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'

-~~--1~2~-~Th~e~Da~lly~Se~n~tl•ne~I--~--------------------------P_o_m_~_ro_r__l_lld•d•~~eo~·-"~·O~hl~o----------------~------------~~Th•u•~~da~y-,A·p~~-~-4~,1-99~1:

...-----Ohio briefs-__, Rain expected in Buckeye State l)y·tonight
Career education fund~ may be cut
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - . The Legislative Office of Education Oversight Is recommending a severe funding cut in a prdlp'am
to help more than half of the slate's local school districts provide
career education for students.
·
.
In a report issued Wednesday, the office recommended reducing
the Career Education program's biennial subsidy from $11.5 million to $500, 000. .
,
The report said ihe program "seems to have no effect" on making studen~ better workers.
· ..
. ·
Of the state's 612 school districts, 365 l'llCCive about $5 a student
'in state money for programs designed to help students " make good
choices in life' ' and to e11hance job performance:
The office sai4 it has found "no statistically significant differ·
ence" between students in school dislricts that receive the slate
money and those that do noL .

GOP chairman calls for probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPl) - Republican State Chairman ·Bob
Bennett wants a special prosecutor to investigate allegations of illegal phone-tapping by state auditors during an audit of the Southern
Slate Community College.
· "One of his (Slate Audi\OJ' Thomas Ferguson's) employees is
being investigated by the FBI for tampering with phone lines,"
Bennett said Wednesday. "Thi~is a sta.te college funded by Ohio
taxpayers."
· .
Denny Gilber~ an assistant deputy auditor, said Benneu is off
base and working from misinformation provided by George
McCormick, president of the college in Hamilton County. .
"B.eli nett and. McCormick are the Looney Tunes brothers,"
Gilbert said. ''I know we are clean in every way in our endeavor at
Southern State."
·
McCormick has charged that Tom Burke, an employee of the
auditor, and another man were seen inspecting the school's switch·
board and were believed to have installed or removed wiretapping
devices. ·
'
·
Gilbert said the audit is expected to be completed by July I. It is
being conducted following allegations that cash is missing from col·
lege accounts and that there have been improper purchases, !Qck. ·
backs on computer purchases and improper loans from -college
funds.
'
~

Men sentenced in drug operation
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPD - Two men have been sentenced to
prison for their roles in a marijuana operation that cultivated more .
than 8,000 plants on Perry County farms.
Melvin Baker, 44, owner of three adjacent farms where the
plants were found, and Ronald Severance, 43, a worker at the farms,
were sentenced Wednesday by U,S. District Judge George Smith.
Baker was sentenced to seven years in prison and Severance to
·three years. Both 'were convicted of "conspiracy 10 manufacture
marijuana plants."
,
""
Two other men, Daniel Ross, 45, Columbus, and Robert Holmes,
34, Glouster, also have been convicled in the case. They ate awaiting sentencing.
·

U. S. to focus on Itaqi plight .

a chance of showers and thunder·
storms over the wesltnl part of the
stale. Highs will be in the 60s
~hursday and tllere will tie occaSi?nal show~rs jind .thunderstorms,
wrth lows in the mid 40 to near 50
Thursday night. ·
Some showers will linger in the
eastern pan of the :lluckeye State
Friday morning but slcies will be
partly sunny otherwise: Highs will
again be in the 60s.
·
Early Thursday morning high
pressure was centered along the
Atlantic Coast and extended to
· Ohio;
A weak cold front was from
Minnesota to Louisiana. The high
will move off the coast Thursday.
The cold front will move through
Ohio Thursday night and be to the
East Coast by Friday evening. By
then weak high pressure will move
across Ohio.

----Area deaths---John H. Terrell
John H. Terrell, 84, Terrell ·
Lane, Pomeroy, died Wednesday,
Apri13, 1991 at VeteQII!s Memorial
Extended Care Unit in Pomeroy
after a brief illness.
Born in Pomeroy. he was the
son of the late ·E.B. and Martha
Terrell Epple. He was a retired grocer from Epples Grocery in
Pomeroy where he worked for
many years. He also worked as a
welder at the Marieua Mlinufactur·
ing Shipyard in Point Pleasant,
W.Va, puring World War II.
.
Mr. Terrell was a member of the
Trinity ChUrch in Pomeroy, former
member of the Pomeroy Bend
Grange, and until his demise, the
oldc.st living member of the
Pomeroy 'VoiQnteer Fire Department with 58 years of service.
He is survived by two daughters '·
and sons-in-law, Martha and Joe
Struble, and Lila Sue and Gene •
Mitch of Pomeroy; one step-daughter, Kathryn Spencer, Anna Maria; ·
Fla. ; a daughter-in-law, .Polly
Legar, Pomeroy; ten grandchildren,
14 grea~ grandchildren; a cousin,
Clara Lanham, Cross Lanes,
W.Va., and several nieces and
nephews, .
·
Besides his paren!S Mr. Terrell
was preceded in death by his wife,
Wilma Hines Legar Terrell and a
stepson, Charles W. Legar'Sr.
· Services will be held Sunday at
2 p.m. in Pomeroy with Rev.
Roland Wildman officiating. BUrial
will be in ·Beech Grove Cemetery
in Pomeroy.
· Friends may call at the Ewing ·
Funeral Home Po Friday from 7 to
9 p.m. and Saturday from 2 to 4
I
and 7' to 9 p.m. .
·
Services by the Pomeroy .Fire
· Department will be conducted at
. the funeral home on Friday at 7

WASHJNGTON (UPI) - The country, as well as support for
administtatiori promised to tum its democracy in Iraq," the depart" urgent" attention to humanitarian ment said. ' .'The majority of the
issues such as .the plight of the meeting focused on the humanitariKurds fleeing Saddain Hussein's an aspect of the situation in Iraq."
Identities of the Iraqis were ·not
armies, and a senior U.S. official
met with lnlqi opposition figures to disclosed for fear Saddam might
discuss the suffering of the Iraqi hurt theidamilies, officials said.
The group consisled of Muslims...:.
people.
State Department spokeswoman . all living outside Iraq - and
' \ Mmarcl.l'~ \)'~.,IY iDCiuded two American citizens of
Ira(ji origin.
·
ilfe~Jl'ariiiiiisiiiii'Oiilia's msttucted
Thomas Pickering, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, to pur·
U.S. officials, stung by allega·
sue the plight of Iraqi refugees and tions
tbat the administration has
other·issues.
turned its back on the rebels after
Tutwiler also. voiced concern encouraging them 10 oust Saddarn, , p.m.
about reports that the Iraqi army Is . also will meet with Kurdish repre- Mabel E. Brickles
massacring civilians in an. apparent sentatives in the near future.
successful bid to crush an uprising.
Earlier Wednesday, President
Mabel E. Brickles, 87, of 39581
Meanwhile, Assistant Secretary Bush said he would be "willing to
Gold
Ridge Road in Pom.eroy, died
of State John Kelly, head of the take a new look if the (IraQi) army
We!lnesday,
April~. 1991 at Veter·
State Department's Near Eastern took matters into their o'wn hands."
ans
Memorial
Extended Care foland Asian affairs division, met with The president, v~ning in Flori- lowing an extended·
illness . She
Iraqi opposition figures at an undis- da, added that "if a new regimewas
a
housewife.
·
closed location outside the State emerged then I'd like to see w~at
She
was
born
in
Bedford
TownDepartment
.
.
their
gohls
are."
,
ship
on
Apri!IO,
1903,
the
daughThe meeting, the fir st of its
ter of the late John Carl and Lydia
kind, lasted about an hour and the
But
Bush
cautioned,
"I
don't
•
McCumber
Brickles. She .was a
"Iraqi participants expressed their
want
to
see
us
get
sucked
into
the
member_
of
Carl~ton
Church.
concern for the events that are
She rs _survrved by t~o sons ••
· occurring in Iraq and the suffering internal civil war inside of Iraq. ...
.. · of the Iraqi people," the State We are not there 10 intervene. That Donald Bncklcs, Martinsville, Ind.,
.
· an~ Cecil Brickles, Mt. Sterl!ng,
Department said in a statement late is not our purpose."
At
the
State
Department's
daily
·
Ohro; one srster, Lou1se Harnson
Wednesday.
· "They expressed their support news briefing, Tutwiler said the of Pomeroy; one brother, Raii?h
for the territorial irttegri\)' of Iraq adminislration condemned violence Carl of Pomeroy; seven grandchddren ; a,nd II great-gr81\dchildren.
and the non-dismemberment of the against Iraqi civilians.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded iri death by her husband,
Roy Z. Brickles; a brother, Dale
Carl;
a sister, Faye Pratt; and an
Am Ele Power ........·..............29 3/8
DAVtomeet
infant
brother, Leo.
.
Ashland Oil ..... .......... ......... 30 5/8
The Disabled American VeterGraveside
services
will
be'
held
AT&amp;T ...................................34 1/2
ans and Ladies Auxiliary will meet . on Saturday at 11 a.m. at Carleton
· Bob Evans ..................................20
Monday at 7 p.m. at the hall on 124 Cemetery with Clyde Henderson
Charmmg Shop .......... ........... !4 3/8
Butternut Ave. in Pomeroy. officiating.
City Holding .............................. .14
Refreshments
will be served.
.
..
Friends may call aL the funeral
Federal Mogul .............. :....... 15 3/4
,
home
from 6 to 8 p.m. on Friday at
Goodyear T&amp;R .....................23 3/4
Chicken noodle dinner
the Ewing Funeral Home.
Key Centurion ........................... .13
A chicken-noodle dinner will be
..
Lands' End .......................;...22 1/2
held Friday from 4-7 p.m. at the .Charles D. Kennedy
Limited Inc. ;.........................27 3/4
Bethany-Dorcas Onited Methodist
Multimedia Inc ........ ::...........72 1/2
sponsored by tiJe parsonage
Charles D. (Windy) Kennedy,
Rax Restawant ..........................7/8 Church
charge.
Proceeds
will.
be
used
for
,
65,
1-lysell Run Road, Pomeroy,
Robbins&amp;Myers ...................26 3/.8
the
parsonage
fund.
died
Wednesday, April 3, 1991, at ·
Shoney's Inc ......................... l6 1/2
the Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabili·
Star Bank ......... .....................21 1/2
RaciJie Hleh School reunion
tation Center following a brief illWendy Int'l. ........................ 10 5/8
The Racine High School Class ness.
,
~orthington Ind ................... 24 3/~
of 1961 will hold an organizational
He was born in Rutland to the
meeting for its 30th classJcunion late Charles C. (C::huck) and Bessie
on Tuesday at 7 p.m. at 'Southern Lanning Kennedy. He was a retired
High School. All local class mem- maintenance worker at Phillip
bers arc urged io attend.
Sporn Power Plant in New Haven,
Veterans Memorial Hospital
•
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS
; Ethel Lambert, Pomeroy; Virginia
Thoren, Middleport; Perry Hoff•.
13.00
11.110
SPRING VAll fV CINfMA
man. MiddleporL ·
BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY l s.-Y
BARGAIN N!GWT TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
446 4~24
• Chester Co if, William Right·
house. and Beatrice Smith.

Stocks

W.Va. He was a veteran of the
World War TI Anny Air Corps and
a member of.the Eli Dennison Post
467 American Legion in R.utland. .
He is survived liy his wife of 43
years, Margaret L. Kennedy,
Pomeroy; a daughter and son-in•
law, Pat and Kevin Archer, Columbus; a son, Perry Kennedy,
Pomeroy; six grandchildren, Burt,
Jake and Maggie Kennedy, all of
Pomeroy, Drake, Grant and Brian
Archer, all of Columbus.
Besides his patents he was preceded in death by a brother,
Emmett (Tubby) Kennedy.
Services will be Saturday at 1
p.m . at the Birchfield Funeral
Home in Rutland with George
Nash officiating. Burial will be in .
Miles Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
ho111e on Friday from 7 to 9 p.m.
and on Saturday before the service.
In lieu of flowers donations may
be made to the Meigs County
Chapter of 1he American Cancer
Society, 236 West Second St. ;
Pomeroy.
. ·
·

.

..•

--Weather-.-.----.....---..;

By United Press Jnternational
An ·American Electric Power
official said the company is
"deeply disturbed" overacc!lsa·
tions that it tampered wuh coal
mine dust samples taken to guard
against black lung disease
,
AEP headquartered in Colum·
bus, is a'mong 847 coal mine operators across the nation c\1¢ for vio·
lations Thursday by U.S. Labor
Secretary L:tnn Martin. The La~J?r
Department is seeking $1,000 m

Ohio extended forecast
Saturday through Monday ..
Fair through the period, with .
high s in the' . 70s each day.
Overnight lows will be in the 40s:
Saturday and Sunday mornings, '
and ranging from ·the mid 40s to ;
the mid 50s early Monday.

.EMS responds to ten ·cans

'

'

fines for eath violatio~ against
AEP and. thr~e ot~er rums t)lat
operate.mmes m Oh10.
The fines are being asse~sed
~gainst AEP fo~ 19 ~leg~d v1o!a.·
uons at .two of rts mmes m Me1gs
County...
,
.
.
.
J.E. · Jack Katlic, semor v1ce
p~ident of fuel ~UP)llY for AEP,
said the alleged vrolallO'!S concern
' 1 percC!II of the 2,500 .m sam~les
AEP mmes have submuted dunng
the Jli1St20 months. .

{I&gt;

•
idation Coal, said that the irony is
that the coal induslry has·been ask·
ing the Labor l&gt;epartment for a
year - without success - to work
cooperatively wfth it to . examine
dust sampling procedures:
"Apparently the Mine Safety
and Health Administtation is more
interested in malting headlines than
in malting progress in the area of
mine health and safety," Hoffman
said.

· . ''We intend 10 challenge each of Robert E. Murray, for one alleged
the allegations," Katlic said. "We violation at Ohio Valley Coal Co.
would never knowingly or willfully in its Powhatan mine about 15
compromise the safety of our miles south of SL Clairsville.
employees."
.
Consolidation Coal Co., a
The other three Ohio coal mine DuPont subsid.iary that operates the
operators fined are E.I. du Pont de Powhatan No. 4 mine, which had
Nemours &amp; Co., cited for 27 the most violations of any Ohio
alleged violations at itsPowhatan mine, also said it·would challenge
mine in Monroe County; Oglebay · · each counL
·
Norton Co. , for nine alleged viola·
Thomas'Hoffman, vice presi·
tions at its St: Clairsville mine; and dent of public relations for Consol·

•

Robert Murray of Ohio Valley,
Coal Co., owner·of the independent
underground mine near Powha!RD
Poin~ was upset that he was bemg
accused of a single violation.
'
"l am at a loss to .understllnd •
where the on'e violation came
from." he said.
.
A Saginaw Mine Co ,
spokesman declined to comment.
Thursday on the fines, saying he'
was unaware of the allegations.
.

'

'

992-2124
2 MEDIUM

Plzz·as

$999

..

COLUMBUS, o ·hio (UPI)- companies . Under Blessing's for statewide offices that are part of
The Ohio House of Represen1atives amendment this uriion could con· tne bill. Candidates for governor. ·
Thursday passed a much-debated tribute to campaigns under 163 . would bC restricted to $3 million,
· while the auditor, secretary o{ state
bill that' will set up a systeln of vol· separate groups. .
and treasurer would be capped ai
"Is
that
a
level
playing
field?
'~
untary campaign spending limits
$1.2
million each.
for all can'didates for statewide Vukovich asked.
Candidates
for . ·the Ohio
·
In
addition
to
campaign
spendelected office .
Supreme
Court
will
be limited 10
The vote was· 60-37 in favor of ing limits the bill calls for limi~ng
'
$750,000,
while
state
senators
House Biill, and the vote was split contributions to any camP,a1gn
would
be
able
to
speitd
up to
down party lines. The Democrats, committee that does not alnde by
$500,000
and
representatives
who hold the majority in the voluntary limits. The bill also
requires the Ohio Elections Com· $250,000. '
House,
con1r01led the vote. ·
.'
House Speaker Vern Riffe.• DSeveral Republican ammend- . mission to be independent of the
New
BosiOn, voiced his displ~ure
meats were offered 10 the bill and secretary of slate's office to remov·
in
the
partisan discussion on the
soundly defeated by the ing the possibility that political
bill.
Democtats. One amendment in par· pressure could be exerted on the
"Everyone has ben anxious to·
ticular dealt with "leveling the commission. · ·
shoot
holes in this bill . The gover,
The measure will also require
playin.g field" by evening the
nor
has
already indicated his antiamount that corporations and Secretary of State Bob Taft to comlabot
stance
by lhreatening to veto
unions .can contribute to cam· . puterize campaign fmance reports .
the'
legishition.
But the bottom line
The bill is sponsored by Rep.
paigns.
is
)hat
no
one
bas come forward
Rep. Louis Blessing, R-Cincin· Judy .Sheerer, D-Shaker Heights.
with
an
alternative
bill ," .Riffe
nail, offered the amendinent saying She told members of the House that
.
that Gov: George Voinovich fells the problem with campaign fmance said.
The bill viiU now be sent over to
so slrOngly about putting business is too much money in the sy,stem
the Republican-conttolled Senate
and labor on an equal footing that and out of conlrOI spending.
Fair held at the school on ·Thursday. Tbt fair
CHECKING BLOOD SUGAR • Kelly Jobn· ·
for its consideration.
.
Efforts
in
other
states
.
to
come
to
he
has
threatened
to
veto
this
bill
if
WI!S made possible with a grant from Southern
son rigbt a student in tbe Nursing A,ssistant
In other business the Senate
terms with campaign · finance
this language Isn't included.
·
Obio
Coal Compa!IY· (See page 6 ror additional
Cla~s at Meigs High School, checks the blood
, reform have been ruled unconstitu· Agriculture Committee . heard
Rep.
Joseph
V:ukovich,
·D·
photo and story).
sugar level or Melanie Qualls during the Health
Poland, responded to B Iessing by tional because of mandatory limits amendments to a bill that would
privitize Ohio's state-run liquor
arguing that the proposed amend- on spending or contributions.
One amendment adopted
stores.
Sheeter
said
she
is
confident
ment could be circumvented by
will
place
a $1,000 contribution
that
this
plan
is
constitutio~al
unions. He g~ve an example by
ljmit
on
individuals
who place a
because
it
advocates'
voluntary
lun·
WASHINGTON (UP!) - : The . 1'otat hbn-(arm payroll employ· year, remained slagnant in March, pointing out that -the United Auto . its.
•.
'
bid
to
buy
a
former
state-operalell
nation's civilian unemployment meat dropped 205,000 in March to although employment in health ser- Workers have members in 163
·
Sheerer obtlined spending lill)its siore.
rate soared 0.3 percentage point 10 109.3 million, following a 290,000 vices grew slightly by 40,000 jobs. '
Two other indicators corrohorat·
·6.8 percent in Mareh- the highest drop in February. Since last
ed
lhe bad news, Norwood said. ·
since 6.9 percent in November September, the number of payroll
"Tiie number of persons
1986 -· as workers lost their jobs jolis has slipped 1.3 million.
employed
part iime involuntarily,
in manufacturing, consttuction and
Manufacturing jobs, meanwhile
whtch
rose
sharply for February,
trade, the Labor Depariment said continued their downward march,
remained
at
a very high level Qf
Friday.'
losing 90,000 in the month after a
over
6
million
in March," she said.
Since June, the jobless rate has drop of 150,000 in ~ebruary. Fac·
Steven Newman, author of ·ago for Pomeroy's :F~der's Pay Blackwood of Ch¢ster, and Jl\ffieS
climbed 1.5 percentage points as :z tory jobs have been shpprng smce ' ~ Additionally, the number of dis·
,
million workers lost their jobs, a January 1989, with a total loss couraged workers, persons who "Worldwalk", will be the keynote eelebratio)l. He anbcrpatcs .another Pape of Syracuse.
report they want a job but are not speaker . at Camp Kiashuta in- book being published later th•sThe ttail was "blazed" by memLabor Department spokesman said. since then of 1.2 million.
bel'S of the Ohio Civilian ConservaThe unemployment rate was 6. 5
Most of the lost jobs continued looking because they believe their Chester on· Saturday morning, as year, entitled "Yellowstone".
Ground for the Camp Kiashuta lion Corps. This spring. srudents at
percent in February.
,
to be concenttated in durable goods search will be unsuccessful, coiltin· the Meigs County Park District and
ued to edge upwards."
the Tri-State Area Council of Boy ttail project was bCQken in January, Hocking College are expected to
"The nation's job market deteri· industries.
Total
employment
rates,
mllSnSCO\Its
of America dedicate a new and the Parks District .worked develop the interpretive trial natwe
orated further in March, with a
The conslructuction industry
while,
also
edged
down
in
March.
hiking trail at the camp.
closely with Carnp Kiashuta study as a part.of their required
sharp rise in unemployment and a fared no better in the month, losing
With the grim news on the
pronounc.ed decline in oonfarm 70, 000 jobs in March for a IOta! of
Newman, an Ohio native, is list- Ranger Bob Arms, Shade River ptacticuin. .
.
unemployment front, analysts ed in the Guinntss Book of World Forest Manager Jim Milliron and
payroll employment," said Janet 0.5 million since last May.
Sa""'day's grand opemng ce~
mony will al_so p~oy1de tho_se m
Norwood, Commissioner of the
Retailttade jobs dropped 50,000 expected the Iiederal Reserve to act Records for being the first person Meigs County Wildlife Officer
- Department's Bureau of Labor in Mareh following what the gov- quickly tO boost the sagging' econo- to walk around the world alone.
Keith WOOd. The three-mile IJ!Oject
attendance wrth an opportnntty to
Statistics.
,
ernment called an "unusually my by cutting its benchmark uis-·
According to a press release was completed in March.
· •
walk the new trail, and those interAs workers lost their jolls, ~ow- large" revised drop of 110,000 in count interest rate.
from Newman's publisher, William
Members of the parks district, in
ested in walking the trail ariil
Economists had expecled such a Morrow alia Company, Newman addition to Director Powell , are
ever, the average workweek fol- February. Trade industries have
receivin~ awards will -be required
lowed a trend that began six · lost a total of 460,000 jobs since cut if the jobless rate had grown 0.2 did s0 without corporate swnsor- Charles· Barrett of Rutland, Lloyd
Continued on page 10 ·
percenlage point in ·March -. and
months ago by edging down slight· last summer. . .
.
with limiledin funds
ana all he
of r-::::~'-:-r:::rz~~i::-::~-:-- liiii;;;;::----:~1
ly ·in March. Average earnings, · · Th_e servtce rndustry, whrch the 0 .3~~~~t;}it~~~ poin tf rise ship,
his belong!ngs
a bac~pac_k
,..
~. put moreiJres·
named "Chnger". Newman spem .
m~w~Ue•.gJeW sliallilY.•
• . r~marned healt~y unt,U late la$1 seemed
sure on the l'ed to act.
four years completing his !ravels,
which took him across five continents, 20 countries :md a IOJ8I of
15,000 miles.
The "spring forward" part of while serving as the U.S. envoy to
Newman's adventures included
WASHINGTON (UPl) - Lose
an hour's sleep Sunday morning or the old addage, "spring forward, France recommending that shops braving a violent snowstorm in the
party an hour tess on Saturday fall back'' occurs at 2 a.m. local be-opened and closed earlier duriog Pyrenees, surviving a trampling
night; whichever way you go, you · time on the first Sunday of•April, 'summer months to cut the costs of team of horses in Morocco, a ni&amp;ltt
·
.
spent treed by long-tuslced boan m
can't escape the loss of an hour this depriving most American.s of an providing lighting.
ho~r
1&gt;~
sleell
a~d
plun$108
lhe
·
William
Willett
b~gan
urg!ng
Algeria and a battle with bull ants
weekend.
nauon rnto dayhght-sayrng time the adoption of dayhght-savmg in Australia. He ·was arrested in
and more. sunlight at the end of the time irk England and· during World three counaies • and escaped from
day. ·
·
War I it was adopted by England, jail in TUrkey.
The c'loc~s go back at 2 a.m. Fram:e Germany and a few other
A graduate of Ohio Univenity
local time on the last Sunday of nations'.
with a degree in journalism, Newman visited Mei~s County a year
Continued on page 10
It's daylight-saving time , October.
It has not always been so, ·and.

Jobless rate hits 6.8 % in March

•

Newman keynote speaker
for:dedication ceremon~ · · :

1991 FORD
ESCORT LX

1991 FORD
FESTIVA

1991 FORD.
RANGERXLT

STOCK 111337 ·

STOCKt 114.18
•XLTTrlm
•Cast Al~m . Wheels
·A~F.M Cassette .
•Chrome Rear Bumper
•Two Tone Paint
•power Steering
•OverdrivE! Transmls~ion
•Loaded With Optipns·

~~~
STOCK I 1 ~98
•Power Steering
•Rear Defrost
•Light/Conv ..Group
•Overdrive Transmission
•Air Condition
•AMIFM Cassette
•Tilt Wheel
•Cruise Control
•Povver LockS

•Cloth Interior
•Overdrive Transmission
•AMIFM Cassette
•And -More

·. WAS 110,437

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Daylight Saving.Time returns Sunday

WAS 112,675

Spring Fon\ ani
again. Remember to set

your clock ahead one hour
at 2:00a.m. this Sunday.

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10 pm • 2 a111
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House passes much-debated ·
campaign finance reform bill

.

"8Utz Creak"
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lf4WIItG
111,.40t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Frloay, April 5, 1991

~

REBATE

FRI., APRIL 5

.

2 Sectl!&gt;fl•, 14 Pill" 25 aenla
A Multimedia Inc. Nftwapaper

-Coal mine operators upset over ch~rges

- - . - -......, - -.....
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Vol. 41, No. 244
Copyrlghl.t 1H1

WE~THER MAP· A cokl'rront ~oviD&amp; through the North·
west wiD eause rain showen· along the coust and snow showers in
the mountains. Thunderstorms will develop along a surface
through Texas. R11in sl!owen will develop in the Oblo VaHey. Sun·
shine and warmer temperatures will prevpil in the Southwest and
central Plains. (UPI)

Low toalgbt In 50s. Partly
cloudy. High Saturday aear 80.

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South Central Ohio
Occasional showers and thunderstorms Thursday night, with a
low ·near 50. Chance of rain is 80
percent. Partly cloudy Friday, with
a chance of showers mainly in the
morning, and highs between 65 and
70. Chance of rain is 30 percent

Pick 4: 4975
Cards : 4-H, J-C
J-D; A-S·

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Pick3: 525

Pages 3·4·

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.Ohio Lottery

Chicago Bulls
trip Knicks in
NBA action

•

Lottery numbers

Hospital news

WATERING
HOLE

•

Meigs Emergency Merlical Se~- squad was sent to Route 33S fot'
yices units .responded to 10 calls Christopher Hadley, who was takeo ,
for assislance on Wednesday and to Veterans. At 10:19 p.m., Mid·
early Thursday.
die port went to Mill Street for
At 9:36a.m. on Wednesday, James Wooten, who was treated
·Pomeroy squad wenno Chester for · but not transported.
Delmar Baum, He )Vent to St.
On Thursday at2:48 a.m.. Mid·
Joseph Hospital.
!lleport squad went to Middleport
At 2:46 p . m~. Tupper's Plains Police Department for Robin
fire depart ment we.nt to Silver Dugan. Dugan refused treatnaenL
Ridge Road for 811 outbuilding fue. At 7:17.a.m., Pomeroy squad to
Chester fire department assisted. Wolf, Pen Road for Helen Eblin, &lt;IP ,
The fire was at the Chafee resi· who was dead on amval. At 8:08
dence. At5:12p.m.,Rutland squad ' a.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Wolf
went to Meigs Mine 2. Joe Bryant · Pen Road'for Henry Eblin, Sr., who
was taken .10 Holzer Medical Ceo- · trealell but not lransported. At 8:48
ter. At 9:12p.m., Middleport squad a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Molwent to Oliver Street for Terry . berry Avenue for Don Betzing. He ,
CLEVELAND (UPt) _ Wednes· ' Hoffman. Hoffman was taken. to · was-dead on arrival.
day's winning Ohio Lottery num· Veterans. At 9:41 p.m .. Racme
bers:
, .............................................. .
Pick-3
494.
Pemeroy
Ticket sales: $$1,440,007.00.
Hours: ·
Payoff: $338,922.50.
WE NOW
11
am to Mid. Sun.·Thurs.
Pick-4
HAY£
11 am to 1 am 'Fri. &amp; Sat.
6331. :.
DIET PEPSI
Ticket ,sales: $282;333.50. Payoff: $ll5,400.00.
Car'IW"'"
Six of hearts.
Ten of clubs.
Five of diamonds.
2 ITEMS
Queen of spades.
. ·Ticket sales: ~65,871. Payoff:
$21,070.
..
Super Lotto
·29-36-37-39-41-45
.Ticket sales: $3,042,036.00.
•1111 OcMftito"s "-•· lac. burdrW•••ry'- tt...l t20 .0o. ~ ••IIMteed te
Kicker
..,,. .... ..,..,.... .,...., .. pettk:....._loctdoft ontr. ,.._ tu .cl •dlllllolllll wfl . .
. 741304.
_,plc:IMe. Pj,RT 11MI AND t:&amp;ltltEit O PPORlVNITIII NOW AVMA&amp;EI
• Ticket sales: $502,534.

Announcements

AT THE

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--~--~------------~------------~----~
!
H&amp;TIOHAL WEATHER FOIIECAST FIOII7 All O+ft TO Tlll...t.'
• '•
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By United Press lDtenatioual
High pressure continued 10 hold
on along the Atlantic Coast early
Thursday but -it will move east
allowing a weak cold fron! iitlo
Ohio late Thursday, bringing a
chance of rain to the state.
The highest probability of rain
will come 10ward evening with the
rain moving through quickly and
by Friday afternoon there will be at
least ·partly sunny skies across the
state.
·
Thursday morning skies were
partl-l to mostly cloudy and winds
were from the southeast to south 10
mph orlesi. .
·
.
Temperatures were on the mild
side early Thursday witH readings
mostly in the mid 40s to lower 50s.
It was in the upper 30s in the
YoungsiOwn area, however.
Skies will be pilrtly cloudy with

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~~~~~;.:e.,;:c~':.united states

For instance, Haw,ii, Arizona,
the Eastern Tirile Zone ~ of Indi·
ana, Puerto Rico, tbe Vugin Islands
and American Sam01 are excluded
from ha_ving to make the cltange.
The seven months of dayli&amp;ht
saving timC' now observed is based
around the idea of providing an
equal amount of exira evening sun·
light on either side of the hottest
days of the year, generally in late
July. '
.
· HistoriCally, the idea of juggling ·
the hour !land about to adJIISI per·.
sonal schedules to the longer and
shorter days can be traced 10 !len·
jamin Franklin, '!Vho ~te a ~

Court .dismisses sewer petition
A petition to organize the Rut· district on Jan 1_3.1, 1991, but
land Area Sanitary Sewer Dislrict according to $anay Smith, project
filed by the Village of Rutland has chairman for the village, Rutland
been dismissed, according to an • Council voted unanimously 'at a
entry filed in the Meigs County s!*lal meetin4 Tuesday night to
·. dismiss that peutiotl after consider·
Common Fleas Court.
In view of the dismissal the rub· ing the prOJected cost of about ·
lie .heari,ng pn the formation o the 550,000 per )'eat for its operation. ·
The district would have handled
sewer district to administer the $2.2
million waste water collection and billing, setting rues, and 1eneral
sewage treatment system scheduled operati(lll and maintenance of the
for Monilay at 9 a.m. at the Meigs system. Without a sewer disUict
County Courthouse has been can· being e~tablished, these matters
will be bandied through Rutland
celed.
Village
Council.
The village filed a peiition
requesting formation of the sewer

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STEVE NEWMAN ·

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COmmentary

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Sen~inel

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Pomeroy, ·ohio .
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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Bmllii! J"T"',.,.'---.-' ,....,..,.,c:l•-=- I

. ~v
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ltOBERT L. WINGETT

PubiJsher

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~··

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J".

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

Geaeral Maaager

PAT WIDTEHEAD

AMlllilllll Publllher/Colilroller
A MEMBER o! The United Preeslnternatlonal, Inland Dally Press
, Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They sho11ld be less than 300
words long. AU letter s are subject to editing and MliSt be SIIIJ!ed With
name, address and telephone number. No \lnslgned letters will be pllbllshed. Letters should be In good taste, addres1fng Issues, not personall·
.t ies,

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Memory will go on ·

WASHINGTON- In the year
that America celebrates the 200th
anniversary of the Bill of Rights,
the press finds itself under attack
for the way it covered the Persian
Gulf War. But in El S!l)vador; the.
price of reporting on the ·IJiilitary
and the .government is higher than
just a few angry letters to the edi-

style publishing the kind of·bal· paper of staging "a self attack."
. anced storiea that El Salvador's Now government officials will only
other newspapers won't touch. The say they are inveatigaling the Bison.
circulation increased from 1,200 The newspaper employees say they
copies a day to 6,000.
have yet to see much progress
In the' polarized climate of El made in that investigation.
Salvador, even balancCd news cov- . · In a Feb . 23 iruerview with a
erage can prove deadly. EmployeeS MexicO City wire serviee, the pubsoon beglll! to receive death threats. . .lis her of El Diario, Franctsco
tor.
They noticed suspicious vehicles Valencia, complained that unidentiThe San Salvador offi~ of~ with tinted windows [!ked near fie_d men' whom he suspected of
gutsy newspaper El D18flo Latino the newspaper office.
t. Augu,st, 'betng involved in the arson had
was torched by an arsonist nearly the wife of El Diario's editor was been tailin~ him. Valencia is sched'\YO months ago..Now tJ:Ie ~daun~- shot to dealh by an llllknown gun- illed to~ m New York on April_15
ed employees are working m thetr man. In September an employee to recetve the Freedom to Wnte
burned-out building on borrowed was killed along with another jour- award from PEN, the writers' and
typewriters while. paper boys dis- nalist in a mysterious car crash. editors' society. .
tribute copies using rickety public · Then on Feb. 9, the office was set
On the day of the fire, the
buses.
ablaze.
ARENA government had placed its
. El Diario ·celeb~aled j~ 100th
El Diario staffers immediately first paid advertisement in El
birthday last year wtth an employee suspected rightest military ele- Diario. But, for the most part, the
buyout. The employees adopted an nients in the government. An conservative sectors in.EJ Salvador
aggressive, independent reporting ARENA depuiy aa;used the news- have refused to buy ads and they

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

poinJS of the third quarter and the
Knicks turned the ball over nine
times in the period, simply giving
Chicago the game.
'
"We erased an IS-point deficit
in the third ouarter, which is kind
of shoekin :' Jordan Said. " There
was no yefiing or like that at half
lin\e. We knew what 'f/C had to ilo
to' get back in the game/'
'
The Bulls collaps¢ on Patrick
Ewing, limiting him to 10 points
·and two rebounds in the second
half, and held New York to 39 percent shooting from the field. They
also clamped down on Quinneit,
who managed just 4 jloints on 1for-7 shQoting from the field after
the break to finish with a careerhigh 2().
"I felt strong in the fll'St half,"

By DEAN SCIIABNER
VPI Sports Writer
For 12 minutes Thursday night,
' Brian Quinnell made Michael Jor- ·
~ loot ordinary. Theri reality set
m.
c Jordan scored 25 of his 34
'points in the second half to help the
Chicago Bulls rally from a 24-point
-deficit and post a 101-91 victory
· 'over the Knicks in New York. ·
· Quinnett had held Jordan to five
,points in the second quartcir and
"riddled the AII·Star for 16, hitting
all seven of his (teld goal attempts
.- six from long range.
•.
' "I was nervous at halftime,"
Quinnett said. "I was thinking,
'Boy, .this isn't 11oing to be any·
thing if we lose.''Y
·
· The Bulls scored the, first six

Jack Anderson
and Dale VanAtta
·

view the paper as a leftist mg. The
paper relies on ads from ~ocial
movements, international coolribu·
tions and street sales for 95 ,percent
of its income. That doesn't amount
to much and the average El ·Diario .
reporter makesonly$127 a month.
' But money is the least of their
problems. "Of course, there is the
possibility that we could be killed.
There are people still interested in
not having us around," one newspaper 'staffer told our associate
Dean Boyd.
"We'll continue forging ahead,"
one employee told us, "but it's~
question of survivill. We just try to
get out objective news, and that'&amp;
difficult enough.'
'

Scoreboard

Will
.
.
~l - W.......... atNY,

. MAJOR LEAGUE
EXIDBmON STANDINGS

'

- 1:3Sp. m.

7lpri17 - NY Rutpn 11 Wuhing·
7:0, P:· m.
April9 - NY ltutl"' at Wuhing·
wn. 7i"3J p.m.;
.
s-A!"il11 -;- Willllinpn II NY
llanptJ, 7:35 p,m.

ByUnlt... .l'nlllnloraa1lonal

American Leape
W L ...

friend I could count on him, I knew
Dear Editor:
On at least on.e occasion the what his response would be in
Good Book likens mankind to a nearly every situation. He made
forest of trees and the Almighty as friends and he was willin~ to help
the axman. In the past he has cut others. He touched my life and I
down tree after tre~. Somewere know he touched others.
There is no good time to pass
very tall - Washipgtofl, Lincoln,
this
life. We .who are left behind
great heros of the past, brave men
are
not
ready for the tears and the
and women serving America in the
pain
.
But
we must believe that
Oulf W,ar but last week the axman
where
the
ax
falls the Almighty has
a)med his ax at one I had known,
will.ed
it
so.
iau~ht, and coached, and struck
No one can iake Gary's place in
$Sam and again until this 1ree of a
the
forest of men. His memory will
l(lan dropped into the dust of the
goon.
earth. His name was Gary Hart. ·
Lawrence R. Wolfe
·· As Gary's teacher, coach and

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NcwYork

J;lear Editor:

·
.
.; To the individual who stole our
ljeloved American flag from · my
S'lin 's garage door on Mulberry
Rgt •s, in Pomeroy.
· ;. It had a spotlight on it because
vie are proud to be Americllll and
. P!oud of·what our flag siands for,
c)lurage, honesty, bravery and dign!ty, and for all that gave the
uhnost for their country. ·
:: As far as I am concerned it has

..

been defamed by the hands of the
person who stole it
May it never wave over his
dwelling. It took courage and lives
for our forefather's to win our flag.
It took no courage to steal it.
Thieves are our country's cheapest
aommodity, a dime l\ dozen. God
for~ive you.
EtheiShank
105 Union Ave.
· Pomeroy, Ohio

•••

' Parents Dance Committee:
pear
' I would like to take the time out
and thank 'you all for your support,
~never knew they had a teen group
in Meigs County, but !think,it's a
great idea. Please be sure to tell the
~oung men and ladies of your

organization, I ~ly do appreciate
their support. Your cassette tape
you sent me sent chill bumps down
my arms. and made '"e pi'QUd to be
a Meigs Counlian. AD ofmy guys
love A 'side of the cassette you sent
me. My roommate wants to play it
every time we·get up and get ready
for work.
Well it looks like the war is over
and I'll be back home soon. Maybe
when I come back to Middleport to
visit my parents, I'll come and visit
you all. And I will get a chance to
thank you all personally. See ya
later and God Bless you all.
.
Britt Dodson

[Berry's World
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VliE

~XPE cT 1b -eE IN

HAVE BEEN SUSPENDED

.556

12
14
Ballionce
....14 14
CUiomia
.....12 13
Ook1lnd
' , ..11 ll
11 11
Milwaukee
.. 11 19
TOIQCllo
...••.9 11
Deuuit
,,, ..1 21

.531
.500
.500

"""'""'
Sin Jlioao
SL Louia

.625

. I •Ailrilll - NYRanp:atWaab·
anp,1:!lp.m.
s-Apri!IS - W......... IINY
RIIIIOII,7:3Spm.

Adaa.Dh1slon

.480

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......

T~E

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.393
.367
.333

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Houston S, Ciacinnati 4 .
ToRIIUo 2. Kanlu City 1
Mirua... to,Toau3
New Yorlt (NL) It Monuool (ppd.,

•

(Moolnolltadl-1.0)

p.m.

Apdl7- M""""" 11 Buffalo, 7:0!
p.m. ,
\
April9-M-otlluffal• , 7:35

p.m.
.
•·April II - Butrolo II McnUOII,
7:35p.m.

'

. 7:3S p.m.
·
·
•·Aprilll - BIIflololl McnUOII,
7:35 p:m.

Norris Division
........ MI-" .

c~

(Mln-'"'loodl-l.t)
Apri14- Minnsau4, Otic:aao 3

OT

Friday Games

l'lti1J4elphia va, s-, Winlcr
limn, Fla., I~ p.m..
Montreal Yl. Allarita, Welt Palm
Beach, Fla., l:OS p.m.
·
K.ansu C tp n . ~. Kiuimee.
f!&amp;, l~p;m.
T.-ovs. SL Louia,
Fla., llOS p. m.
Colwnbui(AM)n NcwYM
(AL~ Fod Loudentale, Fla., I ,()5 p. m.
Cincinnati n. Dcuoit, Lakeland, Fla.,
l :lOp.ta.
'
Pilybuqh va. Tau, 1'01\ O.ulauo,
fla.,l:lOp.m.
'
MinnciiOII YL Chic.ao (AL), Smaot.;- Fla., I :lS p_.{n .
ChicaJO (1\'L) at Milwaukee., 7 p.m. ·

Democrats 'losing punch 'in ·aawaii ·
either Nisei or"AJA" • Americans
of Japane~ Ancestry) and mem'
bers of Hawaii's labor unions
(notably the International Lon~shoremen 's and Warehousemen s
Union) forged !I political. alliance
that was long unassailable. .
Indeed, Hawaii was one of only
four states carried by both ·Demoera tic presidential candidates
Jimmy Carter in 198(1 and Michael
Dukakis in 1988. .
In 1986, however, Patricia ·Saiki .
became the fll'SI Republican ever to
win a Hawaiian election for a seat
in Congress. Mter two terms in the .
Hou~e. )4e ran ;for a Senate seat
last year -'ud"waged a credible,
albeit losing, campai~.
Professional poliucians with ties
to both major parties agree that
Democratic hegemony is fading, in
great measure because so many
retired mainlanders with Repul&gt;li-

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Rob.ert Walters

Reagan is anything but my~tetious
Ul'll' A R
·

.
SL Loitk vs. Dolrull
\ (lhlrolll-ltftNl..) '
Ap'ril 4 - DeU'ai&amp; 6, 5L Louia 3
ApriJ6 - Dctroilal SL Lckdt, 1:35

..-- . p.m.
Apri!IO- SL Louia 11 Deuui' 7:35
p.m. . .
l·April12 -DetroitllS1. Lou.iJ,
8:15p.m.
•·April 14 - St. Louis at~lt,
1:05 p.m.
'
•·Apri116- Doaoh II SL,l.oWs,

NATIONAL

1:35pm.

ASSOCIATION
Pd.

I·BDIIDft
,, , , ,.54
y·PhiladclpiUa ..... .41
New Yodt
...,...35
Wuhinpn .., ..:f7

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MWm

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Apjil4- EdmCI'It.on 3, C1l1uy I
Apdl6 - Edm"'""'" c.t 1uy, g,os

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April l 0 - Calpry at Edmon10n,

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Paelllc DMsl1111

9:35pm.
I·April12 - EdmooiAlll II CaJauy,
9:35p.m.

Thursday Gam•
84»""'- 123, Now Jcney 104
l'oll1and 105, Wu!Urt- !16
O..doae 98, Allanll91

134, o...-122

OUc.ao 101 , New Yolk 91
San.Ankrio 105,MUwa'*-ec.10I
LA Lolt• t02. , _ . 91
Pod1aad 11 Odando. 1:30 p.m.
Owrloeee.aJ Jleveland, 7:30p.m.
WooJWtauin 11htltiana, 7:30p.m.
Minnela&amp;a It Delrok, I p.m.

Sao ........... Oti. . . lp.m. '
!hob 11 Dallaa.l:lO p.IIL
Hounon at ~. 10!30 p.tD.
Miomi c LA Lo1ton, !0:30p.m.

flt-iuiOoldoti lloto,IO::IOp.m.

'

SalllrdaJ Gmnes

DmoilatN., Yadr:,l:30p.m.
Betton 1t Odando, 7:30 p.IIL
lncUana ltAil•ta, I p.m.
New Jenor"
9 p.m.

MD-

l/tahatH-1:30p.DI.

Go1da1 5111011 s - . 1 0:30

p.m.

.

• -Aprill4 "- Cal&amp;uy11Edmonl&lt;ln,

,

. , ~p.m .

I·April16 - Edmori10n II Cal11ry,

9:35,....

•.If._,

illy--·- .

Tbariday's .
Spotts Tranucllont · ·

lyUftllld.._l_l
AU..ta - Pl.cod pitda Pete Smilh

... 1!!lJL
' C1l¥tiMd - C1aJmed catch• Eddle
T1~a-.. and piHod him en major·

r·dlnehed pb,.rf-

S..alo11 LA~ 10:30 ~.m.

-

loa... -

.

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:.
In 19S1;.JI!llus and. Ethel Rosenberg were sentenced to death in New ':
York for steal_mg aromtc ~Is-for the Sovie~ Union.
.
:
In !~· vtolence ~ 10 seveQI Amencan cities in response 10 th~ • .
assassmauon of Marlin Luther King Jr.
.
.
i
~n 1976, reclusive billionaire Howard Hughe's died of k(dney failure I
dunng a flight from Acapulco, Mexico, to Houston.
;
In 1?82, the British fleet sailed to recapture the Falkland Islands from !
Argentma.
.
.
·
,
.In 1~ Japan made major commitments to change its economy and :
legal pracllces 10 reduce its $49 billion trade .surplus with the United '
States.
·
:

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t

.. A thoil~~t for the day: English. philosopher Thomas Robbe' wrote, J .
The CQndiuon of~ ... ts a condiuon of war of everyone against every- r

one." .

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•

MonbeiJ- PlaCed cutf1Ciidar Darren
Retd on ~bled ~ rec.aUed outfl&amp;l.der
Eric lulloct lnm ..;.,or ioall"'! ""'P· Nbd~hil - Placed pildta Ken
Hoftll..aGulfioldwSUCOmpiiiOon
dllablod Uol; opli&lt;tood J&gt;!ld-. Tim Mauo·
•.IICODd ~ Mickey MonndiN
iad
FltCdlorto Semnon

...._c.-

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~)

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S&lt;. t..olo- OpdOnod itdloldon Tun
1-aadl.odo Alio.,lla&amp; ""-'Rod
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Dll'loO• ll-day dd-

·
-...
oblod
1111. ........

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On this date in histOry:

.

p.m.
,
April&amp; - Calauy II EdmCIIII&lt;II, 9:3l

Friday Gam• ,

Today is Friday, AprilS, t!Je 95th day of 1991 with 270 to follow.
. The moon ts wanmg, movmg toward its last quarter.. ·
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Saturn.'
·
,
The evening stars are Mercury and Jupiter.
·
. 'fl!ose born on this dllte are under the sig_n of Aries. They include;
EngliSh philosopher Thomas Hobbes in 1588; Benjamin Harrison, signer :
o~ the Dec~uon of Independence, in 1726; English physician Joseph :
Laster! who ~troduced antiseptic surgery, ih 1827; educator Booker T. ·
Washmgton 10 18~; actors. Spencer Tracy in 1900, Melvyn Douglas in ;
1901, Bette Davts m 1901t and Gregory Peck in 19I6 (age 75)· novelist '
Arthur Hailey in 1920 (age 71); and impressionist Frank GorShi~ in 1934 :
(age 57).

'

'"·

19

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y-U.Loken ......!13 21
,716 21/l
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17
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LA CUppen ..., ..21 4l .:llo\,
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SacramcnLO .......20 52 .211 34 1/l
x~llarW dMMII dllt

Minneaou

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. I·A . 16 - Vancouver t1 Loa An·
Jeloo, I :!l p.m.

•

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29
.311 321/l

Midwest Dlvlllon
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I·Aprill4 -l..ol Anccloa 11 Van-

Wesiem Conferenre

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ApdltO -to. AntcJ- at Vancou-

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Central Dlvlslon .
........ll II .753
r·Dctnn~
.........&gt;46 'rl .630

r·Mllwaukee ,,, ..44 30
.... ..... 31 3l
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10:15 p.m.

19

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.

Apri16- ..._

~ 8 -Loa AnJo1&lt;o 11 v....,vcr,

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13

East.ern..sprtng
• sports sJates

April4 ...:v-6, Lao Alt.,..

10:3S.p.,tll.

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Mllllr....,.... pltdttr 101 ...... oho

Snyder, Stewart
active on KCC nine
Two former Meigs Marauders
are off to a good slart in the young
baseball season at Kemucky Chris- ·
tian College.
Joey Snyder is a starter in center
. field, where he baited .377 as a
sophomore last year, while freshman Chris Stewart is seeing some
action on the · mo~_nd.
, ,
. Last weekend KCC split four
games on a trip 10 Georgia, Stewart
picked up his fll'Sl collegiate victory over Toccoa Fall College as the
rig~t-hander struck out 12 en route
to a 3-,J victory.
·Snyder doubled home the win. n .in~ run in the second game ·
agamst Toccoa Falls as KCC
picked up a 5-4 victory.
·

Meigs track schedule
Boys and Girls
'Aj&gt;ril 9-Federal Hocking and
Alexander-H
·
·
Ap.ril 13-at Vinton County lnvita.tional
·
,April 16-at Belpre with Warren
' Local
April 18-Vinton County-H
Apri123-Eastem-H
April 25-at Vinton County with
Nelsonville-Yorlt
April27 -BI Fedelll Hocking Invitationat
'
April30-Wellston-Home
May 4-Meigs Invitational
May 7-at Federal Hocking ·
May 11-TVC Meet at Belpre
,May 14:Trimble with Ale~and~-H

T-.-~ pl:lcrhM WUlle '

Pr.. W

.

lobllcDcin.w 10 SftiCUIC ar

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Nultvlllo(WIIL) - NamMRon
a-. ....... ·

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ooocbRicltT...U.-.....
Talil&gt;r lotitb bubo·

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,.......

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I

ICIDMh.

·•

'

p.m.
April I·- s ~. Looilu Detroit, 7 :3!5

BASKETBALL

Today in history
'

x·Apri116 - Miru'aou at OUcaao,

8:35p.m.

ByUollodPINII-..u.nal

'

By United Press International

1:05 p.m.

Nev. 10:05 ~· m.
CaiU.... II !.Go Alt....., 10:3l p.m.
San Fnnciao at Odlind, ·10:35 p.m.
• .........K ... uod

hardly rates as mystifying.
He alsO enjoys a gentle joke as . rr l
US eT;
'much as Abraham Lincoln- anoth-. healthier, or Ies
er mysterious figure, come to think Ronald Reagan' .
of it AD in all, I can't think of arly- closely at hi
eel otherwise
one I know who ~e personality is may be staring into mirror.
·

.zam •

I·April12- Minncla&amp;lll OUCIJO•
8:3S p.m.
•·Apri114 -CbicaJ'P at Minnesota,

· San·Dicaon. S..W..Lo• v.,.,,

can proclivities are moving ' into
beachfront condominiums being all pineapple prbduqion on the
built throughout the state, especial- island of Lanai by 1993..
That company, which markets
,!sYlanhedreofonHathweau.~oannda oCnoasthet olS.flanthde.
food producis under the Dple
of Maui.
name, owns 98 percent of th~
The sugar industry, the comer- island and has long used it exclu·
stone of the · state's economy sively as a pineapple plantation. :
thtoughout the last half of the 19th
Hawaii's status as a mid-Pacific
and fll'St half of the ~th centuries, fortress dates back to 1919, whenemployed 56,000 Hawaiians when the Navy constructed elaborate for-'
it peaked in the 1920s. Today, it tifications and a huge drydock at.
provides jobs for only about on~- , Pearl Harbor. In the ensuing:
tenth as many people,
decades, dozens of additional mili-:
Drastic reductions in the amount tary facilities were constructed on·
of land devoted to growing sugar the islands.
cane resulted in a production
But during the !9980s - when:
decline of 20 to 25 percent during , the military budget expanded rapidthe mid-1980s alone.
ly under President Ronald Reagan -·
Production of pineapple, tradi- defense expenditures in Hawaii,
tionally the state's other major declined. Moreover, that trend is
crop, has also dropped sharply. expected to continue as Pentagon
EspeciililY striking IS the decision spending contracts worldwide in
of Castk &amp; Cook Inc. to abandon the 1990s.

'

April I - Chicaao at Minnelota,
'
•
AprillO - a.;..Joll Mmnaou,
8:05p.m.
1:05 p.m.

St.-.,

I -

Minn•ot~n Chk:110.

April 6 -

8:35p.m.

J

•

.

l·April13 - M~ at BUffalO,

'

Cleveland 11 , MU waukee 7
sutlle7, a.;..10 (NL) 2

.

.

April!- Mm&lt;zea17, llda!D l
Aprill - Buffalo ot"'-al. 7:3l

l'ltilJdelplt;a II, ~11
Pitlli&gt;lqJI 2, 8011011 I
'
Chicaao (AL) 4, S1 Louia 2 .
Baltinu.. 3,Now Yodt (AL)2

.•

.

· s-Apri111 - IW1foal11 Baolal.
7:35p.m.
a·Apri113 -B•ton 1tHartf'ord.
7:35p.m.
&gt;·Apri115-llanloalatB..-,
7:35 p.tn.
MonlrUI n. ..,..alo

nin)

"

.

p.m.

Qlli.nnett said, looking like someone had shol his dog . "I don ' t
know how we can be in a game like
that and come out and stink it up.''
Jordan was held to nine points
on 4-of-12 shooting in the fll'Sl half
but he was the show in the fourth
quamr, scoring 11 of the Bulls'
· final 17 .p~inu·. J,or4an, who was
playing in his SOOth career. game,
stored 13 in the period.
, ·
"Jordan took over and as we've
seen, he's obviously a great play~
er," New York head coach John
MacLeod said. "He just jammed it.
He accelerated right past us. We
tried 10 double team him, but we
couldn't get the double-teams there
. in tilpC to shut him down."
Ptppen scored 20 points,
grabbed 10 rebounds, handed out
12 assists and made four steals as
the Central Division-leading Bulls
improved to 55-18 and kept pace
with Portland for the· NBA's best
overaU record.
Tbe Knicks ran their lead to 24
are (L·R) Heather Blanks, Amy Harrison, AprU
WINS TOURNAMENT TITLE -The Meigs
in the second quarter and led by 18
Halley, Suzanna Henderson and Tonya Phalin.
seventh-grade girls' basketball team recently
at the half before managing just 12
Pict~~ted in tbe second row are Mindy Patterson,&lt;
rinished a successrul season by winning the
Vanessa Harless, Anne Brown, Alica Haggy,
. points in the third quarter and 17 in
Miller Junior High Basketliall Tournament The
the fourth as the Bulls came back.
Cy~tliia Cotterill and Coach John Arnott.
.,
girls dereated the host Miller five by a score or
New York; which played withQut
30-18 to win the title. Pictured in the front row
· Charles Oakley, Gerald Wilkins
' and Trent Tucker, has droooed
seven of its last 10.
'
"They are our first round (playoff) match ," Jordan ~ aid. "We
wanted,to come in .here and make a
statement,' give them 'something to
worry about.''
In other games, the Los Angeles
Lakers held off Phoenix 102-98,
San Antonio overcame Milwaukee
105-101, Minnesota thumped Denver 134-122, Charlotte downed
Atlanta 98-91 ; Boston pounded ·
New Jersey 123-104 and Portland
knocked off Washingtoil 10~ -96 .
Lakers 102, Suns 98
At Phoenix , James Worthy
.scored 16 of his 26 points in the
fll'St quarter to stake the Lakers 10 a
14-pointlead; Los Angeles padded
its margin over the Suns for second
place in the div.isi.on to 2 1/2
· . games. Kevin Johnson led Phoenix
with 33 points and 12 assists.
Spurs lOS, Bucks 101
At Milwaukee, David Robinson
scored 28 of his game•high 35
points in the second half and Terry
Cummings hit a free throw with
seven seconds left t.o help .the Spurs
remain in first place in the Midwest
Division. San Antonio, whi ch
outscored the Bucks 33'-17 in the
final period, used a 12-0 run to
open the founh quarter· to help
FINISH THIRD - The Meigs eighth-grade girls' basketball
erase what had been a 16-point
team recenlly finished a successful season. The girls finished lhird
deficit in the second quarter.
.
The Daily Sentinel
· Timtierwolves U4, Nuggets 122 · in the !Oth annual Miller Junior High ,Dasketball Tournament. Pic·
lured m the first row are (L-R) Jacklyn Swartz, Stephanie Davis
At Minneapolis, Doug Wes t
(USPS lfwtf)
llillie Butcher, Amber Dlackwell, Martha Russell, Dobbie Butche;
A DlvllloD of Multimedia, Inc.
scored 10 of his season-high 15
-·
and Jana Dailey. In the back row are Melllssa Vance, Melissa Clirpoints in the fourth quarter to help
Pu.bllshed every afternoon , Monday
rord, Kim .Haggy, Erica Robie, Vanessa Compston, Emily Johnson
the Timbctwolves set a franchise
through Friday, 111 COurt St., Po-• ;
·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pubscoring record. The Wolves sur- · and Coach. Cathy Edwards.
lltblng Company/Multtmedla, Inc.,
passed theii· ,1989-90 win total with
Pomeroy, Ohlo 157119, Ph. 992-2t56. s..
the victory and ended a five-game
'
cond clasa po1tqe paid at Pomeroy,.
Ohio.
losing streak. Minnesota's previous
.'
frailchise high was 128 points set •
Member: United Prelt InternaUoilaJ '
Inland DaUy Press A•odaUaa Ud t..e ~
earlier this season against the
Ohio Newspas: Aacrlatlon: Natloul
Nuggpts.
.
·
Advertlablg
rHentattve, BraDham
Hornets 98, Hawks 91
Newopaper S eo, 733 111lrd Avenue,
Apt-16-At
Fed.
Hocking,
4:30
(3:
30)
EASTERN 1891
· ,
At Charlolte, N.C., Johnn~
Apr. 17-Symmes Valley, 4:30
. ' New York, New York 10017.
SOI'TBALL ROSTER
Apr.
IS-Waterford,
4:
30
(See NBA ·on Page 4) ·
NAME , POSITION
Gr .
POS'I'MASTER: Send acldr,.. cti..,..
'

Apdi7-B-..otlla11foal, 7:3l
p.tn.
'
Apdl9- a....... - ..... 7:3s

.:p6

9

Hartford

(llarlflri looduera.t.f).
. Apd13-llulfonll,BD11Dn2
, April$ -' llulfonl'lllloiUlll, 7:3S

.423

Tbunday's Results

ORBIT BY, LET'~ S~E ...
.HOW FAST DOE~ THIS

An American president almost phy is due out next year, and there
has to be fairly popular to land the · have already been rumors that it
job at all.. But the processes of ero- will be noticeably negative about
sion set in right away, and he CI!JI its subject.
count on being dimintshed by them
Morris went on to say that Reasooner or later.
gan is "the most mysterious man I
Given the,liberals' detestation of have ever confronted. II is impossiRonald Reagan's politics, there ble to understand him .... He's slab' was never any tiope for even a brief by and he's cold.''
•
Indian summer for his reputation.
Asked for confmnation'bf these
The critics kept relatively quiet comments, Morris replied: "I can't
while he was in office, because his speak to Mrs. Reagan's opinion. l
popularity with the Americun pco- .can say that I found him mysteriple was so immense .- But they ous, and my impression is that
cr~wled out from u~d~r their rocks . most people do."
.,
wtthm month~ after' Ius departure,
Well, JUSt for the record, I don t,
and have never let up since.
am! my pers911al acquaintance with
Their fll'St effort was to re-write him giles back 20 years. · · ·
the history of the 1980s. Never
The trouble with Reagan is that
mind the economic boom, the his reactions are so normal that
rebuilding of our defenses, the col- devious peofle (and thai includes
lapse of the Soviet.empire. Talk, 90 percent o the inhabirants of the
instead, only about sldze, greed zoo inside the Beltway) probably
and junk bonds, and blame all these do find him incomprehensible.
on Reagan.
Lyn Nofziger once told me that
But that sort of stuff works his fll'St job, on JoinS to work for
mostly on the converted. Now the Reagan, was to disabuse him of the
second wave is coming ashore, and notions "that right will triumph in
its message is men: subd~. Reagan, the end, that the U.S. Caulry will'
it tells ys, wu ne,ver the relaxed; arrive at the lui minute and save
warmbeaned sur we thought he the day. and that Qod cares who is
was. On the con tracy, ho is pro- president of the United States."
roundly and somehow ominously Naive convictions, perhaps. but
"mysterious."
hardly the intellectual baggage of a
The father of this line of analy- myslery mail.
•
, 4_ _- _ , , .
sis is Edmund Morris, a Pulitzer
Ronald· Reagan knows what he
~~
Prize-winning historian who was believes, and is at peace with himC&gt; ,., .., ~- ~.
designated by Reagan u his offi- self. Maybe, in this neurotic age,
cia! biographer, ana as such· was that qualifies him as mysterious,
allowed to run loose around the but if so whose fault is that1 He is
White House for years, ailending also deeply In love with his wife,~ of important~~ and a state of affairs that probably ~L- - - - -·____..;·.:....;....;;,,;,.:~~.,::::__...;...~ all
making notet, The taultifta biiJBra· · flea many ~:-- people, but

SOME FRE.EDQMS

.600

,,14 10 .!113
.....IS 11 .571
Adanta
..... .14 11
.560
Pit........
.... 14 II
.568
S111 Fnndoco
.14 12 .l!l
Now Yoot
, 14 14 .500
Chicaa•
.....14 16 ' /467
... .12 14
.&gt;462
l.oo' Anpko
..I :t )1 .433
Cinc:inru&lt;i
... .12 16 A29
l'ltilJdelphia
.. .10 16 .:Ill
Spllt-4quad • - • count In llaftdlnp. •
...,., ........... uct ..............
non-IM,Ior lela• ...._. do aDL

•

KAILUA, Hawaii (NEA)
Nowhere in the nation is the constantly accelera!ing pace of eco- .
nomic, poijtical and social chan~Je
more apparent than here in Hawati,
a state whose pastoral landscape
often obscures the dramatic shifts
profoundly affecting its people's
lives.
Not long ago, Hawaii's elec- '
torate was overwhebningly Demooear Committee:
cratic, its economy was heavily
Your care package was most depen(lent upon agriculture and its .
appreciated. So nice to know, that islands were lined with bustling
we have the support of our fellow · military inslallations. Today, all of
Americans. I'm proud to serve the that is changing.
United States in uniform.
Democratic domination in the
Your kindness meant·more than state's elections dates back almost
this thank-you can say -Please give five decades, to the years immedime a chance to returl\ it someday,
ately followinJ. World War II when .
Special Thanks, Hawaii was still a territory.
SSgt. Mary Hayes
During those mid-century years,
Thank you, the islands' Japanese-Americans
Iva Sisson (commonly referred to here a~

•••

10

NatlonaiJ.eacue

Shares letters with_public

Dear Editor:
· · Many of you :ovho attended Suj&gt;port Sunday at the Locomotion .m
Pomeroy are wondering about the
;104 packages that were sent to our
~roops in the Middle East. Well,
letters have started to arrive and we
would like to share them with you. ·
: When the ·letters speak of a tape
. they are referring to a cassette
made for each package. On side A
. was the Letter to Saddarn. On ·Side
fl were three songs taped during
one of our Saturday night dances.
While the song played each .teen
, !Vas able to speak over the music
with a message to one special or all
our troops. They were much like
you might have heard on the radio
iluring the war and m~nt a great
Ileal to those whO'received them.
: I hope you'll enjoy these letters
a.s much as we have.

ton,

.690
.690
.600

1l

r....

•'
•'
,•
,•

,,20 9
...... 20 9
..11 12

CiewUnd
.... IS
Sooaie
,., .. IS
Kmlu Cily " ..14
Chica'o
.....14

Thieves a cheap commodity in U. S.

•

•

Chicago overcomes 18-point
deficit to top New 'York 101-91

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy.....Middleport, Ohio
· Friday, April 5, 1991

'· Thrmoil!in El Salvador continpes .. .·

111 Court Street

"•

•

F~lday, AprilS, 1181

•

The · Daily

p

~

.,

'

...

.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
· . SALES 6 SERVICE

...•,...........,

204 Condor It,

19-AI ~lllwestem, 4: l&gt; 13: l&gt;)
'Toby Hill, OF .... ........... .. ...... .,, Sr. · , Apr.
Apr. 22-0ak Hill, 4:l&gt;, Baseball Only
'Edna Hensley, P/ IF ......... ..... .. . Sr.
Apr. 24-At Kyger Creek, 4: 30 (3: 30)
'Mary Ann Kibble, OF ...... ,., .. .... 'Sr.
Apr. 25-At Waterford, 4: 30 (3: 00)
'Lorrie Baker, c ...... .................. Sr.
Apr.
26- AI North Gallla, 4:30 13: 1~1
'Tabby Phillips, IF .. .. ................ J r .
Apr. 29-AI Hannan Trace, 4: l&gt; (3:001
'Lee Gillilan, IF ........................ J r .
Baseball Only
'Amy Well , OF ......... ,,,,,.,,,.,, J r.
May
1Soulhern
, 4:30
'Mary Jo Reed, IF/OF ....... .... ... J r .
May 2-At Wahama, 4:30 (3: 301
'Lisa Golden, IF/OF .................. J r .
May s..:.Trimble, 4: 30
Andrea Rockhold , JF/ P ...... : .. .. , J r.
May 7-Federal Hocking, 4: 30
Marlko Tayama , OF ..... ..... ........ J r.
' Carrie Morrissey, IF ............ Soph .
'Misty Newell, OF ............... , Soph.
EASTERN INI
'Michelle Donovan , OF ...... .... Soph.
•
GIRLS 6 BOYS TRACK
Sherr! Smith, P t OF ............ ,, Soph .
Apr. 2-0ak Hill, 4:30 (3: 00 )
P,e nny Aelker, IF: ...................... Fr .
Apr. 4- Melgs, 4: 30 (3: 30)
Shelly Rend ricks, IF /P .. .. ,., ...... Fr .
Apr. 6~0ak Ifill Invitational ,
Jaime Wilson, IF /C ................... Fr.
"
10:00(8:00)
Nora Eastman, OFIC ... ............. Fr .
Apr. 9-Miller--4 : 30,(3: 00 )
Alme Friend, OF .. ................ : .... Fr .
Apr. 16- Waterlord, 5: 00 (3: 3m
Andrea Dillard, OF .............. ~.... . Fr .
Apr. 18- Nelsonvllle, 4: 30 (3 : 00)
. • - Letter winner
Apr, 23-Melgs, 4: 30 13: 30)
Apr. 25-0ak Hill, 4: 30 (3 : 00)
Apr.27- Fed. Hocking Invitational
EASTERN t98t SPRING
'
10: 00 (9: 00)
SOFTBALL 6 BASEBALL •
Apr. 30-Wate rlord, 5:00 (3: 30)
SCHEDULE
May 2- Fort Frye, 4: 30 (3: 00) ,
Apr. 1-AI Symmes·Valley, 4:30 12: 30 )
May 4-Metgs Invitational 10:00 (9:00)
Apr,. 3-Southwes ter n, 4:30 .
May 7-Fe&lt;feral Hocking, 4: 30 (3: 30)
Apr. 4- Wa ha ma, 4:30
.·
Apr, 5-At 'Oak Hill, 4:30
· Baseball o tty r3: 001
Apr. 8-Kyger Cree k, 4:30
Apr. 9-AI Tr imble, 4: 30 (3: 15)
Apr. 1.0 -North Gallla, 4: 30
Apr. 127 Hannan Trace, 4: 30
Baseball Only
Apr. 15-At Southern, 4:30 (3 : 30)

1o The. ll&amp;Uy· Sentinel, 111 Q)UJ1 91., ,

Pomeroy, Ohio 4!1700.

• 8VB8VKIPTION RATIIII

ay Cam" or Mal• lloule

Ooe Week ............ ........ ,,,, ......... , fUO .
o.. Month ........................ ,........16.11!1 •
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Dally .. ,,,,,, ...... .,. ........ ,, , 25 Cento
Subscribers not detlr1na to pay the car- 1
rler may remit In ad van~ 'direct to
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•

No s ublcrlpttoni by mali permitted In

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~ 2 WeekS ..... ,,,,,,, .... , .. .. , . .. ,. flll,fll

OPEN HOUSE
suNDA

r. APRIL 1; 1991

t A&amp;-IP.M.
Set. ' AJL.1 ,.._.

'

1:00 PM 'Til ??
· AT THE

MEIGS GOLF .. COURSE
· (ForJtterly Jaymar Golf Club)

OFF ST. RT ·7
\ .IN POMEROY
'

.FREE GOLF.
AND

PorMrDy, OH .

Sp•IR1 .... S•••••r IHn

'

SNACK
Entertai;nment
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:~ Page

4 T,he Dally Sentinel

Friday, April 5, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"

Reds tQ open season Monday
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K!ound, center) in lbe f'irs4 period of Thursday
mght's NHL playoff contest in SL Louis Mo
which the Red Wings won 6•3. (l.JPI)
'
.,

l

MAKEs SAVE -Detroit goalie Tim Chevel• _ dae (right) comes out of his goal feet first to
: make a diving save on this point-blank goal
: attempt by ·st. Louis Blues Dave Lowry (fore~

•

~ Detroi~,

~

Edmonton.·;, Minnesota, .
Vancouver·NUL playoff ~winners

: -

By TOM WITIIERS
'
· UPI Sports Writer
Tim Chev~ldae was first to
;
• admit his goaltending wasn't pic~ ture perfect, but it sure was effec.' tive.
I.
Cheveldae, starting in his first
i NHL playoff game, IJillde 37 saves
• _ and Steve Yzerman recorded his
· second career playof£ hat trick
Thursday night, leading the Detroit
• Red Wings to a 6-3 triumph over
the SL Louis Blues in the opening
' gameoftheirNorris Divisioo semi, final.
.'
"I was fortunate tQ keep. the
i puck out of the net," Cheveldae
· : said. "A couple of times I was

scrambling like a fish, throwing my Riendeau.
glove out trying to make a save."
"That's the worst nightmare of
The victory gave the Red Wings goaltender," said Riendeau. "The
a 1-0 lead with Game 2 of the best· other guy'_s stopping everything.
· of- seven series set for Saturday We're down theze and can't score
night In St. Louis.
and they rome back and score.''
"The players gave me the puck
Yzerman scored twice in the
after the game but I gave it to Tim second period and converted a twoCheveldae," Detroit head coach on-one break with S:OS remaining
Brian Murray said. "He played in tlie third period to complete his
great in his fust playof£ game, par- bar trick. Yzerman scored three
titularly in the second period."
goals in an April 6, t989 playoff
In the second period, the Blues game against Chicago.
blasted away at Cheveldae. He
"In the second period, we took
stopped seven shots in the first it to them and then Stevie (Yzerthree minutes of the period and 10 man) puts in a couple of goals," SL
in the first five to frusttate' both the Louis head coach Brian Sutter said.
Blues and their goaltender, Vinq:nt "We were down a goal and we
went after themY
- Brad McCrimmon, Sergei
Fedorov and Kevin Miller also
scored· for Detroit and Bob Probert
had three assists for DetroiL
Breu HuU. who scored 86 goals
in the regular season to lead the
leap:, collected two goals and an
IISSISt for the Blues.
"We were able to keep them ocr
lhe board in the fust period and we
got a couple of ~uick ones in the
second period,' Yzerman said.
"Then they had 10 op,en things up
and thev can't exacdy try to shui us
Clown.''
'
The Blues closed to 5-3 when
,Adam Oates deflected in a Hull
pass at 12:44 of the third periOd,
but Yzerman's third goal, a wrist
shot from the lower left circle,
closed out the Blues.
"We had OJ)IlOrtllnities. But the
bci&gt;ttom line is the puck dido't go in
the net," said Sutter. "Adversity
luis hit us in the face."
And so has a hot f,Jaltender.
In Thursday nigllt's other opening round games: Minnesota
shocked Chicago 4-3 in overtime;
Edmonton topped Calgary 3-1 and
Vancouvez upset Los Angeles 6-5.
North Stars 4, Blackbawks (3
OT)
At Chicago, Brian PrOpp scored
a power·fllaY goal at 4:14 of overtime to hft the North StarS in the
opening·11ame of their best·ofseven Norris Division playoff
series. Neal Broten's second goal
of the game with 13:38 remaining
in regulation tied it 3-3 for MinnesOta. The North StarS outshot the
Blackhawks 34-23 for the game.
Chicago finished the regular season
With l&lt;J&lt;i points and the league's
best record, while Minnesota had
the worst record of the 16 teams
making th'e playoffs. Game 2· is
Saturday night in Chicago.
Oilers 3, Flames 1
At Calgary, Alberta, Pett Klima
and Esa Tikkanen each scored a
goal and added an assist and Grant
Fuhr stopped 27 shots to lead U\e
defending Stanley Cup champion
Oilers in their Smythe -Division
opener. Game 2 of the best-ofseven series is scheduled for Saturday nighL The loss for the Flames
~· D~V~ ARO~D ROBINSON - Milwaukee's Frank Brickmarked the third straight year .Cal•' owsk1 (wtth baD) dnves around an: airborne David Robinson as he
gary has lost its first postseason: looks for an open spot to shoot in the second quarter or Thursday
game. ..
. night's NBA game against visiting San Antonio whicb the Spurs
Canucks '· Kings 5 .
•
. ,
'
·
• . won 105-101. (UPI)
At Inglewood, Calif., Geoff
Courtnall scored a hat trick and set
: NBA
---,....:.&lt;C:-o_nu_
·n_;_ue.. . ,tl..;.;fr..;.;om:::..:. P:::!:ag::.e:. :.3&gt;_ _ _;__ up Cliff R,onning's tie-breaking
goal with 2: 31left gave Vancouver
~ Newman scored 17 of his :io points Unseld and Bullets Darrell Walker the upset victory over Los Angeles.
: in the .third quaner 10 rally the Hor- and Pervis Ellison fueled a 19-S
' nets. Rex Chapman added 16 Portland surge in the fourth quarter.
; points and nine assists for the Hor- The Bullets were called for 26
: nets, who have won four of their fouls to 16 for the Trail Blazers.
• last six. J;lominique WiJPns paced Portland shot 40 free throws to 11
: the Hawks with 26 points. Atlanta for Washington.
; has lost
in a row. _
•
Celtles 123, Nets 104
:
At Boston, Kevin McHale
! scored !eight of his 19' points il) the
• third quarter, b,-eaking·open a tight
: game. New Jersey's Sam Bowie
' : led all scorers with 28 points as the
• Nets dropped their second game
AT THE
• this week to the Celtics. Kevin
• Gamble led seven Boston players
; in double figures with 20 points on
! ~-of·ll shooting frOm the floor.

action ....

CINCINNATI (UPI)- The
The Reds led the National
Cincinnati Reds open defe!ISC of Leagqc in bo'th bjnine and .,._,..,_g
the
_ ir .---'~
-L--.u.-......
-~-y Iast season and -...
.........in
..... w ,..._
.., __ uy M·""""
were second
when
they host the Houston Astros p'-'-'
.
lowung.
·
m the tradi.lional National League
"Other clubs in our division
season c;~pener at sold-out 52,952- have improved, but heading into
seat Riv..J...-1
"'""'' Stadium. \he season, I·stiU feel our ·club is
"We're dedicated t0 the task of the best," declared PinieUa. "Our
re~ and RIOving that laSt year con.fidence level is high and we
was oo uke, says Reds manager !'ave good chemistry, which is very
Lou Piniella. "We believe we have Important to the success of any
the talent to win again in 1991."
team."
The Reds basically · have the
Browning, who will be the
same talent they used to shock and Reds' Ope · Da · h
h
sweep Oakland in last Octobez's that sennO:~ Y pttc er, ec oes
World Seri'es. The oniy major
"We're solid throughout," he
absence 1s pitcher Damiy Jackson says. _"We enjoyed winning it all
now with the Chicago Cubs. Veter: last year ~d want to do it again.
an pitchet Ted Power has re-joined We realized how much work it
the Reds from Pittsburgh.
. takes to win it; but ive also realized
Back are sluggers Eric Davis, how much fun it is. The rewards
Billy Hatcher, Paul O'Neill and are gJ:CBL"
.
Chris Sabo. Returning are slickThe Reds would love to open
fieldinl!, good hitting Batty Larkin the '91 camP.aign the same way
and Bill DOran. Starting pitcbers they began 90 - witb a nineare led by Jose Rijo and Tom game winning streak. That great
Browning. Top relievers are 5tart helped Cincinnati Slay in fust'
"Nasty Boys" Rob Dibble and place every day of the seaso,n, as
-- Randy Myers.
•
the Reds became the fust National
While Cincinnati declined to League team to lead wire-to-wire
'inake many changes in the off-sea- in a 162-game season.
son, m~st National League West
Cincinnati then defeated Pitts·
9ompet1tors revamped significantly burgh, four games to two, in an
m an effort to catch the Reds. ·
_ -excitiilg Natiorial League ChampiMost notably, the Los Angeles onship series and then capped off a
~gers addel! Darryl Sttaw~. 'magical season by blanking the
whtle the Gtants, Pa~res and highly favored Athletics, four
Br~ves also may have 1mproved games to none, in the World Series.
theu clubs. Onll th~ Astros, who · "Cinderella lives,'' proclaimed
ha~e l~t most o theu _sluggers and Reds general m1!03&amp;er Bob Quinn.
r~hef pll~h~rs, s_eem mcapa.ble of
Like Piniella, Quinn believes
gtvmg Cmcmnau a chase thiS sea- the Reds ·can r.epeat as champs,
so~..
,
mainly because of sttong starting
. ~ ut,, YO';' ~on 't}u y ~ pen· pitching and awesome relief work.
nant, said Ptmella. 1bat s been
"The first line of defense is
proven over and over. We've got 'pitching and we're happy with our
the p~yers already here we want to pitching," said Quinn. "We like
go wtt,h. We feel good about what our starters and our closers. The
we've·goL"
·

By United Press International
Relax, all you Pittsburgh.Pirate
and New York Yankee fans. That
'blockbuster' deat .is nothing more
than rumor.
,
Bobby Bonilla and Barry
Bonds, two-thirds of the Pirates'
, stellar outfield, who have become
objects of ttade rumors this spring,
the latest of which had them head·
ed to the YankeeS in a multi-player
deal; aren't going anywhere. At
least, not to New York.
"Those reportS are abSolutely
Jireposcerous, .absurd," New Yodc
gllneral manager Gene .Michael
· said in response. to a story in New
York Newsday that had Bonilla
and Bonds joining the Yankees in
return for Roberto Kelly, Kevin
Maas, Jesse Barfield and a top
minor league pmspecL
"There is no truth in them,''
Michael said. "We taiJred with the
Pirates a while back and Barry
Bonds' name came up. But WI'
never made any ofrer. We didn't
get down to talking about any of
our players. I've had discussions
with lots of teams and the discussioo with the Pirates was the same
· -just a discussion.
"We have nevez made an offer
of any sort for Bonilla. His name
didn't come up and we haven't put
lilgether any package of players.' '
If the Yankees don't trade for
both, a source told Newsday that
New Yodc would likely trade for
one of them before Opening Day
ooMpnday.
Bonilla, a Bronx, N.Y., native,
and Bonds, the NL MVP, are both
unhappy because they lost their
arbittation cases during the off-season. Boriilla is eligible for free
. agency after this season and is
seekin$ a four-year conttact worth
$20 mtllion. Bonds can be a free
agent after next season.
"The Yankees are interested in
Barry Bonds," Pirates Manager
Jim Leyland said. "That is absolutely,totally correct. Are we going
to ttade him? No way."

~!lc~~~ ~~~; l.~~ ~wNn;~

York Mets 11nd Montreal Expos
were postponed by rain.
·
In a night game: the Baltimore
Orioles faced the New Yolk Yankees in Fort LaUderdale, Fla.
At Bradenton, Fla., Gary Varsho

At Landover, Md., technical
~ fouls and ejections assessed to
Washington head c~ach Wes
•

$3.00
BARGAIN IIIITINE£5 SArUIUIAY I SUNIIIIY
- IIARUIN NIGHT TU!:SIIIIY

2

ot to•
Columbus.
0.
W. Mam \
991-1311 Pome rov.
'

·

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MEIGS;TIRE
John

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7 p.m.

1

l.anOOn Hope, eY:lnWII!II:.

OLD DEXTER BIBLE CIIRJSTIAN
. CHURCH. ;Jack deland. pastor, Alana CJe.
land, SUpt. Sulllay SchooiiO:OO a.m.: Youlll

sleepin~ wttn tne enem~

716 NORTH SECOND AV£,

.

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

.DQTTIE S. TURNER, ·
BROKER

f

: ·SYRACUSE FIRST IJNlTED PRESBY·
· TERIAN - Sunday School. 10 a.m.;
Church -service, U:OO a.m.: Youth group.
first and third SUndays~ 4 p.m.
RUTLAIIID CHURCH OF GOD, Putor,
John F. Corcoran. Sunday School 10:00 a. ·
m.; Sunday Morning Worship 11:00 a.m.
Chlldre:a's Church 11 a.m. Sunday EvenIng Service 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. Young
Ladles' Auxiliary. Wedn011day. 7 p.m.
Family Worship.
4....,
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH. Off
Rt 124. 3 miles from Portland-tonK Bot·
tom. Edsel Hart, pastor. Sunday Sc~ool,
9:30 a.m.; Sunday morning preaching
10~30 a.m.; Sunday evening services, 7:30
p.m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL IIAPTIST
CHURCH~ Corner 'Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, pu.tor. Sunday ScboOitO·OO a .
m.: Morning Worship, 11:00 a.m.; Wed·
n~sday and Saturday Even Ina: Services at
7:30p.m.
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST ~f! 121, behind WUkesvllle. Charles Jones
pastor. Sunday School, 9:30 a."m.; mornlni
worship, 10: 30; Sunday and ,Thursday
evening services. 7. 00 p.m.
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NOBTRI!AST CLUSTII:II
Rev. 8hareia RauiiiiU

.Rew Cwleo Elll•

· Re\1~ SeldOD Johns•

llle&lt;!tlng,1p.m.~w-.y

Kill......,

OPEN HOUSE

Sunday, 'April 7th, 1991-2· PM t~ 5 PM
Just follow arrows from Route 3 3 at Countrp Mobile Home P•k

t

:

NewConstruction-AbouthalfWiytoAthens-HISspacious,bNU·
tiful 2% IC'! !ol, kitchen with island, dininc room with atrium doof,
and a lara• lt¥1111 room. Has 2 bedrooms and 2 baths downstairs. and
-could have 2 bedrooms and I bath upstairs. Owner will finish upstairs
for a little more money.
$70,500
.._;_.-

"Go'

reel.

~~.

••

RT. 33

)

MASON, WV

Mah ~ To Have Sunday Dinner With Us
.

Featuring '

$

5.29

.

ro

11 Carry

Out~ A"W''e (304) ns-sa21

VISA •, MASIERCARD • AME CAN EXPRESS ACCEPrED

11

I·
I
I...

:: MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
,• 5th aDd Main, AI Hart SOD, minliter,
•• Richard DuBole, Auoclate Piator; Mike
,! Gfrlach, Sunday School Superintendent.
•• Worship Service I, 8:Hi a.m.: Sunday
: School 9:30a.m.; WonlllpServlcell,IO:JO
, a.m.; Eventna: Wonhtp,7 p.m.; Wedne- .
.' uy, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting.
_
,
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NAZ• ARENE, PASTOR Rev. Uoyd D. Grimm,
: Jr.• pall«. Jean Kim a, Sunday School Su• ..,-tntendent. Sunday School 9:30 a.m ;·
1
Moraine Wor~hlp ~.10:30 a.m.; Sun·
, day oveatna ,.....lc:e, 6 ·p.m.; Wedn-y
' ....blllllrVkt. 1 p.m.·
'
SYRACUSE CHURCH Of' THE NAZA• RENE, Rev. Glean McMillan, p.utor. Jim
,: Cuailllri S. S. Sltpertlltenclent. Sunday
, School :30 o.m.; monlal wcnblp, 10:30
o.m.; Ev..,elltuc IIII'Vk:e, 6 p.m.:
Prayer old Pralot Wedneooky, 1• p.m.: .
, Y~~m~.1P.m. ·
,
VNJ&amp;D~ IIINJiftY ·
Ol'lmiOtiOOVN'IT
I
JleO, O'fl I ollellr
'
IIARIIIBONVII.U' PRESBYTERIAN
• CIIUROl - ~ Wonldp ._.lett
, i:OO a.m.; Clnlnll ldJoal t: 8 Lm..

,

MIDDLEPORT PRE811YTERIAN -

• Iunday lleboGI. eblldna llld Alllultt. ' to
• t:CII a.m.; Wonblp tii'VIee, 10 a.m.:
•~ Y---IItdlourthSUildaye.•

p.m.

I

\1

.

.

·

-

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

. an.•

&gt;month.

...... Cod • • •

.

APPLE GROVE - Cbureb SchoOl 9:00
a.m.: Mornlnc Worslllp 10:00 a.m.; Btbl•
Study Sunday 7:00p.m. : Prayer meetlnt
7:00p.m. Thuntla~·' (Htcbl
BETHANY - Wonblp 9 a.m.; Church
!il:ltooiiO a.m.: Bible Study Wt&lt;lneoday 10
a.m.; Dorcaa WOinen'l Fellowmtp Wed. - y 11 a. rrl· (Balter).
· ·
CARMD.- Cllurch' Schoolt:IO a.m.:
Worship, 10: f5 a.m. S"""nd lltd Fourth
Sundayo; Fellawtlllp diMer With SuttCII
thlnl Tlluroday, t:ao p.m. (Balter) .
MORNING SI'Ait- Cllu!&lt;!h School t:45
a.m.: WonbiD 10;10 a.m.; Blbte Study,

ThuJrM·7,.,
"'"'- cllaker&gt;·
S
N - CIIUI'I!b !Jcllool, 9: 30 a.m.;

Momllta Wortldp IIU5a.m.llntlltd lhlrcl

Swtdayo; Flll""'""ht dina.- wtlh Carmel

lblnl Tllu~.! t:all p.m. (Bok•).
· EAIITLITAKT-MoraiiJWo.-.pt:OO
Lm.: a....,blcllooiiO:OOa.m.; UMWIIrtl
Tt8day 7:30p.m. (Groce).
RACiliE - Qlur&lt;b Scllool. ID a.m.; WOI'
tltlp U Lrn.~&lt;;;:'- Monday al7: 30p.
m.;lofta'a
Bul'aet.W~.a
Lnt.(G.....,).
.

'i;

KENO CHURa! OF CHJ!IIT, ltarthi8
Mauor lltd 01~ Swain. Sunday SchcKil
Supll. PracbiDI 9:30 ~.m. oacll Sunday:
SuntlatliollcllooiiD: 30 a.m.
HO
N CHURa! OF. CHRIST IN

\,

· IEAlTOI

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
BILL QUICKEL ·

992-5432

SlrW £Boo~1
93 Mill Street
Middleport. Ohio 46710
16141 992·6867 -19911-00KSI

992·6611.9

,

l "·&amp;&amp;"

m
l..13

22g W. Main -St., Po1111roy

Ph. 991 -liOt
Pomeroy

ALFRED - Church SChool 9: 3D a.m.;
·
Worsh\p,lla.m.; .UMYF 6;30p.rn.· UMW
. SACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH , Third
Tuea{tay, 7; ll p.m . Comnlunlon
. - 161 Mulberry Ave.. Pomeroy. Ph. 992·
" first Sunday. (Haushman) ·
'
1 ,!589ft Saturday Evening Mass, 5: :Jl p.m.:
CHESTER
Worship
S
a.m.:
Church
Sunday Mass 9::J.I a.m. CCD clanes, 10::11
SehoOilO a.m ; Blbh~St udy, Thunday,7 p.
a.m. first, second and third Sundays of eac~
m :; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.; COn\·
~~, month. Dally Mass, 8. 30 a.m.~ Confessions
munlon, first Sunday t(Ha,usman).
Saturday afternon, -4-!1 p.m.
JOPPA - Worship 9:30 a.m.; Church
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
SChool lO: 30 4.m. Bible Study Wednesday,
TOUC FAITH- New Lima Road, next to'
7:30p.m (Johnson).
Fort MeigS Park. RobE'rt W Rlcha1 ds,
LONG BOTTOM -Church School 9: 3D
pastor. Sunday $E'rvlces. 10 a.rri. and 7 p.
a.m.: Worohtp 10:30 a.m.: Bible Study.
• ~ m : Wednesday worship. 7 p.m.
Wednesday. 7: 30 p.m.; COmmunion First
•
MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY CHURCH.
Sunday
of Month (Rev. Char i!! Eaton)
~1~ Pearl St., Middleport. Sam Ande-rson,
REEDSVILt.E
- Sunday Wotahlp Ser·
pastor. S,unday School 10 a'.m.; Sunday
viet&gt; 9:30a.m.; Ghureh School 10;30 a.m.;
evening servlc~ 7: JO p.m.; Wedne5day l'!er- Bible Study 7:30p.m. Wednesday.
vice, 7:30p.m.
TUPPERS Pl:AINS ST. PAUL Church School 9 1a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.;
1
GRAHAM UNITED METHODIST,
Bible Study, Tueiday, 7:30p.m.; Commu·
I Preaching 9:30a.m. first and second Sunnl011 First Sunday (f:lauaman) .
.,. days of each mon1h: third and fourth Sun·
CENTRAL CI.USTER
day each month wors~lp se-rvlcesat 7: 30p. ,.
•Rev. DoeM.-... ·
~ m.; Wednesday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
)lev, W,.lq Tlutlch er
t Prayer and Bible Study.
Rev, Fraalt 8mllll
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST, Mul. Rev.
•uey
bfrry HelJ[hts Road, Pomeroy.·PastorBob
Rev. Boa,.._.,
Snyder; Sabbath School Superintendent,
Rev. ~ur crabtree
Rodney Spires. Sabbath School begins at 2
Re\1. Florence SmUll
p.m. on Saturday afternoon with worship
ASBURY (SyracUJe)- Wonhlp II a m
service fOIIQwtng at 3:~ p.m Everyone
·: Church School ?:15 a.m.; Ch&amp;rtre Btble
I. welcome.
Study. Wednesday. 1:30 p.m.: UMW. first
'
RIJ"l1.AND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
Tuesday. 1·00 p.m. ; Choir RehearSal,
- Sister Harriett Warner, Supt. Sunday
Wednesday 6:30p.m. (Thatcher)
~ School 9: .'JO a.m.; Morning Worship, 10:45
ENTERPRISE - Worship S , a.m :;
r. a.m.
·
,
Church SchooiiO a.m.: Bible Study, Tues•. POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST. East
day, 7:00p.m.; UMW, Ftrst Monday, 7!30
Main St Steve Fuller, pastor. George
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. (Riley)
Skinner,
Sunday
School
Superintendent.
1
FLATWOODS- Church Schooi,IO a.m .
Sunday School, 9:30 a.m.; Morning Wor·
: Worship. 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursship 10:38 a.m.: Wednesday ~venlng
pra)'tr and Bible study, 7:30p.m.
. . day. 7 p.m.: UMVF , Sunday. 6 p.m. (RI·
leyl.
·
nRST SOUTHERN BAPTilii. 11872
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m:;
Pom-eroy Pike. E. Lamar O'BryTnt, pasChurch School 10 A.M.: Choir practice.
' tor and Sunday School Director. Sunday
Thursday. 6:30p.m.: U~W third Monday .
\ School, 9:30 a.m .; Momtng Worship,
(Thatcher)
·
1 10:45; CholrJractlce, 6:30 p.m.; evening
HEATH iMiddletJI)rll- Chun:h School.
Morning Worship lO:.JJ a.m.;
::~~:.·1~~ p~~~.:;~n~=~~r:~:~ 9:30a.m.:
Youth Groop, 4 p.m.; Wedn8day, Bible
l
2-6), Royal Ambassadors (boys ages6·18),
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal7:00 p.m.
and Glrli In Action (ages6·18) on Wednes·
!Frank Smith!.
,
days, 7:30 p.m. Church-wide Visitation
MINERSVILLE - Church School S: 00
6:30 p.m. Tuesday.
a.m.; Wonhlp IPrvlce 10: 00 a.m.; UMW
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bal·
third Wedneoday. 1 p.m. JThatcher)
ley Run Road. Rev. Emmett Rawson, pasPEARL CHAPEt.- Church ~boot S:OO
, . tor. Hand ley Ounn, supt. s~:~nday SchOol,
a.m.; Worship Service 10:00 a.m. (Flo• 10 a.m.; Sunday ev81ngservice, 7:OOp.m.
rence- Smith)
,
' ; Bible teaching, 7:00p.m. Thursday
POMEROY
Church
School,
9:
15
a.m.
SYRA&lt;;USE MISSION, WI Bridgeman
·:
: Wo.rshlp 10: 30 a.m.; Choir rehee.rsal
St., Syracuse Sunday School 10 a.m.:
WednPSday. 7:30 p m.; UMW, secopd .
evening service 6 ,p.m.; Wec:1nesday serTuesday, 7:30p.m.: UMYFSunday.6p.m.
vlce.1 p.m.
.
·
CMf'adowtl
~·
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,
ROCK
SPRINGSChurch
School. S: 15
Riclne. Rev. James Satterfield, pastor.
a.m: Wonhlp 10 a.m.; BtbleStUdy, Wed·
. Freeman Wllllilms, Supt . SUnday School
neoday. 1:30 p.m.: UMYF I !!OnionI. Sunr· 9:45 a.m.; Sut1day and Wednesday evenday, 6 p.m.; cJunlon• every other Sun·
, lng services. 1 p.m .
da~, 6 p.m. IRUey! .
,
·
" , MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST.
UTLA!ft&gt;- Sunday !!chool. 9:30a .m.:
r Corner Sixth and Palmer. Rev. .fames A.
Worship 10rvlc:e, 10: 3D a.m.; Bible Stuy. 7·
•; Seddon, pastor; Don Wllaoil. S.S. Supt.;
p.m. Thurtday. (Crab!
(. Beulah White, Aut. Supt. Sunday School
SALEM CENTER..;. Chur&lt;h SchoolS: I~
•
9:15
am;
momlltJ
wonhtp
10:15
am;
1
a.m.; Motnipl Woralllp ltt15 a.m.
,. Sunay eVentna worship 7 ·pm; Prayer
(Fierce)
.
•; rneetlnil and Bible Study Wedneoday 7
SNOWVILLE - Mornlnll Worship, 9: 110
"• pm; Men's .Prayer Breakfaat, 1st Satura.m.; Church SChool10: 00 a.m. (Florence
~,~ day each month 7 am tn fellowship hall;
Smith)
'
• , adull choir pracllce Suaday, 8 pm; radio
• pr&lt;wfam "Pr~rtn1 tbe Way" Satul'day,
,~ 3 pm WMOV 1360•AM, Ravenswood, WV:
BOIJI'IIEIIN CLUSTEII
' Lord's Supper -observed 1st Sunay of each
~·•
!

'

"FNI8tl•l Kt~lttei.g Ft·l•~ C.W.1"

I~Fultr. Mgr.
F:

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Po,meroy
.9.92·3325

(row's Family Restaw111t

CENTrR, INC.
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Middleport,
Ohio

Or Try One Of Our Other Great Menu Itemst
OPEN SUNDAY, 8 AM
9 PM ~

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992-3785, Pomeroy

hu_I ·! a

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K&amp;C JEWELERS

992-28811
HOME 992-6692

Chol.c e of Potat~.
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GRAVElY TRActOR SALES

n 4 (. Mairi
. 992-5130 Pomeroy

172 North SHond Avt.
Middleport, Ohio ·

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Darlene
Stewart '- 992-11366
Sheryl Walt••- 367·0421

Mill WorkCabinet Making
· Syracuse
992-3978
.
.

INSURANCE ---I SERVICES

992-7075

OFFICE

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On This
RACINE PLANING MILL TEAFORD REALTY

'

8rogan-Warner

.•

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

20&amp;-NORTH SECOND AVE.
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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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WATERING
HOLE
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SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp;SAFETY

NEXl"IO FAST 4 'u AND MASON MO'IEL
SI.OO

Pre\CriptJons
992-Z951
Pamerov

Pemtror

Hibbard pitched a seven-hitter over
S 1-3 inning, to lead Chicago.

·- --d's

FRI., APRIL 5

.:

II S E. Mltllorlal Dr.
"~·2104

-

'

~~~~!· ru
~

Memorial ,Hospitql

• •

.

)

e;r ..veterans
---

In Thursday's
exhibition
Pittsburgh
edged
Bostopaction:
2-1; · ~=======B;re;:nd;a;J:•:ft:a;ra:;:9;9;2;·;3;0;611;;;:;:;:;;:;:;:~·
Houston nipped Cincinnati S-4; the
Chicago White Sox topped St.'
AI ·
Louis 4-2; Minnesota blasted Texas
,
~
· Wct)'.t ,.,
, 10-3; P)liladelphia outscored
Detroit 11· 7; Toronto slipped by
~
Kansas City 2-1; Cleveland pasted
At;
·
·

"Blitz Creak"

TraU Bluers 105, BaUets 96

tripled home Don Slaught with the
tie-breilking run in the fifth inning
to lift the Pirates over the Red Sox.
Bob Walk allowed just one hit' in
five innings and allowed only one
hit- a home run by Tom Brunansky . The Red Sox managed just
two hits off Walk,' Vicente Palacios, .!lob PatterSon and BilL Lao;
drum. •
, At Plant City, Fla., Javier Oniz
and Mark Davidson each had twO
hits and an RBI to lift the Astros.
Davidson hit a solo homer in the
seventh. Angel Gonzalez, in his
fust appearance of the spring, and
Reggie Jefferson each bad three
hits for the Reds.
ju St. Petersburg, Fla., .Greg

This Message and Ch'UIY}h Direetory
Spon.~~ored Ry The
Interested
.
. .
. SWISHER &amp; LOHSE'

(ih\

Rumors of Bonds-Bonilla trade to
Yankees·unfounded . GM Michael

four

•

only question is the inexperience ot
our pitching in the middle."
·
Last season's top middle reliever, Norm Charlton, has been moved
irito the starting rotatioo to replace
Jackson. The Reds are hoping 36year- old Power can still throw
some decent middle iMings.
·
Cincinnati is the birthplace of
professional baseball 81\d Opening
Day is treated as an informal holiday in the city. A big noon-time
parade winds through downtown
before the 2 p.m. fust pitch. ,
The Reds h.ad hoped to have
''The Mother of all Cer.emonial
. First Pitches" for Opening Day
when they invited Iraq war hero
· Gen. Notman Schwarzkopf to toss
· out the first pitch . :But,
-Schwarzkopf had to send his
regrets because he's still tying up
the loose ends of the war.
__ _
So, .the Reds had to seule fot a
politician to make the fttst pitch Ohio Gov. George Voinovich. ·
It m11y be awhile before Reds'
owner Marf!e Schott is her usual
zesty self m the stands. Schou
recen~y ~t several weeks in the
hospital for mtense treatment of a
blood disease.
An Opening t;&gt;ay sideshow
could develop if maJOr leagqe owners lock umpires out of stadiums
because of a contract dispute. The
umpires say owners intend 10 lock
them out and use amateur umpires
until conttact agreement with the
regular umps is reached.
A dozen years ago, the season
began with umpires on strike.
While the regular umpires picketed
outside Riverfront Stadium, ama-.
teur umps worked the seasoo opener.· Players and managers were told
by baseball officials not to argue
109 much with the amateur umps.

Ohio

CHURCH SUPPLIES &amp; BIBLES

RAWUNGS,-COATS

EWING FUNERAL HOME ·
''Dignity and Serdce

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME

Alwav.~"

Established 1913

992-5141

992·2121
106 Mulberry Ave.

CHRISTIAN UNION, Theron Durllam.
• BETHLEHEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl
pastor. Sunday service. 9:30a.m.; even·
Shuler, pasror. WoNihlpservlce, 9:30a.m
lng serv-Ice 7:00p.m. Prayer meeting,
Sunday School 10:30a.m. Bible Study and
W~EnAes~WayAL,1L:OOo' p.mRID. GE CHURCH OF
prayer service Thursday, 1: 30 p.m.
W
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATIONCHRIST, Jack Colegrove. pastor. Bible
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road Rev
Class, 9:30a.m.; MornlncWorshlp10:30a.
Cl~e w Henderson, pastor. · Sunday
m:
EventngWonhlp,6:30p.m. Thursday
Sc oot9·30am Ralph Carl Su t E
Hlbi,Study, 6:30p.m.
·
· ·•
• P · venZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pomeroylng woralttp 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting.
WedneSday 7:00p.m.
HarrlsonvUIe Rd. IRt. 143) Robert E . Pur·
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
tell, minister; Steve Stanley, Bible School
CHURCH, 28601 State Route 7, MlddleSupt.; Harley Johnse11, Asst. Supt. SUNport. Sunday Schoo110 a.m.: Sunday,evenOAV:.. Bible Scbool 9:30a.m.: Wonhtp . lng service 7:30p.m.; Tuesday service,
10:30 A.M. and 1:30 P.M.:' Wednesday Bl· , 1:30 p.m.
ble Study,7:00 p.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH,
. ST. IQHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
Bob Grimm, pastor. SundaY SChool 9: 30 a.
Grove. The Rev. Laura A. Leach. pastor.
m.: Worship 10: 4~ a.m.: Sunday evening
Church service 9:30a.m.· Sunday ScMol
!0:30a.m.
'
Rrvtce, 7 p.m.
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST, •
K'nob, located on County Road 31. RE'v
Tom Runyon, pastor. Sunday School 9: 30
Roger Wllllonl, pastor. Sunay School9; 30
a.m.;oLarrY Haynes, S. S. Supt. Mom Ina:
worship 10: 30 a.m.
a.m.; Momlntr Worship 10:45 a.m.: Sun ·
day evening worship 7:00 p.m. J Wednes
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
day evening Bible Study 1:00 p.m
RENE . RC!V. Thomas L Gates II. pastor.
WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN Cool.
Ora Bass, Sunday School Superlnten~ent.
vUlt&gt; RD. Rev. Phillip Ridenour, pastor.
Sunday School. 9:30a.m.; worship t~~ervlcE"
· Sunday School9: 30 a.m.: worship servIce
10:30a.ro.; evening serV1ce. 6 p.m. Wed·
10: ~0 a.m.; Bible study and wonhlp sernesday evenlna service. 7 p.m.
,
vice, Wednesday, 1 p m
'
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, DexRUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Euter. Woody Call1 pastor. Services Sunday
gene E. Underwood. mlnlst~. Sunday
10 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wedn8day, 7 p.m.
School, 9:30a.m.; Mamtng wonhip, 10: 30
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH
a.m.; Evening Worship, 7:00 p.m. ·
Lloyd ~yre, Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a:
RIJ"l1.AND BIBLE METHODIST, Rev.
m.; momtpg worsblp '10:"30 a.m. Sunday
Ivan Myers. Sunday School9; 30 a.m. with
eyen1nr service- 7 p.m.
SOnny Hudson, Supt.; E:~ning $ffvlce
RACINE nRST BAPTIST, Steve
7:00p.m. Pr&amp;Yf!'r meeting and Bible study,
' t:&gt;eaver, Pastor. Mike Swtaer. Sunday
Wedneoday, 1 p.m,
School Supl.; Sunday Scllool 9:30 a.m.;
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZAMorning Wf)rthlp 10:40 a .m.; SUnday
RENE. Samuel Basye, pastor. Sunday
ey~ntna worship 7l 30 p.m., Wednesday
School9:30 a.m.: WorshlpServlcel0:30a.
. evening Bible tiUdy 1:30 p.m.
m.; Youna People's Service 6 p.m.
Evangelistic servlce6: 30 p.m. Wednesday
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH.
BurUacJtattl. Ray Laooermnt. pastor; Ri&gt;
service 7 p.m.
""rt COZart. ualttant put!l'. Su~ SchOol
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
10 a.m.; worshlp1 p.m.; Wi!dneaday, 6 p.m.
St .. Muon. W.Va . Sunday Bible Sludy 10
youth meettll(l; Wed., 1 p.m. clturch aervlcfll.
a.m.: Worship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Wednes. PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, \2
day Bible Study, vocal mustc, 1 p.m.
mlleoffRt. 325. Rev. Ben J. Watts, pastor
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud·
· Robert S"''fleo, ~.S. Supt. Sunday Scbool
ding Larie, Mason, W. Va. J. N. Thacker.
9:30 ~.m.: MorniDI Worship 10: 3D a.m.; , pastor. Evening service 7·30 p.m.; WoSunday eventna service 7:30 p.m.; Wed·
men's Ministry Thursday, 9· 30 a.m.; Wed ·
nesday service, 7:30 p.m.
nesday Prayer and,Bible Study 1: 15 p.m.
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Little,
HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH, St. Rl.
pastor. Steve Little, S. S. Supt. Sunday
U3 Just oil Rt. 1. Rev. Jam .. R . Acree Sr. .'
SchOol tO a .m.; .Morning woralp, 11 a .m.;
pa~;tor; Rev. Mike Willett, Asst. Pastor:
Sunday evening wcrshtp 7: 30 p.m. Prayer
Joe Humpllrey, S.S. Supl; Sund•y School
meeting and Bible otudy Wedneoclay. 7:30
lOa.m.; MomtngWorshiplla.m.: Sunday
p.m.; Youth meetlftl Wednesday at 7 p.m.
evea1n1 service- 6 P..m.; Wednesday evenREJOICING UFE BAPTIST CHURCH
lnl7 p.m . .
-' 383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Suaday
PORTLAND FIRST CHURCH OF THE
SchooiiO a.m. Sunday even111J1:00 p.m.:
NAZARENE, William Jusrts . pastor. Sun.Mid-week ~rvtce, Wed., 7 p.m.
day School Supt, Sonja Justis. Sunday
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
School, 9:30a.m.; moming worship, 10:40
Sunday SchoolS: 30 a.m.; Jeff Smith, oupt :
a.m.; . Sunday and Wednesday srfvlces,
: Morning · worship 10:30 a.m.: Suaday
1:30 p.m.
evening servlc~. 1::.1 p.m.; Wednesday
MIDDLEPORT O'JMMUNITY CHURCH.
evening service, 7:30p.m .
:m Pearl St., Sam And&lt;n&lt;n. pa!ltor. Sunday
. , EDEN UNrrED BR-ETHREN IN
moritlni service. 1IJ a.m.; Evening services.
CHRIST: Elden R. Blake. pastcr. Sunday
&amp;!nay and Wednatday. 1: :ll p m.
School 10 a.m.: Gary Reed, Lay leader.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
Morning sermon. 11 a.m.; Sunday night
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford. W. Va .
services: C~hrlstlan Endeavor 7:30 p.m. ,
Rf'Y. Davkl McManis, pastor. Church
Song service 8 p.m. Preachtni 8:30 p.rn .
School 9:30 a.m.: Sunday morning ser~.MI~ ·Wf'ek prayer meeting, Wt'dnelday. 7
v.ice, 1} a.m.; Sunday evening service,
. p.m.
7:30p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting, 7:30
' CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CENTER,
p.m.
Salem Sl., Rutland. Robert E. Musser,
FAIRVIEW BIBL&lt;: CHURCH. Letart.
pastor. Sunday School 10:00 a m.; WorW. Va., Rt. 1, James i.ewi•, pa!ltor. Wor·
ship ttrvict", 1: 15 a.m.; Sunday eveniOR
ohlp aervlcet 9:30a.m.; Sunday School I!
servlc:e. 7:00p.m.: Thurtday evenlnc ter·
a.m.; Evening worship 7:30p.m. Tuesday
vice, 7:00p.m.
cottace prayer meetlnJ ond Blbte Study
NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH ,
9:30a.m.; Worship tervl~. Wednesday
Cheater. Gary IJIDOO. pastor. Sunday
1
School al 9:30 a.m.; Wonhlp service at
' ~';A VI OUR LUTHER A~ CHURCII,
10:30 a.m.: Sundayevealqservlct. 6:00
Walnut and Henry Sta., Raven•wood, W,
p.m.: Wedn-y, Dltctple Cluo, 7:00 p.
Va. Th~Rrv. ~rae c . Welrtell:, pastor.
m.
Sunday SCitool9: 30 a.m.; Sunday worship
II a.m.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, CIW'·
CALVARY BIBLECHURCH,Iocatedon
IH Domlpn, paator. Sunday School Supt.
Pomeroy Pt~tt County Road 25 neor Flat·
MOrnlniWonhlp9:1!a.m.; Sunday Schoo!
wooda. Rev. 111ackwood, paator. Sorvlcea
l!l:30 a.m.: EveniDIIMII'Y1&lt;e, 7:00p.m . .
on SUnclayat10:30 a.m. and 7:30p.m. with
MT. UNION BAPTIST, ~aotcr: Joe N.
Sunday Scbool8: 30a.m. BlbleStttdy, Wed·
Sayre, Sunday Scbool 9: f5 a m.: EveniDI
neoday. 1:30 p.m.
Wtt'ltilp 6:30p.m.; Prayer Meetlna. 6:30
SPIRrrUAL P'ArrH CHtiRCH, State
p.m. Wednesday.
Route 331, ~atlqully. A, Stewart, pastor .
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
Sunday Mornlna, 10 a.m.; Sunday evening
CHRIST. ~Obert Foster, pastor; Howard
1:30 p.m.; Tbanday ev•nlq7:30 p.m ..
Cilldwell. Superlntetldont; Church oclloot
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
S a.m.: Worship ...-vleet: f!a.m . and 6:30
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 75 Pearl St. Rev.
p.m. Everycne well"Oifte.
Jvan Myen, actlnl putor: Roger Manley.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Sr., Sunday School Supertntendent. Sun.
RENE. Rov. Horbort Grate, paotor. Dou1
day School 9:30 a.m.: Momlna worohlp
Blt10ll, aupt. Swoday School t:JO a.m. ;
10:30 a.m.: evonlng wonhlp 1:'30 p.m.;
Wonhlp aervtce, 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. SunWadneaday even1n1 Bible otudy1 prayer
day. Wednetday, 1 p.m. Prtl"" m..t1n1.
and praise ae-Mce, 7:30 p.m.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
CHURCH. William Wlllltmo, putor; RO'
TOLl«:: - VOJIZandlaad Ward Rd. Etder
bt!rt E. B.rtlllt, Dlndor ol Cllrtatlan Edtt·
Jomea MIUor, PlltCI'. Sunday SChool.
cation: Steve Eblin, ullltant. Sunday
10:30 a.m.; Wonlttp Sorvke, Sunday, 1.: 30
School 1:30 a.m.: Mornlni wotahlp 10:30
p.m.; Bible Stud;y.._ Wotlneaday,1:30 p.m.
a.m.; THill In Acttca. f p.m.: Evoalq
CALVARY PD.uRIM CHAPD.. Horrl· •
Wonhlp. 7:00 p.m-Qiolr pnctl&lt;t 8 p.m.
Sunday. Wedneoday """""-prayer and
iiCIIVIIlo - · Rev. VIctor Rouoll, putor;
. Cllnlalt Faulk, Sunday lieltool Supt.; SunBlblotiUd' '
dayScbool9:30a.m.; momtqw!l'tlllp,ll
I:&gt;EXIE
CHURCH . Of' CHRIST,
Boler WataCII mlnlllft'; Nonnaa WDI,
a.m.; Suncla1m:oalai •rv!ce 1:30 p.m.
Prayer M
, Wedneaday, 7:30,.m.
t~pt. S-ay Sciioot 1:30 a .m.; Wonbl~
SYRACUSE RST'CHURCH or GOD.
oervtee 10:30' a.m. Bible ttudy, Weda...
ooa-ha._olal. WonbiP oervlee stinday
day,7:~~·
10 a.m.; iuntla:r School II a.m. Evenlq
REOR
IZI:D CHURCH Of JESUS
wonlllp III'YI&lt;e 7:00 p.m. Wotlneaday
CJIRII1' OF LATI'ER D~Y liAllf1'S. fllrt·
p r - meot1J117:00 p.m.
lancJ.Radae It*. Wllltom Rauth, pattor. Jalllot D....,., c•ur&lt;h lcllool dlrte.
.
tcr. Cllur&lt;ft orhool 9:30 a.m.; ~rnlnC
wcnblp 10: 30 t.m.; Wedlleoday
IDI
MT. HERMON UN!ttO BRE:TIIltEN
p"yer II!I'Vk;et, 7:30p.m.
·IN CHRIST CHURCH, I..OcOtled In Texu
J•

.

Community off Ct Rt . 82 RPV Rob(&gt;rt
Sanders, pastor. Jpff Ho lter, lav leadpr;
Ed Roush. Sunday School Su pl. Sunday
School 9·30 a.m.: morning wor,~;hip and
&lt;lhlldren 's church 10:30 am.: Pventng
preaching -SE'rvlcE' first thrt&gt;e Sundays,
7:30p.m.: Special servicE' fourth Sunday
even111g, 7· 30 p m .; Wednesday Prayf'r
Meeting, Blblf&gt; Study and Youth Fellow·
shlp,1.30 p.m.
CIIURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.
Located on 0 , .J. White Road otf Highway
160 Pat Henson, pastor. Sunday School10
a.m. Classes for all a:g:es. Junior Church 11
a.m.; Morning worship 11 a.m. Adult
Choir practice 6 p.m . .Sunday. Young Peoplf:"'s, Chlldr'en \s Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7.30 p.m.
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Grant
St, MlddlpPort Afftualed wtth SOuthern
B&lt;tptist Convention , David Bryan, Sr .. Mt·
·nister Sunda y School 10 a.m.; Morning
worship 11 a m ., Evening worship 7 p.m .;
Wednt'Sday £'venlng Bible study and
prayer mffilng 7 p.m .
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Derek Stump, pastor.
WJIIIam. Ambe-rger. S. S SIIPt. : Sunday
School 9:30a .m.: Morning Wor.shlp]0:30
a.m .: Evening wor!lhip 7' 30 p m Wednt&gt;S·
dav worship 7:30p.m
$T. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
Corncr Sycamor&lt;' and Second Sts. , PomProy. ThP R('V. Laura A Uach ShrP!n('l', pastor. Sunday School 9·45 a.m
Church st&gt;rvlc{' 11 a.in.
,
VICTORY BAPTIST. 525 N. 2nd Sr. .
Middleport. James E. Kt&gt;PSeE". pastor.
Sunday morning worship 10 a . ty~ ; EvenIng service 1 p.m .; Wednesday evening ·
worship 1 p.m. VlsUatlon Thursday 6: 30p.
m;;IORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: D~"'
Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a-~"")
warship sf'rvtce 11 a.m.: Sunday nillhl
worship ~ervtce 7· :Jo p m.; Midwepk
prayf'r service W~nesda y 7 p.m .
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH of MlddiE"port, Inc .. 75 Pearl ST .•
Rev . Ivan M)·er.'i, pastor; Roger-Manley.
Sr., Sunday Sc hool Supt. Sunday School

9:30a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30 a.m.;
Evl'ninil WQrl'lhlp 7' 30' p.m. Wednesday
f'VeJitng Bible study. pray ~r- and praise
servlcf', 7:30p.m.
FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH. Long Bot·
tom, Sunday School , 9:30a.m . Morning
Worship 10:45 a m , Sunday evening 7· 00
p.m. lsummPr 7:30 p m. ); Wednesday
night 7:00 p.m. !Summer 1:30 'p.m.) .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third

Ave. Rev Clark Baker. putor. Carl Not·
ttngham, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
School 10 a.m. with classes tor all ages.

Evening services at 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl,
bl~ study at 7:30 p m. Youth services Frl·
day aq:30 p.m.
·
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. 128 Mtll St ..
Middleport. Brother Chuck McPherson,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m ; Sunday
evening servlc~ at 7 p.m. and Wednesday
services at 7 p.m .
'
ANTIQUrrY BAPTIST. Kenn eth Smith,
pastor. Sunday School 9:.10 am.; church
se-rvice 7· JO p.m.; you ttl fellowship 6: 30p
m.; Bible study, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 3.1045
Hiland Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas ·
tor Dannf Lambert: S. s . Supt. Sunda y
morning service at 10 a .m. ; Sunday evenIng service 7:30p.m. Tuesday and Thurs·
day Services at 7:30p.m.
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
ZARENE . Rev. Glendon Stroud. pastor.
Sunt!ay School9 :30 a.m.; Worship service.
10:30 a.m.; Youth servJ'e Supday 6:15 p.
m. Sunday evening service 7:OOp.m. Wed·
nesday Prayer Meeunc and Bible Study
1:00 p.m.
•
NEASE SETTLEMENTCHURC!!, Sun·
day afternoon services at 2;30. Thursday
evenlna.servlcet at 7:30.
nRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W.
Va. Rev. Wallace Mings, pastor. Sunday
School tO a m ~ Sunday evening service, 6

Miclcll,..t

p.m.; Prayer meeting and Bible study
Wednesday, 7:30p.m.
·
RIJ"l1.AND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·
lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastcr. Sunday
School tO a.m.; Sunday even ins 7:00p.m.;
Wednesday ·evenlng prayer meettna 7:00
p.m .
•
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, Stiver Ridge. Duane S~·
strlcker, putor. Sunday School 9 a.m.;
Worship SEirvice,lO a.m.; Sunday evenlai
service. 7:00p.m. Wednesday nlgbt Bible
study 7:00p.m.
~

NEW LIFE

••
COVENANT CHURCH OF

GOD, Chester "l"' Gary Hines, putar. SW,·
day School 9:30a.m.; worUtp ..-vtee
10. 30a.m.; evenlq~ervlce,6p.m.; DteP:
pleshlp class, Wednetday, 7 p.m. ·

MT. OLIVE COMMUNITY CH!JRCH,
Lawreneto Buf;h, pa1tor Sunday .Schotl
9·30 a .tn.; Sunday and Wedneeday eve~~·
ing worship service, 7:00p.m.
..
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rl. 7 on J'o.
meroy By-Pass Rev. Robert E . Smith st
pastor. Melvin Drake,

s. s. Supt. sund.Y

School 9:30a.m.; MomlncWorlltlp ..:30; •
Evening Worship 7:00 p.m.; Wedleoday
Prayer Service, '1:00 p.m.
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Rallnad
St .. Mason. Sunday Scltooi!O a.m.; MomIna worship 11 a.m.: Evftlllnatervk!et p.
m. Prayer meetlnl and Blblt Study Wed:
nesday, 7 p,m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyio
Borden. pastor. Comellus Bunch, IUpt.
Sunday SChool 9:30 a.m.; Seco.d and
fourth Sundays won-lp "rvlce at 1:30 p.

m.

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth lltd
Main St., Middleport. R... Gllbtrl Crala,
Jr., pastor. Mn. Ervin S.unwantllli
Sunday School Supt. Sunday Schoalt: 10 a:
m.: Worship Sei'vlce,10:C5 a.m.
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OFC!f1!18T
- Joseph B Hoaklno, evan1elltl. Souiday
Bible Study S a.m.; Worship, tOa.m.: BUllday evening se~lce 6 p.m.; WldJitlday
evenlnc service, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Raolae
Rl . 124. Wtllllm Hoback. pallor. Sunday
SChoollO a.m.: Sunday evenl-. 811'Ylct T
p.m. Wednesday ovenln&amp;lfi'VIce 1 p.m.
CARPENTER BAPTIST. !loa C....dle,
Supt. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. MonhiiJ
Worship 10: 30 a.m. Prayer HI"Y'ICe, alterd~
ate Sundays.
,
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
APOSTOLIC FAITH- New Uma
next to Fort Melp Park, Rutland. RoMrt
Richards, pastor. ServkN at '1 ·p.m. 011
Wedn-.Ja_yt and Suntlayo.
HARRISONVILLE HOLINIESS CHAP·
TER ol tho w..Ioyan BollnMt Cllurc~.
Rev. Earl Flo!ds, put or. Henry .Eblin
Sunday School Supt.: Sunday lleltooi!O
m.: Mornl~t Wonblp U a.m.: Ewnlll
service 7:30p.m. Wedneoday own~ac - ·
vice 7:30 p.m.
'
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FA!Tll.
Gary Holter, paslor. Sunday.........,. t: .0
a.m. and 7 p.m.: Midweek service, T; 30p.
m. Thurlday
1
COOL VILLE UNITED METHODIST
PARISH -li. E. Alloy, paator. Mlkeand
4ane Klnif, lay supply pestcrs at Tordt
Church. COOLVILt.E CHIJRCH M~
and Ftllh Sts. Wotahlp Service, i a.~ ·
Slllltlay ScllooiiOa.m.; Bible Study Tuia·
day, 1 p.!ft.· BETHEL CHURCH: T.,....
ship Rood
Sunday lclJool t a.m.;
Church Servlee, IO..m.; Btbldtutly,JG
a.m.
Wedneaday;
HOCKINGPORT
C!ruRCH,GrandStrfe!: Sunday-10
a.m., Cburch lerVIctlla.m.;-Biblftltudy,
Wedneoday, 8 p.m.; TORCH CIIURCII
COUIIIy Roa463: Sllnday SciiOclt: iltla.m.;'
Wonltp Servtco, 10: ~!a.m .

Rd.:

a:

tae:

.Sermonette ·
. !!GJVE OUR CHILDREN ROQTS IN GOD" •
What do you give to your childreri? Sounds simple doesn't iL ll is not .0
s~pl~ Clothes, food, warm hou!IC, schooling and love is it, Right? Wrong,
children need more. They need roots along wilh dreams 11111 jend their minds
soaring.
·
We all need grounding in manners, pauiotism, and a sense of sharing and
concern for tl:te needs of olhcrs. We need something to sink our roots into. II
includes neigh)lOr hood, community, nation and the entire universe. II ailo
means God·and what he wants of each and everyone of us including all nur
Children.
• '
As a child on a sWing we can soar up iniO ihe sky to see far away places.
We can dream of sailing ships, spliCe travel, adventllTes 1o far Janda and new
pcQpleo. Moslly we must lllik ourselves, whll .c an I do to make this world and
my community a betterpl,g. How can I pau lhia feeling«) the youlh todl.y.
OUr children. as well as we ourselves should dream dreams, l"ar to far away
lands and galaxies yet. keep our feet planted in God's good esnlt.
· Utde·plan(S Jtavc tendll' roots and need 10 be cared .for, landed 10 .and·fod.
Whll are we giving our children that willlut etcmally. Science and ~
knowledge are good butlmowllldgaofOod and His desires are belter. We ileod
to root them funtly in Qadi ways and of service io
We need 10 l.eloh
them to imitate Christ le1t11 arid be a IBIVanl to thoM lesa forllmala lhoD ,..
ouraelvas. We need ro ground our childmnllldjiCtlhOuiiiiJIIootnel¥e1 in die
ways or God llld·!he Bible.
auth ill Heaven il really our home and thotl
where we mutt nive ro live. Leu planlour 10011 and our chilclren'ai'ODII in
God's way and path.

ot

mtlllk.ind.

:n.c

.p..orw

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Pomeroy

264 South 2nd

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Friday, April 5, 1991
t •

~CBS'

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•

Hagman as J.R. beclllle a ~

The 111011 famous was the ''Wbo finale of ''MASH.''
Shot J.R.?" 'episode wbicb ended · J.R.'s brother, Bobby, also had a
··pnrne time series on IICtwork tele- the
1979-80 ~season with brusb with doalh whea be was
. , vision after "Gunsmate,!' ends ill the gunning dowa of J.R., played killed in a hit-and-nan accident at
13-year run May 3 wilh show about by Larry Hqman.
·
tho end o( the 1984-85 seuon
what life would ha\oe been like 11
The answer to lhe question-wu . bec•n"' Patrlc:t Duffy decided to
~ Southfork if J. R. Ewing had never aired on Nov. 11,· 1980, and leavctherolo.
, been born.
~arne _the second-highest rated
With ratinp Dgging, Jiasman
...,.. CBS has called the two-hour episode m reccrded televiJion his· ~aled to DUffy to -ejoin the cast
show "tbe greate8t finale in the 101)', pmering a 53.3 lllling and a and the 1986-8'7 seuon opened
history of 'D811as,"' a considerable 77 share. I! ~ watched by ~ore ~ a very livel_y Bobby ,lathering
feat for a series known for its than 300 million people worldWide. m the shower. His death, it seems,
$!iffbangen.
The"highest-rated was the 1983 wuaUadream.
·
·
"Dallas" flllt aired on April 2.

- .feople in the nt;?Ws.
HEALTH .FAIR PARTICIPANTS • Pictured
• are some·of the studeats who jaklng part In the
Health Fair at Meigs High School on Thursday;
sponsored
by the Nursln~t Assistant Class.
1

i

Pic-:

tured,J-r, are Kevin Mus8er, Love llatey, Micah
Bunch and Jasoo DowelL Preparing miJksbakes
are nursing students, 1-r, Tracy EUis Bobble
Huffman and Melanie Adams.
· '

!.Teens at a risk of heart disease
I

"Teens at Risk for Heart Dis·
~ ~~ was the theme of the Health
, Fair presented by the Nursing
Assistant Class at Meigs High
!School on Thursday.
j
The goal of the fair, made possi1ble with a grant from ·S.outhern
; Ohio Coal Company, was to pror vide the opponunity for students to
~ learn about their risks for heart dis·
l ease. Participants received in formalion on how to reduce those various
risks and, therefore, perhaps alter
•lifes!Yies t6 lower their chances of

!

I

developing. heart-related diseases.
gram c~nsists of two periods of
C?Jlporrunities.for the. heallh fair !'Cialcd mstruction ditring the mom·
~ctpants mcluded: blood choles- · mg and four periods of simulaled
terol screening, blood pressure laborarory ex{'Crience in the afterscreening, blood sugar screenint, noon. Beginmng second semester
anti-smoking demonstration, nu1n- students. panicipate in on-the-job
tion counseling. determination of Coopetalive employment as a local
ideal body weight for !\eight; sam- !Jealth care or hospilal faci1i dur·
piing of heart-healthy foods 11,0d mg ·the afternoon or evening
numerous educational materials.
Stpdents become certified in CPR
The .nursing assistant program at and First Aid and also complete a
Meigs High School is a .one year 75-hour nurse aid training )Xllgram
P~ offered to SIJ!dents in their required by law to work in a Jongsen10r year of high school. The pro- term care facility.
.

7.:::.

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Sentinel Calendar .

Community Calendar items 1\M; Friday, 6:.30 p.m.; dinner,
appear two days before llll event meeting at 7:30p.m.
:and the day or that event. Items _
)must be received weD in advance
DORCAS • Chicken noodle dinFriday-from 4·7 p.m. at the
ner
!.~
. -.ar. re publication in the cal· Bethany
Dorcas United Methodist
Church sponsored by the parsonage
charge. Proceeds go to the parsonFRIDAY
age fund.
·
POMEROY • Revival at the
SATURDAY
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel in
MIDDLEPORT ' There wiU be
· Pomeroy will be held through Sunday at 7:30p.m. nightly with. Rev. &amp; fish fry at the Middleport FU:e
Kenneih Hoop&lt;:{ as evangelist. The ·House on SatUrday beginning at.ll
ch\IICh is located one half mile off a.m.
Route 7 on Route 143. Rev. Victor
~oush inviteS the public.
SALEM CENTER ·• Star
Grange and.Star Junior Gnmge will
LONG BOTTOM . .Revival meet Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
through Sunday at Mount Olive · grange hall near Salem Center.
Community Church in Long Bot- Harrisonville Grange will visit.
tom at 7 p;m. each night. Speaker
Potluck refreshments. All members
wiD be Evangelist BiD Villars.
ur~to aUend.

i

L

TIJPPERS PLAINS • There will
be a round and square dance on
Friday at the VFW Building in
· Tilppers Plains from 8-11:30 a.m.
featuring Rocky Mountain Bluegrass. Jim Carnahan will be the
caller, Public invited.
·

Church

at 7 p.m: on Saturday.

RUTI.AND ·The Believers Pellowship Cllurch will have a joy
sing on Saturday at 7 p.m. Rev. Joy
Sizemore will speak. Rev. Mar. garet Robinson iqvites the public.
.
- SUNDAY
CHESHIRE· The Gabriel Quartet wiU perfonn SWiday II 7 p.m. at
the Old Kyger Freewill Baptist
Church in Cheshire. Special
p~!Jing by Mich,ael Frash. Public
IS mvtted.
·
,
POMEROY - Popcorr. Sunday,
Hillside Baptist Church, Sunday,
10 a.m. Everyone .wiU receive popcom and suckers.

'

. LOTTRIDGE • The Lotbidge
Community Center will have a
CHESTER - The Chester Fire smorgasbord dinner, Sunday, noon
Department will 'have a fish fry on to 2 p.m., Cost is 45 for adult and
Saturday f':llll4-(p.m.
$2.50 for ~hildren. Public invited.

MIDDLEPORT. "Horse with
POMEROy ·A 12-stepAA
Flying Tail" will be presented at meeting will begin Sunday·at 7
the Meigs County Public Library ·p.m. at the JTPA office 117 West
on Saturday at 2 p.m. and on Moo- Second St. in ~roy.
POMEROY · Meigs County day at 7 p.m. at the Middleport
Grange Banquet. Friday, 7:15 p.m. Branch.
.
at Salisbury Elementary. EntertainMONDAYment, Bob and Kendra Ward
·RACINE • The Southern High
CHESHIRE • Women Alive
Bence. Speaker, Gene Esbenshade.
School Clilss of 1966 will hold an will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
organizational meeting for its 25th Kyger Creek Clubhouse. There will
BRADBURY - Revival services class reunion on Saturday at 6 p.m. be a devotional speaker and Becky
at Bradbury Church of Christ Fri- at the high school. All local school Pasquale will demonstrate sweat·
day through Sunday at 7 p.m. Pub- class members ~e urged to attend.
shirt decorating: Refreshments will
lic invited. Special speakers nightbe served.
·
ly. AI Hartons, Friday; Derek '
RUTLAND - Baseball league
Stump, Saturday; and"Don s..evers will have a signup Satlitday from 9
BEDFORD -.Bedford Township
Sr., Sunday. .
Trustees
will meet Monday at 7
a.m to I p.m, at the civic ~nter.
p.m. at the town hall.
REEDSVILLE - The Olive
REEDSVILLE - The Unity ·
Township Trustees will meet Fri- Singers will perform at the
CHESTER · The Chester PTO
day at 6:30 p.m. at the Reedsville Reedsville United Methodist will meet Monday II 7 p.m. at the
Fire House.
:
. .
school. All parents and teachers are
V
urged 10 attend.
MIDDLEPORT • Inspection
W .I. OU nOW
Middleport Lodge No. 363 F and
By United Press Iatematlonal
POMEROY • The Disabled
Dwight Eisenhower won an · American Veterans and Ladies
appoinunent to the Naval Academy Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
at Annapolis, Md., ~ut was too old p.m. at the hall at 124 Butternut
to be admitted and wound up going Ave. in Pomeroy. Refreshments
PLAINVIEW, Texas(UI?I) .io
West Point.
will be serVed.
M.T. carroD, owner of the Carroll
· Catde Co. will never again let the
chips fall where they may.
While one of Carroll's company
drfvers was moving some cattle
'
lhroush Dumas, Texas, one of the
bull's chips fell right in the middle
of main street.
The driver was promptly pulled
You can say goodbye ta your creditors and bills for~vtr.
over by a police officer and ticketed for animal littering. The fine is
. We have developed a program that wiU enable you ta
$221:
own your own business without quiHiilg Vat1r job. Start
canon was shocked tO hear of
in yaur spare time and embark on our wealth accumuthO fine and says he will chaDenge
the fine at a hearing set for April
lation pian. Don~t delay, .just imagi~' owning a ntw
10.
home ar maybe I! lul!ury car.
"I could understand. it if we
wOre in a rnecropolitan area' where
Simply order "How to r----------~-.,
porlPio IIC not .a:uStomed.to movBecame Financially
I Yes! Send my copy of UHow to 1
1111 Clllle," CarroU Said. "But out
11
here it's a way of life. We move
lndtpenclent with Little
thousands of head of cattle every
mart" by stnding the . ic my $20.00.
I
week. ••
1

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No

K

Carroll said be could come up
with on~: solution to a.void

~.

IUCh..
•
"Diapen." he said. "I guess if
1 could get me 101M diapers to fit
on a cow thai would like care of
iL"

coupon and $20
1$17,00 + S3.00 S&amp;tl) I I
ta Amos PUbhshing Ca., c11r
Dept. 2A, P.O. lol! 566, I c~, " ~ I
Hilliard, Ohio 43026. !:__ _: _________ J

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Jeff and Laura H~rton, Wp~,- .
lhington, are announcmg the birth
of a daughter, Elimbelh Diane, on
March 19 at Riverside Methodist
Hospital in Columbus. .
'
The infant weighed six pounda
and one ounc;e and was 19 inch~
long.
·
· .
Matanal glandparents are
Eichinger, Chester, and the late
Henry Eichinger.
. Paternal grandparents are Mrs.
Phyllis Horton, Columl)us, and
Ar¢ur Horton, Novi, Mich.
,

oPal

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Weekend Steclala .

n=·

.175·

2Bd.

"Miller'• Cro11ina" - Joel
and Ethan Coen's energetic, enig·
matic Prohibition era gangster ·
drama IS a violent, moody, aunospheric and .cnta1aining shoot·'ern·
up. Gabriel Byrne is Tommy, an
Irish mobster who w.o rts for city
. boss Leo (Albert Finney) until both
fall for the same woman. When
Leo kicks him out, literally; ·
Tommy joins the opposition
(may!Je) and helps unseat Leo,
toucrung off a bloody war Wllil he
turns again to helP. his old bon
repln his throne. Its an often bru·
181 but ikillfuiiy handled and choleo~ film, a fme blend of old
· worid flavor and new wodd fCMll",
aided considerably by evocative
· musi.cal score. 1990. liS minutes.
CBS-Fox Video. Rate&lt;J R. $92.98. '
.
"The Last Picture Show" At .last on home video, 1n exceptiona!, mclancholic tale of growing
up in a dusty, dying Texas town in
the '50s. ·
.

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Looking For A Bargain?
WE HAVE IT AT COLE'S MOBILE HOMES
With Our Last New 1990' Single Wide, 1 4x80
.

.VICTORY
BAP-TIST
CHURCH

1

-FEA'TURES:
.
upg!llde doors, upgrade

car~~~rt 6 pad, eathlldr1l
ceiling, apreyed 6 textuNd Clilingl throughout. 115 cu. ft. 2
door r1frlger1t0r, upgrade in1ulatlcn, 100 1mp nrvlce. 30
gallon wllter heater, extr1 window in h1llway, optional linin
clo11t l.n bathroom plu1 much, much more.

, "ONLY TAX &amp; Tl'fLE DOWN" (•1()12)
SALE PRICE

.

PER MONTH

$16 , 700°0
.

PrtaelnaludH block. up to 20ft. metltlol "'' MCh utility connection,

.~

---·
COLE'S MOBILE HOMES -.

tie downo, ful VInyl aklrtlng end one Ill Df lt8pl with 4•4 do!ck.
•1 10 rftOftthl M 11.71 APR 10 qt dlfled bu\W. lome Nltriotlonl _,..:ty~ IM ul•·

Located 6 Miles Eatt of Route 33
on Rt. ISO East, Athens. 1592-,972

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·oPEN.
HOUSE

CELEBRATION

MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

"Everyone Welcome"

I

GOD'S SIMPLE PLAN
OF SALVATION

WEEKEND

Saturd~y, April6 • Sunday, Aprit7.

I. "All heva 1lnnad." Rom1n1

3:10, "For all h1va linnad
1nd cioma lhort of the glory
of God .•• " Ao!lllnl 3:23
I. "Sin mut ~ Plld for:'' Ro!llln 1:12, "for the Willi of
lin It ciMth but the P.lft of
· God Ill .tarnal 11.... • Ao•
11181111:23
Ill. "Ja1u1 Chrllt Pilei for our
11n1:" Roman• 1:8, ''but
God eommanclath Hl1 love
tow1rd u1, in thlt while we
ware yet linntrll. Chrllt died
for·ue. ,,.
IV. "Whit WI mult do." Romani 10:1-13. "For Who_ . , lhall ~I upon the
n•me of the Lord 1hllll be

·

Visit 0uf..Newly Remodel~ Showroom
And Expanded Manufacturing Plant At
'

156 w. Main St.

c1n know we •re
w..,
to HMVen :"
John 3 :3&amp;. "He thllt btlltv011 our

lth on h1 8on hu avarlalt. lng lift..... ' '
VI. "A• a;oe:" I John 1:14

'

. ...... 1 I, "And thllll the aonfl.
lii!I08 that- 11811eln Him~....

•

SUNDAY SCHOOl, 10.00 A.M.
MO....G WOISIIIP,
'
11t00 A.M.
SUN• .._G, 7t00 P.M.
WID. laE SYUIIY, 7t00 P.M.

.~ STUDENT OP THE WEEK • Sam Conn ,.._ inrarded Stu·
'

~

quare dancing
.
nd clogging slated
'

There will be square dancinJ
d clogging PI tho Henderson,
.Va., Community Cenll!t, tCJIIl&amp;bt
8 to 11 p.m. with lhe Country
'P"'""IIId Saiurday, AJ¥il6 from B
II p.m. at the ~;tnter with the
bert Mountaineers.
.

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We Have A MonumentTo Fit Every Budget
"GUARANTEED" Lowest Prica Be Finest Quality
•

· H2-2172

ent or the Week rec:aatly at Melp Jualor HIJb School for hll
ork Ia band. PreaeatiDa Ills certificate II Toney Dlnpu, band
!rector.
.

6 AND 1~ FOOT WIDE

-INGELS
CARPET STORE
MIDDLEPOIT, OHIO
N.
AVE.

"Wild At Heart" - Divid
Lynch's miJchievous, ofleft foreboding tale of i couple of I"UII8WIIY
lovers carecnina down a highway
to nowhere is captivatiDJ! and
kooty: Nicolas Cage is Sailor, a
hip, ex-con in a snakeslcin Jacket
(' Tbe symbol of my· indiv1dualiiy") and Laura De~ is his Lula
and they're op the lam from her
"wicked witch" of a mother
(Diane Ladd) who puiS out a contract on Sailor and sends her ex·boyfriend to set him. All they mate
their mad dash "over the rain·
l!ow, •• the t;wo lovebirds find their
'"yellow brick road'' paved with
potholes - Big Tuna, Texas, for
example, is sure no Emerald City.
(Tbe film, as you may guess,
m~ ~ references to "11ie
Wizard Of Oz.") Lynch's connect·
·the-doll style of srory~eDing can be
confusing but compelling and he
consiantly is sprinkling the yarn
with his usual cnusual characters.
Winner of the Best Picture award 11
the Cannes Film ~estival, and with

.

·81Ved."
V. "How -

We have just received
.. over 700 $quare yards of
· outdoor carpet. Corite in
now for the best selection
and the best price of the
year.

HEAVY OUTDOOR TURF •••••• !.~:.r.~·•• S695

A n.
Landers

MOVIES

a:!li:

OUTDOOR CARPET
SALE.

3 COLORS

differ~nces

scene ...

=• tw::

I

12 FOOT WIDE -

~c~willmateafl1111·

your

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GREEN GRA·SS ............~ •••••••.•!P..~~•.. $349

episode.

· . By MICHAEL DABNEY
lives about three blocks from the
MERION, Pa. (UPI)- Sen. school, "All I could see was smol·
John Heinz and six other peciple dering wrecbgo.''
were killed Thursday when his
The SCIIItor's offu:e said Heinz
. De. ADa l.uden: For yem I
from a constituent meet- have admired
even-handed
small plane collided with a heli·_ was
·cdpter-over subur.ban Philade_lphia ing in w .
to ~·phia _ _.. to_........ No 1"tis
. fl
tend plummeted m flames mto a · for an editoria board .meeti11g at - - · ~'~~............ w
my
rtrowded school yard during a tile Philadelphia: Inquirer and a turn~:,!: ~-years it has ·been
:te~:ess ~~· au~ties said.
town m!leting in Media larer in the rare for my sistllr "Debbie • and me
Authoritles
.said
the
Pennsylva·
day.
·
.
·
. ' '.
-'NN LANDERS
1
· :ma Republican and heir to theHJ.
Heinz, 52, was heir to tlie H.J. ·' to carry onactvU~venatlon. The
"19"· 1M~-~ .. .
:1feinz Co. ketchup and pickle Heinz Co. empire, which was IIOUblef~.fA boodW1111Mmy. freihman
T~!':!!~:.~:'
empire, was on his way to Philadel· founded by his grandfather and run · Y~ o ..... sc: . 1• Y~ISlet was a £;;;;;:;;~;;::;:::=
~ia from Lycoming County when by his father.
semor. .
.
~
·tire crash occurred shortly · after
In 1976 Heinz won election to
Debbte and I have yet 10 CIIJOY a seem• thatonee you sign up with an
noon.
·
the Senate by defemng Democratic holiday IOgether· with the family. obslelric:ianyouptputonalillihal
" The dead included Heinz and Rep. WiUiam Green fil, who later When the two of us~ in the same is disbibuled to diaper services,
two other people aboard the plane, became mayor of Philadelphia. He IOOlll or; even the same house there photographen. baby food companies
two people aboard the helicopter spent a total of $6 million in h~s . are ftreworb. It has gotten 10 bad and 10 on. UnfOitWlately, 1 misc:ar- ·
and two children QDthe ground, the primary and general election cam- that our parenta are unable to ried and we lost our 100.
authorities said.
•
paigns, including $2.S million of conuol our fighting which has · A. photographer called ~vera!
Two other children an.d three his OVJ!l money.
,
reSulted In cots, sc:raiChes. bruises. weeks ago 10 say it was time ror my
adult employees of the Merion EleAs a senator, Heinz was torn blouses and dresses and worst
mentary School in Lo)Yer Merion exuemely papillar with Pennsylva' of all wounded prid~ and hurt
~10 and ~
Township were injured in the nia voters. As a ·Republican, he feelings' ·
·
.
day·
come m.
crowded sc_hool yard.
. main~ a liberal ,v(_lting record,
. Whe~ Debbie returns home I %1d the woman thai I did not have
-:;. The chtldren were struck by espectally on labor ~~sues. The •• she recently moved iniO her own ;hei~guedand ~herandfor
IJaming debris as they played out- Pennsylvania Building arid Con. .
.
~e the school building. Two of suuction Trades Union endorsed apanment •• the .~on 15 '? thtck lcntw I had a child and il was time
ilJe injurCd children, both girls who him for a secood term a full year you couldn't cut It with~ c~ 18W. for his two-month photo. I became
were struek by debris and suffered before the election and before the I have 8 very open re~sh•p w•th so upset that I just hung up the
l!~rns, were treated and released Democrats had even slated an · my parents wh1ch _Debl11e. has. never phone.
.
.
· ~ted and .released at Osteopathic opponent.
had. They have Uicd to Sit WI~ the
1 became pregnant again and am
Medical Center in Philadelphia, a
Heinz concentrated on issues two of us and talk out our differ· sad to say that llost Chat baby also. I
hospital spokeswoman said.
affecting the well-being of his state cnces, but these sessions always do not look forward to receiving
. "I said all right, all right, we're rather than national matters.
result in more· Ulger and tears and these magazines, phone calls, eiC.
all dead," said Matthew Shore, 7,
· Heinz gmduated from Yale Uni- another unresolved argument.
Isn't there some way that tlie
y;ho was playing wiih classmates versity and went to work in the
We have fought over her taking doctor's office could pass on the
Qutside the school. "I was under family business. He left ketchup my possessions without permission, information 10 tiMillO COIIIpanil'&amp; that
. lhll helicopter when it was comin~ an4 pi~es behind in 1971 10 run . her refusal to act reiJlOIIsibly 10ward the pregnancy was unsucce!'ful?
. dP~? and some of the metal htt ·successfully for a vac!lncy in the the family and our grandpareniS. ind
Dealing with the loss is hard
me.
·
House.
. ·
the way she inauill· my friends
h A r-•· · --·'d
,. A Federal Aviation Administra··
Heinz's great-grandfalhet- whichiaarealemblrraasmiiiiL
' eiiOUg · 1""' eompuSJOD,......
. ljon official said the plane was founded the Heinz company in
What ean I do to resolve this make things. easier on thole of us
~par~ndy ~periencing problems , ~harpsbur~ in.J869, deveiOJ&gt;C&lt;! it problemthaliscauslnssomuchpain ~ho ~ ~:Jt
WJth ~ts lamh~g gev an.IIJlll~h mto a wor dwtde food processt~g and streu in· my life? •• HAD ~you. ·. '
tR Philadelphia Intemauonal Air· compat!y - one of·the largestm ENOUGH IN NEW HAYEN
.
DEAR·RIVERSIDE: I t - s 10
J1Q1t. and a SWI' Oil. helicopter was the mdustry - and coined the
.
_ ..
4iwa1Ched to monitor the problem phrase "57 varieties" to adllertise
•O,liAR NE~ HAVEN: Smce me that the same "grapevine" that
(!ym the air.
Heinz
ucts.
'fOil,re a ~e tada", rm sure provides these companies with ihe
· r..: "The plane and the helicopter
Heinz father, Henry J. Heinz you~ seen this !"IU'stion before: ilames of expectan1 mothers could
came together," said Robert II, .c ' an of the HJ. Heinz Co. Try_JOinl e;ounselinl·
notify them of the tragedies. That's
Zinzel, a landscaping contractor em re-• 1nce 19S9,lllied Feb: '23: · If Dcllbae,aefulea to go: go alone. · the lei$ t1JM C1J11 be done.
11!llo was wQI!ting near the school 19 7, II ~ 78 following a sbon It may well .be that you cannoc fix
'DJ'here was a .kind of pop, then an illneSS It his Florida home.
. this flawed relatlonlhip by yourself,
. ~~plosion, and the plane went .-Heinz" net worth, listed"at
~Whithcuc,lrecommcndthatfor
:&lt;stnu~ht down."
·
between $9 million and $16..million ·\ the ,time~ing. you lltay away .from .
' '
','tlimzel's co-worker. Steve in 1979,' made liim one of the her.
W,illiams, said the crash looked like wealthiest men ever to serve in the · De!lr Ana Landers: When 1
&lt;!'war scene.
Senate.'
,
became pregnant with my fJI'Iit child,
· :'We could .see the helicop~r
. Heinz was. married to Teresa my husblnd and 1 wac thriUed, and
gomg down tn slow-mo wuh S1moes-Ferretra. They had three we welcomed any brochures or
flames
oufof it. It was like childrel).
of Vietnamn or the
Democratic Penns)llvania Gov.
he said.
Robert Casey, after a suitable
the mourning period, wiU have to name
t!: ~~:::o:.:3~~l~hhs~~h•owered
side of the a successor to the Republican
~~';·b~::lli:~~~s landed 011 the Heinz who would serve unu1 the
J1
1992 general election although
a fireman relling Heinz' term does not ~xpire until
""~'Pr"'• children. There s chi!· 1994.
525 N. 2ND ST.
said Steve LipShutz,:' who

ROCKETS IN TOP FORM?:
Does rock 'n' roU talcc precedence
over basketball? The 9ucstion will
have to be settled m Houston
before April 25, when ZZ Top is

·

:~~:~;; ~::d~~~s·;o~·i~. ~o•J:h

become an

Sisters'

Horton birth ..·~

Couric replacing
Norville

SMALL INVESTMENT
.
·EQUALS BIG MONEY

I~~~~ttT. :~~~·r.: I
I
1I

ELIZABETH" D. HORTON

By Wll.LJ.U1 C. TROTT
scheduled to start a three-night
United Preas International
stand at The Summit. The Housto11
SELLECK STRIKES OUT Rockets also may have a. playoff
ON HIS OWN: Tom Selleck game Chat night in the same arena
pinch-hit in the Detroit Tigers' so an NBA spokesman said the
· .exhibition game Wednesday night league is look,ing into the matter. A
· but about the only Ching be hit was similar, scheduling problem devel1-t,
a· little· girl. Selleck went to the oped last year. with Rockets glll)les
plate for the Tigers in the eighth and Madollna •s· rehearsals for 'ilie·
~
inning and sttuck out after hiUinf! a opening of her U.S. tour. That conon 'Today' ;' ·
couple of foul balls. one of wbtch . flict was settled by moving Madonconkeil Molly Fogarty, 9, of na's equipment in and 'out of the
Y9ungstown, Ohio, on the head. arena to make way for the. basketNEW YORK (UPI)· - NBC
She wasn~t seriously, hurt and Sell- ban games.
•.
News officials Thursday named
eck soothed her by auiOgnlphing a
Katie Couric co- anchor of thd
PRESIDENT
FACES
UP:
baseball, '"To MoUy, with love and
"Today'· morning show, replacing
aloha, Tom SeUecll:." SeUeck has Argentine President Carlos Debor~oh Norville, who $ays she
been associated with the Tigers Menem Sl!YS his swollen face was will concentrate on motherhood
since his days on "Magnum, P.l." caused by a wasp sting but that afte,r a controversial year ia thewhen his character wore a Tigers hasn't stopped sJieculation that he .anchor's chair.
, ·
·,,;
cap and he has b en banging recently had injections to smooth
"I am thriUCxl that Katie Courit&lt;
around baseball tea s since last out the wrinltles· in his 61-year-old ~as agreed to take over the coMenem started commen~
role as an face.
season 10 researc
buzzing
when he returned Tuesday llncllor position," NBC News Pre$•·
ageingball play in a . ovie-to-be
ident Michael Gartner said in a·
titled "Tokyo · on " "It was night from a four-day weekend statement. ''The mom ins news•
· a lot of fWI 'b I wish we'd won near the, mountain resort cil)' of period is one of the most competi~
the game," Se k said of his time Bariloche with a s'Nollen but wrin- tiv,p.and difficult in all of televi:'
kle-free face. When asked how
at bat in .lhe Tigers' 6-4 loss to long
,. ,,
thll swelling would last, sion:"'
Cincinnati. "I was trying to think
The
"Today"
show's
ratings
Menem said, "Ask the wasp."
about baUin~J ·practice and the way I Newspapers
are reporting that he is had dropped after Norville became'
had been domg things In that. But I
havin$
an
allergic
fc:action to the an anchorpwith Bryant Gumbel in•
just couldn't fmd it.''
January 1990. The popular Jan&amp;
facialmjections.
.
Pauley left the show at the same'
GLIMPSES: Vice President time, creating the impression for
THE KENNEDYS OF PALM
BEACH: Them are more ~!ems Daa Quayle will pinch-hit for many that she had been pushed out'
for .the Kennedy clan m Palm Presldeat Bash this Monday by in favor of Norville. The ratings'
Beach, Fla. Sen. Edward thrOwing out the rust ball when the have been rcboimding recendy with
Kennedy's. relationship with a Baltimore Orioles open the season Couric fllling in for Norville.
•~
Palm Beach neighl!or, real estate against the .~hicago .White Sox.
Norvillt~ 33, who recently gavC'
agent DragaQI Llclde, has become Quayle al~ flliCcl in for Bush at binh to, her first cbild, Niki, told •
an· issllll in her custody battle with Monday's White House Easter egg network olficials that she wanied to·
· her ex-husband." Kennedy, D· roll ... EnterWner and "Tonight" spend at least the next y_ear as a'
Mas$.' was scheduled to le.Stify last show creator Steve ADen, who has full-time mother, NBC wd
•
month about his ties to I&gt;ragana bUt donated writings. photopaphs and
"During the past month 'away
a judge canceled the deposition memor.abilia to Bowling Green f~om !RY day-~o-day responsibili -"
after Kennedy's lawyers argued the State University's popular culture ues, I ve ,had lime 10 !llflect on the·
senator had not been properly sub- library, wm get something to tumultuous last year land·a half,"
poenaed. Dragana and Garrison iemember his gift by - an hon- she said in 1he NBC statement.
1
duPont Llckle were divorced in orary dociOnlte degree. ·
' '
•
1984 and J:te is tryi_ng to wif! C!15·
tocly of thell" two childlen, claiming
~t she has exposed them to ''the .
,
lifestyle Of the ]Cl set (and) to notorious characJers, lome of whom
have criminal backgrounds and
. ..
others of questionable character." ·
FIIDA.Y, APIIL 5
Liclde's attorney~ Joe Farish, said
FIS.HTAIL ~ANDWICH PLAnEI .....................~ S3; 19
he wants to question Kennedy
.
French Frle1, Choice of .Slew, Mac1roni Salad.or .
about the places he and Dragana
. Billed BMnl
took the children. "He'd been
going around .with her for some
SUNDAY, APIIL 7 _
time," Farish said. "He took her to
HOMEMADE MEAnOAF DINND .....................s4.29
th·e old lady's (Rose Kennedfs)
I OOth birthday party in Hyannis
M~lhed Potatoe• 1nd GriJV'f, Green Bean• with
Port." Drsgana. however, issued a
Mu1hroom1. Hot Roll. Coffee or Small Drink.
statement Thursday saying
Kennedy is simply "a neighbor ••
Houre:. 11;00 A.M. TO 6 P.M. 7 DAYS A WEEK
and a friend" and that she has had
no other involvement with him.
The Kennedys also have been in
the news this week after a woman
claimed she was raped at the family's esrate. ·
.

Cow diapers?

star as the w~rf!'l:!:alinJ,
power· huagry,
· · nx.
oilman thai audiences laved to
hate. Bollby was lhe JOOd lxolher,
and their home was )ll1ll1ded over
by their mother, Mill lillie, played
by Barblra Bel 0Gdb
Returning for the "whal if J.R.
had nev«been born" fina1o will be
previous stars lncludina Mary
Crosby, Unda Gray. Steve Kanaly,
Jack Scalia and Ted Shackelford
and Jo111 Van Ark. who~ aeries

;fa.
• . Senator
· ·Heinz, six
'!::~n~d~S6ha;;:r~:/ft
oes
bas
others die in,plane crash ~:::~c:=·c:!'Jc!~·off the air. It

·..

a familiar c:ast tllat also includes
Isabella Rouellini, Willem Dafoe
and Harry Dean Stanton, it's a
rowdy llld Casc:inating romp. ·1990.
12S minutes. Media Home Enter·
tainment.-Raled R. $89.98.

~

I

Page 1

....;,;,..........___·Video Views--

'Dallas' heads jQr last round-up,

NEW YORK (UPI) -· "Dal-

the curriculum, students will writC
an essay on "Ohio manufacturers •
cOIIIpeutive strategies for produc- ·
ing quality procluc![" Oue enay per
high acboof may be submitted for
judllin1. All entries must be postinarhif by Apri110.
From these entries, jlldges wiU
select 30 f.malists to participate in .
th~ ManufactQring Caravan, a
week-long, expense paid to.ur of ··
· Ohio's major manufacturing cen•
ters. The caravan incllldes corpo. rate presen.tations and plant tours
which provide students with ind·
depth information about the state's
manufacblring industry.
Following the caravan, students
will Mite a SeCond essay. A panel
of judges will select three scholarship recipients from those essays.
Wlnners·Will received their aMnls
at the OMA '1 Annual Leadership
Conference in December at the
·stouffer Tower Plaza Hotel in
Cleveland.
·
.

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlej)ollt, Ohio

,1~." the . ~ad-longest running

Area high school llllldents cur·
rendy have the ()JliOtuDlty to win a
share of $30,000 in scliolarship
money through a statewide essay
contesL
The second annual ManufaciUF·
ing Study Progran) 8!ld Essay Contest, sponsored by the Ohio Manu·
facturers' Association, offm Ohio
high school juniors a Wlique learn·
ing opportunity and a chance to
win a shar'e of $30,000 In scholarsh~ f~~ to any Ohio 'tollc:ge or
umvemty. ·
~ statey.:id~ pro~. sponsored m assoctauon With the Ohio
Department of Edbcation and Ohio
Board of Regcnls. gives sttidents. a
f1111t-hand look at modem technology Ia the rnanufaclllring wortplace.
A series of leisons develoPed by
Ohio educators for the rnanwacturing prOgram culminate in an essay
contest.: Every high school in the
state received a manufacturing cur.riculum which is designed for II ih
· grade students. After completinl(

.

FUNtwnrAl

or •

aa:epted ~ use our Iuy Payment Plan ·

.'

Call 585-5522 or 1-800-545--d14

.DIJIINDINT .

J.ijiiiiiiiiiiiii.....----.-~-~-~

'LOGAN MONUMENT (:OMPANY·

REVIVAL .

. Bradbury Church of Christ
Fri., April s~AI Hartson, Speaker
.·Sat., April 6-Derek Stump_, S~ker
Sun., April 7-Don S..vers, Sr., Speaker
7:00P.M. Each IYiftlng
Public I~ Invited

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'&gt; '

'

1 -'

'

}

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•

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I

•

�•
,-

Friday, April 5, 1991

Sentinel

The

Ohio

'

3 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
Gettle Of Milton

COU!"ti.;.

3
6

10
Monthly

~UII bt pfl•

• 7 point IiTie typ• only utect .
'S~ntintl is not retponstble for ttrOfs atle~ fiut ·d., CChtdl
for tnart l1nt d.., ad runs '"ptpefl Calllulfo'tl 2 :00pm

Qelllt County

·

Htppy Adt

h1 Memori~tm

Y•d Sll•

ANICDdt614

·~·- O•llip~lis

3·7-Chllhira
311;..VInton

. d .. sif•ed •dv~'tiurn..,.t pltc::ed in The DillY SentintJit• ·

241-Rio Gflnde
2H- Guye11 Oist.

cept -~ clr.sifiiKI diaplev. Buttn•s Card end leglf nolicia)
will lito ftJ'PI'O•' in the Pt . Pl•••nt ,.._...., and thi G•lli· '
~ polis D1ily h lb0f1e.. ruching over 111.000 hom ...

.• a43 - .A,.bi•Dist

-37t- WIInat

. ..

.42

013, 00

.60

Meitt County
Artl Code 814

M1sonCo . WV

192 ·· MiddltiP(Irt
Pomeroy
115 -Ch .. Mt ·
143- Port ..nd

178-PI. Pl••••nt

Art• Code 304

247-Letort FiUt

••• ·- Recine

?42 ~- Autlertd

'

458,-loon

171 - Apple. Grove

- 2 '· 00 , ,M , TUIIOAY
- 2 •00 P.M . WEDNESDAY •
·- 2 :00P.M THURSDAY

OROII'!IANCE NO. IIB3
Fl•lng ond Ngulotlng tho
prlco thot may 1M ""•rv•d by
Ohla Power Company for
-trlclty to tho Vllloge of
Pomeroy, Ohio.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE
OF POMEROY, OHIO:
for ond In oonoldorollon of
tht mutuel - n - • ond
ogreomonto h - - con·
- · tho partfoo ho&lt;oto
ogreo with ooch other oo

.•.

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

THE FIRST AND THIRD
FRIDAYS OF THE MONTH
APR. 5 &amp; APR. 19

fo-o:

Entertarn ment By

"The.Ritz"

-..n..

---

-"'·
2.;rhoCuot_og_rrto

From 6:30 pm 'til ?
In The Bar Dini.~g Room
Come Jom The ·
·· Comradery At...

occopt tho oervlao heroin
-!fled during tht tarm of
thlo ogreomont ond to poy
theralor 11 tho eppllcoblo

;::: .~"b::;~.,:S: =:":,o~

OSCAR~S

•

-oF COURSE!

59 Court Sb

theroto oo -lflool In Totlff
S. L. which hoo boon op·
provod by tht Public Utllltloo
Commloolan of Ohla.
3. Uj&gt;on ""'olpt of •

Gallipolis

written notla• from • duly

).

•

-

I

authorlzod ropreoonto1111o of
tht Cuotomor, tho Company
• - • lo lnotoll oddltlonol
lompo. Such lor(lpa oholl 1.
provldod by tho Company
endpoidforb'/tlloCuotomor

in accordlnce wtth r•tu
_ . _ In Torlft S.L. In

BIG KIDS &amp;BABIES
PROGRAM

ofloct ot tho time tho oddl- ·

TUESDAY, APRIL 9-6:30 P.M.
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
DOCTORS CONFERENCE ROOM

•

..

tlonol llft!PI ore oddod.
Tho 1*\loo ,.cognize thtt
o porlod of limo will noceooorlty elopoo - · oil tho
lompo Clln 1M obtolnod'
ond lnotollod. The Compeny
wiN lnotlll lllo odclltlonol
lompo u ropldly oo labor
COI'dltlons ond motor.. l do.o
llvorlto wtl permit.
4. All moterlol furnlohod
by tho compeny ohttiNmoln
tht property of tho Company
ond moy bl ,.,._od ot the
tormhtotlon of thlo ogroomont If iht Compony ao

.... .._ ....

Pl.949-2101
or Its. 949·2160

TIONES • PlAQUES
IADGES
IOHitl IIAfOID
Scout c., IlL CliiJk

"Free Eatlma101"

• NO SUNDAY CAllS '
3-11-tfn

~~

ttmptntl,

.....,

about 70 L..
11 mos. old. Wtaring
black nylon collar with,
pi
nd ad
nome aft a
•
dress.
(

ontact Gregory

laotright 915-4211
or

,._LL • •--tr•'gh•'
.,...11 ..,..
915-392.1

YOUNG'S
-Ounerworll.
- ConCtttt work

(FREE ESTIMATEBI

V.

C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

614 992·5984

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

•

'•

.,

0

"'· ~ ~

cau-c.~~~.o~~

.··

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
DOTTIE S. TURNER, BROKER
MIDDLEPORT- Ptarl ,SttHt :-A nice 2 slory home with 3
bedrooms, 117 baths. vrnyl sidrng, new windows, full basement House is on ~ GOOD Street
$39,900

THIS l"d"
. .
BULLETIN BOARD
.I -SPACE AVAILABLE
AT $5.00 PER DAY
'

~

.MIDDLEPORT- Beech StrHt - A 117 story frame home
w1lh 2 bedrooms. Newly remodeled. Comes with new washer
, dryer. range, and refrigertor. Also, a 9 piece living room
s.urte. 3 beds, and 2 nrghl slands.
JUST '19.500
.
R~TLA~.D- Beech Grove Rd. - Approx. 2 acres and a cule
I ~ story home wilh 3 bedrooms, deck, garden area. part basement and a dtning room. Owner wants an .oHer.

r

0

$26.000

,.

.

. ..

54 MlscellaiiiOUa

'

Merchalldlea

RUTlAND - State ·Rt. 124 - Building lol. Big 2 acre lol
lhet IS level and has a lol of lrontage. Public water and ·elec·
tnc avarlable.
· •
JUST '7.1100
RUTLAND- SmHh Run Rd. - Beatltiful start, appro!. 3·
a dug well, bam, stock tank, and
rs fenced .
•
$13 ,soo

·POMEROY - Children will love ~ - Because !here's abed·
room for ali tn Ihis 4 bedroom home, aJso has a big nice pool
for clnklren to swim. Huge rooms, full basement. rock flower
garden. and a view of the river, and a fireplace.
·

$.t6.000

I SIZE'- NEW

WHITE POTATOES .........!~...·29&lt;
RUSSET P9TATOES ~.. JMts. S1.79
KENNIIE(

.

$EED
•• !~.~~.~!.. S6.88
. POTATOES
'
-HARDY ~ZALEAS ........'A9t S4.44
FROST PROOF
CABBAGE, BROCCOLI,·
.. CAULIFLOWER
PLANTS

MEIGS.FA. . MARKET
300 WISI a1• ST.
POIIIIOY, •o

CHESTER - Btum Subdivision. - Eletance &amp; luxuryNrce brg shade trees w1th a colonral style home srtting on 2'h
acres. Fancy chandelters, 2 lireplaces, 4 bedrooms, lormal
dining room. big foyer, 2 car garage, b.asement, swimming
pool and much. much more. Call lor more details.

LONG BOnOM- flntasllc RIYII' View- This one story 3
bedroQm home is almost in the middle of two bends of the

beautilul Ohio R!ver. Has new carpetin&amp; throu&amp;houl: lmnied·
rale PMSeSSH!n and comes with all furnrture.
MUST S~E ' 28 •000
DAIWIN- F~M- 166acresolland with a1nolder 2 story .
home. Has six riioms, 3 bedToof!IS, 2 barns. and free gas to
hell your home. Approx. 20 acres tillable.
$15,000
HAPI'I' HOLlOW lOAD - Alittle oVer 16 acres w~h anewer
2 story hor:ne. Hu&amp;e living room, 4 bedrooms upsta11s,' and a
27x36 unl1nishecl on lhe inside room. Has a cute little cov·
ered picnic shelter, and 2 storaae building.
$21,900

::::1

MEMO. JEFFERS ............................................. ~: 'Z'Mi

STEWAIT ............................... ~j~~J
LIALTEIIS ............~.. .

388.eoa5. fio Sundly cane.

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0

. LINDA'S
PAINTING
1111111101 • DliiiOI
FREE ESTIMATES

"At

USED RAilROAD TIES

Pldt Up.

Complltt Grooming
For All frootls

lEN'S APPLIANCE
SIIVICI
9.U·U3S or

992-7013
or 992-5553

EMILEE MERINAR

915·3561

Owntr &amp; o,.ator

,_.,,

lena , ....... Offlc8

6.14-992-6820 .

117 L,_.,.
POP lOY,

-J -800-141-0070
DAIWIN. OHIO

BISSELL &amp; lUilE
CONSTIUC'nON

•Remodeling ·and
Homo Repelrt

...........

•Roofing
•Siding
.•Painting
NO JOB TOO SII ALL
FREE ESTIMATES

•I MINI•'"'

UPHCILSTDY
21 J.fte. Sec•d
. Pkltllepert ' .
Hand Tufting
· Cuttom. Drepea

•Ga......
•C-pleto

...........

Stop &amp; Compare
frM lstiMatll

CEDAR

CONSTRUCftON

36 YHrtEtrperl-

915·4473
. 667·6179

992·6641 er
691·6164

614·992-2321
We Soy Whot We Co.
We Oo Whot We loy.

t 2·Jl ·10-tfn

10-19-11tto.

ROOFING
NEW- REPAIR

'

Guttera
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning

Painting

'

FREE ESTIMATES ·

949-2161--

MOilLE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS •
All FUINACE PAm

0• Seffn· Sdleelltl. eH Rt. 141

4-5-11-1110. pd.

Spoore,~04-117!1-142i.

Announcements
3 Ann~ncement,
Aroo Slngtot==\i!Ook Ouolhy
Pooplo
FOr r · Slgnlftcont
Rtlollonohlpo.
Confldontlol. '
Write: HN!rt...rch, P.O. Box ·
1043, Qoltlpctlo, OH ~131.
:

BoooboN Buo Trill Sunday, April
'14, Brtv• at C(noiMitl, 130.
uch1_1tavea Point Pt••Mnt t:OO

AM, MaviH an bu1, no amoklng
ar ochollc boV«&lt;r.•· Ruoty

Cooto, 30&lt;1-7!15-2431 oyo.
I TlmQthy LOwle ho"" mould out
of IIIII lnd Will no longer 1M
reoponolblo onr dobta other thin ony own.
'
Roduco JOUr Wolahl • Ttko
"Now ....,. Diol Pion" ond 1-

. PROM TANNING

SPECIAl
1st 50 lfith Schall
Shulents

1D u•.-s
•
,.........,. · -

$1 0

Call 949·2126
Por Appt. .

fOIEYfl IIONZI
IASIIAII II., UC.
3+'91· 110•

. KElLER'S CUSTOM BENDING .
Wt Han Changed Our location Ta ·
1111 Milts East Dll Rt. 241 tr.tougli
Chtsttr, Oh.

8PECIALIZINO IN....
eCultorn

IMt Exheuet Sy.t1m1

·

eComplet• Une of Exhlult Suppliet
•Hendl• 1nd lnlt811 Monroe Shocka
Come aad See Ua For A Ptee I•pectlon
ud&amp;i&amp;lma&amp;e

PH. 614·915·3949 - . n aua

47269 St. It, 2.tl

. .

lont lotfOft!,Jih.

.___...:;;:;..;::;&amp;,::;,a

Glvuway

2 molt lull a-n Oortnon
Jlhophordl, ,1 vihlto, 1 block I
ollvor. Good homo. 3Q4.tt1. ',
311114.

.

'

2 omoll black. &amp; grey, I 'whMo
Tiger Kin-. e ...... old. 1143'111.a72.
•
Booutlfut, block, fluflv, odorobWo, )
ohorttoaaod puppy, • w11o. old, ·
male, :J0.1.175.aU •tter I p.m.
lcrep far burning 1 tin,
114-1112-1208.

6

_ _...;.:-i:-:=::::-.i.:.-INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CQ.
recommend• tha1 you do bu~·
n - with poop1o you k.- ond
NOT to·- monoy,throl!llh tht
moM until .rou hovo lnvooilgllod
tho oflotlng.
Arthur'• · Choln Link Fonco.
Rooldontlol, Comniorolol, In·

duatrfll, FrM Elllm.t..l com~
piMe lntt•lliiiiOn. Phone: · 014384-8277.

Modem Boouty Shop for Rio. 5
Mafn StrMC, Point
PI-nt. 304-175-4873.

81ttlontl,

23

-r

FOUCoonNO JOU"'I molo lhM Tl...
HOund,
l,oon, II unclo-1 doyo will glvoto gMd
homo, 304-tN-1•FOUNO. Olclor black chlhuohuo
~ lyriO- ..... 114-

•
.·
•
;

\

Loot: Boogto Pot or 14 JOOr old. ;
Sllott Loft8d Block 8,_, 1 ' .
Whlto. Mow._ to: Lucy. lidWill VlritonA-. 1J14.3N-8114.
IAII: Brown Mare
Coli • .
Mlko Kingery, 114-4 41
114-

":;&amp;

441-4111.

'

.

Forry. Win occor&gt;t troll~y relrlgoretor 1\rmlohod, privolo
Wit., IVIIIIble. Phone ,
71- 1nt111noe, parking and porch.
2722.
EKcollont nolghllorhcod, 304O.J. Whit• Rood, 1 Woodod 8 - orl7f5..ttll2.
BulkiiQa Lol._2 ocrao. Roody to
build &lt;!li. $8,wo1.'e14-241-11185.
Roulo 2 Aohton, 1 ocro
3
mltoo oouth Golllpotle
o,

15ft. Aero Croft

John.on, New 8elt1, 2 Ttnke.

Condition. S1,150. 114-2581711.
••
II fl. ltal Boytlnor Ctoirlcl, II •
hp, U.S. Morino Forco Outbolrd •
storooiot!:~ II= Wolk Thru •

t:t

public: Water, no rHtriotlona,
aome whh riv.r front•g•, 304571-2338.

Trenchlna tlorvloo. Wetor, geo,
olocl~c llnoo. Frat lotlm-.
304-77HIIt.

Real Estate

Comot.ry Soltor Pooplo Wontod.
~~~co Prolorrod. Coli e14- ·31 Homes for Sale
.
. far lntorvlow appclnt"WARMTH &amp; HAPPINE88"
m.nt.
. .
Fooling -gllc? Step In
EARN $2001$500 PER WEEK tlmo In thle ltlill!l,~~
READING BOOKS' AT HOME. 2 ~ Englllh
. futurlng
CA~L 1-815-4'13-lll40 EXT. Blll5.
unlquo opon pion, lormol
DR., cozy ftroploco, prlvlll InllfTELLIOEIICE
JOBS. . All ground pool, 2 cor gorogo,
bronc•. US Cllllomo, DEA, . .nlcured com. lot. Como
Ole. N- Hl~ng. Coli C1l fr-lho huollo- -lo
1152-eOOO EKI. K-10111. .
to tho quilt of 1 omoll
dopondoblo poreon with town. can tor etwowlng. eo'a.
dtp&amp;ltdable . traneii!Ofi8tlon. Lana ThuratOn 1o411 Ill '1282 or
Muot hovo IJPing oklllo ond ~- RooHy. CO. 1-e~
eome com~r experience or
trolnlng. Sond R-mo: 8011 Clo
OH, c/o Ootllpcllo Dolly Trt1Mt!!!J1 2br loQ home 11 mil•• below
821 Third Avonuo, Qolllpclle. DH Golllpcllo on At. 7. 4nd Con·
trect. . U.OOO Down, I27S/mo.
454131.
'
Coneld•r Tr~ll•r Down Payment.
Noodld lmmodlltoly coatio, 1-ll-8055.
w.ureo.-ohorJ.
dloho
wuherw. Hfld latttr of lnternt 3 bedroom home, 1112 bsths,
ond 3 roloNncooto P.O. 8ox737 ch•ln link f111ce, H1adereon,
uc cond, 140,000. 304-875-7:109
Roclno, OH 45771.

Wlnd1

Unlurnlohod Zbt, ldool far t oon or couple. No Pfi!L 322
Thlnll\-UO. ~- 114- - blforo lp.m.
3br llouooln CountJ Bohoola To V1t1oJ Ylow Aport..-, lllo
Rent, LMee or Land Conlrect. Qrenilo 011· 1 or 2 bodroom oPI.
114 411 till, , ..... lp......
wll to woii corpot, fully oqulp.
kite
•Jectrlo heal, ~.
8mHA· " fundod Clll Anglo
Rentals
lloogre s, 814-245..1'111, EHO,

or 175·7554.

RHI Estate
wanted

41 HOU881 for Rent

Rooms
Aportmont ovelloblo far 2 « 3
oonotructlan Worlttro 304-882-

nMf

2111.

Roclno1 ,!orgo yord, no polo, 114-

rent·- or month.
a;: ~ 01 tl20/mo. Qollo Holol.
.....
"
I 7
-·
'

1192-A...

2br

Rooms frir

houH

dlohwuhor,

walherldrvar hook-up, 1300fmo.

DopooH R'oqulred. f14-441-4222

Slooplng Jitlh -'tlng.
· Aloo trwlor - · Atl-k·upo.
C.ll •fter 2:00 p.m., 304-71'33 bodroom, unfumlohod, cloon, 5811,MoocnWV.
no l~o, dopcolt roqulred,
MtweenO&amp;I. '

1

,...

46 Space for Re.n t

·

3br R•nch, city •chooll, P11nt

Subdlvlolan,. 1371/mo. 81&lt;1-37Vo
2 8 4 2 - 5p.m.-lp.m.
Country houM,

a f'ODift•

Countrr Mobile Homo Pork,
Route 33, North ol P-roy.
Lato1 .!:flllolo, pol'lo, ooltor. Colt

•nd

814-trll2·'l1171.

both, 2 mlloo from t-n on Rt. 2
N. 304-175-2229.
Portly fuml- 2 bodroorn In

47 Wentad to Rant

-·

Duncon PhYfe oolo I clnlng
....,. Ill, lxc. cond., l mllc.
ontlquoo. 114-441-2201..
For Solo Picnic tobloo liO.GO &amp;
•..uU.Jor dtrl:aJie.ft.'' m ' " ' '
IMw

meN•

For s...: Alr=loner uud
lotio thin 2.
1,
441"1218' 304..
2111

,w. """

,.,.,.no., ·
••o

.r,:re.

.

'

=~:.JFa·

Olclor holl1l In Appto bl14
Buslnes,s
-• II.- Coli Oflloo.
....
llrm,
304_.,.;21114 or 114Training
-..18110 oftw I pm
Rllraln
_.ltloutllooatom Roducod To Soli: 2 Btoty 3br
Bull.- Colloge, ~1"'.3 Valloy Comer Lcr4 In Choohlre, Ohio.
PIIZI. Colt Todoy, I"
-431711 EKcollonl oondlllon. f04.132·
Roglolorlllan,_IZliiB.
osg,1104-1132·71'111.

OCIIM. 1321.

•

=

"'

'J.r;.t';.:,'·t't :Z7.

SN..UU~ by BI'Ua! Beattie

1Wo 3 bloycloo. VIcinity
Aree 0( Odd Loll, RaiTrocltt. ConiHI: Qolllpollo
Pollco Ooportmont at 114-

7

Yard Sale

wllor Ilnoo, , plumbing, up dolo
, old oor'vloo, eorpontor work.
roMOdotlng. , _ ootllllllo, 304ltl4441, •· Alto, WV.
Dunllvy Wilding Shop, Pliny.
&amp;MOll lobo •-od. Con

111 ..11M

m~nut.ciura 1 all lt.m1. 304-

13'1-2733.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
i Fomlty: 413 Hubblrd A-uo ·,

hom&lt;i
'"'•
otllor ..........
- "-· ..
I, MtUfdar,
lunct.r.
Konou.go. lobyclcthto,

ALL Yonl .... ll'* h Polclln
" " - . IIUDUNI: Z:GO p.m.
tht . , ....... the ...... ""'·

=;..:':;' .dJ:O. ~;~ '

E I R TREE RVICl. l~,
Ttlmmlng, Ti Removal,
Trlm_mlng. Froo Eetlllll-1 I
311'7117.
'
trector
tlllod,

Go-

ftlobllo

-

- · 1110 mlloo out 1 . - Run
Rd, Haw Haven. 11M llaoM14.
-

1 IR oultoblo for

~

~·

=--OC"... =

plan-

•

-

,.,_, ........~ .....
,::: ..~~~r.:"Wr...:~
Avollolllo. Crow I Bono, Jocfi.

:;,::,...-u.

$2,100, 11~-4312.

1$64 Tnono Am ~ mlltl, T·
topo, PS, PI, PW, AIM'II ·en.
MHo, U,tGO. f14.311-12111,
ttal 112 E-" S.W.. P.S. tuto,
!!!L 11,000 mlltor fi'IUO. • - •

=
.......

-

'

__...

~

dOUbll 8N,

',,,,
~

'
•
'

:.'·•
•

hie

•

~11-out

i:

Home
Improvements

1185 Tr1n1 Am, gr.,, ,.._,

· 41,0oo mllee. OM ow,_., •IWIIYI
gaNged, never In 1now. lfe.
IASEMENT
445.0177.
WATERPROOFING
1118 Clla.l • SUprarn•, 1 owner, UilcondHionol .ttlollmo guoron·
88;000 miiH, $4,300. 81.a-24J..
5411

=:-'==::-7:=::.-=.::11H Ch.-o....: opood, blue,
very dlpondo
c~St,IIO.

tN, Lccol roloronc• fumlohod.
FrM •lm.. n. C.ll collect 1· "'11!4-1137-04111, doy or night

,...

~

a.utMnt Waterproo- ._
~

t-

1 11

H-n1Piantoor304-e71-tHt. lloptlo Tonk Pu~ng 1110"Qollll •
RON EVANS ENTERPHISE8,
tN7 Dodgo 100, yory ~ Co.
Jockoon, OH totl00o637ollll28.

114-211 laiWI·

ltdlng I Roalocamonl, Win·
I ~ F111 Elllmalol
lt4 t18 Ill&amp;.

1IIH Ctdillec Do-. 2-dr,
n,ooo onlloo, • lont oondf. Davtl S.W•VIC Servlee,
lion, :Iii Plua ~ mloogo, on,... Crwk Ad. P•rt•, •upllltoo. plokup, ond dollvory, 114M,OOO flriro, tl4-foiWIOI.
448-42114.
eonw,., M, 11tuo, -.ooo
- · ~:f.-:!!1 82 . Plumbing &amp;
oruloo, ~"'" •·
Heating
Ci'~~~mo""'tru., ,
;r;;~-.."!
_
C:Ortor'o Plumbing
1104.
ondHootlna '
ltM 1_,. OT, no. , ol
,_hondPrno
- .t• 27,0110 ,....._ - •.·
Oolllpotle: Ohio
t02t.
114-441-3111
1HO ,.,.. l'looloi\12,000 MillO, 5 :.;,;..;.;.;;.;;.;.;c.;.._____ :
opood, AIIIPM -.~ mlloo 84
Electrical &amp;
10 tho golton. f14.114t-pu
Refrigeration .

t•

'•

'""-·
I-:GO PM.

LlvMtock

"Why Ia lhat aold only at newtatlllda? If
you were 1 mallntlln, wtJUid you deiiVII' It?"

__

,.

11

Serv tces

..m i -

t2 • ~ollor

_.

•
;'
; .

For Bolo: 11H Norrlo 24ft. Sill· ·
oontolnod Compor, o l - 5, •

J011"fauo_,_

... .

'

:IOW~~&amp;-3~13.

.
.

~)

~~

1173 Dodge 23 ft . Mini Molar .1.
Homo, OKcollont condNion,
11000. Colt Ronnlo Thornton,

.,....... rounc1 t.r biller 1200 •
11,1110. lot of AC 11" flft

a••

•

•

•

..., OH e14 281 1411.

.,.., . . - . On Olo]&gt;lly 2 .....,_ furnlehtd o p t , Unlooltod a Prtco- ~ •· Mldiii;art, Ohio. dlpcMit
rollinltcl. ~ Mldlltll ~rt. 1n Haw ,., IMt 111 nw. 101e .... •. . . Dll Nllulred, 304Your
~
. . . . . .,
Choohlro- f4112 1103 ·~ ..........
....., Then .......
tw4PII.
I 111 dtoom unturnllfMIII _.,
- h 3rd Avo, llkldlepart, Ohio.
Goorgoo Port- lowmlll,.don,
Ar •
•M ~ll ,...
Point, Olllo•.
to tht """ lUll II hlul yoo1r qull'8d. 304 • 1111.
coii30W7!1-1la7.
2112.

,.

.~
•
•

prlco, 304-t714081.
.
fl. lr•vtt trailer, fully equl.,... :
1184 Ford TompcJ outo, good 11
peel, roof, air, &amp; •wnlng. IM-251conclhlon, $2,500.1t'M-t48-1211.
1141.
.
1184 Hondo Accord LX, high 1110 Prowl~r e~~mper traUer. 20 ~
mllel, $2500, 11~.
. Ft. long. 11&lt;1-11411-2857.
'
1184 Hond• Civic Wlgc&gt;n, 1173 Atrotroom TIIYII Troller, · )'
1utomatlc AMAI etereo cu- IIOellent ~dltlon, ..If-con• '~~
ooHo, ox..Uont goo mlloogo, tol!*f, AC,l3,7UO. 814-441-3411. I

=~«~chpfc'..::· ~~~~~:. ::":~~~.:-=:no::

Wheel dflkl, Cklll.. corn

~- Ford Now Holl::') and

Olafawwlw,

'

I .

SttGO.I14-441·1713oftor8p.m,
Hoy Blnoo 7 &amp; D ft. ta ft. Hor-

-

or

tiii!IO! .....

.... No ...... l144111• ••
1br

."
;

114-44H7!11,1f4.4411•
. JET
j
IIH=~"' I.Litlron 31.000 AeNtlon Motor., riPiftd. New •
1c1uot ml
~ . ,".!'!: oond. I - I n - - In llcck, RON •
E¥11!1.!!, JACKSON, OH.
.latin Doore 4t0 Bock Hoe, 514-·
11.000 or boilt ottor. 114-441- IIH Morcury T-. outomotlc, 531'10i11.
1044
Pll olr •• 000· tHe Cht- Ron"• TV a.rvtce, •peolallzlng
-::~·=~::::::::--;;-::=-;;;:;;:
• • "• '·-''
·'
Ford Com &lt;Ptontor, 2 ""'• Pick· Covolloril •!!,. A...,.• co-lo, In Z.nllh a110 ......,lelnr. moll
OCher brlndl. Houu cal , el~e~
up typo, gooc1 condllan, IIIlO; $2,200. 1&lt;1--·12711.
opJ&gt;ilonco ropolro. wv
Now- 1c1oo Com Plclttr, t row tiM. Pontlec or Florro, a-d -304-ll'WI~
Ohio 114-445-2454, •
model 310, · good condllan, ..-, 814-441-:1240 1111 . far

ao•potlo, 1114...M7771
-la
-~ - rorm
trectON
a nlmplemonto.
Buy,
8111, . - , I:GO-I:OO ...W.,1,
lot. 1111-.
,_,. and Uood Form Eaulptitonl:
Ovor II Uood TroOtoro to

' loundry ......,. ·- - · All
In ~~~- fill«!, Dopooh llocoutred.
114-447733,

AI-•

1111 141171noobllo llltldlorl 011. Coli Toni
1114-lllli.IIMI tRw I:GO p.m.

Cob, U,tiiO; 'IOIInt'l with 4 Bot·
tom PI-, 13JIII: Cub LOwbOY
WHh PI- a Blldo St,'ll!;
Su~!.C wtth Plow &amp; Cuhlv•t~r,
St.:zso. 11&lt;1o28H522.
1g41 2N Ford tr~~ctor, nMd1
..ark. ... ae I• $1,300. 304-67J..
-~
_,
4000 Ford Trector, $2,795; IGO
Ford f2,11!i,;. &amp;ft. Buoh Noa
ms· 115 .,. 84,350; 126 MF
I:IT~ Will ':'nonce. ll4-

• -

··poelt,-::::-.,""'==-JJI -Ublrty

wllllldlllon total 4 bldrDCNMI
1112 to 2 oo- bom ond olllli

.-....?-•.

Campers&amp;
MotorHomaa

IIH whMI, 14,000 mi..., gooa

61 Fann Equipment
t211 lnt, D1ooo1 T - with

-·

Apanmant
. torRent

79

• - · · pilyer._
""· 84,000.
lt&lt;lo-8
oftor.,.m.

Jlm'o Form EqulpmoniJ.SR. 35,

44

1117 Mobile H- 12ltl5, Good
Condllon. 114 445 ~411.
11110

&amp; Ltvestock

NOd¥ nwohlnoryl - · · Form
l!lofilnory, Rt. 124 1
•-lttcn OH 1 ~

18 - Wanted t&lt;l Do

32 Mobile Homaa
DHoh Wltoh ...,leo, goo ond
for Sale

Cover : '

1811 Pontile Orond PriK, - V· owning, air oondH!on¥. E•cotI onglno, outomotlct..!,lr, otoreo lont COndiHon. Coii304-4N-tlta.

~-~==

For Ront May 101: tbr trllttr, unfurnlehtd, • - rohlfl! olor, olr
oond., i llllloo' .....,. Oolllpcllt
on Rt. 7, I20CII-, lt90 ...........

1!182 red Trone Am, n-,
blook Interior AM.fll eo~toJ

....a.

Farm Supplte&gt;

Plo-.

..,......

ar

114~31'1·

Llalll• tJpe aoiiiM pweb~, 6
wke, 4 m•lll $100, c•ll Junl• If·
cor 4 p.m. 814-1143-5315.

:.11.

l!l:'.

••n

COmp.~nlon•.

dartul

7700.

Sl-.

•n

lahlin Fumlt..a.

For hie: AKC Roglilt. .d Colm
Ttrrler Pupo, SIOCf • St50. Won•

!)!
. Musical
For 8111: Full Fleured, Pluo Slzo
lnst'ruments
Wedding Down, (Appro• Slzo:
•
24-:lill O...lptlon, Ylclo~an
ond Chopol Longth Ooubll k1Ybolrd Hammond orTroln, Y Nopk Uno, With ~ &amp; gon wHh · p«o-lan ond
a.-noo, Aolclng Prloo; sm. toot'peclale, prloe "'I·· 114-2472711.
.
B14-446o7140.

Accepting AppHcallono for
Houoo On AI. 5881.112 milo Pometoy, 114-H2·101Q.ava..bl Ho.uoo or 'INIIor In CGunl!r
Soltor Pooplo. Minimum Expoc• 3br
w!Otrdon Spool.- ODIIan To For Solo: Rotrlaorotor, In good
tod Annuol Solory $35,000. From Town. 133,000. wrll Toko
l.Nd• and SIIH Aida Fur· lloblle Homo Or Cor or Tredo-ln.
Of Loncl Controot. l14-211oondlton. tt4.S1131.
'
1.....-373.
nlshod.
t BOO 444 7712.
42
Mobile
Homea
Porkoroburg Window COmpany, 704 Moln Stroot, 4 Wont to rent z bodroom hoU•
Aok For: Mr. Upton.
· for Rant
or oportmont In - · · 2 bot..,
condition.
ANum.. t»lna eccepted for =-~ In $20~. ono 304-17!1- 12ltl0, 2br on Clerk a..po1 ht"" ot"" I twlrlgos-.
....'714712.
port~lmo
boolrkoopor. Mull
RoM, 114 448 Jlf7 1fter ~p.m.
F~urdoy, Joono 11.00,
have •rona eccountlna back· Buy Builder: Now 3br, 2 full
ground. 25 hro. per w~. Sond betM, nice kltctllr1, dJnlng .,.., 2 bodrvo111 fumlehtd troller,
Joon """kll• 120.00. "-"·
Mercllcndlsc·
Glrollmi, Dovlo, 11011 ~ldfOril
NIUtMe ID P. 0. lox 1012, Gti- Jorge utiiHy roorir oKIN mloc
Crob Croolc, 11110. por month,
1
Rd.Athtno,OH.
pluo utiiiUoo, dopoolt requalred,
Jipclle, OH 4!1131.
, _ l•rv• ...........
no poto, 304-67!1-t2GO.
nice
lot,
MlghbOrtlc
c
d,
en
Goldin Rom Looor X2, Gall
Soltor Help Wooled: In Homo,
opot, Contonory A-.
,1100. 2 bodr~m mobile hollll; unlui- Sl
elubl woOdl t-3-4 • - 3 thiu
Household
Soltor Exporionco Noc-ry. Conoldor
Trodio~n on llobllt
P.W. Llgllt wolgllta 114-1112-1523.
nlahed,
amlll
Coli 8'14-44a-3115 fGr lntorvlow.
Homo. 114 448 .a31oftor 4p.m.
• Goods
children eccept•cl
INlier
.-.d+bed oouch, reolln. eMir
Somoono toloko down - plno
opooo. Rt. 1 Locuot Rood on
,,.. oncl houl thorn ,away, 114- For 111• by ownw: I roorn1, 3 right, Point P'-nl, 304-17!1- 2 pi1C8 IIVInt room IUitl, brown IO match, $210, 11440:2~7223.
batha, 3 c:ar g•rage, 1110 of
&amp; tan, exe.rlent condition, 114-245-8241 oft•S:oo.
.
ocro. Ovorlooldng Ohio Al ..r. 1071.
441·2370.
Kenmore .,..,_ cilohwoohor,
Stoy holl1l ond moltt $500IWII. 614 441 0019..
Zbt Mobllo Homo, Ntco,_'-tod
A VIr, ..... 2
Ex•
400
ccmponleo
nood
on
Rt.
1101.
No
poto.
wi!Oimo.
L'jl~
~:"T:,T;~Itor
~~
=
~1on.
l
GO.
304OOYERNMENT HOMES trom Sl
31
- · C o l t tor l~l (U ropolr). Oollnquonl tax 114-446oa.G.
2103
ncorded meauga. 31
'
Plllt E4"'-nt f'or
Plzu
p-rtr. A - - -· Your Zbt portly fumlohod, C:Ontonory.
4330,01.31.
oroo 11 -1152-80011. E.ttt. QH. 1200/mo. StOO Dopooll, Prolor •"" ~~ ~h On~~' Cct':: Uoln _,,
·
rafrklgorttod
IIIJ!Iot Wontod: Full or Port-limo. 1805 for curfent repo net.
Adu!!!J_ _Prlvllo Lol, Cltln. 114oo. - · 1 -"J,l 1
~ unto, o1oug11
,..,..,., wogo, pi~ oomm. or 1M In Golllpcllo, Groot Loclllonl 441·111&gt;'1.
·
~~
llol-- - r . t-e• 1-, rofrl.-.
your own DoN &amp; 111M • ltl• Mov•-ln condition. Fireplace,
•--m1 fro
n
'
lll44.
-...!!'icrowovo. 114-'IQ.20at
tlon. Apply II Flntll Styling gorogo,
BR mobile ......... 10 n. m
oMor 4,.,..
prhroto clrlvo, I 112 ' 3Qolllpolfo.
Count'loottlng. $210 Countr Appllonoo" Inc. Oood
Solon, or coli 114-445-11122 ook ·bolho.l14·256o1151.
por mqnth. Dop. 2 rotoronc• ipplll-, T.v. lolo. Otltn lllnii!Kote 71111X laol oontrol
lor Coral.
trolling -or .,. v..r-r bot•
Uablllntl; Drive, 3 l:la*ooau, lull requlrod. 114-44M7SI, I om • 5 :.:·~e.!:.
Truck Drlvlr Noodod. 2 rooro b8Mm•m, Qlrlll'f MDICI. 11:1 pm.
....,._
..,.
Brooding rolt!&gt;IIO. ~
11
'U per..nc. w11n ,..,~ c•n
polio, lmmodlolo poo-on to Double wide on prtvoto lot. 31 ;;::;:::;;:;;;:;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;;:J.;;~:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;~
drfvlng reoonl. muot D.O.T. oottlo
ootllo. Coli 1--.71113 --no; 2 Ml botht, olr I'
Drug Till. Coli· 114-44&amp;--,.44
Mt1
1&amp;I
AppiJ at llol- oltor 5p.m. colt - •

.
2

,..

cover, driYII on tralltr, garag•
kopt, $7,~. 304-tl'!l-5445.
tNa 20 fl. Pontoon Sool 1989
48 HP Johnoon Motor. Colt 304·
17!1-lll34 or 304-171-2547.
Pontoon Boot Trotter, Now 3011.
1750. l1of.3117o0447, 114-317-0415.
Pontoon Boot, 28ft. Lontllh, 50
hit. Now llorcury Molar, 14,500.
II4-317-G447, 114-317.0455.

Furnished

45

2 - ono 1portly
bod,_,
onolor2 ..,...._.,,
turnllhod, 114-1112-31127.

,

Hte of •kit, •• covera •nd pull

BmHA.

2 or 3 bedroom houM

•

Convertible Top, PriCe 14,200.
114-367-0415, tM-317-o-441.
1110 14 ft. long Torry Buo Boll,
10 hP mercurj motor trottr
motor fl4-ft2•21t2 .
1111 8ojo lolondor 1aa, A-J
cond, 1 - 140 hp, 11ft Wllk
lhru wlndotrlold, ttlo )oclrola, 2

0

36

~

T~·Hutl W. 55 ~t

Qood

Professional

ServiCBI

Shl~oy

per

ptrMn, $200. plua el.ctrlc,
and dlpolat, 304&lt;875raterance
10 1aru, 14 miiH from Holzer'•• :zm.
$6,000. tt4o446-em.
cloon 3 roomo ond
LOTS FOR SALE In QoiHpollo Spott-ly
bllth, ground t1oor, ltove &amp;

..:1..

Loat &amp; Found

p.M.· .......

'I

Business
OpportunH.y

C

Vap Dkndo II Frulh l'hormeay.

0311,

FOIEVII IIONZI

~ ~~n St, Point Ploulnj,

· AVON' l'· All 'Aroo1 I

BENNm'S MOilLE HOME
HEADNG &amp; COOLING
Lacafltl

anaa. ~ - llltphotte miiRr, £01. a.ftlt r..ume 10 lox
1&gt;.1 "!!: ~Point PI-nt Rog..

Ftnanctal

21

1~.00

nsonth with iuot 4 lioutw 1 -1&lt;.
llull 1111 by May ' Ill Molg•
County ow- moving 0&lt;11 of
ototo. Will -rtnco 1&gt;u01... far
One bod-m ouhobll for ontr seooo.ao Botor Vending,
.-11 or oouplo,_pt.. d._n 114-192-2514.
and' ,......_, NO polo. 30418711 Ford EKptorar hill ton
17!1-4023.
lruok. Aero ground wtlh wollond
Rio Grande, 2br, no polo, mobllo llomo, 304-ll'WIOI.
$2311/mo. Trull &amp; Gorbogo Pokl. 2 Dyr111111rk Riding Mow.,., tO
114 ';f18 1038.
'
HP, 31 Inch CUI, 1300 NCh. 2
Sftiol ono bOdroom fumlohod RotoUIIr"l, 3 112 HP, $110 IICh.
tpl, upttlll'li, aulttbla f(lr on• 114-44HM8.

Would lko to do bobyofltlng In
my holM all 3 •hltle AvallaDI•.
R••encea
Avall•b.. l
Downlown Qolllpollo ArM. 114-

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

=-.

Howard L .Wrltotel

" ·

''· ~

....,

4

3/8/'8111 mo,

.........ng ....lcofaroervloo
nduotry. "111111 1M In 171 a·

614-992-5114

THE

GROOM
ROOM

HelpWantad

-··-·21-45.

CAll fOI PIICES

4-16-IS·Ifn

IUIIADS
lrl111 It hi Or We

Employment Services

EXT 1122.
AVON • All orooo, Coli Marilyn

fwroui m.ula.

•-nabla Prien"

1·12-90-tfn

NEW • USED PAffTII
FOR ALL MAKES &amp;
MODELS ·

maun•ium. ,.dlltors, ltart·
.,., 1lt•n•1or1 and 111 non·

PH. 949·2101
or les. 949•2160
'. Day or Night
· NO SUNDAY CAlLS

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Custem Fr-• lllllllr

•-ov.

can

$300Allly Proc11tlng phOM
ordoro et homL Pooptil coli rou
. to order. For Info. 1-80()..735-81117

TRI-(OUNTY
RECYCUNG

.locatod Off lho lypou On
.
Tht Comer of. ·
II. 7 &amp; It, 143
Ohlo
P~lng Clth for •tUJninum,
copper. bfesa. ttalnlss st•.t.

Generate Over

441-8tltl4.

Wont to buy 1 aood uood
chlldroit houoo. 114-fll2·308e.
Want to buy electr~ trNd mill,
Wltllom Routh, 304-773-5207.
W.ntocl..f~~uy. standing tlmblr,
Bob w · • • Sono 6t4-992·
5448. ~

11

yal'll on wttkttlds..•. we
lluj_ on wttktndL

CUSTOM IUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGE'S

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAII

. 01 IOU FlEE

RECYCLING

BISSELL
IUILDEIS

.SHRUB &amp; TREE
TIIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULI~G
•FIREWOOD

"

OPEN 7 DAYS
A WEEK
9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.
H you cloan up your

1~·141J1 0

~cres of vacant grpund wilh

·.sWEET CANTALOUPES ltSll S1.29:
NEW CABBAGE ••••••••••• lt-••••• 15&lt;

814·3811o8427, e14·:JII8.

8833.

Comptoto Cotw, $15 &amp; Dorrn,
Cor Bodloo, $25 &amp; Down. 8t&lt;lo

M lddleport,

•Ruoonobl• Retoo
•Ou•lttr Work
•Froe Eotlmetee
•C.rvet H.. Fao1 Dry
Time
•High Glo.. on
Floor Flnilh
Mill lEWIS, Ownor
It. I, lotlonol, 011.

11-14-'90

AUTO PARTS

/~i'·,,

lltnd.

t

639 !lryen Place

CAIPif CIIAifiiS
and nu PLOOI CARE

t2 ft. ootollho dloh ccmploto,
ooklng 1800: molorcyc:lo
loolhor ooddlo ...... m.ao·flm..
304-87H8M.
15 PEPSI MACI:IINE81 1-lod In
Oolto lnd Uotg~' . County.

wanted to Buy

Lorry Uvoly. 114411-113113.

Po-ay, Ohio

· SpoclallalnD ill
·••

9·

· Wanted To Buy: Junk Autoo

IIIDIUPOir, 01U0 45760
Office 61.t-9t2·2116
110MI 614-992-5692

......lng

WHALEY'S

OFFICE 992·2886
. HOME 992·6.892

SERYKE

&amp;Auction

Will Vlrglnlo, 304-77Ml85• .

· lAMES ICEESH
992-2772 or
742-2251

992-5335 .. '915.3561
Auou flint Pest Offlco
POMROY 0110

:ros N. Soconol Stroot

-Rootint
-Inter*' b :twktr

3·8·'91 • 1 mo. pd.

"SeHer than a Stea111 Cleaner &amp; at a
Belter P11ce"
Great Service/Great Prices
GUARANTEED/ free Eslim•es

KEN'S APPLIANCE

~ . ~­
'iui7i'u. h lh .. , , ,

(614) 915·4180

DAVE'S
CARPET CLEANING

1100 OYIIIS-$7t .,..

Public Sale

Bonory Oporotod PA Syotom, on

•VI'IVI Siding
•Rep..cemont
Windows
•Rooflna
•lnau ..tlon

. . . .DAIOIS-$100 up
IAIIII$-.........-SIU
IIIIZIIS-SIIS ., .

Porch Soil: A'1.3rl tum llrot
rood loll from .
' - l Hill
pootWMP0,5-

with or without motort.

VERY HASOHAilE
HAVE REFE.NCES

675-4340, .Ext. 304

-•

Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Rick PN:raon Auc..on Company,
ful lim• •uctlon•r, complete
auction HrYice. UctnHd Ohio,

..

INSULATION

WAJIIIIS-$100 up
DIYIS-$6t .,

4/111110.

Take tht paiti out of
painting.
lot rnt cia it fo~ you.

Real Estate General

J&amp;L

toiUWAIIANn

Sale
6 for 155
NEW G-.s._............. S4
lralctn Clubs Repairlcl

• -Eioctricll ond Plumbing

..,.u

01144.

Pomeroy,

. ''

~~~---.;.-. ·

USED APPUANCIS

GOlf LESSONS •• SJO oa.

W1111d appt"«iote . in·

ytlow .,.., very shy,

T..

COUNTIY CLI,IB

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

· c~~~~~~ER!I(f

.__.._, .....,__ , .. ,,..,_, ......, 11
, . . , Femolt
.
mutt, li1"'!J.Gy cjllor,

.

•VINYL SIDING .
•ALUMINUM BIDING
•BLOWN IN
INBULATION

$I
REWARD
For
Dog

not

..

• - · gorblgo
No polo.Pilei
Ciil

I'

8

Busin.e ss ·Services

. PubliC Notice

W~

Dotollo : lt4-448-440f oftor 7p.m. :
Porting Out 1112 Pontile ......: ~
neville Good engine, 1111nem• •
olon, tlreo, coli !1.._._7.
!

=· . . . . ..
-

•vr••

1. Tht Compony ogrooo to
furnloh end tht Cuotomor
ogreoo to occoptand pay for
otreot llghtlne ..,Ice, dur- 6
Lost &amp; F
d
lng tho term of thlo ogr•· ;.=:::;===D=U=n==:f
mont. conolotlng of tho
numbor, olzo ond type of
.
lompo 11 Notod on Attoch·
mont A. , lncorporllod by
.
a --t
II If fully rewritten
I.VIi

--Musical

•

0

.

.-·

· Jlubllc Notice

BULLETIN
--- .
- BOARD
....

·

937-lulfolo

-Get Ruuffe -fltt

2 ·00 P.M F"tOAV

2 llrHIIh Spltii!M 1m &amp; tm-"
Both for $2.000 firm. Phono lot'"

Zbt fumlehtd oportmont, 20
0..,. llrMI, .Mimo., ......

Hann•Traoe A01d.

.• .

71' Autoe for Sale

con••-=•

7?3- Mtson
112-New H•ven
111-Letert

;- 11 ~00 A .M . SATURDAY ·
~ 2 ;00 P M MONDAY

--~

.05 / doy

$1 .30 / day

117 -Coolwlle

.,...._

.20
.30

$9.00

15

15
15

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

-

'

follotl'illl( 1rlefllwll'r exchanl(eil ...

•

C111d ollh..,ks

.

14.00
16.00

C/a.~.si.fied f1UfH'-~.cot·er lhe

run
11 no chirge
•Prh:• of td for all c..,itiiiMifll It double P.,iee of td eo1t

dl\' lfter publicll ion to m-.e COffKtlon.

Ov'r u; Words

Rate

"•'" •r8 for eon~tc;utflol~ rvnt, brolcenvpd$1!lWhl be eh.tged
for •• i:h ft~t~o~ •• IIIPIUitl't adl.

'" ~:~~-:~~~50 discount for 11d1 JMid in adv81'\CI
•
• Giveew111y tnd Found ads und• 11 wcmtt will bl

•Adt tha1 must be pafd In 1dY1nce .,.

Words
15
15

for Rent

3 Fomlly 'Yord Solo: Al!ril 3rd
thni llh. I tin lp.M., olf .211 on

KIT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wript

Houlehold
. Goocll

Apanment

n..

RATES
1

44

w•

0--

·• ·The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
Days

Public Notice

....

•

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992·2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.

PubliC NotiCe

LAFF-A·DAY

-Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

cleeP.o.
.
m - ond ' !ivy of tu" " ' - · Ohio 41718. llcle Voterono Momorltl Hoopl·
II. Thlo ogrMmont lllollbe . outflclellt fund. .. pey ... rMihod oflor IIIIo limo wll
..,d re1111l.li In fuU 1..- not bo IIIIOIPIIId- lido wllbe ,, 22. 21: 1411. 3t.
Compeny ony omounl8 effect for on lnlllol wm of it.
oponod prlvn.ly otter tt.,
optallod ofHing time end
yeor from ond otter tht (41 1, 3, II, 3tc
1at cloy of,June, 18119, and
•• 1r ted bF tt ro
1M noPubliC Notice
there1fter in •ucnulve
tlflotl within- Willi.
PubliC Notice
Copioo of tho lidding
NOTICE TO IIDDI!RI
t•mo of ont-¥Mr •ch. Ulllt
either porty olio II give atle..t
may 1M o•omVAN I'URCHAII
liD ADVERTIIE'MENT
"*! and obtllned 11 lht of·
MIICII COUNTY •
10 devo' notice In writing 1o
ADDITION
of Ponlch a Noo1 Arclll·
DEPARTMENT OF
the Dthtr of Ito lnlenllon 1o
EXTENDED CARE UNIT
-.107Riai_A,.,uo,
HUMAN IERVICEI
&gt;
dl-tlnuo lht _,leo It
the end ofeny -.m. ·
VETERANI MEMORIAL
Athono. Olt.. q101 upon
looled bldo wll 1M ro- '
HOIPITAL
payment of «&lt;'Polll .of Cllvod by tllo Molgo County
II. If .tho Cuot- lhlll
defeuH In the poyment of
POMEROY. OHIO 411788
f30.00forooohootofdoou...... of Commloolanera In
ony . blllo .. htrelnbeforo Ponlcll ond Nool Archmonu. Ally blddor -mlng tholr ofllce ioamod In tht ,
507 Rlchlend Avenuo
lht doau-ln good oo.,.. Courttoouoo, 1-nd llrMI
provldod. tho Compony moy .
11 !to option, oflor having
Alhono. Ohio 411701
dillon wllflln ten doyi of tho Po-y, Ohio 411718 unti
(IJ 1 *I 1182·2420
bid -lng will be rotundod 1 2:00 noon on tho 24111 doy
given 10 do yo wrltlon notice
Votorano Memorial Hoopl· tho ful dopoolt, mlnuo any of Aprtl, 1880 ond 11 2 p.m.
of Ito !ntontlon to dla oc,
dlecontlnuo tho ""'leo ho· tel wlllrocel,..._locl blclo on · llllpplng chorgeo. Any non· oponod by tho Cllrlc of llld
blddor roturnlng tho do.cu· Boord ond rool oloud for tht ·
rein
for 1nd con·· tho followlngcc&gt;ntroct: Gon·
llnue to wMhhold tht oupply erol Contrect only.
monl8 wMhln ten doyo will purchoH of a VAN for tho ~
of eloctrlc onorgy for otroot
The work lnclud• con· 1M rofundod tht oum of Molgo Coumy Ooportmont
lighting until ouch limo oo 11noctk&gt;n of 1 1,000 of oddl· f111.00. .
of Hunt11n Sarvlceo "JOII"
the Cuotomor hto modo II01Ua• tht o•lotlng llllonc&amp;d
A Pr•lld M-lng wll 1M Progrorn,
'
payment for oil bllloln - h Co,. unH. In clueing miiCel· held It 10:30 a.m. on Wad·
lpeclflatlono .· for oold
It lo In orrooro, tnY ouch lonoouo damolltlen. con· - y . Aprt3, 1181,ottht Von moy 1M obtolnod from
tho Clotl! of tht Boord of
ouopenolon o f - · by tho - . mUonry ollll!{lor w.,l, project lito.
- k - , ilool joist
eldll for . the obove do· Molgo County Commloolon· .,
c~•., "'"" not . terml· nete thl1 &amp;grHII'IIInt un•u roof otructure with motel ocrlbod -rk muot 1M ••· on b e t - tht houro of •
Cornponr oc olecto. .
docldne ond olnglo ply roof· compenled by o llg Guo- 1:30 A.M. encl 4:30 P.M ..
7 . Tho Customer 11 lng, 40 teat of oofll· romy mooting tho .-quire·
Mondoy through Frldoy.
''
lvrther conolderatton for tht rlum, Interior ond ••wlor - · o f lloctlon 113.114 of
Tht Commlttionoro ore ,.
bound by Foderoll- which •
proml•• end ogreomonta flnloh wan.. end rolotod tho Ohio Ravleod Code.
modo by the Compon'( ht· oprlnklor, hooting and Vllntl·
lito bl- mov wHhdrprohlbHo contnoctlng from
roln oot forth hereby grento lotlne, ond -rtc•l-rtr.
hlo bid will! In olltty doys of" on Htobllohmont lhoy or o
to tho sold Componv the ' licit ohtll 1M on I lump ter tht ICIUOI dalt of tho ', ftmlly mombor moy hiVI e
· flnonclol'lntriot ln.
prlvilogo of lht u• of the oum bloiJ. with eny •• oponlng thereof.
11-s. olleyo ond public ooalotod oprlnklor. heotlne
The pro"ct aholl . be
Tht Commloolonero rot· '
ploceo of oold Cuotomer lor or Olectrlcol work Included. completed ·within 14 ·con· - t h o right tel NJoct eny
the pur- of pllclng Ita
Vetereno Momorlol Hoapl· . oocutlvo wooko.
ond 1111 bldo ond/af accept
poles ond equipment for tal will recolw bldo untH
The right lo rooorvod by tho boot bid for tht Intended
corrylng out thii •a-mont. 2 :30 p.m.loool time on April Vlllerono Mernorlol Hoopltol purpooo.
12, 1881, ot tho .Office of to reject ony or oil bldo, to
Mory Hobstotter, Clork
8 . The Culltomer
lhet during tho lifo of thlo lllo E•ecu1111o D"-r. VII· welvo lnformolltlot or to ocMolgo County Board of .
ogroemont "will provide In erona Memorill Hoopltol. copt ony bid Which lo
Commloolonoro · •
Ito ennuol buclt!Mo ond ootl· 1 111 E. Momarltl D-. doomed moet fovoroblt to 141 6, 12, Ztc

Classifie
Mtii!IS ,

Pubic Notice

PubliC Notice

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-9

P meroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

';,

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

..
•
------Weather
-------t
·Meigs announcements-1\•
Friday, April .5, 199t

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Local news briefs
•

Methodistl to hold clothing drive
The Meigs United Methodist Cooperative Parish will hold a cloth- ·
ing drive Apri1 .8 and 9, with county residents and cit;izens of the Soviet
Union benefitting.
·
All the clothes you have to give will be accepted Monday from 9 to
11 ·a.m. They should be. brought to the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church at 112 E. Second Street.
The CooPfllltive Parish will son and size ~lothes and keep a sufficient stock to meet anticipated needs of Meigs County residents.
Excess clothing will be given to the First Assembly of God Church 'in
Athens, which will pl!Ck and ship it to the Soviel Union.
The Athens chureh has a goal of sending SMOO boxes of clothing
to Russia. They have. an agreement with the Soviet Union that each
box may contain a copy of the Bible, printed in the Russian language.
. The Rev. Roger Grace, director of the Cooperative Parish. said, ·
"Here is a chance to make room .in your house, assist the needy people
of Meigs County ·an~ help the. people ·of the Soviet Union know the .
love of God and recetve Hi$ wrttlet) Word"
·
· For additional infolliUUion. please contact: The Rev. Don MeadowS,
pastor of the Pomeroy United Methodist Church, 992-5788.
- ·
·

Farmers eligible to serve on council
Eligible farmers in Athens, Meigs and Vinton Counties are invited
to become nominees for the Farmers Home Adminislralimi (FmJiA) .
county committee, .actor(ling to FmHA County Supervisor David P.
Urwin.
As a result of the 198S Farm Bill, two of the three members of the
FmHA county committees must be elected. The third member is desiganted by the FmHA countl office in determining .the eligibility of
applicants for certain tYpes o FmHA loans.
Generally. farmers who are residents of these counties are eligible
to become nominees for the FmHA county committee. ·
"FIIJlllers in these counties, serving on the commi!tee, phiy an
important role .by assisting in the process of loan applications· and
reviews," Urwin said.
Nominating petitions must be returned to the FmHA county office
by May 19. Additional information and application forms for thoJi.CL
who are interested in becoming nominees for the county committee are
available at the FmHA county office, 102332 Albany Road, Athens,
Ohio ·45701, or by calling 592-6621.
•

-

day. The ttusteeS request that in the
Dinner danee planned
Plans have been fmalized by the future flowets that can be hurig on
Middlepon Arts Council for a din- the monument be puchased so that
ner and dance at the Feeney Ben~ mowing may be done more effi- ·
.
nett Post No. 128 of the American ciently.
Olive Cemetery clean-up
tegion in Middloport on A)J!il21.
Music will be provtded by ·
U,e Olive Township Trustees
George Hall and tickets ,are $28 a will begin cleaning the cemeteries
couple. Tickets may be iJUfchased aftel: W..tnesday. AnyOne wishing
at Mick's Bilrber Shop in Pomeroy, to keep flowers should have them
Kings Service Star and the Dairy removed by that date.
Queen in Middlepon. Tickets also Clean-up date unounced
Salisbury Township will be
may .be purchased by mailing payment io Mary Wise, 522 Sou'th . cleaning cemetery grounds after
April 15 and those wanting tQ save
Third Ave. in·Middleport.
The roast beef dinner will begin flowers and. other items should
at 6 p.m. an&lt;! reservations are due remove them by that date. The
by April16.
.
·
ttustees request that in the future
Sutton Cemetery clean:up
flowers that can be hung on the ·
The Sutton Township Trustees monument be purchased so that
request that all old flowers be mowing may be dolle fqr efficient•
'
removed from cemeteries in Sutton · ly.
"Township before mowing begins Flame Fellowship to D!eet
on Wednesday.
The Flame Fellowship Chapter
Chester Cemetery clean-up
will meet Tuesday •at 7 p.m. at the
Chester Township will be clean- senior citizens center in Pomeroy.
ing cemetery grounds after Hersc~el Fac=er. Nitro, W.Va.,
Wednesday and those wanting to will be the s
er. The public is
save flowers and other items invited to attend.
should remove them l&gt;y We(lnes-

Daylight.:. continued from page 1
The United S tiltes took up the
concept late in lhe war when Presi- ·
dent Wilson, on March 31, 1918,
signed legislation rromoted by
Robert Garland o Pittsburgh.
. However, it was repealed the following year.
'
In the United States the practice

Stocks

'

Revival announced

c:. :..;..,.

was revived in World War II, and
in 1966 the Uniform Time Act provided for the first nationwide
observance of daylight-saving lime
during peacetime.
Dunng the energy crisis of 1973
.and 1974 the nation went to daylight-saving time year-round to
conserve energy, but standard time
was reinstated' late in 1974 for the
four-month winter period with the
fewest ~tours of daylight.
· Assignment to the Transporta- •
tion Department of responsibility
for administering the time law
·dates 10 the days when time zones
were of importance because of the
need for publishing standardized
railroad. schedules.

Am Ele Power ......................2.9 1/2
The Eden United Brethren in Christ Church near Reedsville will
Ashland Oil ....................:... ~ 1 118
hold revival services Monday, Aprill5 lf!rough Sunday, Apri121. Rev.
AT&amp;T ... :... ,................ :..........34 5/8
. Bob Wiseman wiD be the speaker. Special music will be presented ancl
Bob Evans .............:.............. 20 3/8
the public is invited. .· .
·
Charming Shop ... :................ .i4 5/8
City Holding ................. ;...... .14 1/2
Fedllfll( Mogul... ................... l5 3/4
Go&amp;lyearT&amp;R ...................,.23 1/4
Harrisonville Senior Citizens will hold a blood pressure clinic at the
Key Centurion ,,....... :..... ;..... .13 3/S
town house from 10 a.m. until noon on Tuesday. Members will have
Lands'
End ...........................2~ -1/4
potluck dinner and meeting following the clinic. All members are
Limited
Inc . ....... ,........................ 28
urged to auend.
Multimedia Inc. ....................73 1/2
Rax Restaurant ............................. 1
Robbins&amp;Myers ...................26 3/8
Several inquires have been
Shoney' s Inc ........................ .16 3/4 . received by the Meigs County
Star Banli: ............. :...:., ................22 Sheriff's Department inquiring
Helen Eblin
late Charles c. (Chuck) and Bessie . Wendy
Int'l. ................ :....... 10 1/4 about a company making calls
Lanning Kennedy. He was a retired
Wonhington
Ind.......... :........24 7/S about water testing.
Helen D. Johnson Eblin, 75, of maintenance worker at Phillip
Wqlf Pen Road in ·Pomeroy, died Sporn Po\rier Plant in New Haven,
. Meigs County Sheriff James M. .
unexpectedly early Thursday, April W.Va. He was a veteran of the
Soulsby advises Meigs County
4, 1990 at her home. She was a World Warn Army Air Corps and
consumers that all village water
homemaker.
.
a member of the Eli Dennison Post
systems. along with Leading Creelc
She was born in Bradbury on 467 American Legion ill Rutland.
COJ!Servancy District and Tuppers
Investigation is continuing. into Plains-Chester Water District conJuly 15, 1915, the daughter of
He is survived by his wife of 43
Everell and ·Geneive Russell. Lam- years, Margaret L. Kennedy, a one-car accident on County Road duct all required testing for their
.
bert. She was a member of the Zion Pomeroy, a dau$hter and son-in- SO in Olive Township.
customers on a monthly basis.
According
to
the
Meigg
County
Church of Christ, the Harrisonville law, Pat and K:evm Aicher, ColumAccording to Soulsby. n&lt;ine of
Chapter of Order of Eastern Star, bus; a son, Perry Kennedy. , Sherifrs Department. a 1969 Ford, those who have called his depanFernwood Garden Club and the Pomeroy; six grandchildren, Burt, owned by Roger Murphy of Tup- ment have indicated that they have
churcli'sCircleofHelpi!lgHands.
Jake and Maggie Kennedy, all of pers Platns left the roadway and had their water tesred by the comSurviving are her husbancl, Pomeroy, Drake, Grant and Brian went over a 50 foot embankment pany in question, so it is not known
i)n Thursday.
Henry D. Eblin, Sr.; four sons: E. Archer, all of Columbus. ·
exactly what type of tesing might
The driver of the vehicle has not be done. Soulsby reports that the
Ray (Betty) Johnson, James W. . Besides his parents he was pre(Zorra) Johnson, Larry G; (Gloria) ceded . in death by a brother. · been located, but Murphy has company may be selling water soft.advised the depanment of the name eners.
·
·
Johnson; and Kenneth A. .(Debby) Emmett (T~bby) Kennedy.
Johnson; five stepchildren: Henry
Services will be Saturday at 1 of an individual who borrowed the
Soulsby r~ports that the coun- ·
(Heter) E!)lin, Jr., Gerald (Linda) p.m. at the Birchfield Funeral vehicle. Deputies. howe¥er, were ty's water systems assure him that
Eblin, Harley (Jane) Eblin, John Hom.e in ·Rutland with George unable to locate the driver as he the required tests are done and
(Shirley) Eblin and Shirley (Don- Nash officiating. Burihl will be in had moved from his Tuppers Plains appropriate measures are ·taken to
address.
.
aid) Jeffers; a brother, Gene (Ann) Miles Cemetery.
ensure that the public's drinking
Light damage was sustained to water is safe to drink.
Lambert; five sisters: ,Mrs. Carl
Friends may call at the funeral
(Ruth) Mourning, Mrs. Bym (Eliz· home on Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 . the vehicle and charges of failing to
abeth) Vaughn, Mrs. Harley (Mar· · p.m. and on Saturday before the maintain control are pending
against the driver.
.. .
, garet) Haning, Mrs. Cecil (Jo Ann) service.
Gillogly. and Mrs. Mary Grover;
In lieu of flowers donations may
19 grandchildren and five great- be made to .the Meigs County Man arrested on petty
Meigs County Emergency Medgrandchildren.
.
Chapter Qf the American Cancer theft charge
ical
Services responded to five
Besides her parents, she was Society, 236 West Second .St ..
calls
for assistance on Thursday.
Terry
Rhoades,
18,
Middleport,
preceded in death by her first bus- Pomeroy.
At
3:47 p.m., Pomeroy squad
was arrested on Wednesday
band. Joseph R. Johnson and a son, Elmer F.. Bat"rd
went
to
Pomeroy Nursing and
evening and ,charged with petty
Joseph L. Johnson.
Rehabilitation
Center for William
· Funeral services will be held at'
Elmer Franklin Baird, 60, of theft in coMection with the theft of
1p.m. on Saturday at Ewing Funer- 8849 N. State Route 7, Cheshire, a Pioneer stereo from a vehicle at Hughes, who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 7:21 p.m.,
a1 Home with Bob Punell official- died Friday, April 5, 199.1 at Holz- Smith-Nelson Motors in Pomeroy.
ing. Burial wiU be in Miles Ceme- er Medical Center, following a
According to the Meigs County · Middleport squad went to Logan
Sheriff's Department, Rhoades Street for Mary Siders. She was'
·tery.
brief ·illness:
··
Friends may call at the funeral
He was an employee of the admitted to entering a vehicle at taken to Veterans. At 10:44 p.m..
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and Ravenswood Aluminum Corpora- around midnight last Friday and Middleport squad went to Page
from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Friday.
tion (Kaiser) where he had been removing the stereo, selling the Street and took Mabel Baughman
employed since 1957: He was a stereo to a Middleport man who in to Veterans.
Don Betzing
member or the Cheshire F&amp;:AM tum sold the stereo·again. Deputies
At 1:19 am. on Friday, Rutland
. · ·
Siloam Lodge 456 and attended the traced the stereo back 10 Rhoades.
squad went to Nichols Road for
Don. L..Betzmg, 82,. of 32666 Campaign Baptist Church.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby Roberta Carauthers. Carauthers
Rose Hi~ m Pome~y. dted ThursHe was born March 8, 1931 in reports that Deputy Scott Trussell . was transpOrted first to Veterans
day, Apri14, 199~ at hom
. e follow- - Gallia County, son of the late Ora ancl Investigator Robert Beegle and then to Holzer Medical Center.
m~ an extended tllness. He was a and Gail Halfhill Baird
,
conducted the investigation and . At.5:12 a.m., Rutland squad ·went
reured bread salesman for Holsum
He is survived by hiS wife, Bon- filed the charges.
to Main Street in Rutland for
Bake'1: and a fonner employee of nie Litchfield; two sons, John Baird , Rhoades will !!ppeat in Meigs Roben Snowden. He was taken to
theOhioPalletCo~pany. ,
· ,of Houston, ·T exas and Steven County Court on Wednesda'y.
Holzer Medical Center. ·
He was born 10 Chester on Baird of Thurman; one daughter,
October 12, 1908, the son of .the Mrs. James {Deborah) Schmoll of
late Pete and Emma Cole Betzmg. . C~eshire; three grandchildren,
He !lttended the Hemlock Grove Zachary Baird, Lauren and Jamie
Christian Church an~ was a 50 year Schmoll; and two sisters, Dillie
member of Roell: Spnn$s G~ge.
McCormick of Gallipolis. and Mrs.
·a·en. H•rttnuer Pkwy 79 JIICklon Pike 3114 Ealt Mllln St. .
He ts S!lfVtved by his son, Jerry Kenneth (Della) Casto of Orient.
GALLIPOLIS
MIDDLEPORT
POMEROY
qanl Atkins of Carrollton, Ga.: a
One brother, Wayne and two ·
1114-4411-3837
1114-912-1248
1114-992-11292
SISter, Fteda Mil~ of Pomeroy: a sisters, Francis and Flossie,.precedbrother, Roy Betzmg, Pomeroy. a ed him in death.
·
·
.
· Funeral services will be con- ·
. , .grands~n, Jason - Sheet.s of
Reedsville and ~everal nteces, dueled 4 p;m. Sunday at the
nephews, great-meces and great- . McCoy-Moore Funeral Home,
nephe~s. .
•
' Wetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with
. Bestdes hts parents.• h~ was ~re- Rev. Roland Wildman offiwiating.
SUNDAY, APIIL 7 ONLY!
ceded tl'l d~ath by .hts ft.rst Wtfe, Burial will he in Gravel Hill CemeM!ldred Smtih Bewng; his ~~d tery. Cheshire.
.
wtfe. Ruth Gosn.ey Betztng, a
I;riends may call at the funeral
brother, and ~ SIS~rs.
home on Saturday from 2 to 4 p.m.
Funeral servtces .wtll be held on and 7 to 9 p.m. Masonic services
'
'
'
ThrH toppings, chocolate and vanilla frozen dessert
Monday at II a.m.~ Ewm.,Funer· will be conducted 8:45 p.rp. Satural Home. Burial wtll be'" Hem- day, by the Cheshire F&amp;AM
. top,..l with whipped creme and a chtrry served in
lock Qrove Cernetay.
Siloam Lodge 456 John N Roush
a tall glassll
Friends may call at the funeral Master. ·
•
·
•
bome from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. on Sat.
:'
urdaY IIICI 1 p.m. ~ 9 p.m. on sun'
SPE~IAL SUNDAY, APRIL .7 THROUGH
day 111d uoill the brne of semce on · VETERANS MEMORIAL
SATUIDAr, APIIl 13,. 1991
M~:..., K
d
Admitted Thursday: William
liCIJ
enne y
Grueser. Pomeroy; Cora Woodard,
·
Pomeroy; Tracy SimPkins,
Chlrles D. (Windy) Kennedy; Pomeroy; . Sarah J,ane Congo,
1/•
6S. ~sen Run Roa~. Pomeroy, Racine; Laura Ruth Arnold. Mid~~~~·l~~~~ dleport; William R. ' Hu$hes,
IS% Lean Ground Chuck. Ground Fresh Daily
filion Cetller foiJowing a .er ill- ~e.:~and Man- ~se St~rs,

Blood pressure clinic slated

Fair Sunday and Monday, and
chance of showers and thunder~ storms on Tues(jay. Highs. will
range from the mid 70s 10 low so;
Sunday and Monday. and in th~
70s Tuesday. Overnight lows wilt ·
be m8inly in the SOs.
t

South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy Friday night and
· Saturday. with a low FridaY night
near SO, and highs Saturday near
80.
' '
Ohio eXtended roreca8t
Sunday .tlrougb Tuesday

Worldwalker...

l

'

•

•

75 cents ·.

Reds open season Monday - C-1

,.

'

worldwide trek at the Meigs Coon-~•

Out in the
real world
fot a visit

.
"

•

to pay a $2.50 fee fix a patch and a
$4.50 fee for a medal. In order to ' ty Public Library in Pomeroy onreceive the awards. you must walk Saturday at 3 pm.
~
.the trail. However, the hike is not
•
required to attend the ceremony.
~
Registration will· ~t undei'Wa:,: . Plck-J ·
Pick-4
"
for the "inaugur&lt;!l" hike at 9 a.m.
975
•
4 .
525·
"'
. and the ceremony will begin at 10
a;m. Visitor.sare e11coura~ed to
Cards .
:
tate a sack lunch. Camp Kiashuta
Four of beans.
•
is located on Scout Camp Road
Jacli: of clubs.
":
(Chester Township RO;td 112), off
Jacli: of diamonds.
:·
Route 248 near Chester.
Ace of spades.
1
Meanwhile, NeWlllan will make
Ticket sales: $51,99 5. Payoff.•
a slide and rum presentalion on his $48,260.
•

.'

•

Former Gallipolis resident was ~ctim of
Titanic disaster in 1912 • James ~ands • A-6

Lottery numbers

Page B·l

FOR

1 SALE

Buy One Parfait Sundae
Get One FREE

Hospitq.l news

Char

POUNDER ...~ •••••••••• only $169

~e ~as bom in Ru~and 10 the ~~~~harged Thur~day: N~cy

. FRIES .......-................-•••• Only $289
WITH MEDIUM
'

'

•
If'

'

NDftiiNG ltDRKS
UKERU88BR ·

Easter Egg Hunt reset for 2 p.m. ~oday in
Hartinger Park - Beat-of-the-Bend· B·6

.. . Vol. ·ze, No. •

Mlddleport.....P~meroy-OalllpQIIa-Polnt

. ' ' CoPJFighleci1H1

----·

BUIIQess.. - ....·-··--· Ql

Clalllllecl&amp;....- ............ 02-7
.Deaths..... ~ ...... ~ ......... /\-5
EdiiDrlat..... _ ............... A-2
Farm............... ~...........~ 01·8
~rts......._ .......,........ Cl·il
eatber
A-4

···!"·•···· .. . :.......

•

T1111J11rlitpll:ill~bn

I

I

,,..,.~s

lllllilit ll'ICiiCrl... llingllt-... tnt

~ qualily ,_money CIIIIJI¥
• Mali USA

o Wilin'UiilfWICI' (ftCk in"'**

....

• EMyon.Eaoyorr.
• Exlniliglit-wlighllorfltigua rultlloiCI

By BRIAN J, REED
Times-Sentinel StafT

• U'lllnld ..:I uullhlbll

• Qna.potol injiCtiCn ITIOICIICI: ICiltCirl- Pill
Tllic:k 1111 .... I ,_...lniiCI: ililtbCiiCIII I '

o

-pailtl

.

.

. 11 IO'Itlono. 132 Poa••
A Multlmedll Inc. N-opeper

Pleasant, Aprll7, 1991

Mobile ·unit allows more
service.to area· children

Only ~ll100'10ltllldlf I'IAitllr10ftll

8uttrJn Boot olin )IOU . . . . . . . . . . .

POMEROY- A. new mobile
classroom unit allows Gallia-Me~
Head Start to provide pre-school
services to bOys and girls in rural
areas previously not served by the
. progmm. .
'
h' h
The "RV-type" untt, w IC
arrived on site in late 1990, is.used
in both Meigs and Gallia Counties,
spending the first two weeks Qf
each month in Meigs County and
the second two week period in Gallia County.
·
AlthOuJih Head Start is a federal

'

• Riplllr:»•.,.l', • • on Walen• ._, n1
mal 1111
. .
1•
• Allo e I FECit~ tq:H:f"My hiOP•• ·

SUGAR
RUN
MIL'
L
S
·
180 MULBERRY
.
POMEROY

program, funding for the mobile
unit comes from stare sources.
According· to· Meigs County
Head Start CQor&lt;.linator Carol
Yo'ung, the state funding for the
mobile unit allows tt.e program to
reach into the "far corners" of
Meigs County, serving pre-school
children and their families in Portland, Reedsville, Tuppers Plains,
and Danville, which are areas Head
Start has been unable to serve in
the past because of their remote
locations. .
In all, the state-funded mobile
unit serves 36 families. The unit is ..
in Ponland 'BIId Danville all day.

..

with ·a morning class and an afternoon class at each stQp . .ReedSville
and Tuppers Plains use the unit f~r
a half day each.
:
The childr.en are transported
from their homes to the JDObile unit
by a separate van, so patentS are in
no way responsible for 1ran~rling
the ·students to and from the 'class·
room."
While on the unit, preschoolers
get the valuable "classroom experience" portion of the program,
which includes socialization slcills
and other preschool-type activities.
In addition to the classroom
(See MOBILE, page AS)

AVE~

"'·2115
•
'

'

ROADSIDE CI.:EAN-UP • You know It's
spriag whe. work crews can be spotted alona
th hig!lways pickinl up debris and aarba1e.
ROJifr Holm8D of the Melp Coonty Litter

. ··Uert

Control Provam supervisors two his y'outhful
workers 111 they clean up an area near the biter·
section of Union Avenue and the Route 7 bypass.

·Miftgs·~·ctemt::.·
up:even~·11lftnned.
,
.

ty Litter Control Prognun.
By CHAIU.ENE HOEFLICH
KeMy Wiggir)s, project dirccTimes-Sentinel Stair
tQr,
repot!S
that a work crew super·
POMEROY - To make Meigs
vised
by
Roger
Holman is out most
County more attractive through
everyday
picking
up debris and
clean-up and beau!ifiGBiion projects
garbage
which
has
been strewn
is the objective of several spring
along
township,
county
and state .
events planned by the Meigs Coun-

1987 DODGED

31.8 V-8 engine, 46,000 mll•a. auto. trj!ns.,'
extra clean.

·

$649 5

highways; as well as public parks.
He said that supplementing the
clean-up work or the local Litter
Control crew are employees of the
Ohio Department of Transportation.
(See MEIGS, page AS)

Living history group brings
'Union soldiers' to Gallipolis
.

1

4 ap. trans, AM-FM ceuette. aport stipea. run• great.

'

'

$5290

.

1985 FORD BRONCO II

$5400 .
1989 CHEV. 510 PICKUP
$6400"
1986 MAZDA PICIUP SES PIG.
$3995
1·9 89 NISSAN PICIUP
I
$6400
Htte.
little
1985 FORD IANGEit PICKUP
S3750
4 apd ..
good.
~ 988 NISSAN PICKUP
I
$4995
MARK'S ·AUTO SALES
Auto.. AM·FM
atereo. nAnning
boerda. clot~ Interior. Extr• clean . .

6 ap. trana .• A/C,IIkenewconditlon.

l!)d. trent, •ir
Sharp

c~d., AM-FM
tn~ck.

·

CII-

rune

AM-FMoMIIt18,

rear

992-3011

60S General Hartinger Parkway ·

Middlepcut, Ohio

"If you didn'r shop Mark'•· you paid ·roo 'much."
HOURS: Mon.-Thura. 9:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m.
Fri. 9:30 a.m.-6:00 p.m.
·
Sat. 9:00 a
1:00 p.m.

'·

•

•

•

..I(

ca District Executive John Pinkerman; Park
District Board Membera Lloyd Blackwood and
Jim Pape; Shade River Forest Maniger Jim
Milliron; and Meigs C11unty Wildlife OITicer -:
Keith Wood. (rimes-Sentinel photo by B.rian J,
Reed)
·
.
.

ishment will.
.
.
ll's all in a weekend's work,
according to Dave· Gloeckner of
Racine, a member of the 91 st.
GALLIPOLIS. - The town
"Seeing history hap~ is entersquare will ring out with the so.und
taining,"
Gloeckner satd. Whereas
of gunfll'e and bugles next weekend
people
may
not want to sit down
as the ftrst (lallia County recruiting
and read a book about the Civil
and training camp is held in GalWar, they wiD come out to see relipolis.
'
tests.
'
epactments.
April 12-14 will hold a number
.. And the members of the units
In
addition,
there
will
be
day-to·
of unique even.ts for the area,
get
something out of it, too. They
day
activities
of
the
Union
Sol. beginning wi h 'a camp regislrati()ljll
get
a .weekend with the family, . By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
dier's
camp
like
mail
and
pay
affects construc1ion plans for the
· and ending St nday aftemoon.
c.alls.
ration
issue
and
company
away
from
telephones~t~ome
peo$2.2
million waste water colleCtion
Times·Sentinel StafT '
Members t r the 91 Ohio Volun.
ple
wiU
bring
motor
homes
for
the
·
drills.
and sewage treatment project for'
I
· teer Militia (n activated) will camp
And if .the weeping and dying · wife and ldds, he said, but many of
RUTLAND - While a Rutland the Rutland area.
in the cily I ark with as much
That was the word Friday after•
authenticity a~ possible - from the , contest doesn't peak your iitteres~ them camp out "roughing it" for Area Sanitary Sewer District will .
the
weekend
and
its
authenticity.
may,
b
e
the
court
!'lartial
and
punnoon
from Patrick O'Brien, the
not
'be
organized,
that
in
no
way
food they eat to the wool clothes
project attorney.
On Jan. 31, Rutland Village
"This is a family oriented
filed a petition requesting formagroup.." Gloeckner said .
lion of a sewer diStrict to adminisHe joined the 91st re-enactment
ter the project.
gro'up about a year ago, and has a
Last week. however. thill petispecial interest in the War between
tion
was dismissed after Rutland
the States. Visiting his grandmothHUNTINGTON, W.Va. -The
er, Qloecknet saw first hand items Tri-State Veterans Employment .
belonging to h.is link ~ith the "!ar - Committee is recruiting employers
discharge Jlllpers, a JNSIOI, cartndge ,and service providers for the th~d
box, a canteen, the. medal of the annual Veteran/Employer Job F811',
Grapd Army of t11e Republic, and to be held May 8, at the Veterans
paperS of the Society of Union Vet- Memorial Field House in Huntingerans.
.
ton.
.
Having family in the Civil War
In a cominuing effon to provide
is not a prerequisite for joining a employment relatelj services to trire-enactment group, but Gloeckner state veterans. this year's event will
estimates about half of the unit has encompass pre-employment acti vidirect' ties to it.
.
ties for veterans only from 8 a.m. to
· Outfitting a re-enactor can be noon.
Booths will be provided for
costly. Gloeclcner said - the clothes
alone can run nearly $400. Then organizations and agencies to
there's the weapon - another $400. showcase services which "'ay
And, the group is not just for men, assist veterans seeking employ'
the ladies g~t involved, too. They ment.
.From 2 to 6 p.m., employers are
wear period cbstumes and prepare
authentic food. And the)' have the invited to participate in the largest
'
big part in the Weeping and' Dying · job fair in the area. Last year :S I
employers atten~ and hired 109
contest
Gloeckner said thai can prove to veterans in unskilled. skillecl and
be a funny moment at a camp - professional positions. This year
after the initial "dying" of the men the committee will be less restricfolks, the women take ovei' weep- tive to allow more employers to
ing and wailiJII, and sometimes cat attend. Current job openings are
preferred but not required.
fighting over one man.
Any veteran, employer or serThe
events
of
the
camp
are
open
'UNION SOLDIER' -Tom Meteall of Gallla Count;rls one or a
vice
provider interested \n attendto
the
public,
,GloeCkner
spid,
and
number of Uvlna blltor;r IJ'OIIP memben wllo will be In tbe Galing
should
contact Tom White at
people
are
e!ICOWIIed
to
\top
by
'
lipolis Clt;r ParkrAr.rU 11·14 11 )11ft of tile' 9llt Volunteer Ohio
the
Gallipolis
Job Service, 446and
'see
the
eventi
and
di!lCUSS
any
Militia (reactlvtited • Eveoll at the e~mp Iff free and open to tbe
interest in joining the unit they may 1683 .or Jim ·Fitzwater at the Point
public.
·
have .
Pleasant Job Service. 67S-2770.

Sewer system construction not
jeopardized by lack of distric_t

·9.

•

:I

the.y wear.
History can be fun - and this
8f9up of re-enactors will show both
the serious side to the Ci vii War.
and the lighter side. There will be a
number of competitions during the
daytime, including a flapjacks, uniform and one that always proves
interesting, weeping and dying con·

Veterans' Job
Fair set May 8

•TRUCKS•

Cloth Interior. aport Wheela. eliding.
rear window. Check It out.

1 TRAIL OPENED • A rlbbon-cutt1n1 c:eremony was held oa Saturda;r at C101p Klashuta near
Chester, opeoin1 a three·mlle oatare trail blazed
by the ClviHan CoDSerVIIdoo Corps and orcbestrated by the Me'"'· County l'!lrk District Board.
rictured cuttlaiihe ribbon are, 1-r, ·Special
Speaker Steven Newman; Boy Scouts or Ameri-

I

By LEE ANN THOMPSQN
Time-Sen tine! Staff ··,

: I'
•.

•

Aloq tbe rlver;. ..--.81·8

8UTTONUR

' •
r

'•
••

.

SUP ON.

Squads make 'five
Thursday runs

2

·.·.

•

Search continues
for driver of car .

McClure's Family lestaurant

Inside
.

•
•
•

Comics.........."............ Insert

Sheriff issues
consumer advisory

--Area deaths--

..••

Sunda'•

cODiiDued 1rom page 1
•

•

&amp;

.•

'~

\;

.
'

. ~·

ViUage Council met in special SCS·
sion Tuesday night and came 10 the ·
unanimous conclusion that the cost
or organizing and maintaining' a
Sewer District would be "cost prohibitive."
O'Bi;ien said that establishinJ a
sewer dJstrict would require hinr:tl
a full-time director,~a ing boaid
members, and renting flee space.
''That wollld raise the onthly user
rates that£-e are tryin to keep loll'(.
(See SEWER, PIRe AI)
'

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