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                  <text>Page 12-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, March 30, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Quirks in the news _________________
By Ualled Preu International
Hl,lhway baited to protect en dancered woodpecker
THOMASVILLE, Ga. (UPI) Transportation oftlclals have
halted work on a highway project
In southern Georgia to protect a
colony of endangered
woodpeckers.
The effort to widen U.S. 319 to
four lanes was stopped when
o!rtclals discovered a colony of
red-headed cockaded woodpeckers In the path of the
roadway, said TomBerry,superlntendent of Thomasville
utUities.
Berry, who Is In charge of
moving power lines for the
project, said state transportation
officials ordered him to stop
cutting trees In the road's rightof-way. He said a ietter from the
Georgia Transportation Depart·
ment says at least two trees In the
area are home to colonies of the
endangered species.
Until more studies of the
project's Impact on the bird are

Beat of the bend

complete, the road will remain
unfinished, he said.
The project Involves making
U.S. 319 Into four lanes from
Thomasville to the Florida line.
Plans call for the southern
Georgia road to be made Into a
parkway, with trees and vegetation preserved In the median.
Soviets winning race to put
billboards In space
MOSCOW (UPI) - The Soviet
.Union has signed a deal to sell
advertising space - In space, of
all places.
The Tass news agency said
Wednesday that Glavkosmos,
the Soviet commercial space
agency, signed a contract with a
Swiss firm that Includes selling
advertising space on cosmo·
nauts' space suits and painting
two 6- by 9-!oot advertising
messages on the hull of the
orbiting Mlr space station.
Billboards also will be bullt .at
launch pads at Balkonour, the
main launching area In Central

.

Number is changing
By BOB HOEFLICH
Now It's OK lfyoudon'twant to
keep my phone number handy.
No problem.
However, here's
one that many of
you wlll want to
keep track of like write It on
the wall near the
phone.'
Beginning midnight, March 31
- that's tomorrow, so you'd
better do It right now - the
Pomeroy Fire Department telephone number Is being changed.
The new number Is 992-6663.

who they are and I hope they
are wrong. Do keep smiling.

Asia.
Besides the advertising
patches on the spacesuits and the
outdoor space billboards, clients
wilt have the opportunity to have
a 3·mlnute commercial filmed by
cosmonauts onboard the Mlr.
Cltents also wilt each be
permitted to send up to 2. 2
pounds of cargo Into space. The
Idea Is that the cargo- postage
stamps or whatever - can be
promoted as having been In outer
space. Tass said the advertising
package, including the space
station murals, patch on a
cosmonaut's space suit, video,
cargo shipment and a billboard
at the launch pad, will cost
$620,000.
By comparison, a 30-second
television spot during this year's
Super Bowl cost $675,000.
A spokesman for the Berne,
Swltzerland·based firm Punta
was quoted as saying several
Western companies already
were negotiating for advertising
space In space.
The first space ad could be
launched as early as this !all,
Tass said.
The Soviet space program Is
facing possible budget cuts
because of the country's budget
deficit. Glavkosmos, set up In
1986, Is the commercial branch
of the program and is mainly In
charge of negotiating commer·

clal satellite launch clients.
So far only India has paid !or a
launch atop a Soviet rocket.
'Pime capsule to contain judge's
underwear
BALTIMORE (UPI) -A time
capsule to be buried at the
Colonnade residential and business complex will contain momentos from the complex's residents, including· a pair of
undershorts from a federal ·
judge, a spokeswoman said
Wednesday.
Mary Lou Hearn, a sales
representative for Hill &amp; Co, of
Bal ttmore, which is the residential broker for the project, said ·
she asked buyers of the units to
submit something they would
like to see Included in the time
capsule.
"The Items all had partlcu Jar
meanings. It meant something In
their Jtves," Hearn said.
Among the Items are soil from
the construction site, a Salvador
Dalt perfume bottle and a letter
from Ronald Reagan.

But the most unusual item Is a
pair of underwear !rom an
anonymous federal judge In
Baltimore.
"I don't know what it means
but I Imagine It could be very
exciting," Hearn said.
The time capsule Is to be
opened In the 22nd century.
Ceremonies to bury the capsule are scheduled Thursday to
mark the completion of the

Colo nnade Infrastructure, located near the Johns Hopkins
University's Homewood
campus.
The 600,000-square·foot complex, which includes 120 luxury
condominiums, a 125·room hotel,
conference and banquet facilities, gourmet grUI, speclaltty
shops and underground parking,
Is to be completed this !all.

•
·:~i~T~· ~
1

....

•

••

--------

It you are a history buff do keep
In mind that the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society
doefl have SQI!le 20 publications
dealing wlth parts of Meigs ·
County. Prices vary so !!there Is
some area that you're Interested
In write the society at P.O. Box
145, Pomeroy, or call the Meigs
Museu111 lor a little faster action

They always say that there will
be one more snow aner the
forsythia blooms. I don't know

Vol.39, No.228

2 Sections, 16 Pages 25 Cent a

Copyrighted 1989

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Fast effkient servke.

O'DELL LUMIEI CO.

Pom-.y,ono

992-SSOO

REPAIRS START MONDAY - If the weather is good on
Monday, Pomeroy village workers will begin repairing this hole
which has developed near the corner of West Main St. and
Butternut Avenue. According to John Anderson, Pomeroy village
administrator, underneath where the hole has appeared is a 100
year·old rock culvert sewer which was laid by hand. As the shaft
for the sewer was dug by hand, the work was cribbed - or lined
wlth timbers thai are crossed back against the undisturbed earth.
The crlhbing was left alter the work was completed, and

apparently, the shaft was loosely flUed and the hole covered with
wood . A brick street was laid over the wood, and blacktop over the
brick. The wood eventually began rotting away and the earth
underneath settled, which allowed the hole to develop. A wate•·tap
leak In the vicinity ol the hole probably played a part In the settling
process also. Anderson says that hopefully on Monday, workers
will begin removing the loose material to get back to the
undisturbed earth. Then the hole will be back filled and a
reinforced concrete cap poured, before the final cover ol hotmlx.

Gallia man reported fair after surgery
According to Pomeroy pollee
Stanford 0. Cox, 38, Gallipolis,
Cox
,.was d~!vlnl{ an 8 and J
underwent surger.y Friday morn·
Lutnber·
·semi-truck south on
lng at Veterans Memorial Hils pi· '
Route
33,
when he lost control of
tal for treatment of Injuries
the
truck,
went off the right side,
suffer&lt;;&gt;d In an accident Thursday
struck
a
garage
heavily damagevening on Route 33 near the
ing
it,
and
then
a 1917 Pontiac
Intersection of Route 7.
which
was
parked
beside the
Cox reportedly had compound
garage,
demolishing
lt. The
fractures of an arm, multiple
truck
then
proceeded
several
abrasions and possible other
hundred
feet
before
overturning.
injuries.
Both the garage and the car
At 10 this morning he was
reported by the hospital to be in were owned by Walter Bearing:
Pomeroy.
fair condition.
. .

Traffic was tied up for aboul
two hours following the accident
which ' 'occu'Ffed at ·8:'117 p-.m:
Lumber was strewn over the
highway and pollee reported that
It took until about midnight to
clear the accident scene.
Also Investigated by Pomeroy
police was an accident on West
Main St. near the bridge at 4:07
p.m. Thursday.
Police reported that Roger
Dowell, Middleport, traveling
north, turned 'lelt Into the path of

a car driven by Gerl Miller,
Pomeroy, who was traveling
south. ', ·' . ... ' '·· '.
·,
There was moderate damage
to the left front fenders of both
vehicles. pollee report. Dowel!
was cited for failure to yield.
Pollee were also on the scene or
a car fire atlO: 49Thursday at the
intersection of Route 7 and Union
Ave. Esther Nellun wa .. treated
but not transported, it was
reported.

Bill indroduced mandating gun waiting period

You'll be pleased to know that
Earl Snyder Is now out of
Intensive care at University
Hospital where he was confined
for sometime following heart
surgery.
Earl Is doing better and Is now
able to enjoy cards. He would
appreciate hearing from you and
his address Is University Hospl·
tal, Room 919; 9 East Doan Hall;
lOth St., Columbus, Ohio.

handicapped Is having a ball
creating those puzzles made up
of letters of the alphabet which
spell out a word when a certain
combination Is encircled. He
even created one lncludlng·famtly names which, of course, Is
popular with family members.

See P-1 special

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Low In upper 20s. Chance of
snow 80 percent. Saturday,
partly cloudy. High in mid ~Os.

8970

Eastern hoard
gives·Moore
2-year pact

And spring will bring out the
Royal Oak Ballroom Dance Club
members again as they enjoy
their first dance of the year at the
Royal Oak Resort from 8 to 11
p.m. on April 8. Providing the
music for dancing will be
Skyview.

-------Ronald Coats who Is somewhat

Pick3
267
Pick4

•

So it's spring and time for those
golf tournaments to get underway -everyone's Itching to get
back Into the !lame.
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi will be staging Its
third annual tournament on April
29 at the Riverside Golf Course.
Breaking and team drawing wllt
be at 8:30a.m.; tee-off time at 10.
The tournament will be a
!our-person mixed scramble and
the registration fee Is $40 which
will Include breakfast, green
fees, cart, beverages, gUts and
other food. One-half or the
proceeds will go to the MelgsGalllaMason Boy and Girl Scout
Camp fund and Turnpike Ford
wlll provide the new vehicle If
you make a hole-In-one on Hole 9.
To get registered, call the
course at 304·773-9527 or contact
Becky Triplett, 298 Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.

What a pleasant surprise for
Dorothy Young Saturday
evening.
She was tricked Into going out
to eat and when she returned
home her house was decorated
and family members were on
hand for a surprise birthday
party - she marked her 75th on
Friday.
Sure there were refreshments
and presents. Taking part In the
surprise gesture were Russ,
Sandy and Michael Moore, Point
Pleasant; Kathy and Steve Lane,
Middleport; Toby and Tory
Swartz and Charles and Pat
Kuhn, Gallpolls; Jolonda Root
and Kathryn Brown of Middleport, and Bob Yates of GaiUpolls.

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COLUMBUS, Ohio t UPI) -On
the eighth anniversary of the
attempted assassination of Pres·
!dent Reagan, state Sen. Lee
Fisher introduced legislation
Thursday requiring a 14·day
walling period for pistol
purchases.
Flanked by Ohio Highway
Patrol troopers and police from
Bowling Green and Columbus,
Fisher announced the bill at a
Statehouse news conference held
at the foot of a bust of President
Abraham Lincoln, killed by an
assassin using a revolver.
The measure would permit,
but not require, local law en·
forcement officers to conduct
background checks to determine
i! purchasers have criminal
records or are in violation of
federal, state or local firearms
laws.
"This proven crime-fighting
measure, perhaps better des·
crlbed as 'crime control' than
·gun control,' enjoys the strong
support or police officers and the
law enforcement community

across Ohio, and IL is long
overdue," said Fisher.
"In the 22 states that have
handgun waiting periods, liter·
ally thousands of convicted fel·
ons, minors, mentally unstable
persons and other Individuals
prohibited from buying a hand·
gun have been Intercepted with
this provision," the Cleveland
Democrat said.
The bill accommodates fire·
arms hobbyists who make perle·
die purchases and object to
repetitious waiting periods by
providing for Issuance of lde,ntlfl·
cation cards, good for two years,
that would authorize holders to
buy guns without the walt .
"The bill is not designed to
keep hunters, sportspeople and
collectors from exercising their
lawful right to purchase and own
handguns," Fisher said.
The senator read a telegram In
s upport of the bill from Sarah
Brady, whose husband Jim.
Reagan's press secretary, was
critically . wounded In John
Hinckley's attack on Reagan.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
Charles Moore, Eastern High
School principal, was given a
new two year contract, school
years, 1989·90 and 1990·91, and.
the board approved a plan for
external ,funding for athlet lcs.
marc~ing band and other extra·
curricular activities for the 1989·
90 school year at Wednesday
night's meeting of the Eastern
Local Board of Education.
The board 's approval for the
external funding of the three
programs came following a request from Wes Arbuaugh, At·
hletlc Booster president, and Ken
Fasnaugh, Band Booster
president.
The external funding Is neces·
sary due to the school's shortage
of general fund monies following
defeat of recent operating levies .
The funding by the two groups for
the extracurricu Jar activities,
sports and band programs was
successfully carried out last
year.
The board adopted a schedule
of deposits with the treasurer.
For fall sports the monies are to
be deposited with the treasurer
no later .than July 6; !or the other
exti-a·curricu~ar activities It
must be de posted by no later than
Aug. 29 , for winter sports by no
later than Sept. 30, a:nd for spring
sports no later than Feb. 1, 1990.
A school calendar for the
1989-90 school year was adopted.
Teachers will report on Monday ,
Aug. 28, and students will begin
classes on Aug. 29. The last day of
school for teachers and stucjents
will be June 1, 1990.
The board employed a subs tl·
tute teacher, Lori Ritchie, as a
volunteer girls softball coach lor
this year.
Also employed were Masrsha
Egleston. Paula Horton. John

. ·"I hope the day will come when osal had been In effect In Dallas
no American family will have to eight years ago, Hinckley would
go through what my family has not have been able to purchase
the gun he used to shoot Reagan
gone through," she said.
Fisher was joined at the news and Brady.
Furney called the measure
conference by Gov. Richard
Celeste and Democratic Senate " insurance for those communi·
co·sponsors Linda Furney of ties that want to require back·
Toledo and Michael White of ground checks," and White said
Cleveland.
It represents "the first major
Four indictments from last
"I am deeply concerned about attempt to take our streets back" week's session of the Meigs
the rise In crime," said the from criminals.
County Grand Jury have been
governor. "! am committed to
In a statement, Attorney Gen· filed In Meigs County Common
working with the Legislature and era! Anthony Celebrezze said the Pleas Court.
the attorney general's office In two·week waiting period Is "a ·
Indicted by the grand jury
any way possible to bring this proper exercise of the state's were William K. Moore, Dexter,
responsibility to protect Its on one count of sexual battery, a
alarming trend to a halt."
third degree felony, and one
In letters to House Speaker citizens."
"Law enforcement officials count of gross sexual imposition,
Vernal Riffe, D·Wheelersburg,
and Senate President Stanley · now fear that the guns on the a fourth degree felony .' The
Aronoff, R-CinclnQatl, Celese streets far outnumber, and are sexual battery charge stems
said he wholeheartedly supports more deadly, than their own from allegations that Moore
weapons," said Celebrezze .
participated In sexual "conduct"
the bill's quick enactment.
Fisher said Rep. Judy Sheerer, with a minor child. not his
"Any purchaser of a handgun
who cannot live with such a D·Shaker Heights. plans to Intra· spouse. The gross sexual lmposcommon-sense waiting period duce a companion bill In the tion charge stems from allega·
must understand that many will House. The senator said he also lions of sexual "contact" with a
minor, not his wife, according to
not live without It," wrote the will be offering another bill,
within the next 10 days, to outlaw Meigs County Prosecu ling Attorgovernor.
ney Steven Story.
Celeste noted that If the prop· assault weapons.

Teaford. and Sandra Walker as
substitute teachers for the bal·
ance of the 1988·89 school year, to
be used on an as·needed only
basts.
A new policy on commu nit y use
of school buildings was given
first reading. The pt·oposed new
policy will be considered for final
approval at the April 26 meet ing.
The board approved substitute
teachers being included In the
employer "pick-up" plan (a
payroll reduction method) for
put·poses of the State. Teachers
Retirement System. ·
A number of appropriation
modifications and revisions were
approved and bills were ap.
proved for payment. The board
accepted a donation from two
Individuals tota ling $2.800, and
advanced money to the uniform
supply account for purchase of
classroom materials such as
workbooks.
Three elementary teachers
along with the elementary prinle·
pal, Dr. Donald Shue, were given
approval to attend an all·day
workshop to be conducted by the
Ohio Department of Education
on " new directions in the teach·
lng of elementary mathematics"
for kindergarten through second
grades
Amounts and rates as determined by the budget cotnmlsson
for fiscal year 1990 were
reviewed.
Following the meeting the
board moved Into executive
sessio n to discuss personnel
matters.
Next meeting will be at 7:30 on
April 26 In the high school
cafeteria. Attending the meting
were Jim Smith, president,
Kathy Manlcke, vice president,
and members. Susie Heines, Ray
Karr, and I. 0. McCoy.

Four indictments are
returned by grand jury
Mark A. Searles, of the Harrl·
son ville area, was Indicted on one
cqunt of aggravated felonious
assault and one count or carryi ng
a concealed deadly weapon. The
Indictments against Searles
stem from an Incident on March
20 in which Searles allegedly
assaulted Bill Cremea ns y•Jth a
deadly weapon - a 22 caliber
Mississippi derringer. Charges
against Searles also carry a
firearm specification which
mean If Searles Is convicted of
the charges, he would serve a
mandatory additional three ye.
ars In prison fo r the firearm.
Ronnie E. Taylor, Middleport,
was indicted for grand theft
stemming from the March 7
(Continued on page 12)

-Local briefs---...., National Guard to assist police in drug fight
Estep fights extradition

Harrisonville resident Debra Lynn Estep Is contesting the
right of North Carolina to extradite her from Meigs County to
Yadkln County, North Carolina on a warrant charging her with
breaking and entering and grand theft.
Estep was arrested Wednesday by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Deparlrnent on the warrant from North Carolina. Charges
against her stem from an Incident on or about Jan. 19 In North
Carolina In which she was allegedly Involved in the theft of dogs
valued at $4,000.
Estep appeared Thursday before Meigs Common Pleas
Judge Fred Crow III where she contested the extradition. She
was represented by Attorney John Lentes.
Estep was permitted by the court to post at $10,000 property
bond.
Another hearing In the matter has been set for April 28.

Trailer home leveled by fire

MwrtbM FDIC

The trailer home of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur L. Ward, Jacks
Road, near Rutland, was destroyed Thursday by fire. Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby received a report of the fire at
&amp;~~~

•

"

According to the sheriffs report, Mr. Ward had discovered
(Continued on page 12)

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Defense Secretary Dick Cheney has
given final approval to 12 states
to increase the use of the
National Guard In helping pollee
crack down on Ulegal drugs - the
first phase of a $40 million
program .
All are border or coastal
states, ranging from Florida to
Hawaii and Arizona to Washing·
ton, and their National Guard
plans were "accorded the high·
est priority !or review and
Implementation," a Pentagon
statement said Thursday.
"Plans from other states have
been reviewed and approved by
the Department of Defense and
have been sent to the Depart·
ment of Justice for further
review. We expect approval of
these plans In the near future,' '
the Pentagon said.
Tbe 12 state plana · that won
final approval vary, but none
Involves direct participation of
National Guardsmen In pollee

activities such as search and
seizure.
The plans include detection
and monitoring via flight surveil·
lance, aerial photography and
other Imagery , radar surveil·
lance, Jong·range reconnals·
sance, assistance In searching
containers, transportation, ex·
panded training of law enforcement personnel and Increased
loans of mUltary equipment.
Dan Donohue, a spokesman !or
the Natlonai Guard, said the
Guard assisted law enforcement
agencies in 32 states last year
and had a role In the seizure of
$1.3 bllllon worth of illegal drugs.
The new plans Increase the role
of the Guard, he said, so that It
can engage In aerial surveil·
lance, searching containers at
ports of entry and In long· range
foot patrols In the desert Southw·
est aDd el.ewhere.
Cheney approved a total of
$11.7 million for the 12 states. The
state plans and the amount of

federal funding approved were:
Alabama, $930,745; Arizona,
$176,359; California, $990,407;
Florida, $3,413,052; Georgia,
$281,904; Hawaii, $247,627; Loutslana, $1,190,820; Mississippi,
$468,046; New Mexico, $330,399;
Oregon, $474,384; Texas,
$2,904,210 and Washington,
$369',880.
"I just signed of! this morning
on packages for 12 states in

letters to the governors announcIng ... that their plans for using
some of that $40 million that
Congress appropriated for the
Guard have been approved,··
Cheney told reporters during an
Interview.
Congress allocated $4U million
for the increased use of the
National Guard In support of
Illicit drug control and drug
Interdiction efforts by the states.

Spring forward,' fall back
WASHINGTON (UPI) -It's almost time to fiddle with your
clock again. Daylight Saving Time starts Sunday.
The time change mandated by law requires clocks and
watches to be set forward an hour at 2 a.m. local time the first
Sunday In April, moving hack an hour to Standard Time at 2
a.m. local time the last Sunday In October. Just remember the
adage "spring forward, fall back" when you reset your
tlmeple~e.

Bftldenta of Hawaii, Arlzoaa, lhe Eaitern Time Zone part of
llldlana, Puerto Rico, the VIrgin Islands and American Samoa
do nQt make the change.

.,

\

�The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

l

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON I\ REA

~~

sm~ rT"\-J._---.-. ~=·""'
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Publisher
Assistant Publisher/Controller
CHARLENE HOEFLICH, General Manager
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland
Daily Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300
W.t?rds Jong. All Jetters are s ubj ec.~ t to edit ing and must be signed with
name. address and telephone number . No unsigned letters will be pub-

lished . Letters should be In good ta ste, addressing is sues , not personali·

ties.

Bush style

Oil

•

UDIOD boSS

WASHINGTON Mexican
President Carlos Salinas de
Gortari has done a bold thing. He
arrested the oil union boss who Is
the closest thing Mexico has to
Jimmy Hoffa.
The man who should have been
stopped by Salinas' predecessors
years ago is Joaqu in Hernandez
Galicia, the titula r head of the
Me xican 011 Workers Union .
Through fea therbedding , corruption and intim idation over more
than two decades, Hernandez has
built himself a billion-dollar
empire, all the while passing
himself off as the Mexican
work e r s' a ns wer to Mother
Teresa .
Nearly 200,000 oil workers In
the union revere him .because he
made them the best-paid laborers In Latin America, at great
cost to the res t of Mexico.
But now Hernandez, known as
" La Quina, " ha s met his ma tch .
Mexico fmally has a pres ident
determined to put a stop to the
waste and corruption of the
union. Salina s sent troops to
Hernandez' s home in January
and arrested him for a massing
weapons. A federal officer died In
the raid , and now Hernandez
stands accused of murder, too.
In 1986, Dale Van Alta met with

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Salinas and asked him why La
Quina had not been arrested. At
the time , Salinas was budget
director for then -president Miguel de Ia Madrid. Salinas said
the union was " a part of our
system. They a re a part of the
Mexican la bor movement which
backs the government." Whetr
reminded that the oil wor kers
were a grossly pampered part of
the system, Salinas noted that
pampering went out the window
with high oil prices. " We don' t
have a margin for pampering,"
he said .
Salinas was sworn in last
December, and in January he
had La Quma arrested. Salinas
has shown that there is hope for
his administration and for
Mexico.
By the time La Quina was born
Into a family of humble oil
workers in 1922, the petroleras,
or oil workers, had transformed
their country into the secondlarges t 011 produce r in the world ,
and the black gold was flowing
out of their hands as fast as they
could pump it.
A series of strikes culminated
in 1938 when the Mex1can govern·
ment nationalized 17 foreign oil
companies. The oil workers
celebrated what they thougnt

was their victory over the Yan·
quls , but the president then,
Lazaro Cardenas, had no intention of turning the oil companies
over to the workers. He created a
nat ional oil company, PEMEX.
The oil workers tolerated a new
overlord, their own government.
In the early 1970s, PEMEX
struck oil In a big way In the
Isthmus of Tehuantepec and the
Bay of Campeche.
By that time, La Quina controlled the union and had won so
many concessions from PEMEX
that the oil workers were rolling
In money. La Quina was rolling In
it, too, but he lived the outward
life of a humble champion of the
people, tilting· at anyone who
dared call the union corrupt or
Inept .
In one emotion-filled speech In
front of 10,000 workers, La Quina
pledged: "I don't care what
happens to my family, to my sons
or to my grandchildren. What I
love mostin the world is the union
and you."
But new evidence we dug up in
a three-year investigation, which
we will detail In future columns,
suggests that La Quina is more
Godfather than Gandhi. If un·
checked, he and his petroleum
mafia will ruin Mexico.

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He re are a few examples :
Union companies have coll ecte d c o mm i s s ions from
PEMEX to drill wells that no one
wanted. These " political wells"
are drilled In collusion with
PEMEX to pleas!' a local politician or to impress visiting
dignitaries.
There Is widespread embezzlement of funds earmarked by
PEMEX to pay the union for
roads, schools, clinics and other
public projects in communities
with many union members, according to our sources. Numerous reports detail massive thefts
of PEMEX machinery and even
oil that Is sold abroad. ·
There are public charges
against La Quina accusing him
and cronies of arms trafficking.
The latest rumored chicanery
by SO!lle union members, accord·
lng to sources in Mexico City, lA.
drug trafficking. They allegedly
use PEMEX trucks and stuff
drugs in hollow walls Inside the
cylindrical tankers. The temptation to run a profitable narcotics
operation in times of low oil
prices must be great , and the
union already has the infrastructure - trucks , planes, Isolated
ranches and friends at every
level of government.

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UNCLE SAM NEEDS YOU
TO QUIT!

~oday in
~

:•

histQry
..

By United Press International

~=Today is Friday, March 31, the 90th day of 1989 with 275 to follow .

,: The moon Is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
•
.: The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
• The evenJ.ng stars are Mars and Jupiter.
thought for the day: Philosopher Rene Descartes wrote, "Good
sense Is of all things In the world the most equally distributed, for
~rybody thinks he is so well supplied with lt."

:· A

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Africa to produce the desired
result. The U.S. Congress in
particu lar , despite warnings
from vir tually every informed
source that economic sanctions
wouldn ' t work, Imposed them
over President Reagan's veto
and is currently thinking of
streng thening them.
The stage, in short, was set for
confr ontation. South Africa
would simply have to bend,
sooner or later, to th e will of the
outside world.
Few would have guessed, even
a year ago, that if a crack was to
appear in this united front, it
would appear in the policy of the
Soviet Union. Yet that is precisely what has happened . It
seems that Mikhail Gorbachev,
in pulling in Moscow's horns in
Afghanistan, Cambodia, Angola
and elsewhere , did not overlook
South Africa.
On March 15 Yuri Yukalov
head of the African desk of th~
Soviet Foreign Ministry, called
for political dialogue rather than
force to end apartheid In South
Africa. "We would prefer a
political settlement, and want

apartheid to be dealt with by
political means," he declared.
"South Africa should not be
destroyed. It also should be
spoken to not only through
threats or pounding our fist on
the table. There should be
dialogue."
The reasoning behind this
astonishing Soviet shift toward
Ronald Reagan 's policy of "constructive engagement" with
South Africa was explained by
Yukalov's deputy, Boris Asoyan:
" We doubt that revolution in
South Africa Is possible, if you' re
talking of revolutionaries stormIng Pretoria," he said. "We
support the ANC and we regard It
as the main force In contempor·
ary political life in South Africa.
But we also believe that there is
really no alternative to a peace·
ful solution."
And Anatoly Gromyko, director of the Africa Institute of the
Soviet Academy of Sciences,
chimed in with his vision of howl
majority rule might be achieved:
"There would have to be a
program of reforms submitted to
nationwide discussion at which

all sections of society would be
represented."
Now all that remains is to bring
Western liberals, including those
dominant In our Democratic
Congress, in off their limb of
relentless pressure on Pretoria.
One of the most militant of them,
Anthony Lewis of The New York
Times, came up with the Ingenious notion that It is really
Pretoria that is giving way that it will soon release Mandela
and move "toward negotiation."
Lewis of course knows very
well that PreJorla h!ls been
trying for years to open negotiations with South Africa's black
leaders- including Mandel a and
the ANC, if only they would
renounce violence (which they
have steadfastly refused to do) .
But Western liberals, and for that
matter the ANC, cannot possibly
persist In their counter-policy of
sanctions and force If Moscow Is
ready to support (in Gromyko' s
words) "negotiations for two,
three or however many -years."
It appears that South Africa's
firmness is paying off at last.

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I

William Rusher

Trouble in paradise._________R_ob_e_rt_W:--=al~te:..:...::.rs

·:-.

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HONOLULU (NEA) - The
extraordinary odyssey of David
and Ilona Higgins began In
Boston a decade ago. At the time,
they were successful professionals and parents of two young
children , a 6-year-old boy and a
1-year-old girl.
Ilona was a physician special·
lzlng in obste trics and gynecology. David was an attorney
whose love of the sea had
previously led him to enlist in the
Navy and then to qualify for a
Coast Guard license to pilot
ocean-going vessels.
In 1979, they quit their jobs,
purchased a 96-foot schooner
named Deliverance and set out to
sea with the children. In the
ens11ing five years,"'ihe family
traversed 50,000 miles In the
Atlantic and Pacific oceans as
well as the Caribbean, Tasman,

.L
LAYING IT DOWN - Seattle Kingdome
workers Install part of the hardwood maple
basketball court to be useddurlngtheNCAA Final

Four men's tournament Saturday and Monday.
Tbe floor was made by the Horner Floor Co. of
Dollar Bay, l\11ch. (UPJ)

•
•
Final four teams arnve
In Seattle
By FRED LIEF
UPI A~slstant Sports Editor
Quin
SEATTLE (UPI! Snyder, point guard, now gets to
be Quln Snyder, tour guide.
"I was trying to show Danny
(Ferry) where everything was,"
he said.
And the cloud cover at Sea-Tac
Airport broke long enough Thurs·
day to do just that.
Snyder, Duke 's floor leader, is
from Mercer Island, Wash. This
week, as the Blue Devils bid for
their first national championship, he is the native son come
home.
Piedmont cha rter 9327 brought
Duke to Sea-Tac Airport. The
Franklin High School band heralded the welcome, its tubas
bellowing outside the men's
room of gate A-6.
Also waiting wa s Miss Seat tie,
a crown on her head and a ribbon
across her dress. And so was
Sylvia Turner of Buffalo, NY ..
the grandmother of Duke center
Christian Laettner
"I never even hea rd of Duke
until he signed, " she said.
Snyder walked down the corri
dor trailed by back-slappers and
photographers. He waited for his
luggage and tried to dispel the

notion his mother wao cooking
dinner for the entire team.
''I don 't know where people got
tha t." he said. " These guys ea t
too much. "
Also arriving Thursday was
Illinois. Michigan hit town Wednesday as did Seton Hall.
The Pirates we re the only team
not to return home after ._;inning
its regional. Coac h P.J. Carlesima said the players could pick
any place in the Pacific time zone
as a base camp before Seattle.
Los Angeles proved the destination of cho1ce. ·
On Saturday, Duke, 28-7, meets
Seton Hall, 30-6, in the first game
of the national semifinal s with
Michigan, 28-7, fa cing Tlllnols,
31-4, In the other. The winner s
play Monday night .
This is a heady basketball
week fo r Seattle, which las t
staged the Final Four in 1984.
Less than an hour's drive down
the highway in Tacoma , the
women hold their Final Four
( Lol!isiana T ec h -Au bu r n.
Tennesse&lt;•-Maryland), pla yed in
conjunction with the men' s
tournament.
Also in town are the hordes of
coaches for the1r annual convention. A key item on the age nda is

Guidi•" Stult• at \'t•" \ nrk, ll :,!fljl.ltl
!\lll";tuk1•t• at Phm•nl\. ~ =.ill jl.lll
()t'l rull lll St• ,II tit•, Ill jl.m

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Exhibition

consent to such an arrangement .
Never mind that South Africa' s
blacks, themselves shar ply divided into nine separate, distinct
and mutually hostile cultures,
are by no means unanimously
enthusias tic about lt. The outside
world has onlv a limited amount
of time to devote to South Africa
and its problems, and the above
"solution, " r idiculously simplistic as it Is, wa s the best the crlt lcs
~ould come up with .
So in creasing pressures have
been brought to bear on South

•••
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Scoreboard ...

South Africa's resolve----------------------------

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jailed _ _:;J_a~ck_A---=-nd.:..:....e.:..:....r.:...:so:...:..:n:......:a::.:..:n=-=d~D=-=a=-le::.....:....~.:::an..:....:..;::A~tt=a

CXAY... CH~Vf€.R ctJ~:

Berry's World

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, March 31, 1989

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - President Bush has signaled the end of U.S.
mUitary pressure aimed at overthrowing the Marxist-led regime m
NIC:aragua with agreement on a $40 million non-lethal aid plan for the
Con\ra rebel force.
H~ has pointed the way for the United States to join with other
Ceptral American nations to find a diplomatic solution to the problem
of a Soviet presence in the region.
The president apparently decided that it would be impossible to gel
Copgress to continue to arm the resistance and that he had to opt for
the regional peace plan pressed by leaders In the area , which has the
acquiescence- in words at least- of Nicaraguan President Daniel
Ortega.
It was a remarkable reversal of the policy of the last eight years
under President Reagan, who was determined to make Ortega "cry
um;le" but was never able to achieve that goal with a U.S. proxy
army.
\fhlte House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater put it bluntly,
saying: "We believe military pressure has not worked."
Bush was part of the Reagan administration that pulled out all the
stoi&gt;S to overthrow the leftist leaders in Managua.
But there was neither congressional nor public support for the
eff&lt;lrt. In fact, .all the polls indicated that the public, still tearful of
anqther Vietnam, wanted no part of it.
Reagan devoted part of his presidency to the task. He made prime
time television speeches, addressed the issue on many occasions at
ne'fS conferences, and his public liaison office devoted most of its
outfeach hours over two terms briefing groups and try1ng to drum up
support for the cause. But it just didn't take.
I{ anything, it caused Reagan so much frustration that he made end
ruoo to solicit aid from other countries after it was banned by law. The
obs~sslon led him to abdicate his responsibility to military men who
foupd undercover off-the-shelf ways to supply arms to the
Nicaraguan rebels. The result was the national Iran-Contra scandal
tha) potentially could have destroyed his presidency.
~rom the beginning the policy had its drawbacks, and the tactics
caused consternation, particularly when It was discovered that an
"a~sasslnation" manuel had been prepared for the Contras by the
CIA. The agency is barred by from political assassinations an
aftermath of the Watergate scandal.
'
I~ what Bush now calls a "new day," the president stood on a White
House platform with bipartisan congressional leaders and declared:
"We do not claim the right to order the politics of Nicaragua. That is
for ·the Nicaraguan people to decide."
That statement marks the end of the U.S. drive to use military
me11ns to democratize Nicaragua. But that doesn't end it all. With a
carrot and stick approach, the administration is hoping to persuade
the,San?inistas to lighten up, liberalize and hold elections in exchange
for, a lifting of the trade embargo, travel restrictions and other
bilateral issues.
"nle funds, $4.5 million a month, will be used to relocate the 11,000
Coqtras. Secretary of State James Baker has indicated the United
Sta~es will not have an open door policy for them. The hope Is that they
can go home and assimilate back Into the mainstream In Managua.
!lush hailed the new spirit of bipartisanship that brought about the
agreement and said the administration will now be "speaking with
For many years Western liberone voice on an extremely Important foreign policy issue."
als
have shared with the Soviet
J!.aker called it "a first Important step toward building a successful
Union
a simple vision of what
pl¢tlsan policy In the region."
must
happen
in South Africa. The
:i'he Democratic leaders said the accord opens the way for more
white
regime
there mu st free
p~ce between the White House and Congress on other controversial
Nelson Mandela unconditionally,
f()felgn policy Issues.
and
then open negotiations with
~nate Democratic leader George Mitchell seemed to sum it up
his
outlawed
African National
":!len he noted that there can be no effective policy unless It has
·•
Congress
negotiations
con·
"I!Ubllc support."
fined
substantia
lly
to
how
South
;l'hat Is once again the lesson of Vietnam .
Africa can be transformed into a
:!
black republic on the basis of one
••
man, one vote, In a unitary state.
Never mind that South Africa 's
whites, not to mention its other

~~

Schottenheimer's ego was a .
problem, owner Modell says

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

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Philippine and Coral seas!
What began as release and
respite from the pressures of
fast-track urban life was trans·
formed Into a crusade to improve
the abysmally poor physical and
mental health of one group of
island residents of the South
Pacific.
When the Hlgglnses reached
the Marshall Islands -a collection of 34 remote atolls and small
Islands scattered over a halfmillion square miles of ocean they found a society ravaged by
Infant mortality, diabetes, tuber·
culosis and alcoholism. The
teenage suicide rate was 20 times
higher than It Is In this country.
Disturbed by what they saw,
the Hlgglnses began devoting an
increasing amount of their time
during Island visits to providing
medical and other assistance to

the Marshallese. (The islands'
population is about 37,000.)
"We es"pecially wanted to help
the people of Micronesia because
of the shame we feel for what the
U.S. government has done," says
Ilona Higgins.
Indeed, the federal government 's attitude toward the Pacific Trust Territory- entrusted
to Its care by the United Nations
following World War II and only
recently granted limited autonomy - is nothing less than
scandalous.
Although hundreds of millions
of dollars In public funds are
annually poured Into Micronesia'
a vast territory encompassing'
2,100 islands and atolls, most of
the money is used to perpetuate a
government bureaucracy and a
welfare state.
Federal officials .v\ew the

'

islands alm0st exclusively In
terms of their strategic military
and geopolitical value. Meanwhile, leprosy, cholera, tuberculosis, measles, syphilis and smallpox- all diseases that could be
relatively easily eradicated spread unabated.
The Higginses have dedicated
themselves to serving a part of
the . world where there Is no
electricity, plumbing or running
water. Copra, papaya and bread·
fruit are dietary staples, food Is
cooked over open fires and
outrigger canoes are the primary
means of transportation.
The Marlmed Foundation's
first task was to ralse$2.5 million
to build, outfit and equip as a
floating clinic the 156-foot, three·
mas ted topsail schooner Tole
Mour, the largest satling vessel
constructed in this country In the
last 70 years.

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fo' rid,t.l' '" /&lt;4port .. ( 'al 1'fld11r
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l'olt!.-.rt'W \,o;, !'111•w \ odt ("'L I at P11rl St

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ISI&amp;s .. •lhnU
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Houlfon lllllo!tloa, i ::llt p.m
Mi~Ynl at Fhlladf'iphla. i : !UI p.m .
Dalla." al In dlan11 , .,. :1&amp; p.m
Portland at \\'IL'Itlln«{nn. Ill' m
C'IMelllnd 1M ('hlt• t~.l{ll , ti p . m

.

:'IIi ,\TIOI"\t\1, B \.'OKETB.\1.1. ,\..,. ~m · .
Tho~~· .. R1•"ult"

llou,t ora In!!, St"W ·lt•r!e•V 1111
{ioldt&gt;n Stah • ll'l. ('hartO.It• Ill~
Nf'v. \ 'nrlt !1!1, Otdt.l" 911
Ot·n wr 1!:1, s,' ltttlt• llfi
1•.\ l.~tkt• r,. I:Ht, S ;ut Antunh.1 911
Satntmf'ntll l!til, Phot•nb: 1!;1

t' rltla,y'"' Gun ....
N•·• ,J,.r.._oyat ,\ tlanta, 7: :top.m
Hnu,.or~ at Bu..don, ; - :\ltp.m
Miami

at

l"hlllldoolphl~t,

'2: :10 )l.llJ,

Dallao; 111 lnt:lana , .,: :18 p m .
Portl.nd at \\' ullhln~on, !I p.m
flt'\t&gt;land IAI ( 'hh a~~;o, II p rn ,
(;l!llk--nStuh•aiNt•" \'ork,/1. :lOp r~.
Mllw.au il•t•at Phurtnix,!:j: 30 p.m.
Dt•lrolt 111 St•attll•, Ill p. m .
San ,\nt onlo Ill lA ('llpp.·r ... 10 :It p. m
~hardu.v',. Uamt'!&lt;l
l'or11and at ( 'hw-lotk&gt;, nl!llhl
LA lll!lf'r!li at ~·nrr, nl~~;hl
Utah at SMcntml'nlo, nll{hl

NATIONAl. HOf'KE\ Lf;Mil'E
Thuf"CCay',. lll'!idh
Montrt&lt;u.l .J, Bulfaln ':
Hartfurd " · l'ltt!ba ~h I

Phllll.df'lphla5. W"""'l~on-t
St. Loui" -1. qtlf'l11"1· 3 ~OTI

"A Band On T.V/'

discussion of a coaches ' union. a
m('asurP unlikely to genera te
grea t support inas muc h as most
coaches prefer thC' foul line to the
picket line.
All of which 1s ex pected to
pump around S50 million into the
local economy . w1tt1 hotels
booked and tour is t do lla 1·s gob·
bling coho salmon and Oly mpia
oysters
Not to bP di scounted, of course,
a re the scalpers. They are out in
number· and dem anding a prin ce's ra nsom lor ticket s sPiling a t
fa ce valuf' for $oo ap1ece.
RPport s list the price fo r a good
sea t at th e Kingdome a t $1, 200.
That pr·ic e will drop dras tically
by ga me lime.
In Thursday's Seattle Pos tlntelligcncer, the cla ssified secti on pos ted more t ha n 100 ads for
Final Four ti cke ts.
But the bi gges l finam·ial
w1nne r may be th e !our sc hools
them selves. Eac h will ea r n $1.25
million, a far c ry from thc $49,576
ear ned by the 1970 Final Fo ur
learns.

Duke Coac h Mik(' l&lt;rzrzewski
says tl1e treasure c hest has
gotte n too lull. Fo rmerly a t the
U.S. Milita ry Ac ademy, Krzyzewski now hois ts the proletarian

banner , saying it is tim P for Final
Four teams to s ha rP the booty
w1th the game' s have- not s.
College bas ke tball's pre mier
event event comes at a time with
the sport und er close scrutiny . .
For the past yPar alon e, a police
blotte r would have served as well
as a score sheet :
A Kentucky recrui t allegedly
slipped $1,000 in an envelope:
former Memphis State Coach
Dana Kirk convic ted of mco me
tax evas ion ; a boycott by San
Jose State playe~·s , cla.imin g
abuse by th e coach.
To mention but a few And with
the allegations and convictions,
the stakes ra1se and the pressure
to win increases. Thus, the
freneti c coaching upheaval com e
March II Is a s ituation that
angers and depresses many in
the p rofession .
"Tt's very alarmin g, ·• Ca rle
simo said. " It' s either happening
becau se you have a th letiC dir~c
tors and c hancel lots unwilling to
stand up tQ boosters or alumni. or
are not s trong e nough to."
Krzyzewskl wond ers a bout a dministrations so qu1ck to di sm iss

mer to hi re an offensive coordiC LE VE LAN D t UP))
natory after Cleveland's playoff
Browns own er Art Modell say s
loss to Houston. but Schottenhelcoac h Ma 1·ty Schottenheimer's
mer refused and is now the coach
ego go t bi gger a nd the coach was
of the Kansas City Chiefs. The
hard to deal with after being
owner, citing one example, said
na med to the NFL's Com pet it ion
he tried to find out why ScholtenCommit tee in 1986.
heimer wouldn't give speedy
Modell's commen ts, appearing
running
back Tony Baker a
m The Plain Dealer Thursday ,
~hance to play .
mar ked the first t lme he had
"Here this kid had shown
been publicly critical of Scholtenflashes
the few times he touched
heimer, who was fo rced to resign
the
ball
and I questioned Marty
Dec. 28.
about why he doesn't play him
" I think everything changed
with Mart y when I approved his and Marty won' t hear of it go ing on th e league 's Competi- won ' t even consider It ," Modell
tion Committee," Modell said. said.
Modell said Schottenhelmer
' 'He just totally changed as a
resisted making a few assistant
person, his whole personalit y.
"All of a sudden, he's socializ- · coaching changes with Joe
Pendry , brother Kurt Scholtening with the elite in the league,
the Tex Schramms and Paul heimer and Bill Cowher, and
Brown s and Don Shu las and his Modell said he did not want to go
who le attitude changed . Sud- through another season with
de nly, it 's as If he thinks he has Schottenhelmer doubling a s offensive coordllnator.
a ll the answers. It was very
"What I wanted was Marty as a
notiPeable.
head
coach and to stop all this
"We used to sit around, myself,
nonsense
with 12 men, 10 men on
Er nie Accorsl and ,Jim Bailey
I
he
field
,"
Modell said, referring
(both team vice presidents), and
to several penalties Incurred by
WP'd sa y, 'My God, this Isn't the
the Browns. ''I just think he was
same Mart y weusedtoknow .' He
couldn't be budged. He was righ t so preoccupied with the offense,
he lost sight of other things . I
antiL·verybody else was wrong. "
Modell ordered Schottenhel- have friend s, people who were

SEOAL, TVC all-star
game starts Saturday
The annual all-s tar basketball
doubl eheader between the top
se n lor players from the Southea stc m Ohio Athletic LPague
and the Tri -Va llev Conference
wi ll startSaturtl a:v'al6: 30p.m at
Trimble Hi gh School in Glouster .
The girls' game will be followed by th e hoys' POntes! at 8. 1o
pm .
Coac hf's for the 'J'VC girls wrll
be t\e ls on vi ll e-Yo1k 's Tom
Gumpf a nd Vinton County's Phil
Mc Na lly. The)' will fill in f01
Federal Hocking s kipper and
TVC Coac h of the Yea r Kim
Chadwell, who is on ma ter mt v
leal'e aft e1 givin g birth IO a SOn
las t month ChadwPII piloted the
Lan('er s to th e TVC tit le.
The SEO AL g irl&amp;wil l be guided
by Ga llipolis c hief a nd SEOAL
Coach of the Year Gordon Ral(er ,
whose )31uc Angels won the
league crown on thei r way to
winning the Division II !;ioulhcast
Distnct till&lt;'.
" .

Hubbard's Greenhouse

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
FRIDAY, MARCH 31, 1989
HAM 'N SWISS SUB PLAnER ........................ S3.38

Our Popuilr Sub Con1ilt1 of Delldou 1 St•dced Hem •nd Is Topped With A byer of
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m•d• Col•l.w, M•c•oni s.e.t, or B.et«t Bunt
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CHILD'S POIIION .............. u .... .. .................. ..... . . . .. . ... .......... 12.53
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The Plain Dealer also reported ~ .!
Thursday that Modell sent telegrams to Scholtenhelmer, Chief~ ·:
owner Lamar Hunt, Chiefs Gen-:0
era I Manager Carl Peterson ani! ~
the NFL in mid -January, protestIng Schottenhelmer's raid of
Cleveland' s coaching staff.
"I simply was putting them orl
notice, saying I would not allow
tampering of my personnel and ,
that I would hold them accounta ble, " Modell said. "I did not take
kindly to them putting pressure '
on some of our people. particularly (receivers coach) Richard '
Mann and some others."
.,
The Chiefs now have seve n ',',
former Browns assistants.

--------, .. ,
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" I really think It goes back to
pride, or ego, whatever you want
to call It," Modell said. "Deejl
down Inside, I believe Marty
resented the credit t:-.at Lindy ,
received and I'm sure he wanted
to prove he could do that job ." :

CHEEPERS
. BYTHE
DOZEN

NOW OPEN FOR
SPRING SEASON

APPEARING

CHAIG~

SEOAL bo)s
Alh.-,ns- Cory Corrigan. Matt
Creer and Brian Walsh
Gallipolis - Joe Owen 1 ,
,Jackson - Greg Ha rrls"
Logan - ~· im Moore and Doug
Stiverson
Marietta - Justin Herb and
Brent McKenna
Warren Local - Brad Holbe rt

TVC hoys
Alexander- Denny Jarvi s and
SEO~L girls
Jim Martin
Athcn&gt; - As hlpy Ferg-uson .
Belpre- Mark Woodburn
Kathy Harmon, Julie Murray
Federal Hocking
Jeff
a nd Sheila Ross
Marcum
Gallipolis- Tamm y Elliot t
Meigs - Matt Baker, .John
Jackson - J ody Boroff and Burdette and Todd Powell
Ci ndy Ridgeway
Nelsonville-York- Mike EckLogan - Kandy Coil umber and els and Larry Riehl
Julie Huggins
VInton County
Charles
. Marietta - Shay Mea gle, Bowden and Adam Conway
Bet sy Ott and Mis ty Singer
Admission will be $2 for adu Its
Warren Local - Je nny Ander - and $1 for students. with tickets
son. Shelly Marks and Tammy available at the door.
Smith

Homeml!de Gr1vy, A H01 But1ered RoiJ or Homemede Bitcuit (with honey) .,..d
Coffee, Aegu)ar or Deceffin1ted, Both Fi.. hly Brewed (A Small Drink or Hot Tee
Mev Be Subttitutedl

$200 COVEl

The TVC boys Will be it'd by
Trimble mentor Paul Pettit.
while Athens coachh Fred Gibson direct s the SEOAL boys.
Pettit , who formerly coached at
North Gallla, charted the Tom·
cats' path to thl' TVC title and
was named Coach of the YE'ar.
while Gibson sharpd Coach of thP
Year honors wi th Logan boss
Garv Swinehart.

a coach .

"They JUSt don't know wh a t
they're doing, " he said . " They
don't have a plan ."
Three friend s of Indiana 's Bob
Knight were recently fired: Don
Danaher (Dayton ), Bob Donewald (Illinois State ) and Don
DeVoe !Tennessee ).
Knight suggested Da yton - a
Catholic school- take Its actions
a step further In view of dissension within the Catholic church.
" They should fire the Pope ,"
he sa1d .

Schottenhelmer's and Pen'
dry 's offensive coaching abilities
were first questioned In 1985
during Schottenhelmer's first
full year as head coach. Modell
then hired Lindy Infante to run
the offense, but Infante became .
the head coach of the Green Bay
Packers In 1988.

'"

\rouse. Ca rrie Graves and Gina
Prater

TVC girls
Alexander- Tr lria .Jeffer s
Federal Hocking - Ticia Hart
a nd J oanna Schall
Meigs- Les lie Ca rr and Beth
Ewing
Miller - Shelly Simons and
·
Rhond a Toth
Nelsonville-Yor-k Tiffany
Hicha1·ds
VInton Counl~ - Michelle

down on the sidelines, who told
me It was absolute may hem . I
had to put a s top to that. "

PLEASE BRING
YOUR OWN BOX

•
•

~

�March 31. 1989

Friday,

~!:.!:~Jl~s
~~~, !!~~ .~~~~~ ""
J
tg'oln

baseball commls·
u
Pe~er
Ueberroth Thurs·
1
~~ne~ave Pascual Perez one
Yr chance the Montreal Exmo e mor~ pitcher and Bart
g:~;.~~~~ one less wo~ry.
Perez left a drug rehabilitation
c nter where he had s nt the
e 1 two months for a ~ocaine
pas
nd Immediate! be an
r~la~; a Thursday ari'er ~he
P tc g
, .0 f"ce an

comm~ssi~~erh~d fn~t bee~
nounc d d

su~:~/ ~ust comply with an

aftercare program, including
or face a minimum
d
t 11
a~~ e~sr ~~·spension, the com·
mls~oner's office said.
Th
ouncement came just
t
~ ~~\efore Glamattl is to
r:;lac~ Ueberroth as commis·
stoner. Glamattl will still likely
have the Pete Rose affair hang·
lng over him when he assumes
ince the ·chief lnvestlga·
fo;'se~dshe would need more time
t:e case
0
"Perez pit~hed for 12 minutes in
front of manager Buck Rodgers,
pitching coach Larry Bearnarth
and a half-dozen Expos execulives. Rodgers said Perez would
pitch Saturday against the club's
Triple-A Indianapolis team at
WestPalmBeachandcouldpltch
next week In Montreal.
•'There's a good possibility we
can move him right Into the
rotation for the first series In
Montreal, .. said Rodgers, whose
1 b opens the season at home
cu

°

ARGUES CALL- Milwaukee Brewers man·
acer Tom Trebelhorn argues a disputed balk
committed by Brewers pitcher Bryan Clutter·
buckwtlh umpires (L-R) Ted Henry, Jim Joyce

and Terry Cooney during the second Inning of
Thursday's game against the Cleveland Indians
In Chandler, Ariz. The Tribe eventually prevailed,
winning IZ-6. ( UPI)

Mavericks suffer 12th loss . .
•
mrow; Lakers trip Spurs
By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
A 16-2 opening burst couldn't
keep the Dallas Mavericks from
suffering their 12th straight
defeat.
Patrick Ewing scored 4 points
and Mark Jackson added 3 points
and a key assist In a 9-1 closing
spree Thursday night, helping
the New York Knicks to a 99-98
victory over the Mavericks.
''This was like a game of
hearts," Dallas Coach John
MacLeod said. "But we couldn't
get the last card to drop."
Or their shots. The Mavericks,
who fought off numerous chal·
lenges all night, finally succumbed In the final lour minutes,
when they scored only one basket
and missed 4 of 6 free throws.
After New York took Its first
lead of the game on a 3-polnter by
Jackson with 3: 29 left, .Adrian
Dantley missed a chance to put
Dallas back In front wh~n he
made only one oftwo free throws,

Exasperated, Knlcks Coach
Rick Pit! no pulled all his starters
except Ewing with 6: 35leftin the
first quarter. The ploy worked,
as Ewing stole the Mavericks' .
lnbounds pass and lumbered
downcourt for a dunk to break the
spell. By the end of the quarter,
New York had closed the gap to 5
points.
"When I took the guys out I
said, 'This Is just not your half.
Don't worry about It,"' Pltino
said.
New York pulled·within 1 point
four times In the second quarter.
but wasn't able to take the lead
until the closing minutes.
"We played one of our poorest
games of the season but we still
won," Pitlno said. "You have to
give Dallas a lot of credit.
They're banged up, with a lot of
injuries, and they came out and
made us play at their tempo."
Ewing led the Knlcks with 25
points and 13 rebounds, while
Kenny Walker added 19 points,
Jackson had 13 and Oakley
contributed 11 points aqd 10
rebounds.
Perkins led Dallas with 21
points and 10 rebounds, while
Rolando Blackman added 18
points and Dantley had 17.
With the loss, the Mavericks
tied their second-longest losing
streak in the history of the
franchise, matching with two
12-game skids In their inaugural
season of1980-81. The club record
Is 15 straight losses, set in
January and February of 1981.
"I really think we played like
sons·of-guns tonight," MacLeod
said, "and anyone who doesn't
think so should go to the loony
bin."
In other NBA games Thursday
night, Houston beat New Jersey
109-101, Golden State thumpl!d
Charlotte 113-104, Denver outran
Seattle 123-116, Sacramento upended Phoenix 135-123 and the
Los Angeles Lakers crushed San
Antonio 138-98.
Rockets lot, Nels 101
At East Rutherford, Akeem
Olajuwon scored 29 points to help
Houston end a nine-game road
losing streak. The Rockets took
command by outscoring the Nets
29-15 over an eight-minute span
In the second half. The Nets,
paced by 26 points from Mike
McGee, have lost 11 o! their last
12 games.
Warriors 113, Hornets 104
At Charlotte, N.C., Chris Mul·
lin scored 36 points and Mitch
Richmond added 28 points and 12
rebounds as Golden State
snapped a four-game losing
streak.

leaving the score tied 94-94.
Patrick Ewing made two free
throws to give the Kntcks the
lead, but Sam Perkins missed
both free throws after being
fouled by Ewing.
Perkins later made a 3-pointer
to pull the Mavericks within 99-97
and was fouled . the next time
down the court, but missed one of
two free throws with 32 seconds
left that would have tied the
game.
Jackson gave Dallas one more
chance when he missed two free
throws with 5 seconds left, but the
rebound went to the floor and
Gerald Wilkins grabbed It as the
buzzer sounded.
''That was a set play that we
worked on in practice, where
Ge~ald gets the rebound and we
run out the clock," Jackson
joked.
The Knlcks weren't laughing in
the opl!ning minutes of the game,
as a Charles Oakley layup was
their only scoring In the flrst5: 29.

thought we were going to lose
him for the season if · not
forever."
Mets ace Dwight Gooden, for
example, needed a month In the
minors after undergoing drug
rehabllltatlon In 1987, but
Rodgers said Perez had been
throwing while in rehabllltatlon.
"You have to remember this Is
Pascual Perezandhe'scertainly
a different person," Rodgers
said. "You have to remember he
was ready to pitch five Innings
when he entered the rehab and he
has been throwing against a wall
or something all along.
"We aren't talking about a
rookie here. He knows how to
pitch and he knows how to get
ready."
.
Perez' baseball career has
been derailed by drugs before.
He was In a rehabilitation center
for the third time, having twice
failed to complete the programs.
He also spent t)lree months In a
Dominican jail In 1984 for a
cocaine conviction in his native
country.
.
In exhibition PJaY. It was:
Cincinnati 2. Kansas City 0.
Texas 6, Chicago White Sox 2;
Minnesota 7, Houston 6; Atlanta
3, Montreal 2: and Seattle 4, the
Cubs 0.
,At Haines City, Fla. , Paul
0 Neill hit a two-run homer In the
flf\h inning and Danny Jackson
combined with three pitchers to
shut out the Royals for the first
time this spring. Jackson, a

• soar .or
Pnces
Final Four tickets
~

By LUKE HILL
SEATTLE (UP!) -Prices for
· NCAA Final Four tickets soared
Thursday as the countdown to the
"Battle in Seattle" drew lastminute thrill seekers wanting to
witness in person the showcase of
college basketball.
Following a day or so in which
prices Were somewhat de·
pressed, ticket buyers and .
sellers reported Increasing prices as out·of-towners began to
arrive In Seattle looking for more
or better seats than they first had
for Saturday night's semifinals
and Monday night's championship game.
Patrick O'Steen of Tickets for
Less Inc., which was operating
out of office space at the Bellevue
VIsitors Bureau, said Thursday
morning was a good time to buy
because prices appeared to be
down a bit:
"More people wanting to sell
than wanting to buy right now,"
O'Steen said. "But I expect this
afternoon and tomorrow to be
very heavy buying."
Prices for the "great seats" In
the 101, 102 and 103 sections near
courtside, which the NCAA sold
for $55 for the two nights, were
stU! hovering Thursday morning
at about $1,000 a seat for the three
games. O'Steen said.
"I think that the best time to
buy Is right now because there's
not many people in town and
we're able to buy them at a fairly
good price. People are going to
get here tomorrow and think.
'Gosh, we better buy tickets there's only one more day."'
By midday, his prediction was
coming true. At another ticket
exchange, Murray's Tickets, top
seats that bad been selllng for
$1,250 in the morning were up to
$1,500, a broker said.
· .
Moreover, pricE!s for seats far
from the action were climbing as
well. Tickets on the 300 level were
ranging from $100 to $300. On the
closer 200 level, seats were going
lor as high as $400 for behind the
basket to $1,000 between the

fiB,

I

M--·

UUI •• S.mM PIZZA
N

w.................
Onkl.. .nciO.... ....,.,.

PLUS 4 · 1I oz. Softdrlnkl

S9.99

FISt efficient s•wice.

O'DELL WMal CO.

634 E. Main

P_o,, Ohio

992-5500

'

PWS TAX
12 PACK

S2'

LONGHORN AND
29
MOI.AIELLA CHEESE _,......................
LB.
SUBS &amp; CHIPS
COOKED HAM

$169 LL
$269 LL
MIDDLEPORT GAS PLUS

992-3397

MIDDLEPOIT, OHO

THE MIDNIGHT CLOGGERS
Will sponsor a GOLF TOURNAMENT on APRIL 15th
AT RIVERSIDE GOLF COURSE, MASON, W. VA.
To help provide funding for their trip to
DisneyWorld. They would like to thank the
following businesses for their contributions.

OPIN - A l TIIIU fi.Al
9 Ul. · 5 P.M.
SATUIIAl 9 A.M.·1 P.M.

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

~

The income tax laws are ever-changing.
.Put H&amp;R Block's experienced preparers
to work for you.

618 East Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

,
0J!111 9 AM·I PM Wlllcdays, 9·5 ~t.-PH. 992-6674

H&amp;R BLOCK D0\'1 SLT1 :.L rut\ LL~~
/

WE IEPAII WIIIIDOW
SCREEN$ AND DOOI$.

$279

Strl•t &amp; S•••ar Ho1re

I

-

Horse Racing
The Meadows race track at
MeadoW Lands, Pa., said an
$87,000 reconstruction of the
track would begin next week.
About 6,000 tons of dirt will be
droppj!d on the track and the
turns will be elevated by 11
percent.

PomerO'f, OH.

r--DitiiiiJOiliia---..
I
I

Sports briefs

PEPSI

NOW OPIIIIN POMIIOY t•DDLEPOIT
PillA
DIUYDS

Also, at Washington, officials
disclosed President Bush, ac·
companied by Egyptian President Hosnl Mubarak, will throw
out the traditional first pitch
Monday to open the season for
the Baltimore Orioles.

"SUPER SAVINGS"

BLOCD SHOT ATTEMPT - Houston's Akeem Olajuwon
(rl&amp;hl) reaches up to block a shot attempt by New Jersey's Roy
Hluon during the aecond quarter of Thursday night's NBA game
In Eaat Rutherford, N.J. The visiting Rockets won 109-101. (UP I)

DOMIIIO'S

~~~::.-.;::::.will sideline him for

baskets.
The best tickets Murray could
offer were in Section Son the !loor
(100) level, 15 rows from court·
side. Those seats were $1,500·and
climbing, the broker said.
An even more expensive route
was ·possible for the charity
minded. Entertainment Trans·
portatlon Associates of Kirkland,
Wash., was offering a package
costing $3,000 per person - per
night - for seats in a fuily
catered luxury box at mid-court
complete with a private elevator
and open bar.
With proceeds going to the
March of Dimes, reservations for
Satul-day night were filling up the
16·seat box even though the
advertisement for the luxury
seats appeared for the first time
Thursday morning. There were
still 16 seats available for Monday night, a spokeswoman said.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES 8a SERVICE
204 Condor11t.

and struck out three in six
Innings to Improve his spring
record to 3-0.
At Sarasota, Fla ., Charlie
Hough pitched seven innings and
Cecil Espy and Ruben Sierra
homer~ to power the Rangers.
Sierra s homer was his second In
two days and his seventh of the
spring, tying a Rangers record
set by Pete Incaviglia two years
ago. The loss for the White Sox
was their team record 21st of the
spring. The Rangers have won 14
of their last17 games. .
At West Palm Beach, Fla., Jeff
Blauser hit a. two-out, runscoring single In the bottomofthe
12th inning to lift the Braves. The
Expos broke a scoreless tie in the
top of the 12th on Rex Hudler's
base hit, but the Braves tied the
score on a throwing error by
Montreal pitcher Joe H"sketh.
AtKlsslmmee, Fla.,theMinnesola Twins scored three runs
wjth two out In the ninth Inning
and then cut short a two-run rally
by the Astros to defeat Houston
7-6. With the score lied 4-4 going
into the ninth, the Twins roughed
up Houston reliever Dave Smith
for three runs on five hits.
. At Tempe, Ariz., Scott Bank·
head allowed two hits over seven
innings and Ken Griffey Jr.
tripled home a run to power
Seattle. The 19·year·old Griffey.
named Wednesday as the Marin·
ers opening day center fielder ,
collected his 32nd bit and 20th
RBI of the spnng ..
At Chandler, Anz., Milwaukee
Brewers third baseman Paul
Molltordislocatedthering!lnger
on his right hand al\d underwent

J&amp;R SPORT SHOP, Pomeroy, C&amp;A AUfO, Gollipolis
(Golf Cort for Hole in One) WESTERN AUfO, Pt. Pleasant
YFW POST 9926, Mo1011, WV SPRING VAllEY PHARMACY, Gol·
I-MART, Gallipols
&amp;polis
PONDEROSA, Gollipolis
APPALACHIAN TIRE PRODUCTS,
LONG JOHN SIVER'S, Gallipolis Pt. Pleasant
QUALITY PRIIT SHOP, Micldlepwt. laMAICE BEAUfY SHOP, Pt. Pleas·
EXXON, Cheshire
ant
SIYUNE LANES, Gallipolis
SIIONEY'S, Pt. Pleasant
10rs EUCTIONICS, Gallipolis NETWORK VIDEO, Gallipolis
Dl. THALER, Gallpolis
MANlEY'S SUHOCO, Middleport
•s. Gallipolis
ECONO.tODGE, Gallipolis
HONDA. Gallipolis
IOOY CON&lt;EPTS, Pt. Pleasant
McDONAli'S, Gallipo&amp;s
LOio•·s PIZZA. Gallipolis
HAll HAPPENNG, Gallipolis
COUNTIY INTERIORS, Gallipolis
MONTGMIY .TIAILEI SALES
ARTWORK STUDIOS, Rutland
J••s SOIIO, GaiHpolis
COUNTIY CAIRYOUf, lanougo
WENDY'S, Gallpols
FRUTH PHARMACY, Gallipolis
GIIERT'S ASIUND, Middleport HAIDMANN'S, Pt. Pltasant
PAT 1111. FOlD, Middleport
VALLEY LIIMIER, Middleport
IIIKHAB NOITIU, Gallipols JACK &amp; &amp;1. 'S, Gallipolis
INGLES FIIINITUIE, MiJtlleport CAll'S SHOE STORE, Gallipolis
DALE EWS 50110, Middleport JO l Ylli4'S, Gallipols
101 EVANS, Galipal1
PAUL DAVIES JEWBERS, GalliRSCHEI'S IIG WI&amp;, r-o,
pols
CENTRAL TRUST, MiJ.Iport
THOMAS ClOTIIERS, Gallpols
POtn SEIIVKE STOlE, Pt. Pleas· DEIIFIO.D JEWB.IY, Gall polis
ant
G. C. MURPHY, Gallipolis
LES WIUAMSON JEWRERS, Pt. DAN THOMAS &amp; SON SHOES,
PIH..t
Gallpolls

OR
Veterans ·,

Hospital
115 £. Momoriat Dr.
-2104

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
RRE &amp; SAFETY
SAlES r. SERVICE
992·7075

172 North Second A...
Middloport, Ohio

Pomeroy

Rv The

and Church
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Listed On This Pape.

RACINE PLANING MILL TEAFORD REALTY
Mill Work·
Cabinel Making ~~ 1~-~~\\
-~~: S. S~cood rn
-

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Syracuse

Prescriptions
'92-lUS
Pomeroy

Pomeroy
992-3325

992-~978

p,,,,!J Flow~t $hop

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE --=--. SERVICES

FIOWUS fOl EVElY OCCASION

(6141992-2039 or
(6141992·5721

214 E. Mailj
992-5130 Pomeroy

"'""""' An. h-oy, Oh

MEIGS TIRE
CEN1£R, INC.

~ N893 tt 8().62

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

992-2975

. LET US PROTECT OUR PLANET; IT'S

JII!V.
Su!lliiY

THE ONLY ONE WE HAVE

Wtnlip
'I\Je5dlly'

am.

212 E. Main Street
992-3785, Pomeroy

POMEROY CHURCH OF '!liE NAZA·
RENE, Com!r Union and Multmy, JII!V.
Thomas Glsllii&lt;Chuv. """""· N..-man J&gt;res.
lpt, S. S. &amp;.Jt.. Su!lliiY School. Ul a.m.:
n&gt;orling .....,lip 10: :1! a.m.; eYI!IlU\iservtce6 1,.,,...----------~.J
p.m.: mlch'!el&lt; .,.,.,., W-ay. 7 p.m.
p.mMiDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, 326 E.
Maln St., Poma'oy. SUrday services; Holy CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
comrmmionon ttl!ftrstSu~oleachmonth, Herrmann, pastor. Sunday SchoollO:OOa.
and comt1ned wtth mcrrling prayer 00 ~ m.: Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.: Wed·
th1nf &amp;n'doy. Morrtng prayer and !lennon on · nesday .and Saturday Evening Services at
7
' ~~P~E GROVE UNITED METRO·
all otl..- Su!lliiYs cithemonth. Olure~School
andNuraerycareprovlcl!d CoffeeMur~the O!ST CHURCH - Pastor. Rev . Carl
Pariah Hall tnmediately tollowtngtheservke. Hicks, 10 miles above Racine on Rt. 388.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST. 212 W.
Main St, ~Lash, evan~ BtJi.e SChoci Sunday Sctmol 9 a.m., worship service 10
~~am.· M lin
lip.lO ~
y ...a. a.m. Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m.;
"'~ · •
gwa-s
:~a.m.,· o""' Prayer meet Ing an d B'bl
1 e St udy ThursmeeU~ 6:00p.m.; Evenlng....-shlp. 7:00p.
d
6 30
m. W-aynlghlprayermeetlngandBil&gt;e
a~.' 0~~ UNITED METHODISTst~~fit~J.'~TION ·ARMY. 115 Butterwt ou 124. behind wnkesvme. Charles Jones,
Ave., Pom!roy. Mrs. Dora W1nJng In charge. pastor. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; morning
SJ~ hoJbes meeting. 10 a.m; Su~ worship, 10: 30; Sunday and Thursday
Su~ s.:~ YPSM evening services, 7:_00 p.m .
Sch-~ 10:. ~
~ a.m.
·MEIGS
Eklloe Adams, - · 7'
p.m. Salvatkm
COOPERATIVE PARISH
meeting var1ous S!X'Biun and music s!J!Cials.
lJNITI!D METHODIST CBlJRCH
Tlll...tay, ll::Jl a.m. to 2 p.m. Lades Home
. NORTBE ••T CLlJSTER
League, JIHmbers In charge, all Wmle!\
AD
lnv1ted:
p.m Thursday, Carpi Cadli
Qasss (YOWV fl.oo ....BIIM&gt;), 7::1! p.m. BlUe
Rev. Seldotl John.o""
~~~~~E-~0~
ALFRED - Chun:h School 9:30a.m.:
CHRIST. 332260illdren'sHorne Rood (Coull)' Worship, 11 a.m.; UMYF 6:30p.m.; UMW
Road 76). ~-Vocal music. Sulrlay War- Third Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. Communion.
sh1plDa-m. Blble'St\llyU
w hi 6
first Sunday . (Archer)
..,_....__j, n. ~ ..... ~.m.; on P. p,
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Church
m.n=-ay.~~M&gt;--,.?p.m.
OLD DEX1ER IDBLE CHRISTIAN Scho ol10 a.m.; B'b
• le Stud y, Thursday, 7 p.
·-ls,
~•Undil
Swan
m.;
UMW,
first
Thursday, 1 p.m.; COmCHURCH ' AMn CW&lt; ,..-~,
o
Suii Su~ Sclm19:JJ a.m.; pre.!K!hingser- munlon, flrst Sunday (Archer).
vk.'es, llnilandt!UU Surday !ollowlngSu!lliiY
JOPPA -Worship 9:30 a .m.; Church
Schod. Youth meeting. 7:]) p.m. ·every Sun- School10:30 a.m. Blb1eStudy Wedne;day,
dtc:Y.
7:30p.m. (Johnsm).
SACRED HEART CATHOUC CHURCH
LONG B01"fOM - Church School9: 30
- Pomeroy. Msgr. Mtchaet Hellmer, Ph. a.m.; Worsbl~ 10:30 a.-m.; Bible Study,
992-5898. Saturday evening Mass, S:lJ p.m. Wednesday, 1:30 p.m., UMYF WedneJ·
SundAV M
g
d 10
ceo day,
6:00p.m.; COmmuntonFtrstSunday
;
""' ass, a.m. an
a.m.
or Month
{Crofoot).
~~u: ~res;~:~~~esslons: OneREEDSvn.LE- Church SChool9: 30 a.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APQS. m.; Worship !lervlcell:OOa.m.
TOLIC F AlTH - New Lima Road. next to
TIJPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Fort Meigs ·Park. Robert w. Richards, Church School 9 a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.;
pastor. Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7 p.
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; Commu·
·
Wed --"
hl . 7
nlon First Sunday (Archer).
m.;
ni::O)Uay wors p, p, m.
, CENTRAL CLUSTER
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
Preaching 9:30 a.m.~ ttrst and second SunRev. Melvtn Fraaldln
days of each month;' third and fourth SunRev. llemmte 8. Zaolca, Jr.
Kev. Don Me...w•
day each montb worsblp services at 7; 30p.
Rev. Wealey 'l'blkh•
m.; WednMday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
Rev. Paul Marilll
,1&gt;J:ay~r and Bible Study.
Rev. Artbur Crabtree
, SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mul·
Rev. Rober! Sleele
obenyHelghtsRoad, Pomeroy.PastocBob
ASBURY (Syracuae) _ Worshiplla.m.
'Snyder; sabbath SChool Superlntendeal,
; Church Scbool9:'5 a.m.; Char~Btble
parUne Stewart. Sabbath School begins at
t
#P-m. on Saturday afternoon wttb worship
Study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m.; U
' irst
.,ervtce fol1owtng at 3:00p.m. Everyme Tuesday, 1:30 p.m.; Cholr Rehearsal,
areloome.
Wednesday 6:30p.m. (Thatcher)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
• RUTLAND FIRST BAP11ST CHURCH
1- Slster Harriett warner, Supt. Sunday
Church School tO a.m.; BlbieStudy, Tuesjkhoo1930 m Mor LngWosht 1045
day,7:0UY-m.;UMW,FlrstMonday,7:JO
'l'.m.
: a. . :
n
r p, :
ph.m.; Pch'Fldresu~y,6630p.m. ChAdol~tR.e-1
'
'. POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lystm
earsa~,
I
n sat : p.m. . Ua Oa• u 'I
Jawing; Wednesday. (Franklin)
, ona1 ey, minister; Satuniay evening
FLAtwOODS_ Church Scbool, 10a.m.
~:evangeUsUc services, open to public, 1 p.
; worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thurs·
~ rn.; Sunday Church School, 9:30 a.m.;
day 7 p m. UMYF sunday 6 p m
i"Mornlna Worship 10:30 a.m. ·
'
· ·•
'
•
· ·
'
FIRST S0tl'111ERN BAPTIST, Po(F;~'l('k~f RUN _ Worship 9 a .m.;
~ meroy Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
Ch -h School 10 A.M · Cho'• p ctlce
'· Jack Needs, Sunday School Director. Sunu."'
"
u
ra
•
day School, 9:30a.m.; Morning Worship,
Thursday, 6: :JJ p.m.; UMW third Monday.
(Thatcher)
10:45; evening worship, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.")
HEATH (Middleport) -ChurchScho«i,
•&amp; 7: 30 (E.S.T.); Wednesday Prayer S.r·
M
o 30
9
30
· vtce, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.) &amp;.7:30P.M . (E.S.
y' tha.mG.; or4nplng Wowrshlednp~: aB.:Obl·'
T.); Mission Friends (ages 2-6), Royal
ou
rwp,
.m.;
cauay, • e
• Ambassadors (boys ages 6-18), and Glrts
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m.
!Zuniga)
In Action (ages 6-18) on Wednesdays. 7 p.
MINERSVILLE _Church School 9:00
ml.l(tDt.SI.T.)6&amp;307:30p.m. (E.S.T.);Tuesday
a.m.; Worship gervlce 10:00a.m. ; UMW
V s a on, : p.m.
third Wednesday, 1 p.m. (Thatcher)
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Jlal.
ley Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawsoo, pasPEARL CHAPEL- Church SChod 9:00
tor. Handtav Dunn. supt. Sunday Schoci,
a.m.; Worship Service 10:00 a.m. (Mar•,
tin)
10 a.m.; Sunday evenlngiervtce, 7:30p.m.
POMEROY _ Chu reb School, 9: 15 a.m.
; Bible teaching, 7:30p.m. Thursday.
; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Choir rehmrsal
SYRACU~ MISSION, Cherry St.. Sy·
w~·-•
7 30
U W
d
racuse.MarkMorrow,pastor.Services,lO
cuaaatU&amp;f,
:
p.m.;
M • secon
a.m. Sunday. Evenina services sunday
Tuelday,7:30p.rn.; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
•
(Meadows)
and Wedneoday at 6:00p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: 15
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
a.m.; Wo~p lOa.m.; Bible Study. Wed·
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight lllllpt,
nrst elder; Wanda Mohl~. Sunday School
nesday. 7:30p.m.; UMYF (Seniors), SunSupl Sunday School 9: :J&gt; a.m.; Morning
day, 6 p.m.; (Juniors) every other Sunshl
'WI
day, 6p.m. (FranklJn).
w ors hlP 10:· 30 a.m.: E ven ..•••W
.., or up 7;.,
RUTLAND- Chumh School, 10 a.m.;
p.m.; Wednesdayprayermeetlng7:0C1p.m.
Worship, 11 a.m.; UMW First Monday,
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
•
R
J
s tt ·~d
t
7:30p.m. (Crabtree)
Ra c,ne.
IN . ames a erua • pas m-.
SALEM CENTER- Church School9: 15
Freeman Wtlllams, Supt. Sunday School
Mo ......
shl
10 15
9:45a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday even·
a.m.;
rn...,. Wor P
:
a .m.
(Sreele)
lngr:;~~~:J'Ji~· FIRST BAPTIST.
SNOWVILLE - Morning Worship, 9:00
Comer Sixth and Palmer. James Seddon,
a.m.; Ch;g:~= ~i,~~R (MartLn)
Paster. Edna WUsm, S.S. Supt.; Cathy
Rev.''K.eaaet:h Baker
Riggs, Asst. Supt. Sunday SChod. 9:15 a.
Rev. Rorer Grace
m. ; MornlngWorshlp,10:15a.m.; Sunday
Rev. Carl Rldtl
Evening serVIce, 1 p.m. Prayer meeting
APPLE GROVE - Church School 9:00
and Bible Study Wednesday evening, 7 P·
a.m.; Morniog WorShip 10:00 a.m.; Bible
m.; Children's chotr practice, WednEI!IStudy Sunday 7:00p.m.: Prayer meetln&amp;
day, 7 p.m.; Adult choir practice, Wed .. 8
7:00p.m. Thursday. (Hick.o)
r.m.; Radio program, WMPO. Sunday,
BETHANY _ Worlhlp 9 a.m.; Churth
:30MiaD.mDL. EPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
SchooiiO a.m.; Bible Study Wednesday 10
a.m.; Dorcas Women's Fellowship Wed5th and Main, AI Hartson, minister;
nesday 11 a .m. (Baker).
Richard DuBose, Associate Pastor; Mike
CARMEL- Church School 9::.1 a.m.;
Gerlach, Sunday School Superintendent.
WorshJp, 10:45 a .m. Second and Fourth
Bible SChool9: 30 a.m. ; Morning Worship
Sundays; Fellowship dinner wtth Sutt&lt;JI
·third Thunday. 6:30p.m. (Bak..-).
10:30 a.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.
Wednesday. 7:00p.m. Prayer meeting.
MORNING STAR- Church School9: 45
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
a.m.; Worship 10: 30 a.m.; Bible Study,
ZARENE, PASTOR Fred Penhorwood.
Thursday, 7:30p.m, (Baker).
BUI White, Sunday SChool Supt. Sunday
SUTJ'ON- Church School, 9: 30a.m .;
School9: 30 a.m.; Morning Wor5hip 10: 45
MornlngWorshlp 10: 45a.m. tirstandthlrd
a.m .; Evening Service. 6:00p.m.; Wed·
Sundays; FellOWJhlp dinner with Carmel
nelday Prayer Meetblg. 7:00p.m.
third Thursday. 6:30p.m. (Baker).
lJNITI!D PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
EAST LETART- Morning Worahlp 9; 00
OF MEIGS COlJNTY
a.m.; Olun:~SchoollO:OOa.m. ; UMW!Irst
!ln. O'Qubln Kelly
Tuesday 7::1! p.m. (Grace).
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a.m.:
CHURCH - Sunday: Worship Services
Church School tO a.m. (Grace).
ll:OO a.m.; Church SChool10: 15 a.m. .
RACINE- Ol.ureh School,10a.m.; WorMIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN shlplla.m.; UMW!ourthMo~at7::1lp.
Sunday School, 9 a .m.; Church service,
m.; Men's Prayer Breakfut, We$tMday, 8
11:15a.m.
a.m. (Grace).
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Jlooi..)I'ERIAN - Sunday School, 10 a.m.:
Sprlnl.mlnlster; St.rllncMaaoarandOI·
Church service, 10: 15 a.m.
lver Swain, Sunday Scho(j Supll. PreachRUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Paster,
lq9:30a.m. each SUnday; SUDCiaySchool
John Evans. Sunday School10:00 a.m.;
)0:30a.m.
Sunday Morning Worship ll :OOa.m. ChU·
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
dren's Church 11 a.m. Sunday Evening
CHRISTIAN UNION, Therm Durtlam
Service 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. Young La·
past(l'. Sunday se.rvtce. 9:30a.m.; even:
dies' Auxiliary. Wednesday, 7 p.m. Famlng senrlce 7:00 p.m. Prayer meetJDa,
py Worship.
Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
. •
, . HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Of!
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
Rt. 124., 3 miles from Portland-Long Bot·
CHRIST, Joseph B. HosldnJ, putor. Btble
tan. Edsel Hart, past cr. Sunday School,
Clus, 9:30a.m.; MomtnaWorablp10: 30a.
t:30 t a.m.; Sunday morning preaching
m.; EvenLneWorlhlp, 6:30p.m. Thursday
10:30 a 1m.;. Su_Eday evening servlces, 7: 30 Bible ~tudy, 6: ~p.m .

6:45

=F=kAg:::ol

I

Do you ever take time to look at the world
around you? In some places it is still very
beautiful and unspoiled, but in all too
many areas our civilization has taken its
toll. In ever-increasing amounts we are polluting our air and water, turning the land
into a gigantic trash dump and eradicating
all forms of plant and animal life, at the
rate of one species each year. Not all of
these things cart be helped, nor are they
necessarily the result of negligence, but
. with our population growth and di·
minishing wilderness areas it behooves us
to keep all of these unfortunate actions to a
minimum. Learn at your House of Worship
that God gave us our world and all its natural resources to use, but not to destroy.
Thank Him for this evidence of His love
which is all around us, and resolve to do
all you can to help preserve it.

Rawlings-Coats-Blower
FUNERAL HOME
"Serving Families"
264 S. 2nd, Middleport
992-5141
---1

- ..

REALTOR

DAVIS.OUICKEL •• ,. "'• ~
AGENCY lt.IC. ~ fYl :
,~,_,._ .~.~
.,,..l~·' "' '
,..._
,..
~,.·
-

.. -·-,..

POMEROY. OHI0-992-6677
'ill Ql!i&lt;kot

and luth Ann Fox ,

(row's Family Restaurmt
"Fut,l•l Kt~llldig Flltl C41dt~"
228 W. Main St. Pomeroy

992-5432

Ul\5t

C\\\1rt St•W Q3...,;,

93 Mill Stroot
Middleport. Ohio 411780
(1141 S82-86&amp;7 -(998-00KBI
CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp; BIBLES

.I

m~ Prayef ..ffieeting 'and Bible Study Wed·
nesday. 7 p.m.
"'
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rey, Nyle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch. supt'.
716 NORTH
SuDday School S: 30 a.m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2:30 p.
OHIO
m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth anil'
Main St., Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Cralr:'
Jr .• pastcr-. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardn£!".(
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
Sunday SChool Supt. Sunday School9: 30 li.
SChool 9:30 a.m.; morning worship and
m. ; Worship Service, 10:45-a. m.
chl1dren's church 10::Jl a.m.; evening
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
preaching service first three Sundays,
- Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist. Sunday
7:30p.m.; Special servtce fourth Sunday
Bible Study 9a.m. ; Worship, 10a.m.; Sunevening, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday Prayer
day evening service 6 p.m.; Wednesday
Meeting, Bib)e Study and Youth Fellowevening service, 7 p.m.
ship. 7:30 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Raclno,"
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Rt. 124. WUIIam Hoback, pastor. Sunda~
LOcated on 0. J . White Road or Highway
Scbool10 a.m.; Sunday evening service -~ .
160. Pat Hens(JI, pastor. Sunday Schoo110
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m. '
a.m. Classes for all ages. Junior Church 11
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m. MDrnln~
Choir practlce6 p.m. Sunday. Young PeoWorshlp·10: 30 a.m. Prayer service, alternple's, Children's Chureh and Adult Bible
ate Sundays.
Study, Wed.n esday at 7:30p.m.
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST;..
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Uma Rd .:
St., Middleport. Affiliated with Southern
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rut lund. RobertJ
Baptlst Convention. Davkl Bryan, Sr., Mi·
Richards, pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on ~
nister. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Morning
Wednesdays and Sundays.
worship 11 a.m.: Evening worship 7 p.m.;
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP· ,
Wednesday evening Bible study and
TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Churcti. •
prayer meeting 1 p.m.
Rev. David Ferrell, pastor. Henry Eblin,"
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, SL
Sunday School Supt.; Sunday SchoollO a.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Scott Stewart, pas·
m.; Morning Worship 11 a.m. ; Evenlng'11
tor. William Amberger, S. S. Supt.; Sunservice 7:30p.m . Wednesday evening ser·
day School 9: 30 a.m.: Morning Worship
vice 7:30p.m.
.•
10:30 a.m.; Evening worship _"1:30 p.m.
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH·,
Wednesday worship 7:30p.m.
Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday services 9: 30'
~T.
PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
a.m. and 7 p.m.: Midweek &amp;ervlce, 7:3r • _.
Corner Sycamore and Seoond Sts., Pom. Thursday.
.,
meroy. The Rev. William MlddJeswart,
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, T~lrd
pastor. Sunday Scho«i 9:45a.m. Church
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not - ·
service 11 a.m.
lingham, Sunday- Schoo1 Supt. Sunday
. SACRED HEART CHURCH, Msgr.
Schoo1 10 a.m. with classes tor all ages. 1
Anthony Giannamore. Ph. 992-5898. SaturEvening $E!rvtces at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl-'
·day Evening Mass 7:30 p.m.; Sunday
b1e study at 7:30p.m. Youth services Fri-..
Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. Confessions one
day at 7:30p.m.
half bour before each Mass. CCD classes,
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128MUISt,.
11 a.m. Sunday.
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson,'
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St.,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday,
Middleport. James E . Keesee, pul(l'.
evening services at 7 p.m. and Wednesdat"
Sunday mornlng worship 10 a.m.; Evenservlct'S at 7 p.m.
ing service 7 p.m.; Wednesday evening
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith...
worship 7 p.m. VtsltatlonThur9day6:30p.
pastor. Sunday School9:30 a.m.; churelll.,•
m.
•
service 7:30p.m.; youth fellowshipS: 30p!•
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
m.; Bible study, Thursday, 7:30p.m. t.,•
CUrfman. pastor. Sunday School, 10 a .m. ;
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTIIOUSE, 3J04!io:
worship service 11 a.m .; Sunday night
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas..- ,
worship service 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunda~ 1
prayer service Wednesday 1 p.m.
morning service at 10 a.m.; Sunday even-:'
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
lng service 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thur.!'-. ~
CHURCH oiMiddleport.lnc .• 75Pear1St..
day Services pt 7: 30 p.m.
~·
. Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor; Roger Manley,
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE N.\~
Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday SchoQI ~
9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.; ' ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Strood, pastes.\,.
Sunday SChoot9: 30a.m.; Worship service~
Evenin&amp; Worship 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
10:30 a.m.; Yot.ath service Sunday 6:15 p._
evening Bible stlldy, prayer and praloe
m. Sunday evening service?: 00 p.m. Wet:t-.:
service, 7:30p.m.
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Stud)-/
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
7:00p.m.
OF GOD -Gilbert Spencer, pastcr. Sun·
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHlJRCH, Sun,;i
day SChool 9:30 a.m.; MornlnJ service
day afternoon services at 2:30. Thur!lta~·
!O:OOa.m.; Sunday evenlnr service 7:00p.
evening services at 7:30.
,.,
m.: Mid-week prayer aervlce Wednesday
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mas(ll,
7p.m.
U
Va. Pastor, BUI Murphy . Sunday School
MT. OLIVE FULLGOSPELCOMM N·
a.m.: Sunday evening 7:30p.m . Pray a ·
flY CHURCH, Lawrence Bub. poster.
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 1:.-...1
Max Folmer, Sr., S. S. Supt. SUnday SChool
p.m. Everyooe welcome.
:,..:
9:30 a.m.; Sunday evenlnl service, 7: 30.
RUTLAND
FREE
WILL
BAPTIST,
S-•·
m.; WednESday eventDg Bible study and
lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sund~
praise service. 7:30p.m .
SchOoi 10 a.m.; Sunday even lng 7: 00p. m~
UNITED F AITII CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Po·
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:~
m..-oy By-Paso. Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr,
p.m.
'•
pastor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENl!!
School 9:30a.m.; Morn!naWOrshlp 10: 30;
CHURCH, Silver Ridge. Duane Sydea,li
Eventna: WorsbJp 7:00p.m.; Wednesday
·strtcker, past« . Sunday Sehool 9 ~.m_~
Prayer Service, 7:00p.m.
Worship Service, 10 a.m.: Sunday evenlf!lll,'
F AlTH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
service.
7:00p.m. Wednesday nlg~t Bll&gt;tlio
St., Mason. Sunday Schad 10 a.m.; Mornstudy 7:00p.m.
;.
in&amp;" wor~hh:, 11 a .m .: Evenlna service 6 p.

SECOND AVE.

R

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
HarrisCDvllle Rd. Robert Purtell, mln.la·
ter; Steve StaDley, S. S. Supt.;" Bm MeR
roy, Asst. Supt. ; Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
Worship servlce10:30 a.m.; Evenlnewor·
shlpSunday7p.m. and Wednf!lday, 7p.m.
, ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
Grove. The Rev. Wtlllam Mlddleswarth,
pastDI'. Churcb service 9:30a.m.; Sunday
School 10: 30 a.m.
•
BRADBURY CHURcH OF CHRIST,
Tom Runyon, pastor. Sunday School 9:30
a.m.; Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
worship 10: 30 a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. John Vance, pastor; Sandy
Justice, Chairman of the Board of Christian Life. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; Morn·
lng worship 10:30 a.m.; evangel11Uc service 7:00p.m. Wednesday service. 7 p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dexter. Woody Call, paator. Services Sunday
10 a.m. and 1 p.m. Wednesday, 1 p.m.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.
m.; morning worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday
evening service 7 p.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swiger, Sunday
SChool Supt.; Sunday SChod 9:30 a .m.;
Morning worship 10:40 a.m.; Sunday
evening worship 7:30 p.m.; WedneSdaY
evening Bible study 7:30p.m.
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH.
Burllng)lam. Ray Lalldenilllt, past&lt;r. Jlo.
bert O&gt;zart. assistant pastcr. Sunday School
10 a.m.; wcrsltlp 7 p.m.; Wedneolay; 6 p.m.
youth meeting; Wed., 7 p.m church serviCES.
PINE GROVE HOLINESSCHURCH.\0
mlleoffRt. 325. Rev.Ben J. Watts, past cr.
Robert searles, S.S. Supt. Sunday SChool
9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.;
Sunday evening service 7: 3D p.m. ; Wednesday service, 7:30p.m.
·
SILVER RUN BAPTIST. But Little,
pastor. Steve Little, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SchoollO a.m.: Morning w6rsip, 11 a.m.;
Sunday evening worship 7:30p.m. Prayer
meetlng and Bible study Wednesday, 7:30
p.m.; Youth meet ina: Wednesday at 7 p.m.
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday
SChool tO a.m. Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
Mid-week service, Wed., 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
Sunday SChool 9:30a.m.; Dallas Janey,
supt.; Morning worship 10:30 a.m. : Sunday evening service, 7:30p.m.; Wednesday evening service, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn McMUlan, past«.
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.m.; Morning
worship 10:30 a.m.; Evangelistic service,
6 p.m.; Prayer and Praise Wednesday, 7p.
m.; Youth meeting, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, past«. Sunday
School 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay leader.
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
services: Chriltian Endeavor 7:00 p.m.,
Song service 8 p.m. Preaching 8:30 p.m.
Mld·week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 1
p.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
Prentice, past&lt;r. Mllclr'e&lt;1 Zlegle-, SuOOay
SChool Supt. Morning Worship 9:30a.m.;
Sunday School 10:30 a.m.; Evening ser·
vl.ce, 7:30p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Past«: Joe N.
Sayre, Sunday School 9:45a.m.; Evening
worship 6:30p.m.; Prayer Meeting, 6:30
p.m. Wednesday.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Robert Foster, pastoc; Howard
Caldwell, Superintendent; Church school
9 a.m.; Worship service 9:45a.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate, past&lt;J'.
Frank Ritne, supt. Sunday SChool 9: 30 a.
m.; Wonh1p service, U a.m. and 7 p.m.
~nday. Wednesday, 1 p.m. Prayer meeting.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. W!Uiam W!Uiams. pastor; Robert E. Bartoo, DirectOr of Christian Edu·
cation; S~ Eblln, uslstant. Sunday
School 9: 30 a.m.; Morning worship 10:30
a.m.; Teens in Action, 6 p.m.; Evening
Worship, 1:00 p.m. Choir practice 8 p.m.
Suoday. Wednelday evening prayer and
Blbloltlldy.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Charles Ruuell Sr., minister; Norman
WUI, slljll. Su00ay School9: 30 a.m.; Worship ~ervtce 10:Xt a.m. Bible study, Wed·
netday. 6:00p.m.
.
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRISTOFLATI'ER DAY SAINTS. Port·
land-Racine Road. Mike Duht, past..-;
Janice Danner, church school director.
Church acbool9: •a.m. ; Momh'l&amp; worship
10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening prayer
services, 7:30p.m.

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Shuler, pastel'. Worship service, 9:30a.m.
Sunday School10:30 a.m. Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7:30p.m.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
AL CHURCH, Klnpbury RDad. Rev.
Clyde W. Hendersoo, pastor. Sunday
School 9:38a .m.; Ralph Car~ Supt. EvenIng worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wednesd~y 7:00p.m.
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, 28601 State Route 7, Middleport. Sunday School, 10 a.m.; Sunday
evening service, 7:30p.m.; Tuesday ser·
vlce, 7:30p.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
0. H. Cart, pastor. SundaySchoolat9: 30a.
m. ; Morning worship at 10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening service at 7:30p.m. Thursday
services at 7:30p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev.
Roger Wit Uord, past or, Sunday School
'9;30 a.m.; Morning Worshl10:45 a .m.;
SundaY evening worship 7:00p.m.: Wed·
nesday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
WHITE'S
CHURCH- CootvmeRD. Rev. PhiiUpRI·
denour, paatcr. Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
worship service 10:30 a.m.; Blble stUdy
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
, RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
But Carter, pastor. Sunday School9:30 a.
m.; Morning Worship and Communion
10:30a.m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
TUns·, pastor. Sonny Hudson, supt. Sunday
School 9:30a.m.; Morning wor•hlp, 10: 30
a.m.: Sunday evening service 7:00p.m.
Wednesday service 1 p.m. WMPO program 9 a.m. each Subday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
School9:30 a.m.: Worship servlce10:30a.
m.;
Young people's service 6 p.m.
Evangelistic serviceS; 30p.m. Wednesday
service 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, MHler
St., Mason, W.Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
a.m.; Worship 11 a.m. and7 p.m. Wednesday Bible.Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud·
ding Lane, MasM, W.Va. J. N. Thacker,
pastor. Evening service 7:30p.m. ; Women's Ministry, Thursday, 9:30 a.m.;
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7: 15
p.m.
HARTFoRD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va.
Rev. David McManis, pastor. Church
School 9:30 a.m.; Sunday morning ser·
vice, 11 a.m.; Suoday evening servtce,
7:30p.m. Wednesday prayer meetlng,1: 30
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
W.Va•• Rt. 1, Jame5 Lewis, put&lt;r. Worship services 9:30a.m.; Sunday SChoolll
a.m.; Evening worship 7:30p.m. Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9:30 a.m.: Worship service, Wednesday
7

'~J'R&amp;wiOUR

LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W. ·
va. The Rev. George C. Weirick, pastcr.
SundaySChool9:30 a.m.; Sunday worshJp

lla.m.

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH,Iocated on
Pomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near Flatwoods. Rev. BlackWood, past«. Services
on Sunday at !0:30a.m. and 7:30p.m. with
Sunday School 9:30a.m. Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 7::Jl p.m.
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST. St. Rt. 338, AnUqulty. Rev.
Franklin Dickens, past«. Sunday mom·
tn1 10 a.m.; Sunday eventna 7:30 p.m.
'Thursday evening 7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT lNDEPENDENT HOU·
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 7~ Pearl St. Rev.
Ivan Myers, actlng paste.-; Roeer Manley,
Sr., Sunday School Superlnlendent. Sun·
day Schocl 9:30 a.m.; MorniDJ w&lt;nhlp
10:30 a.m.; evenlna worship 7:30p.m.;
. Wednesday evening Bible study, prayer
and praise service, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOUC - VanZandt and Ward R4. Elde&lt;
Jameo Miller. pastcr, Sunday Soboot.
!0:30a.m.; Worohlp!lervlce.Sunday, 7:30
p.m.; Bible Study, Wedneoday, 7:30p.m.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrl·
sanvWeRoad. Rev. Victor Roush, putor;
Cllntm Foulk, Sunday SChoollklpt.; SUncloy School 9:30a.m.; momlncwcrshlp,ll
a.m.; Sunday evenlDg JerVlc:e 7:30 p:m.
Prayer Meeting, Wedneaday, 7:90p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRST CBlJRCH OF GOD.
nm-Pealecollol. Wonhlp eorvtce Sunday
10 a.m.; Sunday Schad 11 a.m. Evenlne
· worship oervtce 7:00 p.m. Wedneoday
prayer meeting 7:00p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located tn Tl!lW
Comlnulllty otl Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
Sanders, pastor. Jeff_ ~Iter, lay leaden

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CALM IS A TREASURE
A treasure Is the calm no present Sunday seems to bring.
When I was a boy Sunday was a day ofleisure and fun. I would go
to church in the morning, walking down the streets. Along ihe
way there were flowers to see In Spring, snow to throw in winter,
leaves to shuffle in during autumn and in Summer to just enjoy
the sunshine and warmth and the shade of trees along the way.
It meant going to the movies, reading the Sunday funnies and
getting the neighbors funnies from the Detroit paper. We would
dress up for church but still came home to change and play ball
in the summer or visit with company and friends. Sundays were
calm and pj!aceful treasures and always a special meat with
family. Those days were treasures to store In our mental bank
for future use.
Today, I wonder If Sunday Is a treasure of calm for you and
yours. Is It a time for visiting, relaxing, playing games, reading
and Just enjoying life without the hustle and bustle of weekday
living? The only stores open then were drug stores, hardware
stores were all closed so most people could have a nice Sund·ay
with family and friends.
God created the world In 6 days and said now rest and treasure
·and enjoy this 7th day. Worship Me, who gave you all this, and
rebuild your strength for the coming week. God wants us to
treasure calm Urnes. When we are not beset by hard work, noise
and sweat from everyday living we can enjoy the calm. God
tells us to relax, worship and give thanks to the creator God and
in return He wUl walk at our side. He will soothe our fevered
brow, ease our sore muscles and calm and remove the presures
of everyday living. Sunday Is the Lord's Day, made most
especially for man that he might have the treasure of calm and
rest for a day before man once more goes out Into the heIter
skelter world around him. Let Sunday be your treasure of calm
and peace and family joy. - Putor William Mldtlleswarth,
Melgsl.utherana, Pomeroy.

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�Friday, March 31. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

-

FOOD STORES

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GRADES 3·4- Third
fourth grade winners
present Tuesday night to receive awards in the
.• recent AAUW contest held In observance of
.· National Women's
Month, are, front row,
I to r, Hlllery Harris,
Josh Roush,

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STORE HOURS: Monday· saturday, 9 a.m.-9 p.m.; Sunday, 11 a.m.-8 p.m. • Mike Mamhout, Owner

100%

FOOD STORES
(304) 675-1155
i

Amber Ohlinger, Southern; Geoff Porter, South·
ern; Eddie Sawyer, Southern; Christie Cooper,
Southern; Amy Hamon, Meigs.

•'
•: The
Area
: • Branch of American Associ a• : lion of
Women re&gt; cently
a poster and
• essay
open to ail third
• through eiljhth graders In Meigs
County. ['h~ theme of the contest
was Wllmen In ·History and
particl~nts were asked to select
a lama s woman and depict her
life in ster or essay form.
Ther were a total of 36 entries
in the poster contest and 155 in
the essay contest AAUW President Lee Lee indicated that this
response was excei)ent for the
first year of the contests.
Local school entries were coor·
dlnated by the Meigs County
Superintendent's O!!lce and en·
tries judged by county teachers .
Awards were presented to the
first, second and third place
winners in each school, and the
first and second place winners
' county-wide in each age div·
ision at the March 28 meeting of
the AAUW. Rachel Downie,
awards chairman, presented
each of the school winners with a
certificate and each of the county
winners with a rosette and
framed certificate.
,
Entries in the poster contest
, • were judged on the criteria of
'I " Information given and the idea
, •. expressed, art, design and letter·
:. lng, and construction. Essays
•;• were judged on accuracy, crea:. • tlvity, conciseness and neatness.

MONEY-BACK
GUARANTEE
POINT PLEASANT, WV

County award winners, grades
•: 3-4, In the poster contest were;
~· Mary Darst, Middleport, first
1
place; Jessica Sayre, Letart
:. · Falls, second place. In grades
• 5-6, the county )VInners were
Rebecca Moore, Syracuse, first
place; Eddie Friend, Syracuse,
second place. The first place
winner in grades 7·8 was AmY
Hamon, Meigs Junior High.
Local school winners in the
poster contesi were, Letart
Falls, grades 3-4, Jessica Sayre,
first; Adam Roush , second:, and
Ricky Watson, third. At Syracuse
in grades 5~. the first . place
Winner was RebeCca Moore and.
second place was Eddie Friend.
At Middleport Elementary, first,
second and third place winners in
grades 3-4 were, respectively,
Mary Darst, Lynn Robbins and
Libby King. In grades 7·8 at
Meigs JuniOr High, first place
went to Amy Hamon.
County wlnn~rs in the essay

contest were. grades 3-4, Cheryl second and third, respectively, In
Jewell, Harrisonville, first grade 7. In grade 8 at Southern.
place; Josh Roush, Portland, first place went to Eddie Sawyer,
second place. In grades 5-6, second to Geoff Porter and third
county winners were C.J. Harris, to Nick Adams.
Portland, first; David Pickens,
March was designated as
Portland, second. In the 7·8 Women's History Month nation·
grades category, first place was a_lly, and as part of the obser·
awarded to' Ryan Holter and vance, the Middleport-Pomeroy
second place to Eddie Sawyer, . AAUW Branch decided to con·
both of Southern Junior High.
duct the poster and essay con·
Local school winners in the tests. Said Lee Lee, "We open a
essay contest were, in grades 3-4 history book and expect to see
at Portland, Josh Roush , first. outstanding men. But what about
and Hiiiery Harris , second: In the women? Maybe someday
grades 5·6 at Portland, school we'll celebrate Susan B. Anthony
winners were C.J. Harris, first, Day or Betsy Ross Day."
and David Pickens, second. At
AAUW has been a catalyst for
Letart Falls , first and second the -advancement of women and
place winners were, respec- their transformation of Amerltiveiy, Jason Barnett and -Billy can society for ovet a century,
Craig. At Racine, first. second Lee Lee ex plained to the many
and third place winners in grades parents and students who at·
5·6 were, Kendra Norris, first; tended Tuesday ev_ening's
Courtney Roush. second; and awards presentation at the RaScott Grace, third. Winners at cine United Methodist Church.
Syracuse Elementary in grades Opportunities awarded by
5-6 were Mary Chaney, first., and AAUW at the national level
Cindy Litchfield, second. Win· include financial aid for gradu- ·
ning at Harrisonville was Cheryl ate education. research and
Jewell, first place in grades 3-4. self-development, she added .
At Meigs Junior High, Matt
The local chapter of AAUW
Craddock placed first in grades meets on the fourth Tuesday of
7·8. At Southern Junior High, every month at the Racirle
Ryan Holter, Christie Cooper and church.
Amber Ohlinger placed first ,

Dr.Ayers
Edward

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building
Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550
Office Hours
Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
JUSTIN D. BROWNING

Friday &amp; Saturday 9 PM-1 AM
D.J. FRIDAY NIGHT, DON BROWN, MARlEnA, OHIO
D.J. SATURDAY NIGHT, J.J. MUSIC MACHINE

FIRESIDE INN

New Patients Welcome

SAND HILL ROAD
POINT PLEASANT, WV.

(304) 675-6015

lflrEASANT
VALl-EY
HOSPITAL

V11lty Drive, Point Plea•nt, W.Va. l5SSO ·

THEATER
426 SECOND AVE .
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

LIQUIDATION
Up To

Suite 12

COME DANCE TO THE SOLID
GOLD HITS OF THE
50'S AND 60'S

JUDITH CAVENDISH
SOPRANO

;

28 oz.

and girl scout camp fund.
Plans were also discussed lor
the Founder's Day dinner to be
held on April 30 at the Blenner·
hasset Hotel In Parkersburg,
W.Va.
The group also voted to donate
$100 to the Meigs County Health
Department .to be used toward
the purchase of a portable
cholesterol machine.

Pediatrics &amp;
Internal Medicine

Mr. and Mrs. Doug BreNning
are announcing the birth of their
first ch,ild, a son, Justin Douglas,
born at Holzer Medical Center.
Feb. 17.
Tt.e infant weighed five
pounds, eight ounces and was )9
inches long.
Grandparents are Theodore
and Becky Pullins, Long Bottom, .. _
and Rufus and Josie Browning,
Pomeroy. Great-grandparents
are Mattie Puliins of Alfred and
Arnold and Ruth Belcher, Man,
W.Va.

: Pos~ . . , essay wi~ners named

I

HILLSHIRE FARMS

••••

,,..

$209

Junio~ high Winners ill the

w ••l.~n·~ History Month poster and
essay conte~. sponsored by the local AAUW
Chapter,
I to r, Ryan Holler, Southern;

4
25

TOTI
PIZ

THORN APPLE VALLEY - 16 OZ. PKG.

a buffet ·supper to honor the
inductees. A decorated cake was
inscribed with the names of the
new members.
During a brief business meeting which followed the buffet.
plans were discussed for the golf
tournament, a men and women's
four person scramble, to be held
at the Riverside Golf Course on
Saturday April 29.
Tee off time will be 10 a.m and
the registration fee is $40 which
Includes green fees, cart, gilts,
beverages, breakfast and other
food.
It was decided by the group
that this year half of the proceeds
will be donated to the MGM boy

Browning birth

--------------~~~------

ALL VARIETIES

SLICED
HAM

Seven new members were
inducted into Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, in the Ritual or Jewels
ceremony at a meeting held
Tuesday night at the home of
Charlene Hoeflich, sponsor.
Inducted into the chapter in the
ritual conducted by Teresa
Kennedy, president, assisted by
Catherine Johnson arid Linda
Jones were Ann VanMeter, Lori
Powell, Kathy Halley, Vanessa
Sidwell, Julie Dillon, Tina
Neigler, and Jamie Blaettnar.
Each was presented a yellow silk
rose _and her Beta Sigma Phi
sorority pin.
The ceremony was followed by

c

MERICO - 12 OZ . PKG.

IMITATION

•

BOX

CHEF BOYARDEE- 15 OZ. CAN

Racine; and C .J. Harris, Portland. Second row, I
to r, ·are Billy Craig, Letart Falls; Cindy
Utchfield, Syracuse; Mary Chaney, Syracuse;
David Pickens, Portland; and Courtney Roush,
Racine.

Sorority inducts members---------

18.5 OZ .

20 OZ.
CAN

CAN

BREAKFAST BOWl_ 18

r

c

c

GRADES 5-Ji - Winners in grades 5·6 in the
AAUW poster ·and essay contests for National
Women's IDstory Month are, front row, I to r,
Eddie Friend, Syracuse; Rebecca Moore, Syra·
cuse; Kendra Norris, Racine; Scotti Grace,

Portland; and Cheryl Jewell, Harrlsonvute.
Second row, I to r, Mary Darst, Middleport;
Jessica Sayre, Letart Falls; Lynn Robbins,
Middleport; and Libby King, Middleport.

Price!

BON TON

oz.

Page-7

WEST VIRGINIA'S ENACTMENT OF THE 6% FOOD SALES TAX
YOU STILL SAVE 25-30% ON YOUR TOTAL FOOD BILL AT SAVE-A-LOT!

FLOUR
32 oz.
•PLAIN
•MEAT
•MUSHROOM

Friday, March 31, 1989

--

••n'o·u

5 LB. BAG

OVEN BEST

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

JON CAVENDISH
BARITONE

Presents ...

An Enchanted Evening of Music, Drama, and
Excitement Featuring the Premiere Performance of.. ..

60°/o OFF

THE OHIO VALLEY SYMPHONY
Playing All Your Favorite Songs"

ON FINE WEARING APPAREL

11

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SATURDAY, APRIL 1, 8:00P.M.

99C GRAB BAGS

ADMISSION - FREE
RECEPTION FOLLOWING

TOP OF THE STAIRS
AND

Pre-Concert Soiree to be held at che new Wiseman Agency,
451 Second Ave. at 6:30 p.m. Food, beverages, entertainment,
and door prize available for $10.00 per couple.
Call 256-1614 or 446-7554 for information.

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE
111 WESI SECOND

POMEIOY
992-6720

\'

',

••

.,

�Friday, March 31, 1989

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel .

Birthday observed at KC Clubhouse

:Alfred community happenings

Lindbergh Arnold, accompanMrs. Burdell (Effie Arnold)
Black was honored with an ying l)lmself on the guitar,
read "What Does Eas ter Mean?" Plains.
evening
buffet at the Kyger dedicated several sonj;s to his
Bible
study
attendance
was
16.
to the little children. Service
Creek
Clubhouse
In observance mother, and Sarah Marte Smith,
Rev.
Don
Archer
ts
conducting
closed with prayer by Thelma
of
her
85th
birthday
anniversary. Mrs. Black's greatthe
study
on
Acts
of
the
Apostles.
Henderson.
Hosting
the
celebration
were grandmother, recited a poem for
Sara
Caldwell
was
an
Easter
Easter chu rch vis it ors Inl)er
children,
Mr.
and
Mrs. her.
cluded Mr. and Mrs. Steve dinner guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Joseph
(Ruby)
Jones,
Mr.
and
Weber, Eagle Ridge; Mr. and Ewing, Beth, Kim, and Benny,
Mrs.
Lindbergh
Arnold,
Mason,
Other f(lmily members attendMrs. Dave Williams and Aaron, Pomeroy.
W.
Ing
Va.;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
were the honored . guest's
Easter dinner guests of Mr.
Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
(Allee)
Bowllng,
Jackson;
Mr.
husband
, Burdell, Doris Arnold,
Brooks· and Hallie, Rick and and Mrs. Clair Follrod were
David
and
Mrs.
Stacie
Arnold,
Racine,
and
Charlene Arnold,
Tammy Williamson, Melissa E dith Ha rper, Tuppers Plains;
and Mr. and Mrs. Grady Dale Mansfield ; Ron. Drema,
Calaway, Columbus; Brenda Mr. and Mrs. Steve Follrod and
Arnold, Albany. Mrs. Black has
Heather, Ryan and Erin Meffley,
a
nq
Mrs.
Kaltlin,
Athens;
Mr.
Buck, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Follrod
two
deceased
sons,
Ervin
Arnold
Stow;
Brent, Denise and Grant
Dave
Watson,
and
Stacie,
Nina
and Kaltlln, Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Arnold,
Randall Arnold, Jennifer
In
the
Korean
Conflict,
and
kllled
Robinson,
and
Clara
Follrod,
Dillinger, Caste and Ritchie.
Arnold,
Kyle Davis, Mandl
Ernest
Arnold
who
died
ln
1980.
loca
L
Athens; Mr. and Mrs. Joe EssBlack,
John
Clonch, Ted and
Mrs.
Black's
brother,
Elmer
man, Nicole and Kyle, The
Lambert,
and
.
his
wile,
Goldie,
Leora
Strom,
Pomeroy.
•
Mansfield, attended as did three · .· Jeff and Debbie Arnold, Na•
than Arnold, Regan Arnold,
of her sisters, Mrs. Vlrgte1Jones,
•
Morehead,
·
Ky.;
Mrs.
Detta
Susan
Arnold ,· Mark Metts and
•
•'
Jull Arnold, Albany; Kathy Van
Parker, Columbus, and Mrs.
=~
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------Addie Hughes, North Ridgeville.
Maire, Greenfield; Keith Jones,
ter will present a 70-year pin to
:·
FRIDAY
ces will be held at the Mt.
· .• POMEROY - The Belles and
Rodney Downing. Plans will be
Hermon U. B. Church, Monday
:'Beaus Western Square Dance through April 9. Rev . William
made for Church Sunday .
;:pub Is sponsoring an open dance Hatfield will be the evangelist.
Luncheon menus for next week
milk.
:=on Friday. March 31. from 8 to 11 There will be special singing
Tuesday : fish nugg e ts,
POMEROY- Past Matrons of In the. M~lgs Local School Dis•'-!-m., at the Senior Citizens every night.
trict, the E'a stern Local School creamed tomatoes, butter carEvangeline Chapter 172, Order of
' Center In Pomeroy. Caller wlll be
District, and Carleton School will
rots, fruit and milk.
Eastern Star, will meet Tuesday,
..:Kent Hall. All western square
Wednesday: turkey , green
LETART- The Letart Town- 7:30p.m., at the home of VIrginia
be as follows:
Meigs
ship trustees will met Monday at
beans and potatoes, roll, fruit
Buchanon. Members are aske,d
~ancers lnvlt~.:_Monday: toaster cheese sand- and milk.
7 p.m at the office building.
to wear their Easter bonnets.
:~' POMEROY - The Belles and
wich, peas, fruit and mllk.
Thursday: peanut butter sand:.Beaus Western Square Dance
sausage
sandwich,
Tuesday:
wich
, vegetable soup, crackers,
POMEROY
From
now
on,
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town•:Club ls sponsoring an open dance
mixed
vegetables,
fr.
u
lt
and
milk.
fruit
and milk.
ship Trustees will meet Monday , the Ladles Auxiliary of the
:-:;o n Friday, from 8 to 11 p.m., at
Wednesday:
hamburger
Friday:
Cheeseburger, french
7:30 p.m., at the Syracuse Fraternal Order of Eagles, 2171,
· the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
gravy,
mashed
potatoes,
hot
rolls
fries
,
pickles,
fruit and mllk.
will meet at 8 p.m . on Tuesdays.
Municipal Building.
Ce nter. Caller will be Kent Hall.
and
butter,
applesauce
,
.
and
Membe rs are asked to bring a
All western square dancers are
milk.
covered
dish for pot luck.
MIDDLEPORT- The MiddleInvited.
Thursday: barbecued chicken,
port Garden Club will meet Alzheimer group
green
beans, bread and bu Iter,
POMEROY -The Al.zhelmers
Monday, 7:30p.m ., at the home
CHESTER - Shade River
fruit and mllk.
of Mrs. Arthur Skinner. Hostess support group will meet at the
Lodge No. 453 wlll meet Friday,
Friday: cooks' choice.
Overbrook
Nursing
Home
on
will be Mrs. Skinner and Nellie
. 7:30p.m.. for work in the entered
Eastern
Apr
il
4
at
3
p.m
.
The
topic
for
Zirkle. All members are to bring
apprentice degree. Re freshMonday: .Cheeseburger, corn,
discussion
will
be
"Joys
and
a miniature arrangement.
. ments will be served. All master
fruit and milk.
Guilt." Refreshments will be
masons are welcome.
Tuesday: sloppy joe, green
served.
POMEROY - RevlvaJ servibeans, cherry crisp, and milk.
ces will begin Monday night at Meeting canceled
CHESTER - Chester TownWednesday: turkey-noodles,
the Mt. Hermon U.B . Church and
ship Trustees will meet Friday,
bread
and butter, mashed potaPOMEROY - The April 3
continue through April 9. The meet lng of the Meigs Assocla tlon
' 7: 30 p.m., at the town hall.
toes and gravy, applesauce, and
church is located In Texas for Retarded Citizens has been
milk.
Community just off Texas Road postponed until April 10. A dish
SATURDAY
ThurSday: meat loaf patty,
on Wickham Road. The Rev. towel shower for the kitchen will
POMEROY - Kathy Crawbread and butter, peas, fruit
Wllliam (Bud) Hatfield will be be held at this time.
,ford, a missionary from Paris,
cookie, and milk.
the evangelist. There will be
will be showing slides at the Ash
Friday: fish, scalloped potaspecial singing every night with
Street Freewill Baptist Church
toes, fruit and milk.
Sunrise to be featured on Tueson Saturday at 7: 30 p.m. EveCarleton School day and The Reflections Trio on
ryone welcome.
Monday: hotdog, carrot sticks,
Saturday. The public ls Invited
baked beans, applesauce and
a !.tend.
PARKERSBURG
Meigs
High Quiz Team will participate
MARQUETIE, Mich. (UPI)TUESDAY
' tn match competition against
'The official in charg.e of sea
-- Frontier High School on SaturPOMEROY - Drew Webster lamprey eradication efforts · in
Post 39 of the American Legion the U.S . . sections of the Great
day, ;at 6 p.m., on TV Honor
Lakes says 20 to 35 tributary
Society, Channel 15, out of will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday . Refreshments will be served.
Parkersburg, W.Va.
streams and rivers will be
treated with the lamprlcide TFM
RACINE A round and
POMEROY - The Ladles
this year.
square dance will be held Satur- Auxiliary of the Fraternal Order
William Daughtery, head of
ol Eagles, 2171, will have a
.day at the Racine American
the U.S. Ftsh and Wildlife Sermeeting 8 p.m. Tuesday . vice sea lamprey control office In
Legion hall, 8 p.m. to midnight.
Members are asked to bring a
Music will be by the True
Marquette, said Thursday the
covered dish.
, Country Ramblers. The public Is
control program will begin the
first week in May and run
Invited.
MIDDLEPORT - Past Mathrough November.
trons
of
Evangeline
Chapter
No.
The $4 million earmarked for
: RUTLAND - Square, round
172, Order of Eastern Star, will la mprey eradication this fiscal
and slow dancing will be featured
meet Tuesday, 7:30p.m .• at the year should be sufficient to
- at a dance Saturday night at Ell
home of Vlrglnla Buchanan . control the eel-like parasite that
'Denison Post 467, American
Members are asked to wear their can kill 40 pounds of fish during
Legion, Rutland. Music will be
provided by a live band from 8 Easter bonnets.
the 20 months or so It spends in a
p.m to mldn Ight. There will be
free swimming state, he said.
MIDDLEPORT- The regular
Typically, lamprey spend sevrefreshments for sale.
meeting of Middleport Lodge 363,
eral years living In the sediments
HARRISONVILLE - Harrl- F&amp;AM, will be Tuesday at 7: 30 of Great Lakes tributaries before
emerging to prey on any fi sh they
' ·sonvllle Lodge 411 F&amp;AM will p.m. with work In the fellowcraft
degree.
The
Deputy
Grand
Mascan attach themselves to.
hold a regular meeting Saturday,
·7:30p.m., for work tn the master
mason degree. All past masters
·a re urged to attend.
•
• There were 55 people In attend,ance for Easter Sunrise service,
:.45 for the Easter breakfast, 58 ln
:Sunday school, and 30 ln c hurch.
: The young adult class furnished
~e ham which was prepared by
: Dorothy Calaway. After Sunday
school the children en joyed an
~gg hunt.
. At Sunrise service, Marta
~Dillinger, Klrt, Danlelle and
:Tiffany Spencer, Matthew, Ash:ley and Jessica Boyles , Stacie
; }'Iatson, and Nicole Essman gave
.recitations. Gertrude Robinson,
·r;orl Ritchie, and Nellie Parker
Jave readings. Florence Spencer

"'

Community calendar

Menu slated at schools

DR. JAMES

IS RESUMING HIS

Friday, March 31, 1989

Mason, W.Va.; Davld,Mary,and
Sarah Marie Smith, Hartford,
W.Va.; Ralph, Martha, Nathan,
Duane and Linde Sayre, Derrick
and Tammy Taylor, Lyn~ Black, '
and Kenneth L. Black, .New '
Haven, W.Va.
Richard, Terry, Andy and
Richard Shaddeau, Galllpolls;
Carol Shaddeau and grandchild·
ren, Toledo, Oscar Parker, Petersburg, Ind.; Bill and Goldie
Black, Ray; Roger and Dawana
Black, Middleport; Warren and,
Esther Black, Bob, Connie and
Jason Black, Lonnie Black, Shlr·
ley Jeffers, Nlckl and Nathan
Black, Jerry, Sharon and Brandon Black, Laurie Black, Angle
Black, Chris Black, ROn and
Barbara Black, Mellssa Black,
Keri Black, Mike, Debi, Brianna,
Brandee and Justin Gilmore,
Tammy Lambert , Rutland;
Margery Douglas and sharon
Swindell, Shade.

I.

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

'~

f

,1

TodePJigaed
teed a b•utlfuUy
fuaeral

arrongemetll, lull call
or villi

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

"The Wav Amnire &amp;nd.t Lm&gt;t&gt;"

Ph. "t-2039 or 992-5721

'

P~,,, CONDE
,........ PRACTICf' AT

15 5 NORTH SEC
MIDDLEPORTI
EFFECTIVE APRIL

DAVE.
;

TO SCHEDULE

Lamprey control
program lU1der'Way

JIM COBBS
PUSH, PULL or T W

531 JACKSON PIKE
ROUTE 35 WEST.

MftO'N . . . . , _ . IAT &amp;SUN

Phone

U " 4 W NIGMf TUDIIAY I

446-4524

I.

I

ILLSI.I!'Iti,IO

General Manager Mike Fox Can't Believe Jim Cobb
Allowed ~2,,000.00 For This Trade-In!!!
y

.,. ......
•

.,. •

•

,
~ •

:1\ . (

'
I

$2,000°0 *

•
t

~

SUNDAY
SYRACUSE - Revival servl: ces will be held at the Asbury
, United Methodist Church, Route
• 124, Syracuse, Sunday through
-· April 9 at 7: 30 each evening. The
''Rev. Wesley Thatcher will be the
speaker and Invites the public to
·attend. There will be special
music each evening.
POMEROY - Coaches and
- other Individuals Interested In
; assisting with the Pomeroy
• Youth League are asked to meet
, Sunday at 2 p.m at the Ohio
• Power service building behind
the football stadium I~ Pomeroy.

l

••

•
MONDAY
; MIDDLEPORT- Meigs Chap: ter, Order of DeMo lay, will meet
i Monday. 7: 30 p.m. at the Middle' port Masonic Tempole. The state
l scribe will be a guest. Members
' and potential members are In: vlted to attend .

-

POMEROY -

Revival servl-

Quiz team
: will participate

I

f

MINIMUM TRADE

WE WILL T~ADE NO MATT~ER
WHAT CONDITION!!!
•

THIS \'lEEK'S SPECIALS!

NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED!

1985 MERCURY · SPECIAL!$
GRAN MARQUIS LS................ 629 5

'

White, Blue velour Interior, new radial tires, fully equipped, 1
owner. New car Fla. trade-ln.

.NO DEALERS PLEASE

1985 CHEVY
SPECIAL!$
CELEBRITY
WAGON ............... 4 4 9 5
Fully equipped.
1989 MERCURY
$
GRAND MARQUIS LS ............. 8 6 9 5

*OFFER GOOD ON ALL NEW FULL SIZED
CARS OR TRUCKS AND SELECTED USED
CARS. (PRIOR SALE PRICES EXCLI,.JDED,)

CONLEY PARK WAGON, N- Michelen radials. fully equipped.

SEVEIAL LATE MODEL USED CAIS TO CHOOSE FROM

*ALL REBATES AND PROMOTIONAL CONSIDERATION TO DEALER .

The Meigs High Quiz Team will
participate In the second round
match against Frontier High
• School on TV Honor Society
Channel 15, out of Parkersburg,'
W.Va., on Saturday at 6 p.m.
Meigs Quiz Team me:nbers Chad
Carson, Scott Edmonds, Jared
Sheets and Monica Turner will be
featured.

.
•

\

....

Dear Ann Landers: I sympathize
with the frustration expressed by
the woman who wrote that she has
tried to get off welfare.
Living on welfare is lousy. BUI it
doesn't have to be that way, at least
not in Massachusetts, where for the
last .six years we have had the
Employment and Training (ET)
Prograrn. ET has placed more than
55,001 welfare recipients in jobs,
and 75 percent of them are off
welfare.
The philosophy behind ET is
simple- provide a woman with day
care, health cart' and transporta·
tion an\f offer her choices of
education, training and, eventually,
a job, and she will find her way out
of poverty.
Hert' is one of our success stories:
Mary Hotz is 32 years old. Ten
years ago Mary was divorced and
she was left with a year'llld daughter to support. She mo·ved in with
her part'nts and worked part-lime.
But she could never make enough
to get off welfare. She was on
welfart' for nine years and then one
day she saw a notice about a
training program that would teach
her high-tech secretarial skills. .
Becau~ :we could offer her day
·care, she grabbed the opportunity.
Today, Mary Hotz is an administra·
tive secretary at the Heller School
for Socjal Welfare at Brandeis
University. She earns nearly $21,000
a year and can now provide for her
11-year-old daughter. " ET turned
my lite around," she Said.
There are thousands pf stories
like Mary's in Massachusetts. I am
convinced that with the Family
Security Act of 1988 about to take
effect, every state in the nation will
have programs like . ET to give
welfare recipients a chance to build
an independent life. ·· MICHAELS.
DUKAKIS
DEAR GOV. DUKAKIS: Thank
you for an excellent letter.
Several states have a similar
program now. and it is wonderful
to know that soon this sct·up will
be available in all SO. (Thanks.
Washington, for finally coming
through!)
Dear Ann
. Landers: I am writing
.
to you 111 the hope of helpmg
,Someone who is wrestling with the
(lecision of leaving his or her spouse
for a new love. ,
' I am a 37·year-old man , who. last
spring, fell deeply in love with a
volunteer at the church where I was
a minister. We both agreed to leave
our spouses. I resigned from the
church and moved out of the house.
The following day. the woman of
iny dreams called to say she had

'

&amp;&amp;.&amp;.HAftii.IO

....

'•
&lt; '

The Daily Sentinel-

Welfare program
helps mothers work

.

SALE

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Eastern Athletic Boosters are
sponsoring a dinner on April! at
the fire house In Tuppers Plains.
. The menu will Include baked
steak, mashed potatoes and
. gravy,greenbeans,coleslaw,ple
wand a drink , allfor$3.50. Serving
- starts at 5 p.m. Everyone
;.welcome.

•

changed her mind. One week later
she wrote to say she had made a
terrible mistake trying to stay in an
unworkable marriage and begged
me to lake her back. ln the end, she
attempted to leave her husband
four times. and went back to him
every time.
My wife fell in love with someone
else and will marry as soon as our
divorce is final . I now live alone
and work in our family business. A
love affair that didn't work out has
cost me my marriage, my children,
my career, my house, my car, my
boat, my self-respect, my reputation
and endless grief.
1 have no one to blame but
myself. Through prayer and coun·
seling, I hope to be able to rebuild
what I have destroyed.
Anyone who is contemplating
leaving a wife and family for an
exciting new love should think
twice about crossing that line from
best friends to lovers. I wish I had.
·· BURN ED TO THE BONE IN THE
MIDWEST
DEAR BURNED: It sounds as if
you have paid dearly for your
mistakes. I hope the future holds
something good for you. Thanks
for telling us your story.
~ar Ann Landers: I have sud·
denly become aware that the years
are Hying by. Time somehow seems
more precious. My parents sudden·
ly seem old. My aunts and uncles
art' sick and I fear they don't have
many years left. I haven't seen some
of my cousins for several years. I
really love my family. Ann , but we
have grown apart.
I am also thinking of my friends,
some I've known since childhood.
Those friendships become more
precious as the years pass. Nothing
warms the heart like sharing a
laugh with someone you've known
for years.
Then my thoughts turn to the
dark side. I remember the feelings
I've hurt and I recall my own hurt
feelings - the misunderstandings
and unmended fences.
I have a close friend in New York
1 haven 't spoken to in three years.
Another 28-year relationship in
Seattle is on the rocks. We're both
41 now and time is marching on.
I think of my mother and her
sister, who haven 't spoken to each
other in five yL&gt;ars. As a. result of
that argument my cousin and I
haven't spoken either. I don 't know.
if she has children. Neither of us ha.~
met the other's husband. What a
waste of precious time! I'm sure
there are millions of people in your

People in the news---..

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
United Press International
. ' POLITICAL DIVORCE: Prime Minister Andreas Papandreou has taken the long-l:'xpected step of filing for divorce from
his wife of nearly 40 y"ars. Margaret . After lht:&gt; divorce is
grantl:'d. Papandreou. 70. is expected to marry Dlmltra Lianl.
the forme\- night attendant with whom hi' has been carrying on
since 19!!7. Papandreou's atlorne)' filed the papers Thursday In
an Athens court. apparently hoping that clearing up the ma tter
now will minimize the damage to his Pan-Hellenic Socialist
Movement in the .June 18 e lections. The Papandreous have been
living under different roofs for a couple of years a nd the prim P
minis ter's divorce petition says there had been a "complete
separal ion" betwet'n them since 1984 ,. when he moved to
another room ln their home. If Papandreou does marry Llani.
who was recently divorced herse lf. she will become his third
wife .
FAMILY ACTS: There 's a new generation of actresses with
famous parents. Ami Dolenz. 19, the daughler of Mickey Dolenz
of the Monkees, appears In "She's Out of Control" with Tony
Danza . And Tracy Reiner. 24 , the daughter of Rob Reiner and
Penny Marshall. ls starring ln Ro~:er Corman's remake of
"Masque of the Red Death," an Edgar Allan Poe tale.
RINGO IS PETTY DRUMMER: The video for Tom Petty's
new. single. " I Won't Back Down." features half of the Bealles.
Petty was In a London studio this week filming with a couple of
his friends from the Traveling Wllburys, George Harrison and
.Jeff Lynne, and Mike Campbell, who plays with Petty In thl'
Heartbreakers. but thl'y didn ' t have a drummer for the video.
Then someone thought of Ringo Starr. who will be seen
drumming In the video even though he does n't really play on the
song. The single Is off "Full Moon Fever .." Petty's first solo ·
album,
NEWS ABOUT NEWS: Marla Shriver Is moving up at NBC
News now that Connie Chung ha s moved on to CBS. Shriver
slgn!ld a four -year contract. the network announced Thursday,
and she will be a join Mary Alice Williams, recently of CNN, on
NBC's upcoming magazine show "Yesterday, Tonight and
Tomorrow." Shriver also will take over Chung's duties on the
Saturday nlghl edition of "NBC Nightly News Weekend
Edition" ... Willard Scott ls still getting lots of mileage out of
Gumblegate. The "Today" show weatherman spoke Wednesday to the Montgomery Women's Club In Mason , Ohio, and
turned into a s tand -up comedian, saying he was limping
because' 'a few days earlier he "had to lift Bryant Gumbel's
ego." He also quoted the old Mort Sahlline about news anchors
being people with ''$50 haircuts on $12 heads. " Turning serious,
Scott said t¥J!fspute with Gumbel has been festering for three
or four years. ·'Why should I have to go on that show and be
.miserable and take a Valium every day in order to get through a
morning? " he said. "This has been a very traumatic thing ln my
life."
DOCUMENTED OSCAR: The Academy Awards w.erc a big
hll with Jason Gaes, 11, of Worthington, Minn. He's the central
figure In "You Don' t Have to Die," the winner of the best short
documentary Oscar. "It was pretty wonderful," Jason said
Thursday from Los Angeles, where he attended the awards
ceremony. " Me and my dad were pretty sure we would wln. You ·
have to have faith In yourself and we did and we were winners."
The documentary was based "My Book for Kids With Cansur, "
the Inspirational book Jason wrote when he was undergoing
successful treatment for cancerous tumors five years ago. He
says people can find an upllrtlng message In the film. "They
know that this movie won an Oscar," Jason said. ''then It must
be pretty good and they would go and watch It and find out."

•

Ann
Landers

Classified

ANN LANDERS

.. 1989, 1..- Anp4N
Tim~ Syndi«Me
Cnoaton SyndltM4'

reading audience who could tell
similar stories.
Wouldn't it be terrific if a special
day could be set aside to reach out
and make amends? We could call it
"Reconciliation Day." Everyone
would vow to write a letter or make
a phone call and mend a broken
relationship. It would also be the
day on which we would all agree to
accept the olive branch extended by
a former friend. This day could be
the starting place. We could go
from there to heal the wounds in
our hearts and rejoice in a new
begining.- VAN NUYS
DEAR VAN NUYS: What a
beautiful idea!
In the absence of a nationaf
holiday it would be wonderful if
every person who sees your letter '
picked up the phone today and
called someone with whom he or
she has had a falling out.
Are you game, folks? I'll guarantee some heart-warming results. Go
ahead and do it! Don 't wait for the
telephone rates to change. And
please write and tell me all about it.
Dear Ann Landers: I hope you
will print this letter and warn
others who might be as stupid as I
was.
I had an obscene phone call last
night. When 1 said, ''l'm not
interested in talking to you," there
was a click and a woman who
identified herself as an AT&amp;T
operator broke in and said, "Keep
this man talking for at least live
minutes. This call is being monitored and we want to trace the
caller." So. I played along with the
creep, encouraging him to continue
with his rotten, filthy talk.
I called New jersey Bell immediately after the conversation was
over. eager IO know if they had
traced the call. The operator said,
"We would never ask a customer to
do such a thing!"
I feel like a fool . Please pass the
word to others and spare them the
humiliation.·· GULLIBLE IN NEW
JERSEY
DEAR N.j.: Don't be too hard on
yourself. Most people would have
been taken in as you were. The best
way to deal with obscene phone
calls is to hang up instantly. Don't
react. just hang up.
Do you have questions about sex,

but nobody you can talk to about
them? Ann Lan_ders' newly revised
booklet, ''Sex and 'the Ter!llager, " will
give you the answers you need. To receive a ropy, send $3 plus a self-addressed. sramped business·size en Pelope (45 cenrs postage) to . Ann
Landers. P.0 . Box I I 562. Chicago,
/1/. 6061 1{)562.

Quirks in
the news

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
• CLOSED SUNPA Y
POUCI ES

"Ads ouutde Met~s Gallta or Ma son counltes must be pre
patd
•ReceNe s .SO dtscount tor ads petd m advanct• Fret tds - GtYeawav and Found ads unO,er , 5 words wtll be
run 3 davs at no c·h•9•
"Pnce ot a d tor aU caprtalletters ts double onet= nf 10 cost
• 7 p01nt ltne type only uted
"Sent mel •s not respon1 tb le tor errots attar hrst dlfV (Check
tor errors tttst a.v tel run s m paper! Call b"tor.: 2 .00 p.m
d.V atter oubhc.tton to m-. e correct ton
"Ads that mutt be J)llld 1n adVance a re
kappv Ad~&gt;
Card of Thtn iu
In Memouam
"f ard Saies

"A clustftll!ld tdvertlsement placed 1n The DatiV Senttne1 1ea.
cept - ct•s•hed dllpt~ . Busm .. , Care and i~al n!'lttces
will also appear 1n. the Pt Pte•ant Aegtste r and the Gall•
poll s OatiV Trtbune. ruch •ng over 18 .000 nomes
DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
COPY DEADliN E -- 11 .00 A.M SATURDA Y
MONDAY PAPER
- 2 ·00 PM MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
- 2 00 PM TUESDA Y
WEDNESDAY PAPE R
2 00 PM WEDNESDA Y
THURSDAY PAPER
2 00 P .M THURSDAY
FRIDAY PAPER
- 2 00 PM FRIDA Y
SUNDAY PAPER

Bank to settle chicken manure
case
PRESTON , Minn. tUP!) - A
southern Minnesota bank will
pay a large chunk of chicken feed
to settle a chicken manure
pollution case with state environmental officials.
Under the agreement reached
with the Minnesota Pollution
Control Agency , the Farmers
and Merc hants Bank of Pres ton
will pay a $5.000 penally. The
now -closed poultry farm could
then reopen .
ThP sl't llement b ri ngs an end to
the poultry pollution case that
has dragged on for five years.
The bank became owner of the
Fillmore County poultry operalion in 1985 when its previous
owner, District Judge Clement
Snyder. went Into default on his
loan.
The M PCA had first cited
SnydN in 1984 for improperly
disposa l of the manure produced
by the 70,000 egg-laylng hens.
The manure was not trea ted and
was running into a nearby creek .

FINANCIAL REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS

For Fiscal Year Ending
December 31 , 1988
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
COUNTY OF MEIGS
" Thio to An Unaudited

Financial Report"
. SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
Toxas .... .. ............ ... 25.811

Intergovernmental
Receipts ..... ......... 54,347
Interest .......................639
All Other Rovenuo ... 2,444
TOTAL
.
RECEIPTS ........... 83.241
EXPENDITURE
'
DISBURSEMENTS:

General Govern·
mont ........... ........ 29,101
Public Safety ............ 4, 790
PUblic Works .......... 48.814
Heatth ..... ................. 1,568
TOTAL OISBURSE MENTS ...... a:....... B4.263

Total Receipt• uver / (Un·

dar) Diob ............. {1,0221
OTHER FINANCING
SOURCES {USES}:

Other Source1 /
Receipts ................ 2.211

Total Other Financing
Sources {Useoj ......... 2.211
Total of Roc. &amp; Other
Source~

Over .(Under) Disb .

&amp; Other Uoeo ........... 1,189

FUnd Cosh Balance
1 / 1 / 88 ... .............. 15,435

Fund Cash Balance
12131 / 88 ...... .. ..... 11.624

Rnerve for Encumb.
12131 / 88 ............... 1.029
NON-EXPENDABLE
TRUST FUN OS
OPERATING
RECEIPTS:
Interest .. .. ................... 181
Total Receiptl .. ........... 181

Total Receipts Over/ (Und'!l') Disb .................. 181
Totol of Roc. &amp; Other

Sourc:ea Over (Under) Disb .
&amp; Other Uses .. ......... 181

Fund Cash Balance
Fund Cash Balance
12/ 31 / 88 ...... ......... 2,711
TOTALS &amp; FUND
BALANCE
RECEIPTS:
Toxes ..................... 25,811

Intergovernmental
Receipts .............. 54,347

Interest ....................... 820
All Other Revenue .... 2,444
TOTAL RCPT ... .. .....83,422
DISBURSEMENTS:

General Govern ment ................... 29,101
Public Safety ............ 4, 790
Public Worko ...... .... 48.814
Health ...................... 1•668
TOTAL OISBURSEMENTS ... .......... .. 84,263
Total Recpts. Ovor/ {Under} Oiob . ....... ........... {841)

Other Sources /
Rocoipto .... ..... .. ........ 2.211

Total Other Financing
Sources {Uoes) ......... 2,211
Total of Roc. &amp; Other

Sources Over (Under) Diab.
&amp; Other Uoes .. ......... t . 370

Fund Cuh Balance
1 /V BB ........... ..... .17,966
Fund Cuh Belance
12/ 31 / 88 ............. 19.336

Reserve for Encumb.
12131 / 88 .. ............. 1,029
Dap..ltory Bal.. ... , .. 20.004
tnvestmento ............. 2,600

Total Treasury
Balance .............. .... 22, 604

Less Outstanding
Checko .................. 3,169
TOTAL BAL. ........... 19.336
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS

Outstanding
1 / 1/ 88 .................... - 0 New tooUH .......... , ... 2,400

Outatllnding
12/ 31 / 88 ............... 2, 400
I cortlfy the foregoing report to be correct and true,

to the bnt of

mv

knowl-

edge:
Sarah Gibbs, Twp. Clerk
March 27, t989
34046 Boll Run Rd .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
814-992-709B
13) 31, he

Public: Notlc:e
CASH lAStS COMBINED
ANNUAL FINANCIAL
REPORT
For Tlta Fltcel Veer Ended
1

Still
good
after ell the1e yearsl

Happy 81rth.ay

Public Notice

Public Notice

1 / 1 / 88 ................... 2. 530

By United Press International

- 9

' Mg:~te:;R~ iltl'll~E

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
GOVERNMENTAL FUND
TYP!I
REVENUE RECEIPTS:
r LDcel to... ...... 1211,334.27

Intergovernmental
Revonue .. .... .2B5, 756 .72

Charges for
Services ......... 66 .537.88

Fin&amp;~ .

licenses, S.

Pormlto ..........69,494.71
Miocollonoous .... 78 , 222 .66
TOTAL
RECEIPTS . ... 61 2,346 .13 '
EXPENDITURE
OISBURSEMENTS:

Security of Penon &amp;
Property ....... 174.442. 77
leaiure Time
Activities .......... 4 .113.58
Beale Utility
Services ., .. , ... 55. 795.B6

Trans·

RATES
16 · 26 WORDS

0 - 15 WORDS

1 DAY

3 OAVS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

54 00
55 .00
58 00
$13.00
533 00

55.00
98 .00
51~ 00
s21 oo
551 00

26 •35 WORDS

57 00
510 00
s15 .00
525 .00
560 00

Rat es are for consecutrve runs broken up d Wtfl wtll be charged
tnr e11r.h rt- lUi separate 11ds

Cla .~ .~i.fietl/Jn~[(' .'
fo llm1 ·i 11 ~
Galha Coum~
ArtaCoae614

r·o r er the

lf'l r&gt;pltoru• ('xrhallf!l'"--·
~e·g ~

MIS On Co

Coun1 y

AreaCooe 6 1 4

992 - M•ddleporl
367 - Chllhtte
Pomeroy
' l88 - V1nton
· 985 - Chester
246 - R•o Grand e
84 3- Ponlan d
, 256 - Guvtn DtSt
247 - l etart fall !
i 643 - Arabla Otlt
949 - Ra ctn~
379 - W.tlttut
742 - Fi u lltnd
667 Coo lvii H446 - GIIIlpOIIS

WV

Area Cooe 304
675 ~ Pt Pluunt
458 - leon

57 6 773 882 B95 9:37 -

Apple Grov tMuon
N'ew Ha ven
le1ar1
Butfalo

Get

I

Public N otice

Public Notice

Debt Se.-.ices .... 66 ,083.03
TOTAL DISBURSE MENT'S ..... 1,095,343 .79

thence et right angle~ and
north a diatllnce of 39 feet
and 5 inch•; thence at right
engln and west 1 diatanr.e
of 8 feet; thence at right angill and north 1 distance of

Total Receipts over /
under Disbursemenu ........ {204,181 .591
NON-OPERATING
REVENUES I IEXPENSESi
MiaceUaneous .... 11,989. 13

Sale of FiJtCed
Assets ............. .1,715.00

Other Sources / Nonoperating Rev ... ..... 131.883.08
Transfers- In ... 125,798.34

10 teat ond 7 In chao to tho

north line of aaid Lot No.
133; thence wnt along the
north line of LDt N. 133 e

distance of 76 feet and 6 inb-chea to the place of beginning, Said above lot being a

part of Philip Jonn Addition
to the Viii ega of Middleport.
Out ........ ... .(125,798.34) .
· DEED REFERENCE : VoAdvances- Out . ... ..... 30.00 lume 22B. Pogo 91 I. Meigo
Total Other Fin . Sources /
County Oeod Records.
tUooal .......... 145.557.21
Save and except e parcel
Exc. Rcpta and Other ·
conveyed to Citizen• NoFinancing Sources Over /
tions! Bank, Midcleport.
{Under) Expend. Disb. Ill Oth· Ohio, by deed of oven dote
or Uses / Net .... 158,624.38) herewith.
Fund Cash Balance
PARCEL NO. 2: Tho fol1 / 1 / 88 .......... 676.103.17 lowing real esgte aitueted in
Fund Cash Balance
Middleport. Molgo County
12 / 31 / 88 ...... 517,478.79 Ohio: That por1 of Lot No:
Treasury Sol. ..... 3B, 659.69 132 described aa follows;
Investments ..... 61 0,052 .48 Beginning et the north·WQ.·

TranSfers-

onotion ........ 268.063.74
General Government ............ 151 ,335.91
Capital Outlay ... 82.213.94
Debt Service ..... 66,083.03
TOTAL OISBURSEMENTS ........ 802.048.83
Total Receipts Over /
Under Oiaburse·
monu ........ {189.702.70)
OTHER FINANCING
SOURES / {USES)Total Trea1ury
terty corner of the eat one·
Sale of Fixed
Bolonce ........ 648,612 .17 holt of lot No. 13~; than ..
Aooato .... ..... ... .. 1 ,21 5.00
Outllanding .... {31,133. 381 south a diatanc• of 60 feet at
Other Source• I Nonop~
orating Rev . ... 97,7112 .08 TOTAL BAL. .... 517 ,478 .79 right engt• to the north llna
SUMMARY OF
otlot No . 132: thence ooot
Tranotero-ln ... 106,063 . 8B
6 teet and 6 lncheo: lhMce
INDEBTEDNESS
TransfersMortgage Revenue
norlh 60 feet : thence walt 8
Out. :............ {94.627 .011
Outstanding
foot and 8 inchoo to the
Total Other Fin. Sources
1/. 1/ 88 .......... 535.000 .00 place of beginning. and be·
/ {Useo) ........ 110.413 .46
Retired ........ ··'··. 1 6.ooo .o'o ing a parcel of land 8 feet
Exc . Rcpts and Other
end 6 lnchoo In width off of
Financing Soun:• Dver/ {Un- Outstanding
the west aida of the aut half
12 / ~1/88 ...... 520,000 .00
dor) Expend. Oiab. l!o 01h·
G.O. NOTES
of lot No. 132 and luving a
er Uoes / Not ... . {79.289 .251
Outstanding
parcel of lond 60 feet on
Fund Cash Balance
1/ 1 / 88 .... .... .. 173.000 .00 Race StrHI and 60 feet on
1/ 1 / 88 .......... 4B1 ,172.66
New luuoo ........ 90,000 .00 the otley.
Fund Cash Balance
Retired ......... ..... .. B.616.56
DEED REFERENCE: Vo12131 / 88 ...... 401,883.41
lume 230. Pogo 323, Moiga
Outstanding
PROPRIETARY FUNDS
12131 / 88 ...... 254.383 .44 County Ooed Recordo.
.
OPERATING
EXCEPTING tho reol ot·
TOTALREVENUES :
Outstanding
tate conveyed to Citizen•
Charg!tl for
. Services ..... . 277.645.89 1/ 1/ 88 .......... 708,000 .00
Notional Bank. by dood reNew lasues ........ 90 ,000 .00 corded In Volume 230. Pogo
TOTAL
326, Moigo County DHd
RECEIPTS ....... 277.645.89 Retired ........... .. . 23.616.66
Outstanding
Recorda.
OPERATING
12/ 31 / 88 ...... 774,3B3.44
EXPENSES:
The Village of Mi~cloport
THIS IS AN UNAUDITED
Personal
rnaNe&amp; ..~~ . right to reject
FINANCIAL STATEMENT
Service• ...... . 177,998.60
any or all bu:ta 1nd to we1ve
I certify this repon to be any lnformotltloo In bidding.
Contractual
Services ......... 58 .313.54 correct and true to the best
fr•d Hoffma". Mayor
of my know ..dge.
Supplies and
Village of Middleport
3 / 26 / 89 13) 10, 17. 24. 31 :
Materials ........66.982.92
Jon Buck. 14) 7. 14. lite
TOTAL DISBURSE ·
Clerk· Traasurer
MENTS ..... ... 293,294.96
237 Race St.
Total receipts over I
Public: Notice
Middleport. Oh .. 46760
Under Disbur•614-992 -8424 tMayorl
monto ..........(16,649.07)
{3) 31 . 1tc
NON-OPERATING
LEGAL NOTICE
REVENUES / IEXPENSES):
Notice
io hereby given that
Public Notice
Miocollonaous .... 11,989.13
the 1nnual meeting of the
Solo of Fixed
shareholders Of Farmeu
PUBLIC NOTICE
Aooets ................. 600.00
Bencohoreo. Inc. wit be hold
Sealed bids will be re·
Other Sources/ Non-opat the office of Farmers Bank
erating Rev ........34,121.00 ceivad at the Mayor' a Of ~
ond Sovln111 Compony. 211
Transfers- In ..... 19.734.96 flee. 237 Roco St., MiddleWell Stcond StrHt, PomTronofero-Out ... {31,171 .33) pon, Ohio 46760 untH 3 :00
roy, Ohio, occordlng to ito
Advonceo- OU1 .. .....{30 .00) p.m .. Aprl 24, 1989 for tho bylawo. on tho thlr~ Wedfollowing deocribed reel esTotal Other Fin. Sourceo/
nesday of AprH, 1989. at
IUoes) ............... 35, 1 43.76 tete in accordance with Or· 3 :00P.M. lorthopurpooeof
dinonc:a 1206-89:
Ex.c. Rcpts and Othar
electing directoro and tho
PARCEL NO. 1 : BeginFinancing Sources Over
trlnNction of such other
,
nirig
at
the
nonheut
corner
IU.-, Expand Disb. &amp; Othbuline.. .. may properly
er Uoas/ Net ...... 19,494.69 otlot No. 132:thenco oouth come before Hid meeting.
along
the
ea.t
1kle
of
Third
Fund Cooh Bolanco
Paul E. Kloas,
Stroot. 1 dioUonco of 60 feet:
t / 1 / B8 ............ 23.344.01
Secretary
thence
at
right
angles
and
Fund Cuh Balance
13124.31
:
{4)
11
,
18, 4tc
12/ 31 / B8 .... ,...42.838.70 eut along the 1outh line of
oald Lot No. 132 • diotance
NON EXPENDABLE TRUST
of 56'12 feet; thence at right
2 In Memoriam
FUNDS
angh!ll and north a distance
Chargoo For
Sorvices ............. 1,166.00 of 110 feet to Race Stroot;
Miscellaneous ............. 6.18 thence wnt elong the south
IN LOVING MEMORY
ToiOI Rcpto.. ........ 1.170.18 aide of Race Street a dis~
10nco
of
66'h
teet
to
tho
OF
Totol Rcpl Over/ Under Oil•
NEVA GRIMM
bursements ...... 1,170.18 place of beginning; said lot
baing In Philip Jones' AddiExc. Rctpoand Other
on her 74th Birthday
tion to tho Villogt of MiddleFinancing Sources Over I
· April 1st
port, Moigo County. Ohio,
{Under) Expend. Disb.
who
is deeply loved
and teeing &amp;0 loot on Third
and Other Uses/
and
sadly
missed more
Not- ......... ....... . 1,170.18 · Street end eKtanding en·
as
each
day
and night
tarly
at
that
width
a
distance
Fund Cooh Balance
goes by. There will
1 / 1 / 88 ............ 71 . 586.60 of 611112 feet.
Aloo tho following root ••·
always be an
Fund Cooh Balance
12 / 31 / B8 ........ 72.756.68 Ullo olluated in Middleport,
emptiness in our heart
Meigt County. Ohio: Begin, TOTALS
and life lor you !
ning et the northwett corner
RECEIPTS:
Your children;
LOCIII toxeo ...... 126,334.27 of lot No. 133; thonceoouth ·
grandchildren &amp;
along
the
e•t
aide
of
Third
Intergovernmental
great ~ randchildren
Street a dlotonco oltiO feet;
Revenue ....... 2811.756 .72
thence
at
right
angln
and
Charg01 for
• Sorvlceo ....... 341,348 .77 e•t a distance of 831f2 feet:
Fin.-. Licon- &amp;
3 Announcements
Pormito .. ........ 59,494.71
Ml•,..,l•nllllftU• .... 78,227 .73
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .. ..... 891.16:1 . 20
DISBURSEMENTS:
Security of Person &amp;
Property ....... 174.442. 77
Leoiuro Time
Actlv~ioo ..........4 ,113.68
Booic UIHity
Smri- ......... &amp;&amp;. 796.BII
T..,......_.... 286,0113.74
GM-1 Governmont , .......... 161.336.81

$1000.00 REWARD

Porsonol
Service ........ 177,B98.50
Contraetual
Servlcel .. .... ...118.313.14
SupptiOI and
Motorlolo ........ll6,882.82
CIIPihtl Oirtloy ..•82,213. ~

Reward for information leading to the
arrest and conviction of person or persons involved in the vandalism of
Richard Starr's log cabin on Boston Hollow road. Incident occurred around the
18th of March. If you have information,
ca.ll Sheriff's Department at 992·3371.
All information will be confidential.

,

�GUN SHOOT
UCINE
FilE DEPT.

PlUMIING &amp; HEAnNG

lalhaiW Building

168 ""'th Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Olio 45760

EVElY

SALES &amp; SERVICE

NOW O"N FOI

'"" Location:

BUSINESS

14tll I llalol St.
Poillt Plea10nt, W. Ya.
We Buy Aluminum
C11t1o. Gleu, Bruo,
Copper and More

We C•rry fi•hlng Suppli•

SAl. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Pay Your Phone
Cable Billa Here
~•-

F•tery Choke
12 Gaugo Shotguns Only
Strictly Enforced
10-7-tln

MON..Fk: 9 am-6 prn
SAT.: I am-12 " -

IUSINUS rHON£
1614) 992-6550
IESIOENC£ rHON£

304-675-3161

f• More Information

(614) 9921

RADIATOR
. SER~ICE

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL
SERVICE

Wa can repair and rt·
core radiators and
heater corn. We can
also add boil and rod
out radiators. We alsa
• G T nks
rep11r as a
•
_
992 2198

SYRACUSE. OHIO
Mo st Foreign and

Lee8a Murphey

DomMtic Vehides
A I C Service

&amp; Aooociat'""

PUBLIC

All Major &amp; Minor

RELATIONS

NIASE Certified M1chenic

Repair s

108 High Sl,..&lt;t

CAll 992-6756

Pomwoy, Ohio 45769

"DOC" VAUGHN

Phonr(614)992-2922

Certified Licensed Shop

PAT HILL FORD

Middleport, Ohio
1 13

Complete Small
Engine Service
TUNEUPSREPAIRSOVERHAULS on
LAWNMOWERS,
ROTOTILLERS,

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282

MEIGS
INDUSTRIES,
INC.

9 AM· 7 PM

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Call AI 742-2328
3 -7 -'89-1

. J&amp;L
INSULATION

VICTORY
BAPTIST
CHURCH

Mastic - C1rtaintMd ®
Vinyl Siding
525 North Seeond
Seamless Gutter
Middleport, Ohio
Replacomenl Windows £V£RYON£ W£LCOM£
llown Insulation
SUNDAY 10:00 A.M.
Storm D-s &amp;
SUNDAY 7:00 P.M.
WEDNESDAY 7 :00 P.M.
Windows
FREE ESTIMATES
Pastor James E. Ke.,.ee

Call 992-2772

992-6772
3-20.-'88-lln

8

Togoodho- loxw('.4PitB~I
4 ,._.. fomol•. 3 mol•·
c IOIIIJOCI .... do dcod tlila.
ohoto. CoiiB•bor• Priddr. 814742-2117.

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING II REPAIRS

PltONE DAY 01 EVENINGS

q

:==
.., _ _ _ ..

985·4141
Refarencu

11-16-'88-tfn

~~~~~~~I
~

WANTED .

DEAD OR AUVE

•Washers •Dryars
•Rengea •Freezara
•Refrigerators

"Mutt lo lopairable"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-H61

WARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING
CHESTER, OHIO

LOST: Sm .. -iw da,..molo.
WilMa whh block oJM&gt;IO, Loot
.... an 01n Jon• Rotd. n. .

Fcund- Sot of k0\'1 with CUII-

Compllltt houHholdt of furnf.
ture • lfttlqu... Alto wood &amp;.
co ..
Swtln' s Fwntture

1711.
I&amp;~

chlin. Ee.rem Awnu•. Clll
81 ....IHIIJ20-

LoR: Black art wtth while PIW ..

•Mobil• Home Parts
-mbing Supplies
oElectrlcol Supplies

Colt 11 .. 992-8422.

Loot: 2 Wolk.- Coon Doeo.
Hemlock o ..... .,.._ Th.lrodov.

Furniture end appliltlt* by the

11'1 H'fllll Run .,.. an ~dl 25.

M•dt 23rd. Call John Koehl•

., .. 992-eoll.

3158.

Found; in Pom..-av. btU and

"""e Bordor C..le w~h chain.
114-992-3&amp;84.

&amp;Vicinity
Thurs·Fri-Sun. Mtrch 31 • Aprit
1-3-4. Rain or 1hine. Urge
DariG• tile. Many antiquu.
I0¥1. Jteriing • turqucMie ..
Wry. Home int.-ior. over 100

·

Old tools. gl••wara. babV
dothM. 1ntiqu81, furniture. 701
Cheny St. A••· Vinton, Ohio.

3 F. . ily Y•d Sol&amp; Chlldr.,.
dothlng. 10oto. dloheo. toto
more. Sit. 9-!5. Flrtt hou11 on
t::~~..d.s c~or.D •• neigh-

... __ .;. ,_____

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE
YAIDMAN IIOWEIS
ECHO SAWS I 111MMEIS
OREGON UIS, CHAINS
IUN SIIVICE Cllnll

&amp; Senice
AI Makes

Parts

On

VISA - MASTERCHARGE
HOURS : Mon. 9-7
Tues. -Sat. 9-5 : Cloeed Sun

949-2969
31 31 188 / 1 mo.

Body Talk Tanning Salon
20 SESSIONS $35.00
20 session signup, bring a
friend to sign up, and
II receive one "FREE
Open Monday-Saturday
9 A.M.-9 P.M.
Call For Appointment
949-2433
A II The Comforts o.f Hom e
Lisa Smith lie Janet Werner
Owners

BODY TALK
TANNING SALON
OHIO

8 :00PM.

...

;..,!:,~ ~:.u~c_:n.,;.r,':i.

8-5. Oui~o. CUrtlllno. Jeen1 tl.
lfMII 8ppli.,oea.

Gcollloolo, Ohio. Coli II 14-4482783.

;;:,;;;:s==Sc;::;h:o:o;ls=== . '

-:------- ..

~erVIG~S

1------Elf'n •tramon'V for yooraprlng
w1rdrobe. Avon. C•M
814448-4182 at Carll -.s-4397.

a.,

I

/ Auident

Tr~inlng.

Aid Av•il•ble. Accr.clittd

Member NHSC. Cell Toll Froo 1-IQ0-848-1411 . local office.
Pllrk ...burg.

Clw.. Fl.

W. Va. Hdqrs:

18 ~anted to

Do -

Scenic Hilts Nureing Cent• or
calll14-441-71eo.

Pipe end Trenching work

City-Soiling glfto In

bl&amp; Coli 814-441-0159.

=

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

-= GIIG GENERAL
I . IOU!II

0

COIIEICIAL
.CUllOM IUTCHENI a IATHI
-t:XliNINE REMOOILINQ
•VINYL IIOING a liiiOO,.NG
dl!fAliUILDtNOI
HDUIINOA APT. PROJECT.

SINCE 1969

IUSIY n. n•01•

992·

FIREWOOD
OAK,

LOCUST

CHERRY

$35

I'll LOAD

DEUVERED
UGHI HlUUNG DONIEI

BILL SLACK
992-2269
THE
BASKET WEAVE
Hand Woven
Ba1keta
Baaket Weeving

Cla11es
,Baaket Supplies

OPEN SATURDAYS
10:00 lll 5:00
PAM MIIIOAH - OWNIII

992-6155
2

CleerviiM' Subd.· 7 mil II aouth

of Oolllpolo. All u nciwround
utM•I•. RHtrietod. C~l 81444&amp;-3488. .•

__,. .
Ught

'·

-.

~~-.B"us~m-e_8_s----~
21

April lot. and 2nd O.oge oale
lit. 124. ~.. 1izo wom«~s
cfathll. coneole TV. emat engtn•. Nl'lge. ch•ect• cake

BOGGS'

WANTED

SAUS &amp; SEIVICE
u. s. n. so un

WEDOING GOWNS, PIOM
DRESSES, FORMAL ARliE
AND ACCESSORIES

OliO
614-662-3121

GUYSVUI,

"Just In Time For Spring

Aulh&lt;!r~ed John

Ew•ts."."

D-e. New Hollllftd,
Bush Hog F1rm
Equpment Dealer.

SRLER- .. Makos Money

flnoi.....MI

FOR IIFORMATION

IUfEI-.Saves Money
614-992-7S21

leiM&amp; Sonlu

614-992-2661

WEDDINGS &amp; EVENTS
NorfhS...IIII.IIilllloport
2-2•-·ss-1" mo.

ALLEN'S
HAULING

MASTERS TUXEDO REHrAl
ORJ CIIANING SEIYKE
SCISSORS SHARPENED
USED SEWING MACHINES
ALTEIAnONS
SINGER AND WIITE
SfWING MACHINES
SINGER MNITTlNG
MAC liNES

FABRIC SHOP
110 Wost Main. Po...-ey

992-2284

OF IUSMESS

Com1110rclal
hsldontlal

992·3101
992-6347

Big V•d lolol Fri .. Sot .. Mon ..

Tueo,. Morell 31ot through A(Ill

4th. 33879 FIM- Rood.
C - to 5 Pointe Md wotcll for
llgn1 to

nt~N

log home. CIK

114-982-7788 (10:00-5:00
p.m.)
.
Dovo H111w. Hoppy Holl- Rd.
Mor"' 30.31. AprU 1. Motor
cyol., c~mp•. c• l)lrtl, mile.
.. Aprl I. 8:30-!

OnelftdfourtMthtmlleonNaw

._,

llnw Ad. P11nt1. chHct.,•e tQ¥1.
clotNn!J 10-hln~ for ...

=~.-"", ""

Road Boolcl for Poyll100oli11o.
Wmo: Plo•330, 181 s . Llncotnwey. N. A...,a, tl 80842.
INDUSTRIAL ENGINEER
lmmeciMe O(lenlng for dogroed
I.E. w•h 10 or more

v• ..

expwience in met• stamp=•
welding op• .. lona. Know I
able In oon~ctmo tlmett

•
•
•d 11111ingw8ger•• ~ eunlan
fac:IIMy. R111ortlng to tho Pl.,t
Mln111• of • em.a _pl~nt In
-oton. Bout_, Ohio. The

S..dr

M11"' 31ot, April 3rd t :001:00. Marlyn- lriak St..

Autllnd, Ohio. Furnltu,.,
dothll. Homelntlrior. ICJ¥1. etc.

Lwge 2 !emily g•ogo solo. AprH
lot. 3rd. • 4th. Paliwll&amp; Ohio.
Sa-Ilor Ci11zeno lulclne

-------pf Pleasiinf ----&amp;Vicinity

wiling to be In the torolront In
doveloplng .,d l"'lllementlng
I.E. progr1m1 mntiltlnt wtth

J J .T. prlnclpl•. Muot be willing
to reloelte. Send r•ume •

utarv requr.mems to: The
Fnai&lt;-Gallogh• ,._faclurlng
Co.• P.O. lo• 788. .._, _ _.,
Ohio 43130. Attontion : W.C .
ltloodo.

3

Announcements

mile. tootl.

mower. WMd ..... ttereo. kJtl

RedUce your -gill- Telco .. _
Shii'O DIM ,..,.. .,d E-V111
Wot• Plio. A..Moblo ,Mh
Ph•"*Y·

....... Cord-· Pt. ,......
Jr. Hlah 8chool Aprt 1, 1tlt,
10 AM lo I ,M.
Wohovathltowllt~on

chlln -

.,d otrln.ll tri.....,.
ony-o. lld.a E"""ment.
304-17.7421.

4

a.-. Mot•loll IUDIIIIod. No
Jo-EII:nt•prlo•. P.O . Box 2203,
Klool-. ,L32742·2~1
seling. Write:

GOVERNMENT JDBS

•11. U40- IIIII, 230 y... N -

hlrlng. Co A (1) 801-117-eooo
Ext. R-9801 for CUITent -~~

•

Auction

. . . of

'""

ldlllft. Qlll .... .......

._In

, ...... llfttiqua ....
.14-241-1112.

=·

MlcnDNIBI
-In llaaWng

'#:n. 1~r:;.r.':7
- - . w.vo.

41

v..,

n-"" .

dtrl¥ lolly In
Svreou•e. Ltveln. lelary neootJ.

olllo. CAll oolloct 114-31111740.

room, 30 ft. eultom Hk kltch•
cabtn••· o81c woodwarll. ftnllh
b•ement. 2 c• g•-ue. lwei
IIMdlc-.:JBd lot, 4 mk• from

Evergreen. Coli 114-381-!J328
5:00.

Of!OI

aH Rt .. 31-

6 room houll for rent. K.n aJQI

•roo. Colll14-. .l-7444.

81 ....8-4189.

Deluxe 3 BR . hou• fDf .... •

flnenao. eon 30_.576-

...; ... er

..-ct In my home.

llouro; _....,_

10~0-8:00:

"-dow. 10:CI0-7:0a Wodn•

dor. 10:00-11~0: Th.lrlllar.
10:00-11:00: Frldoy. 10 :001:00: ltop • ....... , Aulo
Sal• or oollet4-•J. 7401ook

"" ......

For F,lent : Hou•in country. Cell

614-37!1-2209.

7vo•otd 311adroombflal&lt;-.lnvl

GOVERNMENT HOMEII From
11.00 (U Rllllirl· FOtec:loo.-.

Repoa., Tu DeHnqUWit Proper· ·

tl". NDW SELLING THIS .
All EAI Col (11efu ndabltll- 31 1733-eoM. Ext. 2732-A. FOR ·
CURRENT USnNGSI
'
"'ioo roduc:ecl-3 8R .. 2 both
homo on BuiBYille Ad . Cell•

tot81 electric. •dlltyle home,
e.rp_• ed throughout. 1 • acre
fenC*I in bec;k verd with dedc.
Loc•ld 7 -mil• from Motzer
Hoepltll on Rl. 110. A... oblo

Mirc:l\ 1. 131i0 per month. If
lntoraotad, CAll 814-288-1318

47 Wanted to Rent

Pie•..• •r•. 304-876-7717

ol1• 5:00PM.

Mercharnllse

7267. evening.

411R. 2 bot,., full beoament on

F~nillhld

2.3. or 4 toOIM &amp;
bath. Cl..,. Adutts ontt. No

•••· Ref. • dop. noqulrod. Cal
814-. .l-181t.
Nicely furnlahed 1m1l houll.

Eflldencv apt.-1 man. Mobile
hom• below town overlooking
co • he•. ocll ~. only, Nf_

'""II- 0331.

NEW- IS pc. wood group- 1399.

Living room oui110- t1911- "98.
lunk bedo with boddintl' '248.
Full 1tn mlttrlll &amp; foundi'Uon
1Urtlng-

•99. Recllneu

otortlng. 199.
.
USED- Bodo. dr•WI. bedroom

IUft•, De1ka. .wring.- WI I her, •
compl•ellne of Ulld furniture.

s.-

1 ·Mdroom untJr,.hed

County AppKtr~oe. Inc. Good
used ..,pliMc.t lnd TV •••·
Op . . BAM to 8PM . Mon thru

F...-nllhld etflcf... CJf. 807

oond Oolllpollo. tiiO- Sh••
b. h. Colt 441-. .11olt.-7PM.
Two

SWAIN
AUCTION • FU RNrru RE 12
Olive St .. Gcolllpollo.

NEW- _,_. boot• *35.
Workbooto 118 • up. !Stoll •
ooft lao) . Coli 814-448-31&amp;9.

Colt 11

111a1manto, In Gcoftlpollo. t171
.,d U21 p.- monlh. Stove .,d
rafrlg•llor tJr,.hed. Conv•

nt.-.t loc.tion. Raf••c. •d
1. . . requrld. c.n 614-441-

4425 or _..2328.

JICk1on Pike.

e226 a mo.

paid- Coli ....... ,.
ol1• 7 PM .
1.1111~1-

Mod•n 1rt floor 1 BR. flmwlhed
JPt, • 2 BR . 1st floor unltr-

nlohod 1111. Ref. lc
814-. .8-1079.

clop.

Col

••. 114-441- 1.... 1127 :ltd
Ava. Oollipollo. OH.

w.......

GOOD USED APPUANCES
clrv-. tolrlgerot ....
r1ngea. Sk IQOI Appliances.
Upl*' River Rd. belldll Stone

Craot Motel. 11._441-7398.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

dt•• priced from
*391 to 1998. Tobl• •eo ond

·Sof• and

up 10 e1211. Hldo-a·bedo .390
to 111111. Roclln.. •221 to
*37&amp;. Lampo e21 to •us.

Sundov 1 to lp.m. 11._9922528.

54

Misc. Me.r chandlse

1 BR furn'ed. apt .. 108 Booond
AYI ulllhl• paid. doJ&gt;, roq'ld.
•230/ mo. eon 114-3"711-2171.
N- ICCoptlng opplteolioftl lor
2 -oom opa1rnentL Allly

c•pll.t. appl~.-. Wit• 111d

Ragero Mobllty collect.· 1-114'
870-9881.

Swimmlnf Pools- "88
988Madol pools.
Huge 15 bv 24 tt.1Mim ar•. 4
11. d...,. lndudll doclc. fence,
INt.- • w.ranty. lnotoiiMion •
flnenclng ovalloblo. Coli 24 hrl..
, -800-348-0948.
FirW~tood

for ..le-spl• herd-

wood. Pic:lcup ..,clc, cloliv•oc(.
.30. Coll814--41l82.
For S.lt • Cona-•• end Pleltic
1eptlc t..,ks. AI ,a:n. RON

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Joal&lt;oon. Ohio. 1-800537-•28.

au....... 210

• up,

IL wila Rd. Open hm to 15pm
Mon. tlwu Sot. I'll. 114-"1-

0322.

Vlll-.r F.. ntture '
New .,d u1ed furniture .,d

appiiGencoo . Coli 1114-441 7572. Houro 9-&amp;.

pu.._

9 -

·

old. T&amp;lla cropped. ct.w ch1w1
r.-noved &amp; wormed. AI oolof'l

61

Farm Equipment

aN Fordtrocta&lt;, buohhoe plow.
cuhivotGr, ez4eo. eo1 Ford
Wor-.- t-or. '21110. 5
fl. tlnlahod m - . •798. 970
Cooaw~hcob. •eaeo. V•moor

w•
fln.,co Col 814-281-1822.

Plpell'ld Tr•c:hlno work av•ll•

tote. Coll81.,_.1-0189.

loooboll Clfdo. 1819 Flboxeo. eon 304-871-7911 .

v••

For •••: Two b...ttful one
old prom dr. . . .. 11112. loth
dr•. . h111e only .bNn worn
twice &amp; •• In OICcailent oond~
tion. Electrolu• floor 1hlrnpooer

ripe-3
(1311. _,Col 114-448-8488
Triple well tue

1ectlons

llldbon•. Walk., Md Mountoln Curro. 81 4-742-241 z.
Snowden' a K•nal. Rt. 1. Ru·

lien d .

67

Musical
Instruments

lndNklJII ... ltlr l•aont. beginn...
gultlrilt. ltui-

•r1ou•
Muolc. 814-441-08S7.

cardlo
Joff Wocnol'"" lnotructor, 114441-IOn. Llmi11d op..lngo.
Good cond Bun*

11'U"''* end

c-. 304-171-81137.

Fu111
&amp;

Suppl11~s
liVI!SIIIi'k

61

Farm Equipment

UTILITY 8LOO. SPL;30'x40'xt'

Go-cll't with 3Y.I HP motDt". New
tlreo. Run11 &amp;lootco good. 1100.
Colll14-44.0932.

4010 JD cl•ll troctGf, 1400
hro .- 14.510 . Gahl
grlndtr/ ,.,..-.7811. O.hl 1eoO
round bel•· 12.550. 12081nt.,.

Shop whhoul going ohoppl"g. n11Uonal tntetor-e&amp;.950. OWn•
tha AmNIIf 'NIItJ. Amway pro- • wHI flnMco. Coli 114-281ductl dllhrlrld to your home. 8822.
Colllll4-448-9478.

Dolbort Swlalw

Uoo Appll.,--314 Third St.
K.,eugo. .,._ 448-7473. 311Dilhwn,_.,

priCII 118n It

no. 18-Auta. woolwL pri. .
otenot •too.

with Hyd trenaport atlachment.

n.eoo. Doutz-AIIil modol388

-Ford 3810 42 hp dl•ll
, ...... 0870.00 - n • .,.
men1 end tD5.00 por month
for

eo

John DHre 2 rfNt corn pllntlf,

'178. Jolw&gt; D-• 8 II. groin
drl~ 1118. 4 In ell wot.- pump
whh I oyL ...... • 100 11. 4
In"' ..... lf.aoo. Col 81 ..
218-10311.
TollaccD otlakt. F01d 8000 cl•
... ....... taolo. Allo Hly11/bllo. Cd 81._ 3711-2704.

Wanted

to Buy

W..tld:2 load top toll. C tifton.

wv. 3034-77~1181 .

,...,ole. For
more intormllllon ctll 30._1823718. E.D .H.

63

Livestock

Athtno Uveatocl&lt; Sale. llllbony·
Bolo .,_, Soturdov-1 PM.
Llv . .od&lt; oc-'ed ott.- 4 PM

.,flfY Frld~. 1 mle

AI- on

••t of
eo. ao11

St. Rt.
114·&amp;92-2322. 898-3831 .
1¥..-tlng~.

2 otorleo. 4 IIR. full uo-lnilhd '
bMernent. 20x40 lnground .
pool. 2- plua •~•. In Vlnton.call

2 BR ., ceble ovollobiL llacoiltllul

rlv• YIM' .,

Kena~ge .

1987 Ford T*'ruL 32,000
mi-. 4 cyl . full lnioctod. .. c.

oond.. 8ke ov.r .vmentt. Call

114-387-7882.

198&amp; Ch..,., Covell• Type 10Cl. 4 IPM oton.-d ..........
alon. PS/PB. AC. AM / FM rlldlo/ c. .., crulle. doth interior,
otlll w-. rocllnlng lalakot
e...•cuttom two-tone pllint.
One owner-38.000 mllo1.
• 4. 700. Col 304-171-7342.

7 room hou•. in ground po£»1."
F .A. furrwce, wood burMr.
a-"IQe room OWrhNd, S.telltta.
CoN 114-992-3931 olt• 4and •

•

Houle. 19 8Cf •• 2 be.ooml, •
betlwoom . city wat•. til•
phono. TV Gablo. lluo • mill

- ·town.
block304-17.4818.
top 1-4 ....
from
80
ft. - ...... """"·· 3 be~ .
roont 2 bM,., 2 be.,tllulotono •
..,..,._ 2 g•og.. 1.8·
•cr•. Mlny e•trn. tH.ooo.·
304-48.11311.
•

w.,snty. Many acc••orl•·
Catl814-...,..3712.

AOHA 1874gru"agllclng. Nice
m•ldnga. No bad hlllltl. E.:tl-

lontblo... n•. eeoo. Call 8142411-1474JM'IItf Milk COw for •le.
O..tl1. hellftfw. Due to fr•han
1001\ Good milt•. Shede. Ohio

1114-818-1234.

AC . only 11.000 mihl .

76

I.

U.ed &amp; rebult torgue
conwrt...., ltlndlrd dutch-.
.,.. • ..,. pi•-. &amp; throw out
be•ing. Warranty· 12 mo.. eve

up.

jointo-oll typal. CoM 81.,37112220 at 30 .. 8711-8718.

:'
,
'

:

'1·

,.

Hay

&amp;

Grain

HAY roll SALE. Coll814-24!18292.

v... 81 .. 742-3108.

Loodld. 12.000 "'"•· Boeu11ful
c•t 17.000. Qotl ., ....e8828.
1981 ChiYIIIO 2 dr., with oir, 4
opd.. 12200. CCIII 81 .. 2581410.

For

•I• or tr8de for Convllf"'ion

gr'"" Int-. neoo. Coli
814-281-1318111• 7p.m.

1188DDdae0mnL 4dltor, auto,

'81 Ch.,lllo: '11 Ci1otio" 'S5
,.,d Fleo wllh toppor. "Be
Chrvol• Now York.-. 304-1782711 .
•71 PontiiiC IMn .... L2 door.

· 304-171-1808.

•

•

'•
1

•'

•
•

•

1,

~

'
••'

81

Home
lmprovemants

•

•

'•

•

BASEMENT
WATEIIPfiDOANO

Un oonciUonal If• I me guw~­
t• LoCII r.t•~na. furnllhH.
Fl'll •lrut•. Call oonect
1 -11•237-0418. dO\' or night.
Aoger18eaement
Wll•prooflng.

:
'
:
•

SWEEPBI .,d oewlng miChlne '4

cyt.. out. eiiOC). 304-175-eo21 .
1178 Mercury Montego .
31.000 mil•. uc. cond.

Goorgoo C - Rd. Coli 81
4411-0284.

peril. and tuppli•. Pldl;
deiHery, Davll Vacuum

Cle.n er. on• hllf mile

Corpentry WGfk

by

u'l

tlw Job Qr

hour, .-n•llng. dry ~•. plumbing. Mmrla.l. remodeling com-

pi••· Col 814-. . . 7121.

cyl. E11t. oond.

ontr 4.000mM•.

Loodod. 304-871-1114 •11• 8

p.m.

1979 Ch..,., tmpolo ototlon
woga n 380 motor, 4 borrol
c•burRor,

n• .-dlllor. •It•

notor. plu • . good-·· Low
miiMge on car b.. tlmlnl clloln •
full pump. 1800. Co Hooldo
Whl1o. 304-871-3037.

' 78 Muttang 11.. whtte. louv,..
llld IOOOPJ. 8klm. tlott. nW~t

tlr-. 302. runt good. II, ID_O.
Boot Ollor. 304-1711-2814-

lt72 Oldo CCIII- 3110: 1982
C011chrnen Pop·up cemper.

304-876-1917111• 6:00p.m.
Tnuc:ks for Sale

Septic T.,k Pumpintr: eao. Gel- •
llo Co.· liON EVANS ENTER- '
PI:UIES, Jaclt1on, Ohio 1·800..

t

537-9128.

'

1178 Dodge Dlc:lcup. ~ ton. 4
1Dd.. fact:ory • • •· Rare truck .
Clood co-lon. Colt 814-_..
281111•11• lpm.
1981 8-10 pldc- up. 4 GVI.. 4
...d.. 14000. Coli ., .. 25111410.

T1 anspurlollun
For Sa~

1971 Ch.. vceo 2011. bed.,_
onglno, ... 100. 304-87&amp;1&amp;78.
73

Vans

&amp;

l

RON'S TelwiJion Service.
House cllll on RCA, Quazlr, •

GE. Specllilng in Z..Nh. CoR •
304-878-2398 or 11._441- '

•

24~

Fttty Tr.. Trimming.

ltump •

removal. Coll304-,176-1331 .

'

Rot.-y 'or cable toot drMIIng.
Molt wei• oompi•Mieamed~~r.

i•

196-31102

:

PUmp tiiiM and a..... lce. 304- •

IIDN'S APPUANC£ SBIVICE, . :
houu clll 1..-vidng OE, Hot •
Point, Wllhea, dry.,, and •

....... 30 .. 571-2398.

:

Myoro 81-0(1 Md Po\llnt

1~

p.,.

ttan ct.~ol\ wv••we
drlv•
wovo. po•lclng lolo. -In,. Fr11
ootimM•. 304-871-2417.
•

•

Remodlllng. nM ad.-lon~, c•· :
PortL D•8U• end d.c:b. FrM ,

totl-10, coll304-891-3425. ,
B2

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

1878 Ford 4x4 plal&lt;up, excellent
oondhJon. M.llt ael. •1700.
Clllll1._2411-9187.

1971 Dodge truck. 318 eulomotlc. 1-2 ton. •975. 30._1176&amp;021 .

Auto'•

'

o

4

'"'*·
up end

•1eo.: 71 Plymouth. 4 door. I

1188 Ford cullom Ranger 4x4
King cal&gt; Coli 814-441-4105.

Dec"b t..cl oorn and .....,.

:

'

Stnvices

1975 Oldo 98. h• good 4&amp;&amp;

Ground thllled oorn ti.OO P•

Fertilizar

I

•

PS. Pl. 48.000 mla 13100.
Colt Sonclw'• ot 81 .. 892· 7401

ten 'Ao tan Dodge pldfllp.
Si.,lod 8 otonwcl. Pa. roclol
tlr•. 2 extra enow tlr• •
toolbox. cvow good. Coft oltw
lpm. 114-211-1424-

65 Seed &amp;

'

1177 AlP., Trwel tr11Mer. 23· :
•tlf conUIIned, a-c. awning. ~
, ............. """' ••. 12.100.
304-878-4144.
I

miM, •celld oon«&lt;tion. Black

400
· .....
of h., .,d
"" •'•·
Flrot cutting
AHolfa
nmotloy. Nov• been-· c .. by
Juno e. 11 .eo . . bola cr
•Moo per ton. CGntoct Horl'""
E Alee 81 .. 1117-3389.

Mix .. how- lor ooiL .1.50 bole,
304-8&amp;2-3311.

\

SIIOPO 8. Air condhlon. furnlce. •

198&amp; ·Ford Eocort, 43.000

72

100-. Mar-Form. Rt. 38.
Plln.,. 1:00 dl 12:00 .......
SUnclor 30 '1-937-2018. -

~

trod&amp; Coli 814-388-8847.

1884 C.maro Berllnetta.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine

O.llpollo, Ohio
Phone 814--.8-3988 Of 814- •
448-..77

;;:=::;;;=.::;:::::;:::= :
84

_II

Electrical
~efrigeration

------------------- :•
Residential or comm~~rcill wir· •
lng. Nlw llftllce or repelr1.
Ucens8d 81 edridtf'l. RldMtour

Bec:t•lcol, 304-171-1788.

4 W.O. -

Large 2 becl'oom Alrnlohod ""Ne• -ntown Pt. P I - LIIge front porcll. g•ogo apoca
.......... 304-898-34eo.
J tl. J Wotar Service. Swimming
pcoto, clot orne. wollo. I'll. 114-

241-tzl&amp;,

R t1. R Wot.- Service. Poolo

cistern•, well• . lmmedlet.:

1.000 .. 21000gollonodllivcory.
Coli 304-178-8370.

2 llr mollllo home. ,._.,., 2
ml• from Oollisllllil an St. lit.

Watt~~non"e Water Hauling.

rot•. """'-

Ro•anobl•
clooaunto. 2.000 1o 4,000 • .., ...
lty,
· otQ.
304-178-28te. Col clot-........

88B Colll14-. .l-l303.

-1¥ •-doled. ezza p1r
'!'9nth. 1100 dopoeh. In Rio
or..... Colll14-24•1111.

87
Oop.

Reel' ld. 11 21/ mo. O.rdan
· - Cell 114-44.7784 ...
1~3-2144-

~~~.. "" ""'· N1•3 8Ao,
ex,.,dD, llwlng room.IQytrd.
!(an . . . . Cal 114-441-7471

••

--

Pun11oci 400 big bloak nllling
motor. el•o UMI. Ben Dff• or ;

1973 Dodge Motor Home.

Folt«'l

llol- •

•••

BUDGET TAANSMISSION-

U18d
• rebuilt aM •v:;•·
w.,.anty· 30 d-vs. Prlc. I

2 BA . mobile homo. Wol• •
•-ogepald.llol. •dll'· •2211
Qlll 814-..8-1832 ..
311-H311.
'

.... LeGto. 2 IR.

••

•

Auto Parte
II Accessories

.,9,000. Collll4-. . . 0132.

10Hirlfordoowa. 7wtthceN..,
3 IO coli lOOft. 2 "lll•llng

71

19n 17 II. lri h., I 140
lnbo.-c(.outboerd full top. Aolclng •4.eoO. 304-876-3123.

--lOp.
aink. 3 w., ,....IP'_III:or. ltOVI,

1988 PDmiec Fi•o formula 8

-

p.m. 114-28&amp;1318.

co.-ln...

Roe MOt- maro • 300. Polr
m olo blogl• eeo 1u&lt; both do•Coll 814-318-8270.

64

Main&amp; oompiMo top. , _ u,.
holiotcory. •31100- Coli Ill• 7:00

1982 Mu .... g GT. Bright red.
e.o lt.- high output .,gina. 4
liPoid. GJUioo contrvl. intormltwn wlp.._ a.uwoof. Re• win- te72 22 loot cemp.-, HlfClll Iff•
louvon. M.., .... 131100 8PMit4-. .wnlng.
. . 3505.
01 offw. co" &amp;13-8928010.
1971 Tw.y - 21' al~apo oix.
E.:•l ... oondltM»n with •tNs.
1917 vw ._... -·
u.ooo. Col 814-..8-0014.

.

Ct&gt;•toom &amp; Smi1hero. 115,000.
Col .,.__.8-0322.

I

i

Mobile Home Porte. 814-"11102.

------~--~~--·
I roomt • Nth. Corn• of

191811" Bomber runobout with
MoiC&gt;Iry 80 HP outbo•cl. und.-

1182 Cutlau Supreme

Brough-. vory ohlrp -lng
c• IN Ida and out. 2 door. Call
114-992-1941 .

••.eoo. 30 .. 176-1578.

-

kitchen furniohod .,d clnlng
., ... off ttreet .,.king. v-rd. no
pMo. 304-171-1317.

rune good. good mlleogo. CoH
81.,317-0337.

UmGUoin butta- One :zv. vo•
fut~blood. One 1 y- pottod
lul~blood. Coli 814-38.1441.

North 3rd Aw. Mldcleport, 1

2 beit'oom room JPt . . . floor,

1972 Pontiac VentuN, nM
point • vlnvl top, dual •hluot.

35'/2.

and 2 bllt'oom furnillwd l!pt:L

304-882-2881.

71

ena1n1. m8ke otter. 304-8715-

tr•h pldcupa provldod Malnt•

nence •• living alo1e to lhop-

•

88 Bovlln.- C""L It ft. bowtldtr, 130IO.IIfotvaqulpment.
Troller. Excellent condition.
I 7900 Col 81 .. 248- eo40.

w~h

..,., 1-15-xS' 1ldfng __!loor,

aft• 4:30pm.

-·control t100. Coll114441-8209.

8"

Horolcrd holfero. Colll14-9813801.

1-...,lk door-141lte. Ell ECTED IRON HORSE BLDIIS. 114332-9748

se. . 1e in. oolort.e ... llion wtth

eure otend greMd• doubl•l**• aNd•
&amp;~Ilion

pu..-.

a...

1hot1, nsutlfod. ded•ld for

..,.. Coli 814--0181.

4eo l 380 John Dwe· dotaro.
loedor, bookho .. HD1 1. HD21 ,
HDt. ACdoo-. D4D Cot .. TD
20 Int. Huntington. WV. .304738-78911; 1 Slildo-iood•o.
Be-; Ford. Cooo • Mu011.

62

4pm or wMk 111d.

otd cot.

n..-.

AMC Rog'ed, Germ., Shaphorcl
puppl•. t110 eech. Cal 1144411-1087.

eeo. eon 114-3711-2421 "'•

a. , vo•

2 yro. aiel
""· Collet4-3797ft_ ,

Ford-· ~point. 2·12 Inch
bottcmo. Buoh hog dloc:. 5\'r ft. ,
3 point. Ike
Qoll8 14-98153808.

387•.

.,dpollther. Llkenf/Nconcltlon.

3 otd elodea

.., _ _za

2t22.

114-318-808&amp;.

2men••tutt.lkentw. 1 blue,1

whho. lito 34w-381. Coli lllr 4
pm. 814-448-3810-

472 Hoy bind.

montt. or e ,. . .
Ollolloblo. Coli 814-21.1320.
purah•• for qualftld buyen.
Alao NIW' Holltr~d Skid 11_.
3 Garmon ShiPhord pu... Blade
toad••· r. btl••· a. IHII•t.
&amp; tan. 2 male. 1 fem1.le. 4 . toddwo. A campi•• h'"" teo!
months old. t160 e8Ch. Cell Hne New Hotl111d . - . twine
114-248-5833111.- 4pm.
to.oooll. •21.00 1.20011. tor
blltng ttrew 100ft. moretenaR
,. Dachstl.lnd mix•. mlle. otr
..glh 121 .00. .10 bellO 0&lt;
n.utered, hou11 broken, Ill
mort.
llfvlce Cent•.
ohotL do• trtal&lt;o. •eo- Coli 81. At. Keef••
87 Leal\ WV. 304-891-

lt't
Red Bone
puppi•. Walk• puppiM. MountlllnCurr puDDI•. and •oadult

l

For Slllel 1172 17ft. Stargaft
~~~~;;;~~::;~;~~~~~~~~~~~
Auto's Far Sale
TtiHaulloM.12eli .p .Ew.rude

KH!oro S¥C. Cent•. St. Rl.l7.
Lean WI/. ,304-896-3174-

AKC Dabormon

HI

Cl1et9by N!A.

4 raw no-til plant• piMo units
SV fin.. rowmartt... lnleac
Mtach monitor 11, 100. 00.

Floh Tonk. 2413 Joclutan Avo,
WHrrE'S METAL DETECTORS Point Ple•ent 304-171-2013.
RonAIIIon. 1210S.c:ondA¥1., 10 gal111 up t14.99 and 10 gil
Gallipollo, Ohio. 114·448- compt. . 143.25.
4338.
Wented ttud llftlbl for mini ..
'lo Inch uood ~.. otaol. CoR lure Sneuzer imrnldlotelv. 304114-387-7410.
178-2754111• 3:00p.m.

- · 1250- Coli 814-. . .
0932.

188.

Nl .. ell u• elflden.,. lor 1 or 2
'*'-an ThirdAw. IIIII. p.mo. Coli Ride 814-"11-2002
beforo lpm OC' 814-892-3eoe
1ft• I!Jpm.

Whwlchllr• MW or u.-1 . 3
whelfed electric ICOotWI. Cell

Rotl)otill•, 5 • · chain drive, Ike

•29t.,dupto 13115. Bolfvbldo
•no. M•ttr-orbo• """'•
ful OC' twin 118. ~rm 178. on d

Groom and 'Supply Sho,.Pot

Buy or SaU. Riverine Antiqu•.
1 1 24 E. Mlin Street. Pom•ov·
Houn: M,T,W 10e.m. to lp.m ..

•7111. Dwk 1100 up to e375.
Hutoh• e400 .,d up. Bunlc
bedl co,.._t w.mlltl:rNI•

Pets for Sale

onylol. lemo Pol Food Doll•.
Jul'- Wobb I'll . .......0231.

Antiques

DinettM •10IIIf'ld up to t495.
Wood tobla w-8 cholro 1288 to

King 1310. 4 d - • _ , 189.
EKtre nice. quiat. 2 l•ge bed- .G.., col&gt;ln•o I, 8 • 10 gun.
room I , equipped kitchen. Baby matt,_ • 36 • Ull.
l.,ndry room. lllr. mnwnl.m sod trem• e20. •30 • Kl.ng
loeolion. No pMI. Coll814-- frame •ao. Good aelecllon of
1817.
bedroom IUitel. m«ll ceblnlls.
hoodbo•do •30 .,d up to "II.
Untun. Apt. 322 Third Aw. No
Alto. Qoll 81.,441-3741 or 90 Dlya 18m&amp; •• c•h with
2111-1901
•p:r.ovocl crodlt . 3 Ml• out

Hauae for rent, 2 be$oom.
n ewty r•moCS,Ied, Hartford.

Fully fu•. .hod g•ago opt. AI
Ull~l• pold •copt aloc:trlc:lty.
-1¥ .......,.od • -poled.
Dop. Aloo 3 lladraomtrd.-. CoH
814-..8-8&amp;1111. -.e-lleo.

.

_.ld. Coli 304-1171-8104-

plne bonkl .,d

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BR houe on Ch•tlf' Rd. In

Apwtment IYahble. HUD 8C·

rlv•.

63

66

Grooming. All brHdJ ... AII

-loft...,

51 Household Goods

£Jack1on) aft• 7p.m.

304-882-20111.

Pom•ay. "800. Call e 14-38 7-

..de.

Second Aw. F...-nilhed lffidencl• ~lrtlng It t1715 a mo.
Including wM• &amp; 91f'bea&amp;
Sin~• edutt1 onlv. C.ll 11'4-

Homes· for Rent

For rent: 3 Bedroom hou ...

Port Mtwoolt SubdN i15on. .0111

-

SHADY LAWN APTB- 728

1 BR . 1111. In Rio Grondl. LIIOI
lewn. W•lw • dlryer. AI
utl~l• pold e22s 1 mo. Cal
81 .. 258-1402.

CCIII 614- 37!1-2178.

pi-. formal dlnlne Iorge IIving

Hoep~ol

304-87~82&amp;1 ''

Smll 38A hou• n. . Patriot. 2
8R moble home It E\Mr~~~n:

814-3117-0194-

Http

•c:r•

3 8R . hou•. dolu ... AC. t360o
mo. Coli 304-871-8104. or
875-53811.

anractllla bride 4 bedrOOM.
2 b«h,- f8mly room with Rr•

Holzer

814-.. 2-7479.

2 or 3 bed room hou .. in Point

Furnlahecl opt.- I BR . 243

Renlals

H omas_for Sale

81 .. 3811-8194-

Cell-In-·
Auctio-· u_.
•
Olllo: .......--

31

.
V•d
,Bolo.
31. '"""'
"-· I1, -~·
_ ...
reoldonoo on lloln Rd. 0111.
Porry. Clotha glrio. torge••o.
houeohold · -· bootco. Ole. I

Public Sell

7588oflor 5:00.

burn Road.

Real Eotale

1f.z •~e. Above ground pool with
deck. Fenced In bit* v•rd. C. II

8

•a• lot C.m_p_ Cont.,
Rouoh FatTall Rood, 304-8715-

One helf

RMoll lalolneoo for ulo. MldciO'
port. Ohio. Johnoon'o Voriotv
Stato lien Frenklin) . 1-304'
77~530&amp; Iller 5~0p. m .

Price Reduced· Uncoln Log
houee-3 bedroome. 2 bllhl. '\
aod.- log oidln,. flroplece. Fl_. '
n.-.cing evalllble. French City :
Mobile Hom•. C.ll 014· 4489340.

tt..cl. Ohio.

fin•c:in(l Cell 304-41.1875.

BUiiding litH .,d lot1 on Ray,

UIO.· DAY PROCESSING .
Phone ordero. Pwopla colt· you.
No HporiMOI n-NI"I· CoH
!Rolun-tl 1-118-4111-81187
Ext. K1822'7 dove.

cMionl M Hlrril Fermt,

90 ecr•. C.in Rldga. Allo 2·on•
acre trct1. Po11ible CMnlf

lntor-. e7B.OOO. Novotloble.
CAl Ron It 114-982-8972.

814-448-8221 for more info .

.,d.,............ Pial&lt;

N.O .H.S.. 84,eoO. Coli 8143811-1711.

di"•· 2 two beit'oom upttalrs
ep81mdl. Owner hM other

lot.

thlo 11101 110. 213. 10 t75.473.
lmmcodl•• o_p-•1 Coil 1111fundoltltl 1-311-73~1012 Ext.
F2741A .

·'
B..Jiclnglot for •leon 180, ne.-

.cr.

5104.

A.-nbl. .. Eern mon4rt
--bllng Muolcol Teclltl

81!h448- 2404. .

2
n. 900; 200
et
$150. p« 8CJ'a 10 mil• South
of !'t· Plo•.,•· 304-8711-2028..

Bar end lounge wMh 22 liM

LAROE llvm- Bolt. lot. I
lun. April lot-2nd t:o0-1:00.
Pl. P I - M_.LodgaPtmic
lhett•. Hot dog~ . . .,. 2·
et.OO. Pop BOo.Pr-toTho
Coiotlo 1'1-lol'ou-.

GlveawiiY

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

Turn kar op••tion. Downtown

aw.,..

EEO

Oovwnnwn: Jobll NooN hiring

Announce 1m: 111 s

lNG CO . recommendl t"-: you- do busin . . wttt, p.ople you •
know. .,d NOT to e.nd mon..,tlwoud't the mlil untl you h,we
lnY..t1gated t hi off« in g.

poeltion wll have above werage
In oomrn.nMCIIIlknq with
prodUetlon ,.-...,nol In tho
dalllopmem of work ltetlon
lavouta. lnd in mlthodl . . aln... lng. Ht or sht mu.t be

ecntln Ohio Tow,.hip. Approx.
3 ocr• In Powy Townohlp.' Will
HI on l.. d GOntrlct. Call

ln•· 18x28 p-og&amp; Aoklng
$29,800. 814-187-8187.

IUCCIIIlil c."tcldll:l far thia ki!Jf
1~tl

Ll•geyordaolaFtl. I lol. 2312
Joffonon Aw. Pt. Pl. Lawn

INiliiiCII..ITBIOI

IOOfiiiG
loe&amp;lollert . .wn
C.bllll........

3rd. DeWitt• Run Rd., langbot·

1om, Ohio. F..ow tigno.

3·13- '88-1 mo.

Jo's Gift Shoo

SYIACUSI, 01110

41omly "jllrd ooloApril lot. 2nd

lloln or -

992-5275

B&amp;B PAINTING

-roclnggo_,o, JohnboM
with 2 rnolan,. l.wn tractor,
\ICR .

11-.

We Haul and
Spread
Limestone
Dirt, Sand &amp;
Coal 0 elivered
1 ,000 Gal. Water
Service

SYRACUSE, DHid
Evarything Marked
Down
•Cement Items
•Flower Pots
•Bird Baths
•Yard Ornament•
BtCIUII of Cold Welllhor
Ewcythin&amp; Inside. ·
Rin 1 Door Ball lor Service
l-1·1 110.

Pl"l. adding m-=1*1-. micro-

School Diltn,. for 2 children.
Coli 814-448-2370.

9'?.•a• in Ohio Tow ... hlp. 115

OneiiCI'etot on Flatwoodl Ro8d.
12x 10 tr~l•. c. port. outbulld-

PUBLISH- ~

cllolr. 304-17.4178.

814-"11-

each- CoM 81 .. 248-9585 IIIII
5:30PM.

FlllilllCiill

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY

pMo. Depoe~. Co
0139 .

buUdng lotL Approx. 2 IICI'M

-...a ..

necea..,.,.. Agracon.

Need belrloltt.-ln Galipollo City

Acreage

Downtown 1 BR , tpt. n..,~
redeoorMed, c.-pet. oompllle
kit ellen. Ac . Porklnf Aduho. No

Route 33. North of Pbm•CJ¥·
Lote. ...till, S*tt. •1•. C.H

0.1. Wli1o Rd.- 2 wooded

e..wn mowing. dl.lrch•. c:eme
tert... Insured. ReMonlbl &amp;

halllne 814-992-1339-

Wat•, ..,..._., • tr•h lnduded.

446-4107 ... 441-2802.

5448

Alto odd jo ba.

&amp;

Lots

11

Opportunity

Inc. 81.,_.8-0478

3-2-'19tfn

PH. 949·2801
or loa. 9119-2160

35

Will b•~•• in my home. Ri o
Gr•de . . .. Call 614-245,

m...

Farms for Sale

bulldln •. eon 814-25&amp;&gt;1822.

~rga'• Port1ble Saw' mil

Don't haul your loQI to

33

Saoond .,d Pinto Gcollloolo. Colt
T•• Townhouse IP.trMn'tl- 2 814----28. 114-448-4249
Bile.. 1 Yr botlw. CA., dlo- or 814--2321.
hw..t., dlpoul. prlvlll .....
cloood p,.lo, pool. pl011ground. Country Mobile Home Pwlc.
81a11ng It I 288 .p.- mo. Cel
8, 4-317-7880.

146 acre f•m. 'Ary modern. 6
BR. 2 bath hou~ on 218. Some
equlpmtnt. tobacco bMie. out-

tmmei•eopening for mech1nlc.

742-2328

"F rea Eotim1iea"

,..,,_ 304-782-2330.

Flnenci-.1

oowmMI. Cell 30_.876-te67.

814- . .8-3419.

Middleport
8t Vicinity
. --· -------- ----· ---..... ·- ....... .

NlwH-Iult

bect-oom. 15,000. A"o lot for

ment AuittlnCI Home Study-

&amp; ben eftla. A ppty WI penon at

Home tv.- l.ty. Age 45-56 to
tlvo ln. F- room tl. bo .-d. Col

INTERIOR, EXTERIOR

on•- g•111o.
,. . of bul6.g on aorMr of

Dining roOm adte. tabl• fJ.
ch8in, buff« • chine c8bintt.
•l"!tique wick•. porch awing •

For llllftt: Lwge

Quid&lt; Sole: 1873 14tc70 Flootwood. 1'h INittw. 2 or 3

D.O.T. Cortiftcollon Job Ploct&gt;

Help Wanted

E.-p•l.,e.

clu-

Instruction

United Truck M•ter
Truck Driv• Trllning

11

Trol.- opaco In Kyger C Bchool , Diltrl,._ •as me. inwater • &amp;•boo• Col
814-3117-7217ovMin•.

'CO UEGE. 529 Jeclcoon Pike. .
Clll44.4387. Reg. No. 81-11 -·
106S8 .
'

•30.000/ Tr income potentt ...

------"Pome-rov--· -----·--

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

ordeiN..-y. MIIon...,d.GIII olio Bloak Co.. 1 23'.-\ Plno ..

SOUTH~~~~:~~Ng~INESS

EllllliiiVIllent

Sllturdly. 1.4 mNe on Addilonoff Rl. 7 Blue
houae. HouMhold lt.-n1, clo-

WITH

1
NO SUNDAY
-..J.·I-~===;;~;;~

2-3-Un

Wanted standing timber. paying
top P.rtce, 30._15•8· 5824 ett.-

4FemllyGcorogeSII&amp;Fridoy.,d
thine bobv - ......... ''""'·
Colle 1'" 387-783 "-

Conc:rMI blodcl- all 111:... ~d

II' ti'

lI

81 .. 388-8287.

Moton•

- L lntolo. otc. ct..de wtco'""· Rio OrMdl. 0 . Coli 114241-1121 .

2988-

Phone 614-742·

Building Suppliee

Iill

---....._

lltonlov ..... milk - " ' eon

Situations
Wanted

Will do b•~•ttting. 30-.&amp;76·

..

PAINTING

I
I

56

lullclng

U.ed furrWture end household

2041.

~- --,.-~-

round bll•. •2110. Own•

81odi. bridi. - · plpiL wln-

1500 - l y. Colt 814-2977111 or 441!-9"1

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

3 ·Prom Dr•••· 30._57828$8.

AprM 12. Slort·

Caoh paid. Coli 814-992-5857
or 814-192-2481 .
~ppli.,.ces .

.,.__.8-

I .

'

tea&amp; Honda Shadow 700-CC.
01,100 lltm. Colt 81.,_.8oeoz.
187881h•J•bo•. 484ou . ln ..
•2.800 ~rm. aon
0802.

For ..,. Simmental Bulbi. 1Y,

v-• old Coli b a t - 7· 10
p.m. 304-982·32911.

EARN MONEY Read bookll

PROFESSIONAL
CARE

176-7172.

rMU,.

Quills
Pre 1940 quilts. Any condition.

an • .

1
1

Por Gomo

_.
e10.;
lt•eowfthtwintllblel
c:heir
t150.;
Ent.-tllnmMtC•
troclc. em-lm roc11o 110. 304-

1

W.,ted: Truck drlv• with ft•
bed . , .•., .. 48
Pay

I

I

OFFIcE CLERK: lmmeciMo 01&gt; •

St. pt. Plo•ant. WV 2&amp;5eo.

~~:__

I
I
1
1

1 UL ~OOl-32

OIMI top t.tble 1nd rattln •
bnuch•st1!0.:1oveseat•

by

1911 20 11. Chodcmoto. btu•
/ whllto Johnlon 23&amp; lop. all
optlont. ll~apo 2. 70 mph
New conclt5on. t10.&amp;00. C.ll
814-. .1-1187 d.,•. 30.. 17842U .... Ingo.

•

afl•

enoe .,d exwitnee riQUired.
Sendr-.arM Box c1•1n care of
Pt. Pt-.,t Reo'-'•· 200 Mlln

12

walk. Atl.,tic Ctty, NJ 08401

I

&amp;!00.

entire hou.-hold ltso selling.

! ,) 742-2458.

304-875- ~04

tabl•.

c•• gilt• for
rtt•ded. R•f•·

•
••

'*'"

llhptroct... Framlntlu-oll
alz10. Tolclng ordln lor plmiG

P.-t·tii"(MM relpite

WV. 28160.

week. Write for i'tfai'INIIIion 1nd
appliclltlon. I rene' a 1 239Boerd-

DOOI PIIU
I 2 H.D. FREE wHh coupon and
1 puithase of min. H.C. Pack1 ce. limH 1. coupon per cusI 1011111 per bin., MSSIOft.

~:!"f ~~~!~:':6'too'

c.mpina trail• in good condi-

.,..ty

I
1·
I THUIS. E.l. •:45 P.M. 1
SUN. E.l. 1:45 P.M.

4 wheller. 200 ... zeo. Coli
81 .. 24&amp;-9223 """' 4pm.

lmmectf•• .,p~ovm.nt; .
or summer. Averege taiiFY 300

r---------;"1
1
BINGO
I
I

Pl . ..m. WV 25550 ._ c•e of
m. Regtst•. C.-npConlw • •·

Used t.untture by the piece or

814-241-5152.

mitOJY on Bcwctr..alk included.

4-16-86-lln

I
I

2 chldron
mt home.
Dayohlft. Ropi\1 1&lt;&gt;: I'*C -22. Pt.

lng aalary *11.300.

Antique&amp;. furniture • .,pu.-..,.,
ue..t•. IUtO&amp; complet:e home
fumilhing~ . Marlin Wedemeyer,

Bo•M•Ik gift thop. Girls dor·

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

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

B~oln• neodecl for
~g• 4 a 7 . Pr.t• It

the rMnt~~lty

mora AH In good condition. CIM

fln.,cing 011oltoblo. · 304-9372722 MY limo or II 4-4413371 One dov ontv Fndor
Mwch 31. 11 ~0 dll 8:00.

876-4340. AA-EOE.

l
••

814-992-27'70.

Etecrrok.lx
Buy Electrolux Factory direct
ohipped 40 10 10 p.- _ , oH.

muatbe able to work d-v•~dllll
shift. C.l p.-sonnef otftoe 304-

l

ttim.,d .. toolilnjoctlo"
1887 Mor111ry Tr..lng motor.
1987 Shoreline traM• plu1

G-oly oicllng · 12 H.P.
with 12 lncll · Excoll . .
ooncltton. Colt 81._ 742-2112.

all, call 304-D2-ZUII9.

tion. Coli 814-387-0441 .

WrH buy or .ppralse .tnvthiRgl

Boataend
Matons for Sale

a... 8001-1887 LAnd.. 11'8". ...
1987 Molcury 3111'4&gt; motor w~h

10 HP Unitraclt riding IIWn

mo-. CAl 81.,941-2174-

Room lull of cer.-nlc: biNtut .. d
pointe for •to. half prioo II tolco

Mlng for office ct•k It the
West•n Soil Contervlltion Dil·
trlct ... Point Ple•lnt. A•ponti-bllhl• would be g., ... office
~tiel, IUch II typing. lhorth.,d, bookkMPtng. word pro.
ceiling. Grectu.-iqn from hioh
Jchool.,dtwove•• •peritnce
in OOmPI• offloeworkr~ulred
Send currw
and ll'tt•
of intrad.lction to W..tern SCD,
224C Rm Strlllt, Pt. Pl . ..nt.

A~.,llc

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

1

piece or entire houlllhold. F•lr
price&amp; being plid. Clll 814--446-

needed 01 100 bed otcillod
nurolng flclllty. E-lent .....

"~t Reasonable Prices"

992-6135

OUve.

75

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Misc. Merch!lndise

Nint.,da wllh control podo,
light gun. 8 cortridtl• UOO.
Coli e 14-941-2341 Iller 4~0

pcdlonO. Flo,.toch ollooctlont,

Full time • p.,.. tme LPN'•

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Ill(lilt

81 ....8-3159.

•

DetoMo. 11 806-,1 17-1000 Ext.
y-t0189.

CUSTOM BUILT

MON.-TUIS.·WEDARI.
9 Ul.-6 ,.M,
THURS. 9 AM.· 12 NOON
SAl. 9 A.M.-2 , .M.
c.l Aloytloao Day or

AlCtkm.

Junk C.. with "' without
moton. Coli Llny Llvelv-114388-9301

We Service All Mokea

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SYRACUSE
SUPPLY COMPANY

hut••· Third

•

64

p.m.

8uidi-Pontlc. 1911 hll«n

dorl. Nonh Gllllia
.::hool aree. Cell 814,..388·

•as. Cot et•38s-H83 or
814-381-91n.

Pa't timeflhlebot~t. n"aaltbl
••J*ian&lt;*l CIM p . .onnel of-

FOUND: Smell brown Doch-

•hund mixed

S[C\JRITY

w....m morning h.... medium
aize. 38.000 BTU. U•• wllh
netur.l or LP I•· Auto"''tic
thermonat. E-=elltm concltlon.

wood 304-578-2707.

TDP CASH plld fu&lt; 113 mcdol
and nMer uHd c... Smith
Avo .. Galllpolio. Con 114-"I22S2.

Houaahold Goods

R•peerMi•m.,tod.., bnJsh
from under poww line M .Glen·

37!1-2801

C.ll 114-

51

SOCIAL

t9SO Spenon 14x70, 2 BR ., 2
bat hi:, el electric,. CA, WOOdbUrn•. 10x11 deck. 1h14
woad builclng. ~~ 114-24155028.
•

182-2148

MT or MLT ASCP . f .. time

~k.

Raeooon c .....

8ul011ilo Rd

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

Jult w.m to '"n 1 Urtla •tra
monev7 Or w~ld you Ike to
Mrta • c...,? Either Wfllf A ...on
c.n hllp y().l bathe bin you c..
belli Call MerWyn 'Ne. . .. 304-

fica- 304-175-4340. AA-£0E.

1-12!'89-tfn

9-L9-88 lin

9

LAFF-A·DAY

30 .. 87&amp;'1429.

Wanted To Buy

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

12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

f.,.,, pr.-ure coo..,•.

1.,.,.. drep•l• cknhing. much
more. 1 mn. out Send fUll Rd .
Sign e.

Lost and Found

992-5114

RACINE, OHIO

Ohio MdWIItVIrainlo. Booking
Au&lt;:tiono. 30._ n3-s785

linens.

pi00118urwood-ll---

GENERAL CONTRACTORS

W.Ve. Stllte Ch.-npion A~ ·
bon• . Rick "'••on.llee~,.ldln

vtsion cookwlrL chln1 eet.

6

Mobile Homes
for Sale

AV'ON eU • - I I Shk-ler &amp;p. .s.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Help Wanted

11

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ESTATE SALE. 9 A.M. Mw. 30.
31 . Apr. lot. Furnlturo. clot...

SHEET ............. S• lo 30• • ·
IRONY CAST ... 3• lo 20• lb.
ST AINLISS ................ 20' lb.

FACTORY CHOKE

3/ 31 / 88/ 1 mo,

~:~::.~l-m71fll -

1-100-421-3S3S

l Subjec I lo Change
Without Nali&lt;t)
n1 COPPER ............. 16• lb.
#2 COPPER............. W lb.
CLEAN ALUMINUM
SHEETS ..................... s2c lb.
CLEAN ALUMINUM
CAST- ...................... 40• lb.
ALUMINUM
BEVERAGE CANS ••••• SO• lb.
IRONY

1-31 ·'8B·1 mo.

St., Rutland, Oh.

614-992-5479

log.

Jon. 14, 1989

CALL 992·6681

SaliM

Ph.

Paying today

Fully Insured

742-2455

w. 2nd St..

'•m•oy, Ohio 45769

OPEN 7 DAYS

Rea~onable Rates,

•ZETOR TRACTORS
•HOWARD
ROTAVATORS
•MANNIS TILLERS
•INTERSTATE
BATTERIES
LAWN &amp; GARDEN
SUPPLIES

DRIYEWAYS &amp; ETC.

3·20-'88-1 mo.

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT

102

992-6506

PRIVATE HOME
CLEANING
SERVICE

· 2-L7-'81-I mo.

REPRUINTATIYI

DAVE'S ENGINE
REPAIR

· . 1-28-'88-tfn

....,.....,holt,awnor
Jnl St.. Syrvcu11, Oh.

JEFFERY J. WARNER

ETC .

319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, '!hio

LIMESTONE
HAULED

Giveaway

~::;:;:::::· :·:":';1~;;;;;;~;;~;;~;;;;;;~~~~~~-7-----Y-a_rd__Sa_~__~
rNo;u~~c 1 call:
MARCUM CONTRACTING- -------Gatrrpons-·----- -CHESTER, OHIO
,

2•.~.'89 lfn

CARTER'S

Friday, March' 31. 1989
4

Services Offered
PUBUC
RECYCUNG

Friday, March 31 , 1989

Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy

10- The Daily Sentinel

..

'·

' '

Upholstery

•

�'~

•

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

·conunued from page 1
the fire when he came home from work and Rutland and Salem
Township Fire Departments were called to the scene. Mrs.
Ward and their three children were not at home at the time.
The fire department used their drop tank and portable pumps
and pumped water from a nearby stream to extinguish the
flames .
There was insurance on the home the sheriff said.

Plan academic group
Aproximately 30 parents, teachers and administrators met
recently at Eastern High School to discuss the organization of
an Academic Boosters group.
Purpose of the group would be to promote improved academic
excellence in students throughout the district.
Charles Moore, principal of Eastern, chaired the meeting
which had been called as a result of definite interest expressed
in discussions with parents and staff.
After much discussion and many .~uggestions, it was decided
that a committee will be formed to work on directions for the
group and to serve a~ a nominating committee to propose a slate
of officers. Volunteers serving on the committee are Anna
McCoy, Nancy Larkins, Brian Manik, Dan Apling and John
Redovian.
The commitee will meet again Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the high
school library. Any persons.who desire input are encouraged to
attend that meeting, Moore said.

Cold front moves across Ohio Valley

The State Highway Patrol investigated a one car accident at
10:40 p.m. Thursday in Olive Township of Meigs County, on SR.
681, about four miles west of Reedsville.
Troopers said Dottle J. Deems, 37, Coolville, lost control on a
curve. Her car went off the road, striking a tree. Damage was
moderate. No one was Injured. There was no citation.

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

Two men were seriously in·
jured when the tornado struck an ·
office trailer at a construction
site between Jackson and Con-

---Area deathl--Clinton H. George

EMS has 11 Thursday calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 11 calls
Thursday; Rutland at 2:11 a.m. to Happy Hollow Road for
Rolland Smith to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:21
a.m. to Chester for Iva Rayburn to Holzer Medical Center;
Syracuse at 7:42 a.m. to State Route 124 for Danny Canter to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 11 a.m. treated
Esther Nellum at the scene of a car fire on State Route 7;
Pomeroy at 11:36 a.m. to Lasley St. for Norma Goodwin to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 11: 56 a.m. to
State Route 681 for Marlene Rhodes to Camden-Clark
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 1: 13 p.m. to Trouble Creek Road
for Mary K;erns to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
4:17p.m. to an auto accident on Main St. for Jessica Hamilton
who refused treatment; Rutland at 6:15p.m. to a structure fire
at the Ward residence on Jacks Road; Salem Township Fire
Department was also called to the fire; RRutland at 8:33p.m.
transported Cindy Smith from an auto accident at Salem Center
to Holzer Medical Center. Pomeroy at 9:01 p.m. transported
Stanford Cox from an auto accident on Nye Ave. to Veterans
·
Memorial Hospital.

Fifty-six cases proc~sed
in Meigs court this week
M~idsvilie, W.Va., $26 and ·costs;
Albert Martin, Pomeroy, $23 and
costs; Gilbert Thornton, Red
House, W.Va., $21 and costs;
John R. Burkhammer, Vincent,
$21 and costs;. Mark L. Lusk,
State College, Pa., $25 and costs; .
. David M. Arciells, North Canton,
$23 and costs; Lawrence E.
Nelson, Charleston, W.Va., $27
and costs; Roger L. Brown,
Columbia City, Ind., $25 and
costs; Shannon L. Stewart, Mid·
dieport, $30 and costs; Frank C.
Otremba, Canton, $20 and costs;
Charles C. Sullivan, West Columbia, W.Va.,$23andcosts; Robert
L. Ritchie Jr., Racine, $25 and
costs; Matthew Simon, Sciotoville, $23 and costs; Gloria Oiler,
Langsville, $22 and costs; David
E. Young, Elkhart, Ind., $24 imd
costs; Christopher Cruze, Eaton,
U5 ud costs; Edward Boley,
South Point, $23 and costs;
Janice Lee VanMeter,· Middleport, $22 and costs; George
Robinson, Belpre, $21 and costs;
Robert E. Davis, Langsville, $21
and costs.
Forfeiting bonds in county
court were Kenneth Hall, McConnelsville, $55; James W. Cobb,
Vienna, W.Va., $50; John D.
Large, Parkersburg, W.Va., $55;
Antiat R. Mehling, Louisville,
Ky., $55; L. J. Manyak Jr.,
Gallipolis, $55; John F. Lea berry, Huntington, .W.Va., $55;
Joyce A. Smith, Scott Depot,
W.Va., $55; James R. Dieas, El
Dorado, Az.,$55, ali for speeding.
Bonds were also forfeited· by
Martin E . Jennings, Caldwell,
$20, no seat belt; Charles C.
Sullivan, West Columbia, W.Va.,
$40, no seat belt; Robert J.
Lawrence, Long Bottom, $50,
failure to ~ontrol.

Severe thunderstorms moved
tornado destroyed a barn and
through
the Norfolk, Va., area,
hurled one tree Into a house,
causing minor damage. The and several buildings were damaged or destroyed by strong
tornado came from thunderthunderstorm winds near Como,
storms that moved through the
state and northern Florida, the N.C., and In the port Haywood
area. Va.
NWS said.
Record-breaking
heat suffoTornadoes also were seen over
cated southern Texas with the tePrairie and Woodruff counties In
merature climbing to 102 degrees
central Arkansas, and trailers
at Corpus Christi.
were overturned when a storm
The flood watch over northripped through Hickory Plains,
central
New York state was due
Ark. Tornadoes also were rethreat
of heavy rain'along
to
the
Authorities said at least 10 . ported at Des Arc, Ark., and at
with a rapid melting of snow.
other people were Injured, In· Cotton Plant, Ark.
There was flooding already In
In Conway, Ark ..• strong thuneluding two other men In the
office trailer and an 81-year-old derstorm winds caused a tree 4 northern Vermont with several
roads closed near Cambridge
woman whose mobile home was feet in diameter to snap and fall
and Jeffersonville, the NWS
lifted from its foundation and · onto a house. Hail larger than
reported.
hurled across a yard onto a golf balls dented cars and trailWintry weather was not yet
parked car.
ers in Lonoke County, east of
finished as snow, sleet and rain
A thunderstorm in northwest· Little Rock.
ern Alabama created a tornado
No injuries were reported in ·fell over much of northern New
England.
near the town of Hodges late any of the tornadoes.
Thursday but no injuries were
reported, the NWS said. Earlier
Thursday, tornadoes and fierce
winds also ripped through Geo.rand 50.
By United Press International
gia and Arkansas, causing some
Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio
property damage.
Sunday through Tuesday
Tonight: Wet snow or snow
Witnesses near the southwestFair Sunday, with a chance of
flurries ending, with some acern Georgia town of Cairo said a
cumulation possible. Lows will showers Monday and Tuesday.
be in the upper 20s. Winds Highs will range from the upper
northwest 10 to 20 mph. Chance of 40s to the upper 50s Sunday and
mostly in the 60s Monday and
snow is 80 percent.
Saturday: Partly cloudy dur- Tuesday. Early morning lows
Yeager of Centenary and Ruth
ing the morning and pecoming will be In the upper 20s or the 30s
Ann Coble of Akron; several
mostly sunny during the after- Sunday, between 35 and 45
grand and great-grandchildren;
noon. Highs will be between 45 Moqday, and In the 40s Tuesday.
two brothers, Don George of
Lancaster, Ohio and Wendall
George of Bidwell; and one
sister, Laurlyn Russell of
SATURDAY: 7 pc. Dinette Set, Reg. S18S .............. S9995
Columbus.
He was preceded in death by
MONDAY: No Tax Day •••••••••••• We Pay Tax For You
four brothers and three sisters.
TUESDAY: Sofa Bed/loveseat, Reg. S209 ........... S16SOO
Servcies will be conducted 1
p.m. Sunday from McCoy-Moore
WEDNESDAY: All Glassware ........................... l 0% OFF
Funeral Home in Vinton, tHe
FRIDAY: FIHr Wax Packs ......................................... 69&lt;
Rev. Ralph Spires officiating.
AlSO IUYING USED FURNITURE &amp; ANTIQUES
Burial follows in Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the funeral
222 East Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
home Saturday, 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
to 9 p.m.
way. The twister picked the
trailer up and blew It onto U.S.
158.
Fred Butler, 66, of Conway was
listed In serious but stable
condition Friday In the intensive
care unit at Nash General
Hospital In Rocky Mount. Lawrence E. Pope, 68, ofRichSquare
was in serious condition at
Halifax Memorial Hospital in
Roanoke Rapids.

By United Press International
Severe thunderstorms pelted
the South Friday after spinning
off tornadoes that injured at least
12 people In North Carolina.
The thunderstorms developed
along a cold front curving
through the Ohio Valley, the
Tennessee Valley and the lower
Mississippi Valley .
The storms produced severe
weather in Arkansas, Tennessee,
Missouri, Kentucky, Mississippi,
the Carolinas and Virginia
Thursday night.
A tornado that slashed through
Northhampton County, N.C ., just
before dark Thursday Injured at
least 12 people, two of them
seriously, and ripped the roof off
an elementary school in Jackson.
•'The whole roof of the school is
off the school and it rained a lot,"
a dispatcher for the Northhampton County Sheriff's Department
said of the damage at Eastside
Elementary School. "It's a

mess."

Patrol probes one accident

Fifty-six cases were processed
this week in Meigs County Court
according to information released by Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Fined were Harry E. Lee,
Shade, $300 and costs, six months
·in jail suspended to 10 days, 120
license suspension, DWI; $100
and costs, 30 days in jail
suspended to 10 days, driving
under the influence; Robert D.
Miller, Racine, $300 and costs, 30
days In jail suspended to three
days. 60 day license suspension,
DWI; Mark A. Holter, $250 and
costs, three days in jail, 60 day
license suspension, OWl; $25 and
costs, failure to control; Hobart
Templeton. Pomeroy, $100 and
costs, six months in jail suspended to seven days, one year
probation, costs, no valid opera·
tor's license; Paul R. Steinmetz
Sr., RaciJW, UOO lind ca&amp;ts,
suspended jail sentence upon
proof of valid license, no operator's license; $25 and costs,
restitution ordered, passing bad
checks; $25 and costs, expired
plates; Dwight D. Hill, Racine,
$75 and costs, three days in jail
suspended upon proof of valid
motorcycle endorsement, no motorcycle endorsement; . Barbara
Rupe, Pomeroy, $75 and costs,
jail sentence suspended upon
proof of valid operator's license,
expired operator's . license;
Cindy L. Hayes, Pomeroy, $75
and costs, 30 days In Jail
suspended upon proof of valid
operator's license, no valid operator's license; $25 and costs,
failure to control; Dennis Tolley.
Pageville, $75 and costs. 30 days
in jail suspended to six days, one
year probation, no operator's
license.
Robert G. Vaughn, Belpre, $15
and costs and restitution ordered
on two charges of passing bad
checks; Benjamin Carroll, Racine, $20 and costs. disorde.rly
conduct; James P. Wells, Long
Bottom, $40 and costs. reckless
operation; Johnni K. Harrison,
Rutland, $15 and costs, unsafe
vehicle; Joanne Clem; Belpre,
$10 and costs. assured clear
distance; Ray L. Frazier, Crown
Cit'Y, $10 and costs, stop sign
violation; Rockle R. Napier,
Columbus, $20 and costs, tint
violation; Timothy Litchfield,
Crown City, $20 and costs, no seat
belt; Erek Daniels, Rutland, $20
and costs, tint violation; Katrina
Hayes, Racine, $10 and costs,
failure to yield; John E . Foreman, . Syracuse, $10 and costs,
assured clear distance; Joyce
Medley, Racine, $10 and costs,
stop sign violation; Delbert Sanders, Albany, $10 and costs, unsafe
vehicle; Jacob E. Schuler, Pomeroy, $25 and costs, restitution
ordered, passing bad checks;
Jerry Thompson, Reedsville, $20
and costs, tint violation.
Fined for speeding were Ar·
nold M. Grate, Rutl(lnd, $23 and
costs; Arlana Ullsa, Athens, $23
and costs; Donald Gunnoe,

Friday. March 31, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

--Local news briefs... - - -

. :- ;

Clinton Hershel George, 83, of
Route 1 Ewington, died at his
residence on Thursday. He was a
retired carpenter and farmer. He
attended Number 10 Baptist
Church in Wellston.
Born Dec. 25, 1905 in Gallia
County, he was a son of the late
Eimer E. and Bertha Spires
George.
Surviving are his wife, Hester
Melissa Stover George; three
sons, Hershel George of Balti·
'
more,
Ohio, James George and
Myron George of Ewington;
three daughters, Mildred
Farmer of Pomeroy, Carolyn

MARTIN'S FURNITURE AND MORE

Four ...
Continued from page 1
stealing of cigarettes from the
Sup!'rAmerica service station.
Taylor's charge is grand theft
because he has a prior theft
conviction, Story said.
Charles McClOud Jr., Middleport, also with a prior conviction,
was indicted on grand theft
stemming from an incident about
Feb. 21 in which a tool box and
tools were stolen from Bob
Caruthers.
The grand theft ·c harges are
fourth degree felonies.
Arraigments for the four men
who were indicted have been
scheduled for Wednesday before
Meigs Common Pleas Judge
Fred Crow III.

Name cont811 winner
Susie McKay of Racine was the
winner of the Meigs County Soil
and Water Conservation District
mystery farm contest. She successfully identified the farm as
that of Roger Beegle located on
County Road 35 between Racine
and Portland to win the $5 prize
from The Dally Sentinel.

Benjamin J. Sol, M.D.

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.) ·
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Obstetrics &amp; Gynecology

Am Electric Power ............. 26%
AT&amp;T ............................... ::311AJ
Ashland Oil .......... .............. 40%
Bob Evans ........................... 15
Charming Shoppes .............. 15'Vs
City Holding Co ............. :·:.... 18
Federal Mogul... ................. 52%
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .48%
Heck's ................................. ~
Key Centurion .................... 13~
Lands' End ......................... 351AJ
Limited Inc ........................ 28~
Multimedia Inc ................... 86~
Rax Restaurants .................. 2'Vs
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 15¥8
Shoney's Inc ........................ 8*
Wendy's Intl ........................ 6%
Worthlqgton lnd ................. 21%
(Channing Shoppes Is ex dlvi·
dend today)

Suite 215
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building

Now Accepting Patients
•

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

(304) 675-3400

lk.J PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
IVl The Family of profeSlionols
Point Plea~a~~t, WV 255!10

•

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions
Norma Goodwin, Pomeroy;
Stanford Cox, Gallipolis.
Thursday discharges - Mi·
chelle Barrett, ftandall Harri·
son, Rea Roush, Debbie Coffey.

Lottery numbers
PICK-3
267
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,336.895.
PICK-4
8970.

1977 El Camino .................. S1495

...

Auto. st111dard.

1983 Ford Escort ............... S1295
Auto. Air.

1980

Ch~vy

2 door. auto .• a1r.

Shoney's Soup, Salad and Pruit Bar is new again. You'll fmd new fruits,
v~getables and dressings on the bar. Come in to Shoney's this week and
build the perfect salad.

Citation ............ S995

1979 Ford F-180 ............... S1895

CharbroJJ.ccl dinners startlna at $4.99
Looking for an economical way to ftll up? Stop by Shoney's for dinner this
week and choose from our 5 featured charbroiled dinners starting at $4.99.

Auto .• PS, PB. Topper.

1981 Cadillac ElDorado..... $419 5

Loaded. Nice clean car.

I

'

(

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