<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11748" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/11748?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-03T19:17:50+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42718">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/f4ab26e58953d7a9fb64bc7cd75eb978.pdf</src>
      <authentication>7aad1900115b4998cd20f1f509420cf5</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="36965">
                  <text>•

•

l

Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

~.

Ponaoy-Midcleport. Ohio .

June.1.1989

r-Local news briefs----. Heavy rain triggers Michigap fl()()(fling
EMS has 6 Wednesday calls

Unlls of the Meigs Count y E mergency Medica l Services
answered siX calls on Wednesday.
At12:48 a. m .. Middleport went to Park St . for Russell Wells
who refused treat ment.
Rutl and at 10: 14 a. m. was called to the Meigs Mine No. 2Jor
Raymo nd Le iving who was flown to Grant Hospital by
Li fefllg hr.
· ·
At 10:35 a. m.. the Racine unit went to Buck town 'Road for
Charles F indley Sr. who was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 5:30 p.m:. Racine was called to Letart Falls for
Mary P ickens to Veterans Memor ial Hospital. . ·
Rutland at '7:59 p.m. went to Route 143 for Elmer Finlaw to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport went to the Overbrook Center at 10:34 p.m. for ·
Lena Ra!ke to Veterans Memor ial Hospital.

By Ualled P·reu lateraatlonal .
Heavy rain triggered street
flooding In southern Mlchlgarr
Thursday and roads wer e
washed outln Lansing.
Standing water caused by
backed-up sewers In several
Lansing streets stranded cars
and trucks.
Between midnight and 2 a.m.
CDT. nearly 4 Inches of rain fell
at St . John In the the northwest

corner of Indiana. The main
highway through the area was
Impassable because of stalled
cars. Half oft he town was flooded
and without power early
Thursday.
No Injuries were reported.
Portions of Iowa · were
drenched by thunderstorms,
while up to an Inch of snow fell in
the mountains of western Wyom·
!ng Wednesday . · the National
Weather Service reported.

Dr. Conde ·' Continued from page1

···----~--

he ·has received from the Housing Corporation for the
commissioners.
Meigs County Department of
:
CommissiOner Jones reported Human Service's office space at
that the Meigs Commissioners 175 Race St.. was also accepted
There were no injuries· nor citations In an accident which
" are no longer Involved In the by the commissioners. The bid is
occurred Wednesday at 5:30 p.m . on the Jones Road near
Maxine
Plummer lawsuit" for a five year lease at a monthly
Burlingham. according to. Meigs County Sheriff James M.
which
has
been pending since cost of $1,150 per month.
Soulsby.
1983. Jones sa!d he was notified
At the recommendation of
It was reported that a car driven by Doug K. Curtls.19 , Shade,
Tuesday by Attorney Brian Mike Swisher, Meigs. EMS direr.
and one driven by Timothy DeMoss. 23. Athens. collided. At the
Buzby, Columbus, that Meigs , tor, the commissioners hired
po int of impact. the Cu r tis vehicle was left of center, according
Jackson and Gallla Counties Kenda Carsey to fill a vacancy' in
to the report. There was moderate damage to both vehicles. The
have been el!m!nated from the the social services department.
Curtis ve hicle also damaged a fence owned by L. Shockey,
case. II would appear that an The state has given provisional
J ones Road. Shade.
out-of-court settlement was authoriZation to hire Carsey to
The sheriff also reported that a cha!nsaw r epored stolen from
reached with the Insurance com· fill the position which was
Pike Construction on May 23, has been recovered. It was found
pany Involved In the case. The648 created when employee Maty
lying in the weeds alollg Leading Creed Road by a person riding
Board
Is still Included In the suit Birchfield retired. Swisher
a horse. The saw was returned to the company Wednesday.
which Is scheduled to go to court reported.
.
.J ames McNapp, Athens. reported to the sheriff's office that
on
Ju·ne
5
In
Columbus.
Discussed
briefly
tiY the com·
his 1952 Ford tractor had been stolen from his farm In Columbia
A problem of accumulated . missioners was a request from
Township sometime between the May 21·30.
vacation days by employees Meigs County Court Judge Pa·
Timothy Lamb. 22, Fort Wayne, Ind. who was ar rested May 25
directly under the control of the trick O'Brien to hire an add!·
and charged with receiving stolen property entered a not guilty
commissioners was discussed, tiona! employee . In his depart·
plea in Meigs County Cour t this week, the sheriff's depar!ment
but no action taken. II was ment . Although O'Brien
reports. A preliminary hearing has been set for June 5at 10a.m.
reported
that the state exam in· submitted a letter of request to
and bond was set at $25,000 ·or 10 percent cash. Lamb was ·
ers have questioned the accumu· the comm!~sioners, they Sllld
charged with possessing a stolen vehicle In Fort Wayne, Ind.
latlon of vacation !lays. citing the they would need to discuss the
Sheriff's deputi es are also Investigating the theft of a Sears
accumulated time as a potential request In detail with O'Brien
portable r adio-cassette player, a Litton micrciwave, a VCR and
!lability for the county.
before making a decision.
a cable TV converter from the home· of Robert Marcinko
A bid of $17,165 from Pat Hill
An application from JayMar
residence on Union Ave ., sometime betwen May 22 and 26.
Ford for a 1989 Ford Bronco 4X4 CoarCompany for a permit to use
fortheMelgsCountyEmergency salt brine as dust control on ·
Medical Services was acc.epted private property lias been re·
by the commissioners at the ce!ved by the commissioners. A
.
recom'l'lendalionofRobertByer, publiC hearing on the .permit
roy, and Pomeroy Chapter 186. EMS director.
request has been scheduled for
)ohn Cleek
Order of the Eastern Star.
A bid from the Middleport next Wednesday, 1 p.m.
Mrs . Smith is survived by her
,
,
·
John Cleek, 74. Portland. died
husband. Dale E . Smith. PomeTuesday at his resilience after an
roy; a daughter, Charles A.
extended Illness.
garet F6llrod and Norma Custer,
McClung. Marlon; a son, Ronald Equipment needed .
Born Oct. 10. 1914 in Kena.
D. Smith. Pomeroy. four grand· The Meigs County Historical who tied for low gross; Julie
W.Va., he was a farmer of
children , and three great · Society-Heritage Weekend com- Hysell with low net; and Debbie
.Protes tan t faith.
·
·
Sayre. low pulls.
-grandchildren, along with a mlttee needs old·tlme fishing
He is su ~v!v ed by his wife,
Also, It wa~ decided on Tuessister, Amber Lohn. Pomeroy . equlpme,nt and river-r elated
Mac!&lt;? Cleek, Portland; one son:
day
to have the club's lnvlta·
she
was
!terns
for
exhibit.
Also,
the
Besides
her
parents,
Ea rl Cleek, Duncan Falls; two
tiona! on July 25.
death
by
three
museum
would
like
to
prepare
a
preceded
in
brothers, Corbitt Cleek, Por·
sisters. Margaret Houdashelt . display of model cars. If anyone · Tent revival
!land; Carol Cleek. Columbus:
The Word of Life Ministries
Edna Heilman. and Laura has Items or collections to loan
four sisters, Edith Parsons.
Schaefer.
for
exhibit,
bring
them
to
the
will
have a ten crusade beginning
Char les ton. W.Va.; Belle Raines .
Friday
night and continuing
Funeral services will be held museum. located on Butternut
Grace Williams, both of Kena,
June
11 just off Route 33
through
Saturday ai 1 p.m . at the Ewing Ave. In Pomeroy, or call the
W.Va. : Wayn!ta Harris. Par·
at
Burlingham.
beginning at 7
Funeral Home. The Rev. Rl· museum at 992·3810.
_! land; four grandchildren, an&lt;(
p.m.
nightly.
The
revival will be
chard Freeman wlll officiate and Ladles 1°1f ·
five grea t grandchildren.
burial will be in Beech Grove Eighteen ladles joined In Tues· of the miracle and ·deliverance
Funera l services will be Fri·
Cemetery.
Friends may call at day's Ladies' Golf play at Jay- type and the public Is Invited to
day at 11 a.m . at the Parsons
the
funeral
home 2 to4 and 7 to9 Mar Golf Cours!!- In Pomeroy . ,. attend by the Rev. Ray Lauder·
Funeral Home lri Ripley ; W.Va ..
p.m.
Friday
. Eastern Star servl- Winners for the day were Mar- milt. pastor.
with . buria l in the Stone Lick
ces wlll be held at 7: 30 Friday
Ceme.tery .
Fdends may call at the funeral'
evening at the funeral home.
honie from 6-9 p.m. on Thursday .
Daily stock prlc.e s
Goodyear T&amp;R .. ........... .. .... 53'12
Ella Smith
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Heck's .. .. ............... .. .......... .. %
Bryce and Mark Smith
Key Centurion ........... .. ...... .. 13
Ella E . Smith. 84. Spring ~ve . ,
of 'Blunt, Ellis .r. Loewi
Lands'
End .. ..... .. ........ .. .. .. ..28¥.
Veterans Memorial
Pomeroy. died Wednesday at
Limited Inc ......... .. ... ..... .... .. 32
Veterans Memor ial Hospital folAm Electric Power .... ......... 27'12 Multimedia Inc ...... .... ........ ... 95
Wednesday admissions- Cha·
lowing an ex tended illness .
AT&amp;T ....... ... ................... ....35% Rax Restaurants ..... .... ... ..... . 2'%
Born on Apr i1 18. 1905, she was rles Findley Sr .. Racine; Edith
Ashland 0!1 .......... ..... .. ... ... .. 42
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... ... ... 17%
the daughte r of the late James Shamblin. Cheshire.
Bob Evans ............ .. .... ... .. ... 15% Shoney's Inc .. .. .......... .. .. ... ... 11
Wednesday discharges - Ri·
and Emma Thoma Will. and was
Charm!Rg Shoppes .... ..... :....17'&gt;i! Wendy's Jntl.. ...... .. ... .. ..... .. .. 5%
a homemaker . · She was a chard Curtis , Herbert Inscoe. City Holding Co .. ., .. :.. .. .. ..... 16¥. Worthington lnd .... .... .. .. ... .. 21'12
member or Trinit y Church Po me· Ber tlla Rife.
Federal Mogul. ......... .. .. .. .. .. .54'12

No one hurt in mishap

------Area deathS

MeigS area announcements---

'
Showers and thunders torms rheastern portions of the nation.
developed across the Grear the weather service said.
Lakes and upper Mississippi . Streets and basements also
Valley, gathering strength In were tlooded Wednesday near
warm, . humid air lying over the Ohio toWns of Wlllougl!by and
much of south-central and sou· W!ck!Ufe.
By Unlled Presslnteroatlonal
South Central Ohio
Tonight : Showers and thunder·
storms likely, with a low In the
mid 60s. Light southwest winds.
Chance of rain Is 70 percent.
Friday : Mostly cloudy, with
scattered showers and thunder·
storms. Highs will be between 60

and 85. Chance of rain Is 50
percent.
Edended Forecaal
Saturday throu11h Monday
Fair Saturday, with a chance
of showers and thunderstorms
Sunday and Monday. Highs will
be mainly In the .70s, with early
morning lows mostly in the 50s .

$15 couple

....:......W•II Done _Jhdium __Rare

Steak:

___Jiashtd
Potato
--Biked ·
Tour end movie will follow dinner.
Send entry bl1nk1 to: Meig1 County Muaeum; Box 146,
Pomeroy, Ohio 411719.
.

F115T OF SEASON SOUTH CAIOUIIA,
TIEl IIPEIIED

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

1979 FORD PINTO
Slock fll572, 2 - . . v-e. s apooc~
AIM'M . -• . - ! - · 112 11111, tong

bod._
...
WAI

Peaches
5 ll. BASKET

. lED ... JIICY ·
IOU. SIWID

Florida Watermelons

s

25 Ll. lAG

coms s,ooo so. n..

79

$298

Produce Prlcee Good
- - thru June 4, 1818

Drit1 AUltlt t. tile
AIW'sWSIIIC.... el

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

Opltl7..,. . . . .

II.,...........
1/4 . . ,..,. ..

p

Stocl&lt; fllll782, 2 doO,., 4 cyl,

WAI

•

WEED &amp; FEED

:S truble ,retires as
~Middleport postmaster

says state
has $200 million extra

FLATS .......................... lEG. •1 o.oo................. Now

Fertilizer·

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
unemployment rate fell to 5.2
By KATIE CROW
percent In May, b1,1t only 100,000 ·
Sentinel Correspondent
jobs were added to the economy
Patching of streets In the
last month In the smallest
village of Syracuse will get
employment gain in more than
underway within two weeks
three years, the LabOr Depart·
Mayor Eber Pickens told Syra·
ment reported Friday.
cuse Village Council Thursday
The seasonally adjusted job·
night.
Joe Struble will retire offlc!a lly
delivery supervisor .
less
rate
dipped
0.1
percent
last
Mayor Pickens also announced
:as postmaster of the Middleport
He served In the Albany Post
month,
the
department's
Bureau
the Bill Hubbard Memorial
that
Office as the officer In charge,
.Post Office t!!daY (Friday) after
of
Labor
Statistics
said.
The
5.2
Tournament
will begin July 5.
and was the postmaster In
29 years of service ro the postal
percent
rate
was
the
lowest
since
The
1ourney
will
run for a two
Rutland from 1978 to 1981. He was
lndustry.
at
5
percent
unemployment
stood
wee~
lleriod.
· Making the trip down to '· acting supervl'sor atlhe Marietta
Middleport to .bid him farewell - Posf Office for a short time, and In March, the bureau said.
Jobless rates for most groups .
Jim Hill, councilman, sug· .
was Mrs. Margaret Rucker,
was promoted to postmaster at
.
held
steady
from
the
previous
gested
council publlcly thank
manager postmaster. and Billy
the .Middleport Post Office in
mont)l,
but
the
unemployment
SCOTf
ISAACS
members
of the Syracuse Base·
Anderson. director of city opera·
1981.
rate
for
adult
men
declined
0.3
Association
for the extensive
ball
Struble Is involved with the
tlons, both of Zanesville MSC.
percent
to
4.3
percent,
following
the
members
have done at
work
St!Jlble started his postal ca· Trinity Church in Pomeroy, the
an
Increase
of
a
virtually
similar
the
ba!lf!e!ds.
All
council
Pomeroy Fire Department,
reer In Pomeroy as a temporary
In
April,
the
bureau
magnitude
members extended their sincere
substitute clerk and carrier. He Pomeroy Emergency Squad, and
said.
thanks for a job well done.
the American Legion Drew
was . promoted to clerk and
Hill also asked permission for
Total
employment
grew
at
Its
Webster Post 39.
.•
transferred to Athens In 1974
pace
since
84,000
jobs
slowest
the
midget football reams to use
He resides with his wife,
where he worked as a clerk In
were
added
to
the
economy
In
park facility for practice.
the
mall processing. He also served a · Martha, at 105 Terrell Lane In
March!986.
Employment
growth
Permission
was granted.
six month period as acting · Pomeroy.
Pickens told council that the
has averaged 160.000 during the
WASHINGTON tUPI) -Scott
last three months, down ftnm a
r
pace of 275,000 In the previous l2 Isaacs,14, of Littleton. Colo . . won
the 62nd annual National Spelling
months. · ··
Service jobs accounted for Bee by spelling spoliator and
nearly all the 100,000 new jobs, defeating Ojas Tejani, 12, of
which pushed non-farm payroll Chattanooga, Tenn. , who Iniss·
employment to a seasonally pelled senesclng.
ready boosted last week by $183 adjsted 108.2 million. But job
It took 13 rounds Thursday for
COLUMBUS. Ohio !UPI) COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) · State legislators apparently will million, and then project the creation In the service sector also Isaacs .to beat a record field of 222 · Fiscal year-end cash problems In
have an extra $200 mUllan, new-found revenues through the has slowed In recent months, the young spelling aces from across
welfare and corrections occupied
the country whD competed In the
perhaps more, to work with when nex I two years .
bureau said.
the Ohio State Controlling Board
" My guess is that there will be · Employment . In goods · two-day bee. The winner claimed
they begin joint Senate-House
Thursday at its bi-weekly
conference committee negotla· $200 million (more) . maybe even producjng industries declined a $1 ,500 prize and the opportunit y
meeting.
lions on the $26.3 billion state as high as $300 million.'' Aronoff 35,000 In May, wiping out small to meet · Vice President Dan
The board authorized the
said .
gains made in February and Quayle Friday at the White
budget next week.
transfer of $2 million In emer·
Lee Walker, director of the April, the bureau said.
House. The runner-up got $1,000.
Ohio Senate President Stanley
gency funds and $731.680 from
state
Office
of
Budget
and
employment
Isaacs. who competed In the
Manufacturing
Aronoff, R·Cincinnatl. said
other accounts to pay Aid for
Thursday he was Informed that . Management, refused to confirm has fallen by about 30,000 In the 1978 and 1988 bees. Is an eighth
Dependent Children through .
the Celeste administration wlll or deny. the speculation about last two months and Is not back at grader at Kent Denver Country
June 30. Combined with a federat t
rrev!se Its revenue estimates for more revenue. ··we haven't Its January level. the bureau Day School In Englewood. Colo.
match. the money will support$6
Tejani is a sixth grader at St . million in payments.
1990-91 based on an Improving finished our revenue estimates said.
Nicholas School.
economy and higher perfor· yet." she said.
Jerry Friedman, a spokesman
"I think It would be a sate
mance of the personal Income
Durll\g a news conference for the Ohio Department of
assumption that the revenue
tax.
after his victory. Isaacs said he Human Services, said late collec·
Aronoff said he was notified es tlmates are going up, " said
studied more than 100 words a
lions of child support presented a
early Wednesday morning in a state Tax Commissioner Joanne
day since January. One of the
timing f&gt;roblem resulting In the
·personal telephone call from Limbach, pointing OUt that hiS·
words he studied was spoliation, cash shortage.
torical!y the estimates have
Gov. Richard Celeste.
which apparently llelped him
Friedman said the emergency
The senator said the adm!nis· risen between the time the
spell spoliator, meaning a person funds would be repaid with
tratlon plans to Increase Its fiscal budget Is Introduced and the
who robs.
collection of an estimated $8
Continued on page 10
1989 ending fund balance, al·
. He said his spelling coach. million In child support payA Middleport youth was air·
lifted to Cabeli-Huntlrtgron Hos· Diane P!ecker, helped him In ments this month.
pita!, Huntington, W.Va. , after past years, "But this year, It's
an accident at 7 p.m . Thursday almost all been my mom."
on the parking lot of Church's
Thewlnner'sbeam!ngparents,
General Store on SR. 218, about KayeandBudlsaacs,accompan·
one mile north of Mercerville.
led their son to the bee.
The Gallla County Sheriff's
"He's worked an awful long
The Melgs·Gall!a Post, State Highway Patrol Investigated a
Department
said
Tommy
E.
time.
This shows that It pays to
windshield accident at 2: 50p.m. Thursday on SR. 143, 0.1 west of
Fellure,
6,
701
Beach
St.,
Middle·
work
hard," Bud Isaacs said.
Meigs County Prosec11tlng At·
milepost 6, In Scipio Township, Meigs County. No one was .
port,
was
taken
from
the
scene
by
"He'
s
a
joy.
H~'s
a
super
kid."
torney
Steven L. Story has
Injured.,
·
on his office's decl·
Healthnet
to
the
Huntington
In
addition
to
the
money
,
elaborated
Troopers said Thelma Cottertll, 29, Pomeroy, was headed
Hospital,
where
be
was
admit
led
Isaacs
will
appear
on
NBC's
The
s!on
to
allow
the aggravated ,
west when a rock fell from an eastbound truck driven by Lester
wlthafractureoftheleftleg.
His
Tonight
Show.
Asked
which
gu·
murder
charge
against William
L. Parker. 32, Pomeroy, struck the windshield of the Cotterill
was
reported
as
good
ests
he
would
like
to
share
the
O'Dell
(Zeke)
Collins, 28, of
condition
car. Damage was 'l'llnor. There was no citation.
this morning by a hospital television stage with, Isaacs Pomeroy, to be reduced to
spokesperson.
pointed to Tejani and said, "I'd Involuntary manslaugliter.
,Deputies said the accident choose him.' '
Collins pleaded guilty Tuesday
occurred when Christy M. VIII·
Teja.nl stumbled on senesclng Ln Meigs County Common Pleas
Two tlrl!l on a pickup truck owned by Jay Hemsley, Pomeroy,
cent, 23, 701 Beech Street, Mid· - meaning growing old, spelling Court to ibe Involuntary manswere punctured by gun shots yesterday evening. Hemsley
dlepor\ parked her 1973 Ford It as "sonnesalng." To prepare lauabter charge; that be did
reported to the Meigs County Sheriff's Depertment that around
Pinto, left the motor l'llnllllli and tor lhe bee, be sail he studied up cause the death Qf bls uncle.
9:55p.m. Thursday. a subject fired sill sbota at his truck which
wentlntotbestore. Whllesbewu to 3% bours dally. He added he Vll'lii!l ColllDI,onoraboutMerch
was parked at his aunt's house at upper Minersville. Charges
lllllde, one of three children was not sure If be would return 26ofthlayear,at thel'l!lldenaeof
are pending In the matter. Sheriff James M. Souilby reported
apparently knocked tbe car's next ye"ll'.
- -nm ami Eleclly .Da-~ Dirk
thlll mornlflg.
gear shift Into reverse gear and
Earlier Thul1day, words such Hollow Road, Pometoy.
A breakllll and entering at Whaley's Grocery at Darwin Is
the vehicle began moving.
as gamin - a boy street urchinAddltlOIIIlly, ColUIII pleaded
under Investigation by tbe shettfrs department. A sherltr s
Tommy 1nd hlF brother, Dus· and skltzmarker - meaning an
guilty that at .the time be
re(IOl't stat.,_ th1t the B&amp;:E occurred shortly after closing at
tin L. Fellure, ~. Jumped out of ImpressiOn left by a fallen skier . committed the ofteale, be bed oa
mldnllht on Wednesday. Tbe front door was forced open and
the vehiCle. Tbe car ran over - claimed the youq spellers.. bls penon 1 22 caliber plltolelld
CJalrettes, tee shirts, caps, video tapes and other items were
Tommy'• left leg. Dustin auf· Thul1day's words were pulled that the piStol W8l ued In the
taken.
fered multiple facial abrlliQDI out of a dlclloDiry rather than shootbll dnth of bil tiiiCle.
Twenty·fOI!f year old William Dean Wblttin~on, Por,neroy,
and waa treatecht Holzer Medl· from e practice 1111, as they were
AltMtlb Collllll . wu 01'111-'
and 20-year-old Ronnie E. Taylor. Middleport, were trans·
cal CeiiU!r. A &amp;.month Infant In 1 for the three rounds conducted nelly charted with aaravatecl
(Coi!!Jrued on .,..e II)
car-aelfeecaJ)ed ln.liiiy.
· · Wedllelday.
murder, Story atatn the follow·
,.'i

~noff

Slock fll4221, 2 doorl, V-8 ong. 306.

1986 FORD ESCORT
Slock • 82311, 2 - . . l!ont- - ·
.,r.,
4 opood 11011d. trlnl.

lUl &gt;.-··
NOW

'995

-I. . . .---.-wldobecl.
1980 DODGE 0·150 4X4
111333, 2 doora, V-8, 4 .-c1

purpose of SEOVEC upgrading
conferences, a request for relm·
VAX
785to a VAX 5320 .
bursement for professional
In
other action, the board
growth program for Bob Lang,
Jlilproved
an open gym a r range·
teacher, along with several ap·
mentfor
the
summer to be held at
·
propriatlon modifications and
the
high
school
for the purpose of
budget transfers.
Instruction
and
development of
Approved participation In he
COG-SEOVEC Consortium' s skills.
The board set June 28 at8 p.m.
Hosptlalizatlon and Surgical
Health Care Plan for next year, in the high school cafeteria as the
accepted the Downing Childs date, time and place of the next
Mullen Musser Insurance regular board meeting.
Attending were Jim Smith,
Agency. Pomeroy as the carrier
president,
an(! members. Susie
for building and contents !nsu·
Heines,
Ray
Ka rr, and I. 0 .
ranee coverage for the 1989·90
McCoy.
An
executive
session was
school year , and approved a
on
personnel
mat
ters.
held
resolution to make a one-lime
payment to SEOVEC for the

Street patching
job to begin in
Syracuse village

Jobless
rate falls
to 5.2%

Eighth grader
wins national
spelling title

tongWAI bod, -

TUIF BUILDER

,.

LAST DAY - Joe Struble, right, poelmaster of the Mlddleporl
Post Office, will retire today (Friday) after 29 years duty with the
poelal service. Pictured with Struble Is Margaret Rucker, MSC
manager poetmaster from ZanesvHle who ·recognized his years of
service and dedication with a service award. '
· ·

terence between the two to be
"picked up" by the salary
reduction method for tax pur·
poses for those emplo yees
affected.
· On the recommendation pf
district curriculum !nservice
committee chairman, Nancy
Larkins, the board approved a
program of !nservlce meetings
for the 1989·90 school year.
Membership In the Educa·
Ilona! Technology Services for
the next school year was re·
newed. The board also approved
attendance of the treasurer and
the superintendent to summer

.

rr..., PS, PB, AIM'M rodlo, 314 ton

HANGING BASKETS.M.......M
... IEG. SJ1.91
012 FOI $1700

Resignations of two non·
certified workers were accepted
and several policy changes were
considered at Wednesday night's
meeting of the Eastern Local
School District Board of
Education.
The board accepted the resig·
nations of Mary Bowers, assist·
ant cook and Paul Baer, bus
driver.
A new policy on the employ·
ment of classified personnel was
adopted and the board approved
an ·Increase In classified em·
ployees SERS retirement pay·
ment from 8.75 percent to 9
percent and authorized the dlf·

NAME - - - - - - - - - - - - - i - - - ADDRESS _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

PLENTY 0' PLANTS, .ALL AT SPECIAL REDQCED PRICES.

ALL FLOWERING

Two Eastern workers resign

Museum Entry Blank

Cosl: S8 per pmon

2 Sections. 14 Paget 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NewJPapar

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday. June 2, 1989

This year's Heritage Weekend
days? Remember the old paddle· theme Is "History A!Onj!" the
wheelers as they passed by River." To add to the enjoyment .
Meigs County's river banks, on June 9. a tour of the mu$eU!ll
churning the waters of the Ohio? and a short movie in the museum
Remember sitting on the river or theater will be offered following
creek bank just waiting for a fish the dinner.
to bite the line?
The evening's menu will in·
If you can remember. or even If ' elude clam chowder, fresh
you neEJd a littleffmlnderofwhat garden salad. sirloin steak.
those by-gone days along the mashed potatoes and gravy or a
river were like, then plan to baked potato. green beans with
attend the Meigs County Muse· almonds , fruit pie with l!omeurn's "Trip Down Memory made Ice cream, homemade
Lane" on June 9 at 6:30p.m.
bread and butter, and coffee and
Iced tea .
"Times have changed in our
Anyone wishing to attend the
river towns. but we at the Meigs June .9 dinner should make a
County Museum have not forgot · reservation by Monday. June 5.
ten." says museum spokesman Mall !he reservation with ·pay Margaret Parker. The museum ment of $8 per person or $15 per
Is sponsoring the June 9 dinner as couple to: the Meigs County
a preview of Heritage Weekend Museum, Box 145. Pomeroy.
which will be held June 10-11. Ohio, 45769, or call 992-3810.

PHON,..__ _ _ _ _ ___._ _ _NO. ATTENDII1ti..G_ _

PIU'tly cloudy tonight. Low In
60s. Saturday, High In mid 80s.
Chance of rain Is 50 percent.

•

e

•
Remember lazy summer

PL.A NTSALE

IIAIIET PACKS """'""""""" IEG.SI.SOMMMMONOW $)19
. MIX OR MATCH FLATS ..... 2 FOI S1600

Pick 3
171
Pick 4

Page4

Event scheduled June 9

Hospital ·news

Plant Prices Good
W.liile Quantities Lat.

Ohio Lottery

2173

- - -,- - - W e a t h e r - - - - -

--------Stocks --------

The Area's best selection of freshest and finest
quality flowering and vegetable bearing plants!

Houston
cops 7th
straight win

State board shuffles
funds for welfare

Middleport
youth hurt
in accident

Local news briefs--

The board also authorized the
transfer of $1.876 million within
the Ohio Department of Rehabili·
ration and Correction to pay food,
clothing and ut!l!ty b!l!s at
various correctional Institutions.
Rod Young, business adm!nis·
trator for the department, satd
the money will come from $4
million set aside for staffing a
new prison In Warren but not
used this year.
The board approved $10.5 mil·
lion worth of computer software
and hardware for the Ohio
Lottery Commission - $7.5 mil· ·
lion of It from the Grech Corp.,
Providence, R.I.
Battelle Memorial Institute,
Columbus, was hired for $100.000
to provide an analysis of the
security and efficiency of all the
lottery games.
The board approved release of
Continued on page 10

Prosecutor elaborates
on Tuesday's decision

Rock strikes vehicle's windshield

Tires punctured by gunfire

•''

roadside park {former state
park) was now open.
It was noted that anyone
wishing to use the shelter house
at the Municipal Park must
contact Jim Hill.
Council discussed cutting of
weeds along village streets and
agreed to purchase 120 feet of
chain for the swings at the park.
Marty Maynard. pool man·
ager , met with council and gave a
run down on pool activities. Due
to two guards not able to wor~
council hired two additional
guards. Mike Amos and Gary
Freeman.
Council went into a &amp;hort
executive session to discuss a
problem within the viilage.
Attending were Mayor
Pickens. Janice Lawson, clerk·
treasurer. Jack Williams, Minter
Fryar. Hill. Kenny Buckley.
Kathryn Crow and Ernie Sisson.
council members and Jim Con·
nolly police chief.

.,

!ng reason for reducing the
charge to Involuntary
manslaughter.
According to a press release
Issued by Story's office. "after a
thorough Investigation of the
facts, It appeared that the
defendant was highly Intoxicated
at the lime or the offense and that
his actions Immediately before
and after the shootin&amp;. ltldlcate
ther.e was some credibility to the
defendlllt'a postislon lha! tbla
was, In fact. an accldealal
ahootlllll, evea thoUih he pola'-1
tbegunatVIJlUCoi!IIIS. Thllw.borlle
by Ute two
IIIII Bec!Qr

lt.

---------

�t•on.-oy-Middleport. Ohio

Commentary
111 Court Street
P~tneroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF-THE MEJGS·MA!ION ABEA

~lb

. .· . .

~~ ,....__,':-"'T"I,.,.._c:::l,_;'
ROBERT L . WINGE'lT
Publisher

Friday, June 2, 1919

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manqer

PAT WHrrEHEAD
Asslstaa&amp; Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of ibe Alllodatod Pr-,InlaDd Dlllly Pnu~
dation and the American Newapaper Pubi!IIJ.-. "-::ll&amp;loa.
LETTERS OF OPINION areweicome. 'llley _ .. he le.. tllall SN
wordl loar. Allletten are aubjocl to edltlnr and mul he alped with
name, adclreoa ud &amp;elepboae auDtt.. No u..jp.. letlera wm be p•bllshed. Letter&amp; lhoald he 11 pod lute, addrMIIDIIaaiiM; not ,..aoaall·

ties.

On the track
to disarmament
1Jy HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
In the mld·1930s. Soviet Foreign Minister Maxim Lltvlnov said,
"The way to disarm !s to disarm."
So there is a certain Irony that the North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, symljpl of the Western military buildup to thwart
Soviet expansionism In Europe, may be transformed and even
someday put itself out of business.
President Bush has declared a victory for the West and taken the
first steps to try to cut back armaments and manpower if Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev does the same.
. Actually. the Kremlin leader led the drive in proposals to reduce
both nuclear and conventional forces. All that Is needed now Is to get
the show on the road and to begin negotiations in earnest.
, Coupled with the boldness of his moves is Bush's determination to
set a deadline for NATO and the Sovlet·controUed Warsaw Pact to
reach an agreement. His first goal calling for completion of talks
within six months, or perhaps a year, Is ambitious- but realistic If he
and the Kremlin give the green light.
· Although negotiations would be very complicated. It Is more the
desire to reach an accord, rather than the technicalities . that' will
&lt;)etermine the pace of the talks.
: Bush Insists that he was not stampeded by Gorbachev's captivating
style and Innovative projections of unilateral disarmament that had
appeared to put the United States on the defensive.
The president, instead, eli: plains that he proceeded with his own
~ing by first initiating a lengthy foreign policy review that is now
~ompleted.

JERUSALEM -The Palest(.
nlan uprlalnll a&amp;aiDit the Israeli
occupation has progressed from
the streets of the West Bank to
the study halls of Jerusalem. The
uprising, or "Intifada," started
with teenagers throwing rocks.
Now Intellectuals are hurling
missives.
•.
,The Jaffee Center for Strategic
Studies cast the first stone. In an
open challenge to the rullna
Israeli Llkud party's policies, the
center warned recently that the
Intifada will rage untn Israel
accepts a Palestinian state. The
center concluded that the Pales·
tlnlan people widely support the
Palestine lJberation Organlza·

Letters to the editor

About our blood progmm

Jack Anderson and Dale Van Atta

tion. That means Israel must
come to terms Wltb Its old enemy,
split Israelis and whittled away
the PLO.
A conaervative think tank, the
at the support of American Jews.
Here are excerpts from the
JerusaleJ!l Institute for Western
Defense, was alarmed enough at battle of the Intellectuals:
the splash made by tbe Jaffee .
- ' Why has the Intifada been
report hat It has prepared a
able to sustain Itself and how long
response which wUI be published can It continue?
The Jaffee Center says that
later this month. The Jerusalem
Institute contends that the Jaffee "there Is little likelihood that the
Intifada would cease" without
Cen~r Is speaking for a liberal
minority who are "not Interested political negotiations to end it.
In national unity but In forcing
The Jerusalem Institute says
the
lntiflda has flourished be·
(their) policies on the rlght·wtng
cause Israel has allowed It to. " ...
majority. "
This battle of Intellectuals the Israel Defense Force has not
shows the Intifada at Its most been ordered by the political
damagina -as a sword that has level to suppress lt."

·don! .. . .-

'lWo

--._--:

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

lt tokes 69rules,

- What IS t~e riSk to United ···
States-Israeli relations?
The Jaffee Center says that the
tougher Israel aets Wltll t~
Palestinian upstarts, "the more
It jeopardizes U.S. support."
The Jerusalem Institute thinks •·
the real damage Is being done by ~
the Israelllefl. "The effect of Its
activities In the United States bas
been to loosen the emotional ties
between Israel and parts of
American Jewry, making the
latter a much less effectlvj! lobby.
on Israel's behalf." ·
··
r
- Has the Jeaendary Israeli
!lgbttng spirit met Its match?
"After 41 years of struale and
war, Israeli society Is showln1
lncre!ISing signs of national fa·
tlgue," according to tbe Jaffee
Center . ,
Not true, says the Jerusalem
Institute. The only ones gellinfl'
tired are "In some lett-wing ~
Intellectual and social ctrcles.': ;:
-Will the Intifada lead to even
more radical Arabs? ·
"The mere fact of continuing
occupation necessarily acara·
vates Palestinian frustration,"
says the Jaffee Center. "This
almost certainly. means further
·radicalization.''
But the Jerusalem Institute
thinks the Palestinians are becoming more radical because
they are afraid of the PLO and
Muslim fundamentalists, and
are afraid that Israel can's
protect "passive and cooper&amp;·
live" Palestinians. ''The best
Insurance against fundamental·
Ism Is not the PLO but Israel."
- What happens If Israel tries
to maintain Its current status In
the West Bank and Gaza Strip?
The Jaf!ee Center says that the
situation will change, "and this
probably means for the worse.''

1oday
in history
..

&lt;-.e

---

a..

~Pill

earouaa

'

In conclusion, the question of
foreign Investment Ia not
whether It Is good or bad per se,
but rather a question of the
specific nature of such Invest·
me1tt? If a foreign national
purchases an American manu:
lacturtng plant, shuts It down,
lays off Its employees, and sblps
off the plant's equipment over·
seas, then the U.S. has cll!arly
been harmed by such a piu'Chase.
J{owever, In reality most foreign
owned companies behave just
like American owned ones. That
Is, they provide jobs and Income
for Americans and they are
committed to the communities In
which they sre toc;~ted.
Therefore, It Is not clear what,
If anything, needs to be done
about the rising level of foreign
Investment in the U.S. Wblle we
should continue to closely monl·
tor the matter, we must not act In
a manner that would unwlttlnaiY
undermine the confidence of
Investors In our economy, be tlley
foreign or domestic.

1

•
•

·
:
,
;
'
,
•
'
·
;
•v
~

,
:
•
:
·

l

!
.
,
·
•

William Rusher :

111••...'

....

'

ret.

GB

'It ....

!'ft

.......

W L

Mlhnullr1•
NPWYorll.

ua.nts

Q

""""

~:T:::

Baltlmoft"

ntt.lll-

rlevehuul

II tl .Ut

u

Torotto

w...

'tA .UI

C•llfor11ht.

S3 17 .110 - ,
34 II\ .IN -

• II .1M

n a

Thui'Rdq'• Rporia Tnn•t'lloM

I

Oaii.JIUid

Tf'U)I
Sr.&amp;tlr

Transactions

I

~WI
(blc~~ (AI.) - Plactd

fAA.\),

JV.

Mltwau ler

Cllilc~o

We~~Mon

I.

C'.oiiPp
Krnla·Q - Sl..,.d I)MIIrthaU eo.ch
Rldl PhllleiO a 1'· Je•eo•n.lt.
Salrm - Droptll'd r..tJtall, WOihiPD'II
v•f')'tlall. womea'11 w.nhlll; namf'd

Pit~dlf'lpllla

s .. PranCIAeO
{llnei••.U

w...

18 If .1111
II U .111'7

S.DI,pp
I.e!! Mj~tlet~

Spo118 briefs

ToroMII a&amp; . . . . . 1: II .....

GB

II\

4
1%
t~

IY,
IIJe

. .... .... 110

a • .u1 1

'I'INNII.II''~Oame

Ho••l. Los Mpl,. t
Fri..,'• Gam•
Ptlllbllr&amp;ll 1Sinlk7 J.l} • New 1'trll

c~l-l),7:ap.m.

Me..;,.. .. ( ....ptoa 1·11 .. PbUdri-

San Dtep (Terftll ... I) at CI.:I•.UI
(Brnrlllq+l~. 1': 11p.m.
San' h'u~ {Rt...:lwl t-~) at
All.1111ta (Gia'lllnt&gt; 1-1), 7:-IIp.m.
Chl~:aa• c•eeun.. f.ll • St. Lolia
(MajVMt'N),A:Up.m.
LoK AljlrtM IValflllutlal-f} JU. Jlou•
ton {!koU 7.J), ":II ;.m.
8atRII)' 1• GaMN

Chl~uo 11 st.

1916 MEICUIY

Andrtw

.......,

•n
•n t~ ·
.111 1

HoUIIIUII

.......

l!l II .• 'JI
tl Ul ....
Ill II .M'J

l.ot'Wfll~&amp;atl

.tmerte• w IIPf"

..MIt

" 14 .Ill

81. Loulll

'J'radM dff••m• M•t

Ftl..,'• Sport• Call'ftlllar

n u ...

PIIIIIIIIIKIII

'

'

M.aeVIear.

.,..,

'Itt

•nil• -

'

nr .... 1o .PM- .,...,. . . . c.,11111111 ,.,,
.loel Sav11at&gt;, Darcy

NATIONAL LE.WVE

Chi.cap
Monlrnl
f'le,v York

......

NN 'r..fllanll .. . .:. Walvef hll &amp;IJIIII

ldcll.er llt.rr)' liPID.

cNir.r lk-otl lll'Cnrr. •IIIHI wtapor11

CltwlaM .. OaldiWMI
111-.ta .. Ollcqo, ~
Bahkncm ac Dfl ..u, aiPt
New York at MIIM~~ker, al~
. _ _ CIIJ at calhr ..........
TesM lit SuUie, allfll

W L Pt.'l.

Mlc~l Ca~ -:.~!2:.:nttar.
·

laklmeft atDtttll&amp;. 'J:SI,....
New f•rt at M.l.......keto. •= M p.m.

Ml•....e&amp;·JII Chteap, M: • p.m.
Teu~~ a&amp; lu&amp;tlfo, It: II p.m.
newel_. atO...._II. ll:llp.m;
au- CltJa&amp; Cal••l'lll.. lt:SI ,,m.

........ w~PP

Pll .... llh .. NN Y•rk. ~:ll •. m.
MoMft. . . Pll.delpltla. ':H p.m.
s.....f'IO at Cl~ael••tl. '7:11p.M.
SIUI FranciiiH &amp;&amp; ,\U..IIII. 7: .fl p.m.
Clllcqo

t.o•"

s.. rr...~.aAt.._

at 81. IA1IIa, M: Sl p.m.

lM Allpl•111 .II Hou ..... II: II p.M.

........
Cel~ae

Omaha. Neb.- Collf'IP World Seriel
·

-·..1.,.

N1.4. PIQotfll
DHNI at Cbleap, I p.m.

Lu Vppt, Nr\',- IUI,. . IIIIOWboal
Dolllti""Ciauk
O.H
Pktlftrd, N.Y. LPGA

-

.. lief' . . . . . .

Potnac. M .. - - .. . POA Kemper

Wablln, l'apu.ll- lriWI M•ten
•
8oecet'
IIBLn.,llll

I

P1111&amp;- M.l mUllen ftoeacll o,e.

TNeU.. F1eld

a,.

l!llJAA. ·DtviAio• I

.

Newark Catholic, Frankfort .

Adena to battle for prep title
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) The stage was set Thursday for a
rematch between defllndlng
champion Newark Catholic and
Frankfort Adl!na In the cham·
plonshlp ga~e of the Class A
state high ' school baseball
tournament. ''
Newark Catholic rolled to a 9·1
win over Rittman In the semifl·
nals, and Adena edged Gibsonburg 7·6. The winners meet
Friday tor the title, wlilch NC
won by beating Frankfort last
season.
In Thursday's first semifinal
11ame, Newark Catholic's Douc
Wollenb11rg went 3 for 4 With a
three-111n homer and the . 24-5
Green Wave got astro111 pltchln&amp;
performance from Chad
Hickman.
. · WoUenburg, whowlllaotoOhlo
State In the fall, drove In three of
Newark CathoHc's four runs In
the fourth Ulntng With a homer off
Rittman starter and loler Matt
Beaumont, 6·3.
Hickman, ralatna hla record to

Spm1s btfefe

.I

$8495

1986 FOlD BRONCO 414

Baltimore at8aa01ep.11: 1$p.m.
Tea.U
,

Prow. Ul.all atampte...

,Weibring gr-abs ·Kemper lead

LEVIATHAN

tram

Baldlf'tball
Utllll - o....ral Muaj~:er Davr Chf'Cketl•llft-••d retWI'mfld •lledi\'IP oluly

Ncow York !PIY'Ift t-1 I a1 Mllw1Wb1•
llot11to W),ll : Sl p.m.
Mlt111HG&amp;a CAftderao1 W) at Clllcaao
(PIPrtl l-5),fl: • .p.m.
Tau (.IPffceN~t N) at !Jfollitle t Swift Z.

!Sal_..,."'
To..-.u ......

r ...

Of'nWt' Gil AmHtc• Ali~tat•lall. . CAAA.}.
!lr.Uir - PIM'!'d pkc:h.r Erik RU..•• tltr IS·tht' dl.abiH IMI ""'•dtw to
Mtr U; ~~e•t •IIIII!Nrr Ml&amp;, lrutiQ
lo Cal pry ol IIIIP Padftc Coaal Lfo.,.e
cAAA) : re~talkod plkh• en• ZaVllru
llfld oadlrider .JQ • .....,lnmCal pry.

.
Fricllrr'N G11mf'!l.
,..,• • (Cer. . ll ·l)allot~lo• cDo.-oa
~). 7: u,.m.
Baltlmorf' fMII•Id !-$) at Dftnlll
(TruJillo I· IT, 7:11p.m.

KJul. . CIIJIO•blta Hl.aCallforllla
(FI•It)' 1'· 1), 11: S5 p....
GamN

am

Placpd plk·llltr

on diP IU., dluhletl llwl:

uiJfd up plehiM" Tofl)'

ThurMhv's ~IIIia
BaiUrnoft" II, Del,-.lt I
MllwaukPf' $, Nt&gt;w l'orkt
Sealtho I. Tf&gt;XAa ~
Mln ...1. . al. Cllllca,o, ppd ., ral•

I), 11:11 p.m.
01!"toiMd (8Wiadf'll 1-1) at 0 .....
{)h;.,.f.J),IItiiP....
-

-

PARIS {UPI) - Mats WI· line, and said hla poor perfor· semifinals.
weighing just 106 pounds, admit·
" Last ;year I came In here In a led she doesn't know how she
lander, at his preclle beltThura· mance In the Monte Carlo 11nd
day, said his IIDderdoa statU. at Italian Opens waa no Indication nervous way. It was all kind of generated so much power IJI her
new to me," he said ...1 wasn't
the French Open took away the of bla French prospects.
game.
really comfortable out there until
pressure that usually accompan·
''Tills match wu Important,"
"My dad has always helped me
les the defendlna champion's he said. "I played a lot better the quarterfinals. This year, I with that aspect of my game, but
than In the flrat match. Then I
fee\ comfortable. I !eel like I I'm not really sure myself how I
title.
have become so powerful In my
''It's easter, because people was a little nervous, I dldn' t know could ao all the way."
Fourth·seeded Zlna Garrison shots."
don't expect you to do well," said how I was golD&amp; to play. This
of Houston dropped the first set
the !ourth·seeded Wllander, wbo , match, I felt good ."
Garrison said she Is looking
but
rallied
to
beat
Italian
Cathy
Rostapo,
r•nked
49th
.tn
the
forward
to playing Seles.
won three ofthe four Grand Slam
events last year. "For myselt, wo.rld,· 11ever seriously threa· Caverzaslo 5-7. 6-3, 6·2.
"She hits really hard and I like
Garrison admitted clay was 'to play people who hit hard," .
It's better. lt'a the last test on tened Lend!, despite Lendl's
her
"thlrd·f'IVOrlte" surface, but Garrison said. "It'll be fun. The
clay, so If you haven't done well brief lOss of concentration. .
said
she enjoyed Roland Garros fact that everybody 's looking at
''Especially at the bealnnlna of
In Rome and Monte Car Jo It's a
the second set, •tter the first set nonetheless.
her means you've got to play to a
bla motivation."
·
''I'm In a good frame of mind. certain level, but that's what you
Wllander and Ivan Lend! each was so easy, IIoat my concentra·
have claimed three French Open tlon,'' Lend! said. ''When I aot ln ·Red clay brings out the guts In want In a tournament like this."
In other women's matches,
titles In the 1980s. LendiiOOks the trouble on my serve at 3-0, that everyone," she said.
The 25-year·old said she lost 12th seeded American Lori ·
more likely prospect to make It made me wake up a little bit."
four In this decade, as Wllander · Lend! and Wllander are seeded her cOncentration after taking an McNeil fell to Dutchwoman Man·
non Bollegraf 6-2, 6·1 .
has !allen off this year. Lend!, the to meet In the semifinals. In the early lead In the opening set.
''I went up 2·0 In the first set
Three other women's seeds
World No. 1 aaaln, Is the top seed other ball o! the draw, serve-and·
and already baa captured the volleyers Boris Becker and Ste- and I started missing some. I was made It through. No. 6 Manuela
first lea of the Grand Slam with fan Edberg lie In walt, each missing forehand shots down the Maleeva of Bulgaria Bulgaria
his victory In the Australian lookin&amp; for his first French . line. The second and third sets I downed Belgian Sandra Wasser·
victory.
·started t~ play my game."
man 6-3, 5· 7, 6·3; Spain's seventh·
Open:
.
Any of them could.be surprised
In the third round, Garrison . ·seeded Arantxa Sanchez beat
Tbe · Czechoslovakian, who
lives Ill GreenWicb, :conn., eased . by the talented·youncsters In the will face Monica Seles. the Frenchwoman Isabelle Demon·
Into the third round Thursday field, wbo Include flfth·seeded 15-year·old Yugoslav who Is geot 6-4, 6-4. and American Susan
unseeded. but causing a sensa· Sloane, the No. 16, defeated
with a 6·1, 6-3, 6-1 victory over Andre Agassl.
Agassl,
stU!
looking
for
hla
first
lion with her whopping two·fisted Catherine Mothes of France 6-1,
American Derrick Rostapo. ,
tournament
victory
this
·year,
forehand
and backhand.
6·1.
Wllander has bad a poor sprln&amp;
downed
Italian
Paolo
Cane
6·2,
Seles downed American Stacey
The men's 15th seed, Mlcha&amp;l
on clay but loolred no»1heworse
Martin 6-0, 6·2. She lives and Chang, advanced with a straight
for It In a 6-3, 7·6 (7.0), 6-3 Victory 6-2, 6-3.
The 19-year-old American said trains In Florida, where, like sets victory over fellow Amelcan
over Uruguay's Diego Perez.
Wliander, for Ills part, looked he was better ·prepared for the Agassl, she works with Nick Pete Sampras. 6·1, 6-I, 6-1, and
No. 16 Guillermo Perez-Roldan
relaxed playlna from the base- pressure of grand. slam tenniS Bolle! telrl.
than In 1988, when·he reached the
The youngster. 5·foot·8 and ousted fellow Argentine Horaclo
de la Pena 7·6 (9·7). 2-6. 7-5, 4-6,
6·2 In a match c;1rrled over (rom
Wednesday.
Seventh-seeded American Tim
Mayotte was leading Haiti's
HERNDON, Va. JUPil - D.A. Stadler In 19811. He had a chance rliht ln." Hammond said of the Ronald Agenor 6-3, 5·7, 7-5, 3-3
Welbrlng, hobblln&amp; on a tender for a 63, but m'iased a 6-!oot putt ace. "It was 147 yards and I was before the match ws halted by
·
toe, matched the course record for ' birdie on the 18th hole and thinking It might take a big darkness.
9-lron, but my caddie was right,
witha7·u·n der·par64Thursdayto settled fori par.
arab a one-shot lead after one
Weibrlnll missed the final nine as usual. and told me to use an
round of the . $900,000 Kemper ho~ of Wedneiday's pro-am 8-lron. I just tired to keep my eye
Open.
while cettlna treatment from a on ,the ball and make a nice
Welbrlng, seeking his third podiatrist for an Infected In· swing."
Hammond reached 7-under
title and flrstln two years, played grown toenail on Ills lett big toe,
after
playing 15 holes, then
a nearly flawless round at the then aot the foot treated and
absorbed
bogeys on two of his
6.917·yard Tournament Players wr;apped just , hours .before his
last
three
holes to deprive ·
Club at Avenel .ln 95-degree heat
tee-o!l:rttursd.ay.
himself
a
shot
at the lead.
and high, humidity.
'
''l'he doctor did SO!fte cutting.
&amp;
Defending champion Morris
PGA Tour rookie Fred F.unk. ,lnj~tlna and saWIJI&amp;, so I kind of
Hatalsky
was
six
strokes
off
the
the golf coach at the nearby limped ~round here, but It didn't
University of Maryi&amp;D4, fired a bother my ·sw\nalng," Welbrlng pace with a 1·under 70.
6-under 65, barely mlsslna.a putt said.
.,
on the final hole that would have
Welbrlng, 36, Is playlnahts 13th
pulled him Into a ftrst·place tie. year on thePGATour. He stands
Donnie Hammond sank a hole-In· .. at No. 90 on this year's money list
one on his second hole of the day ' with $63,275 and his best official
en route to a 66 that left blm tied finish was a 12th place tie In the
with Tom Byrum two strokes Independent Insurance ·Agents
back, with Dave Barr at 67 an,d event outside Houston In Aprll.
Tom Kite, the 1987 champion and tiut he claimed a $120,000 check
current tour money leader, after Winning a 36-hole non-tou~
amoncll' golfers at 68.
event In Pittsburgh 1~1 week.
Welbrlna's 64 matched the
Welbrlng kept himself out of
record at TPC-Avenel, the bos! tniuble.duringhlsround, maktna
course of the Kemper Open for the tum at 3-under par, then
three years, set by Gre1 Norman producing birdies on Nos. 12, 13,
and Tom Kite In 1987 and Craig 14 and 16 to stake out the lead
COLONY PAll WAGON L.S.
after 18 holes.
9
Pasaenger,
loeded
with
wery option •v811•ble. Velour
"I bad·the ball in good position
1
Interior,
belllltlful
WIIJOn. Low mil• .
all.day ,' Welbrlng said. "I didn't
realize tbat was tile course
record. I just shot a good round."
Buketball
Welbrtna, with just over $1.5
The Phlla&lt;lelphla 76ers Will
mUllon
In career earnlnp, has
open 1989 preseason aaalnst the
won the 19'19 Quad Cities Open
Houston Rockets In Houston Oct.
and
the 1987 Western Open and
14. The Slxers will play a
last
year
tted for third In the U.S.
six-game . preseason schedule
Open.
His
64 was his lowest round
ending Oct. 30 aaalnstDetrolt ....
on
1989.
Welbrlna
had only three
Former University of Plttsburah
rounds under 70 all year.
basketball star Demetreus Gore
Funk, slartln&amp; on lhe back
has pleaded guilty to carryln&amp; an
nine,
went 6-under after his first
unreatstered plato!, Gore, 23,
10
holes,
flip-flopped a bogey and
also p~aded gull ty to removin&amp;
birdie
on
the fourth and fifth
the serial number from the gun.
holes
and
shot
par on hla final
He Is tree on $12,500 bond pendln&amp;
four • holes to · remain Within
sentenclna July 26.... Derek Knoran~ of Welbrtna. Funk '
·striking
wles, a 6-foot-9, 22:&gt;-pound tor·
Ia
No.
150
on t~ money list, but
ward from .Miami, will atlend
flnlabed
third
In th.e Deposit
Jacksonville University .. KnoWhite/Blue mtplng, XLT package, PB, PS, Air, Crulle, Auto.
Guaranty
event
the same· weewles has three years of coDeae
kend as the Masters.
eltalblllty after playing In Day·
Hammond, seeklna his second
tona two seasons aao. whe~:e he
.
tournament
trlllmpb In his seven .
averaaed 12.5 points and 9
years
on·
the
PGA Tour, used a
rebounds at Daytona.
perfectly plllced B-Iron shot to
ace the 147-yard par·3llth hole to
Air, PS, PI, P, P - door lodla,
llnlaa
set the stalll! for his • tronc round.
aruiM, AM/FM, air, blue with blue
North American Boxln&amp; Feder·
velour I.-lor, euto with .overdrive,
"When J. hit It, I knew It was
atlon 'c hamp OrUn Norris, a San goln1 to be close, then It rolled
V·l, 34,000 mil•. A,_ Milrcury
Diego beavywetaht, Is ready and
trad•ln.
Wlllln&amp; to flU In for Tony
Mandarlcb on tbe football field
. The Daily Sentinel
should the Green Bay Packers'
No. 1 draft cbolce take a year off
AJII\o-tfM I'
I llo.
to challenge Mila! Tyaon. Trainer
PS, PI, Auto, ate~lde bed. One ;
Jay Sayatovlcb says Norria Is
local own•.
PllllllllllallftiOir,
..., - ...
llolldiY
ready to trade In bil aJovea for a
li1 CDiu1
Jill.
-~. ~ ·-taoOIIIDVdor ....
Packers jer~ lbould ·'l)'aon
laldal
lloc..
accep~ the MlcbJian State tack·
.............
'Pll. •mt. ...
C!Oid
pold
at
I'Vmtrcly,
le's cballenae. "Orlln Norril
SILVERADO.·.~
Olda.
feels he Is al qualified to play
8hort lied. big tlr•. Alltollmlc.
football in the NFL as the bimbo
Mandarlch Is to ftaht Mike
lapn' 4 door.
Tyson," 8ayatovlcb Nld. ...
Two-time world · llpt heavy·
wetaht Dennll An~ (34-7·2, 21
I 0... Laadld.
·
KOs) will defen.d hla WBC title
aaatnst Jeff "The Hlt Man"
.llardiJI8 ID Atlantic City on June
• Dr. Auta., PI, PI, All•
24. 11ar41J1a (14-(),. 11 J(OI), lilt
No. 2 oontentllr tor the title, Will
ODe ..... 1'l":. ""t ' .. '''""'""~ ........
replace the No. lllelul7 Lalonde,
4 Dr, f IPIId. 1'8, P8.
001 ........~.;......................... 18
who unexpecteclly aniiOunced hla
retirement lui weekend.

RAIN MAN•

r_....-..

.141 1 •
1• M .UI t
n n ,.JII 11
II IS ..IQ 15\-i

Mln..,NGia

pllcher .lf'lf

BIUII(rr oa dfl,p ~l.tflo' dluhlfd llllt;
"'cal,..d rellf"vt&gt;r Kpn
lrem.
V..ouwr ol P•elfte CoaM Lellpr"

ltoe~

I

..

.,..j

IIM•tHtweiiN), 7:ap.m.

•

Berry's World

Scoreboardo ..

Kan• City

•

A lot of the complaln.t s a hou t
Such actions . .,ere bound to
the delays, In fact, simply reflect make Gorbachev popular In
the media's understandable Western Europe, though of cally announces some minor
boredom. They are profession· course the longer-range attitude reduction or pullback In forces or
ally eager to Interview new of Its peoples wlll depend on how weapons than Moscow doesn't
need anyway, Bush must ball tbe
faces, develop new sources, ' well Gorbachev delivers on his
discover new vulnerabilities. promises. But meanwhile what Is step and move swlttly to match
They want to see policy shifts the proper reaction from George or (better yet) double it. WI! are
warned that failure to do so
that they can hall or denounce.
Bush?
Various hotheads, In the media would yield the Initiative to
But George Bush wasn't
elected president simply to pro- and elsl!wherl!, have Insisted that Gorbachev and might "split the
NATO alliance."
vide the media with opportunl· every time Gorbachev dramatl·
ties for bl&amp; head\lnes and sonor·
ous l!dltorlals. He Is the
successor to a strong president,
most of whose policies be supported entbuslastlcally and has
pledged to continue. If that bores
George WUI, It's just too bact.
In one major category, moreover, Bush Is simply getting a
bum rap. And that IS In the area
of relations with Moscow.
The past year bas witnessed a
series of astonlsblna developmenta In the Soviet Union. Far
futer tban anyone dared lm·
&amp;JIBe even 12 montlw qo, the
Soviet people are movtn11 toward
new political and economic ar·
ninaements. Gorbacbev has thus
far mana11ed to stay ahead of the
curw by endorstna far· reachln&amp;
reforms and calling t'or more.
Obvloualy1 IIICh a period of
tnllntal reform ll!avea little
eDei'IY or IIIOIIIIY avanable fllr
exterUI adVtlltllrtlm. Gorba·
obft' IIU tberefore 1barply modi·
11111 Milt torwlp polley: wttb••
drawtaJ from Alabalat•t•n~
Vlet8am to puD out of
Cambadla, Iowa 1111 lcMet pr•
1111'11 OD -tllenl Atrtca ud
"/ AM NOT a streetpersonl I am Into thrift·
I'IPCII'tediY evaa PJ'IIIIa.lllll to
shop
fashion/"
nlilllce IJovlet military aid 'to
NleiJ'IIDI.

y

.uoEIIIcAN u:•ovl!

•

Cong. Clarence Miller.
Income for autoworkers In the
local community where the plant
Is located and economic growth
for that area In general. Foreign
Indirect Investment also has Its
benefits.
When a foreign Investor buys a
U.S. Treasury bill, It frees up
domestic capital that otherwise
might be devoted to the purchase
of government securities, allow·
lng II to be used Instead to
underwrite private sector under·
takings. However, there are
l;lOSSible long-run problems associated with foreian Investment.
The most Important of these Is
the !act that Interest and dlvl·
dends must be pald.oil the foreign
portfolio Investments that are
made here and these represent a
net drain of resources from our
economy: At the same time
however, If those Interest pay·
ments ' are In turn used to
purchase American exports, one
cannot say that the U.S. Is
harmed by this practice.

-•

AGASSI TRIUMPHS - Flfth·aeeded Andre A1aul ral- bla
arms after the match poiDt of billS.!, •2, W \VIctory over unseeded
Paolo Cane of llaly In &amp;be men's alncJes aecond- round match on &amp;be
fourtb day of the SU mUIIon. French Open Tbunday In Paris.
(REUTER)

a, U•lt• PrMsll&amp;w .... ...,

Foreign investment: A bane or blessing?.
a stock or bond of an American
company or a U.S. Tresury note.
The United States Is a very
large market,. and we are blessed
with a strong and stable econ·
omy, thus It Is only natural 't hat
foreign Investors would want to
acquire American assets. For
both of these reasons, foreign
Investment In our country rose
!rom about $19 billion In 1985 to
$41.5 billion In 1987.
According to the most recent
U.S. Commerce Department sta·
tlstlcs the British have tradition·
ally been the largest Investors In
this country's assets followed by
the Netherlands, Japan, Canada
and West Germany. However, In
the last few years, the Japanese
have expanded their holdings at
a rate which Is soon to make them
the undisputed leader.
Our economy derives a
number of benefits from such
Investment. To begin with, direct
Investment provides jobs for
Americans. When a foreign car·
maker produces automobiles In
the U.S., they employ American
workers. That means jobs and

...

Majon

'

Just call him -cool Hand' George ·

.

i

'

: But he was under tremendous pressure to recapture the high
ground on arms control. And he did, winning praise for being positive
l!itd far sighted.
Foreign · Investment In the
·. It was Bush'sdebuton theworldstageofsummltryand he made the
United States IS a subject of
most of it . His series of five foreign policy addresses leading up to t.he
concern to many Americans. The
summit had been heralded as the final word on how he views the
Idea of foreign nationals owning
~orld, but they were essentially negative, challenging the Soviets at
large chunks of our country
every turn and declaring that Gorbachev would have to go beyond
conjures up Images of · foreign
rhetoric and prove with deeds his seriousness a bout force reductions. ! governments dictating policy to
. The president, however. sang a different tune In Brussels. He was
American citizens. However,
cenclllatory and was willing to compromise:
while there are some potential
Bush has learned what every president eventually comes to find
problems with foreign Invest·
out: that the world yearns for peace and peacemakers. and that they
ment, many economists feel that
&amp;core a lot higher In popularity when they have Inspired goals.
It Is not necessarily as serious an
· The president could be on a roll now . Gorbachev has made several
Issue as It may first appear.
concessions. and he 01ppears determined to loosen the military
For afterall, when we discuss
lOdestone around his neck, a costly proposition that Is sapping his
the subject of overseas Invest·
national budget.
ment, we must remain mindful
· He appears determined to open up his society to some extent and to
that the United States Is the
permit a remarkable new individualism to prevail among the
world's largest owner of foreign
Russian people. The people. in turn, have not let a moment pass when
assets, having large holdings In
they are not spreading their wings a bit and speaking their minds.
most major Industrial nations of
:: The president has a golden opportunity to move the world away
tbe world. So I! such Investment
fJ;"om armed conflict and to help end the divisions that have
Is unhealthy then why are we as a
preoccupied the superpowers and drained their resources. So far he Is
nation the world's largest practl·
playing his cards right .
!loner of such Investment?
Foreign Investment In the U.S.
can take two forms: direct
Investment and Indirect (or
portfolio) Investment. Indirect
Investment occurs wben a for·
elgn national purchases an
'
American financial asset such as
Dear Editor:
time; Meigs with 97 had 71 first
·· Did you know the first visit of time donors. Hopefully, these
the Red Cross Bloodmobile to first time donors will become
Meigs County was at tile Trinity
multiple donors- the back bone
Church on April 17, 1951? After of the blood program.
ihat, other chUrches In Pomeroy
Did you know that In addition to
"How's Bush doing?" Is the
$0nd one In Middleport held the the blood donors, many volunteer
ll!oodmoblle operation. Later the f workers •re needed to make .the standard opentna In political
Junior High auditorium was the bloodmobile operation run discussions these days, rather
.;Qilectlon center for many years smoothly? Church IJ'Oups and like P·K4 In chess.
In response, the mind scans the
115 was the Elementary school.
other organizations In the county
On August 27, 1980 the collection who furnish and serve the can· events of the past four months,
center was moved to the new teen are essential. The nurses, looking for spectacular sucSenior Citizen Center on Mul·
typists, registrars, aides and cesses (or failures) that can be
~rry Heights where It Is stUI
clerical workers are all volun· attributed to the president. There
tieing held.
leers who give of their time at seem to be comparatively lew of
:- ·Did you know that Kroger each bloodmobile operation. And either, which In Itself then
•mployees and the three high the publicity cards announcing becomes the chief comment on
schools In the county, Eastern,
the coming bloodmobile visits Bush to date: "He Isn't doing
Southern and Meigs are partie!·
are donated by the Middleport anythln(l very much." But Ia tbat
necessarlly bad?
P.tlng4n the blood program and
Quality Print Shop.
In fairness, let's first note that
«:ontrlbutlng to Its success?
We hope the above Information
the
Bush White House hasn't
Many first time donors come ' will · be ot Interest to Meigs
been
nearly as Inactive as Its
fl'om the above operations. So tar Countlans and help them apprehyperthyroid
critics charge.
thls year Kroger had 21 donors, 8 elate our blood program.
Bush
pulled
off
a
stunning coup In
ot whom were first time; South·
Melp County Blood
persuading
the
Democratic
lead·
(lrn had 63 donors and 21 first
Program Committee
!Jnle; Eastern, 52 and 14 first
Marlon Ebersbach, Chairman ers of Congress to agree with him
on a budget that keeps his solemn
,•
campaign promise, "No new
taxes.'' And the White ·House
prHI corps, after complaining
plteoualy for yeara about Ronald
1
~IIU
I ne,lect of It, baa been
By Ual&amp;ed Preee lateraaileaal
almost
IIIIOlhered
with a.tt.entlon.
:: Todll)' Is Friday, June 2, the 1Mrd day of lJ8II Wlth·212 to follow.
On
a
whole
ranee
of
tsluea, from
·· The moon Is waning, moving towartl Its new phase.
education
to
child
care, ttie
The morning siars arl! Mercury and Saturn.
admlnlatratlon
baa
made
con·
.. The eventna 1tars are Venus and Jupiter.
crete propoAII. "
· Those born on thll date are under the sllln of Gemini. They Include
Moreover, certain IJt Ita al·
f.lrat lady Martha Washington In 1732, French writer Marquis de !lade
lepd derel~ are actually
ta'I740, Eqlllb novel lilt Thomu Hardy In lB«l, Eagllah compoll!l' Sir
the prodtlctl ot lellttmate 0811·
J:dward EJpr, who wrote ''Pomp and Clrcam1tance," In 1857,
tfoQywootl c:elumJIIIt Hedda Hopper ID ,_,, Oiympte SW'Inlme' and tloll or elle of lllevllable llllreau·
cratil: delaya. CoJIII:III 1:111
~'l'arzu" mOYie 1tar Jobally WelasmUDer In 1!10&amp;, utroaaatOiarln
IWdJy
raise the llUdu'dl tor
Coaract'al Apollo 12 In lDt (ap 59) I actre11 S.U, rc.Dermaa 1Dlt37
appolntmat
to t.deral otftCll to a
(.,.Ill), dnlallllfr Qlarllt Wattl ol 'nle RoiiJq Ita
In lJG (qe
polat
........
Arll.... tile Jvlt
II), .._llHY II'.IMieb 1ft lN1 (qea) aad Cllarlllllald In 1M3
wauld
lllw
failed
to a.ke the
.).llllt...,...JI .Marvin HamliiCb In lHC (ap45).
cut, tHD oomplllll 111cau1t Mr.
Blllh baaD1 t J'HDactad till Olda·
• ' . Olllblt .... ln lllltory:
.
1
hOma LaDd Rllllt 1D hll.deltpa.
·•· Ja,
Roblrt E. Lee took commalltf'Of'Uie Confederate
tlou
of •ub·Cablaet·level
·
VlrJinla and North
ID the CtvU War.
otJicall.
fli
ted U.S. cldzensblp ID all American ID4llna.

..

•

Israelis split over Palestinian intifada

The Daily Sentinel
'.

Lendl, Wilander, Agassi post Paris wins

Page-2-The Deily SaJiinel
Pomeloy-Middl1port, Ohio

9·3. struc~ out 11 batters, walked
just one and gave up~nly two hits
In five lnnln11s.
The Flghttna Indians ended the
season 20-6.
In the second game. GillSOn·
butg pitchers gave up nine
walks, lncludln&amp; the tour Frank·
tort batters. Adena led 7·2 after
three Innings.
Gl bsonbllrg had the tyi111 run
on third base with tll(o out In the
last Inning, but he was lett
stranded when Jason Swartz·
lander struck out,
Frankfort's Scott Kunz went
two-for-two With three 111ns bat·
ted In, and teammate Heath
Bennett bad tWoRBiaandiCOred
three runs .
Wlnnln&amp; pitcher Paul Thomas, .
13-2, struck out 12 and walked
just two.
The Golden Bears closed out
the aeaaon Willi a 17-13 record.

$.49.5

1915 MERCURY MARQUIS BROUGHAM
..

$5495

(Wft_,

lllr....
oz
elMo,...,.

=..-.

1915 CHEVY 414 HEAVY Dm C-20

$8495

1911 CHEVY C-10

......... S4495

1915 PLYMOUTH HORIZON ................. S1995

1914 .RCURY TOPAZ ....................... S2295

.,.,I
....
,0111
........
.....!E

()De,_. .......................,......... .
-·~
Dlll!l ...,................:............... c...
.

CIDAIIISTAIUJIT

1914 Ford TeiiMio ............................... S2195

1912 HONDA CMC WAGON............... S2695

�1989

'

Houston defeats~
L.A. Dodgers 7 •2
&gt;

•

/

waits for the pickoff attempt b;v pitcher Scott Bankhead In the
second lnninc of Thursday night's game in Seattle. The Mariners
won :J-2. (UPI)

Cleveland Beat

Will Indians
keep scalps
out West?
By DAN COUGHLIN
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND- There is such
a thing as whistling past the
graveyard, . but . Cleveland Indians manager Doc , Edwards Is
carrying this to the extreme. He
Is singing his lungs out.
••J fear no 011e, " Edwards
announced on the eve of the
Indians' first West Coast trip of
the season.
This does not seem like the
time for saber-rattling, even
.though the Indians have won four
In a row after sweeping a
'thri!e-game set from Toronto.
t The Indians have climbed back
;to within one game of .500 and ·
remain within striking distance
of !lrst-place Baltlmore and
second-place Boston.
; But Cleveland has not con·fronted the monsters yet.
Because they are the Ameri can League "swing team ," the
Indians are the last club to meet
Oakland and California, the two
teams leading the strong American League West.
Well. the party's over. The
Indians fly into the teeth of the
'hurricane.
; The Indians left Thursday for a
six-game western swing that
beg.ins Friday with the first of
:three games In Oakland and
:COntinues next week with three
1:ames against the California
Angels.
~ "The schedule says we've got
tl&gt; play there; so let's get the heck
going and pla y." Edwards said .
':"Fear has no place in this game.
-If you're afraid of anything get a
~dog. If we're playing our game,
:;we've got a chance of beating
'ilnybody:"
: The Indians finally realize that
.· tf they walt for someone to hit
: three-run home runs, they will
·:Still be waiting In September. But
:-this Is not a problem unique to
·:Cleveland; this ls a pitcher's '
,Year.
• .The Calllornla Angels staff ha s
· :'already registered 12 shutouts.
: an astonishing number fo r les s
: than one-third of the season.
: Jim Isabella, a Cleveland radio .
sp(&gt;rtscas ter, ,compared a foul
ball he caught In 'the press box In
'-1987- a big hitter's year - with
· a 1989 game ball.
· "The 1987 ball ls livelier,"
Isabella satd: "It's stlched'tlghter. This year's ball Is a little

' Jooser. "'

a

SAFE AT 'HOME - The Astr011' Glenn Davis is
safe at home alter his home plate coDislon wllh
Dodgers catcher Mike Scloscla In the second

CHICAGO (UP!) - lt"s going
to take more than 59 shots Including only eight by Michael
Jordan - to keep the Chicago
Bulls in the NBA playoffs.
"We've got to respond Frl\:lay, " Jordan ·said. "There Is no
Game 7 If we don't win Game 6."
Chicago, trailing 3-2 afte r
losing 94-85 Wednel day night, Is
home aga inst the Detroit Pistons
Friday night In Game 6 of th eir
best-of-seve n Eastern Conference final. If th e Bulls force
Game 7, it will be Sunday In· the
Palace.
Jordan played the role of
passer Instead of shooter in. the
game, largely be-cause of doubleand triple- teams by Detroit. As a
result, Chicago took an all-time
NBA playoff low 59 shots.
" Part of my ~arne plan was to
get everyone In volved and take
good s hot s," said Jordan, whose
theory worked In the first half
when the Bulls took leads of 25-17
and 45-41. "First half, everybody
was hitting shots. Second hall, It
didn't happen."
Detroit began the series playIng Jordan basically the same
way everybody else ·does -with
one man on him and a second
helping out when he begins his

move.

Detroit. prefers to atta.ck Jordan above the key so he has to get
rid or the ball immediately , It has
w.orked. The Pistons have won
two straight with Jordan making
5 of 15 shots lnGame4 and 4of8ln
Game 6. ·
Chicago Coach Doug Collins
absolves his star because he
agrees somebody else ta~lng a
good shot Is better than Jordan
taking a low percentage shot.
''They just run at Jordan and
chase · him." Coollins said, "I
think It Is to Michael's credit he
didn't try, to force up a lot or shots
against the triple-team."
Chicago made nearly hal!lts59
shots (29) but that Isn't nearly
enough In the NBA. Detroit shOt
80 times, closer to its norm, and
made 39.
'
The Bulls also made a whop·
ping 24 turnovers . It :.vas 83-77
with 6: OO· to play when Chicago
scored just oncl) on Its next seven
trips down the floor. There were
four turnovers (two steals by
Detroit) and a pair or missed
shots In the string.
The Chlcaga,Detrolt games
are. beglimlng to take on a 1
similarity. First the Bulls rush
out to leads of 10 points or so. The

Pistons then start clawing back,
point by po!rit, until they catch
the Bulls and blow past them
sometime In the second hall.
The two games the Bulls have
won have been because they
were a hie to regroup and overtake the Plstohs at the wire -on
Jordan's wings,
Collins tried to give his regu·
Iars more rest. He went to Brad
Sellers, who had played just
three minutes In Game 1, for 22
minutes to rest HoraceGrantand
Seattle Pippen and as a counter
to Detroit's John Salley ,
Jim Pax~n spelled Jordan
once and Craig Hodges a couple
of times while Dave Corzine
playt!!i 13 minutes In relief of Bill
Cartwright. The three scored 19
points and had 10 rebounds.
"It looked a lot like our regular
season," Detroit Coach Chuck
Daly said. "Somebody gets hot at
a different time of the game.
Then throw the kids (Salley and
DenniS Rodman) In for defensive
rebounding."
Rodman didn't score a pointbut he got all 10 of Detroit's
rebounds In the fourth quarter
and continued to be a Pistons
weapon the Bulls can't counter.

Terry Puhl singled, Ken Caminiti
forced Puhl wtth Davis moving to
third.
Ramlrezifoundedtoshortstop
and Alfl'edoGrlffln'sthrowtothe
plate was In time, but Davis was
safe after klcking the ball out of
Mike Sciascia's glove. Caminiti
moved to third 011 tile play and
scored when Craig Biggio hit Into
a .fielder's choice.
The Astros made It 5·0 In the
third. Billy Hatcher led off with a
triple and scored on a one-out
single by Bill Doran. Davis
reached on an · error by third
baseman Jeff HamUton, with
Doran moving to third. One out
later, Camtnltl walked to load the
bases before Ramirez singled to
drive In Doran and Davis ..
Billy Hateher frlpled with one
out In the fourth a.nd scored on a
sacrifice fly by Gerald Young to
give Houston a ,6-0 lead.
Biggio hammered his second
home run of the year leading off
the sixth inning off John Welte·
land to make It 7·0.
There were no other games In
the National League Thursday
night.
In the American League:
Orioles 8, Tigers 3
At Detroit, Jim Traber hit a
three-run home run to highlight a "
six-run first Inning to extend
Baltimore's winning streak to
lour games, Dave Schmidt. 5·4,
· worked five Innings, allowing ·
nine hits and three runs, and
Mark Thurmond four Innings for.
his first save. Randy Nosek went
only two-thirds of an Inning,
allowing six runs and four hits.
Brewers 5, Y1111kees 0
At Milwaukee. Ted Higuera
and Jay Aldrich combined on a
three-hit shutout and Paul Molltor and Gary Sheffield stroked
run-scoring doubles In the second
Inning to lilt Milwaukee. Hlgu·
era. 1-2, gave up two hits. struck
out seven and walked one In siX
Innings. Dave LaPoint. 5-4, was
the loser In his shortest outing of
the season. going three and
one-third Innings, yielding five
runs, three , earned, and eight
hits.
Mariners 3, R11111ers Z
At Seattle, Dave Cochrane
homered with one out In th~
bottom or the ninth' Inning to lift
Seattle and extend Texas' losing
streak to four games. Rookie
Kevin Brown. 4-2, scattered
seven hits while striking out four
and walking two In a complete:
game loss. Mike Schooler, 1·0,
worked the final one and two·
third lnalngs for the victory.

Sports briefs
CoOege
Ben McDonald, the Louisiana
State Un lverslty pltcher, was
named Baseball America's 1989
College Player of the Year.
McDonald. the 6-foot-7 righthander, Is expected to be the top
!!election overall by the Baltimore Orioles In the Major
League Amateur Draft on June
5-7.. . Burke Masters, a second
baseman from Mississippi State
with a perfect 4.00 GPA In
mathematics, was selected GTE
Academic Ali·Amerlcan of the
Year for the University Division.
.. . Salem College Is dropping
football as an Intercollegiate
sport alter 72 years In order to
establish an International studies
center at the school and to bring
several hundr~d Japanese stu:
dents to the college.
Harness Racing
Jaguar Spur, owned by Roy
Davis and Barberry Farm, has
been chosen Horse of the Month
by the U.S. Trotting Association.
The 5-year-old Albatross stalllon .
defeated rival Matt's Scooter
twice In May to raise his season
record to eight victories and a tie
In 10 starts.

Work at removing the turf will
begin the day after the Ohio high
school football playoffs.
''It's our Intention to have the
finest playing field In the country
wh~ we open the 1990 football ,
season," Jones said.
Jones said the possibility of :
having the new grass In place for ·
this season was. discussed, but •
there wasn't enough time.
"After talking to a number of'
experts, we concluded we could 1
get a much better stand·or grass
and a better field tiy giving the '
grass more tie to take root," '
Jones said. "We want to do this
the right way."

APPEARING
SATURDAY
JUNE ,3, 1989

ltrltt &amp; I'III•If Httn
lfa 101•4f 1lllit IIIDAY
tlA•SPA ,
Sl'lll!- t A.ll.·l , ...

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS
FIIDAY, JUM 2, 1919
..... Dl........_ ••••••• ~.............i ..............· • • • • •

•

•'

&gt;

"Jaat
Ua"
12.00 COVER CHARGE
MUST IE 21

MIZWAY
TAVEIN
RT. 143 AND 7
POMEROY, OlftO

1981 Olds Delta 88 Royale ••••• *1595 ·

Auto., Air, PS, PB.

' Nloe
1979
Olds Toronado.................. *1695
CINn Car. Auto., Air, PS. Pl.

SUNDAY, JUNE 4, 1919
HOMIUDI NDODIIS &amp; CHICIIN Dlfllill- 13.99

1914 Ford Te~npo GU ••••••••••••• *1195
IS llpMd. Air.

NOODlES &amp; CIICIEH MU. ___;_______ ,_. llwi-•1.H
'-II hwl-12.19
NEW HOUIII: 10:'"' A.M. t11 1:30 ,..M. t.v111 Dayo A Weill

Loarlad.

.

-

-•.-ISW

=,. . .

-ring o
1111'* Hom. .oolo - : - ; : : : - " ' o a.- wllh ·
Girl- Cllunlll of Cht.... - - wllll -hill
oo Mid llrooy, 11-~~~~~ Umolo-Mid '1'-CIIaloootA Hot ~-llallorllom_l_
loch Frllhlr ......... (A lmlll loft OlinFI ar HOI
r•• ...,.~.. ....,.. od.J
"

1911 Iuick l ..alli~nited
........ S2295
·

' ' ' ' Olds o......................... *169s
AMID., .... "·'*·

Ia &amp;Hre."
nl&amp;bt In a come. 1-f
over
did
muutaeture

- · '

•
'

•

LMv• ........
_,..Hot.
- Cllopf
of Got.... - ........... Wllh 0Uf Own - Co,,.,.., Frloo .,d v-cl'lotoootHom..,ldoC-...

· Moo-llolod. or . . . . . . . . Mid A Hot lutt•od llol ar Hom..,ldo-

Friday. June 2. 1989

scholarships announced
RUTLAND - Three scholar·
Sandy Smith. treasurer.
~ . Haynes, Newark.
ships of S300 each were awarded · Music for dancing was proJohn and Kathy Jeffers, AI·
at Saturday night's 60th annual
bany; Janet Jones. Dublin; Do·
vidlid by Ivan Potter and the
Rutland High School Alumni Silver Wings Band.
nald King, Rockville, Md.; Bel'Association banquet and dance .. Out of county alumni attending
nice Knapp, Springfield; Lurene
held at the Rutland Civic Center. were Martha Agler, Columbus;
Kennedy, Galena; Mary Lynd,
Receiving the scholarships Vernon Alvis, Woodlands,
Minford; James Lanning, Fairwere Charles E. Carson Jr. , Texas; Phyllis and Charles
born; Cheryl Lolten, Memphis,
Jared Sheets, and Renee Young,
Amos, ' Columbia, S.C.; Helen Tenn; Virginia Dennis, Ketterall graduates of Meigs High Atkeson, Mansfield: Cecil lng; Larry Long, Oklahoma City,
School.
Butler, Findlay; Thomas
Okla.; Robert Miller, Venice
Carson, son of M~ , and Mrs. Brewer, Springfield; Dana BarFla.; Henry Milam, Cheshire;
Charles E. Carson, Hysell Run
Lucille Meyers, Vandalia;
ton, VermUion; Charles Bowen,
Road, Pomeroy, will be attend- · Rising Sun; Unda Ball, St.
Claude Montgomeroy, Jackson;
Ing Ohio University where he Albans; Dwight Brown, St. AIJohn Miller, Phoenlz, Ariz.;
plans to get a degree In computer bans, W.Va.; Andy Barton, CarLanna and Robert Good, Sistersscience. He Is a member of the roll, Frank and Pam Colwell,
ville, W. Va.; Roberta Meyer,
National Honor Society, Quiz Vinton; David and Eloise CarMiddleton; Cecil Nelson, West
Team, was a Southeastern Ohio son, Fort Wayne;lnd.; William Chester; Bob and Isabelle NelRegional Scholar for the Tal- Clark, Plckerlngion; Anell son, Morris. Ill.; Richard Nelson,
ented and Gifted Students, and Cross, JackSon; J'ohn Colwell,
Delaware; Delma Nel~on,
was active In-band .
VInton; Patty Clark, New Haven,
McConnelsville; Edwin and GoiSon of James and Jennifer W.-Va.; David Colwell , die Nelson, Wooster; Ronald
•
Sheets, Jared was valedictorian Columbus.
Nicholson, Hilliard'.
of his Meigs High School gradual·
Reva Co;oc, Lakemore; EmoAndrea Parr, Columbus;
lng class, and plans to attend gene Davis. Athens; · Marvel
Harry Plummer, Carroll; Carol
Ohio State University In pre-med Dwant, Barberton; John and
Park, Galllpolls; Howard Pond.
studies. · He Is a member of the Jenea Dyke, Fairborn; Maxine Wlllamsport; Marie Phillips,
Lancaster; Geraldine Reed, ClnNational Honor Society, the and Opal Dyer, Bidwell; Dorothy
Academic Quiz Team, Student Deemer, Jackson; Dorothy Em·
clnnatl; Pauline Rife, Bidwell;
Council, and was active In sports , mons, Brookville; Joetta Eskew, Cecil Rathburn , Columbus; RoNewark; Pat and Judy Eads,
bert and Phylls Rife, St. Albans,
Renee, daughter of Ronnie and Nashville, Tenn.; Dee Easter,
W.Va.; Samuel and Mary Rus·
Diane Young, Pomeroy, wtll be Galena; Mary Fallon, Patriot;
sell, Urbana; Ronnie and Marjoattending · Ohio University, ~aren Gilkey, Athens; Jim Grarie Rtre, Albany; David Rice,
· Athens, this fall.
ham. Columbus; Betty Grim.
Wheelersburg; Robert Romine,
· About 350 alumni, guests and Albany; William Gates, San
Columbus; Claude Russell, Coteachers attended ihe ' banquet Antonio, Texas; Sam' Hicks, Jr.
lumbus; Charles A. and Thelma
Riggs, Roseville,
with Ronald Rife, president, Vinton; Robert and Evelyn Hill,
giving the welcome. Herbert Dayton; Loretta Hoffman, ChaCarl Richards, St. Albans,
W.Va.; Gary and Carolyn Rife,
Grate had devotions preceding rleston, W.Va.: Gary Haynes.
Columbus; Gary D. Rife, Vathe dinner. New officers elected Newark; Ryan Hall, Colum,bus;
Darui and June Hysell, Grove
nessa Rife, Columbus; Raymond
were Richard Rupe, president;
Joan Corder, vice president;
City; Clara Hysell, Pataskala;
Rupe, Virginia Beach, Va.;
Diane Young. secretary, and Emma Roush, Pataskla; Randy

FRIDA:Y
,
MIDDLEPORT - A Missions
Conference wlll be held through
Sunday at Victory Baptist
Church, 525 North Second Ave.,
In 11-Jiddleporl A different missionary will be speaking each
night. Special singing will also be
featured nightly. Rev. James E.
Keesee, pastor, welcomes
everyone . .
'

SYRACUSE - Mt. Moriah
Church of God Ladles Auxiliary,
will be having a yard sale on
Thursday, Friday, and Saturday
across from the Syracuse Park.
. SYRACUSE -The Missionary
' Women of the Syracuse NazareneChurch will haveayardsale
at the shelter house on Route 124
in Syracuse Thursday and Friday. Proceeds will go toward
church projects.

.li

'•
•

'

'

PAGEVILLE - The Scipio
tdwnsh lp trustess will meet Frl·
day at 6 p.m, at the Pagevllle
Township Building.( '

I

CILULBS CARSON JR.
Floyd and Tressa Snowden,
Dayton; Bertha Shenefield,
Hamden; Mary Francis Smith.
DeLand, Fla.; Janet Smith,
Reyoldsburg; Jerry Schoonover.
Cheshire; Robert and · Mildred

HARRISONVILLE - Lend-aHand Society of Harrisonville
will hold a bake and rummage
sale Friday and Saturday from 9
a.m to 4 p.m at the Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church.

REEDSVILLE -There ·will be
a card shower for Mr. and Mrs.
Rex Summerfield, 38550 .East
Shacle Road, Reedsville, Ohio
45772, on their 50th wedding
anniversary on Friday.
SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER - The Star
Grange will meet In regular
session on Saturday at 8 p.m. at
the Grange Hall located on C.R 1
north of Salem Center, The·
Racine Grange will visit and
bring the program. All CWA
sewing and needlework contests
wiJI be judged at this meeting. All
members and applicants are
urged to attend.
MIDDLEPORT-:... There wlll
be a magic show at the Middle·
port Library on Saturday at 2
p.m. with Mike Mullen · as
magician.
HARRISONVILLE - There
wtll be a garden tractor pull
sponsored by the Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Department
on Saturday at the fire hous¢n
Harrisonville beglnlling at 5 p.m .
Refreshments wlll be sold.
SUNDAY
POMEROY - There will be
gospel sing at the Seventh-day

Adventls t Church, Mulberry
Heights Road , Pomeroy, on
Sunday beginning at 1: 30 p.m.
Several groups are scheduled to
participate. The public Is Invited
to attend. All proceeds will go
toward the new roof.
RACINE - "Dan Hayman and
the Faith Trio" will be singing at
the Bethany United Methodist
Church In Racine on Sunday at
7: 30 p.m. Rev, Kenneth Baker
Invites the public to attend.

,decoratlag conies t
The Rutland Fire Department
will be having a pie baking and
cake .decorating contest at the
annual 4th or July celebration.
. Pies can be of any kind with
first place receiving $25, second
place $15, and third'place $10: All
pies must be In throw away pans.
· The cake decorating theme Is
~ ·Patriotic," First place wtll
,receive $50, second place $25, and
third place $15.
FamUy reunion planned
The annual E.R. Hollon family
reunion wlll be held June 11 at the
Chester Fire House In Chester. A
basket dinner will be held at 12:30
p.m. and each person Is asked to
bring their own table service.

Sort ball toa.,.ament
· · A class E USSSA State Quail·
ller Softball Tournament wtll be
"held on June 10 and 11 at Eastern
High School. Coat Is $'Ill plus two
softballs. More Information may
)Je obtained by calling (614)
378-6406.

Mea'a slow plieb
aoftball toaraamenl
There wtll be a Cla8S D and E
USSSA slatequaluter men's slow
pitch softball tournament on
June 10 and llln Reedlvllle. Coat
II $15 plua two softballl. More
Information may ·be obtained by

calllDc

(81~)

through 12th grade, are Invited to
attend. There will be cloWIIs.
refreshments, crafts, fellowship,
fun, and Bible lessons everyday.
Ice Cream Social
The Trinity Church of Pomeroy wtll sponsor an Ice cream
social on June 8 from 11 a.m. to 6
p.m., and on June 9'from 11 a.m.
to 5 , p.m. Eight flavors ,of
homemade ·tee cream, sandwiches, desserts, chicken and
noodles, and beverages will be
available, along with potato
salad, cole slaw, and baked
beans.
,O rders for quarts of Ice cream
are being taken by calling
992-3222. 992-3777, or 992-5480.
Flavors available are chocolate,
vanma. peach, lemon, strawblirry, pineapple, banana, and
cherry nut.
Car wuh
The Rejoicing Ufe Christian
School will be sponsoring a car
wash on June lOat theGasPiualn
Middleport from 10 a.m. to3 p.m.
The price of the car weal! Ia $3.

A picnic was held at the cabin
of Phyllis Hackett, group sponsor, when members or the Xi
Gamma Epsilon Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority met lor their
last of!lclal meeting or the year.
Mrs. Hackett gave the blessing
befor the dinner and several
thank you cards received by the
group were read.
Sonya Wolfe reported that the
fair ads were completed thanks
to the members that worked on
this project.

The sorority will be having a
summer get together P,OSslbly In
July and members(' will he
contacted regarding this event.
The group will also be contacted
regarding fair gate assignments.
Unda Faulk and Kathy CumIngs were recognized as having
the best refreshments lor the
past year.
The 1989 officers were presented with a gift from out-going
president, Patty Pickens .

Jenkins note birthdays
J.D , Jenkins, celebrating his
fifth birthday, and Da'ylo!l Jenkins, celebrating his first birth·
day, were honored recently with
a party at the home or their
parents. D.J. and Lois Jenkins.
A clown theme was carried out
wtth the serving of a clown cake,
and Ice cream.
Those attending and sending
gilts were paternal grandparents, Gene and Linda Jenkins,
paternal great grandparents,

Carl and Mildred Hubbard, mat ernal grandparents, VIrgil and
Gerry Parsons, maternal great
grandparents Albert and Velsla
Roush, Charles andJennyTyree,
Butch. Penny. Scott, and
Amanda Brinker, Harold and
Joan Stewart, Phyllis Morris,
Ken, Lisa, Jason, Justin, and
Jeremy Roush, Crystal Adkins,
Ryan and Roger Roush. Des Uny
Jenkins, Doug Jenkins , and
Missy Roush.

.Mary Woodrum, Enon; Dean
Will, Columbus; Eleanor Williamson, Clrlevllle; Woodrow Wilcox, Sandusky; Wanda Wes tlake, Akron; Barbara Weygant,
Dublin .
Eileen Gorton, Prescott, Ariz.;'
Geraldine Spurlock, Reynoldsburg; Don Ward, Westerville;
Lester Morton, Columbus;
Sherry Johnson, Reynoldsburg;
Donna Clonock, Morens Valley,
Call!.

Holter reuinion

scheduled
The seventh annual George
Holter Jr. family reunion will be
held Sunday at 1 p,m . at the home
of Jim and Karen Holter Werry of
the Morning Star area.
Barbequed chicken and a picnic shelter will be provided as
well as plastic plates and
silverware.
Those attending are asked to
bring family pictures, stories.
and other Items or interest to
share In the herJtageo! the Holter
family.
The Morning Star-Nease Set·
tlement area Is where George
Holter Jr. settled. According to
the family he provided each of his
children with land fora home and
lived to see each of his children
prosper.
·

REEDSVILLE - The Rev.
Donald Meadows of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church will
present a Christian magic show
at the Reedsville United Methodist Church on Sunday at 7:30
p.m. The public Is Invited to
attend.
POMEROY - The Zion Hill
Singers will be singing Sunday at
11:30 a.m. at the United Faith
Church near the Rt.7 bypass In ,
Pomeroy, The publlc:ls Invited to
attend.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Ca•
rleton Sunday school dinner will
be Sunday at 12 noon at the
coonhunter's lodge at the fair·
~trounds. A basket dlnne~ will be
observed.

_____ Community happenings _ _ __
Pie baking, cake

Somers. Fostoria; John Stanley,
Glouster; Harry Snowden, Point
Plesant; Gary Saxton. North
Lewisburg; James Titus, Botkins; Gilford Turley, Gallipolis;
Ann Lucas Wheeler, Elgin, Ill.;

·xi Gamma Epsilon meets

Community calendar

I

Return Ohio State Stadium turf to grass ·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The turf at Ohio Stadium will be
taken up arid replaced wtth grass
In time for the 1990 season,
Athletic Director James Jones
said late Thursday .

•

Page-5

l

Since Major League baseballs
But alt er losing two of the first
.are Individually hand-stlched by three games and seeing Jordan
; workers In sweatshops In Haiti,
destroy them with 46 points, the
;'there Is an accepted variance
Pistons' coaching starr vowed to
• from season to season and even
not let the Bulls' superstar beat
: from ball to ball.
the Pistons again.
; :' Indians President Hank Peters
So Detroit w;:,nt back to the way
·:bas a different theory.
It played In beating Chicago In
; , "It's all the breaking balls tbe piayoffs last year - by
;·they're throwing," Peters said.
rushing a second or third rrian af
·: "The bltters·.wlll catch up- or go . Jordan tile second he gets the
~ baCk to tbe minors. Look ai all
ball.
: the Natlonal League teams hit·
• Ung lander .240. It makes you
GRAVElV .TRACTOR
• lhr-up. "
'· Only time w111 tell If the hitters
SALES • SERVICE
:· Qatcb up. Blat- tile lndlans are
204 Con dar lt.
~'omen~¥. OH.

~

Inning of Thursday nlsht's game In Boustun.
Davis scored on a hit by teammate Ken Caminiti.
The Astros won 7-2. (UPI)

Bulls, Pi~~ons eye conference title

:

'• Jtarlllll to ~.up.
:· "We're not,.Oini to bua&amp; out
wtth lll or U nma a pme, ".
· aewlalld ........ fielder Joe
.. carw uld. •"fte'w JOt to ~

By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI Sports Wrl&amp;er
The Houston Astros have found
that , to win at home, ordinary
performances just woa't do.
Knowing this, Jim Deshaies
left nothing to chance against the
·visiting Los Angeles Dodgers.
Deshaies held the Dodgers
hitless through seven and twothird lnnlnss Thursday night In
ringing up a 7-2 victory,
rn a commanding perfor·
mance, Deshaies. 6-3. allowed
two runs and two hits through
eight and two-third lnntngs,
striking out six In treating
Astrodome fans to a rare home
win. Houston has won seven In a
row, but the first six came on the
road.·
The Astr06 are an uninspiring
11·11 at home, the worst home
record In the National League.
· Loser Mike Morgan, 4-3. who
entered the game wli~ a majorleague leading 1:19 ERA.allowed
six runs on six hits· ln four
Innings.
Deshaies • lost the no-hitter
when' he !IUrrendered an Infield
single to Mickey Hatcher In the
eighth. In the ninth, Deshaies
allowed a broken-bat single by
EddleMurrayandawalkthatled
to two runs. He left the game In
favor of Juan Agosto . .who came
.on to record the final out
"Take away two donkey hils,
we got orr him, and he's got the
ito-hitter," Hat~her said. "He
has that borderline high
fastball that's hard to lay off."
Deshaies also had a no-hitter
through seven innings of a game
against Pittsburgh last season
before Bobby Bonilla led off the
eighth with a single.
"You don't get many chances
to take a no-hitter Into the eighth
Inning." Said Deshaies, who has
won all six of his decisions
against Los Angeles fn the '
Astrodome. "I really appreelated the_ great efforts on
defense behind me. Anytime you
get plays like I got behind me
tonight, you have a chance."
Los Angeles scored twice In the
ninth Inning to spoil the shutout
bid. After Murray singled and
Jeff Hamilton walked. John
Shelby reached on an error to
load the bases. One out later,
Deshaies uncorked a wild pitch.
scoring Murray, and Dave Anderson lifted a sacrifice fly to
deliver Hamilton.
The Astros took a 2-0 lead with
pair of unearned runs In the
second Inning. After Glenn Davis
reached on an Infield hit and

By The Bend

The Daily Sentinel

taking homemade lee cream
orders. To order call 949·2805.
The price Is $2.50 per quart and
flavors available are straw·
berry, orange. lemon, pineapple.
banana. vanilla, .and cbncolate.
All proceeds wtll go toward
church Improvements. '

Peer pressure begins early. A
national survey indicates 25% of
founh graders said they felt
"some" to "a lot" of peer
· pressure to try alcohol or
marijuana. In the seventh grade,
about 60% said they felt pressure
to try alcohol and 50% to try
marijuana. Young people are
succumbing to peer pressure to
"feel older" or simply to "have a
good time."
Why kid yourself? Substance
abuse has been a problem for a

long time. Today it is a larger
and more serious problem than
ever before. Pay attention to
the facts .
Obviously, it's smarter-and
healthier-to say no to drugs.

Group to sln1
Dan Hayman· and the Faith
Trio wtll be singing at the
Bethany United Methodist
Church In Racine on Sunday at
7: 30 p.m. Rev. Kenneth Baker
Invites the public to attend.
Sunday sehool diiDit!r
The ' Carleton Sunday schobl
dinner will be Sunday at the
coonhunter's lodge at the fair·
groUnds at noon. A basket dinner
will be obserV\!d.

Public Notice

Gara1e Sale
The Rejolcl'llt Ute Christian
School wtll be llavina a 1arage
sale on June9 andlOfrom lOa,m.
to 3 p.m, at the corner of North
Second and Rutland In downtown
Middleport.

Oardetl &amp;nld• puD
There will be a aardea tractor
Qa II Pome1 Dl
pull apoiiiOI'ed by the Scipio
'Dr•rell II Cllrllt
Township Volunteer Fire Depart·
• The Pomeroy Churcb of Cbrllt ment oa Saturday bqlalllnlat 5
Wtll be baviDI Vacation Bible ,. p.m,atlheflrehOUJelnHarrllon·
School the week of June 25-29,
ville. Refrelhmentl will be sold.
. from 6:30-8:30 p.m. The theme Is .
· :•Jesus, Jay FDnwer." All child·
lee eream o,..,. bebta tak111
ten of the area, klnderaarden
The RLDS youth p-oup wjll be

3'18-M06.

'·

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156
IIIII. Cll I

POMEROY, OHIO

�•

Pega 6-The Daily Sentinal

"

Porn•oy MWJilart. Ohio

.

'

'

..
Friday, June 2. 1989

Friday, June 2, 1989 .

Local Lions
admit first
woman

l11fJOY Of

I.

r
I·

The Pomeroy-Middlepor t
Lions Club welcomed Leesa
ldurphey as the llrsl woman to
become a local chapter member
~ollowlng her Initiation at a
recent biweekly luncheon meet·
lng held at Hartinger Park In
Middleport.
,, "We are happy to receive
leesa Murphey as our first
remale ,member," commented
Jim Hill, president. who noted
that the Lions Club Is on the move
and accepting new members all
the time. He said that many
community projects are being
planned for next r.ear.
At Wednesdays meeting the
club voted to buy glasses for two
local school aged children. Appll·
cations for assistance for child·
ren who cannot otherwise afford
to buy glases are being regularly
accepted.
Other current club projects
Include a roof for the stage of the
Pomeroy parking lot and putting

(row's Family Rtstuant
"F•ittllf l(""dr Ftltl C61f't1"
221 W. Main St., POIMroy

992-5432

l'flSHER&amp;LOHSE

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

'Iit-.

PliARMN:Y
Prescriptions
We Fill Doclors'

FURNITURE a HARDWARE
Hom~tUte S•w5

H2-2955

Veterans
Memorial Holpltal

"}I.

liStie uWir.

P-eroy

a-~,_-.m,J104

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
s~s

&amp;

992-7075

172 Nerth S.Collll A...

214 E. Main
992-5130 Pomeroy

Mi••••rt. Clio

TR1NY1Y OONGREGATIONAL CH\JRCII,
1\eY. FrMnln. poster, 0 . - a.ct.
Scbod !lip. Olwcb Scbod ~ 15 a.m.;
WonMp Sen1oe lO:ll a.m. QlOir ..........._
Theoc!IIY. 6:CI p.m. \IIIIer dlr&lt;ctlon or Lo~

!II,.

POMEROY CHURCH OF 'I1IE NAZARENE, COm!r Unlon and Mulberry, 1\eY.
'l1loiNI Glm M&lt;CiuJW, post&lt;r. Noonan l're.&gt;
I&lt;:Y. S. S. Qlp., Qlnlay School, ~ll a.m.;
monUll wcnhlp 10: JJ a.m.; evenlngaervtce 6
p.m.; mi....... II!I'VIoe, W-Ill'· 7 p.m.
GRACE EPISIDPAL CHURCH, 326 E .
Main St, PuitO!i&lt;J&gt;. Sunlaf oervteea: Holy

commw*&gt;non the flrlll: Su~ afeadl monlh,
and IXliTilmed with illlll1ing prayer 9ft fro!
INrd !linlaf. Mlrling prayer and"""""' on
allotll!r !linlays ol fro! molih. Otureh School

and Nlii'II!IY c.-. orovlibi Collee 1otr m die

Parloli HaU n.nedl- ro-...lhe-.
P!lMEROY OIUilCI! OF Cllft!ST, 212 W.
Mlilii Sl., lai wh, evan.,uot. Ill lie Schod

~:II a.m.; Momng-p, IO::IIa.m.; Youth
. . . . . . Bill! p.m.; Evenlng...rs!ip, 7:111 p.

m. W~nJahl..---meeiiJigandllltle
llllllY. 7:11) p.m.
'11IE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Bullenut
Ave., ~· Mzs. Dora Wlnlng In charlO.
~:: 1io1ntoo ~ lll a.m.; SUIWIY
lD: ll a.m. Sunlaf School, YPSM
Eloloe Ad..._ leader. Ml p.m. SalvatiOn
..... In&amp; wrtoos spoaker! and millie sped a!&amp;
Thundo:Y, ll:ll a.m. 10 2 p.m. La&lt;leo Home

I

wtmen

lnvttal; 6:CI p.m. Thui'!d!IY, C:..,. cadet I
Cl- (YOUIW A!ople-BIIiei , 7:ll p.m. Bltie
· stillY ond Pniyel' ,_~ opat to Ill! ~&gt;idle.
fOMEROY WESI E CHURCH OF
OIRIST, lllllOtlldren'sllcrnelload !Courty
Road 76). !!n381'7. Vocal music. Sunlaf Wor·
slfplla.m.; BltieSIIIlYlla.m; Wcnhlp.6p.
m. w~. Bllie Stu:ly, 7 p.m.
Lallct&gt;n Hopo, ......,_,_

Sl&gt;e-.

OLD DEX'IER BIJI..E OIRISTIAN
CHURCH, AMn Olrtll, poster, IJnda Swan,
!lip. !lilllllll' School9:ll a.m.; preaching...-.
YICel.llrll and tlinl !111111111' lollowlngSuiiiiiiY
School. Youlllmo&lt;tln&amp;. 7:ll p.m. ....-eJY SUn-

FAITH AND COMPROMISE
ASSURE AHAPPIER MARRIAGE

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

HAZE L WMMUNI'I'Y CHURCH. 011
Rt. 124, '3 mUes !rem Portland-Long Bottom. Edsel Hart, past«. .Sunday Schod,
9i 3D a .m.; Sunday morning preaching
10:30 a.m.; Sunday evening se.rvlcs, 7:30

p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH , Corner A!h and Plum. Noel

Her nnann, pastor. Sunday School10:00a.
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a .m.; Wednesday and Saturday Eventn1 ServtCl'l at
7: 30p.m.
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHQ.
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. Carl
Hicks, 10 miles above Racine on Rt. 388.
Sunday School ~ a.m., worship service 10
a.m. Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m.;
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thura.:
day, 6:30p.m.
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST011 124, behind Wilkesville. Charles Jones,
pastor. Sunday Schocj, 9: 30a.m.: momina
worship, 10: 30; Sunday and' Thuuday
evening services, 7:00p.m.

MEIGS
COOPBBATIVB PUma

UNITED IIBTIIODIIT CIRJJICB
NOIITIIIWIT a.vnm1
Rev, Doo ""'-•
llev • ....,..cr-

ae.. Sel... lo-

ALFRED - Church SCboal 9::JJ a.m.;
Worship, lla.m.; UMYF6:30p.m.: UMW
Third Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m. Communion,
ftrst SundaY. (M&gt;b•l
CHESTEll - Worship 9 a.m.: Cburcb
SchoollOa.m.; BlbleSilidy, Thurall"'', Tp.
m.; UMW. llrsl Thurall"'', I p.ln.; Com·
munlon. lirll Soultlay CArobS') .
,
JOPPA- Worlhlp 1:10 a.m.; Cbun:h
SchoollO::JJa.m. Blble!lludy Weda~, ·
· 7:30 p.m. (JolmJm).
LONG Bal"l'OM - P,urch School 9: 30 .
a.m.; Woriihlp 10:30 a.m. ; Bible !lludy,
Wedneotlay, 7;30 p.m.; UMYF Weda•
day, 6: 00p.m.; CommunionnntSullday
ol Month (Croloot) .
REEDSVIlLE - Cburcb Scboo19: 30 a.
m. ; Wonhlp Se&lt;vlco 11:00 a.m.
TUPPERS' PLAINS ST. PAUL Church School9 a.m. ; Worahlp 10 a.m.;
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.: Commu·

I;

1

LETART FALLS - Worllllp 9 Lm,;
Church School Ill a.m. !Grace).
RACNE- Olurch Scllool. JOa.m: woraldp lla;m.; UMWiouttbMo,.at7::11p.
m.; Mea • ~'royer~ w-Ill'. 8
a.m. (Graa.l .
SAl EM CENTER- Cbureh School t: Ill
a.m.; WOnblDIO: Jlla.m. IS~de).
SNOWVJLCI: _ Wol'llilp 9:00 a.m.;
Scbo&lt;lllO 00
(lilartla)

.... CArl I I .

106 lult•out Alra.

-&amp;f·

Clio.

CHURCH IUPPLIE8 • 118LH
. SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
non-Pentecostal. Worihlp .ervtce Sunday
10 a.m.; Sulldly School II a.m. Ewnlq
wonblp aervlee 7:00 p.m. Wedneaday
_prayer meetln&amp;.7:00p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Loc:ated 1D Tau
Community orr Ct. Rt. •82. Rev. ~bert
Sanders, p1.1t1X'. Jeff Holter, lay leader:
Ed Rousli, Sunday School Supt. Sund"''
SCbooi 9: :II a.m.; mom1D1 worship ond
chUdren'• church 10:30 a.m. : evel\lna
preachlftl service lint three Sund.,a,
7:30p.m.; 8peci81 aervlce fourth Sunclay
evenllla, 7:11 p.m.; Wednesday Pr"''er
MeetinJr, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
.
ship, 7:1 0p.m.
. CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Located on 0 . J . Will~ ~ad ot Hla:hway
1ti0. Pat Heno..,, putor. Sunday Scliool10

a.m. Cluaforallaga. Junlora.ureh 11

J!ii~tdr. "MeT\ilb llraKe, S. S. Supt. Sunday
Sc;hooi9::JJ a.m.; Moi'IIIRI Woriihlp 10:30;
Evenlq Woriihlp 7:00p.m.; WodDeoday
Pr"''er Servlc:e. 7;00 p.m.
FAITH BAP'l'IST CHURCH, Rallraod
St., Mai(IL Sunday Scbool10 a.m.: Mom·
lqwonblp lla.m.; EveaJq aervtc:elp,
m. Prayer m•lq aDd Bible S!IMIY Wed·
•eod"''. 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. !lev. Nyle
Borda. putor. Comdluo lliuldi, npt.
Sulldly ~~~~ 9;:J) a.m.; Secnod' llid
fourth SUndayo wonhlp oorvlce at 2: :J) p.
m.
MT. MORIAH BAPI'IST, Fourth ltld
Malo St., Mldclleport. Rev. Gilbert Crall,
.Jr., pula'. Mrs. Ervin" Baum~er,
SundaY School Supt Sunday School9:30a.
m.; Worthlp !lecytce, 10:45 a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIS'I'
- Ja.t!h B. Haolllna, evaneelllt. Sunday
BlbleSfudyta.m.; Worship, IOa.m.; Sun·
day evenlq aervloe 6 p.m.; Wednelday
evnlna: MI'Yice, 1 p.m. •
,
PEN'I"ECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, RadDe,
Rt. IJI. WUllun Hoback. putor. Sunday
Schooi!O a.m.: Sunday evealq oervtce 7
p.m. Wedneod., = r r v t c e 7 p.m.
CARPENTER
. Don Cbeodle.
Supt. Sunday School 9: :J) -a.m. Moi'IIIDJ
Worlldp 10:30 a.m. Prayer service, al~ra­
a~ SUndaya.
THE CHURCH OF . JESUS OIRIST,
APOSTOUC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,
n..t to Fort Melp Park, Rutland. Robert
Rldllrdl. putor. Services al 7 p.m. oa
Wedneotlayo and Sundays.
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
TER ot lbe W•Ieyan Hollneu Church.
Rev. DaVId Ferrell, p.utor.HenJY Elllln,
Sulldly School Supt.; •Sunday Schoaltlla:
m.;, Mornlq: Wonhlp n a.rn.j Evenlna
oervl4» 7:30p.m. WedD""'ay evenlqaoer·
vk:e 7: :J) p.m.
STIVERSVILLE WORI&gt; OF FAITH.
GaJY Hol~r. put..-. Sunday oervlceo 9: :J)
a.m. and 7 p.m.j Mldweek ter'Vlce, 7:30 p.
m.Tbui'Oilay.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave. Rev. Clark Balil!l:, put or. Carl Nol·
tlftlhlm, Suoday School SUpt Sunday
Scboal 10 a.m. wtlh clu~e~ for all aaa.
Even1111 oorvlces at 6 p.m. Wedneoday Ill·
blt study at 7:30p.m. Youth aervtee~ Friday 11 7:30p.m.
ECCLE$1A FELLOWSIIIP,128MUISt.,
Mlddl-'. Brother Chuek McPhera101,
pastor. SundaY School 10 a .m.; Sunday

Ice cream social
planned by Auxiliary·
The Basban Fire Deparlment
Ladles Auxiliary Is sponsoring
an ice cream· social on June 16
s tartlng at 5 p.m. Ten flavors of
ice cream will be sold,ln addition
to sandwiches, pie, pop and
coffee. Free music will also be ,
featured. Everyone welcome.

The sixth six weeks honor roll
for the Racine Elementary
Sc.hool has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
.
First Grade: J .B. Boso, Stacey
Ervin. Kim Ihle. Tasha Johnson.
Stacy Lyons, Amber Maynard,
Kyle Norris, Chris Randolph.
Tara Rose, Dena Sayre, Bobble
Scarberry, Brandon Wolfe, Lena
Yoacham. Amber Huddleston,
Jamie Baker.
Second Grade: Stev!!n Boso,
Jenny Carleton, Joshua Ervin,
Suzanne Evans, Jody Hupp.
Josie Jarell, Bobby Johnson.
Kara King, Jesse Little, Jessica
Smith. Crlssy Snider.
Third Grade: Tyson Evans,
Ryan Grace. Kristen Hill, Matt
Hill, Nicole Hill, M~llssa Layne,
John Malson, Matt Riffle , Danny
Sayre. Amanda Theiss.
Fourth Grade: Kristen
Hensler. Dianne Jones. Jesse
Maynard, Tonia Nazarewycz,
Ryan Norris. Amy Northup.
David Roush, Jennie Scarberry,
· Bobby " Wrltesel, Camilla
· Yoacham.
Fitlh Grade: John Card, Jason
Hudson, Paullhle. Craig Knight,
Janna Manuel, Chanda Mulford.
Sixth Grade: Grant Circle,
Christy Dill. Jason Ervin, Scott
Grace. Shannon Morarlty, Ken·
dra Norris, Courtney Roush, Jenl
Stewart .
The sixth weeks honor roll for
the Letart Falls Elementary
School has been announced.
. Making a grade of B or above In
all &lt;heir subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Second Grade: Jane Hlll, Ja·
son Imboden, Mike Johnson,
Mike Manley. Rebecca Wolfe .
Third Grade: Amy AtkinS,
Jackie Proffitt, Travis Ransom,
Jennifer Roush, Hillary Turley,
Ranetta Wheeler.
Fourth Grade: Eva Crabtree,
Johnnl@ Gilland, Adam Roush,
Kim Roush, Jessica Sayre, Lora
Sayre, Vanessa Shuler.
Fitlh Grade: Jason Barnett,
Jason Shuler.
Sixth Grade: Tracy Pickett,
Karen Sallsman.

Sermonette

p.m.

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
W. .Va .. Rt. 1, Jam• I.e!' II, JIUior. Woroblp servt- 9:30 LJn.; 9tUidlil' Scboalll
a.m.; Evenlq worlldp 7: IJ~-m. - y
Clllllqeprayer moetli!Ju BlbleSilidy
a.m.; . Wonlllp oervlce, Wnu day

Wben we are little we are alwaya looldllg uc 'or standing on
tiptoe. We are ao short Mother Ia bUlly at the ta le and we stand
get our eyes ud nose over tbe
on our Up toes ud
ed2e of !he table. She Ia pu
lclnt on a cake. It looks so big
a11a BO,ood we wut a pleeer I DOW. We don't get it. Sbetella
u It Ia or tomorrow, for S
y dlllner. In later yeara we 1ee
that one spect:t~lalil that ~':J'' held a cake. It Ia a 100c1
memory• .Ua
It llw&amp;fl
acab.ltlaaloodmemot'J
. Aa a cbDd It alwaya looUd Ulle IUCh a bit Calc@ but It
luted Iolii enouah.
Church and GOd are aood memorlel too. The churcll wu bill
and very pretty wltb coiOrecJ plcturewiDdowa ants a biJh Mlu,,;
It wu alwayaao bl.l and clean anci beaut:Hul, just like m«iii'i'i
chiDa plate and tbaf~t bl.l cake. It wu run to 10 to cbureh
and tee pedpJe ywu
liw there or way up town a few tbneit
We
we
aot beer on the radio much. We wer~
always
Idee
With aU the ofben. We bad to be on

c1.11 [§o

never

alo.=..

~~Sc=-=vlorudo you

Melge County Probati

c-. c..
Rlctlord

Melga

==Filii

tf'.~l!..u
.
..... _
IOfOCiludl,l

a.m.; Wonldp 10:30 ...,_, l1llh
,
'111unday, 7:38p.m. ( . . , ,
stri'TON- CllureiiiMioal, t:lla.m.;
Mol'lllqWonblp».Ua,pa.IJnlltldllllrd
Sundayo; FtlltiMIIID~wllb Carmll

Meifll County. Ohio.

(lokorl.

\

.

Public Not ice

E. pMiinD an iron pin Mt ~
8111.28 ft., going 1 total dl•
...... of 1000.00· fl. tn ·a
point on the nollh line af
8ection24;
Thottoe. w•h aaid north
lin• Eaot a
dll-.eo of
1419.91ft. toU..P*eofboglnnlitg. oontalning 38.8158
- - . more or ._._ and bolng
oullject to tho right·
af
County Rootl No. 13 and all

ownotl by M. W. T-klbary
in Fraction 23, Town 9, ·
R•nge 15, County af M.,;ge;
thence Eaat 101 rode and 3
linko: thence oouth 83 rodl;
th..,co Iouth 57W. 32 rods
and 2t llnkl; thence North
38 ~ Eatt 7 rodl and linka
th.nce along the public road
north 87 W. 14 tods; then eo
oouth 84~ W. 14 rodl;
thence 88'1.1 Weat 58 rodl to
line of a 60 acre lot
formertv owned by M . W.
Towklbory; tl)anco north
68~ rodl to tho north oflaid
fraction.
containing 48

Tr. .urer. 320 Eeat Mail)
Str11t. Pomeroy , Ohio
45789 unt il 1 2 :00 o'clod!
noon, e astern atandard lime,
June 20. 1989, Oftd at thot
time opened by the Tr. ..
urer of uid board 11 pro-vldacl by 1-, for all matori..a nac•urv to replace t he
Ughto at the high tchool
football field. aHuot.ed at
Pomeroy. Ohio, according
to epecificationa prepared
for aaid board.
lnatructiona to biddera
1nd apecificatiOf!S for thi• .
wortr; a re on file It the Ofilce
of tho Superintendent, 320
EMt Main Street, Pomeroy,
Ohio 46769. No propoaal
will be contiderad unl811'•
submitted on the blank
prop0111 forma furnished
with the JpiiCifica Uon t .
Each bid lhlll be ICCOm ·
pon ied by a 10% Bid Bond
uti1factory t o the owner or
by certified check on a ·
solvent bank in the aum of
ten percent (1 0 %) of 1he
amount of the maximum
bid. Bidt are to be aeeled and
addreased to:
·
Meigs Local School Distr ict, Office ofthe Treaaure r. •
320 Enl Main Street, P. 0 .
Box 272, Pomeroy, Ohio
46760.
Bidl are to be plainly
marked on the outaide of the
sealed envelope aa follows : ,
FOOTBALL FIELD LIGHT·
lNG BID . Tho aucc:eulul
bidder will be requ ired to
furnilh a aetilftctory Perfor· •
manca Bond for 100% of the ·
contract price. No bid may
be withdrawn after sche-duled clo1ing t ime or rKeipt
of bidl for at lout tixty (60)
daya.
Delivery date must be
stated on the bid form and
will be taken into conaldera~
tion in the awarding of bids.
The board of education
intends to accept the low•t
responsible bid for the project, but reserves the right to
reject any and ell, or parts of
any and all, bids.
By order of the Board of
Education , Meigs local
School Diotrict, 320 East
Main Street, P . 0 . Box 272,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 46769 .
Jane Fry. Treeaurer
(5) 26; (61 2. 9, 16, 4tc

-•Coull
LonaK. Nou.....,..., Ciorlt
(II 21: til 2. I , 3tc

Public Notice

' WELCOMED - Leesa Murphey was welcomed Into the
PomerOJ·MitWieport Uo1111 Club at a recent ~eetlnr. Plclured
preeent1n1 her wltla a membership certificate and pin Is Jim Rill,
president. Kennetll Utt, left, Is president-elect of the club.
up the flags for area businesses
on national holidays. The club
hosted 36 people at the May 15
district dinner meeting held at
the American Legion Post In
Middleport.
Next meeting will be held at
Overbrook Center June 14. A
luncheon will be served compl-

working sternwheeler, docked at
the Pomeroy levee where tours of
the boat will be available from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m. on June 10·. ' .
Various e ntertainment wlll be
featured on Court Sh·eet along
with the different types of craft
exhibitS.
Anyone wishing to participate .
In lhe Chamber-sponsred craft
show should complete the required form and return It to the
Pomeroy Chamber of · Com·
merce. 204 East Main Street,
Pomeroy , Ohio. 45769, as soon as
possible.
In case of rain, the Anderson's
a!lnex bu ildlng on Main Street
will be used for the show.

Meeting changed
The June meet lng of the Board
of Public Affairs in Syracuse wlll
·not be held Monday. Instead, the
meeting will be held ·on Tuesday
at 7p.m.

men ts of Overbrook and a tour of
the facility will follow the noon
meeting. Mrs. Trlna Davis, Duskey St., Syracuse, will be the
speaker, She will discuss how the
Uon's Club can help with start·
lng a parents of blind children
supporl group.

4-H news

IN THE COMMON P~EAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
CLARICE BLAND, aka
CLARICE E. BLAND
Pl.,;ntlfl
va
ROY TILLIS, ET AL
Defondenta
Cato No, 88 ·CV·108
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
To : Roy Tllllt, eddrooo un·
known, If living; Vlolo Tilllo.
oddrooo unknown. If living;
Jem• Jeffera. lddr•• un-known,lf living; Hugh Hod·
dox. Oildrooo unknown. If liv·
ing; Lillian Haddox, addroua
unknown, If llvirtg; Ohio Val·
loy 011• Refining Comp11ny.
addr•• unknown: the unknown opou-. hlir1. de·

via-. teQIIt. ., uecutora,

Carrie Gllllan presented a
program on lung cancer when
members of the Alfred Angels
4·H Club met at the home of
Susan Pullins with one advisor
and seven members present.
The hostess, along with Robin
and Bobbl White served refresh·
ments to Jason Pulllns, Mike
' Laughery, Jenny Roush, and
Anita Calaway .
The next meeting wlll be June
13 al the home of Susan Pullins.
Janet Bolin presented a dem·
onstratlon on an owl's bird house
when members of the Meigs
County Jade 4·H Club met
recently at her house with one
advisor and eight members
present.
Items discussed Included
birds, and plans for the next
meeting.
The group went bird watching
and refreshmensls were served
by Tammy Miller and Janet
Bolin.
·
The next meeting-will be at the
Pomeroy Ll brary from 6-8 p.m.
and · members are to start their
birdhouses and feeders , and
work on their project books.

The sixth six weeks honor roll
for the Chester· Elementary
School has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above tn
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Third Grade: VIcki Adams,
Kellt Bailey,. Slefanl Bearhs,
Brandon Buckley, Blllee Pooler.
Fourth Grade: Meredith Crow,
Marla Frecker, Tract Heines.
Fifth Grade: Melissa Dempsey, Jessica Karr, Jennifer
Mora, Nicole Nelson, Brandl
Reeves. Heather Well.
Sixth Grade: Charlie Bissell,
Ryan Buckley, Jessica Chevalier, David Fetty, Todd Michael,
Jamie Ord, Jessica Radford.

the roll were:
First Grade: Eugene Bing,
Heather Dalley, Joshua Davis.
Courtney Haines, Tiffany Hickel,
Michelle Lonas, Jonathan Smith.
Autumn Thomas.
Second Orade: Becky Collins,
Bridget Cross, Ashll Davis, Tara
Knighting, Stephen Roberts,
Kim Sayre.
Third Grade: Erica Arnott,.
Mlck Barr. Cynthia Caldwell.
Valerie Cundiff, Lisa Russell,
Evan Strullle, Billy Young.
Fourth Grade: Brian Allen,
Tyson Buckley, Jeremy Buskirk,
Anita Collins, Jessica Counts,
Jason Lawrence, Travis Lisle,
Amber Thomas.
Fifth Grade: Kevin Deemer,
'
The sixth ·six weeks honor roll
Rochelle Jenkins, Jennifer Lawfor &lt;he Tuppers Plains Elemen- rence, Jay McKelvey, Samml
tary School bas been announced. Sisson, Rayan Young.
Sixth Grade: Brian Anderson.
Making a grade of B or above in ·
Randy Bing, Mason Fisher, Mall
all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Morrow. Amy Weaver, Ryan
Sixth Grade: Susan Brewer. Willlmas, Andrea Moore.
Julie Brown, Janet McDonald.
Flflh Grade: Jonathan Avis,
The sixth six weeks honor roll
Brian Bowen, Brian Hoffman,
for the Rejoicing Life Christian
Chris Michael·, Ginger Nutter,
School has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above In
Micah Otto.
all their subjects to be named to
Fourth Grade: Katy Manlcke,
the roll were:
Laura Buckley.
Kindergarten : Chasldl Biggs,
Third Grade: Blllena Bucha·
nan, Wesley Buckley, Michelle , Zachary Bolin, Marjorie Brak
Caldwell, Joanna Gumpf,
ton. Adam Bullington, Benjamin
Call, Isaiah Kebler , Alicia Ker·
Jeremy Kebl, Kelll Norris, Joey
sey, Rose SchrOck, Debby Searls,
·weeks.
Bydd Smith, Brandon Werry.
First Grade: Max Bratton,
The sixth six weeks honor roll
for the Riverview Elementary · JOShua Jones. Tawny Jones,
Joseph McCall, Tl!fa,ny Rich·
School has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above In mond, Candace Werry.
Second Grade: Rach11l Forbes,
all thflr subjects to be named to
Jacque Hall, Rachel Pabnglo,
the roll were:
Third Grade: Brian Criss, Melissa Werry.
Third Grade: Sue Ellen Barn·
l«&gt;bert Harris, Jeffrey Kimes,
hart,
Tara Davis, Steven Rice.
Klmberlee Mayle. Abe Rach,
Fourth Grade: Adam Barrett.
Andy Reed.
Fourth Grade: David Baker,
Flflh Grade: Shawn Rice,
Angela Bissell, Martie Holter.
Tracy Shaffer.
Sixth Grade: Emily Asbeck,
Fifth Grade: Rebecca Evans,
Joey Barrett, Ryan Dodson,
Connie Pooler.
Mandy Jones, Kristen Torres.
Seventh Grs-de: Deanna
The sixth six weeks hOnor roll
for the Syracuse Elementary Boothe, Emlly Heighton, Jeffrey
School bas been announced. Nevitt.
Making a grade of B or above In
all their subjects to be named to

ftUt of kln, edmlnlltrMora
or a1aigna, if any, of Roy
Tillia, deceao Oil: V!ola Tillia.
d-ed; Jomoo Jeffera,
doCIIIOil;
Hugh Heddox,
- e d : and Ullion Had·
dox, deceM eel; the unknown
IUCCMIOI'I or aJiigftl, dlrec~

tor1, officers and/or ahllre-

holdoro of the Ohio Velloy
OM l!t Refining Comp11ny .
You are · hereby notified
that a · Complelnt to Quiet
Title hao boon flied In the
Common Pleao Coun af
M.,;ge County, Ohio, Caae
No. 89-CV-108, d.,..anding
to quiet thlo of the following
de8oriblld reel
estate in
Plolntlfl' 1 nome. ••lilted In
the Townahip of Rutland.
County of M.,;ga, and State
of Ohio, end contelnlld in
Volume 180 at Pogo 331
and Volume 289 at Pogo 7.
af the Meiga County Deed
Rocordo.
and
further
bounded and d•cribod •
followo:
Situate in the Tawnahip of
Rutland, County of Mtllll
and State of Ohio, and
bounded ond daocrlbod u

foHows:

valid--..

rrl·-

••t

Cited boorin111 ore booed
on the nonh line of Section
24 M running due Eut &amp;.

w.t.

·

ecr•.

AI Iron plna doocrlbod 11
being Ht are % " x30" with
on eltllehed plaotlc ldontlfi·

REFERENCE DEED: Vo·
lumo 301,Pego 181, Vo·
lume 314. Page 163, M.,;go
County Deed Reeordl.
Tha demand of the Com·
plaint il that thll title to the
above de~crlbed real Mtatt
be quieted in thenameoft he
Plalntlfl, Millard R. Burlie,
and/ or the reformation of
uld deed to ahow and toreflect that the abova do·
.cribed r•l eatate ia owned
by Plalntlfl in fee simple and
free of all claims of another.
You are required to anawer the Complaint wtt.hin
twonty· tight (281 days after
tho laot publlcat!on of thlo
notice which will be publiahed once each week for
aix (6) auccesaive weaks.
The lat publication will be
made on Ju111 23. 1989.
and tho twenty-eight (28)

cetion cap.

The ebove doocriptlon Ia

the r•uh of an actual auNey
made by Miello.,; P. Barry,
Ohio Reaiatored Survoy or
No. 8803, on Janu•rv 20.
19B8.
The demand of the Com ·
pt.,;nt Ia that the tkle to the
above d.. crlbed rMI •tate
be quilted in the name of the
Plaintiff, Clarice Bland. aka
Clarice E. Bland.
You are required to en ewer the Compl•nt within
tweftty. .,;ght (281 dey a after
tho loot publication of thla
notice .which will be pub·
llohod oneo ..ell woek for
lilt 181 auc-oivo wooka.
The loot pUblication will ba
made on June 23. 1989,
and the twenty-eight (281
d1y1 for answer will com·
mence on that date.
In case of your failure to
1ntwer or otherwile retpond aa required by the Ohio
Rul• of Civl Procedure.
iudgmant bo clafaub will bo
randsrod ageinot you for the
relief demanded in the Complllint .
LARRY E. SPENCER.

daya for anawer will commence on that date.
In cue of your failure to
anewer or otherwise r•pond aa requIred by tho Ohio
Rul• of Civil Procedure,
judgment be default will be
rendered agalnat you for the

relief demand in the Complaint.
LARRY E. SPENCER ,
CI•k of Courta of
Moiga County. Ohio
(61 1~ . 28: (81 2 .9, 16, 23
6tc

Clerk of Court1 of

Moiga County, Ohio
BY: MARLENE
HARRISON
Deputy
(5) 1g, 26; (81 2,9, 16. 23
8tc

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
sealed propollil wll ba
received by tho board of
educat!on af the M.,;lll Locli
School Diatrict of Pomarov.
Ohio, It the office of the

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY. OHIO
MILLARD R . BURKE
Plaintiff
va
CHARLES CONNER. ET AL
Defondenta
CeH No. 89-CV· 113
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
To: Chari• Canner. addrooo unknown If living, and
tf deceMed, hit: unknown
_ . ... h.,;ra, devia-. I•
gltHI.

Business
Services

executora, neat of

Beginning at 1 point in the kin, admiMtraton, 1nd II·
North line of Section No. ligno. whoae addreaaea are
24, Tawnahip No. 8, Range unknown; and L. H . Conner,
No. 14. Ohio Company' 1 addrooo unknown if ·living,
Purch111, which uld point and tf dece•ed. his unla 80 rods Woot of the known apouoo. heira, de·
North. .t corner of aald viiMI, leglteea, executor~.
Section No. 24;
thence nut of kin, adminlatratora.
Woot along the North Nne of end ooolgna.
whoae adthe alor . .ld Section No. 24 dr•.. are unknown; and
1480 feat to a point. which tho unknown opouaoa, heira.
aald point II the NorthWoot devia-. t o g -. ••acu·
corner of the tract of which tore, next Of kin, adminiltrathlt Ia a port; thence South tara, and aaalgno of John w.
along the Wool line of the ' Conner, doceaoed, Tobitha
lrect of whlellthlo Ia a port Porltor. decoooed, and Mil·
1000 feat In a point In oald ton Conner, decoooed, if
Wnt line; thence South 80 any .
dog., Eoat through the tract
You ore hereby notiflad
of which thia Ia a port 1470 that a Complaint to Quiet
feet to a point: tltonco South Title hao boon filed in the
88\'1 dog .. Eaat through the Common Plea Coull af
tract of whlell thla II 1 pilrt M.,;ge County, Ohio. Cue
383 foot to e point; t'-ce Na. 89-CV· 1 13, demanding
North 23'.4 dog., Eoot 110 to quill!titleofthefollowing
feet to a point; thence North d•crlt.d real
Mtate in
811~ dog., Woot 383 foet to Plolntlfl'o name, ond/ orthe
a point; th..,ce Nhnh 1121 reformation
of Plalntlfl'o
feet ta the place of begin· d - to ahow that the fol·
nlng.
containing 38.83 tawing raol ootoll which 11
Acr•, be the ume "'ore or aftulted in the Townahip of
't.a. B.,;ng I pilll of the ft;lt Columbia, County of Mei111.
d•crlbed tl'8ct In a certllin and Stete of Ohio, and con·
Warranty D11d dated 2B talned (n Volume 301 It
M•y 1948, from . Jo111ph Page 181 and Volume 314
GNu•, unmarried, to Roy et Page 153, of the Mllge
Tllllo and Viola Tlllll, r• County Deed Records, and
c:Ordedlft Valume1111, Page
further bounded aftd do·
474 af tho Dood Recorda of acrlbed 11 follow• and lithe
M.,;lll County, Ohio.
tole real property of Millard
B.,;ng tho 11me premia• R. Builio, Plllntlfl, and froo
convoyad to Dwight Bl•d of all claima of aftother:
and Clorloo Bland by Roy
Beginning wbh theN. W.
Tilli1 and Viola THill by deed corn• of e fifty •ere lot
dMod hptombor 18, 1954,
and recorded in Volume 1
Card of Thanks
180, Pogo 331,
Moip
County,
Dood Ro·
cordo. 'Ohln
Sllid roll 001111 being
further doucrlbed • followo:
Being at an Iron pin IM on
the north llno of Boction 24
from whlelltlla NEcorner of
aaid Sect!on boara. by previOUI dMd doocrlpt!on, Eatt a
diatanoe of 1320.00 ft.;
Thence, leevlng uld - tion Nno, S 0 dea. 31' 23" W
a dlltonco of 1 :f28.17 ft. to
a point. llid point bolng r•
fer.,ood by en Iron pin HI
whiCh booro S 70 dea. 20'
113" E a clotonco ofii.DO ft.:
Thence 81 c1ag. 30' OO"
E, pMalng .., Iron pin HI at
334.83 ft., uOlng 1 total dlotance at 311.11 fl. tao point
In tho""'t• a! County Raed
No. 13:
Then... With the cooter af
llid County Rood 13, 8 34
dog. 48' 38"Wodlatanceof
50.88 ft. to a point;
Thonoo. -log aaid T ohlp Rood. and with the north
bound.ry of a 98.42 .....
trect dooolbed In Volume
308. Page 311. the tollowlng
two(2lcatr-:
(11 N 18 dog. 30' DO" W,
p111olng . , Iron pin HI at
12.00 ft .. tiOing a total ....
tanoo of 3411.118 fwt to 10
Iron pin121 N 71doa.18' 31"'W a
dlltan. . of 14t3.eo ft. to on
Iron pin 11M:
Thottco, N 0 dag. 32' 30'

s

-.acllrla•• ••.ow

ION

laylor
614-245-9557

COtttact

GEARY

PAINT and
BODY SHOP

PO SEIITARY

· ... .

t

l.

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

.·.~~ , ,

~·

--·\

..

.

..,.,. .,

Ssl11 I Surlaa

t'·.·. • .

..

.

•

, t.•

........

1-3- '18 -tfc

WANTED

THE
BASKn WEAVE

•Washers •D ryers

HAND WOVEN ·
BASKETS
Largo Supply of Baaket
Weaving Suppllao
Sign up now for Basket ~
Weaving Cluaa•

•Range •F reezers
•Refrigerators
"Mu1t Be Repairable"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

OPEN MOST SATURDAYS
10:00 'TIL 5:00
PIM .HOAN • OWNB

We Service All Makes

5-4·89-1

MOBILJ
HOME PARK
•Mobile 11om8 ·
Perta
.. •M obile l'rolfl-3
Rentals ·.
•Lot Rent'l•

992-7479

It. J3 lllortlt of
POIUeroy, Ohio .

992-6855
5·4·89·1 mo.

LINDA'S
PAINTING ..

IIIIYEIIOR-EXTEIIOR·
FREE ESTIJitATES
lake the pain out of

painting. Let me do .
It for you.
. VEIY lEASON AilE
HAVE IEFEIENCE

614-985-4180
2-15-'88·1

1·13·'81·1111

Ntw lacatiatt:
161 North Second
MltWI.,..t. Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fi11Wn1 luppll•

Your Phone
Bille Hera
t ~~~-~~~ PIIONI

16141 HJ-6550
PIIONI

mo. d.

FOR
SALE

PLUMIING &amp;

F

3 Styles
and
Voriovs Sizes

WOODEN IUilDINGS
Built On Your Lol

ON SALE NOW AT ,

SEARS II MIIDilPOIT
614-

171

DE
INN
·
APPEARING

f•D&amp;Y, IIIII 2• I SA1'111DAY, JUNJ 31D

· "IOCIOLA" 9:30 P.M.·1130 A.M.

...

(IJ.IIIIII-UIII

FUT . .NON

EDmON SET 16-17 .... sus_S$.91
WOO- YAID DICOUnGNS........... SJ.SO u.
W1 992-H71
HCUSI 10 -s pm
..., 915-4196
• •vi I .... Cllall Faaltae Clr,ht. 18ctiH S. Ike ·
...

Ftr• E••I~•HI

Iva SttRrt

FIIEI

,,

U. S. IT. 50 EASI
GUYSYIU.E, OliO
614-662·3121

Monday-Fridoy

295

SALAI, POtliOr HOT IliAD &amp; COfFEE
. . . . 10• 5:00 P.M-7:00 P.M.

'

"· "' ... I

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SEIVICE
Authorized John
Deere. New Holland,
Buoh Hog Farm
Equpment Deelor.

DEAD OR AUVE

..d lhol~fllln•• hi
showed in helpin1 to mike
one of our most diffitult
ti- viltllllly worry-tiee.
IIJ God bl•s 111 of you
for your lltotl_.fllln•s.
The flmllv of

,...~~ _ ......- ...._ .._ ........ uc ...

R

R11. 91e9-2160
NO WNDAf CAW
3-ll·lfn

5·22-'19-1 mo.

We wish to thank all of
our friends who so kindly
expressed their sympathy
to us durin1 lhe recent
loss of our mothe1 and
lflndmclther. Tha priY·
ers, cards, flowers. food
end kind words touched
us deaply. We especielly
thank Dr. lsom Welket,
the Holzer nurses on 4
West, ley Fowler end the
liddlaport COn&amp;Jeplion
of Jehoveh's Wilnesns
for your kindness.
AY11Y speci. thanks to
lr.. Blllct Flsller of Rawlinp.COIIs-flsller Funnl
Home for lht compession

an

PH. 949-2101
or

. 550 PAGE STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
HOURS: 9 A.M.-6 P.M.

I

P1111rey, 01.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
NtwH-Iult

-=========t

MAinN'S FIRNITUIE &amp; MOlE

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

"Free Ettimatet"

RIJM- ............................................... •11••

'

r·

Pu bile Notice

lilY -~....................................... 110••

trltlla ~w::;.':L~~~=
,#:;.,.:c'
=:.i Gblld
lhauld liiml memorilllllte tbla. - p.._
·
au A, Lull rr w of ..... CloaM).
.

EASTLE't
t:OO
a.m.: Oluft!b -lii;IOa.IIL=IInl
l'lleldll!' 7:11 p..m, (GiriN).

·

" - E. IIuoli.

1111. .... St.

~Itt
toourcbUdrtp~~
oiltlbelrl'luDdlf
wtll&amp; .....AberaCbUMb

Coun2' Ohio,

Hubbard llr-. ly-.ou.

oauaau~~e.I ...aterwbatOoclthlnlllotuaaowwe

f; M

No. 282110.

! . J - Pom-.

41781. - • p , • ntedEucutor af t h e - · af Ewly"
Lut*.. - . . . . . .... af

to cburciiJ!nd
ll,lWQIItle\"llatGodaawulleiOOklddllwn

NoW.ui._

....,;u,

·-1------------~----------------~--·--------------------~----------

A CRJN.t PLATIIl WrrH A GBBAT BIG CAKE

••=

NOTICE OF
APPOINTM!NT OP
FIDUCIARY
On Moy 11, 1181, In tho

Meigs County honor rolls·

•

w-·•J'eU,...

t

Mltkloport. Ohio 41710
11141112·1117 -1818-00KII

The Pomeroy Area Chamber of
Commerce Is sponsoring a craft
. show on Saturday, June 10, on
Court St. In 'Pomeroy. The craft
show Is being held In conjunction
with the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society's Heritage
Weekend celebration on June
10·11. The theme for Heritage
Weekend Is "History Along the
River."
Once again, the Chamber will
have the Juanita , AEP's last

Public Notice

Public Notice

Heritage Weekend Craft
Fair scheduled in Meigs

In a auccaslul.
marria(le, there is
no such thing as one's
way . There Is only
the way of both.
- Phyllis McGinley

w-...

B
- Woralllp t a .m.; Cburell
Scboal a.m.; BlblelbitiY WotiiM!Iu Ill
a.m. ; llorcu
Wodaeotlaylla.m. &lt;lid•&gt;·
CARMEL- Olurcb llcJaool:,t:lla.m.·
Worllllp, ID:U a.m. lltoolod ·ltld
~a: Foll-p tile-. wltll S.ttaa
llllnl'l'bundQ, 1:11 p.,. (• •

1

16141992-2019 .,
16141992-5721

a .m.; Mornlq worship 11 a.m. Adult
Cbolr prat:tleo 6 p.m. Sunday. Youna People'o. Chlldrtll'a Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wedneod"'' at 7:30 ~!"·
HOPE BAPTIST CHAP..,., 570 ,! lrant
St .. Mlddloport. Alllllah!d wltb SOulllern ·
Baptist Convention. David BJYan, Sr., Ml·
nllter. Sunday ,School 10 a.m.; Morning
wcnhlp lla.m.; Evenm. wcnhlp 7 p.m.;
Wedneoday eveollla Bible ot,..y and
prayer meoflftl 7 p.m.
·
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.
Rt. 12t and Co. Rd. 5. Scott Ste"Nart, pastor. William Amberger, S. S. Supt.; 'Ill•·
day School 9: :II a .m.; Morning Worship
10: 30 a.m.; Eventna wonhlp 7:30 p.m.
Wedneotl"'' wonhlp .,:30J&gt;.m.
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Comer Sycamore and S.rond St1., ~
meray. The Rev . WIIU.m Mlddleawart,
pootor. Sunday School 9:45a.m. Cburch
service lla.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
SACRED HEART CHURCH, Macr.
0 . H.CarLpoator. SundayScboalat9:30a.
Anthony Glannamore. Ph. 992-5898. Satur- . evenlllgservlceo~7p. m.andWodDelday
m.; Mol'111q worlldp at 10: 30 a.m.; Sun·
day Evening Man 7:30 p.m.; Sunda,y
dayevenlqltrvletat7:30p.m. ThurMiay
aervlre atip.
Man, 8 a.m. and 10 a .m. conraalbnl one
services at 7:30 p.m.
•
ANTIQUIT-Y B
ST. Kenneth Smith, •
half hour before each MUI. CCD ciUitl,
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
paator. Sunday School.9:30 a.m.; church
11 a.m . Sunday.
,
Knob, locoted on County Rood 3L Rev.
"""Ice 7: 30p.m.; youth leilowahlp&amp;:30 p.
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St.,
' ~ger Willford, putcr. Sunday School
m.; Bible stlllly, Thurlday, 7; iiO p.m.
Mlddi&lt;Port. Jamtl E. Keaee, put or.
9:30 a.m.: Mornlna Worahl lO: t5 a.m.i
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 330411
Sun4ay momlna worship 10 a.m. ; E...,..
Sunday evtDiq worship 7:00 !lam.; Wed·
HUand Road. Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pu.
nesday evenlq Bible Study 7:w p.m.
In&amp; aervtce 7 p.m.; Wednesd"'' evenlq
tcr. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
wonhtp7p.m. VlaltatlonThunday6:30p,
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEY AN
momlq eervtce atlO a.m. ; Sunday even.
m.
CHURCH- CoolvDieRD. Rev. PllllllpRI·
lng oervlce 7:30 p.m. Tuesday ud Tbu . .
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
denour, pulor. Sunday School 9:30a.m.;
dill' :!ervtcs at 7: :JJ p.m.
CUifman, put..-. Sunday Scbool, IOa.m.;
wonlilp oervlct IO::JJ a.m. ; Bible ollidy
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
wonlllp service 11 a.m.; Sulllay night
and wonblp ...-vice, Wedioeoday, 7 p.m.
ZARENE, Rev. Gleodon Stroud, putor.
worllilp serviC&lt;&gt; 7:30 p.m. ; M l RIJ'TL\ND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Roy
SundlySchool9: :JJa.m.; Worahlp•rvlce,
prayer oervlce Wednesd"'' 7 p.m.
W. Carlor puler. MomlqWorllllp 10:00
!0:30a.m.; Youth service Sund"'' 6:lll p.
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
a.m.; iiibleSCboaii:OOp.m.; Bible Study ·
m. Sunday evenln.Rservtce7:00p.m. Wed·
CHURCH of Middleport, Inc., 75 Pearl St ..
w-~ 7:00p.m.
neottay Prayet:, ldeetlnl and Bible Study
RUTLANDBIBLEMETHODIST. Amos
Rev. Ivan Myers, pastcr; Roaer Manley,
7:00p.m.
TIIU., put«. Sonll)l Hudlm, 111pt. Sunday
Sr., Sunday School Supt. SUnday School
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, SunSchool9:30 a.m.; Mol'llllli wonblp, 10:30
9: :II a.m.; Montnr Wonhlp 10:30 a.m.;
day afternocm services at 2:.30. TburMiay
a.m.: SundaY evenlnlr oervleo 7:00p.m.
Evenlftl Woralilp 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday
eventnclei'VIces at 7: ao.
Wedneoday' servl&lt;e f p.m. WMPO proevening Bible lludy, prayer and pralae
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mum, W.
cram h.m. eaeil Sulldly.
·
aervlce, 7:ll P·'l'·
Va. Paoter, BIIIMurphy. SundaySChoollO
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
a.m.; Sunday evenlq ·7::JJ p.m. Prayer
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
RENE . samuel llalye, poator, Sunday
meetlalandlllblutudyWoclll~, 1:30
OF GOD - GObert Spencer, puler. SunSchooi9::JJun.; Worablp...-vlce!0:30a.
p.m. Evecyt11e WIIC!IIIM.
'
dill' l!ehool 9::JJ a.m. ; Mornlna .... ce
m.; Youna people'• lti'VIce 6 p.m.
RU'n.AND FIU:E WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
!O:OOa.m.;
Sundayevenlq
..
rvfce7:00p.
Evanpllltleltrvlce6::11p.m.Wedoeoday
lem St. Rev· Paul Taylor, poator. Supday
m.; Mid-- prayer -.Ice Wedneod"''
oervlet7 p.m.
·,
Schod10o.m.: Sllllilay....,IDI7:00p.m.:
7
p..m.
'
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, MIU..WednMt~u evealq prayer meetlnl7: 00
MT. OLIVE FULLGOSPELCOMMUN·
St.. Muon. w. Va. Sunday BlbleSiudy!O
p.m.
.
ITY CHUJICH, Lawreace Buab, JIUier.
a.m.; Woraldplla.m. an47p.m.
50111'11 BETiii:L NEW TESTAMENT
MuFolmor,Sr.,S.
S.Supt.Sundaydill' BlbleSiudY.voell mullc, 7 p.m.
CHURCH, Silver Ridge. Duane ,Syden.
9: 30 a.m.: SuDdayewolnlr oervke, 7::JJ ,
LIBERTY A8SEMBLY OP' GOD, Dud·
strtdclr, putor. Sunday School 9 a.m.;
m.; Wecllleoda&gt;' ...,.,~q Sible study and
iiiDI Lane, Mum, w. Va. J. N. Thacker,
Wonblp Setvlce, lOa.m.; Sunday evtntna:
pratoe aerv1ce. 7: 30 J&gt;.m.
• putct&lt;, E-lq M'Vfce 7::JJ~.m.; Wosi!'VIce. 7:00p.m. Wedneoday nl&amp;ht Bible
UNn'ED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on PomBI'a Mlnlalcy, ThllrailaY, ::JJ a.m.;
otody 7:oop.m.
·m•oy
~~~·PUI._llev.
E
.
Smllll,
Sr,
Wedneodly Prayer IDd Billie Study, 7: IJ5
p.m.
...._
· ·· ·
' I''
HARuuRD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Harlfold, W. Va.
Rev . David McMagte putm-. Clturoll
Schooi9::J) a.m.; Sunday IIIOI'IIInl-·
Vice, 11 a.m.; Sunday ...,.., oorvtee,
7: :JJ p.m. WednM!Iu prayer maetlq. 7: 30

7 : 00~TIIarlday. (JIIdcl)

thlnl'l'bu=IY.I:IG

13MIIItreet

land-Ractae Road. Mike Duhl, poatcr,
Janlc:e Danna-, ehurch achool dlret:tor.
Church achool9: 30 a.m.; Momlt~~worshlp
10:30 a.m.; Wedneoday evenlq _prayer
....,lceo, 7::JJ p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Eorl
Shuler, '""ler. Worllllp .....,..., 9:30a.m.
Sunday SChooi!O::JJ a.m. Bible Study and
prayer IOI'YitoTIIurallty; 7;:JJp.m,
CARLETON IN'I'Ji:IU)I!:NDMINATION·
AL CHURCH, Kloplluy ~Oil. Rev.
Clyd~ w. Hencltfion. llllltor. !linday
School 9:30a.m.; RalpbCarL Supt. Even·
Ina worllllp 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Wedneod"'' 7:00p.m.
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, 28an State RDute 7, Middleport. Sunday School. 10 a.m.; Sunda,y
evenlq oervlce, 7::JJ p.m.; Tuesday aer·
vice, 7::J) p.m.

APPLE GROVE - Cburell Scbooii:OO
a.m .; MomiDIWorllllpiO:OOa.m.; Bible
Study SundaY 7:00p.m.: Pre,..- meotllll

· MOIUIIN&lt;; ~All- Oill...

$••,,. Q3...,,,

School 9; :II a.m.; Morning worllilp 10; :II
a.m.; Te811 In Action, 6 p.m.; Evenlna
Worship, 7:00p.m. Choir practice 8 p.m.
Sunday. Wedneoday evening prayer and
Bible ituclY.
DEXTEll CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Charla Ruuell Sr., mlnllter; Norman
WUI, supl. Su nc~a,y SChooi9::JJaud.m.; WWedor0 3b a.m. Bible st y, lhlp aervlce 1lD:

8c1oool.•.,....._ua.m..;la
LtD.: Gary RHil. ~~-·
.,.
llllbt '
....... Cllrllltu ~-.. 7: p.m.,
8oill ~ I p.m. ,_dll!lll: 30 p.m.
lfltl:"'tllllll'""'
- - w......,. 7
'

IOIJ'DIIIaN CWI'ID

992-2975

~0 CJruR0t ~:-CHRIST, ~er CHRIST
""':'io~~D
CHURCH OF JESUS
OF LA'ITER DAY SAINTS. Port-

Spl'loll, mlll~ltr; Starllq Mauar and'lll·
lver fniD, Sunday School Supt._ Preach-

s.....,

........
_...._
.......-o_

204 C.dar St.
•-roy, 011.

we

l.,

j

' GRAVElY TRA&lt;TOR SALES

In this traditional month of beautiful bridal
gowns, it may.be time to take a good look at
nwrtaae and the high Incidence ol dl\'on:e.
It Is a ~~ad fact that all too many people get
married to someone they love, .but with the .
.
'
'
Idea of •"making over" their apause after the
wedding, lilrc a woman .who buyl a dresl and
redcslps k. The undesirable trailS may not
appear untn later on, perhaps even induced
by the spouse's IICtlons,·but In any cue
should uy to accept our rnarna,e pannen
for what they are, guldlna but not ~
and seeing areas ol compromlle whacou
]J0811ble. We llbould also tum to the clel'1JYDWl
at our House of Wonhlp lOr guidance. Whether
or not' the wedding took place th~. It could
be the beat place. to save the marriage .

lq 9; 30 a.m. eaeillunday; Sunday Scboal
'1ACREo HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
10::JJ a.m.
- Pomeroy. Mslf. Michael Hellmer, Ph.
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
992-5898. Saturday evening Mass, 5: :JJ p .m .
CHRISTIAN UNION, Tht!'m Durbam, ·
; Sunday Maaa. 8 a .m. and 10 a.m. CCD
putor. Sunday aervk:e, 9:30 a.m.; evenclaases, 9 a.m. SuOOay. COnfessions: One1t11 IIOI'IIIce 7:00 p.m. Prayer meetlq,
half hour before each Mass.
Wedl-, 7:00p.m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSBEARW'ALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
TOUC FAITH- New Lima Road, next to
CHRIST, Jooepllll.lloaldu, pntor. Bible
Fort Meigs Park. Robert W. Richards,
Claa!&lt;l:30a.m.: Mo.,..._Wonlilpl0:30a.
pastor. Sunday services, 10 a .m . and 7 p.
m.; ••-1111 W!&gt;!'lldp, 6:10p.m. Tburlday
m.; Wednesd.y wm-shtp. 1 p.m.
BlblelltwiY~ 6:30 p:m.
ZION C1II1RCB OF CHRIST, Pomi!!:ay·
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST,
llarrtomvllleR&lt;t CRI.l43) RoberlE.PurPreaching 9:30a.m. first and second Sunlell, miDIIter: Steve Stanley, Bible School
days of each month; third and fourth SunSupt.; Rotloey Howery, Alii. Su~ SUN·
day each month worship services at 7:30 p.
DAY: Bible School 9;30 a.m.; onhlp
m.; Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m .
ID;30 A.M. and 7:30P.M.: Wedleoday Bl·
Prayer and Bible Study .
ble StudY, 7: DO p.m.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mul·
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
berryHel1hts Road, Pomeroy. Pastor Bob
nlon Flnt Suaday (Arch«) . . ·
GrOft. Tile Rev. WWI.lm Mldil-b,
Snyder; Sabbath School Superintendent,
p.sator. Cburehlei'VIce9::11a.m.; Sunday
Rodney Spires. Sabbath School begins at 2
Schooi!O::JJ a.m.
p.m. on Saturday afternoon with worship
BRADBURY CHURCH OF OIRIST,
service followtng at 3:00p.m. Everyone
Tom RlltiYm, pulor. Suaday School9: 30
welcome.
· ·
CIINT&amp;\L CWIITEII
a.m.; LarJY Hayo.., S. S. Supt. Mornln&amp;
Jlev, MolY• Fruldla
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
worship IO::JJ a.m.
llev. Clem- 8. Zulp, lr.
- Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
an. o.........,
SChool9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship, 10: 45
RENE, Rev. John Vance, pastor: San~ ·
.... w.. '111. ....
a.m.
Julllce, Cllalrman of lhelloard of ChrllBev.Pullbrllll
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lystm
llan Ute. Sunda,y School9:30 a.m.; Morn·
a...-rCralllree
Halley. minister; Saturday ev.ening
lng wonldp 10:30 a.m.; eYIIIJdllllc ser.... Bobtri .....
evanaellsttc servtces, open to public, 7 p.
vi!J! 7:00p.m. W"1!= .-vice, 7 p.m.
ASBURY (Syra..,se) - Wonblplla.m .
m.; Sunday Chureh SChool, 9:30 a.m .;
LIBERTYCHR
CHURCH,Ilox·
; Church School 9:45a.m.; Cbarae Bible
MorBilli Worship 10:30 a.m.
ter. Woody Call, p.sator. Servlcs Sunday
Study, Wedneotlay, 7:30p.m.; UMW,IIrst
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po10 a.m. ODd 7 p.m. Wedii::A"f·· 7 p.m.
Tuesday, I::JJ p.m.; Choir Rallmul,
mft'oy Pike. E . Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
DYESVn.LI: COMMU
CHURCH ,
Wedneoday 6:30p.m. (Tbatch•)
Jack Needs, Sunday Scho&lt;i. Director. Sun~IO)'d Soyre, Supt. Sullilly SC..,ol9:30 o'.
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
dl.y School, 9:30a.m .; Morning Worship,
m.; mom1D1 wonblp IO::JJ a.m. Sunday
Chureh Schooi!O a.m.; Bible Study, Tueo10:45; evening worship, 7:00p.m. (O S.T.)
.-tnlltiVI&lt;e7 p.m
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW, FirllMoDday,7::JJ
A:-7:3(). (E.S.T.); Wednesday Prayer Ser .
p.m. ; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Revice, 7: DO r..m. (D.S.T. I &amp; 7: 30P.M. (E .S.
RACINE FIRST , BAPTIST, Sieve
hearsal, Children's at 6:30p.m. Adult folT.); Miss on Friends (ages 2-6), Roya l
O.aver, Putor. MUte Swl&amp;er, Sund"''
lowing; Wednesday. (FronkiiD)
Ambasudors (boys ages 6-18) , and Girls
School Supt.; Sunday SchoOl 9:30a.m.;
FLATWOODSChurch
SChool,
!Oa,m.
In Action (ages 6-18 ~ on Wednesdays, 7 p.
Mol'111q worlldp 10:10 a .m.; Sunday
; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursm. CD.S.T. ) &amp; 7:30p.m. CE.S .T. 1: Tuesday
......,1111 worllhlp 7::JJ p.m.; Wedneoday
day, 7 p.m.: UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.
VIsitation, 6:30p.m.
evenlnlr Bible study 7::JJ p.m. CIIIJRCH,
(Franklin) ,
FAml TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal·
BU1U.INGHAM COMMUNITY
FOREST RUN - Worllilp 9 a.111.;
ley Run Road, Rev. Emmett Raw soo, pas·
llsolin&amp;llam. RillY L-.nJII. ..,til'; flo.
Church School 10 A.M.: Cbolr practice,
tor. Handi&lt;:Y Dunn, supt. Sunday School,
berl Oart. •~~~ant...-. Su...,.. School
Thurallay, 6;30 p.m.; UMWihlniMonday.
lOa.m.: Sundayeveningservtce.7:30p.m.
!Oa.m.: ...... 7p.m.; W~,6jl.m.
(Thatcher)
·
:: Bible ~aclllng, 7:30p.m. Thursday .
)'llllllln-.; We4, 7p.m.c.....,h...,.....
HEATH (Middleport) -CburchScboal,
· SYRACUSE MISSION. CherJY St., Sy·
PINE GROVE HOLINESB CHURCH, \1
9: :J) a.m.; MorniDc Worllllp 10:30 a.m.;
ncu.e. Mark Morrow. pasta-. Servlces,lD
mUeoiiRI.I:I5. Rev. BeaJ. Watt~ poater.·
Youth Gr(J.Ip, 4 p.m .; Wedlladqo, Billie
a.m. SuDdlly. Eventng services Sunday
- S e a r... S.S. Supt. Sunday Scllool
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearul 7:00p.m .
and Wedneoday at 6:00p.m.
9:30a.m.; Monllq Worlldp lll::lla.m.;
(Zuillp)
MIDDLEPORT CIIIJRCH OF OIRIST
Sunday
lmiiDc- 7:30p.m.: W_..
MINERSVILLE - Church Scbool 9:00
IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Hal~,
neodly oorvlce, 7:311 p.m.
a.m.; Wonhlp lerVIce 10:00 a.m.; UMW
lint eldt!r; Waada Mohler, Sundllf School
. SILVER RUN BAPI'IST, Bill Little,
third Wedneod"'', 1 p.m. (Thakber)
!lipt. Sunday School 9:ll a.m.; Morning
poator, Steve Lillie, s. s . Supt. Sunday
PEARL
CHAPEL
Cburch
Scbool9:
00
Wonhlp 10:30a.m. ; EvenlngWonH.p 7: :1)
SCboaiiO
a.m. ; Monln1worolp, I! a.m .; ·
a.m.; Worshlp Service 10:00 a .m. CMar· · ·Sunday evenlnlr
p.m.; Wednll!lday prayer- meetlns7::mp.m .
worship 7:30p.m. Prayer
tin)
.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
m - U d Bl'bluludy W"tltieoday, 7; :J)
POMEROY- Church SChool, 9: Ill a.m .
·Radne. Rev. James Salterfteld, pastar.
P·!!'.:i Y'ovlllmeetluWednM!Iuat7p,m.·
; Worahlp lll: 30 a.m.; Choir reb...-.al
· Freeman Williams,· Supt. Sunday School
IUOiJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
Wedneoday, 7:30 p.m.; UMW, ....,...
9:45a.m.; Sunday and Wedneeday even - 383 N. 2nd Aw., MiddliPOI'l SuDday
Tueoday, 7:llp.m.; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
ill services, 7 p.m.
SChooi!Oa.m.SundoY...,IIII7:00p.m.;
·(Meodowo)
' MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
Mld·wtk..,-vtee. Wed., 7 p.m.
ROCK
SPRINGSCllurcb
Scbool,
I;
Ill
Comer Sb:th and Palmer. Jametseddon.
LANGlmLLI!: CHRISTIAN CHURC!r, ,
a.m.; Worship !Oa.m.; Bible Study, WildPutor. Edna Wllom, S.S. Supt.; Cathy
.SIIIIda)'
Schad 9:30a.m.: o.Jlu Janey,
Rial, Alit Supt. Sunday School, 9; 15 a. . neotlay, 7::JJp.m.; UMYF (Selllon),Sua- oupt.; llomlq wonbiD 10;30 a.m. ; Sun·
day, 6 p.m.; (Juolon) every other !lw&gt; 'day tftlllq aerv1ee. 1:30 p.m.: Wllilll,._
111.: Mornlq Worllllp, IO: l5 a.m.; Sunday
day, 6 p.m. (FraolliiD).
Eveninl tervlce, 7 p.m. Prayer meetlfll'
,dill' eveolq oervtco, 7:·30 p.m.
RU'It.AND - Cburcb SCbool, 10 a.m.;
and Bible Study Wedneoday evening, 7 p.
IYRAaiiE CHIJRCH OF THE NA·
Worship, II a.m.; UMW Flriil Monday, . ZARENE. Rev. GI-IIeMIIIaa.poalor.
m.; Children's choir practice, Weclne&amp;7: :J) p.m. (Crablree)
day. 7 p.m.; Adult choir practice, Wed., 8
Mol')' Julc:e L a - .
ic~l
SALEM CENTER- Cllurcb School 1: Ill
p.m.; Radio prOII'am, WMPO, Sunday,
Supl. SlllldoY Scboal t.IJ a.m.; 11o
a.rn. j Mol1llllJ worsblp 10:15 a.m..
I::JJ a .m.
wonblp!O:IIa.m.; Eftutlllllleaervtc:e,
(Steele)
I p.m,; Prayer ltldPrllao - ... .....,, 7 p. ·
SNOWVILLE- Moralnlr Woralllll. t:OO
m.~· ....... 7 p.m.
a.m. : Church Scboal IO:OCI'a.m. Ckllll)
UNITED BRI:THJII:N IN
~&lt; Elda R. IIIUe, put•.IIUdaJr

I

ROWUS fOIIYDf OCCASION

786 NoiTH SECOND AVE.

Bol1.

1

Flow11 "''

••

snYI(t

LE-aaue, members in charge, au

P1•1"Y

P11111Hg

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Ohio

·'

,-

.,

.

• ' 'II

·~ ..

�Page 8 The Daily Sentinel

Frida'/. June 2. 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

·Business Services

.......Giillipo1iii......... . .......l't.PI'iiiiiinr·---8&amp; Vicinity
8&amp; Vicinity

Giveaway

4

~===:~::~~~==;ni;:::;~;;;;;;;:~:;r;~;;;;;;~~~;:=trr=:~:::;:;~==~:;l
Y••m••~aRw.A_.
t
bMo. 114·11"1-14U otter

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
" At RtGsonable Prices"

PH 949 2801
•
•
or Res. 949·2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16·16-Hn

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can r~r and rt·
core radiat1r1 and
heater cores. We CCIII
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We aho

PERM SALE
10% OFF

Roger Hysell
. Garage

ANY. PERM

11. 124. '-oy Ohio

NOW THRU JIIIE 10

KAY'S
BEAUTY SALON
169 N. 2nd

rt1.'~;L~a~ORD
992-2198
Mlddl
epon,

Middleport, Oh.

NOW OPEN

REPRESENT AnVE
302 W. 2nd Stroot
Pomoroy, Ohio 45769

0
NA~

tHSUI'I .... Cl

S+89-l mo.

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
YAIDMAN MOWEIS
ECHO SAWS &amp; TIIMMEIS

OIIIGOH IAIS, CHAINS

IY AN SERVICE CEIIITII
Parts 1 S•wi&lt;• On
&amp;I Makes

VISA · MASTERCHARGE
HOURS: Mon.·Fri. 9· 7
Sot. 9-6
Closed Sunday

949-2969

3/17/ 89tfn

Leesa Murphey
&amp; Associate•
PUBLIC
108 Hlsh St"'ot
Pomeroy, Qhio 45769,
Phon• (614) 992-2922
2·3-'89 ofn

224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9978

TIIUIS. LL 6:45 PJl.
51111. u. ,.., , ...

I

I
·1

AUCTIONEER

PH. 304-428-7245

I

z

-

!§Qj~Y

·-

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

-¥/ordf!:lem- Auto .,...

XD7SOO

pnrw:_,_.....,._

l)'pMii';i' Md ''"ollll word ~CIIJort.

.

DISCOUNT PRICES ON ALL MODELS
MEIGS OFFICE MACHINES
•
33407 Smith Ridge Rd., Long Bottom
B43-li4811

!i-25·'89-1

101 T•• lid. Cloll..... OH
J1010 2 lol. Fri.. 12·4, lot,, e,.l.

~-·

·····-l'omerc;v··---------

GENERAL
CONTRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL

.aiETALBUILOINOS
eNEW HOMES

. SINCE 1969

DUSIIY ST. SYUtiSI

992-7611

101 CIIIININGII~·0•-

ALLEN'S
HAULING

GALLON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPREAD
DIOHAUUD
992-5275
1600

5-17-tfn

CAN DO
MAINTENA.NCE

co.

••• Plr Al•trl A'f ..l•t"
Harry Wile

20 Years Experience

43020 St Rt 124
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
1-614·992-3664

Part Time Job With Network 2000

.......
•••u.n
............
...... ,.. ,....
... ..,..,, .

•uo

un•·•u,•s.oo
StaiD,

" • PIAII'"

• • • Ce. ... *ll

mo. pd.

'I'M-COUNTY
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS

In Network Marketing
Cost ' 1 5400 (Includes training &amp; materials)
BE AN INDEPENDENT U.S . SPRINT REPRESENTATIVE
For more info write:
Scot! Anderson

9AM-7PM
Paying today

May 31, 1989
(SIIItjocl to

P. 0. lax 337

Chantt

SI&amp;TS ..................... 52C 1111.
CUAN AlUMINUM
CAST--.....- ........... 40' Ill.
AlUMINUM
.VIIAGl CANS ..... SO• 1~
IIONY

CHESTER, OliO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODEUNG 8&amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY OR EVENIIGS

StET

Raferenceo

-···--S• to 30• ..

IIONY CAST ... 3' to 20' ..
STAINIISS · -..- .... 20' lit.

985-4141
GENEIAJ. CONRACTOIS
•• 'lll·tln
·
11·1D•

992-5114
LoC81ed Off BYI*8
At

Jet.

143,

of

Ru.

7

a

Pom•ov. Oh.

-----f-~12·-··

LIMESTONE FOR SALE
Quality .
Stone Company
PH. 596·4756

or

992-6637
4-14-88-1

mo.

K and J CONSTIUCTION
GBGIAUY

·lfn

All[,[ IIIII ''llfllll.

...

2nd........

IMHY. bovt •d olotltM
ln....,nO&gt;*o7, Jr. ollo3,1,
.,d 7, ~·• . . med.) ForiR
"'n lid .......

-·····-Gallipolis··--···--·
8&amp; Vicinity

of

-....................
D-...,

C.W. D"lo"" l'lu-1 6
Coli 11~-o••
lfl• I p.m.

r,.,...,_

rolnOI-·
.
ca.r... •••

... Pl•nod ,., . .._. of llau·-Ohlo. llllllc:HondAvo..
A-.. Ohio 417o1 . b¥Junol,
11ft. PPIEO lo.,IOE-EIP.

Y•dlelo. lot Juno J. Golllp.,.

.... fomlty typo -

.... - ..... 3!111111•out ... _
ltoodtollollloa Acroo. -~me
.a.. R•n 01lltlne.

8

Public Sale
• Auction

.....

Going out of tho loll¥ luoln1 fomly yord • • ,"".....
....... high ....... ... - .
.. _ _ , _ - 0·1, mloc.
'-llhold, oclll - - Juno
1·31n lolom Cent or.

3 fomltr.

f~do¥

ond _ . . . ,,

hd •d •d. 1:00..?
Dlnv• W.ber"e. Re.-.e.

June

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

n.,., )IIIII c••· 8mfth
luldc· PontlaC. 1811 Eootern
Md

Avo.. Oelllpallo. C.l 114-4412212.

, _ of llntlro ,_oohold. Folr

prlcM bololgpold. Celll14-4413111.
W.,.od to luv: Uood Mobllo
llomoo. colt 114-~017&amp;.
Ustd Almlture

bY

entire houlllhold

114-742-24tll.

•o

tM pl1101 or
t ..lng.

Qullto :
Pro 1940 quito. Artv condition.
C.lh Dllld. Coli 114-892·1117
or 11 4-111 2- 2411 .
Uood flrnclturo •d o-oohotd
oppNMI-. Pho,. 114-742·
2041.

I

Cor,... .... f~dol' ond lotu~
dor. Jun• 2,3. 8 :-.m. t.o.
,..,.._.,., 1'yr• ltvd., R•dne.
lnt... r, -hln~ our·
llllno. bod , , _ - · - •
Dlrdl. tDVtandm•c. June 1-3.
181 Oonnl Hortlngtr - Y·
Mldcllport.

IR 1215. Follow llaN e D~n­
wllo. Juno
2,3. _
Clillcl'.....
11... _
_ 011.ofO.

V•d lola -/ohlna Thuro..
FrL, lo Itt. ·141 of
Cent- .. ~ ~· llollt .....
lor, .;.;.,;j, .. ;,.."";'

Full-timemldiOIIIebrttoryttchnlcton for a ._.., oqulppod
Pllvoid.,'t alflco. •c. bontllto.
no Jhtft wort&amp;. IPPIV In pnon to
_ . . , "••· 203 J•okoon
Ftka loot- 1:30.1:00p.m.
DUKE CLEANE~I ­
OALLII'OUI. - d ._11-~mo 1o
pert ~ tlmt personnel·
appUcMkmt ltceptld, Mon.•
l'uN. -1 to 3 p.m.

a.,..

..
1

440 0 - St., Mfdcl-. lei.
Juno 3rcl Kl• Mid -~ clothin a. furnltuN, tGrl. •••' 1.
..,.-. ond 110 - ·
_~_
..._-_0II_o._..______

*•

1174orl1+741-1810.

Clnlc C-dln•or lor ,.......
Dl•nlngcl .........., fultl ....
h - In P o - with _ ..

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

..... In bind . . . . , , .
fln•cln~

2484.

•:r.

Rd ..

nee•...,. Free

•r-. Call Marltyn

w.- 304-182-2141.

Juat wlftt to ••n 1 Unit -.ua
morwv? Or wauld you Ike to
hWII a are~r? Ettl• WIV Awn
Cln help you bll1t. t.t yau c.,

3 lw., 2 bOlito. lui llnlokod
...- . , _ , _ •..,.
lrol •. . . . . . ,.,..., ,.rd.
2414 Mt Y•non A.... Polm
on ..._lo~
Celll04-171-1774o

"'-- ""coct

bolll Col Marilyn-•, 10+
882-2841.

12

Situations
Wanted .

,oot..tMOblltH-I'Irll.
114-441- , 1102-

Schools
Instruction

1111 Clorteot 14170 _..,.In
lluoiCNiik/11 :1.-. Col""4411-2111. • • "" .......

.....

R E-TIIAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE. 128 Joo:koCNt Ftko.
Col 114-441-4317. Roe No
81-11 ·108&amp;8.
.

CoM."''

-

- - :adua
polcl - •
-l elCllitretlllll.
...rtclty.
Newtrr
D.p. Aioo3 _•_
...... C.I
11+-18111. 01 . , + _

2 .............. hod. 11all0, HIIC. m.
·
Colll14--4318
.•
30+171-17110.

inl AC, 112 mL, -

z lor. , ........ · - • ""lot
1suldn1 tM ONo Rtw•.
taiifo T.V. . . lltblo F_ _.,
...... ....... Celll14_,1102.

- - t i M _.......... 141702111. AC, CIU14-37..
Homa el II~&amp; . o.t.
aoa11
locotlon. Coli 11~441-1421 r,u.•no-0111!1+441-

*·

1ft•

a p.m..

at

wook-.

•diM .,.

2 811 moltll•· homo dooo 10
llodntll'. prolor tldorto _.,...
Nloo
--... Col .14-4344.

Twa.,... . fDr rMt. ..........
104-171-1071.
,
_ ...
llood,2 304..Mottl.
- d H.
"" -·
171-:lfM.
:

WRI point hou• 11¥ ltaur. ltlg
• d ~m~l engine r • • 304871-114t.

frii,IIILidf

1:ioc01 ...... "" ...... •• til ora lind • ......_ 0111

., ....... '144jl

Businea1
Opportunity

nil!\'.--·

-·-'4,,w.etCenl•
AIM 1 .....
laftC - . . , . , on puas I II

dD

t,. mil untl you
lnvooll... tho off•lng.

-ornMy.

ttwouah

1811 14o711. 2 bodr- VIol ..
ri.,. AI ....... UfiOO
IN-Ion only. 30. . .lU411.

hwe

od

7 1 - · - 11a.tllll

1000 Wcolff ..- . T•tn1
Tflllla Commtraiii-Home T.nnlng hdl. Swe to 10 percent.
Prltn from •248. LampsLotlo ... Aco-a C.H todoy.
,,.. oolor Oololot 1-100-2211282 (OHOI7Dl

Juno 1·1 AI kltldo ef • Homvr . . . . Itt • aushiDna.
Rat..... lite. lt. IlL 124, Z
11.2 mL, oloove hut .... Hllh
lohool. ••d - - (Oicl
llthlr prcpWIYI I:Oo-8:00.

el-~---­

-•t. •:aa•

Yord Solo. lltu. . . . •d'"•·
, _ 1 ond 11:00. 7113
-..w.vo.

lot In - - M.IIOO.OO.
Celll0+171-:lfll2.

lt.,

Rod0·
....- lto1......
....
_ ..,...,

lid.

.......el&amp;l t,ml,, '"""" J z................d._....

34

Homea for Sale

31

•
o· - - - - - - - - -fOf lolt: 3 lw., 2 flroploco,
g.-.ga ,.... A·Cifii.IIOO.
A.Ono Ro~ E-• • - · Coli
304-171-1104, or 304-1711111.

~:r

II LOti I lct•a•

'='r.tot~.
II

polio.

5
........... ~~~···­

pold/1171 Col 10.. 17
110" • ao..l71-131&amp; or
J04-171-1'104.

1\ovo10!1-aldmoloPooolo
blo- but not

HM..- ai~D• a ....mc~~~or owr
h•lodlt:IIIIO. 11 fl. olu

-.m

otop
/ 1100:
·
-brl ...-Rd.
231.
1/4lfornoff
31-tott et Doool Goo - ·

............. h ... not h•hhot&amp;

Aprloot fiiO.OO- Col oltor
3:00PM only. 104-171-1111 .

117

Musical

lnetrurnenta

Air Conditioner, 1100
I.T.U./11110. A.n 2100. op.

pr•.IIO topoo/ltOO:ohtln-

14 ln./til: 100 lb. An ·

.tVt128: 2t-cllolnt/011oo:
21 rotlt ef 1 - / l l Pop-wlok•••ll2f:Ing - o' ln - 0 1 whll
chelr/.71 : truck tire. new
ER71-14/120. Clll 814-441ll&amp;l.

Goodu-:ftilnofor ....
Col 1141141.

•400.

I.:;=..;~~:..:.:..;;;____

lnclollofuol :t,:br l•ocroo, be1 ·
•~ B ~
I RMn, _. s IIUR.,.,. N
wclo Muolc. 114-441-0187,
Jllff
lnotnrot•. It 4-

-•ltv

448-1077. Llfttltod oponlnlll-

.-...

c.....

1910 Cllov Ch..,olto In good
lootty E.., . oond. . 11 ft.
aond foa' • 1, 200 or belt ott•. 1111
pluoo,
4-pl• 304-1711-1428.
Cell ott• &amp;:00 PM, 304-17111141 .

floyol ...... """ ...
lt+UI-1181.
Nlcolun~:;,~•- .. 012&amp;. 2

Iron--.
Gl end m.nr...
IIIOolloh. KonmoroDryor 1100.
114-UI·3113.

ltr..a.r;u..pi'* your own.
Cell CIMI de Wlnt ers. Rio
Gr.,do. OH 114-241-1121 .

-

.."l!'~· ...-

..... -

Ot•.c""- .,,......

.. 18M Ford O:P. •c oond. tO
ml• to gallon. Ilk• ov• ,..,.

m- 304-171-32111.

r:w·

~ooc~­

181111... c ........ 2 dr. ttd.
tr..._, P•• PB. nWI
good
cond. tow mil•. •1.100.00.
Col 30+171-337hlt• 1:00.

*•

1981 AMC IPirl. very good
coiiii.II.OOOmiiM. 01. 700.00.
Col 304-171- 71?9 ollor 1,00
PM.

:td4.."t:.

..... ....... lompo. ... ......

room . . ..,..... et Yllaoe
Menor Md Rlvnldo Aport•
mtnto In Mldcloport . From
1112. Col 114-192-7787.

--gclloot&amp; ......
ontlqtM • - ot1t ol~ffll oba
t/2 ..... - · lid.. Pt.
"-wv. COl 304-17114110.
1 boctoom opl. lor - · 1221
monlf\ ....... roqulrod. 114- Uood _ ... _ w..... .,. 1 _ . :M ton wlh
182-11111.
.. d
....
n. ..,.... ••~•an. ml•o- ........
hau•. _.foo-od,A-1 oond,
wwe
ken'•
In Pom•oy. Z - - ._~ 217 • . 2nd 8t. I'Om•oy, 12.000.00. Uood 2 - nlohod. .... polio, .....
"' 114-181- 114-•2·3101 oft• 1:30.
groullll. loarrtty ....... C.l 114-U:I-1331
1111 .
114- .2-.... oil• 1:00 ......
PDrtlbtelkllltld •len with lllttlrl
1211.00
. .,,.. -ory. PI!OIIo
I'"*Woodlorrnn.ZI.IIItlt•
f47.1DIIcloc. 1·80Q.I33~
..........hod. 3 · - -~, ....... lolfdwOiout •d bolll No polo. 114-1413413. MY'dROC.
·
- plano COl 114-1182:IZI&amp;
MJ~ 1111• 1:00 p.or.
8300 . . . . - - .... lor.
A......,.ookwM-d.wi'Vod lo-.
4110 Jolot
- · - .. •d
F...-nlltlid
Coiii04-171-4101L
...-. . . . 1100.00.
Antique
rnoclclno For We: PldcyaurawnltJ.,..
~oomotor. -~~~.• ook
'11~.oorntr
00. 304-171-.H,..tll-loolryftold.
llortlno• tt20oMon1hru Fri. 1·8.
Hotof.rt+441-- . . ,
E.a.n ... COn.alon au_.. sire
F-lood lffloi•CI'· ol utiM.. .... bod. 1100.00. 3114-171ptld. ........... . 118 ...."" 2820.
Avo. c.n 114--1141.
Compl.. e Kln~tllt. · semilllltclng Motorlolo
IIMPinl
wlrll
000
...
1
- - · bod lor AlooTrol•t-AI-- 11110.00.104-171-7128.
lloo:k. brick. - • pip-. wll&gt;
CAU oil• Z..m. 304-773.......... oiC. c ..... wt...
lllt.
WV.,
2 po. -lonll. uood 2ntOntlto. ,... Rio - · OH. Col
11110.00. 104-.2-3177.
114-241-8121.

':.:f

A-••

ow-.

-·

48
Rooma
~~~~~~~!!i~ .l

-ort

Spece for Rent

Two , _ ,,.,.., -lnolol
gold ·-living~- ....
... now oond.I04-17 .. 1114.
c

118

Peta for Sale

1184 Ply_,.. Turlomo 2.:1.

•c.

83

-·l•ltiO. o -

72

LiveltOc:k ·

1181 Docteo 4 w..., ct.• 4 ood.
311 -or/ 031110. coli 814441-2440.

84 Hay • Grain

11171 Ch•ralol pldol p. COR
114-1141-2811.
..'84 DootgoD-110 plcl&lt;up. phone
304-171-1114.
1t84Ford 1,. tonluvCruoE~o
••tlng ~~104-171-28111.
now - · •d
bit,·goocl....,d.
1118 Dodge Dokoto 4•4 low

*• of ..... wll ••• .,.,
off. f10.112.24. coli 304-17174111.

73

-·

""* ••

f
r - - ·. ""• .....
.. o
• .,,000.
. ...

(

..

W••prootlne

SopllcT•kPumpln~Oto.

buldlngo. FrM ....... Coli
114-3712411.

Wtllpop•lnt. point~ Ro• onlble m•. Qullllty wark. Cd
for "• ....... 114-3118021 or 114-117-71111.
Tr• • ltump remowel

copoo, colll14---.
Fetty Troo Trlnu'*'g. oturnp
,.....,.,. Coli 3114-171-1331 .
RotlrY or cable tool ••nng.

Mootwohoomplolodt. .odol'.
Pump ool• .,d -lot. 104811-3802

flon'oTY llavloo. opodollllngln
Z..lheloo001VIclngmoot ...,.
br•dL Hause oA
eome
oppa..oe ropolro. W.Vo 304171-23110hlo 114-441-24114.

•o

20 per cent off Mle on Zenlh
llavloo. Pont or -.with thlo
od, d July 1, 1819. WVo

304-1?1-2118 Ohio 814-44124114.

Vena&amp; 4W.D.

73 vw - · 11110D .. -·for
P-P.•"'* ef oquel ...... Cell
e t+IIJJ.11142.
1111 Doctp c.. ..... 48.000
ml• Air. Alll·fM r - L...
- -·
7 p -.... loot
offor.
114-IIZ-37114.

Odd jolot. polntloa

=-.. ..

71 .1oop

182·27&amp;11.

Plumbing

54 Mise;. Merchllndlll

a. Heetlng

en.

v-1. 3·opood.
1;11100. 3114-171-

Int..., ond

roofinG- dry Will.
·
homloccorpon.
_. worll. ft'11pool.
lltlmlla
work
11" ......... 104-112-3778 ..

1871
· ton Chovy
c..118-1128.
...- - v...· t:tiiOD.OO.
10+

luy or 1o1. lllv...o AI lie •
11241.- lfroot ...... .., .
Hooro: II,T.W 10e.m. tolp.111.,
........, 1 ........ .,~-

n~tch.

••SPM ,,..., •

ehade ,...._
ohrufoo, In • Don'o Loncio-

txt~rlor.

r r&gt;~n~rwl.•lrlrrr

-

74 Motorcyciel

CAIITEII'I PWMIINO
AND HEATING
Car. fourttundPine
Oolltloiii.Ohlo
Phone 114-441-1118 Of 114448-4477.

tl71 loaukl OS-IIIOE, 7100
mL, goodtlr-.oooclaond .. olutoh otbla/ "711. Coli 304171-t431.

84

Trol•- Sml• - t Il . Old "· "'· z •d u 1

104-t?a.8241.

Trucks for Sale

mi..

21 ecr• of hiiW' r. Rutl.-4 far
Hie Of' wfl tlke on.tt:lr4_ you
"" ..d bol• 114-143-1114.

•lm••

Jhn'• Odd Jo ... lundldc •king.
-~ roolln~ . .pont • • lo

1912 Com•o. 310 v.e, .., ..
mlllc. / *2400. blh ••n 7 :»
4:00p.m.• 304-171-157&amp;

mot•.

ATTENTION HorN Own...
Point P.,t 1o , _ c-.ylng , _
Pelnt Plus. 2•115 Jeckson
A_,a Point Pl--.t Phone
304-171-4084. .

IJI••

l..tlc:oncltio'* llt•lme
tee. Loc• , . . . . turnllhtd.
Fr..
Cell DOIICt
1-114-Z37· CM81. di¥ or night.
RogeraBesem•nt

11H HondL "Fot Cot" good
condition. colt 104-171-4472.
MklorOory, or304-171-1481L

now point. with JD Qulcfo.

Col 114-211-

•'

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNO

Ool·
llo Co. RON EVANS ENTER·
PlUSES. Jookoon. OH 1-IJOO.
· &amp;37-1128.

FOR SALe 1971 Ch•ott•
4·- ., ACIBOO. COli 304-1711721.

3020 JD Trtctor with 7 jl. 1107
JO ..,.. _
-11111110:

11822.

Home

lmprovementa

13,100.00, 0 .1 ..0 . 3114-1711211.

exc tond, PS, Pl. lir. loedH.

33 HP MF Turf Troot_., with a
" ·· tlnlohod-/ 147111. 174
lm'l d'-1• wtlh 3 bottcm
..,..mount plow. Itt. - · lnt'l 4 row piMI•I •7311.
... ftn ..... c.• ., ...
Hl-11822.

c
wn• flnMIOO.

81

1811 01. . . . 4 ...... t3.000
mH&amp; 14. 800.00. &amp;1~441-

61 Farm Equipment

2010 JO Tr.tor. ,.._

St:l v1r:r: s

1871 Thund•blrd. 1100.00
price neaotleble. 304·8715·
&amp;1l!l).

Rotary
411. blodo 1o
rototll er for welk·behlnd
Orwol¥ - o r. Coli 11~892· ltr""'*'l•. Addloon Plco. 2
-·
mM• from lit. 7. C.M 11+317·
3-"-olr CDndltlo..., 70000-_:ll_e_._ _ _ _ _ __
ITU'o to 1700 IITU'o call Str-loo. Vou plo:k • 11+1182·1101&amp;.
;I!, I o.m.-8 p.m. T.,lor'o

01 - · · 3
I·;r;~i:=~:""Wo':J:

ForL•ee

Elactrlcel
• Refrigeration

,.,_1111........

,114 VMtlhl Vlraeo. 700 cc.
3100 MI..
lion. tttOO. Col e t + 1411.
.:.,.::,17::.:..
...
-ulol.-_,..,..,.ao,..,..,.L.71-,~-I
tiOO .......... b o - m•
---wlhloloal•1•............ 2 . . . . . .
hof-o. t hi. 1 AFO.. Ukt
now.-.
. . - · -He&gt;
Ollttl. ... 114-.2-111:1.

to tlttr...,

-

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

-

d-..

=

: 11000 lltu Whirlpool AC . 0 ,.... lor ool&amp; - I n D-31.
Cell 11+117·0112llny"liiOthA-.,y'', -.00.
IDIId ook gra_ .... clooko 0111104-171-1714.
et 14110. Alto wol ond
olodal ..d.,naabln•a. 118
FNit
AI hond modo Colt 114-?U·
•veg~~tables
3111.

A.C. Ref. rtll'od.
......... "' 1
Col

,_

i971 Mtr~ry Qqn d Merqui.
I roughem. Eldra n..,_ ..d

Full oqultl-. 302 V8. 1911. 2t ft .• hltclllk• 2, Fifth
11711. &amp;1~892-1711 .
whHI•. dMn M new. Stir•
1918
4 hlch . Ctll 304-171-11801.
doot, lUte n.,, el equipment.
111911. 304-171-2100cf.,~ or
104.fl71-1113 oll•lp.m.

.,. _0_ .-on.
,,....

1818 Chovy Corolco. 23,000
..•• Ctl .,Ytlmo.' 814-892·
1970.

••e. ,._

....

2 .... .... , _ .........

rook•.

• oh•• -el
rtfrlg., complolo bod. 1177 Molo Cock• Sp.,lel 7 -ntho
Did. olio- looking to&lt; • good
~ A -. COM 114-- llomo•too.OO.
I04-U2-3177.

-

........ 1

*•·

""

....,.. ,.,, 4Cit

Avo. tloiiiJiolo. C.l l t + 4411-7PM .
.

..... lffl-·/117&amp; ut•too

!!!.,!\!!.a,·

pole&amp; 701 1411\ ....... 114-

.... 44tl ott• 7 .. ...

H - 110 leur 1171. 2100
...... Col 114. . . .:0D
. . or 104-77•1011 J•JwOI•
•=~••••
ollor I
clot- Pk. 114111
1 t a - - . llttl"" .,.,,.... .,•-"~
,.....,_.,....,__ __
11 11
~ •1100. II • ~ Will• ........ - · •

,.m.

II ~ C111t1t1. ........ 4 ..,L,
fllel Ill ..... AC. t,IIQQ. 112

......

~=l:on·---­

lfll
.l
. --Coll1+
...

11 . . . . . . . .

. . .....,.lo , ..... n• lllo
001to
_Clrllldo
.......
0111111 ........ ,.

r

111001 .... _

Auto Pane

a. Acce110ries

WDoden •We • 4 ... .,.. nloe

Polnt . .o-golng01101Polnt 114-.::.2ro;
Pluo, Oft
20 .
. - tMd
off Mtllflor
,..,,. I .;.......;
&amp;1711._ _ _ _ _ _ __
orfce
lftterior
......,gll.l'olnoo. You - t o o , .
...d .. potntwtlh--glooo.
lo~r.r, Sri,JIJIII'
"CKENI PUIINITUIIE
Phro, 2411 - ' " ' AIIO.,
,; LIJI:•,Jfll.'
- . Uood
~104-..:.......:.17.:.1-.:.40_14.
_ _ _ __
DmNita
lllnnene OOII"t mike a move wllhout ut.
cholro, -ont booth. ........
•'*'• ........ ._ ..... room Coli U·-L 304-1711-7421 .

Nloooolllnl
2Cerito~od.
-"""' forLou-. . .·
,,...._ -~~~~~· COl eu:
182-1711 .. EQH.

48

78

·-·.,eo. Col.,......

•

illvlnl
l -• •
- Lotti•
·- In LokoDrlvo
- fl. of '•

992-6810

.... • ...r •-oil

1 .,d 2

114-?42· 2178 or 114-742·
2103.

Riding mower. • pulh mow.rs.
3 -el biCj'olo "" ..... CoM
114-441-442• .

,.,.,..c........_ ...._

..... · · - "' livinG
pl-ot IMol
wlh daullle

A Great Camllinatioa"Qvality anti IM enalllt Price•"
WI GO Till EIIU . ._ ..

lulciiiiJII

- ..............
.. UD1
Jedto•
A
.,• .,..,.

=.
·-·-,
,_......_.........
_

•NEW HOMES •SIDING
•GARAGES
•REMODELING
•GENERAL CONTRACTING

Blllfneu

·-&amp;...... - .....

QurJ.lbu. 4 .... ltrlo:k- 1
112
1\ lui booomono wtth
21111
tlnlo .... ,......,
· - with fir ....... tUclnl

. ..._w.v..

c..,..

o.-.• .., .. ,

1&amp; ft. Thundorbird Wlh ISO HP

~hnton 1ndtll tl'lll.-. New top.

.... ov... ollllla•
CA a
hu. llol. 0111111•441--•

steal :Ill. ......., .... to
n-. ToyiGo lloory " -· 11-.
foocl • 01• ..,.,
... menevor
n_...
hlotorlo
ltotol In
--.OH.I. . . . .oon- . ... d - t o l o f - o
llotll. P.D. boa 711 MoriOito,
GH417110.

••,..... oppN•-- ood
tr•hpl.,poprcw- - ·
n•ee't•Nwlng . . . tolhopUne of otll clnin:Z
pine bonko •d - • for· room furnMurt
(pr..._. o
morolnlo&lt;-lonoll 30.,182- .......
rol ·top doole. c ....
27111. I .O.H.
tJbiPiti•CUrved gl•e front
12711.
1 blctQOm · ..r•Md IPt. Ullitl• pold, , ...,.,_ _ , ~· 'll.r.lnt Token.
IO•U71-2722.·
Lor~toloctlon
of . ....,
1 pom.
1Z. lOw •1110.
Mollohan
2 bo*_, opt. flrot loor, hFurnlura
fit. 7NarthWipolll.
ktlchen tuM hid _..d clning
.,._ offotr• ,......,~,..d. no OH 114--7444. .
polo. 30.. 171-1117.
Solo: llr..,
with
3 _ _ .,..0oltlp.,.Feory. 114-211-113 . 1100. Col
30+171-11421 ..... _ . 1:00
AM.,di:OO,M .
PICK-:!,'Jl.:.ITUIIE
In Mldcl...,r. 2 be*DOII&amp; tur- Mouoohold -........ 1/ 2 ntl.,
nlohod opt, .........d ,.,..
,.,_lid. Pt .Pioloont. WV,
..... ., ... 112-21111.
.
ooiii0+-171..14110.

TereTew-•A
...CA.,
-·
ar.. 1 112 ltotlto.
...2
I
lw, clo,-L , _....

......."" -

• • Point I'll I il JuM

2 bedroom • .,..._.... l.ttt,

' • Trol•o-lnROdntll'foriOit.
IUUTIRIL APAIINENTI AT or looo moblt ho- · Col
IUDCIIT Pille&amp; AT JACK· 114-448-4344.
aOfif DTAT•• Ill - ""• """' . , l h - Weill to
.....
.... -~
I.O . H. - 1,4-_

ft.__- por- .

1877 ...._
12x.. bodrOOOII. AC.
.........
- . good
..... _otlllng
_ ......
1411111-011

a. Vicinity

1,2,1.

pu""'-

Utlltl•' p&amp;lkl. '701 Faurth Aw.,
llolllpollo. 111 81" - - 4411
d•7p.fl"t, ,
I

J4tn ..... ron ..f128.00.G.E .
rtlrlwolor 1711.00. 104-171'
.
tiiiO.

oond. .,,..,..,...... Mltr.OO.
104-171-1171.

-·-····p-fPfiiiiiiint····-3t.,.llviNoV•dlola 127-

v....... 1 - --doholr
tilt, R... t1200.. FrMmolohlng - · .....
·· with
~~~· prl,.
1288.
AI
-roctucod.

T........... o r _ : _
- · • tnih
- ··
.........
, ......
_ _C.l
... _
tefllo "" 6oll I 14-.... 0127 oil• 2 P.!ft.
I 1+117-71110.

tlus.,•• wtth P•P'I you
know, .ndNOTto .-dmoM¥

IOI.. J..,ol,l-4.7271-oy
II.. Mlckloport. In AS., bohlnd
Carportlol•:frfdor.••• .. 204 · hau•. lloln - IOntonDr., IJ.I,
bob!l
colot,_. ..... ....,,..., ..,.,.._11-.Junoi,I. N.t•
Wloo _.donotln llut..,ol

,.... ......... • ·· ' 2 br., 1240.

'

-

INOTICEI .
THE OHIO V.ALLEY PUILII KINO CO . ....,....., ..... you

.

Top...-,. 01 tow .ooot prt-.

love . •"- taiiiM.
""""'
- . ....d akM-.
·

""""'
.... bod Mutt
-gaud condition.
.., -cat
114-211-1128 or 114-2111877.
'

~~.,r,~~;t~~

Ill • • • •

2 lr1
,...,.,..
1
· - - lor .... C.l

1971 Eloono 141l0, 2 lw.. lo.

lui -won.. fr• 011--.
304-171-2178 or &amp;71-2810.

a. - - - • • • -

-

eo•

Geu•nor 1411'70 3 ..... NUt 6
112. ........
f?,IOD. , . .70111, 1'.\bOII\ - Col 114-111-all. or 114&gt;' CA.Coli 114-ZII311-1741.
1.1 ott ........

*' lowno. C.l 814-441-

tom... ,_d

lot 101 -

Two--llomolnPom•oy.
Full . - .
et+a:~o
2304,

16

Ml
7413.

1101 lt. , MldciiiiOit
--"-Hinnloloory. ltt.•
Juno 3, 8:0&lt;1-1 ·

~nd

18i1 Moon 141?0. 21w.,
..
oloctrtc.
with "'""- Col
114-371-28U.

3
lolo II !loy
, . _ , Ponfond lid .. lot.
Ju..

....

gtote

--·V.prlottol•f .. lllt
f48... 0... 071. King fH.
~-- 111.811. bo... mlltr128.11.

~tt on -.y , _ ,,.,..,
- · Zlor.. ._,nlofwd. D.p. •llot. 1/2
HornopuiDh•odlnMoy.
mi. llf Porter on 1114. Col
~=· Jto-. Cell t t+ 114-11. . .13.

ctpped In OUr home. 21 years

olol._,

::...
L'"'!/!~n. 1~0

--lngiiPflll. .lo•for

•perlence. LPN on ttll. Low
lnoomo homo. C.N 114-U2·
1873 oller 7:00p.m. "" moro
lnfor-lon.

Thr• -Hia June •11 lltby
lor....., A7• .,,.....,.,
hau-ld, mite. Net to flu.
tlond f-.o ... I:OOo.m. ·

.t....._

-Hoovy duty bunk t141/oot. Coplolno bod 1174.
AI blct'oom • • • r... Oid.

etaw~,

II'M, Sun. 12-1. 114-44131&amp;1.

:~~~~~~
-~-~ oil
Compt usora undbl__., wfth ........ flrll
:~
oqulpmont/13,000: 1173

New 2 tr.. utDy roam. •c.
loclllo" JIC. No poll. -rlty
D•aatt c.lll1~44e-1117.

Moy

,.,,._ t11

H~•cu:.ro~t-~I~.~~~~G

Hou• far I'WII:. 1 • • ..._.,
turnlot.d. In t_,. NIWel-.
Nloe 11r0011• No 1M1L _,, 6

pOlo. Dopool ond ,.,. . . ,.
roqulr.od. •14-U:I-3(1110.

BOAT REPAIR . Mor111ry Mor•
cruls.,. Sp~ l llltt factory
tr""ed. Mobile lervlce. Prldsion. Mable Merln• lleld M
Glllipolila Bo.e: Cklb. C•ll 1142&amp; .. 11179.

VI'"• Furniture
Rt. 141. c.nten.,.. 1 / 4mlean
Unooln Pile. Mon. ·l•t. lAM·

•221

Dlnlne 8oi;,.Toltlo ond 4 ..,.,.
1141, Ilea: 0248. o.. 400
wood clntrio cllolr&amp; poddod or
uripoddod, .-lng • flt.te.

lout-••
Un._,,.nlc:...... · al--. no • • •

2 HPwrtlcolpconp. 20got. tonic.
- 2 7 · · - -...ortoty
to ........ from, -Ingot on.

101. 114-448•

F...,..hod lfll., 1 br.. f221.
Utili• pold 243Jookoeot Pk.
Golllpolll. all &amp;14--441&amp;
ol• 7 p.m.

We ••• "" oi.Wty .. d h•cll-

~poltoVNo

don~

------~;-Nioo 2 b;. , carpeted. no
pett/1271 nio.. depot" ,.
IIU~od. Colll14-441-4222 bo81111 11 p.m.

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

*'

loofty'o
Moving
lolo.....
C._,od
out ettla.
......
.........
hotol, lift golfory. Antiquo.
crlllo. clot'*'~ fllfnlluro. A.C ..
houlllftold ltlr'nl. ,..., Mid
IOiutdt¥, J101o 2.3. 10.). 170
Athlt., Mldcl-

H
- - for Rent
....,.,_

41

12x70. lllr., 2 ......... •
• • Hou• ty,. w...-o.
·-Dinnin~ , _ far ..lalt

Wll bob!lolltlngtn my homo In
er-n Cllyeroo. Colll14-2111111.

IU,.._

Untlr'*hldu .......
2111'o.ll2n.dAw.No;to.
~~~"1~~41 or 14-

42 MDbfleHomet
for Rent

114-241-157111.

Juno 1,2,3 only. 10118 N"oo
Rei .• Mldcl- 1-3. 01111 ond
boyoolothoo. lpl-lollngreta.

AlfltM ..... lluldhg kit.,
-bloho.,.,.,....N.,... o
=.,r.;,+r;tm..Ctydo

32 MoblleHonws
for Sale

ool•

Ref•.,• .,Iii.,
1o1o. Al ..oo.olo•--· c.n

- .. llutlond(Adollnolnow••
rMkllncef 1·1.

WI.

4 bo*- hau•.... _
dop. Coli 114--2843.
outbulllnet.l_oo..,.t •
other property •n tr1d1, 2 ._.oarnltoml. ~•era ctoee
t31.-.oo. Phone 30.,171- t o t - Colll14--311:t
11111.
NloeJIRhouJIIbNnt.-..
3 br., _.,.. m I .,.... yooll. 314 TMrd lt.. .......
od.. lon. In 1110'~ I a ·ccnd. Col 114-441-7473.
Coll311+171-7431.ott•lp.m, 1..:..:__________
-....
For ...t 4 811 lfcu-ldo In
country ne• Rio ·OrendiJ.
' AI lwlo:k ho- 3 lor., 1 1/2 ·
lohool dlotrlct.
.... ... 1 112-•wMhloolnon CoHI14-241-1188&amp;
Son clllll Rd . Coli 104-1717332.
Corpot kMcll•

nlble mtll.

O.r11_e11leJun. 1,2.1. Col•

f~ ond

phone 304-171-

Uttlellbd_. RHil. ' r ll:zl...

trtlnlng. llopr- NC011W-.q, com-. Avon. Aak
....... fr• gift. 114-·2·7180.
AVON • AK

Rent

Clrdo 1 - Jr. 30+171-

wfl~lortt

2 ... , ... _ ., , _ .,.., 3
lot&amp;
0. . . . . . fnl. trML
304-171-4414.
FOIIIIALI OR II ENT
3 bo&lt;t-.. :M bioi\ 2 •orv

1

Alii COMPRI!IIOII8
Cwnpbll HIUaWcl USA

or ._.oom •••

Velltl'
Furnlu,.
.
New lnd
us..t
tlrnlture and
oppii•-C.II14--7172.
COM·

loi.MidW.DriN.-Hovon.

lloo•t Ohio, 381 Rlchl.,d
A-o. All.... Ohio 45701 .
II¥ Juno 9, 1889. PPSEO lo ., "
EOE·EIP.

•plrltnc:e

t

Clood ...... 104-77.1111.

and two lft"'DDo¥mn rwl•enc.
to l't..nlll ,.....,ttiDDd af Sou·

No

'

;-,:. =.-:~~:.~
. , _ _.,._ _

P.M. M-

urae.
aeld. I
- n d A110. Clofllp ..
Ill. 11+
14411oll•7 porn.

lo• 1011· 1817 LondiU 11'5"
wllh Mor..,ry 31 ... - .. wMh
powertrMn .. llattool5nlection.
Mercury TroHing motor, lhor•
nne tr.. • IIAis mor .1. AH in aooc1
oondltion. Cllta1 .. 112-2'170.

=,..... .....

0322.

Fur" A=.,.,,

Boeta 111d
Motors for Sale

to Dlya ..,.. • oatt wlh
3 .... out
..,. . Ref. ap., 8 A.M . to I

t.hat.."

Aallton beauttt.l one ICI'I tota
wlttartw«t'~ publcWIII•.

76

JUT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wriaht

----···30
ondupto MIL

'
44 A~
tifi:~ii~~~ii~llii=~~~~~~~~
· en

r_.. hou• In
llutlond. 31/2-a ..... 20'1

c011oot •d _r....,lng wMh
·obiiMy to loll- .. .,... guidelin~~; mull hwe retllble tNn•

Lin-

sayin~

In ...... 7

•peot.t. LPN ormecMCII office

A.R. Knight. 118
P o - . Ohio.

.,.,.II

HlllliDn

"

stop the pre sses ...l just love

I .,... Did trt-twal on 4 • •
ao.e to ·t .wn. OWIW tiMIltrrod. Ptlood te 111.. 11+•&amp;-

Will bobvoh In my homo. Ro• o-

Par ... lolt on M• C - lid..

bod.,....,

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

6 ·2..

"You don't. really hav{' to

•11,100. 2U llliala• .......
lwi... Rd. 1/4ollllloft010•d
Goo Co. ·

Inc., .t.12 VInton Pfka
Ooltlp .... Ohio. 41131. 114-

porletlon. Evening. 8atum.
..d WMkdiV hour~ required.
lend a.tt• of lnt•IJI't. ,.....,...,

() IMI&lt;• .. I o -t• ~ • •• lo. OII ~- Wo•lll•..... &lt;t ..... H

Cf'OII with 81Mie , ........~

1 8 Wantad to Do

Junoe•e. c. - · ·

c-

Hut••

S1•r \dLI~~'

Glt...lo oolo. Kl. olothoo. ol
clloop. .... Ju.. a
10o.nt.-1. D - Altll'.
...... follow ......

I f1111HI-. June 1 ~4. 1•1 to
Unooln Plko. 3 1o 3110 mloout
~1
o1
TV ·~ dlo-

•

c.m:...

11 Help

eol• Allin Of tllln&amp; Old O,..to
Hoft.Potrloi.Juno1 .2.3trornl-1
t•k -loo boll, Oraund
IIPPI.... CM, ttl•lllon, -.ue~
rlum. ond 10btoo, dlo._, lown
tMder, humidifier. clot....
10m1 tupp-a toot fix• Md
meny 1t1m1 to nunwou• to
m.,....

4 fomlly, 1/4 mi. , off 8101.. 11•
on floc!r..
lid. J..,o
1·2-1. tom.. 1-1.

...... wtlh ........el
t a R e i - 120 P•
• · Muot bo wMng to..,....,.
wlhl_o.p.,_,.aiM.otel Helltll l.,.urwla¥1 and to
- I n oon)unctlon wtlh montol
hNithtr•ment t..._ For more
lnformMion contlct lerberl
eo., Cciorcln01or. C"""""nltV ·
Support lervlce, Woodl~d

IIJIIIIyllll'lll

110 louttllo•nd. MldciJu.. 1·7. lpr-. - bodclng ,.. _
...... p-. _ , . , , dr~': - . .
Wanted
omol
opplon•·
.,,,...
.,..---tu ... Iota mile.

tom..,

to .....

. . . for
dloobl~

r-.ulr• • ••·matlwat-t p. .on
with •ceiiMt ...... .....,..,.

TOPCMHpoldlo&lt; 1811modol

lot• .. ~ cllotro prlood .._
0111 to fUlL Toltl• 110 .,d
. . to 1121. Hldo-o-- • to ..... Aealln. . •221 to
1~. Lo01po t28 to 1121.
DlnlltM t101•d up to 14811.
-~ toltfe w-1 ell. . 1111 to
.,... Detk f,141 u' to 11711.
t400•dup. bunkbocll
cotioploto ......,_Ute
ond upM_
to fill.
loby f110.
_ _. ....
._.or- t71. • ., •11. •d
Ill. 0 . . . - U71 lo up.
lllnt OliO. 4 · - · - I l l.
Qun ooltlnoll e. I, • 10 .,,.
..... _
f28, 031
- .....
.....
Ill lo ldng frome 110. Good

For IIIIo ly .,.,_ -~~~
,..,,.. 4 .... 211othln-2
. . . of wooa GenH . . .

.......... pr....,.od. PooMion

9

3 lor., 2

loll¥--

441-111100.

W.V• . I•• ChempkNt Auc~
tiD,.. Rlctll... m. LlcenHdtn
Ohio --VIralnlo.laoldng
,......... 304-77).1711

Boctrlool opplon- . , . _
dlthet . furnltuN. flrepl.ae
-~~~·
(nOWI, _,.,let ol t y - ""'"
w ... ~natt. mlftV ..._ lleml.

3
,ord otleln Rodnor on
Rt 188. Juno 1,2,3. 1-1.
furniture. Acllk _,_, mloc.

V•d Solo: Juno Ill\ 1o ltf\
Unooln ,... Merlin • VMOII
. -... Mite. ~-. nolcrO'
- b o b ¥ - · . olol'*'t

w..... ........ -

Ald-.g a.wn ~. 7 horwe
power. f rom Montgomery
Wordlt181. Good Cond. Col
114-441-11 37.

LAVNI'I' RJIINIFUIIE

..d _ _. _ _ _ _ _ •.

A lllbor•. Pey1 tl J*" hour. IH

Vordlolo.Juno1, 2.1o3. 1to4
pm. 10711o- AIIO.

-ric--.

tlmo. E..,lng.• _ . . , Mid
wNil..,. hauro •• .,... • .
... d ..... ef . . . . . _ _

Furnlluro .,d oppl•- II¥ tiro

.....

h" 1.............. _ .

11uo1 Crook Coon .... nlty Annual
'ford Solo. COfo • Rood. lot.
Junt3rd. t-4.olot,.,Q(olollooJ,
Amigo 3 w ....
orefttnwt
rklna mowrw. window 1, furnltur1. appll•cee.
home lnt.tor. craftt, muah
mora

·"- ......t.-·

w...... ..,.,., ,..........
R.,•

117·
.. 114-117·
7MI.
"
"7788.
-·· -· Celll14OWNEII. ANXIOUt-IIUIT
8ELUI Thr• - - ,_~y
rtmllclated ooiOIIIII. upper 2nd
....... Cell "" ...,._ _
(1141441-2217.

- • phfJiol.n, .. d mille •P"
p ....ibiWilt. Wit
p..an ,
wlthrii1Nd•perl•a..MU81be ,.
dependllbla 1nd ft• .. • with t&lt;,

64 M ilc. Marchllndlse

....... lteveo Appll•ooi.
Upp•
lid . .,. ... ltono
Cr• Motel. 114--7111.

Hth hctme on 114 _.. til
flo
_
__
• ......,_
Control
ofr, Hwd

,_.., Pl•nlnti A-ont In
Molgo. Lowrtnoe •d Gollle
CountiM. Pold trovol, du11oo :

-• d- - liD
ClHondo
rodloo,M.C.
- •d
- l -. lloln or-•
1:00 AM t• 1. 3 . . . out
llledmoltd AldQe Ro ... JUM 2
•dl.

Ofll ... g,oo tit 1:00.

c_,..., torr...,..

I lot •

fulltlmo •port•..cl lor Mold.
con 114-tlt2·1101 ollor--.

4 . . . . . . ~t 143. J - lot
2nd.3rd.OI-e.ofd-

oolo. Tooto.
..tiQUM. tampa. furniture, at.
thing. boob, orotto. driP•·
Juno 1ot. 2nd. lo 3&lt;d. 41&amp;
Jookoon l'lko. Wtrtoh for olgno.

0 0 YE·II N ME fw-T J 0 I I
111,Q40.1U,210
- · '*Ina·
Col 111 - 1 1 ? · lat. 11-- f a r - _
..

111 H-lhOid G90C11
'
GOoD UIID A,UANCU

Doln·- . ._

M-.

.
LPN'o noodod In
ICP- ·
MR flldl~loo coli 114-37S.
1481. Olklo&lt;JII._.,.

...........

LAFF·A·DAY

GOVERNMENT HOMUI from
.1 .00 (U , . . , , . . . . . . . .
~~~~
... T•
tloo . NOW I ELLING THII
NlfAI coli (11... - o l 1·111733-1014. E&amp; 02712-' fO~
CURMNT UlnNCIII

~ ·· noodod ._II or port--

Ju'* Coro with "' wtthaul
orotoro. Coli Lorrv Llvoly 114311-11303.

~

101.. J - 3&lt;d. 1-lY•dlololn
-J--Troi•Porkan
lob MoCoronlo:k. of .....
- · ook oh- ond tlbl-.
hauooholda... amloc.

V•dlolai'Aimll•aut ... dltlll
IIDod to llollln9 Aor• lint time.

•

1 :00. Alter 1 :30-114·441·
:D18.

tne uauy

Ohio

Hometforl•

31

114-,....7111Mhulln 1:30a

Muklplofom..,,.,d .... J .... 3
an
Rold. Pomwov. I:Oo3,00. lnfonto. lloyo. ...,... H

81.

'*"" ..,,.,...

Y•d aola LoOn •d lodtrl
IIDod. Miry 31 ttwu Juno 4.

. . . . . . n..e.d for I yr, old
ltay . llot•on- rOOI-od. C.M

300 Wriaht lt.. Pom-. Juno
1!J1, 2ncf ond •• n - on 3rd.
g:OQ.I:OO.

T••
....... ,.

" " - · ••elwood loorlng.

Thuro., fn., lot. blct'do.
furnlluro. boll¥ 1o • • • colot'-o. tWit turnllu,.. mud. more.

......

Friday, June 2. 1989

Cornploto ltauoohot• of .,,,..
ture A ant~. A"o wood &amp;
oo• tt.t.n. lwaln'• Furnltur.
lo Auction, Third lo Olvo.
114-441-31118.

-·--·---··
............ --···
G1r1111 ltl•wood cr1h1.

C-ory -nhouoo, Fri. Jun•
2. bldlprndJ, drip-. pk:turM,
• -· portllllo , _ , . me- · dlohoo.- - ·
....... oolo. 124 Flrtrt Aw..
Ju .. 1.2,3: Chldr- clot'*'a
ludJprERdl, ......_ wide•.
dlo-.houooholdortlal•.

.....,

wood

or

V•d lela Jun• 1,2,3. 21
M8dllon Aw. n• Plat Hut.
Rol. lno:koofod. Col 114-2441 .

n-

......~

- J ..odondl, ~L 2
-h...,..... v. •d ....
. . . .d ..tn
--··~tolotMn~
hau. .
torport

......... ....., v.........

3 Announcemanta

,llllllll ........

3 MHe East of •Arthur on S.R. SO

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

JCOit 2.3. ........ flrollou• In Choat•· V•My.
rootln•. •tO·opood bite T.V.

toltlo wtth I ......
· oiH IJ.10 - . ..
mile.
Found: WIIMt Pokln-Pooclo dr•L
mlood. by Pom-Firol-n.
Gor..o Solo. lloln
lhln• 2
Clolmot1221...,...,.AIIO.
--oflloclneeot8t. llt.
'OUND fomaloltl-* .,d whko 124. Tholoo-oo.J-1ot.
R.t Tena.r w..tng brawn aat1•. 30+171-HOI.
2t.,...,,.rdotlo.Juno1ot2nd.
•d 3rd. t:OD-1:00. llllln Of
7
Yard Sale
•'*'o. O .E. St-. -~~~- top

lu-lolon ,.rd Nfoo. llohlnd
Dldi-Eiom.8ohoolJunt2
1o 3 trom8· 5.

........... d . . .. -

-

L01t1 •
of bf'• belween
Mlcldl- Fkt lt01lon •d N.
-ndAvo.onM.......,_.
Col 114-H2·2131 or _,4812·7311.

.~-·

Friond801. V•dlola1Moplo
11. .. w . ve. t•aooloo

Fwry, 2nd hou• on 11ft bllaw

••r.wFor
- · IIOD
.. coiii14-.441-

~--

Drln.l'tf•dlot.J-2•43.
~ aftloe .,. 'J cull .. ~ loti
of ni.- WMnll'l Md ohllthn'•
o1 l*oo.ConaolodH-Ing.

•d mens
clolhlioa. gl-o. M.L. plo-

or-•

Found:Tltlrd
A
IllI017.

.
V•d .... 1101 MIMa rbroak

WGINft

lolurder, Ju.. l. lloln
KJ.,
&amp;.rge WCINM, · IOIO mloo
lloolotplnvo lid., oft
Poooh , _ Pom•"'·

Lost and Found

lunMt Dr. MrOII from N...
,.,. clllroh off
Avo.

CIUN ALUMINUM

MARCUM

Middleport
8&amp; VIcinity

FtM kMtMII. COli 3114-1717474.

-net

Without Natit:t I

Oh. 45713

1· 11-1 mo.

ANGa'S

Gutta111
Downspouts
Guttaf Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

U.S. SPRINT

America's only 1 OO"fa Fiber Optic Long
Distanca Network
COMING TO TIIS AliA SOONI

lomCII'fd ~...
Milo lo fomolo ....- . Cell
304-171-1428.

Laro- flrlt time 4 t~ml¥ t•ao•

949-2168

ALL POPULAR SIZES AVAILABLE

Plumbing • PIMier
Rep•ir • Painting
Electrical • Carpentry

existinJ mortpge.
No refmancin&amp;. A
Mortpae Consultant
Service
Call 1·800·422-9010
Ext. 4051

!i-31-'119-1

5-25-'89·dn

'

Save thousands on

NEW- REPAIR

992·2621 or 992-6944

. COMMERCIAL

•CUSTOM KITCHENS &amp;. BATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMODELING
.VINYL IIDING &amp; ROOANO

SYSTEM:

ROOFING

mo.

l)WNB: GRIG I. IOUSit

REDUmON

Howard L Wrltetel

BOB'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

z ......-

,_.,Auction Hooo-. Vlnteot.
OH. Juno 1 lo 2. IJ.4. furniture,
-10. COUntry ollolmo, drop-.
blc-.toolo,now .........,..
.mloc.

Efficiency

•Central Air
•Heat Pumps

SYIACUSE

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

Sllw.w~r~,

V•dlell&lt; llodntll'l'lt&amp; tlllo!•
loll- Hll.

Rumm~gahle

MORTGAGE

4-1 J.1 mo. pd.

Gas

Call 992-2772

.,.

;:.:.::~:;:~::··
1 yr. old tomolo *'• Port
Nor-...
Elk hoorllll. a It
.......or. -

Moving to -

Certtfl.-1 Llcented Shop
&amp;· ZS·'II·Ifn

Slont. . . . . . . . . .

•H igh

FREE ESTIMATES

•

• • II¥ -

V•dlolo:Jiono2-I.J.I. T.,_Lot~n- ........ hot T.V. •

hau-

Lor............ J4 .... _
F~ .. lo lot.J ...o21o 3.

,..,.In

"DOC" VAUGHN

•fi'UI *lll'dl - ·

~~~~~,~Yf~~~" of S.llll Corana

A/ CSwu
All Mljor • Minor

CAU 992-6756

IUnlqu• MtV-10-Iald Corr~~:dnt C...-e ""

Witidows

Oom.tic Vehid•

NIASE Certifl«&lt; M•oh.nlo

TYPIWRmR

-"'·

•10 •~• of _ . , oon«tlon.
•SMII·IIIahl"' Nekonil:: d&amp;CIIIDnlrV dl . . . ,,..
fi'lgof75,DOOwotdl.
•OtMr
tutur• indudl _ .._ _ _. , "" d

Mastic -

·&lt;

~..*ll'o~-':;'l,t'g

Frl, Sol. 2 mH• Oottlpollo ... 141.

Mollt Foreign end

WORD
PROCISSING

INSULATION

•'M

SYIACUSE. OHIO

417 Second Awnue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy,

•Uro-.&amp;0 cfteriCt• cll.play.
cher~ or IMMDfV.
........ btot* mowt. cort• .... •d .~

(lftointood ®
Vinyl Siding
Seamltts Gutlor
Rtplactmonl Windows
Blown 1Mulo1ion
Storm Doors &amp;

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEl
SERVICE

::c '614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104 .

J&amp;L

4

·-·
-·
...... dr-·.

ott. .,oap.m.

Herold-

lnd •bl-. Iordi I blk&amp;llmDL

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

•12,000

4-25- '89-1 mo.

992-2284

-

! LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

il

992-2371

110 WEST MAIN
POMEROY

Ovor 110 hopll ••5.00
Ptr Gaoto
u. #005-U
2·!·tlft

-~Nitt.

Call Anytime

FABRIC SHOP

DDOI 1'1111

Television listilninc Devices
:Dependable Hearing Aid Salas &amp; bnri..l
CJ 'Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

3-10·'89-1 m

. CISTERNS

AT THE

I putthllt of min. H.C. Plcll1 rp. Li11~ I coupon,... cus- per biiiJ) SISSIDft.
1'Wo
,.. •so.oo '• Go••

PATRICK H. BLOSSER

304-675-3161
Far Mart lnf.annation

POOLS, WELLS

TUXEDO RENTAL

I 2 H.D. FREE with COUjlOIUIId,

COHSIGIWENTS WaCOME

a

GALLONS

4/&amp;/88/11n

POMEIOY ..UGUS
CLUI

NIGHT-6:00 P.M.
HOWE'S GROVE PARI!
Belpre, Olio

We Buy Aluminum
Ca~s. GIMo, Bruo,
Copper end Moro
MOII..fl.: 9 am: 6. pm _
SAT" am·l2 Noon

r

....... - : 101. I. IlL 111 2
MI. . . . . . . . .. . , . . . floto-

01-lnltl-* . .•lnltMolt.
- . , Fourtll A,.., to Rt. 7
louttr. Col 814-441-1814.

EVENINGS

BINGO

EVERY THURSDAY

14th I lain St.
Pelod Plta..t, W. Yo.

BILL SLACK
992-2269

4-11-1 mo.

PUBLIC
AUCTION

NOW OPEl FOI
BUSINESS

1,000

-'*

'!fiiOiy .. - - - ....
cC-lld..ap.,tf
.. lltrY » • o- - .. .

7 ...... tot ouool•
1o
• • Lob. CaM 114-742-3133 , ......... -

8

•FIREWOOD

614-949-2526

~--.;.__

WATER
SERVICE

•UGHT HAUUNG

1 bedroom, very
beautiful, furnished.
Housekeepin&amp; Room
By Day, Week, Month

RELATIONS

PUBUC
RECYCUNG .

•SHRUB a. TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

OHIO RIVER
CAMP
GROUNDS

JEFFERY J. WARNER

Clcims:
1-100-421 -3535

::..m~ ~o~n... - · •d
.... -..... . , + • • - ?.

111-1110.
Moo · - Coli 104-

INSURANCE call:

Ph. 614-992- 5479

AI T
1 1
•• ,.... 11 01
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
4-25-lfn

For HEALTH

llog. 614· 992-2477

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

. . V•dlolo: frl., . . . ... -

11 Help Wanted

~·---

,..

...,Ioo.

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

t.ooo.2.ooolllo..-.,y.
Coi10.. 171-IJ70.

'

�•'

Page

tO-The Daily Sentinel

r---

'·.

Local news briefs... ---..

Continued from page 1
ported by deputies on Thursday to the Orten~ Correctional
Reception Center to begin serving sentences recently lmpoied
by the Meigs County Court of Common Pleas. Whittington was
sentenced for felonious assau It and Taylor for grand theft.

EMS has six Wednesday calls
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered six calls on Thursday.
At 2:52 a.m., Tuppers Plains we~ I to Greenup Lane for
Richard Flck Jr. who was treated but not transported.
Middleport at 2:51 p.m. went to General Hartinger Parkway
for Jerry Ramsey who was treated but not transported. At 5:04
p.m ., Middleport went to Page St. for Lucille Higgins who was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 6:55 p.m. was called to Second St. for Michelle
Ward who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 8:32p.m .. Racine went to Third St. for Morgan Wilson who
was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 8: 51 p.m. transported Perry Mitch from the
MapleS Apartments to Veterans Memorlal}lospltal.

Business seminar set June 13
The Pomeroy Area Merchants and the Meigs County
Cooperative Extension Services are co-sponsoring a !luslness
seminar on Tuesday, June13. from 9:15a.m. to2p.m .. atGrace
Episcopal Church In Pomeroy.
Program topics will Include "Building an Image for Your
Store" and "Developing Better Relations with Your Customers." The speaker wlll be Greg Passewltz, extension
specialist, Community and Natural Resource Development, the
Ohio Cooperative Extension Service. Passewltz bas conducted
this type of workshop across the state and ts well known for his
dynamic and creative approach to business.
The registration fee is $5 which Includes a lunch buffet . The
program ts open to the public and registration deadline Is June
13. Participants are Invited to attend the entire workshop or
either of the two sessions.
· For additional Information. a copy of the program brochure.
or to ;egtsier, contact the Meigs County Cooperative Extension
Service, Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio, or call 992·6696.

Man arrested by Pomeroy police
Keith Musser of near Racine Is lodged In the Meigs County Jail
pending his appearance In the court of Mayor Richard Seyler
Tuesday night on four charges resulting from an Instance on the
Pomeroy parking lot Thursday night.
According to Chief of Pollee Gerald Rought Musser damaged
seeveral parking meters. lie was charged with disorderly
conduct. destruction of village property, possession of a
controlled·substance. and public Intoxication.

Will enforce parking ordinance
· The village ordinance which prohibits parking on sidewalks In
the vUlage wlll be strictly enforced by the Pomeroy Pollee
Department. It was announc~ today. The department advises
that violators will be Issued tickets. The Instruction to enforce
Ordinance 351·038 was Issued by Pomeroy Village Council.
police report.

Prosecutor... __;co_n_u_nu_e_d_fr_o-::~::-:p:::a::::g~:-i----he had killed his uncle."
.
The State also pointed out that
an additional reason for the
amended charge was that evl·
dence was consistent with the
theory of involuntary mans·
laughter. which alleges that the
defendant caused the death of
another while committing a .
felony. In this case. the act of
felonious assault.
Law requires. by having a
firearm on his person at the time
of the of!E&gt;nse, the actual lmprl·
sonment of Collins for three
years, The State recommended
at the time of the sentencing that
the defendant receive the maxi·
mum term In prison on the
charge, which is a minimumoflO
years and a maximum of 25
years. as well as \he additional
term of three years for the
firearm specification.
Sentencing will take place on
Tuesday-at 10:15 a.m.
Story says he felt that Collins'
plea was consistent with evi·
dence that may have been
brought out at trial. If Meigs
County Common Pleas Judge
Fred Crow III should approve thE&gt;
prosecution's request . for the
maximum sentence. Collins
would serve not less thail13 years
before his first eliglblllty for
parole.
If the defendant had pleaded
guilty to the original aggravated
murder charge, his first parole
eligibllty would have been at 15
years, so. as pointedoutbyStory,
Collins could receive nearly the
same sentence for the reduced
charge.
James M. Brown, of Middleport. pleaded guilty Tuesday In
Meigs Common Pleas Court to
the felonious assault of Dennis

l Livestock report l
GAU.JPOLI8 8TOCilYARDII
Ma)'rl.-

Fridrt. June 2, t989

Pomeloy-Middleport. Ohio

Tillis. Brown was originally
charged with attempted murder
In connection with the April 23
stabbing of Tillis at the Cedar
'Lounge In Middleport. The
amended charge of . felonious
assault Is an aggravated felony
of the second degree.
Prosecutor Story Indicated
that the reason for the plea '
bargain In Brown's case was that
evidence Indicated that Brown
had consumed a large amount of
alcohol and anti-depressant
drugs before the stabbing, and ·
that up to this time, there was no
evidence of any Ill will or bad
feelings on the part of the
defendant towards the victim.
According to a press release
from Story's office, "the State of
Ohio recommended that the
defendant receive the maximum·
-minimum sentence of eight
years actual Incarceration. Sen· .
tenclng Is set for Tuesday at 10
a .m. The potential minimum
sentences on the charge are
three, four, five, six. seven or
eight years with a maximum
term of up to 15 years."
Should Judge Crow accept the
prosecution's recommendation
In the Brown case for eight years
of actual Incarceration, "Brown
would serve not less than the full
eight years before be Is eligible
for parole," Story reports. ·

Stocks
Dally stock price~~
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ell ill &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ....... .. .... 27%
AT&amp;T ...... .'..........................36%
Ashland Oll .............. .......... 41l'o
Bob Evans .......................... l5%
Charming Shoppes ·......... ... ... 17
City Holding Co .................. 16l'o
Federal Mogul... ................. 57*
Goodyear T&amp;R ............ .......54*
Heck's ................................. %
Key Centurion ..................... 13
Lands' End ......................... 29%
Umlted Inc ........................33~
Multimedia Inc ...................94*
Rax Restaurants ....................3
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .. .. 17%
Sboney's Inc ....................... 11%
Wendy's Inti... ..................... 5~
Worthington lnd .................21*
(Key CeiRurlon ill ex dlvldelld
IOilay .)

Sundc~

.Southwest belted by thunderstoi'Dts
By Uallecl Preulateraatloaal
Thunderstorms pelted parts of
western Texas and eastern New
Mexico early Friday following
tornadoes that downed. power
lines.
A tornado touched down In the
Colorado City, Texas, area, blow·
lng out several windows during
the night. A tornado also was.
reported near Lamesa, T!!xas,
disrupting electricity.

At Alpine In southwest Texas,
southeast of Vaughn.
hall as large as baseballs waa
Earlier Thursday, tbunderreported.
storJm triggered flOOds In the
A severe thunderstonn moved
Midwest and East and a violent
through Big Spring, Texas, dropstorm raced through St. Loula,
ping an Inch and a half of rain In
knookln(l down the wall of a
20 minutes. FloodiDII: washed
parking garage and leaving
several cars off the roads.
· 15,000 residents. wlt~out
In New Mexico, tornadoes electricity.
touched down near Ramon and
The St. Louis storm. packed
Yeso and hall knocked a wind· winds up to 60 miles per bQur,
shield out of a car about 25 miles blowing down the wall of a
· parking garage and causing

.

----Court news
A plea of not · guilty to all
charges against Dottle Turner
and Jimmy . Cain, Pomeroy, In
the couri of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler, has been made
by their at1omey by . mall this
week and a hearing scheduled for
next Tuesday evening.
.
All of the charges against
Turner and Cain result from
their work on the Ohio River
bank and relate to alle(tld
violations of the historical pres·
ervatlon and fiood plain ordinances of the village.
In Tuesday night's court of
Mayor Seyler, seven were fined
and five others forfeited bonds.
Jean A. H,ughes, Spencer, W.
Va. was fined $375 and costs on a
charge of DWI; Harley Barron
and James w. Barton, Pomeroy,

"

•

Forfeltl~~&amp;

bonds were Earl L.
Wood, Pomeroy, $~. assured
clear dlslance; Kenneth Ray
Boswell, Neola, W. Va., $63,
expired tags; . Peggy Reltmlre,
Pomeroy, $63, operating under
suspension; Daniel A. Morris,
BidwelL $43, stop sign violation;
and Chelltet. Young, Mason, W.
Va., ~xplred registration.

.• .

A Judgment action has been
filed In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court ·by Delbert Stearns.
Pomeroy, against Mlcbael T.
Burke and Marilyn Sue Elurke,
Pomeroy.
An entry confirming sale and
ordering distribution of sale
proceeds has been filed In the
case of Bane One of Columbus,
N.A., versus Larry M. Smith, et
al.
David Stewart and Nancy
Stewart, Johnston, Ohio. have
filed suit against Michael O'Bry.
ant and Marty O'Bryant. Pomeroy, for a judgment of $2,973.03.
Teresa M. Tyson Drummer
bas been appointed Meigs County
Common Pleas Court domestic

Charles Cantor, Syracuse, was
fined $50 and costs c;m three ·
charges, one disorderly manner
and two on contempt, when he
appeared Wednesday night In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman.
Forfeiting bonds In the courts
were Robert M. Curry, Parkers·
burg, W.Va.; $450. on OWl, and a
$50 on expired operator's llcense; William Fry, Jr., Mason,

C~url
!'

relations lnvesttgator I~. serve as
needed In borne Investigations In
matters of domestic relations
and child custody.
~
Plaintiff. Debra Gallagher
Huffman, now known as Debra
Honaker. has been found In
contempt of court regardiDII:
orders to divide property. The
defendant In this case Is Brady
M. lluffman.
Dismissed were the actions of
Brenda K. Randolph against
Marvin Dale Randolph; Bank
One; Athens,'N.A., against Parts
R. Hess. ef al; James H. Hoyt
versus l.R.D. Corporation, ei al.
Finally, a Meigs County Grand
Jury Is to be convened Monday.
June 12, at 10 a ..m.

--Middleport

co~rt----

W. Va.; $450 on DWI; Homer J.

Grimm, Middleport, $50 expired
license tags; Johnnie Ray Rice.
Hurricane, w:Va .. $41 speeding;
Timothy R:• Richardson. Red·
house, W. Va., $40. speeding;
Klla A. Young, Reedsville, $42,
speeding; Steven P. llood, Mid·
dleport, $50 running a stop sign;
and Tl!flolhy E. llardyman,
Gallipolis, $50 speeding.

----Meigs announcements _ __
Dance tonight .
Round and square dancing will
be featured tonight (Friday)
from 8 p.m. to 12 midnight at the
Middleport Amerjcan Legion An·
nex. Music will be by the True
Country Ramblers. Everyone Is
welcome.
Free enlertainment
The tree summer programs at

Aronoff. ~

Artist
•
receives
• •
recognition

A visit With Joe Nuxhall...

Page 8-l

In Our Town: Original ·
Honorary Keys recalled...Page B-3

Racine's Star Mill Park will start
this Saturday night, June 3. All
the programs start at 7 p.m. and
the schedule tor the rest of the
summer Is June 17; July 1, 15 and
29; Aug. 12 and 26; and Sept. 9.
Country aqd gospel music will be
featured. Refreshments will be
sold. Brlnng your lawnchalr.

B7 United Preu IDier.utonal
SouCII Central Oblo

Tonight: Partly cloudy, with a
low In the lower 60s. Light and
variable winds.
Saturday: Variable cloud!·
ness, with scattered showers and
thundersronns. Highs will be In
the mid 80s. Chance of rain Is 50

Leglslatirre Is ready to finalize it. elderly.
Senate conferees will be ReLimbach said the OBM has not
publican
Sens. Theodore Gray of
revised Its revenue estimates
Columbus
and Robert · Ney of
since at least last November,
when the administration budget Barnesville. and Democratic
Sen. William Bowen ' of Clncln·
request was being prepared.
At that time, Celeste proposed natl. Aside from Hlnlg, the House
a 10-cent·a-P.Qck Increase In the conferees are likely to be Reps.
cigarette tax, plus tax hikes on Thomas Johnson •. R·Cambrldge,
beer and wine, to balance the and Barney Quilter, D·Toledo.
budget. Those were all stripped
out by the Republlean·controlled
Senate, which passed Its version Correction
earlier this week.
"From the Indications I get. . The name of the surviving
there's a possibility we may have daughter of Ella E. Smith, who
a little more to work with than we died Wednesday at Veterans
have now," said Rep. William Memorial Hospital, was lncor·
Hlntg, D·New PhUadelphla, who rectiy listed In the obituary. The
will chair the conference daughter's name Is Charlene A.
committee.
·
McClung, Marlon.
llow the money Is spent, Hlnig
said, will depend on how much Divorce granted
extra Is there and how much bas
to be added back In programs the
Tonya Proffitt has been
Senate reduced or eliminated.
granted at divorce In Meli*
Aronoff said Senate Republl· County Comn'lon Pleas COurt
cans will keep education their top from Michael Proffitt. 'tanya
priority. Democrats probably Proffitt bas been resrorid by the
will Insist. on more money for court to her malden name,
health care, welfare . and tbe Blackford.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND CUP!) - Thurs·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
· PICK-I
171.
PICK·3 ticket sales totaled
$1,275,119, with a payoff due of
$1.502,640.
PICK-t
2173.
'
PICK·4 ticket sales totaled
$226,100.50, with a payoff due of
$176.100.

ones.
-Release of $1.5 mllUon for a
workshop for 300 mentally retarded and developmentally dis·
a bled people In Lucas County.
-Release of-$3.1 million for ·
access roads and parking lots at
Maumee Bay State Park In
Lucas Co\llltY.

H08pilal news
Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - Han·
nah VanMeter, Long Bottom;
l',ferle Manley, Middleport.
· Thursday discharges - Debra

Burns.

Lketue issued

..

'

A marriage license has been •
Issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Wllllam Harold llol·
comb, 24, . ~bany. and Sandra
Arlene Bale. 24, Dexter.

By MARGARET CAWWELL
Times-Sentinel staff
GALLIPOLIS- With the EPA
making such noise about landfills
and landfill districts. rural rest·
dents are returning to a)terna·
live means for disposing their
garbage and · trash - illegal
-dumps.
.
· It's not a new problem but one
that Is Increasing with the hike In
prices for landfills and the
closing' of area county landfllls,
Indicating that the trash in some
·Illegal dumps may be from
outside Gallla ·county.
"You can'l rule out that
possibility." said Terri Belville.
Gallla County Litter Control
Program manager.
Dickerson Hill. In the far
northwest corner of the county
near tile Vinton and Jackson
County lines. Is one of the worst
Illegal dumps Belville said she
bas seen.
•'Everytlme I come out here
there's a new layer of trash,"
Belville said. "Since It's so close
to the county lines, so you can
just guess how much Isn't Gallla
County trash ." ,
The dump. stretching more
than 100 feet along the road and
talllng more than 80 feet down a
h
k
th
gorge. as ta en more an a
dozen trees.
It Is located on a small straight
stretch between ·two curves, a
generic trait for dumps. Belville
said. "No one can see you
dumping but you can hear them
coming before they see you."
This trail has Invited the
development of a smaller dump
ten feet down the road. ·growing
up to 60-by.JO feet .
"Most of this stuff is recycla·
ble," Belville said, Including the
metal car frames, tin and alumi·

~num~can~s.~a!!::!...:ndw:..::::::::ood;__.~:::.____;:...._____

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

------, .

_....

r"" . '
1 w.:~e
G-IWWII'4(:r

r.

A new fitness center with heated indoor swimming
pool is opening in the Sununer 1989.
~

now offer home health care
services and assisted living

PAINTING UNDERWAY - The PomeroyMason Bridge will have a new look by Oct. 15.

.,

lfyou hMR't !bought about I {
Bristol Village for a while, \ I
it's time you stopped by to se~
how we've grown since our ·
lqinning in 1961. We now
o·
hive so much lliOit to offer in
·
providing for the growing needs and desires of retired folks like you.
~·rea not-for-profit, DOll-denominational community open to people
over tbe age of fifty.
Life Leases 1111ge from S20,1XXJ to $6S,&lt;XXI. Several refund options are
.MiJable, or you may choose a monthly JIIYment plan.

New look in store for bridge

B NANCY YOACHAM
~mes-Seatlnel staff
POMEROY _ By the end of
summer the Pomeroy-Mason
Brld e
have a whole new
look g Inst.e ad of being green tn
colo~ the bridge will be a light

.;.Ill

11

'

s ~e~:fa~~lntlng Company.
c · bell Ohio was awarded
thamt 79S ooo ~ontract by the
o:to ~pa~tment of Trans porta·
tlon Painting has been under·
wa ·since April 15 as weather
pe!mtts Target dat~ tor comple·
· ··
o 15
tlorc~~~r~ontf:ct :.;lkect. L~·ng,
ODOT construction engineer, the
contractor ts using a three-coat
process to paint the local Ohio
Rl r
n After washing down
.

Sonia F. Jackson, In care of
RJcltard G. Alb, Syracu•, llu
flied In Mel&amp;l County Common
PJeu Court for a dlvcne frCIIII
~Dild A. JacU., Galllpolll.
Donald HendrlckiJr.,Syra·
cu~e, and Tltlil A. ~.
Snaeute. have flllcllll tlie colll't
for a dlaaoluUOfl of tllelr

greenish-gray primer; then a
white Intermediate ~oat, and
finally the llght·sllver gray finish
coat. are applied.
The contractor is starting at
the top and painting down. Lang
said, rather than starting at one
side and progressing to the other.
Traffic flow Is .being llmlted
during a good part ott he lO·hour
working days to one-lane, Lang
reported. One-lane traffic Is
especially necessary during
sandblasting, he .added.
Flaggers have been controUing.
the one-lane traffic
· ODOT has "bad some complaints" from motorists about
their vehicles being paint spat·
tered, said Lang, but complain·
ants are being referred back to
the superintendent of the paint·
tng company.

Belville said trash from Jackson and VInton counties are being
dumped here. Thursday afternoon Belville discovered a new
Illegal dump· and said sht&gt; expects to see more lllegal dumps
dl·velop. (Times.Sentlnel photo by Margaret Caldwell)

Accidental poisoning concerns
Meigs Health Department
POMEROY - Accidental poi·
sonlng needs to be a real concern
of parents. Norma Torres. R.N ..
nursing supervisor of the Meigs
County Health Department.
advises.
She cited statistics from the
Ohio Association· of Polson Con·
trol Centers and the Ohio Depart·
men! of llealth which shows that
unintentional poisonings by sol·
Ids and liquids Is the fifth leading
cause of accidental death for
children 1-15 years old and the
sixth leading cause for all age
groups In the United States.
Children under the age of five
are the most frequent victims of
accidental poisonings, according
to Dr. Ronald L. Fletcher,
director. Ohio Department of
Health, while persons over the
age of 65 are also vulnerable to
accidental poisoning. Elderly

deaths from hOusehold poison·
lngs have doubled over the las I 30
years.
The following guidelines for
prevention of accidental home
poiSonings has been complied by
the Department.
-Keep all household chemical
products and medicines out of
reach and out of sight of youngs·
ters. preferably locked up when
not in use. Medicines on kitchen
counters are very accessible to
young children.
·
-Never let these products and
medicines out of your sight when
these products are in use.
-Store all medicines separ·
ately from household products.
and store all household chemical
products away from food.
-Keep Items in their original
containers.
-Before ushig, leave the orlgl·

A separate maintenance project will also be underway on the
bridge In the near future, Lang
reported.
Local company, D.V. Weber
Construction, Reedsville, has
been awarded a $94,664 contract
to Install new galvanized ralls all
along the upriver side of the
bridge (tpward POmeroy).
Weber Is expecting a June 00
delivery of needed materials,
said Karen Pawloski, ODOT's
District 10 public relations spokesman. The proJect will start
when materials arrive and Is
expected to take approxlmatl'iy
three weeks to complete.
Installation of the new ralls
will take place during the ~~!!me
time painting Ill underway, but
will not ~e nearly as long to
complete, Lang said.

Gallia Drug task force gets funds
GALLIPOLIS - Slat~ Repre·
sentative Mary Abel CD·Athens)
announced that Qovernor Rl·
chard F. Celeste Is awardlDII: a
grant of $102,498to Gallla County
to tu.nd anti-drill •nd· jullce

r.

marrla,e.

•

DUMP SlTE - Terri Belville, GaiDa County Utler Control
Pr01f8m manager, wallis away from one of the worst lllega1
dumps in the county on Dickerson mn, In tbe far northwest corner
of the county. With the Increase In state and federal EPA landfill
rel(lllations and prices, and the closing of area county landfills,

- ~

s

~""&amp;\.Oolr~

__,

-

--·~- -

an~esan~l~stlngtbestructure,a

.....11...1; ......

Belville said that In the largers
cltles ."there are centers that will
take care of the larger items.
Including appliances.
However, accessible faclllties
are a problem Is smallareas.llke
Gallla County. because the mo·
ney simply filters down . .
"Landfills are where all this
should go," Belville said. "But
there are a lot of people who can't
afford to pay the fees at the
landfills. The key to the problem
Is that generations do this. It's
accepted."
Efforts to relieve these repro·
duclng conditions is to reach the
children. Belville said.
The Gallla County Litter Con·
trol Program shares Its efforts to
deter Uttering and dumping at
each of the county and city
schOols. Student activities and
contests encourage · the aware·
ness of these problems to the
young.
Other hope lies In the proposed
Partnership Program sponsored
by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources. Division of
Litter Prevention and Recycling.
The program asks for local
litter control departments to
submit litter problem· plans
. which are ,not Included In grant
funds .
The Partnership Program wlll
distribute these plans to Indus·
tries and business. who. In turn,
offer labor and tiq)e to ~lean or
cover up lllegal dumps.
· This provides a positive Impact
on tlie community and offers a
tax break to the Industries or
businesses.
' 'There's really not much more
we can do to discourage lllegal
dumping ... Belville said. "It's up
to the people to keep their county
and county roads clean and turn
in Illegal dumpers."

· 1V'lla
'"' l
·Bnsto
1 ge now ouers
more modern homes,
;::;.:;~
more attractive facilities
~
and beneficial health care . . -- ~
services than ever before:

apartments. Anew skilled
nuning hOme is opening
Muth 1989.

A Muttimedia Inc. New1paper

Illegal dumps flourish as·landfill ·altematives

Conlil!ued from page 1

money from an $8.45 million .
revenue bond tohelpSpongelnc ..
Elyria, relocate Its cellulose
sponge plant from Cleveland.
where It has 106 Jobs, to Elyria,
where 70 Jbbs will be adcled.
The board also approved:
-Release of $1.3 million for
Interior renovations at Clncln·
natl Technical COllege.
-Release of $1.5 million for a
law building addition at Ohio
State University.
-Release of $1.4 million for an
engineering-computer science
facility at Wright State
University. .
-Release of $2 m1l!Jon for state
assistance to 13 steel firms.
-A $750.000 low-Interest loan
to KrQencke Acquisition Corp.,
Dayton: to acquire StatomatGiove Inc., which makes armatures for electric moton, retainIng 70 Jobs and creating 30 new

~---

Variable cloudiness. High in
mid 80s. Chance of rain 70
percent.

11 Sections, 74 Pagaa

Middleport-Ponwoy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, June 4, 1989

--.----

munltles, hometowns, active life.
profiles and guides of tbe area to
celebrate tbe unique culture and
diverse people who make up
Appalachia.
Other articles In the summerall lllsue are a story about
homemade Jam and Jeily mak·
ers, son conservation and recy·
cling In Southeast OhiO and a look
at ·an Athens rodeo ride.

I

Continued from page 1

Vol. 24 No. 17
Co(ll'llgllkt 1989

Kauff to ·be ·
featured in magazine

State...

\

Along the River .... ..... Bl-8
Business ...................... D-1
Comics· ............. ...... Insert
Classlfleds ........ .. .. ..... D3·7
Deaths ...................... .. A-3
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sporhl ............ ....... .. .. Cl·6

•
tntts

percent.
.Extended Porecut
8a11'1117 lllroqll TIIMda.y
A chance . of showers and
thunderstorms each day. Highs
will range from the upper 70s to
the mid 80s. Early morning lows
will range from the m!d ·to the
mid 60s.

~nny

A tribute to Middleport native
Benny Kauff, a famed baseball
player of early days of the sport,
will be featured In the Summer·call Issue of "Southeast Ohio"
magazine. Tile Issue will be on
the newsstands this month.
Kautf began playing baseball
In the old Federal League and
had the leading batting average
and highest number' of stolen
bases for 1914 and 1915. He then
went on to play for the New York
Giants from 1916·1920. Kauffwas
later banned from playing, but
will be remembered for his
flamboyant personality and
early recOrds.
The article was written by Phil
Daquila, a senior at the E. W.
Scripps School of Jolurnallsm.
Ohio University where the maga- ,
zlne Is produced.
"Southeast Ohio" Is the only
· publication · for and about the
Southeastern Ohio region. The
magazine focuses on the com-

Cl

Inside

Community Corner: Brookman
presented award....Page B-6

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

were each fined $88 and costs on
·charges of open flasks; Craig
Bolin, Rutland, $U3 and costs,
publiC Intoxication; Melanie Ann
Winchester, Strasbaqb, Va ..
$375 and costs, DWI; Bradley
Robinson, Pomeroy, $63 and
costs, no tall lights on vehicle;
and Thomas A. Ricker, Huber
Heights, $63 and costs, traffic
light violation.

Meigs.. Common Pleas

another building to collapse. No
one was iep&lt;lrted InJured.
Thunderstorms &amp;!so caused ·
minor flooding and massive
delays at ChieagQ's airports. By
mldafter1100a, O'Hare wu re- '
porting Inbound and 011tbound
delays averaging 90 minutes.
United Airlines reported flight
delays as IODII: as two hours and ,
AmeriCan Airlines canceled 35
fiights.

.50 cents

.-

..
... --- ~-

l

system Improvement efforts.
·The Gallla County grant was
awarded to the Southeast Task
Force locate~! at Ga111polla.
The money will be awarded
· t~ll the Governor's Oft¥e !lf .

Criminal Justice Services using
federal Anti·Drlll Abuse . Act
funds. In addition, local officials
wlll contribute 25 percent of the
total proJect cdat.
(SH QAQU, pap AS) '

GBAOO~TION DAY ~ - fteM
...-- Tr- Blp !loMoi-Jon paPIOIIM al
thlr R lellow poadtia&amp;111 • dleJ &amp;aU tllelr • •
.. tile ltap dulq - - • • exercllel

"

nal labels on all products. and
read the label.
-Always leave the light on
when giving or taking medicine.
-Avoid taking medicines In
front of children, since youngs.
ters tend to Imitate adults.
-Refer to medicine as "medi·
cine", not candy.
•
-Clean out the medicine ca·
binet periodically, and safely
dispose of medicines when the
illness for which they were
prescr'lbed is over.
-Finally. use safety packag·
ing properly. by closing the
container securely after use.
Torres says that If a poisoning
occurs In the home. the Polson
Control Center or the family
physician should be contacted
tmmedlately on how to treat a
poisoning victim.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="163">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2753">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="36967">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="36966">
              <text>June 2, 1989</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
