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..

Wider use of epilepsy
surgery recommended

Maalt 22, 1180

Stroke risk reduced by aspirin:· researchers.

But It cautioned that only about
BE111ESDA, Md. (UP!) Brain surgery could benefit 10 50 percent of pa!tents report
times as many eplleptlcs asnow "marked" reduction In seizures
undergo such operations, a panel and the death and disability rate
runs as high as 20 percent.
· · of medical experts concluded.
"The procedure Is moJt fre·
, A committee convened by the
Nailonallnstltutes of Health said quenlly recommended In pa-.
ednesday that as many as 5,000 · tlents who are prone to violent
erlcans with epilepsy mlghl" fails that often result In head
. helped by surgery each year. Injury," the panel said. The
Only about 500 such operations operation used In such cases
are now performed annually at Involves cu ttlng the corpus calla·
about 40 U.S. hospitals. The sum. a thick bundle of nerve
operations cost $4Q,OOO or more.
fibers connecting the two· halves
·
.. The committee emphasized of the brain.
Surgery as a laSt·dlich treat .surgical 1reatment, which In·
· valves cutting out abnormal ment for epilepsy has been used
brain !Issue thought to cause I he since the 1940s. But Rowland, a
,epUpetic seizures, should be neurologist at New York's Co·
·considered only for those pa· lumbla Presbyterian Medical
:uents who are not helped by drug Center, sajd new electronic lm·
Jherapy,
'
I
.
.
aging. techniques .that give sur·
- CutUng out brain tissue poten· geons a better view of the brain
Ually can damage a person's have made such operations
"much safer."
ability to speak, see, think and
The average age of a patient
:move. BOt Dr. Edward Laws,
;chairman of the neurosurgery undergoing surgery is now 27,
·department at George Washing- and he or she has· usually
ton University Medical Center, suffeted from epilepsy from 10 to
said the side effects frorn epl· 20 years.
In Its 24-page report, the
lepsy surgery are now "very
advisory
panel recommended
minimal" and it has "a reasona·
ble record of safely."
studies be conducted to find out If
EpUepsy - a seizure disorder it might be better to resort to
characterized by recurrent , un- surgery earlier, and- if surgery
controlled electrical discharges might be preferable to the side
·or brain cells - affects at least 2 · effects caused by long-term use
of high doses of anti-convulsant
million Americans;
In most cases, the disorder can drugs.
"It's possible that If we oper·
be · controlled with drugs, and
epUeptlcs can live near-normal a ted earlier, (pat.lents)· might do
lives. But about 10 percent to 20 better in the long-run ," said Dr.
percent of epileptics have recur· Louis Caplan, head of the neural· :
.renl seizures that are poorly . ogy department at Tufts Unlver·
controlled with an li -seizure 1 sity School of Medicine in Boston.
drugs .
Dr. Lewis Roland, chairman of
the 13-member panel, said
surgery appears to be most
successful In treating patients
troubled by complex partial
seizures. Such seizures are
mar.ked by purposeless activity,
such as staring, fidgeting or
Two students from the Meigs
mak-Ing chewing motions . Usu·
County
area were amon~r 40
ally there is no memory of the
recently
Inducted _into Alpha Mia
!!,(&gt;izure afterwards.
Delta.
Hocking
Technical ColAbout 55 percent to 70 percent
lege's
chapter
of Phi Theta
·Of patients with complex partial
.Kappa
.
honor
soci~ty
durln'g a
'Seizures, which usuallY.orlginate
ceremony
at
the
Quality
Inn
In a brain region called the
Hocking
Valley.
temporal lobe, are completely
Tapped for the honor . were
free of seizures after surgery,
Allen
King, Racine, a recreation
although one-third musl still take
-.medication, the committee said. and wildlife student; and Shirley
,The combined rate of death and Lyons, Tuppers Plains, a ·pracll·
'disability from the operation Is Cal nun;lng student.
In addltlon.to academic excel·
less than 5 percent, the panel
·tence,
students must also exhibit
said. ··
.
qualities
of leadership an·d ser·
. Surgery also ll}ay help som~
vice.
Former
~elgs County rest·
patients with generalized sefz.
dent,
Charlotte
!:.amber!, Is one,
ures, which Involve the loss of
of
the
chapter's
advisors.
consciousness, the panel said.

HTC list includes
local students

COIOJI!m'able II'OIIP that received '
Bet- JuDe 1987 and NoLeounl and collea,ue. at the
nc"nedtcatloll. ·
wmber . 1989, 517 people with Texas fiiCWty c:ooniiMted the
The ujllrta. therapy wu. 10 lrre,ular heartbeata were given study _.., lalonnatldn on pa· ·
•ucceaatul, a
laid, that 18 one asplrla tablet dally while 5211 tleall trealld· at 16 medical
montha Into !be 1t11c1;y a ~tor- received a ueleu aut.lhUie. ceatenaJ'OIIIIltbeUaltedStalel.
lag II'OUP told ~ to Nl~ people Ia the ~
Ill people 'fl1tb atrial tlbrlll• :
•tart giving the "011 ul*la II'OilP suffered strokel ,a~~ 18 lion, lhe rllk of strolle II
group either uplrln or 11111111- peoplebadatrokellntbecompar· lncreued tllle-fold becau• tbe&lt;
coaaulalltlmowD uwartarle.
· ~aoa,roup. ·
·
heartteadlto"qulverllkeaboWI ,
The renmcb "fou8d, 11nexT!lere '1"U ..10 a reduction In · ot Jelly," forc!AtJ bloocltopoolln
pectedly, tlii.t you've 101 to give the atrolre rate amoq199 peOple the top two ehimbers, Leonard
these people somethlai," said whO ~lved warfarin but 1Je. said.
:
McBride, a blostatlstlelan at the cau• the n!learcb wu Inter·
AI the blood pools, clots te~ to •
Statistics and EpldemioloiY Re- ruptec1 by the monitoring coni· · form tbat can· cause strokes· Jf,
·search Center In Seattle. The mHtee. "we really don't have a they reach the brain. Aspirin and
study results were published ·good Idea of warfarin's effective· warfarin, as anti-coagulants.'
Wednesday in The ...ew England ~ nell yet," McBride said.
prevent the formation of tlier
J()urnal of Medicine.
·
McBride said that because cloll.
1
. \
most or the study subjects were
Altogether, l.,244 people wltb,
under 75, the researchers could the ·condition took part In the,
not come to any conchlllona study. When researchers com-.
about the effect of aspirin or .pared those taking either aspirin.,
NEW YORK (UP I)- Monkeys de~ ·the nneasure because of
warfarin in people older than or warfarin with those receiving .
arriving at John F. ~enJiedy l'eCel)t Casel in the PhWpplneli · that.
.
the phony substitute, they found:
International Airport from over· and the United ·states In -which
Atrial fibrillation affects about a five-told ln~ase 4n strokes+
seas will need to have papers persons handling moilkeys In· · 1 million Americana, niost ot · · amoq the placebo grc)llp.
• ·
showing they're free of 'the tected with flloYirus came down
them over fill. or these people,
However, since the warfarli(
deadly Ebola Virus, state health wltb the dllease.
"about 75_,000 , will suffer · group was smali and the re·:
officials said.
stroke~," .said Anne Leonard, a
search was Interrupted. McBride.
'ThiS p,oles a r~k to animal
ObserYI!rs likened the action to handlers anCI researchers and
senior research nurse at the ' said, the study could not 'judge;
a de facto ban on the Importation could uttilnately ~ a risk to ' University · of Texas Heaith
the effects .of warfarin vs.;
of monkeys for biomedical re· . others,'! Frances Tarelton, spoScience Center ln. San Antonio.
aspirin. .
,•
search. A,bout 20,0IJO- monkeys kesman for the state·Departrnent
are imported annually Into the of Health told the Washington .
United States, 80 percent of them f'ost.
.
through New York City.
But observers said -the action
Effective Friday, persons amounts to ll ban on monkey
bringing monkeys of the C)'noImportation. because exporting
molgus, African green, ·and rhecountries do not have the faclll· '
sus species from overseas must lies to quarantine or test the
show proof .the anlmal1! were monkeys. Cynomolgus monkeys
quarantined for 60 days before come mainly from the Philip'
. '
shipment and tested negative for
pines and Indonesia and· Rhesus
antibodies to·fllovlrus, the sl;lte
trom China.
·
Health Department said
Fllovlrus Is an Illness capable
Wednesday. . .
of Inducing fatal . fevers In
Once Inside · the state, the !Jumans . .
· monkeys will .!lave be quaranTraces of fllovlrlls recently ·
.
'
tined again for a second twohave been detected In 10 percent
month period and be tested again ' of monkeys of various species
for the virus, which Is deadly to from other ·countries tested by
.
humans, tbe department &amp;ald.
the U.S. Center,s for -Disease
Health officials said they· o:· Control. ·
.BOSTON (\Jfll-A dallydQie
or -aspirin cu cu lin bait tile rllk
of 1tralu!l Ia people wbo 1uffl!r
from a l~Qrt condiUon that
affects 1 mDIIon Americans,
researcher• reported.
A study of' older people who
suffer from alltrreplar heart·
beat that maksotbem prone to
strokes . found ene tablet_ of
aspirin a day was an effective
preventive meuut.. said Ruth
McBride, who helped compile.the
results.
.
McBride' said people with a
condition knOWIIasatrialflbrllla·
lion wbo took the aspirin had 50
percent fewe' · 'strokes · than a

O'Verse:as monkeys need papers

•'

WE'RE NPT GIVING '·ogUflE Oil.
. EVEN .TRIPLE COP.~ONS... ., . '
'

Maw Sp.rlng _Marehln~lsa
· Arriving Dally · ·
,.

'

'

'

' .

'

.

WE RENT TUIEDO.S
'

'

... FOI lOTH MEl &amp; 'BOYS

•

WE'RE GIVING 1
. 0 TIMES THE.
VALUE OF ANY MANUFAOURER'S
COUPON UP TO 50'. .

-

TEN TIMES THE VAlUE
ba111ple:

50~ ~ Coupon

-

tll,·5100 MON.-SAT.

is worth SS.OO

THIS. WEEKEND ONLY ··~·
'NOW .OPEN TIL 6 .
' t

BAHR·
ClOTHIERS
.
•IILIPOII
.

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• '

•

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Corne~ · Collections
.
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ON , .

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~'T" ~

MIDDLEPOIT

'

Ohio Lottery

. NCAA

Daily Number
758'

·resUlts

Piek-4

I.

Page4
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'·

9571
Wealher

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,;

Vo1.40, No.222 .
Copyrighted 11110

·"" Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Friday, March

23.

2 s.ctlono. 14 Pog• 25 C...tl
A Multi&lt;Mdielnc. NOWIPII*'

1990

House votes .to regulate preserve · hunting
COLUMBUS, Olllo (UPI) -The Ohio House of
Representatives voted Thursday to regulate
hunting on game preserves for wild animals and .
·
birds that are not native to Olilo.
. , Before )otnhig ihe senate In weekend ~djourn­
ment, theHo1,1se also adopted, 86-5; a longstanding
bill protecting sehol&gt;l districts when tax abate·
ment Is offered as an Inducement to Industry to
locate or expand In an area.
The hunting Iilli passed orl an 85-5 vote and was
forwarded to the Senate after R~p . Ross Boggs ·
Jr., D·Andover. said It was requested by the Ohio
Department of Natural l_tesources and does not
allow endangered species of birds or animals to be
hunted.
Existing law regulates only the hunting of birds
and animals native to Ohio. Thomas Addis of the
Legislative Wildlife Fund sal_d Boggs's bill would

apply to preserves that offer slka deer, b)gllorn
sheep, mouritaln goats, wild boar, elk, rlngneck
· pheasants, chukk!lr partridge and quail to
·
sportsmen.
One of the opponents, Rep. JQAnn Davidson,
R·Reynoldsburg, sa,ld she was concerned about a
provision In t)le bill that expands the number of
available game preserves.
Davidson also objected to allowing Sunday.and
year-rounq hunting on the preserves.
.
The tax abatement b,lll, Introduced In January
1989, also was sent to the Senate. It requires local
school districts to be notified within 24 hours after
an Industry applies with a local government for
tax abatement.
Sponsored by Rep. John Bara, D·Eiyrla, the bill
also requires that. no action be taken on such an
application until at least48 hours after the schOol

district Is notified.
Bara said the school board would not have veto
power over any tax abaternent.
Before passing the bill, the House ·adopted an
amendment by Rep. Michael Fox, R·Hamllton,
limiting lawsuits by school districts against
companies which receive tax abatement but fall
to lll(e up to Its terms.
Rep. Robert Netzley, R·Laura, an opponent,
said any thr.e at of a lawsuit by a school district
''could kill industry'' In an area because company
.officials would be wary of moving ln.
. Earlier, a Columbus attorney told a special
Senate task force on campaign financing that the
way to eliminate excessive amounts of money
spent on campaigns is to require that incumbent
officeholders debate thei.r challengers, and
require that the news. rnedia cover the debates.

"If these. ethical principles were adopted the
followed, ordinary ciUzens would .be able to run
for office withOut the necessity of raising or
spending large amounts of money," said Clifford
Arnebeck.
.
.
"Voters would lie able to make Intelligent
choices among candidates . There would not be a
valid purpose for expensive advertising to
achieve name recognition or to manipulate public
opinion."
Arnebeck Is challenging veteran Rep. Chat·
meres Wylie, R·Ohio, in the Republican primary
this year.
Sen. Robert Cupp, R- Lima, said senators will
begin to amend the House-passed ca1J1palgn
finance reform bill next week, bu 1 be did not
i.ndlcate any action will be taken soon.

Child ·dies
in accidental
shooting

Stranded
. snowmobilers
r;each,highway safely
.

' CODY, Wyo. : (UPI) - Res·
Hodge said they left Cooke
Twelve-year-old Jeremy Ray
cuers on snowmobiles successCity, Mont., on rented snowmoGuinther,
son of Kenneth and
fully led six stranded snowmobll·
biles Tuesday for a day long
Carol Guinther, died about 5:30
ers, five of them from Jackson outing and were reported miss·
p.m . Thursday of an accidentally
County, Ohio, safely out of
lng when they did not return as
self-Inflicted rifle shot wound,
· Wyoming's rugged Beartooth expected. ·
·
according to information fi'om
Mountains e'ast of Yellowstone
A search was launched. and a
the Meigs County Sheriff's De·
Civil Air Patrol plane spotted the
National Park Thursday.
partment. The bullet entered the
Park County ·Sheriff Dan stranded· snowobllers late Wed·
boy's body In the area of the
Hodge said the party reached
nesday . However, poor'vlslblllty
larnyx, according to a deputy.
U.S. Highway 212 safely and
made it impossible · to fly a
A news release from Sherifi
would be able to snowmobile on
helicopter into the area to rescue
James
M. Soulsby stated that the
them .
the snowpacked highway to its
sheriff's
department and Racine
junction with Wyoming Highway
Hodge said his department
EMS
were
called to the Guinther
·296, where they will l;le picked up. ·took over the rescue effort when
residence on Bashan Road near
The snowmobilers could face
It was discovered the snowmobll·
Racine at about 5:30p.m., after
·penalties of up .to six months In ers had traveled a few mUes into
the youngster's body was found
Wyoming and a plane dropped
jail and $5,000 fines for llle~ally
outside by a member of. the
snowmobiling .ln . a wilderness - supplies, Including gasoline, to
family,
.
...
..
.area.
·
,
. lhelii. ellr.~. Thl'_r:sday.
,
Dr
.
.
Douglas
Hunter,'
Meigs
'Tbey·~e ,o it(" Hodge sat!!:
Rescuers u~lng ·skls and snow·
County Coroner, was on the scene
"There was · some ques lion shoes also reached lhl!rn before .
along with Sheriff Soulsby and
whether they get ~el them all out
the snowmobiles arrived later In
Deputies
Robert Beegle, Harry
and the snowmobiles too, but the day.
Lyons
and
Ralph Trussell. Dr.
they got everything."
•'They had about ·o ne gallon of
Hunter
ruled
the gun shot as
He said It was still unce~tain gasoline left in each of their
accidental.
how the snowmobilers became machines," Hodge said. "We
The body was removed to
stranded near Granite Lake In don'l ·know why they were in the
Ewing Funeral Home.
the mountains near the Montana
predicament they ,were. ·In,
·E xact circumstances sur·
_border, buttherescuersrepor~d . whether they were stuck · or
rounding the accident will proba~
(he .terrain was so rugged they
what."
brush fire "jumped" from one area to another
bly never be known, authorities
BRUSH FIRE SEASON :.._ Equipment from
could leave the area the same
Gallatin National Forest Dis·
around
the
said.
rklge.bonlerlng
the
property,
said
one
Rutland,
Pomeroy
ud
1\llddleport
Fire
Departway they entered it.
trlct Ranger John Logan said the
fireman.
Firemen
brought
the
fire
under
control,
The boy was a seventh grader
mentA
were
used
Thursday
to
fl1ht
a
brush
fire
Th~ sheriff said the six people area where the snowmobilers
only
to
be
called
back
when
the
fire
rekindled
at
Southern Junior High at
which
started
sometime,
around
noon
on
the
8111
appeared to be In good condition
were fo11nci· was deep inside. the
about
6:40
p.m.
No
injuries
were
reported.
Racine.
Willford property on Route 124 near Rutland. The
after spending two nights In the forest's Absorka-Beartooth Wll·
mountains. 'He · said weather · derness, where federa)law pro·
conditions had been .favorable
hlblts using snowmobiles.
·Logan said issuance of ciiTuesday and Wednesday but by
!J'hursday snow was falling inter- allons will depend on a determl·
mlttentl)( and blizzard conditions nation of whether.tjle snowmobil·
A grant of $35,467. has been · fective treatment. programs and
Ohio is only one of thee states In
were approaching the area from ers entered the wilderness area
made to the Alcohol. Drug and supporting local efforts for ad· 2,000 people on waiting lists at 66
the
nation to have a cabinet -level
the north:
deliberately or were lost.
Mental Healih Board serving .dieted Ohioans . I'm extremely drug and. alcohol treatment cen·
dealing with the
deparJ,nlent
GaiUa, Jackson and Meigs Coun- . proud that less than six months ters funded by ODADAS In Ohio.
problehi
of
drug
and alcohol
The mQney Is targeted to help
ties for treatment programs :by ' after this department was
addiction. Celeste called for the
the Ohio Department of Alcohol created , we are seeing real reduce treatmenl center waiting
creation
of the department in his
lists
and
improve
the
quality
and
and Drug Addiction Services.
dollars distributed to local facili· access! bilily of alcohol and drug . 1989 State or the State address
The local area gran I was one of ~~~~ around th~ state."
and in October, 1989, signed H. B.
treatment programs In Ohio. It
53 made across Ohio totaling $5.3
317
to establish ODADAS. The
will
provide
beds
and
cribs
for
stay open ori Saturdays and
million, according to an an·
According to Lucellle Fleming,
Voter registration for the updepartment
coordinates alcohol
lhe
centers
and
vans
for
trans·
nouncement made today by Gov. director of ODADAS, there are
coming primary election closes . evenings prior to the registration
'
and
drug
treat,nent
efforts by
portation
in
rural
and
other
deadline.
· ....
Richard F. Celeste.
now approximately .2.400 treat·
on Monday, April 9, aceordlng to
other
agencies
and
provides
In addition to deciding many
In making the announcement, ment beds for people suffering inaccessible areas. In addition,
Ohio Secretary of State Sherrod
training,
consultation
and
evaprevention and Intervention se·
local issues, voters will be
Celeste said; "An Important part from alcohol and other drug
Brown. .
luation
for
statewide
treatment
minars will. be funded for rami·
nominating party candidates for
of my work as governor has addictions. AI the same time,
"If you've ·changed your name
programs. ·
lies , teachers and clergy.
both state and local offices for the
center-ed around developing ef. said Fleming. there are nearly
or if you've JIIOVed since the last
November general election.
election, you have to update your
Brown said voters can contact
registration," Brown said.
their
local election boards for
Co11nty boards of elect·lon will
more
Information about voter
be operi' until 9 p·.m. on April 9.
I
and the upcoming
registration
A'NN.tPOLIS, Md. ~UPI) Various-election board offices or
stage for the issue to be deterout of this body on Its own,"
ended when abortion opponents ·
elections.
Offering. Maryland voters two mined by Maryland voters in
branch registration offices will
agreed to halt the debate at 12:40
Boozer said .
. distinctly different proposals 'for November.
.
a.m. EST Friday after a day of
Abortion opponents, however,
an abordon law was the only way
Both bills are likely to be
negotiations over the
argued that the same could be
to resolve an elght·day filibuster petitioned by O\ltside groups to
compromise.
said of the abortion rights leglsla·
that paralyzed the state Senate, public referendum. If neither bill
lion and that the filibuster could
"Nobody that's seen the hell
legislators said.
.
is called to a public vote, the
have continued until the blll was · that we've gone through in the
Senators ended the stalemate largely unrestricted legislation
lastelghtdayscanconslder this a
killed.
early Friday by agreeing to pass would be effective.
The filibuster, which began . cop-out," said Senate President
legislation that would sharply
Thomas V. "Mike" Miller.
March 15 and recessed nightly.
'WASHINGTON ~UP!)- Gov.
In a referendum, the bill
guaranteed 85 cents · for every
restrict abortions In the state and
Richard C~leste appeared before dollar in federal gas taxes they
favored by the voters would
a companion measure that would
a House subcommittee T·hurs·
collect.
allow abortions under most become state law, enforceable if
day, calling for a change in the · , Celeste said. Ohio actually bas ·circumstances. '·
the Supreme Court disturbs Its
..
formula the federal government
1973
Roe vs. Wade decision
received only about SO percdnt of
Abortion rights supporters had
uses in ~lstrlbuting money tor
asserting
a woman's constltu·
the money It contributed since
been stymied In attempts to raise
)IJabw.ay proje~;ts.
tional
right
to abortion.
the 85 percent minimum was
the two-thirds majority needed to
Celeste told the SUrface TransMany
abortion
rights senators
adopted in 1982.
end the filibuster, falling one vote
portation Subcommittee of the
refused
the
compromise
and
"And the Irony Is lbat In every
short of the 32 votes required for
Public Works and' Transporta·
voted against tlie restrictive
JACKSON, . Ohio ~UPI) ..:.. An Oak Hill landlord has been
major national . Infrastructure cloture In the47·member Senate.
lion Committee that ~President
legislation,
which
was
approved
charged
In the t•talshootlng Q(one oi hls'tenanis.
.
study released In the last 10
Sen. Walter Baker said the
~ush's proposed transportation
by•
a
slim
24·23
margin.
WIUlam
Donia
Jr.,
67,
was
arrested·
Thu~ay
In
Ashland,
•
years, Ohio bas ranked among
dual-bill package appeared to be
··poucy reduces the federal go"I penonally tolind the blll the
Ky., on a. Jackaon County 'warrant charging him \lllth til!!
the top five states where needs
the only way to resolve the thorny
vernment's traditional role and
most
reprehensible
r
have
ev.
e
r
Wednesday
.slaylne.ot Rick Ratutt, 32, Oak Hill.
are measured agal~t the lack of
Issue, which thteateni!d to derail
shifts responslblity to tbe states.
seen
on
the
Senate
floor,"
said
Donta,
who
maintains residences in Jackson County and In
sulflclent.. resource~\" r,eteste · legislative action tor the rest of
Harford
County
Sen.
Catherine
'
Ashland, appeared Thursday In Boyd County, Ky., District
said. . -,
• ·
the llelalon.
Court and was ordered held ~thou! bond, pending an Aprll16
I· The presld,ellt's plan calla for
·Thirteen perci!Dt of oiu- urban
•qt wu this -or nollUng," he'' Ritey.
BalUmore County Sen. Vernon
continuing federal money to help lntentat~, 22 percent of our said. "Aa a cofldl_llon of getting
hearing.
,.
Boozer,
a
aeaoUator
who
worked
Urias
Hall
Jr.,
Jackson
County's
chief deputy sheriN, said
. modernize exlsdng roads and . rural Interstates and 21 ·l)ercent
the (aborilon rlgb~s) biU passed,
tor concMstons that would allow
Hall apparentl)l plana to fllht extradition to ()hlo.
;-brldees. but for state and. local . o( our brldaes are considered . we had to pus (the more
the aborUon rfahts legislation to
Hall said a dispute~ a borrowed chalnsaw.may have led to
JOventments to take tbe lead In structurally detJClelit," the gov·
re~tJ'IciiVe measure)."
· ·
be
approved.
said
It
Is.
unseemly
peylng for new projects.
ernor said. .
the
shooUng, which occurred In Ratliff's home. Ratutt was 's hot
AI part or theagJI!\!lllent, final
that a minority of 16 senators
once In the chest with a handgun, Hall slad.
' l'llneteen states, Including
This year Ohioans will receive approval of ellller bill by the
eould , get the restrictive bill
·'I thin~ that there was an argument between the two," Hall
,Oblo, lend more aaaollne tax $496 mWion In tedaral IIIJhwiY House of Delegates and Gov.
passed.
said. 'There was no st:ruggle. Hewanll!d tokllowwhy the victim
doUars to !be 'federal IJOVel'n· moneyblitwlllpay-.nmmtoilln William Donald Schaefer re"IUs a bill -that ·in a mli!Jon
men I thu ,they let ba.ck. Those teclerlleuollne taxel, leavln; a
t.adn't brOUilht his cbaln &amp;aw back to hltn."
mains contingent on paa~age of .
could,
have
gotten
years
never
·~tes aet only the minimum
lou of $35 mlllloa, Celeste ~ald.
lis counterpart, a!Jd sets tbe
.

Grant received by dr~g treatment group

Voter ·r egistration deadline
nears .for primary election :

Bill~

Off··
'

end Maryland abortion filibuster

Celeste .seeks more federal
.highway money for Ohio

.

KRISTEN WALKING AND
AEROBIC SHOE

Landlor4 charged in
slaying of Ohio man

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�. Pometoy-Middleport; Ohio

COtn •nentary
HOUSTON' -'- · Drug-running
planes are skipping from Mexico
to south Texas like stones skipping the waters of a pond. It's an
elaborateruseto. fooltheradar' of .
U.S. drug enforcement agents. ·
A confidential report recently
delivered to Attorney General
Richard Thornburgh by federal
· drug agents on the scene descrlbes the techniqqe.
• A smuggl~ will fill his plane
with drugs In northern Mexico
and fly to a Mexican airstrip near
the U.S. border. The pilot approaches low so II appears on ·
radar that he Is coming In fo(a
landing, but once below radar he
skims over the airstrip and heads
acrQss the border. All that the
radar bas "seen" Is a plane that
· took oft , from one Mexican

•

Pomero;r, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~ ...................,..,,.,..._c::l,o=o
.

~v

'
CJIAllLENE
HOEFLICH

ROBERT L.. WINGETT
Publisher
·

General J!(anager

PAT WHITEHEAD
AsslsUat Publlsher/Coulroller

Press

A MEMBER or The United
lllternatlonal Wand oauy Press
Association and the Amerk!a:n N~spaper Publ~s Association.
.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be leu th~n 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unslgJ!ed letters w!ll be publ\~~· Letters shouldbe In gOOdtaste, addressing Issues, not personall·

In pu~suit of an
accurate count
U11der counts, · over counts ... everybo&lt;Jy Is concerned about
the coming count and well they
should.be. The count I speak otis
the 1990 decennial census whiCh
officially.begins on April 1st.
By now, many of you have
begun to receive your census
forms In the mall. Question·
nalres are to be mailed to about
88 million of the 106 million
households nationwide, with the
• balance receiving their questionnaires via census takers.
Roughly 83 percent of the bouseholds will receive the Census
Bureau's short-form questionnaire, . asking such standard
questions as age, marital status, ·
race, etc., whllethe·remalniilg17
percent wUI be 1\Sked to fill out a
more detailed form consisting of
such questions as ances!ry, employment, education, Income,
type of housing, physical condl·
lion, etc.
For every household that falls
to answer and return the questionnaire It Is sent, the Census
Bureau Is required to send a
census taker to the home to
personally gather the .census
data It seeks.
.
Thus, the less cooperation the .
Bureau receives from· the. general public, the more It will cost
to conduct this count. For those
Individuals or families living In
shelters, college dorms and In
other similarly unique settings,
special enumeration programs
are planned.
Why, you may ask, Is It
lmporlant to take a national
census every 10 years? Doesn't
the Census Bureau already tmck
national population growth· and
migration patterns through ongoIng monitoring meihods? Yes,
they do, but this Information, ·for
the best part, Is fragmentary.
For the government, and,· for
that matter, the11rivate sector, to
operate equitably and effectively
In managing and allocating lhelr
resources they need the most
complete data possible. In · essence, the decennial census takes
both the social and economic

,.

TillS C'LElANING
SOLuTION ~MS To ~

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Berry ·s World

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Jaek Aru:lerson and Dale

.
VanAtta

creative enopgh,,be can stash Ilia
drug war In their districts.
Tbe south . Tex~ geography. cargo on airllllers flying troni .
makes It a welcome mat for drug 'drug-producing eountrles rJibt
Into Houaton Intercontinental ·
smugglers. Tbe land Is fiat and
.
Airport
.'
mostly deserted.
. .
The
smuulers
who
don't fly . "Air and land .smuggling hjls
commercially
can
use
tile
stone- ;
been described by· the Drug
skipping
method,
or
they
cati ·
Enforcement Administration,
simply
cruise
acrdss
the
border
U.S. Customs and Border Patrol
below th!l radar ceiling and toss
as 'rampant' In Ibis di'strlct, with
the
booty out the windoW at a ·
air smuggling perceived as the
drop
site without ever hav~~~&amp; to
primary Interdiction method of
major traffickers operating In land. With commercially av&amp;nable homing devices, the report
lhl!J area,'' the report says.
says, a pilot Cali "drop bill cargo
Smugglers Cali pick from Isowith accuracy almost anywhere '
lated airstrips and urban runIn South Texas.' •
ways. There are 125 airfields
serving Houston alotie, accord·
Tbe smart smuggler tlines his
lng to the report. And If a drug
flight
during busy .travel 'hOurs so
smuggler Is. bold enough, and
he can get "l&lt;lst In the crowd:' of·
legitimate planes filling the ·
radar. Night trips .are tou;her.,
. but ·modern ~chnology Is keepIng up With the demands of drug
smugglers with the money to buy
toys. Night vision goggles are
gadget of cbolce'for the late runs.
Sometimes, with a lot of worlk
our feds get lucky. A few yean
ago, · according to the report, ' !l
Colombian drug lo!V unwittingly
hired DEA agents to Set I!P a
reception point near McAllen,'
Texas. ·
·'

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Was·"there·ever. really a .Cold War?

'

A R ·her .

lF/iJ.l'

Gorbachev QUayle-watching r---P-ub-,ic-N_Ot:...::ice:.....·--..----'-Pu_:_bi_.;c-N-otic-e__:__
bares naked truth Sarah Overstreet
For some time now I've felt a
Utile like the kid watching the
parade In the Hans Christian
Andersen fable "The Emperor's
New Clothes."
If you've forgotten thatone,lt's
about a couple of crooked tailors
who convince the emperor they
can make clothing out of a
special cloth that the lncompetent and the stupid are unable to
see. Since no one ln.the kingdom
wants to admit to being lncompetent or stupid, .an the adults
pretend they see the clothes. But
when the emperor parades by,
stark naked In the tailors' nonexistent creations, a little child
cries out, "But he hasn't got
anything on."
.WhY do I feel like one of the
dishonest citizenry? Well, since
the first few weeks after George ·

Aild once we ascertained that
the man a heartbeat away from
the presidency Is grossly unqualified for the Job, many of us said
so; others of us Just let Danny
prove so. Reporters Interviewed
him and chronicled hiJ flawed or
abient knowledge of the world,
and recorded the matly public
Bllftes that further deliloutrated
· bla Ignorance of other COI!ntrles,
diplomacy and history.
But lately, you don't Bee that
much about Dan Quayle In !be
III!WI, and youdOn'thearaomuch
about the "Jleartbeat Away"
factor. That may have ICIIIIetblng
to do with the tact that yot1 don't ·
aeeDanoutandaboutumuchaa ,
you used to, which. may bave
aometblns to do wltb hla pertor. mancee when he waa ollt and

,_

NOtiCE OF
APPOINTMENT Of
'
FIDUCIARY

about.
Or, It J'llay have to do with the
fact that some of us stU! won't
believe Quayle wUl land on the
ticket again until we see his name
on tile campaign paraphernalia.
Bush stUllnsjsts that he will. But ·
we cling to the ho~ that the
presldentls Just saving face, and,
as Hendrick Hertzberg put It,
that there Is one,dlm bulb among
his thousandpolntsofllght. When
It comes time for the actual
el~ctlon, we tell ourselves,
George lvilhurely realize he has
to jettison the dangerous cargo
and will cajole Danno Into
declining the nomination "to
pursue other Interests."
Whatever the reason for our
decllnlngvlglianceon the Quayle
· Trail, It's making me real
panicky.

doeo hereby eotablleh • d ...
the vllltd~••••ICillt'to be known.

"blllllli within

, the Melgo County Prabo1e
·caun. C.e No. 26,638, Dondhy ,_, Alkire, Box 76,'
Racine, Ohio 46n1 - . . , .
painted E-llik .of 1hio 18te of Aline H. liVe..,.;, deCOMed. loole of tllh and Vino
· S t - Bo~ 87, RICine,
·Ohlo4&amp;n1 .
Robert E. Buck,
Probete Judge
Lena K. N•lll~d. Clerk

the Mllldloport Art~Counall.
Sec. II. Thot't hedutleoond ·
ooela of the An• · Coilncil
thellbe:
1. PramoUo .u d provide cu~
tural oppartunltt. ~.the
community.
.
.
2. Ehcouroge pride In com·
munlty. ,·
·
3. Enrich end p,..rw our

Public Notice

II. Fo-tlneartoap.,.,nunltt. for yauth.
.
Ill, Thill the ...........
lng body Of the Arlo Counail
thlll - . .o f . - ........... Bael'll ·o f.Directon.
whoM dulile lhlill InclUde
the farmulllllan of by-law•
for the operillan of the Arto

....

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131 9, 1 8, 23. 3tc

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•s.c.

.

ORDINANCE NO. 1228-80
AN ORDINANCE TO
·. ESTAILIIH THE
MIDDLEPORT ARTS
COUNCIL
Be It ordllned by the
Council of the VUioge of
Mlddloport Iii folawo:
'
Bee. I. Thill the Council of

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.!Continued on Page 8)

JI•m
3 BIG DAYS
Cobb's CELE.·I I-A.TION
.

FIIDAY,
IUICH 2J
lc30 PIII•I:OO pen

•

•••••••••••llillill•llllil••llillilllliiiJ!·••

·-~. .~·•••••.·.

·

NOW

GOING

IUICH 24
9:00 M-4c00 pill
.·

IUICH 25
1:00 p111 to 5:00 pni
.

.

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YOU'LL SAVE$$ ON USED VEHICLES ·
THAT HAVE JUST ARRIVED AND 1990·
NEWCARSAND 1991 S-10TRUCKS ....

SAU ENDS SUIDAY ..

.··. Jim

·. Co.b b

(OPEN SUNDAY 1:00 P.M.-6:00P.M.)

·CHEVROLET-OLDSMOIU~CADILAC.;c;Eo,
308 EAST MAIN
\

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"

P080Y, 0110

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..
INC.)

992-66.4

• 4'

se~ifinals

attempts, hit the troqt of the rim Dayton Stivers was the other,
Wehrle rebounded and Harper press us," said Kemper. The
with his first try, but tbe ball . taking the big school IItle 11)1928, dribbled the ball downcourt and other was Cincinnati Woodward .
(See TOURNEY 01 Pqe 4)
promptly hit his basket.
llounded off the glaSS lind went ln. 1929 and 1930.
His III!Cond shot also rallied
"It was a great one-on·olie
Larry Harper, Wehrle's vetearound the basket, but dropped ran 5-8 senior guard, had put the move," St. John's coach flob
The Daily Sentinel
through.
Wolverines ahead 70-69 with 11 Arnzen said of Harper's basket.
McKinley, whose oniy other seconds to play by hitting a "He pulled up just w,hen he
(USI'SH5-. .l
A Dl"llloa of Mdlmedll, l•e.
loss also was to Scott, ~ In a 17-foot jumper. It was the fourth should have and got off the good
Christmas holiday tournament, leadcbangelnthegame'sflnal50 shot. II he had gone any further,
Publlshed every afl.t rnocm, MolldaY
·
he would have gone Into the pack
got off a desperation final shot seconds.
thr.&lt;lUI!h Friday, Ill Court St.. 1'0·
meroy, Ohlo, by the Ohlo VaJiey Pub·
that wa.s way off the mark.
" He's been the type of player Inside.'-'
·
Ushi~J&amp; COmpanyt MuHt,nedla, Inc..
M~:Klnley, whiCh finished with
all year," sald Kemper, "that
Arnzen admitted his team's
Pomeroy, Ohto tma. Ph. 992-211\6. Second class pQstage paid at Pomeroy ,
a 24:2 record,led 28-24 at halftime every time It becomes crunch final high-lob play to Suever with
Ohio.
but trailed 4.0·38 at the end of the time, be wants the ball. He' s our · a $E'COnd to play was one the
third quarter foU~wlng a 6-0 run Ice man. He's the one .we want to . Bluejays had never worked on.
Member : United Press lnt ernauOnal ,
.'
Inland Daily Press Association and 1he
by Scott,.late In the per~ that have the ball. He's our best ttee
. "We were Just going to lob It to
Ohio Newspaper ,Assocl•tlon. Nat1on11
· throw shooter."
,
the biggest guy we had," said
wiped out a 35-311 Canton lead.
Advertlllng Representative, BraniWn
Newspoper SOles, 733 )'hlrd A\IOnue,
The lead changed hands four
·Harper's.game-wlnnlngbasket Arnzen, .who has won 641 games
New York, New York 10017.
times and tliere were five ties In came 20 seconds after St . John's' In hls4.0 seasob at St . John's; "He
the f\nal quarter and regulation Steve Jettlnghoff had put the (Suever) didn't have time to
POS'IliiASTER: Send · - ChOIIII'!"
play ended at 56·55 when John . Bluejays aheadfortheflnal time, come down with the ball. He had . • to 1lie Dally SenttDel, 111 COun St.,
Pomeroy, OhJo «1700.
lo shoot It In the air." ·
White hit one ot two ftee throws 69-68, with a brealulway layup.
With 22 seconds tb play, Suever
Arnzen surprised Kemper and
SUB8CRIPTION BATES
mate Blaise Reader placed se- for Scott with 38 . sei:onds
In ·the first meet of the 1990
B,- Carrier or Mo&amp;or ao.&amp;e
missed
an
opportunity
to
add
to
the
Wolverines
by
pressing
the
cond
!n
the
high
Jump
and
fourth
remaining.
·
track season, the University of
One Weoi&lt; .. .. ...............................$1.40
In the triple jump, while R\ISty
Scott's Anthony Williams put the .Blue jay lead, missing the quicker· Wehrle team.
One Month ... .... ............ ..............$UO
Rio Grande men's traack team
One Year .......... ....................... 112;80
"That's onlY the second time
Edens was second In· the 1500 his team ahead 57-55 with a first of a · bonus · free throw
· took first place and tbe women's
SINGLE COPY .
•
all year anybody has tried to
baselln,e Jumw with. 1: 29 to situation.
team was fourth In !he Berea . meter run.
PRICE
In the relays, Rio Grande's play . But Wl1118ru1 who scored
(Ky.) Relays on March 17.
Dolly ............, ...................... ~ Cents
men won the 400 meter, , 800 · 17pol!tts,fouJe(Joutott~econtest
The perfOrmances In 11\dlvld·
SubScribers not deslrlngtopay the car·
meter, sprint medley, distance ~9 secoqds•. la~r :when h.e fouled
rl('!' may remit Jn advance dli'ect to
ual and group events bas given
The Dally Sentinel o~ a 3, 6 or l211onth
the 't eams lnipetus · to · reach · medley and 1600 meter. In McKinley's Eric Snow. '
tpasl.s. Credit will be given carrldrea'*
addition; the men placed second
Snow, Who led :McKinley with
certain goals, Coach Bob Willey
week.
.
· In the 3200 meter rf1lay.
14 points, tied It ai 57 with a pair
remarked.
No subscl'lptlons by mall permlttec:hn
Relay athletes Included Vic otfree throws and Scott then held
· "It really helps to run that well,
areas where home carrier service 1s
Austin, MattBagent,MarkCllne, the ball for the final shot by
avaUable.
and psychologically, It makes for
Rusty
Edens,
Bob
Ferguson,
Bob
'
Scrutchlns.
a brighter outlook," Willey said.
Mall SubscrlpUons
Fritz, Aaron Griffin, Scott HasGldver rebounded Scrutchlns
bullde Melp County
"People are no~ looking at goals
13 Weeks ................. ................. 119.24
brook, TlmMurphy,ErlcNorrls, 3-polnll!liSS imd was fouled by
they feel they can achieve."
26 Weeks ................. ...... ........... S3'1.96
James
Peck
and
Rob
Schreiber.
Bowden,
a
6-7.
sophomore,
as
he
The teams competed against
52 Weeks ... .. , ....... .... ..... ....... .. ... 114.36
Individually, Fritz, who quail= put up a shot.
·
tlallide Metp C.ullly
•
squads from the host school,
t3 Weeks ... ............. ............ .. .... S20.1j()
fled for the NAIA Nationals In
Ml~ Hawkins scored 12 points
H)lntlngton (Ind.), David Lips•
26 Weeks ....................... .......... . S&gt;I0.30
SORRY FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE
another meet, placed sixth In the an4 was the only other player In
52 Weeks ... .. ... .. ....... ................. 175.40
comb (Tenn.), Mo!lawk Valley
3000 meter and fifth In the 5000 doubl~ fli\Jrelr'for McKinley. ,
(N.Y.)" and two other Kentucky
meter.
· ·
Webi'le '78,·81. Jobn 69
schools, Union a)td Centre.
·
In
the
women·~
~om
petition,
Columbus
Wehrle coach Chuck .
Among&lt; the numerous first. ··
Renee
.Peck
won
the
3000
meter
Kempe)'
didn't
see the final shot
place flnls!les In Individual
1
'0
·23
d
h
1500
In
his
team's.
70-69 win over
events, VIC Austin won· the , r.un, n,. : an I, e.
meter. In Delphos St. Jnhn Thursday even4:·(if.. ·epnnle Evana took first
.~
Javellri In what Wlltey tenrted his
best yet performance. Aus1fn .,.pl4ce In .th~ !5000 witt\ 19:16. The log In St. John Arena.
team of Becky Webb, Atsuko
"I didn't watch It," Kemper
hurled the javelin 174 feel.• 9
DELUXE 6 POCKET
Yamazaki,
Bonnie
Evans
and
admitted
after the Wolverines
Inches.
Renee Peck also won the 3200 survived that final shot by St.
Travis Rambo ttok the shot
Rf§,..
SALE
John's' ScottSuever. "llool&lt;edat
relay:
·
event by tossing the ball 47 feet,
Yamazaklran"thebestraceot the floor. I didn't know If we had
11 ~ Inches. He also placed first
WOODSMAN
h~r
llfe''ln the relay, Willey said. won or not. I didn't know which
In the hammer and fifth In the
"She really did a great lob."
slde was cheering." ,· ,
discus. Mike Hll\ was first In the
!f§:..
SALE
In
the
field
events,
Sherry
LuckUy for Kemper, It was the
pole vault at 12 feet.
·Cooke placed fourth In the long Wehrle fans who had reason to
jump and. second In the trlple " celebrate; because Seuver's
Tim Murphy took first ln the
.MUCH MORE SAYINGS.. ON HATS, BIBS,
jump
.. Vonda Stiles was fifth In shpt, which came as the final '
high Jump, ln .addltlon to placing
COVERALLS, .FACEMASK;"-cOATS, TAPE,
.the long jump and third In the buzzer sounded, bounced oft the
second In the fntermedlate hurrim.
'
· . T-SH,RTS AND GlOVES. .
dles. For his work at Berea, . triple Jump.
· "· '
The win put Wehrli! Into
. 'fhe teams' l)eXt . )neet Is
Murphy was named the Athleie
•
Saturday at the Musklngum Saturday's Division IV title
of the Meet for the number of
· '~THE
Invitational.
·
ga.me against Springfield Capoints he ' accumulated. Team,
..
tholic, a 64-42 winner over
Mansfield St. Peter's In the other
semifinal contest.
The championship game will
be
a rematch of last year
Seore
b:r
lnDinp
.
By SCOTT WOLFE
.'
·semifinals,
won by Wehrle, 49-44.
Federal
...............
,101
10-3-4-3
Eastern Buehall Coach
Wehrle, now 24-3, can become
Eastern.-.............. 031 · ·u-8-5-4
rBelng patient and taking ad·
only
the' secoild school in history .
·WP-DUrst
van tagt~ pf etgl)t ·Feclel'al HocJG.. ·
to
win
three consecu tlye titles.
LP -"- Sbutoro
lng walks, the Eastern Eagles
.
'
rolled to an 8-3 non-league
opening day dlamolid . victory
oyer the Lancers TllursdayevenRQ;. S109.95
lng at EHS.
. •·
:&gt;Dphomore Jeff Durst piCked
up the wlh In relief of senior Scott
Fitch for , tlte Eagles, while
R;mdy' Shuford s uttered the loss
for the Lancers. Mike Summer·
field came on In relief.
MEN'S &amp;
Durst walked three, hit one
batter and gave up just one bit,
CHILDIEN'S
gettlngJI~tter as the game went
.) Ill STOCK
on after a shakey third frame.
' ' ...
WJNCiiESTERliODI!L 13Do NWTF
Fitch gave up three hits. and
COMMEMORATIVE SHOTGUN
two walks.
,,
.
,.
:woMEN'S
Federal pitching gave up five
·c~MING SOONI
hits, fanned 7, and walked 8.
Federal went ahead 1-0 In the
Will C.M I'IDCa
l flrstlnnlng, picking up the first of
"1••r
At~letle
feetlfelt
H•d•••rter~"
~~-= I·:I"·D"'·WIII 0 '1
three unearned runs, when
,_..,
7.00 •. • •.••• •• •• ••••• . .••..•
Jeremy Blake opened the game
with a single, stole second,
• •
advanced to third on an error and
scored on a Randy Shuford
,.
single. Shuford was caught try·
RETAIL
lng to stretc!J a single Into a
IPS ettunrlllg 10 •· ;.;th inr•tor ,., rib · S569.95
SALE
double by leftflelder Matt
Flnlaw.
219 N. $1COIID - 992·5627 - .DiliPOIT
COLUMEII,J.S, Ohio (UPI) Antbony Glover's two free
tl!"ows with,two secoiJ!Ia remainJog ln overtime lifted No. 1.
Toledo Scptt to a '59-57 victory
over No. 2 Can10n McKinley
Thursday morning IIi the semifinal&amp; of the boys Division I state
high . schOOl basketball tourna·
ment at St. John Arena. .
.The v.lctory moved Scott Into
Saturday morning's DivisiOn I
cl\amplonsbi,P game agalrist the
W!nner ·ot the other semlti,MJ
con tes 1., bel\\&lt;een Ci nc Inn a 11

Woodward, 22-4, aad Stow, 20-5.
The victory for &amp;ott, now 26-l,
waa Ita first ill etallt trlptt to the
state -tournament. The Bulldoga
had JOlt their seven previous
seven ll!mlflnal .conlt!lfta.
Glover, a 6-5 tteOior forward
who scored jus~ four points In the
game, was fouled by McKinley's
Bryant ·Bowden after he had
rebounded a missed shot by
teammate Ses:n Scrutchlns; who
led Scott with 18 points.
,
Glover, who had mlased his
· lmly two previous tree throw

.

Rio track teams _place

in.season's. fl.l'8t meet ·

CORRECTION-.· ·

The Phone NumberJn
Last Night's HooCI Family Shoes
Ad Should Have Been.
992·6254 .

STEWART'S GUN .&amp; SUPPLIES

PANTS ..........................

!~t\!.L..

$2 500

SHIRT .....~......................

~l'-'?1 ....

$2 400

FIRST.PERFECT CAMOUFLAGE"

~es ·def~t lancers 8-3

NITE
· LIGHT ·

..•.

.

INTRODUCING•••

BRITISii~KNlGHTS

Now$8995

1YFNCfi£S1'£A~~

·"'

,...

.lJI the second Eastern finally ·
came. to lite ·when Scott Fitch
walked, Matt Fl\llaw singled,
and Michael Smith had a two run
slngle,t)le score 3-2 after the
bases were walked fuU (Jerrod
Barber and Tim Bissell walking)
and Smith scored on a Durst
sacrifice fly. .
Ill the third Durstcameonwlth
a shakey entry, hitting the first
batll!r, walking the bases fuU,
thep having a run score on ·a
passed ball, the score 3-2.
Matt Flnlaw drove home Scott
Fitch,. who bad walked In the
bottom of the ~lrd .for a 4-2 score.
Fli added Its final run to pull
Wlthln one In ' the fourth, When
Gillilan fanned but reached on a
~ssed ball, then scored on a high
fly single that was caught up In
th_e wind !O right, the acore 4·3.

..

ON!

·SUIIDAY

SA'IUIDAY

Toledo ~tt, (A)Juritbus Wehrle wm m state

$45000

locel her-e.

4. EnOOUIIOIIOI!rllm tlwough
_....of~-

•

SALE ·$33Q00

. tile Vllloge of Middleport

On ~ 2. 1980, ...

•

..

. Some weeks ago In .tbls Spjlce I
staunch battlers for freedom, to Africa because of Its strategic
remarked that a rather comical
their eternal credit. The Talbott position and vital ~lneral depos·
W ' UJm
• ·US
flglJt had broken out between the
version, on the other hand, Its, and support for Israel against
off this horse and explalli the end·.
liberals and the conservatives
enables liberal theorists to rew- the entire Arab population of the
of the Cold War Is a little hard to"
over which ofthem bad "won the
rite history In a way that Levant.
visualize, but don't underrate
Cold War.'' Only lnpassbigdld I
damagestheconservallveswhlle
Eventually, the whole U.S.
their creativity. . Depending ' on
note a third theory, promoted by .' making even dovish liberals ·economy became geared to a · bow hl! turns out, Gorbachev can
Strobe Talbott of Time magasmell like roses.
permanent war stai,us. Soviet
be th!plcted either al a 9ovttrt
zlne; to the effect that there bad · Of course, there has for 'some overtures, such a en!llng miclear
hero willing til· sacrifice every- ,
.never really ·been ' a two-sided
years been a "revisionist:• the- . tests In ·l be atomsphere. were
thing ' for peace, or . as an·
Cold War ~ .that It was all a · oryoftheColdWar~hlcbblames Ignored or summarUY rejected. . Incompetent Improviser whore- ·
hallucination In the overheated ' It entirely on the United States. The whOle :world was forced -to . ·grettably lost his nerVe under
crarilums of American right·
~ut. this view has hitherto been choose. between the United States
sustained.AmeriCan pressure; or. ·
wlngers. ·
·
held only by a handful·of Jett'lst and the Soviet Onion ahd most
even as just one more pitiful '
victim of the North American
This third theory deserves
professors •.of the sort that write nations (as evidenced by their
closer attention, because It will · for Tbe Nation. Now, as the Cold votes In the United Nations)
Molech.
· ··
probablyendupbelngtheofflclal
War ends and tite tlme.nears to sided with the Soviet Union.
Conservatlves,aswellasllbef.- ·
liberal position ·on the subject.
sum ·u all up, this extremist view Nevertheless, as far as the
als who care aboutthe truth;.had ·
Any liberal who Is sensible Is beginning to move lndoo~s. ,
United States under successive better prepare to combat thlss ·
enough to concede that the Cold
Tbe Cold War, In turn, pro- reactionary presidents was con- outrageous distortion of hiStorY ,
War was a two-sided srruggle
vlded the excuse for still further cerned, the Cold .War could last before the tieas walk off with the ,
witch hunts at home, by forever: an Impacted unilateral
army blanket.·The Free. World's
will sooner or later have to settle
for being proud that Harry
McCarthy, McCarran and oth- hostility that consumed .untold
victory In the 45-year Cold War Is .,
Truman recognized It early on,
ers, as well as the various energy and resources that might the proudest and 11!0$1 lmponani· ·
and that certain promlnen\ llber·
right-wing Initiatives abroad: otherwise have been.devoted to achievement of the 20tjl century, .
and future generations must
als such as Henry Jackson, an.d ·. sup~rt .f'!F Chiang, JCal-shek on the welfare of mankind.
Hurbert HumplJrey · we~e .. · Taiwan, leniency toward South
Jus\ how·the left wiUget down never mlslnterpr.et or forgetlt.

:~~:~~sk:n~hedoesn'thave

'

Peg' ·2-The Dill 81 ldllllll
Pomacv MW•port. Ohio -.
F.-..y, MMrh 23, 1910 ..

His plari was to deliver 100,()00
pounds of mariJuana . and 5,000
po11nds of cocaine from Colombia. But the DEA closed In when
l)te first shlpriient of marlj\lana ,
arrived. The agents got the potbut not the drug lord. He Is sUII a
fugitive.
For all tile small successes'
noted In the report, there Is a
tacit admission that the
smugglers still have the upper •
hand In south Texas. •
"
..

Bush
many named
of us his
haverunning
knownmate,
Dan
Quayledoesn'thaveanyclothes
on, figUratively speaking. Uterally speaking, I gUess you could

SINKING LILY PAD

·

tire

DISS0L.VING TUe OIL ...
WUAT I&gt; 1111S STuFF?

pulse of the nation. The lnforma·
tlon gained thr0 ugh the census Is ·
used to allocate more than $38
billion annually In federal fund.Jng for state and community
programs.
How much federa1 monies a
community receives for schools,
highways, health care, housing,
Job training, child care and
programs for the elderly Is
determined by the population
counts disclosed by the census.
On the comm'e rclal and . economic side, Jhe data generated
by the census Is critical to
organiZational decisions governIng such subjects as site locations, 'advertising, . budgets, .and
marketing strategies:
Perhaps most significantly the
data· generated by the decennial
census forms ' the ·basis for
reapportioning the seats In the
U.S. House of RepreSentatives, a
reapportionment .· that concelva- ·
bly could change the political
compl.exlon of that body for the
·
next 10 years.
U population projections ho)d
up, Ohio Is slated tolosetwo$1!ats
In the U.S. House of Representatives, as are il numbe; .of !he
Industrial states In the East and
'Midw.e st. The sunbelt states of
California, Texas a11il Florida
are the principal bentiflclarles of .
the diminished population
growth In the so called '.'rust
belt" states, picking up anywhere from 3 to 6 news seats
·'
each.
Obviously, the Influence of .
such sunbelt states will grow at
the expense of states such as our
own. When such Issues as acid
rain, and enterprize zone legislation are considered, this shift In
representation could have a
significant lmp.a ct on the nature
of bill that Is passed.
• So, let me close by urging each
and every one of you reading this ·
column to do your part In
ensuring that a complete, timely
and accurate count Is obtained by
the Census Bureau. Your future
and .Ohio's fu lure are dependent
on lt.

.

airstrip and landed at another,
and that's not the business of u.S.
drug agents.
Once In U s te 11
th
·
·
·
·
rr.
ory,
epilot
goes through the same motions.
Stlll beneath the radar, he heads
for a known 'American landing
strip; preferably a quiet one
where no one Is 'a round to gei
suspicious. tie skims over It and ·
then gains altitude untU h'e
registers on the radar again as a
plane taking off. Anyone followlng him on radar will assume the
flight originated In the United .
States. He files on to ·a clandes·
tine airstrip and drops his cargo.
The report on south Texas
smuggling techniques was one of
severaltbatThornburghordered
from U.S. attorneys throughout
the country to update him.on ~e

~eY,

U.S. Rep. Clarence Miller
··.--·

...

"D~f? runners skipp~g to Texas.

The Dai.Iy' Sentinel '
.111 Court S&amp;reet

'

•

The Deily Santillllll Pal• 3

•'

..

.:Scott Jo1tch broke the game
open In the fourth with a two run
shtgle that led EHS to a four-run
Jril)lnl and &amp;-3 lead.
.
;Durst retired the side In order
"11h two strikeouts In the top of
the fifth ~fore the game was
ctrled for darkllesa.
·
-Matt Fin law led Eaatern with 2
sqles, Scott Fitch liqled, Tim ··
Btattell had a perfect night ot
1-for-1 with two walliS, and
•·
Mlcbael Smith stneJed.
J'or nl Matt Harrill, Randy'
SIIMord, Brett Lewis, aad •
. Jeremy Blake each singled.
jtutern Ia slated 10 p)IJ thl
Alllnmllol)lgbt, tbea halt Soatw·
e&amp;tern Jn the opettlna I"IUe
game at Eas(!!rn Monday.

RETAIL
.

~

•

• }

'i560.00

!

Speolals Of the W~e~!

t2

SALE

$47500

s.. 3' ChlmiJtJr. 26" IJtJI.. Rim r.~ntt~

. · '1988 F.OID 150 XLT LARin .
J:ully lolded JW!th ell optlone. Including matching
· L11r topPer, tr.•r towing' PICkage, lllvlr end
grwy. Very low ml!eage. o-·• Pereonel Trutlk.

. S12,988
.
.
:~

!

THE ULTIMATE WATERFOWL tr.:OYI

·1984 Mere. Grand Marquis •••••• $3895

Turkey Hen

I'

1985 Ford·Escort...................... S1995

4 epcl. Blue. Good condition.

·1915. Ford
~ epd. Whhe.,

,

.

"

......, •19.95 .....

.

~ALE $1695

~Mort ...................... S1895

Aur11• looka good.

.

t..~

.

. SAVINGS
ON ALL
'
,..•~-...· l-EY CALLS

,

.

.

.·~··

1982 .Ch•tY. Cavalier...........~ •••• S1395
4
,. Dr., Auto., P8, N. Air " ,
.
~·
. '
~£E RAY RIGGS
..
,'

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etll.~ mM •PENN'S WOODS
•OUOEi lOY •lYNCH

~

i·

·-

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~

SMIIOOIIIIIG II '

.
U1C11 Jl, 1990

.GUN &amp;· SUPPLIES
·
•H•III,

•

..

., ••Jtl·t•tl

•

lu 1•1,

lOll It ••ll••t·t.lw!lllr 10 AJI...MI P.M.

Ollie 46775

•

�PtiQ

'

4 The Daily Sentinel

Pon•oy-MidcZ pan. Ohio

Fridly, MM:h 23, 1980

NCAA Tournament roundup

F~.

:Ot•J2J•ell's long· pass gives UConn 71-70 win ·over Ciems.,n ·
By DEAN SCHABNER
UPI Sports Writer
; Connecticut's Scott Burrell,
~ho has a 90 mph las !hall, threw
:One of his fines t pitches Thursday
;night.
• Burrell hurled a floor-length
:pass to Tate George with one
·second left, and George hit a
:turnaround jumper at the buzzer
:to lilt the Huskies to a 71·70
•victory over Clemson In an
:NCAA East Regional semifinal
:at East Rutherford; N.J.
The final play started with

Clemson leading 70~9 and one
second left . After a timeout by
each team, Burrell, who was
drafted by the Seat tie Mariners
·as a pitcher, lnbounded under
Clemson's basket, hurling a long
arching pass to George In the
right comer. The 6-5 senior spun,
pu ttlng his back to t)le basket
before hoisting a shot that caught
only net.
Clemson ·rallied from a 59-40
deficit' with 12: 36 to go, after
· spending all of the first half and
much of the sl!cond cau~ht In the

.State

tour~ey.. •:....-(_c_on_.tl_nu_ed_r_ro_m_·P_a..;;;g_e_a&gt;_ _

'

I didn't think they (St. John's)
would.
"It was a physical game,"
added Kemper. "We were leanIng on Jettlnghoff and he was
leaning on us. That the way we
jlke to play. It re111lnded me of a
Division I game."
· Wehr)e l!ad tlve players · In
double figures, led by Anthony
Johnson with 16 points. Harper
. and Chuck Perry had 13, Jeff
Stanley )1 and Terry Holliman ·
10.St. John's go! 31 points from
[wo of Its l)ench players- Suever
with 17 points and Scot\ Elwer,
,·
with 14.
In the other semifinal contest,
Springfield CathoUc scored 18
consecutive second-half points to
turn a close game Into a rout.

•

NATIONAL BASDTB!\LL AS!«)C. ·

EMW a Culere~~ee
~IMale Dlvlilllon
Te..
W L Pd. GB
Ptlllldei(IJIU .................fl H ,111; -

New Yol'tl ........ ~ ...........JI tl ....

I'll

II ....

1\-11

eo.&amp;oa ....... ..................st

WtMIIIIfio• ~ ······· ··· ····.!:1 t! .S'D II',\
New lr:r.er ................ .11 11 .zn H

"'
...

Mtaml . .... .................... ll u

.221 21

£eatnl DIYllloa
.................... JI II
Chlr: 1110 .......................4s tz
Mltwa.lee .................. .JI II
la .... ...................... .JS 14

.'711 .11: 7
.:;. 15\lt
.4ts 18

:~-Detroit

A.tlanta .................... ,.. .31 II .41e II ~

Clevel .. d ................... JI J$ .4ft 21
Orlll.&amp;l .......................n H . ~M . :St
Wes~ern

""

.,

..

Team

Cotiertnce

'

W L Pet.

a:· U&amp;ab ...... ...................~ll II .7JI
saa MtOIIIo .. ...... .. .. .....41 11 .w
Dallu ........................ .JI • .114
h•wr ....................... .SI 11 .sn
H-llaa .... .................. .S2 II .f11
Ml ...nota .................. J1 fl .UJ

Gl
~~

II
It
II
311,1

Ch.W&amp;t ..... ........... .....ll Ill .IllS 11

I

a:·LA Lakfl'l ................41 II .714 -

%

Plleettbt ........ .......... .....44

tt

.an

New YtrllatCII.Wte, 'l!.p.-,
Sacraml!lllo at Ph~deiPMa. 1: M p:m.
CIII!Yelud.at Clllt:ap, R: • p.m.
Golden st•te at Utah, t: Jl p.m.
Mln~~t~OI.a a&amp; Plloealr, t:• p.m.
lA Clipper• at LA. Lakeh, 11:111 p.m.

Sacram~o .................%1

.au

.

II .Ill U

ll:·dlllehed plQolf berQ,

TllundJII''•re.lM•
DallAl lit. Orlluult lH

Ho•••• 111. Detr• no
8M Alllllllo 11'1. Perdud Ill
Pr•'•rames

Allal*¥1e16oa.7:ap.m.
ou• If IIIIMII, 7: Jl p.m.
New Jeuq .a
'I':JI p.m.

•••.u.

,lfllllg(TfON fT. U &amp;

37t2t HOCIOIHI Dl.
LOCWI, 0110 4JUI

n

NY blu*rs ... tt

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Ad . . . Dtvlaloa

1 •
8 M
1 11
1
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to US
ns ttl

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HS SIS

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Nol'l'tll DIYI!don
W L T pt._

~:aleap .......:u

11 •
x.st. Lull ....... 11 II I
Torollto ...........SI 15 .f
MIMHGta ....... 11 •
I
Detrol ............ t'l 11 u
x-CalprJ ~ ...... 11
~:· Edmoatoa ..... JI
IC·WI•.. peJ ...... II
X•l.u All pi• .. JI
Vuco•wr ....... tl

2 dr., Auto. Trana., Tilt
Wheel, V-II Engine, Crulae
Control. Much More.

:a: us

Ci.mtbell Colderenee
Team

1914 PONTIAC 6000 U.

GF GA
81 na
81 !:II U1
11 111 Ill
1t HI nt
f1 na 111

a

..
W

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

1983 NISSAN PULSAI

$2450

CALL

992-3011

CIJOFANEw
..
'

TRADEAmOIDMOWEROOSM
·.ON A,NEW9NAJIIIER DURING AU.-AMERICAN TRADING ~YS •.
CETATIIAIT ,

It 14

II

Ill IH '

11

•

•

I

•

I

•

U

a-ellnehetl p..,.Gft berih

•

II

. . n1

Sl

Ill IN ·

'7t Jll Ill

..

'

191. YOY01A VAN LE.

Chu-ge8 rded over gestures

'

reports thai there will be another
meeting concerning Neighbor·
hood Watch Pr(/ll'ams. The exact date Is still be announced,
although the sheriff notes that
this ·meeting Is being held lo
furnish ln(ormatlon to anyone
wanting to organize or partie!·
pate In a Watch Program In their
area. More Information on the
meeting will be forthcoming.

Hospital news
VMH
THURSDAY ADMISSIONSShirley Roush. Middleport.
·
. THURSDAY DISCHARGES Haille Zirkle, Zana Gainer.

•
i

At1east~·

ol.dmower ·
can cut

~~~,a

new Snapper.

.'fradeAnd.Sa.ve
Sl 00 TRADE-IN
•Trade in your old mower or
tiller
·
•And cut the cost of a n Snapper Tiller
•Great deals are evailable
on other Snapper pre·
mium lawn care producta ·
Not volid with any other promotion. lillit
one lrad,.in por transaction. At participatinl dealors. Hurry olfor tnds soon.

GRAVELY
TRACTOR

SALES AND SERVICE
204 CONDOR ST.
POMEROY
Wo Offer Elcalltnt Soni&lt;t &amp; Parts to
lark Up Our Soft~ to You, Our Valued
Customer.
lawn &amp; Garden Equipment Is o,..
luune11 - Mot Sideline.
992-2975
. Manning K. Roush, OWNER

In 1959. Lloyd Richards was the
first black to direct a Broadway play.

.

.,

' ..... ., '

1983 FOlD P1 00
e cyt. 3 •114
_
Loob and runo grlllt.

CALL ft2-3011
FOI SAVINGS PIICE

$3650

"Your VehiCle Savings ~l~ce"
MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 9:30-15:30
FRIDA\' 8:30..15:00; SATURDAY 9:00-1:00

BANK FINANCING
A JlAIL.(BLE

0-

IIAIIIAVIS

~ GRAVELY TRACTOR s~~~o

'!OUOIIIDI SJ. .

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• ,_lOY

WI OPI'U l!XCEUENT SERVICE • PARTS TO IIACK UP OUR
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SALES TO YOU, OUR VALUED CUSTOMER.

.,_ a- Gardin Equipmem It Our lull- -

Not 81c1111ne.
. . I 1 L ...... 0111111

ftf.Jt7J ·' .

'\ ,'

~
,•

I'
I

,

PARKERSBURG, W.Va.
(UPI) :... Prosecutors In the
murder trial of an Ohio man
described Wendall Ash In openIng arguments Thursday as an
attentive IQver who became
deadly violent when he learned
he wa~, about to be spumed.
Ash, ·34, of New Matamoras,
Ohio, Is charged in the shooting
death of Janie Mason, 23. Prosecutors described the pair as lovers
and said both were married at
the time of the relationship and of
Mason's death.
Ash hu pleaded lnnocellt by
reason oltnaanlty.
· Michelle Rusen, assistant
WQ9d County.prosecutor, told the ·
jury that on March 29, 1989, Asb
~eared his relatlonllhlp with Ma·
son was about to end.
Ruaen said Ash repeatedly
tried to reach Mason on the
telephone, but eventually went to
her trailer between WaVI!I'Iy and
Williamstown. He allegedly
broke down the door, ripped off
the chain lock and fired 16 shots
fi'Oin a .22-caliM!r piltol.'
A fr1end Of Malon fied the ·.
trailer al0118 with Muon's five
cblldrell when ,Aah arrived. She
wu halfway to a nel8hhor'a
house when abe heard lllota,
Rusen told the Jury. ·

\

i

\

•

-

HE&gt;w soon they
forget.

Prosecutors
say suspect
upset over
being spurned

Auto. TrMia.. «;;oti! Interior,
AM·FM-Stereo.
N- Hooda Trade.

Dl"lliDn

-n u

Racine Squad 28 at 5: 28 p.m.
was called to Bashart Road for
Jeremy Gulnth!lr who was dead
on arrival. Brenda Manuel was
transported by Squad 28 to
Holzer Medical Center. A second
Racine squad was called at 6: 41
p.m. to assist at the scene.
The brush !Ire on the Willford
property on Route 124•reklnkled
about 6:42p.m. and .Rutland Fire
Department was called back to
the scene.
Pomeroy at 7:03p.m. went to.
Mulberry Ave. for Robert Cana·
day who was taken ·tO Veterans
·
Memorial Hospital.

Pllp 5 '.

Stocks

W hi
!71
HI

Rune Ike new. Ju.t returned
fram Myrtle Beech.

·"

RIVERDALE
·
a
·
o
MES
"WIIERE SEIVICE IEAIIS YOUR SAT.ISFACTIOI"

Q8

7 PMo. s..tlnt, Air Cond ..
Sunroof. E-v poulble option.

. . .

$24,89500

U1111 &amp;l LA Olp~ra, 11:11 p.m .

... 141
!71 z-,1

Jr.

Spencer to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
,
Pomeroy Flre.Deparbnentand
EMS unit were called aU: 15 p.m.
to an auto accident on Long Hall
Road. Jeremy Hubbard, Abby
Hubbard, VIncent Broderick and
Matthew Morris were taken from
th'e scene to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Clayton Ohlinger and
Jeff Ohlinger refused treatmet!l
at the &amp;cene.
Rullan&lt;j was called at 5: 16p.m .
toPainterRidgeRoadforHarold
Daniel Lambert•to Holzer Medlcal Center.

ttinel

Study says·plagiarism
· common ·on campus

SuUie at Phoeaa., l:ll p.m.

11

'

home from .2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Saturday.
· •

:

,.m.

Sm~;lle

lhiHif! Iii. Dtner 118

446 4524

•ro~ ·

219 I. $ECOfiD- 992-5627- MIDDUPOIT, OH.

1

Exleaded forecast
. A chance of rain or snow
Sunday, and partly cloudy Monday and Tuesday. Highs wlli
range from the 30s to the mld 40s
each day, with overnight lows In
the 20s. ..
·

Seventeen calls for help were · •
answered on Thursday by units
of Meigs Emergency Medical .
Services.
At 12:411 a.m.,Pomeroywentto
Reedsville for Brldett Hopkins
who was taken to Camden-Clark
Memorial H01pltal.
Middleport at 1: 27 p.m. was •
called to Qak St. for Dorothy
Hendricks to Holzer Medical
Center. At 7:13a.m., Middleport
transported Robert Caruthers
Sr. from Middleport Hill to
Veterans Memorial H(lspltal, .
thenon tolloizerMedtcaiCenter.
Rutland Fire Departmental 12
ndon was called to a brulh fire on
the Bill Willford property alonge
Route 124. Pomeroy and Middleport Departments were called to
assist at 12: 13 p.m. and 12c 18
p.m., respectively. Rutland EMS
was called to the scene at 12: 23
p.m.
Mlddeport at 12:39 p.m. went to
Logan St. for Cleland Siders to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Salem Fire Departtrient at 1: 43
p.m . . assisted Colll!llb!a town. ship Fire Dpeartment with a
brush fire on Star Han'.Road.
At 2:23 p.m., ·Rutland was
called to Route 143 for Natasha
'
.

Patrol cites
Pomeroy man

_,

Portland at Dtnwr, 1: II p.m.

Pl&amp;. .,.ll ....... n n
PIIUadelpNa .• •• U •

.percent.

wltb II.
At mid-morning, temperatures
ranged from 34 at Toledo and 35
at Flndlay,lo46atZnesville. By
evening, temperatures wlllfalllo
tbe upper 20s In the northwest to
the mid·30a In' the south.
Skies will be clear!~ by
evening, but a developing
weathel"system out of Texas will
bring snow Into the OhiO Valley
late tonight and over all of Ohio
Saturday. There could be accumulatloll$ of 2 to 4 Inches of snow
over the southern half of the state
by Saturday night. .
The l)orthern half of Ohio will
see some snow Saturday. after. noon, butshouldescapelheworst
of the storm, providing the low
pressure system does not venture farther north.
Lows tonight will be In the
teens to upper 20s. Saturday, the .
highs will only reach !he 30s. ·
There will be a pha~ce of rain·or
snow Sunday, while Monday and
Tuesday.should be partly cloudy.
It will continue to be unseason,.
bly cold, with highs only In the 30s
to mk1'40s, and !OIIfS ,In the 20s. ·
On the early morning weather
map, a cold front extended from
New England to Virgfnta and
Alabama. 1\Jl Arctic front ex.tended !rom On tarlo across
northwest Ohio to Missouri. A,
large high pressure area was
over the north~ Plains and
much of southern Canada.
The Artie front was moving
rapldly ·s outheast and was to stall

Jeremy Ray Guinther, 12, of
Basban ,Road, Racine, · died EdwUd F. Dailey
Edw!!rd. Franklin Dalley , Jr.,
Thursday at his residence. ·
Born on JulY 23, 1977 at 42, Fort Myers, Fla., formerly. of
Ga!Hpolls, he was the only child Wllkes~lle, died Friday morning
of Kenneth and Carol Glenn at Chillicothe Veterans Admin·
stratlon Hospital following a
Guinther.
:
brief Illness.
Jeremy was a student at
Born July 20, 1947 In Vales
Southern Junior Hlgh School
Mills, he was the son of Phyllis A.
where he played on the football
Charges Involving "coarse ut·
Willey Dalley, Dexter, who sur·
!e~. He was also active In the
terances
. and gestures" have
Racine Youth League baseball vives, and the late Edward F.
c
1
Oatley Sr.
,
program.
,been 'flied In ·Meigs ounty n
connection with . an Incident on
He was a supervisor at GoU
Besides his parents, he Is
along
the
Appalachians
at
mid·
RoUte 124 between Syracuse and
Cart Manufactilr·lng-Club Car
survived by his maternal grandday.
The·northern
portion
of
the
Minersville.
Names· of those
Company, and he was' an Army
parents, .Joe and Janice Glenn,
front
was
to
merge
with
•he
cold
...
being
charged
h!lve been with·
veteran of th~ Korean Conflict .
, Racine, and maternal greatfront
In
the
norlbeast
this
afterheld
by
the
Meigs
County SheSurvivors ' Include sisters, . noon. High pressure was to move
grandparents, Harry and Katie
ff De
dl
1
Sharon Pearce, Grove City;
'Hill, and Dorothy and Dave
rapidly east across the Great
rl s
partment pen ng ssuance of warrants.
T"elma Kinnison, Radcliff;
·Sayre, Racine, and Rollind
Lakes and Ohio tonight. Low ·
Sheriff James M. Soulsby
,
Sheila
Erlewlne,
Dexter;
a
:Glenn, Reedsville, along with
pressure will develop on the tall
brother, John, of Jackson; a end of the cold front over Texas
:several aunts, uncles and couformer wife, Glenn is Dailey, and and move across the lower Ohio
·slns. He was preceded In death by
a foster daughter, Angela Dailey, and Tennessee valleys Saturday.
~ his paternal grandparents, Guy
Fort Myers, Fla.
·
;and Wanda Guinther.
Memorial services will be held
• Funeral services will be held at
Sunday at 2 p.m. at the James M.
'the E.wlng Funeral Home Sunday
The Meigs County Cooperallve
Blower Funeral Home In McAr·
~ at 2 p.m. The Rev. Roger Grace
Parish
will spo~or a Children' s
th!lr with the Rev. Troy Miller
•wlll officiate and burial wlll be In
Choir festival on Sunday at 4
officiating.
, t"e Letart Falls Cemetery.
p.m. at the Racine United ~etho·
'·
Fi-lends may call at the funeral
,Friends may call .at the funeral
.
dlst
Church.
A Pomeroy man was el ted In a
home on Saturday from 6·9 p.m.
The
pubiic Is lnylted to attend. ·
truck-bus crash Thursday at 4:15
p.m. In Salisbury Township on
T.R. 27A, .7ofa mllesOilthofC.R.
19, according to the Ga!Ua-Melgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
Jeffrey W. Ohlinger, 33, of
40600 Carman Rd., was cited for
They found that 91.2 percent of driving under suspension after ..
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) -Nine
out of.,lO students surveyed at the students admitted to particihis 1970 Chevrolet C-10 pickup hit.
Miami University In Oxford pating In at least one of four
a 1981 International school bus
, admit. they'~ . J!laglarlzed , as- academically dishoneSt practiowned .by the Meigs Local School
slgnmen Is, · a researcher · saljl ces In connection with written
Dis trlct and driven by Carrie B.
: asslgiuneilts.
Thursday. ·
Morris, 27, of Rutland. ·
The survey found 74.2 ·percent
Jerold Hale, an associate pro- ·
Morris was driving south when
lessor of communication, said failed to cite a ri!lerence for
the bus and the truck had a
plagiarism appears to be com- paraphrased or quoted material·,
head·on collision on a narrow
·mon o.n campus, and studies ~4.2 percent of students used an
stretch of the gravel road.
from other schools Indicate patt- assignment completed by
another student as their own, 40.8
erns sbnllar to those at Miami.
At the root of the problem, he percent failed to note a word·forl!&amp;AL NOTICE
said, Is the Intense pressure word quotation as a direct quote
stude!lts feel to get good grades. and 39.9 percent used purpose"What students tell us Is 'I fully misleading references to
The Public Uti~lies Comwouldn't do this except every hide plagiarism.
mission of Ohio has set for
other student Is and If I don't I'll
public hearing Case No.
90·02-a -EFC. to review
.be at a competitive disadvanthe fuel procuremeill practage,"' Hale said in a: telephone
tices and policies of ColumInterview.
DallY stock prices
bus Souther~ Power Com"They believe the rewards
.(As of lO::iO a.m.)
pimy. the operation of its
they want when they , finish
Bryce and Mark Smllh
Electric
Fuel Component
college are directly tied to the
of Blunt, Ellis a: Loewl
and
related
matters. This
grades they recelve."
hearing
is
scheduled
to .
Plagiarism prevents students
Am Electric Power .... .... ..... 30%
begin at 10:00 a.m. qn
from developing crlllcallhlnklng · AT&amp;T .... ........................... 41~
March 26, 1990, at the oland preven Is Instructors from
Ashland 011 ...... .. .............. : .35~
lices of lhe Public Uti~ties
assessing students' skUis, he
Bob Evans ... .. ........ .. ........... 12%
Commission, 180 East
said.
Charm!Dg Shoppes .'.... .. ........ 9%
Broad Street, Columbus,
Hale and two Miami colleagues
City Holding Co........... .... ... 13Y.!
Ohio 43266-0573.
- Delores Young, a graduate
Federal Mogul... ............. .... l8%
Allmterested panies will be
student, and Paul Mongeau,
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ................ ,37~
given an O!Jponunity to be
assistant professor of communiHeck's ... : ..........................., . 3\4
heard. Further inlormation
catiQn - surveyed 234 colleg~
Key Centurion ..................... 14
may be obtained by constudents
Lands' End .. ... .. ... .. ............. 18%
tacting the Commission at
. In the 1989fallsemester.
.
Umlted Inc...... :............ ..... 40%
the above address .
Multimedia Inc . .:.............. 78~
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES·
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
COMMISSION
OF OHIO
Robbins &amp; Myers ......... .. .. .. .15~
By:
Gary
E.
Vigorito.
Shoney's Inc ....................... 12Y.!
Secretary.
Star Bank ................ ... .. ...... l8~
Wendy's Int'1 ..... ...... .. .... ...... 4Y.!
Worthington Ind .................. 21 ~

at AUilllla, 7: N p.m.
Mllwaullee at Orlaa-. 7:31p.m.
New Jer.ey at Clevel,.., 1: • p.m.
Plllladel.la at W..Watloa. 1: M p.m.
Ddrolu Su .UtCIIIIo, a:• p .m.
Golde• state at Roulio.,a:• p.m.
Sacnune•to at Clllcap, 8: M

x.ftarlford ....... n n
Qaebee ............ U H

1
~

Jeremy R. Guinther

Cb.vkK~

w.·NV R.naera .34 211 1S 81
New .ler~ey , .... .'l:t S4 8 72
WMili,.Pon ~ ... 3:1 II S ,,

.

--Area'·deaths-·- -

htrifa!t nOU$~
ure ..
SHOE PLACE .

s•nQ'• rame.

8ntta., ........................ .M :It .SIS U'lt
~l*n State ............. .. .ll II .ta II
LA C11ppers ................ .!1 u

REEBOK
C!ONVERSE·.
•
BRC)OKS
AVIA
BRinSH KNIGHTS
IEDS

~mtng clolldy Friday night, ·
with a chance of snow after
midnight · and a low between 25
and 30. Cbance of •snow Is 50r
. percent. Oc«:.a slonal snow, possi. bly mixed with rain Saturday,
with hlgbB between 35. and 40.
Chance of precipitation is 90

1:

•ll•n at New Ytrk. i:• p.m.

x-BHtoa .......... tt u
x-a.HIIo ......... .fl •
x·Molirul ...... ll •

Paclfte IMYIIIo'n

K·hrU•nH8 II .711

CONNIE.
tiURSEIIATES
·HUSH "PPIES
AUDmONS
BUSTER BROWN

sll&amp;htly cOOler temperatures and
strona guaty winds.
·An Arctic front entering Ohio
early today was reducllli
temperatures even more
signlflcan.tly. .
· A, narrow band of clouds was
asJOCiated with the front. Skies
over Ohio were to be cloudy for a
few . boun before the cold h-ont
zipped through the state, bringing much lower . temperatures

------~- Weather---------'

NATIONAL BOCk.EV LEAGUE • .
waae. Collllereaee
PM rick Dlvtlloa
Team
W L T Ptl. GF GA

MJdwNI Dlvllloa ·

"

NilE

, ~MS responds to calls

Choir festival
set Sunday

,.••.,

::..~

NOW OPEN"MON. &amp; Fll. EYaiNGS Ill 6 P.M.
.'

for lids ·

Scoreboard ...
Pro resuhs

WHnHIR SHOPPING FOR EASTER SHOES
OR FOR BASEBALL SHOES, SHOP US FOR
ALL YOUR FOOTWEAR NEEDS.
·N-WOMEN-CHILDREN'S
DEITER .

r....

Br Ualled
latli ettenal
Winler·lllra temperatures have
returned to Ohio and will remain
here throll8b at leut the begin·
ntng of next week.
.
A •WJe of ArcUc air from the
tar north wu to flow Into Ohio
and owr much of the country
east Qf the Rockies today. One
cold froot moved aerillil Oblo
Thursday nlgbt and produced
. S!)llle scattered areu of rain,

FiREPLACE • CAIHEDUL (IILING
COINEI lUI • 214 WAW 16" O.C.
. SPl(IUS iiT(HEN • 12 MONTH WABAm

OUR SPRING LINEUP •.•

The Irish, trailing 35-32, scored
the final threNlOints of the third
quarter and the first 15 of the
fourth for a 50-35·bulge with four
minutes to play.
Jim Roediger led the way for
Springfield Catholic with 18
points and 17 rebounds. Matt
Mullen had 12 points and Brian
Whalen eight points and six
assists.
.
Will Meadows, the Division IV ·
player of the year, scored just six
·points, 25 below lils average, and
.hJs only one of 14 from the field.
;rlie Spartans, who finished at
,21-5, made just nine of 37 shols
the second half, 24.3 percent.
Springfield CathoUc was 15 of 25
for 6() percent. ·

--

_,
..........,...

The Daily Se

Pon•ov

Winter-like ·weather ·r eturns

vise-like pressure of Connect!·
Mayberry bit .another threeHowell kept Arkansas ahead In State, 26-6. Tile Runnln' Rebels, ·
cut's tullcourt press.
pointer a mlnule later, Day
theopenlnghalfand was a major 30-5, have won 17 'of their JUt 18
Mld-t BeJioD
followed with another and Mayb- force· when Day plclted up his games, and all five starterucore
Arh•a• N, Norill C1rollaa 13
erry then made yet another. In
thlrli lOIII Iess than lour minutes In double fleures. led by Larry
A bUTige of three-point shots · the space of two and .. a half Into the game.
Johnson's 20.7. The Cardinals'
by Lee Mayberry and g'odd Day
minutes, Arkansas had built an
So•lllealt Bepon
Paris McCurdy , Chandler
m ldway through the second half
11-polnt lead and the Tar Heels,
At New Orleans, both Syra- Thompson and Curtis Klcld all
p(Jis a 25-polnt show by Lenzle
21-13, got no closer than eight the , cuse, 26-6, and Minnesota, 22-8, average Just more than 11 polnta
Howell carried No.8 Arkansas.to
rest of the game.
are teams tllat pack m01t ol their per game, bUt their defense held
a romp over North Carolina.
The Razorback&amp; made the puneb up front. The Orangemen both ~n State and Louts vii~
Arkansas erupted on a 12-1 run
tournament's final eight teams
are led by, eenter Derrk'k Cole-: tothelrfewestpolntsthlsseuon.
. that began with 10: 37 remaining
tor the first time since 1979 and man, 18 points, 12.1 rebounds,
Tau 1ft, Xavier • . ·
In the conies! on a three-point
wiJI carry a 29-4 record Into and forward Billy Owens, 18.3.
At Dallas, Texas, the "I:exas
shot by Mayberry that broke a
Sunday's
championship Willie BurtOn has led the Golden .. Longhorns knew If they wanted'
54-54 tie.
·
Gopl)~rs for three years, and had to make the NCAA Mldwes t
a career-high 36 points against Regional flpal an all-Southwest, .
Norlbern Iowa in the second Conference aftalr, their "BMW'~ ·
roupd.
·
would have to get them there.
In the aecond game, Michigan . Xavle~ had every Intention
Slate's JI!AII·Io-mjlll defense, Thu~ll.y nl&amp;ht of •pol'lng the
meets "Lethal Weapon In" of much hoped-f~r SWC party.
t.J Tech ,......,:
"'" Denn 1s Sco tt , Instead, the trio of Lance Blanks,
. Georg "'
27.6 points; Brian Oliver, 21.6; Travis Mays and Joey. Wright
and Kenny Anderson, 20.1. The combined to score 86 of Texas's
Spartans, 28-5, held opponents to points, just three less than all of
.2.5 percent during the regular Xavier, as the Longhorns won
season, and l.bnlted their two their semifinal 102-89:
tournament victims to 36 alid 33·
Mays led the way with 32 and
percent.
Wright added 26. More bnportant
.Weal Region
was the performance of Blanks,
At Oakland, Calif., the . mat- who was 0-for-Sin the first half, ·
chup of Aiabluna and Loyola butscored281ntheseco!ldbalfas
Marymount pitS a team whose the lOth-seeded Longhorns
offense Is Its defense against one erased a 16-polnt deficit to stun
wl}ose defense is its offense. The No. 6 seed Xavier.
Crbnson Tide, 26-8, have limited
Derek Strong paced Xavier,
opponents to 61.4 points per 28-5, with 27 points while Tyrone
game, less than half the Lions' Hill scored 22, including his
seasonaverage,l25.2. The Lions, 2,000th point.
2~. are paced by the nation's
The Texas win . assures the
leading scorer, Bo Kimble, 35.6, SWC' of a representative In the
and 'run a perpetual fastbreak Final Four. Texas (24-8) will face
offense..
No. 4-seed and SWC rival Arkan·
In the second game, Nevada· • . sas (29-4) In Saturday's regional
· ,
'
Las Vegas, 30-5, .takeS on Ball final. '

KJNG SCORES - Melp designated bitter Manba Kine (left)
sUdes home on a wild pUcb by Gallla Academy pHcberJoBarmon,
Who takes tile late throw lrarn ca&amp;cber Slacey Mullen In the lhlrd
Inning of Thursday's 110ftballgame Ia Gallpolls. The rnn, wblch
broke~ 7-7 deadlock, was part,ol !'live-run rebellion tllat sent the
Marauders on their way to a IS.I2 victory. (OVP photo by G.
Spencer Osborne)

BACK TO FIBST - Gallla Academy's Ryan Young (11) gets
baek to lint u Melp first baseman Mike Walls walla lor the throw
In the first Inning of Thursday's baseball opener In Gallpolls. The
Marauders, who opened tbe·game with a three-run outburst, won
. 1-2. (OVP photo by G. Spencer O!lbome)

Mln:h 23, 1980

•

.Sprl1g Sa-l•g• On fl••
, Uted Car•l
·
1984 Chevy

'Auto.. PS. Air.

' It's no easy task to era5e
the the blight of drug
abuse. Education is vital,
but it must be backed by
a community..wide .
'
message that drug abuse is •

Cavalier~ ••• S1695
.

1981 AMC Spirit ............ S1295

4 epd:, PS. PB. Tilt whiel. Air.

t

••

un~cceptable.

1979. Ca111aro
·••••••e••••••••• S1 HIS
.

..

. Auto., PS.

A Public·Servite·Message_
Brought To ·You By •••

1981 Chevv C·10e•••••••••S3295

Shortbecl •. Stepelcle. Auto .. PS, PB.

•

1983 ·Chevy Chevette ••• S1195

. PS. Pl. AlltOmetlc.

Fortunately, there are
anti-drug ·efforts going on
in f!Nery town. Do your
part to help save lives. Get
invqlved.

..

THE J)AILY SENTINEL
I

\

�I I~

F....,, Mud•23, 1980

="

w

IHf.JOY Of

7. fXrERIEN

·&lt;

:

-·

1

\1'\John F. FUIII, Mtr:

'I

Ph. "Hill

SUPPLY
ttomtllte Saws

liS I. Mlnllrltrl Dr.

.

16141992-2039 or ·
16141992-5721
106

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

. 992-7075 .

•

172 Nerth Stcend ....

214

•.WI~t~ert, Ohio

O..reh School

271

Mioldle!iort,
OliiO
~

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
. · · 992·SJ41 ·

9:11a.m.; Momngwcnhlp,IO::IIa.m.: \:OOtll
.....tingri, 6:00p.m.; Evl!nlng wmhtp, 7:00p.
m. Wea-lay nlgti p-ayer rriMtllgandBtlie
stilly. 7:00p.m.
TilE SALVATION ARMY, 115 ~
Ave .. Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wining In chargo.
&amp;JJXI.&gt;Iy meeting 10 a.m.; SuJXI.&gt;Iy
School, 10: 11 a.m. SuJXI.&gt;Iy Scbool, YPlM
EJojoe Adamo, le-. 7:30 p.m. Salvation
Jnl!l!ttng vamus stpaken and l1ll1Dc sped all.
Thundo,y, 11:11 a.m. "'2 p.m. Lad8 Horne

p.m.

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPriST

CHURCH , Corner Ash and Plum. Noel

Me«ln&amp; 7p.m. ""elY w.m""""".

Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thursdav, 6:30p.m .

SACRED HEART CATHOLICCHURCH
- 161 Mulberry AYe., Pomeroy. Ph. 9925891. Saturday Evening Mas~ 5:11 p.m.:

MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST -

Off 124. behind Wilkesville. Charles .klnt!i,
pas t«. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; mOrning
worship, 10: 30; Sunday and 'lllursday

Suriday Mass 9:Jt a.m. CCD classes, 10:~
a.m. ftrst, !le&lt;.'Ond andttm:t Su.ysofeach
moilth. Dally; Mu1, 8:30 a .m. Confessions
Sahm:Jay afternon, f..5 p.m.
··

even ing se rvices, 7:00p.m.

MEFGS
COOPERATIVE l'ARISH

OHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APQS.

TOLIC FAITH- New Lima Road, next to
Fort Meigs Park. Robert w.. Richards,
pastor. Sunday services, 10 a.m. and 7 p;

~~=~~~~~=BI;H
Rev. Don An!b• .
Rev. P'rpk Cra(o'ot

m.; Wedn....ta;y Wcrahlp, 7 p.m.
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,

Rev. 8el•n .IOhnlon

Preachint:9: ll a.m. first and second Sun-

ALFRED - Chureh School 9: 30 a.m.:·
Worshlp•. ll a.m. ; UMYF6 : 30 p.m. ; UMW
Third Tuesday. 7:30 p.m. Communion,
first Sunday. (Archer-)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m.; Chun:h

da;')l of each month: third and rourth Sunda;i,each -:nonth wqrshir, servlcel at 7: 30p.
m.;. Wednesday eve.n np at 7:00 p.m.
.

SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST, Mul:

School tO a.m.; BlbleStlldy, TIIuroday, 7p.

berry Hel&amp;hts Road. Pomeroy. Past&lt;r Bob

m .; UMW, first Thurlday, 1 p.m.; Com·
munlon , first Sunday (Archer).
JOPPA- Worship 9: 30a.m .; Church
Sc hoollO : ~ a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
7: 30p.m. (;Johnson).

Snyder; Sabbath Schod Superintenden!,

Rodnoy Spires. Sabbjoth School begins at 2

P-1'1"!· on Sa'turday af~ernoon with worship
service fOllowing at 3:00p.m. Everyone
wel-mme.

LONG BOTI'OM - Chureh School9:30

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

a.m.; Worship 10 :30 a.m.; Bible Study,
Wednesday. 7:30 p.m .; Communion First
Sunday of Month (Rev. Charles Eatoo) '

- $later Harriet t War ner, Supt. Sunday
School'; 30 a·.m.; Morning Wor5hlp, 10: 45

a.m.

REEDSVILLE - Church Schooi9::Jl a.
rn.; Worsl)lp Service 11:00 a.m.
T\JPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL -

POMER,QY FIRST BAPTIST, East
Moll! ~1. Steve F.uller, paste.-. Genrge

Sklniteil, Sunday 1 School Superlntendenl.
Su.-ay Scbo(ll, 9:30a.m.; Morning Wor-

ChurCh School 9 a. m.: Worship 10 a.m .;
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m .; Communion First Sunday (Archer)"

riRST S.OUTHERN BAPTIST, Pom- .

vlci,7:00p.m. CD .S.T.) &amp;7;:KIP.M. (E.S.

T.) ;1 Mission Friends (ages 2·6) , Royal

AmJN,Jsadors (boys ages 6-18), and Gir ls
Ia Action
6-18) on Wednesdays. 7 p.
... tfl.S.T. ) A 7:30p.m. (E.S.T.);Tuesday

1"ree

Vlsl!allon, 6:11p.m.
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal·

ley Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawsm, pas·
trxr H~ndley ' Dunn, supt."Sunday School,
10a.m .; SuDdayevenlng serv lce, 7: 00p.m .
: Bible teaching, 7 ~ 00 p.m. Thursday.
$'RACU&amp;E MISSION, Cherry St. , Sy.
ra ~se. Ma.rk Morrow, pasta-. Services, 10
a.r,. Sunday. Evening services Sunday
an• Wednesday at 6:00p.m .

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
INJ_CHRISTIAI'I UNION, Dwight Hal~ .
ftr,. elder; Wanda Mohler, Sunday School
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.: Morning
Won hlp 10:30 a.m.; Even ing Worship 7: XI
p.nt.; We&lt;m~ay prilyer meetlng7: 30 p.m.
I\IT. MORIAH CHl/RCH OF GOD,

!!u".

1ta9tne. ~ev. James Satterflel~. pastor.
F~an Williams, S upt. Sunday School
' :41 a.m.; Sunday a nd Wednesday eve n,

""'"""'Ices, 7 p.m.

tiiDDLEPORT FIRST

.
BAPTIST.

CofllB' SixtH and Palmer. James Seddon,
Paitc:r. Edn a Wlls (Jl, S.S. Supt. ; Cathy
ltiSP, Asst . Supt. Sunday SChool, 9: 15 a .
m .;•Mornlng Worship, 10: 15 a.m. : Sunday
Evhling service, 7 p.m . Prayer m eet ing
an&lt;! Bibl e Study Wednesday eve ning, 7 p.
m.;. Children's choir practlc~. Wl'dfles.
day: 7 p.m .; Adult choir pract ice, Wed., 8
p.rrt.; Radio progra m ,, \VMPO. Sunday,
8: ~o . m .

~DDLEPORT

CHURCH OF CHRIST,

5th ~ and Main, AI Hartson, minister;
Rldlard 0\IBose, Associate Pastor; Mike
Gerlach, Sunday School Superintendent .
BlleSchool9: 30 a .m .; Mo(nlng Worship
10:
a.m. Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.

.
.
=
"

- y. ,7:00p.m. Prayer meettna.
MIDDLEPORT anJRCH OF THE NAZ·
AllENE, PASTOR Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm,
Jeah Kim.,., Sumay School Su·
dolll Sunday School 9:11 a.m.;
Worship Service, 10: 3Q a.m.; Sun.
•orit'Yftlllll oervlce, 6 p.m.; Wedn&lt;!lday 1

..,_,ti!I'VIce, 7 p.m.

CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
lll:liE, Rov. Glean McMillan, pastor.
llaJt; Matsm, SUperintendent. Sunday
School t: 3D a.m.: Morning Wors hip, 10: .JJ
~~i!. Evanaollsllc service. 6 p.m.;
ond Pralae WednEiday, 7 p.m.:
r
oet .... tp.m.
....,.IAN MINIIITK1'
, or._
£OUHrY
!IYI\ACU&amp;E

. ...o,._...,
HARRIIONVILLE PRE!liiYTERIAN

CIIUI'ICII - Sunclay: Wonblp Servl&lt;;&lt;s
t:~ Cba~~ SchooiiO:II a.m..
EPOR'I' PRESBYTERIAN ....., -ol. 9 a.m.; Chureh service,

.
nRST UNITED PRESBY·

llullllay School, 10 a.m.;
a.ta..mc..,IO:lh.m.
·
llUfU.ND CHURCH OF GOD. Put..-,
!loll ~ r I C.... llulldoy •,,..,oiJO:OO a.m.:
. _ ..., I •Worsld~li:OOa.m.CIItl·
0

M

~

•

~

0

...

0

0

M

St., Mason. Sunday School: 10 a·.m .; Morn"
lng worship 11 a .m .; Evening senrlce 6 p.
m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed·
nesday , 7 p.m .

m.

· CENTRAL CIAJ!!TEB

Rev. Don Meadow a
Rev. Wesley Tbalch ...
Re¥. Barver RlndOI•h
Rev. Katlll')'a BUey '
Rev. Poullllartla ,
Rev. !lrtbur Crabl"'e ·
Rev. Roborl Sleele

ASBURY (Syracuse) -Worship 11 a.m.
; Church School 9:45a.m.; Charge Bibl e
Study, Wednesday, 7;30 p.m.; UMW, first
Tuesc:lay ,- 1 :30 p.m.; Cholr Rehearsal,

WednESday 6:30p.m. (Thalcher)
ENTERPRISE -

Worship 9 a.m.;

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
;::::..., Moln St., Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Craig,

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCHOF CHRIST

'

. KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST,

~oger

Spring, mlnister;·Srarling Massar and 01·
iver Swain, Sunday School Supts. Preach·
ln g 9:30a.m. each Sunday; Sunday School
10:30 a.m.

10:15 • .m.

SNOWVILLE - Morninl Worohlp, 9; 00

a.m.; Chureh Sc_hool_lO: OO a .m . (Martin)
80U'l11EBN

CLU8'1'11:11

Rev. lllelioollt_.,.
Rev. Ror•
Rev. IJ,orl Rl'*"

a.-

APPLE GROVE- Clwrcb School9:00
a.m.; MorniQI Worohlp !O:OOa.m.: lilble .
Study Swwlay 7:01p.m.; Pnyer moettna
7:00p.m. Tllunclay. (IOdui)
.
~ - Worohlp 9 a.m.; Clwn!h
SchooiiOa .m.: lllbleSIUdy w - - 1 0
a.m.; Dun:u Women'• FeUowlllllp 'fled-

• = l l.m. JBakOfi.
C
I; - ,Qhl~l Scbool 1: 30 a.m.;
Wor p, 10: C5 a.m. llteoDd ud Foorlll
9uDdayo; Feii~J&gt; db!a• With Suttm
lblrd Thundi!Yct:~ p.m. CBU•I.
MORNING'STAR- Chu~b lleliool l:t5
a.m.; Worohlp 111:30' •-m.: Blbl, illlidy,
Tll=i/'.11 p.m. (&amp;q.,.),
8
·- Cba~b Bcboal, 9:30a.m.;
llor!dqWoraldflll! Mo.m. ftrllandt-.
lluildoYo; Flllowlhlo dlanor wttb Cormel
tlllnt Thu!idaY.! _!:Jll.~.m .. (~-~or).

7: :1) p.m.

. HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.

Bob Grlmm, pastor. Sund!lY School9:30a .
m.: Worship 10: 4.5 a.m .; Sunday eventng
service, 7 p.m.

tell. mtnl5ter; Sttvf stan I~. Bible School
Supt.; l{arley Jotuasm,· Aast. Supt. SUN·

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a1 Bald

DAY: Bible School 9::10 o.m.; Worship
10:30 A.M. and 7:30P.M.: Wedn~ay Bl·
,ble St.udy,7:00 p.m. ·
·
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grove." The Rev. Laura A. Leach, puler.
Church service 9::Jl a.m.; Sunday School

Knob, located on County Road ll. Rev .
Roger WUJtord, putcr. Sundo!JY SChool
9: 30a.m . ; Mornlna Wotshlp 10:45 a.m.;
SUnday eventnr worship 7:00p. m.; Wed -

CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Tom RUfiYCII, (iulor. Sundoy Sc~ool9: :Jl
a.m.; Larry Haynes. ·S, S. Supt. Mornlna:
worship 10:30 a.m.
·
RACINE aiuRCH OF. THE NAZA·
RENE, Jl!!v. John Vonce. puler: Oro

Sunday School9: 30 a .m .; worship service
10: 30 a.m.; Bibl~ study and WCI'shlp ser·
vice, Wednesday, 7 p. m .

10: »a.m.
~BURY

nesday evening Bible Study 7 :00p.m.

WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN. Cool·
ville RD. Rev. Phillip Ridenour, pastoc.

·

Bass, Cha.1rlflan of the Board of Chriltlan
.Life. Sunday lk'.h9d 9:"JJ a.m.: Morning
Wonhl. 10: .30 a.m.; Evantell~ service,

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Roy
, w. Carter, paator. Sunday Morning Wor·
ship 10:110 a.m.; Sunday Blbl• Schod 6:00
p.m.; Wednesday Bible Study 7'00p.m.
· RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST, Amos

Tillis, pastor. Sonny Hudsm.aupt. Sunday
School 9: 30a.m .: fttarnlng Worship, 10:30
a .m. ; Sunday evening service 7;00 p.m.
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO program 9 a.m. each SUnday.

7:110 p.m.: Wednesday oervlce; 7:00p.m.
. LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, !lex·
ler. Woody Call, putor. Services Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednelday. 7p.m.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

DYESVILLE COjiiMUNITY CHURCH,
Lloyd ~yre, 'Supt. Sunday School ~: 30' a.

RENE. Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday

Sf;:hool9: 30 a.m.; Worship Service 10:30a .
m.; Youna People's Service '6 p.m .
-Evangelistic serviceS: 30 p.riJ. Wednesday
service 7 p.m.

m. ; morning worshlp. lO:lJ a.m. Sunday
, evening service 7 p.m. · ,

RACINE FIRST

Bi\J'TIST, ·sieve

,. Deaver, Past(r .. Mike Swla:er. Sunday

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST. Miller
St., Mason, W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10
a .m.; Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedhes·

Sehool Supt. ; SuNiay SChool 9::JJ a.m.:
Momlng w&lt;nldp 10:40 a.m.: Sunday
ev~ng wOnhlp 7:30 p.m.; Wednesd~ay
OYenlng Blbleotudy~ 7:30p.m.

day Bl~eSkldy, vocal music. 7 P·ll'·

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud·

BURLINGHAM COMMUNn'Y anJRCll,
Burllqham Ro,y Loudonnlt, putcr, RDbort eoran. - - ...""· SuiXIIIY Scilo&lt;j
lO
a.m.: wcnND 7 p.m.; w-.;v, 6 p.m.
)'I)Uilimeottna: "ed, 7p.m.chureh~""-

ding Lane, Mason, w~ Va. J . N. Thacker,
pastor. Evening service 7:30p.m.; Women'sMinlstryThurJday, 9: :.Ja.m.; W.ed·
nesday Prayer and Bible Study 7: 15p.m.

HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH, St. Rt.

PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH .\i
mlleo'IIRt. 325:Rov. BenJ. Walls, past cr.
Robert Seorl01, S.S. Supt. Sunday School

143 just oft Rt. 7. Rev. James R . Acree Sr.,
pastor: Rev. Mike WDiett, Aut. Pastor;

Joe Humphrey, S.S. Supt; Sunday School

JOa.m.; MornlngWorshlplla. m. ; Sunday
eveatng service 6 p.m.: Wednsday even-

neoday oervlce, 7:30P.m.
.
· SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Little,

pastor. Steve Little, S. ~- Supt. Sunday
School tO a.m.; Morning worsip, 11 a .m .;
. Sunday eventne wcrlhlp 1: ~ p.m . Prayer

p.m .; Youtb meetiDgWetblslayat 7p.m .

SchoollO a .m . Sunday eventnc 7:00p.m.;
Mid· week service, Wed., 7 p.m.

Worship

port, Sunday School10a .m .; Sunday even·
ing service 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday service,

' ZION CHURCH OF CJ!RIST, Pomer~­
Harrltanvllle Rd. (RI.I431 Robert E. Pur- ·

9:3(1 a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30 a.m.;
Youth Group, 4 P.-m .; Wednesday, Bible
study 6:00p.m. Cholr rehearsal 7:00p.m.

' a .m .: · Morning
(Steele)

WednESday 7:00p.m. • ·
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPI'IST
CHURCH, 28601 State Route 7, Mlddl ...

Class, 9: 30a .m :; Morntq:Worlt).ip10:30a.
m.; Evening Worship. ~:-30 p.m. Thursday
Blbl e Study, 61:.l p:m. J
•

HEATH (Middleport) - Chu.,h Schoot,

day, 6 p.m. iRIIoy).
RUTLAND - Church School, 10 a.m.;
Worship , 11 a .m . ; UMW First Monday, ·
7:30 p.m. (Crabtree) .
·
SALEM CENTER- Church School9i 15

~

Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
BE,o\RWALLOW RIDGE·anJRCH. OF
'CHRIST. Joseph B. llos.lns, ()I!StCO'. Blbl'e

REJOICING LIFE !I&lt;U'TIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd .Ave., Middleport. Sunday

a .m ..; Worship lOa.m .; BtbleStudy, Wednesday. 7:30p.m .; UMYF ( Seniors) , Sunday, 6 p.m .; (Juniors) every other Sun·

Clyde W. Hendersoo, pastor. Sunday
School9:30 a.m•.; Ralph Carl, Supt. Even·
tng worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN

meetiDI: ond Blbleatlldy'Wednaday, 7:30

(Me&amp;bwo)
·
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: 15

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
AL CHURCH . . Kingsbury Road. Rev.

CHRISTIAN UNION, TherCJl. Durham,
pastor. Sun~ay llt'rvtce; 9:30. a.m.; tv"eri- _.
tng aerylce 7; 00 p.m. Pr'ayer meeting,

FOREST RUN .- : Worship 9 a .m. ;
Church School 10 A .M. : Choir practice,
Thursday, 6:30p.m .; UMW third Monday.
· (Thatcher )

; Worship 10: 30 a .m.; Choir rehearsal
Wednl'Sday, 7:30 p.m. ; UMW, second
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m .; UMYFSunday, 6p.m .

Janice Danner. church school director.
Churoh school.9: ~a . m. ; Moi"ningworshlp
10: 30 a.m.; WednesdaY evening prayer
services, 7: XI p.m .
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Shul~r-. pastor. Worship service, 9:30a.m.
Sunday School tO: 30 a.m. Bible Study and
prayer service Thursday, 7: 30p.m .

a.m .: Cburch School. tO: 00 a .m .; UMW first
Tuesday 7: :J) p.m. (Gr'a~) .
RACINE- Church Sc~ 10 a .m .: Wor·
ship U a.m.; OMW fourth Monday al7: lJ p.
rn. ; Men's Prayer Breakfast. Wednftidl(ll, 8
a.m. {Grace). .
.
.

· 9:3» a.m.; Moralq Wo_nblp 10:30 a.m.;
9u.Dday evening servia 7: :it p.m.; Wed·

(Rindfie!sch) .
.
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9:00
a. m .; Wo rship tervlce 10: DO a.m.; UMW
third Wednesday . ! p.m. (TIIalch..-)
PE~L CHAPEL - Church School!: 00
a .m .; Worship Service 10: 00 a .m . (Mar·
tln)
POMEROY- Chureh School, 9:15a.m.

'

EAST LE.TAin·- MorrungWorsldp 9:00

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,

SUnday School 9: Jt a .m.; Jeff Paltersoo,
supt.; Morntne worship to.:ll a .m .; Sun·
day evening JerVIce, 1:30 p.m .; Wednes·
· day evenin11ervice, 7: ll p.m.

' EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Eldea R. Blake, pastoc. Sunday
School 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Loy Io•der.
Morning $elli'IOn, 11 a.m.; Sunday night

services: Chr(1Uan Encleavor 7:!1) p.m.,
Sona aervlce 8 p.m . Preaching 8: 30 p.m.
·Mid· week. prayer meeting. Wednesday, 7

p.m.

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
·PrentIce, put or. Cllarleo Domlllu. Sundill' School Supt. Morning WoniJip 9:30 a.
m.; Sundll!' Schooll0:30a.m.; EWIIInllft'·
vice, 7:00p.m.
' MT. UNION BAPTIST, Paatcr: Joe N.
Sayre, Sunday School9: 45 a,m.; Evening
w&lt;nldp 6:30p.m.: Prayer Meetln~o 6: 30
p.m. Wednooday.
niPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. ll9bert Foaler, puler, Howard
Coldwell, $uilerlntn-: Cbun:ll achool
tun.; Wonhlp'lei'VIcel:45a.m.and6:30
p.m. Every111e welanne. . "
.CHESTER CHUI'ICII OF TilE NAZA·
.RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate, putcr.
!louJiaa Bll•l~ ltJDI, Sunday School 9: :K1
.

Wonblp Jei'Vlee, 11 a.m. and 6 p.m.
Wedatlday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·

Ing 7 p.m.

HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAI'! UNION. HarUord, W. Va .

- Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist. Sunday
BlbleStudy9a .m .; Worship, 10a.m.; Sun·
day evening service 6 p.m .; Wedneaday
evening serv ice, 7 p.m.

School ~:30 a.m.; morning wors hip and
children's c-hurch 10: 30 a.m.; evening
preaching serv ice first three Sundays,,
7:30p.m.: Special service fourth Sundav
evening, •7:30 p.m .: Wednesday Prayef
Meet ing, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
s hip, 7: 30p.m .

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,

~t. 124, William Hoback, p.ilslor. Sunday

Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morning
Worship 10:;10 a. m . Prayer service, altern·
ate Sundays.

Located on 0. J. White Road of Hlghwav
160. Pat Henson. pastor. Sunday Schoollb
a.m . Classes tor all ages. JunlorChureh 11 ..
a."'.: · Morning worship 11 a .m. Adull
.Choir practlce6 p.m. Sunday. Young Peoplt"'s. Childre n's Church and Adult Bible
~tudy , Wednesday at 7:'30 p.m .

next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland. Robert
Richards, pas tor. Services at 7 p.m . on
Wednesdays and Sundays.
·

HARRIS.ONVIt;LE HOLII'!ESS CHAP-

St .. Middleport. Affiliated with Sou thern
Ba ptist Convention. David Brya n, Sr.,MI·
nlster. Sunday School 10 n.m.; Mornln.K
worship 11 a.m.; Evening wor ship 7p.m .;
Wednesday e vening Bible study anti
prayer meeting 7 p.m.

TER of th~ Wesleyan HolJness Church.

· Rev. Earl Fields, pasJor. He nry Eblin,
Sunday School Sup,.; Sunday School lOa.
m .; Morning Worship 11 a .m.; Evening
servlce' 7; 30 p.in. Wednesday evening service 7: 30 p.m.

BRADFORD. CHURCH OF CHRIST, St .

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAFTH,

Rt. 124and Co. Rd . 5. Derek St ump. pastor.
Willlanl ' Ambergt!!' , S. S . Supt.; SUnd&lt;lv
Schoo19:30 a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 3o
a .m. ; Evening worshlp·7: 30 p.m . Wednes·
day worship 7: :.&gt;p.m.

Gary Holter. pastor. Suqday servlces ,9:3()
· a .m . and 7 p.m .; Midweek service, 7: 30p .
m. Thur-.tay.
'

· MIDDLEPOfiT PENTECOSTAL, 'l'llird

Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not·
llrtgham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 10 a .m . with classes for all ages.
EvenJng services &amp;;I 6 p.m. Wednesday Blblestudy at 7:30p.m. Youth. services Fri·
day at 7:30p.m.

PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Corner Sycamore and Second S1s., fo·
meroy: Tile Rev. Laura ·A. Leach 1 pastor.
Sunday Scbool9:45 a.m. Chu;:ch service 11

.

·

VICTORY BAPTIST,

525 N. 2nd St ..
Mlddlepor1 . James E . Keesee, pastor.
Sunday morning worship 10 a. m.; EvenIng service 7 p.m.; Wednesday evening
worship 7 p.m . VIs itation Thursday 6:30 p.

ANTI,QUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,

pastor. Sunday School9; 30 a .m,; church

service 7: 30p.m.; youth fellowship 6: 30p.
m. ; Bible s tudy , Thursday, 7: 30p.m . .
FULL GOSPEL ~IGHTHOUSE, 3304.1
Hil and Rnad, Pomer9:v. Tom Kelly, pas1
tor. Danny Lambert, -S. S. Supt. Sunday
morning servl~ at 10 a.m.; Sunday even~ lng serv ice 7: 30p.m. Tuesday and Thursday Services at 7::KI p.m .

WESLEYAN BIBt:E . HOLINESS
CHURCH of Mld~lepon,lnc .. 75Pearl St.,

Rev . Ivan Myers, pas tor: Roger Manley,
Sr .. Sunday School Supt . SUflday School
9 ;30 a .m.; Morning Worship !0: 30a.m.;
Ev~nlng Wors hip 7:30 p.m . Wednesd ay
evening Bibl e study, prayer ~nd prais e
service, 7:30 p.m.
tan, Sunday School. 9:30a.m. ; Morning

Worship 10:45 a .m .; Sunday evening 7: 00
p.m. (summer 7:30 p.m .) ; Wednesda y
night 7:00 p.m. (summer 7: :lJ p.m .~.

day afternoon services at 2: :JJ. Thursday
evening servl ces at 7:30.
.

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W.

School9;30 to 10: 20 a .m. ; Worship srvice
10:30 to,ll :.:J) a .m.; Sunday evening ser·
vice, 7 p.m .; Midweek Prayer Service,

meroy By-Pan. Rev. RobertE . Smllh, Srr,
pastor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt . Sunday
School: 9:30a.m. ; Morning WorshiP,10: 30;
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m. ; Wedilesday
Prayer Service. 7:00p.m.

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Rlollr&lt;lld

Va. Pastor, Bill Murphy. Sunday School 10
a.m .; Sunday evening 7:30p.m . P rayer
meeting and Biblesfudy Wednesday, 7;.Jl
p.m . Everyooe welcome.

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, &amp;a.·

1

le m St. Rev . Paul Taylor. pastor. Sunday
School10a.m.: SundaYevenlng7:00p.m .;
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00
p.m .
SOtiTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMEN'I;
CHURCH. Sliver Ridge. Puane Sydenstrlcker, pastor. Sunday School 9 a .m .;
Worship Se'r vice, 'Oa .m.; Sun(lay eve ning
service. 7·:00 p.m . Wednesday night Bible

vice,

n

and
Farnll.l' Healtb Senlee11 department a1 the Melp
County Health Deptu1nretrt hilll been awarded
SZII,IOO In IUpplemental Incentive funding. Tbe
proll"'m also rec:elved the blgbest ~core of 78
counties ·tbat bave almUar proll"'ms. Pictured,
front row, Jackk: Hilderbrand, green thumb .

Wolf

•WdY 7:00p.m.

a .m.; Sunday "'enlna service,

p.m.

cottqe PraYer meeting .aad Blble.Stlldy

9:30 a.m.; Worship .service, Wednelday
7

'~"i._VI~URLUTHERAN CHURCH,

Walnut and Henry"Stl., Ravenswoo:l, W.

Va. Tile Rov. Genrae C. Wetrld&lt;, pastor.
Sundoy SChool9:30 a.m.; Si.nday wonhlp

ll 'a .m.

•

~ALVAIIY BIBLE,CHURCH,

locatedoo

Po""""oy Pike, County Road 25 nar Flat·
woodl. ReV. Blackwood, past«. Services

on su.day at 10:30a.m.lllld 7::1)p.m . with

Suiida)'School9; :Kia.m. BibleStudy, Wed·
aelday, 7:30p.m.
SPIRITUAL FAITH FELLOWSHIP,
Stote.Route 338, AntlqUIJy. Rev. A. !. Ste'+"•rt, ~tor. SUnday terVIces, 10a.m. and
7.p.m.; Tueod0J1,7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHURCH, In~.• '15 Pearl St. Rev.
Ivu.Myers, octlal(lut&lt;r, RoaorMaaley,
Sr., Sunclay School Superintendent. Sun·
day Scbool 9:311 a.m.; Morntna wonhlp
10:30 a.m.; evatna wonblp 1:311 p.m.;
w,edlliaday _ , Bible atudy' prayer
and pralle lorvlce, 7:311 p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOUC - VonZaadl ond Word Rd. Eldor
Jam01 MD!er, ..-tcr. Sliiiday School,
10:30 a.m.; Wol'llllp'lltrvtce, Sumay, 7: 1!0
p.m.; Bible S1114Y, Weclnadoll. 7:30p.m.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harr~
ICIIVIItllood. Rov. VIdor-Ill. puler:
CIIDICII Foulk, Sullllay lleliool SUpi.; SoJa.
day rc-t:llla.m.; mondlla"!!f'..!!lp, 11
Lm.; •a;seaiJ!i tervloeT:IO p.m.
Pra~Keet , W..ta~Q.7:311 p.m.
S
CUBE
CHURCHDFGOD.
.......... WOI'IIdp llrVIcellaailay

-

lwldaJ
EYiaJio&amp;
......
71.,.....
.......
...,. .....,,.,,.at .....,
Ill I.JF!.;

~

IC- 11 a.JIL

CALAMITY OR BLESSING?
'.
So now It was not you who lent me here, but God.

~.

I

•

.

MIDDLEPORT - Raymond
Rice will be tbf featqred speaker
at· the Weslyan Bible Holiness
Church, Pearl St~t, on Friday,
Saturday, and Sunday at 7: 30
p.m. nightly. The public is
Invited to attend.
·

- Genesis 46:8
If anyone could have ·complained about his clrcumslances, It
was Joseph. Thrown Into a pit by his l,lrothers and sold into
slavery, he had good reason to murmur, "Why did this hap!l@n
to me?'" But Joseph learned to look b@yond secondary caus@s.
According to our text, he. believed that his circumstances were
under God's control.
When General "Stonewall" .Jackson lost an arm in bailie, his
chaplain exclaimed. "Oh. General, what a C!J,lamlty!" Jackson
thanked him for his sympathy, but replied, "You see me
wounded, but not depressed, not unhappy. I believ@ It has been
according to God's holy wU~ and I acquiesc@ entirely in lt. You
may lblnk It strange, but you nev@r saw i:ne more perfectly
contented than I am today, for I am sure my heavenly ·Father
designs this affilctlon for my good. I am perfectly satisfied that
either in this life or in that which Is to come, I shall discover that
what Is now regarded as calamity is a blessing..'" What faith! .
We often label adverse circumstances or a shattering
@X!l@rlence a "calamity." But If we could see as God sees, W@
wouldn't want to mls1 the invaluable s'p lrltuallessons we might
notgatn Ia any other way.
• Let'1 trust God. In His time, we•ti clearly see His purposesIf not on earth, then in heaven. - P .B.V.
A.a ..,_ lnwel rltr,...p life"a •IJ•do-d liGIIey,
f1'realt tprlnp of God"• love ever li.e,
A.nd
leot'n chat our aorrot.fand fottel
Are bleaainp He,."' In dilpile. -Anon.
'
- Taken From the Our Dally Bread Daily Devotional

SATURDAY

Th@ Sal@m Township Trust@es
wUI meet Salurday at 9 a.m. at
the Salem Fire Hall.
\

RUTLAND -Sign up will be
h@ld for the Rutland bas@ ball and
girls softball league on Saturday
at the Rutland Civic Cent@r from
9 a.m. to 1 p.m .
·
RACINE -Th@ Southern Jun·
lor High Boosters will meet
Saturday at 10 a.m. at th@ junior
high school building in Racine.

' POMEROY

dressing In old fashioned attire.
Members also brought In antique
items, quilts, bu Iter churns, old
'photographs, antique Bibles, and
several other it@ms which were
displayed in the foyer of the
church. Guest speaker for· Old
. Fashioned Sunday was Dr. Larry
Em@ry, of Ashtabula.
?astor at the church Is Rev.
James Keesee. Assistant pastor
Is Dwight Ashley.

Sign . up for

.

326.

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Monday l hot dog with sauce.
baked beans, fruit, ahd mUk.
Tu@sday: chill with crackers.
peanuthbult@r sa'ndwich, r@llsb
tray, fruited jello, and milk.
Wednesday: chicken patty
sandwich, french fries, fruit and
milk.
• .
Thursday1: pizza, lettuc@ salad.
fruit, and milk.
Friday: cook's chOice.

Baseball and
softball signtfP

---.-.
=--..... ..sa•wa
:.!~:=::•---

......,.~.,

11011111

MEIGS - The Zion Commun·
tty Church, Route 682, Lower
Plains Road, will have revival
beginning Sunday with ~ev .
Lynn Roush, P arkersburg,
W.Va. and R@v. Jackie Parson,
Ga!Upolls. There will be S!l@Cilil
slngirig and services will b@ held
7 p .m . nlgptly . Eddie Boyer,
pastor, invites the public.

7

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FOI MOlE

INFOIMA~ION

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992·5005
.,

ATTENTION

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Paid Card Holders
WE ARE AUTHORIZED TO BILL
YOUR PRESCRIPTIONS
THROUGH THE TILE-PAID ON
LINE SYSTEM.
·YOU ONLY PAY THE CO-PAY.

'·

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\

SWISHER LDH5E
Pharmacy
PRE&amp;CRIPTION&amp;
E: MMn

PH . 88l·2"1
friendly S.rvtc•

ap.. Won

Pomwoy. OH.

I· '

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reationscm
.Where Generations Begin

tlie
9{Jw ~amify-Centerea Maternity Care Unit
at ·

1990

Of Rail

told

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Pleasant o/affey !/{ospital
·'Vblky IJJrWe
Point Pktuant, 'K-Ut IJ/Uaini4

1 t 1 1M Yow.Chol• of

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WI.L IESEIVE TAlUS FOI S 01 MOlE COUPUS
IESEIVATIOfiS NEED TO IE IN IY MAICH 26, 1990
AT THE CHAIIIEI Of. COAUIEICE

W If Dtl rt Mid, Tea or lmlllott DrtH.

f

..

?'"ou're Invitecf
'l'o an Open Jlouse for

Qrwy. Hamlloll....

.

•&lt;

DANCE 8:30 P.M.-12 MIDNIGHT
ADMISSION
S25.00 PEl COUPLE '15.00 SINGLE

Sund., 10:00 a .m. 10 4:00 p.m .

.

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ROYAL OAk RESORT .
SOCIAL HOUR
DINNER (Steak)
7 P.M.
6 P.-M.·7 P.M.

K.nn•tl McCul011gh, R.Ph . Ch~tl• RifM11. R. Ph .
Ron•d Hlnniftg. R.Ph.
Mon. ttwu S.l . 1 :00 • .m. to 1:00 p.m.

Sign up will b@ held for the
Rutland baseball an.d girls soft·
ball leagu@ on Saturday at the
Ru thind Civic Center from 9 a.m.
to 1 p.m.

S-AY, IUICII 25, 1990
mAl DIHEI ................ S4.79
lAUD ~~~
Our OWn """'.. . . . , llmm- In A c,_,.,

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The lunch menu for the East·
ern Local School District .h as
been announced for the week of

RACINE -The Racine Baptist
Church will be obs@rving "Fill
God's House Day" on Sunday.
The public Is Invited to attend.

Our CIIWt ....... It - - Qoollo .....

•I

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REEDSVILLE - The FellOW·
ship Church of the Nazaren e,
Route 124, Reedsville, will be
dedicating their new "sanctuary
on· Sunday at 2 p .m. John
Douglas, pastor, and congrega·
lion invit@ the public.

Eastern menu

.
$3 99
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;~rr.:n·~='i:~=~~=:'o:.n:::::.~"l' -Rol.
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SATURD_AY, MARCH 31, 1990

Mildred Riley celebrate&lt;~ her··
73rd birthday tpls month with a
party glv@n by Patty ~oush and
Hlldred Carson at th@ home of
Patty and Ver'non Roush, Mason,
W.Va.
Attending w@r@ Grufa Roush,
Jeff Walburn, Htldred and K@n·
neth Carson, Paul .and Janice
Clark, Paul Alan Clark and
Debbie with clilldren. Casey and
Corey, Carl and Mae Nelson,
Nettie Boyer, Thelma Boyer·,
Sonia Parsons, Sue !?mllh and
daught@r, Ashley, SonDY and Jan
Haynes. Myra and Megan, Da·
ny@l VanGarten, an exchange
student from Holland, Ted Riley
Sr., Jason Riley. Tom and
Jeannl@ Roush and Sally Lou and
Katie Roush, Vernon Ray Roush ;
Ted Rll@y Jr., and Clara Bell.
sending gifts wer@ W@s!@y
Sisson, Betty Richardson, Lula
Mae Qutvey, and Sandra Clark.

~"t1Ht1111rlnl ~INIIIII

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Dinner &amp; Dance

Riley birthday

AU. YOI CAll Ut

SALISBURY - The Salisbury
Elementary Basketball Banquet
w111 be held Friday at 6 p.m. at
the schooL A pizza party will be
held.
,:

. ·(

Pomeroy Youth baseball League
w111 be held Saturday from 10
a.m. to 2 p.m. at Pomeroy
El@mentary. The fee is $11 and
those registering must brjng a ;·
copy of their b!rth certificate.

FIIDAY, IUICH

MEIGS -The Bosworth Coun·
ell 46 R 6 SM will hold a special
meetinc Friday at 7: 30 p.m.
There will be work In the •uper
excellent maater decree.

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LONG BO'ITOM -Th@ Faith
Gos!l@l Church, Long Bottom,
wUI bav@ a special evening of
music wltb featured singers on
Saturday at 7 p.m. at the cburch.

POMEROY -Any individual
Interested in working with lh@
1990 cansus may take that test at
the Meigs County Library on
Friday. Test times are 9: 30 a.m.
.. and 1:30 p.m. Thole taking th@
test mu~t provide two forma of
Identification. For more infor·
matlon contact th@ library.

' ~ .L.:.~-~~;;...;;::...~~~~~~~~--~
t,

and family, Racine, were recent
y!sltors ·of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah B@th and ·Matthew, were
recent visitors of Mr . and Mrs.
Eugene Haning and Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Rob@ri 'Reeves,
Brandl and Robbie, Chester, and
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Mlssle and
Jeff, were recent visitors of Mrs.
Dorothy Reev@s.
Mr . and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsville, and Mr. and Mrs.
' Char!@S Knapp wer@ recent vis,
ltors of Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Knapp, Michelle, Amy and
Ashley.

SUNDAY

:&gt;-7 P·l!l·

'

care of campater forma, and
u.ro• TannehW, director of the CFHS profP'IUII.
Back row, Carol GUinther, who takes care of
computer forma, Norma Torres, nunlng dlreetor,
Phyll~ Bearh.s, womea's health coordhtator, and
Vonme UtUe, prenatal director.

personal notes

The Victory Baptist Church,
Middleport, has been observing a
campaign @n titled "Quench
Their Thirst," which begaq Jan.
28 and wUI conclude 'Marel!25,
The church's goal for Sunday ·
sc,hool Is 100, in attendance, and
the highi!St so far for 'the
campaign has been 74 and 84 for
Sunday morning worship.
"Old Fashioned Sunday" was
h@ld March llln which members
of th@ church participated by

TUPPERS PLAINS ~There
will.be a soup sup!l@r on Friday at
the St. Paul United Methodist
Church In Tuppers Plains !ram

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH; Letart,

•

Spring Banquet

take~

Victory Baptist Church begins
special Stinday school promotion

7:30p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting, 7: :KI
W.Va., Rt.. l, Jams Lewis, putor. Wor·
ship services 9::1J a.m. ; Sunday Schoolll
a.m.: Evenlnaworship7:30 p.m . Tuesday

P~n

Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
Jr., Mrs. Curtis Thoma and sons,
Newark, were Tuesday visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thomas
Sr. · .
Tuesday visitors of Mr . and
Mrs. Charley Smith ·were Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Thoma Jr.,
Mrs. Curtis Thoma and sons ,
Newark, an(f . Mrs. Howard
Thoma Sr. Mrs. Doyle Knapp
also visited.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Thoma
Jr., Mrs. Curtis Thoma l!nd sons,
N~wark,
and Mrs. Howard
Thoma Sr. wer@ Tuesday visitors
of Mrs. J.R. Murphy aild .Mrs.
Iva Johnson.
Mr. and ' Mrs . Ronald Russell '

BURLINGHAM -The Modern
Woodmen Youth Club will spon·
sor a family program on Friday
at 7 p.m. a! the woodmen hall.
Music will be by Denver Rice and
the Bedtord and Lodl History
Group will be there and slides
w111 be shown. The public Is
Invited. ·

Rev. David McManis. pastor. Chureh
SChool 9: 30 a.m.: Sunday momlng aer·

••

MEIGS COUNTY
CHAMBER OF COMMERCE

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
senior Citizens Dance Club will
have a round · and square dance
on Friday from 8-11 p.m. Music
will be provided by the Happy
Hollow Boys from Athens. Ad·
mission is $2 per perso!l and those
attending are to b,r ing snacks for
the snack table. Th@ call@r is Jim
Carnahan.

7:00p.m.
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun·

OF GOD- Gary Hines, pastor. Sunday

UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Po-

FRIDAY ,

.ZARENE, Rev. Glendon Stroud; pastor.
Sunday School 9: 30a.m. ; Worship service,
10: 30 a.m.; Youth service Sunday 6:15 p.
m . Sunday e-venlngservlce7 : 00p.rn. Wed·
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study

received t he incentive award. He
went on to say that the Meigs
County Program rec@lved the
highi!SI score of the 78 counties .
Th@ trtcentiv@ fundiDJ. which
totals a Utile over $25,000,wlll all
go towards Improving ihe CFHS
for its clients, reports Norma
Totri!S,' Nurslng Dlr@ctor at the
health department.

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Community calendar

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·

FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH, Long Bot·

lng worship service, 7:00p.m .

.'

Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson,
Pastor. Sunday School 1!) a.m. ; Sunday
evening-services at 7p.m. and Wednesday
.services at 7 p.m .
'·

Curfman, past or. Sund.ay School, 10 a .m .;
worship service 11 a.m. ; Sunday night
worship service 7: 30 p.m.; MidWeek
praye r service Wednesday 7 p .m .

Lawrence Bush, pastor. Sunday · School
9: 30a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday even"

'

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128Mli!SI..

m.
·.
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David\

Wed.,7 p.m.
.MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURC.H,

·•

TH,E CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant

a.m.

..

CARPENTER BAPr!ST..Don Cheadle,

CHURCH Of' GOD OF PROPHECY.

ST.

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SchoollO a.m.: Sunday evening service 7
p.m . Wednesday evenln&amp; service 7· p.m.

Tb@ Child and · Family H@alth
department at the
Meip• County Health Depart·
ment bu been awarded supple·
m@ntal incentive funding for the
fiscal year 1990. ·
According to Donald S. Osuga,
program administrator with the
Bureau of Maternal and Child
Health, only 21 counties out of 78
that hav@ a CFHS Program
servlc~

Coming @Vents at Trinity
Church· ·were noted wllen the
Friendly Circle met Tuesday
evening.
Events include the soup by the
qua~t sale on AprU 4; John
St@iners, "The Crlxlfictlon" on
Palsm Sunday at 2 p.m. by th@
community choir made up of
church members from several
church@s; Easter br@akfast; and
th@. rummage sal@ on May 3 and
. 4.
Gay Perrin presided at the
meeting and welcomed several
members who bad been IlL Sh@
also thanked all who helped with
recent events including the · re·
ceptlon welcoming th@ new pas·
tor. Rev. and Mrs. Roland
. Wildman.
May@ Mora pri!Sented the
program Iron\ Jolin II, "I ,&lt;\m
The Resurrection and the Lll@,"
and alsoa narration oil the events
at the Bethany home of Lazarus.
Martha, and Mary, from Maundy ·
Thursday lhrough resurrection
Sunday.
Unison pray@r clos@d the
meeting.
Mary Virginia St@wart and Joy
Russell. served a dessert course
to 12 ' members and a guest,
Eileen · RuSS@Il. Favors were
flowered trivets.

Jl' .• pastoc. Mrs. Ervin Bau·hgardner,
Sunday sChool Supt: Sunday SchoDI9: lOa.
m.; worshiP. Servtce,J0:45 a .m .

Chureh School tO a.m.; Bible Study,~··
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW, Flri!Monday, 7:3t
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Re·
hearsal, Children's 6;30 p.m. Adult fol·
lowing; Wednesday. (Rll'l')
FLATWOODS- Church School, !Oa.m.
; Worship, 11 a. m.; l.11ble Study, Tburs·
day, 7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m. (RI·
ley).
.

"t

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·,1

CFHS recognized; gets
additional funding s

Friendly Circle
·meeting held

FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle

Borden, pastOr. O:irneUus Bunch, supt.
Sunday SChool 9:30 a .m .: Second and
fourth Sundays worship .servlce at 2:30 p.

812·11117-

.

POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF , Herrmann, past or: Sunday School 10:00 a .
CHRIST, 3:1226 Oillch!n' s Home Road !COO li)'
m.; Morning Worship, 11 : 00 a .m .; Wed·
Rood 76). !J!l2..1117. Vocal music. !bnda,y Wornesday and Sat urday Evening Services at
slfp Illa.m.; llllieStll\v ·ll a.m. ; Wcnl'ip, 6p,
7::Jl p.m.
m. w"""""'l!'· Bible Stilly, 7p.m. ~-. ·
APPLE GROVE UNITED ME:I'HO·
uuubn IIDpe, evan(J!Ilst.
· ,DIST CHURCH - Pastor; Rev . GaJ:I
OW DEKTER BIBLE · CHRlSTIAN
Hi cks, 10 miles above RaQ!ne on Rt. 388.
CHURCH. Jack Cleland pastcr; Alana OeSunday School 9 a.m., worshi p service 10
l.,d. Supt. SuJXI.&gt;Iy Scilo&lt;j 10:00 a.m.; Yootll
a. m. Sunday evening service, 6:00 p.m.:

1r 7;•;JO (E .s:t.) ; Wednesday Prayer 'Ser-

992-2121
106 Mulitrry ....

Mldoleport,, Ohio 4'17110

.,

di es' Auxiliary. Wednesday, 7 p.m . Fa m Ily WorsliJp.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rt. 124. 3 miles fr(lll Port land-Long Bot·
tom. Edsel Hart,• pastor. SunOay SChool,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday momJng preaching
· 10:30 a .m .: Sunday evening services, 7; 30

p.m.

evenlnaworshlp, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.)

Establ!sh@d 1913

93 MHIItrHt

dren' s Oturcn u a.tn. s unday t:venlng
SerVIce 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. Young La·

Thursday, Oir!B Cad"
IYOUIW Peolie-BI~) . 7:11p.m. Bible
Stilly and Prayer lllf&lt;:llni!O opm tote.. pmllc.

10:~:

..Dif(nit)' a~d Sen )i('e Alway.s'',

5frtll .Q3;...r.,

~itldleport

. 264 South 2nd

League. memi:Bs in ctuJr&amp;e, aU wcmen.

er&lt;rl' Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor:
JaCk Needs, Sunday School Director. Sunday.. School, ·9:30a.m .; Morning Worship,

EWING FUNERAL HOME ·

UWUNGS-COATS

and ooml:UlEld with mcrrtng prayer on the
tNrd 9.tnd8y. Morring prayer and sermm on
au otiEr SuJXI.&gt;Iys &lt;t the morih. Olureh Schad
and Nu""'J' care proYidod ColleeiDIIr Ill the
Parish Hall lrnnedllfe\Y followln&amp;lhe - ·
POMmOY anJRCH OF OIRJST, 212 W.
Main St. Leo Lull, ovanJII!Ijllt. ·Btlie Schad

ship 10.:30 a .m . : Wednesday evening
prayer and Bible study, 7: 30p.m .

TRACTOR S_ALES
204 Condor St.
P01111roy, 011.
992-2975

Nort~

s....... .

""""""·

Prayer and Bible Study.

GRAV~lY

BILL QUICKEL

992·6669

p.m.; m~c~cw-or. 7 p.m.
GRACE EPJS(X)PAL anJRCII, 3'l6 E.
MolD St, Pomeroy .. &amp;JJXI.&gt;Iy """"""'' Holy
IJlrJUIIIIdon on the llrst SuJXI.&gt;Iy oleach rndntb,

a-

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

716 NORTH SECOND AVE •

SHOP

POMEROY CHURCH OF 1liE NAZA·
RENE, .Oirner Union .,d Mulbl!iry, Rev.
'Jbomas Glal Mc0111!, poster. N&lt;mlllll Pres·
ley, s. s. &amp;.p., &amp;l~X~.&gt;~Y School, 9:11 a.m.;
rnc:rrR\g 'M:I"Shtp 10: ;J) a.m.; evenlnglei'VIce6

Invited; 6:4:1

e ..Main

9: 15

u'* dlredlon &lt;t Lola Burt.

'•-Of· 011.

·•

992· 5130 Pomeroy

IO:lla.m.&lt;ll&gt;~re­

lutllfll!ll ....

Frldlly, M8n:h 23, 1980
'-a• 7

•

~----~-;,...___ _ _ _ _ _

Nancy Manley l01t the most
weigl!t and Helen HIUwu runner
up at the Tullday meeting of
O}lio TOPS 570 held at . the
Car!l@nters Hallin Pomeroy.
tennle Belle Aleshire o!l@n!f\1
tile meeting in ritualistic form
and welcomed two new
members.· Peagy VIning gave a
r@adlng on emtional eating and
conducted a quiz In which Tina
Geary was the winner .
Dorll! Bailey won the fruit
bask@! and the surprls@ gift was,
won by Darlene Buckley.
It wu reported that N@llie
Grover was Ill' and tllat Ozby
Martin had had heart surgery.
• Brenda Templeton was con·
gratulatea tor reaching her Kops
in Waiting status.
The n@lCt meeting will be held
Tuesday with weigh in from
57"6: 3(l p.m. and m@@ting
following.

\ now1;11 JOIIVIIf O[U:IION

~~~~992·2104

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

1!1

.

Pllile..,

By The Bend

TOPS
•
meettng
conducted

'

Pomstog 'Flow, s••P

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

Fill Doctors•
P rescript~ons
. .,
99l·29U
Pomeroy

FURNITURE. HARDWARE

'

.~

'fhe Daily Sentinel:

. ;
--.l;,·: : ·- ·~ - . -~

1).

of Columbus, 0 .
-104 W . M~in
H2· 2lll Pomeroy

-""

Pon~eroy

SWISHER·&amp; LOHsE
PHARMACY
· -~
-we'k

RIDENOUR

[B

Pomeroy
"2·ll25

,.,.-

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This Message antJ, Cla~h Din!ctory Spo~red, By _TI!:e. Im,e_rested lJwitW3Ses Listed On .ThiS Pllgl!.
·~ . . MEIGS DRE .
TEAFORD REALTY ·
P. J. PAULEY; AGENT
(row's Family Restaurant
"F~tlwhtf Krttllif Flltl C/Hei.w"
. ". ~ CENltR, INC. •
· 216 s. SecQnd
Nationwide Ins. Co,
2U W. Mai.n St., Pomeroy
992-5432

..
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&amp;-The Daily Sentinel

Ps;a

Surufay, Marcli 25, 1990
tioursfrom 1 to J p.m.

.,q
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.•I'•
'•

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�,
Sentinel '

F~.

·· Public Natic:a
(COIItirluMI from

Pet• 2)

force from ond Iller Feb. 28.

·-t... . . .

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c~:~:~~~1~:~

~

___.

2

In Memory

8

PubliC Sale

&amp;Auction
In Loving Memory
Of Our Dear Mother
GLADYS WINES

Who Died
March 25. 1984
And Our Daad Dlld,
CLYDE WINES, SR.

Who Diad
March 2,, 1985
Not a day do we forget you;
In our baarts you are
· always her,.
As wa loved you. so
we miss you
As It dawns anqther
'year.
You left a beautiful
memory;
And a sorrow too
great to bli told.
But for us who have
loved and lost you
That memory .will
never grow old.
Sadly missed by
Daughters end
Their Families

CHARITY AUCTION ·
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL GYM
SUNDAY, 'MAICH 25
1:30 P.M.
121 Stereos, Woodburner,·l21 Pianos.
redwood lawn furniture, chair, several
antique dishes. depression glass, wood
shelves, 3 seta of snow tires. several
coins, TV sets, stove. freezer. bed
frames. cenlficate for room cleani.n g by
Stanley ~teamer. plus misc 1 items.

ITEMS TO BE' DONATED FOI THE AUCTION
MAY BE LEFT AT THE SCHOOl ON
SATUIDAY, MAl, 24 - 1·3 P.M. or
SUNDAY, MAR. 25
12 Noon to 1:30 P.M.

CALL 985-332,9 to have your
donated items picked up.
Sponsored by Academic Boosters
and The Class of '92

-

BILL SLAtiC
992-22(.9
EVENINCS .

~·6-19-~n

SITEWORK • ROADS

,_.,Ohio
·
1-'»·n.z
KOUNDY ILUI

DUMP TRUCK
Sand-Sto11e-Dirt

,(614) 667:- 327
Grant A.

•Mobile .Home
Parto

•Mobile Home
Rental•
•Lot Rental•

• 992-7479
lt. 33 North of

POMtrcy, Ohlc
1·12-'IB·tfn

'

2~

SE~ICE .
We can r~ ailcl re1111'1 radtaton and
htattr coril. Wt can
idsa add boil en! rod
out· r.dia,tors. Wt also
rtpair Gas .Tanks.

PAT HIU FOlD

South 4th Sl.

992-2198
Middleport,

lt. 124,

r-oy

Altt Tra••lttlo•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-.7121

CAll

992-2772

.4-25-Hn·

3-5.'91).1 mo.

DAVE'S
SMAU. ENGINE
- REPAIR

FURNACE

l-tod at Y6y l....,
In lllddlopcrt, 01!.

PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC

RACINE
GUN CLUB

FURNACE
FUINACE

KEN'S APPUANCE

SERVICE

Stoc:ll Parte for

1

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Starts at 1:00 P.M.
Factory Choked .
12 G•uue Only
.
9-6-89-ltft

y•u:-2.s.u er 915-3561

~

Stratton.

:= i,!"::.' ~
-

14-&lt;141-1121.

=.=

PH. 992·3922
6-21-'lt-1111

Stop In and See

DALE HILL

c

..... wh-hllrod. white
ald. Ulna
ch-n. To ve to good
tenllr. Four

-

Colll1
,...,...
.
One JOI! old, ....... liaer 1111.

. _.,......_.,

Dlll•:lld.lrtt. ll'lllnild,,.o al.Colt lt4-

-ta4177.
lo good -

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•.. ·-llult

....

Wlnlltl: , Pa ap -:~J.In
or
...... .Couniii .WI lila lllllftl

IMdTYeit-_be,_lor .
C::?t'~ oft• I:DD Pll. ·

Lost • Found

::I;."- -Mr. 114-742-

Hou....for . . . .
a bed...:' 1":':'::.~":;

41

=. .

.

Yard Sale

7

RL JIM IMIIII
biJOOWW, MWir

r ,....,.
-IIM.'I·•"···

2

•

'

r• Jaa am.e. ..,_, on

GalliPoliS

&amp; VIcinity

NOw--

ALLYoniiiiH-IIPIIdln .
- . DEADLINI: I:DD p.ot.
lhi.Y be...., thl od II 10 nm.

Public sale
· &amp; Auction

--·-COm. . . . . . . . tho·---

12

·Wanted
·.
'

......

' - - Oh!!._K_ontuafly, W!'OI
Ylrglnll, 304-TR&lt;t711.
.

.......

uperlenol"'
,..-..nc'!,
Ucen· Auction
- · 18
"' ,
Mil and , _ In "Ill Vlrglnlo 1f1!1 Clllio, 304-27So3447.

I

'"' .....

EIIGirtc - - pllno. 114-.

wtlhoill
- · Coli Lorry· Uvely .at431W3DS.
at~

32 I\ICJblle Homll!
tor Sale

for Rent

... .,.., ~.
114 4MtiSO. '
.

_ _ for_O&lt;_.
ltMG-7471. '

...... "'
b-

AKC r.giOI- mole fllllh-Tzu,

........ ,..

-•wynd Celllry - ·
.........
and
Hlllllll""' ldtllftl. ct.- otUd
..mot. 114 141 IIU lifter 7
p.m.

,.,~

Ooocf 111....,:21111.

.. At: t10.11t -

0&lt;

...~. lild Olh.- at~

-

blond, :rvoorold, ,.,....,._2110.

b-

-~ ... 10 Ill! "'• 111/\ft"'ahhP

MM714 ol•II:OO p.m.

-

.........

,.,~

'"'
- ad.. 11Mtl
Ooocf1111
pll'lllla

Wanted to Buy

Junk .... with

IMitv,-....
lnd ....
IIN4114or-HMO:
ontll; llon"III4Jid

.... nnly
MC. - 1170 . -~ Llnoo1n
""'"
lbr Hllghle.l1t ..UMI

now booldng - - . ...

9

··-·--·-

OIIIIIIIOIIIr - " " ' ; .... grodo
-'mant'h,
city !04..f7l..
...... 1271.
-Run lkt.lholin
ill ,, _ _
.
211:1.
bf IIIIICiriiMint.
114-117~. .
. ,.•.
42 · ·Mobile Homu
Two or ' ttn. WOOM. NIIW

p.m.lotu. .y.

8

LJnooln

114-1112-

t-1~-101.
TOIII -110, · 1- -1, ..... J........,2bfooklof - -

=-' .,::.-; ~·~- I~

IDtl.

'

.

.,. Wllnted to Do

...., •. u. "~= ""dlf.:

:'

- - - 1 1 1 , ........ 1111
...... of .-lno. Ceii814-IIIZ21551diY•) or lf4-MI-lllltil lof. '
t• I p.m.)' Aok 111&lt; Noncy.
·
Old Olone ,.,., looltlll, .onvl,
knivll, guno, buttormoldo, poobt wafolloo, running
or not ... owl•• 11~
2tiD.

t-.

'IT .

35 Lola &amp; Acruge

~lfondly-lo....... ' halrod, whllo oprtooc ona . ..... 11 04.

Old and ........ ly -

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSUlATION

31 H011111 for Sale

121 ..... . Of Hoy, lllr!&lt; ""'
good. 114-117-7411.

Olio

REPAIR

t~~lrocWMI ...... ,_.,..
'

t--.t.=:tomoot.1

AUTO &amp;TRUCK .

Residential I&amp;
. Commercial

FREE ESTIMATES

Giveaway

4

.

C:it. . '-rM-,If ............

=··4111112

.

'

'DA T I M - T........
lrliNM!a, - . . • -

. . . . . . Pruning HIOigee. 114-

••••• •

•

-

...W,

co --

- 1 1 8lli lliiiiillll

Roady

-.tt4-MT...e.

.

Ia

lion'(-_logo..lo,....,IDW'III ...........

tll1. .
Peulo'o IIIJ Cerl Cent•.
..,., aftorclll*, ohllda•.,.. N
....... 1:30 p.m. ~ ,2,..tD.

or les. 949-2160
NO SUNDAY CAllS
• 4-16-16-tfn

114 Ull224

104-111 tiM,

,....

11
. 3-, :J. 'I(). tin

SUN'S UP TANNING
New
Lima ld., Rutland, Ohio
.
1 Stss1on ........................................ S3.50

RUTLAND TilE
. SALES and
SERVICE

6 Sessions .........................~ .••.••.•••• s12.00
12 Sessi0111................................... '20.00
15 Stssiorts................................... S2 5.00
·FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIBLY MORE

Algnment

•Oil Change r. Lube

LOTIONS - STICKERS

•Brake Work

Howard L Wrltu

.

.

•Tire Sa)es
•Front End

Apply In Person/

I

. Call SUian c•man, 74Z·J

1-15-'90-lfn

PIZZA

.Gutters

·Downapouta

949-2t.68
.
2-l.'!IIJ'111o.•,d.
---- ..... - -

GUN SHOOT
UCINI .

FlU DIPT.

...........lnt

naY-

SAT.

...

•aHT

.6:10P.M.

12fiiiiiii~~Ottly
StrickiiJ I

mo.

•

Mtrchandl ..

,

IDL ' :

-nl

AVON • All .,.., Cell lllrllyn
--21411.

w-•

-

-ulhle

FNita&amp;

-·

have - -· eelllng, '

~ wtlh
-tiio
working
the- blWill
llhl•
- l l y thr&lt;&gt;ugh lhl Cllllo .

--- ·VolleJ OtilonlatiOnel -

21

o '

MW O'IWII'iiiiNIHD APTIS
HOW CIPIN. DNI .AND 'TWO
NOIIOOIII. DA11' IDW'II-

' ......... '

mull. Untrtnllod grawlh poton-

41DD -nai7MI?I.

Oilfiottunlty

1111 for In ~~~~~- ·
- .to: CIO Boll Dat, o/o 011llpolle lillY Trt-. as Third
A - Clolllpollo, OH 41131.
........., Won At Home.

'

....

vealtlb181
lor_,

t~.71

lt4471GD2.

o -·Cell

.,... Uwwt el
~
1111-.1, WY. 304-2734447.

INDIICm

CillO YALLIY PUILJIII.III CO.

rz

IIuol

zw•=• .._.

J'OU....=-•

-pn~

===-~-=
.....

QomJiut•
Porto,
Cnlllve
er.tlo, Woodon No..llloa.' .ExDIIIenl Income! 501 111 2331
AJ F !

.

r'

.........WI Ill II •

II ~

..... WIIIIIIIIIniL.Po:••or.
. . . . ..-..stl-llt71t.

........ ,..,, ...u,.,, • -·,.
~MIIn2&amp;­

~

IAIIH -EY .A11dlnt - 1
. .;_,. 11011111101.
llolilo. ( I ) - - lilt. YtDt ••

LOWEST PIICES
IIGHEST QUALITY
REE lOCAL DEUVEIY
POMEIOY AND MDlEPOIT'S ONLY

NEW- REPAIR

FREE ESTIMATES

1

.
Mlscellii'IIOUS

Help wanted

Dllry- of Clolllpollo.
lb"'rllnOid glflt oooll Wlnted. '

STREET

ROOFING

Gutter Cleaoing
Painting

'

Mu*ill

Instruments •·

Employment Serv1ces

1-11-90-tfn

MAIN ST.; IIUTLAND

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

'

.......

985-4422

Area's Largest Multi-Line New Car Dealer
Now Accepting Applications For Sales Positions

54

_ . , = I l l...... RtiUnlblt

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

57 , ·

Top Ceoh pold. Old lumlhn
...-... quiNa. ortontll,
........
to.,.,304-121-!271.
oi - or
a.11 00111ct

,..... .,.., IIOhDIII: 'Dicp IM

R. L.· HOLLON
TRUCKING

..... Workl
-,..,. ...
.....
Pro .....
II honli. Cell

tor lnflormOI... - lxt.lt:O.

.

I '

I

.....

I full

"1!,)0' Q!.

~..,-....
'

.

l0Cll1YOWNED PIZZA SHOP. ' ,

, Pizza-Subs·.Salads-Daily Specials
992-2228
'

---

mo.

.

I and J COISTIUCnON
GIIG IAUY
•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODEUNG
•GENERAL CONTRACTI.NG ,
A Gr~at C.-Jnation- .

"Quilty cnl •••able Pricu"

WIIO M IIllA . ._

992·6110
' .

~

Clllruplln(l8plft48.
bill to !hi

'*· ..

1

,

.

••

....... -

75 Bolltl • Motortl
forBaiB .

"You realize wl}en they lift
the'. 55-mile .speed limit, we
· won'\ be able tQ compete."

to_.. ... to OU lpofng
Clulrilt:, lllollo flln I OIF
poole, o14-44t-.
-

8

Roger Hysell
Garage

Heating, Cooling,
Refrltltratlon
Service

VINYL SIDING
VINYl REPlACEMENT
WINDOWS

Announctm~nta

lool: Fram Doat• - · ._..
"'-Y mothiir

CUMATE
CONTIOL

Spulal 0•

'! · z.l -

lionde -

·s

. 7t2-30U

r1 Tremendous Benefit Package
r1 On-The-Job and Factory Trainh:ig
r1 Pleasant Working Conditions
r1 Five Day Work Week- No Sundays
·r1 No Experience Necess11ry
If You Are Not lntert~tsd In A Clrttr

3

PH. 949-2101
or a... 949•216o'
' . Day .. tight
NO SUNDAY CAllS

992•6173

811417:1.
for '"""' "' -

r, rmo uncr me nl s

"At lnatualtla Prien"

Good Roteo
T.L.C.
27Yro. Exp.
Ret.."'-

::...~=--~:-::"=.· -

CHESTD, OHIO

MOBILE
HOME .PARK

Ollr .

·1·-·-·-·

mo.

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

INSULATION

PH. 949·2101

II thl

1. . . ......... - ·
ta,III0.
114-4IWIII.

Ua .t So•el

CUSTOM -T

J&amp;L

NI._WLAND
ENTERPRISES

.....

--~~---

Other Y•d OmMnenu

BISSELL
BUILDERS

20% OFF ON 'All

t -t2-'80-t

"Free Estimates"

--

SMpl

•Comont Bird lolt.
•Foum.ln Bird lathl• fltut
Door, FIOQI, A"'olo ot~d

. V. C. YOUNG IU
992-6215

Mi&amp;kleport, Oh.
"lOW MCGill IIIOMI"

CLE~RING

(AIIewl .....

.com-. """""'

.r

Homellte, Woa&lt;lellter.
Tocumoah. Brlggo &amp;

-~

tiM 0N11- VIII ..... .
AIM'III' ............... -

ao.v•• oaov alld lott.

.......

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Moat 2 end 4-cycle
engln•

,,

IN ITOCK: -.... . -

~c&gt;r.~o;~,J'iise:.21.2a5 ;;;;;;::;;:~;;,~

ERWIN

........
,__.__lo _ _
'

IS NOW OPEN
FOI IUSINESS.

'"'_,

Wl1~er

73 YIMI4WD..

tm---4WD. ·

SHOP
mac-.0110

SEIYICE

rvi• ce·s·

ui'ili'N~~;;;.:· e~~

m 'N' CARLYU:e

. . ..

YOUNG'S ·

1----------1
B US I• ness·"L----

~~~~~:,~~~:~:0"::.1

LAFF·A·DAY

Business Services
.

Exc. Rcpt • Other Finan.
12/31119 .. ............. 1,140
lourcM OvM/IUnder)
Tr-ury
Exp. Dlob. • Oth.................... 19,373
UM1/ Not ............. l3.7801
30.000
MICIOWAYE
Fund C.h lalenoo
TOIII T,.•u·ry
1/ 1/-9 ............... 42,127
OVEN HPAII
.................. 49,373
Fund C.h Bclenco
Out
.
.
ndlno
.............
20.00
• ALL MAlliS
12/31/19 ............ 38,377 TOTAL
liM. tor Encumbr.
BALANCE ......... :.49,363
Iring It In Or We
12/31/SI .................. 714
SUMMARY OF
·. Plclr Up• .
I NONEXPENDAILE
INDEITEDNESS
TRUST FUNDS
0.0. BONDBlEN'S APPUANCE
RECEIPTS:
Outot. t / 1/ 19 ...... 33,000
TMOTieqetLioneouo ................8
Retired ................... 4.000
SERVICE
rAL
OuUt. 12/31/81 .... 29,000
"2·5335 01' 915-3561
RECEIPTS .................... &amp; OTHER BONDS
DISBURSEMENTS .... - 0~
.NOTESExc. Rcpta. • Othor
117 L S.C. Po orey
Outot. 1/1 / 89 ...... 71,800
Fin, 8oUCM 0-/(Unlledrod .......... , ...... 83,851
· I'CIIIIIIOY, 0110
d4irl Expand. Dlab. l!t
'
311/'90/ltft
Outot. 12/ 31189 .... 7,748
Oth• U.../Net .. ............ :11 TOTALS,Fund C.h Belenc:e
Outot. 111188 .... 104,800
1/ 1/89 .. ................... 1SII
Ret- ................. 17.8111 '
USED APPLIANCES
F1u2nd
/ 3C.1/Bh9Bolence
190 Outot. 12131/88 ... 31,748
DAY
"lhlo II on unoudltod
TOTAi:ii"' "" '
Flnonclll "-port"
RECEIPTS:
I
..tlfy
thlo .-port to be
locli nxM ............ 111.001
I:Orf'Kt •nd true. to the b•t
lntor-vernmontll
up
•of my kn-lodgo.
Revenuo .............. 34,11117
Jonlce
LOwoon,
Clerk
Chorgee tor
.
up
3/20/80
S.rvlcel .............. 88,042
liN'S APPLIANCE
10&amp;3 Ch•ry St..
Fin·• · Licon-. lit
P.O. Box 281
Permha ..... ..............3,1111
SERVICE
Sy,.cu•. Oh. 411778
Mlacllloneo~l........... 8,279
' 814-992-73111
992-5335 915-3561
TOTAL
Acr-f.-P..t~
RECEIPTS
129 400 131 23. 1tc
.........
•
DISBURSEMENTS:
Socurlty of Peroon lit
Pr0perty ...... .'....... 17,337,,
I'
Lelauro Time
·
Actlvltloa ................... 181
Trenoportotlon .. ..... :.. 3,733
Oon ...l
·
1 .,:~~::.,.:,.;:,:~~:!...!
PI.IIMIING HEAliNG
Governmont ........ 24, 785 I'
.... location: '
Peraonli
161·
North Slcond
B0 rvi·17 788
..............
•
•io!lllaport,, Olio 45760.
Controctuol
Servlces .. ... ......... 11 ,919
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Suppll11 ond
We Col'l'y Fiihlng But~t~U•
Mot.-1111 .... ......... 30.714
·
Your Phone
Copltal Outlrt ... .....•.. 2,800
Here

11110.
Counoil end ,.,.I lie r•pon- · Peuod tho 28th drt of Fellllle for tile IWiy octlv-loa bruery, 1980.
of 1he .... p.
.
ATTEST: Jon P. 8uck. Clerk
Icc. IV. lh11t tile mayor,
~ M. Horton.
with epprov81 of ex&gt;uncll.
PrMkMnt of Council
lhelloppointtheortOincl.. 13118, 23, 2tc
- - - B o a r d of Dlrocton 1 0 - untl Dec. 31,
Public Notice
1110. Beginning Jon. 1, I-::-:-::::-::-:-:~=:-::-:~~
1181 the loerd of Dlrectoro CASH BASIS COM liNED
ANNUAL FINANCIAL
ohlll be oppointod by th8
1n11yor, with council oppro.
REPORT
. For FIICII· y - Ending
vel, tor the following tormo:
One m.-nber - to be op.,_.,., 31 , 1888
pointod for a one-.,..,
SYRACUSE VILLAGE
tlrm.
Meiga County, Ohio
One member ·- to be •P·
SU!IIIMAIIY OF CASH
polntod tor 0 two-ye1r
BALANCES. RECEIPTS
linn.
AND EXPENDITUES
One m.-nber - to be •P· GOVERNMENTAl FUNDS
polm.d for a thrM-.,.or RECEIPTS:
be
locll To~ll ............ 16,008
0 linn.
n;...:":~r-;, tfour-~:; lnteriiOYernmontol
·
'*"'·
.
Revenuo ........ .'..... 34.657
lh,.. momboro - ·to be op- C~l-l'lJM For Sorv·
6 071
0
".. .... .. .... .... .. ... •
polntod tor a flvo-.,.ar
· Fin•. Ucon-. &amp;
llrm.
·
. Perrnlta
Eoch expired t•m therOII................ ,3 •616
t.. oholl be filled by the ~OiacT.:'~MIOUI ........... 7 •100
mayor. with council opprovel, fer o p•iod of flvoyllra. · Dl~~~~re~ENTS.. 86 •260
Any voconcl• which occur &amp; .
lty ~- •'
In tho Boord of Dlr-ora owcur 0 1 . . . on
Property ....... ....... 17•337
• L~I be fillod by·tL- m-or
-Ith
councllopp...::..
"'
Lelaure
Time
W
·-~
191
Sec. V. :fhot th•olo her•
Actlvltloa """"'"" '"'"
3
733
by c'eetedwlthln thevHiogo JJ!::::i'A"!,~n .......... •
t-ury 1 fund to be known
24 796
11 the
Mldcleport Arto o:~mont. ............. '
Council Fund.
~- Ice
Sec. VI. Thill Ill opondi...rv
................. 21 •286
turM of the Midcleport Arto TOMT:NTLDSISBURSE- 87 341
, Councllohellbeopprovodby
............... •
L- Boord of DlriCtoro end Toto! Recoipta ov•l un·
t ·dar Dlabur11aubmitted to Middleport VII12 0911
lege Council for their con· Tr:~f!:~············ .. ·· •
ald•otion.
1
Sec. VII. Thotetl .. pandi- Tr;.;;~;~
.............. .... 3 ' 078
tur• opprovod by tho Boord
Out
11 .ft 41
Other
by the Cl•k·Tr-urer from TpOoTn:~of'Hiiii"F' i'N"· 11 • 2581
MENTS .............130,382
tho Mlddloport Arta Council
·
Toto! Rocllpta Over/
·
Fund If tundo oroavollobloln E~~U~~~~~~~~~~.!~I "" 324 Undor Dlab .. .............. l9821
HUCI'S (AI WASH
thil fund.
Fin. Sourcll Ov•oiUn'Miaclllonoouo ..... ,... 47,173 510'12 21111 St. Midclltpor
S*&lt;:. VIII . That all donedor) Exp. Dlab. •
Tronofera
Other UHO/ Not 11 7871
&amp;ln ....................... 3,847
Far Appt. Coli I
tiona to thio group' or fundi
••rned from the octtvitiel of
···· '
Tran.ofero
Cuh Bolonco 12 ao3
992-6717
Home or '
thiagroupahallbedepoaitod Fund
Out ........ .............. (3.827)
·
111 /89
2
lnthiMiddleportArtoCoun· Fund c~i;'jji'i,ii;iii" ,gg
Dtbt .S.rvico ........160, 2031
992-6 44 Gara~e '
cil Fund ond ahflll,!':! Cun~ 1 2/l1/89 ............. 10, 786 OtEhor Ua11/ Nonop. "40I
3-t5·'9o- mo.
tho o u - o 1·- 1 ••· RNorvo fer Encumb.
xp.... .... ......... .... 11 ,g
Tr111h u,. r thetu~e 11 oil
12/31/89 ............... 348 TOIII/(UOthorl Fin. Sou r- &amp;&amp;OI
100 ............. 14 '
ot or v11101 •-·
RROPRIETARY FUNDS
en
&amp;oc. IX. Thot the by·l-• RECEIPTS:
Exc. Rcpta. • Other Fin.
tor tha opcrlltion oft he Mid- Chorgeo tor
Sourc• Ovor/IUndor)
S 1
82 971
E•pend. Dlab. &amp; Other
dleport Arta Council, eo for·
lrv- ...... ......... •
Uoea/Not .. ............ ,(6,6121
muletld by tho Boord of Dl·
ractora. ahall be aubmhtod MlaciiiMeoua ........... 1 •174 Fund CO.h Balonoo
Custom Built '
to Middloport Villooo Coun· TORTE'~EIPTS
•
1/1/89 ......... ...... :,64.886
ell for thoi&lt; opprovol.
...........84 •14 g
Fund Coah Bolon co
Homes, ·,
12/31/89 ............. 49,363
Sec. x. Thot the Middl• ~!~~~:SEMENTS:
~emodeling ~
port Rocr.otlonlil Director
8 orv1ceo ......... ..... 17' 788 Rea. tor Encumbr.
and the Mlddl-ort Art a
Repair Work.
~
Controcturel
Council ahlll coopcrllo in
s
·
11 919 6
Lost
&amp;
Found
the - b l l o - t ofvorloua
orvocoo.... .......... •
985-3365 '
Supplleo end
·
comn:&gt;unlty lctlvhloa In orM
'II
30 714
36629 Sl7 i
derthlttheroorenoclupllca·
at•• • .:........... '
LOST
lion of aorvlcei end thot the . Copltal Outley .. ..... ... 2,800
POMEIOY, OHIO
b11t· lnllrMto of tho com· TOTAL ·DtSBURSEBlue Denim Boys
2·6-'~1 mo.
munlty ond vllogo governMENTS ............... B3 ' 021
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With
ment 8111 afweya of top prior· ToUI Rcpt1 Over/Under
. .
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PIESCIUPTION
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Sec. XI, That thlo ordl- NON·OPERATINO
GLASSES •"n
nonce lo horoby decl.-111 to REVENUES :
· TRIM and ·R Epocket
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*LIGHT HAUI!ING
vide for tho contln~nco of
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lolcr link
011
activities to prov- ad•- o0 bt a. ice
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12821
of tho Vlllogo of Middloport. TD;li.'oTHER,FiN...SOURPIHM rttunt to
Soc. XII. Thla Ordlnonce
ES
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lhell take affect ond be in
C / IUSE I ~..:..:
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F.

: ~~~...~~a~~...U.l'!~~tlleme of the program presented
' by Emma Adams, lecturer, at

tbe recent meeting of the Racine
Grange No. 2606 held at the
II'&amp;Dge hall.
Readings and poems by the
members were given during the
PI'OIIJ'am lncludlll!l those dealing
With St. Patrick's Day.
Earl Cross, worthy master,
. presided at the meeting In which
the pledge to the flag was given.
Mary V. Easterday , WAC,
received a certificate of merit
from the Ohio .S tate Grange and
Jean Alkire, secretary, received.

Beat of the Bend

grange.
Geraldine Cross, community
service chairperson, discussed
Ideas for community · service
projects.
It was reported .thai several
members were Ill.
The blackberry cake contest
Will be held at the May Pomona
meelhtg.
.
lt was anno!lnced that the ·
ann11al grange banquet Will be
held AprU 20 at the Salisbury
Elemenfary School at 7: 15 p.m.
Tickets may be purchaSed from
Earl Cross at $6 tor adults, and $5
for children.
.

Trial and tribulation
By BOB HOEFLICH
I'll tell you, i don't know how
much longer we can cope with
. these dally trials and
· tribulations.
The chimes of Big Ben In
London are being shut down as
repairs on the clock are made
therebY causing a , break In
tradition and In Columbus a
nursing home having. life·
threatening conditions for Its
aged residents has been
"found· ·- now this Is right under
the noses. of people who should
certainly ought to be observing
these things a little closer.
Perhaps, officials spend so much
sweating the little stuff that
they're bitnd.to the big offenses.
The last attempt has been made
to keep the Son of Heaven .
el(hibitors from receiving a mil·
lion dollars of our tax money, but
ihat shot is also expected to fall
·
short.
Of course, the million Is really
not much when you think of how
many of ourltax dollars are going
for the Savings and Loan bailout.
Again - we pay because people
who should be alert to problems
manyhtlmes aren't. After the
horse Is stolen, we lock the barn
door.
What to do - what to do. Now
· what were you saying about
Revolution?

------011 well- forget your troubles,

come on get happy.
The new Meigs County
Chamber of Collll'ilerce Is plan·
· nlng a happy time on Saturday,
March 31, when a dlnner·dance
will be held at Royal Oak Resort
- now that's a pleasant setting.
A steak dinner will be served at
7 p.m. with dancing to begin at 8
and go until midnight. Crossover
will be providing the music. A
new brochure on Meigs County
• will be available that night along
: with a series Qf slides sh~ng of
points of Interest In the county. ·
For ticket information - and
as I recall, the evening out Is
pretty reasonably priced for both
dinner and dancing - call the
chamber oftlce In Pomeroy,
992-5005. By the way, do call
soon since plans will have to be
completed on the . ·nlllllber of
dinners to be prepared.

Pleasant. You can send cards to
Room 112.

---:----

In a January column, I menti·
oned a couple of new magazines
Which were gettingotfth.e ground
along wl.th the comment that this
was just what we needed.
li. note .from nan · Kaercher,
editor of one 111 the magazines called Midwest Living - - ar·
rived along with a. copy of the
April edition. Don mentioned
that the April Issue marks the
third anniversary of publication
In the 12 Midwest states and
reports that the circulation of
Midwest Living has Increased
from 400,000 to 600,000. The April
Issue, he states, set a record In
terms of total pages and advertls·
ing pages.
.
There! The record has been set
straight ·and as s.uggested by
Don, I will take a look at the
magazine and, as suggested by
Don, I might enjoy u:

--------

Speaking at a recent meeting
of the Meigs County Chamber of
Commerce Roger Manley who
has opened a recycling operation
commented that everything today Is over· packaged. And how!
On the other hand, It seems that
there'.s always a kook or two out
thera who wants to drop a bit of
poison Into . one · product · or
another. Is this what we call a
no-wtn situation? Incidentally,
Roger did a good presentation on
the waste disposal problems we
have today and recycling Is going
to have to be one of the solutions. ,
In fact, I believe Roger com.
mente!! tbat he fully expects
recycling to be mandatory one
.day.
Bet you didn't think you'd .see
the day when the social security
payroll ileductlon exceeded the
Income tax deduction did Y0\1?
But - you are smiling aren't
you?

j

'

•

..

The Lencj·A·Hanc1 Society met
Wednesday • e\oenln1 at the
church with eight members and
one guest preaent.
·
Mr. and ' Mrs. Doug Bishop
spent SatunJay evening With
their uncle.8Dd aunt Mr. and Mrs.
Ra:,:mond Ktney In Col~bus. On
Sunday evening they observed
the fourth~ birthday of their
granddaughter, Cortney
Kennedy. Cake and Ice cream
were served.
Robert Gibson and daughter,
Robth, Columbus, were Sunday
guests of his parents, Mr. and
. Mrs. Robert Alkire. '

Rickard ·
birthday

•••••••
To:.:,:.

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

ft. fti·IIH er ft!-1721

2 LITER

in Gallipoli8; 1903•..82

. ,. ·
Vol 21 No.7
ca..,,~g~,_.

WITH
(OLOR .
GUARD
•

99&lt;
•'

SJ. 99

EACH

'

"

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\-

.,

...

·32 ·OZ. ~.

'

..

Polyester
.Stem ·Fiowers

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
9A.M.·I P.M.
BAT. I A.M.·1 P.M.
CLORD MONDAYS

-·-·

·By··Universal

GRAVELY ·
.. .SYSTEM

3 ·FOR

'

,.•

;

,

$.1· ,

Regular 69&lt; each .

..

LOVING TOUCH

VHS~

CASSEnE

CO,.YENIEN(E
PACK

HAVE YOU MOVED, CHANGED YOUR NAME, OR FAILED.TO
VOTE IN THE LAST 4 YEARS?

1180

Midcleport-Pom•ov-Gellipolia Point Pleasant. March

MEDI~44

Count
LlltGE-32 Count ,
Uf.Tilor

TAPES.

$799'

IWE WAIST .

body.

.

.

'

val from North Central was
received March 22. according to
Clyde Evans, Ph. D., Rio
Grande's vice president for
admlnlstrallo'l.
Plans. for curricular offerings
at the branch campuses were
.finalized earlier thl$ motith· dur·
lng a week·long meeting betWeen
Rio Graqd,e' s academic staff and
two representatives of the Japa·
nese foundation supporting the ·
International educational effort.
"The meetuigs · were very
successful and we are extremely
pleased by the quality of the
programs we .wlll be' offering af
Tokyo and Sendal," Evans said.
.Programs to be offered at the
branch campuses, which are
scheduled to open In May,

::·Formal notification of apprd·

'

IOAID OFFICE Wl1 II OPEN FIOM '9&amp;00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. ON
Al'll 9, 1990 FOI YOUI CONVENIINCE

.

.

·•

.

, ,~

I

By United Preu Iaternatlonal J
• Winter's stubborn icy grip
_sl!ouldered spring aside Satu&lt;·
·Oay, dumping snow and dropping
temperatures below f;eetlng
from the. Rockies through th~
. Mldwt!$1 to New York State, the
National Weather Service said.(
• ·In N1t Willa, Icy .conditions on
lntahll._ -• 'QVerftlitlit f~~ ·
motorists off the road and into
ffi!J:tfls .nd .,- ch11rc~ In Ogallal!-:
WfY\i! t~e · .1100 rooms •· at ·~
Ogilllala ptotels filled, more thap
100 ·motorists Were sent to Falt;h
Community· Church and · S).
Paul's l.utheran ·Fellowship
Hall.
I
· 'T~ere "'ere people sleeping
on·ah of the pews aqd others went
to the lower area of the church ,lo
spend the. night," said the RE!v.
· Erjc Wa.lt, of Fl\lth. CommuJty
Church. ..
'
.
. 'l'bete'were abou't'20' ac,d d ts
but no serious injuries report!!d.
Central and soutl!ern IU1!19ts
and par.ts of Missouri we,re
· smacked with up to JO Inches /of
snow. sleet and freezing rain )&gt;y
,m ld·mornlng, comp,l lca ling
travel plans for motorists. 1
~ Nl~lm;h readings were common In an area embracing
Kansas City, St. Louts apd
Springfield, Ill., and 7 lnchesi In
northern Indiana. said Chicago
weather forecaster Cl ,nt
Simpson.
·
•'I was a 111tle surprised by ~ow
much snow fell," said Simpson.
"I didn't think there was that
mucb moisture available."
Pollee said 11 people were
hospitalized, five In serious ·'
dillon. Friday night when a

CLO.SEO.Uil
U .1J;.

""·

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' .' .
'·

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' SALT SHAKER - Eldon Wuerch, property chalnnan for New
Life Lutheran Ohurch near Galilpt)U., shakes the rock salt In his

mtnJ.1preader as he salts the uphill road to the church Saturday
momtng after a major snowstonn made Us appearance. In
southeastern Ohio eilrUer that mom mg. (Times-Sentinel photo by
G. Spencer Osborne)
of 10 college students crossed the
median of Interstate 70 east of ·
Kansas City, capsized and was
struck by a tractor trailer, the
Missouri Highway Patrol
reported ..·
"It was a wonder It dldn' t. kill
all of them," ~aid Trooper illm
Lysaght of the Missouri Highway
·
Patrol.
The Chicago area received
ffeezlng rain, sleet and snow, ·
with temperatures hovertng In
the upper 20s and lower 30s.
The weather service said 6 to 8
'

Inches fell In southern Indiana
and up to 8 Inches In Kentucky
before noon. The Greater Clncln·
natl Airport reported Slh Inches.
, ·Eastern West Virginia, the
central highlands of Virginia and
Western Maryland expected up
to 8 Inches, . Washington,. D.C.,
Baltimore and northern Dela·
ware, 2 to 4 Inches. Lesser
amounts were expected In south·
ern Pennslyvanta, northern New
Jersey and extreme southeast
New York.

POME;ROY -The Board of
Dl~ector• of the Leading Creek'
Conservancy District, and spe·
clflcaily, members Olin C. Ar·
nold and Glen T. Crisp, have been
ordered by Meigs Common Pleas
Judge Fred Crow Ill to recognize
and se,at R~.bfrl F. Snowden as a
member ot :the Leading Creek
Board. Judge Crow Issued the
.o rder after being advised by. ..
Snowden thai his (Snowden's)
right to a seat on the board of
directors Is still being denied.
According to the court entry,
Leading Creek's Board of Dlrec·
tors at their Dec. 20, 1989
m~tlng, and Arnold and CriSp In
particular, refused to recognize
and seal Snowden as a director.
This Is said to be reflected In the
minutes from .· the · Dec. 20
meeting.
·
In addition, the minutes are
said to Indicate that ·no further
meetings "shall be held tUI the
Dis trlct gets an opinion from the
Attorruw General", apparently
of · the validity of Snowden's
claim to a dlrector"s seat.
HQwever, also according to the
court entry, "II appears that the
Board 'did hold subsequent meet·
lngs, and continues to do so, tn
which meetings William Sorden
· was and Is called upon by the
secretary to vote as a member of
.

the Board of Directors of the
District.
Ills the Cqurt's understanding
that Arnold and Crisp, through
legal counsel, have requested the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attor·
ney to seek an Ohio f'ltorney
General's opinion regarding the
validity of Snowden's appoint·
ment to the Board. It Is also the
Court's understanding that
Snowden has requested advice
from the prosecuting attorney
regarding his (Snowden's) status
as a board member.
The Court, by teller dated
March 7, 1990, directed the
prosecuting attorney to make a
motion to cause Arnold and CriSp
to recognize and seai Snowden as
a member of tbe Board without
further delay. The motion has
been filed.
This problem regarding rlgl!t·
ful membership to the Board
stems !rom an action )ast year In
which Meigs Common Pleas
Judge Robert Buck, ·Of t~e
Juvenile-Probate Division, ap·
pointed William Sordeli as a
board member. However, Judge
Buck vacated lhe appointment
soon after.
It Is the Court's position that
the appoln tment of Sorden was
made approximately two weeks
before an actual vacancy on th~
Board occurred, aild was pre~i·

Mason recycling center under
investigation by DNR officials
1

.. .

0~ SALE

,.__1 IIIOIDUIJ.
BotH ~' p..ut·
llld fOtJ!t 111111p of die 111"*-ce
'die ... _
. . in,III:CiCIIdin&amp; 10
MID Doney of die OwteiiOn
DNR o111c:e. Doner llid die , .
Je8Uitl of tballllllplc may take up
10 a Milk, lillce din ilao mooey
am••Ne lor ''nub" wring
.

'A

-c•mln
Hechlar·•

Slllle
Prlday the

I

.ru ~f\ \ · ~ ·

from Seetei&amp;Jy ot

ollk:e llllled

recyc~ ceJIIIIr II 1101
.~ 10 do bitsinetll in die

;t

Slllle of WCII Vqloia • acoqxn·
t1o11. The bo"i"ea is allo 1101lilled

I

. 992··491

widi Clltlllly ~·
Nancy AudeaMAi, lnDcll
. - - . at die MMoo a~ Public
Ulnry,llid lboCIDod

,' 716 lortll

tbo•"n•

'

..... - · . , 10 . . if !bey
toot ..... poducll from local
• ill 61" 10 recycle. Sbc llid the

.OJdo

I

cared upon Judge Buck not being
fuwly Informed In the ma,tter.
Appointments to the Board had
previously been made by the
Judge of tbe Common Pleas
Court, General Division.
The ~appointment·--of. Sorden
was vacated by Judge Buck pi'lor
to the appointment's effective
date and prior to Sorden taking
oath of office. Robert F. Snowden · ·
was !hen appointed to the Board
to a term to have commenced
Dec. 16, 1989. Snowden took oath
of office, according to the Court
records.
Finally, the Court entry states,
"for the above reasons , II Is
hereby ordered that tile Board of
Directors of the Leading Creek
Conservancy Dis tricl and Dan C.
Arnold and Glen T. Crisp. both ·
Individually and as Board
members, recognize the appoint·
ment of Robert F . Snowden and.
seat him as a full voting member
of said Board Immediately." It is
further ordered that they permit
Snowden "full and complete
access to all Board records" and
to exercise "all rights and
privileges" as entitled a member
of the Board.
It Is further ordered that
Willarri Sorden "cease and des·
Is t" from acting or participating
as a member of the Board,

By MINDY KEARNS
employees who recendy tefused 10 be identified ·or pholognlpbed, said
OVP News Staff
sign a sub-coruractD!''s agrccme~t they an: paid minimum wage, no
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. requiring them 10 pay all of !hell' special overtime wage, and receive
The Department of Natural Re- own expenses, including fuel, truek their pay through Wes!Ml Union
soll\'Ces Division of Waste Man· n:peir and equipmeru tq)lir, plus money orders. The em~ ees pick
agement Is lnvestlgatlng a recy· handle their own taxes and agree 10 up !heir money orders
various
cling business on Wadsworth . cover themselves with contraciDl'S' local businesses that handle WesAvenue, just past the Mason
liabilily insiJI'IIIICC.
· .leni Union material.
County Fairgrounds, that Is . The employees, wboasked 110110
' (See ~ON,'psse A3)
ap~eqtly operating Illegally.
JO)u Moore of the DNR 's Point
PleilaDt ollk:e vililed die ~ •

$ 7'' EACH

NOW

lion. While the corporation Is
Beginning In 1991, as Part of the
responsible for the recruitment
agreement's exchange provl·
of faculty, staff and students , Rio s lons , approximately 100 JapaGrande oversees the operation nese students per year are to
and educational viablllly of the attend the home campus In
southeastern Qhio.
campuses.
The university has full author·
The arrival of Japanese stu.
ily over the curriculum and will d.ents at Rio Grande will provide
ensure that t,hebranchcampilses an opportunity for students to
meel standards set by the North gain an lnternallonai perspec·
· tive, and to help create a bonding
Central Association.
"What we have done Is estab· of cultures, Hayes said.
. Ush an adjunct of I he university
To create the highest level of
without changing Its mission." sensitivity to this inlernatlonal
Hayes said. "It's an opportunity relationship, a faculty and stu·
to extend our Influence, and It dent exchange will be developed.
provides an expanded area of University of Rio Grande faculty
and students are scheduled to
service for Rio Grande."
' Classes are scheduled to begin begin participating In the ex at the branch campuses in May. change between the Ohio and ·
The number of entering students Japanese campuses beginning In
1992.
Is expected to approach 700.

.District.ordered to recognize
Snowden's board membership

"

.Mft'''IES

FOR YOUR ADDmONAL CONVENIENCE
. THE VOTERS CAN ALSO UsE tHE POMEROY PUIUC UIRARY TO
CHANGE THEIR ADDRESS, REGISTER.....THEY ARE A PERMANENT
BRANCH LOCAnON OF THE BOARD OF RECnONS."
.
HOURS OF THE POMEROY .PUIUC liBRARY ARE:
', .
MONDAY THIU FRIDAY ~................~...........9:00 a.ni. to 9:00 p.m.
.SA~AY................................................"...9:00 a.m•. to 5:00-.p.m.
SlltDAY ......................................................" 1:00 a..... to 5:00 p.m.
FINAL DAY TO UPDATE YOUIIEGISTRAnON IS APRIL 9, 1990

12 S..:tlono. 76 PegM
A. Mu~lmedle Inc. NIWIIPIIP8r

2s. 1990

Include English Literature, Mass be extending our commitment to
Communication, American Cui· opportunity Into the realm of
ture: International Business and Japanese higher education.
"It is only through multi·
Computer Science. Four addl·
tiona! programs will be added cultural understanding that we
during the 1991·92 academic can appreciate and affect world
peace, have prosperity and ad·
year .
"The dedication of our branch dress problems of human dignity
campuses In Japan opens a new In an ever shrinking world. "
chapter In the history of the . . The . branch .campuses are
l}nlverslly of Rio Grande," openlil@' as the result of an
Hayes said. "By taking this step, agreement between the unlverthe mission of the university sity ·aqd the Tanezo Yal,llasakl
takes on an added dimension of Colleges of Japan - an \igree·
International understanding and .ment . designed to bring the
discipline, creativity and open- •
cooperation."
"For over a century, Rio ness of U.S.·style higher educa·
Grande has offered opportunity lion to the Asian realm.
The branch campuses were
to those who seek to advance
their educational horizons," estAblished by lhe Yamasaki
Hayes added. "We are pleased to corporation, which functions as a
Japanese· educational . founda·

$~ow .spreQdsl
!lcross
U.S. 1 .
.

i

$399

lOX

.
i
·RIO GJ1ANDE - A delegation
ot officials from the University of
Rio Grande will bevlslling Jawd
!n mld·Aprll to participate In th~
dedication of the university'~
branch campuses in .Tokyo an&lt;!.
Sendai..
. :
• University President Paul Cf'
Hayes, ,Ph.D., and Board o
:rr;ustees President Daniel H:
~hlteley, M.D., will represent
ihe horrie campus duriJtg formal
ceremonies to be held Aprll22·2~.
· The dedication of the S3\)
inllllon·plus physical facilities
comes In the wake of prograrri·
ll)atic approval of the campuses
I1Y the North Central AssQCiatio~
!lf Schools and Colleges, Rib
Grande's regional accrediting

.Entire .Stock. of .VCR Rental·

HOURS FOR REGISTRAnON:
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 1:30 A.M.-4:30 P.M.

'

POLAROID

DISPOSABLE.
DIAPERS

IN ORDER TO VOTE IN THE MAY 8, 1990 PRIMARY .
ELECTION YOU MUST BE REGISTERED .BY APRIL 9, ~ 1990

PHONE 992-2697

-

'

CHEER

COKE
.DIET COKE
SPRITE·
.DIET
SPRITE

...........,, OH·.

OR·

AFJ.., teaeher8 strike

S4.99

llidud!ng let Tea ·

. GRAVELY TRACTOR

YOU CAN CHECK YOUR REGISTRATION, CHANGE YOUR
NAME AND/OR ADDRESS OR REGISTER AT
MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ,ELECTIONS
108 MECHANIC STREET
POMEROYI OHIO .
. .

Jllllle8 Sande:

Salad Bar PLUS Dessert Bar

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

.

•arch 25 .
11:0.0 A.M.-8 P.M.

, Aloll( the Bl•er ......... B1·8
Bualaesa .................... Dl-8
Comics- ................... Insert
Classl1leds ................. D2- 7
Dealba ..... .... ........ ........ A5
Editorial ...... ................ A2
Farm .... .............. ....... Dl-8
..................... :: C1·8

their show eouth...B7

B-1

~undcay,

Inside

Loeal clotn •• taking

Roast ..., ·
Frred ChiCken ·
Glazed Ham
Steak &amp; Gravy
Lots of V•tallles · ·

Sprl•t &amp; l••er ...,.

POMEROY
•
ROWER SHOP
.. Tiae IJ'ay Amertm Scmd. tov.."

On the nNid:

ftio·oflticiiil.s to dedicate Japanese branches·

Pancake supper

~T.HE

C-1

NCAA toumanlent results

.

starting at 7 p.m., at Faith
Gospel Church, Long Bottom.
Everyone welcome.

~.

·-~·-.. ·--------~

1

.

A special evening of music will

loo.::'!illy

Cl'IJ('.

•

132 Washinstorl St., Rav,nawood. wv.
. .
304-273-9b38 . .
'

be feat~ted · Saturday · evening,

WITH FLOWERS

50

Rio Grande i
• •
rectptent . .
of·endowment"

Special

·•·

Evening of mi.ric

204 Condor It,

--·

!

13t~ Annivers~ry

.......

Veronlka Alelss Rickard,
daughter of Ron and Lisa Rick·
. ard, celebrateii·her Second birth·
d.a~ re~ently With !I party at her
home.
.
·
.
A "Sesal)le Street" theme was
carried out with a "Bert and
Ernie" cake and Ice cream
served to Frank "Buddy" and
Gladys Reynolds, Ronald and
Betty. Rlcklird, Ada Rickard,
Orenda and Jerod Cook, Lots and
John Snyder, Dave Harris, Tim,
Liz, Adam and Heath Rickard,
Cindy and Rlkkl Lynn Hesson,
Mike, Carolyll, Brlgette and
Gabe Lambert, Snady, Nathan
and Tiffany Halfhill; Lee, Deb- · ·
ble, Troy and·. Lorl Bumgarner.
Others presenting gilts were
Maggie Moles, Chad, Missy and
Derrec!c Wooten.
·.
On her birthday, Feb. 13, Big
Bird told her "Happy Birthday"
on the television show, "Sesame
Street." He also sent her a
birthday card. The was a special
gift arranged by her godmother,
Orenda Cook.

The men of the Racine United
Methodist Church will be serving
a P!lncake and sau51!ge supper on
Wednesday, with serving start·
lng at 3 ·p.m. Dinners · will be
ser.ved·for "donations only." The
publiC is welcome.

: l •: : · (

PERIY'S ·
ORGASBOIDt

VEBONIKA RICKARD .

ATTENTION:

I

Mr. and Mrs. David Arlx are
announcllia the bl111lllf a daugh·
ter on March 17.

SALES 1k SERVICE.

--------

. Dottle Scarberry of the Over·
; brook Center .stair is a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital In Point

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