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p ,. 14-The Deily Sentinel

Porn•oy-Miclclaport. Ohio

Thursday, October 26. 1990

Freeze warning posted for Ohio
By Uatt.etl Prell b~aal
A freeze warning was posted
for northwest Ohio for Thursday
night, With a frost warning up for
the southwest co.unties. Major
cities In the warning area are
CIDCinnall, Dayton, Uma and
Toledo.
A cold night was In .store for
much .of the state as a high
pressure system over the central
United States builds over the
state. tonight. Clear skies will
develop over the western extremes of Ohio around midnight
arid winds will diminish, allowing
the mercury to fall into the upper
· 20s ·over the northwest and to
around 30 In the southwest.
Scattered frost Is expected
over the remainder of the state as
partly cloudy skies prevail along
with north winds of 5 to 10 mph.
A cold front was making Its
way east of Ohio Thursday
morning. In the wake ofthe front,
mostly cloudy skies were ob.. served . across the state along
with patches. of light rain over
extreme eastern and southern
Ohio.

·As the high moves over Ohio on
Friday, skies Will be partly to
mostly sunny. It will remain cool
with highs from the middle 40s In
the northeast to around 50 In the
southwest.
Some moderation In temJ,eratures Is expected Friday and
Saturday and, except for another
short episode of light rain late
Saturday, dry weather will be
suitable for many outiloorchores·
through the early part of next
,week.
Harves-t conditions will change
little over tlie next few days.
Slight warming and more sunshine will bring marglnal,ly lm- ·
proved drying, butsoU conditions
can be expected remain about
the same.
SoU temperatures at 4 Inches
under bare ground continue to
average In the low 50s In most or
Ohio . and condltloas will be
suitable for digging sugar l!eets
In many areas. The cool weather
will be favorable for stockpUing
sugar beets. ·
The slx-to-10-day outlook for
TueSday through Saturday calls
for temperatures' to average
above normal across Ohio. The
outlook is for ·near-normal rain·
fall, except for the possibility of
some enhancement of preclpltalion In the northeast by Lake
Erie.
'
On the early morning weather
map, a cold front extended from
Lake Ontario across West Vtrglnla to Alabama. High pressure

Early morning temperatures
were mainly In the 40s, butcooler
air had made It Into the northw·

est with readings In the upper
30s.
Skies rJ!ursday were to be
variably cloudy and there was a
chance of showers over all bu 1
northwest Ohio. Highs will be
from the middle 40s to around 50.

voinovich. •

Continued from page 1
Republk:an pr Democratic way the attorney general and gover·
to run government, but a right nor are elected separately.
' 'The Celes!E-Celebrezze adway and a wrong way," said
Volnovlch, a Republican who ministration Is the most corrupt,
won three mayoral election$ In a scandal- ridden, unethical In our
city dominated by Democrats. ·'I our memory. Tony. I'm not
want you to know. Tony, that you running against Dick Celeste.
and Dick Celeste have been doing I'm running against you," Volnolt the wrong way."
vich said. "Tony, In eight years,
Volnovlch clearly tried toasso· you never asked the governor,
elate Ceiebrezze with CelestE you never asked the legislature
throughout the debate, although for the power to go In there and go
·
after those corrupt people."
Con.tlnued lrom page 1

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
..

Weather

0

SOulh ~nlral Ohio
Party cloudy Thursday night,
with scattered frost and a l!IW l.n
the mid 30s.. Mostly SUMY Frl;
day. with highs near 50.
Exleaded Foreeast
Saturday &amp;llreqll Monday
Fair through the period, except
for a sUght chance of showers
late Saturday and early Sunday.
Highs will be In the 50s or near 60
Saturday and Sunday, and
mainly In the 60s Sunday. Overnight lows will be generally In the
30s through the period.

. '\

DST ends

•
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter

COLUMBUS "- Seldom has
more Interest been focused on the
secretary of state's office, where
policy Is made on corporate
registry and the conduct of
campaigns and elections, not
Ohio's foreign relations.
Most of the time, the secretary
of state's orrtce runs quietly on Its
data processing system. But Its
profile has been raised this year
as Republicans try to break a

. Am Electric Power ............. 28%

Home is
damaged
by fire

·E
....l..-L...I,O...,.T.LJ¥-T'fo~A:l;l;•'~ol:l;•-sf.:Do:-•;•o~

We t1Htv ICC.,I majur crei.lh Clltdl but
du• to thl low profit m•rglu th••u will ·
be • 3% •ddiliun•l~:t .. ruu If you uu 1
cr1dit card

'TWAS
THE 1EAR
BEFORE
CHRISTMAS

.

·-.

" •

'

STERNWHEELERS ARRIVE - Captain
"Heck" Heckert of River City Tours took time .
out aboard the "Sheila 'D"' stemwheeler to
wave "bello'' on Friday morning. "Heck" Will

'91

35.

Charlotte Kencald, 45, was
wwtbound when she apparently
drove off the right side or the
road, striking a bridge. Her 1985
Cbevrolet Citation continued on
Into a small creek, sustaining
heavy damage. Kencald was
traveling at approximately 40
m lies per hour at the time of
llnpact, according to a report
from the patrol.

the numbers and $3 will go to
each of 140,075 people with three
or the numbers.
Ticket sales totaled $5,113,420
and the total prize PIIYOUt was
$12, 590,027.
.
In the accompanying Kicker
game, one ticket had the winning
combination -: 910797- good for
$100,000.
Seven people had the llrst five
digits correct, worth $5,000; 84
had the first four, worth $1,000;
781 had the first three, worth
$100; and 7,616 had the first two,
worth $10.

YOU PAY ANY AMOUNT
YOU WIS.H WEEKLY.
PAYS 5% INTEREST

,.

2. Standard Selection • ·
YOU SELECT A FIXED DOLLAR AMOUNT
THAT FITS YOUR WEEKLY BUDGET

STERNWHEEL PENCIL DRAWING • Jim
Durst, left, sun or Ed ·and Ruth Durst, Mid·
dleport, drew this pencil sketch for the
Stemwlleeler's Festival on Satnrday. Tbe festival
is sponsored by the Meigs County Chamber of

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE WE CAN MAKE YOUR PAVMENT DIRECT FROM
YOUR CHECKING ACCOUNT EACH WEEK.
1991 CHRISTMAS CLUBS BEGIN OCTOBER 29, 1990

•

Gun Stolen
The Meigs County Sheriff's
DefoEi2teporudiM Plul Curtis
or
reporiOd on Wedneada
that his
calibre rille
Univenal acope IIIII been taken
from his residence. The depliDtlellt
continues to investiga~e.

L_

....._

• •

Farmers
1

992·21.36
221 WEST S(COND
PO.IOY, OHIO '

.\idl!
..,._.

Bank
98S-338S
MEMBER FDIC.

STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

Commem aail the Pomeroy Sesqalcentennial
Committee. Pictured with Durst are Bruce·Reed,·
chamber presldml, and Sberri Hart, chamber
secretary.

HB 237 will permit residents who
move to vote without re-registering

YourBank/n~...

FB

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

-L

,,e ph0r1w

The two story frame home of the
Jesse Barnhart family in Scipio
Township was heavily damaged by
fire late Thursday nighL
The Scipio Fire Department was
cal)ed to lhe scene a1 11:30 p.m.
and was !here for over two hours.
The' son of Barnhart who was sleeping in an upstairs bedroom smelled
smoke and alerted lhe family. AU
escaped without injury.
•
M~,of}b&lt;: Clal!tage; according ·
to a litelilen, was confined to the at·
tic and upstairs of the house. ConteniS .were damage&lt;! but the family
had msurance on bolh the house
and. the conteniS, a spokesman for
Raben Jewell, fire chief, said.
The Scipio Fire Department had
two trucks and 14 men on the
scene. The Pomeroy Fire Department was called to assist and took a
£«:$Cue vehicle and six men to the
SENATOR BRANSTOOL VISITS • Senator Eugene Branslool
fire site.
(0-Utica),
candidate for Lieutenant Governor or Ohio, was in
At 5:50p.m. Middlepon firemen ·
on
Friday morning meeting with Meigs Countians and
Pomeroy
were called io the old Kings Arms
discuSSing
the
issues. Branstool, who visited wilb people in local
building on Route 7. The call was
shops and on the street, staled that this was his fourth visit to
canceUed at 6 p.m. and the firemen
Me1gs County since bis campaign began. (Sentinel Photo by Brian
were back a1 the st~~tion at6: II.
J, Reed)

complaints

""OW OFFERING .2 '" PES OF CHRISTMAS CLUBS"
1. Variable Payment

doesn't 'really want to tie secre:
tary of state.
Beneath these main themes,
several subplots are being
played out. The .Tart campaign
seized on a television report that
Brown tried to block an Ohio
Highway Patrol Investigation
into drug sales among his employees In 1985.
An Investigation showed no
evidence he tried to block such ari
inquiry, and the Franklin County
prosecutor - a· Republican '7
said that although there . was
evidence of drug activity, there
was Insufficient evidence to .
prosecuie.
.
·the Democrats, In turn, have
hammered Taft for his part as a
county commissioner In ejecting
a woman from a county office for
trying to registEr votErs and for a
scandal Involving countyoperated Drake HospitaL

Deputies
Defense seeks change of
•
•
mvestigate venue in Bates murder trial

Christmas shopping will be more enjoyable when you put ·.
away a little money each week. The·interest you earn will
help you get extra special gifts for everyone on your list.

Kencald was taken to Grant
Hospital In Columbus by a ·
Ll fefilght helicopter. She was
listed In serious condition Thursday In the hospital's Intensive
care unit, IICCOrdlng to a llospltal
spokeswoman.
She was not cited In the
accident:

• _..,...___

one or several stemwlleeler operators who arrived early this morning for tbe· Big Bend
Stemwbeelers Festival, which gets uoderway on
Saturday. (SentiDel Photo by Brian J, Reed)
··

IT PAYS TO THINK AHEAD- .
JOIN OUR 1991
SAVINGS CLUB NOW

Patrol releases accident report
The Gallla-Meigs Post, State
Highway Patrol today released
the report or a Racine woman
who suffered serious Injuries
Tuelday when she struck t)le side
of a bridge on Meigs County Road

may be able to arrange the lines
busily soliciting funds lor · failing to monitor and enforce
to permit their party to capture . Brown's defense.
Ohio's campaign finance reportthe Ohio House tor the first time
Brown, 37, who was the young· Ing requirements. He said Brown
since 1972.
est secretary of state· In .Ohio failed tQ detect violations, partie·
The Ohio Republican Party,
hlstnry when first elected In 1982, ularly .In the reports of Demopromising to spend at least $1 has boasted that his office has cratic candidates and groups.
million on the race, Induced Taft - registered 1.5 million voters
Brown says he has referred
to drop out of the governor's ·since 1982 and has the best such ·more cases to the Ohio Elections
contest last February and take program In the country.
Commission than any prior seon Brown.
But Tan, 48, says voter regis- cretary of state, but that the size
House Speaker Vernal Riffe, tratlon has actually declined by4
of his staff does not permit him to
D-Whee.lersburg, whose record percent since 1986, · counting
monitor the' campaign finance
16-year reign could be endan- ·those who have left the rolls.
reports In detail, nor does the law
geted If Taft wins. has been
Brown said Taft's Interest In · require It.
Taft has accused Brown of
voter registration Is hypocritical
and polltic~J:Ily motivated, since
being blindly partisan In br~ak·
he opposed mall·ln registration
lng ties on mattErs of disputE at
as a state legislator In 1977.
local boards of election; Taft
Brown's offiCe expanded the use
says he favors the Republicans
of mail-In reglstratlon.
about one-third of the time - a
Taft has savaged Brown for
higher percentage than his
predecessors.
Brown has chided Tart for
dropping out of the governor's
contest, and says the Republican

446-8051

WEDNESDAY ADMISSiONS.
Edna Pickens, Middleport; William
E. Morris, Racine; Dana Wyant,
Middlepon; Florence Baer, Racine. ·
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES Leora Strom, Agnes Brown,
Gertrude Bass.

One player selects all six lotto namben ·
CLEVELAND (UPI) - One
player picked all stx numbers In
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Wednesday night, making the ticket
holder eligible. to claim the $11
· .million jackwt.
The·wlnner, who has one year
to claim his jackpot, will receive
· $323, 653.84 each year tor 26
years.
The winning numbers were 7,
22, 28, 32, 38 and 45.
There were 98 .tickets with five
ot the n11mbers correct, which
pays .~.000. while $100 goes to
each or 6,790 people with four of

12·year Democratic hold on the
office.
The GOP has come up with
Hamilton County Commissioner
Robert Taft II, heir to a fabulous
Republic;m ancestry, to challenge two-term Democratic Incumbent Sherrod Brown.
The contest Is key to control of
the state Apportionment Board,
which will redraw state leglslatlve boundaries for the 1990s. If
Taft wins, Republicans likely
will dominate the board, and

CALL AHEAD FOR APPROVED CREDIT

Veterans Memorial Hospital

Baer, uansported to Veterans; 2:14
p.m., Middlepon squad to Page
Street, Dana Wyant to Veterans;
2:45 p.m., Pomeroy squad to
Spring Avenue for Audrcr Ainold.
to Pleasant VaHey Hospual; 9:04
p.m., Middleport squad to Gas Plus
store, Dana Longstreth to VeterwiS;
9:08 p.m., Racine . squad to State
Route 124 for Leah Matson. taken
to Veterans Memorial; 9:39 p.m.,
Racirie fire deparUnent and squad,
Syracuse and Pomeroy squads to
State Route 124 for Heather Smith.
Debbie Smith, Angie 'Thaford.
taken to Veterans; Racine squad at
,10:50 p.m. to Slate Route 124 in
Portland, for Keith MII$SCT, taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospilal; 10:57
p.m., Rutland squad to Zion Church
Road for Cammie Morris, taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospilal.
·

A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

r----------'-----.,------------,....-·- -----,--,

EMS squads respond to 13 calls ·
Units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services responded
to I3 calls for assiSianCe on Wednesday.
·
9:07 a.m., Rutland squad to
Salem Shaft ·Mine for John Marculli, taken to Pleasant Valley
. Hospital; 10:47 a.m., Middlepon
squad to Palmer Street for Edna
Piclcens, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; 11:20 a.m.,
Rulland squad Ill Cheshire for AI- ·
bena Holliday, taken to Holzer
Medical Center. 11:26 a.m., Middlepon squad to Page Street for
Thelma Orueser. tliken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
12:34 p.m., Racine squad to
Rowe Road for William Morrill,
lniJlsported to Veterans Memorial ·
Hospilal; 2:0 I p.m., Racine squad ,
to State Route 124 for Aorence

2 Stctiono, 1 6 Pogto 26 Conti

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, October 26, 1990

Ohio secretary of state key race of season·

Dally stock prtces ·
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Sml&amp;lt
of Blunt, Ellis 6 Loewl
Ashland Oil ........................ 28~
AT&amp;T ....................... ......... .33¥,
·Bob Evans ............. : ............ 12%
Charming Sboppes .............. 8')5
City Holding Co ................... 15
Federal Mogul.. .................. 12%
Goodyear T&amp;R ......... .. .... .... 16*
Key CenturiOn ..................... 11
Lands' End....................... .. 9¥,
LimitEd Inc. ............... ........ 14%
Multimedia Inc. .............. .... 56%
Rax Restaurants.................. 1
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 17
Shoney's Inc. ...................... 10~
Star Bank ............... ............ 16%
Wendy's Int'l . ........... .......... 6~
Worthington lnd ...... .. .......... 21 '4

Clear tonight. Low In mid
30s. Sunny Saturday. Hlgb In
mid 60s.
"•

OVER
DEALER
COST!
Cash &amp;
Carry .

Hospital news

quired, Gilmore said.
Dennis .Gilmore will be on hand
with a display of glo-in-the-dark articles.
The n&gt;adway on which · the
hayride wagons will oavel was cut
throUgh the woods by village
employees Fred Older, Dave Ross
and Mike Ralsion. The three along
with Gilman: also donaled many
hours toward getting the fallen
treeS out of the way and spreading
gravel on the road in preparation
for the community party.
The wagons will follow about a
half mile of winding roadway
through the woods, entering from
the paved area and returning the
same way.
In the event of heavy rains which
might make the new limestoned
roadway impassible, an alternate
route has .been planned.
.

Pick-3: 764
Pick-4: 2472
Cards: 9-H; 8-C;
3-0;9-S ·

Vol..41, No.123
Copyrighted 1 990

Stocks

Haunted ...

categories.
When entering the marina area,
each pmon will be .given a ticket
for a hayride. The wagons will
leave from the parting area at the
marina and ~ into the adjacent wooded area
. " GJo..in-the-daric cancDes will
mart the winding roadway through
the area where a dozen action
~are being created.
Gilmore advises that lhe event
wiD be ~U-supervised with both
po~ce and firemen on the scene.
F"tre II'IICb will be moved to the
area and will use spollighls 10 illwninate the parking lot. · ·
While older children and adults ·
wiD be allowed to roast wieners
around the bonfire, younger
children will be served by adults.
Pualts are invited to contribute
wieners although that is not re-

HELD OVER

stretched from the Hudson Bay
· acr01s the western Great Lakes
and the central Plain&amp; to Texu.
The cold front will continue
moving east and move off the
East Coast by Friday morning.
The hlgb pressure system will
move eut and by Friday mornIng ex!End from the Great Lakes
, to the western Gulf of MexiCo.

Ohio Lottery

Turn clocks
back 1 hour
Sunday

-· '

Even though you have moved
and not changed your address with
the Meigs County Board of Elections, registered voters will be
eligible to vote in the Nov. 6 election, according to Jane Frymyer,
local board director. .
.
The change has been brousht
about through the ~or House
Bill 237. 'f1uu b1ll provides that
those who moved on or before Oct.
9 but did not chanlle their addresses
With the Board of l:Iections prior Ill
the deadline for makin~ lhat
.change, can now vote m the

Mechanic Avenue office of the
Board of Elections. However, that
right can be exercised on Election
Day only.
The ballots will not be counted
on election night. but )Vill be
counled during the oflicial count 10
days later aftet it has been verified
that each voter did not vote 11 his
previous polling location.
If residents moved after OcL 9,
then those residents should go back
to tbeir polling pla(:e in the precinct
where they previously resided.
·House BUI 237, according to
Sherrod Brown, Secretary of Slate,

assures

every registered voter the ·
lo vote even !hoUgh the voter
failed to report an addless change
tn the Board of Elections.
The local office will be operi
both Salillllay, Oct 27, and Satur·
dsy, Nov. 3, from 9 a.m. to noon to
accomildate residenlll. The deadline
for making application to vote ab-.
sentee is noon on Nov. 3.
Frymyer reports !hal the "Knocking Down Barriers" program to
courage residents to register to
vote, resulted in · 420 · new
registrations in the county.
~t

en-

A burglary is being investigated
today by lhe Meigs County Sheriff's Department
According to Sheriff James M.
. Soulsby, Tina Jewell of HamptOn
Hollow Road reported that sometime between 10:30 p.m. on 'Wednesday and 4 p.m. on Thursday
evening, someone entered her
uailer and stole a 19 inch color
television, a VCR and 12 tapes.
Investigation into the matter continues.
Basil Haynes of Middlepon
reported Ill the department on
Thursday that someone had
damaged his mailbox during the
night.
The department also repons lhat
Sherman Ray Marcum, who was
arrested in Columbus on Friday
night was released by Franklin
County authorities Monday m()llling following a Rule 4 hearing
there.
Marcum posted bond for a later
appearance in Meigs County Court.

Suspect
caught in
Indiana
VERSAILLES, Ind. (UPI) -A

man wanted for kidnapping a
~year-old Ohio girl has been ·
arrested In Versailles .and was
being held Friday for return to
Cincinnati.
PoliCe said Hobert J. Barrett
Jr., 44, of Knoxville, Tenn., was
featured on a recent segment or
thE!. teleVIsion
show, America's
.

.

Defense attorneys have asked for
a change of venue or new jury for
the murder nial of Roben Bates on
Thursday in Pumam County Circuit
Court, according to a repon in
today's Charleston Gazette.
Bates is accused of aiding Raben
Gtay in an August 1989 arson-forprofit scheme that left John Janey,
an off-duty Pumam County sheriff's deputy, dead. Jury selection was
entering the fourth day for Bates.
Prosecuting
Anorney O.C.
Spaulding said defense lawyers
Harvey Peytnn and William Murray
made the motion before more
potential jurors were called, the
Charleston newspaper staled.
Spaulding said 32 jurors had been
interviewed by Wednesday night.
Bolh defense and prosecuting · attorneys had agreed four should be
excused.
Defense attorneys apparently had
objected to 18 of the remaining 24
potential jurors, and charged that
Bates could not receive a fair Dial
in Pumam County.
The motion slated that all of the

18 expressed an opinion to at least
some degree, that a crime, probably
murder, was committed in August
1989: The motion added that the
potential jorors knew the crime
resulted in the deputy's death.
Bates, of Gallipolis, and formerly of Point Pleasant is charged
with first-degree murder under a
slate law that allo".'s anyone involved in a felony to be charged with
murder if the crime results in
slaying. Prosecutors aUege that
Bales drove Gmy to .the Hurricane
home of Raymond Huck to set fire
to the dwelling as part of the arson
scheme.
Gray was convicted in June of
murdering Janey. Gray is also of
Gallipolis. Police said Janey, who
was hired by insurance inves·
tigators to keep an eye on the
house, surpi'ised Gray before he:
could bum the dwelling.
Huck, accused or hiring Gmy to
bum the house to collect insurance,
pleaded guilty to second-degree
murder in March.
(Continued on Page 12)

a

/

Stemwheelen Festival Schedule
.

/

9:30a.m. to 10 a.m.- Meigs High School Band
10 a.m. to 11 a.m. -Official Welcome.from Meigs County Chamber of Commerce President Bruce Reed and Pomeroy Sesquicentennial Committee .Chairman Mary Powell .
10:30 a.m. • Middlepoo \'olunt,eer Fire' Department Fish Fry
12 noon to 12:30 p.m.· Easteril Junior High School Band
1 p.m. to 1:45 p.m. - Rainbow Cloggers
2 p.m.-- Trinity Oiurch-Meigs County Choir
4 p.m. to 5 p.m. • Exhibition Sternwheelers Race
4 p.m. to 6 p.m. - WMPO Live Remote
5 p.m. to 6 p.m.• Thank you and captains' presentations
5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Pomeroy Volunu:er Fm: Department Barbeque
7 p.m. to'10 p.m. Crossover Band and Shady River Shufllers
7 p.m. to 11 p.m. Merchants Moonlight Madness ~ale
Except wbtll'l! noted, all eveall are aelleduled, Saturday, Oct.
26, at or near &amp;_he Pomeroy leve~ .

�••

.

.

·Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Page-2~The Deily

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Friday, ~bar 26, 1990

rican founders in ·prison--,-----!!.!Ja:::.:.:ck~A:.:.::nde=r:.=:so:.:.:.n

111 Court Slreet
Pomeroy, Ohio

W · HINGTON - The American
waiting at the door of death
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AR
row In a Malaysian prison was
Alb
not dealing_drugs when he was
~m~ ,..,.,_,._-r•~=~~
arres led with a. pound of mari~v
juana nearly a year ago. He was
toting around his medicine.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
That Is the controversial dePublisher
· Geaeral Manacer
fense that Kerry Wiley's lawyer
may use to keep Wiley from
PAT WHITEHEAD
being hanged. The " medicinal
Aaslllianl Publllloer/Centroller
purposes" defense has worked
only three times In the United
I
A MEMBER otThe Untied Press International, Inland Dally Press
States . But Wiley Is In a country
Association nd the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
that prides Itself on enforcing the
harshest drug laws In the world
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300
a country that stamps on Its
words long. AU letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
entry
permits, "Death for drug
name, address and telephone number. Nci unsigned letters wUI be pubtraffickers."
·
lished. Letters should be In good taste, addresslni Issues, not personal!.. lies.
·
Wiley was arrested on Nov. 4,
1989, at a private home In the
'.,'
Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur. Pollee seized 1.1 pounds of
"ganja." In Malaysia, possession of more than seven ounce
carries a mandatory death
penalty.
'"' . '
As we reported last moJ!th,
In
the
manner
In
which
they
have
Wiley,
35, does not tit the protlle
To the Residents of Chester
been
In
past
years.
We,
the
of
a
drug dealer. He Is a
Township:
trustees
of
Chester
Township
feet
scientist and former
computer
On November 6, the Township
that maintaining the cemeteries
lecturer In California and Haof Chester will have a new one
waii. He was ·arrested In the
Is very lmportan t and we will
mill levy on the ballot. This levy
Is for the purpose of maintaining sincerely appreciate your sup- · home of his mother's friend - a
port lor this levy on November 6.
afid operating the cemeteries ill
CheSter Township Trustees
Chester Township.
Gary R. Dill
Due to the rising costs ot
Wald L. Spencer
mowers, gasoline, labor costs,
George A. Wolfe
etc., this levy Is necessary If the
Karen R. Smith, Clerk
~emeterles are to be maintained

Letters to the editor

:·. Levy sought for upkeep of cemetery

Malaysian. teacher whom his
mother met at a teachers'
conferen~e. Both of Wiley's parents are college professors.
If Wiley Is convicted, he would .
be a ftrs.t-tlme offender guilty of a ·
crime that would likely get him a
suspended sentence In the United
States.
The stakes are higher In
Malaysia, so Wiley has a celebrated lawyer In his corner former U.S. Attorney General
Ramsey Clark. He and a doctor
who has reviewed Wiley's medical records told our associate
Jim Lynch about Wiley's past,
much of which was likely to be
repeated In the Malaysian court
If Clark uses the medicinal
defense.
At the age of 12, Wiley fell off a
cliff climbing San Jacinto Peak
In Calttomta. He plummeted 60
feet and waited In semiconsciousness for hours before
he was rescued. The local newspaper called It a " Christmas
miracle" that he lived.
The fall damaged Wiley's
nerves and left him with chronic
pain, arthritis and muscle
spasms. He endured painkiller
after. painkiller, but nothing

__.

.••

.. -·

with the assistance of a job
coach.
A lot of our adults are now
bringing home !lice paychecks. I
remember when they sat and
screwed nuts and bolts together
to entertain themselves because
we had one staff person to work
with them. In just the blink of an
eye y:E
· could need our services.
A ca accident, or the birth of a
baby
problems can happen
at any time. Cart you really
afford for us not to be here? This
levy will cost the average home
owner $21 per year.
A speech therapist or physical
therapiSt costs $50 per hour.
Thank God I have two beautiful,
physically and mentally healthy
children at this minute, but that
car accident could happen tonight. Now Is when we need the
public outcry.
This Is a lot more than a hot
lunch we're talking about. Help
us continue to provide QUALITY
SERVICES FOR QUALITY
PEOPLE, Meigs County's handicapped and retarded. VOTE YES
FOR THE CARLETON
SCHOOL/ MEIGS INDUSTRIES
on Nov . S.
Melva Eblin
Rt.l, Box 23
Rutland, Ohio 45775

.•

peadline for publication
~f
election letters Oct. 31
•
•• . The Dally Sentinel letters •regarding the

Nov. 6 general election.
llowever, In the interest of fairness, no election letters will be
)ccepted alter 12 noon on Wednesday, Oct. 31.
• Individuals should address Issues and not personalities.
: Letters purely endorsing candidates will not ·he used.
:: ·Letters should be 300 words or less. All letters are subject to editing
and must be signed with name, address and telephone nUIIIber. The
(e)ephone numbers will not be published. No unsigned letters will be
published . Letters should be In good taste.

..
•
•

~ush · .buying

for
Jime
to
quell
Iraq
.
•'

•
By BELEN THOMAS
~;
UPI While Hoilae Reponer
•: WASHINNGTON- Phll0$ophet George Santayana said that It we
ito not remember the past, we are doomed to repeat our mistakes In
ll'(.e future.
' ?resident Bush remembers the mistakes before World War II and
(lie appeasement of Adolf Hlt~r In the late thirties by the Western
J'()wers who failed to read the handwriting !)n the wall. ''Peace In our
time" was the slogan.
·
:; 'H itler was not stopped until he ravaged Europe and was caught
.,etween two fronts at untold co~t and suffering. White markers on
Jrilves throughout the world tell the tale of great courage and great
.(llcr!tlce for freedom.
• With that analogy In mind, Bush, who was a World Warllpllotand
ilowned In the Pacltlc by the Japanese, has the .lessons of history
Qefore htm. For that reason, he opposes aggression by Iraq's Saddam
Huueln, who took over Kuwillt In a blitzkrieg Invasion and
lbteatened the entire Persian Gulf region.
.
·
: 'l\'hen he decided to block Iraqi forces from moving on to Saudi
Arabia, Bush Initiated a massive global response and dispatched
100,000 or more troops to · that oU-rlch kingdom. He lined up an
tpternatlonal effort as never seen before and had unprecedented
succes1 In Winning support for eight United Nations resolutions to
lllockade and bring her to "its kneet economically.
•.The massive buildup continues. The boycott of Iraq I oil exports and
li!Jporu of the eSIIentlall for livelihood and war are apparently being
eJtectlvely curtalled.Iraq, one of the world' slargestoll suppUers, has
IJI'.Itltuted gasoUne ration~~~&amp;. Spare parts are becoming scarce as
well a1 .arne ot the other neceultles.
.:Most or tbe ,Arab countrla have sided with the allled effort,
.,.rtlcularly EIIYPt and Syria, which have dispatched troopli to
llilllater the forces In 8audl Arabia . But Jordan, Yemen pnd Ubya .
~ve sbown sympathy for Saddam and are seeking a compromise
~utlon.
·

:·

r

.,II

general under Lyndon Johnson,
hopes the argument will touch at
least one person, Malaysian
Prime Minister Mahathlr Mohamad, a medical doctor
htmself.
But as of yet. Malaysia has
shown no. signs of softening the
law for Wiley or anyone else. As
Mahathlr told us. "We think
(drug dealers) are killers. because so many of these young
boys who have taken these drugs
are dying or dead. It's murder."
The question remains why ·
Wiley would have risked running
marijuana In Malaysia, Clark
des.crlbes Wiley as a rugged
Individualist who was In Sou- ·
theast Asia for an extended
vacation to hike and · study
Buddhism.
He has been In prison since his
arrest. Unless the case Is dismissed, Wiley Is scheduled to tell
his side of the story In a
Malaysian court next month.
SOCIALIST DROP&lt;)UTS
Cubans aren't buying Fidel Castro's "socialism or death" doctrine anymore. They see evidence of failure all around them.
Hundreds of thousands of Cuban
stu()ents drop aut of school before
finishing the equivalent of junior
high. Less than a fourth of them
· seek a college education. WorkIng conditions In Cuban factories
are unhealthy. The medical
facilities c_a n't cope with the high
rate of disease caused by poor
living conditions. The Soviet
Union Is showing signs of wiltingness to cut aid to Cuba, and that
could bring about Castro's downfall. But the greatest threat to
Castro now Is InternaL unrest.
MINI-EDITORIAL . - President Bush showed his solidarity
with government workers .on
Columbus Day when he took the
ltmo Instead of the helicopter
home from Camp David. Federal
workers had been furloughed
that day,l"hile Congress fiddled.
So the helicopter ·came home
empty while Buah and his procession burned up gasoline. Maybe
the next time the presldimtwants
to relate to the little people, he'll
consider the U.S. troops who are
defending cheap gas In the
Persian Gulf.

worked. Clark says that Ironically Wiley "developed ana version for dru~ts ."
Clark refused to say outright
that Wiley had turned to marijuana ·when prescription drugs .,
failed him. But Clark told us he
may present evidence that thou- .
sands of people med.l cate themselves with marijuana when
prescription drugs fall. Dr. Lester Grlinspoon, who Is prepared
to testify at Wiley's trial, told us
that marijuana has become a
"treatment of choice for the kind
of pain Wiley suffers." Grins.poon Is the editor of "Harvard
Mental Health."
In only three cases has a U.S.
court returned an Innocent verdict on the use of marijuana for
medicinal purpo!ll!s. Two defend- ·
ants had glaucoma and one had
multip~ sclerosis. In many other
cases, however, American
courts have reduced the severity
of sentences after hearing the
medicinal defense.
Clark Is quick to note that It has
yet to be proved that the
marijuana belonged to Wiley In
the first place. But hels prepared
to fall back on the medicinal
defense. Clark, the attorney

Seeks 'yes' vote for issue
: At the staff meeting for Ca(.leton School/Meigs Industries
we were told If our 1.5 mUI levy
does not pass there Is the
P.osslbllity that 16 staff persons .
will have to he laid off, or that we
may have to close our .doors for
~p to tour months. This was not a
surprise announcement.
: Our superintendent has been
keeping us updated of the financial problems for the last two
years. We are a county boah! of
mental retardation, thus not
eligible for the state loan fund.
The board tried to tighten the belt
last year by cutting the hot lunch
: prOgram, feeling that direct
programming was more Important, but there was such a public
outcry they reinstated it. That
j ~st caused us to run out of money
that much sooner.
. We no longer have a speech
t!lerapist and our physical therapist and occupational skills therapist work just four days per
month, because we can't afford
them more than that. We need
them every day. With these
tlierapists, we've taught your
children, grandchildren, n~ces ,
nephews and the kid down the
street to walk and talk. We've
gotten people In our adult work·
shops jobs out In the community

Sentin8l

••
,,

, 1 111
't

I

WILSON SCORES - St. Louis Blues' Ron
Wilson flips own rebound past Toronto Maple

Leafs' goalie, Jeff Reese, for his second goal in the
first JieriO&lt;l ol Thursday's NHL match. (UPI)

Black
hawks edge ·Capitals, 3-2
.
.

By United Press International
Ch.l cago's Steve Larmer, who
can expect a payday next week,
Thursday night cost Washington
a cbance to steal a point or two on
the road.
Larmer scored two goals,
Including the fastest overtime
goal IIi club history, leading the
Blackhawks to a 3-2 victory over
the Capitals.
Sch~uled for salary arbitration In the next week, Larmer
continued to make a good case
for ·ntmself by Increasing his
season's goal total to nine,
second only to the 13 of St. Louis'
Brett Hull.
"Sure, I look ·a t numbers, but
we'll walt and see what
happerls," said Larmer, who
earned $265,000 last season. " My
job Is to play hockey. My contract
Is In the hands of my agent
(Larry Kelly ), and I have complete confidence In him."
· Larmer Intercepted Rod Langway's Ill-advised clearing pass,
then rifled a 30-footer over •the
left shoulder of goalie . Don
Beaupre eight seconds Into the
extra session. The former club
mark was 18 seconds by Doug

What became -of me~t in-learning
Say what will you will aboutthe races are rarely the same. The ~olleges and universities, first to
American system of public edu- · dtopout rate for black students Is admit and to graduate a student
cation, It was, as Herbert Hoover much higher, and the grades of population which "mirrors" the
said of prohibition, "an experi- those blacks who stay the course proportion of- ''underment noble In purpose." The are sharply lower.
represented or econmolcally dis·
states would offer an education to
Moreover, the same Is true of advantaged groups'' among high
all children alike In schools college scores. It Is not too much school graduates.
maintained at public expense. to say that the problem of what to
AB 3393, Introduced by AssemFrom these, or private schools do about the discrepancy Is one of bly Speaker Willie Brown, would
accredited by · the state and the most crttical issues facing the even go further In enforcing
meeting similar standards, our nation today. ·
"comprehensive equity goals In
youngsters would emerge to take
From the legislature of Califor- higher education." It requires
up their roles as responsible nia there have now emerged two enhanced success at all educacltl~ens. Thl!s would the cultural
bills, proposing solutions that tional levels so that .there are
values of our American heritage "differ In detail but are alike In similar achievement patterns
be transmitted down the years to principle. One - AB 462, Intro- among all groups regardless of
generations yet unborn.
duced ·by Assemblyman Tom ethnic origin, race, gender, age,
It hasn't worked out quite that Hayden, commands all three disability or economic circumway. For one thing, tHe Supreme segments of California public stances." It directs every college
Court In 1954 took judicial notice higher education "to approxl· and university In the state to
of the fact that the "separate but mate, by the year 2000, a diverse "Implement programs to faciUequal" school facilities provided student body which mirrors the tate higher graduation rates" for
by many states for black and composition of recent high school Individuals belonging to "underwhite schoolchildren were in fact graduates, both In first-year
represented groups."
far tram "equal." A long effort classes and subsequent colleges
If signed by Governor Deukmewas begun to ensure equal and university graduating jtan, which surely they will not
educational opportunities for classes, for Individuals from
be, these appalling pieces . of
whites and blacks by InsiSting historically and currently under- · legislation would quite stmply
that they attend the same represented or economically dis- spell the end of the 200-year
schools. But this effort has been advantaged groups."
American experiment In public
only partially successful, and
That amounts to a nat legisla- education.
even where It Is successful the tive order to California public
Out the door w~uld go the very
educational results for the two
notion of merit · ot superior

Willwm Rusher

.

'

Wilson on Nov. 2, 1989.
"I was lucky," said Larmer,
who ls on a pace to eclipse his
career highs of 46 goals and 90
points. "ILangway) doesn't do
that often."
"It was a helluva shot," said
Chicago Coach Mike Keenan.
"He's played very strongly. He
had a big impact on the outcome
tonight."
The Blackhawks fought back
from their second one-goal deficit at 5:53 of the third period
when Chris .Chellos slammed a
short rebound of Wayne Presley's shot.
·'I'm not frustrated," Washington Coach Terry Murray said
after his club's three-game winning streak was snapped. " Sure,
we would have liked to get a
point, but we did a iot of good
things . It was a ·good game for
everybody."
After Troy Murray and Dlrk
.Graham were whistled for minor
penal !ties on the same sequence
In the secolld period, Washington
caplfaltzedJ on the' 5-on-3 man,
power advantage to take a 2-1
lead.
Chicago detenseman Dave

White cut loose by Royals

perforinance. Replacing It would
be a crude slmulacram of the
ethnic composition of the state of
California, clutching degrees
awarded.- not for academic
achievement, but simply as
gaudy decorations distributed to
various groups In precise propor·
tlon to their numbers In the total
population.
In these bills, equality of
opportunity has been jettisoned
quite openly In favor of the
equality of result. It reminds one
of the reason Lord Russell said be
enjoyed awarding the Order of
the Garter: "There's no damned
merit about it ."
Thoughtful Americans had better take warning of these . two
bills to heart. They are not the
private wlshlists of- a .pair of
crackpots; they have been otfl·
clally emictl!d by the legislature
of the yation's larges.l state, and
all that stands between them and
the authority of the law over 10
percent of the country's population Is the veto of Governor
Deukmejlan.
Truly ,It Is later than we think.

KANSAS CITY, Mo. IUPI)- Bob Boone, the all-time record
Eight-time Gold Glove winner holder lor games caught, has
Frank Whlte was told Thursday also been let go by the team.
' 'The Royals are deeply apprehe will not be.offered a contract
by tHe Kansas City Royals, ciative to Frank for his many
ending the second baseman's years of dedicated service and
17-year major league association for his many accomplishments,"
Royals general manager Herk
with the club.
Robinson
said. "Frank will alWhite, 40, played In just 82
ways
:be
in the hearts of all
games last season ·arter averagRoyals
fanS
.' He was a tremendIng 145 games over the previous
ous
player
and Is a wonderfu I
eight years. He hit .216 with two
person.
We
wish Frank, (his
home runs and 21 runs bat ted ln.
wife)
Gladys
and
his family our
On Sept. 11 he doubled for career
very
best."
'
hit No. 2,000.
White played In 2,324 games
The way was cleared for the
Royals to break their association over his career- all with Kansas
with White, who played 1990 City - and batted .255 with 160
under a one-year contract worth home runs and 886 RBI. He
il reported $1.2 million. after · appeared In five All-Star games,
Tuesday's announcement that he hitting a hOme run t6 help the
would be classified as a player American League and former
for whom noc0mpensation would Royals manager Dick Howser
be required if signed by another post a vlctoiy In the 1986 game at
the Houston Astrodome.
team ·as a free agent.
His eight Gold Gloves tie him
He Is the secpnd veteran this
with
Pittsburgh's Bill Mazeroskl
week to be Informed that Kansas
City would not offer a contract. for the number of such awards
won by second basemen.
·

Cities strike out at pro teams._ __:,R:...:..:.o.:...:be_rt_~_:..;a_lte:__rs:
OAKLAND, Calif. (NEA)
Oakland Mayor Lionel Wilson
was one of the early cas4altles In
this year's elections . . But he
didn't lose his bid for a fourth
term because of the voters'
general discontent with politics
or their heightened hostility for
Incumbents.
The principal reason for Wilson's defeat was his support lor a
cause that politicians generally
assume enjoys broad and endurIng popularity within any electorate·- enticing a major league
professional sports frar\Qhlse to
their city.
·
··
The team Involved In the
negotiations liere was the Raiders . of the National Football
League, Oakland's home team
until the early 1980s. wben owner
AI Davis moved them to Los
Angeles.
In the ensuing decade, however, Davis became notorious for
staging what was, In effect, an
auction among &lt;:alttornta cities
willing to make extravagant
financial offers for the presumed
bonor of serving as the Raiders'
home.
Oakland and Los Angeles were
participants, as was the state

capital of Sacramento and even
the small Los Angeles suburb of
Irwindale, which gave Davis a
non-refundable $10 million deposit just to be considered, then
realized It couldn't secure the
financing for Its $150 million
offer.
Davis Is hardly the only owner
ot a professional sports trancbise
to take advantage of the Inability
of most communities to distinguish between theprldelnhavlng
a major league team and the
publiC poUcy Implications of
spending mUllons of dollars that
could be used for more pressing
municipal needs.
In professional football moves
during the 1980s that took advantage of that confusion, Colts
owner Robert Irsay abandoned
Baltimore In the middle of the
night and shilled his team to
Indianapolis, whlcb had offered
him a aenerous packaae ot
financial guarantees. Cardinals
owner Bill Bidwell relocated his
team from St. Louts to Phoenix to
make more money.
Spy magazine, an Irreverent
month!)', recently documented
the same phenemenon In professional baseball. It noted. for

example, that construction of the frenzy by pledgtni to buy
Seattle's Klngdomewasflnanced millions of do)lars worth of,those
through a $60 million public bond tickets - but others were so
Issue - 'but the Mariners pay outraged by the offer that they
only slightly more than $600,000 gathered more than 33,000 signayearly for use of the stadium.
tures on petitions demanding
In New York, municipal funds
that It either be rescinded or
have been used to pay for $36 placed on the ballot for voters to
million worth of renovations to accept or reject.
Shea Stadium during the past
''There's got to be some limit
five years -but the Mets pay
on how far any community Is
paltry $550,000 In annual rent.
willing to go In pursuit of a sports
Team owners In Detroit, San
tranchtse," said mayoral candl·
Diego, Kansas City, ClnciMatl,
date Elihu Harris. ·~e prioriHouston, Atlanta and Milwaukee
ties of the community are more
enjoy similarly lucrative ... Important than football}'
arrangementa.
Mayoral candidate Wilson
In Oakland, neighborhoods · Riles Jr. was also skeptical.
pla"gued by drugs, a public school · ''This deal is a gamble not worth
system In disrepair and freeways
aettlng Into,'' he said. '·'The risks
reduced to rubble by fait year's
are just too high."
earthquake should have proMunicipal officials responded
vided ample opporblnltles for the
to voter anaer by withdrawing ·
expenditure ot public funds.
their original offer only two
But the Oakland City Council
weeks after It wu announced,
and the Alameda County Board
then fubtonlng a scaled-down
of Supervisors were so anxious to ' iubltttute. But that action was
bring the Raiders back that early
too late to I'I!ICIIe Wlllon, who '
this year they offered a 1660
wu defeated In the June prim·
million INICkaee ot IJiducementa
ary. Harril and Riles are the
- Including $602 million to
contenders In next month's
guarantee the sale of every seat
runoff.
at every Raiders' home game tor
Last month, the R•lders de\ ,
the next 15 years.
clded to remain In Los Angeles.
Some local residents lolned In
.,

.,

end Aarat Jores on the Injured

Transactions
1

!"Pserw list and signed deiensJve
llneman Cra ig Schlichting to thplr

By Unhed Pressln&amp;ernallonal
Baseball
Callfornla - Dedlned arbitra·

practice squad .
Hodl.ey

N.Y. l s land('rs- Assi~nerl d('fen·
S£1men Joe Rr('kle and Jeff Flqley
and lefT wing Brad Laul'r to Capital
Dlstrtrt of th e AHL; f"{_l · as signed
center Greg Parks to Capital
District.

lion with outfielder Brian Downln~i!;

and rei lever Greg Mlntoo. maklnJ::
them frt'eagent s.
Kansas Clty -

AnnouncEd It

would not otter a contra&lt;"! to second
baseman Frank Whl1e.
New York Mets - Signe&lt;l I .
fteldfr Tom Herr t.o a one-yea r

a

.

'

- ~·

()

contract:

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Sunday. Oct. 211
Buffalo at New England, 1 p.m.
Detroit a t New Orleans , 1 p .m .
Miami at Indianapolis, J p.m .
Minnesota vs. Gi-een Ba y a t
Milwaukee. 1 p.m.
N.Y. Jets a t Houstoo. l p.m .
Philadelphia at Dallas, 1 p.m .

sold th(' contra ct of

lnflt'ldE'r Tom O' Malll"'y to Hanshln
of th e Japan League.

·san Diego - Na m('d Ed Ly nch

4 •

dlreC!tDf of minor l eagues.

·

Basketball
Golden Sta te - Signed center
Steve 'Johnson. a restricted frt'e •

Cle\'ela nd at San F~an clsco. 4

• agent. to a OllE'· year conlrdc1 .
LaCrosSt'&gt; 1CBAI Signed , ·
guards Herb Dixon, Marty Haw s
and Ricky Spicer; f orwards .An·
thony Allen, Skip Barry, and Jeff •

McFadden;

and

J:Pnte-r

p.m . .
Chicago at Phrenlx, 4 p.m .
Tampa Bay at San 01 ~o. 4 p.m .
Was hlngtm at N.Y. Ciants1 4

.'

Wl~liams.

Philadelphia - ReiNsed for:
ward Brlart Rahilly artd guard

Kenny Travis.

La Salle.:... Suspended basketball
guard Randy Wo&lt;XIs for six games
for punching tPammatr Keilh Mor·
rls during a plrkup gam I.'.

' '.

once ln each set, enough to win
the match as he produced 13 aces
and never lost more than two
points on any service game.
While the Yugoslav managed
to control his temper, McEnroe
repeatedly hit his racket on the
court, protested line calls and
kicked down an advertisement
sign.
"I concentrated well and he
never had i chance to break
me," lvanlsevlc said. ' 'It was an.
Important win for me as I now
have a chance to reach the ATP
Finals I Nov . 13-18) and will get
an Interesting match against
Becker."
Ivanlsevic upset Becker in the
first round at the French Open,
but fell lo the German In the
sem ifinals of Wimbledon.
''Becker doesn't like lefties so I
have a chance ill serve well," he
said.
McEnroe won the Stockholm
Open in 1978, 1979, 1984 and 1985,
but fell in the 1980 final when the
organizers designed 'il slower
court for Sweden's Bjorn Borg.
"I've had some great matches
here so It was disappointing to
lose," McEnroe said. " I never
got Into the mat ch."
Commenting on rumors that
Borg Is planning a comeback
eight years after his retirement,
McEnroe sa id : "Whatever
makes him happy. He was my
greatest rival and I wish he never
had stopped playing In the first
place."
Wheaton. a 21-year-old Minnesotan, defeated the 1990 French
Open champion Andres Gomez In ·
a three se.) match Wednesday
and brought down Chang, the
1989 French champion. in similar
fashion with powerful serves a nd
good returns .
"Let's hope I can make It

Manson played In the contest
despite having been suspended
four games the previous day by
the league office. His suspension
will begin Thursday when the
Blackhawks host Quebec .
In ·other games, St. Louis
blasted Toronto 8-5, Boston
topped Vancouver 4-2, New Jersey routed Buffalo 5-l, Pitts. burgh downed Quebec 6-3 and
Calgary defeated Edmonton 4-2.
Blues 8, Maple Leafs 5
At St. LOuis, Brett Hull scored
By JEFF HASEN
his second hat trick In as many
UPI
Sports Writer
nights and Ron Wilson added two
LAS
VEGAS,
Nev. {UPll
goals, helping, the Blues stretch
The
only
thing
Buster
Douglas
their unbeaten streak to five with
is
that he
proved
Thursday
night
back-to-back victories over Towas
a
fraud
masquerading
as
ronto. The Leafs are off to the
heavyweight
champion.
worst start In franchise history
The 246 pounds he carried
with a 1-9-1 record.
against
Evander Holyfield was
Bruiiis 4, Canucks 2
an
Insult
to a crown he won last
At Boston, Winger Dave ChrisFebruary
from previously undetian and defenseman Jim Wiefeated Mike Tyson. Only "Robusmer scored just more than three
ter" wouldn't admit II .
minutes apart In the second
' "I'm not embarrassed," Douperiod, helping the Bruins snap a
glas
said after Holyfleld .too~ his
four-game ' s)lde. Boston, outtitle
with
a third-round knookout.
scored 26-4 In Its last four games,
·
Douglas
Ignored the obviousposted Its first win since a 4-2
that
he
trained
more at the
victory Oct. 10 in Winnipeg.
supper
table
than
In
the gym, and
Devils 5, Sabres 1
that
the
14\1,
extra
pounds he.
AI East Rutherford , N.J., Kirk
jiggled
prevented
him
from even
Muller scored one goal and added ·
being
competitive
In
the
fight .
two assists • .helping the Devils
''Sometimes
It
goes
your
way,
remain undefeated at home at
sometimes It doesn 't, " said Dou6-0-1. Troy Crowder put New
glas, not the least bit apologetic.
Jersey ahead with a shot just
''I was more than willing to
under the crossbar behind goalaccept
the challenge. I wanted to
keeper Clint Malarchuk at 19:07.
fight
the
best - that 's why I put
Rick Valve scored a power-play
the
title·
on th e line against
goal for Buffalo.
Evander
Holyfield.
"
Penguins 6, Nordlques 3
At Pittsburgh, Kevin Stevens
Douglas lost the first two
scored three goals for his second
rounds on all three judges'
career hat trick, helping the
scorecards, yet he said he wasn't
Penguins snap a four-game winworried.
less streak. Quebec goalie John
"I got caught with a ·good
Tanner was replaced by Ron
shot," he said of the overhand
Tugnutt after surrenderlng goals
right that floored him a minute
on Pittsburgh's first three shots.
into the third round. " By the time
Flames 4, Oilers 2
I picked up the count 1of referee
At Calgary, Doug Gilmour's
Mills Lane), It was over.
short-handed goal at 19:16 of the
"l just overextended myself. I
second period broke a lie and
was 'hoping to gt;t some rounds
lifted the Flames. Gilmour was
under my belt to get the rhythm
sent in alone on a breakaway by
going. But when you're a chamTim Sweeney, who stole the puck
pion, you live by the sWord and
at the Edmonton blue line and fed
die by the.swotd." ..
a behind-the-back pass to
Gilmour.

Douglas' excess weight kept
him from .retaining title belt

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

. ' " :. '

p.m.

FolliiHoll
Houst(ll - Signed kicker Teddy
Garcia.
.
Ph.lladelphla - SJaned running
back Th.omas Sanders and placf!li
running back Robert Drummond

Pittsburgh at New Jer!Py, 7: 45

p.m.

.

Buffalo ar Toronto, 8: 0!5 p .m .
·
Montreal at St. Louis, 8:35 p.m .
Detroit at MinnesOia, 8: 3!5 p.m.
Washlngtm at Calgary, 10:0!5

· M th' Injured reserve Jlal .
r.tUabul'(lb - Pt•e«&lt; defensive

p.m.
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JIM USED CAR ....
COBB'S SAVINGS! • .

Saturda,'• aamee

Chicago at Bostoo. 7; 05 p.m.
Vancouver at Hartford, 7; 35p.m .
Philadelphia at N.y. Islanders.
"7: 35p.m.
N.Y. Hangers at Quebec, 7: 35

three Grand S)am winners in
three days against Sampras," he
said. " I practice a lot with
Sampras and we have really
close matc hes, usually won by
the one with the most guts."
Wheaton has developed In th~
shadow of the American wh~
kids like Agassi , Chang and
Sampras, which has suited him
perfecuy.
"I don't get distracted by ali
the a ttentl6n like Andre, Michael
and Pete a_nd It helps me ,·~
Wheaton said, " I turned pro In
1989 and I have made a good
progress, but a shin splint has
slowed me down . I haven 't been
able to run off-court for 1-%
y~ars."
.
Wheaton has played his besl
tennis In the Grand Siam tour:
neys this year and reached the
quarterfinals In the Australian
and U.S. Opens.
·
'
"I can't peak every week so I
pick the Grand Slam events anq
build myself up to those
matches, " he said. "A top ~
ranking would be nice, but wha.t'il.
really want to achieve Is a Grand
Slam title. Wimbledon's grass
seems to suit my game the best."
' Sampras excelled on the pressure points against Korda, and
was particularly sharp In thE!
tie-breaker.
, ,
"It was one of my best
tie-breakers. I'm a bit up anll'
down but I was less rusty today,";
said Sampras, who has rested· a•
shin splint since winning the u.s.Open six weeks ago.
.·-:·

·NOW$12,900

Tonight's games
Galllpolls at Jackson
Warren at Marietta
Athens at Logan
Rock Hill at Coal Grove
Huntington East at Pt. Pleasant
Miami Trace at Portmouth
Col. St. Charles at DeSales (Oct.
27)
North Gallla at Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace at Symmes Valley
Oak Hill at Southwestern
Belpre at Meigs
Alexander at M!Uer
Federal Hocktng ·at Wahama
Trimble at Nels-York
Vinton at Wellston

Now, the king is dead.
"Whall came in at Is what lam
comfortable at," Douglas said of
his weight. "I was ready to
fight. "
Douglas said he mighl retire.
although a rematch against
Tyson is a vfrtual certainty.
"At this point , I don ~ I know,"
he said of the future. "It's
something I'll have to decide
myself."
Douglas might consider repl.?,cing his co-tra.iners, J .D.
~cCauley and John Russell.
"I knew this weight thing was ·
going to come up over and over
again," said McCauley, Douglas'
uncle and trainer since the start
of the boxer's career. " For three
or four or six rounds. the weight
wouldn't have been a problem.
"But he didn 't get off, he
leaned In from the outside and
Evander caught him clean . It
happens."
Do.uglas made $24 million
Thursday night, but lost his
chance to defend his title against
Tyson for$20 million next spring.

p.m.
Cinci nnati at Atlanta. S p.m.
Momlay, Oct. 211
L.A. Rams at Pittsburgh, 9 p.m.

Mike

eoo.,.

STOCKHOLM (U Pil- Yugos lavian Goran lvanlsevtc overpowered American John McEnroe
In a tension-charged duel Thursday to set up a quarterfinal with
German· Boris Becker In the $1.1
million Stockholm Open ATP
tennis tournament.
Ivanlsevtc, like McEntQ!! a
southpaw, prevailed over his
childhood hero. 6-4, 6-4, to denr
McEnroe a chance at reaching
the Stockholm final for the 'sixth
time.
Becker, . seede d second,
downed American Richey Reneberg for the third week In a row
with a 6-4, 6-3 victory .
EarUer, David Wheaton upset
fellow American Michael Chang,
6-7 {1- 7), 6-2, 6-3, to set up a
quarterfinal against U.S. Open
champion Pete Sampras, who
outlasted Czechoslovakian Petr
Korda, 6-3,3-6, 7-617-.ll .
Stefan Edberg of Sweden, the
No. 1 player In the world, downed
Swiss Marc Rosser, 6-4, 6·4, In a
serve-and-volley duel and will
face American Brad Gilbert, who
defeated Soviet Andrei Chesnokov, 6-3, 6-4. ·
Promising Swede Nlclas Kultl,
who eliminated third -seed Andre
Agassl Wednesday, upset
Frenchman Guy Forget, 6-4, 6-2.
His opponent In the quarters will
be Soviet Alexander Volkov, who
brought down last year's llnallst
Magnus Gustafsson ··of Sweden,
6-3. 7,6 (7-3) . .
McEnroe recently . outlasted
lvanisevlc in the final of an ATP
event at Basel, Switzerland, to
win his first title this season. But
the 31-year- old New Yorker
couldn't control the teenager's
booming serves on the blue
surpreme carpet in the Globe
Arena.
·
lvantsevtc, 19, broke McEnroe

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�Friday, October 26, 1990
Friday. October 26. 1990'

Ohio

'

7 fXrERIENCE THf JOY Of RELIGION

Holyfield KO's Douglas to
captu1·e heavyw~ight croWn
By DAVE RAFFO ~
UPI Spor&amp;A Wrller
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)
Evander Holyfield waited 18
months for his shot and needed
just minutes to take lt.
Holyfield, retu ling notions he
was not big enough to win the
heavyweight title, knocked
James "Buster" Douglas cold
with one punch at 1: 10 ofthe third
round Thursday night.
Despite, at 208, giving away 38
pounds to the overweight champion, Holyfield used a right band
to put him flat on his back.
Holyfield, 28, Improved to 25-0
with 20 knockouts to achieve the
goal he set for himself when be
began boxing at the age of 10. The
end came suddenly when Douglas missed a right uppercut and
Holyfield dropped a right hand to
the jaw.
Douglas tried to sit up but fell
back and was counted out by
referee Mills Lane.
Douglas, . 30-5-1, stayed down
for almost four minutes before
his handlers helped him to his
stool. Led by trainer Lou Duva,
DOUGLAS TAKES A RIGHT - Evander and final round of the title light Thursday night In
all of Holyfield's comermen
' Holyfield, right, punishes fonner heavyweight Las Vagas. (UPI)
leapt into the ring and stepped
champion Buster Douglas with a right in the third
over the fallen ex-champion
Immediately after he was
counted out.
"This was the first time my
mother (Annie) ever told me to
wiri something for her," Holyfield said. "She said, 'can you win
It for me?' so 1 dedicated It to
her.''
Holyfield, rated the No. 1
Kent, which has not won In the under first year coach Tom
By Unlled Press Inlernatlonal
heavyweight challenger since
Lichtenberg, whose young team April of 1989, waited patiently for
Just a week ago, Toledo was Glass Bowl since 1977, got a
superb
effort
by
quarterback
Joe
has been decimated by Injuries his shot. He finally signed to fight
sailing along unbeaten and Kent
State was trying to find someway Dalpra, who accounted for 327 of on defense.
Mike Tyson last June, but Tyson
Miami and Bowling Green are
to end a 17-game losing streak. the Flashes' 599 total yards
lost the title in a "tuneup" last
·
both on "hot streaks."
How things have changed since against OU.
Feb. llln Tokyo.
,
Dalpra rushed for 110 yards
The Redsklns, 34 overall and
then.
Holyfield waited only 10 min2·2 In the MAC, have won two In a utes for his opportunity ThursToledo dropped a 13-12declslon and three touchdowns and comrow after an 0-3 start BG
at Central Michigan In what pleted 15 of 20 passes for 217
snapped a five-game winless day night .
likely will be the game that yards and another TD.
"He tried to throw a right
Rusty Hanna accounted for all streak last week with a come- uppercut," Holyfield said. "I
decides the Mid-American Con·
!erence. The loss was the first In of Toledo's points in the loss to from-behind 25-15 win over East· stopped back and got the right
seven games overall for the Central with four field goals and ern Michigan .
Miami is 12-3-2 against Bo- hand ln.
Rockets and left them with a 5- 1 barely missed a 51-yarder (wide
right) into the wind in the closing wling Green since 1973, but has
MAC mark.
seconds.
not won at BG since 1979. The 1988
Meanwhile, Kent State, which
game
there ended in a 21-21 tle.
had been outscored 73-0 In Its two
At
Piscataway, N.J., both
Saturday's other MAC games
previous games, exploded
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Akron and Rutgers will be
against Ohio University for a find first ptace Central Michigan
Neither
Minnesota nor Ohio State
at Eastern Michigan, Miami at
iooldng to end losing streaks
4H5 win over the Bobcats.
has
forgotten
last year's 41·37
when they meet for the first time.
The two teams meet Saturday Bowling Green and Western
come-from-behind
Buckeye vicThe Zips (34-1) have dropped
(4:30p.m.) In UT'shomecoming, Michigan at Ohio University
tory
over
the
Golden
Gophers.
four in a row, including a 59-0
with coach Nick Saban's Rockets Ball State hosts Indiana State In a
thrashing at the hands of Florida The difference Is the reason they
non-conference game.
trying to pick up the pieces.
OU, which now occupies the
last week. Rutgers, which won its have for remembering.
"1 feel very badly for the
The Buckeyes, tralllng 31-0 late
first two games, has lost five In a
ptayers because they worked MAC basement after Its loss at
row and is coming off a 42-0 loss In the second quarter, scored just
hard to have the opportunity to go Kent State last week, faces
before halftime to make It 31-8,
at Syracuse.
undefeated and win the IItle," another tough challenge this
then chipped away In the second
Cincinnali,
another
struggling
week
in
Western
Michigan.
said Saban, a Kent State grad.
half
until Greg Frey hit Jeff
team,
visits
the
Louisiana
Super·
"Our players have to remember
While just 3-4 overall and 2-2 In
Graham
with the winning touchdome
for
a
Saturday
night
game
that we can still finish 10-1 and be the conference, the Broncos' two
down
pass
with only 51 seconds to
against Tulane.
one of the best teams In the MAC losses were 27-24 to Eastern
play.
The Bearcats are 1-6 after last
Michigan and 20-13 at Central.
history of the school.
'They should have won the
week's 56-32 loss at East Carol"So,'' added the first year TU They beat Kent 37-10 five weeks
game
last year," Ohio State
ina. Tulane IS 2-6 and will be
coach, ''there are a lot of things ago.
coach
John Cooper said .
OU Is 1-5-1 overal1 and 04-1 trying to snap a five -game losing
for us to continue to play for."
"There's
no lfs, ands or buts
streak.
about II. After leading 31- 0, I'm
The North Coast AthletiC Consure they felt they shoul!l have
ference title 1s on the line
Saturday in Meadville. Pa., when won."
"But," added Cooper, "we
Allegheny hosts Ohio Wesleyan,
played
well in the second half and
both unbeaten.
got
some
help from Minnesota.
Allegheny. seeking its third
relaxed a little."
They
probably
NCAC title In the last four years,
TII!l Me1gs Marauder boys cross
P.J. Chadwell had an excellent
Cooper,
who
underwent back
country team has qualifed for the
day fimshmg seventh place out of is 6- 0·1 overall and 6·0 in the
surgery
for
a
ruptured
disc just
112 runners , Nathan Baloy came m conference.
regionals this Saturday at Lancaster
Sunday.
plans
to
coach
the
15th and Bobby Johnson in 33rd.
on the strength of a fifth place
Buckeyes Saturday, but may be
finish m last weeks d1slnct meet Also sconng for Me1gs were
In the press box Instead of his
Jeremy Heck, Chris Sloan, Ryan
held at Athens Hi~h School.
usual
spot on the sidelines.
Lemley and Phd Smith.
Waverly came m first place, folOhio
State snapped a threeThe Lady Marauders finished
lowing the Tigers were Warren Logame
winless
string last week
fifth out of 10 teams m1ssmg the
cal, Washington Coun House, Rock
with
a
42-2
victory
at Purdue. The
HiU, Meigs, Sheridan, Jackson, regionals by one place. Katrina
Coach R1ck Ash will send h1s
take
a 3-2-1 overall
Buckeyes
will
Ironton, .Athens and Fairland m Turner and Missy Nelson led the
Meigs
Marauder
volleyball
team
record
and
a
1-1-1
Big
Ten mark
Marauders, also placmg well were
tenth !lace. Sou!iJ Point led the
mto district play this Saturday
Into
Saturday's
game
and are a
secon ten followed by Gaiiia
Elizabeth Downey and M1ssy Sis· against Logan. The Marauders,
two-touchdown
favorite
over
Academy,
New
Lexington,
son. April Hudson, Tara Gerlach ranked 15th m thiS week's state
Minnesota.
and Resa Harris alsop scored for
Nonhwest, Hillsboro and West
coaches poll, wiU put their perfect
The Gophers, one of this year's
Meigs.
Union.
21-0 record on the line against the
surprises In the Big Ten, are 4-2
sevenlh ranked Logan club who and 3·0 after last week's 12-0
spons a 17-4 record.
blanking of Indiana.
Game time is 4 p.m. at Unio10
Cooper said he used the 1989
High School near Chillicothe.
Minnesota experience as an

r

Toledo, Kent State clash in
top MAC grid tllt at Toledo

''I was just hoping he wouldn't
get up.''
Many rlngslders thought Douglas could have gotten up. He
pawed his eye with his glove
before rolling back over.
"If I thought I could've gotten
up, I would have," Douglas said.
"I got caught with a good shot.
By the time I tried to pick up the
count, It was over."
Douglas was making the first
defense of the title he won from
Tyson. He fell grossly out of
shape after winning the title and
wel~bed 246 at Wednesday's
weigh-In - 14% pounds more
than for Tyson.
Holyfield was an 8-5 favorite
largely because of Douglas' poor
condition. He beCame the lightest
man to win the heavyweight title
since Michael Spinks at 200
pounds In 1985.
Douglas dented his weight
contributed to his demise.
"I didn't get my rhythm quick
enough," Douglas said .
Douglas, a 30-year-o!d from
Columbus, Ohio, held huge pbyslcal advantages across the board.
At 6-foot4 with an 83-lnch reach,
he stood an Inch and a half with a
5~-lnch reach advantage over
Holyfield.
Still, Douglas never reached
Holyfield with a solid punch In
the scheduled 12-round bout
before a sellout crowd of 16,000 at
The Mirage's outdoor stadium.
Holyfield stayed out of Douglas' range In the opening round
and stunned the champion with a
left hook and a right -hand lead
later In the round. Holyfield
shifted his target to Douglas' soft
middle In the ~ond round,
making the champion wince
from body blows.
Douglas tried to open up In
Round 3, but missed his first big
punch and took the consequences
when Holyfield delivered the
one-punch knockout. Holyfield
became the 15th undefeated

MUS runners qualify for

regional event at Lancaster

Volleyball team to
play in district meet

*e

fighter to capture
heavy- :
weight champiOnship.
He said before the fight be bas :
signed to defend that title against
42-year-old former champion '
George Foreman next year.
Douglas earned a record $24
million while Holyfield was paid
$8 million.
Despite the excitement of the
evening, Nevada .State Athletic
Commissioner Duane Ford said
he found Douglas asleep In his
dressing room about 40 minutes
before the opening bell when he •
went to deliver final instructions.
It took Holyfield only 10 more
minutes toputDouglasoutagaln.
Holyfield was the 13th heavy·
weight challenger to enter the
bout as favorite, and became the
eighth of those challengers to ,
win.
Holyfield's weight was four
pounds less than his career high
of 212 last November against
Alex Stewart.
Holyfield overcame the ninthlargest weight disadvantage In
heavyweight championship his·
tory. He also beCame the first
man to move up from cruiserweight champion to take the :
heavyweight crown. Douglas be- ·
came the 14th heavyweight
champion, counting split titles, to
lose his first defense. His reign of
eight monthS and 14 days was the .
lOth-shortest In history.
He also became the second- ·
heaviest champiOn to lose his ·
title. Primo Carnera weighed
263% when stopped by 209~­
pound Max Baer In 1934.
Holyfield, who set !led for a
bronze medal In the 198!1 Olympics when he was disqualified for
bitting late, held the undisputed
190-pound pro title until moving
up In weight In 1988. He Is 7-0
since making his heavyweight
debut July 16, 1988, with an
eighth-round knockout of J,11mes
Tillis. Holyfield won all six
non-title heavyweight bouts by
knockout.

PRESENTS

2nd. ANNUAL HALLOWEEN PAID

____________,
LlnLE WINGS BAND
10 P.M.-2 A.M.

If delinquent taxes are paid in full or arrangements made with the county treasurer to pay not
later than 48 hours before said publication, the
parcel will be removed from the delinquent list
before advertising.
All delinquent lands will be certified for foreclosure by the county auditor' unlea the tuas,
asseumanta, interest. and penalties due are
paid.
.
The said list will be ready for publication on
November 16 and 29, 1990.

~THE

ltatlstlcs.

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

PEPSI

DELINQUENT TAXPAYERS
NOTICE
In compliance with provisions of Section
6721 .03 of the Ohio Revised Code, there will be
published in a newspaper during the naxt few
weeks a list of those persons who are delinquent
in payment o~ real estate taxes in Meigs County.

I

William .R. Wickline,
Meigs County Auditor,

•,

PRIZES FOR aST COSTUMES
JUDQING AT MIDNIGHT

Redwomen end regular slate
with victories in home match

Central State's Lady MaraudEnding the season on a winning
ers
lost 15-2, 15-6, as Hoop, the
note, the University of Rio
1989
District 22 and Mid-Ohio
Grande volleyball team defeated
Conference
Player Of the Year,
Fairmont State (W.Va.) and
posted
six
kills,
as did Cooper.
Central State In a triangular
Huston recorded five and Zempmatch at Lyne Center Thursday.
ter and Michelle Spears had four
Now rankea third In District 22
With Its 33-8 season record, the each. Zempter and Cooper had
two serving aces, while Zempter
Redwomen await word on their
was credited with two block
pairing with the other top Ohio
solos. Defensively , Ingram led
teams In contention for the
with five digs, Zempter four, and
playoffs. The playoffs are scheSpears and Cooper three each.
duled for Nov. 2-3.
It was the Redwomen's third
"It was a nice victory for us
consecutiVe
victory of the week,
and nice for the seniors to end the
,
following
Tuesday's
home defeat
season with a pair of wins,"
'
of
Urbana.
The
match
closed out
Coach Patsy Fields said. "Beatconference
play
for
the Rio
Ing Fairmont was slgnlffcl!nt
are
7-3
and
second
ladles,
who
because they had beaten us
place In the MOC.
earlier In the season, and Central
State Is a team with a lot of
talent."
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Fairmont Statefell15-7,15-5 as
SALES &amp; SERVICE
seniOr Shannon Huston cap204 Condor St.
Pomotoy, OH.
tained the offense with eight
FaD II Wlllter Hours
kWs. Blllina Cooper added six
TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
kills, Teresa Zempter and
9 A.M .-II P.M:
Memra Ingram bad five. In
SAT. 9 A.M.·1 P.M.
addition, Zempter and Robin
CLOSED MONDAYS
Sbarp bad two serving aces each,
while Cooper bad eight digs.
Sharp and Shelly Hoop had lour
dip, while Hoop added four
block solos to her season

Gutekunst. "He could have said
'L~t's take this one off,' but he
didn't. He came back and really
executed well. I have all the ·
respect In the world for hlrri as a
quarterback."
Despite their 3·2-1 record, this
year's Buckeyes, led by Frey,
running backs Robert Smith and ·
Raymont Harris and receivers
Jeff Graham and Bobby Olive, ·
Impress Gutekunst.
"Ohio State may have the best
overall talent In the league," he
said. ''We'll have to ptay good .
football. And, even If we do play
good football, there's still no
guarantee we'll win the game."
Marque! Fleetwood bas taken
o'ler as the Minnesota quarter,
back, unseating two-year regular Scott Schaffner, the former
Cincinnati Moeller star.
Fleetwood, more of a •
scrambler, has thrown for 799
yards and five touchdowns

$549
24 PACI

SUGAR ClEEK

BACON

$1 59

Ll.

LITTLE DEBBIE
CAKES

5 FOI$1 00

•CAR WASH•
10:30 AM-J&amp;OO PM
1111 Ml-1111 CLOIIIIS Wll - · A CAl

WASI 01 011 LOI SAIUDAY, OCTO. . t7ll,
WIAII£1 f-11111.

Middleport, Ohio

..

.'

MEIGS TIRE .
CENTER, INC.

(row's Family Restaurant
"feel.,lwg l&lt;1wl1tlrg Ftl1l C~lekew "
22'8 W. Main St., Pomeroy
992-5432

FURNITURE I HARDWARE

1101

Nahonw1de Ins . Co .
of Columbus, 0.

804 W Mam
n1 2318 Pomeroy

REAI!OI

Pomeroy

rib\

\ S ) Veterans

~~~~~! 'l~l

fLOtm! fO. MRY OC&lt;A!ION

Memorial Hospital

Prescrtphons

992· 2t55

Homehle Saws

m

216 S Sccnnd
Pomcrnv
•• 1 3311

John F Fultz, Mqr
Ph 992

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

TEAFORD REALTY

. SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY

115 E. Memorial Dr.

Pomeroy

(6141 992-6454
106 luH•nvt Au.

P0111eroy

Pomeroy, Ohio

1--~,.,;'92-2104

J

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
SALES &amp; SERVICE

992-7075

TRINITY CONGREGATIONAL CHUROI
The Rev Roland Wildman. pastor. Oiurch
School 9: 15 a m Alice Glol&gt;okar, !llpt . Worsblp Servl:~ lO: 3) a m OkNr rehe-arsal, Thurs·
daY., 7;,00 p.m. Wls Burt, Dtn:tcfcr
roMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZARENE, Ca-ner Union and Mulberry Rev.
Th!mas Glen M&lt;Clu&gt;w. pastor. Norman Prer
ley, S. S., !llpt., !llnday School, 9: :1) a m ,
rncrning Worship 11!3:1 a m , evenl&gt;w seMct- 6
P m.; mid-week ...--. Wednesday 7 p.m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH. 326 E
Maln St., ~'&lt;&gt;""""Y llle Rev Dr. RoyC Myers.
rerord !llnday ,.,..,..,... 11 a m June lhrough
Aug&gt;j!~t, 11:30 a.m Sepll'IJIIEr through May.
Holy Ccmmunloo, llrst. ""-'-nd, third and
fourth !llndays at each monlh. Morning
i'rayel' m !lith !llndays Oiw-oh schoOl and
nlll'lll!l')' care l"'\1ded Cott.. hour In 111e parIsh halllrnmedlalely follOwing 111e ser'\ice
POMEROY CIIURCH OF CHRIST. 212 W.
Maln St. Lee Lash. ovallll"llst. School
9·lla.m: Mornlngworstup,lO: lJa m., Youth

League, members In chargp, all woi1W'11
6:45 p.m. ThW'Sday. Corps CadPI
C1asss (Yoq People-Bible\. 7 :.l p m Blblo
St1dy and Prayer meet!~ open to the public
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
lnvlled,

CHRIST. !!12260\Udrl'n's llome Rood tCauntv
Road 76\ !!12-3117 Vocal musk: Sunday Worship lOam ; BlbleStudylla m, Worship, 6p
m Wednesday, Blblf' Stu:ty, 7 p m Speaker.
Landon Hope. l"VB.~IIst

DEXTER

BIBLE

CHRISTIAN

CHURCH, Jack Cleland, pastor. Alana CWland, Supl Stulday School 10:00 am Youlh
Mee!lng, 7 p m f'V&lt;'I'Y Wednesday
~ACRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH
- 161 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy Ph 992

5898 Saturday Evening Mass. 5. 30 p m .

Sunday Mas! 9· 30 a m ceo classe-s, 10: 30
am first , second and third Sundavsoteach

mouth Dally Mass 8· 30 a m Confe1J~Ions
Saturday aftE"I'non. 4·5 p m.
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS·
TOLIC FAITH - Ne"' Lima' Road next to
Fort Meigs Park Rober t W Richard!!'
PlfSIOr. Sunday SPrvlces. 10 a m and 7 p
m, , Wednesday worship 7 p m,

992·'"'
271

w~Jcom~.

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
-Sister Harriett Warner. Su pt Sunday .
School 9:30a m: Morning WouhJp, t0·45
am
•
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Eas1
Main St Stevf' Fuller, pastor. George
Skinner, Sunday School Superintendent
Sunday School, 9 30 a m : Morning Worshtp: 10·30 a m , Wednt'Sday pventn~
prf.yer and Sible study, 7·80 p. m
1FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST. 41872
Pom-eroy Pike E. Lamar O'Bryant, pas·
t~ and Sunday School Director Sundav
School, 9· 30 a m
Morn in~ Worship
10~45, Choir practicE', 6· :rl p m , E'Vf'nfng
w&lt;frshlp, 7 30 p.m , Wednesday Praver
5efvlce. 7. 30 p m Mission Friends (ages
2~$ . Royal Ambassadors (boys ages &amp;1St
anld Girl~ lfl Action (ages &amp;181 on Wednf'S
d~s, 7 lJ p m Church·wlde Vlsllatlon
6: p m Tuesday
AITH TABERNACLE CHURCH, Bat ·
I~ Run Road, Rev Emmett Rawson, pas·
to,. Handley Dunn. supt Sunday School
lOt..m; Sundayevenlngst"rvice. 7 OOj) m
· 'lble teachlnJt, 7·00 p m Thursday
$YRACUSE M1SSION,l411 Brld,~teman
St.,. Syracuse Sunday SChool 10 a m .
Evening service, 6 p m : WE'dnesda y
9trvlce, 7p.m.
&gt;ii!IDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
CHRISTIAN UNION, Dwight Hal.,-.
t elder: Wanda Mohler Sunday School
pt. Sun'day School 9•ll o m : Morning
r.~hfp 10:30 a m .. Evening Worship 7· :ll
Jim., Wednesday prayer met'tlng'7 Xl p.m.
MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
sauerflfld, pastor
Supt Sunday School
and Wednmday t"ven·

i

·'MT

'

EWING FUNERAL HOME
../),,rn•h mul Sf•n u·r·

204 Condor Sl.
Pomeroy, OH.

llort~

Sec11141
Mhhlltport,
011io

1lu·fn~ · ·

Established 1913

992-2121

992-2975

I 06 Mulberry Avt.
P m., Wt'dnesday

IAWUNGS·COATS
C

FISHER
FUNERAL HOME
992-5141
264 South 2nd

fl2.

r

'-JirUI l.L,.Joons
93 Mill Street

Middleport

MIDDLEroRr PRJ::SBYTERIAN Sunday Sc~oo!, 9 am., Church servl&lt;'e,
ll·t5am
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY·
TERIAN - Sunday School 10 a m :
Church service, 10:15 a m ..
' RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Pastor .
John F Corcoran Sunday School tO· 00 a
m, Sunday Morning Worship 11·00 a m
Children's Chureh 11 a m Sunday Even
tng 5ervice 7.00 p.m Wed., 6 p m Young
Ladles' Auxlllary Wednesday. 7 p m
Family Worship
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Off
Rt. 124, 3 miles from Portland Long Bot
tom. Edsel Hart. pastor Sunday School'
9 30 a m : Sunday morning preaching
10 30 a m : Sunday evf'fttng services 7 30
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH, Corner Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann , pastor Sunday School 10.00 a
m.; Morning Wonhip, 11;00 a m : Wed·
nesday and Saturday Evening Se rvices at

7 30 p m.

MT OLIVE UNITED METHODIST Off 124, behind Wilkesville. &lt;Lharles Jones.
pastor Sunday School , 9· 30 a m , morning
worship, 10 30, Sunday and Thursday
Pventng services. 7 00 p m

MlDDLEPORTCO~NrrYCHURCH

575 Pf.arl St Middle-port Sam Anderson
pastor Sunday School 10 a m , Sundav
evening service 7 :Jl p m.. WPdnPSday Sf"r
vice, 7 30 p.m
GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST .
Preaching 9· :t&gt; a.m first and S('C()nd Sun
di\fS ot each month. third and fourth Sun
day each month worship services at7. 30 p
m.; Wednesday evenings at 7· 30 p m
Prayer and Biblt" Study
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST. Mul
berry Height s Road, Pomeroy Pastor Bob
Smrder; Sabbath School Superinte-nde-nt.
Rodney Spires Sabbath SchOol begtns at 2
p m on Saturday afternoon with worship
service following at 3 00 p.m EveryonE'

BILL QUICKEL

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEIIST CLUSTER
Rev. Sharon Hausmu
Kew. Frank Orofoo&amp;
Rew. Seldon Johnson
ALFRED- Church Schoo19 30 am.
Worship, 11 a m UMYF 6 :W p m : UMW
Third Tuesday, 7:30 p m. Communi o n
first Sunday rHaushman)
CHESTER - WorshJp 9 a m . Church
Schoal10a m, Bible Study, Thursday , 7p
m~. UMW. first Thursday 1 p m: Com
munlon, flrst"Sunday (Hausman\ .
JOPPA -Worship 9:30am ChurC'h
Schooi!O 30 am BlbleStudv W&lt;'dnesdav
7·30 p m (Johnson}
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9· 30
am, Worship 10.30 am, BlblP Study
Wednesday, 7. :lJ p.m, CommuniOn First
Sunday of Month {Rev Charlt&gt;S Eaton)
REEDSVILLE - Church School9· 30 a
m; Worship SE'rvlce 11 00 a m
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Church School 9 am, Worship 10 a.m,
Bible Study, Tuesday , 7 30 p m: Com mu
nion First Sunday IHausman )
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Kew. Don Meadows
Rev . Wet ley That(!her

Rev. Frank Smith
Re\1 Kathryn Riley

Rev. Ron Fler(!f'
Rev. Artl•r Cl'llbtree
Hew Floren(!e Smith
ASBURY (Sy racusel- Worship 11 a f11
Church School9 •45 am Chargt" Bible
Study, Wednesday 7·30 p m , UMW. first
Tuesday 1 30 p m.. Choir RehearsaJ.
Wednesday 6 30 p m ~That c her)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m :
Church Sc&gt;hoollO am : BlblpStudy, TuPS
day 7 00 p,m. UMW. First Monday, 7 30
p m.. UMYF Sunday. 6 p m. IRUeyl
FLATWOODS- Church School, 10 a m
, Worship' 11 a m , Bible Srudy, Thurs
day, 7 p m : UMYF, Sunday 6 p m (RI
ley\.
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m ,
Church School 10 A M t;:hoir praci!Cf'
Thursday, 6 30 p m. , UMW third Monday
(Thatch{'r)
HEATH iMiddleporl\ -Church School.
9 30 a.m., ~Mornln!i( Worship 10 30 a .m ,
Youth Group, 4 p m: WE'dnesday , BiblE'
study 6 00 p m Choir rt'ht"arsal 7 00 p m
/Frank Smllhl ( J ..
,,
MINERSVILLE - Church School 9 00
am., Worship serv ice 10 00 am .. UMW
third Wednesday, 1 p m /Thatchft'l •
PEARL CHAPEL- Church School9 00
am.; Warship Servlct' 10·00 am I Flo.
renee Smith)
POMEROY -Church School. 9. 15 a.m
, Worship 10·:.) a m , Choir reht"arsal
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
UMW . s~nd
Tuesday. 7llp m .. UMYFSunday, 6p.m
~Meadowsl

ROCK SPRINGS- Church School. 9 15
a m.; Worship 10 a m : Bible Sludy Wed
nesday , 7·ll p m: UMYF !Sen iors). Sun
day, 6 p.m , (Juniors) l"Vecy olher Sun·
day, 6 p m. (RII.,- \.
RUTLAND- Church SChool. 10 a.m.;
Worship, 11 a.m ; UMW First Monda y
1 :.I p.m (Crabtree)
SALEM CENTER- Church School 9 I~
am.; Morning Worship 10 15 a.m
!Fierce I
SNOWVILLE - Morning Worship, 9 00
a m.; Church SchoollO:OO a m IFiore-nce
Smith\
SOumEIIN IJLIJSl'I!R
Rev. Konaelllllake.Rev. Rolli' Orecfl!
Rev. Carl Bleb
APPLE GROVE -Church School 9:00
a.m.; Morning Worship 10.00 a.m ; Bible
Study Sunday 7 00 p.m : Prayer meet lng
7:00p.m Thursday. (Hicks)
BETHANY - Worlhlp 9 a m ; Church
SchooiiOt.m; llbleStwlyWedn81day 10
a.m., Dorct• Women's Fellowlhlp Wedneoday II a.m. (Baker)
CARMEL - Church School 9. 30 t.m.;
Worship, 10: t5 a.m. Seoond and Fourth
~undays; Fellowship dinner with Suttm
&lt;bini ll'hur...y, 6.30 p.m. (Baker)
MORNING STAR - !=hureh School9· 4~

i
•

Middleport, Ohio 46780
41992 -8857- (991-00KSI

;l;:.-'
~~~~~~~~~~~~

meetln(o;. 6. 00 p m.. EvenlJl8 worship 7· 00 p
m Wednesday night pray...- meetln!&lt; and Blbko
study 7· 00 p m. ·
THE SALVATION ARMY, ll5 &amp;nemut
Ave.. ~'&lt;&gt;""""Y \\11' Dora Wining In ctl"'l!"

~IXlay hoi"""-' meeting. 10 a m !llnday
School, I~ 3J a.m. ~nday School. YPSM
Eloise Adams, leader. 7 :KJ p.m SaJvatlon
mmtng; various speakers and musiC specials
Thw'sday, ll 00 am to 2 p m Ladlt&gt;s HomE'

POMfROJ. OHI0-992-6677

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.

214 E. Main
992· 5130 Pomeroy

172 North ~cond Au.
Middi~~~Grl, Ohio '

OW

.r-----------------------------1
THE WATERING HOLE

......

4

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The_Interested Bwi tesses Listed On This Page.

Bucks host Gophers in Big I 0 tilt
example at halftime of last
week's Purdue game, when Ohio
State led the Boilermakers 28-2.
Last year's' loss still sticks In
the craw of Minnesota coach
John Gutekunst and the Gopher
players.
~·1 haven't had to say anything," said Gutekunst. ' 'A lot of
our kids were In that football
game. They know how they fell
afterwards.
"It (the loss) does two things
lor you," said Gutekunst. "One,
It gives you a great deal of
respect for Ohio State, coach
Cooper and the program because
they hung In there away from
home. Number two, It should
remind you that there Is always
hope, so let's play 60 minutes."
Gutekunst said that game gave
him great respect for Frey.
"He (Frey) was flattened and
very dazed and the game was
going very big In our favor," said

The Daily Sentinel-Page 6

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

M

am Worship 10 :roam , Bib)(' St ud'
Thursda\, 7 :lOp m IBakrrt
k~;~~i~irfi;.~.g,~CHURC~
OF .!ESUS
SUTION - Church &amp;hool ~ :lOa m
if
DAY SAINTS Pori
Mornang Worship 10 45 a m rJrst and 1hl rd
Road Mike Duhl pastor.
Sundavs Fellowship dinner wiTh Carm('!
pm
th ird Thursdav .fi 30pm IBakefl
LIFE COVENANT CHURCH
EAST LETAH. r- MornJngWorship 9·00
CheslPr C.arv HlnP.O, pastor Sundav
am Chul"('h SchoollO OOa.m, UMW first
Sc ho ol at 9 30 a m Worship sPrvlcc at
Tuesday 7· ~ p m (Gracl'~
10 30 a m . Sundav f'Vf'ning sPrvlce, 6 00
RACINE- Church School, 10 a m. Wor
p m , W&lt;'dnesdav 0\sc\pl(' Class 7 00 p
ship 11 a m, UMW fourth Monday at 7·;}) p
m
m : Men's Praver BrPakfast. Wednesda,\' R
Jantre Danner . ('hUf'('h SC'hool dlrc&lt;'t or
a m (Gracrl
Church sch0ol9 :to a m • Mornln~ worship
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Ro~er
10 30 a m W£""dnesdav ('vf'nin)l praver
Sprin~. minis ter· Starling Massar and 01
!-iC'rvlces 7 30 p .m
iver Swain, Sunday School Supts Preach
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rt:'\' Earl
ing9 30a.m each Sunday. SundavSchool
Shu ter. pas t or Worship Sf'r\ i('(' 9 30 a m
10.30 a m
Sundav SchOol JO 30 a m BlbleStudv a nd
HOBSON CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
praver servl('(' Thursda\', 7 3Q p m
CHRISTIAN UNION. Th eron Durham
CAR LETON INTERDENOMir&lt;ATION
pastor Sunday servicP, 9 30 a m , evP n
AL CHURCH. Kln,gsburv Road RC'v
ing service 7. 00 p m, Prayer m€'l"tln~.
Clvd&lt;" W Hendt"''son pastor Sundav
Wt"dnesday, 7 00 p m
Schoo19 30 am · Ralph Carl Supt Even
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
mg: worship 7:00 p ,m Praver mE"l'tln g
CHRIST. Jack CoiE&gt;grove, pllstor Blblt"
Wcdnesda v 7 00 p.m
Class 9 30a m .. Mornln~Wors hlp10 . 30a
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPTIST
m .. Evening Worshtp. 6 30 p m. Thursdav
CHU RCH 28601 Stat£&gt; Rout&lt;" 7 Mlddl~
Bible Stucty, 6·lJ p m
port Sundav SrhoollO a m , Sundav even
ZION CHIJRCH OF CHRIST Pomoroy
in g SC'rVICf' 7 ,30 p m , 'TUC'sdav servi('C'
Harrisonville Rd. 1Rt 143\ Robert E Pur
7·:\0pm ·
tell. ministe r. Stpve Stanley Blblp Sc}Jool
Supt , HarlE'\' Johnson, Asst Supt SUN·
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS OIURCH .
DAY· BiblE' School 9· 30 a m worship
Bob Grimm pastor Sunday School9: 30 a.
10· 30 A M and 7•l0 P M · W!'dnt'Sdav Bl
m . Worship 10. 45 a.m, Sunday evening
bleStudy,7 00 pm
servlcf', 7 p m
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a! Bald
Grove The Rev Lau ra A Leach, past or
Knob locatfd on County Road 31 Rev
Church service 9·30 am Sundav School
Ro)lPr Wll1ford. pastor Sunay School 9. 30
10 30 am
am Morning Worship 10:45 a.m , Sun·
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST.
day evenln~ worship 7 00 p m , Wf'dnes·
Tom Runvon, pastor Sunday School9 30
dav wenln~ BiblE' Study 1 00 p m
a.m: Larry Haynes S S S upt Mornln~
WHITE 'S ~HAPEL WESLEYAN Cool
worship 10 30 a m
ville RD Rev Phillip RldPnour pastor
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
Sunday School 9 30 a m , worship servlc('
RENE. Rf'v John Vanct&gt;. pastor. Ora
10 30 a m , Bible study and worship SPr·
Bass, Chai rman of thE' Board of Christian
vice. WednE'Sday 7 p m
Life Sunday School 9·30 am Mornln~
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST Eu
Worshl 10 30 a m , Evangt"llcal servlct"
gPnf' E Underwood mlnlstt&gt;r. Sunday
7 00 p m : WednPSday service. 7 00 p m
School. 9 30 a.m . Morning worship , 10. :JJ
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH. O.x·
a.m . Even ina Worship. 7 00 p m
ter. Woody Call, pastor St'rv!CE"S Sunday
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST, Rl'V
10 a m. and 7 p m Wedn E'!Sday. 7 p.m.
Ivan Myers Sunday Schoo19• 30 a m wUh
DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH.
Sonny Hudson, Supt : EvenlllJil: sE'rvice
Lloyd Sayre. Sup! Standav SchOol 9 ;r) a
7 OOp m Prayer meellnR and Blblpstudy,
m. mornlna worship 10.30 a.m Sundav
Wednesdav. 7 p m
PVf'nln~ service 7 p.m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
Strv&lt;"
RENE Samuel Basye pastor Sunday
DeavPr. Past01 MlkC' Swi~e1, Sundav
Schoo19 30 a m .. WorshlpS£1rv lce 10.30 a
School Supt Sundav School 9 :ll a m
m . Young Peoplp's SPrvice 6 p m
Morning wor!l;hip to 40 a m
Su nda v
Evangt"llsUc Sf"rvlee6· 30 p m WednPSday
evE&gt;n m~ worsh ip 7 JO p m . WPdnesdav
servicE' 7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHR !ST. Miller
f'VPnin~ Bible sl udv 7. 30 p. m
St . Mason W Va Sunday Bible Study 10
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHU RCH
Burlingham Rav taud!'rmllt, pastor: Roa m Worship 11 a m and 7 p m Wednf'S
day Blblt" Studv vocal muslr 7 p m
bert Cozart. asslstant past(J' ~nda,v School
to a m worship 7 p m Wrdnc;dav 6 p m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD. Dud
vouth mt'l'lln~ Wed. 7p.m rhun:'h S('fvi('('S
ding Lan£&gt;. Mason. W Va J. N Thacker
PI NE GROVE HOLI NESSCHl,JRCH,',
pastor EvpninR set'VIC'f' 7 30 p m , WO·
mile ofr Rt :l25 Rev Be-n ,J Watt~. past or·
men's Mlnlstrv Thursday 9· 30 a m : Wed
nesdav Prayer and Btblt" Study 7· 15 p m
Robert Sf'ariPS, S S Supt S und av School
HILLSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH St Rt
q Yl a m Morning Wors hip 10 :\0 a m
Sundav f'vrnln~ scniC(' 7 ~I p m , \\'(•d
143 just off Rt 7 RE-V. JamE'S R Acree Sr ·.
pastor, Rev Mike Will ett. Asst Pastor:
RPSd av SNVICP 7 :1() p.m.
Jo£&gt; Humphrtv. S S Supt: Sunday School
SILVER RUN BAPTIST B\11 Lltllr
lQ a m ; Morning Wors hip 11a m ; Sunday
pastor Strvr Lill i€' S S Sup t Sundav
evenln)l sPrvlcP 6 p m , Wednesday Pven
School tO a m · Morn In~ worslp 11 a m
Sundav PvenmJ! wor ship 7 :JO p m Pra\'f'l
lnR 7 p m
PORTLAND FIRST CHURCH OF THE
mPPtlng a nd Blblrstudv W(ldnt'Sdav 7 lll
NAZARENE William Justis , pastor Sun
p m , Youth m e« llngWednf'Sd av at 7 p m
day School Supt. Sonja Justis. Sunday
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURC H
School. 9 30 a m , mom ina worship, 10.40
- 383 N 2nd Avr Mlddlf'Pmt Sund av
a m . Sunday and WednHday services
School 10 am Sundav ('VPniDl' 7 00 p m
Mid -week S('rvir&lt;' WE'd, 7 p m
/'
730 pm
MlDDLEroRT COMMUNITY CHURCH.
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIA N CHURCH
~7!i Pearl St , Sam Andersm, pastor. Sunday
Sunda \ Schoolq 3lla m .J(IrfSm !tti. supt
mornin!il' sPrVil1'. tO am .. Evening servll'E'S
Mornln~ worship 10 :w a m . Sund av
Sunay and WE'dnesday. 7l'l p m
pvrning S('rVlc('. 7 30 p m . Wftln('Sda\
evC" nln ~ s('rVI CC'. 7 10 p.m.
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Harlfoid . W Va
CHRIST· Elden R Blake. pastor Sundav
Rev David McManis. pastor Church
School lO am · Cary Rrf'd Lav Jt&gt;adrr
School 9 30 am .. Sundav morninr&lt;: scr
Morning SE'rmon 11 a .m • Su ndav night
vtce 11 am , Sundav evenlnll serv]{.'(l,
serv icrs Chrl s lla n Endc&gt;av01 7 Jll p m
7· :10 p m Wednesday praver meet tng, 7 30
Son~ serylcC' ~ p m Pr!'aching R 30 p m
p.m.
Mld·wE'r.k pra yer mN'Iin~. Wednesda y 7
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Lotart.
pm
W Va., Rt 1. James Ll-wis pastor. Wor
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CENTER
s hip wrvlces 9 :K) am , Sundav Schoolll
Salem St , Rutland Robert E . Musser ,
a m : Evening wor ship 7 :.1 p m. Tuesdav
pastor. Sundav School 10 00 a m : Worcolta.(::e prayer meeting and Bible Studv
sltlp service 1 15 a m Sunday t'V{' ning
9 :1&gt; a.m .. Worship serYtCt', Wednesdav
servl('{' 7 00 p m : Thursdav £&gt;ve nin~ srr
7 :llpm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN. David
OUR $A VI OUR LUTHERAN CHURCH
Prentlct'. past or. Charles DOmlJtan. Sun·
Walnut a nd Henry Sts, Ra venswood.
d~v Schad Supt. Mornln~ Worship 9 30 a
Va The Rev George C Weir ick, pastor.
m: Sundav School10 30a.m , Ewnln~ser
Sunday SChool 9· 30 a m : Sunday worship
vice. 1 00 p m
Ham
MT UNION BAPTIST. Pastor Joe N
CALVARY BIBLECHURCH, locat&lt;'don
Sayre . Sunday School 9 45 a m : Evening
Pomerov Pike, County Road 2~ near Flat
worship 6.30 p. m, Prayer MN!tlng 6 · 30
woods Rev Blackwood, pastor services
p m. WE'dnesd av.
on Sunday at10:30a m and7 lJ p.m. with
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
Sunday School 9· 30 a m BibleStudv, Wed·
CHRIST Robert Foster. pastor. Howard
nesday. 7.:KJ p.m.
Caldwell, Superintendent Church school
SPIRITUAL f'AITH FELLOWSHIP.
9a m. Worshlpservlce9; 45a m and6. JO
State Route 338, Antiquity Rev A.l. Step.m . Everyooe welcome
wart, pastor Sunday services, 10 a .m. and
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
7 p m, Tuesday,7 p.m
RENE Rev. Herbert Orale, pastor
MIDDLEPORT INDEPIINDENT HOLI·
Douglas Bissell, supt Sunday School9i 30
NESS CHURCH, Inc., 715 Pearl Sl. Rev
a.m .. Worship service, 11 a m and 6 p.m
Ivan Myers. actina put cr. Ro1er Manlrv
Sunday Wedrtesday, 7 p.m Prayer meet· , Sr • Sunday SchOol SuperlnteNient. Sun:
In«
day School 9:30 am. ; Mornlna wcnhtp
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
10: 30 o.m ; ev&lt;!Ding wonlllp 'f: 30 p m •
CHURCH William WUilams. pastoc, Ro · Wedaeoday
Bible atutly, proy~
bert E . Bartm, Director of Christian Edu·
and pral~ servtce,7 · 30 p.m.
cation, Sieve Eblin. aulstant. Sunday
CHURCH OF JESUS OIR!ST APOS·
Sch0ol9.30 am., Morning worship 10 ·30
TOUC- VanZondt and Word Rd. Elder
a m ; Teens In Action, 6 p .m. , Evening
James Miller. putor. Sunday Scllod
Worship, 7·00 p.m Choir practice 8 p m
10· 30 a .m. : Worlldp Service. Sunday, 7 i1
Sunday. Wednelday evoalng prayer and
p.m .; Bible Study, Wednllday, 7:!111 p.m.
Bltile otwty.
CALVji.RY PILGRIM CHIU'EL,Ililrr~
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
sonvuteRDad. Rev. Vletorlloulh, putor;
Roger Watson, mlat1ter1 Norman wm'
Clinton Foulk. Sunday Bcbool Supt; Sunsupt Sunday Scho9) 9 30 a.m., WorshiP
day School 9:30a.m.; momlngw&lt;nhlp,ll
service 10:30 a .m. BlbJe·study, W&lt;'dnBI•

w:

...,.,.Ina

:

am,
wnrshlp service
p m Wednesday
praver ffiet'linli! 7 00 p m
MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURC H LocatPd In Texas
Commumtv oH Ct Rt 82 Rev. Robert
Sander~ pastor J('ff Holt er Jav leader:
Ed Roush Sundav School Su pl Sundav
Sc ho ol 9 JO a m : mnrnln~ worship and
&lt;'hildren's rhurrh 10.
am , evening
prt'arhmg SNVlC'(' first t hrl'l' Sundavs.
7 :lO p m SpN'lal s!'rvlr£&gt; rou rth Sundav
C'vl'nlng 7· 30 p m W&lt;"dnE'Sdav PraHr
McetlnJt Blbl(' Srudv and Yourh Fell ow
ship 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
Lo&lt;'atro on 0 J Whiff' Road of Hiflhwav
lflO Pal Henson pasT or •·Sundav School tO
a m ClasS£'~ for all a~cs Junior Churrh 11
a m . Mornln~ worship 11 a m Adull
ChOar practiC'e6p m Sundav Youn~ Pw
plf' s Chlldrrn s Church a nd Adult Blblr
!'ilud\' Wednl'Sda v at 7&lt;YI p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL 570 Grant
St Middlt:&gt;port Afflllatl'd with Southern
Baptist Convention Dav id Brvan Sr Mi
nlst('r Sundav &amp;hoot 10 am. Mornlnl{
~o~.•or shlp 11 a m Ev('nlng worship 7 p m ,
Wt'dnt.&gt;Sdav C'VC'nln~ Blblr s tud v and
pravc&gt;r m('f'f mg 7 p m
BRADFORD CHURCH OF' CHRIST S1
Rt 124andCo Rd ~ DrrekStump pastor
William Ambf'rg£&gt;r S S Supt . Sundav
School 9 30 a m Morning Worship JO ;«!
a m , Ev('nang " 01 ship 7 ~ p m. Wednl'S
da\' worc;hlp 7· ll p m
ST
PAUL LUT HERAN CHURCH
CornC'r SvcamorC' and Sl-rond Sts Po
ml'rm Thr R£'\' Laura A Lf'arh pa .. ror
!;unda\ School 9 ~5 a m Chu n;·h sl'rviC'&lt;' 11
am
VtC'TORY BAPTIST 5~ f' 2nd St
!VIIddlf'POM .Ja m rs E Kf'f'SC(' pastor
Sundav m ornm g wor ship 10 a m . Even
ang scrnC'l' 7 ll m, WrdnC'Sdav l.'venlng
"or ~hip 7 p1J1 Vl s lt ;~t 1 onThursd avfl lOp
m
MORSE CHAPEl. CHL ' RCH David
Cu rim an. pa stor Sunda\ S&lt;"hool.10a m,
worship !;(lrvlf'C' 11 a m ~undav nl~ht
"orship !5f'rv lcc 7 'JO P m , Mldwrrk
prav&lt;"r sf'rvi('(l Wf'dnC'5dav 7 p m
WE
SLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH of Middlrport. In &lt;' 75 Pearl St
R('v t va n MvC'rs, pastor. Roa;::('r Manlrv.
Sr Sunda\ S&lt;'hool Supt Sundav School
~ 10 a m Mornln,g Worship 10 30 a m
f:v&lt;"nlng Worship 7 ;10 p m WC'dnrsdav
l'vf'nm~ Blblr studv pravf'r and prai sr
sf'r V(('(' 7 ltl p m
FAITH GOSPEL CHURCH Lon• Bot
1ern Sundav S&lt;"hool 9· 'WI a m Mornin"
"'
Worship 10. 4~ a m . Sundav rvrnln ll 7 00
i
30
p.m
I.
W('dn ~da\'
p 1mhi !summrr
~ f)(l
.....
n g
'
P m 1 su mml'r 7 ·~'~' P m I
NEW LIFE COVENANT CHURCH OF
GOD, Ch~tPr- Garv HlnE"S, pa !it or Sundav SC'hool q 30 a m worship ~NVlC'~
10· 30 a m , PVf'Ring ~PrVIt'f' 6 p m . Dlsel·
piPShlp class W('dn('Sdav. 7 p m
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,
l.awrPnCP Bush, pa~tor Sundav School
9 :\0 am: Sundav and WednH:dav PV~n
ing WON~ hlp Sf'rvif'r. 7· 00 p m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rl. 7on Po
mprov B\ Pas" RPv Robert E Sml1 h Sr,
pastor M£&gt;1vln DrakP S S Supr Sundav
School 9 30 a m.: Mornln~ Worship 10 : :lO:

:w

'
&amp;r"l.rRcH, Railroad
St .
Sunday School10 a m Mornlng wonhlp 11 a m .. Evening serVice 6 p.
m Prayer mE'ettng and BlblP Study Wed·
nesday. 7 p m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev. Nyle .
Borden , paS1or Cornelius Bunch, supt.

~urlh Sundays worship service at 2:30 p
Sunday School 9· 30 a m • Second and
MT MORIAH BAPTIST. Fourth and
Main St , Middleport. RE"v. Gilbert Craig
Jr pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner'
SundaySchnoiSupt SundaySchool9:30a'
m . Worship Servlct', 10·45 a m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B Hoskins, ~vangf."llst. Sunday
BlbleStudy9a.m , Worshlp, 10a m., Sunday evening Sf'rvll'E.' 6 p m ; Wednesday
t"Vt"nlng St"fVI(!Et, 7 p.m
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Racine
Rt. 124 William Hoback, past~ SundaY
School10 a.m Sunday evetalng servl~ 7
p.m Wt'dnesday evening service 7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Che~die
Supt Sunday School 9:30am. Morntnl
Worship 10• 30a m Prayeor service, altern- ·
atE" Sundays
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd'
nPxt to Fort M~Pigs Park, Rutland Robert
Richards, pastor ServicE'S at 7 p.m on
Wednesdays and Sundays
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAPTER of thf' Wesleyan Holiness Church
Rev Earl Fields, pastor. Henry Eblin;
Sunday School Supt: Sunday School 10 a
m ; Morning Worship 11 am: Evening
service 1 30 P m Wednesday evening ser·
vicP 7'30 P m
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH
Gary Hoi!Pr pastor Sunday services
a m and 7 p.m , Mldwepk serv ice. 7:30 p.
m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL. Third
Ave Rpv Clark Bater, pastor Carl Not
tlngham, Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 10 a.m with classes for a ll ages
Event~ services at 6 p m Wednesday Bl
ble study at 7:30pm Youth services Frl
day at 7 30 p.m
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP 128 Mill St
Middle-port Brother Chuck McPherson ,
pastor Sunday School 10 a.m , Sunday
evt'nln~ services at 7 P m and Wednesday
services at 7 p m
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST Kenneth Smith,
pastor Sunday School 9· 30 a .m .; church
servict"7·30pm; youthfellowship6:30p
m Blblt"study, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
Hiland Road, Pomeroy Tom Kelly pas· -.
tor Danny Lambert, S S. Supt S~nday ,
morning se-rvtce at 10 a m.; Sunday even· ,
lng SPrvtce 1 30 p m TuHday and Thurs··
day St&gt;rvices at 7· 30 p m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA· ,'
ZAR£:NE, Rev Glendon Stroud , pas&gt;or •
Sunday SChool9· 30 a.m , Worship service
10· 30 a m ; Youth serviCft Sunday 6. 15
m SlfndayevenlnaserviN'7:00 p m Wed . ,
nesday Prayer MN"tlng and Biblp Study
7• 00 p m
NEASESE'ITLEMENTCHURCH.Sun
day afternoon SE'rvlces at 2' 30 Thursday
f'vPnlng services at 7. 30.
FJRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W
va Rev wa 11 aN' Mings, pas tor Sunday
School 10 a m · Sunday f'VenJnR service, 6
p m , Prayer meetin g and Blbl £&gt; study
Wf'dnesday, 7· 30 p.m.
,
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa . ,
IPm St Rev Paul Taylor pastor Sunday '
Schoo110 a m Sunday !'\'enlng7: 00 p m ;
WE'dnE"Sdav evening prayer meetln~ 7 00
pm
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH SllvPr Ridge DuanP. Syden·
strlcker, pasta- Sunday School 9 am
Worship Sf&gt;rvlce, 10 a m ., Sunday evenlni
st&gt;rVICf' 7 00 p m Wednesday night Bible , ...
s ludv 7: 00p.m

9.30

p:

Sermonette

·'
,

KNOW YOUR LIMITS
will deparr from 1he faith . .. hav mK tht•ir uwn
con.tcience Sf'arf!d wilh a hot iron . - I Tim. 4:1. 2
Dogs are Intelligent, but Chari~ Medley of Rockford , 11. llnols, had some doubts abcut hi~ dog Bull!'! . Whenever Bullet
heard a squirrel, a rabbit, or a person. he would take off like a
shot In the direction of that sound. It didn't matter that he was
tied up . By the lime he reached the end of his rope, he'd be tra veling at maximum velocity. heading straight for his target.
But In an Instant, his strong rope would pull taut and jerk Bullet
to a. jarring, sprawling halt . That beagle never learned his
limits.
God has built Into us a moral tug on the soul whenever we go
beyond what is good for us. It's called conscience. Unlike Bullet's rope, however, It doesn't stop us from going too far. Furl-- thermore, conscience can be deadened when we violate It re peatedly, and II can be programmed with wrong Information so
that we may feel guilty when no real guilt exists , or we may be
guilty and not feel II.
We must learn the moral limits God places on us for our own
good and then choose to live within them. By reading God's
Word and trusting His Spirit to teach us, our conscience be·
comes attuned to God's standard of right and wrong. This helps
us to know our limits and toexperlencethefreedom and joy that
living within them brings.- D.J.D.
-Taken tram "Our Dally Bread"
.t ..·wmr

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�Friday, October 26, 1990

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

r--

Page-6-

Whether you like it or not, it's
· beginning to look a lot like
Christmas.
!-l;!lloween and Thanksgiving are ·
· still out there - but apparently merchandising is.stretching towards the
Christmas season. City stores have
been there for several weeks leaving no recourse for local merchants
beyond getting their merchandise
on display too.
.
, Of course, John Mohler is always in there early with Christmas.
This year John's Christmas .cards
went into the mails on Sept. I 4.
Early? No, for John that's late.

Community Calendar

By Bob Hoeflich

fonnation is asked to call Sue
Hager at 949-2241 after 5 IJlease.
. Those of you having relatives in
Saudi Arabia might want to taJce
part in a program being done by
WSAZ-TV-3.
.
The station is making videos 10
send to the troops there. A five
minute segment from local people
iaking part in the program will be
aired 10 the armed forces every day.
Anyone having a rel~tive involved is welcome to v1s1t the Huntingmn or Charieston studios bet·
ween 2 and 5 p.m. this Saturday to
participate. The Hun~ngton studio
is located at 645 F1fth Ave.; the
Charleston studio at !all Columbia
Ave.

Meanwhile, back at the ranch,
• members of the · United Failh
.. Church on the :Route 7 bypass are
. wondering if they ~ade a mi~take
in placing a shelter .and p1cmc
tables near tlleir church. Th.e spot
A new prop to strength and
has become a social gathering spot
:. the kind of social gatherings that . promote "good citizenship" among
leave all sorts of debris including students has begun at the Pomeroy
' beer cans strewn all about.
Elementary School this year. The
.. Church members are dis- new program is under the direction
couraged by the ou1eome and ma7 of Mrs. Linda Zamoch and Miss
be seeking help from the shenff s Becky Triplett.
department in getting patrols out . Each month a student from each
there and breaking up the un- class at the school is being honored
because of having demonstrated
. pleasant happenings.
outstanding qualities that co-exist
Helen Miller, formerly of Rut- with good citizenship. Photos of
land, will be observing her 93rd those selected are used on the good
birthday with friends and family on citizenship cenificates outside
Oct. 31. Many will remember classroom doors.
Helen so well as an active member
And Mrs. Donna Grueser has
of the Daughters of Union Veterans joined tile Pomeroy Elementary
, over the years. Her present address staff serving as the new librarian.
, is 158 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
You almost need a · scorecard
We're all looking for something these days to find out if the
or other and the Meigs Genealogy government is going to shul down
Society needs help with locating a or keep going. Personally, I don't
couple of cemeteries. They are the get that upset about it, however,
· Rood Cemetery in Olive Township figuring I could do with a little less
and the Red .Brush Cemetery in government most days. Do keep
'[ Chester Township. Anyone with in- smiling.

'

~

Racine UMW meets

~

- "Care Givers" was the title of the

~ program presented by Ruth Stem at

· ~ the October meeting of the Racine
• United M~ thodist Women.
~
Scripture and readings were
; given by Sue Grace, Lee Lee, and
"• Frances Roberts.
,
A·general discussion was held as
~ to how the group could help those
' people, car~givers.
·
! Plans were made for homecom~ ing at the chureh on Sunday with
• service at 11 a.m., potluck dinner to
: follow, and afternoon service at
,, 1:30 p.m. Former pastor's have

~•·

been invited to attend. The public is
invited. ·
Lois Bell and Margaret West
conducted the meeting and plans
were made to setve an Election
Day dinner beginning at 11 a.m.
throughout the evening.
The UMW will also have a
bazaar and bake sale on Dec. 1
begi11ning ai 9:30 a.m. at the
church.
Sick calls were reponed by the
members. ·
Lee Lee served refreshments.

Harrison reunion held

•
A reunion was hosted by floyd
" and Lola Harrison, Rutland, for
~ 'their family which spans fow
~ generations. on Oct. 14 at the state
•: park, Lake Alma, near Wellston.
:,.
Horseshoes, radio-controlled car
: racing, skateboarding and baseball
' were enjoyed.
:
Mr. and Mrs. Harrison have four
~ children, 12 grandchildren and 12
·: great-grandchildren. .
;. Attending were Jack Harrison
:· and sons, John and Dan; Ada (Har•· rison) Scott, daughter, Debra Davis
: and grandson, Tyson; Jim and
:· Elaine
(Harrison)
Quillen,
• daughlllrs, Tina (Spires) Lamben,
: husband, Donny, and daughter,

.·

The next meeting, Nov. 17, will
be a podui:k dil\ner at 6:30 p.m.
with turkey to be furnished by the
grange.

Photo winner
Eva Robson, Pomeroy), was last
week's winner of the Around Town
photo identification series .
She correctly identified the photo
as a detail on !he .facade of what
was formerly Elberfeld's Annex,
now owned by Welker's. Originally
the building housed Aicher's
Jewelry.
Mrs. Robson will receive a
landmark
sesquicente!mial
Christmas ornament from Bank
One.

:

PARTY

For FOE and Auxiliary
MEMBERS· ONLY ·

SATURDAY, OCTOBER
8 P.M.
.

1-.
I

LONG BOTIOM • There wiU be
a square dance on Friday at the
Long Bouom Community Buildil\g
· at 8 p.m. Music is by the Free
Ramblin' Country Band. Public is
invited.
ROlLAND • The Rudand
Community Church, New Lima
Road, will have revival Friday
tllrough Nov. 4 with Gene Roush,
Marion, as speaker.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - The Morse ChaPel
Church will be having a hymn smg
on Saturday at 7:30 p.m. featuring
The Conquerors from Ripley, W.Va.
The public is invited.
BURLINGHAM - The Burlingham Modem Woodmen will be
having a community halloween
party on Oct. 27 from 6:30-8 p.m.
at the woodmen hall. There will be
a fish pond, country store, games
and pnzes. Refre,shments will be
served. Public invited.
POMEROY - ''GhOst of Thomas
Kempe" will be shown at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
on Saturday at 2 p.m. The film is
.shown free of charge for the public.
..
LOT}'RIOOE - Country music
night will be held at the Lottridge
Community Cenler on Saturday
from 6 p.m. to miditight. All bands
are welcome. Refreshments will be
available. The center is located on
County Road 53, five miles west of
Coolville.

POMEROY • The Freedom
Gospel will have a "Hallelujah Party" on Saturday at 4:30 p.m. Dress
as people in the bible and tell their
story. Games and .refreshments af.
ter the meeting. The public is in- .
vited.
POMEROY- The Trinity Church
of Pomeroy will sponsor a soup and
sandwich luncheon on Saturday
from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. and contil\uing following the county choir concert Soups and sandwiches will be
available. For orders of quarts of
soups call 992-5480, 992-3222, or
992-3777 or on Friday call 9923172 d.utinll the day. Co. n.!ainers are
available. Quarts of soup sell for
$2.
PORTLAND ~ The J;ebanon
Township Trilsrees wiU meet Saturday at 7 p.m. at the township building.

.

dnlped funenl

arraa,ente~~l.

rail or

Jutt

~bllt ·

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
.. Th• IJ'n America Send11 LotJp"
PH. 992-6454

SUNDAY
RUTLAND - The · Rutland
Church of the Nazarene will have
homecoming Sunday with Sunday
school at 9:30 am., morning worship at 10:30 a.m. and carry-in
diner at 12:30 p.m. A singspiration
will be held at 2 p.m. The theme is
"From Generation 10 Generation."

HOCKINGPORT - A halloween
will be held at the Hockmgport United Methodist Church
on Saturday beginning at 6:30 p.m.
Coswme and jack-o-lantem judging will begin at 7 p.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a ~und and square dance on
Saturday from 8-11:30 p.m. at the

' COLO\' · ,
..

MIDDLEPORT - The &gt;Gabriel
Quartet will be .IIi the Middleport
Church of the Nazarene on Sunday ·
at 9:30 a.m. for a Sunday school
rally. A noon meal wlll be held at
the pastor's home.
CHESTER - The Ken Amsbary
Chapler of the lzaak Walton
League will begin slug shoots on
Sunday at 1 p.m. The shoots will
continue every Sunday for five
weeks.

MIDDLE~~~~~~e

lhftlllt.

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50
446-0923

J

..
•·.
..
.

WITH nMES AS THEY AlE, YOU CAN'T AFFORD
TO BUY A NEW HOME UNTIL YOU ARE POSITIVE
THAT YOU ARE GmiNG TI(E MOST HOUSE FOR
YOUR HARD EARNED DOLLAR. VISIT OUR HUGE
DISPLAY OF OVER 25 'MANUFAC1URED HOMES.
OUR PROFESSIONAL SALts STAFF WILL SHOW
YOU HOW VOLUME .· PURCHASING AND LOW
OVERHEAD MEANS THE BEST DEALS IN THE
V~EY. GIVE US A TRY -WE'LL EARN YOUR
BUSINESS.

~: Seized ~ stretch-

.

WHRE SERVICE MEANS YOUR

HONESTY • EXPERIENCE • INTEGRITY

:: By United Press International
; · A giant galaxy at the heart of a
distant cluster may be the
largest such object In the known
, universe, a mammoth group of
· stars with a diameter of 6 million
· light ye.a rs- 60 times ;wider tllan
· •Earth's Milky Way, astronomers
said.
.
The object at the cen.ter of a
. galactic clusler known as Abell
' 2029 Is some 1 billion light years
from Earth, that is, the distance
light travels ln 1 billion light
years at a speed of 186,000 miles
per second.
, , "This cluster .. . was dlsco,vered by George Abell in the
• •'50s," said Stephen Boughn,
• ,co-author of a paper appearing
~ Jhursday In the Journal Science.
··''The central dominant galaxy at
• 'the middle of this cluster has long
known as one of the most
::luminous galaxies in the known

ROBERT E. BUCK
Probate-Juvenile Cou.r t

'JUDGE
yean Assistant Prosecpting Attorney, Meigs County
yean Judge of Meigs County Court
terms Judge of Probate-Juvenile Court
awards from the Supreme court for Superior Judicial Service
recipient of State Grants totalling over $300,000 for the
youth and citizens of Meigs County

· ' Building on the work of others,
• Boughn and his co-workers ·Juan Uson of the National Radio
· ·Astronomy Observatory and Jef' . trey Kuhn of Michigan State
University - set out to measure
the dim, diffuse light given of! by
stars s(flpped away from galaxIes In Abell2029 by gravllallonal ·
Interactions.
Using a 36-lnch telescope at the

Introducing ·or. E. Neal Orteza
.and Dr. Emy Olivarez·Orteza

EHS arts,
crafts
fair set
The Eastern Local Band

leasant Valley .Hospltalls pleased tO welcome E. Neal Orteza, M.D. and Emy 1. Olivarez·
Ortaa. M.D. to Its medical stall'. The husband and wife pedlatrldans open their olftce at 2907
Jackson·Avenue, Folnt Pleasant on Nov. ·1. Prior to coming to Point Pleasant, the doctors
completed~ residencies With the Department of Pediatric$ at Unc:oln Medical and Mental
Hea1til Center· In New York. Dr. Neal Ortaa. whO was asSistant chlef resident dwlng the 111111 year ,
of his reSidency progr11111, has a special Interest-In neonatology and endoalnology. Dr. Emy
Ollvarez.Ortea has a spedallnterest In allergy and dermatology. 8oth doctors are board qualified
In ~. and belong to the American Academy of l'l!dlatrlcs and the Amerk.ln Medical
A3loclatlon. The parents of a 16-montiKikl daushte'r, Melissa Rose, they enjoy temls, the mo111es
andthetheatre.AppolntmentsforchlldrenandadolescentsmaybemadebegtnnlngThursday,Oct.
25, by alllng (304) 675-4107. Olllce hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weelldays. ·

(

Boosters wiU sponsor the Third
Al1nual Arts and Crafts Fair at .
: Eastein High School on Nov. 10
from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Irems will be available for creative Chrisllllas aDd fall gift ideas,
ceramics, wood worjting, baskets,
rugs and dolls.
·
Tables may be renled for $10 or
two for $1 S and are available on a
first come Jirst served liesis. To
reserve a table, mail a check to Ray
• and Pany Piclcens, .36215 Texas
I Road, Pomeroy, 45769.
\
RefreshmeniS,will also be avail-

• able.

: For mcxe infcnnllion call V'ugil
• ·and Geni Holsinger 81 318-6253,
: Cbarles and Theda Dailey at 378: ~7, 0r Bill and Twila BUckley at
• 992-2996. Entertainmenl
\ throughout the day will include acts

'

I)

Vallty Drive, Point Plea11nt, WV 25550 (304) 875 43«l

...
~

l!Y local schools.

diffuse light in the cluster. When
we plotted that light as a function
of distance from the center ... we
couldn't tell where the (central)
galaxy ended and where this
light began. It was just a
perfectly smooth curve."
Measurements indicate the
galaxy has a dlameter ,of some 6
mlllion light years, more than 4
~ .times the diameter of the ·
previous record holder and some
60 times wider than Earth's
Milky way, which has a diameter
of about 100,000 light years.
"Whether the diffuse halo In
Abell 2029 ts considered to be an
extension of the cenlral ... galaxy
or a component of dtlfuse cluster
light Is, to some exte'ht, a matter
of semantics," the astronomers
wrote in Science.

Trick or Treat
night scheduled

OFF

.

FROM CROW'S
Monday-Chi,ken &amp; Noodles
Soup of the Day - Pea Soup

Tuesday-(Varies 'from Week to Week)
.

Soup of the Day - Bean Soup &amp; Corn Bread

Wednesday-Baked Ham
Soup of ''• Day-Broccoli Soup ·

Thursday-'-Meatloaf
Soup of the Day-Potato Soup

Saturday-Chi,ken &amp; Noodles
Sunday-Roast Turkey &amp; Dressing

· The Meigs County Museum has
scheduled another session to copy
photos for the Pictorial History of
Meigs County.
Copying dates are Monday from ,
7-9 p.m. and Wednesday from 14:30 p.m. During these u'wcs
pholOs may be brought to the
museum during regular hours,
Tuesday thn)ugh Saturday, 1-4:30
p.m., and.picked up at a later time.

KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN LIVERS DAILY

Crow' s Family Restaurant
PH. 992-5432

•

ANDERSON'S

feinwheelet Fe1tiral Jlalue1
·I

PRICE

ON ALL
*Singer &amp; White Sewing Machines
*Knitting Machines
*Fabric &amp; Craft Panels
*Notions

Lay-A-Way .NOW &amp; SAVE
On Any Singer or White
Sewing Machine -

POMEROY, OHIO

Feat,uring Kentucky Fried Chicken

S~_le

10 STOR-~WIDE

·

The Ken Amsbary Chapter of the
lzaak Walton League will begin
slug shoots on Sunday at 1 p.m.
which will continue for five Sundays.

Photo session stuff

SAT., ·ocT. 27 - 5-1 PM

.3·· o·ol

Slug shoots

Friday-Ham Loaf

But the scientists believe they
are seeing a giant galaxy,
primarily because the halo's
light spreads very smootllly
outward from the central galaxy
and because' the halo has the
same. elliptical shape as the
central galaxy.

Ste1nwbeele11
Moonlight Madness

Bretz, Mechanicsburg; Denny and
Gayle Rosenhoffer and Sara, Chris
and Dlialle Miller, Peebles;
Clarence and Maxine Jordan,
Pomeroy; Jenny and Lori Freeman,
Jackson; Sonny and Barb Kegler,
Wallingford, Ky.; Sandy Kegley.
Wallingford. Ky.; Viola ' Sturgill,
Jackson; Cheri Aldrich, Destine
Aldrich and Nicki Sturgill, all of
Jackson; Christina Brittany and
Christopher Comer, Jackson;
Michelle, Rick and Amanda Adkins, Oakhill; Sam, Karrie and
Richie Davis, Frankfon, Ky.; and
Melody Roberts, Long Bottom. ·

DAILY LUNCH SPECIALS

Wel~ome

·:universe ...

Paid for by Candidate. Robert E. Buck,
29 Mulberry Ave .. Pomeroy. Ohio 467119

•

In Arizona, the astronomers were
able to detect a "halo" of diffuse
light surrounding the massive
galaxy at tile center ofAbell2029.
A mosaic of 16 images made
with light-sensitive electronic
"chips" called charge-coupled
devices, or CCDs, showed the
diffuse halo to be remarkably
uniform, leading the astronomers to conclude they were
looking at a single galaxy.
"Our contribution was primarIly to get a technique for
measuring diffuse light,"
Boughn, an astronomer at Haverford College in Haverford,
Penn., said In a telephone
·
Interview.
"When we analyzed the dala
for this cluster: we .indeed found

&gt;been

2~

PRIUS WILL IE GIVEN AWAY
COME. DRESSED

K!tt Peak National Observatory

The annual Sinclair family
reunion was held recently at the
nortllbound roadside park 011 Route
33 near Darwin.
Photos of families at previous
reunions were shown and information was garnered for histories.
A basket dinner was enjoyed by
Lyle and Joyce Sinclair, Shade;
Kyle and Shelly Sinclair, Pomeroy;
Angie Richards, Pomeroy; Paul and
Carolyn Sinclair, Shade; Brenda
Sinclair, AJbany; Brian Llewellyn,
New Marshfield; Craig and Sue
Sinclair, The Plains; Ann and Noel
Sinclair, Athens; Nola and Ron

Soup of the Day - Bean Soup &amp; Corn Bread

:;Giant galaxy discovered in distant cluster

Re-Elect

2
4
2
10

be able to unaerstand the unique
nature ot Alaskans and their
concerns about government Intervention In their private lives."
Unable to schedule a debate.
the group started an ad campaign crltlclzil)g Bennett's visit
as an Intrusion Into local affairs,
prompting a leader ·of Alaskans
for Recrlminallzatlon of Marl·
juan a, ·Marie Majewske, to express fears that Bennett's visit
might backfire.
. "I'm very happy he's coming,
but the way the ads are running,
he may do us more harm than
good." Majewskje said.
"They're running ads saying Bill
Bennett Is coming up to Interfere
with our state. We're part of the
United States. Why should we
turn down help?"

ference will be held 1n Meigs
County on Apri. 27. For the ·spring
county meeting, FemwOQd wiD
have the program and hosress will
be the Winding Trail Club.
The November meeting will be a
tour of the Manley Recycling Cen·
ter in Middleport on Nov. 13 wilh
the meeting to be held later al the
home of Marge Purtell, continuing
the recycli11g idea.
For the program, each exhibited
a fall arrangement and LO!d of the
mawrials used. There was a variety
of Dowers, vegetable and unusual
nature items used to create the \II'·
rangements.
Others presem were Thelma
Giles, Helen Eblin, Wi1 0 vcne
Bailey, Suzanne Warner. Kathryn
Johnson. Evelyn Thoma and Marge
Purtell.

Sinclair reunion held

Middleport Trick or Treat night
will be TuesdaY., 6 to 7 p.m.. for
those age 12 and under.

limo chauffers drug czar

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI) trafficking conviction of Joe the drug liY aduiis at home. It Is
.- - National drug czar Wllllam . Franko, now in jail, who used against the law for minors to
Bennett was chauffeured around Papa Joe's. First Class Llmou· possess the drug.
. Alaskans for Privacy, a group
In a stretch limo seized II) a drug .. sine service to launder drug
to tout the state constituformed
trafficking case as he cam- money, Grimes said.
tional
right
to privacy upon
Bennetl arrived less than two
paigned to make possession of
which
the
state's
liberal marl·
marijuana a crime again In the weeks before the voters decide
juana
laws
are
·
based,
urged
whether to keep marijuana legal
; only state where it Is legal.
Alaskans
to
"Just
say
no
to
drug
•
Bennett arrived Thursday lo or outlaw It and send users to jail
czar
Wiilllim
Bennett."
·
campaign for the Nov. 6lnltlatlve for up to 90 days. Under the
group challenged Bennett
,. to recrlmlnallze marijuana, rid· current Jaw, adult Alaskans can to The
a
debate,
.but said there was no
up
to
four
ounces
possess
or
grow
,. ing to his various stops In a 1939
response.
at home for, private use, although
,, Chevrolet Classic limo.
"Once again the federal goIt is lllegal to sell the drug .
AJaska State Troopers polished
. vernment is trying to lead
Possession
of
marijuana
has
,,- off the car for Its first offlclai.Job
been legal in Alaska since 1975, Alaskans around by the nose,"
,. - picking up Bennett at the
when tile siate Supreme Court said Alaskans for Privacy Chair·
:: airport and chauffeuring 'him
Robert Wagstaff, a former
: around to anti- drug speeches • . ruled unanif1\ously that protect· man
president
of the state bar and the
111&amp; rights to privacy guaranteed
;. meetings and receptions, Sgt.
who
won the case that
lawyer
by the state Co11stitutlon out·
·: Jim Grimes said.
made
marijuana
possession le' • The limousine was one of three · weighed any societal intllrest In
gaL
"Being
from
outside
: seized following the coca!"~ · prohibiting the personal use of (Alaska) , Mr. Bennett may not

OPEN
8:30-8:00
MON.-SAT.
ClOSED SUN.

595
&amp; 33

A report or the recent county
meeting of Meigs County Garden
Clubs was given by Ida Murphy,
president, at the October meeting of
the Fernwood Garden Club held at
the Zion . Church of Christ.
Drawings were made for the
Christmas Aower Show to oo held
at Royal Oak Reson. Fernwood
will also make the class signs for
the show.
Each one present had a part in
the devotions. using scripture,
poems and ~ings. For roll call
each named their favorite pie as
that was served for dessen.
The Rutland Friendly Club will
celebrate its 30th anniversary on
Nov..28 at 7:30 p.m. at .the Rutland
Church of Christ and Judy Snowden will have the program on
wreath making. .
The 1991 Spring Regional Con-

department removed the fake fig leaves It had placed over the
pubic areas of three foot-taU nude sculptures of women on
display at City Hall.
Offlciais also moved the display, which had been outside the
Office of Vital Statistics, to a less conspicuous location.
The fig leaves were affixed to the sculptures Tuesday. But
after newspaper stories poked fun at the city's prudishness,
parks department officials Thursday ordered the figures
returned to their natural slate.
Lubbock artist Future Akins said the city's initial reaction to
her work, titled "Getting Better AJn't Always Easy," was "silly
and kind of sad."
.
"I can't see 111 my wildestlmaglnation how these pieces would
be offensive to anybody," she said. ·
Yvonne Washington, assistant d.lrector of the city's Park and
Recreation Department, said she received no complaints about
the·art, but opted for the fig leaves to be safe.
"I think there was possibly too much shock value,"
Washington said Wednesday. "I'm trying to be sensitive to the
whole community."
The adulteration of the sculptures did not sit well with art
lovers ..
"Personally, I think it's lime for Dallas to wake up," said
Bonnie Wilber, president of the Dallas cliapter of the Women's
Caucus for Art, which Is sponsoring the exhibition. " Bodies are
bodies. To me, this Is censorship."
'
Picture lands homeless program ·example In jail
RICHMOND, Va, (UP!) - A man held up as a moddel in a
program that gives jobs to the homeless wound up ln. jail alter a
. clerk saw his picture In the newspaper and identified him as the
man who held up his store.
Rory Brown, 31, carne to Richmond from New York In July
and wound up in a homeless shelier after his money ran out. He
landed In a job- training program for the homeless run by the
Telamon Corp., and on Sepi. 30, the picture of success got his
picture in the Richmond Times- Dispatch, a photograph
showing Brown tending flowers In his new job.
On Oct. 7, a man who said he had a gun robbed a local service
station, and when the store manager was reviewing lhe
surveilance camera video, .he remembered seeing the man In
· the newspaper, Detective J. Ernest Foster said.
Foster checked up on Brown, and confronted him at his
regular b'US slOp. "After I showed him the pictures. he admitted
·
to the offense," Foster said.
After :&amp;rown also admitted to a pl'l!vious offense in New York,
Foster ran a computer check and surpr!slngly got a printout,
.dating to 1975, several feet long. It detailed offenses that
Included burglary, larceny and posesslng stolen property.

.....

BUYER
BEWARE

ST. RT.

Fernwood·gardeners ·

INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) -Indiana officials have put on hold a
delinquent t;u-collectlon contract with an Obio firm - after
finding out that the c()llectlon company Itself Is being sued for
non-payment of Its taxes.
·
.
Comprehensive Review Technology Inc., and its chief
executive officer, William R. Heiss, were·sued earlier tills week
by the city of Columbus, Ohio, on charges of failing to pay
$36,853 in city Income taxes during the past four years.
Indiana Gov. Evan Bayh on Aug. 29 signed a contract with
CRT,
ca11!ng for the firm to seek collection of $23 million In
•
•
delinquent unemployment taxes from Hoosier employers.
A day earlier, the Ohio Bureau of Workers Compensation
'
•.
a multimillion· dollar contract with CRT because of
cMceled
:- .
questions about payment of state taxes In Ohio.
A CRT spokesman blamed the tax problems on former
•,·• •
,.
officials of the firm and said arrangements are being made to
pay the back city taxes .
.
'
A1ter learning of the tax problems, Indiana officials declined
to make monthly payments to CRT, putting the contract on h9ld . .
'' ..
. The contract is "in limbo' • pending a .review of the sltuatlol),
'
Fred Nation, press secretary to Bayh, said Wednesday .
..
City removes llg leaves; moves nude statues
DALLAS
(UPI)a bureaucratlcaboutface,
thecltyparks
·: l-;.,.._
_
_In_
____
_ _ _ _......--_ _ _ _ _ _____.

WARNING

LOCATED AT

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

news-~--~-_.;..__,

·.~

owes·

OH KAN
RACINE - The Racine United Coin Club will meet Monday at
Methodist Church will be hllving a
homecoming celebration on Sun- Burkett Barber Shop in Middleport.
Trading session at 7 p.m. Refreshday with special service at 11 a.m. ments
will be served and new
followed by potluck dinner at 12:30'
p.m. and afremoon program at 1:30 members are welcome.

party

•

p.m. Public is invited.

.

COOLVIT.LE - A dinner wiD be
held at the Masonic Lodge on
Saturday at 5:30p.m: The cost is $4
for adults and $2 for children 10
and under. All proceeds will go to
the building program of the
Coolville
United
Methodist ·
Church.

RUTI.AND - There will be a hal·
loween dance at the Rutland
American Legion Hall on Saturday
from 8 p.m. to miditight. Come in
costume. Cost is $2 per person at
the door.

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS ·
, To •ll!fl• • be•tlfully

Tuppers Plains VFW Post 9053
featuring
Rocky
Mountain
Bluegrass. Caller .will be' Arthur
Col\ant Cost is $2.50 for adults and
$1 for children under 12. The
public is invited to attend.

P

ADULT
HALLOWEEN

:

RACINE - There will be a hal.
loween · party ·for all Southern
Junior High students and parents on
Friday from 7·1 0 p.m. at the junior
high building. Admission is $2
single and $3 per couple. Proceeds
wiU be used for cheerleading equipment

Bobbi Stewart, Brenlla t::&gt;plles)
Bolin, husband, Rick, son, Derrick,
and daughter, Brooke, Cindy
(Spires) Hunon, husband, Tony and
daughter, Jessi; son, Tim Spires,
wife, Mary, son, Timmy, and ·
daughters, Jamie and M1ssy Bar- .
.
rett; Don Harrison and wife. Diane, • Royal Oak Dance
with
granddaughter,
Ashley
Whaley.
Royal Oak Dance
Celebratil\g the reunion also
The Royal Oak Dance Oub will
were John and Dan Harrison's have a dance on Nov. 3 from 8·11
mother, Laura HarriSon, Tammy p.m. at Royal Oak Resort.
.Fry
Shannon Walker, Bill
Music will be provided by Ron
C~swell, Anthony Re11o and Chris- Hayes. The cost is $15 per couple
tian Diehl, foreign exchange sw- and the public is invited to atlend.
dent from Germany who lives with
Rick and Brenda Bolin.

~· Hemlock grange meets
• Rosalie Story conducted the
; -literary program at the recent meet.: ing of the Hemlock Grange. "The
', Hariest" was read by Helen
; Quivey; "Autumn" by Doris
· Eastman, and "Autumn Prayer'~ by
; ,Leota Smith. The closing song was
• "Blest Be lhe Tie That Binds."
• Wallace Bradford presided at the
'.meeting and Helen Quivey an• ·nounced contests for the coming
.•·year
.
: . A. quilt block from· each female
: member was reqli~ted to be
• donated to the state. Each block
;. measurers 12 and one-half square.
~ Favorable comments on the new
•: sidewalk were made by various
·~members.
·
: • Others present were Sara Cui: lums, Roland Eastman, Hilber
. Quivcy and Muriel Bradford.

Community Calendar Items appear two days before _an event and
~ day of that evenL Items must be
received in advance to insure publication in the calendar.
FRID.(Y
POMEROY - The Senior
Citizeus Dance dub will have a
roand and square dance on Friday
from 8-11 p.m. at the senior
citizens center· In Pomeroy. Music
will be provided by the Happy Hollow Boys of Athens. The dance will
foUow a halloween theme and
those l!(lending should bring snacks
for the .snack table.

Quirks in the

Local residents call Saudi p~lllce a royal pain
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UPI~ -A Saudi Arabian prince who ·
eslablished his ~ntourage In a Cambridge hotel has become a
royal pain, according to some local residents who charge his
retainers have disrupted life in the university town.
Prince Turk! Bin Abdul Aziz AI Saud, a brother of the Saddl
king and the country's former deputy defense minister. came to
Cambridge for a visit to Harvard University and stayed on,
lnstallll\&amp; his retinue In 40 rooms at the Charles Hotel.
But as far as some Cambridge.resldents .are concerned, the
prince bas long outstayed his welcome,. The Boston Globe
reported. ·
. Some North Cambridge residents complained the prince's
security has ·ejected youngsters from Danehy Park when the
royal family visited the public facility , and drove limousines
acr.oss newly seeded athletic fields, the Globe said.
"Onc;e, they drove their limousine right Into the park and
almost ran people down, then went up the athletic field," said
City Councilor Edward Cyr.
City officials may be tolerating the prince because of his
substantial donation, reportedly amounting to seven figures,
that endows a professorship In lmmunol~gy at Harvard Medical
School. He said he hoped the gift would help "make the world a
safer and healthier place for mankind."
Indiana shelves tax-coDed contract- because company also

Friday, October 26, 1990

Beat of the bend

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SELECTED MERCHANDISE FROM OUR STOCK. INCLUDES
TABLE LAMPS, LIVING ROOM SUITES, END TABLES, ,
. . COFFEE TABLES AND BEDROOM SUITES.
OPEN TIL 7:00P.M. SATURDAY FOR THIS
SPECIAL SALE.

NO LAY·A·WA~S or CHARGES ON
PIECE GOODS

THE W.FABRIC
SHOP
·
Main
OH.
.110

St., Pomeroy,

992-2284

'

I,

··-~

�'-ell 8- The DMv .Seutinel

.

Ohio

Friday, October 26, 1990

Friday, October 26. 1990

•

•

•

I
\

Saturday, October 27th

I
I

;

7:00 pm-11 :00 pm

''j

j

"Shop Downtown .Pomeroy"
MADNESS

DONATION· Howard Nolan donated on
Thursday a life history or his wife, Geneva
Nolan, to the Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy. The collection consists of five large al·
bums full of material on Mrs. Nolan from the
years 1905-1989. The lir~t- al~um contains

SHOP WITH YOUR POMEROY MERCHANTS

The Pome~og
Me,chsnfg Welcome
The Ste,nwheele''

l

I

•CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
•LARRY'S WOODWORKING
•DAVIS QUICKEL INSURANCE •K&amp;C JEWELERS
•HOOD FAMILY SHOES
•CHAPMAN SHOES
•BUTTONS &amp; BOWS

material from Mrs. Nolan's lire in Koane l:ounty
in 1905 and other albums trace her history up to
1989. In addition to the five albums, Nolan
donated a handmade dulcimer wh~b was made,
by Raymond L. Epler of South Charleston,
W.Va.
.
·

W.R.A.P. WO~RS • Volunteers cut; count
· and package ribbons and educational huUetin
inserts iii preparation for Sunday's kickoff of the
White Ribbons Against Porn campaigD in Meigs
County. More than ball of the county's churches
wiU distribute more than 5,000 ribbons for
members to demonstrate opposition to the
availability of obscene videos and otber
materialS in Meip. The campaign is being
·promoted by tbe Meigs County and Middleport
. Ministerial Associations. Among worl\ers were

I

1

(len) Sarah •'owler and (right, center to right)
David Slater, Audrey Slater and Sharon Perry.
Also wor~ting at tbe Middleport Cburcb or
Christ 'fuesday to prepare tbe materialS were
Katby Baker, Angelia Gilkey, Tony Perry, PeDDy
Lewis aDd tbe Revs. AI Hartson and Don
Meadows. A motorcade through Middleport and
Pomeroy is scheduled at 11 a.m. on Nov. 3. Rib·
boos also may be obtained, beginning Monday,
at Swisher &amp; Lohse Pharmacy in Pomeroy and
Westem Auto in Middleport.

SHO~

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
9:30-10:00
Meigs High School Band

10:00-11:00
Official Welcome

Ni·ght.
Magic
;Madness
I.

'I
.,

.

From
7 pm-

11

pm

~Plus

Be Sure
To Visit
. With .The
•
Stern
'
Wheelers
Who Will Be
~: Visiting Our
\:Community!
•

.

•'

~

STERNWHEEL
. FESTIVAL
·MOONLIGHT
SAYINGS

10:30

Middleport firemen Fish Fry

12:00·12:30
Eastern Jr. High Band

1:00-1:45
Rainbow Cloggers

2:00
Meigs Co. Choir ot
Trinity Church

AT

4:00-5:00

HOOD FAMILY SHOES

~eet 011~ of~, mo.st ~portant

Exhibition Race

4:00•6:00

;

GROUP OF LA GEAR &amp;

WMPO Live Remote

IOSSINNI TENNIS SHOES

5:00-6:00

.ll1Sllnulce agents mthiS town.
. '&gt;.t· H' dbl( JH'rhl Olll' nf rl It' r1 1c,...l rlllp( tr1:111 l )lt't rpic ir1 :1u rr·

Thank You alid Captain

50°/o OFF MEN &amp; WOMEN

Presentations

l :&lt;lll l ii iiH IIl\

)(rut: rrld l')\'llt !er11 agt'lll wl H' L':I!Til'!- :\I bt: m~-. , ... ~
·'
"
•lftvr aU. AIh~il&lt;' th~rr ' 11('1jtr&gt;l :rn11rrrt· 11rill•,pul.r.&lt;'rc-, l11r 111u1· ~;rr.
!11 rlllt· .lr lt·. hr r~ rll l':-..'. cn·n h&lt; 1;rt t1r R\ . lndt')X'JHll·nt :~ml' wlr1 rr:tm
IIbl:rl&lt;' , fkr ilw tllll iiX'I i lin· r:Ht'&gt; :11111f:L,r. b 1r d:rim" '" ,.,,. 11t11 ·

5:00-7:00

NUISEMATES

LADIES DIESS AND
CASUAL SHOES
OFF

25°/o
OFF
Naturalizer, Hush Puppies,

25°/o

LA GEAR

Pomeroy Firemen Chicken
Barbe que

MEN'S DRESS SHOES
Jubilee, Flarsheim, (herakee

SO% OFF

7:00-10:00

;, ),l.rl!

Crossover land
(appearances by members of
the Shady River Shufflers.l

ALL TENNIS SHOES.

7:00-11:00

200fo OFF
LA GEAR, CONVERSE ,

Merchants Moonlight
. MadMSs Sale

JEANS WEAl
•Jean Jackets •Jeans

KANGAROOS

:·fl 111 ' 1" 11 '

992-6254

Savingc S.~

Oood lt'c·
Soarvll
MOONLIGHT
MADNESS

•

Be. Sure

•'i

992-6677
· .._, _......_, .•·

.

"1

••

•

l

1 '.
· ~'~·.
· 111•" •. ·lll-1'.•1 .• '.·r~.
·t· r· ..~·•.\1 •'''"·- -. . . ~

NEW SHIPMENT OF

SATURDAY

-

7 P.M. TO 11 P.M.

0/o

'

RINGS - PENDANTS - EARRINGS

tl\9
'

,.

OPEN
7 -11 pm
SATURDAY
OCT. 27

.~

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992-5177

......

220 E·AST MAIN • POMEROY, OHIO
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LARRY~S

-~

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Generat!m
~after generation,
";;~

113 (QURT ST.

POMEROY, OHIO
992-2054

MOONLIGHT
MADNESS
SAVINGS!

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STERNWHEEL FESTIVAL

I

MOONLIGHT MADNESS

•
j

Saturday, Oct. 26, 7 PM-11 _PM

' ••
••'
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· HIGH &amp; LOW CUT

REEBOK
&amp;NIKE
N!JfSe~­
.MateS~

'~

,. '••

1 GROUP' OF TENNIS SHOES
MEN'S, WOMEN'S &amp; CHILDREN'S

i
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••
•

40°/o OFF
1 GROUP OF ·

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,,'
,

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•

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WOMEN'S ' .I
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DRESS
'~
SHOES &amp; FLATS ••
)

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Wel~ome

•K&amp;C JEWELERS
•LARRY'S WOODWORKING SHOP
•CHAPMAN SHOES •
•DAVIS-QUICKEL INSURANCE
•HOOD FAMILY SHOES
eaunONS AND BOWS
•CLARK'S 'JEWELRY STORE
i

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SA~INISI

To See
SATURDAy OCTOBER 27th
Page 9
7-8 pm ..................... l S0/o OFF
For More
8-9 pm ................... ~.20°/o OFF
9-10 pm ..................... 2S 0/o OFF
Savings
10- 11 pm ................... 30°{o .OFF
From
•DISCOUNTS TAKEN OFF ORIGINAL PRICE•
(Holiday Dresses &amp; Accessories Nat Included I
Your
I
WE WILL BE CLOSED FROM 5 to 7 PM I
Pomeroy
Merchants BUTTONS and BOWS

20°/o SAVINGS ·.

SALE

"...

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••

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PO MElOY

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HOOD
FAMILY
SHOES
21 0 EAST MAIN

•

Across From The Courthouse, Pomeroy, OH.

-~~'-1:, .•: ' ··'·ro_.. ,_. l\_
1 '·~".·'·":::.;:·1 .· ·-

PURSES 20% OFF

••

it.L' :ll \\:1\\ ,lf ~K I Im

rrr 1l11 · """ "I, DAVIS-QUICKEL AGENCY. INC.
(.all :tl lllt'l 11!1p: 1rr :\lld lind 1ll1t ., , In ~01 1 ll ' 111 (;1M 'tl J l:mtb
11

•
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''

say Meny Chiisbnas
withtil:
.'indstromB
OIUGINAL

Ste,nw

.

BLACK HILLS COLD
~ONS

~ron -

WOODWORKING SHOP
222 L MAIN, POMEIOY,

olilo .

PH. 992·5492

Custom Orders Taken For Various
Cabinets, Jewelry Boxes, Shelves,
Picture Frames, Tables, Etc.

*VISA
*M/C
•DISCOVER

BUSINESS HOURS:
10 AM· 8 PM TUES. THRU SAT.

•LAYAWAY

212 I.
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OFF

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SEE OUR EARLY ••
SHOPPERS SPECIAL ,c•

TABLE

'
DIFFERENT VVOODS AVAILABLE

-

CONNIE &amp;
FOOTWORIS

30°/o

WOODCRAFTS FOR SALE ·
AT' THE SHOP

SPECIAL ITEMS ONLY ON SALE
Quality Avallable At A Fair Price.

\ }·

$1 oooo

Chapman ShoesPOMIIov·s Guaun·11101 no11
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~!A~~~~~1~o-~n.~~D~-~~~S~~~m~n~-~------------------------!P~om«~~oy~-~M~~~~~~~·~O~h~~~--------------------------_j·F~mm~
· ~y~.~Od~o~bw~2~6~.!1!990~
the Brooklyn facility a nd p lants
In Garden City, Long Island, a nd
Kearney, N.J ., to put ou t F rl·
day's paper.

The strilce brought to a boll a
simmering contract dispute between the news pa per and its
unions, who have been working
without a contract-since March
31.
The strike followed".a vio le nt
confr ontation · th a t ha p pe ned
early. Thu rsday as workers prepared to del!ver the day's editions. About 200 members of the
drivers union left their jobs at the
a r ooklyn plant over We dnesday
night 's firing of a union m em ber I'
who, claiming a m edica l disability, wanted to s it down as he
worked . ·

the Dally News's 10 unions went
on strike Thursday night spark·: lng a confrontation that could
- determine the fate of the coun. try's lar gest-&lt;;ircu latlo n ta bloid.
Asked whet her non-union
:·· " We're at the br idge," said
worker s were being used, Sloan
Mike Alvi no, head of the News- sa id, " We have a very ex tensive
paper and Mall Deliverer's Unconti ngency plan that Is now In
- lon, which represents the dr!v- place and s ince employees have
. er s. " We're officially on strike
gone out on str ike, we will be
. • for unfair labor prac;.t!ces. "
permane ntly replacing an y e mThe .dr!vers were Immediately · p loyee who Is now gone out on
joined In t he strike by unionized
strike."
mailers, p ressm e n ·and fo ur
Striking unions dispatched
'. other smaller unions . Only the
pic kets to the pape r 's headquarNewspa per Guild, t he stereotyp- - te rs on Manhattan 's 42nd Street,
ers and the typographers did not · · where editors a nd r eporters
walk ou t.
co ntinued working .
The Newspaper Guild, which
Alvino sa id the drivers union
: represents repor ters and e ditors
struck In response to m a nage• at the paper, w!ll h.o nor plcke- m ent's decision to lay off 60
tUnes, sa id George McDonald,
m embers of hls union who were
' llead of the Allied Pr inting
"arbi trarily" pic ked for fi rings.
· Trades Council, tile umbrel la
But News spokeswoman Lisa
- group for t he 10 unions.
Robinson denied there were a ny
Pollee fn riot gear ringed the
layoffs a nd blamed the unions for
paper's huge Brooklyn printing
the strike.
.
· plant, pushing b ack de fiant
"The Dally News position Is we
.. pickets more than a block from
think it Is Indeed unfor tunate that
· the facll!ty. At one point str ikers a strike was provoked by these
shouting " scabs must go" set
unions a gainst the Da lly News, at
upon a bus bel!eved · to be
a time when we were Involved In
carrying non-union workers.
the collective barga ining process
Management spokesman J ohn
to resolve our differences," RoSloan said tile· Ne ws was using binson s aid.

As non-union labor wa s
brought In the help deliver the
paper, unionized workers rampaged outside the plant early
Thursday, attacking a bus carryIng the non-union workers and
se tting fire to d e l!very trucks .
Da lly News officials said the
workers walked off the . job
" voluntarily" and described the
action as a strike. They !mmed!a tely began hiring per m a nent
replacements.
Members of the driver s union,
however, insiste d they had been
ordered from the plant Thursday
morning and then locked out
when they tried to return to work.

,.

Classifie

REMOVAL

•uGHT HAULING
. *FIREWOOD

213 No. Sec"'d
Middleport
Hand Tufting
Cu stom Drapes

BILL SLACK

992-2269

36 \'.-ar• Ex p erlen &lt;'f'

614-992-2321

USED RAILROAD TIES

Wo Soy Whet We Oo.
We Oo What Wa Say.
10-19-1 mo.

8 -12-90 lfn

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

RACCOON VALLEY
SPORTSMAN CLUB

SHOOTING
MATCH ·

GAME ROOM
NOW OPEN .
Wed. thru Sat.

Su~tday
Starting at 11 :00 A..M.

Every

HRS.: Wed.-Thurs.-Fri.
5:00 p.m.-11 :00 p.m.
Sot. 12 Noon-11 p.m.

Between
Wilkesville and
Salem Center

Between Wilkesville
and Salem Center

9 -12- '9Q· 1 mo

9 - 12-'90 -1 m o .

WANTED

Banks
Construction

LOW GRADE OAK

SAW LOGS
OHIO PALLET
COMPANY

NEVER CLEAN YOUR
GUnERS AGAIN
GUARANTEEQI
FREE ESTIMATES

P'OMEIOT, OH.

10·1 1 mo.

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

Days
1

8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY

3
6

10
Monthly

CLOSED SUNDAY
POLICIES

"Ads o~o~ t s1de Me1g1, Gall•• or Mason count•es mu st be pre ·
Plld
"Reeefve: 1 ,50 diS COu nt lo r ad s ~M i d'" a dv a nce

Announcements

"Free ads - GiYuway and Foun d ads undet 15 Word s w•ll be
run 3 dl¥1 at no ch•ge.

"Pric• cif ad fo r 11 1 capiullet te rs 11 doubl e pnce ot ad cosr
"7 point line type .o nly used
•Sen1inel is not respo nsible f or errors after first t1 av !C heck
for errors finl d~r~~ a d runs in papttr l Ca ll b f! fo re 2 ·0 0 p m
d_, aher pubh t: -'to n to mak e correct ion
•Ads lhlt must be patd tn advan ce 1re
Card of Thanlcl
Hap py Ad1
In Memortam
Yar d Sal m

4

- G.~V uway

5 - Happy Ads

6 - Lo st an d Fou nd
7 - Yi rd Sal e fp ai(j •n advan ce!
8 - P u b li ~ S a le &amp; A uc tu:~ n
9 - Wanted tQ Bu y

1 1 ·- Help Wanted
12 - Sit uatto n Want ed
13 - l nsu rance
14 - Bus tn.es s Trammg
1 5 - Schools &amp; ln stru ctton
16 - R1d io. TV &amp; CB Rap a tr

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION

MONDAY PAPER
~~E~~tSVO~~p::P ER
1~~0RASvO::P~;PER

- 11 :0 0 A .M SA:fUROAY
- 2 ·0 0 PM MONOAV
- 2 QO P .M TIJE SOA Y

SUNDAY PAPER

-

Classifi ed

-

2:00P .M, WEDNESDAY

M e og!l

84 3 - Ponlafl d
2 47 - Let art Falls

256 - Guvan Otst
643 -· Af•b•• Oost

9 49 - Ra conf!o

.7 42 - Rutl and
66 7 Coolvil l e

379 - W .. nul

3 1 - Homes for

Sal e

83- Ele,....ating
84 - Eiec:t ri cal &amp; Refr igera tion
85 - Gen erat Hau ling
·

Announcements

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86 - Mabil e Home Repai'
8 7 - UpMolsterv

PUBLIC NOTICE
A Zenith color TV. S.N.

022-06061090 will bo oold ·
at Public Auction on Wed-

·

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Public Notice

Public Notice

BANKS
CONSTRUCTION
992-6009

10-1-11110 .

hight•t bidder. Seid item is
1vaileble to the public for inspection at said address du r·
ing normal businett hours .

- ,Aft. _
...___
.

f

rou AL HOU SING
OPPO RTUNITY

REF-RESHM.ENTS

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205 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992-2886/HOME 992 -5692
.DOTTIE S . TURNER, BROKER
IIIDDLE.PORT- Fixer-Upper- ~as 5 roomsdown and 3
rooms fill· part ba sement, porches. I\\ baths forced air heat
pretty ntce cabinets i~ kitchen.
•
$7,100

521 00 S. I . 331, RACINE, OHIO

614-247-4035
Real Estate General

Real Estate ·GenQral

\2)
/ -... -

!: OUAl ~51NO
OPPO IIT'UtotiTY

~·----

205

North Second Ave.

Middleport. Ohio
Office 992 -2886/Home 992-5692
Dottie S. Turner. Broker

OPEN HOUSE

Sunday, Oct. 28, 1990-2 P.M. to 5 P.M.
Just look for signs just west of
.. Lang$ville on Rt. 124

old, 61

1908.

Across From Post Offici
POMEIOY, 'OHIO
10/ 30/'89 tin

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT .
HOMES &amp; GARAGE5
" At Reasonable Prices:•:

PH. 949·2101 .

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT. ·

Res. 949·2160
Day or Night -.
NO SUNDAY CAUS .
4-16-86-11'

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
Factory Choko .

12 Gougo Shotguns Only
Strictly Enlorc..t

RACINE ··
GUN CLUB::
'

GUN SHOOTS.1
. 1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

.
i.

12 Gauge Factary' .
Choke 1111ly ' '

SHOOTS START ;,:
SEPT 16, 199~
Sept. 4,1fn

9-25-'99-lfn

11

Pupptn; 3
'.i, "'Four"' !'-'Pon-Lob
-' moto, 7 wko.
ald. tM256-6~/.

·:. f.,.

Buy, SsU or Trade
Guns

OPEN MON.-SAT. 10-5
742-2421
36496 511111 lUll •••
llfTUIID, OHIO .
10-01-'90-1 mo.

•New Homas
•Garages
-•Complete
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare
FrH Estimates

985-4473
667-6179

Domino'• PfDI of

Pomeroy f&amp;

for All Breeds :
EMILEE MERINAR
Owner &amp; Optrator ·
614-992-6120

: 4

with whHe ,...:. 1

1

; :::~I~:~

temblt Producta 11 home. Call
for lnfonnltion. 104-141-1003

1311 aft · -.
1
•r ,.p.m.

Ell. 31S.
21
Business
Eclword'o
Trorwpol'llllon
R•von-. wv. l.oolllng fW
OYO&lt;Iho rood drt ... fWIIot bod
Opportunity.
oporotton. N- good lklvtng
· tNGnCEI
rocord, Oloblo -ldng hltlory, OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING co.

mUM M =,tre 91' Old"er with 3
yooro ..
nco, be oblo to
drug OclMlllng ond laid
tMC. 800428-HSI tot dltaiiL

Ellpo-d

modlo

:Jf;!fl Kmon Longhlllr.

, _ wHh pooplo you know, ond
NOT to Hnd monoy thr-n the

11111 tho aftorlng.

reprtMntatlve. BaH · plut com· · Bualnlri for ule,

=
~•null:~

ret 11 loth•- flit
tor":U

mlulon. 304·727-7885 Clll for ln.

ve:.~

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT tS

~t"~..J:40:J:2E~B~

=·

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR
ALL MAKES
Bring It In Dr
Pick

Up.

We:

·

KEN'S APPLIANCE.
SERVICE
992-5335 or 915-356.1.

Auoss F.., Post OHicl
217 E. Sec. P-op;~;
POMEROT, 0110 ·

3t61'90tun·

•Remodeling and ,;
Home Repairs L,
•R ooflng
:'·
•Siding
:•
•Painting

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FREE ESTIMATES ,

CEDAR

;.

CONSTRUCnort:'·
992·6641 or ;,,
698-6164 :'.'
10-.12·'90-1 .... ~

5-31 -'90 tfn

• __ !

tlmo. 304-875-7518 or

.

~J."::: ~~";:!'=

lion. ....,rlty dopmft l rolonn~ a mu~l WIHmln RNI E.-.

tllo,lnc.ll14-44144144.

tor Rent
,_
1_ 110 2 •-•
&amp;A
u.aroom,Contra!
"'rot lot,
G-.
Townoh!p,
olr,

=c::rorar

aecurtly dtpoaH,

14x70 mobllt home Sind Hill

Road, 304-175-3834.
14170 Mobil• HotM, •hara Nnt

I

2 ~le homea, ...., lnd
water fumiMed, refertncte ,..
quiNd. R1. \ Locuot Rd, Point

~~;;;;;:;;;;,-.;;;;r-;;;;: P l - . 304-875-1011.
3 ba*oorn• hout:a, lend con-

lrocl, 304-875-1104.

I1Advance.
ALL Yonl 111111 111111 Bo Pold In
DEADUNE: Z:OO p.m.

dey before the ad Ill to run.
~ Sundly edHion • 2 :00 p.m.

1 the

7 room, 1-112 blth, 1.3 acrw, ad-

; Frldoy. llonctoy odllon - 2:00

dftlonol 33 ocroo hunting ond
timber. 114-112-7118 or 1·384-

, p.m. 81turdly.

20117.

Matura lady to live In with aldorty tidy. Contoct :tel4-t75-1882

7 roomo 1 112 blltho, country
living but • ' - to School
and town. Rl. U:.C line,
Tawnohlp Rood 27. Flrot rood to
CotltM-112-7111 ot 1-384-

Corotyn McCoy.

=·

Malor Route carrilr neHtd to
' llovlna Solo: Thuro, Frl, Sol 1211 dotlvlr
Horold Olopotch Morning
"'&amp;tala "Sti"HH, Gllllpolll. •Stove,
Fridge, Cloth.., Furnltura, mlac. -popor lol p - Pl-ril
11'11. Mutt have goad da,......
f~·~-·------·----~ debla tn,.porteUOn and bl
Pomeroy,
- · Colt Jton lllllor 1-aoo.
155-1110 extanslon 830, 1:301:00 lion lhru F~doy.
Middleport
~
&amp; VlclnHy
bllbylllltr ior my 5 yoor
I
.
okl child. R.,_ncoe roquiNd.
•2 tomlty pniAio. ono milo ond 114-112·53117. 1
:11'10'1 UJ! Bolloy Run Rood.
HOllE TYPISTS, PC UI«S
• Children • elollhe•, mlec.
.-od. ~.ooo ·patontlot.
Dototto. 11) 1105-88UOOO Ell. llPublic Sale
4511a.
,;
&amp; At.ictlon
HOllE TYPISTS, PC 135,000 palontlol.
,Rick Poclnon Auction eompony .-od.
Dottlll.
(11
805-887-6000 Ell . 8·
now booki~ auctk»nn, ••- 101U.
.
porto- molcH tho clltoronco.
·Liconood Oh~ ~~uclcy, WOII INTELLIGENCE JOBS. CIA, US

00\IERNIIENT HOliES lrom S1
(U ropolrt. 0.:1:\::;' tu
Your
.... (11 - - Ell. GH41511a ror cu,.,.. npo 1111.
Bldwlll, Ohio, lbr hou• on 1
ocro, f25,000. Will conolclor ~~~~
1"11 on lind controct l lllclng
IIObl.. Holw. or euto u down
"""'*!!· (11 304-4a-5330.

.....,..,.r· "-

;e

2br ""

lorgt j&gt;rlvoto

let,

ru..

nllhad, 5225 per month plue

4 lA brick, 1 •112 ·beth, 2 car
~~-,~•collont condition. 614-

.

.,.,_ R. BrlmrMr, 1158 South

Jtffll'llon Drive, Huntington, WV

215101

SoluLAYNndE'S•~t RNITlcodURE ~I

\Uf. 2~ec~=::

I '

I

f1
I

1177 lnlomollonll~lo ulo
dump 1ruck, new
ftC,

cond,

F" H

~
-

tO·~"

'' . '

!_.~~.;..Mon. thN 9oi. Coli 114-

---

11

J' 'b:t.":"..';::;;.::.O::

84 Inch Shontll . Solo; O..lol - - • choir;

?"·

)I

Inch, Eatey llactric
111 In
IIC, cond,l14 Ut .303.
Automatic w•hlr 1ndl dryer,

MOBILE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS r:·.~
All FURNACE PARTS
·••·

$1,111Di~

JD Troct~r1 SZ,tiOO. OW.., ·will
rtnonco. &amp;M-286-e5:12.

-~ &amp; poll $75.

:::O...a;' oo\!'n..."'11:-~2:

Round Baler. $1,111i OWner Will
Finance. 114-2MAS22.

Jim'• Form E3utpm•~.r- 35,
WOII Ollllillol 1, 114 11-8777;
Wldo Hloellon now &amp; UMd lonn
1211,000 btu noturot or LP_gu troctoro • lmpton.rto. 8111',
lurnoco, blloo - n 111«. 11400. uU, trocto, 8:0D-5:00 wMkctoyo,
On ro;~'ai'allund ar LP gu :So::L:.I:::II:.;IP,:Iool:=;:n·_ _ _...;.__

-·
-

"'3237 after 5";00

63

~~j;;~L~I;;v~eist~o~c~kTH;ii;;;

1r aublc ft. 1fraeat. 1110·12..
~~~ II • .54 ptoc;o. 4-1185-

\c.-'
E,

- · R~tiYt,
Loool IIIII""' Coi!Oa•
~
tory
lllioouino P.O. eomlol 111, il-tt.

At.-p

~~~~~~~~~~~
_c

olr · oondlttor..

Mn, OH 1-ION37-t528.

Fl.-..ood for • 11· Cui alabll.
114-251-8118 or 114-211-1458.
lroML
~ . Qotf
thru Clubtl
PW, call
Far ....
.Pingaftar
aya 52

p.m. :104-n:l-t104. ,
Solo: luck Stovo ttroptoco
1tn Ex condh'1011
... ••so
n • 2222 c.
• •
t14-441·
Qutno For Stlo: Wielding Ring
or Your PIHom, lllchlno
autnocL S75. Phono: lt4-aaa11151·
R-Hionod Woohon, DJYI'L
GuorontNd
fiRinlpl Mrvlco tor
oil mokM, madoto.
Tl)l Wuhor
Dryw Shop,.. &amp;14-441-2!144.
Sot c1 toft-hllnclod gall ctube, 7
Iron ond 2 woo&lt;t. $40; 14

for

Wit clo ~ ~ock Hou~

lng. 111ft. Goooonock Trollor)
C~uck Wlllomo, 114-245-60111.

Hay &amp; Grain
8oloo oood hoy, t1 poi- bolo,
&amp;M-3117-7111}. .
400

POMEROY. OHIO: R1.: 7 . S.R. 143
ALBANY, OKlO: Rt. 60. S.R. 143
•
.
NEW HOURS:
1;
POMEROY: 8 a .m.-7 p.m. 7 Oaye
ALBANY: 10 e.m.-15 p.m. 8 DIYif, Clolld Sundl'l(
PAYING AS OF TODAY, SEPT. 11, 1990:·;
#1 Copper '1 per lb.:
. .
Clean Dry Aluminum C1n1, 4&amp;C per lb. • .
Clean Auto Redllltora 44C lb.; a.tt.rJet '1.211•;.
Yellow Br111 40c lb.: .Alum. She1t1 40C lb. · •
814 99 -61 4 .:...--.. ;

lila.

l

r•maa

t.,..,
245-at21.

(

.

Motorcycles

1181 SUzullt

te.tone
•

100, "Aoct"
mltoo, lib

75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor SaiB
1112 17 ft . Slon:roft Trf.Hutt
- · 1211 lop,
HP, Evtrvudo~ne,
compllft
new u
.
Call 114-286-13'11aflar :00 ILnL
MrVlce ICCM...... Wa f,_.,

.,..

Transportation

76

Aut

1077 Camii'O far Plitt, ~75·

f

Sal

"'""='.;,.;;.:::o.:;a~o~r:-::.:;:.:e~-

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

1137.
tm Ford Bronco. Comptoto
d~vo troln. 1Q84 Ford Rongor
2.1 VI onglno oncl 11-op:ocj

tranen'll••lon. 114JI4•2877.

1183

Fonl

a.3, aood -

bloCic, SIOO. tM-44'1-7058.

&amp;

Budall Tnnomloo._, lJHd &amp;
,.buTH, llortlntl II Ill; 114-24551177, t1+3N&gt;2211.

'

Vlntan Auto Salvage. Foralgn &amp;

Dorn Porto buying junk .....

18'77 Mereury «;oupr. Auna snd

looiJ goad. $300 OBO. 614-1112·

&amp;'f4.38811062.
.;..;.;...;..;.;...;....;;;...
_ _ __

140a.

79

1177 Mercury Grand llerqute, 4

campers &amp;
Motor Homes

dr Soclon, Low mil-. vory
good condnton, 11~771 1V61 11" Blazon T111vll Trailer
IVIningl.
oood ODrldftlon, grill lor dtoi
1m Chovy SUrburbon. Now fiuntoro or tllhorrnon. tM-441tlree, Nlr air, cru ..., lnllerfna

r,'~!~ 804~ Engtno. eon

3775 ovonlnt•-

Servtces

1878 Corvlltle, T"'•· elr, PW,

•uto, e-. cond, 73,000 miiM.

oolllng 17,200. 81+882·7G41.
81
1810 l'lroblnl, --- point, .....
ahrame ..w Dtade whMJN T·
lop, runo groo~ thorp, iOUll11511.

Homs

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondhlonol lllollmo guoran-

=

1881
Stilton
-104.:
· IM. Local rar....ncll fumlthed.
$275
bllt
work car
F,.. estimat-. Call caiiKt 1".
175-31111 bllloro 2:30 p.m.
814-237-11488, doy or ntghl
11111 llonto ~~'!....PS,_ PB, Air Aogart BaHmant Waterprooconcl• v-e, _.....,.1ool onor fing.
•
&amp;:00 •II.
tQ8t Rlvorlo Butdl. VI, goad

condlllan, automatic, pb, ps,

crutH. 1port rima, landau top.

614-1112-2211.

1912 Chev. Car, Run• ~.

S1,200. Now Boll Jolnto, Now
Brako s - . Podo Irani. 1114441-3005.
Complolo llolltlo Homo Ill u,.o

11112 Toyoto - mltn, vory l ropolro, 1110 ·plumbing l
good condhlon, 42 mlln Pllr olldrlcol; rootlna, romodollng
gallon, · 114-44&amp;-3371, ~~ ootloco &amp; docko o1c. REMODEl:
:1111.
INQI Ror........ Eatl-.o.
1H3 Gnnd llorqulo, 110 _ . , 114-2511-1811.

naar naw tlrw arid brakll. Ntw

All brood pot g100mlng, 21 goo ochoch. High mllugo. 3114yAra ex,..rtanca. "J.ppolntmants 675-5057 oftot &amp;:110 Pll .
only. 111411124820. It no annar,
1184 Floro, tooclod, $2,800. lluot
IMW mtllaQI.
Nil. 304-875-533Q.
B11UIIIul Slom- Kmono, &amp;14111811 Chivy Covollor, AIIJFII 1
441-0231 Tho Groom Shop.
PSIP8 1 ~c. now llrH. rut gooo
cond. 0&lt;,500. &amp;14-441-11131.

·

_....,.....,..11

wanted to Do

212 ocro torm In .....
Townthlp, wacded. OWiw wll
01rry canlrwtct. IM·'Jl2.2112.
Form Roducod 12 112 2
bllrno, tobllooo ht,OOO.
Troltorl 3 blldr..,.., a bellll,
oontro olr 111,000 linn. :104-lQ.

.....

."Bullnete II IIOW•. Go take
a·lew atop ligna."

. ''"

"

-----

for-=-~­
ctwger
• J1 I %~ 4 .....

-·--,lair.......,

FNH81
Vegetables

t'-A

I

mU•, exc

2424; 1-72N2111.

19117 Comoro ss. Eooollord condhlon. eM-115-4211.
- 11orcury 11 ont..,...
....., Good
1•••
tl-. now bllltory, now broiJoo.
block on.-, oood motor ond
d-ni - olL S280 ot OBO.
114-HZ-3582.
blcyc .... loti ot extre Pllrtt, of~ t1171111on11 Bocty, Orlglnolty hod
flf' S210i Super XL HomaiHt
v-e onatno, no ICifllno, NbuiO
chaln11w 20·- $200; 13"' transmrnton wllh 1 ,.ar war·
Crtftomon cholnoow $40. Colt ~~~ $1100. 1114-241-11114, e14IM-m-2805 oftorl pm.
823.

Block, brick, ..wer ~:Mpae, win·
dow., llnlell, •tc. c•audl Wl""
Rio Grande, OH Call 11C.

'i l~..

S~J Per Day Bullellll Bo;ml /\llvt!r!isl!lllf!Ill lrl Till' Ut~IIV S1:11llll!:l i:Lt:,;::!il:il Sl!i:tlrill.

v.n.

vttto Ecltlon, Lolo fll Eotroo, tow
":'l':t:3..:cotlont
e
.....ana•---ton..

Wo oro r.0WWWTERIZIIIGI'If1~ 1
RIVERSIDE
Round Bolol In lho Flolcl. 814-. SHRINKWRAP.
MARINE Oolllpotll, OH. 114-441245-6411
Hay lor Sill. Clover &amp; TimothY.

)lito to -

OfFIIS 2 LOCATIONS TO SEIYE YOU.... .~NGSVILLE - ELEGANcE ALL THE WAY -MANSION ON
THE HILL- Thore lusllsn'tiiiDupwonlstodmrlbtt~is
3yr. old, 2story ho11t wit~ 2110rpousflreplacts. buutlluf cabinets &amp;alore In kitchan,. 3 bi&amp; bathrooms, 4 bedrooms, formal dlnln&amp; room, and h•l' tamilp ruom. Sits
ny blck frotn road lor privacy and 1 view. Hasapprox. &amp;0
acres lor lnttnals or hunterS. There' sa bi&amp;btm. pond,and
partir fenced . Call lor moro dolllls.
$140,000

--·--ondbe
lm-lolllY. eon
lor tnt.vtow Unw only. IW-1«1·

11m ~ Von, 1300 ar ollor, 8
7-7211.
111&gt;1 Font Econottne
aran-

naw, l14-4

.-...~~~ Jln111 needl I to tO
. . . . . . . . 1111··· . . .

Til-COUNTY RECYCLING

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

now ""tzt;'io~

12

18

l~u~cin.Od!i,

Bmm deer rtne whh rtd Held •

1

::?.·
~=,._....~
2127. ~."f"-.-:,:O.:

r::;:,::~--,--,----

:104-458-1843.

SHuatiOn
Ptuo
____Wanted
.;..;.,;.;..;.;.;....,.-..,..,....
011 4111M.
WIN bll-. little,
·•-- aoro• fW
IN.
. . lftduC18 .. . . . . 1105 bill b ''" ..,..
;.,., up to t400
no ••· 12Pnt. Mondoy-Soturdoy.
,

~1=~~:~~~

Bronco II, -

-oro.

tlnll, Pamlroy, Oltlo 41711.

4

61 Fann Equipment
n... - - -3020 JD Troct,
JD Tractor wllolclor, 18 ...,, 2010

Merchandise
~socf'r.%DT;"f2~1S~n:;'d~~
100ft. choln link lonco 31" high, Long roctar $1,1!10; • 41 lnt'l

W-

wanted to Buy

-,..ver 30t 112 21141.

oyl.

SMvorod9,
1121on
PSIPI,
M!, AIIIFII,
CC, lift,
T-.
-

..

Now In
Stoc•ff

llo"ffr, 4

:104-

r====:====,=========:lI~~:=~§~~==

Frlgldotro. 114-112·7302,
dapowlt Ia raflrancee,
itolgo 1011 . . _ wtlh motch8
2231, 614-446-2511.
!.'
lfl tovo - · S175. 304-875- surpa,.
'""' comounoao.
Cor2br, olt now cof!IIIJ. locllod In .111~
hort, Donlm,
Rontol Clothing.
Evergntan,814-t~M07.
o.cron ln.ulatlan Conrail•,
l_,.luo Flonll Llvlntl Room Co....,._ S27. Som Som..
2br, troltor for ront In Choolllro, 9uno • Solo Bod,
rvlto'o, lliot ot Rovonowood.
e14-3117-7110 oftor lp.m.
Dlnotto Sot, W.ohor, llryor, F~. Sot, Sun; Noon-1:00 Pll.
304-273-6155 othor drlyo.
-Ito homo. $1115 month. Rocllnor, IM-441-1531.
DoppoH -trod. 1141112-6732 ~coin bedo, nov« ~light Truck cop. Fill Oodal DSO. Uko
oftor 7:if p.m.
pine, $450. 304-4175- M.
now. S150. &amp;M-fi2-3242.
Unlumlohlld lloblto Homo. COUCh. 81", medium blue blick· u.c1 Woodbumer, S200i A
14x52, a !!_RJ no polo. 322 Third. round. llovlng. nooct to 1111. lloby Bod, sso. 814-441-7157 .~
114-441-3,.. or e14-2H-11103
Mllt2-71183.
tor (p.m.
blllorotlpm.
~=---:-:----::=----::
~h, choir, onomon, $300. W.ohor ond dryor S171. or toll
304-175-4311.
Uporotlly. 011 OIOYO $25.
Apanment
44
Nlnenlo
" Uftlme" orlglnel
County Apptllnco. Inc. Good $52. ool tor 840. 8oyou llltiJ
tor Rent
uNCI appUai1CII, T.V. ttt:a. Open 130. Hyclllclo •as. Womon'o Rod
1br, tclol lloctrlc, 11 Rio Orondo, 8 e.m. . to IS p.m. Man..Sat. &amp;14- Hurty 10 tllCiod $11. AI good
CION to Unlvoraily, t1751mo. 441-1811, 527 3rcl. Avo. 0111- cond. 304-8G5-3314 ar 175-320.
llpotlo, OH
114-388-1141.
WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
GOOD USED APPLIANCES Ron Alllo"!! 1• 1210 Sooond Avo,
Within, dryon, rolri~rotoro, Galllpalla, urt &amp;14-441~331.
ro-. !llllggo Aptliloncoo,
Uppor Rlvor Rd. llllclo Slono 55
Building
Cnoot _,_ Coli 614-44e-7311.
Supplies

1':'4c'?'

.

~~goOd,
runo good,
•nrtl....

Monro- or - ·
oprl'&amp;tno
lull or- S11, flnn Cool UnllmHod. 4 ton minimum
1 -~...:=,~ :=:;•: :00:.~~~~~ por
:·K::'
SH. Gun Coblllllo 8, I, l 10
Gun. llod
81by ,..,...
lftlllr. .1125.
. . PI
l
c:ona••
&amp; pla•tlc
•pile tar*a,
141.
Quoin
Ron Evant
Enton&gt;riuo,
Jock·

out lutsvllll
Ad. ()pan
"'" 1pprov
c 8 A.M.
· mto•

tili!, ......

~&amp;.' mttoogo;

.*:~37':_ :::~•,;g:': e~~m.~;:,.";.:~ I~~~~i_7~ -=::-::=
Dt-11 Pll, 304-812-3tit.
Ii
'"

s1111~1onl ~~ng tndrmo-~$50:..~
11
-·
~ bo
_,
....tal cabii'MIItl, hu.dbolrd1 ail
::h~tho M5,10tdctoyrodlo
totmo
3 ••1

$1,000. 114

::"::':C-:::';-.,--:---:-:----,tm Chovy Luv ~~true: it,
Ita ford

1145 up ta $311. Hut"""• $400 l Copoclty 17,500 BTU. Atoo
up bunk • • complete wtth •ctrtc luXIIre furn1ce 15,500
...itt
... $2111 ond up to nos. ~ wHh control olr. et,..._

Coli (11 105-o87-t000 Ell. K·
101al.
Pln~lmo LPN .-oc~ ror oil
""'"'· Coli Dorothy Horptr, 114441-7141.

Unclolllround-lmh•ln Eo;tom Ohio to Hoking n,, . 011111 County Echo, VAt'-. porioncod -ton ond ot oupltoot.,l14-441-1324.
potl ,.,..,.n. lllnlm'"" fll I
,..,. oup~~llloary uport..Nqulrod. All tnqul,.. wiN be
llepl oonfldonllol. lntorootod
concldoiM oho&lt;Jid opply to lox
72111 Pomoroy, Ohio 41111.
Wontod To .Buy: Junk Autoo Wo-: Plrt~lmo. Bor Ton&lt;lor
lllth or wHhoul
Colt ......... privoll dub, .....lord
Lorry Lhloly. 114 3a111 I .
-ng -Hion, nlgldo on~ clo Box oao, 011HpoHI Dol T~bu"-! 1 ,125 Thlnl
Employment Serv1ces •.Oollflllllo,"" 4111:11.
Would Hilt 10 aononl
•
orne. help for ~10 •lib,
40
-11 Help wanted
-&amp;oo~:-· T--JY~
~VON • AI - Col llorllyn : . , _":: =~r:xr s-

nvm

::':.::l.:P.'~t~::'0:::
Lompo $21 to S125.

Cultoma, DEAJ ate. Now Hiring.

COIIOignmont
toto, """"
onc1
lnduRiot
Equt,.-,.
Trucko,
~TraDtra. All e...
~nmenl• •leoma. Oat. 27.
10:GG AM. Cui a lana avaiJ.
•blo. Joo-. County Auc:tlonl.
A- 21 Nonh S.ncl¥vlllo. 1
!"II• north ot Rlptoy, liCM-:n:t,1112. - · J o h n E• .tonoo
1111.

=:

CrHI r. pr

S3811o $011. Tables $50 and up

l,,.

Gel Quick Hesull:-; 1 PliifY

72 Trucks for Sale

Pll.

Goods

77W841w :IIIIWI2·3415.

2 bedrooma, t.th, comar lat,
porch 1nd •ck. Hencleraon,

S.turdly, 508 O.k Drlva, Baby

· Household

-

$-10111.

$150.

oublc IDol whlrlpcoot
rwlrigort!or. Two yun otcl Eo·
collonl Condition. Aoldng $210.
114-lil:l-3481.
old •·•
-~1
; wHh
2 bod- -'&gt;lie homo, ru.. , ..t oand,- ~· -, - . dryo&lt;
. . $231 3 glMllliYingroom choln, 0111 1
month.,
llluo utllhloo. Colt &amp;M-tl2·'lll7t. ond roc11nor. - "'I ---•t
~ "'· ~
~

31 Homes lor Sale
WV. 30W75-71111.

&amp;14-286-~.

Orond

00\IERNIIENT
SEIZED - from $100. Forde. Merud11 .
Conton-. Chovyo. Surplua.
Your oroa. (11 Eld.

box

l mponolbiiiiY. wtth hlahly
functioninG MIA malt, -,or
LOANS IV IIAIL
d«ollo cotfl14-4441-2515.
Up to 15,000 In 72 hou,., Wo
con hotp YO&lt;J got • '1\n;turo 14X7V troltor, 3 bedroom, porLoon By llilll. 1-100-2 500. tloiiY lumlohlld. 10111 aloctrlc.
n.lltot.
. ~~ ""'nthtyidepoolt. !ltddlepcH1·Rullond ..... No poto.
IM-111a-2071.

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Ohio.

1111 ' PoniiiC

•11.1111/mo., lilt ford ""F·
280 .f121.7lllllo. -Hm.·

bllby -

42 Mobile Homes

Real Estate

1,Vif'llnla, 304-~JA.

uo,_,

f.:· ftr.*'•

tot.

. Yard Sale

nema.

10-5 1

th~~co!r.

chack. y 1-IOO-zze.G048.
..aur
dapcall, na $18.85
credit

Min oturw Colllo~ In tho olllco
"Sycamore • Fourth "Av.nut AJ'H. train
: •Soblo holr lltlppod In bloclt, no
' togo. Vory Timid. Homo II Joel&lt;.
• LOOt 10120190. 114-441-3131 wHh
·~! lnlorrilotlqn. · Fomlty Pot.
Roworct.
'7

••

RetlfWICtl. 114--441-4038 11444t-!l11.
woman• Small Furnl.n.d houN, ._tel,
d tn
731 Re• Third Ava, 1150/mo.
n...;
l14-44&amp;a3870, ,,.._
1

CARD. VIIIJMaattrclrd guaran·
teed. h.,caah Advance•, no

~ood~~~;~~~][~·~1 ~-~~·

~

2 MWiy built comm...a.l w.tta.
1100 aq. tt. Mch. 1150 • month.

~.~.
...80
m - ,,. ~!trot• 5I

CREDIT PWS. GOLD CREDIT

0

For Lease

· ·
Ono 3 bodroom houH olld ono
4 bod_,. houoo for rtnt, 304t·=75-:.:30:c::30;_:ar::-:117::5-~:M:_31:::_.-:::::-:::-

22 Money to Loan

• Found 1 hilt grown bllck ~=rtlc, ~~ ~~_-::.~~
plla=~s·
• lomolo
puppy, -ntown 0 ntc I Pomo
• Pomary . ..-. · Medium
"
0'. Ga lpoll• an
•
, •qu""'"t-o•·hnlcgy~
' hair, to.,. people. 114111244 • :r:Tpki~•Mu 11
•
: LoeJ= hbla I White ShaiUe ( curacy·
1

49

~~~=:,t=..z.:::.._roo::- ~~-

~ :r-eo&amp;f;_tt~: =~~k
' ; t ':l.,to;',•;_ 's:"..!u~
lnqulrill Ontyl211-7112-2020.

0
:
1,1
• Ruotl~ HHio, Syrocu11. tM/112,' :75:-:38=oft_or-:-4:-;:00:-;p;-.-:-'"'::-::--:-::-.:1:·:.:01:.:80::.·-=-,-----,...,--

a.ng:r

_._c,-.

171-3112 ,,., I·OO

mill until yau hanlnvntTgated

; =-s..'",-:n:-'-wh-:'::-no-,-:-,.:-......
=-m-:1-no..,.turoulllng w11or m•·
' Colllo lot glvtoway. Good tomtty lollmmodloto rooponoo.
chlnoo, tocol rout• tor oolo.
1 dog 814-HZ 7134
Repeat
bu•lnn•.
Above
- ·
·
·
Hotr otyllol noodod. I1+Vil:l- ovorogolncomo. 2111-212.,.90_
3233·
6 Lost &amp; Found
HOllE TYPISTS, PC UMrl Ownor ulllng vondlng rauto

~:t·~~.: ~~~· .~~==~~ ':.~

':."7....:0~

on 1M -

1113.52/mo., 111a lllicll -

Rooms

recomm11nda thlt you do bual- :;

gr~y-whhe t.m...

JMovlng Sale: 828 Third Avenue,
• Frt &amp; Sit . .., Furniture, Llnlnl,
: Large to Small

Pomeroy, Ohio

"-

Ani&gt;ounclno

Flnondng

t111.Dmo.,
101
...,.,._, 1H3
,,..- Chewilt•

f,:"::Jt'UJ.- ·

~IIJ5~ttv. 3 houooe lol ront,
d-h roq
_ uiNd. COlt &amp;14-446-

&amp;M/112·7227.

1,ml.c.
11- couch, ••-· - ·

'"
BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCnON

:, rtt.ct,:,...

1

10.1 1 mo.

Sporting Needs

Help wanted

l:5-;F:::om:::::lly:-::'Pon:::::::h:-;:-So::-:lo:::::.:F~rldo~y~l:;-

REWIRING AND
TROUBLE SHOOTING

992-500.9

ftmale~~~= ;~an

-•orod. ~.
• doc'.- .nd n-·
,,
; •_d...,utt___,•,..•n_ty'-.-::•304-IT:
::-5-_2_8,..114_._
&gt; Lobrtdor 1111 Pup, 8 moo.,
• 0111 b1 1&lt;. S od h
~
~y....:.:. :::
5'MOJ.
24
,1
.
, Nice one year ok:l ml~r~d breed
~:'1 .to • good homo. 114-:;:.:,:;--;:;-- -=-c,..--:-:'-:-:-

r

Residential and
.,. · Comm,.rcial

CONSTRUCTION

llil~'• Auto -

1.1%

4 bodroom
hamo. Dopoth,. 11851,111-WV.
quiNd.
No polo.II-HM~.
For Ront or For S.to: 3 br ~ 46 Space for Rent
53
. 18 Wanted to Do .
=ry33,11o.=.
a Antiquo Vlolorlon Styli Chot...
(!oiwoon 0 &amp; 11.
loti, rontlll, .pol'll, 111M. Colt 814-361~.
WI
. HOUII fW ronl, holl ocrt lol, IM-II2·llll't.
~:-:--:-:--------In Itmy
tokho•corololhotdony
porson•
omott
otoro- ••dg -~· ~roltor tot tor ront, ...
54 Miscellaneous
me.
av. ref,l'lncel.
- "' , .,.,......,.,. ,,
_ , , "'ru

yur atd tomoto blloglo now htrtng.114-112-2124.
.
dog.l14-1112·31117.
Eooy Worlll E1collont Poyl AI-

1' -

COMPLETE
ELECTRICAL SERVICE

Certified Eltctrldans
FrM Ethwotn
BANK~

lluytriQuldo
1·
1•. AIM,
..,. sua:lnp •nd • rl • ·

A-·

--ton WUI'rwt•·
··-- 30"4 ·=-~
led~m.
h01..-e good ..,,_\
notahborhood, 304-eTi-ll!o~ or ~-=-~--~..,.-..,.-....:..,..
&amp;75'5388.
R-Iot ront • Wuk or month.
3br, - · chy llmlo, corpol, F·
Golllo Hotol.
g_•u turnoco.
mo&lt;tom
kllcl\on,
na polo,1orvo
~
,. Slooptng roamtl whh aaoldng.
q.48'u2lrod3
. • o_noytorloou,t14-441- Alootrioli.--. AII hook--.
Cell after 2:00 p.m.. 304·773o

- lnd
- eo...-.oonn.af'erd
a-v..

-

Porellla.
ottw
for
....,....,. m .

Roome IVIIIIIIbfe for 2 or 3 c on- .

,.; =--:::-,....,:----::-:-:---:--1:;:==7,:=7.:~=;=::-r::======
· ::::::1
1
~o':t ~.O,:::'on~ &amp;,.~·
~=t'lt~ul;:.;;:rhe =

: Outdoor Young Cat•: 1 black

or

..

~

{::-: !.-=: ~-:-.m_•-: .:-:h: :~-:-a-:-lds; ;'t.,.-•m-:-.:-:u........:.c.;
:.:..·.

'" 4) 446-941.6 •• t-100·172·5"7

RUTLAND - Ntw.Lima Road- Spacrous lot, 311 acres in
town. and a cute Gtngerbr~d trimmed, freshly painted, 1\\
story home wrth 3 bedrooms; dining room, screened in
porch. and 2 other porches.
All For $21,900

992-2136

1/281 1

Located on Safford School ld. off lt. t41

T~PPERS PLAINS - Arbaulh Addition - I story ranch
wnh 3 bedrooms. equipped liitchen, garden area and approx. II acre of land.
$32,000

FARMERS BANK

992-5335 or 985-35111

eE!i~ .

3

,. ,.

righ. t,
either. Have you got something
· ·
~-a )t'ttle more ·eXOtt'c?"
,. •..

' ::-;:~':---':-:':::--:-:-=~.;:,.ktdo,
oftor5:30.
: 2 Pup:~~emlnd brood, 8wllo.

3

IUSINISS PIIINE ·
(6141 992-6550
,IIESIOII!CE PHONE .
'(6141 992-7754

BENNEn'S MOBILE HOME
HEAliNG &amp; COOLING

LANGSVILLE - ,li&amp; Level Lot- Side sitting porch, newer
pretty kttchen, vtnyl sidtng, new carpeting, 2 bedrooms, big
livtng room, plus a 3 room house for storage or rental.
Just $25,000-

CALL

KEN'S · APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SN us For Tour

SYRACUSE - Close but not selcuded - An older 2 story
home _wtth a new heal pump, new roof, and completely redone rnsrde. Home has 3 bedrooms, sunroom, dining room,
wrap-around porch, and a patio. Two of the bedrooms are
huge.
Astin&amp; $43,000

100 ACRES WITH
APPROXIMATELY 2 ACRE
POND, GAS WELL AND
FREE GAS.
,LOCATED IN SUTTON TOWNSHIP
OFF DORCAS ROAD.

WASHER$-$100 up
DRYER$-$69 up
.
REFRIGERA10R5-$100 up •
RAIIGES- Gas·Eiec.- $125 up
FREEZERS- $115 up
MICRO OVEN$-$79 up

SUPPLIES

RACCOON CREEK - A nice camping lot with electric and
grey water dtsposal. Showers and bathrooms really close
also has frontage on Raccoon Creek for a boa I dock. Really
nt~e
.
.
Just $5,9110

PROPERTY FOR SALE

· '

Giveaway
whlo puppy, I mont flo,

B
1 1o to
: :~ old
ho.::.' I~;.'i.~
., Booutllut Lorgo, otclor p.,.lon

. Pay Your Phoite .
and Cable Bills Here·

9D DU WAIIANTY

NOTICE

\

'
1

SALES &amp; SERVICE -

USED APPLIANCES

I

Real Estate General

10 am·5 pm

:+!.w=:~ = "N. o, that's not quite
1

'

We c.,.y Flahing IYppll•

992-2196
Middleport; Ohio
1-tl-tfc

STEWART'S
GUNS &amp;

*150,00. term• cash. to the

Herbal Gifts, Herb Wreaths,
Books, Sundials, Baskets,
Potpourri and other Herbal
Accessories.
'

,

Middltport, Ohio 45760

'

QOVERNMEHJ SI!IZEO -~~~

/

lumllhod, U25

161 North !e&lt;ond ·
'

-J

·--- mo.-..
qund, 1 yur ...... (ciMI for
~ "' a....plo, 114-

..,

Applications will be received in
the Veterans Service Office, 114
Mulberry Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio,
to employ a Veterans Service Officer for Meigs County.
. All applicants must be an honorably discharged veteran and a resident of Meigs County. Resumes
must be submitted by 12:00 Noon
on November 16, 1990.

neodoy. October 31 . 1990
Banchorga of Ohio. 300
ol 10 o'clock at 300 W. 2nd W. 2nd St.. Pomeroy , Ohio
St., Pomeroy. Ohio 46709 45789.
ltlrting at 1 miriimum bid of 110128 1tc

F1/l Hlt~e~t OpBn HDUIB
SAT., OCT. 27. -

Commercial &amp;
Residential
•Roofing
· •Siding
•Windows
Isn't ~ Wortlr Doing R9lt

9/ 271'90/ 1 mo.

81 · Home lmprove mt~r~ tl
82 - Piumbrn g &amp; He 81 tng

45 - Fur n1s tl ed Rooms

ANNOUNCES
'

REMODELING

992-3033

Servtce s

Houses tor Rent
Mobile Ho mM for R ~nt
Farm s tor Rent
Apartment for Rent

46 .. Space tor Ren t
4 7 - Wanted t o Rent
48 - EQutpm en t for Fj e nt
49 · Fo r l ease

CONNIE'S
.
OIUO RIVER HERBS and
EVERLASTINGS
.

BUILDING &amp;

3 Announcements

--~~,-~--~--~~~~
,

10-10·'90-1 mo.

· 35

41 4243 44 -

PAT· HILL FORD

79 - Camper s S. Mo1or Hom e5

34 - Bus mess Bulldt!JfJ$
l ot1 &amp; Acnage
36 - Rul Estat e Want e d

Now location:

We can repair and recare radiators CJnd
heater 'ores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gcis Tanks.

''*·

I? I"

11

71 . Autos for sate

41 HOUIH for Rent
2 b o d - -. u -.
Now point, corpotod. Dtpoo1t
-trod. Na lnoldo polo. \Jtlllolro - mont,
no poll, utllnt.,
pold. e~tb:l7.
2tO . . . . . . . -·both,
nowty Ni.Od'olod • - 1 not. 45
Furnished

;

PlUMIING &amp; IlEA nNG

EVElY

CALL

74 - Motcrcv eles
76 - Soa ts &amp; M ot ors fo r Sa l e
76 - Auto Pans &amp; Accessori es
17 -- Auto Repair
18 -Cempmg fQU IIJment·

32 - Mob• le Hom es to r Sale
3 3 - Far ms for Sal e

Oet ResuJtt Fad
3

Auto s f or Sal e

7 2 -- Tr ucks f o r S1l e
73 - Vans &amp; 4 V'10 ·s

Real Estate

Area Code 304
675 -- P! Pleaunl
4 58 - l eon
5 76 Apple G rove
7 7 3 Mu o n
88 2 - New Haven
8 9 5 - l ela rt
9 37 - Buttalo

71

2 3 - ProfMSIOnal Serv1ces

M as on Co . VV V

County

9 92 ·- Moddl epotl
Po m eroy
9 8 5 - Chester

311 - Von ton
245 - Rio Grande

21 - Bus•nets Opportunit y
2 2 - Mon._, to loan

exchalllfl'-~ ...

Area Cod e 6 14

441 - Ga ll•p ol•t
317 - Ch•h~r e

the

SER~ICE

Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do
it for you.
Very Reasonable
have Rtfere.nces
614·915-4110

$2

Tran sporlation

NO SUNDAT CAllS

l*"i\IIN

Ono bodroom
fW rom.
~~ month. DopooR roquiNd.
or m -:1571.
Routo2Aohlon, 1..,.1oto,S 114-112-2211 eftar 1 p.m. '·
mit• oouth Oolllpolto Locko, &amp;moll lumlohod 1111, , . , _..
publlo water, no NttrtotloM, ond ~ 304-8'15-1315.
_,. wtth rlvor - . , S04&amp;moll Fu.....,.. £ntGtoncy
1171-ZS31.
.,hoblo fW 1· poroooi, contwil
Rentals
,....,.,
~
· porlltna.
•

: 1 ton l

Bashan Building

10 VISITS
900
OPEN 'BY
APPOIN'I'MENT

18 - W•nted To D o

2·0 0 P.M FRIDA Y

foUnwinJ; telephont•
Galh• Co ...mt v
Area Code 614

17 - Mi! ceU•neo u s

- 2 00 PM THURSDAY

pa![e -~ cot:l' r

6 3 -- Lilies t oek

4-IS-16-Ifn

FREE ESTIMATES

OCTOBER.
SPECIAL

64 - H•v &amp;. Or1 in
65- Se ed &amp; Ft rt ilo Je r

9-21-10- I mo.

We Nf'f'd Ll ~ lin,rB!

4 TON MIN •.LIMIT

FIT and TRIM

61 - F•r m EquiJ) m ent
62 P· W~n ted to Buy

PH. 949·2101 ;
or Res. 949-2160

INTERIOR • EXTERIOR

10-24 I mo. pd.

Farm SurJplies
&amp; Lt vestuck

DOTTIE S. TUitNER, IIOI(R
HOUSES•LOTS#FARMS
COMMERCIAL

Daily

KIT 'N' CARLYLE!I by Lany Wrlaltt

. Apartment
tor Rent

3044~

N•wH_._...
...,..,
•I··
" Free Estim.tee" ,

HOME 614-992 -5692

44

tthW:CI!1J:

BISSELL
SIDING CO. ,

205 N. Se&lt;OIId Str11t
MIDDL£POIT, OHIO 45760
Olfi&lt;t 614-"2-2116

UNLIMITED

286-2689

57- Mus•c al lnstr umenu
58 - Frv tts &amp; Vegecabl•
59 - For Sal e or Trade

Ernplovment
Servtces

LINDA'S
PAINTING

$50.00 p11 ton
Lump or Stoker

5 1- Hou t eh old Good!!
5 2- Sporting Qogds •
53- An1 iQue s
54 - Mttc Merchandtse
55 - Buildmg Suppl t815
56 - Pets for Sal P.

3 - A nnouce m~ ts

"A clauif11ad adv ert tsement plac!Jd '"The Darty Sent tnel (ell ·
cepl - ct•sifitd d isplfY, Busmeu Ca rd .a nd legal nol •ces l
win also appear in th e Pt. Pfa•ant R eg 111e r and 1Me Galh
polis Oauly Tr ibYne. reachm g DVt:r 18.000 homes
COPY DEADLINE -

Merchandt se

1 - Card of Thinks
2 - In Me m o ry

8 / 27/'90/ 1 mo .

COAL

~~~"ar e for consecutiVe runs, br oken updlfV SVtftll be enarged
tnr ea~ h 11- a s Sfl l)arat e ad !l

35 I:.Ots• Acreage
A_ppn:nt. 1 ec~.
a ~did loC•,
cny wll•, owner
-~
rico Aoect, Polnl P
, WV

Fox Terrier

DEL!VEIED TO

RATES
Over 16 Words
Rate
Words
.
.2,D
$4 .00
15
.3D
$6 .00
15
.42,
$9.00
15
.60
513:00
15
.05 / doy
s1 .3D / day
15

LAFF-A-OAY ·

•VINYL S IOING
.'
•ALUMINUM SIDING :
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

&amp;
TRIM en! .

The

Oh~

lr==;;=;::;;:;;;:::=iTr:=======::;t=======::-r;::=====::=:;
SHRUB TREE

$1 SO Th:u~~nd

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

26, 1990

Announcements

Business Services

=Daily News delivers strike
NEW YORK (UPI) -Seve n of

October

,.

1171 Unoaln Ccnlli&amp;&amp;tlf TGM'I
C.... 4 Door. I CfiiMIK Wo.
,.,..... Air, All ~-=~Uioi
tnotdo ond 0111181
-- ·

-

r

�. ..
•
•

•

.~ Pllga

12

Friday. Octobar 26, 19!JO:

1.., ..,_,. Sent'......
•

~- n-:a..

Squads respond to 12 calls Thursday ·

·_.Mllder weather predicted for Buckeye State
develop over Lake Erie and
move Inland. Afew showers were
also occurring over the northeast

ll:y Ualted Preu latematloaal
Sky colldltlons were variable
over Ohio Friday mprnlng ~and
temperatures dipped below the
freezing mark before sunrise In
western Ohio. Another frost
warning was posted for Friday
night, for the eastern third of the
state. .
·
: · Mostly cloudy sides were observed across northeast and east
centrl!l Ohio Friday morning as
• lake effect clouds continued to

Suspect

(Coatlaaed from Pa1e 1)
Most Wanted.
Barrett was charged with
kidnapping the girl July 17 In
Chesapeake, Ohio. The youngster later was found alive In
Winston-Salem, N.C.
Investigators said Barrett was
arrested Wednesday In Versailles while driving a pickup
truck. Officials said a local
resident who knew Barrett had
Dally stock prices
spotted him and notified pollee.
(As of 10: SO Lm.) ·
Barrett was transferred to
Bryce and Mark Smtih
Indianapolis for a hearing In
of munt, Ellll A Loewl
federal court on a fugitive
warrant, then held for return to
Am El~trlc Power .... .......... 28
ClnciMatl.
.
I
Ashland
.Oil ,.. .. ................... 27!1,
He faces · federal and OhiO
AT&amp;T ................................. 33')8 - kidnapping charges, and has
Bob Evans .. .. .. .................... 12* "been Indicted by a grand jury on
Charming Shoppes .. . .. .. .. .. .. . Sli. charges of raping the girl.
City Holding Co................... 15
Federal Mogul.. ........ .......... ll\4
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .. ........... 15\4
Key Centurion .......... ........ ... 11
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Lands' End .. .. .... .. ...... .. ....... 9lj,
Limited Inc................., ...... 14'tl
THURSDAY . ADMISSIONS •
Multimedia 111c.................... 57
Laura
Arnold, Middleport; Laura B.
Rax Restaurants .................. 1
Scott,
Middlepon; Otis B. McRobbins &amp; Myers ........ ......... 17
Clintock,
Racine.
Shoney's Inc. .............. .. ..... .10\t
THURSDAY
DISCHARGES
Star Bank ........................... 16%
Roben
Imboden,
Johnnie Johnson,
Wendy'sint'l. ..................... 6'14
Goldie Lawson.
Worthington Ind .......... .. ...... 21 'l8

Stocks

extreme~.

Elsewhere, skies were generclear. Temperatures at
dawn v•rted greatly because of
the differing sky conditions and
ranged lrom the upper 20s In the
west to around 40 degrees In the
northeast.
Skies were to be mostly sunny
over ;Ill but the northeast Friday
ally

State highway patrol cites Rutland man Weather
A Rutland man was cited _In a
car-truck crash Thursday at 5: 30·
p.m. In Salisbury Township on
S.R. 7at the)unctionofBradbury
Road, according· to the GalllaMeigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
· Gregory L. VanMeter, 32, was
cited for failure to yield after Ills
1979 GMC ·J immy hit a 1984

Dance set
A round arid square dance will be
held on Saturday from 8 p.m. until
11:30 p.m. at lhe VFW Building in
Tuppers Plains. Music will be
provided by Rocky Mountain f!luegrass Band and the caller will
be Arthur· Conant. Donation of
$2.50 for adults and $1 for those 12
and under.

Fall Dinner .
Letart Falls P'fO Annual Fall
Dinner will be held on November 3
at 5 p.m. at Letart Falls Elementary
School.
The menue will be choice of
turkey, ham or · creamed b3ked
' chicken, mashed potatoes, noodles,
slaw,. roll, green beans or baked
beans, chocke of desserts, tea or
Racine Trick or Treat
coffee. Prices for lhe dinner are
Trick
or Treat for Racine Village
$3.50 for adults, $2 for children
will
be
Tuesday
from 6 p.m. until?
aged . 3-12. and children under 3
free. There will be games for the p.m. If you plan on panicipating,
leave the JlOICh light on.
children and door prizes.

-----Area deaths-Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home from 7-9 p.m.
tonight.

Hazel Gillispie

Hazel J. Gillispie, 81, of Ashton,
died Thursday, October 2A, 1990,
in St. Marys Hospital following a Robert ~oberts
short illne$5.
Born August 9, 1909 in Pliny.
Roben Lee Roberts, 62, Racine,
she was a daughter of lhe late Wil- died Friday at Holzer Medical Cenliam and Lillie M. (Fletcher) North. ter following an extended illness.
She was a member of Balls Chapel
Born on Marth 20, 1928 in GalChun:h in Ashton. .
lipolis, he was the son of the late
She was preceded in death by Corbett Roberts and Virgie Dewitt
two brothers and two sisters.
Roberts of GallipoliS.
.
Survivors include her husband,
.He was head mechanic for
Elra Gillispie of Ashton· two . R1chard and Sons Gravel, havmg
daughters, Vonda Pow~ of re~in March of 1989. . .
Gahanna, OH and Gladys Black of . Be~des his mother, surviVIng are
Huntington; two sons, Donald Gil- h1s wife of 40 years, Phebe Ann
lispie and Ranell McCarty both of Roberts, Racme; two sons, Randy
.: Ashton· a brolher AndersOn North Roberts of Waverly, and Michael
of
Gallipolis ' Ferry;
13 R~berts of Racine; a daughter1 Judi
grandchildren;
14
great· Vitale, Atlanla, Ga.; two SISters,
grandchildren and five great-great- Brenda Morgan of Rio G~e ~
grandchildren.
Cotbetll! Roberts of Gallipolis_; SIX
Service wm be held at 2 p.m. grandchildren; and several meces
Saturday October 28 1990 at Balls and nephews.
Chapel Omrch with 'the Rev. Max
Graveside services will be held
Spurlock officiating. Burial wiD be on Saturday at 4 p.m. at Letan Falls
in the Balls Chapel Cemetery. The Cern~~· with Rev. Roger Gnice
, body will be taken to the chun:h an offictaung._
.
· hour prior to the service.
There will be no calling hours.
: Pallbeilrs will be Timmy Powers,
In lieu of ftowers, donations may
; Scott Powers, Donny Gillispie, Roy be made to Meigs County Chapter
: McCarty, Gene Black and Lee of the American Cancer Socrety.
• Black.
P.O. Box 692, Pomeroy, Oh1o
45769.

6 Pc. Sectional

WI AM-FM

CGSH!tt,

; Mayor Fred. Hoffman an' nounced today that Trick or
: Treat Night In Middleport will be
' observed oil Tuesday, Oct. 30,
lrom 6 to 7 p.m .. for youths 12
~ years o! age and under.
· The fire siren will be sounded
: at the beginning and end of the

'

.

ing .....

·

\o!u

';

I

1

Pastel Plaid.

ONI ¥

NOT

$899 95

i

1499.95

. ONLY

~' .: Y,

$39995

Sofa, Chair

Gray &amp; Black.

t

,,,,

I

ON t ¥

'

$J 4995

i '! 'I ' 'i ~

$99995,

Curio .Cabinet
Oak.

NOT
1799.95

Wall Hugaer Recliners

Fleastitl, 4 cOlOrs.
:::9.95

.

OJII.y

$39995
Hutch
Almand

ONLY .

NOT

$3999$,

$699.95

I

VIDEO CHAIRS,
PICTURES~ DINEnES,
All FOR CHRISTMAS.

Student Desk
lit• oa1t finish.

~fl...s

OIILy

S699~

4 Pc. Bedroom .Suite ·

Heavy Table &amp;6 Chairs

Dark Pint

~:9'1.95

ONLy

Oak Finith

~~...

Maple Finish.

$79995

:':9.95

llue,

ONLy

$29995

MaUYt

$49995

::9.95

5 Drawer Chest

~~~-95

0f1Ly

On Finish.

· ONLY

$14995

:::9.95

$11995

Chair &amp; Ottoman

Desk w /Hutch Top

::,,90

$29995

&amp; hill- OfllI

Almond or Brass Dcrv Bed

Dark Pint

OIILY

Sofa, Chair, Trad.

Secretary Desk

.,

Beige w/IIM Flower. 0•1

$14995

$2·99 95

::...

Recliners

Corner TV-VCR Cabinet
Chlrry Finish.
::..95

-

y

ONLY

$2999.5

NOT
IJ99.U

9 Pc. Sectional

.

SUIIDAY, OCTOIEI 21, 1990
COUIITIY STEAl 1111110.""''''"'"'"'"""''"''

OIILY

••.at
'i"l.rPet... S~anw-1111
'• ....,~~... "-••~ ...... s-.
&amp;
1'-t CNU4 ._, 1.- with..._

NOT
1349'1.95

G~ary,

$199995

Ill! a.ttlflll ... ,,...,. lrtwltl Cefht, . . . . . . DowlhiMttll.
letll Froallly lnwtll, 51111 .,.... Mop h s.hllllrtti
Open 11 A.M. Deily; Sundey 10 A.M.

$19995

--

,

.

Beat of the Bendt"
More tb8n 1.,200 Mei88 County residents
admin_istered t1u 8hol8 this year - B-7
Safety tips, C08tunte parties, IJ'aditions,
gh08t stories and trick or b'eal - B-1

Inside·
Along tl)e River ......... B1·8
Buslness .......~···· ··· ···· · · ·D- 1
Comics- .. .... .............IDsert
ClasaUieds ................ D-2-7
Deaths ........................ A-3
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sports ................... .... C-1-8

Partly cloudy, fflps In mid
50s.

11 Sectlono, II Pill•*
A Multimedi• Inc . Newepaper

Middleport-Ponwoy-GalipQiii-Point Plaasant. October 28~ 1990

..

Gallia excels in voter
registration efforts

GALLIPOLIS - JeffreY E.
Smith has been named Gallla
County's Man of the Year In an
announcement by Thomas E.
Wiseman, president of the Gampolls Area Chamber . of
Commerce .
Smith, along with other honorees from ~urroundlng counties,
will be recognized at the Southeastern Ohio Regional Council
banquet Thursday, Nov. 8 at the
Ohio University Inn, Athens.
Smith _served as president of
the Gallla County Community
Improvement Corporation (CIC)
from 1987 until 1990 and was ·
Instrumental In formulating a
comprehensive mark!ltlng plan
for the organization. This Included designing the strategy to
position Gallla County for future
economic development, while
simultaneously enhancing · the
quality of life lor the county's
citizens.
Last year Smith spearheaded
the CIC's commltmen.t to the
Gallipolis · Streetscape Project.
The .CIC's donation of $75,000
toward the $1.1 mlllloa rev)taltzatlon In -the .city's downtown
dltrtrlct issuh!d· the viability ·of
the program . . Streetscape re-

suited In new sidewalks, modernizing utility services and adding
to the al)lblance of the historic
FFrench community.
As CIC president, he was also
successful In the Issue and
private placement of $2.7 million
In Economic Development Revenue Bonds for the construction
of a new dormitory at the
University of Rio Grande. The
tax-free bonds, approved by the
&lt;;IC and Gallla County Board o!
Commissioners, were placed
with ·seven area banks . This
action saved the university more
than $1 mlllon In lnteres t and
fees, compared to conl(entlonal
methods.
Smith, who earned his bache- ·
lor's and master's degrees at
Ohio University, has contributed
much of Ills time and energy to
education. He Is a member of the
Board of Trustees·and Executive
Committee at the University of
Rio Grande and a charter
member of the Board of Education of the 13-year-old Ohio
Valley Christian School In
Gallipolis.· .
.".
Smith Is execlltt'lrewl.ce,,.p_r:esldenr of Ohio Valley Biin'k ' In
Gallipolis~ where he serves on the .

GaHia litter

prev~ntion,

Grants totaling $130,433 have
. been approved for two litter
prevention and recycling projects In Gallla County. TheGallla
County Litter Control program
and· Riverview Recycling were
the (ll'ant recipients, accorlng to
State Rep. Mary Abel (DAthens) and State Sen. Jan
Michael Long (D-Circlevllle).
Comprehensive pro11ram activities which will benefl.t from
the receipt of the grant monies
Include recycling promotion, lit-·
ter collection and containment,
enhanced lit tie law enforcement,
and public lnlormation and
education.
Recycling operations grants
fund community recycling centers, satelllie activltle and curbside coilection programs oper·
ated by a non-profit corporation
or organization.
"I'm pleased to receive the

grant, and exptect the two the local communities to help
programs to continue working deal with . our solid waste probwell together," Terri Belville, lem here In Gallla County," said
Gallla County Litter Control Long.
director said Friday.
· The state Is awarding nearly $8
She also noted the recycling million In grants to Ohio comproject at Gallipolis Develo)l' . munltles for local litter preven·
ment Center, called Riverview tion and recycling projects In
Recycling, Is expandlpg, now 1991 .
making regular stops outside the
The grants are awarded by the
city to pick up materials for the Ohio Department of Natural
project.
Resources and:are administered
''Recycling Is becoming . ln- through Its Division of Litter
crMslngly more Important as a Prevention and Recycling.
solid waste management tool,"
Since Its creation by the O~tlo
Abel said. "Recycling extends
t)le life of landfills by reducing General ASsembly In 1980, the
the volume of solid waste. It also Division of Litter Prevention and
conserves natural resources and ~ycllng has Implemented a
energy . This grant will help statewide, comprehensive litter
enable our community meet the prevention and recycling prostate's. goal of reducing the waste gram. The il'ants are part of an
effort to help local communities
stream by 25 percent."
"This Is another exam (lie ofthe establish self-sufficient local prostate working hand In hand with grams throughout the slate.

JEFFREY E. SMrl'll
bank's Board of Directors and
Executive Committee. He has
been Involved . extensively with
the blink's ongoing building program, whlcl\lncluded the recent
completion of a new $1.2 mUllon
Trust and Operations Center.

GA-LLIPOLIS - Secretary of have been working to meet
Stole Sherrod Brown honored the . registration goals by Oct. 9, the ·
Gallla CountY Board of Elections registration deadline for the
Friday for achieving Its goal In November election.
Brown has also worked to
the 1990 "Knocking Down the
dismantle
other barriers to the
Barriers'' voter registration
polls,
through
programs such as
drive, a program aimed at
Improving
handicapped
accessiIncreasing voter registration In
bility
and
mail-In
voter
· Ohio's 88 C(lunties.
·
''I'm proud to announce that registration.
"The upcoming election InGallla County. has achieved Its
. goal of registering more Ohioans volves many Important questo vote," Brown said. "Thanks to tions for Ohioans, so we need to
hard work and dedication on the get as many people as possible
part of Ohio's county boards of registered and Involved," Brown
elections, mllllon.s of Ohioans are said. •'Too many people are
now registered to vote. Now It's letting others make decisions lor
up to them to visit the polls on them ~ Important decisions
affecting their lives." .
No'v . 6."
. Brown said that sl)tce he took
County boards of elections
office In 1983, his olflce cooper·'

'

ated .with private organizations
to register more than 1.5 mllUon
Ohioans to vote.
'
•'The United States has the
lowest voter participation of au
western democracies," Brown
sa'id. "While voter turnout has
been \lecllnlng nationally, Ohio
has maintained Its turnout rate.
Ohioans can take pride In our
elections system and continue to
make our state a national leader
In voter participation.
"We have reached !he polilt
where the only barrier to voting
left Is the one citizens create for
themselves - falling to go to the
polls on .election day," Brown
added. ''I urge all Ohioans to get
out to vote on Nov. 6."

. Smith, along with his wife
Marsha and children Nathan and
Sarah, reside in Gallltiolls.
Tickets for the SEORC Man ol
the Year banquet are available
tor$15 each and are on sale at the
Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce, 16 State St. The banquet
""'1 1$1A!;' at ~,30 ,p.m. with a
'·fiJ~t~ti~liy liinii- 6igtnnlngat5: 30
at the OU Inn.

recycling
projec~s receive $130,433 in grants

HALLOWEEN · SAFETY ~ Safety sbould
always be a coacern oi parenla ol small children
wben chooalng a costwne for Fright Night.
Rell&amp;her Ferrell, left, and HoUle Ferrell, right,
daughters of T.J. and Vickie Ferrell of Rutland,

POMEROY • Richard E. Jones,
candidate for Slate Represenlative
from lhe 94th Disuict (Athens, Gallia, and Meigs) today issued a
slatement in regard to a recent mail·
ing by the Ohio Education Association.
'11181 mailing, while i1 included
otbet .things, endorsed Jones' opponent, Rep. Mary Abel, (D·
Athens).
111 his statement Jones said:
"Over lhe past couple of days, I
have received several phone calls
from teaChers who have been supponers of my candidacy. They
were, fiBnkly, very upset over a
recent mailin$ they had received
from O.E.A. m which O.E.A. en.dorsed
opponent
"I don t have 111y p-oblem with
O:E.A. enclolling ':l~ne they
want. Alii have ever
is what
I ask of anyone else: loolc at both
our records and listen to whit we
both have 10 say about edUC81ion. I
find it suange 1hat Mary Abel, who
for months made only vague
siiiiCmetttl 'sli(JI)OrliDa educt lion',
and who now embraces virtually
every pan or my Position ori education llld especiaDy statements I
have made, for yeats, abow the

I
I

•
l

need for equity in funding, got the
endorsement. Even stranger is the
fact that she now says the funding
formula is unfair and that our
children are being shortchanged by
it, but has twice had the oppor·
tunity to change it and didn't and,
in fac~ voted Cot the formula."
But more troubling about the
O.E.A. mailing, according to Jones,
is that it, by an l!Sterisk indicates
his · 94th District race, and three
others! are 111l8et.ed legislative
liiCes. Jones qoot.ed from the mailing - "In other words, the opposing
c8lldidate has been ~wn money,
reponedly $500,000, m one case, to
use in his or her campaign 10 'defeat
the incumbenL"
"Let's get the facts straight,"
Jones continued. "Rich Jones certainly has not gotten SSOO,OOO from
anyone: I can't speak for the other
three candidates if anyone got
$500,000, but I can say, without
equivocation, that in my race, it
simply is not true. O.E.A. knows it
iii not true and deliberately misrepresented iL I have received le$5
than $600, !0 date, from tbe State
Party. I know fut I fiCt that the
Ohio DemOCIIlic Party bought ror
my opponent, men lhan $4,000

••

were busy perusing lhe many options available In
safe costumes al Dollar General Store In Pomeroy
on Friday. See related stories and photOs on page
81. ·

Cle8n air bill awaits signature
'WASHINGTON (UJ"I) ..,- Congress, breaking 13 years of '
legislative deadlock, sent President Bush a historic clean air bill
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Here a!'ld Ohio suburbs; Parkersburg,
Saturday th•t will require almost are compliance schedules set by W.Va. .-Marletta. Ohio;
Moderate · · Deadline ' 1996:
every major Industry to make the ~Jean air blll for Ohio and
deep and costly cuts In emlss!ons West VIrginia cities now violat- Charleston, W.Va.; C'tnclnnatl;
causing urban smog, acid rain, . lng federal health standards for Cleveland; Dayton-Springfield,
toxic hazards or ozone depletion. ozone smog. This Is the antici- Ohio; Toledo, Ohio;
The Senate voted 89-10 to give pated classlftcat!on of cities as
Marginal - Deadline 1993:
final approval to the bill, which determined by the Environmen- Canton, Ohio; Columbus, Ohio;
Greenbriar· County, W.Va.;
strengthens the 1977 Clean Air · tal Protection Agency.
Act to combat thickening air
Serious - Deadline 1999: Hun- Youngstown- Warren, Ohio.
pollution that health experts say tington, W.Va., . Ashland. Ky.,
kills or cripples tens ol thousands
of Americans each year.
The House approved the meaThe final bill emerged from 15
''Three- fifths of our people today
sure Friday 401-25.
live In areas where they are months of torturous congresWhite House officials have
forced to breathe air that Is not sional deliberations marked by
IDdtcated Bush will sign the bill clean.
Intense regional conflicts Into law, despite warnings from
''There are costs to cleanlngup especially over acid rain- and a
, Industry and several prominent our air, bu tthere are also greater titanic lobbying war · between
economists that It · will cost costs to doing nothing," Mitchell · Industry and environmental
thousands of jobs and accelerate
said. "Air that Is too pollu'ted for groups over how far and fast the
the nation's economic downturn. 'children to play In or for adults to nation should go .In reducing
DuriDg a three-hour Senate go jogging In Is air that under- pollution.
The legislation, which Is
debate, Sen. Steve S:Ymms, R·
mines the health o! every ·man,
Idaho, echoed that gloomy as• woman and chUd ."
slightly tougher and more expeJt-·
sessment In predicting the bill
slve than Bush's plan, seeks by
Mitchell and other lawmakers the turn of the century to:
would "put the country Into a
regulatory receallon. ... It's gave Bush a large ~easureotthe
.going to be very destructive to credit lor pasSilge of the bill,
-Clear the skies In most of the
which largely followed the outour ec:ollomy. n
96 cities' where smog now· exlines
of
the
wide-ranging
clean
But Seaate Democratic leader
federal health limits. Los
George Mitchell of Maine said air plan the president proposed In ceeds
Angeles,
the nation's smoggiest
.
the 13- ..year delay In updating July 1989.
city,
and
eight
others would have
Bush'S Initiative was a major
clean air laws had exacted an
at
the
latest. To achieve
untll2010
even more fearsome toll In c bange from President Ronald
those
goals,
the
bill tightens
envtromneatal degradation and Reagan, who steadfastly OJl'
posed clean air legislation pollution controls on factories
premature death and llltless.
. "All Americans have paid a . thrOughout the 1980s, sealing the .. and smaller facilities such as
gasoilne stations and print shops.
price for that delay," he said. congressional gridlock.

Ohio, W.Va. cities targeted

Jones· speaks out
against OEA choice

mr.

VISA

'

ONLY l

NOT
12499.95

$24995

139'1.95

2 Pll'li- of Ow T_.y a.ttw DiiiMIJ lith Seniti wttll Ow lleoiiLao•• Torll!r
Soua. Hot Geloloft Frllldi Fries eoll ,_ Choke of lloM•d• Colo Slow, ...

r

5 Pc. Bedroom

Washed Pint

.

Former CIC official
named Man ·of Year
by Gallipolis Chamber

. ·Af.

Almond &amp; Mauve.
NOT

$3 9995

~::9.95

8 ,"' ,,,,

Dinette w/4 Chairs
o•Y

ONLY

FISH &amp; CHIPS PLAna ................................. 13.04

Try o.
Seniti With

Full &amp; Tmn 8u nk Bed

Sofa, Chair ·E.A.

lc·ilnl ut

'

·

11999.95

FIIDAY, OCTOIII 26, .1990

CONIIi Will ., ...... · - .

lfoo

C-1

College football results

backonehour?~H~~~o-wam--=----------------~~

~*'&lt;11990

Black &amp; Silver.
NOT

$89995

~f:9'1.95

..

o•Y

Week••• Speelal•
.

Did you
rememhe.~ to
tum your clock

to:

Sectional

blues, includ·

:Middleport Trick or Treat night Oct. 30
period.
Residents who wish to treat the
children are requested to leave
their porch lights on. Motorlats
are urged to use extreme caution
during this time, due to the
numerous amounts of children
crossing the streets throughout
the village. ·

South Central Ohio
Mostly clear Friday night, with
adow· between 35 and 40. Mostly
sunny Saturday, with highs In the
middle 60s.
•
Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
Fair through the period, with
dally highs ranging from 55 to 65,
and overnight lows In the 30s.

EMPIRE FURNITURE

,. _ _ _ Meigs announcements--Hyma Sing set
A hymn sing will be held at the
Rutland United· Methodist Chun:h
on Sunday at 10:30 a.m. Dan
Hayman and the Faith Trio will
preSent the music. Rev. Arthur
Crabtree invites the public.

Chevrolet Cavalier driven by
Nancy E. Cohee, 35, of Rutland.
Cohee was l)eadlng north on
S.R. 7 and was entering the
Intersection when VanMeter,
who was traveling east on
Bradbury'Road, started to cross
S.R. 7-when he collided with
Cohee!scar and hit It In the right
side.

went to State Route 681 to an auto :
accident, David Fenl:ll taken by
Life flight 2 to Grant Medical Cen-:
ter at 6:50 a.m., Dennis Searles to..;
Grant by Life Flight I at 7:16am.;;
II :28 a.m., Rutland squad to .
Happy HoUow for Chit:stine Haley,:
taken to Veterans Memorial; 12:43 • p.m., Pomeroy to Routes 12A and 7,:
Elizabeth McKnight, Nicholas :
McKnight and Andy McKnight, :
taken to Veterans; 3:32 p.m, .
Pomeroy iaken to Mulberry Avenue :
for John Six, iaken to Veterans; ·
3:47 p.m., Racin~ squad to Fifth::
Street for Otis McClintock.
Veterans; 5: 14 p.m., Middleport·
squad 10 Pearl Street for James:
Pauley, to Veterans; 6 p.m., Life:
Flight 2 called to transport Six to·
Gran.l Medical Center; 5:50 p.m.,:
Middleport squad to State Route 7t
for a structure fire; 11:54 p.m.,.
Scipio Fire Depanment to Pageville;
ROad, sauclW'e fire at lhe Rinehart :
residence, back at 2:26a.m.
Vol 26 No. 38 .

Hospital news · ·

· Rabbit Show
The Rutland Civic Center will be
hosting an open class rabbit show
on Sunday. Judging will begin at 9
a.m. The public is inviled. This is
the Soulheatem Ohio Rabbit
Breeders Association Fall Fanrasy
-. Show.

Meigs Counl)' Emergency Medical Services responded to 12 calls
as. high pressure to the west for assistance on Thursday.
.
moves toward the state. Skies
12:19 am., Pomeroy squad to
were to become partly .to mostly · Main S1reet, Glaycia Davis to
sunny over the northeast por- Veterans Memorial Hospital; 2:48
tions of the state by afternoon as
cool winds blowing across Lake a.!D.• Pomeroy squad to Main Street
for Todd Ackerman, transported to
Erie subside.
&lt;
Holzer Medical Center; 6 am., Rut·
Highs Friday w(!re to range land, Middleport and Salem units
from 45 to 50 In the east and 50 to
55 In the west.

75 cents

Sunday

•

RICHARD E • .JONES ·
worth or advertising at just one
radio station in Athens County.
Even the mailing itself Sllys 'in one
case', so why are four races highlighted b lill!Sterisk.
"This a dim vice 10 me and to
all the members or O.E.A. who
want to be fair llld listen to all the
facts. When the O.E.A. throws out
a figure like SSOO,OOO, 1hey should,
first or indiclle IIJICCiftratly who
they are wlking about It is NOT
Rich Jones. And sccondly, in the in·
terests or fairness, if we want to

Is

an.

com(lafe campaign spcndinkS:S..!

have no objeclion to that
Mary Abel is ouiSpCIIding me
probably five-to-one; then let's put
(See lONES, pap .U)

I

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