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•

Paga 16-The Daily Seminal

Thursday. March 16. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

___...;..___ People in the news-----campus-wide office and falsely
claiming that he has Jackson's
endorsement until Jesse sets the
THE JESSE JACKSON record straight. Jackson's preSHOW: Jesae Jackson enters the vious TV experience includes
different world of a television hosting "Saturday Night Live"
sit-com Friday. The civil rights and · an appearance - on · "Lou
activist will tape a role In NBC's · Grant. "
SENATOR IS A WILlARD
series "A Different World" series, appearing as himself. BACKER: Now that the Senate is
"We're thrilled," said producer- through delving into the privated
director Debbie Alien. "We're life of John Tower, Sen. Tim
doing an episode on young people Johnson. D-S.D., Is bold,iy throwand how one person can make a Ing himself into another personal
difference. If anyone can help matter - the Willard Scott·
ride that home, it's Jesse Jack- Bryant Gumbel fracas - and
son." The plot for the show has he's on the side of the hefty bald
Kadeem Hardison, who plays guy. Johnson sent his colleagues
Dwayne Wayne, running for a a letter inviting them to sign a
By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press lnternailof\1\l

Stolen cattle gallstones resold
OMAHA, Neb. (UP!) - An
Omaha man pleaded guilty Wed·
nesday to felony theft of a cattle
gallstone for resale in the Orient,
where the stones are used as an
aphrodisiac.
A.B. Barnett told Douglas
County District Judge Paul Hickman he stole one gallstone worth
several hundred dollars from the
Cornhusker Packing Co. where
he worked.
·
Barnett said he was given the
gallstone by a fellow employee

Oct. 31. He said he knew the
sto ne, wrapped in paper, was
stolen and he put it in his pocket:'
Deputy County Attorney Greg
Abboud said Barnett admitted
the theft and turned ·over the
gallstone when confronted by a
manager later the day he received it.
The gallstone weighed 0.06 of
an ounce and would have sold tor
$672, Abboud said. Barnett faces
a maximum sentence of 5 years
in prison and a $10,000 fine.

Honeymoon's over for officer .
Dan Trew, a spokesman at
FORT SHERIDAN, Ill. (UP!)
-A high-ranking Army Reserve Fort Sheridan, said Wednesday
officer could be court-martiaied that Lamont may l)ecome the
for allegedly charging his honey- first high-ranking officer statimoon expenses to the military, . oned In the United States to face
court-martial under a 2-year-old
an Army official said.
Lt. Col. James M. Lamont also federal law allowing the Army to
is accused of wearing a ribbon he put reservists on active duty
during military_trials. ·
did not earn.

"Jetter of thanks to Willard"
after the "dust-up'· with Gumbel
over the anchorman's critical
memo. Johnson apparently likes
Willard's folksy manner and the
way he acknowledges "Today"
show viewers in the hlnt&lt;:,riands.
"I know that my consitutuents .
appreciate the attention that
Willard has brought over the
years to several worthwhile
community activities in South
Dakota," he told congressmen,
"and I imagine you can think of
examples in your own district as
well."

AND SO SHE GOES TO CNN:
Soon Linda Ellerbee is about to
achieve a journalistic hat trick
by working for three television
networks. The maverick newswoman is going to work for Cable
News Network starting March
20, when CNN will broadcast the
first of her thrice-weekly essays.
"I found I like being o.n CNN,"
said Ellerbee, who was a commentator for Ted Turner's news
network during its convention
and election night coverage.
"The nice part is CNN lets me
say what I think without first
telling me what I think. I guess
they know you can't depend on
anybody to be wrong ail the
time." Ellerbee spent 11 years at
NBC News, most notably on the
"NBC News Overnight" show
and switched to ABC in 1986 for
the ill-fated "Our World" program. Her book, "And So It
Goes," is being made into a
movie.
SUIT HURTS: William Hurl .
received an unwanted wedding
present from an ex-girlfriend.
Sandra Jennings, a (ormer New
York City Ballet dancer, filed
suit against the actor in New

York Supreme Court, demanding
an extra $16,000 a month for
support of their son, Alexander,
5. Hurt, whO two weeks ago
married · Held! Henderson,
daughter of bandleader Skilch
Hendei'!IOn, alreadY pays Jennings $65,000 a year.
GLIMPSES: Massachusetts
Gov. Michael Dukakls, who frequently reminded voters that he
was the son of Greek Immigrants
during his unsuccessful presidential campaign, will be the grand
marshal in New York's 50th
annual Greek Independence Day
Parade up Fifth Avenue on April
9 ... Gilbert Hill, the real-life
Detroit cop who played Eddie
Murphy's boss in the "Beverly
Hills Cop" films, isn't shy about
using his movie exposure In his
campaign for the Detroit City
Council. Hill, 57, who currently is
charge of the Pollee Department
special sl!rvices division, said "I
know the fact that I've been i.n a
couple movies isn't gning to hurt
me," he said in announcing his
candidacy. "I know the fact that
I've been a police officer so many
years Isn't going to hurt me. But
I've also spent a lot of time in the
community ... listening to what
the people want" ... Pope John
Pauf II sneaked off from the
Vatican Tuesday for a skiing
outing in the Abruzzl mountains
northeast of Rome Tuesday.
Security was quite tight and the
slope was closed to everyone but
the pope.

Youth league sign-up
992-6593, or Gene Wise at 9926224, by Saturday. March 18. This
will be the last scheduled sign-up
day.

MIDDLEPORT - Anyone interested in signing up for this
·year's Middleport Youth League
should contact Pam Burch at

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SUNDAY, MARCH 19
TOPIC: RADON GAS
Speaker: Dr. Arnold Sattler
At: Pleasant Valley
Community Room
Sponsored by: Aroa Ostonoy Assoc.

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•
Vol.39, No.218
1989

Pomeroy.:...Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 17, 1989

.Copyrighted

~t. ,Patrick~

Day showing

~een . from

Ohio .to spaee

force and they're ail going to be
out there," said Savannah
Police spokesman Mark
KelJer.
Ftom St. Patrick, Ohio,
Mayor John Rousakls, who is
where there are no more Irish,
of
Greek descent, polished his
to New York, which has plenty,
Irish
brogue as he tossed green
. Americans joyously celebrated
food
coloring into the city's
St. PaJrlck's Day Friday with
historic
Forsyth Founta!.n. ·
parades, drinking and showing
"The greening of the founOff tM.traditlorial green.
tains gets - ~verybody in the
'~'- Everi NASA engineers cqn·
green .spirit and k!Cill! ofl the
·t~q!,ltnll:the flighi of the shuttle
par~d.!!, " .he said.
·
Pi$~yert'"gol into the act by
"ln Ireland, there's more of a
changing . the ro lor ·of their ..
religious aspect." remarked
,! liaill.ttacklng map from blue
Mbnsignor David Bourke, a
to green.
native of Ireland who attenied ·
"But, course. everybody is
his first Savannah parade 54
.Irish on Si. Patrick's Day,''
years
ago. "Here some aspects
said John Maloney, who runs a
are
extreme
and lhere's nobar In Scranton. Pa .. where
thing
religious
in what many of
lesll,vltles already began last
the people do."
Saturday.
In Scranton, the celebration
., ln ·-New York, leading the
began last Saturday with the
es dmated 150,000 Irish and
annual St. PatriCk's parade.
honorary · Ir!sli marchers was
Maloney, proprietor of Malograrl!lmother Dorothy Hayden
ney's Bar &amp; Grill in the city's
Cudahy. 'the ·first female grand
s.aint by eating Italian food ."
South Side; said he hasn't had a
marShal in the hiStory of the
.• Friday night, the German
moment's rest since. ,
cltyos 228-y01ar-olq . parade,
families will crown a St. Pa·
''People have been coming in
which highlights the country's
trick's
Day
queen
at
a
tavern
in
waves,
and that goes on all
largest St. Patrick's
'
nearby
McCartyvilie,
and
a
morning,
all afternoon and ail
cele,bl'atlon.
3-mile
Irish
jog
will
go
from
St.
nigHt,"
he
said.
More than 1 million people
Patrick to McCartyvllle
Maloney said most revelers
were expected to line up both
Saturday.
drawn by the twin neon shamsides of ~;reen-striped Fifth
. But the race's organizer,
rocks in the tavern's front
Avenue, drink green beer and
Larry Huecker, said it's not
window have roots in the
eat corned beef at hundreds of
really much of a race.
Emerald Isle, although there
bars, bistros and restaurants.
"About 50 percent of the
are more than a few of what he
Cudahy dedicated the march
calls "strays."
people walk," he said. "Some
lei ','pur . mothers .and ali our
-allljli!!I,IO.nl , .who came from . '91 them· pull wagons wtth beer;_..,,. At-I!,rj!dJ~ ,~u!ltain in New
rreT•na: ~~,·~fr:#&gt;~~- ·"' ,·:,
&lt;''
. • .or Irish whiskey and drink it -Ashford, ·!11ass., St. Patrick's
alqng the way. lt's not very
weekend is serious party time.
; ,Tll!' tin~ Ohio community of
competitive.''
Richard. LeClair said the base
Sr. ·Pal rick was ready tot the
area is covered with green
In Salem, Oregon, • The
. day even 1hough there are ho
snow, and green beer will be
more Irish .left there. It was In · Statesman-Journal newspaper
changed Its name for the day to
flowing throughout the wee1862 that the Irish settled the
kend. Those who are hungry
village aboul 60 miles northw- Statesman-O'Jourital.
In
Savannah,
Ga.,
portable
can
munch on green eggs.
est ot Columbus to help build
bleachers
and
potties
were
·'Today
is the day Of the Irish.
the Miami and Erie Canal. But
We'IJ have a real big crowd,
wedged in among the azalea
· the~ moved on years ago. and
blossoms as the city prepared
and they have fun," LeClair
ail that's left is siX hOuses and
to host its 165th Sl. Patrick's
said. "All the rooms are filled.
St. Patrick Chureh.
The Rev_ Henry Albietz,
Day Parade.
They· party upstairs with
the Catholic chureh,
corned beef ·a nd cabbage with
pastor
Billed as the second largest
St. Patrick's Day celebration in
Sl!ld nearly ail the 120 families
an Irish band. there'll be
leprechauns skiing throughouf
'in his pariSh are of German
the nation, bUslnes¥s and law
desc~nt. ·
enforcement personnel braced
the mountain, bag pipers will
: Albielz .wiiJ have a spaghetti
themselves for an expected . be going around and playing for
dinner ·sunday, meaning, "A crowd of more than 300,000
those in the lift lines and
revelers.
there'll also be a band playing
bunch of Germans are getting
together to celebrate an Irish
"Th~re are 325 officers on the
outside."

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..

SATUIDAY UNTIL 4 P.M.

GOVENORS AWARD WINNERS- 'l'beee are
the studenl8 who In addiHon to reee1v1D1••perlor
ratlnp were also awarded Govenot'B Awardll.
From bottom up, Abbey Blake In ap-Iculture and

,

foed ~eleaeea, Michelle Youa1 In wa&amp;er resources,
stephanie Price Ia energy, Jas011 Huffman in
envlromnenlal science~~, Kyla Sellers Ia IIIIer
prevention and recycllnJ, and teacher Rusty
Bookman.

Development group topic goal-setting
HARTFORD, W.va. - Goals- ·
setting was lhe main activil)'
Thursday night during the monthly
meeting of the newly formed Bend
Area Development Council, said
Mason Mayor George Nichols.
The group also IIIUIOUIICed that
Frank Lee, Muon County
econanic development director,
will be the spealcer 81 the next
meeting set for April 12, 7 p.m. 81
Middleport Town Hall.
Nichols said lhe group set fhe

"•

Chance ol showers and
Jhunderstorms, windy. Lows
in mid 50s. Saturday, chance
ol showers In the morning.
Highs in the mid 60s.

8903

(b'FRANK T. CSONGOS
United Press.lnlernatlonal

""BEER AND WINE CARRYOUT"

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1989 OLDS DELTA 88

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Happy St.
Patrick's Day

FRIDAY -SATURDAY -SUNDAY

:

A.CJO/o Uf tO

Ohio Lottery

'

following goals at Thursday's meet·
ing:

-

Enhance economic growlh

through oooperation between the
Meigs and Muon counties communities.
- Development of shared communi!)' activities and Mtitudcs
- Promote activities that im·
prove tbe qualil)' of life in the

communities.
- Promote inlelgovcrnmental
cooperation.
·

One example of lhe last pi intergovernmental cooperatJOn is lhe recent push by tbe Bend Area
Development Council to see longdislllnee telephone rates reduced
between the nver communities.
·Nichols said lUO!ulions of support have been an-oved by the
Mason and Mei" County commisstonen and vanous town councils
are also considering resolutions.
Nichols said lhe grand plan Is to
(See DEVELOPMENT, paJe 5)

2 SectKJns, 14 Peges 26 Cenu
A Mu11imedia Inc. Newapaper

House adopts record
state budget ·Thursday
and applicators. Hunting and
COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) The Ohio House of Representa- fishing licenses would be raised
tives, acting in what may have
from $7 to $11, and trapping
been record lime, passed Thurspermits from $5 to $8.
day a $26.3 billion st~te budget
"Thls is a fair budget, " said
that increases spending by 12
House Speaker Vernal Riffe,
D-Wheeiersburg, after sending
percent for the next two years.
his troops on a two-week Easter
The House budget, which
added about $200 million to the
vacation. "It's a balanced
recommen-dation of Gov. Ri·
budget. We tried to deal with as
chard Celeste, was forwarded to . many problems as we could with
the revenues t hal were
the Senate on a 67-32 vote. Most
available. ' '
Republicans opposed the budget,
saying it requires more taxes and
The governor also commended
the House version of the budge\,
does not appropriate enough for
but ex pressed concern over some
e\lucat!on.
trimming done on his proposals
The Senate, which normally
does not get the budget from the for senior citizen community
programs, health care and recovHouse until 'tl)ld-Aprll, will have
ery
services for drug and alcohol
until June to act on it. Senators
abusers .
have been holding budget hear"!think we have a budget here
ings for several weeks. The
deadline for enactment is June that we can be proud of," said
Rep. William Hinig, D-New Phi·
30. The House spent only 50 days
considering the proposal.
lad.elphia, chairman of the House
Finance Committee. who along
The budget Is financed without
an increase In the major state with Riffe set the basic framework of the Hou se spending plan.
taxes . However, the cigarette tax
Hinig said the " themes" of the
would be hiked by 7 cents a pack.
other tobacco products by 25 appropriations bill are accountability and aid for education, an
percent at the wholesale level,
and draft beer by a 1 cent a glass. equitable tax policy and expanLiquor permit fees also are sion and res to rat ion of successful
increased, along with a host of government programs.
other permit fees ranging from
"The two themes of this
beekeeping to pesticide dealers budget," countered Rep. Tho·

mas Johnson. R-Cambridge,
"are taxes and the underfunding
of education."
The budget increases spending
for primary and secondary education by 11 percent to $7 billion
for the two years; higher education by 11 percent to $3.3 billion;
welfare by 5 percent to $2.55
billion: and ·Medicaid, or health
care for the indigent, by a
whopping 27 percent to $5.7
billion.
Aside from shuffling minor
amounts from one program to
another, the main changes made
by the House from the original
budget offered by the governor
Jan. 23 were to add$74 million for
higher education and $57 .6 m II·
lion for primary and secondary
education. Both education com·
munities said they need even
more.
Celeste had deliberalely' shortchanged education and )eft out
aid altogether for some programs; counting on a ballol
initiative which would produce
$1.84 billion with a 1 percent
Income tax earmarked for education. There Is no plan by the
Legislature to honor the governor 's wish for that issue to be on
the November ballot.
(See HOUSE, page 5)

On the trail of reading, Portland
students take a safari with books
Mrs. Winland visited, students
Send a friend a reading the month dt March.
were treated to frozen bananas.
Much
of
the
school's
curricuinvitation.
.
iu·m
at
all
age
levels
has
centered
Southern Kindergarten stuThat's this year 's Right lo
Read theme at Portland Elemen- around SAFARI. from vocabu· dents visited the school one day
with Portland students acting as
tary School and the acronym for lary exercises to school menus.
The enti~e school was deco- hosts and hostesses for several
the theme Is SAFARI.
In keeping with SAFARJ, Lyda rated by the children and activities. International students
Winland, of Athens. who's been teachers· in keeping with the from Ohio University also visited
on safari in Tanzania and is going SARARI theme, especially the , as weiJ as Meigs County Senior
to Zambia this summer, visited gymnasium, which was the cen- Citizens who joined the SAFARI
to read to the students.
the school last week with a slide ter or' activities with a reading
On another day , children
hut
(which
was
built
around
what
show, display !I ems. and lots of
is
usually
the
stage),
and
reading
brought
stuffed animals from
enthusiasm for sharing her expehome
tor
a jungle animal show.
jeeps
(which
were
appliance
riences with the Portland
And another oighllght for stuboxes paint,ed·to look like camoustudents.
dents was a safari hunt in·
Winland has been on safari one flaged jungle jeeps) and straw
Portland Park.
time, but her husband, Roger mats for lying on the floor and
Many donations made the
Winland, who is a dentist in reading. Helmets, the kind worn
Portland SARARI possible, and
Athens, has been on safari four by big game hunters, were also
available, 11nd a variety of. art students and teachers are aJ- ·
times. Between the two of them,
in the
ready thinking ahead to next
they have collected every thing projects tpok place
activity
compound.
On
the
day
year's
Righi to Read program.
from an elephant tusk to beaded
jewelry from the Mansai tribe.
Although Winland had many
animal skins on display for the
children to see and feel, she
pointed out that she and her
husband are both "non-killing"
people, explaining that some
killing is necessary or jungle
animals would become overpopulated and then end up starving
to death for Jack of enough food to
eat. There Is a big difference
between professional big game
hunting and poaching, she
explained .
She also pointed out that when
her husband hunts big game, he
eats what can be eaten, saves
what can be saved, and then she
utilizes skins by making baskets
and carrying cases.
Even the whiskers of elephants, which feel almost like
wire, can be used to make
bracelets.
When an elephant Is killed,
Winland said, the first thing
members of AfriCan tribes do Is
make bracelets to wear because
they believe the bracelets are
magic and will ward off elephant
attacks. When Winland's husband was ready to leave camp to
hunt, tribesmen would refuse to
accompany him if he was wearing a bracelet, because they
knew elephant hunting would be
a waste of time with the bracelet.
So he would take it ort and leave it
at camp, she said.
Photograph albums were also
Included In Winland's dl,splay
and children saw pictures of
African city life as well as
plct ures of the Afrlc an jungle and
jungle animals.
AlthOugh.Winland's visit to the
school was a highlight of Right to
WOW-BE! -Carl Wllloa, a Portlud Elementary fourth p-ader,
Read Week, March 6-10, other
and Anpl Roberta, a alxlh IP'8IIe 1a.dent, learn flnt baad that an
actlvilies related to SARAI;li
elephant tusk feel• diHerent lhan what you ml1ht lnia11ne.
have been on-going throughout

�•

•

Friday, March 17. 1989

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

~lb

....... ......-=.=

Bm~ ~.__
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
('AT WWTEliEAD
Publisher
Assistant Publisher/Controller
CHARLENE HOEFLICH, General Manager
A MEMBE R of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper PublisHers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shou ld be less than 300
words long. All letters are subj ect to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub·
ltshed. Letters should be In good taste, ad(lresstng Issues. not personaltt!es.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Friday, March 17, 1989

•

_The 'insci-utabl~' East strikes again
Many American observers
were surprised at Red China's
brusque and arbitrary action In
preventing the prominent dissenter Fang Llzhl from accepting
President Bush's jnv!tat!on to
attend the American. barbecue In
Peking on the occasion of Mr.
Bush's recent visit there. And
quite a few were taken aback by
the administration's rather
mousy and understated response
to this brazen social Insult.
But this sort of rude behavior
by the Ch!coms Is nothing new .
And personally I prefer, In
response to It, the kind of reply
· offered by Dr. Larry P . Arnn
recently, when Boss Deng's local
•

.

Black group opposes Sanctions
.

· WASHINGTON - A group of
prominent black Americans has
become an unllkely advocate for
U.S. companies doing business In
South Africa. The organization
publicly argues that companies
:Shouldn't be forced out of South
:A frica by economic sanctions.
Here's something they don' t
publicize. The group was formed
with money and moral support
from corporate giants that have
big lnveslrtlents In South Africa
and want to stay there.
· The group calls Itself the
Coalition on Southern AfriCa, and
Is made up of black ministers,
educators and business people.
Anti-apartheid activists fear that
American corporations are using
COSA as a puppet In a massive
lobbying campaign against
sanctions.
Our associate Scott Sleek Investigated COSA's corporate
connections and found that the
group had received about $1.2
m!lllon from companies doing
business In South Africa, IncludIng Mobil Oil, Johnson &amp; Johnson
and Caltex Petroleu~Corp. For
years, such companies have ·
opposed congressional efforts to
Impose economic sanctions on
South Africa. They have also
resisted public pressure to divest

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta
their Interests In the racially
segregated countrv.
COSA was formed in 1987
thanks In large part to public
relations wizard Raphael Pagan
and his flrm, Pagan Interna. tiona!. Pagan had previously
been a consultant to Shell on, a
major Investor In South Africa.
When Shell was faced with a
boycott by anti-apartheid
groups, Pagan came to the
rescue. In a document known as
the "Neptune Strategy," he
spelled out the solution: Get
religious leaders on the side of
business. (Shell was not Involved
In the formation of COSA.)
Another COSA founder was
Robert Brown, the black North
Carolina businessman who angered South African blacks last
year by claiming he had power of
attorney to represent the name of
Imprisoned black nationalist
leader Nelson Mandela. Brown
said he was trying to protect the
Mandela name from explo!ta·
Uon . But Mandela's supporters
feared that Mandela's wife,
Winnie, wanted to profit from the
name. Brown runs a public
relations firm and among his
clients are American companies

T Ower controversvJ
followe.d the ·script
The John Tower lmbrog!!o has
been portrayed as a power
struggle between the executive
and legislative branches and a
partisan scuffle between Democrats and Republicans. But It Is
best appreciated, In my estimation, as Washington theater.
It deserves to be savored, like a
fine wine, for Its color and
character and bouquet. It ought
to be rolled around th~ mouth a
few times and bounced off the
tonsils before swallowing. It Is a
· robust vintage bottled on the
: banks of the Potomac. Appella : uon Washington Controlee.
• Scandals In the capital city
tend to unravel In predlcta ble
ways. Rules and precedents have
been perfected by countless
scoundrels through the years to
guide the behavior of the ac. cused. They were first and most
: brilliantly codified by James
· Boyd !nt he 1970 "Washington
Monthly" article, "The Ritual of
Wiggle: From Rul.n to R eelec.t!on."
An analysis of the T9wer affair
demonstrates that George
Bush's choice for defense secre· tary Is a diligent student of the
rules, as compiled by Boyd and
· amended by Spear. Herewith, a
sampler:
I. Confess to what Is known,
evade what Is unknown (Boyd).
Everybody In Washington had
heard stories about Tower's
boozing and womanizing, so he
could hardly deny them. He has
therefore, hewed to Wiggle Rule
1 and confessed to his previous .
problems with Scotch and his
martial !nfldelltltles. He has
been notably circumspect, how·
ever, about the most Important
accusation leveled against him
- that Information he acquired
as an arms negotiator was
passed on the defense firms In
return for $750,000 In consulting
fees . Tower said he provided only
"a sort of speculation on what
was likely to happen" as a result
of the arms talks.
2. Arrange lor a quickie exoneration from a semi-respected
..,urce (Boyd). Tower'sexonera• tlon came from a source with
even better . bona fides than
required. President Bush him·
sell angrily lambasted Tower's
critics for "the rumors and
Innuendos (they) used against
this decent man."
a. Pick a aeapegoat (Boyd) .
• The decoy most often employed
•II the opposition party, and the
Republicans p!~ked up the partisanship chant early and wtth

gusto. Such charges are usually
employed by people Boyd called
"Party Flannelmouths" - funct!onarles who resemble statesmen bu I are wlilt ng to I oo k
partisan and even foolish for the
safe of the organization. Two
nonpar!el Flannelmouths, Senat e Ml nor ItY Lead er R ober t
Dole of Kansas and Minority
Whip Alan Simpson of Wyoming
leaped to the rescue In the Tower
a ff a Ir ·
4. Pray thata buffoon wUI step
forward to play the roD ol rodeo
clown (Spear) . During the 1970s,
Sen. R oman H rus k a, R· Ne b ..
could always be counted on for a
stupid remark. Indeed, It was he
who argued that Richard Nixon's
f
Supreme court
.
c Ipher o a
nominee, G. Harrold Carswell,

Page 3

•

Commentary
The Dailr Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

with South African holdings.
Brown Is resigning from COSA
because of complaints from
other members. Sources told us
the group wants him out because
of his ties to Winnie Mandela.
A spokesman for Brown, Arm·
strong, Williams, confirmed to us
that Brown and COSA gave
Winnie Mandela money to build a
palatial home amid the squalor
of the Soweto township. Black
activists In South Africa were so
outraged by the lavlsb house that
Winnie Mandela wlsPlv decided
not to move ln.
COSA also gave money to help
rebuild Winnie Mandela's medl·
cal clinic when It was firebombed
In 1985.
We talked current COSA
members who think that American businesses can play a posl·
tlve role In overcoming apar·
theld, It they are allowed to stay
there. They also think economic
sanctions will hurt the ImpoverIshed blacks of South Africa. The
group has lobbied Congress on
the sanctions Issue, has sent ald
to South African blacks and
sponsored South African students to study Jn the United
States.

'o h Spear
Jl sep
should be approved so that
mediocrity could be represented
on the high court. In the :rower
affair, Sen. Gordon Humphrey,
R·N.H., filled Hruska's shoes
admirably when he remarked
that Bush'S earlier effort to
"extend the hand of friendship
(to Democrats) Is sophomoric
driveL What they need to do Is
extend the middle finger."
~. Set up a series of endol'IICmeals by prominent churchmen
(Boyd). This was also difficult
for Tower, who had even been
abandoned by Jerry Falwell. The
best the nominee could do was a~"
endorsement from an abstinent
Mormon, Sen. Orin Hatch, RUtah, who deplored the Democratlc "bed and breath check" on
Tower .

Washington Window

QuayIe veers off path
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House ~Wporter

runn!ng·dogs tried their patented
brand of bluster on him.
Dr. Arnn Is a pleasant, softspoken conservative with a
wicked wll, who serves as
director of the Claremont Institute In Claremont, Calif. On April
7-8, his Institute is co-sponsoring,
In Los Angeles, with the Institute
of International Relations of the
Republic of China (!.e., the
Nallonalls I government on Talwan), a scholarly conference on
the topic "The United States and
the Republic of China: Democratic Friends, Economic
Partners and Strategic All!es."
One of several thousand Invitations to the affair apparently fell
Into the hands of the Red Chinese
consulate In Los Angeles.
Thus II happened that on
March 3 Dr. Arnn received a
phone call from a man who
Identified himself as Zhang
Pang-xlang, a political counselor
of the People's Republc of China,
who said he was phoning on the
Instructions of the Red Chinese
Consul General In Los Angeles.
Thus It happened that on
March 3 Dr. Arnn received a
phone call from a man who
Identified himself as Zhang
Pang-xlang, a political counselor
of the People's Republic of

Public Notice

Public Notice

~!:;..lh::.":' ;'Q~h.:::o:o:

links: thence nonh 43 rods

to tho ploca of beginning.

2

:;:'~'::d ::::·::::

Since Bush was the ultimate team player, never faltering from total
support of the Reagan administration when he was vice president It ,
Is difficult to belleve that Quayle did not get the message on the mod'us
operan d! f rom the highest level.
·
Quayle's remarks, contained In a speech to the Indianapolis
Economic Club . were submitted to the White House the day before
they were delivered . White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater
bj
was su ec.ted to several questions concerning the speech before .
Bush held a news conference conceding defeat on Tower and
announcing the appointment of Cheney.
.
During the news conference, the president said he had.not seen the -Quayle speech and he added, "I speak for myself. He speaks for
himself."
Several hours after Bush made the remarks concerning the Quayle
address. White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater said the
same thing - that Bush and Quayle spoke for themselves. Fitzwater
us~ally primes the president before a news conference, even a
quickie one, on the shoals ahead. And some aides reportedly had
already decided the speech was not In tune with administration
policy.

For the Southern DiatriC1
of Ohio
(31 3, 10, 17 3tc

Public Notice

NOTICE OF FINDING
.,ld to Hirmon T. Cline.
OF NO StGII!IFICANT
ENVIRONMENTAL
rool~o."':::'!t~~
IMPACT AND
umbio
Towolllip. Moigoo
NOTICE OF INTENT TO
County. Ohio: lloglnning 10
REQUEST RELEASE
OF FUNDS
choina 73 llnb lOUth of the
MEIGS COUNTY
~
of
SoCiion
8
1n the Townotip of Coklmbio: COMMISSIONERS
-oo-26ch-10inb CounhouM
to • -o: U...oo lOUth 96 Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
choino 77 linb to a •o: 814-992-8B61
ooot 5 ch- 60 inlol TO ALL INTERESTED
to 1 nonec - 00 lOUth 5 GROUPS, PERSONS.
choin~ 1honco ooot 20 chlinl ANO AGENCIES:
60inbtoo_o_oa,._
On or obout Morch 24.
utr. 6 north (IS dow•l 1989t the above named
- 1411nloo; ...... north 14 County will request the O.hio
choina 77 llnb to the P.l-. of Ooponmont of Developbeginning, it being tho umo ment, Office of Locel Gopremlo• oet off and ... vernment Servic81, to ,..
oignod to Corollno R-lingo leue Feder~~l Funda, for the
In a cortoin -Jtion tor port i- fOllowing project.
~·County Comtion in Meiga
Title: Community Oevolmon PI- Coun wh.,... opmont Block Grant, EconGoorgo R. Rowlingo, ot al .. omic O.Velopment Prowoo potltlonw ond Amondo gram. loan to M•gs MenuRawI - • al.. were r•- fecturwd Houolng. Inc. for
p~l. ond rocordod In olto propol'lltion end rolotod
complete w P8ge 240 and conotructlon octlvity.
Locotlon; BodfOrd Town~!!~o ,:.t.~.h ~~.:::; ~ ohip,
Melgo County, Ohio
35iA ecr•. more or teas.
Amount: t2S8,000
An Envlronmontol Review
Record
reopoctlng tho
H1nnon doted JuneS, 1962, whhin project hu been
r.::~7dod lnVolumo216. m11de by' the above named
County which documents
Grontor, Hoi 8. H•rmon, the environmental review of

-oo

of~~~::o":~~~~

111 tho ca•l .,d other mi-

:::.i'~~~':':X'!:,~: :~:

=-

orvoo ono-hlllf of tho oH end
aeo fnlm the obovo dooc~~·:.O":!"~otion lor
thlo convoyonco tho grontor
ogr- thot there ohall be no
air aholto or u• or domoge
to tho ourfocelortho mining

~~d~~ "J..t~oolm~~ t~;

obovo deocr- reel •toto
withoutthoea-oconoent
~~~ grontoo, .Mic~oel L.
Leot rof•oncoo; Volume
2111, Pogo 775. ond Volume
161, Pogo 91 , Me1111 County
~ood~nco: Volume
270,
Pogo 241. Meigo
County Oood R-rdo.
Together with oil tho oppuneno- end horoditomonto thoteunto belonging;

thet pur.,.nt to 1 Werrant of

Arreot In Rem. tho Unkod
Stoteo Morohel h• orrootod
·tho doltondant propony ond
holds the ume in his cu•
tody; 1hot onv per""" claimina to hove ony intereot In
end to oaid clof.,dont proparty •hell filo with tho Cllfk
ofthloCourthloclolmwithln
ton 1101 dovo fon-tnv thlo
Not leo In contormitv with
tho rooquiNmonto of Rulo

~~'.!.%,t~t':::=

on=M,:It- Ctolmo of tho
F
Ruloo of Clvl Prd • ond ollt!lt t ' * :.:-ca:O~OW:J~;
to ony Inter,..._ rolot- .
to • plointlfrocomploint
hln - t v 1201 diOY• to~
lowingthollllngofhloclolm.
11 roqulrod by ond In confor·
mlty with laid Supplomontol

!:II

the project. Thit Environment.l Aeview Record is on
file at the .txwe 1ddreS1 and
is avlilabla for public exami·
natton upon requ.. t . The

project hu been fou net to

have no aignificant effect on
the environment.

Tho Mol go County Commialionera will undertake

the deocr- project with
Community

Development

Block Gront funds from tho
Ohio Ooportmont of Devol·
opmant. tho Meigs County

Commi11ion•t are certifying to the Ohio Department

of Oovolopmant thot tho
County ond Meigo County
Commialionra in their offi-

clol copoclty u County
Commilleian•t. con•nt to

occopt the jurlldlctlon of tho
Feotorol Couno If onv octlon

it brouGht to 111force r...
ponaiblllti• in Nl.tion to
..vlronment.l rwiBwa. d•

cloion-moillng ond octlon,
end thot theoo ••ponolbltl- hovo b - Htllflod. The
togol effect of tho Cortilico·

tton i8 that upon tt1 appro-

val. tho Meigs County Commialionere

mey u• the

CDBG !undo. ond tho Ohio
Deptrtmont of Development wll hiiVe tatilfled the

rooponolbllltloo under tho
Notlonol Environmental PolIcy Act of 19111. Tho Ohio
Deportment of O.VolopmMit, Offl .. of loco! Go-

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE
Rule C(lll: thot ony penon quifed dedaion finding. . or
NOTICE tS liEREBY Gl· wishing to petition for tho stop applicable in tho project
VEN: thlt on FobrullfY 1&amp;. remiation of mRigetion of in the review proceaa. Ob1989. tho United Stoteo of tho forfeltu,. of the defend· jections must be prepared
Amorlco, oo Plaintiff, fllod o ant property may do ao by and submitted in accorvoriliod Comploint For For- aubmhtlng a Petition for Re- dance with the required profeiture In the United Stltll mlulon or Mltlgotlon to D. coduro(24CFR Part&amp;Biond
Olotrict
Coun for the Michlel Critn,
United may be addrn•d to tho
Southern Olotrlct of Ohio, Stotoo Attorney, Room 200, Ohio Department of DevelEutern Dtvil:ion, at Colum· 811 Marconi Boulovord, Col- opment, Office of Local
buo, Ohio, being Civil Action umbuo, Ohio 43216, in con· Government Sorvlceo, 24th
No. C2-89-0134, ogalnlt formity whh the requir• Floor. Vernal Riffe, Stlite
cortllln property, 11 defend- menta of Port 9 ofTitlo 28 of Office Tower, 77 South
ant, to wit:
High
Street, Columbus,
the Code of Federal RegulaReal Property known and tions and by filing 1 copy of Ohio 43216.
numborod • 3889B Oyeo- aald Petition for Romluion
Objection to the release of
vMio Rood. Pomeroy, Ohio or Mltlgotion with the Drug funds on basil other than
and logolly deocrlbed eo:
Enforcement
Administra- thoM atated above will not
Sltuotad
In Columbia tion. 7406 Fedorol Building, be considered by the Ohio
Townohip, Melgo County, 1560 Main Street, Cincin- Oeponmont at OovolopOhio;
Bevinnlng at tho nati. Ohio 45202, with re- ment. No obiection received
northweat corner of Section ference to DEA file number
after April 12, 1989. wMI
8, Town 8, Ronge 16, of the t9-86-X010.
be conoidorad by tho Ohio
Ohio Compony' 1 purchaa:
ROBERT W. FOSTER Oeponmont of Oovotopment.
thonco woot 104 rodo 10
United States Marshal

hereby exceptl •nd re1ervw

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Bush and VIce President Dan
Quayle took the high road and the low road tn the aftermath ofthe loss
of the nomination of former Sen. John Tower to be defense secretary.
Bush turned· the other cheek and dismissed his defeat with a quick
" That's history . That' s done." If he had been Scarlett O'Hara h~
might have added, ' 'I'll worry about that tomorrow."
But the president was obviously In no mood to pick on Congress
which delivered the first major setback to his administration. Bush:
who spent weeks In single-minded determination to win the bailie
told reporters that "too much time has been wasted."
'
He did not 'hesitate the second time around and within 24 hours
chose Re p. Richard Che~ey, R-Wyo., No.2 man In the GOP House
hierarchy and chief of stafl to President Ford, to head the Pentagon.
Cheney Is ex pected to be a shoo-ln.
But while the gentler, kinder Bush remained conc!Uatory, refusing
to fault the lawmakers who handed him his defeat along party lines
Quayle struck out against the antagonists with a charge that they had
conducted a "McCarthylte mudslinging" contest. Quayle also
accused the opposition of trying to undermine the presidency.
Quayle, who served In the House for four yearsand!n the Senate for
e!ght, seemed to be off-key with the administration. And yet one
wonders.
'

William A. Rusher

China, who said he was phoning
on the Instructions of the Red
The conversation was plainly
Chinese Consul General In Los
Angeles ,
not proceeding along the lines
Mr. Znang advised Dr. Arnn Mr. Zhang had envisioned, and
that he found the whole proposed he tried to regain the offensive.
conference offensive. There was, Dr. Arnn, he Insisted, did not
he declared, no such thing as understand . This was a diplo"the Republic of China", and his matic matter, and Arnn was
government "would not toler- violating the policy of the United
ate" any "two-Chinas policy." States government. Dr. Arnn
Nor would It "tolerate" the replied that he was not represent·
conference. He added, as a sort of !ng the United States
clincher, that the proposed con- government. ·
ference was In violation of the
When this failed to enllghteng
policy of the United States as .well Mr. Zhang, Dr. Arnn tried to
as that of the People's Republic · explain to the baffled Chlcom two
of China.
concepts which, he suggested,
Dr. Arnn, recovering quickly might be unfamiliar to him:
from his astonishment, thereu- freedom of speech and the rights
pon told Mr. Zhang that, In the of a private citizen, But Mr.
opinion of the Claremont Insti- Zhang slrtlply responded that this
tute, Marxism was a great evil was "a diplomatic matter." and
and could not be tolerated any that the conference could not go
longer. It was (he added) partic- forward.
ularly out of the question that It
Mr. Zhang responded grimly
should · continue In a nation by saying that tits government
containing hundreds of mllllons. would have to take "some
of people.
action'' because they certainly
Noting that he and Mr. Zhang couldn't tolerate the conference.
plainly had a sharp difference of Dr. Arnn asked what "action"
opinion, Dr. Arnn thereupon Mr. Zhang had In mind, and he
replied that he would begin by
proposed a compromise: If Red
sending Dr. Arnn a letter. Arnn Is
China . would abandon Marxism,
Dr. Arnn would change th¢ title awaiting It with keen anticipation. Stay tuned.
of his forthcoming c.o nference.

ManninQ Roush, Preaident
Meirp Countv Board

of Commiition••
Counhouaa
Pomwoy. Ohio 46789
13!10, 17. 2tc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
AGGREGATE VENDORS
Sooted bldo wUI be received by the Boord of Meigo
Counnty Commi11ionert at

the Commlooionoro Office.

located In the Court Hou•.
in the Village of Pomeroy,
Ohio until noon on the 5th

dov of April, 1989. and the
bldo will be oponad end reol

aloud at 1 :30 p.m. on ttw

5th doy of AprH, 19B9, for
tho furnishing of oil klndo of

tiles of aggregate that miY

be roquirod

by

the Moigo

County Hlghw1y
Oepanment.

Eotimotad quontMioo of oil
oggregoto roquirod. opproxi·
motoly 40,000 ton.
SPECIFICATIONS
FOR BIOS AS FOLLOWS
1. Big price pw ton f.o.b.
loodad It tho vondoro plont
tor tho
end
slzeo of 111111'-'• thet mov
be rooqulrod. which wll confOrm to tho port"*&gt;t Stato
of Ohio Oeponmont of High·

-lou• kl,..

Wlyt c;onatructlon end
Materills Specifications, ex-

cepting poo or ohot grovel.
which

motor ill.

it tn ungrtded

2. With respect to the
eforeuld. ettimlted quanti••· thevendonlhellunderttM1d that no guerantee i8
given to the actual quantl-

tioo of oggrotllt81 to bo
furnlohed, but ooch vendor
lholl be roquirod to furnish

any part of the actu..
requirementa,, u ord•ed
during tho bid period.

3. Prlcel on thlo bid oholl
.be flrm ond In offoct from
AprM 1. 19BI to April 1,
1190.
4. All blddero muot ogroe
to furnilh eny moterioll Ot
the ...... prlceo to on tho
Politico! Subdlvlolono of
Moi91 County durl"tt tho bid
period.

lnd

read

aloud

for

28-3, meet Clemson Saturday .
The Colonials, 21-9, shot 26
percent In the first half and were
led by Vaughn Luton with 23
points In th e half.
Clemson 83~ .St.Mary'.s'IO
Elden Campbell hit for 20
points and Dale Davis had all of
his 18 In the second half to lead
Clemson, 19-10. St. Mary's, 25-5.
led by 10 points In the first half. AI
Lewis led the Gaels with 26
points.
UNLV-68, Idaho 56
Stacey Augmon scored 17
points and David Butler added 16
to power the Runnln ' Rebels,
'27-7. Inside scoring, Including 10
points In the first half by center
Riley Smtth, kept the Vandals
ahead. most of the period until
2:27 left when Idaho fell behind
24-22 on a dunk l!y Augmon.
DePaul 66, Memphis Slate 63
Terence Greene made · four
free throws with less than one
minute remaining to help De·
Paul, 21-11, hold off a late rally.
Stanley Brundy led DePaul with

20 points and If&gt; · rebounds and
reserve for ward David Booth
added F points. Rodney Douglas
led the Tigers with 16 points and
Elliott Per ry added 15.

Tickets
available
COLUMB US, Ohio tUPT)
Ohio Slate is to meet Nebraska in
the seco nd round of the Nallonal
lnvita.l ion Tournamen t Monday
night In St . Jo hn Arena.
The co ntest wil l be a I'Cm atch
of a Dec. 14 game. when th e
Buckeyes trounced Nebras ka .
103-7G. at St. John Arena.
Ohio State, 18- 14, defe;J.ted
Akron, 81-70, Wednesday night
and Nebraska, 17-15. .nipped
Arka nsas State, 81-79, Thursday
night in the fits tround of the NIT.
Tickets fo r Monday night 's
game go on sa le at 1 p.m. Friday
at the north end o( Ohio Stad ium,
said an OSU spokesman.

•

SHAMROCK-N-ROLL
Live Entertainment
Friday and Saturday Nights
Dance To Solid Gold Hits
Of The 50's and 60's
IRISH STEW and your FAYORnE IRISH BEVERAGE

Clfa "'' J.,In Ths Fun/

FIRESIDE INN POINT PLEASANT, wv.

Ono new 19B9 72 horoo
Bid speciflcationo may be
picked up et tho Melgo

County Engin_.• 1 office or

tho Melgo County Commlo·
aion•• Office.

The Molgo County Com-

milaionera may accept the

lowoot bid, or leloct tho belt
bid tor tho lntondod purpooo.

I.S1 1l11S····
\.OW tM1ll ·

EASTER
BASKET

•

and rea.ve the right to •

eccept or reject any or all
bid a and / or any part

thoroof.
Mary Hobotettor, Clerk
Board of Mel91
County Commission••
(3117, 24. 2tc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
BITUMINOUS
VENDORS
Soelod bldo will be received by the Boord of Melge
County Commitaionera.
Court Houae, Pomeroy.

Ohio, 46789 untl 12 noon
on the lith dov of Aprl,
19B9. ond tho bldo will be
opened ond roel eloud ot
1 :00 p.m. on tho 5th diOY of
April, 1189, for tho lumilh·
lng of bltumlnouo motoriols
tor tho Molgo County High·
wov Oeponment: end ooch
month thwMitw, bido will
bli received end opened on

tho l11t Wodn•doy of eoch
month for tho toHawing
month'• roqulromento. Eotimoted quontltloo of liquid

'FREE"
*Rebates Up to $1.'I soooo

WITH
TEST
DRIVE!

*ON SELECTED MODELS

"You'll Receive Low Interest Rates Plus Factory Rebates"

HURRY! THESE CARS IN STOC.K!!!

REGISTER FOR GIANT
EASTER BASKET TO
BE GIVEN AWAY ....

''SUPER SAVINGS''

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY!

•

11phelt required tpproxlmotoly 1100,000 gollono for

tho vow.
SPECIFICATIONS
FOR TTHE BIDS:
1. Big price por gollon
f.o.b. vondort plont, the bid
price per gellon dollvorod to
tho vondoro portoblo tonk to
any

1989 METRO

1989 CHEVY CORSICA

County Enginoeo, tho bid
price por gollon for ..,.,-

S6289

S9989

location •whhln the
county • deolgned by tho

dult control; for the varklua

1989 OLDS DELTA 88

1~89

Sl4,989

CUTLASS CALAIS

S9989

~

1989 CHEVY CELEBRITY

1989 CHEVY CAVALIER

5 11,989

S8989

grooloo of blt....,lnouo motariels wh!ch oholl confOrm to
tho pertinent Stoll of Ohio.
Department of tho Highway
Conotn'lctlon ond Motorloi
Speciflcetions

end the

1989 CHEVY CAPRICE
CLASSIC BROUGHAM
·-

Molge County Hlghwov 0.

partment'a Bituminoua

Spoclficatlono.
2 . Vondoro lholl undormnd t11at no guarantee il
given to the ectuol quontitioo
vendor shell be required to
furnish Ill or any ,.,. af the
County• 1 ..requ We menta 11
ordered during the bid

period.
3. Bidded pric• ohalt be

firm and in affect during the

bid period.
4. All biddoro moot ogroo

to f\,lrnish any bituminou•

materialt. •• rwqueated In
ltom 1. at the ....,. price to

FREE B£DLINER

llod

Engineer;

Committioner1 reserve the

throu9h the pfflco ol lho
Boord of Melgo County

by

tho Melgo County

or obttined

or all bids and / or MIY part

Commi•lionera.

-eof.
Morv Hobotettw, Cl0rk
Melgo County Bowd of

7. Tho oucceolllul vendor
will be roqulrod to furnilh
eny t•b or deolgn
grooloo u req-tod by tho
Melgo County Engln-.
8. The Melgo County
Commlooionwo ,.."""' tho
right to oa.pt or rojoct eny
or oil bido. or ony port
thoroof.
Mory Hobotoottw, Cl.ork
Molgo County il011rd
of Commilolon••
(3117. 24, 2tc

'3,000

OPEN SUNDAY,
MARCH
19th,·
•
1 :00 p.m.-5: 00 p.m.

SAVE

#4000

FREE

EVEBY CAB AND TBUCK
MABKED DOWN.

DOWN
SALE...
"
USED CAR MAI .
"Look for Red Tags In Windows
I(

&amp;. The envelo~. contain-

ba opined on the dllta and

SAVE

1989 CADILAC BROUGHAM ·

515,989

1989 CONVERSION VANS

needed. but each succ•lful

ploco •I!"Ciflod obovo.
7 . Tho Melgo County

_ . on objection to Itt op- '
Public N otlce
provel ofthorol-ooffundl
ond occopton .. of the cortiflcotion onty if it to on ono of
NOTICE TO
tho toll-Ing boolo: (11 Thlt
TRACTOR
DEALERS
tho oortlflo.tlon w• not
In occordon.. with oae001•d by tho Chief Ex· tlon
307.BI of the Ohio
ocutlvo Offl. .: 121 that apRov- Codo. ooolod bldo
plie~nt' t envlronmentel r•
·view record for the project wll be - - b\1 tho Boill'd
of Molgo County Commlolndlc.te~ omit~ion of a r•

76, ,\rkansas-Ut Ue
R&lt;lck 71
Louisville. always strong come
the tournament, won behind 17
points by Kenny Payne and a
second-half ru'!_s~arked l!y_ Felton Spencer. Cardinals center
Pervis Ellison was limited to 8
points by Jeff Cummings. For
Arkansas-Little.Rock , 23-8, Carl
Brown had 26 points.
Arkansas 120, Loyola Marymount101
Marlo Credit scored a careerhigh 34 points and Lenzle Howell
added 27 to power Arkansas. in a
racehorse game. The Razorbacks, 25-6, next meet Lou!sv!lle.
Arkansas just m issed the tournament record of 123 points set by
North Carolina last year against
Loyola Marymount.
llllnols 77, McNeese State 71
Kenny Battle scored 18 points
and top seed Illinois survived a
scoreless span of 7: 44 in the first
half. The lll!n!, 28-4, advanced to
a second-round game Saturday
against Ball State. The 16thseeded Cowboys return to Lake
Charles, La., with a 16-14 record.
Ball State 68, Pittsburgh 64
Paris McCurdy scored 18
points and sank two key free
throws with 7 seconds remaining.
Ball State owns the nation 's best
record at 29-2 and the nation's
longest current winning streak at
16 games. Pittsl!urgh, which had
beaten regional top seeds Okla·
homa and Georgetown plus No. 2
seed Syracuse In the regular
season, ended Its season 17-13.
At Boise, Idaho
Arizona 94, Robert Morris 60
The top seed In the region had
an easy time, with All-America
Sean Elliott scoring 27 points and
Anthony Cook 25. The Wildcats,

tractor.

noua Bid" .
8. PropoMit •re to be
returned on bid fonnt eupp-

,... nrnent S.Vto.a, wll ao-

Duke 90, S.C. State 69
Phil Henderson scored 22
points, and No: 7 Duke used two
scoring bursts to put away South
Carolina State. The Blue Devils,
25-7, opened a big lead with a 20-7
spurt in the !lrst half, then
clinched the Victory wi th a 15-2.
run in the second half.
At Nashvllle, Tenn.
Middle Tennessee ~late 97, FlorIda State 83
In perhaps the most astonish-

Louisville

the

ing a.ch month t bhl mult
be p&amp;linty mtrked ..Bitumi-

Commlalionera

scored 32 ·points and hit two
winning free throws wtth three
seconds left. "I try to play to the
fans, and I think not having
crowd has hurt me. "
Brown redeemed himself for
missing the· front end of two
1-and-1s in the last minu te.
Jeffery Robinson added 20 points
for the Saints. 25·4. Stanford,
26-7, was led by Adam Keefe with
22 points and Todd Lichtl with 17.
Keefe's pair of foul shots made
it 78-78 with · 34 seconds to go.
Stanford allowed Siena to play
for the last shot, and Brown
broke around a double screen
and found a clear path for a

lng comeback in tournament
history, Middle Tennessee State
scored the gam e's !Jnal 21 points
and rode the startling play of
freshman Mike Buck to upset of
16th-ranked Florida State. Buck
poured Ii123 OI Ills 2li points In ffie
second half -Including a spur t of
15 straight after Florida State
took an 83-76 advantage with 5:22
left. Middle Tennessee State,
which trailed by 17 poiJl (s with
16:06 left. improved to "1!3-7 and
advanced to Saturday's second
round against Virginia .
Virginia 100, Providence 97
Richard Morgan scored 33
points, includiQg the go-ahead
free throws With 1:36 remai ning
as VIrginia earned Its first NCAA
Tournament triumph since 1984 .
The Cavaliers improved to 20-10.
Providence, 18-11, lost seven of
Its !lnal eight games"!lfter a 17-4
start.
Loulslapa Tech 83, La Salle 74
Randy White scored 22 points
and Louisiana Tech repelled
three second-half comeback bids
by La Salle to move to the next
round against Oklahoma. The
Bulldogs, 23-8, are the first
American South Conference entry in the tournament. La Salle,
26-6, was paced by Lionel Simmons and freshman Jack Hurd
with 26 points each.
Oklahoma 7~. East Tennessee
State 71
Oklahoma survived a big scare
when Mook!e Blaylock scored on
a baseline drive with 81 seconds
remaining as the Sooners rallied
from a 17-po!nt deficit . Stacey
King scored 28 points for Oklahoma, 29 -5. East Tennessee
State, 20-11, was playing In Its
first NCAA Tournament since
1968.

purchaa of:

......od "Aggrogoto Bid".
&amp;. Propoeolo .,. to be
rotumod on bid tormo ouppliod by the vendor. ond wHt

(31 17, 2.C: 2tc

again," said Marc Brown, who

la y up. Llchti deflected the ball
from behind but was called for "
the foul.
" There was one matchup
where we had an advantage the
entire game, and that was Marc
·srown, ,.- Sfena Coacli Mik e
Dean e said. " We wanted the ball
in Marc's hands ."
TheCardlnai's loss was its fir st
in NCAA Tournament hi story.
Stanford won the national title in
1942.
AI Greensboro, N.C.,
Minnesota 86, Kansas State 75
Willie Burton scored 29 points
and Minnesota turned back a
second-hall rally to advance to
the second round against Siena.
Kevin Lynch added 18 points for
the Golden Gophers, 18-11. Steve
Henson scored 24 and LaKe!th
Humphrey 16 for Kansas Stale,
19-11.
West Virginia 84, Tennessee 68
The 19th-ranked Mountaineers
held Tennessee to 29 percent
shooting In the first half and
coasted. Herbie Brooks scored 22
polilts. for West Virginia, 26-4.
Tennessee fell to 19-11. The
Mountaineers advanced toSatur·
day' s second round against
Duke.

roy, Ohio 457118, until
Noon, April II, 19B8. Tho
bido wHI then be opened ot
1:45 p.m. on Aprl 8, 18B9

oil tho Polhlclol Subdlviaiono
of Melgo County during the
bid period.
.

right to occopt or reject •nv

By FRED LIEF
UPI Assistant Sports Editor
If this Is what happens when
measles breaks out, give Siena
more, Chicken pox, mumps . It
doesn't matter. Any Infectious
-ch!l!IIIDOOalsease will do.
Right now, the only contagious
thing Is victory.
The school from Loudonville,
N.Y. , struck by a measles
epidemic late in the season.
Thursday delivered the shocker
· on the open lng day of the NCAA
Tournament - an 80-78 victory
over Stan.f ord in the East Regional at Greensboro, N.C.
Siena, making its first appearance In the NCAA playoffs, next
faces Minnesota Saturday .
The measles quarantine In the
last six weeks forced Siena to
play its last nine games without
fans. The ban was lifted Saturday
after the team won the ECAC
North Atlantic Tournament and
took a new nickname - the
Saints .. The old nickname (Indians) was considered demeaning.
''I liked having a crowd·

1K»nara, CourtHou•. Pom•

6. On tho onvolopo cantolnlng tho bid. tho namo ond

lddreea Of the vendor• mu.t
be · ahown and plainly

Siena survives Stanford attack, 80-78 to· advance tn toomey

ALL

USED VEHICLES ON SALE

.

--

.

..

OPEN• MONDAY THIU FIIDAY UNTIL 7 P.M.
~SATURDAY UNTIL 4 P.M.

·

More Legal• on Page 8

).

.,

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Macomber defeats defending champion

Scoreboard ...
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Friday, March 17, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thul'l'id~'!li nosulls

Quf' h&lt;-l' t. &amp;stun 2 i Ill' I

K11fflllo 10, Hartford I
Luuh; ~. Phlladclphiu 3 tOT I

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\'1U14.'0 U""'r 3. Edmonton II
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at U' a-.hinp;ton,

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( 'hlcli,I!O ~~ Sew Jerst.'.\'
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Muntrt&gt;al al PlttshUf1:h, nlgf!t
Nl' Jsllltldc-rs uJ \' 1tm·ou~r. night

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Uet roll a! St. loul!i, nl ghl
C~tiJO!.ry at Lo!i 1\nxrlcs. nllfthl

Friday, March 17, 1989

MAYNARD NAMED ALL-OHIO - Southern's :Brad ~laynard
(right) was named honorable mehtlon all-Ohio by The Associated
Press earlier this week. The 6·0 junior center re~eived the honor by
being one of the factors In leading Coach Howle Caldwell's
Tornadoes to an 14·9 record and the SVAC championship. ( OVP file
photo)

Development...

OKLAHOMA CITY iUP!)
Here are how the Ohioans fared
Thursday In the first day of the
NCAA wrestling tournament:
Pigtail Round
118-Wayne Gibson, Old Do·
minion, dec. Adam DISabato,
Ohio State, 12·4.
134-Jade Montrle, Toledo,
dec. Pat Fitzgerald, ,Purdue,
10-5; Mark Marinelli, Ohio
State. won by technical fail
over Mark Mangrum. North
Carolina State, 15-0 (6: 09).
150-Mel Rentschler, Toledo,
won by cr iterla decision over
Rick Lynch, Boston University.
1·1, 1-1.
167-Tom Marchetti. Bucknell, '
pinned JeHrey Amstred, Toledo, •
1:52; G.T. Taylor, Arizona State,
dec . Frank McKeon, Cleveland
State, 5-3.
Preliminaries
118-John Galkowskl, Cal
Poly, dec. Doug Harper, Eastern
Michigan. OT, 3-3. 6-4; Jack
Cuvo, East Stroudsburg. won by
technical fall over Jack DeBoe,
Kent State, 24-8. 6:25.
126-David Beck. Eastern
Michigan. pinned Jody Jackson.
Vlrglnla.2:23; Brad Ginter, Ohio
State, bye.
134-T.J. Sewell, Oklahoma,
pinned Jade Montrle , Toledo.
1: 49; Miles Nilson, Eastern
Michigan. dec. Clarence Arrlng·
ton. Tennessee-Chattanooga, 6,
5; Mark Marinelli, Ohio State,

dec . Matt Rohrer, Marquette,
10·2.
142-Travis West. Portland
State. dec. Kenny Ramsey , Ohio
State, 4-1; Joe Reynolds, Oklahoma. dec. Tim Tuslck. Kent
State, 13-4; Rob Meloy, Penn
State, dec. Mark Boston, Ohio
University, 5·3.
150-Ben Dagley. Ashland.
dec. Mel Rentschler, Toledo.
14-6; TeDon Fleischman, New
Mexico, dec . Dave Wiodarz,
Cleveland State. 4-3; Scott Ho·
van, Pittsburgh, pinned Brian
Schneider, Eastern Michigan,
6:57.
158-Joel Smith. Eastern Mlch·
lgan. pinned E.C. Cotton, lillnols
State. 2: 15; Jeff Coltvet, Ne·
braska, dec . Matt Peters. Cleve·
land State, 10-6.
177-Brad Lloyd, Lock
Haven, won by technical fail
over Matt Mynster. Ohio State,
16·1. 7: 00; Chris Barnes,
Oklahoma State, won by
technical fall over Kevin Vegel,
Central Michigan, 19-4, 7: 00;
Rich Powers. Northern Iowa,
won by technical fall over
Kevin Higgins, BaldwlnWallace, 15·0, 4:44.
190-Charlle Buckshaw
Tennessee-Chattanooga, dec'.
Dave Benes, Ohio University,
12·5.
Hwt-Andy Haman, Iowa, dec.
Jeff Oatkullak, Kent State, 3-1;
Joel Greenlee, Northern Iowa,

won by technical fall over Vince
Cameron, Ohio Northern, 16·1.
5:00.
Second Prelbninary Round
126-Jason Kelber, Nebraska,
dec. Brad Ginter. Ohio State, 9-4.

134-Mark Marinelli, Ohio
State, dec . Glenn Ja r rett ,
Oregon. 8-6.
150-Tim Kreiger, Iowa State.
pinned Ben Dagley, Ashland,
3:33.

Rookie takes PBA event lead
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Rookie Jim Johnson Jr. of Wilmlng- ·
ton, Del.. used a near perfect 299
to help him capture the fifth·
round lead Thursday night In the
$280,000 Trustcorp Professional
Bowlers Association National
Championship.
.Johnson's 40 game pintail.
including 30 bonus pins for his six
match game wins, is 8,919.
Three-time champion Dave
Ferraro of Kingston, N.Y., owns
the No. 2 spot 41 pins behind
Johnson with an 8,878 pintaiL
Fourth-round leader Pete
Weber of Florissant. Mo., an
11-time champ, slipped to third
place. Weber, who needs a win
here to !&lt;:&gt;In Billy Hardwick and

Johnny Petraglia as the only
bowlers to win the "Triple
Crown." The other two tournaments are the Tournament of
Champions and U.S. Open.
Another three-time winner,
Mark Baker of Garden Grove.
Call!., Is in fourth place alter
feiUng 8,784 pins.
·
Alan Bishop of Louisville, Ky .,
who like Johnson ls gunning for
PBA victory No. 1, clings to the
filth spot with 8, 736 pins .
The 24 bowlers, from an .
original field or 353, bowl16 more
match games Friday before
being cut to the top five for
Saturday afternoon's nationallytelevised championship round.

Buffalo bland in
win over Hartford
By United Press InternatiOnal
Judging from their showing
Thursday night in Hartford, the
Buffalo Sabres are not overly
excited about the prospect or
meeting Montreal In the first
round of the Stanley Cup
playoffs .
B&lt;~!faio and Hartford· are battling for third place in the Adams
Division, with the fourth-place
finisher lacing the ugly task of
taking on the division's runaway
leaders. the Montreal Canadlens,
in the !irst round.

Jitney supper slated Friday

------Weather------ Hospital news

EMS reports 10 calls

Conferences
set at school

ST.

n.

143 &amp; 7

POMUOY, OHIO

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Tuppers plains dance set

Genealogical society to meet

Highway department negotiates

Board meets

".,

~~
~

Fuel taxes collected, distributed

!Ill

2 s(

~

9(

~

......__ _ Area deaths. _ _ __
Isola Taylor
Isola Taylor, 86, formerly of
Shade-Guysville area, died
Thursday at the Hockory Creek
Nursing Center, The Plains,
after an extended lllness.
Born in Athens County, she was
'the daughter of the late William
'lind Viola ,Dye Conant.
. Mrs. Taylor graduated from
:the Tuppers Plains High School
·and Greenfleid Business College.
.An Athens County resident most
;of her life, she was a member of
-the Alfred United Methodist
Church.
She is survived by one daughter.
Mrs. Lloyd (Doris) Dillinger,
Shade; two sons and daughtersin-law, John and June Taylor,
Torrence, Call!. and Charles and
Pat Taylor, or Kenton; eight
grandchildren. and six
great -grandchildren.
Beides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her hus-

618 East Main Street

band, Ernest In 1979, an Infant
son, James, two sisters, Rosa
Hull, Alura Taylor, and a
brother, Noah Conant.
Funeral services wlil be held at
1 p.m. on Monday at the Alfred
United Methodist Church with
the Rev. Don Archer officiating.
Burial will be In the Coolville
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the· Hughes Funeral Home Sun·
day from 2 to4 and 7 to9p.m.and
one hour prior to the service on
Monday at the church.
531 JACKSON PIKE
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Phone

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HOME PHONE 814-985-4398

M /\11 I IN '• F l J H N I 1 lJ H I

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SATURDAY
MARCH 18TH

MUST BE 21
'2.00 COVER CHARGE

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

Tuesday night. Kurt Miller ·
added 20 points for the Lobos.
21 ·10. Mitch Burley led Santa .
Clara. 20-11. with 17 point s.
AI Las Cruces, N.M .. Craig ,
Davis and Dexter Howard each ·
scored 16 points and ·Pepperdine ·
cap italized on cold New Mexico
State shooting. Pepperdine. 20·
12, hit 32 of 56 from the floor t57.7
percent) and led by at leas t 14
points th rougho ut the second
half. Willie Joseph scored 30
points for New Mexico State,
21·11.
.
At Wichita. Kan. , Steve Grayer
scored 18 points and grabbed 15
rebounds to help Wichita State,
19-10. post its first NIT victory
after six defeats. John Cooper
added 11 points for tile Shockers.
Tony Akins led Santa Barbara.
21·9, with 19 points and 13
reboundjl.
At Berkeley, Calif .. Leonard :
Taylor scored 16 points and
grabbed 7 rebounds to lead :
California, 20-12. into a second· ·
round matchup Monday at Connecticut. The Bears used a 13-0
run to take a 67-45 lead with 1:53
to play. Hawaii. 17-13. was led by
17 points from Troy Bowe while ·
teammate Reggie Cross added 14 :
points and 12 rebounds. Califor·
nla starting forward Roy Fisher · .
broke his thumb in practice ·
Wednesday and is out lor the ·
tournament :

•DOOR PRIZES•

Winners named

Donkey game tickets on sale

.

Ohio results announced in NCAA wrestling

(From IIOl"SE. page I 1

the education nppt opt·iation. sa"!
Rep. Daniel Troy, D Sll
million was put in to rai"r th&lt; ·
All Middleport Village funds as
sements. ba lance. $35.821.42; en· Willowi ck. chairman of a sub·
$15.100
minimum teacher 's •a
of· Feb. 28 totaled $231.216.61 . vironmental development. ~ommitt ee ·that helped fashion ·
A 1987 Honda four whe&lt;"l vehicle owned by Wilbur Donohue
la
ry
in
Ohio
to Slti,IKtO "art ing in
according to the report or Middle· $1.709.40, $3,598.48, $8,176.69.
Racine: was recovered Thursday evening "tn Vinton County:
Julv
and
to
$16.700
the followin g ·
port Village Clerk-Treasurer Jon
Public transportation.
accordmg to the Meigs County Sheriff's Department.
year.
Buck.
$47,197.97; $16,721.46; $18.870.44;
The deportment reports that the vehicle taken from the
He al •o sai d thr Hou se in
_
_
!{eceiQts.
disbursemenu
Jor
wajei' tank: no r£ceip'ts, no---.-LErom llEVELOPMENT. pag~
Donohue garage· in Racine ·On March~ was recovered by the
cr~ascd t hP number or fu II)
the
month.
and
th
e
balance
of
di
s
bursem
e
nts.
balance
I)
.
Vinton County Sheriff's Department.
each fund , respectively , making · $69.886.81 ; water. $12,135.36;
submit a petition to the telephone financ ed vocational. s pecia l ~nd
An accident which occurred on Flatwoods Road around 9 p.m.
up the total include :
$10.770.26; $25.700.73; sa nitar)' companies involved. Between frve gif!Pd education progm m' o,·cr
Thursday remains under investigation, Sheriff James M.
General: $21,257.46. $5717.65.
sewer:
$8 ,656 .31. $9.366. to 10 percent of lhe residents in the what Ce leste propose d.
Soulsby reports .
,
TrO)' said that by adding S56
$4109 .20; street maintenance :
55,115.97; swimming pool, no effected areas would sign lhe pctiA blue Ford Granada was northbound on Flatwoods Road.
milliO'n
to the instructional subsi·
$6390.56. $4.533.99 • $3,058.16; . recelpts, $15.73, $7.25; cemetery:
tion, the mayor explained.
.
went off the road on the right and struck the bridge abutment.
dies
for
colleges and untver'sit ies.
income tax, no receipts,
$1.192.88, $1.124.94. $59.90; water
In other items, the group:
The vehicle was heavily damaged. 'j'he driver left the scene.
"we
are
hopei" i t hl')' will work
$1.433.85, no balance rellected ;
meter trusts , $265. $155.90.
-Discussed work to coordinate
The sheriff reports that the registration tag did not belong on
with
us
to
hold tui tio n increases
fire equipment : $75.00. $632.02. · . $14,067.61; and miniature · golf:
an agrecmem bcrwccn towns on
that vehicle. The name of the owner of the tags is being withheld
1
o
a
minimum
.''
$568.67;
no reclepts. $332.62, deficit bal· bolh sides of the river 10 rackle
pending location of the driver.
fire true k. no receipts, no dlsbu r- ance. $640.13.
delinquem water and sewer ac· Also under investigation by the department Is the theft of a
The group is working wilh
counts.
10-speed bicycle taken from the Roger Abbott residence on
the
West
Virginia Public Service
Rock Springs Road. The theft of the bicycle occurred In late
Winners in th ~ grand op~nlng
Commission
and PUCO in Ohio. givea way sponsored by the Mar· ·
February.
.
Teams which will be com pet · The guidelines for such an agreeTickets are on sale for the
The theft of aluminum pieces and several sections of brass
ing
in the game will be the ment have been obtained by mem- tin' s Furniture and More store
donkey basketball game to be
pipe taken from a location off Oak Grove Road was reported to
Rutland Fire Department, Scipio bers of the comm ittee working on during thei r grand opening ccl~­
held next Thursday at 7 p.m. at
the sheriff's department by Carroll Teaford, Racine, and the
brat ion were We nd~' Hendrix.
Fire Department, Columbia Fire that project, Nichols said.
the Rutland Civic Center under
theft remains under investigation.
Jeff
· Hilliary. Aaron Will and·
Department. and a pickup team
- Looked at activities in the Billy Young.
sponsorship of the Rutland Fire
by Dennis McKinney.
various communities that could be
Department Ladies Auxiliary.
Real live donkeys. trained for shared or coordinated events, parAdvance tickets are $3 for high
GRAVELY TRACTOR
basketball. will be used in the ticularly around Memorial Day and
school st udents and adults and $2
The Bas han Ladies Auxiliary will have a jitney supper Friday
show.
The
donkeys
·
wiU
be
July 4.
SALES &amp; SERVICE
for children six and over. At the
night at the Bas han firehouse In Bashan. Serving will be from 5
furnished
by
the
Buckeye
Don·
204
Condor S1.
Pomeroy, OH .
Discussed
shared
schOQi
acdoor
tickets
will
be
one
dollar
to 8 p.m. Price for the dinner will be $4.50 tor adults. and $2 for
key
Ball
Co.,
Westerville.
tivities
in
the
Bend
Area.
higher.
children under 12. The price Includes a full dinner with several
Spring &amp; Summer Hours
meats and vegetables to select from, rolls, desserts and
OPIN MONDAY tHRU FRIOAY
beverages.
9 A.M •• 5 P.M.
VMII
SAIURDAY
9 A.M.- t P.M.
South Central Ohio
the morning. Temperatures
Thursday
admissions
-Erma
Tonight. a 60 percent chance or
steady falling to around 50.
Smith, Pomeroy: Ethel Rife.
showers
and
thunderstorms.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 10 calls
Pomeroy; Mary Huff, Pomeroy.
Sunday through Tuesday
Low 55 to 60. Sou.th winds 15 to 25
Thursday; Pomeroy at 1:02 a.m. to Spring Ave. for Erma Smith
Thursday discharges - Ellza·
Generally fair through the
mph . Saturday , variable cloudito Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 3:14a.m. to
beth
Vaughan, Clifford Con ley,
period, with highs in the mid-30s
ness with a 50 percent chance of
Rice Run Road ror George Collins to St. Joseph's Hospital ;
Paul
Taylor.
Freda McFann.
to mid -40s artd lows mainly in the
scattered showers especially in
Pomeroy at 11:13 a.m. to State Route 7 for Vlnls Tuttle to St.
20s.
Joseph's Hospital; Rutland at 12:57 p.m. to College Ave. for
Shawn Taylor to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 1: 14
p.m. to College Road for Gene Dyer to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 4:09 p.m. to Mill St. for Mary Huff to
Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 4:40p.m. to a brush fire on
Auto ., air.
Dally stock prices
the Nease property on Happy Hollow Road; Pomeroy at 6:03
The Meigs Local School Dis·
(As ollO: 30 a.m.)
p.m . to the Arnericare-Porneroy Nursing Center for Ethel Rile
trlct
will
be
holding
parent·
:Bryce and Mark Smith
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 6:57 p.m. to a hay fire
Stainless steel top, loaded.
teacher conferences on Wednesof Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
on State Route 338; Pomeroy at 9:55 p.m. to the Meigs County
day,
March
22,
from
6
to
9
p.rn.,
Infirmary for Mary Huff to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
and on Thursday. March 23. from
Am Electric Power ... ... ...... .. 26
9 a.m. to 12 noon . Children will
AT&amp;T ................................. 31~
Auto., PS, PB, air.
not attend school on Thursday,
Ashland Oil ....... ... ............... 40
March 23.
Bob Evans .......................... 15\6
Parents will receive a letter
Charming Shoppes .............. 16~
The Perry Sisters from Huntington, W.Va. will be singing at
Auto, PS, PB.
describing the conference scheCity Holding Co .................. 18Y,
Saturday's Bend Area Gospel Sing at the First Church of God in
duling procedure along with
Federal Mogul. .................... 52
New Haven, W.Va. The sing will start at 7 p·.m. The Reflections
on
the
conferences.
information
Goodyear
T&amp;R .................. .46%
Trio and Narrow Way will also be singing.
Students will be bringing this
Heck's ............. , ................... 'h
Auto. air, PS, PB.
information home March 17.
Key Centurion .. , .................. 13
Lands' End ............. ............ 33%
The purpose of the conferences
is to allow the parent and teacher
Limited Inc ........................ 29%
Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053 is sponsoring a dance tonight
Multimedia Inc .................... 92
to discuss pupil progress and to
iFriday) , and every Friday night. from 8 p.m. to 12 midnight.
keep the parents and schools
Rax Restaurants .................. 3Y,
informed about student activities
No alcoholic beverages are permitted. .
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15\6
as they relate to school behavior Shoney's Inc ..................... ... 8\6
Wendy's Inti. ....................... 6Y,
and performance.
Parents are encouraged to
Worthington Ind ............. : ....21%
take advantage of this opportunThe Meigs County Genealogical Society is meeting Sunday, 2
ity to communicate with their
p.m., at the museum on Butternut Ave. In Pomeroy. Delmar
children's Instructors . HopeHamm, formerly of Meigs County, now of South Webster, Ohio,
fully, a more effective educa·
will be the speaker. The public is invited.
tiona! program can result from
this exchange of information and
ideas.
Further questions regarding
these conferences should be
Contract negotiations at the Meigs County . Highway
directed to the children's schools
Department have been underway since the latter part of
of attendance.
January reports Meigs County Engineer Philip Roberts. The
highway department current one-year contract expires on
Mru:ch 31.
A fact finder has been appointed in the negotiation process.
A school bus driver's certifi· ·
Roberts reports. The appointment of the fact finder is normal,
cate for Robert Ramsburg from
Roberts says. e after a certain amount of time has elapsed in the
Meigs Local School District was
negotiation process. The fact finder Is put in place just In case
approved at a meeting earlier
he's neroed.
.
this week of the Meigs County
Roberts does not anticipate problems In settling a contract at
Board of Education.
the department. The next negotiation session Is scheduled for
Three employees of the county
Friday (today).
board were reemployed includ The average highway department wage is $8 per hour plus
ing Kathy Baker as a speech
benefits, according to Superintendent Ted Warner.
therapist on a two-year contract;
John Constanzo as elementary
supervisor on a five-year contract; and John Foster as work·
study coordinator on a threeMeigs County's share of motor fuel taxes collected by the
r____.:;
" . ;;;..,__....]
year
contract.
state and distributed to local governmental units by statutory
Michele Pratt, who has been
formula · was $1,258,049, with the county receiving $819,8ll,
'AlMER
.
working
as a speech therapist on
townships, 353,971. and munlclpa11ties, $84,266.
,..
PAAS
ROD
PI\
FOILED
WRAPPED
a temporary certificate. could
In calendar year 1988, total dtstribu lions to local governments
Jelly Eggs
EGGS 6 .,.
not rehired by the board at thls
EASTER EGG
from motor fuel tax amounted to $194,106,186. This amount
Auorted
- Spicy 11 e, .
time.
Pratt
must
complete
a
HOLlOW MILK
(OLORING KIT
represents about 25 percent or total motor fuel tax receipts, with
required university course this
Marshmallow Bunnies
CHOCOLATE BUNNY
the remainder being used for statewide liighway purposes .
summer before her employment
2.75 01 .
Jell ow or 'ink - lb '"
EASIER EGG
These taxes are required by the Ohio Constlrutlon to be used
may be reconsidered by the local
for highway purposes.
, _ AROUNDS KIT
board.

Michigan State Spartans top Kent State
didn't realize the rsecondl three·
point line is tire NBA."
In other firsHound games
Thursday, Alabama ·
Birmingham topped Georgia
Southern 83-74, Nebraska nipped
Arkansas State 81-79. New Mex·
ico drubbed Santa .Cla ra 91 -76;
.f'epperdine pounded New Mex '
ico State . 84-69, Wichita State
downed Santa Barbara 70-62 and
Cali!orniil eliminated Hawaii 73·
57.
At Birmingham, Ala .. Regi ·
nald Turner scored 29 points to
lead Alabama-Birmingham. 19·
11. Barry Bearden scored 16
points for the Blazers. who play
Monday at Richmond. Jeff Sand·
ers led Georgia Southern. 23-6.
with 24 points, raising his career
total to 1,861 and making him the
Eagles all-time leading scorer
since the school moved up to
Division 1 in 1971.
At Lincoln. Neb .. Eric Johnson
hit a jumper and two free throws
in the closing seconds to help
move Nebraska into a second·
round game Monday at Ohio
State. Nebraska, 17-15, led by as
many as 17 in the second half
before the Indians. 20-10. rallied
to lead 79· 76 with 48 seconds left.
Wlth no time remaining, Arkan·
sas State's Chris Dillard missed
the front end of a 1-and -l. John
Tate led the ·Indians with 23
points and Ed Louden added 22.
At Albuquerque. N.M., Rob
Robbins scored 21 points. includ·
ing a 3-point.basket that sparked
a New Mexico run in the second
half and lifted the Lobos, who
advanced to host Pepperdlne

5 .

House...--~------

Four-tVheeler recovered

Tom Schoa added 12 before he
the title game.
as badly as they had played.
fouled out.
West Geauga. 26-0 and ranked
"! told them to go out and enjoy
AI Sicard , Charninade ·
the second half," said Schroeder. No. 1. did nothing to tarnish Its
"They came back and played Image with a convincing 84-55 Julienne's 6-5 ail-Ohioan. scored .
28 to · pace the Eagles , who :
romp over Dover.
well in the second half. "
finished with a 23-3 record .
All-Ohio
guard
Shauri
Kearney
St. Jos~ll.h broke a 41-41 tie with
"'He (Sicarif)!s fheoesfpiayer
broke
a
7-7
tie
with
a
three-potDt
slx
consecutive
points
and
led
the
when you win."
we've
played against this year , ..
goal
and
the
Wolverines.
who
lost
The 6·6 Jackson. who will play rest of the way in its win over
said
Lexington
coach Gregg
In
the
championship
game
a
year
his next four yearsforOhloState, Western Reserve.
Collins.
"'He
can
do so many ·
ago,
pulled
away
to
lead
25·16
Tony Redding had 18 points
led his Toledo Macomber team to ·
things.
Offensively
,
he 's a great
a 57-50 win over defending and David Wojciechowski16 for after one quarter and 43·31 at
player,
but
I
was
Impressed
with
champion Cincinnati Woodward the Vikings, who trailed by eight halftime.
his
defense,
too."
Mickey · Quinlan's 16 points
In the semifinals of the Division I points on two occasions.
Restllle. who missed four
"It took us a while just to get topped 10 West Geauga players
boys state high school
games
with a broken nose during
the grips on the ball," said St. Joe who scored. Brad Long had 13,
tournament.
the
regular
season. triggered the
The victory put Macomber into coach Mike Moran. "We didn't Shane Ruminski 12 and Kearney
Lexington stretch drive.
Saturday's championship game have any scoring In transition 10.
"It wqs a tremendous lift. " .
Dover, which bowed out at 20-6.
against Cleveland St. Joseph. a and they did . We had some
Collins said of Restiile"s play In
61·59 victor over Warren Western decent shots. but we were rush- had only player in double figures.
the fourth quarter. "I thought it
ing them.
Kevin Frye with 19.
Reserve in the other semi.
was the big key in the game. They
Dover shot 73.3 percent from
Reserve's Eric Winters led
Jackson, the UPI Division 1
decided they were going to pack
player or the year. scored 29 both teams in scoring with 21 the floor in the first hall. but got
it in and see if we could score
15
shots,
hitting
11.
West
off
only
points
andi\.lfie
Burch
added
15
points to outduel Woodward's 6-6
outside.
Fortunately, 'Donny got
Geauga,
meanwhile,
was
18
of
34
D .J. Boston, who had 25 points for lor the tl:aiders. who were
hot.
He's
got the shooter's
ror
52.9
percent.
the losing Bulldogs.
making their first trip to the llnal
Even
if he misses a
mentality.
"There
were
two
things
we
A basket by Jackson put
four.
couple.
he's
going
to keep coming
With three seconds remaining, tried to do," said WG coach Cliff
Macomber ahead to stay at 49-48
back.'
'
with 5: 31 left ln the game. The Winters went to the free throw Hunt. "hold down their shooting
·'We were trading them two for
Macmen had trailed 29-23 at line with a one-and-one opportun- . percentage and limit their
three
at the end of the game."
halftime and 35-26 midway Uy and his team trailing 61-58. He number of shots. If you can do
said C-J coach Joe Staley, "and
through the third quarter. But made the first and missed the just one of those. you're ali
that's tough."
they tied it 41-41 at the end of second. Burch then missed a right."
The Division IV and IJI semifl·
The second game was decided
short follow shot which would
three periods.
nals are scheduled for thls
"I guess the key to the game have' tied it and a couple of with eight seconds remaining
afternoon and tonight .
was the fourth period," said desperation tips also failed to fall when Lexington's Donn Restille
In Division IV. Lima Central
broke a 55-55 tie with a pair of
Woodward coach Larry Miller. as time ran out.
Catholic takes on Berlin Center
"That's the first time I"ve told free throws.
"We just couldn't put it in the
Western Reserve at I p.m . and
Restl!le, a former star ter.
basket.
a kid to miss a shot," said
Columbus
Wehrle plays No. 1
carne
off
the
bench,
scoring
14
of
"Jimmy Jackson has to be one Reserve coach Bob Laricca. "It
ranked
Springfield
Central Ca·
came
down
to
the
last
shot.
You
his
16
points
In
the
second
half.
of the two or three best players in
tholic
at
3:
45
p.m.
He
hit
a
trio
of
3·pointers
in
less
the country. He really took it to couldn't ask for a better ending if
The Division 111 games match
than three minutes In the fourth
your a Cleveland St. Joseph fan."
us.''
.
Akron
Hoban against Bucyrus
The two Division II semifinal quarter to bring the Minutemen
Macomber coach Bart
Wynford at 6:45p.m. and Whee- .
.
Schroeder said he told his team winners were Chesterland West back from a 45-40 cleficlt.
lersburg against Cincinnati .
Jeff Hoeppner ted Lexington.
at halftime they were In good Geauga and Lexington. who
North· College Hill at 9: 30:
shape to be only six points down meet Saturday at 10:30 a.m. in now 26-1. with 19 points , while

47-42 edge with 15:57 remaining.
Smith and Mark Montgomery
sparked a 10-0 Michigan State
run that pushed the Spartans in
front 51-47 with 13:47 to play.
Smith hit back-to-back baskets
and Montgomery, who finished
with 14 points . connected on
consecutive three-point field
goals.
·
·
The Golden 'Flashes make it
close, 56·53, on Eric Glenn's
three-pointer. but the Spartans
netted the next eight points for a .
64-53 bulge with 8:31 left.
K~n Redfield made a threepointer with 3:30 to play to
increase Michigan State's margin to 78-58.
•
"There are only 48 teams left
playing iincluding NCAA tourna .
meni teams) and we're one of
them," said Michigan State
Coac h Jud Heathcote. "! feel
pretty good."
Ric Blevins led the Golden
Flashes with 16 points, including
a three-of-four performance
from thrPe-point range.
''He had three NBA - not even
NBA - three-pointers,·· Heathcote said. "They were 2 or 3 feet
back of the line.
"He must have bad eyes and

The Daily Senttnel - Page

r-----Area news ·briefs-- Middleport funds releas~d

:By GENE CAD DES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio CUP!)
Jim Jackson got his first St. John
Arena action Thursday night and
said, "'H. felt real good, especially

By BOB TRIPI
United Press International
Michigan State round itself tn
an unusual role in its first-round
National Invitation Tournament
game Thursday night - being
the larger team.
"We had a size advantage
probably for the first time all
year." sai d Michigan State lorward Steve Smith, who scored 28
points to lead the Spartans to an
83-69 triumph over Kent State in
Detroit. " In the Big Ten, we' re
probably the smallest team.
Today we were real big compared to Kent. ..
The Spartans. 16-13, who had a
decisive . edge in height and
weight against Kent State. ad·
vance to host a second-round
game against Wichita State
Monday night.
The Golden Flashes finished
their season with a 20-11 record.
"They went after us in the
second half,' ' said Kent State
Coach Jim McDonald. "They let
their athletes go against our
players. I couldn't fault our
effort. We made a few too many
mistakes."
Kent State led 39-37 at halftime
and scored eight of the first 13
points of the second half to take a

Pomeroy-- Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY
.
FLOWER SHOP
"Tiu• Wn AmPric'o Sto•ul. tmW'"
Ph. ttl-2019 or 992-S 721

, .

"

�•

Friday, March 17 . 1~89

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
••

1 IS E.

Memorial

Dr.

Pomeroy

992·2104

P.-escnphons

,,

Po:rnerov

29S~

INSURANCE -=-...
SERVICES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075

1 72 North St&lt;ond Avo.

Nationwide Ins. Co. "
'
'
of Columbus. 0.
804 W Ma10
992 1311 Pomeroy

106 lullll'Mll Ave., Pomeroy, Oil

()

MEIGS TIRE
~ \ CENTER, INC:

•
)
i
I
I

'

~~~~jE~~~~~~~

Burt
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE , Correr Union and Mulbeny, Rev
Thomas Glfft McClu~. pastoc Norman Pres·
ley, S S Su(l., Sunday School, 9·:1) am;

mornlngwtntip10:.»a.m.; evrnlngservlce6
(&gt;m.. mid-week service, Wedneolay, 7 p.m.

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, ~ E
Main St, Pomeroy Su May services Holy
rorrununlonon ttl! ftrst Sumay of each month.
and romti.ned wlth..morring prayer on IJ'w.&gt;
third &amp;trrl~ Morning prayer and sermon on
all ottEr 9Jm.ws of the month Qmrch Scbod
and Nursery care provl~ Coffee hour In the
Parish llall irunedl ately rollowlngtheservioe.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIS'l', 2l2 W.
Main St. Leo Las~ evan!l'l~t Bltle School
9•lJ am, Morlingworstlp.lO l&gt;a m , Youth
meeting;, 6:00pm, Evening \Wl'Shlp, 7·00 p
m w~~ night prayer meetlngandBible
stu:ty. 7. 00 p.m.
1HE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Ave, Pomerc&amp;" Mrs Dora WJnlng In charge
Sunday huU""' meellng. 10 a.m .. Sullloy
School. IO. ll a.m. Sullla,y School. YPSM
Eloise Adams, leader ?·ll p m Salvation
meeting, val'klus SIJ"akers and music sp:!dals.
Thun;day, n·:ll am to 2 pm. Ladlffi Home
League, members In charge, all wanen
invited, 6 45 p m Thursday, Corp;, Cadet
Cla.sss (Yo ung PeorJe-BitieJ, 7·l:l p m Bible
St~ and Praye-r meeting, open to the pWJllc
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST. 33Zl6a.tldren'sHomeRoad (Coulty
Road 761 99'.2.52.'J'j Vocal mustc Sull1ay War·
ship lOa m, B!JjeStu:ty ll am, Worship, 6p
m WedneOOay, Bible Stlliy, 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH. Alvm Curtis. pastcr. Unda Swan,
Su~ SuOOay School. 9:.}) a.m ; preachlngser·
vtces, first and t hin! Sullloy tollowlngSumay
SchOO. Youth meeting. 7::11 p.m. every Sun-

-.... . .

SACRED HEART CA-.:HDLIC CHURCH
- Pomeroy Msgr Michael Hellmer, Ph
992-5898. Saturday evening Mass, 5· ~ p m

, Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 am. CCO
classes. 9 a m Su nday. Co nfessions Onehalf hour before each Mass
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOLIC FAITH - New Lima Road, nf'xl lo

FOrt Meigs Park Robert W. Ri chards.
pas tor Sunday services, JO am and 7 p
m, Wednesday worship, 7 p m
GRAHAM

UNITED METHODIST.
· Preaching q 30 a m first and second Sun

days of each month; third and fourth Sun·
day each month worship services at 7:30p.
m. , Wednesday evenings at 7 30 p.m.
Prayer and Bible Study
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST,

Mul

berry HeiJhlsRoad, Pomeroy. Pas t trBob

Snyder, Sabbath School Superintendent,
Darline Stewart. Sabbath School begins at
2 p m on Saturday afternoon with worship
service following at 3· 00 p m Everyone
welcome.
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

- Sister Harriett Warner, Supt Sunday
SChool9· 30 a m : Morning Worship, 10· 45
am
~
POMEROY FI~ BAPTIST. Lysloo
Halley 1 minister, Saturday evening

evangelistic services, open Lo public, 7 p
m., Sunday Church School, 9·30 a m :
Morning Worship tO · 30 a m
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po

meroy Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
Jack Needs, Sunday School Director Sun·
day School, 9' 30 am.; Morning Worship,
10· 45: evening worship, 7; OOp m (0 S T )
&amp; 130 (E.S.T. ); Wednesday Prayer Ser
vic!&gt;, 7.00pm {O.S.T. )&amp;7. 30P.M. (ES
T. ): Mission Friends (ages 2-6), Royal

Ambassadors (boys ages 6 18) , and Girls
In Action (ages '"18) on Wednesdays, 7 p ·
m .( DST. )&amp;7 30p.m (EST.); Tuesday

Ph 992

Mgr.
1101

K&amp;C JEWELERS

'~g~g~~~:~r~o!o
FREEWILL BAPTIST
~
Ash and Plum Noel

ttrsl elder, Wanda Mohler, Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9.30 a.m.; Morning
· Worship 10. 30 a.m., Evening Worship 7: l&gt;
p m.: Wednesday prayer meetlng7· ~P m
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD ,

Racine Rev James Satterfield, pastCI'
Freeman Williams, Supt. Sunday School
9· 45 a .m .. Sunday and Wednesday even·
lng services, 7 p.m
MIDDLEPORT

FIRST

BAPTIST

Corner Sixth and Palmer James Seddon,
Pastor Edna WUs m , S.S. Supt.: Cathy
Rigg5. Asst Supt Sunday Schoci, 9 15 a
m.. Morning Worship, 10·15 a m : Sunday
Evening service, 7 p m Prayer meeting
and Bible Study Wednesday evening. 7 p
m. Children' s cholr practice, Wednes·
day, 7 J).m ., Adult choir practice. Wed, 8
p m , Radio program, WMPO. Sunday,
8:30am
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
5th and Main, AI Hartson, minister;

Richard DuBose, Associate Pastoc, Mike
Gerlach, Sunday Schad Superintendent.
BlbleSchool9 XI am., Morning Worship
10· 30 a m Evening Worship 7 00 p m
Wednesday, 7 00 p m Prayer meeting.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE, PASTOR Fred Penhorwood

Bill White, Sund ay School Supt. Sunday
SchooJ 9 30 a m ; Morning Worship 10:45
am.; Evangelistic meeting 7:00 p m
Wednesday, 7 00 p m. Prayer meeting
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINIIITRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Re~

O'Qulnn .Kelly

HARRISONVI LLE PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCH - Sunday . Worship Services
9:00am.; Church Schoci 10.15 a.m ..
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN -

Sunday School, 9 a m : Church service,
11 ;15 a.m .
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY
TERIAN - Sunday SchOol, 10 a m.;

Chureh service, 10 IS a.m

Rt.JTLAND CHURCH OF GOD. PasllJ',

John Evans. Sunday Schoci 10.00 a .m. ;
Suaday Mombli,Worlhlp 11.00 a .m. ChU·
dren' 1 Church 11 a m. Sunday Evening
5ervlce7~ 00p.m.

Wed., &amp;p"m. Young Ladles' AuxUiary. Wednesday, 7 p.m. FamUy Worshlo.
HAZEL . COMMUNITY CHURCH. Oft

Rl. 124, 3 mUm trc:m Portland-Luna Bot·
tan. Edlel Hart, put&lt;r. SuOO.y School,

When winter snows no longer fall
And cold winds cease to blow,
There comes the nicest time of all,
When things begin to grow.
The grass will sprout its tiny blades
For carpeting the ground,
While blossoms in their pastel shades
Send perfume all around.
The insects hum and birds will sing,
Enlivening the skies,
Which then reveal the fluttering
Of gorgeous butterflies.
Now all this beauty here on earth
God 's love will always bring:
The joy we feel with each rebirth
Of life that comes in spring.
,
- Gloria Nowak •

m , Morning Worship, 11. 00 a m., Wed·
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7·30 p.m
APPLE GROVE UNITED METIIO·
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev Carl
Hicks 10 mues above Racin e on Rt 388
~unday Schoo19 a.m , worship service 10

a m Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m ;

Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thursday, 6:30 p.m
MT OLIVE UNITED METHODIST -

~Zuniga)

MINERSVILLE - Church School 9:00

tin)

POMEROY- Church School. 9, 15a m .
: Worship 10' 30 a.m , Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7•30 pm, UMW, second
Tuesday, 7:30pm., UMYFSunday,6p m.
(Meadows)
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School, 9: 15

am : Worshlp10am; BlbleStudy, Wed·
nesday. 7:30pm: UMYF (SPntors), Sun·
day, 6 p.m .. (Juniors) every other Sun
day, 6 p.m. (Franklin)
RUTLAND - Church School, 10 a.m ,
Worship, 11 am; UMW First Monday,
7.30p.m. (Crabtree)
SALEM CENTER- Chureh School9 15

am;

Morning Worship

10 15 a m .

(Steele)

SNOWVILLE - Morning Worship, 9· 00
a.m.. Church SchoollO.OO a.m. tMartln)
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev. Debl Fo11ter
Re\1. Rolli' Grace
Rev. COl'! Htcko
APPLE GROVE - Chureh School 9 00

a.m.• Morning Worship 10:00 am. Bible
Study Sunday 7.00 p.m: Prayer meeting

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy
Harris rnvllle Rd. Robert Purtell, minis
ter; Steve Stanley, S. S Supt., Bill McEl·
roy, Asst. Supt ; Sunday School 9 30 a m ;
Worship ~rvlce 10· 30 a m , Evening wor
ship Sunday 7 p m and Wednesday, 7 p.m
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. P ine
Grove. The Rev William Middl eswar th,
pastor Church service 9 30 a m , Sunday
School10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Tom Runyon, pastor Sunday School 9 30

am., Larry Haynes, S S. Supt Mor ning
worship 10· 30 a m
RACINE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA

RENE, Rev. John Vance, pastor, Sandy
Justice.,Chalrman of the Board of Chris
tlan Lite Sunday School9 30 a m ; Morn
lng worship 10· 30 a.m , evangelisrlc ser ·
vice 7· 00 p m. Wednesday service, 7 p.m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Dexter. WoOOy Call, pastor Services Sunday
10 am and 7 p m Wednesday, 7 p m
DYESVILLE COMM].lNITY CHURCH,

Lloyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m., morning worship 10 .30 am. Sunday
evening servlce'7 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Steve
Deaver, Pastot Mike Swiger. Sunda y
School Supt , Sunday School 9 30 a.m ,
Mornln~ worsh!p 10 40 a rn , Su nd ay
evening worship 7· Jq p m. Wednesday
evening Bible study 1 30 p m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH

Burlingham Ray Laudermnt. pastoc; Robert COzart. assistant p:I.Shr. Surv;tay School
10 am wocshlp 7 p m Wednesday, 6 p m
youth meeting: Wed., 7p m church services
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH.

'o

mlleoff Rt.325 Rev BenJ . Watt s pastor
Robert Searles , s S Supt Su nday School
9 30 a m , Mormng Worship 10 JO a m ;
Sunday evening service 7· 30 p m : Wed
nl-sday serv!Cf', 7 30 p m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST. Bill Little,

pastor Steve Lit tle, S S Su pt Sunday
School 10 a m , Morning worslp, 11 a m :
Sunday evening worsh.lp 7 30 p m Prayer
meeHng and Bible study Wednesday, 7 30
p m , Youth meetlng Wednesda v at 7 p.m
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH

- 383 ,N 2nd Ave, Middleport Sunday
School lOam Sundayevenlng7 OOp m ;
Mid-week service, Wed, 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.

Sunday School 9·30 am; Dallas Janey,
supt , Morning worship to· 30 a m , Sunday evening service, 7:30pm, Wednes
day evening service, 7. 30 p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE . NA -

ZARENE Rev Glenn McMillan, pas tCI"
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a m , Morning
worship 10. 30 a m , Evangelistic service,
6p.m , Prayer and Praise Wednesday, 7p.
m ; Youth meeting, 7 pm
EDEN

UNITED

BRETHREN

IN

CHRlST, Elden R. Blake, pastor Sunday
School 10 a m . Gary Reed, La y lead er.
Morning sermon, 11 a.m , Sunday night
servi ces Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m ,
Song service 8 p.m Preaching 8· 30 p.m
Mid-week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7
pm.

7:00pm Thursday. (Hicks)

BETHANY -Worship 9 a.m., Church
School tO am ; BlbleStudy Wednesday 10
a.m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship Wed nesday 11 a m. (Foster)
CARMEL - Church School 9 30 a m
Wonhlp, 10·45 a.m Second and Fourth
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Suttm
third Thunday, 6.30 p m (Foster).
MORNING STAR- Chureh School9· &lt;5
am: Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Thursday, 7·30 p.m (Foster).
SUTTON - Church School, 9 30 a m.:
Morning Worship 10:45a.m flrstandthlrd
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Carmel
third 1bul'lday, 6:30pm. !Fosler) .
EAST LETART- Morning Worship 9:00
a.m.; Otun::h Schod 10:00 a.m., UMW Urst
TueldO.V 7: :D p.m. (Gr•ce) .

LETART FALLS - Worship 9 am.;
Church ScboollO a.m (Grace).

RACINE- O.u"'h School, 10 am, Worship na.m.; UMW IDurth Monday at 7: :D p.
m.; Mea' a Pray!!&lt; Breaklaa~ Wemeodo.v, 8

a.m. cGracel

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, RoK..Sprln&amp;, mlnla.,r, Starling Ma10arllld Ol·

lver Swain, Sunday SChool Supt:J Preach·
Ina 9· 30 a .m. each SundiY; Sunday School
10 30a.m.
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, 1berm Dumam

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIA..\1, Char-

les Domlgan, pastor Mildred Ziegler, Sun
day Schoci Supt . Morning Worship 9 30 a.
m: SuOOaySchoollD.JOa m : Eveningserv1ce, 7'3(1 p m
MT UNION BAPTIST. PaslCI" Joe N.
Sayre, Sunday School9. 45 a m ; Evening
worship 6· 30 p m ; Prayer Meeting, ~: 30
p m . Wedncsday.
·
TUPPERS

PLAINS

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST Robert Foster, pastor, Howard
CaldweiJ, Superintendent ; Chu rch scboci
9 a.m.; Worship service 9: 45a.m
CHESTER CIIURCH OF THE NAZA·

RENE . Rev. Herbert Grate, past or.
Frank RlfOe. supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.
m ; Worship service, 11 am. and 7 p.m.
SUnday. Wednesday, 7 p m Prayer meet·

lng
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH William Williams, pastor; Ra.
bert E , Barton, Director ot Chrtstlan Edu·

cation; Steve Eblin, assistant. Sunday
School. 9.XI a.m.; Morning worship 10: 30
a m.; Teens In Action, 6 p.m .. Evening
Worship, 7 00 p m Cholr practice 8 p.m.
Sunday. Wednesday evening prayer and
Bible study.
DEXTER

CIIURCH

OF

CHRIST,

Charles Russell Sr , mlntster; Norman
WUI, supt Sunday School9: 3:1a.m.; Worship service 10· 30 a.m. Bible study, Wed-

putor. Sunday tei'VIce, 9:30a.m ; even~
lng service 7:00 p.m. Prayer meettng
Wednl!llday, 7:00p.m.
'

nesday , 6:00p.m.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAJNTS. Pori·

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CIIURCH OF

land-Racine- Road. Mike Duhl, P!lStor:
Janice DannE!', church school dlrectoT.
Church school9·30a m, Morning worship
10.30 a.m., Wednesday evening prayer
services, 7: :JJ p.m

CHRIST, J - h B.Hooldns. pootor Bible

Clua, 9:30a.m.; MornlncWonh1p10·30a.

9:311 a.m.. Sunday momtna preacbln;l m.; Ewn(JII Worlhlp, 6:30p.m. Tllurlday
10: 30 a.m .. Sunday evenlnflt"flct!O, 7: • ll!ble Study, 6:30p.m.

fill Cjui&lt;kel and Ruth

"" orshlp service 10· 30 a m : Bible study
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH

OF

CHRIST.

Bill Cat ter , pas t01 . Sunday School 9:30 a.
m Morning Worship and Communion
10 30a m
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Tillis, pastor Sonny Hudson, supt Sunday
School 9. 30 a m.; Morning worship, 10. 30
am , Sunday even ing service 7:00 p.m
Wednesday service 7 p m WMPO progra m 9 a m each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
School9 .30 am , Worship servlce10 30a
m
Young people's service 6 p m
Eva ngelistic sen •ice 6 30 p m Wednesday
service 7 p.m
MASON CHURC H OF CHRIST. Miller
St Mason, W.Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
am; Worshiplla m and7p.m Wednes·
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud
ding Lane. Masoo. W. Va J. N. Thacker.
pastor Eve ning service 7:30 p m, Women's Ministry, Thursday, 9· 30 a .m;
WednPSday Pra yer and Bible Study, 7: 15
pm
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartford, W. Va.
Rev David McManis, pastor Church
School 9· 30 a.m ; Sunday morning ser·
vice, 11 a .m , Sunday evening service,
7 30 p m. Wedl}.esday prayer meetlng, 7. 30
pm
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
W. Va , Rt 1, James Lewis, pastor Wors hip services 9. 30 a m. , Sunday Schoolll
a.m , Evening worship 7; 30 p.m. Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9· 30 a m ; Worship service, Wednesday
7·30 p m
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut a nd HE'n ry Sts., Ravenswood, W. ·
Va The Rev George C. Welrlck, past~;~".
Sunday SChool9· 30 a m.; Sunday worship
llam
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 2~ near Flat·
woOOs Rev. Blackwood, pastcr. Services
on Sunday at 10:30a.m and 7:30p.m. with
Sunday School9: 30 a.m BtbleStudy , Wed·
nesday, 7 30 p m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, St. Rl . 338, Antiquity. Rev.
Franklin Dickens, pastor Sunday mornIng 10 a m ; Sunday evening 7• 30 p.m.
Thursday 'evening 7: 3() p m.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 75 Pearl St. Rev.
Ivan Myers, acting pastCI'; Roger Manley,
Sr., Sunday School Superintendent. Sun~
day School 9·30 a.m.; Morning w&lt;nhtp
10:30 a.m., evening wonhip 7: 30p.m. ;
Wednesday evening Bible study, prayer
and praise ~ervtce, 7· 30 p.m .
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS.
TOLIC - VanZandt and Ward Rd. Elder
James Miller, pastor. Sunday Scbod.
10:30 a .m .; Worship service, SUnday, 7~ XI
p.m. , Bible Study, Wednesday. 7:3bp.m.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEl., Han1soovUleRoad. Rev. Vict.orRoulb, putcr.
Cllnt&lt;l'l faulk, Synday SCbod SUpt.; SUa·
day Schoo19 30a m. ; momtnc wcrlblp. 11
a.m .. Sunday e\'enlng service 7:30p.m.
Prayer Meetlna:. Wednelday, 1: 30 p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
non Penteco~tal . Worship aervlce SU~
10 a m ., Sunday Schod 11 a.m. EvealnJ
worship service 7.00 p.m. Wedneaday
prayer meettng7:oo p.m.

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHIU:N
IN CHRIST CIIURCH, Located ID Texas
Communl!y oft Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert

Sanders, pastor. .J~tr_H~lter, lay le~der;

Ann

For

(row's Family Restour111t
"Futu~l•l K••fuk~ Frl1d C6ld11"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

.Ufl\;t

8TH GRAD(

"Serving Families"
264 S. 21111, Middleport

992-5141

(6141992-6657 - (998 -00KSI

~--i CHURCH SUPPLIES l BIBLES

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.

m~ Prayef."nlfetmg and Bible s t udy Wed·
nesday , 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt 1
Sunda)' School 9:30 a m , Second and
toun.h Sundays worship service at 2:30 p.
m.
MT MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and

Ed Roush. Sunday School Sup1 Sunday
School 9· 30 a m , morning worship and
children's church 10 30 am, evening
preaching service tlrst three Sundays,
7 30 p m , Special service fourth Sunday
evening 7· 30" p m : Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Stud~ and Youth Fellow
ship, 7 30 p.m
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH

David

Curfman, pastor Sunday School, 10 a. m ,
worship service 11 a m ; Sunday night
worship service 7:30 p.m . Midweek
prayer service Wednesday 7 p m.
WE~I:EY AN

BIBLE

HOLINESS

CHURCH of Middleport, Inc, 7SPear1St,
Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor, Roger Mantey,
Sr. Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
9 30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30 a.m ,
Evening Worship 7.30 p.m. Wednesday
evening Bible study, prayer and praise
service, 7· 30 p.m
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH

OF GOD - Gilbert Spencer, pasta-. Sunday SChool 9:30 a.m., Morning service
10:00a m.; Sundaye\'enlngservtce7:00p
m.; Mid-week prayer service Wednesday
7p.m .
MT. OLIVE FULLGOSPELCOMMUN·

ITY CHURCH, Lawrence Bush, pastcr
Max Folmer, Sr., S. S. Supt. Sunday School
9 30 a.m.; Sunday evening service, 7:30 .
m. , Wednesday evenlftg Bible study and
praise service, 7 30 p m.

Main St , Middleport. Rev Gilbert Craig,
Jr , pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School9. 30a.
m., Worshlp Servlce.10. 45 a.m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist Sunday
Bible Study 9a m , Worshlp,10a m Sun·
day evening service 6 p.m ., Wednesday

evening service. 7 p m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
Rt 124 Wtlllam Hoback, pastor Sunday
School10 a.m : Sunday evening service 7
p m Wednesday evening service 7 p m

MJHS

HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·

TER ot the Wesleyan Holiness Church.
Rev. David Ferrell, pastor Henry Eblin,
Sunday School Supt ; Sunday SchoollO a
Mor ning Worship 11 a m Evening
~rvlce 7· 30 p m Wednesday evening servlce7.30pm.
I

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH ,

Gary Ho lter, pastor Sunday services 9.30
a m and 7 p m. Midweek service, 7 3f'
m. Thursday .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third

Ave Rev Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Nottln~ham. Sunday SchOol Sugt Sunday
School 10 a m with classes for all ages
Evening services a1 6 p m Wednesday Bl·
bl e study at 7· 30 p.m. Youlh services Frl·
day at 7 30 p.m

TRICIA WOLFE

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP , 128MIII Sl,

Middleport Brother Chuck McPherson ,
pastor Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday
evening services at 7 p.m. and Wednesday
services at 7 p. m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smllh,
past or Sunday School 9 30 a m , chu rch
service 7· 30 p m ; youth fellowship 6 30 p
m : Bibl e study, Thursday, 7. 30 p m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33()45
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas·
tor Danny Lambert S S Supt Sunday
morning service at 10 a m ; Sunday even
lng service 7 30 p m Tuesday and Thurs
day Services at 7:30 p m.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·

ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, pastCI"
Sunday School9 30 a m , Worship service, .
10.30 a m , Youth service Sunday 6 15 p.
m Sunda)' evenlngservlce7:00p.m Wednesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
7 OOpm.
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH , Sun-

day afternoon services at 2 30 Thur!llay
evening ser'vlces at 7· 30
FIRST BAPTIST CIIURCH, MasC&lt;l. W.

Va. Pastor, Bill Murphy. Sunday School10
a m ; Sunday evening 7 30 p m. Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday , 7 30
p m Everyone welcome.
·
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST. Sa ·

pm
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT

St., Mason. Sunday Schoci 10 a .m .; Mornin~ wnrf!tlln 11 a m.: Evenln~ service 6 p

Jane Ann Will tams, a junior at
Southern High School has been
selected as the delegate for
Buckeye G1rls State. She lS the
daughter of Jack and Judy

next to Fort Meigs Park, Ru tland. Robert
Richards, pastor Services at 7 p.m on
Wednesdays and Sundays

m;

CHURCH, Sliver Ridge. Duane Sydenstricker, pastor Stlnday School 9 am.:
Worship service, 10 a m ; Sunday evening
service, 7·00 p.m Wednesday night Bible
study 7 00 p.m

Sennonette
ONE LAST "HURRAH!"

This was the day· when the disciples had their last chance to
vent their emotion. Our Lord Jesus Christ had carefully planned
to enter the Royal City on a donkey - and that In Itself was a
dramatic symbol of kingship. From the time of David and
Solomon, Israel's rulers rode to their coronation on these lowly
beasts of burden.
When they went to war It was In chariots, clad in armor,
driving proud, prancing, snorting horses, eager for battle.
However, the lowly donkey was thesymbolofpeace- kingship,
yes -but of a peace-minded King.
What could Jesus our Lord be lhlnking of as the crowd
acclaimed Him, "Hosanna In the Highest! Behold the Son of
David, come now to take His rlghUul throne! "
We can only guess that there was sadness In His heart, and
perhaps tears In His eyes. The people did not comprehend. They
were looking for another King David whO would set men's and
women's hearts afire, put Iron In their souls, and would throw
off the yoke of the hatell Romans.
Well did our Lord Jesus know that only five days from this
brl&amp;ht Sullday of palms He would be hanging, bruised, bleeding
and dyln1 on a rou1h, cruel cross. The shameful irony of It all
would be that some of the same excited people would be
screamln&amp; ''Cruelty him! Cruelty!"
Let us be sure- very sure- that our enthusiasms are sound,
well-founded, and endurtn1. -Rev. Mr. Richard H. Freeman,
TriDit)' CoaP"e,atlonal Church

Downie, and Lori Kelly. Second row left to right,
Dan Tillis, Mike Hall, and Nathan Brown. Back
row left to right, Steve Swatzel, David Curfman,
John Bentley, and Randall Johnston. Allison
Gannaway was absent during time of photo.

Williams named delegate
to Buckeye Girls States

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, '
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd .•

pastor. Melvin Drake, S S Supt. Sunday
School9: 30 a m.; Mornl.ng Worship 10: 30,
Evening Worslllp 7·00 p.m ; Wednesday
Prayer service, 7·00 p.m .
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad

SUPERIOR RATINGS - Pictured here are
students who received superior ratings In the
Sixth Annual Science Fair held at the Meigs Jr.
High School who will now compete In the district
contest. First row left to right, Sheryl Thoma,
Heather Pauley, Kelly Satterlleld, Elizabeth

ate Sundays

UNITED FAITH CIIURCH. Rt. 7 on Po-

meroy By-Pass. Rev. Robert E Smlt h, Sr,

•

CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday School 9. 30 a.m Morning
Wor$hlp 10 30 a m Prayer service, alter-n-

!em St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor Sunday
School10 a m.; Sunday evening 7:00 p.m :
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7 00

•

\

992-5432

0\\i({

Located on 0 . J White Road of Highway
160 Pat He-nson, pastor Sunday Schoo!IO
am Classes fora \I ages Junior Church 11
am; Mor~lng worship 11 am. Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday. Young People's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7· 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, !170 Grant
St., Middleport. Affiliated with Southern
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr .1 Ml·
nlster Sunday Schad 10 a m ; Morning
worship 11 a.m , Evening worship 7 p m :
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rt"V Ea rl
Wednesday evening Bible study and
Shu ler. pastor Worship service, 9 30 a m.
Sunday School 10 30 a m Bible- Study and . prayer meeting 7 p m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St
prayer service Thursday, 7· 30 p m
Rt 124 and Co Rd 5. Scott Stewart, pasCARLETON INTERDENOMINATION
tor William Amberger, S S Supt ; Sun
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev.
day School 9 30 a.m : Morning Worship
Clyde W Henderson, _pastor Sunday
10:30 a.m., Evening worship 7.30 p m
School 9 30 am , Ralph Carl, Supt Even
lng worship 7 00 p.m Prayer meeting,
Wednesday worsh\p 7 30 p.m
Wednesday 7·00 p m
ST
PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
Corner Sycamore and Second Srs , Po
CHURC H, 28601 State Rout£&gt; 7 Middlemeroy The Rev William Mlddl esWart,
port Su nda y School, 10 a m : Sunday
pastor Sunday Scl\oo£ 9 45 a m Church
('Venlng service, 7 30 p.m ., Tuesday ser·
service 11 a m
vice 7.30pm
SACRED
HEART CHURCH , Msgr
Anthony Giannamore. Ph. 992 5898 Satur
HY SELL R UN HOLINESS CHURCH
day Evening Mass 7 30 p m.; Sunday
0 H Carr, pastor SundaySchoolat9:30a
Mass, 8 a m and 10 a m Confessions one
m . Morning worship at 10. 30 a.m , Sun
half hour before each Mass CCD classes,
da y evening service at 7 30 p.m Thursday
11 a.m. Sunday.
services at 7, 30 p m
Vl&lt;:rORY BAPTIST. 525 N 2nd St.,
FREEOOM GOSPEL MISSION at Ba l ~
Middleport. James E Keesee, pastcr.
Knob , located on Co unty Road 31. Rev.
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m ; EvenRoger Willford, pas tor. Sunday School
Ing service 7 p.m, Wednesday evening
'9,30 am .. Morning Worsbi 10 4$ a.m. ,
worship 7 p.m V\sltaUon Thursday 6· 30 p
Sunday even mg worship 7• 00 p m., Wed·
m.
nesday evening Bible Study 7 00 p m
WHITE 'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH - Coolville RD . Rev . Phillip Rl·
denour, pastor Sunday School 9 30 am,

?
•

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

S,r((l LBoohs
93 Mill Street
Middleport. Ohio 46760

GOD'S LOVE WILL ENCHANT US
WITH THE BEAU1Y OF SPRING·

Herrmann, pastor. Sunday SchoollO OOa.

ley Run Road, Rev Emmett Rawsm, pas
tor Handley Dunn, supt Sunday Schoci.
lOam., Sundayevenlngservlce, 7 30p.m
Bible teaching, 7 30 p.m Thursday

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Hal~ .

FUNERAl HOME

11@!11411

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PEARL CHAPEL- Church School9· 00
am : WorshJp Service 10 00 a m (Mar-

racuae. Mark Morrow, past(!' Services, tO
a m. Sunday Evening services Sunday
and Wednesday at 6. 00 p.m.

~ N8931160-62

992-3785. Pomeroy

Visitation. 6.30 p m.

SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St , Sy·

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

2I 2 E. Mam Street

Off 124, behind Wilkesville Charles Jones,
pastor Sunday School, 9. 30a m., morning
worsJUp, 10. 30. Sunday and Thursday
evening services, 7 00 p m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PAll ISH
UNITED MJrniODIST CHURCH
NOJITIII!AST CLUSTEH
Rev. Don Archer
Rev. Frank Crofoot
Re\', Seldoa Johmloo
ALFRED - Church SChoci 9 30 am ,
Worship, lla m,; UMYF6:30p m , UMW
Third Tuesday, 7• 30 p m Communion,
first Sunday. (Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 am., Church
SchoDllOa.m, BlbleStudy, Thursday, 7p
m UMW, flrsr Thursday, 1 p.m, Communion, first Sunday (Archei')
JOPPA- Worship 9.30 a .m.; Church
SChoDl 10.30 a m, Bible Study Wednesday,
1· 30 p m. (Johnsm).
LONG BOTTOM - Chureh School 9: 30
a .m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study.
Wednesday, 7.30 p.m.; UMYF Wednesday, 6.00 p m; Communion First Sunday
of Month (Crofoot).
REEDSVILLE - Churcn School9· 30 a .
m., Worship Service ll.OOa ..m.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Ch~rch School 9 a.m ; Worship 10 am ,
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7·30p m , Commu.
nlon First Sunday (Archer).
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. Melvin Franklin
Rev. Clemeate S. Zuniga, Jr.
Rev. Don Meadows
Jl.e\1, We~le,. Tludcber
Re\1. P•l Martin
Rev. Arthur Crabl:ree
Rev. Robert Steele
ASBURY (Syracuse) -Worship 11 a.m .
, Church School9;45 am.; Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7 30p m., UMW, first
Tuesday, 1· 30 p.m .; Choir Rehearsal ,
Wednesday 6 30 p m. (Thatcher)
,
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m.,
Church School tO a.m .. Bible Study, Tuesday, 7 00 p m : UMW, Flrst Monday, 7· 30
p m; UMYF Sunday, 6. p m Choir Rehearsal, Children's at 6 36 p m Adult tol
lowing, Wednesday, (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church ~hool, 10a.m.
; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thurs·
day, 7 p.m: UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m
(Franklin).
FOREST RUN - Worslllp 9 a.m ..
Church Schoci 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
Thursday, 6:.l) p m.; UMW third Monday
(Thatcher)
HEATH (Middleport) -Church School,
9 30 a.m., Morning Worship 10. 30 a.m.,
Youth Group, 4 p.m, Wednesday, Bible
study 6·00 p m Choir rehearsal 7 00 p m.

,) II \ \.

992-2975

Pomerov

a.m .. Worship service 10· 00 a.m , UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p m. {Thatcher)

FAITH T ABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal·

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

John F Futn.

1

Worship Service
Tuesday, 6 45 p m.

MT

(6141992-2039 or
(614)992-5721

992-5130 Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT ·

216 S. Second
Pomeroy
992· 3325

flOW!IS 101 IYIIY OCUSION

214 E. Main

Middleport, Ohio

Etghteen eighth graders who
received superior ratings on
their proJecis at the Sixth Annual
Meigs Junior High School
science !air will be participating
in the district competition to be
held at Ohio University April 8.
Five of the students who
received the superior ratings
were atso presented Govenors
Awards by teacher Rusty Book·
man on behalf of Govenor Ri·
chard Celeste. They were Abby
Blake, "How Do You Score on
Fats?" in Agriculture and Food
Science Research; Jason Hu!·
!man, "Can Past Levels of
Precipitation be Detected In
, Annual Rings?" in Envtronmental Sctence Research; Kyla
Sellers, ''Solve Our Garbage
Problem-Recycle" in the area of
Litter Prevention and Recy clmg; Michelle Young, " How
Does Pollution Affect Our Aquatic Ll!e?" in Water Resources
Research; and Stephanie Price,
"Doni Be a Hot Head" In Energy
Research.

Pom,og Flowe~ Shop

Brogan-Warner

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

daJ-.

RACINE PlANING MILl
Mill Work·
Cabinet Making ~!il~~·!;.l''
Syracuse
ggz.me
\'ti

h,t

~~~~~!

Students compete in science fair

Rv The Interested .Rru;inesses L-isted On This-Page.

This Messat!e ana Church
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Veterans
Hospital

Friday, March 17, 1989
Page-7

Williams , Syracuse
Jane Ann partictpates in col·
lege preparatory classes and IS
active in student co uncil, girls
basketball, vo lleyball, softball,
choir. and show choir She works
part t1me at Pleasers restaurant
in Middleport, and enjoys water
skiing, racketball, and sailing
Selected as alternate for Buck·
eye Girls State is Tricia Wolfe,
daughter of Suzanne Wolfe, Ra·
c1ne. and Carl Wolfe, Waverly
Tricia, also a junior at Southern, participates in studeni council, girls basketball, softball, and
volleyball. She 1s attends the
Racine United Methodist
Church.
The girls are sponsored by the
Amencan Legion Auxihary RaCine Post 602.
The 43rd session of Buckeye
Girls. State will be held June
17-24 at Ashland College in
Ashland.

Child day €are programs
are a service, business
Child care is an essential
service for families with young
children. The tdea of running a
Child Day Care Program in the
home is appealing to many
people, because of Jove for
children and as a source of
family income. However, it is
more than a service for families
... it is a business.
As In all well- run businesses,
there are many legal and financial considerations. The Ohto
Cooperative Extension Service Is
sponsoring a two·even lng seminar designed to address those
critical issues.
The program is scheduled for
March 29 and 30, 7 p.m. -9: 30p.m.
at the Lafayette Hotel on Front
Street in Marietta.
The presentations Include,
"Rules and Regulations". by
Carol Ankrom from the Ohio
Department of Human Services,
"Licensing", by Patti Choppa,
also from the Oh lo Department of

Chester UMW meet
"Peace Like Bread, Must be
Made Daily" was the title of the
program presented by Bernice
Barley and Ruth Kar r at the
recent meeting of the Chester
United Methodist Women.
Marilyn Spencer presided at
the meeting In which a htanv for
peace was read by the leader and
the group In unison .
It was reported that there were
15 sick and shut-in calls for the
month.
The group also decided they
would pay for the wiring for the
lights a( the Meigs Cooperative
Parish building and give $100 to
George and Debbie Pickens .

Human Services , "State Sources
of Financral Assistance". by
Cheryl Lovely from the Ohio
Department of Development,
"The One Stop Business Permit
Center" by Kathryn Chenoweth
from the Ohio Cooperative Extension Service, "Business Management" by Vicki Rash from
the Warren County Career Cen·
ter , "Liability Insurance" by
Kevin Rings from The isen,
Brock, Frye, Erb &amp; Leeper,
Attorneys-at-Law, "Food Ser·
vice" by Roger Coffman from the
Washington County Health Department, and "A Panel Discu s·
slon" by experienced Child Care
Business owners and operators ,
Sally Johnson, YMCA Child
Care; Kathy Dawe, Pioneer
Nursery School; Ruth Rauch ,
Rauch Day Care Center; Sue
Ellis, The Children's Center; and .
Maureen Boggs, the Betsey
Mills .
Registration fee for the seminar is $25/ person, which covers materials, room · renta l,
travel of resource people and
refreshments. Registration
deadline is March 20. For registration Information call, Kathryn
K. Chenoweth, Extension Agent,
Home Economics at the Washington County Extension Ser·
vice, Court House, 205 Putnam
Street, Marietta Ohio 45750,
614/ 373·6623 Ext. 274.
COMMUNITY MEETING
SUNDAY, MARCH 19
TOPIC: RADON GAS
Speaker; Dr. Arnold Sattler

At: Pleasant Valley
Community Room

Sponsored by: Area Ostomy Asso&lt;.

DANCE FOR JOY
AEROBIC DANCE CLASS

C~RLETON

SCHOOL, SYRACUSE. OHIO
10 WEEK SPRING SESSION '42.00
HIGH SCHOOL DISCOUNT PRICE 0 36.00
SESSIONS BEGIN MARCH 27, 1989
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY 7 P.M .·B P.M.
TUESDAY-THURSDAY 5:30 P.M.-8:30P.M.
FOR REGISTRATION CALL....
JOY KINO, INSTRUCTOR 992-3794
JEANIE OWEN, ASST. INSTRUCTOR 992-8893
OR YOU MAY REGISTER AT FIRST CLASS

'

•

•

'.'

Other students who will be
going to the disirict co ntest with
their respective projects are
Kelly Satterfield, "What Does
the Future Hold Due to the
Effects of the Ozone Layer";
Lori Kelly , "Greenhouse Ef·
feet"; M1ke Hall, "Computer
Vtrus", Steve Swatzel, "Effects
of X-ray s on Seeds", John
Bentley. "Acid Rain": Sheryl
Thoma, "So.Jar Roller"; Randall
Johnston , "Clean Machme"; Al·

lison Gannaway, "How Do VIdeo
Games Affect Your Life" ; Donny
Tillis , " What is •the Effect of
Varied Water Temperatures on
Goldfish? ": Heather Pauley,
"How the Bra!(\ Affecls the Eye
and Heart"; Elizabeth Downie,
"Does Practice Make Perfect?": Nathan Brown. "Solar
Water Heater"; and David Curfman, "Acid Levels in Water."
One hundred and forty five
students of Rusty Bookman,
science day director, and Jesse
Vall. science teachers, partlci·
paled m the science !air.
After the judging was co mpleted by John Costanzo, Bill
Buckley, both school board officers, Larry Kennedy, D.D.S., and
Ron Ash, Ohio Power Co., 1S
students were awarded superior
ratings, 52 recetved excellent
ratings, 67 finished with ratings
of good, and eight were awarded
a satisfactory rallng.
Attending the open house
where all of the projects were
ex hibited were nearly 400 par·
ents and friend s.
Students receiving ratings of
excellent were Nathan Teter,
Kyle Simpson, Tara Shepherd,
Courtney Riggs. Leslie Osborne,
Robin Hall, Autumn Griffith, Jay
Creameans, Michelle Whittington , Sherry Seddon, Tina Smilh,
Tammy Queen, Kelly Phelps.
Lorena Oller, Joseph Boyd, Nathan Baloy, Yvette Young, Paul
VanCooney, Jason Stewart, Rick
Price, Lynette Neece, Angela
Lee, Jody Fowler. Tracey

TOPS elects officers

JANE ANN WILLIAMS

Barker ·selected
on dean's list
· Melissa Ann Barker, dau ghter
of Mr. and Mrs. Her bert Barker,
Racme , earned a grade point
average of B to be hsed on the
dean's list of Bob Jones Un iversity, Greenville, S. C. for the firsl
semester.
Melissa , a 1986 graduate of
Eastern High School, Reedsville,
is a jumor at the University
where she is majori ng in specral
education
A fundamenta l Christian, hb
era! arts institution, Bob Jones
University draws its student
body of approximately 5.500
students from every state in the
union and nearly 40 foreign
countnes and territories.

Easter sunrise,
breakfast set
Plans were completed for the
Easter su nrise program a nd
brea kfa st at the recent meetmg
of the Sl. Paul Willing Workers of
the Tuppers Plains United Meth·
odist Church.
A toaster was purchased and
$25 will be don ated lo !he food
pantry.
Several craft items were donated by Lana Chevalier for the
fall craft sale and other members
were asked tomakecraftsfor the
bazaar
Two new members, Pat Hall
and Beulah Maxey, joined the
group.
There will be another quilt sel
up for Apnl.
The nexl meeting will be Apr
11, 1 p m.

Officers for the new year were
elected at the recent meeting of
Ohio TOPS 570 held at the
fairgrounds .
Re-elected officers includ e Lin·
nie B Al eshire, leader; Peggi
Vining, co-leader; Ola St Clair,
secretary: Vtrglnla Smith. ass ista nt secretary; Virg inta
Dean, treasurer; Nellie Grover,
photographer; Virginia Smith,
measurer; a nd Juanita Humph·
reys, calone chart.
New officers are Mary Martin,
weighl recorder; Julia ;Hysell,

Granges annual
banquet slated
The annual banq uet of Meigs
Cou nty granges to be held on
April 14 al lhe Salisbury school
was announced al a recent
meetmg of the Rock Springs
Grange.
Barbara Fry, women's activities chairman. reported on the
state baking contest which wrll
be held t theApnl meetmg. It was
also noted that Rock Springs will
visit Hemlock Grange on April
15. An award of meril from the
National Grange was presented
to Barbara Fry. It was noted that
the sixth degree will be given on
Aug. 12 at Jackson.
Contribu lions were made to the
National Youth Fund, the state
youth and travet fund, and
Friendly Hills Camp.
Refres hm ents were served by
Nancy Morris and Ltnda Broder·
ick. Reported ill were Don
Betzmg, Ro Uln Radford and
Agnes Dixon. An auction was
held followm g the meeting.

assistant weigh! recorder; Kay
Morris. publicity ; and Phylis
McMillian, assistant publicity
Mrs. Aleshire welcomed a new
member, and discussed the
TOpS angel for Area Recogmtlon
Day to be held May 20 in
Zanesville.
It was noted the deadline for
the scrapbook competition Is
Apr. 15. The theme is "TOPS:
The Magic Kingdom. "
Receivmg gifts for best losers
were Pearle Knapp and Mrs .
McMillian.
The fruit basket was won by
Mrs. Humphreys and the surprise package was won by OJ a St.
Clair.
The Easter contest is now in
progress .

Grueser, LeAnn Cundiff, Anna
Chapman, Megan Bartels. Carrie Bartels, Becky Snowden,
Steve Shuler, Richard Stewart.
Kelly Doidge, David Dalley,
Matt Craddock, Verna Co mpston, P.J . Chadwell , Tim Baker,
Katrina Turner, Angela Searles,
Courtney Midkiff. Mike Phillips,
Heather Franckowiak. Linda
Chapman, Dennis Boyd, Holly
Wtlllams , Kevin Lambert, Pen ny
Lewis , Richie Carson, Je nnifer
Chasteen. Michael Cremeans ,
a nd Brooke Coates.
Awarded good ratings were
Ruth Will, Scott Moore, Michele
Lee. Keith Jones, Jodi Imboden,
Dennis Hoschar. Shawn Hamon;
Ginger Findlay, Kand1 Bachtel:
Zean Wilson. So nja Stanley,
Chris Knight, Bltly Glaze, Mall
Cook, Peter Co hee, James Cra·
mer. Jennifer Barnhart. Gary
Adans, Marcia Robinson, Mrke
Welsh, Virginia Shuler, Vince
Reiber , Tammy Pennington,
Amy Hamon, Chris Billingsley.
Chuck Young, Rusty Triplett,
Beth Roush, Shane Hysell, Mtke
Vance, Branden Shuler, Amy
Reynolds, Jim Pullins, Trudy
Lambert, Brian Hoffman. Trevor Harrison. Jason Hall, Margaret George, Wendy Clark,
James Biggs, Scott Whitlatch,
J ess1ca Silvers, Steve Reitmire .
Bobby Johnson. Mindy Harris,
Jay Harris, Dale Eblin, Joy
Cundtff, Tracy Collins , Debbie
Alkire, Patrick Steele, Missy
Sisson, Reva Mullen, Chris Neel,
Sherry Johnson, Jay Kerr, Grant
Reynolds , Melissa Jacks, Charles King, Mist! Kin g, Shane
Hatfield, Todd Dill, Tessie Bradshaw, Aleta Billingsley, Kim
Fetty, Melissa Durham, a nd
Debbie Conkey.
Satisfactory ratmgs went to
Roger Roush. Kandl Hysell,
Bryan Hoffman, Randy Robte,
Melissa Maynard, Julie Brum
field, Rusty Edmonds , and Mike
Still

COLONY THEATRE.

ONE

AT 7 30 P.M

II 00

Pomeroy, Ott.
Wul Main St.

992-2124

..--------------~
RECEIVE 2 FREE
PEPSI'S

1

I
I

WITH A PAN PillA
ORDER
I P(JWIOT ~~=-I AM"'"'""'"
I sra. ON.J 11 .w 1 AM.,.~ s...

DINNER FOR

2 MEDIUM PIZZAS

S8.88

Lunch Only

~or

11 AM -1 PM

MOIIISI
11 ,_ 1 M

Su~~o 11111•,

L--------------Lsr!~~_:~.!.~.,.~~-

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

Board meetings set
Regular meetings of the Meigs
County Board of Health are held
on the second Tuesday of each
month at 4:30 p.m in the
conference room in the multi·
purpose building In Pomeroy.
Jon D. Jacobs, R. S., adminnistrator, 'advises (hat all regular
board meel!ngs are open to the
public.

FrH Delivery to Middleport, Pomeroy,
Bradbury, Minersvlle, Rutland, Syracuse,
and Mason, W. Va.
If you feel you have been paying too much for
your prescriptions, give us a call. We will quote
you prices!!!
I

After 29 Years
SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
Is Liquidating

SAVE • SAVE • SAVE
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9:30 to 5:00
ALL SALES FINAL

SIMON'S PICK-A-PAIR
IN

THE HEART OF POMEROY

r----------------------------,
•COUPON•

I
I

l
l
Il

I
I

s3oo OFF
ANY NEW OR TRANSFERRED
PRESCRIPTION
EKpire• Mar.c h 31, 1989

I
I
lI

·---------------------------Jult bring in any new prescription or prescription bottle
from any araa pharmacy with the above coupon and
racelva $3 .00 off otlr already low prescription prices!!

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

992-6669
271 Nom SIC:OND
'IIIDDUPOIT, OH.

' -

" .

~-

'

�Page-S-The

Sentinel

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed bids will be re·
ceived at the Mayor's Office. 2.37 Rac8! St., Middleport. Ohio 45760 until3 ,00

National Bank. by deed re-

p .m .• April24. 1989 for the
following descdbed real es tate in accordance with Or·

dinance 1206-89 :
PARCEL NO . 1 : Begin·

,

REGISTERED NURSE

Rocords .
The Village of Middleport
reserves the right to reject
any or all bids and 10 wa1ve
any informalities in bidding.
Fred Hoffman, Mayor
Village of M idd leport
10,__17,1_4_. ~.1 ;

n.ing at the nonheau corner

7. 14. 6tc

of lot No. 132; thence south
along the east side of Third

Street, a distance of 50 feet;
thence a t right angles ··and

Public Notice

east along the south line of

said lot No . 132 a distance
of 56% feet; thence at rig ht
angles and north a distance
of 50 feet to Race Street;
thence west along the south
side of A;ace Street a dis·
tance of 561f.! fe et to the
place of beginning; said lot
being In Philip J ones' Addition to the Village of Middl aport. Meigs Counry_1 Ohio.
and facing 50 feet o n Third
Street and extending eas·
rerly at that width a distance
of 56 V:.i feet .
Also the following real estate situated in Middleport .
Meigs County, Ohio : Beginning at the northwest corner
of lot No. 133; thence south
along the east side of Third
Street a distance of 5 0 feet;
t.hence at right angles and
east a di s tance of 83% feet;
thence at right angles and
north a distance o f 39 feet
and 5 i nches ; thence at right
angl es and west a distance
of 8 feet; thence at right angl es and north a distance of
1 0 feet and 7 inches to the
north li ne of said l ot No.
133; the.nce west along th e
north line of Lot N . 133 a
distan ce of 75 feet a nd 6 inches to the place o f beginn ing . Said above lot bei ng a
pa rt o f Philip Jo n es Addition
to •he Villal=te of Middleport.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On February 27, 1989, ip

late of P. 0 . Box 275, SyracUse, Ohio 45769.
Roben E. Buck.

Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

614-245-9557

Public Notice

3-10-' 89 -1 mo .

SYRACUSE
SUPPLY COMPANY
•Mobil e Home Parts
•Plumbing Supplies
•Electrical Supplies

MON.-TUES.-WEDARI.
9 A.M.- 6 P.M.
THURS. 9 A.M.- 12 NOON
lAT. 9 A.M.-2 P.M.
Call Any time Oay or
Night

Route 3 , Box 28 , Racine,

Ohio 45771 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk
(3) 3. 10, 17. 3tc

992 -6135
Brian Houda1helt, Owner
3rd St., Syrucuse, Oh.
1-17-"88·1 mo.

RAOIATOR
SER~ICE

Happy. Ads

We can repair and re·
core . radiators
and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We olso
repair Gas Tanks.

herew it h.
PARCEL NO. 2 : The fol·

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-J J.tfc

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building

HAPPY 16th,
BURT!

lume 230. Page 323, Mei gs
Coun ty Deed Records .

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Card of Thanks

J&amp;L
INSULATION

WANTED

Mastic &amp; Certain teed
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doors &amp;
Windows

WEDDING GOWNS, PROM
DRESSES, FORMAL AniR£
AND A&lt;CESSORI£S
"Just In Time For Spring

Free Estimates

614-992-7S21
614-992-2661
WEDDINGS &amp; EVENTS
North S.concl, lliddl....,rt

Call

2

8115/rtn

3

45760.

985-4141
GENERAl CO"' TRACTORS

1 1 -16-'BB·tfn

992-6282

PAINTING

I-I and

Woven
Baskets
Basket Weaving
Classes
Basket Supplies

WIJH
PROFESSIONAL

OPEN SATURDAYS

CARE

10:00 'Til5:00
PAM MilHOAN · OWNER

INTERIOR, EXTERIOR

992·61155
2·27·89· 1 mo.

742-2328
PUBLIC
RECYCLING

j EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now Homos luHt

"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

Happy 26th
Birthday!
Love You,
Mom

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3-11-lfn

GUN CLUB

NO SUNDAY CALLS

Commercial
Residential

DEAD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must le Ropair,.le"

INTERIOR•EXTERIOR
ROOFING
Joe &amp; Robert Brown
Call Evenings ••••

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

992·3801
992·6347
2·27-89·1 mo. d.

814· 992-2987 or 614-992·
2232.
Little. long-haired dog to good
home. LooM ~ke Pekineae. c.n

Pay Your Phone ·
and Cable Bills Here
• •. . BUSINESS PHONE
•
(614) 992-6Sl0
REIID.ENCE PHONE
.
16141 992-77 54
·

\/28/tln

It's t1111e to trade
the •led for • cu.
Love, Or11td111a

PUBLIC

RELATIONS
108 Hi@:h Stn•..t'
Pomif"roy, Ohio 45 769
Phonr (6 14) 992·2922

OF BUSINESS

Jo's Gift Shoo

MASTERS TUXEDO RENTAl
DRY ClEANING SERVI(£
S&lt;tSSORS SHARPENED
USED SEWING MA&lt;HINES
ALTERAnONS
SINGER AND WHITE
SEWING MA&lt;HINES
SINGER KNmtNG
MACHINES

Body Talk Tanning Salon
20 SESSIONS $35.00
20 session sign up, bring a
friend to sign up, and
you'll receive one "FREE
is it.

FABRIC SHOP
110 Wnt lla1n, Pom•oy

992-2284

SYRACUSE. OHid
Everything Marked
Down

•Cement ltams
•Flower Pots
•Bird Baths

•Yard Ornaments
Because of Cold Weather
Everything Inside.
Ring Door Bell for Service
2-7-1 mo.

lb.
tb.

BOGGS

lb.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

lb.
~.

lb.
lb.

1-12-' B9·tfn

MOBILE
HOME PARK

7233.
7 'Mtek puppi1111. bl&amp;clt and
white, black and brown. 304-

•Mobile Home
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

875-3066.

6

992-7479
Rt.

33

North of

CONSTRUCTION
GIEG I. IOUIH
GENERAl

Bill SLACK
992-2269

e£X'IEfllltvE IIIEMODEUNQ
•Y'!!,t :I lOt NO. AOOPING

BODY TALK
T A'NNING SALON

· .._-.,.4LIUILDIHQI
Htlllf'INO • .YT. ttAOJECT,.

.SII'992-76

"":' •

RACINE, OHIO

SINCE 1969.
ST. IY.DIS

REPRESENTATIVE
302 W. 2nd St.,
Pom•oy, Ohio 45769
Pb. 614 -992-5479 _ ,
log. 614-992-2477

Clmms: .
1-100-421-3535

•

==

....... UIII ............. ~·

'

FREE ESTIMATES
Tako the pain out af
painting. let me do
it for you.

Assemblera.. Eafn monayaaaembfing Musical Tedr:t,o
Materials supplied. No 1elflng.
'Nrtt8! Jo-El Enterprises, P':O .
Box 2203. · Kiuimmee. "fL

Bll••·

32742-2203.

part time.

OffiDB Sea"Btery,
l'(pin~

,.yroll, fllln ~

Edwin 'Ninter now booking
spring s.alea. 17 yt•• ~P.pe­
rienoe. Phone 304-273-3447
R8Yenwsood, W.Va.
W.Va. State Chemplon Auction•. Rlek Pe.-son. Lleented in
Ohio 1nd Weat Virginia. Booking
Auctlonear.

Comp~tor

15

Schools
Instruction

~~

~~\3 :r.R;':.":k.~:n

~ L:.:JI

1

0se8.
Unhd T.- - ·
Truck DrW• Training
D.O.T. Cortlfl. .lon.Job Ploe•

. ' - s -... "'

1-800-848-M11 . Loclll office.

POrk. .bilrg.
C1w .• Fl.

w. vo. Hdqn:

~;:;;~;::=~~~;==
18

Wanted to

Do

tnc. P.O . Box 307,
Oh.

ln$111~•
Syr.a~1e ,

Need somaoneto-llveln and help
with elderty warn.,. , . , .
Chriltt.n or good mor.al*ton.
Paalbty could hwe own furMhed apl!l"'ment•. Room ind
bO•d plus love offering ,ll'ld

other bonoftt~ 814-742-2004
""'"8:30p.m. Calvin 0'~1.

uta Write; PASE·31G. 1e\,S .
Uncolnway,

N. Aurora, IL

60542.
Wanted: l-tv to age 45 to live in
my home and taka c•• of tt.
More for• home than aalary. For
a gantlemw~ who workll ~0

e

JUnk Cars wtth or without
motors. call Larry Uvetv· 814388-9303.

Help wanted . AppiT. ·01
McC... re's Dairy Isle in M ddl•
port. Bring r•umes in Mon~

Will Wy or llppNiaa lftVtf;ngl
AntiQuea, furritu,., tppll.,a..,
eutoe. oomp'-te home
fumllhlngs. M•lln W.demev-r,
814-2415-&amp;1&amp;2.

eatat•.

frldl'f. -ch 201h-24th tietween 3:00 and 4:00p.m.

Me•

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOT1CEI
THE OHIO VAUEY PUBLI8tf.
· INO CO. ,_....,,.. tN!t you
4lo biloin- wl1h pooplo you
. know, •d NOT to ..,d mo~
ttwou.-, 1t. mal undl you hw1
lnvOIIIgotod I ho olforlnv.

-Ill

NEED EXTRA CAl H7
In potonttol
.......
I
n - of
011.000. Coli lt44415-8081
.
If you oro

1\lrn 11ot&lt; -odon. Downt-.
8or 81d loungo JOikh 22 din•. 2 twa be.ioom upmfrw
..,..-.. aw.. hoo othM'
lnt.wta. 178,000. N.aotlabt1.
CAl Ron ot e14-II:Z.tlll72.
Trar&gt;hy Md ..grovtng buolnlncllclll ol oqulp,_, plus
inventory. exc opportunity,

. ow,.

WANTED II Old "1800' 1 log
c.bln. Cuh plld. Call 814-2419448.

~:.........:...:.._

w.,t niW moble horM for haH

prt,.1 1972 H•aoot. 1hll0.
totol oloc., olr oond. Colt ltll4415-01711. 18280.

Nice 3 be•oom nil• Mid ·on
room on 3 Iota on Ohio Rtv•

oo~lence store.

Top prioe 'tor u118d tumltun,

gonorol hoo...,.ld. ont-o.
ond oppllln-. An typos. Coli
814-8111-4388.
Qullto
Pro 1840 qulfto. Any condition.
Cuh olld. Cotle14-882·&amp;8&amp;7
or 114-182·2411 .

u..t furnttu .. .,d houtlhold
IPpllan0111. Phone 814-742-

,2048.

DAY OR EVENING

Outboord Motor, 1 ·10 HP. Coli
e14-948-2013.

I

GOOD USED APPUANCES
- -· dryoro. rotrt-oro.
rengea. Sk~·· ~ppllanc:ea,
Uppor Rlllor Rd. bolldo 8tono

MobilaHomes
for Rent

Nice 2BA . moblehomefor rtnt.
llol. l!o doo. Nqulrod. Cll

e14-4411-0127 oft• 2 PM.

2be•oommoblehomefor rlftt.
11 MlddiiPorl. Coli 814-1122171
.
Tr..••· Unlm•hed. Coupl&amp;
smllt chlchn accepted. Rt. 1.
loDJit Road. Pt. PIHIIftt. be-

hind KAK. 304-8715-1078.
Two be*oom l.lr•hed mablle

ho- n 1&amp;. 00 pluo .,.,,.,
30+e715-1&amp;12 or 1711-3800.

2 bo*oom. 141170, .... rol olr.
SondHII Rood. 304e715-3834.

1979 Eloono 141170. 3 bodroom~. 1~ batl&amp; centl'll lllr.
10101 oloctrlc. """'' u-.ldrt·
In II poroh • ..,, bl"'- ono rontll
lot, no,l50o.oo. 304-171·
29411.

month. 3041711-8884.

Mollie home on one acrtlot et
CJ-ood. 30... &amp;76-2... 7 ..
oft• e:Oo PM 1715-2018.

2 becl-oom Moble Hom&amp; t200

44

Apartment
for Rent

191148chut.14x70wllh7&gt;&lt;2t
•pondo, oil olootrlo. 2 bodfOOII'&amp; 2 blltta. oentral air.

8EAUTIAJL APARTMENTS AT
IUDOif PRICS AT JACK·
ION ESTATD, &amp;H Jocbon
Me t-om '183 1 mo. Wllk to
......, .,d mwlol. 114-44152&amp;118.E .O.H.

1311500. flrm. 304-1715-13U
Cll:l•o..nllll p.m.

T•• lbwnhau• . . .,..... 2
BRo.. 1 Y, botho, CA.. dis·

33

dll_.t,
"'"'... ....
oloolll p•lo.
pool, pl"r'pound.
Wot•. - • · • trooh inclldoti
lt.,lng 01 • ·2119 p• mo. Col
e14- 387- "'110.

undlrpannfng,

.47 eore lot.

Farms for Sale

mavlng muat . . . Clll

""'""'*'·

Dow- 1 BR, opt. n-1r
,....,...... .,.,._ aompiMt

3'11 A. Good fwm lind with

31 Homes for

Sale

1011 oftw &amp; PM.

·o.J. 'Mtll:• Ad.· 2 wooded
building loll. Approx. 2 ocr•

T• botln- ,..._

tloo. NOW SELLING THIS
NlfAI Col tflo'o-ol. I ·
3115-733-8014. Ell. OZ732A.
FOR CURRENT UIT1N081

IDII.

Bit hou• on Mill ct..

.17.000 .. ..... off•. COl
i14-4415-837 3.

;~~=7::'30:0. ~:::~t I .

.

,_. Tlm1 Phl•botomltt
Must be •~enoed. Cell p•
sonnll office. 304e71-4340.

211ory, l r _ ..... " -

- • · KftiO' Creoll Bohool dlot.
9/10 ICI'e. Motttv tlvtl. 1 mL

off ltoryo llun tid. Coli 814•· 3e7-"'11

Gav4llmnlml ho,....l •1. 00 lu
...,.., F • - - •• dlllnq- pr-. oolllng.
1111o ••' ·eo• ~olundoblol •·
118-4BS.31141 OX1. H 11Z2 for
llotlngs.
Own• .....t Ill. e ye• old
1t&gt;i011ol. 3 -oom. 2 bllho,
l•go - l y room. AI olodrla.
Many m .... 4 • • ctoe1 to
,_, off 81. At. 7. Coli T1m lhlo
for "PPolntnwll to - · 1114!
ill-1174 ... 111&lt;11 741-2880..

Good hoY• for IOio In nolghborhaodofRutllndv•Pricer...,cod 111000. MDI liM' In
Re.t Horne 1nd need to •It
Colvin O'Doll, 114-742-2004
aft• 1:00 p.m.

CRNA
Full tlmo i&gt;ooMion wkh bon ollie.
R•lv toJICiklon0W~•a1Hotp5lll. ~.0 . Bo• 720, Rlpl~ . W.Vo.
21271 .
•

*3811101118. Tobl• •eo ond
up to 112&amp;. Hlct.o·bodl 1380
to 1111. Rocllnooo 122&amp; to
1371. Lornpo 021 to 112&amp;.
Dln-1101onduptoUit.
Wood •bl• w-1 cholro on&amp; to
1791. Oook 1100 up to137&amp;.
HU1ch• 1400 Md up. ....
co"'lll- w·mott128hndupiD 1385.11obot bodo
•110. M1tbt u•qrboiC .,tngs
lui 01 twin lllf."'lrm 171. Md

.88. au- lztO • up.
Klngl3150. 4 d - - t t l l ..
Oun cobln. . e. 8 • 10 gun.
..... m o l l - .,. • 148.
Bod - - 120, 130 • ICing
~r .... 1150. Good ootoctlon of
-oom oulteo, motol-oto.
h-•do 130Mdupto •ae.

- l r .....,dllod 1 IR. opt.
Appt. llrnlohod. ldoellocotlon- 1
~a~a• from clowntCNti'L C.l
114-4411-483e.

41

Homes for Rent

---------=::
2t Ootllo81. 1300omo. 1200
d - ·· Col e14-44fi.220&amp;.

hou..

Fwnlohod opt.· 1 BR . 243

:.'t'J'S";:,':.:."'.::~

Tll~dA•.

1or-. E2::.:eel5-~1:.::1~o.:1::.:...=:-:---:::-:-

d.., ... - · - Cotll14-44151 2 32 .. 2415-et9o oak
o.vto.
.._
3-oom.doMtO
In ...,........
22&amp;. por month. Col
·
*
114-III:Z.II031.

• - srr-. Mlddloport, Otrto.
2 ._.oarnllr*hl8d•.. m.m.
utM._ IIMIId. ,..• .,. ._Phone
3041112-nee.
.

......

YIRo Fumltlft. A..... _
0p., Dollr 8 AM·lii'M

Sundov 12 Noon-e PM
e14-448-3181
e pc. wood lllllng room lUll•
1311. Alloolo'o8icholromorlcod
down , y, prloe mattNII Mle.
Hoovy dUty bunk bodo with
boddlng-1229. Froo mott..e: with pul'lhMt of cemln
bedroom auttM. 7 pc. wood
p&lt;lotw bedroom oulto-17 .... 7
pc. aountry dlnMtta 1• (lft..
dudoo hulohi·I&amp;IIO.
.

..,pH.,_

AH
h.- 30 d"r'l
gu..,t• . TIIADE·INI • lovo·
waya Wlloom1. Lota of n•
....w~.s. Rt. 141 c.ntenwy, ,,..
on Lincoln Pike.

m1e

A•fr..,.tor · • renae. Both
grwn, Good oond. PriCI r•

Bluo - o d le" ooto. Good
cond. 1110. Coli e14-44e·
1079.

Uolllrangn,
""'""".......
d!ty...
,.,.,..,
...._ mlaro'MW OYina. Ken• a A11P111110t,
217 E. 2nd St., P.,moroy.
e14-882·&amp;331 or 114-81113&amp;81 .

Maytag poi'Uibfe dryer and

· Fwnftwe and Clrp4111t
VInyl t4.17 yd, DD-olel
...,.. U.ll yd.lolo, 100m o'rlmnantl end roH, carpet hill
Inch pill I 1.79 vd with -pot.
Mollo'-' l=wnhure
2 locetlona

122 Yl.,d Btr_,
Paint Pl-._ W.Va.
304-e715-M91

•• ,. ni.,., Meldouwbrook Addf.• tkll\ aft• 1:00 and week.,dl

cell 3041711-7431.
2 "' 3 bo*oom . ...,.. lll
....- . lot on R~ 2.

Nice aond. Wll ODNid411r moble

hDm• trM--In. Mike I rown.
304-1715-2488.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sele

2 mobl• for lllo:
o ••• 0.111. uooa . Dn.
lhA,
· - lolhl.,lollr
fUr
rill hod. Col 1111- n
11n.

..- -..,., ...3 - 4 - - 2bolhl.-...

dooto.•
CA.
•t :1.000.
Colt0•11
114·-·-311-81....

74

Ootrt "-·t200. 2 Mllquo

1111 tlwlulll 2&amp;0 Quod-RI-.

•331.

:~ r:.:!.•1 'tc:t c:

114-4411-3712.
For Sol• Deorlond. Vll'-ld

R•aort.
1.....
0
- -Memberahlp
0-hllclng.lfohlng.
•
a&lt; lull fll•lne Col
e14-44S.848t.

-i

1
2-:::"'==-::--:- 1:-+:-4411-:-:--1- 1,1111 H..,,.. KR21011. EJolol.
aond. Cal 814-44e-0102 Of

--:-:-:---:--:--::::--:-446-2012.

~~========~====="':':":':":"::'"':'M=~ 1113Hondo .. odow1100.Juot

c:h--

for

71 A

18 11.•4 ft. above ground pool
l n - g - d-Ing oqutp.•
m-. .,.. IUplllv
"'tile. Col 814-37S.2408oftor

68

SII1WIIOnlr hoopllol bod • mot· -· Vwy good COnd., 1100.
Colll14-3ell-1711

Floh
2413 J-on Ave,
Paint PI-~ 304-I7 15- 2013.
10golo•upt14.HMd10gol
oo"'lll•• 143.28.

I I'M.

Boltn I1'\0WIIf-8 hortl. My.,.

wo1or pump. Dirt blco.
e14-4411-H91.

C.N

11-- - ·

4 II. - · mochlno. ..... LT 10
m.- for ...... Colt et4-37S.
2730.

-

gr_, driPioo 100.13
lnchaO,..,couch. NaYyblue
wl-o. Con 8144411-337&amp;.

-om

-•om

~=!::~!:'.h.~:a:;.:
ot 113 N. -.r, Mldcl_.
Uolllllmllu,.,.,tqu-. ...._
tors 1torno 81d otOrlflod lu'*c - 1n ond - · ond 00¥
MHotaJH.,dlloft,. Mlaelon
- . . - . l.oto at mtrlorlol.
Buy.IJott.T-11- cloft't hwe
w• .,d t. ond - • you
lhllt hlrd wnad Cllh.

H.-

Pats

~-.--lopupploo.

Coll1 14-tU:!'782.

ttiO.

,.,~~,

Coon doo. good oqulrrol dog.
.3150.00. 304-HII-3413.

67

Musical
Instruments

currtw

lt"':'!~"':':.CO:.:f."':."o
ocrotchoo. phono 304·111·
1011 ott• &amp;:30.

69

For Sale

or Trade

For ... orllldo. 7&amp;F..dFtOO.
I eyl •110. ndo. good oond.
304-e715-ll411.

Plrom goWn from Moc¥'1 at
AU- tor ooto. Bin 11-1o.
Novor - n. e1+11:Z.
7

434.

81

Farm Equipment

UTILITY ILOO. l"'30'•40'•r
1-111-d' _l_.!foor,
1-wolkdoof.I41... ERECTEO·
ltlON HORSE ILDRS. 114332-1748.

••·

RtrnlnC..on 170 lhotfjn 12
a•go
g. 384-882-3 11.

830

c.. a

d•l•el traotor

:::~==~~~=lo=-n~~
Glows • dllc. 2 rawoarn piMt•.
)p~ ...-~ oulfll. Ill. bilohhoo.
1 ...10. o - w • fln.,oo. Col
814-2115-1122.

GOVERNMENT IEIZED vohlof• !rom 1100. Fa&lt;&lt;IJ. Mor·
- · c.....,. Chovvo. Bur·
pluo . luyoro Outdo 1111
IOI-817-IOOO•t.l· t018 ·
Oldo. Dolto 11 R'71oto.
1.• _
••
On• aw,..-, b;OII, bo4t. fM
ltortw, Jll...,or, ,....or. llol
• Wot• pu"mp. Coli 814-44fi.
0271 ollw
.,ytlmo.

I PM._.,,..

1178 Z·28 Com oro. t1150Cl
1111C11ovlllo2* .. olr,4opct..
12200. Coli 114-21S.1410.
1112: Cutllll lupreme
• ..,g~~.,.
bo.,.IM
cw lnlldo • ou~ 2 dOor. Coli
114-112-8841.

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

1882Pontloc l'hoonlc, 4*·· PS.
olr. Ooodru-ocond. 11000.
Coli 814-2415-1130.
·
E
1883 o-.n 210
op1ior\ tlr-. - ·
brllc• 1 •. oond.
Coli
et4-448-3820 oft• 41'M.
1178 Chovy lmpoto 3150. V-1.
*- 7t.OOOmlla A-g
11400. Collll"'4411-4048.
1111 Chevy Msllbu 1 - n
Wlgon. 12.ooo ..... AC. ' 8 •
Pl .. - · olfor. Col 114-44154430.
1171 Oldo 911. ·wNto. 2 dr.
11000. Ooodrumlng e~~nd. CoW
114-44..1812.

zx.

:'"'l

•eaoo.

-on.

1113
1. .4 Chow olio.
2-1111 Horllon. III&amp;Hooloon..
1180 Torato c - . . 1180
Toyoto T•oot. 1111 Ocnogo.
t8M Chovlllo. 1110 Hondo
Clvlo. 1111 . . . , . _ IIIII
Toyoto v... 1tU Chovotlo.
- · -· Coll14-448-87711
bot- t•e.

1813 Un- T-n eor. E-.
oond. Full...,_, uo CMr Ave.
n.,. tr-. now bOilary. NA
~ wlndoWI a do on. One
-nor. 17· - · Col 81 "'4415net .
18131!ogloLirnltlll aw.. -~
lroo. v.., ol-. Col 814-44111171dwkbluO-..,IVMinlUio
ltetlon 11 n with ~ owrt.olodlerl 302 ....,.. Auto.,
olr.'W ... dot'--'o.Noods
••olro Coli 814-H:Z.
1812 oft• I:Ofl!lrn. Aoldng
'1000.

Ally ...
ertolc llodco.
Stone and aonortt1. F,.. btlm... 304- nJ-18150.

"*' v..

14' · - ....... pool, 24' ....
mator Md lin• 1111
ac~ori•.

lull..,g Motor!• .
Blodc. bride. - · pip•, win- · lmotJ. .... cr.., . . - .
ton, Rio Orona o. CoN e142415-&amp;121.

bla._

•-o ;r

Concnle
ell
. . .. ,. MeiDniMcl 1
Ito • - Co.. 121111 Plno .,
Oolllpollo. Olrlo. Colt ltll-44152783.

68

Pets for Sale

tor, COpperton1 ooktr, 3048715-3881.

Antique•

7 "·· 'point ............ Good
oondllon. Col.,oi-Mf-20,1

.,u..
!xniiMt condition.
ueoo. 304-n•ll-.

480 • 3110John Deoro· ...._
lo-. bo&lt;*hot. H011, H0121,
HOI. AC - - 040 Cot., TO
20 Int. H - - WV. 30+
7J8. 78Hc I Slild 11• - I - ; l'arll eooo• - . , .

1117
... " Trollng
··
1917 - lhoralln•
tr ...• - plua
mora Atl In CIOOd oondl:ioft. Cal

114-112·21'10.

For .... , 1872 17ft. ....... ott
TriHou18oot, IZ&amp;H.P. Ew&gt;rudo
..
"""
ho ~00-0iop.. UIOO. Coil olr• 7:00
p.m. I 4-28S.1318.

7$

Auto Pertl
8t Aecenorles

__

For .....Enain1 00,....1:440
Dodaa .010 ....,. •2 cu. ln.•

_..,

...........k lholl. , ........
·~1111.

...... c .......

·~

lumoolpump.ColI 14-2115-1484.

79

o.

Moto,. Home~
&amp;Camp1111

1an 20 tt Coooh.--

W/ root oir • -nln.. . _

I.

boot. oond. UIOO. Col 114448-3e20 oil• 4 PM.
1171ifllogu•Trw.. tral•· Good
cond. Allcllg 11.000. Cll 1142115-1231.

1178 - - Dto 23 II mint
motor ho~n~. ..-ar 1nd II
aaa...t-. low m1..., •a
cond. llhono 304-171-2811.
St' I v11.1 ..

81

Home

Improvements
IAIIIMINT
WATIIIPIIOOPINO
Unoo-tonot llftiiiM ..,,_
·
- Lacot
......
Froo
•• _ Coli......
1·114-237·0411. dov "'.....,_
Rot•rala•ement

....,_II

-1.

I'M.III.,d-gm-o
.,d oupplloo. Plolc
up •d dollvlly, Oovto Vota~um
Cl•••· one hlllf milt Ul'
-~~~~ Crooto ltd. COli 114448-0284.

ropolr,

RON'S Tolovlolon lorvloo.
HouM collo on fiCA.
Cll. l!'oollllnt In . . .~~. Col
304-178-2HI 0&lt; 114-4412484.

a.-.

A1- Uvlllodl Sol&amp; Albony·
IIIIo owory Sotu-- 1 PM.
Uvootaolc oc-od oli,• 4 PM
wory Frid~. 1 milo of ·
Albony on 81. At. 150. Col
114· 112-2322. 888-3831,
--go.

1172 Pantloc ~ .. 2 - ·
4 0 0 - . 30+4&amp;11-1141

IION'W AI'PUNICE IIIIVICI,
hoooo cell a. . lolltg OE. Hot

117801dsTar-BIOUgh-.
bllllttltlmult ... toepprlol•e.
loodod. 72.000mlloo. 304-e?ll23111.

1 1 - 30+1711-2Bt.

l'llro a..t .,.orting..,,_,..
.... CoR 114-211-13112.

'"' Momo Colfo v-e .,_.,,._
T-top, good oon&lt;l. I 1.200, 00.
304-1715-2&amp;21.

84

Hay

8t Grain

AKC~4rnontllold.Nd,melo

bot
Hoy lor
IOio. n.ao.
1500 100
• 1100
· ·
Chow
puppy. 01150· Col &amp;oo
bot•
bot-.
814-378-2741.
nd
.,d
3rd
calltlng.
12.
2
38.
Roglot_C_IP•IIot,..po.l~.:.'"".:.:..74_2-_20_1_3_.- - - RoglotONCI bluo point 11om- Ground oholllll - n 11.00 P•
ldti~ Co • h. No choolco. Coli 100owt. Mor- Form, Rt. 31,
e1•- •
·
Pllnoy. 1:00 .. 12:00 - -

2 2 80 7

'77 Unooln Town oar, MW tlr-.
• - .,dtu-p. -rlllodc.
*2.100.00. 304-1112-2048.
1171 Dotoun 110. 8 cy~
1200.00 "' - · phono
304-4&amp;S.11te.

86 Seed 8t

Point. w•hlrl.

82

d~lrt tnd

Plumbing

a. Heating

CNITER'I PWMIINCI
AND HEATING
Car. llaurth •II ""•
Ohio
Phono et4
IIIII 01 81+
441-4477

Ool'f.":"

I;;;:~;~;:;==:
84

Electrical

tl72 M-• Corle bolt off• ·
&amp; Refrlger~tion
304-17S.42...... 1711-114111.
---------

•v•ll•

•P••d

'11 Ch
4
n, 1oo.oo. 30+1711-4840.

72

TNc:kl for Sale

=========;;;;.J.:::::::::::=====~ lun""" 304-137-2011.

R..ldlntlal or oamrrwclal wlr·

HMoe

r•*•·

lng. New
«
Ucen~.t IIICIIrld.... Rlde."Ur

Bodrlcol, 304-8711-178e.

86

Fertillzll'
11811DoclgoD-Iport. AC.
AM·FM-01-t. -~ ·
- Looo
15000
.
1!1.000
.. -- lo......Coli
oft• 41'M 114-3118-1820.

II diiSIIIH I dllllll

71 Auto's For Sale
1113 "'ntloo llroblrll ......
oulftof. o l r , - bluow/""o
03810. .... Col
11+21S.I82Z ar 384-2212.

Int-.

""··

1118 lulolc II-• fllrk Avo.
. . . _ • •. _,d. (loriiiO
kill'· 11.000 . . . . Aolclng
... 000. Col e14--11134.
1111 Ford M -.. ~ n•
1101- AM-FM-Cioo•o.-•ton. 4
.,..... Col 11 ... 241-1871

lortt..,. -

finally spring . We've seen our
first robin. "

. . . loot-1117Lan .... 11'11".
,. 3&amp; hp motorwflh
_1117 -_ ..._,d.,.oollnJeotlon.

R01ory or oolllo *Bing.
--oompl·od•.........
"'""' ool• Md •304181--2

Livedoc:k

2104.

1.:.:.:..:...:-=::-:-::-:::---::--:-

Boetl and
Moto,. for .Sale

1tl0 Mercury M1r11ul1
&amp;ough.,. Nloo. d - - · , ..
E -...
oondllon .102
VI. ·
0111&amp;.
81 ... H2-1718
.

83

Wolf trolnld. Colt e14-742·

Oornmordel lot W I - bul.
lng. _ _ _ nd • .,.,_o.
l'limo to•lon for omoll bul~
• - COl 114-881·4340 or
448-1711.

75

tiM l;llovy 810, VI, I opood.
tlr-. 311.000

a-t• Haroo Golding for oolo.

Buv or loti. Rillorlno Antlq1124 E. Moln Stroot, P.,mwoy.
Houro: M,T,W 10o.m. ro lp.m.,
&amp;undoy . 1 to lp.m. 114-112·
2&amp;28.

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

Pa, Pl. olr, now

Golllpollo. Ohlo
814-441-7444.

!Canmore ttove .,d nfrl. .a·

1111 Hondo 2150 4 Tr• 4
- ·· Cotll14-3117-7117or
3•7·03!'7.

1114 Tr... Am. Ukt nM. AC.
Mo. tit whoot. '""lao oonrrot.
AM-'M • • - 01000. =,..lel-e14-Mf.

Building Supplle1

1----------

2 Ill. 1110blo holM wlft IoriO
- o n r _ , prtvetolol...-1110. Country Moblo H - ...,~~,
c - to _._ CA • -Ina. 3:1. - h of Pa~
n
n
o
•
•
-~~~•
·
e~.:'~:,r'"'
101••
dop. Col 1111--130&amp;.

I

17110.

1988 Ford lhu-blrd 1,800
mR• f u l l - .
CNIII oontrol v-e. 304-e7fl.
1888.

Fullr lurnllhod 1•011• opt. AI Roonw lor - - - "'month.
U111tl• potd •oopt of-laity. lt.,lnt 11 o 120 o mo. Oollo
-lw Nd-otod • o•potod. Hotof.l14-4415-1810.
Dop. llloo 3bo*oomllol•. Col 1:...:.:....:...._______
11+&lt;141-111118. 441-1110.
•Oif!lnl _ , . wlh oooldne
AI hool&gt; ....
Also Troll• 21R., oolllo ovololllt. bo.,.llul CAl ollor 2p.m. 304-773rllf• viM in Kana~ ... F.r_.l 1111. M81011 WV.
MDblo Homo- 114-448- t:=;;:;;::;;;;::~~==
1102.
I·
M .. 2 IR . . . . . ,_.,..... 48 Spce, for Rent
4'AI ml• from O~ola No
· Colll14-- a
~-~~ 0280
mo.
-100
lr - - Pill
*
dlr&gt;. In lito o..,a Coli
e14-J4tl-l181.

S le

""'"· 2411-11111-ov-go.

a:,.-::eld

-

or

hlnodupll1410. Collfii-44111181ollwHM. .

1113Audii50IJO.I. 4dr.• outo..
· · ounCOli
root.et4-28S.I5087·
Bpotl•o oond.
111711.

Roln- V_..., Cl-• NIW
llko • - with ottochm-•
0111.00 - h w ,.,... ••
rongod, 30+e78-441e.

Ill-lilY

, F
uto I

Sale

"""'""""
Modal Smith
1 100 Shol
Gun 12 ......
.,d
W•- 3e lpoclot. e14-8822113.

66

Motorcycle•

::~~~:...":.::~

....... Cotl814-379-2m

Upp• Alv• RoM

63

4 W.O.

WHITE'S METAL OETECTOAS
RonAIIoon.1210-ndA,.. ,
Golllpollo, Ohio. 1114· 44e·

old. lndlldll al
304-nJ.t13e.

Hoover portable weaher. UOO.
- · F~m. COII814-112·1207.
STOP AND CHECK OUR PRI·
CEI

Vant&amp;

11"' Ford M t - v ... lit
tnafne. air. Good codtlon.
UBOO. lrm. COlt . etii-MI2013.

EVANS ENT£RMIIEI. Jack·
son. Ohio. 1--137-1128.

.._. Clll 814-4415-M78oftw
· - 1111-4111 ft toll
9:30 I'M - · • Fri.. Tlluro. , 111.00 you dig wll dig 11.00
ott• &amp; PM .
lxtlll. 8 ...... north Potnt
Pl....,.t, Rt. 2. ..-oea Qood
8h1pher.d Church, Thom11
Nuroory. 304-1715-4041 .

2 bo*-hoo•bondor-.1111 oc...,.lng opplic:otlono b
1171.00 por 2 bodroom ..,.,,_,, llllr
ho
~~nt"'
Fleetty. 304- c•plted. IPPN., ... w.tw and
e711-&amp;8400&lt; 304-1112-240&amp;.
tr•h pldcupo prov- Molnt• 64 Misc . Merchandise
nriOI ••living aloa1 to ahop20• - r 2 brlllbolom.,. pine r-1co .,d oolloolo. Fa&lt;
• ~•
•·
cell30•88•
o 200
momh.
304e715-3812· moroln~motlon
~
~ ~
Swimming Poofo. 1111
oft• 5:30.
3711. E.O.H.
-lolt-19&amp;8Modllpoolo.
Hugo 11 bot 24ft. owlm oroo, 4
3boct-oomhou01wkhlnwolklng 2 bo*oorn Apto. for ,....
dloton,. North I'Dint Mid Hlgfi Corp•lll. Nice Jllling. Laun*v
School. lnqulro 1700 Joff.,.. f9.,.e
1•11 WEoiiOoiiiH. A Clll e 14- ffn.,olng ovollolllo. CON 24 hro.,
2tk37
Blvd. Point P l - . W.Vo.
•
·
I·IIO().MII-0141.
2 be*oom hoi'MI dot• to mlln
r......
..
~
.. 1 lvlnft 1 .,d 2 fled. I
road lftd echool In tt.tfor4 room ._.."""'' at VJU111•
Manor lftd Rlvertkle ApM·
20 e
304-8l2t ·
m1nt1 In Mld.tport. From
3 bo*oorno. tul .... _._ 1112. Col 11,..112-n11.
qulol loOIIIo" e d • north
Paint PI_.... 304-e711-t0711. 2 bodr00011 opt. In Mlddlopart.
• 171 P• month. • • r•
qurod. No-. Oov 61,..8122311 ..... tng 814-118:1-21109.
42 Mobile Homes .
for Rent
46 Fuml1hed Rooms

0 -~-

3 boct_, ronch. prlcod 110' •

"-ic

For Sale • toner•• Md
t"Pilc llnlco. N1 . - . RON

-lful oolld wood
ouno with kln1 lin wotorbod.
Uko now. e14-112-7014 oft•
4p.m.
1120's wotnut
101.
m~: Coli oll•7p,m. 814-112-

Ullltlel pold. Coli 4411-4411

322
Adufto. onlr. No
- · COli e14-448-3748 ..

73

1.::::_::.:.:..:.::...:=::_-.,.--

VIlli¥ Furniture
,
NIW 1nd ual8d furntturt 1nd

dolu110 AC '31100

..C

1182 !by . . d•lol lo.. bod
· 111&amp; Ford
holfton rrucl 3044&amp;11-tlll.

trudc wlh -

WurNII:•Pt•o. E-*1.,oondf.tlon. Coli e14-,..._2413.
.._,..
lndtvlcluOt gullor - · boglnnoro, •rtouo g u - . IN~
...... Mullc. 814-4411-0117.
JoH W...lloy lnl1ruclor, 1144411-80n. um•od oponlngo.

1tt• 7 PM.

"""••

1

TN del for Sale

14.000.00. 304-lll:il-20&lt;1t.

Flr.voad for •I• IPAk Midwood. Pld&lt;up OUCk. - .:_13=:_0-.:Col~le:_1:_4:-_1:_:1_:1..;4.:;.
11
:;;1;;..'"-:
1111 lhru 1111 now . , of
En&lt;:yclopodlo Brit.,-. 1800.
Coli lt4-388-HU.

Two 10.00..20 ~,, .... on rima.
1100ooch. Colle 4-742-2321.

PICKENS USED RJRNITURE
Cornplt"te hoY•hold furnlahlngo. y, lrilf......lcllo. 304-87111 uo. e14 · U8-1773.

72

·n Ford 41141ruolc. '14 oon. 400
.,gin•...,
p11nt. no rult,lft 1111:
with ""'del. llr• ., d roll blr.

M\ln. tl&gt;ru 811. Ph. 114-44110)22.

appllcancea . Call 81•· "8·
7&amp;72. Houro S.&amp;.

LarrJ' WriRht ,

- 9

"74 F3150 Ford •mp INolc. 12 II
boll phoM 3041715-1211.

Spln.t pl1no. ExCII.
· Colll14-4411-0711 oft•
3 I'M.

..Jic::bon Ptk• 12315 e mo.

Modorn11111ooriBR.llr1Wihod
3
·
• .
opt• • 2 IR. til floor .......
mo. COl 304-1711-&amp;104. .. nllllod .,. Rot. • doo. eon
l715-l3l8.
lt4-4411-1078.
3 BR. hou,.. Dopook -~oti
1001dFertTroll. Cotle14-448- Ellronloo21R . E&gt;o:ot. loc:otlo"
211:1. 1 toe c~o~~r.
p•ldne~ Equtpooct u!lllon. Loun*v 100m. No plio.
7 room-· n-11- ,.._.,od. O..,oort. Coli 11+4411-1B17.
• - · rolrlgorotor.
olr ~~Un:.:.:.ll:..rnlo::.:...hod.:.:._2::.:...eR-.-..,-.,-,_--.
IR

KIT N' CARLYLE® by

M lac . Merchandise

""""oo•

90 Dllya eeme • c•h wll:h
IPIWO\I'td credh:. 3 MI.. out
Bi.Javll• Rd. Op~n S.m to lem

:.:•r;.:.-:::",:=.'::,";;

AA·EOE.

MT- mft
full time w.,lng 1htft pOIMion
b., oil! I. no call tin.-. ·to
JtckiDn O.wel Ho1p.l: ft.O.
Bo• 720, Rlpl~ , W.Yo. 2&amp;2"11.

"*'••

both. COr- of
Olllhom. Smltlwo. 111.000.
. Coli 11+-0J2Z.
...... · l r - • 7 - 41R.
CA, 2 •• pogo. 2 - - . Mid
040'1. con 814-4415-117110.

Sof• and chlln Priced from

gor-

&amp; ,...,. •

•-II Shirl., Spt•s.
:

Flost tech .. atGtkl,. mu_.~
able to work dl¥'1 end 11 1hHfl:

SHADV LAWN APTS. 728
- n d A•. ,urnlohod ollloloncl• atettlng - '171 411 mo.
ln ... dlng - . . •
Sinrrle
onlr. Cd lf44411'4107 .. 4411-ztO:Z.

11~..W8-7391.

Cr..t Motel.
LAVNE"S FURNITURE

"*'""

1111 Molillw honlo. 3 ""'.... 2 botho, ..... ..lng
room.l'hecra t2f,IOO.Mudoodl Rd. Coli Ito&amp;. lt4-4415-

304-8715-1429.

MT or MLT ASCP

eon 11+4411-

c..,..,

GOVERNMENT HOMES! From
*1.00 tU "-'olr!.l'arodoo--.
Rlpoo.,

· o..,oo•.
0138.

ooch. Col e14-2411-1111. ~f!&lt;O;.
&amp;:30 PM .
'
2 BR. 'Pl., nM t*&lt;oh corpot.
n- ...., . porllellr pold.
1 ocn lot on Rt. 1150. &amp; ml• *178o- Coll304-e715-&amp;104.
from H-. 111,000. can e1o1- ll:..7:.;1-:_1:..31:.:..:11.:_1_7_11-_77_.:38_._ __
4415-1371
ApMmll'lt awelabla HUD acLandwlh good bl"'- ormoblo -od. Col3048715-&amp;t04.
holM '"• .... _
Rt. 17 •
Rd. 10. t Furnlollod 2.3. or 4 roonw •
-.lfllllo Rd on
1cre •e.eoo.oo. 3 acre• blth. ct.t. Adults ""'· No
010.000 . 00. &amp; ocru - · Rol. • clop. -rod. CoR
118.000.00, poooll&gt;lo 114-4411-1&amp;11.
ff ..otng. 0300.00 - n . 80
..... fO'IOitl-. Mfl.ooo.oo. Nloof¥ llrnlollod omol hou•.
Caunty - · ovolslllo. 304- Eflld.,CII opt.-1 man. Mobllo
411-117&amp;.
ho- bolaw - n ......,ldng
""•·
oo • - .
onlr. lol.
Lata 1nd aar11110e on RIYburn COl e14-44fi.0338.
Rooti John Gorloch. 304-e788283.
Furnlohocl offfol.,... 1507 looond, Oollpollo. 1180. Sh••
Lot blolo. Onopluoocr-. hoff b•h. Col 4411-4411oii•7PM.
mh..,IO- Roodoflofllt. 2.
3041711-8.200oftor 6:00PM.

Ool"'o 3 BR. hoY• lor •lo.
Ownor flnon ... cal 30+e715• 1104.

AVO"' · An orOM. Coli Mortfv n
WtrNOf 304-882-284&amp;. 1 r

Jull want ta earn a little ~~t\re
mon&amp;¥7 Or would vou lka .to
have 1 c•ew1 Eithw wey ~von
can helpvoubethlbedyouc~
belli C1ll Marltvn Wee~•. 304

aiJ

I b. tobecca - .. Puatble home
Jllo. 13.000. COl e14-137·

36 Lots 8t Acr1111ge

Send reet~r:ne

U11d llmlturw bv the piece or · txperlance pr.r..,... Cal/40
entW:e houaehokt •o ..116ng.

e 14-742-241&amp;.

..,... ,. _ l · n

.... _.. •o hook up for enothtr
tr1U• ••kina •23:.000.00 muat
loll, 304-8815-3038. '
.

30+e715-18&amp;2 oft• 1:00PM.

toTheDaltv Stntinel, Box 729f .
Pomeroy, Ohio.

8B2·2846.
WMtto Buy·Aiumlnum140f 10
ft. John Bo.t:. Also 115 HPmotor.
Coli 814-2&amp;15-1431 .

___

Mull loll· t984 14x70 -to..
bl ho
COli 114-44"
mo 0
.._
0 1&amp;1 oft• I PM;

t41180. 2 IR . Good oond.
Ow-In-g with lowdown
~m•. 1210 1 mo- 3 .,.,
lo ... Coli 814-4411-7104.

Lldv over 31 with •peftanoe 11.

AVON all

p..,.

42

Mobile Hornet
for Sale

Goorgo'o Portoblo BRvmlll
Don't h.,l your logs to I
mil. Col 3041715-1167.
24 hour Dly Clr ... ~I 11•
&amp; ''**'provided. Llrge
book,_d. Structurodpl~~mo.
C o l i - - 114-4415-0138.

::;.~t:.=:~~·· 827 l&lt;d.

t;;;:::;~~;::;:::::::::::"'l"'i~~~~~;;;;:=;=='j
32

uood ~lin- ond TV 11110.
1o IPM . Mon thnl

Clpon

.~

"H ere 's one I can let you
· d a h a Jf.
have for a Inidll"ton an
c I.J . I
It's
calle
I Jg \Way
Robbery.' "

ment
.. oe HomeFtnStudy·
/ RA_...
- Trolnlng.
..olel
Aid Awolloblo. Accrodltod
Mombo' NH&amp;C. Coli Toll Fr•

2

814-4415-31&amp;9.

Wentld ta luy· 2 -3 bedroom
home. O.lllpoh ar•. C.n

·986·4222

oo"'fllotollno of utlod .,rnlture.
NEW- W.twn boot• t315.
Workbooto 111&amp; up. (11101 •
ocrlt tool . Coil 114· 4411-31&amp;1.
County Aaollll'loe. Inc. Good

RE-TRAIN N0\!'11
SOUTHEASTER"' BUSINESS

owtlooldng nM Goff CourM.

d8fs a week. Weg• negot~e.
Sand r•ume 10 The D1tly
Sentinel, Box 729 B. Pom•~·
Ohio.
~

prl,.. baing ,.rd. Coli 814-441531&amp;8.

INSTALLATION AND SERVICE OF
HEll ENERGY EFFICIENT HEAT
PUMPS, AIR .CONDITIONING AND
EFFICIENT FURNACE.

1 tsr ti n g - • 9 9 . A411 c II n er I
ltlnlr.g.- •11.
USED· Eodo. d r -. bedroom
tuit•. O.ak1. wriniJII' welher. •

=

Lawn Supervisor Wanted. AbDncmts shouldpos...sthetoi(Owlng: ac parlance In equipment
meintananoe. tchd.lllng amployees, comp .. ltlve bidding.
Position available March 115.
1989. Starting hourly Nt:e,
•e.60. Apptro by reaumeontv to :

Read boab tor Pl'f'l .,00, a

Furniture and applhli'tcw by the
place or entire hauHhold. Fair

or at

CHESTER, OHIO

Buy

CMh. Clll 114-448·1312.

&lt;'=
..,..,

-

. 4073,

45769.

Keith Block. Melgo

AUCTIOIIIEER

helt••-

2·15·1 mod. pd.

•

814-245-6152.

Compl. . houMholda of furni ture 6 antiquea. Alao wood It
call
Swain' a FlJ'nfture
&amp; Auat:lan, Third &amp; QU\fe,

614-985-4180

SYIACUSt OHIO

UU?'.A."J

Call Marlin Wedemtrfer, AuctioBonded in
State of Ohia : llquid11Uon1.
h•ms. ertetes. anUques. ate.

TOP CASH paid for '83 mad~
and n.,...,. uted c••· Smith
Bulck·POntiiC. 1911 Eartern
Ave .. Golllpolla. C.ll 814-4462282.

VERY IEASONIILE
HAVE REFERENCE

WAHNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

CAlL

outlook. We train peoptefor jqbs
•• electricians. He•lng. Mghtlng.
power, air· contitloning and refrigeration component• all o~er­
ata tlwough electrical IY•Iins
that are instaDed lfld Wired by
electricians. a.... for the
Adu It Electricity program at
Tri·County Vocational School
begin Mereh 27th. To reglater or
for more information call 814753-3611 ext. 14. You mar be
eligible tar rnoni• ta pay '" for
your' training, ask about ~our
financial aid sources.
.

Bolt 729 B. Pom•oy. Ohla

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Wanted To

l

SkiU is pOwer. Brighten youfJob

knowladga helpful but not , .

neer, Ucensed •

9

LINDA.'S
PAINTING

Veterans Memorial Hospital
; Mulberry Hats. Pomeroy, Ohio

II

t .;...

ldlcllon. AC. Pirldng. Adults. No.

hiring. C.ll (11 8015-887·8000
Ext. A-980&amp; tor current fed.-al

1 Mil.

INTERIOR-EXTERIOR

·

Mott Foreign and
&lt;UUOM KITCHENS &amp; IATHI

INSURANCE call:
JEFFERY J. WARNER

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEl
SERVICE
Domestic VehicJM
A / C Service
All Major l!o Minor
Repairs
NIASE Certified Me•ch•11c

Lost and Found

8

(614) 446.7619 or (614) 992-2104
417
S.:ood Avalue, Box 1213
3
- ,GIIHpolis, Ohio 45631

UGHT HAUUNG DONE

Job Hunting1 Need a aklll7 We
train people for iob• •• Auto
Mechanics. Cerpenttra. Coam•
tologista. ONenified Med,H:.II
Workers, Electrici~ns, FoodServit;e Workers. Elec:tronica Tee;~
nlclans, lnck.lstrial Maintenan,ee
Workers. NursingAIIiltlntsapd
Orderlies. Machinilta. Office
Workers and Welders. Register
now for det~nbeginningMarch
27th. Call Trj..CountyVoc.tlonel
Adult Center at 614-763-3611
ext. 14. A variety of tundiflg
sourc.e t tO pay for t...,.ing are
available for those eligible. -

cenary. Send resume to P.;Q ,

~

DEUVERED

hiring. C.ll 111 8015-8B7· 80&amp;0
Ext. R-9805 for current federal

S16.040.·S69,230 year. Now

5872.

~ 'LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: :Licensed Clinical Audiologist

PER lOAD

G 0 VERN MEN T J 0 B·S
$16, 040.- 869,230. yew. Hbw

GOVERNMENT JOBS

Found : young. male hunting
. dog. Call aftM 4 :00. 614-992-

1Dependable Hearillc Aid,.Sales &amp; Servic4
CJ !Hearing Evaluetions For All Ages.

OAK, LOCUST,
CHERRY

..

lilt.

Television Listening Devices

U ·'U·Ifn

Open Monday-Saturday
9 A.M.-9 P.M.
. Call For Appointment
949-2433
"A ll the Comforts
of Home"

To, good home in country.
German Sheph81"d, male, good
INith children, 304-676-1608.

Easter puppies, part Germ.-.
Shepherd, Aeal Cute, 304-675-

GUTSVIU, OliO

far• E41lp•nt
Sal• &amp;

WMI do typing. SIWing and or
mending. phon• 304-fJ75·

The .Daily Sentinei- P

Wh ...d'lllrs-nM or ..-d. 3
whootod oloeoric Coli
Rogoro Moblty colloct. 1-11 4870.9181 .

Hou1ahold Good•

SWAIN
AUCTION • AJRIIIITURE 82
Olivo St.. Ooll-.
NEW- I pc. -group- IHG.
U.lngroom....._. 111S.Uit.
Bunk- wMh.boddlniO" 1241.
Full II• mon- • loundotlon

Can far eldlrtr in my home in
Pa-oy. Co~ 114-992· 7204.

3002.

U. S. IT. 50 EAST
614-662-3121
Authorized John
Doaro, Now Holland,
Bush Hog Farm
Equpment Dealer.

FIREWOOD

S35

goad ttome. 304-875-7879 after 5:00.

Porcelain bath tub 304-896-

lb.

Located Off Bypass
At Jet. of Rts . 7 &amp;
143, Pomeroy, Oh.
'

2 almost white female hou ..
cats year old. very loving. to

For LIFE

992-5114

Announcements

814-992-5006 .

We Service All Makes

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM
Paying today
Jan. 14r 1989

Leesa Murphey
&amp; Associate•

Black female Chow mixed pup. 3
months. old. Loves childr~~n;
GWeaway to good home. 814949-2433 or 614-949-2225 .

Female Wire Haired Terrier.
White and brown, ahort hair. Call

We Carry Fishing Supplitll

51

Situations
Wanted

rrnanml

Ohio certified EMT 'a, Adv.nced
EMT'a. Paramedics . Part-time
positions available. Flexltele
hours up to 38 hours par week.
Ath&amp;fla, Vinton, Jeckaon. t..w' ·
renee, Vinton countle~ ." Contact
Southeast Ohio Emergency
Medical Servicet, Inc. 614-44&amp;-

9.840. (EEOMIFI

~: Night

Point Pleasant, W. Va.
We Buy Aluminum
Cans. Glau, Brau,
Copper and More
MON.-FRI.: 9 am-6 pm
SAT.: 8 am-12 Noon

WANTED

SYRACUSE, OHIO

Giveaway

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860

3-1 0· '89-1 mo

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING

Happy 16th!

Gift!l for Easter. Behind City
Hall, 324 Eaat Main, Pomeroy.
8 14-992· 7204.

"At Reasonable Prites"

4· 16-BS·Hn

12

(3131 542·8400. E&gt;&lt;l. 3384. :

lhn.

1/22188/tln

rt

MATCH . Sleeve

guns. 7:00p.m. Mile Hill Rd ..
Racine. every Saturday night.

5 i30 PM. 614-379· 2741 .

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

SALES &amp; SERVICE

304-67 S-3161

B&amp;B PAINTING

(Subject to Change
Without Notice)
#1 &lt;OPPER .............. S6•
#2 &lt;OPPER " ............ 65 '
CLEAN AlUMINUM
SHEETS ..................... 52'
CLEAN ALUMINUM
CAST ......................... 40'
AlUMINUM
BEVERAGE CANS •.... 50'
IRONY
SHEET ............. S• to 30•
IRONY &lt;AST •.. 3' !o 20'
STAINLESS ................ 20'

Announcements

Act in TV Commerci••· Children, Teens, Young Aduhs. end
Mature People needed. High pay
TV advertising. Cell for cettlng
information : Charm Studio•

Cute puppielf to a loving home.
Part Husk'V·P•t lab. Call after

NOW OPEN FOR
BUSINESS
14th &amp; llain St.

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
.9·19-88 tin

45640.

4

Now location:
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

0998.

Announcements

SHOOTING

BISSELL
BUILDERS

3·2·'89 tin

GUN SHOOT

fD&lt;Iory (hohe
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
Stri&lt;tly Enforced
10·7-tfn

3

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

Doy

EMT-P's and EMT-A's needed
tullandpart time. 851 Primrote
Place. Lima, Ohia,' 419-222Plumbing Firm o.n the mo\16Naeds experiened plumber.
Management backgrouod helpful. Good pay. E•cellent ben sf·
its. Send resume to: Plumber',
P.O. BoK 806, Jackson. Ohio

CARTER'S

SEllER ..... Makes Money
BUYER •.. Saves Money

your

Earn extra monev for
spring
Avon. Ca'l Sea 81444&amp;.4882 or Cerel 446-4397.

2-24-' 89-f mo .

THE
BASKET WEAVE

RACINE, OHIO

In Memoriam

In loving Memory of my
husband. Charles R. Hysell, who passed away six
years ago March 17. 1983.
March comes with sad regrets,
The day, the month, I will
never forge t
For in my heart you will al·
ways stay.
l oved and remembered every day .
Sadly missad by wile
Kathryn, &amp; all the Family .

Prelbyterian R111oun:::e Center
Coordinator/ CE with sma,U
churdlll 25 hn / wk . Cent• 1n
Jadtson. Oh. Job de~criptlon .
info. Hanging RockCoordinator,
1 65N. Fourth. Middleport, Ohio

war~obe .

54

Merch~11d1se

Golllpolla. Olllo·Rt. 7 l!o 35.
HourJ 9-11 AM &amp; 12·3 PM:

CHESTER, OHIO

henn .... "

Far More Information
We would like to ex·
press our sincere appre·
ciati on to all who assisted in any way during
the illness and death of
o ur mother and grand·.
mother. Florence Work·
man .
.
Thanks to the nurses
and doctors at Holzer
Medical Center. Espe·
cially Dr. Oscar Clarke.
Home . Health nurses.
New Haven Emergency
Squad, relatives, neigh·
bors an d friends . May
God bless each one of
you .
The Ia mily of
Florence Workman

ct.., drilling record. pap DOT
p"'sical &amp;: ~ugscr.en. Pr.vloUI
tank• •xperienoe wil be given
consideration. Pierc:eton Trucking Co.• Inc. 1- SOD-541-8072.
Applicatiohl will be t•ktn S., ..
March 18 at Burtile Oil Co ..

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

PLUMBING
&amp;.HEATING

FOR INFORMATION

992-2772

6:30 P.M.

Dad

EXCEPTING the real es·
tate conveyed to Citizens

WANTED TANKER DRIVERS

MARCUM CONTRACTING

References

LAFF·A·DAY

Help Wanted

Ref•••

Moatly k&gt;ctl worit. Mutt hiVe

1 · 31·"BB· 1 mo .

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARY
On February 27, 1989, in
the Meigs CounJ:y ·P robate
Court, Case No . 26,168.
Thomas M . Theiss, 49140
SR124. Racino. Ohio 45771 .
was appointed Executor of
the estate of Bonnie F.
Theiss, deceased, late of

5

CALL 992·6681

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Bebvskting in my homa, IITY
19•·
are aveHable..
3041711-11194.

Help Wanted

32742·2203. ..

7-'89-1 ·mo .

Reasonable Rates,
Fully Insured

Contact Blaino Taylor

11 ,

ASSEMBlERS. ElrR mo..-y Itsembling MuJica! Tedct( le.-s.
MJt .. illt supplied. No telling.
Wrfter Jo-El Ent•pri..l. P.0 ..
Box 120:.3... ~m_u._ Fl.

Call AI 742-2328

MEIGS
INDUSTRIES, .
INC.

$7.50 PER TON

(3) 3. 10. 17. 3tc

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

11

DRIVEWAYS &amp; ETC.

949-2168
2· 10-'88· 1 mo. pd.

STONE

Probate Judge

conveyed t o Citil:ens Na-

1

Downspouts

DELIVERED &amp; SPREAD
GALLIA CO. AREA

Lena K . Nesselroad. Clerk

More legals on Page 2

DEED REFERENCE: Vo·

Gutters

Services Offered

DEE D REF~ R E NCE : Vo-

lowing real estate situated in
Middleport. Meigs County,
Ohio : That part of Lot No.
132 described as follows:
Beginning at the north-wes terly co rner of the east onehalf of lot No. 132: thence
south a distance of 50 feet at
right angles to t he north line
of Lot No. 132: thence east
6 feet and 6 inches; thence
north 50 feet; thence west 6
feet and 6 inche.s to the
place of beginning, and be·
ing a parcel of land 6 feet
and 6 inches in width off of
the west side of the east half
of lot No . 132 and leavinQ a
parcel of land 50 feet on
Race Street and 50 feet on
the alley.

NEW-REPAIR

OPPORTUNIIY EMPLOYER

~ervtces

LIMESTONE
HAULED

ROOFING

the
Meigs
County
Probate 1
Court.
Case
No. 26,167.
1-----------~------..;..---1
Jbyce Hope. 4~63 liberty
Road,
Delaware,
Ohio
43201 , was appointed 81(8·
cutrix of the estate of Kenneth B . lawson, deceased.

lume 228 . Page 961. Meigs
Cou nty Deed Records.
Save a nd except a parcel
t ional Bank, Middl eport, ,
Oh10, by deed of even date

Howard L. Writesel

Immediate opening for part time registered
nurse to work in IC.U / CCU. Salary com men~ urate with experience. Excellent fringe .beneftts .
Send resume to:
Rhonda Dailey, R.N, _
Director of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
4) 992-2104, extension 213

Friday, March 17, 1989

EnlpiiiYill~nl

Business Service

Help Wanted

corded in Volume .230. Page

326. Maigs County Deed

Friday, March 17, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1171 Ford LTO. Colll4-7704.

1171FordF--Iilmo. 4711ou.
ln., 1-2. now--- - oondllon. Coli 11 ...

mr,;:

.:.1.;;18:.;2:;·C.:hov:.:....yS:-.-:-10~.:-:VI:-.~4-op-!
11500 11. ""' 1o111.

c-. ...,..

.. High
..._
-oL
·
ruM
CIMd
end ...,..,
...
llodrlooo - ...... n. . . .. .

........ · - · · 11110. Col
114-Mf-2841
11770MC 1ten1niCIII. Orfolnot

.. oily, fodory-lcl':dlfotr
...... "'.. good. 11
I14-

J • J W•• 8orvloo. lwlmmlng
-2415-128&amp;.
clot .... · l'h. e14R • R W.or llorvloo. 1'0011.
clatems, welll. lmmedlat•
t,ooo .. 2.000g-,.dotwwv.
Coli 304-171-1370.

-lolco W•• -Una &amp;orv~.
1,000 ... .2.000 , . &lt;iotlvorl. .
p - 304-&amp;715- 311 01 etol4415-4011.
Wlttenon•a Wilt• Hnltng.

llo•onoblo ...._ - ... diOoounto. 2.000., 4.000•••
lty, clot ........... -

Col 304-1711-2111.

7G-2t ... ollw 8:00p.m.

'18 4a4 110 plolllp. Mo V-8,
AM·FM rodlo, , _ 1~-. 44.000
miiM. •e.1eo.oo. 304-175...40.
.
11"' II Cimino wl1h ·
'
171--. ..38.oon&lt;l. 11711.011.

Uphollltery

....

�'
'

Pllu•

10

Friday. March 17,1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

Community calendar

Sunclay

50 cents

================================·
FRIDAY
RACINE - A birthday party
for Racine Legion Post602 will be
held Friday starting at 7:30p.m.
Members and families are In·
vitro. AuXIliary members are
a~ ked to bring salads.

Grange and Star Junior Grange
will meet Saturday at 6:30 p.m.
at the hall located on Coutny
Road I near Salem Center. for a
potluck supper and fun night . An
Easter egg liunt will precede fhe
potluck supper. Ail members are
urged to attend.

- ·- -

SATURDAY
TUPPE-RS PLAINS
Tuppers Plains VFW Craft Show
and Sale will be held Saturday ,
from 9 to 3 p.m .. at the hall. in
Tuppers Plain. Concessions and
baked items will be available.
Everyone welcome.

HUJAMBO- Thai's good moming in Swahili,

': explaiDB Lyda Winland to students at Portland

;: mementaJ'Y School as she begins a sUde

..,:; preseataUon to tell the students about life on

safari. Winland visited the students last week as
part of the school's Rightlo Read program called
SAFARI, which Is an acronym for ''Send AFriend
A Reading Invitation."

Star

School menus
announced
Menus for the week of March
20-24 In schools in the Meigs
Local School District and the
Carleton School are as follows:
Meigs
Monday: Sloppy joes, peas,
fruit and mill(.
Tuesday : macaroni and
cheese, bread and butter, fruit
and milk.
Wednesday: turkey roast,
green beans, hot rolls and butter,
Ice cream and milk.
Thursday: pizza, salad fruit
and milk.
Friday: spring break.
Carleton
Monday: Green beans and
ham, potatoes, roll, fruit and
milk.
Tuesday: meat loaf, mashed
ptoatoes, roll peaches and milk.
Wednessday: toasted cheese
·sandwich, tomato· soup,
crackers, fruit and milk.
Thursday: sausage gravy and
biscuits, mixed vegetables, fruit
and milk.
Friday: cook's choice.
ATMOSPHERE MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE - Pordand aecond grader Jessica Cooper
and alxlb Jrader David Pickens enjoy silent

reading In the
Elementary.

reading

hut at

Revival !!et
MIDDLE PORT - As h Street :
Freewill Baptist Church. Middle·
port, will be in revival March
20-25 wll No rma n Taylor. Servi·
ces will sta rt at ·7:30 p.m.

Page B-1

VoL 24No. 6

..--Where's the Easter Bunny?--•

I

1984 GMC "515" JIMY
4 WHEEL DIIYE

V-6 motor, air cond., AM·FM-Stereo. cruise. aluminum
wheels. 2 tone paint. Extra clean I

992·2174
COLUMBUS, Ohio - A bill
sponsored by State Rep. Jolynn
Boster (D-Gailipolis) to benefit
rural water districts passed the
Ohio House unanimously
Wednesday.
The bill, House BIU 156, would
require the Department of Trans·
portation to notify local water
and sewer districts of impending
public sales of used equipment,
materials; and supplies. Local
water and sewer districts would
then be eligible to purchase these

PubiiJhecl every attemOCII, Monday

tbrougb Friday, 111 Court st.. Pomeroy. Ohio, by the Oblo Valley Pubiilbllll Compony/Multlmedla, Inc.,

Pomeroy, Oblo 15'71i9, Ph. 992-21!16. Se-

cond class polta&amp;e paid at Pomeroy,

1983 NISSAN 200 51 2 DOOR

UnitA!d Preto International,
lalaod DaUy Prell AuoclatloD and the

Leas than 44.000 actual mila. air cond .. 2 tone paint.
alactric windows, raar wiper. defroster . THIS IS A NICE
~El
.

. Ohio Newopo[?. Auoolatlon. National
Advertlllftl

re~eDtatlve,

Branham

NewiP&amp;per
•· 733 Thlrd Avenue,
New York. New York 10017.
POSThiAS'IER: Setld addrell cban1101
to Tile DallY Setltlnel, lll Court SL,
Pomeroy, Oblo e7fll. ·

A Multimedia Inc. New1pt1per

Budget has education
oversight committee
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI ) The Ohio General Assembly ,
Intent on accountability in educa·
lion, Is establishing a special
Legislative Office of Education
Oversight governed by a bipartl·
san House-Senate commission.
"'It's going to be a working
commission," said House
Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., D·
Wheelersburg, shortly after the
House approved It last week as
part- of the' $26.3 billion state
budget. "I mean business with
it."
Naturally, the Senate will have
something to say about the
legislative oversight of education
as It considers the budget.
Senators also will begin hear·
lngs In the Education Committee
Tuesday evening on a package of
Republican-written education re·
forms that require no additional
funds .
That package also contains
accountability for school dis·
trlcts, including an annual "re·
port card" to be submitted to the
Ohio Department of Education.
o
Neither the House nor the
Senate will be in session this
week, although the Senate has a
few committee hearings. ·

Riffe said the education over· cation, Board of Regents and
sight office will operate some- · college presidents have exwhat like the Legislative Budget pressed opposition to such a
Office, which does ail the finan- · "super board ."
cial research for the General · The budget also cont.alns a
Assembly, under lhe dlre~tlon of section. Inserted by Rep . Mlcha'el
Fox. R-Hamilton, in Finance
representatives and senators;
The Office of Education Over· Committee, requiring the creasight will be governed by five tion of an educa tion management
senators and five represenia· information system.
Fox's amendment requires the
tlves. It will evaluate programs
conducted by elementary and state Board of Education to set .
seo:;ondary schools, and by state· up the system and have every
supported colleges and school district collect data and
put It Into the system each year.
universities.
The office also will be assigned The Information would involve
to determine whether the schools competency tests in grades eight
and colleges improve their per· and 10, comparing the results of
formances with the state money such tests In every school and·
they receive, and whether the making the results public.
Ohio Department of Education
Fjox also got Into the budget bill
and the Ohio Board of Regents an amendment requiring that
every general relief recipient
are doing their jobs properly.
Gov. Richard Celeste has pro- (Individuals with no children)
posed an oversight board of between ages 19 and 40 have a
trustees to determine how his high school diploma or . skills
proposed 1 percent education training in order to qualify for
·
Income tax would be ·spent by welfare benefits.
·'This will send a message to
schools, colleges and unlversl·
ties, but there is no sign that his them that says, don't drop out
education Initiative will be ap- and expect to come back a·nd
collect welfare benefits." said
proved by the Legislature.
The state- Department of Edu· Fox.

'

Boster bill _moving on to Senate

(U8P814 ....)

Member:

local youngsters collected 3511 Easler eggs tiDed
wltb candy, toys and coapODB. J.D. Mentz, Rax
associate manager, said lwo Easter baskets and
two stuff Easter bunnies were also given away,

Two-and-a-half year old Tracy
and
Michelle Harvey, 9, were entertained by Uncle
Alllgalor Saturday during the annual Rax Easter
En Hunt In the GaJUpoUs Clly Park. More t!mn 70

A l l l - • 1 - · a , ....

Ohio.

I

•

I

. ON ALL CARS LISTED!!!

CALL

Cloudy, windy. Wghs In mid
50s.

11 Sections. 80 Pages

Middleport Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, March 19. 1989

Copyrighted 1989

The Daily Sentinel

Wendy Hogue, daughter ol
Jerry and Donna (Grueser)
Hogue, Darlington, Pa., has been
named to the president's list at
the Community College of
Beaver County with a 4.0 aver·
age. She is a freshman majoring
in elementary education.
Grandparents are Dav·e
Grueser, Ga!Upolls, and Thelma
Grueser, Pomeroy.

In Our Town: Veterans a drag..•
Page A7

tnttS

FINANCING AVAILABLE

.

Along the River ......... B1·8
Buslness ...... .... ..... ...Dl,2,8
Comics- .. ..... ......... ... Insert
.Ciassilleds ................. 03-7
Editorial ................ ...... A2
Deaths .... ..... .. ....... ....... A3
Sports ............ .......... . CJ-8

Cl

•

Portland

Hogue named to
president's list

Beat of the Bend: A rising 8tar"'
Page 88

---

WILKESVILLE - A smorgas·
bQrd will be held Saturday by the
Wilkes Grange at the Wilkesville
Pythlan Sisters ijall. Serving will
begin at 4 p.m. and the $5 for
adults and $2.50 for those under
12 is for all anyone can eat. Door
prizes will be awarded during the
evening. The public Is invited to
attend.
SALEM CENTER -

Education's
future needs

POINT PLEASA NT
Cru ..
sade for Chr ist bu siness and
planning meeting will be Satur·
day, 10 a .m. at the Church of
Christ in Christian Union Fe llow·
Softball tourney
ship Hallin Point Pleasant.
REEDSVILLE - A men' s
softball tournament for eight
CHESHIRE- Gallia Christian teams will be held April 8·9 at
School Board of Trustees m eet · Reedsville. Registration fee Is
ingwill be Saturday, 9 a.m . at the $70 pius two softballs. Shirts will
home of Cynthia Langona . school bf' awarded for fi rst place, and
administrator.
hats for second. Asponsor trophy
will be given to th e third place
SUNDAY
RACINE - Racine Youth team . For information , caB 378League will hold its 1989 organi- 406.
zational meeting on Sunday at 5
p.m. at the Southern Kinder· Concert
POMEROY- Richard Haley,
gar ten building . In teres ted
coaches and parents are urged to son of Rev·. Liston Haley, will
present ati Easter concert at the
attend.
Pomeroy Baptist Church morn RUTLAND- Signupday for the ing worship hour on Sunday at
Rutland Baseball League will be 10: 30 a.m.
Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m. at the Shamrock ball
MIDDLEPORT - The second
Rulland Civic Center. Sunday
annual
Shamrock Bail wiil be
will be the final day for slgnup.
held Friday, 8 p.m. to midnight,
at the American Legion Annex In
MIDDLEPORT - The Wal·
Middleport . Live music will be
lace Brothers Quarter of Bar·
boursville, W. Va. will sing at 7 fealured. Costs are$10 per couple .
or $6 sll)gle, in advance. Tickets
p.m. Sunday at the Middleport
at the door will be $12 a couple
Church of Christ. The publiC is
and $8 single. Proceeds from the ,
invited to at tend by Al Hartson.
event will go to the Muscular
pastor.
Dystrophy Association.

POMEROY - Sign-up day for
the Pomeroy Youth League
summer baseball and softball
· will be held Saturday at the
Pomeroy Elementary School
from 10 a.m to 2 p.m. Sign up fee
is $11 along with a copy of the
birth certificate for those who
have not played in the league
before.'
·

•

NCAA, boys toumament ·results

MONDAY
DEXTER - The Meigs County
Chu rc hes of Chrisi Me n's Fellowship will meet Monday ai 7: 30
p.m. at the Dexter Church of
Christ.

CALL

supplies before the public sale, at the House floor.
substantial savings.
"Rural water and sewer disBoster introduced the leglsla· tricts operate with extremely
lion In response to concerns tight budgets. Any money saved
raised by Le-Ax Water District in In capital purchases could be
Athens County.
money spent in providing
''School districts, counties, ell· service."
les, villages, and townships are
The bill passed the House 99-0,.
already eligible to participate in and will be sent to the Senate,
this program and realize signifi· where hearings on the bill are
cant savings. This legislation expected to begin after the
provides water and sewer dis· General Assembly's spring
tricts with the same opportun- recess.
ity," Boster noted in a=~~~------------,

992-2174

1

III!MCall"'l''ON IIATEII
BJ cant..- or Mol• Boote
One Weel&lt; .................. .................suo
One Month ......... .. ... ............... ... .$6.10
One Year ................................. $12.80

SINGLE COPY
PIUCE

''

•

Dolly .. .. ............................... 25 Cento

··'·' ,,,.,....

Sublerlbel'J aot deetrtng to pay the car·
rler may "remit In advance direct to
Tile Dally Setltlllelon a 3, 6 or 12 mooth
bull. Credit wUi be pveocorrtereaeh
weelt.
No aubocrtptlool by man permitted In
areu where home carrier tervlce 11

WINDOW DISPLAY - In honor of seoul week the Salisbury

: tack :ue had a window display of various Items uoed In scoudng as

: well u eraft projects lbal the scouts had done In the Elherfelds
;. bllldlag. Some scouts also took parlin the annual bowl·a·lhon a1
: oaJipolls.

I

Pierce celebrates 80th birthday ·

Nellie Pierce celebrated her
80th birthday recently with a

War Cry distributed
The Easter War Cry of the
Salvation Army Is being distributed this week in Middleport .
Next week it willbedistributed In
Pomeroy. Anyone being missed
WhO wishes a copy may call
!192·5472 or 992·6917.

$2 99

'"'

13 Weeiii ..................................
CotuoiJ $19.:H
26Weekl ................................ .. $37.96
52Weeiii ........... ....................... $7U6
Ooo!Mellolp r...tr
13Weekl ................................ .. $20.80 .
26 Weeiii ......... .. .. ..................... M0.30
52Weelll ......... .. ....................... m.IO

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
FIIDAY, MAICH 17, 1919
SHIIMP
BOAT
S2.19
r.,_
11) Sucaul.m
P IPLlnEI"''"'""''""'"'""'''""'
- of G..W.. ltwlmp I«Wd Wlllh Our Own ......
_._..
Co'*'"IIS.,.e. Hot Oolclon Fr..,llh Fri-.lftd Choi•o!H-- Col-. lltac•onl Sllld, or ltlkld ...,...

'SCARRY OUT
liD
7-33 CARRY OUT

2 ·door, sunroof, luggage rack, automatic and more.
THIS IS A VERY CLEAN CARl

CALL 992·2174

1916

BUICK LeSABRE UMITED
NEW CAR' TRADE

4

1916 OLDSMOBILE DELTA
SAVINGS PLUS!

ROYALE ...... SI595

,1915

OLDSMOBILE
AQUAUTYCAR

II

DR ......... 5999 5
.

"91" 4 DR................ 5149 5

SUNDAY, MAICH 19, 1919
HOMEIAIED fOil CHOP &amp;

·1915

DIISSIIG DINIII ........................................ t4.39

1915 BUICK REGAL T-TOP - LOADED .... S5995
191K6 P0RNEnATAC SUNBIRD 2 DR................. s6595
L0 0 8 0

,,..,w:t

LllrgeJuiGf PorkChope.
FNihlnOurOwn Kttchlft. s.rwd Whh Your F•varh Homemtdt Dreaina. M11h• Potatoaend HDmtmldeGrwy. car.. a.With Mulhrooma. Your Choloe of A Hot luNrlld Roll or Horn..,.. lllc:uk end
Coli.._ A..,i.- or Daollll- loth I'Toohly • - Co' lmoll Soft Drink 0t Hcrt

NEW HOURS: Optn 10 A.M.-7 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK

12PACI
· CANS

1984 PONTIAC SUNIIID L.E.

WENDY HOGUE

Ttl M-vo . . IUbrltkutltd.)
10% Dlecount to All Senior Cltllene Wtlh Buell.,. or Mou.-6n• Cerlllll

PEPSI

.

I

Guests attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Pierce, Groveport;
Delores Johnson, Carroll; David
Pierce, Mansfield; Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Gaken and Mrs. Floyd E.
Gentner, Chelsea. · Mich.; and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Newton,
Waverly.

THURSDAY- FRIDAY- SATURDAY

....."',..,..

avallable.

surprise dinner at the home of
her son, Mr. and Mrs. Rusty
Pierce in Salem Center.

ST. PATRICK'S
DAY SPECIAL

...

--rtpla-·-P

MAINTENANCE WORK UNDERWV- Meigs
County Ohio Department o!Transporlallon crews
have been visible this week on Stale Route 124
between Pomeroy and Racine as they trim down
the roadway's berms to prevent water from
collecting which can eventually lead to deterlora-

BUICK LeSABRE 2 DR ....................... S7995
REAR WHEEL DRIVE. LOW MILES .

- RUNS· GREAT!

!!e~1 :!,~·TJ. 2 DR.
1913

" ............................ S5495

FORD LTD WAGON COUNTRY SQUIRE •••_54995

SMITH NELSON MOTORS, INC.
992-2174

. 500 ElS'I lWI

.

POMEIOY, OHIO

)

uame Assoclallon, tbe Racine Gun Club, and
Racine American Legion have belped make tbe
project a reality. Plans to pave the levy road,
repair the boat launch facltUty, and repaln to lhe
apron area are scheduled. Those wishing to
contrlbu te should send donations lo Racine
VIllage Levy Fund Drive, In care of Clerk Jane
Beegle, Box 375, Racine, Ohio 45771. (TimesSentinel photo)

LEVY TO BE IMPROVED -The Racine Boat
Launching facility has been a favorite lor those
wishing to enjoy Ohio ~lver recreaii.o nas a boater
or fisherman. The closest area to lhe rich Ohio
River fishing pool near the Racine Locks and
Dam, Is scheduled to undergo a major overhaul
when the weather breaks for spring. Donations
from various civic organizations, such llli the
Izaak Walton league, Meigs County Fish and

R&amp;M

'on - target,~

DAYTON, Ohio - Robbins &amp;
Myers, Inc. today reported level
earnings for the second quarter,
but an Improved first half for
flscal1989 (ended February 28).
"This Is in line with management's expectation at the begln•
nlng of the fiscal year," said
Daniel W. Duval, president and
chief executive officer.
"Our fiscal 1989 earnings for
the first half of the year were
affected by plant consolidation
costs In our Motion Control
Group, most notably In the
second quarter. We believe tbe
Company is now positioned for
improved performance provided
the economy and our markets
remain strong."
Second quarter results Include
a sales Increase of 11%, \O $26.6

•

'

Duval says

million, compared to the $24.0 final phase of plant consolidation
million recorded in the second and the statt up of.the new Eden
quarter of fiscal 1988. Year· to· Prairie, Minn. facility within the
date sales were $51.2 million Motion Control Group.
versus $47.4 million for 1988.
Robbins &amp; Myers Is an InternaNet income for the quarter was tional manufacturing and mar$831,000, or 35 cents per share1 keting company with facilities In
compared to $852,000, or 36 cents the United States, Canada, Eu·
per share for the same quarter in · rope and the Far East. The
1988.
•
Fluids Handling Group manufacNet Income for the' six months tures and markets progressing
ended Feb. 28 was Sl. 7 mUiion, cavity pumps for Industrial aJ)fourteen percent higher than the plicatlons In paper processing,
$1.5 million from the flrstl\alt of chemlcal: food processing and oil
1988. Year·t&lt;Hiate earnings per recovery Industries and applica-·
share are 70 cents, compared lions for waste water treatment.
with 62 cents for the same period
The Motion Control Group
a year ago.
manufactures and markets AC
The company reported that lhe and DC ·motors, servosystems
level Income on higher sales for and optical encoders used In
the second quarter was the result Industrial and otflce automation.
of expenses Incurred during the

r

)

lion of the road surface. James Prolfltt,
superintendent of the Meigs' State Highway
Department, reports thai crews will continue up
Route 124 to the Ravenswood Bridge, then down
State Route 338, before doing some work on Stale
Routes 7 and 124 West.

NASA gears up for next shuttle
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UPI) -With Discovery back on
the ground In apparently good
shape, NASA officials are In·
creasingly confident the post·
Challenger space agency can
meet an ambitious seven-flight
1989 launch schedule.
Engineers are gearing up to
haul the shuttle Atlantis to the
launch pad Thursday for bias loll
In just six weeks to carry a $530
million Venus probe into space.

"We've got a lot to do in the.
next year and ln the future."
Rear Adm. Richard Truly, as so·
elate administrator for space·flight, said .a fter Discovery's
la,nding Saturday at Edwards Air
Force Base, Calif. "But I think
this flight of the shuttle, again,
shows what a marvelous and
capable vehicle It Is. I'm extremely happy with where we
are."
Atlantis, already bolted to an

external fuel tank and a pair of
solid-fuel boosters, is scheduled
to blast off April 28 to ferry the
Magellan Venus radar mapper
into space in a flight marking the
first use of a space shuttle to
launch an interplaneta r y
spacecraft.
Magellan, mounted atop a $45
million "inertial upper stage"
booster for the flight to Venus,
was taken to a special "white
(~ee NASA, page A3)

ODOT spring cleanup beginning
MARIETTA - "Spring clean· said Bernard B. Hurst, P.E .,
ing" begins next week along director of ODOT. ·'Motorists
Ohio's highways In an effort by should exercise extreme caution
the Ohio Department of Trans· when approaching the crews
portatlon (ODOT) to keep our providing this vital service for all
Ohioans."
roadways clean.
Removing litter from high·
ODOT's annual Spring Litter
Cleanup and Tree Planting Pro- ways improves safety for high·
gram will clean more than 6,000 way workers and reduces the
miles of highways, while creat- chance of damage to mainteIng jobs for college students and nance equipment In spring. The
people temporarily unemployed, tree planting will reduce slope
erosion and provide cover for
for the next slx weeks.
"This program beautifies . wildlife.
Ohio's roadways while creating · · This program will be con·
employment for those In need," dueled In all 88 Ohio count!~" In

1

i

conjunction with the Ohio De·
par.tment of Natural Resources,
Civilian Conservation Corps,
Division ol Forestry, and the
Office of Litter Control.
Locally, litter will be picked up
In all nine counties In District 10,
Including Athens, Gallla, Hock·
lng, Meigs, Monr.oe, Morgan,
Noble, Vinton and Wash ington
Counties. Last year, employees
for the Spring Litter Cleanup In
District 10 ·cleared an estimated
242,340 pounds of litter cleaning
1,211 miles of two-lane and 245
mUes or four-lane roads .

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