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Page-16-The Daily ~inel

Pomeroy-Midtlaport. Ohio

Thul'ldlly. June 8. 1989

-

.---Local news briefs... - - . Ohio Senate...
Continued from page 1
fee's arid courts cost.
•
The !lrst witness called to testify for Plummer was a former
Ga111polis resident, Mary Lou King. whose testimony ended
Tuesday alter a day and a half on the witness stand .
Former Gallla County commission Paul D. Niday and former
mental health board member John Rice. have also testlfled.
Plummer was employed as executive of the G-J-M mental
health board in August of 1971 and removed from of(ice Sep\. 16,
1983 alter a three day hearing by a review group appointed by
the state mental health director. ·
The tria l is expected to last 10 days.

Pair transported to prison
Meigs County Sheri!! James M. Soulsby and special deputy
Pat Souls by, on Wednesday , transported James M: Brown, 35,
Middleport, and William "Zeke" Collins, Racine, to the Orient
Co rrectional Facility Reception Center to begin serving their
sentences Imposed recently by the Meigs Court of Common
Pleas.
In another matter. Joe W. Nuzum, 24, Ravenswood, W.Va.,
was arrested on Tuesday on an indictment charging forger y.
Nuzum will be appearing In common pleas court.

EMS has seven Thursday calls .
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
answered seven calls on Wednesday.
At 1:53 a.m., Middleport went to Oliver St. for Julia Boyles
who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Rutland at 2:20 a.m. was called to Meigs Mine No. 1 for
Merrill George, also' taken to Holzer Medical Center. At 6:25
p.m .. Rutland went to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Darrell Owsley to
Holzer Mecllcal Cente.r.
•
Pomeroy at 8:58p.m. went to Wes t Main St . for Jim Michael
. who was transported to Veterans Memorial .Hospltal
Middleport was called at 9:07 . p.m. to .the Rlverslcle
Apartments for Barbara Boling who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Pomeroy at 9: 27 p.m . went to the Maples Apartments for
VIrginia Phalln to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
·
Mldclleport went at 10: 20 p.m. to Lincoln St. for Robbie Clonch
who was taken to Veterans Memorial HospitaL
·

said. "The bllll sponsored in 1981
still hasn't been put into ef!eet
yet."
,Sen. Paul Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
chalnnan oltheSenateJudlclary
Committee, said he oppossed the
bill because the fear of lethal
injection was not a deterrent to
crime.
"The presence of the chali Is
more of a deterrent than the
lethal injection," said Pfeifer.
2:'ho had opposed the bill in

committee.
Sen. Robert W. Ney, RBarnesville, said he feared that
clianglng the method of execution would open the doors for an
attorney to find another way to
appeal a~d prevent executions.
Senators also defeated a bill
that would remove res trlctions
place on the use of natural gas or
synthetic natural gas for outdoor
lighting. The restrictions were
put Into effect during the energy
crisis In the mid 1970s.

CLEVELAND tUPI)- There
was one jackpot-winning ticket
sold for Ohio's Super Lotto
drawing Wednedsay night, makIng the holder eligible to claim
the $3 million prize.
The name of the winner will be
announced · after the winning :

• .
tlcl!et is redeemed, a lottery
commission spokesman said
Thursday. The winning numbers
were 8, 9, 26, 28, 30 and 41.
Tbe prize will be. paid In 20 _
annual Installments of $120,000
after mandatory federal taxes.

Weather

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark SmHb
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ........... 27~
AT&amp;T ............................... 36'&gt;(.
Ashland 011 ........................ 42
Bob Evans .......................... 15
Charming Shoppes ............ 16¥,
City Holding Co ... , ........ .... 16~
Feqeral Mogul... ........ :.:.... 56¥,
Goodyear T&amp;R : ............ ;..... 56
Heck's ................................ %
Key Centurion .. .. ............ .. 13'4
Lands' Encl ...... .. ............... 28'4
Limited Inc ......... ........ ..... 32lt
Multimedia Inc ................. 100¥,
Rax Restaurants .. .. .. ....... .... 23A
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .... ...... 18'4
Shoney's Inc ............. , ....... lllt
Wendy's Intl. :...................... 6
Worthington Ind ............... 22'4
(Charming Shoppes regular
quarterly $.03 dividend payable
July 17; shareholders of record
oo·June 19)

Ohio I..nttery
Pick 3

108-105

226

Pick 4
4052

Page 4

In addition to· the jackpot
winner, 77 players picked five of
the ,numbers to win $1,000 each,
and' 4,464 players chose four of
tbe numbers to -w ln-$75 apiece.
Ticket sales tota)(d $3,283,360
and the total prize· PaYOUt was

By UnHecl Press International
Soutb Central Ohio
Tonight: Mostly cloudy, with a
chance of showers and thunderstorms ~ Lows wlll be between 60 $3,411,800.
and 65. Light and variable winds.
In the accompanying Kicker
"I'he supply of natural gas Is Chance of rain 50 percent.
game,
there also was one winner
plentiful and the restrictions
Friday: Showers likely, with a of the $100,000 grand prize. The
should be limited," said Sen. Ben chance of thunderstorms. Highs
wln~r Kicker combination was
Gaeth, R-Deflance.
will be near 85. Chance or rain 70 794688.
But Branstool said lifting the percent.
,
In addition to the one ticket
restrictions would be a waste of a
· Ohio's Exlended Forecast
that
had the six Kicker numbers
natural resource and that "we'd ·
Salurday tbrourb Monday
In
order,
four players had thebe doing future generations an
Fair Saturday and Sunday, first live, which pays ~.QOO; 48
injustice."
with a chance or showers and
Senators votecl 17-14 against thunde~storms Mooday . Highs had the first four, which !IBYS
lifting the restrictions, but at the will be between 75 and 85. Ear Jy $1,000; 498 had the first three, .
end of the session, Gaeth movecl morning lows will be between 55 which pays $100; and 5,065 had
the first tWo, which pays $10.
for a reconsideration of the bill and 65.
and left it pending on the
calenclar.
continued from page 1

Stocks

Pistons win
Game Two,

One person ha~ winning lotto ticket

Continued from page 1

•

•

•

Vol.40. No.25

June

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesclay admlssslons
Rose Bowen, Coolville; VIrginia
Phalln, Pomeroy; Barbara BolIng, Middleport. ·
Wednesday discharges - Audrey McQuaid, Stephanie Nuzum,
Bette Morrissey.

tee

Biggs, president of the
Monroe CoiUity' Commission;
lyle McClure, Charles McCorvey,
Silas Tucker, and Alex Roberts,
Monroe CoWity Commissionen;
Also, Charles Dett, Monroe
County rax collector; Fonda ~elton, tax assessor; Shall Dunmng,
chairman .o f the Monroeville Industrial Development Board: Melin FoWcel president of Monrot!
v
•

car-

Colwell; ancl· In another case,
$1,213.96 from Samuel A. Gibbs.
FIJially, a case lnvolv1ng the
Household Finance Corporation
versusGeneandSharonWisehas
been cllsmlssed.
Flies !Or dissolution
Sharon F . Drasko and Joseph
E . Drasko Jr., both of Racine,
have filed for a dissolution of
their marriage In the .Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.

--Area deaths--Isabel Wilson
Former Racine resident ,
Isabel Bentz Wilson, of Columbus. died Wednesday. She was a
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William S. Bentz:
Surviving are two sons and
daughters-in-law, Jerry and VIrginia Wilson and Paul and
· Tamara Wilson, of Columbus;
three granddaughters, one
grandson and three great grandchildren. Local relatives are
nephews. Paul and Brooks
Sayre, both of Syracuse.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, two brothers and
seven sisters.
Graveside services will be
Friday, 11 a .m., at the Plants
Cemetery, Letart Fails, with
Rev. Roger Grace officiating.

Donald Simon
'

Donaicl A. Simon, 56, of Columbus, died Tuesday at Riverside
Hospital.
Mr. Simon was a son of the late
George M. Sr. ancl Madallne

Farhat Simon. He was a veteran
of the Korean War.
Survivors include his wife,
Yvonne Simon; two daughters
and sons-In-law, Cheryl and
Douglas Goclard and Debbie ancl
John Sheppard; a son, Donald S.
Simon; four brothers and s.! stersin-law. Joseph and Mary Simon,
Charles and Marion Simon, Fred
and Peggy Simon, and of Pomeroy, Paul and Allie Simon;
another brother, Thomas J .
Simon; a sister-in-law and
brother-in-law, Theresa and
George Fares; and numerous
nieces ancl nephews.
In addition to his parents, he
was preceded In . death by a
brother, George M. Simon Jr.
Funeral Mass will be 10 a .m .
Friday at St . Timothy's Catholic
Church, 1088 Thomas Roacl,
Columbus. Burial will be in
Resurrection Cemetery. Friends
may call at the John Quint and
Sons Funeral Home, 1177 W.
Fifth Ave .. Columbus, on Thurs·
day from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Prayer service will be at 8: 30
p.m. Thursday.

2 Sections, 14 Pages
25 Cents
A Muttimedia Inc. N&amp;WIP&amp;Par

1989 .

'Odor' missing at wood

CoWity Chamber of Commerce;
Tom Tippy, vice presidenl-miU
manager, Alabama River Pulp;
Robert Frese. executive vice president, Alabama River Woodlands;
and Brian Rundle, vice president,
·P&amp;W Alabama River Newsprint.
C
. ,..._
'
onsltllclion '-;"· '
?Jte dele$Bnon ~as expected 10 .
amv~ back an Huntington Tlnarsday
evenmg.

pulp plant in Alabma
By CHARLES A. MASON
OVPStalf
MONROEVILLE, Ala. - You
couldn't smeU that "horrendous
odor'' that everybody says you do
when you enter a wood pulp plant.
You had 10 practically walk right up
to the machinety on site before
your nose detected anything that
stank.

Meigs Court news
In the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas, the Motorists
Mutual Insurance Company, In
care of Kriner and Peters Co..
L.P.A., Columbus, Is seeking
$4,594.14 from Leonard G. Paden,
Memphis. Tenn.
·
Sherman White has · been
awarded $2,300 from Kathy L.
Pierce In a default judgment.
The Farmers Bank and Savlngs Company has been awarded
$1.671.24 from Dean. and Alina

•

Mason group finds

Mason ...

Otha

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
upper 50s. Salurday,
sunny. Higbs In mid 70s.

Analysis

1989 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE CLASSIC
BROUGHAM

CAPRICE STA. WGN.
.
List
Discount -1,250.
Rebate -750

"LOADED"

#1199
3 IN STOCK

9 PASSENGER
Lilt 517,918
Discount -1 ,200

$)7

NOW

Cauette. Defogger

ust •13,273

Discount -600
Rlbtite -1,000

$9 973

NOW

Three injured in two Meigs mishaps

1989 CHEVROLET
CORSICA

Ust $11,173
Discount -600
Rebate -600

Auto .• Air. PS. PB.

VIEW PAPER CU1TING· MACHmES - A machine In Claiborne, Ala., wood pulp plant
porUon of the Mason County area cielagalion Is · Thursday afternoon.
show~ above viewing a huge paper culling

718

1989 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER
#1091

...... ..,

#1261

NOW

#1133
Auto, Air, Oefoaaer.
Cauette, V-8 • "More

1989
S-10 TAHOE

S-10

Lilt $10,431

List 58,329
Rebate -500
Discount -500

NOW

•

#1248

'" $7 329

$9 1 1

1989 CHEVROLET FULL SIZE
CONVERSION VAN
3ft. :roN
360 V-8 ENGINE

STARTING AT

61N

$17 900

STOCK

$11,118
Discount -600
Rebate -1 .000
List

NOW - $)

~
6 IN STOCK

18

List 116,898
Discount -1,000 '

Rebate -1,500

Slater was listecl In poor
condition this •morning, a hospital spokesperson said, •while
Beaver was listed in satisfactory
condition. Cleland, driver of th'e
stationwagon. was not lnjurecl.
The accident is still under
investigation. the patrol saicl.
According to the patrol, neither
Slater nor Beaver was wearing a
helmet .
The other motorcycle-car accident occurred at 12:15 p.m.

Thursday in Letart Township on
TR. 96, 0.9 of a mile north of TR.
96.
Troopers said a 1986 Honda-250
riclden by Chad A. Wolfe, 18,
Racine, ·went left and collldecl
h~ad-on with a car driven by
John D. Roush, 28, R11clne.
Damage was moderate to the car
and minor to the motorcycle.
Wolfe was airlifted by a LifeFlight helicopter to Grant Hospl·
tal's Trauma Center at Columbus. His condition was reported
as satisfactory this morning, a
hospital spokesperson said.
The acciclent ts still under
investigation.

1989 OLDSMOBIE
CUTLASS CIERA

198C) CADILLAC
SEDAN DEVILLE
$26,440

.-3,000

$23,440

.. _.
_,

List 514,736
Discount -1,000
Rebate -1,000

NOW - S12

...

Another letter protesting the
noise from the Philip Sporn Plant
floating across the river to the
villagE&gt; of Racine will be sent to
the plant management, It was
decided at a meeting of Racine
VIllage Council Monday night.
It was reported that there is a
new manager at the plant and the
clerk was authorized to direct a
letter to him as a reminder of an
earlier complaint lodged with the
company .
Maypr Frank Cleland reported
that he has received an answer
from the Bureau of Workers
Compensation as how to calculate the rate charges, noting that

.

~----=--'

~

·~--

•

#1137

736
DELTA 81
List

#1216

Reba tit
Discount

NOW

117,256
-1,000
-1.500

. $14,756

1989 CADILLAC
BROUGHAM
List S29,601
Discount -3,000

S26,601

a

WOOD PULP PLANT FLUME- This flume conveys water for
transporting logo from nearby river In Claiborne, Ala., for the
wood pulp plant In thai area. AMason Countydelegalion loured the
facility Thursday afternoon. (Charles Mason photos)

Council pro-tests plant noise again

S16,700

S1 398

List
Discount

was also injured. Slater and
Hudson; were flown by LifeFlight helicopter to Grant Hospital Trauma Center at Columbus.

AS LOW AS

1989 OLDSMOBILE .
CUTLA.SS SUPREME

NOW

Three men were Injured Thursday in two separate motorcycle
accidents In Meigs County according to the Gailla-Meigs Post.
State Highway Patrol.
Robin Slater, 27. Dexter. was
. "· in]ufed when his 1973 Kawasaki 900 went left of center and
collided head-on with a 1977
Dodge statlonwagon driven by
Jack D. Cleland, 42. Micldleport.
The accident occurred at 3:12
p.m. Thursday on CR. 4, 0.7 of a
mile west of CR. 10. In Salem
Township. There was heavy
· damage to both vehicles.
A passenger on the motorcy cle. Mike A. Hudson. 16. Dexter ,

_1989 CHEVROLET
ASTRO VANS

OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS CALAIS

#1161

Rebate -760
Discount· -660

#1347

The workers make on an average
of $10 bucks an hour and the
county tax base has just about
, tripled since Parsons &amp; Whittemore
of London came to town here about
17 years ago. They buy the wood
locally, so the plant here has given
the Monroe County economy a
double boost in purse strings .
The natives like the company,
what it stancls for and what it can
do for them in the future, especially
when a $400 · million newsprint
plant SlartS up a year from now and
the company finishes building a
second wood pulp plant right next
to the first Ill cost of $700 million.
Monroe County, Alabama, is
· only sli!lht!Y smaller than Mason
County m population, although it's
Alabama's eighth-largest county
with more than 900 square miles,
and MonroeviUe, the county seat, is
only slightly larger than Point
Pleasant. The dozen Mason
Countians who lrllveled to MonroeviUe Thursday could have been
loolcing in. a mirror as similarity afContlnued on page 10

APPEARANCE IMPROVED - Through the
·combined efforiB of members of lbe Community
Builders Club of lbe Reedsville-Long Bottom
area, the Olive Township Trustees and donations

from private Individuals, a new alp baa been
lutalled and new low-lying shrubs have been
planted at the Reedsville Cemetery.

'

#1203

Cemetery's appearance . improved
by community builders organization
By NANCY VOACHAM
SenUnel New• Staff
As In other of Meigs County's
small communities. when civicminded residents In the
Reedsville-Long Bottom area see
a need, they set out to meet that
need.
Members of the Community
Builders Club of the ReedsvilleLong Bottom are~ became con. cerned when overgrown evergreens at • the Reedsville
Cemetery became a traffic hazard. Motorists had to nose their
vehicles out onto the highway
from the cemetery, explains a
CBC member, because they
couldn't see around the
evergreens.
So the CBC decided to sponsor
a project to remove the old
evergreens and replace ....rith

new. Form letters were mailed
out to families, both In the local
area and outside the local area,
with burial plots at the cemetery.
Approximately 75 people responded with private donations
that amounted to a total of $2,000
for cemetery Improvements.
Through the cooperation of the
Ollve Township Tru1~. the
$2,000 was stretched to do the
most aoqd It could. The trustees
removed the old, overgrown
plantlnp, and prepafed the
ground for the planune of the new
ev~rgreeps. Tbe trustees also
removed a11 aelng storaee buildIng, plan~ new grass on the
site. and Improved tbe driveway
of the cemetery. with limestone.
·A new stone-based redwood
marker was alao made (l!lllalble

with proceeds from the donations. It was Installed among the
65 new plantings which Included
miniature barberry, euonymus
and other low-lying shrubs.
The project apparently · just
grew and grew. And the difference In appearance at the cemetery Is quite noUclble to those
wbo live In the area and see the
cemetery most often.
With a little money that's left
over frcm the f1111d drive, the
CBC Is al10 havtne the flaepole at
the cemetery painted, and a new
flag wlll be obtained and floWn on
special occaalona. .
But the cemetery Ia not the only
project that CBC baa unclertaken
reeently. Tbe Installation of a
second m81\lrer (to replace one
'
·Centlnued on pqe 10

Woomer to
die in chair
next week
A former resident of Point
Pleasant and Huntington. W.Va
Is scheduled to die next week In
the electric chair at Columbia.
S.C .. after the South Carolina
State Supreme Court denied an
appeal Thursday .
Ronald Raymond " Rusty"
Woomer, 34, wlli be executed for
the February 1979 shotgun killing
of Delia Louise Sellers of Georgetown, S.C.
The execution has been set for 1
a.m. Friday. June 16.
Woomer has been on trial
several times In the past decade
and a J&gt;revlous death sentence
against him was reversed.
The last person to be executed
In South Carolina was James T.
Roach, on Jan. 10, 1970.
U Woomer is executed, he
would be the third person In
South Carolina to be put to death
since the U. S. Supreme Court
reinstated the death penalty In
1976.
Now the court hu been, petitioned to change Woomer's death
sentence to life In prison, order a
new sen tenctng trial.or wapone
the execution until the ·outcome
· of other pending cases against
WQO!Iler.

the village is on a "shared
liability' ' with all villages of
similar size In the state.
It was also noted that the tax
commissioner has Issued the tax
exemption certificate for the
Nease property which was recently acquired by the village. A
tax exemption application from
the five acres purchased- from
Junior Salser will have to be filed
by Oct. 1, Clerk Jane Beegle
reported.
Council rejected the proposal
from Dr. Harold Brown regarding acceptance of a water line
and hydrant to Elwood Terrace
Apartments. Accorolng to the

~Jerk. the Council decided "It
would not be In the best public
Interest to accept the easement. " •
However, Mayor Cleland will
meet with the Board of Public ·
Affairs to secure their opinion on :
the proposal.
Several items needed by the ,
s treet department were approved for purchase. It was noted
that a number of reslclents are
putting limbs and grass clippings
In the ditches ancl Council
warneq that there Is an ordinance prohibiting this.
Councilman Henry Bentz was
authorized to get an estimate for
(Continued on page lO)

Local news briefs
Marijuana confiscated by sheriff
Charges of growing marijuana are pending against Chris
Capehart, 26, of Mldclleport. Meigs Counly Deputy Sheriff
Jlmmer Soulsby reports.
Deputy Soulsby reported that about 9 a.m. Friday he was
joined by Deputies Dqn Snider and Mark Boyd. a nd Middleporl
Chief of Police Sid Little for a search of the second floor
apartment of Capehart on Laurel St. where several mar ijuana
plants were found.
Capehart gave consent to 1he officials for the search. Deputy
Soulsby said .
The plants were reportedly in the windows of the aparlment
and visible from the street although an attempt was made to
remove them and conceal the plants. the deputy reported.

Flag reported stolen
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that his
department has been notified that an American flag has been
stolen from the Temple ~ernetery In Columbia Township.
Anyone with lnforma~lon regarding this theft Is asked to.
contact the sheriffs office. Information will be kept
confidentiaL

Pinewood Derby set Saturday
There's the Kentucky Derby, the Brown Derby. the Soapbox
Derby, and then there's the Pinewood Derby. which Is wbat's
happening this Saturday In Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Scout Troop 249 will hold a Pinewood DerbY. on
Saturday at the Court Street mini-park. and anyone who would
like to give Pinewood Derby a try, may do so for a quarwr. A
track wlll be set up on which wooden cars, mad£' by the scouts.
will run. The cars are moved only by gravity and a whole lot of
~ heerlng from the respective car builders. Allin all. it makes for
Continued on paee 10

-

�Commentary
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oillo
DEVOTED TO T,!IE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

. ~lb
ts:m~
q,v

.......

~._ ,,._,c::~,­

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFUCH
General Manqer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlaher/ControUer
A MEMBER of Tile AIIIOCiaied l'rells, lnlalld Dally Preo&amp; A_.
dation and the AmwleaD Newspapt!l' Publlsben AIIOdailoiL
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They abould be t..o tbu300
wordll loa g. Alllellero are subject lo edlllng and mUll be algood wHh
aame, address aod telephone number. No aulped IMiera wUI be publlabed. Leiters should be In good taste, addr-lng la&amp;ues, aol penonaH-

IIeo.

·

Bush looking·
beyond containment
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON- President Bush Is a lucky man. The sea changes
in the communist world are presenting him with a golden opportunity
to promote democracy peacefully where totalitarianism once
rei gned supreme.
No matter how the current political upheaval In China plays out.
democracy appears to be on the march. Sooner or later, the Chinese
people are expected to prevail. It's a revolt of the masses with the
international community rooting them on.
In Poland, the first free election In more than 40 years put the
Solidarity trade union candidates on top of the heap. and the Warsaw
communist leaders said they would abide by the results.
·
The contagion of freedom is sweeping through other nations In the
Eastern bloc as Mikhail Gorbachev pursues perestroika reforms and
a new openness. Refreshing, daring · criticism of the Kremlin
leaderslllp, unheard of In the past, Is a new phenomena In Moscow .
All of this bodes well for the West. Bush has become president at a
time when the death knell of communism Is being heard around the
world. He can spur the transformation to freer societies In many
ways. The economies of the Soviet Union and other Eastern European
nations have h!t rook bottom. They are looking to the United States for
assistance and trade.
On the other side of the coin, Bush himself Is being pushed to go
"beyond containment" by European allies, particularly West
Germany. as ihe Soviet threat appears to be lessening.
Bush's predecessors had all they could do to run In place and to
make sure that Soviet expansionism gained no more territory.
The cold war began In 1946. There were temporary thaws at times,
particularly In the era of Nlk!ta S. Khrushschev In the late 1950swhen
the Soviet leader and President Dwight D. Eisenhower moved toward
a philosophy of coexistence. The possibility of the free world and the
communist bloc living side by side In peace and harmony gave new
hope to humanity.
The 1956, Soviet crushing of the Hungarian revolution was complete
by then and Khrushschev was denouncing the evil Stalinist regime In
a secret speech before the Communist Party In Moscow. It was the
first major post-war break In ·the Soviet ranks and exposure of the
gulag that Josef Stalin Imposed on a completely regimented state.
But attempts of the neighboring communist satellites to let a little
sunshine In were brutally put down as In the "Prague Spring" In 1968
when Lyndon Johnson had to forgo plans for a rapprochement with
the Soviets. ·
Through I( all the United States maintained a policy of
containment, but at the same time steered clear of any superpower
confrontation because of the · nuclear standoff, or what Winston
Churchill called "the sublime Irony of mutual terror." .
The United States and the Soviet Union came closestto pushing the
button during the Cuban Missile crisis. Khrushschev blinked and
removed the Soviet missiles, aimed at the United States, from Cuba.
In other situations. direct confrontation was avoided , but the
United States supported rebels against Soviet-backed regimes. A
major success for that" kind of effort was registered with the
withdrawal of Soviet troops from Afghanistan eight years after the
Russians lnvad\!(1 the country.
There is some concern that as the European Community grows
closer economically and politiCally, as It soon will, the United States
will be aced out. On his recent journey to Rome, Brussels, Bonn and
London, Bush declared that the United States will remain a power In
Europe. But Inevitably the relationship Is expected to change and
Washington won't be calling all the shots.

Letters to the editor
Reader 'steamed up'
Dear Editor:
It' not very often that I get all
steamed up. But today when I
read about the folks In Pomeroy
not being able to park on the
sidewalks not even lor church Is a
disgrace. Can't council find
something else to d9 that Is more
useful like new water lines or fix
big holes In the road like the one
by Dr, Harold Brown's offlee? I

Peg1 2-The Dely Sa tllnal

have nothing but the greatest
'respect for Dottle Turner for
standing up for what she thinks Is
r_lght. That's her land. I say go for
lt. Another thing, If folks wni look
around every member of the
council has a parking place.
Print this please.
Roy Brunty
Pine Grove Road
Racine, Ohio 45771

•

:Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Friday.. June 9, the 160th day of 1989 with 205 to follow.
: The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The·morning stars are Mercury and Saturn.
• The evening stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
• Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They Include
Russian Czar Peter the Great In 1672. composer Cole Porter In 1893,
actor Robert Cummings In 1910 (age 79), guitarist and recording
pioneer Les Paul In 1915 (age 74), RobertS. McNamara, former
defense secretary and World Bank president, In 1916 (age 73), soul
~Inger Jackie Wilson In 1934, and actorMichaeiJ. Fox In 1961 Cage28).
On this date In history:

In 1898, Britain leased Hong Kong from Cl\lna for 99 years. The
territory returns tb Chinese rule In 1997.
. In 1934. Donald Duck made his first screen appearance In "The
Wise Little' Hen."
In 1943, Cohgress passed an act authomlng employers to withhold
Income tax payments from salary checks.
In 1984, an Italian prOHCUtor's report linked the Bulgarian secret
service to the 1981 assassination at tempt on Pope John Paul II. Three
Bulgartana were Indicted but a trial failed to prove charges against

!hem.

"There

• A tboulllt.for tll4t day: Comedian Groucho Marx wrote,
Is
Qne WIY to ftlld Otltlf a man II honest: uk him. If he says •yes,' you
!mow he '- crDOked. ••
•

,

Houston comes from behind
again to edge SD; Reds win

Pomeroy-Midcl1patt. Ohio
Friday, June 9, 1989

WASHINGTbN- It Is nearly
Impossible for a challenger to
unseat an Incumbent member of
Congress, short of proving the
veteran Is an ax murderer. And
even that Is no guarantee.
The power of a "sitting"
legislator to raise money and
wow the voters with glitzy
commercials means the Incumbent can count on re-election.
And present federal laws to
equalize things simply are not
working.
New ligures developed by the
non-partisan. Citizens Against
Political Action. Committees
show that sitting senators spent a
total of $101 million In the 1988
· election. Their opponents had a
piddling $56 million. In the
House, .· the . margin 'was even
more astounding - $156 million
spent by Incumbents and $50

Jack Anderson and Dale V(Jn Atta

million by upstarts.
The shbo-ln candidates, wbo
are least In need of big bucks
during a campaign, often get the
lion's .share of the money
-anyway.
House Democratic leader Thomas Foley., 0 -Wash .. and House
GOP leader Robert Michel, Rm.. both got more than half a
million dollars In PAC money for
the 1988 election:
Dan Rostenkowski, D-111., the
chairman of the House Ways lind
Means Committee, and Rober
Matsui, D-Calif., a member of
that committee, averaged about
80 percent of the vote over the
same period, and each collected
more than $400,000 from PACs
last year.
John Dlngell, D-Mich., chairman of the· House Energy and
Commerce· Committee, aver-

a1ed 71 percent of the vote, but he
accepted more than $460,000 In
1988 PAC money. So did Thomas
Luken, D.Ohlo, who got 60
percent of the vote.
Philip Stern, who beads Citizens Against PACs, said "It Abe
Lincoln were running In llllnois
against Dan Rostenkowslll or
Robert Michel, he wouldn't have
a prayer, not· because of merit,
but because or sheer money.''
Because the system Is out of
whack, reformers are suggesting
some radical changes. Those
reformers Include Stern, former
Federal Communications Com:
missioner Nicholas Johnson,
Curtis Gans of the Committee for
the Study of the American
Electorate and a tiny handful of

federal Ieglslaton.
One plan would require broadcasters to give free time to
challengers, or at leut to tllelr
parties, based on the same
formulas used lor dll trlbutlng
federal election funds.
· Another proposal would Ioree
broadcasters to give discounts to
candidates who appear In person
and talk about the Issues rather
than rely on canned
commercials.
Some reformera, such as Rep.
Bariley Frank, D-Mau:, believe
public fundlnl of elections Is the
real solution. But giving chaltenlers more air time and
promoting more honest and
direct advertlllng would be a
useful secondary approach.

OUT AT HOME - Giants rlrht fielder Candy
Maldonado Dies Into home plate, but Is out at lhe
plate after advancing· on a hit by teammate Ken

~cHoot~ .
·.

AMERiCAN
DANe~

•

I

You

ca~'t

Higher education opens the
door of opportunity for many
young people, and It also pro. motes the well-being of society as
a whole by Improving the skills
and productivity of our
workforce.
·
That Is why the federal government helps many people receive
a higher education through the
guaranteed student loan (GSL)
program which shares the cost of
higher education between the
student and society as a whole.
For Its part, the government
guarantees that a student loan
will be repaid and makes the
Interest payments on a GSL
while a student Is In school.
The loan recipient's responsibility In turn Is to assume Interest
payments after graduation and
to pay back the loan out of the
higher Income that the additional
education enables the borrower
to earn. So, a GSL Is a two-way
street and as long as each side
upholds Its end ofthe bargain, the
public generally perceives the
GSL program to be a good deal
for both. Unfortunately however, .
many GSL recipients do not
uphold their end of the bargain.
Since 1966, the default rate on
student loans has risen from
about 7% to almost 14% last year.

squeeze blood from a turnip
Last year, defaults cost the
taxpayer $1.4 billion, which was
43% of the entire Io11n program's
budget. This year, student loan
result, many find that they
defaults are expected to cost the cannot complete the programs
U.S. Treasury about $1.8 billion.
that they begin.
In 1986, Congress passed legis·
Stlll others lind themselves In
latlon Intended to force student marginal trade and technical
loan defaulters to honor their schools that fall to deliver on
obligations. This new law their advertised promises to gain
enabled the federal government good jobs for their graduates.
to crack down on those who had Thus, many of these loan recipthe means to repay their loans Ients all to often find themselves
but refused to do so. However, either unemployed, or with Insufthe most recent climb In the ficient earnings to pay back their
student loan default rate bas loans as planned.
been caused by another type of
No one II quite yet sure what to
GSL recipient. That Is, those do · about this newest class of
former students who would pay student loan defaulters. from
back their loans, but are finan- the standpoint of the students, .
cially unable to do so.
the Ideal solution would be to
This problem stems from the Increase federal grant programs
fact that while the cost of private so that low Income students
and public colleges has risen by would not have to rely as heavily
an estimated- 40% over the last upon loans. However, given the
eight years, federal student aid current budget realities this Is
has risen by only 3%. So, many not a feasible alternative.
low Income students who would
Therefore, other alternatives
have formerly relied upon grants are being discussed to prevent so
to finance their education have many students from defaulting.
turned Increasingly to student Former Secretary of Education
loans. Unfortunately, many of Bennett bad proposed cutting
these students have very limited · schools off from federl!l aid
resources and lack the necessary programs If more than 20% of
academic discipline and back- their students default on student
ground to make a go ollt. As a loans. It Is reasoned that such an

NBC Television inadvertently blacks In the proposition that
got Its tall caught In a crack they are superior to whites In
recently when It broadcast a certain particulars, It might
documentary exploring why equally well be argued that they
blackS dominate certlln sports, are Innately Inferior to whites In
Including baseball and .basket- other particulars. And that conball. No one, I am sure, will tention Is, of course, amoqother
accuse NBC of consciously prom- things, one of the key tenets of
oting racist opinions. But lt'was racism.
condemned for reinforcing a
The result Is that foes of racism
"racist assumption" anyway be- have often preferred to argue
cause two academic researchers that there II no Inherent differInterviewed on the proeram were ence between the r1ces of manallowed to present what they kind In regard to athletic ability
claimed was .proof that physical
(or, by extension, In any other
differences between whites and regard) . All differences - and
blackl partially explain the there manlfestty ·are d!ffl!rences
mystery.
- muat lnatead be attributed
Perhaps NBC wa foollw'dy alma.t entirely to eovtroiiiMIIIII
even to address the question, factors.
since the subject of differenCes
That Wll the pt»IIIOn taken by
between the races II probably the Richard E.Lapchlcklunartlcle
tenderest In au of Amerlc8ll publlllled OD the op-ed pqe of
society- But we will never solve ·The New York Tlmelln ~ly to
our problema 11nleu n ue the NBC' documentary.
allowed to dlleiW I1Iem cllmly
Lapchlck (WIIo II director of
and ratloll8lly, and I hope the
!olortlteutern
Ulllvenlty' I Cft.
patience of my twdBsa Will
ter
for
the
Sttld)'
of Sport Ill
exiAIDd to my own attempt to Ibid
IIOclety)
rlllttiY
polllfa
Ollt lltlt
a little lllbt oa tllll • • ·
·
No doubt NBC ulltDMd ·tbat over the ;rean commentltol'l
there could be no otreM to . have taken wildly lDCOIIIIIIAIDt
- - -- -- ~r--

J

. Cong. Clarence Miller · .
approach would put pressure on
schools to minimize the number
of student loan def1u1ters.
Another proposal Is to have· .
banks which process the loans :
assume responsibility for part of
the bad debt, thereby encourag- :
lng them to extend GSL's more
prudently.
This past · week, the U.S.
Department of Education released Its new regulations and
legislative prbposals aimed at
stemming thll growing number
of atudent loan defaults. The
most notable of these new regula·
lions wUI subject achoola to
removal from the GSL proeram
If that school's default rate
exceeds a predetermined level.
It Is also anticipated that
Congress wUI be looking lnlo this
Issue more thorougllly In the
months ahead. While trying to
make people who don't have
adequate Income pay back their
loans Is a bit like trying to
squeeze blood from 'a tumlp, we
owe It to the taxpaytne public to
do all we can to stop the financial
hemorrhaging being experienced In this regard.

What racial differenceS amount

-

Oberklellln the eighth Inning of Thursday night's
game against the Reds In Clnclnnail. The Reds
heat the Giants 3-2. (UPI)

Graf gains finals in French Open

'

_.

... ...

Distribution of. PAC funds unfair

The Daily Sentinel

positions with respect to the
supposed superiority of various
groups at varloua sports. In 1933,
Ed Sullivan wrote tbat Jews
"take n1turaiiy" to the g1me of
basketball because they are
wllllne to "take chances.'' In
1971, Sports Dlurrtrated speculated that "perhaps bec1uie of a
physical Inheritance, no black
has ever been a swtmmln1
champion" - a theory. that went
up In smoke at the Seoul
Olymplca Jut summer, when a
black man from Suriname won 11
eold med!IIID IWlmmtq.
Lapchlck arpea that blackl
are almply heat In thole relatively few fleldl - notably 1p0rt1
and mualc - where they have
been lllowed to perform .and
excel. "For me," be Wl'ltet,

"ldence 1w 1t111

proved

Utile"

COIICm'IIIDI the lllepd pnlltlc
auperlorlty of blulra u alll1etet.
He lddl, "Culture, Clul IDd
envii'OIUDellt' • - 1U three of
wlllell boD down to envlrolllllent

- "ltD! tell Ul the 11101t.''
IAPfhtek may be tlPt, but I
cauot IICIPt thlt uneuy feellna

-··-

to_Rw_~he_r-

· that he Is heading for a fall, and In
the process seriously misleading
the very blacks he seeks to
protect. There II simply no ·
galnsayingthefactthatthereare
major eenetic (or Inherent, or
Innate) differences betweea the
races of mankind: In skin ro.lor,
to tlke only the ma.t obvious
example. And If 110, II It likely
that these differences have no
meas11rable consequences
whatever?
"One wonders," Lapchlck remarkl, "about the children of
Allan lmmlll'anta who are out· . ·
performlq white ltudentlln the ·
clailromn. Why IJ'e DO aclellllltl :
buy trytn1 to prove the lnnale ·
Intellectual auperlorlty of :
AIIIDIT" I'm not sure aclelltllll
Ollpt to be "buy u-ym, lo
prove" (u dlltiDIUIIJMd from
test) 1ny partlcllllr ,1111111, but
that one loolll pretty I.'CIDVInclne
tome.
1be poiDt II that n mullt Dever
fe1r the lrllth. '11111 Ia God's
world, IDd lie II on tbe aide ot bll

ereatures.

some great winners and was able
to get back Into the match.
" After the first set and at 2-1 in
the second set, I suddenly felt of!.
I don't know what It was ."
Nevertheless-, her agility and
greater .e xperience told at crucial times .
Leading 4-3 In the third. she
ended a . long and dramatic
baseline rally with a flerc~
forehand winner. Seles. who had
fought off two break points in the
game, never came back. Graf
,winning the next five points and
the match.
·
"I got a little bit tired." Seles
said. "It was 4-3 and It was deuce.
1 had a chance to win and she got
It back. After that, I was just
exhausted."
This year. Sanchez improved
her ranking from 18th to lOth by
reaching the semifinals In eight
clay-court tournaments. She was
more consistent than Fernandez.
who admitted she was too
impatient.
"She hit a lot of balls back."
said Fernandez.

play.
PARIS tUPJ) - Steff! Graf
"You always want to give a
affirmed her status as Ute
good performance." said Graf.
world's best female tennis player
"Today I did not and I'm not
Thursday and advanced to the
happy
about that . .ven If I did
final of the French Open by
win."
conquering the most unlikely of
Tbe last time the West German
challengers - l~·year-old ondropped a set In a Grand Slam
seeded amateur Monica Seles.
was In the 1988 U.S. Open. when
Grar s greater experience and
better conditioning carried her to . she beat world No. 2 Gabriela
Sabatini In a three-set final.
a 6-3, 3·6, 6-3 victory In the often
Seles, playing in only her sixth
brllliant duel. She will meet
Grand Prix tournament, was
17-year-old Arantxa Sanchez for
the title. The Spaniard. seeded excited by the closeness of her
seventh, downed No. 15 Mary Joe first match against Graf. Seles
Fernandez of Miami, Fla.,6-2, 6:2 said she felt .no pressure - until
she started to win .
In the other semifinal.
''To tell the truth. through the
Graf. at 19 the oldest ofthefour
teenage semifinalists, has lost whole match I didn't think I could
only four sets In 1989. The West · win, except maybe In the third
German is one victory from her set. when I was up 2-1 and 30-0.
sixth consecutlve Grand Slam But when I thought about It, my
champlpnshlp.
hands started shaking. '
"On a couple of points, I was
Seles. playing in her first
Grand Slam tournament, used thinking 'gosh, I'm going to win
her two-fisted forehands and this point. I'm going to win this
backhands to match the power of game.' That's wMn I started
!Jraf, who was urtcharacterlstl· missing."
The match started out like a
cally error-prone. The young
Yugoslavian, who grunts loudly typical Graf walkover, · as she
with each groundstroke. was the rolled out to a 3-0 lead ·ln the first
crowd favorite at Rdland Garro•. set.
She disguised her shots well and
"If I had continued to play as
snapped .sharply angled winners well. definitely," Graf said, when
off of Graf's'shortcr shots.
asked If she was expecting a
Graf. seeking her third
blowout at that point. "But at 4-1,
straight Fnmch Open crown, was I started to play less well and
less than pleased with her own make some easy errors. She hit

I

uhh ... "

Schott then turned to the crowd
and asked. "IS that tampering?'~
The Riverfront Stadium scoreboard·feature "This date !~Reds'
history" produced an unusual
Item Thursday.
It seems that on June 8. 1920,
Reds' player Edd Rausch was
kicked out of . a game. For
sleeping.
The Reds were playing the
Giants In New York and several
players got Involved In an argument. While the argument
ensued. Rausch stretched out In
center field and fell asleep.
When the game was ready to
resume. Rausch was still snoring. He was ejected lor holding
up play.
Barry Larkin just k'*ps getting hotter and hotter at the
plate.
·
· Thursday. Larkin wenf 3-lor-4
to boost his season average to

GRAVELY TR~R
SALES SIJNlGE

a

"*!.!!af• Qlt.
.,,,., &amp; -......, •••,.

204 CaMclr I~

01111 ..,.., TMU ..INY

tUL ·SPA
~;:tUL·IP.M.

"

Graham transfers
to Ohio State

COLUMBUS. Ohio tUPII
Kent Graham. backup quarter·
back at Notre Dame. announced
Wednesday he is transferring to
Ohio State.
The 6-5, 236-pound Graham. of
Wheaton. Ill.. was cQnsldered
.363. In the last four games
one of the top high school
against San Francisco, the
quarterbacks in the nation two
Reds's shortstop went 11-for-18.
Y!'ars ago when he signed with
Larkin has htt safely ln19olhls
Notl'&lt;' Dame. But last season he
· tast 20 games. going 37-for-78, a
played behind sophomore Tony
.474 average. during- that time.
Rice. who led the Fighting Irish
to the national championship.
The Reds are starting their · "Ohio State is a great school
longest road trip of the seasonand It's got a great football
13 games In 14 days.
program." said Graham. who
The trip begins Friday with' announced two months ago he
four games in Los Angeles and
planned to transfer and also
Includes three games each In San . considered South Carolina and
Diego. San Francisco and
Alabama. "I like what coach
Atlanta.
tJohnl Cooper and his staff are
Probable pitchers for the
trying to do there. "
Dodgers series: Friday night.
As a transfer, Graham will
Jose Rljo (5-2) -vs. Ore! Hershlser have to sll out the 1989 season. but
(7-4); Saturday afternoon, Tom then will have two years of
Browning (5-5) vs. Tim . Leary eligibility remaining.
14-4); Sunday afternoon, Scott
Greg Frey was Ohio State's
Scudder tO-Ol vs . · Tim Belcher starting quarterback last year as
(4-4 1;
Monday night. Rick a sophomore and will go Into his
Mahler (8·5) vs. Mike Morgan j unlor season of 1989 as th!'
(4-4).
.
Buckeyes' No. 1 signal caller.
Cincinnati's next home game Is
"I'm going to come In here and
Friday night. June 23, against compete (o the best of my
Los Angeles.
ability," Graham said.

I

Riverfront Ramblings...

CINCINNATI IUPII - Cincinnati Reds owner Marge Schott
added a little spice to a Ken
Griffey and Ken Griffey .Jr.
publicity session Thursday.
Griffey, 39. a Reds player. and
Griffey Jr .. 19. a Seattle Mariners player, were conducting a
news conference to prorriote a
po~ter they are selling. The
Grlffeys are the only father-son
combination ever to play In the
major leagues at the same time.
Schott walked into the news
conierence: walked up to the
younger Griffey and said, "Are
you goln!( to come play with
daddy?"
Griffey Jr. responded, "Uhh.

lhe Deily Sentinlliii-Page-3

POm8roy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, June 9, 1989

By ERIK K. LIEF
UPI Sports Wrller
Like a dice player on a hot
streak. the Houston Astros are
continually seeing their number
come up.
TheAstros came up with seven
lucky runs Thursday night, six of
them coming In the final two
Innings. as they snatched· a 7-6
victory In 10 Innings from the San
Diego Padres.
Trailing 5-l, the Astros put
together a four-run rally In the
ninth inning to tie the score and
send the gamelnto extra Innings.
Although San Diego scored to
opep the lOth, Glenn Davis
stroked a two-run, game-winning
homer in the bottom half of the
Inning to hand Houston Its
sixth-straight one-run victory
and 13th vlciory in Its last 14
games.
"We're winners right now,"
said Davis, whose homer was his
14th of the year. "We're on a roll.
If we were In Las Vegas, they'd
probably kick us out of the
house.''
Gerald Young walked of! losing pitcher Mark Davis, 2-2. to
open the lOth. and .moved to
second on a ground out before
Glenn Davis blasted a 1-1 offerIng over the left field fence.
Mark Davis. who converted his
first 17 save opportunities. has
failed to hold · a lead In two
straight appearances.
Houston- reliever Danny Darwin, 5-l, pitched the lOth to
collect the victory.
San Diego Manager Jack
McKeon also believes that the
Astros may be winning noi only
on talent alone. "Right now,
they're playing like they're
under a lucky star."
Tony Gwynn, who drove In
three runs and had three hits , put

STAITIIIG AI
11011151

.....,.,~,. A.M.-I P.M.
s.twtky 9 A.M.·4 ,...

San Diego grabbed a 3-0 lead In
the third. Gary Green reached on
an Infield single. Green was safe
at second on a fielder's choice
when Show sacrificed. - Salazar
then bunted and Houston starter
Bob Knepper threw the ball away
for an error. allowing Green to
score and Show to move to third.
Roberto Alomar hit a sacrifice
fly to score Show with Salazar
moving · to second. Gwynn
reached on an Infield hit before
Jack Clark singled to drive In
Salazar. making It 3-0.
·•
Houston made It 3-lln the third
when Young doubled with two out
and scored on Bill Doran's single.
The Padres made the score 5-5
in the fifth. Salazar reached on a
throwing error by shortstop
Ramirez and moved to third on
Alomar's double. Gwynn singled
to drive in Salazar and Alomar.
Gwynn, a three-time National
League batting champion, had at
leas! two hits for the sixth
straight game and the 27th time
this season. Gwyno smacked
three hiis Thursday to raise his
. average to .353 and improve his
major-league leading total to 85
for the season.
Elsewhere In the National

Texas thumps LSU, 12-7;
gains college series finals

League. Cincinnati edged San
Francisco 3-2, St. Loul11 squashed
Montreal 7-2. Philadelphia outslugged Pittsburgh 15-ll and
Chicago nipped New York 5-4 In
10 Innings.
In the AL. It was: New York 8, '
Boston 7 ill 11 Innings; Milwaukee 6, Baltimore 2; and Texas 11,
Chicago 7.
Reds 3, Gl alii&amp; 2
At Cincinnati, Craig Lefferts
threw a wild pitch with the bases
loaded In the eighth Inning
allowing Barry Larkin, enabling
Cincinnati to triumph: Mike
LaCoss, 2-5, loaded the bases
before yielding to Lefferts. Rob
Dibble. 5-2. pitched 1 2-3 Innings
for the win and John . Franco
earned his 17th save.
Cardinals 7, Expos 2
At Montreal, Pedro Guerrero
drove In three runs, Including a
RBI single which Ignited a
five -run ninth Inning. Kevin
Gross. 6-4, got tagged In the ninth
despite retiring 23 consecutive
batters and allowing only one hit
to that point. Frank DIPino, 3-0,
went 1 2-3 Innings for the win.
. Phlllles 15, Pirate 11
At Philadelphia, Von Hayes
and Steve Jeltz each slugged a
pair o! homers In a game which
saw Philadelphia rebound from a
10-run deficit after one _lnnln&amp; to
send Pittsburgh to Its seventh
straight loss. Don Carman. 2-9, .
gave up no hits a.n d walked one In
1 1-3 Innings for the win. Jell
Robinson. 2-6, allowed four runs
in the eighth inning.
Cubs 5, Meta 4
10 lnnlnp
AI Chicago. Rick Wrona laid
down a squeeze bunt to sCOt'~!:
Lloyd McClendon to lift Chicago. ..
Don Aase, 1-2.1oaded the bases In
the lOth inning and took the loss.
• Mitch Williams. 1-2. pitched two
Innings to pick up the victory.
Kevin McReynolds and Howard
Johnson homered In a losing
cause.

The Daily Sentinel

The blister ripped open in the
OMAHA. Neb. I UP!) - Louisiana State's season may have second Inning. as the Longhorns
ended before Ben McDonald took pushed their lead to 6-0 In the
' second on Butcher's two-run
the mound Thursda~· night.
Texas clobbered an ailing double. Texas added .a run In the
McDonald for 11 runs and nine third on a solo home run by Steve
hits, holding on for a 12·7 victory Bethea, his fifth homer of the
.
to move Into the championship season.
••Knowing what I know now.
game of the College World
I'm,sorry tMcDol)aldi started,"
Series.
Texas, o4-17, will play Satur- 'LSU Coach Skip Berttnan said.
McDonald set a College World
day for the national championship against the winner o(Frlday Series record with his fourth
night's game between Florida career loss In the tournament.
"It's been tough here." he said.
State and Wichita State. Louisiana Slate ended Its season 5i'i-17, "I've not had a whole lot of luck.
tying a school record for Maybe I'll get a chance to come
here In pro ball and win a game
victories.
· McDonald. the first pick In here."
Texas starter Kirk DressenMonday's amateur draft. was
dorfer
went six Innings to raise
hampered by a blister that
his
record
to 18·2 and equal the
developed on the ace's middle
national high for victories this
!Inger during warmups.
"It affected my velocity - I season. Pitching despite back
couldn't throw my two-seam and shoulder ailments. he gave
fastball." said McDonald. who up four runs. one earned. and five
hits, striking out seven and
struck out six and walked three.
wa !king eight.
"It also affected my control.
''That was as gutsy a perforOnce I put a Band-Aid on, I
mance
as I ever saw," Texas
couldn't feel the ball. "
Coach
Cliff
Gustafson said. "He
Texas scored four runs before
was
in
a
lot
of pain. · He was
McDonald could record an out.
hurting
throughout.
but he didn't
Lance Jones led off with a walk.
went to second on a David want to come out."
The Tigers pulled within 6-3
Tollison single and both runners
moved up when McDonald's with three unearned runs In the
attempted pickoff throw wound boltom of the third.
up. In center field. ·
Scott Bryant followed with a
two-run triple and scored on
Arthur Butcher's .single to right.
Butcher stole second and scored
when McDonald fielded Craig
Newkirk's sacrifice bunt and
overthrew third base for an

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COACHES SHORTS

error.
" It seemed like the same old
thing," McDonald said. "There
was a seeing-eye hit up the
middle, then I throw a changeup
to Bryant and he bloops It over
first base."

:Jim·Cobb Special Factory Purchase
1989
Oldsmobile
Cutlass
Supremes

San Diego ahead In the top of the
lOth with a RBI single of! Darwin
scoring Luis Sa.lazar.
In the ninth , San Diego starter
Eric Show held a four-run lead
but allowed consecutive singles
to Davis. Terry Puhl and Rafael
Ramirez, making the score 5-2.
Mark Davis relieved Show and
was greeted by Craig Biggio's
RBI double, scoring Puhl. Davis
then uncorked a wild pitch to
score Ramirez and move Biggio
to third . Alex Trevino's sacrifice
fly scored Biggio and tied the
score.

by

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"YimiDAY'·S GOQIIIS'.' AT A GlUT

.SA.._

1

�,..

Friday. June 9, 1989

Ponaoy-Middleport. Ohio

By The Bend

Pistons defeat Lakers; Johnson injured

•

MJ\HORN REACTS - Detroit forward Rick Mahom ( 44) reaclo
when he believes he is.called for a foun in the second quarter, when
in fact the foul was called on L.A.'s Kareem Abdui.Jabbar (left) in
Garne 2 of Thursday night's NBA finals. The Pis Ions won 108-105 to
take a 2-0 edge In the serkis. (UPI)

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Sieckmann leads
Westchester tournament
HARRISON. N.Y. (UP)) Tom Sieckmann. strugglin~
through a dismal season, returnPd to one of his favorltr• ·
courses Thursday and shot a
bogey·free. 7· under-par 64 to
take a one·shot lead after one
round of the S1 million Manufac·
turers Hanover Weslches ler
Classic.
Rocco Mediate also nel'(otialed
the Westchester Country Club
course without a bogey and
added an eagle with a 40·foot
sa nd wedge to take second at 6&gt;.
Five golfers were grouped. al
66. including Fred Couples. Craig
Stadler. Mark Lye, Kenny Knox
and Dick Mast. Stadler had seven
birdies and was delighted with
his round despite a double-bogei
on the seventh hole. when his
drive veered right in the middle
of a cart path and landed in a

'

t

creek.

Ben Crenshaw. whose game
has been depressed since· his

tough loss at the Masters. was al
6i along wilh 1987 Westchester
c(Jarnpion J .C. Snead. Dan Pohl
and .Jumbo Ozaki.
Sieckmann. who registered his
firs! vlclory at lhe Anheuser·
Busch Cla~sic las! year, has
missed the cut in 13 of 17
tournaments this year and
slands 1281h on !he money list
wllh $39.69o.
Bui on Ihis day he missed only
two greens. Starling on the lOth
hole. he sank blrdiP pulls of~. 20
and 8 feet on the 12th. 13th and
18th holes to reach the turn at
~ · under. He then sank a 30-foot
birdie putt to slarl Ihe back nine,
and on his last hole barely missed
an eagle from 1!1 feel, settling for
a birdie.
"T haven '! been playing well,"
said Steckmann. 6-fool·5, whO
played one year of basketball at
the University Of Nebraska.
"I've been working hard, but It
hasn 't come logether for me.

.·

when Magic went down. We've
got two. we have to find a way to
win two more."
They won't have to search too
hard If the backcourt continues
Its solid play. Dumarssteppedup
when Thomas went QUI with foul
trouble and scored 26 of his 33
points before Intermission.
"I got into foul trouble and he
came in and picked us up,"
Thomas said. "It's good that ail
youpeoplegottoseewhatklndof
a ballplayer he Is."
Arter Magic Johnson left the
game. the Lakers outscored the
Pistons 17·9 the rest of the period
to lead 92·84 beadlnglntothefinal
period. Then the Detroit defense
clamped down.
In the fourth quarter. Detroit
held Los Angeles to 13 points
after shutting out the Lakers on
their first 10 possessions. The 13
points tied an NBA finals record
for fewest points· in the final
period.
The Pis Ions' Blli Lalmbeer
was taken to the hospital for
examination for numbness In his
right hand but is expected to
. travel with the team. He didn't
play the second half.
The best-of-seven series
switches 10 Los Angeles for
Games 3 and 4 sunday anmd
Tuesday at the Forum. The
Pistons. who went 2·0agalnstthe
Lakers In the regular season.
split the first two games with Los
Angeles In the finals last year .
Detroit Is vying for Its first
NBA title tn franchise history.
The Pistons lost to the Lakers in
seven games last year tn their
first NBA finals appearance,

ThePistonsonceaJalnputona to put the Pistons ahead 102·95
defensive display that has be- with 4:33 left.
come a playoff trademark. The
The Lakers missed their first
game was the first in 15 10 shots ot the fourth period and
Detroit's entire postseason run- did not convert their flftt basket
that an opponent managed to from the neld un!ll Mychai
score 100 points.
Thompson sank a layin with 3: 40 ,
Los Angeles mounted its final logo. .
rally and pulled within 1()6.105
The Lakers. aiming tor their
with two seconds lett. After third co~utive NBA Iitle, were
drawing within 106-104 with 32 led by Worthy with 19 points.
seconds len on a pair of free Magic Johnson and Michael
throws by A.C. Green. the Cooper - starting in place of
Pistons were called for a 24· Scott - each scored 18 and
second viol.Otion with eight se· Campbell 15.
conds remaining.
Thedefendlngchamp!onshead
James Worthy then received a home striving to become only the
blocking call wj.fh two seconds !bird team in NBA history to
left and went to the foul line but rebound from an 0·2 deficit to win
the Lakers' leading postseason the title. The last comeback from
scorer missed the ftrstrreethrow such a disadvantage carne In
before making the second.
1977. when the Portland Trail
"Two would have been nice," Blazers overcame the );&gt;hiladei·
Worthy said. "I went through my phla 76ers.
ritual, but the bail rolled off the
The Lakers took a 62-l\61ead at
rim."
Intermission. Cooper hit a 3-point
Tony Campbell. wno replaced shot with 10 seconds left after Los
Magic Johnson. scored 7 points Angeles grabbed three offensive
a $the Lllkers surged to close the .rebounds.
third period. The Pistons then
The Pistons. who trailed by as
outscored the Lakers 11·3 lo tie many lO points In the first
the score 75·75 as Johnson left the quarter. cut the deficit to 51·~ on
game.
a 4-polnt play wlJh 3: 39 left In the
The Pistons opened the final half. Thomas hil a basket an!l
period with a 12·1 run. scoring on Green and Detroit's Bill Lalrn·
6 of their first 7 possessions. A beer got their arms tangled.
thundrous dunk by Dennis Rod· After separating, Green shoved
man with 8:04 remaining gave Rick Mahorn and received a
Detroil a 96·93 lead.
technical. Cooper also received a
On the Lakers' first 4 posses·
lechnicai for objecting to the call.
slons. they could only manage a
"We have to keep a proper
free throw by Kareem Abdul· perspective." Los Angeles Coach
Jabbar.
Pat Riley said. "With faith
After Los Angeles' Orlando anything Is possible. We gave
Woolridge made 2 free throws, Detroit a few things to think
Thomas sank 3 straight baskets about."

ELMONT, N.Y. !UP!)- The
draw for Belmont Stakes post
positions ThlJrsday set . the per·
feet stage for a dramatic, Triple
Crown-deciding duel between
Kenlucky, Derby-Preakness
Stakes Sunday Silence and arch·
rival Easy Goer.
Post time for lhe race, to be
televised by ABC. is set for o:30
p.m. EDT.

Sunday Silence. the lanky · break under Pat Valenzuela
near·biack colt trying to become
from the 11/o. 6 gate and Easy
racing's 12th Triple Crown cham·
Goer and Pat Day from the 7- a
pion. and Easy Goer. the museu·
lineup that will allow them to
iar chestnut seeking to avoid
keep track of one another and
joining .his father Alydar as lhe, should prevent either one .from'
series' only three·time runners·
puiling away to a big lead early:
,up. drew side-by-Side in lhe
"When Charlie drew ' the 6, I
starting gate.
said 'I hope I get the 7 so I can
The Charlie Whittingham·
clock him close and see what
trained Sunday Siience wlli happens."' said Shug
McGaughey. Easy Goer's
trainer.
"I'm glad they drew side by
sidE&gt;,"
Whltilngham said. "My
strike get past him for a passed
eyes aren't as good any more. so
bali.
Jason Wright then singled for now I can watch both of them."
Easy Goer was the Derby and
the first Meigs hit, after Terry
Preakness
favorite. and Sunday
Fields walked to load the bases.
Silence
the
second choice, but
Chris Lance walked to fource In
Belmont
Park
oddsmaker Don
!he Innings second run. Lance
LaPlace
gave
the
nod to Sunday
was then fourced at second, but
Silence
for
the
Triple
Crown
Wright and Fields scored on a
finale.
He
posted
Sunday
Silence
wlid throw to first to make It a 8-4
at even·money on the morning
ballgame.
·
Each team scored single runs in line. and put Easy Goer and
the seventh and Athens widened stablemate Awe Inspiring. who
the gap with. three more In the are coupled in the betting, at 6·5.
Through the first two legs of
eighth to close out the scoring.
the
crown. the Sunday Silence·
Corrigan pitched the first
seven innings for Athens striking Easy Goer rivalry has been
out 9, while walking 6 to pick up
the win. Scott Stricklin pitched
the last two Innings.
.Jason
Wright was the starter and loser
for Meigs, he had relief help from
Chris Lance, Wade McQueen.
and Kevin Taylor.
Meigs had just four hits in the
game. besides .Wright's single
Jeff McElroy had a double, and
Wes Young and Kevin Taylor
each had a single.
Athens Is now 3·1 on the season
and In league play. The Meigs
rE&gt;cord drops to 0·6, and 0-4 in the
league.
Meigs will hosl Pickerington In
a twlnblil at l Saturday after·
noon, and travel lo Glouster for
two on Sunday.

Athens Legion tops Meigs
Athens' Legion basebailers
jumped out to an 8·0 lead and
behind the hurling Cory Corrigan
and Scott Strickland. defealed
the Meigs "American Legion
learn 12-5 at Rock Springs
Wednesday evening.
Corrigan helped himself with a
three run double in the first
Inning. Athens then added two
more runs In the third. one in the
fourth. and two more In Ihe sixth
for a 8·0 lead.
Athens bad only six hits in the
game but took advantage of 10
walks and 8 errors by Meigs.
Steve Hawk. Scott Decamanada.
Craig Phillips and Jim Abbott
each had a single. Corrigan also
chipped in with a single.
Meigs was ' held hitless through
the !Irs! five innings by Corrigan.
Randy Corsi led off the Meigs
sixth with a walk. Wes Young
reached first when he forced
Corsi al second. Young then stole
second. reached lhird on a wild
pitch and scored when Jeff
McElroy reached first when the
Athens calcher let -the third

Swimming lessons are
offered al London Pool
Anyone In teres ted in swim·
rntng lessons at London Pool
should conlacl Marty Maynard.
manager. at 992·9909. or cc;&gt;me In
person lo the pool. Monday
through Friday, from l to 5 p.m.
Instructions will be given In the
following , classes - beginners.
advanced beginners and inler·
mediate. at a cost of $12 for 10
lessons
and advanced
swimmer. a I a cost of $20 for 10
lessons. lnleresled Individuals
should sign up immediately so
that classes may be organized.

FRIDAY
RACINE - 'Vacation Bible
School w!ll be held through
Friday from 9-11:30 a.m. at the
Racine First Baptist Church for
ages two throug)l high school.
RUTLAND- The Zion Church
or Christ Is having a two week
Vacation Bible School each
morning from 9·11:30 a.m.
through . June 16 for ages two
through high school.

1984 MERCURY TOPAZ
••••••••· S229~5.
,

Looded. 2 dr. Good condhion.

1986 FORD BRONCO XLT· •••• S9495 ·

APPEARING

FRIDAY, JUNE 9 &amp; SAIUIDAY, JUNE 10

"CEU.A110NS"

D.J. SOliS- ..... SIIOW
COl. . ., OliO
9130 P ··h JO All.
Char GrW
Steak Dinner

$1'5

poiMo. hotbrllllllld

J18. 05rive,CHEVY
C-20 ••••~.!c........ S8495
PB, PS. Auto., 1 Locel o-.
'

The Enterprise United Metho ~
dlst Church will be having
Vacation Bible, School the week
of June 12·16 from 9-11:30 a .m.

•

~
...... ~

WINNERS - The winners of the "Tide Mobile" given away by
Tide lau~y detergent and Vaughan's Cardinal were (lett to
right) Mathew Smith (seated In the ''Tide Mobile"), Sean Smtih of
Cheshire, and Gene Spurlock of Vaughan's Cardinal.

lRS·T: CRUSRDE

Circle meets ·

FOR DADI

•

Sandy Cowdery, program dl·
rector. presented "The Impor·
tance or Lillie Things" with
Vivian Humphrey and Pat Mar·
tin adding poem readings when
members of the Faith Gospel
Ladies Circle met recently at the
home of Thelma Smith with Jodi
Bissell as co-hostess.
Emma Durst won the Bible
quiz game and Mary Ailee Bise
won the door prize. The group
reported 32 shut-in calls tor the
previous month.
The group will hold a bake and
yard sale on July l at the home of
Dolly Reed in Reedsville. The
church youth will also be having
a car wash lit this time.
Attending with those menti·
oned tibove were Verna Rose.
Debbie Barringer, Erika Boring,
Audra Ruckman, Virginia Wai·
ton, Tammy Cowdery and her
, son. Christopher, and Bobble
; Reed with her son. Shawn.

•

•

i.

OFFEI GOOD THIU
SAT., JU. 17, 1919

•
••

BELTS, BUCKLES, BILLFOLDS
MOCCASINS••• Now 20o10 oFF
YOU'LL FIND

., ·' VBS commencement set

· SALE ·PRICES
ON•••

elawn ley Trimmers
andMow•s
.eDump Carts

..

"I·IIM

The Racine United Methodist
; Church Vacation Bible School
commencement will be Friday at
7:30p.m.

.

. BoanJ to meet
Tile Melp County Board or
Eiectlona will hold It's regular
meellng on Monday at 4: 30 p.m.

R&amp;G .Feed &amp; Supply (o.

• Rutland couocil to meet

NIINY, 01110

The ltore With "AI IIndt of ltuft"
Por Pete, • - - · f.ortt • 1111111 Allin!•. l.lwnt • Gordona.
(

The Asbury United Methodist
Church in Syracuse will be
hok!ing Vacation Bible Schopi
the week of June 12·16 from
9·11: 30 a.m. The Bible school is
opened to the public.

. !' .. _..,..;;...;~
~'""- ....

The Big Bend Ctvttan Club will
sponsor a "Celebra~e Freedom"
bike parade In Pomeroy·
Mlddieporl at 10 a.m. on Flag
Day, June 14. The club Invites ail
youth. ages 6-14, to participate. A
similar parade will be held In
Mason, W.Va. at 1 p.m.
A $2&gt; savings bond will be
awarded to the person having the
best decorated bike In each of two
age groups - 6 to 10 and 11 to 14.
No motorized bikes may be
ridden In the parade - only
pedai·powered bl kes will be
allowed.
·
At 9:30 a.m., ali participants
will meet behind the old Pomeroy
Junior High School to receive
instructions regarding the parade route .
Big Bend Clvttan Club Is a local
chapter of Civltan International.
a volunteer organization for men
and women. which encourages
personal and professional devel·
opment while encouraging ser·
vice to the local as well as the
worldwide community. Civitan
has been a major sponsor of
International Special Olympics.
Big Bend Civltan Club has
sl?Onsored Jr. Clvltan Ci4bs at
Meigs, Eastern and Wahama
High Schools. Members of the Jr.
Clvitan Clubs will be assisting
with the bike parades.

RACINE - Vacation Bible
School will be held at the Racine
'U nited Methodist Church
through Friday from ·9-ll a.m.
dally. Ali children preschool
through junior high are welcome.
RACINE
The Morris
Chapel, Racine-Portland Road,
will be having revival on Friday
and Saturday at7 p.m. There will
be s~ciai singing by Dan Hay man and the Faith Trio. The Rev.
David Cur1man Invites the
public.
---'

RACINE- TheR.L.D .S. youth
group wlii be taking homemade
ice cream orders through Sun·
day. The price Is $2.50 a quart.
and flavors Include strawberry,
orange, lemon. pineapple, ba·
nana. vanilla, and chocolate. To
order call 949-2805. Ali proceeds
will go toward church Improve·
, ments.
'
POMEROY - The Trinity
Church of Pomeroy will sponsor
an Ice cream social on Friday
from 11 a .m. to 5 p.m. Eight
flavors of ice cream, sandwiches, desserts, chicken and
noodles. potato salad, cole slaw,
• apd baked beans wlii be avlala·
ble. To order quarts of tee cream
· caii992-3222, 992-3777. or992·5480.
ROCK . SPRINGS Mary
Shrine No. 37, White Shrine of
Jerusalem. will hold a regular
meeting on Friday. at 7:30p.m ..
at the Rock Springs Grange Hail.
Potluck refreshments will be
served.

,

POMEROY - The wlll be a
free blood pressure clinic at Rite
Aid on Friday from !i 'a.m. to 5
p.m.

..

-

There wUibe a replor Rutland
VIllose COIIIICU meotJna at 7 p.m.
at lho civic center In Rutland.

p

·Contest slated
The Rulland Fire Department
will be having a pte baking and
cake decoration contest at the
annual fourth of July
celebration.
Pies can be of any kind with
first place receiving $25, second
place. $15. and third place. $10.
The pies must be Ina throw away
container.
The cake decorating theme Is
"Patriotic." First place will
receive $50, second place, $2o,
and third P.lace, $15.

Morris revival set
Morris Chapel Church. Racine.
will have revival services on
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
with Rev. David Curfman. The
church Is located on Racine·
Portland Road. County Road 35.
Services will start at 7 p.m. each
evening. Everyone welcome.

Aialna Nicole Sigler cele·
brated her first birthday on May
14 at the residence of her parents
Alan and Sue Sigler, 501 Oak Dr.
Attending from out of town
were her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Bert GrlndslaU of Fredericktown, Ohio, and Mr. and Mrs.
John Sigler or ManSfield, Ohio;
great-grandmother, Mrs. Mary
Steel ot Mansfield and Steve
Sigler of Mansfield.
Attending from Gallipolis were
Mr. and Mrs. Brent Eastman,
Mrs. Rosemary Hanning, Erica
and Keith, Lynnlta Newberry
and Kalee, Mr. and Mrs. John
Niece, Karlssa and Johnny, and
Mr. and Mrs. Brad Palmer,
.Jenny, Amy and Lisa.
Sending gifts but unable to
attend were Mrs. Jenny Weber of
Mt. Vernon, Ohio, Mrs. Shirley
Eller of Utica; OhiO, Mr. and
Mrs. Randy Tharp, David and
Jennifer or MI. Vernon, Ohio, Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Grindstaff, Chad,
Melissa, and Amanda or Pickerington, Ohio and Mr. and Mrs.
Bryan Taylor, Michael and Joey
of Mansfield, Ohio.

UMW assist bloodmobile
The Racine United Methodist
Women will furnish and serve the
canleen for the Red Cross Blood·
mobile on June 14 at the Pomeroy
Senior Citizen Center .

REEDSVILLE - There will be
a class D &amp; E State Quallfl.e r
Men's Slow Pitcn Softball Tour·
nament on Saturday at Reeds·
ville. The eost is $75 pius two
softballs. More information may
be obtained by calling (614)
378·6406.

DARWIN- The Modern Wood·
men of America Camp 7230 will
be having a potluck on Saturday
at 6:30 p.m . at the Southbound
State ·Park on Route 33 near ,
Darwin. Members are asked. to
bring a cpvered dish. The public
Is invited.
·

SUNDAY "
REEDSVILLE- There will be
a class D &amp; E Slate Qualifier
Men's Slow Pilch Softball Tournamenl on Sunday at Reedsville.
The cdst is $75 plus two softballs.
More Information may be Ob·
tal ned by calling (614) 378·6406.

MIDDLEPORT -The Rejoic·
lng Life Christian School will be
having a garage sale on Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. ;11 the
corner or North Second and
Rutland In downtown
Middleport.

REEDSVILLE -There wlli be
USSSA Class E State Qualifier
Softball Tournament on Sunda y
at Eastern High School. Cost i,
$7o plus two softballs. More
information may be obtained by
calling (614) 378·6406.

MIDDLEPORT - The Rejolc·
lng Life Christian School will be
having a car wash on Saturday
from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Gas
Pius Store in Middleport. The
price is $3.

CHESTER -The annual E.R.
Hollon family reu nion will be
held Sunday al12: 30 p.m. al the
Chester Fire House with a basket
dinner. Those attending are
asked to bring their own table
service.

REEDSVILLE -There will be
USSSA Class E State Qualifier
Softball Tournament on Satur·
day at Eastern Hjgh School. Cost
is $75 pius two softballs. More
· jnformallon may be obtained by
POMEROY Round and calling (614) 378·6406. ·
square dancing will be featured
Friday. 8 t.o 11 p.m. 1 at the
MIDDLEPORT - Overbrook
Pomeroy Senior Cit lzens Center. Center will be pulling on a style
Music will be by the True show with dresses from 1886·1950
Country Ramblers. The public Is for the public on Saturday at 2
welcome. Those coming should p.m. in co-operation with the
bring snacks.
Meigs County Museum and HerItage Weekend.
SATURDAY
MASON, W.VA. - There will
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
be
a baked chicken and dressing
Cub Scout Pac 249 will be having
at the Mason Fire Depart.
dinner
a bake sale and mock Pinewood
menton
Saturday from 11 a, m to
Derby In the mini park beside the
5
p.m.
sponsored
by the Mason
Sundry store on Saturday al 9
Ladies
Auxiliary
.
For delivery,
a.m. Cars will be provided and
call
t304)
773·5832.
the public is invited to attend and
see the displays.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 'rhere
w!li
be a bake and yard sale
PORTLAND The Hazel
sponsored
by !he V.F .W. Post
Community Church will be havIng a hymn sing on Saturday 9053 and Auxiliary, on Saturday
featuring the "Free Gospel Sin· beginning at 8:30a.m. on the lot .
gers" and speaker Sammy across from the Farmer's Bank
in Tuppers Plains.
Anderson.

Johnson family reunion held
Descendants of Lyman and group enjoyed a wagon ride to the
Mary Moore Johnson mel re· old Lyman Johnson hom~site,
cently at the Carmel Church In where !hey enjoyed drinking
honor of Sieve Johnson. Perry. water from Ihe spring.
Others at tending were Stanley
Ga.. and was hosted by Sue
Johnson.
Clarence and Ruth
Hager and Paul Moore of Racine.
Bradford
,
Laura Circle. ' Lizzie
Civil War records and other
family documents and pictures Wood, Fred and Bertha Smith,
were displayed. Aller group Harlan Eiselstein, Linda Palterpj!Otos were taken. some of !he son. Douglas · Circle, · FlorencE&gt;
Circle. and Marlha and Amy Lee.

Father-son banquet
'

,' t

/I

ALAINA SIGLER
Two bear cakes decorated by
Mrs. Kandy Nuce and Mrs.
Rosemary Hanning ivere served
with ice cream.

Revival slated
The Faith Full Gospel Church
In Long Bottom will hold revival
on June 29. 30, and July 1 at 7: 30
p.m. each e\'enlng. Hear Rev.
Dan Tucker, music specials.
slngirtg. The public is Invited to
attend.

THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS

Wolf Pen notes
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp,
and Mr. and Mrs. J{evln Knapp,
Michelle and Amy were Memor·
1111 Day villtors or Mr. and. Mrs.
Doyle Knapp, Lanpvilie.
Mrs. Lelile Frank. Sarah and
Matthew, Texas Road, were
Wednesday vllftors or Mrs. Eu·
aene Haning ud family.

Jonathan Meigs Chapter Daugh·
ters of the American Revolution
w!ll meet Friday at the Hackett
cabin In Long Bottom at 6 p.m.
r~1ther than at noon originally
lftanned. The program w!ll be
presented by Mrs. John Rose.
Hostesses wlii be Mrs. George
Racket! Jr., Mrs. Robert Ashley,
Mrs. Keith Ashley, Mrs. Lawrence Smith. and Mrs. Linda
Patterson. The hostesses will
provide the meat and beverage.
Invited guests are welcome.

LONG BOTTOM- The Ret urn

Sigler celebrates first birthday

'

J" W.IIAII

Sliver Run · Baptlsl Church
Vacation Bible School will be at
the Sliver Run Baptist Church
from Jun.e 19·23 from f&gt;.Sp.m. The
Silver Run Baptist Church Is
located In Cheshire.

·
.

SA~INOS

20°/o OFF

"Sonseeker Safari. Searching to
Know God."

·;
·•

SUPER

Hu111ming ,
Bird Feeders

Bike parade set
for Flag Day

The Middleport First Baptist
Church will be having Vacation
Bible School June 12-16 from 9
a.m. to 12 noon. The theme will be

Auto •. 4 wh8el driV., olr. cruiH,

·FIRESIDE INN

Bible schools slated

The Pomeroy Church or Christ
will be having Vacation Bible
School the week or June 25-29.
from 6: 30-8: 30 p.m. The theme is
"Jesus, Joy Forever." Ail child·
ren of the · area, kindergarten
through 12th grade. are Invited to
at~nd. There will be Clowns.
refreshments. crafts. fellowship ..
fun, and Bible lessons everyday .

,

1984 FORD TEMPO •••••••••••••• S1995
Auto .• PB, PS, Air.

Shirley Bumgardner, Terl Hockman, Maryfn
Wilcox and Donna Hartson; and back row, Trudy
WIDiams, Dorothy Davis, Debbie Carder and
Carolyn McDaniel. Sharon Stewart and Heidi
Caruthers, who were unavailable lor the picture,
also participate In the chorus. The public is
welcome to attend Sunday's special program.

The Rutland Freewill Baptist
Church, Salem St .. Rutland. will
be having VacatiOn Bible School
June 12·16 from 6·8 p.m. Classes
will be for ages nursery through
teenage. The public Is invited to
participate.
·

Golf evenl Sunday

.

LADIES' MUSICAL- Tne Ladles Choru11 of tbe
Middleport Church of Chll'!lt will be pre~entlng a
program .of musical worship on Sunday at 7 p.m.
at the church. Elitflled "Strictly Fembtine," the
ladles' musical is directed by Ron Ash.
Accompalllst I&amp; Jennifer Sheets. Chorus partfci·
pants laclude, I to r in front, Shelly DuBose,

•

A potluck and mixed scramble
is to be held Sunday. beginning at
3 p.m. for the JayMar Tuesday
Ladl~ League.
This past week's league •
winners after 18 holes of play at
the JayMar course were Margaret Foilrod. low gross; Ada
Nease, lownet; and LE&gt;e Teaford
and Margaret Foilrod. tying for
low putts.

Friday, June 9. 1989

Community calendar

.eerily reminiscent of the battles
between Tripie.Crown champion
Affirmed and Alydar In 1978.
Affirmed took that year's
Derby by 1 1·2 lengths; Sunday
Silence won by 2 1·2 lengths.
Affirmed edged Aiydar by a neck
in the Preakness. and Sunday
Silence prevailed by a nose after
one of the fiercest stretch duels In
history.
Affirmed and Aiydar lined up
side-by-side. in the 2 an 3holes.tn
the Belmont gate, and raced
virtually side-by·slde the entire
mile and a half. After setting a
relatively .slow early pace, the
two gradually accelerated over
the course, leaving the rest of the
field 1J lengths behind as they
battled down the stretch. Af·
firmed won by a head.
It is possible that Sunday
Silence and Easy Goer will not be
1·2 out of the gate. Longshot
Triple Buck also Is expected to
try for the lead. and. since he
drew the No. 3 post, be has a
shorter distance to travel to the
front.

•

Page-5

Stage is set for Belmont duel Saturday

.
!'liuttoruiiA•acuo·
N . l ..nub 1U Chh·a.-o. :!:'!I p .m .
:'lOt•"'' l 'tirk ut Plttloihurah. 1:J5 p.m .
l'lllladt•lphht !1.1 Montr.•lll. 7:35p.m.

01'1 roll

t:

Ea"t
"

Jilt·~

9

tfandiultlli-3) , 7: :\;i p.m .
:\lllwaultt"o· ll 'hUkrhudt '!.:t) :•t Halll·

S \TW:'\:1\1 .. l.t:.o\t i l

l,nub• at ('llit•u.l(o

Sun

11

:Ill :..'tl .6.&amp;:1 I
:t! :!1 .3'29 .JI !
'l't'\U.&lt;;
:12 2~ ..JI:jl
:JI ~
St•alllt•
'!IC :12 .lti7 II •
Mlnnt•.,uta
'!ti :II .l:'rfi IP J
( 'hit•UI:"II
'!I :111 .:liili l ~' ·t
ThurM! U,\o ',. Rt••HIIb.
!\t•"' \'urli./1, RttSion ~. 11 lnnin,lr.'&gt;
Milv.-uu kt.•t• II, Baltimon&gt; 2
'l' o •.\ ~'" II , Oth·ago &lt;
Frldt~,V'" (lam ..s
"''"'"" {Smilh!»na :!·-1 ) at !\t•v.· \'t~rk
!Out ... tn '!-:1) 1 ~::JII p. m .
llt•lrnil (T:UIUna .1·5) at Torunt11 r~tkh
1 ~1), i : !l.i p.m .
~~ ·:UIIt• tlll\'lli"US I~ I) al ( 'h'1&gt;o•lund

)0( ,

•·rand"''ft

Saltwda,y'"' (.iamt'!O
nndnltili al Lu Anflll'lt'!i

lnlt•r l'll.l Jnn;d

tUII.;Rit' t\1\' U :,t,m

link land
f:tllfurni:t
Kan10a... I 'll ,,.

Sa~n

tKnhl n."iiD 3-1 l , 10:25 p.m.

AUBURNHILLS,Mich. (UPH
.:... While Detroit Pistons guards
provided the winning margin
again Thursday night, injury
diminished the Los Angeles Lak·
ers' backcourtto nearly nothing.
Joe Dumars, IslabThomasand
Vinnie Johnson combined for 72
points to pace Detroit to a 108-10o
triumph and a 2-0 lead In theNBA
finals.
The Detroit backcourt. which
outscored the Lakers 67-40 In
Game 1. again made the differ·
ence. Thomas collected 19 points
' and Johnson added 18 as the
Pistons' guards outscored Iheir
counterparts 72-51.
The Lakers. who lost starting
guard Byron Scott on Monday,
watched team leader and league
MVP Magic Johnson go down
with a pulled left hamstring with
4:39 left in the third period. He
left the Paiace ·on crutches.
·'I fell a twinge early in the
third quarter but thought everything was , OK," Johnson said.
"Then I pulled It trying to get
back on defense.".
Johnson. who missed five
games and the Ail-Star Game
because of the same Injury, did
not return and he will not be
examined until Sunday Game 3.
Scott also will be examined
before Sunday's game to deter·
mine If he can play.
"I feel fortunate ," said Detroit
Coach Chuck Daly, whose team
was hobbled by injuries In last
year's finals against Los An·
geies. "We did not play nearly as
well as we clid In Game 1 tal05·92
lriurnph) .
.
"We really caught a break

The 'Daily Sentinel

IOMIIA-

-.,.•o---.-.
...,t..,,,..,... .....,,
·-!A
..............,

POII CHOP
&amp; HISSING 11•11 -····-·- *4.39
.._...Jutaw
,.,..kc._ - • ,.., ... O w _ -'IMih - -

~~--'!Mill
Mu:elwoo-. VOUl CW• of a Hit • ...., .... • H...,.... IIIHuiL Cett..
Regyl• or Dooolfolnllod,- ,......,
IMII- DrtokorTII Mlv le

.

NEW HOURS: 10:00 A.M. to 1:30 P.M ........ Deyo A w..k

The Pomeroy Church of Christ
will be having a falher-son
banquet on June 15 at 6 p.m. In
Ihe church social room. A pat rio·
lie theme will be carried out wilh
decorations by Pat Thoma. Betty
Spencer. Jenny Whiliatch, Mar·
tha Hoffman, and Linda Lauder·
milt will be In charge of the
menu. Hoyt W. Alien Jr .. evange·
list with the Jackson Church of
Chris! will be the speaker.

Correaion
In Thursday' s article involving
Ihe Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, lhe memoriallr ibute will be made to E;velyn
Knight, not Eleanor Knight as
was reported.

Salon to have potlt~ck
The potluck picnic of the Meigs
County Salon 710 has been
rescheduled for June 26 al the
.Roadside Park on Rt. 33 at 6 p.m.
Meat Is lofurnlshed by thrSalon.

FRI., SAT., SUN.

PET SEMETARY

Come Ride The Berry Wagon
To Pick Your Owh Ripe,
Fresh Strawben'les ll~ng Hours; Moo,
l· 8 a.m.-12 noon
79¢1b.
'!hurs. evening· 4-7 p.m.

�Friday. June 9. 1989

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Classifie

'

•

••
'
I•

'

1

-

.

. • The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

~. r;:;~~~Th!!!is!,;.j!Mc~es!!sa~!~~e~a~n~d~Ch~urc~h~~~2.!!!.2!!..:~!!!!..!!!jTh~e~l~n!!!te~res!!!~~ed;!_.!_R~w~~;~~·ness~
. ~·~~!1L~isted~~On~~Th~is~R~ll~Je-~~-.....:....,
Veterans ·
Hospital

••'
.''

r .....

1I 5 E• .,_Ill Dr.
992-2104

ro,

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

RACINE PlANING MILL

~~!!!.
d
Pre.Criplians
ru

c.C~!,,~~ina
l~'·~'ft~l
Syncuse
.. ' .

INSURANCE
SERVICES

SALES &amp; 5UYKE
992-7075
172 florth Soc.,., AIL

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

~

t

Nationwide lns •.co. ~
ol Columbus, 0 .

I)~

'

10.. w. Main
"HJII Pom•roy

..

I

I

pan; De~
•' lknday Scmollk!L Q&gt;urchS.boo19:15a.m;
Wen~ 111::11 a.m. Choir re-,
• . n-I"'Y. 1:45 p.m. unler dlroctlon ci 4&gt;1o
.".

~

•' •· p.m.; mlch•elt......Jce, W-1\Y. ?p.m.
• GRACE EPISOOPAL CHURCH, 326 E.
' ' ·' Main St., Pomeroy. Sunday se!VIcec: llo(y
'"" • cornnUiionon tiE ftrsl: Surllay oteachmonth,
r..;., • and corntmed with mQ"Dng prayer on tbe
~ •· tlllnl !~lld"'Y· Marling tnYer and sermon on

&amp;.-------------J
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

CHURCH, Cornt!' Ash and Plum. Noel
Herrmann, pastor. Sunday SchoollO:OOa.

m :; Morning WorshJp, 11:00 a.m. ; Wed·

nesday and Saturday Evening Serv lees at

Ave., PtiiWS~ . MIS. Dora Wining In Cbarll'.
!lilidftll meetliil. 10 a.m.: SUnlsy

I
•

Scboo1. 10::11 a.m. Su- School. YPSM
~ Ad-. le,.,.... 7:ll p.m. Salvation

,

'111lnd111Y. U::IJ a.m. to 2 p.m. Ladleo Home

~

7

IRIOI

mootllllovor!oustpeal«nand-s!Edals.

,' -Le-. li:45
members In charge. an wanen
p.m.
Corpe C&amp;d&lt;t

&amp;n.Dea.trc••

'lbundiiiY.

' a- (Yourw Peo!ie-IIIlle), 7::11 p.m. Bible
~ ;llludY and l'rayer l!lO!I!J!&amp; """' to the ~lc.
,
POMEROY WESTSIOE CHURCI! OF
• , CHRIST, 33'll6ChUthll'sllomeRoad (CourOy
kood ~). i8'J.6BI. Vocal mwlc. Sunday War·

tj "·llhlpiOa.m; llllleStuciYUa.rn.; W....._6p.
· .... w-~I~StuciY, 7 p.m.

~

OLD

D
Bliit.E CHRIS11AN
, ,. CHURCH. AMD Ctatlfi. pu11r; Unda Swan.
s u • SCbiD 9: :m a.m.; ,.-eachtng lei'·
•
vloll,llnt and tHnl SuniiiiY lollowlngSunlsy
: ~· ~ Youdl meetln&amp; 7::1&gt; p.m. evay Sun-

" '" .su.-..

; . •~CRED HEART CATHOLIC CHURCH

•' - Pomeroy. MsiP'. Mtchael Hellmer, Ph.
.~ • 992-5898. Salurday evening Mass, 5: :It p.m.
tl • ; Sundlly Man, 8 a. m. and 10 a.m . CCD
: ', claues, 9 a.m. Sunday. Confessions: 0nf!' · 0 , half hour bettlre each Mass.
'

GRAHAM

CHESTER - Worship 9 " .m .;-- Ohureb
SChoollOa.m .; Bible Study, ThuiWJay, 7p.
m .; UMW, ftrat 'lb.unda:y, 1 p.m.; Communion, first Sund.y (AlcbE!I') .
•
JOPPA - Worship 9:30 a.m.; Clulrcb

SCbod 10:30 a.m. Bible Study Weclnsday,
7: :II p.m. (.!ohnsm).
LONG BO'ITOM - Chun:h SCbool 9: 30

a.m.; Worship 10:30 a.m.; Bible Study,

Wedneoday, 7: 30 p.m.; UMYF Wedneo·

day, 6:00p.m . ; CommuniOD. Fll'lt SUild.ay

ci Month (Crcioot) .

REEDSVILLE - Chun:h S&lt;hool9: :II a.

llev.

Bev. Doo .......l
Rev. W•ltiJTII-er

' welcome.
RUTLAND F1RST BAPTIST CHURCH

•.

. - Sister Harriett Warner, Supt Sunday
r SChool9:30 a.m.; MorntneworshJp, 10; ts
. ._ a.m.
~

.

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST, Lyst111

"' Halley, minister: Saturday evening
" • -evanaeltlttc services, open to public, 7 p.

• m.; Sunday Chun:h School, 9::11 a.m.;
' · --·Mornllll Worlhlp 10:00 a.m.
• ' ' FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po·

i'

lr.

Rev. -rcralllree
Bev.aollel181e&lt;le

ASBURY (Syra""oe) -Wonblplla.m.

: . Church Schad 9:fo5 a .m.; Charte Bible

Study, Wednsday, 7:30p.m.; UMW, ftnt

TUesday, 1: 30 p.m.; Cbolr Rehearu.l,
Wedneoday 6::II p.m. (Thatcher)
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a.m.;
Churoh S&lt;llool!O a.m.; Bible Study, Tuell·
day, 7:00p.m. ; UMW, First Monday, 7:30
p.m.; UMYF Sunday, 6 p.m. Choir Rehearsal, Children's at 8:30p.m. Adult fol-

lowtns; Wedneoday. (Franklin)
FLATWOODS - Church School, 10 a.m.

; Worship, 11 a.m.; Bible Study, Thursday, 7 p.m.; UMYF, Sunday, 6 p.m.

(Franklin).

FOREST RUN - Worlllllp 9 a.m.;
Churoh Scbod 10 A.M.: Choir practice,
Tburaday, 6::11 p.m. ; UMWtblrd Monday .
(Thatcher)
HEATH (Middleport) -Church SChool,

.. . ~ T.) ; MlasJon Friends (ages 2-6) , Royal
• Ambusadon (boys ages 6-18), and Girls
t;
tn Action (agesi-181 on Wednesdays, 7 p.

Youth Group, 4 p.m. ; Wedneo&lt;lay, Bible

study 6:00p.m. Cbolr rehearsal 7:00p.m.

l Vl•ltatiDn, 6:30p.m.
r . FAITH TABERNAO.E CHURCH, Bal·

a.m.; Wonhtp tervtce 10:00 a.m.; UMW
thlrd Wednsday, I p.m. (TbatchO&lt;)

' ;. m. (D.S.T.) -"7c:llp.m. (E .S.T.); Tuelllay

, - 10)' Run Road, Rev. Emmett Rawson, pas·
'"~ :1· tor. Handle.r Dunn, supt. Sunday School,
11

.:" lOLm.; Sundayeventngservlce, 7:30p.m.

• ; Blbleteachlna. 7:30p.m. Tbuntlay.
: • SYIIACUSE MISSION, Cherry St., sy.
~~~

.,.

" reeulf. Mark Morrow, past cr. Services, 10
a.m. S...Say. Even Ina tervtces SWlday

' andWedn=at6:06p.m.
' ' MIDDL
T CHURCH OF CHRIST
'· IN CHRISTIAN UNION, Owliht Haley,
~ flrat elder; Wanda Mohler, Sundq S&lt;bod
Supt. Sunday S&lt;hod 9: :II a.m.; Morning
,.

•

: '

l,

p.m.; We&lt;lnesdaypnyermeet1Ds7c00p.m.
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD,

Recine. Rev. Jams Satterfield, putoc.
Freeman Williams, Supt. Sunday School
9: t5 a.m. ; Sunday and Wednesday even·
. lne services, 7 p.m.

111

,.
,..
'

~

Wonhlp 10:30 a.m.; Evening Worsh1p 7: l'J

MIDDLEPORT

FIRST

BAPTIST.

.r Corner Sixth and Palmer. James Seddon,
.- Pastor. Edna Wllsm, S.S. Supt.; Cathy

Rigas. Asst. Sulfl. Sunday School, 9:15 a.
m.; Mornina Worship, 10:15 a.m. ; Sunday
EveniRI service, 7 p.m. Prayer meeting
...... . . - and Bible Study Wednesday evening, 7 p.
m.; Children's choir practice, Wednes·
' ~ay •.7 p.m .; Adult choir practtce, Wed., 8

l

I
'

t

:
il

o

p.m.; I!Mdlo program, WMPO, Sunday,

8;:JJ . ....

...

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST,
~th ood Main, AI Hartson, minister;
lllldU•rd Dulole, A.l5odate Pastor; Mlk.e
r.if~rh•ch. Sunday School Supl"'"lnlendent.
Rfblf! School~ : ll a.m .; Morning .Worship
liJ ::tiJ a .m. fo:~nln~ Wor~hlp 7:00 p.m .
'Wf'Cinf.fidi~Y. 7:1XJ p.m. Prayer meetlna.

MIDUI.f:PORT CHURCH OF THE NA·
7.ARf:NF. , PASTOR Fred Penhorwood.

Iiiii Whitt!, Sunday School Supt. Sunday
Sl!html ,. ::JJ a .m. ; Morntnc worship 10:45
a.m. ; Jo:vr~nlnac Srlt'vlcc, G:OO p.m.; Wed·
"at&lt;SdMy Prayflr Mf•r&gt;tlng, 7:110 p.m. .

t;Sri'Kil PHIOIBYTBIIIAN IIIINIITII1'
Ot' IIIKIGI\ I!OIJNTl'

9: ~ a.m.; Morning Worship 10: 30 a :m.;

(ZUniaal
MINERSVILLE - Chun:h SChod 9:00
PEARL CHAPEL -Church SChod 9c 00

a.m.; Worship Service 10:00 a.m.

~Mar·

tin)
POMEROY - Church School, 9: 15 a.m.
; Worshlp 10:30 a.m.; Choir rehau-~~al
Wedneoday, 7::11 p.m.; VMW, second

Tuesday, 7::11p.m. ; UMYFSunday,6p.m.
(Meldowa)
.
ROCK SPRINGS- Chureh Scbod, 9: 15
a.m.; Wonlllp 10 a .m .; Blble Study, Wednsday, 7:110p.m. ; UMYF (Senlon) , Sun.
day, 6 p.m. ; (Juniors) every other Sun· .
day, 6 p.m. (Franklin).
'

RUTU.ND - Church School, 10 a.m.;

Worlhlp, 11 a .m.; UMW Ftrlt Monday,
7:30p.m. (Crabl:ree)

SALEM CEI'ri'ER- Churoh School9:15

a.m.;

( steel!~)

Morning Worship

.

10:15 a.m.
.

SNOWVILLE - Momtnr Worship, 9:00
a.mt, Church S&lt;~Ciol 10: 00 a.m. (Martin)
SO'VTRERN Q.UIITEB
lley.Keoolllaau... .
Bey, Ro1er Orace
.... l:ariJU ...

APPLE GROVE- Chun:h SChool9:00

a .m .; Morning Worlhip 10:00 a .m .; Bible

Study Sunday 7:00p.m. ; Prayer meellftl
7:00p.m. Tburlllay. Ullclls)
BETHANY - Wortblp 9 a.m .j Churob

SChodiOa.m.; Bible9tudyWednsday!O
a .m.; Dbrcu Women'• Fellu.rlhtp Wtd-

nesday II a.m. (Baker) .
·
CARMEL - Church S&lt;hod t: 110 a.m.;

Worship, 10:45 a.m. Semnd and Fourth

Sundays; Fellowahlp dlnn ... wttb Sutt•
third Tbul'lday, 6:.'11 p.m. (Bakwl .
MORNING STAR- Chun:h School t:45
Wor~p 10c30
Bible Study,
7.30 .
9:110

786 NORTH .SECOND AVE.
MIDDlEPORT. OHIO

•

ZION CHURCH.OF CHRIST, Pl&gt;m,e!'oy·
Harrisonville Rd. (Rt. 163) Robert E. Pur·
tell, mlnlltor; Steve Stant.,., Bible SChool
Supt.; Rodn.,. Howery, Asat Supt. SUN·
DAY: Bible School 9::11 a.m. ; Wotohlp
10c30 A.M. and 7::11 P.M.: Wednl!llday Bl·
ble Study, 7:00 p.m.
ST. JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine

Grove. The Rev. WIUlam Mlddlmwarth
putor. Chureh service-9:30a.m.; SundaY

S&lt;hod 10: :11 a.m.
BRADBURY Ciii)RcH OF CHRIST,
Tom Runyon, pastor. Sunday S.llool 9: 30

a.m.; Larry Haynes, S. S. Supt. Morning
wonblp 10:30 a.m.
RACINE CHURCH OF 111E NAZA·

vice 7:00p.m. Wedll~ay ,...,Ice, 7 p.m.
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN GHURCII, DeX•
ter. WOOdy Cal~ ......... !lmrtceo SUnday
10 a.m.
~.m. Wednesday~?.m.
DYES
COMMUNITY C RCH
Lloyd Sayre, Supt. Sunday S&lt;
9: 30 a:
m.; RlOI'IIInC wonbtp 10:3) a.m. Sun4ay

t;1 l

evenlDglei'VIce 7 p.m.

RACINE nRST

BAPTIST,

SteVe

Deaver, PaltCJ', Mllce Swiger, SUnday

SChod Supt.; Sunday S&lt;hod 9:30 a.m.;

Mornlna worahlp 10:40 a.m.; Sunday

evnlq worship 7:30 p.m.; Wednesday

evenlq Bible study 7:30p.m.
, ·
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Boarlltl&amp;llam. Ray Laudermllt. puler, fto.
- tlllart. aulltant puler. SundayS&lt;~
lD un.: wanNJ&gt; 7 p.m.; W-IllY· 6 p.m.

)•outtunmllll; Wed, 7p.rn.churohserv!ceo.
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, %

· mUeotrRt. 325. Rev. BenJ : Wattt, pa.st(J'.

Robert seartea, s.s . Supt. Sunday Schod

9:30a .m .; Mornln&amp; Worahlp 10:30 a .m. ;
Sunday evenlne aervtce 7: ~ p.m .; Wednesday lei'VIce, 7:30p.m.

SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill· Little,

putor. Steve IJttle, S. S. Supt. Sunday
SchoollO a.m.; Morning worsfp, 11 a .m .;
Sunday ev.enlng wanhlp 1:30 p.m. Prayer
meetlnaand Bible 1tudy Wednesday, 7: 30
p.m.; Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p.m .

REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH

- 383 N. 2nd Ave., Middleport. Sunday
School10 a.m, Sunday evenliiJ 7:OOp.m.;

Mid-week oervlce, Wed., 7 p.m.
. LANGSVD.LE CHRI9'I1AI'I CHURCH,
Sunday kllod 9:30a.m.; DIIIU Jan.,.,
sop!.; Mornlnl wonblp 10::11a.m.; su ..
day ov0111n&amp; aervtce, 7:30p.m.; Wecln•
day evenln&amp; let'Vlce, 7: 30 p.m. ·
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF 'ft!E NA·
ZARENE. Rev. Glenn McMlltan, putir.
Mary Janice Lavender, Sunday Schod
Supt. Sunday School 9: :II a.m.; MorntJia
won hlp 10: 30 a.m.; Evantellltlc oervtce,
6p.m.; PrayerandPrlloeWednesday, 7p.
m.: Y~uth meettna. 7 p.m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elden R. Blue, pastor. Sunday
SCbod 10 a.m.; Gary Reed, Lay l&lt;Sder. ·
MorninJ. aennon, 11 a ~m. ; Su~ay nlaht

IOI'\IIceo. Chrllttan Elld..vor 7.:11·p.m. ,
Sont IOI'VIce 8 p.m. Pr..ehlftl 8: :II p.m.

Mid-week prayer me0t1J!8, Wedn-y, 7
p.m.
,

GROVE; CIIRISTIAN, Char·
I• Domlul. PUIIO'. Mildred Do~~~•, Sundill' .!lolloGI lkipt. Mondnc Won lip t: 3D a.
m.; Sullllq llollool10:30a.m.; E-inl-·
IIEMLOa(

vi~t::•mii
'"
IIAPTJST, Puler. Joe N.
~~

S&lt;hool9: 45 Lm.; Ellelllnt
; Pra,..- Meet toa. 8::11

BETHLEHEM BAPI'IST. Rev. Earl
Shuler, pasta-. Worship service, 9::JJ a .m.

Sunday Schod 10::11 a.m. Bible Study and

Borden, putor. Cornellus Bunch, 1upt.
Sunday School 9; :JJ a.m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship aervtce at 2:30 p.

.

'

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Graul
St., Middleport. Af!lllated with Southern

Baptist Conventkm. David Bryan. Sr., Ml·

nls.ter. Sunday S&lt;hbd 10 a.m.; Morning

wonhlp 11 a. m.; Evenlna worship ?·p.m .;
Wednesday even1n1 Bible · study and
prayer meettna 7 p.m .

tng worsbtp 7:00 p.m. Prayer meeting,

Wednsday 7:00p.m.
·
OLD BETHEL FREE WILL BAPI'IST
CHURCH, 211(1()1 State Route 7, Mlddl..
port Sunday SChoollOa.m.; Sunday even·
ing service 7: ~ p.m.; Tllesday service,

7:00p.m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH. ·

0 . H. cart, pastcr. SundayScboolat 9: 30a .
m.; Morning worship at 10: 30 a.m. ; Sun-

dayeveati\&amp;servtceat 7:30p.m . Thur.t.ay
services at 7: :JJ p.m. .

FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald

Knob, l~ated on County Road 31. Rev .
Roaer WUUord, pastc:r. Sunday School
'9; 30 a.m. ; Mornlng Worshl 10: 45 a .m .;
Sutklay evening worship 7:00p.m.; Wed·
nesday evening Blbl~ Study 7:00p.m.

WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvnieRD. Rev. PhllllpRI·
denour, pastcr. Sunday School9:30 a .m .;
worship service 10:30 a.m.; Bible study
and worship tervlee, Wednesday, 7 p.m.

RUTLAND CHURGH OF CHRIST,
Bill Carter, i&gt;astor. Sunday SCbod 9:00 a.
m .; Morning Worship and Communion

!0:30a.m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos

TUUs, pastor. SOnny Hudsm, supt. Sunday
School 9:30a.m.; Morning worship. 10 j 30
a .m.; Sunday evenlq service 7: 00p.m.
Wednesday service 7 ·p.m. WMPO proa;ram 9 a.m. each Sunday.

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA ·
RENE . samuel Bas)"', pastor. Sunday

ST.

PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH ,

Corner Sycamore and Semnd Sts., Pomeroy. The Rev. WOllam Mtddleswart,
pastor. Sunday School 9:4!5 a.m. Chqreh

service 11 a.m.

SACRED HEART CHURCH, Mslt'.
Anthony Glannamore. Ph . 992-5898. Saturday Evening Mass 7: 30 p.m. ; Sunday
Mau, 8 a.m. and 10 a .m . Confessions one
halt hour before each Mass. CCD clas~
11 a.m . Sundar. . - ···
'
VICTORY BAPTIST, ~25 N. 2nd St.,
Middleport. Jamll' E. Keesee, pastcr.

Sunday morning worship 10 a.m. ; EvenIng service 7 p.m.; Wednesday evening
worship 7 p.m. ViJitatton Thursday 6: 30p.

m.

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David

Curfman, pastor. Sunday School, 10 a.m.;
worship service 11 a.m.; Sunday night
worship service 7:30 p.m.; Midweek
prayer service Wedftesday 7 p.m.

'
WESLEYAN
BIBLE HOUNESS
CHURCH of Middleport, Inc., 75 PearlS!.,
Rev. Ivan Myers. paste..-; Roser Manley,

Sr., Sunday Scllod Supt. Sunday Schod
9:30a.m.; Mornini WOrship 10: 30 a.m.;

Evening Wonhlp 7:30 p.m. Wedllesday
eveniDi Bible study, prayer and

service, 7:30p.m.

pral~

'

R~. David McMahls, pastor. Chureh

SChool 9:30 a .m.; Surullly morning Rr·
vice, 11 a.m.; SuncSiy even loa .er vlce,
7: :II p.m. Wedneoday prayer meetln&amp;. 7::11

BtbleStudy 9 a.m.; Wonb.lp,10a.m.; Sun·
day evening aervlce 6 p.m.; Wedlu!lday
evenJna ~tee, 7 p.m.

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY, RaCine,
Rt, ill. William Hobacll, putiO'. Sunday

SCbool JO a.m.; Sun~eve111ng tervlee 7
p.m. Wedneeday even
tervlce 7 p.m.
CARPENTER B
T. Don Cheadle,
Supt. Sunday S&lt;hod 9::II a.m. Momtnr
Worsblp 10: 30a .m . Prayerservtce, alternate Sundays.
nex.t to Fort Meigs Park. Rutland. Robert
Richards, pastor. Services at 1 p.m. on
Wedaetdays and Sundays.

TER of lhe Wesleyan Hollnen Church.

Rev . David Ferrell, pastor. Henry Eblin,
Sunday Schod Supt. ; Sunday SCbod lOa.
m .; MornlftJ Worship 11 ~.m.; Evening
servl~ 7:30p.m. Wednesday evening ser-

vice 7:30p.m.
·
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH
Gary Holter, pastor. Sunday ..rvtces 9:30
a.m. and 7 p.m.; Midweek service, 7:30 p,
m. Thurlclay.

·

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third

Ave. Rev . Clark Baker, pastor. Car:l Not-

tingham, Sunday Schod SupL Sunday

School 10 a .m. With clute~ for all ages.
Evening servlces at 6 p, m. Wednesday Bl·
ble study at 7:30p.m. Youth tervtcea Frl·
day at 7:30 p.m.
·

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP,I28Mn1St.,

Middleport. Brother Chuck McPhen&lt;:a,
pastor. Sunday School 10 a.m.; Sunday
evening servtc" at 7 p.m. and Wednelday
services at 7 p.m.

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,
put or. Sunday School 9: l) a .m. ; cb\1 reh

servtce 7:30p.m.; youth fellowahlp 6:30 p.
m. ; Blbl .. study, Tbul'lday, 7:30p.m.
nJLL GOSPEL LIGIITIIOUSE, 3.1045
HUand Road, Pomeroy. Tom Kelly, paa·
tor. Danny Lambert, S. S. Supt. Suaday
morning service at 10 a.m.; Sunday evenIna aervlce 7: 30 p.ml Tuesday and Thursday Service. at 7: :IJ p.m.

NEW HAVEN CHUReH OF THE NA·
ZARENE , ·Rev. Gi&gt;~J~don Stroud, pastor.
)Iunday School9: :II a.m.; Worlllllplei'VIce,
10:30 a.m.; Youth service Sunday 6: 15 p.

' m. Sunday evenlllgservtce7!00p.m, Wed-

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD -GObert Spence&lt;, put or. Sun·
day SChod 9:00 a.m. ; Mol'llln&amp; aervlce
to: ooa.m.; Sunday eventq aervfce7 :00p.

a.m.; Worship 11 a .m. and7p.m. Wednes·
day Bible Study, vocal music, 7 p.m.

Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7:15
p.m.
, HAR'I;FORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION. Hartford, W. Va.

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Jooeph B. lloaldna, evangelllt. Sunday

HARRISONVILLE HOUNESS CHAP·

Max. Folmer, Sr., s. S. Supt. SunclaySC:hod.
9: 30a.m. ; Sunday eventoa service. 7:30 .
m.; Wednesday evenln&amp; Bible study and
pl'llse 1ervtce; 7: 3D p.m.

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·

m.; WonhipServtee,lD:•sa.m.

day SChool 9: 30a.m. ; Morning Worship
10:30 a.m.; Evealng worship 7: 30 p.m.
Wednesday worship 7:30p.m.

m.; Mid-week prayer oervt.ce Wednesday
7p.m.
MT. OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN·
JTY CHURCH, Lawrence Bush, pa.stcr.

ding t.ne, Mason, W. Va. J. N. Thacker,
paator. Evening service 7:00 p.m.; Women's Mlnlltry, Thuuday, 9:30 a .m.;

Sunday SChod Supt. Sunday School9: 30a.

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
, APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd.,

School9 :30 a.m. ; Worship servlce10: 30a .
m.; Young people's service 6 p .m .
Evangeilstlc servlce6: 30 p.m. Wedneaday
service 7 p.m.

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St., Maaon, W. Va. Sunday Bible Study 10

MT. MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
MaiD St., Middleport. Rev. Gilbert Cralt,
Jr., put«. Mrs. Ervin Baum1ardner,

UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt. 7 on Pomeroy By· Pan Rev. Robert E. Smith. Sr,

pastor. Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt. Sullday
Scbod 9:30 a.m.; Morn In&amp; Worship 10: 30;

Evenlnl Worohlp 7:00p.m.; Weclnsday
Prayer Service, 7:00.p.m.

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Rallroad

St., MUon. Sunday Scholi W a .m.; MornIna WONihln 11 a .fft. : Evenirul service.&amp;p.

nacley Prayer Meeting &amp;Dd Bible Study

7:00p.m.
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH. Sun·

day ahem OM services at 2:30. Thursday
evenlna:servtces at 7:30.

nRST BAPTIST CHURCH. Maa 111, W.
Va. PaatiO', Bill Murplly .SubdaySCIIodlO
a .m.; Sunday eventng 7:l) p.m. Prayer

meeting and Blbleatucly Wednsday, Uo
p.m. Everycne welcome.
RllTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa·

lem St. Rev. Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday

S&lt;hooi!Oa.m.; Sulldayeventng7:00p.m.;
Wednsday eveniDt prayer meettnr 7:00

· p.m.

.

SOUTH BETHEL, NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, Silver Rldte. Duane Sydenttrlcller, paator. Sunday S&lt;hod 9 a.m.;
Worchip servtce, 10 a.m.; Sunday evntq

service, 7:00p.m. Wedneoday night Bible
study 7:00 P·"!·

THE LOVE OF GOD

Like a cradle, rocking, rocking,
Silent, peacefUl, to and fro,Llke a mother's sweet looks dropping
On the Uttle face below,Hl!.ngs the green earth, swinging, turning,
Jarless, noiseless, sate and slow;
Falls the light of God's face; bending
Down and watching us below.

I

...

Yanks win thinl

I

'

I

And as feeble babes that suffer,
Toss and cry; and will not rest,
Are the ones the tender mother
Holds the closest, lovea the !lest;
So when we are weak and wretched,
. B)' our sins welihed down, distressed,
Then It 18 that God's great patience
Holds us closest, loves us best;

0 pat Heart of God! whose loving
CaiUIOt blndered be DGr erosled;
Win liCit W'l!llry, Will not even
Ill our death Itself be lostLqve dlvtlle! of such lft&amp;l loving
Oldy motbel'l!lmclllr tile cost,Colt ot love, wblell au love paQ!n&amp;.
O.V. a Son to u.v. tile losi. ·

" The more I keep learnin g
Nolan Ryan gave up four about this ga m e, the m ore games
homers Thursday night for the like this I'll have . " said Sierra.
first time in his career. Fortu· who had fou r hits In a game fo r
nately For Ryan , all the home the fourth time this season. ·" I'm
. getting to the elite group In thi s
runs were solo shots.
And Ruben Sierra collected game slowly, but I'll be In that
•
four hits , including two homers , group. I'm going to work hard to
and drove in five runs to power get there."
Eric King, 4·8, wa s rocked for
the Texas Rangers to an 11 · 7
victory over the Chicago White seven runs on six hits in three
innings before being relie ved by
Sox.
Sierra's RBis. hits and homers Tom Mc Ca rth y a nd K en
totals tied caree r· hlghs and gave Patterson.
"It was really a rotten perfor·
Ryan , 7-3, his most victories
mance
for our piWhing staff and
after 12 starts since 1983.
our
d
e
fense,"
sa id Chicago man·
"Physically I felt fine , but I
ager
Jeff
Torbor
g, w hose team
didn't have good velocity on my
made
four
error
s
. "Our hitte r s
fastball tonight," said Ryan . who
are
swinging
the
bats
though , but
gave up the most runs in a victory
it
was
an
embarras
sing
effort on
,since Aug. 4, 1976, a 9·6 triumph
over Texas while he was with the field . Who would have
California. "It was one of those thought we would get all those
plghts: They're a free swinging runs against Nolan Ryan and not
club and they came out swinging. win the game?"
I'm just glad they were all solo
Harold Baine s hit two of th e
home runs .
homers
against Ryan. the latter
" When you have a s good an
in
the
eighth
to narrow the score
offensive club as this one. you ' re
to
8-6.
Baines,
Y(ho has six
going to get a few games where
homers
this
season,
went 3 for 4
you gel the win when you may not
and collecled three RBI.
deserve it."
The Rangers took a 5·0 lead in
Ryan allowed six runs ,and six
the
first inning. Cecil Espy and
hits in eight Innings , walking one
Scott
Fletcher !lpened the Inning
and striking out seven. Drew Hail
with
walks
and Rafael Palmeiro
worked two-thirds of an inning
single
d
home
Espy. After Si erra
before Jeff Russell r e corded the
singled
home
Fletcher
. Palmeiro
final out fo r his 13th sav e.,
scored on an error by third
baseman Eddie Williams . Two
batte rs later, Pete Incaviglia
capped the Inning with a two-run
The Middleport Ya nkees Pony single.
league team went to 3·0 on the
Ivan Calderon clubbed a 408·
season recently with a 21·3 foot solo home r in the second to
v ictory over Racine. Middleport make it 5·1. It broke a streak of26
jumped out to a 10·0 lead after
straight batters Ryan had re·
two innings scored 8 more in the tired, a club record pre viously
fourth inning and 3 in the fifth.
held by Paul Kilgus, who retired
Racine plated a r un in the fir s( 21 straight May 21 , 1988.
and two In the third to r ound out
Sierra' s eighth homer of the
the scoring.
.
Mike Haley was the winning
pitcher for Mlddleporl. L .J.
Milch came on to pllch In the
third. they combined to strikeout
5, walk 3 and give up3 hits. Collin
Maidens, Michael Russell, and
Ky le Wickline pitched for Racine
they combine d to give up 12 hits.
walk 9 and s trike out 3.
Mike Creme ans led Middleport
at the plale with a double and lwo
singles, Mark Haley had a triple
and · a single, Jermey ·Phalln
, . tripled and Kevin Whobrey.
John Harrison. Heath Hudson
Shawn Cremeans, Jared Stewari
and Jason Stewart each singled.
R. Reiber had two singles for
Racine, Wickline doubled and
singled· for the other
•I Russell
Racine hits.

By Untied Press lnlernallonal

l

•

:
I
)

On Aug. 6, 1910, New York City
Mayor William J. Gaynor was sbot
and oeriously wounded by a discharged city employee.

APPUIING

SAIUIDAY,
JUNE 10, 1989

•

•

"AMIX"
12.00 COVEl OIARGE
.at • 21 YEAIS OLD

Sue Holm

sleal second In the fourth Inning of Thursday
night's game in New York. Th e Yankees won 8-71n
ll innings. (UPI)

Rangers survive White Sox
homers to cla·i m 11-7 victory

m.

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, St.
Rt. 124 and co. Rd. 5. Sect! Stewart, pas·

prayer servlceTbursday, 7: 30p.m.

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road. Rev.
Clyde W. Henderaon, pastor. Sunday
S&lt;hool9::11a.m.; Ralph Carl. Supt. Even·

STEAL ATTEMPI' FAllS - Boston second
bueman Ed Romero (left) f~lds the throw from
catcher Rick Cerone before tagging out the New
York Yankees' Jest!e Barfield ""Barfield tried to

children' s churoh 10:30 a.m.: evenlna
pret~ching service first tbree Sundays,
7: ao p.m.; Specl_al service fourth Sunday
eventq, 7:30 p.m.; Wedaesday Prayer

a .m. ClasRS for all ages. Junior Church 11
a.m.; Morning y.oOI'Ihlp 11 a.m. Adult
Choir pracUce 6 p.m. Sunday. Young People's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
• "'
Study, Wednesday at 7;00 p.m.

. $13.00
$33.00

$21 .00
$51 .00

Cetd of Th an ks .

21-3&amp; WORDS
&amp;7 ,00
$10.00
$15.00
$25 .00
060.00

COPY DEADLINE MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
1lfUASDAV PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

yea r, a solo shoti n the third , gave
Te xas a 6·1 lead. Baines and Ron
Kittle hit consecutive home runs
in the fourth to narr ow the gap to
6·3. Kittle ' s 429·foot homer to
center wa s hi s 11th of th e year .
Esp y ' s field e r's cho ice
grounde r in th e fourth ma de II
7·3. With two out in the fifth . the
White Sox s co red twice to narrow
it to 7·5. Steve Lyons and Baines
drove home r uns with singles.
Palme lro's fielde r 's c hoi ce
grounde r scored Espy in the
sixth to give the Rangers an 8·5
le ad . Sierra blas te d a three · run
homer in the bottom or the eig hth

Baseball canl show
slated for July l
There will be a base ba ll ca rd
s how on July 1 a t th e Me igs High
School ca fe t eria !rom 9 a. m . to 3
p.m .
The setup tim e will be 7 a .m .
Tables are unlimite d . Th e ent ry
fee for card e xhibitors Is $1 5 in
advance , $20 at the door. Admis·
s ian is $1 for adults a nd $.50 for
children 12 year s old a nd
younger.
Proceeds will go for the pur·
chase of new band uniforms.
Individu a ls Interes te d In reserv·
ing de.a ler 's tables are to c ontact
P e ggy Le wis. P .O. Box 41 2,
Middl eport OH 45760, at 992·26'73.

NASCAR' racer comes
to Foodland Sunday
The Kra ft· Bull's E ye Bar·B·
Que sauce·s ponsore d Olds mobile
racer, which has a ppea red on
NASCAR' s Wins ton Cup circ uit .
will be on dis play a t Oh io Valley
Foodland on U.S. 35 Sunday from
noon to 6 p.m .

1981 OLDS DELTA II

A uto., PB. PS, Air

Court, Caoe No. 211210.
Rlch•d E. Jonao, Pomeroy,
Molgo County , Ohio,
41718. wao fiPpolntld E-·
utor of the utate of Ewtyn
Lucico,
Iota of
Hubbard Stnot, 8yr.cuoo,
Moigo County. Ohio.
Robert E. Buck,
Proboto Court
Lllni K. NeoHirold. Clerk
16) 2•; 1111 2. 8, 3tc

-ld.

46769 until 12&lt;00 o'clocic
noon, uatern standllrd time.

1970 CHEVY 112 TON PICKUP ••• S895
Auto .. PS, Pl.

HARRISON
Deputy
i6) 19, 26; (6) 2,9, 16. 23
6tc

Tho 1111 publication wUI be
made on June 23, 1888,
end the twonty·olght i28)

Public N atics
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
MILLARD R. BURKE
Plaintiff

1hMoo

Weat along t._e North line of

the aloreooid Section No. 24
1460 feet to e point, which
Hid point 11 tho. Northweot
corner of the tract of which
thii it 1 part: thence South
along the Wut line of the
tract of which thia ia a part

VI

CHARLES CONNER. ET AL
OefendMttl

Case No . 89·CV ·113
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
To : Chari• Conner, eddrell unknown if living, and
if deceMed, hla unknown
apouM. helra. devtiHI. I•
gat.... executors. next of
kin, adminietrators, and 11ligna. whon llddr•MI ere
unknown; and L. H . Conner,
addreaa unknown if living,
lnd if dace•ecl. hi• unknown apouM. heira. de-

via... legetMI. executors..
neat of kin. adminiltretors,

rialanece..arytoreplacethe
light1 It the high school
football fie! d, a~uatld at

Acr11. be the tame more or
Being a part of the fir ..

I••·
doocrlbed tract In • corteln
Warronty Deed dated 28
Mev 1946, from Jooeph
Gru•er. unmarried, to Roy

ton Conner, deceased, if
any .
You ere hweby notified

Instructions to bidders
an II apeciflcatlona for th&amp;a
work.,, on file at the Office

Tillis and Viole Tilli•. r•
corded in Volume 166. Page
474 of the DMd Recorda of

thot 1 Comploln1 1o Quiet
Title hao been filed in the

of tho Superintendent, 320
Eut Main Street. Pomeroy.
01\io 46769. No propooat
will be conalderld unlooo

Moip County, Ohio.
convoyed to Dwight Bland
end Clarice Bl111d by Roy

submitted on the blank
proposal forma furniahed
with the ap«:ificetions.

Tillis and Viola TilliS by deed

Melgo County, Ohio. Cue
No . B8·CV·113, demonding
to quiet t~lo of the following
d•crlbed real
eatate in
Plolntlff'a nome, and/ or the

dated September 16. 1954.
and recorded in Volume

Each bid ohell be accom·
ponied by 1 10% Bid Bond

180, Pogo 331 ,
Meigo
County, ·Ohio
Deed Re·

-

utlsfectory to the owner or
by cartifled check on a
solvent bank in the aum of
ten percent (1 0%1 of the
amount of the maximum

cordi.

furtber deocrlbed ao followo:

bid. Bilk oro1o be oeolod ond

from which the NE corner of

P11meroy, Ohio, according
to apeciftcatlono -arid
for uid bo•d.

feet

ning,

to the place of begin·

containing 38.83

Being the ume premia•

. Said

real

Mtata being

Being at im iron pin let on
the north li.ne of Section 24

addr•aed to:

aaid Section beara. by previ-

Moigo Local School Oil·
1rlc1, Office ofthe Troaouror.

oua deed deocrlptlon, Eeot o
di1tance of 1320.00 ft.;

320. Eut Main Street. P. 0.

Thence, lnving uid MC·

Box · 2.7,2.. Pomoroy, Ohio
4 676 0

tionline.S0dt11J.31'23"W

Bi• are to be plainly
merked'on the outtide of the

a dittance of 12215.17 ft. to
1 point, laid point being r•

ferenced by an iron pin aet

Parker, daceeold. and Mil·

Common Plea Court of

reformation

of Plainttffs

to ohow thot the fol·

lowing real ntlrte which is
altueted in the Townahip of

Columbia. County of Mel go,
and State ol Ohio, and con·
tllined in Volume 301 at
Page 181 and Volume 314

ot PtiiJe 153, of the Moigo
County DHd Recorda. end ·
further bounded end d•
1cribed • followo and io the
•ole rMI propwty of Millerd

R. Burke. Plolntlff, end free
of all claim• of another :

Bt11Jinning w~h theN . W.
corn• of 1 fifty acre lot
owned by M. W. T-kabery

silled onvelope ao follow1:
FOOTBALL FIELD UGHT·
. lNG BID. The oucceulul

which bearo S 70 dtiiJ. 20'
63" Ee dlstancoof6.00ft.;
Thence See dt11J . 30' 00"

in Fracrtion 23. Town B.
Rengo15, County of Melgo;

bidder. ,will be reqUired to

E. pa11i1ig an iron pin let at

furnilh a utlofectory Perlor·
monee Bond for 101)% of the

334.83 ft .• going • total dll·
tenceof366 .81 ft . toe point

link•: thence south 83 rods;
thence oouth 57 W. 32 rodl

thenco Eaot 1011 rndl end 3
and 21 llnko; thence North
36'h Eeot 7 rodo and links

contract pric1. No bid may inthecenterofCountyRoed
be·' withdrawn after ache- No. 13;
duled closing time or receipt · Thence. with the center of
of bido for at t...t oixty (801 Hid County Road 13. S 34
daya.
deg . 48' 38 ' "Wadiltanceof

thence along the public road
"'orth 67 W. 14 rodl; 1honce

Delivery date muat be 50.99 ft.to 1 point;
stated on the bid fo1r11 111d
Thence. -inti aoid Tow,..
will be taken into con1idora- ohlp Road, 111d wMh the nonh
1io~ In the awarding of bldl. bou.-y of a 96.42 acre

folrllorfv owned by M. W.

The board of education

Jn1endo to accept the lowoot
roopon1lblt bid for the projoct, but raoorvao the rlghtto
reject lf1Y and all. or parts of
any end all, bido.
By order of the Boord of
Education,

Melga Local

dox. eddr•• unknown. If liv·

1976 CHEVY EL CAMINO •••••••• S2195

Public Notice

end aeigns,
whoae ad·
dr•HI ere unknown; and
the unknown apou.... heirs.
deviiMI. legatee,, executor•. ne•t of ldn, edmlnlltratorl, and a1ign1 of John W.
Conner, dece•ed. Tebi1he

Joilltl Jotr.r1, oddraoo unlcnciwn,H living; Hugh Hod·

4 WhH1 Drive, Auto., PS, PS.

Public Ill otlce

66111 dog .. Wool 3413 flat to
1 point; thence North 1121

addrMs unknown, If living;

1979 CHEVY MONZA •••••• ~ ••• ~ •••• ·sa9 5 .

Section No . 24;

tract ct.cribed in Volume
306. Pogo 361. tho - l n g

two (21 cou,..:
(1) N 116 dtiiJ. 30' 00" W.
pa11ing an iron pin M1 at

12.00 ft. , going • total clio·
tance of 346.59 loot to on
iron pin •et;

i2) N 79 deg.19" 36" W •
diatance of 1463.80 ft. to an
Iron pin oat;
Thonco. N 0 deg . 32' 30'
E, paoolng en iron pin oat ot
995.28 ft .. going 1 toto! clio·
Janca of 1000.00 ft. to a
point on the north tine of

Section 24;
Thence. with aid north

-g

line. Eat a
diltanco of
1468.96ft.10theplaceofbf.
ginning. containing 38.5156
oa&amp; more or..._ and
oubjoct to the right· of·of
County Road No. 13 and ol
volld--1. .
c lted beorlngo ore bao ld
on the nonh line of Section
2111 a running due Eaat •

aouth 84'h W. 14 rodo;
thence 86Ya Weet 66 roda to

eaet line of a 60 acre lot
Tewksbury;

thence north

66'h rodl to 1he north of 1old
fraction,
contllining 46
ecr•.

REFERENCE DEED: Vo·

lume 301 . Pege 181, Vo-

lume 314. Page153, Molgo

County Deed Recordl .

The domlftd of tho Complaint il the! the t~le to the
above deocrlbed •oil eotato
be quieted In thenomeof1hl
Plolntiff, Millard R. Burke,
and/ or the reformotion of
Mid d•d to 1how and to r•
fleet that the above d•
acribed rul eata1e ia owned
by

Plaintiff In fee 1implo end

" " of ell claims of another.
You are required to an·
ewer the Compieint within

--eight i28) doyo eft•
the laot publication of thil
notiCII which wll be pub·
llahed once each week for
IIi&lt;

i61

days tor answer will commence on that date.
In c•e of your failure to
answer or otherwise r•-

pond ao required by the Ohio
Ruleo of ClvH Proceduro,
judgmont be default wll be
rendered tiiJiinat you for the
relief demand in the
plaint.

Com~

LARRY E. SPENCER,
Clerk of Cnurt1 of
Moig1 County, Ohio
(6) 19. 26: i6) 2,8, 16, 23
6tc

8

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

LARGE ANnQUE
&amp; COLLECnBt£
AUCTION
SUN, JUNE II
12:30 P.M.

HOWE'S GROVE PARK
, IEml. DHIO

Allovt 1Z 5 pes. of 1ood
furritvre - oak, waktut.
poplar; primili11s, .,;Itt,
Calle&lt;tiblet.
•

FURNITURE: Oak
HDiser
kitchen cabin d. walnut pegged
blank&lt;t box, highbock oak sid~

board w/ mirror and 8ombtr{
sides. 7 ft. 2·door poplar war·

d10be, 181 oak dress5s w/ mo·
rers, old cupboard wltig5 01•
. pie doors, fainting couch, 5 dwr.
oak lile cabinlt, oak flal wall
cupboard, ill high bock mantels
w/ mirrors, 5 stack oak file cabi·

net, ill round oak tables, poplar
baby Ci!dle; oak highboy , 15
dwr. oak filecabintt, (2) square
oak ta~es. kids rope bed, oak
wa ll l~ephone, oak washstands,
clawfooted oak rocker, iron bed
w/brass knobs, 121 oak night·
stands, 161 matching chairs,
pme cupboard, i2l split bottom
rockers, chiHeJ obe. wicker
stand, mahopny lowboy, Iron
bed, htcllory rocks, iron coa

rack wfmrror. f"'Of marble top
121 banquet tallies. 161 ...
stands. ~d too boles. humpback
and sqt.Ore lrutlo, ~111kel box,
ch,;, t&gt;ik thsw bases. rodters,
stan~

smoke stand, oak SM!I, waslt
stands, stands, Put.... dye oaO.
~ u(J1gtt piano, ron ycuh bed
school desks.

121 flower gardens, 13)
~ILTS:
ble wedding rinll', rod,

wh~e

and blue patchwork plus about
8 ot lx!rs, comforter&gt;
COLLECTIBLES; french tel~
ploln~ old m~~ary rifte cheese
box, msta( chur~ kids WIJI~
~d tOOls clocks. pictu"" &amp;
fram es, baskets, block planes.
old benches. washboards, adv.
boxes, Oonngfloes, churns, other
slone iars and iull5. mirrors,
dol~. draw knde, aug..s, 2 noor
lamps, la~e lamps, sad irons,
iron tr;..ets, iron sklllit, iron Ids,

moo corns, poslcardds, 2 oil
paintinfiS, brass l&lt;lttte, tall china
lamp, brass txrcktt, 011 lamp.
GLASSWARE: Fenton. Dell&lt;.,.
sion, Cilt ~ass, china, oth5'

ilassware.

~LUS lots more furniture, prim&gt;
tive, coiled! ~es and mise;.
~ ems.

PATIK l H. llOSSEI '
AUcnONEEI
TalliS:
« Cllodt •lh ID

c.•

'"' 304-IU·IH S •
421-7145

Cantig-11••Sat. J- 10 at 6:00 p.m.
or S111. J - I 1 at 10A.M.

IUCCOOilvl - · ·

11

Help Wanted

Woot.

All iron pina dlllcribed a
being oat aro 'lio''xJO " with
on attached plaotic ldentlfi·
calion cfiP.
The obove tleocrlptlon to

lng; Ulll111 - · · ldclraoo the NIUit of .... actual IU~
.unknown. Hliving: Ohio Vel· mode by Mlcheol P. Berry.
ley OM • .Refining Compony, Ohio llegiotorld lurvoy or
addr•• unknown; the un- No. 11803, on Januory 20,
known opilu-. helro, de- - 1888. .
v.._, legit-. u.ecutora.
The domand of the Com·
next· of kln, ldmlnlotrotora plolnt II that the title to the
or Malgna, H rmy, of Roy
deoc:ribld rMI Tlllo, deCIMid; VIola Tillie. .......
be quieted In 1he n-• of the
dtctaold; Jlme&amp; Jofl-. Plolntlff, Clorloe Blend, do-ld;
Hugh Haddox, ClariCI E. Bland.
d-Id; 1nd Ulll., Htd·
You ... roqulrecl to an•
cfox, .r-ed; theunltn-n ·- t h e Complolnt within
· IUCCIIIOrt or ooolgnl. dlrootw•otv eight 1211 doyuftor
ti&gt;ro,
ond/ or ohlr• the leot pulllloetlon of tl*
holtloro of tN ONo Voley notloe whlolt wll be pu...
011 • lloflnlng Compony.
onco ..... for
You aro IMrllry notified lllbed
ek. (II IUUIIIIve weeki.
11111 a Complelnt to Quiet
The loot pulllloetlon ...
Title hao tiled In 1111 mode on June 23. 1111.
Cornman ,.._ Court of and the tAMili-eltlld (211
M.... County, OhiO. Ceeo doyo for No. ti·CY-101. tleln.,clnt "*'Gionthltclote. oomto •let title oftl• fa laue Inti
In - • of , _ folure to
deediod reel
- I n . , . , . or • • • . . . , ...
Plelntlff 1 n..,e. oltullod In liCIIId •
the ONo
the T-lilp of IIUCIInd. Rut. of Clvl Praaeclure.
County of ........... . _
... doflult - be
of Ohio. lt'ld Otlftlllnld In Judtlllllt'lt
r•dolod 01111111 you for lhl
1/otumo 110 • P~1 re1111 ~andod tnthl c_.
.W Yllume HI It
7, pllfnt.
.
of 1111 .....,. c..ntv
LARRY I. SI'INCH!
R_,.,
ond
further
Cllrlt of Ceun1 111
............. deoartbed ..

otfl-•

wll

._-by

follawe:

.'

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00A.M . SATURDAY
- 2 :00P.M . MONDAY
- 2:00P .M . TUESDAY
'·
- 2:00P .M . WEDNESDAY •
1
2:00P .M . THURSDAY
2c00 PM . FRIDAY

Juno 20, 1989, end at that
time opened by the Trea·
urer of aald board a pro11idld by lew, for ott mat•

ROY ,TILLIS, ET AL
·"
· Defenclonll
Caoe No. BB·CV·10B
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
· To: Roy Tlllll, lddrao1 unknown, If living; VIola Tllllo,

V-8, Auto .. PB. PS.

Beginning at a point in the
North line of Section · No.
24. Town1hip No. I , Range
No. 14. Ohio Company••
Purch•e. which aaid point
ia 80 rodl: Wnt of the
North. .t corner of aaid

tract of which thla ia II Pllrt
363 feet to 1 point; thence
North 231.4 dog., Eut 60
feet to 1 point; thence Nonh

' VI

-

a

TrNiurer. 320 Eaat Main
$treet. Pomeroy, Ohio

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
CLARICE· BLAND. elto
CLARICE E. BLAND
·
Plelntlff

1981 OLDS OMEGA •••••••••••••••• S1695

bounded and d•crlbed

followo:

1000 feet to a point in oeld
Weot Uno; thence South BO
dtiiJ., Eeot 1hrough the tract
of which thio il • part 1470
feet to 1 point; thMCI South
66'h dt11J .. Eut 1hrough the

Public Notice

Auto. PB, PS, Air.

Rutl111d, County of Moigo
end State of Ohio, end

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sealed propolllo will be
rocoivld by the board of
education of the Melgo Local
School Diotrlct of Pomeroy,
Ohln, at the otflce of the

Schoo( . Olotrlct, 320 E•t
Moin Str- P. 0. Box 272.
Pom•ov. Ohio, 45789.
J1ne Fry. Troaourer
i6) 28; ill) 2.. 9, 18, 4tc

ROYAL. ......... S1695

Situate in the Townahip of

Happy Ads

In Memoriem
Ytt d S.tes
..
' A classititd 1cf\oertisement plac ed in Ttle Daily Sentint!l l m~ · ~
e ept - cl•titied display, Bu sin'els Card end leg Ill not ieesl •
will alto epp ..r in the Pt . Pl e•ant Register end the Gall i· '
pblit D11ily lribunl!. re11ehin" over 18 ,000 h om ...

·

County Probate

Meigs

I

nesday, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev. Nyle

Located or.•.:&gt;. J . White Road or Hlahway
160. Pat Hensm, pastor. Sunday SChool10

$8.00

s 1.3.00

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
0~ May 19, 1888, In the

m~ PriiYerrm~ung ·a nd Btbli StUdy Wed·

Meeting, Bible Study and Youth Fellow·
shlp, 7: 30 p.m.
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY.

ss.oo
se.oo

Public Notice

Ed RDush, Sunday · Sehool Supt. Sunday

School 9:·30 a.m.; morning worship and

ru n J dWt at no ch•o•'
"Price ot ad for ell c..,italletten it doubl f!l prlee of ad cost ,
'7 point llnel~ pe~;t~~ly u11d .
\
"Sentinel it 1"+01 responsible tor errmt after flu t day. !Checl ,
for errors first day ad runs in peperl. Call bf'l hne 2:00p.m. '•
dav eher publication lo make correc1ion.
;
' Ads that must be peid in edunclll! are

, Get Ruultt fast

hstawCIIt

13 Mllltreet
Mlclcllepon,.Ohio 41710
(1141112·1117 -IIIB·OOKII
CHURCH
&amp;BIBLES

tor. William Amberaer, S . S. Supt.; Sun-

tne worahtp 10:30 •.m.; I!YangfiiiUc ter·

meroy Plke. E. Lamar O'Bryant, pastor;
~ ·. Jack Needl, Sunday School Director. Sun·
. ' .. day SCboci, 9:.Jl a.m.; Morning Worship,
•t r 10: fo5; evenlngworshlp, 7:00p.m . (D.S.T.)
"' J 1: 7:30 (E.S.T.) ; WedneHiay Prayer Ser-

: ,_,vice, 7:00p.m. (D.S.T.) g, 7:30P.M. (E.S.

The tlilngs that ,
the flag stands for
... ',
... were .creatcd bt
the CXJ*riencej
of •
'
a great people. ,
- Woodrow Wilson

RENE, Rev. Jolm Vance, pastor, Sandy
Juattce. Cllalrman or the Board of Christian Ute. Sunday ilebool9::11a.m.; Morn.

llev. PaoiJIUIIII

SEVENTH·DAY ADVENTIST, Mul:

: ;, berry HeiKht• Road, Pomeroy. Pas tO' Bob
.. .. .S nyder; !abbatb SChoci Superintendent,
... DerUne Stewart. Sabbath School begins at
• · 2p.m . on Saturday atternooo with wcrshlp
: 1 •· 'H!'VIce .followl.ng at 3:00p.m . Everyooe

·

~ ~":

,.

t:

•

...
a--s.-...

nlon First Sunday (Archer).

tiNJTED METHODIST,

f.

ALFRED - Church Scbod 9:110 a.m.;
Worllhll&gt;,lla.m.; UMYF6;:11p.in.; VMW
Third 'l'uetday, 7:30p.m. Communlcm,
flnt Sunday. (At&lt;her) .

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOS· m.; Wol'lhtp Service ll:OOa.m.
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAUL TOLIC FAITH- New Lima Road, next to·
: • Fort Melp Par)(. Robert W. Richards, Chun:b School 9 a.m.; Worlllllp 10 a.m.;
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.; Conunu·
... , past«. Sunday services, 10 a .m . and 7 p.
' Prmchlna:9: 30 a.m. first and second Sunf. ' days of eech month; thtrd and fourth SuDdll)oeacbmon~worshir,aervt~at7 : 30p.
1 • m.; Wednada:y even n.gs at 7:30 p.m.
11 ... PrayeraadBtbleStudy.

;

Bev.FnU.Cr,..oi
Rev. Seldoolo..,..,

• .

., . m.; Wednesday worship; 7 .p.m.

we

worsblp, 10: :MJ: Sunday and 'lbunclay
evening services, 7:00p.m.
COOPB&amp;ATI\'E PAIIIIR
UNITEII METIIODET CIIUJK:R
NOIITIIIWIT CLVII'ni:R

of material responding to the breeze from
atop a flagpole, and printed or sewn with a
colorful and distinctive dcslgri.
Nevertheless, It signifies the country in which it
waves, along with all the history and heroic
sacrill.ce that arc Inherent in the design .
Whether WI: .a re traveling In a foreign land
or ar home watching a parade, we should show
our love and resp«t for that banner. More·
· over,
should proudly display 'it, according
to the rules, on national holidays and special
occasions. As soon as our children are old
enough to undersiand anything, they should
be taught the reason for this feeling of pride
in the ftag of our nation ; not !Qr what it is,
but for the God-given freedom It represents:'

p1 id.
..
'ReceWe 1.60 ditct~unt for ads l)flid in t thlence.
•·
"Free edt - Giveaway an d ff)U nd a ~ s under 15 w c:~ r dt w ill he '

Rstnare for eon~ecuttve runs, broken u pd ~s will be charged
tor ear.h diN 11 separate Ids.

(.)\\1« S,.w .(8....t;,

As WI: all know, a llag I&amp; only a large piece

ss.oo

$4.00

3 DAYS

6-0AYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

• Frll~ ~"
221 W. llltlin St., r-roy
992-5432

IS TO LOVE WHAT IT REPRESENTS

'~;'.'£ GROVE; UNITED METHO·
DIST CHURCH - Pastor, Rev. C&amp;rl
PortohllalllnmEdl-folkM1ngtheoeM/Ice. Hicks, 10 mlli!S above Ractne on Rt. 388.
POMERO'l ClllJROt OF CIII\IST, 212 W. Sunday Scbool9 a .m ., wcnhlp .ervtce lO
- - St., Lou Lash, evan.,nst Billie Scbool a .m. Sunday evening service, 6:00p.m.:
9::11a.m.; Morling~IO::IIa.m.; You&lt;l! Prayer meeting and Bible Study 'lburs·
rnoo:tlnllo. 6:00p.m.; Evenlng......tllp, 7:00p. day, 6:30p.m .
_ rn. w..hod&lt;IV nl&amp;ll!l'll,l"'r ..-tngandlllble
MT. OLIVE UNITED MEI'HODISTltudY. 7:00p.m.
Off 124. behlnd WUkeovWe. Cborl.. Joneo.
~ ··· TltE SALVATilN ARMY, ll5 BltO!r1111 pastor. Sunday Srbool. 9:30a.m.; morntnr
an other lknlays ctthe rnollh. Chu"'hScbool
1111!1 Nwwery care Pt'OIIIdecl Ool!ee bow' In the

..,,,,1., ICIIII

992·2975

Pomeroy

212 E. ll1in Strnt
992-3785, PoMtroy

CHURCH OF 111E NAZA·

·, RENE, Qlra Union aad Mulbny, Rev.
• 1bortu Glm llfi:OaJV, pula. Nonnan Pres.
; ~. S. S. lkJL, lknday S.bod, 9::11 a.m.;
.. '. rrb1ina: MUS~p lO:JJ a.m ; evenlng!Jl'IVIce6

John F . Futtr, Mgr.
· Ph. "2-Jitl

K&amp;C JEWUERS

llolrt.

I OAY

OHI0-992-6677
r-.,, Clio POMEROY,
lill !!!!&lt;..1 entl lulh Aoa f•• ;',Crow~s Fami~

1&amp;·25 WORDS

0 -15 WORDS

.......iii"·

204 Condor St.
Po1111roy, 011.

•Ads outside Meigs, Galli a or Mason cou ntiea must b e pre· '

RATES

~

•00

MEtGS TIRE

'-. I!I!Y.

•

...,..., Awe.

r:. . ) CENTER, INC.

•

•

......

1614)992-2039"
16141992-5721

992·5130 Pomiroy

•

' ~

fiDWIIS 101 mn IICCAltOM

214 E. Mtiti

•:••·· •• Otoio

Pomeror

992-3325

p,,,,g Flowlf S6op

Brogan-Warner .

IROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FilE &amp; SAFETY

216 S. Second ,

992-~978

Pom•roy

"Ht5S

POLICIES

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
r.,ONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5. P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

~.~

Our experienced rapid growth of the
area's newest Skilled Long Term Care ·
Facility has created real opportunity
for RN'S, LPN'S and NURSING
ASSISTANTS to become a part of a
resPQnsive, well managed health care
delivery team.
Come v tsu, talk. to us about your
experience, and let tis show you that
not all Nursing·Homes are alike.
Stop by for an interview or phone
Nancy VanMeter at (614) 992-6472.

�-.

.

'

~

Page-S-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport.

Ohio

Friday. June 9, 1989

Business Services
Roger Hysell
Garage

FOR
SAlE
3 Styles
and

Alto Tr~•••lul011
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

ON SAlE NOW AT

SEARS IN IIIDDIEPO«T
614-992-2171

-- 9-lmo.

·---------BINGO
224 E. MAIN ST.
992-9976

100« PIIZI
2 H.D. FliEE with cou_pound
putth. . of min. H.C. PackIlL Um~ I coupon 'Jill cus111111( Jill binlil) sesSion.
·we sso.oo P.- Gomt

'ov
·o.., 11 o,..,.. •6s.oo
Ptr Game

MoR Foreign and
Do~lcV~d•

Rep~ In

CAU 992-6756

11·18-'SII·tfl)i

WORD
TYPIWRITER
XD7500
S&amp;cn.Nit.,... ...
print'lext trom memory,

"At Reasonoblt Pricts"

•LIGHT HAULING

PH. 949-2801
or Its. 949-2860

•FIREWOOD

SE~ICE

can r~r and rt·
ctrt radiators and
heater carts. We can
tiho acicllloil 1and rod
out radiators: We alsa

YAIDMAN MOWIIS
£010 SAWS &amp; m.£15
O«EGON IAIS, CHAINS

We

flowera. food. oerdl •nd
Hpoclolly proyero.
during my illn••·
Moy God blou oach of

IYAIII SEIYICE CEIDEI
Parts &amp; Serwkt Oa
AIMalcts

repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

SYRACUSE

Juonba Will

101 CUTIITIIIIIGHIII·0mo.

3/17188tfll

MOBILE
HOME PARI

CJ

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~

•Mobile Home Parts
•Mobile Home
Rentals
•Lot Rentals

992-7479
lt. 33 Narth of·
Pamerey, Ohio
.

1

"'

.·. I
. I
.::·

·.~

1!::.

NOW OPEN FOI
BUSINESS

'.

:.

·.

.

14th&amp; . . St.
P,!nt Plta10d, W. Va.

Profllsl-llnstallaiion

-

We Buy Aluminum

FlEE EmMATES

Cans. Olaoo. Brooo,
Copper ond More
MOI.-FII• 9 - · · p11

IISIDEIITIM &amp; COMIIOAL

ON SAL£

NOW AT

511.:1_12_

SEARS IN MIDOIEPOIT

304·675-3161

61•·"'17

J: ~614) ~-7619 Oi' (614) 992-2104
417 Second Averite, Box 1213
- Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or
Veterans Memorial Hos1pital
. Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy,

cmoM SCIEEN
PIIJIIITIIG

...._...

BISSELL
. SIDING CO.
,

•HATS
•l·SHIRTS
&lt;JACKETS
FOR BUSINESSES,
GROUPS.
ORGANIZATIONS

"Free EotimetH"

PH. 949-2801
or 111. '"'·2160

985-4300

NO SUNDAY

CAN DO
MAINTENANCE

ANGIE'S
GIEENIIOUSE

co.

IEAUTifll IASIETS ss.DO
FLATS Mix '1111 Up ss.oo

Plumbing • Plaster
Repair • Painting
Electrical • Carpently

· Strawflow•s, Statke,

Wlldflowws and More.
"RH PLANT"
Neon • 7:00 p.m,
'Pauho Hill. Co. ld. 352
Out hpot Stroot 2 111.
••"-d. Oh.

"Wt Fls Al•tlf Atftllltt"

20

Harry leffle
Years Experience

43020 St. Rt. 124
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
1-614-992-3554

CAU 7.at .• t7lrt

6-11 -1 mo, pd.

The family of
TROY DURHAM
would like to thank
Gellia County
Emetgency Squad.
Ufe Flight
Attendants.
Rutland EMS,
Rudand Fire Dept.
and all those who
helped in -any way
at tha tetne of the
accident .•

5

Happy Ada

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION
DWNII: GIEG I. IOU5H

''"•
•" '

GEIIEIAL
CONTIACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COMMERCIAL

-•CUSTOM KITCHENS. UTHI
•EXTENSIVE REMODELING

•VINYL IIDINO a "00FING
-Mit'AL IUILDINOI
•NIEWHOMEI

SINCE 1969

01m n. niACISI

5

IEPRESINTAT1V£

•Washers •Dtyera
•Range •Freezers
•Refrigerators

..........

1-100-421 -3535
.

lfiiiUIIUt.Nct

_11....., lfololll loi.,IOCt

C.

~.t•••

~89-1

mo.

THE
BASin WEAVE
HAND WOVEN
BASKETS
Lorge Supply of Bookot
Weaving Suppli•
Sign up now for Bookot

WeavingCia11•

OPEN MOST SATURDAYS
10:00 'TIL 5:00

Pill MHOM • OWNIII

SWEEPER REPAIR
AU MAIIES AND
MODELS

222 East Main
POMIIOY, OH.

992.6872

•-s-·••·• .no.

Happy Adt

INSUUTION

..................
_, ........
"..
sto.~o. Gutt.-

FREE E8TIMATE8

...

992-2772
~z~---~

ALLEN'S

HAin

BIR'IIIIAYI

WriteR~

ROOFING
NEW -REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting

&gt;31-'89-1 mo.

pd.

HAUUNG

1600 IAII.OII
WAIII-WICI

._STOll
SNU•

Dllf IAIIID
992-5275

~17-lfl

11101.

114--0102.

-71

.

14al0 2 Ill . . hooi.
•• ooblntti muoi'11o ....oct.

Public Sale

&amp; Auction

llrn 181el Dlvld .,__..,

17 month old IIPitl- Spe¥ed. W.Vo. Stott Chomploft AuoPhono 114-882-747f.
· tlonw. fllck,. . .on, Lloens•ln
Ohlo.,d-VIralnla looldnt
' ' • pullPI• to oooct ha,..... ....- ... 104-77).1781
o..,_ lhopho&lt;d. Pit BulL
814-143-1421.
-~~~•lid.uo:
o-.
a Coin
Rldgo
(I 112
mL off fit. 171
Klttono. 304-8711-1108.
aoodo. clothing, loto olmllo.. 21
2 ure¥. long h'*lll kltt- 1 ft . ...,.-. Col 304-411-117f.
w - old. coli 304-871-1738
.. 871-1319.
9 Wanted To Buy
Chlmnov brlcko. 304·171138111 .
TOPCAIHpoldlor 1113moclol
end
ulld Cft. Smith
fl kltt.... 304-1711-1717.
lulok-Pontloo. 1111 e. . . .
A.... Golllpollt. Col .14-kltt- 304-8711-1720.
2212.
s kltt.,., 4 mol•. 1 tomola co11 l-c=-...
-.,.-.-.-ho~u-..,-10
1 .-ot-.,-,,.304-&amp;71-1717.
,.,. • ontlquoo. Aloo wciOd •
coli h...... tw.ln' a Furniture
• Auotlol\ 'flllld • Olve.
6 Lost end Found
814--3118.

"""""" .,,....

old.- •
Shoph.-d . . . . . . ;.,, Wo•ln•

.............d.,__ "'""'
...... _,pold.

ftooooll•. Vlolnlty oiMt.Cormol
•noll llldgoRd. Coiii14-:MI- plooo of ontlro ...,_,d. fllr
" " ' oft• 4 p.m.
Cd 114-3111.

•

-

Cnot -\11. 114--7111.

tl••,·•·-·~••~to~

"Where's tlte prt'ze?."

....
ond oholn~oed ....
till
till T
~ij=i~~~~~~~ ;ti==i~~;;;;;;==~ toup to. .tot1H.
·
• t221
tiD .,d
.. .Ao..,...
HI••.._.
•:.oto
144 Apartment
t371. Lompo t21 to n21,
0111for R1111t
t 1otonduptot4ll.
'oint Pl-ont • •
Wood toblo w-l "'*' t21S to
ldtchon. ~~~. both.
1718. Dotk t1d8 .. • f37fl.

3-boo-

dnlng.._fom~- 1111•
""~
onoo. H - - - · · lov48711-1140•304-812-24011.

Wll tllce 01r1 ot .. ...., bed •

W•ted: Lactt to •• w .. h me ••
luofoond ... out of prloCOI. Col
114---,417. oftw 1:00 p.m. ;

I 1tll 1._711, Z be- Vlotori.,, AI oi-IA ,noocl u!IOfl
lnopootlononl\'. 304-Bl-3411 .
Moblo
with ,.,ont_

::.-...
304-1711-11M.
2 11.. llomoMt. V.n011Aw..
Prol• -pi&amp; no poltlt210.
p• - · olut clop- eo•
304-171-2873.

pol-tin..,- 'E........
h¥-114-2111-187&amp;
•

W. ... for

otilu-lr

•perlence.

LPN on c..l Low

1

lnoomo homo. Col 814-.88281173 oft• ?:001&gt;.m. tor moro ;

lnformlltlon.

.

•
=

42

.,.,--.....

·:cr

Fuly "•nlohtd owooo ..... AI

'0

111
~-;..:hl· c:;..oa.e=· cc;:_..
utlltl• plld
.r.:rldty,
II4-Bz. 2730 ., 11 4- ~-_'t. 11,...
:ct'!••-.,.""'.,'."cld.ol
0
-n.
,.. _ .. •••

·-

4--11111. "' 814-44111110.

l

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

I

I

-

Wll

c•e for elct.fr man or

1

~

·,

~:-:-:---:---­

.ru... Hollfllng. In 1n d ·erouM -

Naclne ••· C.ll 114·149·
2177.
•

WANTED: bplll-d No"'
Unlotl Motol ltud F...... ""
war111n OoiMpofll. eolle14-N4ott• 2:00 , ....

*"·

11
Hot ruro1
111-* top lid . d ooptlo
mL, tonk.
from
Oolflpoll- Call 114--2101-

- • of
- - ...........

2 llltho. onlr/t24.111 • up.
looour-dl&amp; Coi1·814-B117111.

~

w - In my homo. 114-1173402 anytime.

io-••

hllolo; 12 - • m

C:...ntryilr- - - 3111 ..

WI! m- . , . . coli 814-3711- ;
210~

Farme for Sale

•'

3S Loll •

Acf'l898

-rill•

Flw 10111- F....hoc! 2 - molllo llomo. CoH 114-0IZ.
1031.

I

'

w-.._,of

..._boalnnlngJ .... 10thctll
e14-713-!111 • t 14. ollout our VWI«v of t.ndlng
8DIIrall wellble to Pl'r' fDi
tr.......

Author._d Jahn
N - HoiiMd,
Buth Hog Ferm

o-•·

Equpment Deal.-.

,_,. E••Jto••t
..... &amp;lmlet

1-3-'811-tlc

TII.COUNTY
RECYCLING
OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

Paying today
May 31, '1919
(Sulljocl to c.....
Wltlleut Notice I
CION AI'MII'*
--52'1..
CION All Jill'* CAST
--40'1..
AI I IIIII•

•rs

_,__,... ,.. ..

• , . . . CANS-- so• ,..

liOTIIY

liOTIIY CAST- J• toiO&lt; ._

STMIISS

10• Ito

992-5114

Loaated Off 1Y111M
At Jot. of~~~&amp;'7•

,. ..011.

143, , _ .

On•i·•·----

---J-11.
11B. f'flono (11dl 742-2110.

Ho-d of . - . . , h• RN·
• •••";",.:•• polood. Ill LPNIIaolt--rllla t.KtJ.t: molo Codl-.
1DIItrttl.
1......
, . . _ lt. ......_
ond
bonellta
114-BZ.IOJ'f.
ln
. ""'
. Ill- IIIII.frtnoo
Ufelneu
....
....._ .... _ , 0 0 _
Found: On• IO¥me. Wrtt• to:
tultlen ........... . .,. . ...
P.O. loor 721Z. """'•crt. Olilo.
.............d.....,.OI
On clooorlptlor\ whonlotl. .,d
Quito
8111 - - - l o t t l n.
P.o1t40 Qll. .. A"f .......... DN. IL Rt. 13. .
-...
417«1
.....
ttl. -dlor
olb1011cfo Coth .... Col1114-lll-1117 114-21.102S.
faund Ill ond of 41.,o Ill' ori14-..I-:MI1.
High. J - 4. 114-. .a.... •J•eld Tll•honl . . lotton. ................. with
....... -Jill! . . . . . ......
Yard Sale
-,1
rold -...,..
•""paea
..... ..
Rtghl

a....

•-nr.

=

...... lot•••·

,.,m

r----··
.,. . . .=.. -·to

7

........

.......Giilllpoliii ----------

.. -

It Vicinity
YIIAIMAITIRCARD

Ill CHM• O...ontllcl. , .

It lit 110, Nortt.1o1 Ill'* . . . . . et ..... ~ ...
- l o l l . h .. Juoo 10dl. oowl 213·121·1101. axt.
11-1:30, VAII111YI_/_a _ U21M.

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

-

. . . . lola: -loDr.. 1hlro..

'""·

Mfnll'o , _ Ill•: Oft f1t.

a

J-1. 1,10.11-1.421A.... " - - Tlll!o. -

.............,.v.........
a *'''· -. illltlilo •

-

· Lo••

114-. . 2-1711.

AYDN • AI • - Clf1 M...,n
-·4----

~--· · ·· · ·· · ·· · ···· ······ ~·········

Fn. • lot .. Junol •10. lltee4
1/2mn• poollno.
'

.. .......,

wll - ·
"""
.............
rtv 111'
1- ..........

AVON oil .--11 . .lt¥1PWO.
304-ln-1428.

sj)ac8 for Rent

ear•

2321.

loot•-- ·-.
-•wll
. _....

-· •

2br.• •cwear.tle,. "'"'· wtt•

ti.OO 1!1 hour.
Ill t •
In - C o - Todd 1 - I'
114-141-2088 .. 114-141·
2121.

polcl. Upp.flt. 7.colll14--

••

..... - - • • • ••.
..,
8 o d - t21. au-t31 • king frUfto tiD. Ooocl
_m_lo_nof
....~--......·.~
·~
.,d up to ~!-~
IO Do•o ...., 0 • c•h wkh
•
3
9 ~.'::' 1::';
P.M. Mon. thru lot. 114-44110322.
VIlle¥ Fumluro
,.,., end used ..rnttuN .,d
oppllon-Coi814-4411-7117:Z.
Hour~ I-I.

...'....

Vlihtolclrolr•- or uood. 3
whooltd o l - I o - - Col
11• .... ModiOli. 1100.11112104.

-·•hod

3 br.,
opt., In
hlttroio ~ No• City P.-k.
I t - .....,~ t271 ...... 1
'1'-1-&amp;- Dop . ._Ind.
Coll814-4411- 21•
'

Boataend
Moton for Sale

-OIHY

loot-1117 Lon des 18'1" '
wflh
311 lrp ,....., w•h •
-trlm.,dUIIoollnjoctlo,. •

- . . . ,r-. .............. .

for 8111 • Corur•• •d Pl.-tic
-lc tonko. 1111 oil-. "ON
I!VANI ENTI!RPR.EI. Jockton. OH. 1---1137-•21.

llftotnlorotuo--..Uinoood '

COndition. Cell 114-012-2770. :

-"''Y -- :

110AT REPAIR.
cruiser. Sp1clalllt fiGtOf'Y (
tr8inCI. Mo.. , lriloa. ,,... ~
aion MoYe Mlrfne. a.sed . ~

AIR CQMPREIIORI
C...pbtll H.,tfofd UIIA
2 HP v_.lcol IIUmp. 20 gol.... k.
powtn 27 Wtooll.l•~vlriltY
to c:hooe• fr~m. ..,lng • ttt.

Oollipoll Ioiii Cklb. Cell 114- '
209-1170.
.
.

1883 22 It tylvtn, , 40 hoc-• :
pa.wr, · m•c aru • • 10 w•h .
. PC~~~~Wr trim. ~~:am lila c...,• tap ·
with alp DUI wlndawa. mooring .·
cover. lea boiC. port.lble pll;ilty, :
depth flndlr. tonb. iotd .
rum•tttll•.ltiiOO. ca•11+
-2141.

Vl' fl• FurNiure
At.141, c.nt.,lfY,1/4mleon
Llnooln Pllt• .Mon.-lot. lAM .
ePM. Sun. 1 2·1. 814-44113111.

SW1MMINOPOOIIf1118

::--------- .

lelltthlh-wllth•tup1h31

-H--fonco.ltl••
hr-o: 1-100-

worrontr. Cal 24

lim

3411-otdS.

311ndlm•.. ttorm~wllhll
h•-ctlt21: Clf1 .14-4713 ottor I p.m.

Two 24 ft. . pontoon bo... 31 •
hor11 pow•. Johnton MD- ·.
tori .Z,OOO. One tor t2.100. '

con 114-3t7-0447. . . e14- ·:
317-0488.

~.---;-::-::-;==---;

Parte
Acceuorlea
Woodburnlng~~~~~~~~:::::~:;.~:;~~"'~"~""~"~•~·-~~~~:~~ 76 &amp;· Auto

1
8toveit400.
K ndlewood Coli 114-245'
8-.
""'lolo: 2 ,..,., t~• •••
13-5-21. eon 814-3117-7841.

68

71

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables

•

uto I

F

S

or

ala

A..._••br
• o1
....,... " ... ac 1botwNnl
o• 8 ,.m. Col &amp;14-441-4013.
Str-t&lt;rllo·piok voo" awn.
lnt•utlon•l lt!Wn mower~. Cell Claudt Wlntera, Rio
tA. Col 114-387-0441
Orondo. 0HI14-241H 12 1.

1178 Thund.-l*d. In raod
~lo ~-11 et• ••11- e87
co,.,.. n. ~
•oft•flo'oloolc.

IWIMMINOPOOIUt111
St•-loo. YCOI pfolc. or wo
-thohMtw•holorao11d1 ~ a o.m.-1 • .m. T-lor't
poo&amp;.H
dedi.,_ fit a
..
...,.
worronty
...n-•lo:"itln':;,o- e 1 4-.;.~:it 2 ":'
2
~,..,olrlllo. Cll124hn: 1-100- 8178.
0141.

:-:;:..

:,'4- 'f:_

A horiO , _
114-4411-Z781.
' 11 • -

•-11•- C•l

•HI• 11'111

bool with

=:::;.~~~:.::2:,';."': . 61 Farm Equipment
e 1 • •••20~ ----------,
•-v lo. focllomp ! 33 HP MF 111•1 Troctor: wHh e
For 1;111•: U..t t: ~-· ..od I ft .. ftnllhlc:l m. .rlt4i91.174
cond.. ctlll14- 11-4 20.
so. . riding-. 11 H.P . 42
lnctr aJt. t210. CoM 114-44113714.

lnt'l dletlo with 3 bottdO
aeml-mountplow. I fl. trMtport
dloe.ln1'14•-lllont•lt738fl.
ow- wll flnonco. Coli &amp;142111-1122.
=::-::-=::-----:-~~--3020JOTr... orw•h7R. I07
JO pul-tyr.: - / M i l O ;
2010 JD ,.... mocor,
• - point. with -JO Ouldl-

BE out..-lc WOthe- HoiVItl
gold/til: OE wothor
w h It e I I 9 I ; M • I eX
-oho&lt;/t17l:lonmoro-hor 8up•lllnglowotorbodHkon..,,
• !~'Tor ljlt. lko ••IUOO: 1 - afd.oornpl••w•h•-•
Whir-lPool -he- • *vor hoot•• .,..._ pod/t71. Ct!
life• -/t300: ICon,_. drvor 114-3111-81107.
whltottltl: 30" ti-le ronoo
,_ eon.-lood./tl380. Ow. .
ooppertono/t9fl: 31" a• Solid ool&lt; grondfolhor • - wHI flnonco. Coli 114-211•ongo/t71: 30" •• rongo. ttonlngoloot t4110. Aloo wol ond 1122.
dll~ndg..ncebln•a.
, reen/181. Call e1•-•~•- rnentll
311. Upp• II ..... Ad.
AI hond modo. C1l 114-742- 1041nt'l t...,.,w•h 241 1nt'l
3188.
round boi.-INSIII: NH Hr;·
PIC11EN8 FURMTURE
lslno/t8911; n- ldoo pull--/Uood
Woodon llollll hllh"''*· EIIIOI- reko/t711: NH oquuo
Sptclel : new 4 drewtr • • ooncltlon. 20. 114-112· blll•l•ll; 414 lnt't Dltltl
ch•/tll. 2 p~ living room 7171.
troct .. with lnt'l he¥ coniiIUit:-.11211. Dlnnllfte chllra.
tlo_., lnt'l 44 ,.,.,. HI• with
din-• ..,._ ttortlnl ot t31.
!IUII-typer..o/t48110.CtiiS14MMv moc•lt.,.l.1/ milo out 66 Bulding Supplill
218-NU
.torlolso lid. Pt. PI-t, WY,
ctll304-171-1410.
3 oil otNI orch bulldlngo.
awldng
Btrolghtw olcloo. big doon. groin
-clno11oHt.goooloond.• • Bloolc. brick. __.pip•. win- ldt. C1Uiok -ory. -44w•
gold lounao ..... coli ott.- I _._ .,.._ ttc. CIUidl Win- t l . - t t . - 40xs:l
,.m.. 114--1214.
t - Alo Bronclo, OH. Col t14. 700. , _ tt,lfiO:
l14-2d8-1121 .
l0.1 12 t2Z.700 U.td ..,,... _ _W•hort. drv·
114.110. Col [11418.48-3001.
.._ - · · ,.,._.._mlc:roW.t ov-. ..,... AI'I'IIMCII.
217 . E, 2nd lt.. I'Omwoy.
63 Liveetodc
114-lt92-IUI or 114-8153111 .
' lullfllv Shop-Pos
o._. ond
Grooming.
All brMdt ... AII Reg'eclau.rt.Horie~•.,d
I Pioco Pft - P· E-lont
oo-lon. t300. Coll814-892· .tv'-· IM11 Pet Food 0.11•· 4 yr. old reo'eil 0...-t:• Han&amp;
Jull' Wobb Ph. 114-4411-0231. Gelding-hat been ahown·
1314olt=- 1:00
p.m.
I I
Plooouro. Col 814Orogonwynd CottOtY Konno!. 2111-8122.
PWrlltn .. dlllm . . MidHim•
l_.en ktnMt. Chow acud ... I ,_._ 2 bo•t. 21 pfgo-1e fol
vlco. Col 11 4--3144ott• 7 hogo/tiiOO ro. til hogo. Col
Hlahoot prt.. pold. - h "" P.M.
114-3711-2101Orrentele, quilt•. cupbo•. .
n.on clodll. entire lltat-. C.ll
• ., loppod-8.-od •llbblto. 2 AnENTION Hor• Ownwa.
colltot: 304-121-3278. or 304- whit• m•l•. -1 biHk f,. P~PkltiiMWCMI'ylngUolc.
123-11114.
-.,. t1o · - c;e~1 e14-44• Paint Plua. 24115 J•ckun
4110.
Polnl " - Phon•
luy ., loll. Rlll•lno Antlqu-.
304-8711-«1114
fl 24 E. Mein ltr-. Porn•oy. 3 mondt old mille Pom . . .1.,
Houn:: M ,T,W 10..m. to lp.m.,
ful blooded. no popn./1100. 10 r•· old 110"1' with lllld•
... ,..., 1 to lp.m. 114-112- CoM e14-379-2103Good wlh kl •. Coli 304-1712128.
8143ottU' fl,
AKC Chow Chow IIUpploo ta.
.... ,.,4-742-3010.
64 Hay &amp; GrainFloh T.,k. 2413 Jocfco101 Avo.
Point PI-~ 304-171-2083.
tOgoltol upt14.89ond10gol
COmpioiO t43.2fl.

Mot...

_t.,.

A-.

'

Rot Torrlor IIUJIPioit, 304-8711108.
Mlllk:el
lnstrumenta

61

Houaellold

1117 Old Cl=-oltll81; 1817

8UOOET TIIANIMISBION- ·
uood • •ollullt oil typet. ;
Worr--30•-o.'n-ttt•
_,,
"'"'
up. Uttd • robult - · '
co-.tn. otonde-d
preuurepi•-•CYCjoirb-11

alu- .

tviJOO. B~n\uonomloolonob- '•
22

Tcr.:::~~m=~: ::.~ ~:e7C:I7fi~.4-379- 20
1

11811 Ford Eoeotttlt189fl •
up; 1111 Plymouth Ho·
•lron/t2311: 11tll Oodoo
OmnVt1111; Two 1111 Ford
Mut ... go/ UIOII; 1818 R•
-M/t1Zillc 1170 FordOronodo/11011; 1177ChrtHCordollolt7811: I ' 0 Molon.
HI-- 110 Nonh. coli .,,._
-81181. 01114--1181.
-1111 bluo Z21 c1m...,. E lont oondltlo,. Co! 814-74221711917 Ll .. ron Coupe. Turbo.
llook. ttonde-d •111ft. loodtd
8h
114-7.2-2021
•P.

.

1914 Fr...d. 17.000 . . ._
2. 2 L onglna 1 opoec1. good
oont*lon. MIOO. C.ll 1141111-3373.,114-•l-411111t71 Oodao Dl!&gt;lomel. 318
mot... blooi. ' " • 3111 No&lt;th
4th.Midcll.,..._
1171 Muoton"
114-182-7131.

tfiOO. Col

1871 Tr•s Am. •c CDnd. Pl.

PI, AM-FM o•s~e. AC. auto
tfnamlltktn. good
304-

*•·

171-3011 .

4 Gtrome aport_..... wtth :

Olrll. Ch..,, luiolc. Pontloo: ·
Ulod t..,.mltolol\ IJI.-ont ... ;
30 dar• Col 304-1711-1001 . . •

79

Motora Home•
&amp; Campara

19'10 Aolm Co~~~t~• 22 ft.. wflh '
t1100. :'

roof .*·
c•••
,._ala
... l711

=

1873 11 fl.. . . . . loo1ty --•
lpart.m.n Camp ...
faur,
... ....... . light/
. Col
814-t'l-0104.
181t_nofl_mobllohlmo.
Colllt4-4411-1811.
18-lunBtr.-nC-.AMotot
Home. Z7 ft.. AC . . . . .or.

2.100 .....1 .... Mult Ill
· - ., 4-882-7321.
1978 louthwlnd 21 .11.: Mot.. '
""'"' lullll loodod Coli 304- .
171-2128. ....... •• .... ..... •
"~

cand .

1

304-1711-1181-

•.
'

'"B"'1:----H=o-m-18
- - --,;.• ,
lmprovementa

72

for

win--.. .
,...,,rilllon..

T ruckl

. BAilMENT
WATIIIPROOFIN'O

1t170MC.
motor, •
bent
A--o/1200. Col 114-4417401.

t ...

11t7tJ lhort Ford y.,, .....
vollllos ..,.,...._ motolmount • tr• out o1u oot t300.
'
Con114-4411-740t.

w...~..

1111 Dodge C•reyan,
Nlcolt14111; 1912 Chovy 3

querter ton pI
....,/.:1311: 11H
I ODd ..
c»nd ..
_,. nlco1M111t 1880 Choily
plck · UJI , eutomallc .
P.B.!t17111; I • 0 _..._
HI-- 180 Nonh. coli &amp;144411-11811. .. 114-441-e1ea.

....,._up.

*

,
. . - - - - de¥
Cell ••.....
1-l14i237-0411.
night. 't
A o a 1 r a 1 .1 • e m • n t

BWiiEPI!R .,d -gmochlno
ropolr. porto. ond oupplloo, Pick
O..rgoo C'"'* Act. Cell 114-0204

- -.....-

Jlm'oOddJo... lunclo&lt;*oldnl

....

.....~.

..........

Wlllpop•lno• Plintlna. •••on obi•
Quollty work. Col
lor
fr•
- · 114-3111- '
t028 .. 814-3117-7811.

rot•.

br••

1r dll~;po;laiiUII

. _.... MoglcOinne¥. ollnosn&gt;
monto.
ttoo.OO
It
304-B:I-2011.

:

•o

___

.

"*•

71

Auto'a For Sale

•
:
•
•

dldla. , . .

~

porta- . . . . . •

;

ootl-•. Cal 304--:1421. :

Goods

Plumbing
It Heating
CARTER 'I PWM.NO
AND HE-CriNO
COr. F~authMdPine

Oolt.":' Ohio
•
. . . . . 114- •
4411-4477.

Phont 114-

111r-.••·

11M v-•• 700
_./.,,100. Col Sf4-:MI-

-1.

-------- ~
B4
E lectrlcal

It

.... ldlnl:tll or cxun..,..cl~ wfr.

'

..

•'

l Y . - ... ..

lit. 7 ' to lor 3 ~~~·- '
· · Col 114-012-1132 lor ...
...ppolnt......
f"

~..;.;.------- -~

•
.
;.'

,

.

· - Coll14-. .l-14111or _.,
....

- . .. U n - H a e _
..... ., ........ Col ",
•.
114-111-1170.
•

t?,:;...,.d*..;',ii..'"i:.':'.r.
·:
--.1(14- l-Oin
.
' I

=:-t a --~· _..,. '

·~

.•

Refrigeretlon

l n g - - ...........
Ll-td oiOOirloiUI. Rldon ...
ElootrlcoL 304-175'1781-

;...,

3--.. . .
r.:-.,
------..
..
............
'(

otump '

20 p.- eM tlllo on 2orllli
-loo.-orloborwlth.,.
oc1. • Juty 1. 1111. WVo
304-fl711-2311 Ohio 114-44112d84
.
::R-.,.-,7"1-:-1-~.-,_--td-:cll-:::-lo-,.----

;i

. . . . . . . . . . .&amp;

Trim,.,,_

IPPianc. ,.....,._ W.V• 304 ...
171-Z311Cihlo 114-4411-2414
.:......:...__:.:.
--: •

3ml.. - t - 3111 .. 211111ho.
ho- 1 112-om/124a32. ,
a-.m. . . . . . . . . . 000. Clf1
114-_42.._ or 814-4411-

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

i

Zanllhi.. O ..vldngmo.t
"'
Hou• aA.
IIOfM ,.

lot• ',

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . u......

•

lion' oTV ..,....; opootolll=· ;

clud8CI•o ,_,_.,., aur'tlllnl.

•••"- ..............

...

,,.. lltimll&amp; Cll •

114-371-2418.

'

VInton: Totollr ..,.odoltd. 2 bl., •
houM on one ecra A....... llll , ~
21.100. Mojor opplon- It&gt; ,

.......... ton.; • •

.,

Rat-.; or cMie tool *lllng. •
Mo.tw.llaompllledaeme...,. •
Pump all• Md llrYiol. 304- •
8M-3102
..

- • Muol~ 114-4411-0117.
Joff - l e ¥ lnttNCI.,, 1144411-11!17. Llntlttd .,.,lngo.

...... . . ._
1/2 .... :·
lot. Glr•• DWed rd. 11 min. ~;
• ... Cloll!&gt;... 20'• Col .14- ,
--·200.

_

!
'
••

upendftllvll¥. DM y..,ym
Cltllfl«, on• helf milt up

•--1. Ctll 304-17 1331.

•o•.

!I.Y - - · 411 Lin- lt..
lllldcll-- 3 - - ...
.
. . . _ 1•11
· '.....
" "ldt·
...........
oh...... w•h - ......

·

•'

1--"condttloNII lfftthnl .-•~n- 't
locll ,.,....,_ ..... hid. '

Fottr Troo

F., Lo•o: Toboc:oo pou-a
.31..,tt/lb.. l,3301bo.A""I•
W.. Wou kl al1o rlftt t«i~ICCO
born wlh hou•. coli 114-4411d111 .•• 814-441-7187.

lndlwkll81 ...... ....... bJ.
ginner.. Hrioua ., ...... 8Ni-

FOf lolo:IIODC.
3 Ill..A-C2 /tti.IOO.
"'""- ,'
......
A-On• • • ldMe
Call
304-171-1104. .. 304-175- .
1321.

031&amp;

•

•'

Sale

11784whooldr.. Oodgo.,.,... I ft., llod Good oond..
PM/AM c • • • • t t l ,
41,aaalmfl•. coli 814-2111221.

'

•

1810 Tovoto Cotlco. a:to. olr,
IIOOdoond.. ooi1304-871-113:Z.
1973 Catllln1 Pant18c. na.
oond.. z ilr.. - • 11111"". Ctl

or •

•-P23. .11.W.I .W.*•"" ·
dodllt. eon 304-871-. .114-

-:---=-:--:-:----:--:--- '

- · In
..........
hot ·
.....
t21.100.
C.h
prloo.
t24.000 ,... - - with
- · - · C.,rllle
... ... """· Clf1
114-3111-11412.

'•

---------

A

B2

WlntllltoiMiy- nt a:aa .,..... ...... Loool lohoal Olttrlol II
-lnl oppt k no lor -~
-lllio ·~-c-oot flo. .
~ D~•orotTnno-

BOGGS

46

A-.
.
.
,
lo-•

.......... lohoal. Jr. High .,d ,
High lohoal-• Juno 12 •
7. 2 hou,. • d.,. 11ro 40

..... ......... wll -

lloelng ...... cooldng
Aloo'lrol•-aAI- ....
CAll oftor 2p.m. 304-773H81. MeaonW¥.

.... Lo...
dlmr•A 2nd loor.
Pin&amp; Golllpolll. On•
llodroom. I t - ...... _ .._
- · provi- Dop- ' .. d
rlf•on-Col
-114-441-4241.
- U28. PI'
-nth.
114-4411-4421. .. e14-445'

Ploteaelonal
Service•

::::::.~"1."7.':";:,.--::

76

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Roomai~IA:iii'iiiiiiil--

wet•.
304-171-1071,

IIWOolltofodt .. oflollng.

.... . .
10 lmpcc ..il
d
. . . . . thM o.pent.........
up tho 1 llulclng
trodo
To roglttw tor

f..-nlahed

Two trll• lot.. 18W• .nd
furnllhld, ••~.

know, •d NOT to llftdmoM¥ .•

ear.

nllghborhood. One c• .....

eou..,Y Mobllo Homo P.-k.
Route 33. Nonh of Pont•oy.
Lott. •ontolt. ...... .... . Col
114-112-7471.

tlwough tM m .. urd you h••

c•,.nt•.

2 IR , furnllhod •• •-1.. r.. hed .., _ _ In qulol

46

lNG CO . i"'CD....., . .. . . you r

beoQ,. •

,,.nlohed ..,s., 1 111.. 1200.
UtiMI• pold. 243 Jocfcorll I'll.
Oolllpolll. ell e14--441e
oft• 7 p.m.

..Mobile homo fDI . - 2 bod· - l.,d Hll Rotd. 3041875'3134,

do lluoln- .... h POODlo you ,

'loft c.nt...
Tli-Coumy Vo.,.IOilol ~
nr.
Aduft you
-with...,....
- to
•
• prcMde

Efll...,crt opt. ldool for 1
pnOI\ mo&amp;le horne blloW
t-n ..,...,...,, "'•· CA •
h•oi.,IW. Coll1"-441-03311.1
'
F.... htd offldoncrt. '110. otlMI• ""· -•b•h. 70114th
A,., Oollp . .. Col 814-4414418 oft or 7 P.M .

wlh ..t - I c -door opon•.
Fullv . ., ...... t22t. ..... ott~
•••· Col~14-4411-7721.

INOTICE!
THE 01110 VALLEY PUILIIH- ,

o1 tl. Adul E

p•klng • A.C: Ref.
lktltallle for 1 peraon.
lt4-4411-0338.

Twottd . . tari"MM.. ..,• ..,..,
304-1711-1071-

•

:::'a~~''!!.~~~~\~:

-;;;:;;-A,;;:--;;;;;tt;u;;;;
.1
Furl\ A-. n•t to

UPttllrt. unt.... hed opt.,...
"td. utl•l•aolcl. nopoto.Col
114--1137.·-diVt. 1-4
p.m.

AJiplo0--2-_,
mobl~ llomo on 7.e ..,._
,...... Mom-..cl Redv.
304-875-ee«&lt; .. J04-r.tl2Londloroola Dnotollvooor•ln 240fl.
•
__
-1:00Coli
p.m. 114-_l'Owlllhlp.

23

, - t 1 7 1 - Col 304-8711B104o or 304-11711-11311. or
304-871-8704.

Fl:r•hed 3 l'ml., • both.
UI)It81r" ct..,, "o_.PIIa. lultllllt
ro. on• Rot. • Dop. ._~r-oll
Colll14--1111.

2 .... , ... 711 lloartllll Httlng
ponlll •rn. "" oond.,
•-.. eon "t3111-11311.
4111...... ....... _ .. . . . .0
,,......, b •fo. Col 114-241111221W.,Ingo._

lfutoh•MOO.,dup,bunkoomllfoto w-n.lllb IU t21fl
.,d up to · - - flobr ., 10 Mott- ~ 1
·
'
or- IPI'IIII

!!'" :.m. ":'.r.:•h.=1: ·f..c::'A::eg:;.,.

Roorrlo l o r - - .. -nth.
ltaotln1 Itt •120 • rno. Gelle
llot... l14-4411-9110.
'

GOVEIINM!NT JOII
ni.CMO-....
DD - · Coli (11 1011-117-EIIt. 11-1108 lor curront -~~
lltt.

.
_lor_.
..d _ _
ute. Lo•nlloth
_ _
lulld

Wol•. -·.

2 iA, Dopod , _ _ In
- ·· Col 114-3111-1104

Will do odd jobo. _pnl work.
Pllntlna. ttc. N.oap. hou•. 814-MI-2dfl1
•

Businaaa
Opportunity

cit-'- ....... .,_

,,.,.hllrt3rm, 141*0inutllll•
·old. 14Lo...../ -o
~ Q\1 114-44·1~ •;
114--3170.

_,.,111hoct

out 141. Col 814-441-1031.

,33

TweTowMouiiAI*tfMntt·2

lr.. 1 1/2 llotho. CA., do-he-.
alottd , .... pool llfe¥-nd.
tr•h ln'*'clod
-~Ill Ull P• mo. Col
11471110.
.

1.-r.
Vlldl/t210. No polo. 4112m ..

Nloo 3 br..

- - - LPN n - o1 Mld- - """'"' In my ho- Ao•oclllla" EJtM• woriiMg wtth ntllle rat-. R.r•enc. .,...
Oorllllrlao, MR r•ldon.._ 11 bl&amp; A I - o l i o - - - Col
114-241-171f.
;
-o"""""""'•.Moclaol Wll do lownr. Col 114-4411- .
c -....... 814--7141.
~

Mobile Homes
for Rent ·

I

'I

School•
I natruction

IE,II.ITIRIL AIPAIITMENTI AT
IUOOET PRIC!S 'AT JACK ION- !ITAT!I, Ill JacDCI'I
Mo ••m t112o mo. Wolklo
11
4-4411-

·zc::o..::• :~:: - ='~-r.~.:7"1oo.

- • 1n
r-nohlp,
t10.000.00 FOlly- - •
lwoodol
eM WI Ru~ -lluly

ond hln.dl- :
•1*1 In our home. 21 yan

16

Lo-

110 ,..

LAYNE'S RJRNITURE

w..111 •. , . . , _ t- _,

. . . 7 p.m.
111SNool'uo,1.,.'JOwlthEx,_.do. hlol on
.-td lot. Col 114-10-1211-

·=121."':'=-itJ-:1\~

*v...

refrlgll'ltort.
lkoggo Appllone~~,
Upp.- Rill• lid . boolclo ,ltono

t..,..._

_-··

Junk Cor• with or without
mot..._ C.K Lorry Lfvolv e143111-1301

w......
'""D"·

0000 USED APPUANCEI

P_.lol tlrnllhtd on .loff•teo~

Situation a
Wanted

-d

qotd ..,,... _ ond T.V. •••
Op•IA.M . toiP .M.Mondwu
Sot. 114-4411-1. .1. IZ7 3rd.
A... Golllpollt, OH.

both.~.,..,.,_ ,.,.lollv

12

Tho Clolllo County AICI Ofllco
RE-TRAIN NOWI
wM .. ..,.. --lono for IOUTHEAITERN
IU81NEII ,
.. ,...,., pert·tlnw IMip fDr
COU£GE. 121 Jookt101 Plio.
-loymont which wl
e 14--4387. Roo- No.
11111 on or ebout A191.t 30, Cllll
111-11-108118.
liB. A,.,..,.lono
1lo oocopted ,._ 1:00 A.M. to 4:30
,_._on JunoiZ. 1111J. ot tflo
ooumy ofllco - • ot 121 1B Wanted to Do
.-..., Pika Room 3 0 1 1 A , I - - - - - - - - - - Ciolllpalll. 0 H.

n••

Loot or ltGion: 3 yr..

rf.lok

Prl .... lor
tolo/M,IOO.
-711d.
.Coli I t.•..

Room tar llct.rty m., or worn., •
Ful thM lor 8umrMr ontv. 11 Elm Horn.. C1re fDr ..... .,
-~~~ ,.,.,.. rtf.. ' ' - • coli .,d hondlooppod. 114-882·
114--1:1110.
.... II. e14- ..;,;_
1173-2d70.
_ _ _ _ _ __

w•

Coumy Aflllll.,oo, Inc.

Cell 114-

117BIIIonl. 141:70. 2 br., 1

Htl' Wonttd: Hollc1or Inn, 4&amp;0
Pllto lt. lon •111 Dolllp....
eNopflonocollo.
....., c:ootr .,,., 1n - -

toft_,

--·
., •
• "" (ltotl .•
Colt
814--3181

Mer.,..,"'

14al0oddon. .... ln1117.3
2
- .... lllllho. LR, "'· Klctr...
. --woodllur-.1111.. •
ola. ,.,, 1n ooorhod 011..-o;:::.
l:tt'r'.OO"'o~ c:;

'

Currontlr oaoopttng ..,,u.,._
_,.ill.,opooltfonlor
• high ....llty oflloo.
,...,,..m~beltnttolox ole
20 2 c/o Go Kip oil Dolly Trillu riO,
821· Third A.... Oolllpllo, OH
41831 .

oomDietl line of u..S llrNtu ...
NEW· WNt.n boot• 131.

1171 lltuttz. 1.. 10. with

W..,, IN/DON. CoroH..on of
.... , . _ _ Coli 304-871- •

lor 1 _

tOI.- •••.••clln• - -

Cal 114-241'1127-

I. S. IT. SO UST
IIYSVU.; OliO
614-662-3121

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

.....
c•
IIAm ·
·11-.Ar,_

We Service All Makes
&gt;4:19-1 mo.

loward L

8

....._
.. J ........... h. 10th.
Kltt-. I - . ald. L E-o of
·· A"'
1•11ntd. lomol• Coli 814-.. 2- tlquot.
OffAlllltre¥
County
Rotd
31.
2018.
Panlond.

SAliS &amp; SilVIa

Sfontt ..... &amp;

II SOl

992·5335-985-3561

11-4-88- 1 mo.

Mastic - Cwltllnt. .•
VInyl SWing

"SMile Pie "
1111 ,,. 111

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

949-2168

992-6155

J&amp;L

Het~tlll

"Must le Repairoble"

FREE ESTIMATES

992-7611

5- wn- 1111

Y.-lout-- 814-143--.

DEAD OR AUVE

.. EA UL ......,..

Hofto Wont.-, - - IIN'I.
........,..._... CGntool. Cot ...

-od:E. .. . . . . _ _ ...
ltitltd. m-/OENTAL
HYIJI!N.T to Ioiii- -lao
ful .. port-tlmo. Muot ""
llw . 1d to praatlelln 1M al8te
of OH .. !llfl. llolptll llut not
....d.- ... , . -...6--d
us your _ , . . to a. ala 201
o/ o -polo Oily Tdlluno 1211
Tlll•d lA .... Oolllpallt OH
- 1.

,_. 11111 m~t~NM a foUnNIIDn

Tlol• fir tole or - : Antlau0
. ._
- · lor ..... Cell
8 14-4111-0U7 oftor 2 p.m. ,

llbr•Jn• w.m.t In mv home.

Cute klnena to good ho,..,

JEFFERY J. WARNER

Clcims1

""""•Ill'·

Y.-d Sola Juno I . I. 10. 1:00
AM Ill S:OO PM. At. 2. ,..,.....

Giveaway

4-1 w... otd ldtt. . . etso •du •
milt cat. to aood hon.. Cllll
114-4411-031?. ·

WANTED

=-=· -

Hom•purllh-ln

111'10 ......... .,., '

lioltl• To......,• .._. ... '

a.t.~

ldtt-.

992-6810

Ph. 614-992-5479 ~
..~ 614-992-2477

........

Mobile H omaa
for Sale

...., lpoofoi/No ,.,..._ -·
A-..11: on _, ,_ MDWie

- l v Oontol Coro ,_ 1 or 2 I
.... - _ . . ...... - o l ,

- l y Oontole Coro 1llo 1 " '
tlmo . - . lor paolllon of ;

Y•d lolo: e t.nlv Fd .. a lot..
12 W. Andoroon lt. M11on. 1-?
le.,tlful
10 to cho.,.. "Loto of Stuff" lloln - - from. AI oolor a oowbo1, 7
wu.. old Ntt• tr11lnM1. C.l
YAR08ALE
&amp;14-2111-1713.
lot.,J..,o10
2011 Joff-on lhrd.
LlwiiftiCW,..I. Took. CIDt... g,
lookl. M•e•ln• M .. o. ttenw.

WE GO THE EXTIA MILE.....

302 W. 2nd Slretl
r.-oy. Ohio 45769

IIIV••

G......,..

S-8-'89'tfn

MY·T·SHOP

Juno lth ond 10th. Quit .. liD_ ............. olotl*og.
....... Iotty
NOidonoo.
Ylllowbuth Ad., Recine Rein

Y•d lola d03 2dth Str-.
Fri, lot.
Lots d mlec.

A Great Combination"Quality and Reasonable Prices"

INSUAATIICI call:

tNoFrldoi- ............. lt-. ............_
....
thfng.b.-.....
.. d
gtfl ....... lh
: 14•,...
ond lin- A.C. 870 Atll lt..
---10o.m.-??.

""lnl P-.m. Tllu,..

F.- . , , lnfor-tlon

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

·····----

Y.-d lola 1hri.. flf, lot. 8:00
tHI ?. llouto 2 North. ,..,.....
t-clot .... olc.

GREG BAILEY

For HEALTH

Two t.nNioo. Juno10-1 1. 1:00? ltolclo ltot•H"'-0-a
fit, 7. T..-o - • m-o.
1171 aur ukl XL 710
mot enrol&amp;

.,H

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

-lot-

.

houro of 10:00 on d 1:00PM.

Y•d lola Rt 2 North._.,.
-dShophordPoN-..,_ - - kl• olot,_
cklbo.
fithfna
bl....,.,- llmpo.
. .._-•~
Thurt. Fri.
.... 8:00 till 1:00.

K and J CONSTRUCTION

304-1711-1111--.
~~'~-· ....

-

o 10•17J.1112Iillwe ctt. ·

It VIcinity

4

...... - - o t o : - C I . A
:zoo. o/o Gill...... Oily Trfto.
urw,l2111rlrdA•.. CioiUpalo.
Ololo4&amp;1:11.

........- . , ........

UIE0· 8o•. • • - - o o m
autt•.
Dee... .,.....,...... .

110-

·: -'·-pi-•

Wot•lln•• chlnooocllctr•• ....................................
I I
f . . . .-~.. Done bf
c.w, O..llan. ............ - l n l Bolo: Juno 1-10. eoloi.
Tron-• Coli 814--01 . .
- . .1.4111L, olfRt. l7onCo.
ott• e p.m.
10 IOunv•tl
•

z
\

HVAC - · - t d .._..,_ Muot 11o ollie to warfl

Middleport
It VIcinity

-----··l't-PrNiiint ......

Announcement&amp;

1-13-'U-1111

PUBUC
RECYCUNG

CHAIN UNK FENUS

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

121110. I Ill.. 2 "" lllllho. • ••~Houoo ·ty• • . . _ .
"'~•&amp; Prto. tor tJUic*
.... ootroMobloH-P.-k.
114--1102.
.

-------Pomeroy...........

91.m.-4p.m. Nln•Witlw mile

Televisio~ listenina Devices
Dependable Hearin1 Aid Sales &amp; Servic4.
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

........In_._ .... _ . ,
....... h lgtof ....In .
- - lor good
ond ·

Goodl

.... _wlthboddnt"U41.

1041711-- tO:OO •1:00.

104-_,11-1U2 - - tho
houro &lt;1 10:00 ond 1:00PM.

up Bolle¥ Run Ad,

3

'*-....
..............
.,.. . pr-·......... . ....

112 mi., oil Rt. 7. on lllt.,lto
AdcltCOI Ad .. lot., 1-3. lun.,
Mon. . Tua.M.

4 ...ly vord .... Juno ..., 10.

Anrlllllllr:r: rill' II I:;

992-2621 or 992-6944

949-2969

Middleport.

you.

BOB'S HEATING &amp; COOLING

VISA· MASTERCHAROE
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 9-7
Sot. 9 -&amp;
Clooed Sunday

...........

u.~ng

32

4p.m.

I wloh to tt.nk
everyone who tent

•Heat Pumps

-·--

Houaellold

SWAIN
AUCI'ION • FUIINITUIIE 12
Olvo lt., Otlllpollo.
NI!W · I po. wciOdF- · U31.

... -...

lohoal. Fd...,, J..,. lth 11lp.m. lotu..., Juno 10th 1-

Card ofThanks

•Centr al Air

~:w..;.1104

-·tort. --1&lt;1- ·-IHd...d-·

• ,.... 121 '1111rd A.... Juno
•·10.
3 ......_ .......... _ .
. . . aloi ........ / .......... .
of
10th. • tl ? ...... Dolllpallo. Rt 141.

Coli

fl'l ltoldoncoonCoumyRd . 21.
n-.t to llllllury lllm•••t

4/S/ 89/ tln

1

...

MIIMINftOI ....... Wlfttld 10

Clotl*og. blcrtol-. 100ft. ..... ._

EVENINGS

4-16-16-tln
•High Efficiency
Gas

61

blo thto •tol Coli lr'*',.olllol1·118---1... H 1122

...... ~~or~. . .

.................. ·············· ·-

BILL SLACK
992-2269

EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE

LAFF·A·DAY

wai'it8d

- - ............ In" find .

rn1. -

-10opd.. IIIU.I
. . . .. . c.

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and RE·
MOVAL

Day or Nig~t
NO SUNDAY CALLS .

2-l -tfn

on ttt. 7.

..... ofltuff. Go&lt;...........

A / C ienllce
All Mljor &amp; Minot'

PROCESSING

a .,.,.
a.tu,.

torn~~- ..,d Nlo:

SYIACUSf. OliO

NIASE CertHied M•chtnic

References

CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

TIIUIS. 1.1. ,,45 P.M.
SUN. LL 1:45 P.M.

o•o

985-4141

BISSELL
BUILDERS

POMEIOY -EAGlES
CLUI

Help

It Vicinity

VAUGHN'S
AUTO - DIESEl
SERVICE

GENERAL CONRACTOIS

4-25-lfn

11

Help Wlnted

The IWv Sentinei-P.ge 9

Pomaoy-Midlllaport. Ohio

llllillrll IIUI - · ll&gt;lrMi.l
110-.P...,.ti.OO.IIopoo.
T•
,.,_
_ .... 1 - .....

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
•REMODELING &amp; REPAIRS
PHONE DAY 01 EVENINGS'

REPAIR

WOODEN BUILDINGS
Built On Your lot

U&lt; 1005-!1

CHESTO,

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

11

Yard Sale

.......GiiiiPOIIi'""""'"

MAlCOM

111. 124, P-•v Ohio

Varieus SiJK

7

.

-

.

June9,1989

=
I

- - Apto. lor - .
Nloooolt.,8 Loundrv
..
- - 114'
IIJ.I7U.IDJI.

.r:.'INilii-.:.
. . . ?-·,.""'....
........... I

I

~~-a -c':i

Ctcuc=- ..,_ a - .........,._...... ,_
.,
!!!!"''· a_,_
im.oo.
•II·

78

h. No , . ,,..__

.

pallded relit.
104-171-

. . . ..,pet.J04.

"8omeltmtt 1 1111110 noa+alglo that
the toliaiO- what coklr
thll C*PII Ulld to be...

·-· Y---- .

ICNi• ...

MtAIM'8 tor ....

"

•

�a,

f1! ...,, _.,

•

•

.~

.,, • • •

- - - -.. - . ......._ . .. " -. . . . . . - - -~.

Page 10-The Daily Sentinel ·

'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

continued irom page 1
a lot of fun . Derbv activities will start about 10 a.m.
Th&lt;&gt; derby Is being held In conjuntlon with the Pomeroy
Chambei' of Commerce-sponsore11 Craft Show for Heritage
Weekend. The craft show wlll be located on Court St.. which will
be blocked to traffic .
ThE&gt; Shady River Shu fliers will perform from 2·2: 30 p.m. and
the Sternwheeler Juanita will bE&gt; availablE&gt; for touring from 10
a.m . to 4 p.m . at no charge.
Advance tickets for the upcoming July 4th Phil Dirt and the
Dozers Concert. also sponsored by the Chamber of Commerce.
will also be sold this weekend. Tickets cost $7 per pE&gt;rson .

United Press International
Portions of nothern Florida
and southern GfQrgla were
under a tornado watch early
Friday followln!( twisters that
killed five people In Louisiana
and the Florida Panhandle.
At least four tornadoes hit
Louisiana Thursday and others
were reported throughout the
Gulf Coast states. including two
that damaged home.s and build·
in!(s along the Alabama coast. An
unconfirmed twister injured a
park. ranger In the Florida
Panhandle.
The twisters were created by a
thunderstorm system t(lat cut
through Texas earlier In the

EMS has 10 calls Thursday
TE&gt;n calls were answered on Thursday by units of the Meigs
County Emergency Medical Services. Of the 10, three calls
required assistance by Life flight. of Grant Hospital, Columbus.
AI 11:51 a.m .. lhe Racine unit and Racine Fire Department
was called to a car and motorcycle accident on Hill Road. Chad
Wolfe was raken from the accident by Llfeflight to Grant
Hospital. Charles Wolfe was taken by Racine EMS to Veterans
Memorial Hospilal. Regina and John Roush W(i're treated at the
scene.
Rutland EMS and Salem Township Fire Department were
called at 3:07p.m. to a motorcycle and van accident on Bowles
Road. Mike Hudson and Robin Slater were taken from the scene
to Grant Hospital by Llfefllght. Middleport EMS was called at
3:23p.m. Ia assist at the same accident.
Other Thursday calls included Tuppers Plains at 12:17 a.m. t~
Rye Road for Carrie Osborne who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 2:32 a.m .'. Middleport went to North
Second Ave. for Deborah Miller who was treated but not
transported. Rutland at 9:37a.m. was called to Meigs Mine No.
1 for Fred Althouse to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Racine at
2:39 p.m. to Vine St. for Cora Birch to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Pomeroy· at 5:42 p.m. to Condor St. for Mildred
Ohlinger to Holzer Medical Center. Pomeroy.at 9:46p.m. to
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Lowell Lowery to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. And at 11:30 p.m .. Racine to
Route 124 for William Kimes to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

week. the National Weather
Service sal&lt;i The system sped
east across the Gulf Coast states
along a path that forecasters said
would take it. In weaker.fonn.
across the Middle Atlantic states
and New England.
In Florida. about a dozen
tornadoes hammered the East
Point area on the Gulf of Mexico
In late afternoon and early
Thursday evening, destroying
several homes and businesses.
Elsewhere. rain moved across
most of New England and portions of Kentucky. Tennessee and
Arkansas, thunderstorms were
scattered from Michigan to Mls·
sour!, over the central Rockies

and porllons of Utah. It was clear
!rom the Pacific Northwest
across California, Nevada and
the Southwest the weather service said.
An earthquake measuring 4.0
on the Richter scale hit Hays,
Kan .. and was felt 25 miles away,
the ·u.s. Geological Survey reported. There were no reports of
damages.
In Florida, two adults and a
teenager were killed by a rorna'do
that destroyed their home,
Franklin County sheriff's dis·
pate her Robert Coursey said. No
other Injuries were reported. but
Coursey said several homes and
business In the area were dam·
aged or destroyed by about 12
twisters.
The Louisiana fatalities, a man

and a woman in mobile homes',
were reported In Grosse Tete, 15
miles west of Baton Rouge. A
third person was missing, said
Ibervllle Parish Sheriff Freddie
Pitre.
"We went up in a State Pollee
helicopter and viewed it from the
air and, for at leas! 200 yards
wide and 8 miles long, everything
Is juSt wiped out,'' he said.
An emergency center was set
up at the Grosse Tele Lions Club
to help the families of 20 houses
and trailers destroyed.
Three dozen people were taken
to hospitals, said a spokesman
for the Acadian Ambulance
service.
Authorities with bloodhounds
searched destroyed homes for
more victims.

~93-1797.

---Area deaths-Don R. Dal•is
Don R. iPetel Davis. o3. PSR.
Gallipolis. died Thursday at
Holzer Medical Center after a
short illness.
Born July 11. 193.'i at Middleport. he was a son of Don Davis of
Dunbar. W.Va .. and the late
Mary Helen Ebersbach Davis.
He was preceded in death by
.his wife. Willa Dean Kessell
Davis, in March 10. 1988. ·
. He was sales manager at D&amp;W
Mobile Homes of Point Pleasant.
W.Va .. and a member of Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM and
Centenary Methodist Church. He
graduated from Middleport High
School in 1953 and attendE'd
Morris Harv!'y College.
Survivors include a son, Hank
W. Davis. of Gallipolis; a
brothE'r. RobPrt Davis of Pome·

roy; stepmother. Susie DaYis of
Dunbar. W.Va.; a half-sister.
Pam Beam of California: two
nephews, Kyle Davis of Pomeroy. and Brent Davis of Brandon.
Fla.; and niece. Treasa Creech
from Scott Depot. W.Va.
Services will be Sunday. 1
p.m .. at the Willis Funeral Home.
Burial will be in Emma Chapel
Cemetery in Putnam County.
W.Va.
FriE'nds may call at lhE' funeral
home on Saturday from 2 to 4
p.m. and6to9p.m. Masonic rites
will be at 7 p.m. Saturday.
Arrangements under
Cun n ingham -Parkfr-Johnson
Funeral Home. Charlesron.
W.Va .
In lieu of flowers, contributions
may be made to the Centenary
Uniled Methodist Church .Youth
Group.

Webb probably won't go back
A Gallia ( ounty man fired
from Point Pleasant High School
ror not wearlng a tiP says he
doesn't believe he'll ret urn to thE'
classroom dE'spile a court order
that says his bosses were wrong.
According to · the Associated
Press. the West VIrginia State
Supreme Court has reinstated
46-year-old Bill Webb of Cente·

Stocks
Dally st""k prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl

nary with full back pay to his job
as Math teacher at Point Plea·
sant High School. However. the
court also ruled that Webb,
should he decide to return to the
classroom next fall, will have to
conform to the school's dress
code.
"Unless some serious changes
are made. I probably won't go
back." said Webb, who was fired
las 1 December because of gross
Insubordination.
Webb. a 19-year veteran of Ihe
Mason County School System.
openely resisted an order by
Superintendent Charles
Chambers that all male teachers
wear dress pants and lies in
classroom. Webb was suspended
three limes and fired.

Am Electric Power ........... 27.%
AT&amp;T ............................... 36Y,
Ashland 011 .. .. .. ...... . .. . .... .. 41 :~
Bob Evans ........................ 15'1.
Charming Shoppes ....... .... . 16%
City Holding Co ......... .. ..... 161),
Federal Mogul... ............. .. o5%
Goodyear T&amp;R .............. ... 56%
The cash balanceofallfundsas
Heck's ................................ y,
of May 31 was $162.200.8.~. accordKey Centurion .................. 13'.4
! ng to a report from Clerk Jane
Lands' End ....................... 26%
Bee~le.
Limited Inc .. .. .. .... .... ... ..... 32 V.
The figure Included $25.601.76
Multimedia Inc ............... :.100~ .
In the general fund; $20,749.16 In
Rax Restaurants ................. . 2}4
the
street fund; $31.146.79 In the
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 18
1
tire fund; $66,026.91 In the wa1er
Shoney's Inc ....................... 11
fund; $3,1i71.051n water deposits;
Wendy's Inti ........................ 6
$5,401.86 hi cemetery funds; and
Worthington Jnd .......... ..... 22}',
$6,!100 In endowment flinds for
cemeteries. The Super Now
Interest received through April,
1989 was $2,334.89, Clerk Beegle
Veteraaa Memorial
reported.
Thunday admiSsions - Charles Jolll!lt, Racine; Carrie Os·
borne, Reedlvllle; ~Hunter,
Pomeroy; Cora 1;11~~. Racine;
Anile Davia. MiddlePort; Jetrrey
Sellers, Racine; Otis McGowan,
. . . . . . . . . , . . eall
Middleport; Lowell Lowery,

Racine Village
financial report

. Hospit81 riews

-····
.,_
·----'

Will

Pomeroy.

·

JW-Illtt, Julie Loekard. , Hugh
··~

.

,

Taylor, Mat·

·llftortft·IJ*1

ter similarity became apparent.
When a Parsons &amp; Whittemore
jet touched down in J\1onroe
County in 1972, a wood pulp plant
was first announced in 1976 and
!hat facility was brought on line in
1979, the industry brought the
county "tremendous benefits," according 10 Judge Otha Lee Biggs,
president of the Monroe County
Commission. "There is no way that
you can place a value on it," Biggs
said, adding, "Don't let these
people out or your grasp."
Parsons &amp; Whittemore is looking
at Mason County with plans 10
build a $1.1 billion hardwood pulp
plant complex and has signed an
option with Appalachian Power Co.
for 1,300 acres south of the
Goodyear Point Pleasant Polyester
plant along Route 2. The results of
a feasibility study of the site are
expected in September, said C.
Kenneth Goddard, director, Parsons
&amp; Whittemore Lyddon Ltd. The
company is in the process of apply·
ing for water and landfill pcnnits
from the state of West Virginia and
negotiations are ensuing for a
financial package to bring the
project to the Mountain State.
The 2,000 c.ords of wood used
daily to make the pulp are manufactured under the kraft chemical
process - where the impurities of
wood are separated by using
chlorine and oxygen. The process is
considered environmentally safe,
nffici•l• .&lt;oirl . arlrlin~ the treaunent
plan Is 95 percent efficient.
Bob Frese, executive vice president of Alabama River Woodlands,
a wholly-owned subsidiary of Par·
son &amp; Whittemore whicn procures
the wood for the pulp plant in
Alabama, explained Thursday. that
West
Virginia's
plentiful
hardwoods, combined with in·
creased competition for hardwoods
in Alabama, have led to the recent
decision to give Mason County the
once-over.
Hardwoods are those that come
from trees whose leaves fall off.
Softwoods, on the .other hand, are
the pines.
The dozen Mason Countians
visited the 1,378-acre site of
Alabama River Pulp, another
wholly owned subsidiary of Par·
sons &amp; Whittemore, had lunch with
community leaders and toured
Monroeville before heading back 10
Huntington's Tri-Stare Airport.
They found out the Alabama
plant is a model of efficiency,
generating its own power 900,000 pounds of steam per hour
produced by the boilers - and
cleaning up the 23 million gallons
of water taken from the Alabama
River daily with a $12 million
treatment process that uses microorganisms.
"The power we generate would
power a city the size of Huntington.'' said Tom Tippy, vice
president of Alabama River Pulp

•

~SNOW

-RAIN

.

~SHOWERS

FRONTS: "

Warm "
Cold
. . Static "Occluded
Map shows minimum IIJmperal'-. At least SO'l'o of any shaded arwals forecast
to receive precfpltatlon Indicated
UPI

WEATHER MAP - During early Saturday morning, showers
and thunderstorms are forecast for parts of I he central Plains, lhe
western GuU Coast and parts of the north Atlantic Coast states.
Showers and thunderstorms are possible In paris of the northern
Intermountain region and parts of lhe south Atlantic Coast states.
(UP I)

and a veteran of !he wood pulp
business for 48 years.
Tippy said the plant hasn't killed
a fish since it- began production,
continu~d from pa·ge 1
and he added it meets all Alabama
and federal environmenlal redigging up a storm drain behind
Complaints on barking dogs
quiremcnts. ·
the
old
Hayman
Hardware
were
d lscussed and It was
Addressing !he cancer-causing
building.
decided
that anyone being andioxins, which have been disThe
park
committee
reported
noyed
by
barking dogs should file
covered in the pulp-making
on
.the
first
evening
of
entertainprocess, Tippy said the amount of
ch~~~~~~e'::~~o~;sc:;rf~r June
dioxins released could be equated ment held las·! Saturday noting
.to one second compared 10 32,000 that the crowd was small due to 19, 7 p.m. Attending were Mayor
area rain. ThP Bend River Boys Cleland. Clerk Beegle, Stre"'
years.
He said if you took the dioxin Band and the Country Blend Commlssoner Glenn Rizer, Fire
produced by the plant in a year, it Band performed and th(' next Chief. Robert Johnson. and C&lt;J~n'­
would weigh Jess than the lead in a show was announced for June 17. cll members, Robert Beegle:,
It was also reported by the park Bentz. Carroll Teaford. Richard
pencil you used to sign your name.
committee
thai volunteers are Wamsley, and Scott,Wolfe. Larry
Those going on the trip Thursday
paid for by Parsons &amp; Whittemore, needed to erect some playground Wolfe was absent.
were: Russell Holland, Point equipment.
Pleasant mayor; Bartow tones,
chairman of the board of Citizens
Continued from page 1 .
National Bank of Point Pleasant;
state Sen. Ned Jones, D-Cabell;
that was vanda1i1.1 di comme- ity through appropriate com·
Frank Lee, county development merating Major Reed. the munlcation channels. And Of
authority executive director; Jim founder or Reedsville. on a course. from time to time, the
Lewis, development authority marble stand with evergreens CBC sponsors the more vlslblle
president; Counly Commission . planted around it. was made improvement projects, such as
President Thomas D. "Tucker" possible by CBC.'
the one that just took place at th¢
Mayes; Commissioner Larry Sayre;
The community-minded club cemetery. ·
Commissioner R. Kenton Sheline;
started many years ago, mainly
Charles Lanham, development as a social group. Only about six
Lottery numbers
authority treasurer; Beckie Stein, couples are now actively InMason County Area Chamber of volved in CBC with monthly
PICK-3
Commerce president; Charles A.
meetings that are still basically
226.
Mason, edilor of the Point Pleasant
social get -togethers. But besides
PICK-3 ticket sal~ totaled
Register; and Rolland Phillips, enjoying the fellowship of each
$1,303.477.50.
with a payoff due o!
West Virginia industrial develooother. the group also maintains a
$487.927.50.
ment representative.
fund so that flowers can be sent
Gov. Gaston Caperton has called when a death occurs in the
PICK-4
4052.
the potential project "the Super community. Tlie group takes
PICK-4 licl&lt;et sales totaled
Bowl of industrial development" srands on important local issues
$231.332.
with a pay~ff due of
for Mason County and the state of and makes opinions known to
$67.900.
West Virginia.
other members of the communThe guests traveling to Alabama
met with Goddard, vice president
of Apple Grove Pulp Co. and director of Parsons &amp; Whittemore; B.C.
Homady, Monroeville, Ala., mayor;
I·
Announces The Opening Of
John Barrett, chairman of the board
of the Monroe County Bank;
Jimmy Warren, Alabama state
representative; Harvel Deas, executive secretary, and Peggy Jaye,
2924 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant
secretary, Monroe County In-Patient Scheduling Now Available With Appointments
dustrial Board; Judge Otha Lee
Beginning June 12, 1989
Biggs, presi~nt of the Monroe
County Commission; Charlisle
Phone 675·1932 Between The Hours Of 10 am.-2 pm
McClure, ~harles McCorvey, Silas
Tucker; and Alex Roberts, Monroe
Counly Commissioners;
Also, Charles Deer, ·Monroe
County tax collector; Fonda Mel·
ton, tax assessor; Shall Dunning,
All EVIL QUEEN, A
chairman of the MonroeviUe InLOST IIABY, TROLLS,
dustrial Development Board; Mel·
FAIRIE$, LtmE
vin Fouke!, president of Monroe
County Chamber of Commerce;
PEOPLE... THEY'RE
Steve Stewart, editor of The Mon·
ALL WA/TIIIIl
roe Journal; Tippy, vice president·
FOR YOU IN
mill manager, Alabama River Pulp;
Frese, executive vice president,
Alabama River Woodlands; Brian
Rundle, vice president, P&amp;W
Alabama River Newsprint Con·
suuction Co.; and Ken11eth Fairly,
manager of industrial relations for
Alabama River Pulp
·

Council ...

•

• . ,-;

Family Dental Care

Mllga County

Gallla &amp;Mason County

1-800-344-3331 .

675-3398

. ~,. .,

t'

'4 "'i

•

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'0

"' "'*· •· ,."" •, ·" ...-'

'"' ...... ··~ . ...... . . -,..,..., ..,. • • '" 1 "tlt · - .

Beat of the Bend: Don't forget
your freedom flag....Page A-6

~

~ ....

•
,., •

1 '

-

.,_._,..i11

•

~

'

4&lt; • ~

,.~_. ., ""

~

~,

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

•

~~

Cl

Inside
Along the River ... .. .... Jll-8
Business ......................D-1
Comics- ..... .. ...... .. .... Insert
Classlfleds ................. D3·7
Deaths .. .... .................. A-:1
Editorial ................. :... A-2
Sports ....................... Cl-8

Mostly sunny. High in mid
70s.

•

•

tnttS

' '

A Muttimedie Inc. NIIW•paper

---------·-------------

----

GALLIPOLIS - D~niel Forth.
37, Hutitlngt.on. W.Va .. was arrested by Gallipolis City Pollee
lale Friday afternoon on a drug
abuse charge.
The arrest was a result of a
two-week Investigation by city
police and the G~llla Counly
Prosecutor's office. ~
According to Prdlecutlng At·
torney Brent Saunders, an undercover agent purchased approxl·
·mat ely 75 white pills from Forth.
Saunders said the pills were
being sold as amphetamines
(speed).
Saunders added the cl ty poiloe
and prosecutor's office have
been performing Sl,lrvelilance on
Forth the past two Weeks. Forth,
_a potato chip vendor In the
tri-state area. was seiUng the
pills during the delivery of potato
chips.
·At this time. Forth has been
charged with drug abuse. ,a
• violation of Section 2925 11 of the
Ohio Revised Code In that he was
pos$ell:slq l..af:Blepam. a sche-

12 Sectiona, 98 Pagea

MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. June 11. 1989

Rutland listed
·as unsewered
problem area

· SEARCHES VEHICLE - PatrolmaR Greg
Frazier of the Gallipolis Polkle Deparbnent
searches a potato chip dell~ery truck that was
Impounded late Friday following the arrest of
du~

.4 controlled substance.

Saunders stated approxl·
mately five to six hundred pills
were confiscated and have been

driver Daniel Forth, Huntliijiton, W:V a. Forth
was chqed with drug abuse. (Times-Sentinel
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

sent to the Bureau of Criminal
Investigation for testing.
At the scene were the prosecutor. city pollee personnel and a

BCI agent.
Saunders s~ld further charges
are expected :

Baker.
By NANCY YOACHAM
Tlmes-Seotlnel Staff
As explained by Baker. proRUTLAND- "Rutland Is fifth posed plans call for "an alterna in the stale on the Environmental tive system. which classifies the
Protection Agency's problem list system for 75 percent · EPA
or unsewered areas." said Kim funding." A system Is classified
Shields. Meigs County's director by EPA as an alternative, said
of development.
Baker, when it differs from
F0r this reason, Shields Is conventional sewage disposal
hopeful that Rutland citizens will methods. but' has been proven to
be in favor of constructing a work at reduced energy costs.
sewage system that has been . EPA funding for conventional
proposed for their community systems only go as high as 55.
and surrounding areas. If con- " percent. Baker said.
struction funding can be secured
Total cost or construction lor
from the Ohio Environmental the proposed Rutland system is
ProtecJion Agency and other extimated at $:l million.
sources.
An application has already
The firs I of two public hearings been submitted to EPA for
to discuss the proposed sewage construction funding for the
system was held this past week at prop(ised Rutialld project. This is
the Ru !land Civic Center . the final year tor all such EPA
Twenty-nine people. Including grants and it would appear,
concerned residents. village offi- according to Shields, that about
cials. Kent Baker. of Engineer- 20 proposed projects may be
Ing Associates. Wooster. and funded by the state agency
before the grant program Is
Shields, attended the meeting.
The proposed sys tern was eliminated. Rutland's grant apexplained at the meeting by plicarion could be listed as high
as eightll on tlte, EPA list for ·
possl~le funding.
·
Should EPA approve the Rutland project, and If Rp !land
residents are In favor of the
project. a grinder pump would be
installed In the back yard of each
home within the affected area.
Baker said .. Inside the grinder
pump are cutters which shred
four-lane road through Gallla whatever comes lnlo the pump.
County. create a new highway In The shredded material is then
Meigs County linking Pomeroy forced out of the pump, Into the
with Ravenswood and Improve sewage lines, and carried under
the section of U.S. 50 In Athens pressure to the treatment plant.
County between Coolville and The treatment plant would be
Athens.
located on the other side of
Abel, formerly deputy d !rector Leading Creek from the Civic
of labor relations In the Ohio Center. on an approximately
Department of Transportation, 26-acre parcel of land owned .by
said additional construction Ru !land Vlllage. Baker reported.
would depend on new users lees.
Baker described the treatment
But until such action Is taken, she plant as "an · extended aeration
supports a •'continuing effort'' to package plant." With plants of
get construction funded and this type. sewage is held and
started.
treated for 24 hours before being
"We do have to have a released. With conventional systransportation system to attract tems, sewage is nol'l!!ally held
development, and I !eel that by only two hours. The extended
working with the Highway Users holding period should eliminate
Committee, that can be accomp· . the posslbllt.y of any unpleasant
llshed." she said.
odors. said Baker.
On another Issue - education
Also. this type o! plant Is easier
- Abel said she Is hopeful that to operate and works well ! n
(See ABEL, page A3)
(See RUTLAND, page A3)

·A bel lionored a.t reception;
encourages working together
RIO GRANDE - State Rep.
Mary Abel. D-Athens, believes In
a united effort by community,
business and political leaders to
answer the needs of the 94th
House District.
Abel's desire to work with
those leaders punctuat.ed an
Interview with the T(mesSentlnel following a reception In
her honor Friday night at the
University o! Rio Grande.
Among the Issues Abel has
pledged to address for the
unexpired term she Is complet·
lng in the legislature Is economic
development. She said she believes the potential exists for
growth In southern Ohio because
developers are just now discoverIng what the region offers.
As an example of economic
opportunity, she cited contract
negotiations that are currently
· underway between the state's

Michael B. Carlisle, D.D.s:

WE HAVE A VARIETY MENU SURE ~0
PLEASE EVERYONE

n.

~_.

Easy Goer cops Belmont...

Cemetery's ...

MIZWAY TAVERN
"Eat In or Take Out ·orders"
143 I 7
.
Po.IOY, OHIO
992·6170

'

Vendor
·a rrested
on drug
charge

NOW SEIVING HOI FOODII
'J.'ry Oar DeUelou "Mizway Bur1er"
.

~

In Our Town: West Virginia Belle
.to be in area June 17...Page A-7

- --

Rn•P"'t" 80

7

¥0.aoY
nowa SHOP
"11tP ,., ,.,..,...,.. SM•t.nrr"

Tlnlnday dllebarpl- Danny

='='J!IY

nowas

.,.......

Gallia
County
•
tounsm

c.., .... 6 91189

50

Mason ... continued rrom page 1

••

50 cents

Voi.ZUia-18

4D

CONTRACT SIGNED
Bill Bias, left, administrator of
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitalon Center, 36759
Rock Springs Road, Pomeroy, and Scott Lucas, administrator of
Veterans .Memorial Hospital, Wednesday afternoon signed a
contract through which hospital personnel will be providing all
laboratory and X-ray services for tht&gt; nursing and rehabilitation
center.

.,
·-

Sunda

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT ·1~9

Reed named area representative
Bruce Reed of The Farmer's Bank, Pomeroy. has been
named Pomeroy area representative to the 1989 Executive
Advisory Co.uncil of the• Small Business Development Center of
Southeastern Ohio.
.
The council consists of nine members of the Southeastern
Ohio region who are professionally Involved In the development
of their communities.
The members of the newly fanned committeE' will help
increase the visibility of the SBDC'. identify problems unique to
their particular communities and assist the SBDC with
strategies to resolve thesC' issues.
.
The SBDC is des lined to assist the economic developmen.t of a
10 county region in Southeastern Ohio by promoting. fostering
and supporting small .business formation, development and
growth. To accomplish this the SBDC offers ·b uslnessconsultlng
services f~ee of charge and sponsors seminars pertinent to
business start-up and growth.
More information on lhe program may be obtained by
contacting Reed at 992-2136 or SBDC Director Jack Monda.

'

Friday. June 9, 1989

Tornadoes kill at least five peOple in South

.---Local news briefs... - -

·-

ABEL HONORED - 94th District State Rep.,esentatlve Mary
Abel, (D-Athens) was honored at a reception at the UnlversUy of
Rio Grande. She encouraged unHy among political, business and
commanlty leaders to answer the needs of the Galla, Melp,
Athens district.

forestry industry and Japan to
provide Jllpanese Industry with a
steady supply of hardwood. In
addition. the opening of the TS
Trim Industries plant In Athens
showed !here Is still potential for
manufacturing, she added.
•'What we have to do Is work
together with .our chambers of
commerce to culllvate those
Industries that are expanding,"
Abel remarked. ··Also. we should
work with the Ohio Department
of Development to explore our
goals In Improving the
economy."

Helping to attract industry, are
highways. and Abel praised the
efforts of the Highway Users
Committee of the Southeastern
Ohio Regional Council ln. effect·
ing new road construction.
Within Abel's district. com·
munlty leaders have been at·
tempting to make U.S. 35 a

Council to
hard
" hit
..
on acid rain control
.

COLUMBUS, Ol)io - An Oil: mjuire-Ohio to make about 33 per·
coot of the first phase, SOz emislions Paper jiiepaied by tliC
sion
reductions for the nation's
President's
Domestic
Policy
Council says It would be "politi· . emissions. It's ~y disjiiopoc·
tionate, uneonsclonablc and based
cally more palatable" to hit a few
siates
hard with new acid rain • upon political expediency,·. said A.
control legislation, AEP has JoseJI!l Dowd, AEP senior vice
presulent and general counsel.
teamed.
"Because OhiO' coal is high in
The DPC OP,tionS Paper Is apsulfur
content, Ohio does produce
~Lbeing considered . by the

very

more S02 emissions than do other
states, but we shouldn 'I be requim!
Another opdon given the Pres!·
dent would spread tile hun more · to carry much mons than our share
of lhe deanup. The burden is sufftwidely by mjuiring I07 pow~
cienlly heavy already.
planiS 8CI'OSI the nalion 10 make
'"That is 2·1/l -times Ohio's consmaller lfltlut:tions in IIUifur emis·
sions. The presidential Opdons tribution to the nation's S02 emissions. The cost of such emillion
Paper cllallclirized lhll as the
n:duclions will grind the economics
"failest or all options.•
The DPC'a Jllll« said fllllly dial . of the Midwestem lllaleS, and
they're jull !fi&gt;W ge!liag over _the
it would be · "politically more
1982 recesmon. Obr heavy In·
palalable" to require emission
reducdcn 11 only 20 power planiS dtlSiries, which rely upon low
in nine llltes dian leaer reductions energy c:osts in order to compere in
at107 planll nationllly bec:auae the the world martel, would be devas..
1at1er woult1
mme tated.
"What !he Options Paper is tell·
wideiPreld poll
Clp!J91ition."
Six of dlo 20 jllanll are ID Ohio lllld ing the President is that POlitically
it might bf bettor to hit a lew srares
I seveolll...ea tho 11810. Four lie
,Vf!lY bud thin 10 hit I lot of states
. ABl'SJIIIIIIpW!b.
"Tbo 20-plant plqJOI8I- Wllllld .
I!Jee..COVNCIL, pap AI) ·

;:'Jeoder

--

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