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                  <text>Thursday, March 23. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-16-lhe Daily Sentinel

EPA reports long-temt decrease in air pollution_ _ _ __

.I

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Environmental Protection
Agency said average air pollution levels have decreased na:
.Iionwide during the past 10 years,
but ozone and carbon monoxide
remain stubborn urban
problems.
In its annual report on long·
term air pollution trends, the
EPA said Wednesday that between 1978 and 1987, signllican t
reductions have been ac hieved in
the six primary air pollutants
regulated by the government ozone, carbon monoxide, soot,
sulfur dioxide, nitrogen dioxide
and lead.
The most dramatic success
story involves lead levels, which
have fallen 88 percent during the

past decade. The reduction Is
largely attributed to the phaseout of leaded gasoline. High
levels of lead can permanently
damage the nervous system.
especially In children.
However, the agency said that
while Improvements have been
made, many cities still do not
meet federal air quality standards and that ozone smog, In
particular, appears to be
worsening.
Last year, the EPA cited 66
urban areas for exceeding federal ozone limits and preltrnlnary 1988 monitoring data show
another 30 cities may be added to
the list of ozone violators.
The agency listed 59 urban
areas In 1988 that violated the

carbon monoxide standard, but
the figure was six fewer than In
1987.
Don Clay, acting assistant
EPA administrator for air and
radiation, said ozone was an
especially difficult pollutant because It Is not emitted directly
from cars and factories. It Is
produced by the chemical reaction of volatile organic compounds and nitrogen oxide emissions when they are exposed to
sunlight.
"Obviously, we are disappointed In some areas, such as
ozone, but overall the data
clearly show things have gotten
better over the long term," Clay
sal d.
The report said 102 million

Americans lived In areas which decade, partly due to abnormally
exceeded at least one federal air hot weather.
In addltlon to lead and ozone,
quality standard In 198'7. Some 88
mUllan Americans were exposed the report gave this assessment
to excessive ozone, more people of the other four primary
·
'than for the other five primary pollutants:
-Avera!(e carbon monoxide
pollutants combined.
.
Ozone Is beneficial In the upper • levels decreased by 32 percent
atmosphere, where It screens out from 1978 to1987. Concentrations
harmful levels or ultra-violet fell by 6 percentfrom 191l6 to 1987.
radiation from the sun. · but Car e.xhaust Is the major source
low-lying ozone Impairs brea- of this colorless, odorless gas,
which can damage the brain and
thing and Irritates eyes.
The report said ozone levels heart by reducing oxygen levels
decreased by 16 percent l!etween in blood.
-Total suspended particles, or
1978 and 1987. but showed a 5
percent Increase from 1986 to soot, were reduced by 23 percent
1987. The worrisome trend con· between 1978 and 1987. The report
tlnued In 1988 and preliminary said soot levels rose by 3 percent
figures showed that 1988 ozone from 1986 to 1987, but It attributed
levels were the highest of the that change to an increased

number of forest !lres. Soot can
cause breathing problems and
respiratory llliless.
-Sulfur dioxide levels went
down by 35 percent between 1978
and 1987. There was a 3 percent
reductlon from 191l6 to 1987.
Sulfur dioxide Is mainly prO'.
duced by coal-burning power
plants. It can Irritate the upper
respiratory tract and cause lung
damage.
-Nitrogen dioxl(le levels de,
clineil by 12 percent from 1978 to
1987. No change was recorded
from 1986 to 1987. Both motor
vehicles and power plants are
sources of this yellowish brown
gas, which can cause bronchitis
and pneumonia.

Eastent asks to order pilots back
By United Press International
Lawyers for strikebound Eastern Airlines were headed back to
court . Thur~ay In an effort to
force the company's union pilots
to cross picket lines and return to
work.
But a lawyer for the Air Line
Pilots Association said Eastern
has little chance of · prevailing
before the 11th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals.
Arguments In the case were
scheduled Thursday In Tallahas-

see, Fla.

'
FffiST TIME OUT IN PUBLIC - Bawang,
the
San Francisco Zoo's eighteen year old goruta
cuddles her 11-day-old son durlngthelrllrst public

"They (the company) are
asking the court of appeals to
Issue an Injunction," said James
Linsey, an attorney for the pilots
union. "I ·think they are just
grasping at straws. They should
be reaching not to courts, they
should be reaching to employees
for negotiations to settle the
dispute. "
•
Eastern previously asked U.S.
Dis trlct Judge Edward Davis In
Miami to order the pilots back to
work, but Davis refused, saying
he did not have the authority to
Intervene In the labor dispute.
All but 200 of Eastern's 3,600
pilots have refused to cross the
picket lines set up March ~ by
striking machinists, In a show of
solidarity that has crippled the
Miami-based airline.
The company contends the
pilots' action represents an Illegal strike, but the union argues
that Its refusal to fly represents a
sympathy strike, as allowed
under their contract and the
Railway Labor Act.
In New York, U.S. Bankruptcy
Judge Burton Llfland was expected to review Eastern's request for an examiner In the
case .. Eastern flied for bankruptcy on March 9, two days after
Davis 'ruled against the
company.
Eastern said ' It sought the
examiner to review transactions
between It and parent company,
Texas Air Corp. of Houston, to

appearance Wednesday. The baby, wbo Is still
unnamed, was born at 7:55p.m., Saturday, March
11. (UPI)

Investigation brings more defendants
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UP! )
- Five suspected chiefs in
Colombia's notorious Medellin
drug cartel, an associate of the
Bahamian prime minister and 24
others are accU,sed In a federal
indictment of importing 44,000
pounds of cocaine into the United
States in the past 15 years.
Although few suspected drug
kingpins in South America have
reached ArTierican courts, As·

s istanl U.S. Attorney' Ernst
Mueller said he was optlmlslic
defendants named in the Indictment unsealed Wednesday even-·
t ua ily would be brought to trial.
"It took us six years to get
!Carlos) Lehder to the Middle
District of Florida. We think the
chances that they will ultimately
be prosecuted are good,"
Mueller said.
Mueller said eight of the.other
24 people indicted were In
custody.
The indic tment traces
Lehder's development Into a
primary overseas transporter
for the cartel. and outlines the
methods an d people. involved In
building the largest cbcaine
sm uggl ng operation In the United
States.
It said Lehder was aided by
Everette William Bannister of
Na ssau , an associate of BahamIan Prime Minister Lynden Pin·
dling , who is accused of accepting payoffs in exchange for
let ling drug . planes use the
islands .
Bannister allegedly shared the
money with unnamed Bahamian
offic ials, but NBC News reported
it was told by federal law
enforcement authorities that
Pindllng was among the unnamed of[!cials.
The authorities told NBC that
Pindling's nitme was dropped
from the first draft of the
indictment after a review by the
State and Justice departments.
Also dropped were the names of
fugitive financi er Robert Vesco
and Panamanian strongman
Gen. Manuel Noriega. the authorities told NBC.
Edward Ward, the key prosecution witness In the Lehder

trial, said Bannister took money
from him destined for Plndling.
Bannister's son. Gorman, testified his father took the payoffs
from Lehder and Ward and gave
them to PI ndling.
The 12-cout\t Indictment grew
from a fqllow-up Investigation of
Lehper, a Medellin chieftain who
is serving a term of life In prison

without parole. plus 135 years,
for smuggling 3.3 tons of cocaine
Into the United States In 1979 and
1980.
'
Lehder was captured In Colombia In 1987 and extradlcted to the
United States.
Wedneday's Indictment
charges his associates, Pablo
Emilio Escobar-Gavlrla, Jose

connie_·__
I~
CO/lPORATE DASH.
Dash to the office Catch a bite to eat. Run errands.
Does it ever stoo? Well. no. but you can do it
atl in· style and comfort. in this corporate dash .look
tram Connie Shoes. Absolutely dashing in COLOR.~~

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'

heritage house
THE SHOE PUCE

Gonza'lo Rodrlguez-Gacha,
Jorge Luis Ochoa-Vasquez, his
brother Fabio Ochoa-Vasquez
and Gonzalo Mejia, all of
Colombia.
All are belieVed to be leaders in
the violent and powerful cartel in
Medellin, Colombia, and many of
them are named In earlier U.S.
Indictments. Federal Investigators believe the cartel is responslble·for 80 percent of the cocaine
Imported Into the United States.
The defendants Include
Lehder's former wife, Yemel
Nacel of New York City, and
other alleged members of the
organization accused of helping
move the drugs through the
Bahamas, then distribute them
In the United States.
It alleges 205 separate Illegal
acts from 1974 to the present,
Including the Importation of
more than 44,000 pounds of
cocaine.
The Indictment also charges
that Escobar ordered the assassination of Colombian Justice
Minister Lara Bonilla In April
1983, and that the cartel leaders
fled afterward to Nicaragua.
Once there, the Indictment
said, they brought 1,400 kilograms of cocaine Into Nicaragua
and stored It at Los BrasUes Air
Force Base until It could be
shipped to the United States.
One of those cocaine flights,
pUoted by Barry Seal, resulted In
the ·seizure of 665 kUograms of
cocaine by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration.
Seal was gunned down In New
Orleans In 1984. The Indictment
alleges the cartel leaders ordered his murder after learning
he had cooperated with federal
drug agents to seize that flight.
The Indictment charges Es·
cobar, Rodrlguez-Gacha, the
Ochoas, Mejia and American
citizen Jack Carlton Reed with
operating a continuing criminal
enterprise. Known popularly as
"the kingpin statute," that
charge carries a penalty of life
Imprisonment.
Reed, one of Lehder's pilots,
was tried with Lehder and
convicted of drug charges.

dispel criticism of those deals
leveled by the unions.
But the temporary chairman of
the creditors committee in East.
e·r n·s bankruptcy case said the
group will ask Llfland to delay ·a
decision on the Issue by a bout 10
days, to give the group time to
evaluate the proposal.
The committee was named
Wednesday In New York by U.S.
Bankruptcy Trustee Harry
Jones. Among the creditors
named to the committee were the

Air Line Pilots Association, the
International Association of
MachiniSts, Airbus Industries,
General Electric Co. , Boeing Co.,
American Telephone and Tele·
graph Co., United States Trust
Co. of New York and Rolls-Royce
Credit Corp.
.
Jones left the creditors' meetIng shortly after It began. ''I gave
them a little pep talk, wished
them well," he said. "They have
a long, arduous task ahead of
them."

Lottery

St. John's
eliminates
Ohio State

Pirk3
Pick4

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
near tO. Saturday, sunny, high
In mid 60s.

6300

Page 3

•
Val.39, No.223
Copyrighted 1989

2 Sections, 14 Pages 25 Cents

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, March 24, 1989

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

•

Chemists discover fusion reaction
SALT LAKE CITY (UP!) Two chemists said they overcame their own skepticism and
developed an improbable method of sustained nucl ear fusion
in which a cubic foot of ordinary
sea water could safely generate
as much energy as 10 tons of coal.
"It had a one-i,n-a-blllion
chance of working , although it
made perfectly good scientific
sense," said Stanley Pons, chairman of the University of Utah
chemistry .department, who
made the diilcovery with Martin
Fleischmann. electrochemistry

And Fleischmann sa id, "The
professor at England's Universtakes
were so high , we decided
sity of Southampton.
While Fleischmann and Pons we had to try it," with $100.000of
focused the table-lop experi- their own money and working In
a chemistry laboratory at the
mentsonchemic.al reaction, U.S.
University of Utah. "We thought
physicists, financed with more
we wouldn'·t be able to ralse any
than $500 million In federal
grants this year alone, were
money since the experimen t was
so farfetched."
looking at fusion furnaces and
laser devices to power their ·
Although the applications of
experiments.
I his form of nuclear fusion were
not immediately evident, the
"Without our particular back·
grounds," Pons said, "you
scientists said the energy availawouldn't think of the combinable in one cubic foot of sea water
is equivalent to 10 tons of coal.
tion of circumstances required to
get this to work."
In commercial nuclear fission

reactors, large radioactiv e
atoms are sp lit apart, creating
smaller atoms, energy a nd"longllved nuclear waste. Fusion
reactors, still in experimental
stages, would combine tiny
atoms to produce energy and
only a minimum of radioactive
refuse.
Conventional nucl ea r fusion
research requires temperatures
of millions of degrees , similar to
temperatures found In the sun's
interior, to create a reaction.
Fleischmann and Pons said
they concentrate deuterium

from sea water to make "heavy
water" and place it in a vessel
containing platinum and palladium electrodes and use an
electrical charge. The palladium
metal electrode separates and
absorbs the heavy water's hydrogen Ions, which carry an extra
neutron. ·
The hydrogen atoms then join
together, or fuse, creating a
helium atom and an extra proton
or produce tritium, a radioactive
form of hydrogen with two extra
neutrons, and a proton - plus

•

heat energy in both cases.
"The fuel is heavy water,
driven by electric force into
enormo usly compact concentra·
lions in the holes inside th is metal
(palladium), " thus 11eating the
water, University of Utah President Chase Peterson said.
"You boil water. and when you
boil water you make steam. and '
when you make steam you run a
turbine, and if you run a turbine

you can create electricity. So this
has the potenHal to create
electricity," Peterson said.

Pilgrims mark Good Friday
today in Jerusalem's Old City

'88 RANGER 4X4 XLT TRIM
Stock I 8894
I 4Q01

14000

WAS
513,348

•

3 AT THIS Pi/CEI

SALE PRICE

$11 900

OR

$232

24

2DOORLX
I 81124

Lee Lee loves music, but started
out at OSU to be hospital dietitian
By NANCY VOACIIAM
Sentinel News Staff
Anyone who knows Racine's
Lee Lee, knows. that Lee Lee
loves music. But what they
probably don 't know Is that Lee
started out' at Ohio State University with plans to be hospital
dietitian.
"The only music I had~~ Ohio
State w~s as assistant accompa·
nist for the Ohio State Chorus and
as accompanist for music school
vocal students," she laughs .
Despite her obvious musical

SALE PRICE

$6950

row, Sharon Stewart, Debbie Carder, Christi
Lynch, JennHer Sheets, Gerri Hockman, Cathy
Baker, MarUyn Wilcox, and Dorothy Davis. Third
row, Denver Rice, Mac Stewart, Crenson Pratt,
Earl McKinley, Jim Sheets, Mike Stewart, Dez
Jeffers, and Glen Evans. Fourth row, Ron Ash,
and AI Hartson.

Personality Profile

'88 FORD FESTIVA

.tock

CANTATA - "The Fourth Cross" will be
presented by the cholrorthe Middleport Church of
Christ at the Easier sunrise service at 6 a.m. and
again on Monday at 7:30 p.m .. The public Is
Invited to attend. Pictured left to right, front row,
Mary Ash, Krls Ash, Trudy WIUiams, Donna
Hartson, Heldt Caruthers, Bea Stewart. Second

OR
JUST

'88 MERCURY TRACER

talents, she continued for a year
at Ohio State with her goal to be a
dietitian. Now, as she looks back,
she feels she may have been
Influenced by a brother. who is an
engine~r. and a cousin, who Is a
doctor, who tried to steer her
towards the scie'nce or medical
fields.
Fortunately for Lee, she had
what it took to buck the systemso to speak- and her brother and
cousin.
''I was active in music for as
long as I could remember. I had
always sung In music groups,

-Local news briefs~

4DOOR
Stock 1.8633

Annual Easter Egg hunt Sunday
The annual Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club's annual
Easter egg hunt will be held Sunday at the Hartinger Park In
Middleport at 2 p.m. In additional to the traditional gold and
silver eggs which carry cash prizes, others will have
merchandise certificates Inside. Dr. Nick Robinson Is chairman
of this year's hunt and advises that there is no age limit for
participation .

SAlE PRICE

$8555

OR

$161 33

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PER MONTH

AU. PAYIEHTS QUOTED II THIS AD ARE BASED ON

was a piano accompanist, played
saxophone in band and drum s (a
whole set of drums -which was
unusual for a female) in orchestra at Mt. Gilead where I grew
up, " she recalls.
So finally, upon recommendation of her piano teacher, she
. made a decision to transferr to
Wittenberg University where she
spent five years majoring in
music and mlnorlngln English.
She sang in the university's
acapella choir, played sax In the
band and orchestra "and loved it .
I finally decided that music was
definitely my future career," she
says.
Lee graduated from Wit ten·
berg with a bachelor's degree In
music education and gave her
senior recital on the organ for
graduation.
She taught at MI. Gilead and
Athens City Schools before com·
Continued on page 10

VehiCles damaged by object
The interiors of two vehicles parked on the Butternut and
Second St. lot In Pomeroy Thursday afternoon were extensively
damaged when repeatedly struck by a heavy object.
According to Pomeroy pplice, a call was recelvec,l at village
hall at 3:02p.m. that a man had been seen Inside a vehicle on the
Jot hitting .the Interior with a hammer. 'A description of the
subject was given to the police who was reported later to have
been seen leaving the area on foot carrying a hammer. The 1985
Chevrolet damaged at that time was owned by Ralph Calvert,
Pomeroy Pike, Pomeroy.
At 6: 54 p.m. Llnda Warner reported that her vehicle, a·1989
Pontiac. also parked · on the lot during the day had been
damaged Inside.
The Incident remains under Investigation and pollee report
that there is a suspect.
Continued on page 10

JERUSALEM (UP!)
Hundreds of pilgrims crowded
along the narrow alleyways of
the walled Old City on Good
Friday, retracing the path Jesus
took to his crucl!ixion along the
Via Dolorosa.
Soldiers armed with lear gas
grenades and guns stood watch
along the stone path, which
according to religious tradition .
Jesus was forced to walk to his
execution wearing a crown of
thorns and carrying a large
wooden cross over his shoulder.
"It's a spiritual experience,"
said Margaret Eberlein, 80, of
Erie, Pa. "It's be'e n my one wish
... taking the road that our Lord
took and feeling how he felt."
Throughout the morning of
Good Friday, small groups of
pilgrims crowded along the Via
Dolorosa, or the Path of Sorrows,
stopping for prayer at each of the
H stations of the cross where
,Jesus Is said to have stumbled or
received comfort while carrying
the cross.
Franciscan brothers, who each
Friday retrace the route Christians believe Jesus took from his
trial to his crucifixion, led the
main procession at midmornlng.
Amid hymns In Arable telling
of .Jesus's walk, dozens of Christian Pales tin tans from Jerusalem led another portlon of the
procession, one man carrying a
thin wooden cross before him
while several men carried an
8-fool -hlgh wood cross between
them - a replica of those uS'ed by
the Romans In their crucifixions.

Spidennan to
visit Pomeroy
The Amazing Splderman Is ·
coming to Pomeroy on April 29 ,
from 10: 30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., .at
the Kroger store on East Main
Street. Spiderman's appearance
is part of a 1989 Ohio Tour,
sponsored by the League Against
Child Abuse and the Huntington
Banks .
During his visit to Kroger,
Spiderman will use his unique
presentation style to teach children about emotional abuse.
Carol J. Edwards of the Community Assault Prevention Services Agency will be on hand to
answer questions about the Child
Continued on page 10

•

..'

I

along the procession Friday, far
fewer than the thousands who
crowded the Via Dolorosa in
years before. Despite the smaller
turnout, attributed mostly to the
15-month-old Palestinian uprisIng, no trouble er upted during the
procession and prayers at the
stations.
In · the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, pilgrims fell to their
knees before the stone of unction,
a slab of marble where tradition
holds that Jes us's body was
annolted with oils before buriaL
They pra yed in silence, touching
the stone and kissing it.
While pilgrims made their way
along the Via Dolorosa and
onlookers watched. Palestinians
sold beads, religious pic I ures and
other paraphernalia.
"Today you find them (tour·
lsts). Tomorrow you find it
empty and qui et ," said Mohammed, one store ow ner along
the Via Dolorosn . "Bu sin ess was
ver y bad last year and this year
the same. Wehopenextyearwill
be better in making peace."

Pomeroy to host
regional meeting
'

The Ohio Association of HistorIcal Societies and Museums will
hold their Region 8 annual
meeting at the Meigs County
Museum on Saturday. April 15.
The Ohio Association of Historical Societies and Museums is a
network of hi storical organizations which ex ist s to encourage
an appreciation for and an
understanding of Ohio 's heritage
by assisting in efforts lo collect.
preserve and Interpret local
history.
Mrs. Margaret Parker, president of the Meigs County Pioneer
·and Historical Society, Is currently serving as .an alternate
Region 8 state representative,
and with Mary Anne Peters,
another Region 8 representative,
has planned the regional
meeting.
The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society will serve as
host to the 12 counties represented In the region. For the local
society's participation In the
· program, a presentation on
"Yesteryear" will be given . by
Mrs. Susan Oliver, director of the

Meigs Co unty Ret ired Senior
Volunteer Program.
Yesteryear is a program
where fifth grade st udents are
brought to the museum and in
hands-on demonstrations. are
tau ght crafts an d skills from
by-gone days by members of
RSVP . The unique program has
won state and nat iona l rocogni·
lion and an honora ble mention in

the OAHSM award s program last
fall. Th e offic ers and trustees of
the Meigs County Historical
Society bel ieve "Yes teryear" to
be one of the mos t beneficial
services and educatio na l program It offers. as it gives the
society and museum a n opportunity to serve the whole coun ty.
A self-guided tour of local
churches will be offered follow Ing the close of aclivites a1 the
museum.
Reser vat ions for the meet lng
are $8 and mu s t be received by
April 7. For further information.
visit the mu seum during regular
hours , Tuesday through Sa t ur day, 1 to 4: 30 p.m., or telephone
during the same hours, 992-3810.

Non-profit corporation to be fonned
for Pomeroy's sesquicentennial
A non-profit corporatioh to
make plans for the upcoming
celebrations of Pomeroy's sesquicentennial (150th) anntver·
sarles as an Incorporated village
and as Meigs County seat, will be
· formed In the very near future.
Pomeroy resident and business·
woman, Mary Powell, Is spearheading a 'campalgn to get plans
for the joint celebrations "dn the

road."

LEE LEE

The procession began at the
first station of the cross, the site
of the Roman fortress where
Christians believe Pilate con·
demned Jesus to death . It culm!·
naled at the Church of the Holy
Sepulchre, considered by CatholIcs and most Christians to be the
site of JesuS's crucifixion, burial
and resurrection.
. ''ThIs Is something that Is very
close to your heart," said Franciscan Father Raymond Camilleri, shortly after leaving the
Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
"At this time of year you can
feel it much more. There is a ·
religious fervor," Camilleri said.
Holy Week starts with Palm
Sunday when Christians believe
Jesus entered the Old City and
culminates' with Easter Sunday,
the resurrection.
'orthodox Christians, who In·
elude the Greek, Armenian,
Coptic, Ethiopian, Russian and
Syrian churches, celebrate
Easter April 30.
Camilleri estimated more than
1,500 pilgrims made their way

Powell met Wednesday with
the Meigs County Commissioners who offered suggestions as to
forming the non-profit corporation which Is a necessary first
step before official planning can

begin. Powell had earlier met
with Pomeroy VIllage Council
which Is also In full support of the
sesquicentennial celebrations.
Pomeroy was Incorporated as
a village In 1840 and as the county
seat In 1841. Plans at this point
are to plan several different
activities to commemerate the
two separate events, over a six to
12 month period during 1990-91.
Formation of the non-profit
corporation Is necessary to handle all funding jointly, through
the village and the county,
Powell explained. A iarge group
of In teres ted people - 25 to 30
Individuals - will be needed at
...

I

•

1'71

first, which will later be trimmed
down to a number of sub·
committees to handle specific
projects .
Powell said she has been in
contact with other · counties
which have underta ken similar
celebrations, to gain insight as to
the direction Pomeroy and Meigs
County should take in their
celebrations.
The Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce has agreed to act as
"sort of an umbrella agency'' for
the joint-project, she added.
After reviewing information
which Powell had just received
Continued on page 10

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Comm~ntary _
The Daily Sentinel
111 Ceurt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~rh

t!:m~

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

qjv
ROBERT L. WINGET!'
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Coatroller
Publisher
CHARLENE HOEFUCH, Gelleral M.anaser
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publish·
ers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be stped with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub-

t•

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lished. Letters should be In good taste, addresslnc Issues, not personall-

Page-2-The Daily Sen1inel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, March 24, 1989

Letters to the editor
Appreciates effort
'·Dear Editor:

: We would like to take this time
to thank everyone for their help
during the night of our !Ire.
Especially, to Jane Bowles lor
~ reporting it. We dldn'teven know
our garage was on fire. She
' passed by our home and stopped
·at a neighbors and reported it.
ThankS to the W!lkesvllie and
Salem Center fire departments.
To ail our friends and neighbors
and fam!ly who came to help or
just came for moral support. We
;appreciate your love and
•kindness.
: It's a very scary thing seeing
·something you own burning and
you can'tdo It wlthouthelp. Help,

~ Today
•

from others to get your things
out. Help, to put the fire out.
Help, just getthlc over tile shock
of seeing everything you've
worked so hard for go up In
smoke.
Once again It I have lett anyone
out on names or so forth, It's
because It Is still so hard to
remember we w.e re ail so upset.
Just to wllomever stopped and
spoke a kind word or helped fllht
the fire. A many thankS to you all
for ail you done. Thanu to God
for not leltlni!: It be much worse
tha·ll It could have been.
Mary Lou and Roger Wells
Rt. 1, Box 296
Ewlngton, Ohio 45686

in history
By United Preulnternatloul

•

Today Is Friday, March 24, the 83rd day of 1889 with 282 to follow.
• This Is Good Friday.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
' The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aries. They Include
· financier Andrew Mellon In 1855, silent !lim actor Fatty Arbuckle In
1887, pioneer film animator Ub Jwerks, whose artistry helped Walt
Disney to realize his vision, In 1901, Republican presidential
candidate Thpmas Dewey In 1902, poet Lawrence FerUn~~:hettl in 1919
· (age 70), actors Norman Fell In 1925 (age 64) and Steve McQueen In
1930, and dress designer Bob Mackie In 1940 (age 49) .
On this date in history:
In 1934, the United States granted tile Philippine Islands
independence, effective Juty 4, 1946. .
In 1965, white civil rights worker VIola Lluzzo of Detroit was shot
and killed on a road near Selma, Ala.
In 1976, Argentine President Isabel Peron, widow of strOIIflllan
ruler Juan Peron, was arrested In a military coup.

____..... _____
,

Bush urged to convert
WASHINGTON - Last year,
when George Bush only dreamed
of being president, he suggested
converting surplus military
bases Into federal prisons. Now
that Bush's dream has come
true, the federal prison system Is
like a pinch bringing him back to
reality.
It Is one of many pinches that
will make Bush black and blue as
he continues to settle Into office.
The budget deficit, the drug war,
education and other policy prob1
!ems are ali easier to solve In the"
reverie of campaign promises.
Converting military bases to
prisons Is one promise that Bush
should keep, If the job can be

done for the same amount or less
than It would cost to buUd new
facilities. It would save jobs and
businesses in cities that are
dependent on bases targeted for
the scrap heap. And a good place
to start would be using the bases
as federal detention centers.
Federal courts are located In
260 cities. The accused drug
dealers, forgers, racketeers, tax
dodgers and kidnappers who
can't make ball must be kept In
jails that are close to the courts.
In big cities, the federal govern·
ment operates its own detention
centers, bUt In smaller cities and
rural areas, federal prisoners
are kept In local jails and the

By United Press International
exhibited tonight. We hung In
St. .John's, making the second· thPre and chipped away and,
half comebacks a regularity, with a few breaks. wpre able to
reached the semifinals of the come out on top."
National Invitation Tournament
Billy Singleton came off the
Thursday night with what Coach bench to score 10 points, includ·
Lou Carnesecca called "the best ing 4 In overtime, to help put the
second half we've played all Redmen Into the semifinals.
year."
Jayson Williams, who fouled out
Trailing 44-33 at halftime, St. late in regulation. scored 21
John's came back to nip Ohio points, whl)e Jason Buchanan
State 83-80 in overtime and earn a add 18 .PDints and Matt Brust 14.
berth In the semifinals at Madi·
"Even for this coach, who has
son Square Garden, a second been through 1,200 games,
home for the Redmen.
maybe more, this one goes right
St. John's, 18-13 and making its up there with some of the great
25th NIT appearance, advanced ones," Carnesecca said.
into Monday night's semifinal
Singleton broke a 76-76 tie with
against Alabama-Birmingham.
a basket with 2:55 remaining in
The Redmen trailed in the overtime, then hit a pair of
second half in ali three of theit' crucial free throws with 27
NIT games, but rallied each seconds to play to put St. John's
up 82-78.
time.
"I don't know where t o start,"
"Jason Buchanan played a
Carnesecca said. "But I guess l great, great game," Carnesecca
can start with great determlna· said, "and a kid like Billy
tion and gu1s that . thes&lt;' kids . Singleton came In off the bench

basesAnderson and VanAtta

taxpayers foot the bill.
The National Drug Polley
Board compiled a report on the
shortcomings of federal pre-trial
detention facilities and then kept
that report under wraps. It
predicts that by 1992, the U.s.
Marshals Service will have to
worry about finding beds for
15,306 people In custody dally.
And without an ambitious con·
struction plan, the federal goverment will fall approximately
8,626 beds short.
By 1992, an estimated 72 cities
wtll be In what the U.S. Marshals
Service calls "emergency sta·
tus." That means there Is no jail
soace available .In those cities

I'M Af~I91AAVE
SOME 1/I~SSING NEWS,
Ml(l. 6U$~. F15TOf Al.t.,

YOUR VEI-'1'-lE lc;N'T M

'Sg ?ORSCHE AS YOLI

WERe l.EP TO ~ELifVE .. ,

within one hour of a federal
courthouse.
So what if a federal prisoner
doesn't have the equivalent of a
room at the Ritz within walking
distance of the courthouse?
Judges, and the American Civil
Liberties Union, do not look
kindly on anything that gets In
the way of due process Including being too far away
from one's lawyer and the judge,
not to mention having to sleep on
the floor because the detention
center runs out of beds.
Several states have laws that
prohibit them from overcrowdIng their jails. Iflocal pollee don't
have room for their own prisoners, they are not likely to
welcome an influx of federal
prisoners. "In this environment,
It is very difficult for the
Marshals Service to find local
officials who are receptive to
housing federal detainees," the
confienttal report warned. In
other words, when law enforcement officials from the lowest to
the highest levels promise to
crack down on crime, It's every
warden for himself In the fight
for jail space.
On the average, It costs the
Marshals Service $80 a day to
rent space for Its prisoners In city
jails. The cost of maintaining a
prisoner In a detention center
owneil by the federal government Is $50 a day. It is clearly .
cheaper to own than to r~;nt.
But Bush has not shown a ·
willingness to budget the up-front .
costs of new detention facilities.
In spite of his tough-on-crime :
rhetoric, his budget for the ·
Bureau of Prisons Is no more :
ambitious than the budget or his .
predecessor.

RED MEN SCORE- St. John's Robert Werdman Ul) shoots lor
two as Ohio State's Terry White tries lo block the shot in the first
half of Thursday night's NIT game in Columbus. The Redmen beat
the Buckeyes 83-80. (UP I)
·

Scoreboard ...
:'Iii""

't' nrk (r\.1.) tor pllrher l'hark':.
HuW.on: tr.ull.'d lnlif&gt;l~r Luis Sala ~u Ill

Exhihition

San

Exhl hitkon Stan din,;-.
,\I'IIEitU' \S LE\fjl ' t :
"

IG I, :i

PHILADELPHIA (NEA) - A
recent meeting of the Demo·
cratic Leadership Conference,
which brought together top party
leaders, showed how difficult It
may be for Democrats to unite
behind a single strategy for
winnln the White House In 1992.
There was general agreement
that Democrats needed to recapture the support of the working
and middle class, bu I there
seemed little agreement among
DLC me.m bers about whether the
party needs a significant shift In
emphasis to bring tbls about.
As DLC chairman Sen. ·sam
Nunn of Georgia put It: "Democratic support is hemorrhaging
In the heart of the electorate. We
are losing the working and
middle-class Americans who
used to be the mainstay of our
party's governing coalition."
Michigan Gov. Jim Blanchard
said the party's problem Is "that
we no longer control the eco·
nomic agenda as we did tor
decades. As a national party we
have not been able to convince
the middle class that we care
enough about them."
While there was general agree·

ment that the road to victory
begins with a new appeal to the
middle class, Jesse Jackson had
strongly disagreed.
He told the gathering that the
party has had approximately the
correct message but the wrong
messenger. "People vote .for a
president based on their perception of him as a natlonall~ader, "
he said. "We have fallen short In
.gfvlng people the choice of
someone with a vision that all can
believe ln."
Jackson then chided the gathering over the party's difficulties
In handling the racial issue.
Pointing out that the GOP often
campaigns on America's "covert
national racial Insecurity,"
Jackson said, "In a real sense,
we have been shaky on that Issue,
the No. 1 moral Issue In presidential campaigns." Jackson contended that if the party had done
a better job of reaching minorities last November, Michael
Dukakis could have won.
When the session broke up,
there were some very tense
exchanges between Jackson and
Sen. Chuck Robb of Virginia.
To one reporter, Robb said that

future_~_agm
_____
an.

Jackson's emphasis on the gap
between the poor and the middle
class was essentially divisive.
"The public perception that we .
are dividing the county ... (by)
bringing together all who have a
greater need and pitting them
against those who are currently
successful Is not conductive to
electoral success." ·
Jackson responped: "We have
to decide whlchs side of history
we are on .... If we are all things
to all people, we become rather
!11-deflned, indecisive - kind of
like warm spit."
By some tabulations, the rules
change that outlaws winner·
take-all primaries almo~t guarantees Jackson 40 percent of the
convention delegates In 1992.
There was considerable sentiment at this meeting to reverse
these changes.
-The upcoming Chicago mayoral election demonstrates how
divided the Democratic Party
remains.
·
Jesse Jackson support Chica·
go's black acting Mayor Eugene
Sawyer in the recent primary
against Richard M. Daley, son of
the late mayor. When Daley won,

Jackson Immediately announced
he was supporting black Demo- ;
cratic Alderman Timothy ;
Evans, who Is running as an ·
Independent.
This upset many Democrats. ·
Robb said to one reporter that the
action "is going to be a problem .
possibly for Jesse Jackson In :
1992." An obviously displeased ·
Jackson was stahillll~ less than ;
three feet from Robb•t·tAe time. ·
Ron Brown, · tl\e Democratic ·
National Committee's new cbalr· .
man, had originally ~aid t.hat he ·
was going to Chicago. to cam-paign for P.al.e y., He,.lfla'nned to
attend a March 30·' 1un!tydlnner" ·
to be sponsored by the hlinols .
Democratic Party. At the Demo· :
cratlc Leadership Conference, :
he admitted he was rethinking.
that pledge. ''My schedule Is still
undecided," Brown said. Since ·
that time, however, he has ·
announced plans to campaign for ,
Daley.
Evans' su,pporters :- who .
Include the most powerful black,
politicians in Chicago - have
spoken in very stark, racially:
charged language about the;
possibility of Brown, who Is also•
black, campaigning for Daley. ;

Speaker Wright may be silenced Joseph-5pea&lt;
It's been 78 years since a
tune to have the ethics commit·
speaker of the house was detee complete Its probe directly on
throned by the rank and file, but · the heels of the John Tower
affair. Republicans were humll·
Capitol Hill cloakrooms and
lated by the Democrats' rejeccubbyholes area buzz with speculation that a similar fate might be
tion of President Bush's first
awaiting Jim Wright, D-Texas.
choice for defense secretary, and
He Is superbly deserving of the many vowed revenge .
honor.
This was the defense Wright
The House Ethics Committee offered In a mailing to his ·
has completed a nine-month constit11ents last month. His
Investigation that centered on critics, Wright wrote, were politihalf a dozen allegations a miscon- cal foes who were engaged In "a
duct against the speaker. Among game of Sack-the-Quarterback.
them were charges that Wright ... If they can't Injure you and
and his staff promoted bulk sales knock you out of the game, which
of his book, "Reflections of a Is their first choice- then they'll
Private Man," In order to clr· try at least to batter you around
cumvent limits on outside in- enough to spoil your
come; that he received free use concentration."
of a Fort Worth condominium
The speaker's supporters back
owned by the family of a business In Tarrant County might buy that
associate; that he twisted the homey approach. But more than
arms of federal bankl113 regula· a few Capitol Hill Democrats tors on behalf of savings and loan fed up with Wright's high-handed
owners in Texas.
leadership style, offended by his
It is Wright's singular mlsfor- hotheaded approach to politics,

LI~E

FIRESIDE INN

Come Dance to the Solid Gold Hits of the
50's and 60'sll
SERVING FINE FOOD ,AND SPIRITS

"Come Join The Fun"
SAIIDIILL lOAD
FIRESIDE INN · POINT
PIIASIIIT, WY.

.ft.

That Isn't likely to happen. It
will be much more satisfying fo r
the Republicans and, they hope,
more politically rewarding, to
cook him up slowly. Edward J.
Roillns, executive director of the
House Republican campaign
committee, has already vowed to
make Wright his "No. 1 target"
In 1990, and the longer he can
keep the heat on the speaker the

better. "Wright projects an im- :
age that benefits Republicans,"
concurs Sen. Trent Lott, R.· '
Miss., a former House Minority
Whip . .
A surpislng number of Demo- :
crats apparently agree. There is ·
a feeling among many that .
Wright projects the smarmy •
demeanor of a ward heeler
promising pothole repairs in
return for votes. "He is a snake
oil salesman," said one respected Democratic legislator.
"Wright Is yesterday," said a
lobbyist with extensive Democratic connections.

(;EASTER sAlE~
Hurry! Sale Ende Saturday
PICK YOUR OWN DISCOUNT

ENTERTAINMENT!

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHTS
MARCH 24th and 25th

and embarrassed by his casual
regard for ethical standards are hoping the Republicans will
boll him quickly and be done with

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K !ID""'-' { 'it :0

Democrats debate political

Thursday night, St. Louis nipped
New Mexico 66-65.
At Albuquerque. N.M .. Charles
Newbern• stole the ball a nd
Roland Gray hit a layup with 21
seconds left to help St. Louis
successfully complete a rally
from a 20-point deficit.
Gray finished with 34 polnls, 21
In the second half, as the
Billikins, 26-7, erased a 43-23
halftime deficit. S1. Louis. which
won the NIT 31 years ago. wi II
face Michigan Stale In Monday _
night's semifinals.

when we iostourbigguyandheld
the fort. And Matty !Brust), our
only senior. really controlled II."
Ohio State, 19·15, led by 11
points at halflime and by 13 early
in the second half.
But with Williams, Buchanan
and Robert Werdan n ali with four
fouls, the Redmen chipped away
and tied the score 56-56. From
that point, neither team led by
more than 4 points.
Ohio State had shot 65 percent
from the floor In the first half, but
only 37 percent In the second half.
"\'ou have logive them credit,
but we didn't pass the ball very
well the second half, " Ohio State
Coach Gary Williams said.
"We're not a very confid ent
team. A couple times In the
second hail we had people open
and couldn't release the pass."
Perry Carter led Ohio State
with 15 points. while Grady
Mateen had 14, Jerry Francis 13,
and J amaai Brown 11.
·
In the other quarterfinal game

St. Louis used a 36·15 run to
take a 59-58 lead on a basket by
Monroe Douglass with five min·
utes left. The teams traded
baskets before New Mexico's
Luc Longley gave the Lobos a
65-64 lead with one minute left .
Gray missed a shot wiih 21
seconds left. but Newberry
stole the ball from New Mexico
and passed it to Gray, who laid
It in for 66·65 St. Louis lead.

GAHS comes back
to beat Meigs 8-6

buts. Credit wUI be given carrier each

No subscriptions by malt permitted In
areas where home carrier servl~ lA
avallable.

llloolt -rtptt.ftl
-·llolp C..oiy

13 Weekl .................................. $19.24

KWeekl .................................. $37.96
52 Weekl .................................. $74.36
Oohldollelp CoaiiiJ

13 Weeki ................. ., ............... ~.IMJ

- ·---~~

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3,

•

Redmen oust Bucks in overtime, 83-80

Bush projects
infonnal style ·
By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - President Bush has added a new dimension to
the word ''Im promptu." ·
The president's style of engagement is totally different from that of
his predecessor, Ronald Reagan , who was scripted and scenarloed
from the moment he walked Into the Oval Office until the moment he
left .
Of course when he would cut off his remarks to a gathering, point to
his watch and then mockingly complain that his staff always told him
what to do next, Reagan was still maintaining his "Mr. Nice Guy"
Image.
Reagan was indeed above the fray, so much so that he would
convince the crowd that he knew nothing about things going on In the
White House that circumvented the law, particularly the ban on
clandestine arms to the Nicaraguan rebels.
He would often wear a puzzled expression, an Innocent abroad. The
Imperial trappings and a highly protected staff, no matter who the
aides were, gave him a special detached aura.
He had luck and likability and both saved him a lot of grief.
But more is expected of Bush because of his directness. He
apparently does not care to be totally protected by his aides and Is
willing to confront problems head on. Some shielding does go on,
naturally, but nowhere near the protectiveness exerted in the Reagan
days.
Unlike many presidents, who went Into hiding and ducked the P\'"SS
In crisis situations, Bush did submit to questionln~ when his
nomination of former Sen. John Tower to be defense secretary was
going down the drain.
·
Bush likes to make his own decisions, too. He obviously did not want
the perception to prevail that his longtime friend and political
mentor, Secretary of State James Baker, was calllngtheshots behind
the scenes.
·
The president will tell White House chief of staff John Sununu,
former governor of New Hampshire, what he wants to do, but Bush
can take back talk and tolerates Sununu telling him, in effect, "But if
you do that this is going to happen."
Bush Is not one to sit around in any office for long. He likes to move
around and he has probably explored more offices and rooms In the
White house, down to the nooks and cranles, than any predecessor
with the exception of Lyndon Johnson, who went around turning off
the lights.
·
S"o it was not unusual when White House press secretary Marlin
Fitzwater was talking In his office to a reporter and an aide ran in to
say that Bush was In the press room. There, he found the president
chattJng with reporters. He was accompanied by his wife, llarbara,
and their English springer spa nil' I, Millie, who was due to deliver, and
later did deliver a litter of six puppies.
So Bush wants to emphasize the fact he is the boss. He also wants to
promote the perceptJon that he is approachable, not too far above the
crowd, down to earth, and concerned.
Reagan pulled out a cue card to say 'hello,' - not because he was
such a formal man bu 1because his Image makers preferred him to be
remote. Bush can speak without notes, and say what he wants to say.
He has avoided prime time news conferences, bu I he has had
several impromptu sessions with the press that shows he Is on top of
the news. At the same time, he has laid down rules for reportorial
behavior . But they still shout at him as he walks to a helicopter.
So Bush is creating a more easygoing style. He has cut out a lot of
the formality and has taken on some of the Johnsonlan aura, restless
and enjoying the spotlight.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

26 Weekl .................................. $&amp;0.30
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Srn:t:t·r
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Kan"~a~&gt; 1'11 ,\ at l.n .. o'ul~t~ ' l• "' · II : O:t p.m .

Golf scramble
setApril2
Entries are now being accepted for 1he first annual GSC
four -player scramble golf tour·
nament which wil l be played
Sunday, April 2, at th e Oxbow
Golf and Country Club near
Belpre.
Entry fee fo r the event Is $100
per team. Tournament ru les
state that each team mu st have a
combined handicap of at least 40,
and only two players may have a
handicap ol less than 10.
For more Information, call
614-423-6771, or write, Ted Daugh·
erty at Oxbow Golf and Country
Ciub,i-'.0. Box 505. Belpre, Ohio,
45714.
Proceeds will benefit th e Glen·
ville State College golf team.

Plan softball tourney
A men's softball tournament
for eight teams will be held April
8-9 in Reedsville. The registration fee is $70 and two softballs.
Fl !teen tee shirts wlli be awarded
for first place; 15 hats for second
place and a sponsor trophy for
third place. For informal ion, call
378-6406.

\

three singles, a fielder 's choice,
By DI\VE Hi\RRIS
two wai ks and three Blue Devil
OVP Correspondent
ROCK SPRINGS - Kelly errors.
Hocker led off the forth with a
Hocker ripped a two out two run
trlpie,and later scored on a Brett base hit. After Saxon was hit by a
pitch, Skidmore singled to load
Saxon single in the top of the fifth
thf'· ·bases. Donnie Haynes then
inning to give the Gallia
tied the game up with a bases·
Academy Blue Devils a come
from behind 8-6 victory over the clearing triple into right -center
field.
Meigs Marauders Thursday
The Marauders regained the
h ight.
in thpir haH of the inning as
lead
The game was called after fi\·e
Terry
Fields walked. Matt Baker
innings becau~ of darkness.
singled
and Kevin Oiler doubled
Clint Davis led off the inning
to score FielcJs to set the stage for
reaching first on a n errQr off of
the Blue Devil firew orks in the
losing pitcher Chris Stewart.
.
fifth.
Stewart then struck out the next
two batters before catcher Todd
Casey drew a walk a, nd Hocker
Kelly Hocker went 3 for 4 to
ripped a drive In the alley scoring
lead the winners, with two
Davis and Casey with the tying
singles and a triple. Skidmore
and go-a head ru ns.· Saxon thPn chipped in with two singles, and
singled to dr ive in HockC'r wilh
Haynes hit a triple. Saxon and
the insurance run.
Casey each singled.
The Blue Devils jumped out to
Wes Young led the Marauders
a 2·0 lead in the first inning as
with a double a nd a single, while
Saxon walked with two outs and
Matt Baker had two singles.
Rob Skidmore si ngled. Rolh
Oiler had a double, and Mattox,
runnf'rs scored on ·a Marauder
Vanaman, Stewart and Hager
error. Meigs tied it In the second
each singled.
as Wes Young drove a double in
Line score
the gap to score Kevin Oiler and
GAHS ................. 200 33-8·10-3
Vince Vanaman who had walked.
Meigs ................... 023 10-6-5-2
The. Marauders scored three WP - ·· Saxon (Elliott save)
unearned runs in the third on LP- Stewart

R~se

awaits word on probe
young fans lined outside the
clubhouse fence asking for
Rose's autograph, with one boy
shouting, " Mr. Rose, I eat my
Wheatles." a reference to a
breakfast cereal Rose endorses .
"The fans have been support·
ing me for 28 years, that's how i
got into so many AU-Star
Games, " Rose said. "There's no
reason they shouldn't support me

PLANT CITY, Fla. (UP i l ~
The lonPiy vig il of Pete Rose
continued Thursday, wilh Cincin·
nail 's besieged manager and a
burdPned club awai ting the results or a base ball probe Into his
ga mbling habits.
After almost four hours seq ues·
tered in the Reds' clubhouse.
Rose emerged 30 minutes before
the 7 p.m. EST exhibition game
against Detroit. Trailed by two
dozen reporters and four camera
crews, Rose strode qui ckly to·
ward the Cincinnati bullpen
area, separating himself from
the media horde via a 10-foot
screen fence.
"I don' t know anything," Rose
said as fans shouted encourage·
ment behind him. "I'm in great
shape- I feel fine ."
Gesturing toward the cameras ·
a nd notepads, Rose remarked:
"I' m glad this isn't a firing squad
... I'd be in deep troubl e.' ·
Baseball Commissioner Peter
Ueberroth announced Monday
that his office was looking Into
"serious allegations" about
baseball's career hit leader. The
curre nt issue of Sporls lllus·
trated reports allegations Rose
has placed bets on baseball.

now. ''

Officials in the commissioner's
office said Thursday the investigation is s till continuing. No
estimate was offered on when
findings would be made public.
Meanwhile, Rose' s club tries to
cope with uncertainty. Several
Cincinnati players. gazing at the
size of Thursday's media throng
assembled outside the club·
house, simply shook their heads
in a mixture of wonder and
disgust.
"What a zoo," said second·
year pitcher Rob Dibble, who
was not born when Rose broke
into the majors , earning National
League Rookie of the Year
honors in 1963.

Rules stipulate a one-year
suspension for baseball personnel placing wagers on the sport.
If Rose bet on games Involvi ng
the Reds, he would face a lifetime
ban .
Normally one of the most
effusive personalities In the
game, Rose has declined to
comment on the Investigation
until the commissioner's office
makes an a nnouncement.
Asked when he expects the
probe to conclude, Rose s.aid, " I
have no Idea. I wish I had an
Rose's name drew healthy
applause from a sellout crowd
when he was Introduced by the
public address announcer. Many

schedul~s

I

April 11-Mlll..-.................. .. ............... H
Aprill7- Nelsoovtlle.................... .... .... A
April 19-Vlntcn .................................. H

April 21-Federal ........ .. .. .................... H
April 22-Warren ................................. A
April21-Belpre ........................ ...... .... H
April 26-Aiexander ...... ........... ............ A
April 28-Wellstoo. .................... ........... A
Apr1129-Warren ...... .. ........................ H
May 01-Trlmble .... .... ........................ H
May 03-Jackson ...................... .. .. ...... H
May 114-Gatltpotls .............................. A

April 05---Alexander ................ ............. A

r

Area

·I Meigs

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla.
&lt;UP l l - New York Yankees
outfielder
Dave Winfield will
I
have surgery performed on a
herniated disc In his back, it was
r eported Thursday.

Winfield, who suffered back
spasms Feb. 28, has not yet
played this spring.

I
Limilod Dtli..ry I

BOSTON iUPII - The New $:lr&gt;O.OOO with incentives that
England Patriots and quarter· " could double Flutie's salary if he
back Doug Fiutie could reach proves as critical to the team as
agreement on a contract within a he was last year when he stnrted
few days following the team 's nine games, the report said.
increased salary offer from
"We are getting much closer,"
$175.000 to $275.00o. The Bas ton Woolf said Thursday. "ThePatri'
Globe reported Friday .
ots have made a much more
Flutie's attor ney. Bob Woolf, reasonable second offer , a nd I'm
has lowered his original dewilling to settle for what I feel is
mands and is ready lo com prom· fair for Doug, provided that he is
ise on a hase salary close to compensated well if he performs
,
as he did last year...
General mana ger Patrick Sui·
livan agreed that negotiatio ns·
are improving, sayi ng, "] don't.
think we're that far apart."
MEIGS IIN\8
The compromise the Patriots
VARSrrY SOFI'BALL
DATE-TEAM
LOCATION
are likely to reach with Flutle
March 23-Galllpotls ...... .. .............. ...... H
would be for a one-year contract
March 27-Nelsmvllle ... .. ...... .. ... ......... H
March 29-Vintoo ............. .............. ..... A
with a base salary of $360,000 and
March 31-Federal ......................... ..... A
Incentive
clauses that would
April 03-Belpre .............. ........ ............ A
pu sh Fiutle to$800,000 If he s&lt;arts·
April M-Aiexander ...................... ..... .. H
April 07- Wellstm .. ...... .. .... ................. H
as many games as he did last
AprtllO-Trlmb\e ........................ .. ...... A
season, the report said.
April 12-Athens ................... ............. .. A

May 05-MIUer ............. ....... ............... A

NOW OPEN IN PO.IOY /MIDDLIPOIT
DOMINO'S
PllZl
I
DELIYEIS
I

FlEE.

Patriots up offer to Flutie

Winfield Jo have
surgery on back

Winfield 's attorney, Jeff Klein,
said the surgery could take place
as early as Friday morning, The
New York Times reported. The
surgery will reportedly take
place in Los Angeles and is
expected to keep Winfield out of
action for several months .

answer.''

HE'S OUT- Galna Academy catcher Todd Casey (left) tags out
Meigs runner Keith Maddox at the plate in the bottom of the third
Inning of Thursday's game at Meigs High School. The play started
on a wild pitch by hurler Brett Saxon (right) . Though Meig~ scored
three runs earlier In that Inning, the Blue Devils came from behind
to win 8-6. (OVP photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

RESERVE SOFTBALL
DATE-TEi\M
LOCATION
March 23--Gatllpol.is .................... ........ A
March Z!J-VInton .... ............................ H
April 03-Belpre ............ .. ................ .... H

April 07-Wellstoo ...... .......... .... ...... ..... A
April12-Alhens ...... ........... ................. H
Aprll19-Vintoo .............. .......... .......... A
April 22-Warren ........ ....... ............. ..... H
April 21-Belpre ...... ............................ A
Aprtl26-Alexander .............. ., .. ........... H
April 28-Wellstoo ............................... H
April 29-Warren .... ....... ...................... H

May 03-Jacksm ........................... ..... A
May 114-Galtlpotls .............................. H

College scores
rollr~•·

Ru,; lu-thall R1•o,; Ill"

NC,\ ,\ Toqrn».mt•nl
Rr,l;lorMI Sfomiflwl"
So Uihi•.W:
AILI·:dn-"'on, K,v .
Mh·ht~~;l&amp;ll t!, North ( 'nroiiDMo /1.7

VIFK"Inht fll. OU1homa 1111
\\'""1
AI Drnwr
Sd.on Hall 7", In diN~~&amp; U

Nevl&amp;da-LP

Vr~•lll.

Al"lzo1111 17

COLONY THEATRE
FRI.THRU THURS.
TOM HANKS IN

BURlS Rated PG
.
One

Admission SI.OO."
Evonin1 Show 7":30 P.M.

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1981 Olds Omega •••••••••••• S99 5

Automatic, air.

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1983 Ford Escort •••••••••••• s149 5

Automatic, air.

1980 Olds Cutlass •••••••••• s189 5

Automatic, PS, PB,

~ir.

1979 Ford F-150 ••••••••••• 51995

Automatic, PS, PB.

1978 Chevv Van ............. s1295

Automatic, air, PS, ..B.

�Friday, M.-ch 24, 1989

Pomeroy-Midcl1poft, Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Virginia, UNLV among upset
•
•
wmners In NCAA tourney

JRI161t

&amp;4&amp;

~~
'··.

·- · ~ ·

OUT OF REACH - Arizona forward Jud
Buechler (right) passes the hall out of the reach ol
UNLV forward Moses Scurry (left) in their
'fhuJ"N~a_y niKht NCAA West Regional semifinal

game In Denver. The Runnln' Rebels upset the
top-seeded and heavily-favored Wildcats 68-67.
(UPI)

Tigers complete three deals
to improve bench, pitching
By ,JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
The Detroit Tigers were active
In the tra de market Thursday,
comp leti ng three separate dea ls
to s tr~ngthen their pitching and
bench.
The Tigers sent infielder Tom
Broo ken s to lhe New York
Yankees for right-handed
pitcher CharlE's Hudson, dealt
right-hander .Eric King to the
Chicago While Sox for outfielder
Kenny Williams and traded utility pla&gt;•er Luis Salazar to the San
Diego Podres for shortstop Mike
Brumley.
"We had to put togeth er
several pieces a nd we think
we' vP done il with this series of
trades,"' Del roil General Manager Bil I Lajoie said. '"This give.•
us some added spPed and also
adds youth to the roster. We" ll
now s tar t the season' with a
balanced club."'
King is a promising starter
who had been a disappointment
wi llt Del roiL Williams has been·a
disa ppointment with the White
Sox despit~ fine minor league
flgurP~ .

Hudson is expected to replace
King as the team's No.5 starter,
wh ile Brumley provides backup
help for shortstop Alan Trammell and third baseman Chris
Brown .
Brookens will bac k up third
baseman Mike Pagliarulo with
the Yankees. while Salazar
played every position except
pitcher and catcher last year:.
Meanwhile, the vigil of Cincinnati Manager Pete Rose continued as he and the Reds
awaited word on the future of
baseball's all-time hits leader
because of a baseball probe Into
hi s ga mbling habits.
After almost four hours seques·
tered in the clubhouse, Rose
emerged 30 minules before the
Reds' exhibition game against
Detroit. Trailed by two dozen
reporters and four camera
crews, Rose st rode quickly toward I he Reds bu II pen area,
separating himself from the
media · horde by a 10-foot scree n
lcnce.
The commissioner's office announced Monday 11 was looking
Into "serious allegations" aboui
Rose. Th e cu rrent issue.of Sports
Illustrated reports allegations
Rose has placed bets on baseball
games.
Minnesota Twins President
Jerry Bell a nnounced he will
recommend the club move its

spring· training base In 1991 from
Orlando, Fla .. to Fort Myers,
Fla.
In other baseball news. the
Board of Commissioners in Lee
County, where Fort Myers is
located, voted 5-0 Wednesday to
approve development of 80 acres
between the airport and down town Fort Myers for a baseball
facility. The county will provide
a $10 million, 7,500-seat stadium.
The plan will allow the Twins to
bring their minor league and
major league operations to the
same complex . .
Bell must get the approval of
the Twins' e/(ecu,tive committee
before accepting Fort Myers'
offer , but I hat is expected to be a
formalit y.
Also. Ha il of Fame pitcher Don
Drysdale and a group of Japanese inves tors have bought Minnesota's Class A franchise in
Visalia, Fla.
Twins right-hander Charlie
Lea announced Thursday he Is
retiring at age 32. A club
spokesman said Lea "called it
quils" bec ause of pain caused by
tend initis in the bicep of his
pitching arm.
In the Grapefruit League in
Florida, Boston topped Houston
5-2, Montreal blanked the New
York Mets 1-0, Baltimore upended Los Angeles 7-3, Toronto
ripped Texas 11-4, Minnesota
edged Kansas City 5-4, Detroit
clipped Cincinnati 7-5, Atlanta
defeated the New York Yankees
5-3, and the Chicago White Sox
beat Pittsburgh 5-3 In a game
ca lled after six innings because
of rain. The game between St.
Louis and Philadelphia at St.
Petersburg, Fla ., was postponed
because of rain.
In the Cactus League , Clevela nd defeated Seattle 4-1. Mil·
waukee clipped San Francisco
8-6, the Chicago Cubs routed
Ca lifornia 9-1 and San Diego
outlasted Oakland 5-4 in 13
innings.
At Kissimmee, Fla., Nick
Esasky drove in three runs with a
double In the eighth inning to lift
I he Red Sox over Houston. Terry
Pu hi had three hits for the
As IJ·os, and .John Marzano homered for Boston.

At West Palm Beach, Fla.,
Darryl Motley singled home
Andres Galarraga in the eighth
inning lo lift Montreal over the
Mets. Bryn Smith, .Mark
Gardner, Andy McGaffigan and
Tim Burke limited the Mets to
two singles.
At Vera Beach. Fla., Mike
Devereaux hit a three-run homer
and Dave Schmidt gave up two
runs in seven innings to lead
Baltimore past the Dodgers. Jose
Gonzalez homered for Los
Angeles.
At Port Charlotte, Fla., Nelson
Llriano homered and drove in
three runs as Toronto ended the
Rangers' nine-game spring win·
n ing streak. Kelly Gruber and
.Jesse Barfield also homered for
the Blue Jays.
At Orlando, Fla., John Chris·
tensen stroked a pinch-hit single
to drive home the winning run In
the eighth inning and lift Minnesota over Kansas City. The Twins
scored four times in the eighth.
At Plant City, Fla.,,Biily Bean
hit a two-run homer to hlghllghta
four-run seventh inning for the
Tigers. Paul O' Neill stroked a
two-run double to highlight Cincinnati's five-run fifth.
At Fort Lauderdale, Fla .. Dale
Murphy hit a three-run home run
In the top of the eighth inning to
lift the Braves over the Yankees.
New York's Don Mattingly and
Atlanta's Matt Stark also
homered.
At Bradenton, Fla.. Greg
Walker drove In four runs with
two homers and a double to lead
the White Sox over Pittsburgh.
The Pirates had runners on first
and third when the game was
called.
AI Tucson, Ariz., Turner Ward
drove in the go-ahead run and
Luis Aguayo followed with a
two-run double In the eighth
inning to lead Cleveland past the
Mariners. Ward had been assigned to the minors just before
the game.
At Chandler, Ariz., Jim
Gantner stroked an RBI single to
give the Brewers the lead in a
five -run sixth Inning, helping
break a five-game Milwaukee
losing s'treak. Rob Deer homered
for Milwaukee

EASTER SPECIALII

1985 FORD lTD ...................................~••••• S4495

Air, PB. PS, PW, PowerSeeta,Fia. Cllr. NewCarTrlde-In.

1985 GRAND MARQUIS LS"...................... S599S

White, Air. PB, PS, PW, Good condition, Fie. car.

Racers triumph
The Special Olympic River
Racers' Basketball Team traveled to New Lexington Mon.;Jy
night to defeat MI. Aloysius with
a score of 51 to 38.
Scoring for the River Racers
were Ray Laudermilt with 29
points; Sandy Johnson with 16;
and Sarah Harmon and Joan
Hart with two. A MI. Aloysius
player also scored two points for
the River Racers.
The River Racers will end their
season AprU 6 with a game at
Beacon School in Athens. A
swimming party will be held
1
1 after the game.

1982 DODGE RAM CHARGER .................... S489S
Automatic, PB. PS, Rld/Whhl, 318.

By JEFF SHAI!\1 .
UPI Sporta Writer
VIrginia, Seton Hall, Michigan
and Nevada-Las Vegas all elimi·
nated NCAA Tournament favor·
lies Thursday night In decisions
that should shake up a few office
pools.
In the Southeast Regional,
freshman Bryant Stith scored 28
points and his collision with
Mookle Blaylock Incapacitated
the Oklahoma playmaker for
seven minutes, helping Virginia
upend the top-seeded Sooners
86-80. The Cavaliers next will
face Michigan, which got 34
points from Glen Rice, Including
two crucial three-pointers down
the stretch. in defeating North
Carolina 92-87.
In the West Regional, John
Morton scored 17 points and
Seton Hall's defense hounded
Indiana out of the tournament
with a 78-65 victory. The Pirates'
next opponent is Nevada-Las
Vegas, which got a three-pointer
from Anderson Hunt with three
seconds remaining to take a 68-67
triumph over top -seeded
Arizona.
At Lexington, Ky., Stith hit
nine of 16 shots from the floor and
10 of 11 free throws to lead the
Cavaliers, whose moiion offense
kept Oklahoma from approach·
ing Its 102.9-polnts average.
"Before the game my main
concern was to get up for the
game and maintain my campsure throughout," Stith said.
Stith's coUislon with Blaylock
late in the first half left the
Oklahoma point guard with a
swollen eye and hampered his
shooting, Blaylock scored just
five points on 2-for-12 shooting,
far below his 20.4 average.
"That pretty much took him
out of it," Oklahoma coach Billy
Tubbs said.
Later, Rice hit a three-point
shot to break an 83-831iewith3: 44
left that put Michigan ahead to
stay, then stretched the lead to
90-85 with a long three-pointer
from the right baseline with 1:03
to play.
Sean Higgins made hoth free
throws in a 1-and-1 situation with
27 seconds left that clinched the
win. North Carolina's Kevin

Madden twice missed threepointers for the Tar Heels.
Michigan, 3-0 under interim
coach Steve Fisher in the tournament, avenged NCAA losses to
North Carolina in the last two
seasons.
"Michigan took
great step
forward tonight," Fisher said. "I
think our players showed a lot of
character, determination and
guts."
At Denver, Seton Hall forced
Indiana into 6-minute slumps
without a field goal in each half.
Indiana scored 99 and 92 points
in Its previous tournament
games, but was limited to one of
its lowest point totals of the
season by, a team making only Its
second appearance in the NCAA
Tournament.
''They played us as well
defensely as anybody has all
year," Indiana Coach Bobby
Knight said.
Indiana won the Big Ten, but
was made the second seed in the
West Regional by the NCAA
Selection Committee. lllinois,
which finished Sl!COnd in the
conference to the Hoosiers, was
given the top seed in the Midwest
Regional, leading Knight to complain about the seeding process.
But Knight conceded Seton
Hall's superiority after the
game, telling Pirates Coach P ,,J:
Carlesimo, "You've got a bettl'r
basketball team than we do and
the way you played you deserved
to win."
In the late game, Hunt managed to bump Arizona's Kenny
Lofton to the ground and then put
up a three-point shot for the
game-winner.
The play. Which easily could
have resulted in a foul one way or
the other, ended an often
brutally-physical game In which
Wildcats Ali-America Sean Ell!·
ott was shackled and frustrated
by the Rebels defense.
"I hate to comment on any thing without seeing the film."
Arizona Coach Lute Olson said.
''But regardless of who Initiated
contact in that situation, the
young man knocked down the
shot. You have to give him credit
for that. When Kenny fell down, jt
gave him !Hunt) room to shoot."

a

Page-S

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Com1nunity calendar

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1986.

"From our standpoint, we' re
never going to be over the hump
until we win it ali," Illini scoring .
leader Nick Anderson said. ·'If
we don't, the hump is still going
to be there. We can't get rldoflhe
hump unless we win the
tournament."

"

'

OPEN DAILY 9 AM TO tl PM
lUNDAY 1 TO I

aosausm,...n
Hubbard's

Gr-'•••ltuse
H2·S776
.'

Sunday s~w.e,nd~-~c,e ,for
March 19 was 18, and church
attendance was 26.
Churcl! visitors were Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Weber, Saslla and
Shalyn. Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Brooks and Halley. and John
Taylor .of Torre nce: CaL
The recent death of Isola ,Icy )
Taylor is aJ~ tlle.c:ommunity . Mrs. TaYl!fr " ll~ . rats!&gt;
funds for the Qui,ldlp~•..9f the
present Alfred IJnit:eQ,Melaodist
Church wlie)'~ ~S!Je':;':w4~lt
Sunday school teatt~er:'~lt'Jirch
treasurer, and president of
women's societies. Many
members of the church and
community attended visitation

. H.:.. ,._to ·If

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• t

...... ,.....
p ..: ~n

,

Friendly Circle holds meeting

Alfre4r.:toihmunity news

I

SYIACIISL 0110

!t) , ,

•

A program on Holy WeE'k was more gave the officers reports.
presented by Pauline Mayer and Reports of sick calls made were
Marie Hauck at the recent given and the group signed a card
meeting of the Friendly Circle for Genevieve Meinhart. The
held at the Trinity Church.
group also noted that notes of
The program included read· appreciation were received.
ings and poems on Maundy
It ~Vas decided that an Easter
Thursday and ,the Easter story. lily in thl' sanctuary would be
One story noted the similarities given to a shut-In at a later date.
of the first three years of ,Jesus·
Mrs. Mayer dlcussed plans for
lifl' and his .last. three years on, the Easter brel!kfast and the
earth.
''"
· ·•• •" i"
• group closed by giving a prayer
After the program th"ere'Wa s a "in unison. .
· ,
dedication of offeri~"'g •and ·
Fifteen members and Mary
prayer.
.,
Elaine Russell enjoyed a salad
Diane Ha"'ley, we~ided o~er course served by Peggy Harris
the business ¥~1J ip 11 w!llob. and Mrs. Jewell. An Easter
Norma .le'U'JJJMSo~~fl~ n§~·-· .'.h~lfle was carried out.

Tr-.

1

"

WINNER -lrL~ Payne ol Middleport. Iell, was the winner of the
anniversary clock given hy K&amp;C Jewelers as a part of their 30tll
anniversary celebration. Presenting the clock to Mrs. Payne here
Is Claricl' Krautter,
·

Compl-e line of Vegetable
• Bedding Pienta, Aul- •
Fruit
Oereniuma,
Hanging Buketa, ShrubbMy
M!dTr-.

tn,

•

A PART OF THE
MEIGS COUNTY

'

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COMMUNITY .....

... a,

.. ........ ,

at Hughes Funeral Home,
Athens, and funeral services at
the Alfred United Methodist
Church
'
,
Visitors at the Poole-Parker
home were Violet Parker, Sherr!
~nd Michael Smith, and Judy
Lantrip and son, Belpre.
Dorothy Robinson returned
home from Unlver~ity Hospital
in Columbus on March 18.
Doris Avis is recoVering from a
br-oken -foot.
:
.
Pel!lel.'t Stearns and ,Joe.Foole
made-a business trip to FalrbOrn
wherl' Stearns visited his daughter, April Neeley, and Poole
visited friends , Terry Fetty and
•family.

••

School·
. ·menils~' announced
'

Luncheon" menus for the week

Friday: Cook's choice.
of March 2'7-31 in schools in the
Eastern
Meigs Local "ajld ea~iern· Local
Monday : Grilled chet!Se,
Districts are 1!9 f9!low~:
· • pickle ",Jilc~s. green beans, C\)O·
: .M etp.•
kie, ~rujt ant[milk.
Monday: ' No school (spring
Tues·day:: Chili, peanut butter
break),
sandwich, relish tray, fruit and
Tuesday: Chicken patty, corn, milk.
fruit and milk.
Wednesday : Ham patty, baked
Wednesday: Spaghetti and beans, fruit and tnilk.
sauce, hot rolls and butter.
Thursday: Pizza, peas, fruit
applesauce and milk.
and milk.
Thursday: Cheeseburger,
Friday: Cook's choice.
mixed vegetables, fruit and milk.

APPROVED AND CERTIFIED
FOR MEDICAID, MEDICARE,
WORKERS COMPENSATION,
AND PRIVATE INSURANCE
PROGRAMS. AS WELL AS
SELF-PAY RESIDENTS.

~-·r------1 ~'".........

Group 2 meeting conducted

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Mrs. Myron Miller displayed
her first place winning quilt at '
the recent meeting of Group Two
of the First Presbyterian Church
at the home of Mrs. Thomas Rue.
Mrs. Paul Haptonstall pre-,
sided over the me!'ling In which
Mrs. Eddie Burkett, devotional
leader, read an article on the
"Last Supper'' from Ideal magazine and closed with prayer.
Mrs. Donald Lowery conducted the Least Coin and read

Burnside birthday

Come Visit us and Let Us Show You
That All Nursing Homes Are Not
Alike. •

••

.

'

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1987 CHEVY CONVERSION VAN ............ s15,900

Fully equipped, 7,000 mlle1, biiCk/ten

' ".

SEVEUL OT..IS TO CHOOSE FIOM

• •

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333 Page Str•t
Middleport, Ohio 45769

992-6472

RACINE -Sign-up for Racine
Summer Youth League will be
Saturday, from 9 a.m. to noon :
Tuesday, from 6 !o8:30p.m ,; and
next Saturday, April 1, from 9
a.m . to noon, at · the Southern
Kindergarten building. $10 per
child. Birth certificate required.

LONG BOTI'OM -The Long
Bottom-Reedsville Community
Good Friday Service will be held
at the Long Bottom Methodist
Church at 7:30p.m.

RACINE - Racine American
Legion Post 602 is sponsoring an
Easter egg hunt on Saturda~ ,
beginning at 12 noon. at the post
home. Children of ali ages arc
welcome.

RUTLAND - Ali -night gospel
sing wil be held Marc h 24 star tlng
at 7 p.m. at the Rutland Freewill
Saptist Church. The sing will
feature Prodical of Charleston,
W. Va.; Fellowship Singers of
Vinton; Christian Sounds, Logan, W.Va .; Reflections Trio,
Heaven Bound Four and Narrow
Way.

NOW OPEN FOI
SPIING SEASON

•

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Feeney Bennett Post 128, Middleport,
will hold a dance Friday night at
the annex onMiiiStreet,Sp.m . to
m ldnight. Music will be provided
by the Bob Estep and the Western
Rambll'rs.

RUTLAND- Rutland Church
of the Nazarene will present the
cantata, "His. Last Days," on
Friday at 7 p.m.

'

East Regional
At East Rutherford, N..l.,
North Carolina State's players
are fantasizing about a repeat of
the Wolfpack's improbable 1983
national, but will have to eliminate top-seeded Georgetown Fri·
day night to keep the dream
alive.
"We think about it all the
time." North Carolina State
forward Chucky Brown said.
''That team believed it could win
and we're thinking the same
way."
Georgetown guard Charles
Smith, struck with high fever and
a sore throat, has not practiced
the last two days. But Hoyas
Coach .John Thompson said he
expects him to play.

'

Friday, March 24, 1989

.'. .
·,·

Mldwe&amp;l Rep.nal
At Minneapolis, top-seeded Illinois will have to overcome Its
third-round stigma by beating
the most successful NCAA Tournament team of the 1980s Louisville.
The Fighting lllini have not
advanced beyond the third round
of the NCAA Tournament since
1952. including seven appearances as top-16 seeds since 1981 .
Louisville has four trips to the
Final Four in the decade, including national titles in 1980 and

"

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

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Ruby Burnside, Rt. 2, Kingsbury Rd., was honored recently
by her family with a birthday
party.
An Ice cream cake and an
Easter bunny cake, baked by
Mary Etta Burnside, was served
to those named and Tom Burnside, Grace and Glen Thoma,
Gail Thoma, Linda Jones, Marcie and Kenny King, Kay
Koehler, Mary and Rich Houda·
shell, Audra and Betsy, Frances
and Chuck .Eskew, and Pat
Thoma.
Mrs. Burnside received many
cards and gifts from family and
friends.

Legion auxiliary meers
'

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.:
"

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American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39 will not be
having Its regular meeting on

Tuesdf"

an article on partnership from
the Least Coin book by Dorothy
C. Wagoner.
Mrs . Lowery was Bible study
leader and focused on the second"
chapter, of .Jo!Jn. The title of the
study was "Like Father, Like

Son . .,
Mrs . Rue served a dessert
coursE' with coffee.

POMEROY - Unity Singers
directed by Sue Matheny wili
have Good Friday services at the
South Bethel New Testament
· Church, 7 p.m.
POMEROY Round and
square dancing will be featured
Friday night, 8 to 11 p.m . , at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy. Music will be by the True
Country Ramblers. Everyone is
welcome and those planning to
attend ar'e 'asked to bring snacks
.
for the snack table.

MIDDLEPORT - Heath Unl·
ted Methodist Church Easter
sunrise service will be held at
6:30 a.m. with a churchwide
fellowship breakfast to follow ,
Church school will be at 9:30a.m
with the Easter morning worship
at 10: 30 a .m Choral selections
will be provided by the Chancel
Choir.
CARLETON - Carleton Independent Church. Kingsbury
Road, will · have· su11rise service
at 6 a .m . on Easter Sunday with
Rev. Glenn McClung as speaker.
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary Club Is
sponsoring its annual Easter Egg
Hunt on Easter Sunday, March
26, at Hartinger Park in Middleport. The hunt will start at 2 p.m.

TUPPERS PLAINS - There
will be a round and square dance
·sponsored by the VFW Post 9053
from 8 p.m. to midnight. There
will be no alcohoilc beverages
permitted.

. PT. PLEASANT - Dan Hayman the The Faith Trio of Meigs
County will sing at the Sunday 10
a.m. worship service of the
Davies Grove Baptist Church .

SATURDAY
· RUTLAND - Square. round
and slowdancingwillbefeatured
Saturday night at theE! I Denison
Post of the American Legion in
Rutland. Live music. Refreshments. Everyone welcome.

POMEROY - The Hysell Run
Holiness Church will hold a
sunrise and communion service
at 6 a .m. Easter Morning.
Sunday school will be held at 9:30
with worship service to begin at
10:45 a.m. The Sunday evening

Enlist another doctor's help
Dear Ann Landers: I'm 18 and
I have a problem that involves
my doctor. He happens to be a
good friend of my parents and
they insist that I go to him
whenever I'm sick.
The minute I get in his office,
he sends me to the examining
room to ta~e off my clot~s. no
matter what I'm seeing hlni lor,
evtn If it's a sore throat. When.he
comes in to see me I have to stand
there with nothing on and tell him
what Is bOthering me.
After a compll!te physical
exam (every. vllltHie wants to
have a col!:versatlotL with me
while I'm undressed. He always
has a lotofquestlonsaboutschool
and boyfriends. Las I time I asked
him )f-!t ~as OK for me to put my
clothes ,back pn, and he said,
"No, it1s healthy for a girl to be
relaxed · ahou t nudity. This Is
good for you."
When he finally let me get
dressed, he stayed In the room
and watched me put everything
on. I felt very self-conscious.
I told my mother that I want to
go to another doctor and why. She
said, "Absolutely not. Dr, - - Is wonderfuL Get over your false
, modesty,"
Ann, I want to be fair . He really
hasn't done or said anything that
could be considered "fresh," but
I still leel uncomlortBble about
·• my vis~s to his office. Am I being
foolish? -T he only other doctor I
ever went to was my pedlatrt·
clan. I saw her untn I was 16. Can
you help me? - L.W., New
,Britain, Conn.
Dear New BrU: I'm annoyed

by your mother's . refusal to be
sympathetic. Ask if he makes
(ita!) her (unital) get undressed
every time she comes to see him.
In my opinion, your doctor Is
grossly out of line. Enlist the help
of your pediatrician at once. I'll
bet she will come to your rescue.
Dear Ann Landen: Yesterday,
I received a chain letter In the
mall. Normally, I throw this sort
of thing In the garbage and don't
give It a second thought, but this
time my 11-year·old daughter
picked It out of the wastebasket,
read It and became very upset
· She was afraid that something
awful would happen to me If I
didn't follow the Instructions
outllned In the letter. (II was
pointed out that the last person
who broke the chain had several
years of bad luck.)
I tried to explain that II was all
a lot of nonsense, that chain
letters are Illegal and nobody
makes any money off them. She
was stUI frightened 11nd begied
me to reconsider,
Ann, In addition to the time it
would t~keme to comply with the
request, it would cost $5 In
postage and S2 In Xeroxln!J lo
keep the chain going. Also I
would not feel right about imposIng such responsibility on my
friends by sending them this
dreadful thing.
Please ask your readers not to
put a burden on their acqualnlan·
ces. It's no act of friendship to lay

"

. ...

SUGAR RUN MILLS
•
" ·tun.aBY AVE-. POMEIOY, OH.

POMEROY -Second and final
day for tht&gt; s ummer yo uth
lea gue program will be held a t
the Pomero~, ElemPnlarv School
Tuesda,1· from :. to S p.m.' The fPC
1, $11 J nd 1hose• "'ho ha \'l' not
pt"Pvioust,~· pjayed mu st present
birth CE't"lificates .
.
~i)ln up

HAZEL- Then&gt; will b&lt;' spPcla,l
nightly singing at the Hazel
Communit y Ch urch Revival
from March 26-Aprll 2. Rei" .
Lawrence Glucsencamp a nd
Rev. Edsel Hart will be the
speakers. The Grubb family
singers will be feat ur&lt;'d April I.
HARTFORD. W.Va. -A rcvi ·
va l at Father's Hous&lt;' Church in
Ha rtford. W.Va. will star t Sun ·
day and ronlinu&lt;' through April 1.
Th e el"angei isl will bC' .Rick
\VeavPr and s('rvices s tart at 7

p.m. each pvenlng . Special sing·
ing will be featured each night.
POMEROY - He mlock C. rove
C'huri'h will have Easter sunrise
service at 6: ~0 a.m. with break·
fast following at thE' grange hall.
Morning worship will be at 9:30.
The children will be having a
program and a mini-sermon by
David Prentice.
HARRISONVILLE The
Board of Trustees of Columbia
Township will meet in speCial
session Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the fire station.
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The OH
KAN Coin Club will meet Mooday
evening at Burkett's Barber shop
in Middleport. A social hour and
trading session will precede the 8
p.m. meeting. There will be a
coin auction and refreshments.
POMEROY - The Ken Amsbary Chapter of the Jzaak Walton
League "'ill hold its annual White
Elephant Sale un Monday, at 7
p.m .. at the clubhouse. Members
and families are ;~sked to bring a
beverage, covered dish and table
service.
TUESDAY
RACINE - The Middleport Pomeroy Area Branch of the
American Association of Universlly Women will meet at 7:30
Tuesday evening at the Racine
United Methoidst Church.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
"1919, Loo " ......

TIMn 8yndlllllle and

RACINE - Donald Genhel·
mer. an African Eva ngelic&lt;ti
Fellowship Missionar,~ · , will bt:&gt;
SIX' a king and presPn ling a &lt;iid E'
show at the Antlqui t)· Baptist
Church . State Route :!3R. Racine ,
on TUPSda)', M&lt;J rCh ~R . .a I i : :10
p.m.
-~-

POMEORY- Th&lt;' Mt:&gt; igs FFA
banquPI will be lwid Tuesday,
t) ·:IO p.m., in lh&lt;' high sc ho~i
cafeteria . A buffet style meal will
bP se rved with FFA providing
mPal. roil s and beverage. Those
planning to attend are askE'd to be
a side dish or dessert.
Revival Sl'rvices
APPLE GROVE - Revival
services will be held at the Apple
Grove United Methoidsl Church,
March 30 through April 2 at 7
p.m . each evening. Thl' Rev. Carl
Hicks, pastor. will be the speaker
and Invites the public to attend.
There will be special music each
evening. On April 2 the special
singers will be Dan Hayman ahd
the Faith Trio .
Alzh~imer

group
POMEROY- TheAizhelmers
support group will meet at the
Overbrook Nursing Home on
April 4 at 3 p.m. The topic for
discussion will be " ,Joys and
Guilt." Refreshments will be
st:&gt;rved.

All Interested parties wil be
given an opponunity to be
llelnl. Furthlr lnfom•lkwl

:::lhe~~
•

THE PIJBLIC UTJLmES

COMMISSION OF OHIO
By: Galy E. Vigorito,

Secretary.

•

•

Fund raiser
RUTLAND - The Rutland
PTO is trying to raise money for
a fence around. the elementary
schooL Donations are being
accepted for the project.
Seminar
POMEROY - A family sem lnar, conducted by Dean Mills,
will be held March 2930, 7 p.m .
each evening, at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ. Everyone
welcome.
flremen'~ dinner
RUTLAND - A dinner for ail
firemen who have served in the
Rutland Fire Department will be
held Saturday, April 22,6 p.m., at
the fire station.

err.... s,.nc~.f'...

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES 8t SERVICE
this junk on them. Thank you. No Thuks In N, Y,
Dear No Thanks: I have dealt
with chain letters In this space
several times.
I repeat: Chain letters are
against the law.. They are a
rip-off, a waste of time and
energy. The threats are a lot of
malarkey. Don't bite.

204 Condor St.

"-ov. OH,
Ho1r1

Sprltt &amp;s•••.,

OPEN MONDAY THIIllltDAY
9 A.M.. J P.M.
SATUIDAY 9 AJI,. t P.11.

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

LEIAL IIGTICE
The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio has set for
public hearing case No.
~-EL-EFC, to review
lhe fuel procurement practices and policies of Columbus Southern Power Company, lhe operation of Its
Electric Fuel Component
and related matters. This
hearing is scheduled to
begin at 10:00 a.m. on
March 27, 1989, at lhe of·
llces of the Public Utiiltlas
Commission, 180 East
Broad $tr8et. Columllua.
Ohio 43266-0573.

SEE US FOR All
YOUR NEEDS
•PRO MIX
•SUNSHlNE #1
•PEAT MOSS
•FERTILIZER '
•LAWN SEED
'
•FIELD SEED
'
•PINE MULCH
and CHIPS
•MARBLE CHIPS
•POTTING SOIL

SUNDAY
CARPENTER - Easter sunrise services will be held at the
Mt. Union Baptist Church at 6
a.m. Sunday school will be held
at 9: 45 and the church service at
6:30p.m.

service will be held at 7 p.m.

•

THIS
WEEK'S SPEeiAL!
FIIDAY, MilCH 24, 1919
FISH SANDWICH PL&amp;nEI ....- ....................... S2.29

A 1.,..:111 DIMIIOnd CU1 Iotter· Dipped filh Portion Served On A Hot.
lte...., Bun And Oornlahod With- Own Homemlcle Tortar huce; Hot,
Goldin F-ell frlel1nd Your Choice of Homemede Col•low, Mocoronl
Solllfl. or loklcl ....,._

SUNDAY, MAICH 26, 1919
OUI EAS111 HOMEIAIED HAll DINNER ....... S4.59

Gen-•

A
lervlng of Ho......,.ICI H11n Ftttul'ing Our Own Homomlcle
lltlttn-WIInut SIIUCI. lervlcl lool!oped Pott~to•. Hot Buttered
Carn end Hot lu-lcllloH or Ham..,lcla 81_,1t (whh Hon.y), Coftte.
,._..,or Dtcefflneted. loth Frathly lrawlcl (I' Smelt Drink or Hot Teo
Mow 11 Subltitul8dl.
·

C.a.D'S POmOI ....................................................... S3.12
10" Olaoount to AI hnkw C~ftnt With luck.,• or MounUin...- C1rcltl

NEW HOURS: Open tO A.M.-7 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK

.

"'

�Driver program
set for seniors

7 fXrERIENCE THE JOY Of REliGION

~

This Message and Church Directory S(!!)~or:ed_ B~~ 'fhe_ lfJterested B_usittesses Listed On ThiS Page.
TEAFORD REALTY ·
P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
-~ .\ MEIGS nRE

(row's Family Restaurant
"F11111Ing l&lt;ulueig Frl1d CMcbw"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432

RIDENOUR

...,.

FURNI~!e~~~RDWARE J
Homehte Saws

\.
1
)~

CENTER, INC.

216 S. Se&lt;ond

JohnF Fultr, Mgr.
Ph. 991-1101

992-lllS

Pomeroy

m
1..13

Nationwide
104

fMi\

.
Pomeroy

115 E. Mlmotlel Dr.

"Serving Families"
264

e.

992-5141

,_,

716 NoiTH SECOND AVE.

214
Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

DATES OF HOLIDAYS MAY CHANGE, BUT
NOT THEIR MESSAGES

SChOO Sui&lt; Olurch SChOO 9 l, a m ,
Worship Servtce 10 J) a.m Clmlr rehearsal.
~may

The calendar quite frequently
May have to change a date,
But those events of history
Are there to celebrate.
1Wo faiths will honor, with a feast
Which may not coincide,
The time of Hebrew slaves released,
Or when the Savior died.
Yet both occasions are the same,
As either faith explains;
With each occurrence in the name
Of freedom from our chains ..
So let the joyful time begin,
And issue this decree,
That says from slavery or sin
All mankind must be free.
- Gloria Nowak
I •

6· 45 p m un:k&gt;r din&gt;ctlon of lnLS

Blrt.

POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA
RENE, Corru Union and Mult:w&gt;rry, Rev
Thomas Glen McCiul\1. past&lt;r Nonnan Pres·

and Nursery care provt&lt;.W. Coffee hour In the
ParEh Hall imledlatelv following the serW&lt;

POMEROY CHURCH OF OffiiST, 212 W
Main Sl, Leo Lash. evan~lsl BlUe SChOO
9;l) am,; Moningworship.10:ll a m.; Youth
meetings. 6 00 p.m, Evening worstd.p 7·00 p
rri. Wem.sday night p-ayer meeting and BlUe
stilly. 7.00 p.m.
1liE SALVATION ARMY, U5 Butternut
Ave,

Po~

Mrs Dora Wining In charge

Sulll'l\' holi,_ mee&lt;lng. 10 am.. Sulllay
SChool, lO:lJ a.m SUrdE\Y SChool, YPSM
Elobe Adams, leader 7 .]) p rn SalvaUon
meeting various s~akE'f'S aOO musk: spi.'Cials
Thursday, 11 l) a m to 2 p.m Ladies HOI'l\e
Leagup, members In charge, all wcmen
lnvllfd; 6:45 pm Thur!d'l\', Cor)JI Cadet~
Classs (Youre Peop&lt;eBII&gt;e), 7 :n p m Bll&gt;e
Slllly and Prayer meetlng. opm to ttl?' public
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, 33'.126 Ollldren's Home Rood (CouJIY
Road 76) 992-.:IW? Vocal music Surx1ay Wor·
sliplOa.m, Ell lie Stilly 11 am, Worship, 6 p
m. W-'11'· Bllie St\lly, 7 p m Speaker,
Landln llo!J', evanlfllst
OlD DEXTER BIBLE OffiiSTIAN
CHURCH, AMn Curtis. pasta-: Ullla Swan,
Su(L 9Jo:Jay SchocJI 9: ll a m , preaching ser·
vices, first and thlnl Sulllay lollowlngSulllay
Schad. Youth meeting. 7 .J) p m. every Sun
~

.

SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
- Pomeroy. Msgr. Michael Hellmer, Ph.
992-5898. Saturday evening Mass. 5· .J) p m
Sunday Mass, 8 a m and 10 a m ceo
classes, 9 am Surday Confessions Onehalf hour before each Mass
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOLIC FAITH- New Lima Road, nex t to
Fort Meigs Park Robert W Richards,
pastor Sunday services, 10 a m and 7 p
m., Wednesday worship, 7 p.m.
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
Preaching 9.30 a .m nrst and second Sun
days of each month, third and fourth Sun
day each month worship services at 7 JOp
m ; Wednesday evenings at 7 :w p m
Prayer and Bible Study
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mul
berry Heights Road Pomeroy Pastor Bob
Snyder; Sabbath School Superintendent,
Rodney Spire$. Sabbath School begins at 2
p.m on Saturday atternoon wlth worship
aervlce following at 3 00 p,m.' Everyone

welcome.

• RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
:... Sister Harriett Warner, Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Morning WoJ ship, 10 45
am
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lystrn
Halley, minister, Saturday eve ning
evangelistic services, open to public, 7 p
r}'l • Sunday Church School, 9 30 a m
Morning Worshlp 10 30 a m
FIRST SOUTH ERN BAPTIST, Po
meroy Pike E Lamar O' Brya nl, past or
Jack Needs, Sunday School Director. Sun·
day School. 9. 30 a.m.: Morning Worship.
10 45; eventngworship, 7·00p rn (D S T )
&amp;: 7 30 (E .S T ) : Wednesday Prayer Ser·
vlce,7.00pm !D.S.TI&amp;730P.M (ES.
1' ): Mission Friends (ages 2·6), Royal
Ambassadors (boys ages 6-18), and Girls
In Action (ages 6-18) on Wednesdays, 1 p.
m tD.ST ) &amp;7 :30p.m (EST.) ; Tuesday
VIsitation, 6 30 p.m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bailey Run Road, Rev Emmett Rawson, pastor Handley Dunn, supt Sunday Schod,
10a.m., Sundayeveningservice,7 30p.m.
, Bible teaching, 7:30pm Thuuday .
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St , Sy·
racuse Mark Morrow, pastor. Sei'vlces, 10
a m Sunday Evening serv iCf'S Sunday
and Wednesday at 6 00 p m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRL~T
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Owtght Haley,
first elder, Wanda Mohler. Sunda,y School
Supt Sulllay School 9 30 a m.. Morning
Worship 10:30 a m Evening Worship 7 JJ
pm, Wednesdayprayermeetlng7·JOpm

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
Racine Rev .James Satterfield, pastoc
Freeman Williams, Supt Sunday School
9: 45 a m , Sunday and Wednesda y evenIng serv ices, 7 p m
• MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Corner Sixth and Palmer. James Seddon.
Pastor Edna WUsm, S S Supr.; Ca thy
Riggs, Asst Supt Sunday Schoci, 9 15 a
m, Morning Worship, 10.15a m., Sunday
Evening service, 7 p m Prayer meet ing
and Bible Study Wednesday evening, 7 p
m, Children's c:holr practice, Wednes·
day, 7 p m Adult choir practice, Wro. , 8
p m , Radio program, WMPO, Sunday,
830am
MIDDLEPORT CHU RCH OF CH,RIST,
5th and Main, AI Hartsm, mlnlster;
Richard DuBose, Associate Paster; Mike
Gerlach, Sunday School Superintendent
Bible Schocl9 30 a m , Morning Worship
10:30 am. Evening Worship ?'·00 p.m.
Wednesday, 7 00 p m Prayer meeting
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE , PASTO~ Fred Penhorwood
BUI Wltlte, Sunday Sch9ol Supl Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Morning Worship 10. 4~
a.m.; Evangelistic meeting 7;00 p.m
Wedneada.y. 7 00 p m Prayer meeting
UNITED PIIESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
llo&gt;. O'ljulnn Kelll
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - SuDday. Worship ServiCfti
9 00 a .m.; Church Schod 10.15 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN SU.aday Schod, 9 a.m.; Church service,
Jl:15a.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBYTERIAN - Sunday School, 10 a m ;
Cburch ..m~. 10·15 a .m
Rli'I1.AND 'CHURCH OF GOD, Puler,
Jolm Evaaa. Sunday Schocl 10:00 a.m ;
SUnday MOI'IIInl Wonldp 11:00 a.m. CbU·
dren' 1 Cburch 11 a.m. Sunday Evening
Servl"" 7:00p.m. Wt!CI., p.m. Youllfl Ladl'"' AWdllary. Wednaoday, 1 p.m. Fam·
fly Wonlllp.

e

'

(

s. 7nd, Middt.port

FtOWUS 101 IVIRY OCCA!ION

TR!NI!Y &lt;XlNGREGAT!ONAL CHURCH,

ley, S. S Sui&lt; .. Sulllay SChool, 9ll a.m ..
morringWCf'Stdp 10: J) am, evening service 6
pm; mJd-~ service, Wednedi\Y, 7 p m
GRACE EPISOOPAL CHURCH, ~ E
Main St., PoTOO"oy SurdE\Y services Holy
communion on the erst Sumay of each month,
and comt4ined with m01 ring prayer on thi!
third Sun:Jay. Morring prayer and sermon on
au ether &amp;l~s c:t the month 0\urch School

•

1---~=='U-2104 ~--t----------1
Po111e~og Flowe~ $bop

Rev. RJchard Freeman pastor: IRbtie Buck.

~,

Matn

FUNERAl HOME

SALES &amp; SERVICE
172 North S..:ond An.
MHI~I-rt, Ohio

w

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

"\SJ- yeterans
Memorial Holpital

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
992-7075

_,

992 2JIB Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
-~
w~ Ftll Doctors•
~
992· 29lS

Co.

ol Columbus, 0.

IUI.TOI

Pomeroy

Pre-scrtplians.

Ins.

HAZF.L COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rt 124, 3 mUes from Portland-Long Bot
tom. Edsel Hart, pasl.:r. Sunday Schod,
9· 30 a m , Sunday morning preacbtng
10 30a m, Sundayeventngservtces, 7:30
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrmann, pastor. Sunday SChoollO·Ooa
m.; Morning Worship, u ·oo am; Wed·
nesday a nd Saturday Evening Services at
1:10p m
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
Hicks, 10 miles above Racine on Rt. .388.
Sunday School 9 a m , worship service 10
am Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m,
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thurs·
day, 6: 30p.m.
MT OLIVE UNITED METHODIST Off 124, behind WllkesvDie Charles Jones,
pastoc. Sunday School, 9 30a m , morning
worship, 10· 30, Sunday and Thursday
evenin g services, 7 00 p m

16141992-2039 or
(614)992-5721 .

•

06 lutltrAUt An., Pomeroy, Oh,

GRAVElY TRACTOR SAlES
204 Condor St.
P-roy, 011.

992-2975

Ull\a

C\\\ifl

5rrut c&amp;.l;,

93 Mill Street
Mldcleport, Ohio 457410

11141992-1117- f99B-OOKSI
CHURCH SUPPLIES • BIBLES

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
l11l Qlll(ktl and

lutb

Ann ft•

pastor. Melvin Ura~e. S. S Supt. Sunday
SChool 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship )O· 30;
Evening Worship 7 00 p.m , Wednesday
Prayer Service, 7 DO p.m
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
St , Mason Sunday Schod 10 a m.; Morn·
lng worship 11 a.m., Evening service&amp; p.
m . Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed
ne!day, 7 pm
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt
Sunday School 9· 30 a m , Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2:30 p.

m.

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD .
MT MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
non-Pentecostal Worship service Sunday
Main Sl , Middleport. Rev. Gllbet't Craig,
10 a m ; Sunday Schoci 11 a m Evening
Jr , pas ur. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,
worship service 7.00 p m. Wednesday
Sunday School Supt Sunday School9: lOa.
prayer meeting 7:00p.m.
m., Worship Service, 10:45 a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CdRIST
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
- Joseph B Hoskins, evangelllt. Sunday
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
BlbleStudy9a.m .. Worshlp,10a.m., Sun
Community off Ct Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
dar evenlng service 6 p.m. ; Wednesday
Sanders, pastor. Jeff Holter, lay leader;
evening serviCe, 7 p.m
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt Sunday
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a.m.,
SChool9.30 a.m.; Morning worship 10:30
PEN'l'ECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Racine,
School
9
30
a
m.;
morning
worship
and
Chureh Schod 10 a.m. (Grace) .
a m.; Teens In Action, 6 p.m.; Evening
Rt. 1U. William Hoback, past..-. Sunday
children's chureh 10:30 am , evening
RACINE- Church School,lO am ; Wor- Worship, 7 00 p m. Choir practice 8 p m
School10 a m ; Sunday evening service 7
preaching service first three Sundays,
ship 11 a.m., UMW fourth Moroay at 7 30 p.
Sunday. Wednesday evening prayer and
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m
7.30 p.m, Special service rourth Sunday
m. ; Men's Prayer Breakfast, Wednmday, 8 Bible study.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
evening,
7:
30
p.m.;
Wednesday
Prayer
am
{Gracel
MI!IGS
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SUpt. Sunday SChool 9 30 a m. Morning
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth FellO'toV·
COOPI!RATIVE PARISH
Charles
Runell
Sr
.•
mlnlster:
Norman
SALEM CENTER- Cburch SChool9: 15
Worship 10 · 30 a.m. Prayer sen lee, alternohlp, 7 30 p.m
UNITI!D MI!TIIODIST CHURCH
Will, supt Sunday School9· 30 a.m : Wor
am., Worlhlo10:J5a.m !Steelel
ate Sundays
CHURCH
OF
GOD
OF
PROPHECY
NOR'l'IIEA8T CLUSTI!B
ship service 10· ~ a.m. Bible study, Wed·
SNOWVILU:
Worship
9.00
a.m.;
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
Located
on
0
J
White
Road
of
Highway
Rn. DoaArells
nesday. 6:00p.m.
Church School10.00 a.m. (Martin).
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,
160 Pat Hensoo, pastor. Sunday School10
Rev. Fraak Cralo~
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland Robert
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Rog.. CHRIST OF LA'ITER OAY SAINTS. Port·
a.m Classes tor all ages Junior Church 11
Rev. Seldott Jolma•
Richards, pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
a m ; Morning worship 11 a m Adult
ALFRED - Church School 9· 30 a.m. ; • ~ Sprtna, miDllter, Starling Massar and 01. land-Racine Road. Mike Duhl, puler:
Wednesdays and Sundays.
lver Swain, Sunday School Supts. Preach- Janice Danner, church school director
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday. Youlli PeoWorshlp, lla m; UMYF6.30p.m.; UMW
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CRAP·
ple's,
CbUdren's
Church
and
Adult
Bible
Inc
9:30a.m
.
each
Sunday;
Sunday
School
Third Tuesday, 7; 30 p.m. Communion,
Churcb schoo19· 30a m.; Mornlngworshlp
TER ot the Wealeyan Hollnesa Church .
10:30a.m
Study,
Wednesday
at
7·
30
p.m.
nrst sunday. (Archer)
10: 30 am.: Weclnl!lday evening prayer
Rev Davld Ferrell, pastor. Henry Eblln,
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN services, 7::Kl p.m.
CHESTER - Worship 9 am; Church
Sunday School Supt.: Sunday School10 a .
St.,
Middleport.
AIO!Iated
with
SOutltcrn.,
CHRISTIAN UNION, Theron Durham,
SChool10a m, BlbleSiudy, Thur!day, 7p.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. E.orl
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Ml- 1 m.; Mornlnr' Wo~SftiR )) ,a n1', ; Evening
pastor. Sunday service, 9::1) a.m.; even· Shuler,
m, UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; Compastor. Worship service. 9. SO a.m.
service 7 30 p.m. WedlJesday evenlnesernil1er. Su"day School 10 a .m., Morning
lng
aervtce
7:00
p.m.
Prayer
meeting,
munion, first Sunday (ArchEI') .
Sunday School10: 30 a.m. Bible Study and
vlce 7: SO p.m
worship 11 a m ; Evening worShip 1 p m,,
Wednaoday, 7:00p.m.
JOPPA - Worship 9:30a.m., Cburch
prayer service Tburlday, 7· ~p.m.
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITII,
Wednesday
evening
Bible
study
and
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
School10: 30 a .m. Bible Study Wednesday,
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday services 9;))
prayer meeting 7 p.m
CHRIST, Joseph B Hoskins, paotor. Bible AL CHURCH. Klnpbury Road. Rev.
7• :II p m (Johnsm)
a.m. and 7 p m .. Midweek service, 7:30 p.
BRADFO~D CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.
Class, 9:30am.; MornlngWorshlpl0:30a
LONG BOITOM - Church SChool 9. 30
Clyde W. Hendersm, pester. Sunday
m. Tbunday.
'
Rt. U4 and Go. Rd. ~- Scott Stewart, pasm.; EvenlngWorshlp,6·30pm Thurotlay
am .. Worsltfp 10:30 a.m; Bible Study,
SChool 9 30 a.m.; Ralph Car~ Supt Even·
tor.
William
Amberg..-,
S.
S,
Supt.;
SunBlbi•Study, 6:30pm
MIDDLEPORT
PENTECOSTAL,
Third
Wednesday, 1:30 p.m.; UMYF Wedn ..•
lng worship 1.00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
day School 9: 30 a.m., Morning Worsltlp
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not·
day, 6· 00 p m., COmmunion First SuiMtay
Wednesday 7:00pm
10:30 a .m.; Evenlntr wonhip 7·30 p.m
Harrtsm.vUie Rd. Robert Purtell, mlni.J·
tlngham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
of Month (Cro!oot).
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPI'IST
Wednesday worship 7:30p.m.
ter; Steve Stan!~. S. S. SUpt.; BIIIMcEI·
School 10 a .m. with classes for all ages
REEDSVILLE- Church SChool9 30 a
CHURCH, 28601 State Route 7,- MidtlleST
PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
roy, Ant. Supt.; SundayScltoo19:30a.m.;
Evenlllg' services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl·
m : Worship Service 11 00 a.m.
port. Sunday School, 10 a m.; SUnday
Worship service 10· 30 a.m.; Evening wor·
Corner
Sycamore
and Serond Sts .• Poble 5tucly at 7 30 p.m. Youth services FriTUPPERS PI..AINS ST. PAUL evening service, 7.:JJ p.m.; Tuesday &amp;er·
meroy. The Rev William Mlddleawart,
ship Sunday 7 p.m. and Wednesday, 7 p,m
day at 7 30 p,m
Church SChool. 9 am , Worship 10 am.;
vice, 7:00p.m.
pastor Sunday SchOO. 9. 45 a m Chureh
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
ECCLESIA FElLOWSH!P,128MIIISt.,
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7 30 p.m.; Conunu·
service 11 a.m.
Grove. The Rev. William Mlddleswarttl,
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH .
nlon First Sunday (ArC' her).
Middleport Brother Chuck McPhersoo.
SACRED
HEART CHURCH, Msgr
pastOI'. Chutth aervtce 9: :1) a.m.; su-.....
0 H Cart, pastor SundaySchoolat9:30a.
paslor. Sunday Scbool 10 a.m.; Sunday
School10:30 a.m.
m., Morning WOI'shlp at 10:30 a.m.. Sun· 1 Anthony Glannamore Pit. 992-58118. Saturevening servtces at 7 p.m. and Wedneeday
day Evenlni Mass 7: 30 p.m.; Sunday
day evenlna service at 7· 30p.m Tbur!lday
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
services at 7 p.m.
Tom
RulfYon,
pastel'.
Sunday
SChool9:
30
services
at
7:30p.m
Mau,
8
a.m.
and
10
a.m.
Confessiona
one
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smhh,
CENTRAL CIAJSTEB
a.m , Larry Haynes, S. S. SupL Morning
half hour before each Mass CCO classes,
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
pastor. SUnday School 9· 30 a.m.; church
Rtv . MelvIn Fr11tldla
wonltlp 10:30 a .m.
11 a.m. Sunday.
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
service 7 30 p.m ; youth lellowsltlp6:30p.
Rev. Clemtllle S. Zullo. Jr.
VlcrORY BAPTIST, 525 N 2nd St.,
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA· ' Roger Willford, paster Sunday School
m .; Bible study, Thurotlay, 7:30 p.m
Rev. Don Meadow•
RENE, Rev. John Vance, pastoc; Sanely
Middleport James E. Keesee, pa&amp;ttr.
9;30 a.m.: Mornlna Worsltf 10:i5 a.m.;
FULL GOSPEL LIGHn!OUSE, 33045
Rev. Wale, 'l'llla&amp;cher
Justtce1 Chairman of the Board of ChrllSunday morn.ln1 wocshlp 10 a.m.; Even- Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, posSunday evening worship 7:00p.m.; Wedllo&gt; . PauiMarlla
Ing service 7 p.m ; Wednelday evening
ttan Life. Sunday School9: 30 a.m.; Morn·
nesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
ter. DanttY !.amber~ S. S. SUpt. Sunday
Rev. AnburCI'abiree
worship 7 p.m. Vloltatlon Thurstlay6: 30 p,
ing wonhlp 10:30 a.m.; evangellattc ser
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
momlllJ aervtce at 10 a m : Sunday evenRev. Robert Steele
m.
vice 1. 00 p.m. Wednesday service, 7 p.m
CHURCH - CoolvUle RD. Rev. Phillip RIIng !lervtce 7 30 p .m. Tuetday and ThursASBURY (SVracu..,)- Worship lla.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dexdenour, past~ Sunday SCbool9:30 am,
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
day Servicet~ at 7:30pm
; Church School 9:45 a.m ; Charge Bible
..r . Woody Call, pastor. Servlci!J Sunday
Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
worship service 10.30 a.m.; Bible study
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF 'll!E No\·
Study, Wednesday, 7::11 p.m., UMW, Drot
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednl'll&lt;lay, 7 p.m
and wonhlp service, Wedllelday, 1 p.m.
worship service 11 a m ; Sunday nlght
ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud, puler.
Tuesday, 1· 30 p m , Choir Reheanal,
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
worship aorvlce 7 30 p.m.; Midweek
RUTLAND CR\JRCH OF CHRIST, Roy
Sunday School 9:30a.m.; Wonldpaervice,
Wednesday 6 30 p.m . (Thatcbft')
Lloyd Say..,, Supt Sunday School 9: 30 a
prayer service Wedneaday 7 p.m.
carter, putrr. MorniiiJWonltlp 10:410
10:30 am; Youth service Sunday 6:15 p.
ENTERPRISE - Worsh~p 9 a m ,
m., morning worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday
a.m .. Bible School 6:00p.m.; BlltleStwly
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLIN.ESS
nL Sunday evenlnflservlce7:00p.m. Wed·
Church School10 a .m.. Bible Study, Tuesevening servtce 7 p m.
Wedni'II&lt;I'Q' 7:00p.m.
CHURCH of Middleport, Inc.. 75PeariSI.,
naoday Prayer Meetbtr ud Bible Study ,
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW, First Monday, 7:30
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amoo
Rev. Ivan Myers. pastcr; Roger Manley,
7'00 p.m.
p.m ; UMYF Sunday, 6 p m . Choir R~
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Tillis, pan or SOnttY Hudson, supl. Sunday
Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sultday School
NEASE SETI'LEMENT CHURCH, Sunhearsal, Children's at 6:30p.m. Adult tol·
Deaver, PutCI". Mike Swiger, Subday
School
9·
30
a.m
;
Mornlngwonhlp,
10
30
9· :11 a.m.; Morning Worship 10. 30 a .m.;
day atternom services at 2::.30 Thurlday·
lowing; Wednesday (Franklin)
SChool Supt., Sunday School 9· 30 a.m.;
Evening Worsltfp 7· 30 p.m. Wednesday
am.: Sunday eventna eervlce 1:00 p.m.
evening services at 7: ao
FLATWOODS- Church School,lOa.m.
Morning wocshlp 10: &gt;10 a.m.; Sunday
Wedneaday service 1 p.m WMPO proevening Bible study, prayer and praise
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mum, W.
; Worship, 11 am., Bible Study, Thunevening worsltlp 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday
service, 7· ao p.m.
gram 9 a.m. each SuDday.
Ya.
Putor, Bill Murphy, Sunday School10
day, 7 p m , UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.
evenlnj Bible otudy 7:30p.m.
Rt.JTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZAam.; Sunday eveniDg 7:30 p.m. Prayer
(Franklin).
LMNG WORD CHE~TER CHURCH
BURLINGHAM COMMUNri'Y CHURCH,
RENE. Samuel Baaye, pastor. Sunday
meetlni and Bible study Wednl!lday, 7:30
FOREST RUN - Worsltfp 9 a.m.:
OF GOO - Gilbert SpeDCet', poster. Sun·
Burtlniltam. Ray Laudermllt pastcr; RoSchool9:30 a.m ; Worship service 10: lOa.
p.m. EvE!!ryme welcome.
Church School 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
day
School
9:30
a.m.;
Morning
service
bert Cmart, asslotant paster. Sulllay SChool
m.. Youllfl people's service 6 p.m.
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
Thunclay, 6· 30p m; UMWthlrdMonday.
10:00a.m.;
Sundayeventngserv1ce7:00p.
!Oa.m.; wcnhlp7pm., W-'1\'.&amp;p.m.
Evangel I$ tic servtce6· ill p.m. Wednesday
!em St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. SUnday
(Thatcher)
m.; Mid-week prayer service Wednesday
youtll meetlni; Wed, 7 p.m. chureh serv1...
servtce7p m
School10a.m.; Sundayevenlng7·00p.m;
7p.m.
HEATH (Middleport) - Cburch Sclmol,
PINE GROVE HOLfNESSCHURCH, \!
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
Wednesday evening prayer meetlna:7:00
9•30 a.m, Morn.tng Worship 10:30 a.m.;
MT.
OLIVE
FULL
GOSPEL
COMMUNmlleoft:Rt. 325 Rev. Ben J. Watts, pastoc.
St, Muon, W Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
p.m.
Youth Group, 4 p m; Wednesday, Bible
ITY
CHURCH,
Lawren~
Bush,
pastct'.
Robert Searl,., S.S. Supt Sunday School
am, Worshtplla.m.and7p.m WednesSOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
sludy 6.00 p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m.
Max
Folmer,
Sr.,
S
S.
Supt.SundaySchool
9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10·30 a rn;
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
CHURCH, Sliver Ridge. Duane Syden·
(Zuniga)
9:3Q a.m.; SUnday evenlnJ[ service. 7:30.
Sunday evening servtce 7 30 p.m.; Wed
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dudotrtck..-, patter. Sunday School 9 a .m.;
m.; Wednertpay evenlnJ[ Bible study and
MINERSVILLE -Church SChool9.00
nesday tervlce, 1 30 p.m.
ding Lane, Mucn, W. Va. J . N . Thacker,
Worship Service, 10 a m ; Sunday even ina:
a m.; Worship service 10 00 a .m.; UMW
praise
oervlce,
7:30p.m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, BUI Little,
pastor. Evening eervtce 1:30 p.m.; Wcr
service, 7:00pm. W-esday nl&amp;ht Bible
third Wednesday, I p.m (Thatcbft')
UNITED
F
AlTH
CHURCH,
Rt.
7
on
Popastor. Steve Little, S. S Supt Suoo.y
men's Mtnlltry, 1b.uraday, 9:30 am.:
1tudy 7: 00p.m.
PEARL CHAPEL- Church SChool9: 00
m«oy B~·PUo. .Reo!· RobertE.Smlth, Sr,
SchoollO a.m.; Morntng wocslp, 11 a.m ;
Wt!Cinl'll&lt;lay Prayer and Bible Study, 7· ~
a m., Worship Service 10. DO a .m. (Mar·
Sunday
evening
worship
7:30p.m
Prayer
pm.
tin)
meetlnJ[ and Bible stUdy Wednl!lday, 7:30
POMEROY- Church SChool, 9: 15am
HAR1TORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
p m.: Youth meeting Wednesday at 7p.m.
; Worship 10. 30 a.m.; Choir reb.,.rsal
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va.
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; UMW, second
Rev. David McManll, puler. Cbun:h
- 383 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport Sunday
Tuesday, 7:30p.m; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
School 9:30 a.m.; Sunday momlnc serSchoollO
a
.m.
Sunday
evening
7:00p.m
:
(Meadows)
vice, 11 a.m.: Sunday evenln&amp; aervlce,
Mid·week service, Wed, 7 p.m
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School, 9: ~
7 30 p.m Wednaoday prayer meetlnJ[, 7:30
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH'
a.m.; Worship 10 a m ; lllble Study, Wed·
p.m.
H God were to send you a bill lor his gifts, I wonder which one
Sunday Scho&lt;i 9 30 a.m.; Dallas Jane}·;
nesday, 7· 30 p.m., UMYF (Senlora), Sun
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
supt.,
Mornlni
worship
10·
~ a m ; Sunyou
would be most happy to pay. Would you pay for a sunny day,
day, 6 p.m., (Juniors) every other Sunw. Va., Rt. 1, Jam'" Lowll, putor. Wor·
day evening service, 7 30 p m., Wedne&amp;·
day, 6 p.m. (Franklin)
born babe, the song of a bird, the trickle of a brook, the last
a
new
ship
oervices9:at
a.m.;
Sund'Q'Sehoolll
day evening service, 7; 30 p.m.
Hl.JTLAND - Church SChool, 10 a. m.;
a .m .; Evenlnr woroltlp 7:30p.m. Tuesday
day
of
school or the !towers of Spring? Would you be willing to
SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
NA·
Worship, 11 a .m.: UMW First Monday,
cottage prayer meetfna and Bible Study
ZARENE . Rev. Glt!itnMcMIIIan, poster.
pay
$100,000
for any of these nice things? Maybe you would pay
7:30p.m. (Crabtree)
9:30 a.m.. Worship ,.rvlce, Wednesday
Mary Janice ....vendet', Sunday School
SALEM CENTER- Cburch School9:
7·
:11
p.m.
God
all
that
money
just to be able to read the Bible or to have a
Supt. Sunday School 9· 30 a m , Morning
a.m.; Morning Worship 10:15 a.m
OURSAVIOURLU111ERANCHtlRCH,
10:
30
a
m
;
Evangellsllc
oervice,
worship
friend.
JJow
much
would
you pay or do you pay just to be sure
(Steele)
Walnut and Heney StJ., Ravenswom, W
6p m , PrayerandPral~eWednesday, 7p.
your
church
Ls
going
to
stay
on the corner or hall way up the
SNOWVILLE - Morning Worsltfp, 9:00
Va. The !WI. &lt;leoJI• C. Weirick, put or.
m , Youth meeting, 7 p.m.
a.m.; Church School10:00 a.m. (Martm,
SUnday
SChool9:30
a.m.;
Suatlay
wonblp
block.
What
Is
It
worth
to
hear
the church bell on a Sunday
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
lla.m.
.
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, puler. SUnday
Morning? I'm sure fou would be willing to pay lor a Bible, hymn
CALYARYBIBLECHURCH,Iocatedon
School 10 a.m.; Gory Real, Lay INd«.
book, choir and pew to sit on, or would you?
Pom«oy
Pike,
Gountyllood
2h"'r
FlatMorntne ~erm.on, 11 a.m., Sunday ntght
woods. Rev. Blacltwotlll, puttr. Servleeo
services: Christian Endeavor 7:30p.m.,
These all are worth paying God lor as they all come from
on Sundayatl0:30a.m.ud7:30p.m. with
SOng oervtce 8 p m. Preaching 8 30 p.m.
SOU1111!RN CLUSTER
God's
loving care. The mOBt Important of all of course Is we
SUnday SChool 9:30a.m. Blbi.Study, WedRev. Keane&amp;h Baker
Mfd-ftelt prayer meeting, Wednl!lday, 1
nesday, 7:30p.m.
would pay our most lor him called Jesus Chrlst. He Is our Lord
o.m.
Rev. Roaer Gt~~ce
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FQR
Rev . Cllrl Rlduo
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Otarand savior, God's only Son and the one wbo has taken away our
APPLE GROVE - Church SChool 9· 00
1.. Oorntean, puter. MU&lt;t-ed Zletd..-, Sun- · CHRIST, St. Rt. 338, Arltlqulty. Rev.
sins
and granted us everlastllig life. Who would not give his all
Franklin
Dlcken1,
putor.
Sunday
moma m , Morning Worship 10.00 am.; Blb1e
d'Q' School Supl. Mortt1n1 Worsh[p 9· 30 a.
Ina 10 a.m.; SUnday evet~IIIJ 7:30 p.m.
for this great gift of salvation and eternal life.
Study Sunday 7. 00 p m., Pray~r meetlna
m.; Sulfll&lt;l.v School10:30a.m ; Evenlngoer.
Thunday eventna ?:atJ~
vice. 7:30p.m.
7:00p.m Thursday. (Hicks)
We know we are sinners and we need help every day. We also
MIODLEPORTlND
DENT HOLI·
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Paatcr: Joe N.
BETHANY - Worship 9 a.m., Church
know
we must pay our way through life for the big things and the
7!1
Pearl
St.
Rev.
NESS
CHURCH,
Inc.,
Schooi!O a m , Bible Study Wednesday 10
sayre, Sunday School9:45 a.m.; Evening
Ivan Myero, actlllflputor; Rop!'Manloy,
a.m , Dorcas Women's Fellowship Wedwonblp 6:30p.m.; Prayer Meeting, 6. 30
small.
Salvation, forgiveness of all our sins and heaven as our
Sr , Sunday School Sal*'fntlendeat. Sunp.m. W-l'llday.
nesday 11 am. (Baker) .
home
are
beyond our~prehenston. How much Is It all worth?
'lliPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF, ·4&amp;)' School 9:30 a.m .. Manllna wonllfp
CARMEL - Church SChool 9:30 a m .;
·10:30
a.m.;.evalrtJ
wctnldp
'li30
p.m.;
can
not
say
but I do know the little things In life are just as dear
I
Worship, 10 45 a m Sf!cond and Fourth
CHRIST. Roberl F•ter, put&lt;r, Howard
Wt!Cirtooday ....,.btl Bible atudy, prayer
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Suttm
bltlettdont; Cburch ochool
and
I
can
euUy
see their value. Thank you Lord lor the sunny
and praise oervlce, "': mp.m.
third Thunda~. 6.30 p.m. (Bakft')
Wo IJ&gt; ..-.Ice t: t5 a.m.
day,
the
song
o_f
the
bird, the beauty of the flower below and the
CIIIJRCH OF JESUS CHRIST APQS.
MORNING STAR- Cbuteh SCbool9:4~
CR I Er\ CR\JRCH OF TRE NAZA·
TOLIC
VaaZandt
and
Ward
Rd.
Eldw
cloucls above, a laughing child, a happy IU!W born lamb and the
a.m ; Woroltlp 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
RENE. llo&gt;. Rerberl Grate, puttr.
. Jam01 Miller, puler. Strlltlay Ilebool,
Frank Rlftle, 1._ SUnday Seltool 9: 30 a .
Th"u~f6• 7 30 p.m. (Bak..-) .
10und of rain on a window pane. This I understand Oh Lord. Now
10:30a.m.,
WonltlpSenlce,lltutdi.Y,
7:m
m.: Worship oervl....,, 11 a.m. and 7 p.m.
N - Cbul'dt Scbool, 1: at a.m.;
S
p.m.; BlbleSt.IY,~W......,,7t3ilp.IL
help me see the great COlt of my salvation and slnlessness
Sunday Wt!Cirtooday, 7 p.m. Proyer meet·
Mol'lllnl Worship 10: t5a.m. llntud lblrd
CALVARY PIUlRDI CIIAPIL, llarJ'I.
Sundayo; Feii&lt;Ponltlp dlma..- wltb Carmel
your son Jesu Chrllt. He suffered and died for my
through.
putor;
third Thuroday, 6:» p.m. (BUS').
LAUREL O.IFP' FREE METHODIST • 1onvWeRoad. Rev. VIdal'
evilness.
Thank you Lord lor y,our great Gift .... - Putor
CIIDltJI
Fault,
Suad~Q'
Scltool
Supt.;
Sa•
EAST LETART- MoralllaWonldpt:OO CR\JIICH. William WWiamo, puler; RodaySchooll:30a.m.; IIIOI'IIIalw--.11
William Ml.Ueawartll, Melp Cowtt, Lutheran•
a.m.; Olurcb ScbooiiD:OOa.m., tJMW ftral
bert E . Bart•, Director ol Cbilotlan Edu·
:a.m.; Sunday O¥alq oervtce 7:JO p.m. '
Tuesday 7::11 p.m. (Gra,.,).
c~tlon; Steve Eblin, uslltant. Soliday
,frayer Meetlq, Wedlteot!q, 7:» p.m. ,

w.

·sermonette

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•

••

March 24. 1989

F

Friday. March 24. 1989

Pomeeoy-Middlaport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

ThPAARP program "55 AlivPMature Driver'' w111 be offered
on Apri14 and 5. from 1 to 4 p.m.
each day at the Semor center
ThP program IS conducled by
AARP volunleer Esther Smllh,
and consists of 111m and work,!Jook sesselons 10 refresh older
,drivers on Ira fflc Ia ws, devensive dnvlng, and what to do m

Pomer~y-Middlepo;~rt,~O~h:io~••••••••••••••••Tiihilei.DiiliaiillylliiSieniltiiilniieliilllliiil•

tsters

meetzng

A combination rummage and
bake sale was set for April 7. 9
a .m. !Ill 4 p.m al the home of
Elizabeth Hayes in Chester at the
recent meeting of the Rockland
615 Pythlan Sisters
The group also made plans to
serve dmner to the Hayman
family
Upcoming evenls of Pythian
Ohio Include a Bible class April
29, at Ute University Inn. Colum·
bus, to honor the 100th anniver-

sarv of Pythian Sls1ers. and the
125th anniversar~ of the Kn1ghts
of Pyth1as.
ReservaHons for the celebra
tions can be made by contacting
Patricia Cummins, AS R chairman , at 210 E. TaylorS! .Ashley.
OhiO 43003.
The bowl a -than for the ArlhriIIS Foundation will be at Sou(hwyck Lanes in Toledo on June 3
The Sunshine Girls Council w11l
be sometime tn June.

~mergeijcies ,

, Therp is a cost of $7 for th e two
!1ay course, and a certificate will
~e givPn upon completion of the
program
, Some Insurance companies
offer a discount to persons
~omp le lmg a defensive driver's
course such as this, il was
reported.

fashion show plans
fliscussed at meeting

H&amp;R Block has the answers. What's more, our
professional preparers will help you get the
maximum refund you're entitled to.

·618 East Main Street

'•

Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 9 AM-8 PM Weekdays, 9-6 Sat. Phone 992-6674
•

H&amp;R BLOCK DON'T SETTLE FDR LESS!

OFFD
UP.
3/29/19

In case of accidental poisoning, know what to do!
Time is vital. Qui'ck action can save a life!
While Supplies Last "SYRUP OF IPECAC
"FREE" PAMPHLETS While Supplies Last.

,..

POISON PREVENTION CENTER
DAYTON, OHIO

1·800·762-0727

-

"WE CARE ABOUT YOUR HEALTH
AND YOUR SAFETY ... "

..

.PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992-6669

271 NORTH SECOND

Public Notice

N0TIOE TO
RS
TRACT,OR DEALE
In accordance with section 307 86 of the Ohio
Aeviaed Code. aealed bidl
w1u be received bv the Board

the pertinent State ol Ohto,
Oapartmont of tha Highway
Construction and Material
Specifications end the
MOtgs County Highway Dapartment"1 Bituminous

of Margs County C omm I•·

Specifications.

2 . ..-ondora ahatl undor-

roy, Ohio 46789, until
Noon, Apr~ 6, 1989 The
bids will then be opened at
1:45 p.m. on April 6, 1989
end read aloud for the
purchMe of:
One new 1988 72 horse

givontotheactualquantltiel
noadod: but each auccoalful
vendor shaU be required to
furniah all or any Pllrt of the
County's requtrementa as
d d ·
h
b 1d
ordore
urtng t 8

mately 40,000 ton.
SPECIFICATIONS
FOA BIDS AS FOLLOWS
1 . Big price per ton f.o.b.
loaded at the vendors plant
for the various lcind8 end
aiz• of eggregatea thet mey
be required. wllich will con~
form to the pertinent Stata
of Ohio Deportment of Highway a Construction and

and settlotr~ent .
~STATE NO 25483 - Fi·
neland Distributive Account
of Rita D. Hamm, Administratrbl of the Ealate of Wil·
ham Hamm, Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 25287 Second Annual Account of
Merlyn Howery, Guardian
61 tha Person and Estate of
Verlin Howorv
ESTATE NO 25358 - Fi·
nal and-Distributive Account
of Mary Auth deLamoreno

tractor

3 . Bidded pric• shall be
firm and in affect dur~ng the
bid period.
4 . All bidders must agree
to furnish any bituminous
materials, es requ81tad in
Item 1, at theaame price to
s
·
all the Pohtical ubdivia10n1
of Moigl County during the
bid period.
6 The envelope, contam·
lng eech month' s bid, mull:
be pleinty marked "'Bitumi·
noua Bid" .
6 Proposels are to be
ratumod on bid forma aupplied by the Meigs COunty
Eng 1noor. or obtained
through the oHice of the
Board of Meiga ' County
Commi1110nera.
7 The auccenful vendor
will bo required to furniah
any feb work or dnign
grades 11 requested by the
Moigl County Engin-.
8 . The Meiga County

sionen, CounHouiB, Pom• 1-.,• .,;~ that no guarantee il

thereof

,

Mary Hobatetter, Clerk
Soard of Meigs
County Comm11tionera
(3) 17, 24, 2tc
1

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
BITUMINOUS
YENDOAS
, sealed bids will be re·
teivad bv tho BoardofMeigl
County Comminionera,

period.

Court House, Pomeroy,

Commlssk)nera re~erve the

Ohio. 45'7&amp;9 until 1 2 noon
on the 6th day of AprH,
1 989, and the bidl wtll be
opened and •eel aloud at
1 :00 p m. on the 6th dtry of
a
r pnl, 1989, forthefurnilh·
M"g of bitummous materials
for tho Molgo County High'-av Department; and each
month thereafter, bid• will
be received and opened on
(he lut Wednesday of each
month for the following

right to accept or reject any
or all bldo, or anv part
thereof.
Mary Hobatetter, CLerk
Malg1 County Boerd
of Comm11sionen
( 3 ) 17• 24 • 2tc

month's req\oliremanu. Eatl~~tated

quenthiel of liquid
uphalt required approxl·
mately 1100.000 gallono for
(Ito year.
IIPECIACATIONS
FQA TTHE BIDS:
: 1. 81g price pill' gallon
i. o. b. vondoro plant. the bid
prrco por gellon delivered to
tho vencloro ponaltlo tonk to
~ny locatiO/! within the
""unty .. dMignod by the
(:ounty Engln-. the bid
price per gellon for applied
oluat control; for tho v~rloua
)radoa of bitutlllnoua mate·
olalo which ohell conform to

\

Area Code 614

Area Code 304

446- GalltpOIII
367-Chelhlre
388- Vmtort

992-Middleport
Pomeroy

676- Pt Pleasant

943- Portland
247 .... Letart Falls
949- Raclne
742- Rutland

4 - Gt~eaway

p bl' N •
u IC ottce
NOTICE TO
AGGREGATE VENDOAS
Soalad bidl wll be received bv the Board of Meigo
CounrMy Commlulo-• at
the Commloalanero Office.
loceted In the Caurt Hou•.
in tho Village at Pom•ov.
Ohio untl noon on the 5th
dtry of April, 1918. end the
bido will be OPIIflad and real
aloud ot 1:30 P·l"· on the
5th dey of AprH. 1989, for
the lurnl1hlng of all kindo of
..... of aggregate that may
bo required bv tlttt Meigs
County Highway
Deportment.
Estlmltted quantltlel of all
aggrwoat• required. oppro~l·

Materials Speeiflcettona. excepting pea or shot gravel.
which 11 an ungraded
materiel
2 . With reopect to the
eforeaaid. eatimated quantities, the vendoralhell under·
stand that no gUarantee Is
given to the actual quanti·
tiM of aggregates to be
furniahed. but each vendor
ttltall bo required to furniah
eny part of the actual

requirements.. aa ordered
during the bid por1od
3. Prices on th1s bid shall
be firm and 1n affect from
April 1. 1 sag 10 April 1,
1990.
4 All bidden mu8t agree
to furnish any materials at
the nme prices to all the
Political Subdivisions of
Meigs County during the bid
period.
•
,
6 On the envelope con·
talning the bid. the neme end
addr•s of the vendors must
be ahown and plainly
morlced " Aggrogote Btd" .
8 Propo•l• ere to be
retu mad on bid forma aupplted bv the vendor. and wtll
be opened on the data and
place 1peciftad above.
7
The Meigl County
Commiuionen reJerve the
right to accept or reject any
or all btds and /or any part
thereof
Mary Hobltetlor. Clerk
Meigs Cou ntv Board oi
Commis8'oners
(31 17. 24, 2tc

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT.
PAOBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Account• end vouchers o1
tho folowlng named fiduci·
ariel hove been filed in
the Pro bote Court, Meig1
County, Ohio, for approval

54 - M,sc Merchandtse

6 - Lost and Found
7- Vard Sale ipa1d 1n advoncel
8 - Pubhc Sale &amp; Auct1an
9 - Wanted t o Buy

57 - MuStclllnstrumenn
68 - Fru1t1 &amp; Veg&amp;tabii'JI

55- Budding Suppl••
58 - Peu for Sale

59 - For Sale or Trade

Servi~es

Farm SUPJllies
&amp; L1vesto~k

11 - Heln Wanted
.1 2- Sttuatlon Wanted
13- lnturl!lnce
14- Bus•n•• Traimng
15 - Schools &amp; InstrUCtion
16 - RadiO, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Mlsceltaneou s

61 - Farm Equipment
62 63 6465 -

Wanted to Buy
L•vestock
Hay &amp; Gra1n
Seed 8o FerUtler

18 - Want•d To Oo

Transportation

22 - Mon~ to Lo.an
23 - Prof•stonal Serv1ces

Real Estate
31 - Homn for Sale
32-Mobile Homn for Sele
33-F.rms for Sale

458- Leon

34 - Buatnets Bu1ldmg1

676 - Appla Gro\le

35 - Lots &amp; Acreage
36 - Real Estate Wanted

773 - Mason
882-New Haven

71 - Autos for Sale
72- Trucks for Sale
73 - Vens &amp; 4 WD s
74 - MotMcycl•
75-Boats 8o Motors for Sale
76 - Auto Patti&amp; Ac:c•IOI'IM

77- Auto Repatr
78 - Camplng Equ1pment
79 - Campe!'l &amp; Motor Homn

l;titblld

896 - letert

937 - Buffalo

41 - Houses101" Rent
42 - Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Farma tor Rent
44- Apanment tor Rent
46 - Furnllhltd Rooms
46- Space for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent

Services
81 - Home Improvements
82-Piumblng &amp; H.,.t1:1g

83- EIICWating

84- Elec:tncll • Refrigeratton
86- Gen •AI Hauling
86 - Mobile Home Repa~r

48 - Equtpment for Rent
49 - for Le•a

Public Notice

NOTIE OF PUBLIC
HEAAINGS AEGAADING
STATE OF OHIO SOLID
WASTE MANAGEMENT
PLAN
Notice ia hereby givon that
the Ohio EPA will bo conducting public hearings concerning the Slate of Ohio
Solid Waote MonegomPian .. mandated bv Am.
Sub. H . B. 592. The -lngo
will bo held at the foUowlng
lo~iona and tim• : Belmont
School Auditorium.
Moplevlew Ave., Dayton, Dh., Tuaoday, April 25.
1989, 41:00 p m.-9:00 p m ;
Ohio Univeralty, Irvine Hall
Audttorium, West Green/·
Richland Ave.. Athena, Oh ..
Tuesday, Apri 26, 1989,
8:00 p.m.-9.00 p.m .. parking will bo available In loll 1 8
8o 27 (around footbell field);
Akron Univeulty, Schrank
Hall South. Room 145, off
Eut ExchanQe St • Akron.

5 - Happy Ads

Employment

667 - Coohl~la

Public Notice

Merchandise

87- Upholstery

Public Notice

Public Notice

Oh .. Wednndoy, Aprtl 2&amp;.
1989, 6:00 p.m.-9:00pm.

p•rklng is eveilabte at the
Schrank Hall South Deck,
tho Art 8o Science Center
Deck (Sumner St.) and on
Eaat Exchange St.: Donnell
Jr. High School•uditorium,
allclwin, Fincl~r~. Oh ,
w_ _.~r~, Apri 28. 1989.
&amp;:00 p.m · 9:00 p.m. Centen·
nlrtl High Shool Auditorium.
1441
Bethel Ad. Columbua. Oh ..
_.~r~. Apri
26, 1989, &amp;:00 p.m.-9·00 p.
m The plan will be available
for revfew beginning April
10, 1989 et tho following
Ohio libraries· Akron-Sum·
mit County Public Ltbrary,
66 S Main St., Akron, Oh.;
Nalaonvllla Public Library/ Athon1
Brench, 66 N.
Court St • Athono, Oh • Public Librory of Cincinnati and
Hamilton County, BOO Vtno
St.·ltbrery Square. Cincinnati, Oh : Tha Claveland

131

w_

Public Librery, 326 Superior
Avo .• Clavoland. Oh.; Public
Library of Colu1T1bu1 and
Frenklin County, 96 Grant
Avo, Columbuo. Oh.; Dayton and Montgomery Countv Public Library, 216 E
Third St, Dayton. Oh.; Findlay Hancock County District

Public Library. 206

Brot~d·

way, Ftndlay, Oh. : Port•
mouth Public Library, 1220
GaUia St.. Portamouth, Oh.,
Tolodo·Lucao County Public
Library, 325 Michigan St..
Toledo. Oh: Public Library
of Young1town and Mahon·
lng County, 305 Wick Ave ..
Voungotown, Oh . The plan
will alao be available for re·
view beginning April 10,
1888 at tho Ohio EPA, Divi·
110n of Solid and Hazardous
Waoto Management. 1800
WaterMark Dr , Columbu1,
Oh Written commenta concerning the pllln will be ac:ceptad untM May I 2, 1 989

Commento ahould be aub milled to the Ohto EPA, DI'llllion of Solid end Hazerdoua Wasta manag.ment:
Attn. Solid Waate Menagement Section, 1800 Watermark Dr .. Columbua, Oh
43216. If thoro aro any
questions concerning thit
matter. pleMe contact thll
Ohio EPA, Divi1ion ol Solid
and Hozardou1 Wuto Man ·
agom . .t, Attn : Solid Wasta
Monagemont Section. 1800
Watermark Or, Columbuo,
Oh. 43216, Tal: (8141 &amp;442917.
l-..:i3_1_;2_4_._1_tc_ _ _ _ _~

SAVE STEPS!

I

Shopthe
Want Ads
fwst!

Absolute
Real
Estate
Auction
'

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Public N otice

and reserve the right to
accept or reject any or all
bids and/or any part

2- ln Mamory

Mason Co , WV

Meags

26 35 WORDS
S7 00
610 00
$15 00
$25 00
660 00

51 ..... Household Goo dill
52 - Spor1ing Goods
53- Ant,ques

3- Annoucements

Cet· Results Fast

Public Notice

B1d specifications may be
picked up at the Meig1
County Eng1neer' 1 off1ce or
the Metga County Commls·
sioneu Office
The Meiga County Com·
miutOners may accept the
lowest bid, or aeleC1 the beat
bid forthe intended purpooo,

1- Card of Thanks

21 - BusinMI Opportunity

Galha County
Ante Code 614

643- Atlble 011t
379- Walnut

..

.

Announcements

Classified pages cover the

986-ChMter

$4 00
56 00
$8 00
$13 00

Ratesare for consecuttv~ runs broken up drtVS Wtll be charged
fnr ear.h 11"" as separate ads

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY DEADLINE - t1 00 AM SATURDAY
MONDAY PAPER
- 2 00 PM MONDAY
TUESDAY i'APER
- 2 00 PM TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY PAPER
- 2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
- 2 00 PM THURSDAY
FR IDAV .PAPER
- 2 00 PM FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAPER

24&amp;- Rto Granda

Public Notice

·

1 DAY
3 DAVS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

"A ctan1f1ed advertiHment placed m The Da•tv Sentinel (alii
cept - cl•stfled d11pl-v-, Bu•meu Card and legBI nohces)
wd\ also appear m the Pt Plaaunt Register and the Gall•
pol•s Oa1ly Trtbune, reaching over 18.000 homes

Count~

11-26WOROS
$5 00
$8 00
$13 00
S21 00
S33 00
S51 00

0 15 WORDS

'Ads out11de Me igs, Gallla or Mason counlles mus\ be prepatd
•Receive f 50 dtscount1or ads paid'" adllar't'ae
•Free ads - Gweawav and Found ads under 15 words w1ll be
run J davs at no ch•g•
•Pnce of ad for all caprta lletters •s double pnce of ad cost
•7 po1nt hne type only usad
•sentmel 1$ not responstble tor en on after first d., (Ch~tck
to' enors ftrst day ad runs •n paper) Call before 2 00 P m
daft after publt cation to make correction
•Ads thl1 must be pa1d 1n adv•nce are
Card of Thanks
Happy Ads
In Memortam
Yard Sales

258 - Guvan D•st

"FREE"

Mr. a~'d,~1drs. Doug f!1shop
attended a western square dance
festival last weekend at Ky Dam
Mrs. ,F\rances Young
has
returned"'hitt'Al~'
•ft&lt;'r' s~ndln"
1 ') lf~b•fp &lt;I ":11 Ji l&amp;J 'I
1'\21.
the winter In nzona w th. her
brother Ml' ·:fridl,'l'l!tli!'D9\?"Ball ..
Mrs. ' Vellfl'~~ t:b'ng : Columbus.
VISited Mr.• and Mrs Millard
Christah 'and also attended the
funeral' oCher cousin, Hnl Harmon, on-fuJJ!.I!!I.YL · ":' ·'
The spoFte&gt;aw&amp;l'd banquet was
held Morlday 'J\'lghl lj.f the Harrl·
sonv1lle School honormg the boys
and girls who played basketball
This year. , .
,• , ,
Mrs. Pauhne Atklns·attended a
da1rv meeting In McConnelsville
on Thursday.

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992·21 Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
SUN Y

following telephone exchanges ...

'

Harrisonville
happenings ·

• The Area'·s Number 1 Marketplace

POliCIES

I

· Seltmgsfor th eApr U13fashlon
~how lo .be hpld at the Pomeroy
Elementary Sc hool wet ep lanned
at Tuesday's meeting of the
committee headed by Susan
Clark at the Main Streel Pizza.
' II was decided that the first
half ot I he· show wtll feature a
beach scene with a more formal
scene to close the show
' It was reported that the design
for the program cover has been
completed by Lees a Murphy.
!lcket sales are progress ing and
members were advised that
more 11ckets can be secured from
ClaricP Krautter
It was proposed by Ann Chap- •
man that each merchant attend·
lng wear a scat I as part of their
dress to tie in w1th the scarf
demonstration being planned by
Cindy Ohven. Meigs County
'i:xtens1on agent
Deadlines were discussed with
merchants bemg advised to get
the names of models to Mrs
Clark by Monday smce the
programs will go to the printer
that day , and prizes and coupons
to Pat Arnold or Vrcky Ferrell bv
Tuesday
The deadlme (or the nar ration
list is April7wilh that mal erlal to
be given to Mrs· Ch~J?inan.

Classified

EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY

Saturday, March 25, 1989-1:30 P.M.

and Joy Roberta Sauer. Co·
Adminiatratrlx with the Will
Annexed of tho EototeofFoy
Mildred Sauer,

Oeceued.

ESTATE NO 26749 - Final and Distributive Account
of Bernard V. Fultz, Execu·
tor of tho Estate of Opal
Rendolph, Deceased.
ESTATE NO. 23826 Third Account of Grace E
W - . Guardian of tho Per·
aon and Estate of Mark Alan
Weber
ESTATE NO. 26383 - Fi nal and Distributive Account
of Torry C. Wayland, Admin·
istrator of the Estate of
Jennlnga 8 Wayland, De-

NEEDS WORK BUT HAS POTENTIAL

COULD BE TWO UNIT RENTAL

Vol. 302 Page 027 Meigs Co. Deeds Records

Vol. 302 Page 027 Meigs Co. Deeds Records

ceased.
ESTATE NO. 25881 - FI-

nal and Olatributiva Account
of Dwane A . Jordan. Melva
Faye Crabtree, and M Wei·

ter Jordan, Co -Exeeutora of
the Eotate of Elizabath A.
Jordan, Deceased.
Unl•s axcepttOnl are
ftled thereto, 1ald account•
will be for hearing before
oaid Court on tho 24th dtry
of April. 1888, at which
time uid accounts wHI be
considered end continued
from dtry to dtry until ftnally
diopoood of.
Any person intar•ted
may fila written ••eptiona to

aeid eccounta or to m1tten
pertaming to the execution
of the trust, not leal than
five days prior tothedateaet
for heenng.
Robert E. Suck. Judge
Common Pie• Court
Probate Olvlolon
M01gs County, Ohio
(3) 24, 1tc

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

SMALL HOUSE COULD BE RENTAL

Vol. 302 Pap 751 Meigs Co. Deeds Records

TERMS: 1OOfo DOWN DAY OF AUCnON
BALANCE WITH DEED WITHIN 30 DAYS
HOUSE AVAILABLE FOR VIEWING BY CALLING
992·2259 AND 1 HOUR BEFORE AUCTION
Sale Conducted By:
Martin-DePugh Realty &amp; Auction Service 774-2114
in Co-operation with

Cleland Raalty-608 East" Main, Pomeroy
HE..Y E. CLELAND, IEALTOR· - 992-2259
OWNER-MARY YOUNG
AnOINIY-IEINAID FULTZ
AUCTIONEEI-LAIIY DtPUGH
••

•I

�'· ·

Friday. March 24, 1989
Page- S The Daily Sentinel

s .

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio'

.

8
;::::=====t;rr=~~u=ins~I~n§e====s9-sT"E:?:e=r~v=tmc=e=s:::;:::==::::===::::::;l :r.:-i!~::.olg;.~o:1•4~
WEDDING GOWNS, !'tOM
DRESSES, FORMAl ArniE
AND ACCESSORI£S
"Just In Time For Spring
hsnls.• .' •

•Mobile Home Pans

•Plumbing Suppliee
•Eiaetrical Supplie&amp;
MON.·fU£S.·W£Q ••fll.

9 A.M.·6 P.M.

THUIS. 9 A.M.-12 NOON

SEIUI .Mall11 Mont•

SAT. 9 A.M.·2 P.M.
Call AllftiMo Day or

BUYEJI ...Sav• Montr

FOR llfOIMATION
614-992-7521
614 992 2661
'
'
WEDDINGS &amp; EVENTS

lrt.l Houdasholt, Ownor

3rd St.,

Syn~cuso,

Oh.

:_. STONE

Public Notice

DEUYIIED &amp; SPIUD
GALLIA CO. AIEl

PUB~IC

NOTICE
Soolod bidl will be roCIIVBd at the Mayor' s Of·
lice. 237 Roco St .. Middleport. Ohio 45780 until 3 :00
p .m .. April24, 1989 lor tho
following deacribed real ••·
tate in accordanoe with Ordlnon ce 1208-a9 :
PARCEL NO . 1 . Bogin·
ning at the northeast corner
of Lot No. 132: thence south
along the east 1ide of Third

Street, a diatanca of SO feet ;
thence at right anglea and
eaat along the 1outh hne of
said Lot No. 132 a distance
of 561JJ feet; thence at right

angl81 and north a. distance
of 50 foot to Race Street:
thence weat along the south
side of Race Street a distance of 6fiV:z feet to the
place of beginning: said lot
being in Philip Jonw' Addition to the Village of Middleport. Meigs Coumy, Ohio,
ond feeing 60 foot on Third
Street and extending ••·
terly at that width a distance
of 56'h feet
Also the following real estate situated in Middleport.
Meigs County, Ohio. Begin·
ning at the northwest corner
of Lot No. 1 33; thence south
along the eaet aida of Third
Stroot o diotonco of 60 feet:
thence at right angles and
eat a distance of 83% feet;
thence at right angl• and
north e diatance of 39 feet
and II incheo: then coot right

angles and west a dietance
of B feet: thence ot right angles and north 1 dietllnce of
1 0 foot ond 7 incheo to the
north line of said Lot No.
133: thence wost along the
north line of Lot N. 133 •
dietance of 76 feet tnd 6 !nchH to tho place of bogonning. Said above lot being e
port of Philip Joneo Addition
to the Vill1111e of Middleport.
DEED REFERENCE: Vo·
lumo 228. Pogo 9111. Meigo ·
County Deed Rocordo.
Save and aJC.capt a parcel
conveyed to Citizens No·
lionel Bonk. Middleport.
Ohio, by deed of oven dote

herewith.
PARCEL NO 2 : Tho following real estate sitU8tH in
Middleport, Meigo County,
Ohio: That port of Lot No.
132 deocrlbed oo followo:
Beginning at the north-westarty corner of the e.-t one.o
In Memoriam

IN LOVING
MEMORY OF
RP.YMOND (BUCKl
LARKINS
WHO LEFT US
FOUR YEARS AGO
MARCH 24. 1985
We can'' tlllk ond tell you
ell the things we uood
to uy;
But God in Hooven
knows we mi11 you
more each day.
You ware ouch o heppy
guy ond loved by all
and enjoyed lifo in OV·
orv way;
But thio io taken from uo
and left uo to only
pray.
.
wo violt your grwe with
flower• which holpl
conaola our he.-ts
With all the empty feel·
ingo that con n - d•
port.
Sadly mloood and loved
by Wife Noncy: Son Eric;
D-htero Catherine •
Charlene: Siotora Voro •
Donno: Brother Howord,

lfPRESENr&amp;riYE
302 w· ••
• d St··
"'m•ll'· Ohio 45769
•

Claim~&lt;

S7,50•EI lON

Contact Blaine

laylor

6 I 4-245-9557

3· 1 0 · '89· 1 mo.

Public N otlce
half of lot No. 132: thence
south a distanceof60feet at
right angles to the north line
of Lot No. 1 32; thence eeot
6 feet and 6 inchM; thence
north 50 foot: thence west 6
feet and 6 inches to the
place of beginning, and be-·
ing a parcel of land 6 feet
and 6 inches '" width off of
tho weot oido of the aut half
of Lot No. 132 and leaving a
parcel of tend 60 feat on
Race Street and 50 feet on
tho alley.
OEED REFERENCE: Volume 230, Pogo 323, Meigs
County Dead Records
EXCEPTING tho real eo·
tate conveyed to C•tizens
National Bank, by deed recorded in Volum, 230. Page
325, Meigs County Oeod

=::!1

110 West llaln, Pomeroy

992-2284

..,____

Of BUSINESS

Jo's Gift Shoo

6

SYRACUSE. OHIO
Most Foreign and
Oom~t1c Vehicl es
A/ C Service
All MaJOr &amp; Mmor
Repairs
NIASE Certilied Mechanic

Ring

Certifeed L•censed Shop

2-1·1 mo.

MOBILJ
HOME PARK
•Mobile Home .,
Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

CALL 992-6756
"DOC"

33

HAULED

SER~ICE

We

C!J

can repoir and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
olso acid boil ond rod
out radiators. We also
repoir Gas Tanks.

992·2196

North of

Television
Devices
. Dependable Hearillg Aid, Sales &amp; Santicl
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Middleport,

Public Notice

Leesa
&amp;

M'!ffthey
Assoc1ateo

PUBLIC
RELATIONS

PUBLIC NOTICE
On Saturday, March 25,
1989, at 10:00 A.M .. The
Home National Bank, Ra·
cine. Ohio. wHI oHer for sale

108 Highs,,,.
Pom.,.oy, Ohio 45769
Phon• (6141 992·2922

et
public lot,
auction
the bank:
parking
the on
folowing

~~========~

19B7 Ch811roiot S-10
4 wheel drive pickup truck
Sorlol Number
1 GCCT14RHZ116431 .

The term• of the Mle era

cuh.
The Home Notional Bonk
rnarv.. the right to bid at
the sale or to remove the

item or itarns from the Nle
at any time.
(3119.
21. 22. 23. 24. Btc

zo.

Public Notice
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Ia horoby given that
tho onnuol meeting of tho
ohoroholdoro of Farmero
8on,.horea. Inc. wll be h-'d
at the office of Farmers lank
end Sovlngo Company, 211
West Second Stree!, Pomroy, Ohio, according to it•
bylaws. on tho third Wed·
naodoy of April. 1989. at
3 :00P.M . for tho purpoooof
electing directors and the
tranuction of auch other
bu llneoo 01 moy properly
coma before sal d meeting.
Paul E. Kloeo.
Secretory
131 24. 31: 141 11. 18, 4tc

1

THE
BASKET WEAVE
Hand Woven
Baskets
Basket Weaving
ClaBSes
Basket Supplies
OPEN SATURDAYS
10:00 'TIL 5:00
PAM MilHOAN • OWNIII

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp;· HEATING

NOW OPEN fOI
IUSINESS

$35

Cans, Gl•s. Brass.
Copper and Mora
MON •.fl.: 9 am·6 Jl!ll
SAT.: I am-12 Hiioti -

NO SUNDAY

Top prt01 fur used 'llrntture.
...... .__ld, ontlquoo,
and •plan-. All ty,.... C.H
114-115-4381.

&amp; lollart lrown
lv•ings....

Ouilto
Pro 1140 quito. Any aondllian.
CUh oold. Coft 114-992-11857
"'114-1182-2. . 1.

SAT. NIGHT

PROFESSIONAl
CARE

6:30P.M.

INTERIOR, EXTERIOR

EVDY

lltasonablt Pric11"

Uoed furniture on d hou-ld
opplltn - · Phone 114-742·
20411.

·WITH

Basham Building

Day =r Night-

Fact·orv Choke

PlUMIING &amp; uu·n11"
Now Location:
161 North Socond
Mitltlleport, Ohio 457 60

I llliliii VIIII'III

11

Help W1ntad

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Flohlng 8uppll•
Your Phone
l C.1bla Bills Hare

IUSIHISS PHONE
16141 H2-6SSO
~.EIIIDta PHONE '

GUN SHOOT

EVERY SUNDAY

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE. OHIO
FACTORY CHOKE

..utt-

0-ntpoutl
Gutter Cluning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2168
2-10-'11·1 mo. pd.

Authorized John
Deere, New HoiiMd,
9ulh Hog firm
Equpment Dealer.

REPAIR
3-20·'88·1 mo.

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE
MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,

OPEN 7 DAYS

. INC. -

Paying today
Jan. 14, 1989

Reasonable Rates,
Fully Insured

I Subject

CAU 992-6681

__ ..,...,. __ _

I 1·31 · '8a-1 mo.

BINGO

POMEROY -EAGLES
CLUB
224 E. MAIN ST.
992·9976

TIIUIS. U. lt:4S P.M.
SIN. U. 1:45 P.M • .
DOOI PillE

2 H.O. FREE with COUJIOn Mid
puldl.. of lllin. H.C. Pack.'
..._ Lim~ I coupon per cus,_. per binau sess1on.
Wo
150.00 P• Game
Oror 10 Ptoplo 165.00

'"T

u,

•oos-/1" Game

2-l ·tfn

to Chongo
Withoul Noti••l
#I COPPU . ............ 16• Ill.
#2 COPPU _ , , .. ,,. .. 65 • lt.
CUAN ALUMIHUM
SHEETS ...........- ....... 52• IlL
CUAN AWMIMUM
CAST ....:.................... 40• Ill.
AW.HUM
IIVBAGI CANS . .... SD• 111.
IRONY
!IIEIT ............. 5' to 30• ._
IRONY CAST-· 3' to 20' Ill.
STAINlESS .............:.. 20• .._

!-•""'""*·
-""---nd
. , . _ , Firm on tho mo...
Noe• •parlenod plumber.

tiL 8oodpoy.

lllbpoll• - l o r 2dlldron
ttl• 4 • 7 . . . . . "'I' " " Do.,-. lloply to: I • C·22, 1't.
......... w. v •. 28180 In - 0
, tho Roglot •.
Ubrory - o n t noodad It Now
HaVen PlrbUc Ullrory. Ability 10
work with ahllcr., n. . ...,.
Cloolng dlto Aprl Ill. Aptlll. .

Read boo'- lor Pll'lt100Uitlo.
Wrllo: PAIIE-8170 , 111 S .
Uncalnway, N. Awora, IL
IOIIU

Port timo LPN. AI ohltlo. hool·
lont • and
CaN
Clltlw
Wrll'.
AN. CllroHovon
of
Pt. Pl. .tnt. 304-1175-3005.1

'*'-·

c--

for iverythingp

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

Atmot tlloo:llll"th

4411-1011.

Announcamentl

...

.. •orv loturdov night.

•rlntl......_.

W. h..,. tho ""- on
choln- and
o n y - ...... l!qulp-t.
304-1171-7421.

...,,• • -

far I yr. • 2

-doy.

yr. 3\'1 dll'l I
1111. Col olt• I PM 114-44110278.

..... ...,.... o.,.,..,._
far
""'"""
folollly.
_ .1 .1DO
. , .bad
_ ..
ln_w_.

992-5114

NDOm. . . dlil CW 2 YWI of
.........e d • - • l n • - h
- · ~~-........
~~II - loolory.
c ..
Nunlnaeont•. lit. 2 lea 21:1.
......-or ool 114--7110.

Located Off Bypaaa
At Jet. of Rt1. 7 S.
143, Po~nerc111.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sot• ll"'d chain priced fro m
1 396 t o *985, T•bl• •10 an d

up to t126, Hlde-•·bodl t390
to t815. Aeclnn 1225 to
t376. Lompa I 28 to 1125.
DinM'tM $109 and up to •496.
Wood table w-e chair• 12$6 to
1795. Dook 1100 up to 1375
Hutchoo t400 and up. Bunk
bedl compl•e w· mtttr-•
t215ondupto1395. BIIJ;•110. Menr.... orbo• springa

Real Estate

"It will never last. He's
campfrre, she's microwave!"

r.=========:-r-;::;::::;;:::::::::::::;::::::::1
44
Apartment
for Rent

41

1----------------

Homes for Sale

Vl!lfY attractiVe brick 4 be~oom.

2 bllh. hmity room wrth fir•
place. forme! dining. lwge IN ing
mom. 30 ft. cultom Ollk kitchen
cWMn••· olk woodwOfk. fin .. h
beument. 2; car g•age. hwel
l.. dlclped lot, 4 rnilea from
Holzer H01phal off Rt: 35·
FQrt •brook SubdN ilion. CaU

81 .. 4411-4189

Delu)(e 3 BR . house for !IBie.
O.Vner fin.nce Can 304-67&amp;

5104.
GOVERNMENT HOMESI From
$1 .00 (U Repair). Forecloauret.
Repos.. Tax Delinquent Proper-

lin NOW SELLING THIS
• AR EAI Cal IAefu ndoblol. 1•
315-733-11084, Ext. G2732A.
FOR CURRENT USTINGSI
Hou11 for 11le by owner. A nice
home located of 5th Aw .•
Ken aJQII. large lot, air conditioned second floor, naw 981
furnace. EJCeltant for amell.
young famltt oren ola couple
Home has many fine featuret.
•\ For appointment· call 61+448-

0820.

'

1

1hop and mO\Iiel. 814-446-

Complete houaehold furnilhinQJ. 1/J miiNerrlcho 304-8715-

from city on Rocldidc. Rd ., 1300
a mo Ref
Sec dep req

Tan Townhoul8 aplrlment•· 2
BAa., t y, baths, CA .. dis·
twva1ha', diapolll. fN'ivlte en·
clo ..d patio. pool, plllfground
Wet•. te'WOr, &amp; traah included
$tart1ng at $289 pa mo Call

evenings.

3644.

7 V~~*' old. 3bectoom bride.~ "'"VI
total electri c. r1nch ltyle home,
c •peted throughout_ 1 acre
fenced in back yard with deck
Localld 7 ml• from HcMzer

Hoapltol on Rt. 180. Awlloblo

· Good hou• .tor ule in t.lt
' nolghbori*&gt;dofRutlondvHIIIIo.

Price rDicM esooo. Mother in
· Alit Home .-.d need to ~&amp;II.
r

bedrdooms. g•eu• full
b•emn. •••lot on Rt. 2. nice
con d. wUI conilCI• mobile home
·tJMiein.. Mlke8f0Wnl 304-67&amp;
2418.
I..,
'
l

2

or 3

32 Mobile Homes

SHADY

'

Pom«ov 2 bedroom hou1e,
Mulberrv Ave. Kitchen with
stove and refrigwmor. full b••
mMt, ._...,h.- and dryer t'loak·
up, off Itreal parkin g. Ideal tor
working d.llt1 or retirlld couple
No
822&amp; month and

pet•.

dopoa•. 814-992· 5292 oft•
&amp;p.m ..

Smell completely furni1hed
hou ... Prefer con1truction

workon. 8t4-992· 7751 .

4 bel2'oom1. 21tOfY, nice porch,
on riv• front in Middleport
8 200

per montli. 81 4-992·
5837 boforo 8 30p.m

Available A,..H 1at in Mlddl•
port, 2 bad'oom Sower dupiM..
nSNtt deooratlld, nicetv fur·
nlshed Adutt. onty, no petl. ean

3 br house wit: tWt Wilking
distance North Point end PPHS.
~quire 1700 Jaff•son Blvd.

oftsr 8 ·30.

Mobile Homes
"'" for Rer'lt

Fultv furni•hod g•aga apt. All
utllit1• paid except elact:ricttv.
New tv .edea:nat.t &amp; carpeted.
Oep Allo 3 bedroom trail•. Clll

614-4411-8868.448-8850.

2 BR .. cable ev•llable. be&amp;Jtlful
river viM' in Kana~ga F01ter'1
I'Aobile Home Park. 814·4481802.

Ref. •

clop.

requ~ed .

614-446-0627 aft.- 2 PM.

Coil

1980 Sp~on 14~t 70, 2 BR , 2 , For rent. 2 Br. trailer in the
• btllw. aH oloctric. CA. woo~ countfY. Call 814-371-2187.

bJr... 1 Olt 18 dock. 12&gt;&lt; 14

wood
5028.

buil~g.

Call 6t4-246-

dadt. woodb.lrnar. Mutt ••·

Coli 614-44&amp;4387.

' 14x70 Wlndlor. 1St up &amp; r..clv
to move ln. 7 acr• in oountrv
"Rented lot"' . Mlnutas from
Spring Vlll8f Kerr-Harrilburg
• Rd. $12.100 0111 614-246-

' 630! work, 245-5558 ovo

! 1882 Fleetwood 14x70, 3 BR .,

2bathl on 1.28ac:r•. Bultr~tlle
· Rd. t26,ti00. 0111 814-4451492.

• •1979 Monolan. 14A70, 3 bo~
roonw. an el~rlc. unct.pinning
Vflfl'(

good aoncltlon.

: neoo. 81,.843-11453.

Double wide mobile hol'1l8. on
1ound81Min. approx. 2 acr-.
.. cloaeto town end 1chooll. llrge

ldlch.,, IMlndry, 3 hodr....._ 2
new carptt:, conatll:e
• Pa&lt;dl-wolko, bock · polio,
' rollnlohod cell•. hoot pump.
~

b.tt..

excellent DDlldiUon. Large b•n
. with aonace toor. 114-982-

!218 ..,onlngo lifter 6 :30 or
........ do.

Mable home on one acre lot at
01.-.wood. 304-571-24871 or

oft• 8:00PM 5711-2018.
1179 Eloono 14A70. 3

be~

roon.. 1Y.i hthl. centre! air,
totll eiiCirl~ vinyl undersldrting. pordt. out bldg., one rentll
lot. 110,1100. Coli 304-875-

2948.
For &amp;ale fire d.wniiQed trail•.

Bolt Oflsr. 304-175-1078.

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

35

Lots

For rent or aale. 2 bedroom,
furnilhed. washer end di\W. air.

Call 614-992-7479.

In Tupper• Pllinl, 2 badroom1.
8 175. par month plus depoalt

and utllitlos. Call 514-1173487.
2 bedrOQm. 14x70, central air,

SondHitllloed. 304-875-3834

1988 8 roedmooremobll a home.
14x72. 3 Br , 2 bitt.. A•ume
tqon. Cotl 814-4411-9308.

ilnd porch,

2badroomtrailw. furnished. On
Walnut St., in Racina. 614-992~

6039.

1978Shultz, totallloc., 2 BR .. 2
lutl bothl...... ••pot. t:Z.20

l!t Acreage

2 or 3 bed room hou• in Point
Ple•ant •raa. 304-875-n17
after 5 :00PM
2 bel2-oom t:f81ter, compttt:etv
furnished. •r cond., wuh•and
dryer In Maaon · 304-773-

6761 .

2 bedroom hou • City weter
Schoolbu1. 1 mile off R1. 87on

A E·TRAIN NCMI
SOIITHEAIITERN IUSINE8S
COllEGE, 821
Pl&lt;o.
Coll4411-4317...... No. 111-11·
10118.

.-on

l)dtedTiuck-·
Trudt Drtv• Trolnlng
D.O.T. Cartll-n Job 1'1mllll A-on• llorno ~­
, _ _ T - a l'lnonllol
Aid A.,.llollle. J.oor-ed
Mombtr N. .C. Col 'lbll P'1--141-1411. Looololla
w. V1. "'-'"
CIW.. Fl.

,.,_,e.

18

Wanted

to Do

· a ....... Subd.· 7 mil• south
. ol Golllpollo AH u-r'"'nd
- utll~l•. Rootrlcted. Col 8144411-341111.

.s - · o11

a. 'R•""'

At.
1or
- · · AI hoolc· upo 111,000.
Colt 304-11811-3335.

_...,,_.holt

, lalloroole.
mlaautG,..Aoldollllou•Z.
ilhone 304-17 .. 5200 ofter
1:00.

10--. Coin llldgo. Allo 2·on•
~-· tr--.
fiiDIIIIIe OWnll'
Cell 104-411.11711.

11n-.

448-4807 or 448-2802.

·-r.tnt,

2 BR apt . new pluah c•plll:,
utlliti• partillty' pakl
• 17 omo Call304-176-6104.
175-5388. 875-7738.
Apertmllnt: availabla. HUO accept.t Cell 304-676-510._
F11nhll'led 2.3, or 4 rooms 5
b&amp;rth. €lean. Adult1 ontv No
0011. Ret. • dep. requ~ld . Cal

614-448-1619.

Niclltv furni•hed 1meft houll!ll.
Efficienev •pt.-1 men. Mobile
home below town overlooking
river. ca &amp; hea. acl.Jits onty, 18f,

Clll 614-4411-0338

F 11ni1hed efficiency 807 Second. CWiipoN1 $160 Sh•e
bit h. Coll44tl-44tlolt• 7PM .

Two 1 ~bedroom unfurni1hed
ap .-tments. In Galllpoll . 1175
and 8226 par month. Stove .. d
refrigaoetor furnithad. Conv•
nlent toc.tion Ret. . .ca Md

leoso required. Coil 814-4414.t25 or 4•8-2326.

Furnished opt.· 1 8R . 243
Jadc•on l'ika. $236 • mo
Utllhl• pold. Coil 4411-4418
olt&lt;1'7PM .

814-4411-1079.

Unfurnilhed apt. for rent 1250
a mo For further information

call 8t4-448-6186 Mon.-Fri
bot_, SAM lo 5 PM

45

Furnished Rooms

Room~

for rent·week or month.
St.-tlng 1rt $120 e mo. Oellia

Hotol-114- 4411-11580.
Furnilhed r(J9m. $76 1 mo. AI
utilil:i• paid. Sh•e bath. 919
Saoond Ave. CAll 814-446-

3946

Sleeping rooms with cooking.
AltoTraR• apace. AH hooltups.
CAll after 2p.m. 304-7736661 . M•on WV.

46. Space for

or uood . 3
whMied tleotric ICOOt ..... Call
Ro,... Moblty collect. 1·814-

1987 Hartev Davidlon Tourct.alc. low mil• c,n

870-9181 .

Glide

614-441-2115.

SwlrM1ing Pool.. *999

•tt: vver 1988 MocW pools.

1986 Hondl Gold Wing. AIPtn·
cede, 4488 m1111 S6300 Clll

Huge 115 by 24 ft, twim •re~, 4

ft. dtop. lndtldol d - !once.
fltt:er &amp; warranty lnttallllion &amp;
fl nencing available. Call 24 hrs ..
, -110().345· 09411

5t4-446-0139

75

Rr-.vood for pf .. ll)llt: h•rdwood Pickup truck, d.efvered·

Boats and
M otors for Sale

• 30 Coli 114-4411-4912.

Bus

Soet~ 1987 Landau 16' 5",
1987 Merrury 35 hp motor with
power lr1m and auto oif injection.
1987 M•rca.uy Trolling motor.
1987 Shoreline trailer plus
more. Allin goodcondttlol\ Call

For Ssle ~ Concrate md Pled:ic
teptlc tankl All slzea. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Joel!·
eon. Ohio. 1 ·800.$37· 11528
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS

614-992-2770

Ron Allison. 1 210Second A ......
Gallipoll•. Ohio 61 4 · 448·
43311

Coum'Y Mobile Home Pwk.
Route 33, Non n... ot PDm•ov.
lDU. rent:ala. p.t:1, ul111 Call

814-992-7479

47 Wanted to

Rent

2

be~oom

EMtca~tive looking

for 3

BR . home In G11ipollo oroo. Coli
814-441-0500 or 817-3678
CooiYIIa

Merchiinlii se

44

51

Household Goods

1---------

Apartment
for Rent

Beech Strost. Middl_,., Ohio.
2 bodroomlurnishod . . .mont:

ullltiaa paid, ftlf.-MOM. Phone

304-882·2518.
Now ecctiPiing applh::Mionl for
2 IIOdroom 111 .,menlo. lullv
c•pM_,, applianc-. wwt•and
trBih ptokupa provided. Meint•
n.nce • • ltvtng cloH to ~op­
ping. bonkl on d ochoolo For

moralnlornwtian call 304-882·
3711. E.O.It. ·

30 .. 882· 2188.

2 IIOdroom Apto. lor rtnt.
C•p-. Nice totting. I.Mindry
locllllol tvolllblo. CIIU 814982·3711. EO H.
Gr OUI lYing. 1 Md 2 bedroom IPII'tmlnt:s at VHI1111
Minor and Rlv ...dl Al*t:·
In Middleport. From

....,u
t112. Coli 814-lt2·7787.

•alit ,.

2 110*- opt, in Mlclcloport.
.,75 p• morotll.
qu~ld - No , _ Day tl4-992·
2311. ovonlng 114-112-2508.

In
Ono IIOdroom IPI· fllr · 1150
rnomh ·
..... utlltlol.
CAl - 114-1121114117o.m.·4p.m. or 814-8412217 olt•lp.m.

SWAIN

AUCTION &amp; RJANITURE e2
Olivo St, Golllpollo.
NEW· 8 pc. wood.oup- t399.
Living ri.Om ouh• t191J.I599
Bunk beds with bedclng- '249
Full olze mollr-. roundotian
aurtlng- $99 . Recliners
otortlntt 199.
USED- Bodo. dr•o.,., - o m
outt•. Oeol&lt;o. wrlne-wot"-, o
compa.te
line of uMd
t.Jrnlture
NEW· -lorn
booto·
t35.

Workboolo t18 • up. (SIMI •

soft tool. Calll14-4411-3159.

&amp;

V'1Aa Furniture 8a ApplienOH
()pan Dolly 9 AM-5 PM
Sund.,. 12 Noon-6 PM

814-441· 3t58

e pc. wood lilltng room 1Lih:ft·

•389. All sofa'• 8a ch•ra m•kad
down 1..7 price matt:r. . ••le.
Hewy duty bunk bedl with
beddln9"8229. Free m•ttrftl
lilt with purdl•e of certain
bedroom suit•. 7 pc.. wood
poster Hdroom 1uh• $749. 7
pc. country dtnnette •at (In·
cludel hutch)· 8550.

Used &amp;

King 1lze watarblld . Semi-V~eVII
mattra•. 8200 OBO. Cell 614-

448-9308
Gro01ry store dilpll'f can•·
meet vegetable &amp; dairy &amp;
cer.nie kiln forule Aahl_..k. Ky

1 ·1108·928· 38t8
Spring form.ll . V•rlou1 1izn

Coli 614·448-0931 .

FirtMI'ood for 11le-Oak &amp; mlxe:d
hardwood. 8ft pickup-120 Call

814-4411-t 187

AI\ appli.,otl h..,e 30 diVS
guarantee. TRADE-INS &amp; leva·
ways welcome. Lots of net.N
anlvel1. Rt. 141 Cllnten.-y, 14
m1l1 on Linooln Pike

Family weight bench exercl••·
Excel cond.- t70. Call 61 4·

VrKV good furnitu,.Couch, caf·

55

fee ••ble. end llbtes. curfO. etc

445-7803.

245-5t 21

•ira•·

2783

56

Pets for Sale

_Antiques

Groom •nd Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breads .. All
1tyle1. lam• Pat Food Dealer.
Julio Wobb Ph. 614-448·0231 .
Dregonwynd Catterv Kennet
Peraien 1nd Siameae Md Him•
IIIVM ldttena. Chow 1tud Hr~

vice. Coll814-448-3844oltor7
PM.
Superior Quality AKC Cocl!•
Spaniel pupa. Shots tterted,

Buv or Sell Riverine Antique•.

1124 E. M•in Street, Pomewoy .
Hours: M,T,W 10e m. to 8p.m ,

Sundlv t to lp.m 814· 992·
2628.

wormed, Vottsotld. t160osch.
Cell 814-388-8890.
Golden Retrlewer pur• AKC 3
m•le, 8 female ElCCe . pedigree

1200oach Call814-888·8888,
Proctorville.

54

Misc. Merchandise

Grwety tractor w / duel wheats,
rotarary mower. 1ulky, cut:llve·
tort &amp; cycle blr Call 81 .. 448·

9838.

Big gMt: Llnle Store. Origtn•l P &amp;
J Odda andEnd1Shopnowopen
•t 193 N. Second, Mldc. .port.
U1ed f!,lrniture. 1ntique1, collectors ltam1 •nd glorified junk.
Com1 in and brow• •d •v
hallo to Joe .-dPolly. Wlh aell an
conlionment. Lot• or m~terial
Buy-1811-Treda. If we doin't have
h, we will find it and •ve you
that hard Nl'ned 011h.

AKC Boston Terrier. Male. 8
wka old 1200 Call 814-2&amp;8-

9364

Chow-CIIow pupo, lull bloodednot ~eglnared Sholl ltllrted &amp;
wornwt. 8100 each. Cell 81438fl.l890.
AKC Aeg. male Pomeranian,

1176. AKC Reg. mole Chow .
175. Call 814-379-2103.

Reglltered Cock• Sp.nlel pup1.
Reglltered blue point Siame~e

ldttono. Coah. No checko. Call
614-992-2807.
Regllfered a..ate puppiM. 850

Prom gown from Macy' 1 of
Atlanta for ..le. Size 8 · 10.
Niver beert worn. 81 .. 992·

coli 814· 992·:1'782

Nlmendo \Nifh control p.:la.
Ught Gun. 8 certrldg• Clll

814-985-4288.

814-941-2346 oltor 4p.m

lArge

18 HP G•don Troctor. Cohlor
engine. Needs suemblad. Cell
814-949-2345 oltor 4p.m

2460.

2 Schwinn Alr·Dr• exercl••
blk•. Vfl!fY goo concltlon.

Aototller. 31h HP. Workl fine.

t110. OM ronge, 38 Inch,
whlto. Goodcondhlon. •75. Coli
114-992·7215.

PDrtlble Hoover wu tw end
*ver, Roll-ew.y bed with m•·
trau. bedroom aulte, 1'8frlger•·

AI,_ Price Tee Recorder end
Phonograph with Racord. Both

130. Mottraos and box oprtngo,
140. Couch. brown and bolgo,
.40. £\WYthlnggoocloorddon.
Coli 814· 1111-4385.

Robblto ror ooto. Roady for
Eaner. Half Checkered Gl111t:
and half California GiMit. Call
10 month purw bred
Rottwallor . t1 00. 814· 742·
Fl1h Tenk. 2413 J•cklon Ave,

Point Plo•••t 304-875-2013.
10 goloot up tt4.99ond 10 gol
complete e43.21.
2 AKC Rllglttered male Chi hue-

hull, 7 wko old Coli 304-87118387 boloro 5 PM.

57

Fendar bUI gulllir, 8100. Ya·
n•ha FG-76 flat lop guh:ar- $715.
lolut electric ~iter~ 860. Call

Win-air -loner, 21 ,000
BTU-1125 2·woodon doors,
one wtth gl ... Call 304-1718414.

814-379-2511
lndllrlduol ,r.:hor l. .ons, ,._
gin_.., •
uo .. llarlot. Brulcordis Muolc. 814-448·0187.
Jail Wemoio¥ inllrueto&lt;. 8144411-1077. Llmhld openlngo.
Vomoho RX 17 wa.h mlcl .Wm
•

Uood 34, 000 BTU H Whirlpool,
cent,.l ... mndlllon unit. V01y
r - b l e. 304-773-5531

Midi con ..rtar for Commodor
84 computar-t48. Cell 304773-5177 oltw 8 PM.

machlne-1200 080 Sonua

l.:=========:J.:=========~

8 t 4-379-256 1

1983 Pontiac Phoenix. Good

79

cond

8.§~6

6286.

Coli 610.245·

(

814- 247· 429 2

Motors Homes
&amp; Camp ~:rs

1986Chav.ne, 2 dr .• 4•pd ,air,

12.200. 1988 Chovv S-10
pickup, 4 cyl . 4 opd.. $4.000

....

1986 Dodge Ch•ger. 2 2. 6
spd . a1r, AM -FM ·tepe. a~nroof.

1978 St arcr.sft Otx 23 ft m1n i
motor ho me. geneator and all
acce~•on •. low mileage, e~tc
cond, phone 304-676· 2685.

1982 Mer(l.lry Cou;- Wagon
call 814-448- 1981 or 4469339.

Services

83,200 Call 814-2511-1410

F•m•ll C Lb. Hey rak• John

Da•e lima•pre~d•. c.n

4~ 14 in. alu minum sl01 rims &amp;
tir es for G M product 8 160. Cel\

Chwrolet picku p 3speitd trllnl·
miss10n, clu tch, pressure plate
and ot her ChBIIrolet part1 Call

814-992-8941 .

t3896. 220 AC dlaol tractor·
c..., puff. $8950. 1500 GOhl

2 220 "' 304- 675-8768.

1982 C u tlas s Supr e m e
E xcel oond Wlr e
1poke rima, 2 dr l oaded Call
Brougham

6000 Ford cl•al tractor with
&amp; 115 Ford Dyne Bounce mowing
machine. Ford bel• a. hi¥' raike.

•ft• s

PMwooltdevo. 814-387· 7543.

4010 JO di81el tr8Ct~r, 1400
hr1 -84 , 560 . Gehl

1985 Buick Park Ave. Electra
IDIIded. Garage kept. Call 614-

,.,tnder/ mb&lt;or· •796. Gehl 1500
round bal•· U,550. 120IImer-

448-8834.

8522.

1987 Olds Calal1. loaded.
23. 000 milea 57,800 Call

nllional trector·l6. 950. Owner
will finance. can 814-288-

81

614-2611-14t0

Feodor Ringo 8uvtnuold bottor-

iM. Morril EquipmMtt. Rutland.

Ohio 814-742·2465.

t4 ft Hil1boro dump trail.-, 40
Inch wein~foiG.Ip cattle r•ck•. 8
ft 3 polnt bush hog. 6 ton
1lumlnum bulk feed-fertMizer

truck body. Call 814-992· 7302

1983 Pontiac Firebird. 11.1nroof,
steroo cas. t3,496 Sh•P· Call

614-288- 72t4 or 380.2212.

1973 Mu1tang convertible 351
eng. , 3 spr;i, 86,000 act mil•

$1800. Call 814-4411-3485.

1988 Cougar LS . 6 cyl . fullv
~uipped,

low mileage.

('::&amp;11

Home
Improvements
BAS EMENT
WATER PROOFIN G

Unconditional lifetime gu arant ee Local r.,er ences furnished
Free estimates
Call collect
1-614-237· 0488, dev or night.
Roger s B ase m e n t
Waterproofin g.
SWEEPER an d sfiW'Ing machine
repair, parts. and s upplle~ . Pi ~
up and dellverv. OaiJ is Vacu um
Cleaner, one half mile up

evenlng1.

81~992-2762.

130 buoholl Now Ideo floil typo

1976 Ford Ellu. 361 , good

Georges Creek Rd . Call 610.
448-0294.

6290

Carpentry work by the job ot
hour, pen ellng, dry wall, plumb·
In g. el eccr~cal , remodeUn g co m-

m..u re epread•. $100. C. II
814-992-2563.

450. 3150 John D..- e . do:rers.
load•. baidchoe. H01 1. H021 .

HOI, AC dozers, 04D Cot . TD
20 Int. Huntington. WV. 304731- 7898; 5 Skid otoer lood•o.
Bobcat; Ford. C81a&amp; Mil•~ ·

Int. 630PT0Min .,reSpreeder,
148 bu, uMd VfltY lit:tl• exc
concl. 11.500.00. Now Ideo
323. one row corn pic*•, picked
••• than 50 ec. Ec cond
83.200 00. L.E Si11on, 304875-2933.

condltton. 1978 Chwv Vr~~ . 6
cyl., bod,' rough. Call614-843-

1977 Cadilec Eldorado Runs •

8600, Nogotlblo

814-992·

7300 evenlnga. weekends.
198001d1Cufl••Brougham. 2

plote. Coli

SeptiC Tank Pumpin[tl90, Ga l·
lia Co RON EVANS ENTER -

PRISES, Jockson, Ohio 1-800·
.

door Extra nice and cliiNWl All
the equipment. V8 engine

~37- 9528 .

82100. Coil 810.892-8719.

Small joba of any kind. Paint in g
Inside &amp; outside, all kin ds of
remodeling &amp;. room addlt lona.
Free ntimates. 36 veer~ of
eJCperlence. Call 6 14· 448·

1979 MllibJ. 2 door. ~aclc, new
good tlr•. good condj..

e~thaJit,

tian 81700. 814-843-6244

' 78 MonteCarto V-8 automiCic.

8824.

RON ' S Te l evl aio n S ervice
Hou1e c all• on RC A. Quazar,

'17llnooln Town car. new tir•.
ahocb ertd tunii:Lip, color b4eck,

GE. Spoclflllng in Zenith. Call
304-578· 2398 or 81 4-4462464.

1980Fill X19. phona304-675-

t3,800. Deutz· AIIil model 385

3089.

removol . Call 304-876-1331

4 row no-till pl1nt81" pltrle units
dry ten.. rowmarkers, inleet
lttlch monitor t8. 1500. 00.
KHf•• Svc. Cant•. St Rt. 87.

t9S8 Ford ThUnd•bird 1,800
mil•. full power. titt wheal.

Rotary or cable tool drilling
Molt wells complat:ad lime d8'(
PoJmp salea and aervice. 304-

937·2018.
Brillion 8' lUre lt•nd gru•
aeeder doubl• ~ck• 111edar
wtth H'ld tren•port: anachm.-&amp;t:~

12.500.00. 304-882·2048.
.

cruile control. V-8 304-675-

.... wv. 304-895-3874.

1989

New Ford 3910 42 hp dlooll
tractors 1570.00 - n p..,.

'78 Chevy M•llbl. 4 door, good

mant and •286.00 per month
for 80 monthl or 1 leaa
purc:h•e for qualiflad buyel'l.
Al•o New Holl.nd Skid lteer
load••· r. b•lwa, 1 bM•a.
tedders. A compl•e hay tool
llna. New Hollll'ld bal• twine

10,000 ft. 121.00 7,200 ft. lor

running concL 304-875-4219

1979 Mustang. V-8, PS. PB,
tuto, •lr, tih wheel. phone

304-675-4t43.
1974 Chwv Impale. 350 •uto.

1300 Coli 304-175-1326.

baling nraw 100ft. more t:enaR

1978 Buick. 4615 .,glne. Runs
good. Body llir shop&amp; 8375.

more. Keef•• Service Center,
St. At. 87Loon. WV. 304-895-

Clll 30 .. 8711-2738.

ltrongth t21 .00. 10 bol• or
3874.

1968 Flrobircl. good cond 350
auto

83,000

72

Tn.u:ks for Sale

•ft• 5.

304-882· 27 16

1978 FreightllneCab over, 290
Sale fNI/TV S.turdav-1 PM. Cummin1, 13 •p•d. 38 rear1.
UvMt:ock eocsptMI eftw 4 PM Not •
ha.ll•. Good c:ondf..
""IIY Frld.,.. 1 mile e•t of tlon Coli Albany, 814-888-

oo•

Albany on St. At. 50. Coli
114·592·2322. 898· 3531 .
..,.,ln • .
::.:::::::::::____________
t-Roglotarod Palled Hereford
eull, 2 yrL old 2-yaung Polled
Herol'urd bulla thorouahbrodl
b.lt not reglltarlld. f · young
l'bllld Hereford Hollar tho·
rou--brad but not rwgilt•ed.
Coll614-25tl-1431.

8548

Hereford cow and coli Anguo
Ch•l*
cro111040.
cow wtlh calf.
Clil
814-982·

=:...:.:~=.:::...:.::.

____

Extro nlco lair pige. Coli 304875-330a

64

England ' ltvtng room 1utte.
Couch and chair. brown wlh
blue end whlt:e ftowen. 1 y. .

Hay

&amp;

Grtin

Ground oholled corn 11.00 p•
IOOcwt. Mor-Forrn. Rt. 311.
Piney. 8:00 tilt 12:00 •copt
Sundlfr 304-937· 2018

old. 1150. Cal 114-817-1321.
STOP ANO CHECK OUR PRI·
CES

Mlrled haV·

Furniture .-d Cerpllt

c.n

304-1711-4430

mornlnCJII I dl 12.

VInyl t4.17 yd, oomman:iol
- • t3. 99 yd. lata. -m olio
remnll'lta and rot1. cerpM. half
Inch peel •1. 71 yd wtlh c.pat .

896-3802

RON'S APPUANCE SERVI CE,

house call servicing GE, Hot
Point, w•hau, dryeu and
1tove1 304-676·2398
Myer1 Blac:it:tap and Paving.
Henderson. WVa. We pave driveways, perking Iota, ~eating Free .
estimat:81. 304-675- 2457

Remodeling. n8W' addlion1, c•·
pon1. g•egee and deck1. Free

oatlmllft. call 304-896-3426.

82

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

1881 Ford F-150

PS, Pe.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pin e
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-448- 3888 or 8 14-

448-4477

84

Electrical ·

Nnnln'J bo•dl. toppew, v-8. 4
apd..
br.,d new Redi• tlr•

&amp; Refrigeration

1978 Chwrolot Choy.,na PS .
PB. shOrt bed, tool bo~t , tilt.
slicing back window, 3150 •uto.
Call 814-317-0429 .

Rat1d11nt iaf or commer cial w ir·
lng. New service or repairs
Ucannd electrich11. Ridenour

t982S-t0 pldwp, V-8. 4spoed,
ohort bod. Coli 304-896-3441.

85

73

0111.-d Water Serv ice. Pools,
Cllterns, Well1. DeiN ery Anv-

Clil 51 4-317-042!1.

Vans &amp; 4W.D.
----------------- 1975 Ja111 CJ -8 . Good cond.
, ... 119110. Call 1144411-4141 .
1977 Ja111 CJ-7. 1978 Chovy

•••· wracked. n.- an~ne.
Clll114-448-03152.
1881 Eegle4whHI drive. 4cyl. ,

Boctrical. 304-8711-1 786

General Hauling

tlma Coli 614-446· 740 4-No
Sund~ cell s

J &amp; J Water Service. Sw•mming
pool1, ci•tern1, we lls. Ph . 6 14-

248-9286

R a. A Water Service Poola.
elat a rn s. well1 . lmni ediole·

4opood. good goo mllooga good 1.000 or 2,000gellona doUvory.
11250. Coil 114- _.::..:_I
Coi _3_0_4-_8_7_e-_8_37_0:_._____
1
247-4292.
cond~lon.

74

Tr;msport;tllun

Mollohan F..ntt,..
21ocotiano

1,

I

stump

Livestock

Athono Llvootock Sola. Albany·

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Fetty Tree Trimnin g.

Motorcycles

Palr1ek1 Wllter H1uling Service,
1,000or 2.000 gets. de1Ne n81,
phone 304-678· 2311 or &amp;14-

445-4098

Wstterson' • Water Haulin g.

1982 Vomoha Seco 750 Elfcol.
71 Auto '1 For Sala
wnd. Shaft drllte. new tlr• Like
- · t1100. Coli 814-4411GOVERNMENT IEIZEO )18111- 0584.
ol• lrom 1100. fa&lt;dl. Mar·
cedll. c....n ... Cltavyo. sur- 1981 Suzuki 410. rtroot blko.
plus. luyoro Guido (1) Coli 814-441-8105.
105-lt1-IOOO•L 1 -10111
1973 Hori.., Davidson Sport•
11711 01•. Ditto Bllloyete. 2 , • . t1100. 114-742-22411.
dr. Oote-. E-.bodv.Now
1888 """'-' 101280. - · · oltomotar........ loll lltoln,
.,....... and tre.
• wet• CoH 114-4411- t1200. Cal J•A Sprot Shop
0271 . . . 8 PM, -ends
114-lt2·2184.
onvt-

t22VIondStrMt

- t . w.v•.
304-11711-114111

Paint

U!&gt;D• llhlsr Aood
GO!IIpolo. Ohio
814-441-7444.

"We're being sued by 110me guy who
gol malaria?!"

d••·

Re•onable rete~, vofume
cou ntl, 2, 000 to 4 , 000 cap eclty, ci•t•ns. pooll. walls, 81c.

Coil 304-671-29t9.

87

Upholstery

Mowr.,·• Upholtterin g IBrVIn g
t:rl oourwyerel23ve-s. 'Tl!e bett
In furniture upholstering. CaH
30-t- 876 · 41154 fo r free
eltlmM•.

·+- .

'

e10.448-7629.

T-top, good cond. $1.200.00.
304-575-2528

Allis Chelmer• MZ Glean•. 4
row corn hud plua 13 ft. bell'l
held. E.::el. cond. Call 304-

63

Musical
Instruments

CJM ltove, clnet:te •et. China
Hutch. omol *var for •lo. Coli
114-742-3149.

Gil lull I n - tnd-lop.
IICIOd--" 304-1178-1103olt•
. :OOPM.

7923

Farm Equipment. ZetorTractors,
How~rd Rot•vatora, Blad•.

8t4-4411-8858.

53

1970 Oldl. 98. 1n goo d re~ tora·
ble condition. Call 814-448-

powor. 11900. Coli 614-441-

Concrete blockl· all
ytlrd
or dellverv. M110n san d. Gallipo-11• Block Co , 1 23'/ z Pine St ..
Gallipoli•. Ohio. Call 614-44&amp;:-

814· 992· 5335 or 114· 98113581 .

110. 500 Call 814-388-8268

830 Case del l el tractor
w / loader. S2995 firm late
modll4441nlernetional t ractor.
plows&amp; dl•c. 2 rowcarn planter,
3 pt. ..,lfll, Sit. buohhog.
14650. Own• will finance. Cell
814-288-8622.

0008.

Building Matoriolo

7 pc. living room 1uite·
diiVenport, chair, 2 end tebt•.
coffee 1eble. 2 '-"PI· $210.

U1ed applianCII. W11hllrs, dry·
11r1. 111nges, refrlgeratorl. microwave ov.,• . Ken'• Appliance.
217 E. 2nd St ,· Pom.-oy.

1987 Monte Carlo. burgundyloade d 27 . 000 m1l u .

Oliver 650 Independent. ltve
Block, brick. ltWer pipe~, windows, Nntell. etc. Claute Wintau, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 81~

Carpet-11 ft 7in. x 11 ft 71n
Green Good oond 140 C•ll

614-

Call 814-281-1622.

Buildin9, Supplies

Kenmore aiW'ing mechine with
attachment• a c•rying cue. 1
yr old, under 8 yr. werr., t 100.
Corone 17 Kerosene he~t:er,

Mlot take all. Coli 814- 448·
0639.

UTILITY BLDG SPL.:30'x40'x9'
etW81, 1-16·•8' aliding door,
1 ·WIIk door- 84999. ER ECTEO •

IRON HORSE BLDAS
332·8746.

rebuilt all t y pel
days Prices &amp;99&amp;
up Us ed &amp; r&amp;buitt torgue
converters. standard clutchM.
pressure plates. &amp; throw out
bearing Warranty·12 mos. CV C
jolnta·all types Call 614-379Warrantv~3 0

Round bal.-. 12676. N H h lfr'
bind 8996 Owner will finance

Coli 814-4411-8778.

180 Coli 814-448-8482.

A uto Parts
A ccessories

BUD GET TRAN SM ISSION·

8 t 4 · 38 8 · 1773,

tor, 1 yr. old 814-992-7315.

mobile home. 8200.

month. 304-875· 898'1.

1450.

t400ooeh. CoM 114-882-1144.
You rv

76

PICKENS USED RJRNITURE

7434.

Rant

2 bedroom trailer, Mt• end

•ewer furnl•hed. 8 mR• Nort~
ol t..Wn on At. 12. 304-871110711.

North 3rd Aw. Middleport, 1
O.J W.llo Rd.· 2 wooded
bullclng loto. Ap,..O&gt;&lt;. 2 1&lt;110
Ooch C.H 114-3411-11585 oft•
5:30PM.

LAWN APT!&gt; 729

Second A-... Furnllhed etfic:i.,...
cl• llartlng at $176 a mo
including wet• &amp; gwbaga.
~nglt ali.ltt1 ontv . C.ll 814-

COunty Rd. 32. Call 30 .. 89113886.

and 2 bedroom furnilhed lpiJ.

Instruction

eon 814-448-

Modern 11t floor 1 8R furnlihed
apt &amp; 2 BR 11t floor unfur·
nflhed • t Ref a. dep. Cell

Nice 2 BR . moblehomefor rwnt.

for Sale

c•r,at.

redeoorlted,
complete
kitchen, AC. Perk ng. Adults. No

intorootld, CAll 814-2811-1318

3 bodro_.,,,;;z ri,,.loo, ,,futl: "

30 4-876- 1774. •

Downtown 1 BR . apt. ftiiW'Iv

(Jackson) after 7p.m .

42

ftntahed •ement, new furnace
.. d ...t ..l'liP. ,..~~g-.: tonliid'
yard. 2414 fJl' Vlfl\rrnAW .. Pt.
Ple•ant. Priced on inapect:ion.

114-367· 71150

- · Dopoah.
0139 .

Colvin O'Dell, 614-742· 2004

aft• 8 ;00 p.m.

2688. E.O H.

March 1 $350 p« month. If

.

•

Motorcycles

1986 Sutuki 700 Intruder lott
of chroma. t1BOO. C1ll 614446-3083.

Whaolchlir .. -

Vellev Furniture
N.w and u1ed furnkure and
applicance1. Call 81 .. · 4487572. Houu 9· 6.

2 BR .• 2 1tory home located In

38R houll, deluxe. AC. $3501

Rofllty, 30,.675-5640.

''

74

Larry

90 O.Vs 1eme •• ca~h wkh
1pprov.d credit. 3 MM• out
Butsvlllo Ad ()pen 11om to 6pm
Man thru Sat. Ph. 614-441-

mo. Coli 30,.875-5104. or
675-5388

For Sale by Owner. Nice briek
home. Oebl::rf Dr Subdlwilion. 3 beci'aoml. fuU basement,
3800sq ft total. 3or4BR .. 2% quill!: location. 8 mil• north
bitt., LR, OR , 2 c.- g•ege. Point PIIIMMt, 304-676-1076
much more. Tot•llv redone In
pllt 4 yrs. Priced to 1all to · 4 bedroom house Point PI••
t79.500 0111 614-4411-2800 sant. 2 baths. basement,
eve. &amp; weekends, 446-2129 8 330. 00 p.- month. Hom•teed

u:

.
KIT N' CARLYLE®

Misc. Merchandise

fMIN

Sentinei- Page- 9

Bod from .. 120. t30 • King
frame •ao. Good •election of
bedroom 1uh111, metal Cllblnlll:l.
haadbo•d• 130 _.d up to *86

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK ·
SON ESTATES. 636 Jockaon
Plk e from 1183 e mo. Walk to

614- 992· 7216

weekct.{1.

twin 188, firm S78, Md

Daily

0322.

Homes for Rent

a.

;31

pr

54

The

Ohio

188 Queen 11111 1250 &amp; up,
King •3&amp;0, 4 drawer ch•t $19
Oun cabin•• 6, 8 &amp;: tO Fn
l•bv mattr-" t 35 &amp; • 415.

city, goo halt, $326 a mo. 3BR ..
2 bath home . approx . 12 mil•

,~

lll•_n_E_..,ot
r.,Und.
- · up to 141»
1100owi&lt;Col814-2411-8111.

SHOonNG MATCH. · .,.._ 7:00p.m. Mia H. Rd.,

-

Shonl¥0 - · .-liking oppll...lono lor nlgtc olllll, clnlng
room m.,..,.., IPP~ Mon or
Tu• Nhw.., hours , 0:00
AM-4:00 PM. Paint 1'1011ont.

Act In 1V
Child- 1 ,~..--­
ron. T - Vouna Multo. and
-roi'Oiopto-Highpoy
Wanted
1V ............ Col far .......
lnlor-lon: Ch•m ltutlloo
(3131142-1400. bt. 3314.
BdOIIy mon - g to ohoro
l.oool firm -~~ .No
. .•po.
. "' homa. WllpariDrroDm•bo•d.
Coli 814-4411-381111 olt• I I'M.
n... reqUhd. To ....... •

a_,market

3

-of.
hotp:

... lond-to:
P.O. 101. Jacbon. Ohio
45840.

CLASSIRED ADS

9AM·7PM

Port limo R.N .
W.Vo. l - I d R.N. noodad for
cia¥ shfftworkC.retlftMTuts
VIII..,, 2 de111 woolt wory Cll"weok and off, A""' ItO Paplsr
Fork Aold1 or GDnl.. MMy
Wllk• O.O.N. 304-787· 71121.
M-F, 8 :30-4:30.

Moln Ubrory.

We Servlae

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING

773-6305 aft• 6:00p.m

po.. lon 3-11. 11-7 •hill.
Caro Hevon Tooro VrM..,. Quell·
fled IIIP-• tn&lt;IIU ...... to
apply 510 Paptsr Fork Rood.
Hurrican . Wv • . M - F .
8:30-4:30. Compdlwo wogo.
banolllo pack• offsred to
quelifled C.N.A.o.

tJorw.v.lllbi••NawHwenend

lEN'S APPUAIJIIIQ
SDYICI
915·3561

Ftr• E••lt••l
S.l• &amp;

992-6506

ROOFING
NEWrREPAIR

614-662-3121

DAVE'S ENGINE

Howard l. Writesel

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

GUYSVUE, OliO

ETC.

41 "'·

•W11h1r1 •Dryers
•Rangaa •FnNIZM'I
•Rafrlgar•tora

u. s. n. ,. un

Retell bu1tneu for 11le. Middeport. Ohio. John~on ' a V•iety
Store (Ben Franklin) . 1· 304-

for nurting edrnlnilt:NUon. c•
..... growth ll'ld . . .pment.
Mille Inquiry Clr• Hwen of
Tall'l Vrllll'r SilO I'IDplsr Fork
lid, HurT!-. W¥a. coli 304717· 7121. Com oct poroort
Dlvld lMIIur Admn.

lmm.tote opening lor •porlonoad Phyolcl- Ofllotllllng
Cl•k. Prior blllng _,...._ •
n..ot. Cont.,. Chof...r l'olon.
Dlrocta&lt; of Corp. D~.. l'._ont
VIII"' Hoop. . 304-11711-4340.

AIIS!MILEIIS. Eorn mo..,. o..
o.nllllng Tlddi ll•o.
-011111 IUIIIIIIod. 1'lo ulllng.
Write: Jo..Ef l!nt ..... oo, P .0 .
lox 2203. Klufmmoo, Fl.
32742·2203.

DEAD 01 AUYE

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

cln•. 2 twa -oom upotalra
ap.-tmente. Owner h• other
Int....,,. t75.000 Nogotloblo
CAH Ron ot 814-992· 9972

_w_.v_._._______________ •

s~~rv l l,t'l

WANTED

BOGGS

TUNEUPS •
REPAIRS·
OVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS,
ROTOTILLERS,

hy for t-v. - • ond
gonulno lnt•tot In Clerl•lc
nurolng. Ellllllont -unity

Now tlldng opp8cotlons on rM
poollono. Shone( 1. 1:00 PM
and 4:00 AM. 1'1011ont.

3-Z-'19 tin
Complete Small
Engine Service

auperyilorv•Piri.na 1 CIPIIC-

w.v•.

742-2328

NO SUNDAY CAUS

.9-19-Uifn

nefits.

814-742·2455.

PAINTING

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

or Res. 94•'·21or.O'I

ONLY

SEND RESUME TO:
Rhonda Dailey, R. N .
Director of Nuning
Veterans Memorial Ho1pltal
116 E. Memorial Drive
Pomaroy, Ohio 46789
(814) 992-2104, extension 213
EO AL OPPORTUNITY E P YER

entire household llso selling.

99~t-6347

GUN SHOOT

c.n

UsMI tJrnlture by tM pleoe or

992-3801

614-985-4180

PH. 949-2801

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

tmmtldieta opening for pert time raglmrtld
nurses to work In Spacial C11ra Unit, Acute
Care and &amp;mergency Room. Salary cornmenaurete with experience. Excellent fringe be-

120 "'"' of 111 clrt.
114-37&amp;-2377.

INlEIIOI•EDRIOI
IOOFING
Joe
Coli

oper~ton.

. · loR
-3 Cortllled
C.N A 'o.nMdOd
tl-

Commercial
lesidontial

VERY REASONABLE
HAVE IEFEIENCE

of .... 949-2860

3158.

SYIACUSI. OliO

FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do
it for you.

PH. 949-2801

on- IIOing pold. Call 814-4411-

B&amp;B PAINIING

INTEIIOR·EXTERIOR

"Free Estimates"

Furniture 1nd appll... - br' the
~ ot ont~e hou-ld. Fair

11

LINDA'S
PAINTING

. .... " - Built

"AI

time o sorrow. Special thanks to the
Long Bottom comit
h
Pyth'
mun y, t II
IBn
Sisters and Rev. Joe
Masters.
The Rich•d

REGISTERED~NURSES

References

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

f

Th• S.llll•t"'
Dl•~ I. Do•1

GENERAl CONTRACTORS

Ju'* ea.. with or without
motoro. Coil Lonv Lhrliv-11438.. 1303.

'

flowers. or helped in
anyway during our

Lor•,

992-2269

cente ...... Reglat•NureewM:h

985-4141

BISSELL
BUILDERS

would like to
sincerely thank everyone who sent food,

Ann M11h:
H1ppg 29th Bl1thd1gl
.
Fo1 The 31If Time//

PHONE DAY Ill EVENINGS

BISSELL·
SIDING CO.

We Buy Aluminum

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING l!t REPAIRS

BILL SLACK
•VINYL. SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

We

Happy Ada

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

1Ul(jn 1 HAUUNG DOtiiEI

Card of Thanks

•

CHESTER, OHIO

r1

full

Turn kev
Downtown
Blr and lounge wMh 22 -

--bly-

c••·

Uppw Rhrw Rd bolide Stona
c - Motot. 814-441- 739a.

Business
Opportunity

know. and NOT to 181'\d monev
throoQh the mail until you hwe
tnvnt1g8t:ed the off•ing

hlfpyoubet:het.tyouc.,

belli Col! -llrn WoiW•. 304and new• uted
Smith 812·21411.
Buick-Pontiac. 1111 Eort•n
Aft.. Golllpollo. C.H 114-4411- ATTENTION: EXCELLENT IN2282.
COMEfor
lnlo coiii04-146-1700Dopt. p
Cemploto hou-ldl of lornl- 2303.
tuN • ontlqu•. Aloo wood •
coli ~... SWIIn•• Fwnlture ASSISTANT DIA EcrOit OF
• Auctl&lt;m Third • Olivo. NURSING
124bad muMI '-til . . . nursing
114-4411-3t59.

MARCUM

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

14tlt &amp; Mal• St.
Paint PIMtant, W. Va.

-31 1

w.,

TOP CAll H pold for '83 modo!

FIREWOOD

-

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEV PUBUSHING CO . rea&gt;fnmondl thot you
do busin . . wtt:h people you

F1' toy~
~f~~~~~~;lii&lt;ONolrv.

c~n

II-

dry...

Ftnancia I

&amp;rn monev It hamel Aslembla

-----------------I w...,.,

2·15-1 mod. pd.

,..,,..,."""..,,.,.,.,,.

992-6855

IECYCUNG

..-:!!!!:...

0000 USEO APPLIANCES
w.........
r*ia-etort.
rang.. Skagg_1 Appliance•.

Will c.-e tar elderly peraon In
tholr home. Coli 30 .. 8711-3798.

•It• 8:30 p.m Calvin O'Ooll.

Somoonoto do odd )olio. ! AUCTIONEER
rl.,ood tonoe lui.... Ill- up
Edwin 'Mntw , _ booking wor~ lond raloron- to P.O .
spring "'•· 17 yen •pa- lox 729 v . Pom•or. Ol..o.
rlon,.. Phone 304-273-3447
Rov-oood, W.Vo.
AVON · AI • - · CaN Morllyn
304-112-21411.
W.Vo. Stile Ch. .plon Auc·
don•. Ah* Pesroon. Ucenoed In AVON oil • - I I Shirl II' Spooro,
Ohio and-Virginia. eoollng 304-875-1429.
·
AuctianL 304-773-5785
Jullt wart to . .n 1 little eltrll
monBV7 Or would you • • to
9 Wanted To Buy
have e c._.? EIU•
Awn

985-4222
DAY OR EVENING

, . .. . . . ®

8

. . . . apa1mlft'l, Room and
bo•d plus love offe'ing 1ft d
other bon.eto. 114,742-2004

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Sat. 114-4411-1119. 127 3rd.
Avo. Golllpollo. 0 H.

Gennl&amp;: Comnwc:ill tiNn ing
nawavallabta. Contact B*'dl's
Cle•lng Servk:e, 8 14-448·3 t84.

&amp; PTworkwallble.
CIU
ol-onim, oth(refundablol 1·407· 744-3000
Elfl. S-1 822 24 houro.

OHIO

Col 304-1711-1957

In Meroerv lle erN. Call 8 14-

21

Household Goods

'*

Bobpalttlng. In my homo. Any
.-ge. tnY ahift, weeks.ndl. Live

en.

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

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport,

NHdaomeoneto INetn 81d hllp
wft:h elderfv women. Pref•
Chrlltl1n or good morel p. .on.

Coli

·oswm~~t.

Middleport,

County Aa:»pl anet. Inc. Good
udd appll..
lftd 1V •••Op.. lAM to II'M. Mon thru

George' s Portable S.Wmlll
Don't h-..1 your logt t o a

Wasem., Real Ettata. 814-448-

Oo home with nothing but
mo~. No P•mh: Cell 814-

61

LAFF-A-OAY

32742-2203.

-lbly opuld h•• own fur·.

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

992-6282

&amp; Vicinity

4411-7037,

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
. Mulberry Hgts . Pomeroy,

CHESTER.

.......Giilliiiolis ........ ..

AtMI'I'Ibl..,.. Earnmon.,.Miembling MueiCII Tedct( 811••·
Mlttfl• •u~IW No ulin_9.
Write: Jo-El Ent•pril-. P.O.
Box 220 3. KlulmmH, FL

....

Recorda.

Tho Village of Middleport
reserves the right to reject
any or all b1dl and to we•ve
ony informoiHieo In bidding
Fred Hoffman, Mayor
Villogo of Middleport
13110, 17, 24,31:
141 7, 14, 8tc

Yard Sale

GOVERNMENT JOBS
t11.040.· t&amp;9.230 y . .. Now
Open Frt-Sat.·Sun. HIVe y_our hlrln~ Coli !11 806-lt7·1000
V•d Silo II Ed's GIHipalo FIN Ext. R-9805 for ourrtnt fad• II
Mlrk•. &amp;...,..,. Wllnt your Ceft
oils. Sell left _ , . to Doll. .

3 417 Second Av.. ue, BQII 1213

PAT HILL FORD

Lock tho okllo? Nood a job? W.
trlin pooplo for Jobo • mochlnlltl In our mKhlnetechnolosw

Found

~~g qu.-t• ·blglna Mlrdl

7

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist
~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

-

Lost and

to Do

Wanted

251-1521.

Arbuckle • •· Call 304-458· ollgllflooppN.... o CellthiAdU~
Educltion Center-· Tri-County
11411.
JV&amp; 01814-753-31111 •t. 14.

3-7

RADIATOR

Ext R-9805 tor aurr.-1 fMirll

ill.

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DRIVEWAYS &amp; ETC.
Call AI 742-2328

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GOVERNMENT JOBS
11t1,040.- tll9.230. - · How
hlrln~ Cal 111 1011-117·1000

progrsm. N••IV ~ procl.l Cl
l.olt: M•reh 18, Sumner Rd. of lnclJttry. from oor'nfl*• to
atM. medium liHd white hou.. turbin•. il m8de either uaing
dog. No coli•. Call 814-985- m.:hlnetoolt OKu..,.gmechin•
rrwdewlth m.chlnetooll. In tM
3187.
miiChlne t:.chnolow prognrn
Found: Wolk• Coon Hound. youwlt l_.n haw IOUIIVII;ioUI
8Hch G..,.. Rd.. Longovilla
of miChin.., auch • .
lotho. drll pr- miMing m•
· -· 114-742-2521
chin• grintln_g mechlne .snd
FOUNO: Largo milt Blue Tick puntlt pr ... W.: hw•• varl.tv
dog. 2 or 3 - • old. Found in of t.udng sour011 w1Habl1 fJDr

LIMESTONE

SYRACUSE . OHtd
Everything Marked
Down
•Cement Items ·
•Flower Pots
•Bird Baths
•Yard Ornaments
Because of Cold Weather

Everything Inside.
Door Bell for Semce

Masli&lt; - (ertainteed ®
Vinyl Siding
525 North Seeond
Seam1tiS Gutter
M t' ddl eport, Oh'to
R I
d
EVER YONE; WELCOM E
ep a&lt;emenl tn ows
Blown Insulation
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
S DAy 7 00 p
Stor m Doors &amp;
UN
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Windows
W ~ DN ESDAY 7:00P.M.
FREE ESTIMATES
Pastor Jam'"' E. Ke.,.ee

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL .
SERVICE

Help Wantad

:n.:#~27:;n

Call 992-2772

3-13-'a9-1 mo

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Huoky. Cil Job Humlng?- o ololl? W.
trlin p009le f!lr jolll • Auto
U.chanit~~.. Catp«d.._ Casm•
PUrebred Siam- cot. ftmolo. tologloto.
DlvorsHied Mtclcal
Colllt4-245-599e.
Worklro. Elodridlnl. Foo~llar­
vla.. W,rk.., Elldroni• Tech2 mole lloegla Robbit doge to nici.w. lndultr~ Mlintwnii'IGI
DOOd home 4 and s va.. old. Workn. NurslnJ!oliotonto and
liory ~. 114-742·2621
Or.dlrH-. Me
ilt" Offlca
Workors and Woldft Roglot•
2-8 wko. old pufll'loo. Coli now fordMI•bealnnlngMerah
304-lttl-3823.
27th. CoH Tri-C..,myVocotianol
Adu~ Cont•ot 114-783-3811
2·block. whltolemolepuppl•. ut. 14. A wri""' of londlng
p., Satt• • Rotrlovor eou IOUrcel tO piY. t for tNining M'e
304-458·1791.
eveillble for thole lllglti•

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1-100·421 -3535

Givti!IWBY

Cuto pufll'l• to 1 loving homo.

CHURCH

AlTEliAnONS
SINGER AND WHITE
SEWING MACHINES
SINGU KNmtNG
MACliN
•
ES

•·

VICTORY
BAPTIST

INSULATION

usm SEWING MACHINES

.

~G~ro:n~d~ch~ild_•_•_n~;:Nei:l:l~n~d~~:;;::H:•:::~nFami
5

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SCISSORS SHARPENED

l'h. 614·992-5479
I
614 99 • 2477 "
og.

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INSUAANCI call:
JEFFERY J. WARNER

Harth Second. lllololoport
2·24·' 88-fmo

2-17-'88-1 mo.

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992-6135

•

UPI

WANTED

SYRACUSE
SUPPLY COMPANY

March 24, 1989

Friday,

18

• Pomeroy-

'

'

I ...

�,

- - Local news briefs ...- - - . Lee Lee...
Conti nued from page 1

Patrol probes deer-car mishap
The Gallia-Meigs Post . State Highway Patrol investigated a

car-deer accident at 7 p.m. Thursday In Meigs County, on CR.
35. 0.2 east of TR. 140.
Troopers said a car driven by Jo Ann Evans, 18. Portland,
st ruck and killed a deer . Damage was minor to the car. No
one was injured.

Commodities

to

be distributed

The Ga llia-Meigs Community Action Agency will be
dis tributing U.S.D.A. commodities (peanut butter, portk and
flour) on Tu.esday. March 28, from 10 a. m. to 2 p.m. iri Meigs
Cou nt y, and from 12 noon to 2:30 p.m . in Gallia County.
Meigs distribution sites are the county fairgrounds , the
Racine American Legion, the Tuppers Plains Fire Department
a nd the Pageville Town Hall.
Galiia distribution sites are the fairgrounds . the Mt. Carmel
Baptists Church in Bidwell, Guiding Hand School and in
Mercerville and Crown City .
Residents must have a valid Food Commodity Card to receive
commodities .

Squads have 6 Thursday calls
"

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Thursday: Rutland at 7: 19 a .m . to Pageviile Road for Wilbur
Smith to Vete rans Memorial Hospital: Tuppers Plains at 9:01
a.m . 't ransported Helen Caldwell to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Middleport at 9:42a.m . to South Second Ave. for Ida Martin to
Veterans Me morial Hospital: Pomeroy at 10:53 a.m. to
Pomerov Cliffs Apartments · for Anna Cornell to VeteransMemorial Hospital: Racine and Bashan Fire Departments at
12: 24 p.m. to a brush fire at the Norris residence in I he Portland
area: Pomeroy at 8: 39p.m. to East Main St. for Willie Robinson
to Holzer Medical Center.

·,

--Area deaths--David Rilt&gt;y
Middleport native. William
David Riley . 65, of Houston,
Texas; died Tu esday at Ve teran s
)-lospital in Houston. Texas.
Born Pec. 17, 1923. he was a son
of I he laic Thomas A. and Flora
Sisson R ilev. He was a veteran of
World War II and a rnember of
the Houston Professional Mu s i·
clans Association. He attended
Ohio State University.
Mr. Riley · is survived t)y a
brother a nd sister-in-law, T.A.
and Zelia Riley. Middleport: a
brother-in -l aw , Harlan Kloes: a
nephew , Riley Kloes: a niece,
Sharon Ashlev: and special
friends. Mr. and Mrs . .Jack Flinn
and Sonnv Riley of Houston.
Bes ides his parents. Mr. Riley
was preceded in death by two
sisters, Mari(aret Kioes and
Mar v K. Edwards.
G1:aveside services were being
held today (Friday) ,10: 30 a.m.,
at Veterans Cemetery, Houston.

Friday, March 24, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

ment as a professional secretary.
Miss Smith was a long-time
active member of Trinit y
Church, a past president of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Drew Webster Post 39, a fon·ner
member of the Women 's Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial Hos pital, and active with the Meigs
County Chapter of the American
Cancer Society.
She ts survived by a sister,
Genevieve Meinhart, and several nieces and nephews. Besides
her parents she was preceded in
death by three brothers , Albert,
Elmer and Arthur, and two
sisters. Ellen and Kathryn.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Richard Freeman officiating.
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral h9me two hours prior
to the service.

tng to Racine to marry John R.
(Dick) Lee, whom she met when
she v1slted relatives In the
Racine area . " Marriage to Dick
was what brought me permane ntly to Meigs County and I've
never been sorry," she adds .
Many former st udent s who
attended schools in the RacineSouthern District havE' never
been sorry either. Because Lee
introduced them to more than
just music in school. She ar ranged trips outside the school
district to concerts and musicals,
and always took special interest
in st udents who· displayed musi cal promise.
She taught In the Racine,
Southern District first as a part
time instrumental teacher , then
full time as both vocal and
instrumental teacher, and flna ily
as vocal teacher exclusively .
During her years of teaching in
the Racine area, she was responsible for music training at four
elementary schools, the junior
higl) school, the hlgh .school and
the kindergarten.
Some of the activities which
she fondly remembers from
those teaching years are " taking
students on buses to Columbus to
see musicals at the Ohio Theater
and Memorial Auditorium. Most
of the students h~d never been to
either place and had never seen a
live musical. "

ShE' also remembers the many
operettas, musicals, . choir and
glee club concerts and variety
s hows that were a part of every
school year, and her sponsorship
of a chapter of Modern Music
Masters (Tri-M) a·t RacineSouthern Htgl:l.
But that wasn't ail, in addition
to her leaching responslblltles In
the sc-hool district, she gave
private piano lessons and served
several different times as organist for the Order of Eastern
Star.
Her eventual retirement from
full time teaching did not mean
retirement from music or hectic
schedules.
She remains active in the
Racine United Methodist Church
where she belongs to the United
Methodist Women and also plays
orga_n.
She enjoys making crafts and
taking them "to craft shows, in
addition to her hobbles of read·
ing, oil and watercolor painting
and traveling.
And she also maintains connec-

l.ottt&gt;ry numhers

Weather

continued from page 1

Sunday

lions with several profeSSIOnal
CLEVELAND 1UP I I - Thuf,sSouth Centr al Ohio
organizations, incl udlng the, 0~ i&lt;l
day's
winning Ohio Lottery
Tonight : P ar tly cloudy. with a
Music Educators' Association:•
numbers:
low near 40 . Southw~sl 'llind ..
Delta" Kappa Gamma Sorority':
PJ(:K-3
••
about
10 mph.
•, ' ' •
the French Art Colon~· where she,
Saturday: Sunny, with ·lll ghs ·~ 171.
is a volunteer; the Val le,· Artist'
• PICK:l tickel sa les totaled
between
65 and 70.
t'; ·
Concert Series for which she
"
SUo1,446.50. with a pa~· off du&lt;:' pf
Extended Forecast
serves as Meigs ~Count~· ch~ir';
$1 ",65~.888.
man: and especially the AmerlSunday ihrou~:h Tu ~sday
can Association ·of Univer&amp;lti • • f'alr Sunday through ruesd a)'.
PJ&lt;:K-~
Highs. will be mainly in t,hj; 60s,
6P300C.
.
Women f or which she serves
'
•
h " 1
· I " I til&lt;:
1 K-4 ticket sa les lota ied
president of the local Middleport.!
wit 'f~ Y morm~~~- !&gt;~ ·· n • ~ S239.951. with a payoff du t&gt; of
40 sPomeroy chapter.
• '
S77 500
It is her active involvement .. ·
-· •
·'
' ·
with AAUW that is much in the
fore front of her life these. ,a ays i&gt; 1
She hopes through her 'role as
president of the loCiil -cliap\er.
she will bP able to JP,all~ m~J:jl;.. •
people aware of the purp()ses• of ,.
AAUW. " Lots of our money goes
into an education foundation
FLOWERING CACTUS, EASTER FLOWERS,
program which, through· grants
a nd scholarships, helps women
ltANGING BASKETS, VEGETABLE AND
further their educations ' in a
variety of fields," she eJOplains.
BEDDING PLANTS, ETC.
AAUW also focuses on· Issues "' C!'F.N ~ 0 f.~.- b P.M. DAILY
which are Important to WQJnen ;..•
' Miles North oi PorlerH •·n County Road I '1, Pe01h Fork
today and will influence ' thli;l
choices of women tomorrow. "
Lee would also like to · --see
,,
AAtJW rollaborate with other
local organiza!Ions on joint proSA:.TURDAY ONLY!
.jects to benefit area people.
And if any~mecan b~tng AAUW
BOXES ".~:
to the local public ' s eye, It will be
Lee Lee. Because she'll do it with
the same '"neve-r Say never"
·~
EACH
attitude she used ·during her
••
formal teaching career· as; over
''IN STOCK NEW SHIPMENT OF FURNITURE"
MIKE &amp; CHRIS MARTIN-OWNERS
and over again, she cut through
CLOSED ON THURSDAYS &amp; SUNDAYS
red tape to arrange bus trips out
of the area , and year after year,
pulled sometimes unwll~ng stuIVIARTIN S f-URNITURE /\Nll MORE STORF
dents out of \heir she~l~ a'lld Into
222 lAST MAIN POMERU i UHIU
the spotlights during . variety
shows. operettas" and concerts.
..

.

I

a•

'Now Open Fur The Growing Seuon"

Vol. 24 No. 7
Copyrighted 1989

.. "HOT COFFEE-AND
DONUTS SERVED".
'
sPON~o. ~EQ !!... Firsf,. Sout~trn Baptist . ,( hur.ch

..
REMEMBERING THE CRUCIFIXION - The
Rev. Wtlliam Myers of St. Louis Catholic Church
conducted the Stations of the Cross Friday
uf~rnoon before his congre!f&amp;ilon. The 14 stations
represent th"e Incidents along the road lo the
crucifixion oi Jesus Chrl!it with a devotional
prayer ai each. Assisting Myers, left, were altar

,,,,,,poMEROY, OHIO

&lt;

SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 A.M.,"· woRSHIP 10:45 A.M.

Continued from page 1
from the state regarding establishment of a non-profit corporation. Commissioner Richard
Jones suggested that Powell
select five Interested people who
could meet and select a name for
the corporation, decide who the
contact person for the corporation wtll be, and then file articles
of Incorporation through the
state. Then a list of those 25 to 30
individuals who would agree to
serve as trustees of the non-profit
corporation, which would likely
include the original five, should
be approved by the village and
the county "and then you're In
business," .Jol)es said. The trustees can then define the purpose
and overall goal of the corporation and establish bylaws for the
organization.
The commissioners commended Powell for undertaking
the projects and pledged their
full support and cooperation "In
any way possible."

Hospital news

..
.

Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - Edward Capehart, Pomeroy; Wil·
bur Smith, Pomeroy: Brenda
Templeton, Pomeroy: Benjamin
Upton, Reedsville.
Thursday discharges
Evelyn Stan ley, Everette
Warner, Helen Williams, Cathy
Elias, James Perkins, Norman
Wood.

.

'

.,

·--;~

boys Jeff Davison, center, and Mark Davison,
holding the covered crucifix. The ·crucifix and
statues of st. Joseph and Mary the mother of
Jesus, are covered during Holy Week and
unveiled at a celebrailon ol the resurrection of
Christ. (Tlmes.Sentlnel pholo by Lee Ann Welch)

Easter: not the time to 'give up'
something~ _
b ut take on discipleship
.

Spiderman ...

Non-profit ...

RUTLAND - Mary Hysell
The U. S. nursing team will
· Discussio n topics will Include
Lynd, daughter of Elmer and attend four days of the Interna - . the nursing shortage, nursing
Flossle Hysell, Route 1, Rutland, tiona! Nursing Conference of
trends, current nursing rehas been selected to serve as a China in Peking with keynote search, and curricular structure
Citizen Ambassador in the U.S. topics to include nursing admin - for nursing education.
delegation of approximately 50 istratlon and education. Chinese
Ms. Lynd was selected because
nurses who will be in China from traditional nursing, community o! her vast nursing clinic expeJune 1-17.
health care, maternity and pedi- rience in a variety of nursing
The project is sponsored by the at ric nursing and medical surgi- specialties including child and
People-to-Peopie International cal nursing.
·maternal health and gerentol-Organization of the United States
The next five days will include ogy, as well as her active
·and the Chinese Nurses Associa - professional site visits to health membership In professional
tlon and the Chinese Association care center In Yanzhou including nursing organizations, and her
of Science and Technology in the Hospital of Traditional Chi, level of nursing education and
China.
,
nese Medidne, Medical College, experience as a nurse educator.
As explained by Ms . Lynd, the Department of Nursing, and the
Ms. Lynd graduated as vale·
pur-pose of this International People's Hospital.
dictorian of Rutland High School
The final five days will be spent in 1959, from the Holzer Hospital
nursing COI)ference Is to provide
a reciprocal exchange of know!- in Shanghai visiting a medical School of Nursing in 1962, anti
edge regarding health care university nursing department ' a obtained a bachelor of science In
issues, especially those related to teaching hospital, a college· of
nursing from Ohio University in
nursing between American and traditional Chinese medicine and 1981, summa cum laude. She
Chinese nurses, according to . · a traditional Chinese medical
(See MEIGS NATIVE, A3)
Mrs. Lynd.
clinic.

.

·:. ;

.

Meigs native to serve
as China ambassador

•&gt;

,,,,

A Muhimedlllnc. New..,.p•

Mary Lynd to represent U.S. nurses

'

REV. LAMAI O'IIYANT

1 1 Soctlono, 70 Pogn

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis- Point Pleasant, March 26, 1989
---

-'~SUNRISE SERVICE'' ,
MEIGS COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS
SUNDAY,· MlRCH ·.26, 7:00 A.M.
.

Mostly sunny. Wgh In mid
70s.
\

ttntS

1989 FLEER PACKS ••• •••••••••••• 69&lt;

'

Along the Rive r ......... Bl-8
Business .................... D1,8
Comics· ................... Insert
Classlfleds ................. D~ 7
Editorial ................. ..... A2
Deaths ......................... A3
Sport.. ........... ............ C1-8

•

Erma Jean Smith. 85, of Spring
Ave .. Pomeroy, died early Frl·
day morning at Veterans Memorial Hospital after a brief Illness.
She was the daughter of ,Julius
and Barbara Hatchie Smtth ·and
was employed until her retire·

•

In Our Town: It's spring and the days are longer...
Page 86

BASEBALL CARD
........... 3/S1.29
DON RUSS 89 lACK PACKS ............ Sl.09

.

Cl

Old church NCAA playoffs continue•••
•
gettmg a
Beat of the Bend: Former Racine
Inside
woman municipal judge...
Page B3
new look
Page B-1

PAT'S GREENHOUSE

Enna Smith

Continued from page 1
Assault Prevention Project that
deals with physical, emotional
and child sexual abuse.
State Senator .Jan Michael
Long, ID -CirclevilieJ , will also
be at the store sometime during
the day.
· The Spiderman tour is the
largest event of its kind in the
country and will include presen-.
tations to n\ore than 25,000
children in 30 cities.
According to Russell Miller,
president of the League Against
Child Abuse, "the tour Is effective because Spiderman is able to
capture the children's attention
and imagination. They really
learn and remember the message. We're excited about Huntington Banks' sponsorship and
proud to bring Splderman· to
Ohio."

50 cents

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UP 10
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HURRY! THESE CARS IN STOCK!!!
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''SUPER S.AVI·N GS''
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1989 METRO

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#1287

56289*

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1989 CALAIS

1989 DELTA 88

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1989 CAVALIER

58989*

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By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes.Sentlnel staff
GALLIPOLIS - Easter ts a fun time tor
children, but a solemn one for adults.
Brightly colored eggs and big chocolate bunnies
mean Easter to kids, who haven't yet come to
kiww "what the season Is all about.
For the older children, new frtlly dresses and
bright Easter bonnets are bought and brought out
for Sunday at church.
To adults, the solemnity of the occasion is
paramount. Churches are !tiled to capacity, and
people who've not been in the building all year
dress up and come out.
Gallipollsisacommunltyofmanychurchesand
religions, but all take note of the somberness of
the crucifixion of Christ and the joy which
followed as His disciples realized the
resurrection.
Leading up to Easter, there have been Lenten
celebrations for the past few weeks, sponsored by
the Gallta €ountyMintstertal Association. according to its president the Rev. Rick A. Vilardo.
"We've lost sight of some of the significance,"
of Easter, Vilardo said . "It's a time to renew our
commitment as disciples of Christ."
Traditionally and historically, Lent is the 40
days before Easter, excluding Sundays, VIlardo
said. It is a period for Instruction, fasting and
prayer, to prepare our hearts and souls to
celebrate the resurrection of Christs and to
understand the significance and Importance of
the crucifixion.
Some people say they'll "give up" something
for Lent, but VIlardo says people should actually
be taking on something - the commitment of

discipleship.
Protestant churches ma,rk the resurrection day
with a sunrise service, and their members have
t&gt;een planning them for months.
· Most note the service at their church, inside a
warm building. First Baptist Churcl\ in Gallipolis
holds its sunrise service on Fortification Hill and
the members literally watch the sun rise.
The congregation of First Baptist has been
holding sunrise services on the htll at least 25
years, and prior to that, conducted them on the
riverfront.
In the Catholic Church, many special services
are held throughout the week - there are vigils,
· communion and and the celebration of Christ's
resurrection.
Several vigils of various types are held, but
none as Impressive as the resurrection's when the
priest unvells the covered crucifix and statues to
celebrate the occasion, accordtrig to Rev. Wtlllam
Myers of St. Louts Church.
There is also a remembrance of the crucifixion
called the Stations of the Cross, where the priest
and altar boys proceed along the sides of the
church to 14 p()lnts, each with astgntftcant prayer,
noting the different scenes leading to Christ's
crucifixion and resurrection.
Religious pilgrims retrace the various incidents
on the way to the crucifixion, and that is how the
stations of the cross came about, Myers said.
Easter has many focuses - as many as there
are churches, but each views It ending in joy.
Vilardo noted that for some, too much emphasis
may be placed on the death of Christ, leaving the
end result to second place, although it ts most
important- the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

WALUI GOING UP- The walls are going up on
the Ohio River Plaza, locaied on Upper Rou~ 7 ai
Galllpolla. According to Jim Olsen of the Robert
A. Darden Company, 1eneral contractor for the
plaza, steel should be ping up around AprU 1. The

Bengals to return for benefit
GALLIPOLIS - The Cincin- Center and AdvaCare. Also helpnati Bengals are not only stellar . Ing tn the effort are the local
football players, but they can sponsors who cover the costs of
take to the hardcourt and be bringing the Bengals to the event
competitive in basketball, too.
for a second time, and Rio
The Bengals' travelling bas- Grande College, who is providing
_k etball team wtll return to Gallla Lyne Center for the game.
County for the second annual
Players from the Bengals
Scott Connelley Memorial All· squad will be announced at a
Star Game, to benefit the local later time, a spokeswoman for
American Cancer Society units.
the benefit said.
c.o11ege semors playing against
The game will be played
against college all-stars on Aprtl the Bengals wtll be from Oh to
21, and tipoff Is 7 p.m. for the State University, Morehead
Bengals. A second game with State, the University of Charles·
high school all-stars wtll be ton, Ohio Domlntclan, West Vtrplayed at approximately 9 p.m.
gtnla Tech, West Virginia UniProceeds from the admissions versity and Rio Grande CoUege.
and concessions will be distribHigh school teams featured In
uted between the cancer Units in the second game will be the
the area, to be used for educa- North, comprised of senior var·
tion, research and service tor sity players from Eastern, Southpatients.
ern, Meigs, Wahama, Wellston,
Organizers for the game are North Gallta, Kyger Creek, Ohio
Holzer Clinic, Holzer Medical Valley Christian School and Pt.

'

J'l

1989 CAPRICE

CLASSIC STA. WGN.

~
STOCK

#1268.

515,800

1989 CONVERSION

VANS

198-8 CAPRICE

'S15,989
' .

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#1234

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j

Pleasant High.
The South team will be senior
players from Oak Htll, Symmes
Valley, Hannan Trace, Gallla
Academy, Hannan, Fairland,
Chesapeake, Jackson and
Southwestern High Schools.
Tickets are on sale for $3.50 at
all the participating high schools,
the Foodland stores in Guilla,
Meigs and Mason counties, all
locations of Star Bank and Ohio
Valley Bank in Gallia County and
all Holzer Clinic locations.
There wtll be an autograph
session with the Bengals players
at half-time of their game whlle a
slam dunk exhibition ts con·
dueled by the coUege all-stars.
The Scott Connelley Memorial
All-Star Game was started last
year to honor the former Kyger
Creek High School athlete who
died In 1987.

Ariel schedules first show April 1
By LEE ANN WELCH ·
Ttmes-Senllnel Slaff
GALLIPOLIS- It's showtlme,
folks!
The Ariel Cultural and Performing Arts Centre Is ready to
put on Its first show, AprU 1 at 8
p.m. ..
No, It's not an April Fool joke,
the theater Is es~enttally ready
for occupancy and shows, ac·
cardiac to local dlll!ctor Lora
LyMSnow.
Patrons at the free concert will
sit on folding chairs, but still see
a show, "Puttin' It Together,"
Snow said.
Judith Cavendish, soprano and
Jon Cavendish, baritone, both of
Charleston, W.Va., along with

-.

•

plaza wlll be home for Bll Bear supermarket,
Hlll's Department Store, Ten Below women's
wear, Picway Shoes, Fantullc Sam's Har Salon,
Cardinal ~ry Cleaners and Fashion Bug and
Fashion Bug Plus. (Tlmes.Senllnel pholo) ·

,,

I FOUND IT- SlacqWet.ead, II, plllbupoae
of the lutEuler e&amp;plllddealll tbeGalllpolltiClty
Park followiD1 tbe Euler E11But Satlri_,.
S&amp;acey 1ave the e111 &amp;o JUGII Melvan, ·S, of
Galllpollll, who fouad the eggu tbe more thu '1110
clllldrea were leavlnl the parii..The huat divided
children lnlo four age J(I'Oups (3. years old and

llllller; t ud I; t, '1,

8; ud lllroqll 11) to
provide tile cllaace for tbe clllldren 1o fiDd tbe
more tbaa l8e dften e1p bidden Ia tbe park.
GallpoDI City Maaa1er Dale lman &amp;ave &amp;be call
for lhe chDdren lo rula In tbelr respective sectloaa
&amp;o fhld the en•· (Ttmes-!leottnel pholo)

I

I

Edna Whitely, wtll present vo- be used to fund the Ariel, Snow
cals; Snow said. She also noted said. The pre-show reception
the Suzuki Academy of Charle- begins at 6: 30p.m., and reservason will perform. The Suzuki tions need to be made by sending
Academy ts sponsored by Ohio check or money order to PO Box
. 424, Gallipolis, Ohio, 45631.
Valley Bank.
Also included for those who
Included In the performance
attend
the pre-show event will be
wUI be "01' Man River," ''Some
prefered
seating for the perforEnchanted Evening," "Sound of
mance,
Snow
added.
Music," and "The Stars and
There
wtll
be
a second recepStripes."
There wtll also be a retrospec- tion, free to all at~ndina the
tive by Whitely on O.O.Mclntyre. performance, .on the stage followWhile the performance itself is ing the show, she said.
"We Intend the Ariel to be
free aDd open to the public, there
something
for everyone, not just
will be a small fund-raiser prior
the
'rich
and famous," Snow
to the show, Snow said.
said.
There
will be performances
For $10 a couple, patrons may
to
appeal
to
everyone during the
eat and drink at the Wiseman
year,
she
added.
Agency offices, and proceeds will

·'

I

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