres, more
or Ieos.
·
Soth parcels aubjtcl to all
leases. right• of way, easemente. mineral and other
renrvationa, if any, of re·

·cord .
Reference Deoda; Volume
81 , Pogo 199; Volume 81 .
Pogo 200; Volume 1 06.
Page 372; Volume 147,
Pogo 46&amp; ; . Volume 1 &amp;0;
Pogo 374;" Volume 1 51 .
Pogo 129; Volume 176 ,
Poge 307; Volume 2&amp;0,
Poge 791 · Volume 2B9
Poge 1125.' Melgo County:
Ohio. Died Recorda.
You ere further notified

.
tht
• you may havo o c I••m

"TiiiiN 1: ~ Ar A1TY

992-5335 01985 .3561
• OHio
AcrGSs , , _ Post

PUBLIC NOTICE
wr-DI-Islmritlftg
bido for • 1981 1·ton' Cob
ond Cha. . wltllthe follow·
...,•• -

._

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

~-~=

lfel¥y Duty- oprlnga

Power- • ..,lnt end POwer
•
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R u - - INti
Dome tltht

~~":':.'~::"'0
Rod In aakir

1 llrllioht OUt DUNh....
lnt. .lted bHidlra Mould

neht to rw;ect

an,

J UST$25.000

IACIIiE

Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation is now
accepting resumes for permanent employment at
ita plant in Ravenswood. Jackson County. West
Virginia, in various production and maintenance
classifications such as

In

• Crane Operator
• Electrician/Electronics Repair
• Equipment Operator
Garage Mechanic
General Laborer
Hydraulic Repair
Mact)inist
Millwright
Roll Grinder
Welder

tiO SIINOA YCAliS

. EVERY . .·
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
facfory Chokt

12 Gouge

Shott- Only

Strktly Enlorcotl
9-25·'99-lfn

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MAPUWOOD
LAKE
614-949-2734

In Loving Memory Of
SHERMAN
ROBERTS
Who PeaHd Awey
Dec. 7, 1982
AI IYIInlng 1hadowt
draw near
Our thoughtl tum to
the one we loved 10
dear.

or

. 614-949-2635

11·13·111-1 ••.

SKATI-A·WAY
OPIII WD.·fiL..SAt.

7:31-10.00
Blrthdey, Church.

BISSELL~.·

..,...
'···'
·~

,·•.

good-bya.
Sadly mined by
wife, Dorothy; Sone
and Daughters and
Fa mill•

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGEf
"At

ltiCis-..Wit PriCes"

Day ar Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-1&amp;-16-tln

.•

.,

·-

/J'

KOUNTRY KLUB

90 DAY WalttAIITY

BUILDERS

••

~

WASHER5-S100 up
DR'IEI5- $19 up
·
IEFIIGERATOR~$100 up •
RAIIGIS-Gu-Eiac.-$125 op
FREEZER5-$125 ~P
.
IICIO OV£N5-S79 up

..

r

·

Qrivera ... 18
Wedgeo .. I&amp;
· Puttera ... 1

..,
"
.·~ ·

-..'
,.

GiV!PHITE SHAFTS
INSTALLED
BAGS .......... ...... .. ... UB
CHRIStMAS
TROPHIES • PLAQUES

UN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
992-5335 .... 15-35.1
Acroa F..- Pill OHke
. .1'0111101".;'01110 .
· ' -•

· .

·

BROWNING
CHRISTMAS
GRAPHITE

.!

JOHN TEAFORD

lcoot U..p loa•
011ttr, Ohio
11·29-90-1 ••

IM0/'19 tfn

1180 • 01 plalllc. Bottloa not
necNaary. can Ma~ 114M2·

5857.

Wanted to Buy: SIOndlng TlmI&gt;Or, Small 01 larga ocraago, 11+
36'1-7S11. altO&lt; 7 p.m.
Wanted bf collact01: lllbla
dolta ond Gl Joa dolle, 19BCJ.

CHRISTMAS

J&amp;L .

*10 end up
FRESH CUT DAILY
White 8r.
Scotch Pine

108 SNOWDEN
1\taln St., Rutland

742·3051

11-29-1 mo. pd.

Ntw location: ·
,.1 North Second
MiddlljiOI't, OhHr 45760 .

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Windows
•Roofing .,
•lneuletion

'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

W• C.v .Fiahing SuppU•

YourPhoJI.Ii

, (il,ble !IIIIa Here
. IUSINISS PIIONE

JAMESmSEE
992-2772

......-

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG . ~

INSULAnON

tREES
6Ft. to 12Ft.

742-2251

. -'
J

.;.,.

Ul

639 Bryan Piece
· Middleport, Ohio
11 / 1./ tln '

.. ' .,"
"

~

-' .

Announcement s

CAIN'S

Of Ml••l•pert
UPHOLSTERY
Hand Tufting
Cultom Drt1pe1

614·992-2121
211 North S.C111d
Wo Sly Whet WI Do.
Wt Do What We Say

STEWART'S
GUliS &amp; SuPPUES
742·2421

SAT.-SUN. AnDIIOOII
sss f'ltrs Slratt ...... 175'1

,.

.. •

CHifSTIIAS PAin
Fit• .DIC. 21
N.Y. EVE Piln 7:10-hOO

PH. 91S-9t96 - 915-Hit
.. 104-112·2924
12-7-1

White&amp;.
Scotch Pine
II F1, and Up
Wetf Sltelred. Grown
on the Weber Ferm In
Rutfend

_.,_....___

--·-...

IEADY DEC. 2nd

742·2143

11·21·'90'1

110.

""'wood

IL&lt;I.,....

oUall .... poooalllofloybi-ID-IIIDiaallomllil-

8allzilla . . oonr-

(I

lOAD fliRY 12 HOUill

VICKER'S WOOD HEAnNG
Dill' r a ...._,..._ .. _
1'1111111 (lOt) S7WIII

aducllion on ehlldcs10. Workod
with lnllntL 448 Spruce SIIMI
Ext., Downtown Galllpolio a-.

.

Help Wanted
11
$350.00/0oy Practising Phone
·Ordarol Paoplo Cell You. No Ex·
peritnce

Nece~.

1o3'15·133o

60&amp;2 IIlii. P-2138B (retundablat
$40,000/Yrl READ BQOI(S AND
TV SCRIPTS. FILL OUT SIMPLE
"UKEIDOII'T LIKE" FORM.
EASYI FUN, RELAXING AT
lHQME, BEACH, VACATIONS.
QUARANTEEO
PAYCHECK.
FREE. 24 HOUR RECORDING.
801471-2118 EXT. PTEB.
AVON • All ar-. Celt Marilyn
WNVII' 304-882-2645.
AaHtrible product• at home
urn up. to $40:0 weakly, no experience. easy work. For mort
lnfotmatlon Clll 1-504--813-1194
Ext. 1127.

&amp;a.m. -10p.m. 7.dayo.

AVON I All AINI I Slllrloy
Spoa ... 30+675-M2V.
HOME TYPISTS, PC nHded. 135.000 potantlar.
Ootaltt. (1 t 80W87.eODO Ext. a.
101BV.
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT IS

~~~~~~J~O:S:O"t':.'GB'=

for lmm.ctlate r-.ponH.

INTELLIGENCE JOBS. AU·
broncllaa. US CUIIomo, DEA,
ate. Now Hiring. Cel (11105-t87,
1000 Ext. K·10fiV.
NOW HIRING STATE AP.
PROVED NURSING ASSIII,
· TANTS
Scenic Hltto Nurolng canter
provldH excetl.m bineflt• •
growth
o-unHiaa.THAEE
RAISES FIRST YEAR
Tuition r e i -. Ctadlt
Union S.mcoo, ca~ng I oonc•rned ao-worur. I. auptr·
vlaora. You can meke a diff«·
tnct In the Uvea of our
18aldonl0. Ar&gt;IIIY In po'""" or

~II

l'f4..U6-'nY,

311

tlon

center

h••

Immediate

I~

term

e~re

IW'fwred.

Buck

Ridge Ad. E.O.E.
.,_oy Nuralng I Rohablllta·

.

Cheeklng Station.
11-21-9·1 ....

Tuil'N r: 1&lt; Rc;, n

.. ..,

....

.;~

Y

205 ll Stcafttl Str11t
...UPOIT, 0110 4576
Offlct 614-992-2116
1lotnt 6T 4-992-5692

-DAYS
11 . . . . . . .""'
.
Clteb ...y

SHOOTS STAll

SIPT 16, 1990

. 4,tfn

Rd.,

AEPOBSESSEO HOMES
3br, 1 beth, ha~ aCN MIL on
Block hewll Rood. ·~ d~ 1
10 porconl APR wlh aPPfOVOO

houst
oood
nllicthborllood, 304-675-sto~ or

3

B.clroom

17&amp;=5318.

.

446-1802 or44UIIO.

31

Homes for Sale
3 bedroom hom•, Milton Road,
camp Contoy, S45,000. Will talk.

Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pt....~, WV,

coli :JOM7t!o14!0·

Lo-. llocond Aoartnwrt.
KMcMn FumiMied, DB Firat
A-ue. $210/mo. pr.,. utlr-.

N40pluadapollt,l14 41185111.

Nicory tumlallod mobile"-· 1
... ba1cnr town =•ki:r.
..... _ .... .. __. 0
A
iii4'141'0338.""''
'
·

0111 3104-871-4100 Of 171-3411.

Smarr

Fumllhod

Eftlclancyl

Mlhabll for 1 peNon, cent. .

.--.--

.

parlclng,

c!opoalt

I

ThrM blc:lroom dUI)Iex In exc.f..
toni nalg-ood, turr ment wllilundry hook-upe. 304-

875-87lll or 175-3616.
45

Antiques

4 Po.!« lad - A Choat 2
occrnhnal chalfll 1 .~h whh
porcorain ,.....,,, A..,.M 8 trock
• - · with atond: 814-241 51138.
1ft Antiquo Wood Show CMo,
114-317.Q581.

Antiquo Malblo top olanda l
Iampo, 1114-311'0513.
Buy a&lt; Hll." Rl-lno Antlquao,
1124 E. Main 8troat, Pomeroy.
Houro: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 1:00
1 :00 to I:Dfl p.m.

r:.:-=

Qulftl

- .pro 1!140 aood oancltion.
pllotoo ana -~= to
Sand
1 Pilton, Alhano, Ohio . 01
coli eMM2-51157 a&lt; IMISV2·
2411.

31 mm SLR camera, 2 lena, one
8Cb:200, zoom, flash, ~· •nd 3x
convtrtora, carrying cue, 3()4.
175-Sr78.

81411112-2233.

a

WoodbUmer,
Wlfumaco, Kit $1150. IM-245-::W
= 7·=::-:'-=:::-== c:;-::-::'::Burg..,dy I plnll lormol aown.
llzo 7
wom, NO.
mlct'allne, U.•l In one, $121.
114 44Htrlll.
.

"Annatrong

no-

litton

Chrlltrnu tM• $10. •ch. Cut

your -., 1 milo riam Union
Church. --2583.
Concrato I plaotlc ooptlc tanllo,
Ron Evona Enlo-, Jockaon, OH HIOO;G374UAI. .
Doric ptno hutch 11371. lllohwuher

145. t- Sharp

ClrNI

mlcrowno $75. Commodo11 M .

~--75-3779.

fl-

For Stle: All
hanlwoocl, ltM tlal'-1-, 814-

371-2111, lnytlmL

55

Building
Supplies

cr.:t:·

Brook, b-, _ . ,
winHntota. ate.
Wintan. Rio Orondo, OH Cell ....
245-f12t
Pets for Sale
G1&lt;10111 ond Supply Sho!H'at
Grooming, All brMda. Allotyloo.
Pal Food Doaler. Julie
Webb. can 1M 441 112111.
3 AKC · - TerriO&lt; Pupplaa. 1
t.male, 2 • • , depoelt will
hold till Ctntatmu, - · I

54 Mlacelleneoua
Merchandise

AmeriCIIn ·WoiH T~nnlng Bed. Z
yuro old. Alklng S2,100.

Flirn Is lied
Rooms

eaa,w_a.-_

53

':"'::~~~~~":":~':"'::

64

Hay. I Grain
==~::=:::-::::::::::-::::::::-::;:;::
Hay
I G11ln, lquore blloa, oats
11.11. Cloolar 11.10, Mixed on..
11.25, 814-1112.z331. .
Hay 1or Salo. c - a Tl-hY.
In the Flold. lt4-

no- :=.J••

--.IM-317-ot t7.
1-nlan p u - I -ka
old. 2 black r.na!M, 1 rod ......
Fun · but
troo
aoch. l1411112·711113.
AKC ChiiMiahua PUp, 114-44110321aftor 5p.m.
AKC Lha11 Apoo puppies,
prlco, CUIHt otock·
lng llu- ..~ [:' mono Information 304--1
38.
AKC roaiiiMod Cockor Spaniol
pupo. lf41ae7-3090.
AKC roglll«ed Boagle pope. 1
malo, 1 tomala. $150 -h. 1 112
year old - l o running dog.
11711. IMIMt-2444.
·
AKC
RoglotaiOd
Brittany
Sponlal Pupploa I Wb. old, 4

,._btl

Hay, Atfllfa and gr~• 'mix,
aq........... - - .
Llrgo round of hey lot
Nit - 115 llll!'h. Doll.-y Ani~
able. -1-1012.

Transportation

good, ....300. 304.tl75o3228.

1m Dodgl P-or

Wogan; 318

automatic, PS, PB, 12,100. 114-

3711o211&amp;7.

•• •
• '

·r ··t

.

..

1m JMP CJ.:r, hard top, 114- .,

388 8122

: :.

1 - ~PIIIIftllr nn, ·· "

no

go(!d

ruar, 12.100

orl/0 114-319.
. .
1t80 JMD CJ5 one owner. '
S2,100. tAe ciiiC 314 ton Sleml
.

404, . cyl, $5,500. 304-aV5-38lll.

74 Motorcycles
. .
Autos for Bale
"'t9"'as'"""SI1=on,.-driY,.,.:o:....,3,-w.,..hoo...,...lor " · ~
· "1o"'
' u"""CIIOV)'.,...,Im,-po..,.II""H.=,ooo=m-:lloa~,
_
... cond, 304-117!1.ZV31 •
arr -lnal coli aftO&lt; llp.m. 2250X.
or 3Q4.171.2521.
.• ..

71

nwa.,NOuch,IM-II2-7141. f2,500. 11t ttl 8011.
AKC Roglot«acl Cockar Spaniol
M-ng Runo
Pupa, ,..c~y lot Chrlllmul $1150 11111'
aooct, Ntl.
1mt Honcla CB 100,
Now taking dapoaltal 1~41- ilouble ovtr hMcl cam. Nk:e.
~ oaJ anytl"".
$510. 1141247-4212.
AKC
Roglalored
Cocker , , . Chi~ CIWJIII 350
Spanloll, ..... •
buH
COlor, chamalon
lnaa. automatic, PS, Pl. N-* minor
Fema'- I rnonl:hl, black I whlta, bcdv - · 1m Cll8V)' - ·
:i5oNoadt
.,._,lc
-·
- .. wnned, UIO .-,MeG ca.W.
PS, Pl.
minoron rapalr.
lot both, -~021.
114111112-1302.

"':.':.11

1m Font Econotlno von, 814&lt; : · '
·•·
1178 ...... 4 - 1 drlva, NM • ,

-

75 Boats &amp; Motors

for Sale
1872 17 ft. S.•rcrafl Tri-Hull

8ool. 125 HP, Evlnruda Englno,
-eomlllata top MW uoholstory.
Celt '*2B&amp;-13tti
t:oo p.m.

•"ar

Auto Parts &amp;
·'
Accessories
Budaot Tronomln-. Und A •
,.bultt, atartlna II $119; 114-24~
51177, 814-319-:la3.
Taltgata w/Wipat lor 1985 Dodge. •. ·
Tallaate tor mini-van wtwlper.

C..l f . IWIII-1372

7:-.m. • 4: 30p.~~~.

betwNn

·

:~

Services

~p, King
4d
2br trailer for reht, Porter area, IIIII.
Gun 131111.
Ceblnat..
I, · I, ·
I 10
114-388.96V8, 614--8.
v.... 111&gt;7- rna

1148. lad · lramaa iiZI, Queen
st• rn 1 king ,..,. $150. 0ooc1
llllectlon of "'b1 c' oon• eultn,
.,..., $185 • dtpoelt, 814-388- IMIII o•blnel:8, heed-.. $30
3 bedroom hoUH1 one ICrt fll81.
ond up to 1111.10 dlyo 11mo •
wooded ''"· Rockaortngo. Ohio.
114-m-5225 stter &amp;pm.
£xtr1 nk:e 14"x70' 2 bedroom Cllh with -oltod · 3 1111.
noar · GaUipotll Prau. Wat«, ... Butavllt Rd. 0tMn I A.M. to
3 bedroom• houaa, 11nd con- sowago,
gorbaga lnctudod. 1300 1 P.M. Mon, th"' Sat. can IMtract, 3~Ht04.
moi'llfl. Dtpoalt a referena• 441.0322.
GOVERNMENT HOMES From $1 . ,.qulred. MlcrOWive I eterlo ln- 2 wing blck cm.lni, very old,
304.ti7~12W7.

(U rapalr). Oollnquonl tax
property. A..,..nalonl. Your
am (11 801!-887.eODO Ext. GH4112 for cu"ent repo llel.

·

Mobile HomBs
for Bale

water, t,.1h, · .. ave,
refrigerator furnished, VInton

2br

cJudacl. &amp;M1441o02011 or 1114111V2- good oancltlon. Naw living
3014.
_, couch hal two
For renl Or 1111, 1970 Chlmg!: rocll- lxlift ln. Chair Ia rockar
moblto · homo, _1zxeo. 2
gllcler.
p.m. · - - """' 4:Dfl
rooma, 304-67o-a884.
dining ,_, suMo!
Fumlahed mobile hOme for rent, llalutlfullrt~
.....,, cheel 0
2 bedroom, 30+675-e512 a"ar peaanj
d....,., Bod comptata. :1312
1:00PM.
Jeffnon Avenue.
Mobile homa lor rent, lumlahed
wHh WID. $2110 mo. PIUI daposH
l uti1MIH. I141992-lll.,..
Mobile homo fully tumlohod,

F.rry, 11tttng on nice hill acre
lot, 304-175-5H7.

wa1Mr, dryer, AJC, 2 bedrooma,

or 871-1833.

efttr2p.m.

304-773-6858.
11174 Shultz 14z'111, 304_.7f5.7979 One 2br, on. 3br, e·14-448-0527

credtt Gllll 1-800-44MI10 John 1m lily Vlaw tZXIO, Ciao, tully
lumlohad, cood cond. FIIOI
Sal loy.
S5000tak.. 1t, con bo aoan at
RN'o t30/hDU', LPH'll .ZtAtour. s - Ad. a...., 1114·lll2~.
Aulanemnta In c.ntral •
South..n Ohio. ICU, llap - n; Mx70 JVIO Saville 2br all
mod - ~
·
• nurilng honws, otoctrlc wHh Jarga kitchen, CA.
corroctionl
Oillllporlo. lnl«· untlarplnnlng,lf14.256-11011.
v - 11
lday Inn Tuoacloy,
Docambor 11th, 1pm-ttp.m. Dac
12th, lo.m.·12:30p.m., Cel tor
appolnt!Mnl, WOIIO&lt;n Moclcal
SOrvica .-48-83111.
RN'o I LPN't wlh ltolpltaJ ••·
porlonco ntodacl tor oudltlng I

........ J. lllllmtll 428
~~-

11·1-10-tln

· 1:00 P.M.

llonl-"'f Ward
upright
~
17
cu.
ft., """ ~-·
ttso, ~enmore microwave oven,
$100. 1141. ltn, 11WII 1101.
PICKENS RJRNITURE
NlwiiiNd
.... hold fumlshlng. 112 mi.

Two 2bt unlwnlallod, on 8118.
30+67U709.
'
Unlllmlohod -lie Home.
CioN to tvlfYihlng -nlown.
ldlll for 1 ,.,.,. or couple.

114-4411-3llll,
boloreVp.m.

114-2511·1103

rev• In PoiMroy, Lagan area.
or Holldayo. Sand

•COMMERCIAL
WI NEED USTINGSI

GUN SHOOTS

Rookaorlngo

No--

llml
s. " .... · HOUIESoLQTBoFARMB

tGat•••

d.,.., MO.oo. 304-6711-

em, aFIOr 1 p.m.

tor ono -on. 1~102.

SOil, afFordable, ehltdcl,.. M-F FIIOI Avonuo, 1185/mo. plus $100 Roome IVIIIIble lor 2 or 3 ccin·e a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Agee 2 ·10• . dopolll. 8-6-4038, 814-4411- otruction worllaro, - Before, afttr IChool. Drop-In• t8t5.
2581.
wolcomo. 814-441 ..224.
Houao a mobile homo 2 bod- Roomo lor ront - -ak or month.
Standing timber. Top _prlc.. room, tumlthed, 1 child, no sj;~~ irtl120/m0. Gallla Hotor.
1580.
pold. 8141317-7!tlohor7:trOp.m. IIIIa, ,._. Hlven, WV. 3041182- I
~488
.
Wallpapat I painting IM-lll2·
Sloaplng rooms •Uh .-!ng.
ZUL
Mlddtoport.
4 bod1a0m · Also tnller aplc:e. All hook-ups.
$325 mon4hly pluo dapoall. 114- can aftot' 2:00 p.m.. 304-Tr.lWanl...aomeont to cut an apple 112·7714 alter 7:30 pm.
t16111, - n WY.
.
lrH and bo• under trM for
In -City, phone IM- Molllle homoa lot 111'11 In 46 S
pace f Or R8 nt
1112·7352.
country 114 441 0508 or 0718, newly &lt;*G..Country Mobile HOlM Parll.
Will do billy lltllng bf hour or
day lfl your home. Barblra MI. Vernon A... 2 bedroom Routa 31, Nortlt of P-,.Y.
ho.,.o, ono child, -no palo, Lot... renlale, part., ua.. Call
Tygratt, 304-&amp;7!1-1224.
. rwfvenc. Md depolilt, $275. 8M-1192·11179.
Will do baby silting -In ..,. homo, 304-171-2111:
814-lll2-2219.
Merchandise
42 MobiiB Homes
Financial
for Rent
12xeo 2br, In EvergrMn, 5I
Children occeptod, can anor
Business
4p.m. 114 44fl 381l
21
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Opportunity
2 bedroom Mobile Home, parSoroo •nd chalro prlcacl rrom
tially
tumlahad.
Mlddlaporl.
INOTICEI
ht51o SV95. Toblao $150 and up
814M2~039.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
to 1125. Hlda-a-boda tHO to
r.com•nde thai VO'! do buel• 2 bedroOm mobile holM p81r- t511. Rocllnaro •2211.1o S37S.
nt11 wHh ptOpl• you know 1nd tlatry furnlsilod, Mlddlaport IM- Lampa hi to $125. lllnatt01
NOT to nnd monoy tlw;;;.;;l, tha VVZ-6038.
SIOV and up to MM. Wood tibia
man until you ha•• ln-Tgatacl
w.- chaltl UB5 to .791. Daaka
2 IR mobile " -·In Portor, you $141 up to S37S. lllllcheo t400 I
the ollarlrlg.
poy uiHHIN I dop. I14411H112. up, bunk .,_. oonrpl'lte wfth
2 BRj unfum., buuJ:Iful rtv.,... - - - Real Estate
11311.
view, water rum,.1 no cHy tu.ee. baby -St10lnd
......
"to_
..
Foeter'a Moblll ttome Park. 114- bo• aptl"ffl full or twin ~~..,

MX70 mobile home, uc cond
oft Ply..l Road, Oillllpollo

~) ~

Sale

.GIICioua living. 1 and 2 bod_ , aponmom. II VIIManor
and
Rlvorwlilo
Apon,_,a In Mlddtoport. From
1111. Ceiii14-IIZ-7l117. EOH. .

Wanted: Aul Estate To Buy,
NOrlh Third strMt, Middleport,
the CHy of OarllfiDIIo and Clallla Ohio. 2 bedroom tum- apO,
County. ,._ ....,, water I , . _ and dapoaM requlrOd,
atactrlc avallablo. &lt;lll ,...,.,_ -,25111.
r1ble. Mu• be zOMd mid.,...
tlat. .Cell 8tavan Korry, OBERER Dna bedroom opto. lor 11111.
lloQiojlmont Co. 1-22Z.f137. t225 ""'"lh. DapoaM raquiiOd.
114-112·2211 aner I p.m.
Pomeroy, 2 b I drocMn furnlahed
Renlals
aportmant. WID, patio==•
playground. · Sacurlty
.
~n · altar 8:00 pan.
-..
aeae.
41 Houses tor Rent
3 Br, · spJH·rovot,
newry NEWLY REMODELED do!"'"" to rn
remodeled, 1425/mo., O.,o.li RENT and a your budgat. 1 ,...,_, 1138.
required. 814-441-4222.
pluo lllllltlea, 2 ,a,.· bld2br houae, khchan w/atove &amp; roomo 1118. pluo utiiHleL ldalli
NfrlgeNtor, $2101mo.
ph• tor lingle pe..-n, m1rrled
utMhln, dapoolt I roforoncat, couple, conltnmtlan worbn.
no pats. 238-Rur First Ave. tl14- naodlna to IVOid high 441-4fl211.
mocete. For more InfOrmation

Fumlshad 4 room howe·on 138

317111

Giveaway

Autos fqr

Fumlohod afficlonoy apollmont:
Upital,., qut.t, well-kept, caroatod. otr-llreat policing. ldaal

.,..u ti"ACCa &amp; vacant loti within

Mia• Paul1'1 Day Clre Center.

3214.

81lltiVIJi'.eM or unci rauma to

......,. Ohio 4117M. MlnorltiOI
encouraged to apply. E.O.E.
·

Real Estate
Wanted

4 room ho~e, · tlove I
refrigerator
rumlthed.
R-onabla ""'· &amp;14-448-0VM.

32

We Are A Deer

36

McO.nlel C~o~ltom Butctt~~·
lfocto, Ctttle and Doal'. 30
•

Bariollls. lllaoy baaed on yearo
or ox~lo,_ Cell LaRua Hill
R-!i:.~_O.O. N. lar l,.orvlow at

4

71

utiiiU•, water &amp; traM pUI,

v... Ooy Cera canter 3br houM, attached garage. on
rettonlble,
dependable,
110, n.. e~,..t, newly
lice,.,, q1.1111ty child care. Mon- · SA
pllnled, IVIIIIbll Immediately,
dsy lhN Fridiy, 7:30 1111 5:30. 137!1
pluo 1100 dopoaH, 114-245For more InfOrmation or to 51M.
11gla10r 30~75-5847.

HOURS: Monday
thN Saturday
· 10emto6pm

RACINE
.GUN CLUB

915·4473.
667·6179

lnflnt ·ca.re: my home. 11 YMr
experience; dlrc-re. Hlive

opening lor roglstlfld nu- I
LP.N. P - 1 a.....,.noa In

BISSELL &amp; BUill
CONSTIUCnOII

........

~~~:.Jobe. 304-6~

Magic

Stroot,

ulto

PortortlOUih, OH 411112.

Chi~

103,

• Malgo Carnmunity

~

• - y ....
_IIIIIIICIIIonl: for a nn.
driYariOUoiOdlan poalion to be
baoacl at - PDIMroy
Ollloe.
Tha· ~
kdfiiUII ..,.
( o r - -In 10 doyo ollllre)
o__c,ontmarelel
(I:DI.j.
11tle lo •- ~- poaleet:tt~na

·~·

experienced, have rtferMCM..

Larry U..ly. 814488-1303.

Aatlon

•Ctetplate
. ..... dill..
Shlfi&amp;C••pan

18 WantBd to Do
HOUDAY SPECIALS • interior
and Elllarlor Painting, 10 y11ro

1-t-1504.

Tha -

···"-

Now!IISoutt.utem

Bulin- Colsgo, Spllna V.lloy
Plw. can Today, 114-4411-43&amp;711
Rlglatarlllon ~~~1:mB. ·

21/t Mi. oUtside
Rutland on New
LIMO lei.

11· 1 ..1.1&amp;

c•ISTMAS TIEES
FOI SALE

Training

paldll304-273-1240.
Wanted To Bur. J..,k Auloo

tion Into., call 1·218-M't-1537

/_

Ave liable

' oiumt14110•

Lunch Bone
1110'..1870'1 . Metll dome IOPI
or ~L!a~bllc:kll. A.lao vinyls, No

ATTENTION POIIEROYI
"POSTAL J099'
$11.41 - $14.10 hr. No oxparlonco
nHdad. Fa&lt; oxam and ,applica-

__.A oiumt141101MI:II--

]--P*~

wanted to Buy

Employment Services

(61 . 446-6000

MON.·TUES.-1HUIS. NIGHTS

...........

' i

Auctlonaar, Richard Roynokll

t30 All Walcoma 304-257-3&amp;51,

wllh or without molora. Call

Sl'll/NG V.tUEY I'ROFESSION.tL BUILDING
JOO J.t CKSON PIKE · SUITE lOJ
G.tWPOLIS, OHIO 4J6Jr

USED APPUANCES

Business

14
hl111ln

Privata Pertloo

CALL
Labor Dispute in Progreu
We are looking for permanent replecement workers.

. ·•

•ON -SitE SERVICE/ REP AUt
•CUSTOM PROGRAMMIN(i
. 0 SAI.ES
' 'ON -SITE CUSTOM TRAINING

..

Ill Yean Experience

on high;
Someday we'll mHt
again end niYII' uy

RAVENSWOOD ALUMINUM CORPORATION

26164

popor/cords, ••tch... Lots ol

mdM. Come urty, ... y Jatt.

1970'a, clolha and -=c.-oriel.

SKINNED

Personnel Depl!!r::tJ!I~nt

Box 98

.'

Top~

4-1646-lfn

su. $20

Anyone interested in such position• should direct
resumes to the attention of:

AAE/EOE
M / F / H/V

PH. 949·2801
or Its. 949·2860

"The only way anyone's ever
going to look up to that man
is through a glass-bottomed
sofa!"
·

X-JMa HolM C.rt, I14-3M-81e3.

mirror.,

plctlftl,

O.C.L. COMPUTER SOLUTIONS, INC.

Ba1han Building

God HW fit to take
you to hltr horne up

• . Air Conditioning Repair
• Brickmason
·

..

FIRE DEPT.

$79,900

ATTENTION:

Ravenswood, West Virginia

GUN SHOOT

kitchen and living room wilh cathedral ceiling. A bal~ony
bedroom overlooking living room, 2 other big bedrooms. Has
a full basemen! with utility room and workshop. Approx. 10
acres of land wilh 2 caves and an above.ground pool.

2

_____,

......

16141 ... _,4,. •• 1-100-172-5. . 7

"'· 949-2801
••
or Its. 949·2860

BOWMAN'S IUN RD. -A lone home for Alta- Big open

and an

Help wanted

P.O.

11 00 Remington
Slug Guns
870 Remington
Slug Guna
Ithaca Slug Guns
"11 · 13· 1 mo.

. $46,900

blda.
1111 30: (1213. 7, 3tc

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

~

Llcanaod Oh!!!,_Kantucky, Will
Vlrglnls, 304-TT.J-5785.
:::,:::=:=~;;CT:;;;;:ION
;;;;--;;s=
d::::- 12
Situation
CHRISTMAS AU
· un ay,
oec.m~r 9 at ' :oo p.m.,
Wanted
Hardford Community Building.
·
Dolll, truclta, cara trtlnt, llrilpi, Hlv. room.ln m~homll for 2 ·••
r~~dloa, comJ)Utol'l, camcordtra, de
clio
stor-. rodlo control co,., 3 pc.
rty Ia 0.
rlll'o PriYIIa

..

Lomtell on Safford Sch~l ld. off 11. 141

BISSELL :.i
SIDING CO.

992-2034

RUTLAND- DEPOT ST. - Alarge lot with a new sectional
lhat is 28x52. Really beauiHul with cathedral ceilings, skyl·
ighl. bay window, garden bath tub, 3 bedrooms. dining room.
and two baths. The kitchen has gorgeous oak cabinets,

0-.

MOBILE
HEATING &amp; COOLING

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Mkldlepart, Oh.

MIDDLEPORT- Abargain of a home. AI\; story home w~h
3 rooms up and 3 rooms down. Carport, part basement,
equipped_k~chen . Great starter or rental home.
•
• JUST 18,000.

cont.attheDI-Ofllooet
918-3311, fnlm a :OO to
4:30tori.PifC)Int_to_
tnldl. T~11. tnldl II In - vloa. 10 it " oiWIYI on the
roed.
.
lido will be opened MOft•
dly, December 10. 1110 ot
tho Dlstrio1
311H1
Bar 30 Roed, Roedovllo.
Ohio at 2:00 P.M.
. Tha Dllt- ,,.,.,
..,..._.,•• lila

8

9

,___,;.;;~--'"":""'

911 Hysell St.

POMEROY -liO !)OWN PAYMENT- Owners will carry 2nd
mortpee on this two story home on agood street Has alarge
family room. some hardwood Hoors, 3 bedrooms, and a din·
ing room. Has vinyl siding for low maintenance.
ONLY $24,000.

11wM bldl . . 'Ill IRed:
Ono--afe1117
1-t• Fcwtl - . .,,.
wfthout utllty W end ....

P.....,oy

MOVING SALE
CARPENTER
GUNS &amp; AMMO

lANGSVILLE - Bil Level Lot - Side sitting porch, newer
kilthen, ~nyl siding. new carpeting, 2 bedrooms, big living
room, plus a 3 room house for storage or rental.

,.

..

Nlca lnd- mooing 1110, Dac. B
&amp; 10 Sit I MOn. 1Cf a.m. • 5 p~m:
Many MW and UNd hoe 1hokt
tttml. Aut01111tlc waher &amp;
dryer, --., cr.n., old camln_B
. .... wl tlda 3rd 81- Sl

Clol~~aa

KIT ' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Page- 9

Fumwhect Al*tmlflt, next 'to
Ubrlry, porlilng. -'111 holl,
10!sronao raquliod, o u - lar
1 -.114-4-.
.
Fumlohod Apt. 2 bt, 1131
""'·
-·
pakt, .
e1t Claiii:;GIIo,
ue M18 •••
rp.111.

p.m. Setuhlay.

_,Free Eatimltas"

TUPPERS PlAINS- Arbluifl AddHion - 1 story ranch with
3 bedoroms, equipped kitchen, garden area, and approx. \;
acre of land.
· $32,000

Oulll ,., wiiMfl

...

MOBILE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
ALL FURNACE PARTS

... "-ll!lt

POMEROY - Children Will Lon It - Because !here's a
bedroom for all in lhis 4 bedroom home, also a big nice pool
for children lo swim. Huge rooms. full basement, rock flower
garden, a view of lhe river, and a fireplace.
$46,000

ing:
.
S . - d ......_nd rn•ual

Sec~

POIIEIOY, OHIO
:J/&amp;/'90/Ifn

The TupP.,. Plain•Chll·

11

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

217 E.

992-2198
Middleport,

=:.••roy

perttnc. m1k.. the clfference.

Up.

P, . ~
1!:.'-~-206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992·2888/HOME 992-6892
· DOTTIE S. TURNER. BROKER

PA1"H1Ll FORD

We

I(EN'S APPUANCE
. ·sERVICE

OPPO"t\JNJTY

Ohio Company' s Purchase
begin~ing

ALL lUKES

can
also ~~Cid ball and roil
out rlllliattll'l. Wa also
rlpGir Gas Tanb.

-1"11 ~unity. Appllcollono bo picked up II
~. can ,,._

. qual

The. Daily Sentinel

- M I rer....,.., no pata,
Rick Purson Auction Company t---~---:---"T"------------ll~l21. ·
.
now boOkl~ auotlone, I X·
Nice 1 bedroom ,.partmem, 1ow

1' (

Stoekl!

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
Bring It In Or

EQUAL HOLU JG

Town 8, Aonge 14 of tho

.'

Mow Ill
We

- tar:
lnctudlng
::!:t
••ge, I t11ectr1c
it
o n -'oiMomo.E-

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity
ALLYard S.IH Must Bo Paid In
Advonco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
thO day beloro t"- ed Ia to run.
sundoy edition • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Mondal' odltion _. 2:00

Racln., OH

BASHEN RD.,
RACINE
car.,.

Aport. . rn. m
Fowth A....,., ,.,..._ lot
the-,; mUll be A a&lt; older.

'Rt. 124 Lola Moon Nlldlnct,

WRAPPING

. Pick

Situated in Fraction 38,

..

•'

11-12-90

I ~ater

F.....,._,

Ohio .

Household
GoodI

S1

Doruu 1ilr, 700 OCIUON ,...,
oonvonlontry locOied, I
11lrla. fumlohed, 1231 plue
utllillea. 111 Ul 2157.
'·

I

Yard Sale

.

· Apartment
for Rent

e .... . ..._,...... .., _ _ _

IIII

Alrt&gt;Otl, Aowardl
8, 114.....1004.

44

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VICinity

SKINNING,

11 -11- 90-1 mo.

LAFF-A-DAY

part ChfFiUihUI, h.. collar.
Tuelday, November 21, 1110,

'

USED RAILROAD DES

CUTTING,

Real Estate General

Parcel No. 2 :

and

· cuntNG

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Coun, Meigs Coonty, Ohio
(1217. 14. 21. 28; 1114. 11,
1991 etc

-.

BILL SLACK
992-.2269

HILL'S DEER

1

Derk of Common Ptea1

.

. .-

"FIREWOOD

THIS l "xl"
BULLETIN BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE
-AT ss.oo PER DAY ·

anew.r in thia plnding or
any othe' metter at thia

•·

REMOVAL
"LIGHT HAULING

11·30.90-1 ....

Pomeroy- Middleport,

'-

111M~

For Current Prices

949-2206

Doa, Smsll brown 111111.,

7

SHRUB &amp;'11EE

Call 698·6185

Much More.
Gallipolis Location Open
Mon.-Sat. till 9, Sun. til 7
Mason location
Operi Mon.-Sun. til 8

(.oot ;

11/14/tln

Chriltrftlll V1cation

Now Stocked with
Beautiful Fraser Firs
&amp; White Pines, Live
Wreaths &amp; Garland.
Red, Pink &amp; White
Poinsettias &amp;

Loat &amp; Found

Vlcln :~•

992·6215 .
p....,.,, Ohio

OPEN e DAYS A WEEK
ALBANY. OH. LOCATIO
10 AM·Ii PM
CLOSED SUNDAY
Wo Will Cloll At Albltn
Doc. 24 to JMI. 2 Ft~r

6

614-4

V. C. YOUIG II

Call 992·5114

..

VIrgie R. Burford. ., lncom·
poiMI poraon, ba hold to
havo good IIIIo to oold pe..,.,
of ..... lillie ......._
..
Po..,.,· No. i· In thlo com·
plolnt · ond thll Plaintiff,
Rochol Hutton ID bit held to
hOve good title to talcl pereol
of rMI allate doocrl- 11
Parcel No. 2 In 1111• com·
plalrit; that the penlnont
dledo. offldovlto or other In·
llrumenta in the ch1in1 of

..

'

- Room Ad4111ont
·-Gutt• Work
..o.Eiocnloel • Pk11nblna
- ConcNteWork
- Rootlna
-lntorlar. Elltorlar
Polntillg
tFREE ESTIMATES!

For Curnnt Prices

ext 232.

'

CAI'EN1R BVICE

OPEI\I EVERY DAY AT
POMEROY LOCATiON
7 DAYS I AM-7 PM
CLOSED CHRISTMAS
DAY ONtY

Pleasant

01

Friday, December 7. 1990

YOUNG'S

Cltrlet••• ~,
Til-COUNTY
IECYCUNG ·

Big Kids Babies Program
will meet Dec. 11, 6:30 P.M.

t l a - In sold
oomplalnt. Plllntlfltl' da·
mend for relilf lo • !Orth In
tho oomplalnt oo foiOwa:
WHEREFORE l'tointllfa
IIIIo

. ,. .e.,••

.

.

1990

Business Services

BULLETIN BOARD

~~~-oflOki
- · by
virtue
lila ...
dowoipliott
of.

December 7.

7

i" •

Putrtllto to - - ...., - .
w.ilituno.., l"llk -~. WU I'.&gt;'
old, •12IJ'VIU1t ... •.
It:'"
lliolrllil ..h a-.-. 1
.... 'Tv..IMiliiNIII.

e

L.oat &amp; Found

...

.:

....

11on.Apfri-·M1CI-1NiCAA
-011101.
· IIN.tho
Gillieallaoand
In 81-. ~Ire, Ohio

35 Lota • Acreage

28,
mlteo
1110._
Apptltll(llil
_- _ aull-

ma.

:==.ai&amp;:l=""

R - 2 -, 1 ICNioll.3
- h Oarllpollo Loob,
pu1r11o wal«, no tollrlollonl,
wlh ~... ll'onlogo, 304-

41120 -

'llll!ndaY, Dooombor wat• evallabla. -

HOMI TV~_,.
· (1)
lrtllol.
Datolla.
Ext.
114112.

--: ,_... --,,, ...........
on-c:;n,..
atull.bo.-'tillg

~

LQ1S fOR IALI In GaHipotlo
l'olry. Wll ..tra11ora. oHy

t::.r=-i~--=
Are.,
., .Oil .J.."'ii'tnee:tt.
.

.-.
36

104-175-

.

Riel Eltate
Wlnted

=:;...

rat.....
......:::"'..::

'""'~
............

. a.ooo .:\ooe
~

•

�Page 1Q-Thl Daily Sa 1tinal

'

Nati()nal unemploYIJlent rate. rises to 5.9%

-

WASHINGTON (UPI) _:_The
NorwoOd told the congresReUecttng the t.nerease · · The nuin~r peilpte who re- Industry addea jobs durjng the tlnued ·to wallow last month,
· trimming 60,000 jobs. In the past
nation's labor market took a sional Joint Economic Commit- . number of factory layof!a, the ' cently lost thefr jobs and those month.
"substantial and · widespread'; tee that sharp employment .deunemploymentrateformanu!ac- who have been unemployed for . The decline In manutacturlnJI' six months, the Industry has shed
.
·hlt last month as the unemploy- . clines were spread throughout turing· workers rose nearly a inore .than 27 weekS also In· totaled_200,0QO, with reductions about 250,000 Jobs.
The
average
workweek
for
:
widespread throughout the lnment rate rose 0.2 percent. to 5.9 the goods and services sectors of · perj:entage point last month to. creased last month·.·
per:cent, the highest tevelln more the economy; with the greates 1 .. 6.6· percent. The construction . · Total civilian employment de- dustry. The greatest decline production and . non-supervisory .·
workers rose 0.2 hOurs In No-. ,
Industry, strapped by the . na- cllned by 450,000 to 117.3 mUllan, . came from the automoblle.lndusthan two yea,rs, the Labor De- hits In manufacturing and
vember
to 34.4 hours, after ••
tlon's economic slowdown and continuing a downward trend .try, which cut ~5,000 jobs In
construction.
partment said Friday.
"Employment fell sharply and
tighter credit standards by lend· that began In June. Employment November . Most of this reduc- declining 0.5 hours the month '
In yet · another $lgn of . the
•
In
nearly
ev.ery
Industry,"
she
ers, posted an unemployment amol!g teenagers has beeii dec- tion came from ·temporary plant before.
weakness ·spreading throughout
Tile
manufacturing
workweek
said.
rate of 13.6 percent.
lining ev.en 'iol!ger, since March. shutdowns to avoid excessive
t~e U. ~ . economy, employment
decreased 0.2 hOUrs io 40.5 hours
The number of unemployed
· Layoffs acci)unted.for much of · The civilian labor force has Inventory, .the government said.
levels fell sharply last month
Wtth ·· non-farm pay.rolls losing workers swelled by 300,000 to 7.4 the job losses In these Industries.
changed little at 124.6 million~
But when the auto companies an~ · factoryovert!rnedecllnedO.l ;
..
'
NOR·f.a rm pay~on shoWed a shave jobs, the Impact Js felt hour to 3.5 hours..
267,000 jo~ . )l'lanufacturlng, con· mUllondurlng the month. Most of TJte number of job losers, who
for
·
.
Average
.
hourly
.
e
arnings
structlon and retail jobS were the newly jobless were adult now make up more than halt of "mat ked deterioration," the La· down the line. Jobs were lostlast
men. Unemployment rates for the unemployed, r!&gt;.s e by ne\lrly .· llor J)epartn)ent Said, with a month In several other Industries prQduction and nqn-supervlsory · ·
hard.e st hit.
· The monthlY job loss was the adult men have Increased stead· 300,000 last month and by about decline of 265,000 jobs In No- that supply automakers, lnclud- workers remained essentially
greatest sln.c e the recession of lly through the year to reach 5. 4 700,000 since June, the govern· · vember and a 180, OOOdecllnethe lng _fabricated metals, rubber unchanged In Nov.ell)ber. Average hourly earnings rose o.7
percentln November. ··
ment said.
· month before.
and plastics .
1~ and the· second consecutive
.
percent becau:;e ofthe rebound In
Unemployment rates for other
Only mining and ·the service
The construction l!idustry con~rge monthly decline. . ·
hours
worked. Average weekly I
· "In summary, the November categories also Increased. The
earnings
edged down to $348.49.
labor market data show a sub- adult woinen unemployment rate
Over
the
year, average -hoi!rly
stantial and widespread · over· reac.hed 5.1 percel!t last month:
earnings
have
·· Increased 3.6
tile-month deterioration," said teenagers, 16.5 percent; · whites,
.
.
percent ~nd average weekly
·· Janet Norwood, commissioner of 5.1 percent; blacks, 12.4 percent
earnings
!)ave gained 3 .percent:
and
Hispanics,
'
8
.6
percent.
the Bureau of Labor Statistics.

.Cheney says hostage release
..:..._~ doesn'f halt troop bui~dup
~

•

I

~ostage ... .__ ·_co_riun_·_ued_._fro_m..:.p...:ag....;.e1_ _ _
&lt;;hange ·my thinkilli oil his need
tp comply 100 perc~&gt;nl, without
condition, to the U.N.
r',esolutions. "
: Senate Republican ·leader Bob
Dole of Kansas , said of the
!lroposed release of the hostages,
"No doubt about it. The pres!·
qent's policy Is working. 'I:he last
thing we need are any more timid
signals from 'Congress."
·
: On · a related matter, Baker
lfaS asked about reports · the
qnited.States, ina shift of policy,
was recommending the U.N.
Security . Council support an
International ·Middle East peace
cpnference..
• "We hav.e not ln . any way
shifted our position on an International conference.'' Baker said.
''Be'c ause of our consistent posl·
tlon that. we will not lllik the gulf
crisis and Arab-Israeli dispute,
this Is certainly not an appropr)ate · time for such a
Conference. " : Baker was . backed bY Bush,
_who told reporters In Santiago,
' ';I'he question is the aggression
I '

against Kuwait. There will be
and Is. no linkage to the Palest!· .
nlan or the West Bank question.
Eaker said there Is no evidence
that economic· sanctlo115 against
Iraq will succeed In dislodging
Iraqi forces from Kuwait, and
therefore the option of military
action must be raised.
· He told the House committee,
. "We hav.e to face the fact that,
four months Into this conflict,
none of our efforts have yet
produced any sign of change In '
Saddam Hussein.
"NQ on~! wants war," said
Baker, buthearguedthatrelytng
on sanctions alone merely encourages Saddam to try to break
the International coalition
aligned against him.
In testimony Wednesday be' fore the S.e nate Foreign Rela·
lions. Committee, Baker tan Into
heav.y flak, mainly along. party ,
lines, with Democrats demanding the administration give sanctions more time and Republicans ·
· saying tl)at the public Is squarely
behind Bush.
,

'

.

,YMuch
United Press International
of the Gulf Coast was hit
Friday with a variety of foul
weather - high winds In Texas,
cold temperatures In Alabama
and rain In Louslana and
Mississippi.
Winds in Galveston, Texas,
reached 35 mph, creating rough
seas that prompted the National
W!!ather Service to advise sma 11
craft operators · to stay In port.
Motorists on the causeway lead·
lng to the bridge were warned
about buffett!ng winds and residents were ·told to stow their
ol(tdoor furniture so It wouldn't
become airborne.,

•

'
farther
down the coast, a cold
· front that passed through the '
~orpus Christi area also . left
windy, cold weather.
·
~ cold front stalled ov.er
Mississippi ' overnight and
breught rain to the southern part
of the state.
The approaching cold front
also put an end to sunny days In
Alabama, where rain fell In
mlich of the state overnight alld ,
temperatures were In the .20s In
the mot:nlng hours. The cold front
also promlied to chase away the

OPEN DAILY 9-5
SUNDAY 1·5

POINSETTIAS .

7 Calal'l - All SillS

POINSETTIA IASim
H()i.LY TREES
FOLIAGE IASIETS
LM &amp; cur

nm .

For Yht Loved .One's Grave•
llanbtt, VGJ~~ and Sprays

HUBBARD'S
GREENHQUSE. . ,
SYIACUSE, OH.
992-5776
v

' -.

•
Along the River .... ..... Bl-8
Business .. .. ;...... :.. .. .... DI,S
Comics- ... .... .. ...... .... )nsert
Classifie ds ......... :.. .. ... D3-7
Deaths ............ ......... ,... A3
Editorial ....... .;...... ..... .. A2
Sports ... .......... .... ...... Cl-8

Hannan Trace FFA soil teaDU!
among the state's best: Dl

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Vol. 25 No. 43
Copyrigh1Bd 1990

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~ - STARTING ·DECEMBER 1OTH ..·I:

By United Press Internatlonai ·
Ohioans can expect a di-y
weather pattern through the
·
weekend. · ·
Skies across the Buckeye State
were 1\'lOStly c)oudy early Friday
morning with clearing over the
northwest c!&gt;rner. Temperatures,.
ranged from the mid 20s over
northwest counties to mid · 30s
over southeast sections. Winds
were light andgenerally!rom the
northwest.
Clouds will Increase across
northern Ohio late Friday after·

Stocks
Dalty stock prices
(As oflO: 30 a.m.) ·
Bryce .jllld Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ell II &amp; Loewl

noon as a weak cold front moves
across the northern Great Lakes.
btherwtse skle$ will. be partly
cloudy Friday night with lows In
the upper 'los. ,
.
The Rocky Mountain high
pressure system wm regain
control of Obi!&gt;' s weather on
Saturday and ,Sunday. It
. provide variable cloudy days
with afternoon highs In the 40s.
Qn the Friday morning
weather map, a stationary front
was located over the southeastern states. A large area of high
pressure was centered ov.er the
Rocky Mountain ,region and
extended, across the central
Plains states to the lower Great
Lakes. •
The southeastern front and the
high pressure will remain nearly
stationary through Saturday.

wlll

Hospital news .

Am Electric Power ............. 28~

r

WILL 8E 'OPEN .
I WEEKNIGHTS.UNTIL
1·
8:00 P.M. AND
I SUNDAY'S DECEMBER
I 16TH &amp; 23RD FROM
• 1-5:00 P.M. FOR YOUR
SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

I'

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w

Dry ·weather ·for weekend

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0\-\;ff
·

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93 MILl ST.

I,

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5t~ttt 03o~ltsl

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MIDDLEPORT

992-6657

.CHRISTMAS
SALE!

(olognes ....:.................................. 40°/o off
Silk Po.insettia ...............;...... 30°/o Off

Public ·tneeting
for Rutland
:· · '·'~~ sewer Monday

•

PRIC~ S2 59 5

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS, INC.
. 992-2.174
500 E~ST MAIN STREET

.

POMEROY, OHIO

Red 'Tag Gifts ......~.~............... 40°/o Off

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_ _ _ _...;...._---:-....;-...---..! :

Prescription Shop
992-6669
253 North Second
I

Middleport, Ohio

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
directly intO our stonn sewers
Times-Sentinel Staff
which result in not only terrible
RUTLAND - Information on the odors, but is unhealthy to all the .·
J)roposed waste water colleetion residents," the ma~orcommented.
ancf sewage b'eaunent syslem instal- In stressing the unponance of the
•
lation, and the eaSements required sewage system to the economy or
.
to move forward on ihe $2.2 mil- Rutland, Mayor Fink said that the
' ..... '.: .
remembrance GaiUpolls' Bicentennial celebration, 00
. of
lion project will be presented for a villaRe ''will never attract new
WELCOME TO GALLIPOLJSl - In a joint effort, the Gallipolis
the
Bicentennial
Commission.
Pictured·
from
left
are:
Dr.
Donald
final
tirrie at 7:30 p.m. Monday at businesses or even be able to keep
Chamber of Commerce, the Beautification Committee and the
co·chainnan;
Jan
Thaler,
the
Rutland
Civic Cenler.
the businesses we have unless we
Thaler,
bicentennial
.commission
Bicentennial Comltllsilon, made possible the entrance ·sign
bicentennial
commlssiow,
Charles
I.
Adkins
Jr.,
bicentennial
RuUand
Mayor
James
M.
Fink
is
all
pull together and cooperate in
locaied along Route 7, near the Gallia-MelgS Regional Airport.
enco.uraging land and home ownerS making the new sewage system a
commission co-chairman; Beth Cherrington, Beautification
who .have questions about the reality." ,
Designing the $4,500 cast'alwnlnum disk, ·as a gift to the
committee; Paula Thacker, Chamber· of. Commerce exec. sec.;
project· and particularJy·'those who
Each borne owner who has not
community, was Mark Epling, architect, of Gallipolis. BralnTom Wiseman, Chamber president; Dale Iman, city manager;
h
· ed
a1
·
st~·rmlng lhe. project was Pam Matura, director ofthe Area on
Jewell
ans, Beaullfication. committee; and Rick Martin, site
ave notas yet Sign easements to
ready Signed easement documents
Aging Agency. Funds for the project we•e· received from the
attend the meeting.
wiU be contacted by some village
coordl
. (Times'Sentlnel photo by Krls Cochran)
Several meetings to explain the official this week, Ma)ior Fink said.
Travel and Tourism !}rant. The .entrance sign Is a lasllng
purpOse of and need for the Ms. Smith wiU go to homes to as~
easements
earlier
.executing
· doC:uments
.1.
1-~a
.1. ··
.a.a.
fall.
Mayor were
Fink held
advises
that this
this sist
thoseinwllo
are unable
to get out for
or
will be the final informational have work. schedules which keep
POMEROY - The AGHJMV appointed to sit on the committee director pos,ition. The committee is been reponed, have h~ their plans meeting before the project is !ldver- them from attending the meeting.
expected to choose six "semi- · returned (or revision.
tised for bid in early 1991.
Easements are .required because
Solid Waste District is a step closer for their respective counties.
, to appointing a director · to superAccording to Roush, the commit- finalists" !'rom that pool before
The policy committee had earlier
Representatives of the Ohio En- the plans calls for each property .to
vise activities of the district.
tee will begin the selection process . hiring director.
recornme!lded two changes to the vironrnental Protection Agency, have an on-lot pump syslem. After
A committee consisting of a at a meeting in Athens on DecemRoush also reponed that no. plari, one allowing the district to · Engineering Associates, Inc. which the irt$tallation of the syslem on
.county commissioner from each of ber .20. Qualifications {or the job changes were made to the district's limit the acceptance of out-of-dis- designed the system, Attorney each propeny, the village is rethe._counties involv~ (Athens, Gal- include knowle&lt;jge of the opemtion solid Wll$te plan before it wrui sub- · trict garbage, aild the other allow' Patrick O'Brien, Mayor Fink, and quired to clean·and restore the land.
lia, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs and · of the district and general manage- mitted to the Ohio Environmenlal ing iransfer statians, if needed, in Rutland Council members wiU be . The ea,sements are restricted to five
Yi1!Wn) was appointed when the ment skills needed tb nin ·a 4istrict PtoteCtiol) Ag~ncyJor approval.
addition to. the transfer station on hand .to .answer questiens Moil- feet ori either side of the on-lot sysdistrict's policy committee met in the size of the · AGHJMV district,
. No word lias been received yet being planned for construction in day nighL A notary' public will .also tern. .
.
·• . . 1 ·
.McAnhur earlier this week.
Roush said.
.
on whether Or not the plan will be Meigs County. Those · changes, be [here · to ass1st m execubng
. The waste collection and sewage
Meigs CoWJty Commissioner
Roush reported on Friday that he approved by the Ohio EPA, or sent however, were noi added before the easements.
treatment system is being financed
Manning Roush and Gallia County had personally screened "at _least back to the distri~t for changes. plan was sent to Columbus. ·
.Aceording to Sandy Smith, vii- with a grant of $1,549,315 frorri the
Commissioner George Pope were 20" letlers of application . for the Several districts in the state, it has
· !age clerk, there are a to!al of 305 Federal Environrnen!al . Protection
1
1
L.
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ea5ements to secure. Currently Agency and $617,000 from the
there are about 125 land and home Ohio Public · Works Commisson in
~'
owners yet to sign easement docu- Issue 2 monies. 11)e village ' borments.
rowed $200,000 early this year
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
may be present
.
which will be constructed ne~t Carpenter to · clleek . into a service
It has been emphasized by from the Ohio Waler Development
Times-Sentinel Slaff
In other action, the board gave a year.
·
•
contract on terminals only. It was officials that there is no ch81¥e for Authority so that the engineering
POMEROY . ·Negotiations with salary increase of 19 ce~ts an hour
The board also will enter. into a pointed out that sometimes it is installation if the propeny 1s in· on the project could go forward.
the Meigs Local Teachers' Associa- · to Brent . Manley, director of leak _msurance program w1th the more economical to replace phones eluded on the sewage lines at the
The work on trying to get needed
tion concerning the "no smoking" transportabon, and employed Kathy · Leadmg Creek Wa~ Conservancy ratlier than have them repall'ed and time of installation. However; if a sewage P"eatment facilities for Rut·
policy recently adopted by the Jones as a substitute teacher for the District whicll. supJ?Iies watef to for that reason the the Board land or home owner docs not par- land begari more than 15 years ago.
Meigs Local Board of Education 1990-91 school year.
.
.
Bradbury; HarrisorlVllle,and Salem questioned the need for an -overall ticipate in the program at the time In 1975, . the prolllem was studied
.will begin immediately.
·
A field _tnp for the Me1gs High · Center. The cost per ~~ool ~111 be . service con~ct.
.
of initial construction, then there and recommendations made but ·
Meeting Friday night the Bol!rd show chorr to . Fon Recovery on · $24 a year. In addlbon 11 was
An execuuve sess1on was held to will be a charge for the actual cost · due to a lack of funds and other
voted to enter into the ~egotiations Feb. I and 2 was approved by the decided to renew the service discuss ~rsonnel foUowing the of hookup, which, according to problems, the project was not pur·
and to postpOne the effective date board.
.
agreement of E. C. Babben {Qr the open meebng.
Mayor Fink, would be · ap· sued.'
of the new policy from Jan 1 to
Arrangements were made to high school sewage treatment plant,
Attending were Supt. Carpenter, proximately $3,000 to $5,000.
Then in early 1989, when fundJan. 1s.
·
grant an easement to the Village of and the liability insurance with Jane Fry, treasurer, and board
.. Residents will be required to pay ing prospects for such projects ap,The policy, as adopted by the Rutland for the installation of Nationwi~e Insuranc~. .
members, Jeff Werry, Roben a monthly charge of about $7 for peared' to be more available, !he viiboard. specified that smoking is not ~ewa~e syslem equ1pment m con. Followmg a discussiOn on ser.- Snowden, Larry Rupe, R1chard each 1,000 gallons of water used. !age, assisted by Kim Shields, viito take place anywhere within any JWlCbon w1th the overall wasle v!ce contracts for telephone ser- Vaughl!fl, and Raben Banon, pres!· An average household in RuUand, !age consultant, submitted grant reo£ the buildings where students waler and sewage treatment project v1ce, the Board asked Supt. James dent.
according to · r~ords, would use quests and were successful in
between 2,000 and 3,000 gallons of . securing funding.
water a month, ttanslating into bills
Since thal time several hearings
II
II
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that would average between $15 ·for input from residents have been
and $24 a month.
held.
In a letter to home owners,
Obtaining easements from land
.J anuary;
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) the next chairman of the Ohio chairman since Gov.. Richard
Mayor
Fink
said.
th3t
while
he
is
and
bume owpers is the final step
~983,
but
Celeste
took
office
in
The
speculation
includes
de·
Speculation is mounting in the .Democratic Party.
aware
that
many
of
the
propeny
which
has to be taken before the
plans
to
return
to
Toledo
se&gt;on.
feated
Secretary
of
State
Sherrod
capital city about the Identity of
James Ruvolo, 42, has been
His term runs through June of
BroWn, but he has said he is owners do not wish to panicipale in village can advenise for bids on the
1992, bu t,he has said he will leave
interested In a possible U.S. the sewage . project,. all p~rty actual construCtion. Tentative plans
once .the attorney general's race
Senate campaign .and would , owners w1th10 the VIllage will be · call for the work to begin in early'
serve as party chairman only if required by law (Ohio Revised spring or summer and be completed
Is decided.
"I want to get out in Januar y,"
drafted by a strong .consensus of Code Sec. 729.01-11) to hook up to , within a yeat.
the sewage system.
The area ·included in the sewage
Ru vola said Friday .
party leaders.
Mayor
Fink
described
the
·
plan
takes in. the complete village
"We're
nowhere
neat
a
decl·
• Toppiqg the list of potential
Proper precautions should be
·GALLIPOLIS - With winter
sewage
project
as
.being
"heaven
of
Rutland
and extends up New
sian
on
my
repllicement,"
said
c'andldates for the chairmanship
already ·upon us. along with Its -taken during the holiday season. .are
.sent"
Lima
Road
.
to, While Hill Road,
Ruvolo , who was Lucas Ce&gt;unty .
state Tax Commissioner
"But If a home fire does
cold temperatures, the chances
"We
have
been
in
desperate
need
down·
Route
124
to Happy Hollow
Democratic chairman when Ce·
occur ... he said, ",there are three · Joanne J,.lmbach and William
of a fire occuring in one's horne
of
a
sewage
system
for
years.
As
Road,
out
Salem
Street
to the top of
leste ran for gover nor In 1982.
fire safety steps that can become Chavanne, chief of staff for
dramatically rise. The Galiia
most
of
you
already
know,
sewage
Lasher
Hill,
and
out
Depoi
Street to
"We are In a n evaluation
Attorney General Anthony Cele·
life-saving techniques if followed
County Sheriff's Departrrient is
from many ·homes is emptied beyond the corporation limits.
brezze Jr. Both will be jobless to process.'' "
properly ."
,offering some home safety Ups
Salisbury recommended re·
for local residents to . prevent
minding
family members to
home fires .
always
drop
to the floor when a
Siatlst!cs show that over 1,000
fire
starts.
If
clothing catches on
home fires do occur dally in the
fire,
victims
should roll on the
!Jolted States and about 7,000
·the
flames are
floor
until
persons per year die in .horne
S!llothered.
fires . as a result of carelessness
Second, family members
or Poor fire-prevention planning.
should be instructed to crawl
In preparing for winter
through smoke. Heads should be
weather, Gailla Counly Sheriff
below the smoke and hands ·
Dennis R. Salisbury recom·
should
be used to guide .one when
. mends home owners ·check all
vision
Is
Impaired by smoke.
fireplaces and wood burning
Finally,
Sal!sbury stated,
stoves for safety. Batteries In
make
sure
thatthe entire family
smoke alarms should· be tested
ha~
several
routes
of escape from
and replaced If necessary.
all
areas
of
the
house.
Hav.e a
Leaves only ·should be burned
pre-designated
meeting
place
where legal and under close
superV,Isl!&gt;n.
.
., ·. outside the home, and practice
getting · there with several In·
.Christmas is time to take
horne fire drills. Make sure to
special precautions against
emphasize that once a person Is ·
home fires, SaliSbury stated.
out of the house, he or she Is t!&gt;
Real Christmas trees that are
stay out, Salisbury stated.
drying out and authentic wreaths
~'Please take these simple
· can be dangerous around candles'
card signed by each student. Followlnl their caroiiDJ, the students
HERE WI!: COME A·CAROLING • The s~tb grade ciasses at
precautiOJ\s
io keeP this Gallla
jlnd faulty .elilctrlc sources .. Sevwere treated to bot cbocolate In the mini-park from the Pomeroy
Pomeroy E!eme11tary were In the Christmas spirit as they caroled
CoUJ!tY winter safe and fire·
eral chlmne:,&lt;s burti each year
Merchants Association. '
·
to tbe business establishments In Downtown Po10eroy on Friday afwhen flaming , wrapping paper . free one," Salisbury s,
ternoon. Each business caroled received a batch of cookies and a
· Ignites. them, Salisbury stated.
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aste
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pts
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' k .about new..· party c·.ha:r'man·
.h,;0 .d em·,S th;n_
O

offered by Sheriff

MINIATURE COLLECTIBLE

SPECIAL

A Multim!ldia Inc ~ N.Wap•per ..·

Fire prevention tips

TO

·cHEVROLET
CHEVETTE 2 DR.
SALE

II '·

£;0UNT
DOWN

1986

Auto. trans., power steering, air cond .• tilt
wheel. rear defogger. A great little car. Gas
cruncher.

W..

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

Toys ....................... GooD sELEcnoN 2 S0/o ou ·
Christmas .
. ·
··
De~orations ........................;...... 3 0°/o .· Off

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Mostly sunny Sunday wl_tb a
h lg~ around 50.

15 Sactlono, 144 Pageo

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis. Point Pleasant, December 9, 1990.

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Announcements·

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c•rllf••• s..... ,

Page Bl

Cl

Inside

James Sands:
In a Ume befor~ antibiotics
~inter was a dreaded time: A8

or. :

Ashland Oil ........ ................ 29%
Holzer Medical Center
AT&amp;T ........ .. ,............... .... .... 30
Discharges for Dec. 6 - Mrs.
Bob Evans .............. ............14%
Albert Bloomfield and son,
Charming Shoppes ..... .......... 11
City Holding Co..................15% James Craft, Mrs. Ralph Day
and son, 'Monica Ehman, Susan
Federal Mogul.. ...... : ....... .... 13~
Greer, Joanna Howell, Donna
Goodyear T&amp;R .......... .... .....15%
Johnson,
Clara Kay, Elizabeth
Key Centurion ....................11%
McClaskey,
Roy Monroe, VIckie
Lands' End .. ............ .... ........ 14
Norton,
Charles
Prunty, Theresa
L.lmlted Inc ........................16%
good weather In the .Florida
Star,c her and Naomi Whitt.
Multimedia Inc ...................62%
l;&gt;anhandle.,
Rax Restaurants.................. %
· Elsewhere, New England had
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... .... ... 17')4
The air distance between Paris and
a mix of sun and cloudy skies
Sboney's Inc . ............ .., ........ i.l
Chicago is 4,143 miles.
with temperatures In the 30s and · Star Bank ...... .......... ... ........16%
. 40s and a low-pressw-e area was
Wendy's lnt'l. ........ .. ........... 6% · W.C. Fields' original name was Wilthreatening the Mld·Atlantlc
Worthington lnd ....... .. .........21% liam Claude Dukenfield.
.
Coast with rain. Fog, moisture
and temperatures near or just
below freezing made driving
dangerous In parts 'of Oregon.

New Op.. For

College .basketball . roundup .-

Toot! Toot!
Trains a
lifetime hobby

·Area ·deaths,! ·
· · Michael.P. Bissell ·
.!

benefit from his aggression. by
150,00o U.S. troops ordered to the
BRUSSELS, Belglutn (UPI) .
Plans to complete the massive gUlf last month will be "sufficient saying he's .able to keep 10
u.s. troop buildup In the Persian . to give us offensive military · percent of what he stole or 20
Michael Patrick Bissell, three
percent of What he stole or 30
Gulf are unchanged by Iraq's capability should It be required,"
year old son of L. Michael and :
percent of what he stole,would do
statement that all hostage~ will but he asked other NATO coun·
Patricia A. Howard Bissell, Smith •
·
fundamental
violence to the very
be released, Defense Secretary · tries to send troops If possible.
Run ROad in Rutland, died un- :
principles that are at stake
Dick Cheney said Friday.
"Most valuable at tills point,"
eXpect¢1y at Veterans Memorial :
he~." he said.
.
Hospital 00 ThurSday. .
. . .
. Cheney, at a meeting of NATO he said, would be self~sustalnmg
''Such
a
settlement
wpuld
be
defense ministers, also re- heav.y c!&gt;mbat units "ready to
. Meigs County . Coroner,
reminiscent of hlstorial preceque$te!l that · U.S. allies send support themselves and not be a
DQuglas Hunlei' Said that the child ·
dents where we'v_e seen appeaseadditional heavy combat _troops logistical ~rain" on existing
had been ill with flu-like ·
ment of dictators In the past,"
to the gulf, as IVell as artillery supply netw~rks, but still part of
symptoms, and was transported to :
Cl)eney silld.
and air defense systems.
an Integrated · command
Veterans by a Ru~d Emergency ·
"We have no plans to alter the structure.
·
Medical Services unit when· the •
deployment now under way," ·
symptoms became more severe.
,
Cheney said. ''If the hostages are
He was born on July 28, 1987, in ·
He also asked -for additional
released, we welcome that, but sealift and airlift support to
Gallipolis.
·
Lodge to meet
we dQn't think Saddam Hussein transport troops and supplies.
· Besides his . PBI'ents, he is sur- '
The Racine Lodge No. 461 F &amp;
deserves praise for having deAM will meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. vived by his sister, Michelle Anne ·
Cheney silld his requests to
cided to release people held In other NATO defense ministers for
Rutland;
maternal ,
installation · of · officers. Bissell,
violation of every norm of were "generalized," and did not
Refreshments will follow and all grandparents, Glispie and Edith ·
International behavior.
Masons are invited to attend. ·
Christine Howard, Po~eroy: paterseek an Immediate response.
nal grandmother, Ada E. Bissen of · ·
••we have no plans whatsoever
"I did not come with specific
Boosters to meet
to change our course or our requests, saying, 'lwantCojlntry
Long
Bottom;
great-great
The .Meigs · Jum'or·
High· grandfathe. r, J .D. · Ki tc hen, S. an dy
Objectives or our policy,'' Cheney X to commit an additional
·Academic Boosters wiU meet • ,Hook, Ky.; and several aunts, untold a news conference after a
brigade,"' he said.
joint meeting Qf JIIATO's Defense
,
Cheney rejected any settle- Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Meigs . cles and cousins. ·
Planning Comll)lttee and Nument of the gUlf crisis that would Junior High Cafeleria. AU in teres- , · He was preceded in death by his
clear Plan·nlng Group.
great-grandfather, Joseph E. Bisallow Iraq to keeJ) part of Kuwait. · ted person are urged to attend.
sen.
Cheney ~aid the additional
''To allow Saddarn Hussein to
Funeral services w!U be held on
Country music night
The Lottridge Community Cen- Sunday at 3:30 p.m. at Ewing
ter will host country music night on · Funeral Horne in Pomeroy, with
Sarurday from 6 p.m. to midnight Rev. Rolien Punell officiating. .
According to a report from the All bands are welcome. RefreshAn Athens man suffered minor
Burial will be in Sand HiU
Injuries Thursday · after the Gallla-Melgs .post of the State ~~nts. will be available. _The public Cemetery.
.
.
tractor-trailer he ·was driving Highway Patrol, Bailey was IS mv1ted. The center is ·located on
Friends may call at the funeral
overturned on State· Route 681.
wes !bound when he apparently Athens County Road 53, five miles home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
' Martin L. Bailey, 30, was taken lost control of his truck and went west of Coolville,
p.m. on Satirrday.
___.,.,
to Ve~rans Memorial aospitai ott the right side of the road. The
following the crash near U.S. 33. truck then slid Into a ditch and
.
He was treated formlnorlnjurles overturned.
Bailey was cited for failure to
.a nd released, a hospital spokeswoman stated Friday.
wear a safety,belt.

Gulf·Coast gets ugly
·weather: cold, rain
.

'

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·RA C ·asks reconsideration Man hurt a~ semi overturns
~f forced bargaining
By Michele Carter
' well settled. that states cannot inter·
OVP Staff
fere with the righis and obligations
.
provided. b_y the NLRA including
:Ravenswood · Aluminutil Cor· the bargaimng process.
·
p6ration has ljSked for reconsider&amp;·
RAC appreciates the concern of
tion for a stay in an order made by Judge Fox, the statement said; but
Judge Fred L. Fox, II, concerning the corporation believes the laws
forced collective bargaining with goveminj! collective b.argainin~ are
the United Steelworkers of America . and should remain in.the dorruun of
according· to a staleinent released the Federal Government.
frpm the company on Thursday.
Joe Chapman, · USWA Staff
· ·Ju!lge Fox was appointed by the Representative, said Friday momWV Supreme Court to hear the in- ing that the union has challenged
· junction petition by the compaily to . the RAC request. The tinion
li1Jiit the number of picketers at ·lawyers have filed a motion in supeach station. Fox's decision called ponofthejudge'sdecision.
for tlie picketers to be limited to
Accmding to Chapman, the full
silt, limited to their J)icket areas, the negotiating team from the union
cQn.pany security gUards to be will ' be at the Jackson County
li~ited to company property, no Courthouse on Monday ready to sit
bl'ight lights oi' weapons for either down for serious bargaining. "We
pany, and both sides were to sit' . are going to fully comply with the
dl)wn at the Jackson County judge's order," Chapman said.
Courthouse for serious bargaining
orl Monday until a settlement is
Using the Classifieds
made.
Is as Easy as .. .
1The statement said the company
felt the judgment was a fait one,
with ' one exception. The company
questioos the ability of Fox to order
me sides to ~ain. RAC does not
oppose collecbve bargaining in
good faith.
:According to the statement, procedures for this kind of bargaining
have been established by Federal
Law, namely through the National
uibor Relations.Act (NLRA). It is

75 cents

Sunday

Friday, December 7, 1990 :

Pomeloy-'-Middleport, Ohio

a

-~

·'

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