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•
•
1991

Ohio

-----Area deaths .- - Sutton ...
Margaret Westfall
Margaret Blanche Westfall, 72,
of Route 1, Reedsville, died
Wednesday, April 24, 1991, at
Camden Clark Memorial Hospital
i,n Partersbmg, W.. Va.
Born in Pennaylvania, she was
ihe daughter of the late Edward and
Grace Brawley. She was a ho~­
wife and attended the Fellowship
of the Nazarene Church in
Recdsville.
She is survived by three sons
and daughters-in-law, Jackie and
Ila Westfall of Reedsville; Virgil
Eusenc and .Fay Westfall of Long
BQIIOm; Roger and Sheila Westfall
of Reedsvilfe; three daughters and
s ons -in-law, Sylvia and John
Causey of Reedsville; Judy and
George Horner of Thppers Plains,
:Linda and Dave Smeeks of
:Coolville, a son-in-law, Larry
Welch of. HQCpngport; 20 grand.children and eight great·grandchil·
llren.
· · Also surviving arc three sisters,
.Dorothy Bowman of Coolville. Ida
Nestor of Columbus, and Betty
·cup of Johnstown; two sisters-inJaw, Edith Brawley 'o f New York
and Bessie Brawley of Coolville;
and one brother-in-law, Hal Westfall of Millwood. W. Va. ·
Besides bel' parents she was preceded in death by her husband, Virgil, one daughter, Arlene Welch,
and one greal-granddauahter, two
brothers, and two brothers-in-law.
. Funeral services will' be held
Saturday at 2:30 p.m. at the Fe!lowship of the Nazarene ChUrch m
Reedsville.-Friends may call at the
White Fun.eral ~orne in Coolville,
Friday from 2.to 4 and_7 to 9 p._m.
Burial will be in the Tuppers Plains
Christian Cemetery. Officiating
will be Rev. John Douglas and
Robin Elswick.

Bernard W. Taphorn
Bernard William Taphom, 68, a
· resident of the Gallipolis Developmental Center, died Thursday,
April2S, 1991 the cen1er.
He was born Nov. ~0. 1922 in
Cincinnati, son of the late Bernard
W. and Thresa Rich~ Taphorn.
· He is survived by one sister 9f
Cincinnati.
Funeral services and burial will
be conducted at the St. Marys
Cemetery, SL Bernard, Ohio.
Funeral arranaernents are under
the direction of tile Cremeens
fllneral Chapel.

Evelyn M. Nicholson
Evelyn M. Nicholson, 80, of
Clifton, W.Va., died Wednesday,
April 24, 1991 at P~t Valley
Hospital. Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
She was a cook ~ Clifton Grade
School and a member of the Clifton
Tabernacle.
She was born Feb. 6, 1911 in
·clifton, W.Va., daul~ter of the late
Herman R. ind Jessie VanMatre
C~wriaht.
.
Her father preceded her in death
in 1963: her mother in 1976; and
ller husband, Asa Pearl Nicholson
in 1963.
Survivors include four daughters Wanda L. Roush of West
Col~mbia, W.Va., Mary J. Roush
· of Mason, W.Va., Janet M. Robinson of Pt. Pleasant, W.Va. and Janice F. Bergdoll of Gallipolis; two

sons, Jllicit P. Nicholson of St.
Louis, Mo., and .Charles L.
Cartwright of Milson, W.Va.: two
sisters, Marcella Chapmali of Middlepon and Marguerite Dint of Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va.; two brothers,
Ralph Cartwright of PJma Gorda,
Fla. and Glenn Cartwright 'of
CookevUle, Tenn.; 12 grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren.
Preceding her in death were one
brother, Roy Chester Cartwright,
during World War II; one granddaughter, Cinda Kay Roush; and
01ie son-in-law, John Curtis Roush.
Funeral services will be condllj;ted 2 p.m. Friday at Foglesong
Funeral Home, with Rev. Larry
Gilland officiating. Burial willlle
in Graham Cemetery. ·
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 3 to 5 p.m. and 7
to 9 p.m.

Frederick Hausman

Coatiaued koia page 1
' loeal calling area
ed within their
now, hut that tHey prefened to shop
and bank in the Meigs County
comm11nity.
·
Meigs County Commissioner
Richard Jones teslified on belta1f of
the Shade residents, and stated that
''establishing the toll-free exchange
. is not only the right thing to do, but
is the fair thillg to do."
·
.
Jones testified that he h!Jd spoken to senior citizen residents in
the llrea who were fofced to make a
toll call when call(qa members or
their family living less than a mile
away.
. ,
The petitioners were represented
at the hearing by Pomeroy Attorney Steven L. Story, and GTE was
represented by their Corporate
Attorney from Marion, Delena
Edwards. The hearing was conducted at the Meigs County Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
According to Agranoff, a decision on the matter will take several

Frederic~!: G. "Fritz" Hausman,
56, 316 Ingleside Ave., Marietta,
died at Union Hospital in Dover on
Wednesday morning, April 24,
1991.
.
· Born Sept. 26, 1934 in Roc~­
ford, Ill., he was a son of Mary
Brisk Hausman, Seattle, Wash.,
and the late Alexander B. Hausman. He was a veterans of the
Korean COnOict where he served in
the Air Force.
He had been employed as treasurer of VanGuard Paint and Finishes Inc. for more than 30 years.
He was a member of the Norwood
United Methodist Church, the
American.Legion Post64 where he
was a past commllnder. He was a
past comm~der of Dislrict 11 of wee)cs.
the Am6rican Legion,.a member of
the Washington County Post 5108,
Veterans of. Foreign Wars, the 40
.,
Et 8, Military Order of Cooties, the
Frontier CB Radio Club and he
Veterans Memorial Hospital
served as a past officer of the MariWEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
etta Men's Bowling Association. - William Wells, Tuppers Plains.
He had also held local and district
WEDNESDAY DlSCHARGES
offices in the United Methodist -None.
Chureh.
,
On Nov. 2, 1953 he married
HolztrMedkaiCen·ter
Marilyn Sue Dobbins who preced·
Dlschar_ges A:prll 25 - Karen
ed him in death on May 8, 1983. Blankenship, Mrs. John Hanning
On Nov. S, 1988 he m&amp;rr~ed.Sharon . and son, Nathan House, Barbara
Rhonemus who survives aNI' serves Johnson, John Johnson, Louis Lauas pastor for the Chester United dennilt, Irene Phillips, Elthan PreMethodist Church, SL Paul United ston, Johnathan Samples, Lisa
Methodist Church in Tuppers Searls and COra Waldron.
Plains and the Alfred United
Methodist Church.
Besides bis mother and wife, he
is survived two sons and daughters- Release
report
in-law, Robert Alan and Emily
Hausman, and Eugene and Debbie
The Middleport Fire DepartHausman, all of Marietta;· one
ment
answered a total of 62 fire
brother, Ted Hausman, Toledo; one
and
emergency
calls durina March,
sister, Myra Kendall, Glendale,
according
to
a
report from Jeff
Calif.; and one gnD'dd•nghter.
Darst,
ftre
chief.
'
Besides 'his father, 'he was preThe
rcpol'J
showed
that
nine
of
_ceded ill death by a brqther, Joe.
the
calls
we're
to
fires,
while
53
Services will be held Saturday
at! p.m. at the Norwood United were emergency medical situations.
Methodist Church with Rev. Don
Archei off'tciating. Burial will be in
Greenlawn Cemetery at Lowell
with
!Dilitary rites.
Friends may call at the
McClure-Schafer Funeral Home
Soulll Ceatr81 Ohio
this cvenina and up to 11 a.m. SatCloudy Thlarsday night, with a
urday, and at the church one hour chance of showers, and a low near
prior to the service.
50. Chance of rain is 30 percent.
Partly cloudy Friday, with highs in
the upjler 70s. Chance of rain is 20
perccnL
• Extended fonaut
much of the Ohio Valley and Great
Saturday tbroup Monday
Lakes region. Low pressure was
A chance of showers and thunover Montana with a cold front derstorms each day. Highs will be
trailing southwest to soUthern Cali- in the 70s each day with overnight
fornia.
lows in the 50s..

.

Stocks

Am Ele Power ..................29 1/4

Alh!lnd Oil ........ .............. 34

AT&amp;T ...............................37 3/4
Bob Evans ........................ 1g
OllrmingShop................. l71/8
Cl1y Holclina .......... ,.......... 14
FedenJ Mogul .................. IS S/8
Ooociyear TAR ................. 21 1/4
koy Centurion ..................12 3/4
l.arD• E.llld
1/8
Umlllld Inc: ....................... 29 1/8
Maltlmcdia lnc...... ; .........ss 114
Rll Resllllrlllt ................. l.l/16
oououooo oo0ouooooo oo22

RoiJbinsctMyers ...............26 Ill
S~y·• Inc: .................... .17

Ill
Star 8ank ..........:::::...........22 l/4
Wendy Int'l. ..................... 10 7/8

W011bingtOnllld. ..............26 1/4

Sud,.,_,.., ""H:JO &amp;.II.

Pick 3:850
Pick 4:9451

Cards : J-H, 6-C
Q-D; 7-S ,_.

•BIG.
DISCOUNTS
•LARGE
SELECTION
•SVPER
DAYS

.'

Val. 41, No. 245
Coprrlghted 1891

·Southern Board eliminates two teaching posts
. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH ·
· , · Sentinel News Slaf1' · ,

the district approximat~:ly .
$140,000.
Saving that amount, along with
.. Curriculum chang!IS along with anticipated savings from earlier
some teaching and coaching posi • . cuts made by the board, could keep
lions have been eliminated for the the dislrict out of the loan program
1991-92 school year in an effort to if the four-mill levy passes at the
keep the Southern Local School May 7 primary election, according
District solvent and out of the state to Treasurer Dennie Hill.
: loan program.
·
The overall shonfall in the die
· Meeting in recessed session budget for -1991-92 school year is
WedJiesday night, the Board voted approximately $400,000. The levy
tQ·
. make
. changes which will save . will bring in about $215,000.

STOREWIDE SAVINGSI
3 PIECE EXAMPLE:

,·

COUNTRY STYLING LIVING ROOM ·
ALL 3 PIECES

S899

Instrumental music will be dis· was reported. The board voted not .
continued in the district effective to renew the teaching contract of
·next fall as a cost saving measure. Tom Walters, current band direc- ·
That action waS taken following a tor.
repon on die lack of interest by the
Changes in the business office
high school student&amp; in participat· education program to reduce one
· ing in band. It was reported by one teacher were adopted by the board.
board member that less than a One section for both Juniors and
dozen had sianed up for next
seniors will be offered rather than
. .That eliminaw the posiuon of the separate sections now taught by
band director and aves the disuict two teachers. The savings by elimi. about $37,000 in salary, llenefits nating one teacher, ac~g to the
· and other band related expen5es, it. treasurer, will save the district

rear·

lEG. 11299.00

· LYNCHBURG, Va. - A Jesuit priest says he's
disappointed American Electric Power Co. shareholders have rejected a proposal that the company
repon its progress toward protecting the environmenL
But Father Thomas Gaunt said he's not discouraged: "we'll be hack next year."
Jesuits of the Maryland Province of the Society of
Jesus,and Catholic Health~ West,~ that hold
AEP stock, wanted the Utiltty holdmg company to
issue a report outlining steps toward achieving the 10·
objectives of the Valdez Principles.
The principles ol c:orporate environmental disclosure were designed by environmentalists in I 989
af~ the Exxon Valdez oil spill. They call for reduc,
ing and ultillllllely eliininatini the releuc of all pol·lutants, compensating for envuonmental damage and
having third-party auditors check for compliance.
AEP is the parent company of eight utilities serving 7 million people in Virginia, West Vir;nia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Ohio,
and Michtgan.
: AEP urged 450 stockholders during their annual
meeting Wednesday to vote against the proposal.
[ql}
.
W.S. White Jr., retiring AEP chairman. said. "We

100% NYLON COVERS

.

~----.....

'

ABLES &amp;
CHAIRS

IUTCIING
CNIN~S

SAVE

30°/o TO 40°/o
#1 IN liDDING!

WI1H YIIS COUPOII

CLUB

,

.

s.ooom

.

PITTSBURGH - Ravenswood
Aluminum Corp. and the United
Steelworkers left the negotiating
table on T()ursda~ for the fourth
time without making any progress
·in the six-month labor dispute.
"I just made a report to 75 peo-:
ple at Union Hall," said Dan Slid·
ham, president .o f Local 5668.
"People are .disappointed that we
haven't worked things out, but I
didn 't .have a single negative comment tonighL"
. About 1,700 USW members
have. been off the .job since Oct. 31;

lfG. PIKI
'3S'
IW PIKI '299"
1111 COIIPON 'lO.OO

.

IIOW

$26995

1,000 ITU, 1 1,000 lni, l't ,OOO ITU, 11,000 ITU

n.ooo . AND 2•.ooo tru

At The

UNIQ(Jf ( )l~;..ioo&lt;eTED COIL

Royal Oak "Spring Roundup".

I

27, 1991

BEDROOM
SUITES

Serving 8:00 a.m.·,11 :00 a.m.

--Local

LARGE SEUmON OF
IEHOOM ·SUITES TO
CHOOSE FROM••

IAU. YOU CAN Ell)

Royal Oak Resort Club, Recreation Hall
33429 Flatwoods lct-laclne, OH. ·

II£G.

. '1099

Adults, age 13 and up - $3.00 .
Children, age 6-12 - $2.00
und•r age 6 eat free
.
• Public Cordially Invited •
Proceeds Supp_o rt
•
County Serviee Projeelo

r

TOLL FREE 1·800-837-8217
RUnAND, OHIO

up in March

when their old contract expired.
The company is running the plant
with salaried staff and more than
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sales
700 replacement workers. ·
of
previously-owned homes edged
Union members say they were
up
0.6 percent in Marth, helped by
locked out of the-plant, while
a
I
0.2
percent rise in the Midwest,
.Ravenswood offic•als say the
as
buyers
continued to respond to
workers are on strilce.
favorable
mongaae interest rates,
The company and the union met
the
National
Association of Realwith a federal medialor Wednesday
tors
said
Thursday.
and Thursday, but both sides say
The incre~~Se - which was seen
the other hasn't made Bliy imporas
statistically insignificant tant concessions.
Continued on pajl1! 10 ·
No date has been set for future
meetings.
·

briefs-~

The Meigs County Sheriff's Department reported that Patrick
McGhee orCarpenter Hill Road complained Thursday that his
unlocked house was entered and a VCR and a chain saw were
ieportcd missing .
Investigation into the matter continues, according to Sheriff
James M. Soulsby.
·
·

$89995 &amp;UP

Rutland Furniture Co.

· "Service Above Self"

all campers; and Jim Cobb Chevro- sausage, juice, coffee and milk. A
let, Pomeroy, and La!ry Simmons food concession stand will be operChevrolet-Geo, Athens, conversion atcd all day SaiiiRiay by the Eastvans.
..
ern High School Junior Class and
· Fridar, e'V ening at 6 p.m. a Band.
hayri(le w1ll be held ~d at 7 p.m.
Kids crafts wiD include buttons
there. will be a bonfire with those · · and t·shins while the adult crafts .
attending being asked to take their will be making ·a wool lamb stool
own hot dogs and buns. Marshmal- or a wool lamb yard ornament.
lows, hot chocolate and coffee There will be a charge of materials.
along with condiments will be pro- Nature hikes, horseshoes, and safevided by the reson. The event will ty classes will be held during the
be held on the basketball coun. In afternoon and at 5 p.m. there will
the event of inclement weather it be a covered dish dinner in the
will be held in the lounge.
lounge.
Saturday morning the Middle. The evening activities will begin
CANCER DAY EVENT SAID SUCCESSport.- Pomeroy Rotary Club will with a show by the Shady River
FUL • Proceeds kom llle Sixth Annual Big Bend
serve breakfaSt in the lounge with Cloggers followed by, a spring
Foodland Cancer Day were presented by
the menu to consist of pancakes, round-up dance. Cou for the dance
Charles Blake, lett, maaaaer of the Pomeroy
will be $7 .50.
Store, to Ferman Moore, executive director or
the Meigs County Utili of lhe American Cancer

Sheriffinvestigates Carpenter theft

"Free .Full Size Box
Spring.&amp;; Mattrees''

742-2211
ST. IT. 124

Here Judy Mora, Royal Oak.employee BDd eoor. diaator or Spri~~g Round-up, coarers with Car·
roll Irvine, who brought in one or the RV's . .

RAC, USW impasse continues' Home sales

.

Air Conditioner'

Rofary Pancake
Breakfas.t

r

A "S~g Round-Up", featuring
a show of campers, recreational
vehicles and·conversion vans, will
be held 11 Royal Oak R~ort Club
·this weekenl!.
All activities which begin at 4
p.m. Friday (today) will be open to
the public. Craft classes for children and adults, games, entertainment and a dance arc included on
!he aaenda of activities planned for
the three days event
The 23 vehicles on display will
. be opeit to lbe public beginnil!g at 4
p.m. Friday through Sunday at 4
p.m. Dealers exhibiting are Irvine's
Camper Sales, Inc., LiUle Hocking;
Happy Hills Camper Sales, Nel. sonville; Burky's R.V., Belpre,
Clay's Trailer Sales, South ~int,

sums wnH

$30

·

..

tb' ofotber activities lncludlaJ. relr~llmtnts,
entertainment aail a dance will lie featured.

'Spling Round-Up' to begin
today at Royal Oak Rt}sort Club

•T.Ull ~NO 4
CNAIIS
•T&amp;Ill AND 7
. CNAIIS
•DINING IObM

REC£M
OFF
THE SALE PRICE ON
AIR coN'omoNERs ·

or

~ '. RecreatloUt ~
all
~_.,·:.o¥ea oniO~ p..,...ol tbe ROP1

MOVING

Oalti ResDrt Club Tbunday lftenloon Ia Pl'tll•·
ration ror llle USprloi Roulld-up" to be held this
eftnilll and over the w"kend. The event Is liP'!'
to the _puhlk:.ln addition to the RV show, a vart·

•Adjustable shelves
•Energy saver switch
•Huge freezer

EARLY BIRD SAVINGS':

ROTARY

.

,,

GIBSON NO-FROST
2·DOOR REFRIGERATOR

GIBSON
CHEST
FREEZERS
5CU. FT..........S269 .
8CU. FT..........S299
16 CU. FT."'""s399

going 1,0 the full day kindergarten
program, it was reported, because
students will travel ori the same
buses used by student's, first
through 1.2.
All assistant coaching sraff positions were elimin~ted by the Board
as another cost saving move. Gate
receipts which go into the Athletic
Fund will be used for paying the
head athletic coaches hired at the
meeting.
Continued on page 10

don't disagree that environmental factors should play
a majof role. They do at AEP and have for many ,
years."
·
_
The board won't issue the r~P.ort, however,
because the list ol objectives doesn t ·balance safety
with energy and cost considerations, White said
[em}"We arc stewards ol our shareownen' investment as well as the environment," he said
The com_lJIIIIY already prints relevant infOI"Ill!lti~n
about how It· handles enVU'OIUIIental problems m 1ts
·annual repon, which, for the first time this year, coniains a page that describes the .company's policy
toward operating safely. AEP recel)dY appointed a
vice president in charge of environmental issues,
White added.
.
.
.
In an earlier interview, White and other company
officials argued that to elimina~ all ~llutants they
would have to stop burning cqal, a major component
of AEPU's bl!siness.
..
The com_1181!y has come under tJre because buming coal at_lts Ohio plants rei~ li!Jie amounts of
sulfur dioXJde tliat produc~ ac1d nun '" the _north~st.
One plant alone, the Gavm plant, bums SIX mdhon
tons of h!s~-sulfur coal per year, producing more
than 300.000 tons of sulfur dioxide.
·

Indiana

MIDDLEPORT· POMEROY

Saturd~y, · April

about $30,000 in salary and benefits. . .
Another cost saving step taken
by the board was to change the
kindergarten schedule . Full day
kindergarten will start in the fall,
with some students attending all
day three days a week with others
attending all day two days a week
one sernesler, and then switching at
the end of the fii'St semester.
Thousands of dollars· in transportation costs will be saved by

AEP rejects pollutjon guidelin,.es

Your Choice of a Good
Selection of Cove-n and
Colors,

Weather

.

.2 Secllone, 14 Pegee 25 oerile
·A Multimedia lno. N.wepeper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 26, 1991

fire

run

Low tonight in mid-50s.
Party cloudy Saturday.
Chance of rain 40 percent.

•

•

Hrispital news

fiOia llft'IIIM bJ'Br.llt, Ellll
q41Mwl rfo.m,olll.

'·

Ohio Lottery

Page3

ToUfree ...

Skies cloudy over Ohio
By United Press IntemaUonal
Patchy, dense fog was over
Ohio early Thursday moining.
The night began with mostly
clear skies and calm winds, but
around midnight fog begAn formina
across Ohio due to the moist air
near the ground being cooled.
By 5 a.m., patches of dense fog
were being encounte!ed mainly in
the eastern two-thirds of Ohio.
Cloudy skies were expected by
evening. The clouds arc ahead or
an upper air disturbance over the
middle Mississippi Valley. This
disturbance will pass across Ohio
Thursday night, causing cloudy
skies and a slight chance of showers across the state.
: Friday is looking like a nice day
with panly sunny skies expected._
Lows Thursday night will be
from the middle 40s to lower 50s
. while highs on Friday will be most·
' ly in the 70s.
.
On the Thursday morning
weather map, high pressure was
eentered over Ohio and covered

Reds rally to
edge Chicago
Cubs, 8-6

Continued l'rom page 1
afler being rec:ommended by Common Plcal Juilge Fred W. Crow ill; ·
and George W. Miller and Fred
Hoffman were appointed to the
'board by Hoffman, the maror of
Middleport. The commissiOners ·
expect 111 make their appointment
to the board next week.
Commissioners reviewed a letter from the county budget commission, which certified a deduction from the Meigs Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental
Disability's budget in the amount
of $146;354.20. The deduction follows the Februl!fY failure of a tax
levy in the county.

· Vehicles damaged, vandalized
•

John Blake of Pomeroy reported to. the Meigs County Sherifrs
Office on Thursday that two former military vehicles owned by
Allen Peasley were damaaed earlier this week while on Blake's

~~

to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Blake advised that the
vehicles were ·on his property on Blake Hill Road. The glass and
lights were knoclred out and damaae done 10 lbe motor companmentl. There was also red plint sprayed on the vehicles,_
'
Contlau'ed 011 page 10

- . v;

'

·

Society. Pktured with Blake and Moore is Mark
Abbott, Foodland cci-man11er, Five percent or
the day's sales were contributed to the Cancer
Society. Blake said lbat It was the overall cooperation or the Pomeroy and Middleport commu·
f1lly tHat made the event a success.

Infectious waste bills sail through house
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The fll'st bill requires operators
Two bills aimed at putting the pub- applying for permits for any new
. lie spot\ight on operators of infec- facilities or expansion of present
ti.ous waste inctnertitors sailed incinerators to notify all township,
through the Ohio House Thursday municipal or county governments
with no opposition from the floor.
of their. plans. It passed unaminousThe bills, both sponsored by ly by a vote of 95-0.
.
State Rep. Ronald Gerberry, DThe second bill would require
Austintown, require fmns that plan the director of the Ohio Environto expand incinetation of infecttous mental Protection Agency to have a
waste to open up these plans up to public meeting allowing area resithe public.
dents to vo.ice any objection before

these penn1ts are awarded. This bill
was approved by a margin of 95- I.
Ohio is one of the largest dis•
posers of infectious waste in the
Midwest. Alison Shockley, EPA
infectious waste unit supervisor,
said· more than half of this waste
comes from outside Ohio.
.
She said this not because of Ia)\
standards, but because Ohio is easily accessible by road and has a
Continued on page 10

GNP down 2.8 percent du1ingjirst quarter
By ALEC D.B. McCABE
UPI Dulness Writer
WASHINGTO-"i -:-The nation's total output of goods and services '!ro.PJled by a slighdy higher than expected 2.8 percent - or
$29.5 billion - ill advance estimateS for the the fust quarter of
1991, the COmmerce Deparancnt said Friday.
The sliJ? followed a 1.6 p!:lCent- or $16.6 billion- drop in the
. Gross Nanonal Product durina the fourth quarter oll990 tliat was
the fii'Sl dOc!ine since the second quar1er ol 1986, when spending
l)roJ)Jied 1. ~percent.
·
·
tli:onom•sts commonly say two back-to-bact declines in the
GNP representa proof the economy has slipped into rei:ession. The
last time that happened was in the fourth quarter of 1981 and the
ftrst quarter of 1982.
.
But the Natiooal Bureau of Economic Research said Thursday
that the current recession actually bepn last JUly.
Inflation, as measured by .the GNP fixed weight index, climbed
by H percent in the fii'St quarlel after ina-easing by 4.7 percent in
the foUrth.
·
.
'
Domestically, the index increased by 3.6 percent after climbing
by 6. 3 pefl:ent --.,. a drop thac was more than accounted for by

declining energy prices. .
On the positive side, fi$ures provided by the department' s
Bureau of Economic ~ys1.s sh~ed that improvements in tm~
left the government Wtth an mflauon·adJUSted swylus of ~2.~ blllion in the fust quarter that followed an $8.8 b1lhon deficu tn the
.fourth.
,
That represented the first gain in net exports since the first quarter of !983, when the rtgiii'C hit $22.8 billion, a Commerce Depart·
ment spokesman said.
·
·
.
. Expons were ~wn $0,7 billion whi\e !mP?rts declined $1 1.71lijhon compared w1th ~decrease of ~21 b1U1on 10 the fourth qu~r.
Consumer spending, meanwhtle, 'ras down $9.5 billion m the
fust quarter after falling $23.2 billion in the fourth.
The end of the war in the Persian Gulf pushed government
spendina on ROOds and services down by $3.1 billion in the fust
quarter after increasing $3.9 billion in the~
Figures pl'O\'idcd by the JOvemmcnt s
current dollar personal income increasfng to $16.7 billion in " rii'St quarter after
increasing by $40 billion in the fourth.
·
Disposable penonal income was up by $15 billion in the fii'St
quarter, less than half the $32.8 billion mcrease in the fourth.

~--~~~
· ~--------------~~~~------·-----.------~·---J
·+'

�.•

-·

Commentary
.~ .. . it

Th·e Daily
Sentin~l
m eo.ri sareec · ·

· I

.•

P-erer.Oido

.

~•

Military won media
victory in Gulf War

By HELEN THOMAS
.
UPJ Wlllte HoUle Reporter
WASHINGTON -Totally managed press i:ovmge or the Persian
Gulf.war played into the hands of the admi,nisttatioo, which contmlled
tl!e plelllnlllld the $101}'.
.
·
.
' 'lbe medj• has a nght to wonder whether. the press restraints that
WOibd 10 well fer the aovemment will be the blueprint of future intema·
oo~in~
· ·
Wit became almost palatable under the U.S. system of keeping the
maJol'lty or rep0rtcn from the front and saturating them only with the
JOOCl news. A5 a !ellllt, there was a dis!Drted
. picture of the Gulf War.
Jleponm llld pholographcn we~e kept at bay and most of the lime kept
from the IIIDr.y.
Thm: is hardly a good word to be heard about the Pentagon restrictions from n:pauas and C8Diel'llllen returning from the gulf. Instead they
recille. a lirany of confronbrions, snafus, military ~ rape and the obslruc·
tionism that put the press COl'JI8 on the defense and kept them from doing
their tlldi~ job.
.
.
One photographer cited the many tim~ in the months leading up to the
air war when he and others were taken 10 the Saudi desert where opera·
dons were simulated, including the evacuation of wounded should there
be heavy caswlltiea.
·
.
.Later on when thC war was on and a Scud missile hit an American bar·
rac:ks in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia and there were indeed m1111y casualties, a .
wire service ohololraDher arrivina an the scene was blocked by officus,
who halldcufted hiiil ind broke hiS camera. ·
·
Tile military wanled no ""too--:"'~tures 10 reach the homefront.
'Tile aJOrdinalion and sync
· on of the briefing officers in Wash·
ington, and Riyadh was uuprecedented. Excellent communiqtions
between lhe Pentagon and Operalian Desert SIOnri headquarten made it
poaible for evayone to sing the same tuue. There were few gaffes as a
result.
FiiSt laily Barbara Bush was among the millions of Americans who
were glued to cable News NeiWOlt and was an attentive viewer for the
military briefings. On ~~avera! occasions, the president noted that his wife
was a devotille cil certain anicnlate briefer&amp;.
• .
"I loved diem all," she told reporters in a recent interview. "They
were all wondedul. I don 'I know how they stayed as sort of calm and they
ans~ everything."
,
..
Whea told tblt the public was hardly given all the facts and the briefers
managed die aew.s. Idle said: '"l'bat's the m1151 ridiculous thing I ever
heard. Wm.-e oot ~on the li:ont peges of the new~.··
.
"I loved lbe IIOriea, ' she said, referring 10 the American offiCer who
told fOur blmooted frightened lnlqi prisOners, "Get up, get up," and
assured them they wem not going to bi halmed. "They were all so afraid
they would be shot,.. she said.
.
· It's nmnl enough to coneen~ on ihe brighter side or a picture, but
no one in the adminislnllioli was willing to discuss the human cost af the
war or the deVIIIalion . - y for viciOry.
During the war briefings, officen were heard to $IV "it's a beautiful
da for bombing," or "it's a healthy day for bombing.' 1
the other side or the coin was the fiK:t that the Iraqi regime tossed ·
out all af the WCIIem press u SOOII u die war was over.
Bumed from f'actual n:pc:ns of the Vietnam War, the military aided and
abetted by the administratioa, was determined that the press would not
have free .eip this time around.
.·
To this day aome military officials insist th8l the press lost the war far
the United Stare~ in Vielllllll. nat assclisment shows little faith in the
American people to IJillb their own judgments.
Two Jllll adminillralicll were bent on selling the Vietnam War 10 the
public with rosy, but mial~reports ananating from government
briefings in Saigon thai were
I the "S o'cloct fOllies."
Reporta1 oo~ World W• D and the Kor.a1n War with censorship,
but not on the all-encompusing scale witnessed in the Gulf War.
Tile United Siatel openllel on the free flow of information, letting the
chipll fall where they may. That is the essence af democracy and freedom.
With the war over. the American people ltC now getting a truer picture af
· the ravages or war. · . .
.
_

&gt;on

.

.
•
"

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio :

FrldiiY,

Mml It, ,..,

.

•

WHA1 A.RE '{OU
00\NG lU~RE~
SPR\NG 6RE,.._\&lt;.
IS OVERi

•

•

v

0

;i
0.

••

Havel, '60s·rock 'n' roll united Czech spirit ...
~
-~

Tho~ Mnuden picked

up hits . Classmate Shawn Hamon added a single: each. The I aneers
could only manage three hill off af
two Meigs llilchCn. led by Amold
with a double.
.
McGuire wu the swter and
winner for Meigs going the fmt
rive innings giving up one bit,
striking out live and walkin11 s~. .
Wright picked up the save pvina ·
up two hits and striking out three in
two innings. Bennett was the 1oaer
for thei...!Incers.
·
Meigs, with the two victories,
. raiiied its mcord to 7-6 overail and
7-4 in the conference. the Mltlud·
ers will travel to Vinton County 011
~ while Wright hlld a sinale Randy Corsi and Kevin Taylor Friday afternoon.

••
••
•I

ine"-"I hope someday you'D join
us, and the world will live u one
"
The lyrics ue written in large
graffiti on what is known as ''The
Lennon Wall" at the bot10111 of the
hill from the Hradcany Castle
where Havel works. The wall of
protest arid pop began not long
after Lennon was murdered in
1980. lt would become as critical
10 the underground anti-communist
revolution poster .a n in Poland
and graffiu in the People's Republie of China. The wan was to be
whitewashed by authorities reguIarly, but new portraits of Lennon
and a variel)' of revolutionary myings or '60s lyrics would r-appe-t'.
Duril)g our lengthy interview
with Havel, he became the most
animated when discussing his
favorite music and what it meant to
his people. The music b~came
important during the darlmes$ that
followed the brief period of reform
lcnown as "Prague Spring" in 1968.
"After 1968' in this countty followed.a period of darlalesi, and all

,as

.....
4

the music had to go undergound,"
Havel said. "Rock bands like the
Plastic People or the Univc:ne had
to go underf:ound and alsh use
pseudonyms. It was the arrest and
trial or the Plastic People rock band
· (named from a song by American
rocker FJank Zappa) that mobilized
Havel and others in 1977 to write
"Charter '77," a document signed
by intellectuals calling for new
freedom from the communists.
In the 1970s, "the forbidden
music brought us IOJlelher- very
broad spectrum of people who
. were untied by the Spirit of resistance. And music, thus, became
resistance. It was the liale candle in
·a dark: forest tl!at gradually became
a «reb."
It was no accident that Havel
later called the overthrow af communism, dte "Velvet Revolution,"
in remembrance or American rocker Lou Reed and his '60s barili;;Jhe
Velvet Underground.
,,; :. · , • ,

Havel acknowledged that the
'60s spirit is still strongly felt in
Prague jlecause, "It w.as not on!)'
the IDUSIC dial was so unportant, it .
was the whole $1!iritual climate aG:
the '60s that influe~ the modenC'
history of Czechoslovakia."
Now that Havel has come of~
and is heading a COWJtry, his~
cult transition period cannot aff~n""'
10 have too much af the rebelliot;r
spirit in its music. ''The '60s ~
marked by .the idea of noncon,..
formism, hy the idea of deslruction;t
rather than construction.' We camot'
really afford an~ mQre destruc-;,.
tion." Ravel satd. "We have 11'&lt;
much harder task, and that is to~
build something. So what you ~
seeing is not merely a revival of the~)
'60s, it is a revival of the '60s pi~
this need to build,. 10 construct, tev
startanew."
•
PACKING THE BENCHPresident Bush has about 120 judi:
cia! vacancies to fill. We predict
that he will speed up the process
and clear those •ppointmen~
through Congress before his firsC'
term ends in January 1993. That
will load the federal bench with
appointees of Presidents Reagan,
and .Bush. Democratic judges, pu::{ ··.
ticularly liberal t;&gt;emqcrata, wilt·
become an endangered sPecies and
the judicial system wifl become .
solidly COJ1SCI'Vative.
. }....
month Secretary of State JamesBaker said that a window of cppoi'- 1
tunity had been opened for peace in:.
the Middle East He took advantsge'' ~
of that window and made tlie·''
rounds ofthe U.S. allies in the Per- .
sian Gulf. Bill a better tenn might":
be "window dressing." Some Stite' 1.:
l)epartment sources say the win• •
dow is slamming shut. In public 1· •
Arab, Israeli and Palestinian lead,"
ers ue parroting Balcer's calls fOt'.':
peace, but when they get behind~
closed doors. their demands ~ justr' ·
as strong and divisive as ever. It'·:.·
may be that Baker and Bush ~ IOd ''
ambitious tb think they can solve
·the animosity that has festered"~
between Jews and Arabs far thou:~'
sands of years.
:~·:

, : ~:

Rural communities fight job losses
TORRINGTON, Wyo. (NEA) . "The cumulative effect·of all the rioration of their ecdhomies that- ~·we're not a down-in-the- economic hardships .is making it they are aggressively hiddinl! to be
mouth county, but we have prirnar- increasingly difficult for rural designated the sites of pnsons,
ily an agricultural economy -and Americans to achieve and maintain Iandftlls and other facilities most
that means we've had 10me tough financial security;" he adds. "They other communities abhOr.
years recently," explains James K. ltC ata distinct disadvantage in the
In the 1970s and early 1980s,
Gibson, director of the Goshen labor mlltet."
outmigra,tion by wal residents no
County Economic Development
During the past decade, the job longer able rir willing to cope with
~.
creation rate in wal regions has those pressures was generally limit. 'w.e know we need a more been only half that of urban areas. ed to the Midwest. In the late
dtv~ed economy ~ we have Moreover. dependence ~ farm1980s, however, the phenomenon
to do It ourselves, he adds. ing, fishing, l'orestry, mming and $~!read throughout the country.
"Nobody is going to do it far us- other resource-based industries
During the last half of the
but we're ready to reach down and makes rural regions·especially vul- · 1980s, about 400.000 people annugot a hold of our own bootstraps."
nerable to cyclical swinss and ally abandoned rural communiSituated near the Wyoming- other gyrations of the global econo- ties-a rate alllllllll twice as high as
Nebraska. border, Torrington and my.
.
.
during the fint half of the decade.
surroundmg Goshen County are · As a result, rural unemployment
Some communities have bucked
indeed ~ving -especially ~!'1- a!!d poverty rates are marted.ly that trend br develOping imaginapared wtth other rural cammurutJes higher than urban levels. Per captta tive strategtes 10 lure new enter·
th=oubout the country. But its income is aignificantly lower. Sea- prises. Clarksdale Miss. far exams
e to remain vibrant typifies sonallayorfs and other manifest&amp;· pie, has built an e'speciaity creative
the c lenge fac~ by the t!Jo~- tions of employment imltability are campaign around an anisa's draw·
sands of towns outside the natJon s more commonplace.
ing of an adorable frog posed
maJ~ JDCirOIXIlill!JI areas.
.
"Non-metro C!!fDings per job eitha slouched in an inner' tube or
.Rural ~mencans ,are expen· lagged me~ earrungs throughout perchedatopalilyPacJ.
encmg sigmf~Candy htgher lovels the 1980s, says the U.S. DepanThe fro 8 makes it easy to
o_f job loas ~ economic disloca; ment of Agric~ltur~'s Economic remember Cladcsdale's carchy slotJOn than their~ counterparts,.
Research Servtce. Urban areas gao to attract business: "We're
says •yst Michael PodiurskY in pontinue to lead rural areas in most lookinJ for a big frog for our small
as~ ~iss~ by-the B,co- measuresoCeconamic well-being." pond. They appear 10geth« on Tnomac.Policy Institute o( WashmgIndeed, 10me rural towns have shirts, bumper stiCkers, cookbooks,
IOn, D.C.
become so anxious about the dete· caps and a host or other promotion-

·
al items.

R.ob,ert .Walter~;';

...; ,
Since that campaign was••
launc~. the' nilmber of jobs available m the community ha•r;
increased by 500 and the unem • .·~
ployment rate has been slasbed!:;.
from above 20 pacent to below. 10 .•,
percent.
. Hen: in_qoshen County, Gibson,j
c~tes Wlt!J pnde.a 3 pe«ent J)OJ)Ula'-:~
tJOn gam durmg the 19fl0s--lar:
decade when most other counties in,,:
the state. lost people and Wyciming·11
sh~ mto 50th place among the,~:l
states m total ~ulation.
- ·;
The county. s voter~ rec~ntly '
too1t !he unusual step or unposmg a.:;,
new 1 percent sales~ upon them• 1,!
selves for the next ftve ·years 10.. I·
finance $3.7 million worth o£;,
improve"!ents at the county fair- ..
grounds, .m~luding COIISinJCtion of.;_.,
a new building that can house conventio~, rodeos and other revenue&lt;n;
genenwn~~vents.
.
· ,.~
In addiUon, localoffictals ~A.
attempti~g to convince a major~
meatpackmg fum to locate a DeW&gt;:'."'
pork and caule processing facility ,.J
here. ''We realize we've got to
work .hard far whatever we get,";::·.
says a determined Gibson.
· . .~!
' j

..,
...
u

~

•• ~ H

William A. Rusher:...

era were, almost by dint of their
•
•
.
u~-f;
subpoenas, men and women of Here ts
&lt;;hrisiOpher
Matthews,
~ .~.;
virtue, at worst imr.atient progres81de ~ Tom Foley who is).:'
sives. They wer~ t In fact, each former
now
a
colummst,
demolishing perand every one of them had been haps the single most
important ,;;
deeply involved in Communist scrap of liberal Holy Writ
on the, &amp;
. •••• "
affalJ'S
subject
of
the 1988 election:
. -,
To one who, like myself, was
"Was the furlougb issue rete- "'
deeply embroiled, as a conserva- ·vant? Yea. Did the Willie HortoJS :'t
tive, in the 1950s battles over episode occur? Yes. Was his case'a: domestic communism, that is an fair target in a campaign meant rp .
extraordinary admisaion. If more test candidates' values? Certain:C
liberals had made it at the time, a ly .. .. The issue here was not Will~
lot of grief and u~asantness Honan but Michael Dukakis.... The'
could have tK.en avo·
Pledge of Allegiance islue hit the .
Nevertheless, The New Repub· same bull's-eyo: Dnhkis' world.:;:•·
lie deserves great credit far having .class elitism ~ Why did Dukal'is::~
the courage to mate these painful
forcinll teachers to reel~¢;.: :
admissions. (Almost as great, I am oppose
the
Pledge
apmst their will? It's a ·
tempted 10 say, as Natio~ Review good questton that deserved an ·
11
does for insisting steadfastly that it answer"
'"
make them).
·
. Gosh, fellas, you're almost mak~1%
And the habit may be catching. mg
me cry.
·~ i

Today

-udera

'=

MINI-EDITORIAL..,..Las.r.'~

If it's true that confession is put on display u America's Absogood for the soul, the ediiOrs of. lutely Typical Liberal kicks off in
Tile New Republic must be in par- his TRB column on page i by
ticularly robust spiritual health · breezily conceding what may well
these days.
he the deadliest Republican con·
During the first 20 or my 31 tention of 1991, and the one most
years as publisher or National bitterly resisted by congressional
Review (which still bills itself as Democrats:
"America'slcadins journal of con"Is (the Civil Rights Act of
servative opinion), we regilded 1991) a 'quota bill'? The civil
The New Republic as our mirror rights lobby maintains there.is no
. image on the left. We could depend · evidence that businesses engage in
on it to disagree without just about reverse discrimination to avoid
anything we said-and, of course laW5ults.lfthey don't they must be
we returned the compliment enthu- idiots. I sure would.... In the real
siastically.
world of business, minority preferIn nicent years, under the own- ence is common and fear of lawership and editorship· of Marty soilS is clearly one reason. Why
the obvious?"
Peretz The Now Republic has den1y Ull
incbed noticeably away from Its
Then, oa page '30, Eugene Gen·
former gung-ho enthusiasm for oveso draws a most interesting
everythina left of center. To some · ~JIIriiDII:
.
extent it seemed possible to
I fear that our ~ve colatlrlbute this 10 Peretz's hard· line '::;z;es (on college faculties) are
views on U.S. foreign policy, · .
facing a new McC~yism
which in iurn could arguably be · m ~me ways more effective and
traced to his quite unambiiUOUI viCIOUS than the old. Are.conactva•
J!&amp;saion far Israel. But The New tives onlY gellin,, then, a dose of
RqJublic lloday boulllll a 10p edi- their own medicme? In fact, they
tor Fred Barnes, who isn't liberal . ltC not. The·. t did not rule our
br anybody's standard, Including ! cam;uses dunng the McCarthy
his own.
·
era.
Still, I am amazed · and
Finally, here is editor Peretz
inojiesacd by the amount of liberal .himself, on paae 42:
recantltim 10 be found In the AJiril
MFor years it. s been part ar
!Stb inue of Tile New Republic. received doclrine that the unfriend.
Michael Kinsley, no less wham the ly witnesses before the congresSmithsonian would deltly love to . sional tribunals of the ·McCarthy

two wins·thia weet over Tri·Valley pitched a inniag and two-thirds,
Conference foes ., c:nd a Marauder striking out one and walking one,
two game to.iog ltrelk.
Kevin Taylor finished up with a
Wednesday, tho Marauders strikCout and a walk. Losing piiCh·
defOitecl liimble 11·8 and Thurs- cr was Sbamhart.·
day afternoon Meigs defeated the
In the pme witb Foderal HockFederal~ Lancers 6-4.
ing, .tbe
could only manIn the v1ctory over the age fOlD' bits, but took advanrage of
Tomcats,tbo Marauders scored .wild pitching from the l..ancenl as
eight runs in the third inning to tum !he Federal Hocking pitchers
a 4·1 deficit into a 9-4 lead, then wabd five and hit three balter$ to
lleld on for the vitrory.
post a 6-3 win. •
·
Eric Heck and Jason Wright had
Joe McElroy leu. the Marauders
the b~:ts for the maroon and at the plate with a double and three
gold.
went 3 for 4 with three stolea bases, Terry McGuire,

Jack Anderson and Dale Van Attti

Is new Republic recanting ·liberalism?·

Berry's World

araudet baseballers pick up
two moFe conference wins

-

Page . 2-The Deily SUIII'Iel!

PRAGUE, CzechoslovakiaYou may say be's a dreamer, but
. DEVOTED TO TRE INTE&amp;II:II'I'II OP TRE IIDGI·MAIION AREA
President Vaclav·Havel is not the
only one in Czechoslovakia.
lma~ine a revolution that was
~ ·.................... ,.,.._c::l,_.~
, kept alive by rock 'n' roll. Havel,
~..
.
1
the ~drst democratically elected
pres• ent here in 40 years,
ROBJ!:RT L. WINGETT
. CBARLBNB HOEFLICH
· ' describj:s music as the candle that
hbu.iler·
. O.er.. ll&amp;a&amp;J111'
kept freedom-loving hopes alive
forthelastdecade.
PAT WIIJ'J'EliBAD
:· Imagitie a playwright-president
AMW. . PablldiM'/C.UUrol~
who still spouts '60s "hippie"
rhetoric
as if caught in a lime warp,
A MEMBERofTbe United Pre.slnternatlonal, Inland DaUy Preoo
talldng
aboullove,
peace and hapAIIOC!atlon and tbe American Nl!'l'apaper Publta bera AllliClatlon.
piness, signing his name with a
heart as !he final flourish, riding
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be J'ils than 300 .
around on a scooter throush the old
wordllonc. AD Jetiers are subject to edit in&amp; and must be ft1111ed with
name, adclre.o and telephone number. No unslped lettert wlll bepubcastle that serves as government
Jtabed. Letteralllould be In lloocl tute, addre.llfn&amp; latUH, not personall·
offices, wearing a Mexican Indian ·
tie..
talisman on his wrist to give him
. ... ...
more energy, and decking the back
window of his presidential limo
with a ring of pink hearts. .
Imagine a place that overthrew
Lenin with the help of Lennon.
That is Prague and ita president
today, still asking the question of
the old John Lennon song, "Irnag·
.

.'1

OhiO

in history
By United Press International
'

.'"'

• , . \j

Today is Friday, April26,,the !16th day of 1991 with 249 to follow. :,t.
The moon_ IS waxing, movmg toward iiS full phase.
•·•4Tbe mO!Illng stars ltC Venus, Mars and Saturn.
·•~ ~
Tile ovenmg ~ ltC Mercury and luJI!ter.
"·'!'
~ 00111 on this cllle are uDder the SJgn or Taurus. They include nat-~· ·•
uralisa Jolul James Audubon in 1785: author Anita Loos in 1893· Rudolf
H~. Adolf Hitler's deputy, in 1894; inventor Qlarles }tichter, -nsi-'""'
ble for the Richter Scale of earthquake measurement, in 1900.
... ~~
.' '"''

sixthaiO'tt';o~cerunthe~~~

run for Wnght.was his second o~
~rn 1!':s~~ ~J!D.f~:~~
April3
· ·
··
· .
Other Ml!rauder hitters were
Terry McGwre, Terry Router and
Joe McElroy with a double eacb.
For the To'mcats Gatchel bad a
triple, Shamhart and Kittle a double
eacb and Vore, Kovach and
' Riciiards a single each. ·
• •••• Ia tle t'i' d ...... of nul'llllly Dlabt'S
Lel'lhander Mike Vance was the
starter and die winner for Meigs,
dlt1'111tiq Chicago Cubs, who lost
the sophomore went 4 and one. thurd mnings striking out three,
walkins four while giving up two

J:'ror:-

Quinones' eighth-inning HR
. gives Reds ·6·4 win over Cubs

: CINCINNATI (UP!)- Luis !iRed a 'IIIli to ripe field, scoring was walked intentlonally, Samuel
Qitinones, wboae .apeciah)' ia ·'· .Sal!o.
.'
scored when Daniels hit into a
pinch.JIItting, clicm't dfaDDDillflllt
Sllawoi lhs'Btolllied the scon furj:eout
Cincilllllli Reda on
lliPL · in 1111 •Uaf inllniat whln lie lined
The· Dodgers pushed their lead
: ~broke a tie with a two- I baale 1118 ~Me tile left·fllld wall, to 7-1 in the seventh on Daniels •
run hamer in the ellhth innina,llft.. his I
dllclln«olthe yar.
three-run home run. ·samuel sinin'g the. Reds 10 a '-4 victory over
Till Cabs ICOftld two in the fifth gled and Murray was wallced intenthe Chicago Cubs.
to take i 3·1 advantaJe. Luis tionally before Daniels homered ro
. : 'I just wanted to hit a fly baD to
siDJled and moved 10 sec- right field, his second of the sea·
Jllll us ahead 1111d I knew I hit the c.d 0!' Putitlon's sillgle. Erik Pap- . ~·
ball well," said Quinones, who pas 11J11led to score Salazor and
"As soon as I hit it, I knew it
will tum 29 on Sunday. ·
.
Dunatoa ea!fte home on a Greg, was gone," Daniels said. "I hit a
With the score tiecl 4-4, Hcrrn MaMux IICrifice ~y. . . · .
slider that stayed inside. Earlier in
Wi.nningham opeaed the eiahth
.'lbe ~lied • 3-3 JR the fifth. the season,! wasn't pic~ng up the
with a double and sdvanced to dlird Wtth two out, Doran waltC4 and ball well, but I'm starting to do that
·blse on J011 Oliver'• ~ lluin: went to leCOnd CISI Bury Larkin's now. With Bddie'Murray hitting
· QW,nones theu hammered ·H ...._. linll•. O'Neill alagled to acore · ahead of me and being walked, it
cljffSlocumb'sllnti!IICito¥erllll DerM,fllldLaddtl~holaeCIIa · gives me a chance to drive in
rightrfield fence. •
··
.
Manta daullle.
.~
runs."
• "It was a fastball rigbt over 1111
Bell hit a solo homer, his fourth
The Giants had taken a 1·0 lead
middle of the plate," · 11id of the season, to put the Cubs in the rust inninJ on Will Clark's
Quinones, who was 0 for 3 this aheld 4-3 in the sixth inninJ.
solo home run, his fourth homer of
year as a pinch hitler aftr.r IDiDI 13
In ather Nl?lional Leaaue sction the MISOII.
for 36 a year ago in the- role. · Thursday night, Los Anaeles .
PIIIIUes 5, Mets 3
Slocumb, 1·1, admilled be Plllde do~aed ~an Francisco 7-1,
At Philadelphia, pinch-hitter
a bad pitch 10 Quinones.
Phi~lphia beat New York S-3, Randy Ready singled home the tie·
"It's easy to second-guess our- and Pittsblqh bombed Montreal 8- breaking run in the eighth inning to
self now and sar I should have 0.
· enable the Phillies to snap a threethrown a ~!Icier,' said the rookie
".. Dldpn7,GiaJitll .,,.
. "me losing. streak. The victory
right-hander, who piiCbed just a .
LaS ARgeles Qodaers manager was the fust for the Phillies under
dtlrd af an inning.
Tom':i'v'=*cla, a1ways the ~t new mana go! Jim Fregosi and
·Sharing tho spotlil~l with !YP.I•
to nev« have lost faith ended a f~r-gall)e Mets winning
QainoneS'Were relic""' Ted PoWer · m his ~- oflens:e. Fonuaare- Sire&amp; Phi1adelphl8 rook command
and Eric Davis, who had !!om·out ly for TIRilelcher,,his II!IDIDWes off loser Doug Simon, 1·1, after
of'Jhe Reds linelll.' si-lut Jlrida)l blii:tM up I I 4a s faith Tlturs- starter Dwight Gooden left after
with a left hamstring injury.
day n!Pt. .
seven strong i~nings . Roger
Power replaced starter Tom . KafDonrels homered and drove McDowell, 3-0, puched the eighth
Browningwithoneoutandrunners mfour}WisaadJuanSamueladded an" -ot the victoly with Mitch
on second alld third in the top of . a.two-run ~ome run Thursday Williams pic)f:ing up his fourth
the' eighth.. After wallting George mght, leadtnl the. Los Anscles save.
Bell intentionally to !old the bases, Docl&amp;ers 10 a 7-1 VJCliOry over the
Pirates 8, Expos 0
~wer induced Andre Dawaon and San F'rancia!:o Giants.
At Montreal, Vincente Palacios
pinch hitter Chico Walker to pop
"When we were behind 1·0, I tossed a four-hitter and Barry
up and end the tlueat.
told Bel'*t lie wu IOi~ to win 7· Bonds drove in three runs to lead
'"I knew I had to keep the 1ta11 I. I !Did him one ruq im t soing to Pittsburgh to their sixth straight
do!rfn to Daw1011 and J JOt hiM ana beat ,on." Lllonla said.
·. victory. Vincente Palacios, 1·0,
low slider,'' said Power, 2-1. "I , •· JtlrAicr, 3-1, aealod down after. allowed four harmless singles,
locating my pitches wtij llld I JiYIIIJ.IIP I first•IM!.DJ run 10 fuh. struck out five and did not walk a
·gotWalkeronulider,IOO."
111111 ft~tl?lr. ~out IICven batter. It was the second start of the
Randy Myers got the final three · W Wllkinl ORe ia posllDI his•first year 'for Palacios, who is taking
ouls for his third save.
· COIMIIete pml of the season.
. Bob Walk's place in the Pittsburgh
''I had my holiest hitter (O.w·
''l fUIIIIIy llllrted piiChing with ro1ation. Chris Nabholz, 0-3, rook
son) up in tho eighth and had the 1101'1 lllln two piiChes," Belcher the loss as the Expos dropped their
Reds where I Wlllled. Bllt . . IIU lAid. "Ia IIIia _IIIIIC, I fmally. had a fifth straight game. Montreal, 5111,
ca't do it ewry time," said Clliat- a11c1cr for the fint time.
is orr to its worst start since ·the
go~~ager Don Zimmer, whole.
'.'I - ~ out or_JIIIa ~it· 1970 season.
·
team lost for the sixth time in their
tie Ill 1111-aindiJNiinl. Tiley tried
brJ·e~s
lasl·aeven pmea.
·
lib MD ID bock 2111 011111111 even
I:
Davis, who batted far Hal Mar- · hit a W olf my leg. I still don't CJCIIIII
·.
ris' in the ~~awnth, I ¢ed a dll Mil fetlllll" • • tina tlllt I lhould
The 'National Cycling League
10 right to driw hoMe
Dena . ill II 9 • Jlsl
.,.. on."
will begin its third ieason May 5
wid! the run that dod die SC11114-4.
SQ Ptutiace starter Bud wi!h a race in Houston pitting the
It w• Davis' fUll Ul flldle.., . 111111:. 1·3, Jll'l'llf.IOVCII hill Mil lloat Outlaws, Pitllbllrgh Power,
$011 in 10 games .S die SOOdt ef W..• caa itl ..... innin11 of Saa Diego Zoom and Seattle
his career.
wilt.
~Iones.
. "I was ready to bat if !bey aeed·
"llstdt II new to the leque, but . Football
ed -me,··· Davia said. ''We ..t die aace .. ~~the reams he'll
~ib ''Rocket'' Ismail appar·
~ well tonight, but you c.'t pi
be 111 ra4bt,',' Giants manager ently IS free 10 work out a deal in
to6 high afler one ~ I'd
It llollr Qaia llid
wbich he could play for both the
was a step in the right diiection. '
'the Dodpn eruecl a 1-0 lead Toronto Argonauts and Los AngeCincinnati lOOk a·~ lead Ia die witll dna lUll Ia die boaOm af lhe lea Raiders nexn season. Bruce
fuit iMing. Chris Sllbo led off wiCil · ftnL .,_ IIIler Ied eriC widi a lin- McNall, who recently purchased
l hGsDeled to rilhl the Argonauts of the Canadian
a single and lOOk third 021 Ddaa'a lit till
siDJie. One out laner, Paul O'Neill. Beld. 1111 fiiutll bolller or the sea· Football League, told the Los
··
·
IQII. Dllryl Strawberry followed Angeles Times be would not stand
witll I cl8able, 10011: l'hird when ° in the way or the former Notre
• ~
, IHie M1':1 fhtH 011 and Dame star if he wanted to play fCI'

1burlifiY

su-

OSU
cage
title
banner
stolen
COLUMBUS Ohio
A
It was unveiled at the ream ban·
(UPI) ...;,

banner comm~morating Ohio q~t Apri! 9. The IC8D\ s~ ~
State's 1990-91 Big Ten bas!rc:tbaD Big Ten title this season WJth Indi· .
co-championship has been reported ana. It was the Buckeyes' first
stolen from St. John Arena
men's basketball conference tide in ·
. .
·
· 20
·
Vt~ki Cho_rman, coordi~ of
years.
bailding ~cea at OSU,. wd the ,-...:.,.....-----~----,
banDer was diacovered missing last
The Daily Sentinel
Monday: It had huag on a beam
&lt;Uinu...)
. sup~orung the balcony at St.

Jo~ 8•

.

A Dll'IIIM If MerWm4MII, IM;

.

~t l_ooks hke .~omebody JU~t

tore 11 right down, Chorman S8Id

Thursday. Only a small comer of
the scarlet banner was left

Publlllled every olleraoaa, Mmulay
tbraup Friday, Ul Court St., Po·
MOI'O)', Oldo, by Iho Olllo Valley Pul&gt;
liUIJia COmpuy!Multlmlllla, Inc.,

!'Omeroy, Oldo 411111, Ph. tn-2J.M. Se&lt;01111 &lt;lua poatqo paid al Pomoroy,

Olllo.

Member: United Ptaa lntem&amp;tlollSI,
Inland Dilly i'r8aAIOodatloll and tbe
o111o
Newapaf:.::-:~a••· NatiOnal
Advertillnr
tatlvo, BrOIIbam
New01, 733 '11111'4 Avenue,

ASSORTED VEGETABLE
AND FLOWER SEEDS'

New York, New Yo!lllOOlT.
•

Oldo-.

l'llmoroy,

$1
8

IUIIIKJIIPIIOH aAfll

., Coni•
.. · - - auo
One Weell
...................................
One Month .................................11.10
One y..,. ................................. 183.!11
81NGLII OOPY
PIICB

PACKAGES
FOR

Dally ...................... ............. 25 ·eenta
Subacrlbera aot doalriDirlo pay Ibe&lt;arrter may remit In advuce direct to

Tbo Dally Sentlnot on a 3, I or 12 m,.tb
I!Uil. Credit wlllboatvea carrier Hctl
week.
.....

No aubicrlptlons by maU pormltted In
area• where borne carrl• INI'VIce 11
available. ,

...., .....

~. l•lllo Mlip ·tH117

2501 .lllcb01 An.
Pt.Piecnant', WV.
25550
130'1 675-2303

3" JadiiOII Plkl
Gallpolis, Oh.
45631
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7U North Second St.
Middlepor?, OH.
45760
161.41 992·6491

10 H I II I I) I \ I I

I

IJWeeltJ ....................... ........... $21.84

26Weelti .................................. N3.1•
52Weelti .............................. .... I8C.'II
lloolllllloMiipCMIIJ
tJWeeltJ ....................... .... ....... nuo

26 w...u ..................................SI$.50
52 Weeka ..... .-........................... MIO

I (, II I I II H I Il l

I .I\ I '

1,

COME TO THE

w.-

.•·

Sports

•m

sax

s....

Plttsburob Boston .

pbst NHL trl.....,... , ::' ••

..._Ia........_.
,PiasburJh falguial Coldllob

.,_, Ualted

Johnson hu giveu his team Pridly
off. It will be their 11m day away
froln the rinlc in about a IDCIIth IIIII
deacrve iL
'
• '-- 1r J
d
ookie JIUUm •ar 0 101

::!!!:1 C:C:::~ goa~
Tom Barrasso made fr savea
Tlaursday~,diYiDJ lM his·

:tU: :rory over ;!.-;,:--= .
~llburlh'a w1a eth ts;....,

~.-net·

:::O..!ihrs:u~ t:!

"WeliCGI'ad ts 1"1111 in two days da)' reportedly worth a guaranteed
alld 1!'_&amp;1'1 sometlllag," L~da . $18.2 million. Sunday, the Raiders
~d. 11M 1e1111 has started gomg ~~alected the flanker-kick returner in
m the liJbl dltecnion. w~ knew we the fourth round or the NFL draft.
had JOYS who w_ere gOIDI to hit, Golf
and we were wai&amp;in1 to - them
Englishman Russell Claydon
lllrt."
shot a 6-under-par 66 to take a
1..e1 Aaplel added a 11111 in the three. atrolte lead after the first
fifth when SIS'IIuel walked, wu round of tho $470,000 Madrid
balbd IQIIlCO?IIIby Blll:kl?ld .IOIIk Open.~don led fellow
dli1d Clft. ifi ~~- loiW Munly .
S~·:::;.=-~~
()'OUJ 1n, wbo all shol69.

:-of

:a.:;·

) 1:00PM
'

COUNTY JR. FAIRGROUNDS
Join workers and their families as they mourn the five union workers who died
at the Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation (RAC) over the last two years, and
vow to fight for the living. Your participation shows solidarity with the 1,700
Steelworkers at RAC who have been locked out of their jobs since Nov. I, 1990.
Guest Speakers:
Lynn Williams, President, United Steelworkers or America
· Rkhard Trumka, President, United Mineworkers or America
Gaston Caperton, Governor, West Virginia
Joe Powell, President, West Virginia AFL-CIO
Jim Bowen, Director, USWA Distdct 23
Dan Stidham, President. USW A Local 5668
(r
Music &amp; Entertainment
(r
Food &amp; Beverages from the Lockout Kitchen at picket line prices
(r
Rally buttons and other souvenirs
Bring blankets &amp; lawn chairs
(&gt;

WEST VIRGINIA'S WORKERS
HAVE A RIGHT TO A SAFE JOB.

be~W~f·IIOVC?I

aeries 4-1. '1'111 ...
pial will plaf die w'- II dlt
. Adams Diviasoa fia&amp;l lle\W!ft

Ia I *liPid MCIIII'IIl, ..... Iii lli!lt
pme aclleduled fot WI'IIFII).O

==

ilig•t at the Adams cb••ploe 1
ama
. Tbe :oo.aa

""'"r.

POSTMA8I'ER:
Send adclreu
to '11le ~:y Seatlaol,
lU CDwt ~

UNITED STEELWORJCIRS Of AMIRICA 1 Aft..,CIO, CLC

For more information call J84.m93DerJM.'Jiil.~
To reach the Jackson County Jr. Fairgrounds, take 1·71 to Ripley (Exit138).
T.hc.fairgrounds are 7 f!iiles from 1-71, west on Route 33. or about 48 miles from Charlcs10n.
·'

�'

26,1991

Ohio

Friday, April 26, 1991

Milwaukee posts 9-1 victory over Texas
., Ulliled l'w.laltenadoul
l'wo ICIIDIIS 110, theft W1S no
for Cbris Bosio.
)u&amp; ulil nunday, Milwaukee
rip!
llcr hid reit like a visiror
ill llis own llallpft.
Bosio pitdled a nine-hitter and
rode a two-llomct, five·RBI night
by Grq VIUIJm 10 bdp propcllbc
B.ewcn kl a 9-1 victory over lbe

bUJ!IP."

BOlio, who lost bis shnhNf bid
in tbe nlalb innins, im)lloved bis
caJeer record ill Aprjll&gt; 1s-4 wilb

place like !lome

..

a 1.97 ened-run -aYI!IIIp.
T - IIIIa Kenny Rogen. 03, lllowed nms and six !tits

t

••

•

T-Rin8n.
Bclio, ~-2, llnlcl1: out two and

•
'•
••
•
•

walkod rour 10 post·die Brewers•
fira IXllllplete poe Ibis season. It
IIIJo wu llis tint complete-game
victory since biJ last bome win,

....,., way 20 or'- year.

"Yoa bow wblt die most gnlifyioc IbiD&amp; was? It's llecn a while

Iince I've W011 at County Stsdil&amp;, ' ' aaidllolio, who WC1114-91ast
UMl8111d Jollt billalt ICYCII dcci-

liou wllile hampered wilb knee
problems. "That wu my main
objective today. I Wlllled 10 come
out and throw a solid same at
bollle.
.
"Two )'Cin qo I bad a put
seuon at Cqunty Stadium - I
lbink I
9- or 10-1. I needed a
ap lib tbis 10 Bet me over lbc

l
••

w•

•
'

.

ovc:z six .......

MiiWIUkee jumped on Rogers
for five runs in tbc firsl innins.
~ul Molilllr, reawnlas after missmg tblee games wilb a Jes injwy,
opened die rally wilb. a single, Wilb
twq OUI, Robin YOUDI walked and
Fra!W.in Stubbs was hit by a pircll
10 load the bases.
Dante Bichct1e doubled down
the lefl-field line, scoring Molitor
and Y011nL Vuglm fullowal witb
. his third homer or the season, a
390-rooc shot into the lert-field
seats 10 put Mii'W811bc in front 5-0.
"The 1· 2 piu:b 10 Bicbcue, I
know I'll be thinking about that
one IOIIight and so will &lt;Rolers),"
Texas Manaaer Bobby ·v.rentine
said. "That was the piu:b. 11 was
too low in zone. The velocity
wasn't bad. but die location wasn't
very good."
Vaughn's second bomer; com-

ing witb one OUI in tile siuh,
extended lbe leld 10 7..0. Scubbs
sin&amp;W' 10 optD die illninB llid llole
l!eCODd. Aller Bicbeue IUUCk OUI,
Vaughn drilled a 2-1 pi«:b from
~ over lbc left..field wall.
'If you want to call them
saats or bome-run lpCils. you C8ll
call them wbal you WIIIL My aoaJ
is 10 0111 !bee and try l) hit lbc
ball bsrd and do wball'm supposed
10 do," said Vaughn, wbo moved
into tbe starling lineup wbcn Candy
Maldonado broke his root "I've ·
been worlrins on some things and
!bey say bard work pays off. I
worked l!ard over the wmcer and
everytbing's falling iniO place right
now."
·
·
Milwaukee added two runs in
the seventh off reliever John
B~rfield. Gary Sheffield sinsted
·wttb one out and Yount followed
wilb his fifth home run of lbe sea-

so

son.

.' Texas scored its only run in lbc
nmth on a bases-loaded infield single by Julio Franco.
In other American League
action Th11rsday night, Toron1o
shaded Deiroit 3-2 and Minncsoaa

r

lyUIIitedl'reMIJdenatloul
.
Tbe
Cbic:qo
Bulla
opened
lbe
)
· NBA ~yotfs wilb a lillnl Thurs·
•
day Dllhl, ·rippiDI apart tbe New
• CATCHES FOUL BALL- Detroit's Tra¥is flrylll•.la!PI•kl
Y~ Knicb in IIYIIC f'asbion as
· : • tbe stands to C!ltdl a foul ball off tbe bat or Toroato's Grq M;ren · they rec:ordecl the bigest playoff
• • in tbe fourtb IDDIIII ~ Tblll'lday nlgbt'saame Ia Toroato, wbidt the blowoul in IQlll his1ory.
'WOn. (UPI)
.
.
·
Micblel Jordan ICCRd 28 points
llld Sc:ouie Pi~ 25 10 power die
Bulls 10 a 126-85 romp. Cllicago
recarded 15 steals and rorced 27
New Yort tumoven.
'•
'"1\ae's aot much 10 aay about ·
.,.
1 J1111C like thai except we Mallv
·'
MaJor
L••• leN':1 n I
IUnlllll tbe lide," Bulls CcJacb Phil
A-d lape-E1'
o.t;
Bj tTnllld , _ , '
. _ .... oad~Qd ,:. . .
~·
JICbon
said. "We bad a slugisb
a .
.
. .. t.ln;Huwy, Cal. lad,
. ,,
KCI.
•
Slart.
wllic:h
is II8IUtll. Our defense
••
.all r
~
p&lt;l.
dlea
lllllled
it
up...
Noli..t
.......
L
Sod!b.ltL6:
Do....,., T•• ..ll 6
13 .464
Loll-, SO 5; "'-.NY.
MuOn•, S.. .. .51 15
22 A31
New York, never .in the game
Cld,ondW~Pbi.4.
•I
O"~'n......,,OU 6! 15
20 .393
Ca.pltleGa._
after
tbe first gwrter, will get two
: . ~·
Cuw, Tor
......68 10
lS .361
Americoa .....,.._ McDow.oii,Clli
1~, Col
.... .49 9
II .W
days
10 resroup before Game 2,
2; !I tied with!.
Polonia. Col ....57 20
20 .351
8Cbecluled
ror Sunday aftemonn at
Nolirm!Loop
!Oiied-1.
Srillwdl, KC .....46 7
16 .341

'

.

-

...,.:;,';1

I

I

...•..42
,. , J'ldd,or, Chi .....39

5

2

CRipl&lt;cn. Bol .. .41 13
,
N1tlon81 Leap
ob r
,.
Bi&amp;iio, Hou
... .S'l 9
Gwym, SO
... 63 I
Donn. Cia
.....44 5 .
C!ult, SF
....... 60 12
SIL
......57 14
DyUU., Pbi
.... .M 15
Saaoo1, LA
.... 65 II
- . L A ... 53 10
~~ • OI.Willll.Chi
... 66 I

..

S..tiaao. SO

-.....
.... 64

I

14
13
16

DuiOutl

.333 •

....

.333

b

pd.
.371

23

15
20
19
21
21
17
21

.36:1
.341
.333
.333
.321
.323
.321
.111

20

.313

20

..

W

T....._.
.......... 10 7
u.....
........... 6
Do1roi1
... ... .....7 7
Milwaubo
........7 I
CloYalad
........ 5 I
NewYadt
.....,5 I
Bobimcn
........ 5 I
W•l
Chicoa•
...........9 4
c.tifomia ...........9 7
OoiWnd
..........9 7
Sooule
.............1 I
T..•
............6 6
X.....City ........7 7
-..,
.........6 10

Americu Loo..,.- Giboan, KC,

and D. Heacl.oa,OU. 6i; YDW~t. MilS;
' · o.,;,.,d c.Ripk.., Bol. oa11 v..p..

~

Mi14.

.

._.........

Notionol Loop- Mi1choll, SF 7;
DoWim.Chi. DoeR Md am, SF, .,d
Somuol. LA 4; lliorl wilh 3.

,_

-

~I:t.;:~ •a.tca,.

leM&amp;le(Jdawo.i~l)atMi• lf'r
(l!cict-1- 2),1:0:12-"'. ·
- (llmio 1·2) .. " - Cily
(I
tto±•J -2).1:1$~
CIMiaDd lCaodioiai 2-1) otT....
Cl11" 2-1~ ·=~~'-'!.
N!G ·, ~-m 2. t) at OJk.
.... (W..... l·l~ 10:3! , ....

s._,o_r....._

Nalionll ~..oo.,.. - a..,.., SD3;
cwt, Sf;Colarwt,NY: DcSHd+,

1:lS p.m.
Milwt'*- d Baltimore. 7:35 p.m.

DIIrota ••

MOn; I.Antfonl..,. Oquendo, SIL, ond

'l'hampooD, SF 2.
SIGiool.
- . . ........ - Polonia.Coll:
, ;. l'Oali, To&amp;6;Briloy .... Coao,S...IIIII
c ....... Ool; 4; 10 liod willl 3.
Na~Kwtal ~pe - Do!bd•, Moo
• I
10. Colanrll, NY I; Dyk,U&gt;, l'lii 6; Du_Ad
5.

Seealeat~,3: 1~p.ID.

,

ou....,

w.-- s-15;-. T...

on,

~

S..IAiil

'
-~ - ~1'11115;
• DoSIDolds, loloo,ond-SILI ..
Th 1 ,SFtr..a-illa, Pl~c.:wt.SF,
IDdSUawbws) . ~ 12.

-

Americu Lap - Corlot, T"' 25;
0.1 - . Ook 24; Mortioc, Soo 21 ;

.......,,Coi:IO; a..at,Col, oad Yount,

Mill,,

Notiono!IMpo - Gwyna, SO 23;

.

, U. 21; Bi&amp;aiO. !lou; C!ut, SF, one! F• ·
nondaonlll .......,SD2ll.

Woo-Loot

-... ......... - o-..ao..

Pinky, Cll. and !Co,. T" 44.
Qi l- 1; 19 tied 1With 2-0.
NolloruolLoop - Nallc,SD, Smi·
ley, Pb.,- "'" ell 3-0; ·~au.
ODd .........
LA 3-1; 20liorl willl 2-0.
......... A_ _ ..

·

. . 992-5432

·

,,:u , ....

'
(11.--~0-2)•11.'•· ......
~

:,

(lijo0-lt7: ~

O.l)•Ord

d

-~~-1- l)'il­
~0-!}; I::Up.m.

Son Pn (lACooo I oiJ) " Loo ·
Aqoioo (R. -2-1), 10:Ssp.m.

SobrdoJG- .

SuDieftatP.ih+elp!'ie 7:05p.nL
Molmilot St. ...... 1:05 p.m.

Cllieoaoot~d,t : t51""­
l'lt1Mqh II Now Y
I &gt;40 p.m.

""!'J

Nal..t....._ - ~NYJ.I;

AlloatoOI~I:wp&amp;

· SD :14; Bolol!or, LA, .... II_
SD 21 ; Clurilaa, Cia, Dol..of'". SIL, ond
-

s.. Pnociaooll Leo,.,...., 10:0:1

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SPECIAL
SPEAKER:

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p.m.

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J - F . Fultz, Mtr,
Ph. 9t2· 2101
Pom..-oy

"1·ll2S

·

ot Columbus, 0 . ;
PI w. M•in
991·2311 Pomeroy

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SWISHER &amp; UIISE

RIDENOUR

a

·m
-- ·
'X

PHARMACY
We Fill Doclors'

SUPPLY

Preuriptions

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homelitt S,aws

"2· 1955

.

.

Pomeroy

EWING FUNERAL HOME·'

·SNOUFFER
.. FIRE &amp; SAFETY

"Di/inity ond Service Alwayo"

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

992-7075

Establlshed 1913
992-2121

214 e. Main
'992-5130 Pomeroy

172 llltth - - , ...
"'d#si:rt, .._

I 06 .... rrj bt.

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

SHOP
992-U69
llertlt
. 271
s.-i

204 Condor St.

ott.
992-2975

Pomeroy,

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

Srruf

264 s..th 21111
p.m.

n:oo

Rood
-·Vocal musk. S.nllay wor1 ~ 10 a.m.; EIIRS!WIY U a.m; Wo" ..P. 6 p.
m . W-IlY· 11 StudY. 7 p.m

'*'

Spo-.

~ Hotfu'::r~E ~

CHURCH, Jack Cleland, poster, Alana a.land, Supt. Sunlll)l SolloOI 10:00 a.m.: Youth

~~
~ ~1:0't'f CHURCH

~·'lJi.JVE

T:
UNITED METHODIST -161 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy. Ph. 992· Ot!12t,behllldWUkesvllle. CharleoJon..,
58911. Rov. Walter E . Heinz, pastor. Satur·
putar. SuadaySohool,t::tOa.m.; momlag
day Evening Mass, 5:30p.m.: SunciiiY Man . wcnblp, 10: 30; Sunday aDd Thunday
B:f&amp;tol;15~9:30a.m. CCDcl ..... 10: 30
ev.,l"' serv!Cft, 7:tltlp.m.
a.m. ~.~nd and third SuncSaysofeach
8101 .

montb. DaUy Mass, 8:30a.m. COnfessiOns

CHASE LOOSE' BALL -

Pblladelpbla l'rontmaa Charles
Barkley (left) and Milwaukee's
flraak Brlekowsid cbue a loose
ball'dowa tke court Ia Jke lint
qnarter of 'l'llanday •Jsllt's NBA
tlnt-1'011~ liD"" pme mMU·
waukee's Mec:c:a, wllere tbe Six·
en Willi 99-90. (UP))
76ers Barkley and Rick Mahom
called for flasnmt fouls. The Bucks
rallied from 20 down 10 close within 92-84 wit b. 1:43 ldt. But
Hawtins hit two free !brows and
Barkley, playin\:.~s fourlb 'game
since retumins
a knee injwy,
scored on a breakaway dunk to
give the 76ers a 96·84 lead wilb
1:0510 go.
Lakers 94, Rockets 9l
In Inglewood, Calir., Byron
Scou sctnc1 20 points llld sank a
controvenial jumper witb 3.5 seconds JemaininiiO lead the Laten.
Scxlu's 18-foot jumper, wbil:b PYCI
Los Ansetes a 93-90 lead, wu It
fm .ruled by referee Jack MaMeu
10 bave come after lbc expiration or
the 24-second clock.

COOPEB.t'I'IVE PAR18B

Saturday afternoon, 4-5 p.m .
,.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOLIC FAITH -liow Lima Road, next to
Fort Meigs Park. Robert W. Richards,

Weekend Speelalc
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RIDAY, APIIL 26, 1991

·,

FISH SANDWICH PLAnO ................... t2.55

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French Fries, Choice of Slaw. Macaroni Salad or
Baked Beans.

SUNDAY, APIIL 21, 1991

HOMEMADE NOODLES &amp; CHICKEN ...... S4.29
Mashed Potatoes &amp; Gravy, Buttered Peas. Hot
Roll, Coffee or Small Drink.
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NEW HOURS: Mon.·S•t. 11:00 am-8:00 pm
Sunday 10:00 lm·8:00 pm

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UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTIIEAIIT CLUSTER
RO\'. Slw'"' Ro....,..
,
Rev. Cloar._ Ell•
pasror. Sunday services. 10 a.m. and 7 p. ·
Rft, ~llloa Jo-.
,
m .; Wednesday wonlllp, 7 p.m.
ALFRED -Church School 9: 30a .m.:
MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Worllhlp, U a.m.: UMYF 6;30 p.m .; UMW
57~ PNrl St., Middleport. Sam Anderson.
Third Tueaday, 7:30 p.m. Communion,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunda)'
ftnt Suaday . (Hauabmanl
evenlngoervlee7:30p.m .; Wedn..clayse&lt;CH~ER- Worahlp t a .m .: Cbut&lt;h
vice, 7:30 o.m.
School10a.m.; Blbi.Study, Thurocloy, 7p.
GRAHAM· . UNITED METHODIST,
m.: UMW, ftnt Tburaday, I p.m.: ComPreocbiQI •· 30 a m Drat and IOCODd Suo·
munloo, !frat Sunday (Houllllllll .
claysoleoch' m.,jtbi lhlnl'alldlourthSullJOPPA- Worohlp "30 a.m.; Cllut&lt;h
day H&lt;ll month worshiP servi&lt;M at 7: 30p.
Scboo110: 30 a.m. Bible Study Wldn!!JIIay ,
m · Wedaesday evenlnp at 7:30 p.m .
7:30p.m. (Jollno&lt;fll .
Pri
aac1 Bible Stucly
LONG BOTI'OM- Cbut&lt;b Scllool9: 30
S~·DAY ADVENTIST Mul- . a.m.: Worahlp 10:30 a .m.: Bible Study,
berry Hel&amp;bts Road, PomeroY. PaitorBob
Wednesday, 7: :J&gt; p.m.; Communion First
Sn c1er: S.bb.ltb School Superlatondent
Sunclay o1 Monlh !Rev. Cbarle1 Ealml
SplrH Sabbath Scllool beflns at 2
REEDSVILLE - ·Sundoy Worwhlp Ser·
p m 011 saturday artemoon with wonhlp
vice 9: 30a .m.; Church School10:30 a.m.:
HrVI&lt;:e tollowiDc at· . 3•00
p m ·Everyone
Bible Study 7:30p.m. Wedneoday.
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TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL '1\~D FlRST BAPTIST CHURCH Church School 9 a.m.: Worship 10 a .m.:
_Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
BlbleStuay, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. ; Commu·
nlon First~~~~~
Scbool9:30 a.m.: Morning Worslllp, 10:45

:..·• Rk.y
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Rev. - · .... WeoleJ - • . -

a.l\'QMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Eaot
·· · Main St. Steve Fuller, po•tor. GeOJ'IIe
.•, Skinner, Sunday Scbool Suportntonclelll.
, Sunday Se-. t: 30 a .m .; Momlq Worf 1blp 18:30 Lm.: Wodll-y .......

•: pra~~"J'A;,.

•1112

!• f'om.Mtlr Pike. E . t.amarO'Iryaat, ,_.
.: tor aac1 a - r Sebool Dlr«&lt;or. Sllllcloy

, , Scbool, t:30 o.m.: lllornlll Woroblp,
',• 10:f!l: Cbotr'J',actlee, 1: Ill p.m.: fYI!II!Jtl
~-- Pr
• ' wonlllp, 7:
p.DL; ·w
Y oyer
. ' Service, 7; 30 p.m. MluiGn Frlolldl 1 . : 2-6) , RDyal Ambauadors (boyo aceo 1-181 • ·
. andGirl.o lnActlon (IIMI-llhoow•eod.LyLo, , ,30 p.m. · Churth-wklo Vll ltatlon
6 30
' . ' FliT~ :J:"~.f'NACLE CHURCH, llallev Run Road, Rev. Emmett Raw1&lt;11, pu"
tor. Hudley Dunn, oupt. Sullday School,
10a.m.: Suaclayoveatngoervtce, 7:00p.m .
: Bible teacblnc, 7:00p.m . Thuraday.
·SYRACUSE HISSION, Ull Brklcomon
St., Syracuae. ,SIIJicloy Sdlodl 10 o.m.;
· eveal•l aervtce 6 p.m. ; Wldn-y oarvi~: P~L\H CHURCH OF GOD,
Ractao. ...,__ Jameo 8altet'llokl, JIUIOI'.
Freemoa WlllloiBI, Supt. SUaday Sdlool
1: IS a.m.: •SIIIIcloy ond W.......y even·
7 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT FlRST IIAPTIST.
Comer Slxtb ..d Palmer. Rev. Jam'" A.
t.
Secldon, pastor: Don WI! ...,, S·S· S up"
lleuloh White, Alii. Supt. Sullday School
9:15 am: momlna worship 10 : ~ 1111;

IDa,....,_,

Suna'y eventna wonhlp 7 pm; Prayer

-tlnl and Bible Study WlidJiesday 7
pm; Men'i Proyer Breaklaot, Ill S.tur·
d•• each IIIGIIth 7 am 1D lollowolllp ball;
odUit cbolr pnctke Sunday, 8 pm: radio
prQII'om "Proportna tbe Wey'' 5aturday,
3 pm WMOV 13!11 All, Jta....wood, WV;
Lonl'aSu_.aliHrvedlotlluJiayotoa.dl
rnontb.

awild

~-:;:;r-~~
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Ad!.

Cn1t1JM

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DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Roaer Wolalll, mtnllter; Nonnao Will.
1upL &amp;ullday Sehool 9:30 a .m,: Worablp
IOI'VIee 10:30 a .m. Bible 1tutly, Wedneoday, 7:00p.m.
Ri:oRCANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF UTI"ER DAY SAINTS. ~ort­
lond-Raellle Road. Wllllsm RA&gt;uah, pu·
tor; Janl.. Danner, church ochi&gt;ol dinetor. Church ICitool 9:30 a.m.; Mo11tlllll
KENO Ci!URCH OF CHRIST, ,Starllnc
)VCI'IIIIP 10: 30 a.m,; W..S.esday tvtn1118
Massar and 011- Swain, Sunday School
pro:yer aervlcel, 7:30
Supts·. Preachlalt: 30 a.m. each Sunday;
BETHLEHEM BA
T. Rev. Earl
Sunday Scbool10: 30 a.m.
Sllultr, paotor. Woroblp oorvlOf, t: 30 a.m.
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Sullcloy Scllool10: 30 o.m. Bible Stucly oDd
CHRISTIAN UNION, Tborm Durhom,
pnyor oerv1ee ,.,....y, 7:30p.m.
paator. Sunday ll!rvlee, 9: :.»a.m.; even·
CARLETON IIITERDENOIJIINATION·
Ina - · 7:00 p.m. Prayer meettna,
AL
atVIICH. KIDpbul')l RA&gt;od. Rn.
We'dnesday, 7:00p.m.
Clyde W. HetltknGD. put..-. Su.y
'BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
l!dlool t : 30 a.m.; Ralph Carl, Sopt. EwnCHRIII'l', Jadt eo~e~rove. putor. Bible
1118 wwoblp 7:00 p.m. Prayer mootiDII.
Clau,t:30a.m.; MomiDaWorahlp10:30o .
·-~-:;:p.m .
m .: Evealq Worohlp, I ; )0 p.m. Tbur.. ay
OLD
l'ftEE WILL )IAPTIST
Bible Stucly, 6:30p.m.
CHURCH, 21101 State Route 7, Mld&lt;lle' ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
rt. Sullday Seboo110a.m.: Sunday even·
Harrtfl!lllvllle RAI. IRI.It31 ~bert E. hr·
aorvlee 7: 30 p.m.; Tu01cloy arvtcr,
tell, mlnllter: Steve Stanley, Elblellehool
p.m.
SUpt.: Harley John1on, Alit. Supt. SUN·
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH,
DAY: Bible School &amp;:30 a.m.; Worship
Bob Grtmm, putor. Sullday Scbool9: 30 • ·
10; 30 A.M. and 7:30P.M.; Wednoocloy Bl·
m.: Wtnblp 10;15 a.m.; Sunday ovenlna
ble StutiY,7: 00 p.m.
·
servft, 1 p.m. ·
,
ST. JOHN L(ITHERAN CHURCH, Pine
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Grove. The Rev. Laura A. Leocb, po1tar.
Knob. located Ofi·C-Iy Road 31. Rev .
Church aervtce 9:30 o.m.; ·Sunclay Scltool
Jlotrer W I -. pasttr. Sunay Scbool t ; 30
!0:30a.m.
.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST, , o.m.; Montlnt Wollldp JD: 65 a.m. : SundaY evultl(l ~:00p.m.: WldnOI·
Tom Ruaym,JIUt•. SIIDtlay Sehool9:30
a .m.: .Larry Haynel, S. S. Supt. Momtnc
day
Bible
7:00 p.m.
WH1'1'E CHAPEL
LEY AN. Coolwol'lblp 10:30 o.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF 11!E NAZA· , vOle RD. Rev. PbiDip illd.,our, ~tar.
S - y School t: 30 a.m. i worohlp Mrvlce
RENE,~- Tltomoa L. Gatotli, poator.
10:30 a.m.: Blbltltutly and Wtroblp ..,..
Oro Ball, Sunday Sdlool Soperlntelldont.
viet, w•~y._ 7 p.m.
Sunday Sebool, t, 30 a.m.: wonblp lti'V!ee
Rtrn.AND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Eu·
10:30 a.m.: _ . . , oervlee, I p.m . Wldpno E. Und...,....., mlnllior. Sundoy
netcloy ~lng aervlee, 7 p.m.
Sdlool, t: 30 a .m.: Momll18 wcroblp, 10: 30
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dexa .m.: Evealnl Wonblp,7:00 p.m.
ter. ·WOCLtly Call, put,.., Servlcoa Sundoy
~UTLANO l!IBLE METHODIST, Rev.
10 a.m. aDd 7 p.m. Wed-y, 7 p.m .
!von Nyera. SW)day Sebool&amp;: 30 o.m. with
DYESYILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Satiny HuclaCXI, Supt.: ~ Evonlna aorvtce
Lloyd SO)'!'&lt;!, Supl. Sllllday Sehool t: 30 a.
m.i momma worship 10:30 a.m. Sunday 7:00p.m. PrflYt'l' mret!nlond Blblutudy,.
WedaOOclay, 1 p.m.
evening 1ervlce T P· ~·
RUTLAND CHURCH OF '1'HE NAZA·
RACINE FIRST IIAP11ST, Stove
RENE. Samuel Buye, pa1tar. Sunday
Deaver,' Puror. Mike Swla'e-r, Sunday
Seltool9;3ila.m .; WonblpServlco10:30a.
SChool Supt.; SUnday Schocil &amp;:30 a .m.:
m.; Youna . Proplo'l Service 6 p.m.
MO'ml111 worlhlp . IO:fll a.m.; Suncll!l
Evoqollstlc service I ; 30 p.m. Wetlntoday
.....,n, worsblp 7: 30 p.m.: w•Oiday
oervtct 7 p.m.
eVflltnc Bible otudy 7:30 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST HIDer
BURLINGHAM OOHMUNml' CHURCH,
St.......... w. Va . s.ncloy Bible Stucly 10
illlrllllllbom Ray ~ pooler. fto.
a.m.; WonlllpUo.m. and7p.m. W - ·
clolr= Study, voeal muolc, 7 p.m.
O!wt, - - pllbl'. luilcloy Scltool
TY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Du4·
10 o.m~ WCI'IItlp7p.m.; w~
y o u t h - Wtld.. 7p.JIL..,..
dinl Lau, MUCXI, W. Va. J. N. Th~cller,
PINE GROVE HOLIIIDI CHURCH, \i
po~W. Evealnl oervlee 7:30 p.m.; Womtleo11Rl32$. RaY. - J.Watto, pootor.
moo'INIBIItry'lburocloy, t::JOo.m.· etl·
RoiN!rt Searleo. 1.1. aa,t. luaday School
neocloy Pro:yer and Btbl .. 11111dy , p.m .
9:30a.m.: Mom!Jtl Wonblp lll:illl a .m.:
IULLSIDE BAPTIST CHU
, St. Rt.
Sllllcloy t!VIIIInl aervlee 7: 311 p.m .: Wed·
1" Ju1t oil Rt. 7. Rev. Jomeo tot:ree Sr.,
noaday HI'VIce, 7;30 Jl.m.
putor: Rev. Mike WUiet~ Aat. Putor;
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, BDI Little,
J .. Humplu'ey, s.s. Supt: Sunday Seltool
put«. Stew Little, S. S. Supt. SUnday · 10a.m.; lilomln1Worwlllp1la:m.; Suaday
School to a .m.; Momlal WCI'IIp, lla.m.;
evelllag oervlce I p.m.: Wednooday even·
Sunday oven!~t~waroblp 7: 30 p.m . Prayer
m ..llnl ond Blbl•atudY Wetl-y, 1:30
nRST CHURCH OF THE
p.m.; Youtll,_tln1Wetl.-yat7p.m.
NAZARENE. WU!IamJUitla, pa1tor. Sun·
day Sehoo1 Supt, Solllo Juatll. Suod1y
REJOICING UFE IIAPTlST CHURCH
- 38.'1 N. 2nd Ave., Mltltlloport. Sunclsy
Sebool, 9: SO a.m.: mortllnl wcnhlp, 10:40
sChool10a :m . Suaclay-lnl7:00p.m.;
a.m.: S\UIIIIay and Wedatlday lft'VIces,
Mltl·week oervlce, Wefl., 7 p.m.
7;30 p.m. . .
CH
l.ANGIMLLE CBRm'I'Wf CHURCH ,
MlllDLEPORT OOMMI.JNri'Y CHUR ,
Stuoclaylcllotolt:30a.m.: .Jelfllmtlb, oupt.
, "--lit..
paalcr. !lu~
wwtMD 10:• a.m.; 'IWICioy
...... .,a,., un.; ....,.w.,
. . - , aenoloe, 1;30 ,,.,, Watlnaoday
-..oyolldWets 'y, 7:11p.m.

-ut.

f&gt;:!'U. ·

;R!!J

h~J.l,&amp;~D

Sam--

: Mon..,

m.

MT. MORIAH IIAP11ST, Fourth aDd
Mala St., Mlddlop«t . Rov. Gilbert Crala • .
11141
Jr., put..-. Mra. Ervin Bau,..ardHI',
~....t Sullday Sebool !lupt. Sullday School&amp;: :lOa.
m. ; War~ llorv!ee, 10:1S a .m.
•
SUCC
ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
sYRACUSE lriRST CHURCH OF GOD.
- J - b B. Jlollllao, ev..gelltt. Sunday
-Petlte&lt;Dital. Wonhlp oervlee Sunday
Bible Study9a.m.: Worslttp, !Oa.m.; Sun10 a .m .; Sunday Schoolll a.m. ~~
clay evenlnt oervloe 6 p.m.: Wedneoday
-.blp oervlce 7: oo p.m. w •
y
~tna a ervtce, 7 p;m.
.
pnyer meetlq 7:00p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, RaciDo,
Rl. 12i. William Hoback. put..-. Sundoy
SChool 10 a.m.: Suncloy.evenlq oervt~ 7
p.m. Wedn ..cloy eventnc~nY~ce 7 p.ro.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Ch•dlo,
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Locatld In Texaa
Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m. Morntna
Community off Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Raber!
Worship 10: 30 a.m. Prayrr a~rvte., altern·
Sanden, putor. Jeff Honer, lay INcder;
ate Sunda.ys.
.
Ed Rouoh, Sunday School Supt. Swulay
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHR!§:r,
School t: !J a.m.; morning worship and
A:POSTOLIC FAI'11f - New Limo Rd .,
eblldftn's church 10:30 a.m.; evenlnt
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutlalld. RoMrt
prearhtne 16VIce ftrsl threto Sundays ,
Richards, pastor. Services at T p.m. 'Oil
'1.: 30 p.m.; Special service four1h Sunday·

evnlnr. 7:30 p.m.: Wednesday Prayer
NHI!nl, Blblo Study and Youtb Follow·
llllp, 7:30p.m. ·
OIIURCR OF GOD OF PROPHECY .
Located on 0 . J . White Road oft Hl.ahway
11111. Pat HoniUl, pa1tor. SIDtday SchooiiO
a.m. OuJeS for aU IIH. Junior Church 11
a.m.; Morntna worahlp 11 a .m. Adult

Wfldne1411ya and Sundays .

•

HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS ·CHq.
TER of th• Wooleyan Hollaeo1 Cburth.
Rov. Earl Flolda, putor. Honl')l Ebltn ,
Sullday Scllool SUpt.: Sullday Sebool l~a .
m.·; Mon11111 Woi'IIIID 11 a .m.; Ewnl!w

lf'rvt~ 7:30p.m. Wldnesda)l evtnlqtervlc. 7: 3D p.m .

STIYERSY!LU: WORD OF FAI11!,
Gary Holter, pa1tor. 8unt1ay Hrvlces 9:«:1
plo'o, Children's Church and '-dult Bible
a.m . and 7 p.m.: Midweek oervlce, 7:30y .
StudY, Wednesday at 7 : ~ p.m .
m. Thunday.
HOPE BAPI'IST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
CQOLVD.LE UNITED METHODI~T
St., Middleport. Alftllated with Suuthern
PARISH
- Harold E. Alloway-P i
Baptist Convention . David Bryan. Sr., Ml·
pastor. Mlkf' and Janp KJ~ lay aa
ntttl'r. sundty Scho~ 10 a.m.; Mom ina
pastors at Torch Church . COOLVJ
wonhlp n a.m .: Eventna wonhlp 7 p.m.; . CHURCH , Main and Firth Sto. Worth p
'fednesday eovnlng Bible study and
Strvlce , 9 a.m.; Sunday School 10 &amp;.ft\,;
prayer moet!ng7 p.m.
.
Blblp Study Tuesday , 7 p.m.: BETHEL
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.
CHURCH: TOWtlaltlp Road t«; Sullday
Rt. 12hlld Co. RcU. Derek Stump, paotor.
Scbool9 a .m.: Church Service, IOa.m1;
WIUiam Ambera&lt;r. S. S. Supt. : Sullday
Bible Study , 10 o.m. Wldn-y; HOCitSebool9:30 a.m.: Momlnjf Wor1hlp 10: 30
INGPORT CHURCH. Grand I t -: ....
o.m.: Evening warlhlp 7: 3(1 p.m . WednOI·
day Seboo110 o.m ., Cbttr&lt;h Servl.. lla.ra.
cloy worahlp 7; 30 p.m.
; Btllloltudy, Weda-y,l,m.: TORCH
liT. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
CHURCH, Coualy Rood'-l: llullt!ay llcbool
.eor.er Syca~ and Second St1., Po9:30 o.m.: W-p Service, 10: !lo.m.
meroy. The Rev. Laura A. LHcb Shref·
ner, poster. Sullday School .9:45 s .m.
Churcb tM"VIce 11 a.m.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Thlfd
VICTORY BAPTIST. 5215 N. 2nd St .,
Avo. Rev. Clark BaUt', poatar. Carl NotMiddleport. Jame1 E . Keoot'f, pastor.
tl118bam, Suncloy School Supt. luaday
Sunday motnlnJ worlblp 10 a.m.; Even·
Sehool 10 a.m. with clu- tar au . . .. •
Ina .ervtceo T p.m.; Wednsday eo vt~nlna
EV..II18 tterviCHlt 6 p.m. W......clay Ill·
wonhlp 7 p.m. Vlsltotton Thunday 6: 30p.
ble - Y at 7:30p.m. Youth olrvi&lt;M Frt·
m.
Clay at 7; 30 p.m,
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP; 128MUIS(,
Curf11111a, p'u tor. SUnday School, 10 a.m.:
Mlcldloport. Brolber Clluck HcPberoCXI,
wonhlp IWvlc@ 11 a.m.: Sunday nl&amp;hl
putor. Sunday Sc~ool 10 o.m.; SUndl')l ,
wonhtp lft'VIce 7:30 p.m .; Midwe-ek
ovenlaa 1erv!Cft at 7 p.m. and WC!tlnooclay
proyer oervlce Wednroolay 7 p.m.
•ervtcet at,7 p.m.
WESLEY AN . BIBLE
HOLINESS
. ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. KtMelh Smltb,
CHURCH ol Mlclclloport. lnc., 'Ill Pearl Sl.,
putor. Sunday School9;30 a .m. : church
Rev. !von N)IOI'o, poot&lt;.-; Roaor Manley,
oervlee7 :30 p.m.: youth lolloonlllp6:3!1p.
Sr., Stmcloy School Supt. Sunclay School
m.: llbloatutiY. Tburoclor. 7:10p.m.
9: 30 o.m.; Morntna Woraltlp 10: 30 a .m.:
FULL GOSPEL UGHTHOVSE, S301S
Evoal.. WOI'I!llp 7:30 p.m. Wedneoday
Htllad Road, Pou""' TOm Kolly, pu.
........, 111111• otudy, prayer and praloe
tar. lluay Lam!&gt;ort. . S. Supt. Suncloy
aervtco, 7:30p.m.
-~~~'"""Ice ot 10 o.m.: SU.clay evenFAITH GOSPEL CHURCH , Long Dot·
.., aervlco 7: 30 ,.m. TU.-y uti Thurstom, SUDtloy Sebool. &amp;. 30 a .m.; Mom IIIII
day lleryteeo at 7: 311p.m.
•
Woroblp 10:f&amp; a .m .; Sullday evon1n1 7:00
NEW RAVEil CHURCH OF 1111: NA;- .
p.m . loummor 7; 30 p.m. ,; W"""eoday
ZARDIE, Rev. G l - St ....... putor..
ntabt 7:00 p.m. 11ummer 7:30 p.m.\ ,
s.Miyllcboolll::tOo.m.; Worolllparvlet,
10: -.a.m.: YCNth ltrvlce Sunday I; 1! p.
NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH OF
m. SUDclay eveni01Hrvlce7: 00p.m. Wid·
GOD, Cbnter- Gary Hlnel, ·paltcw. Sunnllday Prapr Meeting trtd Bfble Study ~
clay School 9:30 a .m .; worship JHvlct',
!0:30a.m.; evenlnatervlce,6p.m.: Disci · · 7
:
~l .. hlp clou, Wldnelday, 7 p.m.
day
afttraOCXI
JOI'VIcel
at
2:30.
Tbur
..
oy
MT. OUVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
even1D1 Jervtcet •t 7:30.
..
t.awr8l't BUlb, paJtor. Sunday School
FlRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mu"'- W, ·
9: 30 a.m.; Sunday and Wednf!lday even·
Va. Rev. WallaC@ Mtnp, paator. SundaY ~
tna worship aervtce, 7l00 p.m.
School JO a.m.; Sunday ennlaa tervtce, 6 '
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt . 7 on Po·
p.m.; Prayer meotlna oDd Bible otudy
rneroy ll)'·Pus. ~ - Robert E . Smith, Sr.
Wldn-y, 7:311 p.m.
putor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday
R!11'L4ND FREE WILL IIAPTIST, Sa· :
Seltool t:30 LID.; Morn!Jtl Worllhlp 10;311;
1... St. Rev. Paul Tlylor, paotor, SU.day
E..ut(J W-lp 7:00 p.m.; Wedaetdoy
lelloollOo.m. : 1 - y . - . . , T:oop.m .;
PrQor lorvlee, 1:00 p.m .
wa... Mday ••••... , . , . ........ 7:ot
FAITH IAPT1ST CHURCH, Railroad
p.a.
•
St., ..la-y School10 a .m.; Mom·
101.11'11 AI HLL NEW TUI'.UO:N'f
!Jt1 wonblp lla.m .: Ewnlng •orvlee I p.
CHURCH , ll!tlto. DttiM Iyden;
m. Pi-a,..- llltlllftalond Bible Stucly Wed·
1trt&lt;kor, plllcl' •
School t a .m .;
neocloy,7p.m.
·
WorohlpServlce, IDa.m.: Su... yovenlnl
FOREST RUN IIAP11ST. Rev. Nylo
Mrvlee, 7:00p.m. Wedallday flllht Bible
Borden. pastor. Comellus Bunch, supt.
atucly 7:00p.m .
·
SUDclov School 9:30 a.m.; Second ond

Choir practtc:e6 p.m. SUnday. Youna Pe~

' ~~SE'ITU:HENTCHURCH,Suflr

._Y

•«·

···~·· .
t.'''=m~·-:'d.)~ llclloGill:tOa.&amp;l"*-&lt;»

'

REV. TIMILINI
waa•, •CHIGAN .

m•••on; OHIO

.f

EAST LETART- Mol'lllnaWoralllpi:OO
a.m.; Cburdi Scbooi!O: 00 a.m.: UMW fll'lt
Tuooday 7:30p.m. (Graaj .,
RACINE- Oturclt !lellotil, 10 o.m.; Wor•h!P U a.,m.; UMW - b Monday at 7:;tt p.
m .; Men 1 Prayer
w-111. a
a .m. !Grate) .

ASBURY ISyr-) -Wonblp11o.m.
: Clnartb School t:tll LI!L: ~lillie
~~-W""" ~p.ym
, 7:30p.molr.: bbMr"'::
•-Y· ,.., .; Cb
•
w•Oiday
11:30 p.m.
ENTERPRISE
- ('lbotcber)
Wonblp 9 a.m.:
Cllurch SehoollO a.m.: Blb!ellludy, Tueo·
00
UMW f1 1M nc1a 7 30
day. 7: up.m .;
• r1 o
y, :
p.m.: UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. (Riley)
FLATWOODS - Cbur&lt;ll Sehool, 10 a.m.
: Worship. 11 a .m.; Bible Study, Tbursday, 7 p.m.; UMYF , Sunday, 6 p.m . (RI·
ley) .
.
FOREST RUN - Worllhlp 9 o.m.:
Cburtll SCbool 10 A.M.: Cltotr practice,
Tburaclay, 6: 30p.m.: UMW third Mollday.
l'lbotcber\
HEATH (Middleport) - Cburc:~ Sebool,
&amp;:30 a .m.; Montini Wonldp 10: Ill a .m.:
Youtb Group, C p.m.; Weda-y, - ·
otudy 1:011 p.m. Choir rollaroal 7; ()() p.m.
tvenlq.-v~N...t.138P. m .
!Fr"'* Smith) ·
EDEM Ulfrn;D IRI'TIIII'EN IN
MDIERSVILLE - CJ&gt;ur6 8cllool I :IIO
CHRIST, Eld111ll. Bloke, ...... .,_cloy
a.m.; Woroblp oervlee IO:tltla.m .; UMW
HARTI'ORI) CHURCH C1l' CHRIST IN
Seboo110 a .m.: Gary R,citl, Lay loader.
third w-~· 1 p.m. ('lboti!ller)
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va .
~
-hool9 00
Mora.., 11n11011, 11 o.m.: .....Y DISitt
....__ Dlvltl Mclllatdl, put«. Cllurcb
PEARL CH EL- ~nurcb:
lti'VIcol: C-tlln E-vw 1;Ill p.m ..
Sebool &amp;:30 Lm.; Sullday mornlq ..,..
o.m.; Wonblp Service 10; 00 a .m . (Fionmco •-tthl
sona 1orvlte 8 p.m. Pr01cbl• 8:30 p.m.
vice, 'I o .m.; Sllllcloy fYI!IIII18 oervlco,
.,...
oo1 9 1"
Mld-weell proyer mocotlq, Wldnetcloy, 7
7: 30p.m. Wllflnesdayprayer..-1118, 7:30 .
POMEROY- Cbut&lt;h Seh ' : .a."' .
: Wonhip 10: ·30 a.m.; Choir reharnl , P·~HRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CENTER,
W"""oocloy, 7:3f! p.m.: UMW, oecond
E . Mu-.
Salem St., Rutlalld. TU.-y, 7:30p.m.: UMYFSunclay, lp.m.
pastor. SUadoy School 10:00 a.m.; Wor(M-OCKSIP) RINGs · ~ h ~hool ~·•
lblp IIOI'Vtce·, 1: ~ a.m.: hntlay r~t~~~lag
R
- ~nurc • •· ~
.,.rvlce, 7:00p.m.; TlWncloy rvetllq
a .m.: Worship 10 a.m.: Bible Study, Wed·
vice, T:IIO p.m.
Mldoy, 7:30p.m.; UMYF (Seniors). SunNEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH,
day, I p.m. ; (Juolorl) every otJ&gt;.-Sun·
Ch..tor, Gary IIIII•, put«. SU8tlay
day, 8 p.m. (RUeyl .
School at t: 30 a .m.; WMN~p .-vice ot
RUTLAND- Sllllcloy Sehool, 9: :tO a .m.:
10:80 o.m.: SIIJicloy--. Ml'vlco, 1:00
_..,...,. ..., 10:30a.m.; BlbleStiiJI, 7•
p.m .; w • - Y llllelplt Cl-. 7:00 p. ·
....... Thndo~ !Crollli'Oel .
m.
SAI.J:IJI CE I J:R - Cllureb Seboo19: 15
L&amp;; Monllllll Wanltlp !Go 11 a.m.

1

fourth Sundays worship service at 2:!) p.

Mldclttport. Ohla 41710

Mlddlapori .

SYRACUSE FI!tST llNli'ED PRESBY'
TERIAN - Sunday School, 10 a .m.:
Cbun:b oervlee,
a .m.: Youth III'OUP•
first aDd tblrd OllltllaYt, f p.m.
R\J'I'LAND CHURCH OF GOD, Putar,
Jolm F. Corcoran. SUDclay Sebool 10:00 a.
m.; Sullday Monotna Worsltlp 11:00 a.m.
Chlldren'o Church 11 a.m. Sunday.Ewnlng Service 7.: 00 p.m. Wed., 6 p.m . Younc
Ladleo' Auxtllory. Wednetdoy, 7 p.m.
Family WOt'lblp.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Oft
Rt. 124, 3 mu .. !rom Portland-Long Bot·
tom. Edoel Hart, putor. Sunday School,
9: 30 a .m.; SUnday morntnc preachlna
10:~ a .m.; Sullday evenlna Jervlces, 7:30
P·:IDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH. Comer Alh ond Plum. Nofl
HerrDIIIIII, put..-. Sunday.ScboollO:OO a.
m.: Mornll18 Wonblp, 11:110 a.m.; Wed·
neaday and S.tunlay Evenlnl Sei'VI&lt;H at

!Boor.,

93MII81rNt

992-5141 .

MONDAY, APIIL 29-COME HEAl "THE GAI.L QUAnn"
· . PASTOR _KEESEE, INVITES .T HI PVBUC
.ISIIY PIOVIDED
7. . P&amp; -.n.Y
525 lOIII 'SICOID

'

UWUNGS..COATS

-VICTORY -BAPTIST CHURCH
SUNDAY, APRIL 28 thr11 ,WEDNESDAY, MAY .1
•

.

ow. .

REVIVAL
.

.

"ld.iport,

sc:oriD1 o• tlleir lllntOven. Tbat
made llllltlii M' C1 "
lalllillr.,..
I MiJ-Uc beat ~ 'IIICb 99~90. San
~io ODIM !liN 0Jr1'ta Stale
IJO.Ul, die l...ol Aapla Laten
edaecJ HouaiOD 94- 92 and Utah
embarrassed the Sw in Plloenix
I29-90.
76en 99, Buclul90
In Milwaukee, Heney Hawkins
scored 25 pointt and Cbarlea
Barkley added IIlls the 76011 llled
an It-point lhird-quaner run to
win. 1be . . . or tbe

1~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~

••

\.

·

·

wcntDilly ~ duowing die
ball away. We were llteClting and

SonllioaoOI-loiJ)OII'WI ....'f'"o

5

, Haddu•.a.!zo. .

I 1/2
2
21fl
2 Ill
3

(l)oleouo 0- 0),
Plnl -~U)aHowYadt
(V'toll U), 1&gt;40 , ...

' 0.21; .....,., Dot
c
a. 1.23;
IS1; N~j9'lJf.
.• ldilctw,I.C
_._
_
,I'll
0.41: - · L A 0.91: CMdroo, C1o
· 1.16;Yiala,NYI.17; llamio&lt;ll,llou
1.47.
lllrl"-lo
-.,.Loo..,_- C I _ Boo
34;Ry... Ta21:-Cbl.ond
s. :1:1: Pinky, Cal24.

f

I
2
3 1/2
6
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LooAapoloi7,S..Fnncioeol

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,ea-

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N.

.. _... II s .as
...... 10 6 ,QS
.. ........9 7 563
Chioor ........:.. 1 ' .471
~
........5 II .313
Pbllodolpbia ........ 5 II ,31J
WMI
Soallqo
......10 6 .625
Cindanili ........1 7 533
Leo AaFoo .......1 I 500
........7 • .457
Adlllu
...........6 7 .462
San Franaoco .......7 9 .131
ThundaJOoClnclanoli 6, ~ 4
PNlrclolphir !,HowYCIItl
~Y~

14: C.lipUa, BoiiJ; HID. Call2.

, ()awtQt. , Chi, O,kttra, Phi. &amp;ad Samuel,

-

NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L

.
Klli;i Vandewegbe led the
.Kllitb wilb 19 points, while Bulls
celllers BiD·Canwright and Will
· Perdue held New York center
Purick Ewlas to a season-low 6.
Bwins spe~u 11101t or the pme in
l'oullnlublc a 101 bit with a Ulebllical- wllile lfiUinB a cllai'F in the
teeond quanir. He sat out tbe
banh, • did Jordan.
· "Tile thiua was be (Ewing)
wasn't able to aet the bRII arty,"
Paduuaid orEw' . "He was not
lettinl the amou'nt
~ sho1s a'player
or bis lbility sbould be. 1bat was
geuina him frustrated, along with
getting in'foul trouble."
"The:~~ whipped us," said
E"fins. "That's Cllllllmssing. We
let lllem outplay us. We were .playin&amp; lllre we wereiCII'ed. ''
CbiCIJO's JRvious bigac marlin. q( VICtory in a playoff pme
was 27 points, set ia 197~ in a I 04n win over Kansas Ciay.Qmaha.
· "We wanted 10 send a mes·
sap," said Bulls rorward Horace
.Grana.
The Bulls, in beating die Knicks
for lbc eighdl straighuime overall
and lllb in • row at Cbicaso Stadi·
wn, SII'UIIIod at lbe
missing
10 of their rirsc 1.3 rield-goal
attempts. But they ran off lbc last 9
poinls of tbe opening quarter,
taci\ICiiJia a 3-pointa fnlm Jordan
and anc1111er fnlm BJ. Armstrong,
10 !Me CCliiiiiiMII (« I,IIOd.
Cbicaao led by 10 arcer one,
. then blew it
in tbe. second
,... ........~ tbe Kllicb 3617 to take a 29-point halftime
advantaae. Pippen bad I 9 points
and Jordan lfi' in tbe f~r~t hair,
wbile the Bulls sbot a blazing 70
JOUtclllt In the 8eCOIId quaner.
"They really lOll or pve up at
that point." Pippen raid. "They

-a.

Now Y..t&lt;" CJdooao, 1:05 p.m.
ct...laod 11 Tow. 1:35pm.
a........ .,... Oty, 2:1s , ....
California It OU!Md, 4:&lt;JS p.m.

- .au.-.sc....

•

.en

.563 I Ill
.563 I 1/2
.500 2 1/2
.500 ·2112
.500 21/2
.175 4 Ill

Milwaubo(l-loiJ)o&lt;l""- 1·2), 7:35 ,....
.

- · Pbi. BOIIilla; l'll. oad $"'""""'·LA
5· 1lliorlwilb4.
'
T......_
..,....
Amai&lt;:on Loop -411iorhrilh I.

·--

.511
.571
1/2
.500 I 1/2
.467
2
.:115
3
.315
3
.liS
3

Dllroit (OWH*= l..Q) .. Tometo
(Scoalom,..loiJ), 7:35 .....

·- L o o p - D. - M,
Ook ODd Whilo, Tor9; Alomu, Tor, I ;
Caw, Tar, WE;, '±,KC7.
NalioDol Loop - 1- S&lt;L 7; Dyk-

Ammcut(Mp- 0 . 1' ·

GB

........- . . . 4. S..IIJo 3, 1 0 -..

!5; c.-, Tor, Dd y,..n, Mil14; Win·
rw.t,c.t13;-.KC 12.
Notional Loop -, Clad&lt;, SF :10;
D1oio1a, LA 17; Jlildooll, SF 16: Knok,
Pbi 14; Caldonll, ..... S1L,
, Saanloi.V.. ... V•SI,U.I'IIl3.

"t '

N.

T...... 3,Dooa&amp;2

C. ~.

e

-·

Thui'IUJ A_.U.
MilWaukee 9, Teut 1

fiondenM,
..· •' Ook -...Loop-D.
17; FioWol, Dot 16;
Dol

.,

L

,

·a'. ~·

CIUcuo Stadiwn.

AMERICAN LEAGUE'
1111

'

•

Amtoian Leo • - I tied Willi.I.
Noli..W Loo I" - 6liorl ~ I

.333

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•

This Message and CJaurch Directory Spt!rnwred Br The In.te_rested Jjusi.ttesSes Listed On _ThiS Pagt!-·· .
-~ . \ MEIGS nRE
TEAFORD REALTY .
P. J. PAULEY, AGE~T
(row's Family Restaurant
"Fntlll'f ICtilleir Ftlfl CllleA11"
CEN1ER, INC.
mPomeroy
s .• second
Nationwide 1ns. co. ~··
228 w. Main s~ .. PomerDy

0..-.

ful:, O.i

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

..

) fXrERIEN~ 111E JOY .Of RELIGION

Bulls rout Knicks in playoff opener

i

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Pomeroy-411ddleport, Ohio
'

edsed Seaule 4-3.
·
Blue JaYJ 3, Tilers 2
At TorDnio, Jimmy Key scattered fow- hits over seven·mnings
and Joe Caner drove bome two
runs w lead the Blue Jays. Key, 40, sauck out three IIIII -walked two
ia matchins Bos1on's Roser
Clemens and California's Cbuct
Finley as lhe only four-same winners m lhe major leagues. Duane
Ward picked up his third save.
. Detroit's Dan Petry, 0-1, allowed
three runs and 10 hilS over seven
innings.
Twlas 4, Mlrinm 3
(10 ln•lap) ·
At Minneapolis, Mike Jackson's
wild pitcb and droppedlbrow on
lbe same play allowed two runs 10
sca-e in lbe lOth inniigto give the
Twins the victory. Witb tbe bues
loaded, Jackson, 1-2, uncorked
piu:h 10 Brian Harper that bounced
m front of catcber Dave Valle and
roUed 10 !be backstop. Kilby Puckeu scored Slallding up and Newman
dove across tbe plate as Jackson
dropped the tbrow from Valle.
· Steve Bedrosian, 2-0, picked up lbC
win.

••

_.......

Sermonette
GOOD NEIGHBOQS CAN BE COUNTRIES AS

WELL AS PEOPLE
h Ita bemllid lila! wecac'-ourfrillllll.liul our~et.UV. .,., Whod
111. Moftooer, IIIia il tn1e of our ne;pban, wbo wm allo acqubed by
aceldenL but we can and ohould be JOOd neiJhbon. Do 1he people ne~t doot
watch your houie whoa youao away, utd do you offer to fe«&lt;lhcir doa when ::
'dtay like 1 vacllion?
'
·
'
'l'hil11111 of aoocl neJabbor relationlhip can alto be utabliJhetl between :•
adj- ~ Ub Canada tnd dta United Stalea, an4 f~ly, il hu \ ;
luRitBad dta w~. '1'111111 evldontfromaurcxlrlla--wida llftlllll'!lad bt:ouftd. i
. ,... - frlanclly .. mparidoll bt aporll, ll!d other thlnp ' r.ec Ul dunk dta
:
LcftiDrtllls.Mdpnydlt&amp;ourJOOdMiplwnllliotolltiplwiUiutf-.wilh
•
bod! 1M boala lllllldoar and 0. OOUidlfllllll door.

aa

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'

The Daily Sentinel .

By. The Bend
•

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Frtday, April 28, 1811 •
Page • ::

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Calendar

•

Eastern program is planned

~t

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.~

Co••ualt' Cale•dar Items
appear two UJI llelote • evnt
and tbe da' of tbat eYHt. Items
mut lie nalwd weD Ia ed'VIIKe
to alllre pultllcatloala tM eal·
elldlr.

· ·

PRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middle.·
port Commuru~·
Chwth will have
reviVIl dlrou Saturday 11 7:30
p.m. lliJbdy.
will be dift'erent speakers and sinaers ni&amp;htly.
.Public invited.

"Country U.S.A." will be held
ln the Eastern High School Gymnasium on Ml!y 4 with proceeds to
benefit the Eastern Band.
· Special guesis of the evening
will include Bruce Wolfe and the
Midnight Cloggers, Touch .of
Grass, Southern Hill~. Sinaers,

-

.,..
•
...
'"...

Rainbow Cloggers, Altson J(ose
and other JocallalenL
Doors will open at 6 p.m. and
, the show begins at 7 p.m. Til:kell,
$3 for adults and $2 for students,
will be sold at the door. Refreshments will be available.

~

•

Krawsczyn uses and they received answers tn
any questions they bad. Pictured with Dr.
Krawsczyn are first grade students, 1-r, Jeselt:a
Bartlmus, Holly Landes, Evu Needs, Joaatban.
Will'and Midlael Taylor.

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EXPLAINS JOB • Debbie Smith explained
Ill ·
a aune at Wednesday's Career
It
Studenl5 were given
various ite• Wied

by someone In· tile llltdlcal profession. Pictured
are fint grade studeats, l·r, TIFraa, Heuley,
Rya1 Hawtbonte, Btu Holter Md Sanll Dailey.

SATURDAY
COOL VILLE • A spaghetti dinner will be held Satulllay at S p.m.
at the Coolville Masonic Lod&amp;e by
the Coolville United Methodist
Women. Cost is $4 for adults and
$2 for .children. All proceeds go
toward the new church annex.

REEDSVILLE • The Eastern
Local Board of Education will
meet in special sessiOn oit Saturday
at 8 a.m. in the high school cafeteria.

..
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llaowa II oar IS word m•zlmaa cnpaa.
ALL AD8111J8T Bit PAID IN ADVANCE ud
' recel'ftd to be pubUalaed oa or before oar
· April 30, 1991 ecUtiOG,

CHESTER. • There will be a
planning session.for the 101h class
reunion of Eastern HJab School'on
Friday 11 7:30 p.m. 11 lhe home of
Rodney ~ller on Route 248 neu
!=h~~er. All ·1981 graduates ue

TUPPERS PLAINS • There will
be a round and squue· dance on ·
'Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at the
~pen Pllini VFW buildinl fest~Jnng "Country Grass. --Ronnie ·
Wood will be the caller. Public is
invited.
·

A FIRST SUPERIOR RAi'ING • Tbe Eastern Coacert Baad
achieved Its ftrst superior ratlnaln tbe State BIDd Contest held Saturday at Gahanna Lincoln Hl&amp;b SchooL 1be CI)IICert band now joins
tile marcblna band Wblcb ftnt accompliahed IIIII Feat last November.
Botb bands are ·directed by WHUam R. Hal. Stndents In the award
wlnalai conce~t band are left to right, Front, Dawn Foley, Kim

'

'
'
Pleue Dat the colwlm y~ woUld like your

ad to ran under.

NaJDe____~---------------

. ,t

Phone_______ PAID IN
'
ADYANCE
Prtnt one word ln each space below. Each
ONLY
Column

Initial or group of figures counts as a word.

,..

"
u

''

Count name and ad!lress or phone n1.1mber
tfused.

banquet recently at Southern High
School.
.
Brent Rose gave the invocation
and Bobby Ord, Mike ~ubi and
Maxine .rqse received honorable
cha~ fanner degrees.
Receiving groenhand farm~r
degreil$ were Aaron Card, Angte
Teaford, Bill Hively, Clifford
Smith, Corey Hatfield, Corey
Rowe, Danny Terzopplous, Eddie
Willis, Gordon Roach, Jennifer
Rowe, Jerry Hayman, John Amos,
LeAnn Castleman, Mike Edwards,
Rob Hill, Shawn Engle and
Stephanie Sayre.
.
Michelle F.riend received the
Star Greenhand Degree. sponsored
by Farmers Bank.
Receiving chapter farmer
degrees were James Litchfield,
Jason Rowe, Michelle Friend,
Monica Miller. Perry Levacy,
Shannon Pierce and Tom Adkins.
Michelle Brown received the
Star Chapter Flinner Degree sponsored by Racine Home National
Bank.
Stephanie Sayre received the
Bob Lee Citizenship Award sponsored by Bank One, and Michelle
Brown Michelle Friend and
Stephanie s&amp;yro received the ~hoi-

arship award.
For public spealcing, .Michelle
Friend received the prepared award
sponsored ·by Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Ord; and for the creed, Stephanie
Sayre,' by the American· Association of University Women.
James Languoll and Jason Rowe
received ibe lhlit and vegetable
production award by Mr. and Mrs.
John Hill and John Amos and
Corey Rowe received the electricity awuds by Wagner's Hardware.
Jamie Proffitt received the home
improvement award sponsored by
Ferrellg115. Outdoor recreation went
to Chris Wolfe. sponsored \&gt;y
Keefer's Service Center. Wildlife
management went to Brent Rose
sponsored·by DJ's Trading ~st
floriculture went to Michelle
Friend sponsored by Ferrellgas.
Agriculture Science Award w~nt to
S!C!lhanie Sayre sponsored byFairplam Tractor Sales Inc. The farm
management award went to
Michelle Brown and Michelle
Friend sponsored by Dan Smith.
The greenhouse- management
award went to Corey Hatfield ~d
Perry Levacy, sponsored by F811'·
plain Tractor.
' The welding award went to
Shannon Pierce and Clifford Smith

'

"

I.

2.

•

...

,,

•

10.
•'.

MI~I,ael, Lisa Hoffman, ·Nicbola'Pi~kens, Julie Brown, Lorre

Osborne, Carrie Morrissey, and Cbulene Dalle,;.seoond row, Adria
Dempsey, Nl~ole
Frecker, 'JenniFer Mora, Cbrlsdne Studer, Mel
Kanawslsky, Karen Morris, Amy Smltb, Christy Drake, NoeUe Pt~k·
ens, Jeanie Cline, Rebecca Evaas; third row, Leltla Holslnge~,
Heatber Well, James Ewlna, Sherrl Smith, Jonathan Avis, Suste
Kimes, Bobble White, April Smith, Laurea Youna, Eric Hollon,

II.

...

12.

s.

....

7.

15.

.
.

sponsored by Wain Cross and
Sons. The carpentry award was
presented to Aaron Card and Tom
Adkins sponsored by Chuck and
Nira Yost.
Michelle Brown, Brent Rose.
and James Languell received an
award for Urban Soil Judaina.
sponsored by Chester Agri Service.
Stephanie Sayre, John Amos, and
Michelle Friend received an award
for Rural Soil Judging sponSored
by Excelsior Salt Worlcs Inc.
The following received an
award for parliamentary procedure:
Michelle Brown, Michelle Friend,
Monica Miller. Stephanie Sayre,
Aaron Card, Brent Rose, Clifford
Smith, James Lan~ll. John Amos
and Perry Levacy. ·
Perry Levacy was awarded for
treasurer's book; Stephanie Sayre
for secretary's book; and James
Languell for reporter's book.
Bill Leininger, 1989-90 State
FFA Reporter, was the guest·speaker for the banquet
Officers for 1991 inslalled were
. RETURNS HOME- Sgt.
Michelle Brown, president; Rick Baker, son of Rev. and Mrs.
Michelle Friend, vice president; Kenny Baker, Racine, bas
Corey Hatfield, secretary; Perry · retnrned hoD!t lrom Saudi Ara·
Levacy, treasurer; Stephame
bla. Sgt. Baker's twin sons attend
reporter; Shannon
·
Racine Elementary. Sat. Baker
wlre,l'Cincly, visited the cbll·
and
and Clifferd Smi~h.
dren at Radle Elementary and
told about his experiences while
serving wltb Operation Desert
Stqrm.

Olonchis
I
r'f!,nner.:. up

Dance set

.&lt;my Clonch. daughter of Dale
Clollc:h and the late Augustine
~-:reb, Middleport, recently
r ved runner-up honors at the
199. State Finals for America 's
Ccmt Miss Besuty Contest held in

Coldmbus.

'

13.

I

FFA AWARD WINNERS· Stephanie Sayre,
Michelle Brown and Mlcbelle Friend received
scholanbip·awards at the receat Southern FF A
. banquet held at the hlgb sdlool. Sayre received

=

NOW OPEN fOR THE
I·

• runner-up, she will travel
I1a:VJOIII! Beach, Fla. in June to
te . in the 1991 National
Pin a for·tbe Iitle of America's ·

........"' .........

........ 111111 , . . . .

H'udbt.

SVRACUII!, OtUO

AMY CLONCH

112·1771
Open IIIIIJ f·SI S.. 1·5

S199
•CHAISE LOUNGI$14
OR RECLINER ....
~

9
$4.9 9

•SWIVEl ROCKER

;•

-.- $99
'

•5 PIECE SEOIONAL

~

•BUNK BED COMPlETE

:,r:JNG ...............$2 2 9

Roiary Pancake
Breakfast

•

.•

..
.

At The

•
*...•·

\,f, .,

"

:J

CELEBRATION

'..,
•

Saturday, April27,_1991
Serving 8:00 a.m.· ll :00 a.m.

w•

&lt;0

.,•

•"'t:• ·

P.IZES

AJIIR 26

su•AY, APia

SPiaw -

SPICIAU

LentHtfdet 99C ·

·~-- .....~ 994

__:so~

479 JACKSON

GAWPOIIS

.

'•

nvites You To The

tile Bob Lee Cltisensblji Award; Brown received
the Star FFA Degree Award; and Friend
received tile Star Greenhand Award.

AN~IVERSARY

.............
111*•• ....
Hally,,..,
Hullbanl's ~aa_!lhoust

S59

Royal Oak "Spring Roundup''

lla11gl.......... Fruit IIIII
Flowarint r...., Shrulls,

and recently won tbe 1990 'Ohio
S~ Cbamjrionship for Beginner
QucC1n in modeling. She is a member of the Ruffles and Flourishes
BalOn Corjls instructed by April

)

suso• ·.

(ou.lltt U111 al V...t.W.

CovftMiss.
She 1tas modeled for three years

Slle was sponsored by the
~ Lqion Post 128 of Mid·
dleport and lhe Muon VFW.

. , . ,••

llllll •• w,

•OAK GUDER

,...••.

IIGmn THAI WIEIEND TO

Clonch competed in the
10eu age group. The judging
wu
on personality projectio•• facial beauty and overall

Store Hours: Mon.-Sat. 9-6
Sunday 12-S

.,

CLUB

April 26-27-28
Friday-Saturday-Sunday

)

-NEW ARRIVAL$
DAILY

ROTARY

.,"'

,.

The Royal Oak Dance Club will
sponsor a dance on Msy 4 from 811 p.m. with George Hall provid·
irig the music.

•Rent to Own
•Financing
Available
•Low Cash &amp;
Carry Prices!

MIDDLEPORT-POMEROY

McClure's FamilY
Restaurant

.

RENT
TO OWN

I·

..

LOTTRIDGE • Country Music
Night will be held at the Lottridge
Community Center on Saturday
from 6 p.m. 10 midnighL All bands
are welcome and ref!Uhments will
be available. The public is invile!l.

assisted by teacher Amy Alisoa. Oilier careen
represented duriag the day Included medical
laboratory tecbliclan, J nurse, doctor tnek
driver, social worlt:er, llremaD, veterl~ariaa,
telephoae worker, poetal worlt:er, litter CODtrol
worker, coal miner, state bigbway patrolman
and game protedor.
· .

TERMS FOR
EVERY
BUDGET! l

•

.

GARDENING EXPLAINED • Students at
C~ Elemeatary participated in Career Day
oD Wedaesday where they learned tbe job
relpo.,lblllties or many different types or
aree~s. Here, first and third graders at the
11Cf001lellrn about gardening from Ward Dames

.'

•

I

¥

3.

Charles Bryant, Ginger Nutter, Crystal Morris, and Andrew Wolf~ : ·
and Fourth row, Heather Farley, Vl~kl Warner, Brian HoFfman, Krlstl Warner, Joe Karschnlk, Aaron Wilson, and· DIU Baker. Band::
members not pictured .are Sherr! Wolf, Heather Howard and Kyle~ :
Fausnaugh.
t·

Racine FFA banquet held recently The Racine FFA held its annual

· LONG BOTTOM • F•itb
Gospel Church Ia t.ona Bottom
will have a hymn sing on Friday
witb the Dailey FamUy. Rev. Sieve
, Reed invites the public.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Senior Citizens Dance Club will
hold • IOIIIId and square dance on
Friday from 8-11 p.m. wi.th music
by the Happy Hollow Boys of
Athens. Publtc is invited. Those
attendina !Iring snacks fl)r the
snacktsbk.

I

•

BURLINGHAM • The Modem
Woodmen of AnJorica Cam!l7230
is havilla a dinner to honor the service men and women of Desen
Storm on Sllllnlay'at 6:30 p.m. at
the hall in BurlinJI!am. Members
ue to brina a potluck dish with
chicken, bam, mubed potstoes,
noodles, tossed salad an4 drinks
provided by diC eamp.

IDYl-.

'

...

POMBROY - A plannina session for Church Women Unitlld for
the Msy Fellowship meetin1 will
be held Friday at I p.m. at Grace
Episcopal Church in PomeiO):. All
key women (rom Meigs County
churches are invited to auend.
·

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:1,,.

MIDDLEPORT • .Hope Baptist
· Church in Middlepon will 'have
revival throll&amp;h Sunday at 7 p.m.
nightly with lev. J. Eddie Gandy .
ofWesimcnland.Biptist Chmth in
Huntington, W. VL
.

.: VETERINARI~N TALK • Dr. David
Kpwsczyn, D.V.M., Jlllrticipated In C11reer Day
atfbester Elementary on Wednesday afternoon
t0&gt;1nform stl!lienl5 about his job as a veterinaria4'. Tbe studen.ts were shown the tools Dr.

.

•anona Split S1.29

Alfred news
A picture of the Alfred United
Methodist Church is on the front
cover of "Youth Home Activity,"
spring quarter, United Gospel
Press. The picture was submitted
by James S. Brooks.
·
Brenda Weber was Jay speaker
at the church on April 21. She
SPOke on "Love in Action." Pastor
Sharon Hausman was on another
assignmenL
GertrUde Robinson is announcing the marriaae of her Jrand·
dauahter. Diana Cox, to Pvt. Randy
Brannan, at Ft. Leonud Wood,
Mo.
Nellie Parker visited Wilma end
Howard l'llltcr. Other guests were ·
·their dautdoand family, ~pril.
Todd and
Lewis, Peru, Ind•
Kirtley Sponcer, Grove City,
visited Mike Weber and~ family members in Meigs County.
Nina RobinJOII !U:eivod news of
the birth of her areat·anaddauah·
ter, Mindy Michelle Slican. Sherr! ·
end Larry Sbolll a MiJ!dl'l I*· ·
cnts; Norma Jean aad .Gerald ;
$W111Z lte lllllteiDIIII'MJmWIIL l
Those aict ta the cOIDIII~~

include Nlla Rollinlon, Role ..,...
end Bobby Keaton.

,.,

FFA OFFICERS • The 1991 FFA omc~n at Southern Hi&amp;h
School are, l•r, lroat, Michelle Brown, Ml~helle Friend and
Step•anle Sayre. Back, Perry Levacy, Clift'ord Smith, Corey Hat·
field and Sbailnoa Pierce.

•

' l

(AU YOU CAN EAT)

REVIVAL

Royal ·Oak Resort Club, Recreation·Hall ·
33429 Flatwoods ld.-lacine, OH.

Victory Baptist Chufch

Adults, age 13 and up - $3.00
Children, age .6-12 - $2.00.

APIIL 28 THIU MAY 1, 1991
7:00 P.M. NIGHTLY
THE
. .

cotl\

;.&amp;.a.. Gabriel Quartet
MONDAY, APRIL 29

....

Pastor Keesee Invites the Public
•anY PIOYIMD
125 110111 SICO•
U . .OII, OHIO

...........

~

\_

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

~----

\ . ---~

.

''

I •

•l

&lt;

I\'

L(•.'}

..•\
~-)

. ...
)
·'.

"Service Above Self"
t..

.

'

'

· under age 6 ecit free .
*Public Cordially Invited· *
Proceeds Support
County Service Projects

..

~

'"

•

�The

Ohio

Classifie

NOrtCI TO IIDOEIII
leolodpropooolowllbo
roallhlodottlw:
DIVIIION OF
RECLAMATION
DIPAIITMI!NT OF
NATURAL IIEIOUIICII
1111 FOUNTAIN IQUARE
- IECOND FLOOR
COLUMIUI. OHIO 43224
..nH
Tu.-v. MFy 21.
1111 ot 11 :00 o.m. •d
DpiMd thlreeftwi for fu.nlohlng the ........... ....
porformlnt tile ..... of tho

···The Area's Number_1 Marketplace
RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

Warda

Days
1
3

8 'A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

·'

6
10
Monthly

o~o~ttide Mti~ . c;hlllt or MNon counti.i. mutt bt

Hid

"

P.••·

A~• ... • tar'~pn•cuth.t•

fnr

•lite....,• 1.10 dltco~.o~ftt for tdt Plid in tdwtn~•·
.,,.. lids - Gjve.w.y lnd Found tdt und• 1 &amp; word• will bt

In Memorilm

Y•d Sal•

MONDAY I'APER
TUESOAV PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
. THURSDAY PAPEII
FRIDAY PAPER
8UNDAY PAPER

G-loat and Found

- 2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
2 &gt;00 P.M . THURSDAY
2 :00P.M . FRIDAY

23-Prof•ai~n~al

3·1 -

441- Galllpo4il
317- Ch•hfrt

992 - Middi~~Port

675 - Pt . Pl•nant

Pom•ov
111 - Ch••r
143 ...... Ponland
247-Lotort Fallo
1•1-Aec:in•

458-loon

33-F•rma for Slit

71 - Auto1 for S-'•
72-Trucka for Sal•
'J-Vono • 4 I'(D ' t
74- Mororcvc:t•

75-loets • Motor1 for Sale
78- AU1o PMU &amp; Ac:c:•tofi•
77··Auto Aepajr
?8 - Camp lng EQUiS»ment

ttom" tor Sale

32 - Mobile Hom" for Sate

34-Bu~i"n.-tBu~din';s

1578 - Ap.,lt Grove

773-:- Ma•on
882 ~ New Hl'ltn
1915 - Let•rt
93?-B..,fflllo

SEPnC TANK PUMPING

83-Eaclll'attnl

J

_

76

Public Notice

BULLETIN BOARD DEADUNE
4:30 P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBUCATION

'
BASKET WEAVING CLASS MAY 2

"Mike your own Molhe(s Day PIE bas·
kef" at THE BASKET WEAVE
·
36425 Rock Spnnas Rd.
Pomeroy, OH.-992·6855
ol baskols in stock ready for Mother's

Be a guest at your next party.
. Let us cater it for you.
Catering for all occasions.

NOTICE TO IIDD!RI
Tho Vllllgo of Porrioroy
tllolroo to rocolvo o..lod,
blclo for Oooollno product.
- unle- end dlo•l fuel
- tor one year porlodo.
AU oulod bldo ohal lie rt·
celvod In the Clort&lt;'ootflcoot
320 Eoot Mom ltreot. Pomeroy. Ohio on or botoro
12:00 o'clock' noon on May
1, 1811.
The Pomeroy \liege Councllo II - lhe right til occept
or rojoatlrendo
ony-Morrlo,
ol - ·Clerk
Pomeroy VII logo
320 Eoot Moln Street
Pomeroy, Ohio 48788
(4) 1 8. 211, 2tc

WILSON'S CATERING INC.

Buy.

17-Uphola1trv ·

~

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
. CONSTRUCTION

• VUIII
I
• 1t82 ........ 18' Boot
W31731
11111 l!vlnroda M"'or 80

M.P. 1107777

The Fa,.....• Bonk ond

• ....,.. c-peny, Porno·

roy. Ohio. N-e• tho right
to llld et IIIIo Hlo, oncl to
w - r - tho obovo colll·
terll prior til nle. Furthor,
• The FomMn Bank oncl lovlnp Compony _
.. the
right to rojoct ony or ol 111111
.. bmlttad.
Further. thto obovo colllterol be lllld In the condition h lo In with no OX·
piaued or Implied W8ft'an·
tlooglvon.
141 24. 21. 21 3tc .

PubliC Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLEAS COURT,
PIIOIATI DIVIIION
MEIGS COUNTY, •OHIO
IN THI MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
,ACCOUNTS,
• PROlATE COURT,
' ME108 COUNTY, OHIO

n-

• .--untoond vouchoro of
• the followlntl
fkluci .,... -

-

Iliad In tho

• ,.,...e Court, Molgo County, Dlllo. tor epprovol .,,
.Uien11111t:
CAaE NO. 23224- Sixth
Partlll "-unt of J - T.
WOW.. TN- of tile Truot
'Ci•lld "'"'"'._ v of tho
.......... T--of
CrMcl.l...._ D111111d.
C.UI NO. 21311- Flnol
anti Dial....... "-tint "'
Dou..••
Ultlt, l - o r

•c;arJitllt
•Compl.te
lemttWina
Stop &amp; Compare
FrH lltlfllatet

BUCKEYE SUPIIME
AWMINUM
11UCIIED

r-

7 ft.x12 ft. with full

roll-up
door. H11
been used for aboUt
&amp; months only. Like
MW. Fits lite model
1 ton truck.
.

w.

oftlw
· - " ' ....,.. .....
Jr.,
D1nen:1.
CAal!
NO. 21217 l'oultll Annual A-nt of
Maotlyoo Ho.-,, o-c~~an

vomont with -

985-4473
667-6179

concrete

/~
· ...........
I
..
~..
~:..
.. •'"

....

SNOWVILLE -Shows TLC -A 4o acre Iarm that is all rol:
ling cleared pasture land·. Approl. 20 acres fenced. Large
melll barn and an immaculmly clean 3 bedroom newer
home with 'lree cis equ1pp«1 k~chen. and public water.
MUST SEE $55,000
.

right to ,..._ ony or all bllll

. . . . re•rvee the

. .d to ...... any lnfar..... l·
tlooln llldtl....
Frod Hoffman, Moyor
Vllllltle of Mllldlaport
141 28: (II f 21c

SHERYL WALTERS ..................., ... 387·0421
DARLINE STEWART .. ... ................ 192·13&amp;11
BRENDA JEFFERS ...............,. ....... 982-3018
BAI\(DV BU,TCHER ...................... ,. 992-1371

CAal' NO. 11410 - l'tnol

anti Ot.ttllu!MI Account of

,.

I

aJi!l nu PLOOI CAll
•Ao811pnable 111111 ,

·

Foot Dry

.

•
'•

'

J

Aeeourcee

THE

GROOM
.ROOM

· Pomeroy,

9D DAY WAIUIIn

W&amp;SIIEIS-$100 ••
DIYIS-$69 ••

llfllfiUATOIS-$100 up
I&amp;NGIS-Ga-Boc.-$125 up
fiiiZIIS-$ I iS up '

•no OVINS-SJ9 .,.

8

.

Gto11 on

o.-

992-5335

Of

Public Salt

•; Rick.._,_,_=
&amp;Auction

lEN'S APPLIANCE
. SERVICE

lull tllnl • ..,., wr,
..............
1
• Vlrglnll, liM-71M111.
~.

~

915·3561

MDII fr• l'el1 Offkt

: 9 Wanttld to Buy

11m_,.....,..,

- .... to buv ......... - ·

BISSELL
BUILDERS

ol Mllile''"

UPHOLSTERY
213·1o. Seund
....l•port
H1nd Tufting
Custom Dr1po1
S6 Yea,. lxperlenee

614·Hf·U21

We loy Whet Wio Do.
Wo Do What Wo loy.

10-11-1

mo.

Interior • btarler
FMI IStiMAliS
Take the pcin out of

,..:,.

-·...·--7717.
-·GriCIOIM ltvlng. 1 Md 2 beef.

••

"At ltollllllblt Pric•"

~

PH. 949-2101
· or 1... 949·2160
'· , Day Cit' Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

~

•.

"''

'••

......., ...-.. -

a

BUII11811
Opportunity

i;.:;..,,....-;;· - . ; :

,.... Employment SPrv1ces

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GAUGES

fj•.

IPECIAL ......., to you; tilt

Col
EOH.
, , . , _ ..-Jie homo, 1 mill

onodoll, """"" ... , ...........

MIDir liMit, au~aatdng rtv.,
Not
lor Children, P-,
CA. 114 111 Dill.

-or

INQ11CII

OHIO VALLEY PUIUBHING CO.

tllroo........, 14Xl0

paln1i...

- . . - - · tloii

Haw IDalpth. lppllaMioM far

lordoloiiO. _

llleon AplrtJMniL Eq&amp;MII t:loul-

'lng
... -pickup,
·· .- .Opp.,
frw 1rolh
cy
WlrJ' 110
PIV JOU orrn
111111 to
•
•
..
!1104·771141172 lor 111.11110. . . 11121.
Afau.l Crwko. be

•••••»·
mend, lt11tl 1111 . . . 1:00

45

PM.

- L.oalon

33 Fenn1 for Sale

'· ~

):Jk~Lk iL

992-6215
.

IEPAIR ·

949-2168
4-5-11·1

r

SIGNS
I

by tlck HIDI"'ll~,

B~·rby ;
. :
Point Ptnsint · 675-69t' .
.

.

-·- h!r-.-

I Bhlrlor

•. A - I AI -

~~-.

11.000. aoooo ,.,_,.. ~.-.

•Repair Work
•LandiC8ping •G•acllngl

I. L lUSH

CIIPENTIY
992-5526

4-11·11·1JH.

OPEN 7 DAYS

A WEEK

ROOFING

AND EVEIYTHifiG UNDERNEATH

1.0AN1 BY IIAIL
Up 1o N,OOO Felli Sol:lllllllecocllllllol&gt;lln
Goouronl_,, lmrr...:tolo ......,.,
1..eoo.2tl •••• 114.11 fH.

•

" rouon ......._ ••,

yard

lri•.t.• ........

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING

... •

,_ oountr

--•-o.

.

...

CALl fOt PIKES
tHI·ft'2·SI14

Gold with Ivory loco prom d . .. Size 5, worn once. For
more lnformrotlon coN 114-M..
2072.

-----

Hord ftock, .......,

•:· yeif11,
- IIIII*.
h'T.IOO
4110,00
..
OOIIIIIruc:IIDn,
• rolld

rtlbulklng,

--.

•

I

,

....

..

-n

31 ' Hom II for Sail

2 - on Notion -In Rut-

-.-•--·-'
•..........

""'*"' ............_.. •
looC......,._J!I~
rollo,
no 11111 I110.UU, 114-112·11183.

Froet
Proe
Oood Condition,
UOO; ltorm Door..!I,O,LAir CondM-. 18,000 •' .,...oo, 114-

_..

Houeehold
GOOde

:::.-eM

Cllltlt 4411011.
LD1S FOR ULE Ill Orl'p mill

Curtlo ...... ~or.pro ........,
YM llpeolooiCII Or! Ololor ~

2722.

W'• do Ul
tlmet•l

Rcntdh

,....,
I' c .... ....,._..._1

HeiDOinl Upright , _.........4
Shel-, ........ .--:

~~

127 lrd. -

Lltllo

-

clothl~

104-171·

Ill ....... -

· Tho -liar

Drytrl'-.114 •• 2844.

Kenmore ...." duty
dryer, Harvell Gold, ~ _,.
ou, No .lob To . 110.00 t114-1112-1111 after 7:00
l'rM Ei-

I ;';":Or;:;;l"':lilll=114o441=;;:";21;1·;;;:=.,1,;P;·m~·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:~
SNAFU~

by Bruce . .ttle

2lw

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
1-12-10-tfn

I

Sltuetlon

N•wl• ·
,,,1,//

k.&amp;lilll Oa Soffoc4 SdiHI K off lt. 141' ·

In - - 114-

B-o&gt;Kono Ad.

For Sale
or Trade

59

11110 Foltl .., ~I Trade For
Trallor. 114-44M175, 114-,..
1012.

r.~rm
~

Stlflflllrs

LIVColock

61 Fann Equipment
411 - - - Troo1or,

r.;..-r~..=.
T~ ~·.:.:::
Flnloh ltoM&lt; IUM; 100 Ford

__ __
-u...--.--·-'
"
""
lot.··wtth . . _ , b.iiiiii-1100 Oliver

~-· OWner Win rlnonoo. 114-

·
· -ca.

.,.

Hoi For 1111,. Motor

,,_..,. • llllpt•••nta. , lur,
Mil, II1Nie. I:OD4:a •nlnlrr•,

•l':'rre,
iJ ·~:.:::·~~-··
ua
•. IW. ~_,
.,........

......

WaniiCI

J
J

MOilLE NOME FUINAGS - IIAT PUMPS
All
PAllS
.

IENNm'S MOilLE HOME
HUIING &amp; COOLING

-

"'"''•F~:.4:,n·
·W•
'
i

.................. No lind

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TIIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

r:.~

........ 'Clhlo. 114-446-1044.

dflala.tl0,100.11tt•o~.

IICI.

t.::ll

v.

~ ':S,:,.IInl,.;!-or"':...,

....._•n•••t.

FBI ESTIMATES

A - Qraon- opono Mon.
4122.
11 ... LW •
pltntl,
toonglna
~, "'""'
bo111. Clpln
IAII........
.. PII ........,,
1 milo ilortll at llathen on

tt111 T'""" Am, gray, ~~41.000 mlloo, one-· o,_p

For ..., .... Hlg!l ~

--~er­

TROMM

.....

AI aanclllloned W.hllre. Oryera.
Cluoronteod pno~~~JII ...... lor

='
"'=:
.....
""*'•

=-~
a lldlng.

t

..,CIIr.--.
.
.
.
........ , ··-4

Col ofttr 3p.lft. 114-3Po713S.

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

J~llr I')L'Il\ r.:rl1t' 11l:-,

tN4 FlfOblrd, outo, AC. T-T-tlon, M,OOO. 1 - ;

~.

....... -~-..........
"" ...... 111110 ft. -h. . . llill
~ or_.a, 114-JU.

=

iiilo.-

L ..

=: .~ ~li'L~.."fl

__ __
riiDin ...... • • •

II!'""~.

Helpolnt ·

- J o n "'
....,, rtatanlblt ~ .,,u.~_lno. Good
A.-

Lond lor 1111: Good

....

• rapoolr. lncrodlllloi _.........
• .... t-:aoa-.,..1000 rlfi. 111nva.
;. NMd ..,.... one to mow llwn,

5I

lor

-2211 Unccoln Awe,
1'11-41:il.

....... 112 SoUth 3nf
otraot, lllildllpolt Fri. 4/M1
12:00 • 4:00; Sol. 4l2ll9t 10:00 •

~lnturl....
~ ~::~~~~~~=
glolo
,~
... killona. Con pltl&amp;
u.d wEHu JIll T.V. Mta. ~
:1:
trariMIIItlan.
.............. ~.104-4711-·
- ....
J..., D. Gortaoh. no I
te t '""·
.
.

laaolell Off .... .,,... Chi '
lt. 7 I It, 14J
,...,.., Ollie

_ . . . ... -

tl8l Whlo Hondo Civic -

For IIIIo, 01-. 11.1 em. ft.
............ frM•r lop. .....

'111711.
lrlobllo lpooo lor ' Siftlll 1r1ob11o
., Compor. All ,. t . . . . . ..

35 Loti &amp; Acreege

Profllllonal
-Services

ttfllhundorblrd, Whho, t1,450.
114 4410380.

2:00.

1.1eJCilJndiSC

---·--

r·!'!,j.-,.-,.-o.....~,..;:lor~-::::'-:::lor::-::-=-~

iiNalln w-...n 'ln. ....

.........

~ rlld--ND ............
• '""'or~

I' -·

, _ . . -.

. . - · Clll ...,tlolla """"'

14

Buslflll8

........ ,..•.

I - old

"YOU'IItnow i!ltllctll•• clttl't gel . . •aar I I .,

....... ldl1ento

1'8C111110111le. l1lr(l be at.4ng , _ In - · "

,.,

v

'•

tm 2711.11o!tto no- ......_
a..A.·u-oondJ. •

tlon. ~1- mlJoo,. 11,000. 114...... lor4otolle.
1flt . . _ Compor, .... .... _,

-~--». "-"'
of ' - ·
....... -·Coli

- e11ctr1o
lot lorlit""'·
...........
or
,, ....,
»f...77.

9 A."". 'TIL 7 P.M ;
dean .. , _ .

""c.... ..
.....................
,...,.........
.....,,., ..."..

- ·

,

Motor HoiMI · :
-

.... -

..........

Clmpera &amp;

.::l, flolr

4 rp

~lon DOD. iJood
114-11112-7120.

46 Space for Rent

I

Y - IIIIM. I I.-.
1011. Col Toll - . 1M HAS, 1·

IICYCUNG

Poylftg cooll fi&gt;r -

c:-.trr-- . . .

Bull,...
Building I

or 01111 COI•alldallon. Low

TII-COINTY
oGeregoa
•Kitchana • Bathe
•VInyi .Sidlng
•Reetoretlon

34

22 Money to Loan

'.

Clio-,

.,..ftll -=-·

dii--::.J:k •

'•

11110

-lon-·--

eoo-matM.

-... ..CWMtorl end .,, non-

WE, DO

,.

UALJTY

PO.IOI, OliO .

We Need

Howard L Wrltenl

Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

,!

Sic_.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Gutters
Downspout•
Gutter Cleaning

6 •., •ss
NEW GIIPS .•.:............. '4

•Room Addition•

. 205 N.
Slrel1
..auPOIT, OHIO
OffiCI 614·9t2·2116
1111M1 614·tt2·S.92
001111 s.

(FREE EITIMATEI)

flEW~

GOLF LESSONS-'10 oa.

4-23-1 mo. pd.

,_....

ROOFING

·S1le

Fuinllhecl
Roome

l..olp I.Aal -ntl llouto For
Aporl,... .......... lor 2 or 3
Pool • 140, 11•. AePMI 14wlnnr Sec'"
.
.
.
~
AulllfiO""
lOr poeltlon ol lor__ ..._.
Bond ,....,. In conlldonot to: 001111. ,..., 140 • ..,
I' lor lfa!'IP ..,.. Por month.
Prom Qorwn - · buiiMMior .
,. P I - ~!!.. 200 lfaln It, oolo.IM-1112o-.
II
Qo~ll Molal.
Fomr
lor
-'•
Or-.
Dill,
111
U~IIID.
,
,. Point PI-nt, '" 21110.
•'
VE-: .._liMa For loll. Llillll'l ..... For ..... lnfonna..
Sltlplng nMMnl with DOOklng.
Tum
.., Openotlon, Mel Now E- tlonca1130t-.-.
-~·co.•-­
.' -Ina
llpJIIIcre!loM lor roody qul_....
o ..ramood
Allo trill•
- ·p.m,
All hoolo-ulli.
Coli
oRor 2:00
104·7'1311
" m&amp;
DOT Ceo" ......- . 11101111: Coth BuooJ.
llno.doit
• Por Ap~tlc t ,_, 1 100 214-13131
_llll,lfaoonWV.
,, ....... , _ ....14.

CtUltlllt
..

1614) 915·4110 '

""':'Conont• wort!
-Rooflnt ·
- lnteriar. b-iot

11-14·'90 Hn

COUmY CLUI

VIIIIUSOIUILI
IIAVIIIR...OS

-"""·

P-oy, Ohio

THE

1m 0oc1go zoo 4K4
W9&gt;ft. "'"" good, 4 drive
nu. porto loi - · 114-311•

••·t"i

Ht .:::;~C:MR..:

lhll, .JOU
olo .......
wllhpiiiJIII
. k.-,
....
NOT
1o
ooiM1
tllrl!ullh
the
11 Help wantld
moll ..... JOU .............
thlolltrh,.. ·
_ , Pooplo .... yooi. llo ....
Allllur'e Choln L.IM .......
_ ...... Com-.....
......,_
·
1-2111
0242.._1on P-2JIIIA.
.............
Elllmlllll c..
::,:=,=.::;;:;:.;.;~~~ ~llrlllon.
_ , . 114A - • All ..... Col Morllyn

-r

Menor
end
lllvtrolio
Apoort_,.. In ltklclleiiONt " ' -

8oulh Pohll, Ohio. .,..._

lttl.

·~
··,• ·-w
..=-=or~30WIMMB=-==:::·~·.,..-,--:-:::-

4-11-U-Ho

1110.

Let "" lie It for you.

__,. .
-o.--"'
-EI-11 ond Pkr ........

NEAI'RACIIIE ON THE RIVER- An acrewrth 'a24x40 metal
building with a deck and sets of patio doors. huge sl1d1ng me·
tal doors lor easy storage of a camper or boat Has sewage,
water, and electric.
PRICED AT $17,000

• CAll NO. 217M - l'tnol

"' Dnu c.

···••w

42 Mobile Homll
for Rem

·

'\.' Adul c.le to Ohawr, 114-

POMIIOY, OliO
10130/'lt Hn

LINDA'S
PAINTING ·

CARPENTER SERVICE

MIDDLEPORT -Lincoln Stroot- Look at the price on th~
3 to 4 bedroom 2 story home on a nice street. $18,000

GRAIIT STREO - MlddltpOrl- A one story home w~h 5
rooms, 2·3 bedrooms, some new carpeting and some new
plumbing. Immediate possession.
$1,500

-~"-ntlll

4/121 '11/t

YOUNG'·S

RIVER FRONT PROPERTY - Approx. I acre beautiful ~rassy •
lot wrth water tap already installed. Great for campmg or
boating- near Racine.
PRIC~D AT o.NLV $7,000

.r t1w , _ , Md Eotett Ill
.,... •• WinY. ~-- "'
the._ofH•rvJ. Worry,

52100 s. •. 131,
I•IM, OIL

Acro11 p,... Poot OHica
!17 •• s....llt.
POIIIIOI, OliO
3/&amp;110/Hn

TUPPUS PLAINS- Rlas Crntlllnor- Want a beautiful home at a great price'feheck this one out - Aone floor
plan 3 bedroom house. I Y, bath and a family room with afi·
replace, detached' garage, with a barn. and outbuilding. All
on approx. 2V. acres.
$53,000

=.r":O
•oo=:C:o"~
tiMy ..... frMI ....... of
~

to '

USED APPUANCIS

lt. 1, hllnd, OIL

247·4035

992·5335 or
915·3561

MIDDLEPORT - liVE FREE - Live in the big house.and
rent the garage apartment. The big house has huge lrvmg
room lormal dining room w~h wmdow seat four to five bed·
rooms 2 baths and an endoSEIIJront porch. Garage apart·
men! has 3 bedrooms, and equipped hilchen, living room
and two car garage.
All FOR JUST $27,900.

tundod _ . . , tho Ohio
Public Worll1 C:-lrnulon
111d muot comply to 1111 llllont.
.

V.... H~.

pup

614-992-6820

4·1·'90·1 mo.

111111 LIWU.

No;, Open For Sprln11!
•Herb Plento •Perenlalo
•Evarlo,ttlngo
Crtftllt'o, Grow you own
dried motorlolo.
· OPIII Thurs. thru Sat.
10·11; Sun. 12·6

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SEIVICE

lOOK AT ME, LOOK AT ME. I'M SITTIN~ HERE ON RT. 331 have 2 to 3 bedrooms wrth alarge eat·m krtchen. also afor·
mal dining room lo senle your favorite guest. My open stair·
way is an eye calcher .,.. My garage is detached. W1th all
these great features, how can anyone beat'lhat?
I'M JUST $37. ~

notice to pro a11 d,
The poojlct lo portlolly

........

I wll old llaol LU

Ow111r &amp; Operator

Floor Fln.loh

OHIO IIYII •11s
alld EYIILAmNGS

Iring It I• Or We
Pick Up.

. MIDDLEPORT -llltoto mow your IIWII?-:-It wil be unnecessary due to the unique landscaping ol th~ 7 yr. old home
on Mill Street. Has 2 to 3 bedrooms, also has large wrap·a·
round dech wilh beautfful view lor entertaining friends or
maybe you'd like to just koch back and relax.
YOURS FOR $42,900

n. •d

hllr,tM-441-

EMILE£ MEIINAR

CONIII'S

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
w au•s

Cllle&lt;-'tltW .,.. lllltl ...,...

MIDDlEPORT - A 1975 WlndNr mobllo home that is
12d0. Mu 2 bldJOOIIS, hup llvin1 100111, oquippld
kllcllelt. lois ofwlndows, and utllitl" .,.. In beth. VtJY
i*tiJ Ill up on 1 301100 lot.
ONlY $15,000

u' I

.....

--"· wv.-.no-

•.

otonll droln- ..,_.
.
L.wl.ug • u'
lhll incluclo but ... not ........ to
"" toiiDo""" fiMI c~oo~gn,

e

I

FlllJI1CIJI

. MIDDLEPORT; OHIO
DOTTIE.S. TURNER. BROKER

.-vement and
curb. gutttr. tld_. .und 1

L

Complete Grooming
For All lrlllls

·sweeper
Repair ·
698-6591

•High

1139 Bryan Piece
Mlddtoport,

5·31-'90 Hn

205 NORTH SECOND AVE.

oophoh

~

'

Dote: 4/17/11
14) 211. (Ill 3 2tc
·

SPEEDY YA.C
·Quality

Time

.r

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM .SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

~~

PUILIC NOTICE '
Bldo wMI be rooolvod 01 the
Moyo~o ottto.. 237 Ract
St .. MiddlePort. Ohio, ..,,.
3:00 P.M .. May 13. 1111
for engln-lng oorvlcoo tor
tho Purllti'DM R-notrucllon Project.
The project lo l~d on
Poart8t.bot-Laurellt.
.,d aon. Hortlngor Pky. and
oonoloto of roploalnt ··410
foot of~oopheh ooncrete po-

The D l r - of Noturel
, . _ , _ ,_.,,, lhe right
to,..._ ony or 111111111. or to
occ.pt the bid whlall emouall oomblnotlon II·
temtte propooolo 11 moy
promote tile ..... lnttrlll of
tile Illite.
.
Ao piovldod In Soctlon
123.1111 of tho Ohio Rovlilecl Code ond 'Admlnlllro·
tlvo Rulo 1 23:2·111·02 of

~~~=IIION°rv~~~~:

.

·:..t:=· :- - -

purdle... horn ..... lty
buiiFJIIII lltell ..... Mt•
forth In tho ;;ln.tiDno.
. CONTRA
Rl
Ill·
QUIRING AIIIITANCI IN
IECUIUNO 1101 I'IIOM
CERTIFIED
Mil lUI·
CDNTIIACTORI
AND
IUPPLIEI MAY CONTACT .
THE STATE EQUAL IMPLOVMI!NT CODRDIN.I\T011 IV CALLING 1114) 4111310 011 THE MINORITY
UNO (114) 411·1700 OR
TOLL FREE ON 1·(800)
212·10811.
APPROVED FOR PUILI·
CATION IN Tha Dolly l111t~
1111. '-ov. DhiD, onAprl
21oncl Mev 3, 1t81 .
RECOMMINDED:
Glen G. Kizer, Chill
Dlvlalon of A-motion
Dlto: 4/ 17/11
APPROVED:
FRANCES S .
BUCHHOLZER, Dlroctor
Dopertmoni of Noturol ·

.:t...
.'

- · TINitotlholueof ..,,_
_ . . , _ - - to ....
mollllol• Mil
...,....

'

Phone 378-6289

HOME 992-6892

Public Notice

_.._oflhe-""

OOI&amp;CIIwtara "lftd IMterill·
pettlalp118 In 1lla con- .

.
·.-'

81'7&amp;0

OFFICE 992·2886 .

..,,g

-llottyiiOideyt-tlle

•Cerget Mao

JAIIIS HISEl
992-2772
742-2251

3-li·H•

--·

..... .

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

•F,.. Eetlma1ee .

Wlndowo

-I&gt; Roofing
•lnaulatlon

NO SUNDAY CAUS •

'

do • d to: DEPARTMENT
OF NATURAL III!IOUIICII,
DIYli!ON OF RI!CI.AMA·
TION,
1111 I'OUNTAIN·
IQUARE, IUILDING H. IECoND .FLOOR. COWM·
IUS. OHIO 43224. No bJcl.

•Quality Work

•Repl1cement

PH. 949-2101
or 111. 949·2160

UniHI
e•copllont are
flied thoroto, Aid oocounto
will be for hurlng before
Mid Cl&gt;urt on Thurocloy. tile
30tlo cloy of Moy. 1181. at
wlllch 11..,. ..., accountl
wHI be ooneld1rld and continued from doy tD day
flnelly " ' - - ' Ill.
Any poroon
lnt•ootod
rnoy 1111 written ••coptlona
to oold occounto or to mott·
oro portolnlng to tho •ocutlon of the trull. not len
thin flw dlya prior lo thtl
doll Mt for heoriiiJI.
ROIEIIT I. BUCK
JUDGE
Common Plotot Court.
ProbaloDiwlolon
Molgo County, Ohkl
C4121 Ito

aan......._ •

•VInyl Siding

·:Free Eatlmatee"

Frocl W. Crow. Jr.. Exocutoo
of tho Eotato of l.lollo F.
Fultz. Doa•JIId.
CAIE NO. 21411- Par·
tlol Account No.1 of Eull I.
Hen.._, Elocutrlll Ill the Eo·
tate of ot..n ·L. Honllor. Do·

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

PLICAIILE TO THII liD.

CAIPn CiiAIIIS

INSULATION

•••• Homtt

FOR SALE

Price

J&amp;L

••• ._hilt

PubHc Notice

liD. WAOIIIATIIIITA..
UIHI!D IN ACCDIIDANCI
wmt IECflON 1113.11
·AND 1113.37 OP Till 111VIIED CODE MULSDAI'·

~

.

- ~ 4477.

Transportation

AcceiiOI'Iel

MEIGS JR. &amp; SR. HIGH
BAND CONCERT .
SUNDAY, APRIL 28
· 3:00P.M.
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
Following will be a Homemade

'.•
PUaLIC NOTICE
., . NOTICE lo herebY 11von
• 'thll on latunloy, April 27,
1111, et 10:00o.m.. a pubHe .... ... hold at 108
.Union Av-. P-roy,
OIIID. to ..., far ••h thl folkrwlnl oottawal:
• · 1173 lheota Trovol Troll•

992·66•1 or
691·61U
·
ta-,1 -to-tin

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Chocken Noodle Dinner - Slaw,
Roll, Dessert, Drink $3.50.
Sponsored by Band Boosters

OF OHIO, AND AIIINDIO
EXICtlmiE 0110111 14-1.
FIMUAIIV
11ii 11M.
FQIJAL IMPLOYU NT OJL
I'OIITUNITY CONDITIONI
Alii AJIPUCAII.I 10 THII

...

TIIAC'I'OII ihlll ...... "'""
effort "' ...... tlwt .n~
fled mksorty. IMdltlll eub--

Auto Paite &amp;

304-675-4281

PubliC Notice

In The

Classified. I

Real Eetlle General

Pleasant, WV.

CEDAI
COfiSTIUmOfl

Cauh Great

84-EI.ctriell Refrlg.,..lion
1!1-Gtn•at H•..,Dng
11-Mobile Home Rtpair

4t- ForLnu

.

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES

11 - ·Hornelmprovem ..t•
12-Piumblng 6 Ht•ing

46-~urn;.hed Rooma
48-Sjpac:• for llt•nt

.

PORT-A-JOHN RENTAl
742-26818

Se1 v1r:1's

41 -Houtll for Rent
42 - Mobil• Hom" for Rent
43- Farmt ror R•nt
44- Aplrtment for Rent

47-Witlted to Atnt
48-Eauipmlftt ior Aant

•Remodeling 1nd
H~m• Re.,..lra
.• Roofing .
•Siding
'eP1Intlng

TRI·COUNTY
SANIYAnON

79-Camp•s S. Mo1or Homn

35 - Lots &amp; AcreaQt
38- A•II htl1e W•ntad

BULLETIN
-- -- BOARD
. ..

Rt. 62 South, Pt.

·

Trhphol•
814·114-3107. A olio villi

7:1, 1172 IXICU!MI 011DI!II IV 'IHI OOYIIINOII

lobellw ... vim t1w CON·

... .. ,.., .. it' ""' t111114.
• ~ old ,..,,.,. • 114-4441-

~

Business Services

Tr;HJsporlalilln

Rr.a l Eslale

Muon Co .. wv
Aru Code304

..

83- livattQidf ~·
.
-'•- Hay • Gtlin
66-S.ed I Far1ili11r

Slfvlcet

Aroo Cod• 114

..

·

21 - Butin•• Opportunil~

O·et Reealte fatt

' .

... . .

61-Farm EQu.,mern
62- Wanttd to Buy

1 8-Wanted To Do

M•igs Coun1y

7"2- Autlend
187- CoohiKio

Trtde

('; 11 1JI:SIIIC~

14-Butin•• Trtining
·1 6 .....-Sctlooll &amp;. ln1truetion
1e - Radio. TV &amp; ca R1pair
17-MitteUeneou•

0.111• County
"'"" Codo 114

251-Guyon Dilt.

Sel~ Ot

f orm Suppl!f'\

1 3- lnlurence

22-Monl'f to loan

143- A,.bia Di1t.
379- W .. not

59-For

11 - Help Wanted
12-Situation Wan1ed

following telephon'f! exchanges ...

241-Aio Ortnde

11- Fruiu &amp; Yat . .bl•

S!'rv1ces

Classified paf(es .cot·er the

3•1 - VInton

17- Mu~clllnnrumlftll

fIll pi II Vlilt: llf

.... Z :OO P.M . TUESDAY

-

le-Pitta for Sll• •

7-Y•d Stltlptid in advance)
I - Public Sale &amp; Auction
9 - Wanted to Buy

DAY BEFOAE PUBLICATION
, .~ " ' 00 A.M . SATURDAY
. - 2o00 P.M . MONDAY
-

l.t - Mitc:. Mtrchendill
56-Building Suppli•

5 - Happ'f Ad&amp;

Athlna. Ohio.

••h .....

CIOOdo

.t - Giv•eway

cleaaffied adYertiHmtnt piKed in Tha Deily Stntlne' I•• ·
cept - cl•lifitd dilpl..,., luain•• Card and lege! nofictl~
wiH •tao a,p. . in th1 Pt. Pl•••nt flll•&amp;t-tar and tto•a Gam
potts Datty Tribune. teaching over 11.000 hom••·

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3-Annoucam~rtu

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COP'Y OEAPLINE -

.

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hold on T.......,, Mev 14,
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•
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wtll follow tho - ioog.
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fleedoMiftcl
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of:
.........._
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MUD FOIIK
RECLAMATION PROJECT
OMolon of ~~--tlon.
l)opoft- of Netunl ...
MEIOI COUNTY, OHIC)
oou-. upon rwoolp1 of a
RECLAMATION PROJECT
In t1w omoulrl of '
NUMBER MO-Ic-01
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end IPICifkwtloiw .. 5 ed IP( DIPM- of Nltulol llotho DEPMTMENI' OF NA· - . -. 'T.... """ 1110 ...
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POet amount. Pllllo end
DIV.ION OF . RECLAMA·
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TION. COLUMIUS, OHIO.
pr-"f of the' praopeatlvo
1101 WILL IE OPENED IN
bl-• and no ,.,...... will
THE THIRD FlOOR CON· be
modo. Add~l lnfor·
FERENCE ROOM OF 1 811
motion rney bo obtelnod
!IUILDINO HI
OF THE
FOUNTAIN
SQUARE OF- from tho Dlvlolon of ll'oclo·
motion, Dop-nt of NtFICII OF THE ·OHIO DEturol
Raoou..,.o.
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PARTMENT OF NATURAL
Founl8ln lquoN, BulldiiiJI
RESOURCES. lho U.S. Of.
fico of - . . Mining A-. H. 1-nc1 Floor, Columbuo,
Ohio 43224. (Phone: (3141
rNtian •net Eftfo&amp;Oiii.!l ia
21111-1011).
Eooh bid mult bo -omCLASSIFIEDS
porilld by o BID GUA·
RANTV, - l n g tho roqulA
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CON11IACI'OII. Alii AD·
VIII!O lMAT IN ACCOIIDANCE wmt Till I'IIIOVJ.

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

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Holiday 141. Tr- 1NIIor Ex................ 4 TlfH, - . 75

Sc1v 1ces

Home
ImprovementI

\

..

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P!pe 10-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Mkldlej,ort, OhiO

....-------Local
... briefs...- - Continued from PBRe 1

EMS units respond to calls

I

•

s0 Uthern. ••

·

The Meigs County Common Pleas Court has granted a divorce
action 10 Jacqueline M. Nave against Rocky Allen Nave.
.
A dissolu!-ion of marriage has been granted in the matter of
Rhonda J. SrudrJ' and Ralph R. Snider.
All iction for dissolution of marriage has been flied in the court
by James T. Shroc and Mary 0. Shroc, both of Middleport

Marriage licenses granted
Marriage licenses have been granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to William Matson Dunaway, 45, Portland, and Hazel Darle_!IC Shain, 33, also of Pmland; David Eugene Haggy, Jr., 23, and
LISa Alln Manley, bolh of Middleport; Charles A. Weddle, 21, Eortland and 'Kelly C· Holman, 21, Middl~ and Davi&lt;l Bruce Ferrell, Jr., 19, Langsville, and Pamela Marie Searles, 15, Wellston.

.Infectious...

Continued from P¥1

to181 of seven ojlerating infectio~ passed the House, but never got a
wa\te disposal ceruers.
hearing by lhe Senarc.
·
· "I'm very comfortable saying
These bills went before the Sen~
our standards are ·the most compre- are Energy, Natural Resources and
hensive. Ohio is really at the fore- Environment Committee chaired
,frorn of dealing with this prob- by Sen. Gary Suhadolnik, R-Parma
lem," Shocld~ said.
· Heights, last session an&lt;l will likely
She couldn 1 provide an accuate be considered there again this
·
.
estimate of the amount of waste round
burned in the stale. A 1990 report
Gerberry wondered how anyone
· 'submitted by BFI Medical Waste could '&gt;:Ole BRainst this bill. He said
Systems shows they dispose of . he hasn't a problem getting any
over 2 million pounds of waste a other bill heard in commitlee. and
month at their Warren facility said these bills aren'tcontroversial.
alone.
Bec•rse he worlted closely with
Gerberry introduced separate people in both the infectious waste
bills on this issue because he said disposal industry and the Ohio
he was unsure of what he could EPA, Gaber• y said the language in
push through lhe Senate. He .intro- this bill should survive in the Senduced six bills dealing with infec· ate.
tious was~ last session that all

Sohio name being replaced
by BP after 63 years .
PARMA. Ohio (UPI) - Sohio signs, a fjJ[ture at Ohio gasoline
stations since 1928, are coming down across the state. .
BP America Inc. of Cleveland on Wednesday in Parma began the
final phase of its name unification program, which inclulled the
renaming of nearly 8,000 stations aCross the' country under me sin·
gle BP logo.
·
. The 1,000 Sohio stations are the last to be changed, and B-P offi"
cials say they Will all have BP signs within drree weeks.
British Petroleum Ltd. of London purchased ·full control of the
former Standard Oil Company (Ohio) in 1987 but has been careful
in eliminating the.Sohio name. Earlier, BP drQpped the name of
Standanl Oil, a company founded in Cleveland by John D. Rocke·
feller in 1870.
·
''Not wilhout a tinge of sadness, we say Sohio will not be forgot·
ten, " BP Chairman Robert Horton said. "Let's say, 'Well done,
Sohio, an&lt;l your red and white. Hail and farewell."' ·
Along with the. ~e cl_umge came an ear~er change in the color
·scheme from Soh10 s tradibonal red and white to BP's yellow and
green.
·
The name change, announced in January 1989, was designed 10
eliminate confusion that ha4 resulted by Standard Oil and then BP
acquiring stations under various names.
. Be~ore lhe ~fication prognun, BPAmerica operated Mobil seaboos m Washmgton, Oregon and northern California, Gulf stations
in the Southeast, BP stations in the Northeast, ·Sohio stations in
Ohio, and Boron stations in Michigan, western Pennsylvania West
Virginia and Indiana. · · ·
'
Horton said the ·company spent $300 million in the renaming
program, which is finishing one year ahead of schedule.
·:• don't like 10 see the piiiSing of an old brand name, but then
~P 1s -also an.old ~ name," Hmon said. "Our station converSI.ons are not J~l s1gns and colors, but a new symbol of quality service at our retail outleu.' •
BP bought interest in Standard Oil in 1970, giving Standard
Oil massive oil reserves in Alaska.
. In 1981, BP paid ~8.3 billi?D for the 4S percent of Standard Oil it
did ~01 already own '!' th~ third largest merger in U.S. history an&lt;l
making BP the world s third-largest oil company behind the Exxon
Corp. and the Royal Dutch-Shelf Group.

an

----Area deaths-Elizabeth Frame

Dfy, mild weekend Predicted for Ohio
By UDiled Preu Inte11111tioul
dry, but there will be at least a
A dry and mild weekend is in slight chance of showers or lhun·
derstonns, except in the lakeshore
·the forecast for Ohio.
Scattered showers moved over counties'.
·
Ohio Thursday_night Where rain · Early Friday morning temperaoccurred, amount&lt;; were less than lures in the Buckeye State ·were
0.1 inch.
roughly 10 degrees above normal
Friday is expected 10 be panly as they w.ere mainly in the 50s.
cloudy and dry. Saturday should
For the next few days southerly
also be partly clou&lt;lr and mostly , winds should help matnbun a mild

Five calls for assistance were. answered 'oo Thursday and early
Friday by unit&lt;; of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
At 1:35 p.m. on Thursday, Pomeroy squad went to Union
Aven·ue for Gladys Parfitt, who was taken 10 Veterans Memorial
Hospi181. At 8:30 p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 the Pomeroy fJrC
statillil for Mark Proffitt, who was l8lcen to Pleasant Valley Hospi181. At 9:03 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Village Green Apanments
for Betty Templeton. She was ttansported 10 Veterans. ·
On Friday morning at 11:10 p.m., Middleport squad went·ro
North Second for Judy Tyree and UndaFrwnan. The were taken 10
Veterans.
At 5!18 a.m., Racine squad went to Racine for Sarah Congo. Congo
-was l8lcen 10 Hplzer .Medical Cenler.
.

Dissolutions, divorces processed

Given contracts for the 1991·92
year were David Gaul, head foetball c.oach; Suzanne Wolfe, head
volleyball coach; Howard Cald·well, head boys basketball coach; '
David Gaul, head girls basketball
coach; Howard Caldwell, athletic
director; Michael Winebrenner,
head baseball coach; Kimberly
Phillips, head softbaiJ coach; James
Lawrence, junior high boys basket·
ball coach; and Michael Wincllrenner as junior high boys basketball
coach. Sandra Baer was also
awarded a supple111en181 contract
for coach of the varsity cheerleaders, and Joan Hudak, a supplemen- .
tal conttact for yearbook. .·

One pers'On has winning.·
Super Lotto 'ticket ·

began in

1973

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Pomeroy water treat~ent plant built in
·1898; Name contest winners • Crow·A2

PageBl

·.

..•••

•·••

WEATHER MAP- Tile West Coast wUIIJe partly sunny and;"
fair, wblle scattered showers will dam pea tbe Northwest. Tbe .
Southwest will be mostly sunny ali.d comfortable. A upper-leveiZ
storm will brill&amp;. scattered mow sbowers to the northern Rockies,~
rain to the nortben Plains and scattered thunderstorms to tbe ~
Great Lakes aDd the southern Mllslaslppi Valley. Tile Southeast~
and middle Atlantic states wUI be mos_tlr doudy, while New Eng·
IBDd will be mild with ample sunshine. (UPI)

n.

Hospital news

Home .

MIZWAY .
TAVERN·
MAY 8

a

I"TERNAnONAL .
CALANDER .N •·
MALE REVUE ,:
. SHOW

;·

LADIES ONLY! ,

I

ston versus Lori E. Huddleston;
and Kelly Lorraine Tobio versus
Thomas Ray Tobin.

Rl'. 33

NEXTTCJ FAST 4 U AND MASON MOTEL
Make Piau To Have Sunday Dlimer With U•
Feal:urlng

FRIED CHICKEN
DINNER
. .
Mtthe4 Potatoes
With Gravy. .
GreeaBeau
Soap aad Salad Bar
Or TrJI One Qf Our Other Greclt Menu ltnasl
OPEN SUNDAY, 8 AM TO 9 PM
jl CaUJ Out Orden AaiJable (304) 7'13-1321 lj
VISA • MAS1ERCARD • AMERICAN EXPRES8 ACCII:PIED

I

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-~

-...."..,..,·-·
•

Eclitoral. ........- .......- ....... .Al

Farm.................~-············01·8

Sports..... _ ....................Cl-8
We~Jher. -··-...................A· 7

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
TiJ!Ies-Sentlnel StaiT

BRIIDCIE CLOSED; · State
338 near Apple
bas been
cloied since April 18, ancl altenate routes are
·. causlag problems for both local olf'1cials aad res·
ldeats. Townsblp trustees, tbe County Engineer
•. and tbe County Commissioners are all con-

· cerned about wear and tear on
roads being
used by tramc as a detour, ·and local residents
are requesting tbllt a tempor..-y bridge or other
bypus be constructed at the bridge site. (Times·
Sentinel Photo by Brian J, Reed)
,

:·Road d~mage . resulting from
'·brldge closi~;~g. ~ill _ be evaJuate,d
By B~N J, REED
Tlmes-8entlnel StaiT
,;i

,)

1

' . APPLE .GROVE - All engineer

for the· Ohio Department of Trans·
portation will meet with local offi·
cials early next week to assess
dam&amp;ge 10 loc;aUy maintained roads
caused by increased traffic, stem·ming from the closing of a bridge
on State Route 338 for replacement
-.
Don Johnson, an engineer with

OOOT, based in Marietta, will
meet.with Letan and Sutton Town·
ship Trustees and Meigs County
Engineer Philip Roberts on Monday.
Several of the trustees and a
group of residents from the area
appeale&lt;l to the Meigs County
Commissioners on Wednesday
afternoon for intervention in what
they allese 10 be serious damage to
tqwnship roads, namely Manuel ·
Road and Blind Hollow Road in

Letart Township and Mile Hill
Road in Sutton Township. That
damage, they say, is caused by
increased ttaffic due to the closing
of the bridge at Yellowbush near.
Apple Grove.
ODOT's official detour takes
travelers across State Route 124,
but few local resident&lt;; are taking
the official detour, opting instead 10
take the many township roads in
the area, which reduces travel time
(See ROAD, page A8)

POMEROY -When residents
attend the first anniversary party
for Opliops for Elders to be staged
Thursday at the Senior Citizens
Center, they are requested 10 malce
their gift a "letter of support"
directed 10 a member of the Senate
Finance Commitree.
The anniversary celebration will
serve as a lcick-oiT for a campaign
.to convince Gov. George
Voinovich and state legislators that
the Options program is working
and needs to be continued.
E.mphasis of the program is 10
keep the frail elderly in their own
homes by providing needed services such as home delivere&lt;l
meals, chore service, personal and
healtli care services, and respite
care.
By delivering appropriate assis·
tance in the home, It allows many
older residents to remain there
rather than go 10 a more expensive
and perhaps less comfortable nurs·
ing home.
' Tile average state cost of
Options services is $3SO a month,
while the average state cost of
nursing hdme care is ~905. It has

Vlll'lable cloudiness. High near
80. Chance of rain 50 percenL

14 Soctiono, 102 Pagu
A

Multimodlo Inc. N-opapor

POMEROY . More than $3 000
The io181 cost of the van is over
· is still needed for the local shar'e of $20,000, with all but $4,500 being
the cost of a new van for the Meigs Jlrovided thro~h Ohio ~nt
County Council on Agin~ to be 1 of Transportabon federal moores.
used to transport elderly restdents.
The: local. share includes the cost of
·The new van which wUI have a radio eqwpment
wheelchair lift is Cltpected to be
. To date $1,451 has been condelivered in early July. It will ' tnbutedrothevanfund.
replace the 198~ vehicle which has
Churches donating have been
been taken over more than a the Pomeroy Church of Christ, the
100,000 miles of bumpy country Rock Springs United Methodist
road in the past eight years and is Women, the Eagles Sunday School
now in need of extensive repairs Class of the Syracuse Asbury Unit·
and bo(ly work.
ed Methodist Church, the Joppa

also been determined that half of adopted, then the Options program
all Options clients are now at a will continue serving those already
nursing home level of care a,nd enrolled, but will discontinu e
would spe";d down to Y'h~re th~y accepting new clients on July 1.
would qlJl!lify for Medicrud assis· ,
The program will then begin a
tance V.:'thm two months. .
natural phasing out process , as
Th1s 111ake the Qpuons for clients' conditions deteriorate and
Elders program both cost. effecbve require the constant care provided
for the ~te and compassiOnate for · in a nursing home, or they die.
older residents.
.
As a part of Thursday's cele. ApproXImately ~0. Me_1gs ~oun- bration to be held from 12:30 to 1
uans are now paru~lpabng rn the p.m. a traditional birthday cake will
program. Over the mne county area be served.
of th~ pilot project, there is an
The program will include a
o~gomg ca~ load of 700 che!lts video presentation, as well as
Wlth.approxlmately 1,150 havmg recognition of local agencies and
rece1ved serv1ces over the pa.st organizations who hav e been
year.
.
.
instrumental in implementing the
. The program IS des1gned to pro- rural home care demonsll'ation proVIde elders and thelf family mem- ject in the nine Southeastern Ohio
bers with one call access to infor· Counties.
matiqn on home care services
As for the cards and letiers of
available. People with immediate support, Eleanor Thomas, e~ecu ­
p~obt.ems .are screene~ and those live director of the Meigs County
w1th lfDpaiCIIIC:Ots and ~es that Council on Aging, asks that they be
put, them at ns~ of nurs.mg home addressed to Gov. Voinovich, Rep.
placement .rece1ve. s~rv1ces from Tom Johnson, Rep. Jack Cera, Sen.
localagenc1es.. A slidin~ fee sched· Jan Michael Long, and Sen. Robert
ulc, based. on mcome •. IS then used Ney, members of the Finance Com·10 determm!l what chents pay for mittee. Sen. Long who represents
needed SCfVICCS.
this district' stron_Biy supports conThe governor has proposed that tinuation of the Options for Elders
the program be phased out over tl)e program .
next iwo years. If that proP9sal is

Entertaining·times expected at fair

By LEE ANN THOMPSON
Tlmes-Sendael Stair
GALLIPOLIS- Entertainment
at the Gallia County Junior Fair
will be boasting few changes and
some SUIJlrises, according to program chairwoman Danella Greene.
Grandstand shows will be by
Lori Morgan. the McKameys,
·Holly Dunn, Pam Tillis and Full
House, Greene said.
But there will be special enter..
tainersawaY. from the stage, roo.
·
Robinson's Racing Pigs will rurr
Sunday School Class, and the four times tlaily, she said, and audi·
Enterprise United Methodist ences will squeal with delight
watching these little hoofed ere&amp;·
Church Willing Workers Class.
Org8flizations making contribu- tures race like the (down)wind.
tions to date have been Chapter 53.
Disabled American Veterans and
.the Fraternal Order of the Eagles,
Auxiliary, Aerie2171.
Contributions should be sent 10
the Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, with checks
to be made out 10 the Meigs Coun·
ty Council on Aging and designed
for the van fun.

funds still11;eeded fo.r seniQrs' van

.·The pigs have been seen recent·
ly on The Tonight Show with John·
ny Carson, and frequent fairs
nationwide, she said.
Greene said sponsors are being
sought for the racing pigs, U~d the
backers may even g1ve the pigs
naines of their favor politicians ,
employees or in-laws, all in fun, of
course.
Also away from the main stage
will be 3· a11d 4-wheeler demonstrations by the Knob ·Squad, a
demolition derby, the ever-popular
truck anCi tractor puUs and a mini·
derby or a demolition derby with 4cylinder cars lilce Cheveues.
Admission to the fair will

remain $5 daily ; which includes
grandstand entertainment but not
amusement rides, Greene said.
The only disappointment in the
shows this year, Greene said, was
the preliminary scheduling of Rest·
less Heart, a popular country
group. The band received another
offer for the same night which
boasts a higher fee, and the conttact allowed them 10 take it
Restless Heart offered to come
another night durin!! the fair, but
the only night available at the time
was Wednesday, and Greene did
not feel they should he booked on
what is traditionally church night in
the county.

FAA awards grant to local Airport
. GALLIPOLIS • The Gallia·
, Meigs Regional Airport has been
awarded a $5,000 grant from The
Eederal Aviation Administration,
according to Howard Linder, preSi·
dent of the seven member authori·
ty.
The grant seeks to study possi·
ble replacement of the two year old
Gallia-Meigs ·Regional Airport.
The existing facility does not ·conConn to present FAA site placement

By LEE ANN THOMPSON
Tnbune News StaiT

MASON, WV

Dtaths. .............................. .A3

Options for elders anniversary·
to serve as campaign kick-off

standards. Mol-cover, the airport,
like many others across the country , is experiencing · urban
encroachment.
The one year study will be fund·
ed by the FAA, administered by the
Ohio Department of Transpo)'ta·
tion, Division of Aviation, and will
cover the two'county area. .
FAA funds are derived princi·
pally'from user fees and nationwide
aviation fuel taXes.

In the replacement study, prime
consideration will be given to
future needs of the community and
10 aviation safety.
,
The existing all weather airport
was constructed in 1969, and has
served business and commercial
aviation needs in lhe two county
area. Increasingly demanding air
space and airport standards have
necessitated this FAA study to
serve future projected community
needs. •

Director named for Gallia EMS

\ $3. 00
$3 .00
IIMGoiiN IIIITIIIEES S.I~Y I SIIIDAY
IIARGAIN NIBHT TUt:SDAY

rs.

Along the river """""""'B1-8
BusiDess.- ........... - .............Dl
Comics. -·~ ...................Insert

Middleport-Pomeroy-Galllpon._point Pleaunt, April ~a. 1991

'

Group sees good in
Davis-Besse, Perry

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Twenty-two ~ases processed
in Meigs Co~nty Court

-.IS

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Inside

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Ohio River travel on packet boats
popular in 1920s • James Sands • B2

-----Weather ____....__..·

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Saturday's MaJor League ·results

'

Clauilled•• _ .................D2·7

. CLEV~L~~ (UPI) - One · numbers, good for payoffs of $80
jackpot-wmnmg ticket worth $12 apiece.
million was sold for Ohio's Super
Ticket sales totaled $4 399 016
South Central Ohio
Extenclecfforecast
'
Lotto drawing Wednesday night ·
and the total prize payout ~as S12
Partly cloudy Friday night, with
Sunday through Tuesday •
·The name of'the winner will be 500,2S2. SatQrdly'sjackpot will~ a low between 55 and 60. Chance
A chance of showers and !hun.;
announced after the ticket is worth $4 million.
of rain is 20 percent. Panly cloudy dersror:ms each day. Highs will' be"
redeemed, a~ spokeSman said
In tbe accompanying Kicker Saturday, with a chance of showers in the 70s each day, with overnight·
Thursday. H the bCketholder chose game, three tickets listed the win- and thunderstorms, and highs near · lows ranging from the mid SOs to'
!O take the winnings in 26 annual riing combination - 933042 - 80. Chance of rain is 40 percent
themid~.
.
.
•
ms181lments, he or she will receive making them worth $100,000 each. ·
$461,539, before taxes, each year. ·
In addition 10 the grand-prize
If. th~ player decided 10 take the winning Kicker tickets, two had the •
wmn~gs m one slwnp sum, he or first five numbers, which pays
she will receiVe $4,995,036, before $S,OOO; S6 had the first four numtaxes.
. .
.
bers, which pays $1,000; 586 ha4
The wmnrng numbers were 8, the fust three, whjch pays $100;
Meigs County ~ourt Judge . only; Jerry Scarberry, Jackson,
12, 28, 32,44 and 46.
and 5,749 ha4 the first two which
Patrick
H. O'Brien· processed 22 soeed. $18 and costs; Michael A.
In addition 10 the top-prize win- pays $1().
'
Cleland, Middleport, seat belt vioncr, 102 players picked five of the
Kicker ticket sales totaled cases on Wednesd8y. ·
Fined were: Ralph W. Fowler II, lation, costs only; l\'illiam .W. Har·
abmbers 10 win $1,186 each, and $634,534 and the prize payout total
Middleport, seat belt, $15 and ris, Pomeroy, disorderly conduct,
4,741 players chose four of the was$482,090.
costs; Stanley E. Ankrom, Little $50 and costs. one year probation,
Hocking, no medicl!) certificate, 10 days in jail, suspended; Terry
$SO an&lt;l costs; Ang'ie L. Hill, Barber, Reedsville, no fishing
Racine, spe,ed, $22 ·and costs; license, $25 and costs:· Ronald E.
James T. Stewart, Gallipolis, speed, Dillon, Tuppers Plains, mishan·
$28 and costs; Michael H. McRee, dling of fiJ'CIII1Rs in motor vehicle,
Parkersburg, W.Va., speed, $24 $25 and costs, weapon returned 10
and costs; Larry Wilbur, Wellston, defendant; Susie N. Abbott, Shade,
DWI, Shade, $300 and cosu, three
By JIM SIELICKI
'coal, which has been singled out as insecure load, $15 and costs; Mark days
in jail, license suspended for
,E.
Roan,
Columbus,
speed,
$23
and
a major source qf air pollution.
United Presslntei"illltlu.al
90
days,
upon enrollment and comcosts;
Charles
R.
Francis,
Long
.
One of Ohio's two nuclear
"The ~ news is that, for this
pl~tion of RTP school, $150 of fmc
·
Bottom,
speed,
$21
and
costs;
power plants once scorned for ito; year lU least, Davis-Besse is not
and jail suspended; , Joh'n L.
poor DCrfonnance and safety record among the country's poorest-per· Nicholas S. Johnson Gallipolis, RicJtards, Reedsville, cposuming
speed,
$22
and
costs;
Martin
W.
has drawn faint praise from an forming nuclear plants, nor has
under age, $50 and cosu,
activist group that has criticized its Davis- Besse's safety record been Davis, Middleport, seat .belt viola- . alcohol
30
days
in jail suspended, probaoperation.
below average," Ross said in a tion, costs only; Dorothy A. Lance, tion of one year, alcohol counseling
The Davis-Besse nuclear plant statement. "The bad news is the Reedsville, seat belt violation, costs ordered.
near Oat Harbor, long on Public cost of this achievement." ·
Bonds were posted by': Frank-·
Citizen's list of Nuclear Lemons,
The rewrt is based on perforCaselle, Proctorville, speed, $60;
was ra~ by the public interest martces in 1988 and. 1989, the latest
Thad Napper, Marion, stop sign,
group as sixth best in the country year for which data was available.
$40; Stepheq Rich, Moundsville,
Veteraas Memorial Hospital
among Ill nuclear reactors.
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS - W.Va.,speed,$60.
The Perry nuclear plant near
Keith Musser, Middleport; Grace
Cleveland was ranked seventh in
•••
mainleoaix:e and operating costs on
Continued from pqe 1
Call, Pomeroy ; Gladys Parfitt, ~------------~ .
came on the heels of a massive 9 Pomeroy; and BettY.1 Templeton,
a list issued by Public CitiZen.
Pomeroy.
Davis-Besse is operated by the
·
Toledo E&lt;lison Co. and Perry is percent jump in sales last month, a
THURSDAY DlStHARGJlS opera1e11 by the Cleveland Elec1ric leap most analysts said was due 10 None.
11Jumilllling Co. Both utilities own buofed optimism ~ the Persiaq
·
shares qf the two nuclear power Gul war drew 10 a close.
Holzer·Medlcai Center
plants and )IJ'Ovide electricity to · But the Marcb figure brought
Discharges Aprjl 25: Ronald
WED~,
northern Oh1o.
existing sin81e-family home sales llogatitus, Anita Canter, Dottle
"I wish Public Citizen were
to a seasonally adjusted annual rate Deacon, John Hoops. Cheryl John·
niore credible source," said Toledo of 3. 18 million units and was son·, Jimmy Jones, Ellis King,
Edison spokesman Rick Kelly, cheering riews 10 realtors who had Jospeb Knapp, Rhea l:..antz, TereSI
addinl! that the utility "appreciated plunged into gloom when the Jan- McClaskey, Homer Pellegrinon,
positive comments" about the uary ra1e fell to a near-record lo"
Mrs. Brian Smith and daug~ter,
plant's performance DQRCtheless.
of 2!90 million.
Wan&lt;Ja Stewart, Carl Trapp,
' ~ I have to also consider the
In the Midwest, the rate of exist: William TraP.r· Donald Wedge,
&gt;
source ... when it comes to nuclear ing-home sales rcise 10.2 percent, Mrs. Brian Wll and daughter.
Births April 25: Mr. and Mrs.
power," Kelly said.
from an annualized pace of
$7.00 PEt TICIET . '
Ohio Citizen Action has been 880,000 uniis in February to Conra4 Bowen, son, Oak Hill; Mr.
DOOI OPENS 7100 P.M.
traditionally critical of nuclear 970,000 units iri March. The medi· . and Mrs. Stanton Burdelle, daugh.
ter,
Point
Pleasant;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
power.
an price there was $76,200, up 3.7
D.J. 7:30·11:30 P.M.
·The plant, which began general· percent from one year earlier,- but Tod4 Quillen, daughter, Pomeroy;
I
and Mr. and Mrs. Michael Spears,
ing electricity in 1977, became the down 0.3 percent from Febnwy.
MUST BE 21
focus of Public Citizen and other
'daughter, Jackson.
anti-nuclear groups because. of a
The Midwest's ainple supply of
June 6, 1985, series of failures thai moderately priced homes and its
Europe's longest bridge at 19.882
COIIIIIT. 7/143
..
led 10 an 18-month outage.
healthy economy will keep the feet long is the Oland l~land Bridlle in
1PO. .OJ, OliO
,
Toledo Edison and CEI officials housin industry there suon , said Sweden, which was ..completed in
have said Davis-Besse and Perry NAR ~hief Economis,t Jotn A. 1972.
~------------~ ~-help reduce their dependence on Tuccillo.

Stocks

(

Yesteryear
concept

'
pressure over the. Plains and :a
region of high pressure over th.e
East Coast. Neither of these fea·
lures is expected 10 change much
'through tomorrow. By !ale Satur·
day a warm front will be approaching Ohio.from the southwest
.:

•

It was also voted by the board to
charge studenu an athletic particip~tio~t fee' of $25 for each swrt,
wrth the charge .not 10 exceed $50
per student
·
In Other action, the board ·
renewed lhe teaching contracts of
Dav_id Gaul and Joan Hudak.
Appf()ved as calamity days were
Jan. 2 and 7, Feb. 15, March 4, for
the district, and Dec. 4 for Letart .
and Portland only.
Attending were Supt. Bobby
Ord, Treasurer Hill, and Susie
Grueser, Gary D. Evans, Gary
Willfor4, Scott Wolfe, and Charles
Norris, board members. ·

Court cases dismissed

/'

pattern. Highs Saturday will be
mosdy in the 70s, but the extreme
south may see the mercury reach
80. Friday night readings should
return to the 50s.
.
The Friday morning weather
chart showed a Jarse system of low

-

7~ ft.'llh

'-,rlrHLI\.

.

Continued from PBRe I

ents, Harold and Rhea Wiilis
Elizabeth Nell Frame, 68, of Pomeroy; several nieces and
Racine, formerly of Spencer, w. nephews and several aunts and
Va., &lt;lied Wednesday, April 24, uncles.
1991, at Vetaans Memorial HospiHer family was affiliated with
tal follo~ef illness.
the Full Gospel .Lisht House
Born in
tsville, w. va.. she Ch~!~st'deomse~e~ce·swill be beld
was the daughler of the late Frant
• ••
and Myrtle Durst Kelley, she was a at I p.m. on Sunday at Riggs
The Meigs County Comnion
honiemaker and a former employee Cemetery in Page ville with
Pleaa
Court has dismisaed the cases
of Gor&lt;lon's Hospital in Spencer, Thomas Kelly, Sr. offiCiating.
·
of
CarmaD
MarshaU versus Roy
W. Va.
.
. b ArcanE.gemeFIIIS are being hand!CII
Allen
Manhall;
David E. Huddle·
· She is survived by one brother,
Y wtng uneral Home in
•
Jack Kelley of New Cumberland, Poli'•m•ero-y.~~-"'!!"........._
W. Va. She resided with her niece,
Patsy Prater, and her husband
.
WRIN!i V~ll EY W!EMA
Richard at Racine. Several other
\16 4'J/4
nieceallld ReJ!hew survive.
Am Ele Power .... ;.............29 1/4
She was preec;:oo in death by
Ashland Oil ......................33 314
her husband, C1i Ord Frame, two
AT&amp;T ...............................37 718
siJten and one brother.
Bob Evans ........................ 18
· A paveaide lerVith·ce Bwas held at
ChanniJia Shop................. I? 114
1 p.m. Friday at e ethlehem
9tyHoliling ..................... 14
~=~:. =~~";;~j: FecleiW
~ .............. ,... IS SIB
~T'&amp;:R .................21
atint
were handled
Key Centurioo .................. 12 314
by andale uneral. Home in
Lands' End ......................:22
Spaacer, W.Va.
Limited Inc. ~ .....................28 1/8
·Meean Wlllls
Multimedia Inc. .:..............ss 314
Mepn Rae Willis, infant
Rax Restaurant .................l l/1 6
dau&amp;blet oflioy A. and Kathy J.
~yers ...............l651B
Gilibl) ~
died n.la April
Shoney's1nc..................... l7 1/2
~
Willll.
y, Ffoa.
Star Bank ..........................22 1/4
3, 1 I at
~
Wend:t lnt'L ...... ~.............. 10 3/4
~in Hill~ .Va.
WIS
Worthingtoa Ind. ..............26 1/8
an April
1991:
·Brr'del II« J*l!llll. a il sur- St«k ff/1011111ff liN 10:30 ._._
vivOd by ber matuilal pai!dpar·
II"'*' prvrldltl 111 Bllllfl, Bllil
ents, Lloyd P. ..d Lillian Gibbs,
41111 Lt»1111 11/Gofllpo/ll.
Mason. W.Va.; paa:mal Jllllldper·

. w can

. Friday, :\pr1126, 19111

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia
County Commission named Roben
):!ailey to the directorship of the
emergency medical services late
last week.
'
. A native of Meigs County, he
had been acting director for several
·months.
· . Bailey, an 18-year EMS veteran,
is not only an administrator, but is
certified to instruct Emergency ·
Medical ' Technicians and
Pannedics, and is a member of the
faculty of Hoelting Technical College.
· In addition, Bailey chairs the
911 Development Committee in
Gallia County, and said Saturday,
ihe system is on it's way 10 implemenlltion in the near future.
• He has been a guest lecturer at
'

.•IIJ\I

lhe J]niversity of Texas at Austin
for the National Institute for Staff
and Organizational Development,
and has a master teacher award
from that institution.
Certified 10 lCiGh in a number of
areas of emergency work, Bailey is
also an instructor for lhe American
Red Cross and The American Heart

Association.

.

Bailey may teach rescue,
repelling, emergency vehicle oper·
ations, Nation Safety Council
Defensive Driving, Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS), Pediatric Advanced Ufe Support, Basic
Trauma Life Suppon (B''n.S), and
has completed study in radiological
monitoring and hazarrl9us materials
incidenU.
Hoelting Technical College rec·
ognized him in 1990 with the
Scholar Award for professional
teaching. ·
·

'

ROBERT BAILEY
New EMS Director

••' ...
~

! .. ,-

.-..

· .r~

t

tr• '•
•

-

EDUCATION FIRST· Cbuck Gibbons (left)
and Wayne Bensoa (rilbt), both or HU!s Depart·
m~nt Store, GaUipolls, are pictured in front of the
store's display of Outstand~ll Citizens. Ali .a part

t1,

-

•

or Hills' 'Education First' program, e111:b star represents a sebools' selection _or an outsandlng stu·
dent ror his or her efforts In and out or the clBS!I·
room. (Times-Sentinel photo by Krls Cochran)
•

Hills sponsored programs places
education first for area students
GALLIPOLIS · "Education
First. " That 's the title -of Hills
Department Stores' sponsored educational programs offered to
schools throughout Gallia County.
Designed with the input and
appro vat of several teachers and
·administrators, "Education First"
individual programs reward stu·
dents for such things as recycling,
achievement, attendance and avoid·
ing drugs.
Hills of Gallipolis currently has
the Outstanding Citizen Program, .
accor&lt;llng 10 Chuck Gibbons and
Wayne Benson of Hills, giving
teachers a root for recognizing stu·
. dents' achievements and accom·

l

plishments which, in tum , will help
build confidence and self-esteem
on the' P.Brl of the students.
·
While the criteria for awarding
110 Ouutanding Citizen Certificate
, will be at the discretion of the
teacher, some of the things that are
considered are: Perfect attendance
for a specified period of time;
straisht A's for exemplary stu·
dents; marked ICholastic improve;
ment for average or below average
pupils; showing support of classmates; and a concened effort 10
modify 1 bellavior problem.
"Each student who is selected as
an 'Oulltanding Qtlzen,' will have
his or her 'star' huns· up in the

school and also in the store," said
Gibbons, Hills loss prevention
"A~o~g ~ith .this selection ; each·.
rec1p1ent IS g1ven a coupon for a
free bag of popcorn and soft drink
at ijills."
The redeemed coupon, stated
Gibbons, will automatically be
entered into a monthly drawing at '
the stole with the winner receivina
a SS Hills gift certificate and his or
her teacher will receive 1 520 gil\
certificate for the purchase of cluaroom supplies. "The prosram ii
ongoing and any lchool may panic.
I'pate"
•

(See toLLS, paae AS)
~-

\~

'

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