<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12114" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12114?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T19:45:03+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43084">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/4d6d5f10675b48142f0a6e46fd82be35.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d58a304f97a85e50e17d390e3755d52b</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38063">
                  <text>Page-12- The

Community calendar
THURsDAY
REEDSVILLE - Riverview
Garden Club meets Thursday, 8
p.m ., home of Mrs. Harlis Frank.
Cohostess is Mrs. Tom Spencer.
Mrs. Ray Young presents
program .
BRADBURY
Meigs
Women 's Fellowship of . Meigs
County Churches of Christ meet
Thursday , 7: 30 p.m .. Bradbury
Chu.rch of Chris t.
. POMEROY . - Members of
Post 9053 of the Veterans of
Foreign War s will elect new
officers at the 8 p.m . Thursday
meeting .' The atte ndance of all
members is req uested.
FRIDAY
ROCK SPRINGS :-- Annual
Meigs Cou nty Grange banquet at
7 p.m. Friday at ihe Salisbury
Elementary SchooL Speaker will
be Mrs . John (Jane) Price, Ceres
of 'the Ohio State Grange and
director of Ohio State Grange
Deaf activities. Enterintainment
will be by the Mark Snyder
family.
HARRISONVILLE The
Rev . Lawrence Gray, mission. ary of Papua , New Guinea, will
show slides of his work there at
7: 30 on Aprll 29 at the Scipio Fire
Station, Harrisonville. The public is invited to attend.
ROCK SPR INGS - Annual
Me igs County Grange banquet at
7 p.m. Friday at the Salisbury
Elementary SchooL Speaker will
be Mrs. John (Jane) Price, Ceres
of the Ohio State Grange and
director of Ohio State Grange
Deaf activities. Enterintainment
will be by the Mark Snyder
family.
POMEROY - A talent show
and dance, sponsored by the
Meigs Teenage Institute, will be
held Saturday, !rom 8 p.m. to
12: 30 a.m. Registration for the
taalent show begins at 7:30.
Ernie G. Anderson, of WKEE,
will be disc jockey for the dance.
No admission. The only requirement Is no chemical use before or
during the evening.

•

Ohio

Sentinel

The teenager's life is a bargain

you have it bad at home with
parents, here is something to think
word to "Near Sacramento," the
.
mother of the 8-year-old·girl who about. You have:
free food,. free telephone, free
wet her pants?
Please have mercy on that child. I electricity, free laundry, free water,
am a mother who suffers with two . free sewage, free TV, free money,
POMEROY - A fellowship wetters who should have stopped
free snacks, pop, etc., free shampoo,
breakfast by the Word of Life long ago. I have a 12·year·old soap, and other personal items, free
Church wlll be held at the Word of wetter and a 7-year-old who wets car, free car insurance and free gas.
Life Christian Academy,located
And to pay for all of this free
her panis every time she laughs. I
at the lntersectl!&gt;n of County
stuff, ail you are expected to do is
Road 235 and State Route 681 have compassion for my children
something that is distasteful to some
because
I
suffered
with
the
same
west of Darwin, Saturday, April
young people. Love and respect
humiliating
problem.
30 at 10 a .m. All preachers and
your
parents and the home that
Thank
God,
l
have
no
memory
of
church lea de rs are Invited . Ray
an
angry
mother.
By
high
school,
l
they
have
worked ha rd to provide
Laudermllt Is pas tor.
lea rned how to beat the problem . I for you.
taught myself not to laugh.
I put my children through the
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Practice for embarra&amp;'lment of being examined
Inspection of Evangeline Chap- by doctors. I've lost faith in the
ter 172, Order of the Eastern medical profession, but I won't go
Star, will be held Sunday a t 5 into that. I've heard that sleep
p.m. at the te mple. Teresa disorders can cause bed·wetting,
Canterbury, worthy matron, and also allergies and emotional probBob King, worthy patron, asks all . lems.
' officers to be present.
I am hoping some hones~ well·
educated physician will read my
MONDAY
letter and respond. I'm sure that
CHESTER- Chester PTO will there ·are many people in the same
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the boat. Please help us aiL I am ··
sc hool.
DROWNING IN BUFFALO
DEAR BUFFALO: You did the
RACINE - Racine Chapter fighLthing when you took your
134, Order of Easte rn Star, will
children to a doctor (I hope a
meet Monday at 7:30p.m . at the
urologist) so that a medical probtemple. Initiation of new
lem could be ruled out.
members will be held . Chapter
Have you looked into the wet·
dresses are to be worn. Practice
alarm
bed sheet? If not; I suggest
for Initiation will be held Sunday
that
you
do. According to my
at 2 p.m. and all officers are
readers,
they
have proven highly
asked to attend .
effective. Meanwhile, it is admirable
COLUMBIA - The Board of that you are patient and nonjudg·
mental. This is very important.
Trustees of Columbia Township
Many mothers could learn from
will meet .Monday at 7:30p.m. at
you.
the fire station.
Dear Ann LanderS: I saw this
article in the Muncie (·Indiana) Star.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Xi Gamma
I hope you think it's good enough
Mu Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi
to run in your column. The author
Sorority, will met at 7:30 Tues - asked that the name be withheld . ..
day at the Bradbury Church of
A DAILY READER
Christ. New officers will be
DEAR DAILY: I liked the essay
Installed .
and called my friend Bill Spurgeon
at the Muncie Star for permission
POMEROY - AIIJ{illary of
to run it in my column. He said,
Eagles 2171 will meet at 8 p.m.
'~With pleasure.,, So here it is with
Tuesday at the hall. New officers
my thanks, Bill.
will be elected.
FREE RIDE
Attention Teenagers! If you think

Dear Ann Landers: May I say a

the Fellowship Church ln .R acine.
Brp. Gary Tayl!&gt;r's church from
Lancaster will preach and si ng.
The public Is Invited.

BASHAN- Red Brush Church
of Christ, Bash an Road, will have
special services Saturday, 7
p.m., and Sunday at 10 a.m. and 6
p.m., with Denver Hill of Foster,
W.Va . speaking. Everyone .
welcome.

If you don't think it's a fair
bargain you cou ld pay for all of
those items on the list that are free
to you.: lt would cost you about
$800 a month.
The next time you ig nore your
dad when he tries · to tW you
something or resp&lt;?nd to your
mother in a disr.-,;pcctful way, just
remember how bad you have it at
home and how easy you would
have it ifvou iust moved out.
Drugs are eJ1erywhere. They're easy
to get, easy ro use and even easier to
get hiiokt.'d 011. If you have questions

Ann ·

Church
•
·notices

Landers

~· - ·

TOP QUALITY

BRAIDED AREA RUGS

REG . •1630.00

SALE

$1

CHESTER ELEMENTARY
SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
The fifth six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Chester
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above in all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
Third Grade: Meredith Crow,
Eric Dillard , Marla Frecker,
Tract Heines , Shanna Machlr,
Kelly Osborne, Jonathan Ray·
burn, Lisa Stethem. Travis
Thomas .
Fourth Grade: Brian Hoffman,
J essica Karr, Jennifer Mora,
Robbie Murphy. Nicole Nelson,
Brandl Reeves, Heather Well,
Lauren Young.
Fifth Grade: Charles Bissell,
Ryan Buckley. David Fetty. Sara
Machlr, Todd Michael, Jamie
Ord, Jessica Radford, Jeff Stethem. Victor VanMeter.
Sixth Grade: Penny Aelker,
J.P. Davis, Adria Frecker, Ty son Rose, Amber Well, Andy
Wolf.

TUPPERS PLAINS SCHOOL
HONOR ROLL
The fifth six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Tuppers
Plains School has been an·
nounced. Making a grade of B or
above In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
Third Grade: Sherry Burke,
Angela Chaney, Amber Fortney,
Randy Koehler II, Katherine
Manlcke, Sean Maxey, Chance
Watson.
Fourth Grade: Mike Laughery,
Jonathan Avis, Brian Bowen,
Alex Brown, Carletta Buckley,
Susan Hawk, Jeremy Johnston.
Filth Grade: Randall Burke,
John Collins, Janet McDonald.
Sixth Grade: Jaime Wilson,
Michelle Murphy, Paul
Vineyard.

..

,.

•

•••

•

-

•

-

I

•

-

•

199

MEET WITH DIRECI'OR - Government and
' development leaders from throughout Meigs

.

Stocks 8490t , 4 wheel driw, 6
stand. trans., PS, PB, AWFM radio,
reo !ape,radial tires, 1121on pl&lt;l&lt;up, ''
wide bed, rear slap blJfl1per, gauges,

FM radio, stereo tape, radial tires,

conversion kit, bed liner.

wals, rear window defog. .
WAS

A Middleport woman was
killed Instantly when a car in
which sl!e was riding struck a
utUity pole about 1 a.m. F'rlday
on Pomeroy's West Main St.
· ~ad)s. T~~~AndrewL27~or.
64 Nort'Ji Second Ave.,
Middleport.
·
Meigs Coroner Dr. James
Conde reported that Ms. Andrew
died instantly In the accident as a
result of spinal and head injuries.
She was a passenger In a car
driven by Judy Laude!'ml)t of
Middleport and was riding In the '
front passenger seat. Another
passenger In the car, Tim Ohlin·
ger, Middleport, and Laudermilt
were taken to Veterans MemorIal Hospital by the Pomeroy
Emergency squad. The were
both reported In stable condition
at 10 a.m. this morning.
Pomeroy Pollee reported the '
vehicle was headed west on West ·
Main St., near Foodland, when it
went out of cant rol and struck a
utUity pole. The pole was clipped
off and damages to the vehicle
were heavy.
Pomeroy Pollee and Dr: Conde
Indicated they will continue tbelr
•investigation of the accident.
Born on Nov. 17, 1961, Ms.
~ndrew the daughter of Joseph
Palmer Andrews, Sr. of StevensYUle, Md., and her mot her, Toni
Marie Rose Andrew, Middleport.
Other survivors Include a
daughter, Dusty Lynn Andrew,
Middleport, two sons, Christopher Lee Triplett and' Adam
Wayne Haning, Middleport;
three brothers, Benedict A. An·
drew, Stevensville, Md.; Joseph
Palmer Andrew, Jr., Orlando,
F'ia.; and Martin Donlin Andrew,
Middleport; tour sisters, Grace
Marie Andrew, and Mary Ann
Andrew, Marietta; Martha
Emerson Early, Salisbury, Md.,
and Toni Lynn Andrew, Middleport; and a special friend, Steve
Haning, Middleport.
She was preceded in death by a
sister, Agnes Andrew.
Ms. Andrew is a member ofthe
Ladles Auxiliary' of American
Legion Post 296, Grasonville,
Md.
Funeral services wUI be held at
1 p.m. Monday at the Ewing
Funeral Home. The Rev. Eugene
Anspach wlll o!ficate and burial
wUI be In Gilmore Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
p.m. Sunday.

~495

.
WAS

NOW

Stock I 8324t , 2 doors, coupe, 6cyl.,
cond., auto. trans., PS, PB, power
locks, tilt wheel, cruise control, AWF!il
radio, stereo tape, radial tires, bucl&lt;e•

Stock • 8621 1, 4 wheel drive, 6 cyl., 4
speed trans., PS, PB, AMIFM radio, il2
ton pickup, short wide bed, rear stop
bumper, gauges.

seats, rear window defog, gauges,
roof.

NOW

WAS

NOW

S1495

~4695

WAS

NOW

.........
~2...
9s~~LJ
Stockf8593t, 2doori, coupe, 6cyl.,
c:ond., stand. lrans:, PS, PB, oo&gt;verwin·-1
dows, power door locks, tilt
, cruisel
control, AWFM radio, stereo tape,
tires, bucket seats, rear window del1&gt;a.l
gauges, sun roof
WAS

'11,295

NOW

Stock t 83991, 4 wheel drive, 6
stand. trans. , PS, PB, AM!FM ra0110,1
radial tires, 112 ton pickup, short
bed, rear step bumper.
WAS

NOW

'7895

$1

'4795

URWreaches
ag;:eement with
Uniroyal Goodrich
Loans Subject
To Qualification
Of Borrower

I
'

County met Thursday afternoon wllh David J.
Baker, Director of the Ohio Department of
Develoment.

Woman
dies in
accident

•

Stock 175124, 2 doOrs, hard top,
eng., airc:ond., vinyl roof, auto. trans.,
PB, power windows, power seat, nnw'orl
door locks, tilt wheel, cruise

en tine
Baker seeking more
dollars for SEO area

6 PIECE ALL OAK BEDROOM
•Queen size cannonball bed with wood rails
•Two drawer night table, five drawer chest
•large 60 inch dresser and vertical mirror

Clear tonighl. Low In upper

388. Considerable sunshine Sat·
urday. IU ghs near 70.

2 Section•. 16 Pages 26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. NewiPIPer

HOMESTEAD STYLE
. . REG. SALE
SIZE
$22
24" x3!l" ... : :.. ... .. .. .. .......... .... .. .. .. ... $35
$35
27" x48" .... .. .. .................. ............. $48
$74
3'6" x5 '6" .. .. ..~ ....... ...... .. .. ...... .. ..... $96
$175
5'6" x8 '6" .... ......... .. ....... .. ...... .. .... $220
$295
8'6" xll '6" .... ... .. .... .. . : .. ........ .... .... $370
$129
5'6" Rd .... .... .......................... .. ... $168

#87391

;

at

ra bl(' made of long we arin g e&lt;J.SY to clean acry lic, nylon t1 nd wool yar ns. Choose from warm hearty color s
or the l atest in pfls tels.

1987 OLDSMOBILE 442
I

•

OTHER SIZES AVAILABLE
Beauttful3- pty flat braided area rugs. Extremctydu·

RACINE - A special service
will be held Saturday, 7· p.m., at

Loaded

e

Vot.38, No.260
Ciipvrivhtod 1988

SATURDAY
BIDWELL- A hymn sing will
be held Saturday, 7 p.m . , at the
Poplar Ridge Church at Bidwell.

: I

Pick4
0293

Page 4 ·

about drugs and drug use, Ann Land- ·
ers' newly revi.sed booklet, "The Low- ·
down on Dope, " will give you the an·
swers. Send $3 plus a self-addressed;
stamped No. 10 envelope (45 cents
postage) to Ann Landers, P.O. Box
J/562, Chicago, J/1. 606JJ-0562.

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

' :

Daily Number
455

CHESHIRE - Free clothing
day for low income people is
Friday, 9 a.m. to noon at the
clothing bank in Chesl)lre. Sponsored by Gallla-Melgs CommunIty Action

Honor rolls
announced

Ohio Lottery

AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - The
UnirOyal GoodriCh Tire Co. has
become the aecond o!the nation's
blg·three rubbet' companies to
reach a tentative agreement lor
a oew three-year contract wlth
tile Untied Rubber Workers
UDlon.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
POMEROY -When David J .
Baker accepted the position as
director of the Ohio Department
of Development, he was told by
Governor Richard Celeste to "do
some things differently and take
some chances . " Apparently
that'.s just what Baker Is doing'l'laklng changes and taking
chances that In the short and long
runs, are expected to be benefl·
clal to Southeastern Ohio.
Baker emphasized In a Thursday visit to Meigs Couniy the
need to target state economic
development program dollars to
distressed areas In Ohio, largely
the largely the Appalachian
counties, which Include Southeastern Ohio.
Baker met yesterday with
officials and development lead·
ers from thoughout the county.
The forum with Baker was held
in the conference room at the
Emergency Medical Services
headquarters in Pomeroy.
"While the majority of Ohio
has made an ecomomic recovery, many of Ohlo'sAppalac~ian
counties' unemployment l~vels
remain higher than the state and·
national averages," Baker said.
It was last fall that the state's

unemployment rate got down to
Baker pointed out that fewer
the national level for the first and fewer federal dollars, such
time In years, a·ccordlng to as the CDBG monies, are coming
Baker. At that point, Baker said to Ohio now than In the past. But
he realized that If the state Is he also pointed out that more of
averaging much like the nation In whatever money the state does
terms of unemployment, It me- get , " should go to places with
ant that some of the state's high unemployment. And stili
counties were enjoying prosper· more of that money should go to
ity while others were not.
places w!th low family incomes."
He then began to question state
Because of Baker's beliefs and
programs and discovered that, the changes that have already
"although the programs were not · been Implemented within the
neeessarUy bad, we weren' t Department of Development,
aiming them where they were percentages of the state's CDBG
needed." Baker said he became doUars are going to flow In larger
convinced and other department sums to areas like Meigs County,
leaders In Columbus are now beginning this year. Baker told
beginning to agree with him, those at yesterday's meeting that
that, "when there Is a tbne of "Meigs County can probably
relative prosperity, state resour- expect a 25 percent Increase'' In
ces need to be focused on those this year's CDBG allocation, and
areas that remain In difficult possibly more under certain
times.''
circumstances.
The much relied upon ComBaker stressed that other De·.
munity Development Block partmept of Development preY
Grant program was the first grams, such as the Industrial
program to be changed once training program, will also be
Baker's conclusion came Into mote responsive to the needs ot
place. "The rationale behind Appalachian counties. He said
CDBG made sense," Baker ex- his department will be "working
plained, "except we were pass- closely with the Governor's OfIng out the money on a per head flee of Appalachia to develop the
count basis . Counties wlth lots of tremendous potential and resourpeople were getting lots of ces of our' Appalachian
money. Counties with less people
Continued on page 12
were getting less money ."

March·economic indicatorS up
0.8 percent, govertrment says

,

iin;CiOr of
the Ohio Deparbnent of Developm'ent, told local leaders In
attendance In a meeting Thursday In Pomeroy, "I'm not here as
much to Jearn about your problems 88 lo communicate to you that
my staff and the state administration will be responsive to
whatever economic development lssuet1 you folks come up wllh."

Dragging operations
to _be intensified today
Dragging operations were to staff contacted the U.S. Coast
be Intensified today In the search Guard and It wlll also be on the
for the bodies of two Meigs scene.
County men mil;sing since a
Local volunteers have been
boating accident on the Ohio hampered In dragging operaRiver near Cheshire Friday tions due to the size oftheir boats
night.
against the choppy waters
It was learned Thursday from caused by high winds.
·
the director of the West VIrginia
F'red Taylor, head ofthe Mason
Emergency Medical Services , County Emergency Services of·
Department that larger water- flee, advised that local voluncraft wlll be brought In today to teers will also continue to search.
expand the dragging operations.
The decision by the West
The search tor the two miss lng
VIrginia Emergency Services to men began at 12:30 a.m. last
bring in the larger watercraft In Saturday after they and John
the search of Shain SmIth, 18, Brown, 24, Langsville, had gone
near Salem Center, and Pete Into the river near the Kyger
McDonald, 19, Dexter, came as Creek generating plant, when
the result of contacting U.S. their eight loot boat overturned
Senator Robert C. Byrd's office. after It was passed by a towboat.
In addition to Involving the
Workers on, the towboat spotWest Virginia Emergency Servi- ted Brown clinging to the over·
ces at the state level, Sen. Byrd's turned boat and rescued him.

Flight attendant said
missing after ·incident
KAHULUI, Hawaii (UPI) An alrUne pUot did "a !antasUc
Job" of bringing his plane down
!rom 24,000 feet wltb a huge
chunk of the fuselage ripped off
by an exploalon that InJured 61
people and presumably sucked a
flight atlendant from the cabin,
o(ftclala Hid.
The milling flight attendant
waa believed to have been sucked
from the plane when it Ioatcab!n

.,,

pressure after the blast, Aloha
AlrUnes President A. Maurice
Myers said Thursday night.
A Coast Guard search near the
scene of the exploaion turned up
no trace of the mlsslna woman,
First Flight Attendant C.B. LanaIna, a 37~year veteran ot the
company, Myers told a news
conference at company headquarters in Honolulu.
Continued on page 5

DAVID VESEY
UPI Business Writer
WASHINGTON (UPI) - RisIng stock prices and Improved
employment helped push up the
index of leading economic Indicators 0:8 percent in March, the
government said Friday.
The March increase followed a
1.3 percent jump In February,
revised up from 0.9 percent,
according to the Commerce
Department's Census Bureau.
The February rise in the Index
was the sl!!epest since a 2.2
percent Increase In December.
The revision was based on an
Increase In credit assumed by
individuals and businesses, the
department said.
The Index, which Is the government's main gauge of future

economic growth, :decreased 0.7
percent In January, revised up
from a decline of 1.1 percent.
All figures were adjused for
seasonal variations.
Stock prices made the largest
contribution to the rise In the
Index last month, followed by a
decrease to 304,000 from 321,000
In the average number of Initial
claims for state unemployment
Insurance.
Otber contributors to the In·
crease were, in order of Impact,
vendor performance, building
permits, money supply and
change In sensitive materials
prices.
Three of the nine Indicators In
March made negative contributions. They were, from largest to
smallest factor. average work·
week, contracts and orders for

plant and equipment and manufacturers' new orders for consumer goods and materials.
The Index hit 193.3 ln. March
when calculated against a base of
100 In 1967, the department said.
The composite Index of coincident indicators, In monthly approximation of aggregate economic activity, .Increased 0.3
percent In March. following a 0.6
percent hike In February.
The composite Index of lagging
Indicators Increased 0.4 percent
In March following a jump of 0.5
percent in February. The lagging
index Is expected to move after a
time lag In the same direction as
the coincident Index and thus
confirmed the movements in the
coincident Index, the department
said.

Officials on both sides happy
with new Kaiser labor pact OAKLAND, Calif. (UPI) Officials on both sides praised a
.tentative agreement reached by
the ·steelworkers union and
Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Corp. on a new labor contract
covering 5,400 workers In 11
cities.
The agreement announced
Thursday between the company
and the United Steelworkers of
America restores some wages
and benefits the union gave up In
1985.
The pact, retroactive toApr114
and running through Oct. 31,
1990, replaces a three-year contract that expired March 31 but
extended while talks continued.
"I'm really proud of what we
accomplished," Larry Hemmert, president or Kaiser's
Trentwootl Local 338, near Spokane, Wash., said. "It's not a
contract that the workers are
going to jump up and rave about.
But we protected our member·
ship, we got money back and we
still have kept Kaiser competl·
live In terms or total hourly
cost."'

Chris Carlson, Kaiser vice
president, said the agreement
will not hurt Kaiser's
performance.
''The agreement addresses
many of the issues that were of
concern to the employee&amp;," Carl·

son said, "but still maintains the
company's ability to compete In
the markets It serves."
The setU~t restores about
$3 .50 an hour of $4.50 the union
gave up In 1985 when aluminum
prices were down;
Included are a 50-cent hourly
base wage increase, and res tara·
lion of three holidays.
The agreement provides a
$1,000 bonus for each employee
when the union ratifies the
contract and adds a cost-of-living
adjustment the second year of
the contract.
It ties quarterly cash bonuses
to the Midwest priCe for prlmaTy
aluminum In a formula that
would produce a maximum $2 an
hour at loday's metal prices.

"It addresses many of the
issues that were of priority
Interest to employees and It
maintains the company's ability
to compete In the markets It
serves," Kaiser Vice President
James Presley and Steelworkers
Chairman Jim Bowen said In a
statement released by Kaiser 's
corporate headquarters in
Oakland.
The contact covers Kaiser
plants In Gramercy, Chalmette
and Norco, La .. Mead, Trentwood and Tacoma, Wash .. Ravenswood, W.Va., Newark, Toldeo and Belpre, Ohio, and
Purvis, Miss.
Settlement was reached after
three days of talks In Pittsburgh.
Continued on page 5

Ohioans to display heritage
Utlitetl PrMA laternatloaal
Ohio's herltaae It! on dlaplay next month 88 the Ohio
Hlsilrlcal Socle&amp;y oblervea tile alnth annual Ohio IUslorlc

Preaervatlon month, allowtaa toiln of landmarklland
hltllorfc dlalrJctL
More than at toun, rualnl from ouldoor walldaaloun to
glbnJIIIU lnalile bltltorlc private llomee, are oa the aclledale In
Mq. Many of tile propertlee ari lltlted on the National Repater
ollllllorlc Placee.
lllalorlc PrMM'VIItlon Moatll allo Includes lnfonnatlve
pJ'OFIDIB, fuclnatlna exlllbltl and IP'Cial events.

-

�J
Friday, April 29, 1988

Comment
The. Daily Sentiner
Ill Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio

DE~OTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~~

s m~
~v

.

r""T"L...&gt;&lt;..,..,

.

.....--=.=

ROBERT L. WINGETf
Publisher
PAT WHITE!IEAD
Asslslanl Publlsher/ Conlroller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper ~Publishers Association.

.

'

LETTERS OF OPJNION are welcome. They s hould be less than 300 words
long. All letters are subj ecltoedltl ng and must be signed with name, address and
tE:Iephone number. N"o unsigned letters wUJ be published. Letlers should be In
good taste, address ing Issues, not personalities.

Reagan and Gorbachev
in pre-summit sparring

"secret."

We have seen a few of those
classified pages which make it
clear that North was sweallng
over how much we knew and how
much we would print about the
arms -for-hostages dickering
with the ITanians.
Here Is a chronology:
December 1985 ~ Dale Van
Alta confronted the Pentagon' s
top man on terrorism, Noel Koch,
about the Involvement of Gen.
Richard Secord and ex-CIA offl.
clal Thomas Clines in the sale of
arms to Iran through Israel in

ells Tt?AI

By Jack Anderson and Dale ·VanAtta
.
July, North wrote In h1s notebooks that our knowledge of the
deal had been discussed at a staff
meeting.
.
July 10 - North sent a secret .
message to Poindexter Including
references to our Information.
"It is dis turbing th~t the viSit
(Robert McFarlane s visit to
Teheran) may also be common
knowledge "
Aug. 20 .:... A Washington Post
reporter asked North's nominal
boss, Howard Teicher. whether
our columns were true. Teicher
said no. He later told us he was
concerned that he would risk the
Jives of hostages II he Confirmed
ours tory.
Sept. 17 _North wrote another
secret message to Poindexter
making a case lor keeping
Secretary of State George Shultz
In the dark on one aspect of the
arms-for-hostage deal. North
speculated that the leaks of
Information to us started with
Shultz that Shultz would
confide in someone. who would
tell someone else who would tell
someone else. The person at the
end of the chain "could well be
the source of the J ack Anderson
stuff we have seen periodically,"
North wrote.
By denying our stories, North
and others were able to hold the

press at bay until November ,
nearly a year after we first
f ted the administration
~~hr~~at we knew.
North's noteboo~s are full of
Insights IntO the depths to which
he would sink to get the hostages
b k That ·s clear In a new book
bac io ln~estlgatlve reporter
sievet Emerson of U.S. News&amp; ·
W ld Report. He Is the only
or
journalist who has had extensive
unolllctal access to most of the
no~~~~~~;k "Secret Warriors:
I ld th c'
tMIIItaryOpera·
ns e e over
. ..
lions of the Reagan Era, re·
veals that North said in his
notebooks that he would be
willing to pay $10 million for the
release of the hostages.
The money was headed lor ..
some of the sleaziest thugs In the ·-'
Middle East including Sheik
Fadlallah, the spiritual head of
the Hezbollah terrorist organiza·
lion. He reportedly blessed ter·
rorlsts with a licket to Shiite .
heaven before they blew up our :.
Marine barracks In Beirut In . •
October 1983 k!lllng 241 M~rlnes.
Also on North s payoff list was
Hussein Mussavl, a man who was
actually kidnapping American .
hostages and was behind the
deaths of 26~ Americans, lnciud·
lng the Marmes.

071/ -

WITH

l

5/tl-?f•-ao
Cl-&amp;)

SHOPPERS

Support sought for area scouts

Donkey ball
game a success

"'
f
''

-

•

'

I
'

'

NO PAYMENTS 'TII,I, JULY

-

NJW

TOM PEDEN

..........CIIo-......,

~

l

..,

'
''

••
''
'·

•
•

'

....'

o/;2_.

£'/1'/

were both up . He hurts them games in which Robinson has
appeared this season. Jim Gott
when they're up."
The Padres took a 2·0 lead In retired the last batter for his
the first before the Cardinals third save.
Cubs 5, Dodgers 1
ra Ilied for four runs off Ed
Whitson in the second. Bru·
M Los Ang!'les. Andre Daw son
nansky homered after Terry broke open a scoreleSs game with
Pendleton singled, and Steve a two-run triple in the sixth and
Lake scored on Willie McGee's Calvin Schiraldi combined with
double.
Frank DIPino on a live-hitter to
Larry McWilliams, 1·0. re· lift Chicago. Schiraldi, 1·2. who
lleved Card inal s starter Jose came to the Cubs from Boston in
DeLeon In the second inning with the offseason trade for Lee
the bases load ed and surren- Smith, registered his first Na·
dered a two-run single to Tony tiona! LeaguP victory since June
2. 1985. when he was with the
Gwynn that tied the score 4·4 .
Greg Booker, fell to 0·1 alter Mets. The right -hander s truck
giving up an unearned run in the out seven and allowed just four
hits and an unearned run In 51·3
third. Pendleton opened with a
double to right and went to third
innings.
when Gwynn bobbled the ball in
right field . After. Brunansky
struck out, Luis Alicia grounded
out to first with Pendleton
scoring to give the Cardinals a 5·4
lead.
CLEVELAND, Ohio &lt;UP!) Brunansky's second homer, a
A panel of professional athletes,
solo shot to left in the lllth.innlng,
businessmen and civic leaders
gave St. Louis a 6-4 lead.
has been named by Cleveland
Elsewhere In the NL, Pitts·
State University to recommend
burgh edged San Francisco 2·1 in
changes in the basketball pro10 innings , and the Chicago Cubs
gram recently placed on
beat Los Angeles 5·1.
probation.
In lhe American League, it
The school is seeking ideas lor
was: Minnesota 4, Baltimore 2;
how to avoid a repeat or recruit·
Kansas City 6 , New York 3;
lng violations that led to the
Oakland 6, Toronto 2; Seattle 3,
three-year probation imposed by
Cleveland 1; Detroit 2, California
the NCAA. Cleveland Slate's
1. and the Chicago White Sox 6, appeal of the sanctions 'was
Boston 0.
rejected last week by the NCAA.
Pirates 2, Giants I
The group reportedly will
At San Francisco, Darnell discuss recruiting, team travel
Coles singled home Bobby Bo·
and scheduling, but the specific
nllla with one out in the lOth
areas of concern have not yet
inning, lilting Pittsburgh. PI·
been outlined to panel members.
rates reliever Jeff Robinson, 2·0,
"Everything I know comes
madehis first appearance
from a 30-second conversation
against his former teammates with Henry Goodman (chairman
and threw 3 2·3 for the victory . " or the school's board or trus·
,The Pirates have won all 10
tees), " said Frank Mosler, vice
chairman of BP America Inc. ·
· "The university is not going to
cry In Its beer about being
penalized by the NCAA," said
panel Chairman Bradley Jones,
Mlnlrf'ola (NI•kro 1-11 &amp;I 11oMretired chairman of the former
tun (f'lf'lnell~ ' ·I), 7:SII p.m .
Republic Steel Corp. "They have
C'alltorria ( Petry 1-1) at Toronto
a positive attitude about the
(C'Iww·y 1-2). 7:~~ p.m .
whole thing. We're to develop a
Oakklnd (CJntherD!I 1· 11 at Ot&gt;\'('land (811lk-,; 1-t ), 7:35 p.m .
model program that will reflect
upon the university In the best
suuk' cl.aln~on 1·:1 I "' Del,.,
(Morrb. 2·3), 7:U p.m .
possible
way ."
&amp;lllmono (Thunnon::IIM) at fhkai(O
Mosler said that a successful
1McDow ell I· I), II:.'JO p.m.
KIUIIWI (.1ty !SIIht'rhMa:c&gt;n 2-~) iU
basketball program can be a
Mll111'11111lirP (Qirlched' D-11, II:U p.m .
SaturdiQ''M Gaml'fi
positive aspect or a school.
MlniiP'IIoU iU Bo11tun
"I personally believe Cleve('allfornlll 1M Tortn~o
Klln!Bii City at Mllwaukf't'
land State athletics, and particu·
Ollkland at ( ' lf'vt&gt;IIIDd
Iarly Its basketball team, are
Raltlrnon• itt t hi''II.KO , nl~t
Tt'!lll~ lli Nf'w Vorlr., niKfll
very Important to the school and
Sultlt• "'Dtlrott, niPt
the area. We wan! tomakesureit
remains Division I," Mosler
said.

CSU names panel
· to change program

Scoreboard ...
Plllltmn:::h
,'\'t•w \ "ork

!

$199.66

By TOM WITHERS
UP! Sports Writer
On his first swing through a
new circuit, Tom Brunansky's
old swing works just fine.
A perennial home run hitter for
the World Champion Minnesota
Twins before being traded la s t
F'riday to St. Louis, Brunansky Is
making his inaugural tour of the
National League. Thursda y at
San Diego, he hit two home runs
-giving him three in his last t,wo
games - to help the Cardinals
claim a 6·4 triumph over the
Padres .
Brunansky, who has averaged
28 homers the last !lve seasons,
attributes his early success in the
Nat tonal League to his aggres ·
siveness at the plate. You've got
to be aggressive, s ituations in the
American League are very rare
when you are going to see three
or lour different pitchers in a
game. I kind of like It this way. ' '
The Padres used .six differe nt
pitchers Thursday.
The trade that brought right
fielder Brunansky to the Cardi·
nals for longtime St. Louis
second baseman Tommy Herr
may provide St. Louis with the
power hitter it so desperately
needs.
Brunansky expects to have
trouble with some of th!' NL's
pitchers s imply because or
unfamiliarity.
"! never want · to be in a
situation where I'm 0·2, he sai d
, ''I don't know these guys a nd I'll
probabi,Y strike out a lot."
San Diego Manager Larry
Bowa hasn 't seen much of
Brunartsky but has see n enough
to know what pitches you can't
throw to him .
"Wh~n Brunansky gets his.
pitches, he hits them. Those balls

Majors

~

o/?" o///;

Cards top Padres; Pirates
slip past San Francisco, 2-1

''

·j
•'
'

$176.46

~1AJ lJRftS1

•

ri::::::=••.::::::il t::-~~.Ji.o·:·~._-~~

.

(9-S')

/1J&amp;t65

NTS

$149.89

I
~·.or

.

."

\

·~ " ,;;

.

$109.35

I

I.:J-'1-)

·you CAN AFFORD

f~~

4: 30
(:NJ)

...

APRIL CLOSEOUT SALE

Appreciates support

' '•

B~t I PRe (3-9

Beyond the Afghan aCCOrd _ _By_W_ill_i.am-'--.R_us_h_er

=.,:-...;.w:-.·.~F-.,.- 1t.~:"..;

(lfF.o)

•

&lt;"&gt;/3- -'1:80

By HELEN THOMAS
, . UPJ While House Reporter
WASHINGTbN (IJPI) - President Reagan and Soviet leader
Michael Gorbachcv are doing a diplomatic dance- mainly for home
consumption - as th ey move toward their fourth summit meeting,
· this time In Moscow .
Wild horses could not keep Reagan away, although to hear him talk
he Is about to meet with people you wouldn't Invite Into your home.
The presiden t's high profile rhetoric In the days leading up to the
May 25·June 3 summ it journey Is something to behold. He has made a
series of three speeches In recent weeks: in Las Vegas, before the
American Society of Newspaper Editors In Washington, and before a
regional World Affairs Council in Springfield, Mass., all focused onr
What he used to call the "evil empire."
There are more pre-summit addresses on tap before the president
The agreement recently signed
takes orr on his first journey to1heSovlet Union, with a rest stop on the
tor., who in the waning days of the who are battling Moscow's un·
leadership,- that we must be
In
Geneva, providing lor the
way In He lsinki, Finland.
Carter adminlstrat ion per · elected and tyrannical puppets In
prepared for waffling, deception
withdrawal or Soviet forces from
Reagan has come a long way from that polarized view and speaks
suaded
his
boss
to
Initiate
the
Angola
on
the
Atlantic
coast
or
and
even outright repudiation of
Afghanistan, affords almost lim·
admiringly o( Gorbachev. The two leaders have set aside some
program
or
supplying
arms
to
the
Africa.
And
why
on
·earth,
If
the
the
Soviet
agreement.
!!less rood lor thought.
private talking time, with only interpreters present, In addition to the
freedom fighters; to President Democrats are willing to send
But, when all Is said and done,
On its lace, It is unique.
meetings covering the formal agenda.
Mohammad
Zla
ul·Haq
or
Pakls·
aid
to
brave
rebels
8,000
miles
even
Moscow's bare promise to
Nowhere else, so far as I am
The president's recent tough talk appears aimed reassuring his
tan
,
who
risked
Moscow
's
wrath
away
on
the
border
of
the
Soviet
leave
Afghanistan represents an
aware, has the Soviet Union
jumpy conservative constituency, who are wary of any rapproche·
to
permit
shipment
of
arms
to
Union,
did
they
refuse
It
to
the
unprecedented
admission ofwea· .
publicly agreed to back down
ment with Moscow. But it 's a little late In the game for his right flank
them
through
his
country,
and
contras
of
Nicaragua,
who
were
kness
not
only
military, but
to weigh in heavily , since It is clear that the only real mark Reagan . from a previously adopted polill· sheltered millions of Afghan battling a communist regime
moral
and
psychologicaL
It Is, In
cal and military position In a
can make In his remai ning days In office Is in East-West relations.
refugees
as
well;
and,lastbutnot
less
than
1,000
miles
from
that
respect,
strikingly
equlval·
foreign region of the globe. The
The hardline speec hes have made headlines and hardly enhance
ent to the blow sustained by the
closest
analogy that comes to least, to Ronald Reagan, who Miami?
the political climate in advance of the summit meeting. But the White
across
the
more
than
seven
years
Another
point:
As
Abe
Ros·
United States when It decided to · ·
mind Is Moscow' s agreement to
House has Indicated it is not concerned about that asjJect. The Soviet
or
his
administration
to
date
has
enthal
and
others
have
reminded
pull
out of Vietnam without
end its military occupation of
leadership, through the ofllclal Tass News Agency, denounced
kept
the
vital
arms
floivtng
to
the
us,
It
Is
wise
to
remain
highly
Insisting
upon victory. We can be
eastern Austria in 1955. But that
Reagan for epxressing doubt that the Kremlin would keep Its word In
rebels.
skeptical,
lor
the
present,
as
to
sure
that
Moscow's weakness ·
was part of a quadripartite
a total withdrawal of its forces from Afghanistan.
·
One
wonders,
Incidentally,
just
how
seriously
Moscow
in·
has
been
noted
carefully, as ours
solution of the postwar Austrian
Reagan also Irked his lulure hosts by hammering away at regional
why
so
many
congressional
De·
tends
to
follow
through
on
Its
was,
by
thoughtful
observers In '
problem , under which the United
disputes and the human rights issue, meaning emigration of Soviet
mocrats
are
willing
to
authorize
pledge
to
pull
out
of
Afghanistan.
many
quarters
of
the
globe. It .,
States. B ~; itain and France
Jews.
may have consequences, In East·
agreed to withdraw their forces military aid to the Afghan It Is a move so uncharacteristic,
In response, White House spokesman Marlin Fi tzwater accused the
freedom
fighters
,
yet
would
deny
andnodoubtsounpopularamong
ern
Europe and elsewhere, "
as well, leav ing the nation free
Soviets of " needlessly Inflammatory" attacks on Reagan.
It
to
the
forces
or
Jonas
Savlmbi,
large
sectors
of
the
Soviet
sooner
than you think.
and politically neutral.
Gorbachev Indulged in the same tactics to hold off the Soviet hawks
In Afghanistan, It Is Russia
while he pursued glasnost and his summit meeting last December In
alone
that has soldiers In the
Washington.
.
·
country,
and It Is therefore only
The new Reagan policy, shying away from detente, Is called
Russia that Is withdrawing them .
"realistic engagement." but a rose is a rose by any other name. It
To be sure, both Russia's puppet
.,
signifies more coexistence, with or without warmth, and a realization
Afghan
regime
and
the
lmplaca·
on the part or the superpowers that they have Indulged In no-win
ble mujahedeen freedom llgh·
~nvolvements In regional wars such as Afghanistan, where the
ters
wUI remain on the ground,
Soviets Invaded to prop up a puppet, and Nicaragua, where the United
lighting
on lor ultimate control;
States conducted a proxy war with its surrogates .
and
both
Moscow and WashingFor Reagan. compromise Is In ord er with the Senate so that he can
ton
are
at
liberty, under the
go to Moscow with a ratified Intermediate Nuclear Forces Treaty In
'&gt;
Geneva
agreement,
to continue
hand. The obstacle is Reagan's Insistence on reinterpreting the
to
supply
arms
to
the
respective
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty to permit the United States to forge
sides. But Russia 's consent to the
'
ahead with deploymen t the "Star Wars" space defense . The ABM
withdrawal of Its own troops Is, In
Treaty was negotiated by President Richard Nixon and much as hE'
all
the circumstances, something
would like to support Reagan, even he admits that the Senate narrow
NEW
new under the sun.
SPECIAL FACTORY PURCHASE
Interpretation Is the correct one.
1988
CHEVROLET
The
lion's
share
of
the
credit
'I
1987 CHEVROLET NOVA
START, thE' Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty under negotiation at
SPRINT
•
lor
this
outcome
must
go
to
the
Geneva, is another story with Reagan and other top ollicials just
•
Afghan freedom lighters thema bout ruling out the possibi lity of achieving a pact belorethesummlt.
\
selves,
a proud and ferocious
Some progress ha s been made but not enough to untie all the knots .
people who did not permit the
Nevertheless, Reagan lnt!'nds to continue striving lor a START
.
slaughter
of a million of their
;
accord be lor!' he leaves ol!lce, and It Is conceivable that he could go to
fellow
cit
lzens,
or
the
forced
exile
a final summit meeting with Gorbachev to sign it. If that Is the case,
1
of 3 million more, or even such
he would achieve the title of peacemaker. On the other hand, with the
''
Soviet barbarities as boobyPER IIOIITH
PEA IIOIITH
presidential campaign under way by then and politics in the air, any
trapped toys for children, to
Most have:· automatic transmirlsion. air condilioning, po~r
agreement might have to await the new tenant. in the White House.
5-speed rransmission, am/fm stereo.
steering, power bra.lr:es, anVfm ~~tto, rear window defrosrer.
deter them from the struggle to
America's #1 gas economy car!
~teet betted 1ires .......and mo"!
•I
cleanse their land or the Soviet
presence. There cannot be, any..
...
IU411 • Dolomod,..... P .!ll :":'r~~W. ._. ,_ 101 •
- N.tlll4CI· D11o1!1111 _ . M,iliAii • 12.lft ....
where on earth, much better
..,.
T-.•.•••-.
*llrtci!IO'ft r-·•' .......
lighters than these.
But credit must go, too, to
LEARN THE FACTS
Zblgntew Brzezinski, Jimmy
Carter's national security direc·
FACT#1 Car to car, option to option Dear Editor and citizens of sary materials.
••
all Chevy, Oldsmobile, Pontiac.
Ma so n, Gallla. and Meigs
\
Last year the MGM district
Buick dealers pay the same price.
Counties.
l
had very small c~litrlbutlons
I
FACT lt2 Almost any dealer will
It Is t lme once again lor
through SME. I guess everyone
qu01e
you
a
good
deal.
TriStat e Area Connell or Boy
thought "Someone else will do
Scouts of America to conduct the
Dear Editor,
it" . We an need to realize how
FACT #3 The dealer is the differenco.
annual sustai ning membership
We, the Rutland F'lre Depart·
... and at TOM PEDEN we're
Important It Is to support the
the dt::aler wilh the difference. Shop
drive. Scouting reaches Into the programs for youth In our area.
ment Ladies Auxiliary, would
around, briop us ygur beSt ho111fidc gffec and we
lives of America 's youth through
like to thank all those persons
Our kids need every possible
will beat it and give you Customer Satisfaction at
runlllled, eductional activities.
helping us make Donkey Basket·
positive Influence In their lives.
No E&gt;ITI'I CluuJe.
'•'
The program affects ·boys age
ball a huge success In Rutland
You can help make It happen. It
last week.
eight to eight een and young takes people t~ proved the
adu It s to college age. The result
·Specifically, we would like to
support necessary to keep scout·
SPECIAL
Is a positive Influence on charac- lng strong.
thank Johnny Kerr, WMPO Ra·
11118
SPECIAL
FACTORY
l
ter. citizenship, a nd fitness. We
dlo,
and
members
of
the
Rutland
II you would like to help,
FACTORY
I
PURCHASE
try to instill in boys a sense of contributions can be sent to:
F'lre Department, Steve Morris,
I
PURCHASE
PCNilAC
~·.
•
respect for Gdd, OU I' country,
Ray
Williard,
Carlos
McKnight,
I
Trl State Area Council MGM
ORAND All •
•
""""
CIIEVRIILET
other people, a nd themselves.
•
Tony
Shoemaker,
Danny
Ed·
District, Boy Scouts of America.
I
Boys and volunleer leaders
733 Seventh Ave., Huntington, wards, Danny Davis and Rick
I
Invest lime a nd money In the
Williamson; Rutland Pickup,
W.Va. 25701.
j
scoullng program but It is not
Brian Carr, Danny Tillis, Max
Local contributions will dl·
PERIIOIITH
1117
PERIICNIH
enough . Our council must depend
'
Whitlatch,
John Sisson, Archie
Most have: automalic
rectly benefit local scouts. Our
11111
on sustaining members hip enrol·
lransmissiqn,
air
cmditioning,
McKinney
and
Marty
Pierce;
district needs are too numerous
power steering. power brakes,
Jment to provide the additional
to mention by ANY contribution Scipio Fire Department, William
I
am/fm
steel betted
neces sary services Including
Sanddle,
Ron
Burt,
Tom
Lovecan be puf to good use.
•
training, suppo rt and guidance to
Volunteer BSA dal , Robert Hewell. Glen
•'.
volunteers. visual aides, Profes·
Shirley Smith Kennedy, Jerry Tillis, Lanny
•
'
slonai staff, acllvltles and neces·
Longstreth; and Columbia Fire
r
Department, Randy Ltevlng,
•
Bob F'rank, Rickey Bailey, Thad
~
Dye, Larry Birchfield, Rex Chea·
ON
ALL
VEBICLESIN
STOCK
1
die and Marco Jeffers, for
Dear Editor,
participating In tbe basketball
our Easter Egg Hunt at our games.
This letter Is written In appre~
school.
ciation to Pizza Hut and Dairy
Again
thanks
to
all
those
•
We thank them lor their
••
Queen on behalf or the students
generosity and help In making mentioned and to those not
r
mentioned that helped In anyway
and teachers In the Pre-School,
Chnolel • OJ' MO. • P 7he •llaldl. Ina.
our hunt a great success.
Primary, and Intermediate
to make the night a success.
Sincerely,
c1 asses of Carleton School. Pizza
t
Sincerely,
t71 ......
Robin Foreman
Hut and Dairy Queen provided us
Opal Dyer, Publicity Chairman
t
Patty Parker Rutland Fire Department Ladles
with pizza certificates and sunDawn
Kuhn
Carlson
dae tokens to be used as prizes In
Auxiliary
I

Letters to the editor

#, S. )

( tff'JIF-HS

North's notebooks reveal anxiety
return for hostages. During the
Iran-contra hearings, Koch test!·
fled that Van Atta had the facts
straight. "He came to me and
as ked me about it. ... I simply
said, 'Wou ld you please drop It? I
think If you go with this story ...
you may get somebody killed."'
Dec. 12 - An associate of
North's on the National Security
Council called our office to chew
.us out lor a column which said the
CIA station chief In Beirut,
William Buckley, had been tor·
lured to death In Iran. At the
time, the United States was
sticking to the story that hostage
Buc·kl ey was still alive.
Feb. 21, 1986 - North wrote In
his notebooks that an associate of
his was ''called by Dale VanAtta
re Secord/ Tom Clines In Israel re
hostages."
F'eb. 24- In an Interview with
Van Atta, President Reagan
confirmed the arms-for-hostages
story and asked that the In forma· ·
lion remain secret until the
hostages were free. Adm. John
Poindexter, Reagan's former
national · security adviser, later
testified in the Iran-contra hearIngs that he was ':,Very nervous"
that Reagan had been so candid.
April 28-June 29 - We pub·
llshed a series of four columns
giving the bare outline of the
arms-for-hostages deal. In early

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

N3s /1/1 J""~-nok)JPI B-Pse.B/11/ JPUKP!f~

Frida~April29.1988

WASHINGTON - The secret
notebooks of Lt. Col. Oliver North
reveal that the gung·ho Marine
was afraid or someone blowing
the whistle on him lor nearly a
year before hi s arms-lor·
hostages game was finally
exposed.
That is because we had the
goods on North's scheme and his
notebooks show that he knew It.
Independ ent Counsel Lawrence Walsh and the grand jury
tried unsuccessfully to legally
get their hands on North's
notebooks. The congressional
lnvesllgating committee, which
provided North limited ImmunIty, got thou ~a nds of pages under
subpeona, but only released a
lew pages to the public. The rest
are officially classified as

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

..

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

NATION,\L tEAGtJl &lt;:
E~l

" ' L P~·l. HR
u it .13ft ~~

(bl~lli{U

Phlilld4•lphlu

An ~~·I.,;

l:l
l:l
II
10
!1 .

HoulliiJn
(11M'inltiH
san FtiUithc·u

s_.n Dl ~·~
,\thmLu

I 1·t

-000~

9 II •.fiHl
i 1:1 .:150
II 12 .!133

St. l.oul;;
l.o~

6 .G!W

1l

.' Honln•$1

fi
K
H

fl .&amp;a7 ......
j

.ti:rl

!I .SSII

'h

2

II ..&amp;78

~~ ~

II . 121

t',,
II

J I ~ . 167
11mrsda.v 's KNmll"

st. J..oul~ II, SIUI Hh·~ u I
Pllhlh• 'X• t. San.'ra•d!Wo I, 10 Inn.

01 h•all{n 3, Lo;; An Kt"I~-N I
Friday '~

Gamt'li
t\tlunw tP .Smllh 1· 11 1d
phi a (Ruffin 2·1). 7: 3~ p.m.

Phll11tl•&gt;l·

Calendar

Nt•w Vor~ tFI'rrttnitl•z 0-ll.al ( 'lndn·
JW.IIt ·lackl'lun ;l-11, 7: as p.m .

&amp;Kt•hldl
Ameri••M lA' apt•
Texlt." ttl Nt.&gt;W l 'ork, l:lD p .m .
Mln.:,u!W at Bollloa, ~: Q p.m.

Molllr.•u.l tMartlnt':l !l·t) at H"u.Cun
t iJu...tn I·I ),H::u p.m.
!!II. IA'Iuit; (C'o~~: !- ~) IU l.os An«t•h.'l'l
! lhorMI~~er 1-fl), ID : OJ p.m.

Pill ... rwh (fi'l"hPr !1--1) til Sun
Dlt•I(O (Hiilwldns 2·1 i, II: II !I p.m.
('hlt·a.cn l!iuk.:llfft• 1-2) at San Fra•·
I'IMC·o \Kru610;w 1· 1), lll : ~p. m .
Sahi-d!U''" Oaml'!l
AtlunUI 1U Pblladelphhl
fhlc...:o ul SIUI FriUiliM'll
Nt•w , .orlr.al rtncla•U. nl ~ht
,\ tontrul al Houlllon, nl_..l
St. Leu I" 1111.01'1 i\nl(l'il'l", llllht

Pltlltlurwh atSiln Dle«&lt;. nl~
AMERICi\N L.EA"f.i,JF.
E~U~I

W L Pd .

......

!I .7. l.f ~ ... 7 2
12 ti .117 \!l-'t
II H .nt .I
t 11
&amp;1'1'

""'""'

.no

Toronto
Mllwa~ulrt•

• 10 •..at ·~~
.toe II

Halllmon•

Oalr. ..IIMI
' Kan,.,. Cil)'
('blt:qn
Kf'aUifo

GB

16

fll'¥t'land
Nt•w hrk

0 %1
w~•

TPXIIl'l
Min..,,..&amp;~&amp;

Calllornla

I it · 1 ,pt II I .$M :1
IG ll .ta J~
I. II .oiSG $
II II .411
~~~
II II Atl 5\4
II 13 .:SSI t 1 j

Th•Nay'M Hr11~lli
Ml•lhcU 4, &amp;lllmono I

N.an.,. Cllyl, New 't'orU
Oakland I, Torello :t
Se.Uie J; Clnelatllll
Dtol'roM t, Callornla I
l

(lhleap t, ll•ion 0

".,_,.'NGamf!fl
T~ CIIDIIIIIl J.ll al Nrw York
(C'. . tii!IIU'IItl•l ,.1: . p.M.

('alllormia¥ Torlnlo. 1:11 p.m.

·~

Oilkknd ..a Clnelud, 7:15p.m.
Sfol&amp;il'-•l&amp;i DMre6t , 7:SS p .rn.
n.Jtlmon' a1 Ollcqo, !1: 30 p.m.
KlllnML!I City lilt Mllwullee, II: U p.m.
NMiollll ,I.e ape
Aflanla U PbUadet)tlla.7:U p.m.
New Yorlr.lll Clnd••U, 1: :II p.m .
Monlreal a1 HouMo-. I: Sl p.m.
Sl . l.oul11 a1 Loll Anpiftl, II : U p.m.
Plttnuwlrl"' san Dlep, 11:01 p.m.
ChiCMJO a&amp;t s... Franl'IIIC6, 1n: 31 p.m.
lla•llefball
NBA. Pla,rotrw
Mllwaullef' at AUIIn&amp;a, 1: St p.m .
Nrw York at Bowta. II p.m.
Seaule at Den~, 1:• p.m.
San Ant onlo at LA. Lalr.en. II: :tt p.m.

Gel!
Auw&amp;ln, TelliUI - Lep•dl ol C.ell
Nllb~llle, Tenn. - 1111,. . san Ue
ClaAIIk!

....,...

The Weodlan•, Teu11

-

......

Ale• Ope•

hulepeadallnlllftllcr-

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

8\an II)' (l! p Pl.,.rr.

"-'e

IIJ;anletl

ICiileduk-4

8oecer

MISLPIQifh

a.111mere at Ml•-• J:ll p.m.
Mewl ... at Dai-.I:H , .m.
San Dlep at TaCDrnL II: Jl p.m.
Tenlll•
Atlll.n&amp;ll- 1111,101 AT6T t'hllle~~p

.......... I•• - .... PM
Padtle WomH.. IMer ..11 . ..
llamblfl, Welt o..--, - .......
Walo.r...Opa.
'JJ

MARIETTA SIGNS CALDWELL - Marie!!a
College recenlly signed Soulhern hardwood
standout Jeff Caldwell, second from Jell, to play
baskelball for the Pioneers.· Jeff, flanked by
Coach Howle Caldwell, le!l, and parents Sally and
Jhn Caldwell, attended Eastern for three years
and played basketball there before moving to the
Racine area within the past year. In h!s senior

bl~k

Eagles

season at Southern he was a major contributor to
the Tornadoes' winning the SVAC _crown, the
sectional and dis!rict !ournament lilies before
losing to Middletown Fenwick in !he state
reglonals. He was named the SVAC's~VP lor h~s
many effor!s on the floor, among whJCh was h1s
trademark three-point !\hots. (OVP staff photo)

Highlanders, 6-0

EAST MEIGS- Neither rain. theweat hcr and hme asweli.Col·
1e t nor tee could ley fanned 6, walked one and
nor snow, nors e.
6 h't
bring down the Eastern Eagle~ gai:r~~ohn~;~ was J.J with two
Thursddaylel
rlence a vfeninlg
our n as
pasthtleyngeaxpe6·0 RBI's . Horner 2-3 with a double·
shut-out victory over the Southw·
,Lance 1·1. Jason Hager .. a
Hl hla d
I an SVAC freshman waged hlsllrstvars1ty
estern d g n ers
n a cold · hit , and Scott
'
.
ha d a s ·mg 1e.
d by
Fitch
thatha)ted
Steve Tarbell, the
hit·
It
11
mplete ling ace was sid elined wtth a
broke n ~nkle sullered in the
the game a er ve co
mnings .
N th G II'
Eastern hurler Mark Grlflln outfield al or
a ta .
fought orr the chill to pllch a
Wetlnesday evening the Eas t·
one-hit shut-&lt;&gt;ut. Griffin came ern alumni edged the younger
just one batter away from
Eagles 3-l as EHS could cone;•
pitching a no-hitter, but had that just 4 hit s. while the elder ly (.)
bid broken In the bottom of the alumni had 8 solid blngles .
filth when Chris Metzger rapped
Scott Fitch suffered the loss
a single up the middle. Griffin after scoreless pit ching by Mark
fanned 7 and walked just one.
Griffin and Steve Horner. Griffin
To avoid confusion, Southwest· fanned three and walked one
errr played Its "home" game on allowing three hits. Horner
the road at Eastern because r~nned one and walked o~e. wn le
repairs to its home turf were not Fttch gave up five hits and
completed In time. Eastern bat· fanned fourwtth one walk. . .
ted first and plated three runs In
Charlie RttChle, who was crttl ·
the firs t and second Innings. cally Injured last fail, earned
Leading 6·0 in the third the "comeback" honors to post the
freezing mixture or 'all of the win inlourlnningsofwork. whtle
above' began to faiL
Royce Bissell came home from
Griffin did a nice job to contain service to post a !me reltef effort.
the Highlanders, while Zane
Ritchie fanned live a~d walked
Colley also did a nice job under none despit!'. not betng fully
the circumstances before pulling . recovered, wh1le Bissell gave up
a muscle. He was relieved by two hits,waiked two,and struck
Davies In the fifth . Davies did not out one.
record any KO' s nor walks, but
Jeff Johnson had two singles.
retired thesideasEa s ternlought
Horner a single, and Fitch a

~~~re ;::~~lion

SWH~

Browns add speed, youth
for defensive purposes
CLEVELAND &lt;UPil - Con·
sldertng the meaning or the
Cleveland Browns' draft?
Think fast. The Browns cer·
talnly did, adding speed and
youth to a defense that didn't
quite measure up to Coach Marty
Schottenhelmer's
last
year, despiteexpectations
a second
straight
AFC Central
title.firmly
The draft
locus was
locked In on improving the
team's ability to pressure oppos·
ing quarterbacks. As a result,
veteran linebackers Lucius San·
ford and Anthony Griggs had
better start looktng for other
employment.

lln~~~c~~~!t c~rg~rd'c~~~~~ 1~
Florida and Van Walters of
Indiana along with defensive end
Michael Dean Perry of Clemson

;;:a~~~idcf~;ide an interesting

Word ts that veteran line·
backers Eddie Johnson and Clay
Matthews both are on the trading

Delicious Dishes!
Enjoy the very finest In hor:ne ctyfe
cooking ot the very best prices around I

iG~!~........................................................$349

$
Ia• I Scalloped Potatoes ........................... 349

TUESQAY

WEDNESDAY
S3•9
c.w.ar,
••••
..............................................
.
!HUBS AY
$

Crea•d laked Chicken ............................... 349
FRIQAY
•
$

....
Loaf ···-···············"······················
..•••••• $
SADJRDAY
_

349

footlong, french fries &amp; Slaw ..................... 275
.

·='

HOUH: Mort, thru SAT. 6:30 A.M.·I:OO P.M.

WILLIAMSrDINER

. single.
. .
.
.
Eastern ts tdle unttl Secllonal
Tournament play Wednesday at
Meigs. where . they fa ce 4·4
Crooksville
in
.
. a first round game.
Ltnescore.
.
Eastern ................ 330 00-6 6 0
SWHS .. ................ . 000 00-0 l 4
Batteries: Griffin !WP )a nd
Davts
Co lley ,Davies5th . and Hais lop.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-!MIOI
i\ Division of MuUimedla, Inc.

Published every afternoon. Monda y
thro1,.1gh Friday, 111 Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley PubllshinR Company /Mult imedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph . 992-2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,

· Ohio.
M('mber: United Press In ternational.
Inland Dally Press AssociAtion and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sal£.&gt;S, 733 Third Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

POSTMASTER: Send address "changes
to The Dally Senrlncl. 111 Court St.,

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route
One WC£.'k .... ................ .. ........... .. $1.25
One Month ................................. $5. 45
One Year .......
. ............ $65.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dall y ........... ......... ~ ... .. ........ 25 Cents
Subscribers not desiring to pay the car rier may r('m't in adva ncf,' direct to
ThP Daily Sentinel on a 3. 6 or 12 month
basis. Credit wil l be given carr ier each·
week .

.,

No subscriptions by m all permUted ln
areas where home carrier s('rvlce Is

available.

block. In addition. Green Bay Is
pursuing running back Earnest
Byner, proving if nothing else
that Lindy Infante Indeed has a
good memory, but the Browns
are unlikely to deal since the
Pack has little to offer.

Mall Subscriptions
Inside Melp County
13 Weoeks .................................. $17.29
26 Weeks ................................. l34.1Mi
~2 Weeks .................................. $66.56
Outside Melts County

'•

13 " reeks .. ................. , .............. $18.20

26

W ~k s

..... ...... ....................... S35.JO

52 Weeks .................... ..... ......... $67:60

I'liiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiiiOiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiliiiiiiiO~~~~--~

.,

I urge the good citizens o,f Meigs
County- to help us begin to put an
end
.
·
h to the
t
•,
•,
VaSt problem Of drug traffiCking,
arVeS "
C
ing, and abuse in Meigs ounty. .
Me.lgs
County_ deserves a Shenff who
_
will aggressively not only destroy crops, but
alSO purSUe the major drug traffickerS and
I
harveSterS in OUr COUnty rather than mere Y
making a "public show" by destroying the
·
th e " Sma 11 -t'II!Je " drug
•
CrOpS and arreSting
people. Arrests; convictions, and firm sentences will stop this problem while the mere
'.
destruction of some crops has not.
Both Democrats and Republicans may register at the polls on Election Day and ~o~e
in the Republican Primarv and help us JOin
the national movement of saying NO to
drugs. Return respectability to Meigs
County and free it from its reputation as a .. "
"haven" for dr~g traffickers and harvesters.

VOTE

ROBERT BEEGLE
FOR MEIGS COUNTY SHERIFF
ON MAY lrd

Plid Pol. Ad by Dr. James Conde.
33499 Wills Hill Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

...

'

.

.'
''.
·~"'

••

I.,,
••'

.

'

�Frida~April29,1988

Friday,April29 1 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.....---Local news briefs---. Strong winds topple. trees in Northwest

Mariners cool off Indians

C LE'-'ELAND ( UP! )
Throughout the 1987 season,
Henry Cotto made his travel
plan s on practically a day-to-day
basis.
The outfielder was called up
live separate times by the New
York Yankees from Columbus of
the International League, but
neve r stayed long enough in the
majors to feel at home.
" You want to be able to play
every day," said Cotto, acquired
by Seattle from the Yankees
along with· pitcher Steve Trout
last Dec. 22 in exchange for three
pitchers. "They gave me that
chance here. You get to feel
comfortable. "
Cotto went'3 for 4 with two RBI
singles and a run scored Thurs·
day night to boost the five-hit
pitching of Mike Campbell and
carry the Mariners to a 3·1
victory over the Cleve land
Indian s.
"Henry has been ou tstand·
· ing, " Seattle manager Dick
Williams said or Cotto, who Is
hitting .42J. (24 for 57) with two
homers and 12 RBI in 16 games.
"I was going to platoon him, but
he just got better and better . He' s
won himself a regular job."
Campbell, 2-2, struck out
seven, walked three and allowed
an unearned run In pitching his
second complete game. .
"It took me a couple of innings
to get adjusted to the mound, "

'said Campbell. " It's a higher
mound here. I !eli like I had good
stuff. But my curveball was all
over the place the flrsi couple of
lnrilngs because It was really cold
out there. "
John Farrell, 3-1, was the loser
before a crowd of just 3,762 at
Cleveland Stadium. The Indians,
16·5, ·have the best record in the
major leagues and their bes t
start since 1966.
"I thought I had pretty good
command;" said Farrell . "It's a
loss, and that happens. I don't
worry about getting hitting support because this team can hi t.
(Rain the past two days) prevented batting practice, and I
figured It would be a low-run
game for both teams."
Seattle scored an unearned run
in the sixth for a 1-0 lead. Rey
Quinones lined a one-out double
to left and took third when first
baseman Willie Upshaw booted
Harold Reynolds' grounder.
Cotto followed by grounding a
single up the middle, scoring
Quinones .
The Mariners added two runs
in the' eighth. Reyn'olds doubled
with one out and advanced on
Mike Kingery's groundout. Cotto
singled past Upshaw to score
Reynolds , stole second and
scored on Alvin Davis's single to
right.
The Indians got their only run
In the eighth when Jay Bell

Eastern, Southern reserves
split doubleheader, 9-5, 4-3

was sparse as light rain fell and te~DIM!ralluf&lt;!s
dropped Into the 30s. The first-place Indians lostto
the Mariners 3·1. (UPI)

COLD NIGHT - Cleveland's llrst base coach
Tom Spencer (a GaiUpolis native) warms his
head with a hoi water boiUe as he watches the
act,ion in Cieve~and Thursday night. Attendance

Orioles set. AL losing streak;
face Chicago White Sox next
By LEN HOCHBERG
UPI Sports Writer
Blackjack!
The Orioles have hit 21; s urely
it's time to stick.
.
" The fishbowl is ge,t ting
smaller a nd smaller every day, "
said catcher Terry Ke~nedy
a[ter winless Baltimore set an
American League record Thurs·
day alter-noon by los ing its 21st
consecutive game. ' 'Eac h or us i s

trying harder eve ry day. The
other team is like circling
wolves. They come out with guns
blazing."
One m ight think tea ms would
be lining up to play th e Or ioles
but Twins first baseman Ke nt
Hrbek does n' t see it that way.
"It 's nice to ha ve them over
with," Hr bek said alter smack·
,l ng a two-r un homer in J\o1inneso·
ta's 4·2 triumph. "We have to
play th em aga in in a lew.. days.
Hopefully they 'll have won by
then to ease the pressure on
them . It does n't seem like they' re
giving up."
Left fielde r John Moses , whodrove in th e Twins' other runs
with. a doubl e, agreed: "! think
the re's a lot more pressw·e on
teams playing Ba ltimore than
anyone else. Nobody want s to
lose to them ."

Next op on the Baltimore
futility train - Chicago, where
the White Sox hope to av.oid the
embarrassment of being the first
club to lose to the Orioles In 1988.
The three-game series begins
tonight at Com!sky Park. Baltimore's Mark Thurmond, 0·4,
faces Chicago's Jack McDowell,
1·1, at 8:30p.m. EST.
If the Orioles are swept, they'll
set a modern major-league
mark. The 1961 Philadelphia
Phillies lost 23 straight.
The old AL standard was held
by the 1906 Boston Red Sox and
the 1916 and I943 Philadelphia
Athletics , and Baltimore has
_long s ince eclipsed the record for
13 losses to s tart a season .
As in recent games, the Orioles
scored first Thursday . T!to Lan·
drum led off the first with a single
against Allan Anderson, 1-0, who
arrived this week from Portland
of the Pacific Coast League.
Landrum eventually scored on
Eddie Murray's ground out.
And , as In recent games,
Baltimore couldn' t hang on.
Hrbek connected in the fourth
against Mike Boddlcker, 0·5, who
lost his lOth straight decision ,
most in franchise history . Moses
drilled a two-run double off the
wall in right -center In the sixth.

MHS loses dual meet to Lancers
Both the Marauders and Ma·
rauderet tes were defeated by the
Lancers of Federa l Hocking in a
dual meet, the girls by a 66-62
margin and th e boys 77-55.
For Gordon Fisher's Mara u·
dere t tes, Heather Wood took the
gold in the discus throw with a
di s tance of 86 feet 6 inches. Dee
Hende rson again grabbed a first
place finish In the 1600 meter run
with a tim e of 6:15.7 and Jody
Taylor did th e 300 hurdles In
00:53.9. Amy Wagner's ttme In
the 200 meter run was 00: 29.8 for
the win and Wendl Klees, In the
3200 meter run , pos ted a 15.17 for
a blue ribbon. The 3200 meter
realy combo of Whaley, Doidge,
Hysell and E llis finished In
14:56.9.
Posting second place finishes
lor the Marauderettes were
Missy Woods (high jump), Jody
Taylor (long jump), Nikki Bunch
(shot put) , Leea Johnson 1100
hurdles) , Missy Nelson (400
meters) , Leea Johnson (300
hurdles ), Henderson (800 me·
ters) and Hysell (3200 meters) .
Whaley thigh jump), Jodi Custer
(shot put), Bunch (discus),
Doidge (100 hurdles) , Kloes (1600
meters) , Lesley Carr (800 me·
terS) and Tammy Kauff (3200
meters ) each had third place
finish es for the Marauderettes .
' In the boy 's event, Meigs took
live first place finishes . Dennis
Boothe was a double winner In
the shot put and discus throw.
Rod Brewer captured the 1600

'

Trailing 4·1, the Or ioles squandered a chance to come back in
the seventh . Des pite receiving
four walks that brought home one
run, they failed to produce a key
hit.
Mark Portugal, who also was
in Portland e arlier this week,
relieved with the bases lull and
one out. He fanned pinch-hitter
Fred Lynn and got Cal Rlpken to
fly out, ending the threat. Portu·
gal finished up lor his first save.
"Again we had a number of
opportunities to do something, "
DH Larry Sheets said. "There' s
no reas on lor it ..J know I didn' t do
my job."
Added Manager Frank Robinson: ' 'Tt seems everything we do
right now turns out wrong. We
can' t look at It negatively. We
have to continue to look at It
positively."
Elsewhere , Seattle beat Cleve·
land 3-1, Detroit edged California
2-1, Oakland bested Toronto 6·2,
Kansas City downed New York
6-3, and Chicago blanked Boston
6·0.
In the National League, it was :
St. Louis 6, San Diego 4;
Pittsburgh 2, San Francisco 1 In
10 innings, and Chicago 5, Los
Angeles I.

EAST MEIGS - In a reserve
baseball doubleheader the Eastern Eagles and Southern Tornadoes spilt a twlnbill with Southern taking the opener !r-'5 and
EHS winning the nightcap 4·3.
In the first game Southern
banged out four -hits and five
runs to grab a lead they never
relinquished, 5·0.
EHS starter Kenny Caldwell
then buckled down to hold the
Tornadoes at bay until the fourth,
when shabby EHS fielding put
them In the hole.Two errors, a
walk, and Roy Johnson double
pushed three runs home, while
the fourth reached when Andy
Baer reached on an error, the
score 9-0.
Roy Johnson pitched three
near perfect innings, before
getting relief from McClintock.
In the finale Eastern made It
respectable as Kenny Caldwell
singled for the second time·
.Derek Yonker was hit by a
pitch,Jason Hager walked, two
balks, Brian Bailey reached on a
fielder's choice, Chris Adams
walked and Dennis Marcinko
singled home the fifth run before
a strike out ended the game.
- Besides Caldwell's two hits
Marcinko had the only other EHS
safety.
Roy Johnson, Baer, Lavender,
Grindstaff, and McClintock had
the only SHS hits.

Signs.agreement
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!)
- The Youngtown Pride of the
World Basketball League for
players 6-looH and under has
signed an agreement for its
games to be broad cas ted on
WKBN·AM, the club announced
Thursday.
Youngstown's first game Is
May 19 In Chicago. It Is the
league's first season.
Akron broadcaster Steve
French has been selected to do
the play-by-play. He Is now
sports director at 'v}'SLR and
WKKD radio In Akron, and has
had experience doing Cleveland
Cavalier an9 Cleveland Force
games.

EHS scored the potential win·
ning run In the third after Hager
reached on an error and went to
second, stole third, then rode
home on a McQueen sacrifice fly
to go up, 4·3.
McQueen :gave up just two
hits , four walks and live
s trikeou Is .
Baer and McClintock fanned
four and walked just one.

v1ngs

1985 FORD EXP ... ~ .............: ..... S4295
Moon roof, PS, PB, Air, 6 spd., 4 cyl. Vary clean
one owner car.

1984 CHEVETTE ............................... S1995

4 dr., 4 spd., low mileage.

1983 .FORD ESCORT ..:...................... S179 5

~TI).

· Now Open For Spring
Season

4 dr. Auto .. PB. PS. Looks and runs good.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
~ALES 8t SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

Spt111 &amp; S•••tr He•rt
' OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 AM·&amp; PM
SATURD.AY 9 A.M 11

.P.'!!.

,
GRAVELY
~THE

)

4 doo;. Auto.

197 6 lord Mustang ll ....... ~!'.t'?; ......... S695
107 6 AMC Gremlin ........~.l'!t·.~.~!11....... S395

RIGGS USED CARS

•

'

1'
;

•

MARIETTA - The Obio Department of Transportation
(ODOT) is sponsoring a "roadeo" for highway personnel,
except these "cowboys" wlll be ste ering dump trucks Instead or
broncos or brahmas.
ODOT's District 10 roadeo will be held at the Washington
County Fairgrounds In Marietta on May 3 and 4. County
competitions wlll begin at 8:30a.m. on Tuesday and continue at
9 a.m. on Wednesday May 4. District finals wll be on Wednesday
afternoon.
District 10 Includes Athens, Gallla, Hocking, Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan, Noble, Vinton and Washington Counties.
The truck roadeo Is an obstacle course consisting or six layout
problems designed to simulate maneuvers which operators
often make during snowplowing duties. Only operations
personnel who normally drive dump trucks wlll be permitted to
compete In the roadeo. The volunteer participants wlll have
their choice of an automatic or standard transmission
single-axle dump truck with an 11-loot plow. Participants wlll
have ten minutes to complete the course.
Competitions Include county, district, regional and state
levels. The statewide contest will be held Monday, Aug. 15, at
tM Ohio State Fair In Columbus.
'
In its first year, the roadeo is being sponsored by the ODOT
Bureau of Health, Safety and Claims central office In Columbus.
Petsonnel from the central and district operations and safety
offices will judge the roadeo competition .

By United Press International
Thunderstorms tha t dumped
rain and hurled fierce winds In
- Washington and Idaho thrashed
about through th e Pacific
Northwest today, while some
New England streams and river s
crested after heavy rains.
The storms developed across
eastern Washington and Idaho
Thursday evening, while scattered shower s feU In Washington
a.n d Oregon, the National
Weather Service said.
Thunderstorm winds gusted to
63 mph at Hanford , Wash . A gust
of 57 mph was reported near
Pocatello, Idaho.
In northern Idaho, winds
(!owned trees and power lines at
Hayden Lake. The weather service said trees were toppled and
fires started near the Fourth or
July Canyon eas t of Coeur
.
d'Alene. "
The storms flung gusts to 50
mph and heavy rain - near
Rathdrum.
Heavy rain fell in New Hampshire and southern Maine Thurs·
day evening. In a six -hour period

Fl i.uht ...
~o

ending ea r ly today, 1 y. inches of
rain fell at Br unswi ck Nava l Air
Station In Maine and 1.15 Inches
was recorded at Portland .
" Some small rivers and
streams became bankfull and
water we nt over the roads at a
few locations In New Hampshire, " forecaster Lyle Alexander said. ''Locally, up to 2
inches of raJ n was reported In
southwest Maine."
Flood warnings were posted
for that a rea as well as parts of
eastern New Hampshire.
Winds gusted to more than 30
mph in some parts of Maine and
to more than 40 mph at Brunswick Naval Air Station. Gale
warnings were "In effect for the
coastal waters of Maine and New
Hampshire.
Scattered showers fell early
today from New Yor.k. state to
West Vlrginia.Widely scattered
showers and . thunderstorms
were reported over Arizona and
New Mexico, with some rain
today In the Texas Panhandle.
Cool temperatures In the 30s
and 40s chilled inuch ofthe nation

eas t of the Mississippi River
before dawn. Frost wa r nings

WEATHER MAP - Showers will extend from eastern Ohio
across the northern and central Appalachians to the middle and
northern Atlantic coastal states. Showers and thunderslorms will
be scattered from the northern and central Rockies across the
northern Plateau to the Pacific Northwest. Showers and
thunderstorms will also ex tend over the southern hall of the Plains
and Louisiana.

Continued from page 1

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

"At first, I thought we were all
Myers said officials may not
gone,"
he said. "It just went
know lor some time the cause of
the blast that ripped off a large, 'pool' like an explosion, then the
seml·clrcular section of the top of top went off.''
DaVId Jackson, who was sit·
the cabin just behind the cockpit
of Aloha Airlines Flight 243. The tlng In the forward section of the
Initial Investigation ruled out a plane where the gaping hole was
ripped, said he "saw a flash of
bomb, an FAA official said.
The plane landed about 2 p.m. orange and everthing flew In my
HDT (7 p.m. EDT) Thursday on face .''
::
''I looked around and saw there
the Island of Maul, and one
witness said It looked like the was no more airplane around
cabin had been ''peeled back like me," Jackson told KCBS radio.
•
"This lady sitting next to me .. .
a banana ."
The Boeing 737, en route from there was really nothing between
Hlloon Hawaii island to Honolulu her and the deep blue sea . She
International Airport on Oahu, clung to me and I clung to her."
·r
Witnesses to the landing said
was 4 \'.i miles up and about 25
'
.m Ues from Maul when the blast they could see people's hair
occurred. It was carrying 90 flytng in ·the wind and one said,
passehgers and fiv e crew . "There were a lot Of broken faces
.
and severed ltmbs and a lot or
members.
~S
"The extraordinary compe· cuts and blood and things like
that everywhere."
tence oi Captain (Robert)
I'
'
• Three calls were answered by from Jones Road to Veterans . Schornstelmer and First Officer
The FAA closed the airport and
local units Th.u rsday, the Mefgs Memorial Hospital and she was
Mimi Tompkins In execu tlng a declared a restricted zone below
r-ti:ounty Emergency Medical Ser· later taken to Pleasant Valley
perfect emergency landing un· 3,000 feet so planes would not
Hospital.
!vices reports.
doubtably
prevented a major hamper the search for the
Pomeroy firemen were called
&gt;At 5:12 ,a .m., the Rutland unit
missing person and for debris
disaster,"
Myers
said.
.&lt;ook Nicole Blumenauer from to Kroger Parking Lot at 5: 19
that could provide clues to the
Dr.
Charles
Mitchell
of
Maul
i£&gt;ye Road to Holzer Medical a.m. Friday morning when·a gas Memorial Hospital said 6lpeople disaster. The airport was later
·tenter; Pomeroy at 12:04 p.m. tank on a car was leaking were treated for Injuries and 13 reopened .
\ook Blumenauer to Holzer Medi· gasoline onto the lot.
George Harvey, Federal Avia·
The village brought In sand to were hurt seriously enough to be
l;al Center, and at 10:12 p.ni.,
tion
Administration area coordiadmitted
to
the
hospital.
He
said
Syracuse ' took Shelly Fortune absorb the gasoline.
two people from the plane were In nator In Honolulu, said the
~
critical condition, a woman with sudden departure of a such a
large piece or the fuselage would
a skull fracture and a man with
severe facial burns.
cause Immediate decompression
· Mitchell .said most of the inside the cabin, and It would not
be unusual for someone to have
Injuries Involved "blunt trauma,
impact blast-type Injuries been sucked ou.t of the plane.
Services will be held at 11 a.m.
$.olland Rummell
very few burns." He said the
Saturday
at the Brown Road
patients he spoke with told him
•
'; Rolland Erwin Rummell, 85, Community Church with burial
"there was an explosion and they
Continued from page 1
11\38 Frank Road, Columbus, died to be at Briggsdale. Friends may didn't know what was
'Nednesday at Hlserling Amerl- call at the Norris Funeral Home
Earlier negotiations in Phoenix
happening."
Dr. Tom Abram treated one stalemated after the union con·
,e)lre In Grove City following a in Grove City from 7 to 9 this
evening.
passenger who said he was
s'\x-week Illness.
tract expired and both sides were
"working with a computer on his
retired mechanic and rna·
prepared for a strike, but agreed
~lne worker, Mr. Rummell"Was
lap at one moment and the next
to a cooling-off period.
moment the computer was gone,
born March 16, 1903 In Miners·
Union officials said the key to
.litte, a son of the late Gilbert E.
as was a good deal of the cabin."
the settlement was the com·
Abram said passengers told
pany's retreat from a proposal
~d Llnnle Southard Rummel.
South Central Ohio
,#-Surviving are his wile, Marhim
that
"people
were
flying
the
union ~elleved would destroy
Mostly sunny today, with )llghs
In
the
cabin."
lfta; a son, Gilbert; three daugharound
workers'
seniority rights.
near 65. Mosdy clear tonight,
An
unidentified
passenger
said
with a low In the upper 30s.
Considerable sunshine Saturday, most of the passengers had their
seat belts on "or we would have
~!wood Riffle; Karen and Rick
with highs near 70.
~ampbell. 10 grandchildren, two
The probablllty of preclplta,_ lost a lot more."
great-grandchildren, three sistlon is near zero through
t!!rs, Mrs. Gladys Smith and Mrs.
Saturday.
.tlberta ' Hawse of Barberton:
Winds will be from the northw·
CJenna Rummel, Minersville
est at 10 to 20 mph today and light
lfitd a number of nieces and
and northwesterly tonight.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
nephews. .
Exteaded Forecast
Admitted- Jack Ward, Pome·~ Besides hls parents, he was
Sunday through Tuesday
roy
: Janet Jenkins, Middleport:
Ateceded In death by a brother,
Fair weather through the peRobert
.Kennedy , Langsville;
Wloyd Rummel, and an lnfan t
riod. Highs will be In the 60s
Charles
Snider, Racine ..
~ter, Sylvia Mae Rummel.
Sunday and ranging from the
Discharged
- John Fink, Ger[ Mr. Rummell was a member of
mid 60s to the mkl 70s Monday
trude
Pellegrino,
Wllbur ·Smlth,
tlte Brown Road Community
and Tuesday. Overnight lows will
Glada
Davis.
&lt;:)lurch In Columbus.
be in the 40s.

'

has three calls Thursday

W· ·" i ~&gt;r:. ·Area deaths

PETE

COULADIS
FOR

I

~

REPUBLICAN
STATE CENTRAL COMMITTEEMAN
10TH CONGRESSIONAL DISTRICT

Officials ...

1947 FRAZER
Then enter Dairy_Isle's Collector Ca
S~eepstakes. There is nothing to buy
th1s rare beauty, 1947 Frazer to win. I
fact, at Dairy Isle, you can make it a c1a:ss1c~*
summer-enjoying delicious sundaes
great shakes, terrific parfaits, and plenty
more.
If you're looking to get looked at in you
~ Frazer, better hurry. Contest closes May 30.
• If you're looking for a classic way to treat .
: the whole family, you have all Summer! · ·

*

It
It

i
:
:

dairy lsle

It

:

SWEEPSTAKES
Grand Prize: 1947 Frazer

CITY - - --

-

- - - -- - - - - - - STATE ___

dairy Isle
CONTEST RULES
The National Grand Prize in the I '188 Da.icy Isle Collector Car
Sweepstakes is a 1947 Frazer1

"Pete Couladis is one of the bright , young leaders in
Ohio's political future ."
Congressman

Bob McEwen

-:A

All of Lawrence, Meigs, Gallia, Fairfield, Perry, Morgan.
Muskingum and parts of Licking, Guernsey, Athens and
Washington counties.

Weather

Paid For By The C•ndidate. 4 Kent Dr .• Athens. Ohio 45701

rJ ~~~::s~~~=::~~L~~:;~:~

Hospital news

FARMERS BANK IS PLEASED TO
ANNOUNCE THE OPENING OF OUR
CUSTOMER SERVICE DEPARTMENT

If you ore in the market for a new account stop
in and see or call our new Customer Service
Representative, Uncia Mayer, for all ·the details•

...

Common Pleas Court

Judge Charles Knight

NAME ' - - - - - -- - - - - -- - - - - -- - - - - -- - - - -

ADDRESS - -- - - - - -- - - - - - - -- -- -- - - --

Experienced
• Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge six years - has heard
more than 1,900 cases

•Savings
Accounts
•Checking
Accounts
•Individual
Retirement Account
(IRA'S)

Recognized

. •Certificates
of D.eposit (CD'S)

• Assigned by the Ohio
Supreme Court to hear cases In
four other counties - a
distinction given only to judges
of proven ability

.

licensed driver within the state he or she resides. The entrant

cannot be an employee of Dairy Isle Corporation or a Dairy Isle
Franchite, or any or its advertisina asencies. Void where
prohibited by taw.
Drawing of the Orand Prize winner will be made June J6, 1988.
fl'llnchilea will be inronned oft he Grand Prize winner by Junt ~0 .1

McCLURE'S
3 IN ONE
PO.IOY, OHIO

McCLURE'S
DAIRY ISLE

were in effect foreaster n Tennessee and mu ch of India na.

ffisHOWERS
rmsNOW
BRAIN
.
.
Static . . Occluded
FRONTS : "
Warm 'ft'Cold

f.

To be oliJ;ible to win the Grand Prize the entrant must be a

1982 Chevy Cavalier ...................... SJ195

'

j'

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE - ..2.5776

SEVERAL CHEAPIES TO CHOOSE FROM

1982 Ford Escort Wagon ............... s1195

~

OPEN DAllY 9-5-SIINDAY 1-5

Entrie1 to thil Sweepstakes will be accepted by ' participating
Dairy Isle Franchise• from May I to May 31, t 988.

4 spd. Runs good

1

COMPlETE liNE OF VEGETABLE l
&amp; BEDDING PLANTS AND
j
1
GERANIUMS NOW IEADY.
•
•
HANGING BASKETS, AZAlEAS,
. FRUIT TREES &amp; SHRUBIERY

1982 BUICK REGAL .......................... 52495

4 dr. wagon. Good condition.

·ODOT plans truck roadeo event

j

'

4 dr .. auto., PS. Air. Good condition.

1979 BUICK PARK AVE.. ..... ~.~:; ....... S1695
1983 DODGE ARIES ..................... :.~.$2195

The driver, William Weaver, 20, Middleport, was alrllfted by
Healthnet to the Charleston Area Medical Cenll!r,Charleston,
W.Va. A passenger, Matthew Weaver, IS, Columbus, was
airlifted by Lllefllght to Grant Hospital, Columbus. Both are
listed In serious condition.
Troopers said Weaver's car wentolfthe road, striking a tree.
Damage was heavy. The accident is still under Investigation.
Anotjler Meigs County accident occurred at 5:45 p.m .
Thurs(lay In Chester Twp., on Wood Road, just east of CR. 25.
The patrol said Jeremy J. Lawrence, 17, Pomeroy, lost controL
His car went off the road, hit an embankment and overturned
onto Its top. Damage was heavy. Lawrence was cited lor failure ·
to maintain control.
The patrol Investigated a car-deer accident at 6:44 p.m . ·
Thursday In Ru !land Twp., on CR 5 just north of SR I24.
Troopers said a pickup truck driven by Steven L. Stewart, 29,
Middleport, struck and killed a deer. No one was Injured.

I
•
:

.

~

.
1

1988 COLLECfOR CAR

•

Two men were seriously Injured in an accident at 12:25 a .m.
Friday In Meigs County , according to the State Highway Patrol.
The accldept occurred on CR 5, four-tenths of a mOe east of SR.

!

OFFICIAL ENTRY FORM

•
pr1ng

Two injured in Meigs accident

•

reached on an e rror by shortstop !'
Quinones, took se cond on a walk '
and moved to third on a wild ;
pitch . Bell scored on Julio ;
Franco's sacrifice fly .
,
"Campbell was hot (bu I) It :
looked like the error unnerved •
•
him, " said Williams. "He started 1
aiming the ball. But other than !
one bad Inning three starts ago, ,
he's pitched excellent."
:
Cleveland committed two 1
base-running blunders. Brook
Jacoby ran through thlrd·base •
coachJohnnyGoryl'sstopsignln :
the second and was thrown out •
trying to score by left llelder
Kingery.
J
"That was a mixup," said
Cleveland manager Doc Ed·
wards . ''John wan ted to hold him :
up, but made the decision too •
late. Brook was almost past John
when his arms went up. These
things happen ."
·
In . the filth, Pat Tabler was ~
doubled off second tiy Seattle •
catcherDaveValleafterJayBell :
~
popped out trying to bunt.
Indians left fielder Mel Hall
missed the game with a bruised
right foot. He Is expected to play
this weekend .
Seattle begins a three-game
series In Detroit tonight while
Oakland visits Cleveland lor a
three-game set starting tonight,
The Athletics will start Steve
Ontiveros (1-1, 6.75ERA) against
the Indians' Scott Bailes (1-2,

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

s

Th-. C1&gt;mmuni1y Ownrd Bonk

Decisive

POMEROY
992-2136
992.2137

• Has kept justice moving;.
deciding cases which protected
local mining jobs, sentor
ci~ens and our schools

FB

.Faiil'el&amp;

Bank

TUPPERS PLAINS
915-3315
667-3161

111~

SI1!P -'HI:AO

.MNK

Patd for by the Commtllleo ID
'
Jam•

IOOOnat!t.,W" 1

~011

.a7e0;

Member FDIC

Wr'vr Crown Rrrauoc W" llave
Othen To Grow

MIDDLEPOn, OHIO

...

'

•

�Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Frida~April29,1988

. Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

By The Bend
and Church
{u,j

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

-\t] Veterans
Memorial Hospital
115 E. Memonol Dr.
992-2104

~~~~! r~1
992 2955

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING
WITH BARGAINS

Pomeroy

p,,,,g Fl6w, Shop

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
SERVICES

I

214 E. Mam
992·5130 Pomeroy

992-2156

,. MEIGS TIRE
\ \ CENTER, INC.

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
ot columbus. 0
801Q W Matn
992· 2318 Pomeroy

GrocenesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949-2550

P rescnpttons

Pomeroy

Nat1onw1d,e Ins. Co.

_Ru.&lt;ilinesses Listed On This
TEAfOitD

ft.\\
\iii.,
1

THE LORD'S CREATIJRES SHOULD
BE TREATED WITH KINDNESS

Pomerov

Of course }QU have taught your childen manners;
to honor all adults and particularly older people,
the poor and the handicapped. However, an
extension of this training should include kindness
to 1Ulimals; not only for their own sake, but as part
of your children's attitude tow.u"d all living
creatures, human or otherwise. Moreover, they
should make no distinction betWeen wild animals
and the family pets. Hthey are inclined 10 chase
lizards and tease or abuse the dog when you are
not looking, you should put a stop to it. Their
habits of a lifetime are being formed right now, and
the most important one is the acceptance of the
responsibility that God gave us, which is described
in various ways throughout the Bible and
reinforced at your House of Worship: 10 show Love
and respect for all of the creatures that He put
here on this earth.

'

992-3978

miNm' CHURCH, Reo. John Iliff. pastor,

1'

•
'
0
~
•
•
'

School 9 1!) &lt;t m.. Worship Servtce 10 :D a m
Choir rehearsal Thesday, 7.:ll p.m. Wkier dl
rectkm or LLils Bun.
POMEROY CHURCH OF 1liE NAlA
RENE, Comer Union and Mulberry, Rev
Thomas Glen McClung, pastOJ Norman Pres
lt:oy. S S. Supt. Sunday Sctml, 9::ll a m :
momln~ worship 10: lJ a..m , evening service 6
p m mld-~eek service, Wedn(.osday, 7 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH, :ll6 E
Maln St , Pomeroy SuOOay services Holy
communion on the first Sunday or each monUt,
and romblned with morning prayer on the
third Sunday. Morning prayer and scrmoo on
all other Sundays of the month Chureh School
and Nursery care provtded. O:lffee hour In the
Paris h Hall lmrnedla tely fo~ the service.
POMEROY CHURCil OF CIIRJST, 212 W
Main Sr , Leo Lash, PJangellst Bible SChool
9. l&gt;&lt;Jm .. MornlngworStdp,lO::J&gt;am .. Youth
mcetlng'i, 6 00 p m : Evening worship. 7 00 p
m Wednesday night praye-r meeting and B1ble
study 7 OOpm
THE SALVATION ARMY, 115 Butternut
Ave , Pomeroy Mrs Dora Wlnlng In chargt&gt;
SUrda.y 00Unt!'S5 meeting, 10 am.; Sunday
, School, 10 lJ a m SJOOay School. YPSM
Elol.st&gt; Adams, leader 7•]) p m Salvation
mt'.'('tlng, various speakers aOO music sp:!dals
Thursday, U.]) am. to 2 p.m. Ladies Home
.LeaJ(UE', members In charge, au women
tnvtted, 6 4..'1 p m Thursday, Corps Cadet
•CIU$,-, {Young People-Bible) 7.l) p m Bible
Study and Prayf'f meeting. cpen to th(&gt; public
POMEROY WESTSJDE CHURCI! OF
CHFUST. 33226Chlldren'::; Home Road {CoUllty
Road 76) . !J32.5Zfl VocaJ music. Sunday Worship lOa m , Bible Study 1J a m ; Worship 6 p
m. Wednesday, Blbk.&gt; Study. 7 p m
Oill DEXI'ER BIBLE ClfRISl'IAN
CHUROI, AMn CUrtls, pastor, Unda Swan,
Supt SuOOay School 9 3::&gt; a m , preaching ser
vlt'l'S. first and third &amp;!May followin~ Sunday
SChool Youth meeting, 7 J) p m E'Very Sunday
GRA HAM
UN I TED METHODIST,
Pt r.~r hinl'! 9 ,!0 .1 m fit st i:lmt sPrond ~ un
tla vs of C'ach mont h, third and ruurth Sun
dav ('ach month wot o;h!p $t' f VIC&lt;'" at 7 30p
m : W f'dnf'~dav rvf'nlng~ at 7 JO p m
Pt.IV{•r and BIIJlp Stud v
SF.VEN TII UA Y AOVE:NTJS'J, Mul
l&gt;f't i'V Hrlglm R oad Potnl'I'OV Pa s tm
.John S~t'i~o.~tt. Sabba th School SupPrin
lf'ncl('nl Darline St('w.ut ~ab ba l h SL·hpoJ
bC'j.:"ln!o Jl 2 p m on Sa tu rda y .1fiC'rnoon
with wors htp sf'n' ICf' followi ng at 3 15 p m
'E\'&lt;'1 vom• "C"lcom£&gt;
RUTLAND FIRST BA PTISl CHURCH
- Sis tC' I ll atrlf'tl Wm nC'r , Supt Sundav
St hool 9 10 o m , M orm n~ Worshtp. 10 &lt;15
·' m

POMEROY FIR ~ T 13APTlST, l..vs lon .
H.11l f'V . mlnl sl('l
Sa turd.1 v C'Vc ni n~
• •v.m~t'li !o.I)C SNV IC'('"t OjX' n 10 public, 7 p,
m ~un da y Church Sc hoo l 9 311 a m .
-.f\.1nrnin g Wm shtp UJ 30 a m
F IRST SOUTHEHN BAP1'1ST. Po
m et'O \' Plkf' E Lam.1t 0 B r vo~n l , pa.!ttor,
Jat•k !'IC'rd s Sunda v SchoCII Dit·N' Ior Sun
da\ Schoo l. 9 30 a.m .. Morn ing Wo rs hip
1p 45 {'H'nln~ "-oro;:hJp 7 UO p m. (0 S.T 1
8. i .\0 1 E S 1' ) \'VNln ~dav Prayl'r St•r
vkt•,700 pm 1DST r&amp;7· 30P.M 1E~
T 1. M1 s o:.fon Frtl'ncts laJt(&gt;S 2·61 Ro'!'.tl
~m h:J ssa dorc; 1bovs 3~ro;: li lR I ,tnd Girl"
in At tlon I.J ~ t'~ 6-l t'l un Wf't'in('sdav s 7 p
In !D S I' l &amp;7 . ~Op.m (ES T ), Tu l•st.lo.iv
\' h i1!1110n 6 :\1) p m
F' A!TH TARERN 1\ CLE CHURCH Sal
/(' \ Run Hoad H('v E mmf'1\ Raw son pus
101 Hand l('V Dunn .. upl .Sund av .Sc hool,

lO u m.. ~un d .lvrw• nlngsf'l\'1('(' 7·30p m

._ Rl bl r l!'at hmg i 1f1 p m Thur sda\.
SV HACUS I- MISSION, Ch&lt;'rry S! Sv
r~r u sr Srrvlcf'~ lOam Su nd uv Evr ntng
"l' l \

m

tL't•s Sunll.•v a nd Wr'ilm•sd ll\' ut7·00 p

!\IIODL EPORT CHURCH OF CHRISr
II\ C'HRI STlAN U!\' rON Owij:: hl H;llf''
, ll rSl C&gt;l df'r , w.~ndJ Mohlf'r , Sundav School
' Sup! Su ndav "ichool ~I. JI) J m, M01n inJ;!
• Wot'!ohlp 10 :ID 11 m Evf'nlng Wm ship 7· l)
p.m WnlnC'~dav pr ,r y(•r nll'f'tln,~:;i :lflpm
,
M I' MOR IAH CHURC H OF GOD.
~· Racl nr Rrv .luml")l Sanrr·flr ld pa .. tor
~ Fn•,•nwn W\ll l.tm::;. Sup! Sunda v S r M ol,
~ 9 4!'i am. Su nd av (Jfld Wt'&lt;lnt•sd,I,Y £'V('rJ
I n ~ 'i4'rv\C'('S 7 p m

!

~

MIDDLE PORT

FIRST

RAPTIST

CornN Slxt h .tnrl Pa lm('r. .lamC'N SL'(idon
f:dna Wll "on, S !i Sup l Calhv
,., RIJ!g::.. i\1':-. 1 Supt Sumluv S(' hool, 9 1~ a
:. m . Morn ins:! Worship, 10 15 u m. Sunduv
•' EV(' nlng "&lt;'r\'IC(' 7 p m PravC'r ffi EX&gt;II n2
,. ami Blbk St ud v Wf'dnf'sday ('Vf'ntng 7 p
.-• m .. ChildJ'('n 's rhotr pr.tC 11 Cf', W('() m.' s
;: da~ 7 p m · Adull chOi r prarlic£1, W(\f . ~
~p m .. Radio ptO~ I iJ m , WMPO, Sunda~ .
1•8. 30am
::
MIDDL EPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
, 5th and Mai n, 1\1 Hart son minis ter ,
r Richard DuBose, Associate Pastor, Mike
~ Gc t lnch Su nd ay Sc hool Superintendent
"" Bible Sch0ol 9. 30 a .m ; Morning Worsh ip
~ 10 30 a. m Evt:! n ln~ Worship 7:00 p m
,.. Wt:!dn ~day, 7•00 p m Prayer meeting
i"
MIDDLEPORT CHURC H OF TH E NA·
t* ZARENE. PASTOR F rt&gt;d Pcnhorwood
·: Bill White, Sunday Sc hool Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m : Mo r ning Worship 10 45
~ a . m., E vangelistic meeting 7•00 p m
Wednesday, 7 00 p m. Pra)er meetin g
• UNITE D PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
- · ChariiO Tlllboll
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
C HURCH - Sunday· Worship Servlct'S
9 00 a m.: Churc h School 10. 15 a m ..
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN Su nday Sc hool, 9 a .m : Ckurch service,
1
10: t 5am .
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
TERlAN - Sunda y School, JO a .m ..
C hu rch s~:~rv ire , 11 · 1~ a m.
,
RUTLAND CllURCH OF GOD , Pasror
.. John Eva ns. Sunday Schoa 10: 00 a .m ..
Sunday Morni ng Worship 11 00 a m Chll· •
dren 's Cbu rr. h 11 a.m Su nd ay Evening
Service 7 00 p.m. Wed., 6 P&lt;m. Young La

t

, P us lor

..

/

dies' Aux1lla ry Wednesd ay, 7 p m Fam·
lly Worship
HAZE L COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rt 124, 3 mil es from P ortland-Long Bot·
tom Edsel Hart, pastor Sunda y School,
9 30 a m SundD Y morning preaching
10.30 a.m , Su nd ay evening services, 7 30
pm
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Cor ner Ash a nd Plum Noel
Her rmann, p;tstor Su nday Sc hool lO: OO a
m , Morn ing Wors hip, U · OO a m ., Wed
nt'Sday and Sat urday Evenin g Services at
7.30 p m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archer
RetJ . Roy Deeter
Rev. Carl HieD
ftev_ Seldon lohnaon

ALFRED - Church School 9 30 a. m .,
Wors hip, 11 a .m , UMYF 6· 30 p m . UMW
Third Tuesday, 7 30 p.m Comnlunlon,
flrst Sunday I Archer)
CHESTER - Wor ship 9 a m ; Church
SchoollO a m , Bible Study, Thursday, 7p.
m , UMW, flflll Thursday, 1 p.m ), Communion. fir st Sund ay I Archer)
JOP PA - Worship 9 30 a.m, Church
SchoollO· 30 a m Bible Study We&lt;lnesd ay ,
7, 30 p.m (Johnson)
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9: 30
am; Worship 10: 30 a m., Bible St udy,
Wednesday. 1· 30 p.m : UMY F Wednes·
day, 6 00 p m .. Comrry.mlon First Sunda y
of Month /Hic ks )
REEDSVILLE - Church School9.30 a.
m , Worship Se rvice 11:00 a m . ( ~ler )
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL Church School 9 a m Worship 10 a.m ..
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7· 30 p m ., Comm union First Sunday (Arche-r).
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Re\1 , Kandy Bureh
Kflv. MeltJln Franllln
Rev. Clemen&amp;e S. Zualaa. Jr.
Rev Robert Muuman
Rev. Don Meadows
ASBURY (Syrac use) - Wors hip 11 a m.
, Ch urch School 9· 45 a m ; Charge Bll)le
Study , Wednesday. 7 30 p m ; UMW, fi rst
Tuesday, 1 30 p m • Choir Rehearsal,
Wednesd ay 6 30 p m , lBurch)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m .,
Churc h Sc hool 10 a.m ., Bible St udy, Tuesday, 7 00 p m UMW, E'trst Monda y, 7: 30
p.m , UMYF Su nday , 6 p.m Choir Re·
hearsai, Childre n's at 6. 3t') p.m Adult fol
low in g, Wed nesday (Franklin )
FLATWOODS- Chur ch School , 10a m.
, Worship, 11 a m .. Bible Study, Thurs day, 7 p.m, UMYF , Sunday , 6 p m
(Franklin )
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m .,
Church School 10 A.M Choir prarttce,
Thursday, 6 30 p m ; UMW third Monday
&lt;Burc h) m . (Surch )
HEATH (Middleport) - Church School,
9 30 a m : Morning Worship 10: 30 a m .;
Yout h G!'Oup , 4 p m . Wed nesday, Bible
st ud,y 6. 00 p.m. Choir rehearsal?· 00 p m
(Zuniga )
MlNERSVI LLE - Church Sc hool 9: 00
a m , Worship service 1Q 00 a m ; UMW
ihlrd Wednesda y, 1 p m (Burch )
PEARL CHAPEL - Wors hip Service
9 30 a m.. Church School 10 15 a m
(Mussman)
POMEROY -Church School, 9 15 a.m
, Wors hip 10. 30 a m , Choir rehearsal
Wednesda} , 7. 30 p.m , UMW, second
Tuesday, 7 30 p m., UMYFSunday , 6p .m
(Meadows)
ROC K SPRINGS- Church SchOOl, 9 1~
a m , Worship 10 a .m , Bible Study, Wt&gt;d·
nesday , 7·30 p m, UMYF (Seniors) , Sunday, 6 p.m. , (Juniors) ev(&gt;ry othe-r Sun·
day, 6 p.m. ( F ranklin~
RUTLAND - Church School. 10 a m.;
Wors hip , 11 ~ m ; UMW First Monday,
7. 30 p.m IMussmanJ
SALEM CE NTER- Church &amp; hool9. 15
a .m .: Wors hip 10· 15 p.m ( Mussman) 1
SNOWVILLE - Worship, 9: 00 am.;
chu rc h school 9: 45 a.m. I Mussman)
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev . Deb I Foster
Rev. Ro1er Grace
APPLE GROVE - Church School 9: 30
a.m. Worship, 10 00 a m (ltrst and third
Sundays): Bible study every Sunday 6 p.
m , UMW Second Tuesday, 7: 00 p.m ,
Prayer meeting, Wednesday, 6 p.m.
(Grace)
BETHANY - Wors hip. 9 a m .; Church
Sc hoo l, 10 a m.: Bible St udy, Wednesday,
10 a m . Dorcas Women's Fellowship,
Wednesday, 11 a m. (Foster) .
CARME L - Church School 9: 30 a.m.,
Worship, 10:45 a .m. Second and Fourth
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Sutton
third Thursday, 6:30p.m (Foster).
MORNING STAR - Church School 9. 4~
a m , Worship 10:30 a .m.; Bible Study
Thu~~· 7: XI p.m (Foster)
'
S
N - Church School, 9: 30 a m.,
Morning Worship 10, 45a.m first and third
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Carmel
lhlrd Thursday, 6·Xt p.m (Foster) .
EAST LETART - Church School 9 a .m. ;
Worship 10 a m, second and lourth Sun.
days, UMW first Tuesday, 7 ~ p.m .
(G race),
LETART FALLS - Wonhtp 9 a m.;
Church School10 am. (Grace) .
RACINE- Church School, 10 a .m ; War.
ship ll am.; UMW fourth Monday at 7• :.)p,
m , Men's Prayer Breaktut, Wednesday, 8
a .m . (Grace) .

KENO CHURCH OF' CHRIST Vernon
E ldridge, minister, Oliver Swatn', Sunday
School Supt . Preaching 9: 3Q a.m . each
Sundav

106 lutttrnut .bt, Pomeroy, Oh.

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, 011.

~ !!! ~

John F Fultz, Mgr
Pn 991 HOI

RACINE PLANING MILL .

Drbble Buck, Sunday School Supt ChUl"l'h

16141992·2039 or
1614)992-5721

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION, Everett
Delaney, pastor Sunday se-rvice, 9 30 a
m ; evening serv ice 7.00 p.m . Pra yer
meeting, Wednesday, 7·00 p m
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CllURCH OF'
CHRIST, Joseph B Hoskins, pastor. Bible
Class, 9· 30 a m; MorningWorship10 . 30a.
m.: Evening Worship, 6:30p.m Thursday
Bibl e Study, 6 30 p.m
ZION CHURCH OF' CHRIST, Pomeroy.
Har rlllonvllle Rd. Robert Pur1ell, minis·
ter, Steve Stanley, S. S. Supt .. BUI McEI·
roy, Asst. Sup! ; Sunday School9 30 a m.;
Worship service10 30 am; Evening worship Sunday7 p.m. and Wednesday, 7p m
ST JOliN LUTilERANCHURCII, Pine
Grove Th e Rev William Middleswar th,
pastor. Church service 9 30 a.m , Sunday
SchoollO :l) a.m.
BRADBURY CHURCll OF' CIIRIST,
John Wright , pastor. Sunday School9· 30 a
m .; Larry Haynes, S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m
RACINE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE , Rev ' LloydD. Grimm, Jr .. pastor
Ora Bass , Chairman oft he Board otChrls·
tlan Life Sunday School 9· ll a m ; Morn·
tng worship 10.30 a.m.; evangellstlc ser
vice 7•00 p m Wednesday service, 7 p.m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CllURCH, O.xter. Woody Call, past or. Servi('('S Sunday
10 a.m and 7 p.m . Wednesday, 7 p m .
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CllURCH,
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday School9•30 a.
m ; morning worship 10:30 am Sunday
evening sen• ICf&gt; 7 p m .

H!&lt;MLOCK &lt;.:HOVE CHRISTIAN, Rog·
er Watson, pastor. Crenson Pratt , Sunday
School Sup1 Morning Worship 9, 30 a .m.;
Sunday School 10:30 a m; Evening service, 7.XI p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shue,
pastor, Joe Sayre, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School 9: !&amp;!I a.m : Evening worship 6. 30 p.m.; Prayer Meeting , 6· 30 p m
Wedn~ay .

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCil OF
CHRIST. Dave Prentice, minister. Deryl
Wells, Supt Church School 9 a.m.; Wcr.
ship Service, 9: 45 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE . Rev. Herbert Grate, pastor.
Frank Riffle, supt Sunday School 9. 30 a .
m ., Worship service, 11 a .m and 7 p m.
Sunday. Wednesday, 7 p.m . Prayer meet ·
lng
1
LAUREL CLIFF FREE MET!!ODIST
CHURCH . David Bell. pastor Robert E.
Barton, Diredor of Chri1Uan Education;
Steve Eblin, assistant. Sunday School 9. 30
a .m , Morning worship 10•30 a .m.; Teens
In Action, 6 p.m ., Evening Worship, 7: 00 p
m. Wednesday ~venlng prayer and Bible
study, 7.OOp.m . Choir practice, Thursday,
7 pm
DEXTER CHURCil OF CHRIST.
Charles Rusaell Sr , minister. Rick Ma·
comber, supt , Sunday School 9: JO a Jfl.:
Wol'lhlp
10 30 a.m. Bible study,
CHURCH OF JESUS
DAY SAINTS. Port ·
ianil~iiacl.ie Road. Mltce Duhl, pastor;
Janice Danner. church school dtrector.
Church school9 JOa.m ,; Morning worship
10· 30 a m.; Wednesday evening prayer
services , 7 30 p.m .
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
Shuler, pastor. Worship service, 9. 30 a m.
Sunday School tO· 30 a .m . Bible Study and
prayer servtce Thuraday, 7· 30 p.m
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION AL CHURCH, Klnpbury Road. Rev.
Clyde W. Henderson, pastor Sunday
School 9, 30 a .m .; Rlrlph Carl, Supt. Even
ing worship , 7: 00 p m Prayer meeting,
Wednesday 7: 00p.m.
LONG BO'ITOM CHRISTIAN, Vemon
Eldridge, pea tor; Wallace Damewood, S.
S. Supt. Sunday School 9: 30a.m., Wonhlp
Serv1ce,l0. 30 a.m.
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Put« Mike Swller, Sunday
School Supt.; Sunday SchoOl 9 :J) a .m .;
Mornlna worship 10:60 am.; Sunday
evening wonhip 7.30 p.m.; Wednesday
evenlne Bible 11udy 7::1) p.m.
IIURLINGHAM COMMUNliY CHURCH,
Burllnllltam. Roy Loucllrntln. putor; Robert Car.an, . .lltant pallcr. Sundll\l School
10 a.m.: wcnlm 7 p.m.: We&amp;ladi\Y, 6 p.m.
youth IMlllnll: Wed., 7 p.m. cll&amp;n:h '"""""·
PINE GROVE HOliNESS CHURCH, \1
mlleo11Rt.325. Rev. Boa J. Walls, put..Robert Searla, s.s. Supl. SuDday School
9. 30 a.m : Mornlq Wonblp 10: 30 am.:
Sunday t"Vealna sS"Yice 7::13 p m .; Wednelday Jervlce, 7:30p. m.
SILVER RUN BAPI'IST, BUI UIUe,
putor. Steve Little. S. S. Supt Sunday
SchoollO a.m.; Mornlna wrnlp, 11 a .m .:
SundoyovenlniWCI'IWe7:30 p.m. Prayer
meetlna and Blbleslu WednMday, 7:~
p.m. , Youtb meetlq: edru•day at 7p.m
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIBT CHURCH
- 383 N 2ltd A••· · Mlddloport. Sunday
School tO a.m Sunday eventa11:00 p,m .;
Mid-week lfi"Yice. Wed., 7 p m.
Deav~,

LANGSVILL E CllRISTIAN CllURCH ,
Sunday School 9·30 am ; Da llas Janey,
s upt .. Mor ning worship 10 ·30 a m : Sun
day evening service. 7.30 p m., Wednt!i
day evening service, 1 30 p m.
SYRACUSE CHURCll OF THE NA·
ZARENE . Rev Glenn McMillan. pastmMary Janice Lavender, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9•30 am.; Morning
worship 10. :11 a .m., Evangelistic service,
6p m; Prayer andPralseWednesday, 7p
m , Youth meeting, 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake. past or. Sunday
School 10 a m ; Gary Reed, Lay leader
Morning sermcm, 11 a.m , Sunday night
services: Christian Endeavor 7,30 p.m ..
Song service 8 p m Preachina 8 :JJ p m
Mid·week prayer meettng, Wednl'!'lday, 7
pm
llYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH.
0 H Cart, pastor SundaySchoolat9:30a
m., Morning worship at 10· 30 a m : Sundayeveningservlcea t 7.30p.m Thur5day
services at 7:30p.m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, located on County Road 31. Rev
Lawrence Gluesencamp, pastor. Rev
Roger Willford, asst. pastor. ~reaching
services Sunda y 7, 30 p.m. Prayer meeting
Wednesday, 1· 30 p m, Gary Grlfflth,
leader. Youth groups Sunday ev~ntng at
6:30p.m. wlth Roger and VIolet Willford,
leaders Communion service first Sunday
each month
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CllURCH·- CoolvllleR;). Rev PhtlllpRI
" denour, pastor Sunday School9.30 a .m . ;
worship servtct" 10:30 a m.: Bible study
and worship serv ice, Wednesday, 7 p.m .
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Bill Carter, pastor Sunday School9 30 a
m.. Morning Worship and Communion
!0:30am
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
Tillis, pastor. Sonny Hudsr:m, supt. Sunday
School 9 30 a m., Morning worship, 10. 30
a m.; Sunday evening service 7:00 p m.
Wednesday service 7 p m WMPO program 9 a m. each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCil OF THE NAZA·
RENE . samuel Basye, pastor Sunday
School9; 30 a.m , Wcrshlp servtce 10·30a .
m .: Young people's serv ice 6 p m .
Evangelis tic servlce6: 30 p.m. Wednesday
servlcP 7 p.m.
MASON CllURCII OF CHRIST. Miller
St., Mas(JI, W Va Sunday Bibl e Study 10
a .m.: Worshlplla m. and7p m Wednesday Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p m .
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dudding lane, Mason, w Va. J N Thacker,
pastcr. Evening service 7 30 p m. ; Women's Ministry, Thursday, 9:30 a .m.,
Wednesday Prayer a nd Bible Study, 7:15
pm.

HARTF'ORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartford, W Va
Rev David McManis, pas tor Olurt:'h
Schad 9 30 a m ; Sunday morning ser·
vice, l1 a .m. ; Sunday evening serVIce,
7: 30pm Wednesday prayer meeting, 7· 30
p.m
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CllURCH, Letarl ,
W Va , Rt. 1, James Lewis, pastor WDr
ship ,gervlce5 9· 30 a m , Sunday School]]
a.m , Evening worship 7•30 p.m Tuesd8y
cottage prayer meeting and Bible S1udy
9· 30 am; Wonhlp service, Wednesday
7: 30p.m.
OUR SAVIOUR LUT!IERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswocd, W.
Va The Rev George C. Wetrlck, pastor.
Sunday SChad 9:30am; Sunday worship
llam
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCil, h&gt;ealed on
Pomeroy Pike, Counly Road 25 near Flat·
woods, Rev. Blackwood, pasl&lt;r. Servttes.
on Sunday at 10:30a m. and 7:30p.m . wllh
SundoySchool9:30a m BlbleStudy,Wecl·
net4ay , 7 30 p.m .
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, Sl Rt. 3.18, AnllquHy Rev.
Franklin Dickens, puler Sunday mom·
Ina 10 am.; Sunday evenlltll 7: 30 p.m.
Thui'IISay eventDg7:30 p.m
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHURCH. Inc .. ~ Pearl Sl Rev.
Ivan Myers, lctlnJpeJt«; Ro&amp;a"Manley.
Sr , Sunday School Suporlnlettdftlt. Sun·
day School 9: 30 a.m; Mornln.l wonhlp
10: 30 a.m ; ev•nllll wonlllp 1i 30 p.rn ,
Wednead•y evnlna Bible study, prayer
and praile se-rvice, 7· 30 p m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APQS.
TOLIC- VonZandt and Want Rd. Elder
Jam01 Miller, putcr. Sunday School,
10:30 a .m.; Wonltlp Servl..,, Sunday, 7: 30
p.m .; Btble!lludy, Wednooclay, 7:30p.m .
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, HarrtsmvUie Road. Rev . Dewey Klna. pa1tor;
Cllnlm Foulk, Sunday SchoGI Supt.: Sun·
daySchool9:30o.m; momlnrworlltlp, ll
a .m.; SUnday eYentnc wrvlce 7: 30 p m .
Pra)'t!r M•elllt.l, Wedneotlay, 7:30p.m.
SYRACUSE FIRSTCHUIICH OF GOD.
n(ll·Penlecoatal. Wor.. lp service Sunday
10 a.m ; Sunday Schocj 11 a m. Evening
wonhJp .ervltf 7·00 p m . Wednesday

•

....... • 992-2975

Rawlings-Coats-Blower
FUNERAL HOW
"Serving Families"
264 S. 2nd, Middleport

992-5141

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
MT HERM ON UN ITED BRETilREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Community off Ct Rt 82 Rev Rober.t
Sanders, pastor Jeff Holt er, Ja:,. lead er.
Ed Rou s h. Sunday School Supt S\l nda y
School 9 30 a m , mornin g worship and
chlldrM' s chur ch 10 30 am . evenin g
preach'i~ g servlct' first three- Sun days,
7 30 p "fl\.; Special service four th Sunda y
evenin g, 7 30 p m , Wednesday Prayer
Meeting. B1ble Study and Youth F'ellow·
ship, 7:30p.m
CHU RCil OF GOD OF' PROBHECY .
Located on 0 . J Whit e Ro ad of Highway
160 Pat Henson. pas tor Sunday School 'tO
a m Classes for a ll ages. Junio r Church 11
a m.; Mor nin g wors hip 11 a.m Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m. Su nday Young People's, ChlldrE11's Church and Adult Blbi P
Study, Wednesday al 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAP EL , 570 Gran1
St, Middleport . Af!lliated wl1h Southern
Baptist Convention David Bryan, Sr , MI nis ter Sunday SchOol 10 a m , Morning
worship 11 a .m , Evening worship 7 p m ,
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer meet lng 7 p m.
_
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, S1
Rt 124 and Co Rd . 5. MarkSe evers. mlnis
tcr. Sunday School Supt Harry Hen·
drlcks, Sunday Schoo1 9: 30 a .m.; Morning
Worship 10 30 am., Evenlngworshlp7 . 30
p m Wednesda y wors hip 7 p m
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCil .
Corner Sycamore and Seco nd Sts .. Pomeroy The Rev Willi a m Mlddl es wart.
pastor Sunday School 9·45 am . Chu rch
service 11 a m
SACRED
llEART CllURCH, Msgr.
Anthony Glannamore Ph 992·5898 Satur·
day Evening MaS!i 7 30 p m , Sunday
Mass, 8 a rn a nd 10 a. m Confessio ns on'e
half hour before each Mass CCD cl~ses,
11 a m. Sunday.
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N. 2nd St..
Mlddl€por1 J am es E Keesee pastor.
Sunday morning wors hip 10 a m ; Ev(' n·
lng service 7 p.m , Wednes day evening
worship 7 p m VIs itat io n Thursday 6. 30 p
m
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCil: David
Curfman, past or Sunday School.lO a.m .
worship serviCf' 1l a m ; sunaay night
worship service 7·30 p m : Mtd~·ee k
pr ayer serv ice Wednesday 7 p.m
WESLEY AN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH o f Middlepm1 , ln c., 75 Pearl St.,
Rev Ivan Mvers. past or; Roger Ma nley ,
Sr , Sunday School Supt. Sundav School
9· 30 a.m : Morn ing Wors hip 10 30 ~.m .,
Evening Wors hip 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
eve nin g Bibl e st udv, prayer ;;~nd praise
service, 7:30pm
LIVING WORD CHESTER CllURCH
OF' GOD- Plllrrt Spencer. pastor Sun
da~ School 9. ll a .m .: Morning service
11} OOa m; Su ndayevenln gservlce7 OOp.
m; Mid-week pra yer serv ice Wednesday
7p.m
MT OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN ·
ITY CHURCH , Lawrence Bush, pMtor
Max F'olmer, Sr .. S. S Supt . Sunday School
9 30 a .m, Sunday evening service, 7.30
m ; Wednesday evening Blbl~ study and
praise service, 7· :rJ p m.
UNITED F'AITH CllURCil, Rl. 7 on Po
meroy By-Pass. Rev David Wiseman, Sr ,
pastor Melvin Drake, S S. Supt Sunday
School9 .30 a .m .; Mor ning Wors hip 10.30,
Eventna Worship 7 JO p m ; Wednesday

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL HONOR l'oung, Wes ley Young.
ROLL
So phomores: Nancy Baker,
The fourth six weeks period
Melanie Beegle, Cary Betzlng,
honor roll at the Meigs High
Hank Clela nd , Eddie Crooks,
I
School
has
been
announced
Lisa
Darst, Wally Hatfield, Jay
•
Ma king a grade of B or above In
Humphreys, Daniel Ken nedy,
all their subjects to be named to
Rebecca Ker r, Kristin King,
the roll were:
Robert Lambert, Tammy LamSeniors: Margie Baker, Ml·
bert, Rebecca Napper, Roberta
•
chael
Bartrum,
David
Beegle,
Napper, Kim Parsons , Melissa
•
Dreama Bentz, Brent Bissell,
••
Perrine, Jim Rey nold s, Tracie
Cathy Blessing, Marybet h
I'
Richmond, Homer Welsh.
;
Brewer, Bill Brothers. Pete
Freshmen: Randy Corsi, KimBurnem. Kimberly Calvert, John
berly Ewing, Pam Haggy , Resa
Carl, Melissa Clay, Sherry
Har ris. Eric Heck, Cathy Lam·
Cooper. Jerry Derenberger, Jon- bert. Ma ry Morton. Missy Nel·
athan Dunn, Wendy Fry, Lisa
son, Je nnifer Peyton, Stacey
Frymyer, Paula Gilkey, Char·
Shank, Aaron Sheets, Kristen
lotte Hart , Oeeanna Henderson.
Slawter, Jason Smith, Joseph
Orville Hill, Audra Houdashelt, Smith, Jennifer Taylor, Amy
Mikkl Hupp, Teresa Johnson.
Wagner, Stephanie Walker , Amy
Dena Manley , Kevin McGuire,
Warlh, Jennl Werry , Darcl
Brad Little, Scott Oberholzer,
Wolfe.
Joe Parker, Donlta Pooler, Tina
I
Riffle, Amy Roush, Laurie
OHIO VALLEY CHRISTIAN
Shenefield, John Sisson, Angle SCHOOL HONOR ROLL
Sloan, David Smith, Kelly
The fifth six weeks grading
Thompson , Sandy Van Cooney,
period honor roll at lhe Ohio
James Warner , Darrln Warth.
Valley Chr istian School has been
Juniors: Ronnie Bachtel, Chris a nnounced Making a grade of B
Bass, Henry Buchanan. Char- or above in al llheir subj ects to be
lene Cadle , Melodl Carl. Lesley
named to the roll were:
Carr,
Chad
Carson,
Shannon
First Grade: Rebecca Birch•
Coates, Patricia Davis, Jason field, Amanda Blank, Alan Ha HELP - The Middleport Chamber of Comhas been set lor May 2 The new theatrical group
Dodson, Leah Doidge, David ley, Lacy Hamm , Dan! Jenks,
merce Is provldln1 encoura1ement to the new
hopes to do lour productions a year as well as
Edmonds, Carolyn Elam, Beth Amanda Kohlhoff, Nalalle Pyles,
local theater IJ'OUp, The Legion Players, by
children's theater this summer. &amp;b Freed,
Ewing, Terry Fields, Stacey Bethany Simmons, Daniel Size·
coatrlbuUng money to pay royalty and script lees
president of the Middleport Chamber, Is pictured
Gibbs, Shannon Goble, Dena more, Rebekah Smith. Jessica
glvbtg a contribution to Shirley Smith, co-director
on the first production by the group. Sp0118ored by
Hall, Shlela Hendricks, Wesley Walker, Andrew Williams, Lisa
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, American Legion, the
of the Players, and Shirley Quickel who Is
Howard, Stacy Hysell, Christine Bowman, Amy Priest, Mic hael
Players hope to do their ll1'8t production this
co-chalnnan of the group.
Kauff, Ada King, Tosha Lan- Roach , Jason Jones.
sprbtg. The last call lor auditions lor "Our Town"
daker, VIncent LBudermllt,
Second Grade: Vandana AgraCindy Maynard, Bobby Phelps, wal , Brandy Bahr, Donovan
Jeffrey McElroy, Martha Nel- Davis, Deanna Martin, Bo Polson, Kelly Ogdln, Kaci Parsons, lard, Es ther Simmons, Lisa Jo
Matlhew Peterson, Todd Powell. VoUborn, Sarah Danner, Brad
'
Melinda f!.lggs , Tina Romine, Cox, Elisabeth Frans, Tim Scar·
The " Libraries: Learning F'or of the Bookmobile and the Programs.
Lynn Rosllnskl, Dee See, Jared berry, Todd Marcum
Books-By-Mall Programs.
Your Life" campaign was given
Established in 1973 as the first
Sheets, Susan Trader, Debbie
Third Grade; Me lissa Brown,
A number of major purchases state-funded regional public li·
a boost by the Ohio Valley Area
West, Angela White, Renee
were aulhorlzed for I he use of the brary system in Ohio, today
Libraries (OVAL) Boardo!Trus·
tees Thursday evening, April 21.
eleven member libraries : CD· OVAL administers through local
ROM Drives for mlcrocompu· public libr aries a variety of
During tis monthly meeting, the
ters, $7,700; A one-year subscrlp· programs designed to Improve
Board approved the purchase of
$2,000 In malerlals to support the
lion lo Books In Print Plus on and extend services to local
CD-ROM
di scs, $11,000; Table- reside nts. OVAL Is made up of
OVAL bookmobiles and the
top
display
exhlbil unlls , $4,400.
member libraries participating
public libraries In I he counlles of
Shirley
Mills
F'lscher, OVAL Athens, Hocking, J ackson, LawIn the state-wide public awareness program. The materials
Director, recommended addi- rence, Meigs, Plckaw ay, Pike,
lbr Ann Landers: The letter attitudes I see in the men of my
tional aclivlty to Increas e the Ross, Scioto and Vmton. The from C.T J. in Garlan4, Texas,
Include sun visor caps, ktls, and
generation. They don't have the
public awareness of the Bookmo- OVAL Board of Trustees, which
balloons. The OVAL bookmobile
demands a rebuttal, one that will
same values that my father and
staffs wUI lncorporale the matebile and Books-By-Mall Pro- co nsist s of one trustee from each explain the social trend he begrandfather had.
rials Into their Summer Reading
grams. 'rhe Board alhorlzed the member public library board,
moans.
C.T.j. is right when he says the
Program.
purchase of radio time and space determines policy. controls fiWhat C.TJ. mmt understand is
feminist
moverncnl was largely reIn local newspaper.s. Fischer will nances, and makes final decision
The Board approved the addithat men as well as women are
sponsible for most of the trouble.
tion of one part-time employee
also seek to work lhrough the on what services will be offered.
redefining marn. and commitPerhaps both men and women were
public school systems to ensure Wanda Eblin represents the
and the addition of over-time for
ment.
Both
are
floundering
around
given
too many choices. What do
, two currenl employees for ten ,t he broad distribution oflnforma· Meigs County Public Library,
in
relationships,
doubting,
cheating
you
think,
Ann l..:mders? - L.F. IN
weeks. This additional staff time
lion on the bookmobile summer Pomeroy.
and
ignoring
their
rnarrilll!f
vows
GREENBELT
wjll be applied to lhe automation
schedules and the Books-By-Mall
because they are unhappy.
DEAR GREEN: I think you've
The reason they are unhappy is crammed a lot of good sense into
because the TV marriallfS are fun
one letter. You lose me, however,
and easy. In the movies, spouses are
when you say the women's movemade for each other. In the comment was largely responsible for
Is no chemical use before or SUNDAY
mercials, husbands have endearing
FRIDAY
most of lhe trouble. Some of the
during
the evenbtg.
ROCK SPRINGS - Annual
flaws and wives "look cute" when
MIDDLEPORT- Practice for
trouble, yes. Mosl of it, nQ. Gloria
Meigs County Grange banquet at
the get mad. The message is that we
Inspection of Evangeline Chap·
Steinem. Betty Friedan, the floor IS
BASHAN- Red Brush Church ter 172, Order of the Eastern
7 p.m Friday at the Salisbury
need only to sift through the fish in
yours if you want it
of Christ, Bashan Road. will have Slar, will be held Sunday at 5
Elementary School. Speaker will
the sea and we will find the perfect
Dear Ann landers: I need to
special services Saturday, 7 p.m . at the temple. Teresa
be Mrs. John (Jane) Price, Ceres
one.
Jmt
throw
back
the
ones
you
know
if I have a problem with my
p.m., and Sunday at 10 a .m . and 6 Canterbury , worthy matron, and
of the Ohio State Grange and
don't
like
and
keep
looking.
12·year-old
son's behavior.
p.m . , with Denver Hill of Foster, Bob King, worthy pa tron, asks all
dlreclor of Ohio State Grange
We
have
not
been
taught
to
work
May
of
1985 my best friend
In
W Va . speaking. Everyone officers to be present.
Deal activities. Enlerlntalnment
through
problems
lhat
arise
in
died from cancer. She had been ill
welcome.
will be by the Mark Snyder
relationships. Nor have we been
for
about six months. Two days
family.
MONDAY
given realistic expectations of what before she died I went to see her.
CHESHIRE - Free clothing
CHESTER- Chester PTO will
marrilll!f is all about. No one tells
day for low Income people Is meet Monday al 7 p.m. at the
She asked me to bring my son. She
HARRISONVILLE
The
us that patience, detennination , couldn 't have any children and was
Friday
,
9
a
.m
.
to
noon
at
the
Rev . Lawrence Gray , mission·
school.
clothing bank In Cheshire. Spontrust and good communicalion
like an aunt to "George." When I
ary of Papua, New Guinea, will
sored
by
Gallla-Melgs
Commun·
must
supplement
love
in
order
to
asked
him 10 go, he refused, saying
show slides of his work there at
RACINE - Racine Chapter
tty
Action
make
a
marriaae
work
..
he
wanted
to remember her the way
7:30 on April 29 at the Scipio Fire
134, Order of Eastern Star, will
People
my
parents'
aae
are
ques·
she
was.
Soon
after I asked h1m to
Station, Harrisonville The pub·
meet Monday at 7:30p.m . at the
SATURDAY
tioning
their
marriages.
People
my
come
with
me
to
lhe funeral. Again
lie Is Invited to attend .
temple. Initiation of new
BIDWELL - A hymn sing will members will be held Chapler
aae are witnessins the disenchant- he refused.
be held Saturday, 7 p.m., at the dresses are to be worn. Practice
ment of their married friends.
ROCK SPRINGS - Annual
Now his grandmother is ill and
Poplar
Ridge Church at Bidwell.
I'm 23 and frightened of the
Meigs County Grange banquet at
for Initiation will be held Sunday
getting along in age. A few months
7 p.m. Friday at the Salisbury
at 2 p.m . and all officers are
ago she was put in intens1ve care for
RACINE - A special service asked to attend.
Elementary School. Speaker will
a
stroke. I told my son it might be
will be held Salurday, 7 p.m .. at
be Mrs. John (Jane) Price, Ceres
Cindy Lamberl lost the most
the last time he could !&lt;&amp; his
the Fellowship Church In Racine .
of the Ohio State Grange and
COLUMBIA - The Board of
weekly weight at the Tuesday
grandmother
goodbye. He went to
Bro. Gary Taylor's church from Trustees of Columbia Township
director of Ohio Slate Grange
morning
meeting
of
the
Five
see
her.
She
got better and was
Lancaster will preach and sing. wlll meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at
., Deaf aclivitles. Enterlntalnment
Points Sllnderella Class. Top
The public Is Invited.
. will be ,by the Mark Snyder
the fire station
loser at the Tuesday night class
family
was
Charlotte Smith.
POMEROY - A fellowship
TUESDAY
Judy Eblin and Cathy Hudson
breakfast by the Word of Life
, POMEROY - A talent show
MIDDLEPORT - XI Gamma
each received special 20 pound
Church
will be held at theWordof Mu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
and dance, sponsored by the
weight loss ribbons and cerlfiChristian Academy,located Sorority, will met at 7:30 Tues·
I Meigs Teenage Institute, will be aUte
cates.
In the teen class top loser
1 the Intersection of County
· held Saturday, from 8 p.m. 10
day at the Bradbury Church of
was Michele Folmer with MeRoad 235 and State Route 681 Christ. New officers wtil be
12:30 a.m'. Registration for the
lissa Foster being runner-up.
west of Darwin, Saturday, April Installed.
talent show begins at 7:30. Ernie
Amy Smith was the top loser in
30 at 10 a.m . All preachers and
G. Anderson, of WKEE, will be
the kid's class.
church leaders are Invited. Ray
POMEROY - Auxiliary of
disc jockey for the dance. No
At the Tuesday Mr. and Mrs.
Laudermllt Is pas lor.
~ admission. The only requirement
Eagles 2171 will meet at 8 p.m .
Howardrey Clark lot the most
Tuesday at the hall. New officers
weekly weight wtth Bertha Kinwill be elected. '
zel being the runner-up. Jo Ann
Newsome Is lecturer.
Wednesday -chicken, butter,
The Eastern Schools cafeteria
menu for the week have been bread, mashed potatoes , gravy,
·
applesauce, mlllt.
1, announced:
: Monday - hamburger, baked
Thursday - sausage patty,
. beans, fruit, no bake cookie, green beans, fruit, milk.
992-3411
•
milk.
Friday - pizza, mixed vegetaNORTH SECOND AYE.
MIDDUPOIT, OHIO
, Tuesday - ham patty, french bles, ice juice, milk.
fries, fruit. rice pudding, mllk.
S•~tze,

REA~TY

216 S. Second
Pomeroy

992·3325

m
UAITOI

FRANCIS FLORIST

Counr y·~ OltkJt FloriJt
352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 45769
614 / 992-2644

ltt•ilf '

'

.··oo·""··,.•

••

•,"" ..u,, ..

•

~

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
Bill Quickel and Ruth Ann Fox

(row's Family Resta..-111t
"Fullltltlf 1&lt;1111r~g Filii C'llktt"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992-5432
Prayer ~rvtce, 1·~ p m
FAITH BAPTIST CllURCH, Rallrrod
St , Mason Sunday SchoollO a.m , Morn·
lng worship 11 a m .; Evening servtce6p
m Prayer meet lng and Bible Study Wednesday, 7 p.m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyl e
Borden, pastor Cornelius Bunc:h, sup!.
S~nday School 9 30 a.m.. Second and
fourth Su ndays worship service at 2.30 p.
m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST, F'ourth and
Matn St Middleport Rev Gilbert Craig,
Jr, pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt. Sunday School9· 30 a
m, Wors hip Service, 10 .45 a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CllURCH OF' CHRIST
- Joseph B. Hoskins. evangelfst Sunday
Bibl e Study 9 a. m , Wors hip, 10 a.m , Sunday evening service 6 p m .; Wednesday
evening service, 7 p.m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY . Racin e,
R1 124 Willi am Hoback, pastor. Sunday
School 10 a m . Sunday eventng service 7
p m. Wednesday evening service 7 p.m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadl e,
Supt Sunday School 9 XI a m . Morning
Worship 10 30 a .m F'rayerservice, altern·
ate Sundays,
TilE CHURCil OF' JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC F'AITH - New Lima Rd. ,
next lo F'ort Me igs Park. Rutland Robert
Richards, past or Services at 7 p.m on
Wednesdays and Sundays
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP
TER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church.
Rev . Dav id F'errell, pastor. Henry Eblin,
Sunday School Supt., Sunday SchoollO a
m , Morning Worship U a.m .. Evening
serv ice 7· 30 p m Wednesday evening :service 7:30 p.m
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF' F'AITH,
Cary Holter, pas tor. Sunday services 9, :KI
a.m. and 1 p m.: Midweek service, 7 30 p
m Thu rsday.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave Rev . Clark Baker, pastor Carl Nottingham , Sunday School Supt. Sunday
SchOol 10 a m. with classes for all ages.
Evening services at 6 p.m . Wednesday BIbl e study at 7 30 p.m Youth services Friday at 7 JO p.m.
ECCLES! A FELLOWSHIP. 128 Mill St ,
Mlddlepor1 Brother Chuck McPherson,
pastor Sunday Schoci 10 a m.; Sunday
evening services at 7 p.m . and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m
_
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smllh,
pastor Sunda y School 9. 30 a.m.; church
service 7· 30 p m ; youth fellowship 6:30p.
m ., Bible stur;ly, Thursday, 7:30p.m ,
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE , 33045
Hiland Road, Pomeroy Tom Kelly~ paslor. Danny l a mbert, S. S Supt. Sunday
morning service at 10 a .m : Sunday even·
lng serv ice 7:30p.m. Tuesday and Thursday Services at 7·30 p. m
NEW HAVEN CliURCil OF THE NA·
ZARENE, Rev Glendon Stroud, past&lt;r
Sunday School9· 30 a .m , Worshtpservlce,
10:30 a m.; Youth servtce Sunday 6,15 p.
m. Sunday evenlngservice7:00p.m. Wed·
nesday P r ayer Meeting and Bible Stud)'
700pm
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun·
day afternoon services at 2:30. Thursday
evening services at 7.30.
FIRST BAPTIST CllURCH, Muon, W. l
Va Pastor, Bill Murphy Sunday SChool tO
a m · Sunday evening 7. 30 p.m. Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday, 7. 30
p m. Everyone wei come
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, sa.
lem St Rev Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
Sc hod 10 a.m.; Sunda y evenLng7·00p.m.,
Wednesday evening prayer mretlng 7:00
pm.
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, Silver Ridge Duane Syden·
strlcker, pastor. Sunday School 9 a.m.;
Worship Service, 10 a .m .; Sunday evenlna
service, 7. 00 p m. Wednesday nlgtu Bible
study 7:00p.m .

OVAL trustees conduct meeting

You may remember the story of the lwo men who were
walking down a busy street In one of our large cities when one
man stopped abruptly and said, "Listen, I think I hear a
cricket." His associate laughed and pointed oul how Impossible
It would be to hear a cricket in the midst of the loud shuffle of
people and even louder traffic noises. "But, I do hear a cricket"
the other argued. The issue had now become something of a
challenge and the man was determined to lind I he cricket. Alter
a few minutes search, a cricket was found partially concealed lit.
a small crack. His friend was astonished. As they walked down
the street the discussion centered on how anybody could hear a
cricket amid all the noise. The man who had heard the cricket
said, "Maybe we hear what be want to hear." At that moment,
his friend stopped abruptly and said, "Stop a moment; I believe
I heard someone drop a dime."
It's a simple story but It does Ulustratean Important truth; we
do hear whal we want to hear and If we hear something we do nol
want to hear, we simply Interpret It to mean what we would like
It to mean. In much broader terms, the principle of hearing
what we want to hear (and seeing what we wanl to see) colors
each personality. Opportunlt les are passed by many times
because we refused to recognize them as such. A happy moment
hu been discarded simply because a negative attitude gave an
Interpretation or something quite different. It Is even possible to
miss the beauty of a lifetime because the ears are tuned for
something else -like the tinkle of a coin. -Father Lee Miller,
Grace Church, Pomeroy.

Joy Chaksupa. Micah Lanter,
Kri ste n McDan iel. Nat han
Smith. Shaun Tate. Rob Wilson ,
Mariah Cooper. Mat thew Holley,
Billy Miller, Penny Salisbury,
Benjamin Taylor, Leisa Walters
Fourth Grade: Rachel Coch·
ran , Aaron Holley, Amy Pollard.
Kristen Dassylva. Kelly Davis,
Anesa VanMatre .
Fifth Gra de Cara Bahr, Jen·
nlfer Ha ger, Darren Harris.
Abtgall He nry, Jill McCarl}',
Brent Smith.
Slxlh Grade Jod1e Hager,
Jennifer Hardesly, Elizabeth
Wooten , Byron Burke, Dan Chak·
supa, Jason Cheng, Sarah Miller.
Susan Steele, ,Am y Wood, Ste
phen Smith, .Jeremiah Brow n_
Sevenlh Gra d e : Sa ndra
Adams. Amanda Salem, James
Sisson II. Chrlstoper Walters,
:&lt;ancy Klng, Meredith Pollard
Eighth Grade: Beth Blevins,
Kristin Boggs, Julie Hardesty,
Pam Holley, Cmdy Sheets, Hollie
Bartel, James Black, Hope Hat ·
ten, Amy Icenhower , Jakim
Lanier , Mall Roush, Bryon
Walters.
Ninth Grade. Amy· Brumfield,
Jody Ferguson, Am1 J o Davis,
Nancy Lanier, Greg Wray.
Tenth Grade: Kelli Ferguson,
Becky Wooten. Enc Burgess ,
Becky Danner, Sa mantha Mooney, Tom Rawlings. Heather
Wood.
Eleventh Grade: Steve Adams,
Tony Jamora. Brady Johnson,
Connie Pearson, Tracl Sisson,
Marla Roach, John Keenan,
Barry Call
Twelfeth Grade. Leah Danner,
Rachel Danner, Kathy Fraley,
Gina Jamora , Edina VanMatre,
Ramona King, Laura S~re.
Aaron Young.

Attirudes in today' s men differ
from those of father, grandpa

Community calendar

Slinderella meers

Sennonette

Ann
Landers
that she was
rushed back to lhe hospital l1lis
time he wouldn't visit her or even
call.
Is thiS normal? What will I do
·When she dies?- TERI IN SPRINGFIELD, OHIO
DEAR TERI: I consull£d with Dr.
Harold Visotsky, professor and
chairman of the departmenl of
psychiatry at Northwestern Univer·
sity. This is what he said:
The mother should not push her
son to visit lenninall y ill people nor
should she insist that he go to a
funeral if he doesn 't feel like il.
When she imposes the grieving
proces. on h1m she overloads lhe
circuits
Children know how much they
can handle. Pressuring him to
exceed those hrruts wtll create
feelings of guilt, ambivalence and
anxiety.

Plannmg a wedding? What 's
rrght? What's wrong? "The Ann
LandeT&gt; Guide fur Brides " will reheve
your anxlery. To rcce1ve a copy, send
$3 plus a No. 10, self-addressed,
stamped envelope (45 cenrs postagt)
to Ann LandeT&gt;, P.O Box 11562, Ch~
cago, Ill 60611.()562

AREA ,
BUSINESSES !

FOR ALL YOUR ADVERTISING
NEEDS, SEE US••••

Eastern menus are announced

Johnson's Variety Store

QUANTITIES LIMITED: If Yo•
HALLMARK

HOWARD E. FRANK
YOUR FULL TIME
'

SHERIFF
'

ALL

MOTHER'S DAY
CARDS

BABY
CRAFTS
...

50°/o OFF

WITH COUPON

LIMIT 1 WITH COUPON

Pilei for by Howard E. fflnk. TIUI.• RFD 3. Rlcine, Ollio 45711

.I

Yo• Lt•ell

·--------------.
r-------------,
COUPON
COUPON

RE·ELECT

, prayer mHtlnl 7:00pm.

'•

Friday,Apri129, 1988
-Page- 7

Meigs County honor rolls announced

GRAVELY TRACtOR SALES

'

Mill Work Cabinet Mak ing
Syracuse

IIOWIIS FOR !YilT O((lSMIN

The Daily S-entinel

'--~!~-"!!!.~~9!!. __

30°/o OFF

Explr• May 11. 1988

--------------

THE DAILY SENTINEL
992-2156
ASK FOR

BRIAN
BILLINGS

OR

DAVE
HA-llS

WE DELIVER ...
•

�•
Friday. April 29, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Frida~April29.

House, Senate seats up for grabs in General Assembly
EDITOR'S NOTE: T his Is the
second In a foW'·part pre-election
series prepared by the Ohio staff
of United Press International,
oaUinlng the contesiS In next
Tuesday's Ohio primary. To·
day's article deals with the races
In the Ohio General Assembly.
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - State Rep.
Robert Jas kulski of Brecksville
and form er Rep. Frank Mahnic
J r . of Garfi eld Heights. both
Democrats. are renewi ng their
political feudi ng t his spri ng.
The winner in next Tuesday's
13th House District prima ry
probably wil l retur n to the Ohio
House of Representatives next
yea r, wh ile the other will remain
home in subu rba n Cleve land.
Also in suburban Cleveland,
Rep. Leroy Peterson, D-Maple

Heights, Is In a live-way co ntest
lor the Democratic nomination
lor the 22nd Ohio Senate seat held
by Sen. Grace Drake, R-Solon.
The Jas kulski-Mahnlc race Is
one of the few pri mary contests
lnvolvmg Incum bents In th e Ohio
General Assembly, where 99
House seats a nd 16 Senate seats
are up for election this year.
Twenty-s ix representatives - 25
Democra ts a nd one Republica n
-have no prima ry opponent a nd
no more tha n write-In opposition
In the general elect ion.
Jaskulski, 61, was a state
representa tive from 1971-78, bu t
he retired and Ma hnlc. now 41,
too k his place . In 1984, Mahnlc
at tempted to run fo r the state
Senate bu t was beaten. His seat
was taken by John Carroll. But
Carroll died a fte r five days In
office and J as kulski was appoin ted to ta ke hi s pla ce.

J as kulski defeated Mahnlc by
2,000 votes In the 1986 Democratic primary for the House
seat. This Is a 1rema tc h. The
wi nner wi ll face Republican Don
Sopka of Broadview Heights In
the fa ll.
Peterson , 46, a three-term
House member, faces opposition
from J udy Bender. 49,a clvlcand
socia l service volunteer from
Broadview Height s; Cleveland
attorney Tom F urth, 31, of Solon;
Bernice Kammlller, 58, a hospl·
tal nursing supervisor fr om
Wa d s wor t h; and Wi lliam
O'Neill, 40, of Chagrin Falls, an
employee of Attorney General
Anthony Celebrezze J r.
Drake Is unopposed fo r the
Republican nomination, bu t the
Democra ts have targeted her for
this fall as they at tempt to
overturn the Republicans' 18-15

control of the Senate . .
In the Youngs town area , veteran Sen. Thomas Carney of
Girard faces two Democratic •
opponents In h is bid for
renomination.
·Carney , 64, Is , a four-term
senator . He Is opposed by Trumbull County Commissioner Ar·
thur Magee, 51, a form er mayor
of Hubbard , and construction
worker Thomas Comanescu, 40,
a VIetn a m ve t er an from
Cortla nd .
In the 30th Dis trlct, freshm a n
Sen. Robert Burch of Dover Is
opposed In tl\e De mocratic prim·
ary by Robert Vukellc of
Toronto.
.
In the 12th Dis trict, forme r
state Rep. Dale Locker of" Anna
faces Johnnie Mae Fuqua of
I,.lma in the Democr atic primary
for the right to oppose Sen.
Robert Cupp, R-Llma, In the fall.

.

B y TAMARA HE NRY
WASHINGTON rupt) -The
government's first "batt le pta n"
against AIDS , a dopted by the
Senate only after some angry
Ideological clashes, is sure to
spark m ore fireworks on Its next
field of contentio n in the House.
Senators vo te d 874 late Thu rsday for ·$1.1 blll ion In researc h
and education efforts, bu t not
be fore requiring AIDS tests of
tho se convicted of drug and sex
offenses and adding broa d langua ge that arc h-co nservative
J esse Helms, R-N.C., charged
fu riously would e ncourage homosexuals to "s hack up "
Helms voted aga inst the legisla tion along with GOP .Sens.
Willia m Arms trong of Colorado,
John McCa in of Ar izona and
Ma lcolm Wallop ,of Wyoming
The bill Qow goes to the House,
which has done li ttle work on a
compan ion piece, and heated
debate Is ass ure d .
" We h,a ve the oppo r tun ity
toda y to say to all Am ericans that
educ ation and research are our
top priorit y In the fight against
AIDS," argue d Sen. Brock
Adams , D-Was h., in supporting
the contested legislation .
" We have the oppo rtun ity to
say to the Ame ric an people we
have the coura ge to face AIDS
without allowing Irrational fe ars
to c loud our deliberation, "
Adams added. ·'This bill is a plan
of a ction, a battle plan against
AIDS."
"Fina lly we have declare d war
on th e vir us and not on the
victims," agreed Sen. Edward
Kennedy , D-Mass. "Until we find

Accidental
Discovery May
End Obesity ·
WASHINGTON - ObeSIIY may be

nlrolled naturally wttn a new type

1

ol pdl, discovered by acciclenl, a research sctenlist confJrmed recently.

In sludtes w11h polent1al cnolesterollowerln~~C aaen&amp;s. sclentlsts noled an

unl.ISUIII std ~ ertec t Plillents recelvlq
an ingredaenl Jn Whltl ls now beiDB

caned FS-1 all lost wetght. In spite of

Instructed nor to alter normaJ
eatlns pauems, whale body weagbl In
control groups remained constant.
• Sctentl~ts liBY the mecbamsm behmd the we1ght reduction Is not clc=ar.
bt iR8

but suaest II ls parltally due to a de--

Trade bill proves immediate election
WASH INGTON ( UP !)
George Bush and Michae l Duka)cls, alrea dy staking out turf for
the ir ex pected presidential debates, have seized opposing sides
of a major and immediate Issue
In the form of a threatened vetqof
trade le gislation.
Duka kis, the Massachusetts
governor with eyes on th e Democratic nomination, sent a letter
Thursday to President Reagan
urging him to sign the "sensible,
carefully crafted bi II that will
enhance our competitiveness in
the world."
But VIce Pres ident Bush, the
expected Republican nominee,
stood with Reaga n, who has
j!owed to kill the measure approved by Congress because of a
provision requiring advance notice of factor y closings and ma jor
layoffs. Bush suggeste d the provis ion had no place In the bill and

~enate

should be co nsidered separa tely. to be the right and fairthingtodo.
Bus iness leaders oppose the The fact of the m atter Is that
provision as a federa l Intrusion workers all over this country at
Into private indu stry . Reagan's least need the minimal protecveto, expected next week, will tion that the congressional action
" lay out his generic objections to provides. "
His remaining major Demothe bill" and will indica te what
the admln lstratlon sees as accep- cratic rival , Jesse Jac kson, also
ta ble alternatives, said White has endorsed the provision, and
Hou se s pok es m a n Ma rlin campaigning around Ohio ThursFi tzwater .
day the civil rights leader stuck
While citing concern a bout to similar themes of economic
several par ts of the bill, Fitz- justice.
wa ter said re moval of the 60·day
"Reaganomics must no t be
advance noti ce requirem ent was managed. Reaganomics must
the only non-negotla ble Item. The not be kept. Reaganomics must
la bor-backed provision would be reversed," he told a cheer ing
a pply to companies with 100 or crowd from the Steubenville
more employees.
area.
Dukakls , suppor ting the mea" When welose our jobs - when
sure, found it easy to mesh with
they c lose the plan ts, pull the
broader polltlciil !hemes. He told
plug and the lights go out - all of
reporters in Bos ton, " The min- us look just alike In the dark," he
Imal 60-day notification on a . told about 6,000 people at the
nationa l bas1s would seem to me
t!n lverslty of Akron. " It' s not

•
ISSUe

about black vs. white. It 's about
small fish vs. barracudas. "
Jackson said he still hopes to
win the Democratic nomination
despite the big back-to·back
primary victories for Dukakis in
New York and Pennsylvania .
The next contests come Tuesday
In Ohio, Indiana and the District
of Columbia .
"Don't let them tell you It' s all
over, " .Jackson said. " You peo·
pie must stand tall. If the election
Is over, nobody told me."
There Is no such argument on
the Republican side, and Fitzwater announced Thursday that
Reagan will plunge Into the 1988
campaign soon with a special
ceremony to endorse his vice
pres ident formally.
Reagan until now ha s kept his
distance from the campaign ,
preferr ing not to violate his "11th
Commandment" about speaking
against another Republican. But

By LEE LEONARD
l!PI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS. Ohio rUPI)
· It 's the best-keflt secret of the
•,Ohio primary seas on, but the
;unknown whistleblower is taking
•on one of the bes t-recognized
senators in Americ a nex t
:Tuesday .
• Sen. Howard Metzenba um , D:ohto, whose filibu s ters on cable
:televis ion, outbursts a ga inst the
•oil companies and general
headline -grabbing activities in
behalf of working m en and
:women have given him a high
;profile, has an opponent In the
•Democratic prim ar y.
• On the ballot opposite Metzenbaum wlll be Ra lph Applegate,
a~ unemployed mechanical eng!-

neer from Columbus who says he
was llred fr pm the Defense
Departmenttor " telling ~he trutb
a bout spending."
Ironically, Cleveland Mayor
George Volnovlch has a free ride
to the Republican nomination.
Six months ago, Volnovlch was
gearing up lor an Intra-party
fight against Rep. Bob McEwen
of Hlllsboro, but McEwen
dropped his challenge.
Metzenbaum, 70, Is seeking his
third term In the Senate and has
been an outspoken opponent of
the Reagan administration, particularly of Attorney General
E dwin Me ese a nd of Reagan's
appointment of Judge Rober t
Bork to the Supreme Court.
A labor lawyer and multi -'
m Ulionaire who made his fortune
from airport parking lot franchises, Metzenbaum has conducted high-profile crusades In
behalf of consumers and working
people.
Ea r ly in his ca reer, he led a
filibuster by . amendment on
legislation de regulating natural
gas, keeping the Senate In

session around the clock lor two
weeks.
Metzenbaurn also has bat tied
the airlines for Increased pas·
senger safety a nd convenience
measures, and has tried to forc e
corporations ·to protect em·
ployees when they close factories
and other workplaces .
Applegate, 56, worked fpr the
Defense Construction Supply
Center In Columbus before he
complained to the Government
Accounting Office In 1975 that
there was as much as 25 percent
waste In the defense budget .
Applegate said he testllled
before Congress but the Defense
Department convinced lawmakers that the waste was only 1
percent.
Overbud getlng for defense Is
one thing on which Applegate and
Metzenbaum agree.
"Personally, I don' t believe
Howard has res ponded to the
people of Ohio, " said Applegate.
"He doesn' t represent us . He Is in
the hands of the political action
committees. I don' t see how he
can represent the people of Ohio

when his money comes from
other states.
"The question Is, Is Howard
credible?" said Applegate. " Do
the people of Ohio want to
continue this wasteful spending?
Does Howard just make people
think that he represents them on
certain Issues, or is he sincere? I
think not."
In the absence of a primary
contest, Volnovlch has been
gearing up for his anticipated
autumn bat de with Metzenbaum
by airing a series of television
commercials pointing to his
strength as mayor of Cleveland
and Indicating It Is time lor a
change In Washington.
Volnovlch, 51, has accused
Metzenbaum of violating his
trust with the people by falling to
protect their Social Security
benefits'. In turn. the Metzenbaum camp has tried to link
Volnovlch with Reagan fiscal
policies. ·
Volnovich, a former state
representative, county auditor
and lieutenant governor of Ohio,
emphasizes his role in bringing

1

Cl eveland out of a $110 million
debt after he took office in 1979.
He says that experie nce would
help In bala ncing the federa l
budget.
He has attacked Metzenbaum's wealth and said the senator
has failed to get a lair ret urn of
federal tax dollars for Ohio and
lacks new ideas for dealing with
the nation's trade defic it.
Next: President

NOTICE OF SALE
' · By virtue of an Order of
Sale issued out of the Common Pleas Court of Meigs

County, Ohio, in the case of
Union, Mortgage Company,
Inc ., Plaintiff, vs .. Fred W

Stewart, at al., Defendants,
upon a judgment therein
rendered being Case No.
87CV288, in said Court. I

will offer for sale, at the
front door of the Courtl)ouse
in Pomeroy, Metgs County,
Ohio, on the third day of
Juno, 1988, at 10·00 o.m.,
the following lands and ten·
aments, to wit.

Situated in the County of
Meigs. Stale of Ohio, Town·
ship of Letart and more par·
ticularty delcrtbed as fol·
lows. Beginnmg at a stake at
the Northeast corner of a lot
'"'longing to or Cormerly be·
tonging to E. B. Finney;
thence West a distance of
,100 feel to a stake; thence
North a distance of 141 feet
~o a stake intersection the
South line of what it: or was
High McClain's Lot; thence
Easterly a distance of 122
~t along said line to a stake
on the pubtic road leading
from Letart to Apple Grove;
thence South along said
road a distance of 50 feet to
the place of beginning, containing 10,000 square feet.
more or 11111.
The real estate herein conveyed baing 0 .26 acre. more
or len. of a tour acre lot off
the South and West 11des of
a ten acre lot sold by John
Pilchard to Thoma T. Hop·
kin1, 1t being off the West
end of 100 AcroloU141 of
School Section #16. Town
"1, of Range ~12 .
There i1 e~cepted from
this conveyance, however,
to the State of Ohio; all oil,
gu, coal and other minerals
with the right of entry fort he
purpose of prospecting for,
developing, producing or
operating for 1he same and
the right of occupancy insofar as the samail ••enliel to
,tuch pro1pecting. developIng. operating or producing.
Also, reaerving 10 the State
of Ohio the use of strHms
flowing thrt.ugh 1aid lends
or abutteng upon the same
and so much of the banks
thereof as m-v be neceasary
for such enjoyment and the
protection of such streams
from erosion. contam1n•
lion or deposit of tedtment.
Deed Reference: Volume
271. Pogo 477,
Meigs
County Deed Recorda.
Be the aame more or less.
but subject to all legal high·
ways.
Apprai111d Value: ~
86 ,300.00 .
Term• of Sale: Ca1h
The real estate cannot be
aold for 1811 than two-thirds
than the appraised value.
Howard E. Frank.
Sheriff, Molp County, Ohio
14) 29; (6J6, 13, 3tc

An mslrucuon sheet for proper use
and opttmum results IS prov1ded Wllh
each bottle ol I00 tablets
FS·1

FL WER

"Beautiful Flowers" ·

If vou ca• fl .. better qualltf, ~alter trieas,
stop bf ••• tiek me up!!
$500 A FLAT$500 A HANGING BASKET

Sl 00 DOZ.EN VEGETABLE

PLANTS

LARGE SELECTION
MONDAY THRU FRIDAY- 4 PM until 77
SATURDAY- Open 24 Hours SUNDAY - Noon until71

~New

virus contaminates donated blood

By JAN ZIEGLER
UPI Science Writer
WASHINGTON (U PI ) - It's
no " epid emic," resea rc her s say,
,but wtthc.ut som e new scr eening
•measures a bout 2,800 recipients
of donated blood na tionwide
could be Infected by a cancer'causlng virus each year
' The vir us. HTLV·1. Is a cause
o! adult T-cellleukemla and al so
;has been llnked to neurological
:diseases such as tropical spas tic
•paraparesis, a multiple-sclerosis
•type of disease that causes
, numbing of the legs.
• ''This Is cer tainly not an
~ epidemic In the sense tha t AIDS
, Is. What It Is Is recognition that a
' very low level of ln!ectlon Is
: present In the healthy population
: that donates blood ," said Alan
·Williams, the American Red
; cross epide miologist who led the
: s tudy published Thursd ay In the
journal Science.
, "The Red Cross would like to
•ins titute s creening m ea sures as
~ soon as possible, " Williams
: added.
• The Red Cross collects at least
; 6 million units of blood a year,
about half the donations in the
. United States. The American
Association of Blood BankS and
• Council of Community Blood
: Ce nters collect the other hall.
' The org anizations agreed last
year to Improve screening
m ethods to exc lude those who

m ay be Infected with HTLV·l
•.182. It Is tra nsmitted through transmit the Infection to others.
and to use a blood tes t to
ua l co nta ct , breast milk and
No cases of transfusion-related
e liminate Infected units a s soon
. ~ lect ed celts In whole blood adult T-cellleukemla have been
as on ~ becomes available .
products. According to Wlllla'ms, reported. but this could be
Food artd Drug Administration two- thirds o( blood rec ipients because It may take as long as 30
s pokeswoman Susan Cruzan said ma y die within a year of year s for symptoms to develop or
Thursday !hat one company, transfusion, but those who re- because the virus may play a role
DuPont Inc., Is working with the maIn sexually active and women In other cancers not yet
FDA to atlaln approval of a test. who a re breast-feeding may understood .
HTLV-11s endemic to southwestern J apan, Africa and the
Caribbean bas in, but It has been rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
detected In intravenous drug
abuser s in some eastern U.S.
c ities.
Though a ll volunteer blood
FIIDAY, APRIL 29TH
donors ar e rigorously Intervi ewed to eliminate the possibilSANDWICH PUnEI
Ity of transmitting other infecFISH TAIL RLLE1 ........................................... S2.5t
tions - such a ~ hepatitis or the
Ow a.p e..- flolo fol Son .. h A:;;.. - Wltl1 OwOwo loldlol ...
vir us for acquired Immune dell·
...... ,..........................
...,..,a.lcaefll•••••c•
c lency syndrome - the new
study found .025 percent of
s•DAYr MAY ht
donors are Infected with HTLV-1
and sllp thr ough "the screening
BAllED SWISS STEAl DINNER""""""'""""'" 54,49
• - - , . . . ... of ............. St.............. oCr- Ortllf Jon ..
process.
.... ....., ....._. ..,..._ •••••
J Gnlwy lawanalllll .,_ .._
About 60 percen t of those
wlllo . ._
.-4 , _ Clloloo oil..,,_.. W wiO
' -·
receiving contaminated blood
w Sooloo lo:..llwl....... Pr...., , _.. CA s-ol Soli
c an expe ct to develop an HTLV-1
- k .. ht ' " Moy .. ....,lhot~
lA. . RIA~ la.WICI ALO• ............- .............- .......·-·-··· tt.7t
Infection, the researchers
wa r ned. " We can predict, by a
1¥11\' . . .
Wltill , _. .
rough extension of these preval·
llrwlll
•
~
...,.,
'
lrilllill
Y•r
Ceffte
..,,
..
,,..
,.,_ C.,.l
ence data, the Infection of approximately 2,800 blood recipHOURS: 8:00 A.M.·8:30 P.M.- 7 [)A!~ A WEEK
.•.
ie nts annually In the United
States. "
HTLV-1 was ldentllled.,by Dr.
Robert Ga llo of the National ·
Cancer Institute, who warned of
lOIII 7
91S·JIJI
'Mid
the possible threat it posed to
WE
OIVE
SENIOR
CITIZENS
1K
DIICOUNT
recipients of blood transfusions

Thl• Week'• .Spaeltl•

""-· -• w-. ,_, w-. • .. -.
.... -Cell-.

,,llljey ..,•••,...... ,....

-·z

lin.

i\eehnuglfs nf QI4estrr • ,
IEOAlUIIT

From 124 East in Racine ( 112 mi. past high school! take CR21
(lashan Rd.l traveltxactly 4 mi. (watch for signl, turn left
on Twp. Rd. I09 go 1 milt to Circle farm.

CIRCLE'S GREENHOUSE
LARRY D. CIRCLE - 949-2021

AFSCME LOCAL 1080
ENDORSES

P

Public Notice

P M. ROBERTS.

ADVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Separ..e sealed bids: for
the renovation of the e~ilt:
lng rool of tho Mol111 County
CounhouM in Pomeroy,
Ohio wUI be rocolvod ot tho
office of tho Molg1 Coun·
ty Comml11lanors. Molgo
County CaunhouM, Pom·
oroy, Ohio 46789 unlll2:00
p.m. (tocol time! on Moy 24.
1888 end thon at llld offiCI
pUblicly oponed ond rood
aloud.
,
Tho work covwed by tho
C-r- Documanto In·
etude the followlntlt.,.. Cor
Wlllcll bldl
be I!Ccopled:
Rooting Renovation ol tho
Melgo County Counhou•
Remove! of tho alellng II·
phelt llhlngl• and buHt· up
roofing end 11111- wltll
d - -hell ohlnat• 111d
momlllllne roofing fnoludlng
taof dllak flllllra with ell n•

THE MEIGS COUNTY HIGHWAY EMPlOYEES
HAVE ENDORSED THE CANDIDACY OF PHIUP
M. ROBEm FOR HIS RE-ELEcnON AS MEIGS
COUNTY ENGJIEER. LOCAL .1080 ENCOURAGES AU OTHER UNION BROTHERS AND
SISIEIS IN JOINING LOCAL 1080 IN SUP- .'
,PORT OF THE RE-ELEmON OF PHilP
ROBEm AS MEIGS COUNTY ENGINEER.
P1id for

w•

bJ Local 1080 AFCME AFLCIO

Rt. 2. Rock Sprinas

Rd .. Pom1roy, Oh .

iloo..., epp111llnlng work.

'J

I

.,
I
•

•

The ..tknoled

aonltN·

alan 11 teo,ooo.oo
of Mercll1. 1881.
\

'

a vaccine, we have with this
legislation achieved the only
vaccine that exists today a nd
that's education "
The m eas ure proclaims acquired Immune deficiency syndrome a natio nal health emergency a nd would Increase
research, dissem inate Information and p rovide expand ed medl·
cal care . AIDS. transmitted
through blood and Intim ate co ntact m ainly among homosex uals,
fatal ly destroys a body's ' power
to fight Infection.
Kennedy, the Labor a na Hum an Resources Com m it tee
cha irm an, joined forces with
Utah Sen. Orrin Hatch. a us ual
a dver sary as the pa nel's rank ing
Republican, to suppor t the bill
a nd to reject a nti-homosexual
a me ndments pushed by He lm s.
" 1AIDS) is a public health
probl em of grea t m agnitud e. "
said Hatch. " It seems to me we
have to attack It from the beS't
way we can and this bill is the
bes t bi partisa n blll I have see n. "
Though the legis lation avoids
suc h se nsitive iss ues a s tes ting,
co)lnseling a nd notific ation, the
Se na te ga ve over wh elming approval, 97·0, to a n amendm ent by
Republican Don Nickles of Okla homa to require r outine confidenti al tes tl ng of per sons convicted
of drug and sex offenses
Nickles note d a 1986 Nationa l
Institutes of Jus tic e survey that
found 1,232 confirmed AIDS
c ases In 58 responding s tate and
federal prisons. He sa id, " I thin k
this is a seriou s probl em (a nd )
th1s a me ndment would be a s tep
In the right direction." Helm s

Public Notice

Public Notice

with essenually the same weigh! loss
Cl.lpabthu es might tak e as long U.Ji
c•ght years to be ava11 able. due to
lengthy delo ys encountered 10 th e liP·
proYal process " F S· I is curr e nt\~
available on a ltmlled basis through
pnystcmns and pna rmac1es for U4.98

race pits Metzenbaum against unknown

EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is the
third In a lour-part pre·electlon
series prepared by the Ohio staff
' of United Press International,
• outUnlng the contests In next
Tuesday's Ohio primary. To·
: day's article deals with the
: Democratic contest lor the U.S.
·Senate nomination.

crease m th.e lntestmal abSOrpllon of
cu lorie·rlch dietary tats. Alth.OU&amp;h
sclentiSl!:i tor some ume nave known
of subslances wnh the capabiUty ol
proc:luctng tnls e ffect . the dramatic
rnpuct on weight reduction was not
known until recenlly Substances with
a ~eater potential to block absorption w1H produce greater weight 1011
results
The dtrector ot research and de·
vt&gt; lopment al National Dietary Re-.t'arch. an organ lzalion committed to
the mvesligauon and r~ arch of nulnltonal solutions to world-wide
hedllh problems, stated . "The me·
chamsm by wh tc h FS·I works to de·
crease body weight Ui actually a more
complex and soptusucaled process
called nuln·bondmg. Wh en chewed
and swallowed lmmedhHely before
meals, FS· I releases nulnentl:i with
tow calorie content mto the bOdy,
wrule htgb-catorte fa~ are ehmmat·
ed, thus provtdlng opumum nutrition
and a mtmmum numbe r of calortes "
Studies with FS-1 lndtcote wetght
loss resullS are- clearly superior to
proaucts currently .a vo,u l able lor the
creatmf"nt ot obestty. In a comparaltve ~tudy by NDR . whu:.e n:searcb
t«.~piC!I na ve been the subJeCI of articles published m recent medacal and
nutnliona l Journa ls, FS-J was found to
be the most effecu~e treutmenl tor
obes!t)' and tile must acceptable to l)lluenb.
Tht &lt;ll sc o~ery comes us welcome
news to thouSilnds ol obesity sulftrell
wanmg yeors lor lhts type of brealr.lh·
fl ugb. Accordmg to a spokesperson ac
1\,)R, " FS· I can be muUt avu1lable to
111c public 1mmedaalely, because It LS
not a drug and conlalns only natural
mgredte nts recogmzeiJ as :-.ate A- drug
1

with Bush clearly a lock for the
nomination, Fltzw.ater sa id a
pres ldenUal endorsem ent would
come " probably In Ihe next
couple of weeks ."
Reagan and Bush· had lunch
Wednesday and discu ssed stra tegy for how to Jceep the White
House In Republican hands next
year.
United Press International's
count of committed and projected delegates In the Republl·
can presidential contest shows
Bush with 1,092 of the 1,139 votes
necessary for nomination at
August's national convention In
New Orleans.
On the Democratic side. UPI
finds Dukakls with 1,137. 15 of the
2, 081 delegate votes needed a t
July 's ronventioq In New Or·
leans. Some Democratic delegates vote fractionally . ·Jackson
has 784.20 In the UP! count .

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S ·

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'.

Senate approves AIDS research bill; on to House next

Oldfield In his bid lor nomination
to a fo urth term.
Rep. Jack Cera, D-Bellalre;
faces Bill Thomas of Martins
Ferry for the Democrat lc nom!·
nation In the 99th Dis trlct
Nex t: U.S. Senate

Cupp has no primary opposition.
Nine-term Rep. Ike Thompson,
D-C ieveland, 72, faces a rematch
of his 1986 Democratic primar y
contes t with C.J. P rentiss , 46, a
,woman and member of the s tate
Boa rd of Edu cation.
Rep. June Lucas, D-Mineral
Ridge, Is opposed In the 58th
Dis trlct by Di ana Ma rchese,
J ohnston Township clerk, of
Farmdale. Lucas, 49, has esta blished hersell as a n lnd ependen t
and outspoken represen tative In
her llrst term. Marchese, 43, has
mounted a door- to-door ca mpaign against abortion.
Veteran Rep. Thomas Pottenger of Cinrinnatl is opposed In
the Republican pr imary by
Christopher He ather In his bid
for nomination to a 12th term.
Rep. Vernon Sykes , D-Akron,
faces a cha llenge from Dick

1988

•

The Contract Documents
may be examined at ·
The Office of the Meigs
County Commissioners
Meigs County Courthouse
Pomeroy, Ohio 46769
Burgess &amp; Niple, limited
4424 Emerson Avenue
Parkersburg, WV 26104
CopiBI of the Contract
Documents may be obtained at the office of
Burgns &amp; Niple, Umited
located at 4424 Emerson
Avenue, Parkersburg, West
Virginia 26104 upon pay·
ment of Forty-Five Dollars
($46.001. NONE OF WHICH
WILL BE REFUNDED.
By Order of the Meigs
County Commissoners
(4) 22, 29; 151 6. 13, 4tc

Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
MOUNTAIN STATE BANK
Plaintiff

- vs. -

HELEN RASP MEIER . ETAL
Defendants
CASE NO. 88-CV -79
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
To . Helen Rasp MeiBf, ad·
dress unknown if hving , and
if deceased. her unknown
spouse, heirs. devisees. legatees, executors, next of
kin , administrators, and assigns, whose addresses are
unknown.
You are hereby notified
that a Complaint to Quiet
Title has been filed In the
Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Ohio, Case
No 88-CV- 79 , demanding
to quiet title of the following
described real estate in
Plaintiff's name, and / or the
reformation of Pla•nttff's
deed to include the follow·
ing real estate which 11
1ituated in the Village of
Pomeroy, County of Meigs.
Stale of Ohio, and contamed
in Volume 298 , Paga 137,
Volume 147. Page 389. and
Volume 121, Page 136,
Meigs County Deed Re·
cords. and further bOunct.'
and desc:nbed as follows:
PARCEL ONE : Boginmng
at the southeast corner of a
lot owned by Arthur Maddy,
on Front Stroot, 121 feet below the corner of Spring and
Front Streets; thence in a
northerly d1rection 100 feet;
thence m a northeasterly direction and parallel wtth
Front Street 38 feet; thence
in a southerly direction and
parallel with Arthur Maddy'
eaat Ime 100 feel to Front
StrHt. thence along Front
Street 38 feet to the place of
beginmng.
PARCEL TWO : Beginmng
at the aoutheaet corner of a
lot owned by M r1. Sara Jane
Smith (sa1d lot having been
purchased by her from Glennie Davis, and being a part of
what was known as the Horton Boat Yard property) on
Front StnHit; thence in a
northerly direction and fol·
lowing lhe eaat line of said
lot ninety (80) feet; thence in
a northaaeterly direction and
parallel with Front Street
thirty-eight !381 laot; thence
in a southerly direction and
poroHot wish Spring Street
ninety 1901 foot to Front
Street. thence along Front
Street thlny-olght (381 IHt
to the pltca of beginning,
end being part of the prop·
erty conveyed • by
Mary
Rasp, cllcoaood. by oonHI·
cate of tranafar to Helen
Rosp Moler. ond doted fob·
ruory
1941. lfld recorded
In Volume t47, otPege381.
Meigs Countv Deed Ro·
cordi.
REFERENCE DEED: Vo·
lumo 2118, Polgo137, Molgs
County o..d Recordo .
PARCEL THREE: Bogin·
ning at the 1outheaat corner
of lot No. Two 12) In tho angle of Main Street ond
Spring ltrHI: lhonoo olong
Mllln Stroot oouth-terty
fortv·llvo feet to elot owned
by lovlno Oownlo: thence
book elong and upper oldo of

e.

engaged in a shouting match with
Kenned y when he offered an
amendment to prohibit federal
funding for ma ter ials to groups
that "promote" homosexual activity. Heims said co nservatives
were "sick to their stomachs" to
learn of a federally funded
videotape that "encourages condoms a nd promotes sodomy."
Without alternatives, senators
voted 71-IR for the Helms

Ke nnedy's amendment the effect
of allowing homosexual groups to
discuss high-risk activ ities as
lmog a s they are not promoted
Helms angrily claimed it would
encou r age homosexual s to
"shack up_, but do it one at a
ti me."
· The Nortll Caro linian also lost
his batlle to prohibit the di strlbu
tlon of clean needles to drug
addicts Instead, tlle Senate gave
the surgeo n general the power to
pass out the needles to prevent
the spread of AIDS.
"We are not here to promote
homosex uality or drug use,"
explai ned Sen Lowell Welcker,
R·Conn " Wha t is be mg advocated throug hout the co urse or
this bill i ~ a course of conduct
wh ich will br in g a halt to this
great national threat."
As of Monday , the fed eral
Centers for Disease Control in

am endment .

Kennedy, undaunted, won s upport for a req uirement that
federal AIDS educat ion programs stress public hea lth benefit s of a "monogamous relationship' ' a nd the avoidance of illegal
Intravenous drugs - while provi di ng "accura te inform ation on

red ucing the r isk of becoming
infected'' with the AIDS virus.
Suc h language supercedes restrictions on educational m a teria ls for high-risk groups , giving

Atlanta sa id 60,583 people natio nwide had bee n diagnosed with
AIDS since 1981, of whom 33,926
had died. An estimated I million
Americans are infec ted with the
v ir us

The Senate pa c kage would
cr ea te national and sta l e informat ion and prevention pro-

grams,

would

establish

pro-

grams lo train health
professionals, wou ld speed rs.
search gra n is and would provldf,
for faster eva luation of treat•
ment methods.
The bill has an ope n-end .
au tho riza tion for the researc h
effort ; the es timate d f1rst-year
cost lor the olher programs is
about $685 miLlion .

BARGAI N MATIN EES SATURDAY &amp; SU~DAV
~Ll SE ATS $2.50
B~RGAitl NIGHT TUESDAY 12 50
531 JACKSON PIKE·RT 35 WEST .

~46-4 52 4

Phone

Tournament play starts next week
T h e Eastern -Crooksville
Trun ble a nd Southern are the
winner
will !acP the Trimble·
two top seeds m the Meigs Class
Federa
l
Hocking win ner on May
A sectiona l base ball tourna m ent
10
a
t
4:30
p m., whil e the
at Me igs Hi gh School, as an So
uth
ern-Southwestern
winner
nounced rece ntly m the pa irings
takes
on
the
Kyger
Creek-Nor
tll
li st.
Gal
ha
wmner
on
May
JJ
at
4:30
The 11 -7 Tomcats Wi ll ta ke on
4-10 Federal Hoc kmg T hursday, p.m .
May 5 at '4:30. while the Tor na does 111-5) will face the 1-11
Once in a while.
So uthwestern High la nd ers on
we have a chance
Sat urd ay, May 7 at 1 p.m .
In other ga mes, Ea s ter n 18-6)
to make
will pia~ 4-4 Crooksville on
MEIGS COUNTY
Wednesday , May 4 a t 4:30p.m.,
a nd the 3-8 Kyger Creek Bobcats
better.
dra w Nor th - Ga llla (2·9 1 on
~ota For Beagle!
Sa turd ay. May 7 at 3 30 p.m .

Public Notice

Public Notice

lovma Oowme ' s said lot
mnety (90) feet to t he no rth·
easte rly corner of said lot
and paralle l w1th Spring
Street . thence in .a n easterly
direct1on and parallel wath
Main Street forty-five (45 )
feet to Spring Stre et . thence
along Spring Street mnety
(90) feet to the place of be·
ginn mg.
Also the following descr,bed tract m same Village,
County and State, beginning
at the northeast corne r of a
lot owned by Lovina Dowme; thence tn a northerly
dtrection and parallel with
Spring Street ten (1 0) feet .
thence tn an easterly direction and parallel with Mam
Street forty-five (45 ) feet to
Spring Street. thence 10
southerly dtrectton alonQ
Spring Street ten (1 OJ feet ,
thence m a westerly direction and parallel with Main
Street torty~f1ve (45) feet to
the place of begmmng .
REFERENCE DEEO: Vo lume 298, page 1 31 , Me igs
Co•..w.QLDead Records .
PARCEL FOUR . Commencing at the southeast
comer of the said lot of land
conveyed to Bernice Darst
by deed recorded in Volume
168, Page 644, of tho Deed
Records of Meigs County .
Ohio, thence northwesterly
along the east line of said lot
ninety (90) feet to the
northeast corner thereof;
thence southwestorly along
the north lino of said lot,
aighty· etght (88) teet to a
point; thence southeasterly
and parallel with the east line
of aatd lot ninety (90) feet to
the south line thereof ;
thence northeasterly along
the south ltne of satd lot
eighty-eight (88) feet to the
place of beg1nnng.
There 11 also conveyed
herew1th the tan (1 0) foot
strip of land that lies south of
lhe lot above described
REFERENCE DEED : Vo·
lume 298, Page 137, Me•gs
County Deed Records
Also the following real
estate situate in the State of
Ohto, County of Meegs and
Village of Pomeroy , and
bounded and described as
follows, to· wit
Begmning at the northeast
corner of a lot purchaaed by
Lavina I. Downie from •aid
Glanme Davis; thence in a
northerly directton an~ parallel wtth Spring Street ten
(1 01 feet , thence m a wes·
terly direction and parallel
with Front Street thirty·
elghl 1381 feet, thenct '" a
•outherly direction and parallel with Spreng Street ten
(10) feet: thence in an
easterly direction and along
the northerly line of the said
Lovlnal . Downie's north line
thirty-eight 138) feet to the
place of beginning .
REFERENCE DEED: Vo·
lume 147, Page 389 , and
Volume 121 , page 136.
Meigs County Deed
Records.
The demand of the Complaint i1 that the trtle to the
above described real estate
be quieted in the name of the
Plaintiff, Mountatn State
Bank andf or the reformation of uld dead lo include
the above dHcribed real
estate In Plaintiff's name
alone.
You ara required to
an1wer the Complaint
within twenty-eight 1281
daya after the last publication of thl1 notice which will
be publi1hed once nch
weak for 1ix (8) IUCCBIIive
weeks The lalt publication
will be modo on April 21,
1188, ond tho twenty-eight
(28) doya for • - r will
commence on thllt date.
In case of vour failure to

answer o r otherw1s e respond as requ~red by the
Oh10 Rul es of Civil Pro cedure,
nt aby
default
will beJudgme
rendered
gainst
you
for the rehef demanded m
the Complatnt
Lerry E Spencer.
Clerk of Cou rts
Me1gs CoUnty, Oho
t3i 25, 1411 . 8 . 1 5.
22, 29, 61c

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of
Sale issued out of the Common Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, in the c11e of
Diamond Savings &amp; Loan
Company,
Plaintiff, vs.
Randy Riffle, et al. Defendants, upon a judgment therein rendered , being Case
No 88 -CV-21 in said Court.
I will offer for sale at the
front ·door of the Courthouse
in Pomeroy, Meigs County.
Ohio on the 20th day of
May, 1988, at 10:16 am.,
the following lands and tenements, localed at 4141
Wtlliams Road, Shade, Ohio
46776 , a more complete de·
scription of said real estate is
as follows ·
Situated in Bedford Township, County of Meigs and in
the State of Ohto:
Being in Sectton 16, Town
3, Range 1 :J , Onto Gon~ ­
pany's Purchase Beginning
at a atone set in the ground
in the center of the road at
lhe northwest corner of a
one-half acre lot heretofore
deeded by Samuel F. Wil liams and Elizabeth Wil liams, his wife. to John H.
William•; thence in a south erly direction along the west
line of said one-half acfe lot
10 the southeast corner of
setd lot; thence an easlerly
direction to the southeast
C(Jirner of aald lot; thence a
northerly direction to the
northeast corner of said lot; "'
thence en eaaterly direction
along the center of the road
leading to Chester 24 rods
to a stone set in the center of
the road; thence south to the
south bank of Shade Creak;
thence up Shade Creek followeng south bank of lhe
center of the abutment of
the bndga across said creek;
thence in a northeasterly di·
rection along the center of
the Athans and Pomeroy
Road to a Mulberry tree at
the forks of the road; thence
a 10utheasterlv dtrection
along the center of the Ch!s·
tar Road to the place of be·
ginning,
conta1nlng
10
acres. more or Ins. Also. th$
following real estate in Section 16. Town 3, Range 13
bounded as follow1: Begin·
ning at a stone set in th,a canter of the road bearing northwest from the hou• of John
H. William•; thence an ea•·
tarly direction along thit center of said road 1 0 rods to a
stone set In the giound end
in the canler of the road;
thence a wHterly dlrecdan
parallel to firet line 1 0 rods;
thence northerly direction 8
rods to pt.ce of beginning ,
containing 112 acre .
Alto. the following described real estate situated
In Bedford Township, Molgo
County, Ohio ond In Section'
11, Town3, Rongo13ofthe
Ohio Company'o Purchose.
Being oil of that porc-1 of
land lying between the west
branch of Shade Crook ond
the road
surveyed for
Mot1110 Atf:lnoon and tho
rood INdlng from Alhlfll to
Pomeroy, auppolad to con·
taln 'At acre. mON or leas.
R-en01 Deed : Volume
267,
Page 183, Molgo
County Deed Recordo
APPRAISED AT:

If elected YOU~ SHERIFF. I will endeavor to:

ROBERT E. BEEGLE
FOR SHERIFF
MAY 3, 19118

Pd Pol Ad by Cand .66 6th St Racme Oh1o

r;============:;!

I

HURRY!

*Organize tile office /supervise the deputies to prevent
costly lawsuits.
' Work within the budget set by commissioners.
*Fight drug/ alcohol abuse w~h Citizens Aware ness
Committee
*Cooperate with state / federal departme nt s in fight
against drugs.
*Keep citizens informed w ith news relea ses .
•work with commissioners to upgrade the county jail.
*Organize auxiliary of trained special deput ie s for spe cial
duty .

TODAY'S TIMES REQUIRE EDUCATION, EXPERIENCE AND
INTEGRITY IN THE SHERIFF'S OFFICE.
I have a Master's Degree, 20 years law enforcement
exp,erien,e, and integrity.

Only 2 Openings Left

Vote•••

For

DAY CARE SERVICE
IN RACINE

ROBERT E. BEEGLE

CALL NOW TO CONFIRM
CARE FOR YOUR CHILD
STARTING IN MAY .

SHERIFF

Thank tau.

Daytime 949-241 0
After 6:30 949-2450

Pd. by candidate, 66 6th St .. Ra cin e. Ohio 45771

'

Craftsman 3.5-RP
push lawn mower

Craftsman ,,_..
lawn tractor

\..G38036

LG25427

Super Pull-lite · starter tor last easy starts w1th less
pulling ertort Dependable sohd -state iQmtlon - less
mainte_nance Qu1ck height adJusters. 20-1nch cu t
Same mower w1t h #33072 grass catcher . 199.98

Our lowest pnce In 1988'• for an tt-HP lawn tractor Powerful 4-speed transax le drrve system w1th •
conven1ent 1n-line sh1it1ng Large 36-inch mow1ng
deck cuts b1g yards down to s1ze w1th fewe r passes

qp means teserve oower

'Proce otter 8 l 8B w lo ce 1349 99

Kenmore
523~sq. in.'
gas grill

Craftsman
5-HP front
tine tiller

194!!...

314~!...

Porcelam-enameled • .

spilt cook1ng grid See-, ,
through Window
·rota! coo't ng area

I

See our "LG " catalog for comple te details
nems ere catalog Items ava•lable 10 our LG catalOg • Prrces HICiude StliW'~ to store •tm;tal attOI'I
"llfl1•1ad warrant~ for years spec hec:t See store !or del at IS Gas g••IIS r&amp;qu re !lOme usemtlly
Ask about Sears creclit OIBnS

FREE RC COLA
SATURDAY

t19.ooo.oo. The,..,_,.

e•tra

Register to Win FREE
· Push Mower To be
Given Away May 7th

SEARS

Ul.

788 N. 2nd

992-2178

.. .'

4D 000 BT U

Dual chain drive De·
pendab le soli d-state

connot be ootd lor 1111 then
two·lhlrda tho appratood vet·

TERMS OF SALE : Caoh
on delivery of deed.
Howard E. Fronk. Shorlfl
of Melgo County, Ohio
14115. 22 . 21. 3tc

Residents of Meigs County
I Need YOUR Help!!

MIDDLEPORT

&lt;1\Seera, lloelluc~ and Co., INI

S.floltcfHin fuorollfHtl 'r 10ur money llec:t

�Page- 10- The Dally Sent1nel

Pomeroy-

Business Services

L tlr th ngs
art Worth 1\/ol

"

thr Class (ltd Sr on

let m tonv1r1
old MDv 11
&amp; 5hllu onr to easy VHS
CALL AMY CARTER
o BOB S ElECTRONICS

Pubhc Not1ce
POMEROY OH
992 2259
NEW liSTING - Fo Sa e
Gramps a pr ze w nn ng
Bass Crafty hard o get a
hook nto We II also s~ l the
large po d he ves n w t h
other sm a ler f sh And yes
the I ouse It s very Ia ge too 7
oom~ 3 bedrooms 2 baths
Hugelamly oo • havew
of Gramps hom~ We doubl
you I stay n the house
ho ugh whe1 Gamps "b t
ng' Approx 3 ac es Sell ng
f ICe $46 000 00
PRICE REDUCED - App ox
136 acres of vacant
and Secluded and pr vale
Excell€111 ho mes teo hunt ng
land Up to 30 ac es of hay
and NCJW $38 000 00

RUTlAND N ce ranch
type home on a eve lot 3
bedrooms equ ppro k !chen
close to schools a I n good
condton $25 00000 assu
mab e oan 9 ~~ fo 20 yrs
approx $287/mo P&amp; I&amp;T&amp;I
$450000 down o owner
w II h~p I nan ce ONLY

$29 900 00
POMEROY - Beaut lui v ew
oftheOh oRve th s 2 sto y
home featu es 3 bed rms
n ce I v ng room lull basement wtth a 2 ca ga age
and large fr ont s tt ng po ch
Th s h'mecan be you s w I
I ttle effort MAKE OFFER

$19 900 00
PRICE REDUCED - MID
DLEPORT - 3 bed oom 2
sto y ho me m tow n N ce
k !chen W 8 F P Much
mor e' Ca ll fo you show ng

At the regular meeting of
the Pomeroy V1ll ege Counc I

MIDDLEPORT Beaut lui
estoroJ co omat hom• 4 bed
room s 2 car ga ag~ has o nate tr m leaded glass wtndow
and doo Att c stud o w/s kyl
tght Must See Has roouced
pr ce t0 $62 000 00
NEW LISTING- HARRISON
VILLE - Approx 27 acres of
g uu 1d w~l all ta ler hook
ups ava lab e Cal fo more
detaiS ONLY $12 500 00
LISTINGS NEEDED' We
have buyers lo Me gs
County proper! es and need
homes to se I - Ca ll Today
We need your property to
sell
Henry E Cleland Jr

992 6191
Jean Trussell
949
Doltte Turner
992
Tracy Rtlfle
949
Offtce
992

1

2660
5692
3080
2259

th e Pomeroy V•llage Counc I

d•scuued at length the need
for purc has ng a new f1re
truck for the VII age of Po
m ercy F ra Department
It was the consensus of

the Counc I that t he V llage
of Pomeroy was n n eed of
updated f e f1ght ng equ1p
ment to adequately protect
1ts res dents and property
from the hazard of fires
After due cons deratton
the Po meroy VII age Counc
f om The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savmgs Com p any of Po

•Dozer 8o Backhoe Work
•Will Do Haul ng W th
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Servtce
•Junk Yard Buaoneu
WANT TO IUY WRECKED OR
JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS
-FR!! ESTIMATESForonrofthosuorm.,coll
Between 9 om
or leave

6pm

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt 174 Pomeroy Oh o

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Transmission

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6 17 tfc

me roy Oh o to secu e the
funds neceuary to purchase
a new f re truck that the

FOR

n ew truck wou d be held as
collatera by the tm anctal ln

st tutmn to secure payment
of tne t re truck and 1n per
ta mn g thereto Mrs Bar
on ck made a mot on to
adopt the follow ng
BE IT RESOLVED thatthe
Pomeroy VIllage Counc I
hereby nstructs the Mayor
to secure the approprlale f1
nancmg w1th The Farme s
Bank &amp; Sav ngs Company of
Porno oy Oh o for the pur
chase of a new f re truck for
the Pomeroy VII age F1reDe
partment and to do any and
a acts necessary to eftec
tuate th e pu chase and f1
nanc ng of sa d f re truck
Mr Shank offered a se
cond to the mot on and upon
roll call the vote result$ as
follows
larry Wehrung yea Bruce
Reed yea Betty Baron ck
yea W lham Young absent
Br an Shank yea
ATTEST Jane Walton C erk
Pomeroy VII age
Me gs Oh10
141 29 15) 6 2tc

SALE
3

Styles

and
Vanous Stzes
WOODEN BUILDINGS
BUilt On Your Lot
ON SALE NOW AT

SEARS IN MIDDL£PORT
614-992-2178

4 27 88 lmo

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repatr and re
core rad1ators and
heater cores We can
also ac1d bOll and rod
out radtators We also
repair Gas Tanks

PAT HILL FORD
992 2196
Moddleport Oh10
113tfc

Pubhc N ot1ce
LEGAL NOTICE
TQ BIDDERS
Sealed proposals bear ng
the title of the work and the
name of thQ b1dder will be
rece1ved n the off ce of the
Treasurer of the Board of
Educat on Southern Local
School D stnct Box 176
Rae no Me g, Co
Oh o
45711 untl 1 00 PM
Day ght Sav ngs T•me on
May 13 19B8 for the
mstallat on of new heater
and modern tat1on of the
warm air heat ng n the
present Rae ne Elementary
School Rac10e Me•gs
County Ohio all n accor
dance wnh spectf•catlona on
f Ia at the off ce of theTreas
urer of sa1d Board
B ds w II be publ ely
opened and read aloud at
1 00 P M Dayl ght Sovongo
T me on May 13 19881nthe
offtceo of the Board ot
Educat on
The Informal on for
B dders Form of Proposal
Form of Contract Spec f ca
ltons and other contract
documents may be exam
ned n the off1ce of the
Owner 8 odors requ nng
spectf cattons may obtam
them from the Ownor at
Ractne Meigs County Ohto
45771
(4 1 22 29 151 6 3tc

Card of Thanks

PLUMBING

&amp; HEATING

168

North Second
Moddleport Ohoo 4S760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry F sh ng Suppl es

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Btlls Here
BUSINESS PHON!
1614) 992 65!0
RISIOINCI PHON!
16141

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Ntw Hemts luHt
Fraa Estomates

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
NO SUNDAY CALLS
3 II tfn

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR
Authonzed Serv~ce
&amp; Parts
Br ggs &amp; Stratton
Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homehte
Jacobsen

J&amp;l
INSULATION

BISSELL
BUILDERS

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

CUSTOM BUILT

11

lost and Found

~;4-~;~MnB..,ceRd

St

Call 814-44&amp;-321 1
Owoen 8 4

•FUR N AC ES

PH 949 " 280 1
Clr Res 949-2860

•AIR CONDITIONERS
•H EAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

n., ....

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

Meogs Feltowshop of Chnstoen Athletes
Rusty Bookman Me1gs Jaycees Metgs AthletiC
Boosters Jtm Suste Elenor Rotary Club (dtn
ner &amp; money) Feeney Bennett Post No 128
Sons of Amertcan Legoon Larry sCarpet Outlet
Valley Lumber and Supply Corp
Powett s
Super Vatu UMWA Dostrtct and Local 1B90
(Gene Wtse) Un fied C1t1zens for Educat•on (Iva
Sosso n) POK Constructoon Farmers Bank Mr
and Mrs Moch Chtlds Mr and Mrs Btlt Cholds
Herttage House Locker 219 Facemyer Lumber
Co Inc Mr and Mrs leshe Facemyer Vau
ghan s Cardona! SwiSher &amp; Lohse Whaley s
Used Cars Pat Holt Ford Ben Ewong Frank Ha
rold Jr Bank One Mr and Mrs Paul Pauley
Preston G bbs Barbara Chapman H&amp;R
Block Downong Chtlds Agency Inc Mtchael
Meadows 0 Broen &amp; 0 Bnen Mochael R Sw1n
ger Gravely Tractor Sales Stmon s PICk A
Paor D Bumgardner Sales Inc Coty Loan
Bank Rawlmgs Coats Blower Mr and Mrs
Carl Shenefoeld Mr and Mrs Roy Vaughan Mr
and Mrs ReK Shenefoeld Warren Hart Quahty
Prtnt Shop Mr and Mrs Randy Hawley Ohvo
Page Mr and Mrs Allen Page 0 Dell Lumber
Kong Butlders Supply Mr and Mrs Larry
Pockens Foreman &amp; Abbott Pearl Canedey
Rodney Wroght Robert Barton Cleland Realty
Inc Dennos McKonney Story 8o Story Coach
foster Meadows &amp; Meadows Baum lumber
Co Kermit Walton DaviS Ouockol Agency Inc
Vollage Pharmacy
Fruth Pharmacy C &amp; D Pennzool Ace Hord
ware Johnson Varoety Store Mr and Mrs Ed
doe Crooks Mtke Barr Mr end Mrs J1m Oyer
Mr end Mrs Don Kennedy Mr end Mrs
Charles Chencey Mr and Mrs Boll Wilford
Dan sCiothong Mr and Mrs LarryParsons Mr
and Mrs Jom Snyder Joe Hawkins Paul Patter
son Kerth WIS ecup Harold Roush Robert
Spears Thomas Smoth Jay Burleson Jom Neal
Gary Fife Boc k Street Vodeo Davod Johnson
Barber Shop Larry s Grocery P1ck 8o Shovel
Lottie Coat Bucket Tewksbury Berber Shop

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING

THANKS AGAIN!

Moddleport Oh
992 661,
J 30-17 "

CARTER'S

992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh1o
I 28 88

c:J

tfn

•Wa shers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrogerators
Must Be Repaorable

985-3561
We Serv ce All Makes

1122/88/ tln

10 8 tfc

L&amp;L
INDEPENDENT
CARPET
CLEANERS

W1ll do Federal
and State
Income Tax,
typmg,
bookkeepmg.
and Notary
Serv1ce
Margaret Parker

The Best Technique
In Carpet Cleanmg

742-2451
MIKE LEWIS OWNER
Rt 1 Rutland Oh 45775
4ll881mo

992 2264

32l87Imo

CHARLIE'S
MIDTOWN
VIDEOS

BINGO

PH 742-2833

A1ck Pewaon Auctlo""' II
censed Oh o and Welt Virgin I•
Estate antique f•m. liquid•
tlon Illes 304-773-5785
9

12

We P-v cash for late model dean
UMid C81"1
Jim Mink Chett .Oidllnc
Bill Gene Johnaon
614-446 3872

Complete houl8holdl of furnl
ture &amp; •ntiq~ Alao wood &amp;
COli heatiM'I Sw•in 1 Furniture
• Auction Third • Olive
6t&lt;&amp;-446-3t59

Call us tor your mobile home
nsurance Miller ln1ur1nce
304 882 2145 A lao auto
homa life. health

P. E. MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES

CALL 992-2772
GARAGE &amp;

d

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnsulat on
•Storm Doors
•Storm W nd ows
•Replacemen1 W ndow s
•N,ew Roof ng
FREE ESTIMATES

'SALES &amp; SERVICE
U

614 662 3821
Aufhorozed John Deere
New Holland Bu_sh Hog
Farm Equ1pment
OHler

PH 992-2772

Farm Equlp111ent

328881mo

Parts &amp; Service

1386ttc

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

Black Powder Suppltes
Modern Ammun1t1on
CAN ORDER Modern
GUNS ON REQUEST
At Reasonable PriCes
It 124 Across
Happy Hollow Rood

614-7 42-2355

411871mo

EAST

GUYSVIlLE, OHIO

JAMES KEESEE

HILLSIDE
MUIZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

S RT SO

Announ ce menIs
3

Announcements

Would I ke to hear from parMtl

who has a child rata ned in the
first grade Ple..e nnd wrflten
correspondence to Jo.-.11 H11
kin• At 1 Georue- sCreekRd
Oalhpolls Ohio 46631
Now op"ld Mr P bbt Pin1
and Subs Call 614-992 3234
Fast free delivery to limited
ar ...

4

G1veaway

3 truckload• just ~trlvtdll Buy
new Hem1 for the pric. of uiOd
Bunk bedl br..1 had boerd1
Wllther a. dryer porch •wings 1
tun 1lUCk load of tool1-ho11
•hovels l'lk-. hand tooll IIW
blada
more Baby Item•
11ro41•• bedl. w81k.. toy1.
blkH trlkM ICOOtll'a. pogo
b .. la Otllk ltema Y, price
Rt 141atCem:enay t.mleon
Uncotn Pike s ... atar1a Thun
8 I Closed Sun Starte •gain
Mon 811

Serv 1ces
11

BOGGS

Fn &amp; Sat
3 mi below
Gall pollsonRt 7 lolsoflteml

E111iJioymenl

Help Wanted

ASSEMBLERS wantad Earn
monev ...embllng TecktV
Free inforrretlon Wrtta Jo El
Enterprilet P 0 Box 2203
K111lmmee F1 32742 2203

It••

Aprl 29 30 AioGrendeE ...tll

boyl-0-8 toyL
hou .. hold ltema Follow
Pom. . . lloby

Men1 WOfMIII

GOVERNMENT JOIS
116 040
159 230/yr Now
hiring Your arN 805-117
8000 ext A 10189torcunent
Fodorol list

FriSat

3ml 1
Rt 7
Blbf •dutt clothet cll1hel furntture CUIUiina spread~ Watch
for ligna
O.•CrMkF w B Church V•d
SII .. Cir W•~Bike SII1-Hot
Dog Saturdav from 9 IS on 180
In Vinton •• Jeck Rat:lifr1
rlllldlnce

EARN AS MUCH • UOO
WEEKLY ooooomblylng pr.... cta
in your honw Start ~ght ...,,y
No ex perienC41 N•ces•ry Senil
llff-ldchued Jtamped ....
lope to HOMECRAFTS. P 0
Box 7802. Humlngton WV
25778

Yord Booi•Fn &amp; Sot 9-4 370
Dobby Dr
Goolllpolla lalrv
furniture of Ill tv.-. beb¥
auPDII• girl • boy dotting.
adUh clothing--ala 9 lho•
pflttzgrlff clahel coffee tllble.
toya. coffM mlker nu,..rou1
other Items All it«ns In good
condlclon
2 Fomlly Bob McCorrniclo Rd
Trill• Ct Fn 29th • 811

Registered Nur,.w.nted imm•
dlllttfv to auperv .. the AM'
HoiHr Clinic Weight Racltetlon
Program If lnter•tlld call 114446-5244
Penon to work In
Ooll"'oolll olftoo Sond rtply
r11umeto Box Cl•145 Gllllpollo DallyTrlbuno 826ThlrdA,.
Goolllpala 0 H 45131
Wan1_.

30th.

7 Fomlty 0 - • 8011• Off Rt 7
on Addloon Plo 2 mloo. flrot
roood loft. wl1lte llllu• whh rod
b•n bthlnd AddeviUe Schoof
Dlnlngtlbleach_._ 00 _ _
.... .._....
ch•lra tundmadt crefh
olol.-g- allolzo Aprl 21 &amp; 30
M-v 2 thru 7

LPN-Appty In paqon to Tht
Medical. Pt.,. 203 Jacbon
Pike. Golllpolla Ohio bot,..on 9
AM&amp;430PM
The Down Under AM*'IW'It II
now 1cc.ptlng ll)plc.IIDM lor
bwlllndlrt. w.it....
• ho. ., . . Appfvl~ pw~on No
phont clll pleue 300 Second
A110 Latoorotlt Mall

..-It••

To g1veaw..,. Pupp••
6t&lt;&amp;-25&amp;-1688

Call

Giveaway 4 temele ldt~n1 8
..Ws old Call 814 446 2163
Old refrlgentor Still runa free
for hllul ng away Cell 614-4483939
Free puppy to good home 9
wks old Half Gernwn Sh•
pherd H1lf Collie. Haa had Ill
ahota C1ll 814 44&amp;-3939
Free flra wood locet~ in town
649 4th. Ave or call 614 448732&amp;
Femala Ptt Bull to give away
Fom ly pot Coii81&lt;&amp;-843-5Z11
Smell cement block building.
Mutt be torn down 614-98153521 lifter lp m
Dog to glvt fiNly Pert Oermln
Shepherd Plrt Huakv 2 yn ofd
light tan color frlendtv 51 49•9 30&amp;1
Cute tree pupplft
30&lt;&amp;-773-Bt48

pert

Collie.

3 or 4 lfNII locul1 t .... for
f rewood e•v acQih 3048711-1431 ah• 6 00 pm
Sh

month old fem•le
Schn~uzet "o plptft to Qood
ho!'lW •n the country Pho01
304-882 2392

Butted cenwnt Could be uMd
for Ill 30&lt;&amp;-1711-4208

6

lost and Found

FOUND Molo 4 mo old Cock•
poo Bloclo Call 1 372 11084.
C1nn cttim It Jtlcklon Co
Animal Shetter

Rlnloy Dink FIN Moorflot - Pioneer 1111 former Rinks
8 uilclng- Aaute 7 eouth M1
rfwnl Oh 2 .or• urad• roof
Outside 1~ walllble. Ower
night ll'ld week1nd c.mping
waltlble for dell. . Open Fn;.
dllf Sotvrdov &amp; Sundoy 9
AM IPM yew round For moN
Jnformltkm c.ll V Johnaon
81&lt;&amp;-318-9778

Outoldo Sol• Rep -ted for
Ollila Co Mutt h.,. ptiVIDul
oulide - ' • txperitno. Mike
•t7 cornn*slon on aach 121
Nla Ewry one ill protp~Gtlnd
WI re "1 In our field. Experienced lnter•ted men or
women 1hould r...,. wfth ,..
aume or work hletorv P 0 Box
371 Pl:ort..-tn. Ohio 45112.
ATTN Sol• Mgr

...,.ooo

Hair StyHm
Tho StriOI
stylng Hlon le IHIIIng one
odcltlonol ttyflot wtoo Ia -ng
for mono then Not .. Job
Call Tarn 111 8f4-44S.I810 for

a-.~ t.nlf• At 7

....

- """"""' - .....
...

cw fenwl.. who lk• to

~

Big Vord Solo on Ill 7 In
Ch•hlre Moy 2nd &amp; 3rd Rain

m•

c......

poooplo. Good • typing lftd
office work EUCIIII••ct Inti
roolloololo.
Good Job
for tloo right- Rootw • floe
Dolly
· lux 721 G
Ohio
Pl:onwoy

Mens and lad es 'Middlng bands
Never worn Must 11!111 Call J m
It 614-992 2982
Two 20 nch BMX bovs b cvcl as
for ule. $20 eaeh Cal 6t4992 6150

LlrNn Mower Repalra
Lawn Servlctl
Smal Gardena Plowed
304-675-1663
WHI do teWing In my home
Cttt~tfreezer for .... 304-7735688

3 bedroom hou• 1 9 acres On
Rl 7 Appointment only 6149928332
3 bedroom rand! 189 Beedl

Financtal

St Mlddeport Single bath
Cky lot t18 &amp;00 Call 614992 2808

Bus1ness
Opportunity

2 nice lot1 with 8 room houte
Bath •n d e hllf tun porCh and
c• port 2 out buildings 614742 2022
2 bedroom hou11 Mulberry
Ave Pomeroy Full balement 2
c• g~rege. ,.p,.ls.t t 50 000
oell for $20 000 Call 81&lt;&amp;-992
36&amp;1

I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO reeomnendll that you
do bu1ln . . with peo:fle you
know and NOT to •n money
through the mel until you hiWe
invMtlgated t hA offering.

Bedford Townahlp Ad

'

'

Gowrnment homea from •1 {u
repair) Dtlinquant •x PI'QPerty
Repoueealona Call 808 887
8000 EJCt GH9806 for current
repo Nat

lnwatment property for sele.
Aemodeted rental hou• 2 br
with b,..ment citv •17 600.
30&lt;&amp;-8711-8331

Michigan Sate-60 Neilllwn
mowert cemetery wrallhl
MotherOayglfta promdreuM
drep" bedding. clothet

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; V1ctmty

Car-

VCR • 0111'1.. mlnlt cape.
-ding dr- ...... olothtl,
rowing maolllno 831 HHdo Dr
Mov2·4

I

LOTS. one aa"e ltwtl wooded.
water Jericho Road owner
financing. good terms 304372 8405 or 372 2676

Downtown Modern 1 BR compl . . kitChen AC carpet Call
8 t 4-446 0139

City

Rentals

Sitting-Shady
•7000
Call 30&lt;&amp;-678-2987 or 67111071

refrlp

3 bedroom rw1ch 8x12 ltontge
bldg. 1 acre Gallipolis Ferry
prioad
Moving out of
...te f;::ll for appointment 3041711-8284

•ao •

'
"'I

1

Hou• for •Ia. 3 bedrooma. 2h
b•l-.. dining room. living room
with ff,. plaoe. large kltch11110
h••economiCIItv oneecrelot
Make on oil• 30&lt;&amp;-882 2096
townar flnltlclng avehblel
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

S8Yef'! temHI• M.y 2nd and
3rd 9 00.4 00 Clothol furniture tools llnena (list. pana
gl.,..wre antique rock• cur
taln1 apphncee .. c Dele
Herta Vellowbush Road
A•dne

19 81 Redm1n Sectfo111l home

May 2 and 3 Furnlt_,.. dl1h11 ,.
quilt topa miiC 1tem1 Frank
Clel.,dl W1lnut St Racine

'

i.,---,-..:.._...;._ _:_.::.:____::_

April 30 Mav 1 2 3 Yellow-brulh Rd Aadn• Ohio lots of
dathlng of 811 liHI Lot of "
dltf-t thlngo
Moving Sill• Friday April 29th ~
and Srlurd-r April 30th 1512
t
llooclo St Mlddtllllon H ralro
1.3;:1_8_AI_h-:8t:-:-:M-Idol--:-o""-ort-=tG
111• Saturday Apr I 30 •t
127 Uncoln Hill from 10 5
Furniture, clothel lots of miiC

•rea•

.....

28x56 3 BR control air oeooctv
to be moved. Call 81&lt;&amp;-4418 594 after 8pm
19811 t 4xfl0 N.. llJO 2 Bedroom unfumlahed E.:el cond
Set up &amp;. rHCii 10 mow into
112 200 Coli 8t4-26S.19&amp;3
M F AM only
Sit Sun
anytime.
1184 Fl•h• mobile home 2
bedroom• 1Vi bet:hl a. .. tttul
buiM In fe•uiOI Coli 814-4464 291 wenlngl
12x80Mobfle Home with porch
In Crown City 2 BR fur. . hed
Set up &amp;. rea6t 10 mow Into
Excool co rod. Call 11&lt;&amp;-446-0276
ooftar 8 PM
Extr~~

niDI Schu!U 198912x8&amp;
new c•pet. u• hHt
Dol-ed FREE 089118 Call
8t4-441-0t76
3 BA

1977 lloylliow 2 eR den
wlfl::/'lece. new Wltar hHt•
cent
air 2 porch• Call
Bt&lt;&amp;-441-70&amp;1

i·~;:---:-1 -:-:--:---­

...... pan • • 918 South Third
Mlddeport Sat Aprl 30 Mon
end Tu• May 2 1nd 3 A1in at

t973 Floomlngo 12x85 3 bodroom• pannaled deck. unh air
cond •nd unct.pennlng In-cluded. •• 600 oa. 30&lt;&amp;-87112871

ne

Olrege ule MIY 2 3 4 572
High St Mlddlopcort A"""r
ConMt ...

88 Floming mobile home oxc
cond 304-8711-8841

Tun May 3 Syl'llcul8 P•k
led dl1hw11har bicycles
c•pet rowtng m1chln1 lot•
more Rlin ctnoell

1981 Flenilng Mobile Home
Excel co rod Call 304-875
B84t

•
3 famlfy ...,d •le. betide VfW
Post on At 33 Muon W VL
too
April 28 28 30 Tlouro. Fr1 Sot •
ao.- fumltuN entlquea lnd
blauty lhop equtpment Iota of ,...
dothlngaH ....

~

1970 \Nindlor 12x85 with
10•12 lldd on woodlx.lrner
Wltt.enddrWr alroond mult
be m ...d. oooll 30&lt;&amp;-8911-3802

N cely furnished small houll8
Aclllts only Rat required No
pat• Cell 814-4.46· 033B

Fu nllhed House 3 BR 29 Nell
Ave Galllpoll• •22&amp;a mo can
448 4416 after 7 PM

2BA unfumiahed-1mile 218
•200rent t150dep &amp;ref Ona
eh ld Cell 614-446-9886
Nice one BR furnlahed hou11
No P911 Ref 6 IBC dep
required Call814-446-1769
3 rooma &amp; bath Completely
fur,..lood Coli 8t4-446-4109
or 379-2740

Nice 2 bedroom home baae
ment large yard Uncoln Ht1
$1715 Reference and deposit
roqulred 81&lt;&amp;-992 6053 Avel~
abla Mav 111

3 bedroom houl8 for lttnt on
WetzgaH St Unfumlahed $22&amp;
month deposit required 814992 8724.
M dcleport 3 bedroom 2 bath.
cam1111 air t275 month plut

utHitiOI ond dopoalt 396-93307119
Newer 3 bedroom 111ndl home
attached g. .g• 8276 month
Phone 742 3t71
Smell hou• 1 a 13 Jeftanon
fl\td
Pol11t Pl .... nt phone
30&lt;&amp;-876-1365
Completly turniahed 3 BR
hou• on "River front In M•on
W Va •40o • mo Dep required Call 304-77J..&amp;OB1
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Mobile home for rent Call after
2 pm 61&lt;&amp;-446-0627
Trlller for 181lt C.ll Mter 5 PM
&amp;t&lt;&amp;-448-4226
Nee 3 bedroom 11'111• &amp;pan do
living room lar_gYIIrd K.-euge
Call614 4411-7473

2 IR Nice &amp; ciMn i'l Eure1t1
1200 a mo Oep .equlred No
polo Coli 614-245 8863

2 BR

unfurniohod 12KI0 V.
milepa11HMConRt 315 Dep •
oef ""'ulrood Cooll 614 446
4369 or 30&lt;&amp;-875 9780
Mobile Home for rent In Middl•
port Two b. .oom• Furnished

or unfumilhtd air conditioned
electric heat Adutta only no
Must hi'J8 reference Call
61&lt;&amp;-992 3384

'*'

2 bedrooms fumlahed or unfur
Nehedtdll• Mektyormonthly
depoalt required 304 t 78
1206
MobHehome 2BA AC '4mlle
out Sand Hill Rd C•ll 304-875Mobile hor'l'tll 2 bldrooma fur
nilhtd BurdetteAddn •zoo 00
month t1 00 00 depoeh: plut
utllhlao 30&lt;&amp;-878 tOIIO
TNIII' for Nnl 2 bedroomt
12xl0 1 V.. mUet out Mlll1tone
Ao•d Apple Grove WV•
• 250 00 per month plus dep
0111. phone 304-1578 2483 ar
571-2233

35 Lots llo. Acreage

43 Fanns for Rant

a

One •are waoded tot. Recooon
OMII frontla• oounty ._.. •
. . . lely 10'*' to rtYer
111100 lly Ownor Call 814448-7111.
20 ear• for .... Hlmtock
ti

El.ndiy
-· 2
bul...,g
oltH
Call 114-8t2
7217

u

1 tCI'e an rtver rev. from.e•
.... loptlotlllk. oolootrto.1 - -llllu•
..
_
, to.._btl park.
ioolooolooot
c.n.,
814lt2t111

In..,..,.

Furn •hed eff dency 8145 Ut I
rtles paid Share beth 607
Second Gallipolis Call 814448 4416 after 7 PM
Garege aPt fumiaMd 8226
Utilit181 pe d 29VJ Ne I Galhpa
h1 Call 614-448 4416 after 7
PM
11 Court St 2 BR 2 b1th1
klttchen tu n1shed w w c•pet
No pet1 Off street parking.
83251 mo plus ut htles O.p &amp;
ref Call 814 448 4926
Garage apartment 3 roonw &amp;
bath w d a r Clean No pets
Adults onty Call 614 446
1519
New one Bedroom apt&amp; n
M ddleport FurNahed or unfur
n1shed Cell 614-992 5304 or
446 8898 aft"' 5

Furnla:t.d apt
1 BR 807
Seeond Gall pol 1 8226 • mo
Utllklao pord c.u 448 44te
afler 7 PM
In Rio Grande nice 2 BR U26
mo Refrigerator etove &amp;. water
furnished No pets Call 614446-8038
tpt1 1 4 roonw 81
1 3 room• &amp; poreh located
u.,.te ra 468'h Second Ave
Tolll elac aae. dep required
Adu ha on tv No pets Call
11&lt;&amp;-446 2236 .. 448 2581
2

furn~ahed

1 BR furnl1hed Utilltlee paid
NO Pets •&amp;o
depoait $190permo 6month1
leaae Ca I 614 446 3867
No ch drll'l

Valltrf Furniture
New and u•d fu mtture and
appllcanca• Call 614 446
7 672 Mours 9 5
J &amp; S FURNITURE
1415 Ea1tern Ava
Uvtng room suites S179 &amp; up
Bedroom tulles 8399 &amp;. up

PICKENS
FURNITURE
Dlneua1 bad• bedding
dr&amp;s18r't cheat couches cheirs
Iampi coffee-end tabll!ll Every
day Specie!• Vr mile out Jerri
cho 30&lt;&amp;-87&amp; 1450
Refrigerator Good condition
0200 Coli 814 446-3548

K ng a~ze bed complete 8135

M F 50 tractor •2 000 llwn

Bldg 11 b:9} *400 Twin OJ
turntables amplifier and one
large 1paaker $400 Bee
cooler 8400 Buggy 8400 Oak
table 4 cha rsand hutch *600
2 full •ze bed frlmee. mirrors
$126 3 tVIt'ln complete badl
850 each COmmerc aiiMeper
0100 304 67&amp; 8999

Refrlger•tor $81 Refrigerator
coppertone *75 Bectrlcrange
30 •es Electr c r~nge 40
•s&amp; Gu range whfte--l66
FreeJ:er upright frolt free •76.
Kenmora will her t7&amp; G E
washer •76
Skaggo App an coo
6 59 Upper River Rd 448 7398
BORM vanity baby bed stereo
• mlac ttema Call eva 6 8 PIVI
6t&lt;&amp;-446-0885
Uaed Whirlpool Wllhtr • dryer
Call61&lt;&amp;-448 379111ftor 5 PM
Water bed- like nrN W1Vel11a
wh:h heater lner mat1ret1 peel
aheetl t221J or beat off1r Call
30&lt;&amp;-e76-8542 ooftor 4 30 PM

2 bedroom1panment onl ncoln
Hill Pl:omoroy 0111 814 992
8639 or 814-992 3489
2 bedroom Apt for .ent Car
peted: N ce sett ng Landry
f~ePttiM evallllble Call 614992 3711 EOH
1 bedroom fumtshed effeciency
apt 1 upaUIIrs apt wilh 2
bedroom~ K tehen tum~ahed E
Mam Pomeroy 814-992 8216
or814 992 3523
Two fou bed oom ap.-tmenta
In Pomeroy Depolit required
Call 814 992 6723 •fter 5 00
Nioe one bedroom unfumiahed
1partment n Po merE for 181lt
Wet• •war nsh dcup fur
nlohed Call 614 99 2094
Ap.-tment for rent t225 •
month Oeposk required 614992 5724
APARTMENTS. mobtle home1.
hou•• Pt PIMYntendGallipo11• 614-448 B221
Beech Street Middleport Ohio
2 bedroom fumlehed apt utlttlee paid referenceaenddepolit
30&lt;&amp;-au 2688
Apt for rtnt 117 N Fourth
Aw Middleport Ohio 2 bedroom furnlahed 304 882
2588
45 Furn•hed Rooms
_
--------Furnl1hed room-819 Second
A"" Goolllpollo •125 o mo.
Utillti•l)lid Sinalemele.Sh••
bath. CaM 441-44111afl• 7PM

Buy or Sell Riverine
1124 E Main Street
Houn M T W 108m
SundlrY 1 to 8p m
2528

Concrete blocka ell •zea yard
ordellverv Maaonund. Gall polia Block Co 1 23% Pine St
Gallipolis Ohio Coli 61&lt;&amp;-4462783
56

Pets for Sale

Groom 1nd Suppty Shop Pet
Gnom ng All breed• All
stvl• lams Pet Food Dealer
Julie Webb Ph 614-448 0231

57
Antlqutl
Pomeroy
to Sp m
1514-992

54 M1sc Merchandise
Callahan aUMdTire9hop Over
1 ooom. •znu 13 14 1fi
16 18 5 8 mil• out At 218
Call 614 258 6251
SWIMMING POOLS 0988
ORDER NOW PAY LATER
Huge 31 oval pool with deck.
fonc::e II fitter lnsmllalion II
ffnanelng available 1 BOO 345
0948

2 prom gownt for •I•Gunny

saek tlze 3 •15 Worn once C•ll
6t&lt;&amp;-448 7923

Ill 'A A
Rt 141 at Cen•IIY It ml on
Unooln Pike 448 315B
Sunk bedl---•1 79 brill head
bo•d• •24 95 .. ble • chalfa
• 99 stroll. . U4 911 porch
owing us sa 12 eMX blk•
138 98 10 trlk•l19 18 pogo
ball •t 98 le1f rak••3 99
thovel• •3 99 ho11 t2 91
.-w b1MI81 11 99
Open Dolly 8 8 Clooood Sundl¥

1986 Rockwood pop up
camper 2 queen beds d nette
J ho&gt;Mt
like brtlnd new C.ll
614 245-561 6

3010 J 0 Sh•p J o plows.
gra n dr II hay bal.- ra ke n..,
condh oner $6400 Owner w II
finance Call 614-286-8622

1984 A rs-t,.am Excela-tnler
$28 900 Pr ce f rm Extra•
Excel cond Cal between 4 &amp;. 7
PM 614-446 6130

FarrMI Cub tractor mOWing
m1ch1ne &amp; turn~ng plow Call
after 4 30-Wed Thurs &amp; Sun.
61&lt;&amp;-367 7543
0 17 All s Chalmers 3 pt

PS

live PTO Excallant conciteon
614--949-20 13

Musocal
Instruments

Bundy Trumpet Ul&amp;d 2 ye..-s
t200. Coli 61&lt;&amp;-446-2668
In dlvldual gu ;tar l"'ont Be
ginners Serious Gultarilt Rru
mcerdll Mutlc 614-44&amp;-0687
Jeff Wamsley inatructor 614448 8077 Umited Open ngs
58

&amp;

Fnut
Vegetables

Red and white aweet poteto
pl~nts Call 614-742 2220 ot
614-742 2773
Freezer beef 304-875-4t82

Farm SUilllltes
1'1

LJVP.slock

1 982 Ford Eacort Wago" 4
spd AC AM FM C111 n8W'
hres &amp; battery 76 000 mil e~
Good eond 82186 Call 304876-8609 or 675 t087

1- - - - - - - - - - -

t 976 Ro ckwood Moto Home
614-949 2013

1 979 Datsun 2 door clean
• 700 00 or make en offer
304-882 2714

Toppe r campe fo 8ft bed with
stow 1 nk
ce box Good
condrt on 8500 Call 814 992
2217 or 614 992 5778

lWo 1965 Mustang• rough
304676-3238

Excel ent Condttion. 1 98&amp; Renadt All ance black. 2 door 4
speed, AC AM FM tinted w .,._
dows nliwer radial twes groat
g• mileage! Excellent 2nd c•
•• 000 00 reaaoMble off• accepted 304 875 2120 ext
1122 or 675-4107

1980 Carr age Travel Trill.,- air
awn ngs 3 3 ft Many 01 her
o pt ons Very clean 614 986

Uvestock

1980 &amp; 1978 Ofots Cutla11
Supreme. loaded act It cc f1 ce
cars low ml 304-875-6281

Service s

6 wk. old baf7t ch cks S We
laced Wyan dolts Barred Aocics
white rocb pu lets Roosters
Call 61&lt;&amp;-256-6413

1980 C tatlon run1 good good
shape a rcond ps pb takeover
payments 304-B82 2252

Stallion Serv ce AQHA lncen
tiYII Fund Palomino Stallion
Offlpring ave ltble for napecfton NOQHA allglbte. 8100.
614-949-2465

72

6206 Deutz tractor Excel cond
Re•on for sell n~OwrMW
t red Cell 304-676 6827

r•

t6hptl"'etorwlthm0\Wr plow
dlac cultiVator Call 304-6754004
63

One Pal am no m•e to foal n
June 1 reg stered Angu1 Bull
Call 8t&lt;&amp;-98S.3891

Bu lding Mater als
Block brick 1B11War pipes w n
dowt lintels etc Cla~de Wi.,.
len Rio Grande 0 Cell 814246 6121

a we•ks old pigs 836 00 aach
304-876-2038

Trans porl ali on
71 Auto

s

For Sale

Trucks for Sale

New 1988 Jeep Comman che

aporttruck Black with 1 lver
otrlpooo 4 opd s W B a 6500
Call 614 256-6327

1975onetonduf11ptruck Good
motor &amp; holst $1 600 Don s
Landscapes 614-446 9646
1976Ford150XLT V8 auto
a r PS PB Runsexca!lent Body
fa~r Cal 614 245 5040 afl:e 6
PM

CROSS&amp; SONS
U s 35 Welt Jeclleon. Ohio
11&lt;&amp;-288-6451
Mauav Fergu10n NIM' Holland.
Buth Hog Sal• S. Service Over
40 uaed tnctor1 to chooae from
&amp; complete I ne of new &amp; used
equipment Largeat •lect on In
S E Ohio

19 B6 YaHow Stone Camper 30
fl: lots of eJ(tres like new Cal
304-a95 3465 after 5 PM

81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unc:ondit onal I fet1me gu1r1n
tee toea nrfaoences fum11hed.
Free est mates Call collect
1 614-237 0488 day or n1ghL
Rage t B aseme llt
Waterp oofing
SWEEPER 111 d sew ng mach ne
repa r part ! and suppl• Pick
up end deltVery Dav s Vacuwn
Cleaner one half m Ia up
Georges Creek Ad Call 814446-0294
S dmg. overhang gut'lltf'S storm
doors &amp; wmdows Free .., ..
mate Cull 614-446-8070

Bnck Block Work Fou~ltions
brick \l&amp;neer f raplaces
restorat on• a amall JObt Free
est mates 25 ~ars ex per ence.
Call 614-245-9652

1979 Fo d F 100 p1ckup VeJy
good cond 82600 Call 614446-4045

RC remodel ng Odd JOba
Carpentry Ftee es:tunatea Call
614-388-8491

1981 Ravena Flat 10 ft 2
Spreed With sides h gli bows
new tarp Exeellent cond ton
Call 614 949 2455

Concrete Septic Tan kl 1000
gal 1500galandJetAeration
system flctory tra ned repair
shop RON EVANS ENTI:R
PR SES Jackson Oh1o 1 BOO.
537 9528

t 981 Olds Cutin a loaded
Low m Iwoe. $2750 or trade for
cattle or farm equipment Call
81&lt;&amp;-448-4288
1981 Concord Wagon Tilt
crm1e AM FM Atldng $1100
Coli 61&lt;&amp;-446-0208

1 981 Chevy Luv Ut lity truck
Good work truck 51300 Ca l
Sendys 614 992 7403

19B1 Olds De tl 88 Royale
73 OOOmll• Florida c• ElCCel
1hape 82650 or belt offer Cal
30&lt;&amp;-676-2241

1 962 Ford p ckup Can be seen
at 180 Park Dr Pt Ple8$1nt
$800 Cal 304 875--6221

a3 Oldl Flrenza station wagon
83 Buick Skylark. 84lynx Sell
attrada Call 61&lt;&amp;-256-1270

IIIP•••

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES
Sept c tank pump1ng- $90 pet'
load Call 1 800.537 962B

1 97B Dodge 1!. ton Pick up
81 000 mil eo $2 500 00 304
675 6574

1978 Mon• Carlo 380 4 bolt
main with 3/ 4 cam &amp; head«s
nooo o so Call 304-87567&amp;6

ch.,..

79
short pickup 1'2 ton
wfth topper 4 new dres Good
Cond 304-675-3059

1984 Ford Bronco II Exce
cond AC AM FM red o euto
good tlrM Call after 5 PM
weekdll';'s 614-387 7aOO

73

Vans

&amp;4 W

D

1987 Ford 150 extended con~o"~rsiOn 'AIIl t4 000 m les fll!fl
steat &amp; leather cept:l n chairs &amp;
ounge Call 614-266 6327

1979 New Yorkw 81000 Cal
61&lt;&amp;-446-1847
19BO Oldl Omaga. front wheel
drive Oood condltton Ca
61&lt;&amp;-446-1001

1977FordVan Runswell Body
good sMpo $1500 F rm Cal
after 6 PM 614-446-9380

1984 Chrveler Laaer PB PS
AM FM Clu ster.o 4 cyl
E&gt;&lt;cel co rod Call 614 446-4347
or 446-4746

New pant lock 111 lock
out hubs 4 spd AM FM Csss
Cell 614-446-6692

Fetty Trea Tr nvntng. ttump
remow Ca11304-675-1331
Aot1ry or cable tool dr llmg
Most W~~ell sca mpler:edumedl\f
Pump sales tnd serv ce 304e95 3B02
Starks Tree and Lawn SerVIce.
awn c•e landtcap ng stwnp
emova
304 576 2842 or
676-2903
82

Plumbing
Heat1ng

&amp;

4 'NO

1984 (Mdl Stet1on Wagon
auto air Nice c. *3996 1980
VW Rabbitt dieHI runs &amp; lookl
good t995 26 more c . . &amp;
truck• to choose from Whol•
11le priced 8 a D Motor.
Highway 160 4 mllea north of
Holzer Call 614-446-6B85

1978 Ford Van
304-4581506
74

$ 1 900 00

CARTERS PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Co Fourth and P ne
Gallipol s Oh o
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614446-4477

Motorcycles

1985 CR 1 25 water cooJed
naw en91ne 1850 Cell 614388 8745

1983 Chrytler New York• 5th
Aw edlt10n lloaded) Brown
exter or with be ge velour mt•

1984 Chw Cellllbrlty loaded
new tire1 tune up AM FM
redo Excel cand Call 814448-1810

1982Kawauki560Lm
Call S14 992 7887

ssoo

1 983 Kelallk 850 excellent
peint JOb axe running cond Me
430 Cypres1 Court Ple81ant
VIII!Pi Apts

1981 ChiWette 4 door AC AT
Good shepe. Aklng t1800 C.l
81&lt;&amp;-26S.t584
1979 Pontile Bonnwtlle Good
cond AC PW nM battery Call

75

1987 GMC Jimmy Loadood
Excal co rod 10 BOO mlloo Call
814-44.,.1813 Ilk for Mike

a...,.,

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Er&lt;cavat1ng

Backhoe &amp; Dump Truek Serv ce
Cement Work All kinds mweta
Reasonabl e pr cas Call 6143B8 9686
84

&amp;

Electrocal
Refnger at1on

Res dental or oommere A w
epaw 1
ing Nftvt ser" ce o

l censed electr Clan Est ma1e
free R dAnour Electr cal 3046751786
85

General Hauhng

Aoomt for Mnt week cw month
••rtlng II •120 a mo Galli•
Hotool 11&lt;&amp;-4411-1680.

c•• ba11t1 pl1n11 repo d Sur

plua Your Are• Buyer• Oulde
111806-187 8000 Ext S 9805

28 ft Bayhner cru ser 1985
W1de beam 111 electron c g•ltev
c•n.,., ate 360 V 8 eng
.,...,, e v.,., low hours
*27 500 Call 304-727 6890

48

Smelt red V W convertible
Shrln•e~t Ukentw easo Cell
814-.992153201ftVtlrne.

16 ft V hull Qlaatron boat with
88 Mere a traler Verv good
oond 81900 Call 614 4467345

19159 Ou1Vrol81lmpela. 4 door
811.000mlloo. 03800 81&lt;&amp;-98113824

18 ft CruiMI' Inc 2 2 HP
MerQ.Iry motor &amp;. tdller $900
Call 6t4 448-9588

c ste ns well1 lmmed ate
1 000or 2 OOOgallontdetMtry
Call 304-675-6370

1982 Flreblrd 4 opaed. low
ml• goodoondltlon 814-992
8723aftor 6 00 p m

1979 15 !h tt Starcrlft Trl Haul
bollt 1 1 I Mercury 08 pov.er
trim 814-992 7091 or 614992 7110

Paul Aupe J Wiler Servic•
Pbols c 111rns. Y'llfla Call &amp;14-

Aed Hot bargafnal Drug deli••

Space for Rent

am~~lll•

ho~

1881 Plymouth Horb:on TC3 4
speed. 4cyt ntNr.od ••van
g• uooo. Call .. oly. 114992 7403.

COUNTRY MOilLE llomol'orl&lt;
Aou• 33. North of PIDnwoy
-~ troiiWL Call 11&lt;&amp;-162
7479

Trill• ep~ca for ..,., In Mldcl•
pon with orlow OJI 11&lt;&amp;8813114.

76

llo.

1811 Ch811rol« Cllltlon Auta
P8. PI AM FM rodto W
•nglne 17 OOOmll• LooDend
rune goad U700 c.n a.n- 1
114-H2-74CI3.

lploe for .... ,..... AI
hoolo-llpt Cable Aloootftolon..,
ro111111. llr 1nd Glbl&amp; Mlaan.
WYo Coi1304-77M881
We re nol homeleas you nitwit this ts the
line for Mlcheel Jackson tickets!

Auto Parts
Accessoroes

Ofolo luldt Pl:ontfac. CloONy
Cll.., tnrct.. l'&lt;&gt;rd O.ry~or
lrlnamlaloN (u_.l ere lntwr
noolly lnltoOCiod &amp; corry 3000ml
,.. 30 dllf worrtnty fwhlclo_,
OCCUtl flrstl We buy lunk
tran-na Coli 114-4480981

1177 Ford G...... 2 ...o looloo •8110 Call
hnolya 81&lt;&amp;-H2· 7403

•

•

•
•

83

~;;;;;;;;;;;;::::~L:::::::::::::::::~ -81~"-_4_4_a._o~o~77~------.,-SNAFU® b) Bruce Beanie

3594 or 61 4 9B5 3 595

1985 GMC ~ ton PickuP V 8
auto a r Sharp Truck. 84995
1987 Dodge p ckup N ce
8 49915 215 more cars &amp; truckl to
choose from Wholesale p ced
B &amp;. 0 Motorw H ghwav 160 4
m les North of Holzer Call
6t 4-448 686&amp;

rlor Excel cond Priced to tell
t3595 Call 61&lt;&amp;-245-5809
61 Fann EqUipment

79 Motors Homes
&amp; C~mpers

1560 Oliver tractor plow. gra n 1978 Ch&amp;Yy Chwette Auto
dr II post driver $3 560 3800 look• and runa good S 650 Call
Ford with Oyna Bounce mower 6t4992 7403
$4960 Owner w II ftnen ce Cell 1-:-:-::::-:-:---:--c--:---61 4-286-6522
1980 Merwrv C.pr L.ookland
runa good low m leege engne
Ford tractor With 4 ft fln•he8 11275 080 Cal 614-992
mo'llllr 82260 Plewa $260 2684
Disc '295 Cutl:lvator 1195 2
row corn planter Owner 'Mil
fin.-.ce Call 614-286--8622

55 Buddmg Supphes

Nor..wglen Elkhounda 1 fern~le
3yeltl'aold 1 mele9monthlold
t75 00 aach 30&lt;&amp;-895 3029

AntiQues

71 Autos For Sale

Registered Paint Stalhon se
vice Beaulful derk brown Tobi
ano APHA A OM arena blood
line Fee $715 Call 614 949
2052

SeWI Kenmore eutomadc dis
hw11her •1 00 00 c•ll 304-875-1365after5 30PM
53

61 Farm Equipment

16 HP Craftsman mo'Mr 42
Inch cut wtth Craftsman dump
traler t1400 Call 304-875
4208

Full alte box IIJ)finga ll mettre11
Coli 814 2411-9824

Auto Repair

Pa nt ng Qodv work. tune up
brakes etc M nor mechan1c
work Cl I 614-446--7572 after
5 PM 446 6441

Many new 1pec als Pfckena
Used Furniture 304-8761450

ltvlng 1 and 2 bed
room 1partment1 at Villege
M.,or and RMtrtlde Apart
menta n Middleport From
*1B2. lndudlng utlfttlel Call
8t&lt;&amp;-992 7787 EOH
Gr~cloua

Mo ..• home lot lor IWit
··~~~-Call 81&lt;&amp;-311-1173.

New completely furnllhl~
:C:'IIIIMII • mobile hon In
y MoiUo only Parking Call
11&lt;&amp;-448-0331

One G E gas drver Exc Cond
t200 304 875 30 59

Maytag wringer wahar ., exc
cond also double Nba 304875--34315

44

2 lA apto 8 ol-a .....,.,.
appl furnlolotol. -Ooor-Dryor
hook up ww a~ n_.tr
pllnted. deck Ae~ Inc
Aota Call 30&lt;&amp;-878·77~ or
8111-5104.

15 ft abow ground pool fuUv
equipped Exc Cond 304 882
2817

Nice 1 BR apt Range • refr g
furNshed Wllter &amp;. gerbage
pe d Oepolit requited Csll
8t&lt;&amp;-448 4346 aher 8 PM

Mobile hornll lot eo ft or
820 4th OIIIIDolit.
HI--or paid. Call 441-4418
attar 7 PM

Apartment
for Rent

New 10 ft Channel Mute
Satellite aystem w th bui t "
deacrembler remote control
with t ye., sub to 8 ~erambled
channel a e1 39 6 00 lnamlled
304-675 5477

Oragonwynd Canary Kannel
CFA Hlmeli'ylln Peuien and
Sl.-nae kitten a New AK C
Chow puJIPI• Call 614-446
3844 after 1PM

LEASE 011 RENt 27oonooorop
puture
lind and eo
304-8711-41148

•cr•

Uaed R$6 Oltch Witch tranche
w.ch hoe 614 694-7842 or
419 883-1469

Unfurnished apt 2 BR 818 5
W1ter pa1d Stove &amp; rafrlg 1 138
Second Gallipoll• Call 4484416after7PM

3834

1871 lloy\IIOW 14x70 7&gt;124
u.-ndo 3 bedroom• 11.4
b•hl. n.w c•pel ffrlp;lece. llr
oondltlon ::-anOII 8x32
awning, win
ewnlng~. und•.-.nlng. e~~:c cond 304182·3308 ooftar 8

C.mp lite &amp;. t11H• for ••• on
Blue Ulle
Reoooon CrMII.
J H - h • 304-1711-41171

6 t.nlfy lOUd oolo Mon &amp; Toreo
cr011 RA . . . . from • • •
lohool Clalllpollt Ftorry follow
ol.,t 10 tl ? ClothH llo""'
Int.._ old toolt. lob ltema

Homes for Rent

For Rent or Sal•&amp; rooma .nd
bath ai'Ciched garaga Call
61&lt;&amp;-446-7428

built on All alec .,..._-d,.,..r

Fl¥8 f.nlly T V lllereo waahlr
llthel clothel 111 . . . books
On Rl 884 ofl Rt 143 In
H•rrleonvllle Sit till 15p m
SUndiV noon 11117

41

hou• 11'111• ext• room

3 BA

We buy quih:1 Pre 1960 a Any
condition ($6 t400) Need
now Call 61&lt;&amp;-992 6567

Vord ooolo 2217 Olio 8t Mon
Tu-. llloy 2 3 IDta baby
alottt. wooden ltemt. toola.
mlto

Upata rs unfutntshed apt Car
peted utilities .-id No ch ldren
No peta Call 614 446 1637

In town 2 BR
living room
f1mltv room 1 1--!1 baths lamdrv
room •2&amp;0 Ret &amp;. dap Call
81&lt;&amp;-446-17 34

stove

O.r11• lilt. S• Apr 30 7 1m
to 1 pmonW.WdiA:d ChHdrM
and eduh clothing. mlac

26 ecrM on Rodmond R dga
$6 000 00 f rm cal Robert
after 8 OOPM 304-675-7616

3 bedroom 21ootfoo full tlnoh.,.t
b•ment new furnece and
c_.....l•lr g . .g., fenced yard
LDw80 s.24t4Mt VernonAw
PI Pit 30&lt;&amp;-8711-1774

Wllter Camping area

Y•d &amp;lie. 2303 Jeftereon Aw
Frl &amp; Sot AprU 28 30 Maytog
wring~t Wllhlr mltll Pinta 33
ond:MI.,IIIhJO Mlac......,g.
Toole null. bolta. mite

epartmenta with modern kltch en
end washe drver hookupa c•
ble telavl1ion ava I able Call
6t&lt;&amp;-446-2127

268 3

batha l•ge lllnng room kitchen
and dining area. vtnyl a ding
much more Owner must •II
Mid 30 1 Century Twenty--one
CLOUTZ Reattv Inc. 614-5944211

Brookside Apartments located

off B~av lleRd 1 BA specioua

lot 1nd g•ege with trill ler hook
up can ba •en h Handeuon.
307 HollOWlY St or call 304995-3096

acru 1 1 vn old. 3 bedroom 2

Galllpoll• Ferry good end going
busin. . •llft•t• 1nd equjpment lot 100x200 Call Som.,.
r.tNie Real Eltlte 304-876-

1 hi

Hou 11 lou. Gall polls Ferry
30&lt;&amp;-676-6908

77

•

New lad es 1 quarter karat
Diamond Solitaire Never wom
Valued lit .e 360 Must BBII Only
$260 Call J m at 614-992
2962

W'll do houll-cleening apring
d..,lng and c•pet dean ng
Haverefeftlf'lces WillworkMondlro' throoogh Sotur&lt;lov 614378-8461

3 t.nlly May tIt 2nd 3rd Gray
hou•onHoblonRd off Rt 71n

1976 V 6 eng ne for Buck or Old
stao oo transm••• on 160 oo
Phone 304 675-2982

'

wh:h reuonebla rates Calleher
5 30 PM 814-949 2481

Thur'ld., and FrldWf' Pomeroy
Pike next 10 Southern Blptllt
Church on County Roed 26
CIOH to Sansbury School A
Uttle of everything. Nice ping
pong tlbl••715 2 bra• • giUI
lamp-" 9 01).6 00

U•11d 8r ebuh tranam 1110n1
Used are interneltv nspacted
andcarry3 OOOm lescw30davs
werranty wh chevar occurs
f rst) We buy ju nk transm 1
1 ons Ca 614-.446 0968

175-16 3~

llg Gerq• Sale. A•rock Grooory May2&amp;3 frorniOO 4 00
Oothlng hou_.,• toofs
mile CenOIIIId If .-.In

P. . ffmo RN lor-at ful
tlmoLPN 711oeofiCI'-INI'Iong
........ foollly - · for •
' - good .. loin ""'
dool-allff-··.... to prowlclng q..llty o••
Pl...a clll Ot wrtta hlty eo ...
rod D 0 N for ., - New Will •II• end •OIIIMt
bonollt ptoloogo. Aooadla lOUr•
lng eom. lor• A Main It
Coolwfllt. Ohio 457U 1 114887-311Mt

Folding wheel chair &amp; pair t1f bed
guard rails Cell614-448 1981

For eele 50 gal plastic bal'ralls
Greet fo boat dock• 614-949
2013

::---c-:-c-:---:-3
Carpenter looking for extra work

.... an

Hugat tottlm. .oror F~ Sot &amp;
lun luolo... HHio Rood 2/10
mila from lUDic• Hilt Lot•
.,....,,.. ... .,.. t INrtl. aid
•ahoal deltct. ......, aem•
premdr....

•u

Prom droa 'MJrn once Pink
wtth white over lace Sit:e 2 2 ~
050 Coll814-256 6830

Receptlonlat or Gen•l Off ce
Work Call 814-446 4336 or
446-2131

•arou from old Hondll

lltop lot 8-? loll or .....,

Oovernrnll'lt Jobe. •11 040
2:10 yr Now hlrln~ Your
. . , 80S..II71000 ext Rt801 for .... . - " " - llot.
fW:IIIc Rel.tion ...,.on WWit_.

Merchandt se

Auto Parts
Accessortes

BUDGET TRANSMISSION
Uaed &amp; rebu It el types Guaren
tee 30 days m n rTJUm Prloel
199 &amp; up Aebulh torquH
con'll8n, 11 low as 139 Con-vera on kitS 10 a&amp;. C 10 sover
d rve t o 350 • Wa buy junk
transm uions Cell 304-6754230 0 014 379 2220

Uled washer Needl rvpe r
Wh rlpqol Meke oHM 304-

Y•d le1 .. 23 Berg~t Street i ·M:-rdol_opo_-:"-R-:ool-cn:---oat_•_ _
aero• from McDonlhra fwL Larga yard Mle Something for
ctothee Jew•lery moweu everyone Mey 2 3 4 on N•lson
toots Sit Mon
Ad Rutllnd

Mldd.con Eawt• will be accepting 1Poli~lo01 I AM 11
AM T- Mov 3forDirootCaro
S. l P N lntii'Vi...VI wll be hlfd
May&amp;

Uaed Leroy 125 a r cornpreuor
Naeds some repaiu See at
Middleport VIllage Gerege Park
6 High Sta

•

BabV afttlng n my home Full or
pert tim• 5 m nute• from Holzer
Hoapitll on Kerr Bethel Church
AoDd Big Yard to ~IY in
Referencu Call 814 448
8373

G..-age Sai•Aprll 30th. May 2
a4 6 12mllelout218

dilly gold 1itver coins.
r ngs. Jewelry .r:erllng wll'e. old
coins l•ge cummey Top prl
cea Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd Ave Middleport Oh et 4992 3476

Spacious mobile home Iota for
rent Family Pr de Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry W Va
304-875--3073

•

Mldol1011on 3 bo&lt;lroom 2 b•h
cent111l lir Might fh111nce with
down peymttnt •28 000 305933-0759

Buyin~

76

prom go\M'I Neva
worn Size 11 876 Cal 514992 2483

'\'ard SaleS

Buying furniture and lpollenOM
by 1he piece or by 'the lot Fair
pr oeo Call 61&lt;&amp;-441 3168

PH 614-992-2657
4-20 88 I mo

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

SerVICe On All Makes
Wt Honor MC / Dtu / Vosa
4 18 88 tfn

Child c•e in mr holM country
aettlng 2 mil• out Broadrun
Raid from Philip ~orn Plant
Other children to
y with
Indoor outdoor activttl•

Wl!lntad Registered Morgen
stud hou• to breed marw or to
buy Cell 814 446 8078 week
days only

H11me Health Care
Agency
We Provnf8 Care For The
Elderly In The r Home
NURSES AIDES
ORDERLIES LPN s
Hourly or L1ve In
Arrangements
BONDEO INSURED
Covered W th Workmen s
Compensat on

Yardman

Do

KIT N CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Bea~ttfu I

Blbv littlng In my home for any
age. from 9-&amp; For more Inform
CoOl 6to&amp;-3B&amp;9636

21

The Datly Sentinei-Page-11
&amp;

11~11

MoWn 2 Bedroom home Mt
ached g•age. Clo• to golf
coune &amp; awtmmlng pool
Fenc:.td in back ¥Srd Call 814446-9Bt8

54 MISC Merchan~ISe

tree est•mata 304-773-5045

Insurance

18 Wanted to

46 Space for Rent

51 Househol d Goods

Standing timber Cell 814-379
2758

mo

Dtaltr For
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO
Located Halfway Be
tween At 7 &amp; Bas han
NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
8 7 Ftnancong On

SituatiOns
Wanted

13

LAFF-A-DAY

HornetS for Sale

Oar Care Services provided All
ft11d~e hourt P.-t or full time
tar ge fenced yerd Refer•u:;:•
provldood Call 61&lt;&amp;-448-9402

Bal7;'ahtlng In mr home exc
locaUon Away from ro.d. with
piiV equipment Ref Provided.
30&lt;&amp;-773-68t8

TOP CASH Plld tor 83 model
1nd newer uted c11r1 Smith
Buck Pontiac 1911 E•atem
Ave Goolllpollo Call 614-4462282

Eslole

R &amp; 8 Odd JObs yOU Med It we
cen do It Auto fawn or home

I now h.ve an opening for 1
eldlrtyo women or men in my
prWIIe home 17 yra. ellll~
rlenot Tu ppera Plain a Oihl
6 1&lt;&amp;-817 3402.

Wanted To Buy

Heal

Pomsroy- M1ddleport Oh1o

3 eR 2 botht 19811 S. .. loral
1 acre af land. t32000 Cell
81 &lt;&amp;-388-9305

:":"':o:ro::3:0:&lt;&amp;-:B:8:2:3:4:1:8::::::~~3=0=30=at=B:7:11-:3:4:3:1= = = =

FREE ESTIMATES

or at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mulberry Hgts Pomeroy

Auct1oneer Cot Oacar E Click
30&lt;&amp;-8911-3430 Ue. No 75&lt;&amp;88

Delivery Pertan ulwy plu1
comtfliNion. apply in pnon
VIllage Ph!m Inn 3004Jackson
Aw PI Pteaaent

•

Uaed Mobile Homes Clll1 814- lr
I
448-0178

J&amp;L
INSULATION

45631

Delivery Person. Al.y plus
camml.. ion. lppJv in peraon
Vlll-ue Plzm Inn 3004 Jackson
Aw PI Ple818nt

D"

Rutland, Oh1o

-

Wodernayer 1 Auct on Servlc•
available at vour conwnlenCI
and locatlona Mar In Wedem ever Auct oneer 614-2455152

Junk Cars wilh or without
motors Call Larry Uvely 114-38 "9303.

Open Monday thru
Saturday
12 Noon ttll 8 PM
Corner of New lomo
Road &amp; Bryant Street

4 II I mo

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auction

Want to buy U18d furniture and
antiqun Will buv entire hou•
hold fumilhlng Marlin Wedem ..., 614-24&amp; 5t52

Ltstentng Dev1ces
Dependable Heanne A1d Sales &amp;Sentic(
Heanng Evaluations For All Ages

Galltpolls OhiO

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

,.,w

•
••

Jim a&lt;OddJobl
Sundeckl •ding. penntlng. roof
ing cltpentl!lt work. ti'IIIM' re
pair Call 814-379 2418

Will hlullny k nd oftlllshiKCept
car bodiM *20 ph;:kupla.d C.ll
304-875-fi•62 or 875-7274

FEDERAL STATE ANO CIVIL
SERVICE JOBS
hiring. vouriFN t13 5150
to 159 480 lmmedl•• opening~ Call 1 C316173:J.8082 ext
F2938

Fnday. April 29 1988
31

AVON

Full time opening for mldni~ht
LPN tor local nursing home
PositiOn ncludw health life
lneuranee pension C.tl for
Inter'&lt;~ lew IP polnlment 304876-3005 E 0 E

8

Do

Cleenlng-Hou• • offiCII Ref.
erenoe1 Cell St4-448-8788 or
2411-&amp;363

AREA SUPERVISOR
ladi_. Hou• of Uoyd Super
Party Alll now hlrtng ero
1upervltora No Investment
Free training .,ppli•&amp; kit Call
Kothv collooct 61&lt;1-373-1777

LOST D•lmatlon wewlng rod
colt• Full grown male. can
30&lt;&amp;-675-5509 or 676-3100

18 Wanted to

Men-uer for locallull•rvicepa
ltlltlon In Pomeroy .,.. s.nd
,..ume to D1ily Sentinel Box
729 8 Po"*oy Ohio
All .,... Call MIH'ilvn
w•.,., 304-882 2845

Loot and boollevod otoiWl 2
~~~= t:::,"r..•cuJ .':''\a~
-•
Frldlro' ..,..,.In~ R-ord""
roturn or lnformotlon l... nglo
roturn Call 11&lt;&amp;-9923023 or
01&lt;&amp;-9925007

992 3410

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

z LISA M KOCH MS
a: L1censed
Chmcal Aud1olog1st
~ (614) 446 7619 or (614) 992 2104
:r: 417 Second Avenue Box 1213
z

-

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALl'

DEAD OR ALIVE

POLE
BUILDINGS
ROOFING &amp;
GUTTERS

b•

Golden Rotralvor loot In Bon.,
Run onooo Fe malo. bright onnge
eon. 10 months old can
01&lt;&amp;-992 2208

NO SUNDAY

WANTED

4 12 88-1

Clh

Day or Ntght

PH. 992 •2772
3 28 88 l .mo

Help Wanted

Aa..mbl. . w.nted Earn mombllng Tedc:loi Be•s.
Free fnfo,.tlon Write Jo El
Enter.,.... P 0 Box 2203
Kiooimnooo Fl 32742 2203.

~~~~~':!':,!\;":';::~~!!

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
At Reasonable Pmes

PH. 949-2969

MY THANKS AND APPRECIA·
liON TO EVERYONE WHO
HELPED SPONSOR MY RECENT
TRIP TO EUROPE!
MICHAEL BARTRUM

•

"

ths18thdayofAprl1988

$16 50000
NEW liSTING - I th e oountry- 2 acr es of land wrth all
hook up ava lab!~ Elec sept c tank phone and a we I
What more could you as k for
ONLY $7 300 00

EXCAVATING

614-742-2617
R ESO LUTION

des res to execute a loan
mat~y

6

~::;=:;:;,;;:;:;,;,;:::::;jTF==:::;::;:=::==:rrr=========::;:r;::=========illOST
M•l• black.
Wtlker
coon
j
Hound Vll'hit1
II brown

TRIPLE P -&lt;

Real Estate Gene ral

Friday April 29. 1988

OhiO

0 liard Water Servtee Pools,
C ste ns Welt Oelrve y Ally

t me Call 614-448- 7404-No
Sunday c aUs

R &amp; A Wiler Serv ce Po ot 1

446-31 71

Watterson • Water Hauling
rusonab e ete1 immedi•e
2 000 ga Ion delivery cisterns
pools. """"" ttc cal 304-67&amp;.
2919
87

Upholetery

Mowrey s Upholatwing -.tng
WI counlyarea22-..•s Th•bett
n furnltu,. uphoiSIItlng Otll
304 875 41154 for fre•
eltimlt"

•

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

.
Friday, April 29, 1988 ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ba k er... _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Continued from page 1

comes from Applachlan Ohio, as
counties ."
The Gover nor's Office of Appa - director the Office of Appalalachia was created by the leglsla- chia . Runyon was also present at.
. ture in November, 1986 to ,!Jigh· yesterday 's meeting.
Baker, a native of Barberton,
light the Issues facing the 28
Appalachian counties. Legisla· Ohio, who attended Ohio Univertlon which created the Office of sity, brings with him to his job as
Appa lachia was sponsored by head of development ln the state,
State Rep. Jolynn Boster. D- a background In teaching and
Galli polls. Boster was In attend- business.
According to Meigs Couniy
ance a t Thursday's meeting.
Housed In the Development Comm issioner Richard Jones.
Department. the Office of Appa· who coordinated Thursday's
lachia focuses full -time Olf'WOrk· meeting, Baker's business expetng . with and advocating Appal- rience is "a real benefit " to the
achian Ohio's needs an d Ohio Department of Develop• ment, since Baker is the first
co ncerns.
.In January, the Governor director in many years to have a
appointed Randy Runyon, who business background .

W ariler appeals Home State case
CINCINNATI (U~I) -Marvin
Warner, tormer owner of Home
State Savings Bank, has asked an
appellate court to overturn his
convictions In connection with
the co llapse of the bank thr~e
year.s ago.
Attorneys for Warner argued
Thursday In the Ohio 1st District
Court of Appeals that the special
prosecutor In the case was
Illegally appointed and contended Warner didn't receive a
fair trial because of too much
pre -trial p~bllclty .. because a
juror was biased agamstWarner
an~ because the trial judge erred
in Jury Instructions .

Prosecutors argued that all
those allegations were untrue
and urged the appellate court to
uphold Warner's convictions.
The court ' is not expected to
rule ·on 'the appeal for several
months.
Last year In Hamilton County
Common Pleas Court, Warner
was convicted on six charges of
unauthorized transfer . of funds
from Home State and three
securities violations. Judge Rlchard Niehaus sentenced
Warner to three and a half years
In prison and order him to pay $22
million In restitution. Warner Is
free on bond ·
a ruling on

• •

Sunday

,

.

CODVICtiODS

htS appeal.
The money that warner transferred from Home State went to
ESM Government Securities of
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., a sham
operation. Both ESM and Home
State collapsed three years ago.
The demise of Home State
triggered depositor runs on other
·Ohio savings and loans and Gov.
Richard Celeste closed 70 S&amp;Ls
for several months which ternporarlly left thousa~ds of people
without access to their savings.
Shortly after the Home State
collapse the Ohio General Assembly ' passed legislation to

have as peclal prosecutor lnves II· ·
gate the case. Warner's attor- :
neys argued before the appellate :
court Thursday that the appointment o! Lawrence Kane as
special prosecutor was unconstitutional because It Infringed on .
the separa tlon of powers among
the legislative, judicial and executive branches of government.
Home State was headquartered In Cincinnati a,nd attorneys,
for warner contended that because of extensive local publicity
about Home State's collapse, a
cnange of venue should have
been granted for Warner's trial.

PHS 'Alumni scholarships
Beat of the Bend, By Bob Hoeflich

~~ ·

Inside:
Along the River ......... Bl-8
Buslness ...................... E·l
Comics-TV .............. Insert
CiassHleds ................. DS-7
Farm ............ .....•..•..... E·l
Editorial ..................... A-2

-B-1

SUNNY

1~p
M'/-i-

Cqnslder'able sunshine.
High In mid 60s. Chance of
rain zero

...... .... .......... ... Cl-8

•

tmes Middleport- Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant,

12 Sections .. 92 Pages
A MUltimedia Inc. Newspaper

1,1988

Six county races contested
GALLIPOLIS - Six county Burnett. Candidates tor the Jan .
offices are being contested on the · 3 term are Republican George E.
ballot Tuesday In the May 3 Pope and Democrats Incumbent
Prlmary Election. Four offices J .E. (Dick) Cremeens, DonaldL.
will be contested tn· the GOP Walker and Flem Meade.
On the Republican ticket for
prtmary , Including the Gallla
County Sheriff, Gallla County Gallla County Sheriff are Jane
Recorder, Gallla County Clerk of Ellen Colley, Dennis R. Salisbury
Courts, and Gallia County Cor· and John L. Belville. Runnnlng
oner . Contested offices on the unopposed on the Democratic
Demoe,ratlc ticket are Gallla ticket is Incumbent Sheriff
County. Recorder and Gallla James M. Montgomery .
Incumbent Gallla County ReCounty Commissioner Feb. 3
term. Four local lax levies will corder, Evalee Myers, did not
appear on Tuesday's ballot.
seek re-election. Candidates for
On the ballot racing unopposed recorder on the Democratic
for the Jan. 2 term for Gallla ticket are ·Karen Waugh BrowCounty Commissioners were Re- nell and Donald E. Wright. On the
publican Incumbent T. Kall Bu- Republican ticket are Molly
rleson and Democrat Clyde D. Plymale, Roma Wood and Lewis

TAYLOR TRAILER

8. 9% FINANCIN
Du_ring
TAYLOR NISSAN'S

K

ANNUAL

For A Limited Time Only/

·are Dr. Edward J . Berklch and
Sheets .
Candidates for Gallla County Dr. Gene H. Ab els. ·
Clerk of Courts on the RepubliFiling at the Athens County
can ticket are Incumbent Louise Board of Elections for State
Representative were DemoBurger and Brenda K. Evans.
Gallla County Prosecutor can- cratic Incumben t Jolynn Boster
didates running unopposed are and Republican Norman L.
Democrat ·· Incumbent Brent A. Stewart.
Candidates for the Feb. 9 term
Saunders and Republican Wllfor 4tq District Court of Appeals
llam D. Conley .
Running unopposed for Gallla judge Is Lawrence Grey. Candi·
County Treasurer are Republi· dates for the new Feb. 10 term
can Incumbent Myron L. (!Jud ) are William H. Harsha, Gerald
McGhee and Democrat Claudia E. Radcliffe and Anthony D.
Cennamo.
M. Lyon.
JameS'f'. Baird, Republican is
Issues filed at the board of
unopposed for Gallia County elections include the GalliaJackson-Vinton Joint Vocational
Engineer.
Candidates for Gallla County School District proposed tax levy
Coroner on the Republican ticket
(See SIX, AS)

Central committee spots up for election

1988 Nissan Sentra E Wagon
5 speed manua/.lransmission, body side molding, ~nted
glass, hall wheel covers, dual mirrors, halogen
headlamps, Pt55/80R13 all season radials, reclining
front bucket seats, vinyl seat trim with cloth inserts,

lull door trim, lull carpeting, rear window defroster with
1imer, trip odometer, floor console , day/ night mirror ,

cigarette lighter. split told down rear seat backs. 1.6
Iller OHC 4 cylinder engine, eleclronic fuel Injection,
front &amp; rear stabilizer bars, power front disc/rear drum
brakes.

Stock#
. 4326

$149° * Per Mo.
0

1977 PlYMOUTH
FURY

1980 PlYMOUTH
CHAAlP 2 DOOR

Air conditioning, automatic transmission, vinyl
roof, radial tires.

Black, brown interior,
rear defroster, AM/FM
stereo cassette.

1988 Nissan
Sentra 4 Door
5 speed manual transmlssl!ln. body side molding, tlntod

S1295

, S1495

glass, wheel trim rings, dual mirrors, halogen
headlamps, Pt55/BOR13 all seaSOfl radials, reollnlng
front bucket seats, vinyl seat trim, lull carpeting, rear
window defroster w~h IImer, trip o&lt;lameter, rtooi con·
sole, day/night mirror, clgarenelighter, trip odometl!f.
floor con so~. Intermittent wipers, t .6 Iller OHC 4
c~lnder engine, electronic fuel injection, front &amp; rear
staOIUzer oar, power front disc/ rear drum Drakes .

1985 NISSAN XE
2 ~ HATOIIACK

1979 CHEVY
CAMARO Z-28

rear defroot power wilOOws,

$143° * Per Mo.

automati~

litl. cruise, AMIFM.

55995

S3995

1987 NISSAN
SENTR~ 2 DOOR

J986 NISSAN
SENTRA

1988 Nissan Standard 4x2

CustDm sbipes, body side
rooldings, radials, 5 speed
transmission.

Radials, rear delrosl,
AM/FM stereo, 5 speed,
one owner.

$5995

S$995

Manual transmission, double wall cargo bed with rope
hooks, styled steel wheels , Pt85/75R15 radials, one
touch tailgate, three passenger be~ch seat. headlight on

1985 MERCURY
MARQUIS 4 DOOR

chime, low fuel warning tamp,~~~'::":~::::::~.~~~~·
side window defogger, 2.4 1iter OHC 4
electronic tuollnjectlon, power brakes with
disc. maintenance free batlery , 15.9 gallon fuel tank
capacity, Independent front suspension .
·

Fawn exterior, darll brown
ckJth intemr, automatic,
tinted glass, radials, air.

$5995
1987 CHEVY
SPRINTER 2 DOOR

1987 NISSAN
SENTRA 2 DOOR

Radials, 5 speed transmission, cruise control,
AM/FM stereo cassette.

Red, raised letter radials,

5 speed, air, AM/f'M
stereo cassette.

$5995
covers. P175/70Rt3 all season tires, dual manual
· remo1e control mirrors, cloth reclining front bucket

v.w.

release. front &amp;rear assist grips, rear window defroster
with timer, trunk carpeting, floor console, trunk light,

cklth interior, dual mirrors,
automatic, AM/FM radio,
air.

$7995

lockable glove boX, 1.61iter OHC 4 cylinder fuel injectod
engine, power rack &amp; pinion steering , power front
disc/rear drum brakes, front &amp; rear stabilizer bars .

1916 NISSAN

$168° * Per Month
0

1977 CIIVY C-20
BEAUVIlLE

MAXIMA S.E. 4 DR.

8.9 _% FINANCING

BurfJJOOy, rear defrllll. power
surrool, door bdcs &amp;witcbN~
AMifM cassile. II, lir.

Window van, 7 passenger, dual heaters, air, tilt,
cruise, custom interior.

S11,995

$2995

1986 DODGE

1986 NISSAN
ICING CAl 4x2

RAM CUSTOM 1OD

Dark

blu~

mlithing

~

8'

-PLUS-

$8995

DOUBLE CASH BACK

57995
1984 FORD
4x4 RANGER

Automatic transmission,
dual
mirrors, step
bumper, AM/FM radio.

*Figured with down payment of $1,000 cash or trade plus tax, title &amp;
freight and cash back.
8.9% for 48 months, 9.9% for 60 months. 10.25% for 66 months, 12.75% for 72 months

$5995

'

E. Pasquale, Rt. 2; Green
Precinct 3, Dorothy L. Candee,
434 Lorlat Dr.; Green Township,
Conard E. Hudson Sr. , PSR.
Greenfield Township, Robert
E . Dunlap, Rt. 2, Patriot; Guyan
Township, Jeffery J. Fowler, Rt.
1 Crown City; Guyan Precinct,
Paul B. Stanley, Rt. I , Crown
City; Harrison Township, Jack
W. Slone, Rt. I, Crown Ci ty;
Huntington Precinct, Kathryn
Rece, Vinton; Huntington Township, Rpger D. Meade, Rt. 3,
Bidwell.
, Morgan Township, Johnnie E.
Russeli,_Rt. 1, Bidwell; Oblo
Towuhlp,lletteS.-Meadows,
Rt.
p
T
hi"
2, Crown City; erry owns r•

Edward Lynch, Rt. l, Thurman;
Raccoon Township, no candl·
date; Rio Grande Precinct , Ray mond R. Pope . Rio Grande;
Centerville Precinct, No candl·
date; Bidwell Precinct , Holzer
Gregory, Rt. 2. Bidwell, Springfield Township , Thomas E.
Sprague, Rt. l Bidwell; and
Walnut Township, Dolores
Baker, Rt. 2, Patriot.
In the Republican central
committee race, the following
people filed.
City l·A, D. Kenneth Nlorgan,
102 First Ave.; City l·B, John J.
Allison, 132 PortSmouth Rd; City
Z.A, Suzanne Moulton, 421 Third
(See CENTRAL,

. RIO GRANDE - Sharon
Yates, associate prpfessor of
education at Rio Grande College
I Community College since 1976.
is the 1988 recipient of the Edwin
A. Jones Excellence In Teaching
Award. Yates will be honored at
a reception, banquet and awards
presentation at the college May
6.
The award Is presented annu ally by Rio Grande faculty to an
outstanding teacher at the college. Yates Is the fourth recipient
of the award.
A native of Iaeger. W.Va.,
Yates Is a 1968 graduate of
Marshall University, where she
received a bachelor of arts
degree ln English and social
studies. She received her master

RIO GRANDE- .The assistant
superintendent of public Instruction for the Ohio Department of
Education will be the featured
speaker at the 112th commence·
ment ceremony ~~ Rio Grande
College/Community College on
May 15.
G. Robert Bowers has served
ln the post slnce 1970. Within the
Ohio Department of Education,
he has responsibility for the
dlvls Ions of computer services
G. ROBERT BO~RS
and statistical. reports. elementary and secondary education, science de&amp;ree In educ.tlon from
tnservlce education, and teacher Ohio University in 195?. Bowers
became a science teaoher In the
education and certification.
He also oversees the depart· . Columbus Public Schobts, where
ment's representation · In legal he taught television courses over
matters , and Is directing the WOSU-TV.
J·
From there, with a master's
State Board of Education's
"Classroom of the .Future" degree from Ohio Sta e University earned In 1960, be began an
project.
eight-year
career asl' superln·
After earning hls bachelor of
POMEROY - Meigs County
tendent of the Plain LobaJSchool
will nominate canRepublicans
District ln Stark CounlY· ·
dldates
to
run
for three. county
In 1973, Bowers f!arned a
In
the
fall
when they go to
posts
doctorate ln educatloqal adminthe
~Us
In
the
May
3 Primary
Istration from the Unjverslty of
Tuesday.
Akron. The Untverstty 1of Dayton
CHESTER - A 20 year-old and Ashland College
have
Democrats have no races !or
man was kll~d In
school awarded him honorar~ degrees.
county
level posts Tuesday since ··
bus-ilar collision near the Inter·
He Is a member of th~ Buckeye _only one candidate flied for a
section of Rl. 7-24811hordy alter 4 Assaclatlon of Schoolj Adminisp.m. Saturdl'Y according to the trators, the America~ Associa- county position. He Is James
Melp-Gallla Post. Stale Hlgh- tion of School Adml~istrators, Soulsby, former Pomeroy Postmuter, who seeks the nominawa} Patrol.
the National Socletyfof the Study lion to run for county sheriff In
Name of the vlctbn, who was In of Education, and th~ Associathe automobile, was withheld tion for Supervision antl Curricu- the fall.
'
pending notification of relatives. lum Development. !
The three
races facing county
The Meigs EMS received the
Republicans
on the county level
Bowers Is a past p~esldent of
call around 4: 17 p.m. and the the Central Ohlo Schcrotmasters are those for the nomination to
OSP around 4: 19 p.m.
Club; and, In 191!(] ser1ved as the run for Meigs Common Pleas
Offlcel'!l were stUI on the scene chairman of the Goals and Court Judg~. \'llelgs County Shealter 5 p.m., a patrol dispatcher Resolutions Comm:lttpe of the riff and Meigs County Engineer.
said.
In the race for common pleas
Buckeye Association . of School
court
judge, Fred. W. Crow 1!!,
I
Administrators.

of arts degree as a reading
specialist from Marshall in 1972.
She has done doctoral work ln
reading/ language arts at Ohio
University and has done graduate work for certification ln
learning and reading dlsabllltles
at George Peobody College for
Teachers, Nashville, Tenn.Shels
currenily enrolled In the'cooperatlve doctorate In education program at · West VIrginia
University.
She worked as a teacher and
coordinator In the Mason County,
W.Va., publiC schools unt111976.
She was Title I program coordlnat or for the Gallla County Local
Schools from 1977 to I980. She has
been an adjunct faculty member
of the University of Dayton at Its

Rio Grande location since 1985.
Yates' communlty Involvement Includes participation in
workshops at Rio Grande to ald
parents with Improving their
children's vocabulary skills,
coordinating summer and afterschool reading tutorials at Rio
Grande for school age learning
and reading disabled children,
and being a member of the
Reading Advisory Council at
Buckeye Hills Career Centj:&gt;r.'
The recipient of the numerous
grants and awards. Yates recelved the 1987 Award for Commltment to the College Teaching
Mission from the Association of
Independent Colleges and Unlverslties in Ohio. Yates Is active
In the International Reading

SHARON YATES
Association, the Ohio Council of
Reading, Phi Delta Kappa and
the Rio Grande Faculty
Association.

.Meigs County voters set to cast ballots .

Man killed in
Saturday accident

nowserVIngasprosecutlngattorney, Is seeking the nomination
and opposes Incumbent, Charles
H Knight
·
·
Robert E. Beegle, a former
Meigs County Deputy Sheriff, Is
opposing Incumbent Sherif!
Howard E. Frank for the Repub·
llcan nomination to run lor
sheriff In the fall and the winner
of that race will be opposed by
Democrat Souisby In November.
Robert H. Eason of near
Pomeroy Is seeking nomination
to run for county engineer In the
fall and opposes Incumbent,
Philip M. Roberts, Tuesday.
Whichever candidate wins the
Republican nomination for the
judge's post and the engineer's
position Tuesday wlll be assured
of election ln the fall since no

Democrats have filed for either
post.
Other Republicans who ha~e
filed for county level positions In
Tuesday's election and are virtu·
ally assured of election tn the fall
since there are no Democratic
candidates are: David J . Koblentz and Richard E . Jones,
county commissioners; Larry
Spencer county clerk of courts ·
Emmog'ene Holstein Congo',
county recorder; George M.
Collins, county treasuer; Dr.
James P . Conde, county coroner,
and Steven L. Story who Is the
candidate for thecountyprosecu tor's post being being vacated by
Fred w. Crow III.
Both Democrats and Republicans wlll flU central committee

~stsa when :f'ey go to the polls
es ay an members of both
parties will have state and
national candidates to vote on .
Also on Tuesday, voters ln
three subdivisions will decide on
tax measures. In the Eastern
Local School District voters Will
decide on a 12.4 mill continuing
current expense levy . In the
Meigs Local School District
voters will decide on a five mill
continuing tax levy for current
expenses. In Rutland VIllage
voters will decide on an eight
mUI, five year levy which would
provide funds for pollee
protection.
The 34 polls of the county will
open at 6:30 a .m . Tuesday and
will close at 7:30p.m.

Sinking survivor~ rescuer are reunited

Blue mist alderior, step
bumper, right side mirror,
5 speed, rear flip seats.

bed, aut~ili~ rear ~~
gi&amp;IS, AMifM. powe1 sleerilg

4HillcrestDr.; Clty3·B,FioydE.
Wright, 920 Fourth Ave.; City
4-A, no candidate; City 4·8, C.
Sue White, 2000 Chestnut.
Addison Township, Barbara E.
Russell, Rt. 4; Addison Precinct,
Claude B. Burnett, 620 Burnett
Rd.; Cheshire Township, Sandra
J . Wills, Rt. 1, Cheshire; Cheshire Precinct, Gladys Rife,
Cheshire; Clay Township, Char-·
lotte F. SeamQn, Rt. 2; Clay
Precinct, Donald E. Perkins ,
ERS; Kanauga Precinct, Clyde
D. Burnett, 452 Fifth Ave. , KMR '
GaiUpolis Township, James L.
Holley, 169 Portsmouth J'(d.,
GreenPreclnctl,RuthGillesple,
Rt. 3; GreenPreclnct2, THomas

Yates receives teaching award

a

Dark blue exlerior, blue

Bur!JJndy, alloy whetis. sport
mi'rors. new rooials, air,
AM/FM ste:oo, automMic.

seats, till steering column, remote trunk, luel door

$7995
1987
JEnA 4 DOOR

1984 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

5 speed manual transmission, tinted glass. full wheel

GALLIPOLIS :-- While flve
Democratic Gallia County central commlttee seats remain
wlthout a candidates for the May
3 Primary Election, five Republlcan slots are being contested. All
Republican seats have candldates. No democratic seats are
being contested for central comSEARCH CONTINUES • Point Pleasant volunteer
fighter mlttee offices.
Keitb Carpenter looks out at the rough water on the
River
In the Democratic central
Frida;y evening. High winds and rough water rorced tbe
to
committee
Point people filed. race, the following
take tiS boat out or the river just below Salt Creek,
PleasanL The search continued this morning and is also planned ror . City l·A, Warren F. Sheets, 120
Sunday. Several area departments, Including Mason, N~w Haven,
First Ave.; City I-B, no candlLeon, VaHey and Point Pleasant volunteer lire ~epartlnents are par- date;
City 2·A, Joseph E. Stiles.
ticipating in the search.
I
450 First Ave.; City 2-B. Dottle
M. Ch es tnt
u , 633 Se cond Ave.;
Clty3-A,JosephE.Fenderbosch ,

Speaker set
for RGC
graduation

Custom stripes, body side
moldings, rear defrost, ra·
dials, AM/FM, Jintlll glass.

Blac~ aHoy wheels, radi~

0

r

C-1

Kentucky Derby preview

"Velveteen
Rabbit.••'

AT THE

Stock#
4638

50 cents

•

Vol. 23 No. 12

~DEALS: WHEELS

D

·

8.90fo

1915 &amp; New. Madel
Year CY1rlablel

9.9%

1,14 &amp; Oltlerllldtl
1Year IYarlaltle)

By DICK THOMAS
Tlmes-Senltnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- Richard E.
(Gene) Houcl&lt;. Rt . 1 Crown City
was aboard the USS IndlamipoIis, when It was sunk by a Japanese submarine, July 29,
1945,
Wilbur C. (Chuck) Gwinn, San
Jose, Cal it., waa the Navy pilot
who spotted the first survivors In
the PhilipPine Sea on the fourth
day after the sinking. ,
The two men never met face to
face until 15 yean later when
they attended the 1960lndlanapoiis survivors reuniOn at Indianapolls, Ind.
Last weekend, Gwinn and his

wife, Norma, attend~ the 50th Planning Operations after 27
· wedding anniversarY, of Gene Years in the San JC!se school
and Estella Houck at Columbus. district.
Friends attended f~om Ohio,
Houck enlisted In the Navy at
West Vtrglnla, Kentllcky, Flor- Bucyrus In January 1944 and was
Ida, California and Michigan.
aboard the Indlanapolls when It
Houck retired frOI'Ij Ohio Bell sailed from Hunters Potnt, Ca.,
Telephone In 1972 and moved to July 16, 1945 to deliver compoGaiUa County In 1981'. His 50th nents of the first Atomic bomb to
wedding anniversary!was April Ttnlan Island In the Pactrlc
10, and Houck had 1undergone Ocean. The heavy cruiser made
triple bypass heart +urgery on · the crossing to Diamond Head,
Feb. 29. He and his wlf'e, and their Hawaii, In 74 hours and 30
poodle
Muffet ,eslde In a minutes, a record that still
mobllehome at the Junction of SR stands, and then delivered Its
218 and SR 790.
1
special carao to Ttnlan.
Gwinn and bis wlfr reside at
Proceeding to Guam, the
San Jose, Calif. He retired In 1984 skipper of the Indianapolis, Cap·
as Director of Maintenance and taln Charles B. McVay, III,
I(
I .

received orders to proceed to
Leyte In the Philippines to pick
up a tralnlng task force. On
Saturday July 28, the Indlanapolis steamed through sharkInfested waters toward Leyte.
The vessel didn't make it.
Around mk!nlght, July 29, a
Japanese submarine under Commander Mochltursa Hashimoto,
lurking In the -murky waters,
fired six torpedoes with three
confirmed hits. Two tore off the
cruiser's bQw, another struck the
communiCations center under
the bridge. Flames, steam and
smoke belched out of the forward
stack and a ball of tire swept
(See SURVIVOR, AS)

\
•

• . !

'

'

. . .,. .

P.;·

•

(i' ....._
...___

I

,~--:

- ~'

~~

REUNI'l1!:D...:, Richard E. (Gene) RottCk, left, Rl. l Crown Clt;y,
survivor of tile Jndlanapola llnldtt&amp; In Jul;y lMI, remllllle• wlth·
Wilbur C. (Chack) Gwinn, Sui-, CL, pOol of the NaVJI pUN)
bomber who spotted &amp;be fll'llt aurvlvora. (Tlm•-Senltul Photo)

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="142">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2726">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38065">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38064">
              <text>April 29, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="5381">
      <name>rummell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
