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                  <text>Pae•

Thursday. March 9. 1989

Pom&amp;ioy-Mktdleport. Ohio

16-The Daily Sentinel

I

Beat of the bend

When's the county fair?

I

Ohio Eta Phi meeting held
at the Senior atlzens Cente r.
The meetln~ was opened by
vice-president Becky Triplett
and plans for the golf tournament
were discussed as well as the St.
Patrick's Day dance that will be

It was voted by Ohio 'Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi SororIty, that the chapter will donate a
ham and canned goods to a needy
family at Easter, and also give
$20 to the American Cancer
Society at a recent meeting held

held on March 18. 8: 00p.m. a t the
Senior Citizen's Center , Tickets
are $4, single, and $8, couple.
Joyce Douglas gave the cultu·
ral report and also served
refreshments.

Now you know
The Great Society, the term
used to describe President Lyndon B. Johnson's objectives lor
America, was actually coined !iO
years before he took the Oval
Office. It was the title of a book by
the famous liberal writer Gra·
h.a m Wallas hi 1914 .

would work for the town? As I
By BOB HOEFLICH
Perllaps, If we look ahead to recall, · once upon a time, a
summer, t11e weather will warm slingshot did the trick against the
glan I. Do keep sm !ling.
1.1~ Jet's try
that.
The Me
County F
Board has re• cillved approval
()f dates (or the
1989 county fair
and they are Aug. 15 through
Aug. 19. The fair board Is busy
planning even more action for
,the 1989 event.
Grandstand entertainment has
been booked for the most part
and will Include an appearance
·.
by McGuffey Lane out of Co tum·
bus. This Is a popular group In
our area. This year the fair board
Is booking grandstand entertainment for Friday and Saturday
evenings - the nights when the
'A Division Of The First Huntington National Bank, Member F. D./. C.
tractor and truck pulls are held
~----------------~
~----------~~~--,
at the far end of the race track
Ulfleld. Previously, there was no
grandstand entertainment on
Stockl8994
those evenings.
One of the groups which will
•• 4001
FINANCING AVAILABLE
appear on Friday evening will be ·
Stoc:k f 8916
t '4000
TO
Restoration Jazz which comes
'highly recommended. Groups
QUALIFIED APPLICANTS
being booked for Friday and
(UP TO 60 MGrHHS)
Saturday nights· have been
warned of possible noise coming
from the truck and tractor pull
area, but are coming anyway.
Incidentally, draft horse show
3ATTHJS PRlC£!
Y 1 AVAILABLE/
activities are being extended fpr
SALE
PRICE
SALE PRICE
the 1989 fair with special events
OR
8
29
11
OR
8
'featuring draft horses to be
8
PER MONTH
JUST
JUST
staged and a District Holstein
!!how Is being lncorpocated Into
the 1989 fair schedule.

CE SALE

'88

Special Rate Offered By Citizens National* Of Point Pleasant, WV
HURRY! THIS IS A LIMITED TIME OFFER!

'88 FORD E-150
ERSIQN VAN"

'88 RANGER 4X4
XLT
IM

ON ALL
REMAINING '88
MODEL NEW OR
USED CARS AND
TRUCKS!

31&amp;

11,408

-----~--

Then there's July .
There have been several community July 4th celebrations In
!he county over the past years.
This year Pomeroy will be
·getting Into the action.
The Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce will be bringing Phil
Dirt and. the Dozers In for a
concert at Marauder Stadium in
Pomeroy on the Fourth of July.

EXTENDED
SERVICE
CONTRACTS
AVAILABLE ON

FamUy Circle Is the theme of a
special get·together to be held at
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing
a .. Rehabilitation Center, 36759
Rock Springs Road, at 7 p.m. on
Saturday, March 18.
Friends and famllles of residents at the center are Invited to
attend the event which will
provide residents with social
opportunities not only with famIly, but with community friends .
Often residents feel cut-off and
ISolated from the community and
friends and this evening wlll~Je
filled with an opportunity for an
Information exchange. High·
lighting the evening will be
Spring Review, a variety presentation featuring community talent. There will be door prizes and
refreshments.
For any· Information on the
upcoming event, do call Jan
Buskirk at 992-6606. There may
be some way In which you can
help make the evening even more
interesting. Jan will be happy to
hear from you and can field any
&lt;JI:Ie&amp;tlons you might have.

--------

Pomeroy's being sued by the
stale for being unable to comply
~th EPA regulations seems
Incredible. Instead of help, you
~hassled. Wonder If a slingshot

.
•

Qoote of the day
'JIJ V•lled PNM laleraa&amp;loul
• Se111te Republican leader Rotiert Dole, on the pending vote by
the Selllte on the nomination of
Joba Tower as defense
secretary:
~1

ki\OW lbe numbers In this
(Democrats to Republicans). It would take a
llllracle at this point tor John
'lQwer to be confirmed.''

bcfdY, 55-45

Daily Number
920
Pick4l307

•
Vol. 39, No.213
Copyrighted 1 989

'88 FORD FESTIVA

'88 MERCURY TRACER

'88 JEEP WRANGLER

2 DOOR LX

_4 DOOR

''
Stock 11 8524

SALE PRICE
OR
JUST

WAS *11,820

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehou.se Reporter
COLUMBUS - Advocates of
sportsmen appealed to the Ohio
Hpuse Finance Committee
Thursday to elbnlnate a $2.4
million "chargeback" of the
state Wildlife Fund for services
rendered by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources.
Tom Addis, execu live director
of the Wildlife Legislative Fund,

a lobbying group, told the com·
mlttee hunters and fishermen
support the state's wildlife pro·
grams, enjoyed by all Ohioans,
through their license fees .
''The Division (of Wildlife) and
Its fee-funding has always looked
like a juicy apple to be plucked
for someone else to eat, and that
Is what the indirect chargeback
represents," said Addis .
"It is a way of making the

Shamrock
Ball set
March 17

hunter and fisherman pay for
everyone else's benefit, when he
is already the benefactor, and not
a burden on state government."
The Finance Committee finished taking testimony on the
revised House version of Gov.
Richard Celeste's $25 billion
budget for fiscal 1990-91. Ex·
pressing some satisfaction for
House additions , but sUI! lobbying for more, were human

.

-

By JULIE DILLON
Sentinel News stall
For Robert Gibnore, and his
wife Jean, the second annual
MDA Shamrock Ball is more
than just an opportunity to have a
good time.
When their gandson, Brian
!" , -"- ..
Walls. of Gahanna, was 18
'·~··""
'"'
•
months old he was diagnosed as·
{.:.ro m-J&lt;t
,J
having the deadliest type of the
r()f:J\IW'&gt;l"''
·
'·'
q'l
disease known as Duchenne
.. oft/: •
muscular dystrophy. Life expectancy for this particular type of
MD is 22·23 years.
Brian, who is 16, could not get
around without the use of his
motoriZed wheelchair that was
given to him by the MDA. He
receives treatment at University
Hospital In Columbus whlc~,
according to Gilmore, Is known
for Its work In the area Of
muscular dystrophy.
The one thing that makes this
disease so difficult Is that It
doesn't affect the mind, Gilmore
DISPLAYS SHAMROCK BALL POSTER- Robert Gilmore Is
said.
seen here displaying one of the many posters thai can be seen
Brian attends a regular school
around lown advertising the Second Annual Shamrock Ball, a fund
that is equipped for the handiraising project for muscular dystrophy.
capped, but other than that
receives the same treatment as
$10 per couple, $6 per person in
any other student, and Is In the discovery.
The second annual MDA Sham- advance , or $12 per couple, $8 per
upper one third of his class.
The Gllmores, who are the rock Ball, sponsored by Riepen- person at the door. Entertain·
Meigs County co-chair men for hoff Distributing and Middleport men1 will be provided by the
MDA, work to raise money for Trophy's will be held to help raise group "Country Blend. ·· There
will be an auction · during tlie
research to help find a cure for money for more research.
event,
In which baseballs, autoAnheuser -Busch, · whose local
the disease.
Gilmore noted that recently independent disirlbutor is Rie- graphed by players of the Cincinresearchers have discovered a penho!f in Jackson, raises about nati Reds, will be available.
way to Isolate a protein, known as $6 million a year for the MDA.
Because there Is no local MDA
dystrophyn, which Is a chemical This is a combination of money office, the Gllmores are hoping
in normal muscles. This protein raised !rom corporate headquar- that people will come out and
is the· missing Ingredient In the ters as well as other independent support the organization by gomuscles of people with MD. By distributors, like Riepenhoff. ing to the ball, as well as getting
'· Injecting the protein into the ·Anheuser-Busch has been a cor- involved In other lund raisers for
body of a person with MD, the porate sponsor of the MDA for MDA
muscles seem to get stronger, he years.
"It's our hope that the extra
said.
The ball will be held March 17, dollars raised here wlll be the
To say the least the Gibnores 8 p.m . at the Ametlcan Legion ones that help find a cure,"
are "elated" with this recent Annex in Middleport. Tickets are Gilmore concluded.
&gt;

SALE PRICE

8120•

Stock II 8633

Stock# 8206

810,.520

OR
JUST

'11973
PER MONTH

SALE PRICE

88555

OR
JUST

'15822
PER MONTH

'

QUOTED IN THIS AD ARE BASED ON $1,500 DOWN· CASH OR '111ADE ·11.8% FIXED RATE FOR eo MONlliS

I

12210, 2 doors, coupe, ~ cyl.
, air 00f1d:, auto. trans., PS, PB,
windows, power seat, power
. ~It wheel, et~~ise 00f1trol,
' stereo tape radial tires,
seats, rear window defog.
I

WAS

NOW

1988FORD
TAURUS Gl
Stock t 12190, 4 dom, sedan, lront
wheel driw, air cond., auto, trans., PS,
PB, power windows, power door locks,
tilt wheel, cruise control, AtNFM radio,
bud&lt;et seats, rear window defog.
WAS

$ll,OOF '10,995

NOW

$9750

1988 CHEVY S..15
Slocl&lt; t 9604 t. 2 doors. 4 wheel drive,
V-8, air00f1d., stand. trans., PS, PB, tilt
wheel, cruise control, AMIFM radio.
stereo tape, radial tires, bud&lt;et seats.
1/2 ton pickup, sho" wheel base, rear
step bumper, au~ . luel tank, gauges,
sliding rear glass.
•
WAS

'13,495

$12,

NOW

.....................................

"'uRNPIKt
OFFERS YOU

THE
TRI-COUNTY'S
LARGEST
SELECTION OF
PftE..OWNED
CARSfl
TRUCKS!

1988 LINCOLN
CONTINENTAL

1988 PONTIAC
GRANDAM
Stock I 93071, 2 doors, sedan, coupe,
front wheel drive, 4 cyl., air cond., auto.

trans., PS, PB, power windows. cruise
control, AMIFM radio, bud&lt;et seats,
rear window defog.
WAS

110,295

NOW

Stack I 12130, 4 doors, sedan, front
wheel drive, 6 cyl., air cond ,, auto.
trans ., PS, PB, power windows, power
seat, power door locks, tilt wheel , auise

control ,AM/FMradia, stereo tape, radial
tires, white walls, rear window defog.
WAS

..... '23,995

NOW

$21 25

2 Sections. 14 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newll)aper

.Sportsmen fight chargeback on wildlife fund

• ••

Will Remain With Customer

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday. March 10. 1989

w~.~:-~ ,,,

Factory Rebates, U Any

•

Partly cloudy tonight, Sat· .
urday. Low tonight In mid 30s.
High Saturday in mid 60s .

Page 3

~!

If you have any Ideas for the
!lulland Fire Department on the
celebration do call Lilly at
742·2861 or Charlie at 742-2578and
pass that Input along.
, I'm always curious as to how
new Ideas go In Meigs County and
l was particularly Interested In
the new promotion of Mary and
Roger Gilmore who were prepar·
1n1 cookies placed on long stems
. and packaged to resemble roses
for Valentine's Day. Well - the
Idea was accepted quite well- In
fact, Mary delivered 77 boxes of
the novel creations for Valen.tlne's Day. That's neat.

230

FACTORY
REBATE OF
$750°0

BANK PERSONNEL WlLL BE
AVAILABLE AND ON THE SPOT TO
APPROVE YOUR LOAN
LIMITED TIME OFFER!

ALLVEIUCLES

;I'he concert won 't be taking
place until about 9 p.m. so you'll
have ample opportunity to attend
other celebrations during the day
and early evening. This Is a big
.financial undertaking for the
chamber so lots of tickets must
be moved. Advance tickets will
be $7 while the charge at the gate
on concert night will be $9.
Out Rutland way, plans are
nioving right along for the annual
July 4th celebration and this year
the observance activities will
honor VIetnam veterans.

sn,aoo

Ohio Lottery

Indiana
wins Big Ten
cage title

Sheriff has lead in B &amp; E case
Meigs County Chief Deputy
Sheriff Jimmer Soulsby said
today he had a lead In the
February breaking and entering
al Mike Shuler's garage , on
.
Hobson Road.
· With the assistance of Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Little, a
number of Items stolen from the
garage have been · recovered,
Including, a spray gun, air drill
and two all' rachets.
Also recovered was a tool box
and tools taken in Middleport on
Feb. 21.
It was noted that the brass and

copper stolen from the garage
has been sold at Tri·County
Recycling by a suspect using a
false name.
Soulsby advises that Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney
Steven Story will prepare
charges of disposing of stolen
property against several individuals that were responsible for
disposing of the stolen property .
Names are being withheld
pending completion of the
investigation.
On Tuesday evening, John J .
Ginther, College Road , Syra·

cuse, reported to the ' sheriff's
office that his 1980 vehicle had
been stolen and that two females
from the Reedsville · area were
suspected to be involved. He did
not know the names.
EarUer in the evening, Deputy
Brian Bissell had been called to
Syracuse on another matter and
had been at the Ginther residence in connection with the
other call. While at Ginther's, he
observed the two females. When
notlfieed of the auto theft, Bissell
went to Long Bottom and shortly
Continued on page 10

service organizations Including
the Ohio Coalition for the Ho.me·
less and Ohio United Way.
In his original budget proposal,
Celeste eliminated the chargeback on the Wildlife Fund for the
first time-in several years. He
said general revenues could
support the Wildlife Division's
share of DNR printing, postage,
telephone and other costs .
But House Democratic leaders

reinstated the chargeback,
shared equally by all divisions In
the department.
"The question is, " said Addis ,
' 'why should the hunters and
fishermen, through their license
fees, pay .Part of the director's
salaryT'
·
· Addis said the Wildlife Division
Isn't "getting a free ride" because " unlike these other dlv·
isions, the division's activities

aren't primarily for the purpose
of regulating , or benefitting ,
· hunters and fishermen . Everyone benefits from healthy
wildlife populations, whether
they hunt, fish , or not. "
Judith Bird, representing Ohio
United Way , expressed appreclalion for House res toratlon of $12
million in social se rvices subs I·
dies over th e go vernor 's
recommendation.

Jobless rate drops .
to S.l % in February
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
surge in employment among
people under the age of 25, many
of them Hispanic, helped shrink
the jobless rate to 5.1 percentin
February , the lowest level ln
nearly 15 years, the government
said Friday.
The 0.3 perc~ntage point de·
cline last mon1h reflected the
creation of 289,000 payroll jobs,
with virtually all gains In servi.c e
Industries. ·
Construction employment
dipped slightly and manufactur·
ing showed little change from
January to March , although
15,000 jobs were lost in the

automobile Indus try, according
to the Labor Department.
At 5.1 percent, unemployment
feillast month to the same level
of May 1974 and the lowest level
since a 4.9 percent jobless rat~ in·
December 1973.
The 289,000-job hike In pay roils
Is considered a healthy increase
that reflects a robust economy,
especially In light of the 415,000·
job Increase In January, revised
up from the 408,000 reported one
month ago.
Analysts pay close attention to
the job-creation figures In employment reports as one of the
earliest and most accurate signs

Meigs Grand Jury
·indicts five people
Five people were Indicted by
the Meigs County Grand Jury

after hearing evidence from
Prosecuting Attorney Steven L.
Story during last week 's session
held in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court .
David M. Persons, West Co·
lumbia, W. Va. was indicted on
the charge of felony escape, as
the result of an Incident which
occurred on Dec. 1, 1987. P~rsons
reportedly escaped from the
custody of the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department deputies
while at a hearing In the Meigs
County Court before he could be .
returned to the Meigs County
jail.
Escape Is a felony of the fourth
degree and carries with It a
maximum penalty of 18 months
In prison and a maximum fine of
$2,500. A governor's warrant to
extradite Is being sough1 by Story
for the return of Persons who Is
now in Wood County, W. Va .
BUJ Powell and Greg Laudre·
milt, both of Middleport, were
indicted on a charge of aggra vated burglary for an incident
that occurred on Feb. 8, at the
residence of Rick Lunsford,
Laurel Cliff Rd., Pomeroy·.
Laudermilt was scheduled to
be arraigned late this morning
(Friday) In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. Authorities are attempting to locate
Powell, It was reported.
Aggravated burglary Is a fel·
any of the first degree and
carries with it minimum sen ten·
ces of five to 10 years up to the
maximum of 25 years, with a
maximum fine of $10,000.
Eddie Pat rick and William

Dean Whittington, both of Middleport, were Indicted on several
charges for incidents which
occurred In Middleport on Jan.
31 .
The two men are charged with
two counts of felonious assault
and 'one count of felony Intimidation. The felonious assaults as
charged In the indictment allege
that on Jan . 31 that they did cause
Continued on page 10

of economic health. The Federal
Reserve Board has been pushing
up interest rates In the past year
in an attempt to slow economic
growth and fight Inflation. reflecting a reaction to a rapid
growth in payroll jobs.
Accordi,ng to a Bureau of Labor
Statistics survey of households ,
the 5.1 percent unemployment
rate was theresultofonlyasUght
increase in the labor pool after a
very large gain In January . The
number of jobless people declined to 6.3 mUJion last month.
Employment hit 116.9 million
with a record 62 .9 percent of the
work force having jobs .
All figures were adjusted lor
seasonal variations.
Unemployment for teenagers
fell by 1.6 percentage points to
14.8 percent while the jobless
rate for those aged 20 to 24 feli1.2
points to 8.1 perce nt. the department said.
There was little change among
people aged 25 and over.
Joblessness among Hispanics
fell 1.6 percentage points to 6.8
percent. Unemployment · among
white workers dipped 0.3 points
to 4.3 percent while blacks had a
0.1 percentage-point dip to 11.9
percent.

Local news briefs
Vehicle damaged in wreck
There were no injuries but heavy vehicle damage in an
accident between a tractor-trailer and a car at the Intersection
of Nye Ave. and East Main St., Pomeroy, early Thursday
evening.
• According to Pomeroy PoUce, William Beegle; 35, of
GaJUpolls, traveling west on East Main had stopped lor the
traffic light.
A semi tractor-trailer owned by Schmidgall Transfer Inc. and
driven by Frederick Clark, 29, Rushville, Ind. was making a left
turn from Nye Ave. onto East Main.
As the semi made the sharp Jell turn onto East Main the
wheels of the trailer struck the passenger side of the Beegie
vehicle and then rolled over the front of the car.
The car was towed away . There was no damage to the semi
but Clark was cited for left of center.

·No one hurt in Meigs accident
The Gallia-Meigs Post, State Highway Pal rol inves tigated a
one vehicle accident at 4: !iO p.m . Thursday in Meigs Coun~y .
The mishap occurred on US 33, In Bedford Township, 0.6 miles
west of mile post 4.
,
Troopers said a car driven by Lara L. Hall.l6. Shade, went off
the road, striking a Ohio Department of Trans portal ion sign
and an embankment. Damage was moderate. No one was
Injured. The patrol cited Hall for failure to maintain controL
Continued on page 10

Tower heads back to private.life after rejection
WASHINGTON (UPI) - One
day after his rejection In the
Senate, John Tower headed back
to private life In Texas and
President Bush hunted for a new
defense secretary . The Senate
was awaiting word on who the
nominee will be.
After days of brusing, acrlmori·
Jous and sharply personal debate, the Senate voted 53-47
Thursday, chlefiy along party
Jines, to deny its former colleague the Pentagon job he so
badly wanted.
In the aftermath of the vote,
Democrats and RepubliCans
,&amp;Jike expressed hope the out·
come would not permanently
damage relations between the
White House and the Senate, as

.

...

well as relations, within the
c hamber.
Bush, dealt the sharpest blow
Of his young presidency, said in a
prepared statement Issued in
New York, "Instead of the
recompense of a grateful nation,
John Tower'S lot In the past
weeks has been a cruel ordeal.
For this, I am truly sorry for both
him and his family.
''The Senate has made Its
determination. I respect Its role
In doing so, but I disagree with
the outcome."
Bush Immediately started
looking for a replacement for
Tower, and a senior adminlstra·
lion official Indicated an announcement could come by Saturday. But It was unlikely a

--

scandal.
Pentagon chief could be con·
But his drive to the Pentagon
firmed before early April, since a
new nominee must be screened
was derailed by volum.inous
allegations about drinking and
and the Senate has a two-week
womanizing, and concerns a bout
recess at the end of March.
the "revolving door" nature of
Tower, 63, went Into the history
his quick jump from negotiator to
books as the first former senator
rejected by his colleagues for a
consultant, and the potential for
Cabinet post. He was also the
conflicts of Interest.
The womanizing claims were
ninth person ever rejected for a
Cabinet job, and the first of a
largely shot down In huge FBI
newly elected president to lose.
files available only to senators,
He spent 24 years In the Senate,
although the committee said he
Including four as chairman of the
had been Indiscrete In relations
Armed Services Committee. In
with women.
1985 he began a 14-month stint as
He admitted to being a heavy
an arms control negotiator, and
drinker In the 1970s, said he had
then went to work as a defense
changed his behavior and
consultant. He served with displedged to quit drinking all
tinction as head of' the panel that
together If confirmed. Still, Deln~estigated
the Iran-Contra . mocrats were concerned that he

abused alcohol Into the 1980s, and
said he did notbelongln the chain
of command in the nuclear age.
They also dealt at length with
conflict of Interest concerns.
Republicans protested that
Tower was being subjected to a
double standard, and members
on both sides chaffed at their
Inability to cite specifics In the
FBI report to bol!tter their cases .
Democrats and many Republicans sought to portray the future
of relations between the Se,n ate
and White House as moving past
the Tower flap back to
bipartisanship.
Tower, said Dole, was "maligned with leaks and Innuendoes. We're not going to forget
that very easily."

•

lORN TOWER

.

�The Daily Sentinei-Page~3

Commentary.
The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, March 10, 1989

Arkansas airport home base_
I

lll Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

'

l5l mR~. ,..,.,_, .._-r-• ,.,.,c=~.-

.

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WIDTEHEAD.
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shoti ld be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed wHh name, address and telephone numbe'r. No unsigned l etters will be pub·

lished , Letters should be in good taste, addressing Issues , not personali-

WASHINGTON - The joke
around Mena, Ark., Is that
everyone works for the Central
Intelligence Agency.
Mena Is a tiny town of 5,000
nestled In the Ozark Mountains,
far from the Interstate. Its most
noteworthy landmark Is what
locals call "The Barry Seal
Memorial Airport," In memory
of a notorious drug smuggler.
From 1982 to 1986, Seal used the
airport as the headquarters tor a
massive drug-dealing, arms~muggllng and moneylaundering operation. During
part of that time, he was both a
smuggler and an undercover
federal Informant posing as a

smuggler. Seal paid the ultimate
price for playing both sides of the
fence: He was killed In 1986 by
the Medellin cocaine cartel of
Colombia.
State and local pollee suspect
that the Mena airport Is still
being used by smugglers. But
efforts to prove that have been
stymied at ·every turn. Pollee
have been stonewalled by the
Justice Department, the Drug
Enforcement Administration,
the FBI and even the Internal
Revenue Service. When the heat
Is on, the suspects fall back on the
line that worked for Barry Seal.
They say they work for the CIA.
Sources tell us that several

Mena businesses have used that
llne to discourage state officials
from asking too many questions
about their activities. State and
local pollee say that they have
received strange phone calls
from people claiming to be FBI
agents, asking them to stop
nosing around Mena.
•
In late 1987, a firm which once
had a minor maintenance contract with the Strategic Defense
Command, used that ties to
convince the airport authority to
bulld a security fence around a
hangar and supply more guards
to protect an airplane.
A former top Pentagon crlml·
nallnvestlgator checked through

Hes.

Administration
lacks direction
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON- The honeymoon Is just about over for President
Bush and critics are beginning to accent the negative.
The disastrous nomination of former Texas Sen. John Tower to be
secretary of defense has contributed to the poor performance rat lngs .
But there are other complaints.
Bush is being faulted for the slowness In filling key positions In the
fed eral departments; State and Defense In particular. He also Is
criticized 'lor not setting goals and policies that can be the guidelines
for his ad ministration. Although he made the remarks in a different
context, Bush said recently, ··rm lear ning."
The presidency is on-the-job training. No matter how long he has
been waiting in the wings, Bush still has to feel his way.
His predecessor, Ronald Reagan. simply was transported Into the
Oval Office. His style was to delegate duties, to be above the fray and
to take as little responsibility as possible. Certainly not the blame.
But he had a constituency that allowed that to happen. He had a
protective coaling that lasted eight years.
Bush does not have the Teflon. People expect more of him and do
not shield him from the slings and arrows bound to come his way .
White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater calls It a
··shakedown" period-where Bush is just becomi'ng acclimated to the
job. He notes that some"of the past presidents have gotten shaky
s tarts In the beginning of !heir terms as well.
But Bush is not being accorded the patience or time to grow into the
job. Because of his eight-year tenure in the previous administration.
it was expected that he would hit the deck running. Instead. he is
cautious and is paying a price.
·
While his ap pointment process proceeds at a slow pace, the
bureaucrats are running the government without much guidance.
The Pentagon, without a captain at the helm, is almost on hold
without basic di rection. The State Department under Secretary
JaJlleS Baker has yet to put a team together to cover all.the major
policy areas Including the Middle East and Ce ntral America.
Baker moves through government with his own coterie. He has a
team that goes wherever he goes. They are the same people who
worked with him at the White House during Reagan's .first term; at
the Treasury Department when he was secretary in Reagan's second
term: and now at the State Departm~nt.
He relies on these loyal aides and has given short shrift so far to the
career diplomats who have the expertise in the critical regions.
The president, meanwhile, seems to lack direction on where he is
going and where he wants to be. He wants to be known tor spotlighting
education and the environment, but he has had no bold initiatives to
rally the troops.
In many ways he appears to be carrying the weight of Reagan's
unfulfilled goals instead of charting his own course. He has yet to
branch out to make a difference.
Clearly, the transition period was a wasted time with Bush failing to
set an agenda, or to map out a blueprint for his first term.
Bush has said he does not want to be sta mpeded and he wants to go
at hi&amp; own speed. But he has too many policies under review,
particularly in the foreign policy field where vacuums do not enhance
the United States. Bush's 100 days in of!ice will be up at the end of
·April.
He does not want to be judged on that kind of calendar, but " 100
Days" have been the guideposts for assessing presidential
accomplishments back to Franklin D. Roosevelt"s era, and Inevitably
Bush will have to withstand the same kind of scrutiny within that
deadline.

Berry's World ·

Cl 11188 by NEA. Inc:.

'

"Let's say you have three basketballs and the
coach gives you two more .... "

Kalida girls capture second
straight Qivision IV cage title

B~

S&amp;L

BLOOD BANK

lack Anderson

:::....:Da~le:.._~_an_A_t_ta

____:a::.:...:.n..:.:_d

the Pentagon's top secret
" black" channels to see if the
government is sanctioning any
covert ac~lvltles In Mena . The
answer was no.
Sources famUiar with the ongoIng activities In Mena speculate
that the area Is one of several
places used to ship private aid to
the Nicaraguan contras. "They
pushed Ollie (North) aside and
kept going," one source said.
A congressional Investigator
told our associate Jim Lynch that
covert support operations that
used to be In highly visible places
In southern Florida were moved
to remote locations. The former
Pentagon Investigator said some
of those operations are suspected
of financing their private milItary aid by running drugs.
Since Seal's death, a new cast
has settled In at the Mena
airport. One business calls Itself
an "International aircraft delivery company," another "delivers aircraft parts all over the
world." State police are wonderIng why all those lnternatonal
services picked a remote base In
the Ozarks.
Among the strange goings-on
in Mena was the construction of a
primitive airstrip 15 miles from
·town. The former Pentagon
crimina! Investigator claims that
up until a year ago, the strip was
used for commando training and
to teach pilots how to land
without lights.
Last year, Rep. Bill Alexander,
D-Ark., asked the General Accounting Office to investigate
any government Involvement In
drug and arms trafficking to
Central America. He specifically
wanted to know about a link to
Mena.
A string of letters shows that
the National Security Council
told the GAO It would speak t)le
administration In .the Investigation. Then the NSC Instructed
other government agences not to
cooperate with the investigation,
and it gave the GAO no answer.

'- -"'"'

':A.?
•'

DMSION IV CHAMPS - Kalida team
members and captains SondraEhrnsberger (24),
Lisa Siebeneck (22) and Annette Trenkamp (34)
raise the state championship trophy to the fans

SPRINGDALE, Ark. [NEAlIn one class at Springdale High
School, students have briefly
suspended their analysts of
"Oedipus Rex" to thoughtfully
discuss the plight of a Classmate
receiving chemotherapy treatments for cancer.
·
A science class Is engaged In
hands-on experimentation with
taste sensations. In an adjacent
room. another class Is applying
its newfound knowledge of meteorology and geography by
producing a make-believe TV
weather program.
Here in Arkansas' northwestern corner - and In thousands of
other communities across the
nation · - administrators and
teachers, students and parents
are working to reform the
educational process.
The lnsplraton for those efforts
was the spate of reports issued in
the mid-1980s that cited the often
abysmal quality of the country's
public schools and warned of dire
consequences If im"provements
were not made promptly .
Although the subsequent

changes have not attracted as
much attention as the earlier
criticism dld, ,many civic, political and educational leaders at
the local, state and federal levels
have worked qard to implement
the reports' recommendations.
Some examples of the
hundreds of experiments now
underway: In many communities, daycare Is provided before
and after school to relieve the
strain on working parents. A
number of states award pay
increases to outstanding
teachers who assume extra
·responsibilities.
In Mapleton, Colo. computers
have been placed in the homes of
disadvantaged students. In Spartanburg, S.C. , parents are becoming more directly Involved in
their children's education. In
Provo, Utah, schools are being
operated yea[-round. In Paramus, N.J., special programs
have been established for at-risk
pre-school children.
"If we compare our schools to
what they were five years ago,
we can see how tar we've come,"

says Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton,
one of the state executives most
concerned about education. "But
It's obvious that we still have
much to do ... Wehavetodevelop
ways to teach our students to be
better problem-solvers.''
That is exactly what Is being
attempted in Springdale, a community of about 25.000 that Is the
home of TYson Foods, the nation's largest chicken producer
and processor.
At the beginning of the 198&amp;-87
academic year, Springdale
launched Its School-Within-aSchool program. It ·seeks to
replace traditional rote learning
with the development of communication, organizational.
decision-making and problemsolving skills.
Students are pressed to become active participants rather
than passive receptacles In the
learning process . Emphasis Is
placed on creativity, analysis,
evaluation, critical thinking and
synthesizing school work with
outside experiences.
Participants In the program

Robert Walters
are enrolled In four Interdisciplinary classes - Science: Inquiry
and Expression: Literature and
Fine Arts; and History and
Philosophy -as well as regular
courses In mathematics and
other subjects.
Teacher Fran Flynt notes that
"there's a lot of stress" Involved
In launching an educational
experiment, but she says It has
provided her with "the three
most challenging years of my
professional career."
The new program has had
troubles and setbacks. Springdale Hlgh.School Principal Harry
Wilson wishes more planning had .
been done before It was launched
and notes that the number of
participating students has
dwindled from 86 to 51.
But It has been an especially
noble effort in a joint program
sponsored . by the U.S. Department of Education and the
National Governors Association
to provide models for ·c hange for
the nation's 16,000 school
districts.

Media and the '88 campaign___
Wil_lia_m_Ru_she_r
We are far enough removed won the election so handily, few
from last autumn's presidential observers, even of the conservaelection now to look back and tive variety, have taken the
attempt a mature assessment of trouble to point this out. Some
the media's performance In people may also have been
covering lt.
confused because the bias dldn' t
Some liberal observers have always take the form of enthusisimply allowed their bitterness asm for Dukakls. The media
at Dukakls' defeat to color their could read the polls as well as
conclusions on the subject. Mar- anybody else, and knew Dukakls
vin Kalb, now comfortably ens- was going to lose. They therefore
conced In his own fur-trimmed needed a. scapegoat, and Dukakls
"journalism center'' at Harvard, himself was the logical one.
complained that ''TV news made
As a matter of fact, the same
no sustained effort to challenge" study mentioned above reported
George Bush. Newsweek agreed, that Dukakls' "bad press," exand blamed "the decision of actly like Bush's, outnumbered
reporters to censor themselves" · his "good press" 2 to 1. On this
when It came to criticizing Bush. basis, the study solemnly conColumnist Anthony Lewis cluded that the medla'scoverage
thought the problem was "an of the presidential campaign
Inability to deal with lies" "was notable for Its balance''!
emanating from the Bush
Missing this dis tinction Is the
campaign. ·
blunder that misled the sponsors
But such complaints are manif- of the aforementioned study: Dr.
est nonsense. They boll down to S. Robert Lichter and his col· an objection that the media leagues at the Center for Media
didn't deal harshly enough with and Public Affairs In WashingBush, whereas the most careful ton. Their own examples of the
analysts of the campaign yet media's negativism toward Dupublished (discussed below) con- kakls (cited In their report on the
clud.e d that Bush's "bad press" study, published In the Januaryoutweighed his "good press" by a / February Issue of Public Opin2 to 1 margin (66 percent to 34 Ion) prove the point.
percent).
"The air waves," they say of
The truth Is that In their Dukakls, "were Increasingly
coverage of the campaign, the tilled with complaints about his
media displayed their usual dullness, arrogance and disorblatant and ·Inveterate liberal ganized carnpallln techniques.
Wu. B11t, pr&amp;alallly IM!cau~e B11ah For every stGry that protested

Bush's new-found pugnacity,
another ripped Dukakls's Ineptitude as a counterpuncher."
Or, to put it another way, for
every attack by the media on
Bush there was a wall from them
about Dukakls' Inability to respond effectively.
Lichter Is the media analyst
whose 1980 report on hour-long
in-depth InterVIews with nearly

300 randomly selected members
of the "medii\ elite" demonstrated conclusively that they
are, as a group, far to the left of
mainstream American opinion.
(In the four presidential elections preceding 1980, for example, never less than 80 percent of
them voted for the Democratic
candidate - even George
McGovern.)

·Today in history
By United Preulnternational
Today Is Friday, March 10, the 69th day of 1989 with 296 to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Pisces. They Include
actor Barry Fitzgerald In 1888, French composer Arthur Honegger In
1892, Sherman Billingsley, owner of New York's Stork Club, In 1900,
jazz cornetist Blx Belderbecke In 1903, poet Margaret Fishback In
1904 (age 85), playwright David Rabe In 1940 (age 49), and Britain's
Prince Edward In 1964 (age 25).
On this date In history:
In 515B.C., rebuilding ofthe great Jewish temple In Jerusalem was
completed.
In 1862, the U.S. Treasury Issued the first American paper money
In denominations from S5 to $1,000.
·
'
In 1969, James"Earl Ray pleaded guilty tci the murder of Dr. Martin
Luther King Jr., and was sentenced to 99 years in prison.
In 1987, the Vatican condemned human artificial fertilization or
generation of human life outalde the womb and said all reproduction
must result frorn the ''act of conjugal love."
A thought for the day: Theodore Roosevelt once advised, "Do what
yo11 can, with what you ha\l_e, where you are."

I

·~

after beating Berlin Hiland 57-451n the Division IV
girls' final Thursday night at St. John's Arena In
Columbus. (UPl)

Indiana captures Big 10 title
By BILL WOLLE
UPI Sports Writer
Though only 3-4 early In ·the
season, the Indiana Hoosiers do
rrot feel any magic was Involved
in their rallying to surprise many
by capturing the Big Ten
championship.
No. 6 Indiana , with its 75-64
victory Thursday night over
Wisconsin, earned its first outright Big Ten title since 1983.
"I don 't think it's a miracle,"

American education bounces back

\,}

said Joel Hillman, who scored 17
points, including 13 on free
throws. "We are by far . the best
p·repared team in the
conference.''
After a poor start that included
blowout losses to Syracuse,
North Carolina and Louisville,
I!idlana has rallied to a 25-6
record, 15-2 in Big Ten play. The
Hoosiers turned their season
around wheri Coach Bobby
Knight switched to a three-guard
lineup.
"I told them never to believe a
hell of a lot of what they read , but
after the first five or six games, I
thought they did," Knight said
during a post-game ceremony
honoring his six senior players.
"They've worked awful hard.
They've done the things we've
asked them to."

After falling behind early
Thursday night, the Hoosiers
rallied to dispatch Wisconsin for
the 19th straight time. An 11-3
spurt gave Indiana a 27-21 lead
with 6: 04left in the first half, and
the Badgers never caught up.
Todd Jadlow scored all1.8 of his
points in the second half for
Indiana. Danny Jones and Trent
Jackson each scored 16 points for
the Badgers, 17-10 and 8-9.
Elsewhere Thursday night,
three other teams earned NCAA
Tournament berths by winning
conference tourneys. Rutgers
edged Penn State 70-66 in the
Atlantic 10, Middle Tennessee
State nipped Austin Peay 82-79 in
the Ohio Valley Conference and
Arkansas-Little Rock rolled over
Centenary 100-72 In the Trans
America Athletic Conference.
Also, No. 9 Michigan survived
Northwestern 88-79 and No. 19
Nevada-Las Vegas outscored
Cal-Irvine 102-82 in the quarterfinals of the Big West Conference
tournament.
At "Piscataway, N.J., Rick
Dadika hit two 3-polnters in the
final3: 14to help Rutgers hold off
Penn State and gain its first
appearance in the NCAA Tournament since 1983.
Tom Savage scored 18 points

All-TVC Dream Team
revealed by coaches
League champion Trimble
took the top honors for the boys
and Miller and Federal Hocking
split the girls honors in the TVC
All-Conference Teams that were
announced recently.
In the boys selections, Jeff
Holbert a 5-9 junior guard was
named Most Valuable Player
while Tomcat Coach Paul Pettit
was picked Coach of the Year.
Holbert guided his team to an 18-5
record and a 15-1 mark in the
TVC.
Bragg, Holbert Repeat
Scott Bragg was selected to the
team for the third year in a row.
Bragg joined Holbert as the only
repeaters from last year's team.
Joining Holbert and Bragg on
the first team were Denny Jarvis
of Alexander. Ryan McConkey of
Belpre, Brian McPherson of
Federal Hocking, John Doughty
of Miller, Holbert and Ryan
McClelland of Trimble , Charles
Bowden and Jay Palmer of
Vinton County, Bragg and Rob
Hardee. Wellston . Juniors dominated the team as Jarvis ,
Bowden and Bragg were the only
seniors on the team.
Matt Baker 6-1 senior guard for
the Meigs Marauders, was
named to the Honorable Mention
team. Baker was joined by Tim
Baker of Belpre, Tom Full&lt; of
M!Uer, Mike Eckels of Nelsonville and Scott Aufllck of
Trimble.
Girls Team Announced
In the girls selections, Coach of
the Year honors went to Kim
Chadwell of the Federal Hocking
Lancers. Chadwell guided her
team to a perfect 20-0 season and
a 23-1 overall and regional
runner-up honors. •
Most Valuable Player honors
went to Shelly Simons of the
Miller Falcons. Simmons beat
out Federal Hocking star Lori

Williams . Wiliams recieved all
league honors for the fourth time
in her career. Williams was
recently named district coplayer of the year and first team
all-state and was voted the MVP
the last two years.
Joining Simons and Williams
on the first team were Missy
James of Alexander, Wiliams
and Stacie Glass of Federal
Hocking. Jody Taylor of Meigs,
Simons and Carol Dodson of
Miller, Cindy Dupler and Tiffany
Richards of Nelsonville York and
Michelle Crouse and Angie Fa in
of VInton.
Three Are Repeaters
James, Williams and Glass
were repeaters from last years
team.
Receiving Honorable Mention
were Beth Ewing of Meelgs,
Tricia Jeffers of Alexander,
Joanna ,Schall of Federal Hocking, CharlotteJenklnsofTr.lmble
and Kara Ervin of Wellston.

and Dadika 14 for the Scarlet
Knights , 18-12. Bruce Blake led
the Niltany Lions, 19-11, with l7
points.
At Nashville, Tenn., Kerry
Hammonds converted a 3-polnt
play with 6 seconds left to rally
Middle Tennessee State. With
Austin Peay leading 79·77, Hammonds turned an offensive rebound into a 3-point play to give
the Blue Raiders an 80-79 lead.
Hammonds finished with 17
points and 16 rebounds for the
Blue Raiders, 22-7. Randy Henry
added 18 points and Gerald
Harris 13. Keith Rawls scored 23
points to lead Austin Peay,18-12.
At Little Rock, Ark., Jeff
Cummings scored 21 points· to
lead Arkansas-Lit tie Rock. The
Trojans, 23-7, got 20-point performances from four players Cummings, the tournament's
most valuable player, Johnnie
Bell with 25 points and 11
rebounds , James Scott with 23
points and Derrick Owens with
20.
A 14-0 run gave ArkansasLittle Rock a 54-381ead with 16:23
Continued on page 4

second quarter that g·ave- thl!lT! a21-12lead. It was 28-18 at halftime
and they never led by less than
six the rest of the way .
Julie Gerber's 16 points led
Hiland, which finished 24-3, and
.
Angle Schneider added 10.

By GENE CADDES
' UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS- Kalida's Wild·
cats are the queens of girls
Division IV high school basketball In Ohio for the second
consecutive year.
Voted No. I all season long In
the United Press International
Board of Coac hes ratings, the
Wildcats backed up the coaches'
confidence In them with a solid
57-45 win over Berlin Hiland in
the Iitle game Thursday night at
St. John Arena.
All-Ohio Annette Trenkamp,
playing her final high school
game, paced Kalida with 22
points ·and 11 rebounds. Her
sophomore siSter, Lori, came off
the bench to add 11 points and 6
rebounds.
·
"We were afraid it was going to
be anti-climactic," said Kalida
coach Frank Schroeder, a reference to his team's 52-41 win over
NQ. 2 rariked South Charleston
Southeastern In the semifinals
Wednesday night. "It's very
unusual that a team can come
down here and win it two years in
· a row . And, even more, have two
undefeated seasons in a row.
"The thing I told my kids we
had to guard against was that we
were going to play a tougher
team tonight than yesterday.
"We came out and did every. thing well the first half, but we
kind of let up in the third
quarter. "
Trenkamp, who fouled out for
the first time In her career in the
semifinal win over Southeastern, '
said that proved an Incentive for
the final game.
"After last night, it was real
Important for me to play well,"
she said. "We just pulled together and said we were going to
do whatever it took to win. I think
this year Is more special to me
because I'm a senior."
Hiland coach Ora Shetler said
his team had "nothing to be
ashamed of."
"They (Kalida) have some
really great players, " said
Shetler. "I Annette) Trenkamp
really worried us . She does II.
You don't stop here. You just try
to slow her down .
"I told my girls when Kalida
was receiving their trophies. to
stand and cheer for them because they're a great team. What
makes them No. 1 In the state is
they're very balanced."
The Wildcats, who completed
their season at 27-0, led nearly all
the way and got control of the·
game with a run of eight
unanswered points early in the

Annette Trenkamp, who Jed
Kalida to its second consecutive
Division IV state high school
basketball championship Thursday night, was selected the
tournament's most valuable
player.

Tlie 5-foot-8 senior, who scored
14 points in Kalida"s semifinal
win over South Charleston Sou theastern despite being hampered by early foul trouble, came
back with 22 points and II
rebounds in the Wildcats' 57-45
victory over Berlin Hiland in the
championship game.
Joining Trenkamp on the alltournament team were tea mmate Sondra Ehrnsberger. Julie
Gerber of Hiland , Jane Recker of
Arcadia and Sonia Dunsmorp of
Southeastern.

Byesville knocks off
top-rated Trinity, 47-41
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) Byesville Meadowbrook's· Lady
Colts like .challenges. big
chailenges.
The 14th-ranked Colts went
face-to-face with the state's No.1
ranked Division II team Thurs·
day in St. John Arena and
decisively whipped the Trojans
47-41 to earn their second straight
berth In the championship game.
The Colts used a 22-0 run,
covering the final six minutes of
the second quarter and the first
4:20 of the third to take a 33-15
lead which Ibe towering Trojans
were unable to overcome.
"Our kids really looked !orward to playing a team !Ike
Ti-lnity," said Meadowbrook
Coach Frank Gregory. "They
have a lot of ·pride and really
went Into the game thinking they
could win."
Meadowbrook used pressure
defense, which forced Trinity
into 24 turnovers, to post Its 23rd
win in 25 games.
"D~,fense has been our key al.I.
year," said Gregory. "We had
looked to use a lot of zone, but
after the first half, we stuck with
the pressure ."
After ,. falling behind by 18,
Trinity got back within six late in
the game, but Jennifer Neuhart
.and Devan ie Gossett both hit a
pair of free throws in the final42
seconds to keep the Colts In front.
Gosset led Meadowbrook with
13, Neuhart had nine and Lisa
Scholik and Coco Schrader eight
each.
Vonda Ward. Trinity's 6-foot-5
sophof(lore, led her team with 13
points and 12 rebounds, while
Kay Tucker had 10.
"We -didn't execute our game
plan,'" said Trinity Coach Pat
Diuius. "We got out of control
and didn't control the tempo.
We're not used to playlnR: behind.

··our guardS didn't play well,"
added Diulus. ''They didn't control the ball. lrt a game like this.
you have to dictate the game."'
In th e other IT semifinal,
Watkins Memorial got a huge
shot in the arm by a 3-point goal
at the halftime buzzer by JO
Weaver. It cut a 30-24 Mount
Notre Dame lead ldown to 30-27
and set the tempo for the second
half.
"l t bought that made a big
difference," said Watkins coach
Ron Rat lift. ·'The girls at halftime really thought they were
going to win after that."
Notre Dame ·coach Gerry
Lackey agreed.
''No doubt the 3-point goal took
a lot of wind out of our sails." he
. said. "You'd rather be up by stx'
than by three.
"ln the first half, we were
pat lent and got the ball where we
wanted. I think they did a good
job adjusting on defense in the
second half. "

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Portsmouth ....... 21 4 1847 1448
Waverly ............ 19 3 1595 1172
Logan ...... ....... ... 19 4 1436 1239
Athens ...... ... .... .. 17 5 1343 1221
Rock Hill. ..... .- .... 14 8 1560 1359
Southern .. .. ........ 14 9 1537 1467
Greenfield .. ....... 13 8 1160 1092
Vinton ...... .... ~ .... 10 11 1251 1226
Warren .............. 10 11 1224 1228
Marietta ............ 8 13 1183 1265
South Point. ....... 8 13 1436 1462
Gallipolis ........... 8 14 1019 1140
Pt. Pleasant .. .. .. 7 16 1337 1541
Meigs ..... ... .... ,... 5 16 1129 1318
Jackson ............. 4 17 1248 1397

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Complete Auction Service Availebta-We Buy 8r Sell.
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Jim Cobb _3rd Anniversary

x.Stlll in tourney
Division Iii
Regional Tournament
(At OU)
Thu.r sday's games:
Wheelersburg 61 Hannibal
River 49
Chesapeake 69 Fort Frye 59
Finals- Saturday, 7:30p.m.,
Wheelersburg vs. Chesapeake.
Winner advances to Division
III State Tournament at
Columbus.

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�Friday, March 10, 1989

pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 .The Daily Sentinel

:.-

Ueberroth hopes baseball averts strike

Scoreboard ...
Shtlnif

Pro results

Jnu ll, " 'ril Gl"tnuut)' mpn ',; 'thrld C.p
Sklinr

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAG UE

Shlpi!IJif'D , Iapan - me!~ ' • sil.lom,
&amp;tan! slalom, parall~ s lalom'; women' •

1'hu rwiJQ· '~ Rellutil

t&gt;et ,_.. 1, r-.·v Ranll'f"!'i t

w•ln.cton 1, Ra!ltoa 2'
"Miiil"f'al t" Qiit" tiK!
.
PhlladrlpNa t . NY I slandf'rs t (lk-1
st. Lo\d!l • · To ront o 1
(' al pry 10, Pit 1ft ra:h I
Frlday '11 Gam~
Pitt11t1U ra:h WhulipeJt. 8: 35 p.m .
Lo t MJd CO!i at Vant'GUvt.r . It: :IB p.m.

*

Saturd l\f'* Gllmef
•Buffalo al Bo11lon

Su""""C\•er

MISL

lbiUmol"t' ill .San Dit' p , II :S5 p.tn.
Tt!n.es

lnllan " '!!II"- Calif. - 1!50,ti1VIrrtnla

SUJM of ln cl~tn " 't.Jl'i
Scottlldalf'. Ark. Cla!i!!l&lt;'

S415,tol

E.aa:le

Trla ck

New J erl!l('y al NV blunder ~. n l ~
NY Ran errS:"' Wli!INn~t~on,nl(hl

*

Th.unida,y 'li Sport• Tran!i&amp;L11tno.

• Hartford
Moni..,...J , nlrtil
DenoM. at Tol'orio, nl~
( 'alp'y at Edmo•on, nl~t
Mln~uill ttl St. Louk, nlxtlt

Bukelbldl
lkslon - SIKftl'd ruard Ke-lvin Vp!lh aw

A..~ SO( '.

Tllund~ ·~~

lt4&gt;!i ult li
f"lll .. delpHa 101. S amt.m enlo'6
San A.lt~o lit, New J er_.y Ill
Golden St 1n t 1218, 0f'YeiiUid 1 H

lo lt-d a.r contract; pllll! ed unliP'r Ramo•
RIVIIII on ln,blred liM . ·
!'lORA. - Namt'd Tom ' 'Saleh" Sa.det' 5 ·
dil"t'ctor of communlt)' an• player
pror;ram1: named Carolyn Blltadl~ctor
ofcerporat e ~tflal~; IULmt'd.Steve Marean
rommunll )' rd.lilllo .. dln-c:t or.
( "oiii'JC~

Frtu.r ' t liam~

LA Lakrrsal CharloCie, 1: :Wp.m
.,..n~ at MlamL 1: 30 p.m .
Phoen~ at Indiana , 7: 3G p .m.
Sacramento Ill Washl n~on, ll p . m,
DaiiM a.1 Houlllon, 11:3(1 p. m.
SloaUie Ill Mllwau lflf't'. !I p.m .
Golden Slate at Utah, 1: 31 p. m .
Cl"eland al LA. (11ppl"r&lt;o, 1&amp;: 311 p.n1 .

Mlnne-~ota - S•m~d Ed Plnlcllun
!it tCJ!Iiary coac h.
Pootllall
D.-n~r- Sip II frer &amp;II eat 1M hacker

Blake Pe1~non lo a !ietles of 1· )ear
cor'ra 1.-- t*i aa:red to ~rma wkll fnt!e
~,.:ent runnln11 back Kno Gvvdt-.
Grel"n 8a,)' - Slped cwo lree &amp;lmt.A:

tlgta end Gary WUklu aad ll•backer
Kurt O'aln .

S&amp;l.urd"'" Gamea
Ddrett al PhlladelpNa. nlrbl
MI~Pl M.l Atlanta , night
lndllllla ll« New Vork. nll[ht
New Jerwy at Houtton. nJ .ghl
Sutllr II&lt; Chlcajj:o, 11IPI
Dill Wi lli SaA An,Oil\0, nl(ht
Phoenix at Mllwau We, nl ~114
Fr .. ~ . "' ·" 'Portt CalendiU'
Buebllll E~~:hltillon
Chlcll(O (t\L J uo. Boston at WlnWr
Have!~~ , fla. , I p.m .
P'IUPrxh v~ St . Louli!i at St. l'&lt;'il'r ll"
,t-611(. f1a .. I p.m .
Montrral .,._ Allanta at West Pl.lm
Beaeh, F1a. , 1: 1:1 p.m .
Phlladel ..la ·" '· f'lncl nnatl at Plant
&lt;'hf, F1a., 1:15 p.m .
NI"W York CNL) \ ':t, New York !AL l ~tl
Fort Laudrnlftl~. fla. , I : :W p.m .
Houl'lton vs. Detroit at Lakeland , Fl~&amp;. .
1: 30 p.m .
L.,o, AnJP"'fll' v!l. Baltlmow Ill: Miami,
1: :s5 p.m.
~u Y!l. Toronto ll1 Du~dln, f1a ..
1: 15 p.m.
Kill! !oMS Cll)' V!O . Minllf'Sota ttl Orlan ill,
Fla., ! : $p.m.
StatUr u . Mll"·aukrP at Chamll ll r.
trtt ., :t : O~ p.m .
San lMI'JtU vs. Oaklllnd at Phot'nlx , ~ : us
p.m .
O,lc-a-o (NL ) \'!II. .'iiUI fi'ranci!OL'&lt;l at

Sc:ouedale, Artz ., :1 : 0~ p.m.
California V!li. Cleveland ac Tu&lt;!fton.

Arb; ., 3:85 p.nt.
Basketball

LA. Laken at lla..-l&amp;tlf'. i :.1fl p.m.
Dtn wr 1&amp;1 MIIUIII, 7: 31 p.m.
.-hornl:w atlnllana , 1: 30 p.m .
S.at'namento at Washlnxton.li p.m .
Dalk&amp; at HouiiiiOII. H: ill p.m .

Ne-w England - Slpllld lrtP &amp;lrnl
ld ckrr Grer Davhi.
NV ,Jet !l -:- Slr;ned frf'l'-&amp;11'111 ll.whllCkt!r Tim Co fteld.
Sea&amp;~tle - Slpell 4 free apnt!C ll11ht
e nd John Emhr~. dJ:OIM!d"Wf' t-nd St.eve
Wilburn. kicker lan Howfleld, punter
StPvr Sampson.

Swlmmlna
L'.S. Swlmmlnr - Named DearU
ruN cy naiklnat.lll'am director.

Cage scores .
CoiiP(I' Bali let ball HeM..&amp;.11

By United Preulnter •lloi'J'II

Toumaments
A.llanlk 10 Co nff'rf'ftl;' f
Champlotwhlp
Ruag e rs 70. Pe anSl. liti
8111 Ea~-il (.'o.ter!IM'l'

FlrstftGuM
8(1s ljln Coli. Ill, 8t John'~ 7-1 ,
BlrSlty Conferl;!nc:l'
FlrlitRound
M&lt;Htl&amp;na 8~ , MonCilna St. II.J tOT )
\\'etM&gt;r Sl. 61. Nevada-Renofl
Hlg ..'e.lll

Ccuaf~reiW"f!

Qu1u1~r11rals

Fullerton St. 1!1, Utah Sl. 116 tOT)
Nendlt'LWI \1~11u 102. Clll-lrYiftl• 1! 2
N~· Mexlto Sl . 61, Fre!ino St. ~~
sanca &amp;rbara fit, 1.. 111; Reach St. ~7
f( ,\C North Allan tic Conlerenct
QMartrriiDILis
Bo011on l l. !1&amp;, Nlarara 58
Hurdord 15, ( 'anllllus 51
Notlhf'llltlli':rn~.

Sellltk· a1 Mllwaulll'r. 9 p.m.
Goi!Wn Stalt' at Utah, 8: !1{1 p.m .
( 'h•w•land at LA Cllppl'rs. 10: 31 p.m.
Bodng

" 'el14'rwrlfhi!i!
Las \'t· ~ !'lie\' . - To~· Haltll1.Br \'S.

Solin)' Broolis
IRF ,Ju nlor
Umo~'ll.

Mbt.IGm, p.aralleol

lnd.anapolls - NCAA DivisiOn IT'ral' k
MOd Fi eld ( 'h rnplorl!lhlp!J

f'tii CJlKO .Ill Phi1Mdl'l.phla

NATIONAL BAS KETBM.L

ladiM' ..,.

FI.)'M'!~M Title
France!- Jo.lll' Sanahrla 'o'S,

Fahrtte Jknkhou
Su l"r Rantam••el gbts
Miami- Pe*oDecllltllVS. Tony Pr ultl
Junior Middleweights
~llunl Leonudo llf&gt;rmtldez VM.
Ginn Wolle

Mahe ~
Slen111 II, Cui pte 51
MldWt"stt'rn Cclllrrta&amp;e {'onfrrcnte
Quartrrflmb
DQy ton
Dt&gt;troh 54

n.

st. Lo~s 511, Bulk&gt;!' 64

Xa.vlf'r 11.'1, Loyola~3
Ohio \ ' Ill!(')· Corde.-rnt:e

fhamplomldp
Middle Tl'hll. St. M'!, Austin Pti\V 7fl
Pa.l~ IO

Coni't•tent:e

F1rsl Round

t-1, Arttona $1 . II~
\\;!ISh\ n~on St . 7S. Orr~n 51
~nlhf'aslt• rn l:Onferf'nt·l'
Flri&gt;it Round

Soud~t•rn (' ~tl

By United Press International
Baseball's oulgoing commls·
sioner expressed hope Thursday
that the sport could avert a strike
In 1990. saying the two sides
should not "shut-down a g,ame
that goes to millions."
Peter Ueberroth, at an infor·
mal briefing in Fort Lauderdale,
Fla ., said the game has " enough
money to go around" and there
should be no reason for the
game's third strike In 10 years .
Baseball's basic labor agreement ends after this season. The
expiration of the last two labor
agreements has resulted tn work
stoppages .
·
Baseball suffered a 50·day
strike In 1981, during the term of
Bowie Kuhn, and a one·day
stoppage In 1985.
.
Discussing some of the re·
venue sources he developed.
Ueberroth said it would be hard
for the owners to spend them·
selves back to bankruptcy. He
noted that eight clubs were for
sale when he took office, but only
the Texas Rangers. are now.
Also Thursday, Major League
Baseball announced it !s joining
the Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis Association to honor Hall of
Famer Lou Gehrig in a 50th
anniversary tribute.
Gehrig, the New York Yankee
first baseman who holds the
record of 2,130 consecutive
games played, died ofthedisease
In 1941. It Is now known as Lou
Gehrig's Disease orALS.
.
As part of the tribute, major
leag11e baseball has dedicated
June as Lou Gehrig Month and
will conduct Lou Gehrig Days
across the country. The finale
actually comes July 4 at Yankee
Stadium, 50 years after Gehrig
made his emotional farewell
address.
On the field, the Chicago White
Sox asked waivers on veteran
second baseman Donnie Hill !or
the purpose of giving him his
unconditional release. Hill, 28,
who hit over .280 tor two straight
seasons with Oakland, hit only
.239 and .217 in his two seasons
with Chicago.
In Grapefruit League action,
Atlanta blanked Baltimore 4·0,

Huc ke)'
Pltt.,..l'l(h at \\'lnript'Jt, !1::1~ p.m .
La" A.n«cle.~ at Vllftrou-.t"r, 10: 35 p .m.

Ml!iPihll!ippl MI. Auhu m 68
.
T~n s ,\mprlt•a Conferl'nce
Ch amplelllihi p
Arbn*li·LIIIll' Kofil lOG, Ct&gt;nle1Ulry72
l\'I'Strrn Alllilrclr Co nfrn'nre
Quarkrlfnal~t

Colorudo st . 5!, Vl11h 50
Hawaii 72, Brll{harn You.,; it
N~w Mt'xlc.-o 7t, Air Force 10
Tt.xllli•EI Pa.~o M. \\'yam in~ Ill {20T\

MEIGS ELEMENTARY CHAMPIONSHIP
(At Meigs High School)
POMEROY 4th

MARCH 11, 9 :00a .m.

RUTLAND 4th

BRADBURY 5th

MARCH 11, 10:30
RUTLAND 5th

(Continued from Page 3)
remaining. Larry Robinson had
23 points for Centenary, 16·14.
At Evanston, Ill., Glen Rice
scored 26 points to spark Michl·
gan. Rlce, with his first three
baskets. moved Into second place
on Michigan's all·tlme scoring
list ahead of Gary Grant. who
finished his career with 2,222
points. He also moved into fourth
place on the Big Ten's all·tlme
scoring list.
Michigan, third in the Big Ten
at 12·5. improved to 24-6 overall.
Northwestern; 9·18 and 2·15. was
paced by Brian Schwabe's 22
points.
In another Big 10 game,
Purdue walloped Ohio State
83·53.
At Long Beach , Calif.. Stacey
Augmon scored 27 points to
power Nevada·Las Vegas. Greg
Anthony scored 24 points and
Anderson Hunt 14 for the Runnln'
Rebels, while Rod Palmer paced
CaHrvlnP with 23 points.
UNLV, 24·7, used man·to·man
pressure defense to erase an
early deficit and roll to a 55·45
halftime advantage. A 22·4 run
made it 85·63 with 7: 14 to play .
Also in the Big West, New
Mexico State sUpped past Fresno
State 60·59. Cal-Santa Barbara
drubbed Long Beach State 69·57

Sports briefs
High School
Milwaukee Pius' girls team
tied a national record when It
defeated La Crosse Central 73·57
Saturday for Its eighth straight
Wisconsin Independent Schools
Athletic Association Class A
basketball title. The girls team at
Kirtland Central In New Mexico
won· eight straight from 1980.87
and the boys from Northfolk,
W.Va., won eight in a row from
1974·81.
Salling
Georgs Kolesnikovs will set out
Friday in an at tempt to break the
record for sailing from New York
to San Francisco around Cape
Horn. The record of SO days, 9
hours and 46 minutes was set last
· month by Warren Luhrs.

POMEROY 6th

MARCH 11, 12:00
RUTLAND 6th

• RUTLAND GIRLS

CARMEN MANUEL

MR.WAUKEE SCORES - Milwaukee short·
stop Gary Sheffield (left) slides past Chicago
Cubs catcher Damon Berryhill to score on Terry
Francona' s triple In the fourth inning of
Houston ripped the New York
Mets 7·2, Cincinnati blasted
Pittsburgh 9·2, Toronto topped
the Chicago White Sox 6·4, Los
Angeles defeated Minnesota 4·2,
the New York Yankees thumped
Mo.ntreal 11·6, Texas routed St.
Louis 8·1, Philadelphia and Detroit tied 5·5 in 11 innings and
Boston and Kansas City were
rained out.
In the Cactus League, Milwau·
kee ripped the Chicago Cubs 7·1.
Oakland's split squads beat a
California split squad 9-3 and
edged Seattle 6·5 in 12 innings, an
Angels split squad topped San
Francisco 7·1 and Cleveland and
San Diego tied 7-7 in a game
called after 10 innings.
At West Palm Beach. Fla ..
Tom Glavine pitched four shu·
tout Innings, giving up two hits.
and a walk to lead the Braves
over the Orioles. Ron Gao t
homered for Atlanta.

Thursday's Cactus League spring training game
In Mesa Ariz. The Brewers won H to hand the
Cubs th~ir sixth Joss In spring training. (UP I)

At Kissimmee, Fla. , Billy
Hatcher went 3 for 3 and drove in
four runs with a homer and a
single to lead the Astros past the
Mets. Hatcher has a hit in each of
his last six spring at -bats.
At Bradenton. Fla., Eric Davis
doubled. tripled and drove in
three r uns to lead the Reds past
Pitt sburgh , Tom Browning
pitched three shutout innings for
Cincinnati,
At Sarasota, Fla. , Lloyd Mo·
S&lt;'by had two hits, stole two bases
and scored three runs to lead the
Blue Jays past the White Sox.
Tony Fernandez and Fred
McGriff each had two RBI for
Toronto.
At Vero Beach. Fla .. Mike
Marshall hit a two· run homer to
carry the Dodgers past the Twins
in a live· inning game . Marshall's
blast capped a three· run third
inning and gave Orel Hershiser

with his first exhibition win.
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla., Hal
Morris stroked a two·run double
to highlight a seven-run eighth
inning for the Yankees. Montreal
third baseman Mike Blowers
committed two errors in the
inning.
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Pete
Incaviglia's two·run double
sparked a flve·run fourth Inning
as theRangersdumpedSt. Louts.
Dean Palmer homered for
Texas.
At Clearwater, Fla . , Bob Dern·
ier's third single of the game
drove home the game· tying run
for the Phillles. The game was
called after 11 innings alter the
Tigers ran out of available
pitchers.
.
At Mesa, Ariz., Mike Birkbeck
pitched flve shutout innings to
lead Milwaukee past the Cubs.
Birkbeck hasn't allowed the Cubs
a run in 13 innings dating back to
last spring.
At Phoenix, Dave Parker and
Mark McGwire hit back·to·back
homP runs in a six ·run fifth
inning to lead Oakland past
California. The Athletics
pounded out 12 hits off Angels
.
pitching.
At Tempe. Ariz .. Billy Beane ,
singled home pinch runner
Buddy Pryor with one out in the
12th inning to lift the Athletics
past Seattle. Oakland'sBillSava·
rino drove in' an insurance run.
At Scottsdale, Ariz. , Devon
White had two hits to lead the
Angels past San Francisco. Will
Clark homered for the Giants.
At Tucson, Ariz .. Rob Nelson
had three hits, including two
homers. as the Padres tied · the
Indians . The game was called
alter 10 Innings by mutual
consent.

LEGAL NOTICE

ATLANTIC·lO CHAMPS - Rutgers' head coach Bob We,nzel
jubllanlly hugs Emory Ward alter the Scarlet Knights deleated
Penn Stale 70.66 Thursday night In Piscataway, N.J. to win the
Atlanllc·IO championship and an automatic bid to the NCAA
tournament. (UPI)
and Fullerton StatP escaped
Utah State 87·86 in overtime.
In other action, it was Georgia
83, Mississippi State 68 and
Mississippi SO, Auburn 68 ln the
first round of the Southeastern
Conference tournament; South·
ern Cal 94. Arizona State 82 and
Washington State 78, Oregon 56 in
the opening round of the Pacific·
10 Conference tournament; and
Montana 87 , Montana State 84 In
overtime and Weber State 69,
Nevada· Reno 61 In the first round
of the Big Sky Conference
tourney .
In quarterfinal tournament
play, it was Boston Unlverslty96,
Niagara 58; Hartford 75, Can!·
slus 57; Nortljeastern 65, Maine
59; and Siena 61, Colgate 51 In the
ECAC North Atlantic Confer·
ence; and Dayton 77, Detroit 54;
St. Louis 68, Butler 64; and

_NOW IN STOCK! I
~~~~~~:G~.~~~. . . $2 2 75

BRADBURY GIRLS

Sign-up day Sunday
The Rutland Baseball League.
will have s!gn-up day Sunday
!rom 2 to 5 p.m. at the Rutland
Civic Center. Sign-up fee Is $10.
Birth certificate must be pres·
ented. Information may be obtained by caiUng 742-2187.

IETSOfiiBREAO '

WITHAM AD
992-2156

I

""'"-,- --

-"-- -

-

----

GRAVELY TRACTOR

PEl IOU

SALES &amp; SERVICE

s,_., Hetrt

204 Condor St.

S~rl•l &amp;

Pomor"", OH.

FENCING AND
POULTRY NEniNG

01'111 IOIIDAY T-. .-&amp;Y
tAJI..SPJI.
SAIUINY t A.a.t P.l.

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Friday, March 10, 1989

-Humor or just hiding

Xavier 85, Loyola (Chicago ) 831n
the Midwestern Collegiate
Conference.
In the Western Athletic Confer·
ence quarterfinals, it was Colo·
rado State 52, Utah 50; Hawaii 72.
Brigham Young 69; New Mexico
74, Air Force 60: and Texas· EI
Paso 88, Wyoming 81 in double
overtime.
Also. Dana Barros scored 38
points to lead Boston College past
St. John's 81-74 in a Big East
Tournament qualifying game.

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set
for public hearing Case
No .. 89·01-El·EFC, to
review the fuel procure·
ment practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company. the operation
of its Eleclric Fuel Com·
ponent, and related ·mat·
lers. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
1:30 p.m., on March 13,
1989 at Clly Council
Chambers, 218 Cleveland
Avenue , S.W., Canton,
· Ohio 44702.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further infor·
mation may be obtained
by contacling the Com·
mission.

JANE MANUEL

Sisters are
·good examples
for all women
If you were a child In the
Charles and Evelyn Manuel
home in the Racine area of Meigs
County, "you grew up knowing
you were going to college," says
Carmen Manuel, one of the eight
Manuel children.
Carmen, and three sisters,
Jane, Jenny and Joan, are all
graduates of Southern High
School and Rio Grande College
with degrees in education.
The four sisters are considered
by the Middleport· Pomeroy Area
Chapter of the American Associ·
ation of University Women as
excellent examples of the
modern·day professional
woman. They have been selected
by the local AAUW Chapter for
inclusion in a series of articles In
this week's Dally Sentinel. in
co.njuntion with National AAUW
Week, March 5·11.
Carmen received her Bachelor
of Science Degree in elementary
education in 1984. Jenny and
Jane, also with bachelor's de·
grees in elementary education,
graduated in 1986 and 1987,
respect lvely.
In 1974, older sister Joan
received her Bachelor of Arts
Degree in secondary education.
Joan also has a dual certlficatlon
in elementary education. She
received her Masters of Educa·
lion Degree and a reading
supervisor certification In 1976
from Ohio University,
A big age difference exists
between the Manuel children so

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge 36.1, F&amp;AM will have its
inspection Friday, 7:30 p, .m. at
the Middleport Masonic Temple.
POMEROY- Annual Charter
Day luncheon of the Return
Jonathar: Meigs Chapter, Daugh·
ters of the American Revolution
will be held Friday, 12:30 p.m at
Trinity Church.
POMEROY - Beverly Per·
kins will be the speaker at the
Friday, 7 p.m. meeting of Flame
Fellowship, Columbus and South·
ern Building, Gallipolis.
POMEROY - There will be
round and square dancing on
Friday. from 8 to 11 p.m. , at the
Senior Citizens Center ln Pome·
roy. Admission $2. Music will be
by True Country Ramblers ,
Those attending should bring
snacks.

1977 Cadillac Sedan DeYille .. S1295

1980 Chevv Luv 4x4 .............. S1495

POMEROY - Meigs County
Retired Teachers Association
•

Escort ••••• ,••••••••••••••••..••••

Auto. &amp; Air.

1981 Cadillac E1Dorado ...........S4195

Stainless steel top. Loaded.

4 door. Loaded.

1981 Olds Omega
...................... S895
.

Automatic

1975 Ford Yan .......................... $595

Automatic

1980 Chevy Citation ...............S1 09 5

Automatic.

·

1977 Chevy EICamino ............ S1695

Auto •• PS. PB . .

1978

Malibu ................ $1095

"somebody was always In col·
lege," Ca·rmen says. The
younger children In the family
just "didn't know any better"
than to go to college, she laughs.
Carmen and her sisters credit
their successes In school to their
parents. "They were always
there for us," shesa~s. "and they
made an effort to be Involved In
what ever we were doing." For
example, if one of the children
was In a play, then mom and dad
were In the audience.
It was this type of sincere
Interest that made all the differ·
ence ,for the four sisters. They
knew their parents could be
counted upon for moral support.
Now all four girls are pursuing
their teaching careers, as well as
other Individual interests.
Joan has been a fifth and sixth
grade reading teacher at North
Point Elementary In Mason
County, W.Va. for the last 13
years. She is a member of
AAUW, the Phi Alpha Theta
history society, the West Virginia
Education Association and other
professional organizations.
Carmen, Jenny .and Jane are
continuing their educations by
attending the University of Day·
ton at the Rlo Grande campus as
graduate students. They will
receive their Masters of Education Degrees In July 1989.
Carmen has been teaching for
five years at Meigs Junior High.
She too is a member of AAUW
and Phi Alpha Theta. She is also a
member of the Ohio Education
Association and other profes·
slonal organizations, Including
the Meigs Local Teachers' Association for which she serves as
secretary.
Jane and Jenny are currently
employed as substitute teachers

meets Saturday 12:30 p.m. at the
Masonic Temple. Reservations
may be made by calling 742-2141
BURLINGHAM
Bur·
!Ingham Modern Woodmen will
have potluck dinner Saturday,
6:30 p.m., at the haiL Cindy
Oliver! will speak following the
meeting.
RUTLAND - Square, round
and slow dancing Saturday, from
8 p.m. to 12 midnight, at the E¥i
Denison Post of the American
Legion, Rutland .
RUTI.AND - A fish fry and
bake sale will be held Saturday,
starting at 11 a.m. ,at the Rutland
American Legion. Donations of
baked goods would be
appreciated.
MIDDLEPORT- Sign-up for
Middleport softball and baseball
will be Saturday, 9 a;m. to noon,
at Middleport City HaiL $10 per
child, not to exceed $25 per
family.
SUNDAY
RUTI.AND - Rutland Base·
ball League will hold sign-up
day on Sunday, March 12, from 2
to 5 p.m., at the civic center.
Sign-up fee Is $10.
·
HAZAEL- Paul Deem, shows
missionary slides of The Philli·
pines on Saturday at 7 p.m. at the
Hazael Community Church.

Dear Ann Landers: When I sick stuff. Sign me - No
read that cplumn about the Laughing Malter In Ohio
husband who makes jokes out of
Dear Ohio: I receive d dozens of
everything and trlvlalizes every letters from women who share
conversation, I couldn't believe your pain . There was one lone
my eyes . I thought I was the only Jetter from a man. Here it Is :
woman In the world who had that
Dear Ann Landers: My wife
problem.
put your column under my nose
You can't Imagine what hell it the other day and said, "Look,
Is to live with a man who is
Howard, this is you ."
incapable of a serious conversa·
It was a letter from the woma n
tlon. My husband makes jokes whose husband makes a joke out
about people's names when he Is of everything. I had to admit that
Introduced. Then, within min· she was right, bu tthere' s more to
utes, he tells a tasteless ethnic It, Ann.
joke. I want to crawl under a
My comedy routine began
chair..
when iny wife told me she wanted
When we were dating I thought a separation and ·maybe a
he had a hilarious sense of divorce. I was so desperately
hunior. After we married I found unhappy that I hid my pain
less and less to laugh at. Ten behind "jokes." Humor was my
years later I was sick to death of defense against facing reality .
his jokes. I thought about leaving
I'll bet If that wife who wrote to
hlm many times, but we had four you would curl .up next to her
children and I couldn't see husband tonight when they are in
breaking up our family.
bed and let him know that she
Now we are In our 60s and the loves him, he'd get serious In a
clown Is stlll yukklng It up, only hurry and slay that way as long
now he sounds like a real nut. I as the affection lasted. - West
urge every young woman who Coast Mr. D.
reads this and recognizes her
Dear Mr: D.: You are blaming
husba!ld to get out NOW. A the victim, and I don't buy It.
person who has to turn every·
The personality pattern that
thing Into a joke is seriously your wlfe can't stand was In the
disturbed. He uses his so·called making long before she wimted to
humor to cover up an awful lot of . leave. I'd bet on it, Howard.

in Southern and Meigs Local
School Distrkts in Meigs County ,
and in Mason County Schools in
West Virginia.
Jenny has two years of full
tlme teaching experience as a
Chapter I Reading teacher In
Southern District .' Among the
organizations to which she be·
longs are AAUW" Phi Alpha
Theta and the Alpha Lambda
Delta honor society.
Jane has been substitute teach·
ing in Meigs &lt;;:ounty for the last
two years. She Is involved wtth
AAUW, Phi Alpha Theta, Who's
Who Among American College
Students, and other professional
organizations.
All lour women are happy with
their career choices, and if they
had their way , another Manuel
woman would soon jOin the ranks
of college coed - their mom.
"We've been trying to talk her
Into going, " says Carmen. "lt"s
her turn now."

MIDDLEPORT - There will
be a meeting Sunday, 2 p.m., at
the Middleport Council Room,
for area Senior Girls' Softball
League. All coaches and int~r·
ested people are invited. For
information, call Jim Pape at
992-3420, after 7 p.m .

Thieves break
into prison
COPENHAGEN . Denmark
(UP!) - · Thieves broke Into a
Danish prison for a second time,
cracked a safe and ina de off with
$11,000 in cash, a prison spokes·
man said.
·
·•·I suppose we should have
Installed an anti·theft device
after the first break·ln in 1988,
but we didn't think they 'd come
back," Flemming Lerche, dep·
uty director of the Mogelkaer
State prison, said Thursday.
Lerche said the thieves broke
into the compound Tuesday and
then crawled through a gymna·
slum window:
Tl)ey proceeded to the prison
office; put black plastic over
windows so no Peeping Toms
could see them, cut open the safe,
and made off with 85,000 kroner ,
or about

POSTER WINNERS - Presented plaques and
cash awards as winners In the annual Dental
Health Week Poster Contest by Christie Wool·
cock, Meigs Co. Health Department adminlslra·

..

Dear Ann Lailde~s: I a m not
making this up. I am reading it
right out of the newspaper. It
makes me wonder what a norma l
person can do to protect him self
or herself a gainst th e loonies that
are loose out there.
A woman In P iqua , Ohio, was
upset when she learned that her
boyfriend was married. She
posed as a door· to·door cosmetic
saleperson, went to his home and
when his Wife opened the door,
she stabbed her in the chest.
When charged with atte mpted
murder, the woman said. "'I was
kind of upset."
How about some answer s,
Ann? - Tennessee Reader
Dear Tennessee: In a country
of 250 million, there Is bound to be
a certain percentage of mentaiiy
Ill people.
This woman who was ·'kind of
upset" Is more than a little
disturbed. I hope the authoriiles
see that she gets the help she
· needs, not only for her sake but
the sake of the community.

-~~~SIJIIII!ISP~EIIJ!II!ICIA~LDental poster
•
contest wtnners 198s PONTIAC 6000 ...............S5495
4 dr., automltic. cruise. air, one owner, PB. PS.
announced
Winners in the annual Dental
Health Week elementary school
poster contest were announced
today by the Meigs Co. Health
Department.
The winners were Jas.on Law·
renee, first place, Syracuse Elementary, $15 prize donated by
Sheriff James Soulsby; Jesse
Dillon, second place, Harrison·
ville Elementary, $10 prize donated by Auditor Bill Wickline;
Betsy Houdashelt, third place,
Salisbury Elementary, $5 prize
donated by Common Pleas Judge
Fredrick Crow III; and· Johnnie
Gilland, fourth place, Letart
Elementary, $5 prize donated by
Treasurer George Collins.
The contest was held In obser·
vance of National Children's
Dental Health Month and spon·
sored by the Oh lo Den tal Hygle·
nists ' Association and the Ohio
Department of Health and the
Division of Dental Health.
Posters were judged on the
basis of theme relativity, "Play
It Safe: Protect Your Teeth!" as
well as accurate spelling and
punctuation, visual appeal, and
originality.
In addition to the prizes listed
above.• Christie Woolcock, Health
Department, presented each
winner with an engraved plaque.

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
FRIDAY, MARCH 10, 1989
ClUlGE lOLL DINNER".............................. •3.98

A Succulent .nd Juicy Stuffad Cabb8gl Aotl hrvetd With Homtc:OOked lutte.-ld
Hom~tN~e Coi•IIW 1nd a Hot Buttered Roll OK HOm1mld1 llecult.

Corn.

SUNDAY, MARCH 12, 1989
BAKED SWISS STEAl DINNER"...................... •4.69

A Genwoua Portion Gf T•ty ..._ .. SteM, Simmered In A Creamy OriVY, lti'Yitd
With MMhed Potato• &amp; OriYy, Hom~ked Broccoli Topped With A D1UDoua

s....

Ch . . .
ce. A Hot Buriered Roll or Hamem.te8111Cult WtihHon.,. CotfH. A•
gul.- or Dec.tftn.-ted, Both Fifthly Brewtd lA Smd Soft DrlnkorH01 TeaM..,. be

Subltttutad.)

.

lAUD STIAI SANDWICH ALONE ............................... 12.79
1ft DISCOIIIf fe All Seooler Cltll- Wit....._,. er ......_

c.•J

1985 MERC. MARQUIS ..............S4895

BROUGHAM WAGON. Fully equipped, woodgrain sides,
rack, PB, PS, power door locks, V-6. Nice clean car.

1985 CHEVY

CELEBRITY WAGON ..... $449 5

WAS '4896. Fully equipped. Good condition, V-6, J&gt;S, PB,
air. cruiaa. power wlndowaand locka, rack •. front wheel drive.

At The Prescription Shop
Prescriptions Are .Our Business!
•Fast Service &amp; Low Prescription Prices
, •Quality Prescription Drugs
•Full Line of Generics Available
•Most Insurance Carries Accepted
frH Delivery to Middleport, Pomeroy,
Bradbury, Minersvll1, Rutland, Syracuse,
and Mason, W. Ya.
If you feel you have been paying too much for
your prttcrlptlons, give us a call. We will quote
you prices!!

t

·.*3.00' OFF lilY tiUl
. 01 DIIISFIUID
PIISCIIPTON.
EXP. 3·31·89

JISt bring In any new
. prHcriptien or prMcrlptlon
, bottle from any area
pha1111acy and rOC8ivt
$3.00 oH our already low
prHcriptiOtt prices)!

NEW HOURS: Mondey thru Slturdey 11 A.M. to II P.M.
Open Sunday 10 A.M. to II ~M.

CZ•!iil

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992·6669

_.._ _

ANN LANDERS
"1989, Lo1 Anjldft
Tim" S yndi ra~·,. and
C ~aton s,·ndint"

live a.•slstanl, were Jason Lawrence, first place,
Jesse Dillon, second place, Betsy Houdashelt,
third place, and Johnnie Gilland, fourth place.

271 NOITH SECOND

--------

Ann
Landers

JOAN MANUEL

Community calendar

ROCK SPRINGS
Mary
Shrine, White Shrine of Jerusa·
lem, meets Friday, 7:30 p.m .,
Rock Springs Grange Hall.
SATURDAY
RACINE - Round and square
dancing will be held Saturday,
from 8 p.m. to midnight, at the
Racine American Legion Hall.
Music by True Country
Ramblers.

New tirea. 4 spald.
MARCH 11, 1:30 p.m.

•

Page- 5

Indiana ...

Grorgh l!il Mili!iiS!IIppl SC. 5g

Bantamwtl~il

Sanll Clara. Calif. - Gerlltdo Marline~ n . Marlo Lozan o
Golf
Orlando. f11L - 51100,000 PGA. Nelillt'
lnllitatlo-.J
'
Ptloml:c PGA St-niono ArRnM
C'lall.odc

.....

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

�Friday, M8reh 1 0, 1989

Fnday March 10 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport Oh10

Page-6-The Dally Sent1nel

People in the news_ _ _ __

&gt; fXrERIENCE lliE JOY Of RELIGION

By WILLIAM C TBOTI'
United Press IDiernatlonal
MORE OF CABSON .Jolumy
C~ says It was a meteorolog!
cal quirk that made him re up to
host 'The Thnl&amp;ht Show Car
son who will celebrate his 27th
anniversary behind the To
night ' desk on Oct 1 told his
Wednesday night audience he
has signed a contract (no terms
announced) to continue through
September 1990 Brandon (Tar
llkofl president of NBC Enter
talnment) asked If I was still
having fun with the show and I
said Yes I m having a ball
Carson 63 said
Last year I made a foolish
mistake - I said to him I II do
this another year when It snows
In Malibu It snowed In Malibu so
here we are Since 1962 Carson
has hosted more than 7 000 hours
of The Tonight Show and
brought au I some 20 ()()() guests
have been Introduced
DEPP STUCK Johnny Depp
who plays an undercover polleeman on 21 Jump Street broke
character long enough to assault
a security guard In Vancouver
pollee said
Depp 25 was arrested and

This Message and Church Directory Sf!!'nsored By_The Interested Businesses Listed On This Page.
TEAFORD REALTY
P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
~
MEIGS nRE
(row's Famtlv Restaurant
F~tlrrlng K1nlu~kg ''''d CMtlt.1n
216 S Second
' \ CENTER, INC.
Nahonw1de Ins Co ~
Pomeroy
22 8 W Mom St Pomeroy

I)~

992-5432

RIDENOOR

Homehle saws

991

))ll

p,-escnphons

991 2955

115 E ....,,., Dr
?92 2104

P..,1roy

992 707S

172 North Second Ave.
Mitldleoort Ohoo
TRINITY CONGREGATIONAL CHUROl
Rev RJchard Freeman pastor: Debll.e Buck

You are basically a good person, but bemg
a so called normal human bemg you
have fallen mto the trap of temptation
somewhere along the way Perhaps you are
a worned but confirmed smoker or the
pressures of your JOb have caused you to
drmk too much or become mvolved With
drugs By now you may be addicted to the
extent that It w1ll take more than will
power to overcome your habtt but don t
g1ve up Try one of those treatment centers
1f you hke but also adopt a posmve attt
tude Thmk not how much fun your habtt
1s but mstead how n1ce It would be not to
have to depend on tt For some real help
talk to the clergyman at your House of
Worship He Will understand and not cntt
CIZe or condemn He knows you are smcere
about tt or you wouldn t be there, and he
can help you tf you w11l let htm

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

9.1~

Schcd Suji Oturch Schc:d 9 l5a m
Worship Service 10 :II a m Choir rehearsal
Thesday 6:45 p m urDer dire('llon of (1)15

Burt

POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA

RENE Correr Un on and Mulberry Rev
Thomas Glm McCJu~ paste( Nonnan Pres

am

morning worstdp 10 :Jl a m t&gt;Venlng service 6
p m nUd-\.1.-.?ek sernce Wedne9:1~ 7 p m

GRACE EPJSCXlPAL CHURCH

326 E
Pomeroy Su May serv!C('S Holy
t•orrununion on the llrst Su OOa.v of each month
and comjjned wtth monlng prayer on tk&gt;
third &amp;! May Morning prayer and sermon on
alliXtl::r Surrlays of tlr mo111h Olurch School
and Nuniery care prov1£t&gt;d. Coffee hour In the
Parlsh Hall hunedlately follO'Ningtheservke
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W
Main S Leo Lash, evan~1st Bit:ie SchOO
9:Ilam Morringworshlp10:Dam You1h
llll'l'tUli:). 6 00 p m E\ening warship 7 00 p
m Wednesday night prayer meetlngandBllie
stWy 700pm.
11-iE SALVATION ARMY liS BllternUI
A~ Pomeroy Mrs Dor.~ \\~nin g n c harge
Surt:I&lt;C,Y holiness m~mg. 10 am Sun:lay
Schad 10 l) am Su~ ScOOol YPSM
Eloise Adams eader 7 :IJ p m Salvation
mcel'lng, vario).IS SfFakB'S arv:t music sp;!C!als
Thui'5da;} ll lJ a m to 2 p m Ladies Home
League memOOrs In char~ all wcrnen
lnvt!M 6 45 p m Thursday Corp~ Cad&lt;t 1
Oasss Young Pl?o)ie-Bi!ie '1 .ll PJYl Bible
Snrly and Prayer meeting. opm to th? pub! c
Main St

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH O!f

Rt 124 3 miles from Portland-Long Bot
tm~ Edsel Hart pastoc Sunday Schod
9 30 a m Sunday morning preaching
10 30 a m Sunday evening serv ces 7 30

pm
MlDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

CHURCH Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrmann pastor Sunday SchoollO OOa
m Morning Worship 11 00 am Wed
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7 30 p m

APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO

DIST CHURCH - Paster Rev Carl
HIcks 10 mUes above RacJne on R 388
Sunday School 9 ~ m worship SE'rvice 10
a m Sunday evening service 6 00 p m
Prayer meetlng and Bible Study Thurs
day 6 30pm

MT OLIVE UNITED METHODIST -

Off 124 behind Wl\kesvUle Charles Jones

pastor Sunday School 9 30a m morning
worshiP 10 30: Sunday and Thursday
evening services 7 00 p m

CHRIST 33226 Children sHome Road (Courty

Road 76) 992-3&amp;7 Vocal music Surday Wor
shlp10am BlbleSlrlvllam Worship 6p
m Wedne;day Btie Surly 7 p.m Speaker
Lancbn Hop? wan~llst
OlD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH AMn Curtis past~r. Unda Swan
Sup SuMay School9::ll am preachlngser

vtre; fin;O and lhlnl &amp;Jlllay foUIM'ing&amp;Jlllay
SChad Youth meeting. 7 :lJ PA ~?Very Sunday
SACRED HEART CATHOUC CHURCH

- Pomeroy Msgr Michael Hellmer Ph
992-5898 Saturday eve ning Mass 5 l.l p m
Sunday Mass 8 am and 10 am CCD
classes 9 am SuMay Confessior'!s Onehalf hour before each Mass

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS

TOLIC FAlTH- New L rna Road next to
Fori Meigs Park Robert Y. Richards
pastor Sundi.l.y services 10 am and 7 p
I'll Wednesday "'orship 7 p m

GRAHAM

UNITED METHODIST

Preaching 9 30 am fi r st and second Sun
days of ea ch month third and fourth Sun
day each month worsh p services at 7 lOp
m Wednesdav evenings a 7 30 p m
Prayer and Bible Stud}
SEVENTH DAY

ADV E NTIST

Mul

her!)' Heights Road Pomeroy Paste Bob
Snyder Sabba h School Sul)frlntendent
Rodney Spires Sabba h School begins a 2
I? m on Saturday afte r noon wilh worship
service fo lowing at 3 00 p m Ever yone

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED MI!TIIODIST CHURCH
NORTIIEAST CLUSTER
Rev Don Archa~ Fraak Crofoot
Re-v Seldon John1oo

ALFRED - Church School 9 30 a m
Worship 11 a m UMYF 6 30 p m UMW
Third Tuesday 7 30 .p m Communion
first Sunday (Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 am Church
School lOam BlbleStudy Thursda) 7p
m UMW first Thursday 1 p m Com
munlon flnt Sunday (Archer)
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 am Church
School tO 30 am Blblf"Study Wednesday
7 30 p m (Johnsm)

LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9 30

a m Worship 10 30 a m Bible Study
Wednesday 7 30 p m UMYF Wed.nes
day 6 00 p m Communion First Sunday
ot. Month (Crofoot
REEDSVILLE - Chureh School9 30 a
m Worship Service 11 00 a m

TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL -

Church School 9 a m Worship 10 a m
Bible Study Tuesday 7 30 p m Commu
nlon First Sunday (Archer)

Rev Melvin Fra.oklln

Rev Clemeale s Zualaa. Jr
Rev Don Meadows
Rev Wmley Thllteh«
Rev raul Mlll11a
Rev Artbur Crabtree
Re-v Robert Steele

- S s er Harriett Warner Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a n Morning Worship 10 45

am
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Lysooo

FIRST SOUTiiERN BAPTIST Po

meroy Pike E Lamar 0 Bryant pastor
Jack Needs Sunday School Director Sun
da)' School 9 30 a m Morning Wo rshlp
10 45 e\enlngworshlp 7 OOp m (0 S T)
&amp; 7 30 (E S T ) Wednesday Prayer Ser
vfC&lt;' 7 00 p m (DS T) &amp; 7 30 PM IE S
T ) Mission Friends (ages 2 6) Royal
AmbaSsadors (boy s ages 618) and Girls
In Action (ages &amp;18 on Wednesdays 7 p
m {DST 1&amp;7 30pm (EST) Tuesday
VLs\ration 6 30pm

FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Bal

CENTRAL ~LUSTER

~

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

Hal ey
mlnlstt'r
Sa urday evening
evangelts1fc services open to public 7 p
m Sunday Church School 9 30 am
Morning Worship 10 30 a m

ASBURY (Syraruse) -Worship 11 a m
Church School 9 45 a m Charge Bible
Study Wednesday 7 30 p.m UMW first
Tuesday 1 30 p m
Choir Rehearsal
Wednesday 6 30 p m {Thatcher)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 am
Church SchoollO am Bible Study Tues
day 7 00 p m UMW First Monday 7 30
p m UMYF Sunday 6 p m Choir Rehearsal Children s at 6 30 p m Adult fol
lowing; Wed.nf"Sday (Franklin)

FLATWOODS- Church School lOam

Worship 11 a m Bible Study Thurs
day 7 p m UMYF Sunday 6 p m
(Franklin)

FOREST RUN - Worship 9 am

Jey Run Road Rev Emmet1 Rawson pas
lor Hand!~ Dunn supt Sunday Schad
lOam Sunday even ngser\lce 7 30p m
Bib e teachin g 7 30 p m Thursday

Church Schoci 10 A M Choir practice
Thursday 6 30 p m UMW third Monday
(Thatcher)

racuse Mark Morroo pastor Services 10
a m Sunday Evening services Sunday
and \\ ednesd a ~ at 6 00 p m

9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 30 a m
Youth Groop 4 p m Wednesday Btblf"
study 6 00 p m Chotr rehearsal 7 00 p m
(Zuniga)

SYRACUSE MlSSION Cherry So Sy

MIODLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION Dwight Hal~

rtrst elder Wanda Mohler Sunday School
Supt Sunday Schad 9 ;x} am Morning
Worship 10 30 a m Evening Worship 7 .l)
pm Wednesday prayermeeting7 JOpm

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD

Racine Rev Jam es Sa Uerfleld past&lt;:r
Freeman Will ams Supt Sunday School
9 45 am Sunda) and Wednesday even
lng sen Ices 7 p m

MIDDLEPORT FIRST

BAPTlST

Corner Sheth and Pa lmer James Seddon
Pastoc Edna Wllsa'l S S Supt Cathy
Riggs Asst Sup Sunday SchoOl 9 15 a
m Mornin g Worship 10 15 a m Sunday
E'ening ser vice 7 p m Praye r meeting
and Bibl e Study Wednesday evening 7 p
m Children s &lt;'holr practice Wednes
day 7 p.m Adult c hoir pra ctice WPd 8
p m Radi o progra m WMPO Sunday
S:JJam

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST

~th

and Main AI Hart soo minister
Richard DuBose Ass ociate Paster Mike
Gerlach Sunday School Superintendent
Bible School9 30 a m Morning Worship
10 30 a m Eve ning Worship 1 00 p m
Wednesday 7 00 p m Prayer meeting

HEATH (MJddleponJ -Church School

MINERSVILLE - Church School 9 00

a m Worship service 10 00 a m UMW
third Wednesday 1 p m (Thatchfr)

PEARL CHAPEL -Church School9 00
a m Worship Service 10 00 a m (Mar
lin)
POMEROY- Chureh School 9 15a m
Worship 10 30 a m Choir rehearsal
Wednesday 7 30 p m
UMW seoond
Tuesday 1: 30pm UMYFSunday 6p m
(Meadows)

ROCK SPRINGS- Church School 9 15

am

Worship lOa rn Bible Study Wed
nesday 7 30 p m UMYF (5enlors) Sun

day 6 p m (Juniors) every other Sun
day 6 p m (Fran kiln)
RUTLAND - Church School 10 a m
Worship 11 a m UMW First Monday
7 30 p.m (Crabtree)

SALEM CENTER- Church School9 1~
am
Morning Worship 10 15 a m
(Steele)
SNOWVILLE - Morning Worship 9 OQ

am

Church SchoollO 00 am {Martln)

SOU'111ERN CLUSTER
Rev Debl Foster

MIDDLEPORT CHURCHOF TilE NA
ZARENE PASTOR Fred Penhorwood

Rev Roaer Grace
Rev Carl Bl&lt;b

School 9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 45
a m Evangelistic meeting 7 00 p m
Wednesday 7 00 p m Prayer meeting

a m Morning Worship.lO 00 a m Bible
Study Sunday 7 00 p m Prayer meeting

BUI White Sunday School Supt Sunday

UNITED PRESBYTEBIAN MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
a.. 0 Qallln 11e11,
HARRISONVD..LE PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCH - Sunday Worship Servlce8
9 00 a m Church SchoallO 15 a m

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN -

Sunday School 9 a m
U 15am

Chun::h servtce

SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY
TERIAN - Sunday School IO a m
Chureh service 10 15 a m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Pastor

John Evana. Sunday School 10 00 a m

Sunday Morning Worshlp 11 00 a m Chi!
dren 1 Cbu'reh 11 am Sunday Evening
Service 7 00 p m Wed 6 p.rn You IIi La
til"' AuxUlary Wednooday 7 p m Fam
lly Wonblp

LETART FALLS - Worship 9 am
Church School10 a m (Graoe)
RACINE - Omrch School 10 am Wor
ship 11 a m UMW fourth Monday at 7 lJ p
m Men s Prayer Breakla.st Wednmlay 8
am (Grace}

SALEM CENTER- Church School9 15

a m Worship 10 15 a m Steele)
SNOWVILLE -

Worship 9 00 am
Church SchoollO 00 a m (Martin )

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST Rog&lt;r

Spring minister Starling Massar and 0
lver Swain Sunday School Supts Preach
lng 9 30 a m each Sunday Sunday School
1030am

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

CHRISTIAN UNION Theroo Durham
pastor Sunday serv ce 9 30 a m even
lng service 7 00 p m Prayer meeting
Wednesday 7 00 p m

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

CHRIST Joseph B Hoskins pastor Bib e
Class 9 30a m Mornlng\\ orshtplO 30a
m Evening Worship 6 30p m Thursday
Bible Study 6 30 p m

ZION C!IURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy

HurrlsrnvUle Rd Robert Purtell minis
ter Steve Stanley S S Supt Bill MeEI
rcry Asst Supt SundaySchoo19 30a m
Worship service 10 30 a m E ening wor
ship5unday7p m and Wednesday 7p m

ST JOHN LUTIIERAN CHURCH I'tne

Grove The Rev William Mldd.leswa rth
pastor Church service 9 30 a m Suru..
School 10 30 a m

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST

welcome

APPLE GROVE - Church School 9 00
7 00 p.m Thunclay (llldu)

BETHANY - Wonhlp 9 am Church

SchoallO am Bible Study Wednesday 10
a m Don::as Womea 1 Fellow!htp Wed
netday 11 a m (Fo1-ter)

Tom Runyon pastor Sunday School 9 30
a m L.arn Haynes S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m

RACINE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA

RENE Rev John Vance pastor Sandy
Justice Chairman of he Board of Chris
llan Life Sunday Schoo19 30 a m Morn
lng worship 10 30 a m evangelistic ser
vice 7 00 p m Wednesday service 7 p m

UBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST

Steve

Deaver Pastor Mike Swiger Sunday
School Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a m
Morning worship 10 40 a m
Sunday
evening worship 7 30 p m Wednesday
evening Bible study 7 30 p m

BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH

Burllngttam Ray LaudermUt pastrc: R&amp;
bert Cozar1 asststant JllStcr Sulll;zy Schoct
10 am wcrshJp7 p m Wednesday 6 p m
youth meeHng; Wed. 7 p m church ~et,'"\llces

PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH II

mi)PotfRt 325 Re\ BenJ Watts pastCf"
Robert Sf"arles S S Supt Sunday School
9 30 a m Morning Worsh p 10 30 a m
Sunday even ing service 7 30 p m Wed
nesday service 7 30 p m

SlLVER RUN BAPTfST B11 Lit Je

pastor Steve Little S S Supt Sunda}
School 10 a m Morn ng worsip 11 a m
Sunday evening worship 7 30 p m Prayer
meetlng and Blblestudy Wednesday 7 30
pm YouthmeetlngWednesdayat7pm

REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH

- 383 N 2nd Ave

Middleport Sunday
School 10 a m Sunday evening 7 00 p m
Mid week service Wed 7 p m

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH

Sunday School 9 30 am Dallas Janey
supt Morning worship 10 30 am Sun
day evening service 7 30 p m Wednes
day f"Vening serVIce 7 30 p m

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA

ZARENE Rev Glenn McMillan pastoc
Mary Janice Lavender Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Morning
worship 10 30 a m Evangelistic service
6p m PrayerandPraiseWednesday 7 p
nt Youth meeting 7 p m

EDEN

UNITED BRETHREN IN

CHRIST Elden R Blake past&lt;r Sunday
School 10 a m Gary Reed Lay leader
Morning sermon 11 a m Sunday night
services Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m
Song service 8 p m Preaching 8 30 p m
Mid week prayer meeting Wednesday 7

pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN

Char

les Domtgan pastor Mildred Ziegler Sun
day SChod Supt Morning Worship 9 JO a
m SuMay SChool tO lOam. Evenlngser
vice 7 30p m

MT UNION BAPTIST Paster Joe N

Thu~

RENE

third 'lburltlay 6 30 p m (Foster)
EAST LETART- Morning Worship 9 00

a rn Olureh SchoallO OOa m UMW tlrat

Tueallll!' 7 30

p m (Grace!

CHRIST OF LA'ITER DAY SAINTS Port
land Racine Road Mike Duhl past or:
Janice Danner church school director
Churchschoo\9 30a m Morning worship
10 30 a m Wednesday evening prayer
serv ces 7 30 p m

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl

Shu er pastor \\orship service 9 30a m
Sunday SchOol 10 30 a m Bable Study and
pray£&gt;r servlce Thursday 7 30 p m
C\R LET ON lNTERDENOMINAT!ON
AL CHURCH Kingsbury Road Rev
ClydE' W Hendersoo pastor Sunday
Schoo\9 JO am Ralph Carl Supt Even
ing worship 7 00 p m Prayer ml'etlng
Wednesday 7 00 p m
LONG BOITOM CHRISTIAN Vernon
Eldridge pastor Wallace Damewood S
S Supt Sunday SC hool 9 30 a m Worship
ServiCf' 10 :l'l a m

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH

0 H Ca r t pastor SundaySchoolat9 30a
m Mo rning worship at 10 30 a m Sun
day evening ser v cPat 7 30 p m Thursday
se rvlc~ at 7 30 p m

FREEDOM GOSPEL MlSSlDN at Bald

Knob located on County Road .H Rev
Roger Willford pastor Sunday School
'9 30 a m Morning Worshl 10 45 a m
Sunday evening worship 7 00 p m Wed
nesd ay evening Bible Study 7 00 p m

WHITES CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHURCH- Cool\UleRD Rev PhllllpRI

W Carter pastCf' Morning Worship 10:00
am Bible School 6 00 p m Bible Study
Wednesday 7 00 p m

DYESVILLE COHMUNITY CHURCH

thin! Thurltlay 6 30 p m (Footer)
MORNING STAR- Cbuteb ScbooU 45

s
N - Church SChool 9 :.t a m
MornlnaWorshlplO 45a m flrstandthird
SUndaya Fellowahip dinner with carmel

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS

Lloyd Sayre Supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m morning worship 10 30 a m Sunday
evening service 7 p m

GHRIST Robert Foster past(l" Howard
Caldwell Superintendent Church schod.
9 a m Worship service 9 45 a m

Worship 10 30 a m Bible Sludy
7 :ll p.m. (Foster)

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST

Charles Russell Sr minister Nonnan
Wtll supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Wor
ship service 10 30 am Bib e s udy Wed
nesday 6 00 p m

dPnour pastor Sunday School 9 30 am
worship service 10 30 a m Bible study
and worship service Wednesday 7 p m

Dex

CARMEL - Chureb School 9 30 a m

am

School 9 30 a m Morning worship 10 30
a m Teens in Act on 6 p m Evening
Worsh p 7 00 p m Chotr practice 8 p m
Sunda y Wednesday evening prayer and
B ble st ud y

ter Wocdy Call pas1or Services Sunday
10 a m and 7 p m Wednesday 7 p m

Sayre Sunday School 9 45 a m Evening
worship 6 30 p m Prayer Meeting 6 30
p m Wednesday

Worlhlp 10 45 a m 5eoond and Fourth
Sundays Fellowship dinner wttb Suttm

I

YOUR
OF WORSHIP CAN LEAD
YOU OUT OF TEMPTATION

214 E Mam
992 5130 Pomeroy

9 :ll

992-5141

~----~"""'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

&amp;lJl &amp;llllay SclvJol

StrYing Famdoes
264 S 2nd Milldleport

Memorial Hospital

Pomeroy

~,

FUNERAl HOME

\S) Veterans

tV
~

~~~~!

_

Rawhngs-Coats-Biower

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

S S

104 w Maon
991 2318 Pomeroy

IUI.lOI

rM;j

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER

I~

of Columbus 0

Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

....

FURNI~~~~~RDWARE II

JohnF Fulll Mgr
Ph 992 2101

m
L.I:!

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA
Rev

Herbert

Grate

pastor

Fronk R!lne '"'t Sunday School 9 30 a

m

Worshlp tervlce 11 a m and 7 p m

Sundlly Wednesday 7 p m Prayer meet

lng
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH William Williams, putrr. RQ.

bert E Bartoo. D&amp;redorotChrlltLan Edu
cattoa Steve £:blln assiStant Sunday

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST Roy

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST Amos

Tillis pas or Sonn) Hudsm supl Sunday
Sc hool 9 30 a m Morning worship 10 :ll
a m Sunday evening service 7 00 p m
Wednesday service 7 p m WMPO pr~
g ram 9 a m each Sunday

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA

RENE Samuel Basye pastor Sunday
Sc hoo\9 30 a m Worship service 10 30a
m
Young peoples service 6 pm
Evangeo\tstlcservice6 30p m Wednesday
servire 7 p m

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Miller

Mason W Va Sunday Bible Study 10
a m Worship 11 a m and 7 p m Wednes
day Bible Study vocal music 7 p m
St

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD Dud

ding Lane Masoo W Va J N Thacker
pastor E vening service 7 30 p m Women s Mtnlstry Thursday 9 30 am
Wednesday Prayer and Blble Study 7 15

pm
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartfonl W Va
Rev David McManis pastor Olurch
School 9 30 a m Sunday morning ser
vice 11 a m Sunday evening service
7 30 p m Wednesday prayer meeting 7 30

pm
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Lelart

W Va Rt 1 James Lewts pastor Wor
ship services 9 30 a m Sui'Klay School.ll
a m Evening worship 7 30 p m Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9 30 am Worship service Wednesday
730pm

OUR SA V!OUR LUTiiERAN CHURCH

Walnut and Henry Sts Ravenswood W
Va The Rev George C Weirick put&lt;r
Sunday SChool9 30 a m Suiulay worship
llam

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH located on

Pomeroy Pike County Road 25 near Flat
woods Rev Blackwood pastcr Service~
onSundnyatlO 30a m and7 .lJpm with
SundaySchool9 30a m Blble~tudy Wed
nesday 7 30 p m

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST St Rt J3IJ Antiquity Rev

Franklin DlckE"'""s pastor Sunday mom
lng 10 a m Sunday evening 7 .lJ p m
Thursday evening 7 30 p m

MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI
NESS CHURCH Inc 75 Pearl St Rev

lvan Myers acttJig pastcr Roger Manley
Sr Sunday- SChm:i Superintendent San
day School 9 30 a m Morning wcnhlp
10 30 a m evening worthfp 7 30 p m
Wednesday evenlJII Bible lt\M!y prayer
and praise service 1 30 p m

CHURCH QF JESUS CHRIST APQS.
TOL!C- VanZandt and Word R.d Elcler
James MIIJ..- putcr Su1141y Scbocj
10 30 a m Worship Service Sulldly 7 ill
p m Btble Stucly Wednood.lf~7: ill p m
CALVARY I!ILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrisonville Road Rev VI tiler Roulb putor
Cllalm Faulk, Sundoy"Stllool Supl Su1&gt;
day School9 30 a m mom!IIJ wcrlhlp 11
am

Sunday evenlllg service 7 30 p m
Prayer MeecJna Wedlleoday 1 30 p m

flOWERS FOR EVERY OCCASION

1614)992-2039 or
1614)992 S721
06 luth nut Ave Pomeroy

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

;oo
"''·.l
•

.

204 Condor St
Pomeroy, OH

992-2975

Dl\stfl
"M

\..11\o

.Q3

C.

vlrCLI
oof.s
93 Mill Str..t

."

..

POMEROY, OHI0-992 6677
loU (lilllhel and Ruth Ann Fn
pastor M~ vln UraKe S S Supt ~und ay
School9 30 a m Morning Wor ship lQ 30
Evening Worshlp 7 00 p m Vicdnesd a)
Prayer Service 7 00 p m

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH Ra Jrwd

St Mason Sunday SC'hool 10 a m Morn
lng worship 11 a m Evening ser ce 6 p

Middleport Ohio 46760
m Prayer meeting and Bible Soudy Wed
18141 892 1867- (99B OOKS)
nesday 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyl e
CHURCH
SUPPLIES
•
BIBLES
Borden
pas or Cornelius Bunch supo
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __. Sunday School 9 30 a m Seco nd and
"

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD

non Pentecos al \\ orsh p service Sunda y
10 am Sunday Schad 11 am E,.enlng
worship serv ce 7 00 p m Wednesda y
prayer meeting 7 00 p m

MT HERMON UNITE!;&gt; BRETHREN

IN CHRIST CHURCH Located In TE&gt;xa s
Community off Ct Rt 82 Rev Rober
Sanders pastor Jeff Holter lay leader
Ed Roush Sunday Schoo S.upt Sunday
School 9 30 a m morning worship and
children s church 10 30 am evening
preaching service first three Sundays
7 30 p m Special service fourth Sunday
evening 7 30 p m Wednesday Prayer
Meeting Bible Study and Youth Fellow
shtp 7 30 p m

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHEC'l

Located on 0 J White Road of Highway
160 Pat Hensoo pastor Sunday SchooJ 10
a m Classes for all ages Junior Church 11
a m Morning worship 11 a m Adult
Choir practlce6 p m Sunday Young People s Children s Chuf{'h and Adult Bible
Study Wednesday at 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL 570 Grant
St Middleport Affiliated with SoUthern
Baptlst Convention David Bryan Sr Ml
nister Sunday School 10 am Morning
worship 11 am Evening worship 7 p m
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer m~ting 7 p m

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST St

Rt 124 and Co Rd 5 Scott Stewart pas
tor William Amberger S S Sup! Sun
day School 9 30 a m Morning Worship
10 30 a m Evening worship 7 30 p m
Wednesday worship 7 30 p m

ST

Corner
meroy
pastor
service

PAUL LUTHERAN

CH~RCH

Sycamore and Second Sts Po
The Rev William Middleswart
Sunday School 9 45 a m Church
11 a m

SACRED

HEART CHURCH Msgr

Anthony Glannamore Ph 992 5898 Satur
day Evening Mass 7 30 p m Sunday
Mass 8 a m and 10 a m Confessions one
half hour before each Mass. CCD classes
1l am Sunday

VICfORY BAPTIST

~25

N 2nd S

Middleport James E Keesee pastor
Sunday morning worship 10 a m Even
lng service 7 p.m Wednesday evening
worship 1 p m Visitation Thursday 6 30 p
m

MORSE CHAPEL t;HURCH DaW&lt;I

Curfman pastor Sunday School 10 am
worship service 11 am Sunday night
worship service 7 30 p m
Midweek
prayer service Wednesday 7 p m

WESLEY AN

BIBLE

HOLINESS

CHURCH o1 Middleport 1nc 75 Pearl St
Rev [van Myers. pastcr Roger Manley
Sr Sunday School Supt Sunday School
9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 XI a m
Evening Worship 7 30 p m Wednesday
evening Bible study prayer and praise
service 1 30 p m

LMNG WORD CHESTER CHURCH

OF GOD - GU~t Spencer pasl&lt;r $un
day School 9 30 a m Morning service
10 OOa m Sundayevenlngservtce7 OOp
m Mid week prayer service Wednesday

7pm
MT OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN

ITY CHURCH Lawrence Bush pastcr

Max Folmer Sr S S Supt Sunday School

9 XI am SuDday evening service 7 30
m Wednesday evening Bible sh&amp;dy and
praise servlcf" 7 30 p m

UNITED FAITH CHURCH Rt 7on Po-

meroy By Pus. Rev Robert E Smith Sr

fourth Sundays worshap ser 'ice a 2 30 p
m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Four h an d
Main St M ddlcport Re\ G \bert Crai g
Jr pas t or Mrs Ervin Baumgardn er
Sunday School Sup! Sunday School9 30 a
m Worship Service 10 45 a m

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST

- Joseph B Hoskins evangel st Sunday
BibteStudy9a m V.orshlp lO a m Sun
day evening service 6 p m Wednesday
evening serv ce 7 p m
PENTECOSTAl ASSEMBLY Racin e
Rt 124 William Hoback pas or Sunday
School10 am Sunday e\ e nlng serv ice 7
p m Wednesday evening sen Ice 7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadl
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m Morning
Worship 10 30a m Prayer service a tern
ate Sundays

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST

APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd
next to For Meags Park Rutland Robel t
Richards pastor Serv ces at 7 p m on
Wednesdays and Sundays

HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS €HAP

TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church •
Rev David Ferrell pastor Henry Eblin
Sunday School Supt Sunday School. 10 a
m Morning Worship 11 a m Eve ning
service 7 30 p m Wednesday evening ser
vice 7 30 p m

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH

Gary Holter pastor Sundav serv ces 9 30
a m and 7 p m Midweek service 7 30 p
m Thursday

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL Thi rd

Ave Rev Clark

Bak~

pastor Ca r l Not

llngharn Sunday School Sup! Sunday
SChool 10 a m wlrh c asses for all a ges
Evening services at 6 p m Wedn esday B
ble stud) at 7 30 p m Youth services Fr
dayat7 30pm

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP 128MliS

Middleport Bro her Chul'k McPherson
pastor Sunday Schoo 10 a m Sunday
evenlngserv cesat 7 p m and\\edn esday
servic-es a 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kennet h Smi1h
pastor Sunday School 9 30 am chun:h
serv lce7 30pm you h (ellowsh p 6 JOp
m Bible study Thursday 7 30 p m
FULL GOSP.EL LIGHTHOUSE 33045
Hiland Road Pomeroy Tom Kell ~ pas
lor Danny Lambert S S Sup! Sunday
morning service at 10 a m Sunday e en
lng service 7 30 p m Tuesday and Thurs
day Services at 7 30 p m

NEW HAVEN GHURCH OF THE NA

ZARENE Rev Gle-ndon Stroud past or
Sunday Schoo19 30 a m Worship ser vice

10 30 am Youth service Sunda y 6 15 p ~
m Sunday evenlngservlce 7 OOp m Wed
nesday Prayf'r Meeting and Bibl e Study

700pm
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH Sun

day afternoon services at 2 30 Thu rsd ay
pvening services at 7 30

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Mason W

Va Pastor Bill Murphy Sunday SchoollO

am

Sundav eventng 7 30 p m Pra yer
meeting and Bible study W~nesday 7 30
p m Everyone welcome

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST Sa

\em St Rev Pau I Taylor pastm Sunda y
School10 a m Sunday evening 7 00 p m
Wednesday evening pravcr meeting 7 00

pm
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT

CHURCH Stlvf'r R dge Duane Syd en
strlcker pastor Sunday School 9 a m
Worship Service 10 a m Sunda y e\ e ning
service 7 00 p m Wednesday n ghr Bib E:
study 7 OOpm

Sermonette
The Church

Pomauy-Middleport, Oh10

..

held in custody for three hours
early Wednesday after wUce
answered a noisy party &amp;m
plaint AI. a hotel In the West End
section of Vancouver Where 21
Jl!IIIp Street i.s turned
The trouble started when a
security guard asked a group of
people to leave the hotel and
Depp allegedly then assaulted
the guard Telephones In the
hotel lobby also were damaged In
the incident Depp was released
after promising to appear In
court Aprtll2
LEGS TO STAND 01'! Bill
Demby the Vletnam War veteran who plays basketball on
artificial legs In those touc bing
television commercials was a
big hit with the disabled children
at the Massachusetts Hospital
School Demby doesn t need a
wheelchair but he nonetheless
strapped himself In one Wednes
day to play wheelchair basket
ball with the adoring kids
Demby Is a bit shy despite
being an InspiratiOn for the
disabled and had to be coaxed to
speak out during his visit When
you hear somebody say you cant
do something then you go out
and try It and you determine If

Child Conservation League
conducts recent meeting
Tammie Mash and Kitty Darst
were taken In as new members at
the recent meeting of the Middle
port Child Conservation League
held at the home of Linda
Broderick
The meeting was opened with
Mother s Prayer and a pledge lo
the flag Roll call was taken and
devotions were given by Bonnie
Scott
Norma Torres R N gave a

talk on the disease Accquired
Immune Deficiency Syndrome
&lt;AIDS) Members interacted by
telling how they would feel if they
had to send their child to school
w1th another ch1ld who had the
AIDS virus
It was reported that Thelma
Smes was doing better The
group also discussed plans for
future actlvllies and were urged
to remember their secret sisters

Markins birthday noted
Mrs Kenneth (Vermont) Mar
klns Racine was honored with a
birthday dinner at the home of
her daugbter Mr and Mrs John
Dean
Guests attending and present
lng g1fts were Mr and Mrs
Walter Terrell Mr and Mrs
Robert Reed David Rodney
and Chris Richard Ballinger
Mrs Vlrglma Smith Joshua and
Mica Dawn all of Pataskala
Mrs Donna Young Adam Riffle

Susan Riffle Tamlko Riffle
Michelle Riffle and Islah Riffle
Helen Harrrs Mr and Mrs Bill
Spaun Shanon and Julia Mr
and Mrs Junior Smalley Judy
Jones Angela Jones Susan Tho
mas Casey Thomas Jordon
Thomas Nancy Hartley and Mr
and Mrs John Waiter Dean
Jeremy James and Sarah
Also celebratmg a birthday
was James Dean

Exhibitors, judges named
The Oh10 Associalton of
Garden Clubs is announcing Its
upcoming serres of schools which
will cover the entire Exhibitors
and Judges Handbook in six
sessions
The first school w.IJol be April
10 11 at the Marrlott"'East Hotel
m Columbus and will prepare an
tndlvldual to become an Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
accredited flower show judge
Other topics to be covered
include tnstructlons on basic
designs by Mrs William Minor
daffodils by Mrs Alfred Hanenk
rat schedule wrrting by Mrs

John Miller plant Identification
by Dr James D Utzinger oral
judging of container grown fo
llage plants by Mrs Thomas
Cordray Spring blooming flow
ers by Mrs Fred Schuster and
judging by Mrs John Miller
Mrs Rtchard Waller and Char
lotte Ferguson wlll handle the
registration
Anyone Interested in attending
the school should make hotel
reservations before March 20
For more information on the
Exhibitors and Judges Hand
book contact Pal Holter at
!l92 7261

SVAC quiz bowl slated
The Second Annual SVAC Quiz
Bowl Tournament will be held
Monday at Buckeye Hills Career
Center In Rio Grande
Competing for first place will
be the varsity quiz bowl teams of
the SVAC High Schools Eastern
Hannan Trace Kyger Creek
North Gallla Oak Hill Southern
Southwestern and Symmes Val
ley The winner wtll advance to
the Regional SchotastlcCompeti
t1on at Shawnee Slate University
on April 22
Moderators and judges for the
academic competition will be
Betty Cantrell assistant dlrec

lor Davis Library Rio Grande
College Vivian Johnson Direc
tor of Marketing WJEH WYPC
Radio Chuck Mason editor PI
Pleasant Register
David
Mauer Dtrector of Lobrary and
Learning Resources Rio Grande
College Tim Snow Research
Librarian Rio Grande College
and Janet Stiltner current Miss
Gallla County
Competition will begin at 7
p m and the pubhc Is tnvited to
attend
For more information contact
Charla MacKenzie coordinator
at (614)446--7917

you can do It he told the ktds
'That s what II s all about
Don t let anybody pul any labels
on you You determine what you
can do and caonot do Make that
effort and decision to be the best
you can be -r&gt;emby whose lint
commercial was to promote
DuPont which made the material for his legs, also filmed a
public service ad about an
awards program !or disabled
people while at the school
OLD FORD TO PARK HIM
SELF The Ford Motor Co will
soon be without a Ford In the
driver s seat William Clay Ford
who Is the grandson of founder
He11ry Ford and will be 64 next
week Is retiring as vice chair
man at the end of March
His departure will leave the
company without a Ford In upper
management for the first time In
Its B:;.year old hlstqry But there
are a couple of younger model
Fords lower In the ranks Wll
lllt.m Clay Ford Jr 31 and Edael
B Ford II 40 who has been
saying he wants a bigger role In
the company The Ford family
still controls 40 percent of the
automaker s stock

Carleton Church
holds dmner
The Carleton Church enjoyed a
spaghetti dinner at the home of
Mr and Mrs John Walter Dean
Wolf Pen Rd recently
Those a ttendl ng were Rev
and Mrs Clyde Henderson Mr
and Mrs Ralph Carl Mr and
Mrs Olen Harrison Elizabeth
Murray Ruby Burnside Vlrgl
nla Dean Mr and Mrs Tom
Burnside Mr and Mrs Richard
HoudasheH and Betsy Mr and
Mrs Robert Ramsburg Ryan
Meltssa and Bradley Mr and
Mrs Wayne Beal Mr and Mrs
Roger Young and Wesley San
dra King and Mr and Mrs
Harold Well
Games were played

job's Daughters meet
Bethel 62 Internatlonal Order
of Job s Daughters will meet
Monday 7 30 p m at the Middle
port Masonic Temple with the
Investigating committee meet
mg at 7 p m

XtGamma Mu
chapter meets
Xi Gamma Mu Chapter Beta
Sigma Phi met recently at the
home of A R Knight It was
decided to change the date of the
next meeting lo March 28
Officers for the new year will be
elected at that time
Kay Adkins presided over the
meeting in which information
was discussed regarding the
Kentucky State Convention thai
will be held June 9-11 In
Lexington The group received
their tickets for the Ohio Eta Phi
St Patrick s Day dance on
March 18
Some canned goods have al
ready been distributed and more
were brought In A thank you
note was rece1ved from Ruth
Riffle
Mary Woods presented the
cultural report with a demonstra
tlon on clogging and the group
closed with a recipe auction

Wolf Pen notes
Mr and Mrs Richard Shuler of
Racine were recent visitors of
Mr and Mrs Harley Johnson
Mr and Mrs Leslie Frank
Sarah and Mathew of Texas
Rd were vtsltors of Mr and
Mrs Eugene Haning and Ronald
Mr and Mrs Donald Russell of
Harrisonville were Sunday vis
ltors of Mr and Mrs Robert
Russell and family
Ida Murphy and Barbara and
Merinda Davis visited Iva John
son Tuesday evening
Mr and Mrs Jeff Bole (Peggy
Murphy) are visiting In Stock
port for a few days

Church Women United hold meeting

His Body

We are the people of God'
We are bound together by faith and the love of Jesus Chris! our
Savior And yet many of us are often challenged to fullfil! our
faith as we confront various Issues from day to day
We the people of God In almost every ctty and town in
America are of all ages races and colors We are both male
and female We are from different nations denominations and
faiths We are all aliens In a foreign land
We do not however enjoy the same opportunities and
service$ Some ot us are poor living a meager exls tence
eating the husk the swine would eat We are strapped with
poor housing poor educational opportunities poor health care
services and lack of adequate employment
Some of us live lavishly with more than enough to share taking personal pride In our well being while contributing
modestly through charitable channels to the poor
All of us from time to time experience personal crisis and lie
under the threat of famlly Instability 1:rlme terminal illness
and loneliness
And yet, all of us are called upon to' greet one another with a
holy kiss and to 'do good to one anotber and to all
We tbe people of God are bound together We love one
another We are called upoa to encourage one another to seek
love and Justice for others, to pray and to work toward the end
that all may share In God s goodness mercy grace and Justice
through Jesus Christ our Savior
- Negail R Riley

Jesus Teach Me How to
Pray was the theme of Church
Women United when the annual
World Day of Prayer was held
recently at the Minersville Meth
odlst Church
Mrs Ervin Baumgardner pre-

TOPS meets
Peggy Vining assistant weight
recorder announced at the recent meeting of TOPS Ohio 570
held at the Coonhunters building
at the fairgrounds that the new
contest centering around Easter
would run for three weeks
Vlntna also reported that the
best loser wu Dr~ma Pickens
who also won tbe fruit basket
The meeting was calk&gt;d to
order by leader Llnnle Belle
Aleshire with the pledge and
prayer
Shirley Wolfe who won the
surpr!Je gift announced that the
winner ror the clown picture
contest was Juanita. Humphreys
KOPS winners will be an
nounced next week

sided over the meeting with Mrs
Brooks Sayre of the Minersville
church leading In the program
with readers bemg Mrs Karl
Grueser and Mrs William
Downie
The group sang 0 God You
Hear Our Every Prayer
Christ Teach Me How to Pray
and God of Justice God of
Mercy accompanied by Miss
Glenna Rummell who also recited The Touch of the Masters
Hand
Kenny Wiggins sang The
Lord s Prayer accompanied by
his sister Mrs Walter Bentz on
the organ, while Mrs , Arnold_

IE•EMIEI
WITHTo-d-111
fLOWIIS ..

.. """

••lpeolll" " " " ' - ' lui eoll

•

POMEIOY
FLOWEI SHOP
"1'11.- IF'flY Arnf!rinr S.,.dt Lm~ ..
PIL ftl 21ft er ft2·S711

Richards pantomimed with
rhythmic motions
Ushers were Mrs James Titus
Mrs Herbert Pugh Mrs Ted
Downie and Mrs Dwight Wal
lace The offeratory prayer was
given by Mrs Allen Hampton
Greeters were Mrs Grueser
and Mrs Pugh

The Dally Sentlnei- Page-7

PubliC N ot1ce

Public Nottee

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealod bidl will be re
ceivod at tht Mayor' o Of
flee 237 R..,. St Mlddt•
port, Ohro 41780 unll 3 00
p."' AprU 24 1989 fort hi
following cietQr!bod real "

133 thonce weot along tile
north Hno of Lot N 133 o

Ute In accordance with Or
dlnanoo~aOI-18

PARCEL NO 1 811Qin

nine at the northe•t corner
of Lot No 132 lhonce1outh

d11..nct1 of 711 feel and 8 jn
cheo 10 the place of bogon

nlng Sold above lot beong o
part of Philip Joneo AddoiN&gt;n
to the Vlllogo of Mrddteport
DEEO REFERENCE Vo
lumo 228 !!... 8411 M11go
County Deed Rocordl
Seve and except a percel
corweyed to Crtaen1 Na

along the - t oklo of Thord
Sti"MI o d11tance of 60 feat
thence at right angleo and
_, along lht oouth line of
IO!d Lot No 132 • dl1tance
of 68\'o f- thence ot right

lionel Bonk.

Mrddleport.

Ohta by dad of even date

herewith
PARCEL NO

PubliC Notice

Pubhc N otiC&amp;

an" or Ill t»CII lftCI fO WIIVe

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

1nv •nform.tn•

1ft

biddi119

Fred Hoflmon Meyor
V•ll•g• of Maddleport

(3110 17 24 31
1417 14 8tc

Southern Oh1o Coal Com
pany M1t191 Mane No 2 P

PubliC N ot1ce

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Fobrull'"/ 27 1989 on

lowing Nal "tate an:uated 1n

anal• and north a diatence

Ohta Th.t ptlrt of Lot No

43201 woo appoonttd •••

of 50 f- to Race Sir-

132 dotcrlbod

thence weat along the •outh

BeQinnlng at the nonh wea

••tv
corner of the eut on•
half of lot No 132 thence

olde of Race Street o dlotanco of 581'. f- to thl
place of bealnnong; oaid lot
btlng In Philip Joneo Addition to the Vlllltgo of Mrdcl•
Port. Mllgo County Ohio
ond faCing 60 leet on Third
Street and eJC.tending • •
terly at that w1dth a dlttance
ofll'h f AIIO the follOWing real ••

tate ohuated on Mrddleport
Mol(ll County Ohro 811Qlr&gt;·

Tho to!

Mrddleport. Mei(ll County
01

follow1

lOUth a dl1tance of 50 IHI at
nght angiiiiO tht north hne

tete convl';'ed to CttiZena

angiM and wttt a dlatance
of a .... thence at nght an

corded an Volume 230 Page

National Bonk. by dead re-

The Vollago of Moddleport
r81ervet the nght to reJect

Famtly medtcime
By .John C Wolf D 0
Associate Professor of Family

Medicine
Ohio University CoUege of Osteopathic Medicine
Queotlon Are generic drugs as
good as brand name drugs•
Answer Just as a generic can
ot peaches Is pretty similar to a
can of brand name peaches
generic drugs are similar to
brand name drugs
The Food and Drug Adminls
!ration says that generic drugs
usually are as safe and effective
as the brand name products All
drugs sold In the United States
must meet the same FDA stand
ard of quality All drug manufac
turing firms must register with
the FDA and all must follow the
same rules
Generic prescribing Is on the
Increase Twenty years ago less
than 7 percent of all prescriptions
filled In retail pharmacies were
for generic products That
number has more than doubled
since then
There are hundreds of generic
products available so you can
ask your doctor about the possi
blllty of generics any time you
get a prescription Also over
the-counter drugs like Tylenol
(acetaminophen) and Benadryl
(diphenhydramine hydrochlo
ride) are available In generic
forms Benadryl a former pres
crlptlon medication that Is now
available without prescription Is
an antihistamine used for hay

29 34 35 ond Froctloo 36

The propoaed underground
mtnlng area wdl encompatl
51 7 acres end 11 bceted on
the Wilknville 71h Mmute
U S G S quadrangle map
approx•m•tely 2
mat ..
Nonheut of Wilkesvtlle
Ohto The eppl•catton pro
pOMI to expend the area for
Iongweii mtmng

loto of P D Box 275 Syro
cuM Ohio 45789
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge

e

PubliC Not1ce

The apphcatton 11 on fa Ia at
the offte&amp; of the Meigs
County Recorder Meigs
County Court Hou11 Se
cond Street Pomeroy Ohto
46789 for public YteWtng
Wrrtten comments and / or
requests for an mformal
conference mav ba sent to
the Davta.on of Reclamauon
Fountain Square Bulldtng
B 3 Columbuo Ohoo 43224
wtthm thirty ( 30t days of the
last date of publication of
th•s notice

on

the Metgs County Probate

Court Cue No 28 168
Thomu M Theo11 49140
SR124 Rodna. Ohio 41in1

wa1 appointed Executor of
the 81tete of Bonnee F
Theiss deceued late of
Route 3 Box 28 Aacme

Ohro 46771

326 M01go County Deed
Rec:ordt

14 to the Oh10 Department
of Natural Resourcu Otv
tSK)n of Reclamation The
propoted coal mintng opera
tton will be 1n Meigs County
Salam Township Secttons

cutnx of the Htate of Ken
neth B Lawoon doc-ad

NOTitE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On February 27 1989

north a d11tance of 39 fHt

Permit numbered R 0366

Oh10

and I Inch• in w1dth off of
the w.t aide of the eat half

ofLot No 132 ond l11vong a
parcal of I1nd 60 foot on
Race SlrHI and 60 feel on
along the ooot oklo of Third the alley
DEEO REFERENCE Vo
Street 11hst1nce of 60 feet
thence at right anglea and lumo 230 Pogo 323 Margo
County Deed Recordo
. ., 1 d11tance of 83\-2 feet
EXCEPTING tho reel eo
thence at raght angles and

gl• 1nd north 1 daabnce of
10 fHI and 7 1nchM to the
north line of 1-111d Lot No

Delaware

Leno K NMoolrood Clerk
(3) 3 10 17 3tc

n1ng8t the northwnt corrw'
of Lot No 133 thence lOUth

t111d &amp;lncheo thence at roght

Road

of Lot No 132 thence a•t
6 fHt and 6 ~nchea thence
north 10 feet; lhonce weot 6
fHt and I •nch• to the
plKe of begtnnmg. and be

ong 1 parcol of lond 6 foot

applicatton to NVtte 1 Coal
Mtnmg end Reclamation

the Marga County Probate

Court Cooo No 26 167
Joyce Hope 4963 Loberty

~

Box 490 Atheno Ohoo
45701 hu oubmRtod on

0

Robart E Buck
Probate Judge

(2117 24 13) 3 10 4tc

Lono K NMooirood Clerk
(313 10 17 3te

Generic or name brand?
fever and other allergies Your
pharmacist can give you good
advice on which over the-counter
generics to buy
Question Recently when I
went to get a prescription filled at
the drug store the pharmacist
said that he could not give me
generic pills because of the way
the doctor had written the
prescription He said I could
have saved a lot of money with a
generic Is there ever a good
reason for not using generics•
Answer In most states phar
maclsts have the right to substl
lute generic drugs In many
situations This Is a relatively
recent development However
when the doctor feels the generic
is not as good as the brand name
drug he or she can specify no
substitution or dispense as
written
and the pharmacist
must respect this instruction
Though I don I know the nature
of your condition I d assume
your doctor probably had a very
good reason for not prescribing a
generic medication Experience
tells me that with certain medl
cations the brand name product
usually gets better rt&gt;sults than
the generic version When I know
this to be the case I II do as your
doctor did and require the
pharmacist to dispense the brand
name product
There are a number of reasons
why a generic medication and a
brand name product may not be

exactly the same For Instance
products containing the same
active Ingredient but made by
dlffereot manufacturers are not
always blo equivalent
That
Is because of different binders
and fillers - the so-called Inert
Ingredients - they may be
absorbed by the body at different
rates While the FDA is taking
measures to minimize the occur
renee of this problem the tech
nology is not yet available that
can assure the
bio
eqalvalence of all drugs
You are absolutely right on
your point about generic drugs
costing less This is an especially
Important consideration for people who take prescription drugs
for long periods of time These
folks can save significant
amounts of money by buying
generic drugs

IirJ'RODVCIIfO

CHRIS RICHARDSON
CUT &amp;: STYLE'' SPECIAL
II s Simple Bnng a "F11st Timer"
Fnend To Meet Chns and
YOU LL BOTH RECEIVE 50% OFF
MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT NOW/

Sptclalln EntciTh"' Sat March 18

SHEAR DESIGNS UNUr.tTED
"Fnendly Professoonal Haor Care•
RL 62 Mason

Menus set
at schools
Luncheon menus for schools In
the Meigs and Eastern Local
School Drstricts and Carleton
Srhool have been announced
Meigs
Monday Hot dog with sauce
baked beans fruit and milk
Tuesday toasted cheese sand
wich green beans fruit and
milk
Wednesdav Beefaronl hot
rolls and butter applesauce and
milk
Thursday pork barbecue
corn fruit cookie and m tlk
Friday Cook s choice
Eastern
Monday hoi dog with sauce
peas fruit and milk
Tuesday
goulash garlic
bread relish tray fruil and milk
Wednesday sloppy joe green
beans brownie fruit and milk
Thursday chicken bread and
butter mashed potatoes and
gravy fruit and milk
Friday No school parent
teacher conferences
Carleton
Monday corn dogs french
frtes creamed tomatoes fruit
and mllk
Tuesday creamed turkey over
mashed potatoes cole slaw roll
and milk
Wednesday fish sandwich
tater tots carrot sticks fruit and
mUk.
Thursday baked ham sweet
potatoes roll fruit and mllk
Friday taco salad corn apple
crisp and mUk

SATURDAY

MARCH II
10:00 P.M.
TO

1.5 MILE NO. OF POMEIOY ON S.R. 7

bytlrocllloridel

gestant
Nasal D~~~~us congestton

tpseuctoepbedrifte

ldss:r haY {ever

Reheves
due to co t

Drowsiness

With?~, 24 tAILi1S
. so ..

II OW OPEfllll POMEROY /MIDIUPOIT
DOMINO'S
PillA

...

DIUYRS

P-oy, OH

773-5352

....... Al:rOII'""" Kmlf• Rltlllnnt

NOW

lEG. PRICE $4,64

Sl 79

'WHILE SUPPLIES LAST '

W•t Main St
"2-2124

DlllfUifOITWO

2 MEDIUM PIZZAS

sa.aa

Lundt Only 11 AM 1 PM

I

I
I

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992·6669

271 NORTH SECOND

MIDDlEPORT, OH

- - --

I

�Page 8 The

Daily Sentinel
Public Notice

Public Notic e

Public Notice

Public Notice

8 us tn e s s
e

to dy; that any per.s on claif":'·
Fede ral Cou rts if any act io n
NOTIC E
NOTICE OF FINO lNG
is brought t o enfo rce resNOTIC E IS HEREBY GI- ing to hava any 1nterett m
OF NO SIGIIIIFICANT
ponsibilities in relat io n t o
VEN: t~at o n February 1 6 . and to sa id defendant pro·
ENVIRONMENTAL
env ironmental review s. de1 9 8 9. t he United Stat e s of arty shall file w ith the ~le!k
IMPACT AND
BINGO
I
cis ion-making and action,
Ame rica, as Plai nt iff, fil ed a of this Court hit claim w1thm
NOTICE OF INTENT TO
POMEROY
·EAGLES
I
and that these r&amp;~pons l blli­
""rifled Complalnc For For- ten (10 ) day s fo llowing 1his
REQU EST RELEAS E
Not
ice
in
conformity
with
CLUB
I
ties have been s atisfied. The
feit ure in the United SUites
- - ·
OF F\I NDS
224 E. MAIN ST.
I
legal effeCf of lho CortificoOlnill:t
Court fo r t~e the requ irem ent• of Ru le MEIGS COUNTY
992-9976
I
rl t ion is that upon ita approSouthern District of Ohio, Cl 61 of the Supplemental COMMISSION ERS
val. the M.ai.gs County ComEast ern Piviaio n, at..Colum::. Rulee fo r Certlin Admirillv Gourthou ee
THUIS. E.l. 6:!15 P.M. -I
bus. Ohio, being Civil Action and Maritime Claims of the Pomeroy, Oh io 467 69
missioners may UIB the
SUN. U . t:45 P.M. 1
No . C2-89 -0 134, agai nst Federal Rules of Civil Proce- 614-992-6861
COBG funds, and the Ohio
DODI PillE
Department of Developcerta in pro perty, as defend- dure. and shall thereafter TO ALL INTERESTED
2 H.O. FREE w~h coupon and 1
serve his answer to plaint- GROUPS. PERSONS ,
ment will have satisfied the
ant, to w it :
pun:hose of min. H.C. Pack- 1
responsibilities . under the 1 1111. lim~ I, coupon per cus- I
Real Property kn own and iff' s complaint and answers AND AGENCIES :
.
numbere d as 38 998 Dyea- to any Interrogatories relatOn or about Marc h 24, National Environmental Poltomer per btn&amp;O sesSion.
1
ville Road , Po meroy, O hio ing to a plaintiff' s complaint 1989, th8 above nam ed icy Act of 1969. The Ohio 1 We Poy 150.00 Por Gome I
within twenty (20~ days fol- County will request the Ohio
Department of Develo p- I Om 110 People 165.00 I
and legally d&amp;~cri bed as :
Situated
in Columbia lowing the filing rif hiaclaim, Department of Develo p- ment, Office of Local Go- I
Per Game
1-l -Hn I
To wn shi p. Meigs Co u nty, as required by and in confor- ment. Office of local Go- vernment Services. will ac- 1 UL #005-32
Ohio:
Be ginning at the mity with said Supplemental vernment S ervices, to re- cept an o bjection to its ap -'
northwest co rner of Sectio'n Rule Cl6);.,thot any person lease Federal Funds. for the prov'al of the ralaaseoffu'nds ~----------·
8 , Town 8. Range15. of the wishing to petition for the following p roject .
and acceptance of the certiOh io Company's purchas e; remission of mitigation of
Title: Community Devel- fication only if it is on one of
th ence wes t 104 rods 10 the forfeiture of the defend- opment Block Grant. Econ- t he follow ing bas is : 111 That
links; thence s outh 43 rods; ant property may do so by omic Development Pro· t he certification was not
t han ce east 1 04 rods 1 0 - submitting a Petition for Re- gram. loan to Meigs Manu- executed by the Chief Ex·
links : thenca north 43 ro ds miuion or Mitigation to D . factured Ho using, Inc . for ecutive Officer: (2) that apSYRACUSE, OHid
United site preparation and related plicant's environmental reto t he p lace of beginning. Michael CritBS,
Everything
Marked
containi ng 2 8 acres, mo re o r States Anorney. Room 200, construction activity.
view record for the project
Down
85
Marconi
Bou&amp;evard,
Colless.
location : Bedford Town- indicate• ominion of a re•Cement Items
Save and except 5 acres umbus. Ohio 43216, in con- ship. Meigs County, Ohio
quired decision findiflg, or
•Flower
Pots
sold to Hirman T. Cline:
formity with the requires tep applicable in the project
Amount: $258.000
Also the followtng deacribad ments of Part 9 of Title 28 of
•Bird
Baths
in
the
review
process.
Ob·
An Environm ental Review
real estate, sh:uated in Col- the Code of Federal Regula- Record
•Yard Ornaments
respecting
the jections must be prepared
umbia
Townthip, Maigo tions ·a nd by filing a copy of within project hn be.e n and . eub11_1itted in accorBecause of Cold Weather
County, Ohio; Beginning 10 nid Petition for Reminion made by the above named dance with the required pro·
Everything Inside.
chains 73 links lOUth of the or Mitigation with the Drug County which document$ cadurej24 CFR Part 681 and
Ring
Door Bell for Service
Administra- the environmental review of may be addressed to the
northelllt cornet of Section 8 Enforcemerit
.
2-7-i mo.
in th e Township of Columbia: tion, 7406 Federal Building, the project. This Environ- Ohio Department of Develthenoa weet 26 choino1 0 inks 560 Main Street, Cincin- mental RB\Iiew Record is on opment. Office of local
to a lllllke; thence oouth 96 nati, Ohio 45202. with re- file at the above address and Government Services. 24th
chains 77 links to a stake; ference to DEA file number ia ava"ilable for public exami- · Floor. Vernal Riffe. State
t hence east 5 chains: 60 links 19-86-X010 .
Office Tower, 77 South
nation upon request. The
to a stone;: thence south 6
ROBERT W . FOSTER project has been found to High
Street, Co lumbus.
chains; thence e•t 20 chains
United Statas Marshal have no significant effect on
Ohio 43215 .
5 0 links to a stake where a sasFor the Southern Dinrict the environment.
Objection to the release of
of Ohio
safras 6 nonh (15 degr-1
funds on basis other than
The Meigs County Com·
eMt 14 links; thenoe north 14 (3) 3, 10. 17 3tc ·
those stated above will not
miuioners will undertake
chains n linlw to the place of
bo considered by the Ohio
the described project w ith
Department of Developbeginning. it baing the same ' - - - -- ,.,--,---- Communtty Development
premises sat off and as - I·
ment. No objection received
Block Grant funds from the
signed to Caroline Rawlings
Public Notice
alter April 12, 1989. will
Ohio Department of Develin a c ertain petition for part i ~ 1--- - - - '- - - - opment. the Meigs County
be considered by the Ohio
FACTORY CHOKE
t ion in Meig1 County Com Department of DevelopCommissioners are certify12
GAUGE SHOTGUNS
PUBLIC NOTICE
mon Pleas Court where•
ment.
ing to the Ohio Department
ONLY
NOTICE is hereby given of Devel9pment that the
Geo rge R. Rawlings, et al .,
Mann.inR Roush, President
.9-19-88 tfn
was peth:ioner and Amanda that on Saturday , March 11. County and Meigs County
'Meiq.s Cou"ty .Board
Rawlings et al., were res- 1989. at 10:00 a. m. , a pub- Commiuionrs · in their Offiof Commissioners
pondents and recorded In lic sale will be held at 69 cial capacity as County
.
. Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
complete W Page 240 and Brownell Ave., Middleport. Commissioners, consent to
241 to which reference is Ohio. to sail for caa h the fo I- accept the jurisdiction of the
(3110. 17, 2tc
hereby made, estimated at I owing collateral :
1973
Elcona
Mobile
36 3.4 acres, more or leu.
Serial
number
Reference is made to deed Home,
of Ethel l . Harmon to Hal 8 , 26238 6586. 2 bdrm.
Harmon datedJune6, 1962,
Lees• Murphey
The Farmers Bank and
and recorded in Volume 215, Savings Company, Pome&amp; Associates
Page 377.
roy, Ohio reserves the right '----------.1...---------~
PUBLIC
Grantor. Hal B. Harman. to bid at this sale, and to r
hereby excepts and reserves withdrew the above colla'
all the coal and other mi· taral prior to sole.
RELATIONS
ner81e except the oil and gas The Farmers Bank and Sav·
108 High Street
and further excepts and res- ings Company reserves the
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
erves one-half of the ·oil and
reiect any or all bids I
Phon,. (6 14) 992-2922
submitted.
gas from the above de- ·right
scribed real estate.
Further, the above colla"=====2=·3:·:::'8::9::•£=n4
As part consideration for ter•' w ill ba sold in the conr
this conveyance the grantor dition it is in with no e• ·
·
agrees that there shall be no pressed or implied warren NOW OPEN FOR
air shaitts or use or damage ties given. For mo re inlo~mato the surface for the mining tion contact Scott Shonk.
BUSINESS
of any of the minerals in- 992-3293.
14th &amp; Main St.
INTERIOR-EXTERIOR
cluding the coal under the (3) 8, 9 , 10, 3tc
Point Ploasant, W.Va.
FREE ESTIMATES
above described real estate
We Buy Aluminum
without the express consent
Cons. Glen, Brass,
1
Take tht pain out of
of th e grantee, Michael l. 1 Card of Thanks
Copper and More
painting. let me do
Fisher .
Last references: Volume
it for you.
j2mN'.!::'
Rates,
261, Page 775, and Volume
VERY REASONABLE
304-675-3161
Fully Insured
151. Page 91 , Meigs County
We would like to ex.
HAVE REFERENCE
Deed Records.
For Mort Information
992-6681
press our sincere appreDeed reference: V.olume
3-tQ-"89-1
1-31 •' 88 -1 mo.
614-985-4180
ciation to all who as270.
Page 241. Meigs
2-15-'88-1 mo. d.
County Deed"Records.
sisted in any way during
:
Togeth•r with all the apthe illness and death of
purtenances and hereditaHoward L. Writesel
our wife, mother. and
ments thereunto belonging;
that pursuant to a Warrant of
grandmother, Alberta l.
01
PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
Arreet in Rem, the United
Henderson.
Thanks
to
•Washers
•Dryers
Now location:
States Marshal has arrested
the defendant property and
Drs. Farnay, Shah and
I 61 North Socond
•Ranges •Freezers
holds the sam e in his cusGutters
Middloporl, Ohio 45760
M.clntosh. the staff of
•Refrigerators ·
Downspouts
St. Joseph Hospital, Ra"Must lo Rtpairable"
&amp;
1 Card of Thanks
Gutter Cleaning
We Carr.y Fishing Suppli•
cine Emergency Squad,
.
Painting
Pay Your Phone
Rev. Paul McGuire, Rev.
FREE EStiMATES
• and Cable Bills Hare

,....,®

INDUSTRIES
INC

~~tFaRI~:.

Reasonabl~

CALL

WANTED

DEAD

AUVE

ROOFING

NEW-REPAIR

SALES

3

Announcements

liEN'S APPUANCE
SEIVICE

Kenny Baker, Lebanon
Township Trustees, Ewing Funeral Home, Pallbearers, Jimmie, Sr.,
·Don, Dale and Rick Putman, John A. aod Darrell
Henderson. Thanks to
friends and neighbors
for floral arrangements,
food and cards.
Ralph l. Henderson
&amp; family

985-3561
Wa Service

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New H - Built

PH. 949-2801
or· Res. 949-2860

Happy Ads

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Happy Birthday
So111111a

BISSELL
BUILDERS

I

Lon,

J•cob

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Look •nd see If
you know ... who
turns the big

"At

Reasonable

Prices "

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2160

Flve-01

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

.. _

f., , ··, · 1 \

~

.

,R!SIDINCE PHONE

MOBIL~

16141 992·7754

HOME PARK

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
. •Lot Rentals

U. S. IT. 50 UST
GUYSVIllE, OliO

992-7479
Rt. 33 North of

Bu1h Hog Farm
Equpment Dealer.

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
319 So. 2nd Ave.

OPEN SATURDAYS
10:00 'Til 5:00

9 A.M.-6 P.M.
IIIIlS. 9 A.M.-12 NOON

ll•m Birth•••
(huh l:iaudla7111)
We Lo•• VolA,

SAT. 9 A.M.-2 P.M.

Call Artythno Day or
Night

992-6135
Irian Houdasholt, Ownor
3nl
Oh.

Help Wanted

B&amp;B PAINTING
SYRACUSE. OHIO

Commercial
Residential
INTIRIOR•EXTERIOR
ROOFING
Joe &amp; Robart Brown
Call Evenings....

992-3801
992-6347
2-27-89-1 mo.

J&amp;L
INSULATION ,

WANTED:
FOSTER-CARE WORKER:
Provide
long-term residential services to 1 or 2
Meigs County adults who have mental
retardation / developmental disabilities
(M .S.P . R.). Must be willing and able to
have your home (no trailers) meet Ohio
Dept. MR/DD licensure requirements.

Mastic &amp; Certainteed·
Vinyl Siding
Roofina

Snmless Gutt•
Replacement Windows

Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows
•

Cell David Milliken 992-6681 or write
, c/o Meigs Co. Brd. MR/00; 1310
Carleton St., S racuse, Oh . 45779. ·

Free E1tlmtttes

Call 992-2772

1115/ Ho

•

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SliiCUSf. OHIO
Most Foreign ond
Domestic Y'ehicles
A/ C Service
All Maior &amp; Minor
Repairs
N lASE Certified Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

Cartlfiod

PER LOAD
DRIVER ED
LIGHT HAULING DO~IEI

A•embiM'I. E•rn mane, ••..,:.

Pom•oy. Ohio 45769
Ph. 614-992-5479
... 614-992-2477 " (laims:
1-100-421-3535

==
•

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

bling Musical Tedct, •••·
Mat•i• supplied No ullln_g..
Write: Jo. EI EntM'prla-. P .O .
Box 2203. Kluimmaa, .Ill

Announcements

32742- 2203.

Governmant Jot.! t18, 037. ~t0
869,40&amp;. lmmedill:e Hlr!ngl
Ba.,ty Pag..-t Contast 'All . Your eree. Call 1Refund•lll•l&amp; aizes. Call 814-367- 1-518-419-3e11 ht · F1e:~2
7412 after 6pm.
for Federal Lilt 24 Hrs.
,;..
Haye1 R. .tty
Jack W. Carsev-Reahor.

814-992-2403 01 814-992-

Male 811aette hound, approx 3
'f'1 old. ntd with black markinga,

304-773-5838.
Only

TRI·COUNTY
RECYCLING

2 Beegla puj,pi1111, 15 weeka otd.
304-895-3002.

Yard Sale

·- - - - - ~iillipons ·· · ······

&amp;

·

Vicinity

Ywd Sai•S•turdey 10..4. '12
mile out Mill Cretk. Ckllhea,
bikes . acottere , re cliner,

Paying today
Jan. 14, 1989

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

#1 COPPER .............. 86' lb.
I~

CLEAN ALUMINUM

SHUTS ............... ~.... 52• I~

CLEAN ALUMiNUM
I~

Cell Merlin Wedtmf1iflr, Auctiona., Ucenaed &amp; Bonckd In
Stale of Ohio : liquklaUOns.
f•me. e1tat11, ent ... ull. etc.

114-245-&amp;1&amp;2.

Wt

,,.,,., Phone 304-273-3447

out radiaton. We also

IRONY
HIT............. 5' lo 30• 11.
•oNY CAST .... 3• to 2D&lt; 1~
S1 AINIESS ................ 20• lb.

992-5114

South of R•••wood. Cona:l9nmenta wtfao,., Uwn Tractor.

r.-lr Gos Tanks.

PIT IIU FORD
992-21

Middleport,

lfVBAG£ CANS .....

50 1

w.,

LPN: pwt tim.,fulltlme. wening

shift. ttaning t7.85 p• hour.

Conto.. Cathy W..V. RN-DON,

Care Haven of Pbint Ple•ant.

304-675- 3005.

Want.:ll.lll time Mlllmechlf't·
ics, BXJ*Ience r-.ulr«&lt;. Send
letter of ~pll~lon to Sox C-8
cere Point Pl . .ent Regllter,
200 Main St., Point PleMant,

I~

Located Off B YPIII
ofRt1. 111o

AUCTIOIIIEEA

Ect..v• Wlnt• now booking
sDring tal•. 17 ,_.. ape........IIOOd.

w.v•.

IWm Equipment Aldlon. 881
Morch 1t, 10:00
wood

A~n

Sel• position evaillbe•
Silv .. BridgePia:ra. reaJmeo"",

1110 PHONE Colli pt-&amp;

AM,....,..,..
c.nt •. Rt. 2

e=.m lmpl-. Much Muoh
Mara. AuctlonMr Robert J .
Roln" No. 218, 304-2732Bt4.

·•

Eldarlv lldv care. I p.m.- Be.m . 4
night1. Call 44&amp;-4782 aft•- 1
p.m.
Now dleoount vldoo op':,'!~S
loon in Point Pl. .lf'lt will

acr-.
moetl¥ tiM. 1 mJ.StotytRun Rd.
wet•.

Kyg• dftt. .9

Cll 114-387-7e83.
Nice 15 room bride houM wllh
• • • OOUI'Itfy kltahen, bfeerl
way, Z
gw.ge. Set on 1 ecre
lot . ....,.nlr'l TriCe echo~ dte-

MT or MLT ASCP

Roet tech .W s.atiDM mutt bll

Phi-- •

304-1711-43&lt;10. AA·EOE.

-

turnao-. nnl ....,..., bladdap
"'"''·
oppt, 0111 114-31.11110 far
Lou

Two bectoom .,,.• ..., mo ...

ho- .111.00 ..... ut.....
30_.e71-IB12 or e71-3800.

p.,

3 bectoom trel• for rent.
dep011t •d you
utlltla
Phono 304-871'2&amp;38.

3 t. mo..• home ne. the 'Y.
Nloe lot. Accept tectkm '8'

Apartment
for Rent

-oom.

2 bectDOmtmu••d2._..oom
.....,... w,o hoolotp,,.,..

blldl homo on e.go
lot In Hoven. good cond.
304-773-11881 .
boctrDM~

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
Roa!ood 1984111tylillo14a70 3

11!.,11\b•ht. E"'""wrtoon&lt;ltlan. On nntedlot.lndu. . • •
oldrtlng. .......... ..,. • - . • b•n. 21 ft. ..et oontolnod . . . . .. o- -lnJI.
mutt toll- 011 F..,ah City
.......... 114-4411-1340.
1154 rmMo homo la31 Do-

trohlll'. E.-lent oondltlon.

ttOOfiml. Coll1_.4411-01113.

llcothl.,lolr '

w.-.

......

GOOD USED APPUANCES
d..,...,

,.~....,

ran.-. 8kae1• APIIllanan.
(Jp- Rlvor Ad. botldo lltont
Crat Mottl. 114-4411-73111.

LAYNE'S FUANTTUAE

tloltd. lloGirlty dopoolt 011
11,.11112-11111 oft• a:OO p.m.

untumlahod. 3 - - . tuttv
ewportd. No lnoldo Dot&gt;
ool -~- Phono 11,.H23010

""'*

In Mldcl- .,d Pom-. 2

bectoom. one toor plen
ho- In l'om- with tuM
boa-. W·Dhoolup, furhe•. drea o.-Hdn&amp; lt.,.

ll'ld

r.rn..-or.

-.221" . .a

utili'- .,d dopoolt In Mldcl•
port lovol; .... _

_, -

donoo. nlcoldlahen. hlgotllrlnt
utltlty
·-ldnt
- ....
utlltiOI
..d dtpooll.
-~·-dwll_. ......ld
llony, nopota.Phone114-lt2S282 OY-11,. .,...._

2-FcHnwla lot olio. 81- 7 •
Colt 114-117-11841.

a.

K. E IlLII- ...,.h with 100m
oonct. 12 ft. polo •
trlpcrtl. UIB. Coli e14-4412807 oftor B PM.

,.,._ E.,.._

loyaelolhat. - - · t h N 4
,. B. tllg ooloetlon. Coli 114742-27&amp;1.

tMrmopane p•lo door,
ch-. priDed •am Used cand
tiO.OD. s... Man*39&amp; to tiM. T•bl• •eo end good
tNMmM Ike MW 111.00.
up to •1211. Hldo-o-bods lJIO uel
to
Rocllli.. t221 to aJ04.t71-Z033t37&amp;. lAmpo t28 to •ua. 3 pc. lYing coom lulto. llxo 7
Din- • 1Dl .,d up to •4111. w•ddlng gown. 304-D,&amp;.-3_021.
WOod llblt w-1 """"'' •281 to
t79B. Dook noo up to •»11.
Hutch• UOO .,d up. 1.-.k Fonder Rhodot plono with 2
bedl complete w-m...,_
E•-Cond.
.
t29B•dupto•3911.1ab't- uoo. 304-t71 2233.
t110. Matb 1 orbolceprtnla
•lan with lottoca
ful or twin tea. firm •78. lftd -blollghtod
t211. Fr• tlollilory. pt. .,,
taa au- - ueo • up, Ionon
147.eobox. 1-1100·833ICing Ueo. 4 · - ch_, tH.
arrvt!mo. E...• M•ch
Gun . -... a, II • 10 gun. 3483
Bob¥ mott- l3t5 • I 48. 17.

•an

-oeo.
- Good
t20. t30.
ICing
fromo
ooltollon
of
bedroom tuttM. mtlll cebln«s.
h - • • 130 Md up ra Ill.
90 O.y1 ume •

caah wlh

3 MM• out

Downtawn 1 I~ , opt. n.,.lr
,__.,.... -pot. oompltlo
kltah ... loC. Porkln4 AduH1. lllo
P••· Dopoalt. OIH 814- .WI0131 .

Mon. lhru Sit . Ph . 114-.,.._
0222.

VaiiJf Furnltu,.
N.w and uaed t.~rnltu,. •d

opplicon,. , Coli e14-441·
71572. Houn •1.
PICKENS USED

FU~MTUAE

Complete hou•hold .,rnlahlng~ . 'A: miiN....,Icho. 304-1715-

1410 . 114- 38e-t773,

.,.,ingt.

1D'"a14' Hbo..,.. ch.,nollron.
lion. othor utod otool
Uood lulldlng -~~~~~ out of
~ end b•ne. 214. 211.
2•1. 21&lt;10. 9omo win-a.
........ flooring. tlate roof. lev.,.. ,._. of uNCI pw~elng.
C....., D..llv pickup bod, one
ton bUIIIw' pickup· r•r end.
e1 ..318-llle4.
.
.,g~o

56

Buildinp Supplies

Got-It, Ohio. Coli 114-441127e3.

Mevtao eutometlc Wlllher. Nice.

68

2 8R. flit. , MW plu•h c•pet.
nM oolnt. utili• ptrtlolly pold.
l 171omo. Coll304-875-110&lt;l
171-1311. 171-7738.
Apartment avelllbla HUO ec-

-ocl. C.U 304-871-1104.

F,.. .hod 2,3, ,. 4 1oom1 &amp;
t.l:h. C...... Adults ant,-. No
poco. Rof, • •· -Ired. CaR
81.,....._1519.
Nicol\f "'''*hod omol houoo.
Efllcl•cr IPI.-1 mon. Mobile
holM below tDWn averlooldng
rtv•. ct. hotf, oclrlto only, rot.
Coll e14-4411-033&amp;
Furnilhod tlllclwl&lt;'l'· eo7 llo·
oond. Clllllp~. t110. Shwt
boch. Col441-441ellllw7PM.
••. 0

1..... _ , unlu•'*hocl

•..,.,,_,,,
In Oolllp~. • 17&amp;

.,d U21,., month. St- .,d
rotrlgorocor tfr'*hod. c.-e.
nlwrt lo..,lon. .._,_.,_ .,d
!::'~ ::'4~3~· 114-448F
....Utllltl
hod ollloi.,OI'mo.
pold. 920•1n
Founh,
Avo., Ooltlp. .. CoM 4411-441.
ottw 7 PM.
F.... hod apt.· 1 lA. 243
J-on Pika t231 o mo.
Utll'- polcl Cell 4411-4411
ott• 7PM .
Mocltrn ltt-11R .Iu•ntlhtd
a 2 IR . 111 "ftoor unllrnlohocl opt, Aot. • dtp. Col
11 .. 4411-1071.
CJt.

cond. Cell 814-4411-7111.

Worlca poriw«. t1eo Finn. Coli
114-317-0322.

STOP ANO CHECK OUR PRI·
CES
F111nllur9 .,d Co1pOC
VInyl ••.11 yd, oom..,..dll
c•pott3.99yd.lott, -mollo
r.mn..Ct 'lnd rol. carp-. htff
Inch ptd l t. 79 vd wMh . .pot.
Mollohan F...,llu,.
21o-no

lla lllock Co.• 123Yo Plno St..

Peta for Sale

Groom ond Supply lhop-Ptt
Grooming. All biHdt.. All
lllytoo. ltmt Pot Foad Doolw.
Jutlo W.bb Ph. 814-oWII-0231.
D-nwynd Cottocy -nol.
Pwei.,. andllern-•dHim..
lorv., ldtl.,.. Chow "'"' viet- Colll14-44tl-3144oltw7
PM.

122 vr.,d ltr•
Point P l - . W.Vo.
304-1711-14"
Upp• AIY• Rood
Gtltlpollo. Ohio
11 .. 4411-744&lt;1.

HAPPY JACK TIIVERMICDE "-r.1ofo • olloetiYo by
. u .s . .,., Vocwtnocv - •

F~-•
~ ~
n.-d-er~ngorMor,
gOod

A...._..
•Kc
-.--- ~
~
puppt•. Cllll14-3eti-PD1.

aond, w!Oto. 2 cloo1, phono
304-1711-7281.

og-

CJI

clno
hook, ""'"" •
, _ _ _ In do~ • cotel
IIDWELL CASH FEED JD
NOIITH P~ODUCE .

c----

AKC RtglllllodD _

_ , pup-

-

. . . . . . . . h...

.... 1111-IQ-173&lt;1.

,..,.ua.
Col

a•.

63

19e1 Flroblrcl V-1, otvo. good
oond, u.eoo.oo. 304-17112714 or 171-1&amp;77.

Livestock

-Oil

Altrony on lit. At. eo. 011
e14-lt2-2322, 188-313t,

nu.
11 .. 1112-1712.

Nco2--hou•ln"""'•
"'¥· 11 ....._ Ror.- .,d
dtpooll - - e 1 7 1 1111-701721.

_
..1 ...............
2 ....oom IP&amp; tUWIIf. tiiiV
• . , .......... ~..- . - · •d
tr•h plolorpa , . . . - Molnt•
-oo !roo W.lng- to slloi&gt;
pin. . . . . . . . . ~ ......... , ..
- • lnlor rhlllllo• coli 30_.1112-

72

Trucks for Sale

1987 NIHI• pldcup. 5 opd.
ttandtrd. Telce 01Mr PIVnwtfl.
Colll14-742-2381 .

SPECIAL SPRINGER COW/ CALF IALE·Fdd.,. Mor... 17,
7:30 PM. AI - I t t•od •
pi'ogn 8101' · chookocL AI ..,., 18111 GMC Jimmy, tt3,000.
wll bo-odtt.,ln,•4:30 1l&amp;e 14 ton Ford d!Oiol, UeoQ.
PM, TllurodiiY, Morell I • oil 19eii-10CIIavy, •eooo. 1884
dltf' Frid_. tH tell time. Hauling 'h ton GMC 4 WD pt'*"p.
avolhbla ATHENI UVESTOCK •eooo. 0111 t14-441-zuz
IIA~E-1 mlo- of AI- on
St. Rt. eo. Col ......,. . 114- d '"· 4411- 28Hov•.
112·2322 or 191·3131 1170 a,..,y pickup. 18,000
ftenlnGI.
•atUII mAtt. Good oond.
Cen w.nln11 a WM~cna.
For ooi•Pollod Horaford · e14-37.2723.
14montllool&lt;l.,...lo onohwd
but!, 4 yo.o ol&lt;l lt .. H2- 1118 Ooovy "''""- neo. 1872
748S
Fold 'h ttMIO. Coli 1144411-1431.
Two IOWI DV•r 210 lbe ,
t1211.00- 304--11ee. '17 Ford F180, 4a2. I cyl. ionct
wide bed. 7 , 000 mllea,
u ,aoo.oo. Phono 304-87884 H1y It 0 rain
3448.

Auto Parts

&amp; AccePOrles
Ford 200 fl ·eyl. enatne Md 3
al)aldtNnerNuloft, 4000ml-.

coll-lnga, 114-247-430&lt;1.

Edlllbrodc Aktmlnum lntol&lt;o .,.
omll block Dodgo •100.00. 4
•lumlnum . . , two 1k8.5 end ·
two 1Bx7 unllug t100.00. HoiillY eoo tc1 d Ed Ill brodc Pro Flo
,., ...... teo. oo. 30,.1711,348.

79

Motore Homes
8t Campel'l

1173 Yellow Stone Clmptt.

*·

Good oondltlon. • Botlwoom. 1884 F,.d truck. 3
"''tod. with oompor top. E lont condition. e14-H2-1717.

1911 Nomod Compw, 21 It,
ttooo.oo. Phone . 30,.17113259 .. 304-488-1042.

Servlet!s
81

Home
·Improvements
BASEMENT
WATER PRODI'IIIIG

uncoi'MIIIoMI Nftltlmt guaren-

t • loCII ref•tnDII tur•hed.
Fr• -lmlt• diiY
Clll or-Ngllt.
·1·114-237-0418.

AogertBttement

W•wp;oorlng.

SWEEPER .. d -lng mllchlno

r•*· l*tt.. .nd tuppll•. Pick
up end detlwery, O.via VMUum
Clean.,., on• h1lf mile up
Ooo•goo Croolc Rd. Cell 11_.

4411-0214.

Colplnlry - k by tho job or
hour, .. ntllng, dry wal. plumb-

inca. .t.ctrlclll, rttnoiWing oom-

pltla Col 814-441-7121.

A 81 d T BLildon from foundo-

tlon to roaf - lnekle or out. Free

"'~--- ludgll prl-. Col
114-992-3417.
~~~~~~~---,.ON'S T•levltion ltntlce. ·
Hou .. ellis on RCA. Qua.r,
GE. Spoclollng In lon-h. Col
304-1711-2388 or 114-44112414.
'-tty Tr• TrlmMng, etump
rtm01111l. Col 304-171-1331.

Rot.y or c.ble toot *lUng.
MNt well compl•eda~me~.
PUmp ool• •d ... leo. 304-

S85-;1802

AOIII'II APPU4NCE 8 EAVICE.
houto coli ~tcvlclng GE , Hot
Point. WMhtrt, dryers and
.. ..... 304-871-2388.

82

Plumbing
Heating

8t

••ao.

e1 e10 Plclarp. ZI,OOOmlla 4
Hoy lot looond •d tl*d oyt,
4 _.e. oktm.M..,latl.
·
outtln"
Loott ollolfo
lb. t&lt;I.IIOO or
bolol. 13.00
, . hiiY·
bolo. eoTop
304-1811-3031.
· Royol 0o1c Fonn. Pam•
rilr. dh . -dlr• phone 114- 111e CMvv e10 Tolloo 4a4
912·14e8. Nghtt 114--111· '3.1100. 011 1111• e:ao.
~3-=34..:..:.1·------- 304-1711-1071.

boot--

'81 Dodtlo Rom. 4GYL I · •2.000.00. 304-171-234,,

71 Auto'e For Sele
GOVERNMEIIIT NII!ED Voll&gt;
......
uoo.atovyL
,.... ·llur'*'a.
·COrv-.
1 . _ tWcla ltl IOtl-. .71000. -··10111.

1h7.,..... Ornol4 "'" .......
21.000 rritloo-UIIOO. tlt7
Doctgo
2 ... /4C,
outo.·MODO. 1tl7
Cllt•vor 2 •-· 1 IfilL·

CAATER'S PWMIIIIIO
AND HEATIIIIO
Car. Founlt~~ndPine
Gollo. .. Ohio
Phone 114-~1-3111 or 114441-4477

84

It

Electrical
Refrigeration

A•ldentl" or commercial wlf..
New HI'Vtc. or repeire,

In t

Uc-ed e4 Mll:rld.n. Ridenour
e .... lcol. 304-17tl-17ee.

85 ·

General Hauling

Dllwd Wocw lorvloo; Poole.
Clotomo, Willa. Dolilror; Anv·
tlmo. 0111 114-441-740,.111o
1118 ford 1110 4 WD. 311.000 , luncloV collo.
mi-. Coli 11_.4411-4447.
J • J woe or a.v1oo. Swimming
- Ph. 8141111 111m Chwgor 4rc4, Mlto. poolo, olotomo. l o - · · - · · - · 241-1281.
whltolott•tlr•. Coiii14-241R &amp; A Wllw a.v1oo. Poole.
IIJ1.
alattrns, w .. lt . lmm~i•t•1,000or 2.000-nodol!vory,
Coli 30_.8711-1370.

73

II.I' IS p iHLilillii

Cloor...

' - - In ........

,~

76

tiHpa fl . ..If contained,

tlrt-.

4 - .. d both--~
F&lt;Aiboa_ . ._ o l _
"' .... _

Fol Solo! 11n 17 " · Storc..ft
TriHouleoot, 121HP .Evlnrudo
en ;Int. comp._e top, n.w upholtt....,, tJtiOO. 0111 aftor 7:00
p.m. 114-21111-1311.

1871Votka Wagonlu,.-leMie
leh• Real 1Mp. RUM good,
114-742-ZDBI.

-or

~:c;..:;;::i.;vd~~7': :lr. •!1~'!Jt":;U;::
1 403
480
I~:•::::::::::::::::::..L: : ::' ::::::::::::::~ 1- 1,.:117-7141.
lhr.,. olio. t1.10 bola
SNAFU® by Bruce Belittle

la10 Boot-1187 Ltndlu 18' &amp;"'.
1187 Mercury 31 hp moe or wtth
poWer trim end a~ tool lftjtctJon.
1187 MerGJfV Troling motOI',
1117 Shoreline tral• ' plu1
more. An mgood oondttlo11. C.ll
114-HZ-2770.

18illllcilll Pop up. uoo. Colt
114-HZ-2 ea.

1884 C'-\1 Olpi'IOO Cl-lc.
12011ntwnotlonol dl•ol troc• 11P lunohlna 7.,14 troltw.
.... teteo. 10 ..... k e 14-84•zon.
Chlalo ptowa, •t?&amp;. tntwno· 1 - - - - - - - - - tlonol4 ,_ ptontwt lborol- IIS3 l'ontloo T-1000. Contoot
..,_ •111 . ...,,.,.. . noo. Jim• _ . . , _ ., I14-H2Inhrnatlonal raund b•l.,, 2111
021110. Qw-wllllnMOO. Col
114-2e&amp;-8122.
11711 Molltu Station Wogon.
Goodohlpa neoo.GLicle!.132
3010 JD ll'ootor, nlco w/JD llutt•nut. Pom-. Ohio.
...... *IL 14310. lh•p IN
1811 Pontloc Flwo ll. eoo. 00.
Ford
wlbuth hog •
plowa, oultttv•tors. *24150. 304-1711-4480.
Dw- witt
Coli 1141979 Ford Tllu-blrcl good
2111-1&amp;22.
ooncl Nnt 110od. teoo.oo.
· lonct-3 pt. 304-178-2838.
J .D. 1010 Col
ef4-4411- 81 CtpriGI. automoll~ pto; pe,
4447.
•c. cond.ltereo. et.oooml..
FermEaulamMt. ZttorTt'8C:Ion. 304-1112-23&amp;8.
Howerd .. otwators. Bled•.
- R i n f . lu;lngold-•- 78 Chw MMibu 8 van; run1
1•.
- · quiD..... ~utl.. &lt;l goo&lt;l 304-171-7381.
Ohio 814-742-2415&amp;.
Chovollo Saoo,. 4 op.
•. ~~--~--~------ t8e2000
mlltt, .. c. cond .
4110 • 3eoJolw!Dooro- cloxon,
t1.800. 304-77J-Itl7 - r o
loodw.
-·
HD11,
HD21,
HOI, AC-n.D&lt;IDCo1., TD 3 p.m. Aft• 3, 304-1112-3872.
2D Int. H..nlngt..._ WV. 304738-7181; B • t d - _ _._ 'II Chw.n.. 2 •or. euto.
13.000ml-. 13.800.00. 3041 -: Ford. Colt._,,
171-13211.

.,...in...

T•ble a 4 ch*•Woodlln. Good

c.n

Farm Equipment

ConcrN beocb- •A ailee· werd
or dllhtery. M•on -.cL Oelllpoo

It .. 4411-4138.

blodl from dowrwown.

81

A - U._,ock ltlo. Altronylato Wrt . .urdlr-1 PM.
U. . .ock
aft• 4 PM
wwy llri.. 1 nit• lt8t of

Appllu•'*hod. ldoollococion- 1

Boats end
Motors for Sale

1971 F,.d 2 do01 Elto •400.
1110 Dodg• Omnl 4 doot, niiiiN'

1183 BLick Conturyllm*td· 2
door. Mo. UOOO. C.ll I 14742-2117.

Building Mlllllodc. btlcl&lt; - • pipa wlndowo. lint. OICI. Cl.,clo Win'"'- Rio O,.,cla 0. Coli e1424~Btz1 .

Rotrls • rongo. soth , _
Good cond. Call 114-4"118471.

_ , ,...doled 1 BA . apt.

I .IIIII S!ipiJIII'~
~ l IVI:.,IIii.K

far •lo: floarMotlol Grill Pr-.

Rodlol A""-· Coli 114-HZ·
BOlO olt•lj)O p.m.

75

tr•omltolon t810. 1978Chovy
~ ton h-v ..... PS, PI,
t1200. 114-1149-22Ze.

22114.

••-• "'"'l'"'-

IUIJTtFUL APAATMEIIITS AT
BUDGET PAtCES AT JACK·
ION ESTATES, &amp;31 Jockson
fllk• fram •113 • mo. Walt.: to
thop
.. d - ·· 814-4412&amp;88. E.O.H.

Rodbono Md Wolkw Hound
10( olio. Al10 o$th doll·
R •. Snowdon, 33234 81clo Rln
Rd. Rutt..d. Ohio. 11 .. 742- 197td•k blueMw 111ryM•rqula
2412.
8t.Cionwegon with nwtt 0¥1~
houltd e eyL 302•glna Auto..
elr. JIIW.Iftdottw•tN'LNHda
minor repelrt Clll 114-tt:l&amp;112 1111• 8:00pm. Altclng
t1000.
Shophlld p u -. no 1911 atovollo t710. 0110,
- - - 304-481-112&amp;:
fliM gr..t, decent CDncltlon.
Coli 114-742-2284 .. 114742-242:t
157
MUIIcal
Instruments
IIH Cougor LS. VI onalne.
loaded. uncW 8000mM•I14182-271:t

.... 12.1100 IITU ol1 oondlt -. l'ontlilodlo--. Coll
e1 .. 4411-7014 olt•l PM.

Sot• and

Bulwlle Rd. Open lam to 15om

•I•

fo• . . . aplh h ....

Trol . .. Unlur'*hod. Cwpt-.
_
............... At. t ,
LoQIOI llo ... Pt. Pl-ar\t behind Mit 304-175-1071.

epproved lll"edft,

21 GatlloSt. tJOOoma. t200
dopool. Colll14-4411-2201.

"''*"

Str•.

Avo. Goltlpolta, OH.

EJCCeU.,.t ooncltion.

Pun:h•od 11811.
20 hour lntJ*=~ Icn.
•teoo. et 4-912· 7288.

m-. fomol•-

uMd IPPhn• tnd lV •«t.
ap.,. lAM to 111M. Mon thru
Sot. 114-4411-1111. 127 3r&lt;l

c.n

1887 Hon• TAX. 2t50X 4
whMI.r.

I'

UNCI •~11:'10 meohln• from
t3S. ThoFobrlc-p. 814-HZ·

- ~~County
Mt• . , .MII.OOO.OO.
. . . . 30448•1e711.

Homea for Rent

114-4411-8124. .

Rot•••

k-

tnll•.

It ""l81dT-nthltr. 814-H23143.
.

41

•11100. Rolllluggy. MWtnolna

•1100. Both ucel. oond.

s.. M.ah 11. 1-&amp; 1:::;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;~~;.:~~~~~
PM. • - - tpte.l\lo. 101.
Mldcloport.
&amp;8
Pets for Sale
71 Auto's For Sale
SIMPinQ rooma wtlh cooedng. u..t opptl81-. w.-; d"f·
Aa.o TraH• ..-,AI hDole-Tf:
.,., •v-. ..,..,.._.. mi.cl'oCAn "
2p
30•
•
74,000ml-.
pupt. All c 3 419113DogoCOII.
1en ~!"on Wvm.
~ ~ 'I!WYe OVIM . Ken' I AIIDII•OI. Ooldon
apd. w/ hl· lo. Oood cond.
I
E&gt;a:ollcint • 21100. Col e14-4411-731 hf·
217 E. 2nd IL . "'m-.
114-H2·133&amp; or et4-III- podlgroo. t200 lOCh. Coli • 14- te 8 PM .
1811-lell.
3BI1.
48 Space for Rent
1t77 BlOWn lmpolo. 4 ell. Oood
--o-l'oo, 3moo.. ltbo .. mole. -kew. tiOOO. Ctii114-448·
Ahhoto • w.....,j, lulf ooior. 4347, ·
Antiques
I 100. Coli 114-4411-8433.
1,037 pourd tobltom b•a ao ~3
cent a pound. C.A 814-216HAPPY JACII TNVERMICDE:
1431.
luy or loll. AIYorlno Antlou• C'OOOII"illd oolo ond oltoetilro b't
Councrt Mobile Home Park 1 I 24 E. Mtln
Po-oy. Ul • ...., of V•orl...., - ·
Ro•n• 33. North at Pbm•ov. Houn : M.T.W IOo.m. .,lp,m., cine egiiMt hoc*. round end
atndlr 1 to lp.m. 81 ,4 -H2- .,_.omw in doll and c.ttl 1912 Cutl•u Supreme
.,,.
Lob, 992-7478.
- ·· ....... -~-- Cal 2&amp;21.
AloO l'ood Md lupplr 388 W. I .........._ Vrt - P looking
- I I.
c. lntlde 8'1d out 2 do Of, Cllll
IOIII••td llktt nck JIUPI· It 4- H2-884t .
49
For Lease
54 Misc . Merchandlst UKC
o.m II RlmrMrbtwdlng. lire .. 1179 Subwu 4 WO ftltk)n
Night Ooomplon lAM Bkto wegan. M , 000 mila Oood
lito.:*. 'Th- pu_,. Mve tM condltior&gt;
tt eoo. 0111 e 14Comm•ci .. lot for Leae. "'40'
ttu• and Dixie Crot:a. 3 timee
x 2&amp;0', Loc•ect in Zlnn Doc* on
In 1 generation•. 814-941· 441-73&amp;11At. 7 tcr01a from SltvNntl.an • ·
2413.
Coli 114-384-111&amp;.

wood. Plclcup ......, dolilr-UO. Coli 114-oWII-4112.

44

Tflbbtolld on County Ad. eo. 1
ecu ti,IOO.OO. 3 ear••
•1o.eoo . oo . 1 ocru
t1B.OOO.OO. oooatblo fl•clns UDO.OO _._ 110

•1188 Suzuki 2&amp;0 C&amp;.IHI-Racer.

•mtl

clloot. no.

;:,_cod

...,.dlor.ta 1 tol_.e~.

1981 Mo$tlw ho- 3 , _ 3 IR. hou01. Dip. . . -~td.
..... 2 botht. ..... lYing )OOidFortTrtl. Colt 814-4411room.l'll•cr•. e28,IOO.Mud- 2883. I to 8 doltf.
lock Ret . Coli 1 to a, e t 4-448aoea
·7 •oom hou", 2 bot hll. 411 Olivo
St. lnqu~oMII8 loaond.
Home In oou ntrr tor ..... Wfth
181&lt;1 Coli 114-H2-11841.
3-oom2bothll. -c•pot.
l•rae khohen w/•ppl. N.
HouM for
in Southlrn a .!K- oahool dlot11d. Col
School Dlllri... 1818 Sq. ft. 814-318-1111.
llv
lng · 2ot&lt;l 3 1 lr. houoool RioG..,cla t188
bootoom.
both.2 ldtchen.llmllv
room, dining room. lvlngroom.
• mo. Coli e14-2BII-140:t
utllty room. ... .,..... cable
•••lobla ua.ooo. 114-948- 3 IR .. 2 bolht. 2 c• - a 7
2e31 .
ml• from Glllll)olll. 8*&gt;0 1
mo. '*'' clop. Col 114-4483 ~oom hou• for tile In 1341.
Auttlc H. .. 114-992-7448.
7yowolcl3-oombrldc-...,l
2 01 3
110!11110. lui totol .. _.., ..... otylob · - lovollot..,Rt. 2,Not . .. . - thfoughout 1 .....
oond, wll•nlldtrrnobleMme fonood In prct wlh dock.
trodoln. Mlko 1-... 304-&amp;7• Loc•IJd 7 . . . 11om Hatzw
lloopltol on Rt. 1110. A,..oblo
2481.
MDarGII 1, I 380- por ..-h. If
Int........ coli 11 .. 2811-1318
1Jackoor4 ctfl• 7 p.m.

3

a

SWAIN
Nloo 2 lA .. lorgo """"' .,.r&lt;l
4YJ mil• from GIIUpollt. No
AUCTION • FURNTURE 12
OIIYo II., Oolllpollt.
- · Colll14-oWI-103&amp;
NEW- I pe. wood JII'OUP. t3911.
2 • ·
t200 • mo. '*'s Living room eutl ... t11••n1.
utile.. t121dop. ••af.4mH• a...
w•h - v - t2411.
from,_._ Coli 114-44.1&amp;12 full •ta mMt,_ &amp; founMUon
oftwB:30PM.
ltarting· til . "•ollnen
ttonlnv- •as.
2 IR . mobile homt. City USED· Bitk*•,...bt*oom
oeh!&gt;ote. St. Rt. see. 011 ' IUHM. Dotkl, -...waohor. 0
11 4-4411-1303.
complele lint of ulld furniture.
NEW- -tom boo,._ eJI.
2 be•oom. furnilhed. W41h• -kboolt t18 • up, ISt.e •
dryer, llr. t221 per month.,.,, toft ...,_ 0111 114-4411-3188.
dopooll .,d utiiHI•. CAll d14182-7478.
County ADDIIance. lno. Good

It Acreage

Ltndwllh good bldg. or moblo
home til• blrw•• Rt. 87 a

44&lt;1-3934.

IIU...,,•. TIIADE~NS

~1 Household Goodl

llouotn,. 304-175-1111,

36

1987 Hondl4-traJt ATV 2aocc.

&amp;cot. oond. nsoo. Col 114-

30 d1¥1

lunk beck ao...._•

pold. t1 25tmo. Col1114-44113941alt•4PM.

"'''*hod. Colllt .. H:!-7478-

Farms for Sale

PM.

lolnk with
-v-t2ZI. _.._
Mt wtth purch•e of certllln
b.droom a~lt•. 7 pc. wood
poet• biG'oom 1uh• t749, 7
pC:. country dlnnette tet ~
dudoa ...tclii-UIIO.
•

Fwnilhld room w/ atow •
rllfrig. lh•• b•ta. AI utlltle

Spon-. 3100

tion. Clll 81ot-21!il-1304•tt• 7

tto..., ....

9t.-tlno II •120 • mo. Galli•

undlrplnnlnG t.r'*hed or u ...

3 IR. houOI. dtkt•. AC. UIOo
mo. Col 304-17ti-B10&lt;l ,.
171-8311.

11eo IPtnon t4o70. 2 II! .. 2
bollw. ol o l - C A . ...., .. 11lote t:Z.t4
...- . Cal 11.. 2411eoa
·

,.

....

121&lt;10 1171 2 -oom F -

dom. A~._._..,.,,_

trl«. Cotle14-2BII-1941 .
2 Ilona 41R., lull unllnilhod
• - · 20.40 ill ground
PDOI. 2 plua...,•ln Vinton. Clll
814-3111-8114.

'

8 1'-C· wood Httlng room tult•
t :181. A.l eofa' e • ah• m•ked
dor.lwft. \-\ price m ..,.. Ala

hM~e

Ho~or

mna Lik• ,...., EJCiflant Oondl-

our

'*

Tlmo
MuttPon
bt 1M Pll'l•oN. Clll .P~
lonnal office, 304-171-43-tP.
4A-EOE.
•

W.Vt.St. 2811&lt;1.

•m•o•

1981 Sululd 7 &amp;0, 1000 mM • .
Vwy Cl..,, oleo. 1182 Y•
mllha 850 Endro on • off r hMle. 1000 mn,., ""Y d e.n,
tltiO. Coli 11 4o44. 4041.

1180

lundor12-&amp;PM
114-4411-31&amp;e

bectooi'N. Good ooncllion. Cell

pump,lngroundtwlmrftua .,_.

2 llory, I roonw. btlth. rurlll

448-1 8311.

ep., Dolly I AM-t ,M

.,,utn_.

Motorc y c les

1985 Yamlh• YZ- 2150 . Pow.bend. 11000. neg. C•ll 8 14-

VIR• Fuh.iture. A...Uan~

All

Sentinei- Page --9
74

• .... ......... 3 • 4 p~
bedreom Mtll. More furniture
·
· \II nllliw.
out
Pl.-Phurt..
v •JM
. IOhO Rd.,

11_. 742-28113 bo!Dro 12j)O
noon • 304 773-15101 tft•
2:00p.m.

'"""'" Cllfl•.
' " born.
"'........
worklhop,
etc. Two-IIOIV
r•ored horne. 1•.. ODUftlry
kK...... otono tlropl- lull ol

ulllly """ front• book

t200.00 . - h wlh t1DO.OO
dtPotlt, 304-157152173.

d

11n H• c-. 1:z.eo. 2

ocr-.

•-L

Houae Glenwood , W, V1 .

....,..,

81
At. 110, Ewlngton.
hatuN, wooU. dweloped

able to work d.,t end el thtth.
expa-iW'IC8 pr...rtd. Cell ~~
1onnel otftoa 304-171-1349.

Ott in .on

gou nd loor ... d b'l.tre~Umeto
Lee's Ditcount Vlllhot. 110
W•lnut St., Raventwoo4,

- _....

....... ...

3Yo A. Good f•m land wkh seo
- ... boat.-...,.. homo
..... l3000. Call 114-11371081 oft• I PM.

eyttlm. kll:chan "w ith 1•bto•

Homes for Rant

3 tw houoo within wolklng
11e1 Ubwtv t&lt;laM. 111800- ' dlot.,-rth Point • PPHS.
lnqu~o 1700 Joll. .on ailrd.
Col 114- 37li- 2443.
.....,30.
121&lt;10. 2 IR , mo ..o ho.-.
208 Pop!•. 2 ... loll .,...,....
UOO montiL 304-115-3112
- I n Colt
Iandi.e14-211· - - ott•l:30.
•-AC.
..........
12H.
!'Woo r...,oodl 1177 -11. 42 Mobile Homes
Sllultld on 2 • • or wll
for Rent
...,..... ua.eoo. Cotl 114'*30171111• lp, m.

I~

11711 _
... lmp.eol t4a70.
lotll olodrk&gt; Ea. -&lt;IZIR ..
Zt.lloolho._p. . . tlnugh'""- 3-tltno- t:Z.24clodc.
wood..,,_, · - _ ... Coli
.,,.448-4317.
~ ...
2
o;
On•111xtl. •aooo. On•
12altl. · lllr'*- Colll1_.21 ne7.

ofRce p . .onnll

CAST_,................ """ 40C
AlUMINUM

can r~r and rt·
core rodiatDn and
htatlf cores. We can
also cxid boH ond rod

Juat want to e•n a little lllttr•
monav1 Or would you like to
heve • c•eer? Ehhlr
Awn
can help you bet he a-t you 4iii•
belli Call Meritvn WetN,., 304-

W.Va.

I Subjtct to Change
Wilhaul Notice I

#2 COPPEll ............. 65'

•-II

AVON ell
Shirler Sp . .,,
304-675-1429.
.:

3-4 boctroorn. 2 ....... •coltwrt
conelon. Ntw c.p&amp; kh:Ghln
·-···---10.18
dock. CA. U3.000. Col e143niiiW.

33

882-2645.

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

The Melge Local SchooiOlatrfd
11 curr.ntv _.lng ippllcaiDr.
from certified .,plicantt fot ,a
Girls' Ree.veSoftbtll Co.ch b.

tho 1988-8911Choolyow. Appti-.
SHOOTII\IG MATCH. Sl1101e eantl
mutt hold a Y.tld Qh¥r
guns. 7:00p.m, Mile Hill Rd .. leeching
cerUficllte and for
Racine. every Saturday night.
ooac:hlng pa.ll:ior. mutt r.certlciclltion r«&lt;U irem ..ta ci,
No tretpaulng on anv of our
for 1port1 . medtdne and
property, anyone caught will be Ohio
CPA
.
Pltrsons
irt•ett• ahou'd
protea.dted. Ru11etl and Anna COntact JimCarpart•.
Sup•~
Oo~ .
tendent of Mltig1 Local Sc:hooll.
at 121 South Third A'*'lle ir1
Middlopon. Ohio.
. ••
4
Giveaway
0 rlvara wanted. 13.50 p« ~r..
Apptv 11: Domino'• Pila. •13
Give away to good home- 4 noon til 4 PM on week dive, ; ·
puppiea. Vz Beagle &amp; % Paklngett. CoH 614-448-2045.
p,., time cl . .llnu lodv far
houaing _projec:tl loc:llled _lr(
Lovabfe 1 yr. old part CoUts. Hat AthMs. Ohio. Send etpM'itiiOI.
1hot1 &amp; spayed. Call 814-441- and 3 ret..anc. to P.O. ILox
4874 •tter 3,
13&amp;, Mariatta, Ohio 467150
EOE.
5 Beegle pupa to good home. 4
famale, 1 male.Phone814-986- AVON - AD . . . . Call MerttYn
4407.
Weaver 304-882-2848.

7

RIPRESINIATIY£
302 W. 2nd St.

c:l•••

41

Mobile Homes
for Sale

Homes for Sale

kllboll ooun. ulllty buldlng
1:Z.1e. 1 out-o-rltyPfiiiOto "'"''· 8ottlnt on18737
_._ Loc•od luoc off 11. At.
&amp;18 Md CO&lt;a Mil Ad . In
Otlllpolil city - o l .......
AtWng tH.IOO. Coll814-24tl9121.

Vo~ID1')81.

32

18M lllty' \tno moblo homo
t11,000.00. 304-171-4480.

Center--Tri-CountY

regleter

2708. Call for littings or 111•.

Cholte

"I'm sure glad we filed
separate returns, dear!"

Real htat1:

1181AidOOCI'.,Cio¥t..,l2dll
doullt-ido. 3 1R, 2 both.
11x28 .a,tng rm, centrel ••eo

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Lar ry Wright

Household Goods

• lorvt·
W*V• Mlcoma Lott: of n.w
lfTiv•. Rt. 141 Centenery, 1,4
mh on Lincoln Pike.

Hotol· I 14-4411- HIO.

11n - . .... 2 - - tlt&gt;out lo...oorn. !IOfllh. undwplnnlng. air oonclt'o,..., good oondltion. •eeoo. 11,.1112-3111.

31

F1111ished Rooms

ADorna for rwt· \WIIk or month.

tlellllcooriln. 2 - - 11
ol-Io moblo ,.,_ E - •
ooncltlon wllh • .,.. · T.. e
........... 0111 30.....
34Bl.Muat ...

dtcklns _,,.. 111 with he•

•a•

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

45

lualn- tar Solo: Tolop-o
Ill• • a.v1oo. loundluolntor I .,.... wtth toocl culltonw
b•a Low ~,._ • good
io.-lon. Good -nltv far
·
- Wll Ml•
""'" tNinlng
far
MWOOrner,
...... ....ic
•ectronlc beckground. For ..,.
point,_, coli 304-175-3213.

Tha Elactronh::~ Servicing program· at the Adutt Educeticm

Schoot will train you for jobe in
servicing and mainten•c• of
electronic ~uipment We h•e
monies ...,allabfe to pay fot·
trtining for elgible IIPPIICII'rt"
Cell 814-753-3511 "'!. 14 to
for
beglnning
March 27th.

3 ·Announcements

6:30P.M.

For LIFE
INSURANCE c.ll:
JEFFERY J. WARNER

Go th&amp;wey oft he hi-tech "f:ur•

3-2-'8911n

OWMII: GREG I , ROUSH

12 Gauge
Striclly

ext. 14. A .,.rl.-y of tJndlng
sources to pay for trt1lning ••
available for thoae eligible.

14~-2328

$35

SAl. NIGHT

992-6855

SYRACUSE
SUPPLY COMPANY
•Mobile Home Parts
•Plumbing Supplies
•Electrical Supplies

CHERRY

GUN SHOOT

lnt . . .o. '71.000. Nogcitlobl ..
CAl Ron ot 114-1182-H72.

Workers,

WITH

INTERIOR, EXTERIOR

.CUSTOM KITCHENS. BATHS
.eKTtNIII/E REMODELING
•VINYL IIDING • ROOANG

Turn Qv operMion. Downtown
Bar 8'1d tounge wllh 22 • •
dirt•. 2 two &amp;e*aom upftliin
aptrtm ..., . Own• hal 9'1._

Job Hunting? Need a 1kHI? W.
train paople for jobl at A ut.o
Mech ..ict. Clrp.,t.-.. C01m•
tologiats. DNeraified Medloal,
Electriolene. Foods.r-.
vice Workers. Electronk:t Tech-.
nlctanl, lnc*.11trial MeintenMqt

PAINTING

OAK, LOCUST,

GENERAL

hi•'D•ecttht off•~o.

MachiniltL Offi.WWorkert
orkers, .,d
NuraingAIIIttante•nct
~=========~ -Orderli•.
Weldin. Reo•••
now for dat~•beglnnlngMarJlh.
27th. ea• Tri-CountyVocetlonlt1
Adutt Center at 814-753-3811

FIREWOOD

8-8-'81- lln

Bueineas
Opportunity

II\IOTICE t
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . ,__.,ds tllot you
do luoln- with pooplo you
know, end NOT to -.dmon.,ttw'ough the mel unll you h•e

~.,..

GOVERNMENT JOBS
•16, 04C.• t59,230. yo.,; H~,.
hiring. Cell 111 805-887-eoOO
Ext. R-9805 for curr.-.t ted•el
list.

7

PROFESSIONAL
CARE

EVERY

NO SUNDAY CALLS

per1on. No phone call1.

.50 PER TON
61

F111 o11 1:1al

Holld.,.· lnn m: Gallipolis .noW
accepting IPPiicllliorw for roqm..,
ottondant (pen time!. Apply ,11!0

Contact llaino Taylor

North

Basham Building

PAM MilHOAN • OWNER

,Jo.,~

WEDDING GOWNS , PROM

1-3-'88-tfc

992-6282

Heir StvHit with m~n~ger's ·
license needed. Cell 614-44.&amp;3363 or 446-8382 Hk for ,

WANTED

Stlet &amp; S1riltt

Hand Woven
Baskets
Basket Weaving
Classes
Basket Supplies

32742-2203.

3-7- '89-1 mo .

DUSO ST., SYMtuSE

THE
BASKET WEAVE

Be••·

DRIVEWAYS &amp; ETC.
Call AI 742-2328

• METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSlNG. APT. PRO J ECT~
""
S INCE 1969

Ftr• E••IP••t

Pomtroy. O"io, .
1-13- 89-un

ASSEMBLERS. E•rn monev•s-"'
tembling Mu1ical Tedctt
Mater Iall supplied. No eeiUn_...,.
Write: Jo-El Entspril&amp; P ,O t',
Box Z203, Kiuimmee, Fl . ·

LIMESTONE
HAULED .

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Help Wanted

GOVERNMENT JOBS!
No w Hiring THIS AREAl
$10,213 to . t75,473. IMMEDIATE OPENING.SI ~II (Rolu"'
dab! e) 1-315-733-8082. ext.&gt; &gt;'
F-Z73Z·A .
,,_.

tfn

WEDDINGS &amp; EVENTS

t171 p• month. ct.ad r•
qulrtd. No Pllt. Doy .14-H22381, .... lng e14-$92-2eo9.

to Oo

I y~r loge to a
_...,, CoH 304-171-18&amp;7.

21

Employ men!

11

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

614 -992-752t
614-992-2661

2 beG-oom ept. In Mldcleport.

~,~
·· Pofteble s.m•t 1----------.,..---------~
_,

Serv1 ces

(614) 446-7619 or !614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

DRESSES, FORMAl AniRE
AND ACCESSORIES
" Just In Time For Spring
Event5 •••• ''
5Ell£R .....Makos Money
BUYER •.•Savos Money
FOR INfORMATION

1 8A . tpt. tor,_ In Middleport.
t1110 month'*'" utllll•. 114992-8&amp;45 7e.m. . 4p.m. 11494&amp;-2217 alt•lp.m,

,.....,,g.

Ueed furni ture and household_
applian.ees. Phone 814- 742o;- ~
2048.
•

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

COMMERCIM

Deere, New Holland,

_
Pre 1940 quiha. Any condttlon:
Cesh paid. c;all 814&gt;992-5817
or 814-692-2461 .

-az: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

3

Menor lftd RtttnkM A.J*'t·
· mentt In !Wdcl"epew1, From

UnMod Truck-·
Truck Drtv•Trolnlng
D.O.T. Certlll... ion Job Plocemen' A11lltanet. Hom• ltudy/ Rooldoni Trolnl&lt;!t- Fln•clol
Aid Awlhble, Accredlt.cf
Mom ... NHSC. CoH ToH F1-eol)-11411-1411. Locol ofllco.
W. Ve. Hdqr1:
ctw .. Fl .

Don't

Quilta

Television Listen ing Devices
Dependable Heariag Ai!l.SaJes &amp; ~.n,irl
C!J ·Hearing Evaluations For All Age s

i3
l:

G. - u, lotng. 1 81d z bodroam ap.,tNI'III et Vlt 10•

AE·TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN IU811\1ESS
COLlEGE. &amp;21 .-oon Plko.
Coli 441-4317. Alii- No. e11- 1 1·
10--

houaehold. 'antique•.

Daily

Juot
good
d.-. ueedtJQ. truck
twlft m.n,....

Schools
Instruction

Wanted

The

Pldl- Furntlure
304-178-1&amp;80 .. 114- 388. t773.ovo.

t182. Cll I14-H2-7717.

and applianC81. All' typo. C•ll

614-985-4398.

51

Apartment
fo r Rant

WOmlf'i• CIM 11 ... 117· 3*)2.

'

RESIDENTIAL

' 614-662-3121
Authorized John

genwal

44

Piaet y our boedon•ln Mf C• a
Room for 1 tldlrfll m~r~ or

18

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A-DAY

Top price for u1ed furnhure.

11 · "'-' AA .•fn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

BOGGS

hou..,tJold also sa41ing.
614-742-2455.

•

Situations
Wanted

a nti~a

985-4141

.

12

10 , 1989

Used k.l rniture by the piece or

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

-

..

Wantecf to Buy· 2-3 bedroom
home. Gallipolis •rea. C. p~
e11h . Call 814-448-8382.
···'

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

l / 281tfn

2-27-89-1 mo.

99 2· 2~1~5~6~::;:::::=".:.;;Th:..;•IC;,;.; ;I• :;. .~"
11

IU51NISS PHON!

16141 992-6550

Day ;r Night

MON.-TUil.-WID.-FRI.

•

·
IJ
:

"Free Estimates"

5

949-2168
2-10-'88-1 mo. pd.

SERVICE

WHI buy or appraiae anvthlngl
Antiques. furniture. appli .. 081, '"
ettatea, autos, complete home
furnishings. Merlin Wedarnl'(tr,

•HOM-E BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS

:========::;r:=:-==------:i
MEIGS

3158.

CHESTER, OHIO

servt·ces

LINDA'S
PAINTING

Furniture an d applianCM by the
pi ece or entire houlehold. Feir
prlces belngpa id. Cell &amp;14-44•

MARCUM CONTRACTING

RACINE, OHIO

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

388-9303.

614-245-5152.

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

PUBLIC
RECYCUNG

Junk Cars wft h or without
mota" . Call Larry Uvety- &amp;14-

DAY OR2-15-1
EVENING
mod. pd.

References

Friday, March

15

985-4222

. .~..

EVERY SUNDAY

to

1911 E1atern ,
Ave .. Gallipolis. Coli 614-448'
2282.
""
BL.ick-Pontiec,

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

GUN SHOOT .

Bust· ness

Wanted To Buy ·

CHESTER , OHIO

Jors Gift Shoo

Furt~···

9

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

OF BUSINESS

CARD OF THANKS
We send special
thanks to friends andrelatives for their consol ing words, food, and
flowers after the death
of our dear Mother,
Phyllis Mulford. Special
thanks also to RawlingsCoats - Blower Funeral
Home, Americare of Po meroy, Veterans Memorial Hospital, Dr. Villan euva, Rev. O'dell Manley, the pallbearers, and
anyone else who may
have helped in any way.
Your kindness will never
be forgotten. God Bless
all of you.
Daughter and
son-in-law
Betty and Robert
Goodall
Son , Connie Mulford

se rv1•c e s ~: ~~:: p::~./"~J.l ~.:~~

10, 1989 :

Friday, March

Ohio

Ve1118t

4 W.O.

-r

1111 ford liLT
Mini
Yen . Excellent condition .
Lo- · - .........
11
.. 742-J14:t

WlttW80R' 1

W.• HMtllnQ. ,..

IOMbiM rMII, volume dis·

...,,... 2,000., 4.000 cepoo· ....

11'
1. olot-....... 304-I711-H1t.

- - - - - l i n g a.vloo,
phone 30,.871-2311 or 11". 4411-4011.

::£

Coii14-~17K

87
1114Citwy.......... .....
. . . _ _ d . . ........... 104-179-IICIII.

3711. !.O.H.

1110 .,..,_
11_."411-.. 171.

ttoo.

0111

LE 210.
1117 Doclgo za.ooom1•- nt .aoo.
304-171-IIID.

-

Upholstery

.... , 14!holot_.,u ~~~n~tng

trlc:ount';'ltM23~ lttet.tt

In '-rnltu,.. uphoiM.-tng. C.l

104-178 - 41&amp;4 for floe

lltlrn••·

�...

l .

Local ne-Ws briefs--Continued trom page 1

A 14-year-old Pomeroy youth, charged with two Pomeroy ·
breaking and enterlngs, has been sentenced through the Meigs
County Juvenile Court to six months In the Maumee Youth
Camp near Toledo.
.
Pomeroy Chief of Pollee Gerald E. Roush reported that he
was assisted by Juven!!e Office Carl Hysell In the Investigation
which resulted In apprehension of the youth.
The juvenile has also · been lmpl!cated In a Middleport
breaking and entering. Several items taken trom homes have
been recovered.

'Recycle Day• slated Saturday
Meigs Countlaris are reminded that "Recycle Day" Is
Saturday and wlll be held on the Kroger parking lot In Pomeroy
from 9 a.m. until no!ln.
The Meigs County Litter Control Program is asking residents
to donate Items which might ordinarily be thrown away
Including such things as aluminum cans and siding, glass.
newspapers, cardboard, plastic jugs, copper, and brass. The
proceeds wlll go to Carleton School-Meigs Industries.
Glass should be separated by color, clear. .green or brown,
rinsed with metal caps or lids removed, and newspapers should
be tied In bundles or put In bags.
As pointed out by Kenneth Wiggins of the Litter Control
Program; "using th tngs once Is never enough so bring your
recyclable Items in Saturday morning."

EMS has four calls Thursday ·
Four calls for assistance were answered by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Service Thursday:
At 6:57 a.m. the Syracuse squad went to Union Ave. for Opal
Cummins who was transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital; at
2:58p.m. the Middleport unit took Carl Nelson from his home on
_. North Third Ave., to Veterans Memorial Hospital. at 5: 36p.m.
the Pomeroy unit went to Chester Road for Ellen Rose who was
taken to Holzer Medical Center, and at 1:03 p.m. the Middleport
• squad transported William Scott from Cheshire to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

A blustery storm battered the
Northwest with rain Frlday,wh!le gusty winds lashing nor·
theast F1or!da caused erosion
and coastal flooding, alld predawn temperatures rose Into the
50s as far north as Wyoming.
The National Weather Service
said a complex storm system
was spreading showers and thun·
derstorms from the northern and
central Pacific Coast to the
northern Rockies.
Heavy rains doused parts of
eastern Washington state Thurs·
day evening, and some road
flooding was reported In north·
ern Whitman County.
In Montana, the precipitation

or attempt to cause harm to
Ernest Ward and Emmanloul
Mazoros by 'strlklng them with a
propane tank. They were also
charged with felony Intimidation
ariSing from the same Incident
based upon an allegation that
they were attempting to prevent
Ward. who bad charges pending
In Middleport Mayor's Court
against Whittington, from pursuIng criminal charges against
Whittington.
.
Felonious assault Is a second
degree felony and carries with It
minimum penalties of two to five
years, up to a maximum of 15
years. and a maximum fine of
$7,500.

•

Charles R. (Tom) Davis, 49,
Scottsboro, Ala., formerly of
Middleport, died Wednesday.
He Is survived by his mother
and step-father, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Kincaid, Middleport;
his wife, Shirley and step-daughter, Rhonda, ·two daugh·
tets and sons-In-law. Tamml and
_!larry Chandler, al\d Lisa and
Brian Underwood; a son, Tho·
.mas Kevin, and two grandchild·
ren, Lindsey and Craig Chandler.
, Funeral arrangemen Is are beIng handled by the Scottsboro
·Funeral Home.

•

;William Scott
:' E. W!Uiam Scott, 75, of North
hlrd Street; Cheshire, died
:rhursday at Veteran's Memorial
Hospital In Pomeroy. He owned
)lnd operated Scott's Grocery In
. Cheshire for 35 years.
; Born Nov. 8, 1913 In Cheshire,
he was a son of the late Elza Scott
)nd ·Ether Fife Scott.
• Surlvlng are his Wife, Mildred
Rice Scott, whom he married
Oct. 25, 1946 In Cheshire; two
'sons, John-Scott and Steve Scott,
pclth of Cheshire; twograndhclld·
oren; three sisters, Margaret
~all, Dorothy Roush and Ger·
}rude Hysell, all of Cheshire; two
.)lrothers, Wesley ScottofGalllpo41s and Paul Scott of Middleport.
; He was preceded In deatp by
;two brothers and a sister.
A member of Cheshire Baptist
Church, he was also a member of
·snoam Mas onlc Lodge 456, of
,which hew as a past master; Ohio
:valley Commandery 24 of Pome·roy, Royal Arch Masons 80,
:Bosworth Council 46. He was a
:past patron of the Order of the
'Eastern Star and a member of
theCouncllof Anointed Kings. He
.was also a member of Feeney· Bennett Post of the American
:Legion and Beagle Club In
. Harrisonville. He was a · World
;War II United States Navy
·
. veteran.
: Services will be conducted
,Sunday; 1:30 p.m.. at Waugh·
Halley-Wand Funeral Home, the
Rev .. Stewart Jamison official·
lag. Bu'rlal follows In Gravel Hill
Cemet~ry.

Friends may call at the funeral
home Saturday, 6 to 9 p.m.
Masonic
services will I be con·
.
dueled 8:30 p.m.. Saturday.

Russell Wickline

Everett Gilkerson

Daniel S. KiUingswuth of Point
Pleasant, Howard Junior .Kil·
lingsworlh of Point Pleasant and
Otie
R.
Killingswonh
of
Pete
, Va.; and one sister,
Mis
ailac:e Macy Lanier of
Point ·
L Also surviving are
hildren and fifteen

great-grandchildren'.
Fune.ral services will Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Wesleyan Olun:b wilh
the Rev. Elmer C. Farmer official·
ing. Burial will fol!ow in Graham ·

Everett (Hank) Gilkerson, 53,
Noble Summit Road, Middleport,
died URI!Xpectedly Wednesday 111
Cemetery in New Haven.
his residence~
He was employed with the
Friends may call at Wilcoxen
Southern Ohio Coal Co., Mine No. Funeral Home Saturday after 4
2, and had previously worked as a p.m. The body will be brought to
plant manager In the steel ·the chun:h one hour before funeral
Industry.
,
services begin.
Born at Table Roch, W. Va. on
March 6, 1936, he was the son of
the late James Edward Gllker·
son and Gladys Akers'Gilkerson.
Continued from page 1
I
He Is a member of the United alter, spotted the vehicle coming
Mine Workers of AmeriCa, Local up State Route 124.
1881., and Is a veteran of the
A 16-year-old Reedsville juve· Marines, Korean Conntct.
,
nile was driving and was charged
Mr. Gilkerson Is survived by with no operator's license and
his wife, Audrey Neece Gllker· driving while under the lnfiu·
son, Middleport; two sons, Ml· ence. Linda Barber, 19, of Reeds·
cbael Wayne Gilkerson and Cha·
ville, a passenger In the car, was
rles Edward Gilkerson,
charged with g~and theft.
Charlotte, N. C.; a· daughter,
Cathy Elaine Burdette, Ger·
many; and four grandchildren.
Also surviving are four broth·
Daliy alock prices
ers, James, Robert, Bruce and
Eddie Gilkerson, Fayetteville, (Aa of 11:30 Lm.)
W. Va.; three sisters, Onleda Bryce and Mark Smith
Hamm, Fayettevnte, W. Va., of Blunt, Ellis " ~ewl
Bethel Stowers, Orville, and Am Electric Power ..... ........ 26'4
AT&amp;T .................................30%
Martha Milan, Fayetteville.
Besides his · patents he was Ashland Oil .................... ....38%
preceded In death by a brother, Bob Evans ........................... 16
Charming Shoppes ........ .... ..16%
Walter Gilkerson.
Funeral services will be held City Holding Co .................. 18~
Saturday at 11 a.m. at the Ewing Federal Mogul. ................... 54~
Funeral Home. The Rev. John Goodyear T&amp;R ................... .48
Evans will officiate and burial Heck's ............•......•.•.•......... ~
will be In Riverview Cemetery, Key Centurion ..................... 13
Friends may call from 6 to 9 p.m Lands' End .......................... 33
Limited Inc ........ ................ 28~
on Friday.
Multimedia Inc .................... 93
Florence KiUingsw011h
Rax Restaurants .................. 3'4
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15';6
Mistress Aorence E. Gearhan Shoney's Inc ... :.................... S)l
Killingsworth, 84, of 2329 Lincoln Wendy's Intl.. ...................... 6\4
Ave., Point Pleasant, died Thursday, Worthington lnd ................. 21 ~
Mlllth 9, 1989 in Pleasant Valley
Tm8tees to meet
Hospilal after a long illness.
Born Man:h 24, 1904 in
The Bedford Township Trus·
Soulhsidc, she was the daughter of
tees
will meet In regular session
the !ale Daniel and Mahalia Holden
at 6p.m. at the town hall.
Monday
Gearhart. Sbe altended the Wes·
leyan Olun:h of Point PleasanL
Sbe was preceded in death by her
husband, the Rev. Howard Kil·
lingsworth on OcL 6, 1977. Also
preceding her in death wen: five
sisters, five brothers, and two

Sheriff has...

Stocks

grandchildren.
Surviving am two

.

Felony Intimidation Is a third
·degree felony and carries with It
a minimum sentence of one to
live years up to a maximum of 10
years In prison and a maximum
fine of $5,000.
.
In addition to the other
charges, Patrick was also
charged with domes lie violence
against Linda Breeding, al·
legedly resulting from another
Incident which happened on the
same evening.
Since Patrick had been pre. vlously convicted of domestic
violence, the prosecuting attor·
ney says that the present charge
Is a felony of the fourth degree
and carries with It a minimum
sentence of 18 months to three
years up to' a maximum of five
years and a $2,500 fine.
Whittington and Patrick were
scheduled to be arraigned in the
Meigs County Common Pleas
. Court late this morning
(Friday). ·.
In addition to hearing the
evidence which resulted in the
Indictments, the January term
Grand Jury made an inspection
of the Meigs County Jail which Is
one of the Grand Jury's du lies as
prescribed by law.

Hrispital ·news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions -Carole
Phillips, Dexter, and James
Heaton, Pomeroy.
Discharges: Mary Page, Dorothy Robinson, Sherwood Meredith, Pear Gilkey. Everett
Horner, Sarah McCarty, and
Allee Koenig.

Sunday

Five people were killed in
northeastern North Carolina l
Wednesday in traffic accidents
blamed on ley roads, au thorltles
said.
Cottages tumbled Into the surf •
along the nortliern Outer Banks ·
in NQrth Carolina as ocean waves
devoured yards of precious
beaches and left sneer sand cliffs
at the water's edge.

total of .53 Inches Thursday at theastern Arkansas aild western
Glacier Park broke the record of Tennessee.
After breaking records across
.4 7 Inches set In 1906.
the
Plains and the West ThursWinds gusted to 69 mph at
day,
unusually warm tempera·
Peavlne Mountain In western
lures
before dawn Friday ho·
Nevada Thursday nlg)IJ and to 50
vered
In
the 50s as far north as
mph at Bellingham, Wash.
Kansali.
~n {;oloradQ,&lt;!Jld
In a slx·hour period ending at 1
eastern
Wyoming.
a.m. EST, nearly a hall·lnch of
Temperatures were only In the
rain fell at Spokane, Wash., and
.43 Inches soaked Sacramento, 40s and lower 50s over Florida.
Record highs Thursday ln-.
Call!.
79 at Dodge City, Kan.; 77
eluded
Strong winds - whipped up by
at
Denver;
and 76 at Salt Lake
low pressure developing offshore
City.
· - were causing major beach
A winter storm dumped freez·
erosion and coastal flooding In
lng
rain, sleet and snow on parts
northeast Florida. the weather
·
of
Virginia
Thursday and huge
service said. A morning gale
waves
pounded
the beaches
warning was posted with 40 mph
along
the
Outer
Banks
of North
winds expected.
Carolina
.
Fog was developing over nor-

Meigs Grand Jury.. :ontinued from page 1

;;..._,.____ Area deaths _ ____;;;,;,_;,_,_
Matamoras Cemetery. Military
services will be held at grave·
side. Masonic services will be
held at 7:30 p.m. at the funeral
home. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to4 and 7 to9
p.m. on Saturday .

•

Heavy rains, winds lash Pacific Northwest
By United Preuln&amp;ernatlonal

Pomeroy youth sentenced

Charles Davis

Friday, March 10, 1989

Pomeroy-Middl'eport, Ohio

Plga 10-The Daily Seminal

•

College basketball results- Cl

.
gomg ·twtce,

Going
. once,
~

sold.•.

Beat of the Bend: Keep our license rum here...
Page 87
.

Page B-1

In Our Town: Just a lookin' good...
Page 87

The Racine United Methodist ~
Church will have a famil y
potluck dinner and llymn sing at
5:30p.m. Sunday. The public Is
Invited.

'

DAV to meet

The Disabled American Vete·
rans and Its Auxiliary will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall on
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. Refreshments will be served.

•

20 .

"•

•
•

Vot. 24 No. 5
Copyrightod 1989

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. March 12, 1989

~

.

~

fiE RAIN

FRONTS:

11 Warm

"Cold ·

[;: ~J SHOWERS
. . Sialic "Occluded

Map sh.ows minimum t~~Jmperatures At least 50~'o of any shaded area is forecast
to receive precipitation indicated

'

UPI

WEATHER MAP -During early Saturday showers are lorecasi
lor parts of the central Pacific Coast. Rain/showers are possible In
parts of tbe northern Pacific Coast and rain Is possible in parts of
the upper Great Lakes. UPI

------Weather-----a chance of showers Tuesday.
South Central Ohio
Tonight and saturday: Partly Highs will range from the mid 40s
to the mid 50s Sunday. In the 50s ·
cloudy, with a low tonight In the
mid 30s and highs Saturday Monday, and from the mid 50s to .
between 80 and 65. Winds tonight the lower 60s Tuesday. Early
·
south less than 10 mph.
m9rnlng lows will be mostly In
the 30s Sunday and Monday and ·
Extended Forecast
Sunday lh·rough Tuesday ·
. between 35 and 45 Tuesday .
Fair Sunday and Monday, with

1988 CAMARO IROC-Z COUPE
350 TPI V-8, power windows, power door
locks, tilt, cruise, air.

"FULL'f LOADED"
SAVE OVER
S3,500

list Price
SALE
PI ICE

$20,534.00

$16,959

BLOOD GLUCOSE METER

OFFER
EXPIRES
MAY 31, 1919

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The Ohio House of Representatives Is to tackle a pair of major
issues thiS week - the $25 billion
state budget for 1990-91 and a bill
overhauling the workers' compensation system .
Over In the Senate, the spotlight will be on legislation
Implementing a motor vehicle
tailpipe testing program man·
dated by the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, which has
given the state until midnight
Tuesday to enact it.
The House Is scheduled to
reconvene at 11 a.m. Tuesday
and the Senate at 1: 30 p.m .

Senators will be reviewing the
same tailpipe Inspection program, costing motorists $10.50
annually to ·reduce carbon monoxide emissions, whlcll they
defeating late last Wednesday
night. The House has ratified the
proposal.
Gov. Richard Celeste, who
along with legislative leaders
promised the bill would be
enacted Tuesday In order to get
the time extension from the EPA,
was reported to be working on
Democratic senators for three
votes needed to turn the tide.
The House Finance Committee
Is expected to go through a

marathon amending session
Wednesday before reporting out
its version of tile governor's
budget for a vote Thursday. •
(See HOUSE, page A3)

By MARGARET CALDWELL
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - According to
the National Weather Service,
most of the state of Ohio Is no
longer· threatened with another
drought this season. And accord·
lng to to precipitation records,
GaiUa and Meigs counties are,
thus far, abo,ve tile normal
rainfall.
"Our water storage has been
building up;.' said David McKen·
zle, executive director of tile
Gallia County Agricultural Sta·
blllzation and Conservation
Service.
,;I think we're looking to see a
pretty fair year. We've had th e
water stock build up and, wltll the
warm weather, the grass has
begun to grow. The hay and
pasture (fields) are already
beginning to look good.' •
Ed Vollborn, Gallla County
Extension Agent for agriculture,
said the grass, hay and pastures
are starting to grow, but he Is
waiting to see how the precipita·
tlon Is going to continue througll
, the
water
recharge
season
vember
through
April).
· (No·

of above -normal rainfall acros&amp;
average In the Northwest, you
the state. but there's no specific
still have enough surface
outlook lor the Northwest.
moisture."
During the m.onth of February,
The Northwest region Is re·
sponslble for mucll of the wheat South Central Ohio, which en·
and soybean production In Oblo. compasses Gallia, Meigs, Law:
Based on 1987 figures. six of the renee. Scioto, Adams, Pike,
top eight wheat-producing coun· Jackson, and Ross counties,
received 6.84 Inches of niln'
ties are in the Northwest, lnclud·
registering
4.06 Inches above
lng the top three - Wood,
normal
,
according
to Cashell.
Hancock and Putnam. Four of
In
comparison
with
February
the top six. soybean-producing
1988,
precipitation
measured
counties are also In the Northw·
est.,... Hancock (second), Wood only 3.19 Inches, or 0.41 Incites
(fourth),Putnam (fifth) and Van above normal.
The amount of rainfall regis·
Wert (s ixth).
Tile National Weather Service tered for · this calendar . year
said the drought has ended in (January a·nd February) totaled
Ohio In all but the 11 counties of 10.3, measuring 4.15 above nor·
the Northwest. where 3.8 inches mal. Cashell said the amount of
more than tile normal rainfall Is rain In January and February
1988 In South Central Ohio
needed.
The South Central region was registered 5.28, or 0.87 below
lifted out of the drought by a total normal.
The water year (Oct. l·Sept.
of 10.13 lnches of liquid preclplla·
30)
In 1988 measured 11.381nches
tlon since Jan. 1, 76 percent
of
precipitation,
or 2. 74 below
higher than normal for those two
normal.
Rainfall
measured
thus
months.
The National Weather Service far In this water year registered
90-day outlook for March through 19.64, or 5.52 Inches above
normal.
May calls
for_
a_
55 ;._
percentcllance
!.;._
__
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___,

''Thh1gs are looking !!Ood now.
Conditions are favorable for good
spring crops, wltll the growing
warm weather and adequate
rainfall," Vollborn said. ''But we
really need to walt for the next
six weeks to see wllat llappens. It
takes a lot of water to build up 'ihe
reservoir."
David Cashell, Ohio Depart·
ment of Natural Resources lly·
drologlst, agrees that the next
few weeks are lmportan t.
"It take two to three years to
get the water levels noticeably
below normal. Then It can take
up to three years to get back to
normal," Cas hell said. "You
can't solve a shortage without
flooding. But we are getting
normal to above normal
rainfall."
Frederick Miller, chairman of
the Agronbmy Department at
Ohio State University, said tile
threat of a drought has not yet
represent a problem for the
winter wheat crop.
"It will essen tlally tell itself In
the next couple of months," he
said. ''Even !hough we are below

DROUGHT ENDS - Ohio appears to no longer· be threatened
·with a drought again this year, as above nonnal rainfall has
saturated the ground. Many of the trl·county farmers have begun
preparing their fields for the spring crops, with much of the land In
the area already tilled. Hay fields are beginning to show signs of
the upcoming season as livestock are being returned to pasture.
(Times-Sentinel photo)

Ohio prosecutors watch
precedent setting case

COlONY THEATRf:

-Giucorneter it 1 retl*red trademarK of Milet Laboratories, Inc.

FULL SIZE
CHEVIOLEI PICKUP IRICK

Muskegon, Mich., to a job site on the Alleghany
River near Pittsburgh. There the equipment will
be used In hydroplant construction projects at
Locks 8 al!d 9. It took less than lwo hours to
complete the ·job of loading two trailers, six
welding machines and six "shanties" !rom the
bank to the barge. (Times-Sentinel photo)

Thl813-ton traller !Uled with tools was wrapped
with cables which were secured to the hook on the
boom of a cr11ne and swing from the OO~!ool high
bank over the river's edge to a barge below. The
trailer was one of a dozen pieces of equipment and
buUdlngs being moved from West Main Street In
Pomeroy by the Russell Construction Co. of

House to vote on workers' cornp

GLUCOMETER~•n

A Myltimedie Inc . Newspaper

not a threat
to area crops this year

"•'
t

~SNOW

14 Sections. 90 Pages

Up in the air... -~,...-~-----. Drought

"•

·''FREE" Automatic Transmission
"FREE'' Bed Liner

•755

Partly cloudy. llighs In mid
50s.

~

Name contftlt winner
Dick Lambert, Box 48, Langs·
ville, correctly Identified the
Meigs County farm featured In
the mystery farm contest last
Sunday. The farm pictured was
that of Clifford Wooten. Lambert
was one of three correctly
Identifying the mystery farm.
His name was selected by lot·
tery. The prize Is $5 !rom The
Dally Sentinel.

Along the River ......... Bl·8
Business .................... E1·8
Comics- ................... Insert
Classlfleds ................. D3·7
Editorial ...................... A2
Deaths ......................... M
Sports ....................... CJ.6

tmts

.•

•

Tubercul08is tesl8
A skin testing clinic will be
conducted by the Meigs County
Tuberculosis Office at the ?orne·
roy fire station, Butternut Ave ..
Pomeroy, Monday from 4:30 to
6:30p.m.
The service is free and food
service groups are encouraged to
take advantage of the skin
tes dng program.
Blood prest~ure dinic
A free blood pressure clinic
will be held at the Harrisonville
town hall from 10 a.m to noon
Tuesday under · sponsorship of
the Harrisonville Senior Citizens.

Inside

•

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 3·11-!19

dau~hten,

~ Alva Jean Durbm of
Russell Wickline, 76, of WIIU·
amson Ave., New Matamoras, a
Ravenswood and Mistress Mary
former Racine resident, died Lou Carter of Hartfonl; three soos,
Friday lllC)rntng at the Lewis
Veterans Administration Medl·
~al Center at Clarksburg, w,Va.
· Born on Aug. 10, 1912, he was
lbe son of the late Pearl B. and
Bertha Yost Wickline of Racine.
· · He was a veteran of W. W. II
and belonged to Millwright Union
at Parkersburg, V. Va., and
Racine Lodge 461, F . and A.M.
He Is survived by his wife,
1,\(abel L. Clark, and two daugh·
ters, ,June Hoskins, Reynolds·
bura, and Allee Ann Wickline,
Marietta; a son, Russell L. of ·
New ·Mat'amoras, seven arand·
Fhlldrea.; tWo brothers, Clar·
ence of RaciDe, and Ralph of'
baxJe:y, Ga.; and two sllters,
Lorene Dalley, Blacklick, aDd
JreDe Eave~, Bradenton, F1a.
· Funerallervlces Will be held at
2 p.m. Sunday at the Hadley
F1Jberal Home In New Matamol'aJ, Tbe Rev'.. Drew Wather will
C!fftclate and ~rial will be In the

•

Hymn sing, dinner

50 cents

·DGULAI ,fiiCE
$]94.95
SIU PIICE
SJ59.95
GLUCOMEYEI REBATE -60.00
YOUR COST

• •Limited nme Offer •12 To Choose From

..

$99.95

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992·6669

271 NOIJH SECOND

MDlEPOIT, OH.

AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -Ohio's
city and county prosecutors are
watching how Summit County
Prosecutor Lynn Slaby manages ·
more than $2 mllllon worth of
property seized from drugdealing suspects.
Prosecutors said the o1,1tcome
of the case wlll be precedent·
setting, since the seizure Is the
largest under Ohio's corrupt
activities law. The statute allows
prosecutors to seize property and
profits acquired through Illegal
activities, such as drug dealing.
Slaby Is trying to sell 141
parcels or property, 48 cars, an
airplane and other Items taken
trom brothers Albert and Tho·
mas Thrower of Akron.
They surrendered the property
as part of a plea agreement, In
which they pleaded guUty to
.more than 10 counts of drug
tra!fltklng and were sentenced
to 25 years In prison.

However, last week the Throw·
ers fired their lawyer and ac·
cused him of trying to "railroad"
them out of their property. They
have !lied a motion to change
their pleas to Innocent.
Slaby has appointed a lawyer
to manage the property and deal
with banks that are owed thousands of dollars In mortgage
payments.
· "Once we lay the foundation on
how to deal with this, all other
counties will benetlt," Slaby told
the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "I
can tell you, It's no fun being a
landlord."
The state law Is modeled after
the federal Racketeer Influenced
and Corrupt Organization Act
(RICO) that allows federal prosecutors to seize property purchased with money earned
through drug sales or other
Illegal activities.

••
\

••

ON SCHEDULE - Con.trudloa of Ule ClllclllllBDP Brldce II
moving rlcht on ..:hedule, aceordlarto Bob Ho1J1ll, ••perlnlendent
with Meroe Conatractlng aad Supply Co. of Cleveland. Workel'll are
now pouring concrete to repair tile exilltlnJ plen and abulmenu,
whlcb will suppol1 the •ll'uetural ateel beam•. Ro(lk lor channel
protedlon hu been placed along the bukl, and new water and

sewer lines have been lnat.llecl. Rough aald near the tint of May
traffic will be redlverted to the GaiBpolls Boat Club aide.
Pedestrlana wllllhen. be pennltled to u11e the new sidewalk with
railing. Hougllllllld driven have been very careful croaalng the
bridge and have been watching lor pedestrians. (Timea-Senllael
photo)

i

i

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