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Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

lhuiSday, February 16. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local news briefs...____,

' ..

,.

Continued !rom page 1

EMS has 5 Wednesday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Wednesday; Middleport at 8:15a.m. to Short Fourth Avenu e for
Betty Denny to Holzer Medical Center: Rutland a I ll: 06 a .m . to
Meigs Mine No . .1 tor Gary Hogsett to O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 2: 46p.m. to Bas han Road !or Br ian Watson
to lleterans Memorial Hos pital ; Rutland at 6: 14p.m . to Meigs
Mine No. 2 lor Terrance Conlin to Holzer Medica l Center ;
Racine and Sy racuse squads at 7: 01 p.m. transported Johnny
Kauffman, Grace Allen and Donna Ross from an auto accide nt
on Slate Route 338 to V!!terans Memorial Hospital.

'

Drivers cited after accident
Both drivers were c ha rg!!d with dr iving und!!r the influence.
and three people were slightly injured, in an accident at 6:58
p.m . Wednesday on SR. 338, one mile north of the Ravenswood
br idge, according to the State ll!ghway Patrol.
Troopers said a pickup truck driven by Grace E . Allen, 68,
Portland, went left of center and collided headon with a truck
driven by John H. Coffman, Sr., 61, Portland. Damage was
heavy to both vehicles.
The patrol cited Allen for driving under the influence and left
of center; Coffman, for driving under th e influence and no
operator's license.
Allen, Coffman and a passenger in Coffman' s' truck, Donna
L. Ros!!, 48, Portland, were slightly injured and taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
No one was injured but .one driver was ci ted in a two car
collision at 5:41p.m. Wednesday on US33, 0.3mUes eas t of mlle
post 10, about one mile north of Darwin.
Troopers sailj veh!cte driv!!n by Herbert T . Lauderml!t, 18,
Racine, struck the back of a car driven by Dena M. Lawrence,
18, Pomeroy . There was minor damage to both vehicles. No one
was injured.
The patrol cit!!d Laud!!rmllt for following too closely and
fal!ur!! to W!!ar a s!!at belt.

--Area deaths--Delphia Fortney
De lphia MaeFortn!!y, 79, Little
Hocking, died Wednesday at
Camden Clark Hospital in Par·
kersburg, W. Va. She was taken
to the hospital from Arcadia
Nurs ing Center, Cootvill!!, aft!!ra
short stay there.
Born on April 23, 1909, In the
Dutchman community, Macfar·
Jan, Ritchie, W.. Va., she was th!!
daughter of the late Albert
Gilbert and Carrie Alma (Ryan)
Roberts. Mrs. Fortney was a
homemak!!r and a m!!mber of the
LitUe Hocking Church of Christ .
She is survived by her husband ,
William Joseph Fortney, of 61
years; two sons, Robert J .
Fortney, Reedsville, and Willard
L. For tn!!y ,. Dresd!!n; three
daughters, Mrs. Billy L. (Eva·
j!!an) McKnight. Coolville; Mrs.
David L. (Betty) Ross, Middle·
port; and Mrs. Wayne (Chris·
tine ) Lyons, Torch; 19 grand·
c hildren,
and
22
great-grandchildren.
Also surviving are thr!!e sis·
ters, Mrs. Lester (Myrtlf ) Cha·
dock and Mrs. Frank (Juanita)
Hupp, both of Macfarlan, W.Va.,
and Ora Roberts, Alliance.
&amp;sides her parents, she was
preceded in death by four broth·
e rs, Ira, Perry, Homer and
Donald, and three sisters, one
who died as an Infant, V!!lda
Strickling and Belle McRoberts.
Funeral services will be held at
1 p.m on Saturday at the Little
Hocking Church of Christ. Roger
A. Bush and Stephen Fuchs will
official!!. Burial will be in the
Coolvilie Cemetery.
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Hom!! in Coolville, 7 to 9
p .m. Friday. and an hour prior to
the services at the church on
Saturday.
In lieu of !low!!rs, memorial
.contributions may be mad!! toth!!
building fund of the Little Hock·
ing Church of Christ, Little
Hocking, Ohio 45742.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ell is &amp; Loewi
.Am Elect ric Power . .. ... ....... 2€%
AT&amp;T ........ .. ............... .. ...... 31%
Ashland Oil ... ..... .......... ......34 %
Bob Evans .. .. .. .. ............ .. .... 15'!.
Charming Shoppes .... .... ....... 17
City Holding Co .. .. .. .. .... ....... 19
F!!deral Mogul ............. ....... 51')4
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. .... ...... ... ..493-8
Heck's ... .............. .. .. .. .......... ~
Key Centurion ... .. ............... 14 ~
Lands' End .. .. ........... .. ........ 30%
Limited Inc .. .. .... .... .. .......... 31 %
Multimedia Inc .. ....... .... .. ..... 84
Rax Res taurants .. ..... .. .... ..... 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .. .. 16\it
Shoney's lnc .......... .. .. .. ...... .. 8')4
Wendy's Intl ............. .. ........ . 6 ~
Worthington Ind ................. 21)'8

James Romine
James Richard Romine, 72, New
Haven, died Wednesday, Feb. 15,
1989, at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born March 5, 1916 in Syracuse,
Ohio, he was a son of the late
George W. and Margaret S. Crew
Romine.
Also preceding him in death was
his wife, Lillian P. Romine, Jan. 31,

1989.
He served in the United States
Anny during World War n. He was
a member of the Loyal Order of
Moose and DAV, both of
Anchorage, Alaska. He worked for
the International Operating Engineers Local 302 in Seattle, Wash.
Surviving are one step-son,
Harold Lee Howell, Grafton; two
sisters, Mary L. Hoffman, New
Haven, Sadie M. Marr, West
Columbia; several nieces and
nephews.
Service will be Friday at I p.m.
at the Foglesong Funeral Home
with Rev. Clifford West officiating.
Burial will be in the Wells
,Cemetery, Harrison, Ohio. Mililllry
graveside .rites will be conducted at
the graveside.
Friends may call Thursday, from
6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral home.

Area
...
Continued from page 1
started to flood the rear parking
lot," said Athens Mayor Sara
Hendricker, who Inspected the
site with service-safety director
Ron Chapman.
Chapman said a water retention pool overflowed and drain·
age lines became clogged be·
cause of the heavy rains. He
estimated the water was about
two feet deep Wednesday.
Flooding also closed a portion
of U.S. 33 near Burlingham and
U.S. 50 west of Athens.

claim that Woodall sustained
permanent damages, pain and
suffering. Th ey request a tria! by
jury.
An amended ord er of conf!rma·
tlon of sale and orde r of dlstr!bu·
lion of proceeds from the sale has
lleen filed in the case of Central
Trust Company of Southe astern
Ohio against Thomas K. Woods,
et al. A deficiency judgment of
$15,883 .60 has beel) issued
against co-defend a nt , Mar y L.
Woods.
&amp;ne!!c!al Ohio Inc. , Pomeroy,
hilS been awarded a judgment of
$4,269.47 In a suit against Lar ry
M. Bissell, Rutland, and Patricia
Ann Bissell, Rutland.
In other court matters, Donald.
S. Mohler and Dave Jenkins have
been commissioned as special
d!!putles with the Meigs County

Ohio Lottery

Davis signs
· $1.35 million
Reds' contract

wo ••• ------------~~----------------------Continued !rom page 1

71
1 ~

Sheriff s Department for terms
expiring the fir s t Monday in
January, 1993.
A Meigs County Grand Jury
session has been scheduled !or
Thursday , March 2, at 10 a .m.

Daily Number
629
Pick4

8676

Page4

Finally, Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Judge Fred W. Cro'¥
III has stepped down as pres iding
authority In the cases of Hobart
A. Barker. et al, versus Howard
Frank, sheriff, et al; Shirley
Wallace, plaintiff·appellant, ver·
sus Souther n Ohio Coal Com·
pany, et a! , defendants appellees; James E. McKnabb
versus Christy L.. McKnabb;
Melania D. Barnett, now known
as Melania D . Holman, and
Wesley All!!n Barn!!tt; Donald
Gean Jon!!s Jr. and Sherrie Lynn
Jones.

•
Vol.39. No.198

M

GAWPOUS
446-1014

TRUCKLOAD SALE

•

hiATrRISS

REDil\TRICTING -The Meigs Counly·Board of Elections have
redistricted precincts In the Long Bottom-Reedsville !!e&lt;'tlon of
Eastern Meigs County. The three precincts of Olive Dale,
Reedsville, and Long Bottom have been disbanded with voters of
those precincts to vote at·lhe next election In either North Olive or
South Oll"e. The redistricting Is shown on the map above. In
addition, each voter will receive a card advising of the change
before lime to vote again.

Election ...

'

Continued from page 1

Plains Elementary School as the
voting precinct ; and South Olive
with the Long Bottom Community Building as the voting precinct . ..
As shown on the map, the
nor thern section of the Reedsville Precinct into Olive Dale
forms th!! North Olive precinct;
while the southern section ot the
Reedsville precinct Into Long
Bottom forms the South Olive
Precinct.

Ucense issued
Marriage licenses have bren
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court by John Kevin Arnold, 20,
Pomeroy,. and Patrtcia Ann
Wood, 19, Long Bottom; Marty
Dale Hart, 19, Ru tla'nd, and
Sandra Renea VanCooney, 19,
Pomeroy.

All committeemen will remain
in place until the next election for
committeemen which will take
place In May ,1990. Th!!y w!ll then
run for positions in their r!!spectiv!! new precincts. .

lUIUir filM

TWIN 10 '139 TWIN SO '199 TWIN SO 1249
fULl llT
199 FULl SO
249 FUU lET
299
QUEEN SO 229 QUEEN SET 299 QUEEN SET 399

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions- Aud·
ria Arnold, Pomeroy; Byron
Watson, Long Bottom; Jane
Oldaker, Pomeroy; Grace Alien,
Portland; John Kauffman Sr.,
Portland; Donna Ross, Portland.
Wednesday discharges
Juanita Harman, Terri Hall.

3DAVSONLV!

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Ga!fipolis

'

_WATER OVER SHADY COVE ROAD~ As
flash Hood waters In several areas of Meigs
County recede, back water from tbe Ohio River
. cauBCS Leading Creek along Shady Cove Road
below Mldclleport to rise. Shady Cove residents
· begau a cam palliD last year to getloul officials to
help them alleviate the Hooding problem which
often keeps them "watered In" for several weeks

out of a year. When the water comes up, the oDly
way In and out of the cove Is by boat or by walking
a path throiJih the hillside. However, '• large
fallen tree blocks the creek, and another fallen
tree blocks the path, preventlag reseuers from
being able to reach Shady Cove residents In case
of an emergency.

Free Delivery - Credit Terms

TOM PEDEN HAS SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE!

Divorces sought
Divorce actions have been flied
in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Ronald T. Holter,
Cheshire, against Linda L. Hoi·
ter, Racine; Judy Parsons,
Pomeroy, against Elmer Par·
sons, Racine; Donna Thomas,
Little Hocking, against James
Thomas, Pomeroy. Res tra! n!ng
orders have been issued against
the defendants in the Parsons
and Thomas actions.
Granted a divorce ' was Timothy A. Coats from Linda S.
Coats. The defendant in the
action was restored by the court
to her former name, Wilkinson.
Granted a dissolution of their
marriage were Michael Eugene
Cunningham and •Susan R.
Cunningham.

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WORK PROGRESSING ON NEW LmRARYConstruction workers were busy Thursday
afternoon at the site of the new Meigs County

Ubrary on West Mala Street In Pomeroy. With a
construction lab of USO,OOO, the new faciUty Is
expected to be completed In June.

-Local news briefs,-Three wrecks probed in Meigs
The Gallia·Me!gs Post, State Highway Patrol. lnvest!gat!!d
thre!! accidents Thursday in Meigs County.
Kathleen M. Fryar, 38, Syracuse, escaped injury in a one car
accident at 9: 15 a .m. Thursday, on SR. 124, at mile post 29.
Troopers said Fryar's car went off the road. striking a
telephone pole. There was heavy damqge. to the car. The pole
was broken and had to be replaced.
The patrol cited Fryar for failure to maintain control.
Roscoe Fife, 66, Middleport, was cited for failure to maintain
control aft!!r an accident at 9': 50 a.m. Thursday on Leading
Creek Road, 0.4 west of SR. 7. The patrol said File's car wentotf
the road, striking two mail boxes. There was minor damage. No
one was injured.
Another acciden't occurred at 6:39 p.m . Thursday at the
junction of SR. 124 and SR. 338. The patror said a car driven by
Sharlee Evans, 44, Portland, struck a h!ghwater sign. There
was minor damage to the vehicle. No one was cited.

$17 988·

Courthouse to

clo~e

Monday

.

Grand jury session March 2

TOM PEDEN
---. -- ~ --

-- ------

&gt;:--------~--;------

Meigs County Common Pleas Court Judge Fred W, Crow III
has ordered a session of the Grand Jury for Thursday, March 2,
at 10 a.m. It is expected that the Prosecutor's Otflcewill present
several matters Cor th!! jurors' consideration and a visit to the
~e!gs County Jail is also plan.ned for jurors. The visit to the jail
(Continued on Page 10)

--

By United Press International
and OVP Staff reports
Officials at the Gallipolis
Locks and Da m predicted the
Ohio River to crest today, white
the Winfield Dam r!!a ched it s
crest and Is beginning to dr op.
Rainfall registered at the GL&amp;D
was .05 in the past 24 hours.
. Ga!!lpolls Dam readings at 10
a .m . on the upper gauge were
20.2 .feet and 41 .9 fret on the lower
gauge, with the Ohio River rising
at .10 an hour. Dam roller s are
out of the water.
The Winfield Dam reached its
crest at 7 a .m . this morning,
registering at 27.4 on the lower
gauge.
In the three-hour period follow ·
!ng, th!! water dropped two feet ,
with water lowing in the Pitts·
burg, Pa., area, dam official ~
said:
S!!ctions of Gall!a County roads
remain closed today due to high
water, but Gallla County Local
students returned to school
today.

Parts of roads closed in Gall!a
County are SR 233, b!!twe en SR
141 and th!! Jackson County line;
SR 554, near Harrisburg; SR 141,
near the Lawrence County line;
SR 325, between Vinton and Rio
Grande, and between SR 160 and
the Meigs County line.
No roads ar e closed in Meigs
County. All schools in Ga!lia,
Meigs and Mason counties ar"' in
session.
Ohio Roundup
Cold and dr·y w!!ather Is being
forecast for Ohio this W!!ekend.
but some snow or rain might
move into the state by Monday.
Thursday night was seasona·
bly cold in the Buck!!ye State,
with minimum temperatures
within a few degrees of 15 In the
northern counties and In the
lower or mid 20s in the south.
Th!! lowest nighttime tempera·
ture rep 0 rted to the weather
service was 13, which occurred in
Youngs town. Ohio's skies expe-

•

r ienced var ia biec loud!nessove r·.
night , but no prec lp!ta t!on fell.
National Weather S!! rvice offi.
rials in Cleve la nd record ed near
record high pressure. Baromet ric r!!adings at Cleveland Hop·
kins In te rna t ion a 1 Air port
reached 30.90 Inches Wednesday
night , only 0.1 inch below the
record high pressure recorded In
Clevela nd In 1934.
Not much c ha nge in Ohlo' scold
and dry pa ttern is expected
through .Saturday, with highs'
Saturday from the mid 20s to the
mid 30s.
The late morning weather map
show!!d a systemofh!ghpressure
from the north plains, across the
Great Lakes to N!!w England.
This system is not going to move
much for the next few days, th!!
weather service said.
By late Saturday, however, a
low pressure center developing
off the Carolina coast will r!!pres- .
ent an Important new feature on
the w!"ather map.
Continued on pag"' 10

Fifteen candidates file petitions
for May 2 Meigs County primary
Primary elections will be h!!ld
Dewey Horton, Robert Gllmore
in both Middleport and Pomeroy
and Paul Gerard, all lncum·
with contests .for seats on. both
bent~. and Robert Pooler . Demo·
·. Village Councils and the Middle·
crats filing were Jack Satterpotl Board of Public Affairs, · field, incumber!. E . F. Glass, and
according to the Meigs Board of
James Hudson who withdrew his
Elections at ruing deadline
petition due to a conflict or
Thursday.
interest.
· hi add!t!on Pomeroy voters
Filing for positions on the
will vote on a new one mill levy
for lire protection and there will
be special elections in Scipio
Township lor a new ~ mllll!!vy
for ma!nta'!ning cemeteries, and
Meigs Local School District for a
new five mill continuing levy for
current expenses .
As of the 4 p.m. deadline, !!lght
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI)
candidates had filed petitions for
Backing away from any notion
the four seats to be f!lled on
that more money is ne!!ded, a
Pomeroy Village Council while
sharply · divided Ohio S!!nate
seven candidates, with one laiN
panel on school expenditures
withdrawing, filed for the four
recommended Thursday that
. seats on Middleport Village
puptl performance be raised to
Council.
tops in the nation with enly
Republ !can candidates filing
average expenditures.
for Pomeroy Village Council
The so-called "Schafrath
were W!lllam Young and &amp;tty
Panel on School Expenditures"
Baron!ck, incumbents, Mary Po·
recommended a hiJst of studies
well, Steve Price, Thomas J .
and pilot projects, but shied
Werry, John Blaettnar, and
away from any suggg!!stlons that
Barbara James. The only demo·
more money be pumped into
cratic candidate filing was Larry
education, or that class sizes be
J. Wehrung, incumbent.
reduced and teacher pay raised.
In Middl!!port, Republican can·
"Ohio should conduct an ex per·
lrnent designed to find the best
dictates filing petitions were

Middleport Board of Public Af.
fairs with one to be elected were
Robert Duckworth and Bruce
Fisher. both Republicans .
The validity of the petitions
filed will be checked at the Board
of Elections meeting on Tuesday ,
Jane Frymyer, dire ctor, an nounced.

Panel split on Ohio
school recommendations

Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow III has
announced that his office and all other county of!!ces w!ll be
closed Monday in observance of Presidents' Day. Offices will
re-open o.n Tuesday at their usual 8:30a.m. hour.

1 --::---:--......,.,"'""7~------·-· -~·

2 Sectkms, 14 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. 'Newspaper

February 17. 1989

Expect Ohio River to
crest sometime today

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Cloudy tonight. Low mid
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percent. Saturday , variable
cloudiness. tugh near 35.

l'

way to become the top state in
student learning while remain·
!ng an average state In school
spending," the panel conclud!!d. ·
The most noteworthy recommendation calls for the state
Board or Education to creal!! a
"world-class, rigorou s curriculum framework in English" for
kindergarte n through 12th grade,
pilot test it in S!!lect!!d school
district s, a nd meas ure results.
If it works, s!milat· fr a m eworks co uld be dev ised fo r
mathematics and othe r subj ects,
the pan!!l said.
·
"By 2002, "'e believe that Ohio
should be in the top 5 percent of
Continued on page 10

Overbrook
Center is
certified
Overbrook Center has been
certified as a skilled nursing
facility, according to an an· ·
nouncement by Dr. Harold
Brown, sponsor, and Mark Mui'·
· phey , administrator.
Notification or the certlf!catlon
was received by Murphey Thurs·
day from the Chicago Regional
Office of the U. S. Health Care
Financing Administration and
w!IJ be retroactive to Dec. 22
when the initial cert\f!catlon
inspection proces·s was
completed.
·
Ach!!!vement or such certlf!ca·
t!on, according to Murphey, now
enables Overbrook Center to
offer both skUied and intermediate care nursing services to the
residents of !Is service area,
Including all Medicare and Medi·
ca!d eligible patients.
Additional !nfomation regard·
!ng,the new skilled care coverage
may be obtained !rom either
Murphey, administrator, or
Carol Farmer, director ol adm!s·
slons, 992-6472.

TORNADOES SEC'l10NALCBAMPS- With a

48-41 win over Kyger Creek Tuelldar alght, the

Soullleru Tornadoes ctrls' basketball team
claimed the upper-bracket championship of the
Melp sectional and advanced to the district
tournament at Waverly IDI!'h School against

Franklin Fai'JI8(:e Green Monday at 8: 30 p.m. In
the fr011t row are (L-R) Micah Jones, Toaya
Ingels, Wendy Wolfe and Dawn Johnson. Behind
, them are Debbie Greathouse, Becky Evans,
Becky Winebrenner, Crystal lUll and Tracy
Beegle. ·

�Commentary

FBI leaves Chicago traders stunned

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - The FBI has
another surprise for the Chicago
commodities markets. When the
agency pulled Its undercover
agents out of the markets last
month and went public with a
~ling operation, at least two
undercover agents stayed behind
sttll posing as traders .
FBI sources tell us that the
stragglers' sole purpose was to
catch anyone who tried to thwart
the investigation by shredding
documents or otherwise destroyIng evidence. It will be a long
time before commodities traders
can look at each other without
suspicion.
The Chicago Board of Trade
and the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange are together Chlca·
go's single largest business.

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS..MASON AREA

. PAT WHITEHEAD
·Assistant Pubilsher/ConlroUer

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

A MEMBER o!The United Presslnternatlonal.lnland Dally Press
. Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shoukt be less than JXI words
long. All letters are subJect to editing a nd must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unslgnOO letters wtll be publlshE!d. ~tters shoukl be in
good raste, addressing issues, not peuCilal\Ues.

Bush promotes
kinder society
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON iUPI) -President Bush's plans for a " kinder and
genller" nation begs the question: "Kinder and gentler than what? "
As a former loyal team player, he would never say It, nor will his top
ai des , but he obviously means kinder than the Reagan administration, which, among other things, cut funds for school lunch and
funding for child and maternal health.
Although the Increased funding for the social programs Is notlarge,
the new focus is enormous in contrast to the past.
Bush, silent for eigh t years in the nation's No.;! job, has found a
com passiona te voice on some of the Issues long neglected. On the
other hand, the elderly and sick may not find the $6 billion proposed
slash in Medicare a boon to their health or peace of mind.
At the sa me time, Bush vowed fuli funding for Social Security an'd
the cost-of-living increases.
Clearly, Bush wants to be remembered as a kinder, gentler
president and he has tur ned the spotUght on the needs in education,
improving the environment, winning the war against drugs and
tackling the problem of homelessness.
Furthermore, he recognized the financial burden of child care by
proposing a $1,000 tax credit for eac h child under 4. But there Is also
the question of child care facilities and health and safety concerns.
"In addition to caring for our future, we must care for those around
us," he said in his firs t major speech to Congress dealing with the
budget. "A decen t society shows compassion for the young, the
elderly, lhe vulnerable and the poor. "
"Our first obligation is to the most vulnerable - infants, poor
mothers. children living in poverty - and my proposed budget
recognizes tllis~ " he said.
As a consequence, he said he was asking for full funding of Medicaid
-a n increase of over $3 billion- and an expansion of the program to
include coverage of pregnant women who are near the poverty line.
All these were issues that were building up over the years that
President Reagan felt was none of the government's business. But
Bush was not abou t to blame the administration in which he played
such a prominent ro le .
,
"Certain problems," he said In his speech to Congress, "the result
of decades of unwise pracUces, threaten the health and security of our
pepie. Left unattended they will only get worse, but we can act now to
put them behind us.' '
.
Bush, as vice pres ident, proudly pursued deregulation of major
industries with vigor, the price of which will be paid in the future.
. He told Congress that "we need fewer regulations" but at the same
lime he has increased the role of government in several areas,
includ ing a massive cleanup of the nation's nuclear plants and a
bailout for bankrupt savings and loans Institutions. the cost of which
will inevitably fa ll on taxpayers and depositors.
Sheer neglect and lack of regulations and guidelines surely let these
enormous problems come to pass. How else could nuclear plants have
deterioriated tq such a sta te? How is It possible lhat there is so much
alleged fraud and misma nagement in multimillion-dollar contracts
to munitions makers on the Pentagon watch? Who was watching the
store?
So reforms are in order.
Congress and the public are willing to give Bush a chance to soften
lhe image of lhe United States to once more personify a caring
society.
Bush may be trying to make amends for the past. But he may
sometimes wonder what happened In the last eight years and whether
he might have done something earlier to ease the pain.

•.

CBO'f Is the world's largest
commodities market. It trades In
26 types of futures and futures
options, Including Treasury
bonds and notes and agricultural
commodities such as soybeans,
oats, wheat and corn. The Mere Is
the world's second largest, trading In 30 futures including
lumber, pork bellies, hogs, cattle, currencies and other flnanclal·products.
The FBI culminated a twoyear Investigation Into fraudulent practices by serving subpoenas to some traders at their
homes on Jan. 17. Adding insult
- and an element of surprise to Injury, some of th~ traders
opened their doors late that night
to see a fellow "trader," really
an FBI agent, with subpoena In

hand.
So many subpoenas have been
served- about 100 to date- that
one Chicago bar concocted a new
drink for Its depressed customers - ttie "Subpoena Colada."
One ol the agents delivering
subpoenas had his own seat at
CBOT and traded In soybean
futures as part of the Investigation code-named "Operaton Sour
Mash," for the whiskey made
from corn.
Three others making the
rounds with subpoenas had
worked undercover at the Mere,
trading In Treasury bond futures, currency futures and the
Standard &amp; Poors 500 stock index
futures. The Mere sting was
called "Operation Hedge
Clipper," named after the prac·

~

'

measure as a way to attract and
retain qualified people in govern·
ment because, along with raising
the pay of some 2,600 senior level
executive branch officials and
federal judges. As a result of
inflation, the purchasing power
of the salaries of these officials,
in general, earn appreciably less
than they would in the private
sector. So, If the federal government wants to attract quality
people to the public sector, it
simply must pay them more.
As _It Is now, top young lawyers
just exiting law school, in some
cases, command compensation
in excess of sitting judges many
years their senior.
A ' lot of Americans feel, and
justifiably so, that public service
is Its own reward. People accept
lower Incomes In the public
sector in exchange for the
prestige and satisfaction that
accompany such a position. •In
many Instances that Is certainly
the case.
Our top cabinet level officials
could certainly earn far more in
the private sector, but they
accept the positions they hold for
the honor of serving their country

at the highest level of government. However, all too often the
prestige and job satisfaction
associated with federal service
cannot compensate these qualified Individuals for what the job ·
requires of them. As result , the
federal government simply cannot attract the type of ta lent
needed for many of its top
positions.
For example, the federal government's prestigious National
Institutes of Health has been
unable to recruit a single renowned research scientist from
the private sector or from
academia In the last 10 years.
Moreover, relatively low salaries threaten the ability of the
federal government to retain its
top officials. The average senior
appointee in the executive
branch leaves after 18 months
thanks to more attractive private
sector salaries. In addition,
workloads for top officials are
also on the rise, particularly In
the federal courts.
Federal judges are hearing
more and more cases, cases that
are growing In size and complexIty. In the last four years alone

a

.·.

lice of hedging trades against :
sudden price cha nges.
•
The wild pace of the two
exchanges makes them Ideal ·
spots for fraudulent trading. The.
FBI planted agents Inside to.'
build Its case because of loose.:
record keeping and the•raucous·,.
atmosphere in the markets. Both
exchanges have "pits" where
traders in a particular commodIty shout out bids to buy and sell
futures. They are trusted to note
the time and price of the trade on
small slips of paper. Millions of
dollars in price changes can
occur In a minute, leaving the
honor system wide open for
abuses.
A broker for a buyer and a
broker for a seller could make a
deal to report different sales
prices to their respective custo:
mers and then split the difference between themselves.
Traders are allowed to make
trades for themselves on ·the
floor, but they aren't supposed to
trade ahead of their customers to
get a better price. Nor are they ·
permitted to use inside Information to make a trade for themselves. For example, a trader
who knows a customer Is about to
place a large order which would
drive up the pr ice, is not allowed·
to buy lor himself or herself just-'
before the price goes up·.
.
The cases against the traders·
will be prosecuted by Chicago'S:
U.S. Attorney Anton Valukas .
FBI sources tell us he will make
heavy use of racketeering sta- ·
lutes. Related charges, such as :
Income tax evasion and money
laundering are also expected as a
result of the sting. Now, with the
agents who stayed behind to
watch the mad scramble, "ob~
structlon of justic" may be added
to the list.
·

Poor solution for real problem
The American taxpayer won a
major victory last week when
Members of Congress voted
down the pay raise that had been
proposed for themselves and
other top federal officials.
The magnitude of the proposed.
Increase justifiably outraged the
people of this country since the
proposed $45,500 per year raise
for Congressmen was more than
most Americans make In an
entire year. Moreover, coming at
a time when Congress Is talking
about the need for budget deflcli
·reductions, the pay raise must
have seemed like a slap In the
face for most people.
Like most Americans I was
shocked by the size of the
proposed salary inerease and
strongly opposed It,
Many citizens were puzzled as
to why President Reagan and
President Bush, who are bot))
fiscally conservative, supported
this measure. However, they
supported It not because of what
II did for Congressmen, but
because of what It was intended
to do for the federal government
as a whole.
That Is, they viewed the

Cards nip Florida State in·final ·seconds ·

BURSON OUT FOR YEAR - Ohio Stale senior guard Jay
Burson, shown making a layup In a January game, WJUIInJured
while playing at Iowa Tuesday nqhl,lraclurlng the fifth cervical
vertebrae. The InJury did not result In spinal conl.~amage. Burson
will mlsl the rest oft he season and must wear a Halo tracllon brace
for the next three montha. Burson has averaged 22.1 ·points per
game and ends his CRI'eer In fifth place on the OSU all-time scoring
list with I, 756 points and first In steals with 204. ( UPI)

Burson in neck brace
for next three months
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) Jay Burson, who defied the odds
·by competing In the Big Ten; has
played his last game as an Ohio
State basketball player.
OSU team physician Dr. Robert Murphy, neurologist Dr.
Gary Rea and Dr. Sheldon
Simon. chief of orthopedics at
Ohio State's University Hospl'
tals, all said Thursday Burson
will have to wear a neck brace for
three months.
The 6-foot, 158-pound senior
guard, Ohio State's filth all-time
leading scorer; was Injured during the first half of a loss Monday
at Iowa when hew as fouled while
attempting a fastbreak layup. He

Berry's World

q.: . /Va..•...,,..,__·_·
.

· - .. -.....

'

t·l

"Maternity leave? How could you do this
tome?"

M

-

_

......

••

...

~·

- 4. ~

...

__ ......
,_

•

. -- ..........

-~

-

Con.
Clarence Miller-

An Intense Dis trlct 22 matchu p
is set for Saturday In Lyne Center
when the Rio Grande men's
basketball team meets the Cedarville Yellow Jackets In what
is the final home game of the
season for the Redmen.
Game time will be 7:30p.m. It
Is also Ohio Valley Bank Booster
Night.
'With Cedarville's 77-71 defeat
of Mounl Vernon Nazerene
Thursday night, the Redmen and
the Yellow Jackets carry Identical records into competition:
19-11 overall a11d 7-6 In the
Mid-Ohio Conference.
In their previous meeting this
season, at Cedarv1lle Jan. 21, the
Redmen fell, 87-74. Since then,·
the Yellow Jackets posted other
wins over Bluffton, 67-52; Ur·
bana, 97-88; Ohio Dominican,
87-67; Lake Erie, 118-89; Wilmington, 84-81; and Walsh, 92-69.
Losses have. been to Malone,

the federal criminal case load has
Increased 21%. Drug-related .
cases have r isen.85% and these
are often the most complex and
time consuming of all.
These factors are taking ttielr,;
toll on the federal judiciary. In
the years between 1958 and 1973
there were only six resignation~ ·
from the federal bench; however, in the last 15 years there
have been 57.
·
Given these ~ircumstances, II
is not unreasonable to suggest
that some salary realignment for
some federal officials is notoutof
line. Toward this end, President
Bush has indicated that he will ..
work with Congress to explore
the possibilities In this regard.
However, while the Inequities In ,.
top federal salaries are a real
problem ..increaslng the salaries
of Congressmen by 50% is a poor
solution to that problem.
Congress must show restraint I'
in addressing this issue, and I for
one will continue to work to see
that correcting these Inequities
does not become an opportunity •
for those who set federal salaries
to unjustifiably feather their own ·
nests.

Cage standings
(SEO,()pponenls)
(Ali·Gameil)
TEAM
·W
L P or
Chesapeake .... 18 2 1466 1099
x-Waverly ...... 19 3 1595 1172
Portsmouth .... 18 3 1563 1182
Logan ............. 17 3 1341 1067
Wheelersburg . 17 3 f~ 1104
Athens ............ 17 4 ~'1143
Rock H!ll ........:14 7 !497 1293
~uthern ......... 14
8 1465 .1370
x-Greenfleld ... 13 8 I160 1092
x-Vinton ......... 1o 11 1251 1226
x-Warren .... .'. .'. 9 11 1224 1228
Marietta ......... 8 12 1124 1205
x-South Point .. 8 13 1436 1462
x-GD llipol!s .... . 8 14 1019 1140
Pt. Pleasant . .. 6 12 1050 1168
x-Meigs .......... 15 16 1129 1318
x-Jackson ....... 4 17 1248 1397

Robert Wagman

clashes between the two coun- his general conventional arms
tries. This escalated in the 1960s reduction. In addition, Soviet
Into armed clashes along the troops have been withdrawn unaccep ta ble to the Uoited .
4,600-mlle Sino-Soviet border, from Afghanistan.
States.
·•
But the Cambodian Issue releaving hundreds dead.
Many experts here do not .
From the mid-1960s through mains unresolved. The Soviets consider a Sino-Soviet military
the early part of this decade, the have Indicated their willingnes to alllance likely. They point out the -.
two communist powers have see the Vietnamese leave, but deep distrust that has hlstorl- ·
been Involved In a complex cold they want guarantees that ,any cally existed between the two.
war. It saw the Soviets con- new government will not include Further, as the Heritage Founda- ·
stantly attempting to extend Pol Pot's Khmer Rouge, whose lion's China expert, Andrew· '
their Influence In Asia, especially return to power In Cambodia Is Brick, points out, "Such an ·
through their alliance with the backed by the Chinese. The alliance Is unlikely because
Chinese have not agreed to that neither the Soviets nor the ·
North Vietnamese.
The Chinese , have reaeted condition, nor over what' powers Chinese could risk (losing) acslowly to Soviet overtures. U.S. an Interim International peace- cess to vital Western financial ,·
analysts believe the Chinese keeping force will have should It and technological assistance."
have been unsure of whether temporarily replace the
There .are also other Issues
Gorbachev would last. The first Vietnamese.
between the two that could affect•
indication that the Chinese were
Finally , tliere are potential the United States and Its allies: ·
receptive came last October dangers for the United States in For example, the Chinese are :
after Gorbachev reshuffled the the prospect of better Sino-Soviet unhappy about growing trade
Politburo In an attempt to · relations. The main worry Is that · ties between the Soviet Union, ,
solidify his power, demoting It would lead to a military the
Eastern Bloc and Taiwan.
Yegor Llgachev In the process. alliance. When President Bush
However,
one thing is clear: ·
Llgachev was seen by the Chi- visits Beijing on his upcoming
The
Chinese
will try to extract a ·.
nese as the principal architect of Far East tour, he will !Ylake It high price from
the Soviet alliance with Vietnam. clear to Deng that thl.s would be renormalization. the Soviets for :
The Chinese set three conditions for any summit or normalization of relations: reduction of
Soviet forces along the SinoSoviet border; withdraw! of
By United Press International
Soviet forces from neighboring
Today Is Friday, Feb. 17, the 48th day of 1989 with 317 to follow . . ,
Afghanistan; and Soviet presThe moon is waxing, moving toward fuU .
sure on Vietnam to remove Its
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
army from Cambodia.
The evening stars are Mars ~nd Jupiter.
SOviet Foreign Mlnlser Eduard
Those born on this date are uoder the sign of Aquarius. They include
Shevardnadze went to Shanghai mall order retailer Aaron Montgomery Ward in 1843, engraver .•
after the first two conditions Frederick Ives In 185ii, Texas all Millionaire H.L. Hunt in 1889,. ,
were met. The Soviets have contralto singer Marian Anderson In 1902 (age 86), sportscaster Red .
reduced their troop strenglh in Barber in 1908 (age 81), actor Arthur Kennedy in 1914 (age65), author ·,
Mongolia, and Gorbachev has Margaret Truman Daniel, daughter of President Harry Truman, in .
announced a general reduction In 1924 (age 65), and actors Hal Holbrook In 1925 (age 64) and Alan Bates
Soviet forces In the east as part of In 1934 (age 55).
.
'

x~Completed

97·84; . Tiffin, 79-67; and Georgetown (Ky.), 98-77.
Probable starters for Rio
Grande at forward w111 be Larry
Benning (6·4, freshman , 9.7
points and 6 rebounds per game)
and Mike Tidwell (6-3, sophomore, 7.2 points, 3.5 rebounds) .
Starting forwards for Cedarvllle are Chris Reese (6·2, senior,
13 points, 4.9 boards) and Dominic McKinley (6-3, freshman,
10.9 points, 7.9 rebounds).
At guard for the Redmen are
Anthony Raymore (5·ll, senior,
15.6 points, 3 rebounds, 4.4
assists) and Brad Schubert (6-3,
freshman, 9 .1 points, · 2.5
rebounds).
Cedarville w111 send in Gary
Harrison (5-11, sophomore, 15.9
points, 2.7 boards, 4.8 assists)
and Mark Combs (6-2. freshman,
8.5 points, 2.5 rebounds) as Its
defenders.
Rio Grande's Marc Gothard
(64, senior, 7 points, 3.5 rebounds) w111 be at center and the
Yellow Jackets will field Michael
Minto (6-7, junior, 13.9 points, 4.8
rebounds) at the post.
Currently, Rio Grande possesses 2,356 season points, or 78.5
per game. They have given up
2,235 points to their opponents for
74_.5 per outing.

Today in history

at

,,

· Ohio Outdoors

Pocketknives useful tools

The Rio Grande Redwomen
(15-9) were on the road today,
enroute to Saturday's 6:30 p.m.
contest against Limestone College in Ga(fney, S.C.
The Rio ladles conclude their
season Monday against Wingate,
N.C .. presently the No. 3 team
among all NAIA schools fielding
women's basketball.
The Saints, who pursue an
independent schedule In District
6, are 8-13 following an 82-69
home court loss to the University
or South Carolina-Spartanburg.
They were to play the College of
Charleston, S.C., Thursday
night.
Rio Grande w!ll t.o looking for
victory after Its 96·90 loss to Dyke
Tuesday In District 22 action.
Starting forwards for the Redwomen wlll be Lea Ann Mull!ns
(5-7, senior, 24.2 points, 5.7
rebounds and 4.3 assists per
game) and Holly Hastings (5-9,
senior. 15.6 points, 10.6 rebounds). Opposing them from
Limestone are Retha Connelly
(5-10, sophomore, 9.4 points, ·3.5
boards) and Jennifer Hardin
(6-0. freshman, 3.5 points, ' 4.7
rebounds).
'
Redwomen defenders are Beth
Coil (5-6, sophomore, 4.8 points,
2.2 rebounds, 5.4 assists) and
Betsy Bergdoll 15·7, freshman,
10.6 points, 2.1 rebounds). The
Saints are fielding Shelley Ivey
(5-7, junior, 8.9 points, 3 assists)
and Eugenia Crocker (5-10, sophomore, · 9.4 points, 3.5 .
rebounds).
Ann Barnltz (6-0, freshman,
11.5 points, 4.8 rebounds) continues at the post for Rio Grande.
Facing her from Limestone will
be Pam Wade 15-10, junior), the
Saints' top scorer at 23.3 points
per outing, In addition to being
one of the leading rebounders at
10.3 each time out.
The Redwomen have totaled
1,908 season points so far for an
average of 79.5 a game. They
surrendered 1,745 points to their
opponents for 72. 7.

GROUP OF WORK BOOTS

By JERRY PICKRELL
Outdoor Writers
Assoclalloa of America
Distributed by UPI
Long ago, slipping .a pocket·
knife Into your jeans was as
much a part of being dressed as
having your pants on. It'sst!ll not
a bad idea.
Regardless of what you do for a
ltvlng, It's probable that you find
It necessary to open things from
time to time. Envelopes, boxes
and other packages can be
quickly silt with a knife almost
without a second thought. Some
things that come wrapped in
indestructible plastic - some
are even fragile, such as potato
chips -can only be opened with a
knife unless you want to reduce
the contents to crumbs.
It'd be a pretty safe bet that
most of our grandfathers carried
such a knife as a matter of
convenience. It's just as safe a
bet that they 'd probably not
recognize the ones we have
today.
·
Grandpa never heard of a
locking blade, and It's too bad,
too. He likely cut his fingers more
than once from a blade that
collapsed into the folded position
when it wasn't expected. Today's
lock-blades prevent that.
Most of the knives the old
timers carried were made of
regular steel. It'd hold an edge
pretty well. as long as it didn' t get
rusty. Modern knife blades are

nearly always made of stainless
steel. These space age alloys hold
their sharpness just as well as
any knife ever did but they never
rust, even If they are put away
wet.
Knife handles these days usually are some form of plastic,
although some atiractlve ones
have been made with wood.
Grandad may have had us there
- some of the old ones had bone
handles or handles carved from
antlers. They were handsome
indeed.
The plastic lasts longer even if
it isn't as good looking . A small
price, I suppose.
If it's been a while since you
had a pocketknife, pick one up
and carry 1t for a few days. You'll
be surprised at how useful It is
once you remember having it
with you. It might even start a
fad In the office.

Arizona. The Wlldcats coasted to
their 31st.stralght home triumph .
Southern Cal Is six losses away
from becoming the !trst team to
go winless In Pac-10 play.
At East Lansing, Mich., Kenny
Battle scored 19 points and
Lowell Hamilton · 17 to lead
Illinois. All five Illinois starters
scored In double figures. Steve
Smith, who didn't start for
Michigan State because of a ·
sprained knee, led the Spartans
with 19 points. ·
At Chapel Hill. N.C., Steve
Bucknall scored 21 points. 16 In
the second half, to lead North
Carolina. The Tar Heels placed
five players In double figures for
the seventh time this season.
Wake Forest was led by Cal Boyd
wtlh 24 points, all on three-point
shots.
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Rumeal
Robinson and Glen Rice sparked
a 15-8 run at the start of the
second hall to lead Michigan.
Rice led Michigan with 21 points,
whlle Robinson had 19. Kip Jones
led Purdue with a career-high 25
points.
At Morgantown, W.Va., Herbie
Brooks and Tracy Shelton scored
14 points apiece to lead West
Virginia to Its 20th straight
victory, the nation's longest
winning streak. Jim McCoy
scored 23 points for Massachusetts, Including 18 In the second
half. ·

I'

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•

By Outdoorsman
VALUES

TO 557.95

htrita_gt hous.t

season

results:
Rock Hill 53 Gallipolis 50
Wellston 39 Jackson 36 (Ot)
Southern 74 North Gallla 64
Thursday's results:
WashingtOn CH 70 Waverly 64
AI hens 65 New Lexington 55
Sheridan 56 Vinton County 49
Portsmouth 69 South Point 67
Huntington 92 Pt. Pleasant 58
(regular season)
Tonight's games:
Southern vs. Trimble. at Meigs, 7
p.m.
wheelersburg vs . Oak Hill, at
Ironton, 7: 30
Crooksville vs. Alexander, at
Athens, 8:15
Belpre vs. Federal Hocking, at
Athens. 6:30p.m.
Symmes Valley vs. Green, at
Chesapeake, '1: 30 p.m.
Wellston vs. Rock Hill, at Rio, 7
p.m. '
saturday's·sames:
Chillicothe vs. Logan, at Athens,
6:'30 p.m.
Lancaster vs. Marietta, at
Athens, 8: 15 p.m.
West Union vs. Washington CH,
Chlllh:othe, 7 p.m.
Portsmouth vs. Ironton, at South
Webster, 7:30
Chesapeake vs. Coal Grove, at
Ironton, 7:30p.m.

Limestone
to host Rio
Redwomen

CLOSEOUT

•

f11le

Wednesd~y's

/
~.

slid head first into the basket
support. Burson played the rest
of the game, scoring 25 points.
On Wednesday, when pain in
his neck persisted, X-rays dis closed Burson had suffered a
fracture of the front surface of
his fifth cervical vertabra In his
neck.
Murphy said It had been
decided that Burson must wear a
''halo brace'' for a mlnlnum of 12
weeks. He finished with 22.1
points in 24 games this season
and 1, 756 points overall as a
Buckeye.
"It will take three months of
total immobilization for It to
heal," said Murphy.

Rio, Cedarville brace
for intense matchup

Better relations could benefit U. S.
WASHINGTON (NEA) -Experts say the United States has
nothing to fear from the upcom·
lng Soviet-Chinese summit-even
should It accomplish Its goal of
"completely normalizing" relations between the two communist
superpowers.
Even so, U.S. officials will
closely monitor developments.
Improved Sino-Soviet relations
could affect numerous Issues
Important to the United States
and its Asian allies.
U.S. experts on Slnol-Sovlet
affairs stress that the lnterna·
Ilona! situation has changed
significantly since the 1960s and
1970s. Thus, better Chinese·
Soviet relations are not necessar·
Uy bad for the United States.
For years, the United States
had poor relations with both
sides, often playing one off
against the other, profiting when
relations between the two nations
cooled.
Now, however, the United
States has · greatly Improved
relations with both superpowers.
Many U.S. experts believe we
will actually gain If the two enter
a new era of rapprochement
through a reduction of regional
' tensions and agreements on
arms control and nuclear non·
proliferation.
The now-likely meeting In
Beijing between Mikhail Gorba·
chev and Deng Xlaoping will be
the first between Soviet and
Chinese leaders since Nlklta
Khrushchev met Mao Zedong In
October 1959. That summit cui·
minated a - ~ries of ideological

stay in the game. and Ithlnk It's a
beat Virginia Tech, South Carol·
By JEFF SHAIN .
tribute to the freshman (Sulliina and Arkansas in the waning
UPJ !!ports Writer
van) that he could make that
This time, No. 10 Louisville moments.
shot."
Florida State trailed 34-30 at
was the victor and not the victim.
Louisville's Kenny Payne led
Freshman Everlck Sullivan hit halftime and by as many as 9
all
scorers with 24 points, while
points
In
the
second
half,
but
the
a three-point shot at the buzzer
Seminoles
used
a
10·2
run
at
the
Sullivan
finished with 17 points
Thursday n lght, giving the Cardiend
of
regulallon
to
send
the
and
Ellison
had 16.
nals a 78-77 overtime viet ory over
Dawson led Florida State with
No. 9 Florida State and ending a game Into overtime tied 69-69.
21 points, while Hunter flnlshed
string of losses In the flnal Tat Hunter tipped In a missed
Tony Dawson shot to force
with 19 and McCloud had 18.
seconds.
In other games Thursday
Loull;ville was coming off a overtime.
night, No. 2 Arizona trounced
The Seminoles built a 74-691ead
controversial last-shot ·loss to
UCLA on Sunday, one of four In the overtime session after a · Southern Cal 93-70, No. 6 Illinois
routed Michigan Slate 75-56, No.
times this season the Cardinals George McCloud three-pointer
7 North Carolina stuffed Wake
have lost at the end of the game. and a Dawson layup. But LoulsForest 99· 76, No. 13 Michigan
The Cardinals earlier had vllle rallied to within 74-73 with
topped Purdue 84-70, No. 14 West
dropped last-minute decisions to 2: 36 left behind a Tony Kimbro
Virginia clubbed Massachusetts
Xavier, Vanderbilt and Florida hook shot and a pair of free
88-55, No. 16 Stanford rolled past
throws by LaBradford Smith.
State.
·
California 97-71, No. 17 NevadaHunter followed with a three"After losing so many of our
point
play,
butPervis
Ellison
hit
Las Vegas b\asted San Jose State
gam'es the way we have, I
95-66,
Arizona State overcame
a
baseline
shot
to
bring
the
thought we had one like this
No.
20
UCLA 93-86, Brigham
Cardinals
within
77-75,
setting
up
coming," Louisville Coach
Young
topped
No. 20 Texas-EI
Sullivan's
final
shot.
Denny Crum said.
Paso
"
There
were
so
many
times
(at
84-76
and
Siena defeated
For a while, it looked as though
Maine
76-49
In
a
game played
the
end)
that
I
thought
we
had
It
Florida State would pull out Its ·
before
an
empty
house
.
.fifth · last-gasp victory of the won and then I thought we had It
At Tucson, Ariz., Anthony Cook
season. In addition to an 81-78 lost.'' Florida State Coach Pat
scored a career-high 31 points
squeaker over Loulsyille two Kennedy said. "I think It's a
weeks ago, the Seminoles also tribute to our team that we could . and grabbed 12 rebounds to lead

Jack Anderson :•

I
J

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomaoy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-2-The Daily Sentinet.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :·
Friday. February 17, 1989 :~

ARE YOU TELLING
ME BANK ONE
IS STAYING OPEN
ON PRESIDENT'S
DAY?

SHOE PLACE
MIDDUPOIT

..

Benjamin J. Sol, M.D.

lfs True. We're celebrating President's
Day this year by staying open to serve
our BANK ONE customers. On Monday,
Feb. 20, nwill be business as usual for
BANK ONE, POMEROY offices. •
So whether you're working or enjoying a
day off, we'll be here for all your
banking needs. Honest.

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

•

HONEST!

Suite 215
Pleasant Valley Hospital
. Medical Office Building

Now Accepting Patients
Monday through Friday 8:30a.m. to 5 p.m.

(304) 675-3400

BANKS.ONE..

·,

Eighteen ThDus11nd Peopt, Who Carr~. .

17LJ PLIASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

IV'l Til. fom/1, of professionals
I

'

Drive, PoiJ\t Pleasanl, WV 25550

IAHII ON£, A r~Nt (loll(' NA&lt;i!Nif .-AIIirOI fHf C:U/1110 I lA.;

'

M""~FOIC

•Qepos•ts ai'ICI W!fl'ldrawiiS w1tl bt !)Oiled to checlun~
and M'o'•f\01 account! w1th the ne ..t daY'• bustneu.

'l

�•

Page-4- The

Sentinel

Friday. February 17, 1989

Ohio

•

Davis signs for $1.35 million
By MIKE TULLY
UPI Na&amp;lonal Baseball Writer
NEW YORK - Center (Ieider
Eric Davis , with team owner
Marge Schott intervening In the
negotiatiOns, signed a $1.35 mtl·
liOn contract Thursday to become the highest paid player in
the history of the Cincinnati
Reds.
Davis' agent, Eric Goldsch·
m!dt, said the 1-year deal called
for a base pay of $1.35 million,
with a $100.000 bonus for winning
the Gold Glove and various
Incentives. The entire package
could be worth $1.58 If Davis
cas hes in all the bonuses.
Davis, 26, surpasses the salary
of pitcher Mario Solo, who made
$1.2 m!llion last year. The deal
came less than a week after
Davis asked to be traded because
the Reds failed to treat him with
"respect" during negotiations.
DAVIS SIGNS ONE-YEAR CONTRACT- Cincinnati centerfielder Eric Davis signed a one-year contr.a ct with the Reds
Thursday. Davis' agent, Eric Goldschmidt, said the deal called lor
a base pay of $1.35 million, with a $100,000 bonus for winning the
Gold Glove and various other Incentives. The entire d ~al could be
· worth $1.58 If Davis cashes In all the bonues.

Ohio College
cage standings

Vir~

Olli o HI ,11h Sc hool Ba.s J.folhall
B)' United Press lnt...-ml lo~Wol
'fhll~a.,V .

Tourmm1•n1 R rs ult s
Dlv6kl n I
Akr Bul·htl'l 73, Akr f~·atnti · H o~· t&gt;r 29
81»1rdman M, RaVf'nm -I ll

·MID· AMERICAN CONFERENCE
C:of!ferent"e ,\II G11mes
Tr!Uil
\\' L Pet. " ' L Pt.t.
Ball Stair
10 % .M:tJ Zl ~ .9il
Toll!do
7.f .I361311 ,5H
Ke nt Statr
7 .f .536 H II .636
MIIUYII
fi fi .500 10 \1 ..&amp;76
Wa;tern Ml c h
6 6 .lOO II 11 .300
Ellslern Ml ch
j 6 .45-1 13
9 .MI
( 'entral Mh·h
.f M .333 10 IJ ,·1:1$
Ohio Unh•
I 8 .333 10 12 ,-15li
Bowlin ~~: Green
3 M .!'7:1 9 I ~ .409

l'ln J:'rlfk•elon 51, Ml Ht&gt; ditcy 81
fin Ouk Hill" U , W Ch l'!!te r Lah&amp;a -10
Cu ya hQ&amp;:O F'l.lll!l 13,

Ely rill 71,

I( 7

M~tiiosUion

Mounll Un ion
Ohlu Nortlwr n
Mu.rif'lbl

N Ca nt on GltnOak

9 .&amp;0 9

.!tl3 II 10 .GII:I

Co nfcre n tl' i\.11 Gam''"'
" ' L rt1 . W L P&lt;1 .
ID I .909 1!1 .~ .782
Iii t .14:13 1!1 ti .7till

WuO!ik•r
,\lle ~hf' ny

.727 13 II .U'!
5 ti .U&amp; 7 16 .301

Otm-Un

fu!Or R«'M•.rw

MID·OlOO CONFERESfE
('nntert•nt•e All t.l ~t me~
T" IUl1
\\' L r et.
" L
Millon:'
II 2 .14-16 17 10
Urh11nt~.
M t .661 16 10
Ml Vt•rnon Nav.
II I .66j lti II
Rio Gr11.n*'
7 fi ,.$3H 19 Ill
7 '6 .1311 IS 9
Tiffin
( 'l!diU'\illc
It 6 .5011 I~ II
Wlllskl
311 .2 H 10 11
Ohio Oomlnlt•W'l
t II .000 I ~)

Pet.
.6:10
.fl U
.39 :1
.liM
,$4G
.fi:JII
.!l70
.0314

This week's games
This R'Pt•k'"'
Ohio Coiii'Jt' Baslu.&gt;tbWI I'ie hrduh•
Frldll,V , Fl'h. 17

No

!tiUlii'!O • · ht~lt&gt;d

:-iatunhy, F•·h.

•

•
•
•

College scores
Co llv ~t·

t'~~tiKutf' ~II. C11n~lu sM

Dela"'ar ~ Sl . 104, Mnr,ll'an Sl. 112. ( OT )
DuqtJPiillf 109. fi••orjl:e Ww.hlntton 110
Hurtfonl66. Nl.-ara. 6:!
,John ,f:\,l' Ill, l ' ork65
Ubanon \ rllltey 115, Gellyshul'l83
KOOC'rl Morrl.~ 95. \\'attnet Cn lt 1i
Sima 76. M al~ · .&amp;9
!M. Fran cls (
1 INi, Mo nmoutll M!l
Sl . Ro!oof' 7G, l)om lr.·""' &amp;.1
T.,mpk! MO, Hhodf' ls i1U1d &amp;.1
1\lhs 76, "' Wihln~ on &amp; Ll'e 71
"'on.• f'\'l&amp;t~ r l"ol.t 73, Mas.'l. ln stltule 71
South
Rapt~t K-4 , IJ av l~on 77
Co kt!r 63, CoW~Ia.l Carolina 61
Co ppin St. 79, Soulh ('arolillll St. 'l8
F..asl l ' urolh• 65, Cam ~~Jell tO
Fl a. So ulh ~r n r., Ro 111M 70
Gt'O~laSoucttern61, Hardln-Simmom

ra.

"

IJ hcrty i!2, 81UI' fieid 62

LouiMiruta Tet•h 116, Lamar 711
i.oi.IINvlllr 78. f1 orlda Sl . 'T7
,\tl!rt l'f' 110, llouljfun Bap&amp;I!JI 13

MI. St . MIIJ'y's 93. C . Co nn. Sl . 14
NE Loul.shma 94, MeNet'!!le St . IJj
No rth Carolina 9!, Mo'ake Fol'ftt '711
~orlhy,· ester n SI . 17. S.F . tiuslln St . ir
SOuth ,\h\h!Un ll 96, W. Kenlucky H

llhlo Hl~th St· hool 8 \iS itthllli
ThunidiQ' , Fch 16

Rci(UIItr S1&gt;1110on Hf'!!iulls
G11.t~ Mllh Ha "·ken K2, MoJadon• lt l
,\ J('f :oo\iiiP MI . Lrlp!dr 16
Bryan i3, Ot&amp;a"'a GIIUidorf &amp;7
TourNt.mf'nl R l!1i uk l'l

(01')

Tt'nn. ·Ch ttUJlii M!ti119, F\Jnnan fl2
T~a.'i..S IUl AntonioU, S.eti!Un Kit (!()'f)
VlrK:(nla &amp;2. Vlra:lnla MIIUr)' 7t
\\' ~ t \ 'lrcl nla XII. Mlllti• c ho!M!Iht 55

Dh·Wkl n I

('ol Und rn 7-' , Col Easlmoor il l
('ol8r ookhtt, Pn 57. Rry mldshu,_ 40
Galloway \\'t'!'i diUid 90. fol M ~~r· Fl' an k

.\ticfy,:ftt

,,

Baker 72, William ,Jrwrll 71
C'.t'diiJ"\'Uit: 77, MI. V er rJIJaNuar e~ 71
C'rel~theon!O~.S.tllinois

South.&amp;!'. T E'cum*'h .a6

Nc&gt;w PhiiMdelp~a Sf
Dtvl!;lon II

/\th e n!!~ . Nf'W Lt&gt;1t lnr;c on
f.Kr U.~ Iv 7M, WllnUn~on 6'l

Mi

Coii OOt•ton 61 , Drt.&gt;!od ~fl Tri-VIllley :n
Dll)' l'arrolll9. M~on ~•
Du..v Cb wnlnade 61!, I.A" ban On 38
lromon 6Z. Port!IRloudl Wl!!it U
Por111mouth ti9, Sou1h Pnint 67
~h erldt111 M, VInton C01n•y .&amp;!1
" ' il&lt;! hln.on CH 70. Wll\'erly 6-4
Di\'lil lonlll
Amanda :til. " 't&gt;rilfall"
lk"ld~t;"'lori 63. t'ronllrr iiO l \!ot.)
t' ort fo'r)'P 7-4, Blu-~\i!ldlM
lndl .n Valle)' 6!. llut'kf')'C Trail )ot
U ckl na: V.II..,. QC, lot!Miown H
DMsiOn n·
BaiM\'Ia II. Cl n l'hr :iO
Ubt!rt y Ce n ~e r 71, lh&gt;l ~ .at

DEUVERS
FREE.

OH.

limitiMI Deliwery

Wolf Main St.

Art a

992-2124

RECEIVE 2 FlEE
PEPSI'S
WITH A PAN PillA
ORDER

-

I I . .. 1 aM iR,.n.n,
11 Ml..l .. frl.s.t.

~·

.

8t

,Jamest(lwn 101, Moorhe ad St. Itt
l.o)'ola (Ill , l liS. 8uUer 34 '
Ml chlttim M. Purdur 70
Ml chi Kan Tel'l! 72, Sugln~~w Yalle,· IS

Mariners named
McNamara scout

1\'otre DameliO, L11. SaJ ie 111
Oakland U. R!, W~· ne St. 110
Sprlntt .\rhor 89, Co rw:onll a Mol
St Jo!tf'ph'li ( Ind . ) 9t, IRclarwpol&amp;i 93
St . Lou ill 76. Day lon 39
Vlncenra JQG, Danville 74
Southwest
,
ArkanMxSI. ~. PUI Am t'f'k!Ut iO
Sam Huu lllon Mi, NtJrth TPxa!S St. j)
Tllla fO, Wi c hita St. 5'7

DINNER FOR FOUR
~·

LAAQI 111• 5-ITIM PIZZA
Withhp.-onl, 1•-e• MulhrODmL \
Onto .. tnd OfMI'I Pep,...

PLUS 4 · ,6' oz Sofldrlnki

$9.99
. .....

"*II

flf
STOll OilY

I

I

2 MEDIUM PIZZAS

sa.aa

LUnch Only-11 AM -1_!~.1;'

SJOIE OIUY

IDIIIIo

: 1 &amp;Il-l -

I~aloua•IPWtJOUrtnrcw111 alblcome
ta 1eruad, AwLble wbel!!!!! Mil Block
Jllepw• yvar tu: 1ebaa or DOt.

ll&amp;·f1ltln.

DINNER FOI TWO

POMPOY

Use H&amp;R Bloc1r'a Rapid Re6mcl Propun

""'·:c:·•

IT'SFASTI

H:"!!'I~R~BLOC~~It

Pomeroy, 'Ohio

Open 9 AM-8 PM WHkd1y1, 9·6 Set. Phone 992·6174

RECOGNIZED FOR SERVICE - Six Meigs
County World War I veterans or their representatives were presented certiJicates of recognition
from the French Govermnent for service on
French soU In ceremonies Tuesday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The program of giving
certiJicates to American servicemen who served
In FraQce during WM originated with the French
Goverrunent and Is being handled by the Veterans
of Foreign Wars. Receiving the awards, were Leo
Story, Uncoln Russell and Tom Turner, WWI

TONIGHT

My Stepmother Is

An Alien

J!~~2s.~~:!J. Luv 4x4 ............... $149 5
1977 EICamino ......................... S1695
Auto., PS, PB.

1979 Pontiac Grand Prix ......... S109S

Auto., PS, PB

1980 Chevy Citation ................ S109S
2 door, Auto., PS, PB.
1985 Chevy Yan~.~~~ ................. S1195
1979 Chevy Chevette, 4 spd ..... S695

TILLIS USED CARS
SEE JOHN OR JEFF

RT. l

CHESTER
985-4100

Dear Ann Landers: 1 am
writing to you In the hope that you
can help resolve a problem I have
lived with for 12 years. I can best
: make my point by telling you a
· · story of two families .
,; In both fam!l!es one member
has lost the function of his
kidneys and must be on dialysis
to live. In Family A, upon
· learning that a sibling needed a
kidney transplant, all seven of
the brothers and sisters took the
tissue-type tests to see if they
could be donors. As 11 turned out,
four were good matches and as of
today, 12 years later, two have
donated kidneys to the sibling jn
need. (One kidney lasted 10
years. The second kidney has
been functioning for two years
and seems to be doing well.)
Family B presents a totally
'' different picture. In 12 years, not
one of the kidney patient' s
brothers or sisters has even
asked to take the test to see if he
or she might quality as a donor. I
am a member of the second
. family and the one who is In need
·- of a kidney.
·
· : · I would like to know how my
··. brothers and sisters can sit by for
12 years and watch me go
through dialysis and not offer

:

ITT Fin. Serv.-Com. Dlv . to
Billy Ray Hall, R. Sharon Hall,
parcels, Salem .
Gene Roy Lawren ce, by
P.O.A., Beverly I. Lawrence, by
P.O.A., to Wllllam Maynard, lo,ts
11 and 12, Racine Village.
Big Bend Properties to GTE
North Inc ., lot, Pomeroy VIllage.
Carol Marie Riggs, David
Riggs to Dana E. Hendrix,
Wendy S. Hendrix, parcels,
Scipio.
William L. Folmer to Charles
L . Armstrong, · parcels ,
Salisbury.
Edwin K. FLorence, Barbara
J. Florence toTer ry L. McGuire,
Sr. , Christina J . McGuire, parct&gt;ls, Salisbury.
Kaiser Aluminum and Chemlcal Corp. and Kaiser Aluminum
nnd Ch e mical Sales Inc .,

•

m erg~r.

TEXTAN
$ OO
SADDLE................... 50 OFF
10 GALLON

$795

AQUARIUMS
Reg. S1G.95

•
;
•
•

--·--,....t

.BIRD CAGES, DOG BEDS
DOG COATS
AND SWEATERS

~

~

'

" ·
•

~· - ,

k2~ ..

~
~t : ;i J

20°/o'OFF

:
•

'

•

MINNETONKA
.
MOCCASINS ................

20 0Yo OFF

OfFEI GOOD THIU SITUIDAY, FEIIUAIY 25, 1919

R &amp; G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.
399 W.llaln

992·2164

help . They say they Jove me, but
when I think abou t Famlly A, I
wonder.
My question to you Is this:
What does the first family ha-ve
that the second family does not
have• - DlsDiusloned In Ottawa
Dear Disillusioned: The question you have asked Is extremely
difficult to answer. No one can
say for certain why some children turn out to be loving and
generous while others turn out to
be selltsh and mean-spirited.
It cannot be laid to good or poor
parenting because It Is not
uncommon to find a whole range
or characteristics. good and bad,
among siblings who ha\•e the
same mother and father.
In Family A, where seven of

Ann
ANN LANDF..R.S•
"'1988, 1M A.npla

Time&lt;~ Syndiftlle and

C.-eatGI'II Syndlt:•e

the children were willing to be
kidney donors, ihere may have
been factors that outsiders could
not know about. Perhaps one or
two of the siblings came forward,
and by so doing motivated the
others, lest they appear to be less
loving.
The obvious conclusion (and It
may be quite accurate) Is that
Family A produced loving, generous chlldren and Family B
produced selfish brothers and
sisters. Why? As 'I said, nobody
knows :

Pomeroy, Ohio

The Store Whh "All IUndll of Stuff"
Fqr Peto. Stabl•. l.-r1111 • Smott Anlmolo, 1.-wno tk Gardens

,
.

Kn isllr Agricultural Chemicals
: Cos·p. and Kaiser Aluminum
· • Pt'Op!.'rtles, Inc .. amendment.
Kaiser Aluminum and Cheml• cal Corp. and Kaiser Aluminum
and Chemical Sales, Inc., owner• ship and merger.
• Kaiser Aluinlnum and Chern!• cal Corp. to Kaiser Aluminum
: Properties, Inc . , tracts ,
··Lebanon.
Cecil W. Rice, Jr., Sue Rice to
• Frank Nelson Reynolds, parcels,
Olive.
Eloise Pickett to Columbia Gas
Transmission Corp., right of way
and tank site agreement, Bed• rord. (2) .

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
American Legion Is having a
dance on Friday at 8 p.m. at the
annex. Live music by Sweet and
Sassy. Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport United Pentecostal Church
will . be serving chicken-noodle
dinners on Friday, from 11 a.m .
to 2 p.m. Eat-in, carry-out.
Free delivery.
SATURDAY
RACINE - Southern High
boys basketball teams are sponsoring a double-elimination Independent men's basketball tournament on Saturdays and
Sundays Feb. 18-19 and Feb.
2:&gt;--26, Entry tee, $90 with a
lo-man roster. For Information,
call 949-2025.
RUTLAND - Rutland Civic
Center Is having a volleyball
tournament on Saturday. Entry
lee, $20. Trophies will be
awarded . Call 742-2826,
742-2688 or 742-2279 for
Information.
RUTLAND - Square, round
and slow dancing will be featured
Saturday evening, 8 p.m. to 12
m!dnlgbt, at theEI!DenlsonPost
of the American Legion, Rutland. Everyone welcome.
RACINE -Therewlllberound
and square dancing on Saturday ,
tram 8 p.m. to 12 midnight, at the
Racine American Legion. Music
by tbe True Country Ramblers.
Children under 12 admitted free.
Everyone welcome.

grange hall.
TUPPERS PLAINS- A craft
show will be held March 18, from
9 a.m . to 3 p.m .. at the V.F.W.
Post In Tuppers Plains. Display
tables may be rented lor-$10. For
information, call Mary Bryant at
985-3376.
SUNDAY
RACINE
Carmel-Sutton
United Methodist Churches will
be holding revivals services
beginning Sunday, Feb. 19, at
7:30 p.m ., and continuing
through Friday , Feb. 24. Services will be held at the Su lion
Church, Raclne-Bashan Road. on
the first three nights, and at
Carmel Church the last three
nights.

Apr!l6 at the Kentucky Christian
College: Ruby Naggard will be
the speaker.
The Lord's Prayer In unison
opened the meeting with Mrs ,
Wilcox, Mrs . Roach and Mildred
Riley giving officers· reports. /(
reading, "In the Golden Clasp"
was given by Phillis Gilkey.
Named to the prayer list were
EIIa Mae Daugherty, Janis
Falkner, Bertha );;vans, Car l
Nelson, and Larry Nelson.
Members sang " Ha ppy Birth·
day" to Mrs. Riley .
A skit "Somebody 's Valentine" was given with various
members taking part. Donna
Hartson closed ·the meeting with
prayer after which Phyllis Gilkey and Bea Stewart served
refreshments carrying out the
valentine theme.
Officers will be hostesses at the
March meeting. Attending besides those named were Terri
Hockman, Kathy lhle, Pat Webrung, Grace Hawley, and Clarice
Erwin.

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

To •end a beaullfullv

,

des,,aed luneral

arranrement, )Uit call
or vlltt
•
~ rn

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
r Jf'a v A mc&gt;riM
to• ·.-..
SNtd~

Pll. •92·2tin or 992·5121

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1989
ASH &amp; CHIPS PLAnER ................................. S2.34

Two Portion• of Our telty Batter·Dipped Fish Served With Our Home-

made Tartar Sauce. Hot Golden French Friee and Your Choice of Homemade Col•law. Macaroni Salad. or Baked Beans.

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1989
HOMEIAKED POlK CHOP DINNER ................ S4.19

A Lorge Juicy Porte Chop, Prepared Frooh In Our Own Kitchen SO&lt;Ved
"!".' With M81hed Potetoee end Homemade Gravy, Homecooked Green
Beans with Mushrooml. Your Choice of 1 Hot Buttered Roll or Homemade Bilcutt and Coffee. Regular or Decaffinated. Botf) Freshlv Brewed
(A Smatt Soft Drink or Hot Too May Be Substituted.) ·

NEW HOURS: Mondoy thru Sunday 11 A.M . to 6 P.M .

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange and Star Junior Grange
will hOld their regular potluck
supper and fun night this Saturday, starting at 6: 30p.m., at the

Meigs County
&gt;land transfers

"Super Savings"
--~

veterans, sealed left to right. Others participating
In the ceremony and accepting awards lor eligible
·veterans unable to attend were, standing left to
right, Max Bumgardner, chief of start, 12th
district, VFW; Chester Buckley, representing his
father, Ben Buckley; Bob Wlllard .represenllng
Homer Willard; Charles Carr representing
Garner C. Gr!fl!n; Ed Bishop, District 12, VFW
Commander, and Kenneth Hager, Commander of
Post 9053, VFW, Tuppers Plains.

: Nobody knows why
some are selfish

' :!l" ! &lt;o ~lt tl-.... ~

ONIIVIHING SHOW AT 7:30P.M.
ADMISSION 11.00

following a potluck dinner at 6: 30
p.m .
'Mrs. Wilcox presided a:t the
meeting with a donation being
made to the America Lung
Association. II was noted that a
donation had.been received from
Rose Reynolds who Is spending
the winter In Florida.
A report was given on the
kitchen shower for the church
camp and It was reported that It
Is going well.
Ladles Day was announced for

Community calendar

COLONY THEATRE

For more details or to see if you quallfycall H&amp;:RBiock now.

618. East Main Street

New officers were elected at
the recent meeting of the Ph!lathea Women held at the Middleport Church of Christ.
Elected following a report
from the nominating committee
of Clyda Allensworth, Nora Rice
and Thelma Boyer were Maryln
Wilcox, president: Mildred Riley, vice president: Dorothy
Roach. secretary: Kathy !hie,
as.slstant secretary; and Farle
Cole, treasurer. They will be
Installed at the April meeting

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - National League Cy Young Award
winner Orel Her shiser became
baseball's highes t-paid player
Thursday , agreeing to a threeyear contract reportedly worth
$7.9 million.
The agreement came minutes
before Hershiser and the
Dodgers were to enter an arbitration hearing in a Los Angeles
Airport-area hotel.
Hershiser's contract bes ted
that of Boston Red Sox pitc her
Roger Clemens, who signed for
$7.5 mill ion over three years on
Wednesday .

_-w , !ll.• 'ot\I I'(I ... !Xi'!t,'(lll(

Friend s and Flowers and
Friendly Gardeners, Rutland.
ta ble decorations: Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts, name
tags: Star , registration: Ru Uand
Garden Club, iavors: a nd Bend
of the River and Winding Trail,
sales table workers.
Plans were also discussed for
the spring co unt y meet ing which
will be held on May 15 at the
Meigs County Extension Office.
Wildwood Club will have the
program , and Star Club will
serve refreshments.
Stella Atkins had devotions at
the meeting.
·
.

Philathea women's group has meeting
'

1983 Escort L.......................... ,$1495

I

WHY WAIT
FOR YOUR
TAXREFVND
WilEN YOU CAN
GETYOURMONEY FAST!

Mrs. Dean announced that
Plans fo r hosting the Region 11,
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs Mrs. Linda Blazier of Blazier's
spring meeting were made at Nursery will have the morning
Monday night's meeting of the , program, and a flower show will
Meigs County Garden Clubs be held In the afternoon.
Janet Bolin Is chairman of the
Assocatlon.
Pauline Atkins, county contact flower show and announced the
chairman, presided at the meet- theme of " All Things Bright and
Ing with Betty Dean, regional Beautiful" with the show to be
director, participating In plan dedicated to the memory of Susie
Pooler, a past state president . A
discussion. ·
schedule
of the show classes w111
A regional board meeting to
be
sent
to
each club along with a
further plans was announced for
program
for
the meeting.
Aprlll at Chester United MethoCommittees
were appointed
dist Church, noon, with a carry-in
dinner. The regloool meeting will and include Fernwood Winding
be beld on April 8 at the Quality Trail, Middleport, and Middleport Amateurs. coffee hour:
Inn, Nelsonvute.

HIGHEST-PAID PLAYER
_ The Los Angeles Dodgers
signed pitching ace Ore! Hersh!ser, the 1988 Na&amp;lonal
League Cy Young Award
winner, to a new three-year
contract Thursday fClr $7.9
million, making him baseball's highest-paid player.
(UPI file photo)

Auto., Air.

-

Friday, February 17, 1989

County clubs hold meeting

1_982 Chevv C-10 .....................
$2895
Ptckup. Auto. PS,JIB.
·

~c

The , Daily Sentinel
Page- 6

LA Oodgets sign
Orel Hershiser

Of the 12 teams in the NL, the
Braves were 11th in average
(.242) and ERA (4.09). Their .976
fielding percentage was 12t h.
"Statistics don't lie," Nixon
said. "We've got some promising
youngsters coming through our
system, but we have too far to
climb to expect to be contenders
. .
this season."
Mahler, who spent 10 seasons
with the Braves, blamed Atlanta's problems on the many player
changes when Eddie Haas s uc·
ceeded Joe Torre In 1985. During
Torre's three years, the Braves
finished fir st-seco nd -second in
the NL West .
·'They decided to bring kids up
to get their feet wet , knowing the
team was not going to be as
good," Mahler said. "They figured what they had wasn 't going
to win. I disagree. I went into '85
thinking we had the best team in
our division."
The Braves won 66 games In
'85. The following season they put
Cox in the front office and Tanner
in the dugout.
"Our strategy was to rebuild. "
Cox said. "We wanted to build up
the minor league system and , at
the same time, try to win. We
thought we were making progress in '86, but we just burned
out. "

(0T)

DOMINO'S
PIZZA

UI040T}

Dralt r 5!1, 1lllnolsSt. Ut
EvanK\Uit" HK, Xa\'ltr 82
lll l nol~ 75, Mi chJ~tan Sl . 5G
lnd-Pur-.Fort ft' ~~.Y..,IIS, S . lndiiVJ.JI
lnclana T c~; h lt7, Bethel ~

Z~tn~'Av Ui e 37,

ATLANTA (UP!) - Bruce Bobby Cox says other clubs want
Benedict tried to sound optimis- too much In return.
tic In a television Interview about
" You make a plan and you stay
the Atlanta Braves' prospects with it," Cox said. "Secondthis season. But you could tell the guessing is what makes the game
catcher didn' t have his heart In go, but you have to stick with
your plan."
it.
Who could blame him?
Atlanta' s pitching staff, worst
The Braves lost 106 games last in the National League last
sea,son, their most in 53 years, season, lost a mainstay when
and have done vlrtuafly nothing Rick Mahler, 9-16 last year,
since to better themselves.
signed with Cincinnati.
They did sign 41-year-old Dar"It would have been nice to
rell Evans as a free agent more have kept Rick for another year
than 12 years after trading him. or two," said Russ Nixon, who
And, just before last season succeeded Chuck Tanner as
ended. they traded a couple of manager last May. "I thought he
young pitchers to land .32-year- was a very valuable part of the
okl catcher Jody Davis, who lost staff." ·
his starting job with the Chicago
Tanner was ever the eternal
Cubs.
optimist. Nixon is more a realist,
"After losing 106 games, and so much so his goal is to win 20
that is a lot, it'sobvlouswe've got more games than 1988, still
our work cut Out for us." leaving the Braves seven victoBenedict said of !he Braves' ries short of .500.
goals when they open camp this
"We've got so much to do, It's
week In West Palm Beach, Fla. hard to decide where to start,"
"It would have been nice If we Nixon said.
had gotten more off-season help. Durham heads back
"But you never know .. We've
to Canis organization
got a lot of young players that
management Is high on. Maybe,
ST. LOUIS !UP!) - Firs t
by the end of camp. or early on In
baseman Leon Durham, who
the season. they 'll-come through
for us."
began his career with the Sl.
The Braves would like to make Louis Cardinals, has signed a
a few more moves before the minor league contract and Is
season. But General Manager \. scheduled to report to the team's
Class AAA farm team In Louis·
ville. Ky .
Team officials announced the
signing of Dijrham late Wednesday . Ted Simmons, a former
Cardinal
who Is the team's new
SEATTLE (UPll -The Seat director
of
player development.
tle Mariners announced Thurssaid
the
signing
of Durham was
day that John McNamara, who
''controversial."
managed. the Boston Red Sox to
the ~986 World Series, has been
hired as the club's advance
scout.
(All games)
"John is truly one or the TEAM
. W L P OP
first -class people in baseball."
Southern ........ ..... 15 8 1465 1364
Woody Woodward, the Mariners'
x-North Gall!a .... 12 7 1329 1195
vice pres!dentforbaseballopera- x-Eastern .. .... .. ... 11 9 1448 1478
tions, said tn a statement Issued
Oak Hill ...... ...... 11 10 1261 1283
from spring training camp in
x-Southwestern .. 9 12 1426 1518
Tempe, Ariz.
x-Hannan Trace. 9 12 1252 1260
McNamara, 56, has spent 15
x-Kyger Creek ... 5 16 1313 1476
seasons as a major league
Symmes Valley . 4 16 1134 1399
manager, compiling a 1048-1078
(x-completed season)
record and a 545-524 record in the
Friday'• title result•
American League.
At Chesapeake H.S.
He was named Red Sox man- Symmes Valley vs. Franklin
ager In October 1984 and led Furnace Green, 7: 30 p.m.; the
Boston to a 297-273 record in his winner will advance to the
three-plus years with the club. district tournament at Ohio UniHe was fired last July after versity's Convocation Center and
posting a mid-season 43-42 face the winner of the Lucasville
record.
Valley sectiOnal .
In 1986 he guided the Sox to the
At Rock HillH.S. -Oak Hill vs.
American L~ague championship Wheelersburg, 7:30 p.m.; the
with a 95-66 record, but lost the winner will claim the upperWorld Series to the Mets In seven bracket title and advance to the
games.
district tournament at Ohio UniMcNamara began his major versity's Convocation Center,
league career with the Oakland where they will play the PortsA's In 1969 and also managed"the mouth sectional lower-bracket
San Diego Padres from 1974 to winner. ·
19TI; the Cincinnati Reds from
Sa&amp;urday's title game
1979 to 1982; and the California
At Meigs H.S. - Trimble vs.
Angels from 1983 to 1984.
Racine Southern, 7 p.m.: the
"As an AL manager for the last winner will advance · to the
six seasons, John's insights w!ll district tournament at Ohio Unibe a tremendous advantage,"
versity's Convocation Center and
Mariners rookie manager Jim face the winner of the Un loto
Lefebvre said.
sectional.

By The Bend

the team MVP. making The
Sporting News AU-Star team,
and winning a Silver Slugger
award.
"I'm happy to say the situat ion
has been resolved," Davis sal d.
" Marge stepped In and did . an
outstanding deaL "
'
Schott said she was concerned
about the talks hurting Davis'
reputation.
"I know the . fans In Cincinnati." she said. "I didn't want the
fans to get the wrong
impression."
Schott said her lnvervention
would not undermine General
Manager Murray Cook, even
though Davis Indicated the talks
had become unproductive while
Cook was conducting them.
''There Is noway it undermines
the general manager," she said.
"It's always been my policy tha t
my door Is open. If you can't go to
the top, forget lt."

Braves' Benedict says, 'we've got
our work cut out for us this ·year'

SVAC standings

Ll-lethaH Rt'S -* s

Touma.menls
K.lnl:''" Collett i!
t'lht Round
Eu:ilern ('oil. K;l, Villley For~tl' 79
Hoh rrhi \\' t,.ylan 7.A, Mes slah f1
NY-*Ck 64, t::U~ Wrn N11.7.1lrenf.' 56
Kin R's ( '.oll. Ill , Phi Ia . Coli. of 81 hi e 76
EuM
faliiWf'll C'oli. I ll , Sh•vens T ech 3t

Prep scores

~prln.rleld

Ill

1~

OhloShth• a l Northwt&gt;!Oilt•rn
&amp;wllnl{ (in•.. n at "·~~· rn Mi t h
Tol1·do at Mill.ml
O•ntml Mh·h a t Ohio l ' nl\l'r.~ ll y
Eu!'&gt;ll'rn Mh ·h a t Kl'nt !"hll•~
l'lndnratl al \ ' l'll:lnlu T t•eh
Sorth t'rn l ow:~. a1 ( 'lrnhtn d Sial•·
Dayltln ut F.\·an .. \illof'
,.\ kron td Wrl~thl Slltl l'
Xa\'lt&gt;r at Sl . LoLlis ._
8N1u ld~·n at l ' nohl(lltown Slatt•
•\ ,.hhtnd ut Norlbrrn Kl."nlaJ•kJ
Ottrrlwln 111 Raldwln·Wldlllt'l'
1'-lnttnl Union al C'11.pltal
Ohio N11rthfor n IU ·Mark&gt;t:W
Mu Kklni(Um iU Ht"l*llwrtt
Thom a.. Mor.- ( Ky ) at \\' ltlll• nh o:-r ~
O twrlln Il l Ca~~l' ftt"'l'nr
Kt•nyonut Df'n!Non
\\oCIOilrr at Oh In Wl'!Oko,\ an
(',· dl\nilh• al Rio lirand r
Pol Ill P1ll'k ( P a ) al M :tlott~•
t lrhanM at Mt V••rmn N;v,
Tllfln at Ohio Oomlnkan
Wal:&lt;h aol Dc-fl.mn
Wllndn{l on al Rlulft on
Lit.IU' Erlr 111 l'rnlntl Stll.lf'
Fl ncU n.,\1 at 0-'·kt'
\\'&amp;1 t Put 1.11 Hirum
Sund~v. F't•h. I&amp;
Dykc• at ShU\1111i'l' State
Su m l\l' ' s Sport" TrMn!&lt;lllt'f lort~o
l"lll..tlu rJ;h Rrulltod ,toaltrndt•r
ftrltl' l' Kuc·lft&lt;' frmn Mu"kcll:on of tht'
lnlt•rnat k1 rt.1lllo ~ kt'y l.ot' MKUt"·

80 3' ~

Lodl C'lowrlt&gt;af

('lrar fo' ork 3'!. (:Oiont'l Crawford H
Ell!&gt;l ( 'a nton 65 , rolumhlaJill 3K
F••dt'f"al Hockin" 79, Trlmhlto 32
Gur~tlsvi\11' 16, Watt'rlon36
.Judl-'"on Millon 6j. WIWhlllll 10
Klnsm11.n B~tdarr 67. Grand \11\llry .. 9
l..ondn l 'tll h ~ . Lomin ti eanie"' :Ill
Louis viii" Aquinas 7.fl, Unkt•d Lot• U
NI'ISOD\illr Ill. Alhaa~· Al eu.ndu 3ti
Up pt•r Sanrht,;ky H, \\'y rlo rd 39
\' lt•n~at MtUht•w s39 . .Jelfcrs on :w '
\\ l' llln~ttlln .U. Ohf'l"lln 114
DhiNi u n IV
Ansonia n, l'rdar\tllc&gt; i'i7
~\('rUn Wo ~ ll&gt;rn He!&lt; 611, Mu ~dow H
E lyria Open Dour 61. Olyahu«a H1 1116
t' ll,''t' lll•\'lllt• 59, (1n ( 'ou~ry ~ 311
f'1or1•port l.akt&gt;land 119, \\'oodflflt&gt;ld ~0
MrDonaldti3, Mloer~t.l Rld~tr ~.lUI ddll't($ n ~'•• nwl ck 62, ( 'In Summit Z'l
.lol C'hao. Southcu.'ltNn 28, Tlpp flly
Rt•thr l 4tl
·
Stm,.hurg 5M, ·h·,nott.St:lo IK
ThumJlMln Lrdpmo~ 41. t'a lr porl :l':

:i II .!i!l 7 17 .'t9 ~
2 9 . l ~t ; n .:tilt
I 10 .091 . 3 ! I .12S

Dtonbion

1~.

Dhl~ion

~ ~

Ohio \\'1"!1 ""-'' " "
Krnron

EIIM -16

Parma 1'oiorma.ndy -Ui, Brunswic k 36
rnvlsl o n II
81•:~; ll~' ~7 . f ol Brig,;s 33
Bu1·k cyr \ ' Ill 71, Co l Bt&gt;f'r hc•roft -16
Ch ,unplun 2~. \' ovn~· Ch alk'Y .Jfl
Cln ,\lerry ~. Cln McAul ey~
fnl l)i&gt;i'l!t.l r-s TI. Whit ~· hall 39
ful Hartlto.l ' n, l.CJI(an Elm 4;6
llumllton Badin 69, Fon&gt;!ll Puk '5
Loulror.rllle 5C, Canton t't&gt;nl ( 'ilth .f I
~IInford 6~, ro~ll Grow 16
OlnHI III' d t' llll~ Iii , Falnhow :J.f
Parnw. Pafhw. 83, Oht'rlln Flrt!land.~ "'
struthcr!l 66. IMwno nd Southroao;t J !
1'1pp0ty~'l'. Day ('bwn,JuHt'n,.• .fl
Trt•nton EdaE"WUOO 33. }Sprlnl(horu -n
" 'hN'II'I"!ihU 'X -'6, llak Hill 39
" 'oustt•r Trlwa.Y i~. Akr Hoban, 6:t
\'oun(s !oiou lb 1'!. \' o un~ Ur11ullnr 10

C OAST ,\TifLF; Tit.'
( 'ONFERENCE

T I'IVll

Aitr

Ml dYh•10· 39

J 11dt\10n Gt L'nlontolll'n l a kt•

":m

II 1 .533 U lit .5113
· 5 Ill .:133 II 13 .UII
1 4 II . ~·67 12 n ,!',00
; ]) ~ . ~liD
li Ill .UU
2 13 .1!1:1 "20 .16i

~!lkt•~m

NOKTH

a

II 4 .7:13

Gr~ l on

Kent6:J. "''arrt•n Resc-rvt 31

OHIO t\THLETit' CONFERENC'E
C'onfenon~.~ All Gamt'!';
Team
W L P1.1 . · " LPd .
WHti'nhrr~t
U I .IS!t 2~ I .!WI
Capbt
I! 3 ,ll{lt 19 5 .79:1

Ollrrtw ln
He I df'l.hf'r It
Ru.l(t.M' aHal.'e

Ff'b. 16

He had been scheduled for an
arbitration hearing Thursday,
with the club offering $1.15
million and Davis seeking $1.6
million.
His trade request brought
concern from Schott, who joined
the talks Monday and wrapped
up the deal 12:30 a.m. EST
Thursday. At a news conference
12 hours later, Schott and Davis
hugged for the cameras and tried
to minimize any damage the
talks caused.
"Eric and I are here to say he
loves the Cincinnati Reds," she
said. "I b'elieve In this guy. He's·
an important part of our team. "
Despite a slow start, Davis hit
26 homers with 93 RBI last year.
He batted .273 and stole 35 bases.
Goldschmidt called the Gold .
Glove clause "about as sure a
bonus as you 're 'going to get."
Other bonuses come from makIng the All-Star team, becoming

commitment to providing
your family
with quality health care.

PRESENTATION -In appreciation lor the support of Veterans
Memorial Hospital In the staging of supervised teen activities,
several members of the Big Bend Parents Dance Committee
presented Scott Lucas, hospital adminlstra&amp;or,,.,lth a personalized
engraved plaque Thursday alter noon. Committee members, left to
right, making the presentation Included Tammy Searleil, Shirley
Yoder, Barbara Wilson. and Iva Sisson who heads lhe parents'
committee.

531 JACKSON PIKE
RlliJTE 35 WEST .

That's what Dr. Dan Trent is bringing to t~e people. of ~he Bend Area
with the establishment of his private me&lt;hcal practice m Ne~ Haven.
It's the same commitment he's made at Pleasant Valley Hosps~a.l, where
he's been an Emergency Care Center physsc1an for the
past four years and where _he will continue as an
active member of the Med•cal Staff.
A West Virginia ne:tive, Dr. Tre~t g_radu~ted from
Marshall University w1th a degree sn biolog.cal and
general science. He earned his medical d~gree from
the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine in
1983, and completed a rotating internship at Traverse
City Osteopathic Hospi~l in Mich!gan before _
re-locating with his fasruly, wife Lmda and children
Lisa and Dan, to Mason County.
Dr. Trent is looking forward to bring_ing a ..
continuity of care to his patients and thetr fam1he s,
and working with the community for. the good health
and welfare of all its residents. Appointments and walk-n.•s are welcome
from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday, TueSday, Thursday and Fnday, and 9 a.m.
to noon Wednesday.
.·
·

Daniel R. Trent, D.O.
Family Practice
138 Main St., New Haven, West Virginia + qo4) 882·3134
Formerly ~nd Area Medical Center

•
•

�••

•

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, February 17, .1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, February 17, 1989

The. Daily Sentinel-Page-?

EHS band
students
at conference
The Interested Jlru:inesses Listed On This Page.

and Church

~~!~! !~t

Mill Work·
Cabinet Making

·syracuse

Prescriptions

115 £. Mlmorlol Dr.

9t1· 29U

04

Brogan-Warner .

IIOWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFEn
992-7075

112 llerth SociOid Au.

tl •)
.I
~

nHlll Pomeroy .

(6141992-2039 or
(6141992-5721

luttarnut Au., Pomer•r· Oh

MEIGS TIRE
.:;. ) CENTER, INC.

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
10• w. Main

flOWEII rot EVElY OCCA!IIIN

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

Mi ........ Ohio

..

~

tI

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

John F. . FUIIl, Mgr .
Ph. 991· 2101
Pomeroy

l

·

·Burt.
I'I.JMEROY CIIURCII OF 111E NAZA·
RENE. Comer Unloo and Mulbeny, ReY.
'lbcrro Glal McClurw, pa.sta. Norman Pres-

mE GUIDANCE OF mE LORD

''~'· S. S !llll-, SUntlay Schod, 9::.l a.m.:" ~":::""....;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __,
rTO'Iing\WnliplO:~a.m.;

Le-.

a-

M!lrome.
RIJTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

·- Sliter Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
, Sch0019:.Xl a .m.; Morning Worship, 10: .a:;

1

a.m.

' • POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lystci1
' Halley, minister: Silturoay evening
~ evan1ellldc ttrvtces, open to public, 7 p.
, m.; SUnday Church School, 9:30 a.m.;
,• Mornl1111 Worship IU:30 a.m.
·
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po-

;: meroy Plke. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;

Jack Needs, Sunday Schod. Director. Sun.. day Sthool, 9::1) a.m.; MomiDg Worship,

#

10:15; evenln.l'":orsltlp, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.)

I 7.30 (E.S:f.), Wed:Dmday Prayer Ser-

Study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, first
Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.; Cholr Rehearsal,
Wednesday 6:30p.m. (ThatchES)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.:
Church School10 a.m.; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:00p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7:30
p.m.: UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Rehearsal, Children's at 6:30p.m. Adult fol·
lowing; Wednesday. (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church School, !Oa.m.
;:t-Worshlp, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m .: UMYF. Sunday, 6 p.m .
(Franklin) .
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;

Chureh School 10 A .M .: Chotr practice,
Thursday, 6::11 p.m.; UMWthird Monday .
(Thatcher)
HEATH iMiddleport)-ChurchSchool,

vice. 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.) &amp; 7:30P.M. (E.S.
T. ); Million Friends (ages 2·6), Royal
Ambuaadon (boyJ ages 6-18), and Girls
la Acttcm (qea 6-l8) on WedneRdays, 7 p.
m. (D.S.T.) &amp;7: 30p.m. (E.S.T. ); Tuesday
• VIJllatloa, 6:ll p.m.
: FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal·
ley Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pas-

9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Youth Group, 4 p.m .; Wednesday, Bible
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m.

10a.m.; SUndayeveningservlce, 7:30p.m.
; Bible teacblna, 7: :KI p.m. Thursday.

tin)
POMEROY - Chun:h School, 9:15a.m .•

tor. Haadley Dunn, supt. Sunday Scho.d ,

SYRACUSE MISSION, Cberry St., Sy·
racue. Mark Morrow, pastor. Servtces, 10
a.m. Sunday. Evening services Sunday
and Wedn•ay at 6100 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
l!rll elder; Wanda Mohler, Su nd"'Y School
&amp;.pt. Su ..... S c - 9: :ll a.m.; Morning
Wonblp 10:30 a.m.; Evening worship 7: :II
p.m.; Wedneldll)' prayer meetlng7::Klp.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine. Rev. James Satterfield, past«.
Freeman Williams, Supt. Sunday School
t:U a.m.; Suaday and Wednesday even, IDI eervlceo, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
COrner Sixth and Palmer. James Seddon,
Puter. Edna WUsm, s.s. Supt.; Cathy
Rf&amp;p, Aoot. Supt. Sunday School, 9:15 a.
m. ; Morntna Worlhlp, 10:15 a.m.: Sunday
Evtnlnl tervle'@, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting
and Bible Study WedneJday evening, 1 p.
m. ; CbUclren's choir pcactlce, Wednes·
day, 7 p.m.; Adult choir practice, Wed., 8
p.m.; .Radio program, WMPO, Sunday,
l:ll a.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
5th ud Main, AI Hartam. minister;
Richard DuBose, Aucrtate Put cr. Mike
Gerlach, Sunday Sch~ SUperlntendettl.
Bible School9: 30 a.m.; Mornfn8 Worsblp
10:30 a.m. Evtnlftll Worlltlp ?:00 p.m .
WedneJday, 7:00p.m. Prayer meetln1.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE, PASTOR Fred Penborwood.
Bill White, Sunday School Supt Sunday
SclloOI9:30 a.m.; Morning Woroblp 10:45
a.m.; Evan,ellsttc meettna 7:00 p.m.
WedneJdoy, :00 p.m. Pra)'l'r meeting.
UNri'IID PIIE8111'TEBIAN IIINIIITRY
OFIIEIG8 COUNl'l'
.
.... O'Qiobut ......
HARRISQNVILLE PREsBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday: Worship Servlc01
1: 00 a.m.; Cburch School10:15 a&lt;m•.
MIDPLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN !ltultlaY School, 9 a.m.; Cburch service.
11:15a.m.
SYRACUSE FIR.sT UNITED PRESBY·
TERIAN - SUnday School, Ill a.m.;
CltuK!b eervlce. 10: 15 a .m.
Rtm.AND CHURCH OF GOD, Puter,
Jollll E ...... SuJMiay School 10:00 a .m .;
Sundlly
WoJ;lhlp ll:OOo.m. Chll·
drea' 1 Cllurcb 11 a.m. Suaday Evening
Sorvlce7:GOp.m. Wee!., 6 p.m. You~t~La·
4es' Auxiliary. WedDOiday, 7 p.m. Fam·
UyWoi'IIIIP.
· HAZEL. COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rt. 1:11, 3 miles !rem Portlanc}Lon&amp; Bot·
tom. Edoel Hart, puler. Sunday Scbool,
1:30 a.m.; Sunday m01'111ng preachlnl
10:30a.m .j Sundayeveni~RrVtces, 7:ll

lla"""'

l~nlga)

·
MINERSVILLE -Church Scbool9:00

a.m.; Worship !Jervtce 10:00a.m.; UMW
third 'f'!ednesday,1 p.m. (Thatcher)
PEARL CHAPEL - Cburch School9: 00

a.m.; Worship Service 10:00 a.m. (Mar·

; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Choir rehmrsal
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.: UMW, seoond
Tuesday, 7::.Jp.m.; UMYFSunday,6p.m.

(Meadows)

.

ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9:15
a.m.; Worship IOa.m.; Bible Study, Wed·

nesday, 7::Kl p.m .; tJMYF (senton}, Sunday, 6 p.m.; (J uniors) every other Sun·
day, 6 p.m. (Frank11n) .
RUTLAND- Church School, 10 a.m. :,

Worship, ll a.m.; UMW First Monday,

7:30p.m. (Crabtree)
SALEM CENTER- Church School9: 15

a.m.;

Morning Worship

10:15 a.m.

(Steele)
SNOWVILLE - Morning Worship, 9:00
a.m. : Church SclloollO:OO a ..a !Martini
SOUTREBN CLUSTER
Rev. Delli Foller

HeY. • • • Grace

Rov.CoriRidll
APPLE GROVE - Church Scbool 9:110

a.m.; Mornlni Worship 10:00 a.m.; Bible
• Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Prayer meeting
7:110 p.m. Tburlllay. (Hicks)

BETHANY - Worlhlp 9 a .m.; Cburch
School10 a .m .; Bible Study Wednesday Ill
a.m.; Dorcu Women's Fellowship Wed·
nesday 11 a.m. (Foster).
CARMEL - Chun:h School 9: 30a.m.;

Worship. 10:4:5 a.m. Serond and Fourth

Sunday•; Fellowthlp dinner wtth Suttm
thlnl Tbuniday, 6:30p.m. (Foster) .
MORNING STAR- Cburch School9: 45

a.m.; Worablp 10:30 a.m.; Bible Stw:ly,

Thul'lday, 7: :ll p.m. (Fosler) .

SUTI'ON - Church School, 9::.1 a.m:

Mornlftll Worahlp10: 15a.m, flrotand third

SuDdaya; Fellawlhlp dinner With Carmel
thlnl Tbunidoy, 6: 30p. m. (Foster).
EASTLEI'ART- MornlngWorahlp9:110
am.; Otun:hSchooiiO:IIOa.m.; UMWilrat
Tuetda;y T:ll p.m. (Grace) .
LEI'ART FALLS - Worlh!p 9 a.m.;
Cbureh SchooiiO a.m. (Grace).
.
RACINE- Oturcb ScOOd, Ill a.m.; Wol'
olip U a .m .; UMW fowtb Mooday at 7: :Q p.
m.; Melt'a Pra;y..-lll'eakfaat. Wecmmday, B

a.m. (Grace).

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Rog..-

Sprlna, minister; StarllftiiMuaar aJ1C1 01·
lver S"watn, Sunday Scbool Supts. Preacblft119: 30 a.m. each Sunday; Sunday School

10:30 a.m.

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Tberm Durham,
puter. Sunday Jervlce, 9:30a.m.: ...,.

Ina

service 7:00 p.m. Prayer meet1n1,

WednMday, 7:00p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Joseph B. Rooldna, putor, Bible
Class, 9:30a.m.; MomlaaWorahlpl0:30a.

m.; Ji:ventng Worship, l:lqp.m. Tbunday

Bible Study, 6:30p.m.

•

)

"Serving families"

All through liistory the revered leaders of
our great land have demonstrated their
finest ability to lead when they became followers; that is; when they followed the
advice of the Lord. This meant mote than
simp]y going to cl;mrch with their families.
It also involved a lot of private praying at
any hour of any day in the week; particularly when a major decision had to be
made which would have a long-range effect
on the future of the nation. They carried
the awesome responsibility of preserving
ving our freedom, and when war
threatened this meant that the price of it
would be paid with the lives of our young
men. Although we are not burdened with
making decisions of that magnitude, we
would all do better to follow the example
of our noble leaders by relying on God's
guidance rather than our own judgment.
Our history has proved the value of this.

992·3785, Pomeroy

~0\ED

Rawlings-Coots-Blower
FUNERAL HOME

OUR GREATEST LEADERS SOUGHT

212 E. Main Street

ev!"'ingservice6 ..
p.m.; mlc}- IO!VIoe, W-'1!'. 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
GRACE EPISCOPAl. CIRJRCH, :II; E.
CHURCH , Corner Ash an.4 Plum. Noel
Main St., Pomeroy. Sulllay services: Holy
Hernna nn, pastor. Sunday SchoollO:OOa .
m11nna*tn on the ftrst Sumay cA. each month,
m: ; Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wed·
and comti.ned with morling prayer· on tlE
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
Ullnl !l!JIIay. Montr~g prayer and sermon on
7:30p.m.
Ill Olll!r &amp;llllays ollhe morth. Orun:h Schod
APPLE GROVE UNI'I'ED METHO·
llld NUroecy care proyt~ Collee hour In the
Pldiltllall mnedlmeiY lollu.\1nglhe""""". DIST CHURCH - Pastel', Rev. Ca rl
Hicks, 10 mlle~ above Racine on Rt. 388.
I'I.JMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
Sunday SChad. 9 a.m., worship service 10
MaiD St., Leo Lash, evanlJ!IIst. Bille Schod
a.m. Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m.;
!loll a.m.; Mordngworslip, JD:lla.m.; Youth
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thurs·
"""'.~6:00p.m.; Evening -ship. 7:00 p.
day, 6:30p.m.
m. W...alay nlahl prayerm«tlngandBIUe
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST stillY. 7:00p.m.
'l1IE SALVATION ARMY, US ButterM OU 124, behind Wilkesville. Charles Jones.
pastor. Sunday School, 9: 30a.m .; morning
Aw., - -· Mrs. Dora Wining ln charge.
worship, 10: 30; Sunday and Thursday
!lllllay ho"""" meeting; lD am.; &amp;llllay
evening services, 7: 00p.m.
9cl1od. Ill: :Q a.m. Sulllay Sci&gt;Jd. YPSM
MEI08
Eldlo Ad...,, leader. 7: :Q p.m. Salvalion
COOPI!RATIVE PARISH
·meellfl&amp; Y8J'iow. Sfeaktn and music sp!dals.
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
11ai1WCIIIY, U:ll a.m. U&gt; 2 p.m. Ladks Home
NORTIIEIIIIT CLUSl'I!R
mombers In cbafxe, aU wanen
Re\'. Do a Archer
lmo1led; 6:15 p.m. Thumay, ecr111 Cadt1
Rev. Fruk Croto•
!Yourw P!ople-BI~el. 7::11 p.m. Bible
Re\'. Seldon Jolmsm
StillY and Prayer ~ opm to the pOO!Ic
ALFRED - Churoh SchOol 9:30a.m.;
POMEROY WESTSiljE CIRJRCH OF
CIIR5T, 331'.1HltU-.'sHome !Wad (O&gt;urty Worshlp,lla.m.; UMYF6:30p.m.; UMW
Third Tuesday, 7: 30 ·p .m. Communion,
bd ?4i). 9'1J.6Zii. Vocal music. SUlllay Wor·
IHpJOo.m.; BlleSIIIIy na.m.: Worshl~ 6p. first Sunday. (Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m .; Church
m. W-110'· RUe StillY, 1 p.m.
OLD DEX1ER BIBLE CIIRIS11AN SchooiiOa.m.; Bible Study, Thuniday, 7p.
CHURCH, Alvin Cwtls. past&lt;r. Unda Swan, m.; UMW. first Thursday, 1 p.m.; Com·
munlon, first Sunday (Archer) .
lllll- &amp;IJI!ay School9:30 a.m.; preachlngser·
JOPPA...:.. Worship 9:ll a .m .: Church
vtca, lint and tltr1!9JIIIIIO' lolll&gt;wlngSUIIIay
School10:30 a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
!k.itod. Youlh meeting; 7::.l p.m. """'}' Sun7::Q p.m. (Johns&lt;ll).
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9: :Q
HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
-Pomeroy. Msgr. Michael Hellmer, Ph.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; UMYF Wednes992-!1!1198. Saturday evening Mass, 5: ~p.m .
day, 6:00p.m.; Communion First Sunday
; Sunday Masa, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. CCD
at Month (Crofoot).
clauea. 9 a.m. Sunday. COnfessions: OneREEDSVILLE - Chun:h School9: 30 a.
hllf hour before each Mass.
m.; Worship Service 11:00a.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL TOLJC FAITH- New Lima Road, next to
Church School 9 a.m.;- Worship 10 a .m. ;
Fort Melp Park. Robert W. Richards,
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.: Commu·
pastor. Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7 p.
nlon First Sunday (Archer).
m.; Wednelday worship, 7 p.m .
CENTRAL CLUSTER
GRAliAlll
UNITED METHODIST,
Rev. llelvla Fraatua
Preacblnr 9:30a.m. first and second Sun•
Re\'. Clem•Ce S. Zulllp, Jr.
days o1 each month; third and fourth SunBe¥ . DoD Meadows
day each moath wonh.tp services at 7: 30p.
Rew. WMIII!J Th.Uber
' fn.; Wedat!lday evenlnes at 7:30 p.m.
Rov. r ...1Marlin
: Prayer ud Bible Study.
Rev. Artllur Crabtree
,•. SEVENTII·DAY ADVENTIST, Mul·
llev. Robert Sleele
ba'ry HellhlaRoad, Pomeroy. Pastor Bob
ASBURY (Syracu!IE!) -Worship 11 a.m .
, !lllyder; S.bbath School Superintendent,
; Church School9:45 a.m.; Charge Bible
.. Ol.rUne Stewart. Sabbath School begins at

.

Pomeroy

992·3325

REALTOR

·'®\

~

-

:~~u

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

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
'ill

Q~i&lt;ktl

(row's Fomilr.· Restall'anl
"Fut.tl•ll&lt;"'" !I Ftlti Cltl1A11"
228 W. Main St.. Pomeroy

992-5432

Wednesday 7:00p.m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Vornon

Eldrklge, pastcr: Wallace Damewood, S.

S. Supt. Sunday School9: 30a.m.; Worship
Service. l0: 30 a.m.

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
0. H. Cart, past (I'. SundaySchoolat9: JOa .

RENE, Rev. John Vance, pastor; Sandy

Justice, Chairman of the Board of Christian Ufe. Sunday School9:30 a.m. ; MornIna worahlp 10:30 a.m.; evangel.lsdc ser·
vice 7:00p.m. Wednesday service. 7 p.m.

m.; Morning worship at 10:30 a.m.; Sun·
day evening service at 7:30p.m. Thursday
services at 7:30p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on C()unty Road 31. Rt'V.

LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. DeX·
ler. Woody Call, pastor. Services Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m .
DYESVIJ.LE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.

Roaer Willford, pastcr. Sunday School
'9;30 a .m.; Morning Worsh1 10:45 a.m. :
Sunday evening worship 7: 00p.m.; Wed·
nesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.

m.: morning worstllp 10: 30 a.m. Sunday

WHITE 'S

· evening service 7 p.m .

BAPTIST,

Deaver, Pastoc. Mike

Swtg~.

Sunday

Scbool Su... ; Sunday School 9:30a.m.;

Morning worship 10: 40 a.m.; Sunday
evening worship 7: 30 p.m.; Wednesday
evening Bible study 7;:1&gt; p.m.
BURLINGHAlll COMMUNn'Y CIRJRCII,
BurUngham. Ray LaudermUt, past&lt;r. Jlo.
bert Cozart, assiStant ~sta. Su~ Schod
10 a.m.; wcrshl.p 7 p.m.; Wemesd~. 6 p.m.

RUTLAND CHURCH

'[lilts, pastor. Sonny Hudscrt, supt. Sunday
School 9:30a.m.; Morning worship, 10: 30
a.m .; Sunday evening service 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO program 9 a.m. each Sunday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

RENE. Samuel Basye, past(l". Sunday
School9:30 a.m.; Worship service 10:30a .
m.; Young people's service 6 p.m.
Evangelistic service&amp;: 30p.rn. Wednesday
service 7 p.m.

SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Little,

pastor. Steve Little, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SchoollO a.m. ; Morning worslp, 11 a .m.;
Sunday evening worship 7:30p.m. Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
p.m .; Youth meeting Wednesday at 7p.m ..

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller

St., Masoo, W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
a.m.; Worship 1l a.m. and7 p.m. Wednesday Bible Study, vocal muslc,7p.m.

REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHUHCH
383 N. 2nd A~ ..• MlddlE!port. Sunday

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·

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

SChool10 a.m. Sunday eveolng 7:00p.m.;

Mld·week Jervloe. Wed., 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Sunday School 9:30a.m.; Dallas Janey,

p.m .
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. llart!onl, W. Va.

supt.; Morning worship 10:30 a.m.; Sunday evenlnr service. 7:30p.m. ; Wednesday evening service, 7:30p.m.

Rev. David McManis, pastor. Chun::h
Schooi 9:30 a.m.; Sunday morning ser·
vtce, 11 a.m.; Sunday evening service,
7:30p.m. Wednesday 9rayer meet:lng, 7: 30
p.m.

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·

ZARENE . Rev. Glenn McMillan, past«.
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday Schod 9:30a.m.; Morning
worship 10:30 a.m.; Evangelistic service,
6p.m.; Prayer and Praise Wednesday, 7p.
m.; Youth meeting, 7 p.m.
IN

7:)) p.m.
'
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W. ·
Va. The Rev. George C. Wetrlck, pastm".
Sunday SChool9:30 a.m.; Sunday worship

p.m.

lla.m.

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Otar·
I'" Domilan. palter. Mtl&lt;r"ed Zl&lt;l!l..-. Sunda.Y Schoolllt ... Morning Worshlp 9:30 a.
m.; Su1M11,Y School10:30a.m.; Eveuingaervtce, 7:30p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Paster: Joe N.

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on

Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near FlatwoodJ. Rev. Blackwood, past&lt;r. Services
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 7:30p.m. with
Sunday School9: 30a.m. Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 7:30p.m.

Sayre, ~unday 8choo19: 4:5a.m.; Evening
wcnblp 8:30p.m. ; Prayer Meeting, 6::.1

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, St. Rt . 338, Ant iquity. Rev.

p.m.Wedllelcloy.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Dave Pn!ntlce, minister. Deryl

Franklin Dickens, pastor. Sunday mornIng 10 a.m.; Sunday evening 7:30p.m.
Thursday evening 7:30p.m.

Wfll•, Supt. Chu.reh School 9 a.m.; Wor·

MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHU RCH, Inc., 75 Pearl St. Rev.
Ivan Myers, acting pastcr; Roger Manley,
Sr., Sunday School Superl.ntendent. Sun-

sblp Service, 9:15p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate, pastcr.
Frank Rl!lle. aupt. Sunday School 9: :Q a.

day School 9: ao a.m.; Morning W«Ship
10:30 a.m.; evening worship 7:30p.m.;
Wednelday evenlng Bible study, prayer
and pratse service, 7:30p.m.

Ervlce, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.

9JDday. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Prayer meel·

CLI~

"'f:AUREL
FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. William Williams, poster; Robert E . Bartm, Direct..- of Christian Edu·
calion: Stevo Eblin, aaslalant. Sunday
School 9::1l a.m.; Morning worlhlp 10: :ll
a .m.; Teent ill Actk)n. 6 p.m .; Evening

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS.

TOLIC - Van?.andt and Ward Rd . Elder
James Mtuer, putor. Sunday Schod.,
!0:30a. m.; Worship Service, Sunday, 7: ~.
p.m .; Bible Study, Wedne!iday, 7:30p.m.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL. Harrl·

Wonhlp, 7:00p.m. Choir practice 8 p.m.
~nday. Wednmday evening prayer and
CHURCH

OF

Ul\st

Q\\;f( $rrc&lt;l a3oo~s

93 Mill Street
Middleport, Ohio 46760
16141992·6667 - 1998-00KSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp; BIBLES

Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. Su nd ay
School 9:30 a.m.; morning worship and
children's chu rch 10:30 a.m.: evening
preaching servlct&gt; first thrE'e Sundays,
7: 30p.m.: Special service fourth Sunday
evening. 7:30 p.m.; Wedn'esday Praye:r
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
ship, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY .
Located on 0 . J. White Road of Highway
]61). Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday School lO
a.m. Clas ses for all ages. Junior Church 11
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
Choir practlc;e 6 p.m. Sunday. Young People's, Children's Church and Ad ult Bible
Study, Wedne5day at 7:30 p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
St. , Middleport. Affiliated w!th Southern
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Mi·
nlster . Sunday SchoollO a.m.; Morning
worship 11a. m .; Evening worship i p.m. :
Wednesday evening Bible st udy and
prayer meeting 7 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Scott Stewart, pastor. William Amberger. S. S. Supr. ; Sunday School 9: 30 a.m.; Morning Worship
10:30 a. m.; Evening worshlp 7: 30p.m.
Wednesday worship 7:30 p.m.
ST. PAUL LUntERAN CHURCH,
Co~ner Sycamore and Second Sts .. Pomeroy. The Rev . WUJ\am MMdleswart,
pastor. Sunday Schori 9:45a. m. Church
service 11 a.m.
SACRED
HEART CHURCH, Msgr.
Anthony Ciannamore. Ph. 992·5898. Satur·
day Evening Mass 7:30 p.m.; Sunday
Mass. 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. C()nfesstons one
halt hour before each Mass. CCD classes,
11 a.m. Sunday.
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St.,
Middleport. J ames E . Keesee, past cr.
Sunday morning worstnp 10 a.m .: EvenIng service 7 p.m.; Wednesday evening
worship 7 p.m .. VIsitation Thursday 6:30 p.
m.

· MORSE CHAPEL CHU RCH:

David

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

· BIBLE

HOLir&lt;ESS

CHURCH of Middlepon, Jne., 75 Pearl St.,
Rev. lvan Myers. past()[; Roger Manley,
Sr., Sunday School Supl, Sunday School

9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30 a .m.;
Evening Worship 7:30 p. m . Wednesday
evening Bible study, prayer and praise
service, 7:30p. m .
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD -Gilbert Spencer, past cr. Sun·
day School 9:30 a .m.; Morning service

!O:OOa.m.; Sunday evening service ? :OO p.
m.; Mtd-week prayer service Wednesday
7 p.m.

MT ..OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN·
tTY CHURCH. Lawrence Bush, pastcr.
Max Folmtr, Sr., S. S. Supt. Sunday School

9:30 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7: 30 .
m. ; Wednesday evening Bible study and
praise service, 7:30p.m.

UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By·PaJ s. Rev. Robert E. Smith. Sr,

pastor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SChOol9:ll a.m.; Morning Worsbtp 10: 30;
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.; Wednesday
Prayer Service, 7:00p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH , Rallrord
St.. Mason. Sunday Schod 10 a.m.; Morn·

lnR" Wot!!;tlln 11 a. m.: Evenine service 6 p .

sonvWeRoad. Rev. VlctorRou!ll, pastor;
CUniCII Faulk, Sunday School Supt.; Sundoy School9: 30a.m.; momln1worlltlp, 11
a.m.; Sunday ev~nlng Jei'Vke 7:30p.m.
Prayer Meetlftll. Wedneoday, 7:30p.m .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.

CHRIST,

Charla Ruuell Sr., mtnlster; Nonnan
WilL aupt. Su......, Scbool9:30a.m.; Wor·

. sblp aervtce 10:.90 a.m. Bible study, Wed·

noa-PentemJW. Worship service Sunday

n-y. 6:00p.m.
REORGANIZEP CHURCH OF JESUS
CIIRISTOFLA'l'TERDAY SAINTS. Pori·
land-Racine Road. Mike Duhl, putcr;

10 a.m.; Sunday Scboolll a .m. EW!Riftll

wonhlp service 7:00 p.m. Wednesday
prayer meellng 7:00p.m.

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
. IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texaa
CommunitY oil Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
!landers, poster. Jell HOller, lay II!Oaer;

Janice Dannl!l', Ch\li'Ch aehool director.
Church achocl9: 30 a.m.; Morning worship
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening ·prayer
aervtces. 7; 30 p.m.

•I

Three Eastern High School
band members recently parlicipated in the Ohio Band Directors'
Conference All-State Symphonic
Band in Akron. The participating
students were Jenny Cowdery,
daughter of James and Sandy
Cowdery, of Reedsville; Robin
White, son of Robert and Dove
White, of Coolville; and Aaron
Wilson, son of Beryl and Linda
Wilson, of Tuppers Plains.
The 87-member All-Slate Band
was selected from a field of
nearly 200 tape recorded a udi·
lions in which s tudents played
~ca les and a selected solo or
exercise. The Eastern students
were the only members of the
pand from Southeastern Ohio.
• During the two-day event the
students were Involved In seat lng
~uditions and approximately ten
pours of rehearsals. There were
also treated to a concert by the
Pniverslty of Akron Symphonic
·Band. At the conclusion of the
$econd day, the band gave a
-concert for parents and band
directors from throughoul Ohio.
, Cowdery, a senior bass clarine'list, has been in marching and

Carmel-Sutton United Me tho·
dis 1 Churches will be In revival
services beginning Sunday and
continuing through Feb. 24.
The first three services wlll be
held at the Sutton Church located
on the Racine-Bashan Road wilh
. the last three night at the Carmel
Church. A different minister wlll
speak each evening.
The Faith Trio will be appear·
ing on the opening night. Also
singing during the week will be
the Harvest Trio and other
special groups are to be featured.
The public is Invited to attend.

FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a. m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2· 30 p.

.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main St., Middleport. Re\'. Gilbert Craig,
Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School 9: 30a.
m. ; Worship Service. 10:45 a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B. Hoskins. evangelist. Sunday
Bible Study 9 a.m.; Worshlp,lOa.m.; Sun·
day evening serv ice 6 p.m.; Wednesday
evening service, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
Rt. 12t. William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
School 10 a.m.; Sunday evening service 7
p.m. Wednesday evening ser\•lce 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday School 9: 30a.m. Morning
Worship 10: 30 a.m. Prayer servke. altern·
ale Sunday s.
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHI:UST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,
next to Fort Meigs Park.. Rutland. Robert
Richards, pastor. Se-rvices at 7 p.m. on
Wf'dnesdays and Sundays. ·
HARRISONVILLE HOUNESS CHAP·
TER of· lhe Wesleyan Holiness Church.
Rev. David Ferrell, pastor. Henry Eblin,
Sunday School Supt.; Sunday School10 a.
m.; Morning Worship 11 a.m.; Evening
service 7: 30p.m. Wednesday evening service 7:30 p.m.
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,
Gary Ho lter , pastor. Sunday serviceS 9; 30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Midweek service, 7:3(1
m. Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave. Rev . Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Nottingham, Sunda}' ScbooJ Supt. Sunday
School tO a .m . with classes for all ages .
Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bi·
ble st ud y at 7:30p.m. Youth servic~ Frl·
day at 7:30 p.m.
ECCLES lA FELLOWSHIP, 128MIIISt.,
Middlt1)0rt. Brother Chuck McPhersoo,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday
evening servicl'S at i p.m. and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,
pastor. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; chun:h
Sl!rvlce 7: 30p.m.; youth fellowship 6:30 p.
m.: Bible study, Thursday, 7:-30p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE , 33015
Hiland Road, Pomer oy. Tom Kelly, pastor. Danny Lambert, S. s. Supt. Sunday
morning ser vice at 10 a.m.; Sunday even·
ing service 7:30p.m. Tuesday and Thurs..
day Services at 7:30p.m.
NEW HAVEN CHU RCH OF TilE NA·
ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stl'ood, pastor.
Sunday School 9:30a.m .; Worshlpservtce,
10:30 a.m.; Youth service Sunday 6: 15 p.
m. Sunday evenlngservtce7:00 p.m. Wed·
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bibl e Study
7: 00p.m.
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun·
day afternoon services at 2:30. Thursday
evenln&amp; services at 7: 30.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Masm, W.
Va. Pastor, BlllMurphy.SundaySchod10
a.m.; Sunday evening 7:30p.m. Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30
p.m. Everyooe welcome.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
SchoollO a.m.; SundayeVenlng7~00p.m.;
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00
p.m.
SOUTii BETHEL NEW TESTAMEN1:
CHURCH. Silver Ridge. DuS.ne Syden·
strlcker, pastel". Sunday School 9 a .m.;
Worship Service, 10a.m.; Sunday evening
service, 7:00p.m. Wednesday night Bible
study 7:00p.m.

Sertnonette
IS LIFE A FOG?
Life Is like a morning fog that Is thick and will last only so long.
The Sun comes out with the dawn and quickly melts the fog
away Into nothingness. We have seen this happen many limes
along the river. The life of man Is like the fog. It is strong and
thick and slowly fades away.
As a child we think eternity Is a long way ott. We lhlnkllfewlll
go on forever. As we grow older we see how last time seems to
fly. The life of each of us is like the fog, quickly melting away
before the sunshine of time. The fog leaves a beneficial wetness
on everything as It goes away. It Is the next best thing to a gentle
rain. Our lives should do the same. As our life lades a way, what
are we leaving behln~:? Is it a life of faith and deeds or mearly a
life of taking and using?
,
God wants us to be of some use In this world we are born into
and live. God has given us talents and stre]!glh to serve Him and
our fellow man. How are we doing? Take a look at your life and
what do you see. Age has little to do with it. You may not be as
strong physically today but your mind Is just as good. took
around you and see what you can do lo make life rosier and
better for others. Don't consider yourself, just say, what good
can I do today. What good can I do lor others, even strangers.
Will God be pleased and Is this why He put me here on earth?
My life Is not so long compared to eternity. My life Is like the
fog slowly melting away. What am I leaving behind? T)le fog
leaves life giving moisture. Will I leave behind something worth
while for God and man when Ehave melted away into eternity?
~ Pastor William Mlddlet1warth, Lutherans of Meigs Oount)&lt;.

.,. ,

The charter was draped In
memory of Edison Hobstetter, a
gold sheaf (50 year) member at
the ' Thursday night meeting of
the Rock Springs Grange.
Barbara Fry reported tha t the
embroidery contests have been
changed. She also asked
members to continue saving eye
glasses and gave a reading
entitled "Play It Safe."

•
ROBIN WHITE, AARON WJL'!ON, JENNY COWDERY
pep and jazz bands and the
concert bands, the Ali-County
All-County Band. He was also the
Band, the District XVII Honors
Band, the All-Ohio State Band, · c hoir percussionist and has com·
peted in solo and ense(llbie
the National Honors Band a nd
compet itions.
has also participated in solo and
All three stude n ts are
ensemble competitions .
members
oft he Eastern Chapter
White, a junior baritone
of
Modern
Music Masters (Tri·
player, has been in the marching,
M).
concert and pep bands at East·
On Feb. 24-25, Cowdery.
ern. He has also been a member
White and Wilson, along with
o! the All-County Band, District
David Rice, a senior trombonist ,
VXII Honors Band and partici·
will be traveilng to West Virginia
pated in solo and ensemble
Technical College at Morgan·
competitions.
town where they will participate
Wilson is a sophomore percus·
in a nother honors band.
slonist and has been a member of
the school's marching. concert,

the Rock Springs Grange.
For the program by Pat Holter.
Charles Kuhl gave 'a talk on
making guns a nd displayed sev·
era l he had made.
Refreshments were served by
Charles and Bunny Kuhl with ice
cream and birthday cak&lt;&gt; being
served in observance of the
birthday of Kathryn Miller.

Bunny Kuhl reported that s he
had presented the book. ''Com·
prehensive Sign Language Die·
tionary" to the Meigs Library on
behalf of the Rock Springs
Grange.
Visitation to the Hemlock
Grove Grange was announced
for April 16. An aucllon was
planned for the March meeting of
I

::fo.., 1~..
•

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Mildred Phillips of 36943 State
Route 143, Pomeroy, has re·
celved a certificate of completion
lor "Studies In the Bible", a
program offered through the
Pomeroy Church of Christ. The
program Is offered free to anyone
in Meigs County and the lessons
may be obtained by contact Leo
Lash, pastor of the Middleport
Chu rc h of Christ, 212 West Main
St., Pomeroy, or . calling
992-2926.

Genealogical
Society meets
The Meigs County Genealogy
Sociely will meet Sunday. 2 p.m.,
a t the mu seum on Butternul
Ave., Pomeroy. Rev. Roger
Grace, of the Racine United
Methodist Church . . will present
var iou s records · of area
churches. Everyo~e welcome.

.

·yaps meets

ACS CERTIFICICATES PRESENTED - AI·
. ternoon kindergarten students In Southern Local
School District were pleased Thursday afternoon
to recel.ve a certificate of appreciation from the
Meigs County Branch of the American Cancer
Society lor their participation In th.e recent Send A
Mouse To College fundralsing campaign. John
Hunnell, public lnfonnatlon chalnnan for the
county chapter, reports that Southern Kinder-

garten was selected at random from about 30
participating schools to receive the certUicate.
With the students are teacher, Suzanne WoUe, at
leH, and LI!Han Moore, executive director of the
Meigs County Chapter of the Cancer Society, and
teacher, Jean Alkire, both at right. CaiUgraphy on
the certlllcaie was done by David Goodwin, of
Pomeroy.

Quirks in the news)-_ _ _ __
case~

" There isn't any official
police investigation because
there Isn't a criminal activity,"
Sgt. Kenneth Caselonls of the
Euclid Police Departmen I sal d.
"It appears to be a ral her poor
way to keep money lying

around."
Caselonls said he was not sure
if the person l]oldlng the money
would beprosecut.ediflound. The
city· prosecutor could not be
reached for comment.
Late Valentine's gilt a real
winner
SALEM, Ore. (UPI) - A
Rainier tire store .e mployee
almost blew it with his wife on
Valentine's Day, but now both of
them are sitting very pretty

$1,573,980.
.
The ticke t had all six winning
numbers drawn Wednesday
night: 11-13·23·30·33-35. The COU·
ple left with the first of 20 annual
installments of $62,959.20, after
federal withholding taxes, lot·
tery spokeswoman Holly Blan·
chard said.
Whe n Karkleroad, an assistant
manager with Ra in ier Tire,
came home from work Tuesday
evening, h is wife asked him
where her Valentine's Day gift
was. He told her It was out In the
truck
.
' then took off for Rainier's
Quick Shop Mlnll Mart, one of the
lottery's top-selling retallers,
Blanchard said.

Indeed.

J au nita Humphreys wa s
crowned valentine sweethearl at
the Tuesday night meeting of
TOPS Club 570 held al Coonhun·
ters Building on the
Rock
Springs fairgrounds .
Lennie Belle Aleshire crowned
Mrs. Humphreys with a tiara and
sl&gt;e was prese11ted with gifts,
along with a large valenline
covered with smaller valentines
, from .each of the members.
It was reported that Teresa
Wood , weight recorder, is a
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center.
Maida Long reached her go!ll
weight and joined the ranks of
KOPS. Runners-up in weight loss
for the meeting was Bonnie
Johnston and Mary Marlin. Syl·
via Neece won the fruit basket,
and Vlrlgnia Dean, the prize for
the guessing game.
TOPS pals exchanged glfls and
valentines. There was group
singing and several of the
members gave readings on val·
entlnes and love, along with
healthful hints. Mrs . Long gave
20 points on dieting and pres·
ented refrigerator magnets lor
weight goal challenge sheets.
New officers will be elected at the
March meeting.

Tax office open
The Middleport Tax Office will
be open this Saturday, Feb. 18,
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

Nell Harkleroad, 29, and wife
Krist!, 28, showed up at Oregon
Lottery helldquarters in Salem
late Thursday with a winning
Megabucks ticke t worth

992·U69
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO

THRU TUESDAY, FEB. 21 ST

FREE DELIVERY IN THE
FOLLOWING AREAS:

All Winter Merchandise

MIDDLEPORt, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINERSVILLE,
Run.AND SYRACUSL MASON, W. VA.

1/2 PRICE

FREE DEUVEIY ON ALL PRESCRIPnONS

hmfa!t hOU$~·
Ole

SHOE
PLACE
'

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'l

MJSsiONARIES TO SPEAK- Rev. and Mrs. Peter Burkhart ,
missionaries to the Phllllplnes, will be speaking on Monday, at 7 ,
p.m .. al the Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene. The Burkharls arc ~
graduates of Northwest Nazarene College, Nampa, lduho, and , i
have served 10 years In Guyana.

The. Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club Is sponsoring
an open dance on Saturday, from
8 to 11 p.m., at the Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy. Caller will be
Billy Gene Evans. All western
square dancers are Invited.

There will be a pro-life meeting
Saturday, Feb. 18, 7 p.m. , at the
Ohio Valley Christian School,
Third and Locust Streets, Galli·
polls. Special speaker will be
Lorena Glick from Massillon. A
film will be shown and those
, attending are warned that the
film is not suggested for viewing
by small children. The public is
invited to attend.

Having It your way
EUCLID, Ohio IUPI) .,... A
McDonald's restaurant custo·
mer ordered two hamburgers but
instead received a bag of money
· and drove away, police said.
The customer gave the order at
a drive-in window Feb. 10 and
was given a McDonald's paper
bag that an employee believed
contained hamburgers. But It
actually was filled with an
undisclosed, but reportedly siza·
· ble, amount of money, officials
said Thursday.
:· McDonald's officials often
place their day's receipts Inside a
:paper bag to loU would-be
:thieves, pollee said.
., It , was unclear, however,
•whether the person holding the
~money is committing a crime. A
Cuyahoga County prosecutor,
, told of the Incident, said a theft
.charge would be possible but
&lt;would make for an interesting

•

Dance set

Pro-life meeting

By United Press International

'

lt .... ~. ~

Receives certificate

·Rock .Springs Grange conduas meeting

FAIR VIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Letart,

W.Va., Rt. 1, James Lewis, putoc. Wor·
ship services 9:30a.m.; Sunday Schoolll
a.m.; Evening worship 7: XI p.m. Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9:30 a.m.; Worship aervlce, Wednesday

CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, past«. Sunday
Schod. 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay leader.
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
services: Chrlstlan Endeavor 7:30 p.m.,
Son&amp; service 8 p.m. Preaehlng 8: 30 p.m.
Mld·week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7

Blblutudy.
DEXTEII

CHRIST,

10:30 a .m .
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos

Robert Searl~. S.S, Supt. Sunday Schoot
9:30a .m. ; Morning Worship 10:30 a .m.;
Sunday evening service 7:30p.m.: Wednesday service, 7:30p.m.

W~uhip

OF

Bill Carter, paslor. Sunday Sch()oJ 9:30 a.
m.; Morning Worship and Communion

youth meeting; Wed, 7p.m.cl•n&lt;h...-.lce;.
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, II
mlleotf Rt. 325. Rev . Ben J . Watts. pasta.

m.;

WESLEYAN

CHURCH- Coolville RD. Rev. PhllllpRldenour, pastor. Sunday School9;30 a.m.;
worship service 10:30 a.m.; Bible study
and wnr shlp service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.

Steve

BRETHREN

CHAPEL

'

rn.

lqg worship 7.:00 p.m. ,Prayer meeting,

worship 10:30 a.m.

UNITED

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.

Clyde W. Hendersm, pastoc. Sunday

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Tom Ruaytll, pastor. Sunday Schod 9: 30
a.m.; Larry Haynes, S. S. Sup1. Morning

and Ruth Ann Fox ,

nesday, 7 p.m.

School9;30 a.m.; Ralph carl, Supt. E'-:en·

pastor. Church service 9:30a.m.; Sunday
School10: 30 a.m.

,•

.,'1.~\~,~

m~ PraYe't ..~feting 'ancl Bible Study Wed· ·

Sunday SchoollO: 30 a.m. Bible Study and
prayer servtce Thursday, 7:30 p.m .
CARLETON INTERDENOM!NATIDN·
AL CHURCH, Klngobury RDad. Rev.

Grove. The ttev. Wllltam Mlddleswarth,

EDEN

----1

Shuler, past«. worship service. 9:30a.m.

ship Sunday 7p.m. and Wednesday, 7p.m.
ST. JOHN ~UTHERAN CHURCH, Pine

-

992-5141

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev . Earl

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·

Harrlsmvtlle Rd. Robert Purtell, minister; Steve Stanley, S. S. Supt.; BUI McEl·
roy, Asst. Supt.; Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
Worship service 10:30 a.m.; Evening wor-

RACINE FIRST

264 S. 2nd, Middleport

:

ri!IIIJaA,._ •

992-2975

K&amp;C JEWELERS

2p.m. ori Saturday aflernooo with wocshlp
lef'Vke foUowlng at 3:00 p.m. Everyone

=t .
JJ

216 S. Second .

MS-QUJCKEL
AGENCY INC. ~

INSURANCE ----SERVICES

SAlES &amp; SEIYIC£

Nationwide Ins. C!J.
ot Cqlumbu•, 0.

l'.t..,~~
~;.. ···· .
If~·

992-.3978

Pomtrdy

IH

TJ.AfO~D _ REA~TY

RACINE PlANING MILL

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Revival set

SPEAKERS - Mr. and Mrs. Warren Neal, missionaries lrom
Papua, New Gulnen, will be special speakers tonight (1-'rlday) , at7
p.m. , at th e Chester Nazarene Church. Slides will be s hown during ·,
th·e meeting. Evcr.vont:! wt~lc01ne.

Robert Holley, M.D.
is pleased to announce
the opening of his

Family Practice
February 20, 1989
2500 Jefferson Avenue
. Point Pleasant, WV
(former office of Dr. J\arom B'oonsue)

Appointments &amp; Walk-Ins Welcome

(304) 675-1675
New Patients Are Being Accepted
Patients - Past and Present
of Dr. Aarom Boonsue
Are Welcome

~~~~~=

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS INC •.~
'

1989

BONNEVILLE LE SEDAN
Power Door Locks, Reclining Seats,
Rear Window Defogger, Gauges,
Tilt Wheel, Delay Wipers,
Lamp Group, Cruise, Aluminum
Wheels, Split Front Seats,
·AM-FM-Stereo-Cassette, Automatic
Transmission
. With Overdrive.
AS LOW AS

$1_4,400

(ORDERS MUST BE PHONEb IN BEFORE 3:00P.M.)

•sALE PRICE INCLUDES FACTORY RElATE

If YOU DON'T NED A PIESCII'TIOII FlLUD, WE

Wll DEUVEI on•NG • THE nOll FlEE ON A
.
$5.00 MINIM. OlDER.

~on't

Foreet To c•o•k Tho Low Prleu 0•
Oar Preerlptlo••
.

Smith-Nelson Motors, Inc.
992-2174
500 EAST MAIN
'

I

POMEROY, OHIO

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�Friday. February 17, 1989
Pomeroy

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Metgs County Health
Department would like to
issue the followtng adviaory
as directed by Chapter
3701 -29-03 of the Oh1o
Admm1atratrve Code
(A) Any penon propot•ng

to create a aubdivllton shall
aubm1t to the board of
health, for approval , plans
clear~

ahowmg that the
prOVIIIOOI of rules 3701 · 2901 to 3701 29-21 of the
Ohio Sanitary Code can be

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On February 6 . 1989, '"
the Me1 gs County Probate
Court. Cue No 26163.
Sondra l Luck.,doo. 9310
Malcott Ct , Rtchmond, y.,.
glnia. 2;1237. wa1 ap·
Executrht of the

po1nted

estate o1 James E Brew1ng·
ton, ' deceased. late of 268

the board of health and

the Oh•o E nvtronmental Pro·
tecttOJl Agency to matall a
central sewage system
{C) If household sewage

dtapoAI systems are proposed, the plans shall show
(1 ) The total land area to
be used.
( 2) Location and SllB of
lots

13) The propertlfi and
charactenst•cs of the sods .n
the subdivision,

(4 ) Depth to normal
ground water table and rock
strata
(5) Location of all bodies

of water, streams, ditches,

sewers, drain t1le, ex1St1ng
and proposed potable water
supply sources and hnes on
th1s or adJaCant lots within

one hundred feet of t~e
proposed svbdlviSIOn or any
other mformat1on wh1ch
may affect the InstallatiOn or

operat ion of household sew
age disposal svstems or the
enforcement of rules 3701 ·
29-01 to 3701-29-21 oft he
OhiO Samtary Code.
(6) Exlst1ng and fm1shed
grade of all lou
(D) If the proposed subdl·
VISIOn IS to be served by
etther a sanitary sewerage
System or a water suppty
system or both, plans shall
be submltt'fd to the Oh1o

Environmental Protection
Agency as reqwred by sec·
t1on 6111 44 of the Ohto
Rev1sed Code
12) 13 14 15 16, 17. Stc

Public Notice
ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E 161 SOUTHERN
OHIO COAL COMPANY RACCOON MINE NO 3
LEGAL NOTICE
Southern Oh1o Coal Com
pany, Raccoon Mine No 3,

P 0 Box 490, Athens. Ohio
45701, has submitted an
apphcatton to revu a Coal
Mming and ReclamatiOn
Permit numbered R-0483·
12, to the Ohto Department
of Natural resources, ON·
ISIOn of Reclamation The
proposed coal mlnmg end
reclamatiOn operettOn will
be conducted in Meigs

County

Salem Town1hip,

Robert E Buck,
Probate Judge

l.ena K l\llu81road, Clerk

121 10. 17. 24 . 3tc
Public N otica
---------NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY Gl VEN that on December 22.
1988. the United States of
Amenca 81 Platntlff, flied a
ver1futd Complaint For For·
fetture 10 the United States
District Court for the
Southern 011tnct of Ot)10
Eestem 01\IIIIOn, at Colum·
bus, Ohto, be1ng Ctv1IAct10n

No

certa1n property. as defend·
ant, to wtt

Real Property S1tuated m

Me1gs County. Dh1o. known

and numbered u

36063

N1cholson H1ll Road, Rut

land Townohip, Ohio and lo-

gaily descrtbed as
Sttuate 1n Rutland Town
shtp, Ma1gsCounty.Stateof

Purchase

and be1ng de·

ICribed as follows beginning •• a point wost about
1620 feet from tho oouth-

of Natural Resourcet:. DIY·
iseon of Redamatton. The
propoaed coal m1mng opera
t1on will beinMe1gaCounty,
Salem Township, Sect1ons
The proposed underground
m1ntng area wdl encompass
61 7 acres, and is k&gt;cated on

the Wllk01vile 7V. Mmute
U S G S quadrangle map,
approximately 2 . 8 miles
Northo•t of Wtlkeoville.
Ohio. The applicatiOn pro·
poses toe,.pend the area for
Iongweii m1mng

County Recorder, Meegs
County Coun HouN, S•
corld Street Pomeroy, Oh1o

46769 and the Vinton
County Recordltf, VInton
County Court Hou te, M11n
Street, McArthur. Ohio
46661
and the Gallla
County Recorder' a Office,
Galha County Court HouM,
Locust treet.
Galhpolla,

Ohio 46631 for public viewing Written comments and/ or requests for an tnorrnll
conference may be sent to
thu Dtvts.on ot Reclamatton,
Fountain Square, BuHd1ng

of Townthlp

Road T-48.

thence north 61 degree 06'
West B23 feet to a 1 6 mch
poplar tree, thence South 1
degree 1o· west 1112 feet
along a fence to • corner.
thence east 1286 feet along

46696
Persons who are or may be
adversely affected or any
off1cer or head of anv
federal. state. or local go·
vernment agency or •uthor·
1ty may attend to present
their VI8WS.

12) 17. 1tc

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

12)17. 24. 131 3, 10. 4tc

n1ng, contain1ng 28 2 acres.
more or lel1, excepting all

legal r~ghts otway.
thatpursuanttoaWarrantof
Arrest '" Rem. the Unrted
States Marshal has arrested
tho defendant prperty and

In Memoriam

CHARLES G .
ELLIS
Wish to thank our
many friends and
neigh bars for the
food and flowers
and
kindnesses
shown during our
recent loss.
Bess Ellis
and Famil

Without Notice l
#1 COPPER-............ 86•
#2 COPP£1L ........... 65&lt;
Cl£AN ALUMINUM
SHUTS ........ ............ 52'
Cl£AN AlUMINUM
CAST ......................... 40'
AlUMINUM
B£V£RAG£ CANS ...... 50&lt;

40 YRS EXPERIENCE
1-5-'19-1 mo

RADIATOR
d

SERwiCE
• d
rl•
and
can

and Marittme CIBtms of the
Federal Rules of Civ1l Proce·

dura, and shall thereafter

serve his answer to plaint·
1ff' 1 complaint and answers
to any mterrogator~es relat·
1ng to Rlatntiff"l complamt
wtth1n ttvonty 1201 davo tollowtng the filing of his claim,
mrty with .. ,d Supplemental
Rule Cl6i. thot any penon

Michael
Cr~es.
United
States Attorney, Room 200.
86 Marcom Boulevard, Col·
umbus, Ohio 4321 &amp;. 1n con·
form1ty wrth the requirements ot Part 9 ofTttle28 of
the Coda of Federal Regula·
hona and by filif\9 a copy of
uid Petrteon for RemtnKm
or M1t1gat1on
w1th the

FOR SALE BY
SEALED BID
1971 Ford Econoline
Van. excellent conditon,
leas than 36,000 miles
Vehicle may be aeen at
the New Haven Vol Fire
Dept on 5th St. 1n Now
Haven, W Va Do oot call
em•gencv number for
tnformatton
If you w11h add1l10n1l
1nformatt0n c•ll Greg

Koylor, Fire Chief, (3041
882-3669
Send Sealed Bu:ll to
New Haven Vol Fire

Dapt Inc
Box 806
New H1van. W Va
25266
Attn Sealed B1d
New Haven Vol Fire
Dept Inc ruervea the
rtght to accept or reject
any or all b1 ell
B1d1 wtll bo opened on
Morch 6, 1989 ot 7 30
PM

:8~-=Pu~~~ic~S=a~l:e::::------~
&amp;

Auction

PUBIC AUCTION
Inventory Reduction Sale
Furmture, stoves, refngerators. beds, anhque furmture, 4x6 It wall m1rror, wall shelvmg, 4display
cases, stereos. rad1os, TV's. old books, tools . hard ware. bicycles &amp; b1cycle parts. clothmg, portable
s1_gns, dishes. restaurant eqUipment, desks.
ndmg lawn mower, electnc motors, new &amp; used
auto parts, used truck &amp; car tires

Saturday, Feb. 18, 1989

7:00 P.M.

Jet Rts. 2 &amp; 35, Henderson, W. Va.
(Across Street from McDonald's)

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At

Reasonc*lt Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
or Night

Day

4-16-86-tln

NEW-REPAIR
Gutters

Downspouts

Gutter Cleantng
Pa1nt1ng
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168

2-10-'88-f mo pd

LADIES WANTEDI
PERM, CUT, STYLE
ONLY

S27

Plos FREE .....
1 Tannrng S.ss1on and
1 Seaton at Fit ' Trim

Lie. m W. Va. and Ohio

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

AND

992-6720

WANTED:
Foilter·Care Worker; Provide long· term
residential services to 1 or 2 Meigs
county adults who have mental retar·
dation/ developmental disabilities (M.
S.P.R.). Must be willing and able to
have your home (no trailers) meet 0 hi a
Dept. MR/DO licensure requirements.
Call David Milliken 992-66B1 or write
c/o Meigs Co. Brd. MR/00; 1310
Carleton St.; Syracuse. Oh. 45 779.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Basham Building

EVERY
SM. NIGHT
." 6:30 P.M.
Choke

12 Gauge

Only

RELATIONS

HILLSIDE MUZZLE

....

New localran:
168 North Socontl

lOADING

45760

SUPPUES

We Ceuv Fl1hlng Supph•

Muzdlloading !upphos
Motl•n Gun Suppli•
Gons • Ammo • Slvgl
22 A111mo

Pay Your Phone
and Cable B1lls Hera
-~~,. IUSINESS PHONE
(6141 992-6550

H-

Rt 124 ~ut of Rutland
A&lt;:r011 Happy
Rood

RISIDIN(I PHONE

(6141 992-7754

Ph•• 14-742·2355

1128/ tln

9/ 20/ ltn1

CARTER'S

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

$35 PER

LOAD
DELIVERED

MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
INC.

992-6282
'

liGHT HAUUNG

BILL SLACK
992-2269

CLASSIFIED ADS
asupermarket
for everything?

...

Ext R-9806 for mrrenl faderal

EJ£81fent ..,. opportunitY for
cer ... minded p••ont In Pomeroy. Middleport 11'11 EJCelerrt
benefit lfld CDfYII*'IIation pack·
ege. In oflce lind local tr1lnlng
t.,. qwllfild tNinWI For more
lnfor,..ion conCII'ning this opporturity Md a pnonel

Announce men Is
3

.,t.,.

vi-.v. cell between 9·00 a.m
and 4.00 p m. on Tu•day or

Announcements

•
We wtll haul coal for em•gencv

vr

319 So. 2nd Ave.
1-28.'88-tfn

r---------...,
I
I

Fobruory 814-992-7180

Tolopllono 101• pooplo -ntad
Male or temlle wllh piNaMrt
votoa Col 8t4-992-8329
Att... jon, AN'.LPN'1
Ameri••Pom•oy h• lmmecHIIe openlnga for . .rt t•m•
RN'•LPN'e on 1d shifts
Compltftlve utarv. fl.c:ible

a ..gle. Good f.,.,ity JM(:. Call

814-387-0171

schedJIIna. ..,d benefits

off•ed Contact Ltrua Hll,
RN·DON. Am•i.,.•Pom•oy.

M.te Blqeft Hound. 3 yn. old.
T., Md black No PIP•• but •

38751 Aodtlpringa Ad .
114-992-88011.

I

Jo's Gift Shoo
SYRACUSE, CHid
Everything Marked
Down
•Cement Items
•Flower Pots
•Bird Ba1hs
•Yard Ornaments
Because ol Cold Weather
Everylhmg lnstde
Rmg Door Bell for Servtce
2·7lmo

PUBLIC
RECYCLING

NOW OPEN FOI
BUSINESS

14111 I Maift St.
Point Ploasatot, W. Ya.
We Buy Alum1num
Cans, GIML Brau,
Copper and More

MON.·FRI.: 'I am-6 pm
SAT.:

I am-12 Noon

1

Strittly

I
1
1

POMEIOY -EAGLES

CLUB

224 E MAIN ST
992-9976

I

I
I
1

I THURS. U. •:45 P.M. 1
I SUN. E.l. 1:45 P.M. 1
DOOR PRIZE

I 2 H.O FREE wtth coupon and

1
1

I pun:hasa of mtn HC. Pact
1 ~~~ limrt I coupon per cus- I
1 tDm« per binDJ HSS1on.
1
Wo Pi •so.oo Por Gamo I
1 O•or 10 Pooplo '65.00 I
I

1

Per Game
U&lt; •OOS·!l

2-3 Hn

992-7479
lt. 33

North of

I

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTERIOI ·EXTERIOR
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of

painti"'. Lot it for you.

do

YEll IEASONULE
HAVE IERIINCE

614-985-4110

SYRACIIS£. OHIO
Most Foreign and

Domestic Vehtcles

A/ C Servtce
All Mojor &amp; Minor
Repairs

NIASE C.itiod Moclunc

CALL 992·6756

"DOC""ic~~~:/'~~
Certll1ed L'

bed m..~lt._,_el CWIII nu!'lmg
cent• seeks regl1twed nurse
with IUPif'VliiOfY IXpM't_,ce

Cop ollillty ..,

tuchlng and
c.lno, genuine ilt•ett ., Geri-

Woman bnclet -Gold
ch•m with oriental prlntl"g. If
foundpl ... ecall614-~8-2200
or 448-3131 Raward

LOST

atric nurting. E xceiiW opportunity for Nurwing Admmtstra
tion car,er growth and
development. inqu~re C1re

_ . , 590 Pool• F,..k Road.

lOST.Be1gle type dog light
brown &amp; whit• we•lng red

Hunican&amp; WV or Care Ha\len

To~a Voll~.

coli• w / G1HI1 CouniY tag
Chih:lren'a 1M' lott in vicinity af
AtTica Rd e100 R.,....,d. Cell

David Wilbur
Adminiltrtlor.

814-367-0425

mv home.
pert tfrne job before Md lifter
1chooland 3 weeks 1rtdl, 7 and
5
old. aft• 6 00 call
Blbv sift• needed •

lost Mondlll( night flit female
Beegle. Black. white 1nd ten In
Leuret Cliff • • C1ll 614-992·

v••
304-676-7349
Ball¥ •itt• needed lOr toddl•
1rtd betJr, rwf••te:M required.

3028

LOST let of his tnd herweddmg
rtngl tt.tween Murphvs W1d
Court House 304-896-3827

7

You are gone from our
hvos but not from
our hearts.
We love and m1u you.
W1fe, Frada. Daughter
Penny, Step-children
and Grandchildren

WANTED:
Respite Care Providers; In-Home and
Out of Home care needed on short term
beals (ranging from few hours to few
days) for Maigs County adults and chil·
dren who have mental retardation end
developmental disabilities (M .S.P .R .).
Call David Milliken or write c/o
Meigs Co. Brd. MR/00; 1310
Carleton St.; Syracusa,OH. 45779.

I

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

1:00 P.M.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SEIYia
I. S. IT. SO lAST
GUYS¥11.1, OliO
614-66!-3121

RACINE, OHIO

Authorized John
D-e. N- Holland,
Buah Hog Farm
Equpment Dealer.

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

Fir• ~1lp1111t

FACTORY CHOKE
ONLY

9·19-U tln

304-757- 7821.

Conuct

304-676-535B
12

Yard-Sale

G amp·aus··-----

Situations
Wanted

Will do g111 . .1 houlllkeeplng

Call 614-992-3a08

Still I

Meiga lndustrloe, Inc .. In eddhlon ta providing general office end commercial cleaning,
now offers
PRIVATE RESIDENTIAL CLEANING
a• 1 llrvice .
We wll contract to clolln your home on 1 tlxed

IChadule, llttll1dlng to Item• you delint.
We provide fullllabllhy cover1ge. workers
• compenutlon, and pay all tax
requirements.
FOI A PIICI CMICm CAU1

LADY HOffMAN- PH.

O.h.lxe 3 BR house for tale
Owner fin.,ce can 304-676-

AREAl Coli IRefundoblol 1
31 &amp;-733-8084. EXI. G-2732 A
FOR CURRENT USTINGSI

Nice 2 br home m Pt Ple•..t
Utility 10om. dlninu room. large
living room. beeement &amp; c•port
on corn• IQt Lind contrect or
euuma loan with ~m.tl down
p arm tnt Own.~ want to sel
now II SAVEIU Coll614-246-

9588 aft• 8 PM
3 BA , 2

ecr• .. ge o-age. Rt

218 lmmecl•epoas. . lon.

814-446-9232.

c.•

Nice brldr. house 2 c.- gwage.
br. . f!Way, 2 8R . • on acre lot
with l•ge (llrdan spot wii!Mn 'h
mUe of sdtool Mercsrvlle. Cell

15

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. 629 Jockooo Pika
Call446-4367 Rog.No 8&amp;-11105118

Rick Pewson Aucttoneer. II
Ctnled Ohto . .d Well V~rgtnia.
ant~qtM,

Schools
Instruction

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Estete,

c•

To settle 81tat&amp;- 7 room home on
3.&amp; acre~ in Rutl111d. Call
614·992·7376 eventngs or
week·endl
In SyriiQiae. 3 bedroom rlflch

AM electric. new 111rr;lwlncbws.
1lr conditiOned. equippld k11
chen. 1ttached g•age. 1 ac.-e
l.,dwlth 1-t.16 ft outbuilding.

Coil 814-992-6293

18 Wanted to Do

f•m liquid•

tlon tlll81 304-773-5785

bect'oom.

rent

llle or

2

Yz 1cre ground, tn

Pom•ov Adult• ontv No para

614-992-3122

and ni!Mt'er used c•• Smith
luick·Pontiec. 1911 East•n ..

Ave • Galhpolil Call 61 .. 44~

w.,ttng to do c.patterv worlr.

H1veowntrudt •tooil.lyhour
or job. Cll 814-441-8232.

Complete households of furniture &amp;. .,tiqull Alia wood &amp;
oo.e
Swain's fll'nkure
• Auct10n. Third &amp; Olwe. '

heat••

814-44&amp;-31 59

Wll do baby altting In""' home

,..,• .,._ walable. call 304-

.

1980 Sp.-ton 14x70 2 BR. 2
blttw 11 electric. CA. woodtl..~rn•. 10x18 deck. 12x1C.
wood builclng. Call 614-245-

5028.

motors C•ll Llrrv lively. 814- ''

318-9303

Hou• Cl...ing, aen•lll .. d
aprlniJ- h.,o rof•.,,_· 304876-72n

Fumfture lnd appllll'lcet by the
pi.ce or tntire hou111hold Fan

1980

IIVYIIIIW Detuxe

14x70

Cllll8t4-24&amp;-9398 aft• 5 PM '

Uted -..rnilure bv thl piece or
entire household also ..lting.

814-742-2488

614-25~8494

or

P1cken1 Furniture

oroom
••c,ou•ap.-tment1
liVIng. 1

304-87 6- 1450
9773

.. d 2 bed-

"' Vtllage

Middleport

m

butcherblockcabinetbue.2pc.
liv ing roo m suttee hide-a bed.
coffeeS. end tebte s ets. ntchn-

Call 614-992· na7

ers, all wood desks, beddtng.
beds headboard• frt~mes.
matchtng walnut &amp; maple twin
beds bunk beds ntght stettdt,

Beech Street Mtddleport. Ohto,
2 bet)'oomfurntShed Jpiwtment

utllitt• paid ref$Jenees Phone

ettest.
dressers
many more
rtems 1h
mtla out&amp;Jerncho
Rd .

Now accept 1ng applte8Cto ns for
2 beti'oom ap.rments. fully
cwpeted. apphMC811, water .-.d
trash ptcku ps provided Matntenll"lce free liv1ng dase to shopptng. bsnks .. d schools For
more tnformltiOn call 304- 882·

PI P.ta.. anl,

and bh.le floral on betge back
ground Excel lent conditton
$250 Call 614-949 3084

2 pt&amp;ee secttonsl sofa. used
about 2 months 304--882· 1

Furn11h&amp;d one be d room apt,
8200 00 plus elettrt c. t100 00

2904

depos•. 304-876-3900

homa Clooe to town 8300 •

mo

plu1 dep

&amp; ref

Cell

614-44&amp;-3648
7ve•old. 3bedroombridt vlnyl
total alecrrlc. randlstyle home.

2beWoomhouseWid2be~oom

814-992-8888 aft• 8 00 p m

Buy or Sell River ine Amtques,

be~oom

apt, 4 rooms an d

2528

One boli'oom apt, furniShed end
all utllit f• p11d. references re-

54 Misc. Merchandise

qured 304-676-2722

I~~~;::=.::;:=.~:::::;
45 Furnished Rooms

VVheelchalrs rtllW or used 3
wheeled electnc scooters Call
Rogers Mob1lty collect 1·614-

87!1-9661

Rooms for rent week or month
Starting at $120 a mo Gallla
Hotel-- 614-448--9580

FtrSIIIIOOd for •le 825 to SJO
delrvered Oavtd Hill, 614 388

8138
8tg Dakota Farm home b .ult on
model Call 1· 614-886·7311
Pffoce

14x 70, 2 bedroom. g•aga.
front porch. back deck Deposit
and ref•ence. Shown bv "P·

pointmont
6345

on~

Coli 614-898-

2 bect'oom tr11l• for rent m
Pomwoy Readf March 1 6141 bedroom 1n Mufdeport S225
per mont P\ fur M hed. utilit 1•
pad. Call 614--992 7807 or

2 bect'oom trailer for rent m
Syreane Call 614-992·3122
TraHers Unfurntlhed Coupl•.
1mall childr111n accepted Rt 1,
lDaJst Road. Pt PleM&amp;nt, b..
Furnllhed 2 bl!ldroom mobile
home for rent, t200 00 pku
utlllttel , 8100 00 depotlt,
phone 304-17&amp;-6512 or 876-

3900
2 be&lt;toom mobile home. half
mile out Jerridlo Road. 304-

14x.70 moble home. 3 bedroon'\ 2 batt.. C*ltrelalr, totll
elltdric. .9000 Will con~kl•
te•e or sele of lot• with the

For lease

For Sale or Le••Buamen
8'-'lding-Store or Office lp&amp;Ces
1506 Jsfferson Blvd Call 304-

homo. 814-992-'3088.

1914 Eloonl, 10.150 with BJit·
p8J1do, compl•elv furnilhed

SX18 porcl!. 10x10 buNclntl'
t41500 Col 814-992-6835 or
614-992-7887

78xt4 814-949-2072

undlwplnnlng. everything murt
go CaH J 0 It 814-992-2174.

Mod.-n 1 8R , downtown. compl•e kkchen. air, cwpll. Dep-osft no pet1. Cell 814--4480139 weninga, aft• 5

efr ODncf!lanlng, 2 beQ-oom.

21

nam-

Occasslonal ch11r good cond
$25 2 mounted ltres on 15 tn
nms $30 Coll814-44&amp;-0783
1973 Yamaha 250 Washer &amp;
dryer for mobile home Call

99~1-66:11
I'

. I

namon mlle. purabrect not reg.
3'h moa •100 C.. 814 448-

4893

Reg111ered S1beri.n Hu1kv. 6
moa Bladt Ill whhe w / blua
eyes

good f~tmily

To

Ce"

21otaandvautts tn theG1rden of
Veterans tn Memory Gard&amp;na
Metg! County $1100 Call

614-687 3803

County Appliance. Inc Good
used appliances and TV uta
Open SAM to 6PM Mon thru

Sot 614-44&amp;- 1899 627 3rd.
Ave Galltpol•. OH

GOOD USED APPLiANCES
dryers refngera1ors

ranges Skaggs Appliances
Upper RNer Ad bltl1de Stone

Crest Motel 614-446 7398

Fr~day ,

Saturday. Sundw only

Noon-8 OOP M , 10 percent off
Carhart ciothmg Cemoufl11.1ge
Insulated Coveralls

304-27~

5656

LAYNE S FURNITURE
Sofas and chain pnced from
$395 to t995 T1bl• $60 and

Half pnce sale. sweaters and
biOUtJII, S2 00 The Atttc Re·

ule. z•ee Fifth Ave. Huntmgton w Va

up to S126 Htd~a-beds S390
to 1695 Recliners 8225 to 1 - - - - -- - - - -t375 lamg• andupto•
S28 to 1126
.- 1
hi
Portablelight.,..,sgnwrt et~ers
495
Din .. t.. 01 9
Wood table w-6 chus S286 to
8796 Desk $100 up to 8375
Hutches t400 lrld up. Bunk
bedt compl.te w ·mattrea•es
$295111"1duptoU96 Babr,' bed&amp;

t110 Mattress• or box spnngs
full or twtn 868. firm 878, and
$88 Queen setl 1250 &amp; up,
King 8350 4 drawor chest e69
Gun cabineta 6, 8 &amp; 10 gun
BabV mattrenes S35 &amp; $45
Bed frlmM S 20 $30 &amp; Kmg
Good 1election of

0329 00

FREE DELIVERY,

plastic !etten $47 60 box. e!lprun Feb 22 1· 800·533-3453
McDaniel Custom Blllch•tng.
Open 8 days • week. Mondw
thru S1turday Call 304-882·

cash with

3 Milee out

Clll

91m to 5pm
Ph 614-446-

WESTERN REO CE OAR
•ChannetRustlc

and Bevolad lap Siding
• Deck MOI.,tols
Guaranteed Qualit:y

CETIDE, INC , Athens 814·
594-3678

Poodle pupptM, 8 weeks old. 1
mate. 1 femlle. 1ull blooded· not

1974 VW lug Black Mlk1
••cell ent work c•. •aoo or
.... onable offtr CaM 614--246-

regiltered

eso 304 876·

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

Renl :1/s
41

Hcmes for

Rent

Chwr~ 306 .,g., 345 Int.
truck ang.. dlt"'ll bod • hollt.

Poor lov• nr-. Hencteraon. W.
V1 Ct1••_. *••rourd, Dlftlop, fir811ona. """' 1nd u1ed,

Clll

614-445-8253

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campel'l

5040
1984 Lynt&lt; GS, 2 dr. PS PB.
AC, • spd Good oond C.H

Musical
Instruments

814-448 3714oft• &amp;PM.

Sr:Jvu:~s

19841ucik Aogolllmkad. V-8
.,to. PS, PI, PW. AC. cruise
lndrvtdual ~n:er l•sona. be-

ginners Mrtous guittrilt Brulc•d•• MUIIC. 814-448-0187,

Jeff Wamsta¥ tnltructor, 61 +
446--8077 Ltmited ~.,lngs

58

&amp;

wntrol. tilt. AM·FM rldo. 2 dr

48,000 mill 18895 Coll11444&amp;-0247

0&lt;

367-0149

1984 Dodge Ch•uer· 70.000
mil•. AC. AM·FM, -..to. Needl
WOfk.

Another load of f.-noot Lake

11200 Cll 814-251-

93&amp;4 aft• 8 PM

Ontarto 1pples now in Jack's 1_:_:..:_.:..::_.:.::__:.__ _ _ __
Fruit Mkt. Rt 315 Htndenon.
For ..le 1983 Pontt.c T-1000
CIIIIJ1m It 614-992·21 13.

Farm Supp/11~s
&amp; Lcve,luc:k

1185 Chwelle Malltu 2 door
h•dtop Ad orlgk:lal. 283 auto,
mint oondtllon Low mileage

Coil 114-HI-2BB8 doya .,d
814-247-4881

61 Farm Equipment

5944

MF dl•el tmctor w / 8 ft bush
hog. e3860 Post df'tver. e15915
JO gram drtll, e195 New lde1
PTO drillan ~re lpr•der.
•1596 250 gal lpr.., Wlk with
cart &amp; boom. S295 Own• will
fln.,ce Call 814-288--6522
FermE(f.'lpment ZetorTr.cton.
Howard Rotavetors. Blad•.
Feeder Ringt BtJVing old bin•
i • Morr• Equipment. Rutl.,d.

Ohio 814-142-2455
tha towwt pric. on
Homelite. Jonaered 10d Hu1qvarna chain IIIWS and •cc•sori• Sldfll'l E~,tment Com0111'1· 304-67&amp;- 21
We hBIIe

FESRUARY SALE
NEW HOLlAND

load••
213 Sprood• 108 b.t

Modo!
$2.750 00

12.950 00
Model 114 Spread• 177 bu
t3,300 00
Model 304 Sh.my SprNd•a

1 226 gol17,1100 00
Holl111d Model L-5&amp;4 g•.
52 hp repo. 4215 hra
•to.900 00
Model 11 -442. 30 hp goa, 100

hn 87,900 00
NewHol.-.dModal351. 100bu
•lndlr
with leal• and
hvdro drt.oe t10.&amp;00 00.

"*•

1977 Grwtd Prill Pontiac T ·top.
rebull motor, ntw pelnt JOb,
good tW• 1989 Ch•el• Convertible. Good tlr• tntertor

BASEMENT
WATERPROOF1NO

Una:mcltlot* Mfellme SUII'Intee Locll rel•ence~ fur. . twd
F,.. _.I.,..•. c.tl mla

1-814-237-0488.

d~

or nlgl!l

Roger1811ament
Wot•prooflne
SWEE'ER .,dsewlnamecntna
rtpalr. pll'll. anct tuppll• Pick
up •d del~.,. Davll Vewum
Cleener, one half mil• up

Qoor ... C - Ad CoM 814- •
441-0294.
A .-.d T Builders from founde·
don to roof· iulde or out Free

••lmot• Budg• pri- Col
814-892-3487

Runo good 814-742-2905

RON'S Telavlslon lervlca.
House cllll on RCA. Quaur,

1988 Cadillac EIDorodo Barrlu

GE. llc&gt;ocioling In ZonMh. Col
304-8?6-2398 or 8t4-4452484

Excetl ..t condition 41.000
mil• To uttle .nate. CIH

304-87&amp;-4831

Fetty Tr.. Trlmrring, ICUmp

1982 Chwette 4 sPMd,. 4 CVI ,

- C o l 304-175-1331

1985 Plymouth Horizon Good
contltlon Coll814-742-2071

Rotery or cell!• tool *lltng.
PUmp....oompl•ad•-•dov
8J1d ..,..,..• 304885-3802

2 door 8,4-992-7807 or 114992-74U

1984 Chovy Coprit» Cl-lc.
814-HB-2on

•

RON'8 APPUANCE SERVICE,
hou• ctll ....,Iaing OE. Hot
Pok'tt. w•Mn. dryer• and

For • • • dell on a n.w • UIIMI

. , _ 304-871-2391.

1t Jim Mink Chevrolet·

All. . T,.. TrlmnWn~ -=td Stump
Remowel Frw lit
• Cal

c.. truck or.,...... Kinnyllll
Oldlmobjla 814-446-3172 .,
304-nJ-1134.

304-8711-7121

1

'78 Ford Pinto. 4 cyl. t471 00
Phone ~17&amp;-2417

1173 Chwy tmp .. a. 2 door,

•

h•d top. 3110 ..,o, tBIIO.OO.
;:_30;:_4-....:_17
..
75-:.1;..8..;8_7_ _: - - 1973 AMX Jovolin 304
PS. taoo 00 •
304-418-1887

belt

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

B2

CARTER'&amp; PWMetNG
ANOHEATINO

_,o.
offer.

.:.:......:.:..:..:...:....:.
· ----

1982 Fard e.-t 'L'. 4 door,

AC. Pl. AM·FM at..a c...
m..,ll. 4 speed. t1 ,891 00
30 ... e7&amp;-1731

=::....:.....:...:..:_::_______

Cor. Fourth 8'1d Pine

Golf::'·3988
Ohio or 814-

Phone 814441-4477

1980 C.m•o 310 auto .... pb,
1m·fm CMI. Very good condf.
tlort New tlree. . , • aoo firm.

304-87&amp;-3888

1180 Trlf'll Am 400 bl tc* on

Same modal wllh mechlftiCII

Point Pl. .lnl.,d RlpiOI' Rood
Phone 304-89&amp;-3974

1977PontiocFir-tl 380.,~ .

IUto tran1, PS. Pl. n.,. pllrit,

now ••• Alldng •1200 Coil

Elactrica I

84

&amp; Refrigeration

1981PontiocFJoro MIIOO Coli
304-875-4480

block - Rod Bird. _,o, po. pb.
..,.fm. I lt'odl. t1 .1100. 304875-31111.

N.H. 7 It h~ blrul N H 312
Grinder Mbt•. both good oond.

Home
Improvements

81

1978 Pontiec 8onnev•a. 1700
Clll aftw I PM waek(Wys or
anytlma WHiurtdt. 814-317·

0819

Fruit
Vegetables

•tva •d see!• 19 000 00
~==========l==========~ IChf•Setv6ctiCMt•.lh
Rt 87

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

318.

complete S43 25

Model 329 SprMd• 138 bu

Op~W'

lop IC, 283 .,gina. EJCell
cond Must sell t3900 Call

814-379-2f01oftar 6 PM

Bu1ldmg Matertals

245-5121

&amp; Acce880rlel

304-175-3331

t100

Gnnder miten. Mtoore lprMd·
ers. Sk1d Steer

WI"'"

Auto Parts

76
h•d

1977 Dodge Charger.

to

55 Budding Supplies
Biodc brtck. aewer ptpea,

1983 Chwv Impel a. 2 dr

814-992-27'70.

.,tomatic. dual -.h..•t

3224

dows, lintels. etc Cla~de Wintttrs. R10 Grande 0 Cell 814-

1178 Chrytd• LMI•on S W.

auto elr, AM .FM st•eo 1550
Coil 6 t 4-44&amp;- 7804.

power trim ., d auto ol6n}IICI6a r\
1987 M.,GJI'Y Trol6n1 motor.
1987 Shoreline trail• pk,te
more. AH m- " oondtUon. Clll

Fish Tank. 2413 Jackson AVit
Pomt Pleuant. 304-675-2063.
10 galae4 up •14 99and10gel

Used r1d1ng mower Needs bat

SURPLUS.Orig1na1 Army Oe
n1m Rental Clothmg. green
cemoufl.,p:e IDiack·whttet S1m
Somervtlle s Old Route 21·
Juncuon Independence Road
(New ERA) . (Eut Ravenswood)

Buvlrl G.. da i1i 80&amp;-887-

a... 8oot-1987Landat 18'8".
1987-atrv 35 hpmotorwllh

614-887 8957

Sears 5 HP gas motor Good
condition Clll 614 742 2071

Aovel Oak Reson membership
for Yle. $6000 Csll 614--992·

dill tor •100 Fords. Mercedal
Corvettes OtiNVI Surplus

:C•::II:_;8:_1:_;4-:.2;_4_:5-..:110=.17~~--:- 0

S25

apr81derl, whe• drHII, corn
pl.-.ters. fertlile spreed••· po.t
hole dtQg«l. other field reactt
Uled equipment Howe's F1rm
Machinery, Rt 1241 &amp; Mayhwt
Rd Jackson Oht0 e14-28t-

111

Boats and
Motors for Sale

AKC Bissett Hound pup end

aduhs

R"idoentW or oommerclll wif.
ing. New .-vice or , . .....
Uc111naed elec:trlci8J1 Rldtnour

Eloctrlcol, 304-875-1788
85

General Hauling

Ott .. d w•• lorvloo l'ltola,
Clot-.
Willi 001..
Anytim&amp; 0111 614-tMI-7404-No
~

Sundoy colhl.

814-441-7371 oft• S PM

304-273-4215

72
63

Trucks for Sale

Livestock
1987 Ford Alnp- XLT 4x4.
81atooc ,.._, """''Y -otllow
mw._.- fila ovw p.ment ..
Coll114-446-2713.

81 4- 44&amp;-41139

Rogier- 3 V. . old oo- I rolto
IO ride. 11100 Ctil 814-4462107 doya. 814-311-11104

c.t

2 8R IPt . n., plush -*Pit
nowr.int utllti• Plf118fv' paid,
117 a mo. Coll304-875-8104.
17&amp;-8311. &amp;7&amp;- nll.

evening~

64

A_ _ , wololli• HUQ oc-ad. Call 304-175-1104.

wells

p-

hilmediet•

1 ,000 012,000gllllonodllivory
Call 304-87&amp;-8370

•c.

AI- on St Rt 150 Cal
814-192-2322. 898-3&amp;31

-lnga.

R &amp; R W•• llor¥ioo.
cilterns

1000gll - · - • Lim•
tone aprood Wo h.,l •owot.
... tl .....
Call 814-11282711.

1 mile . . . of

-~ romodofod 1 BR. opt
APt&gt;l furnlahoclldoolloltotion- 1

block from downtor.wn

t1300 CoH 814-388-9178

Trans~orlal1on

1978 Coua-. moon racf. n.w
paint. e!lcef. oand. . ttOOO A.. o
14 ft 1klm V-bottom bo• a
trail•. 35 hp tnglna. t600 Call

For sole Oak firuuvood Call
304-676 275? aft• 4 30 p m

•so

t984 V 30 Mogn a low mlleag.. Show room ODncll:lon.

814-445-7059 - · • 8 PM

Haying equ1pment, Tillage
equipment, P T 0 manure

Wash~Ws

1988YZ-125 1200Qflrm Col
814-24&amp;-9388 aft• 5 PM

&amp;14-367 0652 aft• 15 PM. or

614-992· 6461

t,..

1978 Chowy ...,_ ,.......... ..,
.... or

for good 08'. Good

...... low rn~r.. 614-14830011.

B7

Hay &amp; Grain

Upholstery

&amp;0 squ•ebal-. mkad, oon•lonod Hoy Coll814-387-n27

monthly. You will ne•ll

o,.._

cln

30•882·

74 Motorcycles.
1------.:_
_ _;__

8000 ... S-10189

Chow puppy

every Frid.,.

...- _ .... Conaul- 21 Oolflolt UDO o mo UOO
..........- o f 12.7J7.00 depoot. Colll14-446-22011.

t11.000.00 - h for _ ...
- . Co1Jtoll-ho1--78il41 ·
11110 IOYtima

Bea~ttful

Solo w.ry Selurday-1 PM
Uvootod&lt; occoptod aft• 4 PM

TURN KEY IUIINEBSI Ollltrib

ute ,,.~Liy. Nebllao. Heratttv
.. d othlr
bnnd enadt
No aolln• llor¥1oo "'"'
Pin¥' awned aoaountt. lnct.-

Reg BuffCock•Spanlel mille.
Appro!( 4'hmos old S160 Call

Athens Liv•todl Sal&amp; AlblnV ·

BUiine•s
Opportunity

1978 Jeep CJIS

;3;2;::01:;;=;:::=:;:~==

75

35 lots &amp; Acreage

12 aa• Long Hollow Rold,

-

1/ w 8 wks old Vel chedutcl. 71 Auto's For Sale
Ch""'p podigrll $200 Cal I--------.,..-614-26&amp;-1860
,.
GOVERNMENT SEIZED Veh&gt;

57

Wst•. sewer • tr11h incl.lded.
StM'teng It • 289 per mo. C1ll

814-387- 7860

0ragonwvnd Cattery Kennel
Per11an and Sttm•• and H1m ..
leyan ktttenl c~ stud ...

Portable dtshwasher &amp; patient
Hover lifter &amp; grab bw·botl1
n!JIN· never used dtsoou nted

Vali6V Furniture
P1ke from t183 • mo Walk to New and used furniture end
shop end mov• 614-~6- appllcancea C1ll 614·446·
2688 E 0 H
7572 Hours 9 -6

1981 P•kwood.14x70 Control

1918 Ford R.. v• *84115. CaH

.3::04-:_:8::_7:11-_:44:8:0:;.::--::::-:-=

Ground shell corn e&amp;.OO P•
100. Alfalfa h., . Morgan' I
Form. At 311, Pliny, 307-9372018

6815

BEAUTIRJ li&gt;J' ARlMENTS AT 0322
BUDGEf PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 536 Jackoon

hw•"'"· dlllpoaol. .,.....,. enclo•ad o•io. pool playground

Grooming All breedl All
atyl 111 lama Pet Food 0.•1•
Juhe Webb Ph 614-~8-0231

6361

OhiO

Westsrn boots
$36
Workboots S18 Ill up. (Steel &amp;
sOft toe) Call 614 446-3159

90 Dav• ume

CA, dil·

200boi•FioatoHay 11 21 150
bill• •Hollo. 12 25 Phone
814-9815-3538 Paul Ktrr.
Ctlest• Oh

NEW

Buhwllle Ad

1YJ bethl

ale

tory 11 HP $200 814-992
77tt

Man thru Sat

BRa

S

Liv1ng room suites- S199 $599
Bunk beds with beddmg- $249
Full 111e mattress 'l foundation
atart1ng· 899 Recltners
starting- •99
USED- Beda drefser•. beckoom
1u1t1t1 Desks wnnger washer a
complete line of used 1urnh:ure

"PProved credrt

T•• Townhouse IPtrt:menta· 2

Pets for

*3,59&amp;.00 304-875-1731

4 OOp m

Groom Md Supply Shop--Pet

1289

Mixed hard wood slabs 812 per
bundle Containing approx 1 'h:
ton Oh1o Pallet Co , Pomeroy,

bedroom surt• mill II cabtn eta.
headboards S30 end up to S65

Apartment
for Rent

Bradt~

814-448-8764

Olive St. Qalltpohs
NEW· 6 pc wood group- $399

frame

44

56

Call 614-379 2639

SWAIN
AUCTION 8o FURNITURE 62

co11 814-367 n43.

4

•wn tractor with
cultiVator . plows &amp; mowtng
maetune. $200 Call 614--266--

Oavtd

Merchandise

2 Br mobile home All alectrtc.
Dep &amp; ref Adults only No pets

c redenzas

614-446 2359

Coumrv Mobile Home Park.
Route 33. Nor1h of Porherov
Lots. rentals, parts sales Call

676-1435

1602

desk

drBW"ar latteral fUes dock plates
4 noo 16 m tares &amp; nms Call

1--- - - -- - - -

49

1980 Chav half t~ 4i:4 auto.
PS. tit wheel AM·FM .....,, 1ft

bodwllhropp•. ohromow-n

Maxed h- for ..Ia e1 60 p•
b,.e. Call 814-?.42 2270 afte

2781 '

387 0149

your lot S13 995&amp;up SeeDur

Newly .-nodeled 3 br house in

2 BR . cable available. bea.Jtifi:AI
riv• vlfiN '" Kan .. ga Fosters
Mobile Home Parle. 614-446--

,.,.- rein

Extrllwge•.,•llllil•••nctl*e
bel• of h.,. CIH 814-3792139

•ll••n-

Concrete bloats
ytrd
or dellv"lfV Maaon.-.d. Glllipolis Block Co 123Y2 Pine St •
Gallipolis. OhiO C.tl 814-448-

614-446 0550

2904.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

•

wheels, W-31-10 50 tlr•.

PM

1 124 E Mum Street PomtJ'OV
Hours M.T ,W 10a m 10 6p m.
Sunday 1 to 6p m 614-992·

be•ooma Stove and 614-992-7479
rafr1gtretor furntshed 8175 per
month. ptu1 utllllie~andQeposit Tretl• lot for rent S70 per
month plus uttlit181 304-882
In Ch11tar 814-9B6-3922

Full banm.-n: 11h 11ory quiet
locatial\ 8 mtl• North of Pt
Pla.snt 304-675-1076

~~

&amp; r.o

aome bOdY work

•1 .800.00 304-175-29 . .

AKC Engltat'l Springer Spaniels

3 or 4

Mason. a 260. J* month. Pay
own utllltl• 304-773-9684

55 Building Supplies

H

vice Call614-446-31441fter7

Antiques

53

c•peted throughout 1 1cre Sleeping rooms with cooking
fenced 1n back ylrd wtth deck AlsoTretl• space All hook- ~s
Located 7 mll81 from HolzBr CAll after 2p m 304-773
Hotpllll on Rt 160 Auallable 58 51 Mason WV
MDarch 1 t360 P• month If
Interested clll 614-28&amp;-1316
(Jackson) after 7 P m
46 Space for Rent
ap.-tment W D hookup. remodeled. Serurity deposit Call

64

patd very

bath. 0110 00 304-676-2722

• mod•n

w Va

needl

1MtbyNEA.II'IC

~;:;;:;;~;"";~:;;;~;:;~~r;~=:;:r.;::;:;;::;s:;;::::::]

2 pt8Ct't 11\ttng room sun:e rose

3718EOH

Two

sa1 .. 2. BR

814-388-

dmnetto sels· oomo drop INf.

From

nice. refrenoas requlred Two bedroom, 4 rooms
and bath filOUnd lwei, referen ces

For Rent or

01
~~

Maple corn• hutch cradensa,

Mono• and Riv,..lde Apon

ment 1

One 3 room furnished utihlll!ll

676-1082

304-99&amp;-3929.

814-379-2110

Would Utlie to buy front blade to
fll Wheel HorN IMn 'D'IICtor

porch. 1nckldM storage building.

t4600 Call
25&amp;-8&amp;53.

o

992-3711 EOH

furmshed 3

446-0039

101\ 4 ......
~Ne. klw mlldll&amp; rurw good.

t a c1Uti• wa1iabla. Call 614-

room cottage. Employed ad.Jita
or rMwed No pats Ref &amp;
diiiiPOSit Call 61 4-446·2543

For Rent· Nicety

'78 c iMoly hllf

sfter 6 PM. 614-256-6878

~llliiCICirll

•

One owner 2 door cw or truck
Wll p-,. cash Guns. kntves.
wetch•. •fwmmachlnery Call

c.-pet. apph.-.cea Ref &amp; dBf'
No pets. Call 814-446-1183.

hmd k&amp;K 304-675-1076

875-e&amp;U.

Jur* Clrs wfth or Without

6 rooms &amp; beth w / blaement,

3 bedroom. located tn Syraoose
Call 614 992 7889 after
600pm

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1888 SunsHne mobile home.

2282

or s~l 3 BR modern home
• PatriOI S250 mo plus dep
Will help finance C•ll 61~446-1340 or 614-446-3870
Rent

614-992-7419.

1988 Vldori.-.. 2 beG'oom. til
electric mobile home. Glrdan
tub, b~ win-. loodod. Pric«&lt;
10 111 E.:ell111t condtUon. Call
304-882-3451 oft• 5·30 p.m

TOP CASH pold to. '83 modo! "

25 83 9 IO 5 daily

99 2-3122.

2 be*oom. 12K65 moble home
tor sala. underpinning. awning.

glvMWaya

8

2 be~oom. full b•ement, fits 1
Acrou hom pl.,.ground
Priced to alllll. $:23.500. 325
SprlngAw , 614-992·6138

Hoot• for

rent

for

1in CJ-11 Joop P~cola •1100
Call 8t4-241-15017
'78 ChovV CUOiom v.,, 13.000
mil•. 13.500 00. 304-1&amp;&amp;3829

Aman a r efng llnonmtcroweve
oven 1 1 500 BTU k•osane
heator, table &amp; 4 chairs Cell

51 Household Goods

814-44&amp;-7803 01 44&amp;-6117

Moving Sale-In Oltege. 1'\li! mile
on 141 Goodfirept~ee. stove, &amp;
refregerator Sat Free

3 BR house. Deposit requ•ed
10 OldFonTra11 Cstl614-44&amp;-

814-28&amp;-1941

ful ltrnilhed EJCet cond. C1ll

&amp;Vicinity

pricoaboongpoid Colt814-44&amp;- •

HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE AVAIUILE

Port•brook SubdN•IOn. Call

614-441-4189

en do

~----------·

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

Vfl/fY ettrective brn::k 4 be&lt;toom
2 bit h. f.,.,ily room with firepi ICe. formal dining. l•gelhling
room. 30 fl cuttom oak kitchen
cabinetl, olk wooMork. finllh
be11mn 2 e• g•age. l.atel
l.,dl~ed lot. 4 mil• from
Hol1er Hpaptt.e off At 36-

AVONIII•-11 Shirl!!¥ Spa•a

~:::;;;:; 1-31-'8B-1 mo

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

Homes for Sale

304-875-1429

CALL 992·6681

MOBILE
HOME PARk

31

Fluffy grev ldtten to good home.
litter trained. phone 304-675-

Lost and Found

Rent

3 8R hou .. full bMtYnant &amp;
garage Across from Datry
~"" $275 a mo Call 614-

814-992 3894

6

for

814-448-7208

2 story 3 be~oom, 2 bltN, on
riv• In Mlddaport Coli 81498&amp;.4134 evaninge and week

Aaafatant Director Nursing. 124

Homes

Apt!

IUto trttnt , 3,000 rpm, Stal
converter, front It r • lodl.
differ entl•l . 1971 Dodge
Demon bodr • tnglne " •
II" · 1100 lnqui'• • Ton!Jf't
dr.. It 4- 446- 30911.

5 30PM

3BR .2bethl. futlcarpeted Call

AVON· AI • - Call Menlyn
We•• 304-882·2845

8414 altar 8·30

be~oom

p-

be ,.., 10

Cuot""*od Oodgo 4•4 w / lfl
._
mogw-. olr
now 1111 g.te. 440 .-.s. bult.

k~.

8 60 Call 614-446-9617 after

requud , 304-675-2722

"""'"'ov

BINGO

oF aus•rss

Real Estale

full blaadad Alao B01dtw C olllo.

31H

IN MEMORY OF
RICHARD JUNIOR
JACKS
who passed away
Feb 18. ,987
We are thtnk~ng
of
you today. tomor·
row and always

Call (Rafundable)

Avon c1lllng. Want to do som•
tl*lg niW .. d •ctting7 Fr•
start· up kit durtng month of

Reasonable Rates,
Fully Insured

Middleport, Ohio

Jobll •18.037 to

1-518-418-3811 EXT F1822

old full blooded female

ea950 1nvesr:ment Call 24
hourw. 1 80(1-327-1919

Gcr.r•nm~~l

for fed«ll List 24 hoora

Giveaway

Compfi'IV "tabl11hed ICCOU nts
Abaokltaty no competition E•rn
uptpl1500smonth Part time
No expenence nece~sarv Inter·
est fr• expent10n lft•start up

GOVERNMENT HOMES I from
8 1 00 (U Rap llr) Foredosur•
R,.Pos, Tu: Oehnqun Prop•·
t1es NOW SELLING THIS

Vour ere1

2708 Call for llttlngs or 111111

3

ING CO reoommendl that you
do butineu with people you
knOW' end NOT to .,.d montrf
through tM mail untl you h... e
II"Nelttgltad 1M offering.

5104

•e9.40&amp; lmmedill:e H1r1ngl

HEAP. Me1g1 County Dept of
Human Servic• and HEAP
vouchers We c., grve you
prompt delw•1es ExceiiiOI' Satt
Works Inc Pom~~ror. Oh1o

4

NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHI

Wedneadlv. Febru1ry 2111: and

22nd. 304-422-0821 E 0 E

MODliN GUN

SALES &amp; SERVICE

FIREWOOD

GOVERNMENT JOBS
eti.04D·e59.230 va• How
hiring. Call (1) 806-887-6000

10 montM o'd Black .,dwhita
Bean wormed. had shots Cell

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG

8/ 15/Hn

ROOFING

Leesa Murphey
&amp; A~~ociales
PUBLIC
108 High Stret&gt;~
Pomeroy, Ohio 4-5769
Phon• (614) 992-2922
2-3-'89-1 mo

Middleport, Ohio

a.IJ¥ sitt• needed AH hourt.
Reference required 2 pre

c.,..,

992-

M~nag.-'1

446--8312111k furJosnn

11-16- '88-tfn

2

Must

opprlcol• Call 814-245-8232.

7 pc dlnnetlfl 1M· wood lablebf own chro me IBgS Good cond

304-882 2586

TURN KEY BUSINESS

license Call 814-441-3363 or

814-992 2403 "'814-992

SIN CE 1969
DUSn St. SYIACUII

67&amp;-2447.

H* dr.... with

Hayes Re.tty
Jack W
Reeltor

.t!.s

Of

41

Oppqrtunity

IOk for Jeff

814-992-3891

$1695

Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

Writesel

1· 27·'88· 1 mo

LUBRICATION
OIL FILTER

Mastic &amp; Certainteed 1
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown lnsulal1on
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

Howard L.

949-2682
·

INSULATION

Col. Oscar Click. Auctioneer
Help Wanted

F11&lt;tory Choke
STRIULY £NFORaDi
·11·'19-1 mo.

.t:XTENSIVE REMODELING
•VINYL SIOING. ROOANG
•METAl BUILDINGS
HOU8lNO. APT PROJECTS

304-1176-2083

Full time Sai•E xpwl.,ce helpfuL Apply In p. .on Tu• ·Fri.•
10 AM-4 PM. Riv• Front
Hondl, ask tor Chuck or Kelty

EVENINGS AFTER 4
OPEN All DAY ON
WEEKENDS
St. lt. 124, 3 Mi. past
Southern High School

12 Gougo Shotguns Only

.CUSTOM KITCHENS. BATHS

Go-Go girls wented Call collect

985-4141

S6 AND UNDER

EVERY SUNDAY
11:00 A.M.

••

Golllpolio ICF/ MR Coli 614446-7148 b o t - 8 &amp; 4•30

adlo.._L Coii814-446-816Z.

Foliage Plants
Baskets

124 BelwHn Wilkes·
vHit and Salem Center

OWNER: GREG I. ROU!H

Help Wa'll.t Full t1ma. midnJght. LPN tor 35 bed f~e~ltty 10

OHIO

""'*" • ""'"

camping.

Bunk beds w / beddlng. S229
R1 141 m C111ntenary 1!.. mileon
Lincoln Pike

Cerplll:.t Nu::e ..tting. Laundry

t::;::=::;:::;====="T----------1'182.
21
Business

EEOM/F

PHON£ DAY OR EVENINGS

KAlEN'S
GREENHOUSE

"We' fe gett'lllg 50 mewhere
with your $30 million lawsuit. They're talk!(i' settlement to the tune Of 2,000,"

ServiC•, Inc. 814-448--9840

2-15-1 mod. pd.

References

Rl.

posh:iot\1 IVIIIIeble.

A•ible h:Ktr1
up to 38
hr. / wk
Athena,
Jackson.
L1wrence,
Vinton. countiee Contect Southe... Ohio Em•genr:y Metlcel

GENERAl CONTRACTORS

GUN SHOOT

J&amp;L

TOP OF THE STAilS

11

992-5114

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Ohio-certified EMT'1 , Ad·

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

HET ......... ... 5' to 30' •

PATRICK H. BlOSSER
AUCTIONEER
PH. 304·42

...-

NO SUNDAY CALLS

I~

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMEN'S CLUB

Belpre, Oh1o
CONSIGNM£NTS WRCOM£

~~=::6::~'16;-:tsl'.:;::
lion d..dllne ill March 1. 1989

DAY OR EVENING

CHEST~R,

Jllll..,lowoon, CI•k

Vans&amp; 4W . D.

1978 Dodgo v.. Ext,. IoriO.
1-300
Copt"'"
bod- Good
tor hunt.,_. ftahlng01

Mattr eu-hal f off regul• price

Coli 8t4-44&amp;-1817

Pool Sind IP~Iicltlona, tnducf..
lngoo,....•r•umea•ndrefw·

MARCUM CONTRACTING

1~

PAT HILL FORD

"Free E1timate1"

BISSELL
BUILDERS

1~

located Off Bypass
At Jet. of Rts. 7 &amp;
143.
Oh.

HOWES GROVE PARK

are bing aeceptld
for 1889 "*'-a• of London

~- dme

73

814-4413158

Elrtra mce 2 BR , t.Jndrv roo m.
Excell ant locatiOn low uttlit u•
Se c. dep No pels Refer.,ces

Appl~.,r'll

985·4222

,.• ...,."""..,........,"

10

IRONY CAST_ .. 3• to 20• 1~
STAINLESS ............... . 20 1 lb.

New No.... lult

3·11-tfn

1~

b 1 d d
also acid oi an ro
out radiators. We also

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.

NO SUNDAY CALIS

,.,...,.I!!J
..:f!..

IRONY

PUBLIC
AUCTION

Need Mtrt c•h7 Call Awn

vanced EMT'o, Paramedltt

uc cond. 32.000 mlltl,
•e. 700 00 304-87~4431 oft• 1:00PM

V1'R1 Furnft ure &amp; Apphanou
Open Ditty, 9 AM ·5 PM
Sundav 12 noo ~ s PM

N81N one BR furnis hed IIPt tn
Rode. Springs. Pomeror. Ohio
Coli 614-992 5304 o• 44&amp;8898

Trucks for Sale

1988 C'-ntlel \4 ton plok up.

1450 . 81 4 388 9773 .

both. Coll446-44 18ofler 7 PM

pollll Dally Trit.tno. 825 Third
Avo. Glllllpolil, Ohio 45831

INSTALLATION AND SERVICE OF
liEIL ENERGY EFFICIENT HEAT
PUMPS, AIR CONDITIONING AND
95% EFFICIENT FURNACE.

ISubject to Chango

985-3844

r•

CHESTER. OHIO

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM
Paying today
Jon. 14, 1989

WELDING
AUTO &amp;
FARM REPAIR
AUTO BODY&amp;
WRECK REPAIR

Wlilabi•C.hemle~l

Sentinei-Page-9
72

Truck loads of n• fur niture
hiiYe JUSI arrived Bring your ~d
furniture &amp; TRADE·IN for new
Z Br unf.trmshed g•"Y• Cit No
pets AdutU ontv Cell614-44&amp;- 15 p tee. wood grou p, S3fS9
3748 01' 256-1903
So f• &amp;: chairs S269 7 p 1ece
cou nt ry dtnnette l et. 1550
(tndudes hu tch) S ptece be~
Furn•hed efftoen cv 607 Se
cond, Glll•polit S17 6 S har e .roon au it a $399 e!ltrll n1ce.

ComP.-tY hill op_..g for arN
sal• repr•~~ntatNe, Est1bl1shed
IIC&amp;O\Intl with groWth potMIIII
Must btaelf.mothl'etedsndh .... e
rellllble trtnlpOrtlttan Send
auma to IOJl Cl•187, c / oGaUt-

..-.10

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrighl

ev en tngs.

Effl d anw apt - 1 man Mobile
tlome below toWn oYerto ok.ng
rww ce • heat. 1GIIt1 only ref.
Cell 8 14--446- 0338

fttndoblel 1·315· 733-1082.
•• F-2732-A

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

&amp;

furm• hed 1m1M hou•e

N i cely

814-44&amp;-4397 or 44&amp;-4882

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING

I Mi, East of St. Rt. 7
"" 248 at Otesttr

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

1/ 26/1
The Family Of

s,..

3nl St.,
rv,., Oh.
2 17-'11-1 mo

c~r p et:

1183

GOVERNMENT JOBSt

or at
Veterans Memonal Hosp1lal
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy, Oh1o

992·6135

LASHLEY
SERVICE

·

3
-

Daily

Complet e ho u ..ho ld furn ilhlngs 'h m1I•Jerrlcho 304-675-

IPP ii .,a. Adults onty Aef &amp;
dep. Vwy ell., C11l 614-446-

Now Hiring THIS AREAl
f10,213 to t71.473 Coli fr•

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue. BOJt 1213
Galhpohs. Ohio 45631

..ian Houdaahllt, Own•

We Service All

•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

PH, 949-2801
Or Res. 949-2860

hohil the same 1n hiS cus-tody, that anv person clatm·
'"9 to have any Interest tn
and to Hid defendant prop-erty shall file w1th the Clerk
of thia Court h1s claim within
ten {10) days followmg thus
Not1ce 1n conform1t"y w1th
the requirements of Rule

C(61 of tiM! Supplemental
Rul• for Certatn Admiralty

Servt'

~

THURS. 9 A.M.-12 NOON
SAT. 9 A.M.-2 P.M.
Call Anyti01o Day or
IIIII"

$1 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

4 rooms &amp; b• h.

Mloml Fl33281.

Po1t110n

The

Middleport, Ohio

PICI&lt;E NS USED RJRNrTURE

Ill 1188 trii'Wel brodl.lra. For

31: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

9 A.M.·6 P.M.

44

LAFF·A·DAY

morelntormtUon ~d ttamp_.
erwelopeto· INC. P 0 Box 2139

Listenmg Dev1ces
Dependable HearJDg Aid._Sales &amp; Servic4
Heanng Evaluations For All Ages

0

•Eiectril:ol Supplies
MON.-TU£S.• W£D.·FRL

a..,.,;,,.la"
KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

r~Dir an

Parts

•Plumbing SuppliM

"Most 1o

Core racbators
heater cores. We

111 Wost Socalld, hm•oy

2

·~obile Home

•Washers •Dryers
oRanges •Freezers
•Refrigerators

W
e can

th11 notice

a fence to the point of begin·

8-3.

Columbuo,
Oh1o
43224, within 30 days of
thu last date of publication
of this notice
11127. 1213, 10, 17. 4tc

' Wilkesville Elementary
School. Wtlketvllle, Oh•o

County Court Hou•. Se·

m~ntng

The application 11 on file It
the off1ce of the Melg1

DEAD OR AUVE

19B9 at 4 ·00 p m at the
locat1on stated be'ow.

Busm'

Wllhlng to petitiOn for the
remission or midgation of
the forfeiture of the defend·
ant property may do 10 by
aubm1tt1ng a Petition for Re·
misstan or Mitigation to 0

Wilkes\lllle and 0 3 miles
south to 2 8 miles 1outhw·
est ot Salem Center. Oh1o
The apphcatton propoAS to
expand the areu for room
and p1Uar method of undM·
ground mtnmg. and provide
for p1llar removal on tho•
arns and on area pr ..
v1ously appro\led to be
rnmed and tor Iongweii

0 Box 490. Athena, Ohio
45701, has submrtted on
appllcetton to rev11e a Coal
Minmg and Reclamation
Perm1t numbered A 0355·
14, to the Ohio Oepanment

The D1vision of R.:,clama~
tion hereby gtvn nottce that
an lnfo,mal conference on
the above coal mmlng and
reclamation permit apphca·
tion w1ll be held on March 6,

WANTED

Help Wanted

BONUS INCOME
Earn noo-11100 w-~ Moil -

Televis1~n

SYRACUSE
SUPPLY COMPANY

cond Street. Pomeroy, OhiO
46769 for public v-1ng
Written comments and / or
repair Gas Tanks.
east corner of aa1d SectiOn requHtt1 for an tnformal
36. sara p01nt of beginning conference may be sent to 1---------~
being at a fence corner; the Division of ~eclamation,
....,a
~
992-21 96
thence North 1 degree 10' Fountein Square. Building
,._
.......,
Middleport. Ohio
East 776 feet along a fence B-3, Columbus, Oh•o43224 ~=========:;1
to an lfOn p1pe, thence west w1thm thirty llO) days of the 1
:=======i=-1=3-:tl:c~
558 feet to the centerline last date of publtcat1on ot
•VINYL SIDING

ship, Sacttons 1, 2E, 3E, 9,
and Gelha County. Huntmg·
ton Township, Secubn 1,
The proposed underground
m{nmg areal encompau
3.287 acres. and are located
on the Wdlcesvllle 71A: minute

approximately 0 2 m1l11
south to 2 8 mtlea south ot

Southern Oh1o Coal Com
'pany, Me1gs Mme No 2, P

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT O.F
NATURAL RESOURCES
DIVISION
0~
RECLAMATION
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
COLUMBUS. OHIO 43224
LEGAL NOTICE
INFORMAL CONFERENCE
COAL MINING &amp;
RECLAMATION PERMIT
APPLICATION # R-036510
APPLICANT Southern
Oh•o Coal Company
P 0 . Box 490
Athena. Ohto 46701

Oh1o, and bemg In SectiOn
Thoopplicationllonfileat
36. Town6North, Range14 the off1co of the Me1g1
West oftheOhioCompony's County Record... Mol go

•• required by and In confor·

quadrangle map,

ADDENDUM TO PART 1
ITEM E 161
SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE NO 1
LEGAL NOTICE

C2-B8-1 309, egamst 29. 34, 35 and Fract1on 36.

Sections 13, 26. 26, 30, 31,
32. 33 and Fract10na 7. 13.
19, and 25 and V1nton
County, W•lket\lile Town-

US GS

Public Notice

46760

of t he lotsm the subdiVISIOn

bv

Marconi Boulevard, Columbua. Ohio 43216. with reference to OEA file number
IB-89-0008.
ROBERT W. FOSTER.
Unttad States Marthal
For The Southern
D1ttnct of Ohio
121 10. 17. 24. 3tc

Ma1n Street. Middleport,
Me1g1 County . Ohio ,

adequately met. before any
are sold or offered for sale,
whether or not such sale
entails a transfer of tttle or
deed
(8) No penon shall inatall
household sewage d1spoaal
systems 1n new aubd•v•
sions, unless 11 11 to ba
tmpracttcable or madvtsable

Drug Enforcement Admin·
istrat1on. Room 404. 85

11

Bu-s iness Services=::i:::=:::::;

Public

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Friday, February 17, 1989

Middleport . Ohio

Pomeroy

-•!lid

"You
the moet ~-' tr1mrner
on lhe martial? I hOpe )'Oil're happy!"

. l

llqu•o blllodAifllfohOI' lor Olfa
Call 814-446-2974.

'

.,

�..
Friday, February 17. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

10-The Daily Sentinel

Conltnued from page 1
...
Local news· briefs ... - -..... Panel
all states In lhe performance ol lng the average of all the states."

Continued !rom page 1
Is a required duty of the Grand Jury , according to Court Balli!!
Paul Gerard.
•
·

Sheriff issues reminder
Meigs County Sherif! James M. Soulsby today reminded area
residents that !hey could take measures to help recover some
Items that have been stolen during recent breaking and
enterblgs.
Residents should record serial numbers of their items. If no
serial number is on the item, then residents should engrave
their social security number or date of birth, or other mark that
can be used to identity the Item as thel.rs, should it ever be
stolen.
"The bigges t thing to remember , Is to make a list wit h names,
descriptions a nd numbers," said the sheri!!.

EMS has nine calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports·ntne calls
Thursday; Middleport at 6:10a .m. to Chestnut Street for Ruth
Arnold to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 7:28a.m ..
Middleport at 7:33a.m. and Pomeroy at 7:43a.m. to Parkinson
Road where a truck had gone off a bridge; The truck belonged to
Wayne Peyton; No injuries; Pomeroy at 9:01 a.m. to Gilkey
Ridge for Wanda Jacks to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Syracuse at 9:15 a.m. to College Road for Ava Jo Sisson to
Holzer Medical Center: Middlepor t at 1:37 p.m. to Bailey Run
for William Sellers to Holzer Medical Cen ter; Syracuse at 4:14 ·
p.m. to Chester Ro ad for Rose Lee to Veterans. Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 6:17 p.m. to Bowles Roa d lor Patrick ·
McDaniel to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 10:17 p.m. to
Gold Ridge Road for Char les Harper to Ho lzer Medical Center.·

Bus drivers receive certificates
Certificates were issued four bus drivers when the Meigs
County Board of Education met recently In regula r session.
Issued certificates were James Vanaman for Meigs Local; and
David Milliken, . Lee Wedemeyer and Catherine Wood for
Carleton School.
Two courses of study were also approved by the Board,
Including, an accounting-computer technologis t course, and a
refresher math course, both at Meigs High.
Other business matters Included the approving of reports ..
!rom the previous meeting of the Board.

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly cloudy. with a
chance of snow or snow flu rrles.
Lows will be bet ween 20 and 25.
Northeast winds 10 to 15 mph.
Chance of snow Is 50 percent.
·Saturday: Variable cloudiness, with a high near 35.
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
Fair Sunday, with a chance of
snow or rain Monday and Tuesday. Highs will be mainly In the
30s Sunday and Monday and
between 35 and 45 Tuesday.
Early morning lows wlll be In the

teens Sunday and in the 20s
Monday and Tuesday.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UP I) - Thurs_day's .winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
_Daily Number
629.
Ticket sales totaled $1,313,981.
with a payoff due ol $631,294.50.
PICK-4
8676.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$237,614. with a payoff -due ol
$80,200.

--Area deaths-·Delphia Fortney
Funeral services for !Xlphia
- Mae Fortney, 79, of Little HockIng, will be held at 1 p.m.Satur·
day at the Little Hocking Church
of Christ. Roger A. Rush and
Stephen Fuchs will officiate and
burial wlii be in the Coolville
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Home, Coolville, !rom 7
to 9 this evening and an hour
prior to the service at the church
•on Saturday. 'Jn lieu of flower s.
memorial contributions may be
made to the building fund of the
Little Hocking Church of Christ,
Little Hocking, Ohio, 45742.

Norma Stohenbert
Norma ShJbart Stoltenbert, 99,
of Tipton, Iowa, died there on
Jan. 24. ·
Sire was born on Marcn11, 1889

A twin panel, chaired by Sen.
Rob!!rt Cupp, R·Llma, has been
examining ways of funding
schools. Its final report was
nearing completion as o! Wednesday . Both panels are far
behind slmUar ones of the Ohio
House and Gov. Richard Celeste,
which already have made
recommendations.

National Roundup
Light rai n fell Friday in
Tennesse, where an earthen dam
burst on the rain-swollen Obion
River and sent 5 feet of water
pouring Into two towns, and a
state ol emergency was declared
In Kentucky lollowlng !loodlng.
Authorities said 377 residents
In the Tennessee communities of
Rives and Obion were forced to
leave their homes Thursday by
boat. The Tennessee Emergency
Managemeent ~gency reported
50 homes and two·churches were
flooded.
Flooding also chased thousands of people from their homes
In central Kentucky as Gov.
Wallace Wilkinson declared a
state of emergency. National
Guardsmen were dispatched Into
areas swa mped by rain-swollen
rivers.
The rai ns have dumped 10
Inches ol water on parts of
Kentucky and more than 6 inches
In Tennessee since Sunday. The
National Weather Service said
flooding would continue through
the wee kend.
About 100 Kentucky National

Guard troops were put on active
duty to help with evacuations and
200 others were on standby alert .
The Kentucky River In the
state capital, Frankfort, rose to
44.8 feet - nearly 14 feet above
flood stage - by Thursday
evening, and an estimated 2,000
families had fled their homes to
seek sheller on higher ground,
saJd Larry Hodge, city lire chief
and the head of local disaster
emergency services.
The storms that began Sunday
night were blamed for at least
live deaths - four In Kentucky
and one in Tennessee. Two ·
Kentucky deaths were caused by
a car crash on a rain-slicked
road. Two people in Kentucky
and one in Lebanon, Tenn.,
drowned.
Elsewhere, 4 to 8 inches ol
snow fell early Friday from in
Washington state and Montana.
Spokane, Wash. , had 7 Inches
of new snow on the ground and
winter storm warnings covered
the region from northeast and
east central Washington state
through northern and central
Idaho Into northwest Montana.

DELPJIJA FORTNEY
in Ches ter Township. and was a
sister ol the late Ina - Stobar t
Kautz. Funeral services were
held at the Trinity Lutheran
Church at Tipton on Jan. 27.
Local survivors include a nephew , Dale Kautz, Pomeroy, and
several cousins.

District 13. Daughters ol America, will have a practice Saturday at 1 p.m. at the Chester lodge
hall . All members are urged to
attend since the district needs
more parti cipa tion, it was
reported.

Page 86

Page B-1

M

198S FORD. LTD BROUGHAM ..... S449S

Page A8

.

•

Vol24No. 2
C&lt;lpylighlod 1989

•

SEE OUR NICE SELECTION Of OTHER LATE MODEL
AUTOMOBILES &amp; VANS AT OUR NEW LOCATIONS.

By GLENN McCASLAND
OVPStarr

MUST MAKE WAY FOR
SPRING MERCHANDISE

1 DAY ONLY
SATURDAy FEB. 1 8
I

1/2 PRICE
STOREWIDE
MEN'S, WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S
Hushpuppy
Naturalizer
Nurse Mates
LA Gear
Autry
Pony
Adidas
D. Meyers

Florsheim
Woverine
Red Wing
Weinbrenner
LaCrosse •
Tingley
Foot Joy
Jarman

DELIVERING - More than U tons ol
recyclable Items were delivered to the .Silver
B):'ldge parking lot Saturday morning to the
second Recycling Day. More than 110 area

residents dropped of such recyclable Items as·
glass, cardboard, newspaper, tin, and aluminum . .
A third Recycling Day will be held In May.
(Times-8entblel photo) .
.

Community supports Recycling Day
By MARGARET CALDWELL
Times-Sentinel staff
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County
sponsored another successfuli
~ecycling Day Saturday, with
more than 110 cars delivering 6.5
tons o! recyclables Items. said
Terri Belville, program man·
.. ager for the Gallla County Litter
Control Program.
"I want to extend may sincere
thanks to all those whO donated
recyclables as well as all the
volunteers," Belville said. "I
think each ·time , we have a
recycling day It Increases !he
awareness ol today's waste

problems."
Recyclable Items collected at
the Silver Bridge parking lot,
behind Star Bank, between9a.m .
and 1 p.m., were 3,500 pounds ol
glass, which will go to Point
Pleasant recycling; 1.5 tons of
cardboard, 2.5 tons of newspaper, and 1.000 pounds oftin , all
which wlll go to the Athens
County recycling; and 500
pounds of al~mlnum, which will
go to the Gal Upolls Area Jaycees.
Proceeds !rom the collected
Items will go toward the payment
of the new irrigation syStem In
the Gallipolis City Park.
Volunteers on hand to assist in

SUGAR RUN MILLS
992·2115

.

POMEROY

unloading the deliveries were
representatives from Mason Association for a Clean Environment (MACE), Gallipolis Area
Jaycees, Gallia County Sherlfrs
Department, Athens County Litter Prevention and Recycling,
and GalUa County Litter Control.
Also on hand were numerous
community volunteers.
"It was something to have
volunteers from the community
to give up their Saturday morning," Belville said. " I want to
thank them for coming In and
staying throughout the
morning."
(See COMMUNITY, A7)

"I'm extremely glad to hear this
welcome news," Lewis said. "I
want to thank both senators for
their worl; in helping with .this
project from the outseL"
The anny settled a payout of
some $2 million to two businesses
and the development authority on
Wednesday, Dec. 21, 1988.
The action left Mason County in
the black with regrd to the old West
Virginia Ordnance Works Military
Reservation with the final arrangements.
At the time of the settlement,
deads were filed in the Mason
County Courthouse showing the
area to be the No. 1 federal Superfund site in West Virginia.
The atea involved is most com-

monly referred . to by residents as
the TNT section of the Robinson
District.
Byrd and Rockefeller said they
were pleased to announce the grant
and were hopeful the project would
go foJ\h at once, thus speeding the
cleanup of the groundwater treat·
ment systems in the area.
From 1942 to 1945, the WVOW
site, covering about 8,323 acres,
produced Trinitrotoluene, or TNT,
and the site was contaminated.
However, when the government
turned over the site in 1945, it had
been classified as decontaminDied
had has been placed in stand-by
status. In May of 1981,
groundwater contamination was
discovered.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. :.... A
$3.6 million grant has been awarded by the U. S. Army to an Ohiobased company for the cleanup of
the Mason County Industrial Park
.off Route 62, according to West
Virginia's U.S. Senators Jay Rockefeller and Raben C. Byrd.
The contract was approved
Friday in Washington and goes to
the O.H. Materials · Corp. of
Findlay, Ohio.
In a joint announcement with ·
anny officials, the two senators said
work to complete the massive
cleanup at the former West Virginia
Ordnance Works would be completed by mid-AugusL
·
The project is the second phase
of the government's drive to rid the
COLUMBUS - Legal ethics current state of the legal profes60-plus acres of contaminated
and lawyer professionalism will sion In Ohio by Joseph T. Svete,
waste.
Byrd was able to provide $2.4 be featured topics when attor- 1988-89 president of the 20,000
million earlier for the Army to ac- neys from six Southeastern Ohio member OSBA.
·
The program will also include
quire and begin the cleanup of the counties convene at the Sportshigh priority Superfund property, man Restaurant in Athens on two continuing legal education
Saturday, March 4, lor the seminars and a business meeting
aides to the senators said.
While the conii'ICt was awarded annual meeting of District 17 of at which area representatives
io the Ohio company, Rockefeller the Ohio State Bar Association Will be elected to the Assocla· . lion's Council of Delegates and
said that many of the workers in· •(OSBAI.
OSBA District 17 includes 141 Executive Committee.
volved would be selected from {be
lawyers who reside or practice ln
The educational program, for
Point Pleasant area.
Announcement of the $3.6 mil· Athens, Hocking, Meigs, Mor- which three hours' credit has
lion ~t was termed "welcome gan, Noble and Washington been requested under Ohio's
continuing educatiOn requirenews' by Mason County Economic Counties.
The afternoon dinner meeting ment for lawyers, will Include a
Development Authority president
Jim Lewis late Friday.
will fea ture remarks on the
(See LEGAL, page A3)

Legal ethics to be discussed

Historic pres~rvation Meigs group's goal
POMEROY -Less than a year
ago, a group of Meigs County
residents keen on preserving the
past for the future, jobled together and began meeting with
Pomeroy VIllage Council to urge
passage ol an ordinance to
protect Pomeroy's historic buildIngs. The Historic Preservation
Committee, as the group Is
called, was successful in getting
Pomeroy Council to pass the
ordinance whlcll provides guidelines lor renovation of historical
buildings within the village.
But passage of the ordinance
was only a first step for the
committee. The group shares
many concerns with regard to
preserving the historical Integ-

PLEASE, NO SPECIAL ORDERS AT THESE PRICES.

HARTLEY SHOES

z

210 EAST MAIN
MAn. C. YAN·YRANICEN-OWNER
POMEROY, OliO
-r.:liiiil
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614·992·5272
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Phone system
nearly ready
: IMPACT- Pay day at Veterans Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy
• does have an economic Impact on the financial wellness of Meigs
: County. Here George'Hoffman, left, chief finance officer of the
hospital, receives departmental payroll checks from Hospital
Administrator Scott Lucas. Annual payroll for the approximate
17~ employees · of the hospital amounts to well over $2 mUllon
annually. (Times-sentinel photo)

·vMH has economic
impact on Meigs area

SAlTED OR UNSALTED

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$3.6 million TNT area
cleanup grant awarded

198S FORD LTD BROUGHAM ..... S349S

White, PB. PS, power windows, cruise, air, AM/FM. 1
owner. V-6. high mileage, excellent condition .

FINAL FALL CLEARANCE

13 Soctlono, 80 Peg•
A Multlmedie Inc. Newapeper

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CAA to meet
Gallia-Meigs Community Ac-

PEANUTS

me

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, February 19, 1989

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Partly cloudy, wllh highs
near 43.

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tnttl -

Auto., V-6, PB, .PS, air, crui$e, power windows &amp; seats.
new radial tires, IQw mileage, new car trade-in, Florida car.

Stocks

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Along the River ......... B1-8
Business ....... , ..... .......... DI
Comics- .......... ......... lnsert
ClasSllieds ................. D3-7
Editorial ...................... A2
Deaths ........................ _A3
Sports ....................... Cl-8

In Our Town: let's support v4terans.. ,

WEATHER MAP - During early Saturday morning, rain Is
forecast lor parts of the cenlrallo northern Paclllc Coast, the Ohio
Valley and the mid to south Atlantic Coast States. Snow Is forecast ·•
for parts of the northernmost Pacl!lc Coast, the northern
Intermountain Region, parts of the northern Plains, parts of the 1,
upper Ohio Valley and the northern portions of the mid Atlantic 1
Coast. Snow Is possible In most of the northern Plains and parts of :.
the upper Mississippi Valley . Rain/ showers are possible In lbe I.••
GuU Coast with rain possible In the south Atlantic Coast. UPI
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THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

Inside

Beat of the Bend: Check it ouL ..

'IJQA .... ..,

....-

Cl

College cagers in home stretch

Gallians win
top honors
at Reds,.

tlon Agency wlll hold its regu larly scheduled meeting on
Thursday, Feb. 23. The public Is
Invited to attend and provide
community fnput. The meeting
will be held at 5:30 p.m. at the
Guiding Hand School In
Cheshire.

Ladles have meeting
Members of the Bas han Ladles Demolay to meet
Auxiliary di scussed the menu lor
A Demolay meeting will be
a jitney supper to be held March held Monday, 7:30 p.m., at the
17, from 5 to 8 p.m., and ways to Middleport Masonic Temple.
get new members to join the Election ol officers will be
group, during their most recent discussed.
meeting.
The meet ing was conducted by
Auxiliary President Becky Pullins. The secretary's and treasurer's repo rts were given by Kathy Dally stock prices
Riley a nd Lou Pit ze r, (As oll0:38 a.m.)
respectively.
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Group to meet
The Meigs County Genealogy Am Electric Power .. :.. ........ 26'4
Society will meet Sunday, 2 p.m. , AT&amp;T .. ............. .. _.. _.. ..... _.... 31%
at the museum on Butternut Ashland OH ........................ 34~
Ave., -Pomeroy. Rev. Roger Bob E;vans .................. ........ 15%
Grace, of the Racine United Charming Shoppes .... :·......... 16~
Met hodist Church, will present City Holding Co .... .. ... ......... 20%
various records from area Federal Mogul.. .................. 51 y.
churches. Everyone welcome.
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... ....... .... .49%
Heck's ................. ;............... ~
Dance scheduled
Key Centurion .................... 14~ .
The Belles and Beaus Western Lands' End .......... .............. .30%
Square Dance Club is sponsoring Limited Inc .......... .... ..... ...... 31
an open dance on Saturday, from Multimedia Inc .. ..... ............ 84\lo
8 to 11 p.m., a t the Pomeroy Rax Res tau rants ................ .. J Va
Senior Citizens Center. Caller Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15%
will be Billy Gene Evans . All Shoney's Inc .................... .'... 8%
wes tern square dancers are Wendy's Inti.. ...................... 6*
welcome.
Worthington Ind ................ .21Va
(Federal Mogul ts ex dividend
Fellowship slated
today)
The Meigs County Churches of
Christ Men's Fellowship will
meet Monday, 7: 30 p.m. at !he
Zion Church of Christ. Everyone
Veterans Memorial
welcome.
Thursday admissions- Laura
Arnold, Middleport; Wanda
To speak
J . Wilmer Lambert, D.D., Jacks, Shade; Vivian Coy. RuDistrict Superintendent of Naza - lland; Marvin Teaford, Racine;
rene Churches for the Central Bertha Parker, Pomeroy; Dana
Oh lo District, will speak Sunday Wyant, Pomeroy; ErnestBarrln- .
evening, 6 p.m ., at the Pomeroy ger, Reedsville.
Thursday diScharges - Ann
Church of the Nazarene. Pastor
Alva Luckeydoo, Connie
Thomas G. McClung invites the
public.

Including Products Formerly
Msrkotod By Uniroyal

180 MULaiiY

50 cents

-------Announcements~~-----

TINGLEY BOOTS; JUST THE
THING FOR SPRING MUD
Come on in - put your toes into our
line of Tingley Boots. We've 20t famous molded over-the-shoe rubber
footwear, made right in the USA.
Sturdy handcrafted over·the·sock
boots, formerly marketed by Uniroyal
- lace ups, pull-ons, insulated and
non-insulated. And for the economy
minded the most comfortable, perfor·
mance, molded PVC over·the-sock
boots you've ever met, also mede in
the USA. All well-made~ All comfort•
ble. All Tingley_The whole line is here
for you to put your toes and feet into.

Sunday

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.Expect ... ----~co;.;n;;;tin;.;u;.;e;.;d...;;fr;..:om~p;..:a""g"-e.::.1_ __

Hospital news

George Walden
Former Coolville resident,
George Raymond (Ray ) Walden,
90, of 1611 25th Street , Parkersburg, W.Va., died Wednesday at
Holmes Regional Medical Center
bl Melbourne, Fla. , following a
brief Illness.
· ·
Born March 14, 1898 in Coolville, Mr. Walden was a son of the
late Samuel and Hope Plumbey
Walden. He was a 60-year
member of Coolville Lodge No.
. 337 and the Aladdin Temple in
Columbus. He was a produce
salesman and car salesman and
he operated a Sunoco Service
Station In Little Hocking.
Survivors include a daughter
and son-in-law, Beth and Floyd
Matlack, of Parkersburg,
W.Va.; a granddaughter, Cheryl
PUrdy, of Columbus; a grandson,
Kent ~allack, of Gramby,
Conn.; six great grandchildren:
three sisters, Anna Walden,
Mabel Brandenberry and Dora
Lockhart, all of Coolville; and
several nieces and nephews.
Mr. Walden was preceded In
death by his wife, Marian E.
Meredith Walden, in AprU, 1964;
and three brothers.
Services will be Saturday, 3:30
p.m ., at the Wpite Funeral Home
In Coolville with Rev . Jell
Burdsall o!flclating. Burial will
be In Coolville Ce metery .
Friends may call at the funeral
home today (Friday) !rom 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. and on Saturday
from 1 to 3: 30 p.m. Coolville
Lodge No. • 337 will conduct
ma1jlfllc services tonight, 7:30
p.m., at lhe funeral home.

its students on college entrance
examinations, national achievement tests and student graduation rates,'' reported the panel,
headed by Sen. Richard Schafrath , R-Loudo nvllle.
"Further, we believe that Ohio
should attain that quality rankIng while Increasing its per pupil
expend iture at a rate not exceed-

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POMEROY - What wllh extremely limited Industrial and
manufacturing operations taklng place In Meigs County to
bolster the .economy, Veterans
Memorial Hospital ranks among
!he top contributors to the
economic welfare of the county.
In 1989, the local hospital will
be operating with a $6,000,000
plus budget, much ol which will
be pumped Into the local economic picture through the remuneratlon of employees at the
Institution and local expend!·
tures fQI' utilities, repair and
maintenance, and Insurance.
Em p 1o y e e s r P c e I v e d
$2,2743,803ln salaries durlng1988
or an average of. about S1B~.567
every mo.nth of the year. l~
addition another $519,485 was

expended In 1988 for employee
benefits with the local economy
again benefiting.
The hospital spent $128,709 for
utilities and telephone s~rvlces
last year and $73,775 for food
supplies. Insurance fees carried
locally amounted to $99,600.
Repair and maintenance expenditures, with local firms used
quite frequently, amounted to
$254,266 for the year.
The local hospital employs
approximately 175 men and
women In carrying out the
variety of patient services provlded at the Institution. The
employee !igure does not Include
the medical staff.
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
located at 115 E. Memorial Drive
In Pomeroy will observe Its 25th
.. anniversary lhls year.

POMEROY - New digital
switching telephone equipment
representing a $2 million Investment for GTE North Inc. has
been delivered to GTE 's Pomeroy o!flce. Conversion to the new
digital switching office w!ll take
place on July 15 and GTE
employees will spend the next
five months Installing and testing
the new central office
equipment.
The new switching office will
make It possible lor PomeroyMiddleport subscribers to take
advantage of custom calling
services.
Custom services are Call For·
warding, which can forward
calls to another location; Call
Waiting, which alerts a user to an
Incoming call when the line Is
already In use; Three:way Calling, which adds a third party to a
conversation already In progress; and Speed Calling, which
connects as many as 30 frequently called numbers by dialIng Just one or two digits.
The new equipment will eventually allow other long distance
carrier$ besides AT&amp;T to serve
this area.
Local GTE employees have
received'' extensive training In
Installing, malntalnblg and operating the new equipment which
· arrlved•Thursday In Pomeroy.

rity of Pomeroy In particular and greatest assets are Its histortca•
Meigs County as a whole, and buildings and Its location on the
continues to meet regularly at Ohio River. If theylllagecould be
the Community Action Agency In restored, Powell believes that
Pomeroy to discuss and act upon "tour buses traveling !rom the
those concerns. In the near Mar let \a-Parkersburg area
future. the committee hopes to be down Route 7 to Gallipolis, might
meeting In an office of Its own, choose to stop In Pomeroy."
located on the second floor over Committee members also note
the Pomeroy Chamber ol Com- that renovation of Pomeroy's
merce ofllce on East Main buildings would not only improve
Street,
the appearance of the village, but
The committee is comprised of might also attract new buslseverallocal resi&lt;jents,lnciudlng nesses to the village.
business people, retired people,
But although the committee
l!!lucators and others. Those hopes new businesses will evenInvolved with the committee feel tually cqme to Pomeroy, the
that the historic value of many committee does not believe, as
structures outside Pomeroy's explalnedbycommltteemember
downtown historic district are Bill Quickel, that a business
being overlooked, and that those moving Into town and just
structures are Important not only
"throwing up any kind ol a
to Pomeroy, buttoMeigsCounty,
building" Is the way to Improve
Southeastern Ohio and the State
the village. Likewise, to take a
of Ohio.
buUdlng or historic value and try
Committee member Mary Poto turn It Into a modern structure
well points out that Pomeroy's
improves neither the building

BJUDGE TO BE REPLACED - The Ohio
Depanmeat ol Tran1poriallon bas aecepted the
bid ol Dill Construction Co., ol stockdale, Ohio, to
replace this state Route 7 Bridge, over Raccoon
Creek, approximately 8 miles south of GaiUpolls.
Joe Leaeh, ODOT Dlalrlc&amp; 10 Deputy Director,
said the bridge will be a continuous steel beam
supentruc&amp;ure with relnforc~d concrete. A

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nor the overall historic aspect of
Pomeroy.
The main goal In the minds of
most members of the committee
Is the complete renovation of
downtown Pomeroy. For this
reason, the committee encouraged the passage of the ordinance by Pomeroy Council to
protect what remains o! Pomeroy's history. ·
~
As explained by Frank Porter
Ill, who heads up most meetblgs
of the committee, "on one hand,
the ordinance Is a very sweeping·
ordinance; yet at the same time,
there Is much leeway ."
Committee members and
Pomeroy Vlllage Council realize
that many ol the old structures In
Pomeroy are unsound and cannot' be salvaged, but with the
ordinance, before an old bu lldlng
can be )egally torn down, "we
will hopefully be allowed to
photograph and document the
(See HISTORIC, page A3)

temporary brldre will be buill to maintain traffic
durlar consll'uctlon. Leach said I he proJect 11 part
of ODO'rs statewide bridge replacement pr&amp;[p'am for older bridges In Ohio. The RaccoOil
Creek bridge was baUt In 1930. The proJect Is
expj!eted to be compleled June 38, 1990,
(nmes-Sendnel phoiO)

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