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PIIQB

12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomen~v-Middlf)Ot1. Ohio

Local n~s briefs ..·. - contlnued from page 1
departments that was awarded Rural Community Fire
Protection grants along with the Ohio Fire Academy, totaling
$81,225."
Administered by the Ohio Department of Natural Resources
Division of Fores try, the grants aid In upgrading equipment or
In organizing newly established !Ire departments.
Sen. Long and Rep. Boster said that according to the Division
ot Forestry, many of Ohio's rural !Ire departments assist the
Division of Forestry with !Ire protection for forest and
grasslands.
.
The grants were made available through the U. S.
Department of Agr iculture's Forestry Service ·through the
Cooperative Forestry Assistance Act. The grants provide
federal 1)1atchlng funds of up to ·$3.000 to communities with
populations under 10,000.

•

Meigs EMS hils 5 W'ednesday calls

•

Scattered rain falls across the nation
By Unlled Press International
Scattered thunderstorms frequented North Carolina and
northern Mississippi early
Thursday and rain doused eastern Georgia, southern Florida,
southeast Texas. eastern Colo.
rado and the Nebraska
panhandle.
The precipitation was light,
however, amounting to less than
one-third of an Inch over any
particular area.
Early morning temperatures
Thursday dipped to the upper 20s
and near 30 degrees over upper
Michigan, central Vermont and

central New Hampshire.
On Wednesday, thunderstorms
hurled heavy rain and fierce
winds In Texas, floocllna San
Antonio streets durlni the morn·
lng rush hour and blowing down a
~all In an apartment complex ,
while temperaturft .rose across
much of the nation as li cold front
pressed south.
The National Weather Service
said the storms dropped 2.5
Inches of rain In a •s-mtnute
period at Wimberly In south·
central Texas. Some streets tn ·
San Antonio were flooded and
hailstones measuring 1 ~ Inches

Units of the Meigs County· Emergency Medical Service
responded to five calls for assistance Wednesday.
At 2:50a.m. Rutland was ·called toHysellRunRoadfor Donna
McDonald who was trans ported to Holzer Medical Center .
Racine. at 11: 17 a.m. went to Portland for Violet Ritchie who
was taken to St. Joseph Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va. At 11:51
a. m . Columbia Fire Department was called to TR 14 for a
vehicle !Ire. The vehicle belonged to Jeff Mayle. At 6;09 p.m.
Racine responded to a call on Fourth St. for Herbert Shields who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at 7:50 p.m.
Pomeroy was called to Main St. for Allison Lee who was
transported to Pleasant Valley Hospital In Point Ple;~sant.

By United Pn!Bs lnternatloaal
or showers Sunday and Monday.
Sooth Central Oblo
Highs will be In the mid or upper
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a 50s In the north and In the upper
'!ow near 45. Winds mostly .60s In the south Saturday and
southwest less than 10 mph.
Sunday and ranging from the
Friday: Partly cloudy', with upper 60s to the upper 70s
' highs between 70 and 75.
Monday. Early morning lows
Extended Forecast
will range from the middle 30s to
Saturday through Monday
the middle 40s Saiurday and In
Fair Saturday, with a chance the 40s Sunday and Monday.

Squads have 3 Tuesday calls · .

. Pomeroy: Court News

w.va.

Ten persons forfeited bonds
and four others appeared and
were fined on speeding charges
In the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds on the charge
were Charles Dailey, Rf?edsvllle.
S46: Barry Marshall, Racine,
$44; Wayne Hoffman, Glenwood,
W. · Va., S44;
Shannondoah
Hinkle, Ravenswood, $\19; Monta
Metzger, Pomeroy, $45; Tracy
continued from page 1
Snyder, Greenfield, $47; Carla
Smith, Jackson, $46; Larry Har·
only for a selecf few."
Minter.
graves. West Columbia, W. Va.,
Rep . Daniel Troy, 0 "You might be surprised,"
$48; Patrick 0. Day, Bidwell,
WIIlowick, questioned a provJ. replied Minter. "There might be ·
$45; Judy Cook. Mason, $50.
slon in the governor's plan that pupils In some districts who
Fined on the speeding charge
would allow parents to choose would want to go back Into
were Sonia Jackson, Gallipolis,
where their children would go to Cleveland for some things that
$43andcosts; RogerManley,Jr ..
school, as long as racl~l balance are available there."
Middleport, $20 and costs: Ml·
is not upset.
William Coulter. chancellor of
chael Harris, Columbus, $20 and
·'Do you think there'd be the Ohio Board of Regents, Is
costs; Glna F'oilrod, Pomeroy.
anybody left In the Cleveland scheduled to testify next week.
$45
and cos·ts.
School District ?" he asked ·
In addition to the speeding
charge, Carla Smith forfeited $63
· each on charges of tra!!lc light
violation and no operator' s
CLEVELAND 1UP II - There each. while 5,308 players selected
license.
was no winner of the top prize In four of the numbers to win $75
Other forfeiting bonds In the
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Wed- apiece.
nesday night. Increasing the
Ticket sales totaled $3,352,631
jackpot to $6 million for Satur· while the total prize payout was
day's game.
$509,100.
None of the tickets sold lor the
In the accompanying Kicker
midweek game listed the six
game. there was one winner or
winning numbers of 3. 9. 17, 21.34
the $100,000 grand prize. The
and 40, a lottery commission winning Kicker combination was .
spokesman· said Thursday. The • 626872.
jackpot was worth $3 million,
In addil ion to the one ticket
However, Ill players picked
that had the Kicker numbers In
five of the numbers to win $1,000 order. six had th~ first five.
which pays $5,000; 47 had the first
four. which pays $1,000; 506 had
the first three, which pays $IOO:
and 5,120 had the first two.
Dally stock prices
q .
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
ofBiunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

Lawmakers...

. Super Lotto jackpot goes unclaimed

court were Debra Fry, RaveQ.S·
wood, W. Va .. $63, open con·
Iatner; Estel Carpenter, Belpre,
$43, Illegal lett turn; Gregory
Rager, Middleport, $43, defec·
live muffler: Fae Craig, Pomeroy, $63, traffic light violation;
Steven Hood, Pomeroy. $43, stop
sign violation; Brady Johnson,
Rutland, $43, Illegal left turn.
I .
\
Fined In the court were James
Pierce, $63 and costs, expired
registration; Terry Michael,
Pomeroy, $63 and costs, driving
under suspension: $263 and costs,
leaving the scene of an accident;
and $375 and costs, DWI: Ear 1
Goode, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
expired license: -Roger Hoschar,
West Columbia, W. Va•., $63 and
costs, failure to register, and $63
and costs, expired license plates:
Mary Rlffer, Syracuse, $63 and
costs, driving on a temporary
permit without a licensed driver;
Terry Carpenter, Columbus. $25
and costs, failure to appear; and
Robert Clark, Pomerqy, $375-and
costs, DWI.

·Am Electric Power ..... .. .... .. 26%
AT&amp;T ...... ......... .................. 33\'.
Ashland Oil ...... ........ .. ........ 42%
Bob Evans,.... ... .................. .l5%
Charming.Shoppes ............. .14%
City Holding Co ........... :....... 15
Federal Mogui. .. .. :..... ........ 51Y:.
Goodyear T&amp;R ............. ... .. .48%
Heck's ........ ... .. ,................ :.. 'h
Key Centurion ................. .. .13'Vo
Lands' End .. ....... ....... .. ....... 31'h
Llmltei:l Inc .... ....... ... ...... ....30%
Multimedia lnc .................... 95
Rax Restaurants .................. 2'A
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... ......... .16'A
Shoney's Inc ... :..................... 8'h
Wendy's Intl. ................... .-..... 6
Worthington Ind .... .. ............ 22
(Multimedia Inc. first-quarter
net $.37/ hare vs. $.09)

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions - ·
Evelyn Stanley, Pomeroy: Bes·
sle Heck, Portland: and Herbert
Shields. Racine.
Wednesday discharges - Gal. die Roberts, Clair Boso, and
Lydia Harbert.

Cemetery fees due
• Fees for cleaning up and
mowing tots at the Beech Grove
.• Cemetery are due now. The
charce Is $5 per grave lor upkeep
and summer nlowlng and pay·
menta are to be made to Pat
_.1boma at Po111eroy VIllage Hall,
''Main St., Pomeroy. 45769.

Granted judtJment
In the Melp County Common
Pleaa Court. BancOblo National
Bank hal lltell IJI'aDted a l udg·
Jlllllt apllllt Jeff L. Davilln the
IIIIOWit ., ........

-

1,118

•

8

Keith

110

'

NOW

995 ' .•
.

9,118

1989 FORD TAURUS

.

$75.00
sa5.oo
$165.00
$185.00
$235.00
.$246.00
$59.00
$69.00

LO·BACK CHAIR
HI-BACK CHAIR
LOUNGER
2-S-AT GLIDER
3-SEAT GLIDER
CANOPY SWING
END TABLE
COCKTAIL TABLE

$345.00
$362.50
$10.00
$90.00

• 13000, 4 doors, aedan, lront
Wii.Miclrlve. Scyt.,aireond.,luto.nns.,
PB. al wheel, crul18 oontrol, racial
AMIFM r.dlo, Mr window defog.

NOW

1988 FORD F·150

WAS

~~:30-8:00 ·-

I

992-3871
Downtown Pon11roy,

10,118

.1

•

,1989 PONTIAC
.GRAND PRIX
Stack , t 3040, 2 doors, coupe, lront
wheel drive, 8cyt., aircondJ auto. trans.,
PS, PB, AMIFM radio, raCiilt tims, raar
window dafog.

.WAS

'1

...

NOW

1989 FORD TAURUS
Stock , -13030, 4 doors, sedan, lronl

- I drive, 8cyt,, air cond.. auto. tran&amp;.,

PS, PB, till wheel, cruise c:antrol, , _
wildow dafog., AM/FM radio.

WAS

NOW

,495

10,411

8

1988 FORD F·150 , .

'9,995

•1,111

1988 CHEVY 8-10
Sloc:k • 93072, • cyt., 5 apMd lllnd.
hna., PS, PB, AM/FM radio. racial tires,
short wide !)ad, ,.r 1tep bumper,
· GIUIJ81, lldng mar glaoa.

I

WAB

•11,418

HrJ!jbqnd

James D. Whlte,marrJedtothe
former Shelly Fox of Middleport,
was among the casualties 11f the
explosion abOard the battleship
USS Iowa Wednesday.
White, 22, a native of Long
Beach, Caltt. , was a gunner's
mate lhlrd class, and had been a
member of the Iowa crew for
most of his nearly four years In
the Navy. His enlistment would
have been up In August, although
.Mrs. White said he had ,Planned

NOW

~

•

by Ohio Department of Highway workers. Tile
project Is expected to lake several mo'n ths to
compklte and as the work pro~esaes traffic will

Iowa blast casualties
She .received notification that
her husband had died In the
explosion at 5: 30 a :m. Thursday
morning from two officers of the
U.S . Navy.
According to Mrs. White, plans
are being inade for services at
Arlington National Cemetery.
She said Thursday a!lernoon
that the Navy Is making arrange,
ments ' for the trip there for her
and .kveral members of her
family.

to reenlist,
Mrs. White, who had · been In
Norfolk, Va. with per husband
until he left on the latest cruise,
said that she returned' to Mlddle-1:
port earlier this month to be with
relatives while awaiting the birth
of her child In June.
. ,
Mrs. White met her husband 18
months ago In Norfo~. Va. while
there visiting her twin sister,
Sherry Fox Kinnan, who ls also
In the Navy.

RepresentaJive
Boster marries
•
Columbus auomey

Local news bnefsl------.
EMS has 5 Thursday calls

Count~ergency

Meigs
Medical Services reports five calls
Thursday; MtJJ:c:rtat !2:41a.m. transportedMavtsMcCalln
from an auto accident on South Third St. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 1: 54 a.m. to Nye Ave. lor Courtney Hicks
to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 8; 27 a .m. to Cole St. for
Daisy Sisson to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracu~e at 6: 39
p.m. to Rose Valley lor Franklin Imboden to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 10: 07 p.m. to New Lima Road .
for Roger Holman to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital.

Complaints probed by sheriff

-

Melga County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that
complaints are belltl Investigated by members of his
department, tncludlna a complaint from Scottie Smith, Chester.
On Thursday eventna, Smith reported that a rock thrown from a
rldlna mower as It waa belna driven acr01s an old gravel pile,
had aone tfu"OIIIh a window pane In hla garage and struck and
clllpped the Windshield of bill988 Oldsmobile that was parked
tnatde. The cue II belna sent to the pJ'OieCI!Ung attorney.
Jeff Sable, Syracule, IetM'ted Thursday momlng around
1:28 a.m. that a aubject had attempted to steal a battery from a
11elllcle that was parbdbealdebil (Sable's) home In Syracuse.
Rella Sawyers, Racine, reported that 10111etlme Wednesday
morntna. an u.allnown sublect bad poured 11111•r Into tile gas
tank other vehtcll. Tlle vehicle was parlted at her apartment In

Racine.

-.

2 Sections. 14 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newll)lper

the Senate to reinsert. an emergency clause. which could get the
committee started as early as
June.
Rep. Marc Guthrie, D-Newark,
said Ohio Is one of the few states
where pollee officers do not have
torequalifyon the shooting range
every year.
Guthrie said a $5 hike In court
costs for allexceptparklngtlcket
offenders would pay forrequalltl·
cation, jailer training · ~nd the
fingerprinting system enabling

the state Bureau of Critnlnal · ·
Identification and Investigation
to keep track of 1.7 million sets of
prints.
Guthrie said a similar system
was used to catch the "California
night stalker" and the murderer
of an aunt of the governor of
Georgia . f
.
The bill was approved, 89-4.
·ReP . James Buc hy, R ·
Greenville, one of the opponents.
said mayors' courts In small
communities cannot tack on any

more court costs and thus will
have to . pay out ot operating
funds. ""It's a tax incr~ase." he
said.
Rep. Jerry Krupinski, D·
Steubenville, told colleagues that
gasoline prices have risen In his
area by 21 cents a ga llon in two
weeks.
He questioned why, If the
Exxon Valdez oil sp111 were to
blame, all companies raised
their prices and not just Exxon.

Rutland man is taken into
custody on assault warrant
David Priddy, 35, of Corn behind the residence In styro·
Hollow Road, Rutland, was ar- foam cups.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby and
rested Thursday at his residence
as Meigs County Sheriff's depu- Don L. Snyder, Investigator for
Meigs County Prosecuting Attar·
ties executed a search warrant.
Tjle search warrant . was ob· ney Steven L. Story, went to the
tal ned . through Information re- residence to keep · the house
ceived from Chief Deputy James under survellla nee while the .
·search warrant was being ob- ·
Soulsby.
·Souls by had gone to the Priddy tallied. The search warrant was
residence to serve Priddy with an prepared by lh!! prosecuting
asSljult warrant from Meigs attorney and signed by Meigs
County Court, and saw mari- Common Pleas Judge Frederick
juana plants growing In and Crow III.

Sheriff Soulsby advises that
Investigator Snyder was Instrumental in execution of the search
warrant and that contr.aband
w~s removed from the residence.
Deputies Jeff Miller, · Rick
,Hysell and Charlie Rife, along
with Rutland Marshall John
Spires, assisted In the search._
Priddy remains In the Meigs
County Jail on the assault warrant from county court.
The case wUI be presented to a
Meigs County Grand Jury at a
later date.
·

•''

--

•

---~-+~&lt;o

Lee and Lloyo;l Middleton, . technique for producing vinyl
founders of the Mlddlepton Doll dolls which resembles porcelain.
Co.. of Coolville, have been In 1984 with Innovative dollselected as Ohio's Small Busl· making techniques In place, they
'n ess Persons of the Year for 1989, ·began to aggressively marketing
according to an announcement In their products, which have been
Columbus today by Frank D. well received by collectors.
Ray, district director of the U.S.
By the end of 1985, sales were
Small Business Administration.
$1.3 mUIIon and the Middleton
Mr. and Mrs. Middleton Doll Company employed 35 peo- .
started their doll manufacturing pie. Sales have continued to soar.
business In 19!Klln the basement In 1988 the company posted $4.5
of the Trt-County Banking Build· mUllan In sales and employed 125
lng In Coolville. Lee and her people.
husband were the company's
In the summer of 1989, the
only employees that first year . Middleton Doll Company will
They began by making porcelain move Into a new manufacturing
dolls, but soon developed a facility which w1111ncrease their

0

production capabilities. 1989 Is
projected to be another banner
year with employment up 25
people and Increased sales.
Director Ray concluded, "Lee
and Lloyd Middleton are a
perfect example of -t he economic
Impact that talented, Innovative
and hardworking Individuals can
achieve In a community."
The Mlddletons will be honored
at the Ohio Small Business
Awards program ln Columbus on
May 24 at the Hyatt on Capital
Square, after thelr return from
the Washington D. C. Small
Business Week celebration, May
7 through 13.

of Middi'e;~;~M:Oman was Three area residen~ ~ver

amo~ US~

•11,1•

......

( J

....... ....

Ohio

'

Lee, Lloyd Middleton are named
Small Business Persons of Year

NOW

Stook 196091, 4wheel drive, 6 cyt.,
aond. ollnd. tr.,._, PS. PB, APNFM Slock I 945t t, 2 doors, 8 cyt., PS, PB,
11111o. radial am. 112 ton pickup, short AMIFM recto, radial dm,.112 ton pickup,
long wide bed, rearotep bu,.,.., aux.
wide bed, ... llllp bumper, sliding
fuel tank, gau!IIIJ.
.
WAS
NOW
WAS
NOW •

FREE
DEIMR1
Monuy·hturdlly

terly reports on Medicaid expen·
ditures to s.ee that they are in line
with the budget.
Medicaid Is a $5 billion line In
the two-year budget, and the
Legislature already has had to
appropriate $77 million extra to
keep It In balance" in 1989.
Rep. JoAnn Davidson, R·
Reynoldsburg, one of the oppo·
nents, said she Is concerned wit !roo.
the proliferation of oversight
comrillttees. "We pay an awful
lot of people at the Departmental
Human Servifes to keep track of
these things,' said Davidson.
She also pointed out that by the
titne the oversight committee
begins work the Legislature will
already have appropriated money for Medicaid for the nexttwo
years.
Jones said he hopes to convince

S1ock I 13070, 4 doors. sedan, fnln1
' 4cyt.,alrcond.,auto. nna.,
PS, PB, AMIFMradio, racial tires, bucket
seall, rear window defog.

•11,118

· Colors: Aknond,
Pebble, lrown, Slate, llue, Huntw G..-, White.
..

OPEN

,, By LEE LEONARD
measure also sets up an auto·
UPI statehou~e· Reporler
mated fingerprint Identification
COLUMBUS_ After two false
system for critne-flghting. _
starts, , the Ohio House of Repre·
-A resolution calling for a
sentatlves approved Thursd~y a
congressional Investigation of
joint legislative committee to the nationwide, across-the-board
oversee the skyrocketing costs of gasoline price hike foliowing the
Medicaid, the state's program of Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska.
Medicaid oversight cleared on
health care for the indigent .
But skeptical House members a 73-18 vote. It had been delayed
declined to give ell!etgency sta· when members sought a cost
Ius to the bill, mea!ling the Joint estimate.
Legislative Committee on Medl·
The cost estimate furnished by
cald Oversight will be unable to the Legislative Budget Office
start work untll90 days after the was for $331,000 next year and
proposal Is signed by Gov. $303,000 the following year.
.- Richard Celeste.
Rep. ·Paul Jones. D·Ravenna.
: _ Before House members ad- . chief sponsor, said the 'panel Is
journed for the weekend, they needed to review Medicaid ellgl·
passed and sent to the Senate:
blllty rules, monitor reports
-A bill requiring that local required by the Ohio Department
pollee ol!lcers requali!y annually of Human Services. hold periodic
with their firearms . The same public hearings and make quar-

.WORK BEGINS ON BRIDGE - Sanding,
palldlng and aome general rail repair on the
Pomeroy-Muon Bridge got underway thill week

WAS

lEG. IDAil

.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, ·April 21. 1989

1989 PONTIAC
GRANDAM

11,111

S!Dck I t3010, 4 doors, sadan, frant
wheel drive, 4cyt.,lircond., aulD. trans.,
PS, PB, AMIFM raclo, bucket seats,
rear window defog.

$265.00

•

1988CHEVV
BERETTAGT

. 1989 FORD TEMPO

$247.50

Page 4

8

110,995

NOW

SAlE PIICD

Partly cloudy tonight. Low In
Salurday, partly cloudy.
near 70.

House adopts Medicaid oversight' committee

I I oycr/Aaaders

I

Pick 4
7684

Copyr!pllted 1989

•
Pre-Summer Sale
Beauty ••• Comfort ••• and Durability
Casual Outdoor Furniture at its

$1.3 0.00 .

658

Vol.31. No.243

t 13060. 2 doors, frant wheel
. air oond.. auto. trans.. PS, PB,
radial tires, budonseall,

Thanks For An Outstanding
lob Well Done!

$112.50

Pick3

•

1989 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX -

On baseball team
Joey Snyd~r . A i988graduateof.
Meigs High School is playln~ on
this years baseball t~ for
Cincinnati Bible College. Sny&lt;ter
a pitcher and centerfellder,
pitched a three hitter his first
time to the mound this year. In a
5·4 win ·over Asbury College he
struck out 6 to lead the Gold'en
Eagles to the victory.

complex In Martindale, a Cald·
well .County town of about 200
people some 20 mues southeast of
Austin, City Secretary Jimmie
Kitchen said. A mobile home was
blown off Its concrete slab, and
three velitcles were damaged
when tree limbs fell on them, she
said.
·
'

•

M.C.B.M.R./D.D.
ADULT SERVICE AND MEIGS
.INDUSTRIES STAFF

Stocks

In diameter were reported north
of Austin. lorec:ulltralald.
- Austin received l.a. Inches or
rat'n In the slx-bour period endtna
at 8 a.m. EDT Wednesday, tile
weather ~ervlce said.
The storms spawned strong
Wtnds that bleol- out one wall of
the 14-untt Quail Run apartment

Orioles
blank KC
Royals, 2-0

------Weather-----

The Meigs County Emergency Medical Service responded to
three calls on Tuesday .
At 2;37 a.m. Rutland was called to Salem Center for Lily
Lambert who.was transported to Holzer Medical Center. At~; 49
a.m. Syracuse went to Amberger Road for May Holter who was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at 12:50 p.m. the
Tuppers Plains squad and fire truck resp(Jnded to a vehicle !Ire
on Hawk's Hill. The vehicle belonged to Randy Fryar. Extent of
damage was no reported.

1

Thundly, Aprl20, 1988

·--· -- . .,. .

_...,.._ .

- ... __

State Rep. Jolynn Boster (D·
Gallipolis) will take office as
chairman of the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio Monday
· morning In Columbus, and do so
with a new name.
Boster married Columbus· at·
torney E. Wtinam Butler on
Monday In a small cMI cere.mony In Worthington, according to
a spo)!esman from her Leglsla·
tlve office. Butler Is associated
with the law · firm or Hunter,
Butler and Samuels In Columbus.
Accordt"ng to the spokestnan,
Boster will Ulll! her mai'rled
name when she assumes her role
or PUCO chairman Monday at
9:45-.,m. She waa named to that
positiOn April • by Gov. Richard
Celeste.
Her resignation from the state
Hollll! of Representatives takes
effect Monday. and she will then
.a ssume chairmanship ~eOhlo
utility ratemattlna body~
Tile Houlll! Dem&lt;icratlc Caucus
hopes to lind a replacement for
Boster as soon as possible, the
apokesman said. ·•
.,..,..

.

.
from recent a~to _mishap m Flonda
By Jean Warner
Spedai.To OVP

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va -It
was more than an accident It was a
·life and death snuggle: Life won.
Three members of a prominent
Point Pleasant family are well on
their way 10 recovery after a narrow
~ with death recently in a
tragic' car-truclc accident in Mel-

boume,f1a.

• Merlie Shinn, of Point Pleasant.
daughter-in-law . Marianne
Shinn
and a four-year-old
grandchild, Josie Shinn, both of
Cincinnati,JR "patefuiiO be alive
and have the hope of fuU recovery"
after sustaining numerous injuries
that occurre~prU 3. They wUI
belong 10 the family of the tate
John A. Shinn, D.D.S., who practiced dentistty here fc. a nuniber of

her

years.
Maiannc (MIS. John A. Shinn
Jr.) apparendy was the most
seriously injuled. Her injuries included a severe concussion that left
her unconscious fc. four days and
nigllts and in the intensive care tmit
ofHolmes Regional Medical Cen·
ttz for 10 days.
She also had several ribs brdcen,
a lung to collapse, a vertebnle in·
jury, about a three-inch cut on her
neck and numerous bruises.
After spendin¥ IWO weeks in the
Melboumo hospttal, she was flown
back lo Cincinnati, wit= she was
acbiaod to Christ HolpilaL She is
eqlOCied to be mkned 1a1er this
week after uncleqoina extatsiw

doctoB are eXJ11lCting a complete

until the child's father ll'rived there.
reco~," it was learned by tele- Mrs. Arcuri wentro her"daughlct;'s '
phone from her mother-in-law.
· bedside 1c
· Wednesday. Police,
Merlie, who is a member of Th- Merlie sai thought there' would be
Endie-Wei Garden Club and "loves someone ocally to notify, but
yardwork," also has some d&amp;ys of reached Shinn on Josie's infonnarest and recupetlllion ahead of her. tion.
She has a broken right shoulder and
Neither of the women could
wrist.
remember detllils, but were rold by ·
Presently, bel' ann is in a cast police that a heavy dump truck had
from her wrist to elbow and she is struck them. Marianne was driving
wearing a sling. Sbe not only sus- and Merlie was in the bade seat betained the arm injwy, but she also hind her and Josie wu beside her
sustained bruises around her bead, in seat belts. Merlie noted that if
seven stilchcs for a cut on her right the child had 'been in her car seat in
eye, a severe nose bleed and a bad front, she surely would have been
bruise and CUI on her left leg.
. lril.led.
On impact she was kiloclced un·
When the vehicles collided about
conscious for about five ho\II'S, but 5 p.m.. the Shinn latc-moclel car
regained consciousness in the was knocked 31 feet duough the
hospital emergency room. A week air, flipped over and landed on its
afu:r the WieCir: she was moved inro top on a railroad tnick.
a convalescent home, where sbe
Police arrived quicldy at the
stayed until Monday: After closing scale, as well 11 aevetal others.
her condominium, lbe left with a When it was detected that a train
sister b her home in Dziuk, Ala., wu coming at a fast rate of speed,
' until she can make the trip 10 Cin- they tried to SlOP iL k Wll blowing
·cinnati and then finally here.
fur a croaing and blates were ap- ·
: tittle Josie escaped with only Dlied, but bystanders said file was
bruises tllld. small curs. but wu ad- 1lyina from the wheeli and the train
mined 10 the hospital b a couple could not 8IDp.
of days. The child Wll iblc to hold
\bluntcers got the· car off the
her composwe and givo police the lnll:lt and i• wu milled by the train
necessary lnfonnation wbell they by four feet The people ~ still
could not fiDd {JIIIICIIIId such in In dlo lwiiiDd Wft!Cb&amp;e..
the I8Dgled wrecap.
Merlle Sllinn rellltJI that people
The brave lildll IPrl lllld police 11ave· .,_ "woaderffaa" to bet. ID ,
ber falber's name, addrela IDd lhow U1U(:aa. Ml Willi to lhMt Ill
pllane nwnha' after beiDa ·p died fA dlo be people ill Point M " I
· out the blct window of ber ud liape ID be bailie 10111110 J •
paidJnncher's c:ar by a v11o IIIII llllllllow I iipjlllt I I .... Ia

wu

:::-dill

the wo .
women
ladltctrMNIWJconocl«a llilid believed ID Ill delL
Sbinn alerted adler flmilJ 111Mtben in Ciocinn"' ltlll lte with blJ r.d.-ID....... ~Atcud, lew 1D Mo1bolno dlo Dell
day. Mn. Shlan Wll !!IIIDiaed to
~

tesli!lg.
Mn. Sbiun is an avid golfer llld
·bas competed in tournaments in
this many dmea. She bas
mutitod hero lbo ID like tcasobs .
from Howard Saunden of Gallipolia, who Ia I ciCIIO famUy trieiKl
Aldtou&amp;b may be I loq limo, . illy in her ~~·-·· 100111

:It

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Wllllll..tpqas.ll-.llotof

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. . . . !lditP ID iL 41 &amp; "
llllr •M sa
11:

1181

Ql m. 101

Qr..., AlL,
Sbllll 111J Ill PI I'

'l'umlllnecd
()blo, 45140.

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Th.e Daily Sentinel
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ROBERT L. WINGETI'

..................c::I.CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Publisher

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General Manager
PAT WHITEHEAD

A111stant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Prl'ss International Inland
Dally Press Association and thl' American Newspaper Publish·
ers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to edlllna and must be signed wlth
name, add,ress and telephone number. No unaiJned lettert will be published. Letters should be ln good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Bush nearing
100 days report card
By HELEN mOMAS
Ul'l While House Reporter
WASHINGTON- President Bush Is nearing his first 100 days In
office and thl' report card ls mixed.
Thl' yardstick of the lOOdays for a new presldl'nl todemonstratehls
accomplishments began with Franklin D. Roosi'Velt, and whether
they like It or not. successivE' presidents havl' been subjected to
crlllcal judgment In that tlml' period.
Bush aides believe that the prl'sldent has mad!' real strides,
particularly hi achieving a · bipartisan. agreement to continue,
humanitarian aid to the Nicaraguan rebels and a two-party accord on
the budget.
· ·
Conciliation rather than confrontation is Bush's preferred
approach. ln contrast to his predecessor, Ronald Reagan, who used
his veto ppwer as a constant threat and who did little to reach out to
the Democrat~ ·opposition In Congress.
Aides also cite the president's . initiatives in education and the
admi~lstration plan to salvage savings and loan Institutions as
additions to his laurels.
In addition, they noted his proposals on Nhics In government, the
child care tax credit, and the signing ~f the whls,tle-blower bill as ,
progressive measures.
Whether he deserves a pat on the back for the handling oft he Alaska
oil splll remains to be seen. There has been some criticism that the
president did not act fast enough or as~ss the magnitude onhe
damage on the environment. But he is now using the full resources of
the federal government to tackle the problem.
On foreign policy. Bush has yet to fully define his approach to
East-West relations in view of the changing scene in Moscow and
Eastern Europe.
Major foreign policies, including nuclear arms negotiations. and
strategic defense policy a·re stlll under review, which has prompted
complaints from Soviet· leader Mikhail Gorbachev over the delay that
·
has kept U.S.-Sov(et relatiOns on hold.
"Why should we change when we're winning," said a top
administration official · in resP&lt;Inse to suggestions that the
ad"'lnlstratlon Is stalling.
But he hastened taadd, "Maybe' we shou·ld ·
'
reach out more." . ·
,
Thrre is also Bush's conviction that Americans did not vote for
ch~nge. If they had, Gov. Michael Dukakis of Massachusetts might be
in ·the White House.The feeling in the Bush camp Is that people liked
the Reagan approach and believl'd they had prospered economically
underlt.
Eo no dramatic shifts are in the picture. The presi(jent has had no
major crises directly affl'ctlng the United Stales, pther than the
Al!iska oil spill. that require "ne"( thinking."
:.
·B ut there are a raft of headaches awaiting dramatic solutions,
in¢ludlng the nation'·s crime and drug problems, so widespread -that
they demand the recognjtlon and help of the fed,eral government.
,Drug czar BIU Bennett has produced a plan for fightlng the
cotaine-crack epidemic in the country, but it will take time a tid much
m6re money before there Is a reversal of the .addiction and crime
· profile.
·
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:Bush seems to be a president who wants to billld slowly but surely a
f&lt;jundatlon for a "kinder. gentler" government.
·Reagan made strides quickly because he came in with his hatchet.
: HA- felt his mandate was to chop down the federal government and he
' p~oceeded forthwith, ina1nly by appointing administrators and
directors of agencies who shared his philosophy that the best
government was the least government and that social programs. if
ujey existed at all, were the perogallve of the states. .
·Reagan dedicated his energies his first year in office to winning a
tax cut. Other Issues were put on the back burner until that goal was
aphieJed.
•J3ush apparently still is trying to figure out his mandate but is
ailamant on his campaign pledge of no new taxes.

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·Congress spending more

111 Courtli&amp;reet
l'omeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE IN'l'Bali!:IITS OF THE MEIGS.MASON ABEA

I

·Berry s World
..

WASHINGTON - .M the tax- '
payers a walt their annual pluck·
lng, the prodigals In Congresaare
scheming to extract new taxes
and Increase their lavish spendIng at the same time that they
prl'tend to cut back.
They operate tbe world's big·
gest shell game, hiding expenditures under a bewll!lertng array
of shells, conflderll that the
· politician's handj ls quicker than
the taxpayer's ieye. So prosaically, gradually and Invisibly do
they extract the money, tbat ~
taxpayer never appreciates t~
extent of the rip off.
A stick-up man Is moredlrect.
He gets the vlcttm's cash by
waving a revolver. Congress
peaceably and effortlessly ac·

complllbea the same · en!l by
decep~ budgeting. Here's how
the g e Is played.
.
Cori ress uses accounting
tricks to make spending In·
creases look like spending reductions and tax hikes took like tax
cuts. The sh!lght-of-hand begins
witl1 a planning budget called the
current services budget. It lnva·
rtably calls for more spending
and higher taxes.
"I:hen, Congress happily
slashes the pL'.nnlng budget and
· boas is that It has saved money.
By juggling the figurE'S, the
planned budget Is decreased, but
the actual spending Is Increased.
Members of Congress use the
same trickery to pOrtray tax

r.=
..
r'"'~peR 'Jlii$ STaTe's ToUGH

Set-rretJCiNG L.aWS, i I'I~Ve To
$et-IP YoU To PRiSoN. TRY To

5TaY OlJT oF TRouBL-e lJt-lfil.
we BuiLD oNe.

Friday, Apri121, 1988

'

By STEVE RUTKOWSKI ·
UPI Sport&amp; Wrlt~r
For !lie second coitsecu live
night , the New Yor~ Metsneeded
just one hit to wipe out a df'(lcli
and collect.a victory.
In Thursday nlght's4-3vlctory
over Chicago, the Mets received
the key blow In the seventh Inning
from Gregg . Jefferies, who
singled up the middle to score
KI'VIn Elster with the tying run. .
Len Dykstra later scored ihe
game-winner on a groundout by
Mookie Wilson.
The previous night, pinch hit·
ter Lee MazziiU blasted a thrl'e·
run homer In the eighth inning to
lift the Mets to a 4-2 victory over
th~ Phillies.
'Th1s Is the kind of game that
we've won a lot of (In the past),"
Johnson said. "We won't do
anything, then 'they come in
bunches,"
.
Elster walked on four pitches
by reliever Calvin Schiraldi to
open the seventh Inning. Pinch
hitter. Mazzitll fouled out and
Schiraldi was replaced by Mitch
Willlams.' 0-1, who walked Dykstra on four pitches.
Jefferies, who entered the
game In the seventh when Tim
Teufel injured his hip, followed
with a !lingle up the middle to
scoff' Elster and send Dykstra to

Jack Anderson and VanAtta

lncreaaa tO"''he public as tax to reduce the deficit each year
cuts. Now tllly're trylne to . and balance the budget by 1992. ·
convince the pilbllc that a shor- The spendthrifts In Congresl
tage of revenues Is to blame fQr have overcome this problem
the Pikes Peaklt.
. It and that simply by shlftlllg the allells on
. '
morl' taxes are
·
needed the table.
Instead
of
bUdgeting
the moto brlDg the def Cit down to a
ney they want to spend, , they
maliJigeable mound.
This Is a monstrous lie calcu· · underwrite loans and' back thefl!
lated to Justify higher taxes so with government guarantees.
that Congress can continue Its The loans are kept off the budget
reckless spending. The truth Is and are not counted as part of the
that taxes have not been cut, that public debt.
The government bas guaran13 tax Increases were enacied
during the Reagan years and that teed more than $4 trillion in .
revenues shot up nearly' 90 loans, debts, crops, pens~ns,
percent.
·
bank deposits and foreign InvestMeanwhile, with gre!ltfanrare, . ments. This oft-budget flnancln&amp;
Congress pasSI'd the Gramm· gets around ·the GrammRudman Act, which is supposed Rudman restrictions. Yet, the
oft-budget guarantees are stUI
part of thl' crushing financial
burden that w..tghS down the
taxpayers.
J. Peter Grace, an lndefatlga·
ble crusader against government
waste, has called on Congress to
stop the calculatl'd confusion and
adopt a truth-In-budgeting law.
True financial disclosure will
·show that the urgent need Is to
cut spending, nu.t raise taxes. As
the first step, Grace has urgl'd
Congress to eliminate the horrendous waste that the Grace
Commission uncovered.
Footnote: J aclt Anderson Is
co-chairman with Grace of Cit!·
zens Against Government Waste
which has already eliminated
$110 billion In waste. So fa~. 1~4
members of Congress have
joined the Grace caucus which Is
pushing more reforms. The campaign has the support of nearly
five million Americans who bave
expressed their opposition to
government waste. Those who
wish to add their voices can wrtte
to Citizens Against Government
Waste, P.O. Box 2300, Washington, DC 2001:!.

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DOUIILE PLAY_· BaiUmC!re shorlstop cail Rlp..en Jr. leaps
over Kansas Qty's Bo Jackson alter throwing to first base lo
complete a double play started by the Royals' Bob Boone In the
second lnntns of Thursday. nlpt's game In Bald more. ( UPI)
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,COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII
This week's Ohio Fishing Report
as compiled by tlie Division of
Wildlife:
· Ohio River
Recent rains could suspend the
while bass fishing In the ~hlo
River. Try the tributaries for
largemouth bass and the back
bays that may remain dear for
crappies . .
,.
Sou lheast
Hocking River: ' · This Qhlo
River tributary is a good place to
catch hybrid stripers. Anglers
are catching.ihls cross between a
striped bass and a white bass at
the dam "In Athens. The Athens
dam is the first Impassable dam
upstream from the Ohio. Some
crappies are also being caught.
Ross Lake: Ross Lake dffers
excellent . largemouth bass and
· bluegill fishing. Electric motors
only are permitted. Largemouth
bass meas)lrlng 13 to 16 Inches
are protected and may not be
kept. Ross also offers good
redear sunfish fishing.
Central
·Delaware Reservoir: Current
test netting shows excellent
numbers of crappies. Fish the
northern portion of the lake and
use minnows. Some channel
catfish are being taken on night
crawlers.

record of 556.5 pounds in the 242
pound class. His tliree best lifts of
the day totaled 1,410.5 pounds.
A business administration rna·
jor at Concord, Starcher has
played football for two years with
the ·Mountaln Lions.
He is the grartdson of Mr. and
Mrs :·Geroge E. Starcher. Pome·
Mrs. Gaynell McAbee,

Starcher at that competition
als1&gt; broke the state squat record

.

Cong. Clarence Miller

The federal budget deficit has
To help break .this standstill
been near the forefront of (&gt;lAbile and expedite action In this
nomic Commission, tne under- policy. Ukewlse, the Republi·
policy debatE's In Washlngtoll·for regard, last year Congress
taking utterly failed.
cans would not publicly propose
much of the SO's. However, while created the National Economic
Last month, the Commission tax Increases that defil'd their
almost everyone agrees that the Commission. .T his Commission
unveiled Its long awaited work party's position and that: of the .
deficit must be reduced, It seems was premised on the Idea that
which In reality consisted or two , President.
.
that no two people can agree on nelth the Congress nor the · separate rePorts, one by the
Compounding this problem
exactly how to reduce it. This President .could ~ ex(l!!Cted to
Demot:ril\s ·Pn the Coinmlsston, w.as the fact that e; federal court
problem s~~;:ms irom'the fact that run the 'risk of a ballot box
and one by thr Republicans. Both ~ullng prOh1bited the Commisreducing the deficit mean either backlash that could result from
of these reports agreed only on sion from meeting In private.
cutting federal spending or rals·
proposing the specific spending !l&gt; the central single federal pro· Thus, the ability of boih sides to
ing federal revenues and both of cuts or the revenue increases 'gram to be eliminated.
hammer out a compromise bethese policies are polltlcally that are necessary to reduce the
When all was said and done the hind closed doors was precluded ..
painful to pursue.
deficit. So, this responslbiHty
Commission told us nothing that So, in the end, the Commission
Red':'clng federal spending would be haJlded off to a
we didn't already know and itleft was stalemated In the same way
means cutting the assistance commission that was lndependthe discussion of budget deficit that Congress has been.
received by many segments •of . ent of Congre~s and the
reductions right back where it
Personally, I have always had
soc{ety, and every group with a . Preslden t.
started. h
serious reservations about the
stake In federal spending Is
This commission, ' away from
The failure to the Commission use of commissions to makl' the
politically organized to protect the spotlight of public Inquiry
to provide any solutions can be decisions that the President and
Its programs. Raising federal and the pressures of the ballot
credited to many factors. First of members of Congress were
revenues Is, an even more poilU· box, could develop an ertecthre
all, several Members of Con- elected to make. At the same
cally distasteful alternattvl'.
plan for reducing the deficit.
gress of both political parties sat time, when the country Is faced
No one wants to pay more In
Congress learned the potential
on the Commission. Because of with a politically divided govern· taxes and almost no Member of value of this type of commission
this, the commission was ham- ment as It Is now, such commlsCongress or the President Is In the early 1980's with the
pered by the same political . sions can sometimes break the
eager to go on record as advocat- National Commission on Socl'l
considerations that blind Con· logjam that would otherwise
ing a · tax Increase. As a result, Security Reform. As a result of
gress as a whole.
· exist. Such waa,pot the case with
efforts to reduce the federal that Commission's ·work, the
That Is, the Democratic
the National Efl_nomlc Commls·
budget deficit have remained at Social Security System was put
members of the commission slon, so the ball ill now backlnthe
a standstill, pitting the White on a secure financial .i~c~sls for
were dlalnclined to publicly pro- court of Congres' and t~e Chief
House against Congress, Demo- many years to come. However, In
pose spending cuts that would be Executive. We can only hope •
crats against Republicans, and the case of the National Ecocontrary to their party's stated they both are up to the task.
liberals against conservatives.

SETS " NEW RiJCORD - At the Man, W.Va., Teenage
PowerUftlng Cha111plonshlp contest, Eddie Starcher, (raduate of
Wahama, tiroke the stale squat record of Ml pounds and set a new
record of 5~6.5 pounds In the 242 pound Class. . · ·

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Sports briefs
So~cer

_~_al-'-te_rs
Determining risk gets riskier__Ro_be_r_t
,
now can Identify them · at the
Although the Environmental years produced only eight cases
levels of one part pel' billion,
Protection Agency earlier this in which detectable levels or Alar
trillion and even qoodrilllon.
year declared its intention to ban were found.
Other technlcai advances allow Alar by 1990, NRDC last month
But the highly rl'garded Consuus to understand ·threats that
reformulated · Its warning fn
mers Union said It found Alar In
always existed but never before dramatiC tpshlon. It asserted almost three-fourths of the apple
were Identified. Lethal new
that the relatively low body juice samples and more than half
dangers - ranging from powerweight of young children coupled of the raw apples It testl'd.
ful narcotics to AIDS - emerge with their relatively high conWho are . we to believe? CU Is
with disturbing regularity.
sumption of apple sauce, apple clearly more credible than an
Finally, muoll"of the evidence
juice and other apple products Industry trade association- but
we must coJtJider to make
made them esp.ec I a 11 y caution and concern ought not be
rational 4ecflllons and deal reavulnerable'.
..
supplanted by panicky action. As
listically with hazards' I~ conflict·
The Processed Apple Institute tHe problems become more dl·
lng and ·contradictory, as the
responded by claiming that tests cey, rational decision-making
example of apples treated wih
of .4,623 samples of apple sauce becomes crucial.
the chemical growth-regulatQr
and juice during the past two
damlnozlde, marketed as Alar,
lllustra tes.
The risks It poses have been
known and publicly discussed for
By Un !ted Prel8 International
several years. Scientific studies
Today Is Friday, AprU 21. the lllth day or 1989 with 254 to follow.
In the mld·1980s demonstrated
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last 11,uarter.
that when damlnozlde-treated
The morning star Is Saturn.
food Is cooked, the thermal
The evening stars a&lt;e )\fercury, Venu~ and Jupiter.
breakdown of the c hem leal
Those born on this date are under the sign of Taurus. They Include
creates small amounts or · German educator Friedrich Froebel, founder of the klnderearten, In
·uMDH, a known carcinogen.
1782, English novelist Charlotte Bronte In 1816, James Starley,
Recognizing that legitimate
English ll)ventor of the geared bicycle, In 1830, n•turalist and author
. concern, many processors and
.John Muir In 1838. German soclologla't Max Weber In 1864, actor
· dis trlbu tors of apples and apple Anthony Quinn In 1915 (age 74), BMtaln's Queen Elizabeth II In _1926
products subsequently Informed
(age 63), comedian, actress and director Elaine May In 1932 (ale 57),
growers that !hey no longer
actor-director CharleS Grodin In 19:!5 (&amp;le 541, and actl"'!!s-alnaer
wanted fruit sprayed with Alar,
Patti LuPone In lH9 (&amp;le 40).
wblcb enhance&amp; redllell and
;ncreues storap life.
On this date In hlltory:
AJmoat two years ago, a aenlor
In 1836, with the battle cry, •'Remember ~Alamo! '' Texan forces
attorney with the Natural Reunder Sam Houston defeated the army of Mexican Ge11. Antonio
10111'1:11 Detenae CouncU noted In •Lopez de !Iaiita Anna at San Jacinto, Texat.
. a Jlewapaper COllllllll that In 1986 ' Ill 19M,
Air rorce planel bepD fiylllf French hoopa to
"co01umen learlllld that some Incloc:lllna to retntorce Dle~~bleaphu. The city later fell to co111111111111t
beeGmel overwllelmed by .at · auppllel of appill! Jldce may hav.e VIet Mllth forces.
·
.
.beell tainted WI~. darnJJJozld8, ·, 1111975, Np)'Wn Van-ThleU l"'!!lped u~ldent"'fSoutll Vletaam
lltd'"'•ll"'d~
llclelltflt wllo 'Uid to be able to wll1c:ll wu piWiOIIIJy linked to l after di!IIOIIIICllli the UDIIIId Statet II MfruatWOI Gay, 1111
~~act potltlttal antrm"·• at caaaer In tilt CllldiiCW by the ·replacement, Traa Van Huq, prepll'ld lDr ~ tallll wltii.NorGI
lllttlt1ltte."
tbe I4IYfl Cll . . Plfll* mlllln Natlollal
:Vletllllll u coiiiiiiWIIIt foi'Cel advaac:ed 011 S.lltla.
. ·

starcher · displays the
trophy he won for taklnJ' tint
In the APF W.Va. State
Teenage PowerUftlnl! Competition at Man, W.Va.

•

Nottingham Fores.t, · Liverpool's opponent , In las\ week's
tragic FA Cup S!!mlflnal a.t
Sheffield that cost 95 lives, will
play 'its schl'duled English league
game Saturday at Middlesborough. Most other clubs also will
resume action ·,de~plte the
league's announcement that all
teams would · be 'lliowell to
postpone thlsweekepd's match..
as a mark of respect. ' ... JeanPier.re ~apln of M:arsetlle, the
leading .scorer In France's first
, divisiOn, :wlll'be oqt of the lineup .
for the World CUp qualifying
match April 29 againSt Yugoslavia because of a throat Infection.
France has little chance of
gaining .a bert!i In next year's
World Cl,ip, •
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O'Brien to head
banlwood team

. The Daily Sentinel ·

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Publ.llbll!d every atternoe11, Mondlly

DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - Jim
tbriJIIb ftlday, 111 'COurt St., PI&gt;
m•oy,IJI!Io, by the Oblo von.,. P\lbO'Brien, an assistant coach with
lllhlq ' ~puJ:ultlm.edla, Inc.,
tbe;' N~w Yprk Knlcks, was~ ~·
Obi!&gt;~
~Ph. Bta·21tll. fie.
COnd ,c lut ~ra,e·~ld at Pomeroy,
named Wednesday as head basOhio.
•
ketball coach at the University of
Dayton, which tired Don DonoMember: ·uatted Preoo Ioternatloaol,
lnltm4DallyPreaiAUoclottonadthe '
her last month after 25 years In
Oblo~~=•lloa. Notional
the post.
A,dm-tllbl(l:
tattve, Brubarp
Netr_...
.., 133 Tbtrd Avenue,
' O'Brle·n. who assumed the post
Now Ybrk, NOW' York t0017 .
. Immediately, said at a news
conference he would brlllg a
to '11&gt;o D!IIIY -et. Ill O&gt;urt St.,
''running, pressing style'' to the

-crt.

TOday in history

~--­
Oldo-.

The approach may appear
''helter-skeller'' to fan~ at flr,t,
!)u t "the more people become
accustomed· to the style, they'll
realize It's controlled chaos," he
said.
.
·
' 0' &amp;len, 31, has been a11
assistant with the Knlcks for the
past two seasons. Before thai he
was head coach at Wheeling
&lt;W.Va.) Jestllt ..Collece for five
seasons, where he had a record of

--

I

74-69.

Wheeling Jes ult II also the
school where O'Brien bepn his
coaohJDe career, working as
as~tant coach there In 1974·75.
He rno\'t!d to Pembroke State
University In No~tlt Carolll)a,
also as an assistant, for the
19'75o76 season.

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.10

Buckeye Lake: Buckeye Is a
very good early bass. lake. The
best areas are the many channels, bays, and coves. These
areas will warm first. Try
Cranberry Marsh using artificial
night crawlers and small crank
baits.
Southwest
Paint Creek: This lake Is an
excellent producer of crappies
during the early spring months.
Fish around the standing timber
and along the shorelines In five to
seven feet of water. A few
largemouth bass are being
caught. Small saugeyes are
being taken In the tallwaters.
Lake Loramie: Exellent bullhead catfish fishing Is reported
at Lake Loramie. Crappies are
bel~g caught In three to five feet
of water on minnows.
Norlhwest
,
Sandusky River: The walleye
run should peak this weekend;
however, recent rains could '
hamper fishing conditions. The ·
water temperature· Is 51 degrees.
The standard lures are jigs and
twister tails.
Maumee River: The water
temperature is 54 degrees and
the river Is muddy. Flshlngls fair
with the better areas being from
Orleans Park to Waterville.

:..~

'

"":"
..•••
•.

In the tying run and then sCored
the winner In the eighth Inning on
an l'rror by third baseman Ron ._ ..
Gant to help Houston snap a · '
four-game losing streak. Bass
doubled off reliever Paul Asse(
namcher, 0·1, and later scored
'·
when Gani was unable to field a
ball hit by Craig Biggio. Danny
Darwin. 1·0, earned the victory
,.
and Dave Smith earned his
'
second save.
Cardinals 5 Expos 2
.:
\
At St. Louis,' rookie rlght'·
bander Ken Hill scattered five
hits and drove In a run to J;iost his
first major league victory. Hill
1·0, was recalled Wednesday
from Louisville of the American
'
Association when Joe Magrane
was put on the disabled list. He
'
allowed two runs In seven Innlngs. Todd Worrell pitched two
innings for his third save. Randy
Johnson, 0-1, took the loss.
Montreal's first in five games.

..

'

APPLICATION FORM
Name _ _ _ __ _ _ _ A&amp;e,_ _...,Qrade (Melt

'

Yea~
·~:..__

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Phon• No._ _ __
•

Shirt Size,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Shortts.__ _ ____;sizes S·M-L-XL)
Parent's-Guardian's Sipature - - - - - - - - - -- - Send ChiCk to: CoiCh ~oster
Phone: 446-2704
Meip H.S.
(eveninp)
Pomeroy, OH. 4~769
•Signat'ure weiv• •nv accident claims-and givM staff the right to ad~
mlniotw CPR if nooliod.
•Payml!nt due Juno 19. but pteau oend application in if planning to
attend.

'

an&lt;\ ~udlth Starcher, ' West Co·
lumBia,. W. ya .. and a sophomore
at Concord State College, Athens,
W. Va .. took first place in the
APF West Virginia State Teen·
age Powerllftlng Championship
col)'lpe'tition held at Man, W. Va .,
on April 8.

Commission, no substitute for substitute

CHELSEA, Ala. (NEAl- The
public school sys'tem here In
Alabama's Shelby County may
have recently established a reo
cord for the shortest health scare
In the modern history of an
lncreas lngly j lttery society.
On a mid-March morning,
lunchroom managers In schools
throughout the county were Instructed by the school system's
chief nutritionist to halt .t he
dlstrlbu tlon of all apples. By
sundown the sameday,'however,
the apples had been reinstated to
the cafeteria counters.
Although a similar sequence of
events occurred In hundreds of
other schOol systems across the
nation, In most of those cases·two
or three days elapsed between
the banning of the apples and
their return.
'
These events are troubling
because they constitute a break·
down In the Informal risk asaesament system that untU now Jiu
worked generally weU In an era
of terrorist . threats, cancer
scares lind assorted other
dangers that sometimes seem to·
be prollteratlni· at an aweSOIIIe
rate.
, People general!)' muall!r a
IJ'tat deal of a&gt;IIID!On In
performlq the rllk·beneflt ana·
l)'lel neeeailary to make eount-.
lea major and mtnor declllou
dilly -. but the aPIIe aeare
OOIII!Itullld a laJIR that may
PIIIIP a period In wldc:llaoelety

three Chicago runs with a dO\Ible
and single.
Darryl Strawberry tryed to
catch Mitch Webster's double In
the third Inning and left the game
after the l!'illng complaining of
tightness In his right shoulder.
In other NL games, Phlladel·
phia pounded Pittsburgh 9-4.
HoustonedgedAtlanta4-3andSt.
Louis defeated Montreal 5-2.
PhliUes 9, Pirates 4
At Pittsburgh, Von Hayes
smacked a two-run homer and
·· Mike Schmidt doubled twice.
Ken Howell, 2-0, and relievers ·
Greg Harris and.Todd
Frohwlrth combined to three·
hit Pittsburgh. Mike Dunne, H,
was the loser. Schmidt's first
doubl.e was thl' 2,218th hit of his
career, enabling him to pass
Riehle Ashburn as the all-time
Phlllles hits leader.
Aslros 4, Braves 3
At Atlanta, ·Kevin Bass drove

Ohio fishing report

'

.

third. Wilson hit a groundl'r to
second baseman Ryne Sandberg,
who stepped on second for the
force but threw too late to get
W~!son at (lrst.
I knew I was going to sit a
couple of days and not going to
play. Butlwasgladtoget Into the
game," said Jefferies, who had
been benched In favor of Teu~~l
with a .128 batting average. I
jVBS getting bored olfihe bench. It
was a great feeling to }tit the ball
and see It go up the middle."
"I was happy Jefferies gol a
big hit," Mets Manager Davey
Johnson said. ·"It breaks the
Ice."
Dwight Gooden, 3·0, pitched
seven Innings . for the victory,allowing four luts and three runs.
Roger McDowell pitched two
innings for his first save. The
Cubs went hitless after the third
inning.
.
Cubs ·Manager Don Zimmer
defended sending out Schiraldi
and Williams for starter Mike
Bielecki, who allowed four hits
and two runs, one earned, In six
innings.
" ! did everything from the
seventh to the ninth Innings I
wanted to do."· said Zimmer,
whose club lost Its fourth straight
game. " It just didn't work."
Andre Dawson drove home all

Eddie Starcher captures ·first Rainstonns may halt white
place ,in ~we:rlifting -contest b~s fishing in Ohio River
of 549 pounds and set anew state
Eddie Starcher, siln of George

.

, ··-·"""', f9!l#llf lhM
Olf

Sentinei-Page-3

Mets edge Cubs; Astros, Phi.Js triumph

. Page-2-lhe Daly 8&amp; ....... ' .
Pomeroy-Midclsport. Ohio

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Ohio

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Com.men
.

··~

Sports briefs
· Football ..
New , York Giants defensive
back Adrian White has been
arrested after allegedly smashing a glass In a woman's face in a
bar. Authorities In Orange Park,
·F la., just ou\:slde Jacksonville,
said Whltl' was charged with
aggravated battery . White is a
former University of Florida
player who has volu111eered 'his
services 'for anti-drug and anti·
alcohol .prograniS ai various
schools.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES 8t SERVICE
204 Condor St.

. ''

Pomlfoy, OH.

Sprl•l t. S••••r llo.,.

·.

OPEN -AT lttltl lllllY
9 Ul. - S P.M.
SATI.AT 9 A.M.-1 P.M.

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM
__

~..o-....;;;....;;...;;.._

..

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•

1985

.,

,, .

Fotd EScort •••••••••••••••• s2495

PS. PB. 4 sp"'d.

I '

1985 Chevy Celebrity Wgn•••• S4295
,. ,Loaded.

.

.

·"

·

· 1984 Ford Ranger ••••••••••••••• 5329 5
4 speed, good conditron .

·1.983 Ford Fairmont ........... ~ 169 5
·1 Dr., auto., PS, PB. air.
'

STOP IN AND SEE OUR NEW LOT

'

�..~ ...:..r,..,.:-.r:lilt:•r.. .-; .. • ..~ ..r. ..~....-:.,....,....-:r.r.,.. w •1t. r ...... .-:

•

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,.: •: ...-: .-:, ....... 't ;

..

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Paga 4 The

f

Marauders slap I 0-6
loss on Viking nine
By DAVE HARRIS
Matt Baker and Terry Felkls.
ROCK SPRINGS Matt
Vanaman scoredtomakelt7-4on
Baker slammed a three-run
another Viking passed ball,
homer to turn a 3-1 third Inning Kevin Oller than doubled to score
deficit Into a 4·3 lead, and the
Baker and FeUds with the fourth
Meigs Marauders scored 5 runs
and fifth runs of the Inning and
in the fourth inning eroute to- a
give the Marauders a 9-4 lead.
10-li victory over the Vinton
Meigs scored their last run in
County Vikings Thursday night. · the sixth Inning. Baker &amp;ingled,
The Vikings jumped out to a 2-0 · stole second and went to third on
first i!lning lead on a Marauder a wild pltch where he scored on
error and 4 straight Viking hits.
another Viking passed ball.The
Keith Mattox singled with two
VIkings scored three unearDed
outs In the Marauder second; Ed
runs In the seventh but the .
Crooks than blooped a single to Marauders held on for the 10.6
right wltb Mattox going to third. victory.
.
Crooks than stole second and on a
Baker led the Marauder hit
delayed double steal Mattox stole parade with the home run and a
home to cut the Viking lead to2·1.
single. Oiler had a double, and
Wes Young led off the third
Young, Vanaman, Mattox and
l!rlth a walk and stole second,
Crooks each singled. Ray led the
tvlth one out Vince Vanaman
Viking hitters with 2 singles and a
~eached on an error, that set the
double. Terry Fields went the
stage tor Baker's towering Home route to pick up the Win, giving up
Run well over the left-center 8 hits. while striking out 5 and
field fence to give the Marauders walking 3. Alder was the losing
a 4-3 lead. With one out in the pitcher giving up 7 hits, walking
fourth Young ·w alked and stoie 6, ami striking out 10.
second, JeffMcElroywalked a'ftd
The Marauders now 5-2 in the
Vince Vanaman singled to drive TVC will host the Federal Hock·
in Young.
lng.Lancers Friday.
'
McElroy than scored on a Meigs ...................... 013 501 lllO
Vinton ..................... 201 100 3 6
passed ball 11nd after walks to

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flj'\"f'lllld ld .\UIYII.II, i: Jl p.m.
Phlllldt&gt;I,N~ al Dt&gt;trol, lt:fll p.m.

Boltton •I •••IUWII, 11:38 p.m.
M" Nn.. onllt CIIIL·II(G, II: J8 p.m.
Utah 11t .,....._ I:H p.m.
Hnullllon• Phwll~. t:•p.m .
St·allll• 1111 LA ni,....!O, II: at p.m.

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.

Aprtl U - sc . IAIP at ('tllnao. 11: 33

p. m.

Redwomen lose two to walsh

x•AprU 38- lbl c1110 l&amp;t St. Lo111ti,
p.m .

7 : 11~

/'lmyctw Oh·llllon
Lo,. Allle:IIPI'I \Ill. Clllpl')'
(r~ttpr)' ,,.,. wrw. I-ll
1\prl Ill - fMI..,-, 4, ...... All ~PI"" 3

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11: 11 p.m.

Auto .• PB. PS. air.

1983 Ford Escort ••.••••••••• S129 5

Auto.• air.

1-973 ford Torino·•••.••..••• S1195

own•. auto.• air, PS.

Elcamino••••.S1695

.

WOCll'lbin&amp;ton lined a ~-1 pitch.
to left field, scorlll&amp; Rl~n for a ,
2-0 lel4. Tile hit cave Wortblng·-.
toa etpt RBI In 14 I""".
;:
Billard, who dld, IIOt allow an; .
extra-b- bit, wu •llelped by :
·double play, In the flnt and;.

ESPN to ail- .haft Suriday
·.

telecast from a hotel. The net·
work plans remotes from around
the country, Including one from
Dallas, where coach Jimmy
Johnson presides over his first
·draft.
....
Mel Kiper, who for six years
has predicted and analyzed the
choices for ESPN, said the
Cowboys, who have the No. 1
pick. can't alford .to look past
UCLA quarterback Troy
Aikman.

Complete

line of Vtget1ble

• ladcllng Pl•nta. Azal&amp; Fruh T,... Ger•nlum1.
Hanging BMiceta, Shrubbery
1ndTr-.

_,,,.s

.... IAI.YtAIITO , , .

•bbard's Greenhouse
..

t92·S776

SYII~O·O

•Fast Serwke
Prescriptloft Prices
Pre.Cription Drugs
•Full Line of Generics Available
. . d lns.,.aiiCI Carries Accepted

MEDICAL EQUIPMENT &amp; SUPPUES

,,.. . ., . , to .......,.••••,.,.
.lraAWJ, II
lwllaald, Syrac...,
.... lwan, W. Ya.
H you W, y.,a ._" ._. PIIYhll too much fer
yowr , ...a,t1on1, tlva us a cal. We w.l l quote

Will h Mewing Effective April 17

, .. ~Ill

Nil••••

Continuity of Care, Inc.
'

SEE US

AT~

'

NEW LOCAnON .

507 Mulberry Heights

.
.

·'

.

~~-~--------~---------------1
I
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! . s3o~ OFF
l ANY . . 0111AISFERIED

·I . . . ~.....

so. ,,..

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!.:---------------------~----JUil brltle In any new priiOrlptlon or pr11Cflptlon bottle
from any . . pMmleay with till above cCIUpon · eilcl
rtelllve ti.OO off- lhatly low pracrlptlon prloeell

.PIISCIIPIION

Friday. April21, 1989
P8ge-6

•

t. highlight of Heritage Sunday

n.ext week where they have been
Chorale with Jan Dougherty as
1u oe observed by the Middleport
asked to perform at the Amerl·
accompanist.
Heath United Methodist Church can SIDJIS benefit for homeleis · A love oflerlng will be taken to
help delray the cost of the trip to
will be a performance by the Rio children.
Grande College and Community.
The musical selections will Washington, D.C. The general
College's Grande Choral at 7 include "Children of. the Ught", public Is Invited.
p.m. Sunday evening.
"Kyrle", "Assurance", "Roek
'A lamUy style potluck dinner
As explained by the Rev . Soimy Me Lord", "Take These Wlnp". will precede the musical proZuntga, pastor. ..the program of "Jesu". "Joy of Man's Desir· gram at 6 p.m. Those attending
religious and contemporary lng", "Go Now in Peace", and are asked to take a covered dish.
music Is the group's offering to "Soldier Boy."
Table service, meat, rolls, and
·their supporting public before
Dr. John Dougherty Is advisor beverages wllllfeprovlded by the
they leave for Washington, D.C. and direct01 of the Grande Eleanor Circle.
.

•

··Community Calendtlr

CI'QZEN OF THE YEAR- Yonlece Miller, Bl1 Bend Clvltan
Club ~~~Cretary, presea&amp;a the 1888 Citizen of the Year award to
James. R. WI~ Syracuae, a&amp; a recent dinner meeting held a&amp; the
Betsy Mills Club In MBI'Ietta.

(

Ja1nes Hill nam.ed.
citizen of the year
James R. Hill, Syracuse. is the
recipient of the 1989 Citizen of the
Year award from the Big Bend
Clvitan Club.
Hill was one of five honored by
the Athens. Belpre. Big Bend,
Marietta and Pioneer Ladies
Civitan Clubs at a special dinner
held at the Betsy Mills Club in
1
Marietta.
·'

Mana'g er of Pleasars Restaurant. Hill Is a member of th('
$yracuse Village Council, president of the Middleport-Pomeroy

Lions Club. zone chairman lor
the Boy scouts fund raising
committee. member of the Meigs
County Tuberculosis Board. as·
soclate patron and trustee of the
Racine Chapt&lt;'r. Order of the
Eastern Star. Chapter Dad.
Order of Demolay, chairman of
the advisory board of Meigs High
School OWE . member of the
Loyal -Order of Moose. member
of the Ohio Real Estate Association and a member of the Ohio
High School Athletic Association
as a class II basketball official.

Bradford Church of Christ
adult class has spaghetti dinner
A potluck djnner was held
recently wht'n the Adult Class of
the Bradford Church of Christ
1
met at the church.
Wilbur Rowley had the opening
by saying a prayer and the
business meeting was conducted
by Nancy Morris. president. who
also had devotions by reading
Uncertainties and Certainties.
Francis Hysell gave the secre·
tary's report and Gerrl Ughtloot
gave the treasurer's report. A
money donation W_!IS given to a

bereaved family in lieu of flow·
ers. and several other projects
were discussed.
The next meeting has been
changed to May 5 with a potluck
dinner at 6 p.m. Delores Frank
will have devotions.
Others ·attending with those
already mentioned werE' Jim and
Jackie Reed. Everett Lightfoot.
Harless Frank, Tressie and
Harry Hendricks. and special
guest Sy Ivia Blake.

King family celebrates birthday

lOW OPEN FOI
SP. .G SEASON

'

Heritage Sunday ·events slated

second llllllnp. })qJIY Tartabull· :
had three bits for KaniU City; j

At The Prelcription Shop·
PreHrip,lons Are Our Buslnessl
.

x· Aprll tM- Sl . Louili Ill flllcap, K: J5

p.m.

the bases.

over tbe Kalllas . City Royals. and •tretcbed bli hitting streak;
Balfard beCame the first ,Balll· to 13 games.
•.
more Oriole pltcber to win bll
'1t'saahamewecouldn'tsco.re· first th""" AprD s11lrta since any runs the way Saberhapn·; ,
Dave McNally did so lJI Wl3.
pitched," &amp;aid Royal• Manapr :
'"l'bat aurprlled me," said tbe Jnhn Wathan. "Ballard kept us :
left.baJid..., wbo •allo wu born orr balallce. He mixed speedl, •
"
tDI llvel In M N lly'
welL The Orioles have a lot of .
an~ s of 8ll11np.. "Dave
c ~ ands YO"""
hometown
- ·"''YI
- '"ho
.. are doln"• the job'.
1 are &amp;clod ftle!lda. It's not only well. T~'ve llfOWD up fut." •
themoauatlifybqrrameforme,
Elsewhere In the American .
but · probably JIIY best, too. Le8J1Ue, Mlnneso11l thu'Tiped De- •
Winning f-0 pme Is a oonft· troll 7-2; . Boston rlppo.d Cleve-· ;
dence buUder tor me."
land 5-2; ~d Seattle dOwned_;
He struck out three and walked Chlc&amp;JIO 5-2. •.
,
two In ouiduellJnr Brei Saberha·
TwiM 7, Tlpn I
.
&amp;en. 1·2, who IICatlll!red six llltaiJI
At Mlnl)l!a'polls, Carmen Cas· ·
a comp~e-jrame effort. Cal IIIIo's RBI double broke a tie In .
Rtpken Jr. and Craig WortbiDJ· tbe el&amp;bth'l!nd the Twins raiUed ,
ton provided the offense with for five runs to down the Tigers. •
run-scoring singles. ,
Castillo has 10 RBIIn his last nine ·
"My fastball was moving well. games. Reliever German Gon·
down and away," said Ballard, l!8lez, 2·0, worked 1 2-3 scoreless
whose ERA dipped to 1.17. "My IMings to &amp;et tbe victory. Detroit
changeup was sinking. It's one of starter Frank Tanana, 0.3, al·
the bl1111est games I've ever been lowed five runs on eight hits In
ln. Catcher Bob Melvin called a losing his fifth straight to the
great &amp;arne. ' 1
Twl...
Mark Wllliiii"Son gal..../ his
Red Sox J, Indiana 2
third save. getttnt the fin"'i two , At Cleveland, Nick Esisky and
outs. He struck out Bo Jackson Jim Rice hlltWo-rilnhOmersand
wltb two runners on to end the Dennls"OIICan"Boydscatiered
game.
six hits over seven Innings as
"You can't make a · mistake Boston handed Qeveland its
with blm," Williamson said. "I sixth straight defeat. Boyd, J.l,
tried to make quality pitches and was lifted In the seventh Inning
not &amp;lve h~ something he could with a 5-0 lead. Lee Smith worked .
hit out. 1 threw blm a changeup tbe flnalll-31nnings for his first
on 3-and-2, made sure I Ill&gt;' the save as the Red Sox won tbelr
ball down and was fortunate he third straight. Rick Yett, 1·2,
tried to kill It and over swung."
took the loss.
The Orioles took a 1·0 lead In
Mariners 5, White Sox Z
At Chicago, rookie Ken Griffey
t)le first Inning ·when Ripken
singled tn.Joe Orsulak, who had Jr., delivered a tte:breaking
doubled. ·
.
single. In the Seventh Inning, and
WorthlngtQD's RBI strigle pitcher Scott Bankhead, 1·1,
came In ,the ~venth inning. tossed a five· hitter to~elpSeattle
Ripken led off with a walk and extend Chicago's losing streak to
Larry ~ts reached base on an four games. Reliever Barry
error. jtm Traber sacrificed the Jones, 1·1, was the loser. Alvin
runners ahead ·and "Bob Melvin .Davis and Jefferey Leonard
drew an Intentional walk to lOad homered lor Seattle.

By JEFP·BASEN
, UPI ~ Wl'ller
LOS ANGELES &lt;UPI) - The
Mid-Ohio · Conference leader while committing one error.
drafting
of college player~. long
·Walsh weni to·4·0 In softball loop Betsy Bergdoll! freshman. Galli·
conslciered ,Is muJI!Iane as va·
action Thursday aftE'r handing polls! was top hitter with a
nilla Ice cream.. has become a
the Rio GrandE&gt; Redwop:~oo twin . double. Walsh advanced on lour
showpiece ll)r cable netwprks.
hits and a single error. with
losses at Stanley L..Evans Field.
For the lOt~ consecu tlve year.
The Cavaliers edgecj the Rio KE&gt;ndra Compton leadlngtheway
ESPN
will lelevlxe the NFL
't adles 5·4 In the first contest and in hitting with a double and a
draft;
which
jiegtns Sunday at
broke out for a 12·2 win in the triple.
EDT
in
New York. This
noon
nightcap.
Renee Ward !freshman, Galli·
June.
the
NBA
will switch to a
polls! was on the mound for Rio
The opener saw the Redwomen
night-time
draft
so the Turner
score on one hit and seven walks,
Grande and Suzette Rak had the
Broadcasting System can show
win lor Walsh.
the seleCtions In prime time.
The Cavaliers walked 10. had
''The NFL Draft provides a
Sports briefs
eight hits and no errors In the .
terrific combination of hard
lower hall. Amy Slack !lad two news and human Interest," said
Tennis
hits and Dianne Crosby h'lt a p.:i,lr
Second seed Henrt Leconte of
John , Wlldhack, . ESPN' s NFL
of
singles lor the visitors. ForRio coordinating .producer.
France was upset by Yugosla·
Grande, 'a . sirigle apiece was
via's Goran lvanisevic. '6·4, 4·6,
Last year's telecast, the first
recorded by Beth Coli (soph~ shown live on a Sunday, was seen
6·3, in the second round of the
more, Wapakol)eta). Marlo In 1. 7 million homes and received
$200,000 Nice Grand PrilL lvanl·
KlstiE&gt;r (sophomorE', Sugar a 3.6 rating. ESPN' averaged a 1.6
SE'VIC Is ranked 88th by the ATP
and Leconte is No. 14 . .. . Britain Grove) and Kathy Snyder (fresh· and ~.000 homes on Sundays In
man, Gahanna!.
will bid to stage the women's
1988.
Rio Grande had thr~ hits and
Federation Cup In Nottingham In
ESPN. which recently won a
two errors. ·Julie' Fottenbury Sports Emmy lor Its NFL .prethe summer of 1991. Rival bids
!freshman, St. Paris 1 pitched for game show, will use seven
are also being made by Barcel·
the
hosts and Rak scored for commentators on Ita seven-hour
ona, Spain, and Hanover. WE&gt;st
Walsh.
·
.
Germany.
Redwomeri
arel-17
overall
The
MiiMlellaneous
and
1-5
in
the
conference,
while
ThE&gt; International Olympic
Walsh improved Its record tQ 9·5.
Committee has turned 'down an
Rio Grande is to play Capital at
appeal to allow Cam):lodl~ to
home
in a twi·a bill to start at 3: 30
participate In the 15th Sea Games
.
'
p.m.
Friday
and will host Urbana
In August, officials said in Kuala
&amp; Low
Saturday lor two games, starting
Lam pur. Malaysia. HamzahAbu
at 2 p.m. WBish is schedul~ to
Samah, president olthe Olympic
•Qualty
play a-t Ohio Dominican
Council of Malaysia, requested
Saturday.
the participation of the war-torn
In a doubleheader played at
country upon the urgings of the
State on·Monday ..Rio
Morehead
majority of the federation's
Grande
fell12·2
and 4·1.
member countries .

,

1985 Escort •••••.••..•.••.•••.• S1895

17,000
mllea, 1
..

COLLISION! - The t\Atroe' Craig BIIJIIo (7) !"!~~~Into Braves
second sacker Jeff Treadway, but can't knock the ballloeee and Is
forced out to end lhe second Inning of Th•raday ntcht's game In
Atlanta. (UPI)

Aprl N - f'hll'llji;O lll St . Wubl, It: 35
p.m.

M.. ,... . .,. al ....., A.nplftl, ta :e3
p.m .

lulll'tball
Mn..... ll".. lltR..Wu-. 7:•p.m.

Monl,..lll a1 Boollctn. 1: 35

p.m.

Mllliblll&amp;ll Ill . .d~~tell', ll: II p.m .

a.•-·

- Monl"•lll Ml Ro!ilon. i : BI

,.m. ,

!4n1Ur • ('llh·.... •: • p.m .
, .....,._ .. 0 ........ II: SA p.m .

Bo..._•t

·~3

X· •\prd t~- Be..loll al Molllrnl. i :a.l

,\mf'rk•• 11111(11l"
Dtotroillt Mil•._•~·. 1 p.m .
N~ ' "•rk a1 nf'\'rtMIII, "'i:J5 p.m.
T"&amp;ll a1 Tenllfv. 1: :1S p.m .
KdMIII fll,- .. lkt!OIIOttt 7: Sit p.m.

PIIIWtl ... •

i::&amp;5p.m.
..WIIIllfi Dlvl,.lon
IIDHton ""· Mollll"l' ..

,............... .w: PltiHhu l"'lth
Olnplll S••· \ 'nrk
tiM,. 111 nntt••tl
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f'rudll(11 al l.os ,\n«t""'""· niKttf

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II~

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MatWlWWf' Ill fhartot&amp;t'. ';::11 p.m.

Lf~ I\Gt:E

fhh•a(O
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:Wo,.n•al

M'erkl ('ll p .

San "ollt'. C'Oio.. Rk·a -

,.m.

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Pllt!M IKh Ill Ptr.l.. dflplliiM. 7:31p.m .
Morino Ill al Bo~IOII. ':35 p.m.

PI'. . . ',;G•mflh

faltfor•h•

-lu•r MIMt"WtoiPIM

C'lllcqo - Roo Am•.-w• ""' lAuW
MMIM, II,,. ... , mlllllt'Wt'I-M.
Golf
Grt'fllftro. N.f' _ - II miUia• PGr\
Grt&gt;llk'r Gl'f't"'IJiboroO,m
Sl. Yrit'UtlU ~"~• Fb.. - SQI,Oit LPG A.
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s; nit'•••

(ilMIIIIII-11, 1'1: :II

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'I'MIMilltllfs ft..Mulh;
Mlall'ft.._. 'l', DKr. ~
llnMton,il, C1f'\lol'l- :e
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&amp;ololltko
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Ori roll cMorriN t-.11 !It

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........

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a

SIUIUqo

It "! .IIJ; II I .1!:1 3
K .1 .111 a•"'

MI•II"MIIIII

;~llolders.
Ballard ftl'l!d a seven-hitter
over 8 1·3 tanlnp, sparlelq tbe
Baltimore Orlo* to a 2-0 victory

'.

~~

NI'W l'ork - Saolll Maunby

•.1

M.'t!MI

Od.klld

............."
IloilO&amp;

I

III.JIIt

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Tn.,

r......t"ttl •• Cll~......

GB

-

I

TorOIIIo

n .... f' ....

Jeff BIUard pttclled tbe most
satlltytDc came ot bll caner
Tbunday nlpt, aDd aow Bll·
u..- Mobtala can boast of two

Dnwr aiGOhle• stale, It:• p.m,
LA Laltf'N • Pertlallll, It: • p.m.
. lowll•l
Folrlaw-. Ollie·- SUI.. . PBA PIN"

AMEK,c'AN LEAGUE

......

. , 'fOIUtifHBRS
VPI8p · 11: WJOIMr

The Daily Sentinel

By The·. Bend

KC Royals, 2-0

'·

Majors

..

..

• Randy and Cheryl King, Pomeroy, are announcing the birth a
(laughter. Bethany Kathleen. on
Aprll12 at O'Blenntss Hospital in
Athens.
: The Infant weighed ei&amp;ht

smith birthday
Brandon Smtih, son of John ·
11nd Teresa Smith, Reedsville,
r.ecently celebrated his fourth
l;ilrthday . with a party at his
home.
' An lee cream cake, clown Ice
c;_ream cones. punch and nuts
were served to those mentioned
and Brandon's sister, Melissa;
grandparents Dale and Thelma
Smith, Brian and Jodi Bissell,
Debbie and Rick Barringer,
¥ichelle and Chris; and Connit&gt;
jllld Mark Smltb.
' : Sending gifts · were Lucille
Smltb, Grant and Elizabeth
Smitb, Norma Goodwin, Debbie
and Terry Smith, Barbara Olive,
Melyln Smith, and Josephine
~IIchte.

Rutland Alumni
f!lantiing reunion
•
:: The Annual Rutland High
Sch6ol Alumni Banquet and
Dance will be held May 27 at 6:311
p.m.
~ MllUe's -of Bradbury Road,
;Middleport will be calll!rlq the
diJIIIer tbat will Include baked
's tead or baked ham, scalloped
potatoes or baked pot,atoes,
~beans, cole slaw, and roll1,
,With cltolce cit apple cake, pie, or

tlrownles.
: The dance will bt from 9 p.m.
;tol a:m. andwlllfeaturetbelvan
Potter Band.
Cost ot the dinner and diiiCe Is
J~O per Jillion. Local alumni
QJay malre reMI'VItioDI II the
~utland J)eplrtmeat Stare or
lfoe'l CoiiJitry Marlltt .. Rta·
lland. Dtldll• ror l'elei'Vatlolll
111 Ma,y 11. To - d In reterva·

t_

uo

Sc--'

• mall
.
reterVBUon,
1 per
tiMr Rlltlalld Hlp
111111 Auoe11tloll, P.O. Box
125, Rtatlud, Olllo 4S'I'I!I •

..
_..--... ...... Lt

pounds. eight ounces, and was 21
Inches long.
Paternal grandparents are
Charles and Dona King, Mounds·
ville, W.Va .. and paternal great·
-grandmother is Edith King,
Chester. Maternal grandparents
are Robert and Erma Hartley.
Moundsville, W.Va.
The Kings have two other
daughters, Mallory, age lour.
and Madison, age two.

. FRIDAY
'MIDDLEPORT ~ Overbrook
Center, Middleport. will observe
Western Day on Friday starting
at 12:30 p.m. Hotdogs and ham·
burgers will be cooked on the
grill in the ·center courtyard .
Music will be provided by the
Sugar Run Travelers. Famutes
of residents are invited to at tend.
PORTLAND - A weekend
youth revival will be held Friday
through Sunday, April 21-23. at
the Zion Church of· Christ, Stale
Rout~&gt; 143. near Pomeroy. Even·
ing services will stari at 7: 30 and
Sunday morning servic(' atlO: 30,
The music and message will be
presented by Diana Underwood.
Thomas McNerney and Rhonda
McNerney.
'
POMEROY - The Meigs
County 4-H Committee will be
sponsoring a square dance at the

,·

I

Literacy means that: a man Is
able to sign his .name when he
gets his paycheck; a man and
woman waiting on a bus can read
the destination slgil; • a young
man can leave the area where he
lives to find work, because he can
read street signs and maps; a
mother and lather can read a
story to their child, help with
school lessons and demonstrate.
the values of reading and read
labels on grocery products and
add up their cost; compute
Income tax and Social Security
benefits; pass a driver's test; fill
out forms lor job application and
Medicaid; learn about legal
rights; people can learn to read
the Bible, a newspaper, a ma&amp;a·
ztne or a restaurant menu; read
about one's own heritage; a
person. knows bow to use the
dlctlonaty and encyclopedias,
find tbe way around a library,
prepare for and pass a high
school or college level examlna·
tlon, pursue self-directed Independent learnln&amp;, and belp oth•
ers to read and write.
Illiteracy Inhibits 9r prevents
the effective exercise of buman
rights that. are dependent on
literacy skUls. Because of llllter·
acy . men and women suffer
discrimination; Illiteracy prevents choice of work; prohibits
productive Income, makes ex·
plol11ltlon poaslble.

S FUINITUIE &amp; MOlE

.

(2 . .CI UVIIIIOOM SOl
(e ,,1111 HI •f W ... w/Wli•---·"------•1H.95
Drew••-----:..----...
------·.....--S4t.t5
cC'-t
...efSWf
_______ ..____
- •24.95
1971 T111111 lilllll -.n, lllciltiiiWoct Prloo 135.10.-0oor Prill 119,95
...._, ~~et~t~o~y -----· • ·
sue
1975 ,..,. a.r. $1.00-1t7S T- Stner-SS.ot
Onlt s.ltllltdtil-'11.00 lilt lltM

IUYM "GOOD CUlfl
&amp; Clll'k

MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES
PRESENTS

THE AMAZING MILLER
~

· i'tEEDSVlLLE= Eden United
Brethren In Christ Church. two
miles north of Reedsville. will be
having revival services through
Sunday, April 23, 7:30 each
evening, with Rev. Robert Sand·
ers as evangelist.

SATURDAY
CHESTER - The Chester
· Volunteer Fire Department Is
sponsoring a fish fry at the
firehouse on Saturday. April 22,
from 4 to 7 p.m. Dinners will
include a fish tall, french fries,
cole slaw and beverage. Pie and
cake will also be available.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Fire
Department is havlhg an open
house on Sunday. from 2 to 4
p.m .. at the fh'e station. Fitly and
60-year members, and past
chiefs. wi)l be honored. Refresh·
ments will be served and the
dress is informal. Everyone
welcome.

RUTLAND Hysell Run
Holiness Church will . he In

GIC CIIC

Saturday Even.ing Show
7:00
•

MEIG$ HIGH SCHOOL
GYMNASIUM
TICKETS lVAILAILE AT DOOR

.AcriVI'I'IES -Gall Thoma
of Chester has heen named
new acllviUes director In tbe
extended care unit a&amp; V eterans Memorial Hospital. In ,.
the poslllon, Thoma will plan
special events for patients of
the unit. The dauchter of Mr.
and Mrs. Glen Thoma of
Chester, she Is a 19T'I graduate
of Eastern Wp School and •
has beea employed In actlvl· •
Ues work a&amp; the Lakin Stale •,
Hospital.
;

Bloodmobile workers:
VIrginia Buchanan, Dorothy:
Long, . Mar(on Ebersbach. Jack •
and Joan Sorden, Lula Ham- :
mton, Emma Clatworthy. Ger· ;
trude Robinson, William and •
Joyce Hobac;k. Florence Ri· :
chards. Evel~n Gilmore, and :
Gerald Wildermutb. oltheSenior ·
Citizens RSVP program, as·:
sis ted at the recent visit of the :
Red Cross Bloodmobile.
•

.........................................., •:•

J

By Rulh Powen

Shlp111111t •f • • Furniture-lilt- • •

-e

POMEROY -Captain D's fish .
djnners will be served at the
Pomeroy Fire Station on Satur·
day from 3 to 7 · p.m. Advance
tickets lor adults are $4.50.'
Children's tickets are $2.50 In
advance. Costs at the dOor will be
2~· cents more.

revival through Sunday. The
speaker will be Rev. Thomas
·Cqlller. Singers will be the Justis
Family. Services will be at 7:30
each evening and at 10:30Sunday
morning. Sunday school s11lrts at
9:30a.m.

Meigs Library Lines:

0Pn 10.5
PG¢P~Y, 01.
COMPLm AUmGN SDVICIAVAILAIU

212 L Ull st.

Senior Citizens Center on Friday,
from 8-ll p.m. Cost Is $2 for
adults and $1 for children of 4·H
age. Red .Carr will he the caller
and the True Country Band will
provide music.

CAPTAIN D'S FISH FRY

Tbe Meigs County Library
system has the help needed to
turn an Illiterate Into a literate
person. II you read this column
and know of a person needing
help with reading, pleue be a
friend and get the message to this
person, that It Is available by
calling 992-5813. 1 All materials'
·a nd tutoring Ia tree and tbe
tutoring Is dOne on a one-on-one
buts. Please be a FRIEND to a
FRIEND.

POMEROY FIRE DEPARTMENT
SAT., APRIL 22-4:00-7:30
ALL YOU CAN EAT
ADULTS $451
CHILDIEN Sts•
TICDIS lVAILiiU ROM ANY POIIIIOY PillMAN
01 AT G&amp;J lUIO PUIS IN PO IIIOY
TICD1S 25' MOU AT THE DOOI

"Special Care For People Who Are Special to You ... "

We would like to welcome you to our
'

"Spring Art Fair and Open House"
on
·Sunday,_April 23
Twelve Thirty to Five O'clock P.M.·.
.

"

.

~

This afternoon. promises to be "Special" as local
their paintings
throughout
artists shall he displaying
.
.
the warmly decorated Overbrook Center, accompa.:
nied with music and refreshments.
Come celebrate the Spring Time and the Con~bu­
tions to Meigs County that Overbrook Center represents.

Come Visit, and Experience First
Hand ·the Overbrook Difference.

333- Page Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760·
(614) 992-6472

••

I

•
•

•

�•••

•

'-ge-8-The Daily Sentinel

Friday. April 21, 1989

Ohio

MR. adults can work
in community jobs

Public Nodce

·.;

....

PubllcNotlca

Public Notice
....... ,...,...... wll bo
recolvetlll tho:

diU
-..rt.

ot tile ~

friday, April 21. 1989
~--~~~~~~~~~

~otNtnuiii - Ro· '

- - . upon recllipt ot a
The D~octor ot Natufll c - l n t h e - o f
" - r c u - till right •1t.OOIIIIIIo-loletothe
ot Notutal Roto ,.._ Ill\' or .. bl•• or to
- t h e bid whllh am-' • -· T - may atoo bl
..._.. ouch -loin- ol- ~od with c•h In tho
pr_..to • may
p r - tho boat
of
...crttcotlona
- and
tho
,._,.,
ot thoprotpoctlvo
tho ltato.
IHG'Wilfld In loctlon lllcll*aondnomundlwll
111 ot tho Ohio ,.. .... Aci&lt;ICioMI - ...... C..lnd ............ ;:..;-;.,., ... ttllloltlod
"
tile
Dloolallln
ot R.....
11oM ...... 111:241-01 .,

DIVIIION OF
IIICLAMATION
DII'AIITMENTOF
NATUIIAL REIOURCES
oolutlon ot the
11111 FOUNTAI" SQUARE
DMr Au a.ders: Our son hao; reached for a piece of bread from
Tru- ot tllte Toi:-imittip
- IICDND FLOOR
Down's syndrome. When "Ben"
the basket and a hu~~t cockroach
ot ........ Mllig~ County. COWMBUI, OHIO 43224
Olllo. ...... on t i M - - · w..tneoday, ~ 10,
aradualed from sdtool in june, we crawled out from under the basket
cl8y ot ,.........,. 1111.- 1111 at 11:00 e.m. .,d
and then went back 'apin. I saw it is the Idler and my IJSPOn!lll! wirh wlfl bo oubnolnocHoa
told it milbt be three to seven
ot .,..... tr.or.tw "" furno apoloaies- Thanks for asking.
years befure he could !let into a job the same moment Ed di,d.
nlaNng tho _ . . ~.=~.a Ofa lpeaial8Giplo
motlon,~otllll·
rc
Etec- poi ........... the lobol' for the tho .,............. "' A&lt;MitnTo the Editor (of the Arkansas
tralnina propam. The waiting list
We decided the best tiling to do
to
hold
In
thor--......
,lon
aod
loUMiwlll';il•,
til
CON·
Is Yery long in the state of Mary- , was to. say nothing. Was rhar the Gazette in Uttle Rock.~ Every year
11111 '
__ l q .- lulclng
ot lclttlo. Ohio tn the
TRACTOR ofuoll -v ,"""'
land. Mmtally retarded adults are proper thing to do? Some friends we lose several young people in our ._tar pl-. ot vo(lng ot:
H.
11
"net
Ploof.
Cotumltuo.
AUTHEIIION
to Olltt.
IIIII a priority in this state, or said that they would have left the coriununity ro suicide. We keep thlrlln.onT-I!f. thel• RECLAMATION PROJECT fled mlnoolty buainMo oult- Ohio 43224. (PIIoOW. 11141
211-10111.
dl!f ot Ml!f, 1118, tho
MEIQI COUNTY, OHIO
oo-oro ond motwlal'
hoping it will stop. but so far it oond
anywhere else for that matter.
place ar once. What do you say? qUMtlon ot ,...,.,. a tox. In RECLAMATtON PROJECT m"" participate In the oonE- bid muot bo _.n·
hasn't. I hear ir is a national
With a aiut deal of detennina·
APPETITE LOSS IN LYN, TEX.
ot tho IMI milt llmlta·
NUMIER MG·Rt-04
- · Thototelvaluootoub- panlad "" 1 liD GUA· !
tion and a lot of luck. we found
DEAR LYN: A' better way ro have epidemic. Every 90 rii\nures a teens· tlon, for tho J&gt;ondt ot lctplo ln 1 a ••~ wt1t1 the pi- oontncta ewerde'\.!:v end IIANTY. -lng tho_ .. •
......nil ot lectlon 113.14
tor lho purpo11 of
111
him a part-time job in a supennar·
handled it would have been to go ~~tr in this country commits suicide. T-nlhip
moinblnlng .,d operating
of tho Ohio RaviHd Cedi.
:::::::..
mtO::
kd. This would not have been quietly to the mana~~er and tell him This messa~~t is for every youth who CltMierloa.
CON111ACI"ORS ARE)I.D·
TURAL RESOURCES, THE buoinollll - · bo M Mt
VIS£0 THAT IN ACCOII· 1
pollible without the help o( the or her. The basket would have been is considering ending it:
Sold tox boln1: an oddl- DIY.ION OF REa •MA- fot1h In the opoclflcationo.
CONTRACTORS
RE- DANCE WITH THE PIIOY~
You haven't seen the world that tionol ~ mMI to run tor tlw TION. COWMIUI. OHIO.
compassionate. understanding
replaced at once.
liONS OF THE JANUARY
(111
,..,.
II 1 rill Ill• 11111 WILL R OPENED IN QUIRING AIIISTANCE IN
exists outside your family. Soon CHdlng '11 mill• for eHh OM TilE SECOND FLOOR CON- !SECURING 8108 FROM 27.
Wotnan whO is the store manqer
You did the right thing by
11172 EXECUTIYE
and the enlilhlened policies of keeping the incident to yourselves. you will he on your own and then dollar ot avaluation. which FERENCE ROOM OF 11• CERTIFIED MBE IUICON- ORDER IY THE OOVER·
OHIO. ANO
to flve centa (IUILDING HI
OF THE TRACTOIIS
AND SUP- NOll OF
you will understand what is impor· amount•
Giant Food in the Washington,
It would have been extremely rude
AMENDED
EXECUTIYE
FOUNTAIN
SQUARE
OF·
PUERS
MAY
CONTACT
THE
(10.051 lor · ono
tant and what is not important.
D.C., arm.
to have called attention to the
hllndrad dollar• of volutnlon FICD OF THE . OHIO DE· STATE EQUAL EMPlOY- ORDER 14-1. F1!111UARY
What you don 'I know is that IS· for five, .....
This job means so much to Ben.
PARTMENT OF NATURAL MENT COORDINATOR IV 11, 1884. EQUAL EMPLOY·
creepy crawler. You would surely
Tho Polio tor oaid Eloc:tlon RESOURCES.
TilE ESTI· CALLING 1114) 411-1380 MENT OPPORTUNITY C.ON· •
He !lefS his clothes ready the niaht have spoiled the dinner for the minutes after you decide to kill
wilt
bo
opon
It
1:30
o'clo'*
MAT£
FOR
THIS
PROJECT OR THE MtNOIIITY BUll· DITIDN8 AilE APPIJCAILE ,
yourself, you might have felt better.
before so he can set out the door
A.M. Mid ramoln open und AS DETERMINED IV THE NEll DEVELOPMENT Dt- TO THIS liD. WAGE RATES
others and embarrassed your host.
Or two hours later. or two qays, or 7 :30 o'clock P.M.
first thing in the !homing. He is
DIY.ION OF RECLAMA· VISION iY CM.LINGII14) ISTAIIJIHED IN ACCOR- ,
Dear Ann Landers: You quoted
WITH SECTION
By Order or the Boord of TION IS IM11.179.00.
two years.
411-1100 OR TOU fREe DANCE
serious about arriving on time and
an
authority
who
said
turning
ofT
Eloctiono.
ot
Maigo
County.
1813.18
AND
1113.:17 OF
A
p,.bid
mooting
wit
bo
1-(100)282·1081.
What
you
don't
know
is
that
you
his reoord is excellent.
•
THI REVIlED CODE ARE .
Ohio.
hold
on
Monday.
Moy
1.
APPROVED
FOR
PUBLI·
lights
saves
on
the
electric
bill.
True,
are srron~~tr than you think. You
Ben's job is to load groceries imo
Evotyn Clark. Chairmen 1118 It 1:00 a.m. 11 tho CATION IN The Dolly lantl- AlSO APPUCAILE.
•
but when you figure the wear and
can lind another girlfriend, or you
Jono M. Frymyor. Director projoct oho. From Stoto
--•aolod ..dod- '
P_or..,, Ohio Ill' A""
c:ustomtrs' cars and keep the shoptear on the bulb, it'S&amp; wash.
Datod March 1, 1188
Routa 11124, toke County
and 21 : 1988.
- - to: DEPARTMENT •
can stand being shamed more than
'ping carts in order. He tries so hard
OF NATURAL RESOURCES. ,
(41
7, 14. 21. 28. 4tc
Rood 113 south out of Rut- RECOMMENDED:
With
electronic
devices
such
as
you
realize.
Failing
in
school
or
to be careful and not drop anyDIVISION OF RECLAMA·
landloro-of~mUo. TIM L. DIERINGER. Chlot
TVs and computers. the start-up
TION.
18611 FOUNTAIN
~~tiling into trouble with the law 1--p;;bjiji'
thin$- And he always waves goodby
Tum left loo-t( onto Divioion of Redomotion
8QUARE, BUilDING H. SE·
Townlhlp Road 11178 end Dolo Aprl 13, 18M
takes away from one to four hours
mar be painful. but you can ~~tt
to mry customer. He knows exactpr_... 1 cliatoncoof 1 milo.
APPROVED: COND FLOOR. COLUMof life from the unit. If you're going
over' it. You can fix ir. Don't be
ly what to do, but sometimes it
BUS. OHIO 43224. No bidMill at the Houl Road ac·
JOSEPH J. SOMMER,
killing yourself over events that you
NOTICE OF ELECTION
our of the room for an hour or so.
takes him a couple of minutes
coeo on lett aide ofTownlhip
Diractor der ..,.., w i t - hll !&gt;ld
ON TAX LEVY IN
Rood #178.
Departmont ot Natural wlriWI uty 1101 dl!fllltor thl
may barely remember 10 years
it's best ro leave the lilhts and the
lon~~tr to load up a car than it
EXCESS OF THE
ot the
Coplao
of
tho
plano.
opeciRIIOIIl'CM octuol
from now. What you don't know is
TV on.- R.j.S., DAYTON
miaht take a normal person.
TEN !tltLL LIMITATION
m.oot.
flcationo
.,d
propolll
to""•
'
Date
4/
14/
89
rhar 'thert' is nothing romantic or
NOTICE Ia horoby given wHt bo forwlrcled from the 141 21. 28 2tc
I'm writing to you with the hope
The Director of Neturel
DEAR DAYTON: You and 10,00)
thM in pur1u.nce of • Re· Oivtsian of
Resources
r.,.rves the right
mysterious
or
"deep"
about
killing
Reblamation,
l.!.::!...:~~ii;~;:;~;;;---'
that you will print this letter. To
readers can't· be wrong. Thanks for
ootution ot tho Vltloge Cou.,. Dopllllment of Netural Reto l"'lject any or 111 bidl~ or to
yourself.
It
is
a
god-awful
mess
that
those who have smiled at Ben or
the correction.
elf of tho Vlflagool"om.-oy.
occept the bid which emyou can never understand until you Ohio, puNd on the 13th chock
sourc•.In·upon
have said. "You did a good job." I
Dear Ann Landers: I am a
rho receipt
amountof ot•1·--;::~~:~::s:: brecM auch eomtMn.tion II·
dayofFabruitiry.1989.1hlra 19.00 made payable to the
have kids of your own.
wilt be tlt'nate· propoul1 u may
want to say, "Thank you." You teena~~tr who has been reading your
will be aubmltted to • vote of Deportment of Natural Re·
promote the belt inter11t of
OF
What you don't know ts that tho
have done more for a wonderful column for as · long as I can
pooplo of llld Pomeroy . IOUrCH. Th•e ml\' olio bo
tho
State.
RECLAMATION
suicide is sneaky and spiteful and Vlttogoat • Spooiol Election
young person and people like him remember. It's the part of rhe paper
Aa proVided in StcttOn
purchoeed
with
c•h
in
t11o
DEPARTMENT
OF
filled with an~~tr. If you are think.· to bo hold In tho VIllage of oxact amount. Pllill and
123.111 of the Ohio Ro·
than you will ever know. - M.T.. that I grab first . There are rimes
NATURAL RESOURCES
Pomeroy,
Ohio
It
the
roguvioed
Code ond Admlniotro·
opoclficationo
bocome
the
ing about suicide. you arc furious lar pi- of vutlng thoroln.
SILVER SPRING. MD.
when I think you are square or just
Pf-"t of the proopoctive 181111 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
live
Rule
123:2·111·02 of
with somebody. You can be furious on Tuoaday. tho IICOnd dO¥
DEAR M.T.: What a heartwarm· plain goofy. but deep down I know
- SECOND FLOOR
the
Dopartrnont
ot Admin·
itt
....
and no relu
w
COWMBUS. OHIO 43224
without killing yourself or thinking of Moy, 1989, tho quHtlon biddoro
iolrative Sorvicel. lho CONing Idler. Almost all Down's syn· you make a lot of sense and I
bo m...., Additional infor·
of levying I lax, in OXCHI Of motion may bo obtained untl Frldrt. May 12. 1881 TRACTOR oholl molco every
you need the punishment of de~.
drome children are sweet and
respect what you say.
the ten mill limitetion, for from tho Divloion of Reel• It 11 :00 o.m. and opened •tfort to en&amp;ure tMt certiWhat
you
also
don't
know
is
that
Awhile back my parents split.
aentle. and they appreciate any
tho bonaflt ot Pomeroy VII· marion. Depllllment of No· therooftorlor fumiohing tho fied minority busine.. tub·
suicide is fort''ver. and nobody. not loge for the purpooe of lire tural
Rnourcea. 1 866 materiels end pwforming
show of kindness. Being patient and
contr~ors end mlterial·
Usually when this happens. the kids
prottction.
fountain
Square,
Building
the
labor
far
the
eucutlon
men participate In the con·
your
parents
or
your
doctor.
can
kind to them is a beautiful way to
are torn up because they don't
Said tax being: an addi~ H, ~eoond Floor. Columbus. end conttruc1ion of:
trKt. The tOtal value of IUb·
fix
it.
You
won't
be
around
for
the
express your love for all human tty.
know which parent 10 go wtlh. In
tiona! tox of 1:o milt to run Ohio 43224 !Phone· 16141 RE~l'l~:f.o"~ ~OEEJKECT
contracts awarded to and,
funeral. And 'you won't be cominB · for five fl5)
And four cheers for Giant Food
my case. neither one wan led me.
,, meterillla
end teNiees
rate not 2811·1058).
excHcling 1.0 mitto for oach
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Each bid must he acoom·
purchMed
from minority
for hiring Ben. Companies who
1 became depressed an!l decided back.
one dollar of IIValuation, paniorl by 1 910 OUA· RECLAMATION PROJECT
bl,oolneo- ahalt bo • oet
So ~~tt smart. jQin the Marines.
employ exceptional people deserve
ro kill myself. Then I read a letter
which 1mount1 to ten cent• RANTY, m-lng tho roqulNUMBER MO·Sc-4
forth In the opacificetiono.
a public pat on the back, and here's
in your column about teenage Go to California. Find a therapist.
110.101 for uch
ono remanto of Section 163.64 in CONTRACTORS
RE·
wom me PILapse inro sickness. Become mad ao; hundred doll•• of valuation, of the Ohio Reviled Code. ond apodllcorlono - - lrr QUIRING ASSISTANCE IN
mine.
suicides. II changed my mind.
lor five yeara.
CONTRACTORS ARE AO· the DEPAIITMENr OF NA- SECURING BIDS FROM
Dear Ann Landers: I have an
I know a lor of people don't like the dickens. Do your time in jail.
The Polla for Mid Election VISED THAT tN ACCOR· TURAL RESOURCES. TilE
CERTIFIED MIE $UBCON·
etiquette question that I'll ' bet
it wheri you rerun a lener, bur I Bur get ofT the suicide. kick. It's a
witt bo open It 8:30 o'cfoclc DANCE WITH THE PROVI· DIVISION OF RECLAMA· TRACTORS
AND SUP·
A . M ~ and remain open until SIONS OF THE JANUARY TION. COLUMBUS. OHIO.
PUERS MAY CONTACT TilE
you've never heard before.
think this one is important and dead end. - Tom Heisler. Wynne.
7 :30 o'clock P.M .
27.
1972
EXECUTIVE
WLL IE OPINED IN
STATE EQUA~ EMPlOY·
Recently, my husband and I were
some kids may have missed it. Will Ark.
By Order of tho Board of ORDER BY THE GOVER- ~~E':cff~g~~· ~~N~
MENT COORDINATOR BY
guests at a business dinner in a very
you please print It again? - A FAN
Dear Tom Heisler: That was a
8 ~ CliLLING
Etoctiono. of Maigo County, NOR OF
(8141 4H·8380
OHIO. AND
Ohio. .
exclusive restaurant. 'fl!ere were 16
AMENDED
EXECUTIVE I!IUILDING HI
OF THE
OR THE MINORITY lUStsensible piece you wrote - and in
FOREVER IN BOSTON
Evelyn Clerk, Cholrmon ORDER 84-9, FEBRUARY FOUNTAIN SQUARE DF·
NESS DEVELOPMENT Dl ·
around this exquisite table " Ed"
DEAR' FOREVER: You bet. Here language kids can relate to I hope
Jane M. Frymyer. Director 15, 1984. EQUAl. EMPLOY· FICES OF THE OHIO DEVISION B~ CALLING 18141
somebody listens. Nothing in this
Doted Morch 1, 1981
MENT OPPORTUNITY CON· PARTMENT OF NATURAL
488·6700 OR TOLL FREE
'
t4)7, 14. 21. 28. 4tc
DITIONS ARE APPUCASLE
· TilE ESJt1·18001 282·10811.
world causes more grief and suffer·
APPBOVED FOR PUBLI·
ing than the suictde of a child.
TO
THIS BID WAGE
RATES I:;i\ltsN)~ ~~~~:;;PR;~~OJE~CT~~
CATIOIII IN Tho O,.ily Senti·
Public Notice
ESTABLISHED
IN
ACCOR·
Suicide is often an .irrational act,
net, Pomeroy. Ohio on AprH
DANCE
WITH SECTION I 1
21 oncl28, 1818.
an immature response ro disap, 11113.18 AND 1513.37 OF
RECOMMENDED:
ARE
PUBLIC
NOTICE
pointment. f&lt;'l\r and anxiety. It can
TIM
L. DIERINGER. Chiol
NOTICE ia herebY given
also be punitive. If these ki~ would rhot
Oiviaion of Red-ion
on
Soturdey.
AprM
By BOB HOEFLICH
Date AprH 17. 1999
car wash.
just cool it and look ahead a week 22nd, 1189. It 10:00 a.m .•
- - to:
APPROVED:
Those of you who attended the
or a month. they might live to see e public lila wll bo held at OF NATURAl. RESOURCES.
JOSEPH
J
. SOMMER.
,DIVISION
OF
RECI.AMA·
106 Union Avenue. Pom·
annual scholas tie banquet of the
Slowly but surel y. the days are
the best days of their liv...,.
Director
TlON.
·18611
FOUNrAtN
eroy.
Ohio.
to
lilt
for
c•h
Southern Local
warming up and members of
Department
of
Netural
&amp;QUARE.
BUILDING
H.
SE·
the lott-ing conot-:
School Dis trlet.
' Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta
Resources
FLOOR. COWM·
1987 Oodgo D1 00 PU S# COND
Dote 4/ 17/ 89
BUS. OHIO 43224. No bidof course, realSigma Phi Sorority predict that
1 B7FD04H9HIIII12922,
141
21.
28
2tc
der
may
w~hdrew
hie
bid
Sharp,
excellent
condhlon.
Ize that It was a
Saturday. April 29, Is going to be
The Farmoro Bank and within ollcty 1101 doyooltor tho
nk.'e altair.
a beauty.
/
SIIVings
Company, Pom•
At thts point In
That's the day the group will be
Dale L. Harvey and Nikk I
roy. Ohio. ,....,.. tho right
time. the South·
Harvey. tract ~ . to Arlene G. to .bid at thio uto. and to
sta ging its third annual mixed
withdrew rho obova. collaern Local Dis·
scrambles golf tourney at the ' Shlltz fka Harvey, .Columbia.
Robert
E.
Romines
and
Joyce
terot prior to ute. Further.
trlct Is the only one to recognize
Riverside Golf Course.
The
Tho
Former• Bonk end SovIn such a manner. scholastic
entrance fee Is $40 but lntp the
A. Romines, parcels, to Bobbl lngo Company ,• ...,...tho
achievement. Quite attra ctive
Kuhnert, Bedford.
right to rejact ony or oil bldl
bargain you get bre akfast at 8: 30
medallions are presented to the
Claude V. Eblin, dec' d, af!ld., oubmltted. ·
when players will be placed and
to Mary M. Eblin, Sallsbury.
Further, the obove colt•
top students throughout the dt s·
lunch. Tee·off time is 10 a .m .
trlct at the annual event. or There is a new vehicle offered by
Claude V. Eblln. dec' d, af!ld. , ~'::'r!.w:ll:' r:::h":o''~::
course, the Meigs County Board
to Mary M. Eblin and Claude p-•d or impllod wom~n·
Turnpike Ford for a hole-in-one
of Education through the leader·
Douglas
Eblin, Sallsqury .
tloa given.
•
on number 9.
Featuring Gary Hart
Mary
M.
Eblin,
Claude
DouFor
more'
intonn•ion
conship of Supt . John Riebel Is also
If you'd like to get Into the
Scott
Shonk. 992-3293.
recognizing lop scholars of all of
&amp;
swing of the tournament con·
glas Eblin, and Suzanna Dawn -l4i1B.
20. 21 3tc
the school districts in the entire
Eblin. parcels, to Claude Dou- 1 _ _ _ _ __ ;_ _ _- l
ta ct Becky Triplett at 992·548.'i.
.__ _......,......,;,NEY~ II A COVP CHAIGI
county these days and) he a nnual
glas Eblin, Suzanna Dawn Eblin. ~
banquet to honor these students
Howard Eugene Eblin and Ivan
And with warmer weather
will be held In May .
Joseph Eblin, Sallsbury.
comes the wave of bail games
It you were at the Southern
which occupy many. many young
Banquet, I think It's unfortunate
people during the summer
It you weren't close enough to
months.
hear some of Tom Wolfe's
So - with that In mind , Big
one-llners that he threw out a few
Bend Pony League coaches -all
times. Tom has a good sense of
of 'em - will meet at 6: 30 p.m.
humor going there and Is quite a
Thursday in the meeting room at
suppotter of educallon In t.he
Middleport VIllage Hall. This
district.
includes both Meigs and Mason
------ -~
Counties.
Robert Lewis. Jr ., of Middle·
port, would love hearing from
Th,at's what Dr; Dan Trent brings to the people of the Bend Area
Keep that perseverance going
you about now .
Robert has
with the establishment of hi$ privat~t medical practice in New Haven.
- that 's the ability to stick wtth
undergone double bypass heart
, Irs the san\e commitment he's made
PleiJ~nt Val\ey Hospital, where
something you're not really
surgery. Cards can be seen to
·
he's
been
an
Emergency
Care Center physician for the
stuck on, you know . And do keep
Room 907. Doan Hall, University
smlllng.
past four years and wl\ere he continues as an acti~e
Hospital, Columbus, Ohio 43210.
member of the Medical Staff.
A West Virginia native, Dr. Trent graduated from
8111 Kennedy, Rock Springs '
Marshall University ·with a degree in biological and
area resident, Is a patient at
genetal science. He earned his medical degree from
Veterans Memorial Hospital and
•
the West Virginia School of Osteopathic Medicine in
.
FIIDAY,
IPII.
21,
1919
obaerVed his 85th birthday there
1983, and completed a rotating internship at Traverse
SilMON PAntE PLATE--.........- ............... S3.69
on Tuesday.
City
Osteopatliic Hospital in Michigan before
Our Doldetls llllnolttdr s.ton Pwttln, Son.. with
. Hla wife, Carrie. a faithful
re-locating with his family, wife Linda and c~ildren
Clooo11 and A Het lltrtt•.. Ill er llot- .. t lloc•lf.
member' of the hospital's
Lisa and Dan, to Mason County.
yvomen·s Auxlltary, took In two
SUNDAY, APII. 23, 1919
Dr. Trent Is looking fbrward to bringing a
lltrtbdaY cakes tor employees to
continuity
of care to hfs patients and their families,
HOMEIIADE
-----·-"""'
$3,99
llelp mark the occasion.
u
PortionIIEAlLOAf
ot o. 0w11 •••1111
..
1
11Mf
lllfh .....
, .. .
and working with the community for the good health
When 10111eone commented on
and Our IIIMiflfl.. G""f ......... ,,_ . . . wlflt I . .....
··
and
welfare
of
all
its
residents. Appointments and walk-ins are welcome
carrie'•· pleasant, poaltlve attlY- Cholco of AHat ..., ... Iller St..., lbut I Ill It hiiAt,
•
·
from
9
a.m.
to
5
p.m.
Monday, Tli4iiday, Thursday and Friday, and 9 a.m.
ewte the, like some of the rest of
.. w Dolllfflillf.., hill fnollly .,,... lA Stnall Drittl! • Hat ,..
Ia
a replied tbatlhe would have to
So*fltut..).
1
.
.
~
to noon Wednesiiay.
lie tbatwayorahewould cry a lot.
ClllD'S POinON ....................- ...._.............~ '1.99

vMl-

--"'·PI-

4

RIDEIBIR
SUPPLY

Prescriptions
992· 2955

Hctntelitt SAWS

172 North SoceoMI ....
......,,, Ohht
~TIONALCIIURCH ,

Won!~ -

lii::D a.m. a.otr ~- 6:~ p.m. unter 0( Loll
~ CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, GJMeo Union and .Mulbl!ny, """·
Thomas GIBI McCiu '11• pml&lt;r. NOI'IIliiD Prfs.
1~. S, S. !11~1 Sulllall Sctm, 9::11 a.m.;
-.mg.......,._p!D::Da.m.,
evenbig...V.:..6
p.Jn.; mld-Ntt ...-.tee, w......~. 7 p.m
GRACE EPIS(DPAL CIIUROI, 3'.l6 E.
Main St , Puinl!i'UY. S.rdi\Y .......,... Holy
COITvn..... Antho&gt; !fnt &amp;illlal-' 0( etK&gt;hmordl,
101d combined wlllo rn&lt;I'Droa on dE
third Sulllall. Marilin&amp; prayer and...,... on

p.m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

CHURCH, Corner Ash a nd Plum. Noel
Hernnann, pastor. Sun4ay SchoollO :OOa.
m.: Morning Worship, ' 11:00 a.m. , Wed· •
•nesday and Satunla y Evening Services at
7:30pm.
•

APPLE GROVE UNITED METRO.

DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
10 miles above Racine on Rt. 388.
Sunday Schod. 9 a.m. 1 worship service 10
a.m. Sunday' evening servlcl', 6:00p.m. ;
Prayer m€'etlng and Bible St udy 'Tburs·
day, 6:30p.m

HI~

J

------ --

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS'

Try

c,_, •••.,..I

s.r...

' Rlpt on, Carrie!

10liDioooutW ......

_Cit _ _

c..lfH::• ·

-·----cor-t

OEN 7 OAYI A WUK 10 TO 8
J

'

'

Preaching 9:30a.m. nrst and secoDd Sun-

days of each month: third and fourtb Sunllay each month worahlp servlcesat7 :30p.
m. ; Wednesday evenlnp at 7:30 p.m .

SEVEN111·DAY · ADVENTIST, Mul·

Snyder: Slbbath SChoci Superintendent,
RDdney Sptre.. Sobbltll School bex\a• al2

Schooi9::D a.m.; Morning Wonhip, 10.45
POMEROY FIRST BAI;'TIST, LyltCIC

Daniel R. "Trent, 0~0.
-&gt;

POI'IIIII'Iy Bind Area Medical Center

(~

_

.,.·-··--~·~·

·---1-

·~---.-·

__ ___
.._,

'1'11-..-

.... Weotor
.... Paa)llarllil

putor:

Jac::t NeedJ, Sunday School Director. Sun· 1

day Schoci, 9:30 a.m.: Mcralni Worolllp,
10:0; evenlila.,.OI'Iblp, 7:00p.m.ID-.S.T.)
• 7:30 iE.S.T.): WednOidar Pra er Ser·
vice, 7:00p.m.(D.S.T.) 67:· P. . (E.S.
T.): Fr1. . . (q 2·6, llo)&gt;al
AmbuladOn (~IIJel 6-18 • nd Gtrlli
In Aetfoil (llel 6- l on Weclneldlyo: 7 p.
1. m. !D.S.T llc7:30 .m. (E.S.T.);TuOiday
1 VIs ~tton, 6:30p.m.
. I FAITH TABERNACLE CH!JRCH, Bat·
ley Run Road, Rev. 1.'1ftmett RawiKil, pal·
I tor. Handll!!f Duu, 1upt. Sunlay Schoci,
10a.m .; Sundayevenlngaervlce, 7:30p.m.
Bible teaching, 7::II p.m. Thuroday.

I

I;

a...-reroMree
.... S.btn1114!ele
ASBURY (~cu•l - Worllttp U o.m.
: Cbureh School9:•5 o.m.; Cherae Bible
Study, WedDOiday, 7:30p.m.: uMW.IIrot
Tueocloy, 1: Ill p.m.: Choir Rebaroal,
Wedileeclay 6:30p.m. (Tbatcbll')
ENTERPRISE - Wo!'lblp 9 o.m.:
Cbureb SchooiiO a.m.: Bible Study, Tuel·
cloy, 7:00p.m.: UMW. 1'1rotMoocloy, 7:ll
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 8 p.m. Cbolr Rebelrlll. Cbllclren'o at6:311 p.m. Adult lot·
lowlni: Wecloeod07. (Fraolclflll
, FLATWOODS- Cburcb School,IO o.m.
; Wol'lb1p. U a.m.; Bible Study, Tburs~. 7 p.m.; UMYF, Suoday, 6 p.m.

(Fraolclta) .
FOREST RUN - Worlblp II a.m.;
Cllllreb SCbnol 10 A.M.: Choli' pnu:ttce,
Tbuncloy, 6: I) p.m.; UMW third llonclay.

SYRACUSE MISSION, Cherry St. , Sy·
I racuse.
Mark Morrow, put or. Servtces.to
1

(Tbalcllor)
HEATH IMlddloport) - Cbureb SCbool,
9:30 a .m.; Mornbla Wortb.lp 10: :m a .m.;

, a.m Sunday . Evening ~ervlces Sunday
and Wednesday at 6:00p.m. ·

atudy I: DO p.m. Choir rebearsal7:00p.m.

1

'

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
iN CHRISTIAN UNION, Owlflol Hal~,·
!tnt etde-; Wonclo Molll.,, Sundoo,y Scbool
&amp;cpt. Suillfay Schoci 9:11) o.m.; Morllln.l
1
I Wcrstot. 10: 3o a.m.; II:Vi!rtfnl Worllllp 7: 3ll
p.m.; Wedn01d87 pnyer meetlnJ?: ll p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURC.Il OF GOD,
•Raetne. Rav. Jams Sltterft4!1d, putar.
Freeman WWtamo, Supt. !Iunday Scllool
l 9:45 a.m.: Sunday and Wednllday eventna 10ervt&lt;eo, 7 p.m.
1 MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.

l

I

I Corner Slxth and Palmer. James Seddon.

' Pallar. Edna WU1&lt;11, S.S. Supt.; Colttoy
: Rlflll, Alii. Supt. Sunday SChoci, 9: 15 a.
1 m. : MorntnrWorlhlp,10:15a.m.: Sunday
1

!
~
i

EvealftJifl'Yice, 1 p.m. Prayer meeting

and Bible Study WeclnOiday even tar, 7 p.

m.; ChlldreD'I choir pncttee, Wednel·
dey, 7 p.m.: Adull choir practice. Wed., 8
1 p.m.; Radio prqrram, WMPO. Sunday,
• 8:30a.m .

Youllo Grwp, ' p.m.; Wedneoday, Bible
(Zwdp)

.

MINE!IliVILLE - Chureb School I: oo·

o.m.; Wo~ce 10:00 up.; UMW
third Weclo
1 p.m. tTbalc,tr)
PEARLCH
L-CIICin:bScbooi.:OO
a.m.; Worolllp Service 10:00 a.m. (Mor-

ttn~OY- Cbun:b School, 9:18o.m.
. Wol'llolp 10: 30 o.m.; Choir rebarlll
lvedileodav, 7:30 p,m,; UMW, NCDIXI

Tueocloy, f::D p.m.; UMYI"Suildoy, &amp;p.m.
CMe....,.ol
ROCK SPRINGS - Chureh SChool, 9: ~
a.m.; Wci'lblp 10 a.m.; llbleStudy, WodDeodav, 7:31p.m.: UMYF iSenlon),Suodoy, 6 p.m.: (JUJIIon) overy otber Suoday, I p.m. (FrODkiiD) .
RUTLAND- Church SChool, 10 a.m.:
Wot'lhlp. 11 a.m.; UMW 1'1rlt Monday.
7::£·"" (Crabtree)
EM CI:NTER- Cbureb Scbool9: ~
o.m.; Mol'lllnl Worolllp 10: ~ a.m.
(-e)

SNOWVILLE - Mornlla WoroltiD. 1:00
o.m.; Cllllrc:b SchooiiO:O&lt;r a.m. (llartiD)

IOIJ'DIBIIN CLIJIITBII

......
,.o_
.... CartBieu

.... -o.hBolttr

APPLE GROVE - Chureh Scbool 9:00
o.m.: MomfniWorolllpiO:OOa.m.: Bible
Study Sullllay 7:00p.m.: Proyer m...flll
7:00p.m. Tburlllay. (lUdell
BETHANY 9 o.m.: Church
11&lt;-10 a.m.; -oStudy Wedileod8710
a.""; llton!D
Fellowlltlp WidrUo;m.
b-llatla.m:
'NonltiP
d
•·IlL
.... i'iiiiiG
~
_,dill-.. wllb
Slltt•
third '111ui'IIIIY, 1::11 p.m. tllU•l·
MOIINING IITAR - Cllllrcfl School I: «1
a.m.:• Wol'llllll11:30 o.m.;
Staoly,
Tbtind&amp;Y, ?:II p.m. !BUll').
SU'I'I'OH- CIN"'b SChool. 9:30a.m.;
MDrldltl Wonltlp 111: 15o.m. flrotaod tblrcl
*'-~: PtlloWIItfp oftb Cormll
third '111ulldor, 1:30
EAST LETARTJWol'llolp 1:00
LtD.; ClluHSchooi:JO:IIlLOn.; IJW'I'Iilldi:Y 1:11 p.m. !Grace) .

•Ill•

138 Main St., New Haven~ West Virginia +(304) 882·3134

_....',....

meroy Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant,

&amp;.n:-JIIU•I·

~

SChool10: ll Lm.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
TOOT) ftUOII'CII, putor. Sunday SChoci 9:30
a.m.; Larry Hayaeo, s , s. Supt. Mornfnl
wonlllp 10:30 a.m.
RACINE ,CHURCH OF 1l!E NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Jobn V&amp;Dce, puler; Sandy

CIENTBAL CLUIITBII
Rev. Melvll FNakMa :
..... a ...- 8. ........ Jr.
Rev...........

w-··

•

Family Practice

..

m.: Sunday Church SChool, 9·ll a.m.:
Mcrnlill Worohlp 10:lla.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAf'\IST. Po-

Clyde

WednOiday 7:1111 p.m.
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, 28&amp;)1 State Route 7, Middleport. Sunday SChool, 10 a.m.; Sunday
evening service, 7: 30 p.m.; Tuesday aer·
vice, 7:30p.m.

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
0 . H. Cart, pastor. Sunday School at !I: 30a.

m.; Morning worship at 10: 30 a.m:: Sunday evening servtce at 7:30p.m. Thuraclay
services' at 7:30 p.m .

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31 Rev.

' Roger WUUoni, paslcr. Sunday Scbool

9;30 a.m.; Morntag Worahl 10:'5 a.m.:

Sunday evenlna worship 7:00p.m.; Wed·
nesday evenlq Bible Study 7:00p.m.

WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHURCH- Coolville RD. Rev.PbtlllpRl·

denour. paattr. Sunday School 9:30a .m.•
worlhlp eervtce 10:30 a.m.: Bible study
and wcnblp service. Wedlleeday, 7 p.m.
llt.rrLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, !loy
w. Corter, putar. MorniDJ Wo!'lblp 10: tiO

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH,

Uoyd say..,, Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.
m .; momlq wonhlp 10:l0 a.m . Sunday
eventna aervtce 7 p.m.

a.m.; BlbteScbool6:00p.m.; BlbleStudy
WeclnOiday 7:00p.m.
RUTLAND BIBLE ME'IliODIST. Amos

Steve

TUlia, pastor. Sonny Hudlm, aupt. SuDday

School 9:30a.m.; Momtna worship, 10:ll

Deaver. Putor. Mike Swlaer, Sunday

SChool Supt; Sunday Scllool 9:30a.m.:
Mornfll&amp; warllolp 10:40 a.m.; Sunday
evenfDa worship 7: 30 p.m.: wednl!llday
evenflla Bible lfudy 7:ll p.m.
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
8ur11oiJ1toun. RI.Y Lacodermlll, putcr; Jlo.
bert Cozart. Wfllaol poal&lt;r. Surdi\Y Scl»d
10 a.m.; wcnbfp.7 p.m.; W-11)1. 6 p.m.
youth meelln8: Wed., 7p.m. chureb ...-vt......
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH,\!

a.m.; Suaday evenln&amp; aervlce 7: 00p.m.
Wednesday aervtce 1 p.m. WMPO program 9 a .m . each Sunday.
RUTI.AND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE . Samuel Basye, paahr. Sunday
School9:30 a.m.; Worship .ervlce10:30a.
m.; Young people's service I p.m.
Evangelistic service 6: :41 p.m. WedDesday
servtce 7 p.m.

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mlll..-

mueotr Rt. 325. Rev. BeD J . Watts, pastor.

St., Muon, W Va. Sunday BlbleStudylO
a.m .: Worsblp lla. m. and 7 p.m. Wednes·
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m .
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·

Robert searlES, S.S. Supt. Sunday School

a .m.; Morning Worship 10: !It a .m.;
Sunday eveD.lag: service 7:30 p.m.; Wed·

1:~

neldly -.tee, 7:30p.m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, BOt Little,

din&amp; Lane, Muon,

pastor. Eventaa

Sunday'eveDingwcr'Eil 7:30p.m. Prayer
meet1n1 and Bible
Wedneoil07, 7:30
p.m.; Youlbmeettna edn01d87117p.m.
REJOICING LJF! B,wnBT CHURCH
- 383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday
Scbool10 a.m. Sunday evenfn11:00p m.:
~let",

p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hart!ont, W. Va.
Rev. David McMooll, putor. thun:b
SChool 9: :II a.m.: Sunday mornlo&amp; oer·
·vice, 11 a.m.; Sunday evealna 1ervlce,
7:30p.m. WecloeocloyprayermeetiDJ, 7::11
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Lelar.t.

Wed.,'7 p.m .

LANGSVILLE CHRIS11AN CHURCW,
Sunday School 9:30 a.m. ; Dallu Janer.o,

supt.; Mol'lllq wonhlp 10:30 a.m. ; Sun.day eveniq" aervJce, 7: 30p.m: Wednes·

clay I!Ventn.roervlce, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF 1l!E NA·
~NE . Rev. Gleon McMUian, pastcr.
MafY Juice Laveoder, Sunday School
Supt. Sundlll' School9:llo.m.: Mornfllg
wonhlp 10:30 Lm.; Evaneellstlc aervtce.

&amp;p.m.; PrayerandPraloeWecln~. 7p.
m:i,l"outll meetlila, 1 p.m.
UNI'I'£D BRETHREN IN
, CHRIST Eldoa R. Blal£e. putor. Sunday
School iii Lm.; Gory Reed, Lay leoder.
Mcrnlill sermon, U a.m.: Sunday nfllht
10erv1ceo: Chrtlttaa Endoovor 7:ll p.m..
Soq IC!rvlct 8 p.m. Preacldng8: ll p.m.
Mld·-8 prayer meetlnl. WeciDOiday, 7
p.m .
IIEML6cK GROVE citRtsnAN Dov fd
PrOntlce, pmtar. MU- Zl'lfer, SUiidoy
School &amp;lpt. Morntna Worofllp 9: ll a.m.:
;1~0:a!Sc:i~~hool~ 10: 30 a.m.; Evenlnr ...-.
'"aiiikvBAPTIST, Paster: Joe N.
"'
School9:'5'a.m.; E...flll
~· ~·r·•·' Prlyer Meettna. 6:30

""I:N

w. Va. J . N. Thackll!!l',

~ervlce

7:30 p.m.; Women's MiniJtry, Tburala.Y{ 9:30 a.m.;
Weclneoday Prayer and Btl&gt; e Study, 7: ~

putar. Steve Uttle, S. S. Supt. Sunday
ScboallDa.m.; Momtngworslp,lla .m.;

Mid--week

Hendenoo. palter'. Sunday

lllg worship 7:00 p.m. Prayer meettn1.

Juatice, Chairman of the Board of Christian Ufe. Sunday Schoolt: 3D a.m.; Morn·
Ina worship 10:30 a.m.; evangelistic .,ervt"" 7:1111 p.m. Wecln01d07 service, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, !lex·
ter. Woody Ca11, putm-. Services Sunday
10 a.m. aad 1 p.m . Wednesday, 7 p.m.

RACINE FIRST . BAPTIST,

w.

School9.30 a.m.: Ralph car~ &amp;cpt Even·

put«. Cfturch aervlce 9: :.&gt;a.m.; Sulkh..

a.m .

Haney, mlnlaler; Saturday evening
evangelistic tervtces, opea. fo public, 7 p.

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
AL CHURCH. Klnptoury Road. Rev.

afllp Sundoo,y 7p.m. aad WednOiday, 7Rom.
ST. JOHN LU1l!ERAN CHURCH, P!De
Grove. Tbe Rev. William Mtddl•wartb,

berry Heltrhta Road, Pomeroy. Paat~Y Bob

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIS;r CHURCH

Shuler, paatCI'. Worlhlp let'VIce, 9:30a.m.
~nday SChool10:30 a .m. Bible Study and
prayer serYice 1burlday, 7: 30p.m.

rt:lf, Alit Supt.; Sunday School9: 30 a.m.;
Worsblp tervlce 10:30 a.m.; Evenlne wor·

Prayer and Bible Study.

non-Pentecostal Worship service Sunday
10 a.m. : Sunday Schod 11 a.m. Evenlp.g
wors)'l.tp service 7: 00 p.m. Wednesday
prayer meeting 7: 00p.m .

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. """. Earl

pastor. Sunday service, 9; 30 a.m.; even·

UNITED METHODIST,

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.

land-Raclne Road. Mike Duhl, pastcr;
Janice Danner, church school 41rector.
Church school 9: 30a.m.: Mornlna:wonh1p
10:30 &lt;\.m.: Wednesday eveatnK prayer
services, 7: 30p.m.

lnr service 7•00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
WediiOiday, 7:00p.m. ,
BEARWALLOW ffiOGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST, Jooepb B. JlolfdnJ, puler. Bible
C!aq, 9:30a.m.; Mornfn1Worsfllp10:30a.
on.; EventnaWoroblp, 6:l0p.m. Tburaday
Btble Study, 6: 30p.m.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, PomeroY·
HarrflmvWe Rd. Robert Purtel~ miDis·
ll!r; Steve Stanler.o, S S. Supt.: BUt McEI·

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS.

B3 Mill StrHI
Mldcloport. Ohio 45760
11141112·88117 - 199B·OOK81
~HURCH SUPPLIES lc BIBLES

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATIER DAY SAINTS. Port·

HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Tberm Durham,

TOLIC FAITH - New Lima Road, next to
Fort Meip Park. Robert W. Richards,
pastor. Suaday lei"VVces, 10 a.m. and 7 p.
m.; WedDC!Idey worlhlp, 7 p.m.

..
0\\.;rt S•·ui a3oof.,

n~

Charles Russell Sr.. minister: Nonnan
WUl, supt. Sunday School9: 00 a.m.; Wor·
ship service 10: 30 a .m. Bible study, Wed·
nesday, 6:00p.m.

!0:15a.m. (Steele) .

SpJ;'lng, mlntster; Starling Massar and CH·
lver Swain, Sunday SchOol Supts. Preacblng9: 30 a.m. each Sunday; Sunday School
10:30a.m.

- Pomeroy. Map:. Mlcfl4el Hellmer, Ph.
99:1-511!111. Sltunl07 evelltnaMus, 5:ll p.m.
; Sund&amp;¥ Mus, 8 a.m. and 10 a.m. CCD
ctaaaes, 9 a.m1 Sundoy. Conli!lotona: Onehall hour befu'n! each Mua.
•

- Sliter Harriett W'arner, Supt Sunday

Wo~p

992-2975

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST.

SNOWVILU: - Worolilp 9•00 a.m.:
Chureb SchooliO:OO a.m. (Marlin) .
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Hog•

'('tu::R~n HEART CA1l!OUC CHURCH

welcome. ~

o• lulternut An., Pom~ray,

·· ..····
.•.··oo
.•

204 C011dor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

School9: 30 a.m. , Morning worship lO:ll
a.m.; Teens In Action. 6 p.m.: Evening
Worship, 7:00 p.m. Cholr practice 8 p.m.
Sunday. Wednesday even ina: prayer and
Bible study .

SALEM CENTER- Chureh School9: ~

w-.,
l:t!'f'•-·--·

I

LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a,m :
Church School10 ~.m . (Grace)
RACINE - Church Schoci, 10 a m.; Wor·
ship U a.m.: UMW lourthMcnday at7·:Dp

a .m .;

BilLE CHRIS'IlAN
CHURCH. Al¥tol CUrtto, put&lt;r. lJnda Swan,
illpL llllllal-' Sc!Di 9:.11 a.m.; preacllln&amp;oer·
vlcel. 111'111 aod llllld lll-lollowlngS.IIIall
SchrxL Youth meetb.. 7:~ p.m. everySunOU&gt;

p.m. on Silturday afternoon wllh wcrt hlp
service lollowln1 at 3:00 p.m. Everyone

(6141992-2039 or
(6141992-5721

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

Canada and the United States have always
been good neighbors through the years,
· although as with families who live next
door to each other, occasional differences
will arise. This is only natural, but nonetheless the "heads" of the families can get to·
gether and work out solutions acceptable
to both. The friendship is also kept in a
healthy state by paying visits to c;ach other
at regular intervals, with no barricades to
entering each other's territory. Moreover,
their "children" play games together, and if
they happen to be baseball or hockey, this
completes the parallel. The faith that we
learn at our House of Worship teaches us
to "love thy neighbor," .and we pray that
this spirit of helpful frien&lt;Jship will for ever
transcend that 3,000-mile "property line"
' across our continent. ·

m.; Men's Prayer Breakfast, Wednesday , 8
am. ~Grace).

THE CEDAR LOUNGE Presents

at

MT. OLIY,E UNITED METHODIST -

Off 12f, behind Wtlkesvtlle. Charles Jones,
pastor. Sunday SChod, 9: 30a m., mornlng
worship, tO· 30, Suru:tay and Thursday
... evening ~rvl c es , 7:00pm.

GRAHAM

llOWEIS FOJ IVIIY OCCASION

\

HAZEL COMMUNI'I'Y ~HURCH . 01!
Rt. 124, 3 miles from Portland Long Bot·
torn. 'Edsel Har t, pastcr. Sunday School,
9: 30 .a.m.; Sunday morning preaching
10:30 a.m., Sunday evening services, 7. 30

EwnlneIO::Do.m.;
wcnNp. 1:00
p.
!l:~~:ll~a.m.~~:6:00
Mao~=--~~·~~
Youth
rn;ver..-aaon~llble

CHARLESTON'S BEST
AND
MIDDLEPORT'S FINEST

OPENING
FRIDAY,
APRIL 28th·

FAMILIES AND
MUST
TRY TO BE GOOD NEIGHBORS

..

aU ctlEr &amp;llllora ollloe mooth. Clwoofl SchoO
anciNul'll!l')'~.-edl!d. OJI!ee twr In tiE
l'olr1llh Holl
-.,..t!luem:e.
POMER(lY
OF CIIRBI', 2U W.
Main St., Leo Lull, ....f!lllt lltie Sdlod

l

O ·

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

De-

Meigs County
land transfers

commitment to providing
your family
·
with quality health care.

992-S 141

~

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

""" Rlduord Fn!8nan. pultr:
flick.
S.rdi\Y Schoal !Ut:t. !llurchScl»d!l:l!ia.m :

...

Sat., April 2,2, 9 p.m.-1 a.m.

,

SILlS &amp; SEIVIU

.

Fri., April 21

" Serving Families"
264 S. 2nd, Middleport

BRoWN '&amp; SNOUffER
Fll~ &amp; SAFETY
992·7075

e

FUNERAL HOME

Pomeroy

I

_..g

FASTFORWARD

~

992· 2318 Pomer ov

Rawlings.( oats-Blower

·!U

PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'

FURNITURE a HARDWARE

•os

Supporting education.

IUI.IQI

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

I

v••••t •

Beat of the Bend

[H

a

~

d••

THE JOY Of RELIGION ~;

'•
'This Message and Church Directory Se!!.f!S.or:_ed By The_''!-terested JJ.usinesses Listed On .This Page..
-~-. MEIGS DRE
TEAFORD REALTY P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
(row's Family RestaurCIIt
"F,Itlllf 1(,,.,1, Ftlli eMH,."
~ \ CEN1ER, INC.
216 5. Secqnd
Nationwide Ins . Co. ~
Pom e roy
221 w. Main st...J.roy
~~John F. Futu. Mgr.
ol Columb415. 0 .
992-3325
i,
Ph. "1-2111
992-5432
804W. Mam
Pomeroy

•c••

.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7 ,~._.- ._____,_..-·:

·-

--ion -It

='="ARTMM bt: ~

-

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

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

~

7 tiXrERifN

a..-

..,_1

..........

--~~----~~

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

W. Va., Rt. 1, Jama Lew11. putcr. Wor-

sfllp oervtcos 9:30 o.m.: Sunday Schoolll
a.m.; Eveotar worllhlp 7: ll1.m. Tueeclay
"'ttage prayer meetlnr an llbte Study
9:30 a.m.: Wo!'lblp service, Weclneeclay
7.llp.m.
OURSA.VIOUHLU1l!ERANCHURCH,
Walnut aod Hoary Sta.. Raveuwcod, W.
Vo. Tbe Rav. Gto"'le C. Welrtc:k. putar.
SulldaySChool9:30o.m.: S,i11187w_,p
· lla.m.
CALVARY SIBLE CHURCH.Icoatecl011
Pomeroy Ptke. Couoty Roed215 _. l"'lt·
woodl. Rev. Blockwood, putor. Servlceo
on Sunday at10: 30a.m. oad7:30 p.m. w111o
SundayScbool9:30o.m. BibleStudy, Wedn01d87, 7:1) p.m.
1
FAITII FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
' CHRIST, St. HI. 331, Ailttqatty. Rav.
Franklin Dldlea, put«. Sunday mom.

s..- ""'"""

tna 10 a.m. ;
7:11) p.m.
Tbaroday ....... ?:lO p.m.
MIDDLEPORTlNDEPENDENT ROLl·
,..NESS CHURCH, lac., 11 Peerl st. Rev.
lvu ~ aollll put..-; Jloaa'....,._,
Br.,

=-

7

llttperbotn Ill. ....

· = t:lllo.m.; -....w«*p
10: ...,._. •avoaJiW wanlllp '1:311 """''

w

10

~~ ..... INdy 1 prayer

.... -llrviCO,_l:.p.m.
CRUIICII or JDill CIIRIIIT AJ'OS.
TOIJC- V"'""M aool '11'... Rei. Eld..-

Jom• IIIIIIR,iV:. lltrlMiaf leboci,
!O:lOa.m.; Wo
llnlee.luildoiY. ?: Ill
p.m.; Bllilolltole.'W......._,,,,.,p.m.
CALVARY PII:.CIUM CIIAPIL, RarrloQ!i\'IIIJf a.od. Rav, Vtalor Rtttl_a putor;
0 DtCIII l"av~ridqleboallllpl.; SuD-

••

· · ·.~-~--~~· p.m.
meet·
pm.

~OREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. William WUIIaml, putor; Jlo.
bitttli:. Bart•. Dtre&lt;!tctr otChttstlao Eolu· · a.oll.;
catloo&gt;; lltRve EbllOj 111fltant S.lld87
~

tlaiflte •....J.1

}

wcq!Q,

u

'I'll! P.m.

wi!'!P-.,. f:llp.m.

MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Community otf Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
sanders, pastor. Jeff Holter, lay leader;
Ed Roush, Sunday Sc hod Supt. Sunday
School 9:30a.m., morning worship and
children's church 10: 30 a .m., evening
preachlna service first three Sundays,
'I': 30 p.m. , Special service fout1h Sunday
eveniDg, 7:30 p.m., Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow-

'sfllp, 7: ll p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.

Located on 0 . J . White Road of Highway
160. Pat Hensoo . pastor. Sunday School. tO
a .m. Classes for all age. Junior Church 11
a.m.; Morning wor ship 11 a .m. Adult
Cboir practice 6 p.m. Sunday . Youns People's, Children's Church and Adult Bible

StudY, Wednl!llday at 7::W p.m.

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
St., Middleport. Atllllated with Southern
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr., Ml·
nllter. SuDday School 10 a .m. , Morning
worship 11 a.m. : Evening worShip 7 p.m.,
Wednesday evenlni Bible study and
prayer meettng 7 p.m.

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.

Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Scott Stewart, pastor. William Amberger, S. S. Supt., Sunday School 9:00a.m.; Morning Worship
1&amp;.30 a.m.; Evenln&amp; worship 7:30 p.m.

Wedneoday worahlp 7&gt;:11 p.m.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Corner Sycamore and Second Sts. , Pomeroy. The Rev. William Mlddl eswart,
pastor. Sunday Schod 9: 45a.m. Church
service 11 a .m.
•
SACRED HEART CHURCH, Msgr.
Aathony Glannamore. Pb. 992·5898. Satur·
day EveDinli Mass 7: 30 p.m., Sunday
Mass, 8 a .m. and 10 a .m. conresslons one
half hour tiefore each Mass. ceo classes,
11 a.m . Sunday.
·
Vl&lt;:rORY BAPTIST. 525 N. 2nd St.,
Middleport. James E. Keesee, pas t&lt;r.
S\].nday morning worship 10 a.m.; Even·
ing service 7 p.m .; Wednesday evening
worship 1 p rri. Vlsltallon Thursday 6· 30p.
m.

t,

I

....

,.., .fol ll, ..

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
lill !hlkllll and lulb Ann fox
pastor. Melvin L&gt;raJCe, s . S. Supt. Sunday' '
School9: 30 a. m.; Mornlng Wor.sti1p 10: 30; •
Evening Worship 7·00 p m.; Wednesday. ~
Prayer Service, 7:00p.m.

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH. Railroad l

St , Mason. Sunday Schod 10 a .m.; Morn- .r
lng worship 11 a.m.; Evening service 6 p., •
m Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed· f
nesday, 7 p.m .
.~
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyl e
Borden, pastor Cornelius Bunch, supt.
Sunday School 9:30 a.m. ; Second andu
fourth Sundays worship service at 2. 30 p1•

m

~

MT MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and.;
Main St. , Middleport. Rev . Cllbert Crail.'?
· Jr., past&lt;r. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardn er~,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School9: 30a . .tl
' m.: Worship Service, 10:45 a .m.
rJ

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCHOF CHRIST

- Joseph B. Hosklns, eva ngelist. Sunday
Bible Study 9 a.m.; Worship, lOa.m .; Sun-)f
day evening service 6 p.m., Wednesday,
evening service, 7 p.m.
-i

. PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY , Racine, ~

Rt 124 William Hoback, pastor. Sunday 1
School tO a .m .: Sunday even lug service 1
p.m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m .

CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle1 ~

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

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,•

next to Fon Melp Park, Rutland. Robert ._
Richards, pattor. Services at 7 p.m. on ....
Wednesdays anti Sundays,
·

HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·

TER of tbe Wealeyan Hollnesa Cltui'Ch
Rev. David Ferrell, pastor. Henry EbUn(
Sunday School SUpt.; Sunday SchotlllO a. 1
m. ; Morning Worship 11 am., Evening
service 7: 30p.m. Wednesday evening ser~t
vice 7:30p.m .
'J'
STIVERS\'ILLE WORD OF FAlTH
Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday services 9: a&amp;•
a.m. and 7 p.m .; Mldweektervtce, 7 : ~ p.
m . Thunclay.

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third

Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pastor cart Nottingham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday':
School. 10 a.m. with clas.es for all ages •. •
Evening services a l 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl·
ble study at 7:30p.m. Youth services F r i- ·
clay at 7:30p.m .
_

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP,128MittSt., ,

Middleport. Brother Chuck McPhersoo,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m. ; Sunday' •
evening services al7 p.m . and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m.

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Keaneth SmHh,' 1

pastor. ~unday Schod 9! 30 a.m.; churoh'•
service 7:30p.m. ; youth fellowship 6: 30 P~ •
m: Bible study, Thursday, 7:30p.m.

FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE , 3.l&gt;4!5 '

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David

Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas- ..
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday •
morning servtce at 10 a.m. : Sunday evening service 7:30p.m. Tuesday and Thurs--'
day Services at 7:00 p.m.
,

WESLEYAN BIBLE HOUNESS
CHURCH o! Middleport, Inc , 75 Pearl St.,

ZAREHE, Rev. Glendon St rwd , pastor. '
SundaySchoo19: 30a .m.; Wor shlp.ervlce, ' ·
10:30 a.m.; Youth service Sunday 6: l!i p. _.
m. Sundayeventngservtce7:00p.m. Wednesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study t

Evening Worship 7:30 p.m. WednOiday

day afternoon services al
evening servtcea at 7:30.

service, 7:30 p.m.
LMNG WORD CHESTER CHURCH

a.m.; Sunday evelling 7:30p.m Prayer

Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
worship service 11 a.m .; Sunday nigh t
worship service 7•30 p m : Midwe ek
prayer service Wednesday 7 p.m

Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor: Roger Manley,
Sr., Sunday SchOol Supt Sunclay School
9: ao a.m. : Morning Worship 10: 30 a.m.:

eventq Bible stucly , prayer and pralse

OF GOD - Gilbert Spencer, p&amp;ltG". SuD·
day School 9:30 a .m .; Mornina: aervJce
tO:OOa.m ; Sunday evenlq servlce7 :00 p.
m.; Mid-week prayer service Wednelday
7pm.
MT. OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN·
tTY CHURCH, Lawrence Bush, pastor.
Max Folmer, Sr., S. S. Supt. Sunday SChool.
9:!1t a .m.; SuDday evenllla aervlce, 7:30 .
m.: Wednelday eveninl 8ible study and
praJ.se service. 7: 30p.m .

UNITED FAITH CHURCH, HI. 7on PomeroY B&gt;:·Pua. .Rev. Robert E.Smlllo, Sr,

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF 1l!E NA·

7:00p.m.
,
NEASE SETI'LEMENTCHUHCH, Sun.
2 :~.

Thur.Jay ·
'!
CHURCH, M.. m , W.•

FIRST BAPTIST
Va. Past&lt;r. BUI Murphy. Sunday School10

meeting an~ Bible study Wednesday, 7:301
p.m. Everyme welcome.

·

RUTLAND FREE WlLL BAP11ST, Sl·;

lem St Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor Sunday
School tO a .m .: SuQdayevenlng 7:00p.m; .
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7! DO
p.m.

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT '

CHURCH, Silver. Ridge. Duane Syden· . •
Stricker, pastCI'. Sunday Schod 9 a.m ·
Worship Service, 10 a.m.; Sunday even1r\i 1
service, 7:00p.m. Wednesday night Bible

study 7:00p.m.

·sermonette ·
History Is the ground work for making our lives and our world
a better place to live. If we do not know our history, we destine
ourselves to live It over again and again. History Is never made
In the abstract nor In dreams or visions of grandeur .
History Is In reallty the writing down of deeds. These deeds
· may be good or evil.
History Is a record of what others have done, but also what we
ourselves have done. We all make our mark on the pagea of
time. Much may be mundane but some wlll be worthy of note.
Think back to your youth and of your family. Surely there a-e
people whose deeds you gladly remember.
History Is the result of aome one disciplining himself to
achieve a dre,ap1 or dealre, hopes and plans. What ever they
accomplish or have done becomea blstory. Your history may be
only that you are an honest person. It may be only that you are
friendly, helpful, prayerful, devoute lor all to see. \'ou also
m&amp;)'be a crude, hateful, foul-mouthed, untrustworthy perso11,
You would then not ~a nice person ~be around butyouwoutd
stm be hlltory.
Being on the side of God aad walking In Hll ways wUI be
blf' II' fa the good 114!111e. You 1ee a Chrllllall -ta to be Q(
iJII'iiOe to God and man.
. A t'!llniUtua II not out to burt, belittle, backbite nor ataader a ·
nei.,._DOrau~.AJyoulookbackat)'OIIl"lu ' Yllcbool
teacller, family and frien* from clnircb, were lbe.v 1101 111pe
people to lie arouad. Are you not glad you have IIDRJl them.
Their pid•a• and deedl are now II!story.
Tbllpid 1111tory Should be our aaal u welL Walk with....._
follow the h11torlc stepa of God fearing men and wolnenalld the
world around you wWbuliletter place. It Ia true,IJIIar!ll·~

......_of Melp

- Psa&amp;er WIWam MJddlelwwth, ...

~·

�--

I

Friday;

Sentinel

31

Homes

The Daily Sentinel Page 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, April 21, 1989

21 1989 '

LAFF·A·DAY

for Sale

61

Household Goode

64 Mi1c.

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Merchandise

76

· Auto Parts
Accessories

8r
GOO!) USED IIPPUANCES
Waehlrt. drVm. ...rrigwetors.
r•nlll•· Sk_•oa• A_PPIIM~I •
Upp• Rlvoo Rei. bolide Stono
trOll Motol. 814-441-7391.

. ..,ttlJL 1Didoua. bridhtinyl
- n l • 3 •R. 2 lou. lbovo
••11• .-ltv bulk. In .._lr.t
.,.,.. ..... eo~~a14-441-111&amp;
2 bedrooml. C.r_plt.:l.
liurnlnum oidnl- •t4.

&amp;;0 hMI.

Cll
114-912-1272 boforl 5:00
p.m.
3 bo«oom Iorick toomow~h l•uo
iol. Mid W"' 0 olvo. -on.
Good aond. 304- n:l-8811.

.,.udlon

i

VI'RA f\1 RNITURE
• APPUANCES
Rt. 141 lnC4intll'ltry. 1/4ml. on
Uncoln Pike. Ollen 7 d.,a 1
IAM-IPM. COil for oppl.
Aft• hours 114-441-3158.

PilbiCs•

3 t.ctoam ..nCih. priM ao·...
extr1 nice. ,..:adoWbrook Addl·
tlol'\ call lftw t:OO 1ft d w . .
.!&lt;oncil304-178-74a

. 10 ft. Caunhy lion-. 3
b o « - 2 botho. 2 boart!M
Itone ,._...._ 2 c• e•aoe..
8 . 15 ecru . Many extfal .
. .2.000.00. 304-411-1139.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198

Middleport,

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTE!t~GI-EDDIOI

FREE

.~LLEN'S
HAU~ING
We Haul and
Spread
Limestonll
Dirt, Sand &amp;
Coal Oeliverad
1,QOO Gal. Water
• Service

992·5'75
3-28· 'RR-1 mo.

ESTIMATES

Take tile pal• aut ef
palnfiJII. Ltt •• do
It for you.
YEIY IEASOIIULI
HAVE IEFEIINCE

::1: ~614) 446·7619 or (&amp;14) 992-2104
417 ~-- 8CIIl213

z~ ,GIIUpolis, Olio 45831
.

..
•

Quality

SUYICE
915·3t61

4·14-18-t mo.

~====-;:;:;:;:::~::::===~I

YAIINWIIIOWW
ECNO SAWS I nw.a
0110011 IAIS, CIIAINS
RYAN SEIVICE CENTER
Parts &amp; Service On

rno.

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEL ·
SERVICE

Mallet
VISA - MASTERCHARGE
HOURS' Mon. 9-7
1"u01.-Sat. 9-6; Cloeed Su

SYRACUSE, 0110

949-2969

Moat Foreign: and

3/31118/1 mo.

ROOFING

NEW -REPAIR

-·-.

AT THE

FABRIC SHOP

- --

-~

-

-

6

Happy Ads

18

949-2168

MOBILE
HOME PARK tl

Public N otic&amp;

•Mobile HomeParts
'· •Mobile
R ·a ntale
•Lot Rantala

•MirAL BUILDINQI

HOUSING a APT. P"OJECTI

Heinie

SINCE 1969 .

992-7479

n.n•a•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
.
FIDUCIARY
On Apjrll17, 1989,in the
Meigs
County Probate
Court. Coso · No. 26222,
Morigena Hortlino.
3951
Highland Avenue, Shadylido, Ohio, 43947 w• ..,.
pointed Executrix of the ••·
tate of Charlea
Strauss
Gibbo. deceaood.lote of 102
Peoplea Terrace, Pomeroy.
Meigo County. Ohio.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lone K. Nea01lrood. Clark
(41 21. 28; (51 5 3tc

It. 33 Nortll

af

CLW .

992·8871

PUBLIC

• .--,n----.M"e-mor--:-.- m - 18
2 1

.

TNUIS. U. k45 P.M.
SUII. I.L 1:45 PA .
DOOIPIIII
2 H.D. FlEE wlh coU.j1051111d

of min. H.C. P:l:i-'
, •IlL Limit I coupon' _per cus-i
.to:ner per bit~~~ •ilon.
. ' we l'ar •sa.oo '• Gomo ·
pun: h..

o... 110 ...... !65.00 .
hrO...o
lk. nas-sr
2·3-lflo

-lat.

!!~ ~- ~lrilltioV'o

- and IWr! Of 1!115 304-1711·
4347 .. 1711-:illlel.
.
fi'Lilllldi

EAII N I!XCELLENT MONEY 11

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

2---.. .

'""~ eon

c.11

..

I

21

Bl!lirlau
Opportunity

HOWE'S GROVE PARK

CO.--·-

RELATIONS

CONSIGNMENTS WICOMI

108 Hi1h Su....
Pom..-oy, Ohio 45769
Phon• (614) 9'12-2922

PATRICK H. BlOSSER

....,_ for oolo: Femitv Ro1&gt;
/Oomo ,_,_ a-d 1o•1o111
Colll14-387· 7110,

-cod.

31

Homaa for Sale

'

PH. 304-421-724S

4-1-M-1 ... .

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS

HANDWOVEN
BASKETS
Lorge SuPIIiv of Baoket
Weaving Supplloo
Sign up now for Basket
Weaving Claa. . ·

OPEN lOST SATURDAYS ,
10:00 lil5:00
PAM

-II! . OW!Ill

41

SINGEI AND WIITE
SfWIIIG MACIIIIIES
SINGEIIMIIINij
MACIINIS

BISSELL
BUILDERS

of my son

Shane E. Smith

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

who left us
April 22, 1988.

"At Reasonable Prim"

left sa Slldden
didn't~ even say aaad:
bye. Your loss was so

PH. 949-2101
or Its. 949-2160
Day 01' Night

You ·

areat that uy I couldn't

NO SUNDAY CALLS

beli~ve it.

I miss your
smlhn1 face and your
hill and kisses. Oh, haw
I wish you wert here.
llot I day tots by Idon't
cry and wish you were
.till with me. I know JeIUI lOt YOU Out af the
WilliS thlt nipt. But
ltft wltllout you Is so
*Ill. lolltly, and 10
••lq~tn; HOJII soon
I can lit with JliU epln,
lived )ou.VIfJ llllcll,

1om

MORTGAGE

REDUCnON

SYSTEM:

~_,

........

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

can

"fr.. Eltlrnal•"

Service

1·800·422·9010
Ext. 4051

PH. 949·1·1

or .......,.
ND SIINIAY

BOGGS
SAUS I SBYICI

......,...

I.Lif.,HIASY
614""'·1121

Alltlli: 1$ d John

.,.... Now tiGIIM4.
. luelt .... , ....

..,....... o...

.I

..........

..........1

eHOMIIUILDING
•ROOM ADDmONI

•KrFCHINI • IATHI

I

...OOFING
•RIMODIUNG • REPAIRI '
,._MY • IYIIIIS

.....

915-4141

n---.. . ,. """""'

2 1R: apt.. n.w ...... Cl•pfL

Jiold.

="';:."M.

HomuforRent

UOO/mo. CoW 114-441-2238
or 441-2511.

month$'""- ~liP'-

. I&amp; Vicinity
.. -- ·--. --- .................... ........ .
11116 lilt H........- Dr. •
~ -.ctl ...,. ••••~•

.............. u .

·'

Sleeping roorna wtth cooking.
AtaoTrall••.-ce· Alhooh-,upl.
CAll lifter ·2p.m. 304-77~
15851. Malon WV.

46

Space for Rent

53

.
POORBOY$nRES
Htndllreon, W.Va. Now· doing
ftont ~:~nd alignments • 18.915.
New 1nd uted tlree:. · 304-676- ~
3331 .

79
•

~-==========:;:====="'="="==~~
~

Antiqf-188

Reg. AKC Vtnuhlro Torri•
puppioo. COli .,.ilmo 814-·387-

0869·

Rogiltorod AKC LlborOctor Rotriewer. pu~ 8 wMko· old. co·II
_
11 4-•••
- - 06
6 whha pure brel;l O.rm1n

Btl or S.ll. Rlw•IJ'Ie AntiqUIJ,
11 4 E. Main Str-. Pom•oy.
Hou,.: M,T;W 101.m. to 8p.m.,
Slndly . 1 to &amp;p.m. 614-992·
2526.
·

54

Misc. Merchandise

r,gr

AKC · lh... APIO puppies: h1d
~hoto•'a'"71-d2wt-9•
• \'Ill checked.
~ or
~

Tllilrlg dtpolite for AKC r.V1·

1ered Siberian Hulk"fl_all blue
7
plc:k now. 304-I 5-

2",';\'*•

7::-::---::---...,----

r'So.'i!cf"oot'tt:::"'..k.•~,w~'!:

81~881-5085.

-:::--:--:-----,.-Dvtch Oawrt -RabbiJ, fl5.00
ollch. 304-882-3796.

w-.

w-.
..

._.for

14

11

'*''
51

Household Goods'
SWAIN

1 Sun florv 1101-P Very good
condllloit f110. Kanmorool....
rico!oy«*100.2i-on-wlh
IP'Ing~andmlttr... •eoe1ch.
11"-8811-331:1 •
f.
;.
,..
'1: •ao.
White pr:omdr•l.
'Ne'ght benah. t30. Ron-a-w.y
bod. 120. Coli 11~992-7897.

*•

~~::::;;:;:===

1 58

Fruit
&amp;V-e••bles
V1J'

Motors Homes
8r Campers

'·~:

FreeZer beat. corn W ..,p,~._.
m•ely. 2150 lb. Iidia. 304-876-4182.

:!n.UIT,._.i;':

~~!"S:::·d••• .... bootroom

ldt•Oeoko. wriniJilwooh•. •
complete Hne of ul8d fumll:ure.

NEW- Wllt.-n boot. '315.
Worlobooto 11e a up, i - a
ooit teal. COil 114-441-3159.

QUiLTSWANTED
Buying old quito. Mu11 be 26
ve•• oroldlr.HMdqultedonJv.
Anyaon ..lan. hylngtopdoll•
c•hl Coli aoiiiCI 304-4728192. Wli5 oomotoyou. .

County APolanoo. inc. Good

...,..L A""Y. Rontol, Denim

~ fl!Mi•-::-..;~M1Von'te. dotE Nng. S.n Som.-v•••· Nu

Op

,,...

I'll

WV, Junct:Drl lndllpanct

SoO. 114-441-1119, 127 lrd. - Road. Old Rt. 21. Fri. Sea. Sun.

Avo. Goillpoll. OH.
.
. LAYNE'S FIIIINITURE

Sot• and chair~/.~ from

1396 ~o ;[9~/• • ' *IIO•nd
:': ':
. Rod'l:~""t; ~~~
191
1371. Lampo e28 to •121.
Olnottea *101 and up to e48S.
Wood tdlew·e
•211 to
17951. Dook *100 up to U7!1.
t-lltch• t400 Md Up. lunll;
-l2tl codm:oiot• w-mlltron uptot•!l.1obV*110. _,,_arbox.of'ln.,
lol or twin 118. iirm *71. .,d
*"· Ou01n 1210 a up,
!Ongl3110. 4 d r - - * " ·
Gun olltl- I. I a 10 ~n.

1

2

ell••

~'-monr-,20.

-lon

•
• •• tong
41.
*30
!ramo •ao. Good
of
- - jtUII-. mill! - I l l .
- - - t30 and up to US.
-----------·
10 ·u.,. IMII • c•h wllh
•IIIL 3 MI. out
lulwMo Rei. Otion - t o Bam
- . tltru .... Pit. 114-4410!22,
.

Itt-

Noon Ill 1:00PM. N- Army
Ugilt woigill. A""Y Cem•ftogo
forTu--ontAori24-Moy
201 81 . . end "-Hte Cam•flage. 304-273-11111.
T
..:.,• ,O:::oc~.,..:':gon~:'O:
(lloyli ......100.00. Good
oond, coil 304-1711-1131.
- - V~~t~~um . . , . wMh
attiGhmlniL Nnl like nM,.
*189.00 - h or . , • ..,. 01rangoct. 304-!"151-4411-

-·boil-.

-dwll'king m_..,,

ohopn.
ooll-. I., oR~ Mlcitkowy

=:-.:•••doll
.:.:.1':.::.= :•.::.:.'T':£:"r'i.,i
·
· - ....I
.....~_..,

""'

=-= :'~"1~
___
... _
= ..,.....

::'*..: -·-:~

...

- · , _ _ -·110.
frlg•roter. oldo·by· old,!,

1nlooti=n71.

~~~~......

..

Coli 6t4-441!-020a
Auto's For Sale

PM. Foyme Co. Fairgrounds.
Woohlngt..,C'ourthouoo,
200 head ol· Duroc • · Selling
Hamp/Ouroc cro11-breedJ. Ramombor2outofthepoit3yoioro
the Champion Barr()W at the
Oh'o Stete
Show was

72

Trucks for Sale

as Ford tiio. 41, 000 ....
Toppw. niM' tir•. VI. 4 aP-d.
A11urne lotn: Clll B14w387-

~Jr.
at the Banti~ " Pig .

9429.
==-:::---:--::---:-:--:-:-

1617. ."" 1514w992·8719.
Polled HlrehJrd bull tor lile. ·14 1978 'chary pick-up vl1on. 350
monthl old. gentle. Clll 614- .engine. PS. PB. I[Uto. 814-949·
992-7451 ovoningo.
2237.
.
:1:-98::6::-M::-oz-:d-e
-pi~ck:. -up-truck~-,.-kh
1 Duroc htmp bo ... Good for
bfaedlng. *125. 4-11· 6, B hole OPtion•. A.C .• cruiae con1rol.
AM-FM stereo and •!In roof.
Lord rims and tir81. e240.
514-992-2922 or 814-992814-992-7869.
3143 aft• &amp;p.m.
J.r. 4'¥' milk crH~. W81V gentle. I
t978 Ch"'Y ceo truck. 20 ft
y_.a old. fr•h July. On a
old Jenerv Heifer. Pri~ed fhtbed. new engine, wry gOod
•aoo.oo 1or both. Phone 304- cond, •s.soo.M. 304-175t671.
875-2638.
.

v••

2 riding ~rses, phona 30~4581587.

Seed

&amp;

s.,4 W.O.
1986 'Convtnion ...n. ,,.c.
c:ond. Cell614w-448-7003.

73

Vans

Fertilizer

·1978 Chevy Ven. runs good.
1984 Mazda pidw_p. &amp; sp•d.
bedln•. 81800. C1ll 614-379Dec .. b 1Hd corn .,d elfalfa 2568.
•..... 304-875-1508.
84 ford ConverSion Vllt. sh•p.
t8296. ·83 ChatY Conversion
J
Vall. E ldr1 nice. B II D Motor1
Hwy 110 4 mi. n• Holzer:
814-446-6865 or 6t.,446Transportation
8189.
•

71

1988 Ford XLT Aer0111ar Mini
Van. E11cellant condition.
Loaded New tir• ...11 sh•p.
co:: 814-742-3142.

614-985-3363.
18 ft cMnpinQ•Irliler, SBSO.OO.
May be IMn 120 Highltw~d A ..e.
304-S75-7t47.
1977 Aspen trlv•i treil•,. 23'
self comained, a-c. awning.
jacks, R8ese hitch. ex.tras.
Sleeps 1bt. ttBOO. 304-67!§.
4t44.
1973 22 fl. Sh•t• eempar
1l&amp;eps 6 s;t oon1ai"ed. a-c.
12.000. 30•n3-5821.
•
""

Serv1ces
81

Home
·Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
Unconditional liftltima gu1r.,.
tee. local referMces lJrnlshed.
Free estimate~. Call collect
1-11111-237-0418, dll¥' Of night.
A o g e r 1 9 a 1 e m e n .t •
Weterproofing.

•

SWEEPER and eewing machine
repeir, parts, end auPPii•. Pick
up 1nd delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleener. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Clll 614446-0294SapticTank Pumping-$90. Gal· ;
lie Co. RON EVANS ENTER·
PRISE$. Jackson, Ohio 1-801). '

637-952!1-

•

Carpent'V work done: By job or
hour. Will cki remodeling. new
additione. decks-out bu.Utin91 &amp;
roofing: painting. Call 614-367.
0 429. Free Eltimlftes. ·
T

Jim's . Odd Job'•· Sundec:ke. '
siding. painting. roofing. c•pen- ·
ter, builclng. dozer work. F.ree
1981· Subaru, 4 ' wheel drive . ettimei:H.
Cell 6' 1~379-2416
ltiltlftn w1gon, -- good cond·. or_8_1_4-_2_4_5-_S8_30_._ _ __
860000
•- off 30 7
-:3035: oru-t er. 4-&amp; 5- Carpartry work. Paneling. dry
~~=:;:;:===~== Will,
plumbing. 'electrical. rerno.
deling complete. Call614-44&amp;
7829
74 Motorcycles
·
.,
Plymale• Mcflh•sonconttruc·r
tion home building • remodel·
1981 Honda 400cuttom. 8400 in g. free •timates. Phone 38&amp;.
oduOI mil- cou 614-44$- 9940 or 387-7478. Rei.'
9418.
,,..H!Ibla
'

Auto's For Sale

,986 Ford Etcort. auto.• 2 dr.
h•ch beck. 48.000 mi t3000.
080, C81161~246-.9048.
1988 Or11nr;t Am. 2 dr.. AC,
auto.• PS/PB, AM/FM riMio.
l.ftw millie. EJC. ' cond. Tlke
- r poymonto or will ...
re•o•bl• C1ll 814-448-7&amp;72
or '41-1980.
1978 BLick A,gal, .,.c. cond..
111100. COII814-381-9305.
1914 ~auf'/ L..... 48,000
ml.. 4dr.. f2310.CIII114-441o
0780.
'

781uzuldGSii50E.NewclutCh Rainbow Painler. AI work QUIcabl• Good tlr•. N"• tune- r~t.cl. lnl•!or .,d eKterior.
up, 7800 ml•. ll60. COli COlt 6t4-992-2358.
82 Hondo ~oori:4 cto.:Ac. !I 30+175-t43~ !Ill* 6pm.
MPG, Spotleu condition.
RON'S TeleVi1lon Service.
f2490. Call814-241-t118.
1980RS175Suzuki.EJC.cond, House calli on RCA. Ou1zar,
Not u-sed wery mud'l. 1 Own•. . GE. Specilliflg in Zen'ith. Clll~
.ZO_Ih*P Cll't ll pickuP~- Priced • 575. Clll 614o-388-9744.
30424 676-2398 · or 814-446trom t985-f78•&amp;. 8 a 0
54·
Motorl; Hwy. 180 4 mi. n.- 1985 Suzuki Am-260 dirtbika
Fetty Tr1111 Tr ming. stump
1-1331.
Holzars.614-441-18815or441- Water · cooled from &amp; tile remQ¥81. Clll30
1119.
"""'•· Coli 114-441-1304Rotary or cable tool driUing.
1U5 Ford Eocort. 43,000 1983CR80ingoodoh&lt;paif Moti wall• compl•echamedav.
IYI!A-.exCIIItntcondition.Biadl; tnt•eltedcatl61-t.448-3481or F\lmp ..1. 11ttd
30 ...
wMh gr"f lmorlor. *2500. Coil oft• 6,00coR 514-3517-043:1
895-3802
11.4-281-1316 eft• 7p.m. ·
1986 Honda gold wing i1t•~
RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
1978 .01111 Cutl- Supr:eme atata like~ 7500 mi. Win• Mull' call servicing OE. Hot
Coupo. Ell:oilontcondltlon. 2110 . borrt/cot ... lnctudoo covw •
Point. w•h.,l, dryer. end
V8 AC now tit• 76 OOOmll• holm•~ 14-000. COIII14-446IIOVOI. 304-571-239S.
•1eqo.'co11 81~992-6190.
3934Remodeling. nii'N ai:ldtiona. c.,.'
1981 Oldl Do~o Rcrv•t. 41,000 Mlntcondttlon. 1987Suzuk1GS porta. gireg• end decks. Free
4101...
•&amp;lttlllm•llicm•oon
ettlrnllt ... c• 304-89~3425.
H 197•F dF71101•ft fl
m •
v or
.. •. It •d chrome. Six apetd. windshield. Two tun face helmets.
C.ll814-141-2072.
Magic Touch
bell, oneAFOfn&lt;i.lded. Only
·
Painting Company
1981 M11d1RJC1. •aaoo. firm. one
1100 mil•. Purr• Ike a klttan.
l.at Ul cplor 'fOUr world. intlrio.81 992 3717
"t1500. Hoefllchl. 814-982Coli 4·
•
r-utarior, C.ll ken 304-87&amp;:
12!12.
7237. At. 1 Box 10 A, Point
1985 Olcil Cud•• Crull• Sto·
Pl•ent, W. Ve. 25550.
don W.Uol\ 4 door. wry th•P. 1983Hon
_ doV.SMoguEcotell thl eqYipment. VIIIY lh8rp. lent condition.
11100.
c.ll
All the .,ulp\nom. VI Mgina
~~;a_"49-2802 or 614-949Plumbing
82
*38951. 614-992-17t9.
·
&amp; Heating
1977 F..d 1hundwblrd. 2nd
1181 Hlrl., oo,.;cilon Sport- -----~----...:
owner. 97.000mil•. rwwtir• tw. low mil- good oond. ·
tood ·comltion.
*8751. 304-1751-52951.
CARTER'S PWMBIN G
814-742-2979 or I 4-992AND HEATING
3:Jll41111 Hondo v-ae Magno. uc
Cor. Fourth and Pkle
,
-;c:,'-:--::&lt;:""--:----- con4 304-89JI.301t.
OIHipoll. Ohijl
1984 cfiloo: C~lllol\ otr. Ill
Phone 114-448-38118 or &amp;14! ·
whHLcruille.AM-FM5etto,
448-44n
·
r. . wlndowdefogg•.
I•
condition. 12350. 814114-912-1373
84
Elactrical

lllmp.

81

Farm Equipment

UnUTY BLDG. SPL;30'~x9"
..,•. 1-1&amp;-xr llldlng door.
1--ikdoor-M999.ERECTEOIRON HORSE ILilRS 8t4332-9748.
.
220 AC dl•tl e1110. 1100
Oehl rauNI bll•. e2110. Nl
rlilo. ·•1011. 1 ft *"m
m - . 11195. Ow- w!U
flnanoo. COlt 114-281-1122.
MOOII•,•tNCtorw-.hmowfnu
maahln&amp; plow, 110tery hoe. corn

-~lantw. 3

~:i.'i':a';'"·

pt.

-

0111111.

•3495. COM 814-

A....,f

(h!!!,.''"''·'

75

-no.

JD 30 hydooullcboioojoctor,J o 1t72 Voliant Plymouth. 52.000
4rCPNftontmounted cutttvatort. ac:lual mil-. lcyl .. auto. •200.
3 kldlw bolo
COlt ._c_ot_l..,lo-:1~4-_7_42_·_21_5_9_.- - 814-211-1011.
r·
'83 Chivy CO:obrlty. PI, PB.
-Hollond7ilhovbln4good c:ruloo. -• cond. o304-273-4215.
looko. olr, coli oft• I:OCI. 3041711-1147.
·
G-oiv tnctor. 8 IPeed and
..-monto. u.eoo.oo. 304- 1181 .Chw Clm01o, only
1711-2158 or 8711-1719 oft• 12.1100 mit-. T-- olr oond.

dotr-. -

&amp;

Boats and
Motors for Sale

8oot-1887 .... cilu 11'1"
with MlrDIIV 31 hp motor wllh
pawertrim .. d ..t~ollnjectton.
Mercury Trolling motcw, Shor•
lin • tnlll• plu a more. AI In IIDOCI
oonclllon. CoH 114-112-2770.

SNAFU.-.
:... a-ttle
.., u1 - - " " " '

1970 Clcilllac Coupo Oo IIIIo. 4
door. AM-FMII-. A·1 oond, ·
all arlglf\.111 equipment,
11.10CUO. 21 inch o o aotor 1Y e1111.00. 304-87111121.
'71
d""" 30t, JIIIOd oond.
on.. 3041711-:MII oft• 1:00PM.

o...
.,,aoo,ao .. -

8814.

-iol.

IOAT REPAIR. -aooy - crul. .r. lpeal .. ttt Faatory
,._od. Moblo
PNCIolon Molollo M-&amp; COli 814, 211-1171.

'74 .... uoo.oo. 340
Suldl . - . . 1200.00. 30417&amp;-1101.

___
................
........
-.
....
·=oo. ..,. v.. ...-·.....

;14.ft.O_olu_ilo&amp;
14 _ _ .......... .
•., "'' ..... 1,200 ..... ~

u

,,., ..... ltOOO. 0111
Old&amp;
.
'
' ~
-•
.....
0. .. .. . 114-"' ~~~00. '71-·0moter ••• tr••••leelen
12110.00. ..... ..,..17.
AulD Pi~&amp;

7ii

'71 Chwy - - - Clllllo Y.l

····~
t::'&amp;.":i,t- ........
-~

I.W.

.

=d=~==:

.

.L

........-

wilh

PI, N. 0111

~~- .... 4:00PM.

• Aaau uslle

.....
- ... ._ · - · 87
- ~dluu-,••

--for·~-

•CIMC
171-

.,

Refrigeration

R11idlnt:lll or commerci• wlrrr.g. Nevr ..W. or rtpah.
Uwnted llactridan. Riden.our
BOd•lcoi, 304-!"111-1788.

15 II. Oloollron oli bo• ·wlh
~:an:d:l:oo:":·:30:::4-:88:::•:•::=:J~4::0:0:P:M:·===::;;:::=:.J Power
AM-FM
· Wlndo.,o.
utro otwP, oxc
oond. •oil•. as tooroe :10wor Mor'"'"
85
304-8711-1114.
ond olio. n900. COlt 81"-381-

m.

"a;,:'&amp;

•bi•

p1.,.._ Jointn
i.,_ aandlrO. &lt;*Ill

p,g

' 65

::2=2'--=eo-.-.-:-hm-..
-=c.'-m-p-.,-.---'now9304.
. Make an ofler.
tires and more.

te ft. cemportoroalo. $276.00.
Cell 814-742-3130.
,
1980
Monte
Carlo
81200.
Cell
8ft.
'*"!*
for
pickup.
Extends
3 04.75-1899or676-2628.
· ov• c•b. BLW~kl.link. etc. Call

17th ~MUll Bentl"f'
Sale:
Wecln_.,, April 28th. 7:30

purchMad

Campertoplor.8ftpickuptruek.
"
tl!luletect. 8250. C811"8 1._446-

,.,a.

....

AUCTION • FURNITURE 82 . 8ft. OIIOI'!Iooda•ovodoor. *60- ·
0ilvoSt.. Ootilpoll. "
Coil 814-99:1-3111.
'
NEW· I pc. wood group. 1399.
Livlngroomoullll- 1111-1198. lai!JOI-OIIOI40. 0eokUI.
Bunk bedt with bedding- *241.
e1
tre m.rtrlli • found•ion ::V.:~a'
1
1t1rt1ng· $88. R1cllnera 217,.

FUI

71

liVestock

°

AKC Owmtn Shoo
· herd mele

Whootohotro-now or uood. 3
whellld alectrlc scoot... Call
Medial
1-800.888-

63

Sh..ow. plus m1iw cOuntv
winn••· Ao~•Benti.,,Subina. 1980ChavroiMSconldalepldcShept..dpuppie~.Femalet7&amp;, Clll81•&amp;t 2398
· up E
male ~100. 814-742-2981 or 1---~----·--' .::. Con d · ~-11•14441~ a •
• 7423100
1304.
81 ...
•
·
Good cle.,, regiltered quarter :-:=--:--:-:-::--::--:::-1
harMS C." 114-388-9991 0 1977 F 150 Fo d P'ck
·FIIh
2413304-878-2013.
Jeckt~on Ave, 61•3a·
1mmao~1et:e condlt'~--up.
Paint'T~nk.
PI_.,.
..,.. a-a•23
u ·
run.
AutO.
10 811 I Ht up t14.191nd'10
•
shift. 3..f!eHton.
thoVB
. ...,,.·ne.
uipmanl.82496.
New
gal Club pl .... torula Call614-25• tir•.
complete f43.H.

=
.........ce..:..'.,.. ....THaD___

Coil .14'Hll-

""ve air oompr•aor. t16DO.
Complllt• ~lltyiMe torch It
tonk. 8600. Clll 114-448·
9304.

For Sal a- Concrtlte wwd Pl..tic
tonk&amp; AI olin. R.ON
Storage apaee lor rent. Three to Mptlc
EVANS ENTERPRISE-S . Jlclr.· AKC registered female Sefiv1 thou.-d sqUire faet on
Ohlo 1 100.537 9•28
moy.d. gctod with kldl. 1i
· •
• v ·
months ofd. 304-171-7870.
Third A_,.o. COli 114-3711- •on,
2218.
SWIMMING POOLS· 111B8
Eortv. !Wd opOCiol 0 ;, 89 Colllo DUJII. lutf bloodoci 7
Country Mobile Homa Park Hugh 1Sx3tft. pool
Hugh-.
vat
185. 304Route 33. North of flom•ov· f•oe. fth•. &amp; Wlrrll1tY. llitltil- , 57&amp;.2185.
Lots, lllntall. .,...ts.. •1•. C.l
letlan • finandng•lilable. CIJI AKC regtlt•ed Coc:kw Sp ... lel,
~14-992-7479.
.
~4 ...... 1-JI00.345-0941male 2 vn. old. tri-color, ver.y
hrm land for rem. 16 ecr•
u .......l. color &amp; m•kinQI, -..ry
bottom ground It Derwin. Ohk). Swimming -to- tt189. Eor!y loveeble. hill pedigree. Pal d
CaR Don Lamt.t 114-992- bird special on 89 poolll. Huge •1500. wll,aell for UIO. Haa all
19x31' pooL Huge deck. fence. ehot1. 304-.711-3390 Or 8757110!.
flit• &amp; W..,Mfy. lnltiHMion &amp; 3&amp;14. lelll'er'f"•dU•·
Trtil,f lot for rent, HWer end flnonc:lftg .,olloloia Coil 24 hr"
Wlt8r furnished. 304-675- 1-BOG-345-0841.
t078,
.
'
·Musical
57
12 toot -boy utility troll.-,
Instruments
Clll 814-4451-9418.
.
47 Wanted to Rent ,
Toblcco
nnt 30C lb.
For iale: 9 pc. lllmlalec./drUm
COli 814-391-17154.
..Y good condition. Atao 1001
· 2 llf more Hd'oom home or Fold down cernp•; hlcht-a-bad.
att
11 tO
F0 '
trlil• with tvtt:age1trevard-in utf propalad mawer,-NWOocJ.; ;'goo.PC~tr:'rtJ.~ . pc.
Kyger C.... School Olotrlcl. burner. pttlo llrnltur&amp; ctr•11r,
porch lwing. mile, other ttema. lban• aiMric ~tt1r Ltf ,_ 1
Coil 814-317-0404CoH 614-211-1110.
""PI'· llwott-"fbect&lt;otogo
amp. a.rtllll t,d1helf ca~•• 2
49
For L1111se
1.000 lb. ' tott.om t.ae. Call gutter turwa 811 for •40o.
114-379-2194
Everything~ In •c.llent lhape.
Call44&amp;7914.
For t.•e: Apartment n•two· t 35411&gt; tobocco: Booe. 30/lb
Coil 814-441-3277.
I
lluilvl*l. guM• I - bo~~~~ta:w•ICI. 2nd floor. · oornw
· loaond a Pin&amp; O.ftlpolll. On•
gin.,..., - · gu~orilt. &amp;ru;.
blttoom. It~ • ,..,lo-•or. IIV•al,..om*-•· -.c.cond. c•cll Mulic. 114-441-0187.
wotw p r - Oopeol and Worn-~ on-. Sb:e9-10. Clll Jlff w.m...,. lnlt,_..or, · ~
.
rlf••c. nqu~«&lt;. em.,.. 114-441-7441 Ooytimoor11·4- 4 41-aon Llmil_,
E-lngo. Aok ~
' ·
oponongo.
month. Coil 114-4411-4249. 448-9421
Usa.
Pl .. o.For Sllla
4~1-4421. or 441-2325.
Wlftled: Allponaible PII1Y to
For rent 2 bedroom tJ nil heel Bentwood roak•. Good aond._ takeon•mallrnonthlypaymlfttt
moblo homo. 1185.00 "'i&gt;,.h tion. f.21. Garden til•· Ovlf- on pi~r~o.. See loCIIIy. Clll
engine. Nleda new maneg•,. at 800-1315-7111
utlkl•. wll Hud, hauled
dutch. flO. 114-982·391110.
MYtime.
304-178-1512 or 1711-3800.

-o-

ook
1171.

•il•

"'"'·old.""~
Gorman

Houlliootd
Whirlpool
auto
¥'lea,_goodl.
•d df'ver.
Both
"'
he.,yckitv. ne.tv ftiW, •lmond.
45 Furnist)ad Rooms Hoo- upright - - with
attachmlnll. Full 1ile bed com,am. Cheft d • ....,.,._ Strider
Room~ for rent·'NM~t or momh. 1kl_ ......... c.ll ' 304-175Stll'llng .-: *120 1 mo. Gallla 3240.
Hotel-814-441-9180.
-::--:---------IKonm... outowoo•-.onoroom
FurnllhMiroom. e125omonth.
·cond, uc COfld. 304-175AllutllftiMptid. Sh•ebeth. 919 lir
7247.
Second A\11. Clll 614-44839..

..... Col 114- 2 - - . . . for - 14-lt:l-7211.
Corp..,_ NiiOt•loltl,lun*Y
~-o~o~. Ql5l 1142 bl*-rn ..... rtflr.n4* tl:l-3711. !OH.
fiiJU~... 304-175-1•13 01
0 - u • lwing. 1 and 2 1711-10~
r - . . . . . ., oi Yl!oge
Voif"' P""""'ro
'
Minor
d
rnlturo and
m-• In
dtloport. ""'m f.&amp;~--H 114-44542 Mobile Homaa
1111 CoH 4-lt:l-7717.
I-:::::':::::Hoo::-u::ro::B-=-=-·===:'-'
torRent
2 hdr_,_ t l r PICKENI U~O PUIIMTUIIE
dllld. -~ 1... c - - · hau-ld C..rnilhCAl ln .. 'l!omll........- . 2114-1711111-.1..........
1410. 114·311·1773.
- l n...
1 . . . _ .. ..,._ for ..... 1221 lw;~;.-;;;.;;a;-;;;;-;;:
;J:'£\1t"... ...,...._ e14-

...

t.._ Rio Gron~ 0 . COil 8142411-1121,

.

1·304-882-

:"

'"jr."- ,.__ - ..

~·

................. u . . . . . . . u

~

DoWntown 1 BR1 tpt. nM'Ir
redeDDI'atMI. c•p... COtnPI••
ldtchon. AC. i'witlnl- No p•o.
Dopooh. Clil 8t4-44JI.~39.

,.,...
742-31411

.......GiiHpollii'"''"'"'

Middleport
It VIcinity

c•aa,

TIM'I T~nhouselp.,.,_.. 2
BAt., 1 1/t. blthl. CA.. dla·
hwaaMr. dilpo.al. prt.-0. en·
cloa_. patio, pool, ple,ground.
Wlrt•. IIWef, .. trMh inc:klded. '
St.-tinll_at f 289 pao mo. Call
814-317-78110.

•:aoo. ,..

7

- .. - Ill'*'-'
......'POmeroy"'"'"''''

4-1&amp;-1

w•

...,ltl

•VINYL:;::r=:;
•ALUMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN
.
INSULATION

Save thousands on
existinc mortpge.
No refinancin1. A
Morteace ConsuiJint

BENJTIFU ( APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON ESTATES. 531 Jod&lt;oon
Ake fram t1.83 • mo.
to
ohop and movloo. •14-4412518. E.O.H.
.

••JIOI..

FAUIC SlOP

4/1/89/tfn

In loving Memory

Apartment
for Rent

1 IR hou•loOIIod II 1701 Unlnnilhod 2 8R.gwoge oporiChufnut. *140/mo .• ment. Stove and r·atrlg.,
'100/leA Dop..
1711/0op. Clli 814-441-"'70. 12110/mentl\
Ref. r.,·..:. Coli 114-448Houoofor-. Lo.,.._, iColr tid. 1017.
2 mi. tromHoia•Hoopitli. Lor'"
3 - - big yord. UIIO Now occoptlng oppUCIIIono :0.
dopoolt, UIIO/mo. COlt 814- 2 -oom .......... .,liv
4..._ 7117 oft• I P.M .
,IJipHan-. - · •d
trOih pldoupo provkiecl Moint•
7 ve• old. 3be*- bridl- """I' ·non• """ llvlntl """ to ohot&gt;
totli ol-Io. -"" otylo ha/nO. P:no bankl ond ochooto. Far
,_ , _ 1........,... ·1 111'0 morolnformollon Clii 304-88:1fonOIC!in book ,.rd wkh d - 3718. E.O.H.
Locil .. 7 . ..... irOOI HG!Iw ..,.----,------~
Hoopitol on 111.. 110. ,.. . . . . Qno-oomto-¢vorv
t. t3111o p• - - H nloo and olonlr. no
int•OIIIII. CAl 114-211-1311 P.._ p-.304-171-138t- '
1............ 7p.m.
AJ11r1,.. 4 •d boll\
. . . . , _ I , _ and boll\ -101 Jllid. 880.00 - .
,orl ond ,.,.....
304-!"11-1100 • !"111-1108.

AlTaA11QIIs

11GW•t

,

ldt
""'"' '•ref !""""·
oontr
...
IOCII!tld.
1. Sec.
dap.

DIY CIIANING SIIVICI
SCISS!IIS SHAIIPENID
USED SEWING MACIIIIES

BASKET WEAVE

.

.IJI........

For Ront' Largo ono-c• gwago.
rw of building on corner of
hoond and.Pine. O.ll~ls. Cell
8 1~44&amp;-4426. 8U..
4249
., 114-4451-2325.

Fum'od oil o!Odric, 1 IR, LR,

MASTas TUXEDO IENIAI.

THE

Farms for Rent

•t•

. '

319 So. 2ncUvt.

--------

43

.,Hclt'lg tft• .:id lot• on "-Y· Furn. Apt. n•t ' to librtrY
burnRoad.304-175-12S1
P•klng. A.C. Rot. ;.,'ad.
Oornw lot. 114&amp;141 ft. E - . SIHiillo for 1 p«&lt;Ift. Col
W.Va. onbl... tap strait.
114-44e.0338.
andUN~riVallble. f7,SOO.OO. G•oge - . 3 furn'ed. rooms a
304-372-1493.
~·
blth. ~at..
dryer. lir. ciHn.
•
on
eouRd
no
-.Rot.
•
ooq'od• Col
110 8.14-441-1119.Dop.
4 -·
....
•- ·
{GutWIItl. Poaalbleawnerlnandong with esoo.OO down. Effici.,qo tfl'l· idool for 1
304-418-1175.
p . . on.. MObl• hDme bllow
Alhl:on bl.,tlful oni ICIJ, lou town . ovarlooldng rH•, CA •
wMhrtwortr-o. puililc-tor. hut. Rot. CoH 814-441-03311.
Clrdo B - . J•. 304-!"11- Furntohod olfldonv. 11110. uti~
2338. .
·
II• pd., ohwo b•l\ 101 4th.
A oilton, lwge looldlng toto.
COM 814-441-4411f
mobla ho~ l*mitt«&lt;. public
_.., prlClrdo Furn.
~hod A
1 BR. • 1240. •
J r . 304-871-2338.
pt..
utiMI• od.. 920 411\ OIRII&gt;Oill.
HOI! oc:rolot compioto hook 1111· Cotl11._441-4411 o!t•1PM . .
Rouoh Fer"ll Road. camp C- 3 AM a b•l\ -ftl)lln "PP ..
l;'le Point P l - . 304-B"IJI. um.rn'od. A,.Robl6 M"' lot.
7 e.
Coil doVI 814-441-7572. oft• 5
12 ocr• Long Hollow Ro_,, j-,PM_4_4-:-JI._1_98.:.0.
_ _ _-_ _
IAtllt, W. Va. Phone 304-18~ Ntce11R unllrn'eCI.t~Pt.......
3929.
6 ,..,lg. furn'ad .• Wrt• •d
gwbogo pold. bopook roq'oct.
CoR 114-4411-4!48.

AUcnONEER
-

rot•onco. Homootood
·Rooity. .
304-17&amp;-15540
or 304-882·
2.ot05.
,.
2 ...... aom t...a• In oounb'y,
_,trelalr. UOO.Rif•enOIM1d
d-oolt r-ulrod 30• •75
·•
~
·
~v •
1928 ·

--e.

I NoncE I
.
THE 0510 VALLEY PUII.ISH-

114-441-

992-6282

lelpn, Ohio

2 be*oom hou•. CWUpolil
Ferry. li room.t1p ..ment. Clf·
ton. 12:MIOoffiCitrllil•forllle.
1
2
·
304 7~3 18.
Apple Grove .rea.'' 2 bectooom
moble home on 7.1 acr•.

In

'

EVERY THURSDAY
NIGHT-6:00 P.M.

2 '!odroom troll•, -·rand
w..-Rt lurnl1hld. 8 m•• north
on . 82. 304-875-1078.

EnjoV" fiohlng.and roi•lng In *17Somo. COil 304-1751-5104.
¥our own l_.allliefronthome 17'" 11381.
Florldo. 40 "*'·to tho booch. . Furnllhod otfidonqo. 107 low• .. tr_,o. COil II-~ "'""- Goillp... *110. Sh'wo
wool&lt;dlyo.oftw 10 on b•h. Coll441-4411oh•7PM.
' · - 114-4411-0208.
Furnlohod opt.- 1 8R , 243
Land ~~ On eta 1v•acr•ln Je«*aon
PUr.• •2215 .a mo.
"'tland Tawnohlp. COli 114. UtHHI• pOid. COil 441-&lt;A11
1192-3143 oftw 1:00 p.m.
att•7PM.
· ,

"""In-

old. Coli 211-'MG:pptoo. · - -

Aloe "'-··
1717.

36 lots &amp; Acreage

:..- A-iliv "'""'- .:.Woioy.

!NO
Y'"'
do ..... NOT
with
pllnow
to .....
MOll_,.
throulh thl mil untl yau h••
lnv•lgolodthookinl,

4

•114-248-1410.
mo. old -

1t79Etaono141C10. 3bo«oom.
1'h blth. .vJnw'l underpinning.
au1bulldlng. on r•t•d lot.
fB.IIOO. 304-175-2148.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

PUBLIC
AUCTION
Leesa Murphey
&amp; Aoooeiale8

Aili)iJIIIlli'llll'l'i

·

"'om
2558.

44

t972Sc:huilz mollloho- 2 br.
tip aut In lllinSJI room. porch.
unda"pmnlng,_ ...., oond., good
cond. . ee.ooo. ·1·514- 9923111. .

EAIIN MONI!Y -~ baoilll
1211,!XID/yr. lnaorno
- - !11108-M7-1000Ext.
Y·10111.

Co. 7:»4:211--·FII.

224 E. MAIN ST. . ·

'24113
P!:v':.- .!':O:!;~~~~'i't'~:

3 bo«oom Sc:huilz wMh op~r'*
one~Crel.,d. 304-175-1375.

304-882-3733.

~................ 01

POMIIOY ..UGLIS ·

IIXlENIIVE REMODEIJHG .

Do

fur-

Celebrate •pring wtth ' l naw
ro...,col Moot . your · metch
through our llnlll• network.
Wrtte H•.n...,ch. lox 5848 Ore.~ Terrace Mo~l• Home
Athen1, OH 45701 .
. P•k-lott IVIillble. Clll 614w
441-0254 or 446-3543.

1911 Nlw Moon 101110 tr..«.
loCit.t on kJt in New HIYen.
ra.d¥ to move in. $2,600.00.

Truoll Drlven/Melntenance

•VINYL IIDING A ROOANQ

Wanted to

-.:u. 121&lt;~1.

lrlii•. ~ PII't~

1972
2 boctrooma. porct.: und•pklnln,a. tipout IWr.ll room. a1r condltton•.
Good condition. t8000. 61~
992-3181 '

14o10 with 71c21 •pondo.
304-175-1141 .

........

BINGO

"

· 1179 BIY.view mOI;flle home.

t - ~~~- Clft 1·11JI.M&amp;:
1122 -.t T-1120H 24 in.

P. O.lox 337

. Cortlfl_,

.CUITOM kiTCNENe. IATHI

••

2110111oft!IIO
r... llilor.
wll ,..•• ,21.

U. S. SPRINT

"*''

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

NOTICE OF ELECTION
ON TAX LEVY IN
EXCESS OF THE
TEN MILL LIMrrATION
NOTICE io hereby given
that in purauance of a Resolution of tho Board of Education Of the Meigs Local
School OiltriCI, Middleport.
Ohio. pa11od on tho ·a th dey
of Fobtuary, 1989, thorawHI
be submitted to 1 voto of the
people of uid Meig~~ local
School Oiotrlct 1t a Spociol
Elaction to bo held in the
Meigo Local School Dlotrict
of County of Moigl, Ohio, at
the regular plac• of voting
therein. on TuHdoy, tho oocond doy of Moy. 19B9.thl
question of hwylng a tax, In
excesa of the ten mill limitation. for the benefit of Meigs
Locoi School Diotrict for the
purpoH of current expeniM.
Said taK being: an addi·
tiorial tax of 6.0 mills to run
for a continuing period of
time at 1 ratl not exceeding
s·.0 milta for each one dol·
lar of evaluation. which
amount&amp; to fifty cents
($0.501
for· each one
hundrld dollars of valuation, .
for continuing period of
time.
·
The Polls for said Election
will be open at 6:30 o'clock
A·.M. and remain open until
7,30 o'clock P.M.
Bv Order of the Board of
Elections~ of Meigs Counw.
Ohio.
.
Evelyn Clark. Choirmon
Jane M. Frymyar. Director
Dated Morel&gt; 1, 1989
(417. 14. 21. 28, 4tc

,...,GO.- _,__.ton"'-___
can
v••
::;_z: •
Coli '

•

Notice

..... ·;,.,.
lolo: c-,~n, ~"'~:''
......... 3 ............. . .

c• &amp; aceeuorl•/ '
&amp;
drv.. Call 11~441-1031.
1978PonthouooTroltw. 2bolhl.
3 blciooorr&amp; 217280.ad Mlln'•
Curve, Pom•O¥. Ohto.

411/ll/1 mo.
--------

. Gutters

Public

was._

niohod. - • • • - . AC,opplon-

UfiCIINT

Pert Time Job With N-orte 2000
In N-orte MerkMing
Coat '184°0 (lnclud• tl81nlng • mtl1erielsl
BE AN INDEPENDENT U.S. SPRINT REPRESENTATIVE
For
inft write:
·
·
Scott. Anderson

110 WEST MAIN
POME

"DOC" VAUGHN

;· ·- 4-10-'8!).1 mo. pd.

17 M ltcellaneout
-~---.-'----,. '·

,

UHII , _ ... tho pi- ..

Dllt- lhtwerti
..
COlliNG 10 T.S AliA 500111

CALL 992-6756

FREE ESTIMATES

Call Totl.r 1 -800-~21-07152.
12:MIO 2 bld-oom M.H. fu'J..

lmtrica's Hly 100% ,.., Optic ..,....

NIASE Certified M1chanic

Painting

ft~.,-cou w~--rtao'ott'n.
~........

10

(:HESTER, OHIO

-------

TUXEDO RENTAL

Dom•lc VeNd•
A/C Service
All M-Jor &amp; Ml""r
Replirt

Howard L. Wrlttsel

BETTER USED HOMES.
• lo 'loEluo
.
Ho
o::oe.
:C .

FURNACE.
-~!1 • DAY915·'222
01 EVIIHG

liOooi

1

AI

_ Nice
•·•
Go
88
141170
orllt Pat k 3 ........-cwom.
I
F
heM.
UOOcbwn,
p•mo.
Fr• DeliVery. Ohio
221Wlttl •
aOO.ISO?I5
1
·
2·

t:.if.!':
~~l~:r.~~~~f, ·
f,!~i,f::O:. . ...~ ~;•:;-;,::::;.::;=:::::::·:::· ; .
::.,.'::,

""114Dqu...
C..h Mid.
t14-ltJ.ae&amp;7
• t14-UJ.241t.

95~

RaponMIICI

Instruction

:W,~d
Qulla

CONDITIONING MD

MOH•.fll.o 9 ..,..6 Jill'
am:12

~..~vt~v-•!4- 16 · Schools

INSIAWTION Alii' SilVIa OF HilL
ENERGY EFPIOEIIT IIIU1 P...S, All

Copper and More

UT.o I

ar .,._,

.

wARNER HEATING &amp;
COOLING

c.,,, Glooo. Brou.

1971 Corwofttf'/12loBOw/Bft.
•pendo. *5000. Cal dty's
114-379-24&amp;0, ave'•
.
lll'78.
246

aounl'E~~::..N~!NESB-&lt;

PH. 596·4756 or 992·6637

14th&amp; . . St.
P•t ...._Ill, W. Ya.

=•r' .._

J"'* Con-

Mobile Homee
for Re.. t
.,

pr•.,.•

'

"He doesn't want tQ be- taken ·
to our _leader...he wants his
allowance."

2 be*oom

..,...--------··"

3 Mile East of •Arthur M 5.1. 50

NOW OPIN FOR
BUSINESS

SMALL ENGINE

'

- Stqne Company

PUIUC
RECYCUNG

RIDGE

Pri~

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

,

U8"1d •

9uildng Mllori•
Bloc*, bn.ctc. IIW• pip• wlndowl. llntlll. 'tte. Cla~oi Wln-

· Concrete blodca· ali
r.rd
.4 rfi. chllt, •44.95. 6 atylll of "ordll.,.y. Matonlll'ld Qall,po.
~'* bedl awtlng .r •179lis Bladl Co .. 123'/1 Pine St., ·
ir\cludlng bodding. Ful olzO Goili!&gt;olll.. Ohio. Coil 114-441mlttfiii-MI.II. Coft- •d 2783.
.
•d • • f?li ·e ••· Bentwood
rocker-•tl ,91 Or1ndfathe;
Pets for Sale
• • ....... Btuodln-•ot. 8 58
cho!ro- .. 10 llncludoo hulllhl.
SOFM·I . , - - d gooupe31t. Solo and choir-*211. Groom .. d Supply Sho~Pet
111Arli!~NS TAKEN .
Grooming.· All breed1 ... All
IIY•· l1m1 Pet Food Dealer.
Canning jers-•2.150 doz. Klti · Julio Wobb Ph. 114-446-023t .
9hemo- ..,.;&amp; Itt oh:..,egr...,
bo .... COil 44JI.48SB.
Dregonwynd C•lt-v Kannel.
. .
Per11an .nd Sitm . . end Him•
u ... eppl..... w....... dryldtlena. Chow
••·
.38 ltud
vice. Cllll14-44
o!tor
... ,.,.ge~,ltlfrlgaretor•. miCro- lwan
PM
7
6 44
Wive OVIIftl. Ken' 1 ADOIItnce
· 217 E. 2nd St., POm•ov:
514-992·5335 or 8t4-9S5· Full blooded German ShiPherd
31St.
. ·I'UPI for llle. Call 114-44S.
1 149
&lt;i.E. W•hor. roil nlco, 110. · ::_ _ · --,--..:..:._ _ _ __,___
8mo55Whk!o0oi110d,.,.r, •to. P\oppt..:- 8
Lob.
44 . Apartment
CoR 114-317-0322.
Brittany Span. •
Sh•
for Rant
- d T0 G00d ho
1s . ·
1Wlnf125.00.
lile br...Phone
d.Ybed.
2 ye.,. • 15/ea,
· mel · only.
old.
30~812·
Call' &amp;1C.448-0910
' North; 4th-Awe. Mlddtpor:J. 2 33.
a.fi.•tlve.
'

~~j:;;ijj~E=~=='"l";;F:;:;::;:;::::::;=::;::1
t42

~z.

ALL POPULAR SIZES AVAILAILE

We Buy Aluminum

E~GLE

121&lt;70. 3BR .. Hollbothl.now
. .J*. HOUH typo win-L
undorplolnlno
1o1 C:Uidc
.
... Foet•'•MobHeHomeParlc.
114-441-1102.

TOP CMH poid for 'II -dll
.,d
lmlh
_ ,•
. . .. .1111 Elllom
........... c.tl 114-4411-

LIMESJONE FOR SALE ·

oN'S APPliANCE
We Service

9 W•ntect To Buv

Mobile Homaa
for Sale

.

1981i!odman lodlonol 21xll,
3
Itt CA. To after
be movod. Cot!
114-441-8514
epm.

"Muot .. lopalr.lo"

614-985-4180

· 32

m.

or at

Veterans lttnorial Hospl~l
,llulbeOY Hlb. P01111ror.

WANTED .

•Waahara •DIY••
•Ranges •Freazere
•RIIfrlgerat«ks

MIIOr\ WV. ' I atGfV, 3 bed-

, _ ano 1!111\ bllornont.
oara111 a _n d .c arport .
149,1100.00: Coil 304-7731021 ol!• .,oo,

I~ 'LISA
M. KOCH, M.S.
Licensed Clinical ~

1 bedroom, very
beautiful, furnished.
Houseteepinc Room
,BY Day, Week, Month
614·!149-:2526

DEAD OR AUYI

Hou" tar .......aoftd ·StJ•.

s.mc-1

NOW OPEN
OHIO RIVER
. CAMP
·GROUNDS

SEINICE

We Pin r~r and re·
core radioton and
heatw C«IJ. We .Pill
also acid boil and rod
nAIIUt _
radiators. We also
repair Gas T...... ·

Devices
lltptndlble llllrinl Aid Sills &amp;
~ H_
earin1 Evalullions far All AM•

IUOGET TRANSMISSION rebuilt all type1.
W•renty·30de¥1. Pri011e99&amp;
up. Uled • rtbultt tor~ '
conwrt.,., lttnct.d dutch• '
pllll:•. &amp; CVCjoint'"11i .
typM. luring tl"lftlmiaAm• for .•
Plrtl.· Clll 814-379·2220 or •
304-575-5758.

'
Bulding Supplies

55

QeneraJ Hauling

�Fridly, Aprl'21, 1989

'" Pomeroy-MiddllpOI't, Ohio

: Paue-1 0-The Paily Sentinel

: Announcements---~~--~-.;.,
'- --------------- .Clarifiealion
J!1•h try
The Chester Volunteer Fire
Department will be conducting a
fish fry at the firehouse on
: Saturday !rom 4 to 7 p.m.
· Dinners will lnelude a !Ish tall.
: french fries, cole slaw a!)d
' beverage. Pie and cake will also
be available.
· Plan FISH FRY
Captain D's all-you -can-eat
dinners will be served at the
Pomeroy Fire Station on Satur·
day from 3 to 7 p.m; Advanced

tickets for adults are $4.50.
Advanced tickets for children ar
$2.50. Tickets at thedoorwlllcost
an additional 25 cents. Everyone
welcome.
'
Slpup Suurday
Signup for Pomeroy girls se·
nlor softball. ages 14-18, will be
held Saturday 11t 2 p.m at the
Salisbury Elementary School.

PTO will be sponsoring a bean
dlimer Saturday with serving to
begin at 5:30 p.m. The price Is
$1.50 per person. Folowing thf'
dinner there will be a showdown
basketball game between the
boys team and the teachers and
the girls team and their mothers.

Dance Sa&amp;urday
Square, round and slow danelng will be featured at the
Saturday night dance ol Ell .
Denison 'Post 467, Amerlcaa
Legion, Rutlapd. There will be a ·
live band from 8 p.m . to
midnight.

41

,

Pomeroy na live. · Larry M.
Mowery. 51. or Grove City. died
Thursday at Mt. Carmel Hospital
In Columbus.
Born Feb. 8, 1938 In Pomeroy.
he was a son of William Mowery.
or Columbus, and Della Lloyd, or
Galllpolis. He was retired from
Columbus
Show Case and .was a U.S. Air
Force veteran.
In addition to his mother and
father. he Is survived by his wife,
Colleen, of Columbus; two step·
sons and daughJers-in -law .
Steven and Julie Rice and
Charles Tim and Shirley Rice.
Grove City; a stepdaughter and
son·ln-law. Johnda Lee and An·
thony Kapteina. Grove City; five
grandchildren; his stepfather.
VIrgil Lloyd, GalllpoHs; two
sisters and brothers-In-law.
Janet and Reese Grimm, Grove
City. and . Sharon and Craig
Sarver, Columbus; a brother and
sister-in-law. Roger · and June
Mowery. Pomeroy; sisters-Inlaw. Betty Gulley and Bj!ttV
Fraley; sisters-in.faw and
brothers-in-law. Darlene and
Dave Grass and Brenda and Tom
Claus; brother-in-law and sisterIn-law, Les and Opal Fraley; and ·
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be Saturday, 1 p.m.. at the Miller Golden
Rule Funeral Home. 2697 Columbus St .. Grove City. with Rev.
Ralph Blackburn officiating.
Burial will be in the Franklin
Hills Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today !Friday I. from 2 to 4
and ito 9.

CharleJ Arnold
Charles Earnest Arnold. 80.
37799 Arnold Road. Pomeroy,
died Thursday at the Overbrook
Center following a brief Illness.
A farmer. he was born on
March 4. 1909 at Harrlsdnv.llle.
son of Nathan Edward Arnold I.
and Effl,e Clay.
He is survived by three daughters and sons·in·law. Dorothy
and Ray Underwood, Warsaw.
Ohio; Martha and Daniel Cun·
nlngham. and Mary and Loren
Coleman. Pomeroy; and two
sisters-in-law. Hazel Arnold and

Veteran• Memorial
Thursday admlsslollll- Mavlx
McClain, Gallipolis; Daisy Sis·
son, Middleport; Milton H~ .
Middleport; Glenn Hudson, Ma·
son; ·Homer DeLong, Reedsvllli!,
. Thursday discharges - Flos·
sle Badgley, Mabel Brlc.kles.

•

Dance Band: LEGEND
Call 675-1110

...--------------.
FIRESIDE INN
PRESENTS

"I.OCKOLAn

Browns rub shoulders

wilh Royalty...Page B-5

In Our Town: Tourist season begins
next w~... Page B-8 ·

THURSDAY .2 'fRIDAY
SATURDAY - SUNDAY

By NANCY YOACHAM

01

Times--Sentinel stall
POMEROY -Illegal dumping
of garbage Is on the rise in Meigs
County since the closure several
months ago of the Meigs County
Landfill. Area residents wishing
to ·get rid of garbage must now
pay local trash haulers to trans·
port the garbage to landfills in
surrounding counties, or take the
garbage toout·of·county landfills
themselves. Evidently, some
Meigs County residents would.
rather just dump their garbage
in secluded locations and forget
the expense and hassle of paying
someone else or transporting the
garbage themselves. ,
·

FACTORY REBATE
·•6.9°/o 48 MONTHS
•9.-9°/o 60 MON·THS

olos DELTA 88

$1,000 ltbati

. 1989 CAMARO

S1 ,000 Rebate

•
.,5,
ARIIVED
GM176
GM156

YEAR
1989
1988
1988.
·1989

'1989 CHEVY CElEBRITY'

s1,000 ltbate

s 1,000 Rebate

·1989 CUilASS - -

According to Utile. "any perAccording to Keith Little, of
.
son
who Is convicted of open
the Meigs County Health Depart·
ment, the local health agency Is dumping may face the possibility
'·receiving an Increasing of a fine of up to $250 per day until
, number of complaints on the the dump has been properly
operation of open dumps at cleaned up." .
_As Little points out. ·'There are
different · locations throughout
the county. For those who may Ohio Environmental Protection
not know." Little stresses, "It Is a Agency approved solid waste
violation of the Ohio Revts·ed landfills In Gallla, Athens and
Code to create or operate an open VInton Counties In which solid
waste maY. be taken. There Is
dump."
also
a landfill located at West
Although local officials under·
Columbia,
W.Va. If disposal In
stand that lack of a county
landfill Is an Inconvenience. not one of these landfills Is too much
only for resjdents. but for trash of an Inconvenience. then It may
haulers who must charge more be necessary to enlist the servl·
and then wait In line to dump at Cf'S of one of the various licensed
out-of-county sites, their job. refuse haulers which serve all
(See ILLEGAL. page 6)
they say, Is to enforce the law.

'

S600 Rebate

ssoo
.
.Rebate

s1,000 Rebate
•

WHAT A DUMP - Keith Little, ol the Meigs
County Health Department, overlooks one the

S1,700 Dlscounf

I

S1,000

S800. Rebate

I

ssoo lebate

~tbatt

PRICE

MODEL

" $17~500

ASTIO

\1-9,900

CAD.
BROUGHAM
'

521,900

.DELTA 88
Z-24

$11 900

$13,200
900
S10,900

00
S2,99S
f7,995
'14,495
,495'

CAPRICE
S-10 '414

'

.

"

$5,995
995
95

57,995

General and Gynecological Surgery

•oN SELECTED UNm

4 DAY 'BLOW OUT
HUIIY· IN TODAYI!

Seetn, patient•
Monday throuaJl 'rlday

,1

8:80 a.m. • IS p.m.
Suite 211. PVB 1114lcal omce BuUdlnl .·

Dd PLEASANT VALLf.Y HOSPITAL

Jim.Cobb

.,-J 1M (pmlly ol proleulona/•

I

V..,llrlft, Paint PIIEI'nt.W.Ya. . . .

,.

ltEIIIRECTING - Traffic will be redirected
over a temporary bridge while the old Raccoon
Creek Bridge Is lorn down to be replace with a new
one. The project, under the Ohio Department or
Transportation; Is a S1,0311,-tlol8 project, said Karen

Pawloski, ODOT assltant , Ilalaon officer. The
temporary bridge, expected to be up by the end ol
May, will prevent detouring trallle. The new
Raccoon Creek Bridge will be conipleled by June
30,1990. (Tinies-Sentlnel photo)

GALLIPOLIS- Daniel P. Da- · oftheGalllpollsAreaChamberof
vies has joined the senior man· , Commerce and Retail Meragement team or Star Bank, N. chants Association. He Is also a
A.. Tri-State, It was announced past president of the Gallla
Saturday.
County Community Improve·
James L. Heald, president and ment Corporation, of which he
chief executive officer of Star currently serves as a member of
Bank, N. A.. Tri·State said the board of directors.
Davies will replace Scott J.
Davies was selected "Gallla
Hinsch, Jr., senior vice pres!· County Man of the Year"ln 1987.
dent, who wlll assume an exe.cu- · He has served as a director of
tlve position with Star Bank,. N. Star Bank, N. A., Tri-State for
A., Sidney. Ohio.
two years and wlll continue to .
A graduate of Heidelberg Col- serve In that capacity. ·
lege, Davies .has served as
Heald stated, "Gal !Ia County is
president of Paul Davies Jewel· vital to the continued growth of
ers, Inc .. ln Gallipolis. since 1974. · Star Bank, N. A., Tri-State.
Davies . 39, Is well-known In the Selecting Dan Davies to serve.
(See DAVIES, page 5)
area. having served as president

Township officials to decide on sewage project

$1~,900

GIOUP LUNCHEONS 4ND
PRIVATE PAniES WELCOME
$AND HILL ID.
POIJIIT PLEASANT, WV

. many lllegal.dumps that are being reported to the
.Health Department since the closing of the Meigs
County Landfill.
·

Davies to succeed Hinsch
:at ,Star Bank of Gallipol-is .

1989 lERmA

NOW SHYING DINNER

(30tl) 675-1460

A Multimedia Inc. Newtpeper

•

1989. S-1.0 .I.AZER

RESERVATIONS REQUIRED
(304) 676-6789

Dr. Jack 1'1. Levine

Increasing cloudiness, with
a chance of showers. Highs
will be near 70. Chancee ol
rain Is iiO percent.

13 Sections. 104 Pa'ges

Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, April23, 1989

1.989 CutLASS CIERA

,, '

s2.00 COVD CHAIGE

1124A
1292

Along the River ......... 81·8
Business ...................... D-1
Comics· ................... Insert
Classllleds ..... :........... D3-7
Df)aths ........................ A-3
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sports .. ., .............. :.... Cl-6

--"'

1919
CARPIICE AND
CAPRICE STAnONI!IAGONS

NO CHARGE
Automatic Tr-millian

Inside

o·n rtse In area

LOW INTEREST

1989

Middleport

•

1989 CHEVY CORSICA

Cl

tnttS

Vol. 24 l\lo. 11
CoP"fdaftW 1988

.

•••

•

'

9:3q pm:-2:30 a.m.
UVE ENTERtAINMENT -SO's &amp; 60's

•

Beat of the Bend:

•

Friday, April 21. &amp; Saturday, April 22

••

Devoted Chet'
Adkins fan

/1/1•.11.

11 0 per person

.:

's baseball roundu

' ( 01.0\' .

MOTM AND MOOSE
MEMBERS
Make You! Reservation
Now for Fund Raising
Dinner Dance for
Cystic Fibrosis.
FIIDA Y, AI'IIIL 28

.•

Mark B. SearleS, of 31235 Red
Hill Road, Langsville, Is not the
same Mark A. Searles who was
arralped recently In Meigs
·County Common Pleas Court on
charges of felonious assault and
carrying a concealed weapon.

4 -J;)ay
Blow.,. Out

John Van Meter

•

,,

Hospital news .

Jim Cobb's ·

Irene Arnold, Pomeroy; along
with nine grandchildren, tWo
great-grandchildren. and sev·
era! nieces, nephews and
cousins.
He was preceded in death by
his wife, Maggie Marie Arnold on
Dec. 12. 1988. three brothers,
Nathan, Raymond and Everett;
and a sister. Esta Russell.
Funeral services will be held at
1:30 p.m on Monday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. Scott Stewart
will Qffdate and burl.al will be In
Horner Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral hOme 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m on Sunday.

John T. Van Meter, 76. of The
Plains. formerly of Athens, died
unexpectedly Thursday morning
at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, w. Va.
Born In AI fred, he was the son
of the la'te Lester and Ada ·
Williams Van Meter.
· For many years he owned and
operated Van Meter DeconitlDg
·in Athens retiring In 1974 after
many years in the paint contract·
lng business. He was a member
of the Kenney Memorial Wesleyan Church and president of
the XL Sunday school class.
He Is survived by his wife of 40
years, Fred McColllns Van Me·
ter; two daughters. Mrs. Joe
I Beverly) Pedigo or Sl)ade. and
Mrs. Bill (Janel Elekes of New
Marshfield; a son· and daughterIn-law, Gary and Brenda Van
Meter of Athens; seven grand·
.children and six great·
grandchildren, a sister. Carvl
Pooler. Chester. and several
nieces. and nephews.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In .death by his first
wife. Octa Lonas Van Meter In
1946, a stepson, Bille Jo Risley,
and two brothers, James and
Dana Van Meter.
·
Funeral services will be held at
1 p.m. Saturday at the Hughes
Funeral Home in Athens with
. Pastor Denver K. Dodrill officiating. Burial will be In New
Marshfield Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 today.

50 cents

Page B-1

Bean dinner
nie Harrisonville Elementary

- -·Area deaths.....;_-Lan-y Mowery

un ay

CHEVROLET·OLDSMOQILE
· CADILLAC-GEO INd~
·,POMEROY OHIO
---..-...._.. .... -. -----'---"--- l :.~'- -11

TUPPERS PLAINS - Cards
were laid on the table In a Friday
afternoon Information session to
discuss a proposed project to
ellminatf' sewage problems In
TUppers Plains. Now It will be up
to township officials to decide
whether or not to play the 'hand
which Tuppers Plains bas been
dealt.
The meeting at the Tuppers
Plains Fire Station was headed
by Jon Jacobs, Meigs County
Health Department admlnlstra·
tor. According to Jacobs, a
centralized sewage disposal sys-·
tern Is the only permanent
solution for theon-golngsewage
problems In Tuppers Plains,
Because of the sewage problems, a building ban, Imposed by ·
the Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, has been In effect
for years In Tuppers Plains,
preventing any new construction
In what Is considered the best
possible location In Meigs County
for development.
The centralized system, which
was dlacuued In Friday's meetIJti, could be COlllltructed for an
approximate cost of $1.6 mDUon.
However. In order to keep
neceaaary monthly users feea to
a minimum, ,a $900,000 front
would be neceuazy to start the
project roiiiJti.
It 11 tbe up tr011t money which
wu dllcusaetl In ereateat detail
Friday.
Few Tuppen Plalllll ret1ltlents
atii!Dded tile meetiDa Iince It was
only an IJiformaUon -lion and
not a public bearlq. Thole
. realdents wbo were pre~entaald
they want to brlna an end to the
community's -•ae prolllems
and aet tbe .......1•1 ball
lifted
'
but that tbe monlbly uteri feel

.

must be one which residents, wl\h federal dollars; Appalach·
many of whom are on fixed . Jan Regional Commission grant
Incomes, can afford.
·
money; and State Issue II grant
Funding posslblltles which money.
Don Summers, representing ·
Were discussed Included a low
FmHA,
said his agency could.
lnterf'st loan from Farmers
"maybe"
fund $300,000 of the
Home Administration; a low
needed
$900,000
front. Summers
Interest loan from a new OEPA
stressed
the
maybe
and urged
program which Is being funded

those Involved at the problem to
apply "the sooner the better" lor
FmHA funding, even though
early application Is no guarantee
that a project of Tuppers Pla)ns'
type would receive funding.
If FmHA could come through .
with a low interest $300,000 loan,
(See TOWNSHIP, page 6)

. .. ..

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