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                  <text>Ohio

Middleport
eout1 news

SURE SIGN - Yoa kaow the bolcbly seaaonls
oftlclally here whea tile SIIOwflakes s&amp;art to Oy In
tile reconler's office Ia the Melp County
Coutboue. Employees Kay Hill, on coaater, and
,JIIQ Kine, a&amp; rJcllt, and Melp County Recorder
Emmocene Coap, center, hunc the paper

David Per sons of West Coluni·
bla, W. Va. was fined on six
charges when he appeared Wed·
nesclay night In the court of
Middleport Ma y or Fred
Ho!fmaa .
Persons was tined $425 and
costs and sentenced to three days
In jail on a charge of OWl; $10
and costs, operating a motorcy·
cle without eye protection, $10
and costs, expired lags on a
motorcycle; $25 and costs, no
operator's license; $50 and costs,
menacing threats, and $25 and
costs, disorderly manner.
.
Also fined on multiple charges
was David 'E . Watkins. Middleport, $25 and costs, no operator's
Ucenses, $25 and costs, dlsor·
derly manner, and $425 and costy
and three days In jail on a charge
o! DWI.
Gall E . Thoma, Long.Bottom,
entered a plea of not guilty to lour
charges filed against her and
they wUI be transferred tocounty
court. The charges are DWI,
weaving course, running ·a red
light, and allowing an unlicensed
person to operate a motorcycle.
Others fined In the court all on
charges of running stop signs
were Margaret A. Landers, Mid·
dleport, $10 fine only, Sharon K.
Lone, Point Pleasant, $10 and
costs, Mary Mullins, Bidwell, $10
fine only.
Forfeiting bonds In ·the court
were Donald H. Bolen, Jackson,
· $~. stop sign violation; Tamara
Y. Hayes, West Columbia, W.
Va., $460; DWI; $190, driving·
under suspension; George John·
son, Mason, $52, speeding; Jo·
seph L. Thompson, Cheshire, $50,
speeding; Pete Oliver, MI. Alto.
W. Va., $54. speeding; and
Michael L. CelU, Pomeroy, $460,
DWI.

saowllakes oa WedaesdQ mclnlac. The IDOW·
Oakes are a tradition Ia Conp' • office which
started several years ap. The paper 'flakes are
saved !rom year to year with 1.,.1 • lew aew
additions here and there eaeh holiday season.

Stocks
--Local news briefs ...- -... Dally
stock prices
Continued !rom page 1
no appointment necessary . Residents are encouraged to take
advantage of the service which will not be offered again until the
second week of January.

.

ODOT helps 'tie-one-on'
MARIETTA - '.'Tie one on" will take on new meaning tor
many state employees this holiday season, The Ohio
Department of Transpor tation (ODOT) and other state
agencies are joining with Mothers Against Drunk Driving
(MADD) and numerous local organlzat Ions to reduce d~unk
driving this holiday season.
·
Gov. Richard F . Celeste is sponsoring the "Tie-One-On For
Safety" campaign lor all state agencies, to .demonstrate
support lor a less viole.nt season by choosing not to drink and
drive.
The campaign encourages cillz!!ns to lie weatherproof red
ribbons to a vehicle's left door handle, side view mirror or
antenna to serve as a reminder not to drink and drive.
In 1988, 1, 748 people were kUled In vehicle crashes in Oliio. Of
those, 766 were killed In alcohol-related crashes and 29,262 were
Injured due to Impaired driving. Vehicle crashes are the leading
cause of death for young Ohioans ages 16-35.
OOOT Director Bernard B. Hurst, P.E., joins Gov. Celeste in
asking all OOOT employees to display their commitment to this
campaign, thereby creating a safer highway system for au•
Ohioans.
·
Ribbons may be obtained at the Meigs County ODOT garage
located on State Route 7 at Ches.ter.

(As ollO: 38 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .. .... ... .. .. 30'l1
AT&amp;T ..... .. ... .., ....... .. .... ........ 43
Ashland 011 .................... ... .36¥.!
Bob Evans .. .. ... .... .... .: .......... 14
Charming Shoppes .: .... ........10¥.!
City Holding Co ........... ....... 141{,
Federal Mogul... .. ........... .. ... 20
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... .......... ... 46\&lt;i
Heck's .... ............... ........ ...... 4%
Key Centurion .......... .... ...... 14\&lt;i
Lands' End ...... .... ..... .. ........ 26\&lt;i
Limited Inc ..... ... ..... ... ... .. .... 33
Multimedia Inc . ... .... ., .... .. .. .. 92
· Rax Restaurants ..... ........ ..... 2\ii
Robbins &amp; Myers ............. .... 15
Shoney's Inc.. .... ... ... :.... ...... 12%
Star Bank ........ .......... ... ...... 20%
Wendy's Inti. ....... .. ...... .. ..., . .4¥.
Worthington Ind ........ ..........24ll
(Charm me Shoppes Inc.'s November sales rose lour percent.
Umlted lac.'a Ncivemher sales
rose 14 'percent.)

L-------------------------------~
, ~0

--Area deaths-raye Robie
Faye (Taylor) Roble, 74, of
Mesa, Ariz., died Monday in
Mesa.
She was born on May 23, 1915 in
Cbeshlre Township, daughter of
lhe late Fred and Maud &lt;Lem·
ley) Taylor.
She was preceded In death by
ber'husband, Everett Roble; one
son and two brothers.
. Survivors . include one son,
jobn Roble of Mesa; three
daughters. Mrs. Clarice Jarvis,
Mrs. Juanita Harrison and Mrs .
Shirley Oxyer, all of Cheshire; 11
grandchildren, 12 great·
grandchildren, two sisters, Mrs.
Pearl Carsey of Pomeroy and
Mrs. Margaret Morehouse of
Mesa; three brothers, Paul Tay.
lor of Rutland, Fred Taylor of
Gallipolis and Alex Taylor of
Mesa.
Services were held today at
Bunkers Garden Chapel in Mesa.
Burial was held in Mesa.

three grandchildren, six great
grandchildren, and one sister,
Mrs . Gladys Mowrey. Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
In addition to her parents she
was preceded in death by her
husband, James A. Gilbert In
June 1968, by a brother, Elwyn
Yost, and by a sister, Hilda
French.
Friends may call on Friday
!rom 5·8 p.m. at the Bolin
Funeral Home, 1271 Blue Ave.,
Zanesville, where . the funeral
wlll follow at 8 p.m. Pastor John
Edwards, of the Coburn United
Methodist Church will officiate.
Graveside services and burial
will be held Saturday at 1 p.m . In
Zanesville Memorialfark.
The Snyder Funeral Home in
Lexington is handling the
arrangements.

Vera Gilbert
Vera H. Gilbert, 84, 3862
Needham Road, RD 9, Lexlng·
ton. died Wednesday afternoon In
Grlf!etb Nursing Home In Mans·
field following an extended
Ulness.
Born June 5, 1905\n Syracuse to
the late Charles and Mary Miller
Yost. she was a homemaker.
Mrs . Gilbert spent most of her
life In South Zanesville before
moving ID Le;~dngton eight years
ago.
.
She Is survived by a son,
Howard J. Gilbert, Lexington;

One player picks
f6 million jackpot
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
player picked all six numbers In
Ohio's :;Iuper Lotto game Wed- .
al!llday nlJbl, becoming eligible
to claim the Sli mUIIon jackpot.
The namer of the player will be
annouaced after the winning
tkket Is redeemed, a lottery
spokeSman said Thursday. The
wlnniDg numbers were 9, 14, 22,
25, 29 and 39.

Licences issued
A mar,r lage license has been
Issued in Meigs Probate, Court to
William Robert Myers, 33, and
Melissa Jayne Longstreth, 21,
both of Langsville.
·

Forecl~ure sought
A foreclosure action has been
filed In Meigs Common Pleas
Court by Cbemlcal Mortgage
Company, Columbus, against
Cheryl Lynn Powell, formerly
known as Cheryl Colligan
Kropka. Middleport, et al.

EMS has six calls

Shop early,
shop locally

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East Main StrHt, Racine, Ohio

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MIDDLEPOn DEPT. STOlE
Will Be Open This Friday
Dec. 1, and Every Friday
Thereafter Until

SOFAS,
LOYESIATS,
SEC1101WS,

IEOitiEIS,
IOQEI/

IKUNEIS
lntflhl•w
Flllriu IIIII

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•Anplle GOkey •Ethel Lowery
•Emma Lou Davl8

Hoapital news
-v-.... MemGrlal

Wednelday admissions -Lyle
Baker, Racine; John G. Hayes,
Middleport.
Wednesday discharges pauy Jones, Frederica Faris,
Lee BIIIJ, John Loscar, Forrest
Teaford, Debora Michael.

I

-

President Bush arrives for
Malta meet with Gorbachev

Qualifications listed
for ODNR program

~IIlilS.

OPEN HOUSE WINNERS

A routine DUI arrest late vehicle Into the pollee cruiser were notified thai a person
Thursday afternoon In Mlddle- whim Bird resisted and fied on answeringBird'sdescrl'ptlonhad
portevolved into a car theft and a foot. After radioing lor assist· been at a nearby service station.
A passing river tug fronr G&amp;C
search for the thief by authorities ance, Hall, also on loot, went In
!rom Meigs and Ga!Ua Counties. pursuit of Blrtl. The suspect ran Towing was contacted and used
· According to Information !rom lnlnthewoods,thenclrcledback, Its llJhts to assist authorities In
Middleport Pollee Chief Sid Lit· jumped lnln the pollee cruller searc~lng the river bank, but
tie and Meigs Sheriff James M. and drove away with lights Bird could not be found.
In addition to Middleport Po·
Souls by, Middleport Officer flaahlng. According to reports,
the
cruiser
went
up
Story's
Run
!Ice
and the Meigs and Gallla
Ryan Hall had stopped 33-year·
Road
and
SQOn
after
was
found
Sheriffs
Depar,tments, Pomeroy
old Ritchie Allen Bird, of Point
abandoned just below ·the Kyfler po11ce, and the Ohio Highway
Ple~nt, W.Va. , onPowellSt.ln
'
. Patr:9l ·~re.· Involved In the.
• )vli_dit)eport. at about ~ 30 p.rn. Creek Plant-on Route 7.
,,~Jillnl
Wllll'
.IPQited
by
Sh""'
~.......,frill:
BIJ'd.
,. .
yesten:1f~Y; .., • ...,.....
'~~, · ..
... Dr.
'
'
SOtilliby near the bridge on
:\(i-iitllltlday momlng, he sltll
M. Levine, Polllt PleaHall arrested Bird for DUI and Campaign Creek at · Addison, had no\ been located, Chief Little
1811i, a surceon, hu been
was assisting hbn from his own after Ga!Ua County authorities reported. He has however been
named to the Auoclate Medl·
charged In Middleport Mayor's
. cal Staff at V~erans MemorCourt with DUI, and charged In
1~ Hospital.
Meigs County Court with theft of
the pollee car. West VIrginia
authorities have been given a
copy of the arrest warrant lor
Bird, Sheri!! Soulsby reported.
Chief Little said Bird may have
an exuberant Bush said that jumped lnln the pollee cruiser by
VALLETTA , Malta (UP!) President Bush arrived Friday superpower relations "have m !stake, thinking II was hls own
for his first summit with Soviet changed greatly and clearly car.
have changed lor the better.''
leader Mikhail Gorbachev as
''This meeting represents a
White
House
officials
monitored
Jack M. Levl.ne, D. 0 ., Point
point
of departure - the begin·
an
attempted
coup
against
Phi·
Pleasant, W.Va., a surgeon, has
n
log
of a process as full of
llpplne
Presld~nt
Corazon
been named to the Associate
promise
as any that we'.ve
Medical Staff at Veterans Mem· Aquino.
known,"
he
told a Rose Garden
Bush authorized U.S. military
orlal Hospital in Pomeroy.
A native of the Bronx In New assistance to the Phlllppine go- . gathering, pobltlng to the ex·
traordlnary political chapges
York. Dr. Levine attended the vernment early Friday while
State University of New York at traveling to Malta aboard Air transforming communist reApplications for both HEAP
Brockport studying research, Force One and U.S. lighter jets gimes In Eastern Europe lnln
free
societies.
were
providing
alr
support
as
and
Emergency HEAP continue
1974-1976. In 197lj, he received his
"Ours
Is
a
powerful
and
loyal
troops
battled
rebel
forces
to
be
accepted at the GaiUa·
bachelor's degree In biological
hlslnrlc
opportunity
made
possl·
In
Manna
.
Meigs Community Action
science at the University . of
ble by a continuing American Agency In Cheshire,
"We'·re doing what's required
SOuthern California In Los An·
geles. Levine received his Doctor of us and we' re hopeful that the co!llmltmentto the alliance and the GaiUa Satellite office, 220
o! Osteopathic Medicine Degree matter will be contained," Bush Its defense," he said, adding that Jackson Pike, Galllpolls, and at
from the ~ew York Co Uege' of told reporters alter landing in the the last decade of this century the Meigs Satellite office, 39350
"marks the beginning of a new Union Ave., Pomeroy.
Os teopalhy Medicine In Old Mediterranean Island nation.
· The HEAP application dead·
White House spokeman Marlin era."
Westbury In 1982.
He did his Internship at the
Fitzwater told reporters aboard
line Is Jan. 31, 1990. The Emer·
Detroit Osteopathic Hospital and
gency HEAP application period
the aircraft carrier USS Forres·
the HI-Community Hospital In tal that "no Americans have
continues throughout the pr().
Warren, Mich. In 1983 followed by
gram heating season ending
been put at risk," adding, "If
a residency In general surgery at Indeed the tide Is turning, per·
March 30, 1990.
the same two hospitals from 1984 haps there woul!ln't be any need
Both programs provide heal·
!ng assistance to households
through 1988.
lor any further Intervention."
In addition he has done course
whose total Income is below 150
Bush administration officials
VALLETTA, Malta (UP!) work In trauma, a bdomlnal and said Gen. Colin Powell, chairpercent of the poverty level
pelvic anatomy, diseases of the man :of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, President Blish will host the guideline.
pancreas, general surgery, and
The annual Income tor both
was authorized to use U.S. war economic summit of the seven
post-operative management. His
planes to thwart the mosl serious Western Industrial nations In programs Is the same, however,
areas of professional Interest of seven coup attempts against Houston. Texas, July 9·11, a the HEAP application requests
Include general surgery, trauma·
the nearly 4-year-old Aquino spoke~~man announced Friday.
12 monthy Income while the
White House press secretary Emergency Heap state regUla·
tology,gynecologlc surgery, and government. No ground troops
critical care medicine.
were Involved, While House Marlin Fitzwater said Bush has lions provide a choice of using the
designated Frederic V. Malek to past three, or 12 months Income,
Dr. Levine who Is also on the officials said.
·
staff at Pleasant Valley Hospital
"We're providing air cover. serve as director of the summit, which can qualify some appll·
and his wife, Allison, reside at That •s what we've been asked with the personal rank of ambas· cants for Emergency HEAP
for," ·said Secretary o! State sador, to over~ the staging of only. Examples could be house-.
Route 2. Point Pleasant.
holds experiencing drastic In~,
James Baker, who was In Malta the summit meeting.
Malek, president of Northwest come cuts during the past three
lor the superpower summit.
Baker said the Philippine air AlrUnes, was a top campaign months due to Illness, Injury,
force "II evidently supporting aide to Bush In 1988 and formerly unemployment or retirement.
The objective of the Emer·
the rebels. The army Is sttll served as White House personnel
The Ohio Department of Natu· supporting Aquino lor the mo- director In the Nixon era.
gency HEAP program Is to
ral Resources, Division of Recla· . ment. It's lair ID say the situation
Bush also picked Richard I. resolve healing prices created by
matlon, operates a reforestation Is serious."
McCormack, undersecretary o! disconnection, threat of dlscon·
program lor the establishment of
Bush, speaking with reporters state lor economic and agrlcultu· nectlon or a bulk fuel supply of
new forests on abandoned. strip In Malta, said Vice President rat affairs, to be his personal less than 10 days.
mine land. ln order to be ellglble ·&gt; Dan Quayle telephoned Aquino representative to prepare poUcy
Assistance can only be authothe area beinl considered must:
rized for either the primary
and she was "very grateful for aspects of the summit.
1. Have beea mined lor coal or the call and very grateful for the
The summit meeting bas taken heating source or the secondary
IDdustrlal materials prlor to 1972. assistance and seemed to be on a new Importance wltb the heating soun:e If It Is required to
2. Have no likely . remlning ·confident. But that was a couple collapse of most of the commu· operate the primary .
potential.
Aul8 tance for each program II
ntst re~ 1D Eaatern Europe
of hours ago.''
3. Have had erosion or off site
Alr Force One touched down on and a stroDJ bid by Soviet limited to once per heating
sedimentation problems.
a raln·silck tarmac at the biter· Preildent Mikhail Gorbachev to season.
4. Be barren or devoid of national airport on the Medlter· join Western financial alliances.
For additional lnformatton,
The alUed leaders atteadinl call the Cheshire office at 367·
vegetation sufficient to control ranean llland nation at 9:43a.m.
er..lon.
under a steact'raln and overcast ' represeat Great Britain, France, 7341 or 992-6629, the Gallla
Specially Inoculated pine,
Italy, West Germany, Canada, Outreach office, at 446-0611, or
skies.
hardwood and woody ahrub seeIn remarks upon hl8 departure . Japan and the European , Eco- the Meigs Outreach office at
992-5605.
.
!rom
the White House Thursday, nomic Community.
(Continued on Page 10)

Bush announces
economic summit
slated for Houston

watts
• Fits under cabinet

$229

spree largely caused by generous
manufacturers sales Incentives.
"The . evidence suggests that
the economy Is losing steam, "
said Robert Dederick, chief
economist with Northern Trust
Co. In Chicago. " You look around
and it's hard to lind any pluses In
the economy ."
The department also reported
that Its Index of Coincident
Indicators, designed to track
current economic conditions, ·
was unchanged In October after a
0.1 percent decline In September.
The Index of Lagging Indica·
tors, In tended to track pas I
economic conditions, rose 0.4
percent Iii October after falling
by 0.4 percent In September. ·

Applications
for HEAP
still available

HUGE 46 JNCII SCIIE(N

PIINCUS lOLL-TOP DESK

all index !ell at an annual rate of
0.4 percent for the first 10 months
of 1989 compared will! a 3.8
percent annual rate of gain In the
same period In 1988, reflecting an
overall slowing In the nation's
economy this year.
Earlier this week, the department reported that economic
growth was a moderate 2. 7
percent during the July·
September quarter, but there
have been clear signs that
On the plus side, the number of expansion will be slight If at all in ·
new building permits Issued was the fourth quarter, Including a
hlgqer, the nation's money sharp decline In manu'tacturtng
supply Increased, sensitive . employment.
The automobile Industry has ·
mater lals prices rose, orders lor
plant and equipment were up and been particularly weak recently .
with sales plummeting In the fall
stock prices climbed.
The department said the over· after a summertime buying

tors were a sharp Increase In
weekly unemployment claims
and a shortening of the average
work week among manu!actur·
lng workers.
· Also pushing the Index down
were a drop In unfllled manufacturers orders, a decline in
consumer confidence, faster delivery of products by vendors and
a drop In new orders for consu·
mer goods.

Point Pleasant man charged
with DUI flees with cruiser

'
Dr.-Levine
joins hospital
staff here

Cable Roady
hmote Control

VHS Formal

Stecial

·~

19" REMOTE
COLOR TV

Remote · 2 Hoo~•

J

WASHINGTON (UPl) -The
·government reported Friday
that Its primary gauge of future
economic activity declined 0.4
percent In October, a sign of. a
possible rocky road ahead for the
nation's already slowing
economy.
The drop In the Index of
Leading Indicators, Intended to
predict f'conomlc performance
six ID nine months In advance,
follows consecutive gains of 0.3
percent and 0.6 percent In Sep·
tember and August.
Six of the 11 indicators ·that
make up the Index were down In
the October survey, reflecting
. particular weakness In the na·
lion's manufacturing sector.
The bl~est neeatlve contrlbu·

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to.

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25 Cento
A Multimlldia Inc. New apaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 1, 1989

Leading indicators drop 0.4 %

BAND PARTICIPATJON PLAQUES - Eastero, Meigs ·aad
So"lhern High Schools will receive plaque• from tile Ml~eport
and Pomeroy Chambers of Commerce · la appreciation for
participating In Sunday's Christmas parade. Here Tamara
Hayman, field commander, accepts a plaque (rom Dick Owen,
Middleport chamber presldent,loUowlag Wednesday's ~neunce­
ment ol the trophy winners. Representa&amp;lve!l of Melp·and ~tern
bands were not present.
·

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leg. $279 SALE

Low loalpt Ia mid lh.
Cloudy Slturday. Hlp In low
th. ChiiiiCe of preclpltatloa te

0036

No.144
Copyri hted 1989

hall on Tuesday. 6 p.m. lor a
potluck dinner. There will be a $3
gift exchange. Officers are to
wear chapter dresses .

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703
Pidt4

Vot.40.

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Pick 3

•

____ Meigs announcement _ _ __
To meet Tuesday
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, wlll meet in
. regular session at the Chester

24

percent.

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Six calls for assistance were
answered on Wednesday by units
of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services.
At 1:02 a.m., the Chester ·Fire
Department was called a hay tire
on Sand Ridge Road. CIR!ster
Fire Department was called to
Lovers Lane Road at 2:03 a.m.
tor another hay (Ire.
Racine at 8: 32 a.m. was called
to Bridgeman St. for Jean Hall to
Holzer Medical Center.
At Rutland at9: 02 a.m. went to
McCumber Hill Road for Evelyn
McCasky to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
At 3: 07 p.m. , Pomeroy trans·
ported Laura Pickens from the
· Amerlcare-Pomeroy . Nursing
Center to Veterans Memorial
'.
Hospital.
At 7:30 p.m., Mlddle)X&gt;rt went
to South Third Ave. for John
Hayes who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Ohio U.ttery

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y

SYRACUSE POSTMASTER RETIRJ!iS - Marcaret Cotterill,
right, has retired as postmaster of the SyracuiM! Post Office. On
Thursday, her last official day, she handed the keys over to aew
postmaster, Wayne Venham. Cotterill started In the postal
business on Jaa.ll, 19116, and was appolnted9CJ8bnaster onJan.13,
1979. She will be honored with an open bolW! at the Presbyterian
Church annex In Syracuse on Sunday ·f rom U p.m .

U.S. to assist Aquino
in
Philippines,
cruis ·.
..
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'

MANILA, Philippines (UPI)Renegade troops strafed the
presidential palace friday and
seized three garrisons In the
seventh atten!pt to topple Presl·
dent Coraz(ln Aquino, prompting
the United States to assist Aquino
with fighter jets.
President Bush granted the
support request from the Philippine leader while aboard Air
Force One heading to his summit
In the Mediterranean near Malta
with Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev.
"AI the request of President
Aquino, the president has authorized U.S. mlli);ary asslstan~e to
the government of the PhiliP:
pines In defending Itself against a
coup attempt," the White House
said In a statement Issued early
Friday.
Aquino . said U.S. fighte r jets
"would give air cover to our
ground troops."
''This should complete the·
annihilation of the air assets of
the rebel forces." she said.
' Jerry' Huchel, an official at the
U.S. Embassy In Manila, said,
' 'U.S. planes have been In the air
over Manila, but I have not heard
of any engagements."
News reports said U.S. F -4
Phantom jets blasted fo~r rebel

aircraft and blew up the rue!
dump at the former U;S. alr
station at Sangley Point In Cavlte
province. east of Manila. The jets
screamed overhead In the capital
on undisclosed missions.
The Phlllppines are of vital
strategic Importance to the Unltell States In th~ Far East. The
United States maintains two
major bases in the Philippines Sublc Naval Base, and Clark Air
Base, home o! the 13th Air Force .
and the largest American air
base oulslde the continental
United States.
The Red Cross said at least 15
people. Including six soldiers,
were killed In the Intense fight·
lng. More than 50 others, mostly
Qystanders, were wounded.
.
Aquino, 56, In statement Issued
to reporters at mkl·alternoon
said, "The advantages are still
ours in the conflict" and said her
forces were consolidating · In
preparation tor a "major push.''
Earlier Friday, minutes after
addressing the nation by televl·
sion, a rebel helicopter bomb!!d
the station. knocking the ·only
functioning private television
station, Channel9. ott the air and
wounding several civilians.
The chopper then llred rockets
Continued on page 10

....--. Local ·news briefsHobson man held; charges pending
Johnny Ratliff, 23, Hobson, is confined to the Middleport jail
pending filing of several charges resulting from fleeing from an
. officer late Thursday night.
According to ~ld Little. pollee chief, Ratliff had been stopped
at 11: 38 p.m . at Powell and Ash by Patrolman Ryan Hail as a
possible DUI. While the officer was talking to Ratliff, he
suddenly pulled off in his pickup truck. Hall pursued and Ratliff
was stopped on Route 7 below Middleport and brought back to
the jail.

Baisden competency hearing set
GalUa County Common Pleas Court Judge Donald A. Cox has
ordered a competency hearing at one p.m. Monday for Dennis J .
Baisden, 18, Indicted Oct. 121n the triple homicide Sunday Sept.
24 at Kanauga.
Baisden was Indicted on three counts of aggravated homicide
In the deaths of Marvin W. Wears, 91, hiswlfe. Beulah Wears, 84,
of 415 Fourth Ave., Kanauga, and · Mrs. Wears' daughter,
Audrey Foster, of Mlllnn, W.Va.
Baisden entered pleas o! not guilty and not guilty by·reason of
Insanity to the six count Indictment which also Included two
counts of aggravated robbery and one count of aggravated
burglary.
Judge Cox ordered a PQChlatrlc evaluation by the Sllawnee
Forensic Center to cleterm1De tile ISsue of sanity at the lime of
the alleged o!fen.- Ud ttlf .._of competence to atand trial.
Batmen, who Ia In the county jail In lieu of $250,000 baad, Is
accused of slashing tile throats of the three victlma. Later he
allegedly took a ladles watch, a dlamoad ring and $500 from the
Continued on page 10
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�The Dtily Sa ttinrii-Paga 3

Commentary

I .ake1'8·' ready for rematch with Pistons.

Pege- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Br ValiN rrw. ..... r...a
The Loa Anplll Lakin eutly

Friday, December 1, 198$

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·The
Daily Sentinel
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DEV(fi'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~ ~.....- r........c::l,_

•qJV

ROBERT L. WINGETT
'l'llbllsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslo&amp;aal Publlsloer/ ControDer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Mallqer

A MEMBER of 'Die A-aaled Pruo.,lalud Dally Press AMoolallon aBd 111e Amerlcllll New!lpiiMl' l'ublllllen "-"ll&amp;loa.
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sbotdd be leaalbu 11M
wortll 1aa1. All lollero are olillje&lt;llo e&lt;IIIIIIJ oad must be slped wllb
ud lelepM8e namber. No uaolped lellerl wW be ptlbname,
U.bed. Letters lllould bela.- illle, addr-lalls. . ., aol perooaall-

addr••

lleo.

Bush tries to dampen
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summtt
expectations
By HEI.EN THOMAS
UPI WlaJte Roue Reporter
WASHINGTON -The world will be watching as the leaders of the
two superpowers ponder the future of Europe at a seaborne summit
meeting off the coast of Malta.
The end of the Cold War and the collapse.of communism are goals
that few politicians or presidents coul!l have dreamed of as they held
the line tor past 40 years. · . .
The best the West could develop was a workable "containment
. policy" : In a divided Europe. ·The mutual nuclear deterrent also •
helped against big moves.
.
.
But It did nl)l stop the Soviet control of what the Kremlin decided
was Its sphere .of infiuence, aided and abetted by a Soviet army
permanently stationed outside Its borders, which Its leaders - from
Stalin to Brezhnev - were not hesitant to empUoy In the Hungarian
uprising and the "Prague Spring" rebellion.
Mong came a new leader who ch8Jiged the rules of the game.
MJkllall Gorbachev took a look at the Soviet Union and apparently
decided that It had hit rock bottom.
There Is no doubt that his revolu tlonary ze~ opened the windows to
the winds of freedom that are changing the political face of Europe:
llefore departing for the Mediterranean, Bush did all he could to
dampen expectations and to InsiSt that no deals would·be cut with
Gorbachev concerning arms and troops. "There Is all k)Jid of hyped
speculation on the part of some that It's going to be different," Bush
told reporters:
·
··
He Insisted that there would be no surprises, and, he wanted "to
shoot down ... this kind of frantic speculation" that there lsgolngto be
an agreement on arms or troop cuts.
"It takes two." Bush said, Indicating he did not know what the
Soyiet leader had In mind In terms of reducing the Soviet army, half a
mUllan strong, In Europe.
Few diplomatic observers doubt, however, that NATO and Warsaw
Pact forces will lose some oft heir reason for being as tbne goes on and
a slash In troops Is In the offing.
The president's main concern Is that Western allies do not suddenly
decide that the United States believes the ball game Is over and that
freedom and democracy will now reign supreme In Europe.
The ames are still Insisting on the U.S. security blanket 'that has
been there since World War II. They fear that a precipitous pullout of
the bulk of the 300,000 American troops, mainly In West Germany,
would put them In jeopardy.
While Western European leaders are moving aggressively to get
ahead of the crowd - West German Chancellor Helmut Kohl has
produced a new grand design tor eventually uniting the two
Germanys - they want to be sure that the United States stays put.
Most of all they do not want Washington and Moscow calling the shots
for: them now that they are beginning to fiy.
Both Bush and Gorbachev have signaled they will play by the
ground rules and not pull a rabbit out ofthe hat. Bush Is adamant that
the summit will be a freewheeling get-together with no subjects
barred but no agreements made.
It wiiJ be the president's first summit and he knows there can be
pitfalls. '
A lot Is riding on how he deals the Western hand. Although he Is
co~sldered a foreign policy pro, this Is Bush's first big chance to help
shape a friendlier world.
While he has gone out of his way not to raise hopes, he still has the
problem of not disappointing masses of people who are. leading the
way and want hbn to follow with solid support.

Letters to the editor
Carnival a big success
Dear Editor:
On behalf of the Syracuse PTO
we would like to thank the
buslneases who donated ·to our
fall carnival. Also, a hearty
thanks to the people who worked
In order to make the carnival a
grand evening for all who at·

tended. And last but not least,
thanks to the students JVhO were
so well behaved that night.
Thank you,
Rose Ann Jenkins
Rexanna Knlglltlng
PTO·Presldent and VIce
· · President

Thankful for opportunity
To the Southern football team,
the Athletic Booster, Coach Gaul
and Coach Bradbury:
We would like to lake this
opportunity to thankallofyoufor
allowing us to take part In this
ye~·s football program.
The parents of these players
should be very proud of their
s()llli. Each time they were In our

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Chief S &amp; L regulator under the gun

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

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Pomeroy, Ohio

establishment their inanners and
attitudes were very
commendable.
We are now looking forward to
working with the basketball
players and coach, Howle
Caldwell.
Marty and Debbie Morarlty
D A M Pizza and Sub
Syracuse, OH

WASHINGTON - Later this
week, Consresa will see the best
show It's - n slllce Oliver North
11 Charles Keating Is swnmoned
before the House Banking Com·
mlttee, which Is Investigating the
catutrop!llc failure of Lincoln
savings and Loan In Irvine, Calif.
Keating, who controlled Lin·
coin before It was seized by
federal · thrltt regulators last
AprU, would brlllg his trademark
candor and showmanship to the
House hearing. One of the hottest
Jines of questiOning Is bound to
center on what Keating did to
. manipulate the political process.
In May 1987, Federal Home
Loan Bank Board examiners
first reconimended that Lincoln
be shut down. Only through the
direct Intervention of five U.S.
senators and the·forebearance of
the nation's chief thrift regula·
tor, Danny Wall, did Lincoln
manage to buy ·such unprecedented tbne.
We have obtained a confiden·

tlal Bank Board document prepared In 1986 whlcb says, " Lin·
resign. Pressure Is being applied
coin Is unsafe. As It Is currently
by the House Banking Commitoperated, Lincoln Is a threat to Its
tee Chairman Henry Gonzalez,
Insurer." Yet the savings and
D·Texas, who recently wrote to
loan was allowed to continue
Bush urging him to let Wall go:
business as usual.
' 'The failure of the bank board to
Officials expect the collapse of
pursue Lincoln Is not an Isolated
Lincoln will eventually cost tax- case but rather an example of the
payers $2 billion or more, a large
mismanagement and closeness
part of that traceable to the delay
to the Industry of the bank board
In acting against Lincoln whlle It during Danny Wall's leadership
was making bad Investments. which lie at the root of the
Bank regulators have flied a $1.1 collapse (of the thrift Insurance
billion lawsuit against Keating fund). In view of your commit·
and some members of his family,
ment not to let those responsible
alleging fraud.
for these costly failures remain
Although Keating Is the focus . In positions of authority In yo)lr
of the House Banking Committee administration, I believe It would
lnvestlgatlqn. Wall Is also In the
be reassuring to the American
hot seat. Even with two years to
taxpayers who have been asked
prepare, Wall has yet to produce
to pay for this regulatory failure
a consiStent or even coherent If Mr. Wall steps aside."
explanation of why he seemed to
Wall now says Lincoln was
go soft on Lincoln.
adept at concealing Its shortcom·
The smart political money ts lngs. But he and· his staff
now betting that Wall wUI be · originally blamed the problems
forced by President Bush to with Lincoln on personality

clashes between federal examiners and Keating, and differences
of opinion between Keating's
auditors and bank bol\rd audl·
tors. What has always ·been
obvious to everyone except Wall
Is that outside auditors can help
Institutions show record profits
even when they are In ·their death
throes, as Lincoln was.
Keating counted on more t~
the sluggishness of the bank
board. He counted on members
of Congress too. He has unabashedly admitted that he ex·
peeled his pattern of heavy
contributions to power.ful polltl·
clans to buy him Influence. He
makes no 'apologies for that.
Keating also charg~ that the
regulators had turned the thrift
Industry Into a "Nazi state."
It he agrees to testify this
week, Keating wUI have · a na·
Ilona! microphone to explain to
the taxpayers why they ended up
with the $2 billion bill.

next. "

McEnroe, Lendl gain Nabisco semifinals

~

HERE'S TO iH!
PAY RAISES!

MERE'S TO NO
KONORA.R.lA.!
HERE'S TO
LOSBY\STS!

HERE'S TO
LOOPHOI.ES!

NEW YORK (UPI) - John
McEnroe, troubled once again by
an erratic serve and hll brittle
temper. was forced to three sets
by Michael Chang Thursday
night before advancing along
with Ivan U¥ldl to the semifinals
of the Nabisco Masters .
McEnroe, who almost blew a
4·0 lead In the final set, extended
his domination over Chang with a
6-2, 5-7, 6-4 victory after Lend!
stretched his latest winning
streak to 17 matches by blasting
Aaron Kticks teln, 6-1, 6-3.
· Between them, Lend! and
McEnroe have captured this
season-ending championship
eight Urnes, and Lend ill seeking
· to reach the final a lOth consecu·
live time. They both bave 2·0
records and conolude tile round
robin against each other Friday .
Since defending champion Boris Becker and Stefan Edberg·

SIII~A(SC::OitES - Milwaukee Buclul forward .Jack 811ttna (L.)
goes up for two polnU aplllllt De11~er · Nunets forward Blll
,Hanzlik (R) late In the fourth ••arter TbUnday at Deftyer's
M&lt;:.Nlcbol's Arena. DenYer rbeat Milwaukee 103-102. (UPI)
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;:Bruins .tc;Jp Sabres, 5-1

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Blending issues to building a consensus
Congressional ethics and Con·
gressiOnal pay adjustments are
two Issues thaf have dominated
the lOlst Congress from Its
beginning. Both of these Issues
were recently tied together In
legislation that was put on a fast
track liere In Congress.
Earlier this month, the Go·
vernment Ethics Reform Act of
1989, passed the House by a vote
o!252tol74andtheSenatebya56
to 43 mallgill,.an~as signed Into
law by the presidenT. While this
bill bas much to be said for lt,ltts
suretogtvetheAmerlcanpeople
a collective case of heartburn
because of the pay provisiOns It
· contains.
Supporters of this legislation
blUed. It as an ethics bill, and In
fact the measure will do much to
enhance the ethical standards to
which members of Congress
must adhere. Heretofore
members of both the House and
the Senate were treated ldenti·
cally for purposes of pay and
ethics. One of the unique aspects
of this bill Is that now each body
of Congress wlll be treated
dltferently. (PrlinarUy, I will
discuss this legislation In the
context of how .It wUI affect
members of the U.S. House of
Re presentative&amp;.)
The House, generally speak·

lng, placed much tighter restrlclions on Its members In terms of
outside earnings lbnltatlons and
travel. Currently, House and
Senate members can supplement
their regular salaries with In·
come received . from outside
sources that can create conflicts
of Interest. For example, If a
member receives an honorarium
for speaking to a special Interest
group, that honorarium could
potentially Influence how that
member will vote on legislation
affecting that group. The Ethics
Reform Act will help Insulate
House members from these
potential conflicts by virtually
elbnlnatlng this and other sour·
ces of outside Income.
Beginning In 1991, members ·
would be banned from receiving
speaking honoraria unless that
honoraria was given to charity.
Thlsleglslationwlllalsolbnltthe
outside earnings that members
can receive to 15%of their salary
and will prohibit House members
from receiving any outside In·
come from serving on a board of
directors, from practicing a
profession, or providing a profes·
slonal service.
While these ethics reforms can
only be ap.plauded, this leglsla·
tlon, as previously stated • a 1so
contained a pay boost for

Cong. Cla renee M'll
l er

members of Congress and for
some1,115federaljudgesand834
senior members of the executive
branch. In the case of the House,
members will receive a cost-ofliving-adjustment (COLA) of
4.1% for 1989, a COLA of 3.6% In
1990, and a yet to be determined
COLA In 1991. In addition to these
COLA's, the bill also provides a
flat 25% Increase for House
members that will take ettect In
1991.
By contrast, members of the
Senate will have their salaries
Increased by 9.7% In 1990, and by
aCOLAin199lbasedonlnflation.
Unlike the House, there won't be
any 25% Increase for Senators In
1991, bu( at the same tbne the
Senate tailed to Impose any
outside earnings lbnltatiOns on
Its members.
On the one hand, the ethical
reforms embodied In this bill are
long overdue and will work to
reduce the lntluence that outside
money can have on the activities
In Congress. Furthermore, over
the last few years the pay of
federal judges and the senior
executive officials covered by
this legislation has fallen .far
behind what these Individuals
could receive In the private

sector. This has severely ham·
peredthegovernment' sabllltyto
attract and keep top quality
people In these key . positions.
Almost everyone agrees that a
pay raise Cor these officials Is
necessary. On the other band
however, 1 am not convinced that
the COLA's called for In this bill
are appropriate Inasmuch as
they constitute ·an Immediate
pay Increase for those affected.
Personally, 1 feel pay lncreases have no place In a bill
reforming the ethics of Congress.
1 have long advocated that
cons lderation of such pay adjustments should take place only
throug h a stra1ght up or down
recorded vote and that any pay
provision that Is pas&amp;ed should
not take effect until the succeedlng congress. While the largest
part of this Increase for House
members Is prospective, one
fourth of this Increase will be
Immediate. GlveD that 1 have
repeatedly pledged not to vote for
any salary Increase that 1 would
Immediately benefit from, 1 felt
compelled to vote against this
legislation. Furthermore, 11 Is
my Intention to donate any raise I
receive during my current.term
to charity.

:House Bill 294 to ,increase rule powers
Township residents today do
not have the same powers of
self-government as people who
Jive rln cities and vlllages. The
passage of House Blll294 which Is
currently In. the house Elections
and Township Committee, would
allow Ohio townships to exercise
limited home rule authority.
The bill would allow a Board of
Township Truslee!l, by a major·
lty vote, to adopt a resolution to
have the Board of ElectiOns
,submit to the voters the question
of wbetller the township should
adopt a home rule form of
towllllllp government. The question woulll be placed on the ballot
to be voted on at the next general
'election.
TOWillhips that want home rule
are required to eslabllab pollee
and tire departments or contract
for reaular aatety se,rvlces wtth a
nelgllborlng city, lownJblp or
county sheriff. Townships would

also be required to hire a
township law director. The Jaw
director, appointed by the board
of township trustees, would have
to be an attorney licensed to
practice In Ohio. This director
would serve as legal advisor to
the board of township trustees,
the township administrator, and
ali Other township officers, Any
of these people could require
written opinions or InstructiOns
from the law director In matters
connected with their ottlclai
duties.
Townahlps would be prohibited
from palling taxes, establlahlng
crbnlnal codes, setting subdlvi·
alon regulattona and buDding
codes.
Presently, thirty to forty per·
cent o! Ohio's population lives In
1,318 toW118hlpa. In some Instances, townships need more e!fec~ ,
tlve ways of governing to meet
the needs o! this growing popula·

lion. This legi,llatlon could be a
positive step for townships to
achieve limited home rule powers and to meet the needs of their
communities. But the bill Is In Its
formative stages. Consequently,
I welcome and encourage town·
ship officials and resident to Jet
me know how they feel about this

·

The two teams meet only twice
durin&amp; the regular season. Frl·
day's game Is at Inglewood,
CaJit. and they meet again at
Detroit on Jan. 21.
·
Mychal Thompso11 contrlbu ted

'

Berry's World

defeated the Sacramento Kings
Thursday night then focused
their attention to Friday's rematch with the defending cham·
pion Detroit Pistons.
"We meet Detroit lor the first
time since we were swept (4·Q In
last season's NBA Finals) and
we'll see who' s best early ,"
Lakers Coach Pat Riley said.
'"l'here'll be some spar ks
fiYJng."
" We knew going In that we
couldn't take the Kings lightly, "
said James Worthy, who scored a
game·hlgh 22 points to lead the
Lakers to a 109-93 victory over
sacramento. " After our loss at
Houston (110-104 Tuesday) we
wanted to come out and win this
game since we play Detroit

19 polnta and eight rebOUDdJ and aoa1 auempta and fouled ou 1 Cbariotte with 22 points, 121n the
fourth quarter.
Ma&amp;lc Johnson scored U points early 111 the fourth quarter.
8p11n U. Maverlclul •
;
" Pervll baa more game time
and had 15 usII ta to help the
At San Antonio, Terry Cum· ·
Lakers Improve their leape- than be baa bad practice tbne. "
leadlng record to 11-2 and leaeue- Klqa Coach JerryReynolda mlngs acored 20 points and David :
Aid. " For the Klllil to beCOme a Robinson had 15 points and 17 •
best road mark to 4·2.
Kenny Smith led Sacramento good ballclub, Pervls bas to rebounds to lead San Antonio. ·
with 19 points. Danny Alnae mature Into the type of player he The Mavericks suffered their :
first loss under lnterbn coach ·
added 17 points and RodDeY can be."
Riehle Adubato, who was named •
In
other
games,
Orlando
deMcCr ay scored 16 points and had
Wednesday aftet John MacLeod .
feated
Minnesota
103-96,
Houston
12 rebounds tor the Kings, who
never led after the first alx topped Charlotte 113-101, san was fired.
NUJIJieU liS, Buclul18!
Antonio nipPed Dallas 93·89,
minutes of the game.
At
Denver, Walter Davis
Los Angeles built a 75-Si lead In Denver downed Milwaukee 103·
24 points to rally Denver ·
scored
the third quarter as Sacramento 102 and Seattle sUpped by New
from
a
12-polnt third-quarter .
shot only 29 percent tram the Yorkl2H22.
deficit. Bill tlaJIZIJk scored 17 :
Mape 111, Tlmberwolves 88
field. Worthy helped the Lakers
At Orlando, Fla., ReggteTheus points and Fat Lever added 15 :
break the game open Ia the final
quarter when he hit 2 three- and Sam Vincent Ignited an 18-2 and 11 rebounds for the Nuggets.
tblrd·perlod run to lead Orlando. Jay Humphries led Milwaukee
pointers on consecutive pol&amp;el·
slons. His second three-pointer Donald Royal scored 11 of his 15 with 25 points.
Sontcs m, Knlcks m
gave the Lakers a 98-76lead with points In the final periOd as
At
Seattre, Xavier McDaniel ·
Minnesota
rallled
to
make
the
6:42 left.
scored 20 of his game-high 37 •
The No. 1 pick In the 1989 NBA game ciOR.
points In the fourth (ju&amp;rter to :
Draft, Pervls Ellison, made his
Roeketa US, Boneta 111
first sta)'t Cor the Klnp and
A.t Houston, Mitchell Wiggins power Seattle. McDaniel 111113 of :
scored two points and grabbed scored 24 points and Otis Thorpe 19 shots from the field and made
seven rebOunds In 20 mlnlltea of 23 to lead Houston. The Rockets 11 of 11 free throws. McDaniel:
action. The 6-foot·ll center from · 'pulled away for good In the third ·scored six points In a 9-0 Seattle·Louisville made only 1 Q! 9 field q118fler to win their lourth run that gave the Sonlcs a 107·102
•:
straight. Kelly Trlpucka I~ lead with seven minutes left.

Sen. Jan M. Long
legislative proposal .
U you have any questions
concerning this legislation ·
please do not hesitate to contact
me at (614) 461!-81:56 or write:
Senator Jan Michael Long, ~tale·
house, Columbus, Ohio 43215.

Today in history
By United Pre. JnteriiB&amp;tonal
.J
Today Is Friday, Dec. 1, the 335th day of 19ll9 with 30 to follow.
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
· The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include detective noveliSt Rex Stout In 1886, former United Mine .
Workers president W.A. '"l'ony" Boyle In 1904, actress Mary Martin
In 1913 (age 76), comedian-filmmaker Woody Allen In 1935 (age 54),
soul singer Lou Rawls In 1935 (age 54), pro golfer Lee Trevino In 1939
(age 50), comedian-actor Richard Pryor In 1940 '&lt;age 49), and singer
and actress Bette Mldler In 1945 (age 44).

B;r United Press Jnteraatloaal
In their 5-l victory bVer the
Buffalo Sabres Thursday, the
streaking Boston Bruins proved
that sometimes Jess Is more.
Goaltender Clint Malarchuk
stopped all25 Boston shots In the '
first ·period to help the Sabres
preserve a 1-0 lead. But Boston
converted three of tlve shots In
the middle period; going ahead to
stay.
· "Tonight we came out·emptyhanded In the first periOd. You
get In those situations and the
confidence Is there, so you don't
get frustrated, " said Bruins
goalki Andy Moog, who kicked
out 23 shots for his seventh
consecutive victory.
''Youjustkeepyourgameplan
and know that tile gUys are going
to come.up big." ·
Mike Millar and Cam Neely
scored In a 1: 26 sJ?Iln early In the
second period, giving Boston a
2·1 lead.
Millar's goal, a short wrist shot
at 4: 18,.was hi.Sflrstof the season
and first as a Bruin. Neely's goal,
his 19~ Clf the season at 5:44,
.extended hi.$ ·goal-scoflng streak
to elilbt cpnsecutlve games, one.
sby ~ the club record held by
Phil Esposito.
·
'Neely, who was credited with a
goal when Michael ·Thelve·n ·s
siap 'shot deflected,off his leg, has
16 goals In his·last 18 games.
' 'I 'II take 'em as long as they go
over the goal line," Neely said. .
"At the end of the seaspn, they
don't ask how , they ask how
many ."

Janby and Ron SuIter each had a
goal and an· assist to lead
Philadelphia to Its fourth win In
five games. Goaltender Ken
Wregget stopped 34 sbo1a In
handing Pittsburgh Its; third
consecutive loss.
Canadien&amp; 6, Nordlq~ !
At Quebec, Mike McPhee
scored two goals and added an
assist to help Montreal move Into
a first-place tie with Buffalo In
the Adams division. The Canadlens built an early 3-0 lead on
goalsbyMcPhee,RusaCourtnall
and Jean Jacques Daigneault.
Whalers I, Bluet1 3
At St. Louis, Pat Verbeek
snapped a 3-3 Ue with a goal at
14:04 of the third periOd to lead
Hartford. Verbeekcameoutofa
scramble In front of the net and
ripped a 1!Hocrter pasf goalie
Greg Millen for his 17th score of.
the :Year. St. Louis rallied from a
3·1 deficit to tie the game 20
seconds Into the third period on
Brt~ttHull's 18th goal of the year.

· *'iable ~·· laallf~

lOaJ.

qoalteitder Mark Fltzpa·
trlck.atoppe431shots for his first
Nlfl,. lhu to~t. .
.

.

.ftren 1, Peaaut- 1

' At li!hllsdl!lphla, .Scott Mel· ·
-

..l- ..._ - -

-

Pitt's MOler out with ankle injury
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Pittsburgh guard Sean Miller has
decided to sit out the season after
being unable to practice because
of an ankle Injury.
Miller, a junior, early next
month will undergo surgery
which will be followed by up to.
four months of recovery.
He ·will be given a medical
redshlrt and will have two
seasons of eligibility remaining.
Miller made the decision Wed·
nesday after being unable to

practice 10 minutes while fitted
with a brace. He has an Injury
that Involves the partial fusion of
two bones In his left ankle. Pitt
medical officials bel leve the
lnj.ur.y Is conaenltal..
Miller .averaged 9.7 points and
6 uslata last season. He was the
Ilia Eat! Conference fre~bman of
the year the previous season.
The Panthers will use junior
Darelle Porter and senior Pat ·
Cavanaugh at point guard In
Miller's place.

point In the fifth game before
Chang managed to hold.
McEnroe, as Is his wont,
anpred the crowd and abnost
threw away the match when he
protested a fault call while
serving for the match at 5-2. The
linesman called the ball out but
the Cyclops machine didn't register the fault. '·
Chair umpire ' Gerry Arm:
strong cailecl for the ball to be
replayed, and the fans , most of
whom had been for the New
Yorker, turned against hbn and
beld up play for a couple of
minutes with their noise.
''The machine didn't make any
noise 8Jld he (Armstrong) told
me he would go by the machine,''
McEnroe explained later. "The
crowd turned on me later lo some
degree, and then he (Chang) hit a
couple of great shots and broke
me and It was a dogfight to the
end.
"I'm beyond being shocked by
the fans In New York and how
they act."
McEnrcie stumbled the rest of
the way as Chang won the game
and held his serve to close to 5·4.
Chang then had four break points
IR the lOth 11arne before McEnroe
converted his second match point
with a·· 'forehand crosscourt
volley.
"I almost had him today, but

-c--

abnosl Isn't good enough," said ·
Chang, nevertheless encouraged · .
by the fact he took his first set
against McEnroe In four career ·
meetings. "I'd like to think I'm a "
little bit stronger and a little bit
better.
_.
'The last game was typical; 'I' :
just couldn't · convert the break
points and I had bad luck. "
Lend!, a five-time Masters-·
champion, thoroughly frustrated·'
Krlcksteln, delivering 10 aces as·he raced to leads of 4.0 In the first
set and 3-0 In the second.
.·,,
''I'm happy I won and that I'm&lt;.
In the semis," Lendl said.
' "!'hat's all I wanted to do In the ·
flrstthree days. I justtry to enjoy
It, and If I keep moving and :·
hitting well I should do fine." · ·
Lendl, who has won 35 of his ·
Jast36 sets, has a match record ol .,.
7~ for 1989. He now has reached .
the semifinals In 16 of 11 · ·
tournamen.t s this year, winning ·
10 titles .
The world' s No.1 player broke
service In the opening ·game on '·
·his fifth break point, and again In .
the second g8J'!le (lithe second set· ·
Kricksteln double faulted on ·
break point. That was all the help
Ll!ndl needed as he won his last : ·
four service games with the loss ·
of four POints.

.

The Daily Sentinel ,

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES lit SERVICE
St.

(U8P814....)
A Dlvw.a ol Multlmrdla, Inc.

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f•ll &amp; ....., ...,.

Published eveey ahernoon. Monday
· tbrougb Friday, Ill Court St. , Po·
meruy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Com~ny!Multlmedia, Inc. ,
Pom«oy, Ohio 45769, I'll. 99~n56 . s..
cOnd elus postage paid at Pomeroy ,
Ohio,

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OPEN TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
·
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SATURDAY 9 A.M .·1 P.M •
CLOIIO MONDAYS

The
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In Historic Downtown Pomeroy
Along · the Beautiful Ohio River

·

Randy Burridge made It 3-1
with a power' play goal at 15: 57 of
the second .. periOd, connecting
from . Sl\drt •range after a feed
'from Neely.• · '
' Jim Wiemer and Bob Carpen·
ter broke the game open with
goals early In the ~hlrd period,
"gtVtng .Boston a 5·1 lead.
''They came out hard and they
were ready," Buffalo defepse·
mal\ ~Ike Ramsey sald."We
weathered the storm In the first
period, but they played better
than us. They deserved to win. ' '
The Bruins, 10·1·1 In their last
12 games, tested Malarchuk
ea.rly, ou ~hooting the Sabres 15·1
In the first tour minutes of the
game. Many of the shots were
,l egitimate scoring bids, but Ma·
&gt; ' larchuk was flawless and &lt;;brls,
tlan Ruuttu scored a· power-play
, goal at 5~ 51 to give the sabres a
.
. 1·0 lead.
"They had some rebounds and
they ·have some good shooters
• from the point," Malarchuk
· said. ''They shoot from the point
and send guys to the net. I
thought we kept the shots pretty
well ou't."
The Sabres entered Thurs• day's game 6·0·4 In the last ,10·
regular·season games between
the two teams.
' Elsewhere In thE! NJIL; the New
York Isianders blanked Chicago
2·0, Philadelphia dumped Pitta·
burgl\ 4-1; Montreal dusted Qu- .
ebec 6-2, Hartford downed St.
Louts 5·3, Calgary clipped Minnesota 5·2 and Edmonton edged Los
·
Angeles 7·6.
biiUldera' !, Blaekbawlul 8
At Ch.lcaiD. Ah!ll Kerr scored
the game-wlDJIIIIg eoal early Ia
f,be llllllflnd periDd and aaalalild 011

already have clinched thesemifl·
nal berths In the other grou,, this
reduces the entire session Friday
to little more than exhibition
status. Atsll!keon theflnaldayof
the round·robln portion will be
$30,000 for the wlaner of each
match, and a determination of
• semifinal pairings.
McEnroe waa fortUDate to be
broken only three times by his
17-year-old opponent, twice In the
second set. Charig totaled 20
break point opportunities In the 2
hour and 43 minute contest,
squandering the first 10 before
breaking for a 3·1 .lead In the
secolljl set.
After McEnroe foua:ht back to
5-5, Chang, the French .Open
champion, wo'! the set with
another break In the 12th game.
McEnroe took control early In
the final set, sweeping to .a 4·0
lead and holding triple break

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1987 Olds 98 ltglncy .........." .... 0111y S11,975
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POSTMASTER: 5end address changes
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DEC. 2, 1989

1989

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�Friday, December 1, 1989

Ohio

Alabama upsets No. I 0 North Carolina

IUM llaaDID1 aboola lbol1 Jumper Ia Mlep-MIUen TVC prll
hardwood coates&amp;; MRS woa, 51-41 •

•

•

Meigs girls defeat
._·Miller Falcons, 53-45
•

..

By DAVE HARRIS
The Meigs Marauders stormed

B7 TOM Wli&amp;it&amp;S
tJPIIJIIPia Wr...
Alabama started the tailgate
party earlier !ban expected when
the Crimlon Tide Tburaday night
upeel No. 10 North CaroUna.
Tile main topic: of conversation
around the state of Alabama this
week has been Saturday's clash
between the 11ndeteated and
second·ranked Alabama Crimson Tide football team and
state-rival No. 10 Auburn. But the
basketball team fueled the celebration Thursday with a 101·93
victory over the Tar Heels.
Melvin Cheatum scored 23
points, Including 19 In the last
nine minutes to help Alabama
hold off North Carolina.
The Crimson Tide took a 27-16
lead with 7: 281eft In the first half
but the Tar Heels rallied to within
44-41 at halftime.
North Carolina managed to tie
the score 61-6lln the second half
but Cheatum tapped .In his own
mlsll!d shot to give Alabaina a
63-61 lead which It did not
relinquish,
Cheatum scored 17 of Alaba·
rna's last 40 points.
•'Hard work has gotten us here

back from a 15 point first half
deflclt to outscore Miller 28-9 In
the second half to defeat the
Falcons 53-45 In girls TVC action
on Thursday evening.
. The Falcons were red hot from
the floor as they jumped out to a
' 16-11 lead at the end of the first
• quarter and built up a 15 point
lead midway through the second
quarter. The Marauders had a
chance to cut the lead back to
.~ Ingle digits a couple oftlmes but
·a turnover and a bucket by
Cheryl Dodson gave the Falcons
a 36-25 lead at the half.
The second half was a different
story as Meigs chipped away at
the Falcon lead as the Marauders
pulled wilh In 42-38 going Into the
'flnal quarter.
Trlcla Baer hit a free throw
early In the quarter to complete a
· three point play to help spark
Meigs. Baer and Kelly Smith
~omblned to score 11 of the
Marauders 13 points · In the
19-M.
quarter.
·
MILLER (CI) - Leslie Lytle
:. In the fourth quarter Shannon
Newsome got the hot hand from · 5-0-10, Cheryl Dodson 3-2-8, Julie
, outside to go along with clutch Wright 4-2-10, Heidi Compston
foul shooting down the stretch by 3-0-6, Jodey Allier 3-0-6, Misty
Baer and Kim Hanning to give McGrathh 1·2-3, Traci Stiles
1-0-2. TOTALS 20-5-45.
the Marauders the victory.

._e.

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LE.WUE
SundQ Ga.mea
('l nd nrltl l at Cl~cl-. I p.m .
Gn~• llaf al T_......., Bay , I p.m.
Houllllon Ill Pltlllbui"J(h. I p.m.
lndlanapolh• u N- FA.Jta.a.4, J 1 ...11!·

OII.. !M at Tay el Clll~mplo• ( NC Sla&amp;• l

Xetll81 .. · · - Taf
011.. V • .._lteyt&gt; Cl•ak
Wlt~ro.rc • ..t•pullu• (Ill) Tn,011.. Dlmllkllll at s,rtnl Arbor Tn)'
Mr011 Zl, a..-c

..,

....

rr•et•• DaJtoa

LA RIUM a.i Dallu, I p.m .
Ml.-rlillt Ku..u Ctty,l p.m .
N"'· Or leliUl llllt Dftrok, I p.m .
PhlbadelpNul NV Olanb, lp.m .
SWI f"rudli-Ce at A.tLaaa , I p.m .·
Df'n wr at LA. Ralden, .a p.m.
Nl" Jrhl a t San Dl~r;o. -'p.m.
W•hlndon IW. Pltoenb . -' p.m .
Chill' ll~ at Minlftota, !I p.m .

811pperrllftlt !Pal at Allllland

Bufllllo u SuUJto, 8 p.l'n.

llalow CluMc
DniMa 111 Red Cl•sh·
Satwd~~J . O.c. !
't'•IIIIPI_. S. Ill Bo"lla1 Greea
!IIIMDI at ODC:I•Iatl
M81111NIIIIa at Teledo

-.:

MondJQ Gamr...

SIIIWIIII!I'a tn.ll • Xawll!r

Sund~cy,

Ot&gt;c. ID
A&amp;lanta 111 Mlnll.'!llola. I p.m .
Da lbui Ill Phi.Miphla. I p. m.
Ddrolllat Chlcll(O. I p.m .
Kan!Mfl ('lty at Grt&gt;"" 1111)' , I p.m.
New OrlelliJ!Ulllulhtlo. I p .m.
Pltttth...-lut N\' ol'ri11, I p.m.
Slltl01f"~al \\'Ph!naton. I p.m.

C.,lal a&amp; M••ldnpm
&amp;l*lberlai , ••.,.
H.vleUa M Hiram
,.,. Carroll at OtWh.tn
Ob~ N•rdlern at M•u• Vn ion
Cut' ltf.erw at Em•ry IGa)
Pa) • OHrln
' Grow Clt.r ( Pa ) at Ohio Wesley..

W., (

Sunk- lit ct ~~ei..UL 1 p.m .
T.mpM Bay at Jhullion. I p.M.
Nl' GIMitMILIDfnwr • .f p.m .
Cl"'ela nd Ill
f

OU-BI!Imo• a.t Tltnn

Urft- lit D,tlt'
" 'al .. ..t SIMWWP St
Ct'Diral Joit WI TranS (Gar y. lnd)
o..-.d cMit·hl ... DefiiUH·r

•••-p.U..

P·"'·

P hoe nix a&amp; LA R~der !l. 4 p .m .
NI"W &amp; atand Ill MIIIIDI, H p.m.
. Mondllf, OP e. II
Sut Francl!oieo at LA. Kama. I ~tom .

1WIIII... GaM Bftluny ( \\' "• I

Ollie fk at by .. Ctl ampton~~
k•l Sl 1111 I o • Tll'l'
OW. U • Hawiii')'P CIMlllc

Wll .. llber l at ..tup!Maa Tlly
Otlte O.Miak'u at Sprtn1 Arbor TnJ

N ATION.U BA..'iKETIALL AS !tOC

Allr• Zip 0UII6&lt;·

Or-.ndo 113, Mln~ll'llll II
Ho1111on Ill. fll•loUe 101
San Ant onlo t!, Da.lbui Itt
O.n\'PI' 183, Mlhrau~ Ill
~e llllle tn. New York IH
LA Lll ll81111!\ S~tcram~oiS

,_~JQ' R~•t•

M•••
a ..uo:
IJrf'nilon 86

~Red CI1111Aic

Sports
resuks

Fri.., GaiM!I

Clnll'land at lkKton. i:H p.m.
Mlamll&amp;l Nf'W ,Jr r.ey , 7:• p.m.
Orlan• lll.ln•-. 1:• p.m.
... iladf"lpWaal \\·uhi•Rfon, II p.m .

N.4.TIOS,\L HOC'KEY LEA.GUE

ThiiMI.,. R H uM t~
htllo• 5, Bun• 1

llla h • Allu&amp;a, K p.m.
lA (llppPrAat Phoe~~bl , II: .p.l'n.
Dft roi. a1 LA Lakr:n. 11: Jl ,.m.
GolciH Stal• at P•..U..tl, a • p.m.
s.tardQ' GamM

Molll,..lll f . C,.ebft !

Pltlladelpllla I, Pki.Nhui'Jh I
Nl' ......""" ' { Ollcqet

Harderd s. sa. utP S
f al•ry 5.
t

Ml•--•
EchnoMen Lol' An Ad&amp;

Vlah .. W..a.IIIIP•., •I.W

i
Gaun,.
NPW.If'l'lff')' atl•ffalo, 7::1:1 p.m.

'7,

Chi t'lli!IO .t Ml.ml, n i Pitolll.df"lplllul At '-'a, alp&amp;
MIIIRRMatClfWiu .. IIIPi
ltallu at
alp&amp;
Ch•IDIW .. 8• AIIICIIIIIe. •Iaiit
Pons.• at Denwr, .. .,..
New Yorlt a1 Plloeab, alpt
S aerammt• Ill: lA Lllpll"a. alpt

f'rl~

Phlladl'lplt.. at Wuhlql ... 7:!JS p.m.
Drt roil Ill ":JniiiiPf"lt t: 3$ p.m.
NY RIUIIf't'l'lll "~vwr, Jt: SS
8MMI'Cht' Gamet
~ . . . . . . . . . .to.......
Ptlb.... h .. Qll~bfoc• • , ....

l••••n.

p. m .

Hllwau W• at GoWn Sf.ate, -'Pi

M'~IWODal~rwlerr.ey,niPI

common sense has got to enter
In," said Wyche. ''So far, common sense has noz been part of
the · credo or die Cleveland
organization. It's been 'Go for It
Dawg Pound, throw everything
you want.'

INSTITUTE, W.Va. - Rio
Grande center Ann Barnltz
scored a career-high 25 points
against host West Vlralnla State
to put the Redwornen within four
In the final two minutes Thurs·
day, but the Yellow Jackets
posled an 81-72 victory.
Barnltz, a 5-11 sophomore from
Belpre wbo curren~·leacls her
teammates In per-game scoring
average, also snatched 14
rebounds.
WVS fOJward Tammy Rl·
chards captained the home at·tack, posting 23 markers to put
the hosts ahead throughout the
contest.
The Redwomen mounted a
strong comeback during the
second period to narrow the
margin. butCoachRobert"Bud"
Francis' club advanced during
the final seconds on foul sbooUDJ:
OVerall, WVS connected on 19 of
27 free throw attempts for 70
percent.
·Rio Grande' a Renee Ward was
the second·hlghelt scorer with 12
points, while Cindy Rldeeway
came off the bench to lend
effective support In the defense.
Starling guard Debbie Fredrick
led In assists wtth five.
The Redwomen were success-

ful on 27 of 77 field goal attempts
for 25 percent and the Yellow
Jackets were 36 percent on 30 of
83 tries from the floor. Rio
Grande made 22 attempts from
the foul line, succeeding on 14 for
64 percent.
The visitors outrebounded
WVS 48-44, but had 23 turnovers
In comparison to 17 for WVS.
Beth Cowley led the hosts In
rebounds with nine. Assists leaders were Jenny Parrish and
Cynthia Hornick with three each.
The Yellow Jackets host West
Liberty State tonight. Rio
Grande, now 2-2, faces Concord
(W.Va.) Saturday at 4 p.m. In
Lyne Center.
WEST VIRGINIA STATE (81)
- Jenny Parrish, 2-2-6; Chere
Hairston, 3-0-6; Cynthia Hornick,
6-1-4-14: Tammy Richards, 10-12-23; Monica Lepley, 5-4-14; Lora
Hedrick. 1-2-4; · Beth Cowley,
3-5-11. TOTALS ZS.%-11-31.
RIO GRANDE (7=) - Jennl
Couch, 2-5-9; Kathy Snyder,
2·1·5; Ann Barnltz, 11·3·25; Debbie Fredrick, 3·1·0.7; Renee
Ward, 4-3-1·12: Kerr! Kidwell,
2-4-8; Cindy Ridgeway, 2-0-4;
Mindy Montgomery, 1·0.2. TOTALSIW-It-7%.
llallllme acore: WVS •• Rio
GfiiiMie •·

FRESH CUT TBES AYAUIU
01 CUT YOII OWN

'""'._,at
Darwin
•=elf 13.

LOCATED 011 C-Y Ulll1
onto lt. 611, 10 • 1111. to
on grovel rtNHI, 1112

Turn South

to growe.
HOURS: 10 'TIL DARK

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

'

.992-5432

SNOUFFER
F1RE &amp; SAFEn
SMIS &amp; SEIVKE

992-7075

*""" ....
MIIWI-'•

112 North

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomarov

Ohio

SHOP

PRE
TRJNTl"i OONGREGATJONAL CHURCH.
Olurcll School 9:15 a.m.: Wonljp Service
l0:3l a.m. Choir "'~ 1\lesday, ~ 45 p.m.
. . - cllrertlon c1 Lol! B\1'1.
.
.
POMEROY CHURCH OF 1liE NAZA, RENE. Cllrner lmlon and Mulbeny, Rev.
Th&gt;mas Glen McOtre. pastor. Norman Pres~. s.. s. Supt.. Su~ School. \l::ll a.m.: ...
mxlingworsNp lO:lJa.m.: evenlng9et,Yiee6
p.m.: mid-week servloe.
7 p.m.
GRACE EPlSOOPAL CHUROI. 32£ E .
Main St. l'omertly. Suftdl!' ,...,....... , Holy
comrnurion on the first Su~ ofeach~h.
and comlined wtth momng J!l'&amp;yel' on '""
lhlrdSu~. Mordn1fp-ayerandJenllOI1 on
all ilth!r Su~s c1 tl~ morih. Olureh School

~~:=y~~,:'~

'

992-6669

BRANDON SHINES- Ualvenlly of Oregon point guard Terrell
Brandon scored 2'1 points with 1 rebound• and 7'8 881suas the Du~ks
upeet No. :t-ranked Arizona Wildcat• 68-63. Brandon played all40
minutes of the Pae-18 opener al MacArthur Co~t 111 Eugene.
(UPI)

-----Friday's
Eastern at Hannan Trace
Oak Hill at Southew
Symmes Valley at North Gallla
Southwestern at Kyger Creek
Alexander at Vinton County
Federal Hocking at NelsonvllleYork
Meigs at Miller
Belpre at Trimble
Wellston - Open
Greenfield at Hillsboro
Minford at Waverly
Wheelersburg at Valley

games-~-.;......;Athens at Lancaster
Hamilton at Portsmouth
Logan at Mt. Vernon

Thank You for the Gnat
Gr-d Opllliagl

CRIMINAL IECOIDS
JUST ABIYB:
..., ...... Owill-

~

$U9

hth "Pr•te" (...tte 17,ft, 1 (.D. -su.H
....., Tfftil (hrilt- C.MIIo
Ill•• 'I.H
11o11 Colioo "lut S.looolr" Conono

11."
a••• ......,.,_
.
c..tte ''·"
c....

Irk
AMy Gr•t Chrilt-

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Ill.... ''·"
446·3302
43 COUIIr ST. GMIIPOUS

Saturday's games:
Galllpolls at Chesapeake
Warren Local at Frontier

OPIII 'Tl 1.00

84 CHEV. CHEVEnE 4 DR............. S2488
.

,

·

'

.

82 CHEV. CITATION 4 DR............. S2250

Auto .. AM/FM • - ca-tte.

'

'

80 PONnAC PHOENIX 4 DR......... s1975·

Auto., tu-tone paint, low inll11, local owner:

·

·. •

80 DODGE ASPEN 2 DR................ Sl 37S

Auto .. Slant 8 engine, low mil11.

·

82 FORD ESCORT 2 DR............... S117S

Auto., air, AM/FM caiMtte.

81 BUICK REGAL UMITED 2 R..... SlSSO
a. run• good .

'

78 DODGE PICKUP 112 TON ......... S179S

V-B ·engine.

·

Many Mort Late Model One·Owner Can In Stock.
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 9:30-6:30
FRIDAY 8:30-6:00; 8ATURD~Y 9:00-1:00

. . . SUUS

Sll•M

BILL QUICKEL

LET US PRAY
SHARE IN OUR JOY

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

271 llertlo

s-M
IIWtlopert,
Ollio

RAWUNGS.COAn

FISHER ·FUNERAL HOME
99 2•S141

M!d4~t .

Church servtce, to:l~ a.m. ~~

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, PastOI",
Raymond Cox. Sunday SChoollO:OO a .m. ;
SUnday Morning worship 11:00 a.m. Chll·

dren's Church 11 a.m. Sun&lt;tay Evening
6
y
La ·
Serv~ 7:00p.m. Wed., p.m. oung
dies' AuxUiary . Wednesday, 7 p.mt Fam·
Uy WorshJp.
HAZEL COMMUNITY OIURCH. Off
Rt. 124, 3 miles from Portland-Long Bottom. Edsel Hart,_ pastor. Sunday School,
9; :rl a.m .; sunday morning preaching
10:30a .m .: Sunday evening services, 7:30
p.m.
.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. Corn~ Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, pastor. s unda y SCho o110 : 00 a .
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a .m.; Wed·
nesday and SatUrday Evening services at
7
' r:P~E GROVE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
Hicks, 10 miles aOOve Raclne on Rt. 388.
Sunday School 9 a.m., wors}\lp service 10
a.m . Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m.;
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thursday, 6: 30p.m . .
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST Off 12i, behind WUkesvUl• Cbarlea Jones,
pastor· Sunda~School 9'31a m · morning
·
' · .~ "
wonbtp, tO: ; ~unday and 'lbursclaY
evening services, 7:00p.m.

There is something that we all n~ to remem·
· ber during this holiday season. Throughout
history there have always been .those who are
not able to share in the joy and freedom that
are such a normal part of our lives at any time
of the year. Those unfonunate souls may live
in the country in which they are denied their
human rights by the current regime, or at
times they have been hostages from another
· ·' country, kidnapped and impriloned for no
reason. However, we need not feel completely helpless. We can tell out elected officials
·what we want them to do about it. Above all,
we can pray for those people, wherever they
may be. At your House of Worship, pray that
one day all mankind will be able to enjoy our
blessings of liberty. Then we'll truly have
peace on earth.

204 Conder St.
P-roy, 011.

992-2975

$1•ut 03.,.,~,

13' MIIIIrMI
Mldcleport. Ohio 41710

prayer

p .m ..
p.m .

Mr. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH , Located In Texu
Community Off Ct. Rl. ln. Rev. Robert
Sanders, past..-. Jeff Holler, lay leader;
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 9: 30a.m.; morning worship aad
cblldren'a cburch 10:30 a.m.; evening
preechln&amp; aervlce arat three Sundays,
7::ll p.m.: Spectaloervlce lourtb Suodoy
eveaini, 7:30 p.m.: WedDeaday Prayer
Meetlne. Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
ablp, 7:00p.m .
·
· cHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY .
Located on 0 . J . White Read ofHIIbway
1&amp;0. Pat Henson. pastor. Sunday School tO
a.m.Ciasaeslor&amp;Uaaes. JunlorCburchll
a.m.: Mornlnl! wonhlp 11 a .m. Adult
Cbolrpractlce6p.m. Sunday. YoungPeopie's, Chil..en's Church and AduH Bible
ShiiiY, Wedlleoday at 7:ll p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL . 570 Grant
St., Middleport. Affiliated wtth Southern
BaptlatConventlon. David Bryan, Sr.. Ml·
nlster. Suft4ay SchoollO a .m .; Morning
wortlaiP 11 a.m.; Evealne wocshJp 7 p.m.;
Weciladay tveaJni' Bfble study and
· prayer meetiD&amp; 7 p.m.
BRADFORD CHUjlCH OF CHRIST. St.
Rt.l24andCo. Rd. ~.Derek Stump, paslor.
William Amber1«. S. S. Supt.; Sunday
Scho_ol9:30 a.m.: Mor~g Worstllp 10:30
a.m., Evening worship 7. 30 p.m. Wednesday worship 7:30p.m .
ST. PAUL LUTH~RAN CHURCH ,
· Cornet Sycamore and second Sts., Pometoy. The Rev. William Mlddleswart,
pastor. Sunday SChool 9:45a.m. Church
servll"P 11 a.m.
·
SACRED
HEART CHURCH, Msgr.
AnlhonyGiannamore. Ph. 992-51198. Sotur·
day Evenlag Mass ?": 30 p.m.; Sunday
Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a .m . Confessions one
half bl. ~r be(ore each Mass. CCD classes,
11 a.m . Sunday.
VICJ'ORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St.,
Mlddl~rt. Jams E. Keesee, pastm-.
Sunday morning worstup 10 a.m.; Evenlng service 7 p.m .; Wednesday evening
worshlp7p.m. VlsllatlonTh.ursday6:30p.

EWING FUNERAL HOME
"Dignify and Service Always"

Established 1913

992-2121
106 . . .rry AwL
meroy By-Pass, Nev. Robert E . Smflh. Sr,
pastor. Mtlvln Drake, S . S, Supt. Sunday
Schoo19:JO a .m.; Morning Worsldp 10:30;
Eventna Worship 7:00 p.m .; Wednesday
Prayer Service, 7:00p. m .
·
•
FAITH BAPTJST CHURCH , Railroad
St., Mason. Sunday SChoollO a .m.; Morning worship 11 a. m.; E v ening servtce6p.
rn.. Prayer m~tng and Bible Study Wed·
nesctay, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt.
Suaday School 9: 30 a .m .; Second •nd
founh Sundays worship service at 2~ 30 p.

m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main St., Middleport . Rev . Gilbert Cr1111,

Jr .. pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgan!Der,
Sunday SChool Supt . Sunday SChool9: 30 a .
m.: Worship Service, 10:45 a .m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
-Joseph B . Hoskins, evangelist Sunday
BlbleStudy9a.m.; Worship, tO a.m.: Sunday evenll1g service 6 p.m.; Wednesday
eventng service, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY . Racine,
Rt. 124. WUllam Hoback, pastor. Sunday
Scbool10 a .m.; Sunday evening service 7
p.m . Wednesday evening service 7 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
SUpt . Sunday SChool 9::ll a,m. Morning
Worship 10: ~a . m . Prayer servlce, auernate Sundays.
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH- New Lima Rd ..
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland. Robert
Richards, pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
Wednesdays and Sundays.
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAPTER of the Wesleyan Hollnes1 Church.
Rev. Earl Fil!ldl, pastor. lftry Eblin,
Sunday SChool Supt : Sunday School10 a.
m.; Mormng Worship 11 a .m.: Eventn.c
serviCf' 7:30p.m. Wednesday evening service 7: :ll p.m.
STIVERSVTLLE WORD OF FAITH ,
Gary Hotter, pastor. Sunday services 9: ~
a.m . and 7 p.m .; Midweek s ervice, 7: X) p.
m. Thursday.
· MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Tblrd
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Nottlngham, Suaday School Supt. Sunday
School10 a.m. wtlh ctasleS tor all ages.
Eveillnl aetvlces at 6 p.m. Wednesday .Btble study at 7:30p.m . Youth services Frl·
dayat 7 ::llp.m.
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128MIIISt.,
Middleport. BrOihE!' Chuck McPherS(MI,
pastoc. Sunday School 10 a .m.; Sunday
evenlne: services al7 p.m . and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m.
.
•
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smlt~.
pastor. Sunday School 9: 3() a.m.; church
service 7: 30p.m.; youth fellowship 6:30 p.
m.·, Bible study, Thurlday, 7: 30~m.
FULL GOSPEL LIG!ITIIOU , 330f5
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas·
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
morning service at 10 a.m.; Sunday evenlng service 7:30p.m. Tuesday and Thurs·
day Services at 7: 30p.m.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud. pastot.
SundaySchool9 ;30a.m .; Worship service.
10:30 a.m.·, Youth servtc::e Sunday 6: 15 p.
m. Sunday evenlngservtce7 :00p.m. Wednesday Prayer Meeting and Bibl e Study
7 00
: N'-lASEsETTL.EMENTCHURCH, Sun·
day afternooo services a1 2": 30. Thuraday
evening services at 7: 30.
nRST BAPTIST CHURCH , Mas en, W.
Va. Paster, Bill Murphy. Sunday SchoollO
a .m .: Sunday evening 7:30 p.m. Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7: 30

cation; Steve Eblin, uabitant. Sunday
SU'lTON - &lt;.:buren :scnoot., ~: JU a .m.;
School9:ll a .m.: Morolng wonhlp 10:30
Morning WOrshtplO: 4,5a .m. first and th1rd
a.m.; Teens In Action, 6 p.m .; Eventna
S;undays; Fellowlbtp dinner with Carmel
Worship, 7:00p.m . Choir practice 8 p.m.
llllrd Tburtday, 6 :ll p.m. (Boker) .
Su~day. WedneNay evening prayer and
EAST LETART- MornlngWonohlll9:00
POMEROY
WEmSIDE
CHUROI
OF
ClmlST,33'lJI60illck'e'l'sHomeRoad!Courty
Bible study.
a.m.; CburebSchoollO:OOa.m; UMW'ftnt
Roacl'761 . m:IM7. Vocal music. 9Jidly WOI"·
DEXTER CHURCH . OF CHRIST,
Tueldi,Y 7::ll p.m. !Gn!c;e).. • stip JOa.m.; BllieStllly na.m.; worship, 6 PRoiEI' WataCil, minister; Norm:an Will,
LETART .FALLs - Worohlp 9 a.m.:
supt. SuDday SCboot9: 30 a.m.; Wonblp
Church sChod 10 a.m. &lt;Gr'ace) .
m We01ood'l)o. Bllie Study,. 7 p.m. 'l&gt;eakE!'.
service
10:311' a .m . Blbl• shldy, Wecln ..RACINE
&lt;llun:b
SChool.
10
a.m.;
WorLuutmHope,evangeUst.
day, 7:00p.m,
shlpll
a.m.:
UMW
lourtbMonda,y
at7:311p.
OW DEXTER BIBLE OIRJSTIAN
m.: Men's Prayer Jmak!Mt, Wedneodi\Y. 8 · REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JDUS
CHURCH. Jack Clelll\d. p.sta-; AtdryGioyd,
CHRISTOF.LA'M'ERDAY SAINTS. Porta.m. (Grace) .
Su~ Su.nd&amp;IY SchOol ».00 a.m; Yooth mEet·
land-Raclae Road . Mllce- Duhl, putcr.
SALEM CEN'Jl:R- Cburt:b SChool t :15
ln~&amp;{E·ti~~~Ouc CHURCH
Janice Danner, e!Mir&lt;h 1&lt;hool director.
a.m. : Wonldo 10:15 a.m. ISieelel .
ulhelHII
Ph
Church school 9:30a.m.: Morning worship
- p omeroy. M •10'· •~ C a
• mer.
·
SNOWVJLLl: - Woruilp 9:00 a.m.:
10:30. a.m. :. Wednlldsy evening prayer
992·5898. Saturday evening Mus, 5::1) p.m.
. Cltun:h !k:hoollO;OO a.m. (MariiD) ,., .
Mr"~.!. ~JMIL
.
; Sunday Mass, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. CCD
~ BAJI'TJS't. Rev. J!arl
KENO CHURCH OF CIDIIBT, ""~"'
classes. 9 a.m. lsi and 3rd Sunday of each
month. Confessions: one-halt hour before
!!JuinB, mlaloler: llatflq Muur and 01· Sllul«, pest..-. Wonlltp III'Vk!e. 1: 30t.m.
Sunday School10:30 a.m. ·B ibleSiudy and
lver Swain, Sunday SChool Supts. Preach·
each Mass.
prayer servtCP ~ursday,7:30 p.m.
IRJI:~a.m. each Sunday; Sunday SchoOl
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
coo~r~ PARISH
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
10:30a.m.
TOLIC FAITH- New Lima Read, next to
UNITED MI!.'I'IIODIST CIIUBCH
AL ctruRCH, KlnpWry Road. Rev.
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Fort Mel~ Park. Robert W. Richards,
Clyde- W. · HendersCI\, pastor. Sunday
CHRISTIAN UNION, Thermt Durbam,
ru.stor. Sunday services, 10 a .m. and 7 p.
NORTIIEAIT CLtJ8TEB
~
·
hi 7
Rev.DoaA......,.
Schooi9::1Ja.m .: Ralph C.Orl, Supt.- Even·
pasloc. Sunday service, 9::1) a.m. ; even·
m.; Wednesday wors p, p.m .
Rev·. Fraak Crofoat
ing worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
lng servlee 7:on p.m. Prayer meeting,
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
Rev. SeldoolollooM
Wednesday 7:00p.m .
·
Wednesday, 7;00 p.m.
Preaching 9:30a.m. tlrsl and second Sun·
ALffiED - Church School 9: :II a .m. ;
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
days,oteacll month; tlllrd and fourth Sun·
worship, 11 a.m.; UMYF&amp;:JOp.m.; UMW
CHURCH, 28601 Slate Route 7, MiddleCHRIST, Joseph B. Hosklu, pastOI". Bible
dayeachmontbworshlpservtce~al7 : 30p.
Titlrd Tuesday, 7:30 p.m . Communion,
J)ort. Sunday $choo110a.m.; SunDy even·
Clan, 9:»a.m.; MomlngWorshlp10: 30a.
m. ; Wednesday evenlnp at 7:30 p.m.
nrst Sunday. (Archer )
IDR ,.rvlce -7::ll p.m .: Tuesday service,
m.; EvenlngWorahtp, 6:.,p.m. Thu.-.:lay
Prayer aad Bible Study.
·
CHESTER - Worship 9 a .m .; Church
7: ll p.m.
Bible Study, 6:30p.m.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, MUI·
SchoollOa.m.: BlbleStudy, Tburtday, 7p.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·· brn'YiielghtsRoad,Pomeroy. Palt&lt;rBob
m. ; UMW. first Thursday, 1 p.m.; ComBob Grimm. pastor. Sunday School9:30a .
HarrlsmvllleRd. (RI.lf3) Robel'!E . I'IIr·
Snyd!r; Sabbath School Superintendent,
munton. first Sunday (Archer).
m. ; Worship 10:45 a.m.; SundaY ~enlng
tell, minister; Steve Stonley, Bible School
RodneyS..Ires.SabbothSChoolbeglnsat2
JOPPA- Worship 9:ll a.m.: Church
t 7Pm
Supt.; ""dney Howery, (lUI. Supt. SUNp.m. on s8turday; afternoon wltb worship
SchoollO::Jl a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
'"FREEOOM 'GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
DAY: Bible SChool 9:ll a .m,: Worship
~tervlce fbllowlne at 3:00p.m. Everyooe
7:JJ p,m. Uohnsonl .
·
Knob, lomled on CouMY Road 31. Rev.
lO:ll A.M. and 7:30P.M.: Weclneoday Bf.
. ....,lcome.
LONG BO'ITOM- Churth SChOol 9: :ll
R&lt;&gt;~er Willford. pastor. Sunday School
ble Study,7: 00 p.m.
, , RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
a.m.; Worshi~ 10:30 a_. m.; Bible Study, ·
• W·'rlhi 10'45 am ·
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
9
1
; Mor.ln
"' " 7:00p.m
' .: Wed· .,
:
a .m.
Sister Harriett Warne!', Supt. Sunday
Wednesday, 1':30 p.m .. UMYF WednesGrove. Tbe Rev. William Mlddleowarth, . Sunday
evening
wonhlp
School 9:30 a.m,; Morntna: Worship, 10: 45
day 1 6:00 p.m.; Communion Ftrs1 Sunday
pastor. Church service 9:lla.m.: SundaY
nesday I'IIPDing Bible Study 7:00p.m.
mi.!ORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
a.m.
of Month (Crofoot) .
School10: 30 a.m.
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEY AN
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, East
REEDSVILLE -Church SChool9: :ll a .
CHURCH- CoolvDieRD . Rev. PhUltp Ri· · Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10a.m .;
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Main St. Steve Fuller, pastor. George
m.: Worship ServiCP 11:00 a.m.
denour. p,fstr:r. Sunday School9:30 a .m. ;
worship servtee 11 a .m.; Sunday night
Tom Runym. putcr. Sunday SChool9: 30
Sklnaer. Sunday School Svperlntendent.
TIJPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL worshiP service 10::11 a.m.; Bible Jtudy
worship service 7:30 p.m .; Midweek
a .m.: Larry Haynea, S. S. Supt. Morntne
Sunday School, 9:l) a .m .; Morning Wor· · (;burch School 9 a .m. ; Worship 10 a.m .;
and worship service, Wednesday. 7 p.m.
prayer service Wednesday 1 p.m.
worship 10:30 a .m.
ablp 10:30 a .m.; Wednl!lday evening
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m .; CommuRUTLAND CHURCH OF CRRIST.
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZAprayer and Bible ltudy, 7:30p.m.
nlon First Sunday (Archer~ .
Roy W. Carter, pastor. Sunday Morning
CHURCHofMtddleport, Ine., 75Pear1St. ,
RENE, Rev. John Vaace, putor; Ora
nRST SOU111ERN BAPTIST, PoCENTJIAL CLUSTER
Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor; Roger Manley,
• dayBibleSchool
Bass, Chairman of tbe Board of Chriltlan
Wors hi p, 10Wednesday
:00 a.m.; SuBible
Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
' mel'oy Pike. E. Lamar O'Brvant, pastor;
Rev. Don MeadDw•
Life. SuDday Scbool 9:30a.m.; Moraine
6:00p.m.:
Study 7:00 p,
Jack ~eds. Sunday School Dtrecur. Sun·
Rev. Wale, Th.tcher
9:l) a.m.; Morning Wonhip lO::K) a.m. ;
Wonhi 10:30 a.m.; Evuaellcal tervice,
daY Schopl. 9 :30a.m. ; Mornlna Worship,
Rev. Hanq Rllldllt~~~eh
mRUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Evtnlng Worship 7: ll p.m . Wednesday
7:00 p.m. ; Wedneodoy oervb, 7:00p.m.
10; t5: even1n1 worship. 7:00p.m. !D.S.T . )
Rev. Kalhr)'o RU.,.
TUUs. pastor. SOnny H.udlon, supt. Sunday
evtnlng ~lble Jtudy , prayer and praise
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex&amp; 7:30 iE.S.T. );. Wedneoday Prayer Ser·
Rev. Paul Mania
School 9· l) am · Morning worship, tO: :lt
service, 7 ·30 p.m.
ter. Woudy Call, put or. Servlcs Sunday
vice. 7:00p.m . il~.S.T.) lt7:l!P.M. !E .S.
Rev. Arthur Crabtree
10 a .m . and 1 p.m . Wednesday, 7 p.m.
a.m.; s~ndaY eVening service 7:00 p.m.
FAITH FULL GOSPEL ~HUR~, Long
T.) ; Mlsalop Friends (aees 2·6), Royal
Rev. Ro1N118teele
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO proBottcm. Sunday SchooL 9. 30 a .m.. Morn·
DYESV!LLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
AmbuaadDrs (boys aa:ee &amp;-181. and Glrls
ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship lla.m.
9 a m each Sunday.
lng Worship 10:45 a .m.; Sunday evening
Lloyd Soyre, Supl. Sunday SCbool 9:.10 a.
In Action (8.g8 6-18) on Wednesdays. 7 p,
; Church School9:45 a.m.; Charge Bible
gr~'nTLt\Ni&gt; CHURCH OF THE NAZA· , 7:00p.m. fsummer 7100 p.m . I; Wednes·
m.; momlnc wonhlp 10:» a .m . Sunday
m . fD.S.T.) &amp;7 :30p.m. (E.S.T. ) : TUesday
Stlldy, Wetloeoday, 7:30p.m.; . UMW, flrsl
RENE . samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
day nl~t 7:00p.m. (summer 7:JJ p.m.l .
even Ina: service 7 p.m.
VIsitation, 6::«) p.m.
Tuesday, 1: 30 p.ln.; ChOir Reheer!!al,
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. Steve
SChool9 ::lla.m.: Wo~ohlp servlce~O:lla.
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
p.mRUTLA.
Eve~jj'~fti!~~LI. BAPTIST, SaFAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH , BalWednEOday 6:ll p.m t'lllatcher)
m.; Young people .s senol~
p.m.
OF GOD _ Gary Hlne9, pastor. Sunday
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swijrfl'. Sunday
, ley Run ~load, Rev. Emmett Rawsm, pas·
ENTERPRISE - Worship ·g a .m .;
Schoolg ::JJ to l0:20 a .m .;· Worship srvlce
lem St. Rev. Paul Tay lor. pastor. Sunday
Evangellsttcaervtc::e6 .:r&gt; p.m. Wednesday
School Supt. ; Suriday School 9:l) a .m. ;
1 ' tor. Handley Dunn, supt. Sunday School,
Church School tO a.m.; Bible Study, Tues.
servlce7pm
'loll
s d
gser
School10a.m.; Sundayeventna:7:00p.m .;
1
Morning worship 10:40 a .m .; Sunday
10 a .m.; Sunday evening service, 7: 30p. m.
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW, First M~nday, 7: 30
MASON 'cHuR&lt;;H OF CHRIST Miller
10: ~ to 11: .;111 a.m.; un ay even n
·
Wednl'Sday evening prayer meeting 7: 00
evening worship 7 : ~ p.m.; Wedn•daY
· : BJble1eachlng, 7:30p.m . Thursday.
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m . Choir Re·
St. Mason, W. Va. SUnday Bible Study 10
vice, ~ P·:::.·: Midweek Prayer Service.
p.mso· UTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
evening
Bible
study
7
:
~
p.m.
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry Sl., Syhearsal. Chllchn's at 6:30p.m. Adult fola
.m.
;
Worshiplla.m
.
and7p.m.
Wednes-COMMUNITY
CHURCH
,
BURLINGHAM
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
racuae. MarkMorrCM", paslor.Servlces, tO
Jowlng; Wednesday. (Riley ).
day BiblE&gt; Study. vocal muslr. 1 p.m.
Lawrence Bush. pastor. Sunday School
CHURCH , Sllvf'r Ridg e. Duane Sy denBurlingham. Ray J.audermBt. pastor. Roa .m. Sunday . Evening services Sunday
FLATWOODS- Church SchOol, tO a .m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
g·:l) am . Sunday and Wednesday even·
sU1cker, pastor. Sunday Schod 9 a .m .i
bert
Cawt.
asslslaal
pastor.
SUndl!'
SChool
~
and Wednesday at 6:00p.m .
; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, ThursdtnR Lane, Masoa, W. Va . J . N. Thacker,
·
· ht s ervice 7. 00 P m
Worship Service, 10a.m .; Sunday eYe niRI
10
a.m.:
W(I"SNp 7 p.m.; W~mdly . 6 p.m.
1"f,;'~rfFAITH CHuacH ·Rt. on PoMIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
day. 7 p.m. ; UMYF . Sunday. 6 p.m. iRI·
'
pastor. Evening service 7:l) p.m.; Woservice, 7:00p.m. Wednesday night Bible
ywthmeeting
Wed.,
7p.m.
ctalrd!.savlcel.
7
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dw11ht Hoi')',
leyl.
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH.\\
men's Ministry,
: ~ a.m
.;
r ··- - - --- - - -·- - - - . ;·.;.•t;.;ud.;;y;.7_:_00..;p_,m_
. -:-------,
flrll elder: Wonda Mohler, Sundo;y SChool
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a .m .:
WMne&amp;day
PrayerThursday,
and Bible- 9Study,
7: 15
mile off Rt. 325. Rev. Ben J. Watts. pastor.
SUpt. Sunday School 9:3&gt; a .m.: Morning
Church School 10 A.M. : Choir practice,
p.m .
•
Worship 10: ~ a.m.: EYeJtln,Worshlp 7: 30
Thursday, 6: 30p.m.; UMW third Monday. · Robert Searl('5, S.S. Supt. Sunday School
9::ft a.m.; MornlDR Worship tO :!It ,a .m .:
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
,{ p.m.; Wednl!lday prayer meettna7: 30 p.m.
(Thatcher )
. . ·-·
Sunday .-venlng service 7::11 p. m.; Wed·
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
HEATH I Middleport) -Church SChool,
nesday service, 7::11 p.m.
Rev. Davkt McManis, pestor. Church
Racine. Rev. Jame1 Slttertteld, put&lt;r.
9"::lt a.m.; ·Mornlna WorshlprolO ::J) a.m .;
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Llltle,
School 9: 30 a.m. ; Sunday morning !ter·
1'
Freeman WUIIama. Supt. Sunday School
You.th Group, 4 p.m. ; Wedneaday, Bible
pastor. Steve Little, S. S. Supt. Sunday
vice, 11 a.m.: Sunday evenlq aervtce,
•
9: 45 a.ni. ; Sunday aad Wednesday evenstudy 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m.
School tO a .m.; Morning wonlp, 11 a.m.;
7: ll p.m. Weclneoday prayer meeiiJii, 7: 30
fs
(Rindfielsch).
·
.
,
·)ng services. 7 p.m.
DID ADAM CELEBRATE THANKSGIVING IN GARDEN OF
Sunday evening worstup 7:M p.m. Prayer
•
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAP1' T.
MINERSVILLE - Church SChool9:00
meeting
and
Bible
study
Wednesday.
7:¥1
EDEN
p.FAIRVIEW
BIBLE
CHURCH,
Letart,
'
Corner Sixth and PS.Imer. James seddon,
ji.m. ; Worship service 10:00 a.m.; UMW
p.m.; Youthml"t"tlngWednesdlyat 7p.m ..
W. Va., Rt. 1, Jam• Lewis, pastor. Wor•
Put'-. Edla Wllam", S.S. Supt.; C.thy
lhlrd Wednesday 1 p m IThatcher}
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
ship servleeo 9:ll a .m.: Suaclay Schoolll
PEARL CHAPEL~ Church School9:00
: -RIW, Asst. Supt. Sunday School, 9:15 a.
Ever wonder If Adam In the garden of Eden thought about
- 383 N, 2nd Ave.. Mlddloport. Sunday
a.m.; Eventne wcrlhlp 7: ao p.m. Tuesday
~ • 'm. ; Morning Worsblp,10:15a.m.; Sunday
a.m.: WorshJp 8ef!vlce 10:00 a .m. !Mar·
SchOol
tO
a.m.
Sundu
evening
7:00p.m.;
Thanksgiving?
We know It would not be as we think and
rollaJe
prayer
mtetiDJ
and
Bible
Study
tin)
, • Evening service. 7 p.m. Prayer meeting
Mld·week service, Wed., 7 p.m.
9: 30a.m. ; Worlhlp ltrvlce, Wednesday
, ~ and Bible Study Wednesday eventna. 7 p.
POMEROY- Church School, 9:15a .m.
rlo
...
Turkey
and
all the trimmings. Adam saw the world when It
LANGSV.ILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
', m.; childreri.'s choir practice. Wedn•·
; Worship 10: :1) a.m.; Choir rehearsal
SundaY
School9:30
a
.m.:
Jeff
Pattersm,
was
new
and
fresh.
I wondel'l ifthe trees and bushes were always
T:
Ltm!ERAN CHURCH,
~ • day, 7 p.m.i Adult choir practice, Wed. 8
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m .: UMW, sewnd
supt.
;
Morning
worship
IO
::Jl
a
.m.
;
SunWalnut
and
Heary
StL,
Raveuwoad,
W.
bending
down
of
fruit and berries. He did not need to tend the
! · p.m.; Radio prccram, WMPO. Suaday, Tuesday, 7::r&gt;p.m:; UMYFSunl3ay.6p.m. day evening service, 7:30p.m.: WedneaVa. The Rev. Geof'leC . Weirick, put«.
8: 30a.m.
.(Meadows)
garden. He was to name everything and enjoy It alL
day evening servlee, 7:30p.m.
Suaclay SChool 9:30a.m .: SUDCiaywonhlp
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
ROCK SPRINGS- Cltureh School, 9:15
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
We tb!nk of Thanksgiving In the fall after the harvest and
lla.m.
a.m.; Worshlp_tcl a.m.: Bible Study, WedCHRIST, Eldm R . Blake, pastor. Sunday
5th and Main. AI Hart son. mmtster;
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located oa
after
the trees have put on their glory and dropped all for a
Richard DuBose, Ass ociat e Pastor; Mik e
nesday, 7:~ p.m.; UMYF (Senlorsl , SunSchool 10 a.m.: Gary Reed, Lay leoder.
l'opteroy Pike. CouiiiY R&lt;&gt;atl 2$ oar not__. Ge-rlach. Sunday Scho ol Superintendent .
day, 6 p.m.; (Juniors) every. other Sun·
Winter's
rest. We look forward to Spring and the trees turning
Morning termon, 11 a .m .; Sunday nlaht
woodl. Rev. Blaek'Nood. putor. Servleea
servlcel : ChrlsUan Endeavor 7:1) p.m.,
;.. Bible &amp;hool9 : :.) a.m .; Morninll Worship
da~iftrf:N~,R~~kurcb School, 1D a.m .;
,..
sunday
at 10: 30a.m. aad7:30p,m. wttb
green
and bloiiOmiDJ forth In elory. I wonder If Adam ever saw
Song service 8 p.m. Preaching 8: 30p.m.
,""' 10:30 a .m. Evening· Wort hlp T:OO p.m.
Wo~sh1p, tt a.m .; UMW First Monday,
l!uaclay School t: 30 a.m. BlbleSI"'Y. Wldthe beauty of Spring In Eden. Adam saw the world when It was
Mid-week prayer meetlniJ, WeclneoU3', 7
. " Wednesda~OO p.m. Prayer meeting.
,
~.m.
(Crabtree)
•
-a}',~7:311 p.m.
·
7
•'
MIDDL · RTCHURCHOFTHENAZ·
new. We today also -the world new each morning as the sun
p.m.
.
,,-AITII FELLOWSIIIP CRUSADE FOR
EM CENTER- Clturch SChool9 : 15
ARENE, PASTOR Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm,
HEMLOCK
GROv'E
CHRISTIAN.
Davia
;CHRIST,
St.
Rl.
Sll,
Aatlqully.
Rev.
come
up. I know many do not get up that early. Slightly dlfleren t
Jr.. put &lt;I'. Jean' 1-fimm, sunday school Su·
a .m.; Morning Worahlp 10:15 a.m.
. F'rutldla Dlekolll. putCII'. SUDCiay monl•
putor.
Otart•
=~
S.•
Prentice,
·
as
the
seasons come along Is each morning for us. Did Adam In
paintendent. Surlday School 9:ll a.m.:
iSieelowelVILL~
.. _In w hi 9 00
di\Y SChool Supt. Morllla
9:30 a.
1111 10 a.m.: 8uaclay _ , . , 7:30 p.m.
MornlngWorshl!l8ervlce,lO:lla.m.: SUnSN
L -~lftJ oro up, :
tbe
garden
of Eden miss the glory we ·can see today each Spring
m.:
Sundi,Y
SCbool10:30a.m:
E-loa..-.
nlill'llloY evenllll T:ll p.m.
·
di,Y evening oervlce. 6 p.m .: Wednsday
a.m.: Clturch SChooiiO:OO a ,RI. (Martfn),
vice. 7:00p.m.
MJDDLliPORTlNDEPENDENT HOLI·
as
the
trees
green up and blossom forth. Summer sees them turn
evening service, 7 p.m.
801JTIIEBN CLUSTEB
Mr. UNION BAPTIST. Putor: Joe N.
NEilS CHIJRCH, IJie., 15 Pearl St. ReY.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Rev. Knoll• .Ufr
darker
green
and
Then comes harvest time and the
S.yre. Sun~ School9:t5a.m.: EvtniDI
lve Myon. aelfalputor: Ro..-Manloy,
RENji:, Rev, Glenn McMillan, pastor.
8e\'.
Oro..,
worship &amp;: :ll p.m.: Prayer MH!Ina. 6:30
beautiful fall foliage and the llmba with fruit bending down.
Sr., SuDC1ay Sc1laGI su~- su..
ltfark Matson, SUP«i~tndent. Sunday
Rev. ClriBicD
p.m. Wecln-y.
day Scltaol I; 110 a.m.; Moi'IIIM wanltlp
After
lhll the stark bareness or the Dormant Winter months. So
School9:ll a .m .·lsMornlng Worohlp. 10;30
APPLE GROVE- Clturch School9:00
10:M a.m.; .._..,,. wonllip 'f:ao p.m.;
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
a .m .; Evangel tic aervtce, 6 p.m.;
· a.m.; Momtnt Wonldp 10: 00 a.m.; BtbJe
begins Gods miracle to us once more. Spring comes around with
Wodo~ rT"•&amp; Bible lllldy, _ . . .
CHRIST.
Footer,
pastor:
Howartl
• Prayer and Probe Wedneodi\Y. 7 p. m.:
Study SUllday 7:00p.m. ; Pnt~r meotlna
Caldwell, SUperlnteadeot; CturdiiCitoof
uti..- "'"'ee,1:.110 P.m..
the ll'eeDlDJ of tbe trees and bullies and blossoms so lovely.
Youth meeting. 1 p.m .
· 7:00p.m. TlturlilaY. (Hld:s)
. CJIUIICH 01' JI:IMI ~ OIIRIIT APOIIta.m.: ,..orohlp oervlctl:t5a.m. lllldl: 30
• VNrt'ED PRI:UY'I'RIUAN MIN.-rJIY
BETIIAHY - Worlllllp 9 o.m.; ,Cbu reh
All Adam bad to do was reacb up and eat. Are not we more
p.m. Ewrycae wlc»me.
J
'l'OUC - Vee'm* 11114 WU'd 114. Dler
'
O J ' - ~VNI'Y
SC-10 a.m.; BlbltShiiiY Weclneoday 10
CHESTER OIIUJICIJ OF THE NAZA·
bleued ID our eardenl than Adam ID Eden? We can - and
. . BoY. O'llllllit
. &amp;olr TERI'u
Lm.; llorcu
FeltOIIoldp WldJ.....
RENE. Rev. llerllert Grate, - o r.
10:30a.JL;
W
tor.lee,....._, 1:30
enjoy the IIHIIOIIII and Gods bleuJngs. Let us not forget the real
.tl: • PRISBY
~,
lllldoY 1J a.m. IliD•).
.
f'ranlt
RIIDo,
tupl. Iunday Schooll: 30 a .
p.m.:
BlllldtodY.
t:•p.m.
Jldl!l: Won1t1D !lervlceo
CARMEL- Cltttrcb School t:30 o .m. :
.
meuJng of Thauka&amp;l-&lt;lng this day after. Let us bless the Lord
m.: Wbrohlp oervlce, II Lm. ad 7 p.m.
CALVARY l'lUIRIII CIIAPEL, Harrt'
•
'Ucllool 11:1h.m..
Worolllp, 10:t5 a .m. S.mnd aad Fourt.b
Sunday . Wedneadly, 7 p.m. Prayer meet,
.
qaln
today and every day for His wonders to us one and all. o-o!elloed. - · Ylehr-tll, putor;
; . MIDDL.,;EPOJI,iiMPiT PRESBYTERIAN SUIIdayo; Fell-p tllaur with l!ut1&lt;11
In g.
CllntrFaa._....,.._ ...... :••
• llaldly -ol. t ·a.m.: Church oervk:o,
llllnl Tltui'IIIOll. 6: 311 p.m. (Bolltr) .
·
P.....,
William Mlclcleewartll
LAURE!- CLIFF FREE METHODIST
t1q llohoall: 30o.m.; lll...,.wanblp, 11
11&lt;lla.m
·
MORNING STAR - Clnneh School 9:'f5
CHURCR . William Williams, paotor: Ito• •.m.: ludly ""lof .,.... 1:30 p.m.
sY~SEFIIII'I'UNtJ1:DPRESBY - .' a.m .; Wotolllp 10:30 o.m.; Blblt Sludy,
bert E . Bartm, Director ot Chrlollon Edu·
fnyer MHIIal.
7:!111 p.m.
•TERIAI\I - . SU.'l"fr School, 10 o.m. : . Tbu"!!lay, 7; 30 p.m_. lii!~B')_. • __
1

WM!f cfi.IVE

--- -·

SUPER CAR BUYS!!
Auto., low mile a. rune good.

PO.ROY, OHI0-992·6677

'

264 South 2nd

POMEROY CHUROI OF CHRIST. :p2 W.
Mala St., Leo Lash. evanifllsl Bltie SchOol
9::Jla.m.; MorrmgWIDtip.lO:JJa.m.; Youth
meettri,., 6:00p.m.; Eventng wcntip. 7:00 P·
m. wem~ nlgtd p-ayer meettnga~dBtble
stujy. 7:00p.m.
SALVATION
ARMY, JlS Biltlerra&amp;l
11IE~· M
~ Wlnln In...,_
A \e.,.-..... ..,.....,. rs. IJUie
g '-'•-&amp;e·
S.nday hlllne;s meetDg. 10 a.m; SUrday
Schod. lO::Il a.m. Su~ Sci&gt;Jol, YPSM
Eloise Adams, leadB'. 7:.JJ p.m. Salvation
meecJng, varlous sp;.aak~nandmusicsp!Clals.,
'Illusd~·. U :l&gt; a .m. I() 2 p.m. Ladles Horne
Leasue. mtmbers In Ch8flll', all wm~m
Invited; 6:45 p.m. Thursdi\Y. Qrp; C.d,.
Claoss .1Youqr People·BIIie), 7::1l p.m. Bllie
StUdy and Prayer met'ttn~ apm to tlE pW:Jllc

•'That would Include up to, and
Including, gettil\g rid of the Dawg
Pound. The Natonal Football ·
League Is not going to put up with
that. Maybe this will be our new
commlssoner's first big chal·
lenge In the NFL. See If he can
handle them.
"It's a disgrace to the city and
It shouldn't be," added Wyche.

.

FINANCING

UB DIVIS

AVAD,ANJ!:

....

~

221 .W. Maitt 'St., Pomeroy

w.m-.

"Ninety-nine j)ercent of the ·
people In Cleveland are there to
puU for their football tea.m. But
there are a few people there that
are loaded with things to throw.
I've been pounded every time
we've played up there, with
harmless things to chicken bones
that have a sharp broken end that
could have stuck somebody right
In the eye.''
Wyche said he plans to talk
with game officials before Sunday's kickoff to learn what their
plans are for security..
"If we get down near the end
zone and something happens, the
National Football League Is
ready for this," said Wyche.
''There are things that are going
to happen If It happens again.

LIGION

111fJOY Of

(row's Family Restaurant
'1•,.,,., ICemeir FtW C61du"

--------====-1

·

BRADFORD'S

f

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Cleveland Browns fans don't like the
Cincinnati Bengals very much
and· a truce certainly does not
appear In the works for Sunday.
That's because just thn!e days
before tbe Browns· Bengals game
In Cleveland, the Bengals went
out of their way to rip Browns
fans.
''They really are as dirty a fan
as there Is In the league,"
Benpls center Bruce Kozerskl
said Thursday. "That's just the
way they want It and just the way
they do things up In Cleveland.
''We don't have that type of fan
here, and In most places In the
league there Isn't that type of fan .
But ·that's what turns their
players on and tllat's the home
field advantage they have."
TwQ months ago, Cleveland
fahs sitting In end zone seats
called ''TheDawgPound"pelted
Denver Broncos players with so
many objects that officials
moved the teams to the other end
of the field .
Br&lt;&gt;Wns officials have tightened security since that game,
but the Bengals are still wary
about what might happen Sunday. Cincinnati coach Sam
Wyche said after the Broncos·
Browns game that If Cleveland
fans throw things at the Bengals,
he will take his team off the field.
' 'As soon as you pick up
something and start to throw It,

"=

w

&gt; fXPERIEN

so

2 Dr., looka

r..__Ciiiiiriisiiiii....,_.,
WATCH FOR SIGNS

19 points and grab t even
at W aablncton 51-56.
rebQullda ·
..
"ThiS was not a fluke. Ariz. At Lawrence. Kansas, Tl!rry
Brown scored a career-high 19 ana Coach Lute Olson said.
points and Mark Randall added " They d~rved to win the game.
17 to lead the second· ranked Oregon took "II to us frQill
Jayhawks over the Vandals. Jeff beginning to end, "
.
Gueldner added 13 points and
At Seattle, the 13th-ranked
Mike Maddox 10. Kansas, 5-0, led Bruins nearly blew a 12-polnt
25-22 with slxmlnUteS to
In the lead In tile final three mlnutea.
first half but went on a 13-4 r un to The Huskies had a chance to win,
' lead s:zfi at \he haU. Brown and , but Mark West's thr~lnt
Gueldner each had t three- attempt bounced of~, th'e 'rim at
polnten with Gueldner billing all the bUzzer. UCLA. 2-0, was le!l by
four of his attempts. Idaho's Don MacLean's 16 l?O~ts ~nd 10
Riley Smith led all scorers with rebounds .
..
22 points.
In other games, It was: Con·
At Eugene, Ore. , Terrell Bran·
nectlcut 76, Yale 50;. Fordham 69,
don scored 27 points. grabbed Hofstra 56: Penn St. 82, Vermont
seven rebounds and handed out 57; Provldencl! 85, Monmouth 61;
seven assists to lead the Ducks to Rutgers 78, La.tayette69; Towson
the upset of the Wildcats. Bran- St. 102 ..Gettysburg 66; VIllanova
don, a sophomore, canned four - 93, St. Francis 72; . NC·Ashvllle
free throws In the tlnal46 seconds 83, ,Va. Military 77; E. Michigan
to secure the win. He also hit 9of 76, Wls.-MIIwaukee 57; , Lilyo~
14 shots from the field, Including
(Ill.) 69, Rider 61; Fresno_ ~!. 72,
4 of 6 from three-point range.
McNeese St. 71
. .
Oregon Coach Don Monson used
· Also: St. Louis 82; E. llllnols
some reverse psychology to 76; Wake Forest 69, Evan$ville
motivate his team.
64, OT; Houston 102, Hawaii Lqa
"I've been teiUng them they 47; Rice 77, Indiana ~t. 75. OT;
were too scared to play this San Diego 73, North.Texas St. 60;
bunch," Monson said. "That they Tulsa 82. Lamar 70; Brlgha!Jl
couldn't rebound with .them and Young 71, Utah St:,65; Colorado
they couldn't shoot with them. 81, Wyoming 77; Oregon St. 87.
Man. they took them on. "
Arizona St. 64; .Purd11e 65, Utah
Arizona, 1-1, was led by sopho- 63; San Diego St. 67, UC Rivermore transfer B~lan Williams, side 61 and Washington St. 68,
who came off the bench to score Southern Cal 67

WVS nips Redwomen 81-72;
Damitz boosts scoring slate

HIU'tford Ill Monlrul, nl !(hi
Tororto at f il l pry, nl~
S'\' J~~; IMnden at WlnniPI!'IC• •llhl
Mlnntllota iU EdmiHlloii.D! ...
1\'V B.anpn IU Los -'nlf'leti. nlcM

Thk Wet'lt'A
Ohio CoUe1e BuWtb .. I " c hNul•
By Unlid Pl'ft&amp; lnt.r..ato..a
Friii:Q •
I
CUe ~...-w a1 Val•
,... C.Vnll M laNwltt-W IliaCI"
.

so

a13 and No. 13 UCLA survived

Wyche says "Dawg Pound' "a
disgrace' to Cleveland, Browns

Kelly Smith paced the Marauders with 19 points, despite playIng almost the entire second half
with 4 fouls. Newsome and
Hanning joined her In double
figures with 10 each, while Baer
added 9. In the second half
Hanning was 8 or 8 from the line
and Baer was 7 or 9.
For the Falcons Leslie Lytle
and Julie Wright each scored 10,
while Cheryl Dodson added 8.
Meigs won the Reserve contest In
a thriller 31-27. R. Mullins led
Meigs with 10. while C. Weaver
added 8.
The Lady Marauders are now
2-0 on the year, and 1-0 In the
TVC. Meigs will travel to Trimble to take on the Cats next
Thursday night.
By quarters:
Meigs .. ......... .......... . 11 25 38 53
Miller ............... .. .. .. . 16 36 42 45
MEIGS (53) - Kelly Smith
9-1-19, Trlcla Baer 1-7-9, Shannon
Newsome 4·2-10, Kim Hanning
1-8-10, Jennifer Taylor 1-1·3.
Missy Nelson 1·0-2. TOTALS·17·

This week's games

and !bat's what we're goiDJ to
continue to do," Alabama Coach
Wimp Sanderson said. " We
mlibt not win every game, but
we'll play hard."
Keith Askin&amp; added 19 points,
Including 4 three-pointers for
Alabama, which won Its 19th
stralpt at home. Robert Harry
had 17 points and Marcus Webb
and David Benoit 12 each for the
Tide.
"We
on the road. now and
play Vlrtlnla Tech," Sanderson
said. ' 'That won't l:le as easy as
everyone thinks. When you go on
the road It's tough. When you go
Into someone else's barn, you can
easily get killed."
"Playing North Carolina got us
pumped up," Webb said. " Sometime in January, they will be one
11 the top teams and we can say
that we beat them. "
The Tar Heels were led by Rick
Fox's 20 potDts. · Hubert Davis
added 19, Scott Williams 16 and
Pete Chilcutt had 12 and grabbed
nine rebounds for North
Carolina.
.
Ellewbere In the Top 20: No. 2
Kanaas routed Idaho 87-58; No. 3
Arizona was upset by Oregon

The Daily Sentinel- Page- &amp; _

Friday, ~~,; . 1989

Sermonette ,

~J'R"iA ~OUR

run

ruu.

Bor•

w-··

-:::.:*·

~-.

w•..oor.

w•l!!!lar.·

II

'

...

�--~

Ohio

..

.The. Daily Sentinel

f

By Th_
e Be~d -

•

Hobbies can be an tmportant
part of your medical history

Friday, December 1, 1989

Pllae-6

Community calendar

HMC
names
employee
of month

FRIDA\'
SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange No. 778 and Star Junior
Grange No. 878 will meet In
rtJU)ar session on Saturday, at
7:00 p.m., at the grange hall on
County Road 1 near Salem
Center. State youth, young adultyoung mllrrleds. mens and
junior baking conrests will be
held.

Velvet Adkins, R.N., staff
nune on the pediatric unit at
Bober Medical Center, was
named November Employee of
tbe Month, according to Charles
I. AdkinS Jr., chief executive
·
omcer.
A native of Meigs County, Ms.
Adklnl graduated from Meigs
Local IDgh School In Rock
Springs, and Immediately entered the Hoi7Jer Medical Center
School of Nursing graduating In
1981. FoUowtng graduation she
went to work In July, for the
Bober Medical Center.
In nominating Ms. Adkins for
November Employee of the
Month, Jane Martin of the Home
Health Service, cited her unique
abiUtles In pediatric nursing,
based on the care of Mrs.
Martin's three year old grandda~t~hter when she was a patient.
Mrs. Martin said, "When my
granddaughter, Leean, was admitted late one night In the
summer of 1988, she was very
sick Uttle girl who needed an IV
fOr hydration.
"Velvet talked to her In a soft
voice, with a smUe and gen tieness that put Leean at ease, and
the IV was Inserted without a

MIDDLEPORT - There will
be a homemade crart and bake
sale on Friday at the Sears
Catalogue Store from 10 a.m. to 5
p.m. sponlored by the Middleport Presbyterian Church. There
will be decorations, toys, ChrlstfllU Items, pies, cakes, cookies,
and more. On Saturday the sale
will be from 10 a.m to 4 p.m.
SYRACUSE - The Asbury
United Methodist Church will
'have Its Christmas bazaar on
Friday and Saturday from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m. There will be homemade ltems . Including pies,
cakes, cookies, breads, comforters, crqfts, cglft Items, soup,
sandwiches, and coffee.

HONORED - Charles I. Adklna lr., cblef executive officer of
Holzer Medical Cealer coqratula&amp;es Velvel Adkins, RN., on her
selection of employee ollhe monlh.

tear or movement of any kind:
From that time on, Leea referred
to her as 'my nurse Velvet'. A
year later she still talks a bout
'my nurse Velvet'. What an
Impression Velvet made on a
little sick three year old and her
family."
Ms. Adkins and her husband
Doug AdkinS, R.N. head nurse In
the Emergency Department,

have a daughter, Megan, and
they live In Middleport.
As November Employee of the
Month, Ms. Adkins received a $50
U.S. Savings Bond, a special
parking place designated with
her name for the month; and her
name engraved on the permanent plaque of Employees of the
Month displayed In the main
lobby.

POMEROY The Meigs
County REACT will bold Its ·
monthly meeting -on Friday · at
7: 30 p.m. at Pleasers. Officers
will be elected and all members
are urged to attend. '
MIDDLEPORT-The Evangeline Chapter No. 172,'0rder of the
Eastern Star, will have Its open
·~stallatlon on Friday at 7:30

p.m. Members are to bring
sandwiches.

.,

building.

MONDAY
LETART FALLS -The Letart
SATURDAY
FallS PTO will meet Monday at
GALLIPOLIS -The third anthe school at 7 p.m. Mrs. Shirley
nual Christmas Praise at the
Faith Temple Church will be held Sayre's class will present the
on Saturday at 7 p.m. Groups to
program.
sing lncl)Kie the Zion Hit~ Singers
from Columbus, and the Gabriel
POMEROY -The Drew WebsQuartet from Middleport. The ter Post 39 Auxiliary wUI have Its
church Is located of Route 141 on · Christmas dinner · at Crow'.s
Debby Drive between Gallipolis Restaurant on Monday at 6 p.m.
and Centenary.
COLUMBIA TOWNSHIP
ALFRED -The Allred United -The board of trustees of ColumMethodist Church will have Its. bia Township wlll meet Monday
soup supper on Saturday at 5 at 7:30p.m. at the fire .s tation.
p.m. There will be vegetable
' .
MIDDLEPORT -The Middlesoup~ chlll, hot dogs, and ple
available. Donations will be port Garden Club wlll have ItS
t!lken and containers must be - Christmas dinner at the !eglon
provided for carry out soups.
hall on Monday at 6:30· p.m. A
party
will follow a1 the home of .
'
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Betsy Horky.
Volunteer Fire Department will
have Its ChriStmas auction on
RACINE -The Sutton TownSaturday at the station at 7 p.m.
ship Trustees will meet Monday
Refreshments will be served.
at 7:30 p.m. at the .residence of .
the cle~kHARRiSONVILLE -The Harrisonville Lodge F and AM will
LETART -The Letart Townhave Its. open Installation of . ship trustees will meet Monday
officers on Saturday at 7:30p.m.
at 6 p.m. at the office bulldlpg.
There will also be a potluck
dinner.
POMEROY - The Meigs Local Band Boosters will meet
SUNDAY
Monday at 7 p.tn. In the high
RACINE -The December school band room.
:
meeting of the Southern Junior
High School Booster Association
has been changed from Dec. 7 at4
p.m. to Sunday at the junior high
Lunch menus have been announced for the follOWing schools
for the week or Dec. 4.
Eastern Local
Matthew, and Kevin, Mr. and
Monday: hot dog with sauce,
Mrs. Jim Kelly, alllocal; and Mr.
peas, fruit, and milk.
and Mrs. Harvey Mabe and Lily
Tuesday: chicken patty, vegetLawson, Winston-Salem, N.C.
aliles and dip, . fruited · jello,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence HenderJ
cookie, milk.
son accompanied Mr. and Mrs.
Wednesday: pizza, lettuce.
Dave Williams of Belpre to visit
salad, fruit, and milk.
Mr. and Mrs. Blll Wood, ZanesThursday: bologna and cheese
ville, on Nov. 26.
san&lt;lwlch, french frieS, fruit,
Lee Ann Robinson, bride elect
cake ..and milk.
of Kirk Flck, was honored with a
Friday: cook's &lt;;boice.
household shower at the church
Carleton Sctiool
on Nov. 25. Hostesses were Lori
. Monday: hot dog on a bun.
Ritchie, Janet Connolly, Lisa
vegetable 'soup, crackers, fruit,
Henderson, and Lori Burke. Ms.
a11d milk.
Robinson received many beautiTuesday: sausage gravy over
ful and useful gifts.
blscu,ts, mixed vegetables, fruit,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Spencer
and milk.
and Mike, Racine; Mr. and Mrs. '
Wednesday: chill, peanut butTom Avis, Jonath-a n and Meghan
'ter sandwich, crackers, fruit,
were Thanksgiving guests o!Mr.
and milk.
and Mrs. Floyd Avis and Bob.
Thursday: tuna casserole, but'
tered pl!as, roll, fruit, and milk.
Friday: cook's choice.

HOLIPAY FU.N -What del you llsve when you
putabouti8)'0Wig glrll and several of lhelrmOAI!!I
torelher clurtar tile Cbrtatmu holiday !le88on
with loa. of craft ...ppuea? You have an omament
workahop! Girl Scoua. from Racine Brownie

The Alfred United Methodist
Church will have Its Christmas
program on Dec. 17 at 7:30p.m.
Lori Boyles and Pam Yost are
the directors. The public Is
Invited to attend.
Danna Stearns and her fiance
Howard Stoler, Centerville, Va.:
spent Thanksgiving weekend
with her parents; Mr. and Mrs.
Delbert Stearns,
Thanksgiving guests of Mr.
and Mrs. D~ve Watson, Stacie
and Alan were Clara Follord, Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Follrod, all local;
and Mr. and Mrs. Steve Fo!Lrod
and Kaltlyn, Athens.
Nina Robinson spent ThanksgMng day with Mr. and Mrs:
Gerald Swartz; Reno.
Thanksgiving guests of Mr.
and Mrs. LesterKeatonwereMr.
Mrs. Bob Keaton, Bobby,

l

B:r 'li!Jited Preu lnteraallonal

Lunch me_nus

Library lines... ---------

~hyear.

'I1Ie red Christmas stockings,
uaed as going home buntings for
11M! December newborns, add a
lfttlve touch to the occasion, and
are enthusiastically received by
t.. new mothers, who orten
comment that they will preserve
the stocking as a keepsake for
their child to enjoy In years to

come.

•• Mn. Tayntor commented that
tiM volunteers start cutting out
1M llsnnel pieces In late Sep-

PINNING - Volunteers Fay Wright, left, and Ellabelle
McDonald work on the cuttiDg tables, plnaiDg pat teras to lhe red
flannel for the Chrllltmas stockings to be pven to each December
baby al Holzer Medical Center.
!ember, so that the stockings can
all be sewn together before
December.
Those volunteers who cut 130·
stockings this year, from 49

yards of fabric, were Mary
Clendenin, Marcella Houck, El·
Iabelle McDonald, Sally Notter,
Madeline Rees, and Faye
Wright.

:Educational exhibit at ·flower show

Brightly colored .table cloths,
napkins, dishes, and flower artangements decorated 12 card
tables recently at the Christmas
f'lower Show sponsored by Meigs
County Garden Clubs at Royal
Oak Resort.
Each garden club was to make
• decorative luncheon setting for
lbe show which made up a special
itlbcatlonal exhibit.
"roi:._.J_ IL

OJIITJU.f:reua
:.L.
"f41-JS meetS

;.
;:pndy Lambert lost the most
weight In thl' Nov. 20 Five Points
cJIIss of Sltnderella.
-. Nellie Casto and Kate Stone
lied for weight loss In the Nov. 21
dais of Sllnderella at Mason,

w.va.

: Jn the Monday night class,
Jliary Browning lost the · most
'lltelght and Cindy Lambert was
die nm!ll!r up.
• In the Tuesday night Mason
elau1 four new members were
taken In and Joan Vaughan lost
(tie moat weight with Nellie Casto
111 runner up.
: etuusbeglnat6p.m.andnew
_..bers are being accepted.

'

..

~
.

Clubs taking parlin the exhibit
were Virginia Chadwell, Bend of
the River Garden Club and
Chester Garden Club; Marjorie
Purtell, Fernwood Garden Club;
Brenda and Krista! Bolin,
Friends and Flowers Garden
Club; Margaret Edwards and
JoAnn Fetty, Rutland Friendly ·
Garden Club; Rae Reynolds and
Betsy Horky. Middleport Garden
Club; Marjorie Fetty, M.lddleport Amateur Gardeners; Eva
Robson, Rutland Garden Club·
Melanie Stethem, Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts; Allegra
Will and Pauline Atkins, Star
Garden Club· Betty Milhoan
Wildwood G~rden Club; and
Alley Thompson and Addalou
Lewis, Winding Trail Garden

rr

·
v tsttors

d

name

Jean, Norman, and Ronnie
Wood visited during ThanksJ:IVIng with Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Brlckles, Jeffrey, and Michael at
Germantown.
Traveling from Pease Air
Force Base, N.H. to Germantown lor the holiday was Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Wood, Carrie,
Cathy, and Donna.

Club.
The garden clubs wlll display
the arrangements on Sunday as
part of the hoUday happenings at
the Meigs County Museum.
, •

Auxtltary to meet

The Ladles Auxiliary Fraternal Order of Eagles 2171 will have
a potluck meeting on Tuesday at
7 p.m. Those attending are to
bring a covered dish and something for the food baskets which
will be made up for the needy.

Lodge

meet

tO

OIRISTMAS BAZAAR

*

SA111DAYI DICEMIEI 2nd
~
1•11 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
IMI Of GIULDIIME CULAIMD
East .... Str11t, Racine, Ohio
••

ft

.._,,.

-r

The December meet lng of the
Southern Junior High School
Booster Association has been
changed from Dec. 7 at 4 p.m. to
Sunday at the junior high
building.

Trustees to meet

RACINE

lATE·

OPEIIHOISE

if

f

Meeting date _changed

Officers wlll be Installed at the
regular meeting of the Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM on Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
·
The Installation is open and all
The Olive Township Trustees
mas9ns, their wives, and guests. , will have thel~ regular meeting
Refreshments will follow the on 'l)lesday at 6: 30 p.m. at the
1
Installation.
Reedsville Fire Station.

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

~

B:r RUTH POWERS
The dedication Is over and the
new Ml'lgs Couniy Public LIbrary has been officially
launched.
There seems to be some
contusion over the hours tbe
library Is open. True, we have
extended our hours. The Pomeroy Library's new hours are:
Monday thru Friday 9 a.m. to 9
p.m.; Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.;
and Sunday 1 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Middleport Ubrary has new
hours also. Their hours are:
Monday noon to 8 p.m.; Tuesday
thru Saturday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. No
SUnday hours at Middleport.
There also Is some contusion
about the status of the Middleport Library since the new .
library opened. The Middleport Library Is open and operatlngon
the same basts It always did. The
Meigs County Library system
consists of the new Pomeroy
Library which Is the main library

SIIDAY; DIC-11 J, 1919
--L1zH AJI.
. lxd1•1• Olfts.
Mill'S . . _
.. ..,. SI1S
TOYS, a•s, CIIIS'IIIIs CAllY,

l!&gt;rawinlll\.

7""

V

A.

,.r-

:v

JID

c..,.. .See 0• •••Y Nice

,.....-·-·

9ot9-Jt4J

--

t

UCIII, OliO

for the co.unty and the Middleport
Ubrary which Is the branch
library of tl)e county system.
The library staff Is very happy
In their new home and I think the
public likes It too. Circulation Is
booming, and that's the way we
like it.
If you have not had a chance to
visit us, please do so. l think
you'll like what you sei-. Come
check us out!

I

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
, .._""'• 17 colen)
PainMitio lll:tii• ladrtts .... Tr•~

•• "'t

Choislnws Coctus, Foilago ladrttt,
lltrrllll lhlly
~.'-It Show
,.,..., lin anol Cut Cho Is toNi T,.L
Fw tho ...... Ont's Grave .........
.........,, S,.o,._ C-wy Y-.
IWotch hr -Christ- O,•Heontl
Open Deily 9 ·AM-6,P.M. ·

8und8y 1 P.M.-6 P.M.

Syr·-· ow.

HU.AIDS GIIIIIIHOUSE

Pll . I l l
SUNDAY, DEC-EI 3rd
12:00 NOON-3:00 P.M.
l'rM

To The First SJ 0.00 (ustomers
1OOfo-20%-30% DIS(OUNTS

;'

•

Check Your SalK Slips Fer An1tunt1 .
SAlE ITEMS NOT ..CLUDED ON DISCOUNTS .
No Pll'chllst
r - Neltl Net • Pr-t To 'Win.

Nlc•••
- RACINE DEPARTMENT STORE
3.

·

~
. ~eople

IACIIII, OliO

~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~B~U:C:K:E:Y:E::::::~ •
FIIDIY, DICE-II 1, 1919
COUN'IIY nUIIIIINEI-........................... sc.4'
Toy OurCountrySt.._llmm_ln A Ooll-oHomomodoWhlttBMOct ltr...S

•'

With llalhed Pe~Mo•erul Grwvy. HomtcooMd Gr-.t • • • With Mu1hroOma 1tnd

Your Cholot of • Hot Rolf or Hom.m... 16ecutt. Coff-. "egullr
lmollofo Drink
·

Of

Decaf T••••
..

,
SUNDAY, DEC-II 3 .
HOIII UIED IAIIIIIIIII -·········"•........... S4.J9
A ca.n.ous hrvll'lt of HOlM ............ l'etilurfnt Our OWp Homlmld• ft•lsln-

PoUto•.

W..... ...._ lerWd Willi lollloped
Hot Bunered Corn •nd Hot •~·
••lllolorHem•ldel._,flt-llhHen.,)Coff... ft-.ul~rorDeolllln.-. r ..
or Srwollofl Drink.
.
·

C.a'S P011101....................................................... S3.32
OPEN: 8 A.M. 'TIL 7:00 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEE~

•' '

'

o-.ts, Oat-1 I

Grit1. ·

.

.

A·nENTION RUTI.ANDI
Starting December 4, 1919
Connie Aldridge and Debbie Jones
will be at
VICKY'S BEAUTY SALON
on MONDAYS and TUESDAYS

c•

By John C. Welf, D.O.
A.uoclate Prolea10r
of FamUy Medicine
"
Oblo Unlvel'llty CoHere
of o.teopalhlc Medlclae
Question: I saw my family
doctor because 1 was feeling run
down all the tune. He asked me a
lot of ques dons, Including questions about my hobbles. I understand why he asked It! had a sore
throat, cough, etc., but why did
he ask about my hobbles?
Answer: Your doctor asked
about your hobbles because you
may be exposing yourself and
your family to potentially toxic
substances without realizing lt.
These toxic substances may be
causing you to t~l run down _a ll
the time.
'
The federal government sets
standards fQr the safe level of
exposure to potentially hazardous substances which are used In
Industry. These standa~ds are
based on a substance's effect on a
healthy adult mate with an
eight-hour per day exposure.
· Often these same substances
are used at home without proper
safety precautions. Even when
the recommended precautions
are followed at home, this may
not adequately protect your
health -either because you are
not a healthy adult male, or
because you have more than an
eight-hour a day exposure.
A few examples may help you
undetstand. People with II·
loesses such as asthma may be
harmed with a much lower level
of exposure to foi'Jllaldehyde- a
common chemical In particle
board, acrylic paints and ,tnany
other compounds - than those
who are healthy. Children are
much more susceptible to lead
, poisoning from arts-and-crafts

Intere-s ts of nudists.
Specifically, the group wants
the law to allow sunbathing In the
buff on public lands held by
federal agencies like the Tennessee Valley Authority.
"We're trying to do what we
can to convince these agencies to
recognize that nude sunbathing
Is neither a moral nor a social
problem and It can be properly
managed," association &lt;;hlef
Arne Erikson said Thursday.
"We're not looking to disturb
anyone, but tllere are a lo\ of
people who want to sunba,t he
nude, so why shouldn't there be
CHICAGO (UP!) - Doctors
some land set aside for that?"
said they were satisfied with the
The . sunbathing association progress of a Texas toddler who
has budgeted $65,000 for lobbyist ~ received part of her mother's
Kevin Kearney to help persuade liver In the nation's first livethe TVA, National Park Service, donor transplant.
U.S. Forest Service and federal
Alyssa Smith remained In
Bureau of Land Management to critical but stable condition at
set aside space for nudists.
the University of Chicago Hospi"We're just trying to stake out tals Friday morning, a spokeswo·
our piece of the pte," Kearney
man said.
said. ,
"Allysa's liver functlpn Is
Park Service spokesman
continuing to Improve, and the
George Berklacy said the Idea · doctor-s are satisfied with her
likely wlll get a cold shoulder.
progress," said hospital spokes"The naked. truth Is that we woman Mary Fetsch.
don't Intend to write regulations
The 21-month·old Schertz,
permitting nude sunbathing,". Texas, girl underwent the 13
Berklacy said. "There are no ~-hour operation Monday during
federal laws that prohibit this . which she received a portion of
activity; but we do adhere to local her mother's liver.
ordinances."

FOI All APPOIIITIIJIIT

..

~-

LeoWttd. ''

~ I.JII &amp;tAiliM.fY lilt COol

S...ollol!•, ~ - _ ,

Dlilll.,inllll-..otthi1S..~~·IIICI•

Although the condition o! her
mother, Terri - Smith, 29, was
upgraded to good, doctors said It
was unlikely she would see her
daughter Friday because the trip
between the hospital rooms may
tire her, hospital spokesman Ed
E_rnst said.
. The youngster Is expected to
remain hospitalized 3 ~ to 7
weeks and Ernst said for the time
being sMwiJiremaln In Intensive
care, where her condition will be
listed as critical but stable.
The girl's father , John Smith,
27, has been shuttling back and
forth between the hospital rooms
of his daughter and his wife.
"Terri's trying to walk a little
bit," he said. "Her main concern
IS how Alyssa 'is doing."

The Past Matrons of Evangeline Chapter 172 Order pf the
Eastern Star .wlll have Its ChriStmas dinner on Tuesday at 6 p.m.
at the Holiday Inn In GaiUpoUs. A
$5 to $6 gift exchange will be held
at this time also.

A SPECIAL 6
ONTH C.D.

RAPHAEL AS HERSELF: Talk-show hostess Sally Jesay
Rapflael keeps busy moonlighting hy playing herself In movies
and on television. Raphael, wbo had a cameo last season on
"The Equalizer," appears In "She-Devil," the new Meryl
Slre~Roseanne Barr movie, and also wlll be seen In the Dec. 2
episode of "Kojak" with Telly Savatu and Aagle Dlcldii80D.
Raphael also says that she's been approached about appearing
on a new NBC pollee series called "True Blue."
GLIMPSES: Conductor Leonard Bernstein w!U lead Christmas performances of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony on both
sides of the BerUn Wall. The first concert will be held at the
Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, a World War II ruin In East
BerUn, Dec. 23 and the second' will be held Christmas Day at the
Schausplelhaus theater in East Berlin. Both are near the BerUn
WalL which until recently divided the city ... A Pablo Picpainting was sold Thursday In PariS for $51.38 mliUon - the
second highest auction bid on record for a painting. "Noces ~e
Plerrette," which shows a young girl about to marry an older
man, went to Tokyo art connolsseur ·Tomonorl fiurumakl.

FROM

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'

1978 Olds Toronado
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.

Auto .. PS, PB. Air.

1984 Mercury Cougar
•••• S3595
.

Auto, PB, PS. Air.

1978 Ford. Mustang• .......... S995

1968 Chevy C-30 ............. S995

Automatic.

ff you've been
holding back waiting for a great rate,
this Is H. But you've
got to act .fast.
This offer from
Cenlral Trust
•

is available for a
limited time only.
For more information contact
your nearest
Central Trust office
cal Ge illj •• 446-e902
992 ·6661

••••pori

THE CENTRAL TRlSfal\f~Y
T1tr 8tWt 7JriJ.MM '/1riJw$
,.,._
.
•..._..u.........
CJO; ................ ""-'¥
IIIM. . . . . ,.,.,11MI..

' '

0..,.....,

~. ~d l,......olti-.S..IIIIh&gt; ~tl!fldollilllli

/-

1976 Chevy C-10 ............. S795

...

742·233• Fer Vicky's

his mind about crossing the picket line at BallY's In Las Vegas
because there may be a settlement soon In a musicians strike.
Sinatra' had planned to open Dec. 4 as scheduled because of the
holiday season, even though his son and musical director,
Fraak Sinatra Jr., has been acting as a go-between for the
casinos and the musicians, who are striking five casinos to
protest the use of taped music In showrooms. "I am Informed
that a settlement elf the strike Is possible before the holidays,"
Sinatra said In a statement Issued Wednesday. "It such Is the
case, I do not want to jeopardize these conversations and am
deferring my decision to perform In I;as Vegas at the moment. '
Leave the lighting to (Roberto) Duran and (Sagar Ray)

Aotomatic.

on ·Tuesday Evening through Friday.
"2-6311 Fer l1ad~p~arters

••

supplies or stained glass work rial. While vapor from meltiliJ!
than are adults. Many chemicals lead can be dangerous, eatinl:
that seem to be relatively safe for lead Is actually the mostcommolladults. Many chemicals that source of lead poisoning. Little
seem to be relatively safe for children willputanythlng In the~
adults have never been tested on mouths, but how do adults eat
developing babies . So women iead? Well, have you ever
who are pregnant must he handled a soldered wire or 11
partiC)IIarly careful about their piece of stained glass and thert
exposure.
eaten a snack wlthouj washing
The government standards of your hands? You ate lead!
,
eight hours o! exposure per day
Many of the substances used in
are frequently exceeded when photography, ceramics, and
you are working at home. One welding can be toxic. The heavy
way this can happen is If you use metals - like cadmium. chro-.•
a _product In a hobby that you are mlum and cobalt - and th~
also expose_d to on the job. It Is associated solvents can produce.
also possible for paint and other undesirable effects on your;
chemical vapors from a home health. If you can avoid having'
studio to spread throughout a these products come in dlre~ ­
poorly ventilated house and contact with your body, and that
expose the occupants for rela- Includes the air you breathe, you.
tively long periods or time.
will be protecting your health . . :
Question: What are some or the
It is Important for you to&lt;
hazardous material which are remind your family doctor abou t.
common_ly. used at home?
your exposure to potentially·.
;Answer: Chemical solvents toxic substances at work and &amp;l:r
are very cotnmon. They produce home. This Is ic help protect your,
the "tun'les" from paints. dyes, own health because the physical'
glues, stains and many arts-and- signs of toxic exposure such as
crafts materials. Depending on respiratory complaints , skin:
the particular solvent and the rash, high blood pressure or:
nature of the exposure, the result numbness In your arms and legs•.
may be Irritation to the skin, or may be attributed to othet\.
Irritation to the respiratory, conditions. Despite the lmaga:
blood, and nervous systems . . often created on TV, we doctorY
Read the labels carefully. Al- are not mind readers. If a patient_,
ways use adequate ventilation doesn't give us a true and
don't work on your oil painting In complete picture of his or hel't
the corner of the family room lifestyle and medical bacl&lt;hJ
without the wirtdow open and the ground, we are often le!t ' 'grop,·.
fan on. Avoid direct contact with lng in the dark. " Arriving at ~·
the skin by wearing gloves and correct diagnosis is something.i
long sleeves .
like being a detective, but we
Lead is a dangerous substance. need to have at least a few solid :
It has largely been removed from clues .. which only you, the,,
the formulas of most paints, but patient, can provide.
•'
it Is still present in many other
products such as ceramic glazes, r------------:-solder and stained glass mateStlltt! on.c Otoarlme!\l orr'lSII·•IIC•. c.rtdcworeo.,.ranct ~r'lll••

Past matrons to meet

Automatic.

We will -still be at
HEADQUARTERS BEAUTY SALON

'

Liver transplant baby doing better

in the news

OPERA STAR IN THE O.R.: Opera star Luclallo Psvarolll
was a guest In the operating room as a Portland, Ore., doctor
performed open-heart surgery on a GO-year-old man. AfterWard, !he Italian tenor used musical terminology to describe
what he had seen - likening the surgical team's work to "a
perfec\ orcheslra with 'perfect pitch." Pavarotti had been
invited to watch the operation by Dr. Albert starr,lnventor of
the artificial heart valve, who met him· at a private dinner
party. Pavarottl scrubbed with the doctors, put on a surgical
mask and gown and watched with Interest as Starr Implanted an
ar&amp;lclal valve In the patient's heart. Hospital officials say
Pavarotti, 54, has a family history of heart disease and his
grandfather received one of the first pacemakers. Pavarotti
was In POrtland -for a sold-out performance Thursday night.
SINATRA CHANGES TUNE: Frank Sinatra says he c~anged

NOW OPEN fOI IIUifAn: Try Our llat Cak11, French

1Mit,

Nudists In the park? '
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. (UPI)
-A national nudist organization
has hired a lollbyl't tC! wade
through the three-piece-suit
world of Washington and Influence Congress on behalf of Its
naked membership.
The American Sunbathing Association of Klsslmmee, Fla.,
with 35,000 members nationwide,
has also established a political
action committee, NUDEPAC, to
raise money to promote the

cause.''

REFRESHMENTS-DOOR PRIZES

ss.oo Gin

Mea Ia blue make dirty calls
NEW YORK !UPil - The
nation's largest pollee department was red-faced over the
dlscloaure of a S58,000 telephone
btl) for calls to dial-a-porn and
party line dailng services.
PoUce officials vowed Thursday to track down ihe uniformed
and clvlllall employees who
made the unauthorized calls
discovered during a recent audit.
·'The commanders wll.l get that
money back or they will take It
out of their hides," said Inspector
Rlcbard Mayronne, who added
that the department's Internal
Affairs Division ·was investigatIng the abuses.
H~ said · some $2,000 had
already been collected.
The department's director of
cotnmunlcatlons, Michael Amaroaa, said the calls were made
over the first nine months or 1989
lroln about 2, 700 unrestricted
deparunent telephonee throughout the city to dial-a-porn lines,
dating and party lines and
companies that provide theater
and sJH!I'Ial events listings
around New York.
EarUer this year, two school
diStricts amassed 'dial-a-porn
bills or !lJOre than $90,000.
Such uq~uthorized calls were

blocked !rom many city telephones more than two years ago
after officials were hit with a bill
of more than $1 miiUoll for
similar calls and directory assistance requests.
The calls thiS year were also
made to wake-.up services, taped
Interviews with sports figures
and celebrities, Tarot card readIngs and financial advice, Amarosa said.
He noted the Illicit calls
amoimted to only a fraction of tile
department's annual telephone
tab, which exceeds $13· miiUon.
Mayronne said the department
moved to block pollee telephone
access to the dial-up services
after learnlrlg of the abuses but
couldn't because oftheNewYork
Telepho;me strike.

By WILLIAM C. TROTl'
Vnlled Press laleraatlonal
K.ITl'Y GETS STANDING OVATIONS: Reporters were
asked not to query Kitty Dukalda about her drinking problem
wben she appeared Wednesday night In her first public
speaking engagement sinCe being hospitalized for drinking
rubbing alcohoL The Massachusetts Jlrst lady received
Slalldlng ovations before and after her five-minute spi!I!Cb In
Boston Wednesday night to the New England llolocaust
Memorial Committee. When she was asked how she was feeling,
Dukakll said simply, "All right, thanks," and her husband,
Gov. MlcbaelDukakts, added, "We're very, very grateful to the
thousands of people who have written to express their good
wishes and support. People have been tremendous." He called
his wife "a very courageous lady" and said, "It's just fun to he
out with her tonight and to be with good friends for a good

r,.,

992-5776

Troop 1211 and Junior Troop . 104% gathered
Wednesday evening ·at &amp;he Racine United
Methodist Church for their annual ornament
making -slon. A lew of lhe girls are shown here
creatlnr lhelr bollday lrlmmlngs.
)

..,;;._-Quirks in-the news---

Stockings make holiday births brighter ---Alfred news---For the sixth consecutive year,
members of the Volunteer Service League have made bright
red flannel Christmas stockings
for all babies born at Holzer
Medical Center In December to
wear home, according to Ginger
Tayntor, director of volunteer
services.
Slnee December, 1984, the
volunteers have cut out the red
flannel from the specially sized
Cbriatmas stocking patterns,
lhen taken them borne to sew and
trim ll'llh a white furry cuff. The
stocklllg can then be IndividualIzed with tbe name of the ··
newborn and date of birth on one
side, and Hoi7Jer Medical Center ,.:\ ,
on the other, to make the bunting '11'--_
very personal, for the December
"
' _.....,..,._
bablell to wear home.
Staff members at the hospital
also assls tIn II!Wlng up the more
thaD 100 stockings that are made

7

The

··"*--··
.

�-

•

1, 1989

Business Services

Classified

L W.
STEWAU

Wll11 &amp;
SCOTCH PINE

• The Area's NunJber 1 Marketplace
Days

MONDAY th~u FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.
I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY ..
•Acb ·ou1ticlt Me1ga.

~~~~or

P6•d

15

3

16
15
15

6
10

y

PO LI CIES

Worch

1

Month! ~

tnr eaen

•

"7 paint llnt1nM oMr u.ed
·
•sern~n• • not ,..ponsibte 101' .,,Qrl ahar fWtl d• (CI'tedl
tor .,.or• fll'll dw M runt ~n· p..,... l C.U be'Nr11 Z:OO p.m

£0~

n~

. 30

18.00
113.00

IIIIII.AIID, OliO

.• 2
.&amp;0

742-21

COUNTRY
MOillE
HOME PARK

DAY I!FDRE I'UII.ICATIDN

DIAOUNE -

TU£10AY

- 11 :00 A .M . S&amp;TUfiD&amp; Y

PA~£R

WCONIIOAY PAPER

YIWd

u .oo

all .......... ads

MONDA\' PAPER

d• eft• ~C81Ktn 10 meka correct:MM\
• Ads th-' mutt lte ,.td 1n .OW•n~ .,.
I n M.mor-.m

WE.IFAIM

.20

ewe_......,_.._...

run 3 d., 1 . , no ch•t•
•Price at 8d tar •II capQIIteletl ·.. doUble pr1ee af. ad colt

H•PPY Ads

••. oo

.,. ctwJI'itG .....,...,... ~in Ttwo.Mr ._.,.... 1...
c. . - e~.-.. ...._.. au ......
wiAI .... ..,_. irl ~he Pt. fl'l....nt lt ....lllf .-d 1M G.Ui·
polis Daity Tribun._ ,.Kh•n1 owr 11.000 '*"-

• Rec:ew• t .l50 discount fa r ds perd tn IOw"tnce
•Fret ad&amp; - GNeiWIIY and Found . . under 16 words will IN

C:.rd of Ttl MilS

S12 to SJ8

Over 1 &amp; Worct.

A•t•

Ct91t .ASIIOUOW II.

THURSDAY PAPER

s...

FRIDAY PAPER

- 2:00 ~.M .
- 2:00 ~ . M .
- 2:00~ .M
- 2'00 ~ . M .

MONDAY
TUESDAY
WfDN!SDAY
THURSDAY

- 2:00P .M FRIDAY

SUNO&amp; Y P&amp;PfR

•Mobile Home
Parte
•Mobile Home
Ren1ale
•L01 Rentals

We con ~r and 1'1·
cor• radtators and
hta ..r corn. Wt can
als!l acid bail and 1'011
out radiators. Weals•
repair Gas

992-7479

PAT HILL FOlD

Public N atice

NOTICE i1 hereby given

that on S.turdly, O.C:.mber
2nd, 1989. ot 10:00 o.m .. 1
public aele will be held 1t
105 Union Avenue. Pomeroy. Ohio. to Hll lor c•h
tho following collderol :
1988 Pontioc FIOfo 2 dr cpo
Savings Company. Pomeroy, Ohio, 1'81emta the
right to bid at thia MI.. and
to wkhdraw the above coli•
terll prior to sale. Further.
Tho FannOfs Bank and Sov·
ing1 Comp.tny reMrV81 the
right to rtiect any or all bidl
submitted.
Further, the above coli•
torol wll be sold In tho condition it is in with no ••prllaed or implied werrant;.given.
111)28. 29; (121 1. 3tc
Public Nat ice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On N_,.lltr 27. 11188.
in tho MelgoCountv .........,.
Court. Cue No. 284112,
Jtflory w . Cooto. 2110
Homp.- Dr. N .. Columbus, Ohio •3229. op·

2

In Memoriam
In Memory Of
HAROLD D.
BRANNON
A yur ego. you ltrlt
ue.
The te•b on earth

pointod odmlnlttrotor of tho
eototo of Ch•l• H. Gilkey,
de.,..od, lott of Rt. 4. Bal·
ley flun R011d. Pomeroy,
Ohio 46789.
Robert E. Buell,
Proboto Judge
l.eno K. Noooolrood, Cltrk
(12) 1, 8. 16. 3tc
Public N Dtice
~BLIC

NOTICE
In lccotdanCII with Section 307.88 O.R .C. -od
bid&amp; w• be recoivod by the
Mtigo County &amp;o.rd of
Commillioner1 in their offico locoltd In tho Court·
hou•. Pomeroy, Ohio. Untl
noon on December 20,
1989. Tht bido will ...

bulclne should bo broktn
down ..,, • 3·YH• beolo. All
bido oiiGuld indudo tho! bidder il • to provide mllintnonco for tho --ondln·
of !ho buMclng.
The Boord of Meigs

.nor

County Commi88ion•• m..,
requlro odditlonel contract
provlolono with tho
ful b l - inducing but not
limltod to tho right of the opo
tion to cancel the . . . . if n•
..... ry.
The t.ont of tho onvelopo
contlllnina tho bid mud be

oucc••

I

PlllfMING &amp; HEATING
NitW loration:

161 North Stc..d

,•

.

We Carry .Fishin$1 Suppli•

PH. 992-3561

Your Phone
C~,ble Bills Here
IUSINESI 1'11011(
16141 9t2·6SSO
IISIDENCE PHONE
16141

Mory HobottttOf. Ciork
.MoiuoCountv
Commiaaionere
112) 1. 8 . 2tc

Buying Hours;

7:30-8:00

DEER HUNTERS
PARADISE

apa ted at 1:30 P.M. onlllld

"'-"'

Otftce . _ to hou• tho
Mei111 O..tloprn.,t Office,
Uttor Control ~ Mid
Meigs CAA. A minimum of
21100 .... ft.
lo -•od contlllnlng not
tloon abo""""'· BuMd·
ing must lie ground , _
with hondiclop _ . _ Both
men and women' • ,....
rocomoo must lie honcl-oc·
_oil.... !Nid ofllct SPKII
- • hwe both -lnt ond
eir conditioning ond od·
....... - - lighting
Mifftciont for olltce - ·
Mud h... ofl·drMI po,.lng
to accomod8tt 1 minimum

992-771

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
61.4-949-2734
or
614-949-2635

care.

Rental required for uld

11

Help wanted

-•done.

•orr-

---·
.......
-

To • noble r•t ebove.
Nooneknowshowmuch
None but aching hNrtl

,

Loot o n - but found in

....

UVIIIG lOOM SUITES
IEDROOM SUITES
. DtNEm sm
"NEW'' RECUNERS

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

Jooue doeth oil thlngo

woll.

Badly miltod by
doughtor. Debbie
WlohiMclo; sono' Millo.
Ronnie. Jerry Mid IIIII

EVENINGS

Crem..,, and F•miU•

SHOP

10/ 10/ 89 tfn

FURNACE

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Stone-Dirt

KEN'S APPLIANCE

(614) 667-3271

992-5335 or 985-3561
Acron f . 217 E.

Gauge OnlY.

g. e . 89-ttn

~::::::~
GUN SHOOT

698-6500

•ANYTHING
AT ALL

SADDLES &amp; .
HORSE EQUIIPMI

985-4422

Basham lulhling

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory (hol!e
12 Gougo Sholfto~~ Otoly

90 DAY

..._

Announcamems

{12) 1 ••• 11, :ltc

,

.

ALLEN'S .
HAULING

Will Video Tape
Wedding•.
Birlhdaya,
Reunion•. lntariort
of Homae for
lneurance.

'MIIIA&amp;LOII
WAIII SIIVICI

4

2 Wlr.,.lrool Tontoro, - • •
onc1 .,. to glvt . _
AKC Rttillorod. 32300 8t. 111.

-

.,....

-'1

Equlpoownt Dttlll hoo
lor uportooiCad conotructlon
rrr truck equipment, soloo rop.
Wftnlnlmum o1 10 par1 ••·
pooto,..., torrHory lnCtuoloo opo
--~~, 10 countloa 111 tho
-... OhioHnCI
· -raum1,
llallry
pll• oommlaalon,

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

18 Wanted t9 Do
~clOt ond wro~
- • prooo
•
~·
piid, 121. tondortzod $10. 614-

-~-3-="'::::·-:-:-=--==:::::­

- 1 llllnltiilroco l ropOiro,
ol14"'~ otumlolng ~ co.,....,.,.
:.e•:::::::~=::..·- - - - lloofolnlata to _ , . to
Qolllpolio Arao. "" ,..,. U·
-nco. Con rood. liluoprlntl.

Have uNrtenc• on

lolhoo, ml~. oow, d~U -

~

MOO I UP, ....... - - p i Ito
wMh maa- 1211 ond up to
$3N: t.by .,_. 1110 Matt,...
"'lool~ 1u1 o t -

1
N""'
'"snlloble.

~~

•

Ill

•

I bodn10111 a~ Oolllpollt F-,
,..
-· •

-oo=hill_.,

=

11
=:;siTh':-amo·

~-========::;========:!..l !!!'.a--,
~-""'·"*7· - .
_....11-1113- ~ ..

ao ...,. ........... wnh....
.....--H. 3 mi. out Bullvlllo
Rd. Opon I A.ll. to I P.ll. Mon.
lh Sol CoN 81~41-«122
"'
.
.
Couch l chair, tncltobloa l Itt toblt, iKctlltnt cond., ll4441~28t aftor 4•30p m

1174 Ford - r r t n :1'
no1o1 Yon: 1..
t-~· 1 - If...-,
,_,
14
81::,:.:::,·,--,,..,..-.,-.,.-:-:1178 CMvy PlciHop, I oyt.,boodr
-""o. S2211. Colll14 llttllt.
•...,..

to

54

S6

MIIC811antOUI
Merchandise

~ ~ ~i,.eao:.:.,=:

=oil

tr-.

.,_

..,:C·

._al

:::t,tt..:a::

Pt..-.

4

:::n~

==

:;li

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

.

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

;.1112~=:G:,:IIC::,::.;.,tl2:-:-ton--:1:-:.2,..-::cl,-n-ll,.

lllo....

•

ond

can maD ...n Nklpe, cia tintah

..........

~idlwlduol

•1111 210, onglnt,
- . Mrtouo
gul-.
Jofl. Womotov
lnltructor,
114- ...,.,., ..... 304-I7I-2tl2.
41f.1077, tfmHod
73
&amp; WD'a
llon-Thurs, SoL

-lngo.

Kimball plono. - r modol,
good oond lottlltllwl rlofo
10Und 5410. WIU hold untl 0.0.
20 wlh
304-77W181
aRor 1,00 ·
• - lfllc. drum ttl, 2 zldllln
.,...'""'b"Oi_s, dol]lln lol-,_"'!~ __2
pold I
·~114-211 :.:::i.or4p.m.

=r.-11.

:mo.

vans c

1171 Chevy Coooow ,.... Von•
Auto, air, g.c. $21100. lt4-tams.

-Nat. • · 11~-.
ten ~Yin, zJ"::: -e:td

~~

l::r-"'

Cuo
..• •

1

-

~lZ:OOO

Suppl rs

&amp; LivestocK

74

lllloo, 11.000

Motorcycles

ten Hondo 410 • - bike.
61 Fann Equipment
· -: """ 700 mlloo, $8118.
12 hp On~v•lr IIIOWM' wtlh aullcv, 304-171-3412.
220 hN •dl, $1,710. 304-74~ KXIO. Ex 11 rtooncliltlan.Qrlllll
1323.
CtwlotniOO gil. 114-1112- ·~
tor S:OOp.m.
1550 Ollftr lpl.
I •·
tNI •:PhNohl.
~ rt attC,
......_

front
W""'
ouna'
IIF
.-.
CIUI!Ivalrrr,
~~~~·-~-11
522.

for loll: corn - · Jolon
· 4- lnolo ~
off, go.ocf,
I27L

75 Boats •

Motors

tor SBie
1m t7 t. Ston:nolt TiWiull
- · t2$ lop,
HP, Evlnnodo~
..........
..,..,
.
Coll81...-.tstl .... 7:00 ......

lftllllllll'• Of*llnt lor

llllo!V.

;;·
~"
,.

a ....

_ ....,7-ptlonlol,
lncludo lgltl trP!ng,
wood
-oiling,

.,_ I ~'II phOM Md 8Coount

ton-

111011
poooonol.,

..... tncl good
*""''rlJi
ol ontoo ..
IJIIipnwnt. 8loortlioncl I . plut.
-1;101.

going

lind - t o ... P·110111
of Point Plellalll A a· 'er, 200
..... St. Polnl - . . . . . wv

, ~:

28510.

~

..,

..• '

••.

.

__ _
( ..
......
..

•'

m:..~':':'~ .. ·- ... 1--------Auto Parts &amp;

"

boli"'""' or -...• ., dutr, 76
1111- 11-. 111. Ewonlngo:
t~w8•n•

Locultt Pool, tl

-to. I

to'ollor,

wori, IIIJ.4414040.

63

'

Accessories

a

clilol I
1\wu:, , • to fl liD Chew,
lnolo Culo etww tna ..... Oldo, otc. t1444UI'tl.-.

UV..-ock
9
"'

Chlclleno,IIOW7fl,.tm.
Point PI•
ond
Tocll, ~.
f l o g - - n bull. 11
-old.I14-IG-72111.

now-._

POOR lOY nRES, ~~·onc1 ~~$11~ """'
4,0011 good Uteil t ....

I~-~·~...
~-~~~~~~-~--,,.....::
Plolaop - . ~ 1~wr,
~noot.

or

Rod ~T-o truck
VOl')' gtr!!IO - · Will ·-,..• Coli
8uncly ~~
lmld fOr Chrlol-. Aloo, rog'od.
171-1414
auanor-.11UI8111t. or
-

r;

:•::.:::-:=::....-~--- :.64

Hay • Grain
·.,Qround--:--..i-lwl-::-ooo=m-=fl~.oo=-,...~

79

p.tii.

Csmnara &amp;

MotorH....,...

..,,...,
11111, hiY llorpn'o 1174 wtout go -.
Forno, At. 31. Pllror, - 7·
to,
211111, •1211oo Sot. ·
l toiH up root, ,... I good IS.OOO. 114-SIU7al.
Lorge Rliilid botoe ttl )lor 1o&lt;
tole, . $11 - · Doll_,
ovolllblo. 114-446-1052.
Serv1ces
Sauore btiM of hoy tt.OO. 301I'IU171. .
.
81
Home

••s.

link..,...,-. -·•

1--------lmprovemams

Transportation

BASEMENT
WATERPROOfiNG

SBie

UuoondiUDrrlll .......,. .,.,....
.... LaCIII ...... c turnilhlcl.
1147 P"""'"'h Couoo. .,.. F- . . -•. Coli 1·
gino, ........
114-441- lt4-H7-D481, doy or night. R a

71

Autos for

s:z.soo:

2171.

1172

GIIC

plcloup,

a•r•B•••tnent

-

drhe, tiiDV.W. Rabblt,Wprrd
dleeolj ,., Iuick Contwy,

•u.

I ,w.;=::•::crprooflng.~==-=--=---:-­
Ft1ftJ TrN Trtmrwlna. ltUII'tp
-~~. 001 304-t71-fU1.

-Voc

21

Co. -EVANS lNT!iR,...ISES,
Joc1oMn. OH t-.a7-N211.

Heating

--0

.

Atttntlon
Cooonlr
-donto: A publlo ~ o1
lloclt to bol"9 by lliiooro
Cooonl\' Wotan T011rw. lila. to
oporoto on pourolon -OloloandiContiwho
Polnl p~ . .-:. IJo.
tho
..... lor lnlonnotlon by ....
~- llooon
·
laura.
lno., P. ~Y
0. ... :M:I,

Cortor's Plumbing
oniiHootlna
Fourttt and PTne
01111-0hlo

.........-

lltOnCEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
tho! you do
t u - with ptOplt you"'-·
ond NOr to •nd ttoraugh tho .... you .....
lnWNIIgdiid tho ollorloog.

C2

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

s ,..,,aoo ..

...., ..... 1r1u

..,.,11414~.

-I,GIIIItei,WIIJ
_ _ ._.G.T.Iopol.4 ~---

*

_ ....
r.t:.......~.•11:::

-

L

lorlp.IL

100 ... 1111

_,...
•

85 Gannl HIIUIIng

Mobile Homes
tor Rent

......,.u

~dllap.C.IJD4..

~.:; ~~~ ....

n

- ,

"I don't knoW. IIJu•t llll't the 181118...Junlor
faxing Santa Cl1ua hie Christmas list."

'·.

..·

...·.

=

.... ~
n~IL ......._ -~ dlio

. . . . . . . 0 . . . . . . . . 777 . . . . . .

'

... •• '

==
.
.
.
---.
"f.l .,..
·..
=·
.,:""'
:
:
=
...... .....,...71.
__ ...1_
1. . olr,
11M
. . 71,11111
. . - .-N,
au18,
IM,.PVir,
. ... I I i~IJI. Col
==;...:.;.;;...;.;..;..;;.,__
_,

'

,..
"'

Upbolllary
I

1 II

~';~===~
_ , . GUARANTIIDI Coll1·

•'

.~

··-z.a.•v.airulei,-.PW. T.,..,._.....,...

YENDINCIIIOUTI
OALUPOLIIliiiA
EXcmNCI .." Am

~

•

~ -

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Hort1oN. WY 11247.

or .._, lol'l • • •
1 Llln-.wv,
104-1711-1717, -~ ol'

• '

.

tliiiO o1 -tlo on lot,
OIL :wood ..... JMalii.JIIl
121111,

l'or -

..

-·'.

Plumbing•

Bualnesa
OpportunitY

..
-··

-.

ltpllc Tonk P . . - tto..LOattll

Rio On.nde aNI., Cill

I.

..

Rotll)' or Clllilt drtlllriJI.
wolltcomplotod- oilY.
- .iond ......... 304Dtvle
0
i I Crltk Rd. Patll, ._.

-

••
1*
••

•

-

soriH.It
1351.
t•7 Ford F-250. 4 WD, 102 luol

ot: llr. lbolh, 11421 u-.s. lit. 10
-...KY41101.

EARN MONEY typing II - ·
1311.000 ,.., · - polontlol.
Dttilll. (1) 10f1.187-t000 Exl. ..
4852.

''··
'·

..

11-21

=:.::.~~ 1=-= 1 !!!'
========""·-· ...,
Fdtrn

··

1171 Doolgo, D200 Von, Ill
Milo, IJOOI!.IIroo, ,... -

Financial

J .,

..

onllte.

441 21117
·
fiT
MusiCal
t•7Chovyi-10olck-up.l!-*
lnstrumems
- · ••000. Coli EY-IJII,
111~4~4~11~1~230~------,~
Coolo ~with clnomptdoo. - ·
u.-"1, orod. - · - · '180 1•7 Ford Rongor picllfl:-~11 aMIOI
•
;,._nc. conci.. IA*· •t4417·
polnl. (4,100. It I

-

Nloela14 •

--81~U.

-loiol -

11,000

~~--====--- mt

w.- llo-aw-..

•

1177 Chewralot with'-· Coli
IIWIW1Z7.

•••iil&gt;llonll

s.

· ·~·

::C:"· -::'too.

p~a~oup,

olngiO -

•-,.eoo ,..

--.

:::.~
f.S.- ...:'"itii:
:O::ID::·.:•t==~:.:mm:,::..··- - ...,-,

hool:':ce

t.,_

......

PelS for sale

=•· aO:'l:~',.,"~: -hog·-

*

.;

a.-

"""
Rod ~. Sooo. old. IIIII . ....,.
- . . clootn • -.1 dottctol.
81
.,.__.., ·
llollzU'o AKC ovoUoblt, Doc. II,
w1
~··
-•otnu.
I
~ tor -•·
~
1
...... iba._ 11+211 ttOO Woo
lo.m.•TP.IIL

~:4:,73~~

~~:PII~'"

..

7
•

-

.

hu:tll =r de PO and •

oroto-. ,_

·

••
,.

elliOdi'OOIII
"., -...

810.
ou11oo.
Good .....,

on.- .

:U~.nnlng,

•'
~·

Bale

72 Trucks for

-:.:::.e::-u_•·==-;===

!:,'!- 1

.·

au..,......

orl14o2tl

AI'- Wotor Houl~. 3000 - •
,..,.
.,..31 Homaa tor Sale
.I :*~4;71;~'';,21;:,
. ifti;;;m;;;;~c:
· ··
1on ~ooo~. l14-3117·
.
114atocUmMh , _ - · ,100.
1 .... utility, otrlglt · - · 2. 'I , - . , ... 1n
mlloo Wool at HOiaro, oft Rl.' =112=4::101=·: .....---:- - . , . - t121.00. Warm moml"'o:iood 114447-2445 or 114-411112111,
31. 11~1:111.
s , _ , btth qulot -Jon. bumar otowo $110.00,
'II- Coooottll)'
8oo&gt;cooal
ond roil- roqutrod, Fm;:.:o::,. ..,..-.....,.-.,.....,-.,-- Coooottll)', 304-t7&amp;-1314.
4 .._ IIO.OOO. 2 mltoa ..,
VInton, OH · ood1d .,.._ 1147&amp;-tOIO.
Couch, lov• ...t, ..,.,.. rociiM, ~ TNH cull 111.00,
441-7521,114-388-1:174.
:ttl w. opt. 2 llr, 1 'both, priYolt 2 ond Ia-. 614-251-13t5.
Scott ond While Plno, Norwoy
lri~
llbr
2
both
•··t
polio.
ato
County
•
II
I
Good
'
- · 141,'". _
dug TIM
ond btiiOil
•
• ••
.. _ , . .._
.... JjiiJI-~PP orocol. ....
ovol..,......
pucllmM~\:'"e't DOOI.4
lor,
....,,
- · troolo eutod optpll!.-, T
...•-~o.otOt&gt;ont• Rt. 2 North ocrvse Oood
r
, W4s.ts71.
ponwUsd. t21111- Col 114o.m. a • P''"·
it4- at:r
· 'otid ChiX'clo, 304.e71...1 11o ,
..._11... 127 '3rd, AvL 011-o
Home In Ollllpollo, two blocko - - 2 3.
llpollo, OH
104 .
lrMo btnk. Aloo omoll ~~ 10
-·~--· t r - '18 •ch ..,.
miiM. tromolly.l14~1to 'f.
Dtnett•t•blllnd4chllra,304- ~-;·m mllee•..t 11......
678
Mlddt111 art.c.ntralfr located,
cc
Road. 304-171--2233 • 171-a~2.
qulol ilolg-ooi. .S bod,_,
GOOD USED APPUANCES -~304oiTW771.
- · •IIHod
-kloot .,..,
w.o••
,_., doyoro, rolrigorotora, -••u•o11n1ng tOOOO,IIvlng ,_,,both, Aparlmantl lo&lt; ...... 1Win rongoo. Bllallllt Apptllncu, ..-tor-.e1WIMMI.
~~~~ lnoldo
Rivero T - Houelng lor tho Uppor Rl- Ra. IMido Stont
fool, - ~rlcod to eoll. l!ldortr, Hondlcoppod onc1 Crwotllotol. Calll14-441-7311.
Lito RHo gu lumoco.
Phont 11
7. .
·
-·
some
oportmonlt Cloo R
30 inch $1 8 Cloo 71\'
BTU. Rolod Input M,OOO.
owollobll tor non-hondlcooppod,
"otilflli
• h: •- tt I. 114-Mi-:11211.
non-ciiAbiH PIII"'IO\8 betWMh l'lng•, 10 · rana-, 30 1nc • - ;
32 Mobile Ho .. """
tho of ~ snd 112, EQual Wooihor, Whlrll""'!1 171; Wuhor, Holpltol bod tor - · .,. fOr sale
~
unl
:i0+47I- G.E. ~j Dryor, """""""• 175; $75. 304-41711-1112.
8.
Dppoot IJ.
Dry11 ~onmoro, whMo, 175; Hully ex. .too bike, m,; S
111&gt;181, 2 btol"'"'!'1 GOod ololpo. 817
Konrnono Wooloor, _ . , Dutr, lou- cholro, 1 smoll towo
szzoo. lt4447·2.. r or lt4-843- Aportrnonto
hou-,
ond $75; Dmr A..cado, m. -·'."i14-2111., 121 .
112141.
bulldlnfll fc. rwnt. fi71-1250 = ·Ill lpptlo-o. 614-441t2oo81 1873 Comoron 11o111o montlo.ltUD. 304-1714104.
John DMro Log-IIi, 540-A,
Hamo. T•at oloctric. Con 114- BEAUTIFUL APARTIIENT$ AT Glrt'to whlto tlwn Copllln'o N o -· 114-317·7111.
2411-41IUIXIETPRICESATJACK- bod with two clioa- undor- KlETronolllor-814-441ESTATEt. 131 Jocklon Plu noolh, ••c cond, nico Clorlol- 0111 Evliililflli.
$1e2lono. W.lllto a ~ Will hold untl Doc. 20 with
1 ~ w~hod ~'::::4
one- sunporch wlnJI ..,. · Coll14-441o211&amp; EON.
. p..._... 304·7'7Wtll olllr lloHoolrtln IOWoOOOmo BTIIU"'!'~~ 2~
18500: et4-W. llllolono, Apt., Wllllll!l'lol.wotor bod w/4
'.;:d
.
bike.
·
~F' tumlolood,
co~ d....,.,., - - . mlrrow,
1871, 12110, vory privolt rwnlol lh
ldool l&lt;lf 1 poroon, $250. K..-,. holllr, kine- IIIKod wood f30.00 food. CoN
11
2102
~'oo~hl::r' Dlotrlcl.
·
bod,304-t7U713.
304-41'11-!821,olllr4:00
oao
Fumlolood 4021 211t
bodroom
81
KI.,PH weter bed, I .........
.
Paint Pktl now hH Menclll and
18111 t~xlO Buddr, 2 bodraoon, olna '"'
·
' podOolol with 2 mlr,.... Iaiii, croft points. Point Pluo, 2418
Ill tiOCiric, dock. 814-SI2·2414 ..:t..7~
11/.U:. Dod _ond hoolor, 1421, 301-143- ~oc"Awonue.
Point
Oftiii:OO.
nloho!l, ... oncl dopotlt. 6323
wv 304-175-4014.
11183 Cloyton 11110, 3 bod- 171-Zoat.
Lovolr Chrillmoo glftl OYor 100 Pin olr lor ,..... fungo. c room' 2 bathli, on one ac,.
plec.. Role Patftm Ctyatat watw tor your tummy. Ariel
ronlod lot, llllon, WV. - . ~~ ~~ brllt:'toa~: llorvlcofoor 12.114-112-41127.
. , - . IIM~J.:::: wllol ond
22117.
114
08 -7p.rn.
FumHurw or Corpol?
CHIIIST1IAI BPECIAU
No
Chock us out lor quolltr &amp; tow - m l or T. W. Loomoocopoymanto 'Ill lloroh. Two F - Apt. on lltllltloa pold, orlcos llollohon FumHIIII, n 1711-7»1.
t4ll72 - · Coli 1-121- ....,. both, tt601mo. 118 North. l14-44&amp;-7444.
4048, ook lor " - ·
Stconcl Awt. 814-141-3MS.
PICKENS FURNITURE
RCA _.olo 11-, llko - ·
2oo80-~F
Enlcloney,
ohoro
u •. ~ •• ~
$200.
1t.....-.1181oftorl.
1
both. $110.
•c:arpll,
oondllloftlr, 2
...._...,.
eft•UtUitJooo
7p.rn. pold, 114- H• rrhokfMnllhlng.
112 mi. • • k:Mwllle._ An:
. , _ building, ea.ooo. 814.Jorrtcho Rd. Pl. PINMnl, wv, .-ngtor Slolrto ••IIi
241500
FUmllhld apertmlnl, Hunt, 01111 304-17&amp;.1450.
C&amp;rnouaJql .~tea~W• Ari'IIJ'
304-41'11-2257. .
Com• .All illll Cor1oorto .~......
·For - : 12oo80 -.
SWAIN
11- Conooug ·fn.
.-ty ,.mcdr'ad on1.1 HN tot Fumilhld 1putment, $225. AUCTION &amp; FURNrTUAE. 12 11U18tec1 .CimoUataae cowerdl
ot odJII of town. Alto • Utllltloa paid, 1111', 7 Noll, Qaf. Olivo St., Ollllpollo. l Utod .sso.oo Eut cil Aov•waood
on 11o0 1o1, tn . - of _,,.. llpoh, 114 ua 1111 oftor 7p.rn. tumHon,
Wootom l :104-273-1155
U... In ono and ,.., lho othll, •u-~~
~s ~~-- Work-s. 11
3111.
.
$11,t00. 114 4410231 after r . . - • .,
~• T~llt --~ _
ouMo, S.M~ned . Olk I HlcMry
8
•• m
Plko, 11231, ut loa pd. 1~. 14~fl
-·
·-..
Flrawood Lo- pick~p food,
.,.. ·
441-44tllftor7p.m.
Chino ooblnot,
chllro • '
·~
Don
plato,
lint oHy, t411; country,
f1,500.00.
304-41,1-1814.
Wough,ll~-.
33 Farms for Sale ·
OracloUI living. 1 and 2 bedooom opanmonto ot . Vlllogo
vrRA FURNITURE
Shaw Elophont Pllnts, $20-810.
Rt.7, 10 mi. SOUth Ollllpojlo, 41+ llonor
ond
Alvorololo
AT.
t~IIIILES
114.»7-7241.
At&gt;ortmonto In llldd-. From
,,..., lot, $11,500 - · ,, ... 1114. CENo~NAIIY
Porllblt \':.od c1oonthrough llorch 11.
M742211.
Flrot . month rwnt lr• to
RENTTOOWN.I*owor-t• ;:..=..ttllorolan~
.Foci.,
'boll_ll.ttt_
- ...11.,. Coli 114412·7787. $3 wk., bunk bed oomplolt • tiO
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
IOH.
wit. Swivel rockor • U wk., . ExJJ- 11o30.el. Pllltlc 1 dlnottt Ill, 4 chol.. . $7.80 wk. ~ .10
3151
Aohlon fOrgo tulldlng loft, ..... t - bod.- 1 112 R-'lnor. •• wk. LOW CASH ~
o y. o.olll,
PRICES
WHITE'S IIETAL DETECTORS
mobllt pormittocf. public botfi, · In -_...
.... 114-W. lla,. tNO% cooh CrooiM ltmoo Ron A - 1210 , _ ""'water, prlc .. reduced, alSO kill ,...,_
whh riwtr lrontogo, ct,.to 444e oMor I:OOp.m.
ovollablo. Optn llon..sot. I o.m. Qolllpolio. OH 114 Ul 1331.
Bowon, Jr. 304-171-23311.
.....,
One lor., loom. ot 10111irn. opt. In ~~:.1':3~~ 12 .-olol p.m. Wont to buY aood Loto Fot Solo • Oatllpollo f""Y, llddltp 11. 114-112-aM or
bod, 304-t7a:;w.
81,000. Public wotor. 304ol'llw.R.::;ot.,..flll; D~. ;
Bu~uo. Armr. Co,_rt olonlm
2722.
1111:
Froo..,. fill:
ctOI tng.
rogutor
,_
u~._..,~·~.eo~
potod .................. d 300 Dloh
fH.III; como~. 1111111 oqulpmont.
Fourth Awe.
Dryor, 1125; Ooloort
"Unclt" Boom .......
Rentals
UtOd ApDIIoncM p- a. Eut.floYtl~~- Old
!(onaugoo,tt4-441-t473.
Rt. 21L_Incl
nco Roadt,
Fumlahed ,
45
(untO .,...
, - · nun
4:00 PIU:OO ~ ~S Sun,
41 Houses tor Rent
Rooms
Amlquea
53
llooM.OO Pill
2 bedroom ttouH. 2 'bl droom - t o r - · - · - h .
8"1' ot soli. Rl-lnt Antlq-. S5
8tortlng .. . . . - . Dtllll 1124
Building
E. Mlln Street, Pomeroy.
bod-·
2'1224b
t l - .1:00
AllIIOM'IIIO 1:00 ttot.l. l144tllll0
Howl: II.T.W. 10:00 o.m. to 8:00
Sup
pilei
Pll.
r 7:a:"'~ :00 •o 8:00 p.m.
· - - · , _ . loolh.
1
Bloclo, brick. wfn.
OhiO Coont&gt; Top Coolo pold. Old lumMWI Mnlott,
- OH
Cloiode
Wfn.
.....
Rio
llranclt,
Coli
114qullll,
orltntol,
· - - - - n g . cuboordt,
245-41121 .
AJ.o. trallr .,.... AI hDok-u~ p~~lntlnga, lop, or entire ntlltt
Call .... z:oo p.m., :104-m- call IIIGftect 304-125-3275, ar 56- Pats for Sale
104423-11154.
UI1 , ...... WV.

~·

.·..

1
'

1•7 ford T - . 4:1,1100 - .
pwch
d 101»'W, . . . , . tor
$5100. 11 _ _ _4l_1"p.ooo.

WID btbylll In rnr homo, I dop

~·

•

,_

AE·TRAIN HOWl
SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 521 JodoOMO Plks.
CoH 81~41-4317. Rog. No....
11·10!1111.

~,:-~

--ngoonda 1 olio.

...,'.....

2port!ltrrnotolhoohto~-

-~·--

lnstNctlon
,;;:;,::..;:;::.;::=:::-'--

__

Oau.....-11 ..._. uilld 111
.,_ $100.
C1wwYt.
Por- oncl•hor _ . - . . .

Dl-•
: : : .l:..!"J:ri. =t
Dotko$l.a ... toP71.-

-ton

•• .

Corv-

t3IO lo

8111. lite"'- $2211 to 1371.
llnopo $211 to $121.

r=..: =~·~::"..!:;

I.

=J:.'up, oncl clollwtor. 114-

DIIJUUUD
f

end

LAYNE'S fURNITURE
SoiU ond cholro ~ lrMo
m5to-. r - flO onc1 up
to 1121. Mldr 1t:lrd

..

GOVUNIIEHT MaiD \W IIIII
froM 1100. fora llerndn
COl . . .. Chirp. •••
~Guido (I) ~­
Exl.
I-101H.

Qoodl

anytlm~ , I14-241--11ZI.

..~

After 5

room

schOOlS ..

15

a WMk.

141, ~or.

t0WMktolcl, .........1a

home;

. . . , "' ell-..

=

,J

Giveaway

IIMISYOIII
SPBAD

c• 742-UI6

Robert"E. II"'*ProboteJOIIIge
Ltno K. N..oolrood. Cltrk

lradbwy

Rd.. Mhldlapor1. 11MI2·7713.

l &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

UcenMd

Household

~

No hunting or
night or doy on on Al 7 In 1aw1r
VlololorowiH b o p r -. ·
Starting
OIC llliber
4th
Chflatmae tF'IN tor ...._ •tL
Relt.urent,

Care lor pn IChool ohlldr.n In

51

&gt;,

No HunUng or TM.....nt on
Raymond Smith Farm.

Mlllle'•

....,

po1o1 o1c1t c~oyt. bcotlonl od- .
- - -unitloo lor
olimorootrolt od....... obillly. Oood olrMng
ooconl o nioott. _ . , Kl:\.
Ill¥ In It; n Ohio lver
PlizoJ.. . Rl. 7, Clolllpolio. ......
doy utC. 4111 ,bttw- IOo.m.•

--· •=e;. · -0

Public

411710, .IIOintod Adntlroloottalllx of the estate of
JHk MH... cleooOod.lott of
lox 379, Rutlond, Ohio
411771.
.

&lt;.

·-

RUSMll Prlddy'o - ' l o a Rut· •. "'
bond, Ohio. Viololon wilt bo , · .

I

________ _____

Announcements

No hunttng or t. IJII 1"-'-,
or niGht on £dtltl Ctarli"• ...

Acr..s ,,_ Paot Office

=-· _...

=.:--21--

:r......=:

4;fi:
·~--"" ~ao·....-........ F-,
2..=--uum
~· ,.

...

=.t:!~ ~k·. ,""1;

~- a.w.G~Mn•

=:.-....~;!:"~"'L~

No~hu ntlnjj!!...
olng dey '.:
or
,-.,.._ • •
111 on __b,...1Yoet.
0111 will blpt
........
•L~~

992-5335 ar 91S-3Sta1

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On N-bor27, 1811.
In the MelgoCounty .......... .
Court. C..O No. 2MII1, K•
- 111aakor. 318:14 Kollor
Rood. Mldoll_,_
Ohio

,,•

formlt~n c.- 3041:1-'1441.

Wlllllm'

'

I

,.'~':'

No Hunting or r - - on
A. H. Hlckel pr~pertJ8t Hllftord
wHhout wriHon - · For fn.

UN'S APPUAIKE
SIIVICE

985-4300

'
I

,,

IICRO OYENS-$79 up

CHESTER, OHIO

I

In llitltlloport, Dh.
PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moat 2 and 4-cycle
anglnoo
Stock Parta for
Homelite. Weedelter.
Tecumseh, Brigga It

WASHER$-$100 op ·
DRYUS--$69 up
REFRIQEIATOI$-$100 up
RAIIGB-Goot·Eioc.-$125 up
FREilER$-$125 up

JACKETS

,.,

".'

3

-

101•.
EIIY Worl&lt;l Elcolllnl part ....
-l&gt;lo prod,_ o1 home. Coli
lor lnlormltlon, 801 841 0870. .
Exl. 211 Open sundor.
Exoy Worl&lt;l E1collonl Part Aao
-l&gt;lo producto .. home. Col
lor lntormot!On. 1104-Mfi..OIIJO
Exl. 113 opon Sundoy.

•

·~

Stranon.
992-39~!2

hol~r~:C.. ~

tor olodtriy ond hondiCIIIPid. Aeuonataa.. 11Wnothor wtiokond ....., ohllll- 2371.
j
ovoltoblt, 114:'441-7110.,In II Hlllo N"uio Aaarn l011rd and oa,. tor •
oi'!G Conltr1_ S:t11 Buell Rlilge
a- ••
Ad., CloUipofoo.
- - . . p_..,, 614-112·
1101.
lol:yllllor ntodod In Tuppero
Plllno. Olo .....~ll Jon.2, Wo • .,. lor oldorty ond foon.
tiiO. Colll14-117-41
- . LPN'"' ... ' Dolvory P - . We - looldno lnOoml home. Clll 11C - 1173
lor ~ poopio to hondte oRor
-rlolo ond piot"fiO Wo olltr motion.7'00 p.m. lor mora 1m-

EARN IIONEY trplng ot homo.
1311.000 roor lncoiiMi polontlol.
Dotdo, (11 IOW87-t000 Ell. 1-

Stridly Enforced

USED APPUAIICES

T-SHIRTS

!

'

Loatt.tl ot v•y L...-r

PH.

1 1·1·88-tfn

HATS

,_,.DeN.,

•· f

•FILL DIRT

CUSTOM SCREEN
PRINTING

If YouAr• Not I........,.. I• A
Ca•ii•r
A.,J.f
.:.._
I

•LIMESTONE

MY-T-SHOP

X9S lJPPER RIVEil BO.AD
GALUPOUS, OHIO
•Tremendous Benefit Packale
•On The Job And Factory Tralnlnl
•Ple•e•nt Worlrtnl CondltlODS
·~ve Day Work Week - No Sundays
•No E:a:perleJice Nec••arr

____..____

•GRAVEL

Western Boots, Hats.
Shirts, Belu For
Men, lAdies S.
Children.

TURNPIKE

.... _.,.,

CHESTER, OHIO

.

wocotlon. ~ holldoY., oncl

.....,,

DAVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
IEPAII

R. l. HOLLON
TRUCKING

ALBANY, OHIO

APPLY IN PERSON!

•'

10·9-tfn

·DOUBLER
TACI SHOP

AREA'S LARGEST MULTI-LINE
•
NEW CAR DEALER NOW ACCEPTING
APPLICATIONS FOR SALES POSITIONS.

•1·

... •

RACINE ·
FilE DEPT.

Offlct

Help Wanted

...... -"''"'

,

•• •

Foe tory Cholced 12

SEIVICE

=

Pooltlon Avolloblo, RN Futntrno.
8, t. or 10 cloyt In t poy
wocotkin.
l
lnouronco, IYII)' other
- - off, tllrtl"9 11oiir1J
rott. 810.78, dilltNntlll wlu·
tho D.O.N. It
...'!"'- PCoro ~£::'· 80H!III

"'1
home. 5 dop - · 81.10
porcleJ.I14-II~.

Alttnllon RN'o doy ohll, ctargo

..

Stam at 1:00 P.M.

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

Pllnr Truck ltop
. II now
-opting oppllcollon
lor cook
onc1 woltnto. -304-717-8317
bolort 10:00 om oncii:OO pm.

~""" .... with "' without
EARN MONEY Rttdlng Bookol
roor lncomt POitnd...
,.,CaH Loioy Llvoly 114- t30,000
Dttolto. (t)-.eoGO Ell. y.
II II ....,, Prlc:ecf Home, within 4582.
4 mlloo at Ollllpollo. Ut1119
•toor proportr tor -n Slflllt .-od with ctllntolelor
tho Flnoot SIJII'!G Ilion. For fn.
,..,.-.114--8.
formlllon. Colt Cil.... 1111~
OUIIIt
PTa tl40 qutnL MJ condMion. 1122.
· Cooto Pold. Coli 114-·1117 or 81111 PWIOII MMicl mUll hive
ttoxiblt hourw. a bo oblo to IIR
114-·2411.
~ tumMift oncl •Rtppo1'y4tlnno"";:i.vrro•lloFuml~n,
- - .L
Phono 814-74:Z.
21141
12' '
'.
Situation
Wanted

w..... - 8.

EVERY SUNDAY
ltginning Sept. 17

FUINACE

-s

Dodrlll'o Privott Csro;
AVON I AI A11n I Shlrloy Ho,.toOmlnrnrliomelor2.,.
Spoo... 304-171-1121.
clertr todiOO, Hove rol NNodod,
114 388 12111 ..,...,., 114-381AVON • All o,_, Coli llorllyn 1181.

RACINE
GUN CLUI
GUN SHOOT

FURNACE

7-18.'89-lfn

•.

L.oclliM oldlle? o '""? Wo
troln ""
rnochinltta- ., ...,
Technology -rom. "-tr
every pniilucf of lndUIItry, lroln
oornliOiooo to 1 . . - , 1o . ..,..., uotna rnoohlilo • - ..,
~ mectllnM IMde with m.
~'*d:., I~ In tho .::,•chloot
..::. Ia - a..,m-rau ~llaofm
OMChlnory ouch oo: II
*Ill
.milling mocldno, g~ndlng
mach1n11 and pwach , . ... Wit
o vorlotr of funding
oourcoo avoDoble lor ollalble
~dl. c.11 1tte idult
Uon Cent•, Tn.countr
~.V.S. ol1-800-137-18011. WI· Duortor
- - bogln Jorlllor)'
2nd
.
moturw - t o lliilirolt
In our home. Clolllpollt - · All
3 thlfts. 11444~ 841.1.

;~,...=:.,'ii,'t.o~::

WBnted to Buy

Employment Servtces

E.O.E .

AUTOMOTIVE SALES

'.

"

•••• 29. .

Ntwlaricf

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

11

Pilrh &amp; Sorwico OR
AI .....
VISA · MASTERCHARGE
HOURS: Mon.-Fri . 9·7
Sot.9· 6
Cloood Sunday

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
Grant A.

TROPHY

IYAN SIIVICE conn

DOZER
SITEWORK - ROADS
CLEARING

Salary comment11rat11 with experience

GOlF&amp;

SAWS &amp; TIIMMEIS

' / 8/ 89/ tfn

MARK MURPHEY, Administrator
Overbrook Canter
P. 0. Box 33
Middlepon. Ohio 46760

KOUNTRY KLUI

OIIGOit iuH, CHAINS

992-2269

NO SUNDAY

To epply for this highly vieible position et our fecility,
which ia almost fully occupied, please forward a resume' to:

lofon 6 p.M. loa" - . . _

EAGLE RIDGE
SIIAU ENGINE
y AIDMAN MOW liS

BILL SLACK

8

9

16141 915-4110

Sal••

•FIREWOOD

otc. umloloklgo, glfto, ctothos.
Doc. 1l:Z, ll-lp.IIL

wv.- ._,, ...4711.

742-:rcss

iUtJ;Mtl,

Go~ tolt. 18 Dow St. {WI~
IIams . Chrillrnoo docorl11ont,

llg Clvlalooooo -ion, Frldoy
Do0. I, 7:00 Pll Do , _ ohopplng tho ouctlon - · IIIII
lor ...,...... lfortlold
CoiloonunltY .lulldlngt. Horttonl,

MOIIIS
EQUIPMENT

vice background for managing the admission process and
communicating to all interested parties the high qualitY ser·
vices, end 1uperior facilities that Overbrook Center has be. come know for during it1 vary 1uccessful initial year of operation .

•

AfTEII 6 P.M.

located Beloind
Tractor O.llorthip

•LIGHT HAULING

"Free Estimates"

The Overbrook Center is a new "State of the Art" Skilled
Nur~ing Facility which ia now looking for .. Juat the Right Person" to manage the DIRECTOR OF ADMISSIONS position.
Candidates should be equipped with an LPN, R N, or social ser-

ZOOR TRACTORS
INTERSTATE lA nElliS
AUTHORIZED
ECHO·YARDMAN DEAlER
WE DO SAW
REPAIR
•Saw Supplies
•Chains •Chain Oils

((HQ

Now H-• luilt
In Loving Mtmory Of
LAOMAMAE
CREMEANS
From out happy home
end circle
God h• t8ken one we
loved.
She It borne t.om tin ond

USED FURNITURE

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
lli!OVAL

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

"Special Care For People Who Are
Special to You"

•IN STOCK•

SaleM St.,

•VINYL SIDING
· •ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

gun.
Mitsed by Lavin•
and F8mili11

-..

VIIY · I S - I
IIAWII!Illlllm

Nilht

''

• VIcinity

·,..

~~·.".:m4-f::

=

Help wanted

1014.

m-- :=,:.;;;... . . .

~
:;1'11~1;.:E:;OH:::.::..--:--,...-,.--=--

~~-

Pomeroy,
Middleport

lolot tho plio .. , of """''iot
a.t ·us • it fer· JIU.

PH. 949-2801
or las. 949-2860
: Doy or
: NO SUNDAY CALLS

MORRIS EQUIPIIEtn
741-J45S .

1 1-27· '89- 1

God celled you home
to be with Him,
Your He.ven h• be-

C•

11

-.1
---...
.._..........
i.,.....
-.,-.·~---

•n, ·- • andw1.... DuNn
~~-·~~;_
-114
441 - ·· _:.:;,~"-'..:,_""'.....,.~· • · ::::;. 1
ik-1'~
I IR '"'tum. ool. Rongo I refllg. !.!• a 10 JIOI·"'
BallY _ . _
1 •• """"" opt

2

!.:bO ..

ALL Ysnl kilt It Pold in
Aolwa- DEADUIIE: 2;00 p.m.
tho doy betora lht lid lo to run.
Sllr!Cior odlllon • 2:00 p.rn.
Frldoy. llondor odllon • 2;00
p.m. Stturdly.

•••

DEER
CUT AND
WRAPPED

992-2136

.••'

FREE ESTIMATES

Prices"

salt

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

IITEIIOI 11111101
Rttttal Cllattup1 &amp;
Pointing

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"AI l"sa11able

Alee Tr••••l11lo•
PH. 9,·5612
or 992-7121

HOURS: I AM·I PM Doily
CLOSEO SUNDAY

CONTACT:
PAUL KLOES 01 BIUCE IEED

1

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

For Good Home
Cookln' Come See U1!

114 ACRES LOCATED IN
ORANGE TOWNSHIP, OFF
CHERRY RIDGE.

-··•toly

lt. 124, P-ay Ohio

Duncan.

Yard

PRIUS

UNDA'S
PliNnNG &amp; CO.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Garage

owl18d and
operahd by Millie

fiZ.ao'le.

992-2228

Roger Hysell

Is stUI

.

Hound.-

,., I

304 78
t---------.,..---------i::"~···;;
i;;;.e;~~-.WN&lt;iico;:
bodroom opts. lor ront. eor-

LOll: · ooJ.
tar with . choln. . Loot Novombtr
291h In llonkoy Ikon orOL 114-

Pizza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials

Mon. thru Fri.
7:30-4:00 Saturdlly

MIWE'S
IESTAUIANT

sno.

7

HIGHEST QUAliTY
FREE LOCAl DRIVERY
POMEROY ANO MIDDlEPORT'S ONLY
LOCALLY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

loclcsprl111• ltl.
P-roy, Ohio

SALES &amp; SERVICE

-tot.

LOWESt

__,
Tic~...
u.on,

A-••norno-.301tR

STREET
PIZZA

Inc.

Miololloport, Ohio 45760

101t IOIMWhl,. Nck of

•

"''·
""' ····~· .•..,..... ,_ . ..... ......,............
'"rh
·
e fitness
craze is (IVer,
Leonard. You can stop holding in you. r st(lmach."
~

"'Loot-'-"'
...
'-:..-E=-119"''""Iolo,.....,Bh,....
...
&amp;tU17-41tl4.

'

Veterans Memorial HOSI!ital
- Mulberry Hats. Pomeroy,

CHIPWOOD
WANTED
W. Va. Chipping,

- ·- · •

w'oodoroo. 304-a'll-2147.
LOll In Tuppero Pllino ""'!
1
b_ _..._.wlound.....

.'
..'.

.Ucensecf Clinical Audiol()list

'--::====7.'89-1 mo.

d.,, lnd rNd oloud tor tho
tatl.-g bulclng . . . ..
&amp;ell bid to the _,,..
tiono ond spedficetlont 01

of 11i

INirkecl • "Stolid Bid"
"Countv · Office &amp;poco"..
lliddor - • fumiah their
own bid form•.
The Boord of Moiga
County Commltlionors moy
acc•tn tM loweat bid or,._
bid for tho in·
1oct tho tended pui'JtOM, end r•.w
the right to reJtct ony or oil
bicll
end/ or any
part

torS,I1-I-1421.

5p1n111 P'IPPt' "''uuty•, a..,._

r

PUBLIC NOTICE

Apartmem
torRent

1 lr., 1et ,Ftoor, fum'ed. IPl- ~

Rd, . . . ll4-371-2101.

LOST .... - · buff Cocker

z

'·

44

Doa. Nov. 1VIhl
R - llrown wlwlillo, Cora 1111

"

::1: (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second AV«ltte, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·
· or

Middleport,

N atice

Public

Lost• Found

Found: -

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

992-2198

lt. S3 North

.......... .,..
~c£i:t-*'--lon~
. ew-_
--.-.
11
·

~~:nt==.on

. , Dtpendlblt Helri111 Aid SlitS &amp; Senrictl
c:J He1rin1 Ev1IU1tions F01 All Acts

Tcnu.

6

;.

949-2168 11·6·1
~:::==
.: Television Listenin&amp; Dtvices
~

2211. *Yor. No .....
.
oncl
··-·

p_.r IOund.llH-41 1421.Dog

OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Friday
.
Saturday 9 am-6 pm

SERVICE

-·
. . . ,.-··-homo.

To Olvo owor 10 wk. old ....
8hophorol, 304-471-

•

,.,,.Onrtre.IM.I .......

r.1erchand1se

For o r -=2 troltoro .. 1
. . . 114 ... 0420, 1144161411.
F""""*", S brt DCA'II, WMhlr

-Rot-.tl....-r-1131.

I'

p- . -

_,__

C:O::. :-•

AutOI for Sale

71

""'"'"' 1100 lq. fl. ol ~.-....... 110fni:An,
GlllpGol!~··•~o.·
utlllly a depaelt.t14111 teo e. , anl
• .· .,·~-71 i1~
211r, ....... - . 122 Tl*d 1411.
. . . No ..... . ,..........,.. lt ...

HoW II
pot.
181. nlct lotiii111
Just Ill dme to&lt; Clorlol-. .....,.
112 lllcll l.obrodor; 112

RACIM, OliO

1UT N' CARLYLE~ II)' Lury Wrtpt

For Leaaa

21111r, lll_ll_,...poy

e7114t41.

GUNS· AMMO
.
$
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS ••• 2.20 lox
GliTARS &amp; GUITAR STRINGS

15
•1 .30 , Ciay
.05 / dey
. R••• ere tor c:onMCUUH runs. brO._, upd111sw ill be chwatd

Muon c:ounu• mu lt be pra-

49.

miHCI Dabumlll mind, 104-

. RACINE GUN SHOP

TRUCKING
•Grawel
•liMestone
•Fill Dirt
742-2421

FRESH CUT
• SHEARED

TO PLACE AN AD CAU 992-2156

LAFF-A-DAY

Glveeway
, _ to good homo I J1 old

CHRISTMAS
TIEES

The Daily s.rtinel Page 9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

,.

,·
.••'

-

M

.·

�.

·~

.... - ............. ,. .... -- ... ---- ... - -·
''"-

•
Page 10-The Daly Sentinel

Pomeroy-Mk'tlllpOI't. Ohio

Sundzty

---Local news briefs.. ----. Forty-six cases processed this week in Meigs court
Continued from page 1
Wears' residence. He was arrestl!d at 10p.m. Monday Sept.~ at
GalUpolls Ferry, W.Va.
Judge Cox has also scheduled hearings at 10 a.m. Monday on
other motions In the case.

Squads have six Thursday callA
Six calls for assistance were answered on Thursday by units
of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
Racine at 3: 24 a.m. was called to Route 338 for Charles
McNickle to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 8:28 a.m., Middleport was called to Bailey Run for Oakey
Cart to Holzer Medical Center. Middleport was called at 11: 54
a.m. to Murray Hill for William ~mtth to Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
At 6:15 p.m., Rutland was called to MeiJ!S Mine No. 2 for
Dallas DeBord who was taken to Holzer Medica). Center.
Pomeroy was called at 9:18p.m . to Roule 7 for Dlon Brace to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Rutland at 11:04 p.m. transported Douglas Kitchen from
Meigs Mine 31 to O'Bleness Memorial Hospital.'
Continued from page 1
U. S. ···------------------

at National Pollee headquarters
at Camp Crame and the armed
forces general headquarters at
Camp Aguinaldo. The fourth
floor of the police headquarters
building was gutted. The quarters of the military chief also was
bombed and razed and two
members of his household were
wounded, news reports said.
The uprising leaders Issued no
formal statements but one mull-

Qualifications .•.
(Continued from Page 1)
. dUngs ·may be provided and
planted by the Division of Reclamation at no cost to the landowner. An agreement stipulatIng the landownerwillnotdlsturb
the seedlings lor live years Is
required. Deadline lor application Is Dec. 15, 1989.
For further Information on the
· reforestation program, contact
· Mitch Farley, Division of Reclamation, 1007 East State St.,
Athens, Ohio, 45701, or call (614)
594-3507.

neer said their dissatisfaction
was with the government, not the
constitution.
"We are for the constitution,"
the rebel told United Press
International. "We are not workIng for one man alone. We are
hard up. Our trainees have not
yet received thetr salaries."

In the ftrst report of defection
In the provinces, some 200 rebel
soldiers took control of the
airport, the telephone company
and radio station DZRC In the
popular tourist center of Legaspi, 200 miles southeast of
Manila, a radio news report said.
Tbe governor of northern Ca-.
gayan province said troops In his
region were moving toward
Manila to support the uprising.
Military operations chief Brig.
Gen. Usandro Abadla . said 20
officers and 16 soldiers defected
to the rebels at Camp Aguinaldo,
taking over the Logistics Command at the facility without
firing a shot.

Dental contest scheduled
Meigs County fourth graders
are Invited to participate In the
dental health poster contest of
the Division of Dental Health,
Ohio Deparonent of Health, In
observance of National Children's Dental Health Month In
Feburary.
The contest is being conducted
through the various elementary
schools with the Ohio Dental
Hygienists Association, cosponsor for the contest, providIng prizes for the winners.
Theme of the 1990 contest Is
"Dental Defenders: Flourides
a nd Sealants!" Prizes will be
· a warded to five finalists with the
grand prize winner receiving a
ten-speed bicycle and a $50 U.S.
Savings Bond.
''Dental sealants are an Important part of prevzntlve care for
children," said Dr. Ronald L.
· Fletcher, state health director.
· "We hope parents and teachers
· will encourage fourth graders to
participate In the contest as a fun
way to learn about good dental
health.
Contest forms have been sent
to all Ohio schools and the
deadline lor entries Is Dec. 8.
Each school will select winning
entries which will then be judged
by county health department.
Winning posters from county

health department will then be
judged and the top five selected
In state judging during April.
Tbls Is the eighth consecutive
· year the Division of Dental
Health has sponsored a dental
poster contest. During 1989,
entries were received from more
than 32,000 Ohio fourth graders,
representing 600 schools.

Weather

Forty-six cases were processed this week by Judge
Patrick O'Brien In Meigs County
Court
Fined were Edward M. Selk
Jr.,' Racine, $300 and costs, 10
days In j all, 90 day license
suspension, OWl; $30 and costs,
failure to control; Tommy E.
Lyons, Middleport, $250 and
costs, three days In jail, 60 day
license suspension, OWl; Larry
D. Moore, Michael Hrlnda Jr.
and Ml chael J. Gu ttormser, all of
Hollywood, Fla., each fined $150
and costs for attempting to take a
deer with a gun during closed
season; James D. Council,
Langsville, $100 and costs, deer
hunting with a 30-30 caliber
rifle; Paul Woodward, Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., $50 and costs,
spotlighting; Richard M. Van
Meter, Reedsville, $100 and
costs , 30 days In jail suspended to
five, one year probation, no
operator's license; Jeff Parker,
Reedsville, $50 and costs, restitution ordered, reckless operation;
Elza Bartimus, Reedsville, restitution ordered, 30 days In jail
s1,1spended and costs, two years

probatton, telephone harassment
and trespuslng; Harold Pettit,
Pomeroy, six months In jail
suspended to four days, one year
probation, restitution and costs,
theft.,
John W. Casto, Pomeroy, $20
and costs, failure to yield; costs
only for no llablllty Insurance;
Stevep P. Mather. Long Bottom,
$10 and costs, following too
closely; James S. Polcyn, Middleport, $10 and costs, failure to
display registration; Timothy J .
Halloran, Schaumburg, Ill., $20
and costs, failure to COI\trol;
Scott L. Packer, Tbornvllle, $10
and costs, following too closely;
Roger Athey, Cheshire, $5 and
costs, failure to have red flag on
extended load; &lt;Joseph E. Rife,
Middleport, $35 and .costs, failed
to yield one-half of roadway;
Bonnie J. Ransom, Racine, $10
and costs, tailed to display valid
registration; $25 and costs, failed
to yield from stop sign; Jon M.
Grueser, Reedsville, $20 and
costs, seat belt violation; Kenneth Smith, Racine, $25 and
costs, ran over bags of trash;

Craig A. Darst, Shade, $25 and
costs, restitution ordered, passIng bad checks; B. Kyle Buchanan, Reedsville, $10 and costs,
assured clear distance.
Fined for speeding were Ivan
E. Roush, Gallipolis, $23 and
costs; Jayne Ritchie, Coolville.
$20 and costs; Jeff J&lt;autf, Pomeroy, $22 and costs; Barbara A.
Queen. Mason, W.Va., $22 and
costs; Charles L. Shain, Pomeroy, $23 and costs; James Triplett, Gibsonburg, $21 and costs;
Leah H. Doidge, Pomeroy. $21
and costs; Dayral Hall, Moore's
Hill, Ind., $20 and costs; J.a ck
Clark Ill. Albany, $22 and costs;
Dennis Miller, Beckley, W.Va.,
$21 and costs; Larry Barker,

ATTENTION
NEW CAR OR
TRUCK BUYERS!! .

--Common Pleas court-Diamond Savings and Loan
Company has been granted judgment of$19,051.76 plus In teres tin
a Meigs common Pleas Court
foreclosure action against Willard G. Durst Jr., et al.
Farmers Bank and Savings
Company has been granted a
default judgment of $1,541.39 In
an action against Michael W.
Lance Jr.
In a criminal matter, Michael
Pierce has entered a voluntary
plea of guilty to a charge of
domestic violence and a charge
of vandalism, and waived his
right to trial. Pierce has been

sentenced to six months In prison
on Ecach charge, to be served
concurrently, and ordered to pay
$400 to a private party Involved In
the action. Pierce will receive
credit for 84 days already se~ved
In the Meigs County Jail.
In other matters, an agreed
entry ~as been flied In the matter
of Richard B. Payne, et al,
against Clyde E. Sayre, et al,
regarding a question .of
right-of-way.
And Ron E. Eastman has been
reappointed to a five-year-term on the Veterans Servl~e
Conimlsslon.

Trustees to meet
Tbe Rutland Township Trustees w_lll meet In regular session
on Thqrsday at 6:30p.m. at the
· ftre station. The publiC Is Invited
to at rend.
BelleiU'IIBI planned
A rehearsal for the Christmas
program at Trinity Church will
be held Sunday at 2 p.m. at the
church. Mary Skinner, director,
asks that all junior chotr
·members attend.

Soulll Ci!nlral Ohio
Increasing cloudiness Friday
night, with a low between 30 and
35. Cloudy Saturday, wllh a
chance of showers or snow
flurries and highs In the low 40s.
Chance of precipitation Is 40
percent.
Extended Forecast
The Community Choir. under
Sunday t1tr0111h Tuesday
the direction of Sue Matheny will
Snow diminishing to snow
present ''A Magnificent Season,"
flurries In the northeastern part
Christmas Cantata at the Mt.
of the state and a chance of snow
Herman United Brethren Church
flurries over the rest of the state· on Sunday at 7: 30 p.m.
Sunday, with a chance of snow
The church Is located In the
statewide Monday and Tuesday.
Texas community and Rev.
Highs will be between 25 and 30
Robert Sanders Invites the
Sunday, ranging from the upper
public.
20s the low 30s Monday and from
Selling poln8ellias
the middle 30s to the lower 40s
Students of the Pomeroy EleTuesday. Overnight lows will be
mentary School will be selling
near 20 Sunday and Monday poinsettias for the holiday season
mornings and In the 20s early again this year and orders are
Tuesday.
now being taken.
The plants In six Inch pots are
$4 each and come In red, white

Teresa R . Fetty, 37, Springfield, died Wednesday at Wright
Patterson Hospital In Fairborn.
Born Dec. 3, 19511n Bermuda,
she was the daughter of Charles
W. Reams and Rosie Estep

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .............. 31
AT&amp;T ........................... ...... 43)1,
Ashland on ........................ 37~
Bob Evans ......... , ................. 14
: Charming Shoppes ............... ll
City Holding Co ..................14)1,
Federal Mogul ............ ........ 20~
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 46\2
Heck's ................... .... ........ .. 4~
Key Centurion ................ .... 14\2
Lands' End ......................... 27 ~
Limited Inc ........................ JJ\2
Multimedia Inc ................. ... 92
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ............... .l4+f
Shoney's Inc .................. ,.... 12%
Star Bank ............................ 21
Wendy's Inti . ...................... .4)1
Worthington Ind .................. 24)1
(Bob Evans Famu1' lleClOndquarter Oct. 27 aet $.23/allare va.
S.25.)

Hospital news
Thursday admissions - Charles McNickle, Racine; William
Pickens, Portland; Edna Reltmtre, Hartford. W.Va.; William
Frecker. Racine.
· Thursday discharges - Lillie
Randolph, Lyle Baker.

'

Reams, Who survive.
Mrs. Fetty, formerly of Meigs
County, was a homemaker and
she attended the Church of God.
She Is survived by her husband, Terry L. Fetty. They were
married Aug. 29, 1969.
Also surviving are two brothers, Gene Reams, Whitehall; and
Charles Reams Jr., two foster
brothers and a foster sister,
Larry Knotts, Pataskula; Jack
Knotts, Reynoldsburg; and Judy
Kirk, Langsville; and foster
parents, John and Marge Knotts,
Reynoldsburg.
Mrs. Felty was preceded In
death by a son, Terry Fetty Jr.
Services will be Monday, 1
p.m. at Hunter Funeral Home
with the Rev. Donald Stacy
officiating. Burial will be In Miles
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home on Sunday from 2-4 p.m .
and 7-9 p.i:n.

our town:
h'il beginning to look a
lot like Christm•."Page A-6

r----Ho,

ho, ho, kids!----------. ·Priddy is sentenced
on drug, tax charges
•

mum sentence of 45 years In
COLUMBUS, Ohio - Middle- amount of marijuana.
port resident, Fred Priddy was
As part of a plea agreement, prison, up to $110,000 In fines,
sentenced In U.S. District Court Priddy agreed to pay the Internal plus 5 years of . supervised
Thursday on charges of federal Revenue Service $39,000 and release.
Income tax evasion and posses- transfer his residence at 32562
A search warrant executed on
sion with 'Intent to distribute Happy Hollow Road, Middleport, Priddy's Meigs county prpperty
on Oct. 5, 1988 resulted In the
Illegal drugs. U.S. District Court to pay his tax liability.
On the drug charge, he agreed
seizure of amounts of suspected
Judge George Smith sentenced
to
forfeit
to
the
government
his
cocaine
and marijuana, financial
Priddy to 72 months In prison to
In
seven
real
records,
numerous titles on vehlownership
Interest
be followed by five years of
estate
holdings
In
Meigs
and
cles
and
157 weapons ranging
supervised release.
In a Bill of Information flied by Gallla counties and Marlon from handguns to an Uzl.
The charges against Priddy
the U.s. Attorney, Priddy was county, Florida, plus hlslnterest
charged with filing false and in 24 vehicles, Including a 1955 are the result of a Joint lnvestigalion by the Internal Revenue
fraudulent 1987 federal Income Thunderblrd and a 1963 Corvette.
Priddy also agreed to testify
Service, Drug Enforcement AdtaX return with his wife Barbara,
and possession with Intent to . truthfully regarding all other , , ministration, Ohio Bureau of
distribute more than 500 grams Illegal drug activity In which he Crtrnlnallnvesttgatlon and !dentiflcation, and the Athens Pollee
of cocaine and an unspecified was Involved or has knowledge.
He originally laced a maxi- ·

"FREE''

Cars must bt !M'challll from
,..,,.,, lnv•tary llack. Sold
.,.,,. do not apply.

Smith-Nelson
Motors,
Inc.
992-2174
POMEROY I OHIO

500 EAST MAIN

Relocation
of panel
discussed,
rejected

OLIDAY

Br LEE ANN WELCH
· Tlm...Senllnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - The streetlight·
panel dlscuued at

• ~"'- ; t,'

&lt;

B~

NANCY YOACIIAM
'bttll lledatl &amp;all
POMEROY ..;, T!ie possllilllty
of appointing a public defender to
represent Indigent residents of
Meigs County charged In criminal matters Is being considered
by the county commission. "It's
an Idea I belleYe we should think
seriously about,'' said Commissioner Richard Jones In Wednesday's regular meeting of the
county commlllsloners.
As of the end of November,
Meigs County has spent $27,000
on court-appointed attorney fees,
Jones reported. "Tbat, to me,ls a
lot of money,'' said Jones, who
anticipates thai CP.urt:appolnted
attdriley fees' will eontlnue to
Increase In · the county on an
al)nual basts. By the end ·of this
year alone, he expects assigned
counsel fees "may reach $35,000

Correction

or more."

'• 1'..

That total would be considerably higher had there been a
murder trial In which a courtappointed attorney would have
been necessary, Jones noted. As
It turned out, possible murder
cases thus far In 1989 have been
plea bargained and settled at
much less expense than jury
trials.
However, anytime an indigent
person Is charged with a felony
and counsel Is appointed by the
court, If, through plea bargainIng, the felony charge Is reduced
to a misdemeanor, the county
must still pay the attorney· fees
based upon the costs to defend a
felony charge.
In 1988 the county paid
$22,363.M to court-appointed attorneys, according to Meigs
Auditor William Wickline.
That total was based on fees of
$30 per hour for out-of-court work

i·

·, ~' •: '

"i

'· I

and $50 per hour for In-court
work, with a maximum charge of
$500 on misdemeanor cases,
$1,000 on more-or-less routine
felony cases and no limit on
homicide cases.
Recently however, and at the
request of the county bar association, the commissioners passed a
resolution raising courtappointed attorney fees to$40per
hour for out-of-court work and
$60 per hour for In-court work,
with maximums remaining the
same.
This Increase Is above the
amounts paid In some surroundIng counties for court-appointed
attorneys, and below tees paid in
others. Jones · said. "We're almost In the middle," he added,
"but certainly not low."
Attorney fees are paid out of
(See PUBLIC, A5)

Fll. THIU THUR.

TOMSEUECK

AN

INNOCENT

,&lt;

/

;I

. ·&gt;.·.~~- ,

,..,._

C RISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE!
Welcome To Our Annual' Christmas
Open House Saturday, December 2nd,
and Sunday, December 3rd
12:00 P.M.-5:00P.M.

M!,..

MFree Refre•hmenu &amp; Door Prize•"

P..._ttlas, Pal•uttla .............,.,
Poln11ttla ,....., ChrlsiMGf Cactus, Iaiiy TrHS,
fel•• Wets .... Ll"'l Shew rt.llltl.
UVE NORWAY. BLUE SPRUCE TREES
CUT CHRISTMAS TREES

HUIIAIDS GREENHOUSE

992-1776

SYIACISI, 01110

CROW'S F

LY RESTAURANT

221 WIST MAIN, POMROY, OHIO

JliiiN- GfiH .U. I&amp; liN Ia ,.,
IIGH l'anii 0., Ia '-OJ are beliil &amp;IIcea

992-5432

don ud -•Yed bJ leffen Exoavl&amp;lilg,
Pomeror. WarUn far the excavatlill oampur

,
_.

was
location, accordlllii to the project
architects. ' '
Howard Miller, who Is In
charge of the Gallipolis streets.cape project for EG&amp;G of Akron,
said there was some preliminary
discussion In the beginning of
placing the control panel at State
Street and 2\2 Alley, but that was
rejected as not feasible.
Tbe commissioners said at
their meeting Thursday, the
panel stands . out and detracts
.from the park's beauty. AccordIng to City Manager Dale E .
!man, the panel must be centrally located to power all the
streetlights.
Dale Garrison of EG&amp;G gave
thought to alternative placement
of the panel early In the design
process, but 2\2 Alley on State
Street does not have enough
working space, Miller said.
He also noted there could have
been problems with· traffic and
the possibility of hitting the
panel, knocking II out entirely.
There will be shrubs and tall
(See RELOCATION, A71

LOFTY JO~ -A worker fr6m AGE Contractors of Portsmouth
puts the ftnlaltlng touches on a lightpole In downtown GaiUpolls late
last week. The lllhls were Installed and In operation for the parade
Saturday. (Tim...Sentlnel photo by Lee Ann Welch)

Meigs County is part of national
illiteracy problem, officials say

5 Pieces Chicken
2 Biscuits
2 Individual
Colonel'sSawry Stuffing

COLONY THEATRE

!!MAN
•

~

•-' •

,lWeiis County Conunission

10 Pieces Chicken
4 Biscuits
1 Large Colonel's"&amp;zvory Stuffing

Tbe charges filed In Middleport Mayor's Court against Gall
E. 'J'homa, Long Bottom, were
not transferred to county court
but were continued until the next
session of mayor's court. Thoma
Is charged with running a red
light, driving a weaving course
and allowing an unllcen!led person to operate a motorcycle.

Moally cloudy. High In mid
20s Chaace of snow to
percent.

14 Sections, 106 Pog•
A Muttim.ti• Inc. New~pt~ptr

Middleport-Ponwoy Gal6poliii-Point Plaaunt, December 3, 1989

GAS

and pink.
Orders may be placed with any
student or by calling the school
office at 992-2710 no later than
Dec. 8. Delivery date -Is Mortday.
Dec. 11.

Along lhe River ...... ; .. BJ-8
Bualness ...................... E ~l
Comics- ................... lnaerl
ClaasUieda ................. Dt-7
Deaths ........................ A-5
Sports ...................... C-1-8

of Christm• paet. ..B-8

100
GALLONS OF
.......

Inside

Those pl•lic carda-ghOBts

Ca;p • llgfiMd 1181

--Area deaths _ __
Teresa Fetly

Beat of the Bend:

Val. 24No. .43

C-1

today

t

22

Shop early,
shop locally

WITH THE PURCHASE OF A
NEW BUICK-PONTIAC OR GMC
TRUCK •... YOU'LL RECEIVE

-Meigs announcements-Office to be cloeed
Tbe Meigs SoU and Water
Conservation District.office and
the SoU Conservation Service
will be closed on Wednesday so
that employees anc;t supervisors
may attend an out-of-town train·
lng session.
The offices will reopen for
regular services on Thursday.

Chesapeake, $23 and costs;
Roger E. Hill, Racine, $20 and·
costs; Sharon S. Pierce, Racine.
$20 and costs; Linda Mayes,
Glenwood, W.Va., $25 and costs;
Christine Bass, Dexter, $22 an.d
costs; Charles W. Barley, Rutland, $21 and costs; Terry I.
Wolff. Cleveland, $26 and costs.
· Bonds were forfeited In county
court by Timothy Halloran,
Schaumburg, lll; Leslie J.
Spencer, Mentor; Willoughby K.
Hill, Long Bottom, and William
G. Rogers, Massillon, all $60, all
for speeding. John David Shlngary, Senecaville, and Bob R. :
Valentine, Buffalo. Ohio, both
forfeited $55· bonds lor hunting
without written permission.

50 cer.ts

-- .. ---I.

~-

•(

--

··-~

..

c.Nfall7 ....._........ lllal •l'rldQ.
MOM Pann Cttr NCJIIIitlr -~ aut or bulla. .
att. more tlian 18 yeiii'Sla operatlaL

-

'

.

- ...

··-~

'
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlmes-Senllnel Staff
POMEROY - A decade or so
ago when the National Right to
Read program was Introduced
Into public education and the
slogan became "Every Child a
Reader", the goal was to elbnlnate Illiteracy among school
aged children.
It was thought that the unacceptable statistics - · almost 20
percent at that time- with sothe
functionally llllterate students
graduating from high school,
would change.
Unfortunately, they haven't.
Meigs County Is very much a
part of a national problt1m where
more than one In five residents
have been Identified as not being
able to read.
There have been some changes
In the teaching methods of
reading Instruction here and
acr011 the country, but the
problem Isn't an easy one to
resolve.
::;peelal reading programs
have been federally funded and
put Into place, more emphasis
and time have been put on
readfnl In the classrooms, but
the statlalica In moat public
schools remain virtually unchanged despite the apeclal em'
.

phasls this past decade. Apparently something isn't working.
In efforts to address some of
the school problems, Including
the llilleracy one, the Ohio
Department of Education recently held public hearings on
specific requirements 54i1l forth In
education legislation passed this
year by the 1l8th Ohio General
Assembly.
The hearings dealt with establishing community literacy programs, research and development for at-risk student
programs, head start expansion,
and dropout, prevention and
Intervention programs.
Intervention, as explained by
Melp Local Supt. James Carpenter means "going over the
work and re-teaching lt."
But, as one teacher conceded,
''There are no easy answers."
Competency tes ttng programs
bel"'i Initiated Into Meigs County
schools at various IP'ade levels
will help In Identifying reading
and other problems early enough
for Intervention, according to the
Meigs Local superintendent.
But what about thole who have
already gone throueh the school
aystem and came out without
reading akllls.
Tbat mak8 It a community

.&lt;I

problem.
. Tbere is a reading tutoring
program available in Meigs
County where Individuals unable
to·read are tutored one on one by
men and women
especially
trained for instructing illiterate
adults.
The program here Is sponsored
by the Retired Senior Volunteer
Program and Meigs County
Public Library and currently
there are 16 tutor&amp; available to
assist residents who want to
learn to read.
Tbere, of course, Is no charge
and the 11m2 and place for the
tutoring sessioms Is flexible and
can be arranged tor the convenIence of the tutor and the student.
A Meigs County Council on
llllteracy Is In the process of
being formed, Susan Oliver,
RSVP coordinator, reports.
Tbe thoughts about Illiteracy,
how It happens, and how It
affects the Individual and the
family were expressed by the
wife of a man who Is functionally
Illiterate but now learning to
read through the local tutoring
program.
In her communication she tells
of some of her husband's school
experiences, of how sbe feels the
(See MEIGS, .U)

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