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                  <text>POITieloy-Midcleport. Ohio

Paga 16-Tha Daily Sentinel

Thursday. Juna 7. 1990

Ohio Lottery

Reds snap

losing ·spell,

Daily Number
429

top Astros

Pick-4

9042

Low tonight near 70. Chance
of rain 10 perceat. Saturday ,
high In mid 80s. Chance of rain
40 percent .

Page3

•
.

June

TUR

••o

IDlY, JUNE 18,.

Ford
•Air ConditiOn

•Automatic
•Power Windows
•AM/FM Collet1e

•Autor'riatle .
•Air Condition
o4:0 Uter Engine · oAoor Console
•Alloy Wheels
• Loaded!

•Power Locks .
•FIJI OpnoO Cal

SAVE THE POOL PREsENTATION- Syrac.- CoUDCibnaa James P&amp;pe, a member of tbe
poel committee, left, accepted a clleck for
$1,0'71.'13 b'om Z1111e Beegle, manager of the
London Pool, .and Sandra Cobb, a member of the

WAS *18,435

NOW

$14
. '999*

L~OEDI

NIIW

$9999*

NOW

The Meigs County Historical
While Pomeroy Is a feature of
Society Is joining Pomeroy this
the exhibits at the Museum, there
. weekend In the celebration of Its Is much more being offered for
· 150th birthday with an exhibit ·Heritage Weekend. VIsitors will
:featuring historical memorabilia
be able to step back In ilme and
-of the town.
discover how the pioneers lived.
There are photos, yearbooks, · A display of old postcards depict
and other lll'tlfacta on display at
various historical sites. A sUde
tbe Mlllellm relatlllg , to the
shOw presentatl9fl'wlll be shown
v11ltli'e7"'lfi~proneersnina ·Its
by the Southern Ohio Coal Co. on
pi'Ogless through the ,years.
the mining Industry In Meigs

2,988

$9999*

•sPECIAL ·ANNOUNCEMENT"
Ford Mot ot Company Jlas Given Us Additional Allocations
On •Ranger Pickups •F-Series Trucks And
The New .'91 Ford Explorer
Ju~t For This Sale . , .
Hurry,
· Whlle Selection Is Good!

1986 FORD BRONCO
EDDY BAUER PKG~
Slockt5881,2docn.4..,..m, v-.~ ....

8911S

WAS

1983CHEVY
CELEBRITY

PS, PB, AINFII - ·
NOW

PS,PB.

WASI2t85

•2191

drivo,4crt.,llr.auii.. AMFM-.

wu'8885

N01V

WAS

1990 FORD ESCORT

drive.4C¥1.air, d ., PS, P8, tinwhllll,auile,
Slocl!' 13520,4 ....... frant-

NOW

Allll'\t ·
- - llldilll,
wlndaw
dllag.

SlDck' 13350, 2daoll, front wheol drN8, 4 q&gt;l.,
Sapeed, PS, PB, AM.fii1W80 flll8. 111Cia11,
wlndaw defaa.

bucket-. -

WAS

NOW

87711

878.

1989 FORD PROBE.

Slocl! t 13380, 2 doors, o:&gt;upe, 11!'111 wheel

drive, 4'!'1., air, 81110., PS, PB, tibwheel, AM1FM
radio, radials, bucl&lt;et soall, rear window defog.,
gqes.
NOW

1986 FORD F-250
4X2

WAS

' 1980 FORD F-150

1989 FORD
TAURI.fS-GL

Stock t 43-U, 2 - . . V.fl, aull.,

PS, PB, AII/FMradiO, .-11, whlll
walla. 112

""'··'""'-bid.

1988 EAGLE PREMIER

1987 DODGE 150 4X4

WAS'2t85

· S10Citrstst,4whell tlll¥t, v.a, lir; au~o,, PS,
PB, Allofllllllo, 1121:111, long wide bad, raor
U!p bun!por, gouges, liding-

ar-.

SIOCit I 878111, 4 dooll, lltfln, f1ont wheel .
drive, I cwf,, lir, IIIID., PS, PI, pawor locka, tin

whell,
de~ auiM, AMfU

-···-window

NOW

WAS

'7995

S10Cit t2921. 2doors, twdtap, ct!UPI. v.a, lir,
S'iplld lllnd,, PS, PB, paworwlndowl, paw
locka, Ill whell, cMe. AMfU · - llpl,

buclllt-.

WAS·

v
----·---·---------·~~--~---~-~ -~-

1990 FORD TEMPO

wu'5695

...

- ....

'11,885

'10,4.

NOW

'9995

1988FORD:
MUSTANGGT

---~--- ~-

S1ock' 13470.
NOW

SIOCit t 13510, 4 doors, Mdan, front wheel
drive, 4 cyf., lir, IIIID., PS, PB, power lockll,
AtM\1 sterao rape, reor window detog.

WAS

tonight. From 6 lo 7 the Melody Men Barberabop
Quartet wlllalllg, from 7 lo 8 the Sweet Mountlan
Souncb will perfonn, and from 8 to e· p.m. the
MldDir(ht Cloggera will dance on Court Street.
These tents on the. parklllg lot will be used or the
arts and crafts displays.

Heritage Days schedule

I

Sloc:k.l 81073, 4 doGii.

Stodll SoW! I, 2 - ., V.fl,

COMING ALIVE - Tenlll for arlll 1111d crafts
went up, a natbed truck turned Into a covered
stage, and window dlaplays featqrlng thlnp of
yesteryear were put Into place Thursday ·
afle..-n and early Friday momlng In prepara·
lion for Pomeroy's sesqulcetennlal Heritage
Weekend activities which will get underway

SIOCkt5351 ,4 doors, &amp;c:yl., lir, 81110., PS, PB,
f'll"'" wir&lt;lows, power ...~ power loeb. &gt;n
wheol, cruise, AM.fllslenla lap8, llldiaJI, wMe
waits.

.

1989FORD
CROWN VICTORIA

SlDck t 13530, 4 doors, aedan, V-8, lir, v"Y!
roof, IUID., PS, PB, power wiMoin, power
- . power locka, Ill wheel, auiM, AM.fll
•. . , llpl, radilftl, .......:.._-.::-,::

WAS

\

will

County, and there
be Items
used In the mining Industry on
display.
.
Other special exhibits Include
tea sets which have been traced
backed to President Harrison, an
extensive salt and pepper collection, some antique and coming
from val'lous parts of the world;
owned by Garnet Ervine. and a
Continued on page 10

Parts ,.,.,.,., ipeclst
During This Sale Only
Ford Truck Bed Liners
. Only*189
lnstalllllon Extra

1987 PONTIAC
BONNEVILLE

d., PS, PB, paw wlndoool, paw locka, In
"" llldilll
. ....... CIUiM, Nom! ' lu:kei-.QIIIOII.
NOW '

. SyraCUII! Flft Department, both actively In·
volved Ill tile "Save the Pool" fund ralalllg
activltlea. 'lbe money will be uaed for dolllg
needed repalra at the pool.

·Celebration expected to .draw
:big crowd this wee·k end

LOADED/

WAS '12,751

1990

A Muhimodi•

tnc. Newopope&lt;

Delinquent sewer fee
pondered.in Syracuse

'

II PROiiRESS NOW TBRU ·

2 Sections, 14 Pogu 25 Cents

HERITAGE DAYS SCHEDULE
All Heritage Days activities on Friday and Saturday will be
held on Court Street unless otherWise noted. Those attending the
festivities should provide their own seating. .
Friday
6-7 p.m. -Melody Men Barbershop Quartet.
7.8 p.m.- Sweet Mountain Sounds.
8·9 p.m. - Midnight Cloggers.
8 p.m. - The opening of the.exhlb!t, "Ornate and Simple
Forms: Pomeroy Furniture and Fashion, 1840-1880" at the
Meigs County Public Library.
Saturday
10 a.m, - Heritage Parade, sponsored by the Pomeroy
Merchants Association.
,
11 a.m. to noon -Civil War Marching Drills.
noon to 12: 45 p.m. - Shady River Shufflers.
H: 45 p.m. - Special Request Barbershop Band.
1:45-4 p.m. - Restoration Jazz Band.
2: 30 p.m. - Meigs County Fair Queen announced.
3 p.m. - Costume judging on the parking lot stage.
4·5 p.m . - Outhouse races, Second Street.
5-6 p.m. - Pioneer costume review and winners announced.
6 p.m. - Kyger Valley Gospel Quartet.
6: 30 p.m. - Brothers of the Brush contest.
7-8 p.m. -Bob and Kendra Ward-Bence.
8-10 p.m. - J:'eter Shaw-Hotpolnt String Band. Square
dancing In the street .
·
· On Saturday following the parade there .will be carriage ride
throughout the day beginning at-Court and Second Streets.
There also will be Civil War Musket BrJaades displays all day
Saturday. _.
'
On Sunday rides will begin at the museum site at 1 p.m. '
Food and craft concessions will be available all day Friday
and Saturday.
Activities at the museum will be held Saturday and Sunday
from 1-5 p.m.
The exhibit, • 'Ornate and Simple Forms: Pomeroy FUrniture
and Fashion, liN0-1810" at the library will run through June 22
during the hours of 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. MonClay through Friday,
and 1·4 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday.

.Murder trial
in third day

t

WINFIELD, W.Va. (UPI)
Jury selection went Into Its thlro
day Friday In the case of a
GaiUpolls man accused of mur·
derlng a West VIrginia sheriff's
deputy.
Defense attorneys for Robert
Gray of Gallipolis, Ohio, have
slowed the process by moving
th&lt;jt each juror be questioned
Individually. Gray Is charg~ In
the shooting death of Putnam
. County deputy sheriff John
Janey.
The trial of an alleged accomplice, Robert Bates, has been
continued with no date set.
Gray Is accused of killing the
off·dutydeputy Aug. 17. Prosecu·
tors contend Gray was trying to
torch the Hurricane residence of
Raymond Huck In an Insurance
scam to whiCh Huck later
pleaded guilty.
,
Janey was working ,part-time
as an Insurance company Investigator and had staked out Huck's
residence when he surprised
Gray. Pro&amp;ec~~tors allege Gray
tried to flee lind shot Janey In the
chest and head.
Defense attorneys contend
Gray shot Janey In self-defense.
. Putnam County Circuit Judae
Clarence Watt ruled that he·
would allow as evJcleD.ce . a
confession signed by the defend·
ant tile morning after the
.
shooting.

re~lred, and repairs will be
. By KATHRYN CROW
made
to the fence section damSentinel col'l'ellpondent
aged
In
an accident. He gave
A step toward curbing delincouncil
.
a
rundown on dally
quent payments of sewage biDs
receipts
at
the
pool.
was taken Thursday night when
A
letter
was
read
from Mr. and
Syracuse VIllage Council met In
Mrs.
Freeman
Enoch
In regard
regular session.
to
flooding
·
In
.
front
of their
J'4eet1ng with council were Jim
property
during
heavy
rains.
Wickline and John Murphy of the
Kathryn
Crow
reported
that
she
()yrac1,1se Racine Regional Sewhad
been
unable
to
reach
Don
age District, Gordon Wine,
brenner and L;lrry Ebersbach of Johnson with the Ohio Departthe Syracuse board of Public
Affairs, and · Robert Wingett,
grants administrator:
Wingett reported he attended a
meeting of the Sewer Board to
discuss some existing pgoblems.
He advised there are two
major problems, one being sewage bills are not being collected
!rom everyone and there Is no
way of enforcing payment, and
the other being the rate structure
Meigs County Treasurer
which has not been Increased
·
George
Collins has been elected
. since the construction of the
to
a
two-year
term as Republlcan
system In 1982. There Is $20,000 In
County
Chairman
by the party's
dellllquent accounts at the pres·
Central and Executive
ent time, It WI!S reported.
Wingett also noted expenses Comlttees.
for the sewage operation Is
The organizational meeting of
party was held Tuesday night
the
approxlmatey $1.01,000 with revenue of $175,000, with two full at the Senior Citizens Center,
time and one part-time em- Mulberry Heights.
Collins succeeds Meigs County
ployees. He also noted they will
be In a crisis within a two year Commlssoner Richard E. Jones,
period.
who was first elected COU!Ity
.WJekllne alated there.are tbree ' chairman In J976 .and w.ho subhouses whiCh have not hooked mitted his resignation TueSday
onto the system, two In Syracuse . night. Jones Is the Republican
Party candidate for State Reand one In Racine.
The sewage board asked the presntatlve for the 94th District
(Athens, Gallla, and MelgsCoun·
water board and council If they
would consider an ordinance ties) and cited the demands of
providing residents delinquent that race on his time and energy
on sewage charges for 90 days as a reason for stepping down.
Jones thanked the committee
· would have their water shut off
with a possible reconnect fee members for their hard work on
his behalf In the May Primary
Involved.
There are 344 residents In electlon. In a three-man race,
Syracuse, and adding Racine Jones carried all 29 precincts In
·makes more than 700 people on Me~ County and received 81.3
percent of the vote, for a margin
,the system.
Council agreed to have the of 2,218 over his nearest
challenger.
solicitor prepare an ordinance.
Collins had been treasurer for
Members of the water board
-met with council In regard to the Executive and Central Com·
metering residents outside the mit tees for several years. In
accepting the job as county
corporation.
It was suggested bulk meters chairman, he commended Jones
be placed at both the upper and for his leadership.
MembersoftbeCountyCentral
lower ends of Syracuse and at
Rose Valley, and residents there Committee are elected from
pay a share of water going each of Meigs County's 29 preclncts. Officers elected for twothrough the meter.
.Council as ked for ligures on the year terms for the Central
number of meters, cost revenue Committee were Evelyn Clark,
estimates and a prolonged plan chairman; George Nesselroad,
Jr., vice chairman; Paul Gerard,
to be reviewed by the solicitor.
The committee to save the pool secretary.
The Central Committee then
met with council and presented a
check to Zane Beegle, London proceeded to authorize the creaPool manager, and J lm Pape, tlon of an Executive Committee
chairman of the pool committee ·to Include all the Central Comfor $2,071.73 to be used for repair mlttee members, plus a number
of others who were recognized
work.
for
their work In behalf of the
Council commended Heidi
Cobb Beegle, Sandra Cobb, Mary Republican Party. These In·
Pickens, Jeff Bable, Kristin and eluded Henry Wells, Granville
Jim Pape and the Syracuse Fire Lyons; George Collins, Richard
Department for their work at the E. Jones, John Manley, Dorset
pool.
Larkins, Brenda Roush, and
Beegle asked about raising the John Williams.
pay for life guards, but was
Elected for two-year terms as
officers
for the Executive Com·
denied his request because they
mlttee
were George CoUins,
are part-time hourly employees
Meigs County Comchairman;
and the village does not have
mlssoner
David
Koblentz, vice
funds for the Increase.
Council did, however, autho- president; Dorothy McGuffin,
rize pool personnel to-offer life secretary; and County Recorder
guard training and life saving Emmogene Congo, treasurer.
Plans were dlscuased for the
classes to current advanced life
upcoming General Election cam·
saving card holders.
Prerequisite to enroUment Is patgn. Collins pointed out r~ent
Red CrO&amp;S CPR and First Aid
training. Gene Lyons will be the
Instructor for the classes, and
anyone who wants to enroll
should contract Heidi Beegle,
992·9909 or 2f7-4455.
B'eegle · reported 96 passes to
the pool have been sold. He noted · Jason E. Riggs and Douglas A.
a leak In the baby pool Is being 1 Harris both waived their right to
1 a preliminary hearing In Meigs
County Court this morning. '
, Riggs Ia charged with aggra·
, vated vehicular bomk:lde, tam·
perlng with evld&amp;nCe, and abuse
.
of
a human corpae In Saturday
The Melp County Chamber of
night's
death of VIetor A. WIU.
Commerce will meet for a
Riggs
wu
present at this momTuesday . noon luncheon and
log's
llearJna,
along with his
buslnela -•lon at tbe Over·
attorney,
Herman
carson.
brook Center, 333 Pace St.,
Harris
Is
charged
with tamper·
MJdd.\epOrt. G~t apealrer will
log
of
evidence
and
was repres·
be Gary Batel, G'I,'E North wltb a
en
ted
at
this
morning's
hearing
, video presentation.

Collins··succeeds·
Jones as Meigs
GOP chai•·man

..,.....

GEORGE COLLINS
· polls showing Republican guber·
natortal candidate George Volnovlch far ahead of his Democrat
opponent, as well as other
contests where the raees appear
closer.
The new chairman stressed the
Importance of working hard for a
Republican victory, because of
the re-apportionment which will
be coming from the results ofthe
1990 federal census.
Collins appointed · a Meigs
County F'l.lr booth, committee ·
and a headquarters committee.
Refreshments were served durlng a social hour.
Central Committee members
are James H. Qulvey, Bedford;
Rodney Chevalier,.- Chester
North; David J. Koblentz, Ches·
ter South; VIrgil Windon, West
Chester; Gay F . Johnson, Co tumbla; G. Denny Evans, Lebanon;
Harry c. Hill, Letart; Bill
Francis, North Olive; Kirk D.
Reed, South Olive; Roger C. ·
Gaul, Orange; Bette Hobstetter,
Rutlwnd VIllage; Florence Barrett, East Rutland; Ann Barrett,
West Rutland.
·John F. Colwell, Salem; Ruth
Powers. Middleport 1; Fred
Hoffman, Middleport 2; Paul
Gerard, Middleport 3; Dorothy
McGuffin, Mldleport 4; Roger F.
Dillard, Pomeroy I; Evelyn
Clark, Pomeroy 2; Geroge L.
Harris, Pomeroy 3; Larry R.
Thomas, Bradbury; Nathan
Biggs, Laurel Cliff; George Nes:
selroad, Rock Springs; Lola
Clark;- Scipio; Cora Beegle, Ra·
cine Village; Emmogene Hol·
stein Congo, Syracuse Village;
Fred Smith, Minersville; and
Otis Knopp. Racine Precinct.

Riggs, Hanis cases bound
over,to Me~ Grand Jury

Chamber to
meet Tuesday

'lit' .

'll

ment of Highways to discuss the
problem on Enoch's property
located on Route 124. Crow said
tl!e effort will be continued.
Mayor Pickens reported on
work to be done a t the marina.
Attending were Kenny Buckley, Crow, Jim Hill, Minter
Fryar, Pape, arid Tyso·n
Drummer, all council members,
Mayor Pickens and ClerkTreasurer Janice Lawson.

_____
.

.

~-

I

.

-----·----...

~--------

--

' by his attorney, John Lentes .

Steven L. Story , Meigs CO!IIItY
Prosecuting Attorney, represented the State of Ohio;
~ With the decision of Riggs and
: Harris. to waive the right of a
· preliminary hearing, the cases
' have been bound over to the
• Melp County Common Pleu
Court for further proceedings,
Story stated the next arand.:
jury session would be June 1~ ·
1
Bond for Riggs and Harris al10
was continued.

I
I

\.

�• .,

)

~

l

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
~

.Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court St.r eet
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THJj: INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA
.
'

·

J'llb,

&amp;'!m~

~j:j

' ' '

r"T"'\..o.l.._...,.., ....=...c::~,.,.
.

ROBERT L. WINGE'l'T
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager ·

PAT WHITEHEAD
Publisher/Controller

A~lstant

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 thall300
words long, All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·

ties.

.-age::.;.-2-The Daily Seutiltel

I

'l

•
•

:Letters
to the editor
•

WASHINGTON- Sometimes
government agencies are like
athletes on steroids. They pump
up their figures to create an
Illusion of strength..
Federal Maritime Administration officials wo1,1ld like you to
think that their agency Is the
bureaucratic equivalent of Arnold Schwarzenegger. The
agency, whic)l keeps a fleet of
reserve ships for the Navy to use
In the event of war, has hundreds
of those ships ready to saiL
In reality, a large number of
the backup ships are rustbuckets
that have no place in the

'

claim, saying that they know the
bidding is futile because foreign
companies get the contracts
because they pay more, even It It
means a loss of American jobs.
The reserve program Is now
the target of a congressional
probe ied by Rep. WUIIam .
Broomfield, R-Mich. He has
scheduled a hearing on the
problem for June 4. Broomfield
thinks the fleet management Is
troublesome In a time when toe
Pentagon is trying to cut back on
perfectly good weaponry liecause of the optimistic outlook
for world peace.
We first reported on tlle fleet
fiasco last summer when we
learned' that some old war ships
were being used for Navy r,rget
practice, or being sunk ·to form
artificial reefs, before they were
stripped of their valuable.s .
Radar, communications devices,
kitchen equipment and other
machinery were being sent )o
Davy Jones' Locker without so
much as a fare-thee-well.
•
Pentagon Investigators estimate&lt;) the loss at $17 mlllion.(I'h~
Navy has started a pilot program
to strip the ships. Butthe Defense
Department Inspector General' s
Office now thinks another ·$40
million will be deep-slxed with
the scheduled sinking of 64 ol4
ships under Maritime Admlnts;
tratlon control.
.
A Maritime Administration
spokesman said it Is more costly
to strip the ships than sink Uten)
untouched.
.
,
When the agency Isn't s!nklng
ships that should be stripped ami
keeping ships that should be
scrapped, it makes bad trades
for fi\Ore ships. One source told
us that theagencyoftenacquires
ships that have already beeri
slated for the scrap heap by their

,

-:

In 1988, the agency traded '
$7.2 million aircraft carrier for II
$2.1 million cargo ship.

"Saved by recycling."
'

It. pays to be clean _______ :;R:. : . : o. .: . :be:.:. .; rt_;_;~'- =al=. ;te~r~
~

MAPLEWOOD, Minn. (NEA)
3M, whose headquarters are tants and then attempting to program has.. cut Its pollution I~
- For most corporations, con- located In this Mlnneap.olls sub- treat, store or dispose of them.
half, ,data recently collected ~
cern about the environmental urb, launched Its Pollution Prev·
That task is complicated by the Citizen Action. a Washlnflon;;
consequenc.es of their actions Is a ention Pays initiative In 1975 fact that many of the approxi- D.C. public Interest group, lllu~
matter to be handled by a hollow when corporate concern about mately 60,000 products 3M makes trate the awesome scope ()f tht
public relatio115 gesture on· spe- the environment was hardly involve the use of adhesives or problem that remains to M
cial occasions' such as Earth fashionable:
other coatings. (The company's resolved by the firm.
.
: ·
Day.
' Corporate officials estimate best known consumer products
"We must get our emission~
'
At other times, those firms' that the JP program has reduced are . Scotch tape and Post-It down further," says Renner;
business-as-usual approach to company-generated air pollu- notes.)
"We make the point toeverybod~
the release of toxic and carcino- tants in the United States by 224
Large quantities of petroleum· that we know our emissions are
genic materials Into the air, million pounds ahd water pollu- based solvents, which become still too high." Specifically, 3M I~
water and soli means that tants by 30.6 million pounds. The harmful air emissions when they publicly committed to an add!•
abatement of Industrial pollution company also claims to have evaporate, long were assumed to tiona! 90 percent reduction of all
had only a low priority of their greatly cut releases of waste 'be required In the manufacture chemical releases to the land, ah'.
agenda.
of those Items. Now, however, 3M and water and to a 50 percent cu(
water and solid waste.
In 1988, the most recent year
Those figures, says 3M, repres- Is turning to water-based sol- In the generation of hazardou,
for which comprehensive statis- ent savings only in the Initial vents or eliminating their use waste by the end of this decade\
tics are available, the nation' s year of each Improvement. Moentirely in its manufacturing . A few other companies -"
manufacturers released into the reover, the company claims thl\t
proces&amp;es.
including AT&amp;T, .Monsanto and,
environment 6. 2 billion pounds of (he more , than 2,500 projects
"Our biggest problem is air Chevron - have belatedly Jolne¢
contaminants suspected or initiated undef the 3P progr;~m at
pollution, much of it caused by 3M' in recongnizlng that control•
'
known to endanger human health 63 domestic and 22 international
solvents, •• says company spokes- llng pollution Is more than
an
or safety.
sites have reduced Its costs by man Richard H. Renrier. "Be- environmental gesture becaus4
But for the Minnesota Mining $500 million.
cause we want the trust of the it contributes to corporate effl~ .
people who are breathing the air clency, ptoductlv!ty an~
and Manufacturing Co., widely .
known as 3M, the reduction if not
Crucial to the Initial success of that contains our emissions, profitability.
'
elimination o'f companythe 3P lnltia tive is Its emphasis we've got (.pollution control)
Too many other firms, how;
generated pollution has been the
on eliminating or reducing con- · research programs going for ever, continue to deny that theY;
object of a 15-year campaign
lamination at the source every major solvent use we contaminate the envlronmen~
believed to be unmatched by any
usually during production ...:. haveo'
even when the need for wast&amp;
other major corporation.
Although 3M says the 3P reduction becomes critical.
rather than generating p91lu:

.

'

"' .

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

inventory of combat-ready
vessels.
The Maritime Administration, ships to rust at anchor. One old
an agency within theTransporta- ship wa,s so negl~ted, that grass
lion Department, oversees a fleet grew on the wooden deck. Conof 317 reserve ships docked at gresslonal investigators told our
various ports throughout the associate Scott Sleek that at least
country. For years, the Defense · 120 of the ships have outlived
Department and congressional their usefulness and should be
investigators have privately crl- scrapped.
·
tlctzed the program. They say
American scrap companies
that if the United States was complain they can't get enough
pulled into a fuU-scalewar, many government business, but the
.of the reserve boats would need Maritime Admlnlstratlo'n says
major repairs to saU.
· no American companies bid on.
Maritime Administration off!- the scrap contracts. The Amerl·
clals have allowed many of the can companies counter that

owners.

.

..

. ,

'

*, '

TBE wlnnln1 team In this year's Powelll 80
· Seramble, left to rl1ht, Pa&amp; Hill, Dale Browaln1,
~ ~e . Shuler, Tom Meadows and Richard

FoUrod. The team finished with a score ol 12
under, The proceeds !rom the tournament will go
to the lrt1ptlon system at Jaymar

SECOND PLACE team In Thursday afternoon's
scramble, left to right,, John Sll!'ll• Bob Smith,

Larry Powell, Bnce Reed, u!! Dave Diles.
Powena Super Value wu the 1110-r of tblll
year'• eveat.

THREE TEAMS tied lor third place In the
Powells 90 Scramble held Thursday afternoon at
Jaymar GoH Club. Winning a chip off to capture

lhlrd place llonon (left lo rJcht) Lee Powell,
Roscoe Mlllll, Gene Thompeon, Tom Ru-n and
John Felker.

:~.~R~straiion dates announced for grid camp

' . , ~C!NE - The secomd an· are defensive days-Defen$1ve
"• ~·~_n!IJI'Sou!herp High School Foot, · b'acks report 4:30-6: p.m . Linebackers report 6: -7:30 p.m.,
· · );ball,camp will be !leld for kids in
.. , · grades 7-12 on June 1l, 12, 13, 14., Deferu;ive line report 7: 30-9 p.m.
Wednesday and Thursday will
·· •·.'l ' All area football players are
be offensive days-Wide Recelv' welcome to attend. The campers
\v.lll receive Instruction In, the ers. Running backs, Quarter·
backs report 5-7 p.m., Offensive
• fundamentals of their position,
·conditioning, and welghtllftlng.
Line, Tight Ends report7-9p,m..
Camp staff will include head
'- Camp will be broken down as
'1-.llows: Monday and :ruesday
Southern football coach David
.- . ;, REGISTRATION FORM

.

Gaul and his staff and various
college coaches and' players.
,
Cost of the camp Is $20, Cost ·
includes Instruction and camp
T-shirt. Checks should be made
payable to David Gaul and
players can register when they
report to camp.

Derby winner
Unbridled top
choice in Belmont

ELMONT, N.Y. (UP!)- Kentucky Derby winner Unbridle~.
t!le 4·5 overnight favorite, Thursday drew lhe No. 5 post for the
Belmo111 Stakes ;;.. gate custom·
~---WI.: .... --.:
Ill .:
maae for his attempt to Win a
second jewel of the Triole Crown.
.· ' cirilde in Sclaool this lall: - - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - The No.5 spot puts the the colt
smack in the middle of the
Sch~~l you 'will attend
nine-horse field entered for the
ihls fall _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ T-Shirt Size - - 122nd
running of the 1~-mlle
'
Triple Crown finale. More impor'- Par~nts N a n l C - - - - - - ' - - - - - - - - - - - - tant, it puts Unbridled where
jockey Craig Perret can keep an
eye on the . three horses best
, ti.mne l , h o n c - - - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - -equipped to determine the early
pace.
MUST BE SIGNED 8Y ,I'AitENT Oli. GUI\ItDIAN
Chief among those three is
!' ·
, By · sl,.nln~ lh,is st:Licmcnt. I wiU riot huh! Suutlocrn I.(&gt;&lt;:al
Gotham-Wood winner Thirty Six
&lt;, .'\District nor any olltl&lt; conploy.,o:s rcsr~&lt;nL~ihlc lor any in.lnry tluat·
· Red, the tastes t in the field and
~· ,~r' ·: .hay ,occll'r to; .... ...... ,,,,., ............. ~ ·.·· ~····· durt~g tht! l!U)O ' fout- . probably the blggeS! threat . to
' rha.ll clunp. ·
·
steal the nice wire to wire. The
'
other two are Irish shipper Go
And Go and D. Wayne Lukas·
U.i\1'Jr.
trained Land Rush, horses Unbridled's stable would like to see
ANY QUESTIONS, CALL DAVID GAUL AT 992·56:!6
locked with Thirty Six Red in an
early soeed duel.

·, . .

. SOUTliERN FOOTBALL CAMP

a

.

9(J Scramble winners announced
The Powells 90 Scramble wa~
held oh 'I'hursday aftrrnoon at ·
J: aymar ' .Golf Club with all.
proceeds to go for the Irrigation
system at J aymar . According to.
club pro Bill Childs this year's
tournament was the most successful ever held at J aymar.
The winning team of this year's
scramble was Dale Browning;

'

Pat Hili, Ernie Shuler, Tom
Meadows, and Richard Folirod
who finished with a score of 12
under.
In second place with a score of
11 under was the team of John
Sang, Bob Smith, Larry Powell,
Brqce Reed and Dave Diles.
Three teams tied for third
place at 9 under and a chip off

was held to break the tie.
Winning the chip oft was the
team of Lee Powell, Roscoe
Mills, ~ne Thompson, Tom
'Russell and 'John F!!lker.
The sponser of this year's
tour.nameht . was Larry Powell
and Powells Super Value with
Tom Hawley serving as tournament chairman.

1

We salute the 36 J\leigs :Countains ·wh~ . work (or BANK ONE.
True ·tfj their Meigs.'County heritage, they're ~akiqg vital · ·
contributions to banking and rendering quality ·services and
quality products to their customers.
We really, really care!

.

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~

Stage set for upheaval _____w--:-u_twm_Rus_he~~

The narrow victory of Boris
Yeltsln
in his bid for the presid; Dear Editor:
Philson, spinning; Nancy Yoency
of
the
Russian republic puts
• Salisbury Elementary had a cham, Daily . Sentinel; Carson
an
end
to
the
optimistic theory
: very successful year again with Crow, Attorney; Dr. E. Aanes·
that
Mikhail
Gorbachev has
:representatives from different
tand, veterinarian; Mary Powell
clear
strategic
goal, tosome
• careers coming in to speak to the &amp; Rob Pullins, Seoqulcentenlal
ward
which
everything
is pro:students. Our many thanks are Committee; Norma Hawthorne, ,
ceeding
according
to
plan.
Gor·
• extended to the following people Pomeroy Library; Wally Bradbachev
is
in
fact
floundering,
and
; for giving their time to spend ford, Bradford Tree Farm; Dr.
the
mercy
of
events
over
which
: with our Salisbury students: Dr. Margie Lawson, dentist, and the .
he has little or not control.
• Scott Moody, Professor of Zoo!- Meigs ·County Senior Citizens.
It tells us something about the
: ogy at O.U., Mr. James BirchWendy Halar,
depth
of Gorbachev's difficulties,
.: field, Ewing Funeral Home; Pat
Principal
when we hear that his supporters
•
are welcoming Yeltsln's victory
(which Gorbachev did everything In his power to prevent)
because now there will be pres••
By United Press International
sures on his "left" to balance
: Today is Friday, June 8, the 159th day of 1990 with 206 to follow.
those building up on his "right."
The moon is full.
It Is true that Yeltsln's objec·
: The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
tion to Gorbachev Is that his
: The evening stars are Jupiter and Pluto.
"reforms" don't go far enough
: Those born on this date are under ihe sign or Gemini. They Include
and aren't going fact enough,
.:German composer Robert Schumann in 1810; architect Frank Lloyd
whereas most of Gorbachev's
; .Wright in 1869; BrJtish geneticist Francis Crick, who )lelped
other critics (at least In the
•:determine the "double helix" structure of DNA , in 1916 (age 73);
higher ranks ·of the Communist
: actor Robert Preston in 1918; first lady Barbara Bush, in 1925 (age
Party, and perhaps the muttary)
: 65); comedian Joan Rivers In 1933 (age 57); actor James Darren and
contend ·exactly the reverse. But
- ~ baseball great Lou Brook, both in 1936 (age 54) ; and slrtger Nancy
Yeltsln has not clawed his way to
~Sinatra in 1940 1age 50).
the presidency of the largest
••
Soviet republic of them all just to
• On this date in history:
balance the pressures on Mikhail
;: In 1861, Tennessee seceded from the Union to join the Confederacy.
Gorbachev. Yelts!n's aim Is to
;: In 1869, Ives McGaffney of Chicago obtained a patent for a
overthrow him, and he can now
•" 'sweeping machine," the first vacuum cleaner.
make major progress toward
;' In 1985, the United Nations said worsening famine in 19 African
that end.
•nations would claim tens of millions of lives despite massive
The "leftist" or "liberal" dlssi·
:'international ald.
dents In the Soviet Union (mean:: In 1987, Fawn Hall, the former secretary to Iran-Contra scandal
Ing, In the weird vocabulary now
algure Oliver North, told congressional hearings that to protect her
In use, those who favor a market
boss, she helped him alter and shred sensitive documents and
economy and a multi-party desmuggle papers out of the White House.
mocracy) now control the city'*
~
~

;Today .in history

..
,. I

Are resenre ships .seaworthy

Gorbachev playing for
time to transfonn U.S.S.R.
•

...

Friday, June 8, 1990

·

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON - Mikhail Gorbachev has gone home but the
memory lingers on. Despite an overload of troubles at home, and a
high wire act abroad, Gorbachev retained some of his old political
virtuosity.
.
.
He has the winning ways of a popul,lst politician, and in these days of
extreme security surrounding world leaders. he still displayed an
. abandon.and faith that all would be well. ' ·
But the net impression of the Kremlin leader's four days in
Washington was that for him there Is no turning back. He's playing
with the cards he's been dealt and while there Is a sense of fatalism
about It all, he exuded a trust that he will prevail if time does not run
out.
With explicit, if garrulous, explanations, he left an America more
understanding of his problems, and even sympathetic.
With a touch of sarcasm, Gorbachev kept telling his audiences that
he realized Americans could transform the world in 24 hours, but he
was under the impression that Rome wasn't built in a day.
·
He wanted to call timeout to put his house In order. He needs
months, even years, to make a revolutionary change from a centrally
controlled economy to a free market. But his people are Impatient.
· Freedom .has brought empty shelves and greater demand.
' He also has set from two to seven years go find a resolution of the
· Baltic republics that are bent on breaking away from the Soviet
· Union. Considering the explosive nature of the·revolt In Lithuania, he
may not get that much time.
: Gorbachev has unleashed the most dramatic peaceful political
· changes of this century in relations between nations. But like Winston
' Churchill, a giant In World War II who inspired his people to "blood,
toll, tears and sweat" but was deposed after the war was over, He may
_ be thrown out of power before he can achieve the goals of his
•: revolution.
·
;. Gorbachev abhored the perception that he might have come to the
: United States with his hat In his hand. He Insisted he.dld not Intend to
• beg and was not going to submit to any humiliation. But he was
: obviously dealing from a weaker hand and President Bush and others
: were determined to help him sur-Vive with dignity.
·
: Gorbachev did come to the summit In a truly needy state. He needs
• trade, credits, technology and technicians to train his workers. He
: was especially anxious to meet the blue chip CEO's and major
• Industrialists who have made the high-tech breakthroughs.
: The Kremii~ leader has his work cut out for him. The heavy
• concentration on military parity for the past 40 years, generated by
: Insecurity, paranoia from two devastating world wars and an
: expansionist-minded leadership, has left his country bereft of the
• simplest necessities.
·
: The Soviets showed prowess in developing nuclear weapons and
: penetrating the secrets of space. But production of consumer goods
• escaped them, and the man who believed In co-existence, Nll!lta S.
: Khrushchev, was tossed out.
·
: Now with the arms ra~e over and the world on the threshold of the
~creation of a new cl~lization, as Gorbachev put it, the Ieaf!ers must
: projec_t Into. a future of political and economic Interrelationships,
• "One world" was considered the far-fetched vision of crazy
: idealists after World War II. There Is a posslllillty now that it could ·
: l!ecome a reality If the globe is not once again torri apart by age-old
• rivalries , unrepentant ethnic hatreds, and bitterness from the past.
; The rise of nationalistic pride has a place, perhaps. But better still
; would be nations wlliing to join together and cooperate to ensure a .
•las ling peace and no more world wars .
: Such is the way Europe Is headed, sooner than later. There may be a
:NATO around for a few more years, but It will not be the Sa.me. There
• could be someday a federation of European states with equality, free
: movement for ali, and a common market expanded to include the
: entire continent.
• Utopia? Considering the alternative, why not?

'.

Pomeroy-Middleport. ,Ohio

· governments of ·Moscow and
Lenigrad and ~ thanks to Yellsin's victory - the government
of the Russian republic.
This is the huge core constitu·
ent of the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics, stretching
across 11 time zones from Leningrad to ·Vladlvostok and containing 76 percent of the nation's
entire land surface and more
than half of its population,
including virtually all of the
dom,inant ethnic Russians. The
rest of the Soviet republics
cluster around It like so many
dependent children.
Hitherto, of course, the Russian republic 'bas obeyed the
directives of the central government and the Communist Party's
Central Committee as placidly as
every other cow In the barn. But
with President Yeltsin sure to
demand ever greater autonomy
for Russia, not only from the
central government but from the
Central Cormaittee, the stage
seems set for the final disintegration of the Soviet Union.
Meanwhile, as Gorbachev
ponders these grim alternatives,
circumstances conspire to put
him In the worst of all possible
positions. As president of the
U.S.S.R. and the father of both
glasnost and perestroika, he Isnot unreasonably - held respon:
slble for the deterioration of the
economy. Yelts!n, on the other
hand, from his position of high
visibility, can·enjoy the luxury of
criticizing Gorbachev mere!-

lessly without having the slightest responsibility for the current
state of affairs or any means of
Improving them,
Matters are made worse, If
possible, by the fact that Yeltsln,
far from being the statesman
that the situation would seem to
call for, is apparently just a
bombastic silver-haired loud.mouth with a gift for articulating
the current exasperations of the

•

Russian people. He does, how••
ever, seem to be committed to
demolishing the Communis&amp;
Party and replacing It with a;
multi-party democracy. To thaf
extent he -like poor Gorbachev:l:
though more wittingly - wll
undoubtedly be seen by historY
as having played an Important
role in the destruction of the
Soviet system.
!

•"

Front ROw: Uayle Chasteen,. Joan Ma;r, Dianna
Lawson, SheUa p_,we.., Joan Wolfe, Maryln WUcox, Jan Knapp. Second Row: Scott DWo~, AprU .
Harmon, Sharon Werry, Joan . Collins, Maxine
Griffith, MarUyn WoHe. Tbird Row: B. T. Grover,
Jr., President of BANK ONE,. ATHENS, N.A.,
pictured above, does not live ln Meigs county but
has Meigs County heritage. His father, ·B. T.

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Berry's World

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••••
j

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•••

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WE ARE PROlJD OF
T,rEM
.

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&gt;

Grover, Sr., was bom IIi Rutland Towns~p. Marilyn Rol)lnson, Ruth (}raham, · Donna Nelson,
Patty Ingram, De~a Long, 'l'efesa Grimes,
Carolyn Bradford, VIctoria Canterbury, Barbara
Dugan, Jim Bobstettet. Fourth Row: Sally Erwin, Doris Snowden, Geri Walton, Debbie Evans,
Millie Mldldfl, Des JeHers, Bernice VanMeter,
SheUa Buchanan,, Paula Dillon, Jody Harrison. .

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THE KARATE KID:
. LOUIS SULLIVAN'

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IIIINK ON(, II TllrN!l, /iloiA PART OF THE CARING TEAM
Alhlll&amp; Ollio
Memllor FDIC

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"'\:: -~·

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�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

••
I

Friday. June B. 1990

Ponwoy-Midcleport. Ohio

• over Astros .
-Reds end three-game losing skid With 6-1 wm
HOUSTON (UPI) The batter Billy Hatcher scored once, and struck out three.
league-leading Cincinnati Re.ds and had an RBI double.
The Reds led 2·0 In the first.
Jumped on top early and halted a
The Reds, leading the major Saba led ott with a walk, stole
rrtodest three:-game losing streak leagues at 34-15, are 21-9 on the second, took third on Hatcher's
lrr Houston Thursday night,
road. The 20-34 Astros lost their single and scored on Barry
The Reds defeated the Astros seventh straight.
Larkin's sacrifice fly. Hatcher
6·1 to improve their road-record
Veteran infielder Bill Doran scored on Eric Davis' triple off
to21-9, winning in Houston for the feels his club might have reached the right-field wall.
fQurth straight time this season.
The Reds scored their fourth
rock-bottom.
. Jose Rljo, 4-1, won his fourth
' 'This Is by tar the lowest point run off Gullickson h\ the eighth,
siralght decision, allowing only since I' ve been here," said Saba tripled and scored on a
one hlt through the first seven
Doran. "We' ve been struggling. I double by Hatcher.
innings.
dOn't think we hit a ball hard all · Houston scored its run In the
Ci ncinnati manager Lou P i·
eighth, Glenn Wilson singling in
night."
mella praised Rijo.
Ex-Astra Hatcher was happy Rafael Ramirez . '
: ;; 'He pitched well and was In a
The Reds ·scored two Insurance
to see the Reds win after losing
dlod groove tonight," said Pi·
three straight In San Francisco runs in the ninth on pinch hitter
!Plena. "If you're aggressive and
Luis Quinones' two-run single.
earlier in ther week.
Elsewhere . in the National
strikes, with his stuffyou'll
"It was nice to get off to a good
IJ'lt people out."
start after being swept in San League, Philadelphia beat Chi·
Astros manager Art Howe
Francisco," said Hatcher. " We cago 3-1, Montreal topped St.
fe~ls that the top of Cincinnati's
can't sit and walt for big innings Louis 3·2, and Pittsburgh
11)1ttlng order Is the key to their
squeezed by New York 54.
all the time."
great record.
PhUHes 3, Cubsl- At Chicago,
Duncan hammered his fifth
; "They jump out on you early,"
homer of the season to give the Len Dykstra extended his hitting
Sfld Howe. " The top of their
Reds a. 3-0 lead in the seventh. streak to 20 games with a
!l!"der Is so strong. To beat them,
With two outs, Duncan hit a 2·1 tie-breaking RBI double Thurs· .
~u have to get out their lead . pitch off Blli Gullickson, 3-4, over day night to lift the Philadelphia
t$1ters . and make them catch
the leit-fleld fence. "Gullickson PhUiies to a 3-1 vfctory over the
vnu .'"
'worked seven and -two-third Chicago Cubs.
.'
·, Reds leadoff man ChriS· Saba
innings, giving up seven hits and
Ken Howell, 7-3, tossed a
~red two runs and · second
four earned runs. He walked two · five-hitter, notching only_ the

''row

~~

'

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.•:

second complete game of his when the Phillies snapped a 1·1
career. He struck out eight and tie.
Darren Daulton singled to lead
walked three to win his fourth
straight decision.
off and advanced. on a wild pitch
"It was necessary," Howell by Bielecki. Howell then sacrisaid of his complete game. ficed, and Dykstra hit the first
"Those guys in the bullpen have pitch down the right field line,
been doing the job. They needed a scoring Daulton.
break."
"I didn't want to run into the
Mike Bielecki, 3-4,' took the loss chance · that they would . score
for the Cubs, who have lost five three r uns In the eighth, "
straight, giving up Six hits over Zimmer said, explatriing his
six and one-third innings. He strategy .
walke~ three and struck . out
"No, I wouldn't have t~oug)Jt
three.
,
so," Dykstra said, when asked If
Dykstra, whose .414 average he expected another free pass.,
leads the majors, Is baiting .447
"He's to the poini now where he
has so much confidence in each •
during the streak (38 for 85) the longest in the majors this at-bat," Leyva sa,ld. ''He goes up
year.
•
there th.lnkilig he can get a base
"He (Dykstra) knows when he hi t. I knew I had the right man at
comes to the ballpark, he's goilig the plate."
to play. He' s In high he&lt;jven
It was Dykstra's 17th double,
now, " Ph lilies manager Nick which ranks among the league
Leyva said.
leaders.
The Phillles added another run
Dykstra drew a walk In the
third, · and was lntentionallv · in the eighth on Charlie Hayes '
walked with two outsin the fifth,
RBI single off reliever Les
only the second free pass he's Lancaster , driving in ·pinch ·
been Issued this season.
·
runner Sil Campusano.
But Zimmer decided not to
The start of the game yras
walk Dykstra In the ·seventh,
delayed 51 minutes because of

'

By The Bend

rain.
Andre Dawson hit his 15th
homer of the season to open the
Cubs second, sending a 2-0 pitch
from Howell Into the left field
bleachers. It was Dawson's lOth
homer in his last 29 games .
The Ph lilies tied the score 1-1 in
the fifth. Charlie Hayes doubled ·
to lead off, only the second hit
given up by Bielecki. Dickie Thon
singled, advancing Hayes, who
then scored on Darren Daulton's
sacrifice fly to left . .
Expoa 3, Cardinals ! - At
Montreal, Tim Wallach doubled
in Ti!JI Raines to.cap a two-run
rally In the sixth Inning, lifting
Montreal. Zane Smith, 3-3, went
seven innings, allowing two runs
and eight hits and Dave Schmidt
notched his third save. Jose
DeLeon fell to 5-4.
Pirates 5, Mets 4 - At New
York, Barry Bonds - doubled
home Bobby Bonilla with the
go-ahead run in the eighth inning.
Scott Ruskin, 1-1, the third
Pirates pitcher, pic.ked up the
win with relief help from Bob
Kipper, who earned his first
save. Jeff Musselman, 0-1, took
the loss.

Friday. June B. 1990
Page

Community .calendar
FRIDAY
POMEROY -Bible school will
be held at the Zion Church ·of
Christ through ..JIInel5 with the
cl~ne program··on June 17, 7:30
p.m.
.
BURLINGHAM-The Bedford
Lodi History Group will .meet
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at. the Modern
Woodsmen Hall. in Burlingham.
Bring h!Siory rektted Items.
.&amp;AnJBD,\Y
BURLINGHAM -The Modern
Woodmen of America Camp 7230
wiU have 1 cookout S,turday at
6:30p.m. at the south bound park
on Route 33 near Darwin. Each
family is to bring a covered dish.
Hot dogs and hamburgers will be
proVided.
·

BURLINGHAM -There ' will
be a benefit sing on Saturday at 7
p.m . at the Word of Life Church
in Bui'llngltam. Singers will be
Chosen Heirs, Full- Gospel Travelers, Highway Gospel Singers ,
Seawalkers, and more.

•

:{ohnson fans 10 in Mariners' 2-1 wtn over White Sox ·
.

.

•

·:

By C.J. HWU

:•

UP.I Sportswriter
Johnson's first .s tart
~nee his no-hit perfol'l!lance, the
left·hander couldn't provide the
same drama but he proved to be
juM as effective.
.
Tl\is time out, the White Sox
:r:eacJhed him for a single in the
inning, ending any specula·"!.
of a repeat performance
l"'l'i1ursd~•v afternoon in Seattle's
victory over Chicago.
"My stuff was comparable to
no-hitter," said Johnson, who
'lvr&gt;rkl•&lt;l six and two-third innings
striking out 10. "! just
!;,_,,,"'''" to keep us In the game.
Sox were up for facing me
the no-hitter." .
'
· Last·Saturday, Johnson hurled
masterpiece, the firSt in
tie's history, and the first
no-hitter of the season.
' Robin Ventura llned a single
one out in the first, but
:'&lt;!ohm;on returned to his no-hit
'retiring the last 20 batters
shut down Chicago.
Pitcher Barry Jones' errant
1! t:;~~f~ allowed ex-White Sox
lf1
Giles to score the winning
in the eighth inning, as

:! In Randy

Majors

Tlnlnh,y ReB"'b

Mo•rul 3, 81. J.D.-!

Ry Uall.t.&gt;d Prn,.lnterJMtlollll

Pl&amp;bbu rth S. Nrw \'orlt -1

,\MERICAN LEAGUE

Team

E""'

Pllllldelpfd.ll3, Cblup 1

W L Pet. Gil

Bostfln .............•...........H

!3 .358 -

Toi'CintO ,......................28 !f .5r,
MIIWIWke'P ...................!fi
Baltlmol't' ....................'l6
DetnMI ....................... ..!5
Cle\'tla&amp;•d ... ..... ............!3
Nl:'w :Vurll ....·.........•...... ll1

w...

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!3 .510 %
\It
2M ."81 t
31 .-155 5 ~
~ .Ul
51"
:13 .113 ll llr

Oakland ..................... .35 17 .i7S Chlcaro ............... ....... .3J 19 .t20 3
.................. ..30 !3 .56i 3~

tl 'ft

............... ..!R 'l7 .SOl

' ...............•!&amp; 29 .473 10 ¥,
30 .H3 1!1
.. .. .
32 .-101 1-1
Thurwlay Resultli

SeiUtl&lt;' 2. Chlcal{o I
&amp;Ill mort' 3, Mllwauku 2
fallfornllll t, Klln~~~&amp;li Cily 1

CiMI••ll&amp;, RoWifon I

Frld-.y GatmN
Phlladtl~la (Com~

:1-1) al Chk·alQ

(81ull!nmlp f.~), 3:21p.m.
St. Loul" (B.Smlh 1-4 ) Ill Mulrul
(O..MarUft!Z J..&amp;), 1:U p.m.
Pltllhura .. {Walk 1·3) a.1 New \'ark
(FE'r ..... N .1-$ ), 7:U p.m.
SuFrUiciMCO (lbtepprr$-3}atAIIanl.&amp;
(UIUqlisl 1·7 ), '7 :10p.m.
Clnt:lnllllll (BrownlftK ~)ILl HoliMan
(Scetl HJ,ti: 3S p.m.
lA• Anp!IM 48eldller-6-3) at S1m Dl e p
( Widtllln f.J), JI; OS p.m.

Salunl" Gameo

P,hUadelphla Ill Cllk~A«•

l"llilllu!Jh at New 1'-ork, nlpt

San Fraacbco at Atknta, niP!
St. LG•• 11 Moa"'al, nlpt
Chttln..al at Houllor~, aiJIIt
Loa ..\nKfles at 81111 Dlep, niJ;Il

lkl!iton!\, S CM' YorkO

Toruto 10, Mlnrrsota 3
Detroit II. Ot-veland 0
Tf!Klll&gt; 3, Oakland I
Friday Gamt'!i
Se"'tle IHan~n H and Knllckert 1-0)
; Ill Del mit (Rahl.-onHa,.. TJUUtna-1-3),
'l, 5: 35p.m.
1
Cl~el .. nd CF11r~ll 3-3) ut Bo~~ton
!CirmenJ&gt; It-'! ), '7 : :15 p.m .
N~· \ ' urk { Mo'itl 0-.1) at Baltlmol'f'
t MII14Cii:l HI, 7: 35p.m.
' (1tlettJ11 (K.In!f-'·1) at Mln~ota (\hill
"l-:1 1, ti : Oi p.m.
1 Toi"Unto (Ct&gt;ruUI ~-S J 111 MllwiWJlot'
, ! Knud!lon 3-31, H: 3ii p.m.
1\~tn!illll Clly (Gubl t'1ll J..5) at Oaltland
!\ ounr ~- I I, 10: 3S p.m.
' Te:ut!o (Hou~h J..&amp;) at CttiUornlll (All·
:

Johnson improved to 5-3 on the
year.
Giles opened the Fighth lnnilig
with a .single off Donn Pall, 0·1,
and · advanced to second on
Harold Reynolds' sacrifice bunt.
Pinch, hitter Henry . Cotto followed with a checked-swing
single, then Giles scored when
Jones' lo!N throw eluded first
baseman Carlos Martinez tor an
error.
"A double play was in order, so
I wanted to keep the runner
close," said Jones. " Those things
happen. It was my fault."
After Johnson survived a
bases-loaded, no-out jam in the
second inning, he made the rest ·
look easy. Carlton Fisk and
. Marttnez singled and Scott
Fletcher walkl!d, but Johnson
retired Lance. Johnson on a
fielder's choice ground out via
the plate, then fanned Ozzie
Guillen and Sammy Sosa.
"It wasn't a no-hitter, but it
was just as impressive," said
Mariners manager Jim Lefebvre. "He has an ability to
dominate a game.''
"We couldn't do much with the
big guy," said Sox skipper Jeff

holl3·~ ), 10~:1! !::~ Gttm~t~

Frld-.y S portt~Calflldlli'
SCAt\ B~~~ehall
Omaha. !lie b. - CoiiPJ;•1hrtd Sertfltl
Crdlna:
Italy- Tour 11 k!'Jy
Gall
Oalt BrGOk. Dl. - II mllllu PGA
\\'e~eernOpN

Wllmlq&amp;o-. Del. -

SUI,M LPGA

Mc:DonaldA Ch IP'IpkuNlp

Dt"AI'IIern. Ml ciL -

Si• •ltt sealor

PGA Toul'MI11rnl PlaJU:!IC..un pkllllldp
Tarpon Sprlnp, Fla - NCAA IMI'M

1Mvl11 lon I champlollllblptoi
GymnadCK

.

D e nvrr U.S. Natloaal
Cllamplollllh.IPR
Indoor SoeCn
MISL Champlollllblp
S llR Dlep at Baldmo~. 10: 35 p.m.
Tt&gt;nn11
.PIU'ili- Frt&gt;nch Opt'n

Clt&gt;\·e land ut Bo ston
K:~n~~U.'~ Cit .~· 111 Oaklalld

S t&gt;w l'ork ttl Bmlllmon-. nlrht
Sunle at Detroit, nlxlll
Chlu,e;o at Mlnnr.,uill
T t&gt;Xa.'i 111 ('ullfornla

'
r:

.....

"'

fhlcajtO .......... ... ........ ..:.!'!
Wet~t

L P~;
19 .li-e
:.!:1 .Sit

GB

-

3

U .5n 3
7'1 .-110 1 1.1
:tO .U-1 111 1

at

.IOK l t ll:

f lndnnall ............. .. .... ~'i~ 13 .8&amp;1 S~U~ Dl t'lfO ....................tll t .a .:n&amp; -:1,,
Los An~lt'!li,,, .............~; :.!7 .5110 1\.a
s~ Frmnc•h;co ........ .. ...23 !fl ..fiJ 111 :
,\Uanta ................. .... ...2il 3D .
w~
.uou~ c1n .................., ...24\ 3~ .:1':0 161 t .

.aoo

~mp deadline near

.t;
' '.

The deadline is approaching
l',ilr the Meigs Marauder Football
!!:amp under the direction of
Jtfarauder Head Coach Mike
$taggs. The camp will be held
.ft!ly 9-13 and lti for boys in grades

' J!9.
;,Basic fundamentals and condi·

tllming will be taught to the
•mpers by Coach Staggs and his
aff that includes college
aches and players.
'
;ftost or the camp Is $30 and
!"eludes a Punt-Pass -Kick com~tlon to be held on Saturday
J•ly 14.
.
•:For more information contact
~ike Staggs at Meigs High
~c~ooi,_ 42091 Pomeroy Pike,
?timeroy, Ohlo·45769.

~

f,

AUBURN HILLS, Mich. (UP!)
- Clyde Drexler sank two free
throws with 2.1 seconds remaining in overtime Thursday night to
enable- the Portland Trail Blaz- ,
ers to even the NBA Finals at one
game apiece with a 106-105
triumph over the Detroit Pistons.
After Detroit's Bill Laimbeer
had tied a plllyoffrecofd with his
sixth three-pointer of the game
with 4.1 seconds lefi, Drexler
drove for the basket and drew a
holding foul on DenniS Rodman ·
to set up the winning points.
Laimbeer's first of three threepoiliters In overtime, with 2:33
left, snapped a 96-96 tie. Drexler
backed in to score a layup with
1: 44 to play but Lalmbeer struck
again from long range 16 seconds
later for a 102-98 lead.
However, Terry Porter hit two
free throws to record a Finals
record 15 of 15 and Drexler nailed
a tying jumper with 50.7 seconds
left.
. Lai!Tlbeer miSsed a threeppinter on the llther end a!ld
Portland r.aced down court on a
two-on-one breakaway bu i Joe
Dumars deflected Drt!xler's pass
out of bounds wlth27 seconds left.
· Porter missed a difficult
jumper but Buck Williams, while
struggling to control the . rebound, was fouled ·by Dumars
with 9.6 seconds left. Williams, a
70 percent free-throw shooter' in
the regular season, made both
for a 104-102 lead.
Laimbeer, who Jllade 19 of his
26 points after the third quarter,
scored his last 15 points on five
straight three-pointers. Drexler
answered with the !tee throws
that gave him eight overtime

FIR~ DEPARTMENT
IS SPONSORING AN

OLIVE TOWNSHIP

ATV PULL
AI COMMUNin BUILDING IN REEDSVILLE

SUNDAY I JUNE 10
REGISTRATION: 12 NOON - PULLSSTAIT: 1:00 P.M.

MIZWAY TAVERN

"INTERNAnONAL CALENDAR MEN"

MAI;E 'REVUE SHOW
WEDNESDAYI JUNE 13, 1990
SHOW STARTS AT 8:30P.M. TO 10:00· P.M.
D.J. FROM 7:00 P.M. TO 8:30 P.M. AND
AFTER SHOW 10:00 P.M,-10 12:00 A.M.
TICKETS Otl SAU NOW AT $6,00 PER PERSON
AT THE DOC)I TICim AlE $7,50
MUST IE 21 YEARS OLD
. LADIES ONLY UNTIL 10:00 P.M.
CORNER 7 &amp; 143 ,

fered the loss despite strlk.ing out
a season-high 12.
Orioles '· Brewers :i - At
Milwaukee, Dave Johnson and
two relievers combined on a
seven-hitter to lead Baltimore.
Johnson, 5-3, took a shutout into
the eighth inningl!floregivlng up
a two-run homer to Paul Molitor . .
Gregg Olson pitched the ninth for
his 14th save. Paul Mirabella, 2·1 ,
suffered the loss.
Red Sox 3, Yankees 0 - At
Boston, Greg Harris allowed just
one hit over eight Innings ,
sending Boston to a sweep of the
four-game series. Harris, 5·3,
gave up only a fifth·lnnilig single
to Jesse, Barfield while striking
out seven without yielding a

walk. Tim Leary, 3·7, took the
loss.
Blue Jays 10, Twins 3 - At
Toronto, Kelly Gruber, Fred
McGriff and George-Bell paced a
16-hit attack with home runs and
Toronto set a club record with
eight doubles. Gruber and
McGriff each provided two-run ·
bl~sts and Bell added a solo shot
as the Blue J.ays amassed· 11
extra-base hits. Todd Stottlemyre, 4-5, allowed seven hits
over eight innings and Kevin
Tapani, 6-4. took the loss.
Tigers 8, Indians 0 - At
Cleveland, Cecil Fielder drove In
two runs, Gary Ward hit a solo
home run and Tony Phillips'
highlighted a five -run eighth with

a two-run double , giving Detroit
a three-game series sweep.
Brian DuBois, 3-3, allowed four
hits over eight inniligs, hls
longest career outing. B~d
Black, 4·3, took the loss.
Rangers 3, Athletics ·t ~ At
Arlington, Texas, Pete Incavlglla belted a two-r\jn homer and
Bobby Witt limited Oakland to
six hits over eight innings. Witt,
3-7, struck out a season-high 11
and walked three and Kenny
Rogers worked the ninth for-his
second save. Mike Moore, 4·6,
absorbed the loss, givlngupelght
hits In eight innings .

Trail Blazers : _edge Pistons

.,

Nr\TJONr\L LE.\GU£

Tt&gt;aun
Mo'
* Phllihui'Jtll .................. .!l-'
• ' Phlladd phla ................lll
• MOIIN' al .................... .1!1
"' • Ncw \ 'o rk ....................U
"' St. J..,ojjli., ... ..... .'...........%-'

Torborg. "It was a well-pitched.
game. Unfortunately, it came
down to one play."
'
Elsewhere in the American
League, California edged"Kansas
City 2·1, Baltimore. topped Mil·
waukee 5-2, Boston blanked New
york 3-0, Toronto trounced Min·
nesota 10-3, Detroit whitewashed
Cleveland 8-0, and Texas downed
Oakland 3-1.
.
Ancel• 2, Royala1- At Kansas
City, Mo., Chuck Finley scat·
tered four hits over eight Innings
to help California move over the
.500 mark lor the first time sbice
May 18. Finley, 8-3, struck out
seven batters and Mark Etch·
horp worked the ninth for his 12th
save. Bret·Saberhagen, 5-4, suf·

POMEROY, OHIO

•points and 33 In the game.
The overtime was the first In
the Finals since · 1984, when
Boston prevailed over the Los
Angeles Lakers, and finished at
12: 30 a.m.
Detroit still had hope. The
Trail Blazers, with a foul to give,
intentionally fouled Jam~:s Edwards on an hi bounds play. ',l'hat
set up ano,ther inbo4nds play with .
1.5 seconds to go. Edwards took a
pass but miSsed a iadeaway
jumper at the buzzer. ,
Portland recovered from Its
fourth-quarter fold tn the opener
to wrest the home-court advantage from the defending league
champions and hand Detroit its
firs! playoff loss in 11 home
games this year.
With the next three games set
for Portland's Memorial Colls~um Game 3 is Sunday
afternoon- the Trail Blazers are
suddenly in control of the best-of·

seven series.
Portland Is 9-0 at home in the
playoffs , and Detroit has lost Its
last 20 games on the Trail
Blazers' courrsince 1974. Three
more losses would give Portland
its first NBA title in 13 years.

SUNDAY
POINT PLEASANT, W.VA
-The Ohio Kanauga Branch of
the Sons . and Daughters of
Pioneer Rlvermen will hold their
quarterly meeting on Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Mason County Li·
brary at Poilit Pleasant, W.Va.
The public Is invited to attend.
' POMEROY

The Naweit ltlease from
New Kids " tha 81ocll
''STEP 1Y STEP" On Salo Now
liST '10.98 SALE f7,99
UST SJ$,98 SAU f13.99
Step., Step VIdeo $19.99

:·.

Honor -rolls for the final. six
weeks' grading period at the
Meigs ·Junior High School and
Senior High School have been
anrioubced.
Malcmg; a grade of "B;' or
abo~ in ail their subjects to be
lis~ -on the honor roll were the
toilowlng students:
, Meigs ~unlor High
Grade Seven: Sarah Anderson,
Sonja Bateman, Vanessa Compston, Jerod Co(lk, Becky DUes,
Benny Ewlhg, Jarrod Folmer,
Kelley G~ueser, Heidi Huffman,
Kimberly Janey, Ada!JI Krawsczyn, Lori McGhee, Erika Mea·
dows, Shllo Moore, Reggie Pratt,
Cine! Roush, Adam Sheets, Brian
SMith, Jason Taylor, Crystal
Vaughan, Amanda Well, Missy

43 Ceurt St.
Downtown Gallipo6s-446·3302
Open till S:OO p.m. Cloud Sundays

•

H

1984 Bronco 11 .................... S4695

V-6. auto .• P.S., P.B .• AM/FM cass.

1983

P~ntiac

Grand Prix ... S2595

V-6. auto .• P.S., P.B .• P. win.

1987 Pontiac Firebird ......... S7 695

Formula. loaded, 38,000 miles.

1979

Old~.

. '·

Cutlass Supreme .... S995

V-8. auto., a1r, P.S .• P.B.

.

1981 Chevrolet Chevette ...... S795
.

1981 Volkswagen Jetta ...... S129 5

5 spd., 4 dr., AM~FM.

'.

,,.

Recent·guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bailey-were Mr. and Mrs.
Paul : Bush, Mrs. Elsie Sutton,
Minerva; Mr. and Mrs. l;l.alph
Mc€res, DeLand, Fla ., Mr. and
Mrs. Martpn Peters and Brittany, VIrginia Beach, Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsville; Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Knapp and daughters, and Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Knapp were
Sunday visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Russell,
Harrisonville, were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell.
.
. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lavender
and son, of Middleport, were
recent visitors of Mr. and· Mrs.
•Kevin Knapp, Michelle, Amy,
and Ashll.

.

WnH EACH PURCHASE OVER S100000

RN .MOTORS
.· 992!3328 .

1551 NYE AVE.

POMEROY I OHIO

446-0923

1991
S-lO's

Hershel A. Faclimyer 'will be
the guest speaker at Tuesday's
meeting of the Pomeroy -Flame
Fellows~lp . to be held at the
kenior &lt;:itizens building In Pome- ·
roy at 7 p.m.
: Facemyer has been a public
school educator for 17 years and
a Bible college teacher for two
¥ears at New Life Church. He
~Ill
present "Protect the
yessel."
. The public is invited to attend.

STARTING AT

$7395.
,,

S-1 0 TAHOE............ STAITING AT S9199
Power steering; cassette, chrome bumpers, tilt wheel,
intermittent wipers,, sliding rear window and, more ...
•1.000

JIM
COBB

PARTY -Members of the VIctory Bap&amp;lst Church In Middleport
recei!ily held a surprise birthday party lor their pastor, Rev.
James E. Keesee. Pictured wltb Rev. Keesee Is hill daughter,
Amgela Hall, who wrote and perfonned aslnglng telegram for him
from all the memben. MakiDg arrangementS lor the party were
Phyllis Hudnall, Myrtle Quillen and Patsy Cornell.

· REEDSVILLE -The Olive
Township Fire Department will
have a three and four wheeler
pull Sunday at 1 jl.m. The fee Is $7
and regislratlon begins ai noon.
Admission Is $2 and there will be
cash prize~ for each pulling
class. The track is located at the
. intersection of Routes 124 and
681. Conce5~ions will be available
by the ladles auxiliary.

Werry birthday
Brandon Werry celebrated his
fifth birthday at the home of his parents, Raymond· and Joyce
Werry.
.
A cookout was held and a John
Deere Tractor .cake and ice
cream were served to James
Stewart, Bruce, Tracy, and Kelly
Myers, Bruce D.' 'and Dorothy
Myers, Ed Werry , Janet and
Larry Life, Helen Stewart, Flip
and Karen Werry, Janet Lee,
Jeff, Ryan and Katie Russell,

CHESTER - The Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church (Texas
Commukity) will be having bible
school Monday through Friday
from 9:30-11:30 a .m .·dally. The
director Is Julia Will and the
theme is "Island In the Son."
There are classes for all ages and
the public. is invited to attel\d.
POMEROY -Disabled Amer·
!can Veterans and the ladies
auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
p.m. at the hall. Refreshments
will be served.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
annual Vineyard reunion will be
Sunday at 'the Tuppers Plains
SchooL A potluck dinner will be
served at noon.

RACINE - The Southern Lo·
cal Board of Educ.a tion will meet
at 7 p.m. at the high school on
Monday .

KINGSBURY - There wilJ be
a gospel sing at the Carleton
Church on Kingsbury Road 011

Wllxong,
Wyatt.

Tonya
·

Will, Adam

Grade Eight: Lorri Burnem,
Joey Casto, Ryan Conde, Tom
Cremeans, Danlelie Crow, Tony
David, Jerrod Douglas, Arnie
Elllott, Tracy Fife. Danielle
Gray, Jeremy Grimm, Menron
Grueser, JasQn Hart, Joshua
Heck, Heather Hudson, Melissa
Jetter~. Andrea McDonald, Ja·
son Miller, Joy O'Brien, Ronda
Raymond, Ann Riffle, Denise·
Shenefield, Shannon Spaun,
Jared Stewart, Eric Wagner,
Marlo White, Jasori Witherell.
Meigs IUgh School
Grade Nine : Debbie Alkire,
Abby Blake, Jay ·Cremeans,
Kelly Doidge, Elizabeth Downie,

Mr. and Mrs . Richard Spencer
entertained recently with a piC·
nic at their home in honor of Rev .
and ·Mrs. Don Archer. The
Archers are leaving the Nor·
theast Cluster for a new appointment In Marietta.
Guest enjoyed a carry-in
dinner. Lloyd Dillinger asked the
blessing.
,
Later, guests played horse·
shoes and balloon ball. TtJey also
had their pictures taken In an old
time buggy belonging to the
Spencers.
Attending were Doris Dillin·
ger, Tim Spencer, Eloise and
Russell Archer, Danny, Sheila,
Kirt, , Danielle, and Tiffany
Spencer, Thelm.a and Clarence
Henderso, Marlene and Michelle
'Donovan, Marilyn Gobinson,
Nellie Parker ,' Nina Robinson,
Myrtle Flanders, all local; and
Ben and Kathy Jacksom,
Reynoldsburg.

1985 GMC S15 JIMMY 414

wheel, cruise control, low miles, luggage rack, running
. boards, much more. One owner.

CALL 992·3011

1986 CHEV. SPECTRUM 4 DR.... S4250

Allison Gannaway, Mary
Grueser, Randall Johnston, Lori
"Kelly, .Kevin Lambert, Courtney
Midkiff, Lorena Oiler, Matthew
Pierce, Steve Swatzel, Sheryl
Thoma, Rusty Triplett, Katrina
Turner, Michelle Young.
Grade Ten: Barbara Ander·
son, Frank Blake, Heather Davenport, Tara Gerlach, Kim
Green, Stephanie Haggy, John
Harrison, Penny Klein, Darin
Loogan, Steve Martin, Roger
Partlow, Melissa Rollins, Bobby
Vance, Christina Weaver, Robby
Wyatt.
Grade Eleven: Scott Brinker,
Teresa Deem, Raena Eblin,
Angie Elliott, ' Robert Fields,
Resa Harris, Mandl Harris,
Susan Houchins, Marty Hutton,
Burt Kennedy, Billy Kerr, Cathy
Lambert, !Missy Leach, Jamey
Little, Steve Martin, Mary Mor·
ton, Jeanette McDonald, Chris
Neece, Missy Nelson, Shane
Phillips, Aaron Sheets, Kristen
· Slawter, Kristen Stanley, Jennifer Taylor, Amy Wagner, Stephani~~ Walker, Amy Warth,
Jenni Werry, Raymond Wolfe,
Dare! Wolfe, Brenda Wright.
Grade Twelve: Nancy Baker, John Barton, Melanie Beegle,
John Betting, Trlcia Burke,
Heidi Caruthers, Kimberly Chapman, ·walter Crooks, Roxan
Cundiff, Lisa Darst, Angela
Donohue, Kelly Douglas, Lisa
Gray, Ryan Harper, Patti
Hetzer, Leea Johnson, Cecil
Johnson, Kristin King, Bracy
Korn, J .J , Lawrence, Amy
Mann, Kim Masters, .Rebecca
Napper, Wendy Phillips, James
Reynolds, Aimee Rupe, Darlene
See, Michael Seyler, Dee Shane,
Natalie Tromm, Melissa Wells,
Thomas Werry, Jerry White,
Anne Williams, Tara Wolfe,
Derek Yonker.

6 spd. trans .• A/ C, AM -FM atereo, low mile a, runs like

new.

1987 CHEV. S10 PICKUP ........... S4990

V-6 engine. power ateerlng, eliding rear windowa, AM-FM

cassette, oneonwnar.

1983 CHEV. S10 PICKUP ........... S3450

4 cyl. engine, long bed, sport stripes. 4 spd. trans .. aport
rims. runs great.

BRANDON WERRY

REMEMBER

WITH ToFLOWERS
flfttd • tw..urully

e

Rebate end

$600 first time

buyer.

P6MEROY, OHIO
...

•FATHER'S DAY
·CARDS
•COLOGNES
eAnER SHAVE
•CRYSTAL
COLLECniLE CARS
•PLUS MUCH
MOll
·'

·•..

IIARGAIN MTINEEI SATIIRIMY I SUIIDIIY
ALL SEATS $2.75

IIAIIGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY
ALL SEATS $2 . 75

.

I.

Patrece Circle, Racine, was
named to the dean's list at
Morehead State University for
the 1990 spring quarter.
. To be named to the list,, a
student must be enrolled on a full
"lime basil and achieve at least a
U grade point average on a 4.0
~e.

MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 9:30-11:30
FRIDAY 9 :30·6:00; SATURDAY 9:00-1:00

MAll SEARLES
SALESMAN

BANK FfNANCfNC
AVAILABLE

Mark's Auto
Sales, Inc.
992-3011
605 General Hartinger Parkway

Middleporc, Ohio 45760

30°/o
OFF
992-6669

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446 4~24
. . .

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FLOWER SHOP

"Your ~ehlele Saving• Plaee"

Ph. "t·IUt or "1·5721

,.....,..n............. .
4~14

d.. ljpo...t lun""l
arnnF'""'I• Ju•t t'all
or "IIIII

•·ne rf'trV AmPf'iM SPnd• Lo11t•"

~~ ..... ttfM. A...,_,....foiiiiTIIYOW .
.-...-.... ntiiiT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . c ...

4·16

Sterling Sheilds, Leonard, Mary
and Christopher Myers. Marvin.
Sheila, Michael and Becky Taylor, Bill and Kathy Dyer, Morgan
Werry.
Sending cards and gifts were
Ralph Stewart, Dorothy ft~ssell,
and Clifford Ashley . .

V·6 engine, auto. trana., A/C, AM-FM atereo cuaette, tilt

flame Fellowship
meeting.held

With ·Air

•~~r~oe lnoludn

Slnabl olf the iJf.et,
ilio his lie ahtole hi lat.

P.OMEROY -Rev. .Chris
Meenach and the Sunshine Gang
will conduct bible school at the
Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene
Monday through Friday from
6: 30-8: 30 p.m. nightly . The
public is Invited to attend.

Picnic held

Wolf Pen
personals

$5QOO FREE LOnElY TICKETS

ONE lVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50 .

-The descend·

Winners after 18 holes of play
at Jay Mar Golf Club by the
Tuesday Leauge were Margaret
Follrod, low gross; Tee Teaford,
low net; and Mary Bowen,
chip-In-hole and low putts.

-ants of George and Anna Thoma Sunday at 7 p.m. Featured
Wells will hold a reunion on singers are Narroways and the
Sunday at the ·senior citizens - Wells FamUy. Rev. Clyde Hend·
center begiMing at 11 a.m. Bring erson invites the public.
a covered dish and table service.
All famUy members and friends
MONDAY
are invited to at tend . .
RUTLAND -The Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church will
POMEROY - 'rbe second have vacation Bible School Mon·
annual Heritage Weekend Car day through Friday from 6-8
Show will be held Sunday at the ·p.m. Classes for pre-school to
Meigs County Museum. The · teens. The public is invited to
event is sposored by the Meigs attend.
County -Pioneer and Historical
1
Society and the Big Bend ~ruts·
RACINE - The Racine First
ers. Car Club. Trophies will be Baptist Church will have bible
awarded and dash· plaques will school Monday through Friday
be given to first 100 entries. from 6-8 p.m. The theme is
Contact Kevin VanMatre (even- "Fr lend Dimension. " There will
ings) at 992-3024 lor be clas$es for all ages and the
1
. Information.
pubic is invited to attend.
·
MIDDLEf'QRT - Vacation
Bible School will be held Monday
through Friday at the Ash Street
Free W-UJ Baptist Church.
Classes will be held from 9: 30 to
noon .

s.·

Golf news

- -"Honor rolls announced---,_,;,_-

'

CRIMINAL RECORDS

4 spd .• AM/FM, 4 Dr. " .
COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS. ..
MORGAN FREEIA~ JESSIA TANDY
DAN AY11ROYD
IN

EAST MEIGS - -The Eastern
Athletic BOOsters will meet at 7
p.m. Friday In· the high school
cafeteria. Plans will be discussed
.for a Super Weekend to be held
June 22-24. AlJ parents and
,boosters -are urged to attend . ..

GET IT FIRST Af
CRIMINAL RECORDS

-,·

The Daily Sentinel

.'

OHIO

�·•
.

Friday, June 8, 1990

Ponwoy-Middleport Ohio

A place that no longer·ex.ists...
SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
11 5 (, ......,ial Dr

~~~ ~

·~-2104

i92-7075

1

172 N11th S..llld Avo.
, Miololltpert, Olio

Setvlce10:30a.m. Cllolrreheorsal. ThJrs- .
, l..ol5 Burt, Dln!cter
CI!URCH OF 111E NAZA
, Orner llnlon and MulbeJTy, RPv
'l1lomls c ... M&lt;Oa~ put&lt;r Noonan Pres)0, S. S. &amp;!Jl., &amp;IIIIIIIY School. Ul am,
rfiW'*tg .......... lO: 30 a.m., """"\nf!EIV!re6
,m . mlo- oorvtce. w-..,, 7p.m.
GRACE EPISIDPAL C'l!lJR(jl, 3'l6 E
Molll Sl., l'&lt;lrllenJy. Sllrmy oervlt'05 HoW
comm"'*'non tJte llrst&amp;IIIIIIIY oteadnnordl
lllld amlllned with moning fli'8YEI' on tJte
111111 &amp;I. . Moranru:ni'e' and 11!1111011 on
al otbor !llilllaraotthe mordl Oanc~Schod
and Nurony •..., pra.1- Olllee hour In lhe
PullhHalll'rl'l'oedi*IV following the~
I/OMEROY anJRCH OF CHRIST. 212 W
MOlD Sl., Li!o lash, ...."'""' Bllje Schod
9:30a.m: Mornng .....hip.!O:JOa.m, Youth
meellnlllo 6·00 p.m : Evening -.hlp. 700 p.
rn. w~ nlgllpnyer .-lngandlllble
lluly. 1 00 p.m.
11IE SALVATION ARMY. U5 Boner1111
A~e., """""""' Mn Dora Wining In c~~arae.
~ nwtlng ll am, SllndiiY
School. 10:30 a.m. Surmy Sc-_ YPSM
Elc*e Adamo. le-. UJ p.m. Salvallon
mortlng. wrlousspeakaundmuslcspedaiL
'l'fllnlllry, II II a m. to 2 p.m. Ladles ll&lt;me
members In charge. aD wunen
lnvtred; 6:«5 p.m. Thul'llll~. Corps Old..
o . . (Yourw ""',.,.JllljeJ 7 30 p.m. Bible
Stlily and Pra~=
to til! public
IIOMEROY
E CI!URCH OF
CHRIST. J32'lli Olllcl'm's Home Road ICoony
Road 7lil 9lnJ8I7 Vocal musiC. Sllrmy Wor·
ship lOam, JllljeStuly lla m., WorsNJ&gt;, 6p
m. J l"-~. Bllie Sluly, 7 p.m. Speai&lt;B'
IMidon Hope evanaeUst
0U&gt; DEX1ER IDBLE CHRISnAN
CHIJRCII. Jlldc Clel...,, poster: A11111a a..
1111'1- Supt. Sllrmy Scimi 10:00 a rn.. Youtll
MoEilng, 7 p.m l.'llery w-'11'
SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
- 161 Mulberl)' Ave .. Pomeroy Ph 992·
5n8. Saturday Evening Mass. 5 :II p.m ,
Sllnday Mass 9 30 a.m CCO classes. 10 30

_.

a ftJ:·_ nnt, .tec..'Ord andttan:l Sundaysof~ach

mtfll:h. Dally Mass, 8 00 a m. Confessions

Sotunlay alternon. !·5 p m
OIIURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS.
TIJ!-IC FAITH- New Lima Road. next to
Fo!f Melp Park. Robei't W Richards.
!ft"VIces, 10 a m and 7 p

m. ~ Wednesday worship, 7 p m

dRAHAM UNITED METHODIST.
Prf.chlng 9 :m a m ftrst and second Sua

dl of each month. third and fourth Sunda eacbmoatbworsblpservtcesat7 30p
m.. 1 Wednesday evenings at 7 :1'1 p.m

Prayer ud Bible Study.
!lEYENTH·DAY ADVENTIST, Mul
Helll!ts Road, Pomeroy Past"' Bob
er; Sobllath Scllool Superint,ndent,
ay Spires. Sabbath School beilnsal2
p f9 on S"atunlay arternooo with worship
.....,lcr following at 3 00 p m Everyont
wttcome.
1\UTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

=

-)liter Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday

Sc\10019 30 a m . Morning Worship, 10 !5
a 'loMEROY FffiST BAPTIST. East
Main St. Steve Fuller, pastor George

or, Sunday School Superintendent
y Scllool, 9:30 a.111 ; Morning Wor·
10 30 a.m , Wednesday evening
PCIYft and Btblutudy. 7 :!0 p m
'FIRST SOUTHERN IIAPTIST. Porn·
er4f Pike. E· Lamar O'Bryant, pastor,
Jap Needs, Sunday School Director Sun·
d~

School, 9·30 a m : Mornine Worship,
IO;J5: .,.ningworshlp, 7 OOp.m. iD.S T.l
1: .1:30 (E S.T.): Wednesday Prayer Ser·
vlc!l!, 7:00p.m ID S.T i ll 30 PM IE S
T.t. Million Frtmds !ages 2·6), Royal
Ambassadors

In

ages 6-18), and Girls
on Wednesdays. 1 p.

IE.S T I. Tuesday

$'''

IYEH OCCASION

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

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
BILL QUICKEL

(row's Family RtstCU'lllt

204 Condor St.

John F Fultz. Mgr.
Ph. ff2· 21tl
Pomeroy

•

f~l

Pomeroy
992·3325

16141992-2039 or
16141992-5721

MEIGS nRE
CENTER, INC.

Pomeroy, OH.

"Fulltl'l ICullldg Frlli CJ/fll•"
221 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-2975

992-5432

0\\;(( Stml a3oo~s

212 E. llarn Slrul
992-l715. Po11eror
Sunday Mormng worship 11 00 a m Chll·

dren's O!urch 11 a.m. Sunday Evening
Service 7:00pm Wed., 6 p.m. Younr La
dlas' Auxlllary. WednesdOY, 1 p m Fam·
lly Wol'!lltlp.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH ott
Rt Uf. 3 m001 !rem Portlalld-'"&gt;ng Bot·
tan. Edlel Hart, pastor. SUndii)T SchOol,
9 311 a.m , SundOY mornln~ preaching
lO::rJ am, Sunday evening services, 7 30
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPI'lST
CHURCH, Corner Aah and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, poster. Sunday Scllooi!O·OO a.
m , Mnrning Worship, 11 00 a m , Wed·
nelday and Saturday Ewnlng Services at
7•Jipm.
APPLE GROVE UNri'EO METHODIST CHURCH - P11tor, JW, catl
moo. 10 mils above Racine 011 Rt. 318.
Sunday SChool 9 a m . worship oervle&lt;! 10

PRESCRIPnON SHOP
f

1

evening services, 7:00p.m.
MEIGS

COOI'EilATIVE PABIIIH
UNITED Ml!TIIODIST CHURCH
NORTHEASTCLUr.nta
a... DoaArcller
llev.FnaCralool
llev.Sel..a.Jo,_.,

ALFllED - Cbureh School 9:30 a m.;
Worship, lla m. UMYF6·30p.m.; VMW
Third Tuesday, 7·:m pm Communion,
Orst Sunday IAreherl

CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m , Chureh
SchoollOa m, BlbleSttlcly, Thunday, 7p
m. ; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; Com
munlon, first Sunday (Archer)

JOPPA - Wor&amp;blp 9 30 a m : Chureh
SchooiiO 30 am BlbleStudy Wednesday,

7 ll p m (Johasm.).
LONG BO'M'OM - Chureh School9: 30
a m ; Worship 10 :IJ a m , Bible Study,
Wednesday, 7:l» p.m: COmmunion Firat
Sunday of Month (Rev. Charles Eaton)
REEDSVILLE - O!ureh School9: ill a
m.: Worship Service 11:00 a.m

TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Church School 9 a.m ; Wonhip 10 a m ,
BlbleStudy, Tuesday.1::1l p m , Communion First Sunday (Archer)
CENTRAL CWSTBR
Rev O..Me...

w•

a... Weol., Tloal&lt;her

llal...,_
Rn.Pullllarlll

Rev ......., Bbdlll...h
Rev.
BU&lt;:J

a... Art.,.r Crabtree
lln.RolM!It!lleele

ASBURY (Syracuse!- Worship II am.
, Church Scllool9·t5 am , Charge Bible
Study, Wednesday, 7 30 p.m . VMW', first
Tuesday. 1 30 p m . Choir ~heersal.
Wednesday 6·:11 p.m (Thatcher!
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m ,
Chureh SclloollO am.: Bible Study, Tues·
day, 7 00 p.m: UMW, First Monday. 7 ao
p m , UMYF Sunday, 6 p m Choir Re
hearsal. Cblldren'!! at 6 30 p m. Adult fol
IOwlftg; W-esday IRlleyl
FLATWOODS- Churoh Schooi.IO a m
, Worship, ll a m , Bible Study, Thurs·
day 7 p m, UMYF , Sunday. 6 p m (RI·
ley)
FOREST RUN ' - Worship 9 am :
Chureh SChool 10 A M Choir practle&lt;!,
Thunoday, 6:30p.m.: UMWthlrdMonday
(Thatcher)

HEATH !Middleport)- Church School
9 ~ a m.; Morning WorshiP. 10 30 a m.;
Youth Group. t p m : Wednesday, Bible
study 6:00p.m Cholr rehearsal 7 00 p.m
(RindDelschl
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9 00
a m , Worship service 10 00 a m.; UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p m (Thatcher!
PEARL CHAPEL- Church School9 00
am , Worlhtp Service 10:00 a m (Martin)
POMEROY- Church School, 9·J5a.m
: Worablp 10 :ll a m , Choir rehearsal
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m, UMW, semnd
Tuosday. 7 lOp m, UMYFSunday,6p m
(MeadoWS)
ROCK SPRINGS- Church School, 9: 15
am , Worship lOam, BlbleStudy, Wed·
nesday, 7 · ~pm. : UMYF (Seniors), Sunday, 6 p m., {Junton) every other Sun·
day 6 p.m (RUey) .
'
RUTLAND- O!ureh School, 10 am. :
WorshJp. 11 a m ; UMW First Monclay,
7· 30 p.m (Crabtree!
SALEM CENTER -Church School9 15
am . Morning Worship 10•15 a m
(Steel•)
SNOWVILLE - Morning Worship, 9:00
am: Church Schooi!O 00 am (Martini
SOU'111ERN CW8'11!:R

llev.lloaMhllakor
llev.CariBhu

APPLE GROVE - Church School 9. 00
a m : Morning Worship 10 00 a m. Bible
Study Sunday 1:00 p.m : Prayer mooting
7 00 p m Thurlllay iHld&lt;sl
BETHANY- Wonhlp 9 a.m.: O!ureh
SchooiiO a m . BlbleSttlcly Wednooday 10
a m , Dorcas Women's Fellowship Wed
nesday 11 a m. (Baker!
CARMEL - Church School 9 ill a m :
Worship, 10 45 a.m. Second and Fourth
Sundavs, Fellowlhlp dinner with SUttCII
lhlrd Thuroday, 6 30 p m (Bakm\
MORNING STAR- Church School9 t5
am , Worship 10•30 am : Bible Study,
Thur5day,1:30p.m (Baker( .
SU'ITON - Church School. 9: ill a.m.;
MornlngWorshlpiO·t5a m flrstandthlrd
Sundays: Fellow&amp;hlp dinner with Carmel
third Thursday, 6·30 p.m !Baker)
EAST LETART- Mo•nlnrWonhlp9 00
am, Oturch SchoollO:OOa.m ~ UMWftrst
Tuesday 7:30pm (Grace).
RACINE- Chureh School, 10 am., Wor·
ship Ua.m.; UMW fourthMondo,y al7.:!0p.
m.; Men's Prayer Bl'elklaot, Wednad'tf, 8
am. (Grace!.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST. Roaer
Sprlnr, mlnlaler. StariiDrMu- and 01l""r Swain, Sunday School Supts.
ln&amp;9 30 a m. each Sunday. Sunday School
!0:30a.m
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, 1bert1t Durham.

"""•h-

pastor. Sunday service. 9. 30 a.m.; even-

992·5141
2 64 South 2nd

Middleport

EWING FUNERAl HOME

m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed
nesday,1 .P m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Ny\e
Borden, pastor Cornelius Bunch. supt
Sunday School 9·30 a.m.: Semnd and
fourth Sundays worship senrlce at 2 ao p

"D&lt;/{R&lt;Iy and Servic~ Alway&gt;'
Established 1913

992-2121

m

MT MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main Sj . Middleport Rev Gllbort Craig,
~;~~~:r:~~~~~~oiJr
.. pester.
Ct Rt 82 Rev. Robert Sunday
SchoolMr!!.~
Supt Ervln
SundayBaumgardner,
Schooi9:JIIa
Jeff Holter. lay leader,
m; Worship Servlce, 10 45 am.
...-.~
Sundav School Supl Sundav
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST 1
School 9:
a m , morning worship and - Joseph B Hoskins, evangelist Sunday '~
children' s church 10:30 a.m, evening
BtbleStudy9a m , Worship, lOam., Sunpreaching service first three Sundays,
day evening service 6 p.m, Wednesday ~
7&gt;30 p m.: Special service fourth Sunday
evening ae~lce, 7 p.m
m .. ,
evening 7 30 p m 'Wednesday Prayer
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
Meeting. Bible Studv and Youth Fellow·
Rt )2' William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
shJp. 7 30 p.m
SchoollO a.m.; Sunday evening serviCE' 7
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
p m. Wednesday evening service 7 p m '•
Located on 0 J White Road of Hlghwav
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don O!eadlo,
160 Pat HenS&lt;lll pastor Sunday Scllool ]() Supt Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Morntna
a.m Classes for all ages Junior Church 11
Worship 10 :ll a m Prayer service, aJterna m , Morning worship 11 a m Adult
ate Sundays.
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sundav Young PeoTHE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST, '
pie's Children's Church and Adult Bible APOSTOUC FAITH - New Lima Rd 1
Study Wednesdav at 7 ao p.m
next to Fort Meigs Park., Rutland. Robert
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
Rlcllards, pastor Servlct&gt;O at 1 p m. on
St. , Mlddlepon Atftllated with Southern
Wednesdays and Sundays.
~
Bapt)sl Convention David Bryan. Sr , Ml
HARRISONVILLE HOUNESS CHAP·
nlster Sunday School 10 a m.; Morning
TER of the Wesleyaa HoUness Church
worship 11 a.m, Evening worship 7p.m,
Rev. Earl Fields, paStor. Hell~ 'Eblin, t
Wednesdav evening Bible study and
Sunday School Supt., Sunday Sctiocj 10 a. •
pr~rer meellng 7 p.m.
,
m , Morning Worship 11 a m., Evening
~DFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St
service 1:30pm. Wednesday evenlnl(ser·
Rt 12hndCo Rtl 5 DereltStump,paster
vtce1:30p.m.
William Amberger, S S Supt, Sundav
SnYERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,'
School 9:30a.m Morning Worship 10 ~
Gary Holter, pastor Suaday: services 9: :It
a.m.; Evenlngworstdp 7 30 p m Wednes·
am. and7p m., Midweek service, 7·Xt p.
1
dav worship 7: l) p.m
m . Thursday
'
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
'
Comtr Sycamore and Serond Sts , Po
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
mercy The Rev Laura A Leach pastel'
Ave Rev Clark Baker, pastor. Carl Not·
SundaySChool9· 45a.m Churchservicell
ttngham, Sunday School Supt Sunday
a m
SChool 10 a.m wtth classes for all ages
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St . Evenlngservlcesat6p.m WednesdayBI·
Middleport James E Keesee, pastor
ble study at 7· 30 P m Youth services Fri· •
at 7 Jl p m.
(
Sunday morn Ing warshiP 10 a.m • Ewn· day
ECCLESlA FELLOWSHIP,l28 MOISt.,
lng service 7 p m Wednesday evening
Middleport Br.other Chuck McPhertm,
worshlp7pm VisttatlonThursdav6 30p
pastor Sunday School10 am , Sunday ,
mMORSE CHAPEL CHURCH' David
evening servlct&gt;O at 1 p.m and Wednesday 1
Curfman. pastor Sunday School.lO am.,

106 M...rry Au.

)ng ~rvlee 7·00 p.m

Prayer meetlng,
Wednesday. 1'00 p m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRJST, Joseph B Hosklna. pastor Bible
Cluo, 9 30a.m.: MornlngWorablpl0:30a
m, E""nlngl\:orohlp, 6:30p.m. Thurlllay
Bible Study, I 30 p m
ZION C!IURCH OF CHRIST Pomerov·
HarrtsonvllleRd. IRt.l!ll RobertE Pur·
lell, miolater; Stove Stanley, Bible School
Supt., Harley Johnstlt, Aast. Supt. SUN·
DAY· Bible School 9·30 a.m.; Wonhlp
10 30 A.M and 7: 30 P M Wednesday Bl·
bleSttldy.7:00p.m.
'
ST. JOHN LlJTIIERAN CHURCH. Pine
Grove The a... Laura A. Leacll. poster.
Chutth service 9: IJ a m., Sulldav School

~

CHR!STOFLATTERDAY SAINTS Port·
land Raclnt Road Mike Duhl. pastor,
Janice Danfler, church school director
Chureh school9 .JI a m , Morning worship
10 :J) a m Wednesday evening prayer
servtces, 7::Kt p.m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev. Earl
Shuler, pastcr Worship service, 9 30 a m.
Sllnday S.hooiiO 30 am BlbleSttldy and
prayer service Thursday. 7 30 p.m
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION
AL CHURCH, Klngsbu ry Road Rev
Clyde W IIE'ndersCII, pastor Sundav
Scbool9 30 a m • Ralph Car~ Supt. Evtn·
ing worship 7 00 p m. Prayer meeting,
Wedneoday 7•00 p m
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL IIAPTIST
CHURCH, 28601 State Rout. 7. Mlddlo&gt;
port Sunday School tO a m . Sunday even·
lng service 7 X) p m , Tuesday service.
730pm.

10 lOam.

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
Tom Runyon. pastor. Sunday School9 30
a m.; Larrv Haynes, S. S Supt. Morning
worship 10 :.1 a.m.

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH,

RENE "Rn John Vance, pastor. Ora
Bass, Chairman of the Board of Christian
Life. Sundav Scllool 9 30 a.m.: Morning
Wonhl 10 30 a.m , Evangelical service,

FllEEDOM GOSPEL MisSION al Bald
located on County Road 31. Rev
Roger Willford, past&lt;r Sunay Scllool9 30
a.m.: Morning Worship 10·45 am, Sun·
day evonln1 worship 7·00 p m , Wednes
day evening Bible Study 7· 00 p.m
WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEY AN Cool
vlllo RD Rev Phillip Rldmour, pastor
SUnday School9· 30 am , worship service
10:30 am.; Bible study and wcnhlp ser·
vice, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
Run.AND CHURCH OF CHRIST. Eu
gene E Underwootl, minister. sunday
Sc
M
30
hbol, 9, 30 a m ; ornlng worship, 10
a.m.: Evenmaworshlp, 7 OOp.m.
Run.AND BIBLE METHODIST, Amos
TUlia, pastor Sonny Hudson. supt Sunday
School9·30 a.m., Morning Worship, 10.30
am,, Sunday eveniag IE'I"VIce 7, 00 p.m
Wednesday
7 p m WMPO pr ..
(ll'am
9 a.m. servk:e
each Sunday
Run.AND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE. Samuel Basye, pas Ill' Sunday
School9 30a.m., WorshlpServlcelO lOa
m , Young People's Service 6 p.m

7 00 p m. Wednesday servk:e. 7.00 p.m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
ter Wnndy Call. pastor Sot-VIces Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednesday. 7 p m
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH
Lloyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School 9· :II a
m , morning worship 10 ~ a m Sunday
evenina sft'VIce 7 p m

Knob,

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST S
• lovt
Deaver, Putor Mtke Swtaer, Sunday
Scllool Supl • Sunday School 9 30 a.m :
Morning worlhip 10.40 a m.; Sunday
evening worship 7·30Ji:m , Wednesday
"""n=• study 7 P m
B!lfngham. ~~pas~~
bert Cozart, aulltant IQtcr. SU-'•• SChoO
'""" 6 p.m.
I0 am. wmlip 7 P m • Wqesday,
youtllmeetlna; Wed.,1pm.clauchsel'\llces
PINE GROVE HOUNESSCHURCH II
mlleof!RI.325 Rev BtnJ Watts,past&lt;r
Robert Searles, S.S Supt. Sunday School
9 :IJ a m , Morning Worship 10 30 a "·:
EvallJellstlc service 6 l1 p m Wetlnesday
Sunday evening service 7 30 p m , Wjd
nf!lday service, 7. :m p m
service 7 p.m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST BUI Little,
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
tor Sieve Utile. s s Supt Sunday
S1 , Mas011, W. Va. Sunday Blblt Study 10
ho
]()
a
m
• Worship 11 a.m and 7 p m. Wednes
~ ol am ' Morning worsip, 11 am: day Bible
Study, vocal music. 7 p.m
Sunday evening worship 7 30 p.m Prayer
UBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Duel·
meeting and Blblesludy Wednesday, 7 30
pm , Yourhmeetin~rWednesdayat 7 pm
din&amp; Lane, Mascrt, W Va J N Thacker,
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
pastor. Evt!nlnl serviCe 7 30 p m.: Wo- 383 N 2nd Aw, Middleport Sunday
ml!O'sMlnlatl)'Thuraclay, 9:30a.m.: Wed·
School10 8 m Sunday evening 7 OOp m ,
nesday Prayer and Bible Study 7:15p.m.
HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH, St Rt.
d·wetk ,....,,..,Wed· 7 P m
MlLANGSVILLE
1431uatof!Rt.
7. Rev James R. AcreeSr,
CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Sunday School9 :!Oa m, Jef!Smlth supt'
pastor; Rev Mike Wlll .. t, Asst Pastor:
Mo 1
0
Joe Humphre:y, S S. Supt: Sunday SchOol
•
rn DR worsh~ 1 :30 am .. Sunday
lOam ; MornlngWorshlplla.m.; Sunday
eveaina aervlce,
~ervtce, 7 30
· 30p Pmm.: Wednesday
evening
evening
• service 6 p m.; Wednesday even·
1
EDEN UNri'ED BRETHREN IN
Di ' P m.
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunday
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
SchooiiO am, Gary Rted. Lay leader '• CIIRISnAN UNION Hartford, w Va.
Morning sermon, 11 am , Sunday night
&amp;v. David McManls, pastor. Church
services: Chrlat&amp;an Endeavor 7 J) p m , School 9 30 a m , Sunday morning ser
$0ng Rrvtce 8 P m. Preaching 8 30 p m
vtce, 11 a.m , Sunday evening service,
Mld·weelt prayer meeting, Wednesday 1 1:30p.ll1 Wednesday prayer meeting, 7 30
pm
pm.
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CENTER.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Lttart,
Salem Sl . Rutland Robert E Musser, W Va , Rt I, Jamt!O Lewis, poster. Wor
pastor Sunday School 10 00 a.m , Wor· ship servlctS 9 30 a.m ; Sunday Schoolll
ship Jervtce, l: 15 a m : Sunday evening
a m.: Even1n1 worlhlp 'I· 30 p m Tue1day
aervle&lt;!, 7.00 p.m . Thunclay evening ,.,r. cotta1e prayer meetfnl and Bible Study
viet', 7 00 p m.
9::!0 a.m.; Worship oorvlce, Wedneaday
NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH, ~ : ~ p.m
.
Ch,.ler, Gary Hines, pastor Sunday
OURSAVIOURLUTHERANCHURCH,
SChool at 9:30a.m , Worship servtce at Walnut and Henry Sts , Ravenswood, W.
10·30 a.m; Sunday evenlng,.rvk:e, 6 00 va. The Rev. George c . WeiriCk, paat&lt;r.
P m . Wednesday DISCiple Claas. 7 00 p
Sunday SChool9: 30 a m.: SUnday worship
IIEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
Prentk:e, J)lllor • Ghar!.. Dombian. su,..
day School SUpt. Morning Worship 9 30 a
m, SuntlaySchool10.30a m : E...,lng..,.
vice, 1·011 p.m
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Pastor: Joe N'
Sayre, Sunday Sclloo19 !!!a.m., Evening
worohlp 6::&amp;m : Prayer Mtetlng, 6 30
pm Wedn
y
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Robert Fnster, pasttr. Howard
Caldwell, Superintendent; O!ureh school
9a.m; Woratup~ervtce9 tsam and6:JJ
pm L1zcaewlmme

CH
R CHURCH OF THE NAZA.
RENE· Rev. Herbert Grate, paat&lt;r
Douglas Blaooll, aupt. Sunday School 9· ~
a.m.; Woraldp wrvlce, 11 a m. and 6 p m.
Sunday Wedneoday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet·
1
"fAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. WIUlam WDllama, pastor; J1o.
bert E. Barton, Dlr&lt;ctor of Clu1stlan Edu·
cation; Steve Eblin, ualalaat Sunday
School 9 30 a.m.: MoraJna wonhl_p 10:30
am.; Te0111 In Aellall, I p.m ; E&gt;enlng
Wol'lldp, 7 00 p m. Choir practice 8 p.m
&amp;lndly. WM!esdq ....... prayer and
Bllll•lludy.
DJ:X'I'ER CHURcH OF CHRIST,
Ro..- Walaon, mlalall!r; Norman wu~
IUpl. Sunday lie- 8: 30 a.m.; Wo1'11dp
aervlce 10: ll a.m: Bible lludy Wedn,..
dll)r, 7:011 p.m
'
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS

lla.m.

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH. located on
l'&lt;lmoroy Pike, County Road :1!1 near nat·
wooc11 Rev Blackwood, pastor. ServiCt!l
oa Sunday al10:30a.m and? 30 p m with
Sunday Schoolt::!Oa.m. Bible Study, Wed·
naday, 7:30p.m.
SPffiiTUAL FAITH FELLOWSHIP,
State Route .1311, Antiquity. Rev A. I. Stewart, putCI'. Sunday services, tO a m and
7 p.m.; 1'uooday,7 p.m
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOU·
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 7S Rear! St. Rev.
Ivan Myers,actlngpastor; Roger Manley,
Sr., Sunday Scllool Superintendent. Sun·
day School t::ll am.: MornlnJ wtnhlp
10:311 a.m.; even1n1 WOI'Ihlp 7: 30 p.m ,
Wednesday eventna Bible lludy. prayer
ud ~ ltrvlce, 7:30p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APQS.
l'OUC - VanZandt and Ward Rd Elder
Jameo Miller, paater. Suoday School,
10:311a m.; Worohlp Servlct', SulldlY, 7:30
p.m.; BlbleShldy, w....eoday, 1:1l p.m.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrl·
ICIIVUIO Road Rev VIdor Rouab, paator;
Cllatt11 Faulll. Sutlday School &amp;~pt.; Suada¥~t:10a.m.: m-.,wtnlllp,U
a.m.; ~·I• aervtee 7:30p.m.
Prayer Meet
Wedllllday, 7:311 p.m.
SYRACUSE
CHt1RCH QF GOD.
••Ptatealatal. Wo!Uip aorvlce Sunday
Ill ~m.; Sullday School 11 a.m. Evenlnl
wanblp 7:00 p.m. Wedlladay
pr.,.r meetltl&amp;7 :00 p.m.
Ml'. IIERMON UNITED llRETHREN
IN CHRIST CIIURCH, '"&gt;cated In Texaa

worship service 11 a m , Sunday night
worship service 7 30 p m , Midwe-ek
praver service Wednesday 7 p m

WESLEY AN BIBLE HOLINESS
CHURCH of Middleport. Inc , 75 Pearl St.,
Rev. Ivan Myers, pastcr, Roger Manlev,
Sr . Sunday School Supt Sunday School
9: 30 a m.: Morning Worship 10 30 a m
Evening Worship 7 30 p.m Wednesday
evening Bible studv, prayer and praise

tor.
morning

ing service 7:30 p.m

-J

day Services at 7:30p.m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE, Rev. Glmtlon Stroud, put or
Sunday Scbool9 30 a m., Worship service,
10:30 am, Youth service Sunday 6 15 p

service. 7 30 p m

FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH. Long Bot·

tczn, Sundav School 9 30 a m , Morning
Worship 10·45 am , Sunday evening 7·00
p m (summer 7 30 p m . ); Wednesday
night 7 00 p m (summer 7. 30 p.m 1.

m Sunday evening service 7 00 p m Wed·

nesday Prayer Meeting ami Bible Study
700pm.
NEASE SE'ITLEMENTCHURCH, Sun
day afternoon servlcea at :!· 30 Thursday
evf!'nlng !lervlcea at 7 :1)
FIRST BAP'ri:&gt;T CHURCH, Masoo, W
Va. Pastor, Bill Murphy.SundaySChoollO •
a m.; Sunday evening 7: :.J p.m. Prayer ,
meeting and Bible ottldy Wednesday, 7:30

I:.IVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH

OF GOD - Gary Hines, pastor. Sunday
School 9 .'11 to 10 20 a m , Worship srvice
10 30 to 11 .J) a.m : Sunday evening ser-

vice. 7 p.m.. Midweek Prayer Servle&lt;!,
Wed.,1 pm.
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,

Lawrence Bush pastor. Sunday SchOol
9· XI a m ; Sunday and Wednesday even·
lne worship servtce. 7:00p.m.

p m . Everyooe welcome

RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, So· 1
St. Rev Paul Taylor, pastnr Sunday
UNri'ED FAITH CHURCH, Rt.1on PoSundayevtnlna1:00p.m.,
meroy By·Pau J'!.ev RobertE.Smllh,Sr, SchooliOa.m:
Wednesday evening prayer meetlng7 00
pastor Melvin Drake, S S Supt Sunday • pm
'
School9·30 am , Morning Worship 10.30,
SOIITH
BETHEL
NEW
TESTAMENT
Evening Worship 7•00 p m, Wednesday
CHURCH, Stiver Hldge Duant Syden 1
Prayer Service. 1 Oil p.m.
pas1or. Sunday School 9 a m .
FAITH BAPn5T CHURCH, Railroad strlcker,
Worship Service, lOam, Sunday evening
St , Mason. Sunday School tO a.m., Morn
1 00 p.m Wednooday night Bible '
lng worship 11 a m . Evening service 6 p service,
study 7·00 p m
lem

Ser.01onette
.

.

.

,.

'

'
What Is yourlnvestmenHn yourchurch? Have you made your church
•
YOUR church, o~ Is It just somewhere for you to sit for an hour or so on ..
Sunday - and not ~ Sunday at that? ·
•
· I.
When 18 the last time you answered yes to your minister's plea for help
In some area, whe~ller lhat plea was spoken or written In the Sunday
bulletin or monthlY newsletter? When did you decide to be a passive
Christian ra Iher lhan an active ChriStian? Are you the one complaining
that lhlngs aren't Uke they used to be?
A pastor Is here for a short time and then passes on to anolherchurch. .
The pastor Is not the church- YOU are the church. You are called to
minister to your church and to olhersln your church and ootslde of your .
church. The pastor Is called to vl.!llt and to witness, but you too have the
responslblllly of Witnessing to unchurched neighbors, friends and
famUy
Summer vacation 1.!1 a time to find out just who has Invested In the
t
church. Last Sunday evident~ marked the beginning of the summer
i
herein Meigs Counly. I don't know about yourchurchef, but attendance
here in town was pltltuL Granted, many llad left already for vacation,
but how many more had d.ctded to begin their summer v,acatlon !rdln I
church. How lnlerelltlni that we think we can take a vacation from GOd. ·•
Try to lmaJine what would happen ~ r;;oo took a summer vacation !rom
Ul (I'm lUre the temptation has been there)' It'S not Only YOUneiVeS
that you hurt by staying away from church - It's the communlly or
belleveralhat you wonhlp With, the peoplewhodoml.. you when you're
not tllere. But Uyou haven't been making an Investment In yourchurcb,
maybe you don't realize bow empty the space Is whn you or oo~
elle ln't there.
Invest In your church. Tithe your time and your talents - they are
more Important than even your financial tithes. Remember that where
your treasure 11. lher• your heart Ia also
- PMior Lura IAMII
·
..._ _ _ _.....__ _.___-,-...;,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~!"'"...ol
.. .
·;
!

-~·,

(

"1

J

Bob Grimm, p.astor Sunday School9 30a
m.; Worship 10:45 am; Sunday evening
service, 7 p.m.

f

· In August l910, my parents and
I (then being eight years old)
boarded a train at Guysville and
headed west, arriving In Council
Grove, Kansas, four days later.
We settled 12 miles south of
Council Grove, In a community
called Field. The name was due
to a one room school named
Field. There I attended schoolfor
the next four years.
· Field was a prosperous com·
munlty, aboqt a dozen near
l'elghbors with the roads running
east and west and nogth and
south.
Eacl\ farm averaged a half·
;-section or 320 acres. There
were combined stockmen and
farmers raising corn, cane and
tnllo maize, besides cutting a
~undred acres of prairie grass
Jar hay .
! As a small boy, I helped on the
ranch. I shot crow for five cents
fler beak, and trapped California
JOpher for which I received 10
cQnts per gopher grain pocket.
The bounty for coyote was $1 bull
\Vas never lucky enough to get
one. These bounties were paid by
jhe Morris County Treasurer's
afflce.
'' After the disastrous drought of
i913 which never laid the dust lor
months, we all wanted to
come back to Ohio. The return to
Ohio came in September 1914.
So, eighty years later, on May
20, my chauffeur and I headed
west.
In the western part of Ohio,
Indiana, Illinois, and Missouri,
we ran Into a flood district. There
were hundreds of miles and
thousands of acres under flood
water. In places you could see an
entire !arm under water, with
only the buildings showing.
On May 21 we arrived In
Council Grove, Kansas, popula·
tlon of 2400 people where there
were no traffic lights and the
automobiles waited lor you to
cross the streez.
The first historic place we saw
was the Hays House, built In 1854,
and at present operating as a

six

~

m.

a...ao •• o ....

FISHER ·
FUNERAL HOME

!71 llerlh
SK...
llhldltporl,

Ohla

Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thu,...
day, 6 30 p.m.
MT OLIVE UNri'ED METHODIST ott 1.24, beblnd Wllk ..vtlle O!arles Jones,

past cr. Sunday School, 9:30am. , morning

RAWliNGS-COAl'S

992·6..9

am. SuDday evening service, 6 00 p.m .,

worship, 10 30: Sunday and Tbur.day

93 Mill StrHI ,
Middleport. Ohio 41710
11141982·1117-IIIB·OOKSI
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MIDDlfPORT, OHIO

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!

K&amp;C JEWELERS

'IRINri"l OONGREGAnONAL CIIIJRCH,
IW. Roland Wileman, f'OSI&lt;&gt;' Olureh
9: ~ a rn. Alkle Gkilo lear &amp;lit . Wor·

~or Stmday

fiOWDS

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RACINE PLANING MILL

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ALLEN E. BALL

restaurant.
A very Important part of the
trip was getting to see the Council
Oak, a tree under which the
Indians and whites made peace
and opent!d the Santa Fe Trail.
In 1910 It was a large white oak
tree, partially dead Now all that
remains Is a portion of the trunk
which Is under roo!.
The next point of Interest was
the Custer Elm under which
General Custer camped a short
time before he was killed. Half of
the elm still stands.
Another thing -that caught our
eye was a rock silo being aboullO
feet tall with a solid top. The
Indians arranged rocks to des·
crlbe their Itinerary to other
regions.
1 was highly elated at the
prospect of returning home,
since there was my first return
since I had left there In 1914. But
what did I find? Nothing.
There was no home to return
to, not j!Ven a small trace. The
whole community of Field had
vanished with the exception of

the one-room school house. The
old roads were even gone.
The only road from town was In
a southwesterly direction and
missed my old home place by a
large scale.
I sjlent two days trying to find
some reminder of the past, but
turned up nothing. I was told that
In 1915 a large rancher bought the
whole community of Field and
turned In Into a 13,000 acre ranch
which Is what I saw in the place of
my old home.
I sadly started back to Ohio
still having my boyhood
memories.
On our way home we saw
thOusands of head of cattle,
thousands of acres In farms In
Illinois, lots of large bUildings In
the cities, and' an arch In St.
Louise 306 feet tall- all signs of
progr~ss In the past 80 years
What I went to see was my
home as a child. What I found
was a 13,000acre ranch much like
the Indians left It, b4t still yet
another sign of progress.

AT 65 ' Barbara· relishing~ life

WASHINGTON (UPI)- First
lady Barbara Bush turns 65 on
Friday. butthe occasion will pass
by quietly for most Americans
because she dislikes sentimental
"big public displays" on her
birthday, a spokeswoman says
When she relayed a reporter's .
ques tlon to Bush a bout birthday
plans, press secretary Anna
Perez said the first lady "cut off
the conversation abruptly ."
Bush will be spending a quiet
weekend at ,the Camp David
retreat with her, husband.
"She doesn't like big public
d(splays 1on her birthday),'' said
Perez, who added that the first
lady prefers to mar~ the occasion
privately with President Bush.
And the first lady undoubtedly
will hear from her five children
and some of her 12 grandchildren
on her birthday.
Bush, whose popularity has
soared since she became first
lady, has been basking In even
grealer adulation since she dell·
vered a commencj!ment speech
last week at Wellesley College In
suburban Boston.
About 150 students at the
women's college had protested
her appearance, saying she was
not a good role model and was
chosen as speaker because she Is
the president's wife, not because
of her own achievements.
But during her speech Bush
struck a chord with listeners In
proclaiming motherhood and'
wifehood as worthy goals, telling
the graduates· "You Will regret ·
. time not spent with a !Jusbfnd, a
child, a friend or a parent."
Since she made the speech.
Bush has been bombarded with
requests for copies of II "from
mothers with daughters, fathers
with sons ... senators and con·
gressmen," f&gt;erez said
Although promoting literacy
has been her special crusade
over the years. as first lady Bush,
has taken on many other social
Issues such as helping the
hungry, the homeless and people
afflicted with AIDS. She also led
the U.S. delegation to Inaugural
ceremonies In Costa Rica a11d
• was an Immediate hit.
Her dQctors say that after
treatment for Graves' Disease,
Bush's eyes have vastly lm·
proved a11d sire no lollier sul!ers
from double vision. Nor are her
eyes as bloodshot and putty as
they were over many months.
She also has been taken off Of
predtsone, a cortiSone derivative
that eave. her weight problema.
Her Jlfe Is busy, and she
appears to be blossomllli In the
l~l!llght. But often her remarks

..

;

$

People in the news

" Eighty Years and a Vanished
Community."
That was what 88-year-old
Allen E . Ball of Hiland Road,
Pomeroy, titled ao article he
wrote after his recent return
from a trip to Kansas. He went
es peci&lt;tiiY to see "Field", the
town of his childhood - a place
he found no longer exls ts.

This Message and Church Directory Spon~red Ry T/le Interested Ru~~inesses Listed On '[his Pl!lfe·

The Daily Sentinai-PitgB 7

indicate she would like to get
away from it all, perl\aps to work
In her garden at the family's
seaside estate in Kennebunkport,
Maine.
Several months ago, Bush
Indicated in an Interview that she
was not sure she would want to
live In the While House for
another four years after her
husband 's first term It Is not
clear whether she has changed
her mind
Bush is "her husband 's strongest cheerleader. She backs hill\ ,
ail the 'way, and declines to
d1scuss her views on the contr&lt;r
verslai Issues of the day, such as
abortion.
On Jy once did she publicly run
counter to the president - when
she took a stand against assault
weapons following a massacre at
a schoolyard in Stockton, Calif.
She immediately retracted her
comments, however, when she
realized she had diverged from
his v(ewpolnt.
Bush thinks her "grandmoth·
erly look" has been an asset.
Women of all ages relate to her,
and some observers believe she
was able to get off to a good start
because' she represented a contrast to the fashiOn·COnscious
Nancy Reagan .~
But Bush has learned that
cameras are around her con·
stantly, and she no longer says,
as she did at the start of the
admmlstration, ''What you see ls
what you get."
!!lhe has her hair done several
times a week and also buys
designer gowns at a special
discount. She has found She needs
a colorful and constantly new
wardrobe.
Bush keeps up a regimen of
exercise. She swims dally, plays
lots or tennis and Is taking up
golf.
Her constant companion Is
Millie, the family's English
springer spaniel who cuddles up
In bed with her and the president.
Millie rules the Bush household.
Bush Is frequently deacrlbed as
"down to earth," but she has
other winning ways: She · Is
breezy and quick with a quip. She
takes her new-round fame In
stride. When a woman told the
tirsl lady she had 'never heard
anything negative about her.
Bush smiled a)ld said, "Stick
around, kid."
She Is In charge of her side or
the White House, the eaat side.
She Is tough wltlJ her staff at
times and calls her own llhota.
She Is friendly with reporten bu I
knows how to divert unwanted
quesdons with what has been
II

called "the stare."
There is no q ues tlon Bush and
Soviet first lady Ralsa Gorba·
chev hit It off during last week's
summit and developed a warm
relationship. They liked each
other and held hands a&lt; times
while strolling at Camp David.
Perez said the women had a lot to
talk about, particularly their
views of life m the United States
and the Soviet Union
Bush often says she has "no
regi'ets" In her life. She lias been
t!Jrough many ordeals. The most
traumatic for her and the presl·
dent was the loss of their
4·year-old daughter. Robin, to
leukemia
In a recent Interview, Bush
also revealed she had suffered a
bou&lt; of depression In the mid·
1970s after the Bushes returned
from China when George Bush
became CIA director ani) she
found herself alone a lot. But she
plunged Into volunteer work and
pulled out of It
Unlike her predecessor, Nancy
Reagan, Bush does not believe In
horoscopes. Perez said that Bush
"feels you cannot be a religious
person and believe In as troiogy '·
On her 65th birthday, Bush has
a lot to be happy about, and
apparently she Is.

Ethel Ketaaedy only once and
United Press International
describes hlf son 's future
mother·ln-law as " honest and
charming. " Cuomo's oldest son,
REAGAN RE MEMBRANCES
Aadrew, Is marrying Ethel's
GET A 'ftTLE: Ronald Beacan
now has a title for his memoirs daughter. Kerry. this weekend at
"An American Life. " In a statethe Kennedy home In VIrginia.
ment released by his Los Angeles
Cuomo says he's looking forward
office, Reagan said he chose the
to meeting Ethel again. " She's
something of a· legend to me, " he
title because " only in America
could one go from being a poor
says. " It's kind of thrilling .. She
boy on the shores of the Rock
Is pari of history as the whole
River In Dixon, Ill , to being a
family Is " Cuomo ls enchanted
sportscaster, a movie actor,
by the whole Kennedy clan. ''Ted
has always been a favorite of
governor of a major state and
mine," the governor said. "He
finally to the White House."
Reagan, who remembered very
has taken a lot of criticism and
little about the Iran-Contra af·
every time he was cr lticized, I
fair, Is remembering his life for defended him." Cuomo says.
Simon and Schuster. The book Ethel has been doing all the work
In planning the wedding. " The
Will be ou\ In the fall. •
THERE.U.ROCKY: A!ormer only question forme was whether
I wear a long jacket o~ a short
boxer Is lhrowlng a legal punch
at Sylvester Slalloue, saying jacket," said Cuomo.
NEW BRIDE, OLD GROOM:
Stallone stole hi$ life story for the
plot or "Rocky V." Joey Barnum Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., 61,
tiled suit In Los Angeles, seeking has married a woman who was
$600,000 In damages, plus the born the year he was elected to
Congress. Conyers's new wife Is
gross receipts from the yet-to-bereleased movie, and he also Monica Ann Esters, 25, whO
worked !or him as a phot&lt;r
wants the rights of the film
transferred to him. Barnum grapher during hiS unsuccessful
claims Stallone stole his story bid lor mayor of Detroit last
after his representative con- year. The wedding was Monday
in Detroit and It caught many
tactl!d Stallone's m~er, Jacpeople by surprise. Conyers's
queline, and his brother, Frank.
brother, Nllihan, said he knew
and told them how Barnum had
once trained a fighter named nothing about It and his top aide
Marlo Trigo and then come out of In Washington has never even
retirement to fight and beat heard of Esters.
THE RICH GET RICHER:
Trigo. In addition to the Stallones, the suit names MGM-UA The richest man In the country.
Dis trlbu tors, the film's produc· John Kluge, was awarded $46.6
ers, Robert Cbartolf and Irwin mUllan In a suit against a former
friend, which will help make' up
Winkler, and Hal Stone.
CUOMOLOT: New York Gov . for his divorce settlement.
Marlo Cuomo savs he has met Kluge, whose Metromedla em-

..
',

Attends seroice

Jan ice Danner, and Wnna and ~
Jim McHaffie, of the Portlanct ,
Racine Branch of the Reorgan•
lzed Church of Jesus Christ ,
Latter Day Saints. went to Logan •
on Sunday for ground breaking '
ceremonies of tile new Logafl _
Church.
The group participated in th~ :
ground breaking by using two o~·,
the shovels used In recent ground;
breaking ceremonies of the tern· :
pie in Independence, Mo. The. •
temple Is dedicated to peace:
reconciliation, and the healing cJf :
nations
., •

Pomeroy, the early years _____-:'.
By FLORENCE SMITH
Meigs IUstorlcal Socle&amp;y
What was early Pomeroy
Like?
Despite feW pictures or early
hiStories, the Meigs County His·
torlcal Society has found a way to
roll back the years and reveal the
town as It was shortly after
Incorporation.
. The town's first census is the
passport. Taken In 1850, this
document lists all inhabitants by
name, age and place of birth as
well as citing the occupation of
employed males . A few of the
surnames may still be found In
the local telephone directory
today, others will be recognized
by present reslden ts as those of
their forebearers, and still others
remembered as names formerly
prominent in the communlly.
1For the convenience of those
Interested In consulting the cen·
sus, a copy ls available In
alphabatlzed form at the Meigs
County Museum.)
In 1850, Pomeory has 1629
Inhabitants - over half of the
current population 472 were
foreign born· 291, German emigrants; 143 !rom the British
Isles, a scattering from other
countries. More than a third of
the population were children 14
years of age and younger . Many
teenagers were already em·
ployed in a trade
The census enumerated 278
households Including a hotel and
two Inns as well as a school with ,
approximately ten students- all
young males. Many houses were
overcrowded - one listed 19
occupants. It is apparent that
families were sharing space with
other relatives , those engaged In
the same occupation as the head
of the household as well as new
arrivals from one's former
home.
The average age of the 464
employed males was between 31
and 32 years. Imagine the vigor
of such a community! The
youngest employee was a
14-year old tailor and the oldest,
an SO-year old saddler.
Pomeroy was a Western boom
town of that era, of the almost 70
different occupations listed, the
largest category was the building
trade whlchhemployed 75 (38
car nters alone). There were 60

laborers, 55 miners, a flourishing
foundry employing more than 50
and a boating Industry occupying
44. Although there was no bank, ,
business was brisk with 25
merchants. Food was provided
by eight farmers, six grocers,three millers and one butcher;
enhanced by two brewers. four
confeqtioners and one tobacc&lt;r
nlst. Transportation when not by
boat was by horse·drawn vechi·
cle (there were 19 blackSmiths,
one wagon maker, and a 19·year
old stage coach driver) or by
walking (attesled by 20
shoemakers ).
Spiritual and educational In•·
structors included six ministers
and a like number of teachers
Five physicians and one druggist
looked after the residents'
health. News was disseminated
by seven printers, one typesetter
and one telegrapher. &lt;A county
newspaper was printed In Pomeroy at the time.)
Activities of the county court
akcounted for the folloWing residents - six lawyers, one recorder and a jailor. Clothing was
provided by nine tailors, one
hatter and a wool carder. Add!·
tiona! occupations Included a
book seller. watch maker, guns·
mlth, gardner and two peddlers.
Although no occupations are
listed tor females , It Is obvious
from dllferences in names and
places of birth !hat a number of
young women were employed as
helpers ln the households with
which they were listed. Also
there were eight households with
no male breadwlnnners shown -

1988 PLYMOUTH RELIANT ••••• S4995
1985 ·fORD CROWN VICTORIA .... $3695

..

•Snail &amp; Slug
Killer Pellets
•Weed and
Grass Iiiier
•Hummingbird
'Feeders
. ...
•Instant r ;r.
Nectar

'·''

"',,,
" I

.'
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..

·.~

I ..'.

,.

'

SUGAR

.

••

RUN
MILLS
MULIEIIY AYI.

.,n.

,,

~ !1-.\.

.

1\ l

I

''...I
POMEIOY, OliO
'--------------!',·I
"

~~~~~~~~~--~ ,

KOUNTRY
KITCHEN.
Located lcr- 1he Str•t ,,... lloMI NatiMal lank,
Third Gild '-rl Str•t In ladne

' '•'I

"'

•'

•'
'
SUNDAV SPECIALS
,..
OPEN SUNDAY 8:00A.M. TO 3:00P.M.
RII·EYE _.M..................... 51.95 CHK-N-NOODLES-........... 4.7 5
75
'

'

SIRLOIN _........................... 6.95 IOASTIEEF ...................... 4. 7
STUFFED PORI! CHOP ....... 6.95 FRIED CIIC. UVER-.......... 4. 5
lAKED HAM _ ................... 4.75 FISH DINNER .....- ............. 4.75

'··

\1 " '

v

OA/lV SPECIAlS
OPEN MON . THRU SAT. 1:30 A.M . TO 8:00P.M.

fiiDAY
liEF UV£R &amp; ONIONS-· S4,75

..

'

'

SAlUIDAY

lEANS &amp; COINIIEAD - ... 1.60
UlfD STEAK-................. 4.75 MEAT LOAF .....--............ 4.75
CHICKEN UVJRS-.........'".4.75 PORI! TENDEilOIN_ ........ US
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE CHOICE OF TWO VEGETABLES

'·

·:

. 'I

' ---~--~----~
··
.

•"

.. Benjamin J. Sol, M.D.
Obstetrics and Gynecology

1987 BUICK STA. WAGON ••••• S419 5

1984 OLDS TORONADO ......... 55995

Air. Low miiNge. Good condldon.

J.!~~~~'Jf.~~.9~~on~"'! :·s.~ 59 5

•.

'

·

SEE RAy RIGGS

.

k

V-8. Auto., Air, Bronze.

V-6,- Air. Good condition.

these women too must have had: ·
work -possibly as a seamstress, ,
011 rse, etc - to support their· :
families
,A census - often thought of as.
a dry, statistical document- call
provide a revealing picture ot~
,.
another age.
'
The Meigs County Historical,:
Society urges visitors and res);. ,
dents to stop by the Meigs Countjl
Museum Heritage Weekend tQ;,,'
view both the special and per•
manent exhibits on display . : • .

L.----------~A~N~D~A~D~IN~N=E~R~R~O~~~------._--~, .~

Auto., 4 dr. Low mileage.

Trained In Childbirth and Women's Disease•
Both Medical and Sur~cal

..

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

"

'·
, "
'
,r
l

' •
v

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•

'

)

PVH Medical Office Building

q

Suite 215, Valley Drive
Point Pleasant, WV

'

.
St. lt. 7

!

..

dU ESPECIALS

'

plre Includes telecommunlca-:
tlbns, computers and film production, had sued Bill Fuguy on.:.
the grounds that Fugazy had
overvalued the limo company he
sold to Kluge by some $7.5. ~
mOIIon A New York jury ;
awarded Kluge $15.5 million and ,
the judge tripled that amount. · '
" It's an absurd decision," Fu· .'
gazy said. "It· s a personal thing,
Kluge and me. Personally, we 1
were the best of friends ." Kluge )
and Fugazy had once been so· '
close that when Kluge converted J
to Catholicslm, Fugazy bec~t :
his godfather but they no lonl't
speak. Kluge, 75, whOse rornlne
Is es ttmated at $5.2 bi1116n,
recently reached a divorce settlement with Plliriela K1u1e, 45, In ,
which he gave her a 45-room· 'J
mansion In Charlottesville, Va .. !
and the annual Interest on $1
bllllon, which amounts to about
$85 million a year

915-4200

In OB • GYN Pract~ Since 1975

.

. '•

..

~

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~

'

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•

I&lt;

.
'\tl.

-,

(

�Friday, June 8, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-S The Daily Sentinel

Business
ervices
~.;:::::::::::::::z:::::::::::::T---;...----""1

Classifie

•

FOR S.-\1 F
Ont• Oj Rm•int''\ NH't'\1

Includes 4 bedrooms, big kitchen, huge
ltatnlly room, 2 garages, 3 baths, rented
3-room apartment, 40' ·x 120' farm buildIng, pond, over 40 ecree fenced pasture

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
'

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CALl 992·2156
Mf'HDAY thru fRIDAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.

1

3

I A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

8

y

.

10
Monthly

'.

••.oo
es,oo

.eo

.,3,00
11 .30/ doy

'Ra1n ••• for
for e~h ltiN

DINatar

ALL Yn lluet .. Pilei In
Adww. DIAOLINE: 2:10 p.m.
the dlr • - 1M
lo to run.

· 2:DO

'

__

eountr--

• 2:00 p.m.

::t.::""'
......
,. -

,.

1 988 E-1110 I'll Ton Ford
Econollno, 9 3 ,000 milll.
Corgo Van-Short WhMI·
ilele, 302 V-B. 1 .0 L Engine
PSIPB, Auto.
Trenam.
~~~tpo": n~~ged Side
The Boord
. of Edu. cation
(ll•fVOI the r"'ht to occopt
roj
"' II bids ·
ora..:.~'/.TO:' 11 . .,.; rocelved untl 12:00 noon on
·Frldey, July &amp;, 1990 In the
T,_uror'a Oflloo - TrlCounty JVS, 16876 S . R.
Ohio,
191 • Noloonvlle.
4117114. (Envolope marked
Von Bid.)
Elizabeth Opperm•n.
2&amp;: ,
. , !•-uror
151
611 8 31
'

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Boord of Rutland
. Tawnohip, Meigo County of
Phio. will recoive . - e d
bi. untl4:00 !!"clock P.M.
- the 22nd day of Juno 1 990
for the purchooe of a U.ed
Motor Grader.
WITH MINIMUM
;.

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

~~~ft~~~TIONS AS

!,

ENGINE: (8) Cylinder with
net h o r • - of 142 .
., wltii accel-tor/ decelor·
" . ator · Dry Typo
Air
. Cleonar with prl•cl..,or.
TRANSMISSION: FuH powor ahift with in11111rol
...
torque converter.
BRAKES: Soli ocljulling hy' • droullc with booo" • ter.
' REAR AXLE: Splrol Geero
Public Notice
_ with no apln Dill"""" ill. , _ _..;,.;;;;,..;_.;,_....;._.....,
• ·FRONT AXLE: To .. oolld
ber conotruction welded
l'iiOTICE OF SALE
11111 II4!Ciiona · Whee!
l"y virtue of an Order of
. _ on'" left ot right Sole IIIUid out of the Com(not ll11than 17 deg.) Ol• 'm an PI- Court of Mligo
cillltiori totol (not I•• County, Ohio, In the c•• of'
,.. then 35 deg).
the Fermora Sonk • Sovingo
... TANDEM ·DRIVE: Oocillot· Compeny. Pllintllfv·o. Koth·
lng wlldori IIIII box - · . _ Roallnald. It ol.. Do·
tion with oM tight houo- fondento, upon o Judgment
being
ing 23"x8" - Spro&lt;*et thorein endered,
Drive Choln 2" .
C..a No. 90-CV-36 In uid
TIRES: 14:00 x 24. 10 Court. I wit offor for Ill oat
ply on 10" rimo- Rime the front door of the Court·
. to be ln-ongoobie.
hou• In Pomeroy, Mligo
··· ~TEEAING : Hym-OIIItic.
County, Ohio, on the 13th
" i RAME:
Welded · unit day of July, 1810, It 10:00
11 .IIO"x1 1 .75" - Ar- A.M:! tho fol-lng Iondo
. " ... ticulltion 20 deg. loft and end _ _ . , locoted It
: right.
.
871 S. Front St.-. Middle!OLDSDARD: Typo 17" . port, Ohio 4&amp;780. A com; .:·1 rodlua w/ hydroulic P-· pteto 1111111 d•crlptlon of the
' er lhlft-, 2 jr.,_ tilt cy~ rNI lltoto ia u lol!owa: .
• . · indera 1 2'x24'x76".
Sltuoto in the VIHoge of
· ' \RCLE:' Out- dlometor Mlddloport.
County of
;· , 10" .,.,;th otructurol oteel Meigo ond Sfote of Ohio :
roectlon fi.,. hordened
lloio!g the IICOnd iot on
tooth - l:lydroullcoontrol River or Front Strlll obovo
360 dog .
High Strlll, end being deIAWBAII:
T-lheped, ....,_ u Lot No. 21n So, , kovelded conatructlon I" x bon' 1 Socond AdditiOn to
•' .. 8.88" • BB".
Middleport. ond being 88
ADE RANGE: Uft ebove feet front on Flrot 8,_, ond
pround 19'' -Pitch An- 96 ,.., doop. and of record
Jl!ll 38 dog. - ~nk Cut· In Vol; 12. Page 280 end
!lng Angle 10 dog.- Cut· alao d•crlbod In d - of roo
'lng Dlpth 2!1".
oord In Vol. S3. Pogo 212 of
NTAOLS: · Hydroulic.
the
'Rocordl of Doodl.
• "' . ARIRER: CUtting width Mel go County, Ohio. oleo
• " I " - Mounted behind Rocord of Deed Vol. 110.
: : front w - ,· wkh five Pege 693.
.
a honlcl.
.
Aloo. oorteln rlghto end
_ _ II: RQPSw/tintedglillra · -emento end \lranti'd ' In
_,.._ ·(2) Fan 40, 000 BHI Hea- wllet II
d•lan•ed •
~· • ter · DofTooter - Frontend "RIGHT DF WAY" mode by
, • ., Aaor Wlp. . - lrial!le Mir· Non
Rupe,
which uid
- · ror · Air Su-alon Soot lnltrumont
aign•ed
Pod•· "RIGHT OF WAY" beara
' . Adjultlblo
dete of November 19th,
·til.
ISTRUMENTATION:
1940. ond 1o ....,,_ In
- - Mounted in lighted penll · Ri&amp;llt-oi-Way Book No. 4.

1---------

~

s-

Pogti RIICOI'dsr"a
289 of the Office
I'ICOI'dl of
In
the

Hounnetor
Vohmeter
. Fuol
Gouge ·• Engine
Oil ••
- · Tronamialk&gt;n OU Proe·

Melgo

County, Ohio, to

(2) Heed (2) Stop
,. ·._IGHTS:
ourwGaugo.
and ToH (2) Back Up (1)

mode.
wlllch rotor ..co II hereby
Prior lnotrument

Roor Working - Turn Sig•~ :)::APACITIES:
.. nolawithheurdowitch.
Fuel Tenk
,, (701 OoUono • lfYdrMIIic
Syltlm (211) Oellono.
• OPERATING WEIGHT:
.....
30.000 111e.
·~;SPECIAL EQUIPMENT:
". Back Up Alorm • Engine ·
, • , Hood Sidll · Vondeliom .
Protoction for vorioul
'·" lluldllhndcheckpcililta·
'. ,: SMV Sign • Ant~F••• •
Roar Tow Hitch.
WARRANTY: At leat 30

onoo: Volume 304,
313.
Mlilll
·county Dood:
Rocorda.
Rof.,...oo
Volumo 311, Page 13,
Mlilll County Dood Recordi. Soid real - t e hoo
been ualgned Auditor'•
Percel Number: 1&amp;-01 &amp;47,
Seid rill ntoto ll•illlor:t to
occruod 1910 -1 .,.,.
toxn. Promilll known eo:
671 S. Front St..._ Middleport, Ohio 4&amp;780.
REAL
ESTATE · APPRAISED AT: azo.ooo.oo.
The roll ..... connot be
. aold for Ilea than two-thirdl
the appr*-d value.
TERMS OF SALE: Cuh
on dellvlfV of d -.
Jom~~ M. Souloby,
Shorlff of Melgo' County
Ill !1· 1&amp;, 22, 3tc

- · - dov•·
~ DELIVERY TIME:

Only machin• menuf~• ' "'"" In U.S .A. wMI be conaidered.
·'
- -- OFFERED AS TRADE IN:
• , , WABCO 330
Motor
Gredor • S I N 33HCL·
, • B297 ond John Deere
• ' .. 300
Backhoo - SIN
079S73~

lilddor to aubm~ detliled
specificotlono of equiPment
ollored. The Boord of
Trult- ,_,.the right to
reJoct any or ell bids.
Bids wHI be opened at
1:30 o'clock P.M. tho 22nd
dayofJuna1990otthe Rill·
lend Flro Station.
By Order of tho
Boord of Tru- of
Rutlend Townohip
Opll L. Dvor. C'-k
_ (B) 8, 1&amp;. 2tc

Public Ncitlce
"

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Tri· County Joint Yo' cotionll School Boord of
Educotlon will be occepting
,bidl on the loll-ing
moke 1 bid priol WITH
TRADE ond a bid prioo
WITHOUT TRADE o.n eoch):
• , CARGO VAN: 'h ton R•·
· gu!.r: I cylinder automatic:
• lhort Whlllbllo; PS/PB;
" Driver and Front Pu•nger
Soeto; Sliding Sldo Door•
,. w /Win-o; Doublo Reor
' ,'llwlngout Cargo Loading
;, .Door w/Win-a; AM/FM
R•clo; Duol 0/8 .Mirrora
·, painted '"d"; Stonderd
• ...... nre: R. .li tiroe.
;. CARGO VAN: Mini V•n, I
' .-cvlllldlr A..-.otic; Short
WIIMII!ue; PI/PI; Driver
- .,d Front ,.__,.., Sooto;
Slicing Side Doon w/Win·
· llowo; Doubl• "-Swing' .... Cargo Loeclng
·, w/Windowe; AM/FM Ra·
: , dio;
Dull 0/1 Mlrrora
pelntod '"•1": hlndlrd

(PI•••

o-

, S~ 11rt: Red! II Tirll.
"'Trede-ln" •

followo:

PubliC Notice

NATURAL RESOURCES.
The U.S. Ofllce of Surfooo
Mining Redomatlon
ond ·
Enlon:emont II oupplying
100% of tho fundi lor thio
projoct.· ntE
ESTIMATE
FOR THIS PRD.IECT AS
DETERMINED BY THE DIVISION OF RECLAMATION
IS 1123 .6 8 6. 00 .
A pro-bid m-lng will be
hold on Tu•dev. ·J une 12.
1990 11 11 :00 A.M . at the
lito.
Copiel of tho Plana, Specificationa
ond propoul
forme will be lorworded
fTom tho Dlvlalon of Rodemotion. Doportmont of No·
tural R•OUrcM. upon reOlllpt qf o ch- in the
emount of 116.00 mode
peyoblo to tho Depertment
of Neturol R.ourc•. Th••
may 1110 be purchMed with
cooh in the . . - omount.
Plana end apeciflcation~ be·
come the property of the
prolpective bidder• end no
refund wMI be made. Addl· .
tionol Information may be
obtained from the Dlvlalon
of
Roclomotion, Dopartmont of Noturol RMOUI'CII.
18511 Fountlin
Squoro.
Building H, Second Floor.
Columbuo, ' Ohio 43224.
(PIIono: (114) 28&amp;-10&amp;8).
Eoch bid muot be eccom·
ponied by 0 BID GUA·
RANTY. milling the requ~
,.menta of Soctlon 1&amp;3.&amp;4
of the Ohio ReviUcl Code.
CONTRACfORS ARE ADVISED THAT IN ACCDR·
DANCE WITH 'IIIE PROV~
SIONS OF ntE JANUARY
27,
1972 .EXECUTIVE
ORDER BV ntE GOVEA·
NOR OF . OHIO. AND
AMENDED
EXECUTNE
ORDER 114-9, FEBRUARY
111. 1984, EQUAL EMPI,.OY·
MENT OPPORTUNITY CON·
DITIONS ARE APPUCABLE
TO ntiS 810. WAGE RATES'
ESTA-HED IN ACCOR·
DANCE WITH
SECTION
1&amp;13.1B and 1613.37 OF
THE REVISED CODE ARE
ALSO APPUCABLE.
Bldl .,. lOlled and odto: DEPARTMENT
OF NATURAL RESOURCES.
DIVISION Of RECLAMA·
TION, 11&amp;11
FOUNTAIN
SQUARE, BUILDING H, BE·
COND
FLOOR, COWM·
BUS. OHIO 43224. No biddsr ""Y w i t - hil bid ·
wlt'*'lkty(80)dayeeftarthe
_ . d•• of tho -lng

dr-

~':'·DINCIII!f

SELLING

ten • ¥lrt.l wsUJM' nww.
aM
lll*llc
_pf'Oiiiotl...
_

,._. Townha •

-

........
. ..CAICH,
2· tiel""'
11.1
112
Mltl.
AIIMMMr,

,

_,_

.__o~or

.

-

.......... . In

Cornm~W,

,.

- ~--

""" .....
. .Go~
.....
41-11

Mok 0H 4IU1. DII .. IM: JuM
30, 1111111.

poetible. Any peraon who

APPROVED FOR PUBLICATION IN .Tho•Diily Sonth
nlll, p.,.oy. _Ohio on June
1 and B. 1110.
RECOMMENDED:
'
TIM L. DIERINGER. Chlorf
Dlvlaion of Roclomotion
Dota: 11-24-10
APPROVED:
JOSEPH J. SOMMER,
DII'IC!or
Depertmont of Noturol
RftourcM
Dote: &amp;-24-90
161 ( B. 2tc
.
.

NEW~

Guttars
Downspouts·
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949·2168

WASHER$-$100 •• ·
DRYER$-$69 up

, .
REFRIGERATOII$-1100 up '
RA•GB-Gos·Eioc:.-$125 up
FIEIZEI$-$1Z5 up .
IICIO 0¥£15-$79 up

L_.....::::::::::::._~ UN'S API'UANCE
SERVICE

Public Notice
MBE
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Bidding on thio praject io
reatrleted to Minority Buill- • entwpr- (MBE'ol
wllo heve been certified •
MBE by State Eq""' Employment Opportunity Coordinl~or In
IICCOrdMce
with Soctlon 123. 1111 (BI
121 of the O.R.C . (Am. Sub.
H.B. &amp;84). Only bidl r•
celved from MBE'a wllo •••
certified prior to the bid
opening time end dote wll
be occopted.
·
holed propooolo Will be
received at the:
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
1BII6 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
• - SECOND FLOOR
COLUMBUS. OHIO 43224
untl Thureday, Ju~ 21 .
1990 It 2 :00 P.M. ond
opened thorMfter lor furnllhlng the m.ter!.la end
performing the lobar for the
axecution 1nd conatrucdo.n
of:
ROACH-THOMPSON
RECLAMATION PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG-Sb-20
In acoordonoo wltll tile Plene
and Spocift...lone ....,._
by tho DEPARJMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES.
THE DIVISION OF RECLAMATION, . COWMIUS.
OHIO. BIDS
WILL IE
OPENED IN 'Ill! THIRD
FLOOR
CONFiiRENCE
ROOM OF 111111 !BUILD·
lNG H) OF THE FOUNTAIN
SQUARE OFFiCES OF THE
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF

DOZER

SITEWORK ~ R()ADS

ClEARING

NEWUND
,
.
ENTERPRISES

367·0588
~21-'!HI-I MO.pd.

VIC'S .

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•New Homes
•Garages
•COIIIplete

···••ling

Stop &amp; (-pare

Fr11 Estllllatn
' 915·4473
667-6

R. L
TRUCKING
CIESTD, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT.....
•ANYTHING
. ATALL

985·4422
1

DUMP TRUCK •
Sand-Stone-Dirt

·

(614) 667·3271
Grant A. III1WI,

I

Mn

Fast

s.n..,

1-

a.• c-..,.

.,...

- .eo........ ~ ......

Refer~ces

992-5042
209 South 4th St.
Milltlleport, Oh.
"lOW

30 Sessions-S30

Co. Rd. 21

PAT HILL FOlD

Call Now To Make
Appointment

949-2794
SPEeiAL
Wat.. fer Signs

UCINE, OHIO .
S-17·'90·1 mo. tL

IUTLAND. niE
SALES and
SEIVICE
742-3018
•Tire Selh
•Front End
Align11111nt
•Oil Change • Lube

•Brak• Work

MAIN ST., IIUUAIID

Now I

flot!:

161 Nertll Secentl

w. I sport, Ohio 4576G
SALES &amp; SERYKE
w. c.v Flohlna luppH•
YourPho'"'
BNII Her•

1'1101111

Two Fimllv ..lllo,' Frt llh
ind Sat lllr. 1:00 till 4:00. 303
Sovonth St, Hovan.
Yon! ..... 12110 VIand 81., Thura.
Fri, 8ot. 1:00 Ill 7 Clcehlng,
mile.
llec!uco , _ Wllalil: Tau · - Harnelntollor,
.._. Diet Pll!oi". lnd E·VAP
Wlter PltiL A - Frulh Yn Solo, 2 Burdotte Adcln
Frtdey and Ba!Urdoy, Juno I ind

---

1361 Powlll St. . . . . ..,,

IAu. . &amp;.,..._,llorlltlt..l

1614) 992-7143

SPRIIIt SPECIAL

ClEAN, lUIE &amp; TEST

S1816

992·2196

1. Crofto, niol · - · ""'"'
1:00AM.
athlr · - No -

Yn Sileo, 3314 HOwanl Avo. Sol .lUna e.

OPEN: MON .-FRI.
10 A.~.Mj;j',0-8inpt;.Mji;o.,
· 1
Or By,.

WINNING
CAREER
TUNITIES...Singla

Yord '811oSotunlor. June l!h,
1102 MMduecbiook Dr., t-a
clolheo' !Iliac.

Col-.

Pomaroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

tond lhe tum- W.I.N. Seminar
It Hoclli.. TECHNICAL
JUNE a..:;~-._ QUALITY
INN, llo
viii. rocuo on
arnployrr,ont nat trod~
Uonallor .... '""""' al

c:::rough.=.:...=
_
.
- ....... -

GREENHOUSE

3311

OPOR·
..........

homlmakM"', or anyone ent•
lng lhe worll or chlnalna
Y~ .,. lnvl!ed ta ot:

ANGIE~s

----·
-·---.,
........
. -,.... ...
--.
no COlt; II ol 1

1

c.:.nplln m-

tory- lniOrmotlon wtll lie -

· Full
on

~'=·'="~~
High

a WI. .G CAREER ~··• It on Rt. 7ofon-Right. .
-..g Teclonloii~LII ..,_ north

MORE.

614·

lla.aMeOf

4

HUMPHREY'S
CUMATE
CONTIOL

llll-'ltlf7.

...-

3

""'JI!r

old Olllllo lhlpplnl
to flOOd
'Wiin bed and !1111-.

PI'PPf." To give -

..

--

l'llr iondllon. 114-lQ.Dlll.

S.rwlce

I

Relldentlel lo
Comm•n:lel

CALL

two= ."=.

=-·In·-

701 llloh . . . ., .dlfllpDt1.
Rei. and depollt.
304 1121111 •

F-.

.., !he

II!OIIol'f
lor-phWIICII oondl · ~
..... I'OOI'fll. .......
or;;;llc;u·.;-;;;;;

.r ••

GOO"fi'VVJ. 42 Mobile Homes

,..,._ lmm
---be--

Auto.Drron
W.ohere,
0..
Gil -s t ·-,Drvoro,
Ellc:t.

• - Mid Re~; All
From ... to 1100.
Larii
C...
Ulol
-.-;llno."PartobleW-.

Two-·

--

- · tt&amp;O·
, _ Air
i7i 010
to ttso;
Willi
Hung lotio own llnlla, . - , 110
-11. . (3G dor guoronlll on
_,.hlnlll Wo run cello
on any type of agr••ncn We

;~~ ""'"ft::'S

·-ilil .-·
r- -ion,-, .

DIAECTORIQIIRP
tlio ~- . . ., .
VOCA Corp. lo ·- n g 1 Contoat
112~111. 1:00-4:00 or 114-tG.• dynounic lnillvldull to ~
... progra~tla and admlntllntln 3'1211 ovonlnao "" on oppolnt·
ved' br
,_..._,. to 1 10 bed ICFIIIR ....._ The !filhl 1o
fll:l!itr In
Ohio. thl UIIIIMIIiited, n Executor,
Title paeltlon llholvM ldlyt Ia ro)lc! .., and ol - E . - . E r r - o r. ·
alllfl
ond
·
...
tion or hebllllatlon · - 32 Mobile Honill
Ciwllllod-alalo and - . 1 QMRP
,..
Sill
." ...,._ -h lnctUds I
72 All. 1 - lllllor With t4d0
... laoMIOr'l
any
...........
..,vrcu field ilnd 1 ,.., of D•
on • - It lot, CA,
,. porlorJCe lri -ldr· wl!h the
- -al ariel
on -ilh, 2 - •111-.
· -lllr
undsrotmdlng
- i- o n.
010.
IIOWUo20II ' """'
The ;iaoltiaii altoN lloxlblo 1:00PM.
....... encl.
121110 11- Harne on 110&gt;1120
pt- Oroup- ~.~.0.
10: lat. Come and ChMopoalol
II :1111 ~d
Box II, ChTJBPMU. 0H ........
St., llldd' p"'"· 2-tp.m. TuN.·
Fri.
.
.

Chee_...

--·It

tor

a-....... -..,.

.....
u...-ul.,..,...
..,._crda.-..unddiiHI
muet hen own
hend t - . Nlory nogatoble
rMCIIInlco,

dapondlnaonup~rlonoO.-.

,.,...... lielore 1:00am or eltar
1:00pm.
TMChenlniOdllltN .. ro!lrod,
worll _,."" or ,...,.,...
Sond roaumo, P.O. lax 111,
·-41114,

-i,.,o·-·-.
n ~-=
.ZI

2 tuJ wn rnolllllt ·home, ..,_

- · 304471-1112 ofler 1:00.
2 bed_, 111o~nloo

.....

2 '1 Jtoom, fumllhtd mobile
lor rent In P-roy 1111.

....

--lorllnt.2bodH.U.D. aiiHnen. -2-2411.

- · lum-.
ilk:lliCt ,_..

loll lot · Did
Town Camptrouncl,
·304-171-

3011.

Coafr ' Corry Silo
Night 81-, 131.18. 4 Poator

twin bed wHh -lng, .,•. 4
d - • - ald,_11, 14-UI.
A l l - count.., =.dl-•, 3
cheln l bench
'tWin or
lull ...a..... fiu1. Vlluglln
11)1
- - la,..pm.
·
llon-8ot
Sun.o,on
12
, _ , _, At. 141, a oft
Rt. 7.114-441-31A.

llpolll,""

"MOilLE
HO. PARI
•Moblle Nome· · ·
. .P.en.• . .
•Mobilel4cimtf' Ren..la

•I.O•R~r~pta

• 992-7479

,_,.,;Ollie .

lt. U 111111! of

1-12-' .....

NNondo

Colt......

-~.!.~:=~·

PH. 949-2101
....... 949•2160
Dey or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

11M Chlvolll, 327 3 opoed.
11200, 304-e?l-18111.
k.
0 ._ B
1110 Comaro. 402 . lac
114 11112o1244.
PS PB
.
1110 Pontiac,
•
• ru,..
flOOd, S:IOO. 114-441-48lit.

1ir.l '17 ft. · 81orcro~ Tri-Hull
- · 126 HP, Evlnr- EnQI,.,
comotote lop, . - upholotory.
Col 114-2H-1111an.r 7:00 p.m.
1971 SoiS!Or 111112 ft. trl-houl 70
hp, · - ·· All equip. Cell

111t Corwlte OOI'tlvtrllble, 4-opeod, whfto, blOck IOI!hlr lntorlor oH .......... -ch. IM-247·

4iit

lOr Sale

Even!ngl, 1143 t18 i243.

touma_,. TX Bno
T -. 111 hp Evlnrudo. Cell
114115 4331.

boot, wllh 180
XR2. llator Guido t!OI~
PtM'ii wh do o on bath. IM- Ina
- --or.
·•
eor-t Quality Tuning. l.oadod. $1000 IJnn.
awMt the aoundl J&amp;ti ' Pillno 1124110.
111 .4 41ai01Mt-1pm.
Sorvlco, Bill Word ·2325. 1112 Chevrolet, 12,000 octual 3 - p - J o b - ilo!or,
Alii mnboui "Jlll". ·
- · 114-441-:1121, 114-4*- .tll0.'114 111 0133
Ornnlchclld ond oulohlrp, ,.. 7211'
76
cond, ~7!·7552 aftor · s:oo· 1172 Pontile C.loHno, IOW?tiAuto Perts&amp;
.PII.
.
::IIMI::.::_
. :---'
. --,--:-:--::-"7"=--=
10, - , pb. 11111-

Plano luning ond Npolr. 25th
v•r of urYice. Lana Dlnlell.
814-1112·21111.
.

1111 .... _

Acceuortes

1lllil PIJmoulh Vlllllnt, N:, Pll,
PI, aood
, work car, 1500. 11+

~-

1111 Oklo Oafto ... Royall, IOto
ol ... rdl, .... - . - . • lug,
cond, 79
Vegetablll
campers&amp;
wllllft Ford, !)oligo. Chevr 1171,
C.bbate, hl]ll heads. You cut . 20 ln. glritl bicyCle .... cond.
MotorHom11
S .10 o hood. Jolin Hllfo Fonn, 120.00, jrtlone: -~817.
Lotod Folie. aM-241'-3042 ari14ft. lrucll - Porto-pat,
1110 Chevy 4 dotvo pidt· . 10
kit box and ~frlglrtlor, ,...,,
:MUIG.
up. . . . lido. Cor. , . , _ Fruft F..._ Juot oil Sr Will lllnataY. 114 • 1301 or
114-1112-2111
iilllllllr
Jim.
·
111 • • ol Albony. 114-1111110 Okllmobilo Oafta. .......
1:111.
· -·patot......."".'!.Amilh
10 . .. .....
•u•.w•IIIOOIII-IIampo. 11,110. 114-211-11:11.'
..7 doiiJ, -llandey.

58

-Iori!

FRillS &amp;

Farm Supplfrs
&amp; L1vestock

114-211-

u.d roll- tile 11.00 NCb,
coli lf!Or I p.m. 30H71-11V2.

55

Chevy
-:M12
·
giWOI
lhope,Chevatto,
con bl -t •

JllloiOonAve.ApiM .

1. . rod Nova1 4 dr, INI,:O PI,
PI, N:, low ""'"""'· 17,
n-

,,...., cilln,
~.sao;

Building

Supplies

. .

SIJr lrellor wtupondo llvlira
-.~~~~-ol
Rind l Pirc1i 81., Koneugll, OH,

oftarlp.m.
-

1 111 C..NiYIIOf lor llnrroll cub
t!lalorll:ll, ~181Z
1031! 0..0 Ill-. w/180 NH
Round Boler l Hay Blno,
18,110; Ill c... Tractor,
-lno, RIM
NH Hoy lolor, f! 'lBO; Will linanoa. 1'14 31'1 llirL
311 IIF Tractor W/plawo, .,..._;
timor . . - bulb hog,
13,400; 1·271 lnt'l DIIHI
w~ diM oulllv.l:or, 1ft.
Buoh Hoa, P,Saii; wiD flnance.

w,_

IVANI 1101'0118, 11110 Ea...,.
·~"

111 •• 11171.

Apllrtmsnt

1-

Avenue. Saaalall: 11' Z ut. ur

heullr wl .................
IIIII• Hlll....... lltl

for Rent

t-

J:Oi.n 1 ch

Nfttltoc..

tl'lll!'!1

, ,... , . . HI~~Uoro

r••

otumlnurn - - HYOI!oclt
-

mol; Mony 1110 -

..k

'

h-.

llo! .... -

..,

Hllllboro • Dalto In llock; utllhr
tralll,. from 4'd' to l'x10'; We
............. 1-Hing undsr 1110
bed--tml..r a truak
hftchn,eo aAlto
""'"'
111 ulel
In
Mack. .-4MU2. Opon lion,·
Fri. I a.m. • I p.m. Bal. I a.m. • 3
p.m.

Wantad to Do
po11 while
holM

Will oloo do yard or
lt4-44ti-M77 aafl

Jlnr'a '"""C::ul-nt, SR. 35,
Will 01111
, 114-44fof7l7;

-•-lonn
,,..,..a lmF'
lliiD. Bur.
1111. trade, I :ON:OO w Mare,

PubllcSIIe
&amp;AuCtion

~·

1111.111-.

=~;_I"Q"....,

--~­ .

T~op,

A•H,

~.200~

llldng priCe,

1144•aoe N,

........,_, 1,110 pounds, oall
IM-24&amp;-t171, or 141 poundo, call

.

Semces

CI.I!UI SuprorM a.tlc,

loaclorl, :IDW'Iti-1111.
1111 DodGe Shl-. leo ~~~~
olr
-Y"l'
· ·_nlco
33,....,
mU11AII-AI
1 opeod,
cer,
.....lorit cQndhlon. 11100. Coli
114-1'12·2101oftor ap.m.

B1

Home

Improvements
BASEMENT

Wlm!RPAOOFING
U.-.INionll lllalilM GIAINn111.
Froe LMII
.., _
_Col! Millohed.
c:olllct 1·
• - · day or night.

.. -- Wlt--

linj.
llalniMinee:
1111 MorcuiY Col!ll• l o u - Hou11helcl
Rooting, MW/NpaW, aiding,
poymento, :104-&lt;llf'1'i7i
_ , _ ,, corpo,.ry, odd lObi.
1&amp;01 Dadgl DIVfO'IIl 17,000., ...lm.iM. IM-37'14120, allt tor
1187 Dodgo pick... N,lliil, bath lllch.
pcollont oOndlllon. 1171 Ford
Ron'o TV lorYice, -lollzlng
pickup. MOO. 1144" 1111.
In
lonlh
OlioHowe
~ A11C R-ul aTA, 1\000 Olhlr
brandL
caift, -1ila.o
-2711. · Ulol - . ...-. llf4.37e. -~Ohlo814-4ollo2414
oSIIIIIonce - " · WV.

~

Oklo

Cui-

1-.

•2 000 m- Aut•• llr, $'1200,
oil(i 114 .41 IDIM oflor llpm,
ForS.Io: 1. . ..._ •• ,
1184 ~·• .P·Itl!'i .!::,-,=.!!Camino, ~-- I_.....,
1~112 1321, ,

- :1::

l!a!Ory or ceblo tool dotlllng.
wllllo ccmplo!ed "- lnd MrYice,

:l;

1154-..

Ca. RON EVANS ENTERP ISES,
,..,_,, OH 1-.!137-Na.

GOVERNIIEHT SEIZED vafrlcl• OoYil
-VIle S - a.
from $100. Fotda. M•alt' Gu:gee CrMic Ad. Partl, eupcarvon... Chevye. Surp!UI. p!ioo, pickup, and dellvory. 1MYour a .. o. 11) -lld.li44;1;0:JM~,iiG,Iii;i;iiO'"H;;;t
S-10111.
Rem d !lila: Mobile Home
repair: roofing, concrtCt work,

72 TruekI for Sa..

-rlc8i. plulirbing oxporlonco.
...,..., c: 11 lnlurance cla&amp;ITIII

tese 11oc1c . . . - . T - . . -· · - 1111
w/olr, cob l chee. 12,710; wtH -.....- ·~~
·
troclo..,..._mt.
82 Plumbing &amp;
tel7 Chevy. 114 ton. 4 Heating
· UD.
· 114-1
. Mpeed. Clrt•'• Ptumblng
ondHMtlna
FowthondPTno
Golllpollo, Ohio
Excavating
Trill~

32-t-lrlrtrntolltN
Ford 11'11Dtor cd 304 • !to4

In

=~~lA~

Electrical ~

Cclnmorolol

l.ost&amp;Found

--

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

1011.

.

oluniJ 01111 . With or Wit-. . .101
· Coli Lilly Uvely 114-

...

614····2-6·242

· ~..
. '
Anl..,_or-.E--.
tlon !lily........ , . _ . .. .,._

Emplo1 1111'111

lrtftt It I• Or Wi
.
Pldl 'lp.

7

YardSala

wiring, -

.

:,c

r

G11C 32.000
1hlcl!,mlleo.
SUI, 1- Olf
.........
....,. I

In -

or ahop. All worll

-

...,........ t14-3IMIM.
WIH llebyllt In
148-1041 .

my ·-

--

....

.•.

X

nl .......n.

a.

- --•-.an•.
llolldon!lol

..

_ _ ..,

=.-u:..,.,.·

Chevr 1-'!0,Iow II I I = :

.alioo,

· 114-

64

Hay &amp; Grain

OUinll a47o47R

ifr.M; r;;:'.:'':t;' 'l;K
4

.•., ---------Butlnlla
21

-

5

lllhled hey, .... ,.., ftrot

·= a= .... tt:ao - .·

lor - . Col .. ..

------73 'lana &amp;·,4 WD'I

lion, pdllllnd. iiM7Ni\ti

~viis~

~
.-

Von. -

n , Cl,

..nw•~ hoy~ · ~.c:1.,.\:.COIYafl.:;
:_-.
or
•• • a.,.. • Itt •• •••

.,......

11

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICI

~~:m:.::c::s..

"2-UU or 915·3561

·~'!!I~·-

Rooidon!lol

- 111-atrla'a·..orRidenour
.........
llinl tt\000. Col IRor I or loevo lllllrlng,
Lloarilecl
mnnp.,.,..,....
- 1 , ~04-tl~-1711.
~

·--,w-•Dryor......,,

F111,11 ,riel

'I lees

end

IIIViol or - l n.

Llclr*d Ellc:triclone Ploquolo

Col.,.~

......... with . . . . ._
ftiiiiOfa. Akllwd a vgnno

6

11• 1nd

Rafrlgeratlon

Wanted to Buy

11Aiiooot1-latwlth-""" molltlo herno. Would liM to
be
j:anaoyll}" ..
_Holrloonvlllo,
_

COMMERCIAL SIDING
Hou- • Mobile Hom•
• T...,opon Vehl.._ •
Farm Equipment •
Heavy Equlp,.,t, Etc.
FREE EStiMATES
24 HR. SERVICE

•llr,

nee. ,,.. Mtlmatea,
-77WI31.

IIMtrio

84
511 S. Fowtlt Awe.

,•

I'M . . . . .

aotnolor ......

9

.

Septic Tonk Punorlng NORGollla

82 Wanted to Buy

POWEIWASH
SERVICE .

•• .

-r -.. . .__

1172 end 1111 Corvo!IH. Alllo,

lnstft•ments
, ,.

1203-2p.m.
Two T - -'a For Ronl.

pllflll; ~~~ onol

BI$SELL·
BUILDERS
' CUSTOM IUIT

75 Boals &amp; Motors ·

'

1-13-tfc

• coumv

71 . Autos for Sale

.

Middl•port. Ohio
.·

Musical

S1

Tlllol Shop, I In t "oadwo.idng
M-.
rMelllne, whh aoo

·, Painting lloo 1 worll. SI.OO po'r llcur. 304 411
1042, 9inllo King.

8

~·

noo.

c-tr

Appllonce Inc. Good
uood opplllnCII, T.V
. ooto. ODin
8 a.m. 1o 1 p.m. llon..Sot. &amp;141411-1"!'- m 3rd. Avo. Go~

3&gt;104.

*k

_,
q---

~---.lnte-

Daviton Su..., GUde,
1t!t--'-"}IIO mille, t4100. 114117-mlll. 8M-:M?-'12M.
·

175-7!2!1.

- ·o

.. for Rlnt '
Ul ,., • .., liiloi!nlllon
- POSTAL SERVICE .labe. Solory led to er.. and c- Law
thlo ........ Delbarl ........ ..
to Malt lloliomlldo..J~~ Oft* llflor to •:ta on .1une 11, For Olio or - . 2 bed""""
poaf!lonl. C.H (t)
UIOd -~- ...... ond
1110. lleoill'-'l' 0~ .. ,tumllhlll, an eiMirlo, air aond, ........
'Corne( ot. Rand lnd
nt. P·tOtDI. .
wuherand
dryor, non--..., Pei'Oh St. In kUIIIUp. Uftlo. 114~y
148·11171.
PROGRAM .
(S40,000.00~
· depollt~
.
304
lhown
IIJ .Thlo
- l n....
t- onlr.

•• -for UN.-

...a

Heating, Cooling, ,

-

r:-:~ on
- a y . Ohio.

you~~.

2 ............ 0 lrlttnoy
Sponlol
0 ..... . , . _ Collit. ·~lrl!!noy- t ...
rlor.
.

A!Cfo.

- · ond Vlll'!ablo Pll!nle:
Old Locotion: ,..,_ """'
Norlh 011111 H.l. Lacltlon:
1111 mill up llaunt Olivo ~d. on
....... jllount D11Y1 Rd. Ia by
on Nil ot PAINT PI,.US, rol!roed In 1 - 1.) F - l
Hwquv.rn11 Trim~ live - -.. oil p!lnto h1R orlco•
tlltl. 1o $110. MINT PUIB, Jock• US to .II· • donn. 114-38110n Ave, PoW PleMant, 104- 1314.
I'II-40irl.
81JOW- picking
Old pie ulo, I blloo lilol now, 2 mllll beck at - . hoopl!o! bed , ~- Haven, WV nnt to Union Camp
Ground, call In onlerl, No Slfto
PAINT PWS. San ot loell ~. dlyo,304-la-u37.
por gollol\ on lllocled lntorlor
lind ootollor Pltteburg Palnto, . . , t1n1M, You
or ••
MYI !0% on Bur,. IMdl. - - T - o ..,.., Pitch. Karr
:MIS Jeckoon Avo,
Point lloed. llfon.Frl: a..m.. ..m•. Sit:
Pl-. 30U71-40M.
le.m.olp.nt. I'Mo245.et78, IM-o
4411112
..... 10 hp lown lroator
304.f71.2241.
••• ••rriM: Pick rou own,
CaN ClOUds Wintoro, 114-241Sol:&amp;:;;..Como eli !he tinie, 11121.

Win 101o1 ..,. a1
~·•. )ob.
~--··­
you're an ~-. •r
or

Giveaway

Petl for 5ala

:1M

3Q4.

-· :=r.m.o ........

-••eel ......_

~ Cell oiler lp.!ll · -

_. houoa ·-

G. E. tJ ft. dsop · lnlll
IMI.nf-441-:JIID, '
Q.E. W.-· lnd dryor t1SO.
91ds bJ rolrigertor f!OO.
Re~r~tProtor-.., •
f!OO,
Eloctilc d - Sll. 30" Gil
'"11111 S100. Rllrigelator
114-'1112-3352.
.
.11110·
.
Tlllor, ~~~gg.
0Wordo, II30; 1!4-371.
GroYIIJ W mowor. IM-11112·
3441.

t:r ~no"::.'"'m :.!

- . , . lldr~oo:o· Good
. . . . . . of
....
-.1 Clbl!lala•~- til
ond up Ia Ml.oc dor• u
- h With
3 mi.
- -YIIIo Rd. I A.ll. to
s P.M. lion, thru .... C.l 114ue 03ZI.
7ft. Couch I .Choir. 1tx12 Ft.

.. ·

Reduoed lor q'*&gt;k ..... 3 bed· .... 1 1111 otory, loc- 1 milo
lloln St. Clalllpollo,
Dopcolt,
hS,OOO. 304 451 1111 Or . _ r o - fiCIIilnll, 114 441 34tS.

18

eollinG
llorlln, 1
2U-tiU'"""""
or 114-?IW8tl,-

lefrlga~:atlon

Looting "" 3 ....,......, ...... In
lluot
mill FmHA.::=e. 114-

~

Ant..... 80 lilian Jar.
ond . . Hrllll .......
1111111 prrt.....n.,,JuMt.B-?

....

,

11¥- Be- Dlatrlct.

~

i

OPENMON.·SAT.lOieS
mAWFLDWDS: Dw4wf
&amp; TaU; P-AS GRASS:
Pink &amp; Wlite; Ft.ISCHIA,
IASIIETS, ..RIS •1111

.

Oil-.

u-. _,.,,

llbr, hii.:'!!...Jull pluo
aut =·
• • hlw ......- . I

do
.....

8VGit • •·

_ , Pri., 801., Sun:~.,DI'o
FiN - . , Hortlord, WY. '"· :Q
&amp;a.lt, 4 ..,... no.. Ponterar
lriclgo WY loll tiU- or
M~t14 441 Ali.

Paulin's Hil lltwNn
Rutland and Rt. 554

Good Rot•
T.L.C.
27Yro. Exp.

-hcM•Ic ...-nlng 1 dey IaI
114 4411211.

Pt. P~Uaint
&amp; VIcinity ·

F - ., 8o!u....,., 1:00 !HI_4:00.
Hovon.
... p i - ....... ~~~em lrr 302 _...., 81, lhil olote. Thenll You, Cllllllil
chaW,
tnll,.
to IT,
n:.cT•
Baby gkta
-·
ploy
-·
-~
Okllr White ..dv --" "'_,.
illjUndlnoe of Whh melt for
P.O. loll I Mkf. ·
!....!milo!ram
on At.
- Hoo11dorwo
· ......,Juno

MAINTENANCE &amp; REPAIR

Roo• &amp; loan! fw
1 Cltl
ond

41 ttauu. for Rent

~-..tolooeD­

MIDDLEPORT
VCR CLINIC

EUM' HOME

~

•=.;addii'IQ
that...-._.. ::"nWCI.
=1'8on"?..::l'h':i
Of\ll

-.r.

Acrou FrHI Peat llffka

Wt ca:i repair ciild rt·
core radiators and
heatll' car11. Wt can
aho acid boil and rod
out r..tiators. Wt also
repair Gas Tanio.

SALES AND SERVICE
factory Aul. .riud
Smict Coni• For Moll

•••••eel

PARTS AND" SERVICE
For Moot 2 ond 4-cyclo
' engln•
Sto&lt;* 1'8rtalor Homolho,
W...,_or,Tecun\uh,
• Stratton.

FOR::~~=:Nz
OPEIUIIO SOON

....... IIIJ!•,

-.Uto .,.
.....,
.. c:-.tory .....
nat o n - or I n - wtll
be
on June tall.

--·

ezza ••

:V:!~::n...;::n :t...-:~..::O"i..t&amp;:t:.::
fo7, ·~~ intii¥\tW, m-. ._, th- ..... .._...,_
or 47'1..,....
SAcldle, eloUtM, 111M 1 rhokt

ISUW!IIt Mal.,
.,•• ,.,, Oh• .

Household

LAVNE'S FUANirUAE
ond chelrs P!lcod lrvrn
13111o ttM. To- 110 ond up
to t121. Hlda 1 b1d1 1310 to
SHa. . Roclinero
pra.
Lampo PI to 1'!2S. lll-11
ftDI and up to ~II. Wood table
~ ....... Glllo..,... Ooolol
tMiup to 1371. Hutahll 1400 l
up, bUnk ._. wrnpllle with
_,,.. Gil ond up to P&amp;l.
lleby 1110 11111- or
bo• oprtngo lull o r - I~J:"'
.... Ind .... - •
...... K!.JIII
. . 4 - I, I, ·l ....
GUn .Colllnlll
10

NATIONAL TV.
GAlli SHOWS
Cllaonllc 0 1 - or Yord Sola:
- · J11pordy.;_ ,_/Wid Sllurdsv llh IIILm. to 7 Aoln

DAVE'S .SMAU
ENGINE IEPIIR

992·S33Sor,IS-3S61

:J:Ii~

~J'::
, ~ ..........

se

mtnt eond, tow Mil• a8M,

... - ·

For 8111: u.d 7 10• - • l *voro,
doy
g...- . . , -·

Goods

I Sat.,_,., ll!h.
11" 1iS::'J,': Avo,
concelled II

=r.:-OH~~- lo• t04t, Gill-

mo~

ftWLOOAno• · ·

REPAIR

=

5t

Yonl

CONTE~Aiml

ROOFING

:::.M

Yard Sole:. Juno 7, · 8, lltlr.
Clothll, Knick K-!&lt;1. bed, ox·
or
~~·ole. Folrvlow
Bml., Elldrert, Ind. 4lllt.
E v - ""·
1111 PRICE SALEHI . .nl_, Yord ...., lllln or ohlno,
Product~. Juno 11•18. Kllll!lgO, lfolldoy Inn,
1110. M717 School Lot SoL JUiM a, tl-5. ,._ring !laRd. ~ Ohio. - : ~ ~ -r,ue e.MI, lilovo,
111:;:::;12.=--..,....,,....--= ::-~ W I I do, bon,..,.,
:l t;:4::
· 11~'"" --~IY
o _...,. clotlilng olzo
'""jb,
lcoril te 112 ....,.... lop, ahildron'o
::.::..hi.. .
- : clolil!ng, ....

· 399 S. Third. IIWdlaport

, Howard L~ Wrlt111l

i-4.

-~~- Xlt2. I Nlrw.

~~

CHIYSUI..f!LYMOUTI
DODGE

90 DAY WAD.... .,

Trade

992-6803

==
ond

PAT Hill

a-..

Buy· Selt

F ATWOODS ROAD
L
•
POMEROY. OHIO
8/ 111 mo.

::,.':!~Ia~
~=~
llamo•o--Withiltl"l!or

AT

USED APPUANCES

SIDEUNES
SPOIT
CAIDS

~~

l~~=======:;:===="=-=.=~
-:"":·~

For s.le Toa.cco
1020 b.
@.21! cent8, cllllt4 411 3150.

r~erchand;se

~-~-~-~o:-:-~:-:-::-;far•ll, t111 Hondo sao Four,

-

.c.

a...

Prop any
Hondo Shop. u- Rt.7, Rein or
- 7!0Jntl tNck u... oompllte lhl
wtth i'lm,a. Wire cor.nulara
• ·
while In color, Ono S h l - r yard Sola: 111 llo......,. OriViJI.
1ro111na motor t101 Pll or Thlil'l., Fri., 1 8ot.

DALLAS SAYlE

~=: ~;:::=;;;:;;;::=:;-r::::=:=:::~
l=;~~~~~=!
·

BODY SHOP

t.t'1.=
m.u:."'R\£
~~~- c.n,.

~~~~--!..lJj_w.~

I!Oglo!ored
Ellglilh · loltor
For Iiiio: t1hp riling . puppY. 1 jl!d. Errpollont
-liar, 814 448 44:11.
d......lon. - · lt4·1'12-201&amp;.
_,_.
D.P. Wolaht .. nch, Schnauzer ~ SIP ChonJ.cond, 100lbo. D.P. Walgli!a, log
G nd S
Aloo llny lay
lfta ond dumllelll, 110. ~ pion '"
N.
·
lnl2171.
:::.-..:.--Ono
=11.1~7-

1

.... ~.... .,.., llllnllhlno.
Alknl..=:..~~ow':'h
~···
It

dlopolt,Ohle.

Busl·..ness Serv···ces
·

~

or-

' Stop In and Sn

5-16-'90-1

~~--·

Portob!l
ttoo; a14-:m-2241.

loll: 3 onlleo 8 ., Rio
Grondi on 3211, Con!IIIP!IInt Rd.,
111 ln!-lon, '!Ym- ROid1
11t Mu8e. Houwholcl, yara
... 2X4'o. ....lr
eu
, Nendll XRI0 Motor
I 'June " I, •• tM-a4J..I044.
PardllYord-l!omelntOJ'o
lor, cloclol, - of H.lt: - . }
1111 0&lt;11 At. 211. Thurs, m,

- · REWARD lor lnlormi!Joft
111-totheometondoonvtolion
or .,._ .. _ . Olkwood Dr., o 9ote 81.,
dlllzlng. ·-..mg end entry. lreforo liN, tum right,

poae .of obtaining contracta•

992-6421

-hee, ...

-bed, lluch -.1

3 Announcemantl

ilu*ntnicta, or any bthM'
benefit• undor thll HC!ion
lhoil be gull¥ of theft by dtc.ption u provided for In
Soction 2913 .02 of the Reviled Code.
CONTIIACTOAS REQUIII·
,lNG ASIIIITANCE IN SE·
CURING BIDS FIIOM CERnI'IED MBE SIJB.CONTRAC·
TORS AND
SUPPUERS
MAY CDNTACf 'IIIE STATE
EQUAL EMPlOYMENT CO·
ORDt,.ATOR BY CALUNO
(8141 4ell-8380 OR 11-IE Ml·
NOAITY BUSINESS DEVEL·
OPMENT DIVISION ~ CAL·
UNO (8141 4ell-6700 OR
TOLL FIIEE ON 1-18001 282-

rni!lo -

lotH.

A Great Combination" Quality and Reasonable Prkes"
WE GO THE EXTiA MILE.....
992·6110
.OHIO

Intentionally mll-•ente
hirn. .f • .owning, control·
ling. operoting. or pertic·
lpet!ng in 1 minority bual·
n111 enterprl• for the pur-

1oH.

on-, ....,..

Anno uncc rnc nt s

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACnNG

--hot-·-··-

AI. 7. 2 til a..n ,,.,._ wlh •W
lllzwoy · - and
ovor .2,0011. .June ,_... too
......, ond - t o 1111.
Eloctrlc Wood Spllttor, t110;

lth; Rl. · 141, n.r
con-......

1111 v:~~ood lhope,
11.200.
.
•
1111'111.- 11a w-. .. cc.
E&gt;- - - · 114-

,_,

"Y!..~~.!_Ir
oomp••- __ _..,.......

Ceunlry
lt!lfl.
~ 811X lllol, Tnortpat, VIet.

ti-31 · 1· mo.

-t

ton-'

...,. l I

949-2969

. nom minority
bulin•- lhall be ••
of tho total velue
of the conuct, wh11ever

7wl_,_ wl-,
Dl n1t 111e _,. Rt. 14J. 114

Cloteil Stla.

mon pertli::ipete In tho conti'ICI. The 10111 voluo ohub·
purchiOod

Rooms

wv.

Sot. · ~-5

'"d

Fumlshed

rwnt • wook or monlh.
9tortlngo!- Gol!lo Hatll.
1wo 271&lt;3~N104MIIN, ono
e14U6MIO.
100111.
• or 17581 I ptna r'OOIM wllh '**00·
21S7.
Alto tniflar · All hoolo-upo.
Col obr 2:00 p.m., 304·773- Air COfllpriiiiOI; llrp, -~~~
1111, ....,.
0..IIator, twtt/

MOVING!
!101m! ••• ··7

contract• ewerded to
meteriala
end MrVtcea

ADutmn..

1-2'airlliie lncW 81.,i

.-~·

~.IJ!O. -

·
- - !ram
to:

OUT

contractore 1nd meteri8!·

R•ourc• ,.....,.. the right
10 r.joct any or ell bide, or.to
d:_:w:hi:ch:..:om::.
·

·

PAYING AS OF TODAY, MAY 29, 1990
#1 Copp•r 90C ,p•r lb.;·
Clean 0 Aluminum
36C per lb.

•'

...,.c'lnor•
to

CENTER

o..,,,

brec11 ouch combinetion ol·
tlmllle propoala u mey
promote the blOt lntorllt of
the State.
AI provided In Section
123.1111 of the Ohio Reviled Code ond Admlnlatrotlve Rule 123:2-15·02 of
the O..rtment of Admin·
iotrotlvo Sorvl011. the CONTRACTOR ohl!ll mlko overy
effort to eniUN that ~ni­
fled minority buain111 aub-

o1 Noturol

l~oc:c:op:t~t:he:.:bi:·

EAGU IIDGE
SMAll ENGINE

.,

Iii Clllllo
be- In-

A-""

POMEROY. OHIO: Rt. 7 . S .R . 143
ALBANY, OHIO: Rt. 50. S.R . 143
NEW HOURS:
POMEROY:· 9 a.m .-7 p.m . 7 Daya
ALBANY: 10 a .m .-6 p. m. 8
CloHCI Sunday

Motorcyeln '

74

Ohio Voltoy

"'-* .......

eel

~ -

KIT' N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrl&amp;bt

53

of--=

- •Conlor
........
• ' 1t11-

OffiiS 2 LOCAtiONS TO SDVE YOU•••

Public Notice

Apartment
for Rent

Hondo c:uetom too. ' CB,
11,000 mi., muot 1111 newt )144.1421.
..

TII·COUNTY RECYCUNG

•

t

IIIII.

PH. 949·2101
or

8-1· 1 mo .

.01 / dey

out :t1f, Frt I

"FrM liltlm8tes"

. Gall

44

1M2

CNdroo• l - -hlng, l

...........

LAFF·A·DAY

Help Wanted

S...:

I -

IISSILL
SIDIIIG CO.

land and rented mobile home.

Ovtr 1 &amp; Words
.
.20
.30
.42

Rete
14.00

Wordl
111
1&amp;
15,
11 .
16

Div•

11

4 Flfllllr 0 . 2 mU.
, _ f4l on •· 'ghiiGrt 1
- . ThuN, Frl, Set.

-

•VINYL IIQINO
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•ILOWNIN
INSULATION

Horrh'\

Gallipolis
&amp; VICinity

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Friday, June 8, 1990

biilln-

--.

llfflc.

Cll104118o4t11 lor .... -

"Your PBI'IIItl won't ltltd money?
Thrlllln thlm you're coming home."
{

'I

"

.,

.,..... :1:;1 ..., Conlor,'10S
~llf. .
;

c:.:n:=·

�Paga 1o-The Deily Sentinel

Forty-siX Individuals were W.Va., fishing without written
fined and three forfeited bonds In permiSsion from landowner, $25
Wednesday's Meigs County and costs; Terry A. Mayes,
Court of Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Pomeroy, Intoxicated pedesFined were Barry A. Redman, trian, $10 and costs; Ronnie E.
Point Pleasant, W.Va., failure to. Taylor, Long Bottom. failure to
yield right of way, $25 and costs;
display proper regiStration, $10
David W. Jones. New Marsh- and costs; Michael R. Gilkey,
field, safety viola tlon, $25 and Newark, no operator's license,
costs; BrlanEdmundAlexander, $100 and costs, six months jail
Sandusky, Mich., speed, $30 and suspended to 30 days, one year
ci&gt;sts; Janet Mane. Charleston. . probation; Timothy D. Clark,
· W.Va .. speed, $22 and costs;
Litchfield, speed(ng, $24 a nd
Thomas J . Beckerman. Bay ·costs.
· VIllage, Speed, $23 and costs;
James G. Scott Jr., Crown City,
BillY Lundsford, Akron, DWI,
speed, $25 and costs;. Kelly $300 and costs, 10 days jail,
Tobin, Middleport, speed, $20 operator's license suspended for
and costs; Jeffrey L, lnglld, 90 days; Tina Carpenter, Bid·
Buchanon, Mich. , speed, $20 and well, !allure to control, $30 arid
cOsts; SlielJeY M, Proffitt, Por· costs; Michael Deddens, Athens,
ttand, speed, , $18 and costs;
speeding, $23 and costs; Rollins
Kevin Jewell, Rutland, speed, A. Will, Rulland, ATV on high·
$23 and .costs; Terry Sharp, way, $25 and costs, ·no motorcyReedsville, lllegal dumping, $30 cle endorsement, $75 and costs,
and costs; John M. Harper. three days jail, suspended with
Chester, DUI, $250 and costs, stx valid endorsement within 60
m.onth jail, driving under FRA days; . Jason A, Rupe, Middlesuspension, $75 and costs and six .port, reckless operation, $35 and
month jail concurrent with DUE costs, failure to comply, $50 and
cl)arge.
costs, five · days jail susjlended,
·;Robert Morrison, Oceana, Va. , one · year probation; Douglas
speed, $20 and costs; Thomas W. Young, Pittsburg, Pa., speed, $25
Shriver, Huntington, W.Va., and costs; Robert Conlin Jr. Ann
speed, $20 and costs; Howard S. Arbor, Mich., speed, $25 and
R.pth, South Charleston, W,Va. , costs; Igor Janke, Cpapel Hill.
51\fety violation, $25 and costs;
N.C., speed, $22 and costs; Dalvd
Howard S. Roth, South Charles- · Roach , Huntington , W.Va.,
trill, W.Va., safety violation, $25 speed, $20 and cos Is.
and costs; Kerry· Cox. Rutland,
Rebecca L. Cooper, Athens, .
sJ!eed, $27 and costs; ~land passing bad checks, $25 and costs
WID, Rutland, speed, · $22 and and res titution; Wendall L.
costs; Joseph Bryant, Langs- Barber, Reedsville, .assault, SiOO
ville, DWI, $250 and costs, three and cost, 10 days jail suspended
d.ys Jail. operator's license to seven, probation one year,
suspended !or 60 days; Sharon restraining order Issued; Micah
neem, Racine, left of center. $10 M. Large, Pomeroy, disposed
a~ costs; Angel Ia Curlls, Pomebeverage can In river. $25 and
n iy. speeding, $21 and costs;
costs, 16 hours of communlly
Richard L. Deem, . Tuppers service ·with litter control .or
Pialos, failure to yield half of three days jail; Mitchell Allen,
r6adway. $10 and costs; CamUia Syracuse,' DWI. $250 and costs;
s ; Morris, Rutland, dispose of three days j all, sentence susbfverage container Into the wa- pended and $150 of fine sust~r, $30•and costs.
·
pended upon enrollment and
·Harold Kennedy. Lebanon, completion of RTP school, operaW.Va .. speed, $26 and costs; tor's license . suspended for 60
. ~rry Bartlett, Covington, Pa.• days; Joseph
Whl)e, Chesafety violation, $25 and costs; shire, speeding, $20 and costs.
A)len Gay, Milan, Ind., speed, $27
Forfeiting bonds were De· aild costs; Tracy Beegle, Racine, bor,a h NicholSon. Lancaster,
SPeed. $20 and costs; Clayton speed, $55; Robert Williams,
·Brabham, Liverpool, W.Va., Little Hocking, speed, $60; and
f~hlng without valid license, $25
David Lambert. Rutland, squealand costs; Robert Epler, Reedy, Ing tires, $55.
•

w.

-.__;.-Area
deaths--,
'
"irginia
Pratt
•: VIrginia E. Wagenhals.Pratt,

Erma Szlrakl Wagenhals, all of
Mansfield, along with several
•
aunts and uncles.
She was preceded In death by
6J, of Lopg Run Road. Long her father. ·
Bottom, died Wednesllay at ·
Funeral services will be held
Wright Patterson Medical Cen- . Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Ewing
ttr. Dayton, !oUowing an ex- Funeral Home. The Rev . Law·
tfnded Illness. She was a school renee Bush will offlclalate.
t~acher.
.
Friends may call at the funeral
; Born on Nov. 4, 1928 at home from 6 to 9 p.m •. Saturday.
ll!ansfleld, she was the daughter Graveside services will be held
of Fred Wagenhals and Erpta at the Mansfield Cemetery a\ 2
!'o&lt;lrakl Wagenhals. She was a
p.m Tuesday. The Rev . Edward
rllember of the Mt. Olive Com· Gayheart will conduct the graveJi!unlty Church. ·
side rites.
1Mrs. Pratt Is survived by her
l(usband, John C. Pratt of Long
Bottom; a daughter, Shereen V.
Jtammett, a grandson, John D.
ijammett, and her mother,

I

!

UnIts of the Meigs County
EJmergency Medical Service responded to six calls for assist·
ance Thursday.
: At 6:21 a.m. the Rutland unit
went to Meigs Mine No. 1 lor
Marvin Gardner who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
a)ld at 10:16 a.m. the unit went to
Jtoute 124 for Malcolm Ingram
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Center.
: The Pomeroy unit, at 10: 59
a;.m. was called to Main Street
lor Amber Mltz who was taken to
Veterans.
• The Rutland unit, at 5:09p.m.
went to Zion Road for Cammy
fl'lorrls who was taken to
Veterans.
i'
: At 9: 31 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
was called to State Street for
Amy Wright who was taken to
Veterans, and at 10:22 p.m . the
qnlt went to Liberty Lane for
Mike Hewett who was treated bu t
not t~ansported .

Probe continues
l Deputies

I

coUectlon of pioneer toots.
Equipment used by early
women In making clothing, covers and rugs will be display,
along memorabWa of some
Meigs County's freedom fighters, and pictures of various
boats that traveled along the
county's shoreline.
The River Valley Herb Club
·will be featuring a program on
herbs, those used In the past and
still grown today , and .will be
demonstration the use of herbs.
· wtth samples to be avallable to
visitors ..An herb garden has been
planted at thesldeofthemuseum
for visitors to enjoy.
Other displays will lnclu(le
research materials and posters .
made by Meigs High School
students ·of Mike Gerlach, and ·
essays written by the fifth grade
students who participated In .
Yesteryear -at the museum this
spring. The essays were judged
and the winning entries have
been posted at the museum.
Yesteryear Js an annual event of
teaching children about the arts
and crafts of bygone . years .
cosponsored by the Historical
Society and the Retired Senior

Meigs announcemenl8
Sbrlnen .Invited
The GalUpolls Shrine Club has
Invited are shrlners to ride on Its
truck In the parade Saturday In
Pomeroy. Wearing of a fez Is
required, according ·to a local
member. Theparadewillformln
back of the old Pomeroy Meigs
Junior High School at 9:30a .m.

of the Meigs County
SherlfCs Department are contlnulng their Investigation of a
Ji'ported breaking and entering
of a trailer occupied by Glor.la
Ross, Portland.
: According to the report, the
ttailer was entered sometime
bf'lween May 28 and May 30. She '
reported a fur coat and some
groceries were taken.
: DepuUes returned Richard
~ussell, 32, Athens, from the
~thens County Jail Thursday
111orning. He Is to appear In
Meigs County Court.
!Sheriff James M. Soulsby
s11ggests that 4H ·clubs In the
county undertake a community
p~oject of placing ·five digit
·alldress numbers on residents'
llJailboxes. Utility companies,
~Uce, and emergency personnel
aft use the five-digit numbers to
locate.the residences ,

.

Divorce granted

••.,........, •..,.

H08pital news

~THE .

GRAVE.LY

__BYBTENI.

.

Member: United Pr,..i IDternattonal.
Inland DaUy PreasAII!Ic:daUOn aad the
Ohio rfewapaper Auoclatlon. National

Advertlalns Representative, B&lt;anlwn
Newspaper Salea, 733 'Iblrd A"'nue,

New .York. ~ew York 10017.

. POS'!1I!AsTER: !ielld ad&lt;ftss ehanam
to The DaUy sentinel, m O&gt;urt St.,
··I'Omeroy, Oblo-.

YW
1420-A

1985

MAKE
CHEV.
'.

ODe Month .................................$6.10
One Year ................................. m-110
SINGLI! COP\'

GM238·A

1985 .

FORD

LTD

Dolly ................................... 2&amp; Cents

1527-A

1987

DODGE

COLT

' PRICE

Subscribers notde&amp;lrlngto pay the car·
rter may remit in adv4Dce direct to
The Daily Sentlnel On a 3, 6 or 12 mODth
buts. Credit wUI be glveo carrl..- each

13795

· TERM
36

S3995

36

'

.

HOURS: 10 A.M . TO 9 P:M . 7 DAYS A WEEK

=-=·-·
.

1984 MAZDA B-2000 ~ ••• S1695
310 .......... a $ 79. 5

1983 BUICK SKYHAWK •••• S1795
Auto ., PB, PS. Sunroof, 68,000 milea.
1976
CHEVY
CHEVELLE
•••••
S395
2 DR .
1981 BUICK SKYLARK •••••••• S495
4 Speed.

, EXP

FORD

1215-A

1987

DODGE

1341-A

1986

CHEY.

856-A ·

1985

1488-A

1987

NISSAN

STANZA

1,40D-1

1984

BliCK

LESURE

$6295

36

·4

1984

MERC.

WAGON

S4995

24

1440-8

1914

CHEV.

WAGON

1329-A

1984

DODGE

ARIES

•

LANCER

S4495

36

S5495

41

$5495

36

15495 '

36
48

C-1

Belmont Stakes results

Exhibits on
display at
Meigs Library
. until June 22

.Beat of the .Bend:

Inside

Former Bedtord Twp., l'f'.8ident
tum11 100 on Flag Dfay-~age A-4
..

Aloac the River ......... Bl-8
Bualaet1 .................... Dl·B
Comlca- ................... Insert
Clualfleda ................. OZ.7
Dea&amp;ba .......
A..7
Edl&amp;orlal ••••••• ••••••••••.•.•• A2
Farm ............................D8
SporlB ........... : ........... .C1-8

'Heritll@tl Days:
Wei;lk.en4 aetivilies
conti{l~e today...Pap A·3
·J•
.

B-1

. '96.8

Vol. 26 No, 1.9
. Copyrightld 1990 .

·'

,.

u

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

S4695

24

--

CAVAUEI

1989

CHEV.

1462A

1981

OI.DS.

. CIRA

GiA-234

1989

OI.DS.

CIRA

1483-A

1

1514-A

1986

. 324-A .

$9495

60

19995

· 54

. 110,995

60

IIONCO

19995

48

CHEV.

C-10

$8695

36

1987

OLDS.

DELTA 88

'10,895

48

1510-8

1986

CHEV.

BLAZER

'9995

42

1447-A

1985

CAD.

SED. DEVIW

'

.

GALLIPOLIS - . Although
of the home of Warren F. Sheets,
landing on Rlverby's roof, !&lt;nockthere were no official reports of
lng several bricks loose on the top · 120.First Ave .. !ell. blocking both
torn.ad&lt;J!'S , Gai\lpolis and sur- left side.
the sidewalk and part of. the
round lng areas were pummele4
street
overnight.
The fallen portion of the trei;!
around 12:40 a.m. Saturday, then rolled over onto the porch of
A. giant tree was uprooted
behind Empire Furniture Co. on
. when a storm front came through the historic structure, causing
ilke a freight train , leveling trees . extensive damage. Volunteers
the 800 block of Third Avenue,
throughout the city and leaving worked all Saturday afternoon to
smashing a wire fence. The tree
landed In the Ohio Bureau of
debris blocking streets and clean up the mess , and
Services
parking lot, 45 Olive St.
Intersections.
scrambled to cover the roo( With
Extensive damage was re- a ca11vas before more rains hit.
Fourth Avenue and Spruce
ported to the city pollee, but no
Street, and Mill Creek Road were
blocked by fallen tree lllribs.
Heavy damage was done to the
deaths pr InJuries were recorded
during the severe storm: which rear of the roof of a building at · Additionally, Eastern · Avenue
was hard hll Saturday, and trees
lasted more than an hour. More the comer of Third Avenue and
than half an . inch of rain Is Cedar Street, which houses Foun· .were l!prooted on thE: Gallipolis
Developmental Center Grounds ..
estimated to have fa.llen during taln of Youth' beauty Slllon.
· Policemen on duty, along with
A portlo·n of the tin roofliu)ded··
the-storm's onslaugl)t.
Ute Gallipolis volunteer firemen,
B!lrglar alarms were set off at In between the building at 600
helped . clean .up some of the
various locations throughout the Third Ave. and· the home of
city and no major pow11i' outages Marguerite Gothard, 606 Thli'd . debris Until the city's maintewere reported.
Ave. Another section o! the rooL · nance crew could be rounded up.
As of late Saturday morniQg,
Rlverby, 530 First Ave., home · landed on Gothard's 1984 Buick In ·..
of The French Art Colony, was the driveway, causlng"ell;tenslve
the Gallla County Sheriffs Deamlopgthe hardest'hit; The top of damage to the top of . qer
partment had not received retree was sheared off.
automobile.
ports of damage, but a spokesPot'tiOJ"s of a
.·man .Sl!ld SOII)e Is expected.

1987

. 110,995.

54

CHEV.

BLAZER

48

OLDS.

CUTUSS

60

CAD.

ELDORADO

36

PATH

54

1988

GMC

1094-A

1987

196

1989

105-A
1517-A

199(s.o-i.-DCAD. '
1206C

SED. DEVI!J.E

S2§,5o0

294.7
303.9

.60

.

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE

..

CAD-GEO, INC.
'

POMEROY.,

•

•

bul1clln11: at 181 Third Ave. II laaded .. her ltM
Buick durln1 an ear)f mombtg storm 8aturda;y.
Other storm damagl! photoa are on A-3,

POMEROY - A $40,000 grant
for a ·demonstration transportalion pro]ect has been made by the
Ohio Department of Transportation to the Meigs County Board of
M~ntal Retardation.
Announcement of the grant
was made by Rep . Mary Abel
(D-Athen~). who noted that the
moneyhwJll be u!kd primarily
for coordlnatjng transportation
with other agencies .
.
The. emphasis of the .project,
according to Rep. Ab~l. will be to
assiSt client~ of Meigs Industries
·
·

1.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP.IJ The Ohio Senate and House will
meet -tlila week In separate solo
sessions, ' hoping to finish busl·
ness for the summer and clear
•

ln,getting back and forth to their
job sl\es and to medical facilities .
She described the demonstration project as Innovative and
one which should work well in a
rura.l area.
In diseusslng the grant, · Lee
Wedemeyer. superintendent, Carleton School-Meigs lnllustrles,
said that .for the clients In the
adult program who have be:en
· placed on jobs In Athens, Gallla
and even Meigs. Counties. the
biggest single problem Is
transportation.

arded.

Thts Is the second year that the
·Board pf Mental Retardation has
flied an application for a gr11nt
from the Ohio Department of
Transportation, The prltnary
grant writer;: accordlng to the
sup~rlntendent, was Keith ··
Black, former adult services
director.
Wedemeyer said tbat he Is
hopeful of coordinating transportatlon with other agencies by
using their vehicles and ex·
pressed delight at having Meigs.
County selected to do a demon·
stratlon project. ·

What's in a name? The real
Mr. and 'Mrs. ·P omeroy visit
mind was "yeah, right."
The-couple standing before me,
Jonathan and Pam Pomeroy,
POMEROY - Wllo sa)'s mira-' · said they were from Cal·Uornla,
cles can't happen! Well, maybe It butl was still a little leary, !think
wasn'f a miracle, but It certainly they were aware. of this so he
quickly reached for his driver's
was unusual.
On Thursday afternoon I was license.
Well, -they really were the
oiit taking feature pictures for
the paper and when I returned to Pomeroys, and they live In
The Dally Sentinel office there Diamond Bar, Calif., wblch Is
was a couple standing at the located about 20 miles east of Los
Angeles:
· general manager's d~k.
Wbat really struck me as
You're probably thinking, "big
strange
was that they bad no Idea
deal, so wbat," Just as I was until
that
Pomeroy,
the village, was
they were Introduced as Mr. and
celebrating
Its
sesquicentennial
Mrs. Pomeroy. Well, the first
thOUJllt that went through my· this weekend. They were simply

.. By JULIE E. DILLON
Times-Sentinel staff

~·

..

ll,l

Rod ~oclatlon's Sprlngnatlon·
jil~ ,(Ji : Klrkenvllle were told to
leave .. Tbe hoi rod races sche.
duled for Saturday and S)Jnday
were postponed until next
weekend.
Denpy_Darnell, a spokesman
for the Sprlngnationals, said
between 12,000 and 15,000 people
attended Friday night 's races
and as man:r as· I!O,OOil had been
·
expected thiS weekend.
Spiker said between 200 and 400
cars owned by campers at the hot
rod races were covered with
water. The captpgi-ound· was In a
low area while the rl!ce cars and
pits were on higher ~~~:ound .
Some ·people along the river In
Newark were also ordered to
leave their homes as a precaution when the flood gates were
opened and the water flowed

Legisl~tors return for ses~ions

T' ransporta_.ttolt . ~
. ant· ~w . . .

· . PLUS TAX.

.·

"O~ruite

. '•

PAYMENTS FIGURED

·
C
OBB
.•3D8 EAST MAIN

••

Llckllli : 'COiiJiiY , aliihorlties
of LlcklrifiCQ\IIit)O ~~~ten~rvi,11'ld il\e thl'l!at pf a dam llreak at
ces, said atiiill i 4,0oll people In~.
Buck~ Lake ap~aPi!a •to be , village )Vei"e evacuated _as· a
over by mid-Saturday after flood' precaution and another 6,000
gates were opened and pressure
people In Hebron and Klrkers- ·
relieved 011; a leaking earthen
ville were told to be prepared to
dam.
flee 11 an emergency fire whiStle
Gov. Richard Celeste declared
sounded.
a staie of emergency (n ·uckllig
•'It looks like we may escape
•County and tater toUred th!! area
here wlthO!It any Injuries ,"
to check on relief efforts. About
Spiker said. "At this point I think
4,000 people In the village of
we pre past the worst ·
Buckeye Lake were llvacuated.
Spiker said some roads 'fere
The Ohio National Guard sent
tlood'i!d and bridges were washed
out by the flooding. He noted that
.troops a9d. equipment to help
authorities from Ll.ck.lng, Perry ·· the Ohlo·Department of Natural
.~md Fairfield countieS shore · uP
Resources had. been testing the
,tile dam· with sandbags. .
area around the dam as part of a
Ali Intense rain Friday had
project to rebuild It and streng·
soaked the ground and filled the
then the wall.
.
'About 1,000 people staying In a
central Ohio lake. about 20 miles
east of Columbus.
campground at the National Hot

OPEI'UNG NIGHT -The exhibit
and Simple Forma:
Pomeroy Fumtt11 re ~d Fashlon,-11148-1880" openellfl)'iday nlghi
at the Melp County Public Library. Plct~d Ia Schu:y!er Cone,
rlfl:hl, a presenter for the exhibit, explalnbt&amp; one of the pieces to
Clarice Krauller. TJte exhibit will continue lhrbn&amp;h June 22.
'
. · ·

1
.

~

_,,;y P~Jte4 1;1~ latel'l!litlo..J!al · · Randyl !ipDcf1:1 cjep\aty,q_~or

217.6

48

' SIERRA

1468-A

1

STORM DAMAGE - Marperlte Gothard, 1118
Tblrd Ave., Glllllpolls, views the section of a lbt
roof which blew off of the old Cedar Street Markel

FIOQd .t~t eases at Buckeye Lake .

167.1
183.3

36

MuhkMcllolnc.

•

125.3'5
·155.80

275..6

N--·

Poo•

Stonn pounds city;
FAC ·s ustains· damage

·111 .3
' 121.1
121.14

60

14 Saetiono. BS

-------

'

60 .

'A

MicldJepqrt-POmaroy-GaUipoi~Point Pleasant. JuM 10. 1990

24

CORSICA

&amp;speed.

1985 CHEVY CAVALIER ... S1995
2 Dr. Auto., PB, PS. Air.

14495

1985

No subscriptions by mall permitted
afeas where bomf earrter service
available.

48

CHEV.

1195-A

week.

A Dellciouo Combinetion of Ground -~and White Rice Stuffod Into A
G...., 11811 ..._and Slmmerod In A Rich Tomato Sauce. Servod With
Hot Buttorod Corn. Homemade Col•law. and Your Choico of A Steamy
Hot Roll or fluffy H o m - Blocult. Coffee, Regulor or Decafflnatecl.
Both F,..hly llnlwed, Toa or Small Soft Drink.

1984 DATSUN

50 cents

.

SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 1990
STUFFED GREEN PEPPERS ............................. 53,99

4 Speed.

.

meroy, Ohio, by the Oblo Valley Publlahtnc CGmpany/MuHbnedla, Inc.,
Pum..-oy, Ohio 457tll, P!l. 911'J-2156. Second clus poataee paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.

Hot. Crlopy Wecla• of Gol- ltNk Frieo, C,_my Col•law, Macaroni
Salad or Bakod.leMo ond o Hot B - Roll or Homemade Biocult.

.

..

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

thrwal&gt; Friday, 1U Court St., Po-

SUIIIH)BII'TION UTES
BJ cant.- or Me(.- Boote
One Weelt ...................................$1.40

Sunday

Weather

Published every a!terliO&lt;lll, Monday

FII..AY ,.JUNE 8, 1990
CHICKEN
RWT DINNER-··-···················... •• S4.69
Dtlidouo and Ton.._ AI- White Molt Chlc:ken Fillet &amp;trlpo, Sented With

./

'

Volunteer Program of the Meigs Dal)f alock prteea
County Council on Aging.
&lt;As ot 1e:11 LIJI.)
' I
The museum will be open to the Bryce and Mark Smllb
public from 1 to 5 p.m . on C!f Blallt, Ellll II Loewl
saturday and Sunday.
Special activities of the weeAm Electric Power ............. 29}8
By Untied Preu IDterutloDAI
kend will include an .a ntique car AT&amp;T ........................ ... ...... 42%
Phlo could be In line for a .,..,
show to be· held Sunday In Ashland 011 ..•••••.•.••••••• ,....... 36 . major outbreak of severe ·
cooperation wltb the Big Bend • Bob Evans .. .'.................. .'.... 12}8 W.eather Friday night.
Car Club. ,. remote control car Charmtna Shoppes ....... :....... 10
The National Weather Service
rac_e will be held at 2 p.m . on City Hold!De Co ............... :.. 14%
said warm and mum weather
Sunday.
Federal Mogul. ................. .. 22%
conditions over the entire state .
Entertainment wtll be by
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................34% will contribute to the develUJr : .
Denver Rice at 1 p.m on Saturday
Heck's . ................................ 3%
ment of very strong thunder·
·and the Country Gentlemen on
Key Centurion ....................13* storms through Friday nliht.
Sunilay afternoon from 1 to 5 p.m.
Lands' End .... ."..................... 16
Refreshments wtll be for sale by · Limited Inc ....... ,...... ..........46%
The air mass over Ohio Friday •·.
the Society on both days.
Multltnedla Inc ...................81% morning was expected to grow
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Increasingly more · unstablfi! . .
Robbins &amp; Myers ................~% · throughout the day. An Intense
Shoney's Inc .._..................... 14~ cold front over the Plains will
Soutll Cen~J&lt;al Ohio
trl_geer the storma well QUI a !lead
T()night, showers and thunder- S t a r BaDkoe oooooooooo oo oooo o oooooooo o 2 l
storms likely. Some storms could Wendy's Inti . .................. ..... 6% of It as It approacbees Ohio.
•
A batch of early morning :;.
be severe. Low near 70. Southw- Worthington lnd .................24%
est winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of
thunderstorms that developed •
over Indiana Thursday ·night
rain 60 percent.
Saturday, partly cloudy. A
moved Into western Ohio and ':".
chance of showers and thunder•·
A divorce has been granted to bttensifled.
storms. High In the mid 80s. Terrance .B lankenship from Shir·
Chance of rain 4ll percent.
ley . BlankehShlp, and Shirley'
GRAVELY TRACTOR ·;
Extended Foreeut
Blankenship has been restored to
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Sunday thrCJUib Tuesday
her malden name of Shirley
204 Condor St.
~~~~-. OH .
oFalr Sunday through Tuedsay . Taylor In the Melp County Court
Highs will be In the 70s with lows of Common Pleas.
In the 50s. •
MONDAY THIIU FIIIDAV
I A.M.·I P.M.
. SAT. I A.M.·1 P.M.
, I..ieell8e is8u~
CLOIED MONDAVI .
A marriage license has been.
Veteraaa Memorial
Issued In M'lgs County Probate
Thursday admissions - BerCourt to Richard Lee Collins, 37,
nice Bailey, Long Bottom.
Ravenswood, W.Va. , iuld Donna
Thursday discharges Mae Miller, 35. Sandyville,
Gladys Tuckerman, Thomas
W.Va.
Frye, and Carol Taylor. ·

(VIP8 .U . . .)
A Dhloloo of Mdbnedlo, be.

Weekend
Speciale
.

.

Severe
weather on
•
way to Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

'

EMS has six calls

Stocks

Celebraiion. J.eontlnued p:-om pa_ge 1

Meigs ·County Court

'

Friday, June 8, 1990

Pomeiuy-Mickleport. Ohio

passing through town on tbelr
way to West Vlrglnl.a . . ·
Jonathan Pomeroy aald he has ·
always known there was a town
called Pomeroy In Olllo but he
had never visited here ~ore. So,
while Mr. and Mrs. ' Ponneroy
were visltlni 111!1 mother In
Detroit, Mich., he decided to
change their travellnl plans a bit
an«! go to lhtlr deaUnaUon a
different way. He planned tbli as
a aurprlle tor hla wtte.
·
Well, ·the aurpHie wu on them,
becauae when they arrived In
Pomeroy they dllcovered Ute
cek!bratlon was going on so they
(See WHAT'S IN, on AI)

the decks ror a recess until after
the November election.
The Senate plans a Tuesday
sessiOn at 10:30 a.m. The House
will meet Wednesday to complete action on any bills returned

war on drugs this week, because
William Bennett, the federal
drug czar. wlll address a ]oint
session of the House and Senste
at 1:30 p.m . Wednesday.
Bennett, the guest of leglsla· ·

lawmakers worked Saturday In an
attempt to fashion a comprehenslve drug-fighting bill acceptable
In both chambers. But Democrats declined to attend the
meeting. Indicating there are too
many unresolved Issues to get
the job done this week.
Legislative leaders had hoped
to pus a long awaited bill
slgnaltna the start of the &amp;tate's

control strategy.
The Republicans who met
saturday with representatives of
the medical community and the
county.!lrosecu(9rs said they wlll
offer a compromise to a S~?lect
House committee chaired by
Rep. Wayne Jones. D-Cuyahoga
Falls .

by~:c~:r~~;:::::~

::~~~~e[~~-;:~!~~!~!·~~
President Bush's national drug

•

tq)l:~rd' thE! Ucklng R.lver .

·rb'e OHio · Hj ghwa~ Patrol ad-

vis~ motorists to avoid using

Interstate 70 ·east of Columbus
because of fears It wouid become
flooded ,.I hen the floodgates were
opened.
The state ot emergency was
the latest In weather-related
woes for Ohio. Five more counties were declared disaster areas
Friday, bringing to 11 ,tile
number eligible for state and
federal assistance because of
•
tornadoes and flooding.
Celeste asked ihe State Ct\ntrolllng Board Friday to make $1
mUllon avallabje to assist varIous political subdivisions · !il
repairing public property dam·
age caused by . tornadoes and
floods .

.
contmue

Trial to

'

Monday
WINFIELD, W.Va: IUPI) The trial of a Galllpoll~ , Ol!IO;
man charged with murder In the
shooting death of a Putnam
County sheriffs deputy will be
resumed Monday after opening
arguments were presented
Friday.
•
Rpbert Gray , 32, Is charged
with kUling deputY John Janey,
who was .working as a pnv•te ·
Insurance investigator when Janey, allegedly discovered Gray '
trying to. set fire to a house In a
rural area.
The owner of the house. Ray·
mond Huck of Hurricane, already has pleaded guilty to
second-degree murder in · the
Aug. 17,.19891ncldent. ·
Putnam County Prosecutqr .
O.C. Spaulding told the jury Gray
had spread gasoline In the house
and was ready to light It when
Janey, on a stakeout, surprised
h.lm. Janey tried to handcuff
Gray but he escaped and shot the
deputy, the prosecutor
maintained.
Judge Clarence Watt admitted
a taP~: of the last transmissions of
Janey before his shooting, which
lncllcated Gray was Inside the
bouse pouring gasoline. Admit·
dng the tape waa resisted by Joe
Thomas, a cletense lawyer.
Thomu admlta that Gray
killed Janey but Aid the lnvesd·
gator never entered the house,
Gray chliiP,d hla mind ·about
settinc the bouse afire and wu
trytnc to leave wben Jumped and
beaten by Janey with a flublight. The defendant killed Janey
In self-defense, Thomu told the
jury.

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