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Plla•

14-The o.ily Sautinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.-----LocaJ bne
• {:8.·-~~-...;.• ~ea deaI h S
Pomeroy man aited by patrol

!.
'

A Pomeroy ·man was cited In a one-vehicle accident
Wednesday, at 12:05 p.m., In Salisbury Township' on County
Road 20, aboutaquarterofa mllewestofS.R. 7,accordlngtothe
GaWa-Mel&amp;s Post of the ·State Highway Patrol.
Mark Elliott, 19, was cited for driving without a seat belt after
his 1977 Jeep CJ-5 went off the left side of .the road and hit a
JUilrdrall. He was drlvfng east at the time.
·
.

·Arnott named spelling champ
Jason Arnott, an eighth grader, w~s named champlo~ speller
of the Southern Junior High School, and will repfl,!sent the
school at tlie Meigs County Spell!ng Bee on March 9 at Eastern
High School.
Arnott was named champion at the school bee held this
wceek. Jason Is the son of William and. Stephanie Arnott,
Syracuse. First runner-up was S~ane Circle, also an eighth
grader and Wendy Harmon was second runner -up and seventh
grade champion.

Thursday, March 3, 1988 .

Roeemary While

·day morning at Veterans Memor-

~~rvlces

are being arranged at
""
lal Hospital following an ex- · the Rawlings-Coat-Blower Fun- -

Rosemary P . White,

II~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~;;~;;~;;;;;:;:;:;:;:;:~er;a~I~H~o;m~e~l~n~M~I~d~dl~e~por~t.~;;-~St.,
tended Jllness .

Church
notices

ELBERFELDS-WEEKEND SAVINGS
CHECK OUT THE NEW .
SPRING FASHIONS

One player has winning tieket
CLEVELAND iUPI) - One
Ohio Super Lotio player is
eligible to cllilm a $21 million
jackpot after picking all six
winning nu.m bers In Wednesday
night 's drawing.

,,
1

Vo~31. No.20B ·.
htod 1988

c

Sale
Spring

BRA

Handbags

SAl.£
.

bras. Choose
d Super Spo~
nd white.
Fuller Figure,. ~~tiV lined , in be•ge a
. tt cup or lg
aC? ze• 32 A to 440.._ .
•••• sa.L£
" 57.1

a·

s ..

. G $CJ.00 BIA5 ••••••••••• SAL£ $8,•38
II • 510.50 1115••••••••••••• SAL£ $CJ.1I
I£G. 511.50 BIAS •••••••••••••
. 1£G. .
.
'

The name of the player will be
anno\lnced after the winning
ticket Is validated by lottery
officials, a lottery commission
spokesman said today. The win·
nlng numbers were 1. 27., 29, 39, 42
and 44.

Annual meet Friday
The annual meeting of the
Buckeye Joint -County Se lfInsurance Council will be held at
10:30 a.m. Friday ai the Athens
County Home in Athens.
Board lo meet
The Meigs County Board of
Mental Ret a rdation Developmental Disabilities will ·
. meet at 7 p.m. Monday. The
meeting has been rescheduled
from March 14 so that board
members can attend a SOardmanship Symposium on that
date.

SALE! FRIDAY &amp; SATURDA1

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

.KNIT SHIRTS-Our new spring and summer selection - sizes S, M, L, XL, XXL
alld 3XL, plus tall aizes. Solid
colors and patterns.

Men's $6,95 Shirts ......... S5.91
Man's 512.95 Shirts ..... s11.01
Men's 514.95 Shirts ..... Sl2.71
Men's 519.95 Shirts .... .S16.96

·· Hospital news

FRIDAY·&amp;·
SATURDAY SAtE!._
'

JACKETS

UV. RM. SUITE
lag. 1339.9s

$199 95
SA¥1'140

Our new selectio.n
· for spring and summer. Sizes S, M, L,
XL plus big sizes.
You'll like the new
looks and the special
sale prices.

519.95
522.95
524 •.95
539.9.5

By DAVID VESEY
VPI Buldness WJ:tter
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
economy created 530,000 new
Jobs In February to drive down
unemployment 0.1 percentage
point to 5. 7 percent, the lowest
level since 1979, the Labor
Department sa!d today.
Most of the new jobs were In
services Industries, especially
health, . business, retail and .
. who,lesale trade.
,
Total · clvlllan employment
rose by 280,000 to 114.4 million,
according to the department's ·
Bureau of Labor Statistics. The
jobless rate, which was 5.8 ·

percent last month, has fallen 0.3
percentage point since October
and was nearly a full point lower
than a year ago.
The 5.7 percent rate ·ln February was the lowest since a 5. 7
percent rate In July 1979, the
department said.
All figures were adjusted for
seasonal variations.
There was little change lit the
jobless rate In February lor adult
men at 4.9 percent, adult women
at 5.2 percent, teenagers at 15.4
percent, whites al4.8 percent and
blacks at 12.6 percent. unemployment among · Hispanic
workers jumped to 8.3 percent

from 7.2 percent In January, the
department said.
The 6. 9 million Americans
unemployed last month was Ultle
changed from January. The
median duration of unemployment was 6.4 weeks, also unchanged from January but
slightly lower than a year earlier . The proportion ofthe popula·
lion with jobs was at a record 62.2
percent In February.
The large gain . In non'
agricultural payroll employment
ot 530.000 In February followed a
smaller Increase ot 175,000 the
month before. Construction employment saw gains while the

Spring
a·louse SpeCial

I

KNIT SHIRTS
Our new selection for spring and
summer. Sizes 8 through 20. ·
Take advantage of an early se·
lection and· save. this weekend.

_Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys

57.95 Shirts ........ S6.76
59,95 Shirts ........ 58.46
512.95 Shirts .... s11.01
518.95 Shirts .... S16.11

'

JACKETS .................... 516.96
JACKETS .................... 519.51
JACKETS ...............,•••• 521.21
JACKETS ••••••;...........~. 533.96

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel Correspondent
The ·possibility of obtaining
village owned cable service.
·deslill proble111s on the marina,
possible annexation, an ordl·
nance on house numbering and
advertising for a pool manager
and !He guards were some of the
subjects discussed when Syracuse VIllage Council met In
regular session Thursday night.
Jack Williams, councilman,
told council of his meeting with
· ~L~dleROrt ~unc!l-,!n ;regard to
obtallllng vllliige operated cable
service. W!Uiams explained that
he and Kenneth Buckley, councilman, met, with Middleport Council and discussed the lss11e since
Middleport Is trying to obtain
their own cable system .
Williams explained that small
towns are going to have to come
up with revenue to continue
village operations. "We · are
trying to operate on a shoestring
and
we have been fortunate In
'
said. Seventy.tlve percent of the Pl'l!)ect Ill to be
EBOSJON PROBLEM TO BE OORRECl'EDreceiving
grants lor tlie village
paid from the SoU ConserYatlon Service's ·
!Melp Co1J11IY IDghway · Superintendent Ted
as well as the fire department",
Waner and County Engineer ~hiUp Robertalo!lk .Resource ConserYatlon and Developm~at ProWilliams said.
gram through Buckeye RIDs-Hocking Valley
over a portion of Leading Creek bordering County
Williams went on to explain
' ~ 10 Dext,er. The creek Is to be altered later ·Regional Developmen~ Dlatrlcl. The remalnlnl25 that the village could offer
percent match will be provide throu1h IDidnd
IIIII, ,.aar 1o ~~~-- room to widen the road and
customers much better service.
service,
aa hauUng stone and other
~ llllplal, pardfiUJ, Eroalon of the crt;ek bank h~ materla\s,such
Williams will head the project
from the county highway department.
1~lllutallatlon 'of guardralllmpo&amp;alble without
and he Intends to Investigate
Starting date for the project baa not ~e set Roberts
' widenln1 the road;.Paperwork to bid the project,
other
systems operating much
said.
·
1 es~ at $30,080,'1&amp; almost comple~ Roberts
the same as Syracuse and
Middleport Will operate II a cable
system tor the villages can be
obtained.
Meeting with council was Phil
Roberts, county engineer who Is
,,'
doing the engineering work on
The face v~lue of the Macy's providing for the reimbursement
TO~ONTO (UPI) - Raider
the
marina, who explained that
$6.7
billion,
but
of
the
expenses
of
a
so-called
·
deal
was
about
~Obert Campeau says his latest
basically
the problems faced In
arbitrageurs
said
Its
blended
white
knight
would
not
necessarc
b0$tlle offer for Federated De·
completing
the marina are the
value
ranged
between
$67
a
lly
be
unlawfuL"
partment Stores Inc. Is worth
changes
that
the Ohio Depart$6
billion,
and
$70
Macy's
would
riot
comment.
share,
or
about
abOut $68.50 a share, or $6.2
ment
oi-Recreation
keep making.
Arbitrageurs - who seek. to
~IUion, and . he warned rival a share, or $6.3 billion.
One
or
the
changes
for
Instance Is
Campeau amended his exist- · make money In a takeover
bidder R.H. Macy &amp; Co. he would
ODR
wants
to
Increase
the size of
lng tender of $66·a share, or S5.9 situation by buying shares at
not surrender.
The Campeau Corp. chairman billion. His new bid offered $75 a below the price they think
1sald Thursday he Is confident of
share for 70.5 million shares. ultimately will be offered That
would be followed by a speculated Campeau could
success In his 6-week-old quest.
merger
' paying $44 each for sweeten his bid possibly to $69.50
·, He slammed Macy's over soremaining
shares.
a share, apparently based on a
called breakup provisions of Its
Campeau
spokeswoman
said
Federated statement W~nes­
A
definitive agreement to acquire
there
are
about
.
90.8
million
day.
Federated said Campeau's
' Federated of Cincinnati, parent
shares
on
a
fully
advisers
recommended he offer
Federated
..of Bloomingdale's and Abraham
'. ·
· , $6 9. 50 u n de r' certaIn
&amp; Straus, In 11 cash-and· diluted basis. •
Campeau also said In a state- clrcumstahces.
securities deal.
COLuMBUS, Ohio (UPI) But Campeau said, "Our offer The chalrmari of a House sub·
! "We're not giving up the ment Its previously announced
fight," the developer said II) a sources of financing still were Is $68.50 ... our bid Is on the · committee studying whl:'ther to
telephone Interview. "We're available 81Jd It was d!scusslng table."
repeal tl}e state's . mandatory
with commElrclal banks· terms of . 1 Arbitrageurs, predicting the seat belt law Is hoping lor a
very
conflden
t."
1
Campeau later warned Macy's a margin credli facility for the light was far from over, said
calmer atmosphere next week to
Macy's was under pressure to continue a hearing on the
balance of the t!nanclng.
t In a letter the breakup fees were
Campeau said In his letter he disclose details to pack up the proposal.
f unlawfUl.
·
·
Atbltraaeurs awaited develop- would mount "a vjgorous legal alleged value of Its deaL ·
Rep. .Robert E. Hagan, D·
"Everybody would tender to . Madison, chairman of the sub- .
mellta In the costly fight for challenge" to the "blatantly
America's filth-largest retailer. unlawful" breakup fees. He was Campeau If It comes down to It,''
committee of the House High·
expecting the bidding war with referring to provisions that one trader said, adding Campeau ways and Safety Committee,
Macy's to escalate. Ar least tw~ would see Federated pay up to first would be forced to lnvali· abruptly adjourned Thursday's
traders said they leaned toward · $45 million In Macy's expenses If date .Federated's "polson-pill" hearlna after a dispute with the
the deal is busted.
antltakeover defense In court.
·
Campeau's cash bid.
bill's sponsor Rep. Richard
Increase
the
"I'm '· expecting Macy's to Rench, R·Milan, over the presCampeau
would
Analylta were reluctant to,
pndlct wllether Campeau, which back end of his deal by $2.20 pj!r come back and JJuatity how their ence ot pbototrraphera and conacquired Allied Stores Corp. of remaining share It those IE!!!s are otter'a better, Ulan $69.50 all trol o1 the lileetlng.
New York for ~.5 billion In 1986, killed to bring the bid, he said, to ~h." lie ..liS. ''It ain't ~r. so
And when th.e audience showed
there's no reason to ·do anylhtna Its dlsaaUI1action with testimor !\lacy's, seeklni to torm a abOut $68.50 a share.
"It's 10 llllfalr wbat they have rllbt aow. We bave two people ony, Hapa tbreatened to have
....... empire that ~
a
doae," he said In tile lntei'VIew. llabtiJW over ~ ua more the aergeaat-at-arma remove
IDNYftal
''rller'll never 'lulaeld. The maney,''·
·
,
·
them.
, cOurts wiD turn tlll!m down.''
Ca!!~paBU made hll flrat bid
Only two wltn!!Sika had testi·
Proteuor 8arvey Goldlclllinld ' JH. J&amp;.. at .., a allare, or --~ fled with aevera.J otbera waitln&amp;
at tile Columbia UnMralty bWIOn. Tbe offer wu plllled up Ia the --capac~ IUCIIeace
Sclioot ot Law said •'oae WOUld unUI be forced Fedentecuo the WileD Hlpn ad)oQnlld tba beer·
have · to
· the contnetllll btiraaiDtna ~ w1tll the prom· 1ntr about an boar aflier It batran.
O:~::!:~~c~:ire, butlfMacy'a In ot . . a ahare, or 16.1 blllloll,
IJapJi ..11 be wu tr)Uatopt
a1
&amp;taten1811ta are In a friendly dee!.
I 1'00111 Bad time ,ICMdllie for
vslue, ou
a
Maoy'a stepped Ill MOIIday aa · MXt 'ftell to naume tballllrlq.
"I'm ID communlcaUoD with

'*

1-2 Pc. Living Room Suitt-Likt Ntwl
1-0ccasional Uving Rm. Chair-lib Ntwl
1-Stt lox Springs &amp; Mattress
1-Bookcase Headboard w/footboard

The average workweek for all
production or non -supervisory
workers on private payrolls
lncrased 0.2 hour last month to
34.9 hours. The manufacturing
workweek, however, declined 0. 2
hour lo 40.9 hours while factory
overtime fell OJ hour to 3.8 hours.
Average hourly earnings fell
0.2 percent In February while
average weekly earnings rose 0.4
percent,duetothelncreaselnthe
workweek.
Without seasonal adjustment,
average hourly earnings were .
down $.01 to $9.17 and average
weekly earnings rose $.58 ·to
$316.37, the department said.

the ramp to 30 feet.
and ,go over the applications on
Roberts stated that with the April 4, at 7 p.m .
grant funds and the village
In other business Ernie Slsslon
matching funds tliey will be able suggested that all council
to financially put In the parking members meet and tour the park
. lot and the ramp but will not have to see what Is needed to up-grade
·enough money to put In docking the park In order to get · work
facilities.
started before the baseball seaR&lt;1berts explained that he and son gets underway. Council will
Robert Wingett, project engi- meet at the park Tuesday, March
neer, will meet with representa· 8, at 6 p.m.
lives of ODR In Columbus along ·
Jim Hill, councilman , reported
with Joyln BOster,. State Repre- that. the parade to kick-oft the
sentative and Jan Long, State baseball season will be held May
Senator. "to work out the design 14. Hill stated tliata, o;qunty band
problim1s. ticcc:iralng to Roberts and possibly a second band,
the marina must be completed along with a gospel group have
this summer.
agreed they will take part In the
Council In discussing utilities ceiebratlon.'It has been Indicated
being offered to residents outside there 'will be floats taking part In
the village noted that significant the parade.
Increases must be considered to
It was noted that donations for
maintain service unless the prop- the park area are needed. Donaerty outside the village Is an- tions may be sent to Janice
nexed. Council Intends to give the Lawson, clerk-treasurer. .
·
matter and lndepth study.
Mayor Eber Pickens reported
The ordinance commtttee Is to that burning permits must be
meet prior to the next regular obtained by residents If they
meeting of council to draw up an Intend to bu rn. Also, permits are
ordinance that will require resl· good for Of!IY one week and
dents to place their assigned burning can be done only after 4
house numbers on their property. p.m. Pickens noted that new
Meet)ng wl th council was permits are being drawn up with
Roger Michael, project engineer · some changes In the wording.
for house numbering, In regard
Pollee chief jJm Connolly
to some minor problems. Ml· reported that stop signs are need
chael noted that the directories at Ash and Carleton, May and
for the village have not been Carleton, Dusky Street from
printed and II anyone has any Seventh and Hubbard and !Porn ·
questions or·comments or spell- the ballpark parking lot · to
Ing corrections to please contact Bridgeman.
Janice Lawson by March 10 In
Connolly also stated that reorder to get the directories duced speed signs are also
printed. Michael stated that net!!led and no soliciting signs.
Information In the directories .. A letter was reclved from the
will explain how house numbers Meigs County Litter Control
were assigned.
asking the village to again take
Council will be advertising for part In Clean up Ohio Week from
a pool manager and life guards. · April 23 -,30.
•
Applications must be In by April
Council was notified by the
1. The pool committee will meet
Continued for page 12

State _will resume hearing on
repeal of Ohio's seat belt law

l

USED FURNITURE ·

department said.
Much of employment growth In
the past year has been In the
executive, administrative and
managerial occupations, which
accounted for more than a third
of the 3 mii!IOJ!·job growth In total
civilian employment.
Construction jobs rose by
105,000 In February following a
sharp downturn In January.
Manufacturing Jobs shaded up
slightly lor the second straight
month, but manufacturing payrolls have added 400,000 jobs
since June, the department said.
Mining employment was un•
changed In February.

Syracuse Council discusses
.vill~e owned cable sen-ice

oNLY

BOYS' SHORT .SLEEVED

number of manufacturing jobs
Increased a little.'
But services' employment -"up 200,000 - was booming, the
department said.
Health-related jobs rose by
60,000, business services gained
55,000, jobs In ,retail trade
jum(led by 110,000 while
wholesale trade made a .smaller
contribution to payrolls.
Employment. in finance, lnsu·
rance and real estate changed
relatively little, although a
10,000-job decline In finance
provides the first tangible lm·
pact on payrolls since the Oc·
tober stock market collapse, the

Campeau says he. won't surrender

MEN'S LIGHT
WEIGHT

'2 Sections, 18 P8gea 26 Cents
A Multimedia 'Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Friday, March 4, 1988

-

SPECIAL-SAl&amp;!

Free clothing day
Gallla-Meigs Community Action Agency freeclothing 'd aywlll
be held Friday, from 9 a.m. to 12
noon, at the old high school
building in Cheshire.

N£W 2 PC.

:s.

REG. S7 .00 H4NDIAGS ............SALE 9 8
REG. S11.~0 HANDIAGS .......... SALE 9.38
REG. S14.00 HANDIAGS ........SALE 511.88
REG. 519.00 HANDBAGS .....-.SALE S16.18

Reg. 514.00 Blouses ..... Sll .B9
Reg. 518,00 Blouses ..... 515.29
Reg. 524.00 Blouses ..... S20.~"

Board meets Saturday
A special organizational meet·
ing of Meigs County BOard of
Elections will he held · at the
board· office on Saturday at 10
a .m.

Veterans Memorial
· Tuesday Admissions - Dennis
McKinney, Rutland: Patricia
Hill, Middleport; Virginia Burris , Pomeroy; Rosemary White,
Middleport; Harold Darst,
Rutland.
Tuesday Discharges -Mandy
Powell, Ida Pooler, Dixie Slawter, Amanda Hawk, Frank Clark,
·Katherine Oliver. Linda White,
Darrell Dugan.

Treat yourself to a new hand~ag. Styles include,
Acid wash denims. clutches with sh9ulder straps.
college oversized clutches and hornbeck Croco
"Mini" shoulder bags.

Save on our new spring
blouses. You'lllike the new
styles and pretty spring
colors. Sizes 32 to 46.

Trustees meet Monday :..
Columbia Township Trustees
will meet Monday, 7: 30p.m., at
the fire station.

''·

Nation's unemployment rate .at 10-year·low·

'

CARNIVAL.

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
between 1 25 and 30. Partly
cloudy Sllturday.
·

.
enttne
.

at y

tt

-----Announcements.---..;....ReYIYal starts tonight
•
The Rev. Sue Denning of
Parkersburg, W. Va., will be
evangelist for revival services
which start at7: 30 this evening at
the ReedsviUe u nlted Methodist
Churcll. .
_,I
The services will run througq
Sunday and will feature special
vocal music. Singing at tonight's
-service will be Jan Lavendar and
Kathy McDaniel and music on
Saturday night will be . by the
Harvest ·Trio. At 6 p.m. on
Saturday, a fellowship dinner
will be held preceding the revival
service.

D8ily Number
982
Pick4
.9336

Page4

EMS has 1.8 calls Tuesday · .
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 18 calls
on Tuesda'y; Middleport at 3: 24a.m. to Page St. for Patricia H11l
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 6:43 a.m.
transported Edna Haning to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Racine at 10: 20 a.m. to Dewitt's ~un for Irene '1\'IUord to .
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland Fire DePIIrtment at
10:33 a.m. to' a brush fire on the Kenneth Snyder orooertv nn
County Road 10 at Langsvlle; Salem Township Fire Depart·
ment was called at 10:42 a.n\. to aslst Rutland; Rutland
at lU: &gt;2 a.m. to Meigs Mine No. 2 lor George Kennedy to Holzer
Medical Center; Middleport at 11:01 a.m. to North Second Ave.
for Pleasant Ellis to-Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at ·
12: 09 p.m. treated Mark Elliot at the scene of an accident on
County Road 20· Middleport at 12:17 p.m. to High St. for
Rosemary White to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers
Plains at 12: 28 p.m. to the Arbaugh Addition lor Isaac Jackson
to St. Joseph's Hospital; Llfefllght at 1:40 p.m. transported
Pleasant Ellis from Veterans Memorial Hospital to Grant
Hospital, Columbus; ..RuUand at 1:59 p.m. to Vance Road lor
Harold Darst to Veterans Memorial Hospital; · Syracuse Fire
Department at 2: 40 p.m . to a brush fire on the VIrgil Teaford
property on Route 124; Tuppers Plains at 5: 54 p.m. to the
Arbaugh Addition for Mary Jo Reed to St. Joseph's Hospital;
Pomeroy at 7:21p.m. to207 Butternut Ave. for Derek Clark to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;; Middleport at 7:55 p.m. to
Williams St. for Judy Laudermllt to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 11:45 p.m. to Bailey Run Road for Eldon
Morris to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 11: 47 p.m. to
New Lima ROad lor Jackie Searles to Holzer Medical Center.

Ohio Lottery

••·lit •""

ot

~=~OiltH~ .

(Rep.

Man:~ Gutluie,

cllalrmaJI.

of the main committee, " Hagan
use It as a way to express his
said. I want toglvehlm the option
feelings," Hagan said.
and whatever needs to be done to
"That was Interpreted by more
make sure the same thing doesn't
than just me to be more than a
happen next week."
thinly veiled threat and should
Hagan had Interrupted lead-off not be Ignored."
witness Highway Safety Director ·
Hagan said some added securWilliam Denlhan to complain Ity was present for the hearing
about the presence of two televl"as a precautionary ·m easure."
s!QII cameramen. Hagan menti· ·
The writer of the letter was In
oned there was a note that
the audience, Hagan said.
photographs would not ,be al·
"They (security) pointed hiJ11 .
-lowed, but Rench said It wasn't
out · to me," he said. "They
sliJ!ed.
.
determined he shouldn't be
During testimony of the second
restricted.
.
.
wilnesa, James Alexander . of
"Although I did not "let It
Newark, the audience made a
Intimidate me, I did not lose any
lew guffaws and waved their sleep over It," he sa ld.
hands to Indicate their disagree. .
"The reason !suggested It (!,he
ment with a statement.
aeraeant-at-arms action) Is you
'1 will have no more emotional could lel.those things (audience
outburstl from the audience,"
reaction I get out of control," he
Hagan said. "If thll conUnues, said. "Their action Is Qlore '
I'll have the sergeant-at-arms therapy fo~ them than lor the
remove you."
purpose or a hearing."
Haaan Aid afterwards It Is a
In bla testimony, Alexander
little unuaual for the aeraeant-at·
claimed tJ¥! mandatoey seat belt
arms to be In a committee law WU pernment lnlniSIOI\.
lleaJ:Inc, but said he felt It was
''I believe the seat belt law Ia
relative for Thunday'a hearltli. · the m01t (iJiored law since ·
'1 bad noeMid a letter two or Problllltlon," Alexander
three 1&amp;)'1 qo !bet a IIWI was testlflecl.
trOlntr
.117·maanum and

to.,..._

�•

•

Friday, March 4, 1988

....

-•.
•

Comment

r

The

D~rily_

· 111 Court street
Pomeroy, Oblo

.

.

.

. DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG8-MASON AREA

~lb

~~ r-T'\-1'--r· ~c:::i;o=o

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulli&amp;Dt Publlllber/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manacer

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press

Association and the Amer ican Newspaper Publishers AsSOCiation.
'·
L ETTERS OF OPIN:ION .a re welcom e. They ·shouid be lesS than 300 words
long. All letter s a r e subject to editing and must be s igned with name, address and
telephone number. No Ul).signed letters wdl be published. Lefters should be in

good taste , addressing issues, not persona lities.

.

Letters ·to the editor
•

What's wrong, America!

What's wrong America? It
seems that when a new plant
wants to build everyone joins a
.club to fight ·It, just as America
~~s shut down just about every
nuclear power plant' project
stllrted . We just don't want 11. .
. pur future doesn't look very
gOod with all these plants In our
area over twenty years old, some
older than that. Yes, some plants
can stay and rebuild and put In
!lllW parts and last another thirty
years. But what about the other
workers? They need jobs, too.
• J&gt;o Jet's keep an open mtnd to
• the fact If you don' t work don 't
expect to have much In lite and
don't look for your kids to stay In
this area to look fo r work be-

cause It just won't be here, unless
you call working part time at a
hamburger.jolnt a real job.
Our area needs soi,lnd and firm
Industry to move In good paying
jqbs for us all and then this area
can say we have a good job market , but not now. We must learn
to live In today's world even with
Its high tech Industry and all the
fears that It brings because
America always lives this livestyle.
So come on, America, do you
want work or welfare and more
taxes? It's up to you. You vote
and make or break .these new
jobs for our area.
Floyd H. Cleland

Powerful manipulator
. On your story Feb. 28, 1988
·.about ''Coal mining helped deve;loment of Meigs and Is still lm.portant." In my opinion SOCCO
. Is a powerful manipulator of peo· Ple's rights. They paid $20.00 an
: acre for the coal they are mining.
;SOCCO took possession of a gas
well that I own controlling Inter: est: pluged the well and des: tro;yed the casing and gas Jines.
. .Without even a notice, leaving
;tour families without gas.
: As far as longwalllng, people on

rual water do not realize that If the
water on their land Is dropped due
to subsiding, SOCCO will not compensate them.
Im am going to help the development of the future of ~elgs
a nd Vinton counties by drUllng
monitoring wells where mining
Is to occur, to make sure there Is
adequate water tot {he future.
Larry Wright
Wright's Drilling
RR 1, Langsvllle, Ohio
742-2146

First lady steps
·up fight against drugs
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON (U PI) - First lady Nancy Reagan has found her
place in history with her all-out drive to rid the nation of Its drug
problem.
It Is an enormous problem and one tha t will not be wiped out before
President and Mrs. Reagan leave the White House. But both have
vowed to keep trying to spotlight the horror of drugs on American
society long aliter they have moved out of 1600 Pennsylvania avenue.
Mrs. Reagan joined her husband In opening the White House
Conference on a Drug Free America and brought the cheering
'audlenc'e to Its feet with her strong power message that those who use
drugs contri bute to "death and destruction. "
· Never before has her delivery been as strong or her words more
dramatic. She pulled no punches, describing In lurid detail some of
•the tragic examples of the harm that drug users, by their demand,
~ have done to families and to the country.
· When Mrs. Reagan moved Into the While House she had one
concern to keep careful watch over her husband to make sure be was
, not overworked and to make an elegant comfortable home for him In
the family quarters of the Executive Mansion. She was viewed as
; frivolous at firs t since most of the reportage concentrated on her high
~ fashion sense and the purcha se by her friends of expensive "Nancy
• Reagan" china for the White House.
_
: . But within a year , she turned' that image around and she has
• become a heroine In her dedication to rid Americans of the scourge of
• drugs.
; In some wa ys, the battle is one step forward and two steps
; backwa rd. But the president told the conference that she had "raised
- the conscience and consciousness" of the country on the brutality
: inflicted by drugs on law enforcement officers and the pedple at large.
· "The casual user may think when he takes a line of cocaine or
~ smokes a joint In the privacy of his ntce' condo, listening to his
· expensive stereo, that he's somehow not botherlng·anyone," she said.
: "But there Is a trail of death and destruction that leads directly to his
- door. The casual user cannot morally escape responslb!llty for the
: action of drug traffickers and dealings. I'm saying that If you're a
• casual dr ug user, you're an accomplice to murder." ,
: • The drug problem, starting In a big way from the U.S. Involvement
: til 'VIetnam and the smuggling of drugs from the Golden Triangle, has
• l:JI!en Incredibly harmful to American society. Big city crime Is
'
'
• \'JI)lnly
related to drugs and drug users.
'
~ .: ,-be war on drugs Involves the producers In Latin America , the
: srn.ugglers, the money launderers and the users, with their demand.
• Blk city mayors do not see any progress In stemming the tide. But the
: Pr!!sldent Insists that some progress has been made,. a.t least In
: I'JI,Ing the awareness among children and the reduction of cocaine
• ~~~ marijuana use in the schools.
.
·
; •: Mrs. Reagan says she wants the people to "fan the flame of rage"
: lljalnst drugs.
•
,
··;-; 'There Is no middle ground," she adds. "We. must be absolutely
~ lil!Yleldlng and Inflexible In our opposition to drug use."
• :•!hte first lady, who has been severely criticized by some columnists
: a1;tlmes for trying to protect her husband when she felt he was betng
: tD·served, has stood her ground.
• She has a cause and quotes Anne Morrow Lindberg who once wrote:
: "One can never pay In gratltutde. One can only pay 'In kind'
; somewhere else In me."

WASHINGTON - Ten-orlsti
have demonstrated a curious
lack of Imagination when It
co.rnes to ·exploiting high techn61·
ogy to achieve their deadly alms.
This Is the conclusion· reached
by a task force of Pentagon
experts who spent last suriuner
studying the means and methods
used to detect and neutralize
drug !l'afflckers and terrorists.
We ·previously reported the pan·
el's opinion, published tn a secret
report, that drug "kingpins and
law enforcement authorities are
engaged In a !urlo•1s "technology
race," arid the likely winner Is
still In doubt. ·
·
Terrorists, on the other hand,·
. seem mired In the era of rotary
phones and mimeograph machines. Tbelr devices are effec·
live- diabolically so- but they
are essentially updated versions
of old techniques. The good news
Is that the technology Is priml·
tlve. The bad news Is that
primitive stU! works.
" Most of the tactics and
operations (terrorists) have considered are essentially 'more of
the same,'" the task force' s

~Today in ~i8tory

·.

By Jack Anderson and Dale Van Aua .

secret report states. Tile old
standbys tnclude'tll!lletter bomb
(an Invention of the 19408 for terroristi to attempt Naerlal.
which Jewish extremlsti tn Pa· suicide attacks ...or itandOff at·
lesttne get credit), the car bomb, tacks, using remotely ,fired
the radio-controlled car boll)b, rockets or mortan ...
the radio-controlled boat bomb
- Better security at U.S. em·
bautes might cauae terorlllts to
and the suicide vehicle bomb.
"There also have been lnnova. "engage leu heavily defended
!Ions In fusing· and detonating targets sucb as American
. devices : the barometric· schools abroad."
pressure fuse Invented by the
-Attacka on electrical power
Palestinians to blow up airliners grids and energy systema will
' In flight, the long-term delay continue to be used as a routine
mechanism used by Jhe IRA In tactic by both rural and urban
the attempt on BritiSh Prttne guerrilla groups.
-It Ill virtually certain, tn the
Minister Margaret Tbatcher's
lite, the. manufacture or home- opinion of most terrorist experts,
made mortars," the report says; ''that by the year 2000, te;rorlsts
"These tnnova lions could all be will employ shoulder-tired,
categorized as enhancements preCision-guided, surface-to-air
and variations. The basic tactics missiles to shoot down civilian
have changed little over the planes."
years."
·
-Contamination of food, pbar·
What technological and tact!· maceutlcal products and water
cal advances are terrorists llke!y supplies are crimes "clearly on
to make use of tn the coming the rise," but they have been
years? The experts offered these favored more by "criminal ex·
prognostications:
tortlontsti, maleVolent pranks·
-Security measures designed ·ters and mentally unbalanced
to protect American embassies persons" than by terrorists. It
from car bombs could persuade rematns to be seep whether this

wlll change.
·-Large-scale terrorist use or
"chemical or btoloilcal warfare
Is considered to be unlikely thOugh not Impossible - In the
near· term future."
· one h\gb-tech devtce terrorlllti
have exploited to the hilt Ill
television. The task force ad·
dressed the subject but tactfully
offered both sides or the
argument:
"Terrorist acts are news worthy, and the 111edla !lee
coverage as a professional, com·
·petltlve responslbllty, Sorile In
the media have claimed that
Intense coverage helps to pre· .
serve. the key factors In an
Incident, and that putting the
hostages on television may actu·
ally save their lives. ' ·
.
"Othen contend that Information released by the media can
Interfere with resolution or an
Incident, foreclose options for ·
deall~ with It, or unwittingly
provld~-1ntelllgence Information
to terrorist&amp;."

SETS LYNE CENTER MARK - ·Ray Singleton (40) llbattered
the Lyne Center single-game scoring record for the most
'individual points .scored by a Rio Grande player by pumping In 54
In Thursday night's District 22 NAIA Tournameat victory over
Urbana. Tbe old record, 49 points, was set Fe h. 21, 197'1 by Ball or
Fam.e member Jimmy Noe ag"'tnsl Malone.
·

agman..::__
· _· ·.

WASHINGTON (NEA)- The
U.S. Senate Investigation Into
Panama's recently Indicted milItary ruler, Gen. Manuel Antonio
Noriega, bas uncovered what
may be a link between the leader
and Massad, Israel's Intelligence
agency.
Jose I. Blandon, former top
Noriega adviser and Panaman·
ian counsel In New York, has ,
re portedly told Investigators
about an Israeli citizen named
Michael Hararl. A former Israeli
army general, Harai-1 Is said to
· have worked with that nation's

Intelligence after retiring from
active .duty. For the past five to
seven years, he has lived In
Panama, working closely with
Noriega.
Bladon says Hararl selects and
trains Noriega's private guarda unit separate !rom the Pana·
mablan army. Guard otrjcers
report to Noriega through
Hararl.
According to 'Blandon, Harari
also acts as a mlddlemari 'In
weapons _purchases that Noriega
makes In Europe. ·
Reportedly, Nortega has been

a major weapons supplier to
leftist rebels In Colombia and El
Salvador · even wblle working
wltb the CIA In battling the
guerrillas. For several years,
Noriega was believed to have
stopped these shipments at U.S.
Insistence, but they are said to
bave resumed as Noriega's rela·
lions wltliWasblngton worsened.
Blandon . also testified that
when Noriega travels In Europe,
Hararl arranges for his protec·
tlon by Israeli military Intelligence and Massad personnel . In
addition, says Blandon, Israeli

Intelligence provides lnform!l·
tlon to Noriega through Hararl.
Blandon has iold Investigators
that In 1984 - after Panamanian
troops raided a rural cocaine
processing plant owned by the
Colombian cocaine cartel - ·the
organl2atlon planned to assassl·
nate Noriega wblle he was ·
traveling In Eun;~pe. Blandon
says he was told that the llraellg
uncovered and foiled the plot.
· Senate ·Investigators believe
Hararl rilay rej!resent a link
between the Israeli government
and the Panamanian strongman.

Memo exonerates Meese ______....!.W!..!i~llr.am~·!!..!.!R=us::.::he~r
A casual newspaper reader or
TV viewer could be forgiven for
assuming that the "~eese scandal" currently being flogged by
the media must be . something
new. It Is, however, the same old
"Meese scandal" they were. all
yelling about a month ago, the
only difference being that Attorney General Edwin Meese's
lawyer has now managed to· get
the key document In the controve r sy released for public
Inspection.
It Is clear.- in retrospect, that
Meese's critics were better oft
before It was released. I .h ad a
se t-to on the subject, back then,
with Michael Kinsley and Joe
Raub on CNN's "Cross-fire."
These two gladiators - .roughly
speaking, the end prod11cts of
liberalism In their respective
generations - loudly Insisted
that the as-yet-unreleased document proposed a bribe otlsrael's
Labor Party. Meese (their the·
ory went) should therefore
promptly have Instituted a civil
suit or criminal action against
the author of the docilmeni under
the Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act, and by falling to do so bad
laid himself open to a charge ot
misfeasance.
If you thlpk It caused Kinsley
and Raub any embarrassment to
have to rely on a document they
hadn't seen, however, you have
underestlma ted this pair. They
cheerfully admitted they hadn't
seen It, but yelled lustily for
Meese's resignation and Indictment anyway.
What, In fact, does the nowreleased document say? It Is a
memorandum to Meese from E .
Robert Wallach, a lawyer and
friend of his who was lobbying for
a pipeline to carry Iraqi oil safely
out oft(le Middle East. (This was,
on Its merits, a highly deSirable
project, whlcb unfortunately
never came to fruition.)

politics to be to America's
advantage, so his pleasure at the
thought of the · Labor Party
beuefiting !rom the pipeline
project is understandable. But
nowhere does Wallach say or
Imply that any American entl.ty1
or lndlvldualt11s. gotng tq inake"' •

any such payment. On tbe strictly Internal Israeli aftalr.
Alternatively, Meese's lawyer
contrary, be specifically asserts
,
suggests
with considerable
that It Is "Israel" that "will
plausibility
that the funds In
receive" the money. If" a portion
or those funds" was then to "go question were to come, perfectly
directly to Labor," the diversion legally, from Rappaport's own
substantial profits, 'wlien the
was evidently going to_ be a
pipeline waa completed.
·'
'

•

Scoreboard ..
Bop Ollto JU.all Scllool Bukelball
Br Uillted P rHI' lrlteruUonal
ThW'Iday, Ma nlh J
Toumamelll. Res ult s

OIYL'iloft I

Cln Oak Rlllw 51, ctn Princeton 51 (ot)
Col Ullt en 87, Marton Hardl-. 55
Falrflehl lit, an st Xavk!:r $0
Rc)'IIOidlbUI'If 81 , Col Mifflin 7U
Sl.ney 1!1, Day Wq ne 79
Vandalia BUUer 13, Dlly Stebblm 42

.

nnt••d

Pro results
NATIONAL BA.SKETftA.LL "-SSOC.

nund&amp;J '• Results
Cb k ap 17, Philadelphia I S
Portland 131. Phoenix, lit
,
Frlday 'll Gamet
PhUa~lphla at New York, 1': :II p.m .

Dhil lon II

.

Cambrldp $4, PhUo 39
Cln Purcell-Marian &amp;a, Cln C"-PE ~t
Cln Indian Hill M, New Ric hm ond U
Ketlerlftl Alter 711, Day Cbam·Jul 46
Portl!moulh 41, Galllpolllt 3'7
sttubuvllle 77, St (;tall"'lvtlle 56
Tb0111ville SMrtdan fl3, HIIIAboro 63
DlviiiMIIII
Arcanwn 51, W Liberty-Salem $3
Sprtn&amp;fitld Cath "14 , National Trail 55

Phoelllx at Denver, t: 2tp.m.
Golden State at LA Lakera, 10:38 p.m.
Vtah at Suttle, 11: II p.m.

:._
'
Parma PadWII 10, Avon Lake SOIOtJ
Richfie ld ft.evt're ~ II. Solon 35
Warren Champion &amp;4, Younp Moon e.~

"

.

,_ """I Branrch 88, U llbon Beaver

3.3

•
Dlvt~ lon Ill
Bu ckeye Trail 5!1, Ha Miha l Ri ve r S4
·Cohmhla 4", LILG ran~~: e Xeyslone 25
Doylestown 42, No rwaynf' St

· Fremont Sl .ro ~~eph 15. Olsea:o 36
Jaclulon Milton 3t, So ~h R a oa:f' !16
Loui!IVIIIt! A.q•lna¥ IH, S aJiaevllk! S 2~
Nor1h Union l l , Fa lrtleld Union &amp;I
Ottawa GlaiXIOrl ,., S herwood Fair·
vi ew -17
Roots town 50. Llllhon U '
/Swa nton 51, Ka1181U Lakota 4f
Vlt' nllll Mulh t&lt;WI &amp;8, Brookfield 41
We11t Salem NW 49. Wo011ter Trlw11 ~ -18
We llh~JI O n 55, IUUIIda.l e :Ill

•PUJS•
WE'VE caOT THE HOT NEW
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AND
1988 01 DSMOBILE C\ll1ASS SUPREME
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flaA I Ca nton -11, WoodrldCP 36

Fa)'ede 52, Hilltop 51
Fuak Fur Gre en 51, Pl&amp;tflot SW 24
"' Uolllft 5~ Hl cbvlllf 50 ,

Ltncllbul'l' C l~t J Ill, Port11mo•th E 40
Ma,.fldd St Pelf&gt; II, Syc Mohawk U
McDo•ld Q, Bt&gt;rlln W et~lera Rt~~o ,,
01110 ColleltC B..ketball ReButt ll

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lEW POti1IAC
TRANS
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1888 2-0R.
CHEVROLET BERETTA

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Reds sign last
lhree play~r8

RT. SO WEST OF COOlVILlE; OHIO
All Of Our Cars Are Wortto
The Money
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1917
1916
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luldo tolab... ioodod ....... - ..... •19h
Ch••Y Capri" Classic........._ ...... S698U·
PontiCK hltnerilt., ''sharp'' ...... '5915
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1915 Nissan Pickup " liltl new "·--··-· '387,5
1915 Chevy Cht••fl• " low milts".IJ670
1915 Ferd LT.D. 4 Door ..•.._ ...... _ ••,... l46ot '
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1912 Dido Dtltall .... ..... _ ..,_,_; ..... •2601 '
1910 ~ ............. _......19175.
1979 Dodge M ............................ I99S
1971 CadiiiD&lt; ( - D.,iilo . .............. IJ900
1969 WinrWago Motor Nom. ...._ _ ,•• l376fi'
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•
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Denver at Seattle, nlrht

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Wlmlpef4, VucouverJ
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QuebecatWulllrwton, '1 : Sp.m .
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NY II AI.. . ers a1 Pltt.bul'(h
NY R....-ers at Ha rtfonl, al1ht
Wlnnlpe lat TDmnto, nl&amp;bl
Detroit at St. Lo.U , nltht ·
cb!llap 111. MlnnHO&amp;II, nl&amp;:ht
Edmoaton at Cap:y, nl&amp;ht
Monlreal at Lo1 Anrcles. nl1ht

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Elyria Wesl 49, NortH Royalton 44
Garfield Hb Trinity 61, W Geaup; a -Ill
Jetferson 70, Cl e lleaurnunt 87
Leavtl!lbrg La8rae ,$3, Younp Ur;llu-

and final playoff spot.
With Philadelphia trailing 9592, Michael Jorda n fouled Char les Barkley with 10 seconds left.
"Barkely sank the flrstfree throw,
but missed second off the left side
of the rim .
"I just missed It, I dldp't shoot
It right," Barkley r eplied when
asked If he missed Intentionally.
Jordan tl\en hit a pair of free
throw with six seconds left to
produce the final margin.

games of the season, supplylng16
points and sinking all 10 of hiS
free throw attempts .
··
Connecting on 46 of 77 total•
field goals, the Redrnen were 64;
percent and sank 24 of 35,
attempts at the fo1,1l line for 75·
percent.
·
Also scoring high ly for Urbana·
was Brett Ba ker with 14. The
Blue Knights were successful on:
33 of 80 field goals attempts for 36
percent a nd netted 10 of 17 free
throw tries tor 59 percent.
:
URBANA (84) -Brett Baker,·
5(1) -1-3-14; Anthony Harris, 5(2) -.
1-3-17; Chuck Lewis, 3(4)"3-2-21; :
P at McCulllgan, 2-0-0-4; Robert·
Settle, 8-1·5-17; Malco lm De-:
Vould, 2(1) -1-4-6; Mike Soyars,:
0-1-3-1; Kralg Gibson, 1-0-1-2; •
Stefa n Hake, 0·2·1-2. TOTALS:
25(8)-10-26-84.
.
'
RIO GRANDE (119) ·. - J ohn·.
Lambcke, 3-0-3-6; Ray Sh\gleton, :
23-8-5-54; Jim Kearns, 3(2)-1-2··
13; Ron Rlttlnger, 9:5-0-23; Brian:
Watkins, 1(1)-1-51 Rob Jackson,·
1-0-1-2; Marc Gothard, 3-10-3-16.- TOTALS 43(3)·24-15-119.
•

Detroit at WMIII.,ton, nillll
MUwaukee at AUaat., nlsbt
LA Cllppen at Cblear.. nllbt
SaCramento at Ho&amp;~~toa, nl&amp;lll

Parmi Normandy 53, Brunswic k 39
Tol Cerural 81. Tol Macombe r 25

"

The closest the Blue Knights
came fo r the res t of the first half

was 6 (23-17) on another Settle
bas ket. A 3-polnt field goa l by
guard Jim Kearns at 7:52 widened the margin to 13 (30-17), a
lead the Redmen built up to 20
with. less than 2 minutes remainIng. Singleton ended the scori ng
rush with a nother 2-pol nter;
leaving the halftime score at
55-36.
'
Rio Grande, boosted by Singleton's addltlonal 29 points, kept .
up the mome ntum throughout
the rest of the ga me. Urbana, led
in· scoring by Chuck Lewis' 21
points and 17 each from Settle
and Anthony Harris, mounted a
brief offensive assault a round
the 9:22 mark, narrowing the
horne advan tage to 15 (86-71) at
7: 58. A series of trips to the foul
line helped put the Redmen back
Into a 20·plus lead.
Rio Grande burst the century
mark at 5: '24 on a Kearns bas ket
and Singleton snapped Noe's
record about a mlnul:f la ter .
Lawhorn then Inserted his bench
to finish the job .
" We were really in the
rh ythm ," L a who r n s a id .
" N11mber one: (Brian) Wat kins
and Kearns are excellent guard
players. Singleton worked so
hard to get the ball and he did a
great job on containing Harris."
Harris, a sophomore who has
become one of Urbana' s top
players, wa s 32 points shy of
making 1,000 career·points enterIng Thursday 's game. .
" They were trying to stop
Rittlnger and they succeeded
only partly," the coahc continued. "What I like is that we
took what was there , read the
defense and went with it. But our
other people deserve a lot of
credit because they got the ball to
Singleton and were In key spots
on the floor :"
For the Redmen, MOC P layer
of the Year Rlttlnger added 23
points, Kearns had 13 an\! Marc
Gothard, a 6-4 junior from
Circleville, had one of his best

'

satm..,-•a G a me~

New Yorlt a1 New

Dlvtslo• IV

Girl!! Ohio 111111 SchOol Bulletball
By ~nHed P~11 .. ternll.Uonal
Thilrllda,, March 3
Tournamentlk...llll '
.
Dlvt•Ion I
' Akr Bllellliel Si. WPwordl 47
A.lu Ke~rr~or-e 52. Barberton .aa
Au11llalowa 3.3. Kent Rooeeve lt 32
Carlll•n McKinley U, Mau J aclulon 18
EIJrlaU, t"arm a Val Forwe 4!
N Can GlenOU liS, Gt-eerll!bui'J( Gree n

playoff round at 7: 30 p.m. ~ on­
day a t Lyne Center. Ceda rville
defealed Findlay 92· 71 Thursday,
while Defia nce (22-6) knocked off
~aunt Vernon Nazarene 85-71
and Walsh (21-10) beat Malone
88-70. Dan Peters' Walsh club
will travel to Defiance on
Monday.
Against Urbana, which fell to
13-18 In Its first playoff competition In several years, tlie Redmen came on strong In the first
half. A Singleton basket - the
first of his 25 points for the ha lfgot the game going . A field goa l
by the Blue Knights' Rober t
Settle tied t he scoreboard
briefly, but Ron Rlttlnger and
John La rnbcke broke through for
two. baskets to put the lead back
In to the Redmen 's bands.
.Bob Ronal's Url:!ana squad,
suffering from a poor field
performa nce, was never able to
get back Into the game. " I ' had
probably three players.out there
who were working togethe r ,"
Ronal said afterwa rd. "I don't
know what the others were
doing."

LACllpperaat BoMon, 7:38p .m .
WublftiiOD IJ ta•lua,1: SOp.m.
, Hot11ton at Dalla..-, I p.m .
Sacrame nto at Sa n Aatonlo, 8: Sll p.m .

Ca •l Wlnchel&amp;er J7, Newark Cadi M
Col Wehrle 81, U cllq- Ht a «
El;r.rla Open Door 71 , Ma ple lol\ 12
Gallon Northmor '"· New Albaay 6!
!&amp;dependence U , Soudl "-mhel"'lt 5I
Worihlqldn Chr 11J. Martoa Ca tb 41

..

By IAN LOVE
UPI Sport&amp; Writer
Another game on the road
turned Into another loss for the
Philadelphia 76ers and made the
playoffs a mor e remote
possibility.
The 76ers dropped their teamrecord 19th straight away from
home Thursday night, }02-101 to
the Chicago Bulls. The 76ers Jell
out of a three-way tie with
Washington and New York for
the Eastern Conference's eighth

s

4::edarvllle ft , n.tlay 71
Rio Grudt 111, Urbana 84
Deftanee 81, Mo•tV emon 71
Wallh 18, Maloae )0

BeiiMire 7%, Wh.te n vllle Q8
By tt~ YIIt. Mea.dowbroo• 61, Maysville

Singleton sets new record

76ers drop 19th
straight road til't

TlllndQ, Martll3
.blllud 1\8, .. dla... polil •
NAIA DWriet a Pta;rolr.

Cage scores

advanc~s;

History was m ade at Lyne
Center Thursday night.
Not only did Rio Gra nde
'advance to the second round of
· the District 22 pla yof!s by defeat·
lng Urbana 119·84, but senior Ray
Singleton shatter ed the house
record for the most Individual
points scored by a Rio Grande
player by pumping In 54 poll)ts.
The 9ld record, 49 points, was
set Feb, 21 , 1977 by Hall of Fa me
member Jimmy Noe against
Malone. Singleton connected on
23 of 29 field goal attempts (79.3
percent) to score , winning cheers
a nd applause from Redme n fans
when he was taken out of the
game with 2:15 remaining.
"It's hard to believe. I still
don't belleye It, " Singleton, a 6-3
forward from Palnesvllle said
after the game. ''I went out there
and .played hard. I had a lot of
il!centive, thOug(l, because when
we went up there (Urbana ), I
·
played terribly."
"He just worked so hard to get
. the basketball," Redmen Coach
John Lawhorn said. ' 'He read the
defense so well that mentally, be
just didn' t make any mistakes. "
Rio Grande (26-7) will host
Cedarville (20-10) In the second

.

Is there a connection?_______Ro_b_er_t~-·

Since no Arab pipeline In the
East would laat a week
unless the Israelis consented to
Its existence, Israel's advance
approval of the project was
essential. To secure this, It had
been arranged that Israel ltielf
should be one of the pipeline's
beneficiaries. In briefing Meese,
therefore, Wallach stressed the
report of Bruce Rappaport, a
strong supporter or the Iaraell
Labor Party, wbo had a personal
stake In the project as one of the
contractors on lt.
"He," WaUach's .memo to
Meese stated, "confirmed the
arrangement with · (Israeli
Prime Minister Sblmon) Peres to
the effect that Inrael will receive
somewhere between Sll5-S70 mll·
lion a year for 10 years out of the
conciUIIon or the proJect. Wbat ·
was also Indicated to me, and
which would be denied everywhere, Is that a portion of thole
funds Will go directly to Labor. •'
Other parll of the memoran·
~
B)' United l'rM8 International.
dum make It clear that Wallach ·
• Today Is Friday ~arch 4, the 64th day ot 1988 with 302 to follow ,
•
shares Rappaport's enthullum
• The moon Is wanlJ1i, moving toward Its last quarter.
lor the Labor Party aDd could~morning starliore Mercury, ~ars and Saturn. "
~
- ,....
era IIi _.ucendancy
In IaraeU
Tbe ~tiara are Venua&amp;ld Jupiter.
-

.

March 4, 1988

Ten-orists' methods crude, effective

Sentinel

Rio

Pegs 2- TheDiily Se 111n.a
Pomelov Mldllaport. Ohio
' Friday,

The Daily Seniinei- Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Transa~tions
~

Bueball
Baltimore - Slpted pllc bcrs Erie Bell
alld Jolin Hab:yan to 1·,-ear eontrach;
111netllh\rd basem a n Frll&amp;roy Manham
to minor-leap conlrac&amp;.
C11lllonla - Siped plk:hen lUrk
McC.. klll, Ou.elt Ftnley abd Joe Joh•
so n, third bue man Jack Howell, aeconil
haaeman Mark Mcl..emort aDd ullltty
lnllt!lder Gu1 Polldor 1o 1-year c oatra cta;
renewed colllraell on llrlt baseman
WaJiy Jo)'ller, center Oelder Devoa
Wtdle, and plkhen DeWIU'Jie· Bulc:e,
U rbano Lujo and Vlnlclo Cedena.
Ollea10 {NL) - S lped outfield er
Dave Maranea and pitc her Iamie Moyer

to l·)'elll' eoah"ad l.
Cl-lnnUI -

S.lped ptk hen Rob

Murphy and lo• Rl}o, ••.utrleld erKal
Daniela to 1-year cenlracta.
Pltl:lbuflh - Renewed contract of
plklher Bob Kipper.
Plttafleld (Eu&amp;em Leape ) - Named

E ..J. NIII'Ciae 1enerat· manapr of baseball DJ»raltoM.

.

San Dlep - Sl1oed caklten Be•lto
SuUap a ad Mark PareD&amp;, lint buemea
.Jolin Kruk ud ROb Nel.aa,

ot~tfleNeN

Shaae Maek aad Randall BJtl'l, lhort·
&amp;top Mlllt BrumleY, and pltCMn Ed
Votber&amp; and llmmr .Jo~~n.
Saa FnnciiCG - Slpetl outfielder
Mll;e Ald~ t o a l ·Jtfar coahaet.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 14f.NI)

A Dlvlaloa ol Mlilllmodla, IDe.

PLANT CITY, Fla . (UPI)
Without having to go through the
contract-renewal process , the
Clne(nnatl Reds signed their last
three players Thursday.
Signed were lett fielder Kal
Daniels for $185,000 , relief
pitcher Rob Murphy, who signed
for $175,000 plus $50,000 In Incentives, and pitcher Jose Rljo, who
signed !or $127,500.
Murphy, who was 8-5 In 87
. relief appearances last year,
when be earned $95,000, said he
wtU receive $25,000 If he Is chosen
to the All-Star team and $25,000 If ,
.,he Is named reliever of the year.
Thai award usually goes to a
stoppet pitcher, and that role
with the Reds Is filled by John
Franco.
''It Is going to take some things
bappmlnJ but you never know,"
MIIIPbY old. "We have no
COJIIPllllnta. we got to a price ~
could' 'fet fly. We were clole
enoqb where alptng waa the
tblq to do."
Denltl.l eal'llld ...1100 In 1887,
wllell hi hit .3M wlth 28 home

runa.

Rile earned 1115,000 last year

at ~kland, wilel'e lit wu 2-7
wltb a5.90 eal'lled run avenge ••
&amp;itiiiMr 1114 ttartal': . . : .
'. I

Published every afternoon,
.through Fr!d ay, 111 Court St .,
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valli!)' PuJ&gt;.

llshtng Comr,any/MUitlmedla, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Oh o •ms, Pb. 992-21116. second class postage paid at Pomeroy,

Ohio.

Member: Unlled Press International,
Inland Daily Preu AuoclaUon and tbe
Ohio Newspa~Aosoclatloll. Notional

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esentatlve, Branham
ea, 733 lblrd Avenue,

New York, New York 10017. ·

·

POSTMAln'ER: Send addrell challpo
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No IUbocrlptiOIII by moD ponnlttod

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•DLEPOIT, OliO

9ti·SM .
102 WEST MAIN

�•

Pltl• 4 The Dllty Sa •tinel

Friday, Man:h 4, 1988"

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

. Bench may be difference in tonight's District IV opener
By SCOTT WOLJI'E
RACINE - What SVAC bas·
ketball team will be a .District
Semi-finalist In 1988? Many believe that the answer to that
question may very well be a
matter of "feet ", as both Southern and Hannan Trace face each
other In Division IV District
Tournament play at Ohio University's Convocation center to. night, beginning at 6: 30 p .m.
A " matter of feet?" you say?
Yes, that's not a misprint
Explanation: Both Hannan
Trace and Southern are noted for
their torrid fast breaking games .
_ Both like to run and gun. Both use
Nil court pressure and pride
themselves on defense. But there
Is indeed one difference; 'Bench
Strength'!
How does this measure up to
feet? The answer is simple. The
team With the stronger bench Is
most likely to win, because the
more horses you have the easier
tile load is to carry:
Southern Tornado fans know

down deep that they have a very
wha t the Southern t radition Is all
Grady Jobnson's le ngthy 3· waiting to explode; the Wildcats
capable ball club, that flaunts a
about.
pointer won t he Sectional . lor a help~ss victim hoping to
great starting five and a deep
Southern has a lso been known
Hanna n Trate a s they claimed. a defuse the bomb, ,
.
bench that pr:tdes Itself on the· to e'Stabilsh temporary resldenc.e
hard-fought 70-68 overtime win
Last week Southern's single
same 'oats' and hustle as the In the convo during the month or
over the Green Bobcats. South· key Ingredient that has been.with
starter s. I! this is a factor then march; a stopping point along
ern whipped Ky ger Creek , 88-61, them all year long In victory lane
Southern gets the greenilght for
the way to. Columbus.
and North Gallla 71-58 in the was again evident: Teamwork!
the victory.
The Torna&lt;;loes have also had c ha mp ion s hip game last Every man did Ills Job.
Most high school courts me asome . experience on the court, Sat urday.
KeiiiiY Turley, hounded the
sure 84 feet In length, however,
playing regular season games.
Since two-hard fought ga- boards to the tune of 15 ca.roms
college courts are usually 94 feet
there .the past two seasons . Th is mes (the win. over Hannan Trace and 22 points. Jeff Caldwell and
in length for an extra ten feet .
year SHS lost to Indian Valley at horne and · a road
over Dave AmbUrgey, two equally
Normally, a team, on the averSouth on a last second shot at the "AA" Oa k Hill) In the latter part tough competitors, split the opa l(e travels from basket to basket
buzzer.
of the season ,Southern has not posing defenses with great floor
between 18().200 times per game;
Hannan Tra ce has . not ha~ played 'well' of late.
games, last week canning 14 and
some times more or sometimes
game experience In the contem As Coach Ho wie Caldwell re- · 12 respectively.
less. For fast breaking teams this . pory palace.
flects , " most teams ' are just
Dave McMIJ!in, compliments
is usually more so both teams are
· Southern proudly fl aunts the happy to win a s ecttona,l , b\lt we Turley's Inside effort with strong
running approximately an extra
best offense In Southeastern-Ohio .haven't played like we are rebounding; . and also a strong
~ mile per game under Intense
wi,th 1875 points scored for for an capa ble ... we'ye made too many offensive game •.Shannon Riffle,
conditions.
85 .point average, while giving up little mistakes. "
·
known as Southern's defensive
At any rate Hannan Trace
just 1365. Hannan Trace ended up
Ca ldwell conti nued by saying · specialist, proves he is much
largely depends upon Its starting
fourth in the region with 1686 per he thinks that time will come more. with an 11 point average to ·
flve,however , It does have sev- game , while giving u~ 14 37.
when t he Tornadoes play as they his name.
eral young talented players on Its
Southern is 19-3 and HT 18'4. are capa ble, &lt;~end he says enthusiOne flannan Trace source was
bench. Southern is plenty deep,
Each won on their hom e court ili· astically , "I'm looking (otwar.d reported saying ·after the North
12 deep at best Last year 's -league play. fiT won 86-78 at
to that time. It's going to come . Gallia game that 'We'll win by
reserve squad was an SVAC home and Southern won deci- soan."
twenty if they (Southern) play
c hampionship club and knows
sive ly at 11 5-74 In R acine.
Southe rn is indeed a time bomb

like that next week." Hannan
Trace has the poten~l. but then
again Southern may well have .
HT' s number after shooUng a
sizzling 70 percent against the
'Cats at home.
Chris Petro, scoring 26 in his •
last game, - has had tile most
success against Southern. The i
double-digit scorer is a,lso a key l
Inside fll)lre and good rebowt- ;
der.Ricky Swain bandies ftUIJler- l
ous duties including offensive .;
guard and Is also a duel threat ;

""n

scorer.

TEAFOJD REALTY

l

WANT ADS
All . . .
Wl11l BARtMS

l

l

Nationwide Ins. Co.
ot Columbus, 0.
104W. Main

BlOWN I SNOUFFEI
11111 sAim

204 Condor St;

A o.ERGYMAN IS A MODERN VERSION

JOlin F. Fultl, M9"Ph. "2·2101

OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN

Potntrov

1

)J!I~ '

:1, •.,.

· , " ... ·

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

Anedo, pastor. SunUy servloe, 9:\)0a.m.;
evening service 7:30p.m. Prayer meeting,

WednOiday, 7:30-p.m.
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CIIURCH.OF
CHRIST, Josepb B. HO$klas, paStor. Bible

-

Wildcats and the Tomadoes, havlnc WOII their
re•pectlve home pmeilla their two head-to-llead
encounters this seasoo, will be flchtil!l for
bragglns rights In this coolest.

.AHzona, ·ovu,Win; Sooners;
.

Rebels are derailed Thursd!ly ~.
By United Press international
Nevada-Las Vegas and Oklahoma s uffered losses Thursday
night that damaged thelr chan·ces of earning the West's top
see ding for th e NCAA
Tournament.
Meanwhile, the two teams
considered th ~ ir most potent
contenders out West , Arizona
and Brigham Young, stayed on
tra ck to challe nge for a top seed.
The NCAA Se lection Committee ;vlll fin alize Its 64 choices
Marc h 13 at the conclusion · of
conference tournaments .
At Las Veg~;~ s, Ne v. , Long
Beach State u ~d two of NevadaLas Vegas primary we apons the 3-point fie ld goal and fullcourl pressure - to deal the No.
7 Runnln' Re bels their third
home loss of the season, 79·77.
Mo rton Wiley sank two free

'

throws with one second left to lift
At Provo, Utah, Mike Smith ·
the 49ers to the stunning victory. scored 24 points to help rally No. ~: .
At Columbia, Mo. , Derrick 11 Brigham Young, which used
Chievous grabbed 17 rebounds
three Lobos turnovers In the final ·
·and scored 35 points to help 2: 51 to outscore New Mexico 12-5
Miss(luri snap No . 4 Oklahoma's
and win 89-82. Jeff Chatman ·
12-game winning streak and keep added 19 points for the Cougars, ,
the Sooners from clinching the ,15-0 at home this season.
Big Eight Iitle with a 93-90
Although UNLV outrebounded
overtime triumph. Oklahoma ,
the 49ers 50-29, the Rebels
which rallied from a 14-point committed 24 turnovers , three In'
deficit with 8: 15 to go in regulathe closing minute, mostly
tion, shot 9 of 28 from 3-polnt against the fullcourt press. The •
range and was outrebounded
49ers also outdueled the Rebels '·•
59-31.
.
7-6 from 3-polnt range as Wiley .'
At Tucson, Ariz., Anthony Cook hit 4 of 7 and Andre Purry 3 ol4.
Wiley's 20 ·potnts helped the
scored 15 points to help No. 3
49ers
improve to 17-9 overall and
Arizona set a school single11-6
In the Western Athletic
season record with its 27th ,
victory as the Wildcats routed Conference . Gerald Paddlo
scored 22 pOints for UNLV, 25-4
Washington State 79-41 . The
and 14-3.
triumph was Wildcats Coach
Long Beach's Rlgo Moore had
Lute Olson's 100th at the schooL
tied the score with a jumper in
Arizona has clinched the Pac-10
title.
· the lane wl th three seconds left. ,

~THE

GRAVELY

ourwtaterCIIIrllct

or leiter lllld Clrll

1982 CHEVY S-10 ......5389·5

4 sp., topper, good condition.

.

Enjoy the very finest In home etyte
cooking at the very
best prIces
around I
..
"

., L---~----------~------~-----J

Cream Baked Chicken ................~... $349

6 sp., 14,000 miles, war1'anty can be transferred,

Salmon Loaf .......................................S349

Auto., PS, good c:Ondltlon.

1987 Dodge Dako~a ••••••.••••••S6595

MOI)IDAY

TUESDAY

~DNE§OAY

-

~-oori~~~=~:;

!ll
... l!rJt -IIIII third
vk:el,

School. Yooll!

&lt;lilY· .
GRAHAM

meot!rw.

UNITED . METHODIST,

PreoachlnJI: 9: 30a.m. first and second Sun days of each month; third and fourth Sun -

day each month worship servlcesat7: 30p.

m.; Wl'dnesday evenings at

7: ~

p.m.

Prayer and Bible Study.

.

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

c='a.Ardter).
CLUITBB

·

.

•

1979 luack Reaal ..................

2 dr.. auto., PI, PI,

11r.

$

•••••••"· ow. uno
, .. (614) ttJ-7075

.HOUIS: MON. thru SAT. 6:~0 A.M.-8:00 P.M. .

.

Bible Study. 6:30p.m.
NEW STIVERSVILJ.;E COMMUNITY
CJRJRCH, SUnday School servlc~. 9: 4~ a.
.m.; Wonhtp service 10:30 a.m.;
.E:vangellatlc S..VIce 7:30 p,m. Wodnesday: Prayer meeiiDJ7: ~,m. Tburoday.
ZION CHURCH OF CfUUST, PomeroyHarrla&lt;llvtlle Rd. Robert Purtell, minis·
·.,.,Slew Stanley; S. S. Supt.: Bill MCElroy, Alat. Su.pt. ; Sunday Scbpol9: 30a.m;:
Worlhlp service Iq:30a.m.; Evening worship Sunday 7p.m. lllld Wod~Oiday, 7p.m.

ST. JOHN LUTIIERAN CHURCH , Pine
Grove. Th~ Rev. Wllllam Mlddleswarth.
pastor. Church service 9:30a.m .; Sunday
Schooll0:30 a.m.
1
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
John Wrflht: pastor. Sunday Sc:hool9:30a.
I

......,,r.

.....av 1 ..
.... JMIIJI!!!'flo~
ASBUJIY :.:;a.-)- Warship 11a.m.

; Chun:ll St
9:15a.m.: Cltlrll Bible
SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST. Mul· Study,
W-1131.
7:30p.m.: UMW, niat
berry Helji~:hts Road, Pomeroy . Pastor
Tuesday. 7:30 p.m.; Choir Rehearu.l,
John Sweigart ; Sabbath 5(hoo1 Superin 6:30p.m.: UMW, fourth Sun·
te ndent , DarllnP S.ewart. Sabbath S&lt;:'hool
&lt;laY, 6:30p.m. (Bun:b).
begins at 2 p.m. on Saturday afternoon
ENTERPRISE - WOf'lhlp 9 a.m.:
with worship service following at 3:15p.m . . Cltun:h Sc:hooiiO o.m.; Bible Study, TuesEveryone Welcome. .
day, 7:30p.m.: UITIW,FintMqnday, 7:30
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 8 p.m. Choir Re- Sister Harrlt"'t Warner, Supl. Sunday
llanat,l:30 p.m. W~. (Franklin)
School9:30 a .m .: Morning Worship, 10: 45
FLATWOODS- Church SChoOI,IO a.m.
a.m.
: Worship, 11 a.m.: Bllile Study, ThursPOMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. Lyston
day, 7 p.m.; UMYF, !lvoday, 6 p.m.
Hatlpy, ministe-r; Saturday f!'Vftllng
(Franllllft).
evangrUsllc servtcea, open lo public, 7 p.
FOilEST RUN - '!\'orshlp .'9' o.m.;
m.: Sunday Church School. 9:Xt .a.m.:
Cllurcll School 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
MorniJtg WorshiP 10:30 a.m.
'helda)', 1:30 p.m.; UMW, first Tuesday,
FIRST SOUT!IERN BAPTIST, PQ7:
tllarcb).
mE"roy Pike. E . L.amarO'Beyanl , pastor~
Til !Middleport) - Cburth Sc:ltool.
Jack NH'da; Sunday School Dl~tor. Sun·
9:30 a.m.: lllanlJia Woraltfp 10:10 a.m.;
day School, !t: 30 a.m.; Morning WorJhlp,
Youth Group, Cp.m.; Wednesday, Ch""'h
10: 45; evening worship, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.l
Choir rehearsal, 7 p.lfl.: Thurtdly,
&amp; 7:30 (E.S.T.I; Wodnosday Prayer S.r- · Pr~ Sen-ice, 6:30p.m.: Bible Study, 7
vtce. 7:00p.m. CD.S.T.) a 7:30P.M: CE.S. · p.m. (Ztlnl8al.
,
1'. ); Minion Friends (ages 2·6), Royal
MINE!IS\'ILLE - Wonhlp l!orvke 10
Ambassadors ~bOys age!. 6-18), and Clrls
a.m.: Cltureh llehool.lla.m.; t1MW, tblnl
In Action (age-s 6-tfl) on Wrd~sdays, 7 p.
W~,- 1 p.m.: Choir praotlee. Moom. (O.S.T.) .u:30p.m. tE .S.T.I; Tllesday
dAly, 7:30p.m. !Burdi).
VIsitation, 6: 30p.m.
PEARL CHAPEL - WOI'IIIIp Service
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH. Bat·
9:30
a.m.; Clturdl 1c1too1 10:15 a .m.:
IE'y Run Road. Rev. EIIU'nPit Raw1011, pas·
UMW
secolltl'fllelday, 7:30p.m.;-tMu..
tor . Handley Dunn, supt. SUnday SChool.
matl)
lOa.m.; Sullday;evenlngse-rvtce, 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Clturch llehool.l: 15 a.m.
; Bible tPachlng, 7:30p.m. Thurlday . .
:
WoJ:IIdp 10:30 a.m.: CbOir ..-raaJ
'SYRAGUSE MISSION. Cherry Sl.. Sy;
.
W
-113', 7:30 p.m.: UMW, lltOIId
rlllcuSf'. Sf.rvlces, lOa.m. Sunday. EwnlnaTliesdaY, 7:30p.m.: UMYJI'8Gifday,6p.m. •
sE'rvkes Sunday and WfdnPiday at '1: 00 p.
ltOClt SPRINGS- Cltureh lebOol,l: 15
ni.
;
.
a.m.; Wonlllp10a.m.; -.llucly, Wed•MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST· nesday. 7:30p.m.; UMYF (leolori), SunIN CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Haley,
clay, 5 p.m.: tJualon) every otMr,Suatttst elder: Wanda Mohler. Suaday School
daJ, IP.m. IFruidlll).
Slip!. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Mornill(l
RU'I1.ANJ) - Cllun:b School. 10 a.m.:
Worsblp 10:30 a.m.; Evrtlill(l Worship 7; 30
Worlldp,
ll Lm.: UMW ntlt Moaclay,
p.m.; Wodnesdoy prayer mHIInJ 7:30p.m.
7:30~
. .._L._
..._. __ •
' MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD;
,
CI:!ITD~........,.-9:15
Racine. Rev. JamH S.neffll!ld, pallor. • · a.m.;
wol'lldp lO;IJ p.m. (M,_,.),
F,[t'&lt;'Rlan Williams, Supt. Sunday Sc:llool .
SI'IOWVILl.E - Wonldp, t:m a.m.;
9;.45 a.m.: sunday and Wt'dn8day PV!'R•
ohur&lt;:b ""ltool t:a a.m. tMulamanl
11111 .. rvlm. 7 p.m.
• MIDDLEPORT FIRST · BAPTIST.
Cllt-n&lt;" Sixth and Palmor. Jallltl - ·
Plllor. Edna Wilson, S.S. SuJO.; C.llly
Rlafll , Alii. Supt. Sunday Sc:ltool, 9:15 a.
""; Morning Worship, 10:15 a.m.: Sunday
~nlnllfrvlce, 7. p.m. Pra)'f'r mMbll
aikl BIIIW Study We.lnesday """nlnJ, 7 p.
~; Chlld,.n's choir pracnc.. -Wed""'
dAly, 7 p.m.: Adult choir praettce, Wod., 8
p.m.; Radio prOII'ant. WMPO, Sunday, ,
8' 311 a.m. ·

w-,

WlAm.

•

OF'=~

, ' , ..

.

1695

1911

FUNERAL HOME
"S.ning .FCIIIIilits"
264 S. 2nd. Middleport

m.; Larry Haynes. S. S. Supt. Morning

worship lit: 30 a.m.

,

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE, Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr., past..-.

Ora Bau, Claatrman of the Board ofChrls·

tlan We. Sunday School9: Ma.m.: Morn·
lng wonhlp 10:30 ·a .m.; evangellstlr service 7:00p.m. Wedrlelday service, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, De•·
ter. Woody Call, puler..s.n-1... Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wfdgesday, 7 p.m .
. lf);MLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, Rog~

er Watton, p.•tor ..Crnson Pratt, Sunday

School Supt. Mof'Dln&amp; Wonhlp '' 30 a.m.;
Sunday ScMo1 1&amp;. 30 a.m.: E.etttnl aervf&lt;:e, 7: 30 p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shue,
pa1tor: Joe Sayre, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday SChool 9:f5 a.m. ; Evening wor·
ship 6:30p.m.; Prsyer Meeting, 6:30p.m.
Wedtleiday.
,
TUPPERS PLAINS cmJRCH 'OF
CHRIST. Dave lPrentlce, minister. Deryl

Wells, Supt. Churc:h School 9 a.m.; Wor·

ship S.rvtee, t:t5 p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF 111E NAZARENE . Rev. Herben Grate, • paator.
Frank Rlmo, supt. Sunday School 9: 10 a.
m.; Wonhlp RI'Vtce, ll a .m. aDd 7 p.m .

Sunday. Wednelday, 7 p.m. Prayer meet"'L.uREL CUFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. David Bell, pa.tlor. Robert E.
Barton, Director ol CltrlaUan EducaUon:
·St.,.. Eblin, aulslant. SUnday Sc:ltool9: 30
a.m.: Mornllle Wtlrlblp 10:30 a.m.; THill
In Atllon, 6 p.m.; EvenlnaWorshlp, 7: OOp.
m. Wednesday evtnln&amp; pr•yer and Bible
study, 7:00p.m.Cholrpratfice, Thursday,
7p.m.
·
.DEXTER CHURCH . OF CiiRIST,
Charlet Ruaaell $r., minister. Rick Ma-

supl. Sunday School 9:30 a.m.;

servtce 10:30 a.m. Bible stvdy,

7:30

lit! Oui&lt;kal and lulfl AM fo• .

(row's family Restaurmt

..,,.,.,, ICIIIIIIig Ftltl C6/cill ..

221 W. Moin St~ ,_,.,
992-5432

992-5141

Evening Worship 7: p.m. ;
nes aY
Prayer Service, "7: 30p.m .
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad '
St., Mason. Sunday School tO a,.m .; Morn·
lng worship 11 a.m.; Evening service 6 p . •
m . Prayer meeling and Bible Study Wed·
nesday, 1 p.m,

716 N'ORTH SECOND AVE:
MIDDLEPORT, 01110

worship 10:30 a.m .; Suilday evenln&amp; ser·
vice, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday evening ser·
vice, 7:30p.m.
SYRACU~E CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn MeMIUan, pastor.
Mary Janice ~vender, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; Morning
wonhtp 10:30 a.m.; EvangellsUc service.
6p.m.; PrayerandPralseWednesday,7p.
m.; Youth meeting, 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRE"''JfREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunday
Schoo110 a.m .; Gary Reed, Lay leader'.

sermon, 11 a.m.; Su_nday night
7:30 p.m.,
Sun&amp; service 8 p.m. Preaching 8:30p.m.

Morning

servlces: Christian Endeavor

Mid·week prayer meeting, Wednesday, 7

worship service 7:00 p.m. Wednmda)r
prayer meeting 7:00p.m.
MT. HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Community oil Cl Rl. 82 Rev. Robert
Sand~s. pastor. Jeff Holter, lay leatler; .
Ed Roush, _S unday Schod. Supt. Sunday
Schod 9•30 a.m.; rQOrnlng war~hlp and
chUdren'a church , 10:30 a.m.; evening
preacblna: service first three Sundays,
7:30p.m.; Special service fourth Sunday
evening, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
ship, 7:30p.m.
.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Located on 0 . J . Whlte Road or Highway .
160. Pat Henaoo, pastor. Sunday ScboollO
a.m.Ciassealorallages.JunlorChurchll
a.m .; Morning worship 11 a.m. AdUlt
Choir practlee6 p.m. Sunday. Young Peo·
pie's, Chtldren's Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7:30p.m. .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
Sl., Middleport. Atnllated wtth Southern
Baptist Convention. Davkl Bryan, Sr., Ml·
nlster. Sunday School tO a .m.; Morning
worShip 11 a.m.: Evrntngworshlp 7p.m.;
Wednesday evening Bible ~ study and ·
prayer meetlng 7 p.m.

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRiST, St.

Rt.12t and Co. Rd, 5. Mark Seevers, mtnls·

. YS"LL RU" HOLINESS CHURCH
H
'" pul-" Su~-ySChoolat9 · 30a ·
0· H Cart
· '
'
-' · · ·
· m .; Morning wcnhlp at 10:30 a .m.: Sun·

ter. SUnday School Supt. Harry Hen·
drlcka; Sunday School 9:30a.m.; Morning
Worsh~10: 30a.m. ·, Evenlnaworshlp7p.
m .ST.
W nesday wtrShlp 7 p.m.
PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

dayeventnaservlceat7:30p.m . Thursday
servtcea at 7• 30 p.m
FREEOOM co'sPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located ori County Road 31. Rev.
Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastm-. R~·

meroy. he Rev. William Mlddleswart,
pastor. Sunday School 9 : 45 a.m . Church
service 11 a.m.
SACRED
HEART. CHURCH, Msgr.

p.m.

POMEROY, CHI0--992-6677

·

Roger Willford a•• t· pastor · Pr ...chlng
services Slmday' 7::.)p.m.
Prayer meeting
Wednesday, 7:30 ]).m ., Gary . Grltflth,
leader. Youth IP'OUP! Sunday evening at
6:30p.m . With Roger and VIolet Willford,
leaders. Communion service first Sunday
each month.
WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN
Rev . PhllltpRI·
CHUR.CH- ·CoolvUieRD.
ol" 30
denour, pastor. Sunday •;x;ho .,.: a.m.;
worslllp service 10:30 a.m.; Blb6e study
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p.m..
R1 f"M "NI&gt; CHURCH OF CHRIST•
Bill -c•...,
Carl...' pall-... · Sunday SChool I ··» a·
m.; Morning Worship and Communloa
10:30 a.m.
RlrrJ.ANDBIBLEMETHODIST. Amos

Tillis, past cr. Sonny Hudson, supt. Sunday
Scho ~- 9 - ~am· Mornlngworshl&amp;i10·30
, oJU •
·•
•
·Ul Sun•·y
-·enlng
servt7•• ' Y"
•m
am
'
''
._
....
..-..
•
Wedneeday
aervlce
1 p.m. WMPO program 9 a.m. each Sunday.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF 111E NAZA·
RENE. Samuel Basye, putor. Sunday
School 9:30a.m:; Worship servlce10:30a.
m.: Young people's se,-vlce 6 p.m.
Evaniiellstlc servlce6: 30p.m. Wednesday
servtce7 p.m.
MASON CHURCH OF GHRIST, Miller
St., 'Ma1&lt;11, W. Va. SUnday Bible Study 10
a.m.; Worship 11 a.m. and 7p.m. Wodn...
d.-y Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud~
dlft'e Lane, Muoo, W. Va . J. N. nacker,

pUtor. E..,.IDI service 7:30p.m.: Wom&lt;11'1 Mlnlslty, Thursday, 9:30 a.m.:
Wednesday PrAyer and Bible Study, 7:15
p.m.
HARTFORD GHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Harllonl. w. va.
Rev. David
McManis,
pastor.
Church
School
9:30 a.m.;
Sunday
morning
ter·
vke, 11 a .m .; SUnday evening Rrvlce,
7:3)p.m. Wednesday prayermeetlnl:. 7;30
p.m.
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
w. Va., Rt. 1. Jam,. Lewll. put or. WorJhlp servl""' 9:30a.m.: Sunday Sc:boolll
a.m.; Evenlnrwonblp7:30p.m. Tuelday
cottaae prayer meE!flng and Bible Study
9: 3D a.m.; Worship aervlce, Wednaday
7:30p.m.
OURSAVIOURLUTIIERANCHURCH,
Walaut and Henry Sis., RaYeOIWood, W.
Va. The Rev. Geo!'le c. Welrkk. pastor.
SunclaySChooll:30a.m.: Su ....ywcnblp
CHURCH,Iocatedon
P~~~ ~;~~;;;~.i-:
25 •s.vt
- Flat·
t
pUtor.
...

JO:,Ifla.m.and7:10p.m. With
Bible Study, Wod-

:i.Otrm~IP CRUSADE FOR

:dt=~~~iff~ Rev.

Corner ~amore and Second Sts., Po·

FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle

Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch. supt .
Sunday School 9:30 a.m .; Second and
fourth SundaYs worship service at 2:30 p.

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main St., Middleport. Rev. Gtlbert Craig, .

Jr., pastor. Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday SChoOt 9; 30 d.
ril .; Worship Service. 10: 45 a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist. Sund a)' ·
BlbleStudy9a .m .; Worshlp, 10a.m.; Sunday evening service 6 p .m.; Wednesday '
evening service, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Racine,
Rh 124. William Hoback, pastor. Sunday.
School10 a.m.; Sunday evening service 7 ~
p.m. Wednesday evening sprvtce 7 p.m .
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle, .
Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.m . Morning
Worship 10:30 a .m . Prayer service, alle.r n· ~
ate Sundays.

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd., ·
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland. Robe rt..
Richards , pastor. Services at 7 p.m . on
Wednesdays and Sundays .
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP-'
TER of lhe Wesleyan Holiness Churc h.
Rev. David Ferrell, pastor. Henry Eblln,
sunday SChool Supt.; Sunday SChool lOa :
m.; Morning Worship 11 a .m .; Evening
servlee 7: 30p.m . Wednesday evening service 7:30p.m.
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH, '
Harry Holter, pastor. Sunday serv ices
9:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.; Midweek service,
7:30p.m . Thursday.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
Ave. Rev. Clark Baker, pas tor. Carl Nottlngha m, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
Schod 10 a.m. with classE'S for al l ag PS.
Evening services at 6p.m . W~n~ay Bl·
blestudy at 7:30p.m. Youth servtces Frl·
day a t 7: 30 p.m .
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill St. ,
Middleport. Brorher Chuck McPh erson,
pas tor. Sunday School' 10 a.m.: Sunday
evening services a t7 p.m. and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m .

Anthony Glannamore. Ph. 992·5898. Satur·
d
day Evening Mass 7:30 p.m.; Sun ay
Mass, 8 a.m. and lO a . m. Contesstons one
half hour before eacb Mass. ceo classes,
tt,;j~g~~da~APTIST, 525 N. 2nd St .,
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,
pastoc. Sunday School 9:30a.m.; church
Jlames Eh.l K• esee, pasE loc • . service 7: 30p.m. ; youthfellowshlp6:30 p .
8Mindddleport.
u ay 111orn ng wors P 10 a.m.; ven· m · Bible study Thursday 7·30 p m
lng service
7 p.m.: Wednesday , evenln~
·•
•
· ·
· ·
w«shlp
FUlL
GOSPEL
LIGHTHOUSE
, 33045
7 p.m. VlsltallonThur5day 6:30p. Hiland
Road , Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pasmM_ORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: Davjp
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Sunday ·
l'nornlncr service atlO a.m . ; Sundaye\'enCurfman, past cr. Sundoo•~ Schooi, IO a.m.: ingservlce
-~
7:30p.m. Tuesday and Thurs.
wcrship M!rvlce U a.m.; Sunday night
wcrshlp service 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
day ServiceS at 7:.J) p.m.
~ w~
da
NEW HAVf;N CHURCH OF THE N A ~
prayerservn..""r ICUnes Y 7 p.m.
·
ZARENE, Rev . Glendon Stroud, past or.
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH
or Middleport,
Inc., ?SPearl
St., s_u nd ay •.:x:· hoot•":30 a.m.; worshlpservice, ,
ft~.
Ro
M
Youthserv!ce Sunday fi:l5p . •
M
n.ev. 1van
wors~astor:,
ger an1ey, 10:30a.m.,·
Sunday evenlngservlce7:00p.m. Wed· -.Sr., SundavJ ~Sc
Supt. Sunday School m.
nesday Prayer Meeting a nd Bibl e S1udy •
9E:l0 a.m.;WMornllng7 W30orshlp 1WO~ ~T·; 7:00p.m.
venin&amp; orah P ; p.m. ~n=ay
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH. Sun· ;
evening Blblf study, praye~ and praise day afternO&lt;I'I services at 2:30. Thursd ay •
service, ?:30 p.m .
evenlna services at 7::(1.
UVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH . Mason, W . •'
OF GOD - Gilbert Spencer, pastor. Sun- Va . Pastor, Bill Murphy. Sunday School10
day School 9:30a.m.; Morning ll"I'Yice a.m.; Sunday evening 7: 30p.m. Prayer
lO:OOa.m.; Sundayevenlngservlce7:00p. meeting and Bible study We&lt;lnesday, 7:30
m.; Mld·week prayer aervi.Ce Wedft.Hday p.m. Every me welcome.
7 p.m.
RtJTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
MT. OUVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN· lerh St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
ITY CHURCH, Lawrence BUill, pallor. SChool10a.m.; Sundayeventng7:00p.m.;
Max Folmer. Sr., S. S. SUpt. Sunday School
Wednesday evening prayer meeting 7:00
t:30 a.m.: Suaday evenlnaiOIVIce, 7:30 . p.m.
m.: Wednesday evenllta Bible study aDd
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
pralle aervtee, 7; 30 p.m.
CHURCH, Sliver Ridge. Duan~ SydenUNITED FA1111 CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Po- slrlcker, pastor. Sunday School 9 a. m ·
meroyBy·PUI. Rev. DavtdWlleman,Sr., WonhlpServlce, 10a.m.; ~unday evPnlrig .
pallor. MelVIn Drake, S. S. Supt. Sunday service, 7;00 p.m. Wednesday night Bible·,
School
9:30a.m.;
7:00p.m._ _ _ _, _ _ _ _"1
•
,_
__
_ _ _MomlngWorshlp10:30;
_ _ _ _.,;.._ _ _study
_;......;;...

·sermonette
WhO touched tbe earth with beauty? It wasn't the evolutionists who
insist aU thlnp are acckletlts or tust .a roll ofthe dice. Tiley tell us things
juat ha~. Man, wlllch Ia ~only creature to see beauty, lsjusl
another accident that ha~ from a lower form of life, the so ca le&lt;l
scientists claim. ·
.
Caterpillars, files, oak trees, clOuds, siiOw flakes, rainbOws, and lots
more tblnp doa't """beauty or even care about lt. why lhen aiiOUid I
worry about beauty, )'011 may aak. If plallts juat grow and animals Jusl
reproduce oaly In their """ opecles and birds atid ftsh spend all their
time staytq alive, wbo Is tbere to enJoy tbe beauly at! artJUnd us and
w11o put l!Muty 11ere on urtlliD tile flrit ptace.
.
Tile tnrth Is God put beautyonearlll. He did so only forman, who did
·not hatch from a froior fish but was made In the lma&amp;e ol ~ Hlrmelf.
God touched tile earlll w1t11 belluty so He could enjoy It a ad we bumaas,
His apeelal c.,.ttoa, could lalow beauty llld enjoy 11. After each days
creation, God Aid, "II ts IIOOd". Tile beauty oil lhe earth makes tile
mucll fiiOnt IDterelllfll to mnktlld . We can ett and pollder on tile
WOIIden oil tile ual- oil God. We can pause to tiiiH ud plan and
dramoiiTottiiOIIOW. AlllmaiAeo d'n Ollly- toU.aiUIJbelly. 'l1le
1111t1er splas a beautlflll web bul Ollly to c.teh lb food."llau can - at
tftat same web OD a dewy lllfll'llillland -the ._,uty oflbi1)'111111etry aU
IJIIsteillnl wet.. Not to l1le apldet, To blm Ills a cllauel tor food. 'l1le
animal world eata, sleeps ailtl playa a little alld then bact to routllle of
eal and lleep. Maa ean tln!un. J1C111!1er tile vaa- of tile Ulllvenl!,
~ lbere II a God w11o created au tllla. plan for tile futlll'land almply
eajtJy tile bleuty af tilt Mftll. lllan lildlejlla WCIIIdei
lllltde. Re b
billl above tilt ..... oil CI'HU.. Re .. Ia tile llna&amp;'e God. Juat u
fniPortaat,- can - ·IIHIIty. Wllat
baw.
~~ .. an IliON tban jut aMuls
• - ....

f".t,

4dr•• eutct.,

.•.......

• ·

CheiHburger Baiket ......................... $250

·WILLIAMS DINER

CIIURCII. AMII

· firat Sunday. !Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a.m. ; Church
Scllool10a.m.: Bible Study. Thunclay. 7p.
m.: \JMW, ltnlt Thunclay, 1 r -m.: &lt;;om·
mualm, lb'lt Sunday (Archer .
JOPPA - Worship 9&lt;30 a.m.; Church
Sc:liool10: 30 a.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
7: liD P·lll· IJolutaonl · ·
LONG 1101 10M - Cltttn:b Scllool 9: 30
·a.m.; WOJ'IIIIp 1 p.m.: Bl~ ~. Wod·
nesday, 7:• p.m.; UMYF, Wedtleoclay,
5: DO p.m.; Commwdoll Flnl Sunday.
(Archerl.
REEDSVILLE - Churcb SchOol 9: 30 a.
m.: Woroidp Servlc. 11: DO a.m. (Deeter) .
TUPPER$ PLAINS ST. PAUL Chan:h Scllool 9 a.m.: Wonbtp 10 a.m.:
Bible Study, 'fllel!lay, 7:30p.m.; Conunu·
nton First

1978 Chevy Window Van ••••S1495

C•.,...t• lolls .................................
,.. $349
JHURID Y
·
. Fiftiil'vSllllllhettl &amp; MeGtballs .....:................. SJ49
' • ric Chops . &amp; Drt111ng
• ......................
'
SJ
. 49,
.

Class, 9: 30a.m.; MomlngWorshtp10:30a.
m.; Evenlnl Worahip,6 :3&gt;p.m. Thursday

Third 'lllelda)', 1:30 p.m. Communion,

Pomeroy, 011.
• 992-2975

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

,

an.a.....J•••
ALFRED - Cluareh Sc:ltool 9, 30 a.m.;

8: SO p.m. Ia the Convocation Center In AtbeM. The

•

A woman was driving along on a very hot day last
summer. Suddenly, her car refused to budge another
inch suffering from vapor locks and as a result of
that, a·"M&gt;m-9own battery. However, the Lord was
with her, because the place where she became
stranded lu!ppened to be directlY across from the
~age l?f one of the toWn's churches. She sought
help there, and although busy with their own
concerns, the Pastor and his mechanical-minded son
went out in the broiling heat arid worked under the
hood until they were able to send her on her way.
Perhaps ~u have no problems with your car, but in
case you have some other kind, take them to your
House 9f Worship. 1hlk to your cler.g yman, who
will pray for you and help you any way he can. This
is one of his many ways of doing the Lord's work,
as you wjll find out for yourself whenever the
time comes.

Worshll!. 11~·111·! UMYF6:30p.m.: UMW

112 l•sl• Su1 d &amp;w1111

- 992-7U6

1

•

Delicious Dishes!

SATURDAY

,. 1 \

(6141992-2039 or
(614)992·5721

GRAVELY TRAC'I'OR SAIJS

NIIKTII&amp;U'l'CLUITBB
tJNI'IICD
-- ·
leY.
Doll-

Saturday 9 a.m.-1 p.m.

SALES - SERVICE - TESTING

·" . . MEitiS TIRE
~ ' CEII1ER, INC.

.·

ROWIIS fOI MIT O&lt;UIIOII

106 ""'•""' ..... ' - " ' · Olo,

MEIGS
ClOOP&amp;JL\TIVB PAB1811

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992-5!30 POINKOJ

nesday and Saturday Eventna Services at

RISING TO THE· CHALLENGE - Soulhem
hopes to rise to the challence, as center KeDDy ·
Turley ( 35) did against North GaiDa last Saturday
night, In tonight's Division IV district touraament
game against Hannan Trace, which wlll start at

FRANCIS FLORIST
M•i/(8 Counly'• Oldest Floril l
362 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 46789
814/992-2644

.

7:30p.m.

.

lUIlUI

,,,,., Ftiir•t Shop

OJ

diOI' AuxUiary. WedtiOiday, 7 p.m. FamIly Worlldp.
HAZEL COMMUNri'Y CHURCH. 011
Rt. 1:U, 3 mo.. from Portland·Lona Bot·
tom. EdRI Hart, ,_.tar. Sunday Scho(j,
9:30 a.m.: !loanday . morn1D1 preochtaa
10:30 a.m.; S1lllll113' """IDfServlcel, 7:30
p.~DLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCII. Comer Alb and Plum. Noel
Hernnun, pastor. Suaday Sc:boollO: OOa.
m.: Morn1D1 WonhiD, 11:00 a.m.; Wod·

Tuesday thru Friday 9 a.m .·5 p.m.

; Veteran Johnny Rutherford Is
the 'first former winner to have a
car entered in his name for the
1988 Indianapolis 500. Rutherford, a 50-year-old, three-time
winner of the 500 from Fort
Worth, ' Texas, will have his
. eholce of two· cars entered by
Kenny Bernstein, a top drag

lt",..

1111~

I

Closed Monday

racer from Dallas. Teo Fabl of
Italy, the 1983 pole sitter, will be
returning to the Indianapolis
Motor Speedway after a threeyear absence. So far, 25 cars
have been entered for the May 29
race - or about one- third of the
total expected by the April 1
deadline.

214 [.

9~2-3978

New Fill &amp; Wl•ter IIeure

Rutherford enters Indianapolis 500

INSURANCE
. SERVICES ~fi-· ·

·P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Mill Work·
Cabinet !laking
Syracuse

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy. OH.

SVAC CHAMPIONS· - Eastern's Junior Hlgb
School girls' baalletbaU team recently com.,leted
a fine ""ason by claiming the SVAC champlouhlp
wllb a 9-1 reeord. Overall the team po!lted a 10.3
mark. Eaatem averaced 2'l points per came and
1 ave up an avera1e of jusll9.8. Pictured are team
members, lronl, . L-R, Debbie Gray, Elise

619

RACINE PLANING' MILL

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

-Manlcke, Stephanie Otto, Karen Morris, Michele
Metzger, and Nicole l'lckens; Back Row Manager Alvena Van ~eter, Ruby ,B urke, Andrea
Roekhold, TIHany Gardner, Lee Gillilan, and
Jennifer Rollllh. Not pictured Is Coach Scott
Wolfe.

Brogan-Warner .

992-2156

Portsmouth rally. tops GAHS
46-37 in Division II tourney

-

[H

·:

Scott ,JUlnkin, Richard Stitt,
and Mark Jenkins , all veteran i
ball players and"_ gbod .bal· 1
lhandlei's roun.d 'out-the' top .five. !
Tim Brumfield lnd Grady Johnson are usually the fli'stfmen off
· the bench.
·
At any rate tonight's game . ,
should very well be a dog(cat) I
fight to the finis)!. '
i
Tonight's second game will I
· matcl! Le·esburg Fairfield ~
against undefeated EasternPike.
.,

"2-2111 Pomeroy

Portsmouth , the second- 4:31 left of play ) but t,h elr speed,
IE!ad. Then Tubbs, with 3:30 to go,
ranked Division II high school quickness and size ll.n ally paid
all but iced the win with his only
basketball team In Ohio (uP! off."
.
,
three-pointer or the game to
poll) outscored 18th-ranked GalOsborne added, " We feel we
make It 37-31. That 's whe n PHS
lipolis 14-6 In the final four and had to make adjustments on our
began playing keep-a way .
one-half minutes to post a hard· part after that loss down there. ln
Gallipolis his 16 of 36 field goal
earned 46-37 victory over the other words , our kids, learned
attempts for 44 percent. At the
Blue Devils in the 1988 Southeast- from one experience and Imline, GAHS was five of nine. The
ern Ohio District Tournament proved, and that 's a plus for our · Devils had 32 rebo\lnds , nine by
opener Thursday night In Ohio program. It wasn't however
Berklch and eight by Thomas .
University's Convocation Cen- quite enough tonight."
GAHS was c harged with 18
ter, Athens.
After jumping out to a quick turnovers.
Number four-ranked Sheridan
10-4 lead behind Mark Berklch,
Tim Neville led Ga Ilia scorers
ousted Hillsboro 83-63 in the
Ejlll Evans and Tim Neville.
with 14 points . J ason Thomas
opening game. The Generals and
GAHS held a 'slim I0-81ead after closed out with 13.
'rrojans will clash for the district
one quarter.
For the Trojans , who had their
title and a ·spot In the March 17
The Trojans , behind big Do- worst night or the year from the
Daytc;m reglonals at OU on
minic McKinley and David field (12 of 39 for 33 percent)
Saturday, March 12, at 7: 3(1p.m.
Barnes, shot out to a 17-12 lead 1'\lbbs was the only player in
Trojan coach Joe Suboticki,
(4: 02) In the first half before double figures with 21. Barnes
whose PHS club Improved Its
GAHS. behind Jason Thomas, finished with nine and McKinley
season mark to 22-1, was upset
Neville and .Evans, pulled ahead eight
with his team's effort following
23-20 ' during th e halftime
The Trojans were 21 of 2~ a tthe
their lowest offensive output or
intermission.
line for 73 percent. PHS had but
the season. " That's what they
GAHS was up 25-22-wlth 5: 44 to 23 rebounds against the s maller
had to do I guess," the PHS
go in the third when Patrie! Blue Devils, nine by Ba r nes . PHS
m entor said. "We just don't like
Tubbs hit one of his three field had only five turnove rs.
that type of basketball. Portsgoals, followed by a tapln a
Gallipolis bows out at 17-6.
mouth AD J im Branham con- minute later by McKinley to give
Box score:
curred . " What we need In high
PHS a 26-251ead. Portsmouth led
PORTSMOUTH ( 46)- McKinschool ball is a shot clock."
28-27 after three. In the final ley , 4-0-8; Taylor, 1-2-4; Barnes,
Subotlcki agreed.
period, PHS outscored GAHS 3-3-9; White , o-2-·2; Tubbs , H -14In response to those state- 18-10, but nine of those car:ne a( 21; Ape!, 1-0-2; TOTALS lH-21·
ments , Coach Jim Osborne said, I. the chalrlty line by Tubbs In the _46.
.
"We had to play them (Portsfinal minutes or play when the
GALLIPOLIS (3'7) - Berkich,
mouth) theway we dld. They ran Trojans played "keep-a -wa:y 3·0-6; Thomas , 5-3-13; Todd,
over us down the re (6040). We ball" themselves In order lo 0-0-0; Evans , 2-0-4; Neville, 6-2felt we had to be more patient, preserve the lead and win.
14; Kimble, 0-0-0; St ra it, 0-0-0;
work for the good shot, box out on
Jason Thomas ' three-point McGuire. 0-0-0; Casey, 0-0-0;
the boards, and cut down on our
play , a tap-in and foul shot with Anderson, 0-0-0; Owen; 0-0-0;
turn'o vers and keep them from
4: 48 left. cui the Trojans lead to Cornett, 0-0-0; TOTALS 16-5-37.
the fast break in order to win."
32-31.
By Quarters:
Coach Osborne said afterward,
With 4: 31 left. McKinley Galllpolls ...... ...... .10 13 4 10-37
" We had them where we wanted climbed over everybody to tap In ~ Portsmouth ..... .... 8 ' 12 8 18-46
. them late in the game (32-31 with a loose ball to give PHS a 34-31

216 s. Se~:ond ·
Pomeroy
992-3325

GroceriesGtntral lerdlandise
bcint 949-2550 ·

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Ohio

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By·The. Bend

QN r--E OPENING
OF 'tHE.
.

RACI EMEDICAL~ I)
.OPEN HOUSE

.

AL BUILDI

Delli' Q8 Lud11n: Most of us
other vehicle."
have endured the collfuslon of . ~·I was driving my car out of
•• trafllc accidents and then having
the driveway hi the usual
~ to brlefiysm:unerlzethe~nton
manner, when It was struck by
~ those pitifully Inadequate , l!l&amp;u·
the other car In the same place It
~ ranee forms.
·
had been struck ~eral times
:
The following was published by before."
·
~ an Insurance company for Inter· · "I was on my way to the
nal distribution. Tbele are sum· doctor's with rear end trouble
~ maries submitted when policy·
when my universal joint gave
C holclers were asked for a brief way, causlna me to have an
, sta~m!'nt describing their par· accident."
~ tlcular accident. Your readers
"Aa I approached ihe lntersec·
may enjoy .them. -RALEIGH, tion, a stop sign · suddenly ap·
~
N,C;.
.
. · peared In a place where no stop
•: · DEAR R.: What a , hoot: sign had ever appeared before. I
r. Thaliks for passing tbem on.
was .unable to stop Ill time to
:j
"It Happened Thli Way"
avoid the accident." ·
"Tiie telephone pole was ap·
~·
"The otber car collided with
:J mine without giving warning of proachlng fast. I was attempting
to swerve out of Ita path when It
1: Its Intention."
struck
my front end."
:,J·
"I !bought my window was
down, but found II was up when I
"To avolcl hitting the bumper
of tbe car In front, I struck the
'' put my hand tbrough it."
'l "A pedestrian hit me and went pedestrian."
"My car was legally parked as
~ under my car."
•
"The lillY was all over the It hacked Into the other vehicle.''
l place. I had to swerve a number
"An Invisible car came out of
:; of times before I hit him."
nowhere,•struck my vehicle, and
,•
"I pUlled away from thesldeof . vanished." · •
"When I saw I could not avoid a
~ · the road, glanced at my mother· ·
• In• law.' and ' headed over the collision, I ~tepped on the gas and
, ~ embankment..,
crashed Into the other car."
''The pedestrian had no Idea
·,•·
"Tbe accident occurred when I
:: was attempting to bring my car wblch direction to go, so I ran
• out ora skid by steerl!lg lllnto the h1m over.''
~

0

~~~GLAS

HUNTER, M.D.

DR. MARGIE LAWSON, D.D.S.

·992-2575

.FOR AN APPOINTMENT

FOR AN .APPOINTMENT

HOURS:

.

Monday, Tuesday, Thursday '
and Friday
9:00 A.M. • 5:00 P.M.

.

HOURS:

Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday
. 8:30 A.M~·S:OO P.M.
Thursday 8:30 ·A.M.-~:00 P.M.

RACINE ·MEDICAL &amp; DENTAL ·
BUILDING
STH AND PEARL STREET, RACINE

''

DR. DOUGLAS HUNTER, M.D.
AND

DR. MARGIE LAWSON, D. D. S.

THE
RACINE
MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION

•

·'

,,, Wlt6BI 1'

Dr. Margie Lawsoa, deatw, ud Dr. DouJ)u HUll·
ter, M.D., are plc&amp;ured In the aew Racine Medical aad
Dental Clinic.

We Salute The
Racine a~lealan~
Dental Cllnle on Its
0ra'I~' 0p. I II gI' -~

.,

RACINE VILLAGE CO.UNCIL

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ON OPENING IHE ,

:

RACINE· MEDICAL-DENTAL

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cu11c

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better place in which to live.

•~

FROM THE IOARD, ADMINISTRATION, STAFF, AND

;

.ELEMENTS::"~:::HERN
ELEMENTARY
SOuTHERN KINDERGAmN

~
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POITUMD ELEMENTAllY

'

RACINE

~

~:~nN ...~~a:~~nEMENTARY

Dr. Douglas Hunter, M.D.

AND

and

Dr. Margie Lawson, D.D.S.
And Their . Staff To
Racine.

We App1eclste You1

,..

Conltstulstlong, Rs~lne/

•

ON YOUR NEW

~

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RACINE MEDICAL-DENTAL
. ·cLINIC
Thank you for your
service to the residents of
Racine and Meigs
County.

ROUSH CONSTRUCTION
GENEIAL CONTRACTORS
ROOD ID.

.

.

J. D. DRILLING

.

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•••

RACINE MEDICAL &amp;
DENTAL CLINIC
RACINE, OHIO

•' ..

I •

AND STAFF OF THE NEW

Dedlcsfion/

'' ...

''

DR. DOUGLAS HUNTER, M.D.

SYRACUSE

.

Co 119 ratu l·at l.on1
and Good Laekl
TO THE NEW

;

PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town·
" ship Trustees will meet at 7 p.m.
~ Friday at the Pagevllle Town·
~ ship Building.
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' SYRACUSE - A pu)lllc soup
supper, featuring soup, sand·
wlches and pie, will be served
beginning at 4 p.m. Friday at the
Asbury Methodist Church In
Syracuse.
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;:AM Inspection will
b&lt;! heki Tuesday evening. Dinner
at 6:30 followed by the lodge
f!!eetlng at 7:.30.
Rl;TLAND - The Rutland
TOWJ!Shlp Trustees will meet
Friday, 6:30 p.m., at the fire
station. .
REEDSVILLE - Olive Town·
ship Trustees will meet Friday,
6:30p.m., at the Reedsville Fire
Station.
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs,
Counly Pomona Grange will
meet Friday, 7:30 p.m .~ at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall. Co• lumbla Grange will serve refreshments. National Sewing

FRANK and DELORES CLELAND
'
.

CONGRATULATIONS
DR. MARGIE LAWSON, D~D.S.

will meet Monday, 7:30 p;m., at
the fire station.

SATURDAY

CHESTER- Chester PTO will
POMEROY - The annual Cub
meet
Monday, 7 p.m., at the
Scout PineWood Derby of the
·
school.
·
·
MGM district will be held Satur·
day at Royal O!lk Resort. Regis·
POMEROY - Meigs Band
tratlon, 12 noon. with fee of $1.
Races to begin at 1 p.m. Pack 246 Boosters will meet Monday, 7
of Salisbury Is hosting the derby. p.m., In the high school band
room. All parents of bf nd stu·
RUTLAND - A gospel sing dents urged to attend.
will be held Saturday, starting at
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town·
7 p.m., at the Rutland Church of
ship Trustees will meet Monday,
God. Everyone welcome. .
7:30 p.m., at · the ,Syracuse
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,PORTLANP - A hy~n sing Municipal Building. ;
-~will be helcl Saturdiy, stattlng at
TUESDAY
7:30 p.m., at the Hazel Church
RACINE - Eastern B~nd
between Portland. and Long
Boosters wiU meet Tuesday, 7:30
Bottom. Everyone welcome.
p.m., In the band room at the high
SALEM CENTER - Star school.
Grange and Junior Grange will
ORANGE TWP - Orange
meet Saturday, 8 p.m., at the
Stsr Grange Hall on C::Ounty Road · Township Trustees will hold a
1 n~ar Salem Center. A soup special meeting at 7:30 ,p.m.
supper will follow the meeting._ Tuesday at the home of Dorothy
Calaway, clerk. Cable TV, lnsu·
Membe~s ureed to attend.
ranee and other matters will be
MIDDLEPORT ...,. Regisira· discussed.
tlon for the. ,1988 Middleport
CHESTER - Chester Town·
· Youth League summer baU sea·
. son will be helcl at the Middleport ship Trustees will meet Tuesday,
VIUage Hall on Saturday from 11 8 p.m., at the town hall.
· a.m. to 3 p.m. Fee Is $9 for each
RACINE - Racine Baseball
child registered. A birth certlfl· '
cate will be iteeded for any child Association will have an organ!·
who did not participate In last zallonal meeting Tuesday. 7
p.m., at the Southern Kinder·
year's league.
garten building. All Interested
HARRISONVILLE - Hllrrl· parents-urged to attent\;
sonvtlle Lodge 411 wtll meet
Saturday, 7: 30 p.m., at the . RACINE - Racine Lodge 461.
F&amp;AM. will meet 7:30 p.m.
temple. All masons welcome.
Tuesday. Plans will be m~de for
the annual lnspectlop on March
POMEROY - Special organ(,
22.
Members are urged to attend.
zatlonal meetilli ot Meigs
County Board of Elections wlll
be belcl Saturday, 10 a.m., at
Middleport Heath united
the board ofllce In Pomeroy.
Methodist Church has planned a
family dinner to be held this
MONDt\Y ·
CHESTER- Chester PTO will Sunday at 6 p.m. All food Items
will be furnished. Members and
meet Monday night at 7 p.m at
friends of the church are lhvlted
the Chester Elementary School.
to attend. Rev. Marvin Dawson,
former minister of the church,
HARRISONVILLE - Colum·
bla Town!blp Board of Trustees · will be present.

Church dinner

'

Delia.Kappa 'Gamma . sorority meets

AND

DR. DOUGLAS HUNTER, M.D.
ON YOUR NEW CLINIC
OPEN HOUSE
2 P.M. TO 4 P.M.
6th and PEARL ST.• RACINE

"Love" was the devotional ·
theme presented by Mrs. Okey
Connolly at the recent meeting or
the Riverview Garden Club held
at the home of Mrs. Paul ·
·
Thomas.
For roll call members ans·
wered by naming a love song.
Mrs. Connolly, president, wei· ·
corned Mrs. Tom Boggs as a new
member of the club. Mrs. Cindy
lgleheart was a guest.

lOSE'S EICAYlftiG
I.

GliAl
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buket. WIDner
tor

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and are payable to the secretary
or any of the officers.
··,
Nominations for the 1988 Draft
Horse queen will be heard at the
March meeting. The queen will
represent the association at all
events and particlpa te In pa·
rades and fairs. Election of the
queen will take place after all
nominations.
Refreshments by Eleanor Dou·
glas were served at the close of
the meeting.

The February meeting of the May 1 at the Red Bird Ranch.
Another field day was planned
Appalachian Draft Horse and
for
the Chester area for May 21,
Mule&gt;AsSoclatlon was held at the
..
with
further plans to be an·
Natural Resources Building In
nounced
later.
Athens.
·
Plans
were
made for a June
Plans were made for events for
trail
ride
to
be
held at Wald
the coming year. Including, a
Spencer's.
field day, potluck supper and
Dues were collected for 1988
overnight stay with a Sunday
trail ride. to be held Aprll30 and

Alfred community happenings
Charles and Ruth Knowles, and Samuel Michael ,
Dayton , were recent visitors of · StlversviUe.
Mr. and Mrs . Clair Follrod,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hender·
son. The Knowles are .former Mr. and Mrs. Dave Watson and
teachers In the Eastern schools. Stacie were dinner guests Sun·
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. day of Edith Harper, Tuppers
Hobart Swartz were Mr. and Plains.
Nina Robinson and Ruth
Mrs. Gerald Swartz, Reno, Mr.
Brooks
attended the hymn sing at
and Mrs. Harold Swartz. Willi·
Christ
United
Methodist Church,
.amstown, W.Va.
Sarah Caldwell was the dinner GaiUpolls, SunC:Iay evening.
Thirty attended Sunday school
guests of Nina Robinson and
Clara Follrod recently . Other at the Alfred Church Sunday and
recent visitors were Mr. and . 22 were at the church service. On
Feb. 21 the attendance at Sunday
Mrs. Gerald Swartz.
Joining the Poole-Parker tam· school was 28 with churc~ attend·
·
lly for supper Sunday were Cora ance at 16.

Spelling winner

Menus set

.

Tuberculosis a~
BP clinic planned

The Meigs County Tuberculo·
sis Office will be conducting a
' community skin testing clinic at
the Pomeroy Fire Station, ·But·
ternut Ave., on Monday evening
from 4:30 to 6: 30. All area
residents, Including boosters
clubs, PTQ' s, chruch groups and
other residents who are In food
service are urged to take advan·
· tage of this free service ..
A blood pressure clinic will be
· held during the same hours
sponsored by the Pomeroy Fire'
Department and EMS members.
For further Information, call
992-3722. '

· Champion speller at Letart
Falls Elementary Is Stephanie
Sayre, daughter of Aaron and
Shirley Sayre. Alternate winner
Is Sam Shain, son of Sam and
Ruth Shain. Both youngsters are
slxt graders.

Luncheon menus for the week
of ~arch 7 In schools In the
Eastern and Meigs Local School
Districts and the Carleton School
have been annnouned.
In the Eastern District the
luncheon menus are as follows:
Hotdog and sauce, french frld,
Addle Buck, Agnes Dixon,
fruit and milk on Monday ; grilled
Mabel
Moore and Dorothy Lo,ng
cheese sandwich, tomato soup,
were
In
~ew Lexington Tuesday
relish tray, fruit and milk , on
to
visit
Mrs,
Beatrice Buck. Mrs.
· Tuesday; spaghetti and cheese,
Buck
Is
a
former PomeJ;"Oy
roll and ' butt, green beans,
resident.
applesauce, and milk on Wednes·
day; ham patty, peas, .peach rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.
desSert, and milk on Thursday, .
and fish, scalloped potatoes fruit
·
and milk on Friday.
f
In the Meigs Local 'District,
luncheon menus will be cheesef.DAY, IIAICH 4TH
burger, corn, fruit and milk on
I asAGNA ......
99
Monday; oven fried chicken,
lUI
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•
green beans, bread and butter,
Alia wSinflltelllll ••-f-'Jl . I loSinlllwilhCrhpT.-.1
fruit and mllk on Tuesday;
Wall wltll •u IIi ef ,_ Cllelcl. Alii. Senlll wltllllet 111111'111 Cerll.,.
aeefaronl, hot rolls and butter,
, _ Cloelce ef Hat ..... 11 ~ 1 •
illtnllhll.
fruit aDf;l milk on Wednesday;
'
SI.AJ,·IUICH 6lll

Visits

. ::!~:~ra::::; ":~ebu:~ ·
ft

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The flower fund was collected
Others attending . were Mrs.
by Mrs. Frank Blse and cards Claremont Harris, Mrs. Donald
were signed for several who are Myers, Mrs. Terry Olne, Mrs.
Ill. An auction was held with Mrs . Harlts Frank, Mrs. Herman
Blse as the auctioneer: Games Grossnickle, Mrs. Ronald Os·
were played with prizes being borne, Mrs. Donald Putman,
awarded to the winners. !'4rs. Mrs. Ernest Whitehead, Mrs.
Connolly received the door prize. · Ray Young, and Mrs. Lyle
Mrs. Thomas and. Mrs. Denver Balderson. Next meeting will be
Weber, co-hostess, served re· at the home of Mrs. Donald
freshments with miniature flags Myers.
being given as favors .

Draft Horse organization meets

"Stress, Personal Growth, and man, had charge of voting for were read from absent
Change" was the pi"OIJI'sm topic new memben and was assisted members, ,Martha Greenaway
.presented 'by Susan Wlll, VInton by Mra. Jenkins and Nancy and Judith Fetherolf. A friend·
'
ship card was signed for Lucille
County school nurse, at a recent Kibler
Eleanor
Essman
preatded
at
Smith.
meeting of the Delta Kappa
Gamma held at St. Peter and the meetlq and thaaked the , Meigs County members at·
Paul Parish HaU, Welllton.
· bosteal comrntttee as did VIola tending were Mary VIrginia
Reibel, Mrs. Jenkins, NeUie
M.s. Will, Introduced by Donna Gettte., cbafrman of the Febu· Parker, Olive Page, Ma.raaret
Jenkins, penonal lfOWih and rary lfOIIP· Mra. E11man an- · Parsons, Carolyn Snowden,
sei'VIces chairman, aave a t11n1e IIOUIICed !bat the meeUDi date
' , minute quiz on "Can You Equal tor Mareb hal been changed Anna Elizabeth Turner, and
.the Student?" and then talked on from tbe 19th to the 12111. Letters Dorothy Woodard.
stress fmpbulzlnl !bat It Ia tbe
boy's reaponse to any ebaap,
,
.
0
milk on Thursday; and cook's
auch u daath of a loved oae,
1
h I
both F ld
nd
lllnesl, CbaJIII!IIn Ufe ltyle and
New ·c4flcma were I!Jected at
PIIIIIS were made for an c 0 ~ on
r ay a
eatln&amp; habits. Sill! said 1trail can the 'l'llelda)' llllbt meettna ot . auctton to beheld at next week's Saturday.
·
_ ......M . ,.
~ nAt the
Carleton school
.beef
trtaw 1ucb dllea- u caaeer, TOPS5'10beldattheCooahuntera ·-.....
~~ contest will also
· b'-ul
......
arthrltll, ulcen aad ~ ~!!!,~ · lbe Rock Sprlap ........ at !bat time.
stew, ""' ts, cheese ft....,.e,
;: alld talUcloacorrec:U~metl!tl!dl ··- -•fruit and milk will be served on
I:IMid nre Lelllde Bell~ ~~
~ Monda)": 11o1 dOl, rreacw rna.
•• aueb • rtlaxatloll tsCblllqUII,
:1 eou!IHUU,, medication, and 111ft, lelt'er, PaaY V1a1nf.
with Sblrley Wolfe being ~egetable sUeka, fruit and milk
eo-J•drr, .Ola St. aatr, lleClN- the ruaDI!l'·llp Mn Vlntaa won .. on Tuesday; chill, peanut buJter
:l exercllt.
, ,. · A -lloped cblckell lune'- tary: Vlrlbda Dta, trnaurer: . the fruit
of the . sandwich, cracker~, (rult uc1
:~ wuserwtlliJ thecllul'llb womea Sylvia " ' - - aewa aepwleJ, . Olllltelt for TOPS waa Sylvia mUk on Wedlleaday; macaroal
•• 011 tallllll dedDrttH 111 !'Ill .... Jliw. Vhlbll. prGII'IIIl leader,
Neece uc1
KOPS, MrJ
and cheee, JI'HD beana, bread
~ aoid Ill ~tloll af tilt Nuay Gillllilll. wtiJb* ..... 4Jutk-e.~oatheclub and butter, fruit alld lllllk 011
~ . . . ~ af Alpba.Delta
IIJ'J '1'11 ltl WOodl, Mallllllt mil)' be oblilald by ealuna MID ~aDd tulia ~~~ IIJICI.
NI!Xk, Cat~~¥. ""PUPe' Ud Aleablre 88J.74M.
wlcll,
beaua~ potatoeblpl,
·~ . St&amp;&amp;e,
J
.
.
1.awn1'1'J~•·••
L
·
'
cookll!,alldrnlll!onFrlday.
:~.1 :!J.JI.n. Will, rnemtJe!'lblp'ClllaJr.

TOPS conducts recent mee.tino

SATURDAY. ·MARCH &amp;, .1988

Theak You For Your ·
Servlea
IOAID OF DUCONS
FIIST 'BAPnn CHUICH Of UCINE

~

Community Services You Have ·
Sponsored.
Thank You Dr. D.o uglas Hunter, M.D.
and Dr. Margie Lawson, D.D.S., For
The Confidence You Bav'e Placed In
Our Community by Desiring to Locate
Here and Serve Us.
WE APPRECIATE YOU SO MUCH!
Congratulations on Your Grand
.Opening and Open House and Nice
Facilltles. May Your Work Be Ever'
Pleasant.

RACINE
AL &amp;
DENTAL CLINIC

POMEROY - Planned Par·
enthood of Southeast Ohio Pa·
tlent Services offices will b"e
closed Friday for staff meeting.
Offlc~ will reqpen on Mondliy at
8: 30 a.m.
!

!

~any

DR. MARGIE LAWSON, D.D.S.

RUTLAND - Rutland Fire
Department's annual turkey
dinner Is tonight, Thursday, at
Rutland · Elementary. Serving
starts at 5 p.m.

CHESTER - Reading prl~
' time, a part of Right to Read
~' Week acthlltles at the Chester
~ Elementary School, wiU be held
~ Frtdsy night 6 to 8: 40 p.m.

Memoria~

Welcomes

.;::ontest will ~ judged.

FRIDAY

POMEROY -Salisbury Town·
ship Trustees will meet tonight, 7
• p.m., at the township hall on
•' Rock Springs Road.

. r------......._----+-~~~~~.:.:;:_-1-~_::~::.::::::.,__~
Thank You Home National Bank and
Veterans
Hospital For.
The First Baptist Church
WelcQme To Our
Making It Possible For the Racine
Medical and Dental Clinic to Locate In
of Racine
Community!
·
Our Community And For The
.

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Thanks for helping make our area a

LET.AIT FALLS

Riverview Garden Club meets

Community calendar .

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Street Plz.za, Chapman Shoe&amp;, K
and C Jewelers, The Fabric
S))op, Elberf~lds, B11.ttons and
Bows, Dol.l ar General, Oafk's
Jewelry Store.
·
Serving on the style show
committee with Van Vranken
and Mrs.· Powell are Carmel
Sisson, Susan and Joe Clark, Ann
Lambert, Oatlce Krautter, Pat
and Dan Arnold, Rod Pullins,
Mike and Debbie Gerlach, Gwen
Hall, Mila Raymond, Jim and
John Anderson, Bill Quickie, and
Sandy Iannarelll.

AA UW·holds recent meeting

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beemceedbyKermiiWaltonand
narrated by Annie Chapman to
begtn at 7:30 p.m. Again this
year numerous door prizes will
be awarded and participating
merchants will be giving dis·
countcoupons.Duetotheconges·
lion of merchandise displays In
the lobbY, that phase has been ·
discontinued this year.
Tickets are $4 each with a
maximum of 400 to be sold. The
tickets went on sale today and
are available at Dans and Corner
Collections In Middleport; Mar· ·
guerlte Shoes, Hartleys, Main

"I saw the slow-moving, sad·
raced old gentleman as , he
bounced oH the hood of my car."
"Coming home, I drove Into the
wrong house and collided with a
tree I don't have."
''The Indirect cause of this
accident was a little lillY In a
small car with a big mouth."
Dear AD• Landers: A recent
CC?Iumn reminded rrie of your
deflilltfon of Lace Curtain Irish.
It appeared several years ago. It
went something like this:
An Americanism theme was who Is one of her ancestors.
Speaker at the March meeting
"People of Irish descent who carried outln the program for the
Named to the nominating com· will be tbe Rev. Sonny Zuniga,
have fruit In the house when Middleport-Po meroy Area mlttee were Mrs. Lee, Rachael pastor of the Middleport Heath
nobody Is sick." -MEXICO Branch,AmerlcanAssoclallonof Downie, and Judy Arnold.
United j'dethodlst Church. At the
CITY
University Women, held recently
Legtslative Day to be held In April meeting speaker will be lhl
DEAR MEXICO CITY: That · at the Racine United Methodist Columbus on March 12 was district . coordinator of Athens,
definition didn't originate with Church.
announced with Christine Nap· , Lois Whealey.
me but rm glad you sent It on. I
Martha Lou Beegle, Louise ler, president, and Sibley Slack,
Maxine Wingett displayed a
laughed all over again.
·
Stewart, and Frances Roberts, of treasurer of the local branch, to model of a church which had
Planning a wedding? What's the Amerlcl!n Legion Auxiliary, attend. It was noted that the state been constructed from popcycle
right? What's wrong? "The Ann Racine ·Post 602, each .spoke convention will be held In April.
sticks by Tracy Heln, student at
l.llnders Guide for Brides" will briefly on the theme after being ·
Annual report forms were the Letart school. Refreshments
relieve your aiudety. To receive Introduced by Lee Lee, program . distributed to . the officers and wefe served by Luelle Haggerty,
a eopy, send $2.50 plus a No. 10, leader.
committee chairmen. Whenc&lt;im· Judy Arnold, and Kathryn
self-addressed, stamped enve·
L-ucille Haggerty read an artl· pleted they are to be mailed to the Knight.
lope (39 cents postage) to Ann cleonThomasMcKean,slgnedof state president, Jane Wilson,
Landers, P.O. Box 11562, Chi· the declaration of Independence, Dublin.
cago,.III. 60611-0062.

•

Honae National Bank
Veterans Menaori~l Hospital
Dr. Margie Lawson, D.D.S.
Dr. Douglas Hunter, M.D.

THE NEW

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CD111111ulltlo111 1nd

Wt Art Proud To Wel~ome To
Our Community..•.. ·

"Springtime Serenade" Is the
theme of the annual spring style
revue of the Pomeroy Area
Merchal\tS Association to . be
staged In the Pomeroy Elemen·
tan; School auditorium on March
24.
· Matt Van Vranken and Mary
Powell are co-chairmen for the
revuewhlchwlllfeatureapproxl·
mately 80 models showing spring
attire and accessories available
In member stores In Pomeroy
and Middleport.
The doors to the school will
open at6: 30 p.m . with the show to

LanderS

•
:

Sth &amp;Pearl St., Rael1e
SAT., MAR. 5th, 19e8
2 to 4 P.M.

992-2683

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DR.

Th·e Daily ·Sentinel

friday. March 4, 1988
--- ·.. -· ..
· --;---~;-~··:-~~~=-::~=-~~=---------~~::::::::;;.-;;:;~-:~-:---:~------~~----~~~~--~--~~----~----~·~P~•!g~a:!7
~ Accident reports C(ln
..
Style Show planned for Meigs .(Dunty
·~c be se..,;ousl1J
Ann
ltj amusing
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Mln:h 4, 1988
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fhll Week'1 S111ee1111
n

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s....,

HO.IAIID HAll DIMif;;;.:;·..~···..••••... $4.20

AI•••-S.•... ef"•

•'•I ,,._,

O.Owllll••• ' ....
. . . . S.., SenW witt!" t 1' .......... 1111 Ill d IINwy, Hat llwt·
...,C....,_Ciillcwelaletsn.,W•IIIt
' ............
....... Celhurs.tllltcaH I tiii. .... F......,Urewt~IIUallllllrlllll
.... T _ le S iltuwt.
·-•
lVIII SlliiAY1
Wwlt•, Wall1w1 , .... Senlce w1t1i 1 - ·
............ Clillia ............ , _ C.ffea ........... .
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..._,Ow

011!11 ' - '
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HOURS: 10:00 A.M.-1:30 P.M.-7 DAYS A WIIK
. . •

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s nf ai4r.sttr
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�Friday. March 4, 1988

--People in the news--------,
By WILLL\II C. TBOTT

SINGER BACK TO SPAIN TO RECOVER: ,
1 - Carreru, one of the world's top operatic
FIG11'11NG '1'IIB POIICBI OP COLOR: The tenors, quietly slipped out of a Seattle cancer
empires of Georp Lllcu and l!&amp;eve• 8plelberc
ceilter last week and returned home to Barcelona,
struck back Th_uraday at those who want to
Spain. Carreras, 41, underwent a bone marrow
colorize classic black-aDd-white movies. The
transplant on Nov. 16 to fight his le~~kemla and
filmmakers responsible for many of blltory's
was "disease-free whe.n be left Seattle" last
most popWIIf movies appe~ befQre a Senate
subcommittee studying copyrl1ht leplatlon, · Friday,· said a spokeswoman fo~ the Fred
Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
llfllng the senators to protect artlatlc works from
"He has returned to the care of physicians In
"corporate defacers."
·Barcelona." Sulilll Edmondnalcj. "They'll follow
''PeQple who alter or destroy works of art and
him and treat him. We are no longer treating
our cultural heritage for profit or an exercise of
power a.re barbarians," L11cas said In the packed . him.'' Radiation and chemotherapy have weakened Carreras's Immune system sil he · Is
committee room. "If the laws of the United States
supposed
to avoid large groups ot people and wear '·
continue to condone thl&amp; behavior, history will
a
protective
mask In public.
surely classify us as a barbaric society."
BERNIE
GOETZ
MONEY: Subway shooter
Spielberg was especially eloquent: "What law
Bel'llhard
Goetz
Jr.
recently inherited $145,000
will · protect" our dead colleagues fro~ eternal
from
hll
father
but
most
of It probably will end up '
embarrassment at tlie hands of corporate
In someone else's pockets.
defacers? What law protects thoSe of ·Our
"That won't go very far In defending him on
coUeagues :.. whose hopor and reputation are
anything,"
said lawyer Jo11eph Kelner, who
offended by the electronic speeding up or slowing
represents
him
In the civil suits seeking about $63
down of their films or the caprlcous editing of
million
on
behalf
of the tour black teenagers Goetz
scenes?"
shot
In
1984.
PARTY MUSIC: The pos~-Grammy parties
Ron JUiegerman, the attorney for one of Goetz's
may have been . more fun. than the awards
victims,
James Ramseur, was glad to bear abo\lt I
ceremony, RCA Records took over the Rocke·
the.
Inheritance.
'.'His attorneys have been telling
feller Center skating rink and surroundl'ng
us
all
along
that
he doesn't have a dime,"'
restaurant tor a bash featuring world-class
Kllegerman
said.
"Now we know there's
skaters Including JoJo Starbuck performing to the
"Dirty Dancing" souhdtrack. "Dirty Dancing; •. something Ihere." Bernhard Goelz Sr. d led In 1984
In Florida at the age of 78 and his estate was
star Palrlck Swayse was there along with Uza
'recently
split between his four children ..
Mlaelll, Cbrlstopher Walilen, Bueter Pollldexter;
GLIMPSES:
Is Burt Reynolds . about to
Roll&amp;lllle Cash and jazzman Kenny G. Minelli and
surrender
his
closely
guarded bachelorhood? us
Swayze also showed up at CBS'' excluslve'party
magazine
reports
that
Reynolds says he will
at the Four Seasons with Qncly Lauper, Nicholas I
.
marry
Lonl
Anderson
Within
the year and tha.t
Ashford and Valerte .Slmpeo•, Jody Wadey, Dr.
they want to have children ... David Letterman
Ruth Westbelmer, Billy Jeel, Herbie Haacock,
has fans In the Tennessee Legislature. State Sen.
Weird AI Yankovic, Jaclde CoUbis and Anita
Steve
Cohen convinced his colleagues to pass a
Baker. There was a blues theme at the Lone Star
resolution
congratulating Letterman on his
Cafe whe.r e gulstarls\S ·Stevie Ray Vaugha~.
late-rllght show's sixth anniversary and asking
Albert CoUins and _.ubert SumBa jammed with
him to visit Memphis. The resolution lists 10
Dr. John, saxophoniSt David "Fathead" Newman
reasons Letterman should make lhl! trip;
and others.
Including
the chapce to eat great barbequed ribs,
. HE~E'S LOOKING AT,YOU: Ella Dayan, the
tour
Graceland
and "beat his feet on the
granddaughter of the late Israeli hero Moabe
Mlssllslppl
mud"
... Jay Leao was honored
Dayan, received an unusual present the other day
Wednesday
night
as
the man of the year by the
to mark her gr11duatlon from a military training
Harvard
Lampoon.
He
put on a free performance
course. Hebrew-language newspapers reported
at Harvard's Sanders Theater In addition to being
that Rachel Dayan, the widow of the former
military chief of sl;lff 11nd defense minister, · presented the Elmer, which' Is named after the
Lampoon caretaker who wanted to be dipped In
presented Ella, her step-granddaughter, with one
bronze when he died.
of Moshe's trademark black eyepatches.
Ulllleii.,.._Ja..,. ot!ans•

PROCLAMATION ReadlnJ teachers
wUched as representatives of three viDaces Ia the
Melp Local Scbool Dlslrlct liped a proclamation declarlnJ March 7-12 as RIJht· to- Read
Week. Pictured ate, front, I t r, Melp Local Supt.
Dan E. Morris; Middleport Mayor Fred Hoi'
fmaa; Vickie F1nk~ Rutland VIllage CoUJicU
member and wife· of Mayor James Fink, and
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyer. All teachers but

oae pictured are Chapter I readlag teachers Ia the
dlsl,tic&amp;, the exception being Carla Saelens, Melp
Junior High School reading aad spelllagleacher.
1be teachers Include, second row, I to r, Kim
Ohlinger, Marsha Radabaugh, Jo Dunn; Joal
Jeffers, Uz Story, Wendy Halar, program ,
supervisor, third row, I tor, Mrs. Saelens, Janet
· Hoffman, Sheryl Ugbtfrltz, Barbara Matltews.

Right to Read ·Week is planned
,

The Meigs Local School District Is preparing for the obser·
vance of Right-To-Read Week,
March 7-12, with schools taking
part to Include Bradbury, Harrisonville, Middleport, Meigs JunIor High, Pomeroy, Rutland,
Salem Center and Salisbury.
Themes for the observance are
varied and Include: "Our FoundIng Fathers Gave Us Rights
Guaranteed, So We Must Use Our
Right-to-Read"; " Surf's Up, Salem Center; "Let Your Mind
Grow With Reading"; "Famous
Ohioans" and "Pig Out on
Books" .
: A number of the schools are
participating in the central idea
of sustained silent reading for 15
minutes . From that point, each
school ·has selected a wide
variety of activities for the week
ljnd the~ Include: decorating
classroom doors ; recording

.
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books read during the week;
swapping books; decorating a
tee shirt and wearing It to school;
slogan contests; wearing school
colors for a day; parent-student
contacts, reporting ·on activities
at home; decorating the school
with cards showing the title,
author and student's name of any
book read that week; . using
alphabet cereal writing as many
words as one can; Identifying the
mystery reader; balloon launch;
fortune cookie · day; travla
board; wear buttons day; wheel
of fortune, using book or story
titles; Johnny Appleseed' Day,
filmstrip and activities; chewing
gum day; Nell Armstrong story
on tape and activities; dress-up
as an Indian ot honor Techumseh; Orville and Wilbur Wright,
design an airplane; . kiss a pig
day; read at home to your
family; writing time In !:lass;

word hank-new words selected
each day; wall displays; donate
books to the library; book reports; repQrts on lamous
Ohioans; poster contests; book
demonstrations, and someone
reading In the building all day.
Parents are urged to play an
Important role during the week
and for every week throughout
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - NegoI
..
the year. Program organizers
s tuation), said Herb Steinberg;
are asking parents to take some tlators for 9 000 members t th
extra time during the week, turn scrlptwrtter~ gglld have a~ ~.pokesman for the producers.
In 1981, the telev!slon season
off the teiE!vlsion, and listen to to renew contract talks with
producers
In
an
effort
to
forestall
was
set back two months, and
their child read a story or read a
strike
that
could
dllable
th~t
damag~s
e,verybody.
a
story to their child. They are then
daytime
television
prod
You
cant
ever
make up the
11
asked to talk about the story,
The
chief
negotlatorsu~o:~·he
time,
and
In
many
cases Y_OU
questioning the child to think
Alliance
of
Motion
Picture
and
never
make
up
the
money
you re
about the meaning or what he or
Producers
and
the
,fighting
for;,
Everything
is atTelevision
she has just read. .
•
': 'Probe l~to your chUd's feel- Writers Guild of America agreed fected by it. ·
The . alliance reportedly has
ings and open up the channel of late Thursday after a two-hour
meeting
to
resume
full
negotia.
given
producers the green light
communication," organizers
tlons
at
Satllrday
.In
an
etton
to
to
hire
replacement writers, who
urge.
• ' resolve key differences guild ,\'I!OUld be peededlmmedlately.on
'·
spokeswoman Cheryl Rhoden dally game shows, talk shows
.
said
and soap operas.
Rhoden said the guild bleb
Guild members In New York
has been without a contra~t~lnce Wednesday joined thQSe in Los
midnight Monday, had no lmme- An~e.l~ ln.~jectlng the producberta Thaxton. of Racine spent a dlate plans to strike or picket the ers final contract offer by a
day visiting Mrs. Simpson's studios that employ Its members combined vote of 2,335·to·76 .and
sister, Delores Donohue.
'on films and television series.
approved a strike resolution
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Kennedy Talks broke oft early Tllesday 2,317-to-112.
announce the birth of twin sons. after a marathon session.
The contract disputes center
They have a daughter, Julie. The
A walkout would mark ·the
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
third
time In this decade that a
Bill Kennedy, Sr., Pomeroy, and
we.:;
A cpntract dispute resulted In
Mr. and Mrs Loren "Abe" Lee,
a strike against producers. ·Gulld
Albany.
Duane and Hazel Stanley spent members walked out for two
an afternoon visiting Dale and weeks In 1985 and three months In
1981.
Julia Stanley, Albany.
"There Is no winner (In' this

Scriptwriters, producers to talk again

·Harrisonville community happenings
Mr. and· Mrs. Raymond Donohue were visited recently by
their daughters. Linda Rae Donohue of ColumbuS', and .Kenda
Donohue, who attends Mt. Vernon Nazarene College.
The Nellie Lowe family has
moved from the former ·Gibson
pro(ierty In Harrisonville to a
house on Zion Church Road.
Mr. and Mrs . . John Williams
had as guests · her brother,
Charles Warfield and a friend of
Columbus.
'

Mr. and Mrs. Mike Musser and
children and Nancy Boyko,
Pomeroy, spent Sunday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Patterson.
Mr. and Mrs . William Scott,
Nelsonville, were recent visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Duane Stanley.
Mr. and Mrs. John Williams
and Charles Warfield visited
relatives In Somerset, Ky.
Mrs. Shirley Simpson and
daughter , Diana, and Mrs . Ro-

, Frances 0. Young to Tlmoth A.
, Bishop, Terri M. Blsbop,l.ll4 A.

Sisson to Tuppers Plains-Chester
Water District, right of way,

Martin sixth birthday noted
Patrick Martin was honored on
his seventh birthday recently
with a party at the home of his
parents, Rick and Gwen Martin,
Murray Hill Road, Middleport.
Refreshments were played and
games played with prizes goll\g
'to Sara Williams, Chris Imboden,
·and Joshua Price. Sara also won
:the door prize.
·: Attending the party were Jofhua Price, Joe Weaver, Sara
Williams, Jeremy Rowe, Jennl
Howerton, T.J. King, Mellsha
Swllher, Austin Carr, Abby Harrll, Jessica and Derek Johnson,
PATBICJI;
. MARTIN .
Cindy Lewis, Chrl&amp; Imboden,
Jamie Harris, and Patrick's
honored 111est were hll grandbrother. Steve, all of Middleport;
parents, lfelen Glbbl, Harold
NaiiC)' Neal, Charlie Neal, Jr.,
Gibbs, Edward and Polly Martin,
pel Frank Musser, Pomeroy;
and Adam Williams, Helen Beth
IJid Luanna and Tammy Hussell Rice. Luke Scanlon, Brandy Jo
lad Elizabeth Randolph of Mt. St@Yens, Bernard and Brian
Mto, W.Va·,
. H ussell, ·Roland, Ann and Roland
Others presentlq iffts to the Morris. Jr.
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Salisbury. ·
.
Henry •· R . Bailey, Beatrice
Bailey to James S. Rucker Sr.,
Connie Rucker, 40 acre, Olive,
Russell Branham, Rushle
Branham to Furl L. Slade, Rinne!
Duncan, parcels, Sutton . .
Robert A. Jones, Kimberly
Jones to Robert L. Jones, Patricia M. Jones, one-third acre,
Bedford.
·
Adrian R. Roberts, dec. to
Ruletta Roberts, affidavit,
Salisbury.
James B. O'Brien to Carl H.
Platter Jr., Kay PlaUer, Grace
McMaster Harding, Otto Hardlng, Helen G. McMaster, affldavit, Meigs.
Gerald E. Michael , dec. to
Gloria ,I . Michael, affidavit,
Syracuse.
·
Michael Small, Karen Small to ·

S,_..,"er set'
}A'"""

Special nleet_in.g

Do you have

rent.
or
royalty
rt:::;;;;;;;;;===========:;1
income? ·
INVITES YOU. TO
H&amp;RBlock

.can ·make the
new tax laws
work for you.

, FIRST
BAPTIST
CHURCH
'

MAIN STIEO
POMEIOY, OliO
SCHEDUlE OF SERYKES:
Saturaav PM Evangetlatic Service.............7:30
:u,.dey AM Church SchooL ........ :. 9:30-10:21
undey AM Worship ................... 10:30-11 :41
PASTOR ,_ Rtv. Uston
' Jr. - 992·2111

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6fa :Eist.-Ma-in street
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"war of..l.he cities." Scores o1 people bave heea
killed on both aide. but aeltller country hal
released specltlc casualty flpres.
Ayatollah Abdul Karim Ardeblll, the Iranian
chief Justice, told. a prayer 11therlng today that
Iran would halt attacks on Bag~dad rrovided Iraq
retrained from strlldng Tehran, •• ;tp Iranian
radio said.
,
''ThOUih we have extenalve powers of retaliation, we did not seek the war of the cities and never
shall," Ardeblll said. "It the enemy stops his
mischief, we too shall not retaliate."
Iraq fired two mlsllles Into Tehran Ia the early
hours of Thursday a ad another at mid-morning on
Qom, the splrttual base of Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomelnl's religious rule.
The Iranian news ageacy aald one of the Iraqi
ml&amp;slles struck a hospital Ia Tehra11, slightly
wounding 20 people. It said most of the victims
were treated for their Injuries aDd released.
Later Thursday, Iraqi warplaaes raided the
cities of weti(.ern Iran for the second straight day,
bombing Shlraz and Dezful. Iran said 15 people

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~o~. .Ohio ,
·
OIMtn I AM·I PM W111*yt,
1-1
.
. a.t. Phone 112·1874

.

were killed and 20 wounded.
Iran retaliated tor .the traql attacks at 6:45a.m.
aod 1: 55 p.m. and 6: 37 p,m., firing three "
loal·range mllslles across the Iraqi frontier and ,
Into l:lagbdad, the Iranian news agency said.
Iraqi radio · said the three rockets struck :
residential l!re(!S In Ba&amp;hdad, killing . and
wounding several people, and the army swore
revenge. Iraq · released. no. specltlc casualty ·
tt,ures.
'
·
"Iraq has a great destructive force that could·
ram the dens or wltchcraftln the capital Tehran
' and other cities," a spokesman for the Iraqi
armed forces said.
·
Iraq has promised to continue ihe attacks until
Iran accepts a U.N.-ordered cease-fire In the
conflict that has claimed more than a million
casualties. ,
'
.Iraq said It would accept a cease-fire If Iran did,
but Tehran bas refused, demanding that Iraq be
declared the aggressor nation. The Security
Council Is set to debate an embargo against Ira!).

'

British citizen, relief ~,worker, feared . abducted ·in Lebanon
I

BEffiUT, Lebanon (UPI) - A
British citizen working for the
Oxfam International relief
agency was reported missing
and .believed kidnapped by gunmen In southern Lebanon, relief
workers and security sources
said today.
.
A spokesman of Oxfarn,
British-based relief agency, said
~eter Colerlclge, an official of the
orga niza tlon, d lsappeared ·
Thursday-In the southern city of
Sidon, 24 miles south of Belrllt.
"We were Informed that Coleridge was missing In Sidon since
yesterday afternoon," said the
Oxfam spokesman, who ' asked
not to be named. The official said Coleridge, In
bls 40s and fluent In Arable. went
- to Sidon early Thursday and did
not return to the Beirut Oxfam
headquarters later In the day as
scheduled.
The disappearance of Cole-

ridge came on the day that West
Germany hostage Ralpb Scbray,
31, was released by his kidnappers and two 'd ays after U.N.
relief workers Jan Stening, 44, of
Sweden, and William Jorgensen,
58, of Norway , .were freed by
their captors.
The Oxtam official said Coleridge, who IS married with three
children, arrived In Lebanon one
week ago and was scheduled to
leave the country Saturday .
"He had an apPointment todiiY
In the afternoon.'' the official
said. "We were told that he was
missing. We fear that he Is
kidnapped."
Secyrlty sources In Sidon said
Coleridge disappeared In the port
city about 6 p.m. after be met
with otflctals' from local and
lnter.natlonal humanitarian
agencies.
.
"He was moving arQUnd the
city earlier In a German-made

.

Opel station wagon," said one
security official, who requested
anonymity.
'
A British embassy spokesman
said, "We are checking these
reports. We cannot confirm that
Mr. Coleridge Is kidnapped."
The' abduction, If coriflrmed,
would bring the number of
kidnapped Britons In Lebanon to
four and the total of f!lrelgn .
hOstages to 21.
At least three foreigners have
been kidnapped In southern Lebanon since Feb. 5, when gunmen
believed to be Palestinians
snatched' two employees of the
U.N. Relief and Works Agency
for Palestinian refugees Swede Jan Stenlng and Norweglan William Jorgenson.
The U.N. employees were
freed In Moslem west Betr:ut late
Wednesday after UNRWA,
which -supplies humanitarian
services to thousands of Palestinian refugees, withdrew Its 14-.

member International staff from after his 36-day ordeal.
Germany for terrorist offenses.
Lebanon · and froze some
A Syrtaa security source said
The clandestine Strugglers for
serviCes.
ThllrSday morning, a three-car
Freedom group, which claimed
Marine Lt. Col. WIUiam R. . convoy carrylq pro-Iranian
responsibility for abducting
Higgins, leader ol a 75-member Hezbollah gu.nmen handed a
Schray, said In a statement
tJ.N. truce observation unit, was weak and shaken Scbray over to Wednesday It would tree him In
kidnapped Feb. 17 near the Syrian army Col. Amlr Talleh In deal to Include the release of the
southern city of Tyre, 46 miles a waterfront neighborhood or
jailed Shiite brothers.
south of Betrllt.
Beirut.
But a West German Justice
An Intensive. search by v.N. . , The Syrla11s took Schray, 31, to Ministry official In Bonn said'
peace-keeping troops and ShUte their . headquarters In Anjar, Thursday the West German:
. ~al mllltlamea )las failed to Lebanon, 30 miles east of Belrllt, government had not made a ileal•
locate the colonel.
to question him before driving to secure Schray's freedom.
Coleridge's disappearance
him to Damascus.
. West German Foreign Minis:"
was reported only hours after a
Schray, a half-Lebanese Indus- ter Hans-Dietrich Genscher did
West German citizen, Ralph trial engineer, was kidnapped thank Syria for helping to gain
Scbray, was freed In west Belrllt .Jan. 27 ,In west Beirut by pnmen Schray's freedom and asked
and was reportedly safe In the
bellevedtobeassoclatesofAbdel Damascustoworkfortherelease
Syrian capital of Damueus.
Hadl Hamad!, a Hezbollah secur- of Rudolf Cordes, a West German ,
. Syrian officials handed over
lty chief and the elder brother of chemical executive abducted In
Scbray to German diplomats In
Mohammad All Hamad! and All January1987, a Foreign Ministry~
1
Damascuswherehemethlswlfe
Abbas Hamadl, both Jailed in spokesman said.
..- ·-:---:-·---------..,....-----,

a

Tbe Dal'Iy Sentlne
• I

PHONE 992-2156
Dr Writt O.illl Stt!tintl Clllsfitd o.,t.
111 c••,, 5t.. .....,. OlliD 4576t

1

French jetliner crashes,.killing 22;
flight attendant saved by clock
-

· PARIS (UPI) - A French
jetllner on a domestic flight hit a
power line and slamrned lnlo a
field In anowy weather Friday,
killing all 22 people · aboard
lnclu«!lng members of a skiing
party and an infant, pollee said.
The Fokker 27 aircraft
belonging to Transreglonal Air
Transport left the northeastern
French city of Nancy at 6:55
a.m. bound for the capitaL
During his last radio contact
with the Orly airport control
tower, the pilot said he had
trouble with a jet turbine.

a

The plane hit power line and .
crashed Into a field at the village
of Pamtou, 3 miles northwest of
Fontainebleau, some 30 minutes
before It' was to land at Or\Y.
All 22 people aboard were
killed. The victims Included
three crew members, a pregnant
woman, her 16-month·old baby
an"d a group of young people en
route to the Pyrenees Mountains
for a skllq vacation.
A flight attendant trainee who
.was S~=heduled to fly on the plane.
said she missed the flight because heratarmcklckfalledtogo

-IESTAURANT FOR SALE
The opportunity to buy a ,
clean, well equipped, established b!Jsines. ,Only · needs
younger owners.
1 Card

Of Thenka

Public Notice
PUIUC NOTICE
D"- wrn be ,..,,....,
et .... ofllce of ... _ .

We wish to express
O....•rtftlt
Our ,,..

v. Fultz, Attorney-at-Law,

thinks to all who

11111

and e~rtls. To Rev.

torlhe-ofther ,,,,...
oflhe-OtoetL. Rondolph.
oltuoled '" the Ylhte 1r1

Doyle P-ne th. os 1
·•

•

Who provided ·
special music, Red
·
·

fu..,,..
of
\ia..

Fo&amp;ltiOIJI'S

d th f
II

0 OUr

•'Male•
111111 ._of 01o1o. ..... ....._
R......... eoun•r

- 1111"111 • whll
_., , , _
111
thrtil becl-

-· -

Funtra I H01111 and
all who lltl....t in
r- the
any wiy durr111
Mother. .
· The fa11ily of
Opal C. Capehart

Nvllttl fOOift;

Jpartleowhowloloto

11
"'"""'..._ Cherteoldonae.....,
H-. et

371-IZ4e

01

._,.,..

fulb 1t •2-2111.

v.

..,..,.. v. Fullz,

e-""'':!r~:=
1314.

11

Help Wanted

e. 7, a, 1, 10. 11 , 1u:

IEGimiED. NUISES
Immediate opening for . part-time
RN •1 to work 3·11, 11·7 shifts on
Medical/Surgical Unit. Salary commenaurate with experience. ExceiIent f r1nge
.
be f't
ne I a.
Send reaume to:
Rhonde Dailey, R .N.
Direc1or of Nur~ng
Veterenl Memorial Hoapital
116 Eeat Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769 1
or Phone 992-2104 Ext. 213

~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;E~.~O~.E~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

SPRING TIME·
SAVINGS FROM

1

"THE ADDED TOUCH"
IT'S TIME TO' GET FIT &amp; TRIM!

SEIYICIS ON
PI EIIISES

mw:.~=-.:=·
S::
oa aJmoat every polat

-· - ·

bin natt. ur~

,.rtllld_l_hMI.tn-

.,.

Ami 6 P.M. CALL
.949•2324 OF 949•3034
•----~;::~~~~~~~;;.;;;..;;~...1

w. • - ''--

~v. Ohio 411711, untl
T.-oy, M.,..h 11, 1188,

sent food, flowers

r==:::::::;;:;::;::;::;::;i
OPTQM!!'W'.I J

de•

'.

Opportunity

off. When Helene Gulllo.ux arrived at the airport and· apologlzed tor being late, she was told
the plane had crashed.
f!,. COII)pany spokesman said
Tra.nsreglonal did not belteve'the
· snow and poor visibility were to
blame tor the crash and sald It
was Investigating. The pilot of
the J)lane .had n'lore than 10,000
hours flying experience, the
company said.
It was the worst air accident In
France since 1981 , ·When a
Yugoslav airliner crashed In
Corsica; kUling all184 aboard.

· JERUSALEM (UPI) - Secreraised In the negotiations and from the same families al)d there
tary of State George Shultz met
havenotmettogetherwith'Sbultz
1
f I I
:!:"geal0!!;:si. ~s n the cultural and
separately today with Israeli
to dllcuss the plan.
Prime Minister Yltzhak Shamir
·In the afternoon, Shultz left tor
The Idea of a Joint delegation
and Foreign Minister Shimon
Damascus for~ second meeting has been broached before during
Peres, and pollee said a car
with Syrian President Hafez the Middle East negotiations.
Assad. He then plans to travel 10 But It has foundered on the
packed with dynamite was disarmed several blocks from the
Cairo for another talk with Insistence ·Of Arab states and
hotel where Shultz was staying.
. Egyptian President Hosnl Palestinian leaders that the PLO
Shultz arrived In Jerusalem
Mubarak.
lstheonlylegltlrllaterepresenta·
early today to resume hiS dlploHewastoleaveforWashlngton tlve of the Palestinian people.
matlc shuttle mission after a
late today to await the third
two-day break during which he
phase of the negotiations to begin • launch
Shultz's
Immediate
gosl talks
Is to
~lddle
East peace
attended the NATO summit with
March 16 when Shamlr travels to next month under the guidance of
President Reagan In Brussels.
the tinlted States tor an official the United States lind the Soviet
Pollee said they defused a car
working '(lslt.
Union. The participants would be
bomb containing more than 22
Shultz met Thursday tor about Israel, Jordan,·Egypt and Palespounds of dynamite near Shultz's
90 minutes with Jordan's King tinian representatives .
hotel early today. Deputy Ponce · Hussein In London, the second
The U.S. peace Initiative calls
Chief Yosef Yehudal was quoted
meeting between the two' men for negotiations leading to an
by state-run Israel Radio as ~ thll week. Till! talks marked the "interim arraqement" for Usaying Investigators think terrorreswnptlon o1. Shultz's Intricate ml~ Palestinian self-rule In the
lsts rntended to explode the bomb
shuttle operation tliat has taken occupied lands for three years.
as a protest a1alnst the Shultz him to Israel, Jordan, Syria· and
At the end of thn:e years, the
Visit.
EJYPt.
Palestinians would cllooae the
• The car. which· had Israeli
Speaking to reparters later on form of final governance they
license plates, was discovered . the flight to Israel, Shultz des- prefer,lncludlng possible confednear the central bus station, less , crlbed the Hu~seln meetiq as eration with Jordan. Israel se)han a half mile from the
"very lOad" and "worthwblle," ~ the West Bank from Jordan '
l)'er11salem Hilton where Shultz but retullld to ifve- detaUs . .He and Gaza from Egypt In the 1967
and his aides werestaylng, pollee said the·neJOtlatlona were "at an Six-Day War.
•ald.
lnterestlqand Important time. " ·
Shultz did confirm that he
• On Friday morniDI, Shultz met
lor two hours with Shamlr, who favors Palestinian participation· I :
,merged from the aeaslon say- · 1n the negotlatlq process as
tog, "It was a realpleaaure. our membera of a Joint deleptlon
R15 1.
lalks were very friendly, very 'with the Jordaalan av•mwnaaL
)lseful and promlllng."
B11t he aald the United States
, Later, Shultz met for just remains committed to Its posti!nder. two hours · with Peres. tlon·of not negotiating with the
~ter the meeting, Peresaaldthe Pales Nne
LIbera t 1on
·
tJ:S. offiCial had brOUJht "so~ Orpnlzatloll.
~~ery lnterest1n1 ldeaa, food to
Shultz aald tile · eoacept o1 a
__ ...
fhlnk "
··
jolllt Jordalllan-Palelttalaa
IIIHI
l ' He. called on "all reapoulble ptloll waa favorable "beca01e
.( IR
.
,leader• In the reifon" to eolltrlb- tbere ant Pallltllllana on. the .
- •n
ute a1 m11ch aa poa1lb~~~ EutBultudtheWeatBank (Of
. (614) ftt·66f6
the Shultz mtulon sue...._....
..~the:.;J~oniU~~~rl~•e=r~).~Titl~~'~~~-~~~~·~=::.==.::::::::::~

·''

''

Shultz ·leaves· ·f or Dalnascus

..

ATTEND THE
OF THE

MANAMA, Baltraln IUPI) - An Iraqi mllllle
qency said.
,
.
slammed Into Teltran on the Moalem aabbath
Pollee alln'OIIIIded the Soviet mission to prevent
today, ~ fifth day of the wont Iraqi blitz on the
attacka on It by the demoastratora but the crowd
lraalaD capital Ia seven yean of war, while Iran
dllperllld peacefully on Its own, the &amp;Jelley said.
offered to end the cycle of violence.
We.tem diplomats said Iraq wu attacldftlwlth
The mllslle crashed Into a residential area at
Soviet Scud-S surface-to-surface missiles that .
2:23 p.m. but there was no lmmedla~ report of
have ~n modified to mlike the long journey to
cuualtlea or 4&amp;ma1e. the Iranian news agency
Tehran, 300 miles from the border.
said.
The mllslle. hsve a normal range of about 150 ·
miles
but the Iraqi&amp; reportedly have removed
Iraq fired three more ml&amp;slles Into Tetu-'an and
much of their 1,200-pound conventional warhead
the holy city of Qom Thursday. Iran retaliated by
sending three rockets crashing Into Baghdad.
.and added fuel to enable them to hit Tehran.
Tehran radio warned the Soviet Union ThursA ~e~~lor Iranian mllltar)&gt;pfficlal acknowledled
day for supplyla1 the long-range missiles that
. Thursday the modified Soviet missiles that bave
raiDed on Tehran since Monday pack little
Iraq . has ued Ia the wave of alrbome terror
against Tehran and Qom.
' ' destructive pUIICb.
.
Western diplomats beUeve 10 Iranian missiles
· "Iran will not forget those who give weapons to
that have strucll Baghdad since Mondar caused
the criminal Iraqi regime," the statii'Vn radio
more damage and casualties than the more than
uld Ia a commentary Thursday. "We will
respond."
1
·
25 Iraqi miSsiles reported to have hit Tehran.
The cycle of attack and revenge Is tile worst
·: Angry Tehran residents marched on the Soviet
since
Iran and Iraq, at war for more than seven
Embauy chanting "Dei!th to Russia" to protest
years,
began preying on civilians In 1983 In the
tbe Soviet sale of the weapons to Iraq, tile news

I

REEDSVILLE -The Rev. Sue
Denning of Parkersburg speak-·
lng at 7·: 30'each evening through
Sunday at fteedsvllle United '
Methoillst Church with special ·
vocal niuslc each evening and a
fellowshiP, dinner at 6 p.m. on'
Saturday.
·
·

Roger E. Carpenter, Linda K.
Carpenter, lot, Rutland.
Frank C. Smeeks, dec. to
Mildred E. Smeeks, cert. of
trans., Lebanon.
VIrginia Lee Medley CAsey,
Clarence W. Casey, to Clarence
G. Lawrence, Iva L. Lawrence
tracts, Lebanon.
'
Frank C. Smeeks, Jr., Traudy
Smeeks, to Clarence G. Lawrence, Iva L. Lawrence, tracts,
Lebanon.

MIDDLEPORT Special
meeting, · Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM, for inspection; dinner at '
6:30 p.m.; ladle meeting, 7:30
p.m., Inspecting officer Wayne
White; all members to take a pie.

.

around what Is described as a
sliding residual structure on
hourlong television programs
sold Into syndication.
The unlpn has also disputed
what It calls creative rights
issues, Insisting that an original
scriptwriter has the right to a
first rewrite and access to the set
during ' production, and that
women and minorities should ·
have greater access to the'
production process.
·

Meigs County property transfers _ _ __
Corp plied by
Scipio.
,
.
.Emmogerie Holstein Congo
Henry W . Johnson, Grace V.
Recorder, Meigs County
Johnson lo James T. Ward,
Earl W. Robinson to Nick W.
parcel. Olive.
.Robinson , Nancy P . Klme, part
U.S.A. Farmers Home Adm.,
:tots 305 and 303, Middleport
to Philip A. Eagle, Sherry D.
village.
Eagle, 1.10 acre, Chester. .
Lee w: McComas, Beulah
Lorene W, Dalley to. Tuppers
,McComas to Mary E. Smith,
Plains-Chester Water District,
•J..ouls T. Smith, Dorothy M.
right of way, Lebanon.
~Roach, Carl T. Roach, Elmer L.
John L. R. Gtllllan, Mary M.
:Miller, Paula Miller, .Willard D.
Gillilan to Tuppers Plains·
·Miller, Judy Miller, Dale E .
Chesler Water District, right of
;Miller, 1 acre , Middleport
way, Chester.
village.
Jack L. Westfall, lla G. WestDavey J . Miller, Shirley J .
fall to Tuppers Plains-Chester
Miller to Leading Creek Conser- WAter District, right of way,
·vatlon District, right of way,
Olive.
.
.Rutland.
·
Western Reserve Telephone
· Elden Walburn, Gladys L. . Co. to Tuppers Plains-Chester
Walburn to Jeffrle A. Stamper,
Water District, right of way ,
Olive.
·
·Sara M. Stamper,. pt.lots 111 and
110, Middleport VIllage.
George R. Sisson, Shirley A.

'

Iraq attacks; Iran offers to end cities' war

Amtrf•t-.PCIIIWoy

IW..

12··-~
~--

...

�Ohio
111 liouMhold Good•

64 Miac. MarchendlM

711

Auto,_

&amp;

j _ _ _ _ .... old

_ond_. __ -wood •-·
LAYNE'• FURNITURE

OHI to IIH. Tololoo 110 ....
"'' to 0121. Hlclo+- oJIO
to . . .. llha"""
10
om. ....._ 121 . ;o 1121.
011111....,01 ... up to . . . ..

•ua

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992~2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES
•Adt ou1tlde Melga, Oallie or Maaon counti.. muA be pr•
poid.

•ReeeNe t .50 ditcount for ad• paid In actv.nce.
•F,.. H1 - Giveaway, and Found 1d1 under 11 warda will be
run 3 d.ya 11 ~ charge.
· •Price of ad for .. c..,tt:.llenars i1 dOubl.e price of ad colt.
•7 point Nne f'lpe only uMd.
•Senti~ i1 not reeponsl'* for •rors after first d.y . !Checll
for erron flnt. d~ ad runs in PIIP't'•· Call before 2 :00p.m.
day after pubheateon to make correction.
•Ads th .. must be Ptid in tdvtnca .,.:
Card of Th.nkl
Happy Ads
In

Memori~m

Y•d Sal•

'•A clauifitd advartium.nt pltced in The Daily Sandnell,ac~t - clualfied die:play, Butln... .Card and legM notlcaal
will 1110 IPPHr ih .the Pt. Pla..ant R~istar tnd the Galli·
polls Deity Tribune, '"chlng over 11.000 hom11.

,_,....._.

1-c..tol'lll....

Cl-1 .. WDIII)I 11· • .WDIIDI 21·311 WORDI
04.00
Q.OO
17.00
11.00
11.00
110.00
...oo
t11.00
111.00
na.oo.
011.00
021 .00
I liloNTH
133.00
- .00 .
011.00

2-lnMift.. r

10AYI
JOAYI
IOAYI
IODAYI

.y ..

·-----·- .......

R:tW 1n fD"' CDneecuttverun,a. IHo.._ up •Y• wll,bl dtlrgld

tir liMh

MPnt•lld• .

_._..In

M ........ ,an

111-aol

~=PJ'f~~I/e~PER
SUNDAV PAPER

-

IJIO. Mlolb

..

range •371. llby iMib

II

'

...

• II I ' I .. Iii II

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

.

Clauified•pages cover the
following telephone ezchanges ...

n--~~.-

71-cuu••• e.-lpJnM

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 :00 A.M. SATURDAY
2:00P.M. MONDAY
2:00 P.M . TUESDAY
2:00P.M. WEDNESDAY
2:00P.M. THURSDAY
2:00 P.M. FRIDAY

ALUMINUM SIDING

·,11

_.

r

•lntulation

•Storm Doorr
•Storm Window•
•RepiKetnent Wlndowa
•New Roofing

•

'2 01ory houoo loootod In
. . . . ld . - lllhool: 3 IR., 1

I .,

liMit. Wll Ill

•tz'•u

month.

FIEf ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 111111':1'. ':1

BUS. 667-61 02
HOME 374-5599
HOURS: 9:30 o.m.-6 p.m.

Monday-Frida'
Sat. b' Appointmont

3·4·'81-1110.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

BROWN'S
TRAILER PARK
Campers, RVs,
or

Mobile

Home Lot

Rentals
992-5623
POMEI02!~ 9 9:110mo.

CUSTOM BUILT ·
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

"At Reasonobla Pricts"

PH. 949-2101
or

les. 949-2860

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4·16·86·110

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

CHESTER,· OHIO

Custom Home
B.u ilding, Room
Addition a.
Remodeling 8t
· Repairs. Roofs,
Baths, Kitchens

985-3365
Day or IY••ing

2·25-'87-1 mo.

Let

VHS TAP£
Ill_,,.
.......

lo ..., VltS.
CAll AMY CARTER
or IOI'S ElECTRONICS
446-7390

&amp; !lidos -

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE ir hereby given
that on Wedneaday, March .
9, 1988. ol 10:00 e.m., •
public sal• will be held at

THEFARMERSBANKAND
SAVINGS CO .. 21 I We01
Second, Pomeroy, Ohio. to
sell for cash the following
collateral:
867 VCR Topes (will nol be
sold separately
1660 Cloer Coooo
3 VCR MechinH
1 13" Color TV
2 4x8 lighted signs
The Farmers Bank end
Savings ComPany, Pom•
roy, Ohio. reserves the right
to bid at this sale. and to
withdraw the above colla-

11

WANTED

_· DEAD 01 ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Rangea •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Muot • lopair..,lo"

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
'985·3561
We Service All Makes

1122188/tfri

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL .. SANQ
TOP SOIL ·
FILL DIRT

Authori1 .. JaM Dttrt,
Now Hollatld, luJh Hog
F - lquipmont
Dtalor

GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
l:OO P.M.

ROOFING -

'NEw- REPAIR

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
· Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

RACINE
.GUN CLUB

949·2263
or 949·2168

3·2-88·1 mo.

Premiering

nmn ·

DIILII .~

The orlglntl Buy. Sell,

Trade M•aazine for CM'I.
trucks. ba1ts, cycl•. RVs

Middleporl, Ohio

FOR QUICK RESULTS ...
AdvertiM today in

992-2725

PH.

Wheeler Dealer, or you
juat tnay mlas e aalel
Ph. 1·992-3327 or 1-164-4233
or tta¥t mt110gt
2-25·'17 ·1 mo.

WAlK-INS WElCOME
2-5-'88 I mo.

. Public Notice

I

CONTRACTING
CHESTER. OHIO
I

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS

I

•ROOFING

REMODELING •
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS •
BACK HOE WORK

_.., ...........
915·4141

GII!IIAl CDII'IUC1015
Referenc..

~ 11 -:tr.ttn'

GUN SHOOT

YOUNG'S

RACINE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

FIRE DEPT.
Basham

Building

- Addona 1nd remOdeling
- Roofing and gutter work

EVERY .
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

- Concrete work ·
- ptumblng and electrical
(Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Fodory Choke
12 Gouge Shotguns Only

992-b21S or 992-7314

Pomeroy,

FUU nME &amp; PART liME IN SUPERVISORS
7:00 A .M.-3:30 P.M. SHIFT

1· 614·667-3166
Real Estate General

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
New location:
168 North Steam!
Mid,.oparl, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We C.rry Fllhlng Supplie~

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
IUSINESS PilON(
(6141 "2·65SO
HSIDENCE PHONE
(614) .. ,.,. ...

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL .
SIDING CO.

...........

"Free Eltim81ea''

[lei an
. Raa~ty ·
Over 1 00 Properties
F()_r Sale - Call Today ·
992-22&amp;9
9-5 Mon.-Fri.
9-3 Sat1.1rdaya
JEAN TfiUIII!LL- 948·21110
TRACY RIFFLE- 841·3080

DOTTIE TURNER-8t2-H82
HANK CLILAND-112·8111
OFFICI!-882·22118

Pll. 949·2101
or ••· 949·21'0
NO SUNDAY WlS

3-11·1111

3 Announcements

Neat, P.O. Box 518, Ironton,
Ohio 41&amp;38.

• I Ia nllon, 1M!'! Mtla.
f.,oaMed ln. -llddl...art. Ohio.
.14-112·2211.

·

I -llelh.l"-· olllnglod
tOof,IIIIIN UdlliRDfRt.1431ftd

lh.l
;twnllft.-'1--·
Coll14-112·741.

OP!N DAILY.
EXCEPr lUNDAY

Lot of N- ltem1:

F~lu~. Gu~

Areiiery, ond Much

More.
Celf. O.SttwiWt

., •sts-•

....... P't.PI iiiiiia ii'f .....
&amp;. Vicinity

Roger Hysell
Garage

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Rt. 124, Po~roy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR
Alto Tre...ll••l••

PAT HILL FORD

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

.

Middleport, Ohio
1· 13-tfc

,

6·17-lfc

IUBOUGH'S CUSTO
UPHOLSTERY
Serving Meigs lo
Alheu Counties

•Do- • Blokhoe Worlc
•Will Do Hauling With

Rootylinv • Aoupholoto~og

•W..cllerBIMce
•Junk Yerd Busl111t1
WANT TO IU1 WBRIO 01
JM CAIS 011IUCIS
- FIEIISllllmIIIIY .. lhiH ~~nlc• col

Dump Truck

AelkMnUel •

Commerdll Fumiturt
AY!Omotltre a M8rin•
Dl'lperi• • ComiCM

A LARGE SELECTION OF
FABRICS
Pl... p.
FREE ESTIMATES

o.--,

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

(6141 667·6695

2·22·'17'tft

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
·&amp;HEATING

C•ll coltect. Penta Shephard~ ~
404-99B· 91148
:
r.

HANDWRITING ANALYST. NQ,j
exp., will train. t12 p-tv. &amp; uP:
WrltO: 'PASE GRAPHDLDG~ ~
10010, 1&amp;1 S. Lincolnwey,

8

Aui'DI'•. IL 10142.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

•

'

.ft..,

•rr•

I

'

GET PAID for rHdlnQ bookaf
0100.00 1100' lltlo. Writo: PAlEN

•1 .000 rewsrd for lnfoi'JMtlon
leading to 1rrest end conviction
of peraon or ptnon1 thai robbed
the RailrMd Jvnedon. Feb. 23.
1988. Ronnie Miller, awnar.

lnharitance1 Auction. Merch 9.
1988. 10 :00 em. Putnem
County CourthouH. Winfield.
W. Va. Tenn1cMI'I or chiCk with
proper 10. Contlct AI Whitling~
ton, 304-571·2e73.

304·137-2272 ony1imo.

Aurore, IL 101•2.

Motor Rout£ Cirri« naadld.
Bondable, • .good trem~:
tlon. Crown Clty / Gall)poUI'

.,... C1ll Jeen Mlll•r 304·121·
2830.
C•,ntatn : t9-t 1B per hour
.,.;.dklg~ on tkillt; willing til'
reloclte. Celt anytitne 1fler 15: .
PM- 114-241·1177.

304·773·5311 .

No Hunting ar TrHpauint on

9

Neld babytitW in my hom•..,
Dey1• hoursveriM. Trenspo;u~,
tion n•ded. Call 814-448 :~
7841.
~

We"ted To Buy

Gerald Hodge property Send

Hill Ad. ·

4.

'

Full blooded ICIIIh Dog. Good
with kida. CaH 816-379-2775 . .
Two fema• pupt. a wHict old.
1h Lib and English &amp;ener. Give
IWif to good hDme. IU- 982 ~
7519.
Smell cem.m btock bultdlng to
bo

tom dqwn. 114-911· 3121

~tr

W. PlY cash for lete model clnn
uied care.

lnforlftlltlon 11 ne,dad for • boOk.
Anyone victlmind by , IM'Of&amp;&amp;4
alonel P•nan . C1ll Th.,.
Ra.....chwl· 1 ·100·241·3112..~

Jim Mink Chov.· Oido Inc.
Bill Gan• John10n
814-448·3172

Giveaway

I :OOp.m.

6 Lost and Found

'

P•rt-tlma truck delivery Wlnt~ ·
Knowledge of Me~s. AthNa.

TOP CASH pold tor '83 moolol
•nd naw£r uaad CM1. Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 E11tarn
A111. , Golllpollo. Coli 114·446·
2282.

Jackaon. &amp; Lawrence Count._._
prolorred. Call 114-&gt;MI· 410IIi
far •ppt.

Secntlry/ Recaptionllt for ~
to metric office. Bulin... Hucttd
tiOn •nd u.perienca N411U"-i.Send r•um• to: Baa Cia 138t-

Want ta buy: UHCI furniture end
endquu. Will buy antJI'II houaa-

c/oGalllpoliaD•IIyTrlbune. Bal.

haW fumiahlng. Merlin Wid•

zttl .

.

whl•-

I month old puppy,
brown epotl. Lalt In •awmen'l
Run .,.. In A&amp;DIN. Antwert to

Roo·Roo.

eou 114-141·2ao. .

t.ool In Middleport oroo. Oold

Oool ~.... Roword. tf found coli
114-812-2417.
t1 .-.DO REWARD tor fuN

raoo~~~e~ w of

aun1 .. kan Jan. 30.

1811, COIOUiot T r - Mike
R - or Leroy A-1. At. 2.
loon, w.v •. 304·171-1101 .

7

Y1rd S•le

.......Gallipolrs........ ..
&amp;. Vicinity

-·-*·--·
-·-·-··· · -~······-·· · ···· ~·~---·····~·---

~.

,, , ''-

FREE Place of Jawelary ta tiP~
10 people to Mil Avon, Cal!
114·441· 2181.
·-

Complete houMI:old• of furniture • •ntiquft. Alao wood &amp;
coel huteri. lwaln't Furniture
• Auction, Tlolrd • Olivo.
114·441-3118.

'llllrd A.... Golllpollo, Dhiu.
48131 .

.....,... 114-248·81112.
FOUND: Poodle-White with
~ apote. Vicinity of Northup
• Rt. 771. Coli et4-441·01111 .

1•. 1

a truclce: C.ll for
priooo· 814·378·2&amp;1S or 3782714.

FHwel....te •nd cMI

Junk Auta.

far s,.tllt _, SIS- •
SYUCISI, OliO
NEW STOII-flfW STOCI

onct -

.

Cel 114-281·1383.

ph-.

lOW PIKES

ca..

with or without
m.-. Cell lArry Uvoly·II43S.. 8303.
·

Junk

colll14·182·7180.

'

Anyone· vtctimllld by p~\.•

lionel per•an cell The 11tl '
1·100·248-3882. c.

..,ch...
I

2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh. 11.a.

812·3471.

't:'

1171 , 181 8. Unaot &amp;WJY, -., ·

Auroro, 1110&amp;42.

.

u.

l'tirehcnl

...... ·-

13

lneuranoa

~.

eou
uo for
ln1ufanae:

your looollt
Miller llnaurelter.
· 104·112·2141. Aloa · outal
homo. life. ·
.
~-

a-.

: 18 Wentacl to Do t .;.

Nee_,

Come In - Lolo of

New

•

lilledl.

New11r dtuilled. OH - -tl4-"t-OIII,IAII
· For mare lnfor.
ool
· 4:30PM
Uillhdaya.

- - b • d - · -lppod
lldtahen. laaalllant loaatlon.

·e.ou.

Rofol~"::'I 1.......":"::·
1 10

- . ..nfoo-

for rent In
Syroau•. 114-882-7111 8:00.

--

1 or 2 bedroom ho\M In
PomOfO't. R-uv NmOdolid.

-rol
111 . •

3 bad oom

Ft.nlohod or .. ............., 114812·,1 723- 1:00.

3 t11droom Farm..,_ tor rent
., Jo'*- Ad., Potrlot. Ohio.

1100.-tiiOpor-.
CoUII4-?48·t828 .

• ~ ·

"-

No
In

oily. AI utllltloo tu...-. Mu"

u--.
'

dop.CoHII 4·448-

·

.,...

.
~
eor~~
No ~·
'
'
-CoM 14·448-1137.
211-lt.·Fu-IIR,
opl. polol. t110 o mo.
tiO clop. No ..,...,_ No polo.

C": -li:

Z bod-mo. TV . - , hiiH

III Imerrt. fenoed baCik yt~rd,
good looltton, . . . 8 :00 ~.

304-171-4211.

3 ooomo Wid -

Fumlihod
111.
· 1 - - I- 7Apt,
. on Flrot
Avo. Coli 114-4Uot0711.

:1:': pafEEiilSU'
'AI --.
fto
a

Nloo2 IR, -.--yont-ln
Ko-.
CoH t14-"-·7471.

t41l70- 7d4 •pondo. ,l
IR .• 1\t Nlhl. ~I' au fur.

.........

~

-10 E - 1171 2 Ill., 1100.
- . - . dryer, olr oond. •rot. tiOOomo. CoHII4C _ , _ folmlohod. E.,ro 4Q4.
oHIO. Coli 814-4441·
'
0171.

-

IH2.

wh-.

t bad ao:ln .ap ln•sta. Pur~
nlolood
1200.·
ntOIOIIo. ·
Utlltloo fur·
1121. ond
por -

nlofood, Coiiii4-IIZ·1724.

-.--InDo
per-.
t200
1471.

CoM 114-441-

2 bedroom ~In • for

......

wllnyl unclelpliw ..ng.

ltlJ ....

'lery ... •aooo.

114-7.110U.

·'

1.171 International II P•• ~
--buo.Con
be oonua...., to a...,.... YlltY

.•

=d~~:

RePair
-l7.
. CoH 114-112· ~~=======:;:=======ICIIMf=~ -77- -Auto
1tll Suzuki 700 Intruder
------• -~..._-

311j

- - bogo, ooncllllorl, 1.121 mlleo. tziDD.
1813 RM 210 E til ol oondl·
-1113
· 0100
-·
reooot.
KX 10,
- - -n.
tiDD. 1-Xlf.ICI Hoooo1o. Folr
- - · t200. 1 - .a.tru 21011. GMd OOI'Idlllan.
--· t1-. Col
114-112-1 -I:OOp.m.

61 Farm Equipment

-HHog-·J-.

CRDII.SDNI
U.S. :II w.._
Ohio.
114-2....... 1.
IIMooy , _ _ ,

U H,ul _lniOIIo one! .,.1. . for
ron~ 304-171·7421 .

Iuolo
Dvw
40----• _.... .. lltoo of • "qqllpmnu. Urpet MIIDIIDR In
I.E. Ohio.
'

-od.

f«-orTrldo :IHPTroy-

F l - ...._

111.00. 11-~.Golllpo-

......
. 1
,· - Coii14-381·
· ·HII
- ·• A·
llo. Dlllo • NelOn. our dla Ndou1, 304811-1448.

IUIIPWI DENIM, Cerhllt,
A-1 ClolttfnO. Howy . -

wodcc•olhlng. boolaallwtnt.rm
rWioanoblo ,.._, Pal- Ad. . . -.tlo'o, Old Rt. 21 ·
I 1 (I Nlwo00 Rood.

t:,-

'* ReuCLcuucod. Frt..... lun;

- I:DD pon. 104-271·,H81.

1171DoclgoCuotom 4•4, 2ton.
1187 Sony TV C II lla •
,..order • .VCR, 304-178·
1174.
8 H P - - _., lltlle.
304-171-M72.

...12110.
l'aol
- - ......
wlllo hot.
oy·
·
tiH.
I
row
MF oom
......,, UIO. o - wttl II·
- C o l 114-211~22.
110 Oevtd- .._._
wWt ,...... n t"'""' tJ,ao.
271 ......
rouftd ......

dol...

03210. 200~--

. . . . - ... tzll.
.... Col 114-211-1112.
JIM'I FARM EQUIPMENT •
448-1777

""""-loot.

liM
II dlr-wldt
PTO ·
lhett.
I ' Pt.
· - •111
"'

5

r ~;~~~~~s

63

pcNMI'

74711.

•

S6

Peta for Sale-

. R~Iil&amp;rad Ou•rter Horee·
Briood llo,. !nom . t210. 10
t1000. R1glltered I yr. old

s..1111"'
- ·
- •apiMN
piMiure
-. C..InII

ond 8vpply &amp;loop-Pol
Grooming. All br•ade ... AII
otytoo. lomo Pot Foad Do-.
JulloW..... 1'11• 114-4441·0211 .

114-21.. 1122.

Goa for .... Toag•...,ro
No- OIOd 1C1oto. Dldor R -

' IWtMMING POOLS · till
ORDER NOW· PAY LATER

0ragofiWI'Nil Cenery Kennel•
CfA Hlmoloyen, P-.. · ond
I I - - AKC C puJploo. Coli 114-448-3144
-7PM,

" • 31' ....1 pool
t.noe•fliltM'. • lldan•
flooonclol(l--. 1·100·141-

R..,..&amp;ecod bid male Cockar
Spooolol. I - . old. 171. Col
114-1187-.0241-4 Pll.

with-

0141.

-

PkNOOd mixed lwdWCCd. Av-

-t.U. 1t),l
-·'!:
lood·t21
""'
dAared
looal.. . C.l
!114-448--.

-Cooto _ _ _

........ .... ..... ... eM¥

. . . whh. biDod
....... _
......... 14!1
......... ,....,...dotll$111 ••.

. . . .IIWW

,.,...,

Coli 1 1 4 - - - ... -

•taerlng. e3IOO. 814r112·
1101 .

1113 .......... · 4 oyl., 4
door hztdqh±, good .....
ond OUI. Co"l 114-IIZ·
l t : l l - 1:00 .....
11141Wt.111Rov-llrou.,._..
E - t oooldllton. 1!11 - ·
....., - · 114·112·1137
-4:00.

~--c-.-.­
N:ml
b 1a'1. N. N. A-T. A-C,

AM-I'II. Cnlloo, Tit. Col 114111·7112 - 1:00 .....

dOor,---·

-..am...-.- -

H - for ·oofo. CoU 114-371·
2411 .

!olorod Rod Hono. CoH 114-. .2·
3111.

lollf' -

· 304-171-1043.

....,.. 12 oolotful G-.
Colll14-441· 1107••
Rot T - pupo: 1 mole. I
· NotUNI . lloblell. Col
114-448-1413.

pup.--•.., ........

•••=•-.
•aoo. Tand¥ .....
Doloy ........ · -;

....

830
Cloll814--·4701_.,
..
.

Mullcel

64 H•y &amp; G_reln

.......1 1113 ford -

812-1117.
- · ·· -

Coll14-171·2711.

- t t o v · JGUOOd-. tiDo
bolo. CoH 114-441-1030.

-

"" -

· Col 114-441-

ltiiCirondAIILE. Pl. Pl. AC.
tilt. AM·FM 0111 .... ~
wlporo.hooopodollE-.

1H2 Mandu. 1102 ..,...

•

•• jl.

c.u

11 • ...., euo. Col!lor 1M
......,.. Cd .,,.;..,...

For IAeM

..,

2 IR ....... loloiN,IIIIohelr-

............. tar---....

............. 11 _ _
1171 City ···'14.000. - - D o l 114-'

....N71.

304-171-77..

IUD

I

NOW HIIIINII . Yo!tr . A,..,
111.110 to 111,110 IMMI·

•u··'f1

7la.

iiii1 ••1..
.... .,..,

--T--IIIo•
12ft. .. . . .. 'JIOO .. IF ..... . '

1
4 -- - ·
· .114-742·
- -· ·:
Foawy
· t711.
Zft7.

81

Home
lmprovem1111U

-MDIT

WATEIIPIIOOFIIIG

Ornm'ldwwt...._..,..,
.... LDotl ....
,....

:t fumlltted.

Call aolact

..... Jill

1·114-237·-

· doy or lllglot.

o.t.. 4

IHDCioryolor~~
IJ8nt•.mu•-•
ti.III.DD, .........
·171·

lo-

Z113ort71-1711.

1112 Dido oooooigo.llolo - n.-.oo.304-871zeu.,. 171-1711.

I H1 MoniO Corio, Y·l - ·
Pl.
tilt.
Air, ntoo - ·
U,IIQ.OO.
304-171·~113 or
171-1711.

I ---------IH1 ~Zoployl'.-oond.
AC, AT, Pl. PI, ........ to ...
304-871-1217.
· · - · 114-

Fruit
&amp; Vegetable•

72

Truckl for Sale

11711H 1700. 311 ong., I Olld.
11.-. otr
.
,
PI,
IO.ZO
-·
Nloo tniOII. 1171 Dodgo
'II
....up. 311 ............. - · Very ·, oond. Col

·-~14-.:..::2•::..·1:..;1.:41.:.;·----

- · 3D4-1711-4112.

Ill For Sale or Trade

-·--·1142.

.

'Pofoollo•rootfootl,-........,..,
hllullrog. Col &amp;14-3117·0f21.

RON'I T.. niaion larvkle.

- ' Mooo InRCA,
o-r.
GE. I
Zenith.
C.M

-·~~-~~"

T•••••"' -

Folty , _
•••••• Cflllll J04-17... 1ll1 . .

..................
""""

._.. T.- end L.- ..... 1oa.

,........1. 104· 178·li42 or
17..2101.

--·-·- ----·.....-..-like
Dolool ......... F.......

Clood- tooy for- U .DD

10:10, - ·
Col814-448-7171.

TNOII , _ Flf - : 311

111
eu.-. -. =t•
....... -r 1rta

1871 GMC 2 10n 1'11·114-4441· 3241.

I I' IIIII

... 114·4441·

&lt;

-

bolo. ID4-171-2111.

• I Milan 1,

. . .1102

t 1n

Dry w.ll,

g. end ........

· 1174

Chivy 1NOil llo 10n. CoN otoor 8

171·14"17.

1111 N - _...,, 8 opd.,
AII·PM·Cooo.
a-., • ·211-·
Col 114-214-1212
1731.

82

1- T- w..--

.

Plumbing

&amp; HNting .

c·a:
. .---

CARTER'I PLUMBING
AND HEATING

4&gt;&amp;4 IAI. llod.

=C.-rod---· .......··-· =.....:.......... __....., . ..---=
a.llp•l• Dlih" T....... or for

loofomooiiOoo oollll4-441-

1111
- · ;'... y ...... 'njl

plolo-·-..

--~0.­
loholo.
lit ...... AM·I'II. Col
114-441-IH?.

" ' - 11

IIIIC!oovyl-10-........ 10,000- ·4

84

•.• 4 ..... t.dd.O...

A C . - - . ....o t o - .

- · 11'1011. 114-. .1·1313.

Coll14-117·-·

'IICioovy. . . . . . . IOn.Y·I,I

5

.

'II .......... 12.-

- · tf ,100.00. 304•411·
1-12:00-7:00.

............... •·""·
71'Cioeo----·

1114 ......,..,... Cll_. 2 •. ,

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

Coll1......- .

'

0':

:

Elecblcel

&amp; Refl lger•tlon

fll IS

11111•-•n ....... .

"
I Ill II lUI. I
............... II'~

.n-1711.
Ooooop -

looolloog -

ID4-171-1110.

· -· 304-1711-- otior •

73

..........1111.

.

---noruot,- Coet.--. ...........
"111 ·"""'

Pl., PI, AC . . . _ 4
...- •• 111ahlll 111 !1 al¥.

01t1a
ilia
or 114- '

~7'7

0710.00 . 104·171-

-

Roofing, . ., 11 ' •

· drywell,
•
~·
CoN Gorypolntlntl.
114-)11..

llotory
~.
llan
. .or
. wuplld..,.Uy.

II

- · ,._, Pl. Pl. 11.-.eiiiD.Cotobo-ottho

118

-··
.. ,.. ___
-·-·
-·-·
·- -· ·---"
-· "-·-'""'
49'

tllo ft. "" .....
Good
aatsdltlo-:. ~
•700.
Col 114-112·2111.1:00.

tt,200.DD. 304-171-1141 of'

tor 4:00pm.

-

• 077. Llmllod opeolngo

;"1'::. ·=:\,~
en,.-.
·o141'0111. .

.

luly
ooooct...........
Col 114-Mi-11&gt;10.

114-

Good, Timothy tooy for
.... CoH 114-2.... 1211 oltorl
PM .

l'iiii3c;i;;;:;;;;;;;:-;;;;;;;:
1113ctwwy.CI&amp;stlon. AmNdlo.

114-441-0117
•Jatt;A'L;wls;
~·

12 Jtllog Alvlrz - · 1110.00
flron, -.e12-:res1.

--111.1.._..
....... ,..,; _ , 1171- 1111.
of IC • K llfetolo H - .
304-1711-107t.

1171 11 ft. 'MI : .... ...,..

·

---for-.llg-.,_, a'""'··- ·
-··
71 Auto'• For Sale

Jvc.
4 - YHI·VCII· - ·
t221. Coii14-448-Z211.
MID. Col

rlglot.

441-217t.
'78 C2oovy -

nell IN-o

trM.IM t 1&amp;11 Quhar

1

Ill 111111111

1·1···--·-·
Allo badqoom • · c.11 114-

IIH « 171-17:11.

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..._.
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2414.

- · - • o1ooto
- ...•- alloli.
,
Wonoood
. v~ t.ervo rauooc1
1ooy boloo 10r oolo.
o h - •200 oioclo. Col &amp;14· til. CoN 11~... 2·7277.
1181-~.
~~~~~~------

114-441-UN.

a
• .., !toll, ,..... .... ID4-171-

• Campara

Gnnd - · 2
114·112-

1171 1111.

toldng .- " 'for .._

A•a•i•N Coclkar lpanlel,.....

=

- -· 114-112-7471.

Nr• .nd
....
.......

WI,

79 Moton Home•

apony
1 - ·- · 1171.00. 304-171·
2181 ... 171-1711.

noo.oct. oe1

TMCIJ Modlt 4PComllllllrwtlh

fu......._ ......
aaft•

Col -1711-7711 ..

- ·"'=-.. . . .

1-1172-

304-.n-1110 .... for - 1:00-1:00304-1711110.

Livestock

; I 111:,11 II

3 II ' 00111,
okyor, otr. 1121. -

1· 711·170·

18U tude• ltp .,.., ....,

1171. -

. . . . . 4 oyt, iMIIWOOI,

IIR .. Nice iol. tZDD e .... 0...
~red. c:,tl 114-4480112.
. ·' .

....... fumtiMcL ...... Dryw

._ ....

~-·-·-ool

-.. ·u-. .... c...... --

- · Rio llrondo. 0. CoH 114241-8121 .

• rot.

12•10 llobllo
- · 814-111-

Oovenwu•ulttom.ttom•1 . (U ,....,, 0 I 4 Ylnt luii'O\P
lh¢
• na.C.I1-IOI_.,_
1000 lbt. GH·IIIDII f o r -

"'""' ooftl!•·

. ·
plpoo, -

lnltf'Umentl ·

COUNTIIY MOillE Homo Pori&lt;
I I - 33, N - ol ' - ·
fiOIOIOI - . Cd 114-1!12·

lootln _ _ _ _

IIQCirondMooQ olooLI.-

lullc!log M Sloclo, loriclo, -

&amp;7

Alraond. . ..

....... ---~· ···~'··I,..,. -7.-•Roo.

Roaerallia•ment

104-171-ZiiO.

Coolo, n o -· Coi814·H2·
2107.

48 Space for Rant

Jim'• ......,. . . . . . ,.~

-I:OOPfll.

-

-mo. Col 114-1
· ~Ill.
7 . tl21.
....1111.
·

- I Pll·

71 Auto'1 For Sale

Very--kopl.~

......., ...... 100111. ..........

F«-orll-2 U .. 12xl0
-H-t200e-Col
114-4U-U41- I PM .

....

1~ •

- - .._,. ctr,eo for

2•nR
....--""'""'·
letup•-lollnM-.. Coli
114-441-N27 Ill• 2 PM.·
_ _ _ _ I:DD.
- - - J Cdi14. _ 2 .... - - 11'1

,.74 Nolly Porto, '701114. I

plolo-up. -

11.-.
--.___ ...,_

Naw 8Ift lln&amp;f 1; ••ant wtth t

~- • -· 141170. a lood.-zlull-.-bufldo
............ ...,

z

Dol-

- ·- -·Good

154 Mlac. MarcJ't•tidiM

.....,

Nolly ..,., -12.
l'ooa.LMdMRbWI ......
lito. tiDDO. 114-742·30JI.

a.a.: nncnact ,_lh:uoDCI• .
HIAP No. 7047 rog-.
or
814-742·242&amp;. •

For

Now on
l'lom - . tool bluo. wom 100 """' fenoo - · 1111
Too-formyold-. t71. .._ on-ofl Do- ploloup for - · eloo
fM'm . . lp?M'IIt. 104Collll4-448-t:ll2.
. lllouldor, 13-14, ........ .......
171·2328 or it71· 2 - .
Cool•
104-171·:1447.
- -· -·ton. lluot UnldoniDDOoto-,- o r, IO
......ft. Col 114-448·1312.
II. -lito dlok. . 62 Wanted to Buy
ooblo. o11 -~. ....
Antiquo wing -choir with
oond. t7DD. 304'1112·3314. ·
a..-tAmeloao. Polrmollogonyond-ANA·I oondl·
1111 Building Supplin
- . 114-112·1111.

304-t711-27H..

· Colll14-742•1033.

wills•

P I - for ..... 031 o - ·
Will-.
114-143-1410.
·to-

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.LMooa _ , -

blo ...... If• 112·2748.

1174 Moly hrll. I b1drooM.
70a14. I•Dtllnt "''h . . .

..

•oo-.
P_.

1t77 VCIA

.
.
.
--...,=
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...
..
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·..... -:::· ·...,_
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.... 1 0 o l 0 - - 1111
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1:14-111-048.

----··12por
11'1
co.
Ponmw. Ohio. 114~02 · 1411 .

Cc~n ..
ton. •o•. Dhlc!

for Rent

21R .. WIIIar.-fum-.
ttoout11u1 . -. No oily
F114-~1102.
- · Mobllo Homo
.-Pork. ·Col

· for S1la

E..... - -. Cool814214-1128.·

w....... lm;:uht&amp;wd • ........._

2 - ..... -. ~~~~on oolo fa&lt; t110 -·WIN_.
for on-·
Olllolthowey.Colll14-4411·

114-

114-441-1111.

IIDD.oO

M - J o - fino; Ill. 17.
104-411· 1042 . .

7£ lla FMY.
....-. a\4

31 Mobile Homes

'

Mollohen Furniture

4014th. Aw.·KMA
Golllpollo. Ohlo-114-4441·7444.
·~~lo ......... ..- ....:...ld ::/':' •
lompo , Good. oond. Col 114441-0421.

42 ·Moblll Home•

- - · 304-171·1371.

:, '

Corpot·-

........

gino,....., ..... 0120. obo. Col

Vena •

4 W.D.

,.. "•m•• Yes a ...
v... , . _ - -·11.-.Col11~

... -,....

7117.

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

• . . . . . . . . 1.. -

.111l8,..,. V•. I

._ 100.

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

llrd llatll .... No

31.9 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio

DaaJ:toan ....,.. floor .,....,..
mast. 4 nM.,
t II IIMl.

-·

2 po. lvlng room -·IIOrtt,.
ot 1300. 8 .... dlnlog ......... ot 1221. 7 pc.
dining room oullo· tiiO.
Rodln••-ottlll. Phlloo 21" colar l'V-MIO. I po.
· IIVInl room IUitll -1400.
ot 14 • yd.
Kltohen • bethroom vinyl
Hnoloum· otortl,ot t4.8h yd.
lnatallltlon
finana,ng
·ovolloblo.
1

..w..

!~
~..

lltlst• fiN' FlEE

992-6282

whio - ·

T..... _, -

bftdgM. tr8Ck. bnwfviilrt... M ~

-~

010

I'

I Ill.-

rofrla, No - · Coil 114-4411·
311'1.

Tyoo

1t77Ce:ua.v-&amp; ..... - . .

... llftd ...
c...v
a.
-~ r - ...... 2
lit. 7, -

Apartment
for Rent

-- -·..

1200. 2 ....... Coli 114-448·
1174.

....... Col 114-441-1111.

Clooooh. •:OCI-4:00.

mloo""

•rot.

..

dolly gold. ollwr aolno, · ~:.'!,· 3:.:2;::. MorilrJ&gt;:
rinp, J&amp;WMry, lterling ware, aid ::::--;-:-:-:..::.:....:.:.;,:::.:,..__,~"
oolno. lortlo c u -. Top pr1. Got pold for -tno boob .
'c•. Ed · - lorllor Shop, 1100,00 por ~flo. Wrlto: PAl
Buying

hou•.

Z lA.
portly 1-•~
Adultoonly. No-. Dop••
3 mi. I ...... · Coli &amp;14-4411804.

•·

'
Information" It nMded for boat~

W...... 10 buy· Old Cupboord,
chaat of clriWit', okl qultta. C.ll
11 4-248·14411.

...,.. . . It ....... Trlnlly

Tuttle II

.,._,

Get own Avon 1t cast. Prfzea.~.:
IMUJ'IInoe. Na litn·up IMif yOu.

Middleport
&amp;. VIcinity

-

J . 8 fURNITURE
I.......UV-'ofurooluwol
1411 . . _ Aw. .
LMooa oooon oul1oo- tl711.
. .. lltdowmoulloo-.11·
up. Compl11l miarawaucmnda
1118.85. up.
~In ond moot t h o -

·~ ....... 2 ..... Nidlam.
..............
It ........
....
_ _ ......
....,.00

.,

ZOO M'IP brNkar box : 81ntla

.......P'omerov'.........

110101

..-..:-.

HrYic;

poll, • ,....., Much. much fnDI'I •
Thurl.. ·~.. ..... 1· 1. 2121
- - l f r e l n. •

. . otTwiN. c. ..

Nlaelt 'wlllhomelnCifton.

...W ldlolan. ...., •peted.
1111Uhld
......
.,a.u.atty
_NOIII.
_
-.a
,_

)obi t19,141 lo UI,Stl p.,·
ye1r. Now hiring! Cell Jab U~fL.
1· 111·419·3111 Eotf112210't.
lnlo. 24 HR.
'"'

- · full bod •

·
.... , ......

naeriellla.

Would lllae Ia buy junk cart.
.._.... cert •nd motorcycln. · P1rt-dme MLT for Full Servtoe~
Coli 114·371·2110 or 378· Lab. Appty in Plrton It 1ft~.;
2423.
.
Medlcel Pl•n· 203 J1cksa ~
Plko, GoiHpoHo, 8' 4:30.
. ·_
WMt to buy llandlng tNnbw &amp;
Govarnm~~nt Jobt. *11,04o.;
ptne. Pty TOP DOLLAR . B ICNI
CM' more. Exeallant retarancu. ' 0.18,230 yaar, Now hiring. Ya.u:t.
Coli lArry llrl-nd lotting. ..... 1' 808·187·1000 En. n,:
,aeos lor turrooo1 ,_,.11101.. ;.
114·112·7823.

. . . . . . . IIUIMIIII ...... Motft.

. JO'S GIR SHOP

......

I14-:117-D1•t- 1:00-

'
-l'i
P1rt tim• In ttore marchandJMt;,,

n•m• it wt1 probably got Itt Aaln
or 81]lne.

Attention Electroux cullOm ....
Fnnk Fultz is now your IU~ ­
rlzed faclory •In end atrvice
repraenutlve. For MI'Yice c1ll

614·742·2617

- ~

OM

•42.0011.00; D:1oa

Help Wanted

.

(SM), 1"h miiH out Broed Run
Ad. from PhlllipSpom P11nt, you

Wedem.,...' a Auartion lervfceaveillble 11 your CQnWnlanc:e
end locations. Marlin Wed£:
meyer AuctlonHI'~ 114-2415112.

EXCAYAnNG

lt. 2, CoolwHie

11

2 BR. unfumlohod, I -21S
off Rt. 7 . 1200 ....... liD clop.
Aot. ....... Ooo-.
Colll14-441--.
.

I-·_
..........
--·-·-,.
···-·.
.........
'"'

Two
............
ban"""'
..... Point,._,•.

33J, 1&amp;1 s. u.-woy. Jto

~ ' ···· · -~ -----~

GINS &amp; SWPUIS

lot. 1'11. 814-441-

Yll141y Fumllura
1um1tun onct
appllcenan. Cell 114-441..

-

Vorynloo38A.; 1 " - · - Ona 1nd. two-braaii'OOfll apart:
home. Inc,_ Clly-.
e110 a mo. Cal . . , 4
oofo-lor
· for -- · - · t20ll
ond•
PM·I14-21 ..1 -.
•221 per month. R•luu.n d - . . . -. Colll4co.....-v tumlohod 3 111. o
441-4t.... 448·4428 ... 441!homo. lwtmmlntPMI·- 2328.
- . FomllyiOjlm.Aithouno.
Coli 114·448·4108 .. 171·
2740.

•

•

Gigantic Oerega Sale, Merch 6
Kupld'e Nett 1nd ConnecdoM
Dating Service of Huntington
Join• topther therlng profiiH.
For Information wri... : Kupkl'a

FOUND: Smolldog lnvlclnllyof
Oott cou,.., Cell 114·441-

RADIATOR
. SERVICE

992-2196

Allll UllllCI:IIII'III s

Collll~·44•·2143.

114·112·

. • -.-.00. 304-171--.

work

10-7·tfn

Lool!lng for a few good nu.- to join our
dediceted steff who are committed to provid·
ing quality care. If you f8el you llhere this dedi·
cation and committment to quality geriatric
care and team work. pleeu can or write:
Patty Conard, R.N., D.O .N.
for an interview. WEW wage scale and
excellent benefit package.
ARCADIA NURSING CENTER
Box A, Main St.
Coolville, Ohio 46723

FirM E••lt•••l
Plrtt &amp; 1 '1!1~&amp; tfc

eo Mlflo """· eo•

1114.

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ollio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy.

10-9·tfn

PHOTO ADS SflU

169 N. 2nd Ave.

FREE ESTIMATES

3:00·11 :30 A.M.
11:00 P.M.· 7:30 A.M.
. 75 BED ICF/LONG-TERM
CARE FACILITY

-z

114-4441-2107-dlyo, -

.-.. . pool.-·-

~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104

%

• ........ Outbullllllga.

• l ' s GO"'- 2 betM, 2 CNII'
...... 1o1 on 111. 31.

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist ·

614-662-3821

IACINE; OHIO

KAY'S
BEAUTT SALON

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

PARniME LPN'S

-

z LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

U. S. RT. 50 lAST

992-3410

. ....

llldFOOIII£,

Re-acquaint yourself
wi\h the stylists Mary, Naomi, Jane,
Groce, Donna, Angela
and Kay at

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Help Wanted

c,

SAUS &amp; SERVICE

ng Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; S.n•i••
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

Howard L. Writesel

INSULATION

tlee given .
(3) 3. 4. 6, 3tc

__
...,.,. __
.........

2 IR. hOuaoon 1J 1 / 3 - . ful b
..... 2 .....

Hometor ..... GaMipcllafM¥,4

J&amp;L

teral prior to sale. Furthlll'
The Farmer• Bank and Sav:
inga Company reservea the
righl lo reject oiw or ell bldl
submitted.
Further, the above' colla~
teral will ba sold In the condition it is In with no tKpreuad or implied warrar,-

BOGGS

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

'

lmm MOVIES .. SUDfS to

J lladrOOM ..._..2021 Challllm.
EIOol. Nloo
oond.- U· l-. -. root.
Coli
114-4441·1201.

..

44

on '-NI oontteat:

...012.- -1.
Col .... 114-448~7172. ..... Nlcoly luml- omoH ,1·114-441-1122.
. Adulto. Rot. • clop. No polo.
Wlter fumllhed . •111 per

11 v ................

ERWIN
CONSTRUCTION

41 Homea fo'r Rant

-

3 Mlloo out
....... Rei. Open lam to lpm

71'72. HO...I·I.

..-- . ..
•

•7-coolwllo

17 Yn. E•perience
CERTIFIED MECHANIC

l!oyo

-0322.
· -

1 r 1 1 ,1

11 f'IYIIItOM 0...
u-ce.
TY • Rodlo • .,• .,.
14
_ _ __
•--Aetilau•

742-llulllttd

41926 ST. IT. 7
TUPI'fRS PUINS. OHIO

~·,;;·~;· ...,...,,... ..-.

8o

. .

-~-.........

AUTO REPAIR

.

•·* I .

late husband left a
. It's called

·

Business Services
VINYL&amp;

-

.i$

II I

tM • MI. Bod *20.
010 • lllni ...... tiD. Good
11'r 1..,. ot bad oom IUitea.
tMtll olblnett. Mldboerda ,,.,
ond"'' to Ill.
.

----

714:0~ ....... " -

141 .... d&amp;nd
241--&amp;.otort Folo

Rand S

.·

.,.... .... tll.tll ond .,... Col
j1·114--7311.

. lt-l'•lllllo or TIMe

INSUUnON

· ~....

llgllll. - - - o n

........... v..-

J&amp;L BLOWN

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

• ..... ,.._..,....__..... ...,_....

71-·--·1·

_

Of

lUI • - til, 11m! 178, oid
til. a - - 1!21. lOot
UICI.4--IH.Oun
cd:l• I gun. 811 or t1eo1r1c

7Z-TNalio for . . .
71- V-·4WO'o

....

I

UHWid,.toUH. Ioby-

II-""""" lor ....

1-H-1-LGotond7-Yon

....

b4dl OCCI ;'ICI ·W·n•b

....
...._,.,, .............
....
·--'-··--·-"-

__
.
...-.,

RATES

--2-MIIWiqart

COPY DEADLINEMONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER

- ·--llu-----~-·~••
·-· 1100 .. 1D 1171.

AOCIIUMI

lll4llf

~.

.....
C!'

- .... :a.. -

~,.
UI
Ita

......

-0111114-

lOIII " · · . . -

I.,_!' ..... - - •

- - ... Colletti·~
.....
~

�..

i

Pomei!OY Mlddhport, Ohio

Pi 91 12-n. Dilly S1ntinel

S~ks
DaU:r litGcll pnce.

EMS has eight Thursday calls
Yelp Couilty EmerJeacy Medical Services ieporta eight
calli TIIUJ'Iday; Tuppers PlaiDs at 1: 20 un. to ~~ Camp
Rol4 for IJIIII.a Perlou to Veterans Memorial Holptlal;
Rutlalld at 11: 03 a.m. to Beech Grove Road for Marte Priddy to
Vel8rau Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plallla at 12:56 p.m. to
J - Nursing Home for Catherine Beha to Carilden·Clark
Mtmortal Hospital; Pomeroy atl: 13 p.m. to ButterDut Ave. for
DebOrah Hively to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
1:59 p.m. to the senior citiZens center for Mary Francis to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 3: 411 p.m. to West
Main St. tor Freda Casto to Dr. Schmoll's office; Middleport at
7:02p.m. to Main St. for LIIUan Zirkle who was treated but not
trauported; Middleport at 11: 45 p.m. to an auto ftre at the
Cheshire Food Shop.

I

.

'

1:

Parents meeting canceled
Supday's regularly scheduled meeting of Parents For.
Education In Meigs Local School District has been canceled.
Instead, the if11UP Is sponsoring a seminar on ThurSday evening
·at 7p:m., with guest speaker Carroll McCammon of Columbus.
·Mr. McCammon will be dlscus81ng school financing. ')'burs·
day's seminar will take place at Meigs Junior High ar\d the
public Is Invited to attend.

Winter sports banqUet Monday
Meigs Athletic Boosters will hold their winter sports banquet
on Monday, starting at 6:30p.m., at the high school cafeteria.
Each family Is asked to bring two side dishes. vegetable, salad
or dessert. Basketball p)ayers, wrestlers and cheerleaders
be honored .a t the banquet.
··

w1n

Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce will meet Tuesday for
a luncheon meeting at the Pomeroy Trinity Church. Guest
speaker will be Kim Shields, Meigs County development
director. All members are urged to attend.

I'

Irene Burris
Irene Vrrginia Burris, Mason,
died Friday morning, Much 4,

1988 at Veterans Memorial
Hospital in Pomeroy, Ohio.
ArrangemeniS are under lhe
direction of the Foglesong Funeral
Home.

Emma Snyder
Emma Edna Snyder, 70, lor·.
merly of Hockingport, a resident
of Weber's Nursing Home In
Wellington. died Thursday at the
Wellington Community Hospital.
Miss Snyder was born In
Athens County, a daughter of the
late Lon H . and. Rose Blake
Snyder . She was a homemaker.
Surviving are three sisters,
Mary Sambla~ of Navarre;
Wilma Young, eedsviUe. and
Thelma Swlers, Amherst; two
brothers, Lawrence H. Snyder
and Clifford Snyder, both of
Hockingport, and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by two sisters,
Bertha
Gregory and Freda
Yeater.
·
Services wiU be at 2 p.m.
Sunday at the White Funeral
Home In Coolvlllle, with the Rev.
Roy Deeter officiating. Burial
will be In Stewart Cemetery,
Hockingport. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Saturday. ·

Bob Evans .....•.....................17%
Charming Shop)le$ .... ........ ..14%
City Holding Co .............. :.. ,29~
Federal Mogu.l ....................39:%
Goodyear T&amp;ft ...................62%
Heclc'~ Inc .............. .. .. ...... ... 1%
Key Centurion .................... 39~
Lands' End .......................... 21
IJmlted.lnc.............. ............ 20
Multimedia Inc . ....... ........... 58~
Rax Reslaurants .... .... ............t
Robbllla 8t Myers ...................9
Shoney's Inc....... ....... .......... 24
Wendy's Inti. ....................... 7%
Worthington Ind ..................20.%

Hospital news
Veteran Memorial
ThurSday Admissions - Pau·
line Derenberger, Pomeroy;
Jack Ward, Pomeroy; Nettle
Betzlng, Middleport; Norman
Terrell, Middleport; · Carol
Theiss, Pomeroy.
Th"rsday Discharges - Patrl·
cia Hill. Jeremy Lawrence, Ruth
ChUes.

Announcements

Trus&amp;ees to meet

Area deaths
Allee Beaver, formerly of
Meigs County, died· Feb. 2$ at
East Liverpool.
Local survivors Include thr~
sisters, Faye Wolfe, Maye Smith
and Nina Yates of Pomeroy; a
brother, Philip Donovan of Syra·
cuse. A brother. Clinton Donovan
of VIrginia also survives along
with three daughters, and sev·
era! grandchlklren and great·
grandchildren.
Services aad burial were held
Saturday In East Liverpool.

Am Electnc Power .. .. .... .... .28~
AT&amp;T ................... ........ ..... .28%
Ashland Oll .. •... ••....•. ••.....•••. 63

lnspectloa Saturday
. Job's Daughters, Inspection
practice will be · held · 11: 30
Saturday. mornlpg at· the Middle, port Masonic Temple.

Chamber to meet Tuesday .

A&amp;e Beaver

(Aaellll•.,m.)
&amp;r,ee ... llhrlllllllllll
ol Blat Dlllt II a-t

Virgil Wood

A.uocta«on lo Ol'JBDize
Syracuse Youth League will
hold an organizational meeting
Wednesday, 7 p.m.', at Syracuse
Elemen~ School.
Unified. Cltlsens meet
A meeting of Unified Citizens
for Education In the Meigs Local
School District has been called
for 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday at the
American Legion Hall In . Ru·
tland. All members are urged to
attend.
PTO&amp;omee&amp;
Chester PTO will meet Mon·
day, 1 p.m., at the sc~ool.

VIrgil M. Wood, 64, formerly of
Meigs County, dted Thursday at
his residence at 5566 Oakmont
Road, Col11mbus, following a
.
brief lllnes~.
Mr. Wood was born May 4, 1923
In Syracuse. a son of the late
Marion (Brownie) and Letha H.
Betzlng Wood, Chester.
He was employed with Agrlco
FertUizer for 30 years and was a
member of the Our Lady of
Miraculous Medal Church.
.Racine councU
Surviving are his wile, Roberta
.Racine VIllage Councli will
· Wood; two sisters; Mrs. Mat· · meet Moilday, 7 p.m, .at the
garet Chrlsty,.Chester, and Mrs. Shrine Park Building.
Jeraldine Hawk, Tuppers
Plains; a brother, Robert P. Miraculous · Medal Church,· 5225
Wood, Long Bottom, and several
aunts, uncles, nieces and Refugee Road, Columbus. The
. body then W\11 be broqht to the
nephews.
Christian wake services will be Ewing F.u neral Home In Pomeheld at the Schoedlpger East roy where friends may call from
Funeral Home Friday evening 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday.
where visitation will take place Graveside services will be held
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. on at 2 p.m. Sunday at, the Chester
Cemetery with the Rev. Don
Friday. The mass of Christian
burial will be held Saturday Archer and the Rev. Father
Anthony Glnnamore officiating. ·
morning at the Our Lady of

Rio faces Cedanrllle

Theater

Beat of the Bend, By 8ob Hoeflich

PageB-1

..

$.1,0 0
Far Your Old

Car or .Truckl

Busineas .......... ...... ...... D-1

Where do we go from here?

Comlcs·TV .......... .. .. Insert
Claallllleds ...... .. .. ...... o,2·7 .
'Deaths ..............~ ......... A-3
Editorial .. .. .... ,........ : ... A·2
·Sporls ......... ............. C-1·8 ·

Partly Sunclay. Hlr;hs betlween I
50 and Gl.

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tnttS '

VoL Z3 No.4
CDP'f•W •d 1188

Drag,.Push or Pull

Inside:

Along the River ........ B-J.8

B-8

A-2

ii

Mic!dlaport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleuant, March 6, 1988

7 Sioc:tlono, 10 Peieo
..
A Multimedia Inc. N_.,....,

:f

l;allia-Meigs :Jobless rate up during January
COLliMBUS (UPI} - Ohio was third In
unemployment last month among the 11 most
populous states with a 6.4 percent unemployment
figure, the Labor Department reported:
Michigan lind Texas were ' tied for first placeboth with 8.4 percent joblessness figures. The
Labor Department said Illinois was second at 7.5
percent.
In Gallla and Meigs Counties, unemployment
was up to 11.3 percent In each for January. In the
surrounding counties figures were 8.6 In Athens,
'11.2 In Jackson. 10.7 In Lawrence; and 13.2 In
'
VInton.
,
·
·
In Gallla County, the unemployment figure was
up from 9.2 percent tn' December, but down

slightly (rom one year ago, when It reached 11.8
perce'lt.
.
.
The ;figure In Meigs County was up from 8.4
. percelll!n December, and considerably less than
the 14.0 one year ago. ·
·
The highest single county umemployment rate
for January was In .M()nroe with 19.5 percent;
followed by Adams at 18.2 'percent. Harrison at
17.3 pereerit, Pike with 17.1 percent and Perry at
16.4 Pfl.[qent.
·
·
., ·
· The lowest unemployment figures by county
were Holmes at 4.6 perce.nt, Hamilton at 4. 7
percent and Franklin, with 5.0 percent.
The 6,4 percent February unemployment rate
In OhiO was down by two percentage points from

February, 1987's, 8.4 percent. However, Ohio
reported a one-tenth of one percentJncrease In Its
unemployment, as compared with January:s
figures.
More tjlan 5 million Ohioans had jobs last
month, the first lime the civilian labor force bas
reached that number.
That Job level grew as the state's unemployment rate dropped 0.1 percentage point to 6.4
percent imd the nation's rate fell to 5.6 percent,
state and federal officials reported Friday.
.Employment In Ohio grew by 30,000 jobs over
January's total to 5,013,000, while the number of
jobless people dropped by 5,000 to 342,000, said
Dixie Sommers. labor market Information

director for the Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services.
· '
She said 4,983.000 Ohioans were employed In
January and 4,850,000 were working In February
1987. Total employment In Ohio rol!E' by 163,000
jobs over the past year, Sommers said.
'
Ohio's jobless rate last month was 2 points'
below the state's 8.4 percent unemployment rate a. ·
year ago. U was 6.2 percent In December, the
lowest.ln several years.
. .
Sommers credited part of the lmprovemen.t aod
the record number of jobholder~ to a stronger
manufacturing sector. Ohioans who moved to the
Sunbelt during the early 1980s also may be
returning. she said.

-A
look
into
the
past----~
Postal ·rate increase ·approved
WASHINGTON (UPl) -The will lncrea$e from 14 cents to 15
Postal Rate Commission ap· cents and third class bu)J(.adver·
proved a request Friday to raise tlslng mall will advance by 25
the cost of a first-class stamp to percent.
25 cents, the flrsi postage hike ln.
Second class mall for· maga·
Zlnes and .ne.w spapers will hi·
three years.
. The 3 cent Increase still mus1 ·c vease by 18 percent al)d parcel
1&gt;4! approved by the nine-member ·post rates wllledgeup15percent.
1rhe average overall Increase
Postal Boatd of Governors,
which could take up the price for a II classes of mall approved
by the commission was 17.5
hike as early as this week.
.The Increase In the cost of a percent.
. first-class stamp and other types
The commission attrlbl!~ed. the
of po'(li~ will raise ·an add!· Increases to rising lallbr and
tlonal.$4.3 biUion In revenue for health care costs and a new
the Postai Service, a spokesman retirement program for~ postal
'
said.,
workers.
,
tncrea~ 1'!,, • , Mailing a first class lj!lter ~~~s
In addition
,stamp, ·.•C.O~t~celltsslnceFfbt:uarl~~·~.
i.jiiiJWtjjdij[jl[~~~~
1 ~; r~ !!~~tal Serv.t~ ••~ch ~as··.

M ;

reorganized along the lines of a
private corpora lion In 197Q, lost
$125 million In 1987 after posting a
surplus of $305 mllUon In 1986.
Last May, the board asked the
commission to Increase the cost
of a first -class stamp from 22
cents to a quarter, but the
Independent agency took nearly
10 months to rule on the request.·
Tlie commsslon bel&lt;!, a lengthy
series .of hearings and gathered
more than 40,000 pages of testimony and deposl!Ions on the
proposed hike.
Even If the commlsslop had
rejected · the rate Increase, the
board c.ould have Imposed the
·hllie . It I! ' agreeq to &lt;1o so
unanimously.
...
, ··~'ft;l&gt;'~

' wa8te opft9n 'disaster''.
~perton: ~ay~· 'during "Mason stop
.

j

~~

'

By CHARLES A•. MASON
"I think one of the mp_$ imporOVP New• staff
tant things in West Virgloia is iiS
PT. PLEASANT - Demo- · environment," he said ' "Mason .
cratlc gubernatorial candidate . County is environmenW)y allr!IC·
Gaston ,CIIMrton sal4 Friday the live. To have Point PleaSant turned
state of West VIrginia should itot into a dumping grQUDd : of ·toxic
Issue any permits . to hazardous wasre and garbage·is abSolutely the
waste lnclnerator~mpanles, and . . wrong direction 10 take. 'ijlis option
he agreed wltb pending state ~lis disaster." He ilddCd tile tip·
bringing out-of-stale waste to
West VIrginia.
Capenon
was campaigning
Friday in Mason County, addressing· the senior citizens at noon and
auending a reception at the Moose
Club,
-1 ---

Meeting Sunday
. on Aptus proposal
'

GALLIPOLIS - There will
be a meeting of.representatives
of the Mason Association for a
Clean Environment (MACE)
and the people of GalUpolls
Sunday, 2 tp 4 p~m. · at the '
Washington Ele!Jientary
School.

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... / ~ '
~·

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..11i

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'·

i;

.iii;........
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'

Save Nowl
Order Your New Home !afore April
5th and Avoid The April Price lncra:a
Home• Prlc... From ·

$27,039.00 .
On Your t:.ot lnd F®ndation

.

'

Chuck Wingett, Builder
A-... hill lt~lldlvlelon
The .......
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a

•

Uttle
Buckeye

"Let's put power back in lhe
classroom."
He wants 10 run government like
a business, distainiog the quick
fixes of past administrations including the present Job creation should
replace . what Caper)On calls
''bsnlcniptcy economics.'' .
ph·lllolgra.phs· of the 11162 Pomeroy Girl Seoul troop
Shirley Cogar, director of Me!P Coanty Girl
Caperton said he would end lhe
and
a program from Girl Scout Sunday at
Scouts' Big Bend Eu&amp; service unit, looks over
confrontational politics that current
Pomeroy
Trinity (then called Federated) Church.
memorabilia from Girl Scout Week In 1962.
rule Charleston, politics which he
story
on B6. ( Tlmes..Sentlnel photo)
See
Amon« &amp;he Items, which were purchased by a
Commerce Commission.
said have not brought progress in
· Raelbe realdent at a recent auction; were old
Caperton has been president of West Virginia. He criticized the
lhe West Vuginia-based Me- current leadership's lack of atten·
Donough Capenoo
Insurance lion to paying the state's bills on
Group since 1976. His.father star- time. "One thing that has saved
· ted the business in 1936. .
West Virginia in the past is we've
Capeiton, a father of two, says had to balance the budget." He cal·
his campaign is a "break with the led "arroglitt" attemptS to lead the
politics of the Past.•. adding he's state into deficit spending.
He discowtled the lofty hopes
ruruiing · a sii'OIIg ser:ol)d to
' Democratic front·runMI: Clyde See. some of the stare's leaders have at- ·
Democrat Jesse Jackson •s candl- fare as well in delegates, because.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
"I am, in second place, gaining tempted 10 place on his slender
dacy
cannot·be dismissed.
of co.mplex electoral procedurt!/i.
every day on the leader."
' shouldeiS. "I dOn't think one person preliminaries are over and 20
"There's something In It for
Caperton said he wants to mo\'!1 is going Ill lead us.out of the wil· states will vote this week In the
At
greatest
risk
are
Demo·
everybody,"
said Bert Lance,
West Virginia forward through a cleniess. We need to g~t people Ill Super Tuesday primaries a.nd
cratlc
Sen.
Albert
Gore
Jr.
of
former
Georgia
Democratic
caucuses that are likely to anoint
planned
auack
comprising wort together. •
Tennessee.
who
staked
every·
state
chairman
and
federal
The Charleston businessman the finalists for the Democratic thing on a strong showing In his budget director who Is advising
economic develOpment and educa·
lion. "We need IQ fel the sehool doesn't want 10 radically change and . ,Repul!llcan presidential native Deep South, and Rep. Jackson. "I don't expect to see ·
·
system more goal-oncnted and less lhe presel!i State tall structure. ''We nominations.
Jack Kemp of New York, who any funerals Wednesday
Never
before
have
this
many
Continued on A·3
bureaucratic," he said, adding, ·
nominating convention delegates cannot afford more buffeting In morning."
the GOP race.
Du.kakls Is expected to win
been at stake at once and
Sen.
Robert
Dole
of
Kansas,
handily
In his home state of
candidates have pulled out all
Bush's
main
challenger,
has
Massachusetts
and neighboring
stops to get their share. holding
..
been
trying
to
set
low
Rhode
Island,
where
120 Demofree.for-all airport news confer·
expectation~
with
public
opinion
cratlc
delegates
are
at
stake. But
ences and airing sometimes
polls
showing
him
trailing
the
Jackson
could
sweep
·
the Deep
nasty television ads spanning
2·1
In
the
South
.
South,
where
his
black
base of
vice
president
both coasts but concentrated In
The Senate Republican leader
support constitutes 20 percent of
Dixie.
registered voters.
Delegates ch6sen In previous could find It very hard to
Dole hopes to survive Super
skirmishes like Iowa and New . recover from a dismal showing.
Former television evangelist Tuesday by offsetlng Bush
Hampshire are peanuts when
compared to those being selected Pat Robertson had hoped to win strength In the Deep South with
strong showings elsewhere such
Tuesday by voters In 20 slates Saturday's South Carolina Republican
primary
and
be
proas
Missouri anil Maryland. He
alid the U.S. territory of Amerl·
pelled
to
a
strong
Super
Tuesday
also
has targeted North Carolina,
can Samoa. Most of the action Is
three
days
later.
But
the
native state of his wife
showing
In the Deep South and border
with
polls
showing
Bush
holding
Elizabeth.
.
states In what amounts to a
a
comfortable
lead
In
the
Pal·
Gepbardl
has
targeted
Teli.as
reglolial primary.
and Oklahoma, where his adi(O·
"We've never had an event like metto State, Robertson scaled
cacy of an oil Import tax Is
thll before," Mlallsalppl Na· bacl! his expectations.
The ll)'lpact of Robertson's . popular, ant,l Dukakls has con·
lloJ1al Republican Committeeman Haley Barbour. Sl!ld. •'But It "Invisible army" of fundamen· · centrated on both Texas and
Florida with special attention to
came up like a thunderstorm and tallst followers, however, Is as
unpredictable
as
ever
In
the
large Hispanic populations.
It's aolng to be gone very
Bible
Belt.
The results also could ·.be
qulcldy." .
Rep.
Richard
Gephardt
o!
affected.
by crossover voting
It the public opinion pollS are to
Missouri,
vying
with
Gore
for
the
allowed
In
the South, where
be trusted, Vice President
voters ca11 vote In either prim·
Geol'Je Bush could be Invincible white conservative and moder·
ary. Robertson bas sought to lure
In the Republican race when the ate Democratic vote, badly
fundamentalist . Democrats . to
squall dlel down ·and the spo· needs to best the Tennessee
vote for him !n the GOP ra,c e ..
tlllbt lhUta to Midwestern and senator to keep his candidacy
aolng.
It
appears
that
only
one
of
On the Democratk llde, 1,307
Norlheuwrn bltUegrounds.
them
can
survive.
·
delegatesareatltalleTiaesdayMuucblilettl Gov. Michael
The playing field Is so wide that 63 percent of the :i,tm Desdld for
DuiCeldleollld be ateatly 1trtng·
thellld u a "national candidate" barrlnaaweepllin both partles,lt nomination In July at lhe Demotor the Democratic nomination may be difficult to ascertain cratlc National c:cmw.u011 ' 111
Atlanta and 31 pe~C8tlt 01 the
and It may filially rqllter th~t "winners" Wednesday morning.
Popular vote winners may not
~ate total ol 1,1112.
•

!~f~~~~on f':!'t~h ;&gt;li~~~:~re~ ~':C:e;i:g~a~:C:~~=

Rosemary White
Rosemary P . White, 52, Mid·
dleport, died Thursday at Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. White was born Sept. 14,
1935 In Illinois, a daughter of the
late Wayne H. W. and ~ranees M. .
O'Neal Morris. Sbe was assistant
manager of Dale's Smorgasbord
In Gauta County.
Surviving are her husband,
Ora Eugene White; two daugh·
· ters, Shirlee Conley. Young·
stown; Scarlet Bailey, Galllpo.
lis; a daughter and son-In-law;
Susan 81111 Mike Valdez, Austin,
Tex.; a· son, Shannon Bailey,
Austin·, Tex.; three sons and
daughters-In-law, Scott and
Mary Bailey; Steve and Cyndl
Bailey and Shane and Mila
Bailey, all of Austin; five step·
sons, Gene and Rober! White,
Florida; Ora, R!IYmond and
Jen-y Wblte, Lorain; a stepdaughter, Role Marie White,
Lorain; two &amp;liters, Barbara
Todd, Ohulka, Okla., and Toni
Moleck; Paxtoa, IlL; three broth·
m. EcJ MOC'I'il, Champag~~e, Dl;
We
r.y of Raatoul, Ill.• and
Jolm •dey of Paxtoll, Dl.; etaht
grandchildren, nine step·
grandeblldrell .and several nieces and ·nep11e1n. . ·
Services will be beld at 1 p.m.
Sllllday at tbe Rawllnp-Coatl·
·· 11 a a ,......1 8onle With tile
Rev. Earl O'Nia! olfklatlq.

.
'
Friday, M.n:h ~· ~., :

·~·

Letart Township Trustees will
meet Monday, 7 p.m., at the
office building. Public Is Invited.

Burial will be In Riverview
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2to 4-and 7
to 9 p.m. Saturday.

Mtnter Fryar, councilman,
suggested · that. councU coulder
applylq fpr lllsurance cowraae
for fireman . In case of InJury or
death whUe. tlghtlng a fire. He
IntroduCed a high option pollcy
with a heart rider that would
offer, In cue of death, $40,000 to·
the beneficiary or $200 a weelc If

~'

mk
1\ICIWII

'

•1

~

=L.nv

Super Tuesday takes_political
center st~e ·as 20 states poll

\

•

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