<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12010" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/12010?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-11T16:20:56+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42980">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/d281fd137c665c2f054dd91f56be391b.pdf</src>
      <authentication>45e0f236d38f904df5a82a125441a1cf</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="37751">
                  <text>~111

12-lhe Dally Se 1tlnal

__...,_.

Ttlurldly, ......,, 21. , .

Poni&amp;IOV Midcleport, Ohio

same sac... Due To locOI CotrWII

Ohio Lottery

.

Church
notices
'

Daily Number
623
Pick 4
8062

Page6
Meri'IJICIM
Sole Pilce

fiiiC.e

$13~.

WIIH COUIION
E.S.P.• fomell&gt; stretch

Sale Price

Sole Price

$7Ea.

s&amp;Ea.

·wmtCOUPON

WIIHCQUPON

Infant qavs' ar girts' af
polyester/cotton. Fit
newbom·6 mas.

potyeste~/eollon.

xa...
........ •11
l92, 193 Umlb tl.S.P. ond
,J... L~=----1

'l'alhllon Tops

Jog Sell

.lclhnny-collar style ot

QUOIIIY c:ollori In smart

-

cokn. Sizes 5-t.H.

19&lt;1 UmN 2 . . . mer;" 'IOIY by

196 197 Umtl4

Fothlfc.re,;pt · J ltOdiPn'IOib
QtC I ,_.Colp.

m,,

Our Reg. Low l'llce&amp;
Wl'lll COWOII
'Mimlln'l wallell;

~-­
clutches
and IIIOie.

,._

196 Umll12 - - -

C:rewSocks

$1
Prs.

wmtCOUPON
Men's styles of Or·

3 ptl. crew socks or

ton•lnylan In basic
colOrs. Fit~ 10·13.

·calion/nylon In whne
or pastels. Fit 9·11.

201

Willi C0W011

Dellcloullun cremes
In chOice 01 ftavorl:

Ounchv popcorn

foriFIOCidng. 16 oz.

... ... 2ll7 ....... I'I&lt;QI.

270 Urn1t 3 pllgS. Mfr. may YOrY

202 203 umt6pn.

.67Pk~.

WI1H COVI'ON

Gerald Michael, 61, of SyraCllse, died early Thursday after·
noon In a blaze that destroyed his
. Church St. home In Syracuse.
Cause of Mlchael~s death was
asphyxiation due to smoke lnha·
latlon, according to Meigs Coroner ·James Conde who was
called to the scene.
The Syracuse Fire Depart·
ment responded Immediately to
the 2:28p.m. fire call. The call for
help came from Bill Roberts of
Racine, a cable company em·
ployee who was working In the
area and noticed smoke coming
from the house. Firemen arrived
to find the one-and-a-half story
frame house engulfed In flames .
• Firemen fought the blaze for

_

~.GtealfOI

... ......

. . snacking. 4¥• oz.

Mfr. mcay IIOiiV

Coupon Good Th\n.~ Jan . :; ThN ..... Feb. 2

•······-- '3·l''§H•-~--·-·•
Mexican Fixings

Snack Favorites
Sale Price

Sale Price

83~g.

99~.

wmtCOUPON
These tas1y treats are

7'h-Dz. nacho chips:
orl2-oz. plcante sal·
sa. mild or medium.

great for parties or
snackllme. 5-71h oz.

243 24.t 245 246 lWnlt.tpkgs

247 248 2.. Urnlt 3 pkga.

IIIIUiallng Cups ·
Sale Price

$1
Pkgs. .

2

Pkg.

.... COUPON
pt 50, 6.4-oz. size
for hot or COld bevel·
ages. Of ptastlc loam, ..

SolePdce

$5~.

Willi COIIIICiil
3-flng l*lCI8I wttn 100
adhesive pqgel, Far

up to 8x10' pholol.

m

----,

r~----~-----,

I

I

1

I

Sale Price

1

99

!
I
I
1
I
I

I

011 Filters

.
.

Ea.

Conalr Hair Care
Sale Price

84~.

!

wmt COUPON
I
Spin-on type tor G.M .•
Ford cars, II. trucks.
I
Oltterllas Ea., 2.17 I
211

1

"-'Good"'""·· ""'·'""'"'""·,..,,

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

1

L----- *3·1'14·Ut.--•--.1

256 lfmlf 3

Coupon Good Tl'lun ., Jon. 28 Thru lues., r-eb. 2

r----!. ... . ,
I

I
I
I
I
I
I

Bowl Deodorizer

Sale Price

Sale Price

l.. ,~~""'J.~:::::?J.l

Scentoo toilet bowl
deodoriZer In 3-oz.

scenlllquld. 14 oz.

size. Great value!

,., ,., •••

4·~k

I
I
Sole Price
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
WIIHCOUPON
I
I
.22l.R.ammo•: 4DI
' grain, hi-velocity. 250 I
rounds per carton.
I
I
272
IOCOIDU
I
I
I
""'-'Good-.......••nvu ....... r.o.,
I
L-~·--4i·l 1 14~J:·-----.1 ·
I

1

Wl11l COUPON
"AA" or "AAA"

alkaline ballenas lor
vartety of uses.
266 267 UmUp!V, Soldln
Horne nlpiOWement Dept.

'

a..

.,

5~?.

"

~

tl.,,. ~ eliberates '

·

Governor: has bill delaying
vehicle, emissi~ns lnspection

Llmll2

Claims customers
are overcharged

llmlf3

Coupon Good Thurl.. Jon. 28 ll1N ........ feb, 2

I

Plcg.

$1

4
For
WI1H C'OUfiON

ed spray, or lemon·

L--··••••
r

1

In chOice of fonnulas.
For a cleaner shave.
256 2&amp; 1 m 2&amp;9 umr 2

" " ' - - -.. Jan, 211hN -

.. ,..,, 2

.... --=-

LIM Diapers

L.t*Ml'

,.,. ... ==
-1.00

Dlmper Bag
Sale Price

3~7

Willi COUfOH .
!lnaPclaue.ln
choice 01 COiall with
embroidered pattem.

m

SALE STARTS TltURS.,
• 28;
ENDS TU·ES., FEB. 2

Llmll2

.

By NANCY YOACHAM
and kennel !u_nd, since state laW late penalty wl.li be charged.
Sentinel Staff Writer
allows "only" monies from the
At the suggestion of County
Questions from a local resident dog and kennel fund to be used to Engineer Philip Roberts and
as to why Meigs County dog operate the county dog shelter.
Highway SuperintendE'nt Ted
license prices !lave Increased
Warner, the commissioners
this year, prompted explanation
Jones said that after the cutoff agreed- to charge an extra $1
from Commissioner Richard date for purchasing licenses , postage and handli ng for mailing
Jones In Wednesday's regular extrahelpwillbeusedtocanvass
acountymap . Mapsare $2el;lchif
commissioners' meeting.
the county to make . sure that
purchased at the courthouse or $3
Several morlths ago, following residents are purchasing !log If mailed.
that claimed the life of well-known '!ly1rac:use
Syracuse _.t ,• Raclne
Paul Life and Joe Lant z. Olive
completion of the county's an- licenses as they should. By better
BATI'LE
resident
Gi!rald
Michael.
fire
Saturday
ldternooa
nual
state
audit.
the
commission·
enforcement
of
the
license
Jaw
.
·
Township
Trustees, were present
f~men l011pt a
ers Increased
ce of a single the commissioners hope that at Wednesday's meeting to dis·
·-e;"'F··~~....,~~:i~~~~~~
~~
.-~Ideo'• wW..,iM(;!.l'~·~commissioners and
!'I
their licenses, won't feel . Engineer Roberts roads and
· to $20.
penalize~. Jones admitted that
bridges In Olive Township.
Finally. the commissioners
Jones explained that .license. probably not everyone who neg.costs had remained the same for lects to buy licenses will be assisted a Tuppers Plains rest eight years, but this year the . caught In the survey ; "but dent In clarifying a situation
state auditors required the costs hopefully we'll get a lot of them." regarding the vacation of an
Friday I today) Is the last day alley way in the Tuppers Plains
be Increased. The state auditors
LEXINGTON, Miss. (UPI)- lly contended that by the time· Calif.. ruled 9·3 In favor of R.J.
for
the purchase of dog licenses area on Sept. 30, 1987.
required the Increase In order to
A j4ry that Includes three smok· Horton and the public was aware Reynolds Tobacco Co. In 1985. , . create more revtonue for the dog In Meigs County . After today, a
·
Horton, a home builder who
ers Is deliberating a $17 million of the health dangers of smoking.
claimed he contracted lung
lawsuit that. was filed by a he was too hooke(l to quit .
A
codefendant
In
the
case
Is
cancer from smoking two packs
longtime smoker who died of
New
Deal
Tobacco
and
Candy
of
unfiltered Pall Mall clgare,ttes
lung cancer before his case
Co.
•
of
Greenwood,
a
cigarette
a
day
for 35 years, claimed In his
against American Tobacco Co.
distributor.
_
·
lawsuit thai American Tobacco
went to trial.
The lawsuit -: only the second knowingly distributed cigarettes
Legal experts give the family
contaminated with pesticides
of Nathan Henry Horton a good such case to ever go to a jury chance of prevailing because of we.nt to the panel of nine women and other additives. In testlm·
Mississippi's comparative negll· and three men at 3:12 p.m. ony Wednesday, a pathologist.
gence rule, which allows juries to Thursday. Three of the jurors Dr. Robert O'Neal of the University of Mississippi Medical Cenassess damages even If the smoke.
said Sen. Eugene Bran stool,
slon of firearms.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) ,
The
tobacco
industry,
legal
ter. said Horton suffered from
plaintiffs shares blame for
Ney's bill stipulates that state D-Ullea, who normally sides with
Legislation, backed by the Na·
community and stock-market · adenocarcinoma, a type of
Injuries.
and federal laws pre-empt local the hunters on such matters.
tiona! Rifle Association, erasing
Attorneys for American In· analysts are watching the suit caricer traditionally associated
local anti-gun ordinances Is on a ordinances banning guns . Since "The local communities should
slsted throughout the three-week closely and authorities say a with cigarette smoking.
there are .no st~te or federal be allowed to determine their
fast track In the Ohio General
Horton filed suit In 1986 after
trial that Horton, who died last verdict In Horton's favor could
bans,
there could be no local own destiny on this.'·' Brans tool,
Assembly.
his lung cancer was diagnosed
year at the age of 50, was well trigger a rash of similar suits ..
a member of the committee.
ones,
either
.
The blll, Introduced only two
In the only other product and his family has pursued the
aware of the health risks asso· .
voted against the bill.
Ney
said
hunters
and
other
weeks ago, sped through tlie
elated with cigarette smoking liability case In the nation · suit, which seeks $2 million In
AI though the bill has been
Senate Agriculture, Commerce legitimate gun owners could be
against a manufacturer to go to a actual and $15 million In punitive
and freely chose to smoke. ·
endorsed
by the National Associ·
and LabOr Committee Thursday subject to arrest If they travel ation of Chiefs of Pollee, the
But lawyers lor Horttm's tam· jury, a panel In Santa Barbara, damages.
on a 6-2 vole and Is In position for through an area where gun
ownership Is forbidden . Among International Union of Police
a floor vote soon.
Associations and the American
The blll, sponsored by Sen. cities With handgun restrictions
In Ohio are Cleveland, Beach· Federation of ·Pollee. Sen. Lee
Robert Ney . · R-Barnesvllle,
·Fisher , D·Shaker Heights, testl·
cleared committee over objec- wood, Shaker Heights, Univer- fled that law enforcement agentions of Sf!nators who believe sity Heights and Cleveland
cies are "up In arms " over the
. local governments should· be Heights.
"
proposal.
"I
think
we've
$one
too
far,"
empowered to regulate posses·

local handgun bans

wmtCOUPON

Catgate ll·OZ. foam

Furniture Polish

WITH COUPON
Reg. or lemon-scent·

I

88

72~'

1 . ~6

Syracuse Fire Department
was assisted by the Racine Fire
Department , called at 2:33p.m.:
and Middleport Rescue 17, called
at 3 p.m. Racine and Syracuse
Emergency Medical Service un· .
Its were on the scene with Robert
Byer, Meigs EMS director. Traf·
fie was directed around the scene
by the Meigs Sh e rf!f's.
Department.
Firemen were at the site until
approximately 6 p.m.

Bill.would pre-empt

Sale Price

-----.Ci·ltJ;.J:·-----.J

1

Batteries
Sale Price

I
I ,
I
I
I
I
I

250 251 252 253 2S.

I

Shaw Cream

I
I

burner in the basement of the
home. The house was completely
gutted by the fire and loss of the
structure was estimated , at
$30,000. There was insurance, the
spokesman said.

suit against tobacco company

I

I

2()-oz. shampoo or
condlfloner. or9.3·
· ' oz. hair $pray.

Umtl4 Mfr. may~

I

Li'rl2 ..,., fftl:1i ¥Or¥

some time before they were able
to make their way Inside the
house through the thick smoke to
search for Michael, whom they
believed to be Inside. Michael
was a stroke victim .apd some·
what hamperecY'fh his move·
ment. He wa's found by firemen
on his bedln a bedroom. His body
was taken to Ewing Funeral ·
Home.
Other members of the Michael
family were at their employment
when the fire occurred.
The state fire marshall's offlee
was called in to Investigate the
cause of the blaze. According to a
Syracuse Fire Department spokesman, the fire marshall said
the fire started around a wood·

Dog license prices questioned

2.W ....,... piiiQIL"' .

Photo Album

25 Cents

A Multimedia

·Syracuse·man dies in
·Thursday aftemoonfire

:

Cracker Jacks
Sale Price

2

2 Sections, 16

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday, January 29, 1988

.

Sale Price

/)

at

COIC»&gt;ft (iOOCI rNa.. .D'I. 28 RIN...._, f'eb. 2
:.::

.•
enttne

•

e

•

Cloudy tonight. Low near 35.
Sunny and windy Saturday.
Qlg!ls near 55. .

we can vote to override," said said the senator. ''In my 16 years
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The ball Is In Gov. Richard . Finan, adding that attempt could around here, I've learned that
take place as early as next It's always a new ballgame when
Celeste's court on the delay of a
the governor vetoes a bill."
Tuesday.
controversial auto emissions hi·
Only
20
votes
are
needed
to
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
spectlon program, and tliegover·
Ohio agreed In 1979 to submit to
Ohio Consumers' Counsel WI!·
nor plans to knock It out of the overturn a gubernatorial veto In
the Senate, but despite the 22 a U.S. Envlronmental·PTotectlon
llam Spratley said today Colum·
park.
votes
cast Thursday, Finan re- Agency plan to rid the air of
bla Gas Transmission Co. over·
The Ohio Senate took final
fused to predict success.
unac~eptable ozo'ne and carbOn
charged Its customers by $350
leglsaltlve action Thursday on a
·
"Passing
a
bill
and
overrldln~
monoxide
levels
In
the
Cleveland
million last year and should
bill postponing lor six months the
a
veto
are
two
different
'
d
ucks,"
and
Cincinnati
ar.eas.
refund the money.
testing program In the Cleveland
and Cincinnati areas, concurring
Spratley told a news· confer22· 7 with the version adopted by
The checkups performed at ence the transmission company
the House earlier In the week.
has Ignored opportunities to buy
local service stations In the five
South Central Ohio
The bill was toarrtveonCeleste's
less
expensive gas from suppll·
Partly cloudy today, with highs counties will control ozone emls·
desk today.
near 45. Partly cloudy tonight, .slons by verifying that a bOut ers, Instead contracting for a set
"He's going to veto It," said with a low near 35. Mostly sunny eight pollution control parts are amount of gas from producers
Thomas Katzenmeyer, the gov· and windy Saturday, with highs In place and operating.
even If the rate exceeds local
ernor's legislative aide, confirm· near. 55.
Finan and other CinciMall· demand.
lng what ~teste promised, sev·
"Consequently," said Spra·
· The probability of preclplta· area . legls!ators , have comera! weeks ago.
!loll 1.1 near near zero today and plained that the Ohio EPA has tley. "pipelines, local gas com•
That means unless the Lepla·
tonight and :iO percent Saturday. not ensured that enough service panles and ultimately ratepayture overrides the veto. . th.e
. Winds will be from the south at Stations are ready to acc;ommo· .e rs get stuck paying for gas they
emissions Inspection proeram 1:» to 20 mph today and ti"om the d1Jte ,the swarm of motorists never CODll\lmed."
will begin Monday as 11Cbe4Uied southwest at 15 to 2C) mpll tO!IIghl: whose last names begin with C
T!Je Co11111111ers' Counsel .b as
la•W
,
_
_
.
andD.
·
In Cuyahoga, Lake, Lorain, Ha·
filed elqiert teatlmony aupport1111 Its poaltlon ),n a caae before
milton and Butler ~ouat11111.
8udaJ &amp;Ius lh Tu.dQ
By the end ol February, about
Rain llki!ly Sunday, with a
The_ Ohio EPA testified that the Federal Enefly ReauJatory
150,000 motorists In those coun· cbaace ct rain or now Monday eJIOtlih ' lnlpec:tlon stations are · Commlulon IR Wulli.D&amp;IDa.
tieS will have to have lnspeetlon
and 'I'IMIIday. Bllfll will be In the . ready to bqln, with minimal
He •14 If tht Co111111118rs'
certificates In order to obtain
liiiB Sllllllay, falllaa IDto the 40s hassle, aDd Celeste hu opposed Counsel prevaUa, Columbia Gas
cuslomen will receive yearly
their vehicle regtstratlona tor
Monday a~::c:arrom 35 to45 any further delay.
988,
Sen.
Richard
Finan.
R·
Tueldey,
t
t
Iowa
will
be
,One
IM!Datbr
wtln&amp;
qalaat
the
rate reductlona of 179.56, Clncln·
1
In the 101 llllllday and Monday delay waa Sen. Gary Bulladolnlk,
Cincinnati. aDd other aupporlml
nat! ~· 6 Electric Cllltomera,
~ 11111 In tile 201 early R·Panna Rellhll, Wl\oet 411trlct
$34.32, and Wi!tt Ohio Gaa eo .
of the delay predict chao•·
' · Ues In a11 llffected area.
. "I bope he vetoes It quickly JO TuHda)r.
cyatomers, N9.92.

Weather

Olllo.

-..

'

. '
•

'"

~

~

Reagan to address
nation on Contra aid
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan, known for his
skill!! 'as an orator, will go on television Tuesday to drum up
support for aid to the Nicaraguan Contras, saying it would be
"terrible",to end military funding for the rebels.
Reagan said he would object to a Contra aid package limited
to non-lethal, humallltarlan assistance.
· "II would· be a terrible thing for u8 to do," the president told
reporters Thursday at a Wlllte Bouse state dinner In honor ol
Eoptlan President Hoanl Mubarak.
Democratic leaden In Conjp'eSS have Indicated solid
opposition to aa aid paekage that Includes lethal ald. \
The president hu asked for S38 mUUon for the rebels with 10
percent of that earmarked for miUtary aid to be held In reserve
ID CU!l current peace ne~t~tlatlons break down.
Reagan, whom some have called The Great Communicator
for hll speaking talent, will deUver his nationally televlsled
speech on the eve of a Feb. 3 showdown vote In the HoUlle on his
request.
.
AI for the vote, Reagan said, "I don'tlmow whether II will go
or not. It'• cl-."
.
Be 18141 tile muttaey aid would "make the difference" In
helping the ''freedom flgllten" keep the pressure oil
Ntcaragu'a10venment.
.
Beapn llu deUvered such addre11e1 before when Coagress
wu abold to vote on Contra ald. '1'he lut apeech, In spring 19116,
011Wlled wlla&amp; Beapn aees as a sweepblr Soviet threat to.the
hemllphere U Mauaua'• Marxllt.Jed Sandlnlata ~t~vernment
were to Nlll8ba Ia .-er.
Lawmallen that par voted Sl.. million Ia aid but •one alace
tbe lrai-Culra IICudal revelled tile ICheme to IM!ll arms to
lrall 11114 divert tile ..._ ,...,Ill .. tile Colltra rebela.

�Comment
The Daily .Sentinel
111 Court S&amp;net
Pomeroy, Olalo
JIEVOTI!;D TO TilE INTJ!:IU!lSTS OF THE MEIG9-MASON /\REA

~'h

cs:m~
~v

.

I"T"\-..0.._.,..,,.,._=.....
.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publlaller
PAT WHITEHEAD
AMistaat P•bllllher/Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manarer

A MEMBER ofThj! United Press International , Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINlON ar lt welrome. They should be less than XIO words
long. All letters ar~subject toedttlng and must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned l~ten wUI be publtshed. Letters should be In
good taste, adi:lrt"Sslng Issues, not penonalltles.

By U111ted Press International
• A big win ·over Oral Roberts
may be just what the doctor
ordered for the 'cincinnati
Bearcats .
The Bea•cats jumped .out to a
19-9 lead and · rolled to a 98·77
triumph over Oral Roberts In
Cincinnati Thursday night, ·
· ''I thought. our win tonight was
good medicine for ou~ basketball
1eam," said Cincinnati coach
Tony )"ates. "I'ni sure it ralSPd
our spirits."
·Louis Banks scored 15 of his 20
points In the first half and Cedric
Glover had 27 In Cincinnati's
sixth win against nine losses.

.

TM eefANNIN6 TO
~STAND...

I

Reag~n . "not

General Accounting Office used to be able to get low-Interest • Vance Clark toldi our reporter
loans that were deSigned for Frank Byr.t.
Investigation.
As of June 1986, 50,000 farmers
family
farms . Finally, collection
The FmHA4s the credit agency
were
behind In loan payments
procedures
are
·
hampered
by
of the Department of Agrlcul:
amounting
to $4 .1 billion. The
ture. Its emergency loan pro- lawsuits, like the one by the'
GAO
report
predicts that $7.8
gram was established to lend farmers · that stopped FmHA
billion
of
the
FmHA's
$28 billion
money to farmers who lost crops from confiscating their crop
loan
portfolio
Is
uncollectible.
to a natural disaster such as a sul)sldy checks.
Put another way, farmers can . And that assumes the FmHA can
drought, floods, wind or hall.
The emergency loan program now collect money · from one sell the property the farmers pu_t
·has become a disaster Itself. For government office while default· up as collateral.
The government's liberal
one thing, good money Is thrown lng on loans to .another.
credit
policy and the wllllngness ·
"Historically,
this
has
been
a
after bad when farmers who are
of
regional
FmHA administraalready in debt to li'mliA are terrible program for the farmers
tors
to
lend
more
money to people ~,
gl~en automatic followup loans. ' and the government," the
alrPady
seriously
delinquent ex- '
For another, big corporations FmHA ' s top administrator
acerbated the problem, lhl! study ~
shows. Once they were _In the :
· program, farmers were auto- • ·
matlcally eligible for flv~ subse- :
quent annual emergency loans ~
even If they dldn 'I experience~
another dlsast~r.
•:
In 1975, the FmHA expanded :
the emergency loan ' program
b!'yond natural dlsastens ·to i
farmers who just wanted to 1
expand their operations or who •
merely had a poor crop year.
,•
The deal was too good to pass :
up for thousands of farmers !
desperate to stay In business.
!
Legislation passed In 1985 :
tightened up the qualifications l ,.
for loans, capped · the total !·
amount for each disaster, limited :·
the loans to family farms and not '
corporations, and required that ',
\he farmers prove a real loss. "
But, In 1987, Congress rein- :
stated the policy of automatic :
loans for five years to already
dellnquent farmers. Thls ''will •:
likely result In increased loan
losses," the GAO report con- '
eludes.
Coll.ections have not been going ;
well. North Dakota farmers won .&lt;
a class action suit ag'a lnst the .
FmHA for foreclosing

By HELEN THOMAS
White House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPII- President Reagan says he is "nolflnlshed
yet" and he wants his eighth year In office to be the best.
.
But the president is a realist and he has lowPr!'d his sights while
sticking to his guns on his conSPrvative agenda. For the past seveli
years he has railed agains.t Washington and big government and
called tor amendments to permit prayer In the schools and to ban
abortion.
He does not e xpect to make much headway on the domestic side
with the Democrats In control of both houses ln Congress .
But Ironically thl' president could make real contributions in the
foreJgn policy field. which he Ignored In his first year In office except
to throw down the gauntlet In Central America and to never 1!'1 up in a
drive to wipe out Marxist influence and rebels- a cause he feels close
· to on grounds that the region is close "to our borders."
· Reagan plans to meet next month with Mexican President Miguel
de Ia Madrid. who like him is a lame duck, and to promote a free trade
agreement similar to the accord reached with Canada at I hi;' end of
becember.
: The presidl'nt also has a good chance to improve his contribution to
arms control as his legacy If negotiations go well with the Soviets In
Geneva in t.he coming months.
.
. A big feather in his cap would be to walk away from.a summit
meeting in Moscow in May with an agreement on a 50 percent
AMES, Iowa (NEAl -He's not
s'uperjJower reduction in long range strat!'glc missiles .
a
candida!!'
for the Republican or
: The summit meeting with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev will be
Democratic
presidential nomiheld whether the gap is closed or not. but Reagan Is striving mightily
nation
in
Iowa's
upcoming cau· to add another arms pact to .his laurels.
cuses,
but
one
veteran
of govern·
·. He expects the Senate will ratify the treaty with the Soviets to
men!
service
is
making
an
eliminate medium· and short-range missiles from Europe and Asia.
impressivP
political
comeback.
l)esplte•strong opp0si1ion from his conservative supporters who think
He's Harry Hopkins, who was
&gt;tis a sellout and who' question whethPr the Russians would abide by
born
In Sioux City. Iowa In 1890,
the verification provisions.
.
.
educated
at GrlnnPll College in
&lt; Another forPign policy lssu!' Is Nicaragua, and Reagan Is reducing
Grinnell,
Iowa
, and spent more
~Is aid requ&lt;'sl for ·th!' U.S. -backed Nicaraguan rebels or Contras to
than
a
decade
In Washington as
5ee if the Guatemala City peace accord can be Implemented.
one
of
President
Franklin D.
·: The president Is under a lo.L.Plures~!ll'e to,~lto~more flexibility and
R&lt;YOOt'Vt''ft's most trust't'd
the amount of his request $36 million is a time marker. The polls have
advisers.
eonsistently shown that Americans do not support continued aid to the
Although Hopkins died In 1946,
Contras, but Reagan's quest to get Nicaraguan President Daniel
.
the
revival of Interest in his
Ortpga to cry "uncle" Is still the operative policy.
carper
has been m·arked by the
·; The Middle East has defied Reagan's best intentions of finding a
publication
of a major new
~aceful solution to thl' Arab-Israeli conflict. As a result he has
biography,
production
of · an
avoided the Issue for the past two years and focused on issues where
documentary
!lim
hour-long
solutions arP easier .
about
his
life,
establishment
of
· But now he sees the handwriting on the wall and realizes that the
the
Harry
Hopkins
·
Public
Ser·
Middl!' East tinderbox has to bp dealt with and that putting off .the
vice Lecture Series at Grinnell
q.rdeal only magnifies it.
.
· · ·
.
and other events.
·: He supports an International peac!' conference on the Middle East,
Those protnotlng the Hopkins
which is also backed by Western allies . Getting the Israelis to go along
revival
note that his philosophy
and formulating the representation for the Palestinians are the chief
uf
ggvernment
.ser,vice. co.ntrasts
·Obstacles-. Time is not on his side oil thisissue with the uprising on tile
sl!arply
with
the
attitude of'many
West Bank and in Gaza .
·
contemporary
federal
·· sO the prpsident's plate is full. He can leave center stag!' with all who view their tenure officials
In Wa·
ilags flying, particularly If he adds new laurels and stature to the
·
shlngton
as
an
opportunity
for
United States as a peacemaker during his remaining .tenure.
His goals are large and he cannot b!'ar the role o!lame duck. That self-promotion and personal
imagl' alone is making him try harder when other presidents have
tieen ready to hang up their cleats.
·

The spirit

•

Letters to the editor
F(lced with many challenges
· Wl'il. thl' strikE' is ovl' r!
· I sN' one positi\&lt;e 1'\'E'n l th at i.s
pmerging from thP rumble of the
war-torn ar!'as of the Ml'igs
Local School District. That one
pvent is thP "Parpnt s for Education" orga nization . What bplfor
wav to h&lt;'al the wounds and to
eliminate the confu sion a nd fl'a r
than to ban togl'ther for a
common purpose&gt;·~ That ca use is
to promotP the bl's t posslbic
school system WI' can providl' for
our childrf'n.
· As pare nts and ta xpa yp rs. WI'
3 ,.., fac ed with many challcnges
here in MPigs Count y. The truth
of the matter is that we are th l'

Today

ones that han• to meet thpse
challenges . It is up to us to fight
for Meigs County . Although! my
f3milv and I hav&lt;' lived here just
owr thrP&lt;' ,vears. Wf' have made a
dPcisiion to IIV!' herp and fight for
what is right . fair and decpnt.
ln 'closing. I encourag!' all my
friends to find out a ~?out this n('W
and exciting organization. WP
nf' ed your help. Remember .. it is ·
not wrong to ask questions, but it
is wrong not to seek thP an~wers .
Sign I'd
A Parpnt for Education
Dennis L. Hol'kman . 6&gt;7 Hi gh
St .. Middleport. Ohio 4a761l. 992·
7066.

mhistory

By United Press International
Today is Friday . Jan. 29. the 29th day of 1988 with 337 to follow .
The moon is waxing. moving toward its full phase.
The morning stars are Mars and Saturn .
The evening. stars are Mercury , Vl'nus and Jupiter.
Tl)ose born on this date are under tht'sign of Aquarius. They Include
Swedish scientist and philosopher Emanuel Swedenborg In 1688;
American political philosopher Thomas Paine In 1737; G!'n. Henry
"Light Horse Harry" Lee In 1756; William McKinley, 25th president
of thl' United States, In 1843: Russian dramatist Anton Chekhov•In
1&amp;;(); comic screen actor W.C. Fields In 1880; In 1880; actors VIctor
Mature ln. !916 t age 721 and John Forsythe In (age 70); dramatist
Paddy Chayevsky in 1923 tage 65); a·ctress Katharine Ross .In 1943
tage451 . and actorTomS~lleck in 1945 (age43) .

On this date in history:
In 1861, Kansas became the 34th state of the Union as a free state at
·a time. when southern states were seceding from the Union.
·In 1900, t!lght baseball teams were organized as the American
League. They were Buffalo. Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Indianapolis. Kansas pry, Mllwaukee and Minneapolis.
In 1979, President Jimmy Carter commuted Patricia Hearst's
seven-year prison sentence for bank robbery to two years, allowing
her to leave prison and be married In February.

Sponsoring that party was the
Harry ·Hopkins Public Service
Institute, headed by Verne W.
Newton (a Humboldt, Iowa,
native who ndw lives In the
Washington area) ~hd dedicated
to perpetuating the memory of
Hopkins' "selfle~s public

at Miami
Cntral Mleh at Oh~ Unlv

Oevelaod stat Dlllloh·Oiica~
Xat'Jrr at st. Peter'•
Mllfty 8t a1 Ve.-pwwa St
Brtold,. at Allro•
WriiM sa • MIU')'IaM·Balt ay
Ballwi•W llllct• al Olllo No11bern

the Preservation of the 1979
Prayer · Book ' (that being the
revision that earlier preserva·
tionists had resisted) .
In Britain too the battle rages
hot and heavy. No priestesses
have been ordained there yet
(though female deacons are
permitted). but the liberal pressures for them ar!' severe. The
ancient bark of Anglicanism may
·well split apart on this jagged
theological rock. On!' must not lose perspective.

Wo-*r at Dulhton
Urh. . Ill CedanllkRI• Grallde al Mal01k•

OliN Domllkaa al Ml Vernon
TIHiaa&amp; Wahlh

Nol'lllem Kell&amp;uek~ lli Aalllud
· Bl.rfton at Hanowr 'Ciadl

Wllml-.rt011 at DeRanct•

Upper Sclo&amp;o Val 71, Unc~nvlew 50
Ur,tHIIIIl il, Sprt . . Kbllwnee 51

D)'ke aU J11ndlay
Hln~maiWAJ(Pa)
Subday ~ .I an.

W~konet..

:n

~

}

!
sonal emissary to Allied leaders ,
•
•
~

1

l
I
l

·•
•,
,l

l

UPI ratings
placti, J.l for

~~econd,

1• .Vtaona (3$1 (lft..-1)
t . Pllrd~tt· c ll 117-1 )

.....
....

113 7

. I . T"'mple (I.J-11
1&gt;·8VU PI) 114·0)

34%

~lllf'a.t:k.

7113

•

. '''

.'

.....''
•• &gt;;

.I

,I
r
'
'

'
I

51' II

.n 1!

11 • ·

71

•

·

SUBSCRIPTION RAl'ES

By CarrtEI' or Motc:r Route

One Wee!&lt; ....................., ... .......... $1. 2~
One Month .. .. ...... ............. .... .... .. $5.45

, win.

0ne Year ......................... .. ...... $65.00
SINGLE cOPY
PRICE

Meigs. from the field. shot a 33
percent average and 31 percent
!tom the foul line. Alexander hit
on so· percent of their field goal
tries and had a hot 70 perecent
from the free throw line.
Meigs' Missy Woods and Alexander's Leslie Carruthers shared
high point honors with 16 each.
For Meigs, Fry had 10 caroms,
Woods 9 and Stobart 7. Tammy
Wright and Jody Taylor had 3
steals each and Stobart led In
assists with five.
Meigs was whistled for 19
infractions-to 15 for Alexander.
Continued on page 4

Dati~

.. ....... .. ... .. ....... ............ 25 Cents

Subscribers not desiring t opay the carrier may rem·lt in advanCe dlrecl to
The Daily Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basts. Credit wlll be given carrier each
week.
No subscriptions by · m~ll permitted in
areas where home carrier serVIce 1B
ava:Uable.
Mall Subocrlp!loos
Inside Mel p County

•

'

13 Weeks ......................... ......... $17.29
26 w••ks ... ......................... ..... . $34.06
52 Weeks .. ....................... o....... . $66.56
Oulolde Melp Counly
13 W eel&lt;s ................. ............... , $18.20

26 Weeks ..... .. .. .................. ... .... $35.10

52 Weeks .... ..... .. ............. ...... ... . $67.60

-II, W llllhllll!lton ('h -12

1

71, Mlllltt4'r .tt '

fop!(")' .fl, Wll.WOI'ttl 31
fortlu.INIIAI&amp;r\llf"W .tl, Uhnt)' 30

u

Dat1viiW .J7, lk-11\1111(' CleiU' Fork U
t 'ayrU•• ill, North C't•ntral .ft
Fh•ld 311, lludMOft -13
.
K3, Mndt1n-Unkln :t.a
lrt~ntt~n,St

,Joe 50

741,

'

M~tln!-Filrnll~on

'

.

Gt

•

Da•old Ll!*omh ltli. Trt-vtc.·u llli
F1ortda St . u.·Central Florida 18 ,
Ga. Soutlwmll, o\rk. Little Rock 1ft.
l..ef' &lt;:olleJPI!I, T~.-euerT;.mpiP 1111
Mar)'la.. E. Shore 'n, Wrl~:ht St . "i:l
N.C: ..Qiar ..tk l'l1 Old Dominion 81
Se.nauft. It "-~'~~•m 't!
Soutll'"'• Mia., •• Loulllwlllt!,tt
Mou&amp;h Florldal1, 'aclalonvllle 55
ftouth Flortd1111l, ,Jawlalonvl~k! 55
Tenn.-chatt. 71, We.lem C11'4tllnll4R
Vlra:lnla U•lon 11, Nerfolk SI.I:C
Wake Fo~lll3, Nordl C•roll• II
_ •
Mitdwest ·
Akron "ii.- Kenyon II .
Andef110n M, GaJialllle115
Aurn"* Unlv. 'J41, Dl. Teeh 1!
Bradiey IIi. We~tt Vtrwtnla 15
CctlarwiiS. IH, 81 ulften_. ~
Cloclnnatl tR, Oral
n
(lle~land 8t Ill, Dllnola Clllcal{o "i3

a.b•r..

Super Bowl c~n ,lead to depression
WILMINGTON, Ohio (UP!)- .
The Super Bowl can lead to Super
Depression If your favorite team
loses, says a psychologist.
''Some of those affected may
not even realize why they feel so
depresSPd or angry.''· said Dr.
Robert Hallida~. professor erne·
rltus of'Wllmlngton College.
•'They may even say that the
Idea:that a football game could be
that important Is ridiculous. The
fact Is. however. that for some
people their favorite team's loss
in an eVPIIt like the Super Bowl is
1:1 signal to them that their values
may be wrong,
,
·
"It's a matter of self-concept.
that is, the tearp should have won
because It represents ourselves ·
at our best. We 'ldeptlfy'with this
team, II' typifies -what we con·
slder to be the best in ourselves.
•'Most of us would like to think
that we are special. that we ought
to win when the chips are down.
And tor some people. the chips
are down when 'our guys' meet
the 'other guys' In a champion·
ship game."
·Halliday says classic Super

Bowl Depresslqn has three dis·
tlnct stages.
The first Is a form of denial,
blanking out what happened. The
person whose team lost refuses to
read newspaper accounts of the
game and turns away from
television reports.
The second stage Is one of
general depression and Is not
even ·consciously linked to the
outcome of the game.
'
Finally, comes acceptance of
what happened - and some
relief.
.
"There's some optimism for
I he coming season," says Halliday , "It becomes the well-known
; walt until next year."' .
Rod Bernhard,' a senior at
Wllmlngton College · from Ashland, Ohio, and an ardent Cleve·
land Browns' fan, agrees with
Halliday's analysis.
Bernhard said he went through
all three stag!!s follow.lng the
Browns' heartbreaking loss to
the Denver Broncos In the AFC
Championship game Jan. 17. He
has finally concluded, "Wait
until ne:~~t year."

ARY CLEARANCE
..

\

. Introducing the Allstate Auto Advantage. A special
new way to save up to 15% on car insurance, for having Allstate
Home Insurance and a great driving record. .
.
So what's a great drivi~ record? Basically, a clean slate.
No accidents. No moving violations.
· ,
Amemberoethe
~
·.
Find out if you qualify. Call your neigh- · A~~oan,I
borhood Allstate ~ent today. And let's see
how low we.can dnv¢ your rates. ·
bire 1npx1 hand&amp;

......
IBIIIB·

}

'

•••

:.;

••

,'

-·

'

..

..

~·
~·

•,

I

,.

Subjoot to t.J.t ...tlolllllt, iolcl q M ..,.,

· .-~~~.N~U.

~

.

Pomeroy, Ohio 457ilj.

Bllpll•t Col. 75, WlnUanp 70
lk&gt;lmonl Colle~· 11. Lambutll Colleae

,.

•

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel, ill Court St. ,

Tt-mple 17, ••
wea~ey~a
.
SouUI
'
Ap.-laclllaa81.1~, E. hnn. &amp;.10

'·
~

'

~ew York , New ro r~ 10017.

· to try to force turnovers. the
Marauderettes committed five•
fouls within two minutes and the
hot shooting Spartans took ad·
vantage of their opportunities at
the charity stripe to nail down the

Ht......... (Pa.)ll. . . . . . .

• • !AU. . .....

f

\

Me-mber: United Pres s Inter national ,
· Inland Daily Press Associallon and the
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertising Representative, Branham
Newspaper Sale5 , 733 Third Avenue,

".•. n..a. "-'............., ..
·-ft!MIIr'e •. '
•· Mrr H

o\rbuall,

!

t
~
;

cond cl ass posta ge paid at Pomerey,
Ohio.
·

Pe• 61. 1'1, Da~tlltllle tl
.
Bb.tle .. ludl M. Gn. WM. 'iii tOT)
S.lllkMtera Mlh. H. Eutern t:eaa.

Glrlfi; Ohio Hl~~~:h School L.111u.-thllll
8~ Untlt•d Pret'!K ln&amp;err~~~tlorud
ft..-.d!Q' •.Jaa. tM
.\da u, folumhuK Grow 3f
""''"''' ,ij, Wa)'ll(' ,.,.llCf .J8
1\urara U. Bul10n Brr~irf' -t3
,\)'rnwtlk• II, Hol«*Cr n
Boardman •· vo ... p Ur!lllll~~r .3 6
Rroollflf'ld ss, IUa..man Blld«er 4!1
Bryn 11. Mantpt'l..,r :n
{lin ~t..on t'J, Cln McAuiP1 Sl

~'IJWr)'

· Pomeroy. Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2156. Se-

MertyhuM ¥o Alhland il.
NY PaiYf,ech M. Marltlmt' 41 ·

41 II
tl z
11 a

Cage scor:eS '

Fr.-nlt Fur Grf'l'n II.

PJibllshed eve ry aft Nnoon, Monday
t6roogh F rlday , -Jll COurt St., Po·
mer~. Ohlo, by the Ohio Vall. ~ Pub·
llshin~ Company!Multlmedta, Inc.,

Fordham In, Arm)' a
Hartwick ll"i, New Palta St. II
'HUt~IJO• 101, Ma&amp;•PI'Mfi.W Isle 15
La Sallt ltl, lallll Ml
Marl11t fll, At. FruciK ( Pa. I It·,

71 ...

Caroll• Slalf', Notre Dame, 0111 .. SUk'. ·
Rhodr f.otllntl, MI . .Joh•'H ud WyomiQ.

C'oldwa~t"l'

Sentinel Stall Writer
Alexander's Lady Sp;~rtans
defeated the Meigs Varsity
squad 53-48 at Larry R. Morrison
gym last night thus ending a
home game winning streak that
h~d reached 38 and dated back to
the 1983-84 season. In the fourth
home contest of that season
Federal Hocking had turned the
trick. .
The contest was close. usually
no more than a four point spread,
for most of the thirty two minutes
of play. Durin'g the first periods,
Meigs was on top by five b~t at
the end of eight minutes the
visitors had cut the margin to
two.
In the second stanza the game
was tied six times as neither
team could gain a real adva,litage
over the other and thev went to

the locker room knotted at 29 all.
Meigs got two quick baskets by
Missy Woods and Beth Ewing
thirty seconds into the third
quarter but Alex tied It again ·at
the five minute mark. The home
team held a slim two point edge
at the end of three.
Disaster struck In ·the next
. three and one half minutes of
play as Meigs went cold, missing
four of five tries from the field
. with Alexander controlling the ·
boards allowing the Maruaderettes only one shot each trip
down court. Meanwhile the vis·
itors hit all five of their attempts
during that period of tlme.
With 3:081eft to play and down
by eight, Meigs made a .run to
pull jto within three on two
straight field goals by Wendy Fry
and Shelley Stobart's free throw.
Having to use full court pressure

11~910)

Brandel• 71 , Bat.on $!
Clark ~ Slllw Rtt«fna 'ill_
Dominica~~ 'II. IU .... Collep 11
FalrteiJII Dtckh1110a M, Roh. Morrl" '7t

IMIJ

Fort

The struggle within American · 1'
Episcopalianism Is small pota- . ,
toes compared to the battles still ,
ragll)g within the far larger
Baptist and Lutheran denomlna- ··
!Ions. But all of them are simply
separate aspects of a great ,
struggie that will one day be seen
as an Important part of the
history of the late 20th century: .
the battle over· the role of the ·.
churches In the spiritual develop- ..
ment of mankind.

Bade~o~

ll&amp;ate. Dt&gt;PMI; Gt-ala
Te"tll. Kl_., Lelll..... l&amp;lk.· Nortll

('(~ll'~llll&gt;

IS, Uma S.. wnee 45

Eat~t

)I

115 •

c.....

{USPS

A IH\IiAion of Multimedia. Inc.

I

333 :1

18. UTEP (lt-3)
17.1c!~a *ate (16-3)
tM.Iuw11 ( IJ-0)
II. Vlllaaow ( l.t-t)
A.(tiN)M'""....till·-11
. . ,.....,~--(1~1)

~,

The Daily Sentinel

Thllrfolday'M C'oUep;c llat~kethiiJI llelmltK
B)' Unl~d 'PN!No!io lnt.r.rn.tloMI

... 9

Jl. ~lchi~~~:IUI (If.!)
I . K,t•al•·k)' (IS.'l)
10. Oltlalloml tl~)
II.FIU...•11hi1HJ
12. tlorida IIHl

~Okll:

beat D yke, 87·75; C!!darvllle
overwhelmed Bluffton, · 109-84; :
Rio Grande got by Wilmington , ·
86-83; and Findlay tripped Tiffin .
79·77.

College scores ·

-1:1! !I

5. Nrv.-Lu Vt•PJ! (I ) (J7.1)

..

.

tl20 1

.,.
""

3. Nonh raroll~ 1 14-2)
... Dulu&gt; ( 12·2)

~~..,,£•

poured In ~ 3 points ·as St. Louis
Jett had 17 and Nate Chambers
rolled over Youngstown Sta te.
chipped In 15 points for · the
Flames. For the Vikings, Ken · · St. Louis Improved to 8-8 as
Youngstown fell to 7-10, losing
McFadden had 17 points, Kenny
six of Its last seven games.
Rob!'rtson and Steve Mally had
Youngstown's Tilman Bevely
12 · points apiece , and HerSPy
led his team with 10 points In the
Strong had n points.
.
At Akron. Eric McLaughlin ·first half, Including a pair. of
three-point field goals, but fin·
and Shawn Roberts combined for
34 points In Akron's triumph over !shed the game with only 12
points. Tim Jackson paced the
Kenyon.
Penguins with 16 points.
McLaughlin ended with 23 and
· In other games , Maryland·
Roberts 11 as the Zips Improved
Eastern Shpre nipped . Wright
to 12-5. Nelson Morris scored 13,
Paul Baler 10 anci Dave Mitchell State. 77-73; Mercyhurst (Pa. )
edged Ashland, 78-76; Urbana
10 for Kenyon, now 8-9.
At St. Louis, Monroe Douglass

...... !8
Oral Robcm n
Sl. Leul!i 74, l'oWiptowa Sl 5!
M•rylaiKI·FAn Rhore 17. Wrllh' St 73
Akron 75. Kenyon 53
Mrn:&gt;i'ul'll (Pa) 7&amp; .\slllaiHI 78
U.rbaJM 31, Dyke 11
Cedantllt' Ill, Bluffton IW
Rio G,.lldl' Ill, Wllrnl~tKton R3
l'lndlay '111, 11ftln 'rf

IJ"oln1K

T"""'

..

..

~I

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Chtcl.u~tttll,

cte . ) lllid lut wt-elt'll

ranll"ll(:

( 'U)'Ilhoellt' lllbll1. Riii\I('IUIII.

•

'

..' .

- - - --·-----

OhkJ Coii«'Kt' BasltetbaiiScoft!K

NEW YORK I UPI) -ThrUniU&gt;d PreM!i
lntrrnatMIMI Board of Coate~' ~p 20
t·oltt&gt;v hM..ethall ratln~, with llr-t·
· Pllkn~ vOb&gt;Joi and M't.'Ord , In pllrendtt•ll,
to&amp;MI point• (hued on U polaf11 tar llr111

f·

· .(

L

-

Wart'ftl Champion II, E PalesU ... .&amp;Cl
~ B,.aciiiUI, Wellntlt.P U
Wllmlnaton 55, Greenfield SS

Thie! (Pa) at J•hn C.arroll

....

~

As Rooseveu··s trusted per-

Berry's World

. C'aplll:l al Olttrbt&gt;l•
HeWrttaerw .. Marld&amp;a
Wltit'llbfoi'J ._ Mo•&amp; Ua~n
AlltP.J CPa) M Ohio We.leyan
Xn)'CHI at {la... ltewrVf'

13. SyraciiMr' (Il-l)
1-1. Dllnob• (IW)
1~. Oeni'Krio~• (I!... )

:

'

'

~

-

Uberty C.nwr $1, Ewer&amp;~n· '!2
Loulnllk&gt; Aqlll••1't. C.p. Val Chr ttl
Macoa Euw. M, WeM tr•Joa -It
Mapnotta ·U, Suduaky PerkiM ll
'Ma..,leld Peten M. IA••avllle 4!
Marton Loeal U. Dfltlllos 8t .Joii.M U
~dthfield C&amp;NIIal it, NMury 10
North Caaten Hoow:r II. CaniOn s tl
Pllrlck Henry 11, Arcllbeld .IO
PCI'I')' 18, Richmond Helrht• ~5
Pcttlnllle a1, Sll')ll.er 3!
Pl)tneulh -11!, Mapl.,ton fl
Rlcllfleld Revere 182, Med HJ1hlalld -It
Sherwoed FairvieW 1t3, I!'Aiprton 0
Sp-acer\llllf -18, Pauldlnw 31
!low 58, Tallmad«e M
SlreetrlboN 53, Twl_.u.._ $l
Stnllhen 71, Campbell 3t
han&amp;o• t$, Delli tt
Ttpp CUy 41, Venalllr8 .f.l
Union Local Ill. Brldseport 41

Daykt'a at a . . . . . .

·

By JIM SOUL'!BY

Kea&amp;on Rid«• H, spn-. GrH!nan to
IAI\IIt.bura: Ldra., 7S, Newtnn f:aiiA
33
•.
,.

Tole:~

:

•'
divided _______W_il_lia_m_R_us_he_r··~

The decade of the 1970s wit- baggage that was by then weighnessed ruptures In almost every Ing down the ancestra·l
Christian denomination, and for denomination .
that matter within the recog- ·__ Rather to my surpriSP, and
nized subdivisions of the Jewish certainly to Bishop Morse's, I
faith too. Broadly speaking, the shortly thereaftl'r decided to join
battle was between those who his diocese mysl'lf, and . I have
wanted to "update" their rell·
rpmalned a member of It ever
glon to mak!' It more rpl·evant to since. (Thank you, Pete
such modern concerns as sex· Hannaford! )
_.
Ism, poverty, etc., and those who
I wish, though, that ther~ were
believed profoundly that religion better news a bout ACNA, on the
becomes "relevant" precisely to occasion of Its lOth anniversary.
the extent that It seeks to Clergy and parishioners who
transform mankind rather than have undergone ·the wrenching
society.
experience of leaving their tradiI had noted the dispute In my tional home are rarl'ly Willing, It
columns, and in April 1977 I seems, to compromise on what
received a phone call from Pete they regard as essentials. The
Hannaford, a California PR man four bishops consecrated In
whom I had met when he was a Denver 10 years ago have separmember of · Ronald Reagan's ated, t9 go In very different
staff some years earlier. Hanna- directions. · One created yet
ford ~lned that he was now another new denomination, resorepreseliUI!g a group of Episco- lutely "hlgh" In its theological
palian priests who wpre headng and liturgical tone. A second
for a collision with the ultra· responded by founding one exliberal national hierarchy of plicitly "low." A third, despairtheir chu~ch , and· wondered If I ing o( finding peace elsewhere,
would be Interested In Interview- joined the Roman Catholic
Ing one of them.
Church as a layman. Meanwhile,
I would, and subsequently I did Bishop Morse continues to lead
· - a reblcund, white-haired Cali- his own growing flock, patiently
fornian named Father Robert
"waiting for the dust to settle."
Morse, who impressed me deeply
Another beneficiary of ACNA's
with his quiet determination and disintegration has been the
vigorous faith. Although I wrote American Episcopal Church, a
three columns on the dispute group that broke away from the
among Episcopalians during the main body of Episcopalianism
next eleven months.
during the 1960s. A number of
· The third reported that four ·ACNA parishes have gone to lt.
bishops (Robert Morse among
,Meanwhile PECUSA - the
them) would be consecrated In Protestant Episcopal Church,
Denver on Jan. 28, 1978, to launch U.S.A. - continues on the pathS
"the Anglican Church In North
that provoked the schism In the
America." This ,body conceived
first place. Priestesses have
Itself as simply the continuation
been ordained· In the great
pf the Episcopalian faith as
majority of Its parishes,' and
known heretofore: without revi- proposals to remove remaining
sions In the 1928 Book of Common .. shreds of "sexism" from Its
Prayer; without priestesses, and
liturgy hav¢ evoked dry remarks
without the rest of the liberal , about the need for a Society for
I ,

Kell&amp;on ft, Deflt.ace •

~~ehtdultd

SIIIW'dQ, Jan. SO
IIDwlllll!: GrHn at Kut 81

i

1·

Kul Roa.ewlllll, Akr Sprlftl'

Friel.,., lan. tt

No pmet

:
•
'

during World War II, Hopkins
·repeatedly . dragged his painwracked body to meet Winston
Churchill In London and Josef
Stalin In Moscow.
Hopkins often was so emaCiJ!J g following those trips that
he had to be hospitalized. He
regularly required pa,inful transfusions of blood and injections of
nutrients - but he persevered.
Rep. Thomas Tauke, R-Iowa,
says Hopkins ty,plfies those "In
earlier ,generations who we~e
devoted to ... . public service:..
without personal return ." Adds
the congressman: "We need ihat
now."

lflcb\lllloe-·51. Tt...-. 52.
lfiUtop st, Edoe IS
KaUda H. Vu Burt-n 36

By UalUd Pre.. International

'

(although not the titles) of deputy
president, chief of stat( and
national security adviser.
Although Hopkins was the
president's closest adviser and
the nation's second most powerful government official, he operated frorli a Spartan office that
Included only one used bridge
table, one telephone and one
secrl"tary.

-

Spartans end Meigs' home streak

Frf!lllOM 81 lof' 14, New Rlepll3
Gr«M!-111'1 Green It, Nortea U

Tblti Week's
Ohio CoUeJe B!Ukt'tball ~~If' .

A' servant who served _ ___;____--=--:.R.::.. .::ob-=-er_:_t- ~. :.:. . ~l.:. . :. te- rs1
service.''
The Institute Is producing the
documentary film and sponsor·
ing the lecture S!'ries. If also is
organizing a campaign to pro·
mote the Issuance of a commemorative stamp during the 1990
centennial of Hopkins' birth and
plans to annually award tlte
Harry Hopkins Public Service
Medal to a dedicated public
servant .
All of those honors are for a
man of whom Roosevelt once
said: "Heaskedonlytoserve." A
social worker, Hopkins was recruited In 1933 during Roosevlllt's ·
famed "first 100 days," then
headed the Works Progress Administration, a massive relief
program to aid victims of the
Great Depression.
· By 1937, however, his health
began to fall because of a never·
fill*, diagnosed but thoroughly
debTntating chronic Intestinal
aliment that would leave his body
fraU and emaciated.
Hopkins' spirit, however, was
unaffected. In 1940, he moved
into the White House, set' up an
office in Abraham Lincoln's
study and assumed the duties

Oral Roberts coach Ken
Cleveland State defeated Illinois-·
Trickey was also Impressed with Chicago , 90· 73; St. Louis
Glover as well as the rest of the trounced Youngstown State, 74team ..
• 52; and Akron bombed Kenyon,
"Cedric Glover is a great 75-53.
player, " ' Trickey said.. "The UC
At Chicago, Eric Mudd scored
players have played , together 19 points and four of his team longer at a dlfferentlevel thatwe
mates hit In double fli:ures to
have. · We are probably the lead Cleveland State past the
youngest basketball team play- University of Illinois-Chicago
Ing this kind of schedule. "
Thursday in Association of MidLeverrts Rottlnson added l4 Continent Universities action.
The VIkings are 13-4 overall
and Roger McClendon 10 lor
an4 4-lln the AMCU. The-Flames
Cincinnati.
Kim .Kelley scored 27, Willie dropped to 5'14 and 2-4.
Illinois-Chicago's Ed Hal) led
Irons 21 and Haywood Workman ·.
all
scorer ~ with 22 points . Willy· ·
13 for Oral Roberts, 4-15.
Elsewhere Thursday night,

This week's games

!

enrichment.
''Those of us who get a chancp"
to serve the country "should be
well motivated when the time
comes to serve lt well." Hopkins
once said In a Grinnell speech.
"He was a guy who put the
interests of the country ahead of
his own concerns," says George
McJimsey, a history profpssor at
low;~ State University In Ames
whose definitive book, "Harry
Hopkins: Ally of the Poor and
Detend'er of Democracy." was
recently published by Harvard
University Press.
Among those prpseni at a
Capitol Hill party last year
honoring McJimsey, and, indirectly, Hopkins W!'re Iowa's two
senators, Republican Charles
Grassley and Democrat Thomas
Harkin, as well as dozens of other
Washington leaders.

____,

Pomeroy-Mid&lt;tleport, Ohio

Scoreboard ...

l

finished .yet'

--

--- ...,--~-

Cincinnati rolls over Oral Roberts, '98-77; CSU romps

Disaster..program in trouble Anderson and VanAtta
WASHINGTON - A federal
farm-loan program Is creating
farmers who are better at
harvesting loans than crops.
The Farmers Home Administration emergency loan program
faces the loss of up to $7.8 billion
In uncollectible loans given to
farmers . many of whom were a
poor risk lri the. first· place. The
causes of the farm fiasco are bad
weather, a poor farm economy,
· unsound farming and business
practices and a govPrnment that
was too free with Its money. That
Is the conclusion of a recent

__..

v

F,riday, January 29, 1988

Page-2-The Daily Senti~ '.
Pomeroy-Midcleport, Ohio
Friday, January 29, 1988 •

\

--

-

•

~
(

.

~.

1.9")

J

.-.--

�The Daily Sentinel- Page

.rag-- us or Pu
s
00

?=r-=:rn~~~~~~:iiiiiiiiPomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Rio Grande edges Quakers

86-83 ·ror ·l71h win of year

•

SING~ON SHOOTS - Rio's Ray Singleton
. (40) lets go from the top olthe key fora two pointer

' In Thursday night's non-league 86-83 vlctol'l' over
· visiting Wilmington. Others left to rh.:ht are John

Lambcke, (43) Rio Grande; Vince Wake (3)
Wilmington; Ron Rlttinger (43) Rio Grande;
Derron Calvert (21) and Craig Hall, Wilmington.

A st rong Wilmington press,
Rio Grande reasserted itself
combined with a canny defense,
when a Ray Singleton basket put
the Redmen ahead by 1 (51-50) at
forced Rio Grande's Redmen to
rally In the second half Thursday
17: 38. The advantage changed
to win an 86-83 non-conference
hands several times and landed
back in the Quakers' hands
victory over the Quakers In
Jackson New Car Dealers Night • (65-63) on a 3-pointer by Vi11ce
at Lyne Center.
Wake. Wlth8mlnutesremalnlng;
" Tile good word is that It 's a . Rtttlnger scored ·2 and Anthony
· W. " Redmen Coach John LaRaymore landed a pair of goals
· whorn said. "Ah ·uglyW is better
to regain the lead.
than a pretty L, but I'll take It"
AI thougq the Quakers never
., The Quakers, 6-17 entering the got back In charge again, t.hey
.game,..put on the pressure early narrowed the lead to 1 (80-79)
1 in the half to twice trail the with 1: 47 left. Only a Singleton
Redmen by a single point. The basketandasetoffreethrowsby
Redmen then held the Quakers Brian Watkins took the Redmen
down and bullt a 9-point lead out of the danger zone.
(20-11) only to turn around and
. "We weren't good on our
see Wilmington, led by junior defense. We didn't get it done,"
center Craig Hall, ca:tcb -up with Lawhorn noted.
them.
Quakers Coach J.F. "Fritz"
The visitors . tied with Rio Plinke was more Impressed with
Grande ' on . a Derron Calvert his team's effort, noting th~J the
basket (32-32) and regained the squad played a strong offense.
lead with 4 minutesl~t in the half
"We go Into a pretty good
on a 2-pointer by Ha)l. Wllmlng- rhythm," Plinke said. "We came'
ton built a 6-point lead (46-40) In back and saw Rio Grande was In
the closing seconds, forcing Rio trouble. Our kids are smart and
Grande's Ron Rlttlnger into his played well. It's a tribute to our
first successful 3-point field goal kids, with three starters out, that
of the season with 17 seconds they played that well."
remaining. The Redmen trailed
Rlttinger scored .27 to lead all
46-43 at the buzzer.

Red men put four of Its .players
into double figures - Singleton
with 17, Raymore with 14 and 10
each from Watkins and John
Lambcke. The hosts were 62.5
percent on free throws, netting 5
of 8 attempts.
Also scoring high for Wilming·
ton were Calvert and Greg Scott
with 14 each and Tim Dlck,e with
10. From the free throw line; the
Quaker.s sank 11 of 13 tries for 87
percent.
.
·
The win puts the Redmen at
17-6 overall. Now 6-2 and In
second place lri ' the Mld;Ohio
Conference after Tuesday's de·
feat of Tiffin, Rio Grande travels
to Canto'n Saturday to face No. 3
Malone In a 7:30 p.m. game.
WILMINGTON (83) - VInce
Wake, . 0(2)-2-1-8; Greg Scott,
6-2-2-14; Derron Calvert, 7-0-2-14;
Tim Dicke, 5-0-3-10; Craig Hall,
10-6-4'26; Scott Feldman, 2-1-2-5;
Mike Stricker, 2-1·2'5; ,Jeff Nordyke, 1-0-3-2; Matt Barth, 1-0-1-2.
TOTALS 33(%)-11-18-83.
RIO GRANDE (86)- Anthony
Raymore, 7-0-2-14; Jim Kearns,
2-0-3-4; Ray Singleton, 8~1-3-17 ;
Ron Rlttlnger; 12(1)-0-1-27; John
Lambcke, 5-0-3-10; Brian Watkins , 0(2) -4-3-10. TOTALS 36(3)5-IS:86.

B
II
dr
:;'K•mg
nets
as
u
ets
0
33
_
.
_p
~~~~s :~rf~~e :.~f:::in;~~~ ~~~
Knicks; Cavaliers lop Rockets Redmen face ·Malone Saturday
~

'

•

'

'

'

Ohio
Outdoors
&gt;
I

'

.

'

a

The man who invented It
marketed it as a spray . It came in
a small plastic jar with one of
thbse pump-tvpe lids, similar to
the one s 'o n h a ir spray
con tai ne rs.
The only problem was this stuff
was as thick as Jello. You
cou ldn 't make it spray no matter
how hard you pumped the lid.
Rather than becoming frustra ted a nd tossing the lure
additive into the drink (it really
does seem to work). some
fisherman somewhere just nosed
his boat onto the beach. strode

Spartans ...

Box score:
MEIGS - Taylor 2-2-4; Woods
7-2-16: Stoba rt 4-1 -9; Fry 5-1-11;
Wright 3-0-6; Beth Ewing 1-0-2.
ALEXANDER- James 3-1-7;
Keffer 4-5-13; Carru thers 5-6-16;
Peterson 1-3-5; Jeffers 3-0-6;
L'Heureux 2-4-6.
Score by quarters:
Meigs ..... .. .. .... .'........ H 29 39 48
Al e~a nd er ........ ...... . 12 29 37 53
Reserves Win
In the opener, Kim Adkin's
reservists . squeezed by Alex ander 24-22 In a low scoring
affair.
·
Alexander outscored the hosts
to take an 8-4 first quarter lead
and w~re up by three at halttime.
The young Marauders tied the
score at 17 after eighteen minu·
tess and managed to best the
visitors in the fourth period,
holding them scoreless until the
1: 14 mark to post the win.'
Meigs .scoring had Jennifer
Taylor canning 7 points, Kelly

!

u .

PUSH IT!

PULL IT!
DRAG IT!

WE WANTm

·l;j

BLOCK PASS -Temple's Mike Breeswyk·,
;right, re~ll~s . ln t4! . 1ll!~!:k St. Bonaventure's Sam

~

GRAVELY

pag~ 3

This Week's Specials
FRIDAy I JANUARY 29TH
PORI PAniE SANDWICH PLAnER..........o,s.... $2.49

O.r &amp;oldoto Doep Frlttl Perk Pattlo f-roo 1ho lelil _. laity no- _.
Sh- of a Perk Chop soruool on a Hot SIMMy lun _. O.r llel DoNclooo hi· ·
..., frlftlh Frlos _.Your Cholco of lle10oooodo Coloolaw, llacaronl W or
....,. loafto, or Pototo SaW

~IYER

SUNDAY, JANUARY 31ST
AND ONION DINNER .......................... 53,95

Dofldouo Vfl'll U.... Cooflool With, _. s.othorld l11, fl'llh CholeM Sonld 111t1o
. . .odPole--1 II IUJtGrary,llltluthniiC-o•IY-Citola '
of o Hots-, 1o1 or llo•o J llocuit, . . . .
s-Ite
harffollototl. beth ,....., llrewool (A lttoll 'loft llrWI .,.--..., fot .,. ...

._Cot,_ •

....tittttoJI,

Watt"",.... S.wlca wltll Y-

IVDY -AY• llljay O.r Weltw,
MMis Served on China PlaMo, _. Dri...
China Ct.PSI

y..;

CoH• or lH " -

__ _

...

'17
'17
'17
'17
'17
'17
'17
'16
'I•

1om 1

IIHIUDIT;-- . .
915·1111

·

.

POD HFIPO~.....................-;. •••••.••. ,....,............ SiftS
DONI DSO Cx4 ..........................................~....... JISH
PLYIIOUIIIIOIIION ......................................._ .., *6995
GIIC 11 I _ , .................................................... ttt9S
lOIII .,._ - -..........................................- ... ••ttS
~
16 .•Yaa WAI~tll GTS-.......;............................. S9995
:14
IlLlA 11..............................~. ...................... IIJ tS
14
S CUIUSS.......................................................... •.ttts

:•r ....._... --.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . •ms
:::S

:::
:.:11111
•'15 .......~~ ..........._·-·-··-··-·-•-................_IJttJ

YOYAIL.-................... 1........ .........:.•9991

.......
.,.. ..........___......- ...... .............._........,...
::: ~. . IICOif ........................~..- ......,..... ....J
~

IIVIOIIIF,
......,..CN1GO"~ -

·-...

- ..:...................... SftJ
..v...LAIU AI.......
LOW AI 7.'nl A.P.IJ.
·

.. .
IILECT MODILa - w•IIIIA!fn' OPTIONAL
HOURS: Mon:·l'lt. I 1.111.·1
- lat., I a.m.-4 p.m.

c•m•

WE GIVE SENIOR CITIZENS 10,.' DISCOUNT

soo .

CHIYSIII ·WAION, 4 dr..................................... *9995
PLYMOUII . .I.CI ........................................... Sl995
DODII LAitCII-...........................................-....... StltS
DOHI 600 ....................................~ ..................... S96tS

HOURS: 10:00 A.M.-8:30 P.M.-7 DAYS A WEEK

Z lerhaugl1'11 n-f &amp;qe11t~r

i.

'85 D150

'" s.

Tar Heels;

top-ranked ·Arizona romps
College Basketball Roundup
By Unite4 Press International
Wake Forest Thursday night
matched its Atlantic Coast Con.- ·
terence victory output from last
.season with an 83-80 triumph
over No. 3 North Carolina.
The Deacons, who two years
ago were winless in the conference. la~t year were only able' to
beat Maryland twice. This season they also defeated North
Carolina State.
Sam Ivy sank 2 free throws
with tl)ree seconds left at Greensboro, N.C.. to give Wake Forest
the final margin of victory. Wake
Foresl · improved to 2-4 In the
cQilference and 7-9 overall. North
CarC!li.J)_~Jf!l to a-~ and 14-3. , .
· Waltfl Forest took the lead for
t~e .first time at 71 -69 with 5:45
left to play when David Carlyle
fd,ilowed his own miss With a
7-foot bank shot. The Tar Heels
H~ it 71-71, but a. basket and 2 ·
frfe throws by Ralph Killey put
Waite Forest ahead 75-71 with
4:04 left.
'Carlyle hit 2 free throws and
To-dd Sanders added a field ~al
to j;ive the De01cons an 81-77
advanta·g e with 1:10 remaining.
A ·3- point e~ by Jeff Lebo with 50
seconds left cut the deficit to 81-80
before Ivy sank the final free
throws.
.,'

.....

r;::::=====:::;-1

Graham, left, from passing off during the first hall
of,. their Atlantlc-10 game In Philadelphia.
(t!PI)
...
.

Deacons topple

-.t

I

THE BIG GAME
IS SUNDAY
BUT
OUR GAME PLAN IS TO
BRING YOU SAYINGS ·

Smith piclting up 6, Amy Rouse
and Missy Nelson accounting for
4 each. Shannon Newsome 2 and
Amy Wagner with one.
Lori Skinner led all scorers
with 12 for the Spartans. --Junior High Results
The junior high maroon team
traveled downriver to thll Old
Washington School to to battle
with the little Blue Angels of
Gallipolis. When the smoke had
cleared, the little 'Marau derette' s win streak was extended to· ten by virtue of a 42·34
wln over the Gallians .
Meigs was led by Rev a
Mullens' 15 points followed by
Kim Hanning who garnered 11.
Other Meigs seorers were Trlcla
Baer with 9, Mary Cremeans ~­
Chrissy Weaver 2 and Verna
Compston with one.
High seorers for GalUpolis
were Reynolds with .. 11 and
Greene who had 10.. ·

.)

WI.th' 12-l ...ec'ord.

\.

continued from

For Your Old Car Or Truck

Tn'•mb. . Ie t·o·p·s TVC·.

{isherrnen are very .inventive
, By JERRY PICKRELL
Outdoor Writers Association
'
of America
·:
Distributed hy UPI
'·It 's a wonder that more tackle
~akers, and even the manufacN rers of other things, don't keep
a ·res iden t fishing bum on their
staf fs.
Fishermen have to be the most
resourceful and inve ntive bunch
there is. They can take a
completely unrela ted object and
apply it to fishing better than a
team of e ngineers sitting at desks
trying to dream up new stuff to
sepa rate the angle r from his
dollars.
For example, some guy a few
vears ago decided to market fish
attt•actor . This was a liquid that
was said to drive fish crazy when
applied to a lure.

-

,

really is great to play with people
Malone's Pioneers have shown
The Pioneer.s did it again On guard posltl'lns Wlll be Martin·
like Moses (Ma lone) and Jeff an uncanny knack this season for Tuesday when a jump shot by (6-1,- sophomore) · and Keith
(Malone). We are really coming winning the game at the last guard Todd Martin at the buzzer Troyer (6·2, sophomore), with
together as a team."
minute.
,
.·
netted them an 80·78 .win over Tim Schlabach (5-9, sophomore)
The Bullets ·have won eight
Rio Grande, a victim of this Cedarvllle, placing Malone at 6-3 possibly seeing some act.lon
straight home games and nine of talent on Jan. 5 when it lost77-76 in the Mid-Ohio Conference (10- either as a starter or off the
12 since Wes Unseld took over the to the Pioneers at Lyne Ceriter on 10 overall) and in . third place bench. At center will be either
coaching reigns from Kevin forward Andy Booth's last- behind Rio Grande and confer- Mark Mason (6:6, junior) or Jim
Loughery on Jan. 3.
. second jumper, will keep that in ence leader Walsh.
Klsh (6-7, freshman).
The Knlcks have lost 14 mind as It prepares for SaturCoach Hal Smith Is expected to
Rio Grande (17-6, 6-2) wlll ·
straight on the road and have not day's encounter with ]VI alone In field Booth (6-6, junior) and Rex probably repeat Its lineup from
won away from Madison Square Canton. .
Adams (6·5, senior) as forwards . Thursday's 8~,83 victory ·over
G r den s i. n c e . before
Game lime Is 7:30 p.m .
Wilmington at home, with Ron ' ·
Thanksgiving.
Rlttlnger (6-6; senior) and Ray .
In other games, Cleveland
Singleton ' (6-3, senior) at for•
routed Houston 109-85, Denver
·ward. Guards will be Anthony'·•
beat "Milwaukee 122-113 and the
Raymore (5·11, junior) and Jim' :
LA Lakers clubbed Sacramento
Kearns (6-1, junior~. with John '
115-94.
.
Lambcke (6-5, sophomore) at
Cavaliers 109, Rockets 85
.1. ,
center . .
At Houston, Brad Daugherty
Following Saturday's game ,scored 18 points and Mark Price
the Redmen will be on the road'·
added17to1handtheR(!cketsonly
Action around the TVC Tues- · York engaged in a •non-league
Tuesday against Mount Vernon
their third loss at the Summit. day saw Trimble's Tomcats post contest.
Nazarene in a 7:30p.m. game. "
Akeem Olajuwon had 23 points
their 12th win· In the league as
tw- Houston, which 1ost tor just they d9wned the Belpre Eagl~s
.the fiffh time in :16 'games.
83·6~. Trimble's BlU Silyre hlt 19
Nuggets 122, Bucks .113
for the winners and four other
At Denver, Alex English Cats finished In · double figures .
scored 24 points and Blair Ras- Scott McConkey's 17 was high for
mussen added 23 to lead siJ&lt; the Golden Eagles.
Nuggets in double iigures. Paul
Pressey's 22 points paced the
The Federal Hocking Lancers
broke
into the win column in
Bucks,
who
have
lost
six
straight
into the commissary, bought a
at
McNichols
Arena
dating
back
conference
play as they , bested
squeeze bottle of ketchup,
•.
to
Jan.
22,
1982.
VInton
County
68-67 in an oversqueezed the ketchup into the .
Lakers 115, Kings 94
, time contest at McArthur. Vin'
trash, refilled the container with
At Sacramento, Calif .. James
ton's Charles Bowden took game
fish attractant, and lobbed the
high honors with 25 and Lancer
original jar Into the trash after Wort.hy scored 26 points and
Ron Eddy finished the night with
Magic Johnson added 18 points
stepping on its head.
Nobody ever envisioned a and 9 assists to lift the Lakers to 20 for the winners.
ketchup bottle dispensing a their 27th straight victory
Meigs, of course, defeated
smelly concoction like fish lure, against the Kings, dating to Feb.
Spartans by 12 (81Alexander's
18,
1983.
Reggie
Theus
scored
16
but nobody ever to ld the fishe r 691
intheirflrsthomegameofthe
points
to
surpass
the
14,000
mark
man that. Besides. It worked so
season at Larry R. Morrison ·
well that the manufacturer now for his career.
Gymnasium. The outcome of the
puts a similar lid on instead of the
contest
will not effect league
original.
standings
as only the first round
Other ma nufacturers have had
. Standings-as of J ~ n .27:
of
play
by
the Marauders will
their. ideas pressed into du ty at
(Boys)
determine
their
place In league
the fishing dock, too.
TVC STANDINGS
o o o
play. This win will count In the
Zip-loc bags were said by their
LeagueAII Games overall standings, however. as '
makers to keep food fres h. They
TEAM
W L W L will all second round games.
do, too. But they also keep socks
Trlmble ..... .. ........ 12 1 14 1
dry if you're wading a stream.
Belpre ... .... .. ... .... .10 3 10 6 . Wellston and Mlller's game
T-hey'll keep plastic worms from
Wellston .. ............ 9 3 11 4 was postponed because of Incle"bleeding" all over everything
Alexander .... .. ..... 8 4 . 8 8 ment weather and Nelsonvillee lse and so many other things
Meigs ....... .. ...... .. 3 4 5
that every fisherman should
Mill
e r ........ ..... .., .. 4 · 7 4
ha ve at least a handful in this
Nels
-York ... ... ... .. . 3 9 3 11
tackle box.
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Vinton
County .. ... . 2 9 2 12
Whoknowswhat elsemightbe
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Federal Hocking .. 1 11 2 12
more useful to fishermen than to
204 Condor St.
(Qlrls)
the people they 're trying to sell 11
Pomeroy, OH.
TEAM
.
W L W L
to?
Mew fall &amp; Wiater H11r1
Federal Hocking .. . 10 0 12 I
I saw a guy do a characteristic
Nels-York
......
..
....
,
8
2
8
6
Clollld Monday
sideways glance just the other
Tueedey
thru Friday 9 a.m.-&amp; p.m.
Alexander
............
9
2
12
2
day In the housewares depari Saturday
9 a . m.-1 p.m.
Mille
r
......
..
....
.......
4
3
B
4
ment at K mart as he slipped
Meigs ....... .. .. .. ...... 4 3 B 4
some Tupperware containers
~THE
VInton 'County ....... 5 4 7 6
into his shopping cart. I'd bet he
Trimble.. .. ... .. . .. ... 2 B 3 11
IJ,HO mlltt
isn't going to put sandwic hes into
Wellston .. ,.. .......... 1 9 1 11
them.
'17 PlYMOUtH IIUIII ..............................................,II69S
Belpre ................ :·:.. l 1l 1 13

· ;
BY JOE ILLUZZI
quick cuts to the basket. King
UPI Sports Writer
came back after missing 169
•
•' Bernard Ki~~g is convinced and
games to play six games for the
so should be the rest of the NBA.
Knicks at the end of last season.
:· "I shouldn't have to answer
New York, however, was skeptianother question about my
cal of the durability of King's
knee, " King said Thursday night
knee, so the club allowed him to
aLter scoring 33 points to power
become a free agent and did not
. t~e Washington Bullets to a 104-90; match Washington's offer sheet
to Kinrz.
victory over the New York
Knicks. the team that gave up on
K,lng start~ the season playt~e former All-Star forward .
lng inconsistently' and was rete;. "You can't watch me play and
gated to a reserve role In several
say I hav'! a ~nee problem. I don 't
games. Recently, however, King
hi!Ye anything left to prove. Well,
has shown flashes ofthe man who
only to myself. My knee is just
was once the toughest.forward in
f(ne ."
·
the NBA to defend. He Is
:-King was in his prime lh 1985 " averaging 27.2 points in his last
lfhen his right knee gave out on
five games and 19.8 points this
him at the Kemper Arena in
season.
.
Kansas City. He suffered a
"I am getting better in every
career-threatening injury that
game," said King, who scored 15
t&lt;iok him two grueling years to
In the fourth quarter to help the
rehabilitate.
Bullets break open a game that
_;A dangerous baseline and was tied after three. "But the
· P!&gt;st-up player ..who relied on
team ll;_ getlina bett~ -too.,_It

I

.

5

't ,
~'

Volleyball ioumament
~fl at Rutland
~A volleyball lournament was

u·par - aturday
Specials .__
· .._
WOMEN'S DRESS FLATS &amp; CASUALS
Good Selection of Styles &amp; Sizes -

P~. -

$1 5 PR. OR
'

\

$2 5

10 TABLE

CHILDREN'S SHOES

$10 PR. OR
r2 .Pl. ·s l

Values to S47 .00

. WOMEN'S

l

~RES$ SHQ5$
FLAT$ &amp; CASUALS

WOMEN'S DRESS BOOTS
FOOTWORKS, lfATUUliiER
Values to S76.00
~ONNIE,

$2 5 PR. OR 2 PR. $40
Ea·rly Shotter's Special
$500 _TABLE
CHILDREN'S HOUSE SLIPPERS
CHILDREN'S SHOES • LADIES' HANDBAGS

KNEE SOCKS
PR.

GROUP

MEN'S SHOES

Sl S PR. OR
2 PR. S2S

CHAPMAN SHOES
POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

~ld

on January 23rd at the
Rl.ttland Civic Center sponsored
. ~ that organizations members,
1)-ophle~ were . awarded to the
Quality Print ShOp for first place,
tl!e Rutland Church of God for
s(icond " and the Rutland . Tires
SQies tot a tlilrd place finish.
f Anothet.... tournament will be
,l'l!lld at t~e _ Civic Center on
F!i'bruary 6th (Saturday). An
entry fee of twenty dollars Is
r~uiF~d of each team , For more
' l'1otmatlon regarding this event
y!Ju may &lt;;all 742-2895 or 742-2279.
fSpeclal thanks is -extended to
~acey Richmond, Chrissy Rich·
nlond. Michelle Adams, Crystal
~chmo!ld ,and Larry Richmond
fW their efforts in this
uhdertaklng.
·

.BECAUSE YOU DON'T
WAN-T RATS OR. MICE
AROUND.
'
NEW RAT-A-REST'" Brand
can kill rats and mice In a
matter of days, otter Just one
feeding. Even Norway rats ..
. which a.re sometimes resls·
tant to other tvRes of rodenllcldes. And Rai-A-Resl"' Is the
only bait with Bromodlolone.
the single-feed rodenticide
active Ingredient approved
for agrlcultura! use. What's
more, tests show rats and
mice e¢ Rat-A-Rest'" wtlhout
hesitation. '.and prefer ~
over animal feed and
stored grains: Guaranteed.

,.

fonight's games
!i . .

.

l*"rldayJs games:
.
QfllipO,is at Athens
rren i,lt Jackson
riettll at Logan
ssell a't Portsmouth
' Y(aharila at Point Pleasant ·
WlJeelersburg at Minford
Waverly at West
·
'
~th Point at Ceredo-Kenova
C al Grove at Chesapeake
lmlnJton at Greenfield
mes Valley at Hannan Trace
ger Creek at Southern
terri at North Gallla
th.,Y~:&amp;t41rn at Oak Hill' ;
rlettli at bVCS ,
·
urct-,•s gamea:
.
lllpoUI at Portsmouth
tp at Point Pleasant

~

--

PER MO.

1977 PONTIAC Grand Prix, sharp. , •.. ·•.••.•.•.•••• 11995
1982 TOYOTA Wagon, blut ..• ....• 1• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 11995
1980 PONTIAC Phoenix ............... ~ .......... 11995
1979 CHEVY Monza, sliver ....................... 11995
1981 DATSUN 210, 4 door, blue ........... , ... ... 11995
1981
. MAZDA 626
. .....•••••.•••...•••.••••••••. 11995
1983 CHEVY Chevette ... , ... : .. . ~ ............... 13995
1985 FORD Escort ...•.••.•....••.•.•••....••...• 14495
1985
NISSAN Sentra, blue ........................ '4995
I
1985 DODGE Cha11er, red ..................... ; ·'~995
· .1914 MERCURY Lynx .•.•••.•.. , ....•......•.•... '4995
1979 PoNTIAC Firebird, red ........... ; , ...•...•. '39951986 FORD LTD, blue ........................... '5995
1986 CHEVY Nova, red ......................•.. •'5995
.
.•
$
1985 DODGE 600 S.E., brown . .· .................. , 5995
1984 FORD LTD Wagon, brown .................... 15495
1987 CHEVY Sprint ..•.......................... '6995

'34.00
*34.00
134.00
'34.00
'34.00
134.00
'15.00
187.00
'99,00
199.00
*112.00
1 109.00
'124.00
1 124.00
'124.00
1126.00
*135.00
"~. ~ · · .•• • .•• ,. .., .• ·.... -.. .••. *.6995
*136.00
1
CHEVY·
.................
'6495 . '137 •.00
1137.00
1986 FORD LTD, blue ........................... 16495
1985 HONDA Civic ............................. '6495
'137.00
1984 CHEVY Camaro .. ; ............ . ............ 1599 5 1140.00
1985 MERCURY Merquis.••••.••••••••.•••••••••.. '6495
'137.00
1985 OLDS Clera, green ......................... '6995
'149.00
1985 CHEVY Ca1111r0, 1'111 .... .. ................... '4995
'149.00
1987 CHEVY Spect1111 .............. : • .... ~ ..... 17995
'157.00
1986 .PONTIAC 6000 LE Wagon .................... '7995
'175.00
_
1987 YW Jetta, black ... ; ....................... '8995
'180.00
1979 DATSUN 280ZX, one o•ner. , ................ '5495
1978 BMW. 3201 ................................ '6495
1
1982 NISUN 280 ZX, silver ................ : ..... 7995
1987 NISSAN S.ntra Sport CHpe •••••••••..•...... 18995 '180.00
1180.00
1917 CHEVY Nowa 4 door, .. .itt ........ . ......... '8995
18995
1180.00
1917 CHEVY Nova 4 door, lwown
••....•.••.••.•..•
.
I
$ .
1985 NHSAN 200ZX, ~ ••...••..•.••.•.•••...• 7995
'175.00
.
'
.
$
'
1984 PONTIAC Flera ........................... . 6995 '169.00
1986 NISSAN Stwlll Wagon, white ..•••.•...•• •• ••. *8495
'186.00
"86 IUICI LeSabn ........................... ; *8995 '199.00
1986 NISSAN Shlnll GL, blue •••.•.•.••••••••• ; ••. '8995 '199.00
1987 NUSAN 300ZX Turbo •••.•••...•..•••.••.. '15;500 ' 1985 NISSAN Maxi• GL ........................ 19495 '211.00

)'

I •• • •••••••••

CHILDREN

50&lt;

SALE

-···
-···
- -···

'

.

'

-···

''

HARD WORKING PICKUPS
1912 FORD f·lOO Plcliup .. , ....•.... ·..... .'...... '1995
.•914 TOYOTA Plcbp, .tan ....................... '4595.
1914 NISSAN Pickup, 01'11111• mist •••••.•••••••••.••.'5495
1914 NISSAN Pickup ...•...... , .....••....••..... 15995
'
.
'6995
1985' CHEVY C·10 ......
r-up ........................
1916 NISSAN lllg Cab 4x2 Plckilp ............... ·.. '7995
191.5 FORD Pickup, reti &amp; wllltt .................. .'1495
1982 CHM SatiiNIII Pickup ••••••.•• ; ••••••.... *6495

134.00

*99.00
f127.00 '
'140..00
*149.00
'175.00
'186.00

.
\

'

--···
';

·NEWMOI .. A'IIII• Bltlnd

Is olio gutiQ rtlld palaluble, '
and Is made to ldll mice In a

r'nall8r of days, aller iUII aile
feeding. And Mot •• A Rest'" I

1s clearecJ for uee tn and
Clround

llei: lilt Soulbern

eetersblll'l at Coal Grove
k,son at Waverly
tat Oak Hill
~rteltl at Zanesville
llonvllle·YOrkAtAihens linu)
rea at cambridge IIIW)
un. W.Va .• at Kyrer Creek
rat&amp;outhem
Hill at Portl~lb Weal

vow home.

un•s

laACKROw . . .

au1a

hgll .......... '395
1977 PLYMOUTII w......... '495 .
1971
•795

· 1976

vw .. ..... :..._....

"" vw

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

r ...... ............,, .
~·!lM·· , ...., ... tortl4 - .. 11M·

...'

-~---'---'----·-- --~. -

�•
•
Friday, January 29. 1988

•

Page- 6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middlapon, Ohio

-' ;, EXrERIENCf ltlf JOY· Of RELIGION ~
.
-This Message and Church Directory Spo~red By The Int_erested Bus~~es Listed (Jn This Page.
•
-•' (row's Fomily Restaurant
MEIGS nRE
TEAFORD REALTY . P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
"Fututiw~ l&lt;e~fflekg Ftied Chiekew "
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

•

•

•••
,.

992-5432

\ \ CENTER, INC.
ft\~ i\ JohnPh.F Fultz, Mgr
Ui
·

rB

216 5 Second
Pornerov

992 2101

992

Pomeroy

ll2S

H~&lt;

•
•

FRANCIS FLORIST

•

\f( 'll' ( outl l\ ·., 01./t "' fl ur1"1

352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
614 / 992· 2644

RIDENOUR

FURNI~~~~~ROWAR:tI
Homehte Saws

WAID CROSS

Thomm; Clrn MtClu ng pastcr Norman Pr'('S
lev S S Su (1 Surrlav &amp;hool !J l) ,1m
mm nln ~ worship 10:,)) a m PJeninjZsrn1rc'f.
p m mld-\\o't'C'k 92J"'Vl('(_' \\ f'dncsdav 7 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURO-I 326 E
Ma!n SL Romcn&gt;y SuOOay S£'rvk.'E'S Holy
mmmuruon on 1 ~ firS1 SUTV:la,\ of each month
and romUned "1th m or nn ~ pra}a on ttl:'
third Sum.w Mornin~ pr.t..H'r and srrmon on
all Of tl:&gt;r Su rr:tavs of til:&gt; month ChutT h Schopl
-and r.:urserv Cart' provu:if'd. Coffee hour In 1B.&gt;
Parish Hall lrrunedlatelv foUQY.'in£: rl'l' scrvicfo
POMEROY CHURCH OF" CHRIS r 212 W
Mam St Leo Nash, evanwllst Bl tlt• SchOO
~:Kla m Morning " mhlplO: lJa m Youth
mPC't m~ 6 00 p rn E\ mm g worship 7 00 p
m Wrdncsda~ night pt awrlllt'etlngan dOtbiC'
:-;tll.lv 7 00 p m
Tl fE $AI VATlO N ARJ\IT 111 Btll l('J nut
Aw , Pomerm Mn; Dot a Wimn g m c h ,u~'
SUnda:, hol!nl'$ mcctmg 10 a m Sunrl,w
School ID30am Sutxl&lt;\\ School YPSM
F.loLw Ad:uns lf'ad(•t 7ll p m Sal\ utlon
mooing, vm1ous SiX' akers rmd mu'!IC' s!X'f'l a1s
Thursd'\\ 11 lJ a m to 2 p m Ladl('!, H0mC&gt;
lol'agw m£m!Ers. m char,eP ull women
Invited D ~5 p m Thui'Sd81. Cot P" C'l d~
Clw.ss t YOU!ll' PropiC"BiljE") i :JJ p.m Bible
StOOV .mel Praye1 mooing. opm to ttl' public

,. •

1-. ~

~ · ,•

1: ... :
'• "!
:,.;
..,. 11 • •

~t

• ,. •
: ~;

• •
~~

•

• '•'

POM EROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF

r • ,.. CHR IST 33'.ll6 Otildrffi s Hol1"lf.? Rood tCouNv
": .. Rooct 'in! 93l523.'i Vocal music Su rrlit\ Wot
1 ,.~. !o!l/"t&gt;lOa m Bit:*&gt;Stirl\ ll a m, Wors hip lip
: :: m Wednesday Btble Sti.d~ . 7pm

•,

OLD DEXTER

RIBI.E CHRISTIAN

CHVRCH Al\m C tn1l~ p tslcr Lmdit;i'Mtn
Sup1 Sunlb\ School9: fl J m pr-eachin'"''
vit'('S, flrst and thtrd Sunda\ lolloo tn~Surrl~

• 1•

• ••~&gt;
..

School \ outh mN•ting 7 ~~ p m

: •;

,. "' •• dctv
==~~ GRr\HAM

lJ'.; IfED

f'

('ry Surr

MI,rllODIS I

.,.• , Pl f Hhm gll lO &lt;.~..m fliS!JndM•t:o nd Sun
~ ..

'41:~

•

~ .. •
" ~ "'J

: :

• ..
... ... ..
41' : .,.. :

: .. : .

d.n ~of r&gt;,uhmonth

th!tdt~ndf o u t rh Sun

d n l'l£ hm onth\\01 S hlp~f'n lceo:; ,,,7 !Up
m
\\o:lnt•s(\,J\ P \1?1\ln ,£::~ dl 7 l(J p m
P1 JH'I Jml Btblr Srud\
SF \ F:N TH DA.' ~DVE:r•n 1ST
Mul
bf'n' Ht •tght~ Ro..tcl Porn PI O\ Pa stm
John Sl\C'l):!Jll Sabb.i lh SrhOol Suprrm
lendE:&gt;n 1 Oarlt nC' St('v. &lt;~r t Sabbath SC'hool
b('J;:"In~ :.~1 2 pm on S,tlu ldav dfU1noo n

., .~.~ \~ llh\A. fll~ hlp sr l \tcf'foll o\\1n ga T :ll!1p

,.t .. ..

,. '

m

E' f'J 'ont) " Plrome

RUT I AND FIRST BAP11S1 CHURCH

Stsl l'l H.llltt 11 " ,lJ nf 1 Rup t Sund L\
,. '" '&lt;~ Sch oo l q J() 1m Mut ntng WOI..,ht p 10 ~~
• .. :l m
: ~·:" • roM E HOY FI RST BA PTTSf L\ o; lnn
"' ... H,d ll'
tntm~\ Pt,
~ .tllu d ,t v
t H'IJ tng
~~&gt; ... f'' lngf'll &lt;: tif' S('t\J&lt;Cs opP n 10 pubh c i p
i' : .. : -

: .:

m

sund n

C' hutch Srhool

H JO ,, rn

Mo1n lng Wo t~hip 10 'lOam
ll&gt;f"
FlRSl SOUTHER N BAPT IS1 Po
mf't O\ Ptkt· E l am ,tt UBt\un l ptslnt
"'. " J. •ll.; Nt c•c.Jo.. Sund.t\ SdltJol D il l( lot Sun
t
d.L \ ~f' h (){J i !.1 30 a m ~ Ol ntn g Wo ts hlp
,.

10~ ", E\ t'ntng\~(H'-hlp700pm •D ~T,
~ .. &amp;: ; ~ll 1 E S 1 1 Wf'&lt;lnf'"(ll\ Pra,rt SI' J
,
'lt f' - flO p m 1 0 S T I 8. 7 :\\1 f.J M i I S
&lt;I
r l Mt :'- ~1 0 11 F'IIC' nd-. ! J ~ l'" l iii Rti\JI
i

;\m1J,,o.;o...,Hll1t' lhm"•

11

~

111 r\(llflll 1 ~ ~~' h ll'l

·'W'~

11 IS1 1nd \.nh
nn \\r'f ln f'-.rl.l\ -.- p

1' l .1::- ::1(1 p.m
1~ 1 1&lt;~!\n n h Ill p m

Ill I n"'

I~ s T l

ruf '"'f] l\

, ,

\

t

F \I i ll 1 \ UI: H'-;At l f I HL' R(' 1-i fl n
lr\ n.u n Rt1 1d Itt \ ~llllll f' 11 R, m o.;ur1 ~.~~

,.

Hll

Handl t ' Dunn r.:upl S undt~\ St !tool
, .. 101m Sun d&lt;n ('\C' nm _c o;f'J' IC C&gt; i lt} p m
• _ HIbi t' 11' ll hmg i lfl p m Thu t "d.!\
" ,._
SV H rH~ SF M ls;~ J ON Chf'tt\ St Fh
'
t.tllt"t' Stt\tcr~ 10 'm Su nd.n l vt nlng
:
~ 11\l&lt;i"Su ru [ ,t \ ,tndWNi npsflu \.117 llOp

'" Ml lll &gt;I r POHT Cfi&lt;'R CH OF C'HRISr

'

''

I~

D\\ld11 Hdl!''

i i iH ISIJ,\ :,; l9H)!\

fit"' r.ifh't \\ Jncl ,t Moh\(•t S.u nd &lt;\\ Sehro(!]
Su pl Suntl,l\ S1hnol q m 1m Mot nt ng
\\ f'lr;..lttplll~lltm £\tnl n_i!\r\m ... hip7'.1 J
p m \-\ {'(\tl('"t lt\ Jlt ,t\ ( 1 mrf'tt ns;: 7 Jtl p m
MI
i\10H l \H C'I-I L BCH OF ( ,OD
R atnt R1' l tml'" SdtPJ!itltl P •:-. lm
• f'1 1' m '" \\ !lh.Jm'&gt; Sup! Sum!, , s, httol
11 15 .t m
Sumlu., .t nd 1.\,•dn('"&lt;\ ,1\ C'\ 1 n

~
"'

•
'
:

. .. lnu
"

~

""I' lit &lt;.

~ pm

,.

MIDI11FI'OR1
F lRS f
J1AP1 fS I
c e&lt;t nt •t sn:t h .tnd P.tlnw t b ' ""' ~ S1•d dnn

:.

P ,l&lt;.,l&lt;ll

.. ·

Hi,l.!r.l" ''"" ' Sup l J{un d t \ St houl 11 Ill 1
m Mm nln g \\or "' hlp 10 1!1 1 m Su ntlt \

.
•,

L i ltht \\ I hom

SS

Supl

( 1lh\

( HnLng~C' I \1(1 i p m l'l.t V f'!lrl l i' JIIlQ:
~ • u•d Bl hlr SJwh \o\'C'dn r~d ' " ( u•n lll ).l 7 p
~ .. m
(tltlcl n n ~ them pt.H!i(r Wt'l: lnf's
: ; {) ,!\ 7 p m
\d ull 1 Mtl Jlt .LCIIC(' WPtl &gt;.:
, ~ p m
RHIJOp l O)! t.Jm \\MPO Su ncl .t \

. .. p; l(l J tn
:•;
MlDDi EPORT C Hl' Rnl 01~ C' HR 1ST
~~ 4 r,th .tnd Mt!n
AI !Iarison mlnt fi f(' l
H lr h.. n ti r&gt;uBoq A~soci,Jl" P.u;lot Mlkr
•'
•; Gf'riH il Sunda\ S(hoo\ Supl'l lnt('ndf'nl
•
Blbi C' S( h0n l9 :lo .1 m M01 nln~ W01 ~ h lp
•,
111 {0 1m r,enlng Wot-;hlp 7 00 p m
;; ~ Wt'Cin rsda\ 7 00 p m P1 avrr ITIN"lln ,g
t •
MIDDLF.POR I CHUHl H OF' 1 HE NA
• 1 • ZAHENE PASTOR F t rd Pf'n hOiwood
' • 81l1 \Vhtlf' Sundll V Sr hool Su p! Sund&lt;l \
·: S&lt;hooJ ~ 30 a m Mo1 nmg Wo1 s htp 10 45
u. m
Ev.w~rli~tt r mrel lng 7 00 p m
'*' \V u ln&lt;'Sdf! V 7 00 p m P lil\ Pr mretln g

•

'r

l l'&lt; l'rED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTR\'
OF Mt:IGS COU NTY
Re\1 Char11.'8 Talbott

Hi\ RRfSONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CI IUfi CH -

Su nd ay • Wors hip Scrv lc{'!)
1~ a m

9 00 a m Chul(•h School 10

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTE RI AN -

,

•

~
~ ••

Sun~a\ School 9 a m
lO 15 ii m

'

Chu rc h sl'rvl ct&gt;,

SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY.

TERIAN - Sunday School, 10 a m ,
Chun:?h serv ice. ll 15 a m
~. ~
Rt.r rt..I\ND CHURCH OF GOD Pas tor,
.. John Evans Sunday School 10 00 a m ,
. .. Sundall Mornlnll Worship 11 00 a m Ch ll dren1S C hurCh ll a m Sunday Evt&gt;n ing
ServlcP 7... 00 p m Wed 6 p m Young La ·
dl (l!!l' Auxlltary Wedn esday, 7 p m , Fam·
llv Wors hJp

CHAPMAN SHOES

"Pometoy'$ Qut/IIIJ ShH Ston"
104 £. MAIN ST., POI't'IROY

992-2815
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Off

Rt 1 2 ~ 3 miles fr om Portla nd Long Bot
rom Ed s(' l Har t pastor Su nday School
9 :lO u m Sundav mornin~ preaching
10 30 a m Sundav evening services 7 30

pm
MIDDLEPORT FREEIHLL BAPTIST

CHUR.CH Corn £'r Ash and Pl um No€'1
Herrmann, pas tot Su nda~· Sc hoollO OOa
m Morn mg Worship ll 00 a m , Wed
nrsdav and Sat urd a \ Evt•mn g Ser\'ices a t
7 JU p m

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE Pi\RISH
UNITED METHODIST CHU RCH
NORTHE&gt;\ST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archer
Rt&gt;\ Roy Deeter
Rt•' Seldon Johnson
ALFRED - Churr h School 9 30 a m ,
W01 sh1p lla m UMYF6 30p m , UMW
Thl1d Tuesda'.i 7 30 p m Co mmunion
fl t st Sunday tAt c her l
CHESTER - Worship 9 u m r Church
Sc hool lO am BibleSr udy T hutsday 7 p
m U M\\i ,_ first T hu rsday l p m. Co m
munio n fi r!&gt;\ Su nd &lt;~Y IArc hen
. JOPPI). - W.orship !LJO am , Church
S&lt;'hoollO ld'!i m BlbleS1udy Wedn ~day ·
7 30 p m IJ Ohnsonl

LONG 801 TOM -Church Sc hool 9 30
a m WOJ Ship 7 p m Blbl P Stud\ WPd
n('sdav 7 ~0 p m UMYF WC'dncsdav,
~ 00 p m
Commumon First Sunda y
tJ'.H' hf' rl
REE:DSVI U E- Ch u1 r h School 9 30 a
m WOi s htpSer vlre 11 OOa m t{)(&gt;etcn
Tt:PPER S P LM NS ST PAUL Chul("h Sc hou19 am Wou hlp 10 .1 m ,
81blc Studv Tucsda' 7 30 p m UMW
Tht rd Tuesd av 7 lO p m Co mmuni on
F'll!oil Sundav tAllhelt

CENTRU CLUSTER

Re' ' ,Ja mes E CorhiU
Rev Ka.n dy Bur~.: h
Rev Melvin Franklin
Re\. VI r nwnl e S Zuniga, J r
Rt!v Robel"t Mussman
ASB URY tS' ra( USl'l- Wor shtp 11 a m
Churc h School q ~5 a m Ctl'argr Blbl€'
Stud, \\' L•d nf&gt;Sda.,. 7 30 p m. UMW, first
TUC'sd&lt;l\ 7 :m p m
Chon Re hea rsal
Wednesda\ 6 30 p m UMW fo ut th Sun
d&lt;t'v 6 10 p m /B urch l
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 am
ChuJ c hS r hool lD a m , Bible Study Tues
cld\ 7 1H p m UMW First Monda y 7 30
p m , PMYF Sunct:lV fi p m Choir Reh£'ar ~a l b :lOp m Wed nesday 1Franklin )
FLA 1 WOODS - Churc h 5&lt;.- hool 10 a m
Wo t shtp 11 .1m Bible Sludy fh urs
da\ 7 p m
UMYF Su nduy 6 p m
tF'r.m khnl
,
nnn:sT RUN - Worsh1p 9 am .
Chu n_h Sc.:hool 10 A M Choh pract lt't:'
TuC'sd cl\ h 10 p m UMW firs t T uPsda)'
7 Ulpm tBllr(hJ
HEATH tMtddlt']Jort ) - Church School
9 30 u m Mot nmg Wors hi p 10 30 a m
Youth C.t oup 4 p m Wed n£&gt;Sd ay, Chutch
Chuu 1 t•hmr s&lt;Jl i p m
Th ursday
P r&lt;l \ ('t S{'r..u0 n 31l pm Bible Study , 7
pm l ZumgH
MINFRSV ILLF'- Worship Sc1vlce 10
d m
Ch u 1 r h SchOol 11 a m UMW third
W edne&gt;Scl c~~ l p m , Cholt prac l Ice, Mon
ct JY 1 30 p m 1Burch1
PF-'AR J l HAPrL - Wot shtp SC'rvlCf'
9 J() am
Chunh St hool 10 15 am,
UMW S ~ cond ru&lt;'sdu~ 7 ln p m ~Muss
mom\
POMI-~R OY- Churc h Sc hool 9 15 a m
Worshi p 10 30 ,, m Cho ir reh('arsa l
W edn~d &lt;1V
7 30 p m . UMW seco nd
Tu t•s da,~ 7 30 p m UMYF Sunday , 6p m
lCorblll 1

ROCK SPRINGS-Chu nh SchQol 9 15
1m Worship 10 am BlbleSiudy Wed
nf'sdu\ 7 30 p m UMY F (S(&gt;n lors t Su n
da '. 5 p m ( Juni on~l f' H'f\ a lh ('r Sun
ri.IV 6 p m tFtrmkl lnf
RUT I AN n - ( hutc h School 10 a m .
Wot s h1p 11 &lt;~ m UMW F'ir~t Monday
7 10 p m
SALI ' M l t::N1ER-Churc h Sc hool9 15
&lt;I m , Worr.:ht p W 15 p m (Mussman)
SNO WVJll E - Wo t ~ hlp 9 00 a m ,
c hu rt h schM I q 4:-, Cl m I Mu ss m a n)
'
s OUTIIEKlltl CLUSTER
Rev Rog er Grace ·
Rev Pa1d McGuIre
Rev. Kr.lth Kader
APPI E: GROVE- Church Schoo\9 30
;.~ rn Worsh1p 10 00 am (ftr sl a nd third
Sunctn~ s J Bibl e study l'very Sunday 6 p
m
UMW Second Tuesday , 7 00 p m :
Pt ;.~ver m{'('ttng, Wednesda y . 6 p m
fCracl')

BETHA,NY - W01 ship 9 am Church
Sc hool lOam BlbleSfudy, Wednf'Sday,
10 .t m r Dorcas Women's F e llowship,
\V('dnesday, 11 ,, m (McGuire)
CARMEL - Churrh School 9 30 a m •
Wors hip 10 45 a m Second and Fourth
Sundays Fe llowsh ip dinner wtrh Sutrm
1
ihlrd ThurSday. 6 30 p m !McGuire I
EAST LETART- Chureh School9a m,
Wors. l'llp 10 a m Set'Ond a nd fourth Sundavs, UMW first Tut'Sday, 7 :Jl pm
(Gra c £'1
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 am
Church Schoo/ 10 am ~Grace)
'
MORNINGSTAR- Worship, 9 45a m .,

Church School, 10 30 a m , lllble STudy,
Thu rsday, 7 30pm (Rad..-).
RAONE WESLEY AN - Church School,

10 a m , Worship 11 am , UMW fourth Mon.
da,v a l 7•30 p.m , Men's Prayer Breakfast,
Wednesday, 7 am (Grace).

SUITON - Chu roh School 9· 30 s m ,

Mo rning Worship 10 45a m fJrst and third
Sundays, Fellowship din ner wfth Carmet
lhl~d

Thursday, 6 30 p m !McGuire)

,.

'

I'

'

SHVICt

Rutland, Ohoo 4!775

J. wm "B1II" Brown, Owner

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Vernon

E ldr ldge, minister, Oliver Swain. Sunday
School Supt Preaching 9· 30 a m E"ach
Sunday

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION. George

~-

MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN

IN CHRIST CHURCH, Locafe-d In Texas
Community off Ct Rl 82 Rev. Roberl
Sand~rs pastor J e ff Holt er lay 1&lt;"8de-r
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt Sunday
Schod 9 30 a,m momlng wor ship and
children' s church 10 30 am e\.enlng
preacblng serviCE' first three Sundays
7·30 p m , Special srrv iCf' fourth Sunday
evening, 7 30 p m , Wednesday P rayE"r
Meeting Bible Studv and Youth Fellow
shl.,. 7 30 o m

Eldtldge. pastor. Wallace DamE&lt;Wood s
S Supl Sunday School9 30 a m Worship
Service, 10 30 a m

G1 ow The Rt&gt;v William Mlddleswarth.
pastor Church serv ice 9 30a m , Sunday
School 10 30 a m

0 H Cart, pas t or SundaySchooiat9·30a
m , Morninj:l worship at 10 30 a m , Su n
day eventng sE"rvlce a.t 7 30 p m Thursday
services al 7 30 p m

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA

RENE , Rev I..,loyd D Grimm, Jr pas lor
Ora Bass , Chairman of the Board of Chris
llan Life Su nda~ School9 30 a m Morn
lng worship 10 30 a m evani!ells llc se r
v ll'e 7 00 p m Wedn('Sday service- 7 p.m

LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·

tE.'r Woody Call, pastor Services Sunday
10 am and 7 p m Wednesday, 7 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Stev£'
DE"avE'r. Pastor Mike Swiger, Sunday
Sc hool Supt Su nday School 9 30 a m •
Morning w orship 10 40 a m
Sunday
eveni ng worship 7 30 p m , Wedn esday
e vening Bible study 7 30 p m

BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURO-I,

Burlingham Ray Laudermilt, pastor, Ro-

bert Cozart, assiStant p:~.sla" SUnday SchOol
l.{p8:m. wcrship 7 p m WednESday, 6 p m

yoot h rna&gt;tlng; Wed , 7p m chureh services

PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, 1\

mlle offRt 325 Rev BenJ Watts pastor
Robeort Searles, S S Sup! Sunday School
9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 30 a m
Sund ay C'Venlng service 7 30 p m , Wed
nesday service, 7 30 p m

SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Llltle,

pastor Steve Little, S S Supl. Su nda y
SchoollO am .. Morning worslp. 11 a m .1
Sunday e\ening worship 7·30 p m Prayer
mt'f'llng and ..Biblestudy Wednesday, 7 30
p m .. Youth meellngWednesday at 7 p m

REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N 2nd Ave, Middleport. Sunday

Sc hool10 am Sunday evenlng7·00 p m '
Mid week se rvice Wed , 7 p m

LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.

Robert E Musser, pastor Sunday School
9 30 a m Paul Musser, supt , Morning
worship 10 30 am, Sunday evening ser
vice, 7 p m mid week serv ice, Wednes
day,7pm

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE Ni\

ZARENE Rf'v GIE"'In M('M\1lan, pastor
Mary Janice Lav.-nder , Sunday School
Su pt Sunda} School "9 30 a .m : Morning
wor sh ip 10 30 a m Evangelistic service,
6p m, PrayE&gt;randPralst&gt;Wednesday,7p
m : Youth m('('tlng, 7 p m

EDEN UNITE;D BRETHREN IN
CHRIST Elden R Blake, pas1or Sunday

Schad 10 a m : Gary Reed Lay lead er
Morning sermon 11 a m , Sunday night
servicE'S Chrlsllan Endeavor 7•30 p m ,
Song st'rvlce 8 p m Preaching 8· 30 p r,n
Mld·week prayer meeting, Wedn esday, 7

pm.
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRJSTIAN, Rog

er Watsoo pastor CrensCJt Pratt Sunday
Sc hool Supt Morning Worshi p 9 30 a .m.,
Sunday School 10 30 a .m, Evening ser·

vice, 7 30 p.m
MT UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shue

pastor, Joe Sayre, Sunday School Supt
Sunday Schoci 9· 45 a m : Even lng wor.
s hip 6· :KJ p m ; Prayer Meet lng, 6 30 p m .

Wedn,.day.
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Dave F!'rentJce,...mlnlster. Deryl
Wells, Supt Church School 9 a m , Wor,
ship Service, 9'15 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev Herber I Grale, pall &lt;r
Frank Rltfle, supt Sunday School9 30 a
m ; Wor.statp service, 11 a m and 7 p m
Sunday. Wednesday. 7 p m Prayer meet·

Ing.
,
,
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH David Bell, paat&lt;r Rober! E
Bartell, lllrecoor of Chrllllan Educalloa;
Stove Eblin, uolllanl SlllldaY School 9:30
a.m.; Morning wnhlp 10: ~ a.m.; T....
lnAcllon. &amp;p.m .. EvenliiCWorllllp, 7•00p
m. Wednesday evenins prayer and Bible
Sludy, 7.00p m Choir practl..,, Thul'lday,
7p.m.
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Chari,. Rowell Sr , mlnlllll'r Rlrk Macomber, •upt Su~ay School 9·110 a.m.;

St , Middleport Afflllated with Southern
Baptist Con\lent ion David Bryan Sr Ml
nlst er Sunday School 10 a m , Morning
worship 11 a m Evening worship 7 p m :
Wt"dnesday evening Bible !!l udy and
orawr mft'tlnll 7 D m

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION

HarrlsCil\. Ilie&gt; Rd ~obert Purtell, minis
ter , Stl'Ve Sta nley, S. S Supt., Bill McEl
r oy Ass! Supt Su nday SchoolS 30 a m ,
Worship service 10 30 a m , Evening" or
shlp Sunda y7p m and Wednesday, 7p.m

BRADBURY CHU RCH OF CHRIST.

HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Gran1

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST !Wv Earl

m
Wors hip service 10 30 a m
EvangelistIC' Service 7 30 p m Wednes
day, Praye1 meeting 7 30 p m Thursday

John Wright. pastor Sunday School9 30a
m , Larry Haynes S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m
'

160 Pat HPnson pastor Sundav SchoollO
a m Classes !OJ all ages Junior Chu rch ll
a m Morning worship 11 a m Adult
C ho ir practice 6 p m Sunday Young Pro
pie' s, Children's Church and Adult Bibl e
Study, Wednesdav at 7· :1) p m

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS Pori

AL CHIJ!_CH, Kl ...btlry Rood Rev
Oycle W Hendt'l"!lm, pastor Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Ralph Carl, Supt Even
lng worship 7 00 p m Prayer mpptJng
Wf.'dn('Sd ay 7 00 p m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pin•

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHErY
Loca1ed on D J White Road of High\\ ay

Worship service lU JO a m BiblE' &amp;tudy,
TuE'sdav, 7 30 p m

Shuler pastoc Wors hip service 9 30 a m
Sunday Sc hoollO·JO am Bible Study and
pra yt&gt;r SE'rvlce Thursday, 7. 30 p m

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST. Pomeroy

BHADFORDC!IURCHOFCHRIST Sl

Rt 124 and Co Rd 5 Mar k Seevers, minister Sunday School Supt. Harrv Hen~
drlcks, Sunday School9 30 a m , Morn In~
Worship 10· 30 am ; Evening w orship 7 p
m Wednesday worship 7 p m

LONG BOTTOM CHRJSTIAN, Vernon

HYSELL RUN

HOLI~ESS

•··~·"''•.•

CHURCH

ST

FREEDOM GOSPEL MJSSION al Bald

SACRED

HEART CHU RCH Msgr

Antho ny Glannarn ore Ph 992-5898 Salu r
day Evening Mass 7 30 p m , Su nday
Mass, 8 a m and 10 am Conft&gt;Sslons one
half hour betore e ach Mass CCD cl asses
11 a.rn Sunday

VICTORY BAPTIS1

525

N 2nd S1

Middlt{)ort James E Kl&gt;esee, pastor
Sunday morning worship 10 a m , Even
ing service 7 p m Wednesday ev~nlng
worship 7 p m VIsitation Thursday 6 30 p
m

WHITE'S CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvllleRD R•v Phillip Rl

denour, pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
worship service 10 30 a m Bible study
and worship service, Wednesday, 7 p m

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH

RUTLAND 0-IURCH OF CHRIST

David

Curfman. pastel' Sunday School. 10 am
worship srrvicP 11 a m , Sunday ntght
worship service 7 30 p m , Midweek
prayer servl~ Wednesday 7 p m

Bill Carter , past or Sunday School9·30 a
m , Morning Wors hip a nd Communion
10 30 am

RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST 1\mos

WESLEYAN

Tillis, pastor Sonny Hudson supt Sunday
Scho ol 9. 30 a m , Mornin~&lt;: worship 10 30
a m Sunday f'vening service 7 00 p m
Wedn esday servic(' 7 p m WMPO pr ogram 9 am (-&lt;ach Sundav.

BlBLE

HOLINESS

CHU.tCH of Middleport , Inc , 75 Pearl St ,
Rev Iva n Myers. pastor. Rogrr Manley,
Sr . Sunday School Supt Sunday School
9 30 am, Morning Worship 10. 30 a m ,
Evening Worship 7•JO p m Wednesday
ev enln~ Bible study, prayer and prais e
Sl;'rVlct&gt;, 7 30 p m

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·

RENE Samuel Basye-, pastor Sunday
School9 30 a m . Worship servi('(' 10
a
m
Young prople s !l.e rvi«" 6 p m
Evangelistic S('rvlce 6 30 p m Wednesday
service 7 p m

ao

Mi\SON CHURCH OF CHRIST,

Pi\UL LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Cor ner Sycamore and 8«-rond Sts , Po
mero; The Rev William Mlddlt-swart ,
pastor Sunday School 9 45 a m Church
s ervlcr- 11 am

Knob loca ted on Count y Road 31 Rev
LawrenCE' Gluesencamp, pastor Rev
Roger Willford , asst pastor Preachln~
s('rvlces Sunday 7. 30 p m Prayer meeting
Wednesday. 7 30 p m , Gary Griffith
lea der Youth groups Sunday t'venlng at
6 JO p m with Roger and VIolet Willford .
leaders Communion s ~rvice- first Sunday
each month

0

•

•

•.

pastor Melvtrt Drake s S S\Jpt Sunday
School9 30 a m , Morn ing Wor'5hlp 10 30;
Eve ning Worship 7, 30 p m ~ Wednesday
1 Prayer Service, 7 30 p m

FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad

St . . Mason Sunday Scho ol10 am, Morn
ing worship 11 a m , Evt'nlng S('rvlce 6 p
m PrayE'r meeting and Bible Study Wed·
nE'Sday 7 p m

FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev Nyle

BordE&gt;n, pastor Cornelius Bunch supt
Sundav School 9 :JJ a m • St.&gt;cond and
fourt h Sundays worship service at 2· 30 p
m

OF GOD- Gilbert Spencl•r, pastor Sun
day SChool 9 30 a m , Morning serv ice
10 OOa m , Sundayevt'nlngservlre7 OOp,
m , Mid-week prayer S{lrVIce Wl'drresday

Miller

Masoo, W Va Sunday Blble S1udy 10
1:1 m
Worship 11 a m and 7 p m Wedn t"S·
day Bible Study, \OCal music, 7 p m

7pm
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH,

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOQ Dud

Lawrl'nce Bush, pastor Max Folmer Sr.
Supt Sund ay School and Morning Worshi p
9 30a m , SundaV ('VC'ningS{'rvlrp 7p m ,
You th mE'f'tln~ and Bible Study, Wedn cs
day 7 p m

ding Lane, Masoo. W Va J N Thacker ,
pastor Evening service 7 30 p m , Wo
men's Minist ry, Thursday, 9·30 am
Wednesday Prayer and Bible Study, 7 15

pm
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Har1ford W Va
Rev bav kl McManis. pastel' Church
School 9· 30 a m , Sunday morning ser

UNJTED FAITH CHURCH R1 7on Po

m('l"oy By Pass RE-v Dav id Wlsl'man Sr

SUCCESS R-OAD CHURCH OF CHRIST

PENTECOSTI\L ASSEMBLY, Racine,

Rt 124 William Hoback, pastor. Sunday
Schoolto,..a m, Sunday evl'nlng service 7
p m Wednesday evening .service 7 p m.

CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle,

Supt Sunday School 9 30 a .m Morning
Worship lO 30 a m Prayer service altern
a tP Su nday!!

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
APOSTOLIC FAITH - Ne~ Lima Rd

nex t to Fort Meigs Park. Rutland Rober!
Richards. pastor Services at 7 p m. on
Wednesdays and Sundays
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP
TER of the Wesleyan HoUneas Chu~h
RC'V David Ferrell, pastor Henry E biJn
Sunday School Supt , Sunday School10 a
m M9rnlng Worship 11 a.m . Evening
servtce 7 30 p m Wednesd ay eveni ng ser
vice 7• 30 p m

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,

Harry Holler, pastor Sunday services
9 30 a m and 7 p m , Mldwel'k service,
7 30 p m Thursday

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
AvP R f'V Clark BakE'r. pastor Carl Not

tl ng ham Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 10 a m. wUh C'lassf'!J for all ages
Evf'nlng services at 6 p m Wednl'liday Bl
bl e study at 7 30 p m Youth services Frl·

pm
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart,
W Va r Rt 1 James Lewis, pus t or Wors hip fOl'rvlres 9 30 a m : Sunday School n

Middleport Brothel Chuck McPherson,
pas101 Sunday School 10 a m. , Sunday
eve ning serv ices at 7 p m. and Wedn esday
service-s at 7 p m

ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kep n&lt;'lh Smlth1

pasta Sundav School 9 30 a m , church
servicE' 7· 30 p m , youth fcllowshlp6. 30 p
m BiblE" study, Thursday, 7 30 p m
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
Hiland Road, Pomeroy Tom Kelly , pas
tor Danny Lambert. s.,S, Supt Sunday
momin~ service at 10 a m : Sunday even•
lng serviet-7· 30 p m Tue-sday and Thurs
day ServiC'l'S at 7.30 p m
•

NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun-

day afternoon services a1 2· 30 Thursday
even ing services at 7 30

Va Pastor Bill Murphy Sunday SchoollO
am · Sunday evening 7 30 p.m Prayer
meeting and Blblrstudy WE'dnesday, 7 30
p m Ewryone welcome
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa
IE'm St RE"v Paul Taytor. pastor. Sundti!Y
School10a m. Sundayevenlng7 OOp.m.,
Wednesday £'venlng prayl'r meeting 7 00

pm
SOUTH BETHEL NF:W TESTAMENT

CHURCH, Silver Rld~e. Duane Sydens trtcker, pas tor Sunday School 9 a.m ,
Worship Sl'rvlre lOa m , Sunday t&gt;venlng
sl'rv icf', 7·00 p m Wt-dnl'5day night Bible
sfudy 7 OOpm

OUR sA VI OUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,

Walnut a nd Henry Sts R~venswood W
Va The Rev. Ceo I'll(' C Weirick, past (I'.
Sunday SChool9:30 a .m .: Sunday worship
llam

Thesp words describe what [experienced as I oncf:' i:igaln was ablr to

vis II Israel and Jordan EsiJ('Cially lrue was It uf thP oltl walled clly of
J erusa lem The narrow streets were void of the usuitl hustlf' and bu ~ l ll•
assoclaled with the old clly. all the cubby hoi• shops, one afleo anothr 1.

CAl, VARY BIBLE CHURCH.localedon

were stlen I with doors of steel barred Ugh I Thl' ernwdNl street ~ Wl'l &lt;'

Pomeroy Plk.e, County Road 2!'i near Flat·
Woods Rev Blackwood, pastor Servlcel
oo Sunday at 10 30a.m. and 7:30p.m with
Sunday School9 JOa m Bible Study, Wed·
nesday, 7 30 p m

nakl'd of any people except for an accaslonal tourist loukmg quite lonrly
and out of place
The Arabs were on slrlke because of lhe lrea1mcnl 1h&lt;'h brethorn In
Ihe West !;lank and the Gaza Strip' were receiving. Rocks were beln~
Ihrown all hose In aulhorlty and rubber bullets and canlsrcrs of tea r gas
came In exchange, many wounds were lx&gt;lng open('d. both physlcallv
and emollonally. Before real healing can be posslbl&lt;• an attitude of
brotherly love and of forgiveness will have lo preva 1l
Whal a parallel to Ihe place I had come from and was r.·turnlng 1o 1
thOught. The teachers slrlke had dampered much acllvlly and the usu~l
dally roullne of many Many wounds were opened physical!
emotionally and relatlonally again I though! real healing can only 6'.;
possible through an anlludlnal challgt'. Brother~ lov.e and forgiveness
will have to prevail How Is this poulble many quesllon•1 believe Iher~
Is scripture lh~! can help lhoSl' who are believers. It I• rouod In 11
Chronicles 7' 14 II My P,eQple, who are called by My name, shall humblt&gt;
themselves and pray, and seek My fa~e. and turn from I~elr wlck('d
ways, then I will hear from Heaven and will forulw Iholr sins and will
heal their Land."
·•
Any peace Is possible only 11 there Is righteousness The world cannot
offer peace and/or rtahteouaneoa. Only a commlltrJK&gt;nt to God and his
ways can bring about true peace.
·Pray lor the Peace of Jerusaleum.
.
Pray for the Pellce of Melp County.
- Melvllll. Frllllldln, P.....,. ol Eltlerprloe, Kee•--rla- --~~

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSAD,E FOR
CHRIST, S1 Rl 338, Antlqu1ty Rev
Franklin Dickens, pastor Supday mom·
lng 10 a .m . , Sunday evening 7•:1) p m
Thul'lday ~enlng 7•30 p.m

STIVERSVILLE COMMUNriY BAP
TIST CHURCH. Pastor Robert Byers

Sunday School10 a m.; Worship tervlce 11
am, Sunday evening' servlce,7:30 p m .,
Wednaday evening service 7:Jl p.m . 1

MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLI·
NESS CHURCH, Inc , 75 Pearl "SI. Rev ,

IvanMyen,actlnaput«r; RogerManlfY,

Sunday SchO&lt;Il Suporlnlendet~l Sun
day School 9· 30 a m, Momln1 wnhlp

Sr.,

10· 30 a m , evPnlng wonlltp 1 .ll p m ·
Wednesday evenlne Bible study, prayeof
llnd pratae aervtce, 7:30p.m.

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOLIC - VanZandt and Wahl Rd. Elder
Jam.. MIUer, putor. Sunday Srhool
10 30 a m , Worship Servlel!, Sunday, 7: 36
p.m.; Bible Study, Wedat!lday, 7.110 p.m.
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Harrl·
moville Road. Rev. Dewey Klllt, putor;
Cllnlm Faulk, Sunday School Supt ; Sun-

~

_...._

v~~

-

'

~

-·-,

'

Grover birthday
Brandon Grover celebrated his
first birthday with a party at his
home wllh his parents, Connie
Smith and Todd Grover. Also
atte nding was his brol her , Chris
topher Brlzel Smith. A clown
theme was carried out at the
party.
,
Others • attending were hos
grandparents, Joe and Joyce
Hall, Butch Grover, BE:verly
Roush. Susie and Patricia Sue
Smllh. Becky and Raymond John
Ward, Howard, Teressa and
Sarah Marte Jeffers. VIckie and
Bethany Boyles, Heather Boyles
Tina. Tracy and Wendy Collins,
Joe, Tim and Will Hall. Terri
Grover, Barry Yeager, LaDeana
Grover. Colena Mowery. Tony
Shoemaker, Rhonda. Michael
and Ashley Hoover, Jennifer
Chadwell
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs Homer B. Smith . Sr , Ron
Freeman. Homer. Jr. and Rita
Smith Games were played with
prizes going lo l3ethany Boyles
and Ashley Hoover. A gift was
also given to Christopher by Joe
and Joyce Ha II

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Square
dance from 8 to mldlght this
evening at Middleport American
legion Annex with music by
True Country Band; tickets at
door-. $3
"

---

'

Dar ADa Llmders: I am weary of
· reading letters in your column
about how family members neglect
their kin who are in nurm111 homes.
: Lord knows tbere is eniJU8h guilt to
go around without pili111 on more.
My 89-yeaM&gt;Id mother is in a
very good facility for the elderly.
Every time I see her she complains
that 'her sister and brolher do not'
write or call. I don't want to tell her
• that !hey both have been dead for
, 20 years. So, I listen and say, "Well,
maybe you 11 hear somethilll to.
,
" morrow."
Whenever I walk tnto mothers
• room she asks. "Why haven't you
• been here in such a Iolli time?" I
don't !"&amp;nt to tell her that I was
there yesterdliy - in fact I ha~
1 rarely missed a day in eight months.
i Some days she cloesJl'l&gt;know who
'I
and asks. "Wh~ doesn't my
daugh"r come to see me?" When I
1 tell ber that I am her dauaftter she
1 says, "No, your hair is gray. My
i daughter's hair is llarlt brown." She
~ then takes out pidures of me when
: I was a bride, 40 yean . . , and
• says, "Seef
; I can understand why reladws
! are reluctant to visit ihe elderly
; more often than is ablolutely _ .
• sary. It is drainina10 be around 8
: penon who is araummlltive, ncp-

ti~&gt;e and often irrational. And it's
also depressi111 to see my dear
mother, who was a wonderful
parent and ff'ierld in such a
confused state. I crY every time 1
leave ber.
So please Ann give us a break. SAD IN DOCAnJR
DEAR SAD: As USU8I there are
two sides to every story.
you
for 1ett1n1 us hear yours. It's not
new 10 me, inddenlllly. 1 have
beard it a lot and my hean goes out
to all of you.
'
Dar Au !•arlen: Recently my
father and YOU!IIIer siSin' went 10 8
national park for the day. While
there, my sister found a child's
purse. There WIS identification in it,
so she wrote to the girl to let her
know that she had found the purse
and that she wOuld send it to her.
Today my sister received a letter

Thank

am

from the lirl's motber ayina that
she is Pod my sister "admitted that
shr his the pune." The woman
added, "You can keep a dollar but
pleue return everytbina ebe."
Fortunately, my IIIIer, who is
only 8 ,an old, WIS not awa.e of
the holtiJe attitude and IIIXU!ItOl'y
tone that the WOliiiJI displa~ 1ft
that letter. But I WIS quite uJflel by
it. After all, my little sister did

Forty-five Melg~ area students
attending Ohio University have
been named to the dean's list for
the fall quarter.
Making at leas t a 3.3 grade
point ~verage out of 4 points to be
named to the list were DebOrah
Elaine Holland, Richard Allen
Hudson, Karen Elaine Waugh,
all of Route l, Cheshire; Ronald
Todd Clay. Chester; Melissa Ann
Calaway, Brian Keith Law, Dou·
glas E . Law, all of the Coolville
area; Randall David Bahr, Amy
D. Louks, Donna M. Coe Wolf, all
at the Long Bottom area; Dav1d
Scott Fisher, Sharon K. Wilson
Hawley, Mark Randall Smith, a II
of Middleport; Jeffrey Jon Arnold. Sherry Renee Arnold. John
Deryl Beaver, Mary Lee Cline,
Lea Ann Gaul, Jodi Ann Harrison. Christopher Scott Kennedy,

Phillip Roge r Kong. Kimberly
Kay Krautter . Steven Alan
Mu sser, Steven Paul Ohlinger,
Larry Scotl Powell, Terry Ann
McKee Simmons. Jennifer Leigh
Swartz, all of Pomeroy; Bruce
Donald Johnson, Portland, Ge
rald lee Dill, Jr • LOis Eltzabeth
Ihle, Melissa Kay Ihle, Kimberly
M. Maynard McFann , Ryan
Craig Oliver, Veronica Provo,
Rachel Laura Reiber, Diana
Marie Simpson, Dixie Kay Wolfe.
all of the Racine area; Amit y
Abigail Cauthorn, John Wetzel
Rice, Reedsville; Robert Steven
Nakamoto, Rulland; Sandy K
Hoy t. Ka ih y Alana Jones ,
Brend;:t Su san Sinclair, Cra1g
Alle n Sinclaor. all of the Shade
area, Julia Patricia Houaashell,
Syracuse.

Eastern vocal teacher honored
Valarie Ranslxillom, vocal
music Instructor at Eastern High
School. will be taking a quartello
the Capital University Honors
Festival In Columbus on Jan. 31
and Feb. l
Participating In the festival
will be quartets and octets of
selected singers from schools In
four slates The students will be
staying In dorms and will present
a concert on Monday at 7 p m.

Slinderella meets
At the Monday night Five
Points class of Sllnderella, Judy
Eblin was a top loser whtle Beth
Slivers lost the most weoght at
the Tuesday morning Five Points
class. At the Tuesday· night
Mason class, Terri Fife lost the ,
most weight and Jennl Little was
runner -up
Information on
classes which are open to new
members may be obtained by Jo
Ann Newsome, lecturer.

Susan Wolf will be accompa
nlst for lhe qu artel made up of
Heather Fon law. Laura Haw throen. Dav od Roce, and Chris
Spencer They will be singmg
"When Rooks Fly Homeward".
"Somebody'·s Calling Mv
Name", " Thou Who Wast God',
and " Praose Ye the lord of
Hosis "
The studen ts woll also be doong
solos for competitiOn and for
critique by the Un1vers1ty 's
musoc staff Mrs Ransboltom
and her husband woll accompany
lhe group lo Columbus.

BRANDON T FOWLER
I

Fowler
birth
Mr and Mrs Jeffrey Fowler
the fanner Tina Pierce, Mason
W Va are announcong the birit
of the or son. Brandon Tyler. Nov
8, at Pl easan t Va lley Hospllal.
Polm Pleasant. W. Va
The mfant we1ghed seven
pounds. five ounces. and was 22
onches long Mat e rna l grandmoth er lS Mildred Pierce SyracUse Paternal gra ndfat her is
Ja ckson Fowler, Mason, W. Va.

Receives degree
Timothy Ray Roberts , Reedsvolle. received hrs bachelor In
fme arts degree at the end of the
fall qua r ter from Ohoo Unoversity
on Athen s

Community calendar

POMEROY - Precptor Beta
Beta Chapter will ml!et at Lambs
"The Wizard 'of oz·• starring , Restaurant for dinner at 6 p m
Judy Garland, Ray Bolger, Jack before attending a performance
Haley and Bert Lahr.lsalmost50 of "Carousel" at Ohio Univeryears old, but retains Its popular- sity For additional Information
And - the names of class Ity year after year '!'he classic members may call 992 2732.
members whose addresses are will be shown again at 8 p.m on
CHESTE!t • - Chester Fire
needed Include Linda Atkinson. Wednesday, Feb. 24, on CBS
Department Is holding an open
Roger Atkinson. Debbie Barnhouse on Thurd&amp;y at 7:30 p.m ..
hart Delores Bush, Debbie Car
Wow! Only two more days left
son. Richard Carler. Donna In January and then the ground· for all local fire departments to
Francis, Kay Gilmore, Paul . hog will tell us where we headed
Hawk, Melissa Hooper. Cheryl Pretty sc1entlflc, huh ? J?o keep
Long. Nadine McMurray. Rick smlhng

i

"A,nd then I !hough! my dream had changed, thBtree1s no lonRer rang
Hushed were the glad Hosannas, the little children sang, Ihe strt'els
grew dark with mY-stery, Ihe nlghl was cold and chollt•rl," TheS&lt;• ar&lt;•
words from a very popular chrlsllan song tllll'd "The Holv Cllv"

7 30 p.m.

The Syracuse Fl re Departmenl will be sponsoring an
auction at 7 p.m on Saturday.
Feb. 6, at the fire station .
Merchandise will come from
R&amp;S Auctions with '' Mickey
McDonald serving as auctioneer

There are two ,sides
to the elderly's ·story

NEW HAVEN CHU{!CH OF THE NA·

Sermonette

a m , Evening worship 7:30 p m Tuesday
cottage prayer meeting and Bible Study
9 30 a m , WorShip ser:vlce, Wedneda:y

1

daya17 30pm
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP 128 Mill Sl

ZARENEl , Rev Glendon Stroud, pasror
Sunday School9 30 a .m : Worship service
10 30 a m . Y.oulh servtre Sunday 6 15 p'
m Su nday evening Sf'rvlc€' 1 OOp m Wed nesday PraYer Meeting and Bible Study
7 00 p m

Sarah Fisher, coordinator of
exhibits for the Meigs County
Plonl!er and Historical Society,
sends a note which I want to pass
along to you verbatim:
If you stopped by lhe Meigs
County Museum du ring the holi days, you saw our "Victorian
Parlor"
The furniture was loaned to us
by Mrs Richard Seyler.
We would now like to have a
permanent parlor and we are
asking for your help. This Is your
Museum and as members of the
Pioneer and Historical Society.
we are taking care of It and want
ot be something of which we can
all be proud.
II has a lot of posslbllltoe~. but
only you can help m ake these
possibilities come true.
Perhaps, you have some Item s
that have greal sentlnmental
val'!e and have been In your
(amlly for years. but do nol want
to permanently part with them.
Perhaps, you would consider
them on loan In honor of your
family. This would also be
appreciated
Followmg is the list of Items
needed:
Love seat or settee: two parlor
chairs, three tables (Iwo end
tables and a coffee table, pictures for walls , two lamps: old
rug or rugs; baskets, and a
wooden kltchdn table and chairs.
There are many Meigs Counltans who have never been inside
'the Museum. Please take time to
stop by. We can all be proud of the
museum and we do nl!ed your
help.

vout

- Joseph B Hoskins, evangellsf Sunday
Bible Study 9 a.m., Worship, 10 am , Sunday evrnlng service 6 p m ; Wednesday
evening service, 1 p m.

·Ohio University dean's li~t giv~~

Mendenhall, Donna Michael.
Martha Miller, David Mitchell,
John Nelson. Connie Schultz ,
Connie Smith , Randy Snider,
Delores Stanley, Mark Still and
Charles Varian.

Meigs High School is planning Its
15th reunion and needs
help
m localmg some of the class
members - there were 208
"'lembers In that class.
The reunion will be only for the
class, definitely note a Me igs
High School Alumni Reunion,
spouses and guests will be held
on Sunday, July 3 at the new
American Legion Hall in Middleport . Once again. some of the
class members will be printing a
book contal)llng Information on
. what's happening to members of
the class and where they're
Hiving these days
t If r.-ou can help wtth the
ai!dresses of S'ome the "lost "
members, please gel In touch
with Edle King, 39054 Bradbury
Road. Mlddleporl. phone 992·
' 3821, or Linda Faulk, 45026
Whipple Road, PomerO:v. 992·
247&gt;

Main Sf Mlddlt'J)ort Rev. Gilbert Craig,
Jt , pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunda y School Supt Sunday School9·30 a
m Worship Service, 10·45 am

v ice 11 a m , Sunday eveninK service,
7:30pm Wt'dnesday prayer me&lt;&gt;tlng, 7· 30

Page--7

The 1973 graduating class of

MT MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourlh and

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, Mason, W

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH

St

.....

I

"

, , o\lll, ..

lill Qu11ktl and luth lnn F01 ,

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD

CHRIST, Joseph B Hoskins, pastor Bible
Class 9 30a m . MornlngWors hlp 10·30a
m , Ev~nlng Worship, 6· 30p m Thursday
Bibl&lt;' Study, 6 30 p m
HVRCH,..IIiallldr!Qt_SefloGI ~@;:;,5 !.•

lOb Butternut Awe., Pom~roy, Oh.

POMEROY. OHI0-992-6677

992-2975

non-Pentecostal Worship service Sunday
10 a m . Sunday School 11 a.m Evening
worship servlcC' 7 00 p m Wednesday
prayer mpet lnl! 7 00 p rn.

_ Wrdnesday 7 30 p m
BEI\RWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY

"

(6141992-2039 or
(6141992-5721

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

day School9· 30 a m , morning worship. l1
a rn , Sunday evening service 7 30 p m
Prayer Met?-!lng Wednesday. 7 30 p.m

land RaC'InE'Road William Roush pastOI'
Linda Evans, c hurch school dlrE"ctor
Church sc ho ol 9 30a m, Morning worship
\0 30 a m • Wednesday ev~nlng prayer
servl ces 7 30 p m

Anedo. pastor Sunday service 9 30 a m ,
eve nlngservl ce 7 30p m Prayer meeting,

I

FLOWER! FOIIYEIY OCCASION

Friday, January 29. 1988

.
... ----·•
....

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff
Easter Is CQmlng on strong Aprll3, this year
-and the Meigs
Unit of the
American
Cancer Society
has a ttractlve
yellow flowered
tins or cookies
which would make great Easter
gifts.
The unit has several cases of
the cookies for sale and If you
want to help you can call the
office, 992-7531. or Lillian Moore
at home. 992-7231.
The seven dollars Is well spent
since proceeds are used to help
Meigs County care for callcer
patients with such things as
travel money to and from doctor
and hospital appointments, medIcation or a portion of expense 10
those who need help In their
battle against cancer.
Lillian Moore says If you place
an order for cookies , a member
of the g~oup will get them to you
or you can stop by the office on
Tuesdays and T~ursdays from 9
a.m. ·to 4 p.m. By the way, do
keep In mind thaqt the unit 's
office is in the former Meigs
General Hospital building, the
rear entrance

'

Brown's Fire &amp;SafetJ
Equl'pment Sales and

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

We all make the miStake of assuming that anything
on this earth will go on forever, and building our
lives upon 1t; for thiS is simply not true. The tides
of business can turn, and even long-established
mmpanies may suddenly go under. Whole towns
can be leveled by earthquakes oF tornadoes.
Mountains rise and fall; shorelines advance and
recede. Even the stars change positions, however
imperceptibly, during our lifetimes. The lives of
human beings are in a constant state of change,
w1th the passage of ume. The only thing in this
world that remains unchanged is the love of Cod.
We should thank Him for it and realize that 1t may
cause even some of these tragedies to be blessings
in disguise. It's all in His universal plan, and you
are a part of it.

Grocer•es-

TiiE NA7..A
RENE, Com .&gt;! Unlon :md Multl&gt;nv Rl'V

i,:•" ', ;••''

NarHING IN THIS WORLD IS
PERMANENT EXCEPT GOD'S WVE

General Merchand•se
Rac1ne 949 2SSO

POMEROY CHuRL'Il OF

f't

Phone(614) 742·2771

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SONS STORE

992-5141

•

The _Daily Sentinel

~

"

Easter and ACS cookies
ar~ a winning combination

Potne'Dy FlowBI $hop

214 E . Main
992· 5130 Pomeroy

E

TRINITY lliURCH .,._ John lllfi, past"
Dcbbi&lt;' Buck Sundav School Supt Chu rch
&amp;hool 9 15 ,, rn Wors hlp Srrvl~ 10 :l) a m
C'hol! reh('arsal Tut"&gt;Sd~ 7 30 p m urri£'1 dl
rr.cr km of l.oLS Bun

Pomoroy

~e.m-

"Serving Fomolies"
264 S. 2nd, Moddleporl

•••
.., •
1

115 E. Mamorial Dr.
992·2104

-BR~

FUNERAL HOME

•• •
... •

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

Pomeroy

992· 2955

~awlings-Coats-Biower

.. '

s

Prescriptions

--- . ...

Beat of the bend

'

•

•

By The Bend

1

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE

~~!!!

"

Nationwide Ins. Co.
ol Columl&gt;us. O.
804 w. Ma•n
992-lllB Pomeroy

·...

Ann '
Landers

have to write to the girl in the fim
place. Sire could have kept the purse
and forgotten all about it. But we
were not raised to be dishonest and
she is the kind of person who
would do the rigbt thing.
How sad, I thought. What could
have been the stan of a lovely
long-di1tan.:e friendship turned out

view Chester's new tanker . Refreshments wlll be served .
RUTLAND - Roller skating
will be offered Friday. 6: 30 to
8. 30 p.m , and every Friday
Pllereaft..-. at Rulland Glvlc
Center. $1 students. $2 adults
Spectators free. Special time will
be allotted for skateboarders.
SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM - A: benefit
sing for David Prall, of Baker
Road. Pomeroy, will be held
Saturday, 7 p m , at the Word of
Lofe Church, Burlingham. Sev
era! singing groups will be
featured. Everyone welcome.

to be a sad disappoinbnent.
I hope the mother who wrote
that letter sees this one in your
column and realizes the damajje she
could have caused had my sister
undentood the Ufl8er!erosity of her
words. Sign me -JACKSONVILLE,
FLA.
DEAR JACKSONVILLE: If the
woman reads my column she can't
help but see he~lftoday.
How empty are the lives of those
who are suspicious and untrusti!lfl
and see the worn tn everyone. 1bey
miss out on all the fun in life.

Plannrng a weddrng? What's
r~ghr? What's wrong? "The Ann
Landm Guidefor Bridts" wiU relieve
)I(IUI' anxiety. To rectWe a ropy, send
$2.50 plus a No. /0, stl/-addrtssed,

One Day 0

stamptr/ mlltlopt (39 cmts fJO.SIQir)
to Ann lAndm, P.O. &amp;x JJS62, Chi~.

Ill. «AS/1{}562.

1983 FORD LTD ................................ S2995

4 dr .. PI, PI, Air. Color t.n, II cyl.

1984 MERCURY TOPAZ .................... S3995

4 dr .• good

condl~.

PI, PS, Air. White.

1985 FORD RANGER 414 ................ S6995

Pl. PS. Sliding ...., window, Nnnlng bcNirda.

1983 DODGE ARIES .......................... S2195

2 Dr.. euto, Pl. PI, Air.

6-7:00P.M.
I
•

'

'

NISTAYION
s,••••,... " .,............ hpt.

•.,.p••

?l ,,. .

~

us

MIIDIIhl

976

CAl f·150 ........,•• S1295
113 COUll
POMEROY
992-2054

�·.

'
Page 8-The Daily Sentinel

Ashland reassigns worker-s
at .Kentucky headquarters

•

PlTISBURGH 1UPI) - Ashland Oil Inc. has reassigned lour
managing employe£•s .at its Ashland. Ky .. headquarters ,as a
result of ,the Jan. 2 storage tank rupture and on splU Into 1M
Monongahela River, a published report said today.
The four employees, who held various engineering and
supervisory positions, were shifted to the company's product
applications and crudp oil supply division. the Pittsburgh
Post-Gazette reported.
The newspaper said three of the employees had prevlou.sly
worked on thP 'reconstruction site of the storage tank In
Jefferson. Pa., that collapsed, du'mplng more than 700,000
gallons of diesel oil Into the Monongahela River. The oil
subsequently flowed into the Ohio River.
The Post-Gazette quoted an Ashland spokesman as saying the
employees' duties were changed as' a "result of an Internal
investigation" Into the mishap.
The Pittsburgh Press reported Wednesday In a copyright
story that Ashland knew more than a year before the spill
occurred that many of the tank's welds were defective.

' Perry Superintendent Gene
Feucht said a family complained

~F~~~~.J~·~~~~~29~~~1~9~8:8-----------------------------P~~~~~~~M~~~~~~~.o~~h~~----------~--------------T-he_._o_ai~lv_s_e_n_~·n_e_I~P_a_ge_-__~ ;

Journalists -: debate school :publishe~ role·
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPih·A U.S.
Supreme Court - decision that
restrl~ts hjgh school journalists
defines the role Of administrators
.as the publishers of school
newspapers, an educator and .
former newspaper editor said. '
William Day. a Universi ty of
Toledo associate professor of
journalism who spent 32 years
with the Toledo Blade, said he
agreed wllh the Supreme Court's
decision "almost 100 percent."
"Somebody lias to be the
boss," Day told a panel sponsored by the Society of Professional JournalistS Thursday .
He said the- ruling determined
· that school administrators are
the ultimate authorities governIng the high school press.
The_Su preme Court In a Jan. 13

Polygamist shootout .ends standoff,.killil!g one ·official
.

decision upheld a Hazelwood, tlon member, .said administra'· vote If It were a university
Mo., principal who ordered two tors must recognize they ar.e not newspaper." he said.
Dale Price. adviser for the
pages of tile school newspaper trained as journalisis and theredeleted because the stories dealt fore must show restraint in their Woodward High School Tattler
• newspaper, said he must now '
with teenage pregnancies and role as publishers.
"We're not professional jour· allow an assistant principal
divorce.
~review each edition before It goes
Other journalists, however, nallsts," he said.
Wilkowski, a lawyer, said he to press following a confrontation
argued that the court's action
will ·stifle student voices willie thought ·the declsto·l was a good with Toledo school officials.
The November issue
threatening the discussion of one.
f was con·
t
, Dennis Hale, an associate fiscated because o a s ory
controversial issues.
Allee Lora, a newspaper ad- professor of journalism at Bo· Involving a school nurse. Price
viser lor Ottawa Hills High wllng Green State Unlv.,rslty, admitted that the story was
School, said the ruling will allow said the outcome may hav.e been unbalanced because the reporter '
administrators to quash stories . different had college students failed to obtain the nurse's side
thi!Y find unfavorable, even If th.e been Involved because the uni· . before wrlttlng the story.
.
reports are balanced and fair'.
"I'm not totally pleased (with '
verslty press Is generally recog·
Keith Wilkowski, a Toledo nlzed as being Independent of the the court), but at least they came
Public Schools Board of Educa- administration.
out and •aid who was in charge, " ..
"I think we'd get a dlffurent Price said.
'\ ~f '

.

By CHERRILL CROSBY
MARION, . Utah (UP)) - It
started when polygamist Addam
Swapp blew Up a Mormon church
to bring forth the vengeance and
resurrection he had seen In ..a
divine revelation, vengeance
against those he said murdered
his patriarch. It ended, as he had
promised. In death. .
'
A brief but furious shootout
Thursday left a veteran corrections officer dead fr.om a highpowered slug that found a seam.
In his bullet-proof vest. Swapp,
· who . admitted bombing the
church In order to force a violent
confrontation that would lead to
the Second Coming, was badly'
wounded but expected to survive.
The other 14 members of the
radical polygamous clan , IncludIng six small children, came out

•

Bib-e distribution . ~hallenged
By United Press International
Bibles have been dis tributed to
students in many Ol!lo school
. districts for years, but officials in
·some northeas t Ohio districts
pla n to discontinue the practice
because of the potential for
lawsuits.
School offic ials in Medina,
Portage, Summit, Wayne and
Stark counties say they have
allowed the Ohio Association of
Gideons International to distrib·
ute free Bibles to students even
though \hey knew the action
could resu1t in lawsuits.
· Brunswick officials and those
from the Perry school district in
Sta rk County, however, say they
have decided to discontin ue the
practice because of challenges.

I

Friday. january 29. 1988

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

·,

filed by the state of Wisco nsin
against Chrysler. ·
"We don't want ·to shoot from
"We would explore our standthe hip." Steagell sa id. "There
lng to do this. We're checking It
are peoplewith less t·han 10 years out with our lawyers," Kuzel
who literally don't have 11 future:· said. ''We're going to check
but we have to look a t our tota l every lao/ful option." .
membership."
.
Some workers 'were In favor of
Kuzel sa id the overall mood of an immediate 'strike vote, while
the meeting was tha t "the others adopted a wait-a nd-see
majority of the people said to attitude. .
keep working, honor the contract
"I don't see anything happenand do what the leadership lng before Feb. 4." said Thomas
says."
Haschker , 43, of Kenosha. "If
The union is scheduled to meet
there was a strike right now, It
Feb. 4 with Chr-ysler officials to. .could jeopardize an.l!.beOIIlil.ll.iWJ
disc uss pensions and the employ- plant workers. I would say If they
ment in vest me nt program,
took a vote right now Ins ide
Kuzel said.
there, they would go 10n strike) ."
Ku ze l sa id about $60 million
"We co uld take a strike vote
had b&lt;een pu t into tha t ·program
and I'd like to see that," said
and workers at Kenosha plant Laymona Houston, 33, of Kenoshould be entitled to between sha, an employee for 14 ·years.
$8,000 and $10,000 each.
"We shouldn 't .be wimpy and just
Workers contributed to that go into th e plant like nothing's
plan between 1982 and 1985, Kuzel . happening. As a union, I'd like to
said. After 1985. they were at leas t take a vote."
supposed to get some of that
Martin Brunella, 47, who has
money, but all they saw was a
spent 29 years with AMC a nd
very small pa yment .in 1985.
Chrysler, said, ''I ca n't agree
Kuze l said another oj)!ion be· with that. I' ve been through this
ing considered was a class-action time and time again. You have to
lawsuit a nd th at the union would si t down and negotiate these
go a long with a lawsuit if one Is kind s of things. "

"We've been saying for some
time that' the defense budget has
been going down , and when you
get cuts you have to take this Jclnd
of action," Carlucci said before
addressinR 8' meeting of the

.. . .

Announcements
Trustees to meet
Sutton Townslllp Trustees will
meet Monday, Feb. 1, 7:30p.m. ,
at the Syracuse Municipal
Building.

Hospital dews
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday admissions- Geraldine Scott, Ga llipolis; Stanley
McGuire, Middleport.
Wednesday discharges · ~ Ma·
rllyn Oiler. Herbert Shields,
Jeffrey Evans, June Cremeans.

military capability that has
become obvious ... they intend to
develop, that poses a disti nct
threa t." he said.
·
Carlucci said withholding resources from the Contra rebels
fighting the Sa_ndanlstas would
Increase the risk to America n
strategic Interests, but added
that U.S. budget restraints have
created a situation where "it
looks like what wlll
will
he an increase in

tl''SFASTI

Singer
daughters.
andSinger's
Vickie
Singer, 44,
one of John
two widows, ,were Indicted on
charges of bombing the chapel.
which was gutted by ab!Jut 100
POLYGAMIST- Addam Swapp arrives at the
University of Utah Hospital Thursday just two
hours after he was shot In the chest and forearm
following a gun batlle at his larnUy's Marion,

:,

·'

."

·..; I .

I

'I
'•'

..
REMEMBERING CHRISTA- Watts Elemen·
tary School students Julie Murray, 6, and Noel
Kaufl, 8, take part In a wreath-laylnge!eremony at
a statu~ honoring school teacher Christa McAii·

,.

llffe and six other ~tronauts who 'died two years
ago wh en the shuttle Challenger exploded. The
schooils located In Charleston, W.Va. (UPI)
· ,

The Pentagon's budget proposal thfsyearwllli nclud e"ma jor
force structure reductions and a
number of program kills in order
to be sure that the smaller force
that we have · will be fully
effective," Ca rlucci said.
. Because of the . failure of

.'

plans to ease the " adversarial"
relationship It has with the
defense industry as part of a new
quality management stra tegy.
''That rela tionship should be
an arms length re la tionship, but
it need not, and should not, be a
hos tile relationship. Cooperation

MIDDLEPORT
FLOWER SHOP
MASON CO. DEUVEIY
mLL AVAUILE
FUll SDVICE
. 992-3533

ow••·

DONNA AINOlD,

...

..

'

_ ;1s~l~m~po~r~ta~n~t~,":h~e:s:a~ld~-~;~;~·;·~•:l:ll~J:a~•:s~ON::.~CA~I:OL~P~IO:Ff~l:n~,•

1
f~:~es~~:s~~~~agon

Cohgress
to provlce
fund·
ing year-to-year,
the stable
Pentagon
Is ·
'being forced to cancel weapons
and reduce

..

SUPER SATURDAY SA~IN8S
MARGUERITE SHOES!!

PRODUCTS
• Hospit•t Beds

•

• Oxysen Concentrators
Bathroom Saltty Oevice~-· Portable O~en
Wheelchairs
·
'• · Allernatin&amp; Pressure Pad
• ' Walkers
Tens Units
• Rewiratory Therapy
Cl- Monitors

Cammacles

ne~:r ~r: !~~~~~ the work equip·

SIIVICI- 7 DAYS A WIEI
BENEFITS .,

ment and we're trYing to figure
out how that happened," Black
said.
·

• No chirp reptacament on
biiCk up ICIUiPG*'t. , ·

thet~py .

• Qilltlc respon11 to
set

"tw

patient
pickups or

ups,

. rtPia~tl.

• Sensitive knowled1e1ble
Pltltnl CGIIIICb.

• Ont p11ont Cll Cln yournetc11.

',.·

all

. •Dirwt lediCIN, lledlalltld llfiYitt IIIIIIIMI 111111...

&amp;•111111111
. . . JrAftOI

11/ Oau, 9•c:•

MUIICAI. lQIIIPMENT I IUI'I'IJ(S

115 I. •

"141 "1·1110

rrW • .. Pt 1111~. 01. 4S7"

·'The next thing that happened
I ·was knoclced forward . I hit my
head on the seat tn front of me
and I fell to the floor . There were
people screaming."
The four tracks on the overpass
- immediately were closed, although one track was reopened to
traffic shortly before 5 a.m., said
Amtrak spokeswoman Marc!
-Larson. Trains traveling past the
accident site In both di rections·
were delayed by as much as 35
minutes as they took turns using
the one .open track.
The Northeast Corridor stretching from Washington to
Boston - handles about 100
trains carrying 39,000 people on .a
normal day. Larson said.
"The er;r!phasls Is to get the
other tracks open as soon as o
ppsslble. But as the morning
progresses, delays co,uld be
longer,' ' Larson said.
The National Transpo~ta tlon
Sit!ety Board was to Investigate
why Amtrak track repair equipment and the passenger train
were using the same track.
"It .was on a track that was-out
of service." Chester pollee Sgt.
Donald Swanson said. "There
were crews working on the track
but they were not hurt. We don't

:~~ ~~~~u~~~c%~~~u~

Disposables
• Home BP Monitors

IPPI Units

• No cost respiratory
dllpoublts.

By MICHAEL DABNE·Y
CHESTER, Pa. (UPI) -Amtrak's "Nightowl" train ca rrying
130 people rolled down a tra ck
closed for repairs, hit a machine
and derailed early today, knocking screaming passengers out of
their seats and lnjurlng24 - none
seriously, authorities said.
All 10 C!ars and two engines of
the train. en route' from Washington .to Boston, jumped the tracks
on, a 16-!oot-hlgh overpass In the .
12: 34 a.m. accident In Chester, 1 ~
!Diles south of Philadelphia.
"We,were traveling along and
all of a sudden the lights went out
and 1 knew the.train was off the
tracks and on the ties,'' said
passenger Orlando Dixon of
Washlngton.,"I thought we were
going to go down the

upright on the overpass .
heads," he said. "People were
_
"There was a jolt and a loud confused."
noise,' ; another passenger sa,ld.
The train' s enginee r, Mark
"We started wobbling and lean- Kenny, 36, of Bricktown. N.J..
Ing to one side. 1 was ·very · was admitted to Crozer-Chester
scared.''
Medical Center for observation.
Mike Jefferson, who lives He suffered facial cuts and
about' 150 feet from the track, bruises, a nursing supervisor
said the crash "sounded like said. Six other crew memliers
chains or something. There was were treated at hospitals for
no loud noise at all." '
· · · minor Injuries and reie~.
"I went outside and saw people
Swanson sald none of -the
wandering around holding their peo~11etaken to Sacred Heart and

Taylor hospitals and Crozer·
Chester Medical Center lmmeo
diately· after the accident .were
seriously hurt .
t
"They're pretty much OK,"
said Diane Bodnar, night supervisor at Taylor Hospital. "They
have pain In their legs. backs and
necks and they are being X·
rayed."

J•

Diane Yerger, night supervi·
sor at Sacred He art Hospital,
said. "No one seems seriously
Injured at this point. One lady
said she had butterflies . She
seemed nervous more than a nything else. Others said they had .
back pain. We'll know more after
they are evaluated."

618 East M·a· t'n Street
POMEROY, OHIO
Open 9 AM -8 PM Weekdays, 9-5 Saturday. Phone 992-6674

l~~~~~~=~===============~~~:
..

·wE ARE PLEASED TO
ANNOUNCE THE
·RESUMPTION OF PRACTICE
OF OUR ADULT AND
PEDIATRICS-UROLOGY
OFFICE AT PLEASANT
VALLEY HOSPITAL. ·

Dr. Shrikant Vaidya, ILD.

•

.,

675-6060
VALLEY DRIVE
POINT' PLEASANT, WV

''A RICANS' I 1_98-6
'THRE AWAY 7·5 .
PERCEN,T o·FTHE
AD~ERTISIN8 AIL

•!

..

THE~ RECEIVED.'~·

rrs SIDE- The eape of Amtrak's "NIJhtowl" pasaeapr
train lleB on Its side after deraUiaJ early Friday near Philadelphia.
The trahl with .130 pur,engers and crew was traveling from
Washington en route to Boston. Official!!. report 18 Injuries, none
r,erlous. Ui&gt;l
"·
·

•

•sOURCE: STUDY BY THE
NAnONAL ADVERTISING BUREAU.

know why It was on the wrong •,r.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;~;~;;;;;;;;:;;;l
track."
1
.Amtrak spokesman Clifford
Black said the train hit a ballast
regulator. a machine about the

Nebulizers

• lift Chairs

cost to , ... patient.

Swappof, explosives
told re latives
he .
pounds
.'
bombed the church as part of a
revelation from God that told
him the state's "deadly force"

H&amp;R BLOCit ·

embankm~nt.

"Home Health Care" ·

consultltlon PfCII'Im at no

Utah, farm. Swapp and 14 other members of his
family had been held up In the farm for 13 days.
Swapp and his mother-In-law, Vickie Singer, were
charged In the Jan. 16 bombing of a Monnon
Church chapel. UPI

, Amtrak passenger train derails, ,24 hurl

WHEN IT COMES TO FEEUNG
Wild -.HEB'S NO ltlACE II'E
HOME CONTINUitY OF CAll ·'

• Continual patient revisits and

614) 992-6606

Program.

AT ·

•
•
•
~

•
Americare-Pometoy ..
Nursing and
Rehabilitation·
Center·

WHENYOUCAN
GETYOURMONEY FAST!

In operation .

American Defense Prepared·
ness Association.
"This is an appropriate actio n.
I th ink what they're trying to do
is preser ve the work for ce, yet
ac hieve the necessary savings,"
he said:
, "Paradoxically enough, that Is
'the account that funds readiness
an d sust.ainability, and it is the
Congress that has consistently
paid lip service to the importance
of readiness and sustainabilltyc
Yet that's tl\e very account they
they've cut most severely," he
said.
Carlucci sa id he could not
predict wehth e r the furloughs
were a one·tlme occurrence.
In other remarks, Carlucc i
said more Aml'rica n forces could
be forced to be deployed in the
Gulf of Me~ico region if Nicaragua's Sandinlsta government
conti nues to build up its military.
" Jf they build up thei r military
machine, which Is already way
out of proportio n, to its needs In
Ce ntral America, II they build up
that military machine even
niore, we ha ve to divert more
forces to the Gulf for simple
purposes of deterrence," Carlucci said.
"Jf you have .a consolidated
communis t regime in Nicaragua
that begins to develop the kind of

ACTIVITIES fOR All
INTERESTS

TAX REFUND

Furlough coming·_ for 80,000 Air Force. workers
DAYTON, Oh io (UP I J- About
80,000 civilian workers a·t Air
Force bases in six stat es !nclud·
i ng Ohio will be placed on a
furlough because of budget cu ts
imposed by Congress, f-ir Force
officials said Thursday.
The civi lians work a t ma jor Air
Force Logistics Command centers. including AFLC's head quarters at Wright -Patterson Air
Force Base, wher(' the furlo ugh
will affect-7.200 workers: AFLC is
in charge of Air Force parts and
supplies.
Defense Secretary Frank Car·
Iucci, who was in Dayton Thu rsday. criticized the milita ry
budget cuts, say ing "Congress
has consistently paid lip S!"rvice
to the importance of readiness
and sustalnability, yet that 's the
very account they've cut most
severely."
AFLC spokeswoman Mynda
Mc.Guire said the furlou ghs
would be concentrated in six
AFLC centers. in addition to
Wright -Pat te rson . They are the .
Aerospace Guidance a nd Metrology Center. Newark Air Force
Base, Newark, Ohio; Okla homa
Air Logistics Center. Tinker Air
Force Base. Okla.; Warner Robins Air Logistics Center, Robins
Air Force Base, Ga.; Ogden Air
Logisl!cs Center, Hill Air Force
Base, Uta h; Sacramento Air
,..) Logistics· Center, McClellan Ai r
Force. Base, Calif.; and San ·
Antonio Air Logistics -Center,
. Kelly Air Force Base, Texas.
The furloughs would be for a
period of up to 10 days, without
pay, before the .end of the fisca l
year ends Sept. 30, AFLC off!·
clals said .

surrender.
a.m., when Swapp and his against the clan would result In
assault on federal o!ficers .
Swapp declared the family
brother, Jonathan, 19, came out the resurrection of John Smger
Swapp will face Identical
me!nbers a separate "nation with rifles to do chores and wer'e and Jesus Christ.
charges once he recovers, pro· :
under God," I hat dld not recog·
met by the snarling attack dog of
John Singer , excommunicated secutors said.
•
nlze civil authority.
•
Lt. Fred l{ouse of Orem, a stat!" from the Mormon Church for
"Leave this valley· imme· corrections officer who was one heresy, was killed during a
· diately," Swapp·wrote.
· of -several officers who slipped standoff with pollee on the same
"Mr. Bangerter - This nation Into a farm building during the remotefarm,40mileseastofSait
of Zion, which .has suffered so night in hopes of surprising Lake City. Officers sent to arrest
many abuses under lhe hands of Swapp and separating him from him for defying a court order
I
your government, makes no the children.
·
involving the self-education of
compromise with you r nation of
Shots rang out. and House fell his children said he pointed a gun
hyprocrlsy. lies and . deceit. mortally wounded . An armored at them.
.
Those who would come against
personnel carrier sent to plcl&lt; · ·During a hearing Thursday
my people. will I verily cause .to him up was met by about 100 before u.s. Magistrate Ronald
be destroyed. "
gunshots from the farmho use. An Boyce, Vickie Singer pleaded
Bangerter said authorities had
FBI agent was hit In the chest but innocent to charges of assaulting
·
no choice but to take adlon.
his bullet -proof vest. saved him.
federal officers, possession of
"We felt 1the · letter) clearly
Swapp, who took up the cause explosives. destruction by explo{
closed the door," he said. "They of Vickie Singer's slain polyga- ~s~lv~e=S~il~n~d~a~l~d~in~g:._~in~f~o:rc~l~b:lej_t===========:
were not interested ln .a peaceful mist husband, John,alter he was r
killed in a similar standoff at the
resolution. "
The gunfire started about 8:30 farm nine years ago, was hit In
the chest and arm and was In
serious condition at University of
Utah Medical Center In Salt Lake
City.
Gary DeLand, the statecorrec·
tions department director, said
the bullet that killed House went
through a door frame and a seam
of his body armor ·'so obviously
somebody was using a highpowered rifle with-probably, my
guess, steel-j acketed ammuni·
tlon, ar mo r-p i erci n g
ammunition ."
Use-H&amp;R Block's Rapid Refund
Inside the farmh ouse were 13
It's available whether H&amp;R Block prepares
rifles, "numerous cases of a m·
munition," plus knives boobyyour taz return or not.
traps and several sticks ·or
dynarnlte believed left over j roin
the church bombing.
·
Swapp, married to two of the
FormoredetailsortoseeifyouqualifycallH&amp;RBlocknow.

WHY WAIT
FOR YOUR

last week about the Bible distri- Garfield school students In Porbution that has been going on In tage CountY' if they have their
his district for more than ' 25 parents' permission and (f the
years. The possibility of a lawsuit students pick up the books af~er
prompted Feucht to decide to -school.
stop givi ng out the Bibles next
''I guess I'm comfortabl!' with
year. he said. ,·
It because we're not using part of
"We don 't want to spend the the school day for Bible distribumoney to go to court ," he told the tion," Superintendent Wllllain
Akron Beacon Journal In a Frazier said.
'
Thursday story. "Our agreement
Lake schools In Stark County
!with the family) ·was we have to will stop the distribution next
back off."
·
year, though there were no
A legal adviser to Brunswick complaints In that district.
schools last . week convinced
Bible distribution already· is
officials there to stop givi ng prohibited by Akron, Norton,
Bibles to students.
Ca nton and. Medina city schools.
Eileen Roberts, executive dl· ' Other districts that allow Gl·
rector ol the American Civil dean Bibles to . be passed out
Libertie,, Union, sa id Bible distri- include Green and Coventry in
bution in public schools Is uncon- Summit County and Black River,
stitutional because It viola tes the Highland and Wadsworth in
separation of church and sta te.
Medina County.
Bibles ·a re made availa ble to

Chrysler worker~ ponder strike
KENOSHA, Wis. IUPI) Union workers- at Chrysler
Corp.'s productio.n plant in Keno·
sha say they will consider the
opt!on of striking·in protest of the
automakfili''S decision to close the
aging facility .
Rudy Kuzel. shop commit tee
chairman of United Auto
Workers Local 72 and former
un!Gri loca l president. sa id Thurs·
day a strike might only be 'used if
all other options fail.
.
' 'I don:t think you should
emp hasize the st rike option."
Kuzel said following a closeddoor m ee ting with union
members . " It would be used only
as a las t res&lt;&gt;rt. l don't wan t you .
to think we'll be doing this in the
near futu re. We'll ex plore all of
our alternatives first.''
Chrysler a nnounced Wednes· day it wo uld end a utomobile
producti~n at the former Ameri ·
ca n Motors Corp. plant · by
September , a move that could
cost an estimated 5,500 workers
their jobs.
Ed Steagell. presiden t of Loca l
72, said considera tion would havp
to be give n •to a II workers.
including about 1.000 workers at
ttij&gt; engine line tha t is· to remai n

of their mountain stronghold
with hands In the air and were not
hurt.
Police said they had no choice
but to ta·ke action against Swapp.
his mother-i n-law, Vickie Singer,
and the rest of the clan that had
held o(f about SO state and federal
officers since blowing up the
nearby chapel Jan. 1!&gt;.
Officers with an attack dog
used the cover of darkness to slip
Into a farm building, backed up
by two armored personnel carri·
ers and a military helicopter.
After saying for days , they
would not storm the compound .
mostly because oft he presence of
the chlldre11,. .authorities were
apparently driven to action when
Swapp a nd Singer sent out a
defiant, dogmatic response to
pleas by Gov. Norm Bangerter to

'•

MARGUEITIE SHOES

102 EAST IIAIN

992·1619

POMIIOY, OHIO

' \

The authorized speed on that
stretch of track Is 110 mph,
although the train Involved In the ·
accident was only author\tlzed
for 90 mph. •·we don't know how .
rut the train wu eotne at the
time of the derailment," L11r10n
said.
. The front of lltt train had just
cleared an overpa~~a when the
coDillon occurred. oae locomotlvt • tumbled dOWn a 111-foot
embaJikmellt and clebrll from
tilt train •llt!Wered onto the.
m.ta bekllr. 8oth locomotives
and two llaJpplllrlllndld oa
t11e1r tldel.- The puMQtl' ean
left the traclla but remallled
IJ

De
· Ilclous.Dl1 h81 I.
Enjoy the v.ryflnetl In home atyle
COoking at the verybeat prices around I

.= . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.

'

$349
~DAY
.
. · $J49
... .Steak ...........~....................................
.

s,S3••so

E!'rr...,...........................;..............
XWJI\IRA.Y IIHf Sa...wlch. _,.........................
ii(i;t

·

2::.• lalltd Chide• __.......................,.SJCt
~~~ . . . . . . . . . . .~. . . . . -..~-·'1"

..

The I)aily Sentinel

11011St .... tin SAl. 61SO A.M.·IaOO P~
'

WE DELIVER!.

..,

�-

-

•

Friday, January 29, 1988

LAFF·A·DAY

44

51

Apartment
for Rent

218ThlriiA,. Fob 1,2. 3 9·1

lurH. eome 1ppltance1

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

•Adt ou1side Me1g1, Gtlhe or Mtton cou nttes Must be pre
ptld

• A oct~vo t 50 diiiC'CM~nt for edt Pfld m tdvance
•Fr" ..ts- Giwawev tnd Found tdtunder 15 words will be
run 3 deyt 11 no ch.-ge
• Pnce of ad for til ctptt.llette,.. •• double pnce of ad coat
•7 pomt hn• type onty uud
· sent~nel lt not respon11bte for erront~ fte r first day (Cheek
for enon firtt dav ad runs in paper) Call before 2 00 p m

I

RATES
0·11WGIIOS 11· 8 WOIIDa 11·311 WOIIDI
•• 00
t7.00
•• 00
10AYI
00
•• 00
.. 00
30AYI
nl 00
.13 00
I :JAYI
MOO
•21 oo
n:s.oo
121 00
1DOAYI
MO.OO
11100
1 MONTH
133.00

.,o

•

•A

cla~S iftt&lt;t

advertisement placed tn The Detty Sentmelltx·

a ..ocouoty

··--

--Oollpollo

COPY DEADliNEMONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
FRIDAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 1 1 00 A M SATURDAY
- 200PM MONDAY
- 2 00 PM TUESDAY
- 2 00 PM WEDNESDAY
- 2 00 PM THURSDAY
- 200PM FRIDAY

112-Middpg,..roy

M7-C-ko

•• -c.....

M3- Puoi..MI

2411-llloO......
BI-Ciuyon Dlol
141--Diot
371-W-

N1-Lootort '•II•

Ml-fl-o

742-11-d

117-Coolvlll

n-v-•-·•

~-==-~=

77 _ _ ...,..,

..

Mllon Co . WV
-C-304

MtlgoCG~nty

ArM Code 114

ArN Code 11•

~~--~~-----•rw.n
..__
~

171- Pt. P -

I ' IIIII

171-AIIIItt Grove
773-Moioon

A-""-.

Wanted To Buy

caal tc.ten Swaln•a Furniture
• Auction. Third &amp; Oliva
614-441·3159
•

H Ill'"' MD_
WI u,t:ellt_,

., ttrllr' ....... ...,...
•~•lloav..11-hrlolo•Tnlllo

9

lUre &amp; an1lquel AIID wood 6

·---"-If.,. ·

·--··-

111- l.eWI

131-· -

Want to buy Utad furniture and
anttquet Will buy emlra houte
hold furniahmg M~rhn Wade
meyer eu.-245-61 52

L1ttle thm~s
are Worth A lot

Public Notice

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
B1ds wtll be received by
1he Vollage o f Mtddleport at
the mayor's offtce at 237
Race St. Middleport. Ohto,
untol 4 00 P M Monday.
Feb B. 1988. lor the pur·
chase of the
tollowmg
equtpment
1 - Used well pulling and
dnlhng outftt complete wtth
truck and accessones
B:dders must submtt an
ttemtzed list of the eqUip
ment and accessor:es betng
offered along wtth the b:d
pnce
The VIIIOQe of Middleport
reserves the nght to reJeCt
any or all btds and to wa1ve
any :nformahttes :n btddcng
Fred Hoffman. Mayor
V:llage of M•ddleport
JAN 22 . 29
Pubhc Notice
NOTICE BY
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSIONERS
REQUESTING OFFICE
SPACE FOR THE MEIGS
COUNTY DEPARTMENT
OF HUMAN SERVICES
ANNEX
In ~accordance w:th Sec·
toon 307 96 of the Oh10 Re
v:sed Code, sealed btds wtll
be recetved by the Meigs
County Board of Comm:s·
stoners, 1n the:r offtce
located m the Courthouse
Pomerov Oh10 unt•l Noon
o n Feb 17 1988 The b1d1
w•ll be opened at 1 30 P M
on Feb 17, 1988 and read
aloud for the followtng
bu1ld1ng lease Each btd to
meet the condttions and
spec:f•cattons as follows
Offtce butldtng to house
the Metgs County Depart
ment of Human Servtces
Annex 1976 square feet mt
n•mum total s pace.
Conststmg of a mm:mum
of 7 offtces. t otlet fac:lit•es
for men and women, and at
least 5 parkmg s paces for
automobtles
Rental requtred for satd
bUIIdtng and related factll ·
t1es should be broken down
for a 2 year baSis All b•ds
sho~ld tndtcate the rental
necessary for the b•dder to ·
provtde ma•nte nanco fo r the
exter:or and :ntertor of tho
buildmg
The Board of County
Commtsstoners m ay reqUire
addtt:onal co ntract provt·
11ons w:th t he s uccessful
b1dder mcludmg but not
hmtted to. the rtght of t he
o pt:on to cancel the lease tf
necessary
The front of the envelope
e nclosmg the b1d must be
marked 'Sealed B:d · De·
panme nt of Human Ser·
vu:::es Butlding Anne x' Btd
der to furn:sh t hetr own b•d
fo rm
The
Board of County
Commtssioners mav accept
the lowest btd . or select the
best b1d for the Intended
purpose. and reserve the
nght to reJect a nv or all btds.
and or any part thereof
Me:gs County
Commtss1oners
Mary Ho bstetter Clerk
Approved
Fred W Crow. Ill
11)29 12 ) 6 2tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
FOR SALE
1973 CHEVROLET C80
DUMP TRUCK
Jane Beegle. Vtllego Cloll&lt;.
V1llage of Rac1ne. Oh1o, wdl
receive Sealed Bids untd
6 00 PM . Monday, Fobruary 1. 1988, for the 1 973
Chevrolet C6D dump truck
declared excess propeny by
village council
Tho Sealed Bids woll be
opened al 7 00 p m February
1 1988. at the regular
monlloly counctl mMUng
Counal , _ t h e right lo
accept or rB)ect any and/ or aH

'" Secllon
the ClasSl(ltd

Public Notice

NOTICE TO 910DERS
PURCHASE OF
INSURANC!
•
MEIGS COUNTY
OEPARTMENT OF
HUMAN SERVICES
Sealed proposals will be
by the Metgs Coun·
tv CommiS&amp;IOners. Pomeroy,
Oh10 at the Clerk's office until
twelw noon of the 17th day of
Febl'uary 1989, and o.,.,ed by
the Clerk of satd Board at1 45
P M for Mercantile Robbery
and Burglary Food Stamp oov
erage to protect them!181ves
agamst robbery and burglary
loss rn the amount of

n&gt;-

5400,000
Separate and tndependent
b1ds wtll be rece:ved with respect to the msurnnce reqUired
to be purchased as provided by
lhe s pecoficalllns SpocoficatJOns and mstructlons to bidders may be 'O btained at the of
free of the Clerk of the Metgs
County Comm1ss:oners. Po·
meroy. Oh:o
Satd Board of Comm•s
stoners reserves the nght to
wa•ve formal:ttes to accept
and reJeCt parts o r all of any
and all b•ds
Mary E Ho bs1etter Clerk
Me tgs Co unty Board of
Comm•ss•oners
111 29 12) 5. 2tc

u ~,n~ ll!t' Cla~ s rl ~t·d,
1~ a~

Easu n ~

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIOUCIARY
On January 14 1988 m
the Me1gs County Probate
Court. Case No 26741
Jennifer l Sheets 211 213
East Se cond Street, Box
686 Pomeroy , Oh10,
45769. was appo•nted Executrrx of the estate of
Eleanor Luc:lle Lohse , de·
ceased late of 512 Headley,
Middleport Ohto. 45760
Robert E Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K Nesselroad, Clerk
111 22 29. 12)5. 31c

1

992-2156

bids
Tho vehicle may be_,dur·
tng tho day hours by contact·
1ng Glenn R1zer at the Water
Deportment BuHding. Jrd 8o
Vtno Street
Bidders are to mark on the
envelope. "BID FOR CHEVROLET DUMP TRUCK"
Jane G Beegle.
Vollage Clell&lt;
V:llage of Racine, Oh1o
111 15 22, 29. 3tc

Public Notice

Public Notice
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMEIIIT OF
FIDUCIARY
On January 13 1 988 1n
the Me:gs County Probate
Court Case No 25740
Beulah
Schultr, . 41908
1owns hiP Road 1035
Reedsville, Me1gs County
Oh10. 4,5772 was appomted
Adm1n11tratruc of the estate
of Everett l Schultz, de
ceased, late of 41908 Town
sh1p Road 1035 Reedsv1lle
Me1g s County, Ohto
45772
Robert E Buck.
Probate Judge
lena K Nessel road. Clerk

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS •
COUNTY. OHIO
FARMERS BANK AND
SAVINGS COMPANY .
221 West Second Street
Pomeroy, Oh 45769
PLAINTIFF
•
VS
LESTER SHOEMAKER
ETAL,
DEFENDANTS
Cese No 87 CV 124
LEGAL NOTICE
A s Sh e nff of Me:gs
County, Oh10 I hereby offer
for sale at 1016 am on
Frodoy March 4 1988. A
0 . on the front steps of the
. . .tfl• County. Court HouM,

Happy Ads

Pomeroy , Oheo. the follow
mg described real estate
PARCEL NO 1
The follow•ng real estate
!ntuate :n RutlandTownstup,
•n the County of Me:gs and
State of Oh1o and bounded
and described as follows

Beg•nmng 37 rods and 15
ltnks east from the center of

Secteon No 26 Town No 6.
Range No 14. of the Oh10
Company 's Purchase,
thence east 79 rods to the
center of Big Lead1ng Creek.
thence up the cen1er of sa1d
creek as follows north 42%
deg rees we s t 14 rods.
thence north 81 1/:z degrees
west 4 rods. thence south
79 degrees west 28 rods,
thence west 22 rods, thence
north 75 degrees west 8
rods and e1ght l:nk.s, thence
south 46117 degrees west 11
rods and 1 2Vt ltnk s to the
pla.:e of begmn:ng contain·
mg l Y2 acres more or less
and be1ng the same real
estate conveyed by W P
Stevens and Joe Z:tevens to

J
C Vanzant by deed
bear1ng date of January
24th 1893 and recorded 1n
Volume 76. Pa~es 193 and
194 of the records of deeds
m the Recorder's Off1ce of
Me1gs County, Ohto
PARCEL NO 2
The follow1ng real estate

29 121 5 , 3tc

Real Estate General

608
E Ma1n
POMEROY, OH.

2

In Memoriam

In memory o
LUCY CHESSER
who palled away
Jan 30, 1987.
A cluster of baauttful
memories,
Spnyad with a mil·

lion tears.
VViohing you could have

lfi8Aid her, God.

For just 1 few more

years
Sadly missed,
Sllltet' !Ill•

Happy First
Birthday,
Brandon
Isaac.
•
We Love You!
MaMa. Ps Ps,
Destiny, Doug
Jenkins

situated tn Rutland Town·
ahlp. in the County of Meigs
and State of Ohio and
bounded and deac:nbed 11
follows The southeast quar
tor of Section No twenty·
sox 1261, Town No ••• 101
and Range No. fourt.., 114)
of the Oh1o Company 's
Purchaoe. with tho exception therefrom of four ecres
more or leps tn the northn1t
corner North of leac:hng
Creek and With the further
exctptton therefrom of the
two followtng described
1ract1 of land to -wit
EXCEPTION NO I
The followmg descnbed
premises shuate in Rutland
Townsh1p, •n Me1gs County.
Oh1o. BJ1d begmmng at the
southeast corner of Sac 26 ,
T 8 , R 14 of the Ohio
Company ' s Purchase .
thence north one rod to the
center of a public road
thence north 71 degrees
west 26 rods along satd
road, thence south 8 rods to
seot1on hne. thence east
25 112 rods to the place of
begtnmng. contammg 100
square rods more or less,
and be1ng the same real
estate conveyed by Cais11us
Vanzant and Florence Vanzant to J M Stout by deed
beartng date of Janu1ry 11
1881 and recorded 1n Vo -

lume53. Pagoo242•nd2•3
of the record, of deedstn the
Recorder's Off:ce of Ma:gs
County. Ohio.
EXCEPTION NO. 2
Tho followmg deiCrobed
reel estate situate in Rutland
Townoltop, on the County of
Meigs and &amp;tete of OhiO.
tO·Wh: Begtnning one rod
north of the southeast
corner of Sect1on 26. Town
6. ROflgO 14, of the Ohto
Company 's Purchase !
thence north 65 rods and 2
hnks to a steke: thence west
23 rods and 8 and one-third
l1nks to a stake. thence south
67 rods and 18 l:nks to tha
center of the public road,
thence sou1h 71 degrees
east 23 rods and 16 and
two th:rds links to the place
of beginning, containing ~ 0
acres more or leas. an(l bemg
the same real estate con·
veyed by Cass:u1 Vanzant
and florence Vanzant to
Wilson Thomas by deed
bearing date of Apnl 12th.
1890 and recorded on Vo·
lume 70, pages 221 and 222
of the records of deedstn the
Recorders office of Me•gs
County. Ohto
Satd reel estate 11 subJect
to allleaaas. eesements and
right of way of record
Sa:d real eata18 is com
monly known as bemn

BINGO

RACINE AREA - Appro11
I -rr,t• l v 26 acres of vac ant
land Really noce bwldmg
s1tes $l3 000 00

RACINE - ApproXImately
3\S acres of land w1th 3 4
hedroom home Also m
eludes a small mobile home
for rental mcome ASKING

MIDDLEPOIIT - He1e os a
two story colomal1n town, tliat
has many great features
Great liVIng room Great wood
burner ftreplace, Great work
shop, plus a Great apartment
for renlal Income .WANTS

$34 900 00

or 101'1 ELECTRONICS

Evenings

"

- - - - -a -.

Used mobile home a Call 61 4
441·0175

149 50

SllndlftG nmber Call 614 ·3792718

Public N otic
acres

formerly

owntd by Noah Chasteen )

WantN to buy Honea It pomea
Call 814-446·3889 or 266·
8808

and Leafy Chasteen Said '
real eatate 11 located in the..r:
Southent Quarter of Sec·
t1on 26. Town Numbar &amp;,
Range Number 14 In Ru
I land Township, Meigs ,
County, Oh1o, and all of Mid
real estate lay• south of
Slate Route 124. tho Con·
soltdated Ra:l trecka and
leading Creak Townlhip "
Road 41 11 bordered on the
north and south by ta1d real
ettate where :t runs across ,
1he southern port•on of Mid
real estate
Said real estate was apprataed at Forty-five Thou ·
•nd Dollars f$46.000 001
The terms of sa•d sale •s
cash
Sale of said real e1tate itlO ,
be for not ten than two· t
th1rdo 12 / 31 of tho lfor-ld"'
appra1aed value
Said sale is subject to
approval by the Common •
ptaas Court. Me1gs County.
Ohio
Howard E Frank,
ShorH1 of
Ma:gs County, Oheo
Approved
Fred W Crow, Attomey
for the Farmers Bank
and Sav1ng_s Compt~ny ,
Pomeroy. Ohio
t11 22. 21. 121 &amp;, 3tc:
'

Buving dally gold. 11lver c:om 1 ,
r~nga jewelry, t*•ng Wire. old
c:oma. l•g• currency Top pr1
c:11 Ed Burkett lerber Shop.
2nd Ave Middleport, Oh 614·
992-3476
Raw fur beef .nd deer hldea
Gyn S:ng end Yellow root We
hid whell and nltt lites
Trappmg supplel: for 1111 tBuy·
tng uHd trap1) lalt diV 10 buy

fur, Feb I, 1988 George
Buckley Hour•12 -9 614·8644711
4

Standing timber Clll614 742
2328

1125/'87/1 mo

11

SeUAVon Getl'OlM'ownAvonat
• discount Calll14 448 3318

CHESTER, OH.

GUN SHOOT

•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Will Buy or Haul Away"

OPEN
WED. - FRI.·SAT

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

We Service

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST

GUYSVILL£, OHIO
.., 4-662-3821
Au1honud John Doort,
New Halland, lush Hag
Farm E.,opment

Doalor
f1r111

h•ll.• ltllllt

P1rt1 &amp; !lat11ll

RACINE, OHIO

L0·9·1fn

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
New Location:
161 North Second
Mid.eport, Oh1o 4S760

BISSELL
SIDI_NG CO.

'SALES &amp; SERVICE

lh• Hames lullt
"Free E1t1metea"

PH. 949-2860
or 949·2801

7 30-10:00
Call for Birthday,
Church, Pr1vate
Part1es Mon • Tues ..
Thurs .. Sat. &amp; Sun.

985-3929
or 985-•996

Roger ~ysell
Garage
Rt. 124, P-oy

qhio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

"l•o Tr••••leelo•

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
&amp;-17-tfc

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL

FILL DIRT

NO SUNDAY CALLS
3· 11-lfn

Telev1s1on Llstenin&amp;
Dependable ltelrin1 Aid Salts &amp; Sarvic•
CJ Heanna Evaluations For All A&amp;es

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
i3 Ucensed Clinical Audioloaist
-

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Awnue. Boll213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or
Veterans Memorial
Mulberry Hils, Pomeroy,

r

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES
Ntw&amp;IHd
SlliS·SIIYICI
SUI'fiiiU
110J11 &amp; SCM Typowritws
leyalllW~

lltoytlll . . Calli ., ...,••

IOMIIIILf
.... lens-. •

•n•1

,., (614) 14J•Mlll

factory (hake
12 Gouge Shatguns

ww._._ ··, ~

12

Situations

Wanted

3S

L
ots

8r. Acreage

••

. ,..,.,

GPWL COtnUCTOIS
11 3 tfn

'

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282

Senior chizen Room end board
for one l1dy Spec:al care '" my
home Aeaunsble Call 81.t·
992-6873

13

Call u1 for your mob•le home
tnauranoe Miller Insurance
304 882 · 2146 Also 1 uto'
home life, health
'

18

Ret1lals

41

Insurance

Wanted to Do

Homes for Rant

3 BR house &amp; garage A 1 Real
Eltlte Carol Yeqer·lroker
304-676-5104
Nicely furniehed small houla
Adultl only Ref required No
pet• Clll614· 44e-0338
Urge 2 '3 BA hau• Pl.my of
ttor1ge Henderson area Call
814-~1-7025

Will do Fltdarel and Statelnc:ome
Ta~~:es, typing bookmg, lnd
No1ary "rvlce Margaret Parker
614 992-2264
Private gu1t11r laaons Umlted
number of ltudenlt Prefer
beglnn.,. 814-949-2887
G•va p1eno Culo Keyboard and
organ l"10n1 In my home to
bag~nnera advanced •tudanlt
Al•o teach chord•ng and trent
PDSmg If interested call 814·
992-5403

FilldiiCidi
21

Nice 2 IR. hou~aln Mlddl..,art

OW, garbage dlapoasl. AC, full
btlaemant Eltctt loc:lllon Call
114-446-9205 olter 5 30 PM

Furnished house 3 BA 21 Nell.
Galhpahs S226 Call448-4418
after 7 PM
3 BR house. 2 ml out 141
$360 1 mo Dep • ref requtred
Call 114 446 9280 alter 5 PM
• weekends
Nlc:e one bedroom house near
downtown &amp; shcoolt R,terences • depoSit required C.U
614· ~6-41&amp;9

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommondo that you
do bualn... with people you
know. •nd NOT to tend money
thrOugh the mail untH you heve
iltVIIt.... lld the offering
,
BeautY lhop for 11le In toWn
Call ~14 - 192 ·3814 for more
lntormMIOn
"P
•r:za Shack" good and go1ng
bu••n811 Galllpoha Ferry new
building and lot 100x20o ft.
cloae to new dam aita call
Somerville Rtala..,; 304-876·
_3_0_3o__
or_B_7_&amp;_·3_4_3_1_______

614· 44•·3844
2 bedroom. 2 botho, 2 ..,
g~raga level lot on Rt 33
Swlmm•nu pool, utellte. clo~e
to Molgo High Coli 114 992
3264

319 So. 2nd Ave. '.
Middleport, Ohio

Vz acre lot •n P.. riot Price Wll
t3600 now t3000 Call 814·
379-2441 .tter4 PM

Compl...ty fum~ahed home tor
rani 3 IR , beth, family room,
all appliM'Ic:et Swimming pool
Satellite d•sh For more mto tt~ll
814 448 4109 or 379 2740
2 BR • with fireplace • h ac:re
t260amo Calll14·44e-1881
1

Z lA house with full bUiment
Reference • deposit requfred
Collltll-441-0191
4 roomt • bath EaiY to hut
MHA approvod s.. at 26
Central or call 114-..... 1.73
9·1
•
House for ula ar rent 1400 aq
ft • 3 IR . 2 full bath1, utility
room f1m1ly room 24x28 gar·
aga Level lot Rt 31-Rodnay
area Calll14-4.41· 2818aft•8
PM
3 btdroom houn for rent in
Syracuu C.ll 814 992-7889
after 15 00
3 ~m. 2 lull baths large
living roam, dln•no room and
khchen Alto laundry room. 2
car lillflge, centrll air. Eattern
School D111nct Reference• r•
qulred Call 814-247-4945

45

'

Furniahad

'

RPoma

Rooms for rent day. week.
manth Gallla Hate\ C.ll 114
448 9&amp;10 Rent a~ low a1 e120
month

46

Space for Rent

Offtce Space for rent Excel
dowritown Galllpolll location
lnquin.. ctll 114 4418 4222
Commerctal b\llkUng for le...
Downlown Pt Pfa11ant Storas,
off•~• A· 1 Real Estate Carol
YHG• Broker Clll 304-675·
5104 .

Unturnlthed hounfor ran1 Fully
c.pltad, mce and clean, eMrgy
efficient W1ll except 1 or 2
ohlldrBn 114-f192 3090

Mobile Home lot far rent Total
electric Pr:aat Mob1le Home
P•k Coll614-387-7438

3 bedroom house S1 76 month
Mulberry Ave Call 814 9921187 or 814 992 7460

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park
Route 33, Narth of Pomeroy
Ren.. l 1railen Call 81 4·992·
7479

2 BR. w / d hook-up Adult.
preferrH. one child accepted
No pela Reference t 111 plus
depotl1 174 Col• S1 .. M1ddleport, Ohto 614·992-6697 or
1-218·836· 39&amp;2

I~;::;;:::;::;:;:::::;;::::===
42 Mobile Homes
f

Spit• for amall treilert. All
hook-ups Cable Also efficiency
rpoms, air and cable Ma1on
W Ve Call 304·773 6111
Spac:ous mobile home 1011 for
rent F•m•ly Pride Mob•le Home
P•k Gallipolis Ferry 304 871
3073

or Rent

1-'---'---------------

1·28·'18-tfn

47 Wanted

to Rant

N•ce rental houte 1n GeHipoll•
ares, 3 IR Rat. .nces av1111
blo C.H 814-446· 9740 oltor I
PM

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
WillE till RD:
IIITlAND, OHIO
7112-2035
12-31'-i? ·1 mo- pd

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addona and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
-Plumbing and etectriCIII

......
If-

Eo11melnl

V. C. YOUNG Ill

"2 ·621~ or 992-7314

P-oy.

IISSIU
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IUIT
HMS&amp; GAUGES

"At l11111 . .11 Prlcts"

PH. 9·9·1101

Announc e111 en ts
3

Mrn II rlllfJ 1se
Announcements

•
Man's

Not1ce Opemng ol Poor
Gracary on Kingsbury Rd Feb
ru•ry 1 Hours 7 00 am to 8 00
pm

Nice 3 BR Moblla Hame
Conwnlent locadon·Rt 7. Par·
I fum1shad Weter paid
Coli 614-241·1818

1

•

Needed AKC reg 1ate•ed m~nla
lure Dachshund for stud lefVIce
304-773-9666

4

Giveaway

Storm wmdowa IO 9,..,81wav
C1\l 614 992 2021
Cut your own fnewoad
614·992·6594

•J

1,

Call

g-~~--~-----',,
6 Lost and Found
FOUND Whhe. long haired eel ,-..·
Flnl Ave Oell•polll Call CS 14
441 8368
•

Found in Rutland Sundty Jan ~•.

2•th. m.le Bntt.sny lptniel with •
bell on cau.r Call e14•7 ,.. '
2751.
-- ,.

Found, black and white young ::
mala dog In 8owmll'l Run .,_
Jomuory 28th CoM 114·MI·
2221or 814 141-2012
·

LOIT S.njle - dotr cUP,..,
anawers Muffin, Near· Fllltf'bck
Firo787Dopt • REWARD 304· 1711
orl7&amp;·1171

32

,.

Free. wh1le aupply latttl Male
1nd female puppltl mhted 1
br"d For •nform1t1on call
11.t 742· 2137 leave na~e tnd ,
phone number

Women who want to "'" utre
lnoame MUll bt 11 or older If
qUIIH\od oton lmmlldlottly
Colll1+-·4170
AVON • AN oq10. COU Morilyn
30..112-2141

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1970 C.mllridgo 12x70. 1•
_,, 3 BR 110 both Extronloo
throughout. "100 CIJI 814·
448-0UII .

61

Household Goode

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St Glllipalit
NEW- I pc wood group· t399
Livtna room •ullft S199·SI599
Bunk bedt with b..:~ ding e 199
Full 1lze manr111 &amp; founclattan
ttllrttng- t88 Recllnera
atortlng- 199
USED Beds dNIHn, bedroam
tuites. •111 t299 Oetlr.t.
wnnger walher 1 complete hne
of ulld furniture
NEW Wootom boola· UO
Workboota •18 &amp; up (Steel •
aolt too) Coli 114· - ·31 59

53

73

Keystone Claalc Mea•· Dodge
or Ford ExerciM maehlne Barr
generator. tool• knina craf11
tarpt Cell 81•·387-0141
Firewood for ui•AII hard wood
Doll-ed· 03&amp; Coli 114-441
1437
20 cu ft Hotpalnt ohesl frH2:er,
t 160 2· 8 ft tool bOktl·lide
mount for plck·up, •400 8 ~nch
ch•mnay blower for wood sto~.
• 100 Coli &amp;14 211- 1191
Pink Ia wh•te tun length prom
gown ttl'&amp; 3 &amp;60 Call 304·
171 5491
1977 4x4 Chevy% ton plck·up
General Electric eoolr. atova
Oliver trector wtth end loader
Call 614-379-2798
Trimllne Treadmill Excel cond
Cs11114 448 8189 after I PM
Mixed hard wood siRs •12 par
bundle Containing approx 1 Yz
ton FOB Oh10 Pallet Co
Pomaroy, Ohio 814· 992 8461
Led... Beaver Jackel tiza 12
The H1dea ., lhta coat were
trapped •n Oh•o Tanned In Ohio
and tha coe1 wa• made m Oh•o
e3150 Phone 814· 949 3081
aftar6pm
Iaven good used t:res four
mounted w1th Pinto hubs and
beaUty rings A 78 13 One
spare mounted. Two recapped
snow tl'"· not mounted All lor
e100 080 Alto Ban Franklin
Stove like new with all ICcetiO·
rin. 0210 080. Aloo firewood
for tale, •76 One pair Acme
ladl• boots. ntver wom, ~rre 6
madhlm, 140 Call 304 773
1127

Farma for

down, OM seatlon, RE304-871· 1101 ••

62

Oak f~rewood Call 304 675 ·
2767 alter 4 30p m A1k for
Woodman

Horses far sal• Standardbred
and Tennessee Walke rs Call
614-446-4766

NlitjorCi'edtt Cards! Regardleu
of cred11 h•atory Al.a new
c:red1t card No one refused! Far
mformatton c:a\1 1· 315· 733·
6062 e11:.t M293B

64

Green velvet Lazy loy chair S1x
1torm wtndowa w1th screens for
caHmant wmdowa 304·675·
4663

PICKENS USED FURNITURE.
304-675·1460 Gas ranges
21 24 &amp;30 In S75 00 8. up,
LPN gas rang• $76 00 21 1n
altc:tr•c r1nge, retnger1tora
865 00 &amp; up, Maytag wr•nger
washer 196 00

Hay

lutlding Matenals
Block brick tewer p1pe1, Win·
dows. llntala, ale Claude W•n·
tars Ria Grande 0 Call &amp;14
245·5121

ba\81 M1xed hay 10 large round
biles Call 614· 286 -333 4
Jack1an Oh•o

76

K1ln Oned Appalach111n Hard
wood Lumber and Plywood

Mouldtng trim buttons plugs,
dowels, IOV part• and exotic
spec:es ADELMANN.CLARK,
INC . AI 93 N McArthur 0
614 598-1271

ServiGes

Auto's For Sale

81

1985 Ford E1cort. $2996 Call
614· 286·6522

RON S Telev1s1on Se rv1 c e
House c:alla on RCA Ouazar,
GE Spee•ahng 1n Z11n1th Call
304 576 2398 or 614 446
2464

1960 Ford Coupe 361 auto,
PS PB TW Not org•n:al Ready
to dr1ve S 1600 Call 614· 3888488
1977 Blac:k Monte Carlo All
opt1ons Ntc:a c1r $750 Call
814 3ea 9789

Dragonwynd Can•rv Kennel
CFA Htmalavan Per11en and
S•amn• iuttena AKC Chow
pupp1et Call 61 4· 446·3844
after 7PM

1182 Old• Brougham Cutlass
Supreme 56.000 actual m1les
2 dr Excel cand S5200 Call
114· 44&amp; 3204

Part white Chow Chow &amp;
1/ 18th wolf pupp•es S150
each Call814· 256 9333

1987 Olds Cu11au Suprema
C1ll 304 773 5616 or 773
5911

Full blooded wh1t1 Germ1n
Shepherd pupp11s for •I• Call
614--48 1149

1981 Oldl Culllll LS Excellent
condnlon 12200 1976 Chevy
p1c:k up h1if·ton e 1 800 Call
614-949 ·2801

Bunny Rabbits! For Valant•na's
or 4· H projac11 18om- Dac
17 1987) tl 00 each Call
614 4417392

-:-:c::--::-------···-

Femal•. 8o•er puppy f1wn 10
weeks old, 3041 175 5736
Musical
Instruments

~atonal!

Rotary or cable tool dr1lhng
Mo•t wells completed same day
Pump seleJ and serv1 c:e 304
895-3802
Starks Tree 1nd Lawn Serv1ce
lawn cere landscapmg stump
removal 304 676 2842 or
576 2903
Tree 1r1mmlng and remo\lal odd
JOba free estimates, 304 675
3312

82

Plumbmg

&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and P1ne
~ Gal h poh s Ohto
Phone 614 446 -3888 or 614
, 446-4477

84

Electncal

&amp; Refngerat1on
Resjdentlal or co mmercial w~r
mg New serv1ce or repa1rs
L1c:ensed electnc11n Est1mate
fr ee Ridenou r Elactr1cal 304·
675 1786

1984 Ford Esc:ort L Wagon
AutomatiC, 2 tone pelnt 85,000
mlln 11800 Ca11Sandyt814
992 7403

86

1978 Plym0t4th Horizan 4 door
auto 78.000 mlln S750 C.ll
Sandy• 114 912· 7403.

Otllard Water Sflrv•ce Pools
CISterns Wells DeJIVIny Any
t•me Call 614·446 ·7404 No
Sunday calls

1981 Dodge Colt 2 door. run•
lood neeclil mutfter e&amp;SO C.U
Ssndys 114·112 7403

I, c-:--:----:-----------

88 ChtvroiM Caprice S10,000
30*-171 2015

72

Truck• for Sale

eiO lnt Trllll·81ar II 81g
ctm-cummlngt Reo.ntly over
h1ulad New lnjecton New

pump AC. Am · FM·Cau
11241 Tnoclo fino ohopo
Coi814-M3· Z113 oflor I PM

S1la

Fe«v Tree Trtmmtng st ump
remo\111 Call 304 675 1331

1879 fire Bird Formula A1r
power wmdowa 403 4 barrel,
blac:lr. lnter•or Good conditio n
13000 Call 614 992 2772

'72 v w 1710 00 '48 w.m ..
Jeap e1 .00000 814 -441 ·
9112

Elootric_wlth . . .. ns 00
flrm ~-112- 2131

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional ltfettma guaran
tee Loc:al refere nces lurmshed
Free es t1mates Call collect
1 614 237 0488 day or n1ght
Rog ers B asem e nt
Watet'proo,mg

1984 Z-28 Auto a1r Blac:k
86900 Call614 446-6579

1979 Pont11c: Grandpr•• 2 dr
auto t950 Call814 446 1616
Of 448· 1244

G1oom and Supply Shop-Pet
Groomtng All breads All
styles lam1 Pet Food Dealer.
Juhe Webb Ph 614 446 0231

Home
Improvements

SWEEPER and sewmg rn ach1ne
repair parts and su pplies P1ck
up and deh\lery, 08\11&amp; Vacuum
Cleaner one half m1le up
Georges Creek Rd Call 614
446 0294

1976 Monte Carlo heel cond
tn &amp; out 350 ang1ne t960 Cell
814 388 8647

Pets for Sale

81 Fenn

Used &amp; rebut It transm1sstons All
Internally mspected &amp; guarn·
teed Cell 614 446 0966 We
buy Junk transmiSSIOns

Transportation

1988 Cavaltar RS Uke new
20,000 m1le1 Auto , AC, PS,
P8, AM·FM-Ca .. , t1lt 86000
Call 814· 388 8240

Ready mtlt c:o nc:rete and all
concrete supplias C1ll ua Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies
304 773 &amp;234

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

Muted hay 81 00 bal e 304676 ·6266

1986 PontiaC: 6000 S HARP!
15600 Call 614 446-6579

Concr81e block• all 111e1 yard or
delivery Mason sand Gallipolis
Block Co • 123'1: Ptna St .
Galhpohl, Oh1o Call 614-446·
2783

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Fully eqpt 16ft Bass Boat 35
hor~:e Me rc ury· Power Tnm L•ke
new Garage kept 614 99 2
5277

304·112· 3231.

•

75

&amp; Gram

1996 N1ssan 300 ZX Loaded
000 miles Excel Cond Call
814-446 8691

C1rvln DC1215 Lead Guitar
1371.00. Co- .. CO·
wltll 12 Inch Coin·
tiona e211 00 loth aac CDnd,

Apartment
for Rent

1987 CR SOOR never been
rec:ed Call for pnce 304 676
1780

1977 Camero (red) 96 000
miles, auto V-8 $1500 Call
614.446 1615 Day, 446 1244
attar 5 PM

eon

44

1969 Harley Davidson Sports
tar Recen1ly rebuilt Many new
parts New paint JOb &amp;BOO
614 985· 4420

Livestock

3~

67
.I

1984 Kawasak: KX 60 motorcy
cle Excellent condttton $500
Call 614 992 5085 after 6 00
pm

1983 Chevy C1t&amp;t1on Am r•d•o.
auto trana PS PB. 89 000
nulel e1700 Can bt~ 1een at the
G1lhpoh1 Datly Tnbune or for
more mformat10n call614-44&amp;·
2342

Building Suppli.es

Motorcycles

Mbted hay or alfalfa 1quare
bales Mtxad hay · large round
bales Call 614 288 3334 ,
Jackson Oh10

71

wnte
29&amp;

56

19n Royal Olds loaded all
power equtpped exc c:ond
$1 195 1985 Jtmmy Blazer
4x4 looded cloth mtertor sport
wheels, e~~:e cond $9 500
304 '773 5944

----------------lcMiud hay Of alfafa m square

"HOMES" LPN 911. furnace for
mobile home. complete with all
the litt•nga 304 676 2061 11'

56

Go 1n th e snow w11h a Toronad o
Fron t whnl dnve 1979 Olds
Toronada loaded 304 675
4413 evemngs

74

Now buying shell co rn or ear
corn Call for latest quotes River
City Farm Supply 614 446
2986

63

4 WD

Wanted to Buy

SURPLUS DENIM, Ca rh1r1
Ren111 Cloth1ng . New haevy
coveralls 122 00 heavy new
work clothing, bOOUIIIwinterat
reuonable pr1c:es Sam SomervHie'a. Old Rt 21 JUnction
Independence Road. e..t Ra
~nawood, Fn, Set Sun noon·
8 00 pm 304-273· 5655

Individual 1n·
atructkm Brun•cardl'a Mutic.
814-441-0187 or call JaH
Wamsley 1n1tructor. 814 441·

G e neral H a uhng

J 8a J Water Serv1ce Sw1mm1ng
pools, c:•stern1 wells Ph 614
246 ·92 85

F1 II&amp; R Water Serv•ce Home
ciatart, wells, pools hlled Formarly James Boys Waters Call
304 876 6370
Paul Rupe, Jr Water Serv1ce
Pools. CISterna. walla Call 61 4441-3171
Watterson 1 Water Hauhng.
rellonable rates lmmed11te
2,000 gallon delivery Clltemt
poo\1, well, e1c c:all 304•576
2918

Equipment

AM·FM·Coll 1,000 mlloo Coli
114·2323 4 PM

IOdO HIMiiDi6 IUo wltt'l

=:""·' "- ..,Gtortre:
-

four--·

.,_

IHOD. For
..... .... Lihltlon wrtle:
c . leatlts P.O loa 111;

a•uathl.

•

1171 Ch..- 111-odo 10 10ft
plolurp, t1300, 1877 Ford FZIO

Ohio....,,

114-149·2101

'

*1300 COM

'
•

'•

l

1182 For4 pic:lr.• UP truck
03210. Colllt4-211·1122

1117- R. .• I 5 apd,

D '
•

1

Firewood delivered 1tacked
$35 00 Maaon Counties, .Galli·
pohs. o1her 1re11 wlth.n reason
at Ollr di1creatton 304·8953446

Guitar

.........
-lt.."""'"nt-ott.

Foory. aM-1?11-1130

U Haul truc::b and tre1\ers for
rent. 304·675·7421

&amp;

1984 N11san 4 wheel dnv e
Sports package metalhc brown
15000 Call 614 949 2414 or
304-675 5693

2010J D tractorw / J D equ1p
ment 2 fOW planter, plow1
rotary hoe post dnver $3~50
Call 614-286-6622

Nancy Hart Pano $900 E~~tc:el
cond Col &amp;14 318-8488

2 bedroom mobile home In
Mloldloport. Ohio R• ..•1oo
ond Socurity dopoalt _.,.,.
3De-882-3217 •• 30·· 7731024

s

1030 Case trac:1o1 Cream Puff
Mu1t be seen to appreciate 6
bottom plowa. tran•port d11c:
84750 Call 61 4-2B6·6522

Mov1ng, must sail two cemetary
lo11 at Melg• Memory Gardens
Will 1111 both for t600 Call
614-992·6240

New exerc11ing nuchlne makes
aaver.l mec:hmas t65 304
675-7316

Callihan 's Used Ttre Shop Over
1 , 000t~rea ~zea12 , 13, 14,15
18, 18&amp; BmllesoutRt 218
Coll614 2&amp;6 8211

t1

CROSS&amp; SONS
3&amp; w..t. Jeckaon. OhiO
614·2B6-6451
M1tsey Fergu1on New Holland
Bush Hog Sales 8. Servtc:e Over
40 used tractors to c:hoo1e from
&amp; complete hne of new &amp; used
equ•pment Largeat selection m
S E Ohio

lJ

BMiwell Cath ~eel Store now
ready for spnng In 11ock all
tobacco tupplle• all flrttlizar
f110e1ng. garden aeed w11ar &amp;
dra•n p1pe C1ll for latest pnces614-388·9668

Ant1qua1. buy ar tell Riverine
AntiQU..., 1 124 East Main St .
Pomerov Hours Mon , Tues,
and Wed 10 OOa m ·8 OOp m
Sun 100 pm ·800 pm a.;
chance or appomlment Run
Moore 61 • · 992-2526

1917HoU.VPork·12xiO ZIR.
1 blth. Z1x10 bulh on room
R N . phyolclono o - . p i - CA.tuololl- 10xl0frant
Mfld.._toao.C-11..,.of ownlnl. ~ _...,. Clood
Paled
2;00 aond. Mom ..... Ciill 114·
f'oltrt
w v. 441·21A oft• I PM
2. .10.
14110
.. dill_ ......_bl...
,,..30
_ _w
,,...,
top

,...,_a_ao..,....

Modal 1 2 · 12 ga , Brown1ng 1 6
ga . Untverael 12 ga 31 Re·
mlngton 1 Z ga Call 614·446·
3U8

Vans

1982 Dodge 250 flam Cu~tom
conversiOn Treder ready Call
614 446 4383 days 446 0139
evens &amp; weekends

•
I

Antiques

Mise, Merchandise

'

1966 350 ~h ev v ptckup step
bed, restored S3,000 304
676 6022

Snowmobile Molo Slu 260, 18
hp. good ahape. runs good.
0350 00 304-882-2887

54

•

•
..

1988 C~e\lrol el S10 p1ekup
$8.000 00 low mt\eage. 304
882 3574

Buy &amp;. Sell Antiques luckaya
Paddler 614 446 7812 Even
•no• &amp; weekends

7LO~a:;T;-::to.;llt:.:oto~,:.:wh:lto_to_':Ji:.~ 1
phone

1981 Datsun Kmg Cab 4x4
p1ck up 5 1peed 70 000 m1les
Runs good 12600 Call Sandys
614· 992-7403

suit••·

1

lonely pre-schooler naedt co mpiny Will baby lit f,_ another
pre tchoeler couple hours day
ttma In Middleport Grandma
•
614· 992 7216

AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF SOU
THEASTERN OHIIJ·AAA
If you ere Interested in 1 selling 1
car.., in GalllaCountyarea, why
Re o l Estdte
not ponaider AAA7 Send us
tom~ lntormatlaf' about yourself
and your work hlllory We will
contaC1 you for an lnttnrlew
S~ttd 10 Automobile Club at
31 Homes for Sale
South....em Oh1o AAA ATT
ClteY Jonn. P 0 BoK 371 . 4 BR , fireplace. full basement 3
Porttmouth. Oh10 4&amp;812
mt 10 of Galhpoltt S29 900
Call
Oayt·8 14 448 1 811. after
'FriBnda Ae111tl Corp" af Galh
polls. Ohio. seeks a competent 600 4481244
11111 person to work in c:htld· Brand new 3 BR near Galhpolls
ren • clolhmg ttore Must be · Locks on AI 7 2 ear garage. nice
hlghty motivtlld and LOVE
Immediate po. .ulon Will
worlc1ng whh children Send lot
con11der trede :n of mobile
resume tG Fnends Rellil Corp
property, etc Bargetn
P 0 Box 981 Qall•polll, Oh1o home,
priced CoU 614-~6- 8038
46131
February 1st 2 Bed·
Need tr.by•tter 1u coma to my Awllable
room hou11 In town tn gaod
home 2 children L1ve cioN to loc:at•on
No pelt S326 Sacur·
hoapttal Ref required C.ll •tv depos1t
Sa references re114 441-0498
qu1red Wttemen Real Etlltt,

Ph......, .........

Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

EXCELLENT WAGES for spa,..
ltme atMmbly work; ~ron
:c. crafts Oth.,. Info call
1ll04·141 · 0011. Ext 2987
O'p&amp;rl 7 diVI CALL NOWI

6
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS 6
BACK HOE WORK

.

Help Wanted

WANTED IHCC Making Adultl
for lfainmg lbt•c Education,
A8E / GED, Job Skilll, Employmant Alaisance and Fln.anclal
Aid ..,.....,._ Contllct Aclul1
Services •• 114·241·1 3 3 1
Don't dsl.,- do It lodayl

REMOOE~INO

Ref•enc•

"''-

w

"Well' l't's all over bUt the
Shoutm
' g• n

Serv 1c es

•ROOFING

1·13-tfc

d

DEAD OR ALIVE

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE :
985-3561t'

CHESTER, OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
oROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS

Middleport. Ohio

WANTED

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

z

'

.

~

...···"".. "" "'-..

c •• .... "-.-~

f mplnynH:n l

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

PAT992-2196
HILL FORD

SIATE·A·WAY

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

::c

AJB

BILL ,SLACK
614-992-2269

446-6939 .. 446-7390

WITH BARGAINS

Per Pickup load
Delivered

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid bail and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

Let us convert those old
Home Mov11s over to easy
VHS.

ULt AMY CARTER

WANT ADS
ARE JUMPING

Locust, Oak, Cherry

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and ra-

$3500

8mm MOVIES lo YHS TAPE

PRICE REDUCED on th1s Han
d1capped access1ble home
Ramp ways SIJEml floor oov
enng specoal balh fiXtures
etc All destgned w~ h the han
dtcapped 1n mmd Really ntce
3 bedroom home w~h hre
place basement &amp; po1ch
area Large modern k1tchen
NOW $34 900 DO
BRADBURY - Close m but
out of lawn Garden 3lea, 3
bed10nms, outbuoldmg, some
new ca1pel equ1pped kil
chen One th1rd down on Land
Contract $2l 000 00

rtREWOOD

.
ces
Servl

992 ·2269

SYRACUSE- II you hkespa
c1ous room and want neatness
and tasteful de&lt;:or make an
appomlment to see thos lovely
4 5 bedroom home · with 2
baths, k1lchen w1th cozy
breakfast nook, formal dmmg
room. utthty room, full .base
menl Large neat acre lot, 2
car garage Many other lea
tures $62.900 00

-

Public Notice

I

$24,000 00 '

I
'

N otica

=~--r-»=~~~~=±==~====·
Business

MIDDLEPORT - Thos older
home IS close to store s and
schools Two lb lhree bed
rooms level lol, carpetmg
and othe1 mce leatUies
N1ce front Sltlm g porch
MAKE OffER $19,000 00

5

Public

Public Notice

"'

Complete houMholds of turm

11 Home lnllteecCIIMitla

!-A .I'•
•
t·MJio;'-Sn
~----0

•z-N.-Hw..

IV..,

1978 Chevv Truck Ask1n g
$700 c.u 814 992 2707

=----------------- r-----------~-----------l

a-.
::j:=!l\ ...,.._

11---·
U-CI. TV lll_l_oot

,,,

.. '\v.. .,,

•TOP CASH pa:d for 83 modal
111d newer
ulld cart Smith
Po
Buick· ntitc. 1911 Eattern
Ave
~282. Qalhpollt Call 814-44&amp;-

I

4111-I.oon

Wedtmeyer't Auction SeMce
.va•latle at your conv.n..,.ce
lind location• Marlin Wede
may• AuclionMr &amp;14-246·
5162

Wepaycoohforlatemodelcloan
uood ••••
Jim Mink Chw.- Oid•lnc
B1ll Gene Johnson
814·448·3&amp;72

11--Ca •••••~=Ill

(-

.'1

.'

n-TJoalootorlolo

44~1Drlloot

Clauified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

Y•d Sal•

cept - classified display, Busln•• Card and legal notieal
w•ll also 1ppaar In the PI Pleasant Register and tha G111i
pol•• Dally Tnbune, reac:hmg o\ler 18.000 homes

_""

41 _ _ .., .....

Happy Ads

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

a-w...... ~uv

...

day after pubhcattan to make contctton
Card of Ttltnks
In Memortam

11~- ......-

....-~~---~~~···
.._.........

Ratee are lor ooneecutlve runa. broken updlyswlt be ctt.,.ed
tor ...:h •Y H -..ttedt

•Ads that must be pa1d m tdvance trt

8

... ..................
......... _
--··
·--·-"-· ·----·-71--·-··
__
'.,.---·N----,.-·--··
............
.,. c..... . . . .
.. _.......
11---··

1978fordF·150' 4 speed 35 1
fiberglass topper $1600
614 99~ 6641

LAYNE' S FURNITURE

Sof11 1nd chan• priced ffo m
t396 to 8995 T1blea S50 and
up to $125 Hide • beda *390
Furn11hed 2 BR apartment to
$695 Recline,. t22_&amp; to
Adults only No pat• Inquire at 8376
128 to • 126
Flrtt &amp; Olive St. ult for Ro•e DinettesLampl
e109 and up to 1496
S1dner
Wood 111bla w 8 chain t28!i to
t 796 Dealt 81 DO up to $376
Furn11hed apartment-7 Neil, Hutchea
e400 1nd up Bunk
Gallipolis 1 lA t221 Utlhbet bedt complete
w -mlttreue•
pa1d Call 448 4418 after 7 PM
e2t6anduptot39&amp; Babybedt
:;----:-:--:-~,.:-::.:.:.:::..:.:.::.1
M•ttreuea or bOIIIPflntt
New deluo 2 BR . equ1ppel( t 1 10
or twin S88 f•rrn S78 end
kttchen, low utUitln Excelftnt full
eaa Queen •ets •221. King
locat•on No peta Oep a. ref
8360 4 drewer chnt $68 Gun
-.qulred can 814·448-1260
cabinet~ 6 gun Gaa or electric
tang• 137&amp; Baby meth'MMI
3 room 6 both oportmont 114 S35 &amp; 14&amp; Bed framea t20
State St Call81•·446-3368
t 30 Ia King frame 860 Good
11lectlon of bedroom
Upauln, 2 roomo 6 booth me.. l cab1ne11, headboard• 830
1nd up to t86
Furnished.
utlltt••Adul11
paid
Ref
a. depeiNn,
,..qutred
onty No peu Clll 614 448
·•· ·· ·••••
1118
90 Days same
u ca1h w•th
1-::---:--:--:-:-----:--- approwd c:redtt 3 Mi\01 out
Gr~~eloua liv:ng 1 and 2 bed Bulwille Rd Open 9am to Spm
raam ap 1 nmants 11 VHIIDI Mon lhru S11 Ph 814·44&amp;Manor and Aiver~•de Apart· .o_3_2_2__:-:--:•______..:.~
merttt in Middleport From
8216 Including ut1hfiH Call
Valley Furniture
New and ul8d furniture and
814--892 7787 EOH
appllc:anc:es Call 814 448
2 bedroom apartment on Uncoln 7572 Houn 9·6
H•H. Po,.roy C.ll 614· 992
Mollohan Furn•ture
1139 or 114-912 Ue9
Upper Rtver Ad • Galllpohs Oh
&amp; up Uv:ng
Cottage effic:l..cy, totel elect· Dlnett81·122fi
SUitU·•300 &amp; up,
ric. rafr~gerator. 11ove nice room
Ra~liners t165 &amp; up Carpel
HUD approvad 2215 Mt Ver· •tarttng
$4 • vd Financing
non Ave, Pt PIHunl 814· IVItllb\e at
to
qulhf1ed
buyers C1ll
992-6868
614 '46-7,44
2 bedroom apt fa~ ren1 Sto"e
J &amp; S FURNITURE
and rafr•gerator 1re fum••hed
(Formally P1r1on' a Furn iture•
Carpeted N1ce aett1ng Call
1416 El•tern Ave
814-992-3711 E 0 H
Uvmg room sunea from 8179 &amp;
Bedroom auites $489 86 &amp;
&amp;room unfurnilhed apt tor rent up
up Complete ft11CrOWIVeltlnda
CAll 814·992·6434 or 304· $39
96 &amp; up
882 2181
Come m and meet the new
1 b..:~ room apt tor rent Utllttltl Owners
paid 3YI mll11 .auth of Midd .. Kenmor• wash• white 176
part AI 7 814 387 0811
Kenmore wuhar coppartona
•7&amp; G E weaher-AviCado ,
APARTMENTS . mobtle homu. eas
refrlglt'ltors
houMI Pt Pl...antand Oalllpo. from 4I 11da·by·tide
17&amp; frigidaire refflgera
lls:: l14 441 -8221
tor e95 2 door refrigerator
8YICidO,
$96 30 tn elec:
2 Qdroom furnlaed apt ref and
harvest gold $96 36 1n
depoait New Haven w V1 . range
elec range white, 875 Galt
304 882 3217 or 304 773 range·avac:ado.
176 Skaggs
6024
Appliances
Beach Street Mlddlaport Ohio 679 Upper R1ver Rd 614 4462 bedroom fum11hed apl ut•h· 7398
t1es paid. refwlf'lca and depo-'1. May Tag y.'rmgar washer,
304· 882·2586
•
t1 00, Spaedquean washer and
r i
1200 Self datrost
3 bedroom houl8. 1 1h bath. d""f
refri
tor, 8BI5 Electric
M11on 2 effic1ency apartments drye
100
Call 614-742
P01nt Pluunt Call 304· 875- 2352
4228 even•ng•
PICKENS USED FURNITURE
Two bedroom 1p1rtment 1n Beds
lampa tlbl..
Henderaon, 304-575-1972 at couch• das'ks,
cha1n dlnnatta mise
tor 6
Half m1ie out Jencho Road
00· 8 DO Sundaylf 12 00
Now ecceptmg apphoattons. 68 QO
3{)4-875·1460
Maaon aptl Maaon. W Va
Con ..ct Julia Johnaon. 304· Rocker recliner good c;ond
n3-&amp;107
196 304·882· 2204
Unturn11hed, one bedroom gar, .. apartment 1n Huntington.
wv. Coli 304 526·1011 ..
814-4441-7603

'

Trucks for Sale

M

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Waahert, dryar1 refrigerators,
rsng11 Skagg a Appliancea.
Upper R l~r Ad bea•d• Stone
Crest Motel 614-441· 7398

Wxury T1ra Apertment• Elegant, Z Br 2 floor, fulty
ca'P'fed, C A and heat Privati
entr.na. encloled .,.tto, pool'
playground Sttrt·t299 per
month UtllltiH no1 lnclud"
C.ll6t4-317-7850

Curt8int, drtpea, furniture p1c

72

Household Goodo

County Appllan~e . Inc Good
used appliancH and TV 1111
OP4n SAM to OPM Mon thru
Sat, 114 448-1899 827 3rd
Ave GaiMpalil OH

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES, 531 Jaak10n
Pike from $183 1 mo Walk to
ahop and n\oviH 114-441·
2688EOH

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. Until NOON SATURDAY

The Daily Sentinei--Page-- 11

Pomeroy- MiddlePort. Ohio

r.lowrey • Upholstering llrVing

trl county 1r11 22 year1 The best
in tumk\:N uphollltaring C111

304· 171 - 41 14 lor tree
eatimlttl

••
•
• ••

••
•

J

•

�..

'
•

Page

. 12~The

•

Daily Sentinel

Friday. January 29,

--,Local news ·briefs.-. .....· Board decid,es against action .against .Clark
By FJtANCE;S ANN BtJJtNS .
PATERSON, N.J. (UPI) -A .
lawyer lor Joe Clark Is declaring
victory In a school board decision
not to reinstate diSCiplinary ·
action against the bat-carrying
princlpai whose tough·mlnc1ed
approach has won praise from
the Reagan administration.
The board backed away trom
Its previous stance, voting not to
bring charges but Instead to
direct ~ superintendent
Frank Napier- a staunch Clark
· backer - to Investigate last .

M~lgs County Em~rgency Medical Servlces reports live calls
· Wednesday; Racln~ at 6:31 a.m. to a minor chimney fire at the

Tom Fill residence; Middleprt at 10:24 ·a.m. to 175'i!j Nort!)
. .Second Ave. lor Don VanCooney to Holzer Clinic; Middleport at
4·50 p.m. to Holzer Clinic lor Patrlc.k McDaniel to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 4:55 p.m. to Long Bottom for Eugene
German to Holzer Medical Center; Rutland at 10:34 p.m. 111
Lasher Road lor Lessle Lush to Holzer Medical Center.
·
~

Triple header slated Saturday ·
.
..

Southern fans can &lt;'njoy not two, but ihree basketball games
at Southern High In Racine on Saturday. Southern's freshman
team will pl;ly Ravenswood at· 4:45p.m. In the afternoon. The
· Tornado Reserve team will play Miller at 6:30 p.m ..
Immediately followed ·by Varsity action between Southern aild
·
Miller,

...

.Stocks
Dally $(0Ck prices
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis .t. LOewl

Parents to ·nieet Sunday
the Parents For Education support groupwlll meet Sunday, 2
p.m.. at Meigs Junior Hl.gh ~hool In MlddlePQrt, to formally
organize and to outline goals lor the remaining school year, ·
Allconcetned parents In Meigs Local Dlsttlct are urged by
Parents For Educ~tlon organizers to attend the meeting and get
Involved in "your" school system.
·

.

-~

month's unauthorized and IDI·
proper suspension of Eastside
High School students.
. ·
Lawyer VIckie Dol!aldson
called tile board action "a
victory lor Joe Clark."
"I . think It's possible now to
•strike some medium, •' she said.
· Neither Clark nor any of his
supporters attended Thursday's
board meeting.. The brief, quiet
meeting· was a contrast to the
.stormy · .session earlier . this
month when the board voted to.·
lnltlat .e disciplinary
proceedings . .
Board . members' said they
-hoped the publicity 'that has
dogged them since the dl&amp;ptite

I '

EMS has six calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Thursday and one call early Friday morning. ·
. Thursday at 1: 17 a.m., Middleport to 391 North Fourth for
Randy Lawson who was treated but not transported; Racine at
3,: 09 a.m. to Stlversvllle Road for Keith Musser who was treated
but not transported; Rutland at 1:13 p.m. to a fire at the
Charlene Hess trailer on Nichols· Road; Syracuse Fire
Dep;trtment at 2:28 p.m. to a fire at the Michael residence on
Church St.; Racine F"lre Department was called to assist .
Syracuse ~t 2:3.3 p.m.; Syracuse EMS at 2:44 p.m. treated
fireman D10n Jones at the scen.e of the fire; Middleport Rescue
17 at 3 p.m. was also called to assist a.t the fire In Syracuse.
. Frld'!Y at 1:57 a.m .. Pomeroy to 126 Laurel SUor Bill Priddy
:o Veter11ns Memorial Hospital.
·

..

Sunday

•

50 cents

.•'

'
66
students
he
said
were
malin·
•
began -In . December would die
· gerers who were not trying to :
down. · .
•
"I would. like to take this learn. ·
.
opportunity to apologize \O the
The · board forced Clark to ~
community and to the children of
Paterson In particular," said readmit the students and voted : ·
board Vice President Elease 7-1 In parly January to begin •
Evans, , who was recently at· disciplinary action against him :,
tacked by Clark lor her alleged lor Insubordination and unlje.. ~
l;lck of support.
coqiing conduct. The · ilctlori ~
"I feel like It's dragged out. · could have led to a reprimand or ;
There are other things In my life eve11 a suspension.
1 .
ra like to get on with and I hope
· the n~xt time you receive media · Board members later were ,
attention It w111 be more posl· forced to rescind the action ;
because of procedural violations'.,;,
tive," she said/
Clark has been under fire from ofthe state open meetings law; j
leading toThtirsdl!y's decision on ;
board members lor his unautho·
rlzed suspension late last. year of reinstatement of the charges.

•

Beat of the .Bend, By Bob Hoeflich -

.2 . .
u-

', :

D

Page 8-I

•:

•

'•

' . .
.-

I

. ...

Am Electrlr Power .. ........... 29~
AT&amp;T .. .. :·:.: .............. , ....... ... 29~ .
Ashland 011 ................... :c ... 55~
Bob EV!!DS ~ .•. :....... :.......... ;; ,15%
Charming Shoppes ..... , ....... .12%
City Holding Co ................... 29
Fedttrat Mogul.. ...................35%
Goodyear T&amp;R ...... .............58'f.,
Heck's Inc..... ...... ................ 1}-8
"Key Centurion .......... d .... , .... 40
Lands' End. , ....................... 20%
Limited Inc........................ .lS%
Multimedia Inc....... ........ ;... 53'f.,
Rax Restaurants ........... ....... 3%
Robbins &amp; M:yers ... ~ ..... , ...... . 7%
Shoney's Inc . .................. .. ..22%
Wendy's Inti. .................... ,.. 5%
Worthington lnd................. .17'f.,

00 Mcintyre's boyhood home
.

·:

•

COME IN AND SEE THE ALL NEW .1988 REGAL ·

Hospital

WE THINK YOU AlE GOING TO "FALL IN

.: Vat: 22 ND. 111

Middleport~Pomerov:-Gallipolis-'Point Pleasant. January 31, 1988

MIDDLEPORT '..:.. As many as ' Central Office at about a 60 parents to arrange conferences ..
1,000Melgs ·Loca!Schooi'Distrlct percent average during the
The school Will notify those
students could be In violation of strike, this could mean that the40 who are In violation or those who
the .district's attendance Polley percent not attending - If they · are close to being In violation, but
as the resul! of t!)e recent were consistently the same stu- It Is definitely the iesponslboillty
teachers strike In the dlsttlct.
dents,.not In attendance- could of the parent to make arrangeMeigs .. Local Supt. Dan E. ilu~ller about1,(JOO ~ 40 percent ments to discuss the problem,
· Morris Friday announced the of the district's enrollment.
according· to Friday's ;mnounceattendance ·and work makeup· . .However, the board of educa- ment.
.
·
policy of the district.
.
, lion has said that cases will be · Aspects .of the grading period
According to the existing at- handled· on an llldlvldual basis and makeup work ·: were also
tend11nce policy of tile district, through conferences with the explained In the ~tatement Issued
.
"studems wno miss more than 15 respective bl!lldlng prlnlclpal as by Supt. Morris.
· According to p(an; the second
days . In ·a semester ~ourse .-e&gt;r. . · to whether .·or. no.t this pe&gt;licy
more than 30 days In a y&lt;'ar may · might be waived.
six weeks will end of as Nov. 5,
be given no credit for . the
The administration, however, 1987 with grade cards going to
semester course or for the year." . stresses th&amp;l It Is Important, If , . parents for this grading period on
The board has decided that parents believe there Is or tl)at • Monday, Feb. 1, 1988.
attendance will count for the there might be a prohl&lt;'m In the
The· third. grading period will
days school was In session during future with receiving credit be from Dec. 21, 1987, to Feb. 27,
the strike~ a total of 19. Since becauseoftheattendancepollcy, 1988, &lt;~nd will be divided Into two
attendance was reported by .the It Is the responsonslbllty of the parts, which Include: the first.

.' '

LOVE''~ •• ·.·

"We've .Got The Keys To A Better Deal"

@
BUICK

SMITH-NELSON OTORS,
500 EAST MAIN
992-2174

~----Want

POMEROY, OHIO

'

·''

. }.

&lt;

. ~.~~
'
.'' .....w .f'•.

I

..•

.-..~-

,.

l'·

!

~

.;[·

' fl) .
~'l
{ ,;.
'

•.
'

,,1:.
'.

/

{

;

~··

'

. ,,·,

'

'

·-~~

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Tech·
re-Interpreted In response to
nological developments that
almost" certain challenges of the
· have expanded the press . to
government's right to regulate
Include new forms of broadcast ' access to the media and ownerand electronic media will force a
ship of new media outlets .
Some new forms of media,
re-definition of First Amend·
ment guarantees of free speech
such as electronic publishing,
: and a free press, a congressional .. ,may not .match old regulatory
research report said Saturday.
pattern~. which have generally
"Satellltes, computers and digused different sta.ndards for the
Ita I transmission lines are -like . ilr,tnt medii!, _br~~dcasters and
th"!' telegraph. telephOne, .radio
so!called common carriers,
and television technologies be- ·which share 11\formationthrough
electronic bulletin boards and
fore them - changing the ways
in which we communicate Ideas,
Other.outlets, the report said.
theories, 'opinions and inciteThe researchers warned that it
will b~;&gt;come increasingly dlfflments to action·, " the report by
the Office of Technology Assese·
cult to justify distinctions bement said.
. . tween the rights of neWspaper
"Taken together: advances in
and magazine publishers, broadcasters and operators of new
computers and telecommunicalloqs may change the concept of
media form s.
·
'thl'press' from one· in which one
Some officials believe ne w
organization publishes for many
restraints might be necessa ry to
to one in which many share
protect technological informalnformatlon amongst them·
lion; others say · freedom of
,selv!'s," the report added.
speech and of the press may
As a result . the office said, the · al.ready have been comprom·
First Amendment will have to be ised, the report said.

':...~ ·

"

,,

..

SUPER SATURDA~I .

HANES
Men's knit briefs, T -shirts. A
shlr'ts. boxer ahOrts, including big
sizes, plus boys T shirta and
briefs and men's and boys
thermal tope and bonoma. ·

SATURDAY ONLY .

Funeralfriends
Homemay
at call'from
Ravenswood
where
2 to
4 'and 7 to 9 p.m. today .

Gerald Michael
Funeral services for Gerald E.
Michael. 61, who lost his life In a
fire at the Michael residencE',
1261 Church St., Syracuse, on
Thursday , will be held at 2'p.m.
Sunday at the Ewing. Funeral
Home.

Forfeiting a $450 bond In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night on a
charge of driving while lntox·
lcated was James Dwayne Priddy
not the same lndlvldual as James
Priddy.

SAVE

20°/o

Collins files for treasurer

Quality - DIP'fldability

$2 7

'

SIMPLICITY
·PATTERNS

25(

wu

MEN'S SHIRT SALE

Includes all aport shirts, all flannel shirts, all knit
shirts, quilt lined flannel shirts, Van HauHn dress
shirts.

EACH

BOYS,
.SHIRT SALE
'nctudea entire •lalctlon.·Knlts.

WASHINGTON tUPil\ - Coal
rnlners and mine owners huddled
' saturday, hoping to arrive at a
·: new four-year contract .before a
: mldnlghtSundaystrlkedeadllne.
•swkesmen for both sides said.
. · !ljelther ' side In the talkS ·
'between the United Mine
.'1:0rkers and the Bltqmlnous
:. CoaiOperatorsAssoclatiQn,con·
tlnuous since Nov. 12, would say .
'whether a setflemerlt or a strike ·
·was Imminent.
. ''We jlre very conscious of the
' time element," UMW spokes. man ~oseph Corcoran !lllld. "Ne-,
gotlatlons are proceeding at a
. ,very Ql!lck . pace with a· clear
.~rstaridlng that midnight

sport ehirt1, jean• ahlna. Sizet 8
tn 20. · •'"

~RICE

PRICE

ct..

POMEROY
~ SHOP

a loved one?
Let Americare Pomeroy Nursing and
Reha.bilitation Centers' understanding,
professtonal staff temporarilY. relieve you of
·
your heavy responsibility.
·
.
Accepting residents for short term re~pi.te care.
Call Sonya Wolfe et 814-992-8808
.
For Consulting ·and Information

YTEX SALE
ALL PLAYTEX BRAS
ALL PLAYTEX GIRDLES

0°/o OFF-.
' SAT. ONLYI

CHAIR SALE

DINETTE SET

,Special group of Berklihe
· wallaway recliners and
. rocker I rec;linera

TABLE &amp; 6 CHAIRS

REG. 279 ..............SALE SJI6
REG. S419 .............SALI S2IO
REG•.S456 .............SALE S305
REG. S479 .............SALE S320

S1.9

during the recent Ashland 011 spill in Pennsyh/ania. The geese
seem to have been unaffected, although their niunbers have
dwindled In the past week. (Times-Sentinel photo by Lee Ann
Welch)
·
·

·

s-turdlf ~·lrl

Supe·r

•nn1eman, J•M ull
or v .. k

.

Temperatures In Gallljiolls have been warm, but not really.
swimming weatller, unlerls of course, you're a Canadian Goose,
and,have taken up resldeac11 along the Ohio River. The geese have
been along the riverbank for the
month, an- some concern
raleed by the Audobon
In Athens 1111 to their

SATURDAY ONL Yl

To

"CAN

•

.

rr:=:::;;;;;;;;;::==~

YOU USE OUR HILP?" . .
Do you need a vacation from 24 hour care ·of
'

.

RCA INFARED .
REMOTE CONTROL
. Reg.
S349

LAMINATED TOP

,

Qililfte •
tile........,

e

·

e ·

. . ·

..., llOimi\Utetll. ·

POMEROY ~ Meigs County
Treasurer GeorgC' M. Collins has
·announced h&lt;' Is seeking a fourth
eJected term In the treasurer's
position . Collins filed his petition
for the Republlca.n nomination
for treasurer Friday afternoon.
Although this would be the ·
fourth time for Collins to seek the
treasurer's seat through the
elective process, he became
treasurer of the county In Marcil

~:~p~~=nth~e~~~:~p~~~~~~~~ ~~

Frank ·files
for Sheriff.

of luDell to Southeaster"ll Ohio. .
In (!ODCJualon, Sell· Loq a11d
Rep. Boater alated that they will
contlllue to work on this proposal
toward a prorram that ~llallow
the return of a fair abare of Issue
'IW' ~n to assist Southeast· .
e~n QbJO. With tllell' Jntra~tructure J)l'011)111111. ·
·
TlltclfliiiUOnwtllbedraftlq

•. ,.

,

Tuppers Plains Community Club
and Is active in the s ummer ·
league baseball program in th~
Tuppers Plains area.

Howard Frank, whO became
Information on strike benefits.
county auditor at that time.
"We're hoping for the best; · ·
· Collins resides on a 90-acre
we're also prepared for the
farm In Olive Township. where
worst," Corcoran said.
· . he, bls wife Nancy, and 12-yearIn East 'Bank, W.Va., union' · old son John Cavld. raise beef
coal miner Ja~es Estep said, ' cattle. Another son, Mkhael Lee,
"Nobody's heard , nothing. It'S Is a member of the U.S. Army,
unbelievable they can keep a stationed In Bambqrg, Germany.
secret this long. 1 guess·we will
Currently, Collins Is a member
all find out what Is gojng on of ,the Meigs County Budget
tomorroW'. We have prepared for Commission, Meigs · County
(See COAL, A4)
Board of Revisions, Meigs ,_ L.o.=..:.....-_..;__ _:_.o~...o.;:..,._-1
County Planning Commission
GEORGE M. l:UILLJI~
and Meigs County Hospital Com·
mission. He is also a member of
the Board of Trustees or · the

meet on Issue 2 _

LoiiiUtl'B olteuclcledtllatthe
~llaruun Ill the form~- , . aiiHflldlnllata to tilt Iaaue Two
. ~ ·~ an4 •
aN hopellll ies(ISIU. U4 wm be propo.tna
. ctals report. TMir amendment• tMt fllnlltr m~atton can be tllem hi the weeki ahead.
·
. lllld4! to euure a fair dlatrlbutlon

••'

.

neaotiatiOn
.continues.
~

.COLUMBUS - At the reqlleat . would be dell~ to benefit
_of Sen. ·Jan Michael' Loq aM rul'lll Ohio In 1i!l)"'al, an!l
State ~p. Jolynn Boater, the . Sovtheastem Qllla. ~lcally,
Appalachian DeJeaatlon of the thlw .report.
·
.
· 01110 Geaeral Alsembly met
LOq and Boater ·a lao note4
··Tbunday to dlleuaa Iaaue Two that they wiD PfOPOie to fliJ)IIn!l
tundlnl ~~~tO\VlllhiP alld vlllap ,.,_I 11ntaWhile .the dtlllfUOII 4111' not Uon at tile dlltrict tlflttlbutlon

mtdtadl.
did dll·
euaa potenttal tillhtlnalt• to
-the tXIItllll propoula, tile Oftl.

e·

.Sunday is on Its .w ay.
best handled on ihe table and not
"!3oth-sides are working very In the public for~m."
hard. Both·sldes are still at the
Tom · Hoffman, a spokesman
table .... As long as they're there. ··for the coal o!JE!ratorsl a·l so said
!here's a chance to get · a
he "can't say" If a strike ·or
settlement. That's our . objec- settlemcilt looks likely.' 'All I can
tlve," Coreoran said.
tell you Is they're continuing to
"A decision to sttlke Is one that' talk. Atthe momenttnere Is not a
Is taken very seriously~" one the deal.'·' .
·
union hopes t.o avoid, he added,
Like Corcoran, Uoffmari also
"(but) at tlie slime time we are said, "l have no comment on the ·
preparing· our members for a · mood at. the table. :... J:!oth sides
worst-case scenariO."
have decided that It's · In~ their
Asked what the miners sought,
Interest to leave the ,negotiating
Corcoran replied: "I Just am . to the negotlllfor}l at the table,"
prohibltE!d from speaking to the
and out or the news. ·
Issues by mu't ual agreement,"
The January l9l!8lssue of the
wlt)l the owners.. "It's been our
United Mine Workers Journal
experience that negotiations are
contalned ·several 'pages of .·

:~slato~

·ONLY 2 TO SILL!

endcirle allY

•

·states thilt for tl!ose students who
have chosen to take "credit ''
th&lt;'n the three six weeks grades
given by the teacher will be
averag'ed for the semester grade.
For those students who choose a
grade for the. first part of the '
third grading period. or those
who receive an •·F" for not
making up work, then all four
grades will be averaged for the ·
s!'mester grade.
The bottom line of the announcement Is that the student
carries the responsibility to see
that the make up work is
complete and the parent has the
respoilsblllity for arranging a
conf!'rence with the building
principal if there is a11 attend·
ance policy problem :

•'~' •

I

AT·ELBERFELD$
UND[RWEAR.

The second part or t~-·grade
will be given by ·the regular
teacher for the week done from
Jan. 25. The regular teacher Will
also give a grade of "credit" for
the work made up by those
students who received grades of
"Incomplete.". The student mak·
lng up the work can ask for a
letter grad&lt;' for this make up
work. ··
. Supt. Morris said thalli should
be emphasized that the student Is
responsible to see t.hat the make
up work is completed. This is the
policy in effect at all: times.
Students who do not make up
work will be given a grade of "F"
for the first part of the grade in
. the third six weeks.
The announcement further

'!

·;&lt;:./'''
.
' .r~~ .

•

part being from Dec. 21. 1987, to
Jar1. 21, 1988, and the second part
being from Jan. 25, 1988 to F.eb.
27, 1988. Grade cards wlll go out
on Mrach 3 and 4 . .
The student will receive two
grades for the ·third grading
period. ·The first" gra\'le will be
given bY the substitute teachers
Who worked during the strike and
will be based on the work.done by
those students who attended
school during the strike. The
student who did not attend or who
did not do enough enough to earn
grades from the sbustltute. wlll
receive a graae of "Incomplete''.
The student who did earn grades
. be . giver\
.
'
Will
a "credit" grade,
unless the student or the parent
desires to have a letter grade for
thls'· period.

/'

•

.

Oreat Savhagsl ·

8 Sections. 66. Pages
A Multimedia ln.c. Ne~ap8per

io take a swim?-'~--~---o:---....,
Technology raising
..
•
•
"
l fh
free press _questions
. ...'! .'
\1 ' ..
__ J,

&lt;

'
1'. '~-·.

Committee to meet
The RUtland VIllage Water
Committee will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday at the Rutland Civic
Center.

·Clarification

, .. .,....B-1·8

·~.

BRAND NEW FROM THE GROUND UP • .

l/2 PRICE

Otmer c;, Polk. 81 Wayne, .
Mich.. formerly of Pomeroy,
died Wednesday at the Garden
. City Hospital in Garden City,
Michigan.
.
Born in West Virginia, he was a
son of the late Clarence and
Agnes Rector Polk . He was a
retired steel worker.
Su rvlvlng are three sisters,
Mrs. Roberta.. Reichblum and
Mrs . Ma rie Rondazzo, both of
Wayne, and Mrs . Gladys Lightfritz, Garden City.
Servi~es will be held at 2 p.m.
Saturday at the Straight-Tucker

~ver

Meigs students may he in attendance violation

. ALL
HOUSEWARES

'

Along the

Comics-TV .............. Insert
Ct'asslfled!i . ~ ... ;.. ........ D-2·7
Deaths ................... :..... A-4
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sp:orts .. ~ ..... ,_..•.•.....•.. ~-1·8

•

.

·lnsidt&gt;
Buslness ................. ~·~··D-1

Announcements

.

C-1

Super ·Bowl22 preview

·Hi-tech·
'f anning ·

NOT JUST .REGAL • • • BUICK REGA.L

I

Area deaths

•

'

.'

Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - ·Ear·
line Ebersbach, Racine; Elma
Goodnite, Racine; James Burt.
Middleport.
Mr. Michael was born Dec. 21,
Charles Pickens
Thursday Discharges - Allen
1926 at Gallipolis, the son of the
BaU, Donald Collins, Dorothy
Charles j, Pickens, 68, Ne- late Oylvan and Hazel Thompson . Collins, Eula Wolfe. Pauline
wark. formerly of Middleport. Mich.ael. He tNas a veteran of
Der!'nberg!'r. Thurston Stone
died Tuesday morning at Licking · World War II having served In
Jr., . Stanley McGI!Ire, • Mary
the U. S. Army and he was
Memorial Hospital in Newark.
Carr.
Born in Middleport, he was a employed as a chernls t's
son of the late Speed l!nd Maggie assistant.
Surviving are his wife, Gloria
Amos Pickens. He was a gradu·
Fischer
Michael; three daughate of Middleport High School
ters
and
sons-In-law,
Brenda and
and a former te acher in the
Hickel,
Pomeroy;
Carol
Benny
Middleport schools also having
and
Barry
Theiss
and
Debbie
and
served as prihicipaL He was a
Curfman,
all
of
Syrac;use;
Kevin
superintendent in the Cleveland
a sol\ and daughter-In-law, Gary
and Central Ohio area schools.
Mr. Pickens was a graduate of and Lynn Mlcbael, (;allipolls;
Rio Grande College and Ohio two sons, Roger Michael. Sy.ra·
University and received . his cuse, &lt;Jnd Dennis Michael, Fort
masters degree in !'ducalion Riley, Kansas; a sister, Nora
from Ohio State University. He Shook, Akron; a brother, Ralpl!
was a member of the Ohio School Michael, . Lebanon, Ga. Also
Boards. Assn., the Buckeye Asso- · sUrviving are his mother-ln:taw,
ela tion of School Administrators. Susie Fischer, Morning St111:;
the American Association of five grandchildren and several
School Administrators, the Asso- nieces &lt;Ind nephews.
Officiating at Sunday's service
ciation of County Superintendwill
be Mr. Mark Morrow and
en ts and was a past president of
the .Centn!l Ohio Teachers Assn. burial will be In Meigs Memory
He was a veteran of World Warll Gardens. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7to 9
having served in the Navy .
p.m. Saturday.
Surviving are his wife, Norma
J. Kaiser Pickens; a son. J.
Bruce of Upper Arlington. and
Square dance
two brot hers, Richard E. of
A square dance wHI be held
Ches hire and Warren of Brook~day.Sp.rn. to midnight, at the
ville. ·
!liiddleport American Legion An·
Besides his parents he was
nex. Music by the True Country
preceded in death by two sisters
Band. . Refreshments will be
and seven brothers.
served. Admission $3.
Services were held at ll a.m.
today at the Brucker and Kishler
Sorority to meet
Funeral Home in . Newark with
Members of XI Gamma Ep.
.
the Rev. Charles Baker official·
silon Chapter of Beta Sigma .Phi
ing. Burial was in the Wesley
Sorority will meet in the upper
Chapel Cemetery, Hilliard.
.Pomeroy parking lot, 6: 15 p.m.
Contributions may be made to
Tuesday. to go to the Down Under
the Charles Pickens Memorial
Restaurant.
Sc holarship Fund, Licking
Council to meet
County Schools. Newark. Ohio
Racine Village Council will
43055.
meet at 7 p.m. Mo~Jday at the
Shrine Park building.
Otmer Polk ,.

I

..

1988

.c - -

EMS hru fioo co.lls Wednesday

•'

••

Incumbent Meigs County She, riff Howard E. Frank filed his
petition of candidacy for the
Republican nomination as the
party'alllerlff candJclatewlth the
Melts Co11nty Boarll of Elections
on Friday, Frt111Ji: 11 seeking the
· ~p~bllcan nomination . In the
May primary elections and If'
.nomlnat!ld will run for reelection
to hi• poat . IIi the November
election. He Is.seeking his RcOnd
term.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="112">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2678">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="37753">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="37752">
              <text>January 29, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1222">
      <name>michael</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="251">
      <name>pickens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1048">
      <name>polk</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
