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'

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

.

r

Pomeroy-Midcleport. Ohio

Thursday, Janul!ry 26. 1989

Toporanked

Ohio Lottery

IDinois upset
by _Gophers

Daily Number
916
Pick4
3246

Page 3

.

.

50s.

•

•

'

fMI1. ADVUIITISED
IIIIEP! C H&amp;NQISE POLICY
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Clear tonight. Low near 30.
Saturday, sunoy : High In mid

11 I

Vo1.39. No.184
Copyri!ht.d1989

•
2 Seetiona, 14 Pagea :l6 Cants
A Mul11midlo Inc. Nowopeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. January 27. 1989

Ohio school leaders voice opinions on budget
By LEE LEONARD

UPI Stateho1111e Reporter
COLUMBUS - William Cool·
ier. chancellor of the Ohio Board
of Regents. said Thursday that
higher education Is being "hung
out to dry'" in Gov. Richard
Celeste's new two-year budget
proposal.
But Lee Walker, director of the
state Office of Budget and
Management, said the colleges
and universities· were treated as
fairly as -any other agencies and
programs, Including Primary
and secondary education, when
available money was doled out in

2

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For

30%~35%

Our 12.99·13.99 Ea. Separates. Choice of
tops in S-M-l , or pants in Jr./m1sses ' 5/6-17/18
Our14.99, Women'sTops•OrCottonJeons.. , $10 .
' 18W

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Sale Price. Automatic Sale Price. Yes laun·
dishwasher deter·
dry detergent with
gent. 50-oz. net wt.
fabric softener. 64 oz.•

'' 18W-2't1W 32 ·d2 Stvtes r epte~fllaftveo( grqup

'FI 01

4 68
•

Sav

25"/:

to meet Inflated costs In 1990-91.
without any increased programs .
''This Is not a budget of either
modest growth or even stab!!·
ity,'" he said. "It's a budget of
cuts." '

The governor's budget, sent to
the Legislature earlier this week,
calls for $3.244 billion for higher
education, compared with a flat
$3 billion during the current
biennium.
Celeste said his budget Is
predicated on voter approval
·later this y,e ar of a 1 percent
Increase In Individual and corpo·
rate income tax rates, which

lu5AI

Save 43% •-·-•
Our 44¢ Pkg. Action microwave popcorn in
choice Of regular or butter flavors . 3-oz . net wt .

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
A donation of $4,935 from the
Athletic and Band Boostllrs organizations of the d!str!c~ was
accepted'W~dnesday night when
the Eastern Local School District
Board of Education met in
regular session.
It was pointed out that without
the donation from the organizations a sp.rlng sports program in
the district would have been
. Impossible due to financial circumstances In the district. How·
ever, the coaching positions are
now being advertl.s ed slllce the
donation has been presented.
Following an executive session
to discuss personnel, the board

Sale Price Pkg. Delicious snacks the entire
family will enjoy. Choose from Cheez Bolls.
Cheez Curls. nacho,or traditional tortilla chips .
5•1 ~Ol ·net·WI pkg

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Women's step·ins with
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Sale Price Skein. 4·ply yarn of
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solid colors or 3-oz• ombres.
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WAL'MRS INTERVIEW TONIGHT - Bar·
bara Walten, co-boot of ABC-TV's "20-20,"
Interviews Col. Muammar Khadafl Ill his tent In
Tripoli. The IDtervlew wUI be aired on ABC today
a1 10 p.m. During the Interview Walters asks

Khada!i If he hopes to talk dlrectl;y with President
George Bush. "Direct dialogue wllh the U.S. Is a
neeesslty If we want to buDd correct, sound and
healthy relations," Khadafl said.

Ohio Department of Transportation
warns traveling public: of snowplows

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kitchen towel of absorbent
100% cotton 18x28" size.
40%

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Sale Price Pkg. Chocolate
treats in choice of peanuts .
raisins , drops. 10-oz. net wt.

Sale Price Pkg. Crunch 'N
Munch in choice of delicious
flavors. 5-oz .-net·wt. box .

78¢~

138 ~

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Sale Price Ea. Crest tooth·
paste in choice of formulas to
suit your Individual needs.

Sale
Scratch Guard is
. ' Price.
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on ideal both and kitchen
cleaner. 26-tl.·oz. size. Save'

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soap. 4J 3.5·0z.· net-wt. per·
sonol ·size bars. Shop Kmart!

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Delicious coffee ideal for
home. office or school. 24,
1.3-oz.-net-wt. pkgs. Buy!

Sale Price Pkg. Ruffles potato
chips ore a great snack for the
entire family' 6.5-oz. net wt .
•

Sale Price. Aluminum
foil in 12"x25' size . ldeol for a
variety of food storage needs.

•

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Sale Price Ea. Murphy oil
soap with trigger spray Ideal ,
for general cleaning . 22 fl. oz.

APLU

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77

~Save
20%
Our 97¢ Pkg. Jobe's house·
plant spikes ore s~ecially for·
• muloted to promote growth.

MARIETTA - Although Sou- snowplow during a storm, with·
theastern Ohio hasn't had to out having a motorist on your
worry much about the snow this tailgate," says Bill Thomas, a
winier, the Ohio Department or snowplow operator from Morgan
"'Transportation wants to suggest -County and ODOT state roadeo
runner-up.
r proper driving techniques to
According to Thomas, drivers
motorists when approaching a
should
maintain sure clear dis·
snow plow In a storm.
tance
before
trying to pass.
"Many drivers don' I know how
MotoristS
should
allow plenty of
to pass a snowplow safely," says
roadway
before
accelerating,
Paul Hoffman , operations engisound
a
brief
warning
signal on
neer for ODOT's District 10.
and
be
assured
the
vehicle
horn
"They should use added caution
when approaching the big yellow of clearance before steering back
'•
ODOT trucks." Hoffman added. · Into the right lane. ·
ODOT sends Its spowplows out
The snowplow operators aren't
just plowtn!nhe snow. They have· to clear and treat the roads as
to regulate the spreadl~!!t of soon as there Is snow to clear.
'"Most people expect us to be out
clnd!rs and salt. guide the plow,
the
minute It starts snowing, but
answer the two-way radio. and
according
to a state directive, we
operate other controls In the
cannot
put
crews on the roads
truck.
until
the
snow
begins to affect the
"It's difficult enough to run the
roads," Hoffman explained.

'

State Representative Jolynn
Boster (0-Galllpolis) and S'tate
Senator Jan Michael Long (DCirclevnle) Introduced leg!sla·
tlon Thursday which would prohibit the state auditor from
charging financially ·troubled

_........____

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Plus or Spectra. 20 exp total.
,.,..,, 7 Pl-9~

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files will help keep you organized . Ideal for dorm . orf,ce .

1.67~~
Our 2.27 Pack. 4·pack light
bulbs in choice of 40·, 60· .
75- or 100-w brightness.
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MHS student to face charge

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Federal lightning .22 L.R.
ammo•. 136 high-velocity
rounds per Hb.-net-wt. bog.

Sate Price Ea. Round or
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Rect./Duallleom...... Ea., 7.97
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Sale Price Gal. Prestone anti·
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, freeze helps provide year round protection . Shop today!

.

~

On Sale Thursday, Jan. 26 thru.·Saturday, Jan. 28
t

t.

school districts for the cost of
auditing the district's records.
"Currently, the fiscal situation
of school districts facing an
operating deficit must be certl·
fled by the state auditor before
the district can apply to the

Local news briefs·--

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

15.77

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'

When the crews are sent out,
they each are assigned a route or
routes for which they are respon·
sible. ODOT has the highways
divided Into three categories
upon which the order of treating
and clearing is based -"first
priority routes (interstates and
four-lanes\; second priority
routes (heavily populated and
traveled two-lanesl; and third
priori!~ routes (low-traffic twolanes) .
ODOT's drivers are profes·
sional men and women who have
proven themselves qualified before going out In a snow storm.
Many have faced dangerous
situations as snowplow operators
and several have rescued
.stranded motorists. Their goal is
to keep Ohio's roads safe for the
traveling public.

Proposed bill by Bo~ter and Long
would prohibit state auditors from
charging financial troubled_districts

._....

.,

would provide higher education
with a $660 mllllonlncrease over
current spending.
But Coulter, who described
himself In a state of "agitation,"
said Celeste's budget allows for
only 2.8 percent growth In state
subsidies to co lle11es next year
and 3.5 percent the year after,
meaning the student's s\are of
the cost of college would balloon
from 41 percent to 47 percent the highest percentage since
1982.
"We're told to get the balance
of our needed spending by
increasing student fees by nearly

30 percent in the next biennium,"
he said.
Coulter said neither the governor, legislators nor college trus·
tees would tolerate such a fee
increase.
The chancellor said even primary and secondary schools, the
other partner in Celeste's educa·
lion Initiative, would get In·
creases of 7 percent and 4.7
percent in their basic ald.
He sa"id the budget affords
general government agencies
annual Increases of 10.7 percent
and 6.3 percent.
.

"Higher education Is the only
major state program placed In
this circumstance," said Coul·
ter. "I think we're hanging out
there all by ourselves . I think the
budget is being balanced on the
back of higher education."
Walker disputed Coulter's
claims, saying that when lottery
money - constitutionally ear·
marked for primary and secon·
dary schools - Is discounted,
basic education would receive
only a 2.8 percent Increase ·the
first year and 3.5 percent the
second.

Eastern board accepts $4,935
donation for spring athletics

limil 2

Our 6.27 Pkg. 6 prs. men's
tube socks. Fit 10·13. !APLU621
Our5.17,6Prs.Boys'•Socks, 3.99
'5•res9·\l

$1

D
t=J

the governor's proposal.
Meanwhile, Franklin Walter.
state superintendent of public
instruction, told a legislative
panel that schools cannot walt for
a ballot issue In order to realize a
larger share of funding for fiscal
1990, which begins July 1.
· coulter, who is to testify before
the House Finance Committee on
the budget next Tuesday, sum·
moned reporters to his office and
said, "Higher education Is being
hung out to dry In this budget."
The chancellor said lt would
take an extra $200 million for
colleges and universities merely

A Meigs High School student will face charges In the Meigs
County Juven!le Court as the result of a bomb threat call made
.
to the b!gh school at 7:45a.m. Friday.
The call was traced to a residence and officials began their ·
Investigation. At the hlgb schoo~ Meigs Sheriff James M.
Soulsby, Deputy Jlrnmer Souls by. and Meigs Juvenile Officer
Car) Hysell. questioned two subjects In regard to the call and
Indicated that one of the two willfacecharges ofinc!t!ng a riot In
the juvenlle court. Sber!ff Soulsby said that he will ask that the
youth, If convicted, be given the maximum sentence. .
Classes at the high school were cancelled on Thursday
morning when· a bomb threat was received at the school.
.
.
Continued on page 5

emergency ian fund," Boster and
Long noted In a joint
announcement.
"Adding_ the costs of these
audits tot he schools' deficit
places a further strain on local
resources and Is a wholly Inappropriate response to a school
district's request for
assistanr:P. ''
In fiscal year 1988, a record ·
number of school districts applied for emergency loons from
the state. These districts were
required to pay an average of
$2,793 to cover the coasts of the
audit. The auditor's fees have
r !sen by over 66 percent In the
past four years.
Boster and Long introduced
the legislation In response to the
experience _of Trimble Local
. School Dtstrlctln Athens County.
In 1988, the school board deter·
mined that the district faced a
deficit In the upcomlnR school
Continued on page-s
•

hired Kay L. Wilson, Jozle P.
Roberts. Nina P. Bias and
Catherine Simpson as substitute
teachers for the ba!aace of the
curre_p t year and employed Virgil Windon as a substitute maintenance and bus mechanic for the
rest of the year.
The resignation of Donna Wolf,
a substitute teacher, was accepted since Wolfe has accepted
a full ttme position in another
district. The board joined the
Ohio School Boards Association'
for 1989 and approved some new
and some revised appropriations
for some school distrillt activity
funds.
The liability 1nsurance policy
with the Nationwide Insurance

Co.,lnc!ud!ng'rtders for the three
elementary school parent
teacher organizations and the
athletic and Qand bOosters organIzations was renewed.
The board set Feb. 8 at 7 p.m.
as the date and time for a special
board meeting to deal with
personnel and financial matters.
The meeting w!!l be held In the
himgh school cafeteria.
The treasurer was authorized
to obtain an advance draw of
monies available fr.om the
county auditor for the calendar
year, 19'89. Attending the meeting
were Jim Smith, prestdeent;
Katby Manlcke, vice president,
and members. Susie Heines and
1. o. MeCoy .

•

Economy grows 3.8 % m '88
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Economic expansion, stunted by the
summer drought, slowed to an
annual rate of 2 percent in the
final three months of last year
but still grew by a robust 3.8
percent In all of 1988. the
government said Friday.
In Its preliminary report on
fourth-quarter gross national
product, the value of all goods
and services, the Commerce
Deparlment said the 2 percent
hike in output added $19.8 bllllon
to the economy . In the third
quarter, GNProse2.5percentor
$24.2 billion, according to the
department's Bureau of Eco·
nomic Analysis.
The 2 percent rise In GNP was
the smallest Increase since a 1.4
percent hike In the fourth quarter
of 1986.
Based on these preliminary
figures, GNP from 1987 to 1988
rose !rom 3.4 percent to 3.8
percent - a figure that would
have been 0.4 percentage point
higher except for the swnmer
drought.
The fourth quarter of last year
saw a significant slowdown in
personal spending, and a dip In
non-residential fixed invest·
ment. But the biggest factor In
the slowdown was · the drought.
Losses In crop and livestock

,Open house
set Sunday .
Overbrook Center on Page St.
In Middleport will hold an open
bouse this Sunday from 12: 30
p.m . to 5 p.m.
The general public Is cordially
Invited to the event which will
Include guided tours provided by
the staff and light refreshments
served In the dining room.
Overbrook Center features the
very latest In medical equipment, room design, and:archltec·
tural layout Including extensive
landscaping, spac.!ous private
patient courtyards, three patient
lounges, an attractive dining
room with beam ceiling and a 60
Inch projector televlsloa, an
extensive collection of American
and Impressionist art, large
photographs of 19th cwtury
Middleport nd Pomeroy land·
marks and a closed circuit
patient television system as well
as all electric beds and Hill-Rom
hospital furnishings.
Dr. Harold Brown, owner. and
&lt;;:ontlnued on page 5

production reduced ' the GNP
Increase by about 1.1 percentage
points after taking a 0.5 percentage point bite out of the third
quarter, the department said.
In the first quarter of this year,
when farm output Is expected to
return to normal, the change In
GNP will be raised by about 2.5
percentage point, the govern·
ment said.
The Reagan administration.
now out of office, predicted the
economy will grow by 3.2 percent
In 1989.
Along with a slowdown In
growth, the report showed that
Inflation also cooled off In late
1988.
Inflation as measured by the
fixed weight price Index, which ts
comparable to the Consumer
Price Index, eased to 4 percent
compared with a 5.3 percent
Increase In the third quarter.
The implicit price deflator,
another measure of inflation,
measured 4.7 percent In both of
the last two quarters, the depart·
ment said.
All figures were adjusted for
seasonal variations.
Personal spending - a major
component of the economy rose 2.8 percent or $18.1 billion In
the fourth quarter compared
with a 3.9 percent jump or. $24.8

billion In the third quarter. It was
the smallest hlke In spending
since a 2.1 percent decline in the
last quarter of 1987, the depart·
ment said.
Purchases of services rose 3.7
percent last quarter while pur. chases 'of durable goods - big
ticket Items designed to last at
least three years- increased 2.1
percent Non-durables rose 1.9
percent.
· Non-residential fixed Investment fell3.4 percent In the fourth
quarter, a decrease of $4.6
billion. It was the steepest drop
since a 8.3 percent decline in the
first quarter of 1987, the depart- ·
ment said.
Residential fixed Investment
rose 12.7 percent or $5.8 billion In
the last three months of lastyear.
Exports of goods and services
increased 2.8 percent while Imports jumped 7 percent. the
department said, Indicating the
nation's trade deficit widened In
the fourth quarter !
Federal government purchases Increased 17 percent or
$12.8 billion In the fourth quarter .
with government farm subsidies
accounting for more than half of
the gain. ·
State and local government
purchases of goods and services
rose by $4.6 billion In the fourth
quarter.
"

Mayor Hoffman says vi)Jage
will enforce junk ordinances
In an effort to clean up any broken glass, crockery, tin cans,
unsightly areas of the commun- rubber, ashes and ·all other
Ity, Middleport Mayor Fred discarded maier!als.
Hoffman stated today that the
Any vehicle which ' Is In an
pollee department will be s trlctly operative condition must be
enforcing the provisions of Sec- licensed.
tion 521.11 of the Middleport
It assistance is needed in
Cod!fll!ll Ordinances.
providing for •the disposal of
Section b of this ordinance Inoperative motor veh icles,
states that no person, firm or please contact the mayors office
corporation shall keep, store, at 992·6424 and arrangements
place or allow to remain building may ,be made for the"disposal of
materials, an unlicensed motor these vehicles.
vehicle In an Inoperative condiIn · the event of a violation,
tion or unfit for further use. notice shall be given to the owner
automobile or motor vehicle of the lot or land, or occupant or
parts, scrap metal, refuse or person having charge of the
rubbish on any lot or parcel of premises upon which the violaland within the city.
tion occurs, to cease such viola.
· Any Inoperative motar vehicle tion wttlltn ten days of such
must be disposed of or pat Inside notice. E'ach day after the 10-day
an enclosed bu lldlng and all , period on which the offense
refuse or rubbish must be re. continues shall be deemed a
moved from any parcel of land separate offense.
within the village.
VIolators of this ordinance are
According to Section ~21.11 (a) .sublect to a fine of up to $100 per
refuse means boxes, baskets, . day for each day the violation
wood, rags, old shoes, leather, exists after notification.
- ---'till-- -- ____,
. - - ..-:..... .......!.\.-- --~--

�•
•

.

•

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

'.,

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERF.'!TS OF THE MEIGs-MASON AREA

~lb
t5l m~ r'T"1.-..'-~· ......... =~·­
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

'

WASHINGTON - U Moam- them off \O prison, then crept
mar Gadhafl has become a pain through the darkened streets In ·
In the American derriere, we can the wee hours to arres• the key
thank Richard Nixon, who likes leaders.
Gadhafl displaced a constltu·
to boast · that, whatever his
Inadequacies, he guided U.s. · tiona! government, which had
foreign policy with uncommon succeeded ages of foreign rule
and Imposed puppets. King Idrls
skill.
I had followed a pro-Western
It Is worth recalling, therefore,
how he handled Gadhatl' arrival policy and became the preeml·
nento'll supplier of several NATO
on the world stage. Gadhafl was a
28-year-old communications cou~trles. Overnight, Gadhafl
lieutenant when he overthrew the tore up exlstlng treaties, prolegitimate government of Libya claimed his alignment with radical Arab states and Indulged In
In 1969.
He headed a band of young radical rhetoric and posturlngs.
The young pretender displayed
conspirators, representing no
constituency In partiCular; who all the symptoms of deep hostll·
usurped power at gunpoint. By tty toward the United States. The
an Arabian Nights ruse, they got second day after the coup, the
the palace guards drunk, carried revolutionary junta demanded

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager .'

A MEMBER of The United Presslnternattonal,lnlancl Dally Press
the American Newspaper Publishers Associat!on.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be. less than 300 words
long. All letters are subject toed lUng and must be signEd wUh name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not persCilalttles.

that Wheelus Air Force Base,
then the centerpiece of the U.S.
defense system ln the M~dlterra­
nean, suspend flight operations
temporarUy. The purpose was to
block any arrivals or departures
not under junta control.
The United States Immediately
compiled, thus according sovereignty to what was merely a
splinter group of pretenders ..
Shortly after the junta, the U.S.
Air Force rescued a Libyan Jew
from the Gadhafl' s clutches by
hiding him In a crate supposedly
carrying musical Instruments
and flying him safely to Malta.
The junta raised a howl when the
escape was discovered. The
United States, which In a more
robust age would have gloried In

President Bush great .on ,
rhetoric, short on specifics
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHfNGTON- President Bush Is putting his symbolic ducks In a
row, but the direction of his administration has yet to be defined.
That Is why the politicos are waiting with bated breath for Feb. 9
when Bush delivers his State of the Union address and sends a revised
budget to Congress.
The spending blueprint for the 1990flscal year Is expected to be
along the llnes of the $1.15 trillion budget submitted by President
Reagan Jan. 9. But some changes are expected.
In a rhetorical sense, Bush ls off to a good start. But what does It all
mean. So far, he has offered no specifics. and the verbiage can last
only so long. "A new breeze" and an "offered hand" sound good. But
he soon must deal in tangibles.
Durlng the campaign, he was short on details, but had plans for
being an "education president" and a president who cares about the
·
environment.
. Well and good, and not a moment too soon. But how and when. He
said In his Inaugural address, there Is the will in the country, but not
the wallet. He Is encouraging voluntarism, butlt would be miraculous
lf the problems of poverty and homelessness and hunger can be
solved with the goodwm of volunteers, and Christmas baskets.
He says there Is no public money for the task. But the needs go far
beyond voluntarisn\, an&lt;;[ the onus will be on tne federal .and local
governments to pitch ln. In I he last analysis, human needs may loom
larger than Pentagon demands.
The "how"ls the main question mark now with Bush's plans torthe
future. If there Is no tax Increase, and he apparently Is adamant on
that subject, and no lhcreased revenues, clearly Bus.h will not propose
new Initiatives In social programs.
'There Is an Incredible amount of voluntarism In the country.
Compassion Is there for- all to see. But compassion also will be
required of the Bush administration to '"make life better for the
people of this country," as he put lt In his recent marching orders to
hls top staff.
,
"We are about to embark on a really great adventure," he told hls
senior advisers. ''I think we can, by hard work, make this a safer and
more secure country."
Reagan left behind a country where the division between the rich
and the poor has become more apparent In the last eight years. His
administration encouraged the entrepreneurs and Indeed helped to
restore prosperity with a heavy Infusion of government money
poured Into major mllltary Industries.
The result was-sustained economic expansion, but a burdensome
deficit. It was In line with Reagan's thesis: that the only role of
government was national security. But Lincoln said that government
should do lor people what they cannot do for themselves.
No one knows how far Bush Is prepared to go, and whether he Is
wllllng to restore the cuts In social programs, Including college loans.
He has been touching base with several segments of society trying
to reassure them that the harsh tone of hls campaign ls over and they
will now see a klnder, gentler president.
But he has some proving to do. Once the ·euphoria of the ·
Inauguration has died down, Bush Is going to ,have to determine
whether the country continues to be blatantly split between the haves
and have nots.
While there are many trouble spots In the world, there is also more
tranqulllty.-afler some 40 years of post-war hostlllty. Bush Is more
attuned to world diplomacy and foreign affairs.
Clearly, he has to tackle domestic problems before they fester
more. A whole new domestlc;J!genda apparently is needed.
The president said In his Inaugural address, "I wlll try hard to be
president of all the people."
The disadvantaged will be looking to ,him to make good on that
promise.

Letters to the editor
assistance, and the Bank One
employees who assisted In the
distribution of the coats. Also,' we
thank the Individuals who anO.
nymously donated over $150.00
which helped us purchase those
particular needy sizes.
The community effort for this
project has once again shown the
people of Meigs County are truly
thoughtful and caring.
Gerl Walton, Chairperson
Coats for Kids
Bank One Athens, Pomeroy
Office

Support appreciated

I

I

I would like to take this
opportun'lty to thank those people
who are the backbone of the
Pomeroy Teen Dances. Without
these people and the hours they
give, without complaint, these
dances would have not been such
a success.
A big thanks goes to Kenny
Searles who made us the terrific
storage cabinet. This means
everything can ~ stored at the
gym lnsiead of ~lng hauled
every Saturday, which can be a
real chore. To Mark and Junior
Mattox who help load and unlOad
theD.J., keep the sign up to date,
and anything else that needs
done, a big thank you. To three
very special ladles, Tammy
Searles, Barb Wlllon, and Shlr·
ley Yoder, you're great! These
ladles In addition to helping
every Saturday n~ht, have spent
their days traveling around
Meigs, Muon. and Gallla County
speaking to the many bualnesaes
concerning what we are about
and coJJecttng &lt;;Io'fiOns which

~~'

'\~ '\~·- ·_
~ : ......~ '--- --::::.'. ·,

have been so very helpful to us,
and we truly appreciate all they
have done. To the many who I've
not named who very unselfishly
give of their time and love In
chaperoning every Saturday
night, you are appreciated and
from myself and the young adults
a big THANK YOU. I thank my
husband, Robert, for his consist..
ent support.
We appreciate so much the
support so many of you have
shown us and we hope you will
continue to support us. These
youna people are a terrific bunch
and ween)oysovery much being
with them on Saturday night. We
would like to Invite you to come
and be a chaperone some Satur·
day night and get behind our
young people, let them know we
care and I'm sure they will make
us proud.
Sincerely,
Iva Sisson
•
Rt.l
t Rutland, Ohio

•

CHARGING FOUL - Minnesota's Walter Bond (right) gets
called lor a charging foul against Dllnols guard Nick Anderson
(left) In the first hall of Thursday night's Big Ten contest In
Minneapolis. The Golden Gopbers won 6912 to knock the DUn I out
ollhe unbeaten ranks. (UP I) .

WASHINGTON (NEA) :-In a
moment of .weakness last year,
Republican presidential candidate George Bush said: "Watch
my vice presidential decision.
'That will tell all." Then, he
picked Sen. Dan Quayle of
Indiana as his running mate.
Well, nobody's perfect- and In
the ensuing months, Bush has
made an Impressive selection of
senior advisers and Cabinet
members. All are highly quail·
fled and most, according to the
conventional wisdom, are "centrists" or "pragmatiSts."
But that characterization obs· .
cures two Important aspects of
Bush's Cabinet and staff. The
first Is the crucial albeit gener·
ally unrecognized dis tinction the
new president has made between
government and politics.
The Cabinet members generally were selected for their
competence - a logical criterion
since they will be conducting the
business of government. Most
have a preference for comprom·
lse over confrontation.
(President Reagan dld not
adhere to that standard and
Instead picked some Cabinet
members on the basis of their
Ideological purity. They quickly
antagonized those who were not
equally fervent about a rliht·
wing agenda.)
But the Incoming president's
three msot Important selections
outside the Cabinet are men of a
different breed. All are veterans
of mu~ttple electoral campaigns ·
and know how to play political
"hardball" when the occasion
demands it. They are:

Robert Walters

- White House Chief of Sta1f
Although Bush Is committed to
John H. Sununu, a brilliant but ' the concept of good government,
acerbic politician who has never he also appreciates the value of
accepted the biblical admonition having tough-minded political extent to which he has undone to "suffer fools gladly.:• Sununu operatives available to assist a with the ·Indirect assistance of
was not seriously challenged In president facing myriad Reagan, the right wing's spirithis three successful bids for New pressures.
ualleader -a quarter centurY of
Hampshire's governorship In
The second lntrlgu lng aspect of conservative gains Inside the
'1982, 1984 and 1986.
Bush's personnel selections Is the Republican Party.
- Republican National Committee Chairman Lee Atwater, a
give-no-quarter organizer who
has managed countless campaigns - most of them successful, many of them tough and
I
some of them vicious - for Se'n,
Strom Thurmond, Gov. Carroll
',
Campbell Jr. and other Republicans In his home state of South
Carolina.
- Quayle, who served two
terms In the House, moved up to
the Senate by waging a ferocious
If not mean campaign to unseat
Sen. Birch Bayh, D-Ind., In 1980
and was re-elected to the Senate
In 1986.
·The Bush campaign originally
wanted Quayle to lea&lt;;[ the attack
against the Democratic ticket In
the pres4dentlal campaign - a
task Quayle enthusiastically accepted before being sidelined by
challenges to his own character
and qualifications.
The placement of these three
men In key positions In the Bush
administration perpetuates the
bifurcation that Intrigued many
observers of last year's campaign. Duling a typical day,
~~
I) 1980 by NEA. Inc
Bush would unleash a mean
attack on the Democrats In one
"A trout stream on the south lawn - that's a
speech, then reiterate his com•
GREAT ldBBI"
mitment to a "kinder, gentler
\nation' • In another address:

B)' Unllf!d PreMslnlll!r ~atkl ... l

TIIU!MIQ', Jan . 28
l&gt;ykc '"· Mouri Vernoa Nu.llnpe 61
DefiWICf' lti, Mlchl,;IIII•De!U'horn 63
Sfi. oloseph (lnd 1 80, A.shiMd 1-1
Sh_.I'III';C St 71, M'e10t Vlr&amp;lnla Tech GO
\\'alsh~7.

Urbana S&amp;

'

.....

Collere Bu Rlball Rn IMs
Army M, C. ('onnectlcul St. 56
Bloundleld (NJ) 78. Concordtac N\') 63
Brandet5IH, "'on-e~ter T~ch 17
Dominican AI, Old Wll'!"thul"}' 71
Elmira 115, Osweao St. 73
Klni'AA 116, NIE Blhle (NJ) 45
MarW 9t, ~t. Francis I Pa.) IH

Penn&amp; . 110, Sl .•ro~ph'.!l (ra. 1 ill
Rhode biiU'Id 7~, St . Bonaventure 59
bft!l 71, UMi18s-IJosiOil M
\\-'&lt;esl!eyan 108, (]ark84

,.....

A.rk.-Uttlr Jklck lrt2, Otorj!1aSI. !I
CamJilcll 91, Mt!t tDdl!!t611
Florida lnt'l 91, Davl.,on K4
Florida St. 69. So•th Carollaa 67
Jacbon St. 18, SE Lou~lana &amp;I
LouiJivllP 15, S. MI~Muippl76
N .C. St . $11, Duke ~3
NorlhwtsV:rn St. 117, McNeese St. &amp;!I
South Alabamall2, 01 d Domlnhm 75
Va. Comm. 7&amp;, Ala.- BirmlnJilam i !l
W. Carolina 16, l'~oT·A..«~hevlllt- 72

W. Kentw;:ky K'l, S, Florida 61
Wtsl Vlrklnla 1%. Gf'OIW"'

"

WA'Ihin~on

Mldw~t

A."ihJand 12, ~~ - oiO!ieph'!'i /Ind.) 6'J
&amp;llarmlne 115, lnd-Pur-Fort WM.vne "3
&lt;Aod...-vllle Ill, •ulfl on !I!
Chttlnratt U, 0.-.1 Ruherh 61
l"ft...,.a{WIII. ) 101. Lakeland~~
Daytoa 35, Buller~!

'
..

Mllllldn 62. t\up.!Jiltna !59
Mln ... .!lota 1\!, DllnDI!I II
Mo,.&amp;ptl!!lll7, Cohui1hl aU
N. Central CoU. 14, Elmt.~t 63
N . Mlrhl«an 6S. Oakland (MI('h.) 61
NC-Chariolit&gt; II~, Bradlt'Y 7~
Ohio St. 1011, Narlhweslr.r n6~
Rio Gnnlk&gt; U, ll' llnlln~on 113
SW Bapli'il ifi, Ccnltal Ml!i!iOUrf 36
Sh 11wnl'e St . 7!1 , Otaln Oomlnkan 66
Siena Hdpts·l31, Dykt.o lOt
St. Frllncl~ (Ind.) 67, Go5ht'n 61
sa. Lolli~ it l.o)'ol• (Ill . ) 61
Tarldn ll'l. El·•n fi:CI i-1
.
\\' aynr U, Mlt•hl«an TN·h 7fJ
\\"ls.-Mtlwau 11'-c 7ft, Wb;.-P;u- ~Ide 6!1

•

Sclulhwe!d
J\rkan!&lt;lall St. 6-t, Pan Amt-rlun ~5
l..oui!!ihUnl Tf'ch 7-1. Lamar 7~
NE Lou.l5lana 7~. Stt•pheh ,\ttdln 7i
(CITJ
.
.
•
NE Okla . 1\&amp;:M 7~ , \\' . Ark Comm( 'oll.

,
'
:

"

New M•&gt;xlt~O &amp;5, ( 'olont.dn !oil . 62 (OT )
Sam Hou"onSt. i$, Texll..'i• Arii"Kton62;

\\'f'St
1\lr Fon:r 67, l lhth ~7
.-\r~OM 96, Arl.znnl. Sl. 71
Bo!Mo St . 7'!, Northern t\ri~ona 53
(.~ Ra.ker.\fteld 9-1, Cal Poly -Pomorail3
ChllfiHIM 71, ~ Norltlrld~l' 74
Fresno~ . lill. Paclll c St
IdaHo 79, "' e~r St . 55
N('W Mell:h'o St .. to, Cal· lrvlnr li9
Or eKOn sa. &amp;9, CallforNa 6-1 fOT l.
Santa Barbana 53, LOty; 1\t'*·h St . 52
Sian toni 75. Ore«on 53
U(' Rh·er!lide 75. Cal Poly SLO liil
Ufl.t\ 64, WaMinKton ~ - 63
\\' W~hin~on JW , Southl!r 11 Cal 7~

1

;
•.

.
l

Girls_scorffl

'

Kinsman

fh"d~r

57, Lake_.w 49

Uberty33, EllA I Palestine U
Mar~~ta 6S, S.nduall)' HI Mar)'S SO
!Marietta 59, JackJion 53 (ut)
Medl• mxllllll1d 41, Revere -16
Middlefield C.rdiMI 48, Newbury 2i
N_. Phlla Qt, MMIIlllon ,Jwckllon 55
Nor1on 51 Greenl!buf'l Grtf'n 31

GirlS Ohio HI ~h School 81\N ll.•ihllll
By Unltf"d Pre!IA lnltrrJltk)·MJ
}' i"ld.,., Jan. t7

~

Athrn!l69, Vlrteenl \\'arnm iii

•
i

Aurol"lll -13, Barton Berk!;hlre 3"
Barberton R3. Nonlo llill 36
Boardman -13, You"«"' Urnii!W!" 36 (nil
Bristol H. Mapk'wood 27
Bronktl~d ~.IAa\· lthllU'! LaBru :J6
Buckeye Soulhwest 72, BIU'~avtlle 48
CllldM-~11-Ii, Bealls\illt• U
Canal Fulton NW $1!, Akr Co,enll")'"

Ch unplon 83, Nrwum Falla 3~
Cohtwatrr n, Mlna~er -1!
Coptey M , " 'luhworth t9
Cuyah01a Falla 7-t, Tallmadre 31
Dan\'lllt 50. New AI hany 30
Elyria Sr 53, IA1111I n Klnr36
Falrb111~ 55. Wayneafl~ld t2
Fr:dforal Hockin~ tl4, Aleundfor -Ill
Fremont St ,Jo~teph 4~, New Rle«el .13
Galllpoll!lim, IApn 54

boards.''

Willie Burton scored 20 points,
including a pair of free throws
with 33 seconds left , .to spark
Minnesota to the Big Ten victory .
Illinois. which had succeeded
Duke as the No. 1 team, felltol7-l
and 4-lln the Big Ten . Saturday,
the Illini face Big Ten leader
Indiana, which Is on a 13-game
winning streak .
"How sweet it Is to .beat the
number one team ln the country," said Minnesota Coach Clem
Haskins, wh'Ose club improved tc
10-5 and 3-3. "I told my playersln
practice that we were gorma win .
You have to believe that."
Illinois fought back late in the
game behind Kenny Battle' s
Inside scoring. He scored seven
of his team's 10 points in a
two-minute period. Marcus LIberty's free throws at 2:45 pulled
the 1lllnl within 61-59.
In other games involving
ranked teams, No. 3 Louisville
beat Southern Mississippi 95-76.

Oak H . r 51. Sandusb Perldnl&gt; :u;
Port Clinton liM, Oyde -II
Raven .. Sl, Akr Sprinr;Ueld 35
Rl~er Valley li&amp;, Rldpdale '!II
SllerwctOd Falrtltew "· FAip;erton ·H
st Henry 71. New lremet~ 53
Sleuhen11illl' Iii, Ealil Uverpool 51
sarudlers ... Hubbard S7
Troy~~ . Tecum~h tfi {Oil

Upper Scioto -18,

ConVCl)'

Cruhiew 30

\\'estlakt £1, 1\Yo•lA~e U

Prorfflults
Frldl.,v'" Sports Cal.-nd ar
"
Basketbllll
Sacramento 1U lo!!lton, i: :Jt p.m.
Golden Sial. I' Ill Ph\ladelphlll. 1:311 p .m .
Clnelilnd at Del roll, II p.m .
San Antonio at Dallas. II p.m.

1tl Chlca«o, A:!IO p.m.
N~w Vork11t Phoenix, 11:30 p.m.
i\llanla at Selolllll', 10 p.m.
Cb..-kltk' at LA lllket'!i, 10: 311 p.m.
"' •Hn~en

Boh~ll'd

WlnterherJI: , "' ~I Grrmat.ny - to:urt&gt;pelU"I Charnpionr~hlp11, two-miUl 11.nd lour-

m"'

flo:d •J:
He~~VywPIJbl:.
Ve~~:a~.

Nf'\". - T!m \\'lther!ipoon

v.._ Lu.r,.Y AleunO!tGolf
•· Bot• Ral.on, fla, Oldsmohlle Clw.sll'

Graef' 79, Indiana We!;le)·an "2U
Grand \'IIJ 83. Salfuw Val7 ..
Iowa 111, Wl!!roMin 11
LaabSupedorRA, Northwood 11!1

'-

.

Kenl 5!1, Slew .t'l
Kentoa Rldlt 511, SprlnK Northl'~WSU!rn

Las

EvanlHilll' MO. Driroll 6.1
Fer riA IJ.t, Hllbdalf' 65

Berry's World
.

Kan-.s Laklll&amp; 45, Jo!M\"''ood 31!

Women's Ohio Coltere BMidb&amp;all

William Rusher i

How long has It been stnce.you actblly accelerated since the years In government service.
heard anybody call George Bush election. In the wake of Michael This me!'.l'lY testifies to the
a "wimp'? At least five months, Dukakls' def~at the media were human fear oj the unknown. government.
Domestically, the nation Is
I'll bet. That poisonous little In a surly mood, and the congres- There are plenty of able men and
piece of propaganda, based on a slonal Democrats could hardly women outside the Beltway, as entering an unprecedented sevwidespread but wholly lnaccu- walt to shove those 'words "no both Carter and Reagan demon- enth year of prosperity, with the
rate J,lfrceptlon of the m~n. .new taxes" down the Incoming strated by naming a number of federal budget deficit declining,
disappeared from journaliStic president's throat. It began to them to high posts In their both ln absolute terms- and (far
radar screens around the time of appear that George Bush's "ho- administrations. But then the more significant) as a proportion
the Republican convention ln neymoon" would be one of the media,
and
the
all-but- of the gross national product.
New Orleans last August and shortest on record.
permanent grandees up on the
Internationally, It ls slowly
hasn't been seen since.
But .Bush kept his cool and his Hill, must go to the trouble of becoming apparent that the Free
As a matter of fact, . Bush's sense of humor, refused either to getting to know them, setting up World, after 40 years of grim
transformation, In less than half panic or retract, and began lines of communication, ex- persistence, has ln fact won the·
a year, from a widely perceived naming to his Cabinet a series of changing favors, etc. At least Cold War - and (even more
wimp Into a relaxed, sure-of- old Washington hands who were Bush has, ln most cases, spared Important, If possible) that the
himself national leader Is one of widely known and respected, them that trouble.
Soviet Union and the rest of the
the most striking political devel- both among the media and on
As a result, It Is fair to say that world know it. Thts Is certainly
opments of recent tlines.
Capitol Hill. Slowly It began to George Bush assumes the presld· no time for the West to let down
In the Reagan White House, dawn on observers that the Bush ency ·under skies abo\lt as clear Its guard, but lt seems possible to
Bush Inevitably took on some of admlnlstratloq was going to be a .. as, ln the nature ·of things, at least hope for a time of relative
the aspects of a fifth wlleel- an . class act ln Its own right, and not political skies ever get. He Is the peace.
ancient problem that has now merely a lame follow-on to the successor and legatee of the most
One would have to be churlish
popular president of modern • Indeed not to wish( President
assumed Its new roost on the Ronald Reagan Show.
shoulder of Dan Quayle. But
As a matter of fact, It has been times. He has surrounded him- Bush well as hls adrtYtnlstratlon
nobo4y ever emerged Into the a llttle amusing to no,te the self with men and women whom begins. But, beyond that, there
sunshine of selfhood more Washington press corps' open he knows well and who, collec· seems sounder reason than many
quickly or more confidently thim relief that so many of Bush's top lively, are the possessors of supposed, even a year ago, to
Bush dld after he was nominated appointees "live Inside the Belt- formidable expertise In the ar- believe that this good-natured
In New Orleans.
way" or have already spent cane arts of politics and and essentially kindly man Is up
What's more, the pr~ess has
to the job.

Greenfield •8, WihnlnJton 3!t

College scorffl

S3t0,000 LPGA

Pehblt&gt; lltuch. Calif, - II million i\T&amp;T
NIUional Pro-Am
Hockf')' .
MoMre.ll al Buffalo, 7:3., p.m.
Thronlo.t Detr..tt, 2:35p.m.
Hartford Ill Nt•w JN~y. 1: Ill) p.m.
SO..· err
,WISL
San DiekO at \\'h :hlla, ld~ p.m .

Tt&gt;nnl"
Melhoume, t\os~ndbl -

Tournament planned
Rutland Civic Center is having
a volleyball lournament Feb. 4
starting at noon . Teams wishing
to participate in the tournament
should registered by Fe b. 2 by
calling 742-2826, 742-2688 or 7422279 . $20 entry fee. Three sponsored trophies and eight indlvid·
ual trophies wlll be awarded.
Winners of the Jan. 21 tournament at the Civic Center were
Stewart 's Gun Shop, first place;
Quality Print Shop, second; and
Capehart's, third.

Austr-.tlllln

np..

Tnt•k
.Johnson

City ,

Tf'nn.

Kodak

-

ln\·ltatloral
NATIOS,o\1. BASKETBALL

A.'l~c·.

Sacnmcnlo II~. NPw .Jeuey lt9
\\" ~i~&lt;ihin~on 126, lndhtna 106
D£-n,-er IH, MIIUlll t!UI
Houston IOi, LA Cllppt•r!iiOU
Charlotte 119, Utah ~
Mllwau ~e 12'1, l"nrtlaRd tfl!t
FrldM.Y'!i GamO'i
Sacramento IU Boston, 7:311 p.m.
Goldl'n Stall' lit PhlladelpiUa. 1:30

P.m.

Clenland at Dt'troit , ~p.m .
San AJUoniO IU Dalllu, ~p. m .
w.... hln«fonal f ' hil!·~o. ~: lCip.IJl.
New York ill Phoe~~lll:, 9: ;111 p .m .
AUanW. at Seattle, 10 p. m.
0..-lolit• ..a LA l.akt&gt;rfi, IO : lt p.m .
l'hlladelphlaJU N'f!w .Jer...el' , nl~hj
Goldl'n Sialt' allndlaaa , nl«ht
Hou-"iion at ln•an•. nl«ht
PhoPniA ll~ Dt&gt;nwr. nllf"l
New York at Ulab, nl~t
Mll~auke~ Ill LA Clipper!!, night

i\tlanlll 1U rbrlland, nl•hl
NATIONAl. ROCKE\" LEAGUE
Tbul'!lda,y'.11 ~ulh
Bo!llon -1, St. Loul~; 2
WII.Shln-'on I, Phll~~odelphla 0
NV 1.\landflr,. R, Wlnnlpe116
Minnesota -5, Qut'btc· 3
cat p.l')' 5, NY Rat~ger~ 3
Vautt:ou~r I, Lo~ An~e5 t
Frl._. '.lll Gamt"' ·
Montrewl at Boff..o, 7:35p.m .
Toronloat Ott roM, 1: !I p.m.
Har~onl ld N@w .rerery, 1: $(l p. n1 .

'

Basketball
The Phoenix Suns signed veteran guard T.R. Dunn to a second
10-day contract. ... The college
entrance test at the center of an
NCAA charge of academic fraud
agatnst Kentucky sophomore
Eric Manuel has been Invalidated by the American College
Test program, the Lexington
Herald-Leader and Louisvllle
Courier-Journal reported. Manuel, a 6-foot-6 swlngman, sidelined hlmseU when the controv·
ersy arose and has maintained he
did nothing Improper .... Rider
Coach John Carpenter will resign
after 23 ~ars at the end of the
season. He Is one of eight
Division I coaches at the same
school since 1967. .. ; Kelvln
Ardlster, an Auburn starter
kicked off the team for chronic
lateness; transferred to Idaho

meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
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Sports briefs

Published every aflernooo, Monday
through Friday. lll Court St., Po-

Yachting
_ The 1988 World 12-Meter
Yatching Championships lefl LuI ea. Sweden, with a defic-it of $3.4
million , A local politician has
gone to court to appeal a decision
that says taxpayers should foot
the bill.

OPEN TUlSDAY THRU FRIDAY
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Sports briefs

saan.,.·.. caml!'l

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The Daily Sentinel

COULD YOU BENEFIT
FROM ANY OF THESE?

Scoreboard

George· Bush begins his presidency

The 'Eastern establishment' is back

Event said huge success
Bank One, Athens, Pomeory
Office thanks all local residents
who helped to rmke the fourth
annual "Coats for Kids" a Huge
·success. OVer 175 coats were
distributed to children In Meigs
County which was an outstanding
respQnse for such a short period
of time.
Our heartfelt thanks goes to the
Pomeroy Fabric Shop, who
handled the cleaning and repairs
of all the coats, Thi! Dally
Sentinel for their pubflclty, to
Dolly Wood for her sJ;)ecial

v

By JOE ILLUZZI
No. 5 Arizona pounded Arizona
UPI Sports Writer
State 96· 71, No. 15 North Car olina
Within four days, Illinois at- State downed No. 5 Duke 88-73, '
tained the No. 1 ranking and No. 11 Florida Sta te edged Sou(h
suffered Its first loss of the Carolina 69-67, No. 12 Iowa
season. Neither bits of news topped Wisconsin 78-70 and No.18
could be considered shocking.
Stanford crushed Oregon 75·53.
Everyone~xpected the llllnl to
At Hattiesburg, Miss. , P ervi s
claim the top ranking when the Ellison scored 26 point s to lead
latest poll was released Monday. . Louisville, which improved to
They were the only major unde- 14·2.
feated team ln the nation and
At Tempe, Ariz ., Sean Elliott
they deserved the distinction.
scored 20 pojnts and Anthony
When Illinois put Its No. 1 Cook added 11 of his 16 poin ts in
rating on the line Thursday night the fi rst half to lift Arizona . The
at Minnesota, however, the llllni Wildcats, 14-2 overa ll and 8-1 ln
were primed to lose. They were the Paclfic-10, led 45·27 at halfwithout Injured Kendall' Glll, time and finished shooting 61
their hlgh-scortng guard , and percent.
were left wlth only eight recruAi· Raleigh. N. C., Brian Howited players .
ard scored 23 points to help North
Combine that with Minnesota's Carolina State hand the Blue
toughness at home, and the Devils their third straight loss
Gophers' 69-62 victory over llli- and move the Wolfpack into a tie
nols cannot be classified a total with North Carolina fo r fi rst
surprise .
place in the Atlantic Coa st
"We're not an awesome ball Conference. Alaa Abd elnaby
team," Illinois Coach Lou Hen- scored a career hi gh 24 poin ts for
son said. "We didn't have that
Duke. All-America Danny Ferry
bounce tonight. We haVe togo out
;md make things happen. That's
just the kind of team we are."
Gill broke a bone in hls left foot
Sunday against Georgia Tech
and he'll likely miss the rest of
the season. Henson . however , dld
not use Gill's absence as an
excuse.
"They just beat us in every
1. Up to SO% Discount on Eyecare
phase of the game," Henson said.
"We couldn't cover their outside
2. Discounts on Your Auto,_Home, or
game. We couldn't cover their
Inside game. They beat us on the
once

Jack Anderson
the deed, officially apologized
and agreed to allow more Libyan
controls at Wheelus.
Not long afterward, the United
States meekly closed down Its
most Important foreign base at
Gadhafl' s request.
We have It from Nixon's ·
then-national security adviser~
Henry Kissinger, that the U.S. ,.
gover'nment debated within Itself , -~
whether to accept or reject the .:,_.
Gadhafl seizure of power and •:"!
that Kissinger had llnalyses :•"
made of various actions that ' -~
could be taken against it.
- -;
· The Central Intelligence •
Agency Insisted that It would be
'
simple to engineer a coup and
replace Gadhafl with a leader
· morefrlendlytotheWest. What's .
more, the United States could
have acted not as a conqueror,
but as a defender of the lawful
government, Interceding at Its
,
request.
What then, with the redoubta· '
ble Richard Nixon at bat, was the •
rationale behind what Kissinger :
would later confess as his admln· '
lstratlon's passivity In Libya?
',
The Stale Department's expla· I .
nation, given In a Senate Inquiry,
was that there was a local '
Intelligence failure which made l•
mlsjudgements unavoidable.
Kissinger's suggestion Is proba·
biyJJiore accurate. He said that
the lower echelons of the U.S.
foreign policy apparatus were
soft-headed about America's
true Interests and had a school·
boy's crush on left-wlng
revolutionaries.
Or, as Kissinger put It, "The
working level of our government, ,
especially In the State Depart· ...,_·c·
ment, operated on the romantic · i
view that Third World radical· •
Ism was really frustrated West·
ern liberalism."

Tonight's games:

Gallipolis at Logan
••
Warren Local at Athens
Marietta at Jackson
Chesapeake at Rock Hill
Wayne at South Point
Greenfield at Wilmington
watched the game from the
Wheelersburg at West
bench In- street clothes while
Oak Hlll at Southern
nursing a sore back .
Eastern at Hannan Trace
At Columbia , S.C., George
Southwestern at Kyger Creek
McCloud sank a 3-potnt shot with
Symmes Valley at North Gallla
7 seconds left to lift Florida State.
Pt. Pleasant at Wahama
Tat Hunter scored 20 and
Northwes I at Waverly
McCloud had 17for Florida State,
Portsmouth at Russell
15-1 overall and 3-0 In the Metro
Federal Hpcklng at Alexander
Conference. South Carolina fell
Meigs at Wellston
. to 12-4 and 2-1.
Mlller at VInton County
At Iowa Cit y, Iowa, Roy , Nelsonville-York at Trimble
Ma rble became Iowa 's all-time
Belpre- Open
leading scorer with 24 points-in
Saturday's games:
the' Haw keyes Big Ten victory 'Portsmouth at Gallipolis
over Wisconsin. Marbl e, a senior
Athens at Walnut Ridge
who entered the game needing 11
Zane Trace at Waverly
points to surpass the previous
Wheelersburg at South Webster
record of 1, 768 by Greg Stokes.
Miller at Eastern
broke the mark with I : 57 remainIng in the. first half. Iowa
Sports biref~
improved to 15-3.
Baseball
At Stanford, Cali!., Howard
Red Sox star outfielder Mike
Wright scored 19 points and
Greenwell says he and the team
grabbed 10 r~bounds and Todd
remain at least $500,000 apart In
Lichlt'Scored 15 points to pace the
salary negotiations. He Is seek-:
Cardinal, which won Its ninth
irig $2 million over two years.
s tralght home game and lm·
proved to 15-4.
•,

Friday, Janu-v 27. 1989

s

Association and

'

Minnesota shocks top-ranked
_Illinois 69-62 in Big I o.·play •

Page-2-The Daily Setltinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Nixon should have handled Gadhafi

111 Court StreH

I

The Daily Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Friday; January 27. 1989_

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friday. ,January 27. 1989

The Daily Sentinel Paga 6

Pomeroy-Middleport, Qt)jo

;

Seifert succeeds Walsh as 49ers coach :
MONTEREY, CaliJ. (UPI) San Francisco 49ers head coach
Bill Walsh, architect of \he
NFL's "Team of the 1980s," will
retire to join the front office and
be succeeded by defensive coor·
dlnator George Seifert, team
owner Edward DeBartolo Jr,
announced Thursday night.
"I'm looking forward io my
new career," said Walsh, who
will become vice president In
charge of !ootb!lll operations.
"It's been a great 10 years."
Walsh, the NFL's wlnningest
coach In the 1980s at 102·63-1,
capped his coaching career with
a Super Bowl XXIII victory over
the Cincinnati Ben gals. The 20-16
triumph In Miami Sunday was
San Francisco's third of the
decade and puts Walsh second In
Super Bowl championships to
Chuck Noll, who won four In
Plttburgh's heyday. Walsh's career playoff record Is 10-4.
"It's uplifting to step away on
such a high note," Walsh said." A
tot of coaches would like to step
aside this way, As long as I keep
busy, I don't think there will be
any withdraw!."

DeBartolo said Walsh did not
make his mind up until Wednes·
day and Seifert, who has run the
defense since 1980, was close to
signing a contract ' to coach the
.Browns.
"That's why George was on his
way to Cleveland," he said.
"We're extremely ple~sed to
have someone of George Seifert's
stature step In, " DeBartolo said.
"He Is without question one ofthe ·
best defensive coaches In the ·
country.
"(And) Bill Walsh ls-Mthout,
without any type of hesitance, the
greatest coach In the game," ·
DeBartolo said. "We feel the
franchise Is now headed Into the
1990s,
Said S~ifert: "Obviously, this
Is a thrill.
"There will be nothing
changed with the basic system.
The transition will be smooth for
the players."
Quarterback Joe Montana said
.he didn't expect a radical change
In the team's offense. ..
''I would Imagine there will be ·
a little more emphasis on defense, and the kind of speeches
II

that are given. but that's all,"
Montana said.
DeBartolo bought the 49ers In
1977 and after their 2-14 season In
1978, hired the offensive-minded
Walsh from Stanford l}nlverslty .
The next season wasn't much
better as San Francisco showed
flashes of brilliance but again
finished 2·14.
However, with Walsh's scoutIng system in place, the 49ers
began to build a winner In the
1979 draft . Montana, a two-ttme
Super Bowl MVP, was selected
out of Notre Dame and Clemson's
Dwight Clark was picked In the
lOth round.
·The next season the 49ers were
6-10 and selected future starters
Earl . Cooper, Jim Stuckey,
Keena Turner, Jim Miller and
Craig Puklln the draft. The draft
chOices and Walsh's Innovative
wide-open pass offense transformed the 49ers Into a
contender.
The next season turned golden
as the 49ers rolled to a 13-3 record
during the regular season and
captured the first o( Walsh's six
NFC West titles. 1n the playoffs.
San Francisco's futurE' course

Local news briefs...-· ...., NWS says soggy stonn ·system heading East

'
hinged on "The Catch."
With time running out In the ·
NFC Championships game, Man- :
tan a was chased from the pocket :
and appeard trapped when he •
lofted a touchdown strtke to ;
Clark, clinching the NFC title :
with a 27-26 triumph over the •
Dallas Cowboys.
,
In the Super Bowl, San Fran- •
cisco's goal Une stand capturedo :
a 26-21 victory over Cincinnati.
The glow of the 1981 season :
vanished In 1982 as a strike and J
rumors of drug use among some I
49ers players brought the San •
Francisco "dynas ly" crashing to ·
earth with a 3-6 mark. .
The sudden !allure shattered :
Walsh's psyche. He took a
two-week hiatus, having no con- •
tact with the media, and contem· :
plated retirement befOre·DeBar- ;
tolo talked him Into coming back. ·
San Francisco rolled to an 11-7 ,
· rect&gt;rd the next season, losing to :
the·Wa$hlngton Redsklns 24-2lln .
the NFC championship game. ;
The stinging disappointment of :
the championship game spar ked .
the49ers toan18-1 record the next :
year and Walsh's second Super ·
Bowl crown. .
·

Continued from page 1
Officials at this point have not connected the Thursday and
Friday calls to the same IndividuaL

Sheriff probes hit-skip mishap
A hit-skip accident Tuesday evening In Racine resulted In a
16-year-olt;t Route 2, Racine youth being charged with the
hit-skip Incident.
According to a report from the of!lce of Meigs County Sheriff
James M. Soulsby, a vehicle owned by Michael Grueser was
parked on private property at Sandy's VIdeo In Racine. At about
6:30p.m. on Tuesday, the Grueser vehicle was dinl)aged by
another vehicle backing out.
On Wednesday evening, the sheriff's department was
Informed of a possible subject In the hit-skip. Word was left by
authorities at the horne of the subject for the subject to appear
Thursday evening at the sherlfrs department to file a report.
The subject did appear and was cited on the hit-skip charge. •
There was light damage to IJ!&gt;th vehicles In the Incident.

Redmen swamp .
.WU1nington, 95-83
WILMINGTON - With a ca·
reer high of 27 points, guard
Anthony Raymore took a big
hand In helping the Rio Grande
Redmen defeat the Wilmington
Quakers 95-8:) at Herrman Court
Thursday . .
· The win Improved Rio's record
to 15-8, while Wilmington. falls to
10-12.
. The Quakers established a
·quick 6-0 lead·that was reversed
),yithin the first five minutes to
put Rio ahead (8-6), where the
team would remain for the rest of
Jhe game.
• Ass is ted by timely scoring
:from Larry Benning and Brad
~hubert, who hit three 3-point
~eld goals In the opening period,
;Rio was ahead 49-39. Raymore
&gt;Scored 14 points for the first half.
: , Led by forw~rd Jay Slou!fman,
:the Quakers remained competl11ve and came as close ·as six
;{83-77) In the second period. The

Redmen led by by as much as 14,
Including the last few seconds
when Benning made the last of
his several slam dunks for a 95·81
margin.
In addition to Raymore,
Jimmy Kearns had 18 ~ints for
Rio Grande and Schubert netted
16. Benning and Brian Watkins
had 10 each. Slouffman was
Wilmington's high scorer with 22
points, while Tim Dicke added 16
and Pat Stevens recorded 15.
The Redmen will be at home
Saturday at 7:30 p.m. against
Mid-Ohio Conference leader Mil'
lone. It will be Holzer Clinic
Night. Wilmington hosts De·
fiance at 3 p.m. Saturday .
In other District 22 games
played Thursday, Cedarville defeated Bluffton, 67-52; Dyke fell
to Siena He!gflts (N.Y.),l31-102;
and Shawnee State outdistanced
Oblo Dominican, 79-66.

ristons not playing
good ball, coach says

I

By WILL DUNHAM
UPI Spol18 Wrl&amp;er
With Wes Unseld In thE' locker
room, the Washington Bullets
· played the way any coach would
want them to Thursday night.
Four out of five starters and
four reserves scored In double
figures to lead the Bullets to a
126-106 rout of Indiana and their
first three-game winning streak
of the season.
Bernard King led Washington
with 21 points, and Jeff Malone
had 17, while Terry Catledge and
John Williams scored 13 each.
Darrell Walker had 12, and
Ledell Eackles scored 11, while
Charles Jones and Mark Alarie
had 10 each. It marked the first
ttme this season the Bullets had
eight players In double ligures.

Unseld, the Bullets head coach,
was not on the bench for the
second half after complaining of
back spasms at halftime, leaving
the coaching duties to assistant
Bill Blair.
"We're not the type of team
thatcan sustain lor four quarters
on very many · nights a total
offensive game," Blair said. "We
just don't have that many
scorers.
"When we play hard defensively, like we did tonight In
periods, and offensively we can
score and get the ball to whom we
want to, we've got a chance to
beat anyone," Blair said. "When
we don't, when we go one-on-one,
we create problems for
ourselves."
, Washl~on Improved to 14-23.

Alford proves·critics wrong
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) - As
much as he's gotten used to It,
Steve Alford continues to take
pleasure In proving thE' critics
wrong.
Many detractors Insisted the
6-foot-2 guard who led Indiana
University to the 1987 NCAA
basketball championship would
never survive In the NBA,
claiming be was too short and too
slow.
• Alford had proved the critics
wrong before, earning lndlana
Mr. Basketball at New Castle
High School and All-America
honors with the Hoosiers. Alford
vowed he would succeed In the
NBA, but the second-round pick
In the 1987 draft mainly sat on the
Dallas bench until the Mavericks
cut him last month.
Golden State signed Alford
three days after 1\e was released.
Since then, Alford has helped the
Warriors win eight straight
games and started proving critIcs wrong again. ·
"They said I couldn't play In
this league. I think I've showed
them I can, said Alford, who
returns home Saturday when the
Warriors visit the Indiana
Pacers.
Alford, a hero In his home
state, played only 235 minutes
over 37 games for Dallas, averagIng merely 1.8 points an appearance. During Golden State's win
streak, Alford averaged 20 min·
utes on the court, producing 9
points and 1.1 steals a game while
bitting 60.5 percent from the
....
field.
"I feel like this has been the
start of my career," Alford said.
"I like the situation. I feel I've
contributed. I'm excited about
playing for this team.''
Alford found sitting on the
Dallas bench difficult after startIng for the Hoosiers four straight ,
years. Now he has to go back to
being a shooting guard.
"I appreciate Coach Nelson
giving me the chance to play a
shooting guard," Alford said.
"I've got to get back In the
mentality of being a shooter first
and passer second.''
One of Alford's supporters· Is

: AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (UPI)
Golden State coach Don Nelson
:~ The Detroit Pistons are In
wasn't impressed. Cleveland,
-1)-ouble, says Coach Cnuck Daly , which drubbed his team two
.\!ven though they are off to the
night's earlier , Impressed him so
;!iest start · In the franchise's
much he tabs the Cavaliers In the
oil !story,
NBA's best team right now.
; . But maybe it Isn't just a
"I don't want to make anybody
to incidence Daly chose to make
mad," Nelson said candidly,
his remarks on the eve of his
"but Cleveland Is the best team
~earn's
game Friday night
we've played - by far. I know
:'llgalnst the Cleveland Cavaliers, . how bad Detroit misses (Joe)
;:who have the best record In the
Dumars, but Cleveland Is far and
away thebes 1team. They have a
::N~~e're not playing very good good shot at winning it all."
:basketball," Daly said WednesIt Is possible the Pis tons have
: day night after Del roll blew an
believed their seven-game loss to
: 18-polnt first-quarter lead and
two-time defending NBA cham·
' needed Islah Thomas's short
pion Los Angeles in the finals
:;lltgh bank shot over Manute Bol
made It automatic they would
;.With 14 seconds left to defeat the
succeed the Lakers without hard
:Golden State Warriors. 105-104.
work.
• "We're not together as a
It is possible another back
-:team ," Daly said after the
Injury by Rick Mahorn, whose
:Pistons Improved to 26-12.
muscle Is sorely missed. and the
&gt;"We're holding the ball a little bit
broken hand that will sideline
;:too long. We're not passing the
Dumars for more than another
·:ball from point 'A' to point 'B.'
month have depleted the deep
-•We have a lot of little bas lc selfish
Detroit bench to the point where
they are a cut below the league's
:problems.
•: "And until we resolve them,
best.
:•we' re not going to be a very good
But there's no denying the
·:ream. If It wasn't lor our defense,
Pistons were playing poorly even
:;we'd have lost another 10 games.
before Mahorn and Dumars got
: "We're not playing very good
hurt- this despite a 26-12 record,
;:basketball In terms of being
that Is the bestln the franchise's .
history at this point In the season.
·:contenders for our division - or
:•being a contenderfortheEastern
" A great poet and great writer,
;:conference championship. You
Rudyard Kipling, once wrote a
poem called 'If,"' Thomas said
:can dismiss that until we get
·back to playing together."
when discussing the relatively
;: Daly Is disturbed by Detroit's
play of his team . "Butthe factls,
-:tendency to operate like a light
we are (playing relatively
: switch - · on-off, on-off poorly). That's a fact.''
;:offensively.
.. The Pistons ran out to an early
•',• lead against the Warrtors, scar·: lng the first 10 points of the game
:; and leading . 39-25 after one
72.000 miles. Loaded.
:·period. Then they went Into a
• shell, holding on until It took a
: bank shot by Thomas to rescue
Automatic. power. steering, power brakea.
:·them.

the man who cut him, Dallas
Coach and Indiana native John
MacLeod.
"I'm happy for him," MacLeod said. "I thought he would
fit In with (Golden State). He's
going to be a player,"
Alford should make his first
NBA regular-season appearance
In his home state when the
Warriors visit the Pacers. Alford
visited. with Dallas last season
and received a standing ovation
In pre-game Introductions, but he
did not play In his team's 110-109
victory.
Alford has taken' the court In
Mar~E't Square Arena since joinIng the NBA. He scored 25 points
and made 10 assists while hitting
11-of-16 shots In an all-star game
against NBA players last
summer, and he played when the
Mavericks visited for an exhibition gam~ last October.

'

Dick Owen Jr . has been elected president of Middleport
Chamber of Commerce for the coming year. Other 1989 officers
elected at a January 17 evening meeting at Middleport Village
Hall are, Michael Gerlach, vtce-presl&lt;lent; Patricia Arnold,
secretary; York Ingels, treasurer; and Bob Freed, member·
ship chairman.
·

Firemen have 82 alarms in 1988
The Racine Volunteer Fire Department responded to 82
alarms In 1988.
'
According to the department's annual report for 1988, this Is
· the most alarms for one year In the department's history.
A total of 1,487 man-hours were expended by the department
on these fire alarms.
Department vehicles were driven a total or 6,486.1 miles
during tl)e year.'us!ng 1,359.5 gallons of fueL
The department also spent 406.5 man-hours on training
exercises.
Department officers for 1989 are Hank Johnson, chief; John
Holman, assistant chi!'!; Wayne Lyons, captain; David Nelgler,
co-captain; Ralph Fisher, first lieutenant; Glen Rizer, second
lieutenant; Lee Floyd, third lieutenant; David Ne!gier,
president; Hank. Johnson, vice-president; and Doug Rees,
secretary-treasurer.

Indiana, 11-29, tied Miami for the 21 points and Akeem Olajuwon:
NBA's worst road record at 1-19. · added 20 to pace six !Houston;
Two free throws by Rick SmIts, players In double figures as the•
who led Indiana with 27. drew the Rockets sent Los Angeles to Its
Pacers within 90-86 with 10: 37teft 13th straight loss. Olajuwon also;
In the game, but Washington grabbed 15 rebounds. ·
went on an 18-6 spree over the
next 5: 30 to ti!ke controL
,
Hornets 89, Jazz 88
Heat t29, Nuggets 108 '
At Salt Lake City, Kurt Rambls :
At Miami, Alex English scored
a miss and banked In
:l4 points and Walter Davis added arebounded
hook shot as time expired to lift
13 In the fourth quarter to help Charlotte. Rambls grabbed Ml· '
Denver break a four-game losing
Holton's miss - his 15th
streak. The Nuggets entered the chael
rebound of the game - and
game with eight losses jn nine scored from the rlgh t of the lane
games and nine . straight road for the Hornets' 11th victory of
losses. The Heat suffered their
fourth straight loss and fell to the year.
4-35.
Bucks 127, Trail Blazers 109 •·,
Kings 112, Nets 109
At Portland, Ore., Larry Kryst- . •
At East Rutherford, N.J ..
Kenny Smith scored 24 paints and kowiak scored a career-high 31
handed out 10 assists and rookie points as Milwaukee handed
Ricky Berry added 20 points to Portland Its fifth consecutive ;
lead Sacramento to Its third loss, The Blazers have lost four .
victory In 20 road games. Buck In a row at home, something they :
Williams scciretl13ofhls 21 points haven't done since February ·
.
In the third quarter to lead New 1986.
Jersey .
Rockets 106, Clippers 100
, At Houston, OtlsThorpescored
'

MAJOR
MOVES

•

,,

Friday, Jan. 27

.

·

'l '

. PHO. 4t6'.o699
GALIB'OUS, .0110

•

•

••

Are You Still

•

•

Are You Worried About
How You're Going.Ji.
Pay Your '88 Taxes?
~ell!

. . . we have good
news for you! You have
always saved money
when you shopped our
stores, and now we will
give you CASH. Family
Cash that is! You will
save even more on each
porchase you make.
Watch for our sale flyer
next week introducing
this program.

1980 CH~VY LUV 4X4 ..................... S1495

Prescription Shop ·

I
t

) Funeral services for Charles
'G. Ellis, 73, who died at his
residence, 39617 State Route 684,
;~Pomeroy, Wednesday, will be
,.•"held at . 2 p.m. Saturday at the
••Ewing Funeral Horne ..
~ Mr. Ellis was a retired brick
··mason for the Meglen Construc::uon Co. He was born Jan. 10, 1915
::tn Athens County, the son of the
'"late Walter and Eloda Myers
:·Ellis. He was a member of Local
;:55 Brick Masons Union, Colum~bus and-was a veteran of World
::war II having served in the U. S.
~Army. He belonged to the Vete:·rans of Foreign Wars Post 9893, ·
''AI
~
bany.
~ Surviving are his wife, Bessie
.. Ellis; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Rl:~ chard (Jean) Ross, Amanda; a
--stepson and step daughter-ln::law, Jack and Dorothy Rlchard~son, Waverly; a brother, Guy
"Ellis, Marion; a sister, Ruth
;:Lowry, Marlon; seven step;·grandchlldren; 19 step-great•·grandchlldren: one step great;igreat grandchild, and several
· nieces and nephews.
;, Officiating at Saturday's ser·
::vtce will be the Rev. Donald
; Meadows. Burial will be In Wells
: Cemetery. Friends may call at
::the funeral home from 2 to 4 p.m.
:·and 7 to 9 p.m. tonlg~t.

;:uennan Morgan
••

"

:; Herman L. Morgan, 62, Lincoln
'Avenue, Point Pleasant, died at 5:02
:p.m. Thursday, Jan. 26, 1989 at St.
:Mary's Hospital in Huntington.
,. He was a retired purchaser for
Ji:;oodyear Tire and Rubber Com;pany, Apple Grove plant. He was a
1'nembcr of the St. Paul United
:~ethodist j::hurch and a 1945
.graduate of Poim Pleasant High
•:Ochool. He was a staff sergeant in
Afle U.S. j\rmy during World War II,
jerved in the West Virginia Na&lt;ional Guard 3664th Ordinance
l:'ompany, and was a member of the ·
jlmerican Legion Charleston Post
~00-

;. Born Aug. 17, 1926 in Leon, he
was il son of the late James L. and
'W. Vcmena Rollins Morgan.
:
;· He was also preceded in death by
cine brother, D.B. Mor11an.
1
:• He is survived by h1s wi(c, Phyllls Henderson Morgan; one son,

992.-6669

2 71 North Second

Continued from page 1
Mark · Murphey , a1'lmlnlstrator,
invite the public to view the
accommodations of the facility
Sunday.

Lunch menus
Menu for the cafet!'rlas of the
Eastern and Meigs Local School
Districts for the week of Jan. 30
are announced:
Eastern
Monday - hot ·dog, sauce,
peas, fruit, milk.
Tuesday- chill. peanut butter
sandwich, relish tray, fruit, milk,
Wednesday - macaroni,
cheese, bread, butter, stewed
· tomatoes, fruit, milk.
Thursday - hamburger,
baked beans, fruit, milk.
Friday - !Ish, scalloped potatoes, fruit, milk.
Meigs
Monday - hot dogs and sauce,
baked beans, fn~lt, milk.
Tuesday - toasted cheese
sandwich, mixed vegetables,
fruit, milk
Wednesday - beefaron!, hot
rolls, butter, fruit, milk.
Thursday - pork barbecue,
peas, pineapple upside down
cake, milk. ·
Friday -cooks' choice.

A foreclosure action has been
filed to Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Diamond Savings
and Loan, Findlay, against Willard G. Durst Jr. and Nancy M.
Durst, Litchfield Park, Ariz.;
Menifee Blevins and Tina L.
Blevins, Pomeroy; et at.
An action by Vernon Bartels
against the VIllage of Syracuse
has been dismissed by the court.
Costs have been charged to the
plaintiff.
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Judge Fred W, Crow III
has stepped down as presiding
au thor tty ' In the case of Dale
Lloyd Lawson versus Nancy Lee
Lawson.

S2 .00 PEl PIISOtl
MIDDLEPoU, OliO

Middleport, Ohio
•

'· .

,,

Stocks
· Dally slock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Elllto &amp; Loewl
•
Am Electric Power ..... ........ 27't.i
AT&amp;T ....................... .. ........ 31)&lt;1
Ashland 011 ........................ 35'A,
Bob Evans .......................... 14%
Charming Shoppes ............... 17
City Holding Co .......... ..... .. .'. 21
Federal Mogul.. .................. 50't,i
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ................. 49't.i
Heck's ........... ,, .................... 'f.i
Key Cen turton ....... .. ............ 15
Lands' End ....................... .. 29Y.
Limited Inc ........................ 29'f.i
Multimedia Inc .............. ... .. 78'f.i
Rax Resla~ants .................. 3-%
Robbins &amp;
rs ................. 17
Shoney's Inc ................ ...... . 8-%
Wendy's Inti ...... .. ............ .... 5~
Worthington Ind ................. 23't,i

· Plan noon meeting
The Rutland Garden Club will
meet at noon Monday at the home
of Margaret Belle Weber In
Rutland. Bernice Nelson Is co·
hostess for the meeting.

already knew: This district was
operating In a deficit situation,"
Trimble Treasurer Jay Cavey
said.
''The amount of the fees may
not appear significant when
compared with a school's total
budget," Boster and Long added.
"However, these charges are an
unnecessary burden to school
districts already struggling to
make ends meet,"
The legislation would require
the state auditor to bear the cost
of the certification process.

L:msNow
FRONTS: . . Wll!l"

BRAIN · !lm}sHOWERS
"
Cold . . . Static
Occluded ,
MaP shows minimum temperatures. At least !iOo/o or any s~aded area Is IOteCast ·• ·
to ~ve preeiptation Indicated .
·
UPI
WEATHER MAP - During earlf Saturday morning, inow Is
forecul for parts of the central Plains with rain forecut.for lhe
eulern portions of the central Plains and the mid M118lsolppi
Valley. ShoweMI and thunderstol'lllll are (orecast lor the soulhern
Plains. Showere and thunderstonns are possible In parts of the
weslern Gulf Coast. UPI

9l

------Weather------

. Trustees to meet

.Charles EUis

THE PRESCRIPTION SHOP

1982 CHEVY C·1 0............................ S2895

Open ...

9:00 P.M.-1:00 A.M•
.

AUtomatic. PS, PB.

year.
The state board pi educatiOn
reviewed the district's financial
forecasts and agreed with the
projected deficit. The school
board then formally requested
the auditor's certification. The
total coast of the auditor's
certlflcattol) amounted to $3,164.
"It Is Ironic that a school
district like Trimble, that was
eventually approved for a
$136,000 loan, should be required
to pay more than $3,000 to the
auditor, to be told what we

--Area deaths-Larry Morgan of Chesapeake,
Ohio; one sister, Bernice Fry,
Pomeroy, Ohio; three grandsons,
Matthew L. Clark, Brian M. and
Bradley S. Morgan.
Services willcbc at 2 p.m . Sunday, Jan . 29 at the Crow-Hussc11
Funeral Home with the Rev. Louis
A. Husscll, Rev. L. Frank Frye and
Rev. Nancy Hamm officiating.
Burial will follow in Kirkland
Memorial Gardens where military
graveside rites will be conducted
by the American Legion Mason
County Post 23.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m,
and 7-9 p.m.

rain Into much of the south Valley, the northern and· central
Rockies and much of the lntercentral part of the nation Friday 'parts of the Great Plains and
mountain West.
night and Saturday morning·,
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1·28-89
Elsewhere Friday, a cold front
produced light rain over portions
of the Carolinas and Georgia.
Most of the nation reported mild
temperatures, save for parts of
the Rockies and the Intermountain West, where thl! mercury
dipped well below zero.
Clear skies were widespread
from the mid-Atlantic Coast
states across the Ohio Valley, the
upper and . middle Mississippi ,40

continued from page 1

Saturday, Jcin. 28

:L---------------------~
.I'

The Prodigal Planet, the final movie of a live film series, will
be shown at the RockSprings United Methodist Church at 7p.m.
this Sunday.
Only one half of the final film will be shown Sunday. however.
with the last hall of the movie to be shown at ?'p.m. on Feb. 5.
The final movie follows the desperate journey of David
Michaels, a r;ondemned fugitive from the world-wide
dictatorship of the anti-Chris t. He and others who refuse to wear
the mark of the anti-Chrlst are fleeing lor their lives. At the
same time, underground believers are seeking a key computer
component that will allow them to broadcast.lnformatlon and
support to their resistance members around the world. It
becomes David's lot to try to deliver the component to .an
un.;nown destination In the deserts of the Western United States
and the film depicts his troubles In accomplishing this.
The public Is Invited to the final two showings which are
sponsored by the Enterprise , Flatwood~, Rock Springs United
Methodist Charge.

Proposed...

Foreclosure action
fi)ed in Meigs eourt

Automatic. PB, PS. Air

•

Final ·shawings slated Sunday

AND

1977 CHEVY El CAMINO ......:••••••••••• S1695

• DIIVEIS EDUCATION
•
•,.
CUSSES
,.• RAITiftG FEB. 6th
•

RIVER" BOAT
INN

Repair On
All Types Of
Equipment

1980 CHEVY CITATION ..................... S1095

I

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services answered four
calls Thursday; Racine at 3:14 a.m. to Bucktown Road for
Charles Michaels ·to Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Tuppers
Plains at 9:01 a.m . to&gt; Long Bottom for Dorothy Thurston to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 11:38 a.m. to
Holzer Clinic for Charles Althouse to Holzer Medical Center;
Rutland at 2:25 p.m. to· Hysell Run Road for Louise Eden to
Veterans Memorial ,Hospital.

NOW APPUIING

1976 CADILLAC ELDORADO .............. S1495

••
··· ----------~---------,

EMS has 4 Thursday oolls

'

AT

'

Owen to head Middleport CC

Bullets defeat Indiana Pacers, 126-106
BILL WALSH

"

By llnlted Press Internal tonal
Snow, hail and rain pelted
parts of the Southwest Friday
and the ·soggy storm system
headed east, the National
Weather Service said.
Forecasters said snow fe)l
during the night over central and
eastern Arizona. Two Inches of
new · snow blankelf!d Payson,
Ariz., Friday morning. Snow
advisories were posted for later
In the day across northern and
central Arizona and the higher
elevations of New Mexico.
A thunderstorm produced
small hall Friday morning at
Roswen, N.M . Rain was reported
In central Texas.
The weather service said the
storm system was moving toward the east and would spread

Officers were elected by the
Bedford Township Trustees for
1989.
They are Robert F. Hawk,
president, and Elmer F. Bailey,
vice president, with third
member, David M. Brlckles
elected fire prevention officer.
Meetings for 1989 were set for
the second Monday of each
month. The trustees are requestIng residents to be more cau tlous
In regard to !Ires. The township
paid $2900 for lire protection In
1988.

South Central Ohio
Tonight: Clear, with a low near
30. Light southwest winds.
Saturday: Mostly sunny, with .
highs In the midd le 50s.
Exlended Forecast
Sunday lhrourh Tuesday
A chance of rain Sunday, rain
or snow Monday, and fair Tuesday. Hlglis will be between 45 and
55 Sunday and between 35 and 45

Monday and Tuesday. Early
morning lows will be between 35
and 40 Sunday and between the
middle 20s to the lower 305
Monday and Tuesday.

GOOD USED
APPLIANCES
WasMr, DryWI, Gal I

. Elec. I••••

Hospital news

lefrlteraton, Color 1Y1
FINAIKIIIG AYAUIU

Thursday admissions - Cha·
rles Michael, Racine: Mildred
Harrts, Mason; Ralph Day Jr.,
Racine; Louise Eden, Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges - Darrell Dugan, Carrie Deem, Flossie
Hysell, Eva Lawson .

COUNTY
· APPLIANCES, INC.
.27

Thi~

,,..

Ho1n1

Speaker named
Speaker at the Chester Church
of GodonSundayat9: 30a.m. and
7 p.Tih with be Christopher
Longdear of Belpre.
•

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
FIIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1989·
Plt.t.liURGEI PUnEI .......-......................... '2.79

Plan .hymn sing

0• Papul• Plla Patti&amp; fll-' w•h Mozuretll Ch ..... and topp.t wkh ~· ~
Seuce. ......don 1 Hot Steamy lun with HotGold.n Frwnch Fri• •ndvourcho101 of
Homtmlde Col•llw. M•c.ani , ....._ or l1ktd hll\t.

_ A hymn sing will be held at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
G;hurch, Route 7 bypass near
Pomeroy, at 7 p.m. Saturday
with the Sisson Family to be the
featured singers. Pastdr Bill
Williams Invites the publiC.

SUNDAY, JANUARY 29, 1919
BAlED SAUSIUIY REAl DINNEI ................ S4.32
A Otnwo,tl Portion of Dellciout a.kld ltllll Slmm•.cl In 1 CriMI'I'IY Mullwoom

Divorces sought

.

A divorce action has been llled
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Donna Guinther, Syracuse, against Malcolm Guinther,
Syracuse.
Wilma Francis Young, Reed.svllle, and John Wilson Young,
Reedsv!lle, have filed for a
dissolution or their marriage.
Granted a dissolution were '
Donald Gene Jones Jr. and
Sherrie Lynn Jones.
·

Trustees to meet
Chester Township Trustees
will meet in special session
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at the town
hall.

Gravy, ..,..d with M.. h_. Pouta• .nd Homemede Grevy, Homt CooQd Green
a ..nt wkh Mulhroome end Your Choice of • Hot, Butw.t Roll or Homernllde ·
Bltc~lt. Coftet. Rtgu'- or Dtc~MIIIed, !MJthFr•hl¥ 8111Wt'd.IA 8mt11Soft0rink

or Hot r .. M-v It lu...tttuted.J

mAl SAitDifiCH ALONt ..........................................12.69
NEW HOUR&amp; ; Mondoy th•u Sundoy 11 A.M. to 6 P.M .

REPLACEMENT CONTACT LENS SERVICE
Refill your

Name speaker

CONTACT
LENS

CONTACT

· Vic Roberts, Little Hocking,
will speak at the Stiversvllle
Word of Faith Church on Thursday at 7 p.m. Pastor Gary Holter
invites the publiC.

I-

LENS

SAVE

Prescription
thru Our Pharmacy

35°/o
TO

•

and
401 Main St.
Pt. PI-nt·
Ph. 675·4020

446·1699

1··1 Sat. •·•

334 sKond An.
Gallipolis
Ph. 446·1111

SAVE
PTO 65

165 lroadway
Jackson, Oh.
Ph. 216·6934

65°/o
THE
ONLY
DIFFERENCE
IS THE
PRICE!

FREE DEUVERY TO THESE AREAS!
MIDDUPOO, POmROY, BuDIUIY, MINEISYILLE,
IUTLAND, SYUCUSE, MASON, W. VA.
IOIDIIS MUST . . .01110 It •011 3 PJI.I

FREE
811!

INCUJDES
FACTORY

REBATE

FOR ONE YEAR
FROM OLDSMOBILE

SEE~~~

FIR DIUYEIY ON ALL PIISCIIPYIONS.
If YOU. IOII'Y NDD A PIISCIIPTION WE WILL DEUVEI
ANniiNG Ill stOlE Pill ON A $5.00 MINIMUM 01111.

Do•'t Fereet To

Oar Lolf Prim o• O•r

Prt~erlptlo••

Prescription Shop
992-6669
271 NOITH

\

C~11k

~

.,

I.

�•

Pomeroy-Middlepo11, Ohio

OR
Veterans
N!emorial Hospital
1IS f . ......,lol Dr.
992·1104

Pamtroy

H2-7075

112 lllrtlt S.OONI Au.
Mltf1port, Olllo

· N•tiollwlde Ins. Co.
ot Columbus. 0.

RACINE PLANING MILL

~~~~! j~l

Mill Work·
Cabinet Making
Syracuse

Prescriptions

rJ

IMW.M&lt;ilin

"2·2lll PDmeoray

·

-216-S. Second

-

Pomeroy

992·.3978

Pomtroy

992·3325

lle-

-to·

(6141H2 -2039 ar
16141H2-5721

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.
992-2975

John F. Fulll. Mgr.
Ph. H2-2t01
Pomeroy

ON IMPULSE;
LET FAITH HELP YOU DECIDE

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. ll1ln Streel
992·3785, Pomeroy

-=

.

COOPEJL\TIVI!: PAIII!IB

UNITED liiJITIIODI!IT CBUIICB
NOIITIIKAST a.usrEB
llov. DooArdl.llov.Fr... CraiHI
llov. Sel*'illollila•
ALF'RED - Church SChool ~: 30 a.m.:
Woriihlp, II a.m.; UMYF6:30p.m.· UMW
Third Tuesday. 7: 30 p.m. comn1unton,
first Sunday. (Arch..-)
CHESTER - Worlhlp 9 a.m.; Chun:h
SehoollOa.m.: BlbleStudy. Thunday, 7p.
m.; UM:W, ftrst Thursday, 1 p.m.; COm·

APOS- m.; Wonhtp 5ervlce ll:OOa.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Chu.rch School9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.:
Fo.rt
Park. Robert W. Richards,
putcr. Sunday Jervlces, 10 a.m .. and 7 p,, Bible Study, Tuesday. 7:30p.m.; Commu·
alon Firat Sunday (Archer).
m.: Wedaeoday worahlp, 7 p.m.
CENTML CLUIITER
• GRAHAM UNITED METIIODIST,
llov. Moi•ID Fraaldlo
Pr,_cblna 9:30a.m. first and second SunRev. Clem•te 8. -•a.Jr:
~~ of each month; third and fourth SunLiina Road, next to

llov. Do a Meadowa

claY each month wonblp tervtces at 7; 30p.
tn.; Wednesday evenings at 7: 30 p.m.
Pr- IUld Bible Study.

a.v. Woii'IY ...,_.,
a.v. PMII Mania

Wiy Helabll Rold, Pomeroy. Pastm- Bob
$1,rder; S.bblth School Superlnteadent,

lln.RobertSieole

SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST,

Mul-

~One Stewart Sabbath School beatnsat
2
on Saturday afternom wttb worship
ll!n'lee loUowlq: at 3:00 p.m. Everyone

v.m.

lin. """"• Crablree

ASBURY (Syraeuoe)- Worship na.m.
: Church School"9:45 a.m.; Charge Bible

Study. Wedneoday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, first
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.; Choir Reh•rsal.
Wedn'esday 6:30p.m. (Thatcher) ·
weiCDIIIO.
ENTERPRISE - Worlhlp 9 a.m.;
Rtri'LAND FIRST BAPTIS'r CHURCH
Chun:h SChool10 a.m.: BlbleSiudy, Tuel·
- Slltft' Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
day, 7:00p.m.: UMW, First Moaday, 7:30
Sdlooll:30a.m.j MornlngWorshtp,10:45
p.m.; UMYF Sunday. 6 p.m. Choir Re
a.m.
Children's at 6:30p.m. Adult tol· ·
• POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lyst&lt;ll heeual,
lowln~~: Wednesday. (Franklin)
·
Wt~~.
mlntsiOr; Satunlay evening
FLATWOODS- Church Sebool, 10 a.m. ,
eyllllellldc oervlces, open to public, 1 p.
: Worahlp, 11 a.m.: Bible Study, Thurs·
m::' S.OUy Chureh Sc~ool, 9:30 a.m.;
day. 7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.
lllllrnlDa Woroblp 10:30 a.m.
.
"• FIRST SO\l11IERN BAPTIST. Po· (Franklin)
FOREST
RUN - Worship 9 a.m.:
mtrCJ)'_ ~~- E. Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
School 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
Jlodl- Soliday SChool Director. Sun· Church
6:30p.m.: UMW third Monday.
_,-.9:30a.m.; Mornlq Worship, ' Thunday,
(Thatcllerl
10:t!l&lt; owalqworahlp, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.J
HEATH (Middleport) -Church School,
a 7:10 (E.S.T.); Wednesday Prayer Ser· 9: 30a.m.;
Morning Wonblp 10: 30 a.m.:
VICe. 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.J. 7:30P.M. (E.S.
T.); III!JIIon Friends (ages 2·6), Royal Youth Grwp, 4 p.m.; Wednesday, Bible
Amboloaclon (boyaaJeo 6-18), and Girls study 6:00p.m . Choir rehearul 7:00p.m.
In Aclloll (qa 1&gt;18) on Wednesdays. 7 p. (Zuniga)
MINERSVILLE -Church School9:·00
111. (D.S.T.)A7:30p.m. (E.S.T.);Tuesday
a.m.; Worship Jervtce lO:OOa.m.; UMW
VllltaiiOD. &amp;:30 ~~om.
·FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bat· third Wednesday, 1 p.m. (Thatch.,.)
PEARL CHAPEL- Church S.hool9:00
llf;RWlRoad. Rev. EmmettRawsm, pas·
.m. ; WorJidp 9ervlce 10:00 a.m. (Mar·
tqo.
Dunn, 111pt. Sunday School, atin)
10a.m.: S..Dd.lyeyenlq serviC&lt;!, 7:30p.m.
POMEROY- Chun:h SChool, 9: ~a.m.
: al!leltaCJIID&amp;, 7:30p.m. ThurOday,
; .Worship 10:30 a.m .; Cbolr rebeersal
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St., Sy- Wednesday,
7:30 p.m.; UMW, ,.cond
raa~•. Marii:MorJ'OIW, past&lt;r.Servlces, 10
7:30p.m.: UMYFSunday,6p.m.
•.m. Suadly. Eveallla ll!'rvlces Sunday • Tuesday,
(Meadows)
ull Wodnllllu alf:Oil p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS- Chun:h SChool. 9: ~
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRiln" a .m
.; Worship 10,a .m .!_ BibleStudy, Wed·
IN CIIRI!I'I'IAN UNION, Dwtalll llai~~Y, nesday,
7 : ~ p.m.; UMYF (Seniors), Sun·
Moblor, sunilo:Y SChool day, 6 p.m
.; (Juniors) every other su-nSulllllly SdiDd. 8:.1) a.m. i Morntna
op1D:30Lm.; E...,bi&amp;Wonhlp7::MI day, 6 p.m. (Franklin).
RUTLAND - Church SCboal. 10 a.m.:
p.m.: We*=layproyermeellng7:30p.m. Worlhlp,
11 a.m.; UMW First Monday
, MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD, 7:30p.m.
(Crabtree)
'
RadDe. a ... Jam.. Satrer~old. pastor.
SALEM CENTER- Chun:h SChool9: 15
........... WUUanuo. Supt. Sunday S.hool a.m.;
&amp;:j!i a.m.; s-tay aad Wedneoday evea· (Steele) Morning Worship 10:15 a' m·
t"l OI!IV!c.w, 7 p.m.
SNOWVILLE- Morning Worship, 9:00
• MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST. a.m.:
Chu~h School10:00 a .m. I Martini
Co..- Slxlh IUld Palmer. Jama Seddon,
SOUDIEBN CLVII'I'ER
Edna Wllsm, S.S. SUpt.; Cathy
lln.DebiF-r
Aut. Supt. Sunday S.bool, 9: 15 a.
llov.RoiOI'G....,.
, rntnrworllhlp,10:15a.m.: Sunday
llov. CariBicb
EVfiDIDI service, 7 p.m. Prayer meetlng
APPLE GROVE - Chun:h Sehooi9·00
Ud Bible Study Wedneoday evening, 7 p.
a .m .; MornlnJ Worship 10:00 a.m.; Bible
m.; Cbtldrenjl choir practice, Wednee··
Study Sunday 7:110 p.m.: Prayer meet in&amp;
day, 1 p.m.; Adult choir practice, Wed., 8
7:00p.m. Thursday. (Hicks)
p.m.; Radio proeram, WMPO, Sunday.
BETHANY - Worship 9 a.m.: Cllun:h
S:IDa.m. ·
Sehool10 a.m.; Bible Study Wedneoday 10
' MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
aad Main, AI Hartson, mlDLtterJ .... a.m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowllllp Wed·
neoday II a.m. (Footer) .
dW'1I ~. A"orlate Putor: Mike
CARMEL - Chun:b Scbool 9:30 a.m.;
artacll. SUnday l!&lt;hool Superlnteaclent.
Worllilp, 10: 15 a.m. Secolld and Fourth
· •ble Schod 9: 30 a.m.; Mornlna Worship
Fellowahlp dlnaer wtlli Sul1111
iii:IO a.m. EwalD&amp; Worship 7:00 p.m. SUndayo:
third 1bunday, 6:30p.m. (Footer).
- - y . 7:00p.m. Prayer meettnr.
MORNING STAR- Chu..,blleboo19· 45
'·•MIDPI EPORTCHURCH OFTHENA· a.m.;
Worthlp 10:30 a.m.; al!le Stwiy
, PASTOR Fred Peftborwood.
Th't'!'~· 7!30p.m. (Foller).
•
- · SUnday S.hool Supt SUnday
S
N - Chu"'h Sebool, 9:30 a.m.;
30 a.m.; Mornlq Worlhlp 10:45
Mo="!JnaWorlhlp 10: 45a.m. first and third
pa,: EvauiiiiUc meellna 7:00 p.m. Su
a: Fellowahlp dla- •1111 Cormoi
1!!'!!-ay• 7:00p.m. Prayer meetlllg.
lhiErdAST Ll'IIIETay, 6:30p.m. (Footer).
llllWl'KDI'IIIIlllll(TERIAN MINWTIIY
ART- MondllrWorahlp9·00
~,..---- 01" 11B1G8 COIJNTY
a.m.;
Clun:b ScboollO:OI)a.m.; UMW th-at
7:30 p.m. (Grace) .
~g·~E1 P=YTERIAN Tueodi,Y
LETART
FALLS - Worlhlp 9 a m.·
- Sunday: Worllhlp Servlcoo Ch.!'!"'..t.~llool
!0 a.m. (Grace),
·. •
; CIIIU'th SCIIool10: 15 a.m.. .
"'"'"''"- Onin:h ~ !0 a.m.: Wo~
DLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN ship U a.m.; UMW fourtbM'ondl,y at7· .11 p.
Sdaoal, 9 a .m.; Church aervlce,
m.: Meli'a Prl,\lor lftallfiM. Wecllladojo 8
m.
Lm. IGnct).
·
'
~SE F~TUNri'EDPRESBY ·
KENO ClltJRCH OF CHRIST, Rca•
- Soliday SChool. 10 a.m.:
Sprlna, mbllol!r; .Starllar Muar and 01·
Ollnoll M vloe. 1D: 15 a.m,
lver Swain, SUIIIIay !lehoal Supto. Preach(lt111L\ND CHURCH OF GOD, Put&lt;r,
lqt:!Oa.m. eacbSunday; St~MaySchool
..-~ _lftu, llouolla,y S.hool 10:00 a.m.;
!0:30a.m.
llondll Wonblp ll:OOa.m. ClllHOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
'1 Oou..a 11 a.m. Sunday Ewabl&amp; ClfRISTIAN'
'l'ller.. Durliam
7:10p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. You• La· t:;tor. SundayUNION,
NI'VIct, I:. a.m.; evrtD:
W-ay, 7 p.m. Fam·

-lilY

•: w-

t

=
f.:

•• _.opdl...,.

•ILUZL ·coiiiiiUNI'!'Y CHURCH.

0!1

..::..":d~ ~=:t.:'·

Prayer

meet~D~,

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
Uf. 3 IIIII• !rom Portlaltd-Loaa Bot· CHRIST, Joteph B. lfooldno, IIUictr. Bible
, EdMI liar!. pulll'. SUnday SCboal, · Clua, t:30a.m.: Mo.....,..Worlhlp!0:30a.
10 a.m.: s-tay momtnt proaebJDa m.; Evealq,Wonldp. 6:10p.m. Thurlday
l!i10 a.m.: Sunday_....~q ..rvl&lt;eo, 7:30 Bible ~ludy, 6: 31!.P.m.
•

ZION CHURCH OF tHR1ST, Pomeroy-

shlp Sunday 7 p.m. and Wedaesday, 7p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTI!ERAN CHURCB, Pln·e
Gr&lt;M. The Rev. Wllllam Mlcldleswarth,
pastoc. Churt!h service 9:30a .m.;· Sunday
School10: 30 a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Tom Ru.aym, pulor. Sunday School9: ~
a.m.: Larry Haynea, S. S. Su.pt. Mornlng
worship 10:30 a.m.

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. John Vance. pastor: Sandy
Julttce, Chat_rman of tbe Board of Chris·
tlan Life. SUnday Scbod 9:30a.m.; Morn·
Jng wonblp 10:30 a.m.; evangellsd~ ser·
vice 7:00p.m. Wednesday service, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
ter. WOOdy Call, putcr. 8erv1ces Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday Schaal 9:30 a .
m .; morning worshJp 10:30 a .m . Sunday
evening 5erv1ce 7 p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Deaver, PaSt(I'. Mike Swiger, Sunday
School Supt.: SundaY Schom 9:30 a .m.; ..
Morning worship 10:40 a .m .: Sunday
evening worship 7:30 _p.m .: Wednesday
evening Bible study 7:30p.m .
.
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURO!

Ro-'

BurUnibam Ray LaudennOt, pasta:
bert Corart, assistant I"Stor. Su ~ School
10 a.m.; wa'S)jp 7 p.m.; Wednesdi(V, 6 p.m.
youth meeting Wed., 7 p.m. church services.

PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH,\!

mlleotrRt. 325. Rev. Ben J . Wans. past cr.
Robert Searles, S.S. Supt. Sunday School
9:30a.m.: MornlngWorslltp 10:30 a .m .;
Sunday evening serviCe 7: 30p.m.; Wed·
nesday service, 7:30p.m.

.SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Little,
SchoollO a.m.; Morning worslp, 11 a.m.;
Sunday evening worship 7:30p.m. Prayer
meetll!i and Bible study Wednesday. 7: 30
p.m. : YouthmeetlngWednesdayat 7p.m.
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday
School tO a.m. Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
pastor. Steve Uttle. S. S. Supt. Sunday

Mid-week service, Wed., 7 p.m.

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Sunday 'School 9: 30 a·.m .; Dp_llas Janey:
supt.; Momlni worship 10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7: 30p.m. ; Wednesday evening service, 7: JO p. m .
SYRAaJSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn McMillan, past cr.
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.m.; Mornlng
worship 10:30 a .m .; Evangell.stlc servll:e,
6 p.m. .; Prayer and Praise Wednesday, 7p.
m.; Youth meetlng, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pastcr. Sainday
School. 10 a .m .; Gary Reed, Lay leader.
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
services: Christian Endeavor 7:30p.m.,
Song service 8 p.m. Preaching 8:30p.m.
Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 1

p.m.

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Char·
lea Domtpn. past&lt;r. Mil~ ZIEIII.,. Sui&gt;
di,Y School Supt. Morning Worship 9:30 a.
r:n-: Sunday SchoollD: 30a.m.; Evenlngser·
vice, 7:30 p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST. Put or: Joe N.
S&amp;yre, Sunliay Schoo19:45 a .m .; Evening
wonhtp 6:30p.m.; Prayer Meeting, 6:30
p.m. Wednelday.
'ruPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Dave Prenttoe. mln1Bter. Deryl
Wells, Supt Qnl:rch School 9 a.m.: Worship 5ervtce, 9:45 p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate, palter.
Frail~ Rlflle. supl. Sunday SChool 9:30 a.
m.; Wortblp aervloe, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m.
SUnday. Wedneoday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·

~UREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. William WUUams, paat&lt;r: Robert E. Bartat. Direct II' ol Chrt.llan Educatloo; S~ Eblin, asalltant. Sunday
S.hool 9:3Q a.m.; Morning worlhlp 10:30
a.m.; T._ Ill Action, 6 p.m.: Eventns
Worship, 7:00p.m. Choir practice 8 p.m.
SUIIIIay. We*eodo:Y ...nlq prayer and

lllbleiiUdY.

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
WU~ oupt. Sllllllo:Y S.boo19; 30 a.m.; Wol'
1lllp B'VIce 10!30 •.m. Blble study, Wedneoday, 1:00 p.m.
REORGANlZI:D CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATI'ER DAY SAINTII. Fort·
taad-Radne Road Mite Dub!, pulor;
Ju"-"
chu"'h oehool dln!ctor.
Cluudlaebool t: liOa.m.; Momlq wanldp
10: 30 Lm.; Wedaeodo:Y evealq prayer
aervl...,, 7: liO p.m.
Charla RuueU Sr., mlniiJ:e"r; Norman

Dana•.

·

"FuMI•g Klllu VFll•i c•lli:u"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

93 Mill Straal
Middleport. Ohio 4&amp;780
16141992-66&amp;7 ~ {998-00KSI
'
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

Ed Roush, Sunday SchooJ Supt. Sunday
School. 9: 30 a.m. ; morning worship and
children's chureh 10: :Kt a.m. ; evening
prea~hing service first three Sundays,
7:30p.m.; Special service fourth Sunday
evening, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow-

BETIILEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
ShuJer. pastcr. Worship aervlce, 9:30a.m.
SUnday S.hool10: 30 a.m. BtbleStudy and
prayer service Thursday, 7:30p.m.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Read. Rev.
Clyde W. Henderscn. put(l'. Sunday
Sehool9:30 a.m.: Ralph car~ SUpt. Even·
ing worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7:00p.m.
LONG BOTI'OM CHRISTIAN. Vernon
EldrJdge, past(ll'j Wallace Damewood, s.
S. Supt. Sunday ~hool9: 30a.m.; Worship
.

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
0 . H. Carl, past cr. SundaySchOol.al9: 30a .
m.: Morning worship at10:30 a.m.; Sun·
da:t.__eyenlng servtceat 7:30 P:m· Thursday

serviCE!'5 at 7: ~ ~.m.

FREEDOM GljSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 3L Rev.

, ~ger W~llford, pastcr. Sund~y School
9,30 a.m., Morning Worsht 10.45 a.m.;
Sunday evening worship 7:00 p.m.; Wednesday evening Blbl'e Study 7:00p.m.

WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEY AN
CHURCH - CoolvU!e RD. Rev. Phillip Rl·
denour, past cr. Sunday School9:30 a.m.;
worship servlcr 10:30 a.m.; Bible study
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST.

Bill Carter, pastor. Sunday School9:30 a.
m.; Morning Worship and Communion
10:30 a .m .
../

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Tillis, pastor. SOnny Hudsm, supt. Sunday
School 9: 30a.m.: Morning worship, 10: 30
a.m.; Sunday evening service 7:00p.m.
Wednesday sen·ice 7 p.m. WMPO program 9 a.m. each Sunday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE . Samuel Basye, pastlr. Sunday
Sch0019: JO a.m.: Worship service 10:30 a .
m.; Young people's servloe 6 p.m.
Evangelistic ~rvlce6: 30 p.m. Wednesday
service 7 p.m.
'

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller

· St., Mas-on, W.Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
a .m .; Worship 11 a.m. and7p.m. Wednes·
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·

ding Lane, Masm, W.Va. J. N. Thacker,
pastor. Evening service 7:3:&gt; p.m.; Wr&gt;men'.s Ministry, Thursday, 9;30 a.m.;
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7: 15

p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartfonl, W. Va .
Rev. Davk1 McManis, pastor. Church
School 9:30a .m.; Sunday morning service, 11 a .m.; Sunday evenlng service,
7:30p.m. Wednesday prayermeetlq,1:30
p.m.

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,

St., Middleport. Affiliated with Southern
Baptisl Convention. David Bryan. Sr .. Ml·
nister. Sunday School. 10 a.m. ; Mo~lng
worship 11 a.m.; Evening worship 1 · .;
Wednesday evening Sible s tudy
d
prayer.meeting 7 p.m.

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.

Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Scott Stewart, pas1or. William Amberger, S. S. Supt.: Sunday School 9: :1) a .m .; Morning Worship
10:30 a.m. ; Evening worship 7: 30 p.m.
Wednesday worship 7:30p.m.

ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Corner SYcamore and Serond Sis. , Po·
meroy, The Rev. WUUam Mlddleswart,
pastor. Sunday School. 9: 45a.m . Chuf('h

service 11 a:m.

SACRED 'HEART CHURCH, Msgr.

Anthony Giannamore. Ph. 992-5898. Saturday Evening Mass 7:30 p .m.: Sunday
Mass. 8 a .m . and 10 a.m. Confessions one
ha)f hour before l"ach Mas s. CCD classes,
11 a.m. Sunday.
·

VICfORY BAPTIST. 525 N. 2nd St.,

Middleport. James E . Ke esee, pastCI".
Sunday morning worsht'p 10 a .m .; Evening service 7 p.m.: Wednesday evening
worship 7 p. m . Visitation Thursday 6: 30 p.

m.

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
Cut1man, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a .m .;
worship service ll a.m.; Sunday night
worship service 7:30 p.m .: Midweek
prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m.
WESLEY AN BIBLE HOLINESS
CHURCH of Middleport, Inc., 75 Pearl St. ,
Rev . Ivan Myers. pastor; ROger Manley,
Sr., Sunday School Supt. Suru;lay School
9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a .m. ;
Evening Worshl~ 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
evening Bible study, .prayer and praise
service, 7:30p.m.
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD- Gilbert Spencer, pastcr. Sunday School 9:30 a .m .; Morning service
10:00a .m .; Sunday evenlngservice7 :00p.
m.; Mid· week prayer service Wednesday

7p.m.
MT. OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN ·
ITY CHURCH. Lawrence Bush.. past(l'.
Max Folmer, Sr ., S. S . Supt. Sunday School
9:30 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7: Jq .
m.: Wednesday evenlng Bible study and
praise service, 7: 30p.m.

UNITED FAITI! CHURCH, Rt. 1 on Pomeroy By· Pass. Rev. Robert E . Smith, Sr,
pastor. ~elvln' ~rake, S. S. Supt. Sun.da~
Scb0o19.:l) ·a .m. , Morning Worship 10. 30,
Evening Worship 7:00p.m .; Wednesday
Prayer Service, 7;00 p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH , R•llrood

St .. Mason. Sunday SChool10 a .m .; Morn·
tng worship 11 a.m.; Evening serviceS p.
m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed·

nesday. 7 p.m.
,
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev . Nyle
Borden. pastor. COrneltus Bunch, supt.

W. Va. , Rt. 1, James Lewis, pastor. Worship services 9:30a.m.; Suoday Schoolll

a.m.; Evening worship 7:30p.m. Tuesday
cattage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9:30a .m .; Worship service, Wednesday
7:30p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTI!ERAN CHURCH
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W: ·
Ya. The Rev. Geof11e c. Wetrlck, pastor.
Sunday SChool 9:30a.m.; S\lnday w&lt;nhlp
lla .m.

Crow:s Farriill, Rest

716 NORTH SECOND AVE,
AIDDlEPORT.

ship, 7: 30 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Located on 0 . J.&lt;:-W\lJte Road of Highway
160. Pa t Hensoo. pas t or. Sunday SchoollO
a.m. Classes !or all ages. JuntorChureh 11
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a .m. Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday. Young P eople's, Children's Chureh and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7:30p.m .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Gran1

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near Flat·
woods. Rev. Blackwood, paste.-. Services
on Sunday at !0:30a.m. and 7:30p.m. wtth
Sunday SChool9: 30a.m. 8tbleStudy, Wed·
nesday, 7:30p.m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, St. Rt. 338, Antiquity, Rev.
Franklin Dickens, putor. Sunday mornIng 10 a.m.; Sunday evening 7:30 p.m.
Thuntlay evenlna7:30 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 75 Pearl St. Rev.
Ivan Myers, actlq pastor; Roger Manley,
Sr.. Sunday School SuperlnU'ndfat. Son·
day School 9;30 a.m.; Momlna: worsblp
10:30 a.m.; evening worsblp 7:30p.m. ;
Wednesday evening Btble 1tw:ty, prayer .and praise service, 7: 30 p.m.
CHURCH OF, JESUS CHRIST APQS.
TOLIC - VanZaadt and Ward Rd. Elder
Jam.. Muter, pastor. SUnday School,
10:30 a.m.; Worllhlp Service, Sunday, 7: 30
p.m.; Bible Study, Wedn-. 7:30p.m.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHIJ&gt;EL, HarrtICJivUie Road. Rev. VIctor ~~oo~-. pastor:
CllniCJI Faulk, Sunday School Supt.: Sunday School9: 30 a.m.: moi'IIIDC woroldp. 11
a.m.; Sunday e'Yenlng aervtce 7:30 p.m.
Prayer Meetlna. Wedneoday, 7:30p.m.
SYRAaJSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
non·Pentecoatat . Worslltp Jer'VIce Sunday
10 a.m.; Sunday S.boolll a.m. Evealq
wonhlp ..rvlce 7:00 p.m. Wedneaday
P!'yer meeting 7:00 p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located lo Tou.a
Community oil Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Rob«t
SOnd...l. pastor. 'elf Holter, lay IMder;

•·!!"..

People not
unkind, just
.unmannered

Sund ay School 9: 3(1 a .m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2:30 p.

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main St., Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Craig,
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday SchoolS: 30 a .
m.; Worship Service, 10: 4!5 a.m.

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST

- Joseph B. Hoskins, .evangelist. Sunday
Bible Study 9 a.m .; Wor ship, 10 a.m .; Sun,
day evening service 6. p.m. ; Wednesday

evening service, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
Rt. 124. William Hoback, pastor. Sllnday
School10 a.m.; Sunday e·venlng servtce 7
p.m . Wednesday evening service7 p.m . ·
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning
Worship 10: 30 a. m. Prayer service, alternate Sundays.
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland. Robert
Richards, pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
Wednesdays and Sundays.
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
TER of the Wesleyan Ho11ness Ctlurch.
Rev . David Ferrell, pastor. Heney Eblin,
Sunday SCh(lol Supt. ; Sunday School tO a .
m.; Morning Worship 11 ·a.m. ; Evening
~vice 7:30p.m. We-dnesday evening ser·
vice 7; 30 p.m."
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH
Gacy Holter, pastol-. Sunday services 9:30
a.m. and 7p.m .; Midweek service. 7:30 p .

~

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,

pits tor. Sunday School 9:30a.m. ; church
service 7: 30p.m. ; youth fellowshtp6 ~ 30 p,

Bible study, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE 33045
Hiland Road. Pomeroy. Tom KellY. pas·
tor. Danny Lambert , S. S. Supt. ,Sunday
morning service at 10 a .m.; Sunday even·
lng service 7:30p.m. Tuesd ay and Thursfl\,:

day Services at 7:30p.m.

NEW HAVE N CHURCH OF THE NA·

ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Strood, pastor.
Sunday School9: 30 a.m.: Wo rship service,
10:30 a.m. ; You th service Sunday 6: 15 p.
m. Sunday even ingservice7:00 p.m. Wednesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study

7:00 p.m.
NEASE SEITLEMENT CHURCH. Sun ·
da y arternoon services at 2:30. Thursday
evening services at 7: 30.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mas &lt;Jl , W.
Va. Pastoc, Bill Murphy. Sunday SchoollO
a .m .: Sunday evenh}g 7:30 p.m. Pray~r
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
w~Icome.

'Partl)ership'
in Cleveland

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
School lOa.m.; Sunday eventng7:00p.m .;
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00
.

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, Silver Ridge. Duane Syden·
st rlcker, pastoc. Sunday School 9 a .m . ;
Worship Service, 10 a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 7;00 p.m . Wednesday night Bibl e
study 7:00p.m.

c ..t your burden on the Lord, and He shall sustain you.
, Psalm 55:22
Several years ago the Wall Street Journal carried a story about Sally ,
an overly conscientious youngster who made herself miserable over the
smaUest !allures and setbacks.
'
Early one fall, while the leaves were still on the trees , there was an
exceptionally heavy snowstorm. Sally's grandfather took her for a drive
and aald, "Nollce those elms," he said. '"The branches are so badly
broke~~ that tbe trees may die. But Jusl look at those pines and
evergreens. They are compl~lely undamaged by the stonn. My child,
there are two kinds of trees In the work!: the!oollshandthewlse. An elm
holds Its branches rigid. As It becomes weighted down, eventually Its
Umbo break. But when an evergreen Ia loaded, It simply relaxes, lowers
Its branches, and lets the burden slip away. And so It remains
unharmed. Be a pine tree, granddaughter."
Cbrlstlans who give up all their cares to the Lord can face Ute's
bunlens much better than 1hose who try 10 bear the weight themselves .
The apostle Paul, who experienced many trials and adversltles.11ave a
three-fold method for handllngdlfllcultles : 1. Be anxious tor nothing. 2.
Pray about everylhlng. 3. Give thanks tor anything (Phil. 4:6).
You can be like the elm tree that tries to bear all Its ttoubles, only to
break under the load. Or you can become like a pine because you are
learning to roll all your bunlens on the Lonl. Be a pine tree! ·H.G.B.
Go to Je1w with your burden•.
Talce ll•em. to tile UmJ in pnryer:
IJ you tndy low ond tr~ut Him,
He will ftlery burden bear.·Bodu.rrha

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Wll DIUVD lllmtlfl Ill 'IHI STOll FlEE ON A

JUST ARRIVED

SANDY'S -VIDEO
'

FOR YOUR ·~

FREE DELIVERY ON ALL PIESCRIPTIONS

God mvtte. ulo bll....., Him wli• ...at bardeno uo.
·- Takoa fr&lt;m "Our D8111 Bread" JaniUU')' 1188

•

,.«.

Community calendar

services a t 7 p.m.

p.m.

Day

we

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pas tor. Carl Nottingham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 10 a.m. with clasges for all ages.
Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl·
blP study at 7: 30p.m . Youth service; Frl·
day at 7:30 p.m.
.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St ..
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPhersoo.
pastor. Sunday School 10 a .m.; Sunday
evenin g services a t 7 p.m. and Wednesday

p.m. Everyone

Recog~on_

_TOPS sche9ules

m . T,hursday.

BE A PINE TREE!

0

•

ex,

Sweet Greetings are for any occasion

Sennonette

• -f

I
l

G\\j(( S,.w Q3.~1is

sudden ...

Service, 10:30 a.m.

OHI0-9~2-6677
·

Q~i&lt;ktl and Ru!h Ann fo• ;

992-5141

• WiUiam SlllaUspean

HarrismvUie Rd. Robert Purtell, mlnlster; Steve Stanley, S. S. Supt.; BlllMcEl·
roy, Asst Supt.; SundayScbool9:~a .m.;
Worshlp service 10:30 a.m. ; Evenlftgwor-

Jill

"StrYing families"
264 S. 211111, Middleport

roo tnadvis'd,

munlon, first Sunday (Arc he!') .
JOPPA - Wonhlp 9: 3D a.m . ; Chureh

POMEROY,

FUNERAL HOME

It is too rash,
toO

l.uunly'_., OltleJl Florid

visited with the residents. The
girls hope the residents at the
Infirmary enjoyed the vis it as
much as the girls did.
~NN LANDERS•
. For the final meeting In De"14&amp;8, t ..
Tim,. SyndiHIP Mid
cember, the girls gathered at the
Cruh:n Syndlutf'
Racine United Methodist
Church. and then left to walk
around town and spread some
Christmas cheer by caroling.
The girls returned to the church
for hot chocolate' and a birthday
JUNIOR TROOP 1284.
cake In honor of member BObble
Syracuse Juntor Girl Scout
Scarberry, who turned seven on
Christmas Eve.
I
Troop 1204 had a craft workshop
•
In December. Each scout made
The most lmprotant thing the
•'
at least four different Christmas
girls learned dl!ring the holiday
~ar
Ann
Landen:
I
have
had
:
ornaments.
season was the true spirit of
a walking disability due to polio 1
On December 19, the. troop
giving, both ofmaletal things and
for 38 years.
went to tl1e Overbrook Health ··., of themselves. Donations In the
1 grew up In a small town, went
Care Center In Middleport. There
form of canned food. clothing and
to
school (here, and no one ever
- they sang ChriStmas carols to the
persona! Items were made by the
said
an unkind word to me. After
patients and presented the orna·
girls and their parents. These
I
graduated
from high school;! "
ments they had made; to be given
Items. along with the Christmas
moved
200
miles
away to attend to the patients on their food trays. visits. hopefully made some
college.
Ann,
It
had never ~
Following their visit to Overpeople's holidays a lillie
curred to me lhat people wolll&lt;J
brook, the girls went to Main
brighter.
•
say cruel thtngs or tliat 1 dldn:t
Street Pizza where they exWith the holidays behind us ;
have the right to be In public. ·,changedglftsandenjoyedaplzza
the girls have retured to badge
Strangers would come LIP to mri
party.
work. cookie sales. and prepara·
on
the street and say, "What Ut
lions for Thinking Day.
the
world Is wrong with you?""qi
BROWNIE TROOP 1067
"How
did you get In !hal
The Chester Brownies started JUNIOR TROOP IOfll
stick
created
by
Mary
Gilmore
as
a
part
of
condition?"
'""
on
a
'TASTEFUL' GIFTS - Pictured here are
their Christmas holiday celebraThe Racine Juniors were busy
Four
years
ago
I
started
;tg
her
new
business
"Sweet
Greellngs."
several special occasion arrangemeihs of cookies
tion by participating In the with holiday activities thro\lgh·
wear a leg brace because 'or·
. Pomeroy Christmas Parade:
tiut the month of December.
weakening muscles. The carlE
The rest of the holiday season Their first Decem~r meeting '
ments
were Incredible. For
was devoted to making a wide was an ornament workshop. The
ample:
"Did you kick yoii.t
variety of Christmas decoraJuniors. along with girls from
-husband out of bed last nlghtt~
tions, ornaments and gifts. Some their sister troop, Racine Brownew.
This remark was !rom someonri
Colorful
cellopnane-wrapped
are
among
the
many
items
bowls
nie Troop 1259, each made three
of these were for use at home,
The
large
homemade
cookies
did not know.
·•
cookies
on
a
stick
arranged
In
in
which
Mrs.
Gilmore
creates
Including smaU baskets and different ornaments. They seare
baked
on
a
stick,
cooled,
Children
are
wonderful,
on
tlie
holiday
or
special
occasion
her
unique
gift
items.
gravevlne .wreaths. and Rulected two ornaments to take
wrapped In clear plastic wrap
She also offers a dozen "long other hand. They get right to ~
dolphs made from pine cones.
home. The ornaments which the containers-what a novel idea
and
then
in
cellophane
before
point. "How come you walk I~
tor
gift
giving!
stemmed''
roses In a box. an
Others were used to decorate a
girls did not keep were given to
being
arranged
in
a
vase
or
other
that?"
They are not mallclo\18
·'Sweet
Greetings
'·
is
the
name
anniversary
special.
as
well
as
Christmas tree for the res ldents residents at the Meigs County
container.
The
holiday
or
occa·
and
I
don't
mind telling them tl111l
of
the
new
business
of
Mary
table
centerpieces.
Many
of
her
of the Veterans Memorial Hasp!· -Infirmary.
sian
determines
the
wrapping
when
I
was
small I was sick ani~
Radford
Gilmore
of
Rock
cookie
.arrangements
are
ental Extended· Care Facility. The
The visit to the Infirmary for
color,
like
red
lor
Valenline's
some
of
my
muscles don't wortl
hanced
with
accessories,
all
Springs
Road,
Pomeroy.
rest were given directly to members of the Junior and
Day,
pastels
lor
Easter.
as
well
right
and
they
need a little ex(lj
designed
to
make
he
r
"tasteful"
Mrs.
GHmore
describes
her
residents ;llong with Christmas Brownie Troops was made possias
the
con
Ia
I
ner.
,
latest
small
venture
as
a
way
of
gifts
not
only
attractive
1o
look
help.
The
kt!!s
atways
gtve mea
cards which were made by the ble by mothers who provided
Wicker
baskets,
designed
big
smile
and
say,
"OK."
":~
providing
consumers,
tired
of
at
,
but
delicious
to
eat.
transportation. Besides their
girls.
mugs,
bud
vases,
and
brandy
I've
written
this
letter
In
Ill~
The Brownies visited the facil- handmade ornaments. the girls traditional gifts, with something
head 50 ttmes and now I feel good
Ity to decorate the tree, sing took with them refreshments and
about getting It down on papert
Christmas carols and share some gifts for the Infirmary residents.
Thanks lor listening, Ann.
Christmas spirit and refresh· A program of songs and poems
D.M., Madison, Wl1.
~~
ments with the residents. The was presented, lncllidlng an
Dear
Madison:
Far
be
It
fro~
girls then returned to the Chester original poem by troop member
Area Recognition Day to be
nounced for a song and program Roush as the runner-up. Nelle
me to defend the lunkheads, bufl
United Methodist Church to have Angle Carleton. The girls en· observed May 20 at the Zanes·
cover contest for the recognition Grover won the fruit basket, and
honestly believe they don't mean
their troop Christmas party, with joyed getting acquainted with the ville High School was announced
day which will hosted by chap· Ruth Dugan, the surprise
to be unkind.
, '··
more songs, games, treats and a residents, and made plans tovlsll at the Tuesday nlgh1 meeting of
lers In Malta and Roseville.
package.
The
problem
Is
that
they
are
tile Infirmary again at various TOPS 570 held at the Coonhunters
gift exchange.
Lennie Aleshire presided atthe
Mrs. Vining presenled a proignorant. When they see solneoJ;~e
• Other activities enjoyed In times tllroughoUt the year.
Building on the Rock Springs · meeting with Ola Sinclair giving gram on salt aild sodium Intake
who Is "different," they become
Rather tllan have a .troop party Fairgrounds.
Dl!cember were a tour of Pizza
the secretary's report. It was
and their effect on the body.
curious.
They have not been
Hilt and collecting toys and and gift exchange, the girls
It was noted that the theme will
noted that Teresa Wood Is
There was also a skit by Mts.
reared
with
the refinement .
candy and clothes lor the needy . decided to go Chrtstmas caroling be "TOPS. The Magic Kingdom"
h()spitallzed at Veterans. Peggy
VIning on eating habits assisted
have grown to expect (because
Besides Jnvolveme11t In the through ijaclne. Meeting ttme on and at that time royalty will be
VIning gave the weight loss
by team members, Mary Roush.
we
. were broug·ht up wltlii
annual Girl Scout Cookie sale. the rilght of caroling was ex- selected, KO:PS will be recogreport which showed Pearl
Mary Marlin. Mrs. Grover, and manners), and we are stunnel!;
the Chester Brownies continue tended so the girls could enjoy nlzed, and there will be special
Knapp as the bestloserandMary Mrs . Aleshire.
"
·
when we encounter .such•
refreShments and a couple of entertainment. Plans were anworking on proficiency badges.
rudeness.
~ •
games . The girls also enjoyed
In
the
future,
when
people
ar&amp;i
treats at a couple of the homes .
BROWNIE TROOP 1259
thoughtless, I hope you willwhere
they caroled.
Meetings o( the Racine Brow·
remember this letter and not let~
During Christmas break from
nle Troop d)lring the holiday
thetr
remarks get you down. :..:
season were joyous and hectic. school, many of the girls In the
The girls' first meeting during troop traveled to Parkersburg,
tile month of December was W.Va. fora day of activities. The
Districts. Guest conductor for
ter masons welrome. Shade
Open dance
•.2
FRIDAY
spel)t making Christmas orna- girls _e arned their books badge by
the concert will be Dr. Berl
River
lodge
members
are
asked
POMEROY
Belles
a'nd"
POMEROY
Rouhd
and
partlclpallng
In
a
morning
pro·
ments. The girls made three ·
Damron of Ohio University.
to bring a hOmemade pie.
Beaus Western Square Dan&lt;~&amp;
different ornaments, two of gram at the public library In square dancing will be featured
Everyone
welcome.
Friday,
8
to
11
p.m.
,
at
the
Senior
~
Round
and
square
Club
ts sponsoring an open dant(':
RACINE
which they kept for themselves. VIenna, W.Va., and thel,r water ·
on
Saturday
, from 8 to 11 p.m.,a.t:
Citizens
Center
In
Pomeroy.
•
dancing
will
be
featured
Satur·
Each girl chose one ornament to fun badge In an aflerll06n proEastern
alumni
the Senior Citizens Center In
be given to a resident at the gram· at, the Parkersburg Music by the True Country day evening, 8 to 12 midnight, at
EAST MEIGS - Anyone Inter·
the
Ramblers.
Admission
$2.
The
Racine
American
Legion.
Pomeroy.
Caller will be Jo~
Y.M.C.A.
Sherry
Hensler
and
Meigs County Infirmary :
ested In participating In the
public
Is
Invited.
Bring
snacks
Music
by
True
Country
Waugh
of
Gallipolis.
All western'
VIcki
Northup,
mothers
of
troop
During The girls' next meeting
Eastern Alumni basketball game
Ramblers
.
Everyone
welcome.
square
dancers
are
invited.
•••.,
for
the
snack
table.
members
Kristen
Hensler·
and
In December, they traveled to the
on Feb. 7 should attend a meeting
Amy
Northup,
accompanied
the
" Infirmary along with the Racine
and prac&lt;lce at the high school at
' ' "1
POMEROY - The Belles and
TUPPERS PLAINS A
Junior Troop. While there, the . girls to Parkersburg.
1
p.m.
Sunday
.
A
fee
of
$10
will
be
Free clothing days
.' ::
November 1roop officers also square da.nce will be held at the Beaus Western Square Dance
girls presented a short program
charged to play and the fee wm ·
Club
will
Tuppers
Pl'alns
V.F
.W.
Post
on
sponsor
an
open
dance
served through December, since
POMEROY -TheMetgsCoof:'l:;
of Chlrstmas carols and poems.
be collected on Sunday before
at
the
Senior
·
Citizens
Center,
,
Friday
evening.
Everyone
erative
Parish, 311 Condor St . ~
many
of
November's
and
DeThe girls then presented Christ·
practice. Those Interested In
welcome.
Pomeroy,
on
Saturday
evening
cember's
meellngs
were
dis·
Pomeroy,
Is sponsoring free&lt; "
mas ornaments to the residents,
playing but cannot attend Sunfrom
8
to
11
p.m.
Caller
will
be
rupted
by
the
holiday
acllvltes.
clothing
days
Tuesday throut!!:
served homedmade cookies and
day's meeting are asked to
John Waugh. All western square
SAT\JRDAY
Thursday. Jan. 24-26, from9a.m'.
\
conlact Tim Baum.
LAUREL CLIFF - A hymn dancers lnviied.
·to J p.m. A wide assortment oi
sing, with the Sisson Family, wiB
Meeting
rcheduled
clothing tor men. women ar.(~
Order of Eastern Star
'
be held Saturday, 7 p.m., at the
• SUNDAY
children Is available. For more.
POMEROY -PastMaironsol
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter, Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
POMEROY- The Churches of
Information, call 992-7400.
..
Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of
' •t
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. will Church. Pastor Bill Williams
Christ-Christian Churches will
Eastern Star, will meet Feb. 7 at
meetThursdayat7:30p.m.at the welcomes the public.
have a fifth Sunday hymn sing at
COLONY THEATRE
CLEVELAND (UP!)
The
I he home of Emma Clatworthy.
Grace Episcopal Parish House
the Zion Church of Christ, on
Cleveland public school system
Members are asked to bring a
FRI. THRU THUR.
Route 143, Sunday, at 7:30p.m.
social room.
RUTLAND - Square, round
will soon provide parents with a
hOmemade baked Item or handand slow dancing will be featured
Each congregation may share a
"partnership agreement" In an
made craft Item for the Val~n·
musical number, along with
Saturday evening, 8 to12 p.m., at
effort to Improve student Chapter meeting changed
tine's
Day gift exchange. There
congregational singing, devotion
Ell De11lson Post 467 or the
performance.
will
be
a catered dinner prior to
and communion . Everyone ·
Evangeline Chapter 186, Order American Legion, Ru !land. Live
T H E
RETUR\1.
The agreement details respon·
the
meeting
at 6 p.m. Cost of the
of the Eastern Star, has post· band and refreshments. Evewelcome.
slbiUtles the state's largest pubdinner Is $6. Any member wish·
paned .l.ts regular meeting from ryone welcome.
lic school district · owes each
lng to make a reservation for the
POMEROY - The Meigs AI·
Feb. 2 to Feb. 9 at 7:30p.m. due to
family and actions each parent
dinner is asked to call Twlla
' .
the District School of Instruction ~
CHES1ER .:... The annual In·
!-County Band will present a
OIIE EVENING SHOW AT 7:30P.M . \ I!, J",
promises to follow In regard to
Childs at 992-~188 by Feb. 1.
. ,,..
free publiC concert on Sunday, at
to be held next week.
spectlon of Shade River Lodge
ADMISSION $1.00
their children.
: ~c
2 p.m ., at Meigs High SchooL Tile
No. 453, Chester. will be held
The agreement calls for the
Saturday . Dinner at 6: 30 p.m.
band is composed of Junior and
district to provide studenls with
~~----~~~~~-~
Lodge meeting at 7:30. Work in
Senior High band studellts. from
competent teachers, a safe envir•
the Fellowcraft Degree. All mas· . Southern, Eastern and Meigs
onment, and tutoring when
Sharon Stewart, who gradu·
needed. It also Includes parental
'
. '
ated
with the first cosmetology
promises 1o make sure a child
class at Meigs High School In
completes homework and that
'
1971, is returning to the field after
the parent wllJ attend parentseveral years ot being a hometeacher meetings.
•
maker and pursuing other actlvt.
Opponents said the agreement
MIDDUPOD,
PO
.
.
OY,
IIAD.IY,
IIINEISYIUI,
ties.
She
will
be
working
on
was unenforcable and that the
Tuesdays, Thursday$ and Satur·
board was "planning for people.
llmlND, SYilCUSI, lUSOI, W. Yl.
·
days at Brenda's Boutique, 318
rather than planning with
(ORDERS MUST BE PHONED IN BEFORE 3:00P.M.) ··
North Second Ave., Middleport,
people."

f

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

We do many things on impulse, in
haste and often in anger, and we may
live to regret those actions after we've
had time to cool off and think it over.
We may quit a job because of one unfortunate incident. We might tenninate
a friendship because of some real or
imaginary hun. We occasionally contemplate a divorce. In any case,· if some
situation should bring you to a major
moment of decision, give it a lot of
thought. Would you really be bener off
as a result of this action, or would you
be sorry perhaps for the rest of your
IU:e? If you need help in de~iding this,
go to your House ofWorshtp and tell
your clergyman about it. That is one of
the most vital functions of your faith:
to point you In the right direction and
to help you straighten out your life,
once and for all.

il.. itiiCWO&lt;INplO:;I!Lm.; I!YI!Itlng..W06 ~~-----------J
1"!!::
mlcJ- ..moe. W-1,\1. 7 p.m.
p.m.
oGIIACE EPISroPAL CHURCH, 3'l6 E.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
Main St., l'onii!JW. SUnloy
HolY CHURCH, Corn..- Asb and Plum. Noel
ci!}m!IDmon llie llriiSu~ ~eacli molilt,
H~rnnann. pastor. Sullday School10:00a.
llid oomblned with momng ~ on the m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.: Wed·
tl*d AI Idly. M«Bng P'll)'er and aerrn.;m on
nesday and SatJJ.I;'day Evening ServJct'l at
~ oiiB" SUaloys~tliemOiih Oiun:~Sehool
7:30p.m.
and Nuroery c'"" provltlt'd. Collee ttoor in tile
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·
I'U1Ih lfaiUnmedhile\Y lolbolng.tlie-. DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
~ atURCH OF CHRIST, 212 w. Hicks, 10 mlleo above Ractne on Rt. 388.
St., Ll!o Lult, ......,.,uat. Bllie 11ct10o1 Sunday School 9 a.m., worship service 10
9:11a.m.: Mm-nnawtnNPtlO::Da.m.; Youth
a.m. Sunday evenlni service, 6:00p.m.;
iratiD&amp; &amp;:Ill p.m.; E\edng-.!Up, 7:11Jp. Prayer meeting and Bible .Study Thora·
m. W..t-l&lt;t"nll!ilprl,\lel'meetlngandBIIie day, 6:30p.m.
lllllY. 7:111 p.m.
MT. OLIVE UNITED METIIODIST - TftE SALVATilN ARMY, 1l5 Butlerlllt Olf 1.24, behind WUki!Sville. Charles Jones,
, " ' " - · Mn. lltJra 'Mnlna In Clilrle.
pastor. Sunday School. 9: JOa.m.; morning
10
SUaloy worship, 10:3D; SUnday and ThurOday
YPSM
evening services, 7:00p.m.

Sehool10:30 a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
7:30p.m. (Johns&lt;ll) .
LONG BOTTOM - Chu.rch S.boal 9: 30
a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Wedneoday, 7:30 p.m.: UMYF Wedn"'·
day, 6:00p.m.; COmmunion F-Irat Sunday
&lt;t,Monlh (Cr&lt;toot) .
REEDSVILLE - Church SChool9: 30 a.

REALTOR

362 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 45769
614/ 992-2644

106 luH••I &amp;...... P•rner•y, ~

MEIGS

m
lJ:!

FRANCIS FLORIST
M~·igs

ROWIH 101 IVERY OCUIION

MEIGS nRE
. CENTER, INC.

•

RoY.
~pastor;
! k - lictiOol !kit. CllUtth School !1: ~a.m.;
Wpnllfp -10:30 a.m. O&gt;olr re~
n..~o:Y. 6: 4!1 p.m. . ~ Lois
IU't.
POMEROY CHURCH OF 1liE NAZA·
RENE, Comr Union and Mulberry. Rev.
'lllomu Glm MeO!rw, put&lt;r. Nonnan Pfes.
lflY, S. S. !kp., Sunloy School, !1:;11 a.m.:

WOI'IIIID.

0

Ann
Landers

Any Girl Scout troop In the
county wishing to participate In
the monthly Girl Scout Diar,y ,
shoutd submit reports, either by
mall or In person. to The Da!Jy
Sentinel, 111 Court Street, Pomeroy, 45769. Reports should be
submitted by the 20th of each
month. Reports may be prepared
by a scout, a parent, or a troop
leader.

TEAFORD REALTY

~~J~l!·:N

Page~7

Girl Scout Diary...

The Interested _Rw~inesses Listed On This Page.

214 E. Mairi
992-5130 Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY; AGENT

Friday, January 27. 198"9

.,

INSURANCE --=SERVICES

SAllS I SEIYKE

,

••

Brogan-Warner .

•• •owN &amp; SNOUFFER
RIE &amp; SAFETY

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
"HtS!

•

0

Friday. January 27. i'989

'

This MesSIII(e and Church

•

•

618 East Main Street
Pomeroy. Ohio

992-6669
U(lltl

,.
·' ..

~71

....... . .

'""

.. w;

. --

.. . ...

~

. . . ....

~

,,

..

•,
~,

~

Open 9 AM·8 PM Weekdaya, 9-5 Set. Phone 9.92·6674 ;'
.

;~"'~

·-·

North S.Cend, Mld.tport, Ohio

..

.,
..

...._ . ~ ·--

-

... -- ........_ -

-

'

'·
--~

.•
.

···----'

-----·---·-" -----·~-

-----. ------·-

.'

�..

----

.)

Page-8-The

Wildoots hand EHS seasons first loss
Hannan Trace's junior high
girls' basketball team handed
Eastern Its flrst loss or the
Sfason , defeating the visiti n g
Eagles 45-41 Thursday night.
Lucy .Mullins led the Wlldca t
-attack wlth 37 points. Teammates Mary aeaver, Cher!Se
Jacobs, Missy Sanders and Stephanie Stapleton scored e ig ht

Business Services

spons briefs

points each.
The E a gles were led by O t to,
who scored 22 p oint s . She got help
from Wilson
(10), Metzger
(seven ) and Morris ( two) .
·
The n ex t game fo r 10-2 Wildcats wlll be played at a Ume and
a ga inst an opponent to , b e
announced.

Services obuuaty
were ro be held In
Arlington, Texas, Thursday ror
David Beck, 35, a -nationally
ranked wheelchair athlete who

a

died when htt by
car while
crossing the street. Beck, who
had begun traalillng tor the 1990
Paralymplcs, was left a quadraptegtc in 1983 after ra!Ung asleep
while driving.

HILLSIDE IIUZILE

•Eer•
zer•

•Washers

CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

•Ranges•F
•Refrlger tors
"Mutt lo I....Ur.. lo"
··-·
liEN'S APPUANCE

949 •2801
or Res. 949·2860

Classifie

1/22188/ffn

thru FRIDAY
8 A.M. until NOON

MONDAY

0 -'15

1 OAY
3 OAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

SATURDAY

POLICIES
•Receive $.60 discount for ads "'paid in ad\tance.

Announcements

"Free ads - G•veaway and Found ads under 15 words will be

tun 3d..,, at no charge.
"Price of ad for all capital 1Mt8tt te double price of ed coat.
"7 point line type only u~ed .

51 - Household Good~~;
52- Sporting Good•
53- Antiques

4- Giveawa\1

56 - Pets for Sale
57- MusicallnstrumEtflts

68- Fruiu &amp; Vegetables
59- For Sale or Trad e

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

1 1- Help Wanted

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A.M . SATURDAY

12131415-

Situation Wanted
lnsurance
8usln•• Training
Schools &amp; Instruction
18 ~ Radlo . TV &amp; CB Repair

- 2'00 P.M. MONDAY

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

-

FRIDAY PAPER

2 :00P .M . TUESDAY
2:00P .M . WEDNESDAY

17- Mitcellanaous

- 2'00 P.M THURSDAY

SUNDAY PAPER

-

18- Wanted To Do

2:00P .M . FRIDAY

22 - Mone¥ to Loan
23 - Profelsional Services .

following telephone exchanges...
Galli a County
Arl8 Code 614

Meigs County
Area Code 614

446- Gallipolis .
367- Cheshire

992- Middleport

388 245 266 643379-

985- Cheste'
843- Portland

VInton
Rio G11nde
GuYin Oist.
Arabia Oist.
Walnu'

Pomer0\1

247 - Letart Falls

949- Racine
742- Rutland

Real Est ale

M11on Co .. WV
Area Code 304

675458 576773 882 -

31 3233343536-

Pt. Pleasant
Leon
Apple Grove
Ma•on '
New Haven

42 - Mabile Homes for Rent
43 - Farms for Rent
44 - Aparlment for Rent
45- Furnis hed Rooms
46 - Spa ce' 1or Rent
47 - Wanted to Rent
48 - Equipm"lmt for Rent

49- For le•e

~ey,

the ooventh day of.Feb·
.ruory, 19B9. the queation of
levying a tax. in excess of the
ten milt limitation. for the
benefit of Entern Local
Sc;hool District for the purpose of current expenses of
the school district.
Said tex being an addi·
tionaltalt of 12.4 mills to run
for a continuing period of
time at a rate not exceeding
12.4 mills for each one dol·
lar of valuati9n. which
amounts to one dollar and
twenty-four cenu for each
one hundred
dollars of
valuation, for a continuing
period of time.
" The Polls for said Election

will bo open at 6 :30 o'clock

A .M. and remain open until
7 :30 o 'clock P.M .
By Order of tho
Board of Election• of
Molgs County, Ohio
Evelyr1 Clark, Chairman
Datod December 29, 19BB
Jane M. Frymyer, Director
11113, 20, 27; 1213. 4tc
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY .
On Jonuory II. 1989 in
tho Maigo County Probata
Court Cuo No, 28121
Patty Ann Pickeno, 362Hi
Toxa1 Rold, Pomeroy. Ohio,
4~769, wu appointed Ad·
mrnqtratrix of the •tate
of Albert E . Goegloin, decened, late ol38215 TaiiU
Rood.
Pomlfoy,
Meigs
County, Ohio.
Robert E. Buck,
Probete Judge
Lena K. Nea_,rOIId, Clerk
111 13, 20, 27, 3tc
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Tupp1&lt;1 Pla(no- Ch•·
tar Water District Ia inviting
bida lor a 1989 1-ton ceb
and chat tis with thl follow·
ing:

1. 6 1paed 1tanderd menuel overdrive transmi11ion
2. Duel rear whe-'s. mud

2

In Memoriam

In Loving
Memory OF
GERALD E.
MICHAEL
Who Passed
Away
Jan. 28, 1988
Sadly missed by
Family and
Friends

11

Help Wanted

,ADMINISTRATIVE/
PERSONNEl

SECRETARY
Immediate opening
for nperianctd per·
san with gaod typing, shorthand and
comput• skills. Ex.
etllent salary and
fringl '-ntflts.

Apply In person at
Holz• Clink
· Administration

Office. Qualified
only need apply•.

Public Notice
ADDENDUM TO PART 1,
ITEM E (5) SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY RACCOON MINE NO: 3 ·
LEGAL NOTICE
Southern Ohio Coal Com-

pany. Raccoon Mine No. 3,

1•

P. 0 . Box 490, Athono, Ohio
4&amp;701, hu aubmitted an
appllca1ion to reviae a C011l

Mining and Reclamation
Permit · numbered R·0483·
12, to tho Ohio Oeportmonl
of Netural rnourc81, Division of 'Reclamatton. Tha
propo•d co•l mining and

reclamation operation will

be conducted in Me"igs
County. Salem Town1hip,

Sectlono 13,215. 28, 30. 31,
32, 33 and Fractiona 7, 13,
19. lnd 25 end Vinton
County. Wilknville Townahip, Soctiona 1, 2E, JE, 9,
and Gallia County, Hunting·
ton Townthip, Section 1.

end snow tires
3 . Engine 460
4 . 6 ply tires front and rear
6 . 1 37" wlloel buo
6 . Heavy duty rear springs
7. Power ateering and

eapand tHe areas for rooril
and pillar method of under·
ground mining, and provide
for pillar removal on those
ereaa and on areu pre·
viously approved to be
mined and lor Iongweii

mining.
The applicetion is on file ot
lhe o"ice of the Maigs
County Recorder, Meigs
County Coun House. Se·
cond Street. Pomeroy. Ohio

and

the Vinton

County Recorder, VInton
County Court House. Main
Slreet, McArthur . Ohio

TOP

Locuat

treet,

THE STAIRS

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
111 W111 Second. Pom•oy

1/26/1 mo.

992-6282
Middleport,. Ohio
1-28·'88-ttn

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and re·

core radiators and
h8a fer cores. We can
atsa acid bcpil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
PAT

ing. Written commentl and·
/ or requ•t• for an inormal
conference may be sent to
tha Divlolon of Roclomotion.
Fountain Square, Building
B·3,
Columbuo,
Ohio
43224. whhln 3,0 days ol
the lett date Of publication
of this notice.

11) 27; (2) 3. 10, 17, 4tc

Extra Special in Ml441eport

HILL

FORD

992- 2196
MiddlePQrt, Ohio

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

1:00 P.M.

RACINE

GUN CLUB
RACINE,

OHI 0

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
·

TRI·COUNTY
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9lM-7PM

Paying today
Jan. 13, 1989
tSubj•ct to chan\'"
Without Notice
COPPER .............. 65' 1~
(lEAN ALUMINUM
SltiETS ..................... 47' 1~
&lt;lEAN AlUMINUM
CAST ........................ 40' 1~
AWiliNUM
IIIONY
SHEET ............. 5• to

30• •·

IIONT CAST .... 3' •• 20' 1~
STAINlESS ................ 20' I~

992-5114
Located Off lypeoo
At Jet. of Rte. 7 •
143, Pomeroy, Oh.
1-12· '89-tln

emergency numbllr for
Inform Ilion.
If you wloh lddltlonot
informotion coli Greg
Kaylor, Fire Chill, (3041
182-31119.
Bond Sollld Bleil to
Now Hovon Vol. Fl,.
Dept. Inc.
loxiOI
Now Hoven. W.Va.
.
21211
Attn.: Soiled Bid
Now H1Y011 Vol. Fir•
.Oopt. Inc. _..,.. the
""" to oooopt or reject
ony or oil blda.
lido wHI bl oponlld on
Morch I, 1889 at 7:30
P.M.

Th1s re~ly ~an extra special pr~erty. lt'san 1860 brick 1n eK·
cellent condrtion. The 5 rooms downsta11.s 1nclude i1ving room.
large family room, kitchen, dinelte, I! bath, and kids' playroom
which could be a lormal dming UlOID, library or downstans
bedroom. Upstairs there are 2 modern baths and 4 bedroomsw~h access to a large private porch. The entire home IS i1 good
cond~ion wrth new w1ring throughout modern plumbmgand
heating central air, hardwood hoors, pretty stairway andlr(Jlt
entrance. Antique hgllts and unusual antique ceramic casting;
dating back to civil war period. Besureto notice the extra large
corner locltion w~h lenced in play yard and braJid new oversized 2 car garage. Maybe lh•e ~ something better in Middle-'
port. II there ~ ~is not oo the market We pnced rt at $59,500.
You look and tell us what you'll give.
#I 08
WISEMAN REAl

GENERAl

M

We C.rry Fishing Suppllel

COMMERCIAl

.CUSTOM KITCHEN&amp;. lATHS
-EXT£NSIVE REMODEliNG
•VINYL SIDING &amp; AOOANG

Pay Your Phone
_ and Cable Bills Here
IUSINESS PHON!
16141. 992·6550

•METAL IUILDINGS
HOUSING. APT. PROJECT$
Slf\'CE 1969

DUllY Sl, SYIACllll

lfSIO!NCI PHONI

Dhch Witch Trench• SOrvicol
for living wlter lnes &amp; dr..,
pipe. Owner C .W. Dn&amp;.on, call

814-446-0159.

ReduceyourWeight·Tike"New
Shap• Dil't Plan" and E·VIIP
Wit.- PU11. AYellabfe FNth

Ph•mecv.

We wll hall mil tor am•gen C,
HEAP. Moiga County Dept. ol
HLm., Serv-. and HEAP
vouch... We Clft give ym.
pro,..t delivlriel . £ ac*lor Salt
Worka. Inc. Pomlftl¥, Ohk),

114-982-3881.

16141 992-7754
l/21/lfn

LASHLEY
SERVICE

FIREWOOD
OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

I MI. East of St. lt. 7
en 241 at Chtsttr

$3 s

WEI,.DING
AUlD &amp;
FARM ~EPAIR
AUTO BODY&amp;
WRECK REPAIR

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

UGHT HAUUNG DO~IEI

BILL SLACK
992-2269

985-3844

40 YRS. EXPERIENCE
I-5-'19-1Mo:

· -, Telewision listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid. Sales g Senric•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

0
~

Amouncemants

Llcl• needed for good paying
temponry office Ike work. No
•Darien08 niJCIR8ry, Alia need

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
3 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Vetetans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

Don't TrMh h Caeh itl
..
Public ReG¥Ung naw op.. for
busln... We
on M•n and

•e
s..-. Paint

14th
,._.,..
w .v.. Wo buy CMI. ... .....
coo.,.- .,d more. Mon.- thn.!
Fod.. 9:00 till e,oo. Satunlltr

8:00 rll noon. For morelnforme· ·

tionc cllll304-e711-3181.

4
Part Coon Hound puDPia
814-2511-U011ft• •. PM .

c•

1 kin"' to ...,, ....,. Coli
814-4411-0912 olt•l PM . "

2 rabblto. t year oid. 81oclt mole
•d . .,.,.. fomllo. Aloo 2 malo
&lt;:11:1. 1 bhck tnd 1 whka end
- · Coli 814-982-8904.,..
1 :00.
FrM ro good home. Aeg*-t•ed
lax•. 10 rnant.. old. Hauae
brok.,, II ohoto. Good wMh
kids. In country ar.._ 814--742·

31n.

START SAVING NOW
FOR NEXT YEAR'S
.VACATION! I
Call the Avon District Manager
For Job Openings In Your

.Lt\.VOO Ar':; 4·698-7111
1

..,,ky
114-992-74118.

.

'

Free to good hom&amp; CoonHound
puppl•. Coli 114-742·2355.

Bobr Crib , foir condition. CoM
814-949·2187. John or VIolet
One bl... tamale Germ.. She;
pl!.d pup 8 montho old. -.1 o
good , . , _ 304-4811-1528.

F,. • - · 2 horlld. 5
monthl old. 304-5'1'11-21107.

.

CHISTR, OHIO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS '
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG. REPAIRS

l'ltONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

915-4141

GENR~

CONTIACTOIS

Aeferenceo

OREN'S
GREENHOUSE
· Foliage Plants
lilskets

$6 AND UNDER
EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN ALL DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. lt. 124, J MI. past

s..t........... SdiMI

949-2682

6

Lost and Found

LOST-BID &amp; r.n, four white
..... while ltomech. biiiCk tailwhite tip, Bllglo a Ooct.-

ahund. v.., frlontly-f.,.lly pot.
Nout'!'ed- Call 114-446-0132.

FOUND. 2 male pupplu, 1
brown. 1 black. apprcm. I wk1.

flfral 81Gtptd our hame on
fourth St. , Mldcleport, nt•
post office. Derk wllh white
m11k.. Reward. Call 814-992·
3SIIO.

WIIIM,

304-n3-U22.

Lost -Vicinity· of Redmond

Ridge. brown m•e. fWd hlk•,
whha ar.r Ofl held. Woukf
panon that cllllod - e eon
bQ. Coukln't find you. 3041711-1278.

BINGO
POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB
224 E. MAIN ST • . - 992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:45 P.M.,
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.

Ride

For rent 2 b8(tooom unt.nnilhed
house. IO?Ih 2nd St. New
Haven. t110. month pkl1 dep-

Business
Opportunity

ooM. 304-871&gt;-5278.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAlLEY PU8LISHING CO . recommMdl that you
do bualn. . whh people you
know. and NOT to lll"d mone,

tion ..... 304-n3-1785.

9

Wanted To

Buy

Real Estate
H cmes for Sale

2 H.D . FREE with coupon end pun:hH of min.
H.C. Peckege. Limit 1 coupon percuatomerpor
WE PAY UO.OO PER GAME
OVER 110 PEOPLE 186.00 PER GAME

I

.....,

Furnlthed tlflciency g1r1ge
•Partment. working gentllftWI
only, 1180. ,.. month. utllkl•
Included. Prl... ate. avalleble

45

Furnished Rooms

Vr.y attractive brick 4 be•oom.
2 belt\ famitv 100m with fir•
place. formal dining. 1.-gelllling
roqm. 30 ft. cult om oak kltd1en
cabin ell. oak w ooM' ork. ftn II h
bM:ement. 2 c• g•age. t.,el
llr'ldiCIIPed lot. 4 ml•· from

$280 p• month plua depoalt.1
Call 814-3811-854&amp;.

46

2 BedroGm mobile home. Chy.
Unfurn•hed. Adut11 only' . Prime par!dng. · ueo a mo.

Pbrt•brook Subd1Vil6on. Call

814-448-4189.
o.lun 3 BR. houN for •le.
Own• flrunca. CIH 304-17&amp;8104.

Sleeping rooms wtth cooking.
Atao Trill• IP8C8. An hook·l.t)l.

2 bedroom trail• h• l.lrnllure.

qulrod. Call 814-4411-4319 or
304-8711-9760.

Holzer Hotpit;al off 'At. 36--

frJr rent-week or month.
St_.ina .. *120 a mo. Ollila
Hotol-814-4411- 9580.

Space for Rant

CO\Intrv

~bile

Home ,_k..

Routt 33, North of PomtrGY-

'*''· •1•. c.n

lDts, rentals,
114-992-7479.

Sp.ae ideal for office or amal

Oopoo• roqurod. Coll814-44113791 ltft• I PM.

busln... On North Second in
Midcleport. 1200 p8l' month. A•

2BR . mobliahome. Sec. dllpoail
&amp; ref. r-.ulred. Cell 114--441--

hlglrts.

utiMi• paid. Coli 814-992&amp;545 diWI &lt;X' 814-949-2217

0808.

Government Hom11l From

38R . mpbllehome.1U:70wll'h

Evening Cook. Appt,- i1 person.
No phonocllllo. HolldO'(-Inn-450
Plko St.. Ollillpolla. Ohio.

GOVERNMENT HOMESI From

t1.00 (U Rep_, , Forecloaurw.

Repo1. Tax Dellnqu.nt Prop..
tin. NOW 8 ElliNG THIS
AREAl CoiJRdl-al. 1·
3111-733-10 Ext. 0 2732·A.
fOR CURRENT USTINOSI

•ee

*1-00 fll Repair) . Foreclosuret.Aspol. Ta Dellnguent Prop•
tl•. Now S.lllngThl• .,.., ean
iRofunclolllol 1-315-733-11014
Ext 0274811 lor Wtr... lllltlngal

IXpiindO,

w.t•.

dl1hwathw. stove.

Train. Unl.lr,.hed. CoUpl•.
smlllll chl*en sccepted. Rt. 1.
Loa.ttt Aoed. Pt. F't••ent. b&amp;hlndK&amp;K. 304-6711-10711.

You pravlde • home. guidance
., d trton•ltlp In 1 family

lllmOIPhlr&amp;

Raqu~•

ability

tD

32

oommltment to the growth and

Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 beltoom, Sand Hill Road.
304-8711-3834.

-llopn.rt of on lndlVkll'o~al
w•h mental r•rdllt&amp;on. Conllcl Syllllo DIY at 448-7,109 1973 Freem., mobile home.
' oft• 8~0 PM. Appll....a mull Total
electric. $&amp;000. Cell614,.Ide in Oallla COunev. Equal .
4411-n&amp;8.
Opportunity EmpiOI'ft'.
0 0 V.E R N M E N T J 0 8 S
118,040.·159,230. yo•. HoW
hiring. eon 111 8011-8B7-6000
Ext. A·9805 for turJS1t feder ..
hi.
$360. • dWi I At home! Proceu
for ourcompanv .

or••
People Cllllyou. Nationwide. For

Dotolll. call IFIIllncloblol 15111-489-8897Ext. K1122.

3 bed-oom all electric mobile
hOme on Pflv•te lot. t175.
month plus utllttl•. 304-875-

Pertlelty furnilhed 'IUrtmant.
Sutl:1ble for 011111 or t...w aGih:a.
Ref. r..ulred. No pels. lnqulra
at: 831 Fourth A..... Oelllpoll.

814-4411-0238.

M~rr.ll&lt;HHiise

51

-

44

Movingl Must ...II 1979 Man lion. 14x70, 3 bedroom.. • 11
electric. underpinning. porch.

Asking *7600. Call

814-~3-

Mobile homo .,d lot. 75x100

Apartment
for Rant

35

Lots

&amp;

Acraage

40 or 80 ICI'W for Mle. Ne•
Hemlock Grove. Meigs County.
All mln.-1 rightt, WGOded.
*300. or leU p..-acra 114-717·

2754.

PllnyTn~ck Stop AestlfJrn. At.

3 cle•ed acr• wllh pond. "Ante
5 acre tract•. ac bldg .ttw off

Schools

AI. 87, 304-458-1876.

Rentals

4,

Antiques

Buy or sell. Rtvwlne Antlqu-.
1124 e·. Main ltrwt. Pomwoy.
Houra: M,T,W 10a.m. to &amp;p.m .•

SundO'( 1 to lp.m. 114-9922828.

64

Hoy to&lt; 30118.

Building Suppliai

•c.

WESTERN AED CEDAR
• Ch.,nlli Ruatlc
and Bovlliod Lop Biding
* Dec:kM.. • I •
0 U8rMtlld au.Miy
CETIDE. INC .. Athona-814594-3871

B70.9181.

F'ets for

58

Sale

Grooming. All bre~d. . .. AII
ttytea. 1.-ns Pet Food DHI•.

eon.., Konnol
anciSin. . .,dHim~

o:-vn&lt;~

Pwe

IIV., ldttene. ChGw ltud - .
vlco. Coli 814-441i-3844olt• 7
PM.

8om 12-23-81. t171oach. eon
814-384-29171tft.- 5 PM.

Tow.,otor furldlft. tfma dock.
pilot ]lei&lt;, 4 18 Inch .....

AKC Bonlll puppl-. Roady to
go. F..,ell&amp;on...,m. 814-517·
38118.

L-......

Filh Tonk. 2413 Joollaon Ave,
Point PI-~ 304-8711-2083.
10 goloft up 114.99ond tO gol

rima, doek pletoo. . . - olfloo
deakl&amp; c:redenzii!MIR t100,
4 drlwar ....-el ftl-.

· Coli 814-742-

Open SAM to IPM . Mon thru
Sot. 114-448-1899, 827 3rd.
Ave. GIIIIP'*· OH .

aampl•• t43.215.
Full blootlod Colle pup 175.00.

Phono 304-578-2233.

67

MUiical
Instruments

Individual guitar let1on1. beoglnnarl, •rlous gultartst. BN'-

cordll ' Muafc. 114-441-0187,
Jeff Womollfll lnllructar, 8144411-9077. Llrnllod oponinga.

f Mill Sllllll i ll~ '

NtrW" 300 .geUon pla.tlc •••
tllnk. Mederoftt In Dick· up truck

llo

bed. 1280. Cllll14-4411-4045.

L1Vt: S I11Lk

Menual Treldmill--uaed vrwy Ittie. Heavy duty ax.-clee like.

8oth for 1100. CoM 814-388o 81 Farm Equipinent
9009.
·
,- - - - - - - - - - AI• Chllm. 0·19 trlalor.
-tng.Houlllhold tur.._ga plow,.. a~lti.otor, U.8811. II
• mile. 1015 Seoond Ave..
MF trector with . -•• relk&amp;.
81 4- 441- 2907 ·
- g t'tllchlna how oontlllion•. 4.4,1110. Dwn• w!lf
Smll - - • o l - t l - l o fln- Col 814-2811-812,2.
be g~,. cut. Cell after 8 P,M.
614-2411-11047.
FormEqu'fl"""'· ZotorT-Dro.
H
d
at
llod
Mludh•d~, 1 .... ,; 2 p.,
ower Rln otw
o.-..
•·
.__,
Flld
ll.f'ilngoldban•
~outdo. contoinlna • - · 110 1•. : ....."'"'"' ...... Rutl•d.
ton. Ohio Pall• Co .• Pom•oy.
Olio 114-742·2451.
Olio. 814-992-1481 .
1114 C.J . 1 JHp. Mllflln 22 llaalr. end white 2 honetrel•.
M-um Rlflo with -PL
. C.ll Ifill• •d lgtc1 work. t700.
_..
-·1 81•992-3842 or 814114-992· 1229 all• 8~0p. m.
10 30,

ua-

5plocolllllnaroomgroup.CI..,,
good concli:lan. 3 , ... old.

t110. 1171 ChrYsler Cordoba.

WI hwl t h o - prl• on
Homellte. JOM.ed ~d ttueq.
wru ohaln uwslftd IOCIHOo

:::::..j Plflll,
rl• . llder• Equ.,,_ com304-8711-7421.

Availlble furnished or unfur~

1058.

21•GIIIIa St. *300 a mo. •200
dor&gt;ooM. Col I 14-4411-22011.

F~.miiMd 2 BR . o•89• IPf.
Acll~a onlv. No pot~ Col

18

31R . houll. d.iuxe, AC. 13110•
mo. Coli 304-875-~104. or
1711-5388. '

Hcmes for Rent

Vinton eree on 1 acra-

I do Win- pllll houoocl-·
In(&gt; CoM 814-44f-1118.

Romodallld 2 BA . hou-. ml)or
II'PL. 1&gt;1rtolno, t271 plua dop.
Coli 814-3811-8482 1110 PM.

WHI do l...,mo T... Short fqrm
no. Cllll14-982-11137.

2 BA. houM cfose 10 town.

u•lll&amp; tun belement.
4.27Simo. t*ladl!l.' lorol. Col
814-4411-3648.

Double

3 BA . houoolnAioG,.,do. 0200
mo. C.H S14-2411-522S.

I

Nicely furnlahed 3 rO'om
aotteg .. one bect"oom. Aduh:a
onlv . No p - Rof. a dopColl 814-448-2S43.
-~

1-

,

Jmuary Ill• New Holancl

•

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie
•

~

Ill' [
loll

814-4411-2404- .

Untlrl]lohocf 2 &amp;R . g•oge • .,.

m.-n:. In town. Clrp•ed. Adults

only. No pets. C.U 114-44•

4581.
Apert....n: .valabfa HUD eo-

coptod. Coli 304-e711-5104.

Cant•.

F..nllt.d 2.3, or 4 rooma •
both. Cl-. _,,. ..... No
poll. Rot. a dop. -.ulnd. Coli
114-4411-1519.

83

-"'a .......

Tr ill! SJIIII Io1 t IOil

350 Chwy engtneandtr-mla-"
lion. Runo. t175. OCIO, Cal·

71 Auto'.•

814-992-2545.

For Sale

Mot--.

GoYomn.rt -lid ·Vohlcl•
from 4.100. For•.
Corvetta. Ch•v· 8urolua. Buy·
on Gula 111 11011-887-11000
Ext. S -10188.
1111 Ford. 4.05. 1973 Dodge
pickup.._ •.'428. 1971 Joop,
04110. ..... 814-3811-9879.
1988 Dodge DlytOOII. Cow miblo. Coli 814-4411-1218.

1975PontlocLo Mono. ... Mdl

11104.

"So much for robbing·a bank 8o.we
pay to have the car llxecL"

.

~

can
·

Serv1ces

cyl., n.w brak•· Good eond.

•
•

Runa good. t7110. Coli S14-

24tl-9087.

•

11B5 Buloll So,....; llloo nM.
Auto.. tit, crulllo. AC, AM-FMc-. Col 814-3111-8240.
1987 Leb•on Coup8 Turbo.
Exoelletit aoncltlon.

A• ,o ptiorw.

••col,

t983 luld&lt; lo8111r&amp;
cond. 4.1991"'- -.1913
Olory lmpalo, t4600 or w!lf
...portlal trod&amp; Col boo
tw- •• 8. S14-4411-7051.

1877 Tr.,..AM. bo4' good
ship&amp; axtrea. 421 engine opo
lfonof. Coli 814-446-803111•
3PM.

1878 Otwt Prll, auto, . air. al
_ . . No run. v.., aootl
gondltlon. Coli 814-285-1838.
1978ond18nT-a~• Boohfor
*771. Won't . . ...,.ltlftt- Call
814-982·2128.

Hom a
Improvement&amp;

81

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
,
Unoon&lt;ltionll lt.kM . . . . .. :

tee. Local r . . . . . . . tumiehecL

,,.. .rlmlt-. call

Liv~~tock

c-...

· Col 814-2811-

2 bon lor ••111luolua Md
1 - P DIJ'OO
1..
Age. Cllllt4-743-27te.

oon_.

t-814-237-1)488. ,_or night.

Ao g e r s l a s e m a n t
W• wp; oollug.

"''*

IWE£P ER ., d -In; modiIn• ·
ropor. _,. ., d auppll•.
. . d .....,..,. Davie YIMitum
Cleener, on• helf mila up
(Joorgll C - Rd. Coli 814-

•

448-0294.

.

a Eotortor.
,.,.. - - - · Col 814-4468344. '
Polnt.,g: lnt-

Corpontry worlo br tho Job or
'-r...n.... (&gt; dry Wll, , . , _
in g. elec:trk:llf, NJmG dellng oompl•o. Col 814-4411-7529.

r••·

Roofln!&gt; plumblnf&gt; aiOdr'lolf I
ho . .
Coli 114::
317-0448.
'
1971 Gr.,d Prt&lt;, PS, P8,
t150(). AllofMeandee... Ike
- · '814-9111-44271ft• 8:00

p.m.

tuat.rnd

1971 auloll Rogol. Automotlc.
no
mterior and tir...
415 ., a rurw good. eeoo.
S14-74 -2811.
.

m'. .

•d ...,..,I,

Ao bin ettl Contrecttn G·

Plu-g

Good •

-1&gt;

worlo
Coli-lorColi
boot
00 for
304-1 11-2578.

RoN·s

Televi1lon

Service~

Houte call• on RCA. au..r.
GE. 8poolalln' In :r.tMh. Col

or 814-4481
\

For ilp.-t dNI on • nM or"*
car. trUck or &gt;An, 111Kenny8a11
at Jim Mink Chevrol•t·

01·-·

304-1711-231
2484.

114-4411-3872 ...
304-773-1134.

oomovot. Cll304-17•1331.

1983 Oodgo eoo ES (Eurooportl, ah•p ..,.,, ........ lllurnl,.m whllll. f801• tit-. . &amp;

Rot..,_ or _....
cllblo•tool
drllln(&gt;
Moot
• ,_...,,
PUmp Ill• 1nd llti'Yioe. 304885-3802

·
- · .,.,.,..-:c
- oand.-·clutch
othlrwlde
book '!8kll

13.380.00 •king 4.2,8110.00.
304-e711-1308.

Folly Tr• Trlm"*'a ...,,..

RON'S APPUANCE SER'VICI,
houll call aervk:lng 0 !. HOI
PDint. w•hen. dry.. and
. . - . 304-578-2388.

198&amp; Ch•r• Cavell•. Gne
ow,.., gold. am roof. elr,

.........lo.AM·FMc•alllo.-11.
II'PfOX 18,600ml•· loldwln'•
Rno G - Gllllpollo. Olio.
814-4411-2227 or 304-17111914.
CARSITRUCKSI • 1971 Chlllroltt trudc 4.60Ct 1877 Ch111·
ro1tt Mollllu 1400; 18711 01._
moblo88Rotr-; tiOO; IIBO
Ford v., 1ton 4.1100: 1881 Ford
Courilr

c.l to . .

dOO.

304-1711-3381
1811 M•"'rv
for - ·
3,000
. ...... cou.,.
Colt 304-48111773.

Ilona Chlmnlfll S - .......
"""J.... -v. 304-n:u:141.

82

Plumbing
Haating

&amp;

CARTeR'S PWMIING
ANDHEATINO
Cor. Fourth IRd Pine

4411-4477

84

72

/Ndcl for Sale

tt81f Chwy plolo.o p hall tan.
llhort h:ol. oond. Coli
814-4411-4171.

till Chwy 'AI ton c ...om

Dotuxo V·l, 4 apd. ....,. trim.
IJI.ng window, bed llnor,

we...

ottrome

•

Elec1ricct I
&amp;

1987 Codllloo lotion. 13,000
ml• Mint-. Coll304-372·
1310. Riplov. wv. 21271.
71 C•dobo. OoOd oand. 3041711-17111 "',,..11 38.

•

Gilt:•·3888
Ohio
•
Phono 814or 114&gt;
Refrigeration

.

Aealdentlal or commwcial wll"'
or ropoioO:
Uc-.t llecrrldll'l. Rl~ou'r
BOdrloof. 304-1711-1718.

.,1&gt; - 86

General Hauling

Dll•d Wll• lervioa: Paola.
Cllt•na. Walla. Qollllory Anytim• Coli 814-448-7404-No
&amp;undo\' calli.

low mn •.

..ePM.

J a J W•• Servloo. Swlmmlnt
clll-. wolll. Pll. d14o
2411-1288.
•

11114 Cllwy ... ton c ...om
palun. I . cyl. auto.. nM

R • R Wotor Servloo. Poola.
cleterns, walla . lmmadlat•

17800. Coli 114-4411-3711 II·

t··--·

4.3780. Coli t14-4411-3791
efhlclh .....

••• PM.

18711 Dodge '""* 100. al., I
.,gin.,
UIO. :1000 tobeca&gt;

-

1,000 or 2.000glllono411111..,.
Coli 304-178-8370.

Potrlclll W•• Halilna lorvlco.'
, phoM 304-5711-231f or 114'
445-4088.
•

Watterson' s W..•Heulhlg. ,....
IOftlbiM rat.. WOlrmt diloounta. 2.000 to 4,000 c.,acltv.
cln•no. •304-1711-291
• · - · ate.

1 0 - - Colt

814-4411-40118.

Cltl..ln. -

Modern 1 IR. l!l.tnterll. Col1 1
814-4411-0380.
Efflol.,., 111artfl*rt w/orfvllo
both In Rio G,..do. CoM 1142411-&amp;223.

M-ro .,._.... artn• mill·
. . .,d oldd -.'Modal213
opr•d• 10B lu, tUIO,DO.
Modal 321,131bu, •z.HO.DO.
Modall14. 177 bu, tJ.300.DO.
Modal 304. 12211 gol oluny
aprlld•, 17,1100. DO. Modol
301 ........ Mia 2271 , ..
alutrY ....- . t12.1100.00. 0
~ tonk - - . , .....,
sprMden. lfetlmaw••••t an
IIdia .,d ft- on II """
apr-.. NM Hollllld moc141
L-113. 42 .., .._,. aiH (It-t
iollllr.... 111.000.00 ......
for 114.-00. Modal 311
arto•
- · IOOblowkhaoot•
.,dlll'd drlllot10.IIOO.OO. 3111
11100.00. w. .... IIIOd ..lid
...... t n - . K - - I o o
St. Rt. 87Pelnt,._llt
.. d IIIDI., Rood. , . - 304eU:It74.
.·.

doluxo 2 IR ..... , . ,
100m, lndlV ...ol ,_kin(&gt; E 1., -lon. No - . Cop. •
tel. Clll814-448-1817.
.

rtbullt '" typM,""

11711 ·Tr-AM 111&gt;4' porto.:
11n 01•. 3110
mllolon. Coli 814-1411-011. -

wlthrnllllhmlaii.W•andaaat•

-

•

wOfTontv·30 dO'(a. Po• 4.tt • ·
up. UOod &amp; rolult ,,.....
convertan. st•dlrd clutch•.
pr•aure pill• • throw out
bowing. -anty-12moo.CVC
lolnto-ol typ-. Col 114-37•
2220 .. 304-e711-e711t.

t.\oat ooll. Call 814-4411-11011().
l1oiP tryln(&gt;

Julio Webb Ph. 814-4411-0231.

Wheelchalr•new or ulld. 3
whlelttd electric 1ooot. .. Call
AOgn Moblty collecl:, 1·11._

.

l.._ •t~dedwan81'11y avail•

Groom ond SuP!&gt;Io Bhot&gt;Pft
Misc. Merchandise

•

u..d

lit Grain

Hay

Mlxod hiW for oolo, 4.2. por bill•
Colllt4-742·2270.

p.m.

2 ptlce ltving room suite for •'-·
Hal b.lilt·ln cu1hlona,. 1 wei
hu..- ndlneJ, one gl- Dp
end tabla 1nd one 18mp. AI in

53

84

For Mia bladt 1oft top farCJ I.
Joop. Lillo n-. 304-8711-1584.

55

Parts
Acceaaries

BUDGET TRANSMISSION ·•

_5_14-_44_11-_48_38_.- - - -- l:bed:=::':1:oo:.:oo:.:30::4-:':'ll-=t1:30::.J:":200::.:':14-::99:2:··1:1:3:&amp;:
.
Nice 1-2 bedroom ........,. ..

Nlcetv tur,.hed smal houae.
Adults onlr. Ref. requt... Na
poll. Coli 814-4411-0338.

Wanted to Do

CoUnty Appll ...., Inc. Good
uted appll•n=- Wid TV sets.

Comploh houlllhold •oma lor
aoto. AntlqliOiodl•wrltlngollolo,
Mod•n 1 IR. downtown, oom- whti:• curio Clbtnet. gl. . top
c•·- Dap- din otto tolllo ond eholra. •o""
Pleto kM~·~r,
~
.
~
doGra, wood door. mens 10
•
Cell IS114-44 ..-~ ~Peed
,
01 it,. no P• aft
~eye!., oth•tt.ns. 81 .,....
0139 ...,lnga, • ·
es2-n1t.
SHADY LAWN APT&amp;- 728
Sooond A.o . F.. nilhod olflolon- Montgo_, Word 23 albic ft.
ci• sll,ing .. e111 • mo. ch•t tr. . . .. Workl good.
indudiflg 'Nit• &amp; ~blae. t125. 814--992-5193.
Sln~o ...,., onlo. Coil lf4Olnlngroomllblt.,dfourbloclt
14&amp;41107 or 4411-2802.
wolvll oholra 1600.00 orlglnllilo
- l o ......,dolod 1 8R. 111t. 4.1,2110.00. D-• w•h ,...,
AppL fur,.hed. ldeallocat6o•1 row and a.c at •twin b8dl
biGck frGm downtown. C.H t30(1.00. F'-"sllewhh•c.~opy

nllt.d. Dopoolt roqulrld. CoW
114-445-4348 all• &amp;PM.
2 &amp;A . 1111.. now """" c•pot.
n.., · uliHII• ..rtlalio .. lei.
• 175o mo. Coli 304-e711-11104.
175-5388. 87tl-n38.

RE-TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
CO UEGE, 529 Joclllon Plko.
Co11446-43e7. Reg. No. 88-1 1-

aft•&amp;

Auto

-lnp.

For ••• Jido Ill' olde fl'lgldolr•
refrigerator, needs OOft1111'-or.
1110. u lo. CIJI 304-1711-5111

c - • • blocokl- oil · - .,..d
or dtiNery. M•on sand. OIIIIIIC&gt;1111 lloek Co., 123\'o Plno St ..
Gollloollo. Ohio. Coil 814-44112783.

very good condition, Cal Obla
Oiler otl14-742-2078.

:\":19c:-2;~ 2 R, i9~'35~~

o.o.

m.,.,

Sowlnill. 4 blod&lt;. 19B2Ponti1C
J 200......... n.ooo. 1973
Dodge pickup. 1380. C.lll14379·2188.

Starting at 4.289 p• mo. Coli
614-387·7850.

on Ina-ion. 304-67!&gt;-143&amp;.

Motorcycle•

76

814-4411-0338.

1984 Town Houn 14x70
mable home. •c cond. priced

call 814-.

Iron! bum,_...... 3 oioto ...... w - Poul tU"*
..,IIJ • . 4.1300. Coil 114-3117·
08211111• 5 PM.

1

Tappon. B.S . ..ectrlc. 4 ta.r~

stove top. 33··.zov.
4.75.00. 304-1711-2801.

Building Matorilll
llod&lt;. btlolc. - • pip-. wlf&gt;.
dows. • • • ·
cr .. • Winton. Rio Gr•do. 0 . Coli 8142411-5121.

..tt.. ..rm..

At- LIY_.ook Ill&amp; Aibol!y.·
Silo w-v S11Vrdoly• 1 PM .
Uv oek
· Ill of1 4 PM
_:! fridociW~ mlo ~. . of
-·-•

1'01' Ml•: Oak Clr . . ood. Coli
304-875-2757 ill• 4:30p.m.

SURPLUS.OriglnoJ .AfT'ftY, Oo·
nim, Rontel Clot~ grcomoull.,go(lllldloj.l8n
Sonwvll•• Old Route 21·
Junction lndependlnoe Aold.
1-ERAj.(EiaiRw-d).
i'fl.tov. Botunlltr. s u - ""'"
-.a:OOP.M.,10poo_.off.
Carh ... cJothlng. CMio~&amp;lll
lnoulltlld c-ol~ 304-2731151.

L'tv-+ock
-·

83

Merchandise

Will ...,. pi.,o -ona In mv
Beginning to fnt•medl•e. Cloll to downtown. Ce~
814-441 · 0200.

New completely furniehed
eparlment &amp; motMie home In
city. Adult• ont{. Parkktg. Can

1463.

4340. AA-EOE.

Instruction

room aulte. Cldar Vlllrdrobl.
ch-. dr.,.,.., youth bed. .,.
bed. oompl.te lint of bedl •
bedc:Hng. dlnnettt 1et1. m,.:~le
hutch. lea box. 2 pc. lvlngroom
cleekt.
mort Items. Y:. mle outJe"icho
Rd .. Pt. Pleaunt. W.Va.

64 Misc.

hOrne.

C...r Motel. &amp;14-446-7318.

15

Pickens Ua.:l Furniture

t3041e75·1460 "' (81413819773. Ewo .
Jult .......,.. another load of
Oood - - d l l • 3 pc. bod-

. m•

WM•. IIWer, • treah included.

coo•

Good · froat-froo rolrlg.. •125.
Hoapltal bode. uo. con 814245-5152.

Hou• Cool for •lo. t2&amp; o ton.
-~....,..------- c., bo -•od or plekodupat
min&amp; Kayatono Rd. Coli
. 814-3811-8820 .,..,.....

AVON ~

38 II , _• .,_.lngl!lpHClflorw
for
._ttr-. call 304-757·
1317 IMtnaa; 10 :00 AM .,d
7 :00PM .

living room tuMI a bo&lt;l'oom
autte. rolh-\Wy b8d. Corbin •
Snyct.. 11511 Seooncl Awe .• 8144411-1171 .

Household Goods

GOOO USEO APPLIANCES
w.h. .. Sk
dryoro, rolr~oro,
•
1
rengll .
agge .... pp enCM,
Uppoo Rill• Rd. boo~ Stone

tech eltectk»namuetbtl.,eto
work lnV d8Y all shift. 3 to &amp;
.,..., •perlen08 pr*nd. Call
penonn•l Gfflce 304· 175-

lngValu.._ Rt.1411nC~enary
1A mHe on llnODin Plie.

Seaaoned Oak • Alh. t31
pl&lt;*up - · 9tocklld .. dllilvorod. Cllll14-2111-9322.

BUIJTII'VL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 5311 Joclllon
Pike frorn t183 • mo. Walk to
1hop and rnoo,oiel. 814-44•
258B. E.O.H .
Toro Townhouao apM1.-rta- 2
• d'11 ~
IRs.. H!z b.ttw. C""'·
hwllher, d.. PDIII. prMite eneloaod P•io. pool plov..,..nct.

Full tl. . modlcol t-.oioglll
ASCP: part tlmo modlcll laborOlchn!Jiogllt ASCP. Floe!

au-....

PRICES SLASHED-W•ao...
roa. t148- t75.
monr- Hl•fOII. nes now
*105. Counrrywooctteblewllh
3 chlllro&amp; bonoh-rog•••,9 now
U89. Mony Moro M!&gt;nw s...

CIIJ 814-446-2359.

DIRECTOR OF NURSING. R.N. be&lt;l'oomo. l14-992-8515. Boll
neediKI tor Dlreclor of Nuratng after.
poo•lon for 0 71 bod aldllod ' - - - - - - - - : - : : : - : - nursing t.cllty. L8adtw1hip and
1973 2·bedroom mobile home
pmlent:c.esklllareamust. We 12x80 wh:h porch, .wniftg- end
off.- In Mcellenl ~N~ge and
Lr!derpaming. 814-7.2· 2393.
benllflt peck age. Appfv inperton Three bedroom rnoble home
lit ArcedlaNurslngCent.-, Maln
14x70, •7,600.00. 304-895St., Coolll•a Ohio 4&amp;723.
3427.

W••• 304-882·2141.

PICKENS USED I'VRMTURE
Comploto houlllhold furnlohlnp. 'Aomllo-.lot~lcho. 304-17111450 , 8 14· 3B8 - 1773 ,

4088 ..

1661 ,

8~0

Honcll
exctllent
~d~;;::;;::;:::;;::;~~~~~o;"~"~~;~ ooncltion.
For
s.ta4or'Mt..,.,
Trlld•1188
250R
Ert,.t-Narf ......

Rental property· two trail.-s &amp;.
land. Rt. 21B. Coli 814-2&amp;8-

more o.- ..... In Mldcl111port. 2

AI IteM. Cell Mlf'i1yn

74

WJII dotr•u:h•wort. Prioedp«
foot. Coli 814-4411-0119.

'N8t•.

cWtv 10om •d tm•dfl'le.

••ce. p..anellhrlng .... a'td •

49

room llddtUon. Very nice. Stove,
rlfrlg.,
truh collection
lndudld. VInton ar•. *1815 plus

end •

80110 or ofl•
41.1808.

Reg. Golden R..rlv• puppl•.

.,..-::-::------,------2 lA . mobile home with 14x30

We p;ovlde 111.-y plus blnllllta

' 87 Ford Van . loeded.
t11. 900.00. Phono 304-875-

For Lease

814-388-9888.

dlf&gt;. Coil 814-3811-9S88.

1978 Chwy 4x4, lod&lt;· out hubo.
AM-FM. Rally _ w ..... n.w
Dllnt. new boctw" .. rtl. No rul't.
~I. 941 ...... mil• 4.3400.
Coil 814-446-1800.

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

wa1•. trMh oollec:Uon included
v.,., nh::e. Vlrrton .,..._ 2 cftlldr.,, U2S p~o dopoolt. Col

WANTED: Full-time employ·
ment: In yout own h:lme 11 a
Mome s.vro. . Wor._. wtth
Buck.,-• ·Community 8.-violl.

Wll -~~ tn mv ,.,_ Arrr
houro. . , do\' . Coli 814-44111519 ofl•l!&gt;-m.

\

.... , ,oo.

mformMion • lnt.vlaw c•
114-4411-7148-... 8,30-&amp;
PM. Mondo\' thru Fridov.

-

_ . , d ... llo.AilotoOch
_ ...g .,d _ . . , _... If
- - ... 814-982-5403.

bingo •-ion.

Filii room apt. b•h. unt.unlahod. UIIO.OOmontl\ 1805'11
Joff. . on Blvd., 304-175-2884

CAll all or 2p.m. 304- n318B1 . M11on WV.

Rent, unfurniehed mobile t.Jme.
1h mHewett of HMC. WMh.-.
dryer hookup. Rlf•ance re--

7572.
Houra 9-5.
eppllcancM.
Cell 114·448·

VIRA'S FURNITURE •
APPUANCES
Op., Mon.·Sit. 9 AM-8 PM,
Sun. 12 noon-S PM. 114-4411315B.
·

Room~

N-io doooratod, 2 BA .. fully
c•peted. See. dip . r«JUired.
Coil 614-4411-8558 or 44118860.

~rnltun 1n d

Furnilhod olftcl•cv down1own
opt. 1111 utl•l• pold. dapoo•
roqurod, 304-8911-34110.

Utllkl• ..ld. Single milo. Shwo
bllh. Coll4411-44181tfter 7PM.

for Rant

the mall untl you haw a
lnveltigMed the offering.

AM-FM·Cooo. pluo 1 lot more.
Excel. cond. CoM e14-3870851.

bedroom ault•. rnltlll cabinetL
h - • • t30 •d up to 4.81.
~-······· ···
t
90 Deya • ..,, u Cllih with
IPPfOYOd orodlt. 3 Ml• out
Bulwlle Rd. Open 9em to &amp;pm
Mon. ...... Sat. Ph. 814-4480322.

w-go.

tlrno lor

LPN n -

ICF!MA GerMtrk: Facility. For

Ollie Pl~o. Or... ll"'d Eleotronlc Kaybo•d · - In ....
honw te bagl ,,..... IICttenced

DOOR PRIZE

moro lnformotlo" 0111 304-882-

Furnllhld room-919 Second
Ave.. o.llipolls. e7&amp; 1 mo.

42 Mobile Hcmes

throu~

1818 FO&lt;d lroftoo. outo., 302

fu .. lnjeated, Oti81' • .,. . . .

Bod from• t 20. 4.30 • ICing

371 e. E.O.H.

Newtv rtmodeled 3 • hou .. ln
Me•on. *2150. p• month. P-v Fob. 1. 304-e71i-2083 or 178own ur•l•. 304- n3-9814.
1889.

3 BA. llouao. Dopod roqurllf.
10 Old F&lt;&gt;" Troll. Coil 814-44112583. 9 to 8 dally.

AuctioRMr t;.
olnMd Ohio and W.t Vir9;nia.
EM.te, antiQue, fwm. liquida-

Clll

•t•

20 used wlndaw'a wtlh ltorm
win-o. wtll aill ch..,P. Coli
814-448-2543.

1prtt1te prectlce. OutiM hcktde
rpurch•lng. ecoou nil pey~~ble •
wonl ~ling • •
gen ... eacr.Carlal end rec•
tlor*t • •· SOme l•ible
houra. ... d ,....,. • 1. . of
Int. . . "" I'Oroannot. P.O.'!10. Glllipola. Ohio 48831.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

'-••on

requk"ed.

3 be*oorm, ku•ed In Syra"''"' Coli 514-992-7889 .,...
5:00p.m.

Financial

31

NQari accepting .tppllc.tlons fDr
2: be•oom ep.-tmtn1&amp; tultv
c•p•ed. 111pUanoa
•d
truh pidrupa prCIVIMcl M_.nt•
rw\CI · - living cloHtO thopplnf&gt; blnkl _,d achoola. FO&lt;

M_o ,.e ,.,_ for ,..._ Cop. a 47 Wanted to Rent
ref. roqurod. Csll oller 2 PM, - - - - - - - - - 11 4- 4411- 05 27.
.
I wouldtlf.ato rentathrllor tour
2 BR.. •tllio lorl]iohod. c.-pilL AC. .. utlftJ• .,.ad beet~ houae tn O.tlla or
except
&amp; 'g•. Cable TV Moiga CO\Inty. Col 814-38118748.
avallbfe. Own• Pllfl
aawage. a tr8M ~dwp. S.01r·
11y dopollil a rol. Foofolonthl of Wlr'IUd tG Rent or luy..B~IIng
30o4Q for ........ for
mile *om city lmit1. Call ., construction company. Call
814-448-77113.
814-448-7914.

Sear•rv·AectPiionilt for siMI

LOST. bill told, pl...e return
PIP•• and keep monBV and

11-16· '81-tfn

'

WNI ewe for efdlrlv penon In
their home or btlbVeh in my
home. Inquire 1714 Jeffer1on
Blvd•• PcMnt PleMint .

AVON 1111•-11 Shir14¥ Spe•a.
304-8711-1429.

old. Coli 814-4411-9880.

MARCUM CONTRACTING

lodl• w~h- for light dollvory
work 011 all owen ce. A .,.,tv in
p . .on ONLY tNo Phone C. !Is)
tO: Mrl. C.rt•. Room30. Econo
t:.ldgo Motll. 8-8:30 AM, MondiW. J., . 30.

phone

8 fuzzy male pupe. I weeb alld.
end Sh.,herd· cro11.

8

1·27-'18-1 mo.

(

,'/~,

3

Announcements

ropr-lllto. C.JI 814-4454397 or 448-48B2.

Hunnel.

IUEIAGE CANS ..... 46' I~
FOR SALE BY
SEALED BID
1971 Ford Eoonollno
Von, oxcoll.,t oonditon.
1111 thin 31.000 mliM.
Vlhiclo m~ be ..,.. II
the N- Hovon Vol. Flro
Oopt. on ~~ St. In Now
Hovon. w. Vo. Oonotcoll

CONSTRUCTION
OWNII: GIEG I. IOUSII

&amp; SERVICE

.9·19-BIIfn

#2

&gt;

I ·U·'II• 1 lilo.

1·l3·tlc

# 1 COPPEI .............. 86 • 1~

one with trad•in' of 1986
Chevrolet 4 W 0 and one a

"LOW INCOME HOME"

lnformaloon

le&lt;olion: ·
161 North Socond
Mirldlopart, Ohio 45760

•

•t,.

Need
c•hl Free kit for
Hmtted time to new Avon

or Paulty lowlrnl
209 South 4th !1.
Middloport, Oh.

Now

.

IChooloroo onlo. Colt 814-387- 0248.

Dip.

4W.D.

Vans•

Vllilov F'""lturo

814-367·7687 or 1·703-38111109.

Need t.bv lltterCh•hir•Kw•

Joo

73

freme eso. Good Hlectlon ol

New and uead

Hcmes for Rent

efectric.

phone 304-8711-2784.

981005. Ft WOrth. Tx. 76111.

2 be«oom an Third St. In
Mlddloport. Clo.. to ohoppln~
1175. P~l diPOair. 114-9922179.

In Ch•hlr•3 ·BR. 2 belt&amp; all

hours, behind Ordnance School.

SouthweMwn Petrolalm. a~

992-6173

HEATING

SALES

TtXAII OIL COMPANY n ~ura p . .an tor short trips
surrpundlng Gallipolll are•.
ContKt OJitOI'IW'I. We tr8in.
Write W.J . Dldl.-.on, P••··

1/ 15/ Hn

&amp;· 1-cl For·

Babo, shtlng in my home. fl•ibte

21

UPto4.1&amp;HOURPROCESSING
, MAIL WEEKLY CHECK GUARANTEED, FREE DETAILS.
WFIITE. SO, 10e7 W. PHILA' DELPHIA. SUJTE 239-G(l. ONTARIO. CALIF91782.

Good RotH
T.L.C.
26 Yro. Exp.
References

A
PLUMBING &amp;

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

Ohio 46631 for public view-

B. Heavy Duty vinyl aoat

atraight out purch••· lnt•·
ootid biddol'l coli office to
ake appolntm.,t to view '86

for More

EmpiOI'ft'.

41

Wanted to Do

,t .. GallloCountvHoallhDfpM1._... Courthouoo. 12 lDII'II
StrttOL Golllpoll. Ohio 4H31 .
,f'hono ,..,,_ 114-..,...4812.
ext . 292. Equlli Opj&gt;ortunlty

llantlcappetl

304-675-3161

992·6720

Gallipolis,

power brakM

10. Domo lomp
11. C:igorot1o lighter
12. Colllf rod
Two bhll are requeated,

OF

~ND

46661
and tho Gollla
County Recorder' a OffiC!I.
Gollio County Court Houao.

Real Estate General

9. Rubber floor mau

Session and
Se11lon of Fil &amp; Trim

·o,

Senior Clti11N and

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS
14 til &amp; Main St.
Point Pleo10nt, W.Va.
We Buy Aluminum
Cans, Glaa. Brass,
Copper and More
MON.-FRI.: 9 om·6 pm
SAT.: I om-12 Noon

ranning

1

looM

18

Help Wanted

WlC Hoall h -alonlli: Ro-

Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

EUM HOME

NOW

319 Sci. 2nd Ave.

on the Wllk..ville 7%. minute
U.S.G.S . quodrongle mop,
approximately 0. 2 miles
aouth to 2 .8 milu lOuth of
Wllkoavlle end 0 .3 mileo
oouth 10 2.8 mlleo southwest of Salem Center, Ohio .
The applicatic;m propolel to

46769

$27

CARTER'S

The proposed undergroUnd
minin~ ereas encompass
3.287 acrea. and are located

Fucta~v (holro

PUBUC
RECYCUNG

FREE .....

Plus

Services

truck from B;OO to 4 :30 11
Dlatrict office.
Biehl will be opened Monday, Fobtuory 13, 1989 11
tho office of the Oiatrict,
39&amp;81 lor 30 Aoed. R oedovlllo. Ohio ot 2 :00P.M .
The District reseNes 1he
right to reject any and / or all
bido .
(1127; 121_1. 6 , 3tc

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

utllijl• . Coli 014-992·113~""
114-992-1732.

1----------.,----------;

&lt;~QUir.:l Ucen~ld Dl.. ldlll .
~'illgfble tor loen1ure. APAIY at

Mastic &amp; Certainteed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacell!ent Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

EVERY

ltO.ooo.oo. 304-8711-4438 ...
t• 5~0PM.

•ea.

om- Jrt ,_1., iI

·Part- dmo MLTfor fullo oqu;ppod
Photsldtn' s Office Ubor1tor;.
Appt-;' In p«son to The Medicel
Plan. 203 Jeck1an Pike beB:3C).4;30.

5-15-tln

J&amp;l
INSULAnON 1

1-3-'B&amp;Hfc

78- Camping Equipment
7~ -Camp9rs &amp; Motor f1 omes

81 - Home Improvement s
82 - Piumbing &amp; He..- lng
83- Excavating
84- Eiectrical &amp; Refr igera tio n
85 - Genet'al Hauling
86- Mobil e Home Repair
87- Upholsterv

•

$1111 &amp; Sorrleo

ONlY

71 - Autos for Sale
72- Trucks for SAle
73 - Vans &amp; 4 WD 's
74- Motorcycles
75 - Boats &amp; Motors fo r Sale
76- Auto ~arts &amp; Acc essories
77 --Aulo Repeir"

"DOC" VAUGHN
Certified Ucensed Shop

Baiham Building

992-7479

11

CAll 992-6756 '

304-428·7245

It. 33 North of

PERM, CUT, STYLE

~~~

Public Notice

be held in the Eastern Local
School District of Meigs
County. at the regular places
of voting therein , on Tues -

Deere, New Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Dealer.
fmo e,.t, •••,

lADIES WANTED!

Transportalion

41 - Houses for Rent

Get Results Fast

Authorized John

I;I@INd

895 - Lelart
937- Buffalo

667 - Coolv~le

NOTICE OF ELECTION ON
TAX LEVY IN EXCESS OF
1
THE TEN MILL
LIMITATION
NOTICE to hereby given
t!1at in pursuance of a Re·
solution of the Board of Edu·
elton of the Eastern Local
School District. Pomeroy.
Ohio. pas 11d on the 21st
day of November, 1988.
there will be submitted to a
vote of the people of teid
Eaatern Local School Dis·
trict at a Special Election to

Hom" for Sale
Mobile Homes for Sale
Farms tor Sale
Busineu Sui)dings
Lots &amp; Acreage
Real Elt1te Wanted

OliO

:;-:;-:-;--:-=-:-:;--

Sale

1988 Chwy 14 ton plek up,

,..,it.

"Not today, Linda. I'm not
dressed for a nuclear protest .
march!"

S•~rv1ces

for

Trucks

32,000, mil••· ••c cond ,

SofM 1nd chen priced from
*311 to tl91. Tebl• tiO and
up to 4.125. Hldo-1·4.390
to uas. fllledlrin 1225 to
· 4.371. Lompo Ul to 4.125.
2 ba*oom unfurnlehtd with Din. .., t101 end up to t495.
•d r.trig.-.. or. No p.ts. Wood table w-8 ch . . t288 to
114-941-2213.
1781. Oook 4.100 up to, 1375.
Hutch• ·~ and up. Bunk
1 beci&gt;oom. ,_..,.,. "'' 1 beds compt.ca w-rn.rtr....
AlutMI• ooJd. 11110. per t298 ..duptoU85. Bobr4.110. Matt-or box-~~~
month. In Pomw"O¥· C.U 114fuA or twin
firm 118. Md
992-2545.
t88. Qu.,. seta t210 &amp; up,
King t350. 4 draw• Ch•t Mt.
In Syr..::...ae. 1 bedroom. *-1 38. Gun coblnoto I, I • 10 gun.
par month plua dll!pDiit end Bairf matt,.... • • • tU.

If

[ •iiplirylllent

Repairs.

RACINE
FIRE· DEPT.

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

614-662-3121

63 - Livestock
64 - Hay &amp; Grain
65 - Seed &amp; Fertilizer

21 - Business Opportunity

n. SO EASY

GUYSVI.LE,

61 - Farm Equipment
.62 - Wanted to Buv

F1n~ncial

Classified pages cover the

U. S.

&amp; SERVICE

I

Went.S To Buy Us«t Mobile
Ham•. Call &amp;14- 441·0176.

· i\IIASE Certified Mechanic

GUN SHOOT

MOBILE
HOME PARK

l

Mttt•.

SYRACUSE, OHIO

1·11-'19·1owo.

BOGGS

t-

Wll buy or ll)praite anvthin gl
An__.. furniture, appii.,OM.
wtQ&amp;. complete home
lur,.hingt. Mll'tin Wlkfemt¥er,

&amp; DIESEl

H.

PH.

I

SERVICE

AUCTIONEER

SUNDAY (AllS

SALES

AUTO

(ONSIGNMlNTS WB(OM£

OHIO

Olive.

-belngpold. Coll514-4463188.
•

VAUGHN'S

Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major It Minor

BLOSSER

a

72

Wri11ht .

•ewe

814-245-5152.

NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWES GROVE PARK
lolpro, Ohio
PATRICK

Compltto hou.,;....,. of tlrniture &amp; antiques. A•o wood •
'aoal hMt.._ lweh1"1 F...-nlture
A..:tlol\ Third

KJT N' CARLYLE~ by Larry

Household Goods
lAVNE'I.fURNITURE

Furniture .,d ll)plitnl* by the
pi.ce or entire houtlhold. Fair

· Fuctory Cholrt

EVERY THURSDAY

3-ll·tln

55- Building SuppliM

Employment
Serv1ces

polis Daily Tribune. reaching over 18,000 homes.

MONDAY PAPER

NO

· ·'

12 Gaugt Shotg- Only

PUBLIC
AUCnON

TOP CASH pold for '83 model
and n...- uud c••· Smtrh
8ulck·Pontiac, 1111 Eutwn
'Aw .. Oalllpollo. C.JI 114-44112282.

r•

51

A pt111mant
for Rent

motoro. Coil ,_., livaly-8143811-9303.

1· 11·'89·1 mo.

SUNOCO

949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
PH.

54-Misc. Merchandise

5- Happy Ads
6- Lost and Fou nd
7---'Vard. Sale (paid in ad\lan ce)
8- Pubhc Sale 81 Auction
9- Wanied to Buy

"A clauitiBd advert isement placed in The Daily Santinal{ex .
ce_pt - clauified_display, Busine~t Card and legal notices)
w11l also appear 1n the Pt. Ple••nt Regis1er a.nd the Galli-

COPY DEADLINE -

$7.00
$10.00
$15.00
$26.00
$60.00

Merchandise

1- Card of Thanks
2- Jn Mamorv
3-Annoucements

•'Sentinet Is not responsible for errors .tter first dav. !Check
for errors first day ad runs in peperl . Call before 2 :00 p,m ,
day after publicalion to mllke correC1lon .
·.Ads that must be p~~id in advance are
Card ofthank1
Happy Ads
In Memoriam
Yard Sal•

.

26·36WOROS

Rat• are for canseeu1ille tun I, broken upd~swill be ch argBd
for ear.:h dav as ~&amp;parata ads.
.

"Ads outside Meigt,. Gallia or Maton coumies must be pre·
paid

'

WORDS 16-25 WORDS
$4.00
66 .00
65.00
SB .OO
$8.00
$13 .00 '
$13 .00
621 .00 '
$33 .00
$61 .00

e... of Rutland

44

Junk CaN wtth or ·without

EVERY SUNDAY
00 AM

11:

•

LAFF·A--DAY

Wanted To Buy

~ 14-4411-3158.

· STIICnY ENFOI&lt;EDI

···s

New H-lullt
"Free Estimates"

RATES

992·21 56
8 A.M. to 5. P.M.

TO PlACE AN AD CAll

Rt . 124

$1695

BISSELL "
SIDING CO.

Su-"

Rt. 124 Betw•nWiltn- .
ville and Solem Center ·

Acrou~IPP'fHoliowRolld

LUBRICATION
OIL FILTER

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

SPORTSMEN rs CLUB

22 Ammo

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

We Service ' All Mekea

••
MODERN GUN
SUPPUES

Mona-ng . ,.....
Modern Guo Suppli•
Guow • Aowrno ·Slugs

PH.

SERVICE

RACCOON VAllEY

~~--..,

"At leasonoltl• Prices"

985·3561

'LOADING

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Friday, January 27, 1989
9 ·

f
l;========.n==~~~~~==trr========trr=====:::;:::::;
WANTED
GUN SHOO.T
BUILDERS
DEAD OR AUVE

•

,. .""

Friday, January 27, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

. ...

...

1111 Cllowy pi&lt;*up. OOotloond.
Qood prloo. can 114-21111278.

87

Upholltery

11711 For4 F2110 - P· 3110
ongtn .. 4 lfiOICI. Good ..,....
lfoit. 01200. Call 114-742·
2114.

'

.

·"

�--.
;

•

Page-1 0-The Deify Sentinel

Friday, Janu-v 27. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport •. Ohio

.----People in the news-----....;..,

0

••

'((C\RSSIPI!D ADS aure to gat ta1u1tB))

By KEN FRANCKLING
United Press lnlernatlonal

"I hope your .... family dies In a plane crash with
Y0\1 In II." The fledgling newscaster apologized
for the message In a statement released by his
HE'S HAVING FUN, FUN, FUN: Former
Beverly Hills publicist.
!leach boys leader Brian Wilson says he was a
Sandler says he will not drop a criminal
little nervous "but real confident" when he went
complaint he has filed. The Los Angeles city
on stage In a surprise mint-concert with the band
attorney's office Is considering charging Reagan
at the Spectrum In Philadelphia Tuesday night. It
with a misdemeanor, which carries a penalty of
was his first public gig In years.
up to slx mon'ths In jail and a line of up to $1,000.
Wilson did It again Wednesday, joining the
BLUE-COlLAR BA'ITLE: Television loudBeach Boys for a three-song mini-set In the middle
mouth Morton Downey Jr. may have lost the
o! a one-hour, 20-song set at the Centrum In
bidding war for the Claridge Casino Hotel. The
Worcester, Mass. where they split theb!ll!ngw!th
Atlantic City Press reported Thursday that an
Chicago. Wilson sang "Surfer Girl" with the Investment group headed by former casino
Beach Boys, the~~ did "Lo-;e and Mercy,"
executive Al .J,.uclanl m11y be the victor.
·
"Walk!n' the Line," and "Melt Away" !rom his
Claridge of!tctals apparently entered 'Into an
solo album, then finished out the set with.theband.
agreement to negotiate only with LuclanL a
Wilson. had a public falling out with the Beach
former Golden Nugget Inc. executive. Last week,
Boys but said the relationship Is improving. He
talk show host Downey claimed his bld for
plans to join the band again lor an upcom!ng11ate Atlantic City's smallest casino had been ac·
at the Nassau Coliseum In New York.
cepted. He wants to turn the elegant, small hotel
STAND BY YOUR PRINCE: Most Americans Into a castle lor blue-collar gamblers.
surveyed In a recent poll think that even If there
FROM IVORY SNOW TO SEX ADVICE: Porn
are problems with her marriage to Prince 111m queen MarDyn Chambers, the ex-Ivory Snow
Charles, England's Princess 01 should "stick It girl, talks about new projects Friday night on Fox
outY
Television' s "A Current Affair." They Include a
The Jan. 27-29 Issue of USA Weekend magazine telephone hotl!ne giving sex advice for the ·love
says that 60 percent of those asked think the lost (''l'll be a kind of sexy Dr. Ruth") and an
princess, who Is scheduled to visit New York City .less-than-steamy R·rated movie lor HBO called
next week, should stay with the prince. Another 26
"Party Girls."
percent think she should opt out, and the other 14
And what about that famous detergent photo
percent !eel "It's none of our business."
that preceded her XXX-rated career? "Even
A WAY WITH WORDS: The gift of gab that while the baby was sleeping, the photographer
landed Michael Reagan a radio talk show job may was chasing me around the studio," Chambers
also land him In jail. The43- year-old son of former
tells Interviewer Steve Dunleavy. Naughty.
president Ronald Reagan and his ex-wife, actress Naughty.
Jane. Wyman, may be charged with a misdemeaGLIMrsES: Anne Schedeen, who plays mama
nor for leaving a threatening message on a Kate Tanner on NBC·TV''s comedy "ALF," and
photographer's answering machine.
her real-lite husband, Chr~ Barrett, have a new
Reagan, who recently signed a two-year baby girl. ALF took one look at 5·pound, 13-ou.nce
contract with KSDO-AM In San Diego, has been Taylor and told publicists: "Human babies are
battling with Los· Angeles photographer Roger short and even cuter than me" .. . Boston private
Sandler over unau thorlzed use of two Sandler eye Spencer's hlp sidekick, "Hawk," flies solo
pictures In Reagan's autobiography, "On the beginning Saturday In an ABG-TV spinoff show
· based In the nation's capital. Avery Brooks
Outside Looking In.' '
On Jan. 15, the day before he began his continues the all-around hard dude role he played
early-morning newscast job, Reagan left a until "Spencer: For Hire" w.as canceled last
message on Sandler's answering machine saying, season .

·1·8.PIBCI
~-

A team of eight physicians
; from the American Gastroente. rolog!cal Association and the
: American Society lor Gastrointestinal Endoscopy said Improved survival rates must Involve early detection of
cancerous growths, but said,
''There Is no universal consensus
as to how this can be
accomplished."
Researchers led by Dr. Kevin
Knight of -the School of Public
Health at the Un lverslty of

California, Los Angeles pointed
out the blood screening tests,
though cheaper, result In many
"false-positives" - results lndl·
eating a person has cancer when
he or she actually does not. Other
studies of this screening method
have shown a high rate of "false
negatives"- results Indicating a
person does not have cancer
when he or she actually does.
The false results can lead to
unnecessary medical procedures
or delays · In getting needed
treatment, and the Los Angeles
researchers said no reliable
studies prove that widespread
screening of samples for blood
could cut death rates. The fecal
sam pie tests cost less than $10.
Another. pair of researchers
from Kaiser Permanente Medical Care Program In Oakland,
Calif., concluded that sigmoidoscopy Is "a highly sensitive and
specific screen lng test for detect lng colo rectal cancers," bbut
said research again does not
show that these tests, given
periodically, would actually cut
death rates ln·the general population. Sigmoidoscopy may cost
$100 to $200.
Both California teams say the
lack of solid evldenceconf!rm!ng
the merits of screening mean
there are no good reasons for
doctors to change current practl·
ces. Those that now screen older
patients should continue to do so,
but others not using mass screen·
lng have no good reason to start.
In an editorial, Dr. Charles
Clayman of the AMA estimated
universal screening of men and
women over age 50 would cost
more than $1.1 billion per year.
He recommended further studies

Page B-1-

•

Luae Rot M•ue4 PahWII od
Laqe Gravy, Laqe l'relll Cole Slaw
od 4 Butul'lDilk Bllcdl

Sheppard stressed that money from the capital
Improvements levy would not be used for sa Iaries,
wages or fringe benefits, which during the current
fiscal year are projected to account lor 9~ percent
of the operating costs.
.
.
The superintendent said the total ·valuatton of
the Gallipolis City School District Is $120,372.390.
The current 25 mills- 3.81nslde and 21.1 outside
- Is not enough to ma!!lta!n an efficient operation
o! the school district. :
·
Local revenue, which supplies only an est!·
mated 30 percent bf the operating costs, has
dropped cOnsistently over the last three years·
while state school
foundation funds, which
furnish nearly •70 percent of the operating costs,
have Increased or maintained the same level over
the same period.
Salaries, wages and fringe benefits have
Increased from $5,241,563, or 80.6 percent of the

total operating costs at the end of calendar year
1985, to an estimated $6,962,900 or a jump to 93
percent of the total operating costs. of the fiscal
year ending June 30, 1989.
.
Last Wednesday, Sam Henderson, Division of
School Management, State Board of Education,
presented the board with a financial analysts of
the school district, stressing that unless steps
were taken, It Is facing a $451,635 deficit at t!Je the
fiscal year ending June 30, 1990.
Henclerson pointed out that the school district
has been spending more than tes taken ln. ln·four
of the last five school years, and has seen a
general fund beginning balance dwindle from
$1,089,922 at the end of calendar 'year 1985, to a
projected, estimated balance of only $82,565 at the
end of the current fiscal year.
Passage of the 4.5 .mlll operating levy would
bring In an estimated $541,675 each year over the
five year period. Henderson said Wednesday

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.West VIrginia Highway Depart. ment site Inspectors are checkIng an area east of Point Pleasant
as one location lor a new bridge
across the Ohio River.
COmmissioner Fred Van Kirk
said Friday
that the site,
downstream 1from where the old
Silver Bridge span was located, is
only one of several locations being
studied for a new bridge to 'replace
the ShiiCIIe Bridge across the
Kanawha River.
''We have just started our site
work and it is goin?, to take a
while," Van Kirk said. 'Meanwhile,
we plan to contiue repair work on
the present Shadle Bridge and keep
it well maintained until we decide
what to do about a new bridge." .
The site work was ordered by
fanner highway commissioner William "Bill" Ritchie Jr., who retired
in December, paving the way for
Van Kirk's appoinuncnt by Gov.
Gas10n Capenon.
Van Kirk saicl to replace the
Shadle Bridge at its present site
would be a long and involved
years or
project,
covering' •t)lree
r
,

..

•
\

or visit

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
-Tn,. If
m•·rkn
'-"''' '··
s..,,t_~

Ph. "2·2039 er "2·H 21

Buy Now•• •
' .
TIME SEQUENCE CHANGING - Traffic
patleru on US 35 allhe lntenectloa of SR 180 near
Holzer Medical Center will be altered, going Into
effect Tuesday. All turns will be by an arrow

GALLIPOLIS - Traffic patterns on US 35 at the Intersection
o! SR 160 near Holzer Medical
Center will be altered, according
to Ted Sushka, traffic .e ngineer
for the Ohio Department of
Transportation, Olstri~t 10. The
changes are expected to go Into
effect Tuesday, Jan. 31.
Traffic crews from ODOT's
district and central office are
complet !ng the Instal !at!on of the
new signal which will affect the

''Deferred Payment Plan"
Buy now and your first payment
will be due in 60 days. This special
offer ends February 17th,
. 1989.
'

See your local automobile deal~r for more
details concerning this special . offer.
Remember,. No payments until spring!

'

BANKE.ONE

Dr. Michael B. Carlisle
'

In The Practice Of Denti&lt;!!try

Eighle~n

EXTENDED OFFICE HOURS:
Tuesday&amp; Wednesday, 5-9p.m.;Friday &amp; Salurday, 9 a.m.-4p.m.

MEMBER FDIC

Point Pleasant •
f·

Tohollsand People Who Care.

8A('IK ONE. ATHENS. OHIO. NA t ONE I' AliT OF THE CARING TEAM

I

Van Kirk said he plans to talk
with . representatives of Wise's
Charleston's office as well as the
Federal Highway Administration to
determine exactly what should be
included In the four-lane highway
· .
project.
''Tilat is a major Item for
transportation in Mason County,"
Van Kirk said. "We want to get the
survey underway and stay with it
until we have a very good highway
for Mason County residents."
Van Kirk said he hopes 10 have
m\)re information on the highway
survey later.
Wise has indicated the highway
project could develop into a twostate push for federal funds ,to complete the actual highway.
Wise has suggested twice that a
meeting be held, possibly in Point
Pleasant, that would involved Ohio
officials and West Virginians to
work together to link Ohio's section of Highway 35, perhaps, to
West Virginia with an aim toward
opening traffic 10 Charles10n in a
better manner.
No date for the meetiqg has been
scheduled.

POMEROY - . A Meigs County
Grand Jury handed down five
Indictments, Including two secret, during a grand jury session
Tuesday In Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Court. The Indictments were !!led Friday In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court,
according to Information from
the oft!ce of Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story.
·
Indicted by the grand jury, as
reported by Don Snyder, Investigator for Story, were Robert
Sawyers, Ga!Upolls, formerly of

trafl!c on US 35.
Sushka said the changes should
help elbnlnate some of the delays
motorists have been experlenc·
lng at this Intersection.
''The change !rom a threephase to a six-phase signal
should allow ' traffic to move
more efficiently," Sushka said.
Motorists are urged to exercise
caution while _adjusting to the
altered traffic patterns.

Racine, on two counts of felonIous assault on a peace Qff!cer,
with a firearms specification on
both counts; Martin Shuler, of
Route 1, Langsville, on a charge
of aggravated vehicular hom!·
c!de; and James Clark Ill, of
Columbus, on a charge of receivIng stolen property.
Sawyers' Indictment stems
!tom an Incident on Nov. 28, 198'7
at his former Tackervllle Road
residence near Racine. On that
date, Sawye~s pointed a 12-ruage
shotgun at Meigs Sher!frs Deputies Don Snyder and Tim Gumph

who had resPonded to a domestic
violence call at the home.
If convicted of the felonious
assault charges, which are aggravated teton!es of. the first
degree, Sawyers faces a min·
!mum of five years and a
maximum of 25 years In prison on
each of the two charges, Snyder
said.
'
·
Because of the gun speclflca·
tlons, a mandatory three years
for each gun specification would
be added to any prison sentence,
Snyder reported.
(See INDICTIIENTS, AS)

IRS offers tip$ on returns

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA along
with area automobile dealers are
offering a special

Announces The AS&lt;roeiation Of

-

existing traffic patterns.
All turns will be by an arrow
signal Indication only. Traffic
from SR 160 will not enter US 35
simultaneously with traffic from
Ohio Valley Bank shopping com·
plex. Ohio Valley Bank shopping
complex traffic will not enter US
35 simultaneously with traffic
from SR 160.
Changes have also been made
to the continuous and turning

more, and would le;~vc the Point
Pleasant area without proper
transportation across to Ohio.
"So we are looking at leaving the
bridge where it is at present and
searching for a new bridge site,'' he
said. "We don't want 10 do anyth·
ins 10 make traffic any worse than
it IS at present."
Van Kirk said any decision-on a
bridge replacement woufd result in
four years of construction time
before it could be completed.
At the same time, Van Kirk said
plans for a feasibility study of a
four-lane highway l route through
Point Pleasant are about to take
shape. - ·
"We are checking on the scope
of work and then we'll really be
able 10 start on that project," Van
Kirk said.
U.S. Rep. Bob Wise, D·W. Va.,
obtained $200,oop in federal funds
last year for the study which would
determine the best route for a four·
lane highway through Mason
County.
That feasibility study is linked,
somewhat 10 the location of the
bridge replacement site.

lndicbtlents retumed in :.:Meigs

slcaal lndlcalloa only. Changes have also been
made to the coatlauollll and turning traffic on US
35. (Tlmea-Seatlnel photo)
"

.Traffic pattem to
change:
ODOT
- .

UCIJIE, OHIO

-·- _.._............_. __ _

night that under current conditions, It would take
a 4 or 5 mill levy to break even. If passed the 4.5
mllllevy would bring In a total of $2,708,375, over
the five-year period.
Passage of the 1.5 mill capital Improvements
levy would bring tn $180,558 per year, or a total of
$902,790 over the five year period. Passage would
mean the district would be able to purchase new
school buses ·on schedule and not be forced to
squander money for maintenance on buses that
needed replacing.
·
If the 4.5 for current-expenses passes, It would
cost the taxpayer 45 cents per $100 or $4.50 per
$1,000 of property valuation. The 1.5 mUI levy
would cost 15-cents per $100 or $1.50 per $1,000 of
property valuation.
The board will present Its two resolution to the
Ga!Ua County Board o!Eiect!ons this week for the
May 2 primary election, The deadline Is Feb. 16.

W.Va. studies site for new bridge

Every Sunday

-- -

A Multlmodio Inc. N-opopor

I

At 6:45P.M .

(

11 S-lon•. 72 Pouoo

Middleport-:-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, Janu-v 29, 1989

By DICK THOMAS
Tlmea-Sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Reacting to the news Wednesday night that they're going to be nearly a
half-mUllon dollars In the red by June 30, 1990 If
something Isn't done, the Galllpolls City Board of
Education met Saturday morning in special
session and took measures to offset the !In pending
disaster.
The board passed two resolutions: one for 4.5
mDls for current operatt!ng expenses, the other
for 1.5 mills for capital Improvements, both to be
voted on at the May 2prlmary election. If passed,
both levies would run for five years.
· City Superintendent Grant Sheppard said that
the money from the capital Improvements levy
would be' used only for equipment purchases,
renovating, remodeling, constructing, ImprovIng, furnishing and equipping buUdlngs and
facilities and improving sites for school purposes.

BINGO

--

e

Gallipolis schqol . board ·proposes two ·levies

RACINE
AMERIC4N LEGION
POST 602
Will Be Having

-.-

•

•

nurses, and two social workers
trained In crisis Intervention.
Patients will Include people
suffering from such disorders as
depression, anxiety, halluclna - lions, delusions, substance
abuse, interpersonal problems,
and suicidal desires.

675·6330

IUgh between In mid 40s.
Chance of rain 80 percent.

.

Vol23 No. 61
Cop,oiuh... 1989

To sead a beautlfullv
destined funeral
arran1ement, just call

,j

•••••••

•

tmts -

• lenmct.J l'rie4 Chicken •

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

tl\'

Along the River ......... 81·8
Buslness .••••.........
Dl
Comics- ................... lnllert
Clas!llfleds ................. D3-7
Editorial ...................... A2
Dealh.s ......................... A3
Sports .......................-Cl·6

In Our Town: Talk about in8alion...
Page 84

10 Pieces

Dr. J. &amp;tephen Lovell, DD&amp;

703 22nd Street

Page B8

to measure the value of such
widespread testing before the
expensive practice Is adopted
na t!o nally.

•

Inside

. Beat of the Bend: Dinner apd dancing."

•&lt;

0&lt;:

Cl

College basketball results
u

Psychiatric ER opens in Cleve/4nd
CLEVELAND (UPI) - The
city's first psychiatric emergency room - a $2.4 m!l!lon
facUlty - was dedlcateq Thursday at St. Vincent Charity
Hospital and Health Center .
The facility was built with
money 'provlded by the hospital
and the state. It has shatterproof
windows and lights, emergtency
call buttons In each examining
. · room, and a specially trained
staff to h~ndle patients who
might need physical restraint . .
While other hospitals ,provide
psychiatric services In their
regular emergency rooms. the
11ew facUlty Is the Cleveland
, area's only emergency room
.dedicated solely to psychiatric
patients, hospital officials said.
The new emergency room will be
staffed 24 hours a day by,at least
one psychiatrist, two psychiatric

50 cents

Bob Hoeflich
WiD retire
ori Tuesday

_Doctors are questioning the value
•
of colon-rectal cancer screenmg
CHICAGO (UPI)
Early
detection of colon cancer, the
second most deadly type of
cancer In the United States, .can
sharply reduce a person' schance
of ·dying from the disease, but
doctors Thursday questioned the
val~e of widespread screening
which could cost $1.1 billion a
year.
About 145,000 new U.S. cases of
colorectal cancer are reported
each year, witli 5 percent of men
and 6 percent of women developIng colon cancer during their
lifetimes.
About 60 percent of the cases
prove fatal, though this rate can
be cut to 20 ·p ercent or less If the
cancer is detected In early
stages. Risk of the disease Is low
lor people under 40, but Increases
above that age.
In four articles In the Journal
of the American Medical Associ. at!on, doctors said early detection o! colorectal cancer usually
Involves examining samples of
fecal material for traces of blood,
or sigmoidoscopy, In which a
flexible fiber-optic Instrument Is
used to Inspect the colon and
remove small growths.

Sunday

I

.

CINCINNATI -It's that time
o! year again and the Internal
Revenue Service offers several
tips when filing the federal
Income tax return .
-Read the Instructions. The
tax package contains valuable
Information on filing requirements, tax law changes and
lmportan t !!ling tips.
Also before beginning to pre·
pare the return, check to see If
a:dd!tional !orms or schedules
are needed. These may be
obtained from the library, banks,
, post offices or by calling 1-800424-FORMS.
-Organize records. Be certain
to receive all income statements
from wages, Interest, dividendS,
unemployement compensation,
ele. This will eliminate the need
to !lie an amended return late.
Be certain all expenses are
documented so to not omit anydeductions or tax credits. A tax
credit often overlooked Is the
Earned Income Credit. Refer to
t-he tax package to see
qualifications.
-Use the simplest form poss!·
ble. The tax rates, exemption

--r

amount, and standard deduction
are the same regardless of which
form used. Using the simplest
form can reduce math errors and
save time In preparing the !orm.
A new filing status, qualifying
widow(er), has been added to
Form 1040A this year.
-Use the peel-of! label on the
tax package. Any necessary
corrections to name, address, or
social security number can be
made on the label. Use of the
label can help prevent one
common cause for undellverea- ·
ble refunds Illegible
handwriting.
-Recheck the return. The
most common errors are omitting the standard deduction or
exemption, computing tbe refund or balance due, or tolaltng
the amOUDt ot IDcome on page 1.
Other common errors include
selecting the Incorrect amo110t of
the tax from the tax tables and
entertnr the Social Security Tax
Instead of Federal Income Tax
withheld.
Forms and sc:hedules should be
attached In order of the "Attach·
ment Sequence Number'' !halls

shown In the right corner of the
form. Forms without a sequence
number and additional Information sheets should be attached at
the end of the return.
Also be certain to attach Copy
B of all Forms W·2.
-Be certain to sign the return.
The tax return Is not considered
valid without a signature and an
omission could delay the processIng of a refund. In cases of a joint
return, both spouses must sign.
-Make a copy of the return for
personal records. The ln!orma·
tton may be needed Ia ter to file an
amended return, apply lor a
college scholarship or apply for a
home loan.
It needed, copies of tax returns
may be ordered from IRS at a
later date but there Is a $4.25
charge per return to cover the
cost of handling.
-Use the special coded envelope In the tax packare. Thla will
speed the processing of the
return and the refUnd. All federal
tax returns from Ohio should be
~:. to IRS, Cincinnati, Ohio,

BUPEBIOR SERVICE AW&amp;aD -

Frallk

"Baa" MIIJI, (L) of tbe G8lla Couaty BoD BINI
W81er Co-rvatlon Dlall'ld; Bolll'd of Supenl·
son, reeelved the 8aperlorllerl'lce Award for lhe

i

dls.t rlct from Nevla Smltb, (R) .Ohio Federa&amp;lon

-

••
\

SloWCD. Tills award Is presented on behalf of the
GoodJear Tire 6 Rullber Co. in recognition of
oulatudlq pi'OIJ'am&amp; ~d service prol'lded by
lhe joeaJ ~WCD dlsll'lds. ··

J

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