<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11304" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/11304?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-13T23:02:23+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42271">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/8b87e9073e45c1075a6fd883d35dadca.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0e9aeb7e951bd8a75694d056d3321088</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35630">
                  <text>Pega 16 The Dally Sentinel

Th&amp;nclay. Aprl12. 1990

Pomaloy-Midclaport. Ohio

Spratley... Continued rrom page 1

Local neuis briefs...
Continued from page 1
Meigs County vourt. It was reported tnat ne nad failed to pay an
·
old fine. He was lodged In the county jail.

Community service set Friday
Community Good Friday Services, sponsored by the
Middleport Ministerial Association, will be held Friday at 7
p.m. at the Heath United Method.i st Church. Les Hayman of the
Ash Street FreeWill Baptist Church will be the speaker.
Combined community choir directed by Darlene Rlndfllesch
will present the special music. The public is Invited to attend.

· Eastern board tours facilities
A tour of the school buildings and other facUlties In the
Eastern Local School District was taken at Tu!lsday's special
, session of the Board of Education. Following the tour, the board
moved Into executive session to discuss personnel matters.

Roush home damage by fire
The Walter and Anna Roush home on State Route 124 in
Syracuse was extensively damaged by . fire early Thursday
evening.
·
A spokesman for the Syracuse Fire Department reported that
the fire In the single story brick home started around the
· f11rnace In the basement. No one was at home when the fire
started. It was dlscovered·by Jack Lyons, a passing motoriSt,
who saw the smoke coming from the house. He stopped, alerted
the Syracuse firemen who were on the scene within two
minutes, and then began an effort to extinguish the flames with .
water from a garden hose.
The fire was primarily confined to the basement although
some of the flames did break through the floor into the main
living quarters, It was reported.
Syracuse summoned the Racine fire departlilent to assist and
also the Middleport rescue unit. The 18 firemen of the Sy~acuse
department were oil the scene for a bout two hours. It was
reported that the owners have Insurance.

Squads have 14 cai.Is Wednesday
.

Spratley said Caller lD "will
reveal unlisted pl)oue numbers
and could make consumers rel!lctant to dial anonymot~s or
confidential calls to social, government, law enforcement,
health agencies, the news media
and businesses."
' 'Some &lt;;rltlcs - argue b)lsl·
nesses will use the service to
develop marketing strategies
which could lead to more telemarketing calls and mall sollcl·
lations, " he said.
"His views are based upon

speculation," said . ¥angen.
"Those sl tuations have not Mp·
-pened In other slates."
.
Spratley said the bloctllng
option' should be offered•free to
customers with untlsted phone
numbers, or to any customer who
requests it. He sal&lt;l It does not
cost the , telephone company
anything and Is part ofthe Caller
ID technology.
"
Mangen said the blocking
option "would require additional
technology and software."

The annu~~ol Cancer crusaqe, a
house-to-house fund drive, will be
held frOm Aprll18 through Mity 5,
according John Runnel, spokes·
man for the local office of the
American Cancer Sodety.
Hunnel said that area captains ·
and other volunteer workers are
needed to conduct the drive and
anyone willing to assist should
contact the office, 992· 7531, on
either Tuesday or Thursday or
· call Lilllari Moore, 992· 7231, or
Runnel at 992·3029. CaniSters will
also be placed l.n several local
businesses ·for contributions,
Runnel reported.

Cullhloua for sale
The Meigs High School A!t!tletlc
Boosters now have stadium cu·
shlons for sale. The cost of the
cushions are S5 each and may be
purchased at the high school or
from any booster member. The
cushion~ will remain on sale until
supplies last.
:
Cemetery dues
:
. Dues are now . payable for
Beech Grove Cemetery; \
The dues are $5 per grave and
money may be sent to Po*'eroy
VIllage Hall In care of Pat
Thoma. Checks are to be 'IYiade
payable to the Beech ~rove
Cemetery Trustees.
l

.
----Meigs announcements _ __

Units of the- .MelgB County
Emergency Medical Service ~
sponded to 14 calls tor assl$tance
on Wednesday.
At 3: .. a.m. the Pom~roy unit
was called to Route 248 for Brian
Collins who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, and at
5:39 a .m. the unit went to Route
681 West for Wll)lur Warner who
was taken to Camden Clark
Hospital:
The Syracuse unit, at 5: 40
a.m., was called to College Road
for Helen Harris who was taken
to Veterans.
Th!;! Rutland unit, at 5: 54 a.m .
went to Ml!lgs Mine 31 for James
Marcus ,to Holzer Medical Cen·
ter, and at 7:46·a.m. theunltwent
to the mine for John Sullivan who
was taken to Holzer.
At 9:09a.m. the Syracuse unit
went to Minersville Road for
Goldie Reitmlre who was taken
to Veterans.
,
At 9: 30 a. ni. the Pomeroy unit
was called to Powell's for Florence Allen who was taken to
Veterans.
At 10: 47 a.m. the Rutland unit
and fire department and Middleport unl~ were called to Route 124
for a tractor trailer ·and auto
·accident In .which Malcolm {ngram was takeu to Veterans.
. Tlie Middleport unit, at 1: 03

',...,.....

•

"'

·~--~

\

souShl

chardson was ·arrested, ·brought
to th.e sheriff's office, finger·
printed and photographed ''when
he was on his way to court."
.
In regard to the tape recording,
Knight said that his client used
the tllpe recofcler because he
~ound himself In a situation
where It was just his ('Richard·
son's) word against the sheriff of
the county.
Knight said his client had been
defending himself and his property (the ,tape recorder) during
the January altercation In the·
Soulsby hom~.

Vol.40, No.231

In the Meigs County Court of ;,
Common Pleas, BancOhla Na- :;':
tiona! Bank, Columbus, is seek· .:
ing $3,220.20 from Victor L. and :~
Grace E. Chevalier, both of •
Reedsville.

New Washtrs . ~om- 589 5 ,., .._
New YCRs from.

5900,., a
Color· 1Vs from"-5 795 ,.,

'

Retail
...
· Continued from page 1

Others fined In the court were
John Clonch, Ga!Upolls, $63 and
costs, ·operating under SU$penslon; Shane Randolph, Point
Pleas.a.nt. W. Va., $50 and costs,
speecilhg; Ralph Moore, Dexter,
$63 ·· :and costs . for expired
teaistratlon . . · ,
·
·· Foi-ieltingbonds.ln thecourton
spee&lt;Jlng cllji'ges were Rl ta
Matthew, Racine, $48; Stephen
Nease, Racine, $49; Rachel Ster·
rett, Copley, $52; a11d Duane
Johnson, Pomeroy, $49. Others
forfeiting bonds were Mark Gaynor, PhUippl, W. Va., $43, Illegal
left turn; ~othy Jones, Pomeroy, $63, failure to control;
Timothy Oldaker, Letart, W.Va.,
$43, Improper backing; Leta
Harmon, Point Pleasant, W.Va.,
$43,"parking In front of a private
driveway . .

.

GE IEMOTE
.. CONTIOL

-~---=-

20' COLOR
TELEVISION

Judmn.en granted·

~

STEIEO

S297

......

I

CAIU IUDY

'

SAMSUNG -VCR
tea· a •11

$199
'

1-------....---......,--_,... . .
'

._ ...

S499

~RP.

· WI1H REMOTE COmOL

;.1.

'',

'

WEL .LI FBIZEI

The jobless rate in Gallla
County was up In February, but
posted a 1:lecrease in Meigs
County, according to una&lt;Jjusted
figures from the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
OBES said that out of an
estimated work force of 10,900 In
Gallla, }.200 people were listed as
unemployed, placing the jobless
rate at 9.7 percent.

(5 ~ ft.)
1

... ,..

• llfiiJtrlhlr·
. Fllillr
'

..

FHOI

Ice In

ClOSS IN 1'41 GOLD, GOLD FIWD, miUNG AND
ILACI HILLS GOLD IN PENDANTS AND IAII.GS
FOI PIEICED UIS.

There will be no Rotary Club Easter egg hunt In Middleport
this yea~.
·
Mark Murphey, president of the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club, announced today tiiat the group has decided not to sponsor
an. egg hunt this year.
It has traditionally been staged by the club on Easter Sunday
• · at the Hartinger Park at tractlng hundreds of area children who
scrambled around the park to gather up the eggs, each· one
worth a prize.
·
~
.
In the early .years of the egg hunt the Rotary mer)'lbers and· ,
their wives colored dozens of eggs which w~re hid at the park. In
.recent years, hoWever, plasUc eggs h~n used.
· The Rotary president did not Indicate whether the traditional
Rotary Club Easte~ egg hunt will be resumed next year.

c.. re:

If you buy eomethlng from Eliott'•· end
within 30 deya find It for 1111 et enother
locelltOCklng deellll', Eliott's will mund
the dm.rence plu1 211% of the difference
upon proof of l o - price.

212 EAST MAIN

POIIEIOY

SAIISING Cl .

.S999
1250fo PIICE GUARANTEB

per,

No {lotary egg hunt this year

Cr rlsr

WiiDJin

22

It was a six-tenths of a percent
drop fr91'!' January's 10.3
cent, but still up over the
February 1989 rate of 9 percent,
OBESsaid.
Unemployment in Meigs was
set at 9.4 percent In February, a
sharp 1 percent decrease from
January'~· level ·of 1o.4, the
service reported. Out of a labor

Local news briefs---:---....,

'

The.,..
..

. W/IZ??Dft COIIIIOI. .

'.

-. S199

IUott'

SllYEI BRIDGE PLAZA

•w
.............
........ ,...
HOIIS

frl. t UL tl I P&amp;

Darst .home destroyed by fire

s.t. t UL tl 6 P&amp;

S....1 P&amp;t.SP&amp;

The trailer home of Mr. and MrS. James Anthony Darst and
their two chlldren 1 County Road 55 In Columbia Township, was
destroyed by fire early Thurld.ay momlag.
Continued on
. paae 12

992·3715

.

-~.

put up three new storage tanks is
expected to be signed In a few
days, accorplng to Poole.
The storage tanks will be
located at Silver Ridge, Gold
Ridge and New England. Two of
the tanks are replacements to
handle growth, while the thtrd is
required to handle the new line
.system, It as reported.
The 140 customers which will
have water · service available .
after the 17 miles of main are
completed and the tanks are In
place will Include Silver Ridge,
West Shade, Kingsbury Road,
Court Street, Letart Falls and
County Road 53 between Alfred
and Lottrldge In Athens County.
The money for the extension
andconstructlonofthenew tanks
comes from a Farmers Home
Administration low In teres (Joan

of $641,000 and a 29 percent grant
of $187,000 to the Water District.
Poole advised that the District
will be contacting all of the new
customers by letter explaining In
more detail how things will
proceed .
He said that any additional
expansion to the District will
require additional plant capacity
and more storage. Poole also
said that the District wants to be
contacted by anyone Interested
In receiving water In the, area
served by the company. Forins
requesting service are available
In the office, he noted:
The general manager also
Indicated that the District is
hopeful of receiving some Issue
II funds for enlargement of the
treatment facility.

Additionally, Knight ex·
plained, "the affiliated counties
would be provided with investl·
gatory services and sentencing
specialists to aid the county In
determining appropriate facts
and sen~nces. The local defend·
ers wmlld have additional aid
ff'!'lll the ,s.i ¥ie ofllce, for· re- ·
search on special issues, appeals
and co-ordination of cases."
Knight pointed out that counties within the proposed branch

office would also be entJtied to
supplemental attorneys' servic'es at no add~:d cost to the
counties '.'when Inevitable confilets occur.:·
.
Over the next biennium, the
10-county branch would be
funded by specific amounts from
t~e pa~tJ!;IpatJ"i COijlljJes, total·
ing approximately $1.1 million
altogether, Knight reported.
Meigs County's share would be
$35.000.
"

17 re~gious ·Filipinos
are nailed to crosses
SAN PEDRO CUTIJD, Philippines (UPI) - AI least 17
Filipinos' were . nailed to crosses
and thousands of penitents
scourged their backs with glassstudded whips In griSly Good
Friday rituals that have degener·
ated Into a commerCial
spectacle.
Thousands of spectator.s, many
of them foreigners, watched
under a hot sun as 12 men were
nailed an~ hoisted · 'on 15-foot
crosses atop a mound ·tn the
farming village . of San Pedro
Cutud, about 50 miles nQrth of
Manila.
Three other men and t.wo
women,. self-proclatnled faith
healers, also were crucified in
the nearby viUage of Santa Lucia
and In Butacan province, organ·
lzers said.

The Flllplno ·'Chris ts," accom·
panted by horse- riding men
dressed as Roman centurions,
paraded for at least a mile from
the Village chapel to the mound
which was surrounded by barbed
wire In the middle of a rl~e
paddy . Onlookers chanted,
"Cruelty them, crucify them." ·
Pollee es limated the crowd In :
San Pedro Cutud at 30,000. Many
of them were foreigners, lnclud-,
ing U.S. servicemen from the
nearby U.S. Clark Air Base, who
came with their families In cars
arid luxury vans to watch the
crucifixions.
"It Is very painful," yelled
Maynardo Pabustan, 22, still
nailed to the cross when asked
how he felt. "But I have to do this
for the sake of my younger sister
who Is paralyzed."

Meigs jobl~ss ·rate decreases

$797

.....,..nMCOIDEI

Cenu

Meigs ·County .urged to take
part.i)1 proposed joint project

'Ask About
Our 5 Year
Product
PrOtection
Plans

plunged by 1,7 percent.
Excluding autos, March retail
sales were off by 0.4 percent the ·
government report said. . '
·
All the figures are adjusted to
reflect seasonal factors.
Although there was a 0.2
percent Increase in sales at food
stores last month, restaurants
and bars saw their retail bus!ness drop by 1.5 percent In
t
March, the Commerce ~partment said.
e-••
In other categories, March
In the Meigs County Court of
retail sales • were off by 0.8 Common Pleas, The Farmers
percent at building materials . Bank and Savings Company has
and hardware stores, down by9.1
been awarded $22,119.19 In a
percent at furnlt\lre stores, off by foreclosure action, and George
0,8 percent at departrnent'stores,
Collins, Meigs County Treasurer,
aown by 0.5 percent at clothing has been awarded $425.05 for
stores, and off by 0. 9 percent at
taxes on that property, In a case
drug stores.
·
against Kathleen Rosllnsk~ eta!.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICU
Seutlnel Nna Staff
Construction of a 17·mlleexten·
slon of the Tuppers. Plains·
Chester Water District service
lines to accommodate 140 new
• customers will get underway
,
"
next week.
Donald Poole, general manager of the sy~m. announced
the constructlon 'schedule this
morning noting Robinson Con·
structton will be handling laying
the. new lines and has 180 ·days ·
from April 19 to complete the
project.
.
The "notice to proceed" on the
project . was signed by. the
Tuppers Plains-Chester Water
District board lit Monday's
meeting.
·
A simUar notice for Mid·
. Atlantic Storage Co: which will

"Where' s ihat wasca.lly wahbit?". asks Elmer Fudd of Bugs
Bunny cartoon fame.
Where.do you think? It's in the
llvlq.room. ...
,
When Camil41.Yoacham asked
for a rabbit for l)er lOth birthday
last July 24th,, her parents, Mark
and Nancy Yoacham, Racine,
tried to talk her out of it. "You
don't really · want a rilbblt,
· Camilla," her -Dad would say.
"Yes, I do/' Camilla would say.
And then· when the blrth!lay .
arrived an.d Mom and Dad•
realized they had "piddlepopped~' around and didn't have
a present, they decided to get the
rabbit afterall.
·
. •.--, ."
The evening of. her -birthday, .
Dad suprJse:d Camllia by taking
her to a local rabbit faim to pick
out her rabbit. "I didn't know
where we were ·going," Camilla
said, "and when 'I found out, I
almost cried. I was so happy."
As It turned out, Camilla
selected a black . and White
mlnl·lop that. . she !!Welitually
· named Wh!,skers.
It would be . wise . for Meigs
Now once the decision haii been
Vounty to participate In a pro·
made to get the ral!bit, Mom · If!{\'!~~;· ·
posed 10-count.y branch of the
stopped by the MeigS County
Ohio Public Defender's Office,
Extension Office for lnforma tlon
according to a letter to the Meigs
on c~;~rlng, for a rabbit. All the dos
Cou~ Cofnmlssloners frQ!ll
and don'ts of typical rabbit care
Meigs Public Delender Charles
were.cavered ill the Information ~
' ~lght.
"
provided by th~ e1't~J1~~~- .
Not on I~ "''"'~I~.JilU'tlcjPJltll,ln In
However, Wb'iskers i!ldn •iti!rn
the diultl:county agency mean
out to be the typical rabbit.
additional services to the Meigs
Whiskers do~n't live i!l a pen
County Public Defender's Office,
in the backyard. ·
but there would be no additional
He lives in an unlocked cage in ,.
costs for the Increase in services.
the family room, arid he uses a
Meigs County's current yearly
Utter box.
budget for . the local public
Allin all, Whiskers has made ·
defender's office is $35,000. Half
GOOD BUDDIES - He's not the Easter Bunny. He's the
for a happy addition to the family
of that amount, or $17,500, Is
Birthday
,Bunny. CamUia Yoacbam got her pet rabbit, Wl!lskers,
- except. that. he found a thread
relmbursible to the county from
for her lOth birthday last July 24th. Since then, Wb.l skers hes been
stickl1'g up In t,he corner of the
the state.
living the good IUe at the Yoacbam house In Racine.
family room rug and by the time
Knight met recently with Ohio
he finished chewing, he'd desPublic Def~nder Randall Dana,
troyed' about four inches of
several members of Dana's staff
dlsconcerthig for visitors, as well outside. He lies beside her when
carpeting. He also chewed a
and approximately 30 represen·
as to the family's 15-year-old cat, she's watching television or
section of wallpaper that was
tatives from nine other counties
Gulntvere, who tries to pretend doing homework. He plays
loose near the floor In the family
the rabbit doesn't really exist. games like running In a figure 8 · surrounding Meigs, regarding
room, and he chewed the finger· · Only when tl)e rabbit actually around and around her legs, and
foundation of the branch of the
tips ·of . a doll belonging to
State Public Defender's Office.
hops on lop of Gulnlvere does she rolling a big pink ball all over the
€amllla's sister, Leba. There
(Guinlvere, the cat) acknowlege floor. And ,sometimes he just The other counties represented
may also be a 'few other minor
at the meeting included Washing·
the rabbit's presence with a hiss . hangs out with her In her room .
gnawed places in the house as yet
ton, Athens, Jackson, Vinton,
and a swat of the paw . .
undiscovered, says camilla's
Ross,
Pickaway, Fayette, High·
As for visitors, the Yoachams
But he's a big responsibility
Mom.
·
land
and
Brown. If the branch
usually try to warn them not to be
too, and Camilla has learned that
. But all In all, a rabbit In the
office
becomes
a reallty,lt would
alarmed If a rabbit hops by .. It Is she must feed and water and
house Isn't much of a problem.
be
centrally
located
in Athens
rather unexpected to be sitting In clean Whiskers' litter· box ·and
Actlially, the rabbit and his ·· someone's ljvlng room and sud· cage regularly.
with attorney services to be
propensity for chewing on things
provided In all Individual
denly see a rabbit run through
· So, as long as things are going
he shouldn't provides an Incencounties.
the room, hop three feet off the smoothly, and until something
tive for family members to put
According to Knight's letter,
floor, kick Its feet and then turn In
valuable Is fo'unq to have unac·
things away In their proper , mid-air an&lt;! run back the way It ceptable rabbit teeth marks, the
"Dana intends to contract with
places, Mom adds.
I!leal counsel as he did with me to
came.
"wascally wabbit" will continue
But having a rabbit running
provide this local
As for Camilla, she can't to live the good life- inside- at
loose · In the house can be
-.,presentaUon."
tniaglne Whiskers ever living the Yoachams.

• Rwhiy;nal•• Frain- $995 ,. -.
New

2~

A Mutti.medi• Inc. NeWIPIPer

Water· line .e xtension
to .begin ·next week

A girl
and her
rabbit

..

2 $ectlono, 18 Pogeo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday. April 13, 1990

Copyrightwd 1980

- -·Pomeroy Court newsTodd Goode, Pomeroy, was
·fined on three charges when he
appeared In the court of Mayor
rtlcliard Seyler 1'uesday night.
He was fined $313 and costs for
resisting arrest, $63 and costs for
disorderly conduct, and $63 and
costs for expired registration.

· Low tonight In low fh.
Cl!ance of. rain 50 percent.
Saturday, high near 60.
Chance of rain 80 percent:

•

at

.

~·

:Richardson... Continued from page 1

'f ormer son-In-law. .However,
under oath,4 Soulsby said that he
slapped Richardson In the face,
Knight pointed out.
Knight also cited othef Incidents which ·were testified to
during the course of the trial, In
which he believes that Richard·
son was mistreated by the
sheriff's department. One such
' Incident allegedly took place on
the day of a scheduled court
appearance by Richardson In
regard to divorce and child
custody proceedings. On this
occasion, Knight said tllat Rl·

Pick 4

Page 4

.

•

400 •.

0849

..
WED~SDAY ADMISSIONS '.",
-Helen Harris, Syracuse; Terry ~ ·
PhDlips, Racine; and Beatrice ·
Blake, Racine.
· .
.:.
WEDNESDAY qiSCHARGES ::;
- John McKenzie, Lena ;•
Hellman.
..
_

J~ent

Pick 3

•

· Hospital -news.
v•rllll8 Memorial

·Ohio Lottery .

Padres hand
Los ·Angeles
8-6 setback

p.m. was called toLe&amp;alngCreek ·•
Road for David Watkins who w.as
transported to Veterans, and at ~· .
4:33 .P-111· the unit went to
Overbrook for Dora Smith, also ·.
taken to Veterans.
· At 5: 34 p:iil':' the Syracuse Fire
Department was called to Route •
124 for a structure fli'e at the •.
Walter !Wush residence. The ,
Middleport rescue · unit was •·
called to assist at 5:48p.m. and at ~
6:06 p.m. the Raclne unit was ·•
called for assistance.
·
Finally, at 10: 39 p.m. the ::
Tuppers Plains unit went . to Route 681 J;:ast for ·Chad Whl· ;
tlatch who was transported to ::;:
Holzer.
'
•

I'·

···-·

t
--~ -~-·

......... -.

-- ·-· -·

~--

~

·--~--------------

1orce estimated at 7,000, there
were 700 people In Meigs out of
work In February, OBES said.
The rate was also an Improvement over the 10 percent unem·
ployment reported in February
1989.
In the area, Vinton County had
the hlghes t percentage of unem:.
ployment at 12.5, unchanged
from January and a steep, 2.1
percent increase !rom the February 1989 )eve! ofl0.4 percent. Out
of an estimated work fofCe of
4,100, there were 500 listed as
unemployed In Vinton.
The lowest level of unemploy·
ment was reported In Athens
County at 7.2 percent down
six-tenths of a percent from the
7.8 percent reported In January,
but an Increase over the February 1989 figure of 6.9 percent.
In Jackson County, unempJoy.
ment was set at 11 percent, down
a full1percentfromJanuary, but
up ·1.6 percent. from February ,
1989's level of 9.4 percent. Lawrence County pOlled a 7. 7 percel!t
jobl•l rate In February, down
from 8 percent In January but up
1.2 percent from a year ag9.
Statewide ~urlnll February,
unemployment wu at U per·
cent, down nlne·tenthl of a
percent from January, but up
from the5.8 percentllsteddurlng
February last year.

u uctloll II&amp; &amp;lie evee&amp;, wlileb waa llped by
former Manball Ual\tenHr Coach SoDDJ Randle,
!ell, ead lll..ola Vllllllp' Coi'IIOI'baell Carl ·
Lee, . riJM. Also Mtndlel &amp;lie 8YIDI fND'
011.,... waa Oallla Coautr cunpalp cbalrmu
Bob neu.:y. (OVP pboto b:y Lee AD~ Welch)

�Commentary .
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~lb

B~m~
~v

. .......,,...,.......c::~ ..=·
,......,_.._

·.• ROBERT L. WINGETT

. ,

.

'

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

·~ Publisher

~eaer.I

Jllaaat;er·

1

PAT WHITEHEAD
Aulstani Publlsber/Conirolier

...

:
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
: AssociatiOn and t)le American Newspape- Publishers AssociatiOn.
LETl'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less Ulan 300
: words long. All letters are subject to ediUng and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pub" llshed. Letters sb011ld be In good taste, addressing lss\11!5, not personal!·

ties.

~ LBJ inlage softening
.~ with the years
.-.-

~

Ponwoy"'7Middleport, Ohio
.Friday, April 13, 1990
.

vlcted qt'bavlnl!, sex wit.h amino~ . bat and hill feet.
In a Milwaukee Incident, he
·- "I try to convince eve~ybody
Luis Polonla seemed more served 27 days In jail. With thll.t
that· I could play," he said.
concerned with his 1990 role than . finished, he can res,ume . being • •'Right now It's gonna be my job,
With his 1989 misfortunes.
what he was when the Yankees
I'mgonna' take it. I'm just happy
"The No. 1 pinch-hitter on the acquired him ·1tn the Rickey
to be here and I hope sooner or
club, I know that 's golngtobemy Henderson trade.
•
.
later things can change."
job,'' Polonla said Thuf sday
"He's a big part of our club,"
· Polonla's hit cJMe on t.h e first
after his pinch-hit single In the said Yankee manager Bucky pitch thrown by reliever Doug
eighth . inning snapped 'a tie, Dent. "He's a good little offen· Jones, and made a winner of Eric
·
helping the New York Yankees slv_e player.'"
Plunk. Jesse Orosco took the
open "their season · with a · 6-4
"I do11't worry a bout any- loss.
victory over the' Cleveland thl~,' ' Polonla said. "I went
"I know the guy," Po ionia said.
· .
Indians.
through a 101 of bad things .last
"I know . ·hiS best pitch Is a
"I know lt~s going to be hard for year. Now I know what's go!Jlg on changeup. I said If he 'throws me
a young guy like me," added In New Yorl\, so I'.m ready for a changeup I'm go11na' hit it.
Polonla, 25. " Bu.t when you know everything. I don't think any· That's exactly what he threw
that's your job, you gotta be thing can hurt me ahymore."
me."
ready."
An outfielder with a reputation
' 'I hope I can keep doing my job
Las't year, Po Ionia faced more as a poor . defensive player,
and turn everyone around and he
than tough relief pltchlllg. Con-- Polonla must contribute with his on my side. That's one of the
'
By MIKE TULLY .
UPI National Ba,sehall Wrlier

Jack Anderson &amp;
.. .Dale VanAtta .

·Mercedes wasn' tavallableforan
WASHINGTON- The Defense to,spruce up the route traveled by won't change that.
This
Isn't
the
first
time
that
big
ordinary GI to check out for the
villltlng
dignitaries.
The
messy
Department suffers from a bad
spenders
at
tbe
Pentagon
have
evening.
overhead
utility
lines
on
the
base
case of vanity. Some top officers
worry' more about appearances are passe, and the sidewalks and favored aesthetics over fiscal _ When the Army ROTC decided
than ·they do about weapons parking• lo.ts are ordinary. An- prudence .. OneAir Force general to create a new Image by ·
strength. They have no qualms drews wan.ts a visitors' center, once spent $75,001J'for an avenue changing its name to Anny
about wasting rtloney on tancy and officials there, are worried · of 50 flagpoles on his base. When ROTC Command, It spent
cars, doodads on unlfonns· and that the hal)gars, telephoite poles someone complained, a member $300,000 on lhl! promotion. About
and parkilllf lots aren't (jlgnifled of the very unit that Installed the 60,000 cadets and 5,000 officers
flowers around mULtary l)ases.
flagpoi!!S was assigned to Invest!- · . got new shoulder patches and a
enough
for visiting dignitaries.
Andrews Air Force Base outgate them. Surprise. He con- -regimental crest.'
side Washington, D.C,, Is a
perfect ., place for _squandering
With Andrews dressed up, eluded that ·the charges of
money on frills. It Is the base those dignitaries can now get a wasteful spending were unsub·
The Army post' at Fort Jackwhere the president's plane Is first Impression ·of --a wealthy Stantlilted beCaUSE: the flags were son, N.C., recently spent more
kept and where members of - country that spends money on top of the line. I
than $235,000 to beautifY the
Congress begin .and end their frUls. Then their second lmpres·
Andrews used to have a glossy grounds when a hirlngfreezewas
junkets. Andrews Is also the port stein will come on the drive 1981 Mercedes 2400 for the use of In ef{_ect because of budget cuts.
of entry for vls.ltlng heads of between Andrews and downtown visiting brass. The car was paid
With the EvU Empire now on
state. And It simply wouldn't do Washington where they will see tor out of the base's Morale, the wane, Congress Is agonizing
io have the place look aus(l!re.
how the taxpayers of that Recreation and Welfare Fund. over troop and weapons ,reducTop officials at Andrews want · wealthy country live - some In That I'!'Oney Is supposed. to be tions. It would be a shame to see
to spend $9.5 million for a poverty, some victimized by used to maintain libraries and val\lable people and hardware
makeover. In addition to expand· crime, some sleeping on steam recreational ·facilities for all lost while the dally waste at the
lng facilities, the money will pay grates. Burying a tew utUity lines personnel on the· base. B\lt
Pentagon gotlS unchecked.

-

-

-Midcleport. Ohio

.

'

·.'·•

four hits and three RBI tQ give
Det roll their first victory qf thE(
season. Urbano - Lugo pitched
three and one-third Innings ot
one-run relief to earn his flrs1
.vi c tory si nce 1986 with
California.
'
Blue Jays 7, Ran1ers 1
Anlels 3, Twins I

•Fertilizer
•Chemicals

•Field Seed
•Seed Corn

SUGAR RUN MILLS
POMEIOY

MULBERRY AVE.

Jim Cobb~s ·Spring Savings
On Used Vehicles!!

"

:.. WASH.INGTON- Reporters who covered Lyndon B. Johnson in his
"" White Ho.use years and before waxed nostalgic on a Washington panel
~ recently to commemorate the 25th anniversary·of· his ·Inaugural.
r
Tbelr·recpllectlons for better or for worse proved the obvious- that
:: LBJ was a very complex, many faceted, brfillant man In many ways,
: who never felt he was understood by the preJ~s. And probably wasn't,
• except that was mostly his fauit. .
·
• Nearly all the ·panel guests had served with .the Johnson
;:: administration at the White House or w.orked with Johnson during his
l- years on Capitol Hill.
,: The pa!lel was not designed as an antidote to author Robert Caro,
:= who Is writing a definitive biography, no":' In the third volume, and
~ bas. cast a long shadow on Johnson.
·
·
.: Johnson's friends from the past do not deny the facts, except they
•: have another side of the story to tell, a kinder, gentler side that was
" typified by his Great Society.
-: Johnson was a "can do" president. When Warren Rogers, an ace
'

allowing Geren to score:
Elsewhere In the American
League, Detroit socked Boston
11-7, Toronto slugged Texas 7'1,
California topped Minnesota 3·1
and Baltimore at Kansas City
was postponed by rain.
T11ers 11, Red Sox 7
At Detroit, Tony Phillips had

main things I'm looking for this
year.
With the score tied 4-4 In the
eighth, ·Jesse Barfield drew a
walk off Orosco and was forced
by ,Roberto Kelly on a ball where
Oeveland failed to turn the
double-play .
"We didn' t execute on the ball
hit·back to the mound," said John
McNamara, a loser In his first
game as peveland's manager..
"It's a different game If that 's
done."
.
.
. "We got to the ·situation we
want with our clQSers but didn't
do the job,' ' McNamara said.
Bob Geren singled Kelly to
third and Jones replaced Orosco.
Polonla lined a single to center,
scoring ~elly. Steve Sax singled
to second. baseman Jerry
Browne, wl\o dove tor the ball,
then threw It past first baseman
Keith Hernandez for an error,

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White BoUM Reporter

.

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Cle~eland. Indians drpp · opener. to .New York Yankees, 6-4

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

Pentagon worried

The ·Daily Sentinel

p

Friday, April13, 1990

•

'

1917 CHEVROLET S-1 0 BLAZER
4X4 TAHOE .
Loaded.
Stock # 1094A

$10,900

1978 CHEVROLET FULL SIZE
BLAZER 4X4

$

Only67,00mlles
Stock 111 208A

2895

,

~=;"~~~e~~~~e!:~eh:u~~~ ~:~~~~~ y~e~~~:!:t' l~~::e~~cn~~

~ ellglbll! for the purple heart because the United States had not
' =·fonnally declared war, John . Immediately sought legislation to
, rectify the situation.
•
:~: But somewhfli'Et along the way truth got lost 'and Johnson P.ald a·
~;price In credlb!Hty. Because he manipulated the facts, reporters
,•never quite believed him.
~ Marianne Means, a.Hearst.colurnnlst, said that Johnson dlslose!l to
::Jter that he was thinking of not running again the ,day. before he
,·renounced re-election on March 31, 1968, delivering an electrifying
;:announcement at the end of a Vietnam speech - and she did not
•believe him.
~ : Bonnie Angelo of Time magazine recalled a trip on Air Force One
•:wtth the late Australian Prime Minister Harold Holt and Mrs. Holt.
:;.&lt;!Jstralla'sfirst lady was extqlllng American bacon to Angelo.as they
1 ,ete breakfast aboard the plane. Suddenly, the long arm of LBJ
::Speared a sllce of bacon right on Mrs. Holt's ptate.
•' LBJ, who always remained close to his Texas roots, Identified with
;:o le poor, and could hardiy sland those "Harvard boys" of the
·kennedy era. He would wander around the West Wing turning out the
:11ghts, shades of the Great Depression days.'
BOSTON i!IlEA) - Ever since
:: When a Southern senator questioned his switch to become an all-out
democratization began to sweep
· :)&gt;at tier for civil rights, Johnson replied: "I'm president now.
the Eastern Bloc, Western com·
.President of all the P!!OPle."
.
panles have envisioned huge
;: It was a love-hate relationship with the press, and he was constantly
profits being made from millions
• •ln search of a format that would suit his personality andputhlm In the
of long-deprived consumers who
· :best light. He came across as wooden on television, and that was the
wUI now have access to Western
:last thing he was.
goods. However, executives with
·: Once he did hit on a style for a news conference. He paced up and
long experience In Eastern E\1·
~own with a microphone hanging around his neck and flailed his
rope c~ution that the profits may
:ilrms, and delivered eloquent answers. But~ven ln.that setting, when
not l!e as great as many busl·jt appeared the real Johnson had finally stood up, he did not adopt It as
n~ses are hoping.
e pattern.
.The great stumbling block Is
: He had five press secretaries durlng,hls years at the White House,
the currencies of Eastern Eur.ope
and finally GeOrge Christian, a friend from Austin, Texas, came to
and the Soviet Union: They are
,the rescue and suited Johnson best.
·
not p «?nvertlble. What good Is It to
~ A doctored transcript of.press briefings would be sent promptly to - earH .an unlimited amount of
,tJohnson, usually. during his lunch hour, with the ·names of the
Soviet rubles, Czech korunas or
,reporters ·inserted by the question. So he kneo,y wbo to hate .I
Polish zlotles If there Is little In
.yrequently, he could guess, before he waS told, the Identity of the
these countries to buy for local
.f'eporter asking the Irritating question. .
.
'
currencies and no way to convert
~ His language a·f ter reading the transcript was not printable.
the money Into dollars, deutsche• So often, ·particularly when faced with the growing national
marks or some other hard
opposition to the VIetnam War, he would say: "It's easy to do the right
currency.
lhing, !I you know what the right thing Is."
Because of currency conver• When the late Sen. George Aiken, R-Vt., told him, and later his
sion problems, there are several
successor, Richard Nixon, to declare a victory and leave, Johnson
deals now being made between
.
.
lold friends: "I know he's right."
Western companies and Eastern
·: But he could not take that advice - and the war went on.
Europe. · Three arrangements
currentiy In the works- all with
Hungary.- are typical.
General Electrl'c has purchased a majority Interest In
Tungsram, Hungary's largest
lighting manufacturer; General

,..., .

Motors 'has· announced a deal to generate significant profits assemble 15,000 cars a year and but· In a non-convertible
make Opel parts; and New currency,
Sponsors of such ventures are
England Machinery has signed a
deal to manufacture packaging planning to reinvest l,nltlal prof·
equipment In a neWly established Its, hopelng that within five to
free trade zone on Hungary's · eight years - wh~n they are
southeastern border.
solidly In the black - Eastern
AU these deals will result In the European currencies will have
manufacture of goods mainly become convertible and the
Intended for export outside of profits can then be withdrawn.
Eastern Europe. They all depend
Glllette recently announced
on three factors: Eastern Eu· yet another kind of deal with an
rope's large pool of workers; the Eastern Bloc country. II signed a
willingness of Eastern European letter of Intent with the Soviet
countries to give Western com- tradlngi productloncompany (efpanles significant financial In· rectlvely a government minis·
centlves to open plants; and the try.), Lenlnets, to build and
belief that the new Europeli\n jointly operate a $50 million razor
Economic Community will lm·
blade faCtory near Leningrad
portgoodsfromEasternEurope.
that can turn out 800 million
By selling products to the West, . blades a year.
these ventures will guarantee ·Some of the production wUI he
profits in convertible currencies.
exported and sold for hard
However, they will not touch the currency, but most of the output
untapped consumerism of the · wlll be sold within the Soviet
Eastern Bloc.
Union.
The most visible business
"This Is going to be a Western·
venture that has sought to appeal styled business," says Zelen.
to Eastern Bloc consumers them· "Investment, receivables, cash
selves Is the opening of the huge flow and the normal things of anew McDonald's In Moscow. Like business. We are going to supply
the opening of the new 520-room, . ·the Soviet market, and we. are
41-story Marriott hotel In War· · going to- eam- harq currency
saw, the venture will probably ~fits. What is unusual ... ls that
·
· ·
,/"""--: agreement with Lenlnets

· Ber,ry'~ World

I
..

•
••
•
•

,,

,·1
'

0

'

.::

.

''

•

•
•

~~-A
1990
NEA. Inc.

•

•

'-

•

by

ALBAtROSS

•
r

\!)

•

'

speclflclally recognizes that both '
parties are In the deal to maj5e a
profit 1 and that profit will be
distributed In hard currency."
Based qn his many years of
experience In the region, Zelen
believes there is the possibility
for some quick profits for ,West·
ern companies, but these oppor·
tunlties will be short-llvesd.
"There Is a great penl'up
desire to purchase what hasn't
been available for purchase,"
says Zelen, "and many people
have hidden away In their'
mattre~ses hard currency they
have acquired one way or
another. So there will be an
expori market, but within a very ·
shOrt time, .a year to a year and a
half at most, It's going to run out.
Then these countries are going to
be faced with a classical balance
of payment problem and with
Inflation and Its consequences.
"So If you're going In, you have
to be prepared to stay. And you
have to structure your deal at the
outset to get out your profits. I
would not make a hard currene~
Investment on the hOPe that at
some time In the future, on terms
I cannot even guess at now, I wUI
be able to withdraw my profits."

Baker comprOmises U. S. principles·

·u
.

'

i'

. Well over a year has gone by
since James Baker achleved .hls
longstanding ambition to ,become
. secretary of ' state, and It Is
possible to make out, now, the .
general outllnes of his notion of
how the job -ought to "be discharged. Unfortunate)y, the
'prognosis Isn't promilllng.
Uniquely among the world's
major nations, the United States
has, from Its Inception, stood for
freedom. Other nations - Brl·
taln and France, for example have themselves been free as
long, or ~ven longer. ·But they
have been compromised by thetr
· lnvolvell!ent In the power politiCS
of Europe and · the blight of
colonla!illm l.n a way, and to an
extent, that the United States
was fortunately able to avoid.
As a result, this country's
Identification with principle of ·
freedom, Is recognized throughout the world . . As the late
President Chiang ,Chlng-kuo of
the Republic of China (Taiwan)
once Bald to me, "It the United
States doesn't stand for freedom, ,
what does it stand for?"
·
It Will the Inability of such

brUIIant Machiavellians as Rl·
chard Nixon and Henry Klssln·
ger to grasp the profound lmporlance of this Identification that
led them ·Into such blunders as
their repellent detente with the ·
elderlythugswhorunRedChlna.
To obtain a "China card" to play
In the Cold War with the Soviet
Union, they gravely sullied this
country's reputation for devotion
to the cause of freedom.
Today, as the Cold War fades,
we find ourselves_ still saddled
with an embarrassing "friend·
ship" with Deng &amp; Co., who have
just renewed their credentials as
murderers by their performance
In Tianallme'n Square.
Unfortunately, there Is consld·
erable evidence t]lat our curreni
secretary of state suffers from a
similar moral myopia. In the
particular case of China, Baker
(unless we prefer to put the onus
entirely on President Bush)
twice secretly dispatched his
own highest deputy and the
National 8ecurlty Colinctl dlrec·
tor to Peking soon after nanan·
men .SQuare, to obtain promises
of better behavior that remain

. 'I

glaringly unfulfilled to this day.
And still more recently, In the
case of Lithuania, the Baker
policy seems far more concerned
\vlth keeping Mikhail Gorbachev
In power In the Soviet Union than
with recognizing and encouragIng the Independence of a Sll!all
nation whose absorption by. the
Soviet Union FOR refused to
recognize even In the midst of .
World War II.
Where, In fact, since Baker
too~ the helm, has U.S. foreign
policy stood unambiguously for
freedom anyWhere In the world?
Not In cambodia, where our
stronge,s t current allies are. the
Khmer Rouge. Not In Angola,
where Jonas· Savlmbl IS being
subjected to the mDitary salami
tactlcf" of Gorbachev' s well· '
supplied puppets as we stand by
and watch.- Not In Nicaragua,
where the administration was
· clearly ready to accept a Sandi·
nillta victory and compel the
contras to do likewise. Not even
In Panama, where a powerful
Internal coup was allowed to
sputter out, and only the result·
lng criticism 'nd Noriega's
~

. . . (USPS UJ-8111)
A Division ollllulllmedla. Inc.

So.Th'at Our ._.ploy~•
May Spend Easter with
'lhelr Families

.. Published every afternoon, Monday
·thrrogh Friday, Ill Court St. , Po·
metat. Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company / Multimedia. Inc., · .
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Se·
cond ~lass ·postage paid at Pomeroy,

TON

$8495 -~· .

.1981 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88
Low miles. one owner.
Stock II t324A r

$98,5

1984 CADILLAC ELDORADO
. Affordable luxury.
Stock IIGM105A

$9696

'

MIDDLE,OIT, OHIO

·~ Ohio.

Member: United Press lnterna11onal,
Inland Dally Press Ass~latlon and the
·Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New 'iork, New York 10017.
'•

PEPSI

.',' .

·PQS'IliiASTER: Send address chanll"'
lo The Dally Sentinel, lll C&lt;&gt;urt St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45169. ·

$589· CASE.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES .

By Carrier or Mot Or Ro•te
, One W~el&lt; ............ .... .. ,..... .... :...... $1.10
One Month .. ..... ....... ..... .. ...... ..... .$6.10
One Year . ........ ............ .. ...... .. .. $72.80
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally .. ...... ... ........................ 25 Cents
Subscribers not desiring to pay thec~r­
rler mav remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentlnel on a 3, 6!or 12 month
basts. Credit wlll be given carrier each
week.

~

SUGAI CIEIK

POTATO CHIPS

BACON

~~9

$169

NOW

..

MIDDLEPORT GULF .

([;o

c:z:.Mt

·$4 4 9 5

Auto .. air.
Stock #1341A

WE GLADLY ACCEPT POOD Slliii'S
992·3397
312~SECOND
MIDDLEPOITI OliO

Stt'( ,.J.lttpP.'(

$4495

1986 CHEVROLET CAVAUER

,

~

1987 FORD BRONCO II 4X4
8 cyl., 6 speed.
Stock #1 403A

$8995 &lt;

$159 LL

C"ECK OUT OUI FlESH DIU SAUDS BEST PIICES IN TOWN...;

·

Mall Sull8crlptlont
lnalde Melp County ·
•13 Weeks ... ... ............. .... ...... , .. .. $19.24
26 Weeks . .,,,. .... .. ................. ... .. $37.96
, 52 Weeks .. ... ~·..................... ....... $74.36
Out8lde Melp,Co11nty .
]J Weeks ..... ....... ,~ ..\ .. .. .. ..... ...... S20.80
•26 Weeks .. ..... .... .. .. ........ .. ... '·.... $40.30
52 Weeks ...... .... ..._.. .... .._. .. ...... .. .. $75.10

1

8 cyl., 3 speed.
Stock #1 4968

MI. lEE

No subscr-Iptions by mall permitted In

available.

1984 FORD 'nso

•

·areas where home carrier service is

·

1985 FORD CROWN VICTORIA
Low miles, one owner.
loaded.
Stock 111414A

$5795

Spwttl · Scnneo~~e

,. YQtth C:Ut
~lowt'l ~toHt
. f:'ttltct
.

William Rusher
growing Insolence finally provoked a U.S. response. ·
. The nations of Eastern Europe,
to be sure, man,aged t.o obtain
their freedom on ijaker' s 1!(1itch.
But any Nobel Prlze~ handed out
for that.. achievement surely
belong to them and to GOrba·
chev; not to Baker.
We must remember that Bak·
er' s roots are deep In the
domestic politics of Texas and
the United States, where a
politician who genuinely stands · .
for principle (as distinguished
from merely pretending to) Is ··
often regarded as just wutlng
his and otller people's lime.
.·
To come trom such a back· '.•
ground to the Intricately brocaded tapestry of International ,
affairs may equip a person to ··
play competent poker wltb the ' ·
Soviet foreign ministry, but It
leaves him woefully unprepared
to raise the one standard that the
world has loag been talllbt to
, regard · u America's special •·
concern: the standard of
freedom.

3/4

THE-DAIRY QUEEN
WILL BE CLOSED
EASTER SUNDAY

· T~e Daily Sentinel

Robert Wagman

$399.5

One owner, automatic,
31$0 V-8. low miles.
Stock 111&amp;10A

~

•

profit . from Eastern Europe

One owner, auto, air.
Stock #1 &amp;02B

Santana caucl!i th&amp; sb9rt fly and doubled up Don
MatUn1ly at first. Yankees won their home
opener, ....
(UPI)
.

OUCH! - IDdlans' shortstop Rafael Santaaa
goes flyhlg over eenler Uelder Milch WebBier In
tile seco~ Inning at Yankee S~adlum 'n!ul'llllaf ,':

C~ .West

I

.1984 CHEVROLET 4X4 H.D.

.1987 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

1985 FORD EXP

· 1985 CHEVROLET CAVAUER
.
. STATION WAGON

··JSo6"s j'1tAtket A~ LJUUtlt'!uses

$3495

4cyl., elr, 8 spcl..
one owner. Stock #1 1911A

'·'

Auto., air •
sunroof
Stock IIT2

$3495

AZALEAS

DAFFODII.S, TUUPS,
GRAPE HYACINTHS

1912 HONDA CIVIC

4 oyl., 81P•d.
rune good.

EASTER
- LILIES · ·

-

'

'

$24.9 5

Stock U28A

''

1919 CHEV"OLET CORSICA

Specie! Fectorv Pl,wcheM

ltocll IIGM241

Our lilt '12,178

.

.

$8995
.

SALE

-

_'You'll Find Super Scivings On These &amp; Many More
0

REDTUUPS

HYACINTHS

JIM

·coBB

CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE
CADILLAC-GEO, INC.
992-6614 POMEROY, OHIO
I

�,

..

F,

o

4

·

Ohio

Phi~adelphia, defeats

Ohio

8~;

Padl;es , own

Phillies, _Cubs .split twilthill·

.

'

.

.

'

By JO~ CIALINI
·mldwaJ; through·the jhlrd quar·
UPISperta Writer
ter to tak.e control of the game.
The
Philadelphia
76ers·
didn't
Hawkins
capped the streak with
a, u...IIIP.Nta.&amp;er . .le.al
need much of acontrlbutlon·from a three-point basket that put the
AIIDIC.UO LIAGVB
Eut
Charles Barkley to make t.helr 76ers ahead 79-54 'wlth 3:08 to go
::'
w L ret. ·oa
, . Yartr....... :............. l 11.. . .
50th Win of the year their most In the wlod:
.
..... .........................1 I .1. - .
convincing
victory
of
the
season.
Minnesota,
which
fell
to 5-33 on
T.rellt• " ' " '"''' '1···· : ••.• •• % I .. . 1
11a1am..e ..................... 1 1 .111 t
l;lampered by a .sore right the road, .received 12 points from
, Delrtlll ...... ... ... .. ,.... ••...• 1 I .:til J
k~, Barkley p!il,yed only 22· Tyrone Corbin and 11 from Tony .
.Oeveluil .. ,.. ... ~............ 1 I .. . t
~~~·~
minutes and scored a mere 11 Campbell.
.
W•l
points Thursday night but Pblla' 'Jt . ta)l:es · tough , play .· and
Cll~taao .•l'. .•••.••••••••..••••.• l
.~.. .- Caf. . ..................... l I .'711 .delphia rolled over the Mlnne- execution to wtn," Cal1)pbell
o--.. .......................! t ..11'7 ~
sola
Tlmberwolves ''l10'77; with . · said. " If we ptay consistently, we
T-. ......... , .... ,............ 1 I · .IH I
Ku• C::M.)' ....... :....... ... I I '. Ill 1
·the 33-potnt dlfference cbelng the can win. There was nothing we
· 18eliiMie .......................... l I .SIS IYI ·
76er~· largest margin of victory could do tonight."
Mhue••·....... ............. t s .til ~ ..
. · TINndlarB•*•
this
season.
·
In other games , Cleveland
New Y..t&amp;:l; OeveiU. 'I
Injured
the
knee
In
a'
clipped
Washington 102-100, Bo~:
Barkley
. DetreM n, ~otto•7
' 'hfH11 7, Teu1 I
collision
wlth
'Atlanta's
Jon
Kon·
ton
beat
Miami 139-118, New
j.Cai ..~S.Mt•-•• ., .
. Balllna.re a&amp; llu . . Oly, ppd. rlla
~ak Tu~ay arid llritpednotlcea· York nipped Indiana 108-100,
· Prw., ·o ....
·
bly OQ the co.u rt ag111nst ,the . Houston stopped Charlotte 117(1M "Oti'U I• palflltbalal
· Clnelaall (Farrell 1-U) .t Chlcqct
Timberwoives.
,
. 110, Utah topped !lie L.A . La.kers
. (JdCDtweJIM),I:•II·•· . '
'
·
"Obvlo11slY
.It's
not
doing
very
.. 107-104, San ~tonlo ,stopped the
C
O..._... ~,....,..,. 11·1) ¥ 8elll&amp;.-e· .
(Baa ... lldlf.l)), Jf:H,p.m.
well," be said. "But there's L.A-.&gt;e-·GHppers 105-98, Phoenix
~
11-lt)•caJ ..... ·-: ..
nothing .I, can do abOut tt. I just defeated Sacramento 116-11~.
. ... (Ait . . UJ.UJ,It:ll p.m-.
.
·, '
, Tero.t;o (Key lHt) at K• . . cu 1
have to relax for a .couple of days Seattle sank Denver 113-103 and
\Ot•••~.. ).l,llp.m.
,
hope, It gets . better by Dallas dumped ~!den State
and
BaUimtre (Jo ...... 4:-1) .. Det..at.,
(Mo...... "14), 1:11 p.m.'
·
.
Saturday (when Philadelphia 140·133.
·
·
TaM (WUt 11-11) al New Yotk(Pern
visits
t;:harlotte)
."
·
f.JI)' 1:• ......
~· Hll. .kee. (Navarro HI M • • •
Ron Anderson came ·off the
· Cavaliers 10%, Bullels 100
· (llleekl!ll' M), 1:Sip.m.
·bench _to' spell Barkley,· and
. At: Landover, Mp., Brad
.
8MW'IIItll'Game.
Baltimore ai Det nit
scored 20 points and He~,sey Daughtery scored 8 of his 22 ·
"I'MIIitll&amp;a-CMy
.
Hawkins added .19, enabling the points tn~ the .foUrth quarier to
!,fJIWMIIII!e .. .But• .·
~ -,.
..·exu.aNewYorll
·· NATIONAL BASKETBALL AS SOC.
·
76ers
to become one.of six teams pace Qeveland:\ The ... victory
tlewlaail. M Clllcap, •laW '
TbundQK•••
Mla. .o&amp;a 11 Calllofllla, a liM
. to 'defeat every other NBA rnoved the C;~vililers lilto a ,tie
ClnelaaiiiJU, w.w.oaiM ·
~~dat 8e'!'tle, Dlpi
...._ .... Miami US·
with Idle Atlanta ·tn the race .for
.opponent thiS season.
........... u .......... ,..,
· NATIONAL LI!AGU£
''I felt somebody. had to com£' tlte final playoff berth · In the
New Ye,.lk. ....... 111 .
Ealt'
U&amp;all 11'7, J,A Lak_.. llf
In and step up," said Anderson, Eastern Conference. Both teams
Team
. W L Pet. GB
•••••117,
o~r~oete att ··
(]lic11&amp;0 ........... ............. 1 1 .117 who hit 9 of · 14 shots. "Rick ·a re'3740wJt.h·ftye games remain·
8M ... , .... lll.lA CllppersiB
1'11- .......... .... :..... :.. o I ,NJ · · ReiiWI! 111. Dnwr liS
'
(Mahorn) has a sore knee, lng In 'the reg1ilar season.
·
8i. La.......................... I I .M'I P._•lx 111. l.cnmetlti llt
N"' Yorlt ..................... l I .111 1
ow
...
1M. Geld• Mate IS! '
Charle$
wa~ really hurting and ·
·
Celtlcs
138,
Heat
118
P~·elpbla ·.... ...... : ...... l t .Ill I
' Fri._, Gam.
Derek (Sthith) couldq't'•play In
At Boston ;-cL~rry Bird scored
......... ......................~ 1 I ·.Ill I
AU. . . • ·n.t .-&amp;, I p.m.
' '
··oru• a&amp; .., . . ...., ap:m.
·
the
second
half
,{because
of.
21
of his 40 points In the fourth ·
a--... ......... l .. : .. ....... s ··• r.IW , l
.• .._ ..e at Oll•l"P.t 8:M .. P:m. ' :
tendinitis In his knee) .'
quarter to lift B9ston, which
•. s.rr..ca.co ,............. t 1 '. m t
Ln·AIIPI• .................. t t :111 . 1¥1
lhd... al Port...;i, II: M p.m.
''
" Someb¢y had io pick things remaiqed . 1~ . games behind
.'· .. .....
ep, ....,................ l ' " · · 1~
Go IIIIa State M·LA Laken, ••= M ,.m.'
up.' ~
., .
. · Phl!adelphl!l. The vlct.ory was
"*-•·~:. ..................... 1 'i i \ .ID t .·.
-~ ·
. ~. . _..,. Gatne~~,
'
• . . . . . . . l .... .................~.. • . • . . . . .. s.- · · .
lad- 'M. Newle~
The:
triumph
gave
Pbiladel·
. Boston's fifth straight, eqUalmg
' ,.
TRI'III.,&amp;II'*a
. ·· ·
V.lupliW•III•••
· .· .' I'Ollodd""a'kCIIkqo .. loil ·
· phla 50 wins In a season. for ihe · Its season-high. The loss was
................ CI!I ......
' • O.,l e... l _.li.del... a·a. t.d '
•nl.taewluMI
first time !n four years as the Miami's sixth in a· row .
Plllltlll rtll a.·Ntw··l'•nl • . ·
Or-.. . . . . . . .
s.. Dep 8, lA's An PI~ •
Knlcks 108, Pacers 100 ·
76ers held theTimberwolves to 34 ·
· A&amp;luta It Mll.,..llee
SIICI'IUi'I-G Ill&amp;.. Dlep
Su huU.C. U. .uau.• 4
points
In
the
second
half.
'•
At
·ll!ew York, Patrick 'Ewing ·
Hollloa a&amp; U&amp;all ·
·
· ···
'FrkiQGana
,Jleawr at Pa.,....
It also. reduced · the• 76ers' scored 40 points and added 15
( IM reconl• Ia ..n•••~)
New York _(Cone 14-11) .a Me•.ell
Plloeab: u Seitlle
magic 11umber for clinching the . rebounds toguldeNewYork. The
Atlantic Division tltleto.a comb!: - los)! snapped the Pacers three·
· nation of four Philadelphia wins .. game winning streak and left
.or Boston losses.
'
them In )eventh place overall in
:"As a, plateau,. 50 wlnsln 'tbe the Eastern Division playoff
.
•
.
.,
I
.
•
.
,, ; :
•
pros are like 20 wins for a college race, two games ahead of Atlanta
,,
,.,
.
· · · · · · · ' ·• team; ''., PhUad~lph!a coach J,lm and Cle~land.
'· ·
l YJ'\r
Lynam •said. " lt separates them
' Rockets 117 .Hornets UO
. ; ... 11 .
.
··
. · .,._,_.! .
·.
.fro~ . the ,others and It 111tows
At Houston, Akeem Olajuwon
~e v~, made .P!~gess from last
scored ~ points and pulled dowl)
The Meigs Maraud~r boy~ and
Alexand.er 23, l!lon&amp;hern ~
· year..
19 rebounds, and Buck Johnson
girls track teams recently took a
High Jump· 1. Ha)'nes (Meigs)
Haw~lns ·.!!.~red ~ven points
added a career-high 39 points for
trl-meet· to open 1Jte 1990 season.
5-4, 2. Caruthers (Meigs) , 3. as Philadelphia used a 23-5 run . Houston. · The triumph lifted
In the girls meet Meigs came In
Durst (Meigs)
·
·
·
• '.,.
·
first with 98 points\ Aiexander
Long Jump- 1. Cremeans
•
!!I!COnd with 53 points and ~uth• 1 (Meigs) 19-9 14 2. weaver .
ernflninshedlnthirdp~e'ivith7 . t(Southern), J. Johnson
0n0
points. In the boys meet Meigs .. ·.. (Afe)(ander) .
'
""0
captured 120 points, While Alex-.
· Shot Put- 1. · Shank (Meigs)
C ·
TV)
ander slipped past Southern with
39·5, 2, . VanMeter (Meigs); 3.
OOC
p0S Q W
0
r" 23 points while Southern capSingleton (8Quthern)
,
. DAY
. TON, ,0· hio. , (UP.I.) 2.
. t.·
.~ , • ·
.
.
tured 22. . .
Discus ~1. Miller (Meigs) 113-8,
It tin
I
llttl d
. . In the girls meet the ·Lady
2. ·Van Metzr .. (Melg.s). 3. Shank
Former University of Dayton cog . a,; g.
wa&amp; a.
e eM.a rauders almqst made a clean
·(Meigs) , .·
I·
,: . . .
basketball coach Don .Donoher flated, Howard said.
.·
reporte.dly . agreed to become
''He ~ent out. and made a call
nly In
I
sweepof th eeven ts Iosngo
PoleVaUit-1.HawleytMelgs)
t0 c !If tat 0 t lkt0 bls
H
the 1600 meters, while the boys . 8.0, 2. Haypes (M~tgs) 3 . Cre- ' head coach at Walsh College In .
a · orn · ' a
so~. e
,
lost only In t~~ .100 meter dash,
means· (Meigs) .
··
.
Canton, then refused the job. :
ft~~e back any said, I cant do
400 melj!rs · an(j . 200 meter.s,
.3200 Meter Relay-1. Lemiey, · The college called ,a news ·
Walsh ,''wtth an enrollment of
Richard · Singleton ()~ : Souther!!
Wya(t, Blake, Hall, (Meigs)
conference Tuesday to.tptroduce · about 1,100, contacied Donoher a
w~ll t!Jose·events. .
·
9:52.5, 2. Alexander
Donober, who was on cam,pus. · fewweekliagoafterGerryFaust,
Marauders ~ere to. com110 . Hurdles- 1:. Ci:rem'eans .
Walsh officials s'ald in a story· bead football coach at the Unlpete ·-lit · Feder.a l.· Hocking on
(Meigs) t9:4, 2. nu.r st (Mei"")
Thursday In The Dayton Dally ·
f
·
Th rsd
•~ht
d 111 b
,News that ·Donoher agreed" In verslty o Akron, was on campus .
u ay, n,.. · an · w
ost
· 100 · M. Dash-1., Singleton
Inc
for a motivational SPfleCh arid
'I)'tmble .and North Gallla on. &lt;!Southern , )· 11.8, 2. English ·· pr lple to take the job, · then sugges'ted to Walsh of!lclals that
(Meigs) a: Blake (Meigs) .
changed his mind. The ·'news.
., '1'\lesday the 17th. .
.'
Gl Is T
Sc
M 1 98
. c'onferenc'e was canceled.
•. Donoher mJght be Interested in
· r
earn ores- e gs ;
·1600 Metj!rs-1; Hall ('l\1etg·s)
- · th 'j b 'th. D 11 N ·
·t d'
d
53
So
th
7
"It
doesn't
look.
like
It's
.gotng
. e o ' e; a Y ews repor e .
Al exan er • u ern
5:17.5, 2 . .• Baloy (Meigs)~ 3.
" Donoher flew ' to .California
Chadweli '(Melgs)
· · .
tohappen,"·jtValshathlettcdlreC- Wed d
. b hi
p 1
Hlgb Jump-1. Deanpa Haggy
(Meigs) 4-4, 2. James· (Alex~
M Relay-1 . .Hawley,, Eng· . tor Joe SplneiU said, ''but I hope
·. Qes ay to e s &amp;on, au •
d ) 3 B It 11 (AI
d )
I'm wrong."
· ·
·
1 wM Is having previously schean er . a re
ex~m er
Its . , Blake, cremeal)s .(Meigs) . ."We'r'e moving on with the dlded surgery .for a kidney
1-ong Jump- 1·. Ronnea Davis
49. , 2~ Alexander, 3. Southern ·
bl
400 Meters- ·l .Singleton (South·
process;" he sa'J'd, "but we'd love , pro em.
.
,
(Meigs) 15;614, 2. Wagner
)3 J
(AI
d )
for him to change his ·mind.
Walsh coach , Dan 0 Conner
(M.e'"
,.s· . ames
exan er . ern) 54.7', 2. Hawley · (Meigs) ! . What's the difference 'if It's res.lgned from his job at the NAIA
Sho~ Put· 1. Nancy Baker
V!inNostear (Alexander)
Dl 1 1o III h 1 fl 3 20 10
(l'r!.elgs) 2~-2 12 '" ~· James
300M. Hurdles- 1. Cremeans Tuesday or Friday? · He's 11n · v ~ n . sc. 00 a er
(•Xllnderl 3•. L'Heareux ·
(Meigs) 48.0, 2. Durst (Meigs), 3. extraordinary candidate, " '
"· record last season.
Dlscus -1: ,Nancy · Baker
Mansflel4''(Alexander) ·
·
Donoher, · 58, :Spent the past
··'
. (Meigs) 77'8, 2. L'Heareux 3.
600 Meters- ]. Hall (Meigs) ·season. as an assistant coach-at
Sellers (Meigs)
2:20.8, . 2. Wyatt (Meigs)' 3. Im;IIana University after serving .
ON CARPET ·CLE'ANING
· · 3200 Relay ·1. Missy Nelson, · Lemley (Meigs), · · ·
as head coach at the University
AmY Rouse, Elizabeth Downie,
200 Meters· 1. Singleton (South· ·. of Dayton for. 25 years. . .
.
WHOLE HOUSE .SPECIAL .
Tiffany Bennett (Meigs) 12:o'7.6, ern) 24.0, 2. Johnson ., (Alex·
Dale aoward, deaQ 9f student
ON ANY COMBINAnON OF S
2. .A,Iexander
.· ander), 3. Cremeans (Meigs)
affairs at Walsh and head of the '
lOOMS, HALI:WAY A.ND BATH
100 M. ·Hurdles-1. Jennifer
3200 Meters- 1. Baloy (Meigs) . search committee for a new
Taylor (Meigs) 18.5, 2. Katrinl! 11:34.0, 2. Lemley (Meigs),· 3. · coach,saldbearrangedthenews ..
ONlY $99~5.
Turner (Meigs), 3. Tara Bell Fauber (Alexander) .
conference and · scheduled to
(Aiexander)1 _
·
.
.• 1600 !'4. Relay-L , Hawley, .. meet Dohoher at 7:30a.m. for
ADVANCED CLE4NIN.G.
lQO, )'&lt;feters-1. . Ronn,ea Davis · Caruthers, · Blake, Haynes breakfast. '
JSE•VICE
(Meigs) 13.~. 2. Miss~. James, 3.
(Meigs) 4:18.8, 2. Aiexander
"He walked ,in, and I could teli
~ .
Hayman (Southern) · ·
'".
he was having some second
· 446·3915
1100 M-Relay~.d. Mary...J:rethougl\ts .. I could tell he 'Was

.

'

By APRIL'ALFARANO
said. "If there was a ttme fQr me second save.
L
UPI Sports Writer ··
t9 get a hit, that was it. I've just ·
In other NL. gam~s. PhlladeiLos Angeles may have lost 8-6. got to keep · going up there _ phla nipped .C.blcago 5-4 ln. the
In their fourth straight meeting swinging. Once I saw It ·ht\ the first game, Chicago beat Phlla· ·
with Sap Diego, but two Dodgers outfield grass, I iet out a b!g sigh delphia 6-3 In the second, Plttsburgh,downedNewYork6-2,and
·had a chance to celebrate ofrellet" .
nonetl)eless.
,
,
Padre manager Jack McKeon . San FrancLso pummel~ Atl.a nta
Dodger outfielder Juan Sa- was calso. pleased wltb Carter's . 13-4,
.
,, ·
muel and .catcher Rick Dempsey · progress.
PhUUes 5, Cubi14
both reached career milestones.'
"It was nice to see Carter get ·
Cubs .&amp;, PhiiUes 3
·Samuel aFhleved his l,OOOth hit In his first hit and RBI," McKeon
.At Cl!lcago, Terry Mulholland,
the third/ Inning and Dempsey · said. "Before he went up. I told 1·0, surrendered justf)ve hits and
became only t~te 18th player and him to p_u t the ball In play. That's struck out three In five and
· flith catcher to play In four all we· wanted to do ltn that two-third.lnnlngs. Roger McDodecades In the major leag~~es . · position. W'e needed that run on well record.ed the final five outs
.. But at one point Dempsey, who ·. third."
·
.
(or his first save. Cubs starter
became a majorleaguerli1~969;
Roberto Alomar, whose two- Steve.W!Ison,P-1.wasrougltedup
wasn't sure he would make it.
run homer In the sixth tied ·the {or {lve r1111s In three and ,
"Before the game 'I thought I score, opened 'the San. Diego one-third Innings. ·He allowed ·
might be having a heart attack, eighth with a walk. Tony Gwynn five hits, gave up five wallis and
but it turned out to be jtfst a tapped back to Aase who threw to committed a ·balk. In the seoolid
muscle spasm In my cnest.'' be · second; but shcirtsinp . Alfredo game, Jose · Nunez · went five
said. "I said, 'Please, let's get . {lrlffln muffed the throw for an )nnlrtgs, allowing six hits and ·
this game going.' You have your -:·error,· sending Alomar to third. . three runs, two of· which; were
usual anxiety before your first Jack Clark walked to load the earned. Mitch· WI\Jiams pitched ·
game of the season.' ' ·
·
bases and Carter followed with. the ninth for his second save. .
It was also an eventful game his two-run single.
· ,
· · Pirates I, llietli%
for
Padre
outfielder
Joe
Carter
Mike
Munoz
replaced
Aase
and
At
New 1iork, Neal Heaton, 1-0,
ALOlfAR HOI\IERS - ' Su Dleso Padres'
lnnlns off of Los Angeles Dodgers' starting
who
hit
a
two-run
single
In
the
walked
Fred
):..ynn
to
re-load
the
pitched
five. Innings · and ·scat·
Roberto Alomar Is greeted by teammate Jack
pitcher, Ramon MarUnez Thursday. The Padrll!l
eighth
ending
an
O
;for-13.
drought
bases.
Benito
Santiago,
followed
terf!!l
six
hits and Barry Bonds
Clark after hltUng a two run bonier In the sixth
beat the Dodgers, ~- (UPI)
drove tn three runs. Mets starter
and giving San Diego a 6·4 lead. with a single driving In Clark and
Carter's · hit came off reliever Carter for an 8-4 San Diego lead. · Sid Fernandez, 0'1, allowed four
Don Aase, 0-1, and gave reltever
Th~ Dodgers scored twice In · hits through six Innings In taking
.
-.
Calvin Schiraldi his first vicjory tl!e ninth when pinch-hitter Mike the loss. He Issued three w&amp;lks,
man Ric Nat tress · scored two · toll and avoid elimination.
of the season:.
: ,
.
Sharperson ~ellvered a two-run
all in t~~. Sl!cond Inning, and two
By United Press International
center
Joe
Nleuwen,
Messler
and.
Glenn·
Anderson,
"I'm
just
glad
themonkey'l&gt;&lt;iff
,single
off
Craig
LeffertS.
Lefferts
of those runners scored.
.
goals
and
.st. Loyls goaltender Vincent
dYk
scored
once
and
added
three
·
Edmonton's
.two
lttadtng
scorers
my
back
·
now
·
and
that
It
·
-ret
fred
Jeff
Hamilton
on
a
fly
out
·,
Giants
13;
Brave&amp;
:4
,
'
' R)endeau · plliyed the part of
At Atlanta, Mike I:.aCoss,.1-0,
ljnli)l:ely hero, preserving a 4·3 assists t 0 . lead the defending . against the Jets . during . the co~tributed to a victory,'.' Carter to end the game and earn his .
St3n.
J
ey'CupChamplons.overL
s
'
reguhit:'
season,
broke
free.
on
a
·
·
surrendered
.five ·hits .o:ver' five
victory Thursday night and help0
ll)g . the :Sl11es clinch their first·
defenseman
(;
round series against the Toronto
a
shot
through
traffic
to
beat
l,lnemate
as
a.
decoy,
and
·
·
• a be'stselllng book and movie ,andBrettButlerscoredfour.Tbe
· · Maple Leafs. ·
·
,..,.
h
NEW
YORK
(UPik
Ex, ,;
· ·
· ,', · Giants s~ored five. tim
· es '!n .the
·After sitting on the bench as s ta r tl ng goaIt.e nd er Ke lly Hru- whi p""u a wrists ot over the
middleweight klrtgRockyGrazlSomebodyUpThereLikesMe.
•
ano, the dead-end· kid who spent
He became a. professional second Inning off Atlanta starter
brilliant rookie Curtis Joseph dey at 6:39 of the second period, gloye of · goa:ttender . Stephane
most of his youth ,Jocked up and · fighter In 1942 and boxed 10 and !oiler John Smoltz,' 0-1. ; \
started each of the Norris Dlv· putthig the Flames up 3-0. At5: 53 Beauregard.
lslon semifinal games, ~lendeau of the third, Nat tress made It 4·1
It' was Anderson's first. point of
went . on to become one of years, becoming one of tbe
. drew the assignment in goal by skating around Ki~ ' d~fen- the playoffs and only th~ second
boxing's -greatest· champions · . ot~tstandlng drawing cards In
GRAVELY TRACTOR
ll)idway through the third period. seman Brian Benning and slip- goal for Messier.
was In serious condition Thurs: ' boxln~ history. He fought 83
·SALES &amp;:SERVICE ·
·Joseph suffered a shoulder ping the puck past Hrudey.
A minute later, Brent Ashton
day ~oUowlng a strok.e. ..
times an,\1 knQCked out 52 oppo204 Conikir St. .
Po,.,.oy, OH.
Injury with thfl Blues leading 4-2
Calgary outshot Los Angeles scored what · appeared to. be .the Tbe 6!!,-year:old former bol!.e r .. nents. Graziano will be particu.&amp;
at 8: 43, and Riendeau was on 35-15 in the gaine.
game· tying goal, but referee ..was being treated In jhe Intensive , larly remembere.d for three
MON.
D
AY THRU FRIDAY
deck.
Calgary, holders of. the Denis Morel dlsallewed l~ becare unit at New York Hospital- -·· savage-fights with Tony Zale. · .
· B'A.M.·ii P.M.
"I never played baseball and I .teague's best power play during ' cau~ a ·Winnipeg forward was . Cor!lflll Medical Center where hi . •.After leavinl! tbe ~mg he took
SAT. ,9 A.M.·t P.M . . '
don't know what a pinch-hitter · the regular season, convertep on lylng·tn the Oilers' goal crease.
was brought Sunday after suffer•. _ the unlikely role of a tll!evlslon
CLOSED MONDAYS
feels, buf my situation - was one . of . :Seveq power pia)(. Pful MilcDermid was knocked ' lng a stroke; a hospllal spOkeswo-' ·. per!Ormer on the Martha .Raye
tOugh," Riendeau said. "I don't ·opportll,nltles.
Into goaltender Bill · Ranford.
man said.
.
,·
.' .. s)low from 1953 to 1956. He also
want to do that again."
Los Angeles got its lone goal w-hich left the net wide open for
The spokeswoman said Grazl- ,·, cr,usaded· against jUvenlle
After giving up a.goal, he made . from defenseman Rob Blake, a A,shtonto fire the puck ln.
·
ano was listed In serious condl· delinquency. .
. .
the save of the game - anil the' power-play goal on . a 45-foot
The oilers scored two goals,
lion, but' declined to release . ·. ~ SII~r., said · Graziano was
.
~erles - robbing Toronto winger
slap~hot..
,:
one by .Cralg Slmpsori and, the
further. details at .the request of
adored_by .fans because of his
D,anlel Marois on a breakaway.
Oilers 4, Jets 3
other by Mark Lamb, in a
·
glits
·
At Edmonton,
Alberta,
Mark
13-second
span
lh
the
latter
part
·
·
his
family.
.
·
·
·
·
·
.~
•
.,.~.
~·~
·
~~
··
..
~
·~-~~~
J'v!arols aimed Inside right post,
,
·
Jake LaMottil, the former I
•
· · ~·~--~llll•••lll!ll!l~llil•
·
)liU Riendeau, sprawling, flicked
Messier snapped a fie at 3:53 of of the second ped9d to tie the
middleweight ·champ whos.e
out his glove to catch the puck..
the third period to r~lly Edmon- game 3•3.
. ·
rough life . aQd •controversial
Loeded with , all options, low mileage, new Ford tra·
; "Tha)lk you, very much,"
career were . brought to the
de-in, .new c.o ndition . ·
·
Blues Winger Srett Hull said.
screen by Robert DeNtro In the
.
·
·
.
''fhat was·a•great save.:•
. film ''Railing Bull,'' said he was
Said Marois, ''I was trying to
distressed about ~razlano:s poor · . · 2 door, sport air, 5 sp. trans., PS, .PB. nice car•. low
go top shelf. He · made a good
health.
. c ·
·
1mileage
· ·
save.''
·
··
" "
'
..,
· ·
'"Ijustfoundoutaboutit.wheni.
. :HuU scored twice, extending
was
out
taking
a'
walk,''
said
La
his point-scoring streak In the
Motta, who has been good friends
Brown. PB. PS. air. auto. trans •• nice car, high miplilyoffs to five games, and Peter
with Graziano since childhOod.
laage.
·
·
, .. ·
Z~el added a goal and two
"I hope he's gotng to get better.
,
.
· ·.
·
assists tl;l pace tl)e Blues. c· ·
t "We were kids on the. lower
Joseph was solid, b11tRiendeau
East Side of New York City
Fully equipped, mea.
·
.
.
performed spectacularly.
··
together.
We·
were
in
the
same
$
.' .
:•:'VInnie has been a big part of
reform
school.
I'm
qot
gotng
'to
I
.
IVY
-·
thJs hockey team all year and he
t.hlnknegatlve, I'mgoingt.othlnk
V-8, 4 Dr., auto. . · · . ·
,
was again tonight," · St. Louis
positive."
.
SEE
RAY
RIGGS
.
· cdach Bilart Sutter said.
. . Graziano suffered a heart
· ·
· ·
St. Louis, In knocking off
attack Feb. 5, a~d was receqt1y
Toronto In five games, ·became
discharged from a local hospital. .
· .the first team to advance In the
Bert Sugar . .editor of Boxing
playoffs this year. St. LoUis will
Illustrated and a friend o( Graziface the winner of the ChicagOano's, said the former bo~er had
Minnesota series In the Norris
been ailing for a long time.
Division final.
Graziano's errors as a young
. :'I! they won tonight, anything ·
St. lt. 7
N•w LGJC~flon Allovt Easi~m High Scheol
915-4200
New York hoodlum and devilcould have happened," Hull said.
into
.may-care fighter was made
.
"Eiut we pulled out all the stops
and played a helluva game."
In the other Norris Division
~
I
semlfhial, Chicago topped MlnSTOPS GOAL ATTEMPT - St. Louts Blues' Harold Snepats
nespl;l to take a 3-2 lead in the
series. .
\
holds off Toronto Maple Leafs' Lou FanceschetU as goalie Curds
Stiblll 009L 2.5 cu. in.' Chainuw·
· ~n tjle Smythe Division, Cal·
Joseph stops a goal attempt In, the f~t.l'erlod Thursday: (UPI)
with
14" 11u a Cham
gary blasted Los Angeles 5-1, but
Lightweight. but sttll rugged and durable.
·
trails three games to two In their
Easy .to liandle. It does more than cut firewood:
~st-of-seven series. Edmonton
ldeal .for
and trimming. Contains featUres
:8lso avoided elimination by defound In
thainsaws.
~eatlng Winnipeg 4-3. The Oilers
lilt..: ILifeltlme Warranty
:-trail the Jets In the series 3-2.
electronic
~. The Wales Conference re•§umes play Friday night wltli the
· .New York Islanders at the New ~orl&lt; )'tangers, Washington at
White, Red, Black ·
··
f'ew Jersey, Hartford at Boston
~nd Montreal at Buffalo:
~
~ The Rangers lead their the ·
~est-of-seven 'series. 3·1. The
White &amp; Colored · . ·
· ·
other .three series are tied at 2-2.
·:
Norris Division ·
,..: Blackhawks·5, North Stars 1
.
'
.
t· At Chicago, Denis Savard had
·· · ·
. • -·
t goal and a pair of assists and Rouen .and Pekin
gbaltender Greg Millen allowed
cine fluke goal, leading Chicago io
4 3-2 lead over Minnesota In their
•
playoff series.
:· Jeremy Roenick and Savard
· (Subiecfto. Arrival
or Tuesdayi ..
gave the Blackhawks a 2-11 lead
after one period that they never
tel~qu!shed. The North Stars.
vf.e re outshot 14-2 ·· during the ·
Pluse note - ~hio Law requires .that we sell .
o}lenlng 20 minutes and 36·27 on
~
, chicks &amp; ducks m lots·ofsix. ·Stcti!m 925-62
Stiblll BG 61 Blower
·
·
.
. ..
.
1
t))e night .
·
The perfect. versattle tool to keep things neat.
.; Greg Gilbert, Michel Goulet
Its powerful airstream blows away !ems and
apd Steve Thomas also scored for
.
deans gutters. sa;ages. patios. porches.
the Blackbawks. Brian Bellows
driveways and gardens. ldea1 for deaqtng
Wa.s credited with Minnesota's
hard-to·reach places. Anti·VIbration feature
FINC~_ES,
o)Jy goal, which deflected off a
· make~ handling easy. For a ltmtted tllile.
Chicago player, for his fourth of
1 0 QALLON AQUARIUM
. t'
tJie playoffs.
· ·
:.
Smythe Dlvialon
·
"
REG. SJO.t5
.
Flames I, Kl!lgs l
· At Calgary, Alberta, defense-

raziano_--s""fI ers ~trok~ :.'

. . ' .w.. ' '

~~~ntia::·~~~~!~~n~h~~; ~~

j

. .S h;nc·
'lads
. ta k e '· . . "
MR t
. art ;n three.IJ
mee
·
.
t
P

Strl•t s•••., Hout•
~THE ~·

.G RAVELY,

· sYSTEM

l985 Ford LYD Brougham ••••••·•·• $3995

'1986 Ford Tempo;..................... $3895
1985 Ford Crown Vi doria ••••••• $3295

.1984 -..cury Grand Marquis ••••• S369S
1981 Ch
c·1tat1on
. ••••·
. ··••••••••····· 400

.

•

APRIL SPECIAL

t"

'·

.

EASTER PETS
NOW IN STOCK

C·h'.IC'kS.•••••• .••••. 6/$360
. . '
$450 ·
Rabbits...............

't

l'
.'

. •• u····· 6/S13·
Ducks
. ·so .
Mond~y

~

' IN STOCK-FEEDERS &amp; .WATERERS....
· • ,*

STOP IN AND SEE OUR' SELECTION ·.,
OF PARAKEETS, CANARIES, COCKATIELS,
.
HAMSJERS, GERBitS. ·.

~~~ . $)6~ ::

;: Sports briefs
•t 'J'alwan will return to the Asian
. C:!rnes after a lapse of 20 year~.
~ding a contingent of 500
a'tllletes and officials to the
multi-sport event In Beijing In
September.
,
·

.

'

,

~ow $7
·399R&amp;G
FEED·
&amp;
SUPPLY
·CO.·
.
W. lllllln .
992·2164 .
Pomeroy, Ohio
(10x20xl2)
.

.

·

95 ·

The Store With "All Kinde of Stuff" for Pete, Stabfe1,
Large • &amp;mill Anlmelt, Lawns • Gerdena.

·

'•·

608

...

STIHC.
.........~··-

POMEIOY
IIIlAlN

her:... reifiUses 'he.,
· a,d 'cnue .·,
h.'s.· · t ·t .alsh. C [[ ege
'.

D

.

·,

Minnesota ·I I0-77

•-•cANer..

'

fir~d ·~:~~~-~:~e~:~:~~;..h~~::ds~l~

Sentinai- PI!ge- 5

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

St. Louis .clinches first-round .series:
A~;;et~lgary

The

'

means, Je!lnlfer
· Taylor:
Amy · '
Wagner,
Holly Williams
(Meigs)
2:02.5, 2! Alexander · ·
1600 Meters-i. Susie Morrell
(Alexander) 6: 13, 2. EliZabeth
pow!ne (Meigs) 3.. KeiJy Doidge
(Meigs)
400 Meter Relay· 1. · Ronnea
Davis, Jennifer Taylor, Amy
Wagner. Holly Wtlllanui (Meigs)
56.6, 2. Alexander, 3. Sou tli~m
400 Meters-1. Katrina Turner
(Meigs) 68.4, 2, Nim l'tJorren
· .(Aiexan,d~r) ~· Mlity Cremeans
(Meigs) .· ·
, ·.' ·.
000 Meters Hurdles-1. Jennifer
Taylor (~etgs) · 53.2 •2. Anne .
L'Heureux (4lexander) 3. Tara"
(Alexander)
·. ·
. .
. Bell
800 Meters- 1. M11sy Nelson
(Meigs) 2:48.8, 2. Sutle Mom111
(Alexander), 3. Tiffany Bennett
. (Meigs)
200 Meters-1. 'i Ronnea Davis
(Metgs)29.2; 2. Tamara .Hayma~ .
,. (Southern), 3. 1 Jacln4.a Sarna
(AleXander) · '
. ' 41)
3200 Meters-1 . MaryCrJ!!IIleans
(Meigs) Tl: 25, ·2.- Kelty &lt;Dold&amp;e
(Meigs), 3. Heather Paul~
(Meigs)
.
- ··
1600 Meter Relil~· 1J Katl1lta

turner, .Mill)' Nell9ll.t; ,Delllll8
HIIIJY, Alii}' Roue (~tp) ,
5: ~.5, 2. Alexander .,,

' ..,.re.m ..._
._.. •

• J

...

•+•-----..·.·-------··.·

-~..;..o...---~-----1111!1·----.

''LAST OF ITS KIND''

PiioTECTS BALL- Miami's Gran~Long ( 43) tries to get a band ,
In on tlie ball as CeiUc .Kevln McHale (L) moves lo the baskel
durlns the first quarter at Bos.ton Garden Thursday. ·Boston won
tile r;ame 139·118. ( UPI)
·
·
Houston to 38-38 as they replace In the Western Conference ·
·malned in the eighth and final · playoff race. Denver,' 39-38, has
Western Conference playoff slot.,' lost 11 of 13 road games to Paclflc
Jazz 107, Lakers 104 ·
Division teams this season .
At Salt Lake City, Karl Malone
Mavericks 140, Warriors .133
scored 45 points and pulled down ·
Ai Oakland, Calif., Sam Per11 rebounds and Jbhn Stockton
kins scored a career-high 45.
handed out 23 a~slsts. The vtctC)ry· points and Roy Tarpley added :a
kept Utah 2lh games ahea!l of
season-high 27 to help Dallas'
San Antonio In the Midwest
~nap a .t hree-game Ioslrig streakc
Division . The loss snapped a
Tarpley, In h(s · second game
seven-game Los Angeles winning
stnce reiurntng from a two-game· I"
·
·
streak. ·
suspension for missing last Fri·
. Spurs lOIS, Clippers 98 . ,
day's practice, added a team·
At San Antonio, Texas, David . high 15 rebounds off the bench.
Robinson scored 32 points and
grabbed 13 rebounds and Willie
Anderson scored 12 of his 26
points tn the fourth quarter for,
San Antonio. Danny Manning ·
came off the bench to score 23·
points for the Clippers.
. Suns 116, Kings 114
At Sacramento, Calif., Randy
Presents
Allen )NBS called for ·goaltendlng
on Tom Chambers' short jumper
with 1.5 seconds left giving the
Suns the victory. Phoenix con·
Saturday,
verted · 34 of.. 40 foul shots,
compared to only 16 of only 20 for
April 14, 1990 .
the Kings .
9:30 pm.-1 :30 a.m.
: Sanies ll3;, Nuggets 10~
. .
At Seattle, Xavier McDaniel
$2.00 Covel' Charge
scored 26 points and .Dale Ellis
added 24 for Seattle. Seattle,
Must Be 21 Yean Old
38-39, ended a three-game' !&lt;,:&gt;sing
. lt. 71143
's treak and' picked up,a gam~ on
· Pomtroy, Ohio
· the Nuggets, clinging to seventh

..

· MIZWAY
• TAVERN

"Southern Charm"·

1974 COIVEnE CONVERTIBLE
Original motor.

427,

original motor

T-top, orlglne' motor.

1970 MONTE CARLO SS
-454.

MAX HILL'S
:·. SJ,COUNTRY
CORVETTES
RT. 338
l

.

l

.

.

.:-

:e .,

J

· .•

"""N~~~
AAI~Ati r
r-"'~·

-'osllAa~
.

· ~· .

. .

bti

(Letart

CHEVIO.LET·-L .
CAD,LLAC·GEO, INC~.
'

·

' 301 EAST MAIN

992·66~4 · . POfllEIOY, OHI· ·
.

.

•

I

Falls)

1985 FORD ESCORT L 2 DR
AM-FM caeaette A c ·
82,000 mile•s~~~po;.c:··s299o

. 6 epeed tr1n1.,

1984

PONTI~( T1 000 4 DR.

auto., 69,000 mllea.

CASH SPECIAL

s·

1990

Auto ..

.

4DR

~Jr. CASH SPECIAL $1990

•

1911 GMC JIMMY 4X4
Tu·tone peint, V-8 engine.

$3990

1982 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME
$

4 Dr, V·B engine. Sharp.

CASH P..CE

.

2200 ,

''Voar ~ehlele Sa•lnge Plaee"
MANY MORE FINE LATE MODEL US~D CARS
TO FIT YOU BUDGET
MOI\IDAY THAU THURSDAY 9:30·6:30
FRIDAY 9:30-&amp;:00; SATURDAY 9:00-1:00
lA. IU. .S
BANK FINANCING •ABIAWs
UIIIIIAI
A Y AILA.BLE · ·
OW.I

I

I&lt;

RACINE

1912 CHEV. CITATION

·~ " ' /

LSL

'

DEALS ON WHEELS

.--~

.

, .l m··
'

CLASSIC ~ BIOUGHAM
- ·. LOADED
.. ~ . .

'

...

614-247-4161

OBIVI:

.1 · l919~ CAPIICE

.,

1973 CHEVEnE ~·••• ~ •••••••• $7450

.!et
-

.

· 327-350, 4 speed.

&lt;~if.~i?_

..

•

·1957 CHEVY ................... $5995

';J~J;

..

'

.1969 ·C.OIVEnE

tc~~

.

·

�...

•

•

.
•,

By The Berid ·

Chester.Garden Club meets'

·The·. Daily Sentinel

"How to Grow a Mexican
Garden,'' by Eleanor Knight ,
and " PlantstoPerfumeaRoom"
by Ruth Erwin were the titles of
progtams. presented at the re.
cent mj!etlng of the Chester
Garden Club held at the home of·
Pauline Ridenour with Mace!
Barton as co-hostess.
In her program, Mrs. Knight
told the story of a British woman,
Diana, who moved from the city
to Mexico and purchased a farm,
Quinta Diana, where she built an ·
adobe, home and grows organic
fruits and vegetables. She served
In the women's limber corps
during World War II and now
spends her time farming and ·
writing cOokbooks.
·
Mrs. Erwin's prQRram des-

c

.

'

., '
, ,~.--------------------~--~~----------------~--~----------------------------------~--------~----~------:· Rutland Scholarship Child abuse prevention
._....;.,·Hudson wins twirl title _ _,_.....;,__ _.__..;;....,.__._
•
···application due
ed
~

Month being observ . .

' .. The deadline for Rutland High '
• School Alumni Scholarship appll·
Meigs County residents are ' teaches - "Tell someone."
·
cations Is May 1.
Edwards said that reported
being asked to make "A Happy
Applicants must be a 1990 Childhood Lasts a Lifetime" by cases of child abuse are escalatgraduate and a child or grand- the Child Assault Prevention Ing everywhere and that Is, lp
~ child of a Rutland alumnus.
Project which serves Gallla, • some ways, good news. "At least
;· , Applications must Include a· Jackson and Meigs Counties. ·
many children riow know and
;, high school ·course transcript, a
The theme for the month of understand that !lbuse Is wrong
' resume of actlvltles and career
· and that they needn't keep It a
objectives, a current photograph April which Is. Child Abuse secret. They .;an get some help."
Preven don Month· Is a positive
; for publicity purposes, the name
1
The Child Assault Prevention
way to focus on preventing child
, and graduation year of the
1
Project of Meigs County, foqnded
to
Carol
Ed·
abuse,
according
alumml parent or grandparent; ·
wards, coordinator of the Child In 1984, Is a member of a
and tbe name of the Intended Assault Prevention Project of nationalhnetwork of projects
higher educational Institution.
which offeu workshops on abuse
Coun~.
.
All appUcants will be evalu· . Meigs
All across hio and the nation a prevention to preschoolers, eleated on grade point average,
network of AP projects will be mentary age children and teens.
. course of &amp;tudy, and compliance · highlighting the same theme ,
"We teaeh chlldr~ how to
· : .with requirements,' with consid·
Edwards
said.
recognize
threatenln .s ituations
: eratlon of extra currJ.cular and
also offer
Gov. Richard Celeste, In pro- and how to get help.
·• co-currlcular activities and ca·
claiming April as Child Abuse parents programs and !f!achers,
.
· reer objectives.
Prevention Month In Ohio; joined staff In-services In every school.
;· ~ AppUcatlons should be mailed
we serve," said Edwards.
: , to the Rutland High .School public officials from, around the
country
.
In
fo~uslng on this
. The CAP Project has served
' Alumni ScholarShip Committee,
3,000 children In Meigs County
national
problem.
. Box 125, Rutland, 45775.
:. I
According to Edwards, child· since It started and . over one
,
ren are learning one of the mUUon children have been
prevention message~ CAP served nat,lonally.
.
Edwards stated "During April
.
w_e hope parents and other adults
•·'
wiiJ think about how 'A happy
chUdren can last a lifetime.'
'
Children who are loVed and cared
for grow up to be· loving and
·caring adults, that's a great goal
'·''
to work on fo~ everyone."
r,o The following churches have
Hysell Run HoUneiiB Church, 6 '
r • 'announced that: they will be
a.m.,
communion, Pastor Robert
•.: ·having special Easter sunrise
Grimm
Invites the public.
·•. '·services.
:' •· VIdory Baptist Church, Mid·
Hemlock · Grove Chrlsllan
dleport, 7 a.m., breakfast to
Church,
6:30 a.m. , breakfast
i"'· -foUow, special singing. Pastor
following,
public Invited. ·
!!
James E . Keesee InVItes the
I!
public.
___
Mt. Unlo11 Baptist Church, '6
;
:
Bradford Church of Chr1st, 7 .a.m., on the hill at the cross, ·
r~c
public Invited.
~
a.m., pu bile 1nvlted
. .

Mary Hudson, and tbe late
Bryant Hudson, won tbe title of
Miss Majorette of Ohio during a
recent National Baton Twirlers
Association's pageant -In Akron.
Miss Hudson . Is the feature
twirler for tbe·Melgs Marjiuder
~and, leader of the Riggs Ran·
· gerettes Baton· Corps, president
of her sophomore class, and a
meml;ler of several organizations
at Melll!s High School.

15

~
~~

S
~

~

1!
~

"'

~

Ladles Auxiliary, Frater• nalTheOrder
of Eagles 2171 will

a1r.

197 6. Chevy C-1 0•••••••.•••.• ~...• S79S

me€t Tuesday, 8 p.m . Nomina·
lions for officers will be taken for
election In May. All members are
urged to attend.

PS

FRIDAY

•••

••'

.,

••

•'

..

~-

.,

.
lEESE'S

GATORADf"

32

.

I

$149;

. ''

,I

·~

''

.,
r,~

11 OL

99&lt;.
~1724

,.'•jl'

PEANUT BUnER .
EGGS

70 DIFFIIENT
FLAVOIS

.

3

oz.

FOR

'i

~
~l
,1

PEANUT BUnER
GRAHAM
COCOUTE CHIP

Sl·oo

~

·~
::

$139,

·

;I
'j

••

. BIDE-A.W'AY EGGS ·7 oz.
MARSBJIALLOW BEN

...;•

BUNNY HEAD WITH
~

oa PIGEON ~~-::;;;----;ei~

BALL GUM

•

CitOICE!

:

$129

•
t~
•
:
:
\
~

t

MASHMALLOW
EGG CRATES -"
.

'$179
.

.

.

'

EGGs · · ···~· .

12 01.

--7.9·c.

.',

:•
The Jackson District Garden
Ohio and Is a nationally accre~ Club of Ohio spring_meeting will dited flowzr show judge.
' ·- be held AprU 30 at the HoUday
Each garden club Is to bring
~ : Inn, Bridge Street, Ch!Uicothe.
one gift. Therewlllalsolieaplant
;; 1 Registration will begin ;II 9: 30 . sale table and donations of
~ ( a.m. Betty Brown, district ~lrec­ plants, s_eeds, rhtzomes,fruits, or
~ 1 tor, will give the welcome and
other will be appreciated.
.., :• special reports will be given by
~ • Sharon Seidell, Margaret
Reservations
be made
by ' . .- - - - - - - - - - - -. .---~---=
contacting
Bettym.ay
M. Brown,
1066
~
Graves, and state officers Dutch Edgewood Drive, Chillicothe
· ~ Celln and Mary DeCessna . .
45601.
' •
., . At 11 a.m. Leslie Hertenstein
'• from Columbus will speak on
~ . ''GraWJng Orchids In the Home
~
Without a Greenhouse. "
~ • Lunch will be served at noon
Final sign up for the Rutland
~
and at 1 p.m. Dottle Kaufman, Baseball Le~e for boys and
~ floral designer of GCO will
girls will be Satilrday 10 a.m. to 1
lti design for a spring afternoon
Quollfltlft Are Llniited
p.m : at the Rutland Civic Cen•· .
10 with "Come on Along.'' She Is a
Coaches are urged to attend.
~""member of Floralla Arrangers of

WRIGLEY GUM .
5 mc11 PACKS
DOUI' 1 MII!IT • SPEA-NT
IIG liD • JUICY ,FIUIT

•

Z

..

•
•
•

LARGE SELECnOif
OF FILLED

Final. sign up

\

I

I

,(

RUTLAND -There wlll be an
all night gospel sing on Friday
't!eginnlng at 7: 30 p.m. at the
Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church. Singers Include Chris-

••

.•

EASTER ·

BA~SKETS

a

1...,

'

•

SUNDAY, APIIL JS, 1990 .

SPICIAL uma lOUIS
WI W1L OP• AT 12100110011 01111m1 SUNDAY
3 PIICE OICIIN 1111.1 ....""•••••- .................... S4,99

•
••
•

•

,.,............... ,. ...... loop:ftWOi... Sor......h...........

,.,&amp;Non ......., . . . .dwe._ot..loooiUoulo-.~"',!!eolh ~.!
II 11 Ilia llalt Cwlt- "'-L ~ ..... • Doc.ff-- -• rrn-r
...... II Soft lriltlr • ,,. llir • ~......
. 1 s

••
'

'•••

caD'S SIZI . .ID .................................. - ........... 2.99
IUJUISIIO 1.11, TO I P.M. 7 DAYS A WDII '

•••
•

•

•'

'•'
I
I

992-6491 '
I

••

•
•L

_.. _ _:._ -··

··- · "' -~ ·-

--·--~-

Worship I-I11S am
Worship 11-1 0:30 am

lo~

_ ;.,;.;._...._

ALL RUSSELL STOVEI
EASTER CANDY AND
RUSSELL .STOVEI EASTER
BASKE·TS ..... 2 5~/o OFF
·MARSHMALLOW

PEEPS

HOLLOW
I

2 FOR~~(

MILK CHOCOLATE
RABBITS

89C

TO

SUNRISE SERVICES

;::r,: :~:Ds. . .2 5°/o

'

SUNDA'I APIIL 1S, 1990
7:00A.M.
.
SUNDAY.SCHOOL ••••••••••••••."1 0:00 A.M.
MORNING WOISHIP ........... 11 :00 AA
E~ININGSERVICI .................. 7:'00 P.IL
WEDNESDAY IVIIIING •••••••••• 7:00 P.M.
PISTOl, J-S L ID.
ASSISTANt PiSTOl, . . . . . A. .Y
991-6771

...._

~

"WELCOMES YOU"

515 IIOITII SICOIID

,,

Sunrise S.r:wice-6:00 am
Sunday School..;...9:30 am

.

'&lt;

•

••
••
••
•

This life changing news brought to
· you by G~d's Word and the .
Mid4h~port Church of Christ
Why not worship with us this Sundt.~y?

Retirement
dinner held

PUNDAIUNTAL INDIMNDENT

.IIUI'Oif, 01110
1

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

\

,,_

~

;

~
~

•

•
•

.

Victory Baptist Church

'

•
•

Buckley who named their par· =
By NELLIE PARKER
The Alfred United Metbodls t · ents and grandparents. •
Church hosted theclusterservlce Members are Lisa Stethem, :
on April 8 with Florence Ann Meredith Crow, Anna Wolf, Jen- :
~pencer as leader. The m~ling
niter and as on Mora, Joey Dillon, :
was opened wlth audience sing- Matthew King, Wesley Karr, and •
Ing of "Calvary" and prayer by Randy Buckley . Dorothy · Karr :
Nina Robinson. Mrs. Spencer led was their pianist.
•
the responsive reading, "AbundRev . Don Archer closed with •
ant Life. " Nellie Parker read prayer and the host church ~
"Happy Easter" and Mrs. served refreshments of cake,
Speqcer read "Mothers." . Da- cookies, fruit plate, and spft :
nlelje and Tiffany Spencer sang,
drinks.
•
"He Is Lord.''
In other matters, the home: of ;
· Matthew, Ashley, and Jessica Carl and Ernest Dorst ll{as •
Boyles, Larry Ritchie, Klrt,
completely destroyed by fire ·on :
March 30. Ernest Is staying Wlth :.
Danlelle, and. TlfflinY Spencer
presented a . litany .. The Alfred
his nephew, Howle Dorst. Car) Is
choir sarig "Were You There?"
In Veterans Memorial E;t~tencied ;
and "The Night Before Easter."
Care recovering from blistered •
The Chester Youth Choir sang
feet. Visitors have Included Sara ;
"Hosanna," "This Little Light of
Caldwell, Martha PoOle, NelUe :
Mine," "Oll In My Lamp," and
Parker, Gay Ann Burke, Sammie ;
·"Heaven Is a Wonderful Place."
Brown. Jlm Robson, all local; •
They were lnlroducted by Twlla
and Archie Dorst, Columbus. · '

Eastern ·menu

·our llllf.Pou.. hrpr, Send" ollrp Sotw lUll Sond.willlllot Dolidou• St"'*
friol •d , _ Clooico of No•
Colo Slow, lllcwohnl Wool • laked • - .

''

'7"86 North
S.co"d
Middleport

The annual blue gold banquet and committee chairman; Debfor Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 ble Cooke, tiger cub leader;
was held recently at Chester Belinda Adams and BrentSisspn,
Elementary SchOol,
• wg)f leaders; JoAnn Newsome.
· Scouts · received .various -a:b master; Mickey Hollon and
·awards, Including year pins and Carl Thomas ; webelos leaders;
certificates. The. den of Pat Pat Clifford, · assistant cubmas·
Meigs c;ounty quil!ers ·are
Keaton and Linda King pres· ter and webelos leader .
Invited to join other regional
ented a skit entitled "Cub Scout
Leaders unable to attend were qullters In a "Southern Ohio
Stew."
l
Kathy Taylor, assistant Uger cub Special", a quilt block contest
Leaders recognized were
leader; Fgank Newsome, scout· and exhibition to· be held In
Linda King, Pat. Keaton, and · lng coordinator; Susan Sisson, conjunction with the fifth annual
wolf leader; and Ma~y Dillard, · "Patterns Worth Repeating" ex-.
Brenda Tuttle, .bear leaders;
Cathy Clifford, webelos leader webelos leader.
hlbltlon at the Dairy Barn
Southeastern OhJo,Cultural Arts
Center )n Athens, June 9-Ju)y 4.
The quilt blocks are to feature
a southern Ohio landmark or
something that denotes the spe- .
cia!
qualities of Ohio. All quilt
· tlan Sounds, • Heaven Bound
LONP BOTTOM -The Red · blocjcs submitted will be exhiFout, Narrow Way', Edens Fam·
Brush Church of Christ · op
bited at tlie Dairy Barn throughlly, Reflections, Gabriel Quartet.
Bashan Road will have servlc~s
out
. "Patterns Worth
and Charity.
Saturday at 7: 30 .p,m., Sunday at
Repeating.''
••
10 a.m. and 6 p.m. with Denver
A panel of regional quilt textile
CARPENTER -"A Place For Hill, Foster, W.Va. as the
experts
will judge the quill
You" will be presented by the Mt.
speaker. The public ls Invited to
blocks
and
select a grouping to be
UniOn Baptist Church on Friday
attend .
made Into a "Southern Ohio
at 7 p.m. on Golgotha' s Hill off
Special" quilt.
Route 143, two miles south of
POMEROY - Resldl!ollts of
When finished the quilt wlll be
Carpenter on County Road 14.
Amerlcare Pomeroy will be'
.
exhibited
at the Da.lry Barn and
Pastor Joe N. Sayre Invites the
having an easter egg hung on
travel
throughout Southern
then
·
public.
Saturday at 3 p.m. for residents,
Ohio
for
d.
l
splay.
their fam!Ues, and cplldren.
Local qullters Interested In
.
.1
RUTLAND -There will be an
creating
and submitting a block
all night hymn sing at the
SUNDAY
·exhibit
;1nd judgjng may
for
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church
HEMLOCK GROVE - Sunrise
request
guidelines
a11d entry
-on Friday sl:lirtlilil at 7: 30 P·~·
Easter services at the Hemlock
forms
by
calling
the
Dairy,
Barn
Grove Church of Christ will be
or
contacting
the
Meigs
County
POMEROY -The Women's
held at 6: 30a.m. David Prentice,
Extension Office before ,May 23.
Auxllla~y of Veterans Memorial
pastor, will have charge of the
The Dairy Barn Is offering
Hospital will have a bake sale
service which will be followed by
area
businesses and Individuals
Friday beginning at lOa.m . hi the
a breakfast.
the
opportunity
to sponsor one or
lobby of the hospital.
Qf the southern 0hlo
more
blocks
MONDAY
quilt as a way to Invest In a work
RUTLAND -Dan Hayman
STIVERSVII.:I.!E -The Stl·
art wl)lch will showcase and
of
and Faith Trlo and the McDaniel
versvllle . Community Word of
express
community pride In
Trio will sing Friday and Sunday
Faith Church will have revival
southern
Ohio. Anyone Inter·
at 7 p.m. at the Hysell Run
through Su11day at 7: 30 p.m.
ested
In
·
helping
to sponsor the
Holiness Cliurch near Rutland.
nightly. Jerry Cottrell, Pales"Southern
.
Ohio
Special" quilt
line, W.Va. wlll))etheevangellst.
may
contact
the
Dairy
Barn for
SATURDAY
Pastor ·Gary }jolter Invites the
fllrther
Information.
·
CHESTER - The Queen and
public . .
King Bees 4H Club will have
bal\e sale Saturday from 9a.m. to
RACINE -The Southern Local
noon at Gaul's Market ln
Board of Education will meet
Chester.
Monday at 7 p.m. at the hlgh
school.
RACiNE - .T he Racine Amerlcap Legion Post 602 will ha,ve an
A_retirement banquet was held
REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
recently
for Clair Giles, Pomeeaster egg hunt on Saturday at 1
athletic boosters will meet Monroy,
at
Bonanza
Restaurant In
p.m . at the post home. All area
day, 7 p.m. at the Eastern High
Jackson.
·
children are Invited to attend.
School.·
•
Attending were Mary and John
SYRACUSE -The Save the
}fARRISONVILLE -There Stanforth, Xenia; Burtha and
Pool Committee will have a car
wm be an ·Easter egg hunt Eldon Moore, Joe and Paula
wash at the fire station· ln
Monday from·1-3 p.m. at the fire · · Crew, Nancy and Ronnie 'Strader
Syracuse beginning at 10 a.m.
house In Harrisonville for child· and Ronda, a)l of Springfield;
Proceeds will go for needed
Frank, Cheri, and Jennifer Giles,
ren of sCipio Township.
repairs of London Pool.
Cheshire; Paul and Mary Stan·
ley, Snowville; Ralph Fa~tor,
GaiUpolls; Charley and Donna
BURLINGHAM -There will
be an Easter potluck dinner
Barley; Benita and Johnle, Walt
and Nellle Haggy, all of Rutland;
sponsored by the. Modern WoodThe lunch ·menu ·tor Eastern Gerald and Gee Gee Gracy,
men of America Burlingham
LOcal
Scho?l District has been Jerry Graey and Laura, Mark
Camp, on Saturday at 6:30p.m.
announced
for tbe week of April
and Kathy Casper 11n4 Derek and
Meat will be provided by the
16.
.
Blake, all of Naw CarUsle; Cecil
camp and those attending are to
Monday:
hamburger,
french
Giles, Summer Donald and Nell,
bring a covered dish.
fries, fruit, rice pudding and
Albany; Frank and Dorothy
· Beatty, Urbana; LOuie and Exa·
• R,UTLAND - Return Jona- milk.
cheese
sandTuesday:
grilled
Mae Christian, Harrisonville;
than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
wich,
tomato
soup,
pickle
spears,
Ida Murphy, Iva J~hnson, Bob
of the American Revolutlon,'wlll
and
milk.
"
fruit
and
· Marge Purtell, Ron and
rQeet Friday at 1 p.m at the home
Wedl}esday:
spagllettl
with
Brenda Arms, all of Pomeroy;
of Mrs. Vernon Weber, Rutland.
cheese, homemade roll with
Junior and Evelyn Wlblen, PageMIDDLEPORT -The Ash butter, green beans, .applesauce· ville; Tim and Carolyn Belt,
April, Carrie, and Shana, Harri·
Street Freewill Baptist Church milk.
Thursday: plzzaburger, corn, burg; and Thelma Giles.
,
will feature the preaching of
frul t, cookie and mllk.
Others presenting gifts were
Mark Morrow on Saturday ai
Friday: fish, .tater tots, fruit
Edna Moore, Springfield; and
7: :io p.m. The publiC Is Invited to
and
milk.
Metta ~hoton, Moraine.
attend.

FIIDAY, APIIL 13, 1'990
s
HALF POUND BUIGEI PLAnll ................~......... 3.64
.

••

STARTING AT

Blue, gold banguet held

Weeked Speelal•

••
•••
•

SPICE or MINI
IIID EGGS

Prices' Good. At
· Middleport Store.
Only

MEIGS -The Vanderhoof
Baptist Church will have a
pre-Easter revival through Saturday at? pm. nightly. Th.e .
evangelist will be Charles F:er·
rell, Pine Grove, W.Va. There
will , be special singing each
evening and the public Is Invited
to attend.

SYRACUSE -The Syracuse
Nazarene Church will have revl·
•.. val through Sunday with Rev.
· ' Ron Roth as special speaker.
SerVIces will be 7 p.m. nightly
• and 10: 30 a.m. and 6 p.m. on
; Sund~y.
'

6FO.S1 00

FERRARA PAN ·

.

I

·-·-··--

JELLY BIRD

ness Chapel through Sunday with
George Wllltams, pastor of the
Point Rock Church, as .speaker.
There will be special singing and
services are nightly at 7 p.m.
Pastor Robert Grimm Invites the
public.

)

PIEMIEI

REESE'S
PEANUT
BUnER .
EGGS

,revival
POMEROY. -There· will ~ a
at the Hysell Run Hall·

SYRACUSE -The Syracuse
Nazarene Church will have revl·
1 val through Sunday at 7 p.m.
' ' nightly and 10: 30 a.m. on Sunday
; wltb Rev. Ronald Roth as special
: speaker. Thl! public Is lnvl.ted to
~
attend.

YOuR '

"

HARTFORD -There will be a
revival at the Fathers House
Church In Hartford, W.Va.
th(ough Sunday at 7 p.m. nightly .
There will be special singing and
preaching and the public Is
Invited to attend.

~

lOoz.

6 PACK

Garden Club meettng scheduled

REEDSVILLE -The United
Methodist Churches of Long
Bottom and Reedsville will holj
spring revival services through
Saturday at 7: 30 p.m. nightly
with Rev. Charles Eaton, as
speaker.
, -

CHESTER -The Mt. Herman
.United Brethren Church will
~ · have revival through Saturday
•. wltb e:Vangelistl.,arnar O'Bryant
,. speaking nightly at 7: 3Q p.m.
•• • There will be special singing .
,.~ Robert Sanders, pastor, Invites
'
·
•' the public.

«

t

MIDDLEPORT -There will
be a children's cantata at 7 p.m.
Friday at Hope Baptist Churc~ln
Middleport. ·

'
crlbed different _- fl~wers and Garden Clubs regional meeflng
which ones were easy or difficult April 28 at Hocking Valley
to grow. Flowers with a pleasant Qualit y Inn In Nelsonville which
fragrance ·are .gardenia, hya- Athens Count y will host with
clnth, narcissus, orchids, persian ~ -morning program by Connie Hill
violet , heliotrope, jasmine, on herbs and af_ternoon program
moonflq:.ver, and asparagu s fern. " Prelude of Spr ing" by Myrna
Maye Mora ' had devoilons Cordray; and county boardmeetuslng Arbor Day and Easter lng April 23, at Meigs County
stories. Scripture was John 7. Extension Office.
Devotions closed with praye~.
T he sunshine gift this month
Roll call was answered with will be for Ada Holter by Clarice
members naming their favorite KraUtter.
southern vacation spot,
Door prizes were won by
Dorothy Karr presided at the Dorothy Karr and Maye Mora.
Mrs .. Ridenour had a 1938 copy
business meeting In which she
am\ounced upcoming events ln· of American Home magazhie
eluding the sesquicentennial and eVeryone guessed the cost of
quilt and flower show on Aprll28 ·. It, which was 15 cents. 'rhe prize
and 29 at the former Pomeroy was won by Maye Mora.
High School Auditorium; sesqul·
The meet1ng dosed with recentennial Founder's Day dinner freshments being served to 13
Aprll28 at 6: 30p.m. at Pomeroy members and one gues t, Carolyn
Elementary; Ohio Association of Barton.

Quiters
contest, Alfred news notes ·
exhibit
scheduled

Community calendar

•

••

•••

.

Jamie Humphrey, Debbie
Clonch, Betty Acree, and Rachel
Hood.
The trustees are Dan Hood,
Ron Clonch, and Joe lJumphrey.
Ushers Include Ron Clonch,
Fred Willett, Greg Willett, Dan
Hood, Joe Humphrey, David
Johnson, and Ryan Clonch.
Services begin with Sunday
school at 10 a.m. and worship
services at 11 a.m. on Sund!IY
with evening services at 6 p.m.
Mid-week services are held Wed·
nesday at 7 p.m. and Thursday at
6 p:m.
.
.

Eagles to meet

•
;·

'i,

EGGS
EGG COLOR lUT.

REV. JAMES R. AC~EE Sr.

:~

,,
.,

~

f

r

•·

i Hill&amp;ide .Bap·tist
L.~nears completion
· The Hillside Baptist Church Is
;/""• 'near completion apd the first
~ services will be held there
~
Sunday with Sunday school at 10
4 a .m. and worship services at 11
a.m.1
~
The new 2,500 · square foot
1
church was constructed by Larry
• . Haynes of Custom Butldlng Pro~ ducts. ·lt. features a large sanctu~
ary, four Sunday school rooms,
~ : two restrooms, and an office.
' (Construction wa'S begun Jan. 22.
' ' The minister of the church Is
· , J11mesR. Acree Sr. and assistant
, pastor Is Mike WIDell. Rev.
) Acree has a bachelor's degree In
~
Chrtstpan EducatlonfromMidwestern Baptist College and he
~
received a certificate of- ordlnai tion from Emmwnuel Baptist
• Church. He Is also certified with
: tbe Natloiial Chrlsdan Marriage
'
Counselors Inc.
~
The church was .es·tabllshed
~
Nov .11, 1989 acd previously met
~
at the borne of the minister. It Is
~
located on just off Route 7 on
~
Route 143.
~
Staff personel Include Joe
~ : 'HumphreY., Sunday school super~ : !ntendent and treasurer; Ron
~ • Clonch, malntalnence superln~ 1 tendent; Jamie Humphrey, fl.
~ nancial secretary and business
~ !, administration; Rachel Hood,
~ 1, communications director; Dan
!1 ; Hood, audio director; Debbie
~: \ Clonch, church clerk; and Betty
;; ~ Acree, nursery supervisor.
~ ~ Sunday school teachers In·
~ elude Mike Willett, Kay Wlllet.t, ·

·

•''
,' '

There .will he a district wide
math fair for the Eastern Local
School Dis trlct on AprU 20 from
6-8 p.m. In the Eastern Hlgh
School gymnasium.
.

q•·

· Reedlvtlle .Fellowslllp Church
Zion Church ol Christ, 6; ~
of the N....-ene, 6:30 a.m., , a.m., special singing, breakfast
special singing, communion, to follow. public Invited.
·
breakfast. John.Douglas, pastor
--.Invites the public. .
Racine Baptist Church, 6: 30
...,._
a.m. with breakfast at 7:30a.m.
Loll( Bottom United Metho- Public Is Invited to attend.
dlllt, with ReedsVille United
Methodlst, 6:,.,
"" a.m . . at Long
mnslde · Bap'llst Church, 11
Bottom church. Public Invited.
a.m., special singing, public
-~Invited.
Sliver Memorial Freewill Bapllllt,,at Kanauga, 6 a.m., special
Hope Baptist ()Jturch. Middlesinging, Rev, Dennis Parsons port, 6:30a.m. , public Invited.
Invites the public.

a

sp.-d. ·

Auto., PB. ·PS.

'·----------------------..,
Easter services
are announced.

•

· '

1983 Mercury Lynx Wagon....S12.95
The combined choirs of the
Racine Baptist and· Methodist
churches Will present the cantata
"Alive" onSundayat7: 30p.m. at
the Racine Baptist Church. The •
chopr Is under tM direction ·of
Mary Louise Shuler and planlstls
-Ulllan Hayman. ·The public· Is
Invited to attend.

~

.•'

1984 ·Ford .Escort Wagon •••• s.] 495

Choir to sing

~

·

Cathy Clifford, Debbie Coolce, Belinda Ad111111,
and JoAnn Newsome. !lack, Brenda Tuttle,
Mlcl(ey · HoUon, Pat Clifford, Carl Tl!omas, and
Brent Sisson.
-. .

'.

..:: ·Mat:h. Fair

1973 Mona~o Camper •..•••••• S2295

..

•.

'

CHESTER BLUE GOLD BANQUET -Leaders. of Clleater Cub Scout Pack 235 w~re honored
recently a&amp; tbe gr011ps annual blue gold banquet.
Pictured
are, front, IJnda King; Pat Keaton,
•

Used 3 times, 24ft.• seH contained, awning.

e

~
~

She competed In modeling and
was awarded third place; In
strutting she tool! first, and In
solo twlrUng she captured first.
She also won the overall title of
Junior Miss Majorette of Ohio. ·
Miss Hudson will now compete
Jn July at Notre Dame University ··
for the Miss Majorette of Amer·
lea title.
•
-.o...Her baton Instructor Is Mrs.'
Judy Riggs,

1987 Sierra by Cobra Camper ....S7500
21 ft .• awning, clean.

The Daily Sentinef,-Page 7

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Friday, April13, 1880

- --- -

. ~ ~YOUR

oFF

EASTER HEADQUARTERS"

\PRESCRIPnON SHOP
'

992-6669..
217 Nor1h Second
......port. Ohio
'
'V

_"'.. -~..:._.. _ _.,__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:J.;..-:o:......-.;....-_ _ _ _ _ _...:.,_ _,_;__

�'·

Pomeroy-Mi,ddleport. Ohio

~.

Friday. Apri113. 1990

--

meto hR.
.

.

Rqse .to receive state.
FFA Farmers Degree

•
••

.

This Message and Ch~ Directory.Spon..tfored Ry The .lnterested .Rrt,~inesses Listed On This -P~e~ .
J$.~F: .Veterans ·
Memorial Hospital
11 S E• .,_ial Dr.

Pomeroy

..J.Jl04

Mill Workl'.tt.~ 1!\:n.\
. CabinelMikinl ~~ ·
Syracuse
~,.~

~~~! i~l
Prescriptions

99z-maDlti.

p,,,.,

• p ·omeroy

992· 2911

Brogan-Warner

SNOUFFER
FIRE '- SAFETY

INSURANCE _...,...._
I SERVICES

SALES I. SERYKE

. 992-7075
172 Nll'lh Second A~t.
MWdlopOrt, Olio ·

Nationwide Ins. Co.
ol Columbus. 0.
H4W.M•in
.H HJII Pomeroy

·•

.

. (6141992 -2039 ...
(6141992-5721 '

lutt•MOI An. Po-ay, Olt

MEIGS TIRE
CE_NlER, INC.

0.

Flottt~ Sh~,

' OCCASION
ROWIIS"fOI IYIIY

214 E. M1hi
992-5130 Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

216 S. Second
Pomeroy
992-3325

GRA,fEI Y TRActO- SAlES
204 Con4or St.
Pomeroy, Ott;

Jonn F . F ulll. Mgr.
. Ph. f92 ·lt0t

9U-2975

Pomeroy

POMEROY, OHI0--'-992-6677

COLONY 1HEATRE

•

BILL QUICKEL .

(row's Famill Rest...,CIIt'
"FIIIItl•l K..,., g Ftlt~ Cilfu•"
228 W. Mai.. St., ~omeroy
992-5432 . .

K&amp;C JEWELERS
.l\\\1f( Srruf Q3...,1i,
212 E. M1in Slreei
992-378$. Pomeroy

716 NOITH SECOND AVE.

SHOP

p.m .

Lima Road, next to
:~::o::c.:.~c=: -Bobl!rt W. RlcbardS,

......... 10 a .m. and 7 p.
w......~ wcnhlp, 7 p.m.
GRAHAM UNITED· METHODIST,
Preacblq t::m a.m. fli'st and second Sun.da)ll of Hell montll: tldrc!and fourth Sunday eacb mouth worsblpservtcesat 7: JOp.
m.; WedDIICiay eveDlnp at 7:30 p.m.

Prayer and Blbl• Study.
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTisT. Mulberi)'HelllltiiRoad, Pomeroy. Pastor Bob
Snyder; Sabbath Sebool Supel'iJitendent.
JIDdn.,-'Solreo. Sabbath School bi!Jllns at 2
p.m. oa Sitturday afternooo wlth worship ,
I!I'Ytcr follawlftl at 3:00 p.m. Everyooe
wei........
.
.
RUn.AND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- Slater Harriett Warner,_Supt. Sunday
Se-I:Jia.m.; Morning Wonhlp, 10:45

a.m.

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, East
Main St. Steve FuUer, pastor. George
stlnaar, Sunday School Superlntendent.
Sunday Sebool, 9:30a.m.; Morning Worlhlp 10: :11 a.m.; Wednesday evening
proyer and Bible study, 7:30p.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Porn· ·
ero:r Pike. E. Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
JaCk•Needl, Sunday School Directc:J". Sun·
doy School, 9:30 ~.m.; Morning Wor$hlp,
lD:Iil; .....,lnaworsl!lp, _7:00p.m. (D.S.T.)
6 .7:30 (E.S.T.): Weclnilday Prayer Ser·
vice; 7:00p.m. (D.S.'I'.I U:30 P.M. (E.S.
T.l: lofllslon Friends (ages- 2-6), Rnyal
AmbuAdull (boys ages 6-18). and Girls
· In Action ill'" 6-lll) oa Wednesdays, 7 p.
m. (D.S.T.I.V:30p.m.(E.S.T.); Tuesday
Vllltatloll,,8:30. p.m.
•
FAlTH TAIIERNACI.i: CHURCH, Bat·
ley Rua. Rold, Rev. Emmeu- Raw s(fl, pas·
tu-. Handley Dunn, supt. su,day School,
10a.m.: SalldayeveniJigserv...,, 7:00p.m.
: Bible teochln1. 7:00p.m. 1l1Jrllday.
·
SYRACUSE MISSION, Cbe&lt;ry St., ,SyraaaR. Mark. Morrow, put&lt;r. Services, 10
a.m. Sunday. Evening serv tees SUnday
and Wodnesdoy at6:00 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST '
IN CHRISTIAN UNION. Dwight Haley •.
llrlt eldor; Wanda Mohl..-, Sunclll,v ,Sebool
Sopt. Sunday Sc:bod 9: :JI a.m.; Morning
Worship lO:il a.m.; ~vening Worsldp 7: :J)

p.m.; Wedn•day prayermeeiiJIJ7: :II p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD.
Racine. Rev. James Satterfield, pastu-.
Freeman WDIIIUIUi, Supt. Sunday. Sehool
9:15a.m.; Sunday and Wedne!day .Vening wrvlces. 7 p.m.

•

THE MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
CHURCH. Corner of Sixth and Palmer. '
Jameo Seddon, Pastor Edna Wilson. s. S.
Sapt.; Cathy RIIQIS, Asst. Supt. Sundav
. Scho$i 9:15a.m.; Momln~ Worship. 10: is
a.m.; SUnday Evening Service, 7 p.m .
Prayer meellng and Bible S1udy Wednes·
day evening, 7 p.m. ; Children's choir
practice, Wednesday,7 p.m.; Adult Choir, ·
Wed. , 8 p.m.; Radio Pr&lt;11ram, WMPO,
Sunday, 8: :It a.m.
MIDDLEPORT cHURCH OF CHRIST,
illh and Main, AI Hart.O.., minister;
Rldaard DUBose, Associate Past(l'] Mike
Gerlach, Sunday Seho~ Superilltertdent.
WO,.Ip Service 1, 8:15 a.m.; Sunday
Se-9:30a.m.; WorshlpServlcell,10: 30
a.nt.; Evening Worshlp,7 p.in.; Wedneuy, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting.
.
MIDDL~RT CHUIICH OF THE NAZ·
ARENE, PASTOR ru.v. Lloyd D. Grimm,
Jr., pastil'. Jean Ktml!l, SUnday Sebool Su·
DC'III-t. SundaY School '' 30 a.m. ;
lolornln&amp;WorsblpServlco,10:30a.m.; SunclsiY ~lllg service, 6 p.m.; Wednl!lday
7 p.m.
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF TilE NAZA·
RENE, !lev. Glenn McMDian, putu-.
Mlrk Matsm, Superintendent. SUnday
Sobool9:30 a.m.; Morning Worship, 10:30
a.m.; Evanftlllttc service, 6 p.m.;
PraYer allcl Praloe Wecln&lt;!ldoy, 7 p.m.;
Youlll meotllla. 7 p.m.
vNftBD PUIIIIY'I'IIIAN MINISTRY
01'1111:101 COUNTY

....,IDa.......,.

·

... O'Qa... llelb

·

·

,JIARRISONVILI.l: PRESI'IYTERIAN
ctaJRCR - ~: Wol'Jidp .services
t:OO L&amp;; Cllln:b Sebo~ 10:15 a.m ..
, MIDDLEPORT 1'1\ESBYTERIAN IIIIIIIIIJ l!:lloal, f a.m.; Clol n:h service,
U:lS a.nl.
·
·
·
SYRAa111! ll'IRS1' UNITED PRESBYTERIAN - ~
10 a.m.;
Cllolla . . . . . IO:lSLm.
·
Rln'IMftl CliURCH OF GOD, Puler,
HaynlGIId Col!- lluaday !"boO! JD: 00 a.m.;

Sc-.

lng service 7:00 p.m.· Prayer ·meeting,

~· '~ ·.. ~

FINANCIAL
SEIYI'CES

BP!I

302 WEST SECOND
POMEROY
992-5479

ll'lii-

NOII SHOWING!
FRIDAY 7,"!0,9:00.
SAT . I: 10;3:00,7: t0,9:00
SUN . l:l0,l:00,7 :10,9:00
MON • THURS.7:10 9:00

••

INSURANCE
-~·on~..o.

.

SPRING
FIX· UP 'TIME......

l

' ·sAlEPRICEsGooo ·
THIU SATURDAY,
APRIL 21

•

m. Prayer-meeting and Bible Study Wed-

A/100p"

PRESSURE
TREATED

PRESSURE TREATED

FRENCH
.GOTHIC FENCE
70115

LANDSCAPE '
TIMBERS

2999

359

SECTION

'
"DECORAnVE"
HALF OAK

WHISKEY
BARRELS

1099

,701100

LST

BIICKFACE

lED 01 GIAY
'

.PATIO
·&amp;L.OCK

399

EACI

la"X18"
"Y11r C..l,"
WHITE' MARBlE SQUARE
or 18" DIAMETER
~ 699
ROUND WHITE MARBlE

EACH

I

I

r

j

GAIDIN MAGIC

I

·SPHAGNUM

I

G,A.IDEN MAGIC

PEAT

739

I

I

II

40

I

.

I
I'

LB.

)99

POmNG SOIL
40 LB.

-2 39

RAILROAD TIES ••••••••••••••••• 899
4o LB: COMPOST MANURE ••••••••• 2'1 9
99
30 LB. SHtEDDED CYPRESS MULCH •••• 2
9
50 LB. ·BAG WillE MARBLE CHIPS ...... 3~
,. cu.·n. RED VOLCANIC ROCK •• ,•••• 459
50 LB. GRAY SLATE ROCK ••••••••••••••• 459

NUGGETS
CU. FT.

.53.9

MUlCH
' 3 CU. FT.

469

STORAGE ·
BUILDING .!!!!, . ~

USED

'.
'
'

'

TOP SOIL'-

...

,I

I

199

u.

I
I

...·-

~~

.• .
'

I

•
(

I

.

•'

•

............. 32 3

lx12 ........ 41500
1Ox12 ...... 475 00
withWill4ew

•••.:.....:::3&amp;1

00

lx12 ........ 491 oo

1Ox12 ...... 5S300
"Some Quantities May Be
Limited"
"N.ot Responsible for Typographical Enora."

l

1

••'

•

'

•

EACH

.I

rd'.J'£

't-

J

8'

6'X8'

R,.

.. S errnonette

~TIONWIDE

•

IIWdleport

prayer service 11Jursday, 7:·:1) p.m.
Wl!dne!day, 7:00p.m.
.
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
Bli;ARWALLOW RIDGE (;IIURCH OF
·AL CHURCH, Kln)!Sbury Boad, Rev.
CHRIST, Joseph B. Hoskins, pastor. Bible
Clyde 'fl. Henders&lt;Jl, past!l'. Sunday
fte\',,seltiDD Jolma•
,,
~lass, 9: 30a.m.; MorningWorship10:30a.
Sehool.9:30 a.m.; Ralph Carl, Supt. Even· ALFRED- Church Sellool 9:30a.m.;
m. ; Evening Worsblp, 6:Jl ·p.m. Thursday ing worahlp 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,
Worshlp, lla.m._; U!o!YF6 :30p.m.; UMW
Bible Study, 6:30p.m.
Wednesdoy ,7:00p.m.
,
Third Tue!day, 1:lt p.m. Communion.
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. PomerovOLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
first Sunday. IArcher)
Harrli&lt;Jlvtlle Rd. IRt. 143) Rot..rt E. PurCHURCH, 28601 State Route 7. Mlddl"
CHESTER - Worsblp 9 a .m.; Church
tell, mlnl.lter; Steve Stanlev, Bible School
pon. Sunday School10 a.m.; Sunday evenSehool10 a.m.; BlbleStudy. Thu r!lday, 7 p,
Supt. : Harley Johnsoo, As·st. Supt. SUN·
Ing service 7:39. p.m.; Tue5day service.
m. ; UMW, first Thursday, 1 p.m.: Com·
DAY: Sible Sehool 9:30 a.m. ; Worship
7: 30p.m.
munlon, first Sunday (Archer).
10: 30 A.M. and 7:30 P.M.: Wednpday Bl·
• JOPPA- Worship 9::wl a .m.; Chutch
ble Study,7:00 p.m.
SehooliO::Mla.m. Bible Study Wednl!!!day,
ST. JOHN ,lUTHERANCHURCH·. Pine
7:30p.m. jJobnsCD).
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH ,
Grove. Th~ Rev. Laura A. Leach, pastor .
BobGrlmm, pastor. Sunday Schoal9: 30 a.
LONG BOTTOM - Church Sehool 9:30
Church
servtCf'
9:~
a.m.;
SundaY
School
a.m.; ~ Worship 10:30 a.m. ; Bible Study,
m .; Worshlp 10:45 a.m.; Sunday evening
10: 30 a.m.
··1 •
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; Communion First
service 7, p.m
.
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CitRlST. - FREEOOI\I .GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Sunday ot.Month !Rev. Charles Eaton)
1 Tom
Runymr pastor. Sunday Scho019: 30
. REEDSVILLE -Church Sehool9: 30 a .
Knob, located on County ROad 31. Rev.
a.m.: Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
m.; Worship Service 11:00 a.m.
Boger Wllllorcl, put or. Sunay Sc:bool9: 30
wership
10:
ao
a.m.
TUPPERS PL~INS ST. PAUL a .m.; Morning Wcn'Shlp 10:45 a.m.; Sun·
RACINE
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZA·
Churc.h Schctbl 9 a.m.;. Worship 10 a.m. ;
, day 'e:ventng wors)llp 7:0Q p.m.; Wedns·
RENE, ReV.\ John Vance, pas1or; Ora
BtbteStudy, Tue.sday, 7:30p.m.; COmmuday evening Bible Study 7:00p.m.
Bass. Chairman ol the Board til Christian
WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN. COol·
nion First Sunday {Archer}. ·
Life.
Sunday
School
9:00
a.ni..;
Morning
CENTJIAL CLUSTER
VUle
RD. Rev. PhUilp Ridenour, pastcr.
Worshl 10:30 a.m.; . Evangelical service,
Be¥. Don Meadows
Sunday School9: 30-a.m.; WorshiP service
7:00p.m.:
Wednelday,
service,
7:00'p.m.
Rev. w..l., TbMehor
10:30 a.m.; Blble'study and wcrshlp serLIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. Dex·
Kev. •llaner BlndllltiOCh
, vice, Wednesday, 7 p.m.
ter.
Woody
Call,
putor.
Services
Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, EuRev. Klllhrya KUey ·
10 a.m . and·? p.m. Wednesday, 7·p.m.
Rev. Poal Manlll
gene E. Underwood, miniSter. Sunday
Sunday morning worship 10 a.m.; Ewn·
dat~b:~&amp;FELLOWSHI~. 128 MIIISi ..
DYES
VILLE.
COMMUNITY
CHURCH,
Rev. Arthur Crabtree
School, 9:30a .m.; Mornlngwcnhtp, 10:30
lng service 7 p.m.;· Wednesday evening
Middleport . Brother Chuck McPhersoo,
Lloyd
Sayre,
Supt.
Sunday
School
9:30
a.
Rev. Robort Sleele
a.m.~ Evening Worship, 7:00p.m.
worshlp7p.m. VlsltatlqnThursday6:30p.
pastor. Sunday School tO a.m.',. Sunday
m.
;
morning
worship
10:30
a.m.
Sunday
ASBURY (Syra_CU!If')- Worship 11 a.m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST, Amos
m.
eveningaervtce.
7
p.m.
.
Tillis,
past
mo.
SOnnyHudlon;
upt.
Sunday
,
MORSE
CHAPEL
CHURCH:
David
evening
services at 7p.m. and Wednesday
; Church Scllool9:45 a.m.: Charge Bibl e
5
ftA(;lNE FIRST BAPTIST, Steve
Study, Wednesday, 7::Ml p.m.; UMW, first
SChooi9::Jl
a
.m.:
MornlngWorlhlp
CUrfman,
pastor.
Sunday
School.
10
a.m.:
se~Q~J.*'BAPTIST.
Kenneth Smith,
1 10:30
Deaver, . Pa&amp;tOI'. Mike Swiger, Sunday
Tuesday , 1:30 p.m.; Choir Rehearsal.
a.m.; Sunday eveatne servlce 7:00p.m.
worship service 11 a.m.: Sunday night
s da •- oiS 30
Sehool
Supt.;
Sunday
School
9:
30
a.m.;
" Wednesday service 7 p.m. WMPO prowonhlp service 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
pastor. un Y .x;ho
'
a.m .; f hurch
Wednesday 6:30p.m. (Thatcher)
Morning worship tO:tO a.m.; Sunday
gram 9 a .m. each Sunday.
- praYer !erviCe Wednesday 7 p.m.
service7:30 p.m.; youth fellow!hip6:30p.
ENTERP~ISE· - Worship 9 a.ll).;
evenin&amp; worahJp 7: 30 p.m.; Wednesday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
m.; Btblestudy,lfltursday. 7:30p.m .
Church School tO a.m.: Bible S1udy, Tues.
evening Bible study 7::J&gt; p.m.
RENE . Samuel Basye, pastu-. Sunday
C1iURCHo!Middleport,1nc .. 75Pear1St ..
FULL GOSPEL LJGHTHOUSE, 33045
day, '7:00p.m.; UMW, First Monday. 7:30
SChool9:30 a.m.: WorshtpServtce10:30a.
Rev. Ivan Myers, pastor; Ro,ger Ma~ley .
Hiland .Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, pas·
p.m.; U.MYF Sundayr' 6 p.m. Choir Re· · BURLINGHAM COIIIMUNITY CHURCH,
Bw-Ungltam. Ray ~. pastrr. fto.
m.; YouRK People's ' Service 6 p.m. ·. Sr., Sunday School Supt. Sunday School
tor. Danny Ulmbert, S. S. Supt. Sunday
hearsal, Children's at6:30 p.m. ,l.dult lotbert. COzart, . . . . past&lt;r. Sunday School
Evangelistic sei"vice6: 30 p.m. Wednesday . 9: 30 1a 1.-rt. ; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m.; . morning !ervice at 10 a.m.; Sunday ~venlowing: Wednell(lay. (Riley)
·
10 a.m.; worship 7.p.m.; Wemeodliy. 6,p.m. . ~rvtce 7 p.m.
FLATWOODS- Church Sc:hoill,10a .m .
·
Evening Worship· 7:30 p.m . Wednesday ,. ~~ 5g;'~f:~:~ f·:·p~~~day andThurs·
youth meetlnl: Wed, 7p.m. chutch.IIP.i'vices.
; Worship, II a.m.; Bible Study, Thur5MASON
CHURCH
'OF
CHRIST,
Miller
evening
Bible ~tudy. prayer and praise ,
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
PINE GROVE.HOUNESSCHURCH,\i
·day, 7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday. 6 p.m. (1'!.1·
Sunda~
Blbt~Study
10
.service.
7::11
p.m.
ZARENE,
Rev. Glendon Stroud, pastdi-.
St.,
Mason.
W.Va.
mUeoll
Rt.
325.
Rev.
BenJ.
Watts,
pastor.
. ley) .
a.m.; Worship lla.m. and1p.m. WednesFAITH GOSPEL CHURCH. Long Bot·
SundaySebool 9::11a.JI'I.; Worshlp~ervlce,
Robert Seal'les, S.S. Supt. Sunday School
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a.m.;
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.
t(Jll. Sunday Schad, 9:30a.m.; Morning ":
10: 30 a.m.; y out h ' ervl ce s unday 6:15p.
9::11 a.m.; Mornln&amp; Worshlp 10:30 a.m.;
Worshi~I0: 45a. m.;SundayevenlltR7:00
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OFGOD,Dud·
Ghun:h Seltolil 10 A.M.: Choir practice.
Sunday
evenlna
~ervice
7:]}
p.m.;
Weddine Lane, Ma!oo, W.Va. J. N. Thacker,
p.m. (!ummer 7: ll p.m. ); Wednesday
m. Sunday eve.nlnc~ervice7:00p.m. Wed·
Tburaday, 6:30p.m.; UMW third Monday.
nesday'servlce, 7:30p.m.
n••ht
nesday Prayer Meet.ing anit Bible Study
(Thatcher~
pastor• E ·-nln
n;
1 serv 1ce 7: 30 p.m.; wo-. 7: oo p.m. csummer 7: 30 p.m. 1.
7
00
SILVER
RUN
BAPTIST,
Bill
Little,
HEATH IMiddleport) -Church Sebool,
men'sMinlstryThuraday; 9::Mla.m.; Wed·
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURt:H
:
SETTLEMENTCHURCH,Sunpastor. Steve LIJtle, S. S. Supt. Sunday
9: lJ a.m.; Morning Worship 10:30 a.m .:
OF GOD- Gary Hines. pastor. Sunday
day afternoon services at 2:30. Thunday
nelday Prayer andBtbleStudy 1:15 p.m.
School10 a.m.; Morning wtrslp, 11 a.m.:
Youth Group, 4 p.m. ; Wednesday, Bible
HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH, St. ~t.
Sehoo19 ::Ml to.I0:20 a.m,; Worship srvlce
evening services at 7::11.
•
SUnday eventnc worship 7: ll p.m. Prayer
study 6:00p.m. Choir rehearsal 7:00p.m.
113 )ust oiiRt. 7. Rev. James II. Acree Sr..
10:30 to 11:30 a.m.; Suqday evening ser·
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W.
meetiJit[ and Btbl . .tudy Wednesday, 7:30
iRindfielsch).
·
p&amp;Jt&lt;r, Rar. Mike Willett, Asst. Pastor;
vice, 7 p.m.; Mldwe. e~.I Prayer Service,
va . Paster, BlllMurphy. SuhdaySCbooUO
p.m.; Youthmeetta.aWednesdayat 7p.m .
MINERSVILLE - Church Sehoul 9:00
Joe Humpllrey, S.S, SUpt; Sunday Sebool
Wed 7 p m
·
· a.m.; Sunday evening 7:30 p.m. Prayer•
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
a.m.; Worship service 10:00 a .m.: UMW
10a.m.; MornlnJWorshlplla.m.; Sunday
M'i'. OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH, meeting and Blblesludy Wednesday, 7:30
- 383 N. 2nd Ave., MiddlEPOrt. Sullclay
third Wednesday, 1 p.m. (ThatchE!')
evening service 6 p.m.: Wednsday even.
Lawrence Bush, ·pastor. Sunday School
p.m. Everyooe welcome.
SchoollO
a.m.
Sunday
evening
7:00p.m.;
PEARL CHAPEL- Church Sch~ol9: 00
lng
7
P;m.
9:~
a.m.:
Sunday
and
Wedn'
e
sday
even·
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, SaMld-weelt
service,
Wed.,
7
p.m.
a.m.: Worship service 10:00 a.m~Mar·
lngworship service, 7:00p.m.
lem St. Rev. Paul ~aylor, pastor. Sunday
. LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
tin I
'
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Po·
Sehool10 a.m.; Sundayeven'lng7:00p.m.:
Sunday Sehool t; 30 a.m.; .Jell PattersM ,
POMEROY- Chureh School, 9:15a.m.
meroy By·Passj.Rev. Robert E . Smith, Sr, · .Wednesday evening prayer m'e eune 7:00
~upt.~ Morning wonhlp JO:JJ a.m.: SunHARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
; Worship 10:30 . a.m.~ Choir rehearsal
pastor, Melvin Drake, s . S. Supt. Sunday
p.m.
.
·
day evenlna service, 7:30p.m.; Weclnes·
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartlorcl, W. Va.
Wednesday, 7:30 p.m.; UMW, second
School 9:30a.m.; MornlngWorslllp 10:30;
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
Rev. David McManll, pastor: Cbureh
Tuesday, 7:00p.m.; UMYFSunday, 6p.ln. . day eventng service, 7:30p.m.
Evening Worslllp 7:00p.m,; Wedneoday
CHURCH, Sltvet Rtdil:e. Duane SydenEDEN UNrrED BRETHREN. IN
' School 9:3() a.m.; Sunday mornlna aef·
&lt;Meadows)
Prayer Service, 7:00p.m.
strlcker. pastor1 Sunday School 9' a.m.;
CHRIST, Elden R. Blake, pastor. Sunday • vice, 11 a.m.; Sunday evening serviC@,
ROCK SPRINGS- Church Seltool, 9: 15
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Rallnad
Worship Service, 10 a.m.; Sunday even1n11
7: Jl p.m. Wednesday prayer meeting, 7: 30
a.m.; Worship 10 a.m.; BlbleStudy, Wed· . Sehool 10 a.m.; Ga.y Reed. Lay leoder.
St., Muon. Sunday SChool tO a.m.; Morn·
service, 7:00p.m. Wednesday night Bible
p.m.
.
nesday, 7:30 p:m.; UMYF (Seniors), Sun- -Morning sennCI'I, 11 a.m.; Sunday nlaht
!rig wot'lltlp lla.m.; i:venlng servfce6 p.
study 7:00p.m.
services : Chrlstlaa Endeavor 7:~ p.m. ,
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
day, 6 p.m.: (.'Juniors) every other Sun·
SOna service 8 p.m. Preaching 8:30p.m.
W. Va., Rt. 1, Ja'rna Lewis, psstor. Worday, 6 p.m. (IIIIey!.
Mid-week prayer meetiJit[, Wednesday, 7
ship services '::tl a.m.; Sunday Schoolll
RUTLAND-' Church Sebool, 10 a.m .;
~m .
. a.m.; EvenlDgworsblp7::1tp.m. Tuesday
Worship, 11 a.m.; UMW First Monday,
cottage prayer meetiJit[ and Bible Study
7:30p.m. (Crabtree)
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, David
9:30 a.m.; Wortblp aervlce, Wednflday
Otarlfl Domlaan. SUnSALEM CENTER- Church School9: 1~
Sap!. Morning Worship 9:30 a.
a .m .; Morning Worship 10:15 a .m.
T: ~JR~VIOUj! LUTHERAN CHURCH,
(Steele)
Seltool10:30a.m.; Evenlltgser·
Walnut and Henry Sts., Ravenswood, W.
SNOWVILLE- Morning Worship; 9:00
Va. The Rev. Geol'le C. Weirick. past..-.
BAPTIST, Pastoc: Joe N.
a.m.; Church School10:00 a.m. (Martin)
Easter brings us all together for a happy hoUday. For some It means
Sunday SCbod 9: :Jia.m,; Sunclay worship
' SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Sa~-~~~~~~=~ SChool9:~ a.m.; Evening
new
clothes, easter baskets, ctiOcolatc buMys,jelly ooans and colored
lla.m.
•
Kev. Kenodll Baker
w
•• -· Y""'"' Prayer MHtlna. 8: I)
eggs.
Easter Is also the most boly.of days!o'r Christians, lbe day Christ
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH, located on
Rev. Ito&amp;I!' Grace
Poi'llerO)' Pike, County Road 25 near Flat• •..
Jetus rose from the grave. He suffered and died lor the sins.of all ·
Rev. Cart l!ldla
WO(Idl. Rev. Bla&lt;kwooct, past..-. Services
APPLE GROVE - Church Sehoul 9:00
mankind. Easlet: Is aiso a day the c,hurcl\es are f'lll to overflowing with
on Sullcliy at10: :.J a.m. and 7:00 p:m. with
a.m.; Morning Worshlp 10:00 a .m.; Bible
Sunrise
services, fam Uy pews over flowlniJ ao well as special
SundaySebooi9:Jia.m.
Bible
Study,
Wed·
Study Sunday 7:00p.m.; Prayer meeting
breakfasts.
Easter Is 'the high holy day for Christiana but also moat of
neodiy,
7:
30p.m.
'
7:00p.m. Thursday. iHicltsl
·
SPmrrU...L FAITH FELLOWSHIP, ·
America and much oltheworld celebrates tbla day aa a happy liollday.
BETHANY - Worsltlp 9 a om.; Chureh
Statel1Duf113311, Antiquity. Rev. A. l. Ste'Sehool10 a.m.; BlbleS!IIdy ~edneoday 10
Winter Is over and Spring has come, with flowers blooming and trees
wart,putcr. SuDday ~ervtces,lOa.m. and
a.m.; Dorcas Women's FeiiOVtl'lhtp Wed·
greening up.
.
• 7 p.m.; Tue&amp;day,7 p.m.
nesday 11 a.m. (Baker) .
Sunday
Js
the
day
to
worship
God.
The
early
Christiana
chose Sunday
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOU·
CARMEL - Church Sehool 9:00 a.m. ;
to
gathe&lt;
because
It
was
the
day
Christ
Jesus
rose
from
the
grave. II Is
Worslllp, 10:45 a .m. Secoad and Fourth
"J~!J'~:L
8ESS CHURCH, IDe., 75 Pearl St. Rev.
_
CLIFF FREE METIIODIST
Ivan Myen, actllla ...tcr; RDa.-Manlll!',
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with Sutt&lt;Jl
alao Ole ftrst day of the week and we need to bql1l eaeh day, and eacb
CHURCH. William WUIIama, ... tcr; llo,Sr., Sunday Sebool Saperbttendent. Sunthird Thursday. 6:00p.m. (Bokor) .
week wltli wol'lhlp ol God. Day by day wedo·ourwonblp atllome alone.
IM&gt;rt E. Bartm, Dtri!c:lor of Chrlatlan Edu. day Seloat 8: :II a.m.; MornlnJ wcnhlp
MORNING STAR- Church Seltool9: 15
011
SUDday we lllther as 011e to bear Gods word, slna his praises and
EbUn, aoalltant. SunciSy
10:30 a.m.; eveniJig wonlllp T::ll p.m.;
a.m. : Worsltlp 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,
·o~e~n0 natrate to the world we love Chrllt t~ Lord more thllll anything
Tburaday, 7:00p.m. (Baker).
Mornlna worship lD: Jl
1\'edDeoday evenlq Bible ltudy, prayar
SUTTON - Church SebOol, 9: :II a.m.;
eiJe. Sunday morn!Jig Is moat valuable fd our lalth and CbriiUan life.
l~"~=~;~;~~r;·~·~·~·~· practice
p.m.; Evening
and
pralle service,
7: :II p.m.
8 p.m.
CHURCH·
OF JESUS
CHRIST APO!J.
Morning Worship 10:4~a.m. Orstandthlrd
St~llday Mornlnals not the demand ol tbe pr.achet' nor pareata. It Is
...nlng prayer and • TOUC - VuZandt aad Ward Rd. Elder
Sundays; Fellowship dinner with C~m"­
',tile
command iii God, the almla~ty. God ~e~~t His oal~ 10n. toourter and •.
thlrd Thursday, 6:30p.m. !Baker),
, JIUIIII MID.-, put!l'. suaday Sehool,
die
for
our IIIIa. Tile leal we ca111qo for this Jl'eat 1111 Ia aatl!'1r,toaetller .
EAST LETART- MornlngWonhlp9:00
-~~~~on~~~;;~ OF.
CHRIST,
10:30o.m.: Wol'lltiPIIervke.StllldBY, 7:30 ·
fl
Norman Will, •· , p.m
. . : Bible Study~ Wednaclay, 7: 3lJ p.m.
a.m.; Chtlrelt!lc:hooiiO:OOa.m.; UMWIIrst
and.give our thanlls, each and ~ry SuadiiY,• not only &lt;!11 Eastern Morn.
a.m,; Worohlp
CALVARY PILt;RIM CHAPEL. HarrtTuetlday 7: :II p.m. !Grace).
•
Tbere are only 52-53 Sutldays each 365 clay year. A COli Pie of hours each
a.m.
otudy, WedltasIOIIVII•Road. Rev. VjctCll'lloaoh, putor;
RACINE- Cbureh Sebool, 10 a.m.; WorSunday
to allow our Jove to God Is DOt m111:b to uk ol you nell. Tbla way ~· ""
doy, 7:00p.m.
•
Cllnt&lt;Jl J'aullt, Sunilay School Supt.: Sun- '
ship lla.m.; UMW fourth Monday at 7:30p.
you can allow your delpbpr.-'you are a.Chr.tstlan and also gain the ·
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS . day SChool t:311a.m.; IIIOI'IIIIIIWCl'lhlp, 11
m.: 1\len'.s Proyer Breelclast, Wednesday, 8
CHRISTOFLA'M'ERDAYSAIN'I'S.Porta.m.; Iunday ......... ...,.Ice 7:11p.m.
a.m. !Grace).
·
ltn!nJIII and aplr!t to JJve a holy lite the mt ol tbe wee~ You owe It 19
land-Racllte Road. Mike Dutil, ... tor:
Prayer MeetiDa, Wednaadoy, 7:30p.m.
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Roser
younelf and your famDy and not ~ ·IQ God the alll)ilht)', Hai'P)'
Janice Danna', cburdl oebool ciiJoct!l',
· SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD.
Sprlni. mlnllter; Starlillg Massar and 01·
EaSter and happy worship every Jlunday ol,eveey )'ftl'. .
·
Cbun:b ~ebool8: 30a.m.; Mol'lllngw!l'lhlp 1n""'Petl-. Wonhlp ..,...ce Suaday
lver Swain, Sunday Sehod SuptL PrMcb·
. .
- ...... WIIIIIm ......._.
10::11 a.m.; Wodneodoy evnlna prayer . Ill Lm.; lltanday llebool U o.m. EwolDt
lng9: 30 a.m. each Suaday; Sunclay Scjbool
· servlcel, 7:30p.m.
, wanlllp MrYice 7:00 p.m. Wednllday
10:30 a.m.
,.
IIETHLEIIEM BAPTIST. Rev. Earl . pn~,..-met!l .... 7:00p.m.
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION, Tberm Durbam, ' Sllul.-, puler. Wonb1poervlce,j:30a.m.
Mr. HERMON UNITED IIRETHREN
put or. Sunday service, 9: 30 a.m.; even!IundaY School 10: 30 a.m. Bible Study and
IN CJ!RIST CHuRCH. Located Ia T~

AND .

I

'
nesday, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN· BAPTiST. Rev. Nyl~
Borden. pas'tor. Cornelius Bunch. supt.
Established 1913
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Seoond and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2: 30 p.
992-2121
m.
106 ......... AIL
P-ey·
MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _... Main St., M.lddleport. Rev. Gllber! Cr~g.
•
Jr .. pastor. Mrs. Ervllt BaumJilr&lt;lner,
Community oil Ct. Rt. 82. Rev. Robert
SUndayScbOoiSupt.SunctaySebool9:30a.
Sanders, pastor. Jeff Holter. lay leader;
m.; Worship Service, 10:45 a.m.
·
Ed Rous~. Sunday School Sup!. Sunday
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OE' CHRIST
School 9:30a.m.; morning worship ~nd
~Joseph B. Hoskins, evangelist. Sunday
children's church 10:30 a.m.: evening
BlbleStudy9a.m.: Worship, tO a.m.; Sun·
day evening service 6 p.m.: Wednesday
preachlnR service first three Sundays,
7: 30 p.m.; Special service fourth Sunday
evenina: service, 7 p.m.
,
evening, 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday Prayer .
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, Ract.ne, '
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
1~4. WIIUaip Hoback. pastor. Sunday
ship, 7:30p.m.
·
SChoo\10 a.m.; Sunday -evening servire7
CHURCH OF GOD . OF. PROPHECY.
p.m. Wedn~y evenlnJ service 7- ~.m.
Located on 0 . J . White Road of Highway
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
160. Pat Hensm. p•stor. Sunday School10
·Supt. Sunday School 9: 30 a.m. Morning
'&amp;.m . Clas!!lf'S for all ages. Junior Church 11 ' Worship 10::.:1 a.m. PrayeT service, altern·"
a .m.; Morning worship 11 a .m. Adult
att Sundays.
Choir practice 6 p.m. Sunday: '(oung Peo\HE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST.
pie's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New, Lima Rd ..
Study, Wednesday at 7::ll p.m.
next to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland. Robert .
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL. 570 Gran t
Richards, pastor. Services at 7 p.m. on
. St., Middleport. Affiliated with Southern
Wednesdays and Sundays.
·
Baptist Convention. David Bryan, Sr .• Mi·
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
n~ter . Sunday Scho0110 a.m.; Mornln~
TER or the Wesleyan Holtn~s , Church.
worshlplla.m.; Evenlngworshlp7p.m .;
Rev. Earl Fields, pastor. Hen.y Eblin,
Wedne$day evenin~ Bible studY and
Sunday School Supt.; Sunday SchoollO a.
praver meeting 7 p.m.
m.; Morning ,Worship 11 a .m.; Evening
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST. St
service 7:30p.m. Wednesday evenlilg ser·
· Rt. I21andCO. 'ld· 5.DerekStump, pastor.
vlco 7:30p.m.
·
William Amberger, S. S. Supt.; Sundav
~ERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,
Sc:bool9: 30 a.m.; Mo'rnlng Worship 10: 30
r:;ary Hotter, pastor. Sunday services 9:30
a.m,; Even1ngw0flstl'p7: 30 p.m. Wednes·
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Midweek service, 7,:30p.
dav worship .7: ·:rl P..m.
~ · Thursday. .
·
1
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH .
·
··
Corner Sycamore .and Second, Sts .. p 0.
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
meroy. The Rev. Laura A. Leach, past &lt;I', . ~:;b~~ - f~!d~YBa::o:UJ:;;·tcgr~-"~~
Sunday Sch6ol9: 45 a.m. Church servk'e 11
School 10 a .m. with classes for 411 age8·:,~
a.m.
Evening services 81 6 p.m. Wednesday Bl·
VICTORY . BAPTIST. 525 N. 2nd St.
bl tud
30
y
h
I
F.
Middleport . James , E. Keesee. pastor.
e s Y at 7; p.m. out serv ceo r 1·
"Di~rnily and Servicf'

~ •.

II

I.

EWING FUNERAL HOME

MEIIl8

~~:1~~;,;;;:~::.: APOS.

264 Soutll 2nd

','

' .

992-5.141

Clltle

,.

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL .BAPTIST
· CHURCH, COrn..- Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann.-pastor. Sunday Schq0110:00 a.
m.; Morning Worship, 11:00 a ~m. ; Wed·
nesday and Saturday Evening Services at
7:30p.m.
'
APPLE GROVE UNITED METHO.
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, !lev. Carl
IDcks, 10 mfia: ab.&gt;ve Racine on Rt. 388.
Sunday School 9 a .m., worship service 10
a.m . Sunday evening !~!Nice, 6:00 p.tn.;
Prayer meeting and Bible Study Thursday, 6:30p.m.
MT. OLIVE UNITED METHODIST011121, behind Wilkesville. Charles Jones,
pasta-. Sunday School, 9:30a.m.; morning
wonhlp. 10: 30; Sanda)l ' and Thursday
evening services, 7:00p.m.

:!_UIUO:'!AH!!

."........

446 4524

••

FUNERAL HOME

·leato!tl

on National Teacher Day, May 8, ,
beginning at .4 p.m. at Sall$bury
Elementary.
To register to at tend contact.
Bobble Archer at 992-2153 or:
Wendy Halar at 992-3404. -The l
workshOp Is free of charge lor
teachers, aides, and parents.

JEFF ·wARNER
INSURANCE

!J

FISHER .

271 lht1h

The Meigs Local . School w111
hold· a make-It take-11 workshlp

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

'•

llllllE&amp;

RAWUNGS..C:OAI'S

991-6169

ImmuniZations required In·
·Registration for the Southern
·
clu(le
three polio and boosters, ·
Local School District kinderlhree
OPT's
and boosters, MMR,
garten will be April 20 at the
aqd
a
recent
TB skin test.
kindergarten building In Racine
Children
must
be five years of
from 8: 15-11 a.m. and 12:30-2:45
age
on
or
before
Sept. 30 to
p.m.
register.
Parents must provide their
There will be no regular
child's birth certificate and. Imkindergarten
classe~hat day.
munization records.

••

111141882-1117 t 18111-00KSI

J_~~~~~~OII~I0~~4c"uRcH suPPLIEs •

Sunday Morrung 'ftorsrup 11:00 a.M. Chll·
dren's Lburch 11 a.m. Sunday Eventng
Service 7:00p.m. Wed., 6 p.m. Young La·
dies' Auxiliary. Wednesday, 7 p.m. FamUy worship.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CI{UitCII. 011
Rt. 124, 3 mues from Portland-Luna Bot ·
ton. Edsel Hart, pastor. Sullcloy Sehool,
9: 30 a .m.; Sunday, nior.nlni' preaching
10: 30 a,.m,; Sunday eyentnl services, 7:30

COOPERATIVE PAKISB
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Do• Archer
Rev. Prull Craloot

83 MHI StrMidcleport. Ohio 48710

Workshop
.

Kindergarten registration set

Brent Rose, son of Chester and Junior ·Fair Board. He Is a
:Maxine Rose, Racine, will be member of the S\1 tton United
:receiving tl)e State Farmers Methodist Church.
This accomplishment gives the
,Degree on June 14 and 15 at the
Racine·
FFA Chapter Its fo11rth
. State FFA Convention to be held
state
'
farmer.
Pas t recipients
In Colwn\lus. ·
were
Bob
Bill
·Lee,
1982, Aody
: Rose Is only one of the few Ohio
Rose,
1985,
and
Harold
Roush,
FFA members who will receive
1986.
~aron
Sayre
Is
the
chapter
th.e honor. Not more than, two
,lnslfuctor.
perc~nt of the members of the
Ohio· Association of the FFA
receive this degree _In any given
year.
Rose Is . receiving this high
award In his junior year which Is
iheearllest Ills given. He has had
~wo ye11rs of training and opporERIC IDLE, R4)BBIECOLTRAINE
t\!llitles In vocational agriculture
IN ·
at Southern High School. '
(PG
13)
Rose 1s the student advisor of
HUNS liNT,_ IIIJH
lbe Racine FFA chapter. He was
on the sciU judging team which
placed first In MeigS·County and
&lt;SOme of his projects Include corn,
'i!alry. market hogs, gardening
p.nd work experience. He t~ · an
.active 4-H'er . He serves as vice
:president of the Megls County
••
••

RACINE PlAN.ING MJLL TIAFOIID ·

SWISHER.&amp; LOHSE

The Daily Sentinel-Page 9

Friday. April13. 1990

'

- - ·"'

614-992-6611 '
· ·-T

555 , , . $To

MIDDUPOIT,__- OH.

-

-·d-e
~

'

HOURS

&amp; SUPPLY CO.

VALl£ Y
! l P J~ ll! H

MON.-Fil.
7:00-5:00
SAT.

.Toll Free ·1-800-733-3334

7:00-3:00
I

1-

cl7

•

...

�••
13, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
7

People in the.newr----~---.'

renewed the contract in March 1989 that the
ISy WILLIA!\'1 C. TRO'IT
videotape made · with an underage girl .and
United Press International
LEONA SIGNS FOR THE CAMERAS: Tax anotl)er woman' in Atlanta could embarrass him
cheater Leo~ Helm$ ley plans to sign a $42,065,000 and Suzuki, too. the adS were pulled last May
check to the IRS !or the cameras of " A Current · lmmedlately after news of the scandal hit Tokyo.
Affair' ' Friday. The checl\ls for the balance of her In the suit, Hakuhod claims It was damaged by
1989 taxes and not related to the hotel queen's tax "the adverse publicity and negative public
fraud conviction last year. "She wants the public Image" of Lowe. Hakuhod wants back the$450,000
to know she pays her taxes," said a spokeswom&lt;~n It paid Lowe and the $130,000 paid to his company
,
for "A Current Affair." The ceremonial signing, Lucky Star.
MONEY FROM THE DEAD: The Grateful
which will take place at the Helmsleys' Harley
Sandcastle Hotel In Sarasota, F1a., was arranged Dead sent a $5,000 check to the Carol DIMaltl
by New ,Y ork Post celebrity columnist Clody Stuart scholarship fund, which was started by the
Adams, who 'also will Interview Leona and · family of the woman killed in Boston's biZarre
husband Harry about their troubles with the law. murder tale. Janie Bischoff, wh9ls working on the
FUN WITH PHILANDERING: "I Love You to fund ~lth Carol's parents, Giusto and Evelyn
•· Death," the movie comedy about a woman and DIMaUI, said the Dead's contribution was totally
. her bumbllqg attempts to have her philandering unsolicited ane! Jhat It helped push the fund's total
hu sband killed , Is based on the true story of Tony to $401,150. Thl! fund was established to benefit
and Frances Toto and now the Totos . are students In the Mission Hill section of Boston
promoting the movie. Fr~nces, wt10 Is portrayed because the neighborhood suffered adverse
In the movie by Tracey Ullmao, served four years publiCity after Carol was killed there last October
In prison but Is now back with Tony, the by her husband, Charles Stuart, whO Initially
Allentown, Pa., pizza man who survived two blamed the killing on a black gunman. Bischoff
·gunshots from Frances's hltmen. "Most of the said ills hoped the first scholarships to Mission
scenes are very real, " said Tony, who Is played by Hill residents will be awarded In June.
COLE PORTER FIGHTS AIDS: A new
Kevin Kline In the·movie. ' 'The movie ls great. It's
fan1Jlstlc. We love it. And It's a message for AIDS·flghting project will feature rock stars
everybody : crime doesn't pay, cheating doesn't performing Cole Porter songs. The project, called
''Red, Hot and Blue," will lncl.ude David Byme of
pay." But the Totos are gettlng paid well,
according to the Los Angeles Times. TJte couple Talking Heads, Slnead O'Connor, U2, Fine Young .
reportedly were paid a six-figure sum and will get · Caolilbals, Annie Lenox, Billy Idol and the Neville
Brothers slnglrig Porter songs like "I ·Got You
a share of the movie's profits.
LOWE DOWN SUI'I,': Sex and selling SuzUki Under My Skin, " " Everytlme We Say Goodbye,"
commercials don't mix, according to a Japanese and "Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?" The
advertising company that Is suelng,Rob Lowe on 9Q.mlnute collection will be recorded and
vldeolaped for store sales and TV broadcast (Dec.
the grounds that hiS sex scandal hurt their cause.
The Hakuhod Inc. ad firm said Lowe was chosen lin the United States on ABC) With the proceeds
to appear in commercials for Cult us, a car SuzUki going to AIDS· related charities around the world.
Motors Co. marketed In Japan, "because of Ills Anlong the directors · contributing videos of
musicians performing the Porter songs are
poslt!.ve and wholesome pupllc image·, which was
to b'e closely associated with (the) ... automo' Stephen Frears, Jonathan Demme, Jim Jar·
bile." Hakuhod claims that Lowe kne\V when he museh and Dlaoe KeaiQD.

: Quirks in th~

---._;_~

news-ord-Inar-y.

Studeni Wii!B S4,000 schol&amp;rshlp for paper on
history of toDet
EVANSVILLE, Ind. (UPI) -A paper on the
history of the toilet earned a high·school junior a
$4,000 scholarship In a History Day contest at the
University ?f Evansville...
The ~~per , entitled, Down the Tubes of
History, was written by Michael Kula, a
17-year·old at Memorial High School In
Evansville.
Phil Ensley, l! professor of history at the
_ university,. said the pat&gt;er was "very wei~
... researched and ve~tl,nteresting; it got the judges .
· atten,tlon for sure.
·
Kula •sa,ld he·. chose the topic because It was

"I wanted to get semethlng that' affects
everybody, something common but not like a
television," Kula said Thursday.
·
Kula said he heard a few jokes from his
classmates when they learned he had won.
"They said, 'You won with a paper on toilets?' "
Kula said. "People couldn't believe it."
The paper traced the Invention from ancient
Greece to mOdern times. Kula said there were at
least two references In the Bible to toilets using
the words latrine and privy. He said the toUet has
n ot changed much In the past 200 years.
Kula said he had not decided yet on a college,
and might not · use the scholarship at the
University of Eva'nsvtlle.

usiness SerViceS
&lt;

I

Classifie

.MO.LE
HOME PAll ·
•Mobile Home

• CLOSED

Y .

S .50 discount for ad1 p~ ~ d i" advan c e
- Giveewev and Found eds undl' 15 words will be

run

d~s

at no ch•ae.

"Prica of ad for all

c~ital

Parts

2 - ln

in paper I . Call

•Mobile Home

Sarwlre

actvlirti:tem~ .placitd in The Deily Sent inlllex ·
cept - cl•sified dilpll'f. ~usfn•• C~td 1nd legal not iclll
will also IPP••• in the Pt . Plt•tnl Regilttr and t~e Gllli·

E111ploy111ent
Sr.rvtcr.s

•A cl1s'lified

pOhs Qaily Tribune. reaching over 18.000 homes

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPEA
TUESDAY PAPEA
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THUASOAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY
•APf:R
,,

, '

-

1 112 13 14 16 -

·- 2,00 P.M. FAIOAY

18 - Wanted To Do

Help Wanted
Situatlon Wanted
lnsurance
Busin•s Training
Schools &amp; ln"ruetion
16 - Aidio. TV &amp; CB Repair
17 - Miseellaneous

DAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 1 1'00 A.M. SATURDAY

- 2'00 P.M. MONDAY
2:00P .M. TUESDAY
- 2'00 P.M. WEDNESDAY
- 2,00 P,.M . THuASDA~

.

'

Cla~sified paf;es'cmw the

'

21 - Busintls Oppor~unltV
22-MoniP( tc Loan
23- Prot•tional Services

. following telephone exchan[{es ...
Area Co~e 614

Meigs County
Aree Code 814

446

992 Middlcart

Galli• County ·

M11on Co.1 WV
Aree Code 30.4

-~i~~t~; jjj-~~~~i~~~~~:
388

.

246
256 643
379

Ria Grande
Guyan Oist.
Arab ia Oist.
Wtlnut

985

Memory

5 - Hippy Adl
6-Lost and Found
7-· V.rd Salt (p1id in adv•nce)
8-Public S1le &amp; Auction
.9-Wanted to Buy

daw ef1er public-' ion to mlhe c:ouec:tion.
'Ads thlt mu_.at be paid in .. .ce ~re
CJP'd ''ot Tktnkf .
H1ppy Ads
In Memorl.-n "'
Yard Sal•

. Plet~ant ·

Cl\ .. ter

843
247
9•9
742-

PortWnd
L1t1rt filii
R1cine
Rutllnd
667- Coolville

Real Eslale
31 - Hom• for Sale

lr~~j~··!H~o!m!njfor
ror Sale

Buildings--c..-.

s.l.

43 - Farm• for R1n1

44 - Apartment for Rent

Public Notice

.

(

66- Ptu for Sale

157- Mulictl lnstrumtnts
58- Fruits a. Vegttabl•

59- For $ele or Trade

F'rm Sup11I1P.S
&amp; LIVP.Stock
61 - Farm Equipment
62- Wanted to Buv
63 - LivHtock
64-tlav &amp; Grain
65 - Sud .&amp; Fertiliur

for Sale ·
72 ,.- Truckl tor S1le

71 - Auta1

73 - V1nil &amp; 4 WO '1
7•- Motorcycl•
.
76 - Boets &amp; Motor• for S•le
?6-Au1o Parta &amp; ACc•sori•
77 -- Auto Repair

1 9.-Cimplt'-S'-6 -Molor-Homes

I

Serv ice s
81-·Homelmprovemenu
82-Ptum•ing 6 Huung

46 - Spac~

47-Wiflttd to Rent
.tB - Equipment ~or Rent

8~ - Mobile

49 - For

:

elot Renlf'll

. • 992-7479

s..............

It, 33 Nerth

S.t. 8·5: Clollod Sun.

HOUR$: . ~·F

,omer.y,

8-7 '

949-2969 .

SYIACIISI. OliO

Le••

PubliC Notice

.......

r.1CIChi!lldiSC

PubllcSIIa
&amp; Auction

51

E. Klo-. Seer....,

(4} 2. 13, 17 4tc

Plf)llc NOlle.

74 Mot6rcyclel

----·,.., tea.oelli Ill 10, ••.
..,..,114-4*1 • .

-8'111. ....
1100- "" -·""··
"'""""
- - · · 11.100. 1111. 0142.

""""·

•

7424110.

400 Kaw '' Nor,._ 1200
...... 11 • • 1111.
'

'.:::a~~.:.~a-~

ta..

75 Boetl &amp; MolOI'I
forSIIe

.,.und
pool, 1100. - - ·

Con Fld•

ao- •Cem....., FtoWor

IIMMI

'II 11'1" ........... 1'11-111

~·=~
-·
.....h..-.
AiMiii............
rldlo,ti'dlr,
..... .

DOli(
Pine
··
·ltu1ch.
. . .114-

Y••
•CIOV .BiniBotM.
•Camll'lt Bird a.thl

•.zae.

30W7W211,- I p.m.

tfounteln Bird a.tha • ptue
be•., Frop. Angels •nd I

.

tm

11 • · 111.- ·
- · 121 HP. 1-lnglne, '

Oth• Y•d Ornem..ta

From Uo &amp; Save I

· tap, , _. .
...
......,.
Cd ,,.,_11111
7:00
p.m. •

3/28/110/tfn
1174 , . . - - . . . - · .

RUTLAND DIE
·SALES and
SERVICE
742-3011
•Tire Sales
•Front End
·Alignment
•Oil Change LutH,
•Brake Work

s.

10
"" .._ , - ·· 3111.

ELIM HOME

. PlUMIING &amp; IIATING
.... &amp;.mtloet
161 North SeeM
Mi·tii·Drl&gt; Ohio 45160

SALES &amp; SERVIC£

We

8upplitl

HUMPHIEY'S
CUMATE

and
~~·~·~·-~.,.,
~·

comoL

Good Rtt•
.T.L.C.
27 .Yro. Exp.
Ref•

H~e~thlt,

COoling,

Refrigeration
Strvlce
'

en-

'·

· Residential &amp;
Commercial

MAIN $1.,

nRE REPAIR
MOVIE RENTAl
CONYINIENU STOll ITEMS

. CHESTER
QUIK STOP

.............
*SHRUB -&amp;-TREE
TRIM ai11l · REMOVAL·

.

*LIGHT HAULING

St. Its. 7 &amp; 241
CHESTD, ·OliO

915-3350

4·9·'90·1 mo.

YeW.

PARTS &amp;
SERVICE
NEW &amp; USED
PARTS
For Rabbit,

Jette. Golf,
Beetle and Bus.
614-742-2315

*FIREWOOD - ·

BILL SLACK
992-2269
EVENINGS
H·l!l-tlll

R. L HOLLON
TRUCKING

· VEIY IEASONAIIE

•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT '
•ANYTHING
AT ALL .

985-4422

==-

- ...

~otepbrlollloutanopo

MEW LOCATIOII
DAVE'S SMALl
ENGINE IEPAIR

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR

llooiM"'

:DoWnspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Piinting ·

PARTS

........ 30WJI.112t.

992-5335 or 985-3561
AU:ots f...., Past Office
217 E. Sac. '-•Y
POMIIOY, OHIO

316/'90/tfn

510 2nd St. Mi~J
1/r

For. Appt. Call
992·6717 Home

plr

or·

992 ·62 ~~ a~·:.T'mo.

Card of Thanks

-.:et..-...-f2.

-

Dozlr - " I -vatlna H.
NIMI on ...,.., lt4 411-2111
Mouellknplng; Wlnlecl.

Homlt

I

ll.ntln..

fldlbll

~~
'

•

...t
•
llln l'llull'a D1J Core contar.
81111, - - oltlldot ... 11-F
1 t.m. - 1:10 p.ll!. . - - l~tolO.
lefoN, aft• IChoo[ Dlap Ina
WIICICIIM. 11t ... 1224.

~NI11ERYICE

0311.

-· -

-=

lor ..... 111llll0

1• - · · - _ _
--e
1;,;:;::.;:=:;,;·
;;;..-:::--.;;.;::;:·

&amp; Acreage

---......!!'

1 or 1-lol: 4 -

......

10
MIL
lleodor·-.
op&lt;tng.
- · Gunv111e ROad. 1 + mil•
on Rt. 17. -7S.7ili7 or .. ..
1.-··
. . . .,. . . . . -n.,.,._
·~
-~

-t-.

:wa..'""ti'r uuuu.. ...n-.
Building lot lor In lllcl-·
tllepOII. t14.fl2 1111.

For ....: 7 ftilldentt.l .cr.- In
oily llmlle, - " ' " - ol
country liVIng In lhe oily, 514-

44f.7130.

949-21

Do,.. _
7180

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

, Tr••••l,.lo•.

SIDING CO.

~I••

••• 11.-.lullt

"Free Eatlmetea ~'

FtnanCIJI

.

AmiUij

· SER~ICE

p.m.

,. ....d ........

IICiuliwd. 114'441-

UN'S

·

ilo llaM
- ._....
Wll 114""'
.......
fllilly.llll.
.I INIJS. . . . f1
,........._pi~

· Thurt. thru Sun.

Middleport, Ohio

FN. Pad Office

.

. . ,....

. GOlF LESSONS

Mastic -

•a
e Hro ....... $46
12 Hra••••• •eo

-club Rtpalr,
•New Orlp*

aon or d•ght•.

0..1 ,..... Com..U.• , JJ ..
Full ·u,.. _. bl,., lui line,

.................
"""""to.............

~upp~r,
11 t -u1

ciMI .. cpauaanl of an lndMJUII

.,.lair
~
t~
·and
-epnyw.
- · · """'-'
........, 31,200 or ottor.

, '

c.., loll&lt;l

Oiti.
4·5-'!0-1010.

GIEG BAILEY

Follll~lorlele:t­

t.ll ....211ttf7.

--.---.aD.--.
104-21H211

P.O. Ill• 104,

-- ..............
Jtm'a ,_~SA. Sl,
Gall
, 11
mi

...

w...

,_.,. I lmplen••o. luy,
...,, tnc!e, I:ON'OII
t• ye,
Bot 1111 NoOn.

•1

4-5-:90-1 •o.

Announr.rmcnl ,

3 , Announcement•
.
.

_ _ In _ _ _ _
DrJ
Cillnlng ~ -

-

at town oft Rl.

"Whet..... a.--.

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

31,

Giveaway
PlUmbing&amp;

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

tnd-illl

~·1~1~1~-~!!~!!'Jit~~~·~··~ONo~~=~: ;

WE GO THI EmA MIU.....
•

011110.·

•

Home Repek

87 - ~phol•tery

'•

RllriQII'IliOn

•,

__..._
LlottiiiH lttlltlo- ~

~~.1~~

New lima Rd., lpfl•d, Ohio
1 Session ······-~~.............................. S3.50
6 Sessions•••••.••••••••••••••••••••_,, •••••• s12.00
12 S..siMs•••.••••.•••••••.•••••••••....••••• S20.00
15 Stssi011s................................... S25.00
FIRST VISIT FREE - POSSIBLY MORE

J

Ellelrlcal &amp;

Ca xeaulll nf A 1J 111111 ,j

SUN'S UP T

Til· COUNTY.

•

----c.c;~;...
~~--;.~..~•.---~.

A Great Comblnotion"Quality and Reasonable Prices;'
992·6810

....

Call 992~277.2

,JOHN TUFOID

K and J CONSTRUCTION

7101 11 -

delivery
am

. . . _ .~ TriiOior, ,.., cul-

.,..,...... Ohio 41140. E41111 ....
podunlly IMPhJ•·

Ctrtainttt41 S

With . . _ -

goo&lt;1 ..-rtlon. One
....... 111 hl.otlll.

· FREE ESTIMATES

•Engrovlng. Trophl•.
Pl. . . . . . .dg.

4/3/'11011 mo.

Sorvtcrs

Slarm Doan &amp;
I WIDcloln
·,

Shelto lor lroloen

Clubl. Clubl lhononlll lor

Ch....

..... ,-ion.

.•

. llow•IMulatlan ·

·" lnotollllt. .... t4.

St. Rt. 131, 5 • •
••• Lat•t, INslo

'

tncl o-aold II"'
di I II e.Ji lt4-Mt40J2 lor
11ap1 -

, ...._

Ylnr!Ning
.s.Grnltri Gutt• .
R~~tWind....

1 Hro.........

46317 Saout

•on.

..

CUb -

lie In . . . Counly. Con11101 a,... Vanllotar • . , , . _

INSQLAnON

KOUNTRY KLUB

247-4035

I-

·:

~·1·-··22

cun-.
.
-·- .......... -·

W i t h _ .......... _

WHOLESALE-RETAiL

1 - Plllmlt10 taN ........... :
.... 11.-4117,

With """' oulll¥ithl&lt; and gnder
. ,1,1ii. lt+ianzz.

Rr:al Estate

--tollle~end

. .1·13-lfe

lin

10 a.m.-15 p.m.

fliNT TO OWN
Top QueiMy lrendLhlna .......,
.....a- 110'1111.11IIIWIL.
dlnnet·

_., ..... .

===r,-.cu;r,:;.

_ -.

992·2196 ,·

9ft-53SS or 915·3561

-

1174 Dodge llaJd.V.n, ..... '
gooil, ~tap, ,.. ptlnt,
. . . . . ...... ·~ fu,.. ..

61 Fann Equipment

...ry"""" _..

J&amp;(.

APRIL I THRU JULY 1

PICKENS FI,IRNITIJRti
Newllllad
~ lurnlehlng. 112 mt.
Jarrlcho Ad. Pl. P I -, WY,

.'1 Ltvestoc:,

own llolne • altonle s.nto•
Worlllr wlh It Dbt,. C..
'IIIUIIily . . Wti ~
tnd. doltr
..,.. o n d - rate. YoU
.. -'de I f!Omt, ...end
....,_lp In • _., -

PAT liiLL FORD

SEIVKE

OPEN:

.Ph.~lll.

F.JI'll Supnllr',

................................
......., ... - - . - t o

can r~ .ani! r•·
core, radiators and
·heater cort~•. we· can
-!so acid boll and1rod
out ·rlldiators; Wt·aiiO
repair Gos Ta.... ..

•.

CONNIE'S
OHIO .IVEI,
HEUS and
EVERL.STINGS

Gl- I Drnr, lor
~ I rrw. old •1110.00, good

=tide,

..Ottll on;tlose
w
I
It-NOM
e11.11....

We

N~WLAND ,

7-IJ-'19-tfw

Cretl-. C111114-4*7JIO.

l b r - 'fl!!lltllor- ••• ...,. lliily WDitc at hoi-.
No ....... - cat! 1·
IOW41·1'7JB I!JI.II2t4. Open :14

tiDAYW-AffrY

Acren

- - . ctryose, .............
.. _ . · - a\rill . . .
U_R.._R•. ...W..one

7 dlye
thiU Sltt. t
Lm. • I p.m, ''"'· 12 Nelon • 1
.. dlaanded. N,_, on Unooln . :..p.m_.·~~-4-4_tl"'3"'111'-::-:._ _ __
~· 51M12in -Oj.lt!Wif2..na.
or 3 bed-. MWiy

:z

1111.

llintltllng our pnl!luote al homo.

4-25,tfn

CLEAIING

Sand-Stone-Dirt·
'
(614) 667·3211
Gr•tA. Newl.d

-.o.n.r.

APPLIANCES

ZIIr, Ito.- lor ..nt.
7111.
3tH: - . In O.Uipolle, no pe1e.

lam,.to$110..,-•

or -992-7121

NO SUNIIAY CAlis

USED

3044.,..

REr~'~

PH. 99J-5682

PH. 949-2801 '
or Res. 949-2160

GOOD

.,..._ Tracw•l tlln, • 1o 1
,.., ..,.,., . . . . . . 114:11Ne77, ' 11W7W:IP. ...

.1..

.... ..... -

41 Hou111 for Rent
'" - . . "~ bunk
~:·=F .~,it VI~
2 or 3 bedr- lor rwnt FumNtn. , t4J1 4 mlleO. Open

_,_,_

llld _. 1.,_ ~.own
DPJIOOOducl-1 M . .. . . . 11MIIil-

· Rt. l2,41 P-oy Ohla ·

. BISSELL . .

to •p.m. ---

=-~ 127

4

·Roger Hysell
Garage

INSULATION

I .......

OIIIIOW7&amp;-1~

Rc11t ::Is
•VINYL SIDING
•ALOMINU~ SIDING
•BLOWN IN '

County AIIDIIInM. lno. Good
UMd 1pptiMat.. T.V. Mta. Open

Gold
sefriaertiOI,
aood - ·
101~
Iller 5:110.

engln• '\
9t0cll Porto for Homllite,
Weadeater, Yeoumaelt,
~::-• Strmon.

FREE ESTIMATES

SITEWORKI • ROADS
•

HOURS:

HUCK'S CAR WASH

-4p.....

f Milble. CIUtlllln WOiftlll
Willing te do iletiYwltllna et ; ,
0

Qliollly ~ .. In my - ..
11-F. with ...... c1) • •, .......

For Moot 2 end 4-cycle

USED APPLIANCES

DUMP·TROCK

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

lind ........
..!~:

llondoyo

All tget
. •
Aprtt
tall.

-.~-·ding.....,.

4-9-'8()..1 mO. pil,

AlL MAKES
Iring It In Or We
Pick Up.

Ql'

~Attn: Ad-

A - I All AIUI I Shklor

25HWiit ....,
' ,._,.,, Dlt.

.Gutters

1·1

lofort 6 p.m.lollltMntatt

MICROWAYl
·OVEN REPAIR

111111;11

·IIIII eQUiptlllllt
....... at
.. • ,.
prlplfll
Wid . ~ I ~- IJd

MINOtlllelllt

ilawor• L Wrlt...l

CHEnn, o•o

FREE ESTIMATES
, ...... , ...... of paint...

"' •• do it ,., you.

_.... _
Coli

AIIIIIICARE
POIIEROV.
•1 . . . . D~reotor. Pe~Mrar
""'""" Wid .....llttllon ....

JOB &amp;
OIL CHANGE

Illy .... Frlilly.
Avtllible . •111
1• 11

::·:w.m.

H'elp wamed

..,_ • All -

CAi.L

4 Qt. Max.

..........
.11

GR~ASE
S1695

Emplo1ment Servtces

A IJI IIIII

!l'lrlnl.
I'
Jd-

•

I 1 :&amp;alii

t'r- 11 I a...........
......._..

II t' ', ....,._,,._

41. Spece for Rent

:=._....-"'....,
_ . . - Pllll.
at "'"I...,.
114-

~

(3)

. =--·-...
=

Goodl

IN STOCK' OC:..m... P -

Pl. 949-2801
or R11. 949•286d
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

LOTIONS - STICKERS
Cqll Susan Cel••• ,.,....

- · llafan

Houuhokl

IS NOW OPEN
FOI .BUSINESS. ·

"At ltasonallla Prictt"

__

,,... -.,....2
...............
__ _:
NIO.'It~.

llltewe Pbs• Sllapl

CUSTOM IUIT
tKIMn &amp; GAIAGES

KIT ' N' CARLYLE~ by Llny Wrlaht

MefchanciiM

85-Gtnfl'll Hauling ·

PubliC Notice

.54 Miscellaneous

Space tor Rent

.•

GIFT SHOP

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Tr~nsporlattnn

83-hcwetii'lg
84 - Eiectrii:.! &amp; Refrig••don

LEGAL NOTICE
Notice Is given that Cable &amp;

~

51 - HouHhold Good•
52-Sporttng Ooodl ·
!53-Anliques
54- Misc . Merchandise
56-BuHding Suppli•

.t5-Furnished
Rooms
for Rent

PubliC NotiCe

ble, · Putnam.
Richland,
Ro11, Sandulkv, Scioto. S•
Wireless
Communicationa. naco. Shelby. Union, Yon
Inc. has filocl en applic&lt;ltion Wert, Vinton,
Warren.
vi(~h the I'IJblic Util~ieo Com·
Wuhlnaton. and Wllllamt
mlsaion of
Ohio {C.1e countlta. Ohio. Any poroon.
No.90.411·TP·AAC) for au· firm, corpor1tiOn, or entity
thority to amend its Cenifl. that can ohow good cauoe
cate of Pulllic Convenience why thio eppllcetlon ohould
and Neceollity No. 28 in oilier not be grenttd ehould file
to provide intar•changetoie- with the Commlsolon • writ·
communicaUon 881'Vicel in tan otatement detelllng the
Adamo, Allen.
Aohlend r-ono on or befo,. May 4,
Atheno, Augllize, Belmont: 1990. Unleu the Commlo·
Brown, Butler, Champaign, tlon recelvtl • written ......
Clark. Clermont. Clinton, ment to th-' offect end an
Crawford. Oorke, Oeflance, accompanying requ•t · for
Delaware, Fairfield. Fayette, tn orel haerlng In thlo met· ·
Franklin, Fulton.
Gtllla, tar, the Ctlt will be decldod
. Green. Guernoey, Hamilton, on the b11i1 of the lnforma·
Hancock, Hardin, N•rriaon. lion contained In the eppil.
Henry. Highland, Hocl&lt;lng, cellon and the affldavlto
Jackson. Jefferson, Knox, oubmlttad by the appUcent.
lawrence, !-tcking. L9g1n, Further informotlon moy be
lucas, M1d1aon,
M1rlon obtalnad by contacting the
Meigo, Mercer,
Miami: Public Utlltieo Commlollon
Monroe. Montgomer,, Mor· of Ohio, 180 Eut .Broad
gan, Morrow. Mulldngum. Street. Columb,,.,
Ohio
Noble, Ottawa, Paulding, 43288·01173.
.
Parry, Pickaway,
Pika, Pre· (4}13 1tc
.

Mcrch ontl tse

78 - Camping Equipment

41 -Housn for Rent
42 - Mobile f.! om" for Rent

Get Retrdts Fast

c.... . tD(

. _ Pwtl _, Sarrice, .
............ Chal.

Ren.la

(6141 ta·s~41SO

Rata
Ov'!r· 16 Wordo
t4.oo
·
.20
16.00
·.30
19.00
.42
113. 00
.60
11 .30/ day
.05/ day

broken upd-vswill blch.,g~
•ds. ,

3 - Annaucemenls
4 - Givu.Wav

before 2 ·00 p m

usu•owas
PIDIIm

HAVE REfERENCES
AnEI 6 P.M. .

An noun cr. men t s

, .. ,.,,is doubla price ot ad cost .

for error' first d~ ad runs

Words
1s
15
15
15
15

1 - Card of Thinks

•7 point line type only used .
•sentinel is not responsible for errors att8r first d&amp;t,' . (Check

I

....... c.......

Aa•• .,. i'o, con•cutNt runs.
fnr ur.h d..v •• IIDir•tt

Meiga. Gelli• or M11on c:ounti• must be pre·

'

_ &amp; Painting

RATES

8 A.~. until NOON SATURDAY

•

111111101 mm011

• The ·Area's Number 1 Marketplace
Days
1
3
6
10
Momhly

'

UGLE IIDGE
SMALl ENGINE
CEN111 .
. . , . . . . . &amp;KIO

UNDA'S
PAINDNG &amp; CO.

•

TO PLACE AN AD CAU 9412·21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M;

•

LAFF-A-DAY

Yard Slle

. ALLYonl--le-ln
·DIADIJHI: 2:90 p.m.
~ doy • - the Ill le "' run.
. ......... • 2:00 p.m.
..-y;
-~
· 2:GG
~,.
.

B

3·29-'90-1 mo. pd,

•..

,

Sentinei-Page- 11

Ohio

.... II, Nottlt
...... , _ , ........... Coli

11W.ml.

.

,.

�.

--~Local

news briefs... ---._,

Continued from page 1
· According to Jim Gaston, a representative of the Col!imbia
Township Fire Department, the trailer was fully Involved when
firefighters arrived on the scene.
·
The fire department was called at 12:34 a.m. to the residence
and was assisted by two firefighters and a combination tanker
and pumper truck from the Albany Fire Department.
According to Gaston, the fire started around a woodburner.
Darst was working away at the time but his wife was awakened
by the sound of the tire and was able to get everyone out of the
house. Gaston went on to say that there were no injuries.
The 16, firefighters were on the scene tor approximately three
hours; and were called again at 10:38 a.m. for a rekindle,
remaining on the scene an additional hour.
Gaston reporfed the Darst's had no Insurance.

'
'

.

Moore pleads

~i,ty ·to

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI) can governor extorted well over
-FormerGov. ArchMoore, who half that amount and that he
agreed to plead gullty to five . failed to pay taxes on or In other
federal charges ranging from ways illegally handled the rest. •
extordon to filing false · tax
The charges said Moore also
returns, will cooperate With a lllegallydlyerted$100,000intohls
wider Investigation Into political 1984 gubernatorial campaign to
corruption in West VIrginia, buy votes and lnlluence the
federal prosecutors said.
electiOn.
An Indictment issued Thurs·
''This news will be greeted with
day focused on $831,221 Moore
a
greatjoybymanylnthestateof
.
receiVed between 1984 and 1988,
West
Virginia,"
Moore
said
In
a
·
· the last o( his three terms,
alleging that the former Republl· statement dellvereq . through
longtime aide Audrey Toler. But

EMS has 12 calls' Th':'rsday

;I

Frldlly. Apri113, 1990

POmeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 12-The Dally Seutinel

Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service ·
responded to 12 calls for ~tance on Thursday.
At, 12:34 a.m. the COI~mb'!.\ Township Fire Department
assisted the Albany Fire Department to County Road 55 for a
trailer fire at the Darst residence. At 10:38 a .m. the fire
department was called back to the scene for a rekindle.
At 4:18a.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Tuppers Plains
for William Grueser who was transported to Holzer Medical
Center.
. , .
The Racine unit, at 10: 59 a .m. wa~ called to Southern High
School for Misty Hayman who was transported -to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
The Pomeroy unit went to Lincoln Heights at U: 51 a.m, for
Elza Gilmore who was transported to Veterans.
At 1:32 p.m. the Syracuse unit went to Bucktown Road for
Woodrow Hall who was taken to Veterans.
The Racine unit, at 5:45p.m. was called to Elmwood Terrace
Apartments for VIcky Boso, to Veterans.
The Middleport unit at 6:27p.m. went to South Third Street for
Mary Bacon, to Holzer.
At 6:29p.m. the Syracuse unit responded to a call on Morning
Star Road for Arthl!r Knight who was transported to Veterans.
The Pomeroy unit, at.,.7: 20 p.m., went to Beech Street In
Middleport for Della Roseberry who was taken to Pleasant
·Valley Hospital.
The Middleport u.rilt took Ernest Wells from South Third
Street at 8: ,i 1 p.m. to Holzer. .
:
Flnaljy, at 9:12p.m. t~e Pomeroy·unlt responded to a call on
Peacock Avenue for D&amp;;!e Smith wh9 was transported ·to
Veterans.

Vandalism reports probed
Deputies of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department are
Investigating the vandalism of two cemeteries which occurred
earlier this month.
According to the report, the first cemetery to be vandalized
was Mt. Hermon Cemetery and the ·second was the Reedsville
Cemetery. Several tombstones were pushed over and several of
the older stones were .broken when they fell.
·
Anyone With information oil tile vandalism should contact the
sheriff'~ office. Sheriff ·James M. Soulsby stated that all
· ·
Information will be kept confidential. :
In other matters, Sheriff Souls by reported that Debra Ramey
Buck Ridge Apartments, Bidwell, _was arrested on a liad check
charge for Gallla County. She was transported to the county line
anll turned over to Gallla County. It was reported that a holder
was·placed against her so she could also face a bad check charge
In Meigs County Court.
·
·
· .

Wholesale

pric~s

federal charges.

he added, "There win be others guilty plea a!ld cooperation into
who w!ll ~ llncerely grieved by wider political corruption In·
reason of their devotion to me West VIrginia, pfosecutors w!ll
and my family ."
not pursue other charges against
Gov. Gaston Caperton, who M~ore.
defeated Moore In a landslide
Moore faces 36 years In prison
1988 victory, sa~d the Indictment and fines totaling $1.2 million In
represents a "traglcdayforWest the current case. No arraign·' ·
VIrginia." He said he Inherited a
ment date was set, and the case.
government that was ''ethically has not been assigned to a judge.'
bankrupt. ... The back-room,
A decorated World War II:,
slipshod politics of the past must- veteran, Moo.r e began his polltl·
forever remain In t,he past." ·
ca\ caJieer In 1952 y,rhen he· was
l,J.S. Attorney .Michael Carey · . elected to a two-year. term In the
said that In exchange for Moore's . West VIrginia House ·of Dele··
gates . In 1956, he was elected to
the, U.S. House of Representa· ·
tlves and served-12 years there. •
He won his·flrst term as governor.
alcoholic bever!lges, cblldren's . In 1968 and became the first
clothes and gold .Jewelry. March person to serve two consecu tlve
terms . He won a third term ln.
tobacco prices .held steady.
1984,
but lost a bid for re-electlo~
Based on the figures for the
to
a
fourth
term.
. · . ·
first three months of the year, .
Thursday'.&amp;
Indictment
marks
wholesale prices are Increasing
the
second
tfme
Moore
has
faced
at annual rate of 6.7 percent.
'
a
cti!lns
taken
federal
charges
for
Based on the figures for March,
·
while
in
the
governor's
office.
In ·
wholesale prices are increasing
1975,
during
his
seeond
-term
as'
"at an annual r11te of 2 percent.
governor, Moore and aide Wll·
Th~ "fholesale price Index for
i tam Loy were Indicted on one
Intermediate goods, meanwhile
count
of conspiring to extort
showed no Increase In March
$25,000
from the D.iverstfled
while the Index for crude goods
Mountaineer
Corp., a savings
dipped by 1.4 percent, the depart·
an.
d
loan
that
wanted bank.
ment said.
charter. Moore and Loy were
acquitted of the charge. ·

decline in·March

Excluding food and energy
WASHINGTON (UP!)
prices, producer prices edged up
Wbolesale prices feU 0.2 percent
0.3 percent In March, following
In March With tumbling food and
energy prices accounting for the gains of 0.4 percent in February·
and 0.~ percent in January, the
first monthly decline since last
August, the Labor Department · Labor Department said.
' The index for consumer goods,
said Friday.
.
other than food and energy, was
Producer ·prices for fresh "vegetables set. a record, plunging up 0.2 percent In March ' 'due·in
25.5 percent after soaring in part to a downturn tn·prlces Jor
women's apparel, pharmaceutl·
January and February, accord·
lng to the department's Bureau cal preparations and newspap.
'ers," the report said.
of Labor Statistics.
Wholesale prices feU for new
"PriCes turned down sharpjy
cars, slowed for ·men's clothing
for _tomatoes, celery and cabbage," the monthly report said. and textiles, and Increased for
''Prices for lettuce and snap
beans also fell."
~o
Beef and coffee prices were
.
also down.
·
In thenextseveral weeks, U.S. CensusBureauemployeesw!U
March gasoline prices fell 2.8
make the rounds In · Meigs County, knocking . on doors and
percent, and prices for natural
assisting residents In completing their .Census questlpnnaires.
gas turned down 2.5 pe~:cent: But
The purpose C)f this effort Is · to conduct a ·. complete and
the cost of home _h eating o!l
accurate he11d count, and as this will have a substantla!.lmpaci
Increased 10.6 percent In March
on all communities, cqmmunit.y cooperation Is encouraged.
after dropping 30,2 percent In
. Census employees are, required . to wear an' official
February.
Identification badge prominently' displayed at ajl times.
I
The wholesale price changes
If there Is doubt that the contactlnj! agent is not a Census
were adjusted to reflect seasonal
employee, contact the Bureau district office in Chllllcothe at
factors, such as the weather.
1-663-4700 or 1-800·999·1990.
The 0.2 percent March decl!ne
in the Labor Department's producer price index followed no·
change In the closely watched
Proceeds from the car wash
Car wash Saturday
economic Indicator In February •. · A car wash w!ll be held by the Will be used toward expenses of
and a 1.8 percent jump in
the youth of ' A$bury United the group to attend I~;hthus, ·a ·· January.
MethodiSt · Church, _ Syracuse, weekend of ChriStian music and
The Index, ltself, stood at 117.0
Saturday beginning at 9 a.m. on teao!llrig to be held the weekend
With 100 equal to $100 in 1982.
the Pleasers parking lot In of ,4.pril27 at Wilmore, Kentucky
Overall food prices, were down
on the Asbury College Campus.
Pomeroy.
0.6 percent In March; after
climbing 0.9 percent in February
and 2.1 percent in January•
Overal} energy prices, were
down 214 percent In March after
falling 5 percent In February. and
rocketing up 13.6 percent In
January In the wake of the
Christmas cold snap.

Census wor.kers

make rounds ·

..
VoL 26 No. 10 .
Cop'lriaftlod , 990

In Thursctay's Daijy Sentinel, it.
wu. reported that · Ronald' S.
Haggy, 38, of Pomeroy, was cited
for !allure to yield In a two-truck ·
crash Wednesday morning on
S.R. 124 in Rutland Township. ·
Malc"on M. Ingram, ~1, of
Middleport, not Haggy, was cited
in the crash.

Census return urged
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The day, Bryant warned that the
"Both states added i percen·
Ce11sus Bureau said the nation's national che&lt;;k·ln response rate
tage point overnight , while the
lethargic rite of census returns was an alarming 57 percent- far
nationwide tally of· census rejumped by 2 points In 24 hours to fewer answers than expected for
tums jumped 2 polnis to 59
59 percent with Wisconsin, Iowa the nationwide count held every
percent," It said. ·
and other Midwestern states 10 years.
South Dakota , Minnesot a ,
leading .t he country .
The government hoped to have , Ohio; North Dakota. Indiana and
"Stand up and be counted a 70 percent return. of the , 90 Michigan were close behind , ·
now! " Census Bureau:!!lrector million census forms that were officials said.
Barbara Bryant said Friday . put In the mail at the end of
In addition, " South Carolina
"Fill out and return your 1990 March. and Bryant blamed some and the District of Columbia
census forms this weekend."
. ofthe slow response on "soc!olog· crossed the 50 percent threshold,
· The 1990 census has been leal trends such as the dual
leaving only Aiabarria (49.6 per·
p!ilgued by reports of foul-ups, career couple."
cent) and .Alaska ( 45.0 percent)
confusion, missed ad&lt;lresses,
.According to fts latest es.tl- below . their halfway points ·
housing units that do not s~ow up mates released Friday, 'W!scon· . aniong the states," the bureau
on official liSts, undelivered sin remains ·ahead in ·statewide said.
·
forms and other nagging returns of census forms, with 73.4
Amolig the nation's maj~r
problems.
perc~;nt closely fol!owed by Iowa
cities IndlanapoUS leads with a
At a news conference Thurs· at 72.2 percent," the bureau said.
(See CENSUS, paae All)

S.PRINI SEASOIII
FOR EARER
. Liles, • - · TuRps,

· Hyaclnth1, Hy.*CIIIIIGs,
Calad.._
.
ALSO: C0111pl1to line of

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

.

Pbds, ••••••• Follagollla94lalbts.
Fruit and Flowal.. Tr-,
Shr1bs, Ast(loa• and
lhododondr- ·

STUDEN'I.'8 BRIEFED ON COURT SESSION
- Gatla Conaty Common Pleas Judge Donald
Andrew 'Cox brleled students.at the University of .
Rio Grande Thu~ay on the .upcoming visit of tbe

HUIIAID'$ DIDNHOUSE
SYIACIISt 111110 '

992-5776

Marriage licenses have been
Issued by the Meigs County
Probate Court to the fol!owlng
couples.
·
_. Michael Todd Vance, 24, Mld·
dleport, and Kelly Rae O'Brien,
2~. Middleport; and Darrell Lee
McKinney, 44, Middleport, and
Pamela Kay Allen, 41,
Middleport.
·

Quillen, Schoettle complete IJ'aining

· Joyce A. Quillen, Racine, and
be reinstituted In time of national
emergency by the Congress and
'Thomas C. Schoettle, Greenfield,
the president. ·
:both assigned to the Selective
Seeks divorce
,Service area office at Ports·
· Schoettle and Quillen's Initial
mouth, have completed Initial . training cons!s ted of . about 12
In the Meigs County Court. of
training for newly appointed
hours of instruction over a
Common
Pleas, ·David W!lllam
Selective Service System local
two-day period focusing on an
Hudson,
Pomeroy,
Is seeking a hoard members.
intensive orjentatlon to the Selec·
divorce
from
Brenda
Kay Hudtlve Service System, the major
These board members were
son,
Pomeroy.
~
·
·
duties and responslbllitles of
recommended for the position by
In
another
matter,
Stephen
R.
local board members, and the
·the Governor and appointed by
prcx;edures to be followed by the Tatterson and Robyn· D. Tatter:
•the Director of Selective Service
son have been granted a
local board.
:1n the name of the President.
· They will receive continued dissolution.
' Although Selective Service
training in changes In the law,
,S ystem boards are In an lnactjve
regulations, responsibilities and
status, they would be responsible
.REMEMBII
related agency · policies and
Ior deciding claims for certain
procedures.
classifications, such as conscien·
WITH JoFLOWERS
M!nd a be.utlfulty
The training ensures that the
tlous objection, hardship and
..........
!••-•
31,464 men registered With Selecreligious ministry' should a draft
unn~t., Ja .. C"all
tive Service from the counties
•••il
included in the Portsmouth Area
POMEROY
Office receive a fair and effective
FLOWER
SHOP
classification process by trained
South Central Ohio
"The Wav AmtriCG Sena Love ..
' Ph. 99~·2039 .. 992-5721 .
and objective lndlvlduals ·shoul!l
Cloudy Friday night, with a
the
need
,for
such
a
system
arise
.
. '
.chance of rain and a low In the
lower 40s. Chance of rain is 50
percent. Occasional rain Satur·
)lay, with highs near 60. Chance
1..........
of rain is 80 percent.
V-6. auto .• PS, PB, air. · _
.
Extended Forecast
Sunday tbrourh Tuesday
Fair Sunday, and a chance of
showers In the northeastern part
Auto., air, PS, PB, low miles.
of the state and fair elsewhere
:Monday. A ctlimce of rain across
the state on Tuesday. H!g!ls wtll
Auto., air, AM-FM tape.
)le range from the upper 40s to the
!i(ls Sunday and Monday and from .
·the . mid 50s to the mid 60s
· Tuesday, Overnight will be range
4 speed, AM/FM, low miles.
·
·
{rom the 30s to the low . 40s
through the period.

Weather .

'84 BUICK CENTURY ••

S299 5

briefing for local and high school
news media at 8: 15 a.m. in the
Times Sentloel Staff
Probate/ Juvenile Courtroom.
GALLIPOLIS ... Continuing its
mis$10!) , o( lnfOJ'Illilli· the public • Arguments, with theflrstset.!or9
a :)il., will. be heard Ill the
about t~e pllerat!On of the courts,
Common; Pleas Courtroom by
the Olilo Supreme Court will
Chief Justice Thomas J. Moyer
.mali;e 'it.s ninth. visit to an. Olllo
along with Justices Herbert R
city this Wednesday when.lt stops
Brown,
Andy Douglas, Craig
in G~IUpolis.
. .
Wright, Allee Roble Resnick, A.
· The · justices w!ll hear oral
Wllllam Sweeney and Robert E.
arguments in five cases arising
Holmes.
. from Jhe state's court of appeals
Moyer, the eighth and second
system and w!ll be honored by
youngest persoq to serve as the
the conunun!ty as part of the 1990
state's chief justice, currently
.Bice.ntenn!al Anniversary
serves as Secretary of the Board
Gelebr:aijoa"" . . .~'~'"' Yl""· .. ~b • .., ,..
of Trustees of Franklin
The ' day will start with a

. By IDUS COOHRAN

· RICK TOLLIV:E~,

·JAY HILL or PAT HILL.
.,

Auto. Trans.
Air Cond.
Power Locks
Tilt Wheel
Polycast Wheels
Rear Defroster
Light Group
AM/FM Caaette
' Clear Coat Paint

need to be made.
was operable or could have been
By J;EE ,\NN WELCH
The first case will be the State made so readily.
·Times.SenUnel Staf.f
GALLIPOLIS - When the . of Ohio Versijs David Parker, · In ·the · case, the · victim had
from Highland County. Parker returned from work to her
Supreme Cour-t of Ohio meets
was convicted of aggravated Ralnsboro home Oct. 24, 1986.
here Wednesday, five cases w!ll
burglary, aggravated robbery Her husband, who Is a musician,
be heard, according to Donald A.
and r;~pe, sentenced to 15 to 25 left. to play in Piketon at approxl·
Cox. Cox, who Is Gall!a County
years on each charge with 15 mately 8 p.m. The victim fell
Common Pleas Court Judge, is
y~ars actual incarceration spec!·
coordinating the effort as a
asleep after putting her son to
fled for each, served bed, She was awakened by a gun
kickoff fo,r the Gallipolis
corisecutlvely .
placed to her head. The attacker
bicentenniaL
Additionally, ~ he was given . forced ·her into the bedroom and
Oral arguments wUJ begin at 9
three years on a firearm specifi· she was ·raped. The attacker
a.m., and each case w!ll be given
cation to the aggravat~d robbery asked for her pur~e. !.hen left'
approximately 30 minutes.
.
Many of the seats in the charge.
She described and Identified
The court ·of appeals reversed the attacker to the county Sheriff,
Common Pleas Courtroom are
reserved for high school stu· the sent.i!rice on t.lie firearm and witnesses said they saw
dents, but the general public may specification, saying the prose- Parkl!r's car leave the victim's
watch the llve, closed, circuli cu tlon did not prove beyond a
''u'""" at 2:30a.m., and return to
doubt the
·

V-6. Air

Cassetta
Speed Control
Rear Defrostar
Ught Gro11p · ,
Power Locks
Power Seats
Power Windows ·
Floor Mats

Cornaring Lamps .

-,

s 111 noc1

FOR IMMEDIATE DEUVEIY

NOW ONLY

Hospital news
Veteraaa Memorlal
: Thursday admissions - Mary
Qualls, Pomeroy; Carojyn Jacobs, Cheshire; Thurston Stone
Ml.ddleport; and Dale E . Smith:
~meroy.
· .
· Thursday discharges ,...
Brenda Woodruff.

R.N.

.

OTORS

992-3321

1551 NYE AVE.
JUNCnON 7 &amp; 33
NANCY JEFFEIS, OWIIEI

POMEROY,
OHIO

POMEROY - Support. of the
new 1.5. mlll levy for general
operating expenses of the Meigs
Industrtes-carletoli School at the
May Primary is urged by Larry
Spencer, who serves on the Meigs
. Industries Board. .
In stressing his support the
Melp County Clerk of Courts
said that it Is his feeling that the
addltional moneY. . Is li~ to
"continue qual!ly services to our
disll-bl"'! Me!P. County citizens,
SUPPORT - Flve-year"'id Jenalfer ~ Ia a
infllnts, children and adults with
ilevelop~nentally 'dliabled child wbo a4tendll Carletoo SeiiHI•.Here
m~nial retardation:"
she demonstrates to l.arey Spencer, a board member of Meigs
He spoke of the: specialized
Industries, how she use8 ber cOmmunication lloud. 'Eacb key on
th~rapy to persons who are ·
the board provldea an elec&amp;ronlcally pro(l'ammed m-1e which
d.e:velopmentally disabled and
helps ber communicate wl&amp;h ber teachers.
said thitt the program "teaches
children and adults to become
prQduct!ve citizens In a world
alternatives available to the Racine, spoke of the Commission
that Is not designed With the
handicapped at that' time along for Accredltatlon.on .. Rehablllta·
haqdlcapped in mtnd:0 '
·
with !.he problems facing the Uon awarded to the Meigs
A paraplegic because of a birth
handicapped In overcoming bar· Industries-Carleton School as
defect, Spencer, a native Meigs
rlers. Spencer said that his ''shining star for Meigs County. "
Countlan, says that he ''knows
mother, Mrs. Dorothy Spencer, · He said tjlat the Meigs indusbetter than anyone else the value
was responsible for transporting tries .workshop gives the 'handl·
of people helping people with
him to ,c lass.
handicaps."
·
capped· person a chance for
Spencer, who lives wilh his self-reliance and noted that In the
He cited his own public schOQI
wife, Kay, and son, Michael in
experience and the lack of
(See OPERATING, pare A8)

URGEs

a

Housing program deadline .nearing
GALLIPOLIS- The Ga!Upol!s
Comprehensive Housing Program, which has been In effect
since June, 1988, w111 end on June
30, according to the Gallla·Metgs
Community Action Agency.
!Jomeowners living within an
eight-block radius on Third and
Fci.u rth Avenues between Syca·
mqre and Cedar Streets can still
apply for assistance. The dea,d·
line for processing applications

Is Monday, Aprll30. Appl!ca lions
cannot be accepted after that
date.
Approximately 60 working
days are allotted for Inspections,
historical review and construe·
tlon work. Although the housing
act.lvlty Is .80 percent complete,
there are enough funds left. to .
rehabilitate three or four major ·
units. In the major category each
home can receive up to $15,000 In

repairs. The primary objective is
to bring substandard homes up to
acceptable s tate· housing
standards .
Emergency ~ funds are also
ava!la ble (limit $2,250) to correct
an Immediate and urgent hous·
lng problem. ·
For more lnformat.lon, contact
the CI\A office at 367·7341 (Gal !Ia
County) or 992·.6629 (Meigs
County) . ·

$9.795

tom9rrow. "Things always pick business of designing trus ses ,
they went to Washington, D.C .
up In the sprtmr." he commented.
. · Tlmea.SenUnel Staff
last
week to get certltled In the
Hill
explained
that
the
trusses
Mlt&gt;DLEPOR'I: - Prodllclng
cpntour
layout Hydro-Air Engi·
are
designed
on
a
computerized
computer designed and eng!·
neering
Program.
engineering
system
and
then
the
neered truss systems is big
Each truss is especially debusiness, according to Bob Hill, printouts are used to set the saws
signed
for size, structure and ·
which
can
cut
four
angles
on
one
office manager of Middleport's
·
streJ!glh
on the computer, Hill
pass.
Once
the
strips
hav!!
been
Southeast Ohio Truss Co. which
explained,
and then the design
cut
the
angles
are
put
together
in Its . first year did nearly a
sheet
is
used
by the person who
with
metal
connector
plates
and
half-miiUon dollars worth of
sets
the
saw'
which -create the·
then
hydraulicallY
pr.essed
which
, business.
right
angJ.es.
forces
the
long
tooth
plales
deep
Engineered truss systems
Any truss made at the plant
Into the lumber minimizing the
me~ a quality job that Is faster,
can
paaa sta\e Inspection In Ohio,
chance of wood failure.
simp~ and more economical to
West
VIrginia or Kentucky, the
The Idea is that a truss Is only
e~~· commented Hill, who
·
rpanager
said.
as good as its plated Joints,
noted tllat the company hu a
Hill
who
got Into the·buslne$s
according to Hill. The Middleport
wide wholesale · market for
after
he
retired
as a sales agent
plant has twO presses,
with
tr~ in ~11theastern Ohio and
with
Western
SQu)hern lnsu·
large tables to acCIImodate- the
We~t Virgln!J.
trusses which sometimes are 60 ranee and a bobby )lackground In
business Is lOc:ated In the
building, says 'he knows the
teet.
, former Imperial Electric build·
!!ffic!ency
Of ""dy-11\ade trusses
The
trusses
are
made
of
i" on Loga,n Street, and the
over
those
~ted by carpenters
Southern
yellow
pine
which
is
~l!let for the m~t part Is
on
the
construction
site.
some
of
the
ltoutest
lumber
you
"ww~ a 75-mlle radius. Lumber
"They're
cheaper
and they 're
can
find.
HIU
said.
Most
of
tbe
~~~~ mike the pun:lwes
better,"
said
Hill,
who
considers
himber
used
by
Southeast
Oblo
WJII!tll are delivered In one of the
the
Middleport
operation
a
Truss
Co.
cornea
out
of
either
ttu:w big truclu owned by
growth
business.
-North
Carolina
or
South
Sou. . .I.
Southeast is not the onjy truss
WlWe the work force baa been Carolina.
maker
In the trt-county area, Hill
While
Hill
and
Jeff
Patterson
· ~ .to alx durlq the winter
said,
but
It Is a full· time facility
who
.
Ia
the
plant
manager
were
lliOiltbs when business Is slower,
where.
the
product IS engineered
qualified
to
do
all
of
the
already
Hill laid that three more em· computer engineering In the and designed
by computer.
ployes will be on lh!! Job

Jly CHARLENE,..OEFIC.H

1990 FORD FESTIVA

GIEAT GAS IULEAGE

AI pricis after RIIIOtes, ~~~~N¥-~Nilllll
Foctwy Discaunt &amp; Pot
•:• Dilatunt.

Tar &amp; Tltlt Not IIICiu4M.

.

'82 (HEVROLET CAVALIER'•••• S1495
.

Operating
levy sought
for program

New Middleport business booms
quring its first year of operation

$tylad Road Wheels

4 IN STOCK
FOR IMMEDIATE DEUVEIY

'83 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ......S2995

'85 MERCURY TOPAZ ........... S2795

University.
Before becoming chief justice,
Moyer served eight years on the
bench of the Court of Appeals ol
Frankllri Couniy, four years as
execudve assistant to Gov.
James A. RhQdes and eight years
In a private law practice In
ColumbUs: He Is also a member
ofthe Natlonal Advisory Council
of The Ohio State U,n!vers!ty
College of Law.
'High school students from a
four-county area, in addition to
students from the University of
Rio Grande, wlll be attending the
(See GALLIA, page AS)

'Gases outlmed for ·court visit

1990 TEMPO
GL
.
4DR •.

'84 CHRYSlER NEW YORKER ••.S3995

Auto., air, AM/FM.

Ohio Supreme Court. Tile students wiU sit In on
one of the five caaea the court will bear on
Wednl!!lday, AprU 18 In the Common Pleas
CourtrOom In Ga!Upo!ls. (Times-Sentinel' photo)

Gallia Eounty will host visit
fro~ Ohio Supreme Court

•

STOP IN AND SEE •

-Maniage licenses

ootli

.
'

~

~"

.,

I I

.

'

.

the

•

MONDAY, WEDNESDAY .and FRIDAY OPEN ,1'1L 7:00; TUESDAY &amp; ·
THURSDAY OPEN 'il. 5:30 P.M.; SATURDAY OPEN 'TIL ·4:00 p.M• .
SEE RICK TOLLIVER, JAY HILL or PAT HILL
'

'.

~~!.HILL

FORD, ·l~£:r
992-1196

'

.

Correction

Republican candidate Dan H!eronlmus will have the
opportunity to speak about his pld for the 17th District Ohio
Senate Seat at the Meigs County Lincoln Day dinner Wednesday
night along with RepubliCan candJdate for Secretary of State
Bob Taft.
,.
.
~erontmus has served as Lawrence Cou11tY Sheriff since 1981
and hopes to win the primary election May 8 a~ the Republican
nominee for the Ohio Senate Seat representing Athens, Gallla·,
Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs, Plckaway, Ross, and · Vhiton
Counties.
The Hleronlmus campaign Is based on providing southeast·
ern Ohio with positive leadership In the Ohio Senate, according
to his committee. ''Too many laws are being created to protect
the lawbreakers, 'and millions of dollars are -being wasted on
coddling career criminals," H!eronlmus explained. "As
Senator, my goal'would be to create legislation In support of the
law abiding citizen;" he added.
The· Lincoln Day dinner wlll be held at the Middleport
ArnerlcaJI Legion hall wit II a social hour af 6 p.m. and the dinner
at 7 p.m.
.

14 Sectiont. 88 Pagot
A Mutlimecli.l Inc. New~paper

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. April16, 1990

•

.

_ _ _ Meigs announcements _ __

Hieronimus in Meigs Wednesday _

-

PRE881NG
- Two ol ...._
hydraulic preutaa madllaell are uoed lo po&amp; &amp;be
conaec&amp;ar pla&amp;es llrmly Ia pJac:e. Thelf04111 ptee.
. are JolneJI loletlaer wl&amp;b tbe eonaec&amp;ar plate.

•
'-~

-. -

.;-

I

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="296">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9569">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35632">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35631">
              <text>April 13, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
