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16 The Daily Sentinel

~R_omania
I

•

Thuncfev, May 31, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

hit by 80 aftershocks Wednesday

BUCHAREST, Romania
· ~(UPI) - More than 80 after'
"shocks, one registering 5.9 on the
Richter scale, kept Romanians'
· nerves on edge Thursday as
: authorlttes began to survey the
damage from thE' region's worst
earthquake In 13 years.
A powerful Jolt at 3:18 a .m.
··shook millions of people from
lhelr sleep and severely dam·
aged a· number of buildings that
. survived the Initial quake nearly
l4llours earlier. au thor! ties said.
At least nine people were kUled
;;lind about 300 others Injured In
the Wednesday after.noon temb'lor, which registered between 6.5
and 7.5 on the Richter scale and
was felt as far away as Leningrad and Istanbul.
·
.. ''The aftershock In the tearly
morning) of May 31 caused,
besides panic, much material
:damage In Vranc!'a County, " the
quake's epicenter, the official
Rompres news agency said.
•· It said the aftershock, measur-.
'lni 5.9 on the Richter scale,
,severely damaged the city hall. a
· theater, a me!llcal clinic and an
·apar.t ment building In the city of
·Foscani.
·
: The Soviet · news agency Tass
Hid the aftershock also was felt
t'n Soviet Moldavia. But there
were no reports of further
casualties from the latest
;temblors . .
More 80 aftershocks have been
'!'Rglstered since the Initial quake
,, t 1: 40 p.m . Wednesday, the
worst since a March 1977 temblor
~Wed more than 1,300 people In
the same region.
~ Eight ofthedead from Wednes. day's quake were killed In
Romania, lnclud1ng one Bucharest resident crushed by a falling
chimney and another who died
· · when a ceiling coUapsed.
· The Bulgarian News Agency
said a woman had a heart attack
tlurlng the Initial quake and died
In a Bulgarian town near the
Romanian border, and that 38
· people were injured.
~ 'tJie aftershock, measuring 5.9
on the Richter scale, rocked the
area at 3:18a.m. Thursday, said
tbe; _u-s. Geological SurVey In
GO~aen. Colq. A temblor of that
ril&amp;&amp;l)llude is capable of causing
s;~~qslderable damage, but there
l!~re no Immediate reports of
casual des or damage.
; ne official Soviet . news
qency Tass said the aftershock
. alSo was felt in Soviet Moldavia.
which borylers Romania, and " 17
tremors were registered betWeen Wednesday's and ('l?hursday;$1 liualte.'' Tass said it had
11!f;repqrts,' of .Injury or damagl'
from the latest temblors. . ,
·
~·Hoapllal ~lals In Bucharesr
said arleast\90 people were hurt
ltrtbe RomBDian capltal ·alone,
alld - !ftOre casualties were
atre&amp;mlng ln. They said panic
was to blame for many of the
IO)urles~.cltlng numerous cases
ol people lU~~~Ping from windows
and balconies.
. :•·we're very experienced.
We've been · through wars and
earthquakes before. " said Boris
Aherghecegltel, director of the
Bucharest City Casualty Unit.
':The Romanian news agenc~·
~mpres said the epicenter was
In the Vran!!f!a region In the
Catpathlan Mountains In northeastern Romania. The same
af!la was severely damaged by a
March 1,77 quakerhat measured
7,l on the Richter scale and.
reportedly killed at least 1,300.
:Rompres said Wednesday's
quake lasted several minutes
and was foUowed by aftershocks.
Apparently because of damage

to communlcailon lines, therE'
were rio Immediate details of
damage in the arE' a around the
town closest to the epicenter,
Buzau, about 110 miles northeast
of the capital. Bucharest Radio
said.
In -Kishinev , in Moldavia near
the Romanian border, residents
reached by telephone reported
feeling two separate shocks
minutes apart.
·
Klshlnev resident Mikhail
Fusu said he -had seen windows. ·
s hattered In buildings and roof
tiles were shaken loose ·from
some homes. Some trolley buses
•Stopped because overhead wires
providing PQWer were torn loose.
"There was no panic," Fusu
· said. "Everything finished in a
minute."
Fusu said hE' had heard no
reports of serious damage or
lnjuri!'S In the capital of the
Soviet rep\lblic.

In Moscow, some 700 miles to
the northeast, the 'quake forced
evacuation of the U.S. Embassy.
U.S. officials said their mission
In Bucharest also was evacuated.
Tass said the quake was felt
across a wlde swath of the Soviet
Union from the Black Sea resort
of Sochl In the south to the
Russian city of Leningrad Iii the
north.
ParUament member llmar
Biser told colleagues there were
"human casualties" In the Soviet
republic of Moldavia nellr the
Romanian border, Tass said. The
report gave no details of damage,
or of the num~r k!lled or
Injured. It said the Parliament
observed a minute of silence.
Other Soviet cities that reported having felt tremors Included Lvov and Uzhgorod In the
Ukraine and President Mlkhall
Gorbachev's hometown of Stavropol and Nevinnomyssk in the

Russian republic.
Tass said the Carpathian
Mountain region of Romania
where the quake was centered Is
a selsmlcally active zone with a ,
history of strong tremors.
The USGS said tbe Initial quake had a magnitude of 6.5 and
an eplcent.e r about 100. mUes
nor th of Bucharest.
In Edinburgh, Scotland, the
Britis.h: GeolOgical Survey said It
measured two' tremors five minutes apart. with one measuring
7,5 on Ihe Richter scale, rattling
the Soviet Union, Romania, Yugoslavia and Turkey.
In Bucharest, reports said the
quake shattered windows In
downtown buildings and sent
guests fleeing In terror from the22-story Intercontinental Hotel.
The official n~ws agency Rompres said the quake measured
from 6.5 to 7.0 on the Richter
scale.
·

The official Bulgarian news
'a geny BTA sald a nuclear power
plant In the nearby town of
Kozlodoui was shut down when

tile temblor struck, bilt "all
''equipment, will lie thorouehly
checked before the plant is
reopened."

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.The total prize payout was
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totaling, $157,640.
Four had the first five numbers
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•WEEPSTAKES RUI.h
NO PURCW!SE N!Ct:SSARV, To.,.., CDiftPIM 1n
of~lal entry farm 1nct' enter' It in tM Offlclel entry

. 992·2635

ao.:

P.o. ao. 1811.

up . . . ..

tor""""'· ID.,..., eoUHeu.

Apofoa:lfnM&amp; f'ttltl Yllut otatend Prlas II 110.000,
Hdl. *&lt;~ wtwe protllbltd. - . must •11 wnt~ or
oktrtl' to Plrtieiplte. See arne:. ruin Ia ~
fetlll Mptet tar COI't'IOIItl '*~~itt.. To ~ offldal
ruiM fend e MllddiiiMd ~ tiO bUIIneu
_,.,..,. to: NMOA Offtclll Ruin, P.O. Box 12U.
Elrnhurll. IIINMa, 101~2 bf: Junl14, 1110.

.....

I•

Warm
weather
returns
By United Preas Jaternalloaal

.submit UOO,OOO In cash receipts with the Krorer
Company providing lhe flnl W,OOO. 'l1te
computers can be used In all pbasell of clauwork.
Plclured are, fron1, a few of the dedicated
stndenta, Pete Sisson, Kevin Flelrlll, TJ,avll IJsle,
Jasoa Lawrence, Samml Si8110n, Carissa Ash and
Jennifer Lawrence; back Jim Lawrence, principal at Syracuse Elementary, Mlcbael Erwin, IBA
representative and. Randy . Snider, acting comanager of the Kroger store.

With the arrival of June, Ohio's
weather Is taking a turn for the
better, wl th sunny ski!'S and
warmer temperatures on the
way.
Tile last of the flOod warnings
In southern Ohio was canceled
this morning, when the Scioto
River fell below flood stage at
Piketon.
In Ross County, a search
resumed again Frldlly for the
body of a second girl from
Chlllicothe WJI9·is feared to have
droWned Tuesday afternoon. Her
friend's body was recovered
. Wednesday a!ter(!oon.
·
Temperatures were to continue to warm .over Ohio Friday,
under sunny skies . Highs were to
reach or exceed 80 degrees over
all the state In the afternoon.
With winds blowing moisture
up from the south , shoWI!rs could
develop late Friday night over
southwest Ohio.
Saturday will be warm and
humid over all the state. Showers
and thunderstorms are expected
to spread from southwest to
northeast across the state. However, It appears that southern
Ohio will have the best chance for
the most widespread rainfall.
High temperatures saturday
should range from 80 to 85.
A weakcoldfrontlsexpectedto
enter Ohio Saturday nllht, which
will probably produce addldoiia~
showers and thunderstorms ..
However, the front Is ex~ed to
leave Ohio early Sunday, bringIng drlet and more stable air.
Temperatures Sunday are again
Continued on page 10 ·
·

.
.
Three injured in
'

Thunday accideni·
I

'

A Syracuse- woman and two
youths !rom area towns were
Injured In a car-truck wrecl( •
Thursday at 3:20 p.m. In Sutton .
Township on S.R. 124, just east or
mUepost 24, according to tl;le
GaiUa-Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
: •
Sherr! D. Sisson, 22, and'.
' Commencement exercises for Michael Allan Frost, Lisa Joanne '
ilmothy J. Triplett, 16, of S.R,.
65 graduating seniors at Eastern ·Gray, Don Allan Harris, Kenneth
124,. PorUand, were taken by the
High School will be held Sunday William Hickman, Christi Lynn
Melp County EMS to Vetera11s.
at 6:30 p.m . In the high schooL Hoffman, Jef!rey. Clark Horner,
·Memorial Hospital. Sisson was
gymnasium.
Cryytal Dawn Kaylor, Diana Sue
held for observation belore being.
The Rev. Don Archer wm Kesterson, Michael Raymond
treated and released for unspecl,
deliver the baccalaureate ad- Klein, Theresa Lynn Lambert,
fled Injuries. Triplett and his
OWNERSHIP CHANGE - Tammy and lim .diDBen . .d will add a lmOJ'Iuboard ballet for
dress entitled •'Preparing to Richard Lowell Lattimer,
passenger, Orris E. Harris, 14, o(
Rupp of Racine have purcllued Mom ·perry's
breakfuta on Sattll'diQ' and Sallclar. Pldured
Care" with the valedictorian; Jeremy Joe Lawrence.
Racine,
were treated and reBounty Table at RaveniiWood from Jilek and
excllanlinl tile "eya to &amp;be basi- are left to
Gretta Lynn Riffle, and the
Amy Ruth Mann, Christopher
leased
for
brulles .
F r - Willie. Tile Huppstook over the buaill. . rtaht, Jack aad Frances White ancl Tanuny and
·salutatorian Shawn Louis Bush Scott McDonald, Kymberlee DITriplett
and
Sisson were drlv: .
.Jim Rapp, with their two year old aon, J Frld~Qr and cballaed the name to Mem'a
·presenting addresses during the ann Mcintyre, Kimberley Jean
west
when
Triplett
stopped to
lng
Smoqubord. n.e, will lie open aeven da,a a
Ricllard.
comm~ncement program.
Masters, Malena Marie Mayturn
lett
Into
a
.priVate
driveway.
week, I a.m. to 8 p.m. ·ror buffet luDCIIeo• and
In the graduating class are nard,. Melissa JeBD Miller, Tara
Sisson did not stop In time to
.
.·
'
'
Bethany Suzanne Arbaugh, Ro- Lynn ' Morrls, Thomas Patrick
avoid bumper contaci with Tribert Ernest Ba!(er, Tommy Lee · Morrissey, Amy Jo Murphy,
plett's truck.
•
Basim, Kemp Field Beaumont, . Mary Magdelene Parker, Krlstll
Sisson was cited for not mainID. Carrie Lee Bernard, Jona- Ann Parsons, William Scott
A restaurant business In Ra- a smorgasbord buffet for bgeak· Dalley's Country Restaurant In · taining assured clear distance.
than Elliot Bissell, Sherr! Rae Phillips.
venswood, W. Va., known for fasts on Saturday anil Sunday. Racine, worked at McCoy's Best . An Albany man wu cited In a
BisselL Jay AntboiiY Blackwood, · ' Crystal Diane Reed, Manna. many years as Mom Perry's · Mr. a~d Mrs. Hupp will' retain Western In Ripley u a hostess
t~ar crash Thursday at 6:t5
Bernard Everet Bobo, Deborah JIU Reynolds, Greta Lynn Riffle,
Bounty Table, has been pur- moet bf the former employees of and cashier, and 111011 recently _p.m. In Columbia Towublp on
Marie Brooks; Sharon Ellzzabeth Jason Euaene RI&amp;P, Shaun
chased by Tammy and Jim Hupp the business.
was manqer or Keebaugh's or Darst Road, .7 of a mile WHI of
Bryant. Trlcla Renee Burke, . Michael Savoy, Matthew HerC.R, 1.
··
of Racine.
Mrs. Hupp has had extensive · Chester Restau rant.
Shawn Louis Busb, Kenny Eu- • man 'Schul, Terry Scott Sharp,
Mr. and Mrs. Hupp took over education BDd experience In the
Chrla
L.
Warren,
18,
wu
Cited
Hupp who will be asslltlfti his
.gene Caldwell, Rebecca Ann Amber Kay Short, Rebecca Lynn
the business Friday from Jack restaurant business. After gra- wife In tbe bullness II also •
for falluie,to Yield 111tr hla lilqChevalier, Rae Lynn Dailey, Surop, JuBDita Mary Swiger,
and Frances White who have duatlni from Southern High graduate or Southern High Cbliviolet Cnvalill' bltnlll301di .
Kevin Byron Damewood.
Dan lei Vauahan Tripp, BIIUe
operated It for the past 14 years. School, she went tn Hocking Scbool. He hal been employed at
Delta-Bl Royale drlviD by C1lrtlll .
Allen Wells, Melissa Marlene
1benameoltherestsuranthas Tecbntcal Collere In Nelsonville West VIrginia Bualneu Ma-. J. Dalley, 31, Rl. 3, Albu,y,
Richard Lee Deem, Brandl Lee' Wells MorriJ, Jerry Wayne
been chan&amp;ed to .Mom'a Smor· wllereaherecelvedanassoclates chines of Charlestoa for the put
Dalley \VU b t t " ' l l - .
DI!Jon, Rhonda Lynn DUnfee, White, ltobln Lee White, «;:rystai
gasbQrd. Hours are 6 a.m. tn 8 4e1ree lu hotel and reslaurant seven years. The couple have a
Warren, wilD
"M'bl
Donald Scott ruch, Tina Marie Faye Wlllama Swlpr, Susan
p.m. with a regular buUet for managen\ent In 1911'.
wentletlolctfterlna"'"'
..
~year-old 11011, James RlFoster, Angela Dawn Francis, Renee Wolf, Defk Lee Yonker. . lunch and dinner ever~ day, a ad lll Since that. Ume she managed
cu~ and h\,Dalley's ear. ·
·
chatd.
Jr.
If
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suggestions from tbe ~elgs defe.
gallon . of refuse ·haulers. The
haulers had met a week ago and
organized In anticipation offtght ·
lngsomeoftheproposalsforflow
control and Upping fees.
.
All of the proposals presented
at the meeting will be outlined a't
the district policy committee
meeting which Is scheduled for
the Senior Center In Logan on
June 12 at 7 p.m. Five members
from each of the six countieS, '
Ath'Z!'s, Gallla , Hocking, Jack'son, MeigsandVInton,areonthe
policy commlftee . . "

Racine couple buy Ravenswood restaurant

at 8n)' pertl(:lp.ttint rettilltate ~Di Junt' 10, 19i0. AI
en ettemCI muns of tntr)', pttnt comt)lete ,, . , .,
melll.._ ~,..., , cH,r, ltMe. lip code arid dey
tetephone number on • 3 11.2•11 s~ poll cerct. Yi:tt•t
entrln to be , _ , . 0y Junt 14, 1t90 to ·Netkloll, ·
HOtneApelll-a:fE~~•s

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SALE DATES: May 31-June 10, 1990
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EPA for sizeable expansli)ns at
thzir landfills.
Funding from the dis trict, and
the anticipated ·COSt of management has been set at 2.3 mllllon
annually, which would come
from landfill district fees and
Income from recycling. Also if
necessary, a fee would be ~ssessed on each parcel of real
estate ·In order to raise the
needed money for the district
operation.
A discussion on future plans for
.m andatory fees and mandatory
pickup led to questions and

Eastern -t o graduate 65
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WASHINGTON tUPI) - ·Pres- have been very concerned with
ldent Bush and Soviet President Lithuania and there Is a good
,Mikhail · Gorbachev. having . chance that any U.S.-Sovlet
smoothed some dl~rd on a · trade pact would encounter seunHied Germany, turned Friday rlous difficult IE'S on Capitol Hill
to the future of Lithuania, Eash as long as the Baltic situation ·
West trade a~;~d agreef!'lents to was unresolved.
limit nuclear testing and destroy . Gorbachev also ,told the lawmakers that he stressed to Bush
. chemical weapons.
After their first day of discus- the Soviet Union hail no problem
slons at jhe superpower summit, with the United States keeping a
bOth leaders were upbeat Thurs- military presence In Europe and
.day and Bush said While the did not "fear" Germany. HowSoviet Union's )Tandllng of Li- ever, he argued that the Issue of
thuanla' s drive for Independence wheth~r a unified Germany
· was mentioned only In passing. remained a part of NATO was "a
"It will certainly be discussed ln ques !ibn of imbalance'' and he
much more detail."
warnlid against the West trying
· At tb.e &amp;Jvse of business Thurs- to "sq\1~-g.l!I'.:JJ\.eSoviet Union
·•day, u• •tft31,0Vt-r 1he filt~:t 01' " rol-' an·aiivantagti. :.- '
..,.··, ..... ...,~··
tile &lt; llteakawjly Baltic ·s rate
Bush and GorBadi*'v planned
clouded pr0$pects for a trade later Friday to sign a series of
. agreement strongly desired by agreements - crowned by forthe Sovl~ts to help th.e lr troubled mal accords on the destruction of
economy. .
chemical weapons, limits on
"We haven 't said whether we nuclear testing • and a longcan sign at rade agreement o~ not awaited pact on major elements
yet," Bush said. "We will be of a treaty to cut .the size of·their
discussing that."
strategic nuclear arsenals.
But at a Frillay breakfast
Whlie ·House press secretary
, FIRST TO GET COMPUTER - Syraevae
·meeting with congressional lead- .Marlin Fitzwater said the trade
Elementary
was the flrlll school in the county to
_e rs held before he headed to pact, once touted as a centerreceive
an
IBM
computer as a re~~ult oflhe Kroger
another session ~lth Bush. Gor- piece · of the second BushCompany's
"Excellence
In Education' •proJI'IUTI.
bachev stressed he would not Gorhachev summit, remained
Schoo.,
In
the
county
will receive an IBM '
"beg for anything" In a trade · unclear as .I t was discussed only
computer
and
printer
for
each 1223;000 In cash
agreement.
by ·Secretary· of State James
register
receipts.
Syracuse
Elementary was the
. "Certainly. we're not asking Baker and sOviet Foreign Minisflrllt
school
In
Meigs
to
turn
In the necessary ·
fora· free ride. We'llbeasklngfor 'ter Eduard Shevardnadze.
receipts
Which
they
did
on
March
3. AI the end of
"The status of that Is essennormal credits," said Gorbathe
school
year
five
area
schoo.,
llad reached
·chev: · "For ' us It would _ be tiall)· what It was," Fitzwater
their
1oa1
for
the
computers.
Tile.
~boola
were to
ttumlllating if we were to beg for said of the plan GorbacMv needs
9orriethlng from you and, of to bolSter perestroika his procourse, hopeless."
gram for Soviet ~conomlc
reform.
The New York Times, citing
The pact has been completed
senior American officials, re- and would give the Soviet Union
ported Friday there was a good the lowest available tariffs in the
chance a trade agreement would United States. It would make
be ·signed, but that a waiver Soviet ,goods more attractive to
required to put it Into effect U.S. consumers, and would make
would not be sent to Congress the Soviets eligible for U.S. credit .
until the admin!Stra!ion was and lending programs.
satisfied on emigration and on
The agreement has been held
the situation · in the Baltic up by l'l!oscow's economic sancrepubliCs.
·
tions to thwart Lithuania's bid
, Many of the U.S. lawmakers, for Independence and the Soviet
both Democrats and R!'publ!- Union's failure to pass a law
cans. who met with Gorbachev easing emigration restrictions.

. ........... ~to'CCO

•O....~C.,II

•

It was reported at the meeting
for household hazardous waste
that the total waste generated
whlcb represents less than one
within ihedlstrict is about2l7,000 - percent of the total waste
tons annually with 77 percent
stream, It was pointed out.
beuig landfllled and 23 percent
Flo\\' control which has been
recycled.
.
proposed was discussed again.
The SCS Engineers proposal is
This means that waste generated
within the six county district
to have three recycling centers.
one In each general ar!!a of would be recycled and land filled
Meigs, Gallla; Athens, Hocking within the district.
and Jackson; Vinton, l5 drop-off
A discussion was held regardstations, and seven curbside ing private or public owned
progra!Jls. These would work landfills. Two private firms have
with the recycling operations reqqested waivers from the
alreadywithinthedlstrlct.There .district which would allow them
woul\1 be drop-off days sched1ded to submit applications to Ohio

and Gorbachev ·
discuss · tough iss11-es

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday. June 1, 1990

Proposals regarding waste t:'lrm. jVhlch Is preparing the
generation, recycling, apd dlspo- manaiement plan.
sal were discussed at the final · It was noted that t!leplan Is due
public hearing, of the multi- · to be submitted on June 24 to the
countySolldWasteManagement Ohio Environmental Protecton
District held Wednesday night at Agency and that a · six month
the Wilkesville Elementary extension requested has not as
School.
been granted. VanVolkenburgh
Nine. of the 17 persons attend- said that he hopes to have a draft
lng were from Meigs County. of the plan to all members of the
Dale Neal , Jackson County t;:om- dlstriCJ policy committee by the
missioner a,nd chairman of the second week In June, and that
managemerv district presided at limited copies will be placed In
the hearing with a report being ' public ' buildings such as court. given by John VanValkenburgh houses. and libraries In all six
of SCS Engineers Consulting counties . . ·

Register lor your chance to·

·rn,.-,_.~

Vol.40, No.270
Copyrighted 1990

WaSte· recycling, disposal final meeting topic

during what may be our.
OST EXCITING EVENT

..., """"
....., _ _

e

1

ar01111d

•

,.

.
. .
61C-992-7066 \
'
657 IIGH STilET .
MIDDUP.OIT, OHIO

Middleport • 992-2635

DIAGONAL

SaiftaJ,

IT'S PEOPLE HELPING PEOPLE
DENNIS L HOCKMAN &amp; ASSOCIARS
IIPIISIJIIIIIG .

. _ t 'a,.. 1a t11e lllld eoa.
Clluce ot1 1'11111 • pereenl.

4226

Page 3

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

19"

Daily Number
177

Piek-4

INGELS

31" DIAGONAL
DIRECT VIEW

Ohio Lottery

Dodgers
tQp Reds
in lOth, 2-1

,';!.:

".

....

--:·~

·,

::*J ·

�,•

..

~ommentary

•.

Page-2-The Daily S..mnel

.

DEVOTED TO TJIE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA .

~lb ,......._,.._...... .......-o:::::~..=,

·.

·~v

'ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publllher

CHARI,.ENE HOEFl.ICH
General Mao&amp;(er

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlaber/ControUer
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
AsSOCiation and the American Newspaper PUblishers AsSOCiation.

.

, LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less-than 300
words long. All letters are subject to edltlng and must he signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pub·
llshed. Letters should be In gOOd~~. addressJna Issues, not personal!"

ties. .

.

·

.. - -

EPA forced to

The .Daily Sentinel

.

Bush ducks answers on
~avings and loan debacle

WASHINGTON - George
Bush Is playing In a field of
dreams If he still thinks he's the
"environmental president. " He
has balked twice so far on the
' Issues of clean air and wetlands,
both times following the bad
signals of White House Chief of
Staff John Sununu. Now Bush
and his minions can add toxic
waste to their hall of shame.
For almost two years, the
Environmental Protection
Agency has been waiting to Issue
rules for the . cleanup of toxic
waste sites around the co.1.1ntry.
And for almost ~o years, the
Office of Mana·gement" and
Budget under Richard Darman
has shuffled ·those · rules from
desk to desl\.
,
·
Darman ·probably ihlnks he's
doing Industry a favor, but he
Isn't. The longer the rules are
delayed, the more expensive and
extensive the cleanup problem
becomes. And If Darman thinks
he Is saving the federal govern·
ment any money, he Is wrong on

W·ait_---"'-...:_Jac_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_and_D_a_le_~_an_A_t_ta

that score too. The U.S. govern- OMB's delay tactics have forced
ment owns 338 of the 4,615 the EPA regional omces to
hazardous waste sites on the .proceed with only a fraction of
cleanup l"t. It would be dostly to · the cleanup efforts mandated by
clean them up now, but It will be the law. An April 1990 report
more costly to clean theni up . from the General Accounting
later.
Office notes that none of the 4,615
The toxic wastes are Industrial sites has been c.ompletely
leftovers,. and In thecaseofmost cleaned up yet.
of the federally owned sites,
The EPA isn't the only angry
hazardous waste generated by party. Congress Is fed up with the
the mtlltary.
' delays too. And industry giants
What the EPA can't seem to have figured out what Darman
pry out ·of Darman and his and his staff can' t - that the
underlings are the "corrective longer they walt, the more the
action rules" to put into effect the cleanup will cost. Erivtronmen·
Resource Conservation and Rec· , tallsts are concerned that the
overy Act. The act simply orders longer this hazardous g&lt;!fbage
the cleanup of Industrial sites sits around, the greater threat It
·where toxic waste Is gener&lt;~ted.
will pose to air, water and soli.
But .the rules specify how the
Our associate Tim Warner ·
cleanup must be done, !lnd until obtained correspondence be·
businesses have those ·rules It
tween the EPA 11nd OMB dating
would' be a waste of their tl~e . back to 1988. · In a letter last
arid money lo begin.
month, EPA Assistant Adminls·
trator
Don R . Cray wrote. " I will
The law was passed In 1984 and
reiterate
my frustrai!on regard·
amended In 1987. ·By this time,
lng
the
length
of time that the
the cleanup effort should have
review
process
lor this proposed
been In full swing, but It lsn' t. The
rule hasJtaken .; "
What EPA gets from OMB in

By HELEN mOMAS
·
UPI White HoUle Reporter
WASHINGTON:- President Bush Is glib and skillful when it comes
.
to ;fleldlng questions at his news conferences.
But on one of the most Important questions of the day- the savings
and loan scandal that Is the biggest financial debacle in the nation's
h~tory- he ducks and weaves.
.
· ·
Bush recently brushed off questions on the slze of the savings and
loan bailout, what he was going to d\J about It , and what was the
iriJpact on taxpayers.
.
_·
·
Granted It's a political hot potato that may come back ro haunt him
------~--+---~~
wllen he runs for re-election. Bur he either knows the answers and
d0!!5 ~or want to acknowledge the magnitude of the disaster, or he
Don't be deceived by all the
diverted to help the Nicaraguan
doesn t know and has glossed over the situation. Either way he's smiles and hand-holding between
contras.
ac(:Ountable and evading responsibility.
·
the White House and Congress
Why, then, has yet another
His answers to the questions above went like this ·
these days as the budget negotla- grand Jilry been assembled and
•:•we don't know the Impact on the taxpayer yet. W~doknow that we
lions Inch forward. Politics ain't
put to work · sifting these cold
ar~ going to ~rotect the depositors. And that's what this Is all about. It bean-bag, as Mr. Dooley long ago ashes? Since the. Impetus c&lt;imes
Is~ t protectmg any savings and loan people, 11 Is protecting the
pointed out, and the Impaneling from special prosecutor Walsh,
depositors. Nick Brady (Treasury Secretary Nicholas Brady)
of a new grand Jury to continue l~ ,us first turn our attention to
testified on an array of figures because we don't know a spectitc
poking around In the debris ofthe him.
·I
figure. And he gave some broad parameters that are on the record ..
Iran-contra controversy means
' Walsh, a Canadian-born. New
Brady had testified that.the bailout cost could reach $300bllllon a~d
just one ·thing: The effort to
Yorker who moved to Okiahoma
some have said it will t11 ke 30 years to pay 11 ott: .
.
destroyRonaldReagan'sreputa· when he· was nearly 70, got his
tlon and/or Impeach George start under New York Governor
Bush has organized a contlilutng meeting between the White·House
and bipartisan congressional leaders 10 find wa.y s to accumulate
Bush has just taken a new lease Thomas Dewey, whom he served
on life.
as counsel. He became a federal
revenues to deal wtlh the ballooning deficit, much of it due tothe cost
Like apy large, complex se· Judge In 1954, but resigned that
of the savmgs and loan catastrophe.
The budget s~ll'!mlleers are just getting off the ground, jockeying
quence oflevents, the Iran-contra position to become deputy attar·
for position. trymg to avoid polltlc.al no-win Issues like tax increases
affair will go on generating ney general In 1957, during
On prevlus occasions. Bush has acknowledged that his own refusai
unanswered, and probably un- Eisenhower's second admlnls·
to grapple with the Issue publicly, or 10 take advantage of the
answerl!ble, questions forever. tratlon. Thereafter he practiced
broadcast outlets to state bls case, is born of caution and prudence_
Never mind that it has already law In New York City for 20
two. guiding principles In hlspolltlcal'IQngevity.
been lnvestlga.ted more years, then (as ·afore-said)
He feels the less said the better. hence his decision 10 reject
throughly than any event since moved to Oklahoma.
recommendations that he go on the air and lead the nation out pf the
Watergate. The Tower Commis,
To Walsh, · who Is now 78,
financial wilderness .
.
·
slon was only the first of many appointment as special prosecu·
Taxes were . ~~creased before the 1929 crash, and Bush, who
probes. Then came the congres· tor In the Iran-contr11 affair must
campaigned on read my Ups_ no taxes," does not want a repetition
slonal extravaganza, chorea·
have seemed a priceless oppor·
Bl!f Bush re~uses to bite the bullet and give the country the truth of · graphed and presided over by · tunlty to add some belated luster
how deeply tt's ln. the red.
Democrats. Finally, It was the to a moderately distinguished
. Ills reticence may be understandable and even commendable If
turn of special prosecutor Law· but not particularly earthm1eed he does not llnow where the nation stands. But on the other
renee Walsh, who ' enlisted the shaking career. His· !allure,
hand, .~s president it behooves him to know the answers and to face up
help, of scores of lawyers and therefore, to ·'obtain single jail
to ;reality,
.
lnvest!llators, spent millions of sentence thus far for any Indicted
~ush has proved to be a hands-on. take charge president in manv
the taxpayers' dollars, and has defendant, let alone to Implicate
ways, but when It comes to the savings and loan scandal and the
yet to put a single person behind Reagan or Bush In some demondeficit debate, he is out to lunch.
bars.
strable wrongdoing, must be
As vice president for eight years under Ronald Reagan, Bush was In .
Add to .these the voluntary thoroughly galling.
charge ~f overseeing many maners, Including government
Investigative efforts of the Wa- · Walsh thus has nothing to lose
deregulatiOn.
shlngton media, who would by pressing on. One or two more
t&gt;eregulatlon and no oversight over Ute high rollers in the savings
gladly trade their admittedly small fry may be Indicted defend·
slender hope of heaven for the ant, let alone to Implicate Rea·
antJioan and banking industry played a big part hi putting depositors
honor of being Instrumental in gan or Bus)l In some demonstra·
behind the eight balL
'tlte federal government has guaranteed the deposits and It cannot
bringing about the dOwnfall of ble wrongdoing. must be
default on that. So while the deficit and the bailout hang like dark
either Reagan or Bush; and ·you
througbly galling.
cl~ds over the naTion. Bush says that he will outline the problem
get some Idea of the sort of , Walsh thus has nothing to lose
wlien he gets an agreement with Congress on bow 10 solve it.
· grinder the Iran-contra events by pressing on. One or two more
ije went on to say that "the people understand that the Congress
have already been through. Yet small fry may be l11dlcted, and he
be~rs a greater responsibility for this. But I'm not trying 10 assign
not a scintilla of evidence has may even .persuade the grand
blame. That's why l'rr. not doing it now ."
·
been found Indicating that either jury to hand up some sort of
J1e may ,a lso find out that! he people understand that he Is passing
Mr. Reagan or Mr. Bush was
"presentment" that tarnishes
th~ buck on one of the most foreboding i!'sues facing the nation.
aware that some proceeds of the Reagan and/ or Bush without
•
arms sales to Iran were being actually accuslngeltherofviolat·

Why .inquiry drags
On.

~

i

"

sale. .
potential transactions Involving
The Land O'Lakes dairy ·
numerous firms In the Twin cooperative was Invited last year
They j.ustlfy that sometimes
Cities area Illustrate the extent to
unseemly activity by citing the
to help the Soviets establish
unprecedented opportunity !or· . which ·growth Is likely In other cooperatives In which farmers
firms throughout the nation to fields. Some examples:
would privately own land, lives- The federal government has
offer goods and services to both
tock and equipment but would
prohibited computer sales to the jointly own· processing, market·
the Soviet Union and the nations
Soviet
Union since It Invaded lng and distribution systems for
It controlled In Eastern Europe.
Afghanistan
In 1979. But Control theJr products.
Of the $5 billion worth of trade
/
Data
now
is
seeking an export
last year between this country
- 3M Is working with Soviet
license to sell six Cyber 960 transportation officials to estaband the Soviet Union, exports
mainframe computers valued at lish a plant to produce reflective
(consisting prlmarUy of grain)
a total of $32 million to Improve road signs. Carlson Is negotiating
accounted !or $4.3 billion. The
safety procedures at nuclear to build a Radisson hotel In
$700,000 worth of Imports was
power plants In the USSR.
mostly In the form of petroleum
Moscow. HoneyWell for the past
vodka and furs.
· '
(Perhaps not entirely by coin· two years has participated In a
'
ctdence, two former Control joint venture to modernize Soviet
The principal corporate benefl·
Data o!f!clals, were lnstrumen· fertilizer plants, petrochemical
claries of that trade have been
tal In convlncll)g Gorbachev to refineries and wastewater proInternational grain trading firms
visit · their borne state of cessing faclll!les.
such as Archer Daniels Midland
Minnesota.)
Bunge, Cargill (whose corpOral~
offices are In a Minneapolis
suburb) and Continental. In
addition to wheat, corn and
soybeans, they !lave sold the
Soviets vegetable oils, rubber,
cotton, coffee, orange juice and
Located Acrou
Str11t ,....., • - llltl~~tal Bank,
other agricultural products.
Third lind Pearl StrNt In ladnt
But the varied previous and

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I· EYE-........................ *1.95
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lAKED H
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CHIC·N·NOODlES _,.......... 4•75

ROAST BF
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FIIDAY
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BF UVEII ONIONS-. *4.75 .ANU CORNIREAD ...... 1.60

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UVEIS
ALL DINNERS

response to Its pleas are rep~tl·
tlve resp11nses calling for more
and more speculative data to
substantiate the ·restrictiveness
of the proposed rules.
This lsn' t the first time the
OMB has dragged jts feet to the
detriment of the environment. In
1986 it took a ruling from a
federal judge to get the OMB to
move on some EPA regulations
mandated by Congress.
Congress goofed this lime
because It didn't set a deadline
for the toxic waste cleanup rules.
Congress preferred to let EPA
move at the pace · It ·deemed
appropriate. The lawmal\ers
trusted the EPA to do the right
thing, but they didn't reckon.wlth
the OMB .
.
If OMB continues to drag Its
feet, Congress may step In ·with a
stern lecture and firm deadlines .
We asked the OMB to respond
to complaints about the delays. A
spokeswoman told us the agency
doesn't talk about rules . while
they are being reviewed. At this
rate, that could be a long, long
time.

..... 4.75 mr Lou
- -.............. 4•75

TENDEII.OIN - ......... 4.15
VEGETABLES

home run gives· L.A. :·:
triumph over Cincinnati

ope·Oiit walk to ~rney Lansford :
LOS ANGELES tUPI) - Kal Kansa;s City 64, and Minnesota
McGw~ '. two-out double •
and
Daniels punished his forme r edged Chicago .3-2.
made
gave oaritt.ad a 1.0 lead in :
teammates Thursday night ,
Padres Z, Braves 1 - At San
tbe
fir
st Inning' ADd the Athleti cs :
leading off the lOth Inning with a Diego; plncb·hltter Fred Lynn
scored
three more In the fou rth. ·
home run to give the Los Angeles singled home PhU Stephenson
" We got ln:... ,...ble with the :
Dodgers a 2-1 victory over the with the winning run as part of a
walks ," Royaltt ·inanager J ohn •
Cincinnati Reds.
·
two-run seventh, lifting San
Wathan said. "Two runs scored :
Daniels, who was traded to the Diego to Its fourth straight
orr' the walks. which was th e :
Dodgers last season, b elted a H
victory. Dennis Rasmussen, 5·2,
pitch off Norm Charlton, 3-l , lnto . went seven Innings for the win difference In the game." .
Twins 3, WIIMe. Sox 2 - At
the le fl-fleld bleachers for his and Greg Harris notched his
Chicago , Klrb,, Puckett and
nlntth homer of the year and 24th third , save: Pete Smith, 4-4,
Gary Gael II each stroked , RBI
RBI In the month of May.
's uffered the defeat.
doubles In the first Inning 'l,'hurs·
"I s!Jll have friends over there
Astrae 5, Giants 3 - At San
day night, helping the Minnesota
,(In Cincinnati), but when you Francisco, Craig Biggio's twoTwins snap Chicago's five-game
step between the lines they're all run single highlighted a four-run
enemies," Daniels sa id .
sixth Inning, dropping the Giants winning streak with a 3-2 victory
Charlton said the home run to 6-16 at Candlestick Park this over the White Sox.
Mark Guthrh!, 2-0, allowed two
pitch "was a slider. It wasn't year, the worst home record In
runs
on eight hits over· five
where I wanted It , It was over th e · baseball. Jim Deshaies, 3·2. gave
Innings
for the win , striking out
plate and up. I'll throw that pitch up two runs and five hits for the
·
four
and
walking none. Rick
100 times in that situation."
win and Danny Darwin earned
Aguilera
recorded
the final six
Don Aase, 2·1, pitched two ·his first save. San Francisco
outs
to
record
his
·14th
save.
lrinlngs In relief of starter Mike star,t er Scott Garrelts, la st year's
Chicago
starter
Jerry
Kutzler,
Morgan fdr the win, as the National League ERA leader,
2-1.
allowed
three
runs,
two •
, Dodgers handed the NL West· dropped to 1-6.
earned,
and
eight
•
hits
over
leading Reds only their 12th los s
A's 6, Royals 4 - Rickey
In 42 games.
Henderson. convinced the Kan-· three-plus innings, walking three ::
and striking out two.
-·
"The thing with this series is sas City Royals will emerge as
....._
. 1hat nobody has to talk about it," late -season challengers In the AL
said Daniels. "It 's bigger for us West , Is directing the Oakland
The Daily Sentipel ·,,
than for them. Hopefully, we can Athletics to build a big lead now.
win at least three or maybe
Henderson ' s eighth-Inning
(USPSIUHI)
sweep it ."
home run helped Oakland to a 6·4
A Divilloa Df Muttbnedla. Jne.
The Dodgers snapped Jack victory over Kansas City, openPublished eve ry afternoon, Monday
Armstrong's st reak of 22 score- ing up a three-game lead over
throogh Friday, 111 Court St .. Poless innings when they scored a second·place Chicago and widenmeroy, Ohio. by the Ohio Vall ey Pubrun In the firs t. Le.noy Harris led ing its margin over the Royals to
lishing Company/Multtm~la , In c..
Pomer oy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992-215~ Seoff
with
a
doubl
e
and
took
second
12
games
..
White
Sox
catcher
Carlton
Fisk
walls
for
the
late
NEWM~N SCORES
Chicago Twltis' AI
cond cl ass postage paid at Pomerov
~
· on Stan Javier 's sacrifice bunt.
"we know Kansas Cit y is a
Ohio. ·'
throw. (,U PI)
. .
Newman scores standiJig up on a two base bit by
Daniels followed with a sacrifice late.season type team that c.an
Kirby Puckett lin first' Inning ac&amp;lon Thunday. ·;
Membt&gt;r: Un ited Pre-s Interna tional ,
fly to score Harris:
make a run." said Hender son.
Inland Daily Press Associat ion and the. 1''
The Reds tied the score with an w))o added his 23rd steal of the
Ohio Mewspaper Association. National
AdverUsing ~presentative , Branham
unearned run in .the third. Marl· ,season and 894th of his career.
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue.
ano Duncan reached base on " What we have to do is focus in on
New York, New York 10017.
shortstop Alfredo Griffin's er - each game now so that we don't
.,
'
PQSThiASTER: Send adlftss chan ge~
rant throw. Joe Oliver followed have to worry about late· season
to The Dally Sentlnel., ll1 Court St ..
with a single and both runners runs."
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
advanced a base on Armstrong 's
Henderson shared the often·
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
sacrifice bunt. Duncan , who was sive spotlight with Mark,
By Carrier or Motor Bo•&amp;e
activated just before the game, McGwire, who drove in four runs
OneWeek ........ ... .......... ... .... .... ... $1.40
On€- Month ....................... ,......... $6.10 .
scored
on
Chris
Saba
'
s
with
a
double,
a
single
and
a
. By MARTIN LADER .
well," said the Floridian. who
One Year ....... ...... .. .... .. .... .... .... 172.80
her."
groundout.
·
bases-loaded walk despite a
now has an 18-4 match record as a ' · Sanchez· Vicario, then 17 , be·
UPI Sports Writer. .
SINGLE COI"Y
nagging
strained quadricep mus·
Duncan
ltad
been
on
the
. PRICE
, •
·
'
·PARIS (UPil Arantxa pro. ·
came the yoimgestFrench chamDally :............. .. ......... .... .. .... 25Cents . ~
disabled list since May 14 with an cl~ in. his right leg.
"I think I pav~ a good chance pion In 1989 when she upset Steffi
Sane~- VIcario, t'hf! defending
"I strai'led It again tonight on
abdominal muscle strain.
Subscribers nqt des'lring to pay thec.lr- ··
(of winning the tournament) If I Graf In the final.
women's champl.o n, was
rler may remit ·In advance direct t.o
Cincinnati first baseman TOdd the double and then two more ·
knocked out In the second round play well. I'll try to wiQ'. ''
The loss by the Spaniard
The Dally Sentinel on a 3; 6 or 12 month
Benzinger saved two potential times ," McGw!re said..
basts. Credit wUI be g1ven carrier each
The quick dismissal of followed the ·trend set among the · runs in the sixth with a grab of
of the, French 'Open Thursday,
,,
Bob Welch, 7-2, earned the
wefok.
opening a path to the semifinals Sanche~- Vicario .marks'the ear 11- . men, where top seeds Stefan · Griffin's line drive. Wltlt runners victory, and Dennis Eckersley
No subscriptions by mall permitted In • · ·
est exit by a defending French .Edberg and Boris. Becker l!oth
for Jennifer Caprlatl.
at first _and second, Benzinger recorded the final four outs for
a reas where home carrier service ls
Sanchez-Vicarlo saw her ser· women's .champlon, and th,e flpst were upset in the first round.
a vailabl e.
made a diving catch down the tits 15th save In 15saveopporrunivice broken 10 ilmes In falling to time one has lost before the rounl:l
Paz and Sanchez-Vlca!'IO, who
t!es. The win , Oakland's eighth in
flrst·base line.
Mall Sa.bflt:rtplktM
Mercedes Paz, h.e r doubles of 16.
have won three doubles titles this
·irs last 10 games, snapped a
laaide Meip Couaty
Armstrong
went
e
ight
and
''What can you dO," asked ye11r. engaged in a long struggle
partner and close friend, 7-5, 3-6,
13 Weeks .. ...... ........ .... ... .... ....... $19.24
one-third innings, giving up five five -game Kansas City winning
26 Weeks., ....... ...... .. ........ ......... 137.96 · ·• •
, Sanchez· VIcario, the No. 3 seed. under a warm sun.
6·1.
streak.
hits,
walking
four
and
striking
52 Weeks .. ............ .......... .. .. ... ... $74.36
No. 2 seed Monica Seles had a "I didn't · play my best. She
The opening set required 74
Outside Melp CourQ
Oakland
took
advantage
of
six
out
five.
Morgan
scattered
six
sc11i'e before' extenl!tng her wtn· played very well . That Is tennis. minutes and included nine ser13 Weeks ............. .... ..... ... .. ....... $20.80 1
walks
In
four
innings
to
build
a
4·0
hits in his eight innings of' work.
26 Weeks ........- ............. ,.. , .... ..... 14(1,30· . ' .
ning' streak to 27 rnatches with.a Sometimes you lose and some· vice breaks. Sanchez.vicario.
lead against Tom Gordon , f3 . A
striking
out
five
.
52 Weeks .................................. $7:5.40 • , • ·
4-6: 6-4. 6·4 squeaker· over Cana· times you win. She played better ranked fourth in the world, took
Morgan said his 6uting was
thai) I did." .
,
. control of the second set as she
dian '•Helen Kelesl. . Seles, a
aided
by catcher Mike Scloscla,
There were 18 service breaks raced to a 5-1 lead, but she fe ll
IS-year-old· Yugoslavian, did not
who
·
threw out three Reds
lose a set In the 26 , previous in a match that lasted two hours . behind 4-0 in the final set and
baserUriners
.
and 22 minutes.
victories.
couldn't recover.
"He
was
r ight on target all
"It was a dream for me to play
Caprlatl, the 14-year-old'terror
Since the beginning of the year
night,
"
Morgan
said. "He was a
of the circuit, required nierely41 on Center Court today and to beat Paz has lost 20 pounds on a s trlct
pitcher's best friend. It was just
minutes to' crush ·cammy Mac- the champion of last year," said training regimen .
like throwing a double-play ball.
Gregor, 6·1,. 6-0, A prof!!5slonal of ;. Paz ,. a 23-year·old Argentine
"The special diet was to run, "
I
started getting tired after the
only two months and unseeded in ranked No. 39 In the world.
she said. "I've been running very
sixth
inning. I had gone nine
Parts, Capriati wm'' meet 12th ~ At the end of .the match, Paz much."
!innings)
in St. louis and had the
"
seed Judith ,Wiesner In the third .. embraced her rival and kis sed
After dropping her list Sfi!t
flu
before
that."
her
on
the
cheek.
round.
since February. Seles broke
Reds manager Lou Plnella
"When I walked on the court I service in the seventh game of
But with Sanchez-VIcarlo re·
said
Sc!oscla ·'did a great job of
moved froin her quarter of· the tried not to think she is a doubles the second and third sets. She
throwing
ou t runners. It was a
partner and a friend ," Paz said. employed a drop shot to gre at
~raw; she has a good chance of
great game all the way . You've
earning a .semifinal date with ''I tried to remember that we are effectiveness against Kelesl, an
got to give the Dodgers credit.
Seles in her first Grand Slam · professionals and we are putting occasional doubles partner.
Morgan threw a great game and
. , on a shol:". I try to play against
·championship.
"I was just lucky I pulled out . Don Aase did a great job In
'
MacGregor managed only nine myself.
this match today ," said Seles , · rei elf."
"At the end I was a little upset ranked No. 2 in the world behind
points. In the second set, and
Efsew.h ere in the National
Cap rial! sa(d · she ~njoyed the for ·her because f. could see how Graf. "! think· ihe whole match
Leagu!i! on Thursday night , San
she felt aboutloslng In the se cond for me was dangerous. It was one
short stand In the sun.
Diego nipped Atlanta 2·1 and
"I'm grateful I don 't ~ave to round after having won here las t of those days when nothing was
Houston
topped San Francisco
year, but at the same time I'm going for me. except my serve ."
have a tough match. and I'm
5·3.
happy bPCause I know I played happy that I was theonewho beat
No. 5 Aaron Krickstein wa s an
In an abbre\•!ated American
easy 6-3. 6-4, 7·5 winner over
League schedule, Oakland beat
French qualifier Stephane
Grenier, and commen ted on hi s
improved chances following the
· losses of Ed berg and Becker.
Now you can own a
·'A lot of guys in tHe locker
$U Fran:-.....:::............11 •
.HI u
trimmer with the world
Mka&amp;a . ..•... ..•••......... ...l7 r. .3~ U
room think they have a chanee to
Majors
win
."
he
said.
"Anyone
who
gets
·
famous Stihl quality and
Tll•ftlda.1o· ~ ..b
By ll•lkd Prtt111 lnterlllliollll
San Dlf'F ! , ;\Umla I
t\MERWM LEAGl"E
to the qua r terfinals has a realisperformance for aprice
•
•Ea!lt
Ho1111toa :1, Sat~ FunciM·o :J
Tic shot. That's the key, to get to
Tram
l\ L p,.,, GB
to~ .\n~le!ll t. (lnclnnatll, 10 Inn.
too good to be true. But it is.
ToroN:o ...... ..... ....... .... .:!1 :! l .S31 the quarters without playing too
Prldll)' (Uhl"i
MII••IIP.f' . ............. ..... :!:J :! 1 .)23
~~
many long marches. "
The new Stihl Cut'N Trim,.
SN· \ 'orlt (VIola Hi at Phlladf'l(lll u
Be 11 1on ,~... ._, ..................:!:l :! '! .sn
1
(CMl~ll . i :33 P·IT! ·
Cl.l'\'f'land .................... :!:! ·za ..&amp;K.' :!
The
men
lost
their
sixth
seeded
...
offers the cutting power of
Mottrul CGrOM f.ll l £\1 PIIWiurwh
Bal11rriorr .......... ..... ..... t1 ~ ta .U7 .f
player when No . 12 Juan Agull·
IDnr.hd; H). i : :U p.m.
Det roli ...... .............. ....til :.'1 .-11114 li
•
larger, heavier models , but
Olil•ap I Maddu H I at St. LOllis
Sl'w \'olil. .. .. ....... \(~,;.'j.J1 21 . ~M fit-:
era was ousted by Thierry
'
IDf'll.oaHJ . tl : &lt;JI.p.m.
in alightweight package at a
Champion of France 3-6, 6·3, 6-3,
,\tlatUa C8molb IH I ld Sun Dl r ~
Oakland ..... ................ .3! H .Hill •
' f0UIIIIf' 0-11, 11:15 p;m,
0\il'll,t;&amp; ........ ...............:!M Hi .1:5 3
• ·'
6·2,
and
Raffael!a
Reggl
,
the
14th
lightweight price. So. stop by
a ••••• (.Jat'bollf-1 ) .. Los.\nl"l f'll
:vllniii'!IOiu .. ................. :!H 1~ .~!If .f' ~
•
(\\'tUelaiMII-3 ), li:SSp.m .
women's seed. lost to Australian
('ulltornb ..... ..... ....... ...%3 l.S .111 10
.,
your nearestStihl dealer and ask
HoMDD (Pert: IIlii 1-5)• au S11n FranSf'atlif' .... ,.......... ....... .. ,%3 H .1. 101 '1
Klrrlly Sharpe, a 17-year,old
cbtl'O
CWIIaonN),
lt:U,.m.
bn;ao~ rlt y ........ ......1-..tfl :ti .U.\ I~
to see the new Stihl Cut'N Trim,.
qualifier, 6·4, 6-2.
T•xus ................ .......... ~1 :tl" .18-1 131 t
..
Satunla, GameM
"
12.00
Cover
Charge
No
.
4
Andres
Gomez
and
No.
7
the
mostexciting
homeowner'
Houlltoa
.a
SUI
Fnad~~e:o
,
Th•nld~ rt&gt;~t'" "
Nt"W
\'ork
At
Phladflphia.
niJht
'
MlnN'KOla 3, Cllk'AIO t
Th01;nas Muster both won In
Must
It
21
Y111rs
Old
'
trimmer
in
Stihl's
history.
»ontreiiiiLI Plt...,.111h. nl~thl
OILIF.Iaild I, KaleN Cil}' -1
•
:·
straight sl!ts, while No. 10 Martin
Chltap .e. St. Lotlla, •IKht
......
Cl.,ln.UI
at
Lo•
Mptl!t'.
nlsflt
CORNER
OF
IT.
7/143
Frldti I{ IIJJI~
Jalte, who dropped two HeA.UanW. ai,_SIWI Dlep. aiJhl
WtmorP {Billkrd 1-S) ut Sn· \ ' orll
breakers, and No. ·14 Magnus
POMEIOY I OHIO
tLaPoiM ·H), i :St p.m.
.•
Frld~ Sports C11lf'fldar
·. Mnwau~~ ~Hiprl'll ... I at Toroo1n
Gustafsson
won
In
five
sets.
llallllt.tball
tSt~re _.,,, 'i':35 p.m.
1

W
. illiam Rusher

minute with Gorby_------lng_a....:..nn=-:b::..::·e~rt. . .:. :~:. . .: :a=lte~rs ·

MINNEAPOLIS !NEA) There may be no better lllustratloO of the domestic economic
op,prtunltles presented by the
fading of the Cold War than the
co!Jimerc!al frenzy surrounding
thl!-: upcomlng brief visit here of
So!rlet President Mikhail
Gorbachev.·
Although Gorbachev is schedull!d to spend merely six hours
In the Twin Cities on the afterROO!' of June 3, the Minneapolis
Sta)i Trlb~ne noted that "the
MIJ!)tesota business community
cr~kled with enthusiasm" In the
da~&amp; and weeks prior to his
arrt.VaL
I~ a less charitable descrlp·
!loti, St. Paul Pioneer Press
colt(mnlst Nick Coleman was
shtu:PIY critical of the "moneygru,l;lblng, opportunistic" buslnes~ executives who view Gorbache.'f as · merely a glorified
pu~haslng agent.
"'file orgy of Gorby-grovellng
that· Is taking place Is nauseatIng;!' added Coleman, inveighing
agatnst the "naked display of
bucil·dlvlng'' on the part of those
~anxious to do business with the
Sovtet Union that they are
. oblivious to Its' status as "the
world' s .longest-lived authoritarIan regime."
Indeed, business People rangIng :trom senior executives of
major corporations to entrepreneurs from small firms have
been shamelessly maneuvering
to gain access to Gorbachev or
bla : retinue. They apparently
hope to eslabllsh a commerlcal
relationship or make a qulcl\

~-1

Pomeroy-Middfeport Ohio
Friday. June 1. 1990
' .--

Bm~

~aniels'.

-

.

.

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Pomeroy, Ohio

~·

'f

Paz ·beats .Sanchez- Vicario·
.
in French Open Thursday

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�Friday, June 1. 1990

Dykstra hitting
,394 to lead, majors

•

CROWD GREETS WESTERN CHAMPS - Pordand Trail
Blazers center, Kevin Duckworth (R) ·!"!!aches out to give fives to a
waiting crowd at Hillsboro Airport early Friday as tlie Blazers

retumed lo Portland after winning the NBA Weitei'D
tllle by defeating Phoenix four games lo lwo. (UPI)

With 112.109 win over Suns,

Portland wins Western Conference title
By MIKE BARNES
UPI Sports Writer
PHOENIX tUPI) -The Portland Trail Blazers crashed
through their playoff roadblock
Thursday night, with a trip to the
NBA Finals waiting on the other
· side.
·
Jerome Kersey's blocked shot
and go-ahead layup wlih 23.2
seconds left pushed 'the . Trail
Blazers to a 112-109 victory over
the Phoenix Suns. giving them a
berth in the league championship
series for the iirst time in 13
years.
Portland took advan tage of a
hamstring injury to Phoenix
guard Kevin Johnson to capture
the best-of-seven Wes tern Conference finals four games to two.
The Trail Blazers will face
Detroit or Chicago in the NBA
Finals beginning Tuesday night.;
and will hold the home-court
advantage should • the Bulls
&amp;dvance.
·
: Portland had lost its previous
Uve road playoff games bv an
average of 18 .8 points. and had
dropped Games 3 and 4 in
Phoenix by margins of 34 and 12
paints. Yet the Trail Blazers
became I he first road team in the
series TO win.
~ "We wanted to win a road
game so we would enter the finals
with an emotional lift." Portland's Buck Williams sa id .
, Johnson. the Suns' sensational
~oint guard. had 16 points before
lli'aving with 2:54 left in the
second quarter with a strai ned
left hamstring. He did not ret ur.n .
"We kept expecting )lim to
come back, ·· Portlond' s Clyde
~rexler said. "iJeffl. Hornacek ·
did a great job as his replace6lent, but he's no K.J. It was a
golden opportunity and we took
II. "

, The Suns. seeking their first
b,erth in the championship series
since 1976. fell in the conference
(lnals for the second straight
:!ear. Their losses to Portland
~arne b~· margins of one. two. six
4'nd three points.
: "The name of the game in this
series was when Portla nd needed
a steal. they got a steal. When
they needed a blocked shot, they
got a blocked shot." Phoenix
&lt;:oach Cotton Fitzsimmons said.
";Whatever they needed. they
!lOt.''
; Portland trailed 109-108 when
Kersev blocked a shot bv a
driving Hornacek and r~ced
r:lowncourt to take Drexler 's pass
and complete a fasi-break layup
fOr a 110-109 edge.
• "It was just a defensive weak&amp;'lde rotation,'' said Kersey, who
finished with 1~ points and 10
rebounds. "I just got a hand on
the ball. I was.Justdoingmy job. "
After two Phoenix limeouts.
fom Chambers looked to drive.
!lui Williams stole the ball off the
dribble. He shoveled it to
prexler, who was fouled by
Chambers with 6.8 seconds to go.
Drexler then sank two free
throws.
! Hornacek, who had a career·
~!gh 36 points, then mis~ed an
off-balance three-pointer with 3.5
S/!Conds left, . Wl!l!ams got ·the
rebound and Portland began to
celebrate.
: "This Is the year of the Trail
Blazer," Williams shouted in the
locker room.
;:Terry Porter and Drexler
scored 23 points aptece for
Portland. Dan Majerle collected
22 points and 10 rebounds off the

..

bench for the Suns and Chambers
had 17 points, though he made
only 5 of 16 shots.
.
Phoenix led 105-99 with four
minutes to play, but the Trail
Blazers battled back.
With Johnson out. Hornacek
shifted from shooting guard to
the point and delivered, making
11 of 22 shots from the floor and
all14 from the free-throw line.
"When we first came in the
locker room. it was kind of a sick
feeling knowing it was over for
us," Hornacek said. "We'd have
!!ked to have continued on."
Said Johnson: "Everyone tried
to· do what it took. Jeff and Dan
had excellent ballgames. I just
~ad
to resign myself to a

different role (as cheerleader) ."
Phoenix made only five field
goals In the third q'uarter, but
actually bullt on its halftime lead
by making 16 of 18 free throws.
Hornacek was 8-for-8 from the
line for 10 points .in th.e period.
hitting two free throws with 7.8
·seconds left to give P)loenix an
89·84 lead entering the final
quarter.
·
Majerle canned 6 of 8 shots in
the second quarter and scored 16 ·
points as the Suns; who led by as
many as 12 points In the period.
settled for a 63-59 haHtime lead.
Porter had 18 points on 7 of 8
shooting for Portland.
Tim Perry's double-pump
layup off Hornacek's fast-break
feed had given Phoenix a 47-35

lead, but the Trail Blazers
retaliated, moving within 53-50
on Kevin Duckworth's jumper.
Johnson, resting since the end
of the first quarter. then returned
to the lineup at the4: 27 mark. But
as he soared to the basket on a
drive, he slid oif Duckworth and ·
landed awkwardly on his left leg.
He made the basket and free
throw, but left limping to the
locker room With 2:54 to play in
the half.
Johnson went wild In the first
quarter, collecting 13 points and
six assists as the Suns took a 34-31
lead. Phoenix hit 12 of 18 shots
and got nine points from Hornacek , but made seven
turnovers.

•
• .h .
Holyfield, McDonagh to f lg t tonight
·
· · , ·
title from Tyson in February, the at the Convention center in a
By DAVE RAFFO
heavyweight championship has scheduled lO·round bout that is
UPI Sports Writer ·
been tied up in legal and political considered a tuneup for HolyATLANTIC CITY. N.J. iUPil
- Evatider' Holyfield's life was knots. Holyfield remains the field. But Holyfield woull!like to
simpler when Mike Tyson held unanimous No. 1 contender. but - know what he is tuning up for.
the heavyweight championship nobody can say for sure if he w!ll
If he and Douglas have their
and Holyfield felt certain he ever fight Douglas.
way. the two will fight September
Holyfield will keep busy to- · for the undisputed heayywe!ght
would get his shot someday.
Since Buster Douglas took the night against Seamus McDonagh
title. But boxing's ruling bodies
may strip Douglas for breaking
from promoter Don King, perhaps leaving Holyfield to fight
Tyson. Or just the World Boxing
Counc!l may strip Douglas :sanc.tion Tyson against George ForeBy'DAVE HARRIS
all-Ohio tackle ban Staggs. now a man as a title fight and leave
Meigs M~raqder head football coach at Prince George High Douglas and Holyfield to fight for
coach Mike Staggs and his ' School in Vlrglna. Former North. a piece of the title.
coaching staff wil! be hold ing the Ga!li a head coach John Blake
"It doesn't bother me at all,"
first Marayder Football Camp and former Marauder stars Holfyield said of the uncertain
July 9-13 at Meigs High School for Bobby Ashley , Chris Judge and championship picture. "You can
boys enteri ng gra des 4-9.
Mike Bartrum wll! also be in win part of the championship.
Basic fundamentals that wil! attendance. Ashley earned All· and then un ify it."
be taughf by the Meigs varsit y American honors at West Vir"The only thing I'm looking
s ta ff wi ll include ball handling, gina State as a punter, Judge was forward to is getting my chance
receiving. proper stance, kick- · the place kicker at Ohio Univer- at the title because I feel I've
!ng. punting, and throwing drills. sity for two years while Bartrum ·earned ·it."
along , with the basic fundamen - is recovering from major knee
tals on offense and defen se. All surgery and will miss the upcomboys will be tlmed in the forty Ing season ·at. Marshall where he
ya rd dash a·n·d agility run. and lettered as a .red shirt freshman
GRAVELY TRACTOR
ranked by their speed ·and tight end last season.
SALES &amp; SERVICE
quickness. Physical conditioning
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy. OH.
Other special quests will be
will be talked about and the use of former Marauder head coach
&amp;
Hun
weight equipment will be demon- Charles Chancey, current Wes t
MONDAYTHRU FRIDAY
s trated by the Meigs varsity Virg!na kicker Mark Johnson
9A.M.-6 p.M.
players .
. SAT. 9 A.M.-1 P.M .
from Ripley, and the new offenCLOSED MONDAYS
Cost of the camp will be $30 for sive coordinator at Marshall
15 hours of Instruction. Cost will University, Joe Dickinson.
~THE
includ e T-shirts that will be given
For more Information on the
out on the firs t day of camp. On camp contact Mike Staggs at
Saturday a Punt-Pass-Kick com- Meigs High School, 42091 Pomepetit ion will be held at Marauder roy Pike, Pomeroy, OH 45769 ..
Stadium, with entry fee to the
competition being included !n the
camp fee.
Mike Staggs will be assisted by
assistant coaches Joe Johnson
Jim Niday, Steve Patterson and
Rick Edwards. Also assisting
I
with the camp will be former

By The Bend

gets the feeling .thai if he's
patient, he'll get pirches to hit
every time up. The!) it's just a
matter of refining his fund amen·
tals. And right now, his funda·
mentals are at the top of his

By .JOE CIALINI

-·----..

Marauder· Football Camp
scheduled ·for .July 9-13

%

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The Bend Area Gosepl Sing will
be held Saturday and Sunday at
the West V!rgiilia State Farm
Museum, six miles north of Point
. Pleasant , W.Va.
; ·, The sing will begin Sat.urday at
, ;1 p;m. and continue into . the
; evening, and on Sunday it will
•))egln at 1 p.m. and continue unt!l
' 6'p.m. There Is no admission. The
Country Kitchen wil! be open. a
;ent will be provided. and those
attending are asked to tltke lawn
chairs.
• Among the featured · singers
will be the Conne• Family,
ltedeemers Quarte t, abriel
Quartet, Reflection, Glory bound
Quartet, Charity, Beulah Trio.
Narrow Way, Praise, Grubb
Family. United Gospelet tes ,
Christ Unlimited, Roll!ns Fani!ly, New Horizons. Edens Fam!ly, Goodwin Family , The Taylors, Bedford Trio. Clark Family,
SoHd Rock Singers,. Lee Sisters.
~HI Pignato, Denise Bone'cutter.
Zion Hill Gospel ~ingers, Shoppe
Sisters and David. Gospel Melody Boys, Wally Hart. The
Messengers, Faith Trio. Valley
Gospelaires, Fellowship Singers.
Lemons Sister.

.

COLONY THEATRE
FRIDAY THRU THURSDAY

PRIZES GALORE
· Color TV's,. Golf
Clubs, Police Scanners, Golf Balls
.
·•Wheels ·of Chance •Blackjack
. •Crap T,able
.
'

S1 0 Admission includes Free Refreshments and Beer

Red, low mileage. V-6.

The Meigs County Health De·
partmPnt has issued a reminder
to area residents who will b!'
handling food at summer events
regarding that department's re·
(:lui rem en Is fo r temP,orary food
service operations.
The following regulati ons
apply:
· All food preparers and sen·e·~'
must possess e\'idenc e of a
~urrent negative TB skin test or
chest X-ray.
All foods. excPpt oaked goods,
must be prepared Pit her on site
or In a licensed food ser\'iCe
operation. Operatof' who sell
only baked goods are not requi'red to obtain a liceqse through
the health department . and the~·
are not subject to health depat't·
ment inspections.
Three tubs must be on hand for
washing. rinsing and sa nitizing
sening utensils and equipm ent ,
and an appro1·ed sanitizer must

_
5699 5

'

SPRING VALl FY CINEMA

1985 Ford Escort •••••••••• Sl695
2 dr. 4 speed, white.·
·
V-6. 4 dr .• ·auto .• air. white.

Model chosen

SINGERS- The Lee Sisters will be among many grqups singing
at the Bend Area Gospel Sing lhis weekend.

Group II
•

be used.
Hot water musthbe available
.for uten sil washing .' Employees
of food t&gt;ooths must have access
to restroom s and handwashing
fac!lities.
Accurate thermomNers must
be on hand for-monitoring hot and
cold food tempe ra tures . Cold
foods must be held at 45 degrees
or lower . and hot foods mu st be
held at i40 degrees or hi gher.
Food must not be stored in ice
w hich Is int e nd ed for
co nsumption .
The cost of temporary li cense
is S15.
The a bo\'€ requirements apply
to food concessions oper.ated at
th e upcoming Her ita ge Da~· s
celebration. at the various communit~· block parties. at local
auctions and flea markets, and at
other festi\'itit'S at which food
will be sold .

446 4524

'" " . :, .

ren. StC\'e and Terr~· of Long
Bottom . Beth Sherman of Colum -.
bus, Janet Chafin. Ca libn , an d
Myr na Carpenter. deceased .
Mrs. Hoffman is ·ihe daughter
of the late Oris and Lucy Gaul.
Mr. Hoffman is the son of Peter
and Estella Hoffman . · ·

meettng
Group 1I of the First Presb~· rer ­
ian Church met recently at t"he
home of Faye Wallace.
Dorothy· Morris . chairman.
presided. Opening prayer was
given by Elizabeth Burkett . Mrs.
Myron Miller ga\'e the roll call
and also the treasurer's repot't.
The secretary's rep ort wa s
given t&gt;y Elizabeth Burkett.
Cat herine Brown read "The
Whoe World .Knows". Th e leas t
coin collection was taken.
Devptions were given b:• Eliza- .
beth Burkett called "Steps" . She
said that "The steps of a good
man are ordered by the Lord :
and He del!ghteth in his way. For
now Thou numbereth my ste ps. "
The book s tud~· was given by
Velma Rue and w,a s entitled
"Love Reaches Out and Hangs
On" . Dorothy Morfls gave the
clos ing prayer. Refreshments of
salad, sandwiches and coffee
·were serve:ct by Mrs. Wallace.

S50 lndtllln EY..,IIi• plush Adttd•iatt toW. lzfs Y1gt11 fiFt
CALL JAYMAR FOR DETAILS 992·8312

St. It, 7

.....

..

Reedsville church will ·
observe anniversary
The 75th a nniversary of the
Reedsville Church of Christ will
be observed Su nd~y with an
.
all ·day seni ce.
. Speaker for the services will be
Jeff Stevenson. minister of the
Norway Avenue Church of Christ
at Huntington, W. Va. He
preached regularly at the Reeds·
ville church on Sundays while
attending the· Ohio Valle,·
College.
The services by Mr. Stevenson
will include Sunday School at
9:30 a.m . with thz topic of "The
Power of an Indestruct ible Life'' . .
10: 30 a.m . . morning worship.
"Something to Hold Onto" : and
the speciaJ anniVersary service
at 2:30 p.m. using the theme
"Why The War Goes On" There
wlll ·be special congregational
singing. a quartet concert. a nd
the" Joyful Sound'· of Vienna. W.
Va . at the services.
Sundav dinner wil! be at the
Belleville Dam at 12:30 p.m.
The first congregation was
organized in 1915 at which time a
wooden structure was built on a
plat of _ground donated by a
devoted member. the lat e Sarah
Fields. ,

Lee'a Johnson, 17 , daughter of
Margaret and Maurice Johnson,
Bailey Run Road. Pomeroy. has
been chosen to . represent the
John Casablanca Modeling
Agency .
She was screened and Inter- ·
viewed by two of the agency's
representatives and selected out
of 300 applicants. She will be
·At the completion of the second
model!Jtg !n Parkersburg and the
surrounding areas of West Virgi- semester at Bob Jones Universitv. Melissa Ann Barker, daugh·
nia and her picture will be sent to
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
New York and distributed
Barker of Racine. was named to
nationwide.
A . graduate of Meigs High the B-a \·erage dean's list . Me·
l!ssa. a 1986 graduate of Eastern
School, she has been accepted at
the University of Rio Grande and High School In Reeds\i!le. is a
was · awarded a two year ROTC senior majoring In special educascholarship, with her selection tion in the School of EducatiQn.
Bob Jones University Is a
being based oq academic abll!ty
Christian. · liberal
fundamental
and leadership qualities.
arts univer sity that has an
annual enrollment of approximately 5,000stutlents from every
state in the Union and 40 foreign
countries and territories.
A grant of $19.100 has been
made to the Ohio Historical
Society lor use in making repairs
at the Buffington Island Statp
Memoria!. Portland, Mary Abel,
State Representative for the 94th
District, announced today.
Plans call for remodeling of the
to!let fac!l!tles and structural
changes to make them handicapped accessible. New roofs
w!ll be also be put on the picnic
shelters. In announcing the grant
1916 auecK
Mrs. Abel stressed the need to
ARAIVA.LSIYHAW. 2 DR.
make public facilities more
6 ipd. tr8na .. A/C·, AM-FM
avai !able to the handicapped and
stereo
caaAt,., tiH wh..t,
· also the importance of preservcruiie
control.
R.W. defrCM·
Ing areas of his toHcal
tar.
aport
wheato.
body aida
significance.
moldings. ahoorp car.
·
A contract for the work at the
992·3011.
Civil War battle memoria! park
has been awarded to Banks
Construction of Pomeroy . The
work Is scbi!duled to begin
Immediately, she said, and to be
completed in about'60 days.

Grant re&lt;:eived

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The same building s till stands
and· serves a s the sa nctuary. It
was remodeled in 1972. That fall
an addit·ion for classrooms was
added. Generous monetary gifts
from the es tales of the late Edna
K. Stewart and Frank M. Coates:
longtime prominent residents ot
Reedsville. helped members ·
with the cost of constructing the
addition.
The small co ngregations have
been sell-supporti ng throughout the years dependi ng so lely
upon contributions of thli '
members.
Among the ministers who have
served the chureh throughout the·
vears were the late Ross Swindeler anti H . T. Dotson,'as we!) as·
Paul Hall. Dale Dotson. CHiton ·
Inman. Lewis Russell . Robert
Swain. Jo hn Tyler. Ivan
Eversen. Charles Aebi. Jim •
Phillips. E·ugene Co nger. who
are presently serving other •
c hurches or teachi ng in Christian
colleges.

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE

20th A,,l,t~mg s,,l,~ S•l•
'
All BEDDING
PLANTS

3 PNS

Barker named to
· B]U dea1J_'s list

Benjamin J. Sol, M~D.
.

SlDD

REG. 16:50 Flats NOW 15so

I

BEDDING GERANIUMS
REG. 112 NOW

$95°

4 IN. GERANIUMS Reg. suo
85c E(- 10 FOR $JIO
4 IN. HARDY MUMS Rog. 11.00
NOW 85c oo. - 10 FOR S7so
1D INCH HANGING BASKETS
REG.

ss.so NOW 5450

REG. $6 7! NOW SS7S
ALL SHRU.ERY &amp; TREES

20%

OFF

Salt Cantin- Throughout Tho St•an

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE, OHIO
992-5776

o,_ Dally 9-5; Closttl Sunday "
•

·

1986 NISSAN
SENTIA 2 Dl.
6 apd. trans. AM-FM ttereo
casaette.
48,000 actual
miles, great fuel economy.

SALE PRICED

~3990

.

. ~"~"' 1914 MIRCUY
~
COIGAR
V-1 engine. l(fc, powar
Mltl, ~r wlndQw.. ,...

Trained In Childbirth and Women's Diseases
.Both Me4ic!ll and Surgical

control, thla D* 18 loac!ML

·I

..

For Appointment, CaU 675-3400
Monday-Friday, 9 a.m. - 5 p.m.

.

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Obstetrics and Gynecology
BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY &amp; SUNOAY
All SEATS $2 . 75
BARGAIN NIGHT T\JESDAY
ALL SEATS 11.75

GS

Reedsville Chureh of Chrilll to observe 75th anniversary

'

SEE RAY RIGGS

1:00 PM Shotgun Start

The annual Curt!s-Eslocker
family · reunion was held on
Saturday at the home of Sam and
Mary Es!Qcker Curtis, Racine . A
cookout and time of fellowship
was enjoyed by 28 members of
t~e families.
_
Attending were on and Winnie
Eslocker, Jack and Ji!l Eslocker,
Ft. wa·shlngton, Maryland; Hu bi!rt McDonald and Elaine DaVis, Thi&gt; Plains; Gene and Wanda
,McDonald. -Ch!llicothe; Debbie
McDonald and Steven , Columbus; Tom and. Martie Eslocker,
Asa and A\'erJI Ann, Athens;
Janet ·Eslocker Well, New AI·
bany; Danny a~d Betty Boling,
Stephanie and Jonatha~t. Wichita, Kan~as; Marcia Curtis
Wells, Pomeroy; Pearl Howard
and Virginia Brooks, Athens.
Unable to attend but call!ng
durtng the reunion were Tom and
Sue Curtis Sweeney. Plam
Springs, Calif.; Birdie Woods,
Logan; and Marge and Rod
Gr,!mm, Racine.
Next year's reunion will be
held at the s11me place om May
26th.

LEE' A JOHNSON

1985 Ford LTD ............... S2695

THUISDA Y, JUNE 7

AU proceeds go to irrigation av-tam at Jaymar .

Paul and Maxene Hoffman.
Sumner Road. Pomero~·. will
obsen·e their 50th wet!dlng anni versary Sundav with an open
reception from 2to 4 p.m. at th eir
home. The obsen·ance is being
)los ted by their children.
Married on Ma~' 31. 1940 in
Kentucky they have five child-

1988 P~mou~h Reliant .... S4995·
4 Dr., auto.: lir,low mileage.

ALL KINDS OF AWARDS
STEAK DINNER AFTER GOLF

ONE EYEIIING SHOW 7:30
ADIIS$1011 $1.50
446-0923

$7995

Page-5 :

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Anniversary open house slated

GOLF SCQMBLE
11:30 Lunch

Slag to be held at the Wzsl VIrginia Stale Farm
Museum Saturday and Sunday.

Food operations health
reminder is issued

GRAVELY
SYSTI;IVI

WEDNESDAY JUNE 6
JAYMAR .GOLF COURSE
7 P.M. UNTIL 10 P.M.

~

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Gospel sing
this weekend

~

.1988 Chevy S-10 4X4 .

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MESSENGERS - A quintet, "The Messenge·r s", will be singing at the Bend Area Gospel

S.rh•t Su•••r

VEGAS NIGHT

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.

The .Daily Sentinel
Reunion held
at Racine

1985
Lincoln
Cont.
Town
Car
Fully equipped. good condition, 2-tone gold, Florida oneowner. car.

•

Friday. June 1. 1991:!

.

UPI SportS Writer
PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
The only thing Lenny Dykstra
likes less than talking about his
success at the plate this season is
game .' r
discussing what went wrong In
Hayes said he saw how hal'(j
1989.
worked during the off.
DYkstra
Dykstra, t)le major league's
season.
leading hitter with a .394 aver"It makes you feel good,"
age, has turned things around
Hayes
said. "I saw his work
this year after ending last season
habits
over
the winter. I live· In
- his first with the Philadelphia
Florida
but
he
came down there
. Phillies - on a decidedly down
early.
He
workei!
hard. He knew
note .
he'd
be
playing
every day. He
After coming to the Phillies In a
wan
ted
to
start
the
season
a lit tie
Fathers Day trade !rain the New
heavy
so
he
could
stay
strong.
York Mets; the center fielder
It's good to see he got some
batted only .178 in the last two
reward for working hard."
months of the season.
Dykstra's best full season
. "I don't really want to talk
came
In 1986, when l)e played In
about last year," said Dykstra,
147
games
for the Me)s and
who is not the most co!Jimunicabatted
a
career-high
. .295 with
tlve of people. "Last year was a
eight
horne
runs
,
.
45
RBI
and 55
learnil!g experience for me. I had
stolen bases.
been platooned for most of rny4~
Due to problems· hitting leftyears l.n the' big leagues antj I
pitchers, however, Dykhanded
wasn't uSed to playing everyday.
stra
was
used as a pl!itoon player · ·
•'I came here and the team was ·
in last place. What if I hit .:iOO? It In New York.
"I got used t&lt;i being a platoon
doesn't matter. The team would
player," he said. "It made !I
still be in last place."
tough physically and mentally
Dykstra guards his words
1to come to . Philadelphia and ·
carefully, as If )le Is afraid that
whatever magtc he has captured . play every day ). I had to get out
of that s!fuation. You prepare
could jl\5t as easily be lost.
Dykstra said he decided after yourself differently t if you plalast season that he had to prepare toon). Everything Is different."
Dykstra barely missed becomhimself d!iferently for the 1990
campaign. Consequently, he car· Ing the 14th player since 1,50 to
ried out an exercise program and I:tave at least a .400 batting
reported to spring training about . average on Ju~e 1.
. Despite the fact that none oft he
35 pounds heavier.
"I came in this year with an 13 who did it has ended the season
Idea, " .he said. "I knew what I above that plateau, Dykstra says
wanted to do and what It would be hitting .400 Is not· ~nreachable. ·
like from day one. It's tough to
keep weight on for a full year.
Last year was a tough experience
and people don't realize it."
The .extra weight has not
slowed Dykstra down. He has at
least one hit in his last 13 games
and In 23 of 24 contests. He wao;
above the .400 mark until collect· .
lng only two hits in his !a~t nine
at-bats. He has not had a batting
average below .302 Ibis season,
becoming an offensive catalyst
for the Ph!ll!es.
"The one thing we'd hoped he
be, playing everyday, was a good
leadoff hitter," Phill!es manager
Nick Leyva said. "And he's
....... - - . . .
~
nr.o.wa.
changed because of that. Last
AND
year. !fthecountwas 3-0or 2·1, he
would be swinging. This year,
PAUL NEWMAN IN
he'll take that pitch and then get
a hit or a walk. That shows he's a
team player. He's not worried
a_bout Lenny Oykstra. _He's wor·
ned about· the Philadelphia
Phlllies ."
·
That attitude has been appre:
elated by Dykstra's teammates.
"Working the count is key fora
leadoff hitter." outfielder Von
Hayes said. "If a guy believes
he's swinging the bat well. he

•

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PVH Medical Office Building
Suite 215, Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV
1,. 08- GYN Prae1a Since 1975

mo• control "*rora, AM·
FM aiat-110, tUt wh .... cruM

SAil Pll(l

,~~ 1914 DODGE OMNI

t"'

4 DR.

Auto. Irena .. A / C. cloth interior, 18.000 mil... Look•
and runa 1uperl

ONLY$2950

$3990

"y_.,
~••1•1• SIYI•e• Plael"
MANY m
IN lA11 1110111. USED WS TO

YOUR IUDGET

MONDAY lHRU THURBOAY 9:30-6:30
FIIIDAY 8:30.,1:00; SATUROAV 9:00·1:00

IIA. SIAIIIt
SAUSIUI

BANK FIN,4/VCTNG
AJ1,4IUBLE

lA. DAVIS
OWIIII

Mark's
Auto
Sales,
Inc.
605 General Hartinger Parkway

· ·

Ohio 45760
1

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Page 6 The Dailv Sentinel

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992-5432

,·

~. \. CENlER, INC.

a

~~

216 s. second
Pomeroy

Joh~~: ~~~~~~~gr.

·w

~-

IIUl

tn·J32S

Pomeroy

ol ~~~~:'.~~0 .
m ·2311 Pomeroy

in
the news
B)' WILLIAM C. TRO'lT
1 United Press laterlllliloaal

l

•

SWISHER &amp; ~
PttARMACY
·~
-we
Doctors'

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

·~

Fill

,

Prescripti~s.

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homeht~ Saw~

,

Pomero~

992 2955 ·

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SAliS &amp; SERVICE

·~

992-7075

214 e. Main
992·5130 Pomeroy '

• 172 Norih Secontl A...
MMNieaart. Ohio

·

BilL QUICKEL

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

EWif4G FUNERAL HOME

992-666.
271

OI" 1liE NAZA·
:]:!:IE~ov' ;~JR(iiandOtre&lt;toc.
Mulbmy, Rev

IIIMoport,
Ololo

Schod. 9: ~ am.;

ID:aoa:,•..; ...,..,lng!II'I'VIee6

"Di1fnity

204 Condor St.
P-roy, Oft.

lllertlt

S.C....

111o.f!!"'.~l!i·Mc&lt;~~. past&lt;r. Nonnan f&gt;res.

•

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

716 NoRTH sECOND AVE.

and Service Always"

Established 1913

992-2121

992-2975

326 E.

and oomtined with moning prayer on thf
tlifcl Su rday . .Mocting prayer and sermon on
allflller Su~G~Ys ollh&gt; moillL Olureh School
and1Nul'!eT')' care prmid:!d. Coffee lDur In the
Parish Hall inmedi.,.ly lolliJwlngtheservk:e
: ,!jllMEI\0'( CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W.
MaUl St. Leo Lash. evan!l'llst Bllie School

St., Mason. Sunday School10 a.m.; Morn- '
In&amp;" worship 11 a.m.; Evenlna: servlc::e 6 p.
m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wednesday , 7 p m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunett. supL '
~nday School 9· 30 a.m ; Second a.nd
fourth Sunday!l worship ser:vtce at 2:;1) p.

RAWUNGS.(OATS

FISHER
FUNERAL HOM£
992-5141
264 South 2nd

m.
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth aDd
;;;::.....1 Main St., Mlddlepcrt. Rev. GUbert Craig,

Middleport

9:lh m.: M&lt;rl1ngwcrship.10:.:t:Ja.m.; Youth
Jni!!IU.. 6:00p.m., Evening - p . 7.00p

m.:Weci&gt;Eid~ nlglt Jn,Yer rne.tlngandBtlie

sta!y. 7:00p.m

1llE SALVATION ARMY. 1.lS Bl.fteroot
Aw.. Pomeroy. Mrs. Dora Wlnlng In charge
Sundly bollness ""'"btg; 10 a.m., Suni!IY
SdiOcl, 10:~ a.m. Suni!IY Schod. YPSM
Eloise Adams, le-ader. 7 .D p..m Salvation
rnel(lng various speaktn and musk: specials
llin..S..V. ll:ll a.m. to 2 p.m. La&lt;le; H&lt;me
memb!rs In chailJl, an women
Invited; 6:45 p.m Thul'!ll~. Cnrps CadEt
Clasos (YOUJW People-BIIiel. 7 ~p.m. Btlie
d PRyer lJ1l'Blng. opel to u~ plJJllc
OY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
1ST, Il'l'!;C111ldren'sHome Road (CnurfY
Road 76) 9923M'T. Vocal music Su rday Wor·
stiP,!Oa.m.; BllieSt.cy 11 a.m; Worslip, 6p.
rrl Wemeaday, 81.~ Stilly. 7 p.m Speaker.
Land:ID Hope, ""an.,ust.

u.-.

~
OLD

DEXTER

BIBLE

CIIRJSTIAN

CIIIJRCII, Jar,k Clelarid. pastcr. Alana Cle-

land. Sup. Suiii&lt;IV SchoaiiO·OO a.m.; Youth
Meet !no. 7 p m. ~ Wectletd~
~CRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
-,161 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. Ph. 992
58._ Saturday Evening Mass, 5: :f) p.m ;
Sunday Mass 9. 00 a.m CCD classes, 10· lJ
a.m. Urst, aecom and thlrdSundaysofeach
mbnth. Dally Mass, 8:30a.m. Confessions
Saturday afternon. 4-5 p.m
·•
jliiURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOLJC FAITH- New Lima Road, next to
Fort Meigs Park. Robert W. Richards.
P~f tor. Sunday ~rvlces, 10 a m and 7 p

m , Wednesday worship, 7 p.m
GRAHAM

UNITED

METHODIST,

Pfeachlng 9 30 a.m. first and second Sun·
days of each month; thlrd and fourth Sunday eac::h mopth worship services at 7· lOp

m•:

WedneSday evenings at 7· ~ p.m

Prayer and Bible Study.

~EVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST,
Mul·
berry HellbtsRoad, Pomeroy. PutrrBob
Snydl!l'; Sabbath S&lt;hool SUperintendent,
Ro&lt;)ney Spires, Sabbath School begins at 2
p.m. on Saturday afternoon wlth worship
servtce following at 3:00 p m. Eweryone
~I rome.

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- "Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
Sc:,~ol9:30 a.m.: Mornlna Worship, 10: 45

am. '

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, East
Mfln St. Stl!lle Fuller. 'pastor. George
Sklnnet, Sunday School Superfntendent
Sunday School, 9::lt a.m.; Morning Wor·
shlp . 10:30 a.m.; Wednesday evening
player and Bible study, 7:30,p.m. ..
.'FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Pom·
er.oy Pike. E Lamar O'Bryant, pastor,
Jack Needs, Sunday School Director. Sun·
day School. 9:30a.m.; Morntn_. Worship,
10:45: evening worship, 7 OOp.m . JD.ST. )
&amp; 7 30 IE .S.T. ); Wednesday Prayer Ser·
vice, 7:00p.m. ID.S.T.I.&amp; 7:30P.M. IE.S
T.); Mission Friends (age 2-61, Royal
Ambassadors (boys ages &amp;-18), and Girls
In Action (ages 6-18) on Wedftel4ays, 7 p.
m. ID.S.T.I&amp;7:30p. m. (El.S.T. I; Tuesday
VIJltatlon, 6: ll p.m.
•
•
FAITH TABERNAO.E CHURCH, Bal·
let/ Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawsm, pas·
t~. Handley Dunn. supt. Sunday School,
10;a.m.; Sunday evening service-. 7:00p..m.
: Bible teaching,' 7 QO p m. Thursday
$YRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St. : Sy·
racuse. Mark MorrOW", pasta". services 10
a.~. Sunday. Evening services Sunday
at(d Wednesday at G·OO p m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
11'1 CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
flr'St elder; Wanda Mohler, Sunday School
~ Sunday ll&lt;hool 9' 30 a.m.. Morning
Worship 10:30 a m , Evening Worship 7: l)
p.tn .; Wednesday prayer meettng 7: :.l p m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD ,
Ractne. Rev. James Satterfield, pastoc.
Freeman Williams, Supt. Sunday School
':'~5 a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday even·
~services, 7 p.m.

, THE MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH . Corner of Slxrh and Palmer.
Jame5 Seddon, Pas tor Edna Wilson. S S.
ltupt. ; Cathy Riggs, Aul Supt. Sunday
~chool9 . 15 a.m.; Mom In• Worship, 10: 15
~~om . : Sunday Evening Service. i p.ll').
lilrayer meeting and Bible Stud~· Wedn~­
lt&amp;y evening, 7 p.m ; Children's choir
acllce, Wednesday,7 p.m. ;.Aduil Choir,
ed .. 8 p m Radl e Prcgram, WMPO,
Oday, s · :Kl am
.:
]",MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
9t,tl and Main, AI Hartson, minister.'
Jtichard DuBose, Associate Pastor; Mike
Q,!rlach. Suriday School Super:lntendent
_'(orshlp Service I , 8' 15 am· , Sunday
9thooJ9· 30a m ., WorshlpServiceii.lO: 30
.Qn., Evening Worship, 7 p.m; w~ne­
!J.Y! 7 p.m. Prayer meeting.
, &gt;MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZ·
M!ENE, PASTOR Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm,
paJtCI'. Jean Klme;, Sunday SchooiSu·
!ntftldent. Sunday Sehool 9· :11 a .m .,
rnlng Worship Service, 10 30 a .m.; Sunevening service, 6 p.m.; Wedne;day
ninll oeivlce, 7 p.m.
YIIACUSE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
E, Rev Glenn McMillan, pastor.
k Matsoo, Superintendent. Sunday
ol 9: a.m.; Morning WorshJp, 10· 30
.th.; Evaneellstlc service, 6 p.m.;
P,fi.yer and Pralle Wednesday, 7 p.m.;
\'iuth meeting, 7 p.m.

£

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lJNITED PBI!:sBl'TJ!RIAN MINISTRY

1'

OF MEIGS COUNTY
,•
Rev. O'Qaln llel!y
•' HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
RCH - Sunday· Worship Services
a.m ; Church SchoollO. 1S a.m ..
DDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Suftday School, 9 a .m : Church service

Uj~tt.~SE FIRST UNITED PRESBY:

,

IAN - Sunday SchoO., 10 a .m ;
rch Jervlce. 10:15 am
UTLAND CHURCH OF GOD, Pastor.

Rt.

~~~~:f::::

9:ll a .m .:
tllll. a .m.,
10::1)
p.m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, pastor Sunday Scbool.10: 00 a.
m .; Morning Worship, 11 · 00 a.m.: Wed·
nesday and Saturday !:ventngServlces at
7· 30 p.m.
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO·
DIST CHURCH - P .. tor, Rev. carl
Hicks, 10 ml1es above Ractne on Rt. 388.
Sunday Sc::hool9 a . m, worship service 10
a.m. Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m.:
Prayer meeting and Bible Study 'thursday, 6:30p.m
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST 011124, behind Wllkesvtlle. ChariESJoneo,
pasttr. SundaySchoal, 9:30a.m: momtna
worship, 10: 30; Sunday and Thursday
evening services, 7.00 p.m.
MEl Gil
COOJ"EBATIVE P ABJSH
UNITED METIIODI8T CBVJI(;B
NOBTIII:AST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Arc•«
Rev . Frank Crulool
Rev. Seldon Jobao•
ALFRED- Church School 9·30 am ·
Worsh1p, lla.m; UMYFG ::Ilpm., UMW
Third 'I'uesday, 7:30 p.m. Communion,
first Sunday fArcher)
CHESTER - Worsh.i~ 9 a ' m: Cburch
School tO a.m.: BlbleStutly, Thursday, 7p.
m , UMW , first Thursday, 1 p.m., Com·
munlon, first Sunday {Archer I.
JOPPA -Worship 9· ll a.m.; Church
School10· Jl a .m. Bible Study Wedneeday,
7:l&gt; p m. lJohnsoo) .
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9: 30
a m. ; Worship 10:30 a .m .; Bible Study,
Wednesday, 7: 30p.m; Communion First
Sunday of Month !Rev. Charles Eat til)
REEDSVILLE - Chureh ll&lt;hool9 30 a .
m.; Worship Service n ·ooa.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Church School 9 a .m.; Worship 10 a.m. ;
Bible Study, Tuesday; 7:30p.m; Communion Flrst Sunday (Archerl
CENTRAL" CLUSTER
Rn. Don MeadltWsl

Re\1. Weeley Tlla&amp;cher
8ft. Harvef RladOietCh ·
Rev. KaUaryD·IWey

-·-'"-·
Rev. Poullllal'ltn

Rev. Arthur Crablree
ASBURY {Syracuse) -Worship 11 a.m.
, Church Schoo19:45 a.m.; Charge Bible
Study: Wednesd'ay, 7·:JI p.m.; UMW, flrst
Tuesday, l ::.l p.m.; Cbolr Rehearsal
Wednesday 6. 30 p.m . (Thatchl!rl
. '
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church School tO a.m ; Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:,1,)0 p.m .; UMW. First Monday, 7: 3(;
p.m.; OMYF Sunday, 6 ,p.mt , Cboir Rehelrul.-ChlldiJ"n's at &amp;:30 p.Jh. Adult following; Wednesday .. (Rlle!(~:· ... •
'
FLATWOODS- Churtb Schoal, ioa.m .
; Worship, 11 a.m.; lllble Study, Thurs·
day, 7 p.m .; UMYF, Sunday. 6 p m. (Rl·
lev ).
FOREST , RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
Church School 10 AM.: Choir practice.
Thursday. 6:30pm: UMW third Monday.

lThatcher\

HEATH IMiddloport l_- Church School,
9 ~ a .m. . Morning Worship 10· ll a m ;
Youth Group. 4 p.m , Wednesday, Bible
study 6· 00 p m Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m.
lRindfletschJ
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9. 00
am . Worsb.lp service 10.00 a.m.; UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p.m. (Thatcher)
• PEARL CHAPEL- Church SchooJ9· 00
~ln~.; Worship Service 10: 00 '!·m. (MarPOMEROY- Church School, 9:15a.m.
. WorshJp 10: 30 a .m.; Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7: 30 p.m.; UMW, second
Tuesday. 7·30p.m.; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
(Meadows)
·
•
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9. 15
a .m.; Worship 10 am : Bible Study, Wednesday , 7·30 p m , UMYF (Seniors), Sunday, 6 p.m .; (Juniors) every other Sunday , 6 p.m. tRIIeyl.
RUT~ND - Church SChool, 10 a.m.;
Worship; 11 a m : UMW First Monday,
7: 30p.m. (Crabtree)
SALEM CENTER- Church School9: 15
a.m ; Morning WorshJp 10:15 a.m
(Steele)
·
SNOWVILLE- Morning Worship, 9:00
a .m.; Church School10:00 am (Martial
• 80\1111ERN CLUSTER

Rev.x•• ....., .......
Rev. Roaer Grace
Rev. Cui Bt&lt;b
APPLE GROVE -Church Schoo!9•00

a.m.;· Morning Worship 10:00 a.m.; Bible

Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Pra)'fr meetlna:
7:00p.m. Thursday. (Hicks)
BETHANY - Worship 9 a.&gt;n.; Ohurch
SchooliO a .m ' Bible Study Wedneolla 10
a.m.; DOrcas Women's Fellowship
nesday I! a .m. JBa~..-)
CARMEL- Church School9:ll a.m.;
Worah.tp, 10: t5 a .m. Second and Fourth
Sundays; Fellowship dlnn.,- with Suttm
third Thur!lday, 6::1t p.m . (Balt.er).
MORNING STAR - Chu reb School9: 45
a .m ; Wonh~p 10:30 a.m.: Btble Study
Thursday, 7 :30p.m. (Bak..-) .
'
SUTION - Church ll&lt;hool 9· 30 a m ·
Morning WorshJp 10: t5a.m. ttfslandt'hlfd
Sundays; Fellowship dinner wtth Carmel
thlm Thurs&lt;l~ ~:JO_~. m . . lllaJter) ,

Wed-

EAST LETAit'l- MDl'lllllgWorshlpt:OO
a .m.; Olurcb Scllool!D·OOa.m.; UMW Drat
Tueodl\l' 7:30p.m. (Grace).
RACINE- Olureh School, 10 a .m.; Wor·
ship U a.m.; UMW lourtll Mollday at 7: ll p.
m.; Men'ol'rlly1!r Breekfaot, Wedn81d~. 8
a.m.tG.....,) .
CHRIST, ROg..-

vtce, 7:00p.m.
NEW LIFE COVENANT C!WRCH.
Chester, Gary Hlneo, put&lt;r. Sunday
School at 9:30 a.m.: WorlhJp service at
10· 30 a.m.: Sunday evenlne servtce, 6:00
p.m.; W-eoday Illsclple Cluo, 7:00 p.

m

~~~~~~~~~~~~~Mu~andrn-

PreachIng 9::JI a.m.
S&lt;hool
10:30 a .m.
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNIO,N. Thorm Dur!tam.
pastor. Sunday ~ervtce. 9:30a.m.; eveD1,ng service 7· 00 p.m. Prajw. rpeetln&amp;,
Wednesday, 7:00p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Jos~h B. HOJk1n.s, past(r. Bible
Clan,9:30a m ; MornlngWorsh1p10:30a.
m; EvenlngWorahlp, 6.30p.m. Thursday
Bible Study, 6:30p.m. ·
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy·
llarrtsmvUieRd. 1Rt. l431 RobertE.Pur·
tell, minister; Steve Stanley. BlbleSc::hool
Supt.; Harley Johnsm, Asst. Supt. SUN·
DAY : Bibl~ Scbool 9· 30 a .m .; Worship
10:30 A M. and 7:30P.M .. Wednesdav Bl·
ble Study,7:00 p.m.
·
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. P1ne
Gtove The Rev. Laura A. Leach, pastor.
Church service 9:30a.m.; Sundav School
·
10:30 a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
Tom Runyoo, pastor. Sunday Schad 9:30
a.m.; Larry Haynes. S. S. Supt. Morning
worshJp 10: 30 a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA.·
RENE , Rev. John Vance, past«; Ora
Bass. Chairman of the Board otCbrlstlan
Life. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Morning
Worlhl 10:30 a.m. ; Evangelical service,
7:00 p.m., Wednesday Jervlce, 7:00p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex.
ter. Woody Call. pastor. servtce Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday, 7 p.m.
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School9: 30 a.
m.: momlng worship 10::JJ a . m Sunday
evening service 7 Q.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Deaver, Pastor. Mike Swiger, Sunday
School Supt.; Sunday School 9·30 a.m.:
Morning worship 10· 40 am.: Sunday
evening worship 7· 30 p.m. ; Wednesday
evening Bible study 7:30p.m.
BURUNGIIAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
BurUngham Ray LaudermUt, pastm-; Robert Cozart, assistant pastc:J' Sutxlay SchoO.
10 a.m.; wO&lt;Siip 7 p.m.; Wetlnesd'l\'. 6 p.m.
youth meeting Wed, 7 p.m. chureh service;;
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH . \!
mile ott Rt. 325. Rev. BenJ. Watts, past cr.
Robert Searles. S.S. Supt. Sunday School
9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 am.:
Sunday e\renlng service 7:30p.m , Wednesday service, 7:30p.m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Little,
pastor. Steve Little, S S. Supt Sunday
School 10 a .m., Morning worslp, 11 a.m.;
Sunday evening worship 7:30p.m Prayer
meeting and Blble study Wednesday. 7:30
p.m .: Youth meeting Wednesday at7p.m, ·
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Ave .. Mlddlepcrt. Sunday
SChool10 a .m . Sunday evening 7.OOp.m.:
Mld·WI!ek servt~. Wed , 7 p.m.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Sunday School9: 30a.m.; JelfSmlth, supt.
; Morning worship tO· aJ a m.; Sunday
eveninR service, 7: 30p.m.; Wednesday
eveninR serv\c~. 7:30p.m.
EDEN ' UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, past(r. Sunday
School 10 a .m.; Gary Reed, Lay leader.
Morning sermon, 11 a.m.; Sunday night
services: ChrlsUan Endeavor 7•:lt p.m.,
Song service- 8 p.m. Preaching S:XI p.m.
Mid·Wl'ek prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7

p.m.

•

Janice Danner, c::hurch ~hool direCtor.
Church school9: 3D a.m.; MornlngwU"shlp
10. 30 a.m.; Wednesday evenlne prayer
services, 7: ~ p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. · Rev, Earl
Shuler, putor. Worlhlp service, 9:~a.m.
Sunday Scho&lt;i IO::«&lt;a.m. Bible Study aod
prayer servloe'l'hunday. 7·30p.m.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIDN·
AL CHURCH, Klopbury Road. Rev.
Clyde w. HenderSM, put&lt;r. Sunday
School9:30 a .m. ; Ralph Car~ SUpt. E -·
lng worship 11:00 p.m. Prayer meetln&amp;.
Wednesday 7:00p.m. .
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPI'IST
CHURCH, 2fi801 Stato Route 7, Mlddl ..
port. Sunday S&lt;hoo!IOa.m.; Sunday even·
lni service 7:30 p.m.; Tuesday service,
7: 30p.m .
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH,
BobGrlmm, pastor. SundaySChool9.30a.
m.; Worship 10:45 a.m.; Sunday evenlne
service, 7 p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31 Rev.
Rogel' Willford, put or. Suooy Scho&lt;i 9:30
a.m.; Mornlna: Worsblp 10:~ a.m.; Sunday evenlna worship 1:00 p.m.: We&lt;mee·
day eventnr Bible Study 7:00p.m.
WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN. Cool·
vtlle RD. Rev. Phlllip Rtdenour1 pastor.
Sunday Scllool 9:30a.m.; wonblp service
10:30 a .m.; Blble study and worsb!p ser·
vice, W-eoday. 7 p.m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Eu·
~c,eee E . Underwood, miDIIter. Sunday
hool, 9::«1 a.m.; MorDina worship, 10: 30
a.m.; Evenlni Worslllp, 7:00p.m.
RUTLANDBIBLEMETHODJST,Amos
TUIIJ, paator. SOnny Hudltm; oupt. Sunday
Scbool9::«1a.m.; MornlnsWorsltlp, 10:30
a .m.: Sunday evening service 7; 00 p.m.
Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO program 9 a.m. each Sunday,
RUTLAND ·CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE . samuel Buye, pastor. Sunday
School9 : ~a m.; WorshlpServlce10:30a.
m.; Young People's servtce 6 p.m.
Evaneellstlcservlce6: :¥)p.m. Wednesday
service 7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St., M11on. W. Va. SUJiday Bible Study 10
a .m.; Worship 11 a .m. and 7 p.m. Wedllee·
day Bible Study, vocal music,~ p.m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud·
ding Lane. Mason, W, Va J. N. Thacker,
pastor. Evening serv:tce .7·lJ p.m.; Women'sMinlltryThurtday, 9:30a.m.; Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study 7:15p.m.
HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH, St. Rt .
143 Just oft Rt 7. Rev. James R. Acree Sr.,
pastor; Rev. Mike WHiett, Asst. Putcr,
Joe Humpbrey, S.S. Supt; Sunday School
10a.m.; MornlngWorshlplla.m.: Sunday
evening service 6 p.m.; Wednesday evenina 7 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford. W. Va.
Rev. David McManis, pastor. Church
School 9:30 a.m.; Sunday momtng ser·
VIce, 11 a .m .: Sunday evening service,
7 30p m. WedneadayproyermeetJnr, 7::«1
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,

SchoOl Y: .30 a .m.; morning wonblp and
children's c::hurch 10:1) a.m.; evening
pre.chlna tervlce first three Sundays..
7:11p.m.: $pedal tervlce fourth Sundav
evening, 7: MJ p.m.; Wednesday Praye"r.
Mttettna. Bible Study and Youth Fellowship, 7:30 p.m.
· CHURCH OF GQD OF PROPHECY.
Located on 0. J. Wltlte Road of Hlghwav
160. P.at Hensoo. pastor. Sundav Scbool10
a .m. Cluaes for an ageJ. JunlofChurch 11
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
(:holr practlce6 p.m. Sunday. Young People's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study, W-eollav at 7 : 30~p.m.
HOPE BAPTI~T CHAPEL. 570 Grant
St., Middleport. Affiliated wtth SOuthl!l'n
Baptist Convention. Davtd Brya(\, Sr., Ml·
ftll~r. Suftday SChool 10 a.m.; Morning
wonbtp lla.m.; Evening wcrshlp 7 p.m.:
Wedn..ray , .eveolng Bible study aod
prayer m""'Jng 7 p.m.
•
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St.
Rt.l21 aodCo, Rd. 5. Derek Slump, pastor
. William Nllberier. s. s. Supt.; Sundav
Scbool9::11a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30
am.; Evening worship 7.30 p.m . Wednes·
dav worship 7:30p.m.
ST, PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts., Po:
meroy. The Rev Laura A. Leach. pastCf'.
Sunday School9: 45 a.m. Church service 11
a.m.
·
VJcrORY BAPTIST, 525 N . 2nd St.,
MJddleport James E. Keesee. pester.
Sunday morntna: worship 10 a.fl'.; Even·
lng service 7 p.m : Wednesday evening
worship 7 p.m . VIsitation Thursday 6: 30p.

m.

W. Va., Rt. 1, Jams Lewll, paatm-. Wor·

W:

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--- .... _, -

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First ladies head to We~lesley

-Anon.

Taken from '"l'be Dally Bre!ld"

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992-,2 156

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Wife shows
no mercy,
.
no remorse

Ann
Landers
A.NN LANDERS

'

.. 1989, LM Anjlrl"'
nm..- Syndl fMr and
Cr.,.aon Swndlit-M•

Dear Ann Landers: Se~ yelml
ago, I met an intelligent, older, well-

to-do widower. He let me know early
in our relationship that he was in
love with me. I fell equally hard

within a mauer of months.
"Ronald" asked me to give up my
can:er in the medical fteld in rerum
for a blissful, storybook marriage.
After considerable lhought, I decided
thai he was the man I wanted to
spend the rest of my life with.
We were married in May, and six
months taler, he adopted my two
children. For five years, Ronald was
wonderful to the children and
exlremely anentive and generous to
me. Suddenly, I noticed some
changes in his behavior. There were
too many nights when he couldn'~
make it home for dinner, too many
unexplailled absences on Saturdays,
100 many spur-of-the-moment, out·
of-town !rips. When I found lipstick
on his shirt and smelled perfume
on his face, I was devastated.
Then I became bitter and resentful.
I knew that I could no longer stay
married to Ibis man and decided to
get even.
I hired a private investigator to
tail my husband. It took several
weeks and $10,000 to get exactly
what I wanted. When I had the evidence, I filed for divorce. His assets
amounted to a tidy fortune. I had no
idea he·was so rich.
I was awarded our home, two cars
(we had thtee) and child support. I
chose a substantial cash settlement,
rather than alimony.
I'm certain that members of
Ronald's family and some of our
friends think of me as a greedy,
vindictive woman, which is why I
am writing. Granted I showed him
no mercy, but any married man who
sneaks around on his wife deserves
to have his clock cleaned, and I hope
my Jetter will encourage other
victims to get out of such marriages
and not be, bashful about taking
every dime they can get. ·· A
CHEATED-ON WIFE WHO
PROFITED FROM 1HE MESS IN
MASS.
DEAR CHEATED-ON WIFE: I
can add nothing to your letter. You
said it all, and I lhan1c you.
Dear Alan Laaders: The mother
who wrote to say how much she
would enjoy having a private
conversation with her son rang a
familiar bell. She said she was fond
of her daughter-in-law, but how
wonderful it would be to have jl!st
an hour alone willa her son.
My mother passed away IS years
ago. Dad renewed an o1d friendship
and married the woman the
following year. He sold our family
home, and they moved into a

one-bedroom apartment, beca~; ·
"we don't want any tOmpany."
!now Jive 1,500 miles away, !never··
go to see my father, and they '
seldom come here.
In all the years that Dad has bcell :
with his second wife, I have ye1 to '·
have a private conversation witlJ .~
him. Whenever I call him, "Della~ ' ·
eitl\er answers lhe ICiephone and
stays on or she picks up the seconc~':
phone when she hears Dad talltirig· ·
to me and from then on it's a 1m-, '
way conversation, with Della doing
70 percent of the tallcing.
•.
I really miss my dad and I10pll
you will print this letter. Writing 1t ,
has made me feel better, because·I"
have kept this inside me for so long.'
--COLORADO SPRINGS
:
DEAR COLORADO SPRINGS: .
I hope you realize that this is not all ,
Della's fault Obviously, your cla!J"
decided long ·ago to let Della call .
the shots,-and this is exactly what ·
he is doing. My condolences,
... dear'. .

Smce ·

Dear Ann Landen: Ask YOIIE .
readers to think about this for i
moment: You have a plain bar of
iron that is warth about
Made into a horseshoe, i1's wonli
about $11.
~.• ~
Made into screwdrivers, it's worll\ _
about$1S.
'
Made into needlea, it's worth about ·

ss.

"

$3,500.
'The same is true of another kind
of material·· YOU.
· :•
Your value is detem!ined by wtuii '
you decide to make or younelf. - ,
From Bane·Ciene Profeuional ,
Cleaning Digest (Indianapolis)
Is alcohol rllining your iijt or tlti',

life of a loved onu "Alcoholism: ..
How to Recognize It, How to Deal '
With It, How to Conq1111r It" can 111m
things around. Send a stlj; :·
addressed, long, busilltss·size enw, ·
lope and a chtclr. or 1110/lt)' or~r':
for $3.65 (this includes posltJge and,
handling) to: Alcohol, c/o Anli''
Landers, P.O. Boz I 1562, Chicago, '
IJ!i.ff.111.()562. (In Canada, se~ :·
')

ANN~

.,

e 1990, Gr&amp;alors SyndlCIIte

"

WITH 'FLOWRS
Te ,..., • . . .

............_.

n~lly

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POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

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Guaranteed

to be here•••

or rent another movie

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CHECK

=-=·-·

•

Wilda Brogan, Rutland , was ford King, Groveport; Mr. and
honored recenlly with a surprise Mrs. George GoU, HalleY and
birthday party hosted by family Jamie, Albright, W. Va.' Mr. and,
Mrs. Ralph McCune, Rudand ;
and friends .
Attending the event were Joan Mr. and Mrs. Jay Clark, and Mr .
and Kevin Gogg, Dunbar; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Barrett, Jr.,
and Mrs. John Brogan, Hurrl· Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Elza
cane; Diana Brogan, J oyce Ellis Thomasson and Jason ,
and Gene Dapley, Columbqs;
Hurrlcanj!.
Toni and Brandy Brogan and
Teresa and Lex Barker, Hurrl·
cane; Mr. and Mrs, Jerry Robin Reshla. Columbus; Susan
Greene, Oak Hill, W. Va. ; Mr . and Brian Spears, Dunbar; Mrs.·
Becky Johnston, Dale, Randall
and Mrs. Harold Pennington,
Charleston; Mr. and Mrs. Gary and Kelly, Lanpvllle; Darlene
Stouer, Leah and Kevin, Cross See, Pomeroy; Sharon Warner
Lanes , W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs. and three children, Pomeroy;
Gary Warner, Jason and Andera, Anna Mae Collins, Columbus;
Norma Stanley and Charley ,
Long Bottom; Austin Dent , Ona,
' Mason; Evelyn Welch, PomeW.Va.
roy; Mrs. Zeva Kitchen, Albany, •
Mr. and Mrs. John Saul,
and John and Sandy Brogan,
[}flaware; Mr. and Mrs. Brad·
Hurricane.

FREE!

Weekend Speciale

.'

'•

0

Rutland garden~rs h.ave meeting

~;

'W/A';E:

-

'.

~~

WiiBwood Garden Club meets

s.

PHILANTRHOPISTS
.. .let him labor... that he may have something to give blm who
has need. - Ephe•iGn• 4:28
Some boys and girls were discussing what they wanted to be
when they Krew up. When It was Jimmy's turn to speak, he
dido' t mention one of the more common professions like doctor,
lawyer, policeman, and fireman. What he wanted to be was a
pbllallthroplst. When the other kids asked him why, be replied,
"Because I heard they are the guys who have all the money."
Jimmy was only partially right. According to "Webster's
New American Dictionary", a phllantrhoplst Is "one who loves
.
and seeks to benefit man(IIDd."
Simply having a lot of money, then, doesn't make you a Phi·
lanthroplst. In fact, a poor person who "loves and seeks to benelit mankind' out of his limited resources Is more of a phllan·
throplst than a person of great wealth who Is a miser and gives
grudgingly -even thorgh the amount of his charitable gifts Is
large.
'The apostle Paul called for com[l8lllllon and generosity when
he exhorted takers. JO become givers. He said, "Let blm who
stole steal. no longer, but rather let h,lm labor, working with his
hands what Is good, that he may have something to gtve him
who has need" (Eph. 4: 28).
·,
Regiltdless of our Income or vocatiOn, we can all be'pbllah·
throplsts! ~ R.W.D.
. . • '
• . '.
It's !lOt what yould do with a million '
"
If riches should e'er be your lot,
But what you are doing at present
With the dollar and quarter you've cot.

CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CENTER,
Salem St., Rutland. Robert E . Musser,
paJtor. Sunday School 10: 00 a.m.; Wor- lla.m.
ship service. 1: 15 a.m.; Sunday evening
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
service, 7:00p.m.: Thurlday evenlngJerPomeroy Pike, County Road 25 near FlatHEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
wood&amp;. Rev.)Mackw00d1 putCI". Sfrvtcea
Prentice, pastor. Olarlm Domlgan, SUnon Sund~at10: :4Ja.m. and 7:30p.m. with
d~ School Supt. Morning Worship 9:30 a.
SundaY, SCbool9: 30a.m. BlbleStudy, Wed·
m .; SUIIII\I' S&lt;hooiiO:lla.m.; Evenlniser·
nliaday, 7:30p.m.
vice, 7·00 p.m.
SPIRITUAL F A1TII FELLOWSHIP
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Past(r: Joe N
State Route ~38, Antiquity. Rev. A.l. St0:
Sayre, Sunday ~hool9 45 a .m.; Evening
wart, putor. Sunday Jervlce~,10a . m . and
worship 6· 30 p.m.; Prayer Meeting, 6;30
7 p.m. ; Tueaday,7 p.m.
p.m. Wedneaday,
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
NESS CHURCH, lllc., 75 Pearl St. Rl!ll.
CHRIST. Robert Foster, pastor; Howard
lvao Myers, actlDsi&gt;Oft&lt;r. RocerManley,
Caldwell, Superintendent; Cbun:h schod.
Sr., Sunday School SUperlntl!lldent Sun·
9 a.m.; Wor1hlp servtce9: 45 a.m. and 6: l)
day S&lt;hool 9:30 a .m .; Morning worship
p.m. Everyme weloome. •
10: 30 a .m . ; evenlne wonblp 7:Jl p.m.;
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Wedaeaday eveobqJ Bible study, prayer
RENE. Rev. Herbert Grate, pester,
and pralae aervtce. 7:30p.m.
lloqlu Bluell, supt. Sunday School9:ll
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST AJ'OS.
a.m.; WorshJp .ervice, 11 a .m . aad 6 p.m.
TOLJC - VanZondt ood Ward Rd. Elder'
Sunday. Wt'dnelday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·
James MIUer, · [IUiar. Sunday School,
lng.
10:30 a.m.; Wonhlp Service, Sunday, 7: 30
', LAUREL O.IFF FREE METHODIST , p,m; Bible Study, Wedaeoday, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH. William \VUI!ams, put&lt;r. f\o.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, 118rrl·
bert E . Bartoo, Director of Chi'lltlaoEduS&lt;llvWeRoad. Rev. VlctorRoulll, putor;
callon; Steve Eblin, assistant. SUnday
Cllntm Faulk,.Sutldoy Sebool Supt.; Sun·
School 9:30a.m. ; Morn1n1 woroh11110:30 , day School9:illla.m.; momlnrw&lt;rllllp,ll
a.m.: Teens In Action, 6 p.m.; E'venlna: a.m., Sundu ovflllq HrVlce 7::«1 p.m.
worship, 7:00 p.m. Choir practice 8 p.m.
Prayer Meeiln11, Waeoday, 7:30p.m.
Sunday. Wednesday evening prayer and
SYRAaJSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD,
Bible study.
..,.
non-Penle&lt;lOstal. Worship service SUnday
DEXTER CHURCH OF C!iRJST,
10 a.m.; Sundoy School 11 a.m. Eveolng
Roa:« WatJon, mlnilter; Nonnan Will, wuphlp oervlce 7:00 p.lll. Wedneolloy
oupt. Sunday Scho&lt;i 9:30 a .m ; Worship
priyer meetbqJ 7·00 p.m
service lO:ll a.m. Bible study, WeclneMT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located lD Texas
•. d"A£t:d'.JlizED CHURCH OF JESUS
Community oil Cl Rt. 82. Rev. Robort
CIIRJSTOFLATTERDAY SAINTS. Port·
Sandin, put&lt;r. Jell Hotter, lay leader;
land-Ractne Road. Mike Duhl, piJtcr.
Ed ~u.oll, Sunday S&lt;hool Supt. Sunday

-

Jr .. paatoc. Mro. Ervin Baumgarclaer,
Sunday ll&lt;hool Supt. SUnday Scllool9: 30a. '
m; Worship Service, lO·.S, a.m.
i
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B. llotoklm, OVUiellat. Sunday '
BlbleStudyta.m.;•Worlhlp,IOa.m.; SIUIday evenlna service 6 p.m.; Wedn81day
evenina servlc::e, 7 p.m.
r
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Radne,
Rt. 121. WOllam Hoback, past«. SUnday '
School10 a.m.; Sunday eveDID&amp; Je!'VIee 7 1 ,
p.m. Wednesday evenlae service 7 p.m·. ,
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheodle. •
Supt. Sunday School 9:311 a .m. Mornlnc - •
Worship 10 :30 a .m. Prayer service, alternate Sundays.
~
THE CHURCH QF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC F AITI'I - New Lima .Rd.,
next to Fort Meigs Park. Rutland. RObert
RlchardJ, pa1tor. Services at 7 p.m~ on ~
Wedneadays and Sundays.
,
HAIIRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP· 1
TER ol the Wesleyan Holiness Chttn:h. ·
Rev. Earl Fields, pastor. Henry Eblin, I
S!!School Supt.; Sunday ScllooliO a . ;
m.; , rnfng Worlhlp II a.m.; Eveotnr
se ce 7: :«1 p.m. Wednesday eYettlni ser·
vtce7:30 p.m.
STIVERSVILLE . WORD OF FAITII,
Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday servtc::eJ 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.: Midweek service, 7:00 p.
m. Thur.:lay.
· MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third '1
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not•
tlngham , Sunday School Supt. Sunday , ,
School 10 a.m. wtth claJSea for all a1e1.
Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl·
ble study at 7:30p.m. Yotllb servl~ Frl·
day at 7:~ p.m.
' ·
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. 128M!I1St.,
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPhS'sm,
paslcr. Sunday, School10 a.m.; Sunday
evening services at 7 p.m. and Wedaesday l
services at _7p.m.
_.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth SmHh
past«. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; c:burcb 'l~
servtee 7: :1) p.m.; youth fellowship&amp;: !Op. 1i
m.; Bible study, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
•
n!LL GOSPEL LIGIITHOUSE 330~ ,
Hiland Road, Pomeroy Tom Kelly, pu.'
tor. Danny !.amber~ S.
SUpt. Stlftday •
momlnaservlce at 10 a.m.: Sunday evenIn&amp; service 7:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thunday S@rvtces at 7:30p.m.
..,
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA· ,
ZARENE. Rev. Glendon StrOUd ~lor
Sunday SChool9::1) a.m.; WorstatPsenotce:
10:30 a.m.; Youth service Sunday 6:1S p
m. Sunday evening service 7:00p.m. Wednesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
7
SETTLEMENT CHURCH, SUn·
day afternooo services at 2. :Jl. nur!day
evening services at 7: :.J.
FIRST BAPI'IST CHlJRCH, Mum, W.
Va. Pastor. Bill Murphy. Sunday Schoo!IO 1 ,
a.m rj Sunday evening 7:~ p.m. Prayer
meeting aDd Bible study Wedneaday, 7:30
p.m. Everyme welcome.
d
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST Sa· ,.
lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Su~y
SchoollOa.m.; Sunday evening 7:00p.m.;
Wednesday evenln1 prayer meet:tng7:00
p.m.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT n
CHURCH, Silver Ridge, Duane S)'den· '
stricker, pastor. Sunday Schocl 9 a.m · ~
Worlhl.p Service, tO a .m .; Sundayevea~i '
service, 7:00p.m. Wedaes&lt;lay nlpt Bible
study 7:00p.m.

Sermortette

shJp services 9:30a.m.; 'Sunday Schoolll
a.m.; Eveolngworshlp 7: ~p.m. Tu~ay
c::ottage prayer meettna and Bible Study
9· 00 a.m.; Worlhlp service, Wednesday
7
'
LUTHERAN CHURCH
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood,
Va. The !lev. George C. Weirick, past&lt;r.
Sunday SChool9: 30 a .m.; Sunday worship

~J'R~VIOUR

,

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH· David
'Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
worship service 11 a.m.; Sunday night
worship service 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m .
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH ol Middleport, Inc.. 75 Pearl St.,
Rev. Ivan Myers, pastcr; Hager Manley
Sr.. Sunday School Supt Sunday Scbooi
9·30 a.m. ; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.:
Evening Worship 7.30 p.m. Wednl'Sday
evening Bible study. prayer and praise
service. 7:30p.m.
FAITH GOSPEL CHlJRCH, Long Bot·
tun, Sunday SchoO, 9:30a.m.: Morning
Worship 10:•5 a.m. ; Sunday evening 7 00
p m. /summer 7:30 p.m.); Wednesday
night 7:00 p.m. · (summer 7;:Kt p.m.) .
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD - Gary Hlneo, past&lt;r. Sunday
School9: 30 to 10:20 a.m.; Worship srvtce
10: 30 to 11:30 a .m.; Sunday evening servlte, 7 p.m.; Midweek Prayer Service,
Wed., 7 p.m.
MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Lawren~ Bush, pastor. Sunday School
9 lJ a.m.; Sunday and Wednesday evenIna: worship service. 7:00p.m.
1lNITED FAITH CBVRCH, Rt. 7 on Poml!l'oy By· Pass. Rev. RobertE.Smlth, Sr,
past«. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday
School9: 30 a .m.; Morning Worship 10: 311;
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.; Wednesday
Prayer Service, 7:00p.m.
F AITB BAPTIST CHURCH, Ra11rmd

.

1 MADONNA AND MORALS:
)fadonaa's show was a little too
racy from some• people In To·
roniD. Warner Bros. Records
~aid the pollee morality squad
11nd a government attorney tried
to l'llach Madonna before her
third and final show TueSday
!"ith a legal order to clean up her
act because of complaints from
PeoPle who had seen the first two
Shows. Pollee at the show merely
watched, however, and deter·
milled no -charges were war·
ranted. ''Nobody went there with
the Intention of chargllll Ma·
!lonna," said Detective Frank
:rrova&amp;o. "However, W'e have a
respilnslblllty to any citizen to
inake sure our laws are upheld."
Madonna later had some high·
flown words on thet matter: "I
jo'ould rather bave cancelled the
show !han let; anybod}' dictate
bow I can or can't express myself
~ an artist. This Is certainly a
~ause for which I am wiiUngto be
:a rrested." Warner Bros. spokes·
,man Bob Merlll said Madonna
as never been charged with any
orm of lewdness. "On this tour
he's played Houston and Dallas,
both In the bible belt. and there
I
wasn't a problem," he said.
'MOVE
TO
THE
MUSIC' - Move to the Music lour through teenage. They will present a valety
HOLLYWOOD, : FlA.: Or·
be
preSented
by
tile dancers of Barbara's of tap, jtuz aud novelty numbers In the lOth annual
will
lando, Fla., will be the entertain·
School
of
Dane~\
to
lie
held Sa&amp;urday, June 2, at recital. Dancers pictured will be tapping to "In
ment capital of the world next
7:30
p.m.
at
SOuthern
High School In Racine, The Mood Medley" and "'Ain' t Mlsbehavln".
Thursday. The occaslomJ s the
under
the
·
direction
of
· Barl!ara Lawrence. Pictured are Heather Franckowllik, Kelly Satter·
opening of Unlversl!l Studios
'Students\ilkiDII
P~.t
In
the
J'tlCital range from age field, Anna Chapman and lJnda Chapman.
Florida an!l the headliners will
Include Mlchaelladcaon, Sylves·
ter stalloDe, Bill Cosb)' and
Michael J. Fox with Steven
Spielberg on hand to cut 'the
ribbon at the movie studloThe Wildwood Garden Club water and minerals are the by Elizabeth Sherrill and a poem,
amusemen·t park. Also con·
Consider Creation . She con·
held
their monthly meeting at the major natural resources. it was
firmed for Ihe gala are Bill
home
of
Connie
Hill
with
Janet
c,
luded the program with a game
reported.
·
Murray, Jimmy Stewart, Chari·
using
the word conservation with
Theiss
as
co·
hostess.
Mrs.
Smith
noted
the
lmpor;.
toil Heston, Sl118y Spacek, Linda
·
The
meeting
was
opened
with
prizes
gomg to Evelyn Hollon and
tance
of
planting
trees.
espe·
Blair, Emest Borgnlne, Beau
Juan
Ita
Will
read·
cially
where
logging
has
taken
Connie
Hill.
devotions
by
Bridges, Dom Deluise, Tippi
lng,
Being
Thankful
and
a
poem,
place.
She
commented
that
trees
For
the
arrangement of the
He~n. Janet Lelgll, Anthony
ba
wn
to
Dusk.
·
.
month
Hilda
are
good
wind
breaks
for
pre·
Yeauger had
Perkins, JJU St. John, Telly
Miller,
president,
Spring
Bouquet
using flowers
Kathryn
venting
soil
erosion
and
plan
tlng
Savala&amp;, Jane Seymour. PIIUip
from
her
gave
a
reading,
the
Ten
Com·
long·rooted,
soil
conserving
garden.
The
yellow iris,
Michael Thomas, Ben Vereen,
vegetation
'or
perennial
grasses
ma!ldments
blue
bell.
mock
orange
bush and
to
Get
Along
With
Robert Wagner and "Siar Trek"
sweel
shrub.
·
People.
She
also
gave
a
reporl
on
prevents
water
erosion.
creator Gene Roddenberry. The
Smith also added· the leaves of
The hostesses served a variety
theme park and movlfl studio has . ·the regional meeting In Nelson·
of
trees
not
only
purify
the
air
by
herb refreshmen ts wtth the
ville.
Everyone
presented
a
been open to paying customers
taking
out
carbon
dioxide
and
door
pnze going to Bel ty
green leaf specimen for roll call.
since laSt week but large sections
·
giving
back
oxygen,
they
are
al
so
Dorothy
Milhoan.
Smith
for
the
program
remained roped off as construe··
Members then toured Mrs
gave the importance of conserva·
home for our song birds.
tlon crews continued to work.
Hill's
tlon and to use wisely the
She also read from the Dall~
gardens , greenhou se and
The park features more !han a
Guidepost, Celebrating Earth, gilt shop.
reSO\IrCes we have. Soil, forests,
dozen attractions - all based on
movies ur teleVIsion Shows.·
T·BIRD LEAVING THE
NEST: Fabulous ThUJJderblrds
guitarist Jimmie Vaughan Is
tired of touring and Is leaving the
The Rutland Garden Club mel ·. Nicholson , Bernice Nelson, Pau · Newly elected o!ficers are Pau·
band after playing a blues
recently at the home of Dorothy line Atkins, Pari Canaday. Eva line Atkins, president, Porothy
festival at Fort Hood, Texas , on
WoO&lt;jard.
Robson, Dorothy Woodard, Oct a
Woodard, vice president, Marcia
June 16. Vaughan's hand·plcked
Mrs. Woodard gave devolions Ward and Marcia Denlson.Neva Denison. secretary, and Mar·
successor will be Duke Robll·
reading a poem Memorial Day
Nicholson , Pauline Atkins , garet Belie Weber, treasurer.
lard, meaning the barid will now
and Scrlplure from First Peter.
Kalhy Dalton, and Ruby Diehl
Binda Diehl provided a Iall
bave three former members of
The creed and collect were provided flower arrangements arrangement featurin g iris. The
Roomful of Bl~ teaming .with
given in unison . Roll call was for churches and other next meeting will be Tuesday ,
Kim Wilson, the only ·remaining
answered with did I put up a organizations.
June 26, instead of June 25 due to
original Thunderbird. Vaughan
birdhouse? Members agreed to
The travellng prize was pro· an Eastern Star tnspection on
wants a break from the Ttiunder·
enter a float in the Rutland vided byhOcta Ward and won by Monday night. It will be potluck.
birds' fierce touring schedule,
Firemen's Fpurth of July · Pauline Atkins. Margaret Belle
A t~ank you note was senl to
which had them playing as many
parade.
,
Weber is to furnish a prize for the Janel Bolin for providing arran·
as 340 dates a year, so he can
A report was made on Jhe next meeting.
gements for .the club for the
spend more tit'ne at home In , planting done In Memorial Park
Binda Diehl, Ann Elizabeth Ru(land Alumni banquet.
Texas and work on projects like
In lower Rutland which was done· Turner, Pearl Canaday and
For Ihe program E va Robson
thP album he is ' making with his
by Pearl Canaday, Neva Nichol· Marcia Denison reported on their gave 'a reading on May Day .
brother, Stevie Ray Vaughan:
Margaret Belle Weber ' gave a
son, Binda Diehl, Pauline Atkins trip to Holland, Michigan for the
GARN ON GORBACHEV:
and Margaret Belle Weber. ' ·
tWip festi\'ai·.
reporl on calla lilies. Dorothy
Sen. Jake Gara. R·Utah, Is
Pearl Canaday gave the nom!· Woodard on spider plants and
Touring Bob's Market in Ma·
Immune to Gorbyminla. Garn
son were Binda Diehl, Neva
nating committee' s reporl . Neva on earthworms.
says he may not read Time again
because the magazine named
Soviet President Mikhail Gorbacbev its man of Ihedecadeforthe
'80s. "He's still a dlctalor despite'whatever you wanl to call
WELLESLEY, Mass. (UP))said.
The leiter thanked the first
him -of a bankrupt system that
Wllh the air of protest tempered.
The letter said. "We ask you. l~dy for speaking at Wellesley's
Is Incredibly corrupt and bureau·
the welcome' mat graced the
Barbara Bush , as, a concerned commencement.
cratlc." earn said thts weeki nan
rolling suburban campus of pres·
mother and a s a symbol of
The letter was addressed only
appearance In St. George. Ulah.
tlgious Wellesley College Friday
service to others, to take a to Mrs. Bush because, "we
"and has not fulfilled any of the for commencement speakers
definilive and vocal sland on the decided lhat the women of the
promises that (Nikolai) Lenin
following critical issues thaf Soviet Union should make lheir
Barbara Bush and Soviet coun·
Ialked aboul. So give Mr. Gorba·
terpart Ralsa Gorbachev.
shape the lives of women in the own requests to Raisa," Po tee
chev credit for this? He had
Graduates who earlier this
United States:"
said .
·.
nothing 10 do witli it." Garn says
spring opposed the choice of Mrs .
Potee said the letter was
The
letter
listed
seven
issues,
Ronald Reagan would have been
Bush as the main speaker for the
including day care, family and written by Susana Cardenas and
a better choice 'f or man of the
school's 1121h commencemenl
medical. lea,•es, welfare cu(s, Peggy Reid, two of the students
decade.
redirected their activist ener·
AIDS research. education, "dete· who co·autbored a petition
GLIMPSES: The New Kids on
gles, saying they wlll urge the
rioration of women' s reproduc· againsl the selection of Mrs.
the Block· are on a roll. Parker
first lady to work harder for
live rights, ", and the wage gap Bush as the school's guest of
Brothers has purchased the
women's rights.
·
honor.
~
between men and women .
rights to make a Nlnlendo video
·'We think she should begin to
game based. on ' the po'p group.
focus on women's Issues more
The game Is still In (he ear~v . publicly," said . senior Ruth
stages of development bul will be Potee, who added that studenls
on the market In a bout a year.
wrote to Mrs. Bush requesting
Parker Brothers won'r, say how
more support for Issues such as
much was paid for the licensing day care and reproductive
FRIDAy, JUNE 1I 1990
rights ... WIUie Nelson has
rights.
rounded up the usual suspects lor
School officials expected about
SHRIMP BOAT DINNER-································ S2.94
another of his Fourth of July
5,000 people to anend I he gradua·
T011 (1 01
Goldin ShriMp Serwed with Our Own H..
"picnics." The show, set .for the
tlon under a while ten! set up
-•a•• Codttall Sau111, Hot Goldlo f...,ch f rles, and Cole Slaw, Ma·
shores of Town Lake In Atlstln.
among 19th·century stone towers
"'""" Salad " .........
Texas, will feature Nelson's
and brick quadrangles on Welles·
' SUNDAy I JUNE 3, 1990
longtime asSociates Krla KriStof·
ley's grassy, 500·acre campus
Ienon, Waylon Jennlnp and
west of 86ston.
.
COUNfiY STEAK DIINEI"........._•••••• "'""""" S4.49
Jolumy ~h along with Alleep a&amp;
Try Out c-try S._., Sl wand ill a Dlllcl- IIMI1 ado Wl!lt1
Mrs.'Bush and Mrs. Gorbache.v
the Wheel and Kinky Freklmau.
were scheduled to address stu·
Sau111, S.... ~ ..... P.tatwt &amp; Gnwy, ..._ C...ad G"He loves to promote shows and
. _ with Musllr•-· , _ dlolcf of a lht W or lllscvlt, fnsltly
dents for about six minutes each
get his friends together and have
before taking a quick tour of
lnwtld CoHH, l . . .r tr hcaffal...tld, T.. er a SntGII Drlllk.
a good concert and do something 86ston and retw-nllig to Washing·
for the community," said Lana
ton for a weekend of Soviet·
HOURS: 10 A.M. TO 8 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK
Nelson, Willie's daughter. "It's
American swnmlt activities.
'
certainly not a profitable venture
Po tee, wbo slglled the protest
for him. It never hal been and
petltjon, described the Jetter as
probably never will be."
"very upbeat."
"We are saying that we are
excited she Is here. But we are
also saying that as a woman In
•
All1ilrl
her position, she bas the oppor·
1llly
.
tunlty that people like you and I
might not have to make Ji strong
statement about women," she

~

106 M....rry An.

7p.m.

Mldn Si .. Pomeroy Sulll~ ,.,..,.,.,, Holy
commurionon the tlrst sumay ote.E~~~:hmonth,

·Surprise party given
for Brogan birthday

P~ople

..,
0

Nationwide Ins. Co.

The Daily Sentinei-PIIga 7 . .

Friday, June 1, 1990

This Message and Claurch Directory SpoR1Jored By .Tl!-e.ln!e.rested .flusinesses Listed On .ThiS P~(}.
·~ . MEIGS nRE
TEAFORD REAlTY .
P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Family Restaurant

Pfffl"lfll K1w11eig Frill Ckldu"
221 W. Main St., Pomeroy

'

'

•

l fXrERIENCE 111f JOY. Of RELIGION
(row's

,.

Fridav, June 1. 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

us

OUTI
PLUS
USD MOVE SAil t6.95-S9.95
IIUNDIIDS TO CHOOSE FIOII

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

~Y, 0110

391 WEST MAIN mEET

992-3524

.

�Page- 8 - The Daily Sentinel

a few pennies spen;t here
comes back folding mo'ney
'

WANT
ADS
WORK!
992-2156·

,.

11

P~roy,

I VICinity

LAFF-A-DAY

•

Middleport

44

&amp; VlclnHy

Expanding physician office needs
a receptionist. Duties include ap·
pointment shaduling. typing (50
wpl"f'!), filing and medical insurance billing. Qualified applicant
should have appropriate experience or education.

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport Ohio

Friday, June 1, 1990

Gallipolis

Help Wanted

Household

Apartment
for Rent

JUT' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Goods

1 or 2 lr. Ala. ti1H3100:~
· All
- lncludod.
Roq.
Colt.....
llflyette
..... lt4-7731or 4411-4222.

2 - - oportmonl. · 1175.
~-

Send resume widi salary requirer:nent to:
Medical Receptionist, P.0 . Box 7290, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 ,

.

Annou nee me nl s

.,

'

Public Notice

Public Notice

MBE
NOTICE TO BIDDERS

subcont-.cta, or any other
benefit• under this aection
•e11 be guilty of theft by deception ... prQVided for · in
Soct~n 2913.02 of the Re-

Bidding on this project is

restricted to Minoriiy Bus~
~as s Entorprioes
(MBE'o)
· Who have been certified ai
M BE by State Equal Em-

ployment Opportunjty Coordinator in
accordance
with Section 123.151 IB)
(2) of tho O.R.C . (Am. Sub.
ti ,B. 584) . Only bido ro~eived

troll' MBE'a who are

certifh'd priqr to the bid
· · ·opening, time apd ·d ate will
be accepted.

.: Sealed propoeslo will bo
received et the:
·,
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
U55 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
·: - SECOND FLOOR
COLUMBUS. OHIO 43224
until Thuradov. June 21 .
1990 ot 2:00 P .M . ond

opened thereafter for furnishing the material• end

v.d Code.
CONTRACTORS REQUIR·
ING ASSISTANCE IN SE·
CURING BIDS FROM CERnAED MBE SUB·CONTRAC·
TORS AND
SUPPUERS
MAY CONTACT THE STATE
EQUAL EMPLOYMENT CO·
ORDINATOR BY CALUNG
.1814)466-8380 OR THE MlNORITY BUSINESS DEVEL·
OPMENT DIVISION BY CALUNO (814) 4611-5700 OR
TOLL FREE ON 1·(8001282·
1085.
APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION IN The Doily Senti·
nel. Pom•oy, Ohio on June
1 and B. 1990.
RECOMMENDED:
TIM L. DIERINGER, Chlof
Division of Reclamation
Date: 5-24-90
APPROVED:
JOSEPH J . SOMMER.
Director
Department of Natural

performing the labor for the

execution and construction
of:
ROACH-THOMPSON
RECLAMATION PROJECT
- MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG-Sb-20
fn eccordance with the Plana
and Specificotiono proporod
by tho DEPARTMENT OF
IIIATURAL , RESOURCES.
THE DIVISION OF RECLA·
MATION.
COLUMBUS,
OHIO. BIDS
WILL BE
OPENED IN THE THIRD
FLOOR
CONFERENCE
ROOM OF 1855 (BUILD·
iNO H) OF THE FOUNTAIN
SQUARE OFFICES OF THE
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
IIIATU,IIAL RESOURCES.
Tho U.S. Office of Surfoce

Mining Reclemition

end

Enforcement is aupplying
100% of the fundo for thio
project. THE
ESTIMATE
FOR THIS PROJECT AS
DETERMINED BY .THE DIVISION OF RECLAMATION
IS .123,686.00.
A pro-bid meeting will bo
held on Tunday, June 12.
1990 ot 11 :00 A.M. at the

oite. ,
Copies of the Plena, Spe.
Gifle~tlona

and propollll
fdnnt will be forwardltd
·fi.om the Diviaion of Ril&lt;:lo!J10tion, Department of No-

turel Resources, upon re·
ceipt of 1 check in the
amount of •16 .00 modo
,.yoblo to tho Do(*tmont
of Naturll A•ourca. Th•e .
riley oloo.be pun:h•ed with

c•h In the exact amount.
Plano end apodficetiono boo;omo tho (H'operty of the
protpectiYe bidders 1nd no
rlifund wKI be mode. Additional information may ~
Obtained from the Oiviaion
of
Reclamation, Oepanmunt of Natural Anourc11,
'855 Fountoin
Square,
ltuilding H, S~nd Floor,
Columbus.
Ohio 43224.
(P!lone: !614) 265· 1058).
. · Each bl&lt;l must be accompanied by o BID GUARANTY, meeting the requirements of Section 153.64
of tho Ohio Roviood Code.
• CONTRACTORS ARE ADVISED THAT IN ACCOII·'
DANCE WITH THE PROV~
SIONS OF THE JANUARY
27.
1972
E~ECUTIVE
l!JRDER BY THE GOVEROHIO. AND
NOR OF
AMENDED
EXECUTIVE
ORDER 84-9. FEBRUARY
15, 1984, EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY CON·
DITIONS ARE APPUCABLE
TO THIS 810. WAGE RATES
ESTABLISHED IN ACCOR·
DANCE WITH
SECTION
151~. 18 and 1613.37 OF
j.HE REVISED CODE ARE
ALSO APPLICABLE.
.
• Bidl are a.ted and IICf.
dreoood to: DEPARTMENT
OF NATURAL RESOURCES,
DIVISION OF RECLAMATION, 1855
FOUNTAIN
SQUARE . BUILDING H. SECOND
FLOOR. COLUMBUS, OHIO 43224. No bidder mBV withdraw his bid
w~hin oixty(601 dl'(aohorthe
actual dllte of the opening

th.. oof.
The Director of Natural
Retourcee reserves the right
tC rejeC1 any or all bids, or 10
accept the bid which embraces sucH combination al ·

ternate propoaals as may
promote the best interest of
~he

State.
As provided In Section
123.1 51 of tho Ohio Re Vised Code and Adminittretive Rule 123:2-15 -02 of
the Department of Administrative Services, the CON·
TRACTOR ohall make evory ,
effort to ensure that cenified minority business sub~
contractors and meterial·
men panicipate in the contl'•ct. The total value of sub·
c·ontracta awarded to end
rrlateriel1
and services
purchued
from minority
bUoinoo"" ohell be ot 1-t
tan percent of tho tcjtol value
df the contact, wherever
po111lble. Any person who
Intentionally mlsreprManta
hlmoolf 11 owning, con1rol·
ling, operating, or partie·
lpating in a minority Dualness enterprise&lt;lor the pur·
pose of obtaining contracts,

No...; is the time fo; g-r-r-r-eat ·
., buys in the classi(ieds

\'

June 1. 1990

Ohio

Raoun:eo
Date: 5-24·90

PubliC Notice accept the bid which embraces such combination el.
ternoto propollls as moy
promote the best interest of
the Slota.
A~ provided in Section
123. 151 of the Ohio RaYiood Code ond Adminiotrotive Rule 123:2-15-02 of
the -Doponment of Administrotivo Senricoo. tho CONTRACTOR shall make ovorv
effon to ensure thot· coni·
fled minority buoinou subcontractors and motorial·
men ponlclpaio In tho eontroct. The total voluo of subcontracts owordod to and
motorlllla
and services
pun:hoood
kom minority
buoinooiM oholl bo ot loat
ton poncent oftho total value
of thll contract, wherever
Poulble. Any pero'On who
intentionally misroprooenta
hlmoolf 01 owning. controlling, oper•ting, or partie·
ipeting in 1 minority buainess enterpriae for the pur·
poM of obtaining controcto,
aubcontrects. or any other
benefits under this section

~·~:·l~ltb~~· guilty
oft heft by do·
as provided for in
2913 .02 ofthe lie-

18) 1. B. 2tc

Public Notice
MBE
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Bidding on thie project il
rHtrlcted to Minority Bueineas EnterpriHI IMBE ' sl
who have been cert;tied as
MBE by State Equal Employment Opportunity Co-ordinMor in
accordance
with Section 123. 151 (B)
121 of the O.R.C . (Am. Sub.
H.B. 584) . Only bido received from MBE 's who are
certified prior to the ' bid
opening time and date win
bo accepted .
Sealed propoNia will be
received 111 the:
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
1855 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
- SECOND FLOOR '
COLUMBUS. OHiO 43224
untK Thurodoy. June 21 .
1990 at 11 :00 A.M. end
opened th•~fter for furnishing the materials and
performing the labor for the
IJl&amp;cution and conatructton
of:
GOOSE CREEK
RECLAMATION PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG-SC -05
in 1ccord.,ce wltl&gt;the P11n1

and Specificetiollll prepared
by the DEPARTMENT OF
.NATURAL RESOURCES.
THE DIVISION OF RECLA·
MATION.
COLUMBUS.
OHIO . BIDS
WILL BE
OPENED IN THE THIRD

:~OJ&gt;,!

~g~:~:~~~~

THE Ml·
DEVELBYCAL466-5700 OR
ON 1-(SOO) 282-

WITHOUT TRADE Qn ooch) :
CARGO VAN : Y, ton Regular; B cylnd• automatic;
Short Whoelbooo: PS / PB;
Driver and Front PuMnger
Soou: Sliding Sldo Dooi-o
w / Windowe: Double Re1r
Sw,ingoui · Corgo Loading
D - w / Windowo; AM / FM
Rodlo; Duel 0 / S Mirrors
pointed 9 " x6": Stendord
Spore Tire: Rodlel tlroo.
CARGO VAN: Mini Van, 6
Cylinder Automatic; 'Short
Whoelbooo: PSI PB: Driver
and Front Paasenger Sellta.:
Sliding Sido Oooro w / Windowo; Double Raor Swingout Corgo loodlng Door
w / Windowo; AM I FM flo·
dlo;
Duol 0 / S Mlrrora
poln1td 9"x8": Standord
Spore Tiro: Radial Tiroo.
"Trodo-ln" u
toii.Wa:
1988 E-160 'h Ton Ford
Econollno. 93,000 mM•.
Corgo Von-Shon Wheel·
bOlo, 302 V-8. 6 .0 L Engine
PS/ PB. Auto.
Tranom.
w / Owrdrlvo, Hin&amp;od Side
Doou. Spare Tire.
The Boord of Education
, . .MII~ ttte right 'to accept
or reject oiy or olt blila.
Sealed bido w~l bo racaivod until 12:00 noon on
Fridoy, July 8 . 1 990 in thlo
TreasuMr'a Office - TriCounty JVS. 16678 S . R.
891 , NoloonvAio.
Ohio.
45784. (Envelope marked
Von Bid.)
Elizabeth Opperman,
TreMurer
16) 25; (8) 1. 8. 3tc

I.1-==---~----...1.;:======:;::::::;1
e
e

DALLAS SAYRE

.,.,

PAT "ILL

CHIYSLII~YitDUTH

.

v c·s
BODY1 ~HOP
~
992-5603

OF
FLATWOODS. ROAD
lNG H) OF THE FOUNTAIN
POMEROY. OHIO
SQUARE OFFICES OF THE ' - . . - - -.....-~--- L----...;6:;.'.;,11;,;1~m;;;•:;.,A
·
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF r
NATURAL RESOURCES.
The U.S . Office of Surface
•VINYL SIQING
Mining Redamation
1md
•ALUMINUM SIDING
SAlES AND SERVICE
Enforcement is supplying
•BLOWN
IN
'
100% of tho fundi for thio
FadorJ Authorized
project. THE
ESTIMATE
INSULATION
SlrYiu C•t• For Most
FOR THIS PROJECT AS
Mall" and Medols
DETERMINED BY THE DIFast
VISION OF RECLAM,&lt;ITION
IS 896.257.40.
A pre~ bid meeting will be
llew • - Built
held on Juno 7, 1990 at
"Free Estimates..
10 :00 A.M. at the o~e .
Copies of the Plans, SpePH.
cifications
and propo111l
forms will be forwarded
or Res.
from the Division of ReclaNO SUNDA YCALlS
mation; Department of Na~
'·
• 4-16-86-1111

BIS$ELL
SIDING CO.

9:49·2801
949-2860

1

'

m.v

SERVICE

We can repair cind re-

mre rad1aton and
hlatti' cares. We can
also acid boil and rad
out radiotan. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PIT HILL FORD

992-2196
Middleport,

MIDDLEPORT
VCR CLINIC

MAINTENANCE &amp; IEPAIR

13•1 Powell St. Mi ....,,
tlu•t frem Hein•• Ttwift Store)

(614) 992·7143

SPRitl8 SPECIAL
CLEAN, LUBE &amp;TEST

$1886

OPEN : MON .-FRI.
10 A .M .· &amp; P .M .
Or By Appointment
6· 1·1 mo: d.

.GRUNHOUSE
Paulin's Hill Between
Rutland and Rt. 554
OPEN MON.-SAT. 10 to 5
STRAWFlOWERS: Dwarf
&amp; TaU; PAMPAS GRASS:

Pink &amp; White; FUSatiA,
usms, HERBS and
MORE. •

614-742-2772 '

R. L.

992 • 6421

CHEnEI, OHIO
•GRAVEL

•LIIIIIESTONE
•FILL DIRT .
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

985-4422
Roger HYJell
Garage ·
Rt, U4J Pameror Obie

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REP AI~
Also Tri•••l••l•• •
PH. ,992·5682
or 992-7121
4-25-tfn

HUMPHREY'S
CLIMATE

.CONTROL
Heating, Cooling,
Refrigerat~n

S.rwica ·

Reiidentiei &amp;
Commercial

CALL .
992-5589 .

5-11-'90-1110.

0ongo -

-

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

- . -polio l'eny. ·
...., • lunlllurdeiM, ' ..... .
1

Iomeii to pd Houioohold,
Homo
"-·
-~lloo
end Toblly, oftor . clot- 111· t:OIJAII.t: ICJ4.e'l&amp;.

Z -

~

L::========C:. ':c::=:5-:l:6·:'90;:·:l:; m;:o.:::
;: ,

~.,-io:-:::-=:-:-::

::::1:"'~1- t - ·

llohlgorotor, 17!1; Rolrlgorltor,
2dr,
frolt
frM,
1150;
Rlhlgorator, 1n&gt;11 - · 2dr, $95:
Maytllg AutomaUc W11her, SH;
Kenmore Dry«, $75; llortog
Dry«, $11;
Chill F_.,
lkt - . 11110: E l - Rongo,
40 Inch, whlll. $15: On Rlllltlt,

1;;1.:. ~ ..... - 1•z.

-II

. . . .......... ' --11(1.

OonoQo
loll, 113 Chonchr
3 1 ...._ Clkl-.~_....,.._.
Drive, Sol, Juno 2, lloya 11111

GIEG BAILEY

==-

•NEW HOMES •SIDING,
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERA.LCONTRACTIIIIG

4 -. -

A Grtat Combination"Quality an- Reasan•l• Prices"
WE GO THE EMA MILE"...
992-6810
POMEIOY . OIHO

-

I wb., to :::JUIII=:;I=.nd::::::Z.~IOI=-=:mh=lt;::,-;lnflnl=
·
.2~
2 ~'~'.• thno ad'* -hlllft, .
~ ,...... end ~I'""

s-

Clkl -

37~-a~t
~F

~

·-~

:c=. ::=:=: ::rJ :hi~

SllagQII Appllancol,
&amp;; rontlll
Uppe r Rlvtr llood., IM-411-

""'-· ::
....
::...
:::.__
· -..,..---:--:---:::--::

30M7M2M.
, _ - n , ahoop c1oa.
...It Ill&gt; ............... 1: s~

1.1rgo vont Solo,. a -~. •
mHO oul .-rv. Run, - . .... 30 thou- z. Nisw

73N.

RENT TO OWN
IM-411-3158
1 pa. wood .group 114.01 por
WMic. 4 ~., Hdroom tulle,
complotl 115.20 por -k.
dlnoito with 4 chll,. $7.!10 PI'
- " ' 11• Chef
cu. ~.
Aolrlgoiotor 112.111 por wook, ts
cu. ft. • ......, 110.10
VI' AI FurnlturO. Rt.
mlleo off Rt. 7.C.ntanlry.Opon
doyeo.· SWAIN
AUCTION l RIRIITURE. 52
Olivo St., GINipolll. &amp; Uoecl
fumtlure, halt.,., Wntem &amp;
Worlt bootL lt4-4411-3151.

...., :.:::::
- .,=.l:.:o,:::;R;::eo::wft.,...,F:-11-IWII-::-:DIIY=-:-o,
·o1or8, :VIlli:;:

..: ~ ~71;,,

tomp Conlly, · ' -· riding
..... 1"11,, . . . and Mori. '

:~~~~~~;~~~~.]-~

,,

NowlllatMa.:
161 North Socootd
MWdltport, Oltle UJIIO

8

SALES &amp; SERVKE
Wt

&lt;;_able· Bill• Here

ER
SITEWORK • R!)AI)S

ClEARING

NEWLAND
'
ENTERPRISES
DUMPTRUCK ·
Sand-Stone-Dirt

FOREVER BRONZ
TANNING

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949•2160
Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

BISSEll &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•lhwH-

'eGarages
•Complete
R~medellng

Stap &amp; Compare
FrH Estbwates

985-4473
667-6179 .

9

25:11 Wnt Main,
. Pomerey,

o•.

. PARTS AND' SERVICE
For Moot 2 end .4 -cyclo
Stock
WHdeater.
Brlggo &amp;

Fumloliod , _ for ohlr1
blth, 1110/mo. In Dollloollo,
114-441-11:11 of.
rlor p.m.
-lor
or month.
11 1120/ma. Gollla Hotll.
1
mo.
·
IIIIDinai room• with cooking.
AM' traTI• ~~ All hook-ups.
Coli ••• 2:00 p.m., 304-7'13-

Ca. R•• 28

-q."!,......
'-

--

4

IUILANDnRE
SAUS and
SERVICE

Juno14.

z:m.
- 114
-

..
.. Twp. lloL
on loll. Lola 01-

-

...

.

n., nYLAND

11

OVEN
ALL lUllS

Iring It In Or We
. Pick Up.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
l.nl·):$U ar 915-3561
Acr- ....
Office
217 I. Sec.
POIUIOY

"::i....'"

992·5335 ., 915-3561
Acr- .... , ... Office

lf"U=k•-

Real Estate

~~~ .~~-~..:.:

......-.-.

.

53 Cowl Strwt. lt•e tor rwlt,
Front • -~~ - otoroga.
114 'ltl 4514, 1'14453-11"-

35 Lots I Acreage

'

lllcldllll 11t Ohio. Rain-~

I

Apprax. oorw on HwY. 1~,-•

- --·-

... lllr!po, d-.lnl-ltor::'
do, op1

-· ..... ~'Ill8Hond 111'1111 MIMI II If\ Ohio'.

eome wHh river

a71-23H.

a... -· llolu!*L~i

......

41

l~le,Ohlo.

By -

~'-:t

2 ...,.,

hDiiM

.:::&amp;.

wllh
pool, In-

~~ln .....ownoreL

Yon! Sail: ....... -

For RMit 01 Sale: P I 1:1 I lend
-roct,
4llr - · vinyl
BARN !lONEY Roodlng - 1 ........ -3 or windOM.
dllfl.
PO,_., =-£'1ontlll - · olovt • rllrlg., lull oil
Oottlo. (1)
lilt. y.
4112.
OIIIIIt4-378-UII·

tlon HDuae, VInton, OH. llaM,
- n e , bon (11-tO) -hie,
Mil• hold, fJoor model NNO

-.--.-

·c=ft•c=D. fullkMtall mK,
...,

&amp;.1, Atart

nu.., Frt.. 111f 30-.luna 1.1-4.

Houaea tor Rant

-root.

Coole
WMIIII,
- In ,,.,,
poroon,
no (lbor!CI
..III,·
HOtldov
Qol.
D1p1ndd• lllbvlftter nMClld

frontage, 304-

Rental s

Conltmpo Feshlonl II IOOidlog
lor 2 poop~~ In 11.-n • - NO
o.h lnvriltH•nl. Set your own
. . . . fUll training. CoiiiM-1112·
211t.

2,
111-1. 1 112 .....
bar·
Rd. llbr -hie, I to
4T. - · clothn • loti

Cnlce),

lloblle Homo Pork,
R - 33, North ol Pomeroy.
Lota1 .~1tla, porto, oolto. Coli
lt4-0R•lll711.

Country

~

I'OIIBOY OliO .

. -

ROWE

POWERWASH
SERVICE

581 5. Fourth Ave.
Mitltllaaort, Ohio

RESID~NTIAL and
COMMERCIAL SIDING
HOUMI • Mobile Hom81
- Tronopon Vahldeo •
Farm Equipment ~
Heavy Equipment, Etc .
FREE ESTIMATES
24 HR . SERVICE

614-992·6242

S-21-'tl).l 010.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE'.
CENTER
SELLING
OUT '·
MOVING!
HO•s••.r •-7.
Sat.,;,

Cloolll Saot. "

949·2969

I

11-31·1 mo.

."SHRUB·&amp; TREE
TRIM llntf RE'MOVAL ••

.

., .

*LIGHT HAULING
*FIREWOOD

BILL SUCK
992-2269
EVENINGS

m-zliiO

In••,:=,. :=~

Mobil. Ho mll

fo.r Rant

-n, . . .

51

Household
Good S

loby robbltto,lt4---.
S.ulllul dog . quolltv.
Dllrnotlon puppy, f4
wkt. old, AKC Rig. popora,
pocllaiW. $200. lnciUdtl: lltd,
otc. lt4-241-611G.
'

eutom~tlc

tr~~nunt..loft

lri

'""'""' cllllt4-112-32ZI.
tl'lll LTD, 4 dr, -then 114!.4141Cl
mille. Good
:a~:IIIIYing;
AC. 114-

"':s

tiiO u.-tn c-, 10,000 oatuol
mlleoL.'!"• __., 113,100. 304-

8824004.

LAYNE'S FURNirURE
Sot.. and chllra priced from
$195 to jtll. Toblle $10 end up
lo 1125. H I - - - $310 to
1115. Rlclln.o $22a to $171.
Lornpl Ul to ft25 , Dlnottoo
11• end up to 1411. Wood table
w-11 o1111ro 1211 to 1'1111. o..u
1141 up lo $1'111.
$400 l
up, _.pllla
5
10 with
1211
.,.. "'
"' ·
billy- ... ~~~~- or
11o1 aprlngo full or tw n $18, flrm
$88, and pa, OUHn Utli $275 &amp;

~'· K~'n ~.!t!'ru:

to:

gulL 8aby molt- 125 l
$48. Bill !romeo $25. OuSID $35 &amp; ldng lrsmo $!0. Good
NIICtlon of DedroOm euhn,
metal cobl.-, heodboordo $30
end up to $11.110 doye Amo •
OllhWhh•...,..vtd-t.3ml.
::l"o::Rd
out Butovlftl
.
I ~11 . to
~w":'"· lhru ;. Coli 614-

-~~~~n~

H01~ Duty (.Qw..., 11ft long 3
rlo3ou'114111
•
·

loll hlndtcl 111 o1 Wlllon 0011
clube and bag m. ....,..
3471.
on ioll It PAINT PWS,
Huequvsrno T~m_.. BaWl
$211. to SIO. MINT PWS, J11&gt;k·
eon Aw, Point Pte. .nt, 304-

-- ·--.....·"""'"'· "'·

- . ... Rt.ll4. June 2;.......
goodo,

a la.Hipolll,
Oolnlno'l
-Puen•or
·llfiPII9olfor 32 Mobile Home•

Pl&amp;te.

...It ........ . , . . . . , - ·

Cllooh.':r'&amp;:Col llpm.
.
P08TALJOB8
II 11U11hr. for -

l
.........""" Into. ... 7 . , .
lo.m.·1Gp.M. ~--·lid.

.

fOr Sale
-

-/dryll'.

homo

'~- ·

tow

Colt-JIQI.

....

r.....

-•1
· I11111
Ill ttUt on
hr. P., eum
IIIIIIDIIOIIInfD.
0111 7 doJ! I Lm.•'IO P.IL 1411-

-

esll or - .
10.

loll . . '!'....,...
11J ~
compgrounct,

3011. •
-

A ~1 _.2 lA, mob111
In . _... Dlpollt. 114-

IMI r••

LMa1 YMI ...._ •11'11• rt

111111. J - 14.
LlwiM _ , .... I hjl

-··

...........N.•. '"". toilok
rutn
.....
I

Roforln-

992·61
209 s.t1t 4th St.

MltW=Oh.
"lOW.

,.
-OOM-.-- - ·

--or.
-

, _ ,.... .

tt-. 3D

--·

01

Instruments

I

-lie

Raueh'a . .awberr._ ,-.uo.,
~'in:
. 2 WV,
- No -SlOlCIIya,
"' -304Ia
·
•11-rloo, Vou fllck 'or •
Dick. Towtor'l Barry Potolt. Kerr
lloocl. I!On-Frt: lo.m.-lp.m.. Sot:
lo.m.-lp.m. at4-24W1'11, lt4ue estz.
•••wbonlll plolled.
lllllon
R - . S y - . s...- ••

only -

•.ooo

1814 comoro po,pl&gt;, "'1:'r~
otlfo. Rune incl 1ooU
•
$2,200 ..- - ·
773111102.
..__hem
11114
_,.
--.
- ICutc - . lolclld.
SOI::I"J
- at4 •••
01
o11. ALnor •
,.......

*

114 245 Ill,_
R-'* T - sportl 01,,
1
All power, I epd., law miiNgl,

Serv1ces

81

Home
· lmprov81'11ents.

35 mpg, t2,100. lt4 411 at2 a._
tor 4.
.
1117 co- - z, ~
tope, olr, tift, CNIIo, PSi -:n

;::.a.::~':".=!m:.

,..

1117 PGrllloo Orand PriX, olllrtl
""""' til, olr, A1111'11 co-o,
ounruol.::r litter tiiW, one
owner,
. llt4-441.e711.
1- CJT, ~~
-.., .... ~_,-•
1111 ..._ AII-AI - • - - . 54ps d, ...
......, ~ trw 17 atlll,
uc...,. ..,.ron, One .....,_
NIGO-. Bt4-84NIIII.
Ooctgo Do""'" ' " : ;
1•
ttl7 Dad(ji plolc"" ...'lUll,
010 • ~ •NIIIon. 1111 p1o1n1p. . . - 114 • •11.
00¥1RfJUIH1' kiZED \,.tel•
.w.a.loul. tlaM . . .. fona . . CJdll

-.. ,

~ 17,101. .....

114
~::~-~==-~·-=--::-=::-::=;;;

AI typoe of - · llrlcio,

-

11111 llano. F- eo-

·----~ :

-IIENT

---Coli-

WAliRPIIOOFIIIO
,
.. ......... P.IJWt.
1M. Looll
~

u.... dh:l

,.,.una•
lt4-Zit-04lll, daY or night.
1.
A.._ Ia ant w.a.,....,..
lni
.
..

w'•--._

Col,.....
•101•

1- kt.
-

~ lui'DIUL
(11 IIIINIJ.IOOO

::a
-··:a..

-- --Ren.. 1Y . . , .... I I

In . . . . . . . .

~--~

. . ., l)codaO
~. ' - - ; '1111
~-IIIIo, ' - lt4~

••••=•:,C~t4:

con
1121.

F;un~

SunpilfH

&amp; LIVf'_,tocl,

------

- leb lloCormlck
lid.
.........._
olothl"' •

.Gooclllot•
T.L.C .
27Yra. Exp.

!Wigl-. . . . . . .
•

~ (lllolloilp C10,llroo, ...... """- ~

•.
, Fumlt..... ' ....,_.
clot- toyo.

'....-,,MSII'Cikl

-

"""""' .a.--3ll4-fiWIZ2-

1711-4084.
ws• s ova I I~~~
••
PAINT p
- ...
por gallon on uloatlll 1111end oltorlor Plttal&gt;urt Polntl,
-· on llurpiO - ·
24tl Jock- Avo, Point
Plount, 304-171-4014.

June 111, 2nd. 3 lomb. Qo""""
Rd., Doll SL " ' lnfii,.,
-hlllft, lllloc.

Ciothel,

.I14-3I7-GIZ4.
Musical

amort.

-J.':!'

1

re.

l!l!lni

'"""""'

In , . , _ Plolnij

--.;..

....

::=..-:_. I...,_. .,
·~

- - . .J - M.

. ,

7

.

allllo
•

"

"Thole aren'tstara

we-

rettd with,

. hon... they' re anlacld tablets." ·

''

AIC,

tl73 ""'"""'
2111.......,,
otlf """'
lllned,
blltvoolll.
.....

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

,--.,.:;:;::.:::=;:.:::-.-:7.::

.,.,.,...,ft4.317.0234,

TN olllf. motlllnod,

111-81ta.

-

1t cu. ft. 1r11 relrlg., whllll 58
Fruits &amp;
wl tolturlll dooro, otovo -ell
Vegetablea
cloanlna ovon. $1QO bot llolh.
614-4411-'22V7.
Dunrovln FruM Fonn. Jut! off Sr
A.C. D-4 Oozor•loodor. 1 t/2 ton l8t of Allllny. IM-1111Ford truck. 24 ft. Doublo uiO 12tS. Amish c - . - h
trsllo• oil for $7500. Hoy- orvci~,IOIIII.ofnowpotll$75., 318 onglno $75., 318 t,.o, h.tt. ·WI 10 foocl llllmpo.
trsnem loolon $751 6 cyclnM&lt; ll-7*1ty,clolldllondoy.
Chevy 1nglne ana tr~neml8elon , 111owe1 and ~~~~~~ Pllrwe:
$'100, Faril lruck tr1n1mleelon Old La 1'~41: ·Acrola from'
$7!1, om- Sln..r
- h - H.l.- Lacotlon:
chino 15b, MW onow . r 112 up llou,. 011.. lid. an
1100. 114-143-6Loft, ( I I - OlhM Ad. II lly
Botona' 1il HP, HYdro-Sill with roll- In B-1.) Cillblgl,
42" dock, onow blod1 &amp; eholno,
Coull-/&gt;ti.OO clciL,
plow, dl~e. n,ooo. et4-44s-•a.
:.~ ~=·
Low

Soli: Uood 1 robulil
w . . - • · dryen, 10 .,.

t1 It

Schooner Mllil-Ualar

Vow olono not boon tuned
11,_ f'ob. - ? You need uol
Antlqu..
·
Jlll P11no Sorvloo. Bill Wlrtl
Buy or IOU. Rlverlno Antlq-. »t..a•ZI25. Willie .._.,.
n24 E. M1ln St-, P-l:'di -·7.
5833: Flhh
11m Stroot
- 1 , ..lt4-lfl2.
-11
48t0.
Hours: II.T;W. tO:OO o.m. lo a:
p.m 2 .~undoy. t :00 to a:oo p.m. Eloctrlc
,_
- ,.,
"'-•
,....,..n.
61 ,..,
25 26
Rhrthoml and Podoll boioch,
~:
poid. Old
mint condllon. Firm iioi 114quilts, I
8$12-2571.
t~~_;~; or
Kimball Sh•nart·La Entartal~r
Ill oraon. 304-175-4158.
Omnlchord end oulohorp. IIC
~ MJSCBIIaniOUS
cond, 300-175·7162 1ft« 1:00
Merchandise
Pll.

For

Motor Homes

11.
Fully otlf......... flloopo .. 1111 ""!!in~-

53

Amli!U with 3112 &amp; an 11tra I 114
dloc·-d~vo, color monftor, IX·
panded m•mory, r,IUii eohwlfe.
IM-3'11-Zt32 """ ngL
E11rcl10 bench, • -111(1 ma·
chino. $IIO. IM 38111!101.

·-

wi th-ra"'':-·
- . Aftor:lpm, ~
.
79
campers&amp;

1nl '

,_
Grand Prll,
mlleo, aood tirM, lolr_ cand,
11,?UO. oao. »t&lt;47MI22-

;~4-~=·~~·~;;!i~~~~

- 2 0 0 ....~.-

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

11171 Ford .......... 2clr, - ·

hhlcl 87 t2 ... pump
turltoy -'•1. Walnut, nonglare Cholet luboe, $325. 1144411-2301 onor 3pm or 114-2411-

~pullrforNie. Comn.dofe.

og:. •

- I p.m.

42

June 1l2, t-lllodnov Plko In
B - Ill lloiiRIIId': Cooll'o
llollldonoo. Cllthlo 111-.

-.bt.101.

....' .,~ _...;....--.----·

AK
. A':&amp;~...
. 1 pupoll.
'
8 uCif ~~"ock
oclull -~ 1177 For LTO. R-. $250. 114pupo11
. AK.;,:V· :;;rloot-pupo~tl2
~;·;
Zut;::::,·,-:-:=c==-::=::~
~
Bulle.. 114Z1tS.
1177 Ford LTO I - a n _ . ,
AKC Nglllortcl Lol&gt;rlclor (&gt;Upt. S30Q. 30W7II-2I4I.
.
t2 w1ca. Blocll 1nd ~· ~. im CJ·7 Honltop. - - lt4-11411-2112 - - 1-lp.m.

, _ Hondo lll No """· end lnttllor, 111u1 now. $1,IIOCI.

'JUne 41ol, N , Bel_,. (off VIM

.

P...s for Sala

·
with -....
ch.ot any$34.17
m11t1re11
Porch alldor • 2 motc!tlng oholr Full bloodod block Lib pupa. No
glldtt Sill oot, A=lt,lloglc poponr. S3101Ch. 1~1410.
Chef boll !No ro
otort·
lng 52tt. Olltn ell t 1.111. • I
p.m. =.lakin trDm I p.m. • t Groom and - Supply Shop Pot
pm
SUn 12...S. Rl. 14t, 4 Grooming. A l l -. AU 11-.
N Food Deller. Jule
maio off Rt. 7, C... onory. '1!4- lame
Wobb. Cllll14 441 0231.
441-3158.
woet
Hlghllnd WhH• T.-..
52 Sporting Goods
AKC
III-3FE, Smell •

l&amp;/30l1Sifo .-.

PH.992

Cho..tll, 327 3 speed,
._,ICI4-e'l&amp;-t171.

56
:.;;_.:..;";.;;.:.',;.;;..:..:.:..:;.....,-AKC- Rot- p u -.
Con both porei)IO. Cfl-.
- l p b l - . UOO - 1m Iuick ..-.,IICI 111111111,
i~1311. .
~-cor.-..- llo

-1.

•::£ -

18111114-3-Pwn'~-.111r, houOI W/11'110
yen!. ' ".""'"'. · - · · lfol~

Merchandise

-hi•

For Aont .,. - : - - lind
3 "' 4br homo,
lkllng, , _ wlndowl, d
·-· • rllrlg., lull. q11
fumaol, woocl tumece, mu.t

~~

or-

Wanted to Rent

Wo,.lll to Rtnt
option to
buJ
or
dbl.
In
- . y - n a In Kygor- C..ok
or Blclililll Scliool dlllrlct. Col
114-4411-1111. Olio for Richerd or
c.rta. ........... 1:.00.

...aoo.·

o .J. Whlto Rd. 2 (lluo ocreo,
(-rlctlll) . woocllll building
lltl, 114-245-115811.
-2Aihton,1ocroloto 3
mlleo lOUth Qolllpotlo Lacko,
public wat•, no Nltrtctlona,

-SolO. Ill 7 .._from
Old lfondo Shop. Juno 1U

-

aaat, ..._ wv.
46 Spaca for Rent

NOrth Golllll school.
Hurry lleftlllt4 388 11043.

90 DAY WAMAIIfY

lEN'S APPUANCE
SRVICE

INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUILIIHING CO.
rocommondo thlt yilu do bUo~
,_with
poopll
1tho
nd
NOTID-monoyl
mol UniH lf"U heft InIll

will coraldor """" coN olllr

USED APPUANCES
WASHEIS-$100 up
.'
DIYIIS-$6!1up
.'
IEFRIQEIATOIS-1100 UJ •
IANQIS Gas Eloc.-$125 up
FREEZERS-$125 up
MICRO OYENS-$19 up

Help wanted

Big Dokotl form - . bulft on
tho~
your lot. 114,885 l up. 514-8811AVON • AI • - CoH Morllyn - . Locol. Greot ••· 731t.
·
~ver 30~ 882 2141.
,,. 1 - Soli oheop. 1-800- S4
Business
AVON I All - · I 9hlrtl'( 1110-112110.
Spooro, 304-171-1429.
Buildings

Soil: llodnoy
Vllllg&lt;l H. Juno 2nd, 1-4, 1a "'
....,. 11m111oo. All - c~
1
~"':.ict.
'"" ,.,. ............... , . Condor 81.,
\2,4.
Fri. .... - · Full bod • molt, z Polr....,. oolloo • end labloo, - · Clothing,, IUrt, toolo, C.l .
oq......,..n{ .. _ , . , lnl~
olothOo.
..·-· ,luniiU.12711'11ne-,
·Cho-.1-0411211.
chei'-W,IIWII DilliN,
.
, _ , .... . . ,. June \ a. •24
111. 'V... Fumllure, badap,.td8,
-...... pllytr pllno,
chlldiWne
clothing,
ll'loc
lloUIIhlld.

Buslneas
Opportunity

'AIIIUNE JOBS•
$18,500 to $70,000 por yoor. C.H
~-- Ext.A·t

Coqununlty Yon!

.i==:~~;l~·l~~~·go.r:lfll:tr ~-~~

21

Employment Serv1ces

742-3011

IUIN

:!"l - rent.S::7a'

SigM

•Brake 'Work

~~r~c~~, - ·&amp;'::' w1n- ;71~Auto:;::::;s.::to;r:Sa:::=le=~

5823·

381-11303.

30 Stssions-130

6-3t-1 mo.

DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE. REPAIR

Wanted to Buy

Junk coro wllh or wHhout
moton. Coli lorry Uvtly 114-

•Tire Salea
• Froot En d· · .}
Alignment
•Oil Change • Lube

ll«k.

--·Rio
"'""'·
• • 011. Coli Wint
Orondo,
lt4245.at21.

!'t.

Gallipolis
&amp; VlclnHy

SPEtiAL :

RACUrfE, OHIO

"At Rea1011ab1. Prius"

Yard Sale

949-2794

Gr•t A. lh••l'

CUSTOM IUIT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

7

Call Now To Make
Appointment

Watch Far

.ISSELL
BUILDERS

Loot:. 2 1110. Clkl puppy; BlOck
whh - · .,... undOr noctc.
11111. arohOm . · lid.
-11-7814.

OPEIIIIIO SOON ·

(614) 667-3271

Supplies

VI'IIA FURNirURE. 7 Choir
S21t l up. NCI- lllortlng II
' " ooffao • end llbloo '"-"
oiot,-ootont.4

c..,Your
Flohhlg "'"'"•
Phonl'
IUSIIISS PMOIII
1614) "'·6550
iiiESIDIIIa PIIOIII
:16141

t4

w-

,kldo clothing, (-..)

PlUMIING

Transportal !On

Building

I:OO.
m.tta.
.
::1411:::::....
..,•• GonMn OnQo8ato3....,,...,22tl.lft
2 1111 -

K and J. CONSTRU(TfON

MEW LOCAJIOtl

TRUCKfNG

1:00.

r

tural Resourcet , upon receipt of a check in the

amount of $16.00 ,.ado
paya~e to the Department
of Natural RMoUrcee. Theta
alto be purchued with
cash in the exact amount.
Plans and speificetiont be·
come the property of the
prospective bidders 1nd no
refund will be made. Addi·
tion•f infor.,atlon. may be
obtained from the Oivition
of
Reclamation, Department of Natural Rnourcas.
1855 Fountllin
Square.
Building H. ·second Floor.
Columbus.
Ohio 43224.
,!Phone: 1614) 285-1058) .
Each bid must be accompan ied by a BID GUARANTY, meeting the requirements of Section 153.54
of the Ohio Revised Code.
CONTRACTORS ARE ADVISED THAT IN ACCORDANCE WlrH THE PROVI·
SIONS OF THE JANUARY
27,
1972
EXECUTIVE
ORDER BY THE GOVER·
NOR OF
OHIO. AND
AMENDED
EXECUTIVE
ORDER 84-9, FEBRUARY
15. 1984, EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY CONDiriONS ARE APPUCA8LE
TO THIS BID . WAGE RATES
ESTABLISHED IN ACCOR·
DANCE WrrH
· SECTION
1513.18 end 1613.37 OF
THE REVISED CODE ARE
ALSO API'LICABLE.
, Bids are seelad and ad·
dreolod to: DEPARTMENT
OF NATURAL RESOURCES,
DIVISION OF RECLAMATION, 1855
FOUNTAIN
SQUARE, . BUILDING H,
SECOND FLOOR, COLUMBUS., OHIO 43224. No bidder may withdraw his bid
within oiltv 180) doyoofta-the
actual dM:e · Of the op.-.ing
th.-eof.
The Director of Natural
Rooourcoo ,....,.. the right
to reject any or ell bido. or to

tl
Clkl
-moll
-_.,I·.
~
~ 30WM-302t oftor

DODGE

399 S. thlrtl', .• dtlllport.

Public NotiCB

NOTICE TO ASPHALT
APPROVED FOR PUBLI- CONCRETE VENDORS:
CATION IN Tho Dolly SentiSoolod bido will bl renel. ~omeroy, ,Ohio on May ceived by tho Boord of
2&amp; ond Juno 1. 1990.
Meigs County Commistion·
RECOMMENDED:
era. Court House, Pomeroy,
TIM L. DIERINGER, ·Chief
Ohio 46769 un1A 12 p.m . on
Division of Reclamation
June 13. 1990 and tho bido
Date: 5 -14-90
wUI bo opened ond r. .d
APPROVED: aloud ot 1 :00 p.m. on the
ClfARLES MAUGER, . 13th doy of Juno for the fur·
Aat. Director for _ niahing of various grades of
JOSEPH J . SOMMER. Aep.h att Concrete ,for the
Director Melga County Highwav Oe·
Oepartm~t of Natural
panment. PrOpoals ere to
Resoureftc be returned on bid forms
Dote: 5-14-90 ouppllod by the vendor. The
(51 25; (61 1 2tc
bid prices hall be firm and in
effect during the 1990 pov·
in_g 1881on from June
PubliC NotiCe
through October
1990.
Speciflcationo Shoot may be
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Tri-County Joint Yo- picked up" the Office ott he
cotlonol School . Board of Moiga County En(llnoor.
Morv Hobstettor, Clerk
~=~~=~:i..r.!:
Boord of Melga County
molco 0 bid price WITH
Commissioners
TRADE and 1 bid price (5) 25; 18) 1, 2tc

ustness
servtces

Stop In and 5M

Public Notice

,......,.lon
Electrical •

I

I

�Peg a 10-The Daily Sentinel

~

Pomeloy-Midcleport. Ohio

:Boot of the Bend

Welcome home•..

Friday. June 1, 1990 •

deaths----Meigs Couniy court -----Area
Maurice Lou ·

Roger Grace. officiating . Burial
will be In Greenwood Ceme ter~· .
Thirty defendants were fined days, OWl ; Thomas Greathouse
Friends
may call at the funeral
••
and seven others forfeited bonds Jr.. Portland, $250 and costs,
Maurice Lott, 85, Racine, died
home
Saturday
from 2 to 4 and 7
In
Meigs County Court three days confinement, license
- has undergone major surgery
By BOB HOEFLICH
Thursday at Veterans Memorial
.•· ·• Wel~ome
to
9.
Masonic
funeral
services
Wednesday .
suspended 60 days, costs only,
home. weary far away, but Is coming along
Hospital following a brief Illness.
·
will
be
held
at
the
funera)'4fome
Fined by Judge Patrick unsafe vehicle.
fine . Her address Is Missouri
: traveler.
Mr. Loll,' a retired educator,
O'Brien were Lawrence BowBaptist Hospital. Room 604, 3015
Richard Robertson, Pomeroy,
: And the weary
was a teacher In Meigs County Saturday at 7: 30 p.m.
. traveler has got
. N. Ballas Rd,, St. Louis, Mis- man,. Cincinnati, $25 and costs, $250 and costs, three days confor 38 years having taught In
no medical certificate; GllbertT. finement, licenses suspended 60
souri, 63131. The Werners' son,
to be M~y Ann
Pomeroy and Racine.
Units of the Meigs County
Travis. Hilliard, OH, $25 and days, three days confinement
Rick. is located In Si . Louis .
- Sorden of
He was born June 23, 1904 at
Emergency
Medical Service recosts, safety violation; Linda L.
: Pomeroy.
and $150 of fine suspended If
Robinson , Dl., the son of the late
sponded
to
six
ealls for asslstHere 's the way 'the Pomeroy
Edwards. Long Bottom. $10 and Residential Treatment Program
: ; AI though
Rufus R. LoM and Kathryn J .
anc.
e
on
Wednesday.
. ·
Sesquicentennial costume com- costs, failure to proceed with attended; David E. Wells , Pome: Mary Ann has
Watson Lot\. He was also preAt
2:
39'
a
.m.
Pomeroy
to East
· • had a .wonderful
petition will be held next Satur- caution; Tracey Ann Calley, roy, $20 and costs, fictitiOus
Ceded In death by his wife the late
Main
Street
for
Becky
Comer
Ravenswood, , $10 · and costs, plates; Vicky Abbott, Syra~use, ·Helen S. Bridgett Loti In 1!!73.
: )raveling experience over the day, June 9.
who
was
taken
to
Veterans
Judging wUl be held at 3 p.m . · failed to stop for stop sign; Allen · $25 and costs, two ~barges,
- past seven weeks, she must be
He was a member ·of the
J . Plimpton, New Manchester , restitution on each, passing bad
op the parking lot stage. Then at
~ happy to be back at home base.
Racine United Methodist Memorial Hospital; at 5:02 a .m.
• An employee In the Alden 6 p.m., there will be a parade .of $25 and costs, safety-violation.
checks; Gracie ijolland, Athens ,
Churcb, a 65 year member of the Pomeroy to Pomeroy Pollee
- Library, Ohio University , the costumed and following that
AnthOny J . Heaton, Racine, $25 $25 and costs, restitution, passing
Racine Masonic Lodge. Eastern Department for Mary Uribe who ;
. l'thens, Mary Ann was selected · parade, winners will be an· and costs , speeding; Sandra I. bad checks; Ronald Shields,
Stars, Racine· and Oblo Retired was taken to Veterans MemorIal; at 9:58a.m. Syracuse to Mile
· for an exchange program with nounced. The parade and a n- Halfhill, Rutland, and William Tuppers plains, costs only, failTeachers Association.
HIUI
Road for Ross Childress,
: thtna. She spent Jive weeks at nouncement of winners wlll take Preston Corcoran, Belmont, N. ure to display valid trailer
He Is survived by one son and
taken
to V.e terans Memorial.
: the Wuhn Library In China and plate on Court St. which Is the C., $23 and costs each, speeding;
registration. ·
!laughter-In-law Jon M. and
At
10:18
a.m. Middleport to SR
• whlle there lectured on au toma· designated entertainment area
G. Randall Bunce, Middleport,
Norma Knox, Vinton, $25 and
Sheila Lott, Car.lsba(l, N. M., and
554
for
Muriel
Spires, taken to
$29 ancl costs, speed; Barry K.
: tton and also taught a class In for next weekend's activities.
costs, make restitution, passing
three grandchlldren, Michael,
Holzer
Medical
Center; at 12:50
· conversational English.
Dressel, ChalkhUI, Pa., $20 and bad checks; Thomas L. Kelly ,
Glenn and Michele Lott of
p.m.
Pom.
e
roy
to
Mulberry Ave.,
: · Mary Ann spent a week In
cos ts, no highway use tax;
Carlsbad:
It seems that the Middleport
Jr ., Middleport, $23 and costs,
for
Harry
Wiles
who
was taken to
· Bljlng where she .visited with High School Class of 1940 which Pamela Napper, Langsville, $10 speed; . Raymond Arnold, Ma·
Funeral services will be held
Veterans
Memorial
·and later
• Chinese friends whom ,she had · held quite a 50th reunion over the and costs, failed to yield; Larry rletta, $25 and eosts, safety Sunday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
transferred
to
St.
Joseph
Hospi. inet when they were 'at Ohio w~kend, rememl;lered
Co nell, Ripley, and Robert violallon; Robett Chapman, Lit- · Funeral Home .with. tiJe Rev.
old
tal,
Parkersburg;
at
·
.
3:
21
p.l)l.
Whlle In China, friend from way. back.
: UniVersity.
McNabb, Ravenswood, $25 and
tle Hocking, $25 and costs, no
Syracuse
and
Pomeroy
to
SR
124
· Mary Ann lived In an apartment
While attending an open house costs each, safety violation.
highway use tax; Monty Far ley ,
scene
of
an
auto
accident.
Syra: with concrete floors and no heat, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Bidwell, $22 and costs, speed;
Under Investigation are two cuse transported Sherr! Sisson
: located near the library.
Charles Asa Bradbury, c lass
Steven Mather, Long Bottom, Mary Moro, Westerville, $29 and
reported
thefts received by the and Pomeroy took Timothy Tri- · From Ch!Qa, Mary Ann wentto members and. their guests ali
$10 and costs, failed to display cost speed; Bill Bostic, GallipoMeigs
County Sheriff's plett to Veterans Memor)al.
: Korea where she spent a week signed a greeting card which was
valid registration; Robert G. lis, $50 and costs, disorderly
Department.
.
: With her son, Charles Hobson and sent to Mrs. Mary A. Webster · Roush, Syracuse, $100 and costs, conduct.
Man sentenced
Sheriff
James
·M.
Soulsby
- his wife and was there for a who Is now residing in Fargo.
Forfeiting bonds were Edwin
and $300 to the Melgq County Law
Tracy Eugene Kllnkow was
reported that his department
Mother's Day observance. Cha- N.D.
Enforcement Trust Fund, reck- B. Ash, Racine, $55, expired
received
a
theft
report
from
to Orient Correctional
sentenced
rles Is stationed In Korea with the
Many of the class remembered
less operation;
Janice Lee registration; Regina Sturlale,
Reception
Center
for one year on.
Jesse
Vall,
Athens.
A
septic
tank
· U. S. Army and his wife Is a Mary affectionately from many
Gieshing, Middleport, , $50 and Athens, $35, seat belt violation;
charges
of
receiving
stolen proppump
had
been
takfln
from
a
· native of Korea.
years ago at a place called
costs, reckless oper,a tlom, $400 to Donald Call, Rio Grande,' John
erty
according
to
an
entry In
residence
on
Sencea
Drive.
Rock
- ·. Nextitwa&amp;toAslaskalorMary Hamilton's.
Mary was partthe Meigs CO!IliiY Law Enforce- Logan, .Jr .. Argllllta . Ky. , and
Springs.
Date
of
the
occurrance
.
Meigs
County
Common
Pleas , •
: Ann where she . )l!sited anothe'r · owner of the popular youth spot
ment Trust Fund, costs only,left Kim Goatley , Mldlin. Pa., $60 ls unknoWn. ·
Court.
·
.
: son, George Hobson arid his wife, where·many of the class hung out . of center.
each, speed; William Fisher, Jr.,
The department also received
· The entry stated that Kllnkow .
: who Is the fortl)er Sonya Wise of at noon and in the even ings. ·
Kevin Manley, Middleport, Belpre. $53, speed; Max E. Hill,
report
that
a
sa
gun
was
taken
a
plead
guilty to the charge and
· Middleport . George Is serving in Mary won a spot In the heart of
$250 and costs, three davs con- Racine, $55. failure to display
from
the
front
porch
of
a
was
given
credit for three days
:the U.S. Air Force. · · Before many of the class members who
finement, license suspended 60 valid registration.
Richards
residence
on
Bald
he
had
already
served. He Is In
: returning home Mary Ann vi- really had hoped she would be
Knobs
Road.
the
custody
of
the
Meigs County
. sited In New Yorklwlth an old able to join them ..at the 50th
announcemen~--Sheriff.
are
also
Investigating
Deputies
: ~end slle had not seen for 30
reunion. But, alas, North Dakota
In the same court Frances Sue ·
Meetlng Monday
the Racine Baptist Church will the theft of a stove and other
- years.
is pretty far from the reunion
Items
of
furniture
reportedly
Hill,
Cheshire and Clarence E.
The Board of Trustees of meet at the parsonage this
scene.
: : Welcome home, Mary Ann.
stolen
from
an
apartment
at
Hill
filed for dissolution of
Columbia Township will meet evening from 7 to9. Allin teres ted
At any rate, Mary wlll be
Syracuse.
marriage.
.Alden Library Is going to be quite delighted to get the card, I'm
Monday, June 4, at 7:30p.m. at
persons wellcome to attend.
·a cbange from the fast track.
sure.
the fire
station.
BYf'
to meet
: , Ruby Stewart, Union Terrace, ·
A couple of Interesting phoios
The
Junior
and Senior BYF of
&lt;Pomeroy, Is In critical condition of yesteryear arrived from
:a:t ,U niversity Hospital in Coll!m- George Kauff. That was thought:b)ls. Vlslt.ors have been res· · ful of you, George - I'll enjoy
·trtcted to famlly members only .
getting Info pinned down on
Hospital news
:Ruby has been lll 'for abo11t two them.
)nonths. Her famlly · reqqests
, Vetera.Ds Memorial
·your prayers and that you
Two days of sunshine In a row?
Admissions;
Helen Augustine.
~member her wltb a card.
Now that's Incredible. Do keep
Middleport.
'.
smiling.
Discharges; none ..
: i The American flag of the
&amp;luthern Junior High School
~bleb was getting a bit tattered
-lias been replaced, Principal
••,.
'JrnnJnis Beegle repnrts. Some
Maniage licenses
members of Racine Post 602,
'f .·' ·,
Continued from page 1
. " .,, "
.,-, '
-Ainerlcan Legion, noted the
Two marriage licenses were
·.. '.o;;4~~i~~;;_-~i .:-·.: ..
.problem and Tom Diddle and
Issued In Meigs County Probate·
expected to reach -the 80s.
W.F. Bearhs · presented a new
Monday will be fair and cooler, Court· to Stephen Michael Kimes,
'ftag to the school.
·
with highs in the mid-60s to 25, Racine and Angel Sue McCoy,
' '
LO.W. Stock #14
Stock #T2
mid-70s, while Tuesday wlll see a 19, Racine; David Scott Hall, 20,
' .
UST '3695
SALE .
SALE
;Mrs. Paul Werner, Lincoln Hill chance of showers, with highs in Long Bottom and Pamela Dianne
s3495 .
ROad, Pomeroy- that's Mickey the 70s.
.
Stewart, iS, Long Bottom.

.

.

Emergency runs

Sunday

Thefts reported

---Meigs

.

. .--"""!....

r---·~·=----~~------------111!'"------

Im

JUNE ·usED
CAR· &amp; TRUCK SAVINGS!

Cobb's

--------

.
-------

Warm ...

1984 Mercury Station Wagon

1985 Ford EXP

$2995·

----.---

$2995

un

1986
Stole #GM259A
0111 OWIIII',

$8 4 9 5

!Unroof, loodetl.

1m AIIIVD OM.Y

1986 Buick Century

Stock #1560A
0111

ow~~~r, lew

·

B-1

miltL

JISI A•IYID ONLY

$6495

1986 Chevrolet Blazer

Stock #15101.
..Loadad, 0111 o~ltll'.
UST '1995
SALE

wrngs are the latest lasliJ sensation

f:rom lite Colonel.

James Sands: '
CottreU's store near Porter
is rememhered. .• on
., page AS

Vol. 25 No. 18
1990

$181 495

0•

1917 Olcls Delta ·as
loadacl,
' $

DWitlf,

UST 59195

SAU

1988 Chevrolet Custom Van
$ 3 .,

GALLIPOLIS - A Crown City
area youth was killed when her
car had a head-on collslon with a
dump truck Saturday at 9: 15
a.m. In Clay Township on State
Ro~te 7, abo \It a mile south of the
Raccoon Creek bridge., accordIng to the Gallla- Meigs Post of
the State Highway PatroL
Tamara D. McGuire, 16,
daughter of Lonnie C. and
Darlene McGuire, Rt. 2, Crown
City, was taken by HealthNet
helicopter to St. Mar:;:s Hospital
In Huntington, W.Va .. but was
. pronounced dead on arrival. She
was the third person to die on ·
Gallla County highways In 1990.
McGuire, driving a 1982 Datsun 310GX, was heading north '
when she went left oi center and
collided with a 1990 Ford dump
truck owned and driven by
Donald A. Ours, 31, Rt. 2, Crown
City. The coll~lon put both
vehicles on the river side of the
road.
· Ours, who was heading south at
· the time, was not Injured.
_MEIGS \mEeKS
· TWO'Middleport.resldents were ·
lnJ!Ifl!d In ·a motprcycle wreck·

P:~i~;~~i~·~:~la,nd

ToWnship on T.R. 174, half a mue
north of S.R. 124. ·
Brian E. Smith, 18, of 32559
Happy Hollow Rd, and his
pas8enger, Kevin P . Musser, 16,
of 32549 Happy Ho IIow Rd ., were
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital by the . Meigs County
EMS.
.
Smith was taken by HealthNet
to Cabell-Huntington Hospital in
Huntington, W.Va., where he was .
admitted for treatment of head
Injuries . At last report he was
listed In serious condition.
Musser was treated and released
for minor Injuries .
. Neither Smith nor Musser was
wearing a helmet.
Smith, riding a 1979 Honda
CX500, was heading south when
he slid off the left sode of the road
and Into a ditch.
A Rutland woman was Injured
in a one-car crash Friday at 11 : 50
p.m. In Rutland Townshlp9nS.R.
124 , just east of milepost 15,
Daisy M- Haggy, 19 , was taken
by i,he 'Rut!lln~ ~MS t~J1Veterans
Mem~rlal .•ffiiiPttal, wlle!'e she
'l!lmllted for observation .
was due to be · relea11ed.

1 ,900

1m

228 WEST MAIN

,

Cobb's

POMEIOY

graduate 65

on·Sunday ·
EAST MEIGS - Greta Lynn
Riffle, daughter of Sharon and
Curtis Riffle, Racine, and Shawn
Louis Bush; son of Janet and
Louis Bush, Racine , are the
valedictorian and salutatorian
respectively of the Eastern High
School graduating class.
.
Rl ffle has been accepted' .In to
tlte ·Honors Tutorial College at
Ohio University · where she will
major In political science. She
has received the Holzer Science
Award. the Daughters of AmerIca and Rutland Alumni Scholar·
ships , and the TaQdy
Scholarship.
Bush, recipient of the Tandy
Scholarship, will be attending

GRETA L. RIFFLE
Valedictorian
Ohio University as a prepharmacy major.
Commencement exercises for
the 65 seniors of Easter~ High
School will be held at 6:30 p.m

,·
8895
" .

i

I

MORNING CRASH SCENE - Tamara D.
McGuire, 18, wu killed In this coUislon' early
Saturday momtng, wben her car went left of
center, hitting a dump truck head on on State
Route 7, about one mile snth of Raccoon Creek

102 PogM
Inc.

Bridge. The driver of the traek escaped
unharmed. McGuire waa lbe third fatality on
GaiDa County roads tbls year, and the ~ond In
one week's time. (Tribune pboto by G. Speacer
Osborne)

Crown City.
the stop sign when Price, who
Jones, who was heading,south · was heading east on S.R. 141,
on Centenary Road, had stopped
slowed down to turn left to

SHAWNLBUSH
Sa)utalortan
Sunday. Both Riffle and Bush
will give addresses: The baccalaureate address will be given by
the Rev . Don Archer .

By LEE ANN WELCH
Ttmes.Sentlnel Staff
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
Village officials asked for an
aud it last fall when they felt
things were not right. and the
results of that were released late
last week._
The village council "senseq
something was wrong," and
asked State Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson to come In an audit the
books, according to council president Bernie Murphy.
After. the audit began, clerk/ treasurer Angle Seagraves tendered her resignation effective at
the end of September 1989, and
· has since been Indicted on three

,GALLIPOLIS - The first ourseives together for the purexisting church In the · city of pose of forming a society to be
Gallipolis, The First Presbyter- known and distinguished as the
Ian Church, celebrated Its Sep- First Religious SoCiety of the
tuagentaqulnque - centennial, Township of Ga!Upolls.
175 years 9f preaching the Gospel
The keynote of established
of Christ , with special services on r~iglon In GaiUpolls was demoSunday, June 3.
cracy. Rev. William R. Gould,
Pastor AI Earley delivered the graduate of the University of
morning sermon, "A Minister's Vermont and teacher of higher
Dreams", which was followed by education at GaiUa Academy,
special ceremonies commemo- was Installed as the first
rating the anniversary, a buffet minister.
luncheon and a return visit from
Before the church was built,
Interim pastor, Rev. Bob Kyser . services were held In either the
Determined to cultivate 'what courthpuse, located near the
they then called "almost Godless upper corner of the public square
ground'· a group of men gathered or the Academy at the corner of
In GallipoliS on Jan . 10, 1815, to second and State Streets.
discuss means of.bringing spiritAs was the custom of many of
ual responsibility to the settle- the churches ' of the time , the
ment of GaiUpolls.
conduct of its membership was
Many residents of the little subject to strict rule.
river town, seeking an order
The session held court a gains I
higher than their own, formed a
members who were Intemperate,
religious society and their Art!· neglectful of prayer, used procles of Association so state: We . fane laoguaie, attended dances,
the subscribers hereby associate
(See PREBYTERIAN, on A8)

Suspect shot by deputy
MERCERVILLE - A Gallla
County Sheriff's Deputy was
fired upon arouJ!d midnight Frl•
day night when answering a
domestic call, according to Sheriff Dennis R. Salisbury.
The unlderitlfled deputy was
talk!Qg to a woman at the scene of
the domestic, when a man exited
the home and shot at the,offtcer.
The deputy fired upon the
suspect, strlkmi him In the lett

CADILLAC-GEO, INC.
.
992•661.

14
A

Prlceturnedthecorner shortand
had a head-on coll!slon'wlth tile
truck.
•

felony charges.
Murphy said Friday afternoon,
the audit was sent to the village
last week and the council accepted the findings .
Add!tional!y, Murphy said, the
council ha s taken steps to correct
the situation and .rectify the
weaknesses the report cited.
Each of the issues brought up
In the audit have been addres sed
and corrected, .he said ..
At Issue were salary overpayments , unauthorized purchases,
altered · checks and personal
phone calles charged to vl11age
phones that were unpaid .
Seagraves goes to trial June 25
In Gal!ia County Common Pleas
Court on two fourth degree

felonies for forgery arid o~e third
degree felony for theft In office.
She was in~icted March 30 by tile
Gallla County grand jury.
·•
Murphy said he and other
village officials were upset with
Friday_'s Gallipolis Dally Trlbune headline, "Audit uncovers
check altering, overpayments by
village offfclals."
•
He said only one person .h&amp;"d' · '
been Indicted !Seagraves) and
she was no longer a Rio Grande
elected official.
Murphy also said he, and other
village council and board of
public affairs members cooper:
ated fuUy with the audit and
Investigation.

Presbyterian Church
celebrate$ 175 years

ShMk #1411A

loi EAST MAIN

Sports ....................... CJ ..7

Rain likely. Low M to $$•.
Chance of rain ee JIM'C'C'DI.
,
Monday ...varlable ctoudlwlth.a chance of rain.

-l';~~t;l;;:;;a:di~ ~Rr;;{tAab~~);;t corr~cteti,
council addressed each audit issue

.· .

© KFCttiiO

CROWS FAMILY RESTAURANT

According to the r eport,
Haggy , driving a 1985 Plymouth
Horizon, was heading west when
an unidentified car "attempted ,
to force Haggy of,f the road ."
Haggy went off the right side of
the road and came to a res I In a
ditch.
No one was cited In this crash.
OTHER GALLIA CRASHES
A Gallipolis area youth was
cited In a one-car crash Friday at
8:50 p.m. In Gallipolis Township
on Mill Crek Road, 2.4 miles
south of Georges Creek Road.
Mend! G . Clark, 16, .Rt. 2,
GalUpolis. was cited forfaliure to
control after her 19Bll Pontiac
Grand Am, which was traveling
south, went off the right side of
the road and hit a tree.
A Pat riot area woman was
cited In a car-truck crash Friday
at 8 a.m. In ,G reen Township on
S.R. 141 at the junction of
Centenary Road .
Freadlth F . Price, 61, R t. 1,
P at riot, was cited for driving left
of center after her 1987 Olds
hit a 1988 GMC truck
the' Gallla - County
.

SalillrdJav

1916 Chev. C-10 Dial SiiYII'Cido
$
un S7995
~ALE 739 5

·

Business ........••.•..••. ;•• D1·8
CGmlcs- ...... ..... ........ Insert
Claallfleds ................. D2-7
Deaths ................... ...... A3
Editorial .... .................. A2
Farm ...... .... .... ... ........... D1

Youth dies when car,
dump truck collide

PiiE-iiuGiiT PiiCP!iii\T110iliS - Don Glbaon, (center back),
of Ripley, W.Va.; and his Harve~~t Moon hot air balloon, stopped off
al the Gallla·Melp Regional Airport receatly to take a
pre·blcentennlal fltglat over GalUpotla. Glbaon bas been flying hla
seven-story high balloon for four yeBI'II and will be participating In
the July 14 and 15 Galla·Melp Relfonal Airport Bicentennial
Alrshow. See otory on page AI ('llmes-Sentlnel pho!Gs)
·
Stock #lSOOA
'JU$T AUiviD ONLY

Along the River ......... B1-7

Middleport-Pom•oy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, June 3, 1990

$8995

.

Inside

tS

1988 Oldsmobile Ciera

Stock #1462
·One owltlf, low milts.
UST 59495
SALE

..,

Kentudcy Fried Chiclceno introcluces
~ Hot Wings-. These spicy, zesty

Beat of the Bend:
Now is the tirne...on page 82

.....

,..•

Cl

Bike riding enthusiasts

Appalachian
Institute
for the Arts

--------

art

50 r:c nt'.

POMEIOY OHIO
I

-- ..,....

-

shoulder. A bac~up officer was
arriving at the scence when the
Incident occuf!/d, Salisbury said.
The suspect surrendered to
officers and was taken to Holzer
Medical Center, where he was
treated and releaaed, Salisbury
said.
·
The man, wlioae Identity Is
being withheld pendiJii charges,
Is lodged IQ the Gallla County
Jail.

COILECDON ON DIIIPLAY - A larp eelledtoa of tialt and
pepper •v•en ewa.etl by Garaet Ervine of RaclDe wW be on
dlaplay - t weeu.tlt tiN! Mel&amp;* Mull8tllll aa a apeolalleltan of
Herltap WeeaM. MIIIJ of the more &amp;ban a •aadnd leta of
abakenlD tbe colee&amp;loa are antique ...d bave come lromcouaate.
arollllll tile world. ·Pldurid here Ia just a 11111all part of tile

coDecill-

Events celebrate
•
_p1oneer ancestors
POMEROY- The 19th Annual
Weekend of the Melp
County Pioneer and Hiltorlcal
Society will be held at the Meigs
County Museum Saturday and
Sunday, June 9 and 10.
Special exhibits and demonHerlta~

.,

..

stratlons, musical entertain·
ment, i&amp;ml!s for the children,
and a car abow will be t.,etures or
the weeltend.
·''Pioaeera Prosperm.tn Mtlp
Couaty"ll the theme ol&amp;r~tate·
(flee BVII:ND, • All
.

.

''

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