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•

Thursday. January 6. 1989

Pomeroy-'-Middieport, Ohio

'

No.1 Duke
wins another
.
cage game

Ohio Lottery
Daily Num.,J;'
132
Pick-4

Page

Cloudy tonight. Low hi mid
30s. Chance of rain 20 percent.

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~Os. Chance of rain 30 percent.

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No.169

2 Soctiono. 14
A Multimedia

$2 million investment

GTE plans to install
new phone equipment
By NANCY YOACHAM
. Sentinel News Staff
A $2 mllllon Investment . by
GTE North, Inc. is going to make
It possible for Pomeroy Middleport telephone subscrib·
ers to take advantage of today's
customized telephone services,
such as Call Forwarding, Call
Waiting; Three-Way Calling and
Speed Calling.
New switching equipment ,
which will make the custom
services possible, will be In·
stalled by the company In Pomeroy on July 15.
GTE North, Inc. has already
constructed \1 building addition
to house a reserve generator for
their new central office. Tile
house adjacent to their Pomeroy
building on Main ·s treet is being
torn down to provide adequate
parking for GTE vehicles.

AccoPdlng to Service Manager
Phil Ramey, this new central
office will provide (aster process·
lng, lmpr0ved transmission, and
greater call handling capacity.
Tfie digital system also makes it
possible to offer the optional
custom calling features for customers whose telephone numbers
begin with 992.
The ~om services are Call
Forwarding, which can forward
calls to another location; Call
Waiting, which alerts the user to
an Incoming call when the line
already ' is In use; Three-Way
Calling, which adds a third party
td a&gt; conversation already In
progress; and Speed Calling,
which connects as many as 30
frequently called numbers by
dialing 'just one or· two digits.
GTE North, Inc. Is also placing
a fiber optic cable between

Pomeroy and Albany. This link
will complete the fiber optic
route between Pomeroy and
Athens. Fiber optic technology
provides for clearer transmls·
slon of voice and data communi·
cation. Calls are transmitted at
the speed of light over hair thin
glass strands . Pomeroy , Racine,
Rutland, Letart Falls and Por·
!land exchanges will have their
long distance calls processed
over this new fiber network.
Local swltchworkers , Barry
McCoy and Jim Bernard, have
already received 24 weeks of
training In Fort Wayne, Ind . to
prepare them for th e malnte·
nance of this new equipment.
Beginning Feb. 1, they w111 work
with lnstaltatlon crews t.o have
the new equipment ready for
service by July 15.

Jobless rate drops to 5.3 %
· COMING DOWN - This house next to the GTE
buUdlng In Pomeroy Is coming down to make

room for additional parking space. The new
·p arking space I&amp; needed to compensate for space
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lost when GTE North, Inc. constructed an
addition to their existing building. The building
addition Wll$ needed to house new equipment
which will benefit telephone subscflbers In the
- l;'omeroy,~lddleport Rr\!a. .
. •.

Riffe says no ballot issues
are planned u~til November
By LEE LEONARD
talked about increasing taxes for
UPI Statehouse Reporter
government spending In the next
COLUMBUS - Ohio House
two years.
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D ·
They said· Celeste discussed
Wheelersburg, said Thursday he neither the question of taxes nor
Is opposed to seeking a public ' the timing of a ballot Issue,
vote on an education tax untll . "Nothing wa~ decided on taxes,"
November, after the state's said Riffe.
1990·91 budget is passed.
·
"I think this was fllOStly a
"I believe it should be In courtesy call," said Aronoff. ·
November if we put It pn (the
But Riffe .m ay have opened the
statewide ballot), and I've told
door to disagreement when he
the governor that," Riffe said said' afterwards that the educa·
following a private meeting tton "tax · should wait until
November .
among legislative leaders and
"People are going to demand
Gov. Rlch·a rd'Celeste.
Rltre' s comment puts him In
that they know what it In the
budget before they vote (on a
direct opposition to the governor,
who has said he wlll press for a
tax)," said the Speaker. "They
public vote on an education tax,
probably a flat 1 percent tax on
Income, at the May primary or at
a special election In June.
The Speaker was asked later
whether he . would go along if
Celeste continues to push for an
early public vote. "No," he
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) -A
answered.
bright object reported In the
The meeting in the governor's
skies over various parts of Ohio
office lasted nearly an hour, but
Thursday morning may be more .
Riffe and Senate President Stan·
In the meteorite area than falling
ley . Aronoff, R-Cinclnnatl, said
space debris, says an ofllclal in
·c eleste was .merely briefing
the Division of Geological
them In general terms on what he
Survey.
plans to address In his "State of
• Reports of a bright object
the State" message to a joint
around 6:50 a.m. came from as
session of the General Assembly
far north as Ashtabula County to
next Tuesday.
as far sou·th as northern
Also present were House Mi·
Kentucky.
1
norlty Leader Corwin Nixon,
'We're not sure what it was,"
R·Lebanon, and Senate Minority
said Mike Hansen of the Division
Leader Harry Meshel, D ·
of Geological Survey within the
Youngstown.
Department of Natural Resour·
Afterwards, Riffe and Aronoff ces. "But we're almost certain
were peppered with questions by
that it was more meteorite than
reporters about whether Celeste
space debris coming down . ••

want to know how much 'we are
spending on education before
they give any more. And they are
going demand some reorganl·
zation oL the education system
and some accountability."
Celeste, Whose Education 2000
Commission recommended the
tax increase, said It .should be
part of the next two-year budget,
which will be enacted by June'30.
Therefore, he sa,ld, the public,
vote should be In May or· June.
A 1 percent hIke In Income tax
rates would raise about $700
million a year, of which the
Education 2000 Commission said
one-third should be returned to
local school districts.

to

·Bright object may
have been meteroite
Hansen said ~rent path,
from !outhwest to northeast, Is
inconsistent with satellite reentry which Is usually on a
north-south basis, He said
NORAD, which tracks satellite
re-entry, said It didn't have
anything coming In over Ohio "so
that put It Into the meteorite

area."
Hansen's secretary told him
when she got to work that she had
seen the object which she dtf.·
crlbed as brighter than a full
moon. He said she told him the
object lasted abo)lt two seconds,
and had a white, broad
triangular -shaped 'tall, and
seemed to be sparking, then
Continued on page 10

Syi-acuse Village Council approves
temporary appropriations for 1989

(

Temporary appropriations
were approved Thursday night
when Syracuse Village Councll
met in regular session.
.
The council approved a tern·
porary appropriation of$5,000for
the vUlage and $9,000 for th~
water department until the per·
manent appropriations resolu·
lion for 1989 Is completed and
approved.
•
Council reelected Jack Willi·
ams as council presldentfo{ 1989.
ceuncil discussed the possibll·
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ity of increasing admittance fees the town and Solicitor Carson
at the town swimming pool but Crow will · look into the legal
took no action and It was agreed aspects of the project. Council
to remove the dock from the new voted to purchase two new tires
marina for the winter. Bob for the pollee cruiser.
Attending the session were
Wingett was present ,to discuss
Mayor
Eber Pickens, Clerk·
grants with village officials,
part1c11Iarly o.n e which would Treasuer Janice Lawson. Chief
cover phase two of the new of .Pollee James Connolly. Win·
gett, and council members Ka·
marina faclllty.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Morrow thryn Crow, Willlams, Minter
met with council to discuss Fryar, James H111. Kenneth
fencing around their property In ·Buckley, and Ernie Sisson.

WASHINGTON ' tUPI) - Un·
employment dipped to 5.3 per·
cent In December, the govern·

Release
tape of
-d ogfight
WASHING10N (UP!) - The
United States, saying it has proof
two Libyan MiGs shot down by
Navy jets were anned; released a,
dramatic tape Thursday · of the
dogfight where the American pilots
could be heard ti-yiog to evade the
Libyar. "bogies" and one finally
shouting, "Shoot him!"
.
At the same time, a Pentagon
spokesman called Libya's am bas·
sador to lhe United Nations "a
liar" for describing the MiGs as
unarmed reconnaissance planes.
In an unusual move, lhe Defense
Deparunent flew the crew from one
of the two Navy F-14 Tomcats that
knocked down the Libyan MiG-23s
over the Meditenanean Sea to
Washington Thlirsday to brief high:
ranking U.S. officials on the inci·
dent
The two Navy fliers, who were
unidentified for securiry reasons,

ment said Friday. as the
economy created 280,000 new
jobs with the s,trongest gains In
service Industries.
In falling 0.1 percentage point
to 5.3 percent, the national
clvllian . unemploymeil! ra!e
matched a low·polnt for the year
set In October and was the
strongest rate In 14 years,
according to the Labor Depart·
ment's Bureau of' Labor
Statistics.
During 1988, employment in·
creased by 2.3 million with adu lt
women accounting for a bout
two-thirds of the gain and adult
men about one-third of the
Improvement. '
In December, The United
States entered Its seventh con·
secutive year of1 sustained em·
ployment Improvement, colncld·
lng with the longest peacetime
economic expansion In history.
The jobless rate last month was a
half a percentage point lower
.than when 1988 started.
Total civllian unemployment
last month was 116 million, little
changed !rom November. The
number of unemployed persons,
6.6 million, also was about
unchanged from November, the
·
department said.
All figures were adjusted for
seasonal variations.

There was little or no change
from November to December In
the unemployment rates of adult
men at 4.7 percent, adult women
at 4.7 percent, teenagers at 14.8
peFcent, whites at 4.6 percent, .
blacks at 11.6 percent and His·
pa,nlcs at 7.6 percent.
Employment in the services
sector rose by 230,000 In De·
cember, with most of the growth
In retail trade, wholesale trade,
business services and health
services, the department said.
The economy added 3 m11llon
services jobs In the past year,
with health services employment
jumping by nearly 500,000.
Factory employment rose for a
third straight month, adding
35,000 jobs, after some signs o(
weakness in the summer. During
1988, manufacturing added
410,000 jobs, with .30 percent of
the gain In ma~inery Industries,
reflecting an export boom aided
by the cheaper value of the dollar
against major foreign
currencies.
Construction employment
showed little change in December, the department said.
But construction added 300,000
jobs in 1988.
The average workweek for
production workers declined 0.1.
hour last month to 34 .7 hours.

Local news bn·e£s&gt;---.

delivered two black-and-white
videotapes taken from the F·l4s of - - 1.1
Wednesday's skinnish over intema·
tional waters 70 miles from Libya's
'
northeastern coast.
. The Pentagon released the
videota_pe from the lead F·l4. At
Meigs County Shertff James M. Soulsby ·reports the
one pomt, a MiG is seen plummet·
Investigation of a truck-train accident which occurred about
ing toward the ground trailing a
8:30a.m, Wednesday at JayMar Coal Company.
heavy 'plume of black smoke. But
According to the report, Bennie R. Stumbo, 59, of Route 1,
the 7\12-minuaes of audio on the
Bidwelf, driving a 1974 Mack truck-trailer, was crossing the
tape was far more dramatic.
rallroad tracks at JayMar Coal and did not see an approaching
The American pilots can be
Conrail train.
..
heard from the time they are told of
Due to Icy conditions, Stumbo was unable to get his truck o(l
the approaching MiGs until the two
the tracks before the train struck and overturned )he trailer . No
Libyan jets are shot down. As lhe
citation was Issued .and no Injuries were reporTed.
U.S. pilots lake evasive action, the
John Hunnell, Antiquity, reported to the department
"bogies" continually come at them.
Thursday evening that his garage had been entered and several
Items taken, Including tools. Entry to the garage was gained by
· Bringing the fliers and videota~
breaking out the window glass In the garage door.
to Washington, and lhe speed wuh
The department Is also Investigating the reported theft of an ·
which the move was talcen, was
AM·FM
stereo cassette player from an auto owned by Blaine
seen as a concerted effort by the
Taylor,
Tuppers
Plains.
United States to ease concerns the
According
to
another
report, -Ellen Green, ST tversvllle, heard
F14s might have been acting in any
a
noise
at
her
resldenceaboutl
p.m. Thursday and saw a femal e
way other than self-defense.
trying
to
get
In
her
window.
The
unidentified woman fled the
The United States maintains the
home upon dlscov~ry .
shooting of the MiGs was not
On Wednesday, deputies returned 23-year-old Pres ton
related to the heightened tension
. Tanner, Reedsville, from the Washington County Jail to answer
111)tween Washington and Tripoli
a charge in Meigs County Court.
·
over U.S . .charges Libya is prepar·
ing large-scale production of
chemical weapons.
At a Pentagon news briefing,
•
spokesman Dan. Howard said he
Two people suffered minor Injuries !nan accidenT at(: 3 5p.m.
"waited through the events" with
In Rutland Township, on SR. 124, .about three miles west of
the Navy fliers and viewed the best
Langsville, according to the State Highway Patrol.
videotar,e. the quality of which was
•
Troopers said Tract E . Wrlght,17, Rutland, lost control on an
"lousy. 'But toward the end of the
Icy highway. Her car went offtbe right side of the road, striking
briefing, HO'Nard was handed a
several small trees. Damage was moderate. There wa s no
note by an aide, which he read:
citation.
"The Navy intelligence review
Wright and a passenger, Bobby Wrlght,l2, Rutland, suffered
of the videotape confinns that they
minor .Injuries and were taken to Ve\erans Memorial Hospital
(the MiGs) had two Aphid missiles
at Pomeroy.
·
and two Apex missile$ on the
aircraft that was closest to the lead
Continued on page 10
.rl4) aircraft," Howard said

Truck; train collide; no one hurt

Ttro people suffer minor injurie$

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The Daily Sentinel

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111 Court street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIOS.MASON AREA

.ll'b

~inS!

,..,.,_,,__..,.., rTE!c::l•o=e

qj~
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ROBERT L. wn;aTl'
Publisher

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FAT WHITEHEAD
Aulslanl Publlsher/ConlroUer

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

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

,Usorlatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
'

Page 2~The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, January 6, 1989

Defective firearms take their toll-:,____An_de_r$o_n
WASHINGTON ~ · Guns are
designed to Inflict bodily harm,
but not In the way that Roger
DeLuca experienced II.
The Arizona 'man was ·on a
hunting trip when his revolver,
tucked In Its holster on his hlp,
blew a hole through DeLuca's
right leg. He says In a lawsuit
that he and a friend were hefting
a deer carcass when the animal's
antler bumped the gun or the
holster. The buUet damaged
nerves In DeLuca's leg and the
resulting limp has aggravated· a
back problem. ·
DeLuca can't look to the

federal g&lt;ivernment for help.
Federal safety watchdogs keep
tabs·'On the safety of everything
from baby dolls to Jumbo jets evecythlrtg except guns. The
Consumer Product -Safety Commission, the Federal Trade Commission and the Bureau , of
Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms
have no authority to keep defec·
live firearms off the market.
It's up to the alleged victims to
ask the courts to decide who is at
fault, after the fact. DeLuca has
sued.the maker of his gun, Sturm,
Ruger and Co. Although the
model that DeLuca carried was

discontinued In 1973, an estl·
mated 1 mUllon of them could
still be In circulation. Numerous
lawsuits have beeJI filed alleging
a dangerous defect In the design.
The company has refused· to
launch a recall, blaming the
accidental shootings on misuse
or negligence.
Whether the federal govern·
ment should protect consumers
from defective guns may be the
next big gun fight on Capitol Hill.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, D·
Ohio, Is known for his battles with
the gun lobby. He has asked the
General Accounting Office to

Lt'r'n:RS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey should be 1... than 300 words

~egacy

~

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI WhKe HoUle Reporter
WASHINGTON~ It's time to sum up the Reagan administration
and to take a look at his legacy even before major historians get a
crack at II.
Edmund Morris, Reagan's ofutlal biographer. who has had
tremendous access to the president and the White House for the past
few years, says his tome·wtll not be published for about three years.
No other chief executive in recent limes has authorized a
·biographer while he was silting In the Oval Office or given him such
lillie and attention~
But then the president also plans to write hlsownmemolrsandthey
will personify the world according ' to Ronald Reagan. His
predecessors have not rushed Into print to acknowledge their
mistakes, and Re_agan Is not expected to be an exception.
Accent the positive Is the guideline. And from that aspect, that Is the
way he has conducted his presidency.
· Is the country better off because Reagan has been the leader for the
laM eight years. That depends on the point of view.
Certainly the beginning of the end of the Cold War with the new
friendly relationship toward the Soviet Union Is a boon for mankldll.
Reagan shed his Rambo Image and found that the title of
"ph.cemaker" was more admirable and raised his stature in the
world where he had been .deplcted as a gun slinging. cowboy.
He has had major success In the area of rapprochementt between
th" superpowers with the Soviets retreating from wars of liberation,
particularly In Afghanistan.
. lh the dying days of his administration, he 1;1lso has ·opened the way
for" a peaceful solution of the Arab-Israel! conflict although It will tak'e
mllnths, perhaps years of painful U.S. dedication to bring the parties
Into an ac'commodation.
South of the border, Reagan has met his Waterloo. He could neither
depose the Sandinlsta government of Daniel Ortega In Nicaragua, nor
could he unseat Panama's strongman Manuel Antonio Noriega.
He created and provided U.S. financing of a rebel army, the
Contras, without the c}ear backing of the American people. And
altlioygh N~caragua has been a bone in his throat, Reagan has struck
ou! In niaking Ortega "cry uncle."
.
l)omestlcally, the picture is more complJcated. HJs tax cut and $2
trl\llon In spending In mllltary budgets helped economic expansion.
Bujll may be on borrowed money and borrowed time. Laissez faire
has led to a lack of regulation of the airlines, the air waves, and a
ieQI!nlng of controls on entrepreneurs In terms of the health and
safety of their workers.
tor different segments of society, there have been setbacks.
St¥tlng with his tiring of some 11,000 alt controllers at the outset of
hls•adminlstratlon, the message went out to organized labor, and the
unlllns have been downhUI ever since.
T,he word from Reagan's Justice Department was also clear: No·
more support of a(flrmatlve action and a slowdown In enforcement of
clvh rights. Reagan had to be begg~ by his Republican supporters to
sigtl an extension of the voting rig,hts bill.
· Tohere were cutbacks In the social programs for the handicapped,
coljege loans, funding for poor mothers and children, not to mention
theladmlnist~atlon's decision, later repudiated, to declare ketchup a
veietable for school lunches.
·
'i)te government statistics show that 20 percent of the children In
this country live below the poverty line. The ranks of the homeless
ha.Je grown to 3 million, and the gap between the rich and the poor is
gr$ng. Big cities are dominated by crime and drugs.
e casual observer also has to wonder about corruption on Wall
St t and foreign takeovers of mj!Jor U.S.Industrles and real estate.
1114 the taxpayers who also have to ball dut the bankrupt savings and
loatls Industry.
.
Jllrtng the Reagan admlnistratio!J..I~Unlted States moved from
bel(lg the largest creditor nation In the
ld to become the biggest
debcor nation In the world.
The,presiden·t came into Oval Office saying that government was
the Jlroblem, not the solution. But he leaves behind a host of problems
that cry out Cor government interest and Intervention, particularly
when there Is no apparent alternative.

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Are you KIDDING?"

Investigate whether better safety
devices on guns would prevent
accidental shooting deaths.
· The NRA Is proud of saying
thalli represents the consumers,
not the gun Industry. But an NRA
official testified before the Se·
nate in 1975 supporting measures
to keep the Consumer Product
Safety Commission out of the
gun-inspection business.
NRA attorney Richard Gardiner told our associate Scott
Sleek that lawsuits filed lnvolv·
lng gun accidents are effective In
stopping defective guns from
being produced.
That means 'consumers are
solely responsible for challengIng the safety of guns and they
can't do It until it's to late.
Numerous gun manufacturers
have weathered lawsuits over
guns that malfunctioned. More
than 230 claims have been filed
against Sturm. Ruger over accld·
ental discharges of the "Old
Model" {the one DeLuca owned) .
slngle-a'ctlon revolvers. Those·
guns were Introduced In the 1950s
and are cQnsldered collectors'
·uems. Many of the alleged
lnclderts have r.e sulted In injurIes and 25 ended In deaths.
The company stopped making
the gun, but never recalled. the
ones on the market. Sturm,
Ruger attorney Stephen Sanettl
says the firm has acted responsl·
bly in notifying the Old Model
owners about a safety enhancement device that can be added to
the gun. The compll'ny has
advertised the device In maga·
zlnes and has sent letters to about
half of the estimated one million
owners.

•

HARPER DRIVES TO JIOOP - Cle••eiand's
Ron Harper drives toward the hoop after a steal In
the fourlh quarter of Thursday night's game

'I'hls presidential media monopoly serves the president well,
at least In the early years of a
term when the pu~liclty Is almost
Invariably roseate. When the
public Is facinated lly English
muffins, they are also Inclined to
listen, and often heed, what this

wonderful president of ours has
to say about taxes, defense,
foreign policy, The Congress, ear
to ground, senses this as it
happens, but often not before.
Hence, all lhe talk about how
there "wUI be no honeymoon."
1'here will be a honeyl!'loon.

By Unlled Press International
Dale Ellis Is welcoming the
new year with thre;e-point flair .' In his first two games of 1989,
the SeatUe scoring ace has put up
91 points, including a career· high
49 Thursday nlghi In leading the
SuperSoniCs to a 120-106 triumph
over the Sacramento Kings.
"How do you stop Dale Ellis?''
asked Sacramento Coach Jerry
Reynolds. ''You are asking the
wrong guy. We don't know and
obviously the Lake.rs don't know,
either. He shoots threes like most
people shoot foul shots. The
threes break your spirit."
Ellis, whose previous career·
high was 47 points. pumped in 42
points Tuesday night In a victory
over the Los Angeles Lak~rs.
Ellis hit 20 of 32 shots from the
floor against the Kings, Including
5 of 8 from three-point range. He
has made 36 of his last 56 shots,
Including 9 of 13 three-pointers.
"I had wide open shots and
when you shoot uncontested you .
have to make those," said Ellis,
who was averaging 28.6 points
before Thursday's game. "The
three-pointer takes the wind out
of a lot of teams. When I'm hot
like this I feel like I can make all
of my shots and It doesn't matter
where I'm shooting from."
Te!lmmate Michael Cage said
w~en Ellis "gets going nobody
can stop him. He's our strength
right now."
The Sonics broke away from an
86·86 tie entering the fourth
quarter when Ellis swished a
pair of jumpers Inside the first
I
minute.
against the vlslilng Chicago Bulls, as Bulls John
With ElUs getting 14 points and
Paxson (left) and Craig Hodges defends.
Derrick McKey 8 of his 18 points
.
.

Redwomen return to action
. in non-loop garne with Dyke

Is Congress 'gelous'---~--'--Be_n_;_w._a_tte_nb_e_rg
A wonderful political Indica·
tor, at some variance with what
we have been led to believe,
appeared the other day In The
Washington Post. A prominent
headline announced, "BUSH,
FOLLOWING HIS NOSE; THE
PRESIDENT-ELECT GOES
SHOPPING FOR BATH GEL."
Yup; bill' new•: Buah · himself
actually · entered a ·store In
downtown Washington to ·buy
some Christmas gifts.
You may ask: Why does this
stunning event have massive
political significance? I answer
your question with more questions: Would there be a story, If
newly elected Senate Majority
Leader George Mitchell, a Democrat, went shopping for bath gel?
Would there be a story If House
Speaker .Jim Wright, a Democrat, went shopping for bath gel?
No. By ·the deeply Ingrained
standards of American journalIsm, bath gel Is news only when
associated with presidents.
The classic case In point was
the great Foro English Muffin
Caper. Have you ever toasted an
English muffin 7 Was It big news?
Answers: Probably yes, surely
no. But when Gerald Ford
assumed the presidency from
Richard Nixon In 1974, It was
learned {leaked?) that the new
president tended to wake early
and make his own English muffin
In the White House toaster. Like,
wow! A real man ofthe people; a
clear signal of the death knell of
the Imperial presidency; how
charming; how very American.
Remake the front page!
This new-prez-worshlp Is an
important, sometimes temporary, often unconsidered part of
the polltlcal power equation.
More so than ever, media Is
power.. Bush-o-manla Is Just
beginning. and my guess Is that
tbe Squire of Kennebunkport Is
going to do pretty well with
hyper-celebrity and the political
power It Yields .
The biggest laugh line of 1989
may be recalling the fact that in
1988 pundits actually said Bush
had no chariSma. Since the
election I've seen Bush a few
times at public occaslo!IS. He
gtves a fine impression: good
looking, !all, trim, self:.effaclng,
occasionally humorous. On televlllon he appears decisive, crl.sp,
knowledgeable ~In short, presidential. Whatever happened to
the foot·ln·mouth wtmp1 What
will we write about?
And all this beforeeveri becomIng president. Just walt untO the
53 grandchUdren start vllltlng
the White House! And add In
Barbara Bush; she wtll be media
dynamite.
Meanwhile, of course, tbe 535
members of the Congress wU1
also be In tbe news: But their
news will not be about bath gel
and little children. No llldeed. It
will be mostly aboUt the world's
most fascinating topic: the deficit. Sequestration. Targets.
Shorl·falll. OUt-years. How very
lntel'l!ltlng. It Is a topic tbat even
the people who understand It,
undentaod tbat they don't under·
atand it.

...•'. ....

aS Sonics top

The Rio Grande Redwornen
are ,at home for their' Saturday
afternoon encounter with the
Lady Demons of Dyke &lt;': ollege In
what will be their last nonconference game until February.
The game, set for 4 p.m., will
pit a determined 5-6 Redwomen
club against Paul Haught's 4-4
Dyke team, which pursues an
independent schedule in District
22.
The Rio ladies are returning t6
action following an appearance
In the Ohio Northern Tournament Dec. 29·30. Entering the
game with a 4·5 slate, they
handed Georgetown (Ky.), the
team with the best overall
record, a 74·64 loss. That placed
the Redwomen Into the championship round with ONU, who
won 80-60.
The Redwomen, who have not
played al home since their 108·42
victory over Lake Erie on Dec.
13, will be looking lor seniors Lea
Ann Mullins and Holly Hastings
for leadership. Mullin.~ !5· 7) ,
nationally ranked fo r her free
throw shooting and overall scoring, is expected to star! as small

Only later, as and If policies
and events don't work out well.
the spot· light shows P·warts, and
the medla·publlc honeymoon
ends. That's when you hear
stories about Ford falling down
and Jimmy Carter-chljstog killer
rabbits.

Nice Station Wagon,
Loaded!
Only $.000 Mill&amp;!

High sclwol notes...

Buffalo doesn't plan
any 'Big Nash' attacks

forward against Dyke. Hastings
(5-9), the team's top reboqnder
CINCINNATI !UPI) ~Buffalo agreed Smerlas. " But, I don't
and a district standout for her
Bills nose tackle Fred Smerlas think we'll do it.
ability on the boards, will take
says he doesn't expect to suffer
the power fmward slot.
any "Big Nash Attacks" in
"You know," ·smerias added
Their oppOsite numbers for
Sunday's American Conference with a laugh, "Joe Nash and I
Dyke will probably be Tracie
championship game against the went to college together. Every
Shorts (5· 7, junior) at small
Cincinnati Bengals .
time he went down, I called his
forward and Lori Walton !5·9,
"Big Nash Attacks" are what wife to see how he was. 1 must
junior) on · the other forw~rd
Cincinnati coach Sam Wyche have spent $100 making calls."
' position.
calls the sudden, mysterious
Re.dwomen Coach Cheryl FieInjuries that beset Seattle pose
When Buffalo coach Marv
litz will proba6iy start Beth Coil
tackle Joe Nash in last weekend's Levy was asked if any "Big Nash
15-6, sophomore) as point guard
Bengais -Seahawks playoff AttackS" were In the works he
and Betsy Bergdoll (5·7, fresh .. game.
seized the opportunity to quesman) at the shooting guard slot.
Cincinnati's third down no- !ion the legality of Wyche's
They will face, respectively,
huddfe offense, designed to keep no· huddle tactics, saying, "Not II
Tonya Feeney (5-6, senior) and
defenses from making substltu· they don't keep 12 or 13 men on
Dawn Christian (5-6, senior) lor . lions, was thwarted several the field.
Dyke.
, · times in that game when· Nash
"It's not legal when you break
Center Ann Barnitz (6-0, fresh·
went down with an alleged Injury the huddle- and I know with the
man) is expecied to start for Rio, and the officials called time out, no-huddle that's a hazy area~ to
while Haught will probably start
giving Seattle time to make have 12'or 13 people on the field,"
Gloria Martin (6·2, sophomore)
substitutions .
•
said Levy. "They're (Bengal
at the post.
" It· seemed like every third players being substituted for)
In 1987·88, the Redwomen were
down we had a 'Big Nash slow coming off. You don',t know
victorious over the Lady Demons
Attack,"' said Wyche. "There's who's coming. off. Is It a tight
on two occasions: 81-62 on'"Jap. 9 no rule against it ; but ethically, it end? Is it a receiver? Is it a
and 74-71 on Feb. 20. In the first
may be on the frlnge. The Seattle running back? We've felt that
game, Rio shooting guard Renee Association of Physicians, or they've had a lot of people on the
Halley scored a career high ol32 whatever ti)ey have, may want to field.
'
'
pomts.
~'
"The game ought to be played
check it against their medical
code of ethics. However, there's by the rules. I think there needs
no doubt that the 'Big Nash to be enforcment of getting
Attacks' were absolulfly 100 people off the field and allQwing
percent successful against us."
enough time for the defense to do
·So, does Smerlas feel a rash of what they havetodo. But, I'm not
third down injuries coming on accusing Sam of breaklrtg the
this Sunday?
· rules. I think Sam is.a principled
"It sure seemed to work," person.

.· Urbana player misses bus, .
but makes winning shot

Black Beauty,
. 5 speed.
Good Economy_!

By GENE CADDES

Scott Gobely scored 40 pdtnts
and pulled down 19 rebounds to

UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS ~ Ohio high
lead Hanoverton United to, an.
school basketball n'otes from
88·71 come·from·behind win over
around the state:
McDonald. Gobely scored 17 of
Urbana's Freddie Morgan
his points in the third quarter as
missed the team bus but not the
United.overc:ame a 33·27 halftime
winnilfg shot with three seconds deficit to ·take a one· point lead.
lelt in overtime last week night in The Golden Eagles, who also got
the HH!cllmbers' 65-63 victory 20 poi)lls from John Crawford,
over Bellefontaine. Morgan, wl1o · outscored McDonald 61·38 In the
sat out the first quarter as second half.
punishment for being late, fin·
Cambridge, a semifinalist In
ished with 22 point s. Bellefon· last year's Division II state
Iaine's George Kennedy. who led tournament, is off to a 9·0 start
all scorers with 26 points, had this season, the Bobcats' ,b est
sen t t.he game Into overtime with beg]nning since the 1952·53 team ·
a 3-point goal In the. closing went 20·0 during the regUlar
seconds of reg(Jiatlon.
season, Cambridge's ninth win
was a 97-56 declsjori over St.
Clairsville, with five players
Tonig~t's
scoring In double figures .

OLDS DELTA88 ROYALESED~N .......... ..;. '11,759

Tyson involved in fender-bender
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP!) ~
Heavyweight boxing champion
Mike Tyson emerged smiling
Thursday after the car he was
riding in was Involved in a
fender-bender accident on a busy
street.
Tyson, 22, and fight promoter
Don King, also a passenger in the
car, were not InJured In the
accident.
The mishap occurred. as Ty·
son's assistant manager Rory B.
Holloway of Albany, N.Y., was
driving the champ's car north·
bound on Eastern Avenue adja·

games

BUICK LESABRE CUSTOM SEDAN ............ '11,586
CHEVROLEI' CELEBRITY EUROSPORT ... i11 $1

CtfEYY CAMARO IROC ·········-··········.......... '10,692

..

Federal Hocking at Belpre
, Meig.'l at Alexander
Miller at Wellston
Nelsonv ille-York at Vinton
County
Trimble ~ Open
Gallipolis at Jackson
Marietta at Warren Local
Logan at Athens
·Chesapeake at Ceredo-Kenova
South Point at Rock Hili
. Greenfield at Clrcl evllle
Milton at Point Pleasant
Wahama at Bufaio-Putnant
Minford at Waverly
Boyd at Purtsmouth
Wheelersburg at Valley
North Gallia at Hannan Trace
Southern at Southwestern
Kyger Creek at Oak Hill
Eastern at Symmes Valley
Saturday's 1ames: •
·Southern at Gallipolis
Logan at Zanesville
Jackson at Waverly
~lersburg at Ironton

Wooster, taking advantage of
its superior free throw shooting,
ran its home court winning
streak J,o 30 F r, iday night with a
74·72 victory over Canton South.
The Generals hit 20 of 23 free
throw attempts, including 14 ofl5
In the second half and eight of
eight in the final quarter. South,
which had one more field goal,
was 16 of 25 from the line.

'-CII'· OH.

Fell &amp; Wilier He1re
OPIN IUIDAY lHIU -AY

tAJI..JPA
SlTUIIAY t AA·1 P.ll
ClOD MOIIDAYS lffiCrlft 10/U /II

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM ,

' Nance had 2t polnta,
win. Larry
Mark Price 19 and Brad Daup.
erty 17 for Cleveland. Mlcllael
Jordan had 32 points, 20 In the
first half, as Chicago's winning
streak ended at three gama.
Sp•n IU, 'l'len IN

#

At San Antonio, rOokie Willie
Anderson struck for a career·
high 36 points to power the Spun
Vernon Maxwell added It polah.
lor San Antonio, and Alvin
Robertson and Darwin Cook
scored 14 apiece. Charles Bark·
ley led Philadelphia wltfl 23
points and 12 reboundl, willie
Mike Gminskl added 22 polata.
Nu.pia Ut, Warrlln t • '
At Denver, Alex E;ntrUah '·
scoflld 37 points and : Walter
Davis hit 4 three-pointers In
finishing with 31 points to spark
ttie Nuggets. Chris MuUin aciored :
35 points for the Warriors, whO ·
have lost 12 consecutlv_e games In· '
Denver dating back to 191M. Otis ~
Smith and Mitch Rltchmond bad"' •
19 points each for Goklen State. -

Redmen
face MVNC
•
in conference game

...

..'.
.. '

1986-87) Joe White, a 6·3 junlor.al
Stung by a 101-69 loss to
the other forward posllloil.
., .
Malone, the Rio Grande Redmen
are regrouping in a move to
Opposing Gregory and White ·,
will be Rio's Mike TidWf'll 111-3,
maintain a hold on their leader·
sophomore) and either Larry: ,
ship position In the ..Mid-Ohio
Bell'nlng (6·4, freshman) or John·,
Conference. Tlieir Immediate
Lambcke !6·5, junior) taklnc the .•:
targets are the Cougars of Mount
place of Marc Gothard 111-4•.
Vernon Nazartne College, who
senior) if Gothard doe~~n't start. . ·
will host the Redmen Saturday In
a 7: 30 p.m. contest.
Due to an InJury suffered last
month, Gothard played but did ,:
Tuesday's defeat In Canton put
not
start against Malone thl11&gt;
the Redmen a 1 11-4 overall and
I·l In the MOC . MVNC. In Its
week.
• ·
Redmen guards Anthony Ray ~ . ~
(ourth year oL,guldance from
more t5·11, senior) and Brian ·
Coach Bernie Bailklan. is 7·7 and
Watkins (5·10, sophomorel are,. •.
2·0 in conference play ..
expected to start against
The Redmen's current season
MVNC's Sam Barber j6-3, ~e-. :·
slate is nearly similar to the one
niorl and Jeff Case 16·0, senklr) ,·,
they possessed in,the first week
Either Benning or Lambcke will
of January ·1988. Rio was 12·4
·take up post duties against the . ,
after losing to Findlay on Jan. 2,
but went only 2·2 before going on
Cougars' Rick Burke (6·7, ' •
senior),
• .•
an 11-game winning streak.
Last season, the Redmen deMVNC, which had Its first
feated MVNC II) two close games,,.. ,
\ vinning season overall 05-14i in
80-78 on Jan. 9 and 69-67 on Feb. ~ ' , ·
1987·88, has continued Improving
... as the current season goes along.
:~
suffering most of its losses by
only a few points.
The Daily Sentinel '"'
Victories have been over
'·
W11lsh, 88·76: Lakl' Erle,108-JOO:
(V8P814-)
'
Nyack tN. Y. i, 95-57; WilmingA Jllt'llloo of M•-s. 1H.
~
ton, 88-81; Kenyon. 83·72; and
Published every aft«noon, Monclly
•
Ohio Dominican twice, 113-72 and
through Frtday, 111 Court St .. p,j. ·' ·
meroy, 01110. by the Ohio Vall., 1'1111- , • '
91·65. Losses have been to Shaw·
llslllng CompanyiMulllmedla. tnt., . .
nee State, 86-79: Ashland, 82-66;
Pomeroy, Ohio 4578!1, Ph. t92·2lilll. S.. ' ·
AdrJan 1Mich.1. 64·58: Northwest
cond cia as postqP paJd at Pomeroy, 1
Ohto.
.. ~.
Nazarene, 84-78; Georgetown
!Ky.). 67-62; Grove City (Pa. l ,
ML&gt;mber: United Press tnteraa tlonal, ~' ~
92-89; and the Colleg(. of Idaho,
Inland Dally'Prea Auoct1tion •nd
Ohio Newspeper AsarrlaUon. N•Uonal ,
88·81.
Advertlslnl Representath'e-, Branham
Like Rio Grande, MVNC has
Newspopor Sales, 733 Tltlrd A.....,..., · ''
New York, New York 10017."
· : -.
· numerous vetera~s back 10 take
•
up the void left by its senior
I'O!rnii!ASTER; Send adlh!u · '·
powerhouses. The Cougars lost
to The Dally Sentinel, Ill Court ~ "
Pomeroy, Ohio 45'/e9.
,. . ,
Tim Madison, Todd Morrison
and Tim Justice to graduation
SUII8CRIPI'ION R~TIIII
•" •
Brcariterorllol.......
' ,·
last year. but have enough
OnE' Weeii: .............. ............ .. .......St..a f
confidence In 6·5 sophomore
one Month ......... ...: ............. ....... .18.10 .
Steve Gregory, a MOC honorable
One Year ............................ ..... m.ID .. '" ..
mention In his premiere season,
IINOLE COPY
• • ..
PIUCE
, ~ ..
to start him as forward , along
Dally .. .............. :................ .. 25 Cento •
with former Redmen player I in
•

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1

t... ·' . ·

Cincinnati picks
Murphy as new coaeh

C'INCINNATI (UPI) ~ The
University of Cincinnati Wednesday named University of Maine
Coach Tim Murphy head football
coach, replacing Dave Currey.
who resigned af!er five losing
seasons.
Murphy had been head coach
· at Maine for two seasons, guiding
the team to a conference champ!·
oshlpand jnto the NCAADivision
I-AA
his first season.

So A

Subscrtbf:nnotdt':'Sirllli to pay ttwcar- ... 1

rter may rerntt t• adv11nce dtrftl to

.

basts. Cl'l'dlt wUl beglvencarrlerHc:b '• ' :
week.

.

No subscrtpllons by mall permitted In • " •
arMs where home carrlef' .ervtc. II

-"·

avallablp.

Matt -.rlpUono

l111llle Melp Cotat)'
13 Weeks ..................... ...... ...... . h9.24
2i Weeks ....................... .. ......... 837.91
~~Weeks ......... ............. ......... .. . S'IUI
Oltlf1le Melp c..n11
13 Weeks .......... ..... ............ ....... DUO
26Weeks ........... ....... , .... , ......... teQ.30
52 Weeks ................... ............... m .to

S3995 FIOIR $3775

....
'·

ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

''

ELECT•ONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS
.J'

' \

$1500',

TUNE·UPS

I CYL

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CY. S34'' 4 CYL S2
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GET ALL THE FACTS FREE ·STOP IN. PHONE OR WRITE FOR

THI$COI.ORFUL ..PAOE HEAlTH INfORMATION BOOKLET.
This AdMl.._ s. H'liiWtiC ..
·- f i r ~·· Doctlfl ol et.ioopnatl~

'

'

' ""'

:

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~----------------~·

OTHERS SLIOHTY HIGHER

.

J

•

The Dally Sentinel on a3,Sor12 month ' '

BRAKES
ASLOWAS

\

\

FALL SPECIALS

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES Ia SERVICE
204 Condor St.

cent to a residential area.
A 1988 Toyota driven by Ml·
cbael Credico, 24, of Henderson,
Nev ., attempted a lane change to
avoid a stalled vehlci~ and drQve
into the path of Tyson's rented
Lincoln Sedan.
The Lincoln struck tl)e rear of
Credico's vehicle. Credico was
cited for making an unsafe lane
change.
Tyson, who Is training for his
Feb. 25 fight against title con·
tender Frank Bruno at the Las
Vegas Hilton, was unshaken by
the mishap.

in the fourth quarter, the Sonles
outscored the Kings 29·14 during
the first 10 'n minutes of the
fourth quarter to build a 117·100
advantage. In that surge, the
SuperSonics hit 14 of 17 shots
from the Ooor.
Jim Petersen led the Kings
wltb 23 points and 11 rebounds,
helping keep the Kings close over
the first three quarters.
. Sacramento led 61-59 at half·
time In a game In which thJ,Jead
chanied hands 16 times.
Seattle led by as many as 9
points In the third quarter before
the Kings rallied to tie the score
8&amp;86.
Elsewhere In the NBA, Cleve·
land stopped Chicago 103-98; San
Antonio routed Philadelphia 119·
104 ahd Denver outlasted G.olden
State 131·129.
·
Cavallersll3, Bulla 98
At Richfield, Ohio, Ron Harper
scored 20. points, Including 7
straight to snap a fourth-quarter
tie, to spark the Cavaliers to a
team record· tying lOth straight

..

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'
••
•••

Kings; Cavs slip .past Bulls

--

1001. AJllenersaresubJect toedtttngandmustbe aPed With name, address and
\elephone num,ber. No ul'liJ&amp;fted letters wUl be_published. Letter~ should be in
ipal taste, adciresstagls~&amp;~e&amp;, not perscilaUtiel.

Summing up Reagan

Elli~ ~ets 49

'

Commentary
,•

Ohio

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�I

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Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

r · ,.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Friday, January 6, 1989

.

Top-ranked Duke rips Davidson, ·101-53

l• .. I ~I
• ....

t ' to

By United Press International
Danny Ferry of Duke and
Rodney Monroe of North Carol·
ina State shook off poor shootl.ng
first halves Thursday night to .
spark their Atlantic Coast Con·
ference teams.
At Durham, N.C., Ferry generated 14 second-half points to
carry No. l Duke to a 101-53
thrashing of Davidson.
At Clemson, S.C., Rodney
Monroe scored 19 second-half
points to lift No. 18 North
Carolina State to a 73-65 triumph
over Clemson In the ACC opener
·
for the teams.
· Ferry, who entered as . the
ACC's leading scorer at 24 points
per game, missed 5 of 6 field-goal
attempts in the first half. He was
5-5 in the second half and also
wound up with 9 rebOunds.
The Blue Devils, 10·0, led 38·23
at halftime and opened the
second half with a 20-4 run that
gave them a 31-polnt advantage
with 15:33 to play.
' Davidson, 4·8, suffered Its most
lopsided loss of the year. The
Wildcats' starting lineup man·
aged just 20 points and combined
for 7·34 from the field.
Monroe's second-half heroics
were more vital to N.C . State . .
Monroe, l ·7 from the field in
the first half, spurred a 14·4 run
that moved the Wolfpack ahead

\

•'

I

·,.

BROOKS GOES FOR DlJNK - W~t Virginia forward Chris
BrOCiks (23) goes to the basket with a ·s lam dunk while St.
Bonaventure guard Michael Burnett (35) defends. The Mountal·
neers defeated the vlsiling Bonnies 69-45 In T~ursday night's
AllanUc 11 game. (UPI)

ThU1'8day's
case scores

Pro scores
NATIONAL BAS KETBA.LL tVi ~ .
Thllnd1Q' '8 RM.tdloo
CIPH•h.md Jl):l, ( bi cq:o 18
San t\ntonlo 119, Phlladl!'lphl a

Glrbl Ollllo Hl1h Scbo.l B'"d&amp;Kball
By Unitt• Pf'ftl lnlf'r•tkl•l
Tllurwdq , Jan. S

Df'n \ t&gt;r I ~ I, Go lck&gt;n S talf' 12!1
Sf'$1 UP l'liJ, Sacram('ftlo 1116
Friday' ,; Gamt':!i
Ch IW'IoiW ut Rn!lton, 7::1fl p.m .
LA. Cllppl'f¥ atlndiiiNII , 1:30 p .m .
~111w&amp;uk&gt;t• \' !1. " 'aahlnp:tun ' 111 Hallimon•.,_ K p.m. ·

,o\lr Sprkl&amp;fldd H, SteM' 30
llarbHU. 8 , Ravr.:.ra li
....... ~ ........hlilh•11
llrlllGI H 1 Mafii'Wood t'l
a."k,.. SoUdtwr111 .t8, Edl!on S ~5

..
..

ts. r.tJio~rl Crawford :II

lllld'f')'f' Ct'.t

Burien B.rDhlr. i4, Card~MI :n
C.nllnpon SJ. Mt Gilt'. . U
c .. d•vlle 1&amp;, WQIH'!I~If' 31

,,l~ntll

Coal

Grow 51, o.,_,rakf" :n

C. ...y 11, Ml!'dhl&amp; IU .....nd :ttl
C::.rUud Lakf"'if"'·- • · •oldlf'ld 1.1
C.)'&amp;bop Fill"' 71. No,.llla t;
Du\lllt.",.h ....._aNer1hrld~;etA

..

.

f'rf'm•ntst.l•f' -lll, llepi'WI'IILoudonl.1

Oalllpalhi II, tl•(!luoon $! ·
Gnenlf'ld M, Orclt"\\lllf' n

NA'fiO~',\L

K.af7t, 'l'allnwiF 311

IW•I•IUIIIV tr, !fiprt•a:: ShwnP"' .u
&amp;Jn...,.a.d,.,.Sil. u ......tyn

T•untd1Q''1' R PII ulf:t
!I.' Y blandrr!l Bos lo n J

JUrliU41-II, RldiiDOMI Hi s 3B

Mln,..so&amp;a S. Phillldf'lpllla .1
l:al pi')' 8, Lo8 An vll!l!l i
Frlda&amp;Y '8 Game,
Vancouwr lli U..lroU , i:!llp.m .
Buffalo Ill Nrw.IPnP.y , 7: U p. m .
ToroMo 11 " 'a.'ihlnK(on. A: O!Ii p.m.

s,

Um. IWh IM, KtontOn -18

M_...arrica II, Mil .. Edlsnn -U
M•lo• flJtn 1.1, HI dFdaiP II
!Mif' Mewbrook IS. ShMandollh :tl
~1101

71.

tld1on ·M

Ne.,..)' .. JS. Dalt 011 lU
P..rry U , NN·burr :S5

Loll An.l('lfS a1 Wln .. pr.:, 8:3.'\ p.m .
S.tlrli!Q•'s Gamf'!oi
IJo!Jion at Monlft'.al, niPt
at Toronto, nl~hl
N\' RIUI!l""ll al Nl' l•landt"l'!l. ni~
Drtroll al Nrw .Jt•rry. niKtf
PIIUIIdPipll llll.l St . Lolli!i, niJht
'V IUK'Ouwr at Pltl!llu l"'h. nll:ht
01 !('qOII " 'll!ihtllltAn, nipl
F.dmonion al ('d pry, niJbl

""•17.
Troy -tl
ron 01 .... 11, Oak Harbo r U

Buffalo

IUcldlf'ltl ~~ rt $8, f1f'ld :11
. .wr \Ill 411, S)'t:amorP Mo . .wk II!
Suu..P;y M, lA ral n Sr II
Slltlb)' II. Nona!UI
Sit ....... f'•lr\ft&gt;W 8t. Hlt·b\411.&gt; ~A
Slf'f'f'tlboro ~~. ,\nora 13
!!ll,..nllll!, C&amp;ftiPill t7
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•

TtpPOIJH, MIU011 Unhln ~9
Wadlworth II, GrtetuiMIIJ Gn'f'n ll "'

This week's games

Qllif•f" lla!oi a.Mtu&amp;JI Rf'S lMs
t:.Lo!.l
Hoi)· froq Ill, fo1oridlllnll. U
M•lll "'.i. &amp; . f'n•t·ill ( P11.) 14

Ohio ( 'ollt•Kt• Raskt'thllll St•hf'du If'
B:t· Unlil'd Prl!I!IJi lnln•t~•l .
Fridii.Y. Jan. i
l..aakr Erh•at Mt Ver110n Na:r
Hlr.am at Alii"Khrny Tounw)
Ct&gt;n lml S1111 Ark-PI•.,. Rhlff Toumt'y

Nl ...an'7t. y..,.,.,*,.
Pn•yl\'11'1118, Lf liA:h I!

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..

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run Stldt&gt; lt'r, M••'·hu.-t11111
... bH1 MorrM 71. Fatrlellfl D!cklll!'rfln
1111
'
••f'rll M':, kh.,.. .. lud 77
~ . lowplil M. Dll fiW'!IB' Ill
~
W..W•t:tonA Ll-f' 85. Elmln 71!
"''rl«N Sl . • · Howard 17

So••
O. ... ltl, Dnwl . . . U

S*urd..,-,

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,\ tt&gt;mphh SC Ill ClnL'iiiiBII
Akron at ·"ldrllr Tf'n ... !Uif"f'

flt"\'f' i lltfld Stat Mluot~ rt- k f
&amp;ldwln-"'llllucr al KPn yon
Otti'rhrln at ( 'ltp ttar
Hrl *lhN-cat Mu11 WalUm
Mar IM:tll al Olillo Norlh.-r n
\\'Uie•llE'rK U Mount
Clllil' RPl)frW at Ohio Wf'!i ll')'illn
O~f'r"n al Y.•oo!lll"r
,·
81ulft on at Wllmln.-on
Alihland al SHp~ry Rock ( Pal
IMiant"t' Ill Dykr
\\'abll'ih (lnd l at Findlay
Lakr t: rlf' &amp;! Sha"JWP Stall'
Ohio Dvml11leM 11 {f'·darvtlll'
TIIfln al 1\hlolll!'
Rio &lt;iran* ai Mt \ 'Prnon Nu
Waish II Uri!Ull
Hlr11m at AllrtbettY Tourney
ff'lltml Sl11 Arii-PinC" Blulf Toumry

R. . . nl 82. GHrtf' Muon 71
l i Nf'·WIImin~on

...

ill

81M1101llll, Mrrtf't' If
,-..,...,..,. Trclllet. FrHd-Hardrnwn

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¥-'NIIf!r•&lt;:.rolha H. (:at.mpbtoll !li!t

w. Knturlty 1-1. Su Dtrp 51

WMI VII'(IU M. 51. ft)•u•nltrr 15

Mlttwto.t

• Allllei'IIHIS . ••lha. HI
Dr.... 73, Dll. . ~., .. 13

.... Pw .... r.n

• (let)

w.,..f' "·

Mid••

n

.. • - Treh tl, Go.hf"n 'JJ

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Iowa U. MlcftiJM HI. ll:t

au .. &amp; , U, Tnu-ArU.&amp;toa 5I

Nehrulllllt, Sam Routon Sl. lt

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No,...'1'arol• 8"'1.

Transactions

o.r.. u7

....... " U, Norlnrf'I!Wn$11
StlaWIW'f' Stair KA, Ollkl DOmlftkan I}
....... 'JI, . . . _

IM&amp;tt' ..

Wl l'IUil St. 11. loMl!!

•

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" 'lti.-Grl!'rn Bll)· !AI, pic.qo ~ale !Iiiio
Solfllntrf"!it
Hardl118immo• 14. Samlerd 15!
IAJJ\Ilr n. Baptllll Collfol't'IS
Loul.~lana Tt~h •• N.E. LoW&amp;Ianil 37.
Tn.b·EI PuoHi%. Vl. . M

Tf'!!.b.SWI Alllonio i4, Arl.·.IJIIIf'o Roc k

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-

Tna. Soa .. l!f'n Ill. StrpWn A•lln 'it

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MuMaaa ~. n ,

E.WMhlnr;ton "'t

Ntnd•L~ 'Vf&gt;PJ- '7!, N-· Mlf'd('O

Nf"' ·Rl'ti Dltll.

J•.m St

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NN Mtt:ice All, Brlrham l'oullJ( 81
Orf'avnSt . .,. , Soalhrrn C11l II
San Dlf',P Sl. n:, f(llonulo St . 57
Stu len! liS. t\riZ(Ira 711

tJCLA t't, Orrpa 61
_,

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TtNntdl\l·'ll liponA Trusattkl,.,.
Ba8f'ball
C11.lllorNa - Slpd llr!ll ba'll'manoulfll'lck'r Jim Eppard lo • 1-)f'IU'

oulfleW"r

Oiu-r~

Mothoy

to

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t•OniNli"-

"•*' .Jantl'

Min..,..,.ota t'l'fttl&gt;r

!;\ p d ml•or-lr..,.llrown to a 1- )f'llt

C'O nli'Ut1.

VI at. Sl. U, P aclnr II
Wf'bforNI . I2, N. i\rtzonaH

[)aiLaK - !Mt:.pf'DliPd forWard Rely
Tarpl.-y . who f'nif'tt:&gt; d a .r._ lrtMnwnl

St.

propm.
I•Aaft.ll - Naml'd IN ~ k Vft'•c rcoacll.
rf'llllu:lnc lnet&gt;rlm Coadt GPoll• lrvlnt'.
NBA - f1ntd Nf'w York r..oach Ki rk
f"Mino U,DN for hl11 w _.•c l tollowl•11 ""
pjfdle• .

. ._L

We also have at The Sentinel
Office one lone hat remaining
from the Big Bend Minstrel
Association's Easter Bonnet Con·
test. This Is a brown bonnet and the owner really should pick
It up soon.

Tim King advises me that King
Builders ·ts undergoing ex tensive
remodeling over the next
months. You can look for a
special celebration at the Middleport business to mark the completion of the project, probably
In April.

~II.IP

•

New officers · were installed
when Chester Council 323,
Daughers of America, met re·
cently at the halL
.
Installed by Erma 'Cleland,
deputy state councilor, were
Virginia Lee. councilor; Betty
Young, associate councilor; Do·
rls Grueser, associate vice coun·
cllor; i&gt;.lta Ballard, conductor;
Thelma White, junior past coun·
cilor; Ruth Smith, associate
junior past councilor; Esther
Smith, recording secretary; Do·
rothy Ritchie assistant recording
secretary; Lora Damewood, fl·
nancial -secretary; Mae McPeek,
assistant financial secretary;
Opal Hollon. treasurer , Ethel Orr
and Betty Roush, trustees , and
Mrs. McPeek, representative to
state session.
Thelma White, councilor, presided at the meeting with Bonnie

1

Landers being reported ilL The
charter was draped in memory of
Dorothy Wells, and the auditing
report read by Dorothy Ritchie
was accepted.
The flagbearers escorted
Thelma White and Ruth Smith to
the altar , whe re Erma Cleland,
council deputy, presented Mrs.
White with a pasT councilor's pin
and Mrs. Smth, a past councilor's
card and complimented the two
on their work in 1988. Kathryn
Baum was pianist for the
meeting.
The new 1989 councilor, Virg inia Lee: announced committees.
The Past Councilors Club will
meet at the home of Marcia
Keller on Jan. 11 , 7; 30 p.m. with
Laura Mae Nice as co· hostess .
Others attending were Eliza·
beth Hayes, Marcia Keller, Faye
Kirkhart , Mary K. Holter, Ada
Bissell, Sandra White.

Carleton S~hool menus announced
Th·e cafeteria menu for the
Carleton School for the week of
Jan. 9 has been announced:
Monday - hot dog, sauce,
baked beans , potato chips, apple
crisp, milk.
Tuesday - baked ham, sweet
potatoes, biscuit, fruit, milk. .
Wednesday macaront,
cheese, bread, butter, green
beans, apple sauce, milk.
. Thursday - conferences.

Friday - cl:licken noodle soup,
tuna salad sandwich, crackers,
frtiit, mille

. WantAds

Auto., PS. PB.

.

.SATURDAY EVENING MASS
AT THE
SACRED HEART CHURCH
IN· POMEROY, OHIO
WILL BE AT 5:30 P.M.

pa~ty

ces Reed, Emma DursT and the
hostess, Mrs. ,Tuttle.
The afternoon was spent look·
ing at old pictures and rev iewing·
minutes of past m eet ings. Inez
Boring, Dorothy Cashdollar,
Garnet Johnson. Phyllis Hetzer,
Eri ka Boring and Eli&gt;abeth
Smith are also members of the
club.

Auto., PS, PB.

.

.

·1976 FORD CLUB WAGON VAN ... S1795
Auto., air, cruise, tilt.

fOR All YOUR HOLIDAY

Auto .. PS, PB.

I

I-

12 EXP. •••••••••o••··················· S3.29

I

l · S~ DISC o••······················••o•o• S4.4 9

SUNDAY I JANUARY 8, 1989 $
BAKED SWISS STEAK DINNER.............. 4 49

36 EXP •••••• o•••••••• ~o•o••··········· 58.4 9

Sonod With M.. hod Potato01 and Hom11111odo Gravy, Groon loans With
Mushrooms, A Hot Buttwod loll or Homomodo liHult, Maxwoll ~ou10
CoHoo or Sanko Duaffinatlll, Bath froshly Browod lA Small Soft Dr~nk or
Hot Too May Be Substituted).
·
·
79

SWISS STEAK SANDW.ICH ALONE ........................

•

•'

$2

NEW HOURS : Monday thru Sunday 11 A.M.-6 P.M.

·Z •il

•

••

il\rr l.nmui1'li uf QIIrrnt.cr
RESTAURANT
ROUTE 7

985-3832

CHESlER

FREE!

RING

1 DAY

'.

SAVE $20

SUPER SAVINGS
ON ALL SILADIUM®

ON All 10K GOLD

DESIGNER RINGS

sAv~$40

95

• ON EVERY 14K GOLD
HIGHSCHOOL
ClASS RING

REG .

Full Lifetime Warranty

Eight Creal Styles ... .
One Great Price.

HURRYI

. SALEENDS MAYJI, 1989.
Oiamoods, Cubic ZiteoniM .uv:t

Custom Features Are
Free On All Sale Rings.

Diamond

P.l•~t.&gt;ls are avail.lble
at an extra cf\a'P}O'.

·
Q...Jiry ;, '"' dijfo......

jewelers of Integrity

BLACK AND WHITE
FILM - ONE DAY
SERVICE

212 EAST MAIN, POMEROY. OH .

992-6669
271 N. SECOND
.DDUPOIT, OHIO
'

.

!

I

•

.I

•

I

••
•

PTION SHOP .
'l.•

''·

PICTURES••• BRING YOUR ·FILM IN
TO US FOR PROCESSING.

1982 CHEVY C-10 ........................ S2895
Auto., PS, PB.

'..

24 EXP ••••••••••••••• ;•••••• o•o••••••• 55.99

SUNDAY SPECIAL

104"

1979 TOYOTA STA. WAGON~ ......... 5795

..•.-.
.

Effective Immediately oo••

.

1978 CHEVY MAUBU .................... S1095

.••

'!'

The Birthday Club of Reeds·
ville met rece nliy with Mrs. Ruth
Tutlie on Texas Road for a
Christmas party.
A gift exchangp was he ld and
Emma Durst won the door prize.
Attending were Ma ry Jamison,
Evelyn Spencer, Nell Wil son. lla
Westfall, Mary Allee Bise, Fran·

•

•NOTICE•

SERVICE
GUARANTEED

197 6 GMC C-15 o••••••••••o•••••••o•••••••o• S650

Nallo,..,lde Mututl Insurance Company
Nationwide lito Insurance Company
Home Oflice: Columbuo, Ohio

Birthday Club meets for

CLASS

., auto .. PB. PS.

..

..••'
.00:·-.
•

tington; Eric and Ja nice Dower,
Chrissy , Tommy, Terri and
Christopher of Portsmouth; Bill
and Kay McElroy , Jeff. Joey and
Jessica, Pomeroy.
The day was completed wi th a
phone call to MM2 Vernon E .
Bing, USS Cape Cod. San Fran·
cisco, Calif. with each member of
his iamily wishing him a happy
holiday. ,

l

'NII1

1984 CUTLASS CIERA .................... S2695

•'

INSURA
E
Nalionwldol II on WOUf' llde

The family of Mrs. Vernon
(Bertha ) Bing on Bailey Run
Road . en joyed Christmas Day
together.
A!lending were Terry and
Sharon Sayre, Misty. Travis and
Jared, Gallipolis; Vernon a nd
Darleen Bing, and Tony, Duane
and Diane Bing, Shelly, Curtis
and Lauren Bing, all of of
Gallipolis; .Melissa Bing. Hun·

1983 FORD ESCORT ....~................. S1195

-'••'

NATION~E

Bing family hqs holiday gathering

WE GIVE SENIOR CITIZENS 10% DISCOUNT

4 Dr.. auto.

••,.

D

and second row, John B\lzzard, Brn Haley, Ian

Story, Crlsli Bareswilf, Rachel Taylor, Brltlnl
Bevans, Tember Wilson, a nd ~II chelle Stahl . .

Newr 1llka I Vacation

2 Dr.. 4 sp.

'

Aopresentalive •

John'"'Buzzard lor a pizza P!~_rty. Pictured left to
right as they caroled at the th e Christmas tree
were 1~11 to right, first row , Ellcla Gilbreath,
Amber Vining, Nicole Evans, and Amy Sarver;

CAROLING - These Middleport kindergarten
children of the morning c lass of Paula Whitt
entertained with Christmas carolS at Overbrook
(:enter, Page St .• The children presenled each
resident with a Christmas stocking and home·
made cards and then had their pictures taken with
the residents. Afterwards they went to thr home of

of Chris tmas was presen ted at ·
the December meeting of thE! &lt;
Reedsville United Methodist:·
Women held at the ·chu rch. · ·,
Mrs. Sandy Cowdery and Mrs.
Violet Sat terfi eld presentt&gt;d a
slide program o n Chr istmas .
•
Members enjoyed a dlnne~· ·.
preceding the meeting with 7 ~ ' · ·
shutin calls being reported.
Cards were sig ned for shutlns
and fr iends in the co mmunity,
and plans completed for a visit to
the Meigs Co unty Infirmary.
Mar lene Putman, presiden t, .
gave a report on the needy family
project. .
Gifts were exc hanged by those
attending. Verna Ross. ParMar·
tin, Sandy· Cowdery, Darlene
Reed, Marlene Putman. Robin
Putman, Tami Putman, Judy
Elkins, Cathy Mas ters, Barbar3.c
Mast ers . Carolyn Whaley,:
Wendy Wilfong. Emma Durst,
Audra Ruckma n. Mamie Buck·
ley , Violet Satterfield, Nell WH'
son, Virginia Walton, Mary Alice
Blse, Pearl Baker, Conni e Whl·
te, Vivian Humphrey, Tammy
Cowdry, Karen and Jennifer
Walker, C~rol Kanawaski, Sandy&lt;
West, Llnda Putman; Krlstie and.
Sara Beth Boston. and Sue Suttle.·
Next m eeting wi ll be ho sted by·
Mrs. P utman a nd Mrs. Douglas- ;
The November meeting of the •
group was held at the home Nell :
Wilson with Emma Durst as •
o- hostess. Fifty-four shutln :
ails were rPported with Mrs .. :.
Durst givin g . devotions which :
included scripture and a poem,·
"Fear Not. "
·

1983 FORD ISCORT ...................... s1195

'•

'

, Tile Pomeroy Fire Depart·
ment has given up,l ts annual New
Year's Ball- probably becauSe
of the lack of a suitable facilitybut conlinues Its annual New
Year's fund raiser.
Winners of prizes this ye~r are
Linda Lambert, Middleport;
Barbara Gordon, Letart, W. Va.;
John Musser, Pomeroy; Henry
Werry , Pomeroy; Mark Wagner,
Logan; Carl Hysell, Rutland ;
Robert White ,.Pomeroy; Rodney
Roush, Pomeroy; Darin Nlhe·
zee. Logan; Sue Soulsby, Pome·
roy; LQulse Souls by, Pomeroy;
Jeff Morris, Pomeroy; Bill Wick·
line, Racine; Jack Lyons, Ra·
cine, and Annette Boyd, Pome·
roy. If you are on the list and
haven't received your notlflca·
lion, contact Danny Zirkle,
Pomeroy Fire Chief. who can
steer you in the right direction.

2 dr .. 4 sp.

JEFFREY J. WARNER, .

DR. JAMES P. CONDE iEGRmULLY
ANNOUNCES THAT DR. EDWARD ISAACS
WILL. NOT BE ASS.ING HIS MEDICAL
PRACnCE AS WAS PREYIOUSLY
ANNOUNCED. PAnENTS DESIRING THEIR
MEDICAL RECORDS TRANSFERRED
SHOULD SIGN A RECORD RELEASE FORM
WITH THE DOCTOR .OF THEIR CHOICE.

__ __ _

1979 CHEVETTE ..................~ ............ S595

Tampa - Alllllttic Dlr.-ctor Fran Cu N'i

302 West 2nd Streel, Pomeroy, OH "57R!I
Phone; 61&lt;1992·5479 Res: 6141992-2477
Clacms : 1·8001421·3535'

Did you catch the meteorite·
Thursday morning? Lowell
Price of Middleport saw it in .
West VIrginia where he is em·
ployed at Kaiser. Lowell said it
was bluish-green In color, about
the size of an automobile and had
a sparkling tall about 40 feet in
length . This was aobut 6: 51a.m.
Thursday,. so 'It you missed it,
small wonder,
_...._ huh?
...._

Chester Council meets .

I

rf'l!lil'"'d. f'lll'dh-. Mq ~1: namt:&gt;•Chr!A
· cat.nlllll·• lnl~rbn athlf'tlc dlh'teor.

•

was Pvt. William R. Howell who
. was on leave from Fort Gordon,
Ga.; where he Is in advanced
communications training.

It was a pleasant Christmas for
Mrs. Bertha Johnson of near
Racine.
Her daughter and son-in·
-law, Eileen and Glenn Cartw·
After being laid up for four
right of Stevensville, Mich., · mon!lls as the result of injuries
picked her up and the three made
received in a fall from the roof of
a trip to Bel Air, Md. , to spend the
his residence on North Third
holiday season with the Cartw·
Ave. , - the · accident occurred
right's son, .E;ric. Eric gave his
Sept. I - Eddie BurketT ha s
fiance a ring for Christmas so
reopened his barber shop at. 239
Mrs. Johnson's looking forward
North Second Ave., and is doing
to getting a new granddaughter
well.
in the near future.
And haven't we been lucky
Here for the holiday season
weatherwise? Why , it's almost
with his parents, Mr. and Mr s.
enough to keep you smiling.
Dennis Howell, Hysell Run Road ,

neflto 1elocted.)
Cell me todey for d.,al11. Service
Ia my epacielty,

foUf'l"
- Anno•IK'f'd l&amp;llbark
Sammif" Smllh will nol pll)l hl~t .,..tor
F1or1dw

By BOB HOEFLICH
You aren't aware of it - but
we've got a problem right here In
River City.
The bottom
line Is that Santa
has lost his bag
a nd even though
he won't need It
for another
year, all of us
need to be concerned.
· However, we can help with the
problem. The attractive, red
velvet bag was found on the
streets of Pomeroy and Is now at
The Sen tine! Office.
So -Santa, wherever you are,
please pick II up and set our
minds at ease.

Who
pays

N nln&amp;t1 .
ln.~UJ.Kpol h~ iJ\.o\,t\) - Si~d h'f'f"'
ll•rnl ltl'tor.Rt b!N'man ,JuNorsooo- ud

\\'f'll l

Bolfwo Sl. IS, P.-,ptrdh''" 58 (OT )
raJ.~t.pil&amp; Cell. tta.
t:t
C&amp;IU.rlllla &amp;&amp;, Ara .. sa. •
Frfti~SI . II, s .. low St. M
IAJ .. Bf•IISI. 11.1, f\IUntonSl. 5I
Mo . . . . lt. ldallo U lOT)

.

•

We
have
Santa's
bag·
.·

Buckeyes to
face Badgers
on Saturday

I

Reedsville
. :·
UMW
meets
A program on ·the true meaning
~

r---------------------..,
NFL£' p Jayoff pick 8

\ ' ouJIIIIifown Sl lli ' Tf'hlll'tiM'f' St

N .C . statr 'JS. Clem.tn 15

Rldimolll 'JII,

7

WrlJhl Slatr &amp;I Brooklyn
O..y IOfl xt Lo,-.. a· (Ill)
\'alparafsdtlndl at Xa,iPr

~

s. c...... ~:~~~ . h. Coppl• St ~ ~

.Jat~ .

----~----~~By the bend-~.-~---~------------------------------~----------------------~--------~--------------------------~--------~------~--::~--~~--:;;----------

Bay.
CANTON, Ohio (UP!) -Terry from the current 144.
Kelly ran for 7,274 yards and 74
Bradshaw, the quarterback who
Players must be retired five
touchdowns in 10 years with
helped the Pittsburgh Steelers to years to be eligible forconsidera·
four Super Bowl championships lion while coaches need·only be Cleveland, twice leading the
NFL In rushing (1967-68) .
In the 1970s, heads a list of 15 retired. Contributors, such as
Mack played 13 seasons with
finalists being considered for Davis, may still be active.
the Los Angeles Rams and was
1989 enshrinement . in the Pro
Blount, Bradshaw aad Hen· named to 11 Pro Bowls.
Football Hall of Fame.
dricks
are in their first year of
Mackey caught 38 touchdown
The llsr, announced today, also
passes In 10 seasons with Baltl·
includes cornerback Mel Blount, eligibility.
Bradshaw began a 14-year. more and San Diego, and had a .
defensive tackles Buck Bucha·
COLUMBUS, .Ohio (UP!) career
with Pittsburgh in 1970 as 75-yard scoring catch in Super
Ohio State Coach Gary Williams nan and the late 'Henry Jordan,
the
top
overall pick in the NFL Bowl V.
doesn't have to look hard to ,f!nd Los Angeles Raiders owner AI
draft
.
He
threw for 27,989 career
Shell played in two Super
the problems facing his Buck· . Davis, defensive end Carl Eller,
yards
and
212 touchdowns.
former
Minnesota
Coach
Bud
Bowls
and eight Pro Bowls
eyes Saturday afternoon in the~r
Blount had 57 Jtuerceptlons In during a 15-year career with the
Grant,
quarterback
Bob
Griese,
Big Ten home opener against
14 seasons with Pittsburgh and
Raiders.
Wisconsin. They're names are linebacker Ted Hendricks, run· performed in four Super Bow Is
nlng
back
Leroy
Kelly,
guard
Swann snared 336 passes and
Danny Jones and Trent Jackson. ,
and five Pro Bowls .
Tom
Mack,
tight
end
John
51 touchdowns in nine
totaled
Jones, a 6-foot-6, 240-pound
Buchanan
played
13
years
for
years
with
Mackey,
tackle
Art
Shell,
wide
Pitisburgh.
junior forward , and Jackson, a
Kansas City and helped the
receiver
Lynn
Swann
and
safety
Wood
toiled
12 years with ·
6-foot·l senior guard, have com·
Chiefs to a Super Bowl IV upset of Green Bay alter being signed as
Willie
Wood.
blned to score 53.1 percent ·Of
Minnesota. He missed just one a free agent, and played in two
Fourteen finalists were deter·
Wisconsin's points so far this ·
contest in a 181-game career.
Super Bowls and eight Pro
season, including 27 by Jones and mined from an original list of 61
Davis Is the only person to Bowls .
candidates
in
a
mall
vote
by
the
21 by Jackson in a 75-67 win over
Hall's 30-member selection com· serve pro football as a personnel
Minnesota Wednesday night. ·
assistant and scout, an assistant
Jackson, who is averaging 20.8 mlttee, which Is comprised of and head coach, a general
points per game, has been media representatives from cur· manager, a league commis·
Wisconsin's leading scorer In rent NFL cities, the president of stoner and as a principal team
oi
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Free
each of the Badgers' odd num· the Pro Football Writers Associ a·
'.
owner and chief executive agent third baseman Buddy Bell
tlon
and
an
at-large
member
of
bered games, 1, 3, 5, 7 and 9.
owner. He engineered the contro· says he would like to return to the
Jones has led in scoring in games the PFWA .
Jordan, who died at 42 in 1977, versial move of the Raiders from Cl~eland Indians, with whom he
. 2, 4, 6, S and 10.
.
Oakland to Los Angeles in 1982.
started his professional career 20
Wisconsin Is 9-1 overall and 1·0 was nominated by a special
Eller played 15 years ' with years ago.
old-timers'
committee
and
auto·
in the Big Ten following the home
Minnesota and SeatUe, helping
Bell ended the 1988 season as
win over Minnesota. which saw matically will become one · of the Vikings to four Super Bowl
seven
finalists
when
the
list
of
the
Houston Astros' starting
the Badgers aown 53-39 with
appearances.
candidates
Is
trimmed
in
Mlamt
third
baseman, but the As tros
11 : 05 to play. Their only loss has
Grant coached Minnesota for declined to offer him a contract
on
Jan.
21,
the
day
before
the
been at Loyola (IlL). 90·76.
18 years (1967-83, 1985), winning and he became a . free agent.
Jackson also is one of the Big Supe-r Bow I.
11
divisional championships al· Besides the lnd'ians, the Chica!JO '
'!:he 1989 class of enshrinees,
Ten's top 3-point field goal
though
he was stymied in four White Sox and the Texas
which must have a minimum of
shooters, hitting 28 of 57 for 49,1
Supen
Bowls
.
four, will be announced Jan. 24 at
Rangers , where Bel f spent seven
percent.
Griese
threw
for 25,092 yards seasons after the Indians traded
6:30
p.m
.
EST.
The
Induction
Ohio State, ranked 14th In the
and 192 touchdowns in 14 seasons
latest UP! Board of Coaches ceremony is scheduled for ~ug. 5 with Miami and returned from ·him In 1978, also are reported
ratings, is coming off a confer- on the front steps of the Hall and. injury to play in the Dolphins' interested In signing him.
He said he had a "lot of
e nce opening 75·65loss at Indiana will swell the number enshrined Super Bowl VII victory .
respect"
for Cleveland president
Wednesday night.
Hendricks played 15 seasons Hank Peters, who drafted Bell as
The Buckeyes, who missed
with Baltimore, Green Bay and a high school senior when he was
their first 16 shots from the floor,
the Raiders, playing in four the Indians' scouting director in
led by five points late in the
Super Bowls and 215 straight 1969.
opening period and 27-26 at
(Varsity only)
regular-season contests.
After his surgically repaired .
halftime, but never again after
TEAM
W L
P OP · Jordan saw action in the first
knee
was examined ' at the
the Hoosiers scored the first six
Trimble ........ ...... . 7 00 503 416 two Super Bowls as he played 13
Cleveland
Clinic Wednesday,
points of tlie second hall.
Wellston . ............. 5 2 491 437 Y\'ars with Cleveland and Green
Bell
and
his
agent, Ed Keating,
Jay Burson, who leads Ohio
Belpre ................. 4 2 3~ 358
met
With
Peters.
State with a 24.1 per game
Vinton ................ .4 3 473 447
average. had 25 to pace th~
Miller .... .............. 3 3 395 412
e
Buckeyes, 19 of those In the
Fed·Hocking
........
2
3
298
340
.1.'
second half. Jerry Francis added
Nels·York ............ l 4 274 292
.
·
13 and Perry Carter 12, but
Alexander ........... 1 5 358 393
iorward Tony White was blanked · Meigs .................. 0 5 312 393
By DAVE RAFFO
Chicago - 49ers were most
in 27 minutes o( action and guard
Tuesday's results
UPI
Sports Writer
Impressive of lasJ weekend's
Jamaal Brown, the other starter,
Wellston 56 Nelsonville-York 44
Sunday
four
winners. AII areas of their
scored only two in 24 minutes.
Trimble 66 Vinton County 64
AFC
game
worked In 34·9 rout of
The loss, Ohio State's 16th In 17
Miller 82 Alexander 73
Cincinnati
(minus
.
4
l
over
Minnesota.
With Joe Montana,
tries in IU's Assembly Hall,• Belpre 64 Meigs 59
Buffalo
Everybody
knows
the
.
Roger
Craig_
and Jerry Rice.
dropped the Buckeyes to 9·3 ...._ Tonl(bt's 11111es:
Bengals
can
pass;
last
week
they
healthy,
49ers
offense
can spread
overalt The Buckeyes have won
Federal Hocking at Belpre
proved
they
can
run,
too.
Clncln·
any defense thin. And their only
seven in a row in St. John Arena,
Meigs at Alexander
natl averaged 5.4 yards per carry defensive ljabillty is a banged-up
Including the final four last
Miller at Wellston
against Seattle. The Ben gals will · secondary - but Chicago Is no
season, and have beaten the
Nelsonville· York at Vinton
have a tougher time running deep passing team.
Badgers 12· of the last 14 times
County
against Buffalo but they have a
Still, Chicago has bel'n the
they have met:
Trimble - Open
much better mix on offense.
NFL's best team over 17 games.
•''
The Bills tried to mix it up The Bears are strong enough to .
better last week, throwing often play. the 49ers at least even on . ·
and early against Houston. They both lines, and Neal. Anderson is .• .
moved the ball, but broke few big capable of ouu'ushlng Craig. But ::
passing
plays and had to rely on
injuries to QBs Jim McMahon :
when you're sick
•pecll\1 team~ and defense towln.
and Mike Tomczak and DTs Dan •
This will be closer than Cincin- , . Hampton and Steve McMichael · •
. or hurt? We canl
nati's regtilar season triumph,
will make it rough to overcome .;
Nationwide con help - with 1 mojor medical pion that leto
but t(\e Bengals should win the San Francisco if the 49ers play ,you 1elec:t tho protection you Wlnt.
l!attles at the line of scrimmage like they did las i week.
••
•ChooH covorage for youi'Mif, your spouiae, your children .
and control the game.
Francisco
20.·Chlcago
17
.
San
•Chooll en omount to h ..p cover hoepltal room ond bo8rd, eurgClnclnnatl24. B~f~lo 17.
Last week - 1·3.
ery, end other doctorw' f - . up to e1 ,000,000 per perlondurNFC
Playoffs - 2-4.
fng their lifetime. (Promlum
.
San Francisco (plus 1) over
·co1t1 vary 'with amount of b•
·
Regular season - 118-99-7.

TVC standings

Friday, January 6, 'S89

, Page-S

Bradshaw heads Hall-of-Fame list

I

M'l!K•o nllin al Ohio SillII'
Kton l Sllllf' at l"Pntnd Mlc h
Mlll.fl111ll " '..,.Uorn Ml t h
Ball StAir at OhiD Unh·
Tolt'do at Eulf'r• Mich
Bow ana: Gr!'fn Ill Dt'lroll

GH .... aS.II .. tralll. G4-el'!(lll Sl. 93
Ultr-ti)' 81, ('ntral Flori•• 71
lA•••- Trd1 • • NE Loul111ana 37
Ml••tll,,. 81, florida 71
Nlc...II•St. U , Mts ~ \1 alley St . .a&amp;
UNC-OIMiDir 71. ( 'olumbl&amp; U

~

IIO('KF; 't'l U:MiLF.

The . Daily Sentinel

Bylbe Bend

Marble scored 26 points and Ed
Arizona 83-78, No. 9 Iowa deHorton added 21 to lead Iowa,
feated Michigan State 93-82, No.
12·1, In its Big Ten opener.
12 Nevada-Las Vegas drubbed
At Las Vegas, Nev., Anderson
New Mexico State ·79·58, No. 19
Hunt scored 14 points and David
Texas· El Paso dropped Utah
82-66.
• . Butler generated 10 of his 13
points in the second half.to pace
At Rosemont, Ill., Steve Buck·
UNLV, 9-2 overall and 4·0 In the
nail went louroffour from 3-point
Big West, over New Mexico
range to finish with 21 points to
send North Carolina, 13·1, to Its ·State. 8-4 and 1·1.
At El Paso, Texas, Greg Foster
11th straight triumph. DePaul,
sc~
22.polnts and UTEP, 12·1,
8·6, was !ed by Stan !e)( Brundy 's
produced
a 16·1 run just before
23 points.
halftime
to gait1 control over
At Stanford, Cali!., Todd Llchti
Utah,
9-i.
in both schools' West·
scored a career-high 35 points to
ern
Athletic
Conference opener.
offset Seap Elllott's35pointsand
In
other
gaines,
It was: Kansas
power Stanford. The Wildcats
fell to 8·2 ovet all and . 3·1 in State 83, Texas·Arllngton 52: .
Mississippi 80, Florida 71; North
conference play. The Cardinal
. Carolina Charlotte 75, Columbia
lmporved to 9·3 and 2-1.
42; Purdue 75, Northwestern 58; ·
Sean Rooks pulled Arizona
Penn State 107, Massachusetts
within 80-781n the final minute on
2 free·throws by Sean Rooks and 79; Rutgers 87, Rhod~ Island 77;
West Virglnia 69, St. ll{&gt;navena field goal . by Elliott. Harvey
ture45; Utah State85. Pacific69;
Mason attempted 2 free throws
St.
Joseph's 84, Duquense 81;
that could have tied the score
Montana
62, Idaho 54; Wichita
with four seconds lef\, but missed
State
78;
Iona
58; Nebraska 89,
the first. ·He intentionally missed
Sam
Houston
State
70; and New
the second, but missed the rim,
Mexico 88, Brigham Young 84;
and Stanford gained possession.
At East Lansing, Mlch., Roy UCLA 97, Oregon 66; and Oregon
State 64, Southern Cal 53.

Buddy Bell talks
with Cleveland

N-·

Drl . . S4 Johns t8, N_. Br.ml'ft :n
EuU1b Nerllll!., M_.flrld !II
Eut Pal..elMo J.t, N"'&amp;.n F~t.lls 3 1
Eut LIYI'rpoel fi , Slt'tlbf-11\'lllf' 3:1
FIIMIQ IK, Frl!'monl ~t; .. ~ l

Fo" Fr,... itt, W 1h•rford It

at Drtroll , K p.m.

Uh1.h iU Chlca~o, 11:38 p.m,
DLlllwo at Ph~nb: . 9: SO p ,m.
MJ 11101 at LA:I.a~Prs, 10 :30 p.m .
Sacram Pnto at Portland, IO::W p, m .
SalftiQ''!i Gllml'!i
NPw \'orkal rln•f'laad
\\' ~t~hlnjl;tonliiCh IU'Iotlt' , nl&amp;ht
Jt&lt;rfiP)' at i\llan&amp;a, nl~tht
Ott roM allndaM . nip!
Ulllll llt MIIWMukl'p, nl ...
PhUIIdf'lp~all Holl!llon. nl«ffl
Da llll." a llk&gt;.nwr. nlaht
.'\tlaml ;~t Phot"ftbt , n l«ht
Portlutd 111 ~~· Ill liP, nlJhl
San 1\nlonl? 111 Goldt&gt;n ~tatr, nl~:hl

Ch_,.,n$'7, Lfowll:hburt LaBr•f' l!l
~

1111

69-65 with 3: 23toplay. Monroe's2
free throws with 55 seconds left
~
helped preserve the win.
Monroe. 7·10 from the field In
the second half, finished with 21
points.
.
.
"Fortuna tely I was able to
come back In the second half. "
said Monroe, a 6-foot-3 sophomore. "I guess they had a-game
plan (to stop him) . In the second
halC (point guard) Chris &lt;Corchi·
ani) found me and I was able to
get free.··
N.C. State Coach Jim Valvano
said: ''Rodney hit some critical
shots for us. He has the green
light, I want him to shoot
whenever he has the shot."
The Wolfpack, 8·1, held a 49-45
edge with 16:32 left. Elden
Campbell fueled a 6-point run
that enabled Clemson, 7-3, to tie
the score 55-55 with 11: 10 to go.
Dale Davis, who led the Tigers
with 20 points, scored 6 straight
to put the Tigers ahead 61·55 wilh
8: 45 left. The Monroe heated up.
· Elsehwere In the Top 20, No. 4
North Carolina ripped DePaul
87-67, Stanford upended co-No. 7

•

�,,
•

....

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday. JanuiM"(' 6. 1989

'

Friday, January 6, 1989

·Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

I

"FNtttlllf Klfltfdg Frl•tl Clllekt•"

of Columbus, 0
104W Matn

.992-5432

rMi\

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

IUt•i~~

( ounl\ t tHtl~''' Flnrul
352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 45769
614/992-2844

PHARMACY"
W~ F1ll Doctors'
Prescrtpt•ons

991 IUS

·a1

.
Pomeroy

115 I. Mlmorial Dr.

214 E. Main

lloa1.
'
POMEROY CHURCH OF 1l!E NAZA
RENE, Olrll'!' Union and Mullm'y Re.l
111omu Glm McCiu ~ Pll'tll' N~ Pti!s~. S S. &amp;r!L, Sunday Schod, ~:Jl am,
morringworslip 10:3) am. ....,lng...-vtce6
p.m: ml~w-Ill'· 7 p.m.
GRACE EPISOOPAL CHURCH ;Ia; E
Malo SL, Pomeroy. &amp;nriJ\11 ~ Holy
commldonon tre Drst&amp;.u~ ~eachtMn1h
and COI\'ll1ned wtth mcrrtne prayer on t~
tNn1 &amp;rnd"'' M&lt;r!Uig pnl3i!r and """"""on
all Suntlot's altho rriO!ih. Cbureh Schod
and Nuroery cft proyl.e19Jftee hour tn IN&gt;

. . ., ,

l'lrllhlllll tnmedi*IY rollowlngtiE ..mce.
POMEROY OIURCH OF CIIRJST %12 W

""'"JI!IlSI.

Main SL, Leo Lash
BIIU Schad
Ulam, Mcrnng"""""'P.JO:llam Yooth
meetlnaa. 6 00 p.m , Evening W£nhip, 7 00 p

m. W~ ntght~ermeetlngandBitie
$1~7 00 P.m
SALVATION ARMY, ll5 Btiternul
Ave, ~ Mrs IJorn \lining tn charge
&amp;rnl'lf hoD,_ meetlng. 10 am, Sundl\Y
SChod,. lO:.l) am SuMay School VPSM

Eloile Adams, leade!' 7:-lJ p m Salvation

~tng. variouss~Eakersandmusicsp:!dals
~~. 11;]) a.m. to2 pm La.dlm Horne

L.eag\le, mem!Ers In charge, all Wfrnen
tnvlted; 6 45 p.m. Thundi\Y, Corjl6 Cadtt
Classs (YOWl! l'l!ople-lliHel, 7 :U pm.ljlble
St\lly and Prayer meetln&amp; ope11 to the public.
POMEROY WESI SIDE CHURCH OF
CHIUST, 33Di Cllllcftn'sHome Road (O:Jurty
Road~) 9!n-52JS Vocal music SUTJ)ay Wor
- slip10am, BIHeStldyllam. Worslip.Gp
•m. W-'IY· lliHe Slldy 7 p.m
• OW DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
• CHURCH, AMn Curtis. pastoc; l.Jnda Swan,
9Jfi. 91rday SChod 9: XI am. pre&lt;r:'htng~tel
vicea, first and third Sundew folkMrtngSJrtiay
Schod. Youth .-.!ng 7 :Jl p m every Sundi\Y.
SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
- Pomeroy Map- Michael llellmer, Ph
m5898 Saturday evenjna Mass, 5 lJ p m
, Sunday MaJs 8 a m and 10 a m CCD
1 clMaea, 9 a m Sunday Confessions Onehalt hour before each Mass
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOLIC FAITH- New Lima Road, next to
1 Fort Meigs Park Robert W Ri chards
putoc Sunday services 10 a m and 7 p
m., Wednesday worship, 7 P m
1
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST
, Preachina 9 Mia m first and second Sun'
days of each mooth, thlrd and fourth Sun
day each month worship tervlces at 7 :lOp
m: Wfdnesday evenings at 7 30 p rn
Prayer and Bible Study
1
SEVENTII DAY AOVENTIST Mut
berryHelgbtaRoad Pomeroy. Past((' Bob
Snyder; Sabbath School Superintendent
DarUne-Stewart Sabbath&amp;hoolbeginsat
.. 2p m on Saturday ahrrnoon with worship
service toUowlng at 3 00 p m Everyme
• welcome
RUTI.;AND FIRST BAPTIST CIIURCR
-Sliter Harriett Warn~, Supt Sunday
School9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10

•s

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST I.ystm
minister, Saturday evPn lng
tvan1ellltlc services, open to public 7 p
, m , Sunday Church Schon!, 9 30 ~ ral ,
Morning Wonh.lp 10. 30 a m
- FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Pomeroy Pike E Lamar O'Bryant-. pa11tor,
Jack Needs Sunday SChool Olredor Sun
day School, 9 · ~ am, Morning Worship,
10 U, evealngworshlp, 7 OOp m (0 S T)
7 30 (E.S T. ), Wednesdoy Prayer Ser
vice, 7 00 p m (D S T 1 A 7 3l PM IE s
' T I. Million Frlenda (ages 2 61. Royal
1 Ambusadon (boy I agea 6-18), and Girls
In Action (aa:es 6-18) on Wednesdays 7 p
m. (D S T ) "7 30 p m (E.S T ) , Tuesday
Vltltatlon. 6 30 p m
FAITII TABERNACLE CHURCH Bal
ley Run Road, Rev Emmett Rawson, pas
1
I , toc Handley Dunn, supt Sunday SchoO.,
; 10am,Sunclayeventngservtce,7JOp.m
' • Bible teaching, 7 30 p m Thurlday
1
,
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St , Sy·
' ' racute Mark Morrow, past« Services, 10
•' am Sunday Evening service~ Sunday
and Wednfllday at 6 00 p:m.
, MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRil;T
' IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
• Rnt elder, Wanda Mohler, Sunday School
Sv.pt. Sunday School 9 :1) am; Morning
Worshlp10:30am, EvenlngWorshlp7ll
pm, W..-,eadoyprayerrneetlng7 :Jlpm
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine Rev James Satterfleld,. pa!itiX'
•: Freeman WUIIams Supt Sunday School
, 9 45 a.m, Sunday and Wednesday even
, tneservtces, 7 p m
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Corner Sixth and Palmer James Seddon,
Pastoc. Edna Wtlsm. S S "Supt , Cathy
•. RIQI AISt Supt Sunday SChool. 9 1~ a.
: m, Morning Woa sblp,10 t5a m, Suud•Y
• Evenlng service, 7 p m Prayer meeting
• and Bible Study Wednesday evenlng 7 p
• m , Children's cholr practice. wednm
day, 7 p.m , Adult c hoir pradlce, Wed, 8
• P m, Radio program, WMPO, Suoday,
8 ll a m

Halley,

:.t

,
.,.
•
:
..
..
•
•

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
5th and Main. AJ Hartsm, minister'
Rlchud DuBose, Aascclate Paster. Mike
Gerlach. Sunday SChool SUperintendent
Bible School9 lJ a m , Mornta1 Worship
10 30 a m Evening Worship 7 00 p m
Wednl!lday, 7:00pm. Prayer meeting.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF 1l!E NA
; , ZARE:NE, PASTOR Fre&lt;l Pen horwood
, Bill Wblt!o_ Sunday Sdlool Sup! Sunday
• ..,_ t '"'o.m , Mooioln1 Worship 10 ~~
a.m , EvaniPUitlc meetiDc 7 00 p m
Wednl!lday. ?:00 p.m. Prayer meeting.
: IINiftD nDIIY'I'II:IIIAN MINIIT&amp;Y

OF MEIGS COUNTY

....O'ljlo.......
HARRISONVILLE PRESliYTERIAN

• CHURCH - ~ : Wonldp Servlres
• t.OOa.m.. Oltlreb SebooiiG:lh.m
:
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN • Sunday Sdlool. t a.m ; Chuttb ~ervt~.
UlSa.m
I SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
• TERIAPI - -IIY School, 10 a m ,

• l1unday M......., \Vonhlp 11 00 a m Chit
• drea'1 O.rdl 11 a.m Sunday Evening
ll!rvlce 7.00 p m. Wed. 6 p m You"' Lo
~·· AWdiWJ&lt; Wedlleaday, 7 p on Fam
I • Uy Wonblp.
(
,

BUSY ROUTE- This photO dated Sept. I&amp;, 1101
Indicates lhal the Pomeroy levee, lhe picture
taken from Mason, W. Va., was a busy plaee In
ILOWEIS FOR EYEIY OCCASION

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.

992 ·5130 Pomeroy

The calendar upon the wall,
Since just the other day,
Was put there to remind us all
The new year's underway.
By looking at it we can find
The moon in every phase,
While small notations keep in mind
Impending holidays
It also gives us ample space
For writing in each date
Of those appointments we must face
And times to celebrate
'
This year, whatever be our creed
Let's mark each Sabbath day; '
As one reminder we sho;uld heed:
To worship God and pray.
-Gloria Nowak

t--_,;.__..;;.,;__.;..__....J
BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075
172 North Stconcl Au.
Mioldl~t~ort, lllloa •

L-"7:':-:;:~0::::':":':'::::~~~=""".,...J

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH OH •
Rt 124 3 mil ef!: from Portland Long Bot
tom Edsel Hart, pastor Sullday Schod
9 30 a m Sunday morning preachtnR
10 JO a m • Sunday evening Berylces 7 30

pm

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Hernnann, pastor Sunday School. tO OOa

m, Mornlfitt Worship, 11 oo am, Wed
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at

7 30 p.m

APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO
DIST CHU RCH - Past..-. Rev Carl
Hicks, 10 miles above RacJnto on Rt 388
Sunday School 9 a m ,•worship service 10
am Sunday evening service, 6 00 p m ,
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Tburs
day,6 31Jpm
MT OLIVE UNITED METHODISTOtr 124 behind WllkesvUle Charles Jones
pastor Sunday School, 9 lOa m 1 momtng
worship, 10 30, Sunday and Thursday
eventng services, 7 00 p m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE P ABI8H
UNITED MEI'IIODI8T CHUJ«:H
NOKtWII:.UT CLUSTER
Rev. Don Arelter
Rev. Jl'ruk Crofoe&amp;
Rev. Seldon .rotu..ea
AlFRED - Church School 9 30 a m
Worship, 11 a m • UMYF 6 30 p m UMW
Third Tuesday, 7 30 p m Communion
first Sunday (Archer)
'
CHESTER - Wor9hlp 9 a m , Church
SChool lOam, BlbleStudy, Thursday 7p
m , UMW, first Thursday, 1 p m c'om
munlon, flnt Sunday (Archer)
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 a m , Church
School tO: 30 a.m Blbl~Study Wednesday
7 30 p m (Johnsoo)
'
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9 ~
am Worship 10 30 am, Btble Study,
Wednesday, 1:30pm, UMYF Wednes
day, 6 00 P m , Communion First Sunday
of Month (Crofoot)
REEDSVJLLE- Church Schad 9 30a
m • Wor!!hip Service 11 00 a rn
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Chureh SChool 9 a m , Worshtp 10 a m
Bible Study, Tuesday 7 30p m Commu'
nion First Supday (Archer).
'

CENTRAL CLUSTER

Rov. Melvin l'rMklln
Rev Deme~~M! 8 ZllniJ&amp;, lr
Rev. Doa Meadows
R.e\1 WMiey Thltc.. er
&amp;t:v Pul Mania
Afthar Crablr..
Bn. Robert Steele
ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship 11 a m
• Church School 9 45 am, Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 1 30 p.m , UMW,liral
1\lesday, I 30 P m , Choir Rehmrsal
Wednesday 6 30 p.m (Thatc her)
'
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m
Chureh SchoollO am Bible Study, Tues'
day, 7 00 p.m , UMW Ftrst Monday, 7 30
P m • UMYF Sunday, 6 p m Choir Reh~rsal, Children's at 6 30 p.m Adult toJ.
lowing, Wednesday (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church SChool, tOa.m
• Worship, 11 a m , Bible S~.. Thursday, 7 pm. UMYF Sunday 6 pm
(Franklin)
'
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m
Chureh School 10 AM Choir practice'
Thursday, 6 .10 p.m, UMW tblrd Monday'
(Thatcher)
HEATH(Middleport) -Church School.
9 30 am. Morning Worship 10 :Jl am
Youth Groop, 4 p m, Wednt'!S(Iay, Bible
stucty 6.00 p m Choir rehearsil7 OOp m

Be•.

{ZUDiga)
MINI!:RSVILI. E- Chureh School9 00
am • Worship servtce 10 00 a.~ UMW
third Wednesday, 1 P m (l'hatcher)
PEARL CHAPEL- Church School 9 00
am • Worship Service tO·OO am (Mar·

tin)

POMEROY -Church School 9 I~ a m
• Worship 10 30 am, Cholr 'rehearsal
Wedneeday 7 30 P m ; UMW, secood
Tuet&lt;lay, 7::MJ P m . UMYFSunday 6p m
(Meadows)
'
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School 9 15
a.m., Worship 10 am, Bible Study,
nesday • 7 ~ P m UMYF (5eniors). Sun
day, 6 P m. CJuntors) every olher sun
day , 6 p .m. (Frank11n)
RUTLAND - Chu1ocb School. 10 a m.
Worlblp, 11 a.m. , UMW Flr st Monday'
7 30 p.m ccrabtreel
'
SALEM CEN1'Ell- Church Schoot9· 15
a m.; Morning Worship 10 15 a m
(Steele)
SNOWVILLE - Morning Worship 9 00
a m , Church SchoollO 00 a m (MarUa)
SOUDIJIRN CLUSTER
.... DeiiiF-r
Rev Be1er Oraee

Wed

Rev. Carl Hhb

APPLE GROVE - t'burch Sehool 9 00
a m • Mornlnl Worship 10.00 a m , Bible
Study Sunday 7 00 p m 1 Prayer meettn&amp;
7 00 p.m Tburalay (Hicksl
BETHANY - Wonhlp 9 am , Chureb
SChooiiO o.m : Sible Study Wednesday 10
am , Dorc.. Women' a FeiiOIValltp Wed
ne5doy Ill Ill (Folt.rl.
CARMEl. - Cllll"'b S&lt;llool 9 3l a m ·
Worahlp, 10. f&amp; a.m. Seoond •nd Fourth
Sundays; Ftllawaldp dlnaer with Suttm
third Tl•u•day, &amp;: 30 p.m. (Foat.r)
MORNINC STAll- Chureh Sehool9 4S
am., Worlldp 10 30 am ; Bible Study,
Tb"v'-rl~' 7 30 p.m (Folterl
S
N - Chureb SCbod. 9· 30 a m
MornlniWonlllplO •.Sa m llrotaadthlni
Sundayo: Fellowoblp dinner wltb Carmel
tlllrdTbunday, 6:30pm (Foster) .
EAST LETART- Morning Worship 9:00
am: Onl"'bSchoniJO ooo m: liMWIIrlt
Tueod~Q&lt; 7 30 p m . (Gr"r)

LETART FALLS - Worship ~ am
Church Schod 10 a m (Grace}
'
RACINE - Chureh School, 10 a m . Wor
shlptlam, UMW!ourthMondayat7llp
m., Men's Prayer Breakfast. Wedneday, 8
am (Grace)
...
SALEM CENTER- Church School9 15
a m Worship 10 15 am (Steele)
SNOWVILLE - Worship 9 00 a m
Churrh Schooi1U 00 am (Marlin)
KENO CHURCH bF CHRIST, Rog..Sprtng minister, Starling Mas5ar and 01
lver Swain, Sunday School Supts Preach·
lne:9 30a m each Sunday, Sunday School
JO 3041 m

HD~N

CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Theroo Durham,
pastor Sunday service, 9 30 a m 1 evenIng service 7 00 p m Prayer meeting
Wednesday, 7 OO.p m
'
BEARWALI.OW RIDGE CIIUliCH OF
CHRIST, Joseph B Hoskins, pastor Bible
Class, 9:30am , MornlngWorsldp10 30a
m , Evening Worship, 6 30 p m thursday
Btble Study, 6 30 p m
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy
Harrtsmvill~ Rd Robert Purtell, mints
ter. Steve Stanl~. S S Supt Btll McEI
rf!J, Asst SUP.t Sunday School9 aoa m
Worship service 10 JO am , Eventngw.W
ship Sunday 7p.m and Wednesday, 7p m
ST JOHN LU1l!ERAN CHURCH,Ptne
Gro\'e The Rev William Mlddleswarth
pastor Church servit.'e 9 30 a m , Sulko .... '
School 10 30 a m
·
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
Tom Runyon, pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m • Larry Haynes, S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m
RACINE CHURCH. OF TilE NAZA
RENE, Rev Jo.hn Vance, pqtor, Sandy
Justice, Chairman of the Board or Cbrls
tlan Lite Sunday Scbool9· 30 a m , Morn
lng worship 10 30 a m evangelistic ser
vice 7•00 p m Wednesday servk-e, 7 p.m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH Dex
ttr Wo!XIy Call pas1or Services Sunday
lOam and 7 p m Wednesday 7 pm
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY, CHURCH
Lloyd Sayre, Supt Sunday Schoo19 ~a
m., morning worship 1o 30 a.m Sunday
evening service 7 p m
RACINE FIRST llAPTIST, Steve
Deaver, Pastoc Mike Swiger, Sunday
School Supt . Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morning worship 10 40 am. SundaY
evening worship 7 30 p m , Wednesda;
evening Bible study 7:30p.m.
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CIIURCII
BurUngham. Ray Laudermtl~ post"' II&lt;&gt;
bert Coulrt, assistant past..- Sundl\Y Schoo
10 am w«Shhp 7 p m , Wednesdi\Y 6 p m
youth meeting; Wed., 7p.m. churebservlces
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH \1,
mlleotfRt 325 Rev BcnJ Watts pasior
Robert Searles, S S Supt Sunday School
9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10 30 a m
Sunday evening service 7 30 p m Wed
nesday service, 7 30 p m
SILVER RUN BAPTIST Bill Little
pastor Steve Little S S Supt SundaY
SchO&lt;M tn a m ; Mot nlng worslp, 11 a m
Sunday l"Ventng worship 7 30 p m. Prayer
meetlhg and Bible study Wednesday, 7 30
P m;.l. Youth meeting Wednesday at 7p m
R~JOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N 2nd Ave. Middleport Sunday
School10 a.m Sunday evenlng7 OOp m
Mld-week l§ervlce, Wed , 7 p m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Sunday School 9 30 am Dallas Janey'
supt , Morning worsblp
30 a m , Sun'
day evening service, 7 30 p m ~ Wednes
day evening service, 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE Rev Glenn McMUiu, past (I"
Mary Janh:e Lavender, Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m .~ Morning
worship 10 00 a m , Evangelistic Jervtce
6 p m , Prayer and Praise Wednesday 7p'
m; Youth meeting, 7 p m
'
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, p.ast&lt;r Sunday
School. 10 a m , Gary Reed, Lay leader
Morning sermon, 11 a m , Sunday nJght
servlcea Christian Endeavor 7 :.) p m
Song service 8 p m PreachJng 8..30 p m'
Mid week prayer meetlng Wednesda"' 7
pm
'
,,

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93 Mill Slreet

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Middleport, Olilo 46780
1814)992 6667 - 1998-00KS!

pastor Melvin UraKe S S Supt Sunday
SchooJ 9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10 30
Evening Worshlp 7 00 p m , Wednesday
Prayer Service, 7 oo p m
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Rail rood
St , Mason Sunday Sebod 10 a m Morn
lng worship 11 a m ' Evening sen Ire 6 p
m Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed
nesday, 7 P m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle
Borden, pastor Cornelius Bunch supt
Sunday
School worship
9 30 a m
, Second
and
rourth Sundays
servl&lt;'e
at 2 30
p
m
MT ~IAH BAPTIST Fourth and
Main St
dleport Rev CllbeJ t Craig
Jr. pastor
rs ErvJn Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt Sunday School9 30a
m Worship Service, 10 45 a m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B Hoskins, evangelist Sunday
Bible Study 9 a m Worship, 10 a m • Sun
day evening service 6 p m, Wednesday
C'\enlng ~ervlce, 7 p m
,
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine
Rl 124 William Hoba ck, pasror Sunday
SChool10 a m , Sunda; evening sPrvtCE' 7
p m Wednesday evening service 7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle
Supt Sunda; School 9 30 a m Morning
Worship 10 30 a m Prayer service -altern
ate Sundays
THE CHURCH OF ~ESUS CHntST
APOSTOLIC FAlTH - New Lima Rd '
next 10 Fort Meigs Park Rutland. Robert
Richards, pastor Services at 7 p m on
Wednesdays and Sundays
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP
TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church
Rev David Ferrell pastor Henrv Eblin
SUnday School Supt , Sunday Sch0ol10 a
m : Morning Worship 11 a m : Evening
service 7 30 p m Wednesday evening ser
vlce7 30pm
,
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH
Gary Holter pastor Sunday services 9 30
a m and 7 p m Midweek Sf'rvtce 7 30 p
m Thursday
'
• MIDDLEPORT PEN1'ECOS1 AL Third
Ave Rev ClarkBak~r pastor Ca; INot
t\ngham, Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 10 a m with classes fo r all ages
Evening services at 6 p m Wednesday Bl
ble study at 7 30 p m Youth services Frl
day at 7 30 p m
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP 128MIIISt
MlddJeport Brottler Chuck McPher!lon'
pastor Sunday School 10 am, SundaY
evening services at 7p m and Wednesday
services at 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smith
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m church
servlce7 30pm, youlhfellowshlp6 30p
m , Bible study, Thu1sday 7 30p.m
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE 33)45
Hiland Road, Pomeroy Tom Kelly pas
tor Danny Lambert S S Supt Sunday
morning service at 10 a m , Sunday even
lng service 7 30 p m fuesday and Thurs
day Services at 7 30 p m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE, Rev Glendon Strood, pastaSundaySchoo\9 JOa m, Worship service
10 :m a m , Youth service Sundays 1~ p
m Sundaycventngsen:lce7 OOpm Wed
J'lesday Prayer Meet: big and Bible Study
700pm
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH Sun
day afternoon services at 2'30 Thursday
evening services at 7 30
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCII Masoo W
Va Pastor Bill Murphy Sunday Scho~llO
a m , Sunday evening 7 30 p m Prayer
rneetlng and B1ble study Wednesda~ 7 30
p m Evl"ryone welcome
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa
\em Sf Rev Pau 1 Taylor pastor Sunday
Sc hoollO a m , Su nda y f'venmg 7 OOp m
WedneSday eveni ng prayer mt'el'lng 7 oO
pm
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH Silver Ridge Duane Syden
slrlcker, pa!itor Sunday School 9 am
Worship Servtce 10 a m , Sunday f'Venlng
service 7 00 p m W ednesday nlghl Bible
study 7 00 p m

L-------------J
CHURCH SUPPLIES 1!o BIBLES

•
BE1l!LEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl
Shuler past(l" Worship service, 9 30 a m
Sunday School tO 30 am Bible Study and
prayer servlce Thursday, 7 :1) p m
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONAL CHURCH, Klnpbury Road Rev
Clyde W Henderson, pastor Sunday
School. 9 30 a m , Ralph Carl, Supt Even
lng worship 7 00 p m Prayer meeting,
Wednesdoy 7 00 p m
LONG BO'ITOM CHRISTIAN Vernoo
Eldrld~te. pastC~". Wallace Damewoo:l, s
S Supt Sunday School9 JOa m Worship
Service, 10 30 a m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CIIURCH
0 H Cart, pasTor SundaySchoolat9 .30a
m Morning worship at 10 30 a m Sun
day evening service at 7 30 p m Thursday
services at 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob located on County Road 31. Rev
Roger Willford pastor Sunday School
9,30 a m Morning Worshl 10 45 am
Sunday evening worship 7 00 p m, woo'
nesday even ing Bible Study 7 00 p.m
WHITE: 'S
CHAPEL
WESLEY AN
CHURCH -Coolville RD Rev Phillip Rt
denour. pastoc Sunday School9 30 am ,
worshtp service 10 30 am , Bible study
and worship service, Wednesday 7 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST Roy
W Carter, pastcr MornlngWor.shlp10 00
am, BlbleSchool6.00p m: Bible Study
Wednesdoy 7 00 p.m
fiUTLAJ:&lt;DBIBLEME1l!ODIST Amos
Tillis, pastor Sonny lludsoo. supt Sunda y
School 9 30 a m , Morning worship tO X)
am, Sunday evening serviCe 7 00 p m
Wednesday service 7 p m WMPO pr(}.
gram 9 a tn each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Samuel Basye, pastor Sunday
School9 30 a m • Worship service 10 30a
m . Young people's service 6 p m
Evan$ellstlcservlce6 ~p m. Wednesday
service 7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St Mason W Va Sunday Bible Study 10
a.m Worship ll a m and 7 p m Wednes
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud
ding Lane, Masm, W Va J N Thacker,
pastoc Evening service 7 30 p m , W(}.
men's Minish'), Thursday, 9 30 am,
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7 15
pm

'

~JO pm

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Dave Prentice, mlnb,.r Deryl
Wella, Supt. Cburch Scbool 9 •·m , Wor
ahlp Service, 9· 4S p.m
CHESTER CHUliCH DF TilE NAZA
RENE Rev Herbert Grot• past..Fruk lllflle. '"''· Sunday SchOOI 9: 3) a
m.:
Worllllp II!I'VIce, 11 a m uti 7 p m
&amp;onday Wedlll!ldoy, 7 p m . Prayer meet-

POMEROYI OHI0-992-6677
liM Qlo11~11 and Ruth Ann Fo~

992-2975

u '(

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Letart
W Va Rt 1, James LewJs, pasioc Wor'
ship servtces 9 30 a m : Sundlly Schoolll
a m , Evening worship 7 30 p Ql Tuesday
cottage prayer meetlng and Bible Study
!,30 • m . Worship ""rvlce, Wedni'Sday

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN Char·
leo DomiJan, ()aft« MU&lt;ftd Zlqr],;. &amp;rnd'Q' Scllool &amp;rpt Mornlni Worship 9:Jl a
m. Sund~Q&lt;SChooiiO·:Ua m, Evenln!loer·
vice, 7 :Ml p.m
MT UNION HAPTIST, Putac· Joe N
Sayn!, SUnday Scboo19.45 am. Evenlnf!
;~~m Prayer Meeting, 6 30

&gt;

fi~t..--

IJ

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION HarUorcl W Va
Rev David McMant.s, pastor' Cbureh
School 9 30 a m., Sunday morning ~er
v1ce, ll a m , Sunday evenlng service
7·30p m Wednesdayprayermeettng 7 JO

io

tnf.AUREL CLIFF FREE ME1li0I)IST
CHURCH WIUiam Wllllaml, pastor, Rober! E.llartm, DirectII' o1 Cllrlltlaa Edu
catkm; Steve Eblin, •utstant Sunday

•

services, 1 30 p.m

•

06 lutt•nut An ; Pomeroy. Oh

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

SChool 9 30 a ru r'.~orning worship 10 30
a m ; T£&gt;ens In Action, 6 p m , Evening
Worship, 7 00 p m Choir practice 8 p m
Sunday Wednesday evening prayer and
Bible study
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Charles Russell Sr , mlnlsler, Norman
Will, supt Sunday School9 30 a m Wo(
ship service to 30 a m Bible study: Wed
nesday 6 00 p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRISTOFLATTERDAY SAINTS Port
land Racine Road. Mike Duh1, pastor
Janice Danner. church school director.
Church school9 30a m, Morning worship
10 30 a m , Wednesday evening prayer

pm

16141992-2039 or
I6141992 -S721

GRAVELY TRA&lt;TOR SALES

•

THE CALENDAR WILL REMIND
US TO OBSERVE OUR FAITH

•

OUR SA VI OUR LU1l!ERAN CHURCH
Wal nul and Henry Sts , Ravenswood, w'
Va The Rev. GeorgeC WetrJck, pastor
Sunday SChool 9.30 am, Sunday worship
llam ,
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 nf!8I Flat·
Wood! Rev BlackWood, past&lt;r St'rvtres
on Sunday at 10 30 a .m and 7 30 p m wUh
Sunday School9 30 a m SlbleStudy Wed
nesday, 7·Xt p m
'
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, St Rt 338, Antiquity Rev
Frar:~klin Dickens, paatcr. Sunday morning 10 a m , Sunday evealng: 7 XI p m.
Thunday evening 7 :It p m
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH, Inc, 75 Pearl St Rev
Ivan Myers, acttng putcr; RoaerManley,
Sr , Sunday Sebool Superinllelldent. Suo
day School 9 ~ a m , Momtn1 worship
10 30 a m , evenlnJ wonhJp 7 30 p m
Wednesday evf'nlna Bible stuiy prayeiand praise tervlc., 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF JESUS CHliiST APOSTOLIC- VanZandt and Ward Rd Elder
Jameo MIUe-. pater. Sunday School
JO•:MJa m, Worship Service, Sunday, 7 ~
pm: Blbi•Stlldy, Wednl!lday, 7 30pm
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrl
aonvllle Road Rev VIctor Roullh. puto.CIIhtoo Faulk, Sunday SCIIDol Supt • Sunday Schoo19 30 a m , morajngw&lt;rlhlp, It
a m Sunday evening oervlt'l! 7· 30 p m
Prayer Meettng. Wednesday, 7 30 p m

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
non Pentecostal Worship service Sunday
10 a m Sunday !'ichool. lJ a m Eve n lng
worship service 7 00 p m Wednesday
prayer meeJ lnii 7 00 p m
MT HERMON UNITED BRE1 HREN
IN CHRIST CHU RCH, Located In Texas
Communltv off Ct Rt 82 Rev Robert
Sanders pas lot .Jeff Holter~ Ia~ leadPr
Ed Roush Sunday SChool Supt Sunda~
School 9 lO a m , morning worship and
children's chuf'{'h 10 10 a m , eve ning
preaching serYice flrsl three Sundays
7 :m P m , Special service fourth Sunday
evening 7 30 p m , Wednesday Prayer
Meeting Bible Study a nd Youth Fel!OIN
s hlp,7~pm

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
l..o(ated on 0 J Whlte Road of Hlghwav
160 Pal Henson, pastor Sunday School10
am Classes for all ages Junior Church 11
am Morning worship 11 am Adult
Choir practice 6 p m Sunday Young People s, Chlldren's Church and Adult Bible
Study Wednesday at 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL 570 Grant
St Middleport AU!IIaled with Soulhern
Baptist Convention David Bryan Sr , Mi
nlsl~r Sunday School 10 a m
Morning
worship 11 a m , Evfning worship 7 p m
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer meet log 7 p m
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. Sl
Rl 124 and Co Rd 5 Scott Stewarl, pas
tor William Amberger S S Supt Sun
day School 9 30 a m , Morning Worship
10 30 a m Evening worship 7 30 p m
Wednesday worship 7 30 p m
ST
PAUL LUTiiERAN CHURCH
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts Po
meroy The Rev William Mlddleswarl
pastor Sunday School 9 45 am Chureh
service 11 a m
SACRED
HEART CHURCH Msgr
Anthony Glannamore Ph 992 5898 Satur
day Evening Mass 7 30 p m , Sunday
Mass 8 a m and 10 a m Confessions one
half hour before each Mass CCO classes
11 a m Sunday
'
VICfORY BAPTIST, ~25 N 2nd St
Middleport James E Keesee, pastor'
Sunday morning worship 10 a m EvenIng service 7 p m Wedne5day evening
worshlp7 p m Vls1tationThursday6 30p
m
MORSE CHAP EL CHURCH Da vld
Curfman pastor Sunday School lOam
won:;hip serv1ce 11 am. Surxlav night
worship service 7 30 p m ~ Midweek
prayer ser\1ce Wednesday 7 p m
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOUNESS
CHURCH or Middleport tnc 75 Pear!St
Rev Ivan M yerS, pastor Roger Mantey'
Sr , Sunday Schoci Supl Sunday Schooi
9 30 a rn , Morning Wo1 ship 10 30 a m
Evening Worship 7 30 p m Wednesday
evening Bible studv prayer and pra1se
service, 7 30 p m
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD - Gilbert Spencer. past(J' Sun
day School 9 30 a m Mornlna service
10 ooa m, Sundayeventngservtce7 OOp
m Mid week pra31er service Wednesday
7p.m
MT. OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN
ITY CHURCH, Lawrence Bush pastoc
Max Folmer, Sr, S s Supt Sunday School
9 ll a m , SQnday evealng service, 7 lJ
m , Weda~y evening Bible study and
praise serv.JC!e, 7 30 p.m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt 7on Pomeroy By Pass'_Rev RObert E Smith Sr.

Sermonette
A poet once wrote about !he t;&gt;ell· He called II simple yet sublime Ho
true It Is. lor the pen sets life s slory on the page to be sent do.,;n t~
stream of tlme A pen can send echoes Into the next age as well as crown
a klngwlth power oruncrown a klnglrom his realm on earth A pen can
r.ut a song on the peoples lips or bring the workl to.sUence and put a tear
ntotheeye of all The pen Is Indeed mightier than the sword The sword
may do the world great good but without the pen to write the tale dow
the world would never know:
n,
Our llle can be lived as we come and go but will the world ever know
we have lived. The pen must write our name and tleeds on Ute pages or
time If we are to be remembered The pen has wrllten lhe story and life
of Christ and the way the path to salvation Chrlsl Jesus came Into the
world as that babe of Bethlehem. He lived and ~ld so much tor all kinds
of people. As we look back, how would we know today what salvation Is
all about and tor whom It was given If someone had not taken pen In hand
and written It down lor all to know and read. The Bible Is our chart and
r;:th to eternal life As we read and study the word ol God called lh
lble, we see the path to heaven clearly laid out for us to follow Wllhou~
thoseJ:;ns of the apostles, we would not know who this Jesus was nor

wily
was born Our path to salv.atlon, eternal life and heaven as our
home eternally would be lost In tiilie and Irom our minds and lives \Ve
would be wanderers In a world or sin with no vision ol a better iace
where sin and evU do not exist. It Is !hose pens of lhe apostles tha t fre so
vital to our eternal We today
We are In a New Year and our pages In Gods book ot life are blank
Wbat wUI tbe pens of Gods angels write' about our lives this New Year
1989. The life we live and lhepalh we follow should be the path the pens ot
the apostles laldourforualolll ago. Let us walk In the wayot JeousThe
Cbrllt. Let us love God tile Father, oerve our fellow man and obey Gods
1811 commandmento. Do tltlland we will know that the pen Ia not on!
sbnple and 1ubllme but all powerfUl. - Pulor WilHam Mlddl•wanJi

Melp CoaaiJ Lalbenaa

'

•

Sawyers, Racine; Melinda
Smith, Pomeroy, Wilma Smith,
Portland, Debra L Snyder,
Middleport. David F Sorden,
Rulland; Kimberly Stewart,
Middleport: Reg'tna Walls. Ru
tland, Sharon Williams, Langs
ville, Todd Allen Wilson, Reeds·
vlille, Joe A Young, Reedsville,
Sean M Porter. Racine: Dan leJ
J Romund, Pomeroy.

•

•

l

Performing a tap dance to
Shortly before Chr~tmas, Barbara 's School of Dance, directed "Heeble Jeebles" were Heldj
.bY Barbara Lawrence, Syracuse, Legar, Beth Knight, Melodli
presented a holiday program. Lawrence, Amber Haye5, Crysl
"Christmas Is In the Air " The tal Barnett, Tara .Grueser, Da~
program was held ai Southern nlelle Grueser, Carrie Hartson,
Junior Htgh m Racine and all Raenl Wood and Jodi Roush~
students performed two numbers • They also performed a jazz
with the second half of the show roullne to ·Santa Claus
Coming To Town "
1
devoted to Christmas songs
Kelly Satterfield, Beth Roush:
Alison Gerlach and Cindy
Roush did a tap routine to Linda Chapman, Ma_rcia Robin\
"Rhythm Is Gonna Get You" and son, Heather Franckowiak)
a jazz number to "Let It Snow." Christy Hawkins, Anna Chap,
First graders Carty Crow, man and Kelly Grueser did a jazt
Sandy Smith, Courtney Haines, dance to "Don't Be Cruel" and
tap dance to ' 'Rock in' Around th
Morgan Mathews, Autumn Tho
,
mas , Molly Heines, Stacie Wil- Christmas Tree. "
"Super
Slar
Give
My
Regards
son, Heather pailey and Dena
Sayre tapped to "I Love to to Broadway" was the tap son~
Travel" and d1d the1r version or performed by Traci Heines,
Meredith Crow, Erin Krawsczyn
"Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Rein
and
Stacie Reed They also
deer" for thetr Christmas
performed
a jazzy version of
number, with Molly as Rudolph.
Shelly Winebrenner performed "Frosty the Snowman "
two advanced tap routines to • Leigh Anne Redovlan per·
"You Do Something To Me" and formed a JaZZ routine to "Always
·'It's the Mbst Wonderful Time of Something There To Remind
Me" and a tap routine to "Sleigh
the Year"
Rtde "
Carletta Buckley, Leann Gun
Klndergarteners Sarah Ball,
dlft and Cassie Nease performed
a jazz routine to "Tell It TO'&gt;My Erin Struble, Laura Costanzo,
Heart" and a tap routine to "We Cara Ash and Andrea Krawsczyn
sang and tapped to· 'Dancing Is a
Need a Little Christmas "
Preschoolers Holly Broderick, Happy Thmg" and "Up On the
Carrie Crow, Del ana Elchmger, Housetop."
Jess1ca Chapman, Katie Sand
Erin Hartson, Whitney Jarrell,
ers,
Jenmfer Lawrence anll
Sara Mansfield, Krystal PenRayan
Young performed a Jazz
nlngton and Amber Snowden
sang and lap danced to "It's Me" dance to· ·staying Together'' and
a tap dance to "Jingle Bell
and "Jingle Bells •:
Rock "
Cynthia and Kert Caldwell ,
Every performer returned to
performed their jazz routine to the stage to sing ·we Wish You A
"Nobody's Fool" and their lap Merry Christmas" to conclude
dance to "Winter Wonderland."
the program.

Is

992-5141

~---~,...!!!!!!992

TRINli'Y CONGREGATIONAL C!RfRCH
R&lt;v Rlchant freeman, poster; Deblic Buck.
&amp;intllt' Schod &amp;r!L CburchSchod 9 IS a.m..
W&lt;n~ Sen.1a! lJJ::Jl am. Cbolr rehearsal,
~, 6 45 p m urder dtredton of Lots.

' Chuldi -co. 10: 15 a m

264 S. 2nd, Middleport

Pomeroy

~~

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Hom~Ute Saws

: 1111n.AND CIIURCH OF GOD, P .. t..• Jolla J:vau. llllllday SCbool 10 00 a m ,

"Serving Families"

~
ER~

SUPPLY

l
••,

FUNERAl HOME

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

•

~

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

\:37

wards, Long Bottom, Kirk Fick,
l.png Bottom, Kimberly J Fol
irod, - Racine; Joyce Foreman.
PortiaJid, Dawna !;!. Grueser,
Racine, Julle Hawk, Reedsville,
Teresa L Johnson, Pomeroy,
Theresa E. Marcinko. Tuppers
Plains; Ruth M. Nutter, Reeds
vllle; Barbara Rupe, Pomeroy,
Kimberly Ryan, Racine, Susan
M Sandy, Langsvtile, Re!i3 J

Dance recital held

•

ROGAN

RIDENOUR

am

I)

992 llll Pomeroy

FRANCIS FL'oRIST

Hocking Technical College has
announced Its winter quarter
dean's list
Local students making a grade
of at least 3 3 to be named
tnciude: Hobart A. Barker, RU ·
tland, Susan Bauer, Long Bot·
tom; Jodi L. Brown, Middleport,
Lori L. Burke, Coolvtlie, Leanne
S Clark, Racine, Todd B Cui·
!urns, Cheshire; David A. Ed·

AGENT

Naltonwtde Ins. Co.

228 W. Main St., Po11111roy

Page 7

Hocking Valley dean,s list announced

7 fXrERIENCE _THE JOY Of RELIGION
(row's Family Restaurant

The Daily Sentinel

•

bygone days when boats used the levee frequently
to deliver g~ to the community. The photo Is
the property of Fred Young, Roule 7, near
Pomeroy.

-Alfred community holida_y events
Allreq UMC hosted the Northeast
Cluster New Year's E~ watch
party Five chun:hes were represented: Chester, Athens Richland
Avenue, Lancaster Mills Memorial, Zion U B., and Alfred,
Rev Don Archer opened the
, program with prayer and read
' Jrom Psalms 89 Lloyd Dillinger
gave a reading, "A, Bricklayer's
Accident." After congregational
singing, the group enjoyed a soup
. supper, Bible quiz and games.
• The program continued with
group pmylng the Lord's Prayer,
Bible reading from Matthew 9 and
short sennon by Rev. Archer, tes
tlrnonles from Ute peple, readings
by Florence Spencer and Lloyd
, Dllllnger, a silent time All jolned
;[n the covenant readlng before dismissal
Nina Robinson visited her son,
Bob and family , Belpre, on
Christmas Eve, and her daughter, Norma Jean Swartz and

family, Reno, on Christmas Day
Clara Follrod spent Christmas
with her son, Carleton and !am
lly, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Yost, Aa
ron and Sarah, spent Christmas
weekend with Mr and Mr~ . Deibert Yost, Lancaster Rt.
ReCent guests of Mr. and Mrs
Bill Robinson were Mr. and Mrs
Lester Seaman, Barlow, and Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Watson, Athens.
Michele Donovan Is making a
satisfactory recovery following
a tonsUlectomy.
Christmas guests of the Floyd
Avis family were Mr. and Mrs
Larry Spencer and Mike, Mr.
and Mrs Elson Spencer, all of
Racine
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Van Me·
ter entertained their daughter
and family, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Burke, Lisa, Trlcia, Sherr! and
Greg at a Christmas Dav dinner

Christmas hoUday guests of Mr
and Mrs. Lester Keaton were Mr
and Mrs. Bob Keaton, Bobby, Mat·
tltew and Kevin, Long Bottom Rt.;
Mr and Mrs Don Keaton, Cleveland; Mr. and Mrs. James Kelly,

-

Snyder birth
James and Norma Snyder, Jr ,
Pomeroy, are announcing the
birth of a daughter, Oct. 2, at
O'Bleness Hospital, Athens The
tnfant wetghed six pounds, eight
ounces and was 18 Inches long
She has been named Tabitha
Jean
Grandparents are Norman and
Patncla Hysell, Jr , Pomeroy,
and James and Marie Snyder,
Sr., Rutland

local

Martha, Joe, and Will Poole
and Nellie Parker hosted a famIly dinner on New Year's Day at
their home. Willis Parker asked
the blessing before the carry· In
dinner. Afterwards the group enjoyed viewing pictures, picture
taking, and visiting
The house was decorated In a
Christmas motif with a manger
scene, pink and red poinsettias,
and a llgllted tree Present besides
the hosts were WUlls Parker, Parkersuurg; Janice and Bob Parker,
Marietta Rt.; Irene Parker, Syra
cuse; Aaron Parker, Columb\ls,
Wilma and Howard Parker, Violet
Parker and Louise Michael, all lo-

Youth revival
A youth revival will be held
next week at three flifferent
churches Services on Thursday,
Jan. 12, will be at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church. On
Friday, Jan 13, services will be
at the Mtsslon Church In Syra
cuse. Both these services will
start at 7 p m. On Saturday, Jan
14, services will be at the Ash St.
Freewill Baptist Church In Middleport, starting at 7 30 p m All
young people are Invited to
attend the services.

caL

Riverview· Garden Club meets
Fruit for baskels to be taken to
several shutins was given by
members In response Io roU call
a I the Christmas meeting of the
Rtvervtew Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs. Grace Weber
wtth Mrs Gladys Thomas as
co-hostess.
The baskets were delivered
latei by Mrs Marlene Putman,
president Gifts lor an exchange
were placed beneath a decorated
tree at the Weber home whtch
was extensively decorated for
!he holiday season
The program toptc was "Be·

cause He Will Save His People"
led by Mrs. Mary Gra&lt;·e
Cowdery . 'Those having readings
were Mrs Maxine Whitehead,
Mrs Weber, Mrs Margaret
Grossnickle, and Mrs Putman.
The program conduded with
Mrs. Whitehead leading the
group In singing "Joy to lhe
World" Mrs Janice Young
presented devotions reading
"The First Christmas Tree'' and
"A Measure of Importance."
Games were conducted by
Mrs. Betty Boggs and Mrs
Putman with Mrs. Whitehead

and Mrs Young recevmg prizes
Door pnzewent to Mrs. Young. A
community proJect was dis
cussed and members voted to
help the Community Buildings
Club with the project.
Christmas cookies, salad,
sandwiches, and punch were
served by the hostesses to those
named and Mrs. Nell Wilson,
Mrs Pauline Myers, Mrs. Opal
Harris, Mrs Mary Altce Bise,
and Mrs Ruth Ann Balderson,
members, and Am Ia Thomas an1l
Teresa Blse, guests Next meet
lng wtll be with Mrs. Whitehead

Clinic set
A free blood pressure clime
Will be held Tuesday, from 10
a m to noon, at the Harrisonville
town hall All ages are welcome.
The Harnsonvllle Sen tor Clltzens
will meet after lunch on Tuesday

Revival underway
A revival Is underway at
Calvary Ptlgrlrn Chapel through
Sunday, at 7 30 each evening,
with Earl Newton

1812 ·Society meeting conducted '
Keith Ashley,
president of the
Society of the War of 1812 In the
State of Ohio and a resident of
Rock Springs community, and
Mtcallel Trowbridge, secretary·
- treasurer of the Sot;lety and a
restdent of Gallipolis, attended
!he soctety's regular meetmg at
Ohio Htstorical Soclely In Columbus recently
The meetlng was the first of the
society since its official recognitiOn and reacuvatton by the
General Society of the War of
1812.
Ashley reported an increase In

membership in the Ohio Society
with several more applications
be considered He also reporled
on his attendance at the 175th
anniversary of the Battle of Lake
Erie at Put-in-Bay In S(•p
!ember He Is planing to atfl)nd
the 175th anniversary of the
Battle of Baltimore In September
where his ancesior, Geroge Hoi
ter, Jr , fought
Other business Included the
electiOn of two new officers , to
complete the slate. The annual
convention will be held in con
junction with the Ohio Daughters

to

.

Band boosters
meeting slated

of 1812 m Canton in March The
constitution and by-laws were
adopted
One of the Important llems for
the society tills year is to place a
marker at the grace of Wilham
Henry Harrison This ts a part of
the program of the General
Society to mark all president's
graves who participated In the
War of 1812.
Any interested male over 18
who has blood descent from a
soldier in the War of 1812 Is
eligible to JOin and may contact
either Ashley or Trowbridge.

Southern Band Boosters will
hold thetr monthly meetmg on
Thursday, Jal). 12, at 7 30 p.m,
in the high school band room
Parents of all band students in
the district are urged to attend

Crusade for Christ
Mason-Gallla-Melgs Crusade
for Christ will hold services
Monday, Jan 9, through Jan 15,
at 7 p m each even lng SerVices
will be at the Church of Christ In
Christian Union, Main St., Point
Pleasant, W Va Special singing
and speakers will be featured
each night. Everyone welcome.

Outrageous, not funny
Dear Readers: A while back, from battered women Some of
•one of my favorite commenta- your answers suggest that you
tors, David Brinkley, signed off believe these women are normal
people.
,his Sunday program on ABCwilh
a real gem If It weren't so
Often, when a woman Is
outrageous It would be downright battered, rules of nonnaicy no
funny Here It Is
longer apply She wUI defend her
Mr. Brinkley: Finally, a brief husband (or lover) when a
: look at how Congress really neighbor Dr the police come to
her rescue, for ' a very good
works.
The House of Representatives reason. The man will beat her
· voted $750,000 for something worse than ever If she doesn't
• called The Taft Institute.' which take his side. He may spend a
, sponsors seminars on the Amerl- little time In jail, but he will be
. can two-party system This Is a back and she knows it.
• real waste of money to begin
The same applies to the bat·
• with.
tered woman who refuses to
From the House the bill went to leave the man when she Is offered
• the Senate where, in an election the opportunity. He bas probably
· year, it was q'llckly seen as a threatened her lite, the chlld• Christmas tree and they pro- ren'\llves and the lives Of her
: ceeded to hang on It every bad • parents and anyone who Is close
· Idea that the Senate had been to her. She also may be so
: waiting to slip through when emotionally battered that she
truly believes she deserves the
, nohody was watching
; Before anyone noticed, the treatmeDt she Is getting and that
; $750,000 escalated to $66 million sbe cannot survive without this
, -an Increase of 8,700 percent
man.
When they sent this mess back
In spite of all this, tbe best
to lhe House to accept the thing you can do for a battered
changes, one member said, "If woman is slip ber the phone
• this were not so pitiful, It would .number of the local women's
be a Joke. 1 gJiess they just can't shelter (or the YWCA). You can
keep their fingers off the taxpay- also be there for her to talk to.
ers' money." The bill was so bad She Deeds to discuss her prob, the House killed lt.
lems with someone who Is
; So, here's a su11estlon to the non-judgmental, someone she
• • Congress. If you want to finance can trust.
• a seminar. why not coMider one
I lmow all about tbls sort of
: on bow Congress loves to waste thing because I have - Been
i the taxpayers' money•
Tbere (N011h Bay, Cal H.)
1 Dear .\nn l.anten: From time
DearNortiiBaJ: Youarerlght
! to time you ha~rlnted letters when you say \a· woman who

.'

Board to meet

ANN LANDERS•

..1988,

TABITHA J. SNYDER

Anplet
Timd SyndiHIIf! and
Crulon Syndlelle
[.Gil

The regular monthly board
meeting of Leading Creek Conservancy District will be Tuesday, Jan 10 at11 a m

•

tolerates beatings Is not a normal
~embership
person. These pathetic victims
have such a low level of selfesteem that they must be cons!·
This year's membership dues
dered dysfunctional.
are now being accepted for the
Many were beaten by their Royal Oak Dance Club. The cost
lathers and saw their mothers to join the club Is $40 per year.
get knocked around as well. They Anyone w1shlng to join lhe club
grew up in violent homes aDd
' should mat! a check as soon as
accepted brutality as a way ol possible to Anna Blackwood,
lite.
40037 Sumner Road, Pomeroy.
The only way to break this
cycle of violence ls for all
concerned to get professional
Mr and Mrs . RobertS Davis
help Wife-beaters were almost of Minersville have received a
always beaten by their parents.
letter of notification from the
These men need counseling more u.S Navy that their daughter,
than they need punishment 1t Tina D Davis Manning, has
they are to learn how to handle
received the rank of Petty
anger and live In peace
Olflcer Third Class.

dues
being accepted

Receives rank

EASTERN HILL FABRIC SHOP
END OF BUSINESS SALE
PMiow Panlls &amp; Matching Material-................ •3.00 •If \'4.

(alko Material ................................................... S3.00 ,., Ytl.
Auorted Fabric ....................................... sl.OO-.S1.59 p., Y4.
lace I Eyeltts..,.....................................:...... 2 Ydl For Sl.OO

Patterns ..................................................................... 25c loch
Ribbon .................................................................... 2sc ,., Yd.
lealted on 5I' 7-5 Miles W. of CU.ter, Ohio

\

I

L

4I

Calendar

-

MIDDLEPORT- A spaghetti
dinner, sponsored by the Order of
Eastern Star, Chapter 172, will be
held Jan. 6, from 11 a m. to 6
p m . at the Middleport Masonic
Temple The menu will included
spaghettl with sauce, ' slaw.
french bread, coffee or lea. and
cream or cherry pie Adulls.
$3 50 Children under 12, $1 75.

band, snack bar and refreshment
stand Mustc from 8 p.m to 12
midnight Ever)!One welcome

SATURDAY
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Ctvtc Center is sponsoring a
volleyball tournament this Saturday at the center $20 entry fee
per team Call by Thursday ,
742-2100 or 742-2279. for
informatton

SALEM CENTER - Siar
Grange and Star JuniOr Grange
wtll meet on Saturday at 8p m at
!he grange hall on County Road 1
near Salem Cellter. All members
urged to attend A potluck supper
will follow the meeting

RACINE -There will be rounq
and square dancing this So.!urday ni'ght, 8 p m. to 12 midnight,
at the Racine American Legion
Mustc by !he True Counlry
Ramblers

MONDAY
RACINE - Southern Local
MIDDLEPORT Spec1al
meetmg of Middleport Lodge 363, OAPSE Chapter 453 will meet
F&amp;AM Saturday, Jan 7, 7 p.m. Monday, 7 p.m , at the high
school.
Work In the fellowcraft degree
ROCK SPRINGS - The Meigs
County Junior Fair steer weigh
In will be held Saturday, 9 to 11
a.m., In the show arena al the
Rock Spnngs Fairgrounds Call
John Rice, 992-6696. for
lnformatlon
RUTLAND - Square, round
and slow dancing will be featured
Saturday at Ell Denison Post467,
American Legion, Rutland. Ltve
t

TUPPERS PLAINS- brange
Township Trustees will hold their
orgamzational meeting on Monday, 7 30 p m., at the home of
Dorothy Calaway, township
clerk
TUESDAY
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM, will have a regular
meeting, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. All
masons urged to attend. Refresh
m~nts will be served
'

Dr. J. Stephen Lovell, DDS
Announces The Association Of

Dr. Michael B. Carlisle
In The
Practice Of Dentistry
703 22nd Street

675·6330

Point Pleasant, WV

* NEW EXPANDED SERVICE *

"FREE DELIVERY"
TO THESE AIEAS

MIDDUPOIT, POMEIOY, IIAD,..Y, MINEISVIUE,
IUTUND, SYIACUSE, MASON, W.VA •

OIDIIS MUST a PliO- Ill IIFOU 3 p.M.
FlEE DEUVEIY ON ALL PIISCIIPTIONS, IF YOU DON'T
NEED A PIISCIIP110fl WI Wll DIUVII ANYTIING IN
STOll FIB ON A SJ.OO MI.MUM OIDII.

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
(FOIIIIILY YILLAGI PHARMACY)

STOH HOlliS: Mon.-Fri. 9 A.M.·6 P.M.; Saturtloy 9 A.M.· I P.M.
271 fiOml SICOIIID
992-6669
MIDDUPOI1, OHIO

J

�·•

Page-S-The

'

Public Notice

Classif·ied
8

RunionondAnn~H

R R.
Runion tO the Ohio Power ~=====:;==::r,::::;;:;;:::::;~--~---;_--j.;.;..
Company. referellce
to 1
which Ia horoby modo for •
complete deocrlption thor•
oof, which r.oal ond riGht•
oreollrMervoduntothooold
OWNII: GIEG l.lOu!ll
IN~LAnON
A. R. Runion end Annil H.
•
GE
Mastic
&amp; Certlinteed•
Runion, their holro ond
fiEUL
Wt can r~r 11nd nolgn,.forevor; thol purouonl
.
JS
~ COIITRACT 01$
Vinyt Sidin1
core rotliotars oncl
to a Warrant of Arreot, In
~ RESIOEIITIAL
lfoofin1
Rom, thoUnltodSt1t01M1r"
"
·
COIIEICIAL
heater corts. Wt can
·. Seamless Gutter
lhll hal arr.uted the defend•
&lt;UITOM knCHENI. IATMI
aha acid boil •nd rod
Replatem..t Wmdows
ant propertioa ond hold• tho
aylng
ay
~=::n~~::.·:~g~~?.
tiUf radiators. We also
· Blown Insulation
same in his cuatory; that any
•METAL IUI.DI~BI
poroon claiming to have any
HOUSING..,,.,, PROJECTs
Storm Doors &amp;
Gas
s.
intereot in end to 111id doISubj~t to Cha-.
SINCE: 1969
Windows
.f ondant propertiOI ohlll file
. .,.
Dill\' 11. SYIIACI!I
Free Estimates
with tho Clerk of thit Court
Withou~lt)
· 992·7611 '
992-2198
Call
992-2772
hlo claim within ten (10)
1 ·Zl·U·t!n.
M
iddlaport,
Ohio
1115/tlo
doyafollowingthloNoticeln
#1 COPPER •••, 8JC lb.
1-IJ.tlc
conformity with tho requirementa of Aulo CUll ot tho
CLEAN ALUMINUM
Supplomontol Aulei for CorSHEETS
1
toln Admirolty ond Maritime
"'""'"" 40 lb.
· Authoriztll Stnico
PlUMIING &amp; MUTING
CLEAN ALIJMNUM
Cloimo of tho Foderol Ruloo
&amp;PIIrll
of Civil Procedure, ond thlll
Now lodtiott:
Brlgp • Stratton
thereafter__... hil anowor
CAST ............ 351 lb.
161 Nortll Stconol
TecumMh
·to plointiff'o compleint ond
AlUMINUM
Mlddhpart, Olio 45760
-A~dona and rMIOdll6ng
Weed Eotor
enswers to any intwroge·
-Roofing and gutwr work
Homllltt
tar• relating to plainttff's
lb
&amp;
-concrete WOfk
complaint within twenty
"""""""
•
Jacobi In
Wo Corry Flohlng Supptl•
-Plumbing end electrlcll
(20) deytlollowing tho filing
Pay Your Phone
• work
of hit clolm. eo required by
and Cebia Bill1 Hare
and in conformity with
Located Off Bypass
IFftEE ESTIMATES)
P.!fa IUSINESS PIIONE
told Supplomentol Rule
At Jet. of Rts. 7 &amp;
Mlddlell!lff, Ohio
"2-6550
C(B): that ony poroon with143, Pomeroy, Oh.
99t-6611
ingto pethiOn for the rem•
12-t1-SB·1 mo.
992-6215
lion or mitigation of the for3-!0-'17 ""
Pomtt'oy,
Ohio
lolturo of tho defondont
11·!4.'88·tln
proportloo moy do oo by oubmitting 1 Petition for RemiaVAUGHN'S
•ion or Mitigation to 0 ,
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
Mlchool CrltM,
Unltod
949·2969
StltM Attorney, Room 200,
SERVICE
Dealer for
86 Marconi Boulovord. ColCUSTOM
IUlT
umbua. Ohio 43216, in con·
SYRACUSt OHIO
YARDMAN I ECHO
Moat Foreign and
formity with the requireHOMES &amp; GARAGES ·
· located Heltwev
mentoof PartS ofTltle28 of
Domestic Vehicles
betwee" Rt. 7 &amp; Beshan.
"At Rtasonablt Prien"
AI C Service
tho Code of Fedora I Aogu lo·
NEW
&amp;
USED
MOWERS
All Major • Mlna&lt;
tiono end by filing • copy of
Holiday
PH.
949-2101
Sorvico Contor for Ryon
11id Petition for Remi11ion
Repeira
Products
·
or Mitigation with the Drug
NIASE Cartlfiod Mechanic
ar ln. 949-2860
8.7 Financing on Vardma
Enforcement AdminletraService on All Mak11
Day or Night
992-6756
tlon, Room 404, 86 Marconi
Wo Honor M&lt;/Disc/Visa
Boulevard, Columbuo. Ohio
NO SUNDAY CAllS
9-1-11-lln
"DOC""U.
43216, with retwence to
Cei-tKied
4-1&amp;-16-tln
DEA No. IB-88-000B.
ROBERT W. FOSTER
12-6.'11-IMO.
United Stetoo Marthtl

TRI (QU.NTJ
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DA
9 AM 7 PM

u-

to 5 P.M.

· I A.M. until

p

rlPERIENCED
MEDICAL
TRANSCRIPTIONIST

~oal var~

Ertra Spe·eial in Mi••leport

.

In Memoriam

Ill

5

Happy Ad1

CANS

•

. .-

.-

•

·..

r...

••

•

."

CALL

...

"I .• • '

"Must .. lepairablt"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985~3561
We Sarvica

WANT TO IUY WECKlD 01
JUNK CAliS 01 RUCKS

-FlEE ESTIMATESFor aoy af thlloswwkft

614-742-2617
••, . _ 9
or ltavt

GUN SHOOT .

LASHLEY
SERVICE

1 MI. East of St. It, 7
on 248 at Chesttr
WELDING
AUTO &amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY &amp;
WRECK REPAIR

RACINE
FIRE DJPT.

Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

985·•3844
40 YRS.

EX\'·~~-ILE~&lt;:E

•zzu

GUN SHOOT

...

EVERY SUNDAY

MODERN GUN

1:00 P.M.

SUPPUES

RACINE

Munllloodiov SuPfli•

Mod•n Gun Supp(i•
Gum • Ammo • Slugt,

22Arnono
At. I 24 Eut of Rutlond
Acroto Happy Hollow Rood

Ph. 614-742-!!55

BOGGS

GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

ONLY

.9·19-88 tfn

GUYSYI.LI, o•o
- .614-1162-3121

· Authorized John
Deere, New Holland.
Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Deol•.

....
ftr•

I••
, It••'

.,.
•,.

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

CLOWNS
Collectors of
Emmitt Kelly Jr.
liMITED EDJnON

50°/o
· To 75°/o
SAVE

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING
._ CO.

~

..-·-..
'

-.

-•'&lt;'

..,.....,«¥

·- '

HEAP. - · County Dotot. of
HtmM'I Servk:el, M1d MEAP
vouch... Wt can give y~
prompt-.;•. Enolorlllt
Workl. Inc. Pom•ov. Ohio.
114-992-3891.

.',',

.'

...

....

No Hunting or Tr...,_..a on
my PfGparty iDc:Med Clendlnln
Dlltrlot. Old Colhoun Pr.......
ofl Crab Cr.,. Rood. Signod:
Jloquelne Dlrttne TMn•. Viol._.
be prc.eaut.t.

•

Glvattway

PH. 949·2801
or Its. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

·'

'

t ..... mtxod brood. 1 . . . .
Chlllulhuo, 1 ltmllthoundlllto
. ._..,_ Catl8t4-256-1884.

..
·-.

',_

lmll. 3 montfl old lomllo
Mixed brood. Cal 11419Z..22110 ott• 5:00.

pu-.

'·

• -.
;

lost

... '.;..
-·

FOUND: Large whht male
Hullly .,. E• Hound dog. Clov

School
1733.

.

TOP OF THE stAllS

oreo. c.n

•

114-256-

...

DESIGNER BOUTiqUE

.,

111 WOlf Soc. P-oy

992-6720

12-5-18-1 mo.

ELIM HOME

I-&amp;1.-4FII'
SeniOI' Cltiz-·•nd

llalt.ca..,...

GoodRotM
T.L.C.
26 Yrt. Exp.
Referencea

9U-687S
Joo or Paulo, lowltllll
209 South 4itt St.

992-2269
1-1-'U- tift

This really is an extra special JlfOIIerty. It's an 1860 brick in excellent condnion. The 5 rooms downs!Jirs indude living room,
family room, k~chen ; dmette. ~ bllh,and kids' playroom
which could be a lormal dining room, liorary Of downstairs
. bedroom. Upstairs Ill ere are 2 modern baths and 4 bedrooms
wlh I~CIISS to a large p(iYale porch.The entire home is il good
condilioll wih new Willig thrwghout modern plumbing and
hellin&amp; central air, h•dwood flo~n, prettysla1rway andlrmt
entrance. Ant~que ~ilts and unusual1ntque ceramiccastin(IS
dating back 'ocivil war period. Be sure tonoticelheextra large
corner loclt1on w~h lenced in play yard and brand new oversized 2 car garage Maybe there~ something better in Middleport. If there is i ~not on the market We pr1ced nat $~.500.
You look and tell us ~hill you'll g;ve.
. il08

l.aot: 4y- oldfomoloBotgloon
N. M - Rutt..d. lundlv, Jon.
1. W..tngredool•.an.w. . ta
Amte. &amp;14-nZ..2etl8.

MARCUM

CHESTDr o•o

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
' •ROOFING ·
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

PKONE DAY 01 EVEtiNGS

985-4141

.. -..
L08T:IrlolaooSomoonllohard
- . , Llnooll&gt; A.o. Doc. 31.
I 918. 6:30 PM, cont-1mpo~
tint ....... CDntact Cart Morrj.

304-711-2144 or locol
polloo dept.

11-16i·'BIB·Ifnl 8

,.

. ••
..
~

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

a.

Ucensed Clnical Audiologist

% (614) 446-j19 or (614) 992·2104
:a 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213

-

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at .
Veterans Me!llorial Hospital
, Mulberry Hcts. Pomeroy,

..,
..
..
·'·
•

'· -

1100. p• tltlo. Wrlto: PA8 E31A. 111 8. Uncot......,. N.
Auroro. ILIO 542.
Am•lcwe PDm•oy h• lrnm.
IIIIo o p - • lor p.t limo
AN't ll'ld LP,N'I. AI ehtfle.
fl•lbl• •ahiiCll•g. iJDmpetllllwe
ollory tnd bonllltt offwtd.
Conttcl Lonui Ill, RN, DON,
Amerlc.-• Pom•oy. 387151
Rockaprlnlll Rood. Pomoroy.
Ohio, 46788. Phone 814-9925108.

AVON Ill •-II ShOI., SPI8'1.
304-876-1429.

fht.,.. •lin oomm •pen11

ollowonco. E,....l.,. opoortu,.
tor •pllllftctd ltfe and
proporty CONtlty ICionto. w~h
prcwen triCk reoordl. Phon•
304-IIZ.. 3309, Lot' a...._

lty

Dr. J. Stophtn LDvol. Dtntll~
hal 111 lmmecl••
for 1
dant.. ••lllant .-.d ., office
meneg., to work wJth hill new
wod•• Dr. Mldllll Clrllale.
Fl•ll:lle houn. E_,.lence a
mun. SendreiUmetoP.O. Box
0029, Point Pl-ont, W. Vo.
12

Situations
Wanted

w.nt•Someone to lv•ln &amp;
cwo lor oldll'lv lody. C. I 114441-0073 or 441-2111
evening~.

Hllti"IC.;.qr for lody In prlvllo
home 8td "'-' to
an
IP. . rMn1 . AI ttrnllhed. N •d
hot m...... Aa•o!WIIIa c.n
114-256-8809.
Wll .... far ........ lady In my
homo. CtH 614-441-0000.
Wll do houoo d..,lng. CtH
. BI4-91Z..ZI70.

1'1111 . . . lar olcl4rlv In lhtlr
hd- nlglll - · TruotworthV
1nd dependable. Phone 11~
7UZZ57 onytlme.
Sc.hools
Instruction

:.!"i.,'!":.~~'Bil. ~.:. ~oB~id'r.:.'T.~c':r1'tt.':.:t

r,""

1o0111on. eon 304-576104.
4 or 8 bedroom. 822 Jocbon
St., VInton, Ohio. Ctll14-3819 380
__ _ · - - - - - - , _ . , '"'""doled 2 otory htuot
In Pt. Ploa Priotd to ooll Col
304-17fl.8318.

2581 I to I dilly.
2-oomhouoolndtv.IZ3tia
month pluo dtp- Coli 614446-0124.
3 8R ........ COU'"'V n. . Rio
O&lt;on• Dop. No pitt. 1 fomllt
onlv. 02110 t mo. Ca11114-24654!!8 ovtnlnga.

Hou• w•h t.ll .... . . . - a•
tur.-:e. 3 Ia'&amp; NHdl tome

_ . , rodocorotod. 2 bod, _ W-0 hoolo- up. Adullo
prefwrod, Onl child - No
Rtfwonoo roqu~td.
Avol obit now. eoa 1-211-8313882.

roP*· 018.000. Colll14-1813820 or 114-376-1218.
4 bechon\ tow down

8~brtlllln, tar w-a P•onta.

MOtt thru ri.IAMto5PM .CIR
514-246-8028.

Wll do bobr•Mintl In rrJf lmmo
ony tlmo doy ..- night .. d
..dt. Llv•rltrhl-ttoRio
011111io .:tdo adlool eon lt438fi.BZOI.

Bueln811

9

Wanted To Buy

TOP CASH pold tor '83 modal
lfld

n..,w

UHd

e••·

Smtth

luldt-Pontiac, 1811 E••~m
,...... G.lllpollo. Col 814-4462ZI:t

...

~~·

~

.
,,'·

c-.......... - o f ..rn~
turo .......... Aloo Wood.
ODII he«. .. Swtin'1 F..-nlture
a Allltion. Third • Olivo.
114-446-3111.

.

F..-ra_,d.,... . . brlht

--gpold.Cti814-J118.
.

'

""''*· Col

...,".•

/

tho-'"·

Harnett for S•la

~m.m.

. .urne ~Int..,. loan. 304176-1723 ..... 4:30.

Ntwlv ttmOdolod 3 br houooln
Moton. 1280. pw .-h. Poy
own utlltl•· 304-713-9,64.

Hou• for • • or rn an
Neighborhood Rood. Goftlpollt.
Ohio- phooo 814-446-4241.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Houll for Ill• or rn on
Nolghborhood Rood. Golllpollt.
·Ohio. phone114-446-4241.

··rMad. a.c. •. ,..u.....

Nlaa hou• In H. . dnlon. 3

Col 114-44fi.I51B or 44647118.

bedroom•. 24x31 garag ..
10x20 red b..l\. phon• 304671-4123.

2 8R. trolar for - · 1 mltofrom
Mull _. to - • • _ , 1W - · Hoopltol. Coli 814-241llory, 111ft btl.._ GII'IIIO. rioa 1112 or 24fi.USO.
304-171-3030 ... 1711-3431.
3 BR., 14a70 Kyger Crook
School dlttrlct. 1280 !*J• . ..
dop. ••ll.lnckldeogll'boga•
32 Mobile Homes
wotw. C.lll14-387·7217.
for 'Sala
IIEnaar• 31Rforrwrtor•le.

1994 24«82 Soctlonol. 3BR .. 2
fUI btl hi. Rotclv tomavo. En.
cond. Coli Fronch City Broklrooo. 114-44fl.ll340.
1914SIIyllne14&gt;170, 3 BR .. 11'.
IMithl. EJCtl. concl. On rent.t
lot. lncludla vinyl •klrtlng,
porah•. Bx11 .._ .
bwn. 2t ft. toll oontllnod
camJ*. Owner moving • mutt
... Cal French Ctty Brok. . .e.
. 114-441-8340.
1910Folrmont Boyvl-14&gt;170,
·111-.. 3 BR1.. tV.bllho.l•go
living room wtth ftrtplaoe. Call
114-441-1213.
19a2- 14x70 Willington. 2
bedroom. 2 "" botht. _ , ....
fir, total electric. porch · and
2
buHclnga. 1~
- •· In RUIIWid vii- CoM
114-384-8096 for lab or 114992-2718 for Ewtvn. Pricod to

..v••· out

... -

197.. ·2 bi•oom. oM .-.done
tenth Ia' I lend. claM to Royal
Ook Rtoort. Cllll 114-98213t4.

1911 VIctor! ... 2 -oom II
11-lc ...... homo. Gordon
tub. bey
lotdttl. Prtcod
to-"· Enlont condltiott Coli
304-882·3451 eft• 5:30p.m.

.m-.

111e uboJiy 14&gt;170. 3 bodroom. 17,900.00. 304-1761671ond 87&amp;-1713.

-oom

1888 'For. . Pork 3 - " " " '
T.IIK 14a72: 1181 Sl&lt;ylnt 2
T.lioc 14&gt;170: 1171
, .... wood 2 bedroom g•
80x1 2: 1974 Vomco Add-aRoom lloc. 24at2: t971-laon 2 bedroom T. E. 80x12.
30 4-876-3000.

35 lots &amp; Acreage
Aohton be.,tllll Iorge t.oldlng
loti. moblt ..,,.. pol-ed.
public wetar, alto ,.,., lata.
Qvdo Bowen. Jr. 304-17•
2331.

Renlals

•

-

·,~

'

...:..'
...

w.:r,

45

Furnished

Rooms

Nlolly .,,nllhtd amol houoo.
AduMI onlv. Ref. : t d . No
. pott. CtH 11 4- 441-0
.
3 IR .. AC. c.,.ot. pool, GII'ICIO,
2 ftropiiOtl. fonoo. Good lodott Coli A-1 Roll Eliott
....... 304-176-5104.
4BR .. 1111 btlomont. -pot. a•
rongo city tchooll. No pllt.
Dap. a Rol. roqulrod. t 325 po1
mo. Col 114-446-0276 ollorl
PM. ..doonytlrnt.
21 Gllllt 81. 0300 • mo. •zoo
depooiL Ctii14-446-2ZOB.

Hom• lor Atnt!Lo•o. l•d
· -Vllltll
Cnlu01
Rd.,
II, E_.
Hftt.
Rotlnov

r•

dlp..tts
qulrtd. 11-*lturn Realty, 814-

.

I....,. a both. ..............
o•p« a ..-pi.,CM. No p•e.

o-

For_ ule: Oek flr.woad. C.ll
304-676-2757 ettw 4:30p.m.

46 Space for Rent

Long 3 cu1hion couch

teo.oo.

good oond. 304-882·3208.

Antiques

,_k.

49

Fumllhtd or unturMhtd. Good
cl_. ooncltDn.1 child. noiJil&amp;
H..on. 304-882-2488.

Ple•.n. Colt 304-876I 104.

For lease

commwdliB~dlnglor*-o.

Pt.

WhtNIIch*•n..., or uMd. 3
wheeled electric •cooten. C1H
Rogn MobRty collect, 1-8t4870.9111.

IW~k

electric o~SIM"'; 112&amp;.00 Itch.

Coli 304-87&amp;-696&amp; or 87&amp;3180.
Ponoblo b-In"' ozo.oo. Oony
otroller fZI.OO. bobv bathtub
compl.... 10. 00. au... bee»
pread and drapM t20. 00,
Strnvberry Shortaakt bectoom
ent.-nblt ll'ld utr81• '215.00.
304-17&amp;-3214.

•ir:•

ConcrBie bloCk• 111
v-rd
or dellw.,.. Mllon.-.d. GeUipollt Blodl Co.. 1 23V. Pine St.•
OoHipollo, Ohio. Clll 114-4412783.

For Slle Fir....,ook-Miud or
..aoned. $215 deUvwed loc.l.
81dwel or•. Devld Hll 114386-8t38.

WESTERN RED CEDAR
• Ch111n .. Ru.tlc
ond llovllod Lop Siding
• Dectrl Mat•l•
Merchandise
Tr.a... unfur'*hld. coupl. .
G Ulrll'lteed Qulllty
2·t•nlng beds, 1 lonlna table. CETIDE , INC ~. Ath.,•-81.C.·
tmlll chi*• IC~Id. Rt. 1.
tocuot Rood. Pt.PII. bthlnd
J•cuzzl,
equip., wide.•
594-3&amp;78
fumttur~. All for t&amp;.ooo. Call
~K. 304-175-1q78.
51 Household Goods
514-441-712t or 304-273- 1
9994.
'
!;
Mobile hom••· furnl•hed.
a 178.00 tnd up per month olu•
58
Pets for Sale
UIIMI•. 304-1711-1612 or 876Towemotor farldlfl, tim• clock. 1 - - - - - - - - - office delk. g• hutw. engine ,3900.
·
SWAIN
AUCTION a FURNITURE 82 · holtt poUot jock. lip lodl bilao. O•oom ond Sup... Shop-Pot
commode ••· Call lf4.....,.
12xti8 mobile homo. 2 bed- . 'Olivo St., Otlllpoll.
4, 41·2359.
Grooming. All bre•d• ... AII
roonw. nice lot. Routh Line NEW· 1 pc. wood •oup- •••·
.tylel.
l•m•
Pet
Food Deafer.
Ch•l*o. Ohio, 304-773-8828. Living room ..... 0119-01199. ·
FlriM'ood
for
•ale.
Herdwood
Julie
Wtbb
Ph.
814-446-0231.
Bunk- wMh bedding. a249.
3 ._.,oom t,.l... you .,.., Full eire mitt,_ • found.elon
apiK. f30 pickup IlVek dollvory. Otog&lt;&gt;nwynd Coli..,. Konnol
utlltl._ deposit requited, 304- 1tertlng· •••· R~ellner•
e.ll 814-44&amp;-4982.
and Slem.•e and Him•
871-2535.
otlrtlng- ....
815,000 BTU fuel oU tJrnace for 1..,-en kkten.. Chow .tud •erUSED- - · dr•....._ -oom •ollor' Coli 814-211-1291 .
• .... eon 114-44&amp;-38441fter 7
For 14a70 trol•. 3 ocldl-gtrWIIhor, I
PM.
co,....• line of uNci tJmhu,..
tkmll roornt. e mil• out
crook. •zoo. monthly. 304- NEWt35. Fuot tonk- Y.fuft. Coli 514-448- HAPPY JACK TRIVERMICDE17&amp;-3044.
- • a18 a up. !Stool •
8880.
:r-anlzod olfa • olloctllle by
10ft tot!. Colll14-44a.3158.
Adlntl woodlalrn•. t125. Call U. S". lw.., of Vlllrin.V
ModlclnoiCIIIntl hook. IOUnd •
County APoHWIOO. Inc. 0""1' 814-448-4880."•
44 Apartment
IIP-'onM In dog~ &amp;. cat1l
u1ed IPPIIinclt and TV •••·
for Rant
Opon lAM to IPM. Mon tlwu Uke niiW rofrlg. , f160. Com- BIDWELL CASH FEED J D
plote,btcl din nolle 111, couch, I·N_O.:_R_T_H_PR,-O_DU-,C.,-E_
.--Bot. 114-446-1899, 827 3rd.
Avo. Ollllpollo, OH.
rectinCBJ,
dryer, d•k •
2 Pure Ired While Oerm ..
2 BR. optt. e ciOIIIL ldtchtnchoir. eon 814-446-3224.
Shepherd puppl-. , 100 uch.
oppt lurnilhtd. WMhlr-Dryor GOOD USED APPUANCES
hoolo-up, pluth carpet. dlo. WMhtn, dryort, r ...lgwotoro. Tomdom Meek trocto• s. Tom- 514-742- 2981 or 114-742DOint.
Nloo good loootlon. rena-. lluva• Appllanae•~ · dom 2&amp; toO Hyot• low Boy. 1.:.31::00:::;_._ _ _ _ _ __
AeganQ'f, Inc. Apta. Call 304- Uppor Rlvor Rd. bolldt Stant
197&amp; lnternatioNI Tamdem Slbtrlan Hw:w,r.ppl•. PuPoyttor dump. 1970F-780 F..-d
••
871-5104. or 1711-5381 or C-Motoi. I14-441-739B.
single
clJmp. Heavy equt rDed. bl .. wh.. . M1111t, bfu•
17&amp;-7738.
~
J
cryH.
Reldv
OVW". 3 mila 1
LAYNE'S FURNITU!If
mont of lnllltlrY E
.lomllo. ae&amp;. 114-992·1144
New complat•lv furnlahed
190 backhoe on tnck.l. ln•lev·
•p.-trMnt • mobile honw m Sofll Md ch*' priCMI from or..•M18 nu.~nted on Tam· 1ft• 5:00p.m.
city. Adullo oniV. Porklng. Col • • • ta tiH. Tabl• tiO and
dem dl•ll truck. H.,d. cren• HIPPY Jack Trtv.-mldde: riODfl'
114-448-0338.
. up to 012&amp;. Hldo-o·- t390 AUitln Willton 4 whM &lt;:Wive nlzld aafe • effec:rlve b¥ u.s
to 1886. Rocllnoro tZZ5 to with 45 foot boom. 1150 CaN aw-..,. af vn.nn..,. Medicine
BENJTIFUL APARTMENTS AT 1371. Lompo *ZI to 0121.
dozorw~hp-btldo.Locllod
BUDGEt' PRICES AT JACK- Din- 1101ond up to IQI. 1t Athelia. Ohio on St. At. 7. egalnlt hook. round • tiP•
worm1 In doll' &amp; cotsl R a G
SON E8TATE8, IH Jod&amp;aan WOod tlble w-1 chlirl •211 to 114-186-902!1.
- . Suppl(. 399W. Mo1n St ..
Pika from e183 • mo. Willi to a78s. Cook t100 Ill' to 13711.
ohop .,d ....... 114-44fl. H.,_ a400 •d up. Bunk
M"'od hwd wood tloba. It 2 por Po"*OV· Oh ·
261B.£.0.H .
_ . complelt• w-mlttriiMI buncle: Contllnlng approx. 1'n AKC regllt•ed Baued pupplea.
t2!15 ..dUfltDt391.1oby- ton. Ohio Polloi Co .. Pomeroy, , 100. Ctll814-ti89-3711.
Tara TownhouM ..,....,..... 2 .1 10. Moll,_ or Ito• ""'"• Ohio. 114-992-1481 .
BRt.. 11'. bot hi. CA.. dlo- fUI or twin 118. tlrrn 078. ond
Tank. 2413 Jacklon Aw.
hwtthtr, dlo~ prlvott tn- .... au . . . . . . 210 II. up.
Cappertone gu rtngt In vood Fllh
Point
- t . 304-17&amp;-2011
clotod plllo, pool, plwgrwnd. King 1310. 4 drtwor ..,., t88. oomltlan. an engine analyzer 10 galoot
up 014.99 end tO gil
tnd
a3
hitch
towb~r,
61
..
885Gun
CObin.,
I,
I
•
tO
IJin.
Wot tr, - · &amp; truh lnduclodcompl•e 143.25.
Stirtlng ot I Zll per mo. CtH 'Babf mattr-- t31 • • •· 3839.
114-387·7880.
Bod trom• fZO. •30 • King
froma 180. Good alloctlon of Firewood for _.._ Mixed h•d
Musical
A,_.monto .. d hou. .. CIH bedroom •ult-. m•lll cablnllta. wood. HEAP vouchen ac- 57
Instruments
304-171-5104.
h - - 030 Wid up to 111. cepted. Pick up or deUwered.
814-742-2428 onvllm•
Modlrn 11R. doWntown. oom- 10 O.V• ume ·n c.h with
ploto kitchen. oil. cwt&gt;ll. Oop- epp:a•ed crdt 3 Ml• out -For Nle; Continuous Outt• lndlvldull .,... l••onl. beooll. no pMt. Col I 14-446Rd. Open 91m to lpm Mochlno. Coli 814-992-2712.
ginn...
aultarln. BruiMon. thru Sot. Ph. 814-446' 0138 .venlnga.lft•l.
c.dla Music. 114-448-0187.
0322.
.
Flr.wood for •I&amp; t20. I Pickup Joll Wwnolor lnllrvctor. 1141211'. Ste Et1Col. cond .. 2 BR ..
lood. You pldlup.Ctll814-742- 446-8071. Llmilld op-go.
-tppod kltahon. llr. ,.........
Vlllor Furniture
3t12.
- · 111. a225
dtp. Col ond uaod fllmlluro .. d
114-441-0803 or :'48-2118.
oppllcona... Coil 814-UII· Twin box opringo ond mattr- 58
Fruit
7172- Houra 11-1.
_
a eo. Couch fbo:-n .. d btlao
8o
Vag11tablea
1 • 2 eR .....- . 1300
wMh phttoont deolgnl. f71. Box
month. lnckldN 1K -1•.
PICKENS Ull£0 fURNITURE
of chHdr..'l books, f10. AI In
AduMt oftlv, · no poll. dep. Complott lmu•hatd fllrnlah- tiood condition. Cell lt4-9111roqu~od. Coli 114-441-4222 ·lnli. l'.mll....,lcho. 304-1'164315.
Rod ond Gold Dill clout oppltL
bot::w.:.:.:.-::.:...:•:.::.:•_·
_
_
__;___
1
10.
8
14·
3
B
I·
9
7
7
3,
a2.99 podl. food
wot:.
· ovtnlnga.
LMgo round btl• 1500 poundo come. J•d!.'• FNit M• 1t. Rt.
Pomeroy· 2 IR . remodel•d
gaoct inll.S h-r. •zo. Cell 315. Hendlnon.
epWimont ofllprlnaA,.. Soc. Forlow-anOUtllltyCtrpet I14-9Btl-3948.
dop. a rtf. Coli trlt• I PM, • Furn1tu10 como to Malohln
114-912-IISI.
Furnltu•UpporRivorRd .• l14- 221.000 BTU Jon~roiFumtct .
4*7444.
114-&amp;SI-3844.
I drill Suppl11:s
Un.,rnllhtd
2 BR
• - •Adutta
oport- I.:::::::;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;J,;:::;::::::===~
mtnt.ln
town.
carpeted.
&lt;II livl:sluck
ontv. No pllt. Coli 114-44fi.
SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
45U

••dl•

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

n.,..

'*•ian

tu1to1-om -.

S.••

•qu..._: · ·

•riou•

'*''

otornr.

----

t

SHADY LAWN APTfl. 729
Stcond A,.. f w - olflclonclll ....lng II *171 I 1M.
lndudlng - · • aorbtao.
.......... - · Cill 1114441'4807. 4!18-}802.

61 Farm Equipment
UTILITY BLDG. 8Pt.:
30'x40'x8'8" Cl. . .,ce. 1·
1 l'x8' • • door. 1·3" -lk
do"': ttl881 ERECTED. Iran
Hone Bldn. Colli t 4-332-9741
Coloct:.
4020 JD tractor w/.,.. round
cab. nloa. t4410. Qreham
HO!MEtlllllt- 1118. JD
11ft. folcf.uplfo,.ow. *488.JD
1010 - · w/JD .. cor.
n ......... -...
fln.,oo. Col 614-HI-81122. '

·-a."*

444 lntomlllonll
Late tr•a&lt;w/lft. t.otftila&amp; ,-_.,
.....
-n ........ 3 II'- outfit. 14110 . 230
lnt.-nli-••now-wlh
plowo. ........h .....
rat.y hDa
Wllln..oe.
Coli 814-ZIB-81122.

U.,..,

brt*
t3'71 II mo.

R - o d 2 • . r81ch. oloooto
VlntongrodltCihtoL tl171•Roltr......
·-""
.._lrod
on IId,..,.,
....deotlt
Wit•
·:Thl8 stutf lan'll'lot, l... uh... l've been on a

114-4411-

•

lot 0~ game rowsl"

.

'

'

• ••

Athana Llveetodt BoltL AlbtnySiio worv Sllurdoy- 1 PM.
Uveetodt occiPiod ott• 4 PM

ev.ry FrldtJi. 1 mil• IMt of

Albtnv on St. Rt 10. Coli
114-892-2322. 198-3131
w.,lnga.

Hading Ewry Monut to ProUv•odl Au'n., HIM•

du_.•

bqro. Ohio. Call JoM A wowood

' .,

11BOF-3(IOV·8 ..glna..t•NH .. h7
trant. Gall• cllmp ·beG. "'Exc.· ,.,. .,~~
Cond. 011.300. 304-481-103t.
•

. . .. ·'

'82 Ford'""* F 100 11ot bed. •• &lt;·
ntw tlr-. magwt)Mie, 302V-I.
"'~
IUtomlltlc tran•mll•lon. 304- ' ; ...,
576-2829.
• " .
.. ·t..

1181Ford 150 pic* up,_31.000 . •uAA
mil•. a7,495.00, 304-87&amp;- "t . •
4308.
'87R~ng.-XlT,ext.,dldct~b.•

.........,

~

c., ......:

814-ISZ.. 7281

whtll dl-lvo. V-1 , 5-opltll olt, ' "
304-178-3121. .......
.,

8utchorlng Hog. Coli 114-388c'
8448.

73

Vans&amp; 4W.D.

..,

.._,

84

Hay &amp; Grain

nmothy Hoy &amp; whilll ltrow for
11lo. Coll8t4-379-2718.

1171 CJ5 .loop. Etl:lll.n .....
dltion wah ll)lrl p. . l. •1100. " 11 ' .J
350Hondl4whtlldrlllo. t978 " ."1
Dadtlo Trvcll. CtH 114-941,,1
2548.
'
•1.! .. ., •

Squ0re blltd mktd h.,, Coli
814-246-5457.

Tr anspur I&lt;J 11 o11

'BO Ch011rolot 4a4, 12.800.00.
Bed llnlf for lhort whttl
olck up. a75.00. 304-8863530.

b•• ··.

~

.. ..,

1978 J11p Chero-. 4 wheel
drlvt. aaoo. 304-17&amp;-4437.

"

71 Auto's For Sale

1871 Otdo, f400 . 1982 E 210
o:tooo. eon 114-4412359.

74

Motorcycles

1184 Honda KR 200 Pro Link.
oxc com!, 0800.00. 304-BBZ..
3190. .

1983 Hondo V46 Mogno. 30417&amp;-3833.

...
."'·--"'
' .. , J

76

"'"~'I ~

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

8 10

Two dtlpendeble. ru1t frM.
loodod. fUll ollldont en w•h
rodlolo. 1183 Plymouth Rollont
SE. 80.1150 ml.- tZ280. 1983
Dodao600. 53,000mi.-13700. BUDGET TRANSMISSIONu ..d &amp; rebuilt all typea.
188~ Dodat Conv-n Mini
V111. new rae~~•. 11 thl•tre.. w•rr.,ty-30 d.,.,, PriCII ' " &amp;
Shorpl 1!,000 ml-11,380. . .... \lied • nobultl - ·
1971 Ford Caur• pldcup. nl'tl'l conw.n... tten dlrd clutch•.
pr•~~un~ pl--. • throw out
pelnt • front hnden.
bowing. Wllrontv-1 2 moo. CVC
dapondoblo-tl50. Colt 8141o1-01 ...... eon 114-379.
448-ti3S3.
!l2ZO or 304-176-1788.
1983VW Rtbbll dl•ol. AM-FM, 1978 Monte C.rto ,_,._ Pinto
4 •pd.. AC. ,.... tfr• C.D
,.na 2300 .,"'"._ C1fl I 14114-25S.1124.
992-2128.
117e Chovy Ctm•o. 350 high
performanoi. llttotnltlc. Red.
Ctll814-448-1127.
Serv IGf! s
1988 Dodgt Dayton. low ml·
letg&amp; Mtendedwarranty avail•

blo. Coli 114--8291.

81

1V87 Chryaltr Lob•on Coupe.

514-441-8010 oltor 8 PM.
1183 Z-28 Cornaro. 301. tutom.tk:. PS. PB, air, tlh:, cnll•&amp;
lit..,, r.t with black a grar
Int-. 01800. Colt 114-4461172 doya. or 446-9803 ... .,.
lng~ ..k fur Keith.
1188 Ch'""' Cll...ity. 43,000
mi-. v.e...to. , AC.crulla1ilt.
AM-FM-Ctoa. Coli 114-3898240.
1181 Chovy Caprloo Stotlon
Wagon. Oood con d. 12200. Call
114-44fl.8231.
1978 Thundor...d. 198t Detaun plclalp. 1889Chovy pldlup.
C.oll 814-387-018:t
1981 Conaord. 2 door, 114181-3838.

....

.., ... t

: ' :)
. ~­

'

-

!'"•

. . ;; •

aw•. ,

,,.. _,_

~~

lo l •"""'

a \~~

,I

'1 ' '"" ""

f.: :.

Home
Improvements

·Lynx Slotlon
w010n. a1 .eoo. eon 8t4-44B08tz.

Excol. cond. All optlono. Coli

~ .;

• ' .., .. ~,J

-~~~ry

1184Eaoort LWagol\ a~to., PS,
PI, llr, factory ltii'IO, 11896.
1980 ChiOI'f PU, I cyL, auto..
PS. P8, 01198. Coli 814-2818522.

.

' I "t•l •

v...

1184

.

·eo CJI .loop, • • aond. 30417fl.231&amp;.

Buy or Son. Riverln• AntlctutL 55 Building Supplies
1124 E. M1in Street, Pom•oy.
Houn: M.T.W 10a.m. to lp.m ..
Sundar 1 to 6p.m. 614-992·
9\0idlng Mot.-illt
2528.
&amp;Jock. brick. IIW• pipM, win- · tl73 Pontloc OtWid AM , 4 dr ..
PS, PB. llr, tit. crulla. Run~
dows. lntelt, 11e. Claude Wfn·
good. Good tlr• t800. Coli
t
...
Rio
Grandt.
0
.
Can
81454 Misc. Merchandise 2~5t21.
114-386-9107 eft• 5 :il0 PM .
.
.

•I•

.!

'71 Chwy pldlup. good cond. ,,, ,,,
eo.OOOml-.: ·n 15-..Neng• . • ..
wn. 85. 000 mila 304-17&amp;- .... ,.,
2372"' 17fl.2281.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehld• for *100. Fordl. M•cedel.
Corv.n... Chwya. Surpkn.
Buyon 0\0do. 111 80&amp;-8875000. Ext S-10t89

3. - - ....... 2 ....... ttollv fllrnlthot!-1271, fully
fUrnlthtcf.t300. ~- ••
·
-• ..,
- • mo.
.......
2 •• qulrtd. Clll14-4tl8-0041 eft or
1•11•
I be.toom
..,.,w-WIIIdng ...onooof I P M o r - - - 0380 I - ,rlvlle
3 b•*oorn 2 ltG'¥
on 1

·-o.

SURPlUS -Original Arrrot. O•
rim, R.nol, Cilrhort Clothing.
USA Jungle Bol!ll, a- Co·
mouftogo c..d bltell whMel.
SAM SOMERVILLE'S, OLD
ROUTE 21, NEW ERA, WVA
!noon - 8 :00pm, Doc. only!.
Other monthl Frliler. laturd.y.
SUnday only. 304-273-5155-

ldng olzo bod. *400.00. 3 pcbed
room sutte. doUbte 1lz1 bed.
e30o.eo. Picon dlnlnl tlblo 8
chi ... chin• cabinet, 800.00.
Other ~..,.. 304-891-3811.

Houoolor - · 4 "' 1 bt«OOnL
12• 'r a' on lt.. VInton. Ohio.
Clll14-38.1380.

m• lloll
3144.

t';;~~~~~~~:;~,-;;:;;::::~~;:=:;::::::~
54 Misc. Marchandis~ 83
livestock

ShMplng roome wh:h ..cooldng.
AiloTrollor tpiCI. AI hoolo-CAII eflor 2p.m . 304-773·
15151. Muon wv.

--·-1210. . .

ll•!
l_"_,'

tlll8 1:1\1 NE.A , Int..

Upper Rtv• Road

Nlotl .........for _ _
from Golla AoodomY tagh

4 8R .. fUI btl om.,. •
tlllt _ _
Utllt • low. Wt&gt;o
ltu,_, Notultl till .,,...
Mcod to .ool. Di• 614-!ltl80271 eflor I PM. _
_,dt
onytlrnt.

=

Grill, 24x24 and counter top
nave 2 burner, oamm•clllf.

I.Dt•.

}'

1... . r.

3 pc Spantlh bedroom IUttt.

814-992-7479.

:

•

2237.

g foot Fiber o1 . . a•age door.
304-171-80.2'7. ,

Country Mobile Home Patk.
Route 33. North of Pom•ay.
rent*, parte. •Ia Call

•••

19781h ton Cbwy pick· up. PS , ..• " •
PB. 3&amp;0 cublelnd'l motor, auto. ,
.. _.
very good ooncltlon. 114-941- ·~ " ·•

Antique dining room ttbte and
llvochlln. 304-175-3791.

uopoalt ooqu~od. CtH
114-446-4240 4:00
and 9:00PM.

w~ninga.

1188 Chwrolll S-10. V-1 oulo
extended Clb·T•hoe pkg .
IGIMd. 10.000 ml•. Blu•
sliver. Bet at Jim Mlnkl.
Chevrolet-Old• . 814· 448·
3172.

flo om. for r*'t·week or month.
StWIIng ot 1120 o mo. Oolllo
Hotol-814-446-9180.

t~~anlty

•aoo. can

1971 Cht¥enne "'h ton pic* up;
a.tto.. tit rtwlng. PS, PB.
AM ·FM · CI... 8 cyl.. 350.
02900. Coll814-387-0429.

MOllOHAN FURNITURE
..Camptetellneof l*plt.GDnSPI.,m. Ylnyle .,d c•ptt rwna.
c.root In ltock on!y. Vlnylo
aertinjllt 13.99 Vf!rd In ttodl
ontv. Fr• llthnlt•. no job to
, large or tm~ll . Two loclt6ons.
122VIondS•eet
Point Pl. ..m. w.v •.
304-876-1498

53

~

1178 Thu ndtr ... d. 1181 Dot... plcll&gt;p. 11e9Choly pldlup.
Coli 814-387-0882.

Golllpolo, Ohlo
8t4-441-7444.

Bulin- orA•Identlll- forNnt·
181 lloar, ll•ge roonend 1~
blltw on St811 St., overlooking
No.r.tlta. R.t••c:. Md

.•

' ill

Colt 814-992-3844.

Olt chill Ref. • dtp. Col
1114-441-1111

_.&amp; Crown CIIY.

n:... ,.d

t.d. TV .-t•m. coffee
tlbl-. w••hlr 111d dryer, tool
boa H. compreuor. cemP• top.
plmno 304-17&amp;-1113.

Ave., Gllktola. ' ' ' 1 mo.
UtRMier tttid. 81noltmllt. 8h•o
both. eo• 448-4&gt;1'11efl• 7PM .

• I'
.....
~·~ '

614-386-8183.

Coll814-441- t 149.

:C,ttable.
living roam •ulte .,.d
Uc• new. f0150.

Sale

1978 Ford 1110. 302 long bed.

304-87&amp;-t4&amp;Ci o• 814-388'
9773,. eve.
.Brown 2 pc. living room ~Uti•
Ilk• n.w. n 315. Hld1-1~bed.
0128. Rodin- *21&amp;up. 4pc.
bedroom •ulte. . t121. AI tv.of • backing. king lizo
mtttr. . &amp; box 1pt1nga. t75.
Hollywood from•. 110 &amp; up. 2
pc. Batattt chin• cebintt. t 221.
Moplo hulch. 0128. M..y moro
lttn,., ~ mil• aut Jwlc:ho Rd ..
Pt. Pl111•t. W .V1.

I loot ftbwgl- both tub, •75.
Coll514-943-8348.

Tnu:ks for

•ft• 5:30 PM .

ptckene Uaed i!urnlture

I · pc. living room llrnltu,.,
1100. Coli 8t4-381-9059.

72

I 978 Choly Slop Sldo PU. Pl.
P8, AM·FM·CI•.. .tide r•.. ~~
., · ·I
wlridow. 400 rnotor. auto. • I
ft ZOO firm. Ctll114-386-9807
I r

PRICES SIASHEO-WIIdroboreg. 1149 ncM" t71. Ou.n tb•
m~n,... feto.Fe11J . t189 now
*1015. Country wood table wtfh
3 chon a bench-rev. tate.1281. M.-w Mor• Mont¥ Sav·
lngVIIu• Itt. 141lnCenteniiY
"A mit on Un aoln Pika

Furnllhld room-819 Second

2 be*oom. fur'*hld. Mther
•d ctryor, llr conditio ... *221
month plut dopooM ond utR~Io.
114-912-7478.

c•

Larry Wright

VIRA'S FURNITURE &amp;
APPUANCES
Op., Mon.·S•t. 9 AM ·5 PM,
SUn. 12 noon-15 PM . 11'4-4463118.

Bul•••

Homes for Rent

44.0008.

morolnforntion oo11 304-8823716. E.O.H.
Olo•d2btdro'"""''WimtmL
A~-·· No FoiL
304- &amp;- 7!t

Coli 114-4411-0880. '

Un-.rnllhtd 12x80 Forllt Pork.
,...... w111t .. crc•lllnQI. two
b•droomt, totel •l•ctrlo.
t7,000. Ctll14-44fi.3010.

Rlf•~~'~* •d

:.O:::';'.;..';'::.,":o.t~'!.:.':
;:: ::~1v:,vd"=-='·~~

-lv dooonttd. 2 BR ., fUIIv

•

~

to luy-Good uotd Pool
Tllllo. Colllt4-4tl8-1718.

~-itlllod

31

. . . . . . . . . -F.
:,n,.~.:-

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLIIHINQ CO. ,..mrnm• tMt you
do t.oaln- with pooplo you
know. Md NOT to _..d mon.,
tfnu"' the mal untl you h.,l

r,atL

KIT N' CARLYLE® by

Household Goods

Good U1.t Color TV'S for a .ea.·

"Aspirin...bicarbonate-... tran• ers... "
quiliz

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUBINES8
COLLEGE. IZI Jockoon Plko.
C.oll446-4317. R~ No.ll&amp;-11101118.

Opportunity

m.._. coo Lorry Llvlly-8t4318-9303.

.1

Got pold lor · - • bookll

21

Junll: C.rs wtt-. or wtthout

l•ee

ble. Fa.tlbl• hour&amp; AMerd ll'ld
r~m .... lon for - ' • -...cce~a.
Want to know morel' Cll Awn
Olllrld M.,_ II 114-19.
7111.

18 Wanted to Do

Television
Devices
Dlpendlble Hearilc Aiel Salis &amp;~erv.e1
Cl Huring Evaluations Foi All Aps

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

ontt. Vllfll Mlnound
llvtraldo Aportmonllln
Mddloport. From t182.
614-992-7787. EOiol

41

GENERAL CONTIACfORS

"LOW ..CCIIII HOIII"

BILL SUCK

Oot pold for • - a bookll
1100 por tltlo. Wrllt: PA8E33A. 161 S. Lln-oy, N.
/lwlroro. tL 8054:t
Bobrtlt«ln Rio OrondotdKool
cllot•lcl. Col 114-241-942111·
tor I PM . .
NURSE&amp;
W horlng -llotlon In . .lng
for tholldo+r .... of your go.
In Uta - l c H.. N...lng
Contw "' . , _ , tar )lot thlt
typo of 1-killi. Wo off•
ocmpltlllwewag• lnd•OIIW
btnelttt. AP!Ify II 8ctnlc Hltil
Nur1lng c.nt.,, lllluakrldga
Rd., Oolllpolll.

15

Mitldltpart, Oh:

~!~~~~!,.
CHERRY
$35

~t::o~n-=-,.g~

•hlr•

and Found

mantt.. Oec1mber &amp; Jll'lulfY

-

tKtppioa.

Fltt
~-ald. ....
fourthl Auotrlltn BhoPhlrd.
304-17&amp;-31148.

8

Ont Month F- Ront
Quollftod · - pay 1200.
Dopoolt ond no ..,t for tile

-ch s ...... Mlddl_._ ohio.
2 bedroom -.rnllhtd opWimont.
Ullltlll ooid. rolor.,. .. Phone
FEDERAL. STATE ·AND C 1 V n . 3 0
-.:..:.4-.:;U:;2:..;··221::.:;1.:;1· - - - - : S£RVIC£ JOBS .
~;::;:;;::::::::;=;:~~j:;:;;::::;:;::;:~~~::::::~NOW HIRING. Your oroo. 131 H
fo S Ia
41 Homes for Rent
Now oc.....lna oppiiOIIiona lor
t11580 to 188.480. IMMEomas r a
2 - .... oPWimtmo. lllllf
1·31&amp;-

n_.

3·.,... old mlla8ctman•. AKC
Aegial•ed. Ooe~n't •• dtMdo
, ... 32300 St. Rt. 141 Pom•
Kif, Ohio.

992-3711. EO H.

lnt••

'*''

3 yr. old fomole Huolly. Con
814-446--7.

Oogt: M"'td. St. Btr. .d •
::::::::., Elkhoundo. .. d St.
-Aioolull Mllmuto, to
give,.,..,. 304-UZ..2111.

GliAl ( .. ISTMAS GIRS
GREAT PRICES • Gin

c-

tton. maior • • •d *1ict mel
11: reQU~ed. bemonatreted •ucond loodnhlp In 'tho
achl•enwtt at fund-railing
·go . . o - culltlllon. work

M.&gt;.IOR NAT'LMULn-liNE INSURANCE CO.
Stoking moture.ICigr-lvelndlvlclJ• to mill:. Horn.. Auto-Lff•
Htllth Int., 2 tr.,lna
progrom, trolnlna_progrom
boneltt pkg. 121-138.000.00

3 A - Coli• to give MIV.
Coli 614-448-3484 - · 5
PM, 446-4011 ollw II PM .

lo•

2 -oom Aptt, for ront.
&lt;;::.-Nlcuottlng. Louncrt
f
Ill 11tllol&gt;lo. COM 814-

.,..,CI

p . .ONII ..,d corpome lolctt•

Got pold for ,_,g bookll
0100.00 po1 tftlo. Wrllo: PASE517A, 111 8. Uncotnwoy. N.
/lwlroro. II 8054:t

w•

4

Smtl fU. .htd .........._ Col .. 4-441-3318.

DEVELOPMENT COORDINA·
TOR - I . I. prolwrod. Slgnlfl.-,t •
in . . . . Gf

AVON - AM or-. Coli Morlly n
Wtwor 304-U:!-2145.

"'Free Eatlmetft"

HAll 5nUNG &amp; TANNING

.

..-

,

'

Nice 1· 2 H«oom IIP..trnMtt.
A¥111111:11• -.r..._. or uMJ,..
nlohtd. DIPoo• -~~~~ - Coli
614-4411-4345 oltorl PM.

HELP WANTED

r_.c:11 II requhd. FlMI:Ima
poa•ion bootd In Athtnl, Ohio,
requlra nenlnglw••k•nd
achadJ._ .. dtr-tlwoughout
liaht southMittrn Ohio oountl-.1.ow20'a.Sendr.urne.,d
lett• of
to Kay Atldnt.
E'*"'~•Dinctor, pt.,n.S Par·
onthood afSou.t -Ohlo, 388
Rlchl ..d A...,,. A - Ohio
45701 .

51

Aportman1
for Rant

2 ll)tl. for rent clo•t to Rio
Orondo Collago. Clll 114-256140:t

- -llmeMLTfor -.iltoqutppod
flhvtlcl•'• Oflloo .. ltoretory.
Apply n poroontoTho-col
PI••· 103 .Jaabon Pllr.• be..,_ 8:31).4:30.

AVON. Le•n w,.e you ••nl

3 Announcements
W. wll ,..., coal for

'

Help Wanted

F,.. trtllning. lnau•oe wd•

Rona Chlmnor Swoop Slloclll
thru Jonuory. 304-713-11348.

Jl. &amp; MISSY
fASIIONS, .

...

-

U. S. IT. 50 EAST

urisr

CEITIIICATES;,

*

AllllllllllCe 111 r~nls

SAUS &amp; SEIVICE

PH. l-992-6822
12-11 :0-1 mo.

LOADING

HILLSIDE

•..

-992-5119
T£RRI POWELL

DIPLE P

•Will Do Hauling
' Dump Truck
•W,..kor Sorvlct
•Junk Yord Bual-•

•..

urs

AUNT

.~~~~!~l~~op

•Washers •DtYers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

'

'

HOME BAKED
GOODIES
Get Your
Goodie
Orders In Now.

44

With ao.d lr'ld vok.l ,.....
txt.WV• rMIDrd ke~~~lng Md

,.•

V. C. YOUNG Ill

.BISSELL
BUILDERS

DEAD 01 AUYE

.

.

SERVICE

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

WANTED

'

..
•

YOUNG'S

SALES

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALl: ENGINE
PH.

WISEMAN._._-,-·~~

•

repair

421

992. 5 114

JANUARl 7. 1978

I'll wait until that clay
when I can bt with

11

&lt;ARPENTER
SERVICE

WAGNER

anew.

,-: ·•

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

WHO PASSED AWAY

lllk;
Pa¥1 a new rold on
wllich we both could
walk;
lut I knowthatsollltday
we .rill ...t apin,
And llfcln our lives

SER~IC~

LAFF·A-DAY

ill

~I~ I ~I! 1: !! ,,

.. PAT IILL FOlD

UGHT HAUUNG DO.

CHARLES H.

could '" you just to

to

RADIATOR

J&amp;L

f Ill :1111 V'ill

d

PER LOAD
DBJVEIED

LOVING MEMORl OF

I any times I've wished I

•

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Dec. 12, 19f8

c,...

2

BUSiness
•
services
________

--....

:The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Friday, Janwry 6. 1989

••

e

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: 1hot on November 23.
19e8.'tho Unltod Stotoo of
Amerlco. • Plointilf. lilod 1
verified Complaint for For~
TO PlACE AN AD Ull 992-2156
foltura In tho Unltod Stltot
Dlotrlct Court for thl South MONDAY
FRIDAY A.M.
ern Dlotrlct of Ohio. Eeet·
NOON SATURDAY
ern Division. 11 Columbua.
Ohio, being Civil Action No.
ClOSED
Y
C2-8B-1232, ogolnot corloin proportlet, I t dolendenta. to wtr:
Real Proporty .~uotod in
Public Notice
Public Notice
Moip County, Ohio. known
.. Rt. , • lOll 17, o......
NOTICE
TO
BIDDERS
Ohio, end legally dMcrlbed
PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed propoula will be ••:
COUNTY: MEIGS
Reel E1tot0 tltuottd in tho
TIM following were recti· received 11 tho:
DIVISION OF
County of Molp, Townlhlp
wd/propored by Tho Ohi
• RECLAMATION
of Columblo ilnd State of
Environmental
ProtitctRm
OEPAATMENT OF
Ohio, known ond d•crlbed
A - (OEPA) l•t woole.
NATURAL RESOURCES.
11 followo:
Effective dot• of final aclot No. Two 121 01 turt&amp;one lll'ld I11U11nce datn of 1866 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
SECOND FLOOR
voyod by John Holt, ourpropoood octiona and of
dfeft ectiona are ataled. fi - COLUMBUS. OHIO 43224 voyorofMoipCounty,AprM
nal action·• m.-y be appuled, until Wedn•dey, Jenliii,Y 1 &amp;. 18415, end W•t adjoinIn writing, within 30 dayaol 18, 1989 at 11 :00o.m . ond lng 1 hundrod ocroo told
the date of thil notice. to openod thoreeftor lor fur- Groy In Section One( 1) In
The Environmental Board of niahing tho motorillo ond Town Nino (9) of tho 16th
Revt-. Rm. 300. 238 E. performing tho lobor lor tho Ronge of tho Ohio ComTown St. . ColumbiJO, Oh. execution and conltNCtion peny'e Purch•e.. contMning
one hundred and aixtlllln
432111. Notice ofonyoppeel of:
ocreo (118) more or l01o.
COAL POWER/BOOTHE
aholl be fllod with tho direcRESOIL RECLAMATION
Aloo In tho tomo Motion,
tor within 3 dora. Propoood
PROJECT
town and range tho followactiona will become final un·
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
ing dMcrlbed rtol ..- . .
111 a • written edjudlcetion
RECLAMATION PRQJECT bounded and d01ccrlbed oa
hearing req-t io oubmitted
NUMBER MG-Xx-3-F
lollowo:
Beginning
31
within 30 d-v• of the ilaaence date; or the director ineccordancewiththeplans chaina and 90 link's aouth
revilel / withdraws the pro- end apocllicotiona prep1red from tho Nonh corner of tho
poled action. ~ny person by the Department of N•- Northellt Quarter of Sec·
mey
tubmit
comments tural R•ourc81, The Divi- tion No. One: Thence Eut
and/ or a meeting regarding alon of Reclamation, Col· 12 Chain• and 64 linb;
any dreft action within 30 umbut, Ohio. Bldo wtll be thon,. oouth 8 ond 69 llnko;
elora of tho dote indlcittd. opened in the Hcond ftoor thence weet 12 chains and
"Action", 11 ull!ld above conference room of 18&amp;&amp; &amp;4 llnkl thence north to the
d - not Include rtceipt of a (Building H) of The Fountoln ploco of boglnnng. contolnvorlflod comploint. lhignili- Square Officn of The Ohio ing 10.77 acr• more or
cant public lnter81t ex.ida, a l)opertmont of Noturel Ro- loot.
Being the ume realeatate
public mooting mll\l'be hold. tourcea, The 11tim1te for
Aa to any Ktlon. Including thio project eo de;::~t~~~ .J convoyed to Gertrude Whl·
tington Grohon bv George B.
receipt of verified com· by the Divioion &gt;f
Whltlngton by doed replalnto. onv peroon moy ob- tlon it *87,800.00.
CopiM oltho plant. opeci- corded in deed book UIO
tain nottce of further acend
propo111 poge 801 of tho Molgo
tlona, end additional lnfor· licotlono.
m•tion. Unl•• otherwite fonna will be forwarded Couny Dood Rocordo. .
Excepting the atanding ·
provided in noticM of portic- from the Dlvil:ion of Aecla·
For the Southern
ullr 1ction1. ell communlca· mation. Oep.,rment of N•~ timber on 1 portion of said
Dlotrlct Ql Ohio
11ons .,.111 be IBnt to: Hear· tural AeaourcM, upon r• real 11t1te which hu been (12123, 30: (1) 8 . 3tc
ing Cl•ll. OEPA. P. 0. Box ceipt of o chck in tho 101~ ond conveyed to Clirk
1048, Columbuo. Oh. 43286- omount of H.OO mode pey- Jlvldon, together with the
Public N otica
0148 PH. (6141 644-2116. .11ble to the Department of right to cut and remove the
Contult OAC Chop. 3746 tnd Neturel Rnourcn. Th•e uid timber. and
Real Property situated in
OAC Ch- 3746-47 ond may •Ito be purch11ed with
NOTICE OF
•
011h In tho uoct omount. Melp County, Ohio, known
3741-&amp; for Mql • anatta.
APPOINTMENT 0 F
Final iaiUIInce of permit to Plono ond opecllicatlono be- 10 30762 Old Doxtor Road,
FIDUCIARY
lnltlll: Malp County Boord come tho property of the Dexter, Ohio, and leg oily deOn December 30, 19811.
of Educltlon: Scipio Twp .. pro•pective blddert end no scribed 11;
Roll Eoteto oltuatod In the in the Meigs County Probete
Ohio. Effective dote: Doc. refundl wKI be mode. AddiCourt. .Con No. 28.11 a. De30. 1888. Facility Dncrlp- tionel Information m1y be County of M•iga, in the vid
Brown, 11.321 Cottin·
obtolnod
from
tho
Dlviaion
Stote
of
Ohio,
end
In
tho
tlon: Wat-er; Appllcogham
Circle, N. W.. Uniontlon No. 08-23411. Thit final of Rodemotlon, Deport- Townohlp of Soltm end
town.
Ohio,
44685 woo apment
of
Natural
Retourcet~.
bounded
1nd
dncribed
11
octlon not procedod by propointed
Executor
of the n·
poltd oction ond II oppeolo- 18118 Fountoln Squore, followa:
tate
of
Walter
P.
Brow:n. de·
Building
H.
Second
Floor.
Situotod
in
Section
12,
blo to EBR. A 2,600 GPO
loto of a4Ba4 SR
nt.nded nr•tion sew-.ge Columbua. · Ohio 43224. Town8ondRongo1&amp;ofTho coeood,
Melga
Ohio Compony'a Purchooo 124, Reodovlllo,
trelltment plant for Herri· (Phone: (614) 266-10118).
County,
Ohio.
Each bid mu_tt be •ccom· in Nid Townahlp, County
tonvMio Elementary School.
Robert E. Buclo.
ponlod by a '1110 GUAR- ond Stott ond moro portlcu(1)6.1tc
Probeto Judge
ANTY, mtoling tho requir• Iori'( doocrlbed 11 follow a,
mtnto of Section 153.&amp;4 of to-wit: Beginning It tho Len• K. Neuelroad. Clerk
tho Ohio Roviood Codo.
Northuot corner of ooid (1) a. 13, 20. 3tc
Cantrectora are adviMd . Section 12; thence Weat on
Public Notice
that in accordance with the. theNorthtineoftaldaection
Public N otic.a
provisions of the January 42 roda: thence huth 50
NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE
27, 1972exocutlvt order by rodo: thtn,. EMt 2~ rodo to
BY SECURED PARTY
tho Governor of Ohio. ond tho contor of loldlng Creole;
NOTICE OF
Notice It h-bygivon thot
emended executive order thenoe down Leltding
APPOINTMENT OF
Wood County lonll. tho un·
84-9. Fellruery ttl. 19a4, following tht cantor ot ..ld
FIDUCIARY
doralgnod h - r of Security equol employment oppor- otreom 3 dot~re• end 56 mlOn Docombor 20 19BB,
Agr-.onu doted Fobruory tunity condftlorq IM'e appli· nutn Wilt 22 rods; thence
In tho Meip County Probate
18, 1118a, ond Moy 21,
cobleto thl1 bid. WegorotM Eoat 121 rocfa end 21 llnlio; Court. Ceto No 211111, Ar1918. Eoocuted by: Thom01
eatlbliahed in accordance
s
.. · nold R. Knight, 118 Uncoln
thence
outh 4 2 rodl;
L. Mill• dbe Coin Mochlne with Section 1613.18 end thence
North 79 dogrRood, P.O. Box 691. PoVending Co. ond Sonbom'o 1613.37 oltherovlood code Eoot 44 rodo; thtnct South
meroy.
·Ohio 467a9, woo
Vending Co. wtll offer for
ere Mao applicable.
7• ...,_
E
2
1ppointed
Executor of the
Bldo
oro_
ooalod
ond
adv
...,.,_
Itt
1
rodo;
oolo tho following .-crlbed
oolloterll on Joriuory 20. drooltd to: Deportment of lhonce South 22 degr- Illite of Evelyn G . Knight.
Naturel Allourcll. Oiviaion Eut to the center of Leading d-11od. loto of 118 Un·
1919. ot 10:00 o'cloljk A.
Rtclomotion.
tBtiti Crook.
being 22 rodo; coin Rood, P .O. Box 591.
M. It tho Commercial loon of
Fountain
Square,
luHdlng
thence
following
the center Pomeroy, Ohio 46789.
Deportment, Wood County
of Leadlne Creek, in e
Robert E. Buck,
link. Fifth ond . Morllet
H, Socond Floor, Columbut, Southeootorly direction to
Probate J uclgo
Strootl, Porlloroburg, Woot Ohio 43224. No bidder moy the north Uno of Iondo of
lena K. Noooolrood. Clerk
Vlrglnlo.
wlthdrowhlabidwlthinoixty Hom• P. Winn; thence (12) 23, 30; (1)6
Collotorol to be oold of (60) deyo ohor tho octuol nurly - t following tho
Sonborn• 1 Vonding Co .• 19 doto of tho opOIIIng thoroof. nOrth Uno of Iondo of Homer 1111-u;:;::--..;==.-W01t Col)lmbut 8troM, NIITho Director of Noturel P. Wlnn to the canter of
Help Wanted
IOnvHie. Ohio, lo 11 followo:
Rotourctt morvot1ho right Leiding Creole; thtnct In o 1;:===:;:::;::;:::==1
(I) Ill tonglbil pllrlonll
to reject any or oil bido, or to north--tori'( direction fol· II
property of Thom11L. Millw accept tho bid which emdba Sonborn'o Vending Co. braCe~ tuch combination al· lowing't"'•CIIntllr of Leading
including Ill lumlture, fix- tomote p&lt;opoeela •• moy Creeklonto1 t2hotheeot lint oflald
; lllctfollowlng
tuntl,
equipment, porta. promote tho bMt intlrMt of ttct
tho 011t lne of 11id aection
acc•eoriel. ettlchmenta. the stote.
Ao provided In Section 12.tothoploctofboglnnlng,
toolt and inventory of the
containing obout 102.84
23
bullnen.
1 .1 51 of the 0 hlo Ro- ocroo. Excepting one-half of
(b)1979 Ford picloup
vltod Codo ond Admlnlttro- Ill GM ond oM underlying
(c) 1983 Dodge plcloup
live Rulo 123: 2-16-02 of llid praml- which io h•oImmediate opening
(d) 19a1 Ford von
the Department of Admin· by reserved to uld previoua
for experienced medi(t) 1980 Chevrolet picloup
lstqttve Servk:et. 1he CON· grentorl. their hebe and U·
(f) 1980 Chovrolet von
TRACTOR ,aholl moleo ovory olgno. with tho right to drHI
cal tramaiplionist.
(g) 1985 Chovroltt Citation tffon to onaure thot certiProfident in medical
Collottral to be oold of fied minority buoinooo oub- tnd oporote thoroon, told
Coin Mechine Vending Co .• cantrltetora and JNterill· grantee~ to ba rtimbur.-d
terminology and o
1402 Colegoto Drive, Ma- men p•rticlp•t• In the con· for reuoneble compenu·
tract.
The
total
value
of
eub~
tion
far
any
damage
that
good typist. Excellent
riotti, Ohio, lo 11 followa:
(t) ell tonglblo per10nol contrtiCtt awarded to the may be ceu•d td Aid aur·
working conditions
propllrty o1Thom11L. Miller mat•lllt and
11rvic• f-:ceptlng the
ond fringe benefits.
dbe Coin Mochlne Vondlng purchMed
from minority outly known u No. 4 , 4-A,
Ca. including all furntuuw. bualneeiH lh .. l be 11 Mt Clerion or Llm•tane Coal In
Send resume to Perfixtunoo, equipment, porto. forth In tht apoclflcttlonl.
d
dor"'l 1 11 of th t
•
Controcta&lt;a
roqulrl~
11on
un
•r
ng
osonnel Dlpartment, P.
ecc•eort.. attachmenta.
...
rogolng rtollltlte, together
toolt ond Inventory of tho tlltonce in toourlng bldo with .mlnlnn ,..,htl end car0. Box 344, GollipoHs,
bullneea.
1rom cortlflod MBE oubc:on• ..
trlctO&lt;t
ond
oupptlero
mov
·
~oln
othtr
rlghta
••
de·
OH. 45631.
Arqngements m1y be
modo for lntpoction of tho contact the State Equal Em· ecribed in an optton gNen by
collttoral bv contlctlng Do- ptoyment
Coorcllnotor by
nold Tlco ot Wood County ciiUng (1141 4tiii-B3BO or
Real Estate General
link. (304) 424-7600 priG&lt; the Minority Bulin•• De·
to ule date.
voloprnent Divltion bv coiTorma of Solo: Coah "' ling (114) 468·6700 or tol
cortlfiod choclc on doy of froo on 1-(800) 282-1081.
Ille.
RECOMMENDED:
Tho Wood County Bonk Tim l. Dieringer, Chief
ntllt'VOt tho right to bid and
Divloon of Rodometion
to nlject ony or 111 bldo.
Dec. 28. 1888
Doted thlt 20th doy of DoAPPROVED;
comber, 1988.
Joaeph J. Somnier.
,
Wood County Bonk
Director,
Fifth ond Morkot StroMa
Deportment of
Porkoroburg, WV 26101
Notural Reoourt:01
(12) 29, 30;
Dec. 30,1988
(1) I, 6,12,13, 19. 20, Btc (1)8, 1tc
.•

'.thru

Janu-v 6, 1989

Pomeroy-Midclleport. Ohio

Sentinel

BASEMENT
• ""
WATERPROOFING
.. .. ..,.,.
Unconcltlonll NfeUme ou•tn·
l""
,... LoCII r.t•.na. i.lrnil~ . l•.~ , ,.
Free •lmlt•. Clll · oollecr •• ·\

''""' .

'

SWEEPER and •CM"Ing m10hlne
rapalr, part .. 111d IUppll•. Pick
up and dlllv..,. Davll VeaJum
Cleaner. one hell milt up
~ro- Cr.- Ad. Call 814446-0214.

'

111 \

': w, \,

, ""'J"'
· J'"r~
~'·•"·
•"'~ "•

Plilntlng: lnt•5or &amp; Exterio~. ·'~'"': ·
fr ..... lmlt • . C.l 114-448-- " 'H 'o.\,
8344.
• !.':

...

'

~

A ON'S Telwl•lon lerv lc•. • .. ,
House catts on RCA. Ouu1r, . • , .,~
GE . SpecltUng ln. Zenith. Cah ~ t . , ~
304-671-2381 or 814-441- , .
2454.
..
.r;..

.. .

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

.,.

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE, ., , •""~ •f
hDu• cllll 1.-vllling OE, Hot . ...~1 \o
Point. w•her._ drytrl and , ]... rn
~ovea. 304-ts7&amp;.238a
• 1..'

1878 T·llrll Runt good. 351
Win dlor Mglne. 1700. C.ft
814-982-2128.

Ak•sT,.Trtmfring.,dStump :""
Remcwll. Fret 1111met•. C1H ' ........
304-1711-712t.
.. ...
... ' l~

ForagreiltdtllonlnWtotulld
• · truakor•n. -Kenny Bin .82
at Jim Mink Chevrol•t·
Oldt.-o. 814-448-3872 or
304-713-1134.

1884 Ch'""' II - · llotlon

-sJQn. I cyj, IUta. YetY eolld
cor. !NY trodo or •1,800.00.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1178llnoolnMtrk IV, tti80.00.
call 304-17&amp;-2111 eflar 1:00
PM.
1981 Ford Eooort lor lllo.
304-176-8&amp;39:
.
'17 VW bolg. AM-FM ........
Nnl good. lot8 new _. ..
'700.00- 304-176-7418.
'81 CUII011Iupnrno. T-top.PI.
P8. V•l. 304-176-2381.
ttl3 Chryll• Yor.....
e:t 100. 304-1711-1ft3 PlyrnGtth Rill- 47,000
mMa AurwiOOIL t1.100. firm.

10:,.4-~f17=76--:-3t
1 te.-:-::---:---:-:-.
.:.

77

11114 luk* ,_k A . o . - '
11.000 ml• 304-176-382t.
1813 Chryolor E - Clott.
oz. 110(). 304-1?6-4480. • .
"17 VW 'fox Ol, 4 •door, olr,
am•tm o•ttte. •xc. oand.
304-176-4132 oh• • 6781814.

' ..,1

. -•'
..

.

O.lllpoh. OKlo
Phone 114-441-3888 or 814-

441-4477

84

" 1
•. ,..,,.~

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Realct.ntl .. or comm•elll wirIng. New •.-vtce or r1p.tr1.
Llc.,tlld electrldtn. htlmltt
tr• Rlct.naur Electrlcll, 304176-1788.
85

'

..
••

.,

,

•• f

•'
•'
•t

.

General Hauling

Dll•d Wit• Slf'VIet: Pool•.
Wollt. O.llvory Anylimo. Coli 514-44S. 7404-No
Sunct., caU•.

Clot••·

J • J W•• ~eNloe. Swimming
r4tt928clot5.1mt, wllo. Ph . 114~

R • R Wll• Sorvloo. Paolo
cla~•n•. wltla. Immediate.
1.000
or Z.OOO gllono dlllvory.
c.n 304-671-1370.

~;:::::;:;:;:;:;::;:===:::.
'B? U pholstery

'I
I

I

'•

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
COf. Fou~h .nd Pine

304-171-1887.
'78 Ford Flllto, 4 C¥L good
cond. tiOO.OO. Phono il04171-2417

I

F.ny Tr11 Trlminlng, ltUmp · '\' .,,,.
rwnovll. Call304-878-1331 • . ~, ,~·~"1
~' ·• '' '
Rot.., or a.bte tool ct'lltn g. ;.. ,
Maatweh oompl.ted•.-n•drt. ' " 1 ,~
PUmp .... .,d .-vice. 304- , .;...1
88 1-3802
' .,

1186 VW Golf. 4 door. 5 apood.
air, AM-F'M c••lllte. Low mi-.
...... _ condition. aiOoo. Coli
814-992-2158.

197201dtCutl-goO((cond. 2
- · lrt. 1480 304'176-24&amp;7.
84 Pontloc Fl•o. blodl. MC.
cond.. nlliN tlr-. br.tl;• •
ltruto.304-171-1110.

•

1·114-237·0488. dov or night. • •;
Roger•B111m"ent '•·tt•
W.t•prooflng.

.

·~

..-·, j·
,,
.,.. ••
•
•.
t
.. . I

. ,., ""' f'

•

.

.. If
.. t

~
Mow r.,•1 Uphollt.tno ..,lng
'_
trloountylrM23y .... 'Thabllt
... :
in .. rniiUN UfholnMtng. C.ft
'": 11
304·871-4 14 lor hoe . . ,
llllm••·
..... "'
_......._

�•

•

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Friday. Janwwv e. 1989
Middl rt Ohio
P
-~~~~~1~0:!~~~0~~-l~y~SMm~~-n~~~--~~~~~~~~------~~~ma~~o!v::~=~~~·~~~----------~~----·~----~:-~~~~~~~~

Easterll part of

NATIONALWEATHERSEPIVICEFORECASTTO'TAMESTH-89

'
•'

I

0

E:·:~ fsNOW

8

RAIN
~SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded
Map shows mirimum temperatures . Atleast50'Yo ol any shaded area is forecast
to receive p&lt;ecipita~on indicated
•
.
UPI
WEATHER MAP - Durin!{ early Saturday momlng, snow Is
forecast for parts of the northern Intermountain Region, the
central and norther11 Plains, the upper Mlsslil'slppl ValleY, ancl the
upper Great Lakes. Showers are possible In most of the Pacific
Coast Stales and the GuH Coast States. Rain/showers are possible
1n parts of the Ohio Valley and the mid Atlantic Coast. Snow Is
possible In most of the Intermountain Region and most of the
central and northern Plains. UPJ

11

ft

By !Jolted Press Jnternalional
Freezing rain, sleet and snow
lashed the eastern part of the
country Friday from Iowa to
Pennsylvania, sending homeless
people scurrying for shelter and
prompting officials In some
areas to take emergency mea·
sures to keep roads open.
Moderate snow was falling
over northeast Iowa and south·
ern Wisconsin, the National
Weather Service said.
Two Inches accumulated over
northeast Iowa slnce ·Thursday
evening. In WisconSin, over ,3
Inches had fallen at Menomonee
Falls and 2 Inches of new snow
was on the ground at Madison. ·
Snow also was falling nioder·
ately across lower Michigan, and
forecasters said between 1 and 3
Inches of snow was expected to
· fall before the snow tapered off.
Snow and freezing drizzle was
expected In northeast Iowa,
northwest llllnols and the south·
ern third of Wisconsin.
Weather advisories for a mix·

Stocks

. ,i ------Weather-----Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio
Sunday through Tuesday
Tonight : Cloudy, with a low
Rail! and snow Sunday, but {air
between 35 and 40. South winds 10
Monday
arid Tuesday. Highs will
to 15 mph~ Chance of preclpita·
be
between
45 and 45 Sunday and
tion 20 percent. .
,
In
the
30s
Monday
and Tuesday.
Saturday: Mostly cloqdy and
Early
morning
lows
will be In the
breezy, with a slight chance of
30s
Sunday,
In-the
20s
Monday,
rain. Highs will be-1&gt;etween 55
and 60. Chance of rain 30 percent. and between 15 and 25 Tuesday.

---Local news briefs...- - contlnued from page 1

Squads have 8 calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports eight
calls Thursday; Rutland at~ : 18 a.m. to Romaine Road !or Levy
McGrath to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 11:17
a.m. to Route 7 for Geo"rge Hensley to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Pomeroy at H : 28 a.m. to Route 7 !or Eloise Boston to
Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 11:35 a.m. to
North Second for Phyllls Blake to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 12:20 p.m. to Reedsville for W!lllam Hoselton to
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 12:56
p.m . to Sumner Road for Betty Farrar to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Rutland squads at 2: 39 p.m. transported Bobby Wright and
Tracy Wright from an auto accident on Route 124 to Holzer
Medical Center; Raclne ·at 9: 54p.m. to Trouble Creek Road for
Mary Kearns to Holzer Medical Center.

:·

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Dally stock prices
(As of 10:38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark ,Smlth
of Blunt, Ellis A: Loewi
Am Electric Power ............ .26%
AT&amp;T .. ............................... 28~
Ashland 011 .. .......... ... ...... , .. 34 ~
Bob Evans .... ... ...... ............. 14%
Charming Shoppes .. .... .. ...... 16~
City Holding Co .... .. ............. 21
Federal Mogul .............. .-.... .49!-2
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................51%
Heck's ... .. ..... .......... .. ........ ... %
Key Cen turton .. ..... .. .. ........ .. 15
Lands' End ... .............. ........ 28%
Limited Inc ...... ........... ....... 29!-2
.Mullimediirinc ..... .... .. .. ..... .75%
Rax Restaurants .... .... .......... 2%
Robbins &amp; My~rs....... ... .... ... 14 34
Shoney's Inc ..... .............. ,.. .. 7%
Wendy's Intl. .............. ........... 6
Worthington Ind ...... ..... .. .... 23%
(Charming Shoppes an·
nounced that Its December sales
were tip 32' percent. Go(Hiyear
\ declared a S.4$ dividend, payable
March 15, to shareholders of
record Feb. 16. Limited Inc.
announced thai Its · December
sales were up 39 percent.)

•

Meteorites, he said, are pieces
of the solar system that are not
easily obtainable.
"'The composition Is what we
might find In rocks near the
center of the earth," Hansen
saud, "They"d be about 4 ,!-2
b!Jllon years old, about the age of
the solar system."
· Fireballs are fairly common In
Ohio, but he said he knows or only
seven meteorites that have fallen
In the state.
,._.

;Traveling youth
:revival scheduled

:Rev.
.

IEMEMBER
wnH' fLOWRS
.......,......,,_.call

e h=-'='
orvtoM

•

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP .
.. .,,.,. IFav ttmerltt"Send~ Low
, "" ..r.rin ., ttr.snl

--.

'

'

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Page B-1

-fllBiuring """
•$2,51Xl in l1ltXI8Y'
S/Mngcou~

GREETS
- Ubyan leader Col. Gadhall waves
the A1 Kablr Hotel in Tripoli after a press
to his supporters
conference on Saturd~. (REUTER)

;Gadhafi proposes
:t8lks with U.S.

ing siting of commen:ial hazardous
waste treallllent facilities in the
area was one of ''what's next?"
Thm Walsh, local spdtesmaJi for
Aptus Environmenlal Services, led

(. p~rcent.

the parade of surprised officials at
the action Thursday night
"We wiU continue to work on
our permit to submit, but this con·
stant changing of positions by the
commissioners malc.es it difficult,"
Walsh said. pointing out that Aplus
has not presented an application for
any facility in Mason County as
yet.
Walsh said his company would
(See cmzENS, A5)

By DICK THOMAS
Tlmes-Sendne1 Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
recorded Its first traffic fatality
of 1989 at 12:30 a.m. Saturday
when a Galllpolls youth died In
the wre·c kage of his pickup truck
after an accident on State Route
141, In Perry Township, about 13
mlles south of Gallipolis. Two·
passengers were slightly Injured
In the accident.
The State Highway Patrol said
the truck driven by Sean C.
Harris, 17, 487 Kathy St., Galllpolls, slid off the right side of the
road, struck a guard rail, and
then went down an embankment,
landing on Its top. Damage was
heavy to the truck.
The victim was trapped In the
vehicle and had to be freed with
the. "'Jaws of Life." Two passengers, Matthew W. Johnson,
18, Rt. 3, Galllpolls, and Darrell
L. Patrick, 16, 31 Evans Heights,
GaiiJpous; suffered·minor vis lble
Injuries but were not treated. The
patrol said none of the tliree

people In thevehlclewas wearing
a seat· belt.
·
Hatr!s was the son of AI L.
Harris and Pam Harris Dotson,
both of Gallipolis. He was a
senior at Gallla Academy High
School and a member of the Key
Oub. He was also an Eagle Scout
from Boy scout Troop 200.
Funeral services will be con·
ducted Monday, 1 p.m. at First
Church of the Nazarene, with
bu rtal In Oh lo Valley Memory
Gardens.
TI1e Gallla County Sheriff's
Department sent the " Jaws of
Life," on another accidental 9: 10
a.m. Saturday at the junction of
SR 160 and 554.
Troopers said David F . :RI·
chardson, 48, Ewlngton , was
headed north on SR 160 and
Richard T. Anderson, 38, Bid·
well, east on SR 554. Troopers
said Anderson pulled onto SR 160
and coUlded with the Richardson
veh.lcle. Damage was heavy to
both cars.
Both drivers were Injured ·and

Murder trials slated
McARTHUR - Three people
Indicted In the December death
of 71-year-old Jackson resident
Dick McGoon are faclqg tenta·
tlve trial ilates tn VInton County
Common PI eas Court:
Oscar Hiiinblln, 25, Creola,
charged with aggravated
murder, aggravated robbery,
kidnapping and two counts of
grand theft, Is to be tried Feb. 1,
Common Pleas Judge Michael
Brame determined. The aggra·
vated murder charge carries a
· death penalty specification, ac·
cording to the !ndlctmerit.
Hamblin's wife, Teresa, 23,

Creola, Is to be tried Jan. 31. Her
brother, Mike Caldwell, 20, Well·
ston, Is tentatively set to be tried
Jan. 30.
Teresa Hamblin ahd Caldwell
were each lnd lcted on charges of
complicity to aggravated
murder, complicity to aggra· ·
vated robbery, complicity to
kidnapping and two counts of
complicity to grand theft.
The three have been charged In
the death of McGoon, whose body
was found Dec. 6 In the Mead
Experimental Forest In Vinton
County.

at the
takwen to Holzer Medical Cen· Saturday on SR 7,
ter . Richardson, who was tern· Intersection of mile post26, near
porarlly trapped In his vehicle, · the French Quarter, at Kanau ga.
Troopers said William 01·
was freed by the "Jaws of Life."
daker,
22 . 1619 Chatham. Ave ..
He was treated and released
Gallipolis,
headed south and lost
from the Emergency Room a few
control.
His
car wentoffthe road,
hours hours after the accident.
striking
a
guy
wire to a utility
Anderson was also treated and
pole,
highway
signs
and a man
released from Holzer.
hole
cover.
Damage
was
heav y.
The patrol cited Anderson for
Oldaker
told
the
patrol
he met
I allure to yield 'the right of way at
on
l)ls
side
or the
a
white
jeep
an Intersection and for not
road and swerved to avoid a
wearing s seat belt.
Both drivers claimed minor collision. Oldaker suffered a
Injuries In an accident at 11:15 minor Injury but refused
a.m., Friday on Hannan Trace treatment.
The patrol charged Oldaker
Road , 0.2 miles east of SR 775.
Troopers said Marvin M. with driving under the Influence
Church, 56,_Rt. 1, Northup. met a and failure to maintain control.
Another driver refused treattruck driven by Ryan G . Sinclair,
22, Shade, O'hlo, applied hls . ment after an accident at 9: 54
brakes ~nd slid left of center, p.m . Friday on SR 7, 0.3 miles
coll!dlng with the truck. Neither south of mlle post 30, near
driver was· treated. Damage was Addison.
Troopers said Kammy Sayre,
heavy to both vehicles. There
23, Addison, head ed north, had
was no citation.
The driver refused treatment stopped on the left side of the
(See GALLIA, A3)
in an accident at 2: 47 a.m,

Early morning fire destr.)ys
Meigs County mobile.home
EAST MEIGS - The mobile home of Paullne LaBonte was
destroyed by lire early Friday morning.
Chester Fire Department Chief Bruce Myers reported his
department, al'ong with Racine and Bas han, were called to the
, s~en~ at 6: ~1 a.m.. Appare~lll)l. the flre was discovered by a
neighbor. The 'Bashan Department was already on the scene
when Chester and Racine arrived, but the home was already
engulfed In flames.
The home was located approXImately two mlles from State
Route 248 on County Road 28 (Bashan-Raclne Road). No famlly
members were home at the time of the fire, and no Injuries were
reported.
.
The origin of the fire remains unknown, but It appears to have
started In the center of the trailer, Myers said. Myers believes
the home was Insured.

State backs. board on Webb suspension
By JEANNIE SURFACE
OVPStaff
'

A hearing examiner for the West
Virginia Education and State
Employees
Grievance
Board
backed up the Mason County
Board of Education, and Superin·
tendent Charles Chambers • suspension of Bill Webb in a ruling that
was released Friday.
M. Drew Crislip has ruled that
Webb was insubordinate in not following the dress code directive, and
that the board and superintendent
had the right ui suspend hiiiJ; Cris·
lip also Slated that Webb faded to
show that his employment conuact
was violated, a claim he had made
throughout the hearing, and
previous county hearings. , .
Webb had stated in earlier county
suspension hearinss thai i'!lplemen-

tatiim of the new dress code made a
change in the tenns of his conuact.
Webb sajd Saturday morning that
he plans 10 appeal the decision to
the Circuit Court of Kanawha
County. ·
"We'D run it through the process
and see what happens," said Webb.
"Either way, I'm satisfied. I can get
up in the morning, look in the mirror and not be ashamed of what I
see. I don't feel like I've lost anything.'' Webb added.
Webb said that if anything, he
hopes something will co~e out of
the situation to benefit other teacher
and employees in the Slate.
The veteran teachers said that if
he receives an unfavorable ruling at
the circuit cllurt level, he would
appeal again. "ICs not over until it's

over."

After rece•vmg the decision from adminisuators employed
Friday afternoon, Chambers said, 'within the county, including the
"The only thing I've ever wanted teacher's principal or the superinwas whar was best for Mr. Webb tendent of schools.
An employee must abide by all
and the students of Mason County.
Mr. Webb could still be teaching of the rules and policies put into efschool today if he had followed the fect during his employment tenn,
established procedures in redress- the ruling stated,
"A county board of education
ing his disagreement with the board
may adopt the actions of its superof education.
· "He continuously refused, not intendent of schools;" Crislip
only me, but the pnncipal of Point · stated, and by the board's upholdPleasant High School and Mason ing of the four-day suspension,
County Board of Education thereby which was Webb's first suspension.
being ruled by the hearing ex· the board "made Chambers' policy
aminer to be insubordinate to these its own. Therefore, Chambers'
individuals," Chambers added.
authority to unilaterally promulgate
Crislip further stated his decision the same is not in issue.'
in the ruling "An order for a
Webb also filed an appeal with
teacher to comply with board of the state hearing examiner on his
education policy need not come · firing, but a decision has not yel
from the board of education itself, been reached on that matter.
but may also . appropriately co'me

Mourning
begins over
llirohito

Eastern budget approved

BY SHOPPING AT THE PRESCRIPTION SHOP
. YOU WILL IE KEEPING AT LEAST ONE OF
YOUR NEW 'YEAI'S IESOLUTIONSI

IIDDUPORT, OH. •

Sunday, partly cloudy : Low
In 30s. Chance of rllin 30

Gallia youth dies in wreck

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. Reaction to the lalest move by
Mason County Commissioners to
again reverse their stand on allow-

271 NORTH SECOND

Along the River ....... .. B1·8
Bu.slness ..•• .•......... •.. •..•. Dl
Com lcs· ... ............ .. .. Insert
ClassUleds ....... .. ....... . D:l-7
Editorial .. ... ......... ........ A2
Deaths ......... ... ...... .... ... A3
Sporls ...... ......... .... .. ;. C1-6

Midd!eport.:.. Pomaroy-Gallipolis-Poin,t Pleasant, January 8. 1989

-.

WELL, IF YOU RESOLVED TO fiND A
PHARMACY WITH:
.
.
•Low Pre&amp;criptlon Price&amp; •Photo Finishing
•Free Delivery •Replacement Contact Lens
Service •Monthly Sales Specials •Shop at
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the Prescription Shop.
·

Inside

tmes -

By GLENN McCASLAND
OVPStaff

$2.00 Per Person

Cl

•

Citizens· surprised
over Mason decision

SATURDAY, JANUARY 7, 1989

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
99J-6669

In Our Town: It's time to buy dog licenses...
Page 87

LONDON (UP.I) - Libyan
Gadhafl's remarks Saturday
leader Moammar Gadhafl said . came lri his first direct public
Saturday he would like to meet statement since U.S. Navy jets
with officials of President-elect shot down t~o Libyan MIGs In a
George Bush's administration to • dogfight Wednesday over the
discuss disputes between the two Mediterranean.
countries that have escalated In
"America should understand
the past week,
that the policy of force, threat
·,
''BUsh's administratiOn should and terrorism, and the policy of
sltface to face with Libya around gunboats, aircraft carriers and
the negotiating table so that we s iege, have .. sharply failed, "
could agree on disputed Issues," Gad hall said.
Gadhafl told reporters In Tripoli
"'America should open direct
lnremarkscarriedbytheLlllyan · negotiations with Libya and slt
news agency Jana and mon1t01;ed around the negotiating table .
by the British Broadcasting America should put arms aside
Corp.
· so that we could establish peace
As U.S. allegation&amp; that Libya In the Mediterranean and the
has built a chemical weapons · world .
plant continued to overshadow a
"I believe that the Bush
Paris conference on chemical administration Is capable of this,
weapons, Gadhafl was also and that It has learned enough
quoted as saying he Is ready to lessons derived from the policy pf
join any International committee force and terrorls'll which
set up to Inspect suspect proved to be Ineffective." Gad·
factories.
hafl said.

Natlonll
DI#Dunt Program

~~

1

1

You'll get agreat deal with lhe Club!

A marriage license has been
Issued In Meigs County .Probate
Court to Gregory Michael Willett, 24, Middleport, and Atrlcla
Lynn Louden, 33, New Haven,
W.Va.

9:00 p.m.•l :00 a.m.

.

HELLRAISER II

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

; A traveling youth revival Is
:being hosted by four local
, churches and Is scheduled to be
: held Thursday, Friday and Sat·
urday, Jan . 12,13 and 14.
• Thursday night's service Is
: being hosted by the . Ru tiand
: Church of God and the RuJiand
' free Will Baptist Church and w!ll
: be ·held at tlie Rutland Free Will
Baptis t Church. The se.rvice w!ll
• begin at 7 p.m. with Rev. Ralph
, Cundiff as tile guest minister.
; Friday night's service wlll be
• held at the Mission Church Ill
: Syracuse. The service will begin
; at 7p.m'. with Rev. John Evans as
: the guest minister.
On Saturday night, the service
•wlll be held at the Ash Street Free
1
Wlll Baptist Church In Middle: port. ThIs service will begin one
' half hour later at 7:30p.m . with
; Rev . Mark Morrow as the guest .
:minis ter.
: Special singing wlll be featured
;each. night and a pizza party wlll
be held after the Saturday
'service.
·
! For more Information, call
Mark Morrow al992-3661.
.
'

Beat of the Bend: Local candidates sought ...
Page B8

COLONY THEATER

RIVERBOAT INN ·
•

Brighter
holidays

Eastern menu

BLITZKRIEG BAND

''

50 cents

Bengals, Bills clas·h today

..

' Maniage licences

NOW APPEARING

·

.

Veterans Memorial
Thursday aadmlsslons
Grace Krider, Long Bottom; Roy
Showalter, Pomeroy; Phyllis
Blake, Middleport.
Thursday discharges - Effie
Buskirk.
·

Continued from page 1

; disappeared.
' He said that repor t came from
, the· northern part of Columbus,
' but that there had been reports
i from throughout the capital city, ·
! .and from opposite ends of the
. : state.
! Hansen said fireballs are spot·
' ted all over the country quite
: regularly.
1
·'There were two last year I'm '
aware of In Ohio," he said, noting
: that one seen lrr March was also
• seen over Wisconsin, Michigan
; and Kentucky.
; He said one seen In June over
; Columbus drew so many reports
a·bout a possible plane crash that
1
sheriff's deputies as far north as
: Delaware County were out look·
: Jng '!or a downed plane ..

rai~

Hospital news

·L-------------------------------------------1
i
.

! Bright...

• county c·ourt'
MeuJ's
-e·

The Disabled American Veterans and Ladles Auxlllary wlll
meet Monday, 7 p.m·. , at the post
home on Butternutr Ave. In
Pomeroy.

An entry cancelling all recorded and non..recorded deputy
sheriff commissions made previous to Sherlft James Souisby's
term of office 'bas been filed In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. A record of all new commissions for deputies shall be
filed with the Meigs County Clerk of Courts.

hit by sleet,

major arteries open to auto '
ture of snow and freezing rain . from the cold.
.
The Long Island R~ll Road trafflc.
were In effect early Friday for
Freezing rain and sleet was
police union' s action Thursday
northeast Indiana, lower Michl·
as far SOI\th as the
reported
came hours after two men died
gan, northern Ohio and western
Piedmont
In North Carolina ,
P ennsylvan ia. A winter slorm from exposure as Icy 18 mph
forecasters
said.
winds whipped the chill factor
warning was In effect for ex·
Snow
also
was falllng over
down to minus 21 degrees.
treme nor~eas t Ohio.
much
of
the
western · United
Homeless people across the
The Inclement weather ex·
States,
and
rain
was falling along
city flocked.to terminals and bus
tended Its reach into Washington,
D .C., and parts of West VIrginia, ·stations, and pollee between 4 parts of the Pacific Cbast.
p.m. and midnight Thursday
Vlrglnla, Maryland, Pennsylva·
nla. New Jersey, Delaware and
piCked up seven homeless people
In Eureka~ Nev ., between 6and
New York state.
from the streets to take them to .. 8 Inches of new snow fell. Ten
A police union In New York shelters.
Inches of snow fell between Ely
threatened to defy new railroad
In Maryland, state police lm· and Elko, Nelf. The snow com·
mana'gement orders to "keep the plemented a snow emergency blned with winds between 60 and
homeless moving" : In Perin Sta· plan for Prince George County 70 mph to produce zero vislbllf·
_
·
lion where they sought refuge early Friday. working to keep ties In the area.·
•
The Lake Tahoe ski areas on
the Callfornla·Nevada border
recetvedheavyamountso!snow.
Between 1 and 2 feet were
The following indlviduals were suspended to two days, six
reported.
·
fined this week In Melg5 County months probation, assault.
The snow was expected to
Court by Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Jonathan Fout. Waverly, $868 move Into Utah, where 1 to :Ueet
Donald · R. Crites, ReedsVille, and costs, overload; Lew FriSby, was forecast for the mountains •
$250 and costs, three days' In .jail, Wellston, $283, overlOad; Ml· and 4 to~ -Inch acc\lmulatlons In ·
60 day license suspension, DWJ; chael L. Amos, Racine, $30 and
valley areas.
Melvin .Lee, Pomeroy, $250 and costs, failed to control; Zane A.
Up to 8 Inches of snow was
costs, thr ee days In jail, 60 day Beegle, Racine, $30 and costs, .. expected to fall over higher
license suspension, DWI; $75 and failed to control; Jimmy D. elevations of Arizona.
costs, three days In jail to be Jackson, Coolville, costs only,
served concurrently with other disorderly conduct whlle lntoxl·
Snow has also been falling
sentence, driving under suspen· cated; Ruth Arnold, Syracuse, from western Wyoming, across
stan; Margaret A. Cox, Cheshire, $10 and costs, failed to yield.
eastern Montana and Into .west·
30 days In jalls suspended. two
Flneq forspeedlngwereJames ern North Dakota, the NWS sal d.
years probation, costs, petty E. Darst, Marlon, $24 and costs; Western and north central North
theft; Dana Swiger, Reedsville, John B. Toney, Dunbar, W.Va., Dakota was expected to receive 2
$25 and costs, 30 days In jall $22 and costs; Douglas W. to 6 Inches of new snow.
The Northeast had another
Beaver, Pomeroy, $23 and costll;
Robert C. Mitchell, Galllpolls, cold night, with rea,:Jings dipping
$23 and coslli; Darrin K. John· below zero . for much~!- New
ston, Langsville, $20 and costs : England. Much of the nation had
The menu for cafeterias of the Wendell Bennett, Columbus, $25 temperatures In the 20s and 30s.
Eastern Local School District for and costs; Jeffrey Newberg,
the week of Jan. 9 is announced:
Huntington, W.Va.. $30 and
Monday - hot dog, sauce, costs; John C. Sheets, Richmond,
french fries, fruit. m llk.
Va .. $27 and costs.
Tuesday- chut, peanut butter
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
Bonds were forte! ted by Bryan
sandwich, pickles, fruit, milk.
K. Landers, Columbus, $55;
Wednesday - cheeseburger, Douglas W. Kemp, St. Albans,
green beans, cherry crisp, milk. W.Va. , $55; Ralph D. Rallte,
R
Thursday - taco" salad with Point Pleasant. W.Va., $55; Jef·
Claire Higgina
corn chips, peas, fruit , chocolate . frey D, McCall, Murray City,
chip.cookie, milk.
ADMISSION $1.00 PER PERSON
$75; and Lois A. Taylor, Dublin,
Friday - cook's cook.
$55, all for speeding.

To meet Monday

Old deputy commissions canceled .

natio~

Sunday

PEOPLES BANK
IIEIIBEll
F.DJ.C:

IYEWHAVEN
882-2135

POINT PLEASANT

IIIASON

875-112"1

773-51114

TOKYO (UPI) -Huge crowds
of mourners. many weeping
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern Local Board of Education
openly and bowing In reverence,
adopted a ' 'statement of needs" budget of $3,057,959 In the
swarmed to the Imperial Palace
general fund for fiscal Y,ear 1989-90, when they met Thursday.
In TokYo Sal urday to pay their
This general fund figure, which Is $61~,105 more than projected
last respects to the late Emperor
revenues for 1989-90, emphasl2es the severe financial condition
Hlrohlto as Japan entered a
of the district.
·
solemn gerloo or mourning.
In addition, the board also adopted budgets of $15,788 In bond
Hlrohlio, 87, who died earller In
retirement; $301,952 In school funds, activity funds and State
· the day In hls bed at the palace
and Federal programs; and S217,800 In lunchroom and uniform
'!allowing a long battle against
·
supply funds.
cancer, was . Immediately suc·
Dr. Dan Apllng, Eastern superintendent, reported on a recent
ceeded by his eldest son, Crown
evaluation of the district by the Ohio Department of Education. ·
Prince Akthlto, 55, who became
The reporf summary said parents, teachers, adminiStrators
the 125th emperor of Japan.
and students should be proud of the way Eastern Local Schools
The funeral, which will be the
are meeting the educatiOnal needs of students. A strong
first such Imperial ceremony In
commitment to students by the teaching staff has helped to
Japan since 1927, Is expected to
offset current financial dlfflcultles.
. .,
be held In 45 days In keeping with
Re-elected board president and vice-president year were Jim · " tradition and to allow officials to
Smith and Kathy Manlcke, respectively. The board established
prepare for th~ elaborate evenl. ·
meeting dates as the fourfh Wednesday of every month. at 7: 30
Alth,ough no announcement
p.m .
has been made, the ceremony
The next regular meeting of the board will be Jan. 25 at the
was expected to be held on Feb.
high school.
·
·
24 with top world leaders In
Board members present were Smith, Manlcke, and Susie 1
attendence.
·Heines, Ray Karr and 1.0. McCoy.
·
·
(See MOURNING, AG)

..;, -

!

'

.

MONARCH DIES- The picture of the .late
Emperor Wrobllo, on a bed of U,OOO peiU"IIIn the
showcase of a major Jewelry shop In Tokyo, draw.s
---.~

the Hrlo.- atleatlon of a If&amp;tle girl )18811inr by on
Saturday following the death of the monarch.
(REUTER)

)

/.

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