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                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, April 7, 1988·

Pomeroy-Middleport, ()hio

People in the news

GRAND PRIZE - Frucle Shrimplin, Pomeroy, left, was the
winner of a VCR given In observance of the first anniversary of the
Middleport VIdeo Touch, and the grand opening of the Pomeroy
VIdeo Touch. Here Crystal Flglel, employe, presents the prize to
Mrs. Shrlmplln.

Xi Gamma Mu chapter meets
New officers were elected at '
the Tuesday night meeting of Xi ·
· Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, heid at the
home of Mrs. A. R. Knight,.
Lincoln HilL
Elected were Kay Adkins,
president; Carolyn Grueser, vice
president; Charlotte Hanning,
corresponding secretary; Kathy
Johnson, recording secretary;
Carolyn Colllns, treasurer; Mrs.
Knight, sponsor; and Sandy
Iannarelll, city council member.
Members voted on the girl of
the year which will be announced
at Founder's Day to be held at lhe
Sportsman in Athens on April 28.
Reservations are to be made at
the April 19 meeting of the
chapter which will be held at the
home of Annie Chapp1an. At that
time the social ritual tea for the
new pledges will be held.

_Ohio Lottery

•

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
EASTWOOD EASING OUT: Clint Eastwood headed up his
last City Ccuncll meeting in Carmel, CaUl., Tuesday night,
considering matters like restricting ska\eboards, lowering
speed limits and making zoning changes. ''This Isn't as easy as
It looks," he told the audience. "I've enjoyed It very much. I
wouldn't trade the last two years for anything."
Eastwood, who was elected mayor by a landslide two years
ago, isn't seeking re-election and will return to full-time
fatherhood and movie-making. But Eastwood says he may
re-enter politics once he spends some quality time with his kids .
"They are in their formative years ... and I don 't want to lose
any mor.e time that might be irretrievable," he said.
Eastwood has endorsed Jean Grace to succeed him in this
month's election. Meanwhile, he'll keep working on his latest
movie, "The Dead Pool," the further adventures of Dirty Harry
Callahan: • .
TEMPTATION OF COKE: David Ruffin, former lead singer
with the Temptations, is out on $1,5()() bond after being charged
in a cocaine case. Ruffin was am9ng several pt'Ople at a Detroit .
home last July 28 when authorities found a blue pouch
containing suspected cocaine residue and personal papers with
Ruffin's name on them . He has a hearing April 11 and, if
convicted. could be sentenced to anywhere from one to 20 years
in prison. ·
Ruffin's soulful voice made hits of Molown songs !Ike "My
Girl" and "Ain't Too Proud to Beg" in the 1960s, and recently
made an album with another former Temp, Eddie Kendrick.
SOFTBALL QUESTIONS, NO HARD HITTING: Legal eagle
Alan Dershowllz has defended John DeLorean and Claus von
Bulow, teaches law at Harvard and writes a magazine column
and he wanted his new television talk show to be something
speciaL Dershowltz promised hard-hitting ·interviews in the
monthly shows on WSBK in Boston but he played softball in his
debut with Geraldine Ferraro.

The Ohio Eta Phi Chapter
dance will be held on April 16 at
the American Legion hall In
Pomeroy on April 16 with the cost
to be $5 a couple.
Maurtsha Nelson presided at
the meeting. A report was given
on Bob Spencer, husband of a
member, Dee, and blood dona·
lions given or arranged through
the membership.
Also reported on were Easter
baskets prepared for several
area children. The ways and
means committee discussed the
A cake walk with proceeds
Meigs · Ccunty Fair premium going to the miscellaneous com·
book ads noting that the project mlttee projects was a feature of
must be completed by April 15. the recent meeting of Chester
'Carolyn Grueser is chairman.
Council 323, Daughters of AmerFor the cultural program, . lea, held at the hall.
Sheila Harris talked on herbs,
Margaret Tuttle was the
flowering and foliage, and pol winner. New by-laws were read
pourrl.
and approved at the meeting
Kay Adkins and Gall Roush presided over by Thelma White
served refreshments.
Reported ill were Dorothy Rlt·

Church
•
notices

He asked the 1984 vice presidential candidate about
Democratic politics but when it came to the major controversy
in Ferraro's life - the real estate fraud Indictment of her
husband John Zaccaro Sr. and the cocaine charges facing her
son Job~ in Vermont - Dershowlti asked only, "II you had
stayed in Queens, would aU of it happened?"
His producer. Larry Silverman. said Dershowltz knew the.
interview was too soft. "I think that Alan Would agree with the
assessment that he was not as hard hitting as he might have
· been," he said . "I think It was because he knows Werraro) as
well as he does."
·
.
KENNEDY IBE: Rep. Joe Kennedy, D·Mass ., says a British
soldier got his Irish up when he used-profanity around a priest In
NorUtern Ireland. Kennedy, the son of RObert Kennedy and
nephew of John and Ted, got into a shouting match with the
soldier who had · stopped their car In an IRA stronghold In
Belfast.
The priest had been driving Kennedy when they encountered
a British army patrol and a soldier ordered the clergyman out
so his "car could be searched. As the bad feelings mounted, the
soldier shou(ed ·"go back to your own country" and Kennedy
responded with "Why don't you go back to yours?"
Afterward, Kennedy described the BrlUsh soldiers' attitude
as callous. "You don:t curse in front of a Catholic P~!est .,- .a t .
least In our country yo\1 aren't brought up to do that, he said.
"It (Ute Incident) was a disappointment and an eye opener in
terms of the attitude the British troops seem to have for the Irish
Catholics."
GLIMPSES: Pulitzer Prize winner Bernard Rands and
composer John Cage wm highlight the Boston Symphony
Orchestra's 1988-89 season ... David Brinkley invited columnists
like Art Buchwald, Vernon Jordan and James J. Xllpatrlck
journalists Sam Donaldson, Ted Koppel, Jim Lehrer, Andrea
MltcheU, Bob Woodward and Ben Bradlee to the party for his
new book, "Washington Goes to War."

Buckeye Card sign-up day slated

Chester Council has meeting

SALEM CENTER - A repre· · days a week at the senior cltlzens
sentative of the Buckeye Pro· center and the library In
gram will be at the Pick and Pomeroy.
The Buckeye Program Is for
Shovel Grocery Store In Salem
Center on Monday, Aprilll, from persons 60 years,of age or older,
12: 30 to 2: 30 p.m.; and at the or for disabled persons. Proof of
Racine Department Store on age wllh a birth certificate or
Friday, Aprll15, from 10:30 a.m. driver's Ilcense is required.
Disabled persons must have a
to 2 p.m.
Residents interested in the letter from a doctor as proof of a
program may also sign-up five dlsabUi ~

chle confined to a Columbus
Hospital; Becky Broderick, a
patient at Holzer, and Cathy
Pullins, lll at home.
Pledges lo the American and
Christian flags, reading of scrip·
ture from Psalms 37. and the
Lord's Prayer In unison opened
the meeting attended by 28
members.

Daily Number

171
Pick 4

Page6

8160

CleiU' tonight. Low In mid
30s. Sun11y Saturday. Highs
near 60. Chance of rain zero

percent.

·--"":"~·

•

e

......

at

Vot.38, No.236
Copyrighted 1988

•

enttne
•

2 Sections, 16 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, April 8, 1988
..,

.

;:

Councll proceeds with rirSt phase of project
By KATIE CROW
Sentlnel "Correspondent

as many as five changes.
Wingett explained the conclu·
slon is the two departments want
"They (officials of the Ohio a top notch launching ramp, a
Outdoor Recreation and J?lvlslon more elabora!e facility. Officials
or·watercraft) want a top notch have changed the width of the
launching ramp" said Robert ramp from 20 feet to 30 feet,
Wingett Thursday . night when Wingett said.
explaining progress- on the pro- · Wingett obtained a grant of
posed marina to the Syracuse $66,000 and the proposed cost is
Vlllage CounciL ·
$88,000 with the village to bear
Wingett, project engineer for the cost of the balance. However,
the project, told council he and Wingett and council were under
Phil Roberts, county englnner, the impression the total grant
had met with officials of would covet the cost of the
OORD&amp;W In regard to the marina. ramp ," parking lot and
marina to see exactly what they road to the facility. However, this
wanted as the design plans have. is not the case.
been returned several times with
Due to the changes, the
changes each time, sometimes will only cover the ramp,

lot and road. Wingett explained
he was told by officials of
OOR&amp;DW that they are willing to
put additional money Into the
project. The marina itself cannot
be put In until the first phase,
ramp, parking area and road are
completed.
Wingett feels the plans should
be finalized by the first of July at
which time the project can be
advertised for bids.
What has developed was not
the original plan. Council voted
to have Wingett and Roberts
proceed with the first phase.
A letter was received from
Senator Jan Long which ·stated
that the Ohio Department of
Transportation has

wllllngness to assist Syracuse
with shoulder widening on SR 124
In upper Syracuse near the
Largent property.
Kenneth Buckley, council
member, read bids received to
repair the tennis courts fromM &amp;
D Blactop Sealing, Inc., Columbus, the only bids received.
• One bid was for the removal
and resettingofpostsandplaclng
or concrete and striping a total of
$1,050. The second bid was for
leveling, sanding, painting lines,
scraping and sealing a total of
$4,900. · Council voted to accept
the blqs .
·
It was also reported that
culvert to be placed along Third
Street had been received and

road signs are in but posts must
be ordered.
Roger Michael, project eng!·
neer for the house numbering
project met wtth council and
submitted the street address
directory for the vlllage. Each
resident wlll be given a directory
by stopping at the office of the
water board anytime from the
first to the 10 of the month
between nooh and 4 p.m . There
wiU be no charge to residents for
the directory.
·
Council encourages residents
to place their respective
numbers on their homes as It will
prove very beneflcal for the fire
and emergency departments,
utility companies and delivery

trucks.
·
Mrs. Minter Fryar met with
council in regard to cleaning
Syracuse Cemelery. It was explalned that the cemetery is
maintained by "the trustees and
they clean the cemetery twice a
year. The trustees are not
financially able to do anymore.
It was suggested that possibly
general relief workers could
work at the cemetery on
occasslon.
Butch Lisle met with councll In
regard to having a tree cut down
that Is located on village property. Council has been unal:&gt;le to
find someone to do this type of
work who has the necessary
Continued on page 9

Top-ranking officials indicted
by Mingo County gr~d jury

l

•

SOCKS
SALE
Women's and girls' sizes.

WHIRLPOOL
·APPLIANCE

CREW SOCKS and ANKLETS
Reg. $1.25 to 56.95

SALE

I

~tr0,1

Sale Pried
·From O"IV

WOMEN'S

UNIFORM
SALE

BdY MOW AND SA~EI
AJI Whirlpool washers, dryers,
ranges, refrigerators,
dishwashers, freezers and
microwave ovens are on sale.

CHILDREN'S

PANTS, TOPS, SKIRTS, LAB
COATS, PANTSUITS and
DRESSE-S

16 20 •iJrE''IIf.Jg"•

ROBES, NilE SHIRTS arid GOWNS

MEN'S SOLID COLOR

KNIT
SHIRTS
SALE!
MEN'S

I

Reg. 5239:00 3 PC. OA~ or MAPLE ........... SALE S177
Reg. 5339.00 5 PC. OAK or MAPLE ........... SALE S257
Reg. S619.00 7 PC. OAK or MAPLE ........... SALE S477

REG. $14.95

WESTERNS....... 13·88

Reg. $129

SEWING ROCKER
Sale Sl 03
Reg. s169 SlAT -BACK ROCKER...........SALE s13 S
Reg. S209 JEFFERSON ROCKER ..........SALE 5167
S229 WEBSTER ROCKER .............SALE s183

.......

88

.

COATS &amp; CLARK

SIVI Thie Wfukud

SHIRTS
Choose lang or short sleeve

111.95 and 119.9\!4.

RO,CKER
SALE

Make emllent golf shirts.

REG. S12.95

$16.95 and 117.91

~
WI NT UK

KNITIING YARN

KNIT SHIRTS ....... 510.50

LADIES' .

s

KNIT SHIRTS....... 1 J•90

BLOUSE
SALE

$148 .SKEIN

Missy •ius t. to 20 and 40·46.
. Fashion and basic styles in
1olids, prints and stripes.

Re9:.. S14 to S30

Sale rrlced

$118 9 TO
$2549

from noon to 4 p.m. between the flrsl and lOth of
each month. Shown with the new directories are,
front, left to right, Roger Michael, Mayor
Pickens, and Kathryn Crow; back, Minter Fryar,
Jack Williams, Jim HID, Ernie Slslllln and
Kenneth Buckley. ..

Wesf hit by pawerful winds

Bays Sins: 6 mas. ta ~ize 7
Girls Sizes: 6 mas. to Ssze 14
REG 16.00 SLEEPWEAR ............ SALE 14.79
REG ' 19.00 SLEEPWEAR .......... SAlE S7 •19
REG. 114.00 SLEEPWEAR ....... SALE lll.l 9
REG: 117.00 SLEEPWEAR ....... SALE 113•59

Sins S. M, l and XL ltTigre
and J. J Cochrao. Shari 1luvts.

WESTERN
styles in silts S, M. Land LX
sizes. True W11tern styling.
Wrangler, J. J. Cackran and
'
Dakota.
113.95 ond 115.95 $ 2 88
WESTERNS........... 1 •

DmECTORIES COMPLETED - Syracuse ,
VIDace alreeel address directories were dell·
vered lo Syracuse VIUage Councll Tbur8day ·
evealng by Roger Michael, project eaglneer for
the house numbering project. Directories will be
avaUable to resident&amp;, free of charge, and may be"
picked up at the office.of the water board anytime

SUMMER
SLEEPWEAR
PAJAMAS, SHORTIE PAJAMAS, ·

Si1ts to
REG. s12.00 ....iALE 113.50
REG. 18.00.. SAU I lb 50
REG. :22.00 .. SALE 122:50
REG. 30.00 ..

1.;..,.;,........

WOOD
DINETTES

99 (

By United Preas International
Pla.lns, which basked in record
Powerful winds diminished ht\iit Thursday, the National
after lashing the West and Weather Service said.
overturning trucks near the
A strong low pressure sys tern
Utah-Nevada border but. adviso- over Wyoming mixed wlt!l a
ries remained over Nevada and strong high pressure system off
California today. while snow jell the central Pacific Coast to whip
In the northern Rockies, cloS1ng up strong winds across the West
roads in Wyoming's Yellowstone late Thursday. the NWS said.
Winds gusting up to 63 mph
National Park.
·
toppled
five semitrailer trucks
Hot weather was forecast tor
paris of the Midwest and central and knocked out windows of four

Nation undergoing worst flu
epid~mic in past four years
ATLANTA (UPI) - Deaths
from Influenza and pneumonia In
1988 indicate the nation is undergoing Its worst flu epidemic since
1984, statistics Issued by the
national Centers for Disease
Control showed Thursday.
The CDC said the Influenza
outbreak at Its peak accounted
for 7 percent of ali deaths
reported by 121 of the nation's
major cities. The respiratory
dllease was still above epidemic
levels as of the week ended April
2, the CDC said.
Four years ago, during the
1984-85 flu season, the percentage
of flu and pneumonia deaths

c!)mpared to all deaths slightly
exceeded 7 percent.
For the week ended Aprll2, the
CDC reported 861-deaths due to
pneumonia and flu ln' 121 cities.
When the epidemic peaked In
early March, the number of flu
deaths totaled 991.
The CDC said the percentage of
deaths attributed to pneumonia
and influenza is calculated each
week and compared with total
deaths that would be expected In
the absence or an influenza
epidemic.
The Influenza outbreak, startlng late in the winter compared
Continued on page 9 ·

other vehicles near Wendover on
the edge of the Bonneville Salt
Flats In western Utah.
The powerful wind had decrea~ed across the West by the
end of the night in most areas and
high wind warnings in northwest
Utah and eastern Nevada were
canceled, forecasler Pete Rey·
nolds said.
But advisories were In effect
over southern Nevada and the
mountains and northern deserts
of Southern California with winds
o! 25 to · 40 mph expected,
Reynolds said.
Winds gusting to 60 mph
blasted Elko County in Nevada,
with reports of roof damage to
homes around Wells and near
Spring Creek. Qusts of 82 mph
damaged a hangar door at the
Battle Mountain airport.
On Thursday, afternoon
temperatures soared Into the 80s
In the Dakotas - more than 30
degrees above normal. Thirty
record highs for the date were set
in nine states across the central
and northern Plains.
It was~ degrees at Aberdeen,
S.D., 85 at Bismark, N.D., and 73
at Alsmosa, Colo. The temperature climbed to 100 at "Yuma,
· Ariz., 87 at Val~~ttne, Neb., and
Continued on page 9

WILLIAMSON, W.Va. (UPI)
- For seven years, vote-buying
and other political corruption
abounded in Mingo County, alleges prosecutor James Colburn,
who has persuaded a special
grand jury to indict 1G -present
and former government
officials.
Two state senators - H.
Truman Chafin and John Pat
Fanning - were among those
named in the indictments issued
from Williamson Thursday afternoon. Fanning, a - McDowell
County Democrat, Is running for
re-election this year.
.
The lndlctmen ts alleged the
commission of acls' of political
corruption, from the selllng of
the sherttf's office In 1982 to
Charles "Eddie" Hilbert to paying approximately $3,500 to be on
county Democratic Party ·chalrman Johnle Owens' political
slate in the 1984 primary.
''That money was to be used for
Illegal purposes," Colburn said,
"paying off elections officials,
buylng·votes, that sort of thing."
. The officials and former off!·
clals were named in a 10-count
indictment alleging bribery and .

grant is for the cooperative effon
between Hartford, Mason and New
The cities or Hartford. Mason Haven and lhe,Y will share eqoally
and New Haven received a $2~tqoo in its benefits,' Smilh said, adding,
grant from lhe lhe State of west "All three town councils shared eV'qinia to combat drug usc by area qually and SUPJl9rted the grant
yOIIIh and educare area youlh about
it was just done in
the pitfalls of drug and alcohol use,
ord's name."
Hariford Mayor David Smilh an·
WhUe !here is other anti-drug
IIOUIICed lhis week.
money available for communities,
The amount of lhe grant, this grant is different from lhe "Jus1
$25,000, he said. is the most tbat Say No" propam initiated by F"II'St
· can be awardod under the grant Lady Nancy Kea&amp;an. Smilh said.
proglllll.
•
The funds, ho added, will be
1bo grant, alth!&gt;~ applied for aimed al' youth in the bigh risk
in Hanford's name, 11 for aU three categories and will be used to stan
Bend Ale&amp; towns. he said. ~

csa';

alcohol . prevention programs in
grade schools.
1
Other items the money will be
used for include gues1 speakers for
'the high school, parent training
seminars, equipment for programs
at lhe community caster, boob on
drugs for !he llb!Wf. and brochures
• for monlhly distnbulion in the
communities, Smith said.
· Some goals llSied in lhe p t re-qUOil include liolh activibes and

education.
Offering alternative drug free BC·
lividell to diJc:ourage adolescentJ
and youths from abusing drugs is
one of tbc goals listed by lhe re--

this year on 13 felony charges by
a federal grand jury. He has
retained his post as sheriff and is
free on $100,000 bond .
Owens has pleaded guilty to
several political corruption
charges.
The federal Investigation in the
county has resulled in more than
50 convictions, and Thursday's
Indictments were prompted by a'
state investigation of alleged
voting irregularities In a 1985
election in the Mingo County
town of Gilbert.
.
Chafin, who sat on the county
commission with Ronald Rum·
ora and Steven Adkins ln 1982,
denied the charge alleged by the
indictment.
"I received no money or
benefit as a result of the transaction," Cha!ln said in a prepared
statement. " I was not th~re when
the commission voted on these
matters, nor did I agree with
anyone at the time not to be
present at that meeting."
Rumora and Adkins were
named in the 10-count bribery
and conspiracy indictment
handed up Thursday.

FROSTY SNOW.- Cherry bl0880Dll coated by
IDowfaU worried many with weekend plans for
frosty IDOW set the seene In Tokyo today after an
traditional cberry blossom-viewing parties.
unexpected AprU snowstorm. Tbe overniJbl
(REUTER)
,
.
.
~~~--~--~----~----~

Bend area communities·· get state drug-grant
By Malt Robertson

conspiracy to be part of Owens'
political machine, Colburn said.
That conspiracy went on from
1980 until last year, the special
prosecutor said.
The officials were charged
with attempting to influence law
enforcement and the outcomes of
the 1984 and 1986 primary elections in the southern West Virginia coal county.
To keep this year's primary
election Iron\ being tainted by
improper poUtical practices, a
special grand jury- empaneled
in January 1987 - will be
ava!lable May 10 for citizens who
"see what they perceive to be
election law violations," Colburn
· said.
Fanning was named as one of
the pt'Ople taking part In the
conspiracy and bribery activity,
and Chafin was accused of
accepting money wh!le he was a
member of the Mingo County
Commission in 1982 to appoint
Hilbert as sheriff.
Hilbert has agreed to plead
gu!lty to paying more than
$25,000 to be appointed sheriff,
replacing Owens In "the position.
Hilbert was indicted earlier

quest.
Other goals include educating
yoiUig people about the dangers of
IObacco use, including smolceless
IObacco, and providing inslructi?n
and education about lhe dangers of
drug abuse. This last goal will
focus on high school and junior
high acbool swdents and will center
oo lhe dangers of driving while in·
toxicated.
Meetings of lhe coinmunity ad·
visory COIUICil will continue to be
held to flne-wne lhe program and
make adjustments as necessary, accordifli to lhe grant proposal. .

Hijacked plane flies over _Beirut

BEmUT, Lebanen (UPI) - A hijacked Kuwaiti jumbo jet
with aboul 110 h08tage11 aboard Dew over the closed Beirut
airport Friday, airport lower olliclala said.
"We announce closing Beirut airport. No planes are taking ott
and no planes wiU be allowed to land here Indefinitely. " a
security official at Beirut airport told United Press
In terna tiona!.
The Official, who asked not to be named, said, "We took a
decision not to allow the hijacked Kuwaiti plane to land hes:e."
Security sources said obstacles werep•cedGIIrunwaysofthe
Syrian-pollced facUlty to bamper a pGIII(ble landing of tile
plane, which took off from Muhad Airport In northeastern Iran
at 2: 28 p.m. (6: S8 a.m. EDT).
·
The plane had been at Mashad for almost 811 hours after
terrorists forced the jumbo jet down and demanded the release
.of 17 extremists Imprisoned In Kuwait. Kuwait has rejected the
demand.

�.·

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•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Commentary

Reds, Mets, Dodgers, Giants post wins

Page-2'-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday. April 8, 1988

Apr. 1'- New Jeraey 3, NY lalaadera!

.

House ~epU:hlicans doclle, cooperative with Democrats

'

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE. INT!liRESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~
~m~ ,..,..,__,.L-.....,.. ~o ..=.
'q:lv
. .
ROBERT L. WINGETT
. ~-Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o!The United Press International. Inland Daily Press
Association and the Am,..rican Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETIE:RS OF OPINION are welcome . They shou ld be lt&gt;ss than 30CI ~1: ords
long. Allletlers are subject to ed!Ung and must be signed w!th name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned let.ters wlli .be published. Letters should be In
good taste·, addres!:ilng Issues, not personalities .'

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- There was a time when House Republicans, though
•
· . in the minority, were feisty in pressing th.e lr point of view.
In 1975, Rep. Alan Norris of Westerville propped a yellow toy
earthmover on his desk one day to protest the Democrats'
"steamroller" tactics. Minority Leader Charles Kurfess of Bowling
Green had the recording of a train wblstie -Indicating a "railroad"
job - played In the House chamber.
Rep. William Batchelder of Medina wore a dog muzzle to session.
One day, Rep. Robert Netzley of Laura clamored lor recognition.
When he opened his mouth to speak, out flew a white handkerchief,
symbolizing the "gag" policy he was protesting.
No more.
·
For 10 years, House Speaker Vernal Riffe ,Jr., D·New Boston, and
House Mlno~lty Leader Corwi!l Nixon, R·Lebanon, have coexlst~d
peacefully.
·
Riffe, 62, and Nixon, 70, belong to the same generation. They
believe In getting things done by cutting deals. Long·wlnded
speeches, philosophizing and parliamentary maneuvering only
hamper the process, In their view .
• Nixon and Riffe are good, card·playlng friends. Some believe It's an
unhealthy relationship. Riffe will visit a Nixon fund·raislng~ventand
praise him as "the best .minority leader In the history o! Ohio, and I
plan to keep It that way ." Everybody laughs, Including Nixon, whose
1986 Christmas card showed him in hunting garb beside a sign: "This
Is Vern Riffe Country."
The gin rummy table is the only place Nixon Is allowed to win. Riffe
bas been speaker a record 14 years and commands a 60-39 majority.
Riffe makes most policy decisions and a tight corps of Democratic
· leaders carries them out. It he needs help from Republicans, he
signals Nixon and tbe help generally arrives.
In return, Nixon's members are thrown some crumbs. One or two of
their bills pass; they get an am~ndanent In the budget or a capital
improvement appropriation In their district.
Extended floor debate on bills is discouraged, as · are floor
amendments.
"Your work is done In the committees, not on the floor of the
House," explains Riffe. "I tell people, 'You· get your best hold in
.committee.' When you're on the floor out there, that's business, it's
not monkey business. I've streamlined this House o!
Representa tlves."
Some argue that Riffe has streamlined the democracy out of the
House.
"The power that one Individual has Is undemocratic," said Rep.

Oefector damages
•
spy ServiCe By lack Anderson
•

WASHINGTON- A quiet war
of tit·for·tat ha s been waged for
nine months between the Central
Intelligence Agency 'lJld the
Cuban Intelligence .service ever since Fidel Castro lea rned
that one of his top . spies had
defected to the United States.
Last June 6. the most lmpor·
tant ·cuban agent ever to cross
over to the CIA simply took a car
from the Cuban embassy in
Czechoslovakia and drove to
Vtenna, where he surrendered to
U.S. dlpolmats.
He was Maj . Florentino Aspil.
laga Lombard. 40, who had.
In Cuban
intelligence
worked
since
he was
15.
Our intelligence sources say
Castro
bonkers" had
when de·
he
heard "went
that Aspillaga

Department ML of the DGI,
headed by Col. Ramon Oroza, Is
the most Important, · employing
a bout 70 percent of DGI case
officers and gathering political
Intelligence abroad.
Department MZ, headed by Lt.
Col. Enrique Miguel Cicard, Is
one of the most secret, because tt
is responsible for recruiting spies
in foreign countries.
Department MG recruits
agents In Cuba, attempting to
••turn " foreign diplomats, bus!·
nessmen and ships' captains
visiting Havana.

$· $ $ $ $ $ $ $ S S $

1

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(Next: Why It doesn't change)

'Your Dollar Goes

!or.$Nissan$ . $ . $

Further/~tlay

AMERICAN LEAGUE

Eut
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e 1.1111 t: 0 1.1110 !
1 ,..,
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Milwaukee
New \'orlt

Clevelud
Dot ...
Torollto

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Callfomla
KauU City
Seattle

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I

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Qlleaso 2, Calllomla J
City 1', Toronlo 4

x.._.

r C,leveland 4, Ted.!l 1
Milwaukee at Baltlm(Ke, ppd. , NID
MinneMta at New York, ppd ., rala

Friday'• Games

1187 records in .-re•lheee.)
Baltimore (McGreprl-71al Develahd
(Ballet 7-8), 8:11p.m.
MilwaUkee (Wepnaa lt-111 at New

Yorl (Dotson 11-1!), 1':10 p.m.
Toroal• (SUch IS.t) at

IOla (Biyleven 15-U), 8:0$ p.m.

Mlnne'

08rolt (Roblnao• &amp;.e) at Kuu.s City
{Ba1Mlsler 18-IIJ , 8:35 p.m .
Boston l&amp;)'d 1·3) al Texas £Je ncoat o.
1), 8:35p.m.
Seattle (Campbell ' 1-t) at O!J.
caro (Peres 1·1 ), 1: 0$ p.m.
Oakland CDavls 1-1) at Ca lifornia CMcCaaklll 4-6), 11}:05 p.m. Sacur•.f 'sGames

Baltimore at Clewland
Detro• ac Ka~ City
'toronto at Ml.meao\a
Mltwau.llee at New York, nllhi
IMMOe M Dllcap , nl1ht
IIGI&amp;on at Texaa, nllflt

Oakland at Callromla, nlrht
NA.TIONA.L LEAGUE
Eut

'
''

W L Pet. 08
! 0 l.otll t I .H'I
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C.k ...
New Yorlt
Mttabul'fh
PIIU.delphla
Molltreal
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Atlanta

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rliil;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;••

;ecr~:~o~u:oc~~o~~~~~~~s~ ~~h!~
reported recently, Asplllaga
brought with him the news that
the CIA had been badly outfoxed
by Cuba for more two decades.
According to the defector, nearly
every spy recruited by the CIA In
Cuba since the Bay of Pigs
invasion had been a double agent
working for Castro.
With Asplllaga In U.S. hands.
Castro decided to one· up the CIA
before it could use the defector's
Information.
On July 13, a Cuban newspaper
printed the names and pictures of
U.S. officials It claimed were CIA
agents operating out of our
diplomatic office there - . a U.S.
Interest section in the Swiss
Embassy In Havana.
U.S. officials, angry over the
slap at their dlploma'!s. retal·
Ia ted on July 16 by ewelllng two
Cuban official frorr their diplo·
matte oltice here - a Cuban
interest section In .he Czechos·
lovaklan Embassy in
Washington .
Castro wasn' t finished. · He
knew that Asplllaga knew about
the double agents and the false
Information those agents had fed
the CIA over the years. So he
'
published
stories of a half dozen
·'heroic" Cuba n double agents
l'll!om he had pian ted In the CIA.
· 'I'wo of them were fishing vessel
captains. CIA olflclals were so
e(nbarassed by Asplllaga's reve·
lations that they weren't about to
be the first to spread that news.
:The most serious aspect of this
un:derground spy war Is that
ASplllaga can reveal the names
of 350 Cubai'l agents abroad.
9astro knows that and has called
some of those agents back home
rather than risk their exposure.
But to pull them all back would
pllra'lyze Cuban intelligence op·
erations for years.
.
Aspillaga has proved he Is an
ln;.iependent·mlnded defector .
He still has affection for his
fo~mer buddies In the spy bus!·
n~os . He Is not angry with them,
bul with · 'the Castro regime,
which lives in luxuary while
ottier Cubans barely eke out an
existence.
So Asplllaga has not spilled all
the names to the CIA. One source
says he Is walling until some are
back In Cuba, and that he Is
secretly communicating with
. several. urging them to defect,
tOQ. At least two other agents of
the Cuban General Directorate of
Intelligence have defected as a
result of his efforts.
Asplllaga :s news was not all
en)barasslng . He has passed on
' ·vaiuable Intelligence, Including
the Information that since the
U.S. Invasion of qrenada In 1983,
Castro ·bas been spying on his
friends, Including Angola, Ethlo·
pi~, Mozambique, Nicaragua
and even the Soviet Union. He
was reportedly livid about the
Soviet meddling In Grenada,
which he thinks prompted the
U.S. Invasion.
The CIA has picked up lmpor·
tant Information from Asplllaga
about the DGI hierarchy. He says
the DGI is still under the control
of the Ministry of the Interior.

Marie Tansey, R·Vermlllon.
¥
"There's a tine line there, and I think that line has been
overstepped," said Rep. Louis Blessing of Cincinnati, the assistant
Republican whip.
.
·'We're making a mistake as a caucus not formally protesting some
of the distortions of the legislative process," said Rep. Joan
Lawrence, R·Galena, who at one time ran the League ,of Women
•Voters o! Ohio.
"It's resulted In bad government," said Lawrence. "It's too far
removed .from what the process Is supposed to be- free and open
debate, an opportunity to discuss and amend. That's gone. It's
efficient and maybe even effective, but It's not representative
government."
"The deals are all cut with the leadership," said Rep. Lynn
Wachtmann, R·Napoleon. "It pre·empts the need to have 99
representatives and 33 senators. Maybe we only need to elect three
people -the leaders of the House and Senate and the governor."
The House Republican leadership defends Its strategy ·which,
according to Rep. David Johnson of North Canton, the assistant
leader, Is to "communicate, cooperate and try to manage actions on
the floor."
"Just making a lot of noise on the floor doesn't get It d0ne," s~id
Johnson.
.
"Rather than beln~ a 10·mlnute hero," said Rep JoAnn Davidson of
Reynoldsburg, the Republican whip, "maybe you're better off to
work at what you want to accomplish In the long haul."
Nixon, Johnson and Davidson belleve ,they have helped shape the
state budget and other major policy bills, and have gotten Rille to go
along with bills and projects that are lr.1portant to Republican
districts.
"We got a lot of Repubilcan bills the last three or four weeks (of the
recent winter session) that we wouldn't have gotten II I hadn't been
sitting here," said Nixon.
Rep. Robert Clark, R·Chardon, agrees. 'Til probably have more
b!Us passed this session than any other Republican," he said.
Clark, a former Navy officer stationed In the Pentagon, said he
understands leadership, and that Rille has no peers as a leader .
Clark said he Is able to get things accomplished because he has
helped Democrats get bills through the Republican-controlled Senate
and the favor .Is returned.
Netzley, however, yearns lor the old days when there w!s pitched
battle between the parties. "They think what they're doing Is
Important," he said of the GOP members. "It doesn't amount to a

Z%

st . l.o••l

New Yorll 8, lhntreall
Loa Aaplta I, Atlanta 2
Saa Franclaco I, San Dte10 I
Pltt.bura:h at Philadelphia, ppd., rah1
Frlday'!l GaiiK"fJ
( 1187 record• In ,.reathese11
New York (AKIIIIera 11-J) at P•lla·
4el ..la (Rulfla 11·141), 1':111 p.m.
Hoa.lon CRyan &amp;-II) at Claci ...U
(Robl ...n 1-5), 7: 35p.m.
O.k:qo (Moyer 1J.11) at Montreal
(l'Oiml&amp;llll ~A}, '7: J5 P·Rl·
Loa All~ln (Leary 3-11) at 1\tlarua
(Giavl• J.f), '3':40 p.m.
Plltlbai'Jh (Walk 11-!1:) at St. Louis (Co.t
11-IJ, 1:31 p.m.
Su Dlep (Jones t-1) at San Francl~~eo

(l.aCoes 11-10), 11:35 p.m.
Sat.-day't GarrHts
Houatoa at ClnciDaall
New Yortl: at PIIUadelpllla
8u Dlero at San Fraocl~~eo
Plt'-buJ'IIa at&amp; . L. .la, night
Odeqo at Montreal, atB:ht
Lo1 An1ell!fl at A.tlaata, nlrht

NATIONAL BA.SKETIIALL ASSOC .

AUaata

Thv.l"'* Reaults

ne, New Jeney 1M

p.m . .

. . .ana at Wublllll(oa, 8 p.m.
New Vorl at Chk:ap, l:H p.m.

at O.IIM, 8:311 p.m.

Den¥er al San Anlo..o, 8:30p.m.
LA Cllppera at LA LaUra,11:30 p.m.
PhteDIIl M Goldea81ate, 10:30 p.m.
Portlalld at Se:aiUt, II: 38 p,m.
Sahanlll,) 1 Game~

AUua, ataht

Dfl•¥er at Dallu, nl1ht
la•ua a1 Mltw.akee, 11ltht

Sacnmemo at Plaoellla, al1ht
LA. Lalrer1 al Portland, nlpt
Hoaetoa at Seattle, nlahll

NATION"-L HOCK-EY LEAGUE
Playoff Schedule
&lt;Beat oiScvcin)
FIRST ROUND
Wales Coafere Dee
Pahtek Dlvlllon
NY lslandera ..... New Jt'rl!lleJ
(Serln tie• I· I)
Apr. I- NV lalude'n t, New Jer.ey S,

OT

Adam• Dlvt1ton

Montreal"" Hartfonl
&lt;Ca•dlena lead series ~-0 )
Apr. f - Moalreal 4, Hartforii.J
Apr. 1'- Montreal '7 , HartfonlJ
Apr. I - Mo•lreal .t Hardord, 7: ~

p.m.

Apr. JO- Montreal at Hartford, T: G5
p.m.
(Boekla \'1, Buffalo)
( Brul..,lead ~~erie• !-1)
Apr. 1- llo1ton 7, llurfalo 3
· .\llr. 1- lodoa •· llullalo l
Apr, 1 - Boataaat Bulla.lo, 1: 95p.m.
. Apr. 10 - 'Boaton atBulfalo, 7:15p.m.
(:am~DeU Confereoce
NoiTIII Dlovlalon
De&amp;Nil n. 'I'DhlOIO
(Serte. ~led I· I )
Apr. I - Toron'o 6, De~.rolt Z
Apr. 1- Jletroll i, Toroll&amp;o t
Apr. I - Di!~roltatToronto, 8;t5 p.m .
Apr. 18- DetrollM TonuRo,1: 0Sp.m,
Apr. 11 - Toronlo II De trow., 7: 3J p.m.
81. IAlP VI. Dlica(O
(Blues lead Mrln 2.0)

A.pr. I - St. Lull •· Chklaro 1
Apr. l - St. Loula J, CMeaco!
Apr. 1-St. Loullat Chlea1e, 8: 3!ip.m.
Apr. 10 - St. Leul1 at Chkaro. II: 1m
p.m .
Sm)'tbe Dl\'ialon
Cal~IU'f u. Lo1 -'n1e1ct1
(Fiamea lead aerle•UI
Apr. 6- Calraryl, Loa AareiN 2
A.pr. 7- C.l(aryl, Loa Mrelea4
o\pr. I - (;allal')' at Lo1 An rein, lD: 311
p.m.
1\pr. 10 - Calpry a&amp; Los An1elea,
ID: S.'l p.m.
EdmoDloD YS. WI..Upe11
(Oilers lead ser~a 2-Cl)
,
Ajlr. 6- Edmotden,, Wlanlpel4
Apr. '2- Edmollli•n3, Wl•alper% ·
,\pr. I - Edmoahn at Wlnnlpel, 8: 05
p.m. ,
Apr. JO- Edmoaton at WlnnlpeJ, 8: OS

p.m.

.Transactions
BaHball
Texas - Slped retleYer Ed Vande..._
Bert to a contract WUh Oklahoma City of
lhe Amerlcaa Auoclallon (A."-A); 11·
siJned p•cher Dave P&amp;\'IM rrom Okba·
homa Oly to Tullia ol the Tu:as Le~~~:ue
lAA).
BaakelbtJI
LA Clippers - Slped guard Sleove
Burtt for the remallider ot tile ~~euon.

Calendar
Bueball

American Lea~
Baltimore a&amp; Clnellnd, 6: OS p.m.
Milwaukee at New York, 7:30p.m.
Toronto at Mlnncao&amp;a, 8:05p.m. .
Detro!&amp; at K&amp;hl&amp;ll 0t)', 8: 95 p.m.
Howton at Teua, 8:35 p.m.
Seattle a1 O.ieap. 1:15 p.m.

Oaklalld M C&amp;lllarnla, 10:05 p~ m.
Nalloul Leque
New Y•rk at Phlladelpbla. '2:31p.m.
Houston at tlacl ...u, 1':15 p.m .
tblea1o at Mo-'real, 1':11 p.m.
lAIII Anreles at .4.tlanla, 1:11 p.m.
Ptttlburrh u 81. Lolli•. 8: li p.m.
SanDiepat Su Franclaco,1t:35 p.m.

DetroH at Philadelphia, T:H p.m.

Fl-lday's Gamea

~roti a&amp;

Apr. U- Philadelphia at Wuhl""on.

7:11p.m.

BuktUJall

New Jeraey at Boskln, 7: SO p.m.
Detrol al r•Dadelpllla, 1:11 p.m .

Utah

Apr, 10- W88hl111f,on at Pb.Uadelphla,
'T :S~p . m .

New Jeree)' a1 Boa&amp;oa, 1': 30 p.m.

HauatoaliS, Utah 10'7

Milwaukee at Cleveland, 7:30

. Apr, I - NY llllal&amp;dt!ra al New Jerlie)' ,
1:45 p.m .
.4.pr. It - NY blanderw at New
• lerwy, 8:35p.m.
AP,r. 12 - New .lerey at NV
lllll.mdera, 1:1~ p.m.
WMahlqton va. PbUadelphla
fSeriN Ued I-I)
Apr. 6- PhUadelpllla4, Wuhlfll';on 2
"~~' · 1- Wllhlllllon t, nuadelphlat·
Apr. 1- Wuhlr!JCGD a1 PhDadelpllla, 1: U p.m .

2%

Pro resull8

1988
4x2

n e. Daily Sentinel-· Page 3

,

'
Local bowling

Milwaukee a&amp; Clewlalld, 1': ll p.m.
lndlau. a1 Wuhl.,ton, 8 p.m.
Ne" Vort at Cllkap, 8:10p.m.
.,
Utah al DaDu, S:st p.m.
Denwr aa saa Mtonio. S!JI p.m .
LA Cllppe:ra at LA Labra, 11: 10 p.m .
Phoenix at Goldea &amp;ale, It: 31 p.m.
Portland at Sea&amp; de, 10: It p.m.

GoU
Au1usta, Geo111a- The Muterw
Pow&amp;J,C.JU. -Tile San DleJOlnamori

Claaak:
HocbJ
NHL Playofla

Firat round

......

No came. ICbeduled

MaJor IDdoor Soccer Lea rue
Clevelaltd a1 BaiUmtre, &amp;:IS p.m .
IAaAapte. at ~h:.blta, 8:3$ p.m.
&lt;lllcqo at MI...:IO&amp;a, t:OI p.m.
Dallal M Ka,.... CIIJ, 1: II p.m.
Su Dlepal Tacoma, 1t:S5 p.m .
Te... ll
Cllleap - SSIS,. . men's touraamellli

HUio• Bead IalaDd, S.C. - ......
FamU)' Circle Mapalae Tena.. CUp

CINCINNATI (UP!)- Danny·
Jackson took a couple of nifty
Na.tlonal League swings Thurs·
day an~ fractured the American
Leagues designated hitter rule.
Making his National League
debut after being acquired from
Kansas City, where the Amerl·
can League's DH rule prevented
him from batting, Jackson drove
in two runs to power Cincinnati to
an 8·1 romp over St. Louis.
Oh, and by the way, Jackson
backed up his hitting by pitching
a three-hitter.
·
Meanwhile, Reds' rookie Chris
Sabo, playlng·Jn only his second
major league game, tied a record
for assists by a third baseman In
a nine-Inning game -11- as the
Reds swept a rain·shortened
two-game series from the weak·
hitting Cardinals.
Eric Davis and Kal Daniels
each drove In a pair of runs for
the Reds.
Jackson singled In a run with
his first major league hit, a
"slug·bunt," In the fourth Inning
and picked up another RBlln the
eighth with a sacrifice fly .to deep
center·
"The only difference I saw
between the American League
and National League was getting
a chance to do some hitting and
running and I sure liked that,"
said Jackson. "It made me feel
more a part of the game than In

Chandler

the American League.
"I just didn't want to embarrass myself at the plate. I did so
well I even shocked myself. •·
On the mound, Jackson .only
struck out two and walked seven
_but really wasn't wild as he kept
the ball close to thestrikezoneall
nine Innings. The lefl·hander lost
his bid for a shutout in the eighth
when Bob Horner homered. .
"It was an exceptional day,
except lor the walks," said
Jackson. "But I'm not too wor·
ried about those because I was
close to the plate."
Sabo got the opportunity for his
assist record only because:tegu·
lar Reds' third baseman Buddy
Bell is sidelined for a lew days
· with a sprained knee. Sabo felt
obliged to give Bell an assist lor
his assist record.
''Be.fore this series started,
Buddy told me what to expect
from the Cardinal hitters and
what he would do against them,"
said Sabo. ''I've got to thank him
lor helping me out.
"I had no Idea I had tied a
record until after the game, but I
knew a lot of balls were being hit
to me. It definitely kept me alert
out there.
"I usually only get two or three
a· game. I thought I might have
hadsevenorelghttoday. Tobeln
the record books after only my
second blgleaguegame!sagreat

a~logizes;

VERSAILLES, Ky. (UPI) Former Gov. A.B. "Happy"
Chandler apologized Thursday
for using a racial slur during a
University of Kentucky trustees
meeting, but some football play.
ers at the school pledged not to
play until he resigns and team
practice was suspended.
Chandler, 89, made his apology
during a news conference at his
home Thursday, but pointed to
his decision as baseball commls·
sloner to allow Jackie Robinson
to become the first black In the
major leagues as proof he Is nota
racist.
"I regret It more than any.
thing," .Chandler said of his
comments made during a com·
mlttee meeting of the UK Board
of Trustees. "I can say I have not
qualified In my lifetime as a
racist and the record will show
that.''
Chandler said Tuesday during
a discussion of university Invest·
ments In South Africa, "You
know, Zimbabwe Is all nigger
now. There aren't any whites."
Chandler said he wou41,l &amp;not
submit to calls for his reslgilallon
as a university trustee until Gov.
Wallace Wilkinson asked for it.
Wilkinson, who named Chandler
to the post, declined comment on
the controversy, but Chandler
said the governor told him he
would never ask lor his
' resignation.
.
Two black seniors on the
university football team, Chris
Chenault and Dave Johnson, said
after a team meeting In Lexlng·
ton that the squad would not
practice until Chandler resigned,
but that was later modified to a
one-day suspension of practice
and the. wearing of black

feeling ."
St. Louis starter and loser Jose
DeLepn, acquired In the off.
season from the Chicago White
So.x. was wild In his Cardinal
debut. He walked six In 3 2·3
innings, gave up five hits and
four earned runs.
"You can't give up six walks In
just 3 2·3 Innings," complained
St. Louis manager Whltey J{er·
zog. "But we've got to start
swinging the bats, too. Three of
our four runs In Monday's game
were driven In by our pitcher."
St . Louis reliever Scott Arnold
was sharp in his major league
debut, striking out three of the
four batters he faced.
"He started out by stt!king aut
Eric Davis," noted Herzog.
"Just a helluva performance."
Jackson helped the Reds
scoore twice In the fourth for a 4·0
lead. Nick Esasky singled, Sabo
walked and Jackson crossed up
charging Cardinals' infielders
expecting a bunt by bouncing a
single past drawn·in third base·
man Terry Pendleton for his first
major league hit and RBI to
score Esasky. Sabo was thrown
out at third on the play and
Jackson took second. Jeff Tread·
way doubled to right to score
Jackson and chase DeLeon.
"I got my first hit on a
slug·\lunt and I had never even
heard of a slug·bunt until spring
training," Jackson said. "In

players ·protest

armbands.
However, Chenault and John·
son said they would refuse to play
In the Blue· White game April 23,
the annual spring public scrim·
mage, or during the regular fall
season if Chandler remained on
the board.
"We feel we cannot play for a
team what will allow such bias,"
Chenault said spllowing a team
meeting. "We can't deal with
racism on our campus."
· Jay Dortch, a white player and
spring drills captain, said It was
undecided whether all the players would join In the refusal to
play.
"It's a team effort and It will be
100 percent," Dortch said. "If
that's what we will agree onrthen
we'll d6 it together."
Coach Je~ry Claiborne said he
was behind his players, but did
not feel he could call for

Chandler's resignation.
"I'm not making the statement
Happy shouldn't be on the board .
I am not a judge," Claiborne
said. ''What he said, I don't agree
with It, and I don't really think he
meant lt. It was embarrassing to
our university and to our squad."
Chandler told reporters who
packed Into the small sitting
room at his white frame house
that "no one has made a better
contribution to race relations and
good feelings between blacks and
whites tha.n your humble.
servant!'
Chandler said that what Is now
a racial slur was a term used
consistently when he was grow·
ing up In Henderson County in
western Kentucky.
"We called them niggers In
those days and they didn't
mind," Chandler said. "For 40
years I was saying It that way."

batting practice one day some·
one told me, 'OK, now' try a
slug·bunt.' I said, 'What's th1,1t?' 1
guess I learned."
Jackson collected a second
RBI In a three· run eighth.
Esasky singled off Bob Forsell,
Sabo doubled and Jackson
brought Esasky home with a
sacrifice fly to center. Pinch·
hitter Dave Concepcion added an
RBI double and Daniels singled
In a run. Daniels had also doubled
home a run In the third.
Davis who smashed a tower·
lng hom~ run to lefl!n the second,
delivered an RBI single In . the
~ve nth .
Mets 8, Expos~
At Montreal, Gary Carter ·
cracked two home runs and
Darryl Strawberry hit another to
lead New York. Bob Ojeda went .
seven Innings for the victory.
Neal Heaton took the loss.
.Carter, a former Expo, has 27
multiple homer games In his
career ..
Dodgers 5, Braves 2
At Atlanta, Pedro Guerrero
singled home two runs to break a
tie , In the ninth, lifting the
Dodgers. Alter Los Angeles
loaded the bases against loser
Paul Assenmacher, Guerrero
greete&lt;' Jim Acker wi.lh a single -·
to give the Dodgers a 4·2 lead. ·
Reliever Alejandro Pena. 1·0,
was the winner and Jesse Orosco
picked up the save.
Giants 6, Padres 1
At San Francisco, Bob Brenly
and Brett Butler each homered to
lead the Giants in their horne
opener. Mike Krukow, 1·0, held
the Padres to one run and four
!)Its over seven Innings. Krukow
won 20 games In 1986 butonly!lve
last season. San Diego, off to an
0·3 start for the second straight
season, owns a team batting ,
average of .191.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lt.. HO)
A Division of Multimedia, Inc.
Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Company /Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ptl . 992 -2156. Second class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
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AU.EVCATS
Marcb 29, 1988

TEAM .
Total Points
Royal Oak Resort.. .............. ............. 160
Codner Trucking ................................ 126

5 spe~ manual transm~saion, dual wall cargo bed with rope hooks, flush mounted halogen
head lamps, radial tires~ 3 paeenger bench sNt 1 he.tllght on chime, low fuel wamlng Ught,
coolant temperatura gauge, side window defogger, 2.• liter O.H.C. 4 cylinder engine, elec·
tronl~ fuel injection, power brakes with vented front dloc, maintenance fraa octtary, tS.9
gallon fuel tank cepaclty, front otoblllzer ber, 1400 lb. payloed, Independent front ouope1&gt;
sian, deluxe chrome step bumper, Mght dual out aide mlrrort, alldtng rear wtndow, tlotod
glass, whHl t~m ~oga, brtght whHI·Iip moldings, hardbody special graphics, audlo syatom,
AMLFM stereo with cassette player, fu.U faca cloth bench seat, cut pile carpeting.

$

.
1988 NISSAN SENTRA 3 DOOR HATCHBACK

!I)OOCI"'"'"'"'1"'-'· tiGdy lido~.- gloss,_,,., rlftos, dual nimn, halogen~.
all 5111011 radial tW.S. reclining bucket Silts, ~nyl sial trim wnh tlalh !nuns. full door trim, lull carpeting,
~

roar wl.- dot.-r w~h timer, lnt..,mont wlpon, day/night mirror. ttoor console, t~p - r . spiR fold·
doWn roor seat bltks. 1.6 &gt;nO&lt; OHC 4 cyti!Mier engine.-~ luellnjoction. front &amp; rear stsblllzor bars,
power lront dlsc/roor drum brakos.

00*

Jim Cobb Olsb., Cadillac&amp;. Chev ........ 121
Farm Market ...... .............................. 118
Aardvark Sounds ................. ...... .. ........ 90
Whaley's Auto Parts ........... ................. 81
High Game - Doris Grueser-202; Lena
Howard-184; Brenda Haggy-176.
High Series - Doris Greuser-525; June
Mowery ·502; Brenda Haggy-452.
High Team Game Royal ' Oak
Resorl-ti71; Codner Trucklng·616; Jim
Cobb Olsb., Cadillac &amp; Chev.-604.
High Team Series Royal Oak
.:· Resort-1m; Jim Cobb Olsb., CadillaC' &amp;
Chev.-1768; Aardvark Sounds &amp; Codner
Trucklng-1697.

Play Saturday

1988 NISSAN STANZA 4 DOOR SEDAN

"The Ideal .family Vehicle"
..

5 speed manual transmission (econom~ &amp; luxury) , trim rings with center caps, all season radial tires,

dUal side ~ew mirrors, bOOy side molding, tinted g~ss, lronl Duckot cloth roctlning seats, remote trunk,
fuel door opener, tlh steering column, analog ckx:k, child safety rear door locks, rear window defroster
with timer, 2.0 liter 4 cylinder eng~o wnh munt·pon tu~ injeCtiOn, stserlng. front irld roar sta~lzer
bars, power rro~t dl~/rur drum brakes .

Jason Thomas, Gallipolis, and
Dave Amburgey, Southern, will
represent District 13 of the SEQ
Coaches Association In Satur·
day's North·South All·Star Clas·
sic at St. John Arena, Columbus .
Amburgey will play with the
South All·Stars (Division 3·4)
when they battle around 2 p.m.
Thomas will play with the
South AJJ.Stars (Division • 1·2
Teams) when' they take the floor
'at 4 p.m.
Admission Is $3 per person.
·'

Kf1NAUGA ORIVf IN

FRI.· SAT.· U
"Peymente figured lor 72 month• wlhl down payment of 11,000 oa•h or lrml• plu81tOX
,Ptue 1- &amp; title, deaunatton charge•, outl beak.

HARRISON FORD IN
R

FRANTIC

•

The exciting Pontiac Grand Prix has a long
·
list of standard features that includes
a four-wheel independent suspension and
•

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OlE REIIIO SIIOW AT 7::10 P.l.
ADIISSION SI.OO

a V6 engine with multi-port fuel injection.
Come see the car everyone's talking about.
Come drive the car everybody wants!

··-

�•

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

New Jersey picks up initial

pl~yoff

~eather

win

By IAN LOVE
New Jersey registered only 16 felt -Sea n would need a break. thlrd-perlod goals .
UPI Sports Writer
• Bruins 4, S11bres I
shots on goal to 26 for New York. And Bob Sauve played an ou tA third-period, power-play The victory was the Devils' first standing game."
'
At Boston, Bruce Shoebottom
goal by Mark Johnson gave the . in Nassau Coliseum since Dec.
In other first -round games. recorded his first NHL goal , tlnd
New .Jersey Devils their first 11, 1984. They had been 0-12-1 in Washington whipped Phlladel- Boston scored three more on
victory in 14 games at Nassau their last 13 games at the phla 5-4, Montreal topped Hart - power plays to take a 2·0 lead In
Coliseum and their first ever !n Coliseum. .
ford 7-3, Boston beat Buffalo 4-1: their fight -filled Adams Division
the playoffs.
"The· key wa s that we didn't St. Louis stopped Chicago 3·2·and semifinal. Ken Linseman, Glen
Johnson scored at 5:56 Thurs- have the same jump tonight," Detroit dumped Toronto 6-2 , Wesley and former Olympian
day night to give the Devils a 3-2 said New York Coach Terry Calgary clipped Los Angeles 6-4 Craig Janney scored during
triumph over the New York Simpson , referring to his team' s and Edmonton edged Winnipeg Boston's man-advantage opporIslanders that evened their Pa- outstanding effort In Wednesday 3-2. Each of the best-of-seven tunitles . Mike Foligno scored for
trick Division semifinal at one night 's 4-3 overtime victory. series switch sites for the next the Sabres . A total of 112 penalty
victory apiece.
" Penalty killing was the two games, Saturday and minutes was called.
Johnson collected the rebound difference."
Sunday .
·
of Jack O'Callahan's point shot
The best-of-seven series is
Patrick Division
Red Wings ti, Maple Leals Z
and wrlsted the puck past goal- scheduled to shift to East.RutherAt Detroit, Petr Klima regis tered Detroit's first playoff hat
Capitals a, Flyers 4
tender Kelly Hrudey. The tri- ford, N.J., for games Saturday
At Landover-, Md. , Steve Leach trick in 23 seasons tohelptheRed
umph was the first after three and Sunday night.
scored one goat and set up Kelly
11 KJI
losses for the Kansas CityIn a startling move, New
Wings even the series · . rna
Miller's
third-period
gamed
hi
h
t
trl
k
tth 2·- 21
Colorado-New Jersey franchise . . Jersey Coach Jim Schoenfeld
c w
winner as Washington evened the complete i s ha
d period
scratched uninjured. goaltender series 1-1. The Capitals tralled3-2 · remaining n t e secon
e play · ·
Sean Burke and started third- in the second period before With Detro1t on a pow r
stringer Bob Sauve. Burke fin - scoring three straight goals .
Olle.rs 3, Jets 2
ished •he regular season 1~ , but
Adams Division
At Edmonton, Alberta, Craig
was Inconsistent in goal in
Canadlens '7, Whalers 3
Simpson s,c ored on a'feflection at
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!)
A Wednesday night's 4-3 overtime
At Montreal. rookie Gi,lles 18:55 of the thlr period to
hearing-impaired freshman who loss to New York.
Thibaudeau scored two goals and provide Edmonton a 2-0 cushion •
overcomes pressure by listening
"I decided a couple of days ago assisted on another to power in the semifinaL Simpson red!. to music gave Southern Califor- that I would start Bob in the Montreal over HaNford and to a reeled a wrist shot from Glenn
nla a·slender lead after the first second game, " Schoenfeld said. 2-0 series lead. Montreal turned Anderson past goalie Daniel
day of competition at the NCAA "With four games In five nights, I the game into a rout with three Berthiaume.
Swl mmlng and Dl vlng r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - = - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Championshlps.
David Wharton Ignored hls
nervousness Thursday night to
wln the 200-yard Individual medley, nearly breaking an American record In his first college
championship finaL
"I take pressure pretty well,"
said · Wharton, who was born
without half the normal human
hearing perception. "I've had a
lot of International competition. I
felt a lot of pressure before the
race, but it was nothing I hadn't
HAS HANDS FULL - Unesman Swede Knox, center, has his
felt before. If you get worked up
hands lull altern pting to break up a light between Buffalo Sabre
over a race, It shows up In theBob Halkldls and Boston Bruin Bruce Shoebottom In the first
race. So I try to get rid of my
period of Thursday night's semUinal playoll game In the Boston
nervousness before I get to the
Garden. (UPI)
starting block. I play my Walkman, listen to mu-sic and try to
relax."
Rittenhouse first round LPGA leader
Wharton, a resident of Warminster, Pa., took · the lead
POWAY, Calif. ('UP! ) - A tnamorl Classic.
midway through the race and
PER MONTH
round of "boring golf" was good
Rittenhouse shot a 65 with no finished in 1:45.04, four 1
enough to give Lenore Ritten- bogeys and didn't miss a green hundredths of a second off the
house the first -round lead Thurs- after botching her approach shot U.S. 11;1ark set by UCLA's Wilday in the $225,000 San Diego on the first hole. ·
liam Barrett In 1982.

Freshman has
lead in meet

73

.

.,

Now is the tiple to see how your car_
weathered through winter.

SPRING
c
GU

No.895

1988 Chevrolet-5-1 0
No.909

1988 Chevrolet Sprint
No.925

1988 CJ1evrolet Spectrum
.
Payment based on sale price of s7,200. Cqsh down or trade equity is
$500. Amount financed is s6, 700 for 66 months at 9.5% APR variable rate.
Simply add tax and title. All to qualified buyers. Rebates to dealer.

''

j

PER MONTH

~I

' ,.

·.

No.781

Sentinel- Page- S

mars Masters play first day

AU (JUSTA , Ga. (UP! ) :... Robert Wrenn, ben"efitting from
weather that made everyone else
miserable, grabbed a share of
the lead after the first round of
the Masters, ·
Wrenn , making his first Masters appearance, and reigning
PGA Champion Larry Nelson
battled swirling winds and slick
greens Thursday while posting
3-urider-par 69s.
The two g_o into today's hopefully calmer second round two '·
strokes ahead , of PGA Tout
leading money winner Sandy
Lyle of Scotland, 1985 Masters
champion Bernhard Langer of
West Germany, Mark Calcavecehla and Don Pooley - the only
others under par on a day 20 of 89
first-round finishers failed ·to
break 80.
"The wind. made it a different
golf course, " said Wrenn .. " It
wasn't just the weather. Where
the pins were made it tough to
figure out. Having . the wind
blowing made it tough to putt. On
some of those gretlnS you could be ·
out there long enough to need a
sandwich. "
Wrenn's position wa s supported by six-time Masters
champion Jack Nicklaus who
knows every nook and cranny of
the Augu"sta National course.
"It was certainly one of the ·

•

Spring into Action!

The

Ohio

Friday, AprilS, 1988

lour or fi ve· most diff icul t days
we've ever had a( the Masters,"
said Nicklaus, who turned In a
3-over 75. " It may have been-the
most difficult, actually ." ·
It had cooled off considerably
by the time Wrenn flnish~d in
twilight and the 28-year-old VIrginian complained "with the chill
factor the last couple of holes, 1
almost got numb out there."
Oddly enough, the chlll helped
Wrenn, who birdied the fin al
hole, vault into the tie with
Nelson.
" At 18 I had 166 (yards) to the
pin," Wrenn said . "I was half
frozen and didn't hit ( a 5-iron) as
hard as I nor,mally would."
The ball wound up just 8 feet
from the cup and after Wrenn
sank the tying putt, he said,
"That's a heck 'of a way to end the

first try, then three- putted for a
triple-bogey.
•
That gave Koch an even-par 72
and a ti e wfth two-time Masters
champ Tom Watson and 1984
winner Ben Crenshaw as only
nine golfers had par or better .
· · Two· time champion Seve Ballesteros of Spain, ra ted a cofavorite with Greg Norman of
Australia, iour-putted No . 16 for.
a double bogey to shoot a 73.
Norman , ti ed for second In each
of the two previous years, had a
77.

dead," Wrenn said. "This earl y.
In the week, you don't worry
abou t going for birdies. It 's more
a bog~y prevention time than a
birdie produ ctlon ."
Lee Trevi no, who has won
every major except the MastPrs ,
turned In a 9-over 81 Thursday
and sta lked away saying, ' 'I'll
just get in my 36 holes and go
home."
Nicklaus, who won here two
years ago at age 46, thought he
played ''pretty well " considering
the conditions.
"I don't think you could win the
tournament today, bu t you could
lose It ," he "said. " I thought 75 -.
would be a good score - and
that's what I shot. "

"Four putts can happen to
anyone," Ballesteros said . " Unfortunately. it happened to me
today. I four-putted in the first
round of the Majorca Open (In
Spain earlier this year) - and l
won that tournament. "
Nelson, who won the Open the . - - - - - -- - - -- day ."
year after he won his first PGA
Nelson, finishing two hours Championship and would make it
GRAVELY TRACTOR
ahead of Wrenn, said the other tWo-major victories In a row If he
. SALES &amp; SERVI CE
golfers were making too much of should win this week, said he Isn't
204 Condor St.
the wind.
looking that far ahead .
Pomeroy. OH . '
"You have to hit it on line
"I'm just-happy I shot 69," he
whether the · wind ts blowing or said. "All I'm looking forward to
Spring &amp; Summer Hours
not," said the two-time PGA and Is my tee shot on the first hole
OPEN MONDA-Y THRU FRIDAY
1983 U.S. Open champ. "No one tomorrow.' '
9 AM -5 PM
SATURDAY 9 AM -1 PM
had an advantage because the
Wrenn, who earned his first
wind didn't favor anybody."
Masters appearance by winning
~THE
Gary Koch was tied for the lead last year's Buick Open, took
going In to the final hole Thurs- pretty much the same approach.
day. But he put his approach shot
''I've got to stop thin!&lt;ing about
Into a trap, failed to get out on his where I am, I have to be brain

'

GRAVELY
YSTEM

WRENN CO-LEADER - Flrat-round co-leader Robert Wrenn
the gallery on the 18th hole at tbe Mastera Toumament
Thur,sday after sinking. a pull for a birdie to de Larry Nel!lon at 3
under par 69. Nelson and Wrenn will take the lead lido the second.
round. (UPI)
~alules

Chicago defeats
Angels; Indians
win second game
By IAN LOVE
UPI Sports Writer
Instead of breakjng up a double
play Thursday, " Wally Joyner
epded the game.
·An Interference call by second
base umpire Jim McKean, when
Joyner slid Into shortstop Ozzle
Guillen, gave the Chicago White
Sox the final out of the ninth
IIJnlng and a 2·1 triumph over the
California Angels.
Guillen forced Joyner at second base for the second out of
the inning after Brian Downing.
hlt -a grounder to the shortstop.
Ouillell leaped to make a throw
and fell when he collided with
Joyner_,
McKean called runner interference, giving the White Stlx the
oyt at first base to snuff an Angel
rally and end the game. ,_
:Guillen admitt.d he was not
attempting a play at first base,
but was going to make a throw to
tliird on the advancing Chill
Davis when Joyner prevented
the toss.
"It was a great call," Guillen
s~ld. ''In a situation like that, an
umpire has to be 100 percent
sure. He made the right calL I
~¥as ready to throw to first but
saw I had no play. I was going to
throw to third, but that's when he
, grabbed my leg."
"I tried to break up the double
play," said Joyner. "I didn't
grab him."
, The Angels scored their only
run before the controversial
play. Tony Armas and Davis hit
bllck-to-back doubles off Chicago
starter Dave LaPoint, 1·0, before
reliever Bill Long walked
Joyner. •
; LaPoint struck out seven and
"-:alked one in 81·3lnntn.gs, giving
up ali five hits.
, 9u111en scored the winning run

In the fifth Inning when Calllornta shortstop Dick Schofield
broke a streak. of 43 errorless
games with a fielding error.
Guillen scored from second when
Schofield let Lance Johnson's
grounder go through· his legs.
Ivan Calderon gave the White
Sox a 1-0 lead In the fourth when
he singled home Gary Redus.
California starter Chuck Finley,
0-1, struck out five and walked
two while giving up five hits In 6
J-3 Innings.
In other games, Detroit beat
Boston 11-6, Kansas City defeated Toronto 7-4 and Cleveland
clipped Texas 4-l. Milwaukee at
Baltimore and Minnesota at New
York were postponed by rain.
lnd~ns t, Rangers l
.
At Arlington, Texas, Cory
Snyder hit a two-run homer In the
seventh inning to break a tie and
spark the Indians. John Far~li.
1-0, pitched six innings and
allowed six hits for the victory.
Chris Cod troll went three Innings ·
lor his first save. Jose Guzman,
0-1, took the loss despite a
career-best 12 strikeouts.
Tigers 11, Red Sox 8
At Boston, Matt Nokes hit two
homers and knocked In five runs
to lead a 21-hlt attack by · tl:e
Tigers. Rookie right-hander
Steve Ellsworth, starting his first
major-league game, IQOk the
loss, going two-plus Innings and
giving up five runs on eight hits.
Frank Tanana, 1-0, earned the
victory.
Royals 7, mue Jays 4
At Kansas City, Mo., Danny
Tartabull hit a three-run home
run and Kurt Stillwell added a
two-run, Inside-the-park homer,
leading the Royals. Mark Gubtcza, 1-0, survived without his
best control. Jim C)ancy fell to
0-1.

1988 Chevrolet Celebrity

r=L _·

No.899

Spring Savings!

1988 Chevrolet Cor.sica

---

No.874

1988 Cavalier RS

'

No.892

1988 Oldsmobile Calais
No. 311

1982 Buick Regal Sta. 'Wgn •••;... 52895
PS, rack, 2 tone blue.

•

1988 Chevrolet C-10 Pickup

1983 Olds Cutlass Ciera ............. 53195

•

Dr. PB, PS. Good condition.

1983 Ford Thunderbird .............. 54195
PS. Air.

977 Dodge 112 Ton Pickup ........ 51095
, PB. PS

Payment based on sale price of s1 0,500. Cash down or trade equity is
51,000. Amount financed is 59,500 for 66. months at 9.5% APR variable
rate. Simply add tax and title. All to qualified buyers. Rebates to dealer.
•

•

.

.

·

980 Ford Fairmont ................... 51095
dr., auto., PS, 8 cyl., good condition. 87,000.

980 Ford F-150 ........................ 51495

AUIIO ..

PS, 4

w~eel

drive .

•

RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISEMENT NOW BY
CALLING•••• 992·2156
THIS SPECIAL EDITION WILL APPEAR IN THE DAILY ·
SENTINEL ON MONDAY, APRIL 25, 1988.
AD DEADLINE IS WEDNESDAY,, APRIL 20, 1988 ·
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Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Friday,April8,1988

Pomeroy-Middlaport, Ohio

1 fXrERIENCE 111E JOY Of RELIGION

By The Bend
Beat

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Interested Businesses Listed On Tlfis Page.
(row's Familr Restaurant

'Fealuling l&lt;enluc g Fmd Cl,icken "
228 W Mum St, Pomeroy

992-5432

FRANCIS FLORIST

Oltlr ~r f'forr~l
352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY OHIO 45769
614 / 992 2644

H, II{'

( uunl\

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MEIGS nRE
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li\

FURNI~!~LH~RDWAR:tE·1

992 2955

CHJUST ~ Chlklren s Home Road (County
Road 76) 992 52.1') Vocal music Sunday Wor
l)hJplOam BlbleSII.dyllam Worship 6 p
m Wednesday Bible Study 7 p m
OlD DEXTER BrBLE CHRlSTIAN
CHURCH Alvin CUrtis J)iiSICK Ui1da Swan
9Jpt Sunda)l Scl'Klol 9 .)) am preaching ser
vlc€s Clrsl and lhlnl Sunday C
ollow!ng Sunday
Schoo! Youth meeting 7 XI p m every Sun
day
METHODl~T

Pr l'ac h!n~ !+ 10 a m first und second Sun
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da v euch m ont h "or ship su viCI.'S":.l l7 30 p
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WcdnC'sda y 1.'\f'nings at 7 )() p m
Pravl'r and Blblf' St ud\

SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST

Mul

bf&gt;rry HC'ight!! Road Pom&lt;'roy Pas tor
John Swf' lgart Sabbath Srhool Su pPrln
11 nd( nt DarllnC' St('w&lt;trl Sa bbat h Sthool
b(&gt;gt ns tl 2 p m on Sat urday afternoon
wllh .... orsh lp wrvlc£' folio" lng at 3 l5 p m
Ev£'ryonf' " elcomC'

RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH

- Sls!rr Hor ri{' tl War n4.'r Sup! Sunday
Sc:: hool 9 30 a m M or nlnj;~ Worship 10 45

•m

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST LySion

Ha\IC'y mlnlslf.'r Saturdav f'V C&gt;nln!l
nu nf:!f'llsllc ~l"rV it PS OJ)f'n to pub lic 7 p
m Su nda v Chur ('h S~.: hool 9 30 a m
Mor ning W o r ~hlp 10 30 a m
F'IRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Po
m C'I O\ Plkl E LumrrOBrvtnt pa stor
Ja ck N&lt;'('(fo; Sunct u\ SchO(li Dir£'ctor Su n
d rv SPhool !I 311 'm Mor ning Wors hip
10 45 &lt;'H nlnl! " ors hlp 7 00 p m ( D S T l
&amp; 7 10 ( E ~ 1 1 Yo NinC'!id tn F•t ::IV&lt;' I Sf'r
vi(C' 700pm !DSTI&amp;7:10PM j F,S
rr I Mi ssion Fl l{ nd s (ag('S 2 tit Rovu\
Amb t '~sado r " Olov s tlJ!l'"i h HI) 1nd (Jil ls
1n Acli nn IJ Rr s nl RI on Wt"dnr ~ clw s 7 p
m (D S T 1&amp; 7 JO p m ( E S T l Tut !&lt;. d&lt;.~\
Vrsit ttlon fi :\0 1&gt; m

FAll HTABERNACLE CHURCH Bol

lt'V Ru n R o;.~tl H('' F. rnnw11 R ''-~ son p ' "
10 1 iltnrti &lt;'V Dunn supt Sunda 't School
10• m Sund uvn tnin}? scrv lll' 7 30 p m
Blblc (t t c hln~ 7 30 p m Thu1sdu\
S\HA('USE MI SS ION Chrttv St S\
I Bl'USf' Stt \lc~ lO u m Sumi J\ Evtnl nj:t
st rvlus Suml J \' and WC&gt;tl nf's d;J\' at 7 !lOp
m

MIDDI EPORT CHURCH OF.CHR IST

JN CHRI STIAN UN ION Owt.cht Hall'V
llr !&lt;it rldrr Wand 1 Mt1 hl &lt;'r Suncl n~ Sl':'hool
Sup! Sunda\ ~&lt;.: ho ol l WI :.~ m Mor nlnf,!
Wor!&lt;. hlp 10 30 1 n1 E\ rnmg Yo ors hlp 7 Ill
p m Yo N:lnC'sdA( pru\ rr m N' rtng 1 ~ p m

MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD

tRu t:tnr Rc\ Ju m&lt;'" Satl&lt;'r flC'l(l pastm
!J f (('mt~n \\ llllrms Sup! Sund ~w Sc hon!
9 45 u m Sund 1\ und \\1&lt;'1 \nrsda\ f'\ 111
lng sf'! viC'&lt;'!' 7 p m

MIODl EPORT FIRSr

BAPT I ~T

Corn£'! S1xth a nd P •lmtr J tmC's S('(ldon
p;.r o;tOI E:d n r \\ ll .. on S S Supt C&lt;.~t h v
R l~~~ MSI SUpt S und ~ \ Sc hool 9 15 r
m Mor nlnJ! \o\ mo;hlp 1\1 l'i -.. m Sund ''
} Hnl n~ o;(' n Icc 7 p m Pr nrr mC'('ting
tJ nd l~lblc St ud \ WNinf'Srll\ C\1 nl ng 7 p
m C' hlldrtfl !&lt;. rhol1 pt:.r1 1hc WN1 n&lt;'s
t lu\ 7 p hl Acl ult C'h011 pt trli&lt;l WM R
p m Rnflr o pro,etam WMPO Sunrlll\
8 lil r m
MlDIJLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
5th nnd Main AI Hart son mlnis tPr
Rlchu rd DuBoS&lt;' Associate P astor Mik e
Gerlach Sunday SchOol Sup('r lnll'ndcnt
Blbif' School 9 30 a m Morning Worship
10 30 a m EvenlnR Worship 7 00 p m
~edn (osday 7 00 p m Prayf'r mreting

; MIDDLEPORT CHU RCH OF THE NA

ZARENE PASTOR Fred Pcnhorwood
.1;3111 White Sunda v School Supt Sunday
.. School 9 30 a m Mo r ning Wo rshlp~ lo 45
,. am
F~va ngell s tl c meeting 7 00 p m
,. Wednesday 7 00 p m Prayer m eetln~

•

•" UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MIN I!!TRY
~

OF MEIGS COVN'l'Y
Rev Charhw Talbott
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCH - Sunday Worship Services
9 00 am Church School10 15 am

MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN -

Sunday Sehool 9 am
10 15 a m

Church service

SYRACUSE FIRST UN ITED PRESBY

1'ER IAN - Su nd ay School
Churc h scrvire 11 H5 a m

10 am

RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD Puslor

• Jo hn Evans Sunday SchOol 10 00 a m
Sund ay Morning Worship 11 00 a m Chi/
• dren s Church 11 !:1m Sunday Evening
Service 7 00 p m Wed 6 p m Younll La
diC'S AuxU I.ary WE&gt;rln esrl ay 7 p m Fam

lly wo,hlp

CHAPMAN SHOES

· "Pommg'r Q111ntg Sh1J6 $tors"
I 04 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY

992-2815
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Otr

Rl 124 3 mil es from Portland Long Bol
t.om Edsel Hart pastor Sunday SchOol
9 30 a m
Sunday morning preaching
10 30 a m Sunday evening services 7 30

pm
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST

CHURCH C01 ner Ash a nd Plum Noel
H('rrmann past or Sunday School10 OOa
m Morning W01shlp 11 00 a m Wed
n('!)day an d Sat urd a~ Even ing Services a t
73Upm

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER

at Hartingter Park

'

is open !rom 8 30 a m to 4 30
By BOB HOEFLICH
p
m , Monday through Friday,
I want to remind you that the
!or
your convenience
annual egg hunt of the
In
order to give you lime to
Middleport
~lean
out some o! the accumula
Pomeroy Ro
,
tions,
I
do wantto advise you that
tary Club will be
cleanup
week will be observed in
held at 2 p m
Pomeroy
starting April 25
Sunday at Gen
Pickup
will
be by wards with the
era! Hartinger
TABITHIA HAYNES
be picked up on
first
ward
to
Park In
Monday, April 25
Middleport
Also it's again time to pay lor
Over 700 plastic eggs, each
grave
maintenance at Beeeh
with a coupon which can be
Tablthla Dora Elaine Haynes,
Grove
Cemetery
The charge is daughter of Mr and Mrs J Allen
' exchanged lor a prize, will be up
lor grabs during the hunt The $5 per grave and the money can Haynes, 'Jr , Ravenswood, W
be sent to Pome~oy Village Hall Va observed her third birthday
age for participants this year Is
with
a notation calling It to the recently with a Mickey Mouse
10 and under In case of rain,
of Beech Grove Cem
attention
there will be a postponement.
theme party
tery Trustees
Attending were Tablthia's sis·
Last week's scholastic banquet
ter , Jessica, Dora Pierce,
Gerald Shuster, Lincoln Tammy and Johnny Pierce,
- the first held In the Southern
Heights resident, 'has had some Randy Baker, Linda and Rick
Local School District - was
rough times o! It lately after Putman, Dot and Jim Haynes,
exceptionally well done
having undergone major surgery Dottie and John Harrison, Danny
The district honored Its 55 top
at the Holzer Medical Center Shamblin, Angte and Takara
scholars and that's commenda·
You can send cards to room 232
• ble and gives balance to the fact
Kay, Eddie, Rhonda and Kent
• that students excelling In non·
Smith Sending gifts were Mary
Fifteen members of the 1988 and John Baker, Belpre
academic skills have been ho
Eastern High School senior class
nored over the years Awards
Refreshments of cake, Ice
will make up the cast for a dinner cream, chips and koolaid were
given the 55 students were
theater presentation, "Headln' served.
Impressive medallons By the
for a Weddln'" at the high school
way , the Rev Charles Norris
on Saturday, Aprlll6
wore two hats at the banquet He
At 6 30 p.m. a barbecued
is not only a board of ed\I'Gation
chicken dinner will be served
member but gave the opening
with the play to start at 7: 30 In
Invocation
Pots of spring flowers and !ern conjunction with the event, a
country store featuring hand·
were among the decorations for
crafted
articles will operate
the dinner and were awarded the
the
evening and a ha!ld·
during
honorees as door prizes Among
crafted
solid
oak corner cabinet
those contributing flowers lor the .
will
go
on
the
auction block
event were Jan and Darrell
Proceeds
will
go
to the senior
Norris and Donna and Dallas
class
Hill
'
Supt Bob Ord Indicates that
David Burt of Columbus is the
the scholastic banquet will beo! last Sunday's Mystery
winner
come an annual event in the
Farm
contest in the Sunday
district.
Times-Sentinel
David was one of
Meantime, Meigs County Su·
10
correct
entries
Identifying the
perlntendent John Riebel says
farm
as
that
of
Donald
and Maida
that the county banquet held to
JEREMY D. JOHNSON
Mora
and
won
the
$5
prize
via the
honor top scholars of ali schools
lottery route
in the county will,/ of course, be
staged again this spring
Ernie G Ander~on of WKEE·
100
will be the d.j. !or the weekly
Jeremy D Johnson celebrated
The Meigs Chapter of the
8
30
to
teen
dance
to
be
held
from
his
ninth birthday recently with a
American Cancer Society has
11
30
p
m
Saturday
In
the
party
at the home of his parents,
begun Its annual house to house
Pomeroy
VIllage
Hall
audita·
Mr
and
Mrs David Johnson,
campaign to raise funds The
rium.
Admission
this
Saturday
Middleport
drive will be taking place in
will be Sl a person
Games were played with prizes
different parts of the county over
By
the
way
,
parents
sJaging
going to Benjamin See, Amber
the next couple of weeks, and Is
the dances again point out that Blackwell, Daniel Whittekind
scheduled to wrap up on April19
the dances are only for YCl\!lli" and Scott Johnson wM also won
There are never enough volun
people
13 and over Eight 00 the door prize Cupcakes and
teers to work the program If
nine year aids are showing up at koolaide were served
you'd be willing to help call
the dances and the parents'
Attending and presenting gifts
992·7531, which is the cancer
group
say
that
sponsoring
to
Jeremy were Mamie Stephen·
society o!flce, or 992· 7231, the
home of Lillian Moore, executive c hiidren of this age should not be son, maternal grandmother,
thrown into the teen age crowd at Jerry and Barbarae Colmer,
director
this point in their ltves Do keep Shari. Amber, Arlca and Aja
in mind that children should be13 Blackwell, Nancy, Shawn and
, And the May primary elections
or
older to be attending these Daniel Whltteklnd, Cherie and
are moving In If you plan to vote
dances
Benjamin See, Matthew SeUers,
the absentee ballot In the primar·
Lynn
Kennedy, Clyde Hender·
ies, you can dosoatanytimenow
Don't
hate
me
for
mentioning
son,
JIU
Johnson, April, Karl and
at the Meigs County Board of
It,
but
your
1987
income
tax
Tiffany
Miller, and Jeremy's
Elections Office, located on Me·
return
Is
due
to
be
in
the
mail,
brother
and
sister, Scott and
chanlc St , in Pomeroy The
Kimberly
exactly one week from today
deadline tor absentee voting Is
Mr and Mrs Carl Johnson,
noon on April 30 The board office
Lotsa luck and do keep smiling
Mason, paternal grandparents,
sent a gift to Jeremy

HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION Eve ret I
Delaney pastor Sunday service 9 30 a
m evening service 7 00 p m Prayer
meeting Wednesday 7 00 p m

BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF

CHRIST Joseph B Hoskins pastor Blblt&gt;
Class 9 30a m MornlngWorshiplO 30a
m , Evening Worship 6 30 p m Thursday
Bible ~tudv , 6 .J) p m

NEW STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY

CHURCH Sunday School servire 9 45 a
m
Worship service 10 30 a m
Evangellstlt' Service 7 30 p m Wednes
day Prayer meet lng 7 30 p m Thursday

ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST Pomeroy

HarrisonvillE' Rd Robert Purtell minis
1er Steve Stanley S S Supt , Bill McEl
roy Asst Supt SundaySchool9 lOam
Worship service 10:30 a m Evening wor
ship Sunday 7 p m and Wednesday, 7 p m

ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH. Pine

Grove The Rev William Mlddleswarth
pastor Church service9 301m Sunday
School 10 30 a m

BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST

TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL -

Churc h School 9 a m Worship 10 a m
Bible St udy Tuesday 7 30 p m Co mmu
nion First Sunday tArcher )

John Wright pastor Sunday Schoo\9 JOa
m , Larry Haynes S S Supt Morning
worship JO: 30 a m

Rev K.andy Burell
'Rev Melvin Franklin
Rev Clemente S Zunl~ta Jr
Rev Robert MusiJPlan
• Rev Den Meadows
ASBURY !Syracuse)- Wor ship 11 am
Church School 9 45 a m Charge Bible
Study Wednesday 7 30 p m UMW Urst
Tuesday 1 30 p m Choir Rehearsal
Wedn esdav 6 30 p m (Burch)
ENTERPR IS E - Worship 9 a m
Chur t:!h Sc hool10 a m Bible S!udy Tucs
day 7 00 p m UMW First Monday 7 30
p m UMYF Sunda y 6 p m Choir Rt&gt;hearsa l Children s at 6 30 p rn Adult rol
lo" !ng Wed ne ~ay (Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church SchOol lO a m
Wors hip 11 a m Bible St udy Tl\urs
day ~ 7 p m UMYF Sunday 6 p m
j Franklin )
FOREST RU N - Worshlt&gt; 9 a m
Churc h School 10 AM Chotr practice
Thursda~ 6 30 p m UM\\ third Monda y
(Burch ) rn IBU!Ch)
HEATH (Middlepor t )- Church School
9 30 a m Mor ning Worship 10 30 a..m ,
'l:outh Gro up 4 p m Wedne!iday Bible
st ud v 6 00 p m Choir rehearsa\7 00 p m
{Zuniga )
...
•
MINERSVILLE: - Church School 9 00
a m Wors hip service lU 00 a m UMW
Third W£'dnesday 1 p m (Burch I
PEARL CHAPEL - Worship Service
9 30 "'.t m
Churc h School 10:15 am
(Mussman !
POMEROY - Church School 9 15 a m
Worship 10 30 a m Choir rehearsal
W{'(tn esday 7 30 p m
UMW second
Tuesda y 7: 30pm UMYFSunday 6p m
tMeadows)
ROCK SPRINGS - Church School 9 15
a m Wors hip 10 a m BiblE&gt; Study Wed
nesdav 7 30 p m UMYF (Seniors) Sun
da y b p m tJunior s J cvcrv other Sun
day tip m (F ra nklin)
RUTLAND - Church SchOol 10 am
Worship 11 a rn UM W First Monday
i 30 p m (Mussman)
SALEM CENTER- Church School9 15
a.,m Wors hip 10 15 p m (Mussman)
SNOWVILLE - Worship 9 00 am
church '&lt;chj)Ol 9 45 am (Mussma n)

RENE RE'v Lloyd 0 Grimm Jr pastor
Ora Bass Chairman of I he Board of Chris
tlan Ufe Sunday School9 30 a m Morn
lng worship 10 30 a m evangelistic ser
viet" 7 00 p m Wednesday service 7 p m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH De&gt;
ter Woody Call paslor Services Sunday
lOam and7pm Wednesday 7pm

RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA

CENTRAL CLUSTER

DYESVILLE COMMUNITY CHURCH

Lloyd Sayre, Supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m morn ing worship 10 30 a m Sunday
t.&gt;vening service 7 p m
Stevt.&gt;
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
Deaver Pastor Mike Swiger Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Mo~ning worship 10 40 a m
Sunday
evening worship 7 an p m , Wednesday
evening Bible study 7 30 p m

Re" &amp;cer Grace
APPLC: GROVE - Church School 9 30
am Worship 10 00 am (firs t a nd lhird
Sunuays\ Bible s tudy every Sunday 6 p
m UMW Second Tuesday 7 00 p m
Prayer meeting We-dnesday 6 p m
lGrat:J:&gt; l
BETHANY - Worship 9 a m Church
School 10 a m Bibl£' Study Wednesday
10 11 m Dorcas Women's Fellowship
Wednesday J1 am (Foster)
CARMEL - Church School 9 30 am
Worship 10 45 a m Se!!Qnd and Fourth
Sundays Fellowship dinner wUh Sutton
thhd 1hur.~day 6 30 p m rFos ter)
4~

am

WOrship 10 30 a m Bible Study
Thursday 7 30 p m {Foster)
SUTI ON - Church School 9 30 a m
Morning Worship 1{1 45 am fi rs t and third
Sundays Fellowship dinner with Carmel
third Thursday 6 30 p m (F os ter!
EAST LETART- Church Sch0019a m
Worship 10 am second and founh Sun
days UMW firs t Tuesday 7 30 p m
(Grace)
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 am
Church SchoOilO a m (Grace)
RACINE - Church School 10 a m., Wor·
shJp U a m UMW rourth Monday at 7 lJ p
m Men s Prayer Breakfast Wednesday, 8
a m (Grace )

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIS I vernon

Eldridge minister Oliver Swai n Sunday
School ~ upt PrenchJng 9 30 a m each
Sunday

BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl

Shuler pastor Worship service, 9 30 a m
Sunday School10 JO.a m Biblt&gt;Study and
prayer service Thursday. 7 30 p m

CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION

AL CHURCH, Kingsbury Road Rev
Clyde W Henderson pastor Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Ralph Carl Supt Even
lng worship 7 00 p m Prayer me-eting
Wednesday 7 00 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN, Vernon
Eldridge, patilor Wallace Damewood S
S Supt Sunday SChool 9 30 a m , Worship
Service 10 30 8 m

HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH

0 H Cart pastor Sunday School at 9 30a
m , Morning worship at 10 30 a m Sun
day evening !u•rvicf' at7 30 p m Thursday
services at 7 30 p m

FRE EDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald

Lawrt&gt;nce Gluet:ien ca mp pastor Rev
R(lger Willford ass! pastor Preaching
services Sunday 7 30p m Prayer meeting
Wednesd!JY 7 30 p m Gary Griffith
leader Youth groups Sunday evening at
6 30 p m with Roger and Violet Willrord
leaders Communion service first Sunday
each month

WHITE"S CHAPEL WESLEYAN
CHURCH- CoolvUieRD Rev Phillip Rl

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

RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,

Blll Carter past&lt;r Sunday School 9 30 a
m • Mor ning Worship and Communion

SILVER RUN BAPTIST Bill Lillie

pastor Steve Lillie, S S Supt Sunday
School 10 a m Morning worslp , 11 a m
Sunday evening worship 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday 1 30
p m Youth meeting Wednesday at 7 p m

REJOICING I.IFE BAPTIST CHURCH

Middleport Sun~lfy
Schoo\10 a m Sunday evening 7 00 p m
Mid week service, Wed 7 p rn

- 383 N 2nd Ave

LANGSVILLE: CHRISTIAN CHURCH,

Robert E Musser pastor Sunday School
9 30 a m , Dallas Janey, supt , Morning
worship 10 30 a m Sunday eve-ntng ser
vice, 1 30 p m , Wednesday ev.,enlng ser
vice 7 30pm

SYRACUSE CHURCH OF mE NA

ZARENE Rev Glenn McMillan. pastor
Mary Janice Lavender Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9 30 am Morning
worship 10 30 a m Evangelistic service
6 p m Prayer and Praise Wednesday 7 p
m Youth m~tlng 7 p m

EDEN UNITED BREmREN IN

CHRfST El~ R Blake pastor Sunday
School 10 a m Gary Reed Lay leader
Morning sermon, 11 am Sunday night
services Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m
Song service 8 p m Preaching 8 lO p m
Mid week pr.,yer meeting, Wednesday, 7

pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN

Hog

er Watson, pastor Crenson Prall Sunday
School Supt Morning Worship 9 30 a m ,
Sunday School 10 30 a m , Evening ser
vlce.730prn
~
MT UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shue
pastor Joe Sayre, Sunday School Supt
Sunday School 9 45 a m Evening wor
ship 6· 30 p m , Praye-r Meeting 6 30 p m
Wednesday

TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF

CHRIST Dave Prentice mini•ter Deryl
Wells Supt Church !kbool 9 a m , Wor
sblp Service 9 15 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH 01;" THE NAZA
RENE Rev Herbert Grate, pastor

RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA

St

MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Mill er
Masoo W Va Sunday Bible Study 10

a m Worship 11 a m and 7 p m Wednes
day Bible Study \ocal music 7 p m

LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOO Dud

ding LanE' Masoo W Va J N Thacker
pastor Evening servlct" 7 30 p m Wo
men s Mlnish-y Thursday 9 30 a m
WednE.&gt;Sday Prayer and Bibl e Study 7 15

pm
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartlord W Va

pm

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Letart
Va Rt 1, James Lewis pastor Wor
ship SE'rvll'l'S 9 30 a m Sunday Schoolll
a m • Evening worship 7 30 p m Tuesday
cot1age prayer meeting and Bible Study
9 30 a m Worship service Wednesday
7 :!Opm

w

OUR SAVIOUR LUmERAN CHURCH

Walnut and Henf)' Sis Ravenswood , W
Va The Rev G('()rge C Weirick, poster
Sunday SChoo\9 30 a m Sunday worship

llarn

CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH located on
Pomeroy Pike County Road 25 nMr Flat

woods Rev Ble.ckwood pastor service&amp;
on Sunday at10 30 am and 7 30 p m wtth
Sunday School9 30a m Bible Shady Wed
nef(lay 7 30 p m

FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST St Rl 3311, Anllqully Rev
Franklin Dickens, pastor Sunday mom
lng 10 a m , Sunday evenlna 7 30 p m
Thursday evening 7 30 p.m

STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP
TlST CHURCH Paol or Robert Byers

Sunday SChoollO a m Worship terVIce 11
a m , Sunday evening service,7 30 p m ,
Wednesd~~enlna:

service 7 30 p.m

Frank Rime, supl SUIIday School 9 30 a

lng.
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Dlvl&lt;l Bell. pallor Robert E

Ivan Myeu, acting past&lt;r, RoeerManley
Sr , Sunday School Superintendent Sun
day School ~ 30 a m , MornlnJ wcnhlp
10 30 a m , evenln1 wonhlp 7:30 p m ,
Wednesday eveninl Bible ltudy prayer

Barton, Director or CbrtJUan Educatlol),
Steve EDlin, aulstant Sunday School 9 XI
a m Mornlna worship 10 30 a m , Teens
In Action 6 p m • EvenlnsWonhlp 7 OOp
m Wednnday eventn&amp; pray~r and Bible
study, 7 OOp m Choir practice Thurlday

7pm
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST,

Charles Russell Sr , minister Rick Ma
comber. supt Sunday School 9 30 am

(6141992-2039 or
(11141992-5721
106 lutternul Avt, Pomeroy, Oh

Btll Qu~&lt;kol and Ruth Ann Fa• .
day Sc hool9 lOa m mornin~ " orshlp, 11
Su nday evening service 7 30 P m
Prayer Meeting Wednesday 7 30 p m

am

SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD

non Pentecostal Worship service Sunday
10 a m Sunday School 11 a m EVening
worship service 7 00 p m • Wedn es day
prayer m eellng 7 00 p m

MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN

IN CHRIST CHURCH LocatE'd In Texas
Communily off Ct Rt 82 Rev Robert
Sanders pastoc Jerr Holter lay leader
Ed Roush Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m morning worship and
children s church 10 30 a m evening
preaching service first three Sundays
7 30 p m Special service fourth Sunday
evening, 7 30 p m Wednesday Prayer
Meeting Bible Study and Youth Fello'¥'
ship 7 30pm .

Located on 0 J Whil e Road of Highway
160 Pat Hensoo pastor Sunday School 10
a m Classes ror all ages Junior Church 11
a m Morning lA. orshlp 11 a m Adult
Cholrpractlce6pm Sunday YoungPeo
pi(' s Children s Church and Adult Bibl e
Studv Wednesdav at 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl 570 Gra nt
St Middleport Affil iated wllh Southern
BaptiSt Convention David Bryan Sr Mi
nister Sunday School 10 a m Morning
wCKshlp 11 a m Evening worship 7 p m
Wednesday evening .Bible sludv and
oraver meet In~ 7 om

BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST St

Rt l24andCo Rd ~ M arkSe~ers,m lnls
ter Sunday School Supt Harry Hen
drlcks Sunday Sc:hoo19 .30 a m MornlnR
Worship 10 30 a m Evening wors hip 7 p
m Wednesdav worship 7 p m.

ST

PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH

Corner Sycamore and SE&gt;cond St s Po
mer oy Thf' Rev William Middleswart
paskil'1 Sunday Sc hool 9 45 a m Chu1 ch
servic(' 11 a m

SACRED
HEART CHURCH Msgr
Anthony Glannamore Ph 992 5898 Satur
day Evening Mass 7 30 p m Sundav
Mass 8 a m anrl 10 a m Confessions one
half hour before each Mass CC D classes
11 am Sunday
VICfORY BAPTIST 525 N 2nd St
Mlddlepon James E KcE.&gt;Sec pastor
Sunday morning worship 10 a m Even
lng service 7 p m Wednesday ('vening
worship 7 p m Visitation Thu rsday 6 30 p
m

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH David

Curfman pastor Sundav SchOol 10 a m
worship servicE&gt; 1l a m , Sunday night
worship servlcP 7 :W p m Mldwei'k:
prayPr servl('(' WC'dnesd ay 7 p m

WESLEYAN

BIBLE • HOLINESS

CHURCH of Middleport Inc 7SPeariSt,
Rev Ivan Myers past or Rogf't' Manley
Sr Sunday School Sup! Sunday School
9 30 am Morning Worship 10 30 a m
Evening Worship 7 30 p m Wednl"Sday
t:'\enlng Bible st udy, prayf'r and praise
service 7 30 p m

LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD - Gilbert Spencer pastor Sun
'day School 9 30 a m Morning service
10 OOa m Sundaycveningscrvlc£'7 OOp
m Mid week prayer service WednPsday
7pm
MT OLIVE FULL GOSPEL COMMUN
ITY CHURCH Lawrence Bush, pastor
Max Folmer Sr S S Supt Sunday SChool
9 30 am , Sunday evening service 7 30
m Wednesday evening Bible study and
praise service 7 30 p.m

UNITED FAim CHURCH Rl 7 on Po

meroy By Pass Rev David Wiseman Sr
pastor Melvin Drake, S. S. Supt Sunday

Sctrool9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 30
Evening Worship 7 30 p m , Wednesday
Prayer 5ervlce 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH Railroad
St Mason Sunday SchoollO a m , Morn
ing worship 11 a m Evening service 6 p
m Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed
nesday 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle
Borden pastor Cornelius Bunch supt
Sunday School 9 30 a m Second and
rourth Sundays worship se rvice at 2 30 p
m
M1 MORIAH BAPTIST Fourth and
Main St Middleport Rev Gilbert Craig,
Jr pas tor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner
Sunday School Supt Sunday Schoo19 30a
m Worship Sen ire 10 45 a m •

SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST •

- Joseph B Hoskins evangelist Sunday
Bible Study 9 a m Worshlp,10 a m , Sun
day evening service 6 p m WednE-Sday
ev~ nlng service 7 p m

PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Racine

Rt 124 William Hoback, pastor Sunday
School 10 a m Sunda y evening service 7
p m Wednesday evening service 7 p m

CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle

Supt Sund&lt;!Y School 9 30 a m Morning
Worship 10 30a m Prayer service, altern
ate Sundays

THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST

APOSTOLI C FAITH - New Lima Rd
next t.o Fort Meigs Park Ru tland Robert
Richards, pastor Services at 7 p m on
Wed n esday~ and Sundays

and pralle service 7 30 p m

CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOUC - VanZandt and Ward Rd Elder
Jamet Miller patter Sunday Srhoti
10 30 a m Worship Service, Sundoy, 7 30
p m , Bible Study, Wednaday, 7 30 p m
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPEL, Horrl
oonvtlle Road Rev Dewey King, pallor;
Clinton Faullc Sunday School Supt Sun

_..,.. .

Jqhnson birthday

HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP

TER o( 't he Wesl eyan Holiness Church
Rev David Ferrell pastor Henry Eblin
Sunday School Sup! , Sunday School 10 a
m Morning Wors hip 11 a m , Evening
service 7 30 p m WE'dnesday evening ser
vice7 JOpm

STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH

Harry Holter pas tor Sunday services
9 30 a m and 7 p m , Midweek service
7 30 p m Thursday

MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL Third
Ave Rev Clark Baker pastor Carl Not
llngham Sunday School Supt Sunday
Sc hool 10 a rn with classes for all ages
Evening s£&gt;rvices at 6 p m Wed11:esday Bi
ble l&gt;tudy at 7 JO p m You th services Frt
dav at 7 30 p m

ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP

Mlddh'~port

128 Mill Sl

Brother Chuck McPherson
pastor Sundav School 10 a m Sunday
evening services at 7 p m and Wednesdav
servi ces oiJ!t 7 p m

ANTI QUI fY BAPTIST Kenneth Smllh

pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m church
service 7 30 p m you th fellowship 6 30 p
m Bible study Thursday 7 30 p m
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
Hiland Road Pom£&gt;ro:v Tom Kelly pas
tor Da nny La mlx&gt;r t S S Supt Sunday
morning ser\ Ice at 10 a m• Sunday even
lng service 7 30 p m Tuesda~ and Thurs
da y Se rvi ces at 7: 30 p m

NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA

ZARENE Rt&gt;v Glendon Stroud pastor
Sunday SchoolS 30a m Wor ship service
10 30 am Youth service Sunday 6 15 p
m Sunday evenlngs('rvlce7 OOp m Wed
nesday Prayer Ml.'ctlng and Bible Study
700pm
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH Sun
da y afternoon se1vices at 2 30 Thursday
evening Sf'rvl ces at 7 30

School menu announced

The menus for the cafeterias of
tile Eastern Local School District
and the Carleton School are
announced.
Eastern
Monday--hot dog witt\ sauce,
)leas, brownie, milk
TuesdaY · macaroni with
cheese, bread, butter, green
beans, fruit, milk
Wednesday turkey noodles
bread, butter, mashed potatoes:
fruit, milk
Thursday· taco solad with corn
chips, baked beans, fruit, milk
" Friday--cooks' choice

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Mason W

Va P ast or Bill Mu rphy Sunday SchoollO
a m Sundav evening 7 30 p m Prayer
meeting and Bible study Wednesday 7 30
p m Everyone welct&gt;ml;'

RUTLAND l'REE WILL BAPTIST Sa

lem St Rev Paul Taylo r pastor Sunday
Sc hool JO a m Sunday E&gt;venlng 7 00 p m
Wednesday evening prayer meE"tlng 7 00

pm
SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT

CHURCH Sliver Ridge Duane Syden
s tricker pa s tor Sunday School 9 8 m
Worship Sen ICC' 10 a m Sunday evening
sl'r\!lce 7 00 p m Wedn esday night Bible
s tudy 7:00pm

Rev David McManis paslor Church
School 9 30 a m Sunday morning ser
vice. 11 a m , Sunday ~enlng serviCE'
7 JOp m Wednesdayprayermeellng 7 30

MIDDL
RT INDEPENDENT HOLI
NESS CHURCH, Inc, 75 Pearl St Rev

m , Worship service 11 a m and 7 p m
Sunday Wednesday, 1 p m Prayer meet

FLOWERS FOR EYIIY OCCASION

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

Knob located on County Road 31 Rev

RENE Samuel Basye, pastor Sunday
School9 30 a m Worship service 10 30a
m
Young peoples service 6 p m
EvanaellstlcserviC('6 lOp m Wednesday
service 7 p m

mile oU Rt 325 Rev Ben J Watts pastor
Robert Searles S s Supt Sunday School
9 30 a m Mqrnlng Worship 10 30 a m
Sunday eventJ\g service 7 30 p m Wed
nesday servi~ 7 30 p m

~

land Racine R(lad Mike Duhl pastor
Janice Danner, church school director
Churchschool9 30a m Morning worship
10 30 a m Wednesday evening prayer
services 7 30 p m

PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH, ll

bert Cozart a.sslstant pu.stor SuOO.ay School
10 am, worship 7 p m , Wednesday, 6 p m
youth meeting; Wed 7 p m church servtces

Rev Dehi Foater

REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRISTOFLATIERDAY SAINTS Port

10 30a m
RUTLANOBIBLEMETHOOlST Amos
Tillis pastor Sonny Hudson supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m Morning worship , 10 30
a m Sunday evening service 7 00 p m
Wednesday SE&gt;rvlce 7 p m WMPO prog ram 9 am each Sunday

BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH
Burllngllam Roy LaudennUI pastor, fto.

SOUmERN CLUSTER

Worship service 10 30 a m Bible s tudy
Tuesday 7 30 p m

I

Carleton
Monday corn dog, nacho chips
with cheese, pork and beans,
fruit, milk ;-...
Tuesday ravioli, toasted
cheese sandwich, vegetable
sticks, fruit, milk,
Wednesday- fish nuggets, rna
caronl and cheese, bread and
butter, fruit, milk
Thursday pizza burgers, potato rounds, pickles, !rult, milk
Friday--roast turkey, green
beans and potatoes, roll, !rult,
milk

"· 8&amp;40 group has meetmg

Sermonette
.
FORMULA FOR SUCCESS

reckon younelve8 to be dead indeed In oln, hut alive to God In Chrlsl
le8us oor Lord Rom 6 11
When we put our faith In Jesus, we are brought from spiritual dfi'ath

Into a life-changing relationship wllh God Paul said this truth must b&lt;'
made a vital part of our day by-day walk We do Ihis by seeing ourselves
as dead to everything that displeases God and allvoto those things Ihal
honor and glorify Christ
The early 2Qth century Bible teacher Keith Brooks told how this truth
was borne out in something that happened to John Fostf.'r, a foreman tn a
pottery factory The owner of the business wrote hi s formulas fo1

making pottery In a lillie book that he kept in his prhale office and
jealously One day Fosler was confronted by an almost
Irresistible temptation Unaware that the owner had been called !rom
his office, Foster walked In and found the formula book lvlngopen on 1he
desk The thought struck him that II he quickly copied some of 1he
guarded

formulas, he could use them to begtn his own pottcrv business Th('

A surprise birthday party was
given by Marcella Casto and
Carla Kimes lor their Ia ther,
Henry Hartman, at the Chester
Firehouse
A potluck supper was enjoyed
by lhe group The Rev William
Tillis and his wife, Naomi, of
Pennsylvania visited in the even·
ing Ella Stollings, a neighbor of
the Hartmans, assisted In deco
rating the hall and also baked the
birthday cake
Gilts were prE!Se~tted

Haynes birthday

Pome,oy Flow, Shop

GRAVElY TRACTOR SAlES

CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY

Rev Doa Archer
Rev Roy Deeter
Rev Carl Hicks
Rev Seldon Johnson
ALFRED - Chu rch School 9 30 a m
Worship 11a m UMYF6 30pm UMW
Third Tuesday 7 30 p m Communion
rlrst Sunday !Aicher)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m Church
SchoollOa m Bible Stud~ Thursday 7 p
m UMW 11! st Thursday 1 p m Com
munlon fi rst Sunday (Archer/
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 a m Church
School10 30 a m Bible Study Wednesda y
7 30 p m tJohnson)
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9 30
a m Worship 10 30 a m Bible Study
Wednesday 7 30 p m , UMYF Wednes
tlav 6 00 p m Communion First Sunday
of Month (Hi cks)
REEDSVILLE - Church Srhool 9 .ao a
m Worship Service 11 00 a m (l)eeter)

MORNING STAR- Church School9

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

When we see a picture on a wall that IS crooked,
we are annoyed by someone's obvtous
carelessness. On the other hand, look at a world
globe on a stand and nonce the way 1t is tilted.
The equatot is not honwntal, but 23 degrees
off 1bis was not divme carelessness, but rather
11 IS God's way of giving us the four seasons
that keep us alive. The earth's orbit of the sun
bnngs the dtrect solar rays north to the 'fropic
of Cancer and south to the 'froptc of Capricorn,
named for therr corresponding Signs of the
Zod1ac. The result IS that m each hemisphere
we have a time of plantmg and of harvest,
mterspersed wtth the seasons of flourishing life
and of complete dormancy beneath the snows
that replenish the water supply. Thank the Lord
for this arrangement that was no accident, but a
vital part of His creation, without which we
would not even be here.

John lll!f pastor

POMEROY WES'l'SIDE CHURCH OF

UN ITED

FORTHEFOURSEA~NS

Rac1ne 949 2SSO

93lam Mllrnlngworshtp lO:J:lam Youth
"""'lngs 6 00 p m Ev~ worship 7 00 p
m Wednesday night prayer meeting and Bible
sh.Kiy 7 CO pm
1liE SALVATION ARMY 115 Butternut
Ave Pomeroy Mrs D:)ra Wining ln charge
Sulliay OOUncss meeting 10 a m &amp;uviay
School 10: :ll a m Sunday Sclxx&gt;l YPSM
Eloise Adame; leader 7 J) p m Salvation
meeting various speakers aM mi.L~ k' spedals.
Thurs:day ll l) a m to 2 p m Ladles Home
League memters In charge all women
Invited 6 45 p m Thursday Col'f&gt;' Cadcl
Cl.,.. (Young People-Bible) 7 :ll p m Bible
Study and Prayer meeting ~ to the public

GRAHAM

GOD TilTED THE EARIH JUSI'RIGHT

GrGcenes-

212 W
Leo Lash evangell.oit Bible School

••
,

UKE
DIAMONDS

Pomoroy

.....

Gener.ll Merch.andtse

• POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST
Main St

Pomeroy

SONS SlORE

Debbie Buck Sunday School Sup! Church
School 9 15 a m Worship Service 10 lJ a m
Choir rehearsal Tueiday 7 :KJ p m wner dl
l'l'('lion of Lois Burt
POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA
RENE Comer Union and Mulberry Rt.-.r
Timnas Clm McClung pastor Nonnan Pres
ley S S. Sup&lt; Sunday School ~ :ll a m
morning worship 10: lJ a m evening service 6
p m mid week set"Jiceo Wa:lnesday 7 p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH :ll6 E
Main St Pomeroy SoOOay services Holy
communion on the nrst Sunday of each month
and combined w\ th monUng prayer on the
third SuOOay Morning prayer and sermon on
all Dther Sundays of the month~ Church School
and Nursery care provided Cottee hour ln the
Parish HaU immediately fo1Jcw..1ng the service

.'

11 S ( Mamortal Dr.
992-2104

WAID CROSS

992-5141
Rev

!n

214 E. Matn
992 5130 Pomeroy

"Semng Fam1lies"
264 S 2nd, Middleport

ol Columbus, 0
804 w Ma1n
~92 2311 Pomerov

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

~a.rno.

FUNERAL HOME

Nahonwtde Ins. Co.

Friday, April 8, 1988
Page-7

Party given in observance"' of birthday

Egg hunt Sunday

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

Ct.hl
-o

- ~ER~

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

CHURCH

Pomeroy

Prescr•Pt•ons

Homehte Saws

TRINITY

John F Fultz. Mgr
Ph 992 2101

~~~~!

m
.

216 S Second
Pomeroy
9'12 3J25

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

11

RIDENOUR

TEAFORD REALTY

The Daily Sentinel

thought of riches loomed b&lt;'lore him An lnlerpaJ struggle ensued bul 11 '
ended quickly Reckoning bimoel! dead to sin Hallelujah' Vlctorv
through Christ!" Although he continued for many vears at his same
poslt(on and salary, greal joy filled his heart beuuse he had applied Ihe
wonderful truth o! Romans 6 11
Read Romans &amp; Then start regarding yoursell as dead lo sin but
allve to God " Sin wUi looe its attraction You'll ha v~ a formula !01
success - P R V
Choose nol the lowly paths of sin
When lofty height• before yqu rise
God freely gives the power to win
The victor's crowa, the heavenly prize -0 J D
Think IMa al lbe power ollldllp OVER you
ud more ollbe pewer of Cllrt8t IN you.
(Taken from Our Dally Bread · AprU 8, 1988 )

,.
1

Plans for the 23rd anniversary
• dinner of Meigs Salon 710, Eight
: and Forty, were made when the
group met Monday night at the
American Legion Hall, Drew
Webster Post 39
The observance will take place
on May 2 at Trinity Church with a
dinner to be served at 6: 30 p.m
' Martha Marsh, departemental
chapeau and Patricia Oldaker,
. first demi chapeau will be
among the• Invited guests, along
I
1with partners from Gallla, Perry
, and Vinton Salons Committee
:chairman are Florence Rl·
•chards reservations, Pearl
, Knapp and Julia Hysell, gifts,
' with each member to provide a
:door prize
, Catherine Welsh presided at
. the meeting with Eunle Brinker
• postlna the flags Iva Powell had
; the prayer and also conducted
the memorfal service for eight
: decealll!d partners. Taking part
; were Mrs. Welsh, Pearl Knapp,
• Julia Hysell who had a poem, and
iMr1. Brinker who read the 23rd
, Psalm. Red and white flowers
were used on the memorial table.

.

The Lord's Prayer was given tn
unison There was silent prayer
!or the Don Roush family whose
cystic flbrosls child died
recently
Julia Hysell, 'children and
youth chairman, reported on
Easter remembe~ances of clothing and candy for several
children with respiratory dis·
eases. The bl!lletln was read
from the de)lllrf'emental chapeau
regarding the convention to be
h.ekl July 29 and 30 al Chillicothe,
Holiday Inn
Loretta Tiemeyer won the door
prize Annual reports fonns were
given out and 1Mary Martin
served retreshmepta.

Star Grange
meeting held,
Easter theme

A.JA BLACKWELL

KIMBERLY JOHNSON

Birthdays observed by two
Kimberly Johnson, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs David Johnson,
Middleport, and Aja Blackwell,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Blackwell, Pomeroy, celebrate!!
their second birthdays together
At the same time the ninth
birthday of J. R. Blackwell was
also observed
A red and white color scheme
was carried out. Cupcakes,
chips, and kooiald were served.
Games were played with prizes
going to Shawn Whltteklnd,
Amber Blackwell, Tiffany
Miller, Benjamin See, Billy
Colmer, II, Scott Johnson, ~ R

Blackwell and Kimberly Jolrn· ,
son Scott Johnson won the door
prize Each child received a
favor
Others attending and present
ing gifts were Mr and Mrs
William Colmer, Mr and Mrs
Harold Whlttekind and Daniel,
JIU Johnson, Karl and i'&gt;pril
M!Uer, Mr and Mrs Jerry
Colmer, Mamie Stephensot;t,
Cherie and Steven See, Clyde
Henderson, Arica Blackwell,
Jeremy Johnson, Angel Day and
Ricky McClasky Sending gifts
were Ruth Blackwell and Mr
and Mrs Carl Johnson

...

'Habit' of saving money
suggested by one reader

Dear Ann Landers: 1 have been ·
readmg a lot lately about how the
members of lhe Calhohc clergy are
hurtmg financraliy, espectaily the
nuns. Here ts a suggesuon lhat
mtght be bel pful
Why don t lhese women m reh·
gious hfe go back to weanng the
habit that looked so spmtua!? Not
only would 1t be less expenstve. but
they would look bener Many nuns
1 ve see~ m pubhc don 't have the
vaguesl ulea about fashton And
how can we expect them to' When
they chose the religiOus hfe lhey
never thought they would have to
think about such thmgs Also, Ann
those lovely habtls would sunphfy
their hves
I hope the leaders in 1he liberal
orders wtli see my letler and ptck
up on u Respectfully yours ·· A
CAn-fOLIC IN ST LOUIS
DEAR ST LOUIS I asked my
good fnend Stster Candtda Lund,
chancellor of Rosary College m
Rtver Forest Ill . to comment on
your suggesllon Thts ts whal she
Easter bonnets were modeled
satd
'While some siSters do not wear
at the recent meeting of the
Meigs County Women's Fellowthe rellgtous habtt, those who do
ship of the Meigs County
remmd us thai lhe ongmal dress of
Churches of Christ held at the
nuns m the early years was very
Zion Church.
much the same as the dress of the
The original designs Included
peasant women of thetr ttme They
several Minnie Pearl hats, Dr
chose the garb because they dtd not
Suess "Cat In the Hat", pill box
WISh to appear dtfferenl
hats, picture hats, and basket
"Your reader who suggests that
bonnets Marge Purtell led the
siSters return to weanf18 the
the
singing and gave the opening
habit because 11 would be less costly
prayer Ann Lambert and Mrs
and
sunpler ts probably unaware
Purtell sang "Water from the
that
rehgiow habtts also cost mon·
Rock", and Maryln Wilcoxo(tbe
ey
and
the dress of some orders
Middleport church gave devo·
requtrts
several hours a week to
tions on ways of saying good
starch
and
press the headdresses
morning She used scripture
and the llnmgs of the veils Also, the
from Peter, John and Matthew
Eileen Bowers had a talk on the sewif18 and foldtng m a precrse
use of a broom and she gave
manner IS tedious and tune-con·
dusters to those who had worked , sumtlliwith her during her term of
''On the personal stde, I was
office '!"here was a skit by the
happy m my habit and I am Just as
Zion members entitled "The happy out of 11 l"m sure I speak for
Preacher Comes Calling " The many H
group sang "Room at the Cross''
Dear Aon Landm: I am wnttf18
and Jeannette Carter had prayer m lhe hope that my letter will alert
to close the meeting Zion
people who msist on usmg au
members served refreshmenla

Fellowship
has ·meeting

honored guest who has been Ill Henry and Hester E blin. Dena
since August Attending were the Anderson, Mrs Drema Bell and
Rev. Amos Tillis, Ruth Tillis, Joe children, Mr and Mrs Cllntoo
and Sue T!Uis, Rev Dewey King Faulk, Mr and Mrs Randy
and wife, Pat, and Melody, Mike Faulk and children , Trlna Faulk,
and Dawn King Rev William David, Debbie, Rachel Mark
Tillis and Noami, Rev Daniel a nd Timmy Ferrell, Margaret
•
Roush and Louise and children, McDaniel
Junita Roush, Oils and Mary
Oscar Qualls, Clara and Erroll
Conroy, Bessie Turley, Madge Allen •. Junior and Edith Cogar,
Barr, Nara Hartman, Kathleen Kenneth and Ruth DeLong and
Holly, Heidi and Bobbi DeLong.
Tillis, Uoyd and Bea Dugan
Harold and June Dewhurst , Bell Reeves Ellen, Colt and
Autumn Eblin, Art and Sue
Ronnie
Eblin, Lydia DeLong, Harriet
Thompson, Carla, Randy Mar
cella , Josh and Jeremy. and
Robert and Pearl Keyes

transportation to fly thetr pets to
vanous destmattons
Several months ago, two unrelat·
ed cats escaped while m the care of
a well·known aullne One of the
cats was 10 a earner but somehow
the door. came unlatcJted The fate
of that cat IS unknown bul I don I
hold much hope for a dcclawed cal
m an atrpoh The second cat,
mtraculously, was rescued and returned to Its owners after a threeweek search
The most recent occurrena: al the
same aupon mvolved a small dog
1hat escaped when Its earner broke
open as the ammal was bemg
loaded onto the plane A snow·
storm was m progress and the
temperature was below zero The
htlle dog was found frozen to death
a few days later
Unfortunately, these are not ISO·
fated mctdents Lost and InJUred
ammals are a fact of hfe al many
atrports
If you can get someone to look
after your pel while you are gone.
please constder thiS option There
are many enterpnsmg young people who would be wlihng to look m
on your cat or walk your dog Seek
them oul -NO NAME NO CITY
DEAR N N N C Your letter tS
sure to save the hves of many pets
On behalf of thetr owners, I Ihank
you for wntmg In ail fatrness,
however many people who shtp
thetr pets by atr are movmg to
o1her ctlles and have hnie chmce
Planmng a· weddmg&gt; What's
r~ghr? What 's wrong&gt; "The Ann
lAnders Guide for Brides" wt/1 relteve
your anxJery To rece1ve a copy, send
J'3 plus a No 10, self-addressed,
swmped enllflope (39 crnts postage)
roAnn lAnders, PO Box 11561, Ch1·
cago, Ill 6051 U/56.2

Ruby Lambert, lecturer, pres·
en ted a program on the theme of
April and Easter , when Star
Grange met recently at the hall ,
Included in the program were
several poetry readings, 'It s
April" by Maxine Dyer, "Song of
Easter" by Patty Dyer , " Motor
Mirth" by Rick Macomber;
'How Wonderful the Ressurec
lion" by Ruby Lambert and
'Delights of Easter ' by Ann
Halliday Lambert also pres
en ted several household hln ts for
April and Larry Montgomery
shared anecdotes during the
"Chiidrens Corner " The entire
group joined in the singing of
" The Old Rugged Cross " The
grange charter was draped in
loving memory of the late
Brother Paul H Montgomery
The annual grange banquet
was announced for Friday , April
29, at 7 p m , at Salisbury
Elementar~ School Tickets will
be $6 for adults, $3 for children
and are availa ble !rom the
grange master All tickets must
be purchased by April 23
Speaker for the evening will be
Janet Price, state deaf activities
chairman
A communication was read
from Arthur Crabtree, county
deputy, announcing Inspection
lor Saturday , May 7, at 8 p m
Selected as first place winner
In the Youth and Young Adults'
needlepoint plllow top contest
was Patty Dyer, with second
place going to Opal Dyer
In! tia ted as new grange
members were Rick and Darla
Wllllamson
Ray Midkiff reported there
were approximately 285 persons
al the State Legislative Confen
ence last weekend, Including
himself and three others from
Meigs County
The val ue of running lor
exercise was highlighted by by
Linda Montgomery, women's
activities chairman Montgo
mery reported that people 40
years and older make up about 26
percent of ali runners She also
had helpful hints for the coming

season
Bernice Midklf! community
service chairman, reported that
the flowers planted in the park
last year are blooming She also
reported that the park needs
cleaned up A date and time for
clean up will be set later
Sixteen members and 13 junior
members were present for the
meeting which was followed by a
potluck supper The meeting was
preceded by an Easter egg hunt
for the juniors

SALES- SERVICE -TESTING

BROWN &amp; SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY
EQUIPMENT
172 North Second he.
llldtlaport, Ohio 45760
PH. (6141 992-7075

Gory Snouffer - 992.7 446

Compo1acl of Sterilized Hor•• Manure, Peat Moll,
Brewer'• lll'llin end Gyp1um Lime. (Wheat Free)
IDEAL FOR LAWNS, GARDENS, FLOWER BEDS
8a LANDSCAPING

Availablt in:

lap. PU Trucb,
Duntp Tl'ldls, Smis

LOADER ON DUTY
Laad At No Costl

'

,.,

�Friday,April8.1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Oeily Sentinel

Community calendar
FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE - A spe·
ctal service will be held Friday
evening, 7:30, at the Harrison·
ville· Holiness Chapel. Rev . Wll·
Ilam Owen, of Negley, Ohio, will
speak. Pastor David Ferrell
welcomes th'! public.

home of Mrs . Vernon Weber,
Rutland. Mrs . Ruth Moser, Sou·
theast Dis trict director. will be
the guest speaker. Members are
to take an article for a silen t
auction. Ho stesses will be Mrs.
Weber, Mrs. VIrgil Atkins, Mrs.
Dayton Parsons, Mrs. Cecil
. Blackwood, Mrs. Stephen Jen·
POMEROY - A revival Is
klns. and Mrs. Robert Jewell ..
underway through Sunday even·
lng at MI. Hermon United
RUTLAND - Rutland Bible
Brethren In Christ Chu rch in the
Methodist Church will be In
Texas Community on County revival Friday through April 17
Road 82. Evangelist .Charles with Rev . Jack Gray and family
Norris . Services begin 7:30 preaching and singing. Services
nightly. Special singing will be will begin at 7 p.m . each evening.
featured. Everyone welcome.
SATURDAY
POMEROY - ' Round and.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Lodge
sqi:tare dancing will be held 164 will have annual lnspectio~
Friday, 8to 11 p.m ., at the S!'nlor Saturday, 7:30 p.m.. at the
citizens c.enter In Pomeroy. Ad· Middleport Temple. Work will be
mission $1.50 . Bring snacks..
In fellowcraft degree. Master
masons welcome. Refreshments
HARRISONVILLE - A spe· will be served.
cial service will be held Friday,
7:30 p.m .. at Harrisonville Hell·
MIDDLEPORT - A training
ness Chapel. Rev. William Owen, session for new cub scout leaders
of Negley, Ohio, will speak. will be held Saturday, 10 a.m., at
the old American Legion Hallin
RUTLAND - Rutland Bible Middleport.
Methodist Church will be In
revival Friday through Aprlll7,
RUTLAND - The Gloryland
with services at 7 p.m . eac h Be1levers will be singing at the
evening. Rev . Jack Gray a nd
Rutland Church of God on
family from Indiana will be Saturday at 7 p.m . Everyone
preaching and singing.
~ welcome.

•

ANTIQUITY - - Reviva l
servlce9 wll be he ld at the Fai th
Fellowship Crusade for Christ,
State Route 338, Antiquity. The
Rev . Paul Eddy Dickens will be
the evengelist for services on
Friday and Saturday evenings, 7
p.m ., and Sunda y after noon, 2
p.m .
POMEROY - Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
meet at I p.m. Friday at the

..--People in the.news_

p.m . The stated meeting and
initiation :Will be held Monday
evening at 7:30 p.m . Officers to
wear formals.

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and l:adles
Auxiliary will meet Monday, 7
p.m ., at the DAV Hall on
Butternut Ave. In Pomeroy.

SUNDAY
RUTLAND - A missionary
meeting will be held Sunday, 7
p.m. , at the Church of Jesus
Chris t Apostolic Faith , on New
Lima Road near Rutland. A
missionary from Liberia will
speak.

RACINE - Southern Local
Board of Education will meet lh
special session Monday, 7 p.m.,
In th&lt;: high school cafeteria.

LONG BOTTOM - The Py·
thian Sisters of Rockland Temple
at Long Bottom ' will have prac·
tlce for Initiation on Sunday at 2

SALEM CENTER - A repre·
sentative of the Buckeye Pro·
gram will be a I the Pick and
Shovel Grocery Store in Salem

Evangelist Willard Wilcox of
Greenville, Tenn., will speak at
the First Church of God, 109
Garfield Ave., Gallipolis, In
services beginning Sunday. The
ser vi~es continue through Wed·
nesday at 7: 30p.m., weeknights,
a nd 7:30p.m. on Sunday .

Center on Monday from 12: 30 to
2: 30 p.m. Residents over 60 or
disabled ' persons are eligible for
the program. Proof of age or
disability required .

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs High
TUESDAY
Alumni Association will hold a '
HARRISONVILLE - All Har·
meeting on Monday, at 7 p.m ., at rlsonvi!le area parents and boys
the Pomeory United Methodist Interested in cub scouts are
Church. Anyone interested in asked to attend a meeting Tues.
helping with the alumni is invited day, 6 to 8 p.m., at Zion Church of
to attend the meeting.
Christ. Anyone with questions
should call Brenda at992·5'170, or
DARWIN- Bedford Township Shli'ley at 992·3289.
Trustees will meet in regular
session Monday, 7 p.m .,' at the
EAST MEIGS- Eastern Band ·
tpwn hall.
Boosters will meet Tuesday, 7:30
p.m., in the band room at the high
POMEROY - A special meet· school. ·
lng of the Meigs Local Band
Boosters will be held Monday, 7
HARRISONVILLE - Harri·
p.m., at the high school band sonvllle Senior Citizens will hold
room .
a blood pressure clinic on Tues·
day frpm 10 a.m. to 12 noon at the
Revival
townhouse. Linda Friend, R.N.,
KANAUGA - Revival servi· will. su(lcrvlse.
ces are underway at the Silver
Memorial Free Will Baptist RoUer skaHng
Church, Second Ave., Kanauga,
RUTf.AND- Roller skating is
7: 30 each evening through Sun· being offered every Friday night,
day. The Rev . Andrew Parsons, from 6: 30 to 8:30p.m .. at the
the Rev. Dennis Parsons, and the Rutland Civic Center. Admission
Rev . Charles Neece are conduct· Is $2 for adults · and $1 for
lng the services·.
students. Bring your own skates.
Volleyball tourney
RUTLAND - The Rutland
Civic Center Is sponsoring a
volleyball tournament on April 16
at the civic center. Entry fee is
$20 per team. To enter a team,
call one of t)le following numbets
by April 13; 742·2279, 742·2800 or
742·2688.
•.
Revival canceled ..
RACINE - The revival which
was sched~ed for Sunday
through April 17 at l\8t. Moriah
Church of God in Racine has been
canceled.

at Gallipolis church

Evangelist to speak

Originally from eastern Ken- . carried on a wee(lly half·hour
tucky, he began preaching at age television ministry called "The
17. Dr. Wilcox has pastored in Lower Lighthouse."
several states and been Involved
There will be special singing by
In the media ministry for 37 ··, the .Sisson Family of GalllP.Olls,
and a nursery will be provided.
years·. .,
For transportation, contact
For the past 30 years, he has
Paul Voss, pastor, at 446-440&lt;1.

Some people;#re just born shy
)

CHARLES A. WEDDLE

Weddle
ends
.
basic training
Charles A. Weddle, . son of
· Odessa Weddle. Portland, has
completed his basic tra ining with
the U.S. Marine Corp a t P a rris
Island, South Carolina. Weddle is
a graduate of Southern High
School. He Is. now sta!loned at
Fort Sill. Okla. and will be home
the end of May .

Alfred'notes

·

'

WASHINGTON tUPI ) -Shy·
ness apparently Is an inborn trait
that emerges In response to
stress, but can be overcome with
practice, researchers from Har·
vard and Yale reported
Thursday.
•
Children who show signs of
shyness as early as age 2 have
different biochemical reactions
to unexpected change or newness
compared to outgoing · children,
·indicating their nervous systems
are more sensitive to novel
events, the scientists reported.
Exposure to stress early on In
life - flghllng with a brother or
sister, for example- apparently
acts as a trigger to bring out shy
behavior, the researchers wrote
In the journal Science.
But being born with a tendency
to shyness does not mean a
youngste r will behave shyly later
on.
'The child begins llle with a
slight bias," said Jerome Kagan ,
a professor of psychology at
Harvard University.
"As with ·any disease where
there's a slight genetic contrlbu·
tlon,.llkedlabetes orcancer, just
because you have the tendency
doesn't mean ·you'll get It (the
disease). It doesn't mean you'll
become a s hy child."
Nor Is it bad to be shy, Kagan
said. He gave the example of a
shy child who dislikes ·large

groups ·.• of people, who comes
from an intellectual family and
spends time studying Instead of
partying - becoming class
valedictorian.
Shyness ·ls not a fixed quality,
either, l)e said. In the study, 40
percent of children who were shy
in early years overcame their
Inhibitions by age 10.
The researchers drew their
conclusions from a study of 28
shy and 30 extroverted children.
They were chosen at either 21 or
31 months of age as either
consistently shy, quiet, timid or
sociable, talkative and spontane·
ous when exposed to unfamiliar
people or procedures in Ia bora·
tory settings.
Both groups were observed at
various points over the years,
with the last observation occur·
ring when they were 7 ',2 years
old. By then, dropouts !lad
brought the group down to a total
of 41 participants.
The participants were tested in
a. laboratory play situation In·
volving unfamiliar children of
the same age and sex, and
individual tes!lng sessions with
an unfamiliar female examiner.
The team noticed the following
characteristics:
-Those who where shy In
testing had higher heart rates,
more widely dilated pupils and

Increased tension In muscles of
vocal cords and the larynx than
those who remained outgoing.
Also noticed was that Inhibited
children's heart rate remained
elevated longer when the .child·
renstooduP.a!terslttlng,lndlcat·
lng a brisker ·response to the
normal drop· In blood pressure
that accompanies a rise to
standing position.
-Shy children with the highest
heart rates were more likely to
be fearful of things such as TV
violence, kidnapping or going to
the bedroom alone in the evening
at age 5 ',2 and 7 ',2 .
-Shy. children had modest
increases In stress-related hor·
manes, norepinephrine and cor·
tlsol, during testing.
The researchers pointe(! out
thelrstudywasbasedonchlldren
speca11y selected· because of
extreme behavior, and ' that
many children fall somewhere in
between.
Kagan also said, shyness may
be caused by strictly environ·
mental - and not hereditary factors.
·
·
He said parents can help shy
children by not blaming them for
their behavior, not assuming the
children can easily conquer
shyness and gradually coax the
child Into more outgoing
behavior.
"I think someday there will be
pharmacological treatments aS
there are now for phobic adults,"
Kagan said, explaining there are
drugs that can be prescribed for
extreme fearfulness.
working with Kagan were
Nancy Snidman of the Harvard
psychology department and J.
Steven Reznick trom Yale Unlv e r 9 1 t y • 5 psych 0 1 0 g y
department.

The church a nd communll y
were saddelled by the dea ths of
Robert Burnem, father of Wilm a
Hende rson, a nd Donald Pra tl,
brothe r·in·law of Dorsel Bibbee.
Many altended visitati ons and
funeral s.
Osle Mae Follrod and The lma
Henderson attended the wedding
of the ir niece, Palty Napier, to
Thomas Comer, a t Pic kerington.
Othe rs attending were Clarence
Hende rson. Kathy Watson and
Stacie, local: Edith Ha rper a nd
.J
.J-- .J
Edna Harmon, Tuppers Plai ns.
J,U1
(.1,(1(1(,1,
J ,.,,. •r
.J
Wilma and Ha rold Lee He nde r·
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( UPI) - A Guinness Book of World Records
son and Nellie Pa rker a tte nded
the 40th . wedding a nniversary of man· believed by his family to be
as the world's oldest man were
Maidie and Don Mora, held a t the the oldest man In the world at 114, unsuccessful.
.
.
Sporl s m a n R es t aura nt i n died Wednesday in hls home.
Post's widow, Velma; said her
Athens .
Glen Post, who lived in Columhusband was not disappointed
Sunday dinner guests o! Clara bus for more than 60 years,
about not making the record
Follrod a nd Nina Robinson were . claimed he was born in Hayes
book. He enjoyed the attention he
l&lt;{r. and Mrs . Clair Follrod, Mr.
were tryCounty, Neb., on March 16, 1874. received· while
and Mrs. Dave Wa tson a nd
re· f~~to~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
However,
original when
birth the
Stacie. local; Mr . a nd Mrs. Steve cord
was his
destroyed
Hayes County courthouse burned
Follrod, Ath e ns . Afte~no 0 n
c;JIIers were Mr. a nd Mrs. Rb bert
In the 1870s.
Robinson and Brian, Belpre.
Replacement birth records In
:Sunday Sc hool atte ndance Lincoln, Neb., and with the Social
.March 20 was 34; c hurch at tend· Security Administration list
FillA' I lPIIL ITI
ance, 20. On March 27 Sunday Post's age as 114.
S~hool attendance was 29 ;
But attempts earlier this year
CltAMED CHIPPED IBF D. . .I ••M . . . . . . . . . . . . . . SC,19
cllurch attendance, 15.
to have Post listed In the
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10. '. es' man'

at' 1.1.4-.IIJOAf..

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h._.,Witt...._. ..

111rny_..

'1t . . .

'70s REUNION FOR AIDS: Some 40 alumnae of the old Reno
Sweeney club, the New York cabaret that launched young talent
during the 1970s, are reuniting at the Bottom Line for an AIDS
fund-raiser. Among tile Reno Sweeney grads scheduled to
perform in a series of concerts are Jimmy Webb, Peter Allen,
Phoebe Snow and Marvin HamUsch. Also appearing will be
singer·songwriter Michael Callen, a leading AIDS activist who
was diagnosed with the dise.a se six years ago.
Callen was the impetus behind the reunion which will benefit
the Reno's Foundation, a· group which wll~dlstrlbute fund s to
several AIDS charities.
·
Callen will be performing the song "Love DQn't Need A
Reason ," an anthem on living and loving in the age of AIDS tha t
will be featul1'd on his new " Purp)e Heart" a lbum scheduled for
an early May release.
OFF THE MAT: Olympic gold medalist wrestler Jeff
matnlck, who twice licked Hodgkin's disease, Is retiring from
'the sport by his own choice without regrets. "It's time fo r me to
take it out of overdrive," Blatnlck said at a news conference
Wednesday.
Blatnick, 30, unexpectedly withdrew from a tournament last
weekend in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, quietly ending his career by
walking up to the scorer's table and disqualifying himself after
winning a second· round match by forfeit. " In the course. of the
tournament, I realized the victories weren't meaning anything.
I wasn't hungry to win, " Biatnick said. · . ·
He was considered a longshot to make the 1988 Olympic
wrestling team in the super·heavywelght division, and has
already signed with NBC to work as a wrestling analyst In SeouL
Blatnlck secured a niche in America 's heart when - after
recovering from Hodgkin's disease - he broke down In tears
after winning the Olympic gold in Los Angeles.
Since then, he has beaten a relapse and Is a highly visible
soldier in the war against cancer. "I have no regret ~. I had
wrestling taken away from me once without a choice. This lime
I can put It away by my choice."
ALL THAT JAZZ: America's homeless will benefit from the
music of Chick Corea and Herbie Hancock when the two jazz
greats take their fusion bands on the road beginning June lin
Seattle for a 23·city concert tour. Facilities and organizations
selected by the National Coalition for the Homeless will receive
$l from each ticket sold. Hancock will perfor!ll with his
Headhunters band and saxophonist Michael Brecker as special
guest artist. Corea will perform with his four·man Elektrlc
Band.
At a Thursday news conference held at the Henry Street
Settlement, a New York City shelter organization, Corea and
Hancock estimated the tour will raise at least $150,000. "In
addition to making music for people, we can also throw some
energy toward helping people out," Corea 'said. "And it may set
a nice precedent.
.
Genera lily, when Individuals and large groups take some of
the energy they have and channel II toward a cause, it results In
a ·beneficial attitude." Corea' said each concert will featuring
some "Jamming" by- the two leaders, probably during the
encore phase of the show.
A FUUrBODIED RESPONSE: When New York " Nightlife"
magazine columnist Michelangelo Signorlle sat across from
Jessica Hahn at Susan Anion's recent dinner party at
Rossellinis, he asked the woman who defrocked the Bakkers If
she thought Jimmy Swargart's alleged prostitute should tell ail
In a book and cash ln.
Hahn,. newly voluptuous thanks to plastic surgery, answered
evenly: "No. I don't think it would be right. I mean, It's a free
country and she can do what she wants, but our two situations.
our completely different. Alter all , she was a prostitute."
Meanwhile, Hahn Is still a resident at Hugh Hefner's Playboy
mansion In Los Angeles: But she senses signs that her welcome
may be wearing thin. She has been Informed that her hefty long
!Jistance phone bills are no longer on the house . they must come
out of her own pocket.
CRUISIN' IN OHIO: United Artis ts studio and the Ohio
Department of Development announced Thursday ·that part of
the new movie "Ralnman," starring DusHn Hoffman and Tom
Cruise, will be filmed In Cincinnati starting next month .
In the story about two long·separated brothers taking a car
trip across the country, Hoffman plays .an idlot·savant, a
mentally deficient man brilliant in many ways. Cruise is the
younger brother who takes care of him.
Directing the film Is Barry Levinson. Levinson and producer
Mark Johnsou have collaborated on such critically acclaimed
· movies as "Good Morning Vietnam," "Tin Men," 44 Dlner" and
"The Nat ural."

I

f.-lot)---

FAMILY STYLE CHICKEN DINJIEI ...;M............. SC.59

Iotty I

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.... lloaoit, • • • • - Colho, w - · I
. . . . . . . • . . I• 8q • I I lllai&amp;J

In !his M-...11
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Gloool
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1!oom All '
IMIIM IIATOII IN

BEffiEJUICE .

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Clthllt Cllllsl
.
HOURS: 10:00 A.M.-7:00 P.M.-7 DAYS A WEEK

'

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110111 7

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.

..

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI )
Toledo has the lowest percentage
of tax -exempt property of any
major city In Ohio, but school
officials are nonetheless upset
over inducements to businesses
that include tax abatements, a
report published Wednesday
said.
School districts receive be·
tween 70 to 80 percent of the real
estate taxes paid in Toledo, with
the rest going to Lucas County
and various government agen·
cles, the Blade said.
Tax Incentives are used to lure
Industries to locate In certain
communities, but Toledo school
officials claim 30·year tax ex·
emptlons are offered too freely,
the newspaper said.
· In Toledo, 18.2 percent of its
property tax base Is tax·exempt.
Dayton, at 34 percent, Is
highest, followed by Cleveland,
31; Akron, 24; Cincinnati, 22; and
Columbus, 21, according to the
Ohio Department of Taxation.
The tax exemptions also In·
elude churches, schools, govern·
men! buildings, cemeteries and
property owned by non·profit
agencies.
The tax exemptions mean that
$1.2 billion worth of Toledo's $6.9
billion property tax base Is
exempt.
Keith Wilkowski, a member of
Toledo's board of Education,
said tax abatements are not
effective tools to lure Industry
because the exemption and the

'

I

Mrs. Alberta Shiveler of Cin·
clnnatl, formerly of Pomeroy,
died Monday while visiting In
Augusta, Ga.
Mrs. Shlveler was the widow of
the Ia te George Shive ler who died
last January.
Surviving are her son and
daughter·in·law, George and

C'oun'C;l" ...

In other business council hired
the following lifeguards to work

••'

'

--

Homes Priced From

.- .

Chuck Wingett, Builder
Adena Park Subdivision
The Plains
i;==7=9=7=·2098 or Offid 592·4119

..-"
~

li

¥-1

J

.,'
~

::1

Martha Shiveler of Cincinnati,
and ·a granddaughter. and her
husband, Jayne and Thomas
Petrak of Augusta, Ga.
Mrs. Shiveler was a member of
the Lakewood Baptist Church In
Cincinnati. •
Services will be held Saturday
In Cincinnati and burial will be in
Arlington Memorial Gardens.

at the pool this summer: Lesley
Carr, Gary Freeman, Kevin
Burgess, Scott McPhail, David
Deem, Heather Shuler, Annett
Cardone, Shelly Renee Connolly,
Chad Taylor and Eber Pickens,
Jr.
Councllls stlll accepting appll·
cations !or ·pool manager that
must be submitted by April 15.
Council will meet on April19, at 7
p.m.
Attending were Mayor Eber
Pickens, Janice Lawson, clerk·
treasurer, Chief Jim Connolly,
Jack W1lllams, Minter Fryar,
Jim Hill, Buckley, Ernie Slssion
and Kathryn Crow, council
members.

ATHENS LIVESTOOK SALES
Aprtl 2, 11188

seo..•

Special meel Monday
Mayor Richard Seyler has
called a special meeting of
Pomeroy Vlliage Council for 7: 30
p.m. Monday evening at Porrie·
roy VIllage Hall.

Hospital news
Veteran• Memorial
Thursday Admissions .- Ber·
nice Godfrey. Portland; Janet
Jenkins, Middleport; William
Adkins, Pomeroy.
Thursday Discharges - Ro·
bert Ellis. .

OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 7 FOR
YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

&lt;:

a!

'

·~~

Al.682

••~
••
•,.

10% DIICOUI\IT

••
••
•'

--------Weather~----''
South Central Ohio
Becoming partly cloudy today,
with hlghY' between 55 and 60.
Clear tonight, with a low between
35 and 40. Mostly sunny Satur·
day, with highs near 60.
The probability of preclplta·
tlon Is near zero through
Saturday.
Winds will be from the north at
10 to 20 mph today and light .a nd
northerly tonight.

t;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;;;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~11
1

Delicious Dishes!

MONDAY

$349

,,

HUBBARD'S
GREENHOUSE

,
•
.•
•••

..

'

SYUCVSI - "1·5776

••

e·a st Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio •

Open 9 AM-8 PM Weekdaya, 9-6 Sat. Phone 992 ·6674
.

'•

.

•

THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

.

w

OP!N DAllY 9·5-SIIIDAY 1·5

Do you have
rent or royalty
income?

·s fa

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Now Op•n For Spring
S.ason
COMPLETE LINE OF VEGnABLE
&amp; BEDDING PLANTS AND
GERANIUMS NOW READY.
HANGING BASKETS, AZALEAS,
FRUIT TREES &amp;SHRUBBERY

II&amp;R BLOC!

C'loat .................................................. S3••
Cr1!;:vla..et .........................~.M ~ $2 75

~'

Kimberly Marlene McFann,
Syracuse, In care of William
Maynard, and Kenneth Ray
McFann, Racine, have filed In
Meigs County Common Pleas '
Court for a dissolution of their •
marriage.
"
Granted · d isso lutions were 1
Brenda Hickel and Benjamin '
Paul Hickel; Shirley A. Durst
and Ralph L. Durst; Deborah S. -.
Wolfe and Michael P. Wol!e.

work for you .

...

·:
•.
.:
;•

DiVOrCes SOUght

new tax laws

·=~:.vw &amp; li1cuits ................................. $3 49
r:a.~~!0lotls............................................. $349
=~·aAc., ,.d.~····.............................. s1 so

WILLIAMS ·DINER .~~~~=

ON THE ''T" I.N ~IDDLEPORT

Lavender , Syracuse , $23 and
costs; Ernest F. McKinney,
Chesapeake , $22 and cos!s; Leah
Spurlock, Long Bottom, $23 and
costs; Nancy G. Phalen, Pomeroy, $22 and costs; Ruth A.
Chiles, Rutland, $29 a nd costs;
Rita Flowers, Columbus, $28 and
costs; Donald Becker, Clncin·
nat!, $21 and costs; Ruth
Burdette, Pomeroy, $23 and
costs; Michael Barr, Syracuse,
$22 and costs; Charles Penning·
ton , Mason, W.Va., $21 and costs.
Bonds were forfeited by Brett
Friend, ·Long Bottom. $64 for a
defective exhaust and $45 for
each of two seat belt violations;
Paul Murdock, Procterv1Ue,S55;
Ann E. Winter, Point Pleasant,
W.Va., $45; Juellyn Larson ,
Nor th Canton, $75; Mark Mar·
shall, Parkersburg, W.Va., $45;
William Ray, Huntington, W.Va.,
$47; Terry Cox, Lexington, Ky.,
$55; and L ~wis Sturgen, Gallipo·
lis. $150. all for speeding.

H&amp;RBlock
can make the

Enjoy the Y.ry finest In home dyle
cooking ot the very best prices around I

Pork Chops &amp; Dressing ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

Ohto·Extended Forecast
Sunday through Tuesday
Increasing clou~lness Sunday, .,
with a chance of rain Sunday
....
night a nd Monday . Fair Tues·
day. Highs will range from 60 to
70 Sunday, dropping into the 5Qs
Monday and Tuesday. Overnight
lows wlll be In the 40s early •
Sunday and in the 30s Monday '
and Tuesday mornings .

Meigs County Court

Stocks

1

UPI -

WEATHER MAP- Rain will extend from New England across "'
eastern and c~ntral New York state, the middle Atlantic Coast
states and North Carolina. Rain and mountain snow will reach
from southern Montana southward through Utah. Rain showers
will be scallered over eutern Wyoming and the western Dakotas
and across southwest Texas. Gusty winds will prevail over
Callfomla and soulhern Nevada.

The following individuals werfi
fined this week In Meigs County
Court by Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Mark W. Grossnickle, Reeds·
Continued from page 1
vllle, $300 and costs, six months
ln jail suspended to 30 days,
with other years, reached epl· When the epidemic began to
ordered to complete 30 day
demlc levels during the week peak, the CDC's "sentinel" phy·
residential treatment program,
slcians reported an average of 8.1 one year probation, six months
ended February 20.
Flu death ratios along with percent of their patients had an
license suspension, DWI; Calvin
physician office visits are used lnfluenza·llke Illness, compared
Mayle, Long Bottom, six months
by the CDC to estimate the with the overall seasonal aver·
in jail suspended to five days, six
Impact of Influenza activity . age of 4.8 percent.
months probation, costs, domes·
The CDC said the flu outbreaks tlc violence; Steve C. Hlll,
this winter and spring have been Pomeroy, six months In jail
characterized by the appearance suspended to five days, one year
of three different flu viruses,
probation , costs, domestic vlo·
with the predominant virus, lence; Stewart Blankenship,
A·H3N2. splitting Into four Pomeroy, $75 and costs, three
variants. days In jail, $25 of find and three
Every state has reported in· days In jail suspended If opera·
fluenza activity except Rhode tor's license Is obtained within 60
Island, with three states - New
Gov. Arch A. Moore Jr. an- York, Connecticut and New days, no operator's license.
David Fisher, Middleport, $36
nounced today ihat he has awarded Hampshire listing widespread
and
costs for speeding; $30 and
$22,257 to West Point Fabricators, outbreaks and eight - Alaska,
costs
for failure to control; $100
Inc, in Point Pleaswu, adding that Delaware. Montana, Vermont,
and
costs,
five days in jail, $25 of
the grant will create new jobs in Washington, New Mexico, North
fine
and
three
days In jail to be'
Mason County.
Dakota and Oregon - reporting suspended If opeerator's license
Moore said the funds will be regional outbreaks.
Is obtained within 60 days , six
used to provide job trainin~ for
A flu vaccine available at months probation, no operator's
nine new employees who will be physicians' offices offers some
engaged as combination welder, protection against the three license; Dwayne Fisher, Middle·
metal products fabricator as- circulating viruses, although the port, $75 and costs. three days in
sembler, maintenance repairer, lay- degree of protection l'!laY have jail suspended, sixmonthsproba·
out worker and secretary at West been cQmpromised by new var· lion, no motorcycle endorse·
men!; Joe A. Thompson, Che. Point Fabricators.
!ants only sllgl!tly inhibited by shire, restitution and costs, six
The new company, which the current vaccine. Annual flu
fabricates steel and aluminum vaccinations are recommended months In jail suspended, pass·
products, anticipates hiring up to 40 for people over 65 and those with lng bad ·checks; L.T. Ward ,
employees within two years, Moore chronic lllnesses ·because they Washington Court House, $10 and
costs, passing on the right; Brian
said.
are particularly vulnerable
A. Porter, Gallipolis, $20 and
The training program is adminiscosts,
driver not wearing seat
tered in cooperation with the
belt;
Darin
D. Roach, Pomeroy,
Governor's Office of Community
$20
and
costs.
driver not wearing
and
Industrial
Developmen~
seat
belt.
employment and training· division; Dally stock prlceo
Fined for speeding were Cyn·
the Bureau of Vocational, Technical (As of 10:30 a.m.)
thla
D. Russell, Galllpolis, $25
and Adult Education and the Bryce and Mark Smith
and
costs;
William W. Russell,
DeparUnent
of
Employment of Blunt E!Us &amp; Loewl
Racine.
$21
and costs; Jerry H.
Security. The funding for the trainW.Va., $21 and
Karr,
Fairmont,
ing will be provided via the Job Am Electric Power ........ ..... 27%
costs;
Marshall
C. Moller,
Training Partnership Ac~ Title II-A AT&amp;;T ................................. 27%
Athena,
$21
and
costs;
Robin A.
Economic Development program, Ashland Oil ........................ 67%
$20
and
costs;
Dugan,
Pomeroy,
Bob Evans .............. ............ 17',2
Moore said.
W.
Alvey,
Medina,
$29
and
John
. In a separate announc~ment Charming Shoppes ............. .13¥.
costs;
Charles
V.
Baker,
GalllpO·
today, Moore said 14 individuals City Holding Co ................... 33
will benefit from additional job- Federal Mogul... .... ..... ..... .. .38% Us, $27 and costs; William T.
training money in Mason County as Goodyear T&amp;R ... .. ........ :..... 65%
part of overall state contracts for Heck's Inc ................... ........ 1',2
Key Centurion ... ................. .40
216 workers; They include:
- American Alloys, Inc., New Lands' End ....................... :.21%
Limited Inc ........................ 20%
Haven- five individuals, $8,856.
Lannes Williamson Pallet Multimedia Inc . .................. 66',2
Co., Southside - three individuals, Rax Restaurants ... ...... .... ..... 4%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 9%
$3,510.
- B.W. Painter, Inc. dtb/a a Shoney's In~............ .. ........ 24',2
Kentucky Fried Chicken, Point Wendy's Intl. ....................... 6%
Worthington Ind ...... .. .. .. .... .. l9%
Pleasant- six individuals, $40 I.

' HOUIS1 ,MON. thru SAT. 6:30 A.M.-1100 P.M.

"¥

1':

to rece11Je pr~1p1tat ion ind1cated

•'In terms of tobacco and
alcohol use, we must take respon·
sibllity for our own health, "
Ha lpin said.
"The serious, j&gt;ermanent dis·
ablllty which may result from
tobacco and aicohol ·abuse substantially reduces the quaUty of
Ute for the individual, the family,
and ultimately, society," Halpin
said.
T!le survey also showed that
for young people, vehicle. ace!·
dents are a serious health
problem.
The study conducted In 1986
examined the number of years of
life that were lost before age 65'.

.........

....

CEIR

fW

R

I

I Market report I Announcements
Slauahter Steen: 68.110-72.00; Slaupter
Heifers: 61.10-11.00;
CATrLE PRICES: Feeder Stetu:
(Good a11d Cllolee) 109-MttiNI. 74.11~181.DO;
lba. 18. •81.80; Feeder ReUen:
(Good and Choice) fiGO.IIOO IINI. 7UI·90.00;
180-W Jbl. U.llt-11.00; Feeder Bulla:
(Good and Cllolce) - l b o. 7!.eo.IS.DO;
IMJO.'Ritllbo. 87.0HI.Itl; Back to Flll'llllloUA
under 1100 tbll.: 1'1.18·80.00; _ , . , . ,
Cow.: VtUIUes 47.1NS.11; Cu•en u•
Cullers 4Uf.IUI;' SprlnleT C.Wo: (By
the Head) 210.f10-418.tli Cow and Call
Polro: CBy tbe Ualtl Mt.t1Ht1.90; Veals:
(Choice OAd Prime) 71.111-1•.90: Baby
Colvee: (By IJie Road) fl.lll-111.00; Baby
Colveo: (By the I'Ouadjll'l.lll-111.00.
HOG 1'1UCE8: lop: (U, ..............
011111 -~~~ llo. lt).JI; Butdlor Sowo:
M.Cif.M. '$; Buteber !loaro: II.INO.•:
,....,. Plp1 (By tbe Road) • · - · • •
IIIIEEI' PRICES: Old Sboep: J7,1f.
11.'!1 81-ter ....,..., 71.01; Goolo by
tile Head: fUtHII.ICI.
.

-RAIN
~SHOWERS . '
FRONTS :
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded.
Map shows minimum temperatures . At least 50% or any shaded area 1S lorecast

West Point
Fabricators
Receives Job
Training Money

Continued from...:......::..
page 1

.proj~t.

of early death.
One·thlrd of alcohol·related
deaths come from motor vehicle
accidents, he said.
Another third of alcohol·
related deaths come from accl·
dents such as falls, drowning,
and !Ires, and the remaining
third In which drinking leads to
death are Jumped into a category
that includes violence, cirrhosis
and cancer.

~SNOW

Nation ...

___ ____

Insurance coverage.
Bob Beegle, a member of
Racine Council suggested that
they contact Eddie H\IPP who
does this type of work a~d does
carry Insurance.
Beegle told council he had two
hydrants for the village. It was
learned the hydrants have been
picked up by employees of the
Syracuse Water Department.
Beegle commencled council on
the house numbering project and
stated Racine Village Is also
proposing the same type of

·,

On Youf Lot and Foundation

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) -The
leading cause of premature
deaths of Ohioans comes from
using tobacco, which ca11ses
about 16 percent of all deaths
annually, a study released by the
state department of health
shows.
Dr. ThomasHalpln,chlefofthe bureau of preventative medl·
cine, said the ll!estyles of some
Ohioans frequently contributes
to an early death and he advised
Ohioans to take more responsibll·
lty toward their health.
''It is a fact that smoking leads
to heart attacks, strokes, cancer
and causes almost all chronic
lung diseases," Halpin told par·
tlclpants at a World Health Day
event Thursday.
"In · the neighborhood of 85
percent, according to the Ameri·
can Cancer Society, of cancer of
the lung can be prevented by not
taking up smoking," he r;aid.
Halpin, who was attending a
seminar at St. VIncent Medical
Center to discuss the Importance
of good health to longevity, said
alcohol Is the second majorca use

"As of last week, with the
inclusion of Nekoosa (Packaging
Inc.), that makes 138 companies
In Arrowhead and there's been no
abatement whatsoever," Mayor
Harry Barlos said.
Lucas County Auditor David
Lewandowski said his agents
have begun investigating ques·
tlonable exemptions previously
granted, particularly to small
"storefront" churches that are
later turned Into businesses, but
still maintain their tax·free
status .
Lewandowski said sections of
property that would normally be
exempt, such as a health club
operated by a church or hospital,
are generally required to pay
taxes on the portions that operate
for profit.
"I'm hard pressed to see how
some of these things are canst·
dered charitable In the first
place, Lewandowski said. "It's
no different than the 21st Century
Health Spa. They pay a fee to
Joln; they're exclusive. "

Area deaths

Alberta Shiveler

..

Ohioans lifestyle rnay lead to early death

loss ·of revenue represent a
reduction In the quality of
education.
"The city of Toledo doeSn't lose
money from tax abatement;
Toledo public schools do," Wll·
kowskl told the newspaper.
The city of ~aumee, which has
developed a 1,100 acre industrial
park and created 5,738 jobs since
1977, has taken a different
approach.

f

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 4-9-88

..

Toledo sc_hool officials upset
with tax'' abatement program

In The Plains

.IKribnugij's.nf O!~r~tt~ • ·

Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., Charleston. W.Va ., has
flied an action In Meigs CQunty Common Pleas Court for ·
$22,049.15 from Scipio Energy, Pomeroy.
Dismissed were the cases of Central Trust Co. against Ronald
M . Young, et al; and Roy Franklin VanMeter and Theresa
Elaine VanMeter.

'

,

Continued from page I

78 at St. Cloud, Minn.
building.
Reynolds said temperatures
Snow was scattered over the
will reach the 80s and low 90s northern Rockies today. Advl,so·
over the desert Southwest today, ·rtes were in effect for portions of
with highs In the 80s common central and sou thern Montana
across the southern and central and the northern mountains of
Plains, southern Iowa. Mi sso uri, Wyoming.
Heavy snow closed roads In
the lower Mississippi Valley and
south Florida.
Yellowstone Park. In a six·hour
High winds hlt Dixie Thursday, period ending today , 3 1nches fell
raking Grandfather Mountain, at Butte, Mont., 2 Inches at
N.C., as a cold front moved Into Bozeman and an inch at Great
the East. Winds blew up to 69 Falls and Helena.
mph over the mountain, with
In the East, rain fell across
gusts peaking at 115 mph.
· much of the upper Ohio Valley
Strong winds pummele d Chi· and the middle Atlantic Coast
cago Wednesday, knocking out states. Rain was scattered over
dozens of windows In Sears' North Carolina, and drizzle fe ll
Tower, the world 's tallest over New England.

Files action in Meigs court

L---------------------------~1 ,

•

weSt

Meigs Co~nty Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Thursday; ~omeroy at 7:53 a .m . to Americare·Pomeroy
Nursing Center for William Adkins to Veterans Memorial ·
Hospital; Middleport at 10:40 a.m. to Beech St. for Darla
Hawley to Holzer Clinic; Racine at 12:03 p.m. transported
Trudy Spradling to Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at
2:42 p.m. to Long Bottom for Glenn Deeter to Camden·Clark
Memorial Hospital ; Tuppers Plains at 9:48p.m. to 681 East for
Lucy Barringer to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Middleport at
11:36 p.m. to Thtrd Ave. for Brian Hayes who was treated but
not transported .

'

The Deily Sentinei- Pege-9

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

EMS has six calls Thursday

$27,039.00

SUNDA' I APIIL 1OTH
'AU YOU CAN EAT'

1988

---··Local news briefs---.

By IRIS KRASNOW
United Press International

Thl• Wttk'• Speol1l1

1

Frida~April8,

'

�1988 .

Business Services

The Daily Sentinel

11

'

be requ1red

by

A TRIBUTE TO
JENNIFER FRIEND

th e

Me1gs County H1g hway D e

Eat• mated qua nttt1es of a ll
aggregate requ1red approx1

mately 40,000 ton s
S PECIFICATIONS FOR
81 OS AS FOLLOWS
1 Bid prace pe r to n f o b

loaded at the vendor' s plant
fo r the vanous kmds and
SllB&amp; of aggregates th at may

2

In Memoriam

In memory of

WAID LEONARD

who passed away 2
years ago, Apnl 9th
Your gentle face a nd pat1
ent smtle
Wtth sadness I recall
You had a ktndly word for
each
And dted beloved by a ll
The vo1ce IS mute and
stilled the heart
That loved me well and

true

Oh, bitter was the tnal to
part
From one so good as you.
You are not forgotten
loved one
Nor Will you ever be,
As long as hie and memones last
I wtll remember thee
I mtss you now, my heart
IS sore
As ltme goes by, I mtss
you more.
Your lovtng smtle. your
gentle face
No one can , or w1ll ever
1111 your vacant place
W1fe , lo1s (Kay)

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4 16-86-lfn

8

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
•I n sulat1on
•Storm Wmdow s

•Re placem ent Wmdows
•N ew Roofm g

FREE ESTIMAIES

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772
1 28 88 I

l / 14/ 11/ 1 mo

DElD OR ALIVE
•Washers •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refngeratoi'S

"Must It Rtpauable"

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Makes
1/22188/ tln

BINGO

INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
•FURNAC ES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•H EAT PUMPS

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2772
3 28 88 I mo

41926 ST. RT. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO
17 Yr&amp; Expenence
CERTIFIED MECHANIC

BUS. 667 -6102
HOURS:

9-30

a.m.-6 p.m.

Monday-Fr~day

Sat by Appo1n1m1n1
l488lmo

BURDETTE CAMPER SALES
ANNUAL OPEN HOUSE

RADIATOR

Apri I 8th, 9th &amp; lOth

There will be refreshments and drawings for
datly door prizes. FREE with the purchase
of a new YELLOWSTONE camper will be
CAREFREE AWNING! We Will also raffle off
an ALUMINUM TOPPER.
So come join m the fun this weekend!
U.S. ROUTE 50 EAST OF ATHENS AT
COOLVILLE, OHIO
667-3386
I

11

Help Wanted

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate opening for parttime registered nurses to work in SPECIAL CARE
AND

MEDICAL/SURGICAL

UNITS .

Salary commensurate with expertence .
Excellent fringe benefits.

I

Send Resume to.
Rhonda Dailey, R . N .
Director of Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Or Call or Visit
Nursmg Servtce Office at Veterans
Memorial ,Hospital
614- 992 - 2104, Ext. 213
EOE

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
168 North Se&lt;ond
M1ddtiport, Oh1o 4 57 60
808

•

SALES
ONE OF THE AREA'S
LEADING DEALERSHIP
IS NOW INTERVIEWING
FOR THE POSITION OF
SALES
REPRESENTATIVE.
•No Experience Necessary

CALL MR. GILMORE
Monday &amp; Tuesday
April 11th &amp; 12th
(614) 446·9800

Between The Hours Of
10 a.m. • 12 Noon
&amp; 4 p.m. - 6 p.m.

'

SALES &amp; SERVICE

E M•ln

We Carry f•s hmg Supplies

POMEROY. OH
992-2269

and Cable Btlls Here

NEW LISTING - 3 house$
lor one pnce or buy separa
tely - a total ol 4 rental
umts w1th a potential a nd
month ly gross mcome of
$685/ mo Call foraddtbona l
tn formatlon 1f you are look
1ng lor a good mvestment
WANT $50 000 00
NEW LISTING- Really mce
1981 mob1le home on a lot
m Pomeroy PRICED TO
SELL AT $14 500 00
NEW LISTING - Older mo
b1le home on a large lot 1n Po
meroy WANT $13,000 00

Pay Your Phone

BUSINESS PHONE
1614} 992-6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
16141 992-7754

CAll AMY CARTER
or lOB'S ElECTRONICS

SllES·SEIYICE·SUPPUES

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

PRICE REDUCED - Really
mce spill foyer home 4 5
bedrooms, all elec • J car
garage, 1\l baths lam1ly
room &amp; much more' ONLY

$49,90000

POMEIOY - Hl siDfY older
home 1n town 4 bedrooms, fuU
basemen~ large lot PRICED TO

SELL AT $14,900 00
338 - Summers al
most here and thts 1s the place
that you11 want to spend your
summer!'Rtver front property
wrth a n1ce cabin Full basement 2 bedrooms, sun porch
wrth a nver vtew Metal butld
mg approx 42'x30' so call
now and look at thiS home
away from
home' ONLY

$27,90000
PRICE REDUCED - M1
nersvtlle - Small 1 bed·
room home thai would make
a great rental mvestment or
a mce snug home Elec 8 8
heat, I bedroom, equtpped
kitchen, front deck w~h a
greal VIew NOW $7,500.00
PRICE REDUCED - PO·
IIEROY - Ntce nt!lghbor
hood! 4 bedroom home w/2
car garage, w b fireplace,
full basement, oak lnm,
workshop over garage Lots
of cabmet space MUCH
MORE' A real bargam at

$39,900 00

SERVICE

We can repa1r ,and recore rad1ators and
heater cores. We can
also ac1d boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repa1 r Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13- tfc

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.

Middleport, Ohio

P. E. MILLER
&amp; ASSOCIATES
Home Health Care

Aaency
We Prov1d8 Care For the
Elderly In The1r Home
NURSES AIDES,
ORDERLIES LPN 1
Hourly or l1'Je 1n
Arrangements
BONOEO INSURED
Covered Ww1th Workmen s
Compensatton

PH.

614-992·2657
3 21 '87 I mo

1-28-'88-tfn

JO'S (;1FT SHOP
For Sprl"' and Summer

SYRACUSE, OHIO
NEW STOlE-NEW STOCK
lOW PRICES

Register

for

FREE

Bird Bath -

No

Purchase Necessary
Come In New

Lots of

-.-.. .•. I mo
-

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

•Dozer • Backhoe Wort&amp;;
•Will Do Houhng With
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Serv1ce
•Junk Yard 8ua1naaa
WANT TO IUY WRECKED OR

JUIII[ CAIS OR IRU&lt;KS

-nu ESilMAm-

For any of tlttl1 SOrVI&lt;tt &lt;all

614-7

61l

ltlwHn

p.m.

9
or ltave

New

&amp; Used

Royal &amp; MAX

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

915-4141
GIIIIUL COII1UCTOIS
R•terenc.
11 ~n

10-8-tf

SMAU ENGINE
IIPAII
Authorized S.r~lc1

&amp; Parts
Br1111 &amp; Str11ton
Tecumseh
Weed Eeler

Homellte
Jecobsen

VAUEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

Middleport. Oh.
882·881' JO.I71fo

MOMER BElT

1.ont lottom, OH. 45743
Ph. 16141 843-5486

CARPENTER
SERVICE

QUAliTY PRINT SHOP
(614) 992·3345

- Addona and remodeling
- R oof1ng and gutter work
- Concrete worlc
- Piumb1ng and electr~cal
work
(free Esltmatesl

3188- l mo

Ann ou nee 111 ent s
3

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-621S

992-7314
Pomeroy, Oh,'~ ,., ,_1
or

Announcements

Parma Seal s.. l• leeks and
punctures In lawn and garden
trector ATV and golf can tires
inter•ted 1n a new rtde: come
out and try out our damonnre
tor New and used mowers
Echo Weed eater1 Two Brinkley
dump carts lett Reduced for
de•ance Eagle Ridge Smell
Enginel14-949-2989

..__ _ _ _ _ _4_.~

Wilr do Federal
and State
Income Tax,
J typing,
bookkeeping,
and Notary
Service.
Margaret Parker

Rick Pearson Auctioneer, 11c:ensed Ohio and Weat V1tg1nia
blete, antiQue farm, hqutdetlon sales 304 773 6786

992-2264

3·21· 87·1 mo

To whom 1t may concern Lloyd
A Ween wm not be ratpanllbfe
for any debts other thenh11own

Roger Hysell
Garage

4

Rr 124, Pomeroy Ohto

Giveaway

BenJi type puppies Male• &amp;
temates Call814 387 7116

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alco Tr••••lulo•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Where ere ell the Onemployed?
Youceneern •a OOperhour No
1111p•ience neceaa1ry Ctll Mn
Doyle at 31M 876-4268 Mon
day. April 11th. 5-B 30 p m
EOE '

Call 114 448

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHID

2 w .. hers. good lor per1a, 1
d..,.. 304 875-54116

614-662-3821

Authorized Jahn D•ro,
New Holland, luh Hog
Farm Equtpmlltt

Ml•ed breed dog. all shots end

IP8'Yed 304·875· 4208

Dtaltr

6

Lost and Found

Pert1 &amp; Servl~•

LOST Small hearing aid Galli
ll• aree-Scenic Hilla, Foodand Fruth I &amp; Hospltll It found
&lt;:Ill 614·441· 3827. Reward

r.:

1-3· 8611

Loat Golden Aetrlw• Fem.ee.
9 months otd Lost 1n Long
Bonom. B•h•n Ad ..... 814985-31137 .. 114·992·2208

KOUNTRY CLUB
GOlf
LESSONS
fi.OO
6 for f4S

Found Smelt whttl wHh brown
end biiCk dog. feme .. W..lng
red c:ollar Found 1round OaiiiJ»o~
II• Krou•• Monday 114·9823083

Clubs doarrenttl $5.00

Now Grips $3.50
Sq-1 Groe'"s $10.00
losh,..ll Trophitr and
Plaqu11 $3.50
Engravlnt

Loat Seck of boys clothing
outakle of Tiny Tech Nunury
Schoo' Return or call 614-892·
3824

JOHN l(AFOID

7

Chttltr, Ohia

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Yard Sale

&amp; Vicinity

....._...

011Upollt F-. Market Former
Thalli" Garap-Ata 315 a 180,
GoiHpolla. Ohio Opon 8aturdoyo
•sundoys,t-5

PH. 949·2101

Gor- Gillo o - 13T· 5TI,
aMira,. n•ao 1 lllle lOUth of
Rio
on 3H April I . I

BISSELL

SIDING CO.,

Moving lat. 2 l•g• bedroom
• h •. lhllna room lumilure Call
114· 245·1,70 or 388·H04

"Free Elltlmetee"

o.-

or 111. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY CAUS

Roln ., lhl,.. Allril I • I, I
AM-I PM Tallo ~t 14t room
Qoltlpotlo tum loft on ne .. to
Patriot Ad . flm hou• on the
•Font1tontruok.~
ofoltlee, ba.slnett, maternity

Located Helfwey between Rt. 7
B11h1n.

a.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
8 . 7 Flnenclng on

Yordm1111
Service on All Mekea
W1Hottar

-· --·

Heward L Wrltllll

ROOFING

Gutters
Downepouta
Gutter Cleaning
Pelntlng
FREE ESTIIIdATES

Dalton Logg1ng Inc Buyer of
standing t1mber and loga Af.,. . .,
bany Ohio 614·198· 6284
...

45

""""'

olotMe, IIIMtrfe ~pNrHif, n.
'"· bond toolo. h• -

-ASSEMBLERS wanted E•rn
money •••embhng Teddy Bears
Free Information Write Jo El
Enterprl ..., P 0 Box 2203,
KlaslmmH. Fl 32742 -2203
Alcohol ONg Councelor. Beche
lor 1 degree, CAC, CDC prefenoed Job Se•ch. P 0 Box
413, Gallipolis, Ohio 46831 By
May 1 M/ F/ H E 0 E

WANTED Pert time Community' '
Service Wortr.• (1Bhoul"''/ wMkl "
for en lntermedllte care facility
for dwelopment.!ly dlaabled 1
adulu 1n Gallipolis High tchool
degrM. valid Ohio driver's H
cen.. and good driving r~d
r.qulred. .eJIIp•lence working
with persons wllh mente! rltar- ..
dltkJn •nd devatapmemal disablliti81 preferred high ener;y ' •
tw.e. punctuel, good communication end organiz1tlon aldlls. • -.,
1nd the eblllty to work •• part of
1 team needed Houri IAMIPM Sat / Sun oruotherwise
teheduled 2 -hour wwkty 1t1fl
mHtlng Yacltion / slc:k Bal•v
'4 28 / hour Send rnum• to ,.
Robin Eby, BUcke¥"e Community ~
Services, P 0 Bolli 804, Jackson Ohio 48840 All apphce
ttons must be pon marked by
4-13-88 Equal Opportumty .,
Employer'"'
W•nted L P Gas truclc driver tor *
local cWiverl11 •nd L P gaa tank
inltall•• Both mun h.ve e.1p•
Hnd rnume to
rt.nce
Box Cia 142. c / o Oelllpolls D1lly
Trtbun• 821 Third Ave , Gallipolis. Ohio 41131

PI••••

Residant Meneger for apartment
complex Send r•um1 to Box
278. Rio Grande. OhiQ 46674
Wanted Ambttious dvn•mlc
person conaal~ntlous mgr for ,,
weight control clinic In the area .,~
Mgt and/ ulu u:plrience pr • .,,&gt;t
ferredr CerHr orientM Stilewide or nlllonwlde lnvotvemanl
possible Income negotiable
lend reauma 11 toon aa poetble w
to Dill Ttchnlqull, 371'11 E '
Mtln 8t , J - n Ohio 45140.'
An E D Paulino. MD.
oov... nmlllt Jobs ., 6,040-t
•11,230 year Now hiring Your ~
1(01 1·805·· 7 1000 h1 A·
1101 for current Fadlrll Nsl
:'r

,,

Jill&gt; huntlnol Naocl o alilll Wo •
plow, utility troller ploturoo. btln -plo for 1o1&gt;o oo Auto . ,
__,_
'-""----:---- I Mtchlnlot Carp•t... EJeotrl • ..,
-__oh_otond
clans, Food S.rvlce Wortt.s. "
•~ • 10 1
• • ..,.. I
• 1111 1-loo T-1no, lndua
dlrtt WeleldMnoh, IWI oompu. trial Malnt1nence Workers,
ter. dllh.,..,..,. MW OGiiQIICII Nursing AulatMtts and Ordar
dorm refriD , oompound bow, llts. Mlohlenlste. •!"d Welders •
J••n•. blous11, ew•at1ra. Regilt• now tor at•. . blglndnun, eto. Milo IIIIM. 441 nfni April 4th Cell Tri-County •
a,._ It Ext.--v - 1 1 ,-.ru~eom• ., 753
1111 OKt 14 A vorloty ot 'y...
._
lol ·ltli • fundlno oour- to PIIY tor ..;
Mon., April1 1 31 Chrttlld Aw. trllnlng ere available to~ -tho••' ..,
I AM· I PM
tllglbto
•

949-2263
or 9•9·2168
3-2·11-l•o

1

"I'm sorry, but your luggage
went to hell."

31

41

Homes for Sale

Broom housaln Herrllonvllle on
SR 888. 1 acre level lot
111.000 11•·698·7289 daya
or 114 982 &amp;013
7 Pm
Four bedrooms. 2 baths. Ned
Sem Addltio", central elr cond.
b.. emant, garage fireplace.
eo·. 304-878· B999
6 room house on 1 acre plus citv
water, located Jim Hill Roold,
•11,000 00 down peyment required owner wiH tinence. 30.&amp;676-4182 or 871 ·2116
Close to town 12 •ern lend, 3
bedroom houM, centrel air.
house trail• and other atres.
304-876·7236

1979 Duke Crown Aoy•l.
14x70 Total electriC. 2 BR ,
underpinning CA. microwave.
porchaa Partly furnished Cell
614 251 9340

1980 Fa~rmon1 Bayview.
14x70 Large INing room with
fireplace 1 ~ blths, 3 BR Good
Cond Coll814 448 41tB

Mobile Homee for Rant Cell
514·441·0627

33

Farms for Sale

Would like to do houseclelning

35 Lot1

8t

Acreage

Will do houat ciHnlng inaide •
out-Point Pleuent 6 Gllllpollt
.... C.lll14·441·11411

Vacant lot on Pine St.. In
Gallipolis No Mobile Hom•
l*'mlnad •4.000 Col 114584·3833 after I PM

Child c~re provided In my home
Lots of fYn end attention Hot
meals Ref•rena.a pro41dH
814-992·7132

'A ac:re lot in Petrtol Counto;o
wtter .vaileblt Aaduced to
t2500 CoH 114·37t·2441 .

C-ory lot lor atlo In Bur·
Ungham Cemetery Cell 814·
182-2710.

--,..-:----:--::-:-=

FO&lt; aalo. 2 proporty Iota. 11•11
end Hx36 In Hoddngport.
Ohio Fonnw lite or H.-:tng.
Small Glrdena Plowed
port Mtthodl•t Epiaoopal
304-175-IH3
Church. Acrau I A 124 from
the Hocldngport Communtty
Will heul all trllh •20 00 loed. bultdlntr Coot to bo by
.._ t bodloo, 304 176- ...... bkl 8idl to bt
1412 or 171·727•
Aplll 22. 1981. 8ond o·o - ·
Hooklngport U - Mot-01
ChuNh. Bo•471 , Hodd~
Ohlo45739 Proporty~­
hildlll:l.il
by lhl Adminl81rattve Counall of
tho Hooklngpon Unltod - .
dlat Church; who rl!llrVII thr
ritht to rojoot oR 21
Business
Allliton. lorvo bulldlne Iota.
Opportunity
....... - - - a d. pulollo
wat.,, .." rfvw Iota, Ctvdl
8owoon.Jr 304·571-2331
I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUILIIH· Camping or INIIIdlng loll on m.
lNG CO. reoommendl that you Ohio Rtv., I mlloo lnlm - n .
do bu8inell with people you 304·178-2721
know, ancl NOT to Hl'td money
through thl mil until yau Mve 1't\ acr. lot wh:h rural Wllter II
- a..... phono 304-571lnvottlgolod tho ofhrlne
Lawn Mower Rpein
Lawn llrvlcee

racetved.,.

2313.

-

2 ..,.., dltllod C.H 304811-31114 oft• I PM.
36

RHI Estate
Wanted

T - Plolnl- 3 BR , oot In
....

bellmlnt . . . . all ........
_,... • · eon 1ttw • Ptil-114441·74•

lloduood t34,000 ,. 131,000.
1111-.3111.. 2 -

... :;:.1101 udllly room 1
-I

• Coli 114--·HIII

2 b-*oom mobile horne hllf

mile out Jericho Aoed, cell eft•
5 00 pm, 304 175 e.&amp;al
Two and lhr.. bedroom mobile
hom.,, 114 mill out Sand Hill
3 ••
_R_•_ad_,_3_o4_·_8_75_·_B_••_ __
44

Soles end ch•ra priced from
•381 to $891. Tabl• •so end
up to $121 Hide-a-beds •380
to *191 Recllntl'll $221i to
U75 Lampo Ul te t125
Dln.n• •109 and up to •41&amp;
Wood table w-1 chlifl t281to
t791 Oelk a100 up to 13715
Hutches •400 and up Bunk
beds complete w·mettrel . .
•281and up to •381. I• by beds
•110 Mattnu• or bo:uprlng~
luH or twin •ea. finn •7&amp;, and
•as Queen ••• U28, King
el&amp;O. 4 drawer ahett Ill Gun
cabinets e gun Baby mettree. .
U5 • 145. Bod fromea t20,
t30 • King frame 150 Oood
aelection of t.draom suit11,
metal ceblnetl, headboards $30
end up to $81

Apartment
for Rant

Naw completely turnlahed
epertm.,t • moltlla home In
city Adults only Parking r..-11
114 441-0331
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 531 J1okooft
Pika from •183 a mo Wlllk to
shop and mov._ 114·4412511 E 0 H

80 Days lan\1 I I cath with
approved credit
3 MH11 ou1
Bulavllla Rd 'Open 9•m to 15pm
Mon thru Sot Ph 114 441
0322

Brookside Apartm.U: Located
off lulftllle Rd 1 BA epeclaus
apartments whh modern kttahen
and w.lher dryer hookupe., ca
bll 111wlaion .v..labla can
814·441·1932

Yalllv Fumiture
New and UHd fumtture end
eppllcanc•• Cell 814·448·
7172 Hou11 8-5.

Upatakl unfurnished apt Cer·
No ahlldren.
No pets Call •14-441-1137

J • S FURNITURE
1411 E11t1m Ave
Living room suh• t179 a up
Badroom IUitN $388. up

J)ltld utMitiee paid.

PICKENS
FURNITURE

Downtown·Modem 11R .c:om•
plete kitchen. AC, cerplt Cell
114· 441...0131.

Ooodcondltlon 2 pc lvingroom
tulte tiO c.tt 114-241 1440
lfter

15

PM

OrNn 3 cushk&gt;n couch Cell
114·-.1-0114
Matlohan Fumkur•. Qulltty furnltuni • - • _

For ront· 1 IR upotolro Nowty
remodelad lecond Ava. Cal
114·441·1111or441·4927
Fum- olfldoncy t 1411 U ~·
••
plid Share beth 807
4
Sooond. Oolllpolla Coli 11 •
441·.Wtl oftOI' 7 PM

bto-··n-tvolllbloto

"*

Oorago oot . fuml- U25
U111~1oa pold 281\ Noll. OolllpoIll Cll 114--M8·4411 1fler 1
PM.
2 IR apt.-111 Tltlrd Avo..

040 00, 304-

Couoh ond 871· 1324

Onoou.,.alng!Ooomploto-•
Md, MVer ulld, oau after I 00,
304-441-7024
UHd ctr~m.llght • ..,. 201.11
1nd llx12 fOot lnd • - ·
tiO.OO all
304-871·
ueo

ron•

SMITH'S ASHLAND - 118 Vme
St G•llipolls, Ohio Cell 814448 · 9333 OIL CHANGE
SPECIAL 6 qts Valvollne
1 Ow30 oil tiher 8&amp; gre•e. sll
tlukl Ieveii checked • 10 99 &amp;
tax Start~ng April 1 1 thru 1 8
Extra for 4x4's

Lhnng room set. tw1n bed, dey
bed exercise bike 10 1pd bike
rowing machine Csll61•· 3888304

For sale Standing timber 200
trMI 13 to 33 1nchn, Ath,
Walnut. Oak etc Vance Farm
3Y.I mlln off At 7 on Leadmg
CrHk Rd

Large calor console T V 1 9 Inch
BW T Y Both t150 Csll 814
882 1708 877 Brownell Ave
Mtdd'-&lt;t, 0~

For 11le: S1a bumer-grill·two
oven nov•. comm•ciel deep
fryer Remodeling . Make offer
Csn bl teen It Me1g1 County
Senior Centlf. 114 992-2-111
U H1ul trucks •nd trellltf'l .tor

rent. 304-875-7421

SURPLUS DENIM , army, rtntll
clothing Wid turkey ••••on
soon c.nouflege gt81n, black
whhe clodtlng NO check•
Political advert11ing 1mprinttd
epec:letd11 Sam Somerville Rt
21 junction lndependanc:e Road ,
Ean Aevenswoad Fr1 Sat, Sun
noon-8 00 pm 304·273-181515
Window IM with timer, •ntique
merble clack, dlhumidHer, 30ol·
875·11011

Groom and SuPIIIy Shop· Ptt
Grooming All breeds All
a~yloo. lomo Ptt Food Dnlor.
Jullt Wtbb Ph 114·448-023t
O r - Conery KoMOI
CF• HI tl
Pt..... ond
81;;,....m ~=~ New AKC
Chow pupploo Col 114 441
3144 efter 7PM

I:::::::~::::::::::;!========~

~46 · 6432

Red Hot berg•n•l Drug de•l•s'
can bolts plenes repo d Sur
plus Vour Area Buy•• Guide
11}806 687 6000 EKt S·9806

Mustcal
Instruments

1977 Bu1ck Slcylerk $700
614· 9B6 · 3537 or 614 992
2208

Individual gu1ter le11on1 B t·
qmners Senous Guharln Bru
nleerd1s Music 814-446-0887,
Jeff Wam•IEV Instructor B14
44&amp;-eon Lmited Opemngs

1982 Cutlass Ctera 4 door P8,
PS. AC AM -FM cas l8tte
$3600 614 992 220B or 614
986· 3637

F·lllll Suppiii!S
&amp; Llve:;lock

1972 Old• Good work car Call
even1ngs 11• 949-2940
1981 Bonneville 8rougham
D1111l sng1ne. hcellent cond1·
t1on 82800 Call 614-9927487 or 114 742 3164

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS

'76 Ford Mustang II, 302 euto.
1300 00 or belt offer 30ol· 5782664

e. SONS

U S 35 Welt J•ckson Ohio

~=
~~M :Lo~RsEC!~~
•2

3 ~ 9745

610 International tractor
w / plowa. trensporl dlac
neeo 2411nternllionel round
bel•. t2960 Own• will fl.
nance Call 114 281 8822

1980 Datsun B210 hitch blck.
good cand 6 speed,
$1 000 00 Smell truck alumn
topp•. like new t200,00, 304·
773· 8028
' .,.,.._..,..-,---.,-.,-,-.,1980 Volkswagon Duher dl8
sel call 304·176· 7666 after
100
1919 ehevy Cemero exc cond
phone 304-BB2· 2695
1 9BO Concord DL. no rust. tK»ctv
In grllt lhepe runs good
transmltsion needs work t460
304 882 2065

72

Jubilee Ford tractor Very good
lhape Call 614·~87· 7441

John Deer1 b1ler seminar Mon·
dey April 1 1, 7 00 PM IICtory
reps on hand to entw8f questions Agrecon Inc 639 Upper
River Road G•llipolls Oh1o
L1veatock

Vans

&amp;4

W.O.

1973 Dodge Meld· Yen 310
AT.PB.PS Rearhtl'ter •1000
negotiable Call 1114· 258· 1 798
1887 Chary Conv•Hn Van
Mark II 9400 mil11. fully
-ulpped.
burt~Mdv whitl ~
ext•
-.,
rior, burgendy end gray 1nt,.. ...r
•11.100 MavCOIIsldarnic.llte
model ctr with low mileege ••
pontrado lt4 815 4418 I*
1911 Chavy Von Stl.. ahlft, I
cvl. good tir•, runs good
Mek• good flahing v•n Cell
114·992· 2818
1981FontF110 4wheeldrlve,
PS, P8, AC, auto futllnjoctlon,
1on bod. t7. 150 00 304 458
1
1031

71 Auto's For Sale

N'- 1

~.-... opr

neo
""""" Dopoolt Nqtil.... 114HZ·IOII

81

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondittonel lifetime gueran
tee Local references fum11hld
Free ~~tim•" Call CGMect
1 614-237·0488 day or mght
Rogerslssement
Waterproofing
SWEEPER •nd sew1ng miChlne
rep•ir pans. end aupph• Pick
up snd delivery, DIMs Veouum
Cleaner one hell mtle up
Georges Creek Ad Cell t14441 0294
Pamtmp roofing ramodehng
tree tnmmmg bu1ld1ngs tom
down g~nerel hluling CeH
614-367-0121

a••

Brick Block Work Foundetiona
bf"1ck veneer, flreplecas. repelra,
r11torat10n1 • am.U tobl FNI
lltlmat.. 26 yelrl- IXI)Ir181'1CI
Calll14 245 1152

RON ' S Television Sarv1ee
HouH calls on RCA Quuar,
GE Speetahng in Zenith CaN
304·676· 2398 or 114 -441·
2454
Tr.. Tnmming ltump
removal Call 304-8715 1331

•=·

Rotary or cable tool drHiing
Molt wells c:amplated ..,.,.dey
Pump all• and service 304
896 ·3802
Starkt Tree end Lewn S.IVICI
lawn cere lendsallplna. lltUmp
removal, 3 04 -871 -2842 or
571 2103
82

tt.B

the environment, ww print
lebell on recycled paper "

Plumbing
Heating

&amp;

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor Fowrth •nd Ptne
Oallipoti1, OhiO
Phone 114-441 3188 or 114
448-4477
84

&amp;

E lectr~cel
Refrigeration

'

1871 Bulcl&lt; Rotol Good oond.

85

::."or:

--------ea11 et4·441-05n

1887 810 llaz•.loadod, Tahoo
podiogo, 304·175· 5112

1179 Kaw1aolu 400 5700
m._ eeoo Ctll et 4·445·
74&amp;2
1175

Ho~oy

Oovldton Soon•

tlf E•oel coM Etectric tttrt

General Hauling •

•
•

Ditlerd Wiler S.rvlce Pool• "
Clttems, Wells O.IIY.-y Any
time Cell 11.&amp;-•41 7404 No ..,
Sunday calls
J &amp; J Wet., Servk!. Swimming
paola cilterns. walla. Ph e14 •
245-9285
•

--------------~---R &amp; R Weter 8erviae Home · ~

1.000 mil• UOOO Call 814·
441·2310

elltll"l, wella pools filled Fat·• 111
rnertv JemN toys Wetn Call •
3CM-8'N· I370
f~

1182 Hwley Devidlon fLH Full
dr.., utr• chrome. new tlrM,
IHOO Will contrade fDr VH. C.l 814-371·
1
4
2
1113 4 dr Ford 1-.. L. Topo 1_
_ _ .:.
• - - - - -- dMk, lt8nd trane ' 1 100 Cal 1884 Yamaha 700 Ylrego
114--· 7113
12200 Calllt4 - -1471

Peul Rupe, Jr Water S.rv~ ' '
Pools clst•n•. well• C.ll 114.448-3t71
Watterson' s Weter Hauliq,
retTon•bl• riHI , immtdl••
2,000 aollon dollvory, clotoma.
pools, wei ate can 304 1712811
87

help

Home
Improvements

Readentlal or commercial w~r- '"
ing New servtce or repeira
Llcanl8d electriden Estimet1
frH Rktenour Electrical 304 •
175·1781

HZ·2014.

-•~w.-.--yord.
gor... · ""..... Nloolr " ' - ...,.. ·
aeo•o Coii14·-·13ZI- Adulto Rot. '""""" No
IPM
- · Calll14---0138

9'h ft shde 1n truck camper
Good conditiOn 8800 Cell
614 992 2218 eft• 5 00 p m

1983Chavy Cl1a11on Amrocllo, I-:----:--- --"-auto trona , PI, Pl. 18.000
mil. . .14150 Can beaeenetthe ~~ 1Pi~ ~~~
Gollpolla Dolly T,._ 01 for n 500 00 304· 882·2592 of·
more Information cell .1.·448· 11, ! OO
2342

. - 01r1M1t In ron•••· lf4-

:a:;..t:t::aJ~ 4·HI·I111

79 Motors Homes
&amp; tampers

Tree • nump removal new
l1wna mulch ltone. lhllle
treet. shurbs Auhu Don'a
Landscapes 6 14·448-9141

73

For Sale CCC carttflcate Ph
304-171· 2443oftarl p m

low-

1 11111room fumlillla• lffl II out
' •Ill· 1 ,...... -'• whli I
ll1droqomt. ICteohtn furftiiMcf I

BUDGET TRANSMISSIONS ·
Used S. rebuilt. ell ty.,_ guar•n·
teed 30 d-v• nunlmum Pnc....
199 a. up Rebu11t torquw as
low as $39 360 conven10n kits
to fit S-10'• C· 10 1 metric 8&amp;
overdnve Hard pens tor trent·
mtllion 8&amp; trenam11110n k1t1 C1ll
1 304 4230 or 1-614 -379 ·
2220

1973 Ford 8o1t ltd pickup
1800 Cell 814-245-9101

1IIO.fial ltratone convertible
X~l.l'tpd ,
boot
..... C.HII4-441·711'72, .....
1110 oft• I I'M

1 II 1*«&lt;on'n, unfurnlaMd apt

Old1 , Butck Pont1ec, Chevy,
Chevy truck. Ford Chrysler
trensm11110ns jused) •re lntern•ltv Inspected a. carry 3000 m1
or 30 dey werranty (whichever
occurs first) We buy JUnk
tfansm111ions Cell 814-446
0988

Fetty

varletyAffalfe 304·671· 1101
Ground •hell com •
.,_
410
100 Exe: round balM Affaffa or
0 .. hey In dry *20 00 8 00
12 00 deity Morgan's Wood·
lewn Farm, Rt 31. Pliny. W. V1
304 1715 1281

e1eoo eon 114·441·2310

C.l 114-

Auto Parts
Accessortes

S1d1ng overhang gun~r~ storm
doors &amp; ~nndowt Free est1
mate 0.11814·448-8070

197B Sub1n1 Brat Call 814
0_749
_4_41
._::----:-:-.,..,..19n Ford Cuttom F100 pk:kup
short bed. afttr 4 00 pm
304-175-5539

KenworthendDeKelbNidcom
Scott Farm Grau Steds w L

1971 Corvette Excll cond Air.

EOH

&amp;

1982 Olds Cutlus Ciere Eaell
cond 84300 or make offer Cell
814 441 t991

Grain

t-top, auto tr.... low miiMga

2 ll•*oom ~. for rwnt. C.r·
aotod Nlot tottlne IAI~

76

Trenchlng-r..sonable rlt" wa
ter electrtc.
drsinage lints
P•pe • ti.ltur• 1t discount Call
614 446·8508

1110 Dodge 1AI ton V I ltlnd
erd Many axtr•• (lual ax..
trailer together or seperate
'3800 C•tll14-441 -4412

Fair lembs and pigs 304-B953430

1883 Old1 Cudul New cond
L- 4·44-2310
· Loodod ueoo
C.
II ..

-.r ond - - · fZOO •
Ull "
"'- fw-.r
Ctfii14-H2-1724.

16 HP Se ars outboard motor or
trade for 2&amp;HP 304 nJ 6296

1980 Chevy Cunom Deluxe
p.ckup with topper Call 814·
446 7481 after 5pm

1973 GMC 8 cyl , heH ton
liMbed New fenchn, rocker
p1nels. ltarter 1 new ceb
comer Slld1ng giUI w1ndow
CompiMelv tuned up t900 C.l
114-44t-1912

•u•

8t

Sela

1987 Ford pickup Runa good
•4150 Cell 814 441 2004

e1 4

I V. yr

Hay

TNcks for

80 Chevy 4x4 pickup lA. ton
66,000 acutu•l mil• Ex cond
Alao. Ohv• trtctor Call I 14379 2798

John Dure 4010 Hat 4020 k1t
•1200 c.1t 61 ' 843 61 14 •f·
ter&amp;OOpm

Feeder Pio• for ule Cell
246 9426

Cell 614 446 4072
1 9B7 bo•t. t•ke ovar payments
nothmg down v.e 1 9 n t76
hp, extras. ut ed 64 hours
304 676-2384

YfllfV

131 MF dlllll. 590 haun wHh
MF Dyna Bounce mower, MF
reike MF #12 baler •61150
Own• wil finance CaU 114·
281 5522

63

19B6 19 Beylm• 1215 HP
outboard Pow8f Trtm end FM
AM -Cast rt&lt;ho Sl...,. 4 Con·
vertlbleendcempertopw / 1985
Escort tr•ller Own• must tell

1979 Datson body good cond.
1360 00 phone 304-6767194

1882 oataun 280 zx. 2+2 5 74 Motorcycle•
opd., T-top n-ptlnt,ote Good '~--------­
cond 15700 Coli 114-441· r
7111

1 bNroom apanmwata. Fu,..

1'.....

1986 DodgeD 50 New Redial
chrome rims, 37 000
miles Excel ahepe Call e14

t~res.

Pets for Sale

2bldroomep aa..-tonUnooln
Hll. ....,....,. C.ll I14·H2·
11Jioret4-IN-34ft

••

57

Pure -bred Ouernlly heifer
Breeding
814 378 1481

56

1974 Plymouth Duster. 31 B
V B engine •uto tr1n1 power
nearing AC Runs good t400
Call 814 258 8490

4 month old AKC reg1stered
Buun hound cell 304-676 ·
3903

General Electric: window air
cond 4.000 btu. like new, 2
used room sire carpet w
pedding, Meytttg auto weaher, 2
155·gal drum kii'OIIfll Whirl
pool 15 000 btu window 1ir
eondhlonsr 304 171 34111i

Cancnte blocks ell alzu yiiCI
ordiiiYery Mesonnnd Gelllpo·
111 Block Co • 1 23V.. Pine St..
OeiiiDolis, Ohto Celll14-441·
278i .

1987 Mercury Cougar 6600
mil at PS PB alf, cru1se loehd
t14 700 Call614 441 1478or
876 37B8

Copper nose female Beagle pup
8 wkt old H1d shots and
wormed U&amp; 614-992 6349

180 ft No 2 aluminum wirl
underground. Naw t75 304
1171·5490

1

1986 Un co tn Town car Call
614· 246 6521 Of 288 1872

AKC Registered S1berlan Husky
puppies 4 mal81 1 tamale Both
parents on prem11n Shots end
warmed Call 8'\lenlngs 614949·2940

old mere Appelooae
fidlng horae • 300 c.n 8 14·
258-581&amp;

lulldlna Motori1lo
llook, brick, ~tw• pipN, win·
dowa, lintels, etc Cleuda Win
tero. •Rti~ 0rende, 0 Cell 814·
241 D

71 Auto's For Sale

AKC Reg Besset1 Hound pup·
piu Shots wormed Vet
checked A1k1ng •200 Call
614-.WB-6034 or 448-8093

3 yr old Standard bred Mare,
very genda Also Honde motor·
cycle CB 126, excel cond Call
114 992 5304

Groo- llvlntr 1 ond 2 bod·
room ot VNiop
Manor Md Ahwlkll Apert·
m1n11 In Middleport From
Uti lnalvdlne ut111t1to. Coli
lt4-992·7717 EOH

•a~tt

Pets for Sale

Cobra SRIOO IIJC8nner 1 1 band
18 chennel progremable end
Welthlrwtdt lnMfgencJYOutlldl
antenna RCA XL 100 floor
model color 1V tl50 00 304
6715-2123 ef11r 5 00 PM

Oo-1•
ueodop• Coli
mo 114·
ptut ~
ut11111ot. ti2B
24t-te95

'cPnl

56

614-286 8461
MUHY Ferguson, New Holland
4 piece bedroom tUlt Doubl1 Bush Hog Saln • Serv1ce Over
•••• can be converted to kln(l 40 u1ed tractors to ehoo11 from
or qu"n IIZI •200 firm 614 ... • complete line of new • used
992-2818
equipment largest selection In
8 fl white llberglen PIC:k-up S E Ohio
lopptr wtth aUdlng front gl111 UTIUTY BLDG SPL: 30.x40 x9'
lntetlor light lugpge rack eave- 1 &amp;'x8' tlidlnf door &amp; 3 '
114 117 1838
49

_.

qualified .,.,.... Uppw '"""
Rd 0111 0 . 814· . . .·7444

1

~~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;:r:~~~~;;;;";'~·~-;'~~;~~

64

Dlnnattea, bldl bedding,
dr1111ra, ch11t1, couah11,
cheirs,lampa. coffee.lnd tlbllt
Evory doy lpooltla \'a mlo out
Jerricha l(M..$71·1450

Unfur;m.Md apt -2 lA t181
Water !hid Stove&amp;,.....g 1131
SIDOnd. 0.11po• Cell 4414418 after 1 PM.
0 _,_ N'- 3 BA 11v1- room
u..._. room.
• ··•
dining
-,e
llhahtn.•
utHtty 1'00111 Ml 8100nd t281
plul utllitill Alf • 1ea.dap.
Calll14·441· 0332

•

B11utHul wh1te wedd1ng dr••
Smehizel •7&amp; Cslll14 3BB
9809

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

1

I I - . . , Rt. Jl. ~ 1100 -::4-:i1'--;H"'a_m
__
•.,.•7fo.,.r""R"'en--:t,.... 11,4111., 1 1 \ - -

,·;

Two prom dreesn Worn once
t16 00 each Size 9 10 Call
614-441-147B

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Wuhen drylf'l, refrigerators.
rang81 Skaggs Appliance•.
Upper Rtv. Rd beside Stone
c_, Mottl 114· 448·731B

In Rio Grondo-Nioo2 BR, U25
e mo Aetrig • Wldlr fwnilhecl.
No pets C1ll 114·441·8031

Cell 814 441 8741 or 318
8472

Trailer lots. Rt 1 Locust Roed
blck ot K &amp; K Mobile Homes.
304-175-1078

Boats e n d
Motors for Sale

•

t 'I

Riding mowen 8 HP Bolen I
HP WhHihone. &amp; 7 HP Torro
Call lt4· 379 2746

Spacious mobile home lots tor
rent Famlfy Pride Mabi .. Home
Park. Oell1polls Flrrv W V•
304-176-3073

County Appllence Inc Good
used appllincee and TV Htl
Open BAM to IPM Mon thnJ
Sot 114·441 1199 827 3rd
Ave Gelllpolil, OH

Moble home 2 bedroom, nice
lol, Mlddhtport Utllltlee In
eluded 114· 992 5949 or 814·
882·9103

Call e14-881-731 1

Swimming Pool Acc:esaorles
Used but tn excellent condition
1 0' Sail Wh1te 10 toot "h meter
div1ng board t200 Turquols
Aque aide $300 1 112 HP
Am•ican Suction pump t200
Air Ou1t1c l1berglaas h1gh capacity tend filter, t200 OR take all
for • toW. t700. Calle1 4 · 441
4637

SWAIN
AUCTION e. FURNITURE 82
Olive Sr., Gelllpotls
NEW I pc wood group t399
Uving room suit•· t1 88-•591.
Bunk bldl with bedding- •199
Full alae mlttr811 &amp; tounct.llon
aterting - $99 Recliners
otartlntr· 098
USED Bade........ bedroom
aultts. t199 · t289 Oeak1.
wringer Wllher, e campi at• line
of ueld tum1ture
NEW Western boots t30
Wcwkboota •18 • up IStHI e.
aoft toe) Cell 81 4 446-31 &amp;9

2 lA mobite home-Kerr·llAI
miles from ,fMC 1 BR apt In
Rio Orondo CaNI14 245 9170
Of 38B·HO.

26 tt Bayhner cru1Mr 1911
Wldl beam ell electrOniC G•lley
e~~ nve s
etc 3 50 V I eng ,
sleeps I
Very low hours '
8Z7 600 Cell 304 · 727 6890

H
In 7 600 BTU 8
.I
otpo 220
'1 • hookup Wlnng
" con
tloner
8&amp;
bo.1 to hook n up Used 3 mos
Celll14-268-1412

51 Household Goods

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Btg Dskote farm home 3 BA 2
be •16,995 &amp; up Modelaopen

Mobile home lot 10 ft or
smal* 920 4th, Gallipolis
$75-weter paid Ca1144,1 -4411

Mr.rcllollllise

304·17&amp;· 6899

ln Eurllce-2 nice &amp; clean 2 BR
mobile homn t200 &amp; •225 P•
mo Dep required No petl
Adults only. Cell 814-2485883

1 18 .cree. 2 barns outbuilding.
pond, good ro1d frontage,
owner wll finance, SomrvMie
Roolty, 304-175·3030 0&lt; 176·
3431
'

ldlohon, ,. . . """"' -

••so 00

1970 Honda 3 whNier Phone
304-176 2443 •ft• 6 p m
75

RCA floor modol .,.,eo $85 3
piaeesofa. •76 Newbabyitem•
• clothmg,etc Cell 114 2415
9801

2 IR hou ... Chlllicothe Ad
*150amo Ref &amp;dep required
Call II 4·441·4038 or 44t181S

1987 Honda C RIS OO t.1c cond
call tor pnce 304 175 1780

0
0

Huge 31 ' oval pool With deck
fence • f1lter Installation S.
financing 8\llll~le 1 -800· 3•6
0948

10th
at
the Flu M1rket BUt 9th &amp;

Spaee for amaH treilel'll All
hook· ups C.ble Also efficiency
rooms, air •nd ceble Mlaon,
W Va Cell 30•· 773·6861

2 IR home in country, water,
electric trash furnished 2 child
ren t210 rent. $1!0 deposit
Reference• Cell 114 3P8
9188

1972 Hommet 12d2 2 BR
Excel cond Call even tft•
7 814-448 4409

J • R'1 Roofing- Siding •
..-.,....,. Will build geragN &amp;
oudlulldlnga Minor c.rpentsr
work on~ 18 veert experience
eon 114-441-5327 or 441·
1912

Homes for Sele

Nawty remodeled z BA houH
In Addison, Oh CeH 114· 992·
0 •_44_8_
I _5_304
__
· a,..a_e_B_
. -:-:7-:-:
3 BA houaa tor rent 218 Call
814 . 441•7208

1976 K1W11 181d 900 1" time
owner, 81 000 00 or belt offer
dav• call 304· 1715 2354 " '"
Ina• 176 2787

SWIMMING POOLS t989
ORDER NOW PAY LATER

RIVER LOTS
For Boating• Camping For Sale
or Rent A-One Retl "Eitete
B - . 304· 871· 5104

2 8R unfumllhld gerage 1
mila 211. •zoo rent $110dep
Ret Married coupl" One child
Coll114·441·8585.

Motorcycles

1987 Hond• 4 whlller I ft
truc6t toper 3 04 876 51 06 at
tar 6 00 pm

Cellehan 1 Uaed Twe Shop Over
1.000tlrH.IIz•12 13 14, 15,
18, 16 6 8 mil .. out At 218
Call It 4 251 5251

Mrs Ruby Crew1'ord w1ll hiVe
C1thltdral window qullta tor 1efe

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy
Rental trellers Call 6~4 -992 ·
7479

74

54 Misc. Merchandise

48 Space for Rent

Mter7PM

sell.

! miiN from Gellipolls 73 acree
with modem hou• and bam,
814· 443-9817 or 114· 441·
9438

31

!

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry W righl

Buy or Sell Rlv•lne AntlquN. •
1 , 24 E Mafn StrMI, Pomeroy
Houra MTW10e m to&amp; p m
Sunday 1 to lp m 814 -9 922528

Deluu Be• King Inflatable bost
Compound and recurve bows
Fishing ge1r Call 614 446
9835

Nice 8 room hauN In town No
pets Heveref • dip •211 Call
elttr 8 30 PM. 114·448·1734

14 ect81 b•n pond, mile out, 2
bedrooms, centr.e air l•n or

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Wll do bebyaftt.ng in my homt
Hive references Calll14 317
7171

AltypesmMOn.-y,brldc.bloclt.
stone end concrift. tree eltl·
motH, 304·n3·8BBO

Homes for Rent

The Daily Sentinei- Page-11

Antiques

Rooms for rent weM or month
Starting It: I 120 a mo Galhe
Hoto1· 81 4·448 9510

'

l----!"'"----~-,~----------1

All type~ of muonry Brtok
..oc:k. lltont end concrete Free Cuh tor vour uaed home Now
animM.. Call304 773 9510
buying pre 1980 12•1 a. 14' s
Will do houM cleaning tprlng Please call 800 821 0712. ut
dnning, wUI bllbya~t for 1meU _31_6- - -- - : - : - : - 1
chlld 304·713· fiB02
1988 Redman 2 bedroom,
centreleir on tot in moltlla home
perk Used one mo 112,900. Of
13
ln1urance
best offer &amp;at up IDeal Cell
304· 883-9644
C•ll us for your mobile home 1174 Camtfon 12Jr.&amp;l5 Totel
insurance Miller ln1urenc1, llectrlc 2 BA Blacks $3300
304 882 2141 Also auto~ Caii814·ZI8·1031
home. 11t• health
1--::-::-:-,.,.--:---:::--:-1871 Wlndaor mobUo homo,
14Jt70, 3 bedrooms central air,
d11hwnhlr, woodbumer, undorponnlng It 2,000 00 30416
Schools
571· 5017.
lnatNction
1978 Bayview 14x70 trailer h..
7x22 expando. 3 bedrooms, 1 1h
Top jobs require top sldlls Act - ·· 304-773-5445 •• 773
Nowl Southlllt•n Bulin"' llt81
Coll1fi1•441 4387 AICS Accr•
1 919 Mobile home. 12x80, two
dltod Rog Bl· t1 · 101i&amp;B
bedrooms 1 'h baths, utres.
t4,200 00 Phono 304·578·
25315 or 576 2119
1 8 Wanted to Do
2 bedroom tumished or untur·
nillhed. deposit and
,.qulred, 30••882 2849
Jim's Odd Jobs
Sundecb, aiding, painting, root- 1 2xl0 1971-Concorda with ac
ing, car.,..tsr work. trailer re- Rent or Sell 304-17!-3+'2
p!Mr. Celll14·379·2418
Cl...lng· HouH • offices Ref·
•rene~~ Cell 11 4·441 1788 or
245·5383

AVON- Sell Avon tor ALL areas
Call 814-446·3368

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room·919 Second
Ave • GaiUpohs 1125 • mo
UUtiti11 P4Md Single male Shere
bath CaM4414(1B•fter7PM

.....,.,ces

Help Wanted

...::....:.......:..__;,~--·

ftr• E4ulp•e•t

Situations
Wanted

Fourth
Middleport, Oh1o Room and
tto.rd for senior ch1nn1 Sptci•l
care In privete home 614-992·
1873

Buying dally gold, 11tver coins.
rings J8Welry lterhng ware old
comt, large currency Top pri
cea Ed Burkett Barber Shop
2nd Ave Middleport. Oh 614
992 3476

GOVERNMENT JOBS
•11,040
t59.Z30/ yr Now
h~ring
Your area 801 187
1000 Ext R-101B9 for cunent
Federal hat

••I•

Ellm Home. 209 S

Junk Cara w1th or without
motors Call larry Uv~y 614 ..,
388·9303

G1ve to good home White
female cat, lp.yed Cell 614245·6638

Oltn Milia huseveralnnmedlate
openlnga tor telephone
p110pl1 No expenence necat·
s.ry Also need aomeone for
light delivery work Apply to
JoAnne DDYI• Lowe's Motor
Inn, Pt PleHint Mon. Apr
11th. 1 p m to 3 p m 7
pm -830 p m NoPhoneCals
EOE
12

Went to buy Uud furniture and
antiques Will buy entlte hout•
hold furmahmg Marlin Wed•
meyer 614 246 6162

11

1937 pe11enger bus cut It up,
haul 11 away. phone 304 458
10.&amp;2

SALES &amp; SERVICE

YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

Complete households of furm·
ture &amp; antiques Also wood &amp;
coal heetera Swam's Furniture
&amp; AuctiOn. Third &amp; Olive,
814·448-3169

dog Good weteh •"11· Call
614· 266-1989 efttr 6 PM

Aloe Plants
1797

BOGGS

NEW -IEPAII

TOP CASH pa1d tor '83 model
•nd newer used can Smith
Buick Pontiac 191 1 Eettern
Ave . Gallipolis Cell 614 441 •
2282

F111 ploy 1111! nt
Si!l vICI:!i
To good home 6 pupples-4
m~~les, 1 female Plus mother 1-;o-uo:-i=o=:-:c-:=-=

6 17-lfc

•••••,for

We pey eesh for late model clea n"
used cars
"'
Jim M1nk Chev Olds Inc
B1U Gene Johnson
614-446 3672

like new shower nail with
lixtur8S-to someone who will
take It out Catl814 446 1630

3-11-tftt

EAGLIIIDGI
SMAU. ENGINE
PH. 949·2969

One furmshed a nd one untur
nished, 304· 676-1365

Sw•mrrNng pool uteiHe. close
to Melp High C.ll 114·992·
3264

MONEY FOR COLLEGE! Part
t~ joba Join the West VIrginia
Army Nltionel Guard 304·111
3910 or 1·800-142-3819

Wanted Standing t1mber Large ~
Rankin R P1ckena, D 0 Board or small acreage Call614 882- ~
Certified In General Practice I 7348 or 6B2· 721 8
will no longer eccept new
patients
Gun1, kn1ves. coma. pocket
watches military ItemsMeigs County Humane Soc1ety uniforms. etc Peymg cash Will
now has 1 l•ge end beautiful pckup Call 614-446-2799
aelact10n of cett look1ng tor
good homes Long or short hair Wanted to Buy UMd Mob1le
All heve had ahots Adoption Homes Calll14 44&amp; 0176
feea are $6 00 end t1 0 00 for
ap..,.ed or neutered cats Call Kmght's Templer Commendery
114 882 3021 or 814 992- uniform S1ze 38•40 C.ll 614
8606 for more dete111
388 8872 after 6 PM

·······Galllpolrs..........
CHESTER OHIO
•HOME IUILOING
•ROOM AOOITIONS
•KITCHENS BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING •
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS I&lt;
BACK HOE WORK

one bedroom furnished apt.
conventent loeltlon, 304-176·
2441

•fl•

Cakola~l

lZ 'll· loo

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Beech Street Mkldleport. Ohio.
2 bedroom fumiehed apt,. utili
ties paid reterencet 1nd depo~:i t,
304· 882· 2511

2 bedroom.. 2 baths, 2 car
garage, level lot on Rt. 33

Auct1oneer Col Otcer E Cltck
304 B96 3430 Lie No 764
88

53

Apartment
for Rent

APARTMENTS mobile homes.
houa" Pt P...santendOelli polla 81 4·446· B221

Sp. . s.

local Northern Vtrglnfa Home
Manufacturer nleds laborers
who •r• looking for steady
employment Oueranteed 40 hrs
per week
ovenime••Four
hour
deyl plus
are avalleble
well10
as
lodging Calwarton Ve 1 703
788-4222, 8 00 am to 4 30 pm

loyal &amp; SCM Typewriton

1/'21!/ t n

NEW LISTING- 2 untt rental
1n Pomeroy Monthly gross 1n
come ol $300 00/mo ASK
lNG $1200000

ST RT

AUTOMOTIVE

VHS TAPE
let US IOIIYtrl I host old Mowltl
&amp; Slides anr to lctlf VHS.

MEIGS OFFICE
MACHINES

YOUNG'S

J&amp;L

RandS
AUTO REPAIR

Announcements

Special hours will be
9 a.m.-6 p.m. Friday and Saturday
and 1 p.m.-6 p.m. Sunday.

lo

o

HOME 374-5599
3

304·175· 1429

loyal &amp; Max Cash l1g11ttrt

WANTED

Sh~rley

Wedemeyer s Auction Servlc•' •
ave1leble at your convemence•
and loeat10n1 M a rl~n Wed•
meyer Auct1onour 614 246
5162

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
• Storm Doors

WOODIID GP TBE WORLD un
1118ULIIICE 80CIITl
~r\'rng Me1gs Gnll.a :~ nd
Masun Cuumres
RICK HALSTED, AGENT
Po1nt Pl~a~ant, WY
1304) 675-7618

AVON ellerNI

PICKENS FURNITURE
Every day Spec11ls. lots 110od
yard sale 1tems In store Cloae
out on used liBI cook stoves
304 675-1 450 111 mile Jenlcho
Ad

Day or Night •

Business
Services

Ha'ir Stylllt:l Across Tha Street
nyllng salon 11 seeking two
addltianll S1ylilll who are look
inu for mor• than just anot her
job Cell T1rri•t 114-448 9610
for details

AVON All atHa Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882·2.846

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860

Before· th1s little
g1rl was born she was
picked by Chnstto be
m H1s garden. She has
always seemed like a
little angel. She was a
spec1al little g1rl and
everyone that knew
her loved her. She got
m a person's heart
and stayed there
When we found out
that she had cystic fi.
brosis it was a ·very,
bleak day The few years
that she was on this
earth, we felt her pain
too. It was a ternble
thmg she had to suffer.
She had been saymg that she wanted to
go to Heaven and be
w1th Jesus. Then she
would not be m any
more pam and she
would be able to run
and play. So for this
sweet little g1rl of 6'h
years old, we say fare well.
In my mind's eye I
can see her running to
Jesus' arms sm1hng
so sweetly.
Bye, Bye, sweet little one, we will m1ss
you very. very much.
Grandma Betty Fnend
Daddy Jeffrey
Uncles. Randy &amp;
Brett and her dear
fnend Shirley

partment

44

Geneel de1rv t•m help Poas•bll1
t ies to advance 10 herdsmen
manager or •h••• State ellipe
rlence end r.,_enee• 2 bid·
room mobile home available
Wrtte Deity Sentinel, Box 729R,
Pomeroy. Ohio 45789

read aloud at 1 . 15 p m o n

may

LAFF·A·OAY

Help Wanted

Sell Avon today to frlenct. •nd
~ltlatlv81 or In a territory Fr•
11gn up 614· 992·7180

Apr.l 7th 8th and 9th Thurs ....
Fn and Set Old car craft garage
on Mechan ic St Pomartty
Most items 26 cent1

th e 27 t h day of A pnl, 19 88
for t he furmshmg of all ktnds
and s1zes of aggre gate that

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Aaaembl•• went" Earn mo
ney •••mbllng Teddy BHra
Fr" lnlormet1on W{itl Jo -El
Enterprl... P 0 Bo" 2203
Kissimmee, Fl :?2742 2203

Ra1n or ahine AprilS 9 on Eagle
Ridge B..ham Rd Turn off At 7
at Meigs Memory G•rden• 110 I
m1l11 Lots of itdms 614 9492566

NOTIC E TO
AGGR EGATE VE N D OR ~
Sealed b1d1 will be n1ce•vod
by the· Board of Me•g•
Cou nty Com miSSIOners at
the CommiSSIOn ers Off•ce.
loca t ed m the Court House,
m t he V1llage ,.of Pomeroy.
Ohto until 12 noon on t he
27th da y of Apnl. 1 988 a nd
the b•ds w•ll be opened and

Friday, April 8, 1988

1114 Chtv C o l - V-1, 4
-- ·1431
""-· Col 114-

1110 Y - o IT 210 till
Cofloft•3PM,II4·2H·1117

••-- t$ I lena 110·0
8 - · MW
oond. 8orloua lnqullloo
ooly Collet4•441·2314, m

Hond1
a 1or
,, 000_Aroo
Low eo
mil-,
lnoludoo
tddhlontl I
riot
a:..1_4-;_1411:.:.::..'":.:.:":.:.:._ _ _ __

1
!
-

n••

1

~

Upholstery

Mowrey • Upholltaok• ..,...
tricountyarea22yeen rt.abelt
ln furnhure UDholeterintl Cal
30• · 678 -•114 for- lr11
elllm...

'

~
~
"t:

·,

~- -------~~---~-------------~~---------~-

�'

Fridi~April8,1~

.

Pac-12-The Daily Seminal

Pomeroy-Middeport, Ohio

Baby boomers reach middle age ·
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Baby sus Bureau report, the median
boomers have officially reached age of the U.S. population rose
middle age, the Census Bureau from30'yearsln1980to32.1years
announced Tuesday, with ,the In 1987.
Suggesting there Is a "baby
leadln,g edge ofthe post-warchUd
surge passing the 40-year mark.
boom echo" - children born to
The Census Bureau also re- the large number of baby boo·
ported the population of the mers - the bureau said the
United States Increased to number of children under age 5
243,915,000onJuly 1,1987- a,7.4 grew by 12 percent. It noted
percent Increase over the ll)llny women born In the baby
227,061,000 people reported Apru · boom have entered their .prime
1, 1980.
. childbearing years.
"The repercussions of the baby
But the age group showing the
boom are many and varied," the sharpest decline was that of
bureau said. "They wUl continue people between 14 and 17 years ·
to affect the United States for old, which declined byll percent.
many years to come."
The groups 5 to 13 years and 18 to
Thenumberofmenandwomen 24 years also declined, the
aged 35 to 45 years pld grew by 34 bureau said, noting there were
pe•cent from 1980 to 1987, while 2.1 million fewer children of
the number of those aged 25 to 34 school age In 1987than there were
-the bulk ofthe baby boomers- In 1980.
Increased by 17 percent.
In a related report, the Census
Other age groups .showing Bureau reported the number of
substantial increases: "' ·
U.S. households grew by 12
-The number of people aged percentln the 1980to1987perlod,
85 and over jumped by 28 compared to the 7.4 percent
percent.
population growth - a growth
-Men and women aged 75 to84 largely attributed to the fact that
Increased by 20 percent.
baby boomers are out of college
-People aged 65 to 74 grew by or their parents' homes and
13 percent.
setting up{helr own households.
Overall, according to the Cen-

!Continued from Page 1 0) ·

opened on the date and
place specified above.
7. The Meigs Countv
Commissioners reserve the
right to accept or reject any
or all bids and / or any part
thereof.
Mary Hobstetter, Clerk
Meigs County Board
of Commissionert
(41 B. 15. 2tc

Public Notice
NOTICE TO
BITUMINOUS VENDORS:

Sealed bida will be received
bV the Board of Meigs Coun·
ty Commissioners, Court
House.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
46769 until 12 Noon on the
271h dov of April, 19B8, and
1he bids will be opened and
read aloud at 1 :00 p.m. on
' ~ tho 27th doy of April. 1988.
: for the furnishing Of bituminous materials for the Meigs
County Highway Depart·
ment; and each month
thereafter. bids will be re·
ceived and opened on the
last Wednesday of each
month for the following
month's requirement.-; e•.
tlmated quantities of liquid
asphalt requirad, approximately 500.000 gallon• for
the year.
SPECIFICATIONS FOR
THE BIOS :
1. Bid price par gallon f.o.
b. vendor's plant, the bid
price per gallon delivered to
the vendor's ponabletank to
. any location within the
county as designated by the
County En.oineer, the bid
price per gallon for applied
du•t control; for the various
grad11 of bituminous mate·
rials which ahall conform to
the pertinent State of Ohio,
Department of Highway
Construction and Material
Specifications and
the
Meigs County Highway De·
partment's Bituminous Spa·
cifications .
·
2. Vendors shall understand thai no guarantee ia
given to the actual quantitie• needed. but each auc·
ceasful vendor shall be re·
quired to furnith all or any
part of the County's requirements as ordered during the
bid period.
·3 . .Bidded pricas shall be
firm and in effect during the
bid period.
4 . All bidders must agree
to furni1h any bituniinous
materials, a1 requested in
Item 1, at the same prices to
all the Political Subdivision•
of Meigs County during the
bid period.
5. The envelope, containing each months bid, must
be,. plainly marked "Bitumi·
nous Bid".
6. Propoaals are 1o be returned on bid forms supplied
by the Meiga County Engi·
near: or obtained through
the office Qf the Board of
Meiga County Commlsaion·
ers.
7. The succe1sful vendor
will be required to furnish
i~ny lab work or design
grades as raqu!lstad by the
(

otica

Pu

Public Notice

At the same time, the report
said the average population per
household declined from 2.75
persons to 2.64 persons.
The report also said that, a~ In
past years, the black population
has Increased at a much faster
rate than the population as
whole, with the number of blacks
growing by 11.4 percent In the
1980-1987 period.
· The white population, ineanwhile, grew by 5.7 percent over
the same period.
.
The Census Bureau also said
the "other races" population,
principally American Indians,
Alaskan Natives, Asians and
.Pacific Islanders, grew at a
much more rapid rate -lncreaslngby52.2percent.Thatlncrease
"has resulted from extremely
high net~lvillan lmmlgratlon,"lt
said.
While the population as a whole
Is "graying," the burea.u said,
thl!,blackpopulationlsconsldera·
bly younger than the white
population with a much larger
share under 25. In 1987, the
bureau said, the black median
age was 27.2 years while _the
white median age was 33 years.
Notice

Public Notice

Meigs Cou
Engineer.
8. The Melgo Countv Com·

Volume 147, Page 389. and County Deed Records.
Volume 121, Page 136,
PARCEL FOUR: Com·
Meigs
County
·
oeed
Re·
mencing
at the southeast
to acc,pt or reject any or all
cords, and further bounded corner of the said lot of land
bida. or any part thereof.
and described as follows:
conveyed to Bernice Darst
Mary Hobototter. Clerk
PARCEl
ONE:
Beginning
by deed recOrded in Volume
Meigs County Board
at the southeast corner of a 168. Page 644. of the Deed
of Commi11ioner1
lot owned by Anhur Maddy, Records of Meigs Coun~y.
(4) 8. 15. 2tc
on Front Street, 121 feet be· Ohio. thence northwesterly
low the corner of Spring and along the east line of said lot
Public
Front Streets: thence in 8 ninety 190) feet to tho
nonherly direction 100 feet; nonheast corner thereof;
thence in a northeasterly di· thence southwesterly along
NOTICE OF INTENTION
rectlon and parallel with the north line of said lot,
TO DISCONTINUE
Street 38 feat; thence eighty-eight 188) feet to a
Front
OPERATIONS OF
in
a
southerly
direction and point; thence southeasterly
BRANCH OFFICE.
Notice it hereby given that parallel with Arthur Maddy and parallel with the ealtline
eatt line 100 feet to Front of said lot ninety (90) feet to
the City Loan Bank, an Ohio
Street; thence along Front the south line thereof;
bank having its principal ofStreet 38 feet to the place of thence northeasterly along
fice in Columbus. Ohio, haa
beginning.
the south line of said lot
received permission from
· PARCEL TWO : Beginning eightv·eight (BB) foot to tho
the Ohio Division of Banks
at the southeast corner of a place of beginnng.
to discontinue ita branch of·
There Is also conveyed
fica operation at 236 East lot owned by Mrs. Sara Jane
Smith
lsaid
lot
having
been
herewith
the ten (10) foot
Main St.. Pomeroy, OH .
purcheaed by her from Glen · strip of land that lieasouth of
45879 on April 30. 1 9BB.
Deposit account• held at nie Davia. and being a part of the lot above deacribed.
REFERENCE DEED: Vo·
that office will be trans- what was known as the Hor·
ferred to the City Loan ton Boat Yard property) on lume 298, Page 137, Meigs
Front Street; thence In a County Deed Records.
8ran~h office located at 26 7
northerly direction and fol· · Also the following real
East ·Main St., Jackon, OH .
lowing the east line of said estate situate in the State of
46640.
lotnlnety(90)feat;thencein Ohio, County of Meigs and
(4) 1. 8 2tc
a northnstorly direction and Village of Pomeroy, and
parallel with Front Street bounded and described as ,
P!Jblic Notice
thirty-eight (38) feet; thence follows. to· wlt:
in a southerly direction and
Beginning at the northeast
parallel with Spring Street corner of a lot purchased by
APPOINTMENT OF
·
FIDUCIARY
ninety 190) feet to Front laVina I. Downie from 1aid
On April &amp;, 1988; In the Street; thence along Front Glenflie Davis; thence in a
Meiga County
Probate Street thiny·eight (38) feet northerly direction and pa·
Coun, CaJe No. 25811, to the place of beginning, rallal with Spring Street ten
Pauline Snowden, 43946 and being pan of the prop· (1 Q) feet; thence in a wet·
Hartinger Road, Pomeroy, arty conveyed by
Mary terty direction and parallel
Ohio 467.69, was appointed Rasp, deceased, by certlfi· with Front Street thirty.
Adminiatratrlx of the oo~otel cate of ·tranJfer to Helen eight (38) teet; thence in a
of Elmer G. Sayre,
Rasp Meier, and dated Feb· southerly direction and pa·
ruary 8, 1941, and recorded rallel with Spring Street ten
ceaaed, late of 43946
ringer Road, Pomeroy,
inVolume147,atPage389. (10) feet; thence in an
46769.
Meigs County Deed Re- easterly direction and along
cords.
the northerly line of the said
REFERENCE DEED: Vo- Lovinal . Downie's north line
lumo 298. Pogo 137. Meigs thirty-eight (3B) loot to tho
County Deed Recorda.
place of beginning.
PARCEL THREE: BeginREFERENCE OEED: Voning at,thesoutheast comer lume 147. Page 389, and
Public Notice
oflot No, Two (2) in the on · Volume 121. page 138,
gle of Main Street and Meigs County Dded
Spring Street: thence along Recorda.
IN THE
Main Street southwesterly
The demand of tha ComCOMMON PLEAS COURT
forty-five
feet
to
a
lot
owned
plaint
is that the title to the
OF
by
Lavina
Downie;
thence
above
described real estate
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
back
along
and
upper
aide
of
be
quieted
In the name of the
MOUNTAIN STATE BANK
Lovina Downie's said lot Plaintiff, Mountain State
Plaintiff
ninety (90) feetto .the no1rtn •. 1 'Bank and/or the reforma- vs.eaJterly corner of
lot tion of said deed to include
HELEN RASP MEIER, ET AL
and
parallel
with
Spring
the above described real
Defendants Street; thence in an easterly estate
in Plaintiff's name
CASE NO. 88-CV-79
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION direction and parallel with alone .
You are required to
To: Helen Rasp Meier, ad- Main Street forty·five (45)
dreu unknown if living, and feetlo Spring Street: thence answer the Complaint
if deceased, her unknown along Spring Street ninety within twenty-eight 128)
spouse, heirs, devisees, le· J90) feet to the place of be· days after the latt publica·
tion of this notice which will
gateea. executora, next of ginning.
Also the following dea· be published once each
kin, administrators, and as·
signs, whose addrelaes arf cribed tract In eame Village, week for six 16) succesJive
County and Stlite; beginning WHks. The last publication
unknown .
You are hereby notified at the noRheatt corner of a will be made on April 29,
that a Complaint to Quiet lot owned by Lovina Dow- 1988, •nd the twenty-eight
Title has been filed in the nie; thence in a nonherly 128~ deya for answer will
Common Pleas Court of direction and parallel with commence on that date.
In case of your failure to
Meiga County, Ohio, Case Spring Street ten f101 feet;
No. 8B · CV-79. demending thence In an eatterly dlrec· an1wer or otherwise re·
tion end parallel with M•in apond as required by the
to quiet title of the following
described real astllte in St!'HI forty-five (451 feet to Ohio Ruleo of Civil Proce·
Plaintiff's name. and/or the Spring Street; thence In dura, judgment by default
reform•tion of Plaintiff's eoutherly · direction alona will be rendered against you
deed to include 1he follow- Spring Street ten (1 0) feet; for the relief demanded In
ing real estate which ia thence in a wuterty direc· the Complaint .
larry E. Spencer,
situated in the Village of tion and parallel with Main
Street
forty-five
(45)
feot
to
Clerk of Courts
Pomeroy. CoUnty of Meig1,
Meigo Countv. Oho
State of Ohio, and contained the pl&lt;lce of beflinnlng.
REFERENCE DEED: Vo- (3} 25; (4} 1. B, 15,
in Volume 298, Paga 137,
lume 298, pogo 137, Moigo 22, 29, 6tc
missionerp reserve tha right

Golf At Its Finest!
GREEN FEES

18 Holes, Weekdays .........................................:....... $11.00
(or anytime with mem~r)
.
18 Holes, Weekends ....................................... :........ $14.00
9 Holes, Weekdays ........................ ~ ........................... $7:oo
9 Halest Weekends ......................................... ~ ......... $9.00
(Ministers and retired members same as published aboVJ,)

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Pro Shop:
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Appropriate dress required
.,

273·3396
273-4121

By Dick Thomas
Page D-8

•
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1~1

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One owner. or~lse. air,
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By NANCY YOACHAM
Tlmes.Senllnel Slaff
POMEROY- Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, speaker of
the ·Ohio House of Representatives, wants to "set the record
straight" on the General Assembly's commitment to education funding. Riffe's h'e was
provoked by recent stat~wlde
television, radio and newspaper
advertisements criticizing the
General Assembly lor the fundIng levels provided to education,
prompting him to speak out on
the subject. The ads were sponsored by the Ohio Education
Association.
Riffe takes exception to OEA's
criticism, pointing out that "even
.!n the recent biennium, given the
limitations In revenue growth

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S.W. Pllwir steering, brakes,

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Spfclal Purchase (4 to choose fr:om)
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and the pledge of no new taxes,
education received the largest
appropriation In the history of
Ohio."
·
Riffe charges that OEA, by
suggesting through their ads that
the legislature bas been shortchanging Ohio's schools, has
attempted to mislead the public.
"These ads not only Ignore the
facts," Riffe says, "but also
Insult those of us In the leglsla·
ture who have been strong,
consistent friends of education."
Riffe's executive assistant, Ty
Marsh, points out that Riffe has
long been a supporter of educa·
tlon funding and higher teaching
standards.
·
On the other side of the coin,
the OEA Is sticking by Its ad
claims. Says Marilyn Cross,

state OEA vice-president, "the
facts as stated in the ads are
accurate and were verified before they were used."
.
The Issue that OEA wants to
bring before the public and
before the legislature, Cross
says, Is that "problems do e~st
In a· state where per pupil
spending can range from $10,000
per pupil In one school district to
$2,000 per pupil In another."
The $10,000 per pupil district Is
Beachwood Cl tY In Cuyahoga
County ·where $9,700 of the
spending figure Is derived from
local real estate taxes, Cross
reports. A little closer to Southeastern Ohio, Upper Arlington
In · Franklin County Is spending
approximately $7,000 per pupil,
she adds, while the $2,000 district

Is London In Madison County.
According to Riffe, spending
by the state on a per pupil ba'sls
has more than tripled In the past
10 years, "showing an average
annualized growth rate of 19.9
percent."
Locally. according to 1985·86
figures from the Meigs County
Board of Education, per pupil
spending Is $1,612 In Eastern
Local, $1,680 In Meigs Local and
$1,7781n Southern. On an average
In Meigs County, reports Treasurer George Collins, 65 percent of
real estate taxes goes to the
schools.
Based on comments from
Cross, It would appear that
OEA's gripe against the legislature has to do with the distribu tion of state funding.

{---1

lit~~..,_
-)~-ltArtto. . .
a-¥otltr... ,

RIO GRANDE - A seasoned
political observer will share his
views of the 1988 presidential
election In the next Community
Forum Series presentational Rio
Grande
College/Com.munlty ·
••
College.
- ~
NBC News national political
correspondel}t Ken 'Bode Is \o
speak In the Fine and PerformIng Arts Center auditorium on
Thursday·, April 21, at 8 p.m.
Bode, who frequently appears
on "NBC Nightly News" and
"The Today Show," has been
- with NBC since September 1979,
reporting on the political scene In
the nation's capitol and around
the country. For NBC, he CO·
vered VIPs, caucuses and state
delegations In 1980 and was a
convention floor reporter In 1984.
Prior to joining the network,
president. The actual constrncllon 11 by tbe M&amp;T. Bode was political editor for The
Conatruct1o11 and Excavating of BldweU. Pictured
New Republic maga:Zlne for five
liijllllt one small front oectlon of the extensive new
years. From 1972 to 1974, he was
structure. Approximately 90 people wiD be
director of the Project on Pres!·
employed at the facUlty when It opens. (Times·
dentlal Nominations for the
Senlln.el pholo)
Twentieth Century Fund Task

'"'

cuatom • • ~,._;

9 Section!: 66 Pages
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Riffe asserts however that the
Last April, Riffe appointed an
trend ts already for the state to 18-member committee to study
pick up a larger share of the tab public education In Ohio, lncludfor education. In 1975 the state In g p o s s l b I e fund 1n g
provided 46 percent of the nonfed· descrepancles.
eral aid to primary and seconNevertheless , Riffe feels
dary education, while local sour- , Ohio's schools and teachers have
ces provided 54 percent. By 1987, · fared well in thepastlOyears and
the ratio was reversed wtth the that the sta te's record of support
state providing ·54 percent and for education Is Impressive.
local sources 46 percent, he says.
He says that assisting educaOn a per-pupil basis, state ' tlon has been and continues to be
support has Increased much a top priority of the-legislature.
more than local support, he adds. "In fact," he continues, "we
· "I do not mean to suggest that have committed an unprecethe legislature has solved all the dented amount of state funds to
problems of our education sys· education."
"
Ten years ago the state spent
tern," Riffe says. "I merely want
to point out that the leglslat~tre Is 30.91 percent of the General
In fact providing tremendous Revenue Fund, nearly $2.7 bll·
amounts of state resources to our lion, for orlmarv and secondary
schools."
(See RIFFE, AI)
--....:..,

NBC correspondent
·.speaks at Rio Grande

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rain zero percent.

•
tnt

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. April10, 1988

Sttl

Alloy . . . . Itt,

OVERCAST
Increasing cloudiness .
lDghs In mid ~Os •• Chance of

House Speaker wants ·to 'set record straight'

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Page B-8 ;;;n:~;.:i)(i;.Ta;;

Vol. 23 No.9
Copyrigh11od 198B

1t1t

C-1

Inside:

'Beat of the Bend, By Bob HoeOich

•·

""
~~"'*
PROGRESS - Progress Is being made on the
COIIfllructlon of tbe sprawllng·new 100-bed nursing
home facility at 333 Page St., Middleport.
Scheduled lor completion by mld-aummer, tbe
SU mUHon facility Is being byllt by Meigs Center
LTD, of wblch Dr. Harold Brown of Pomeroy Is

Force.
Before his association with the ·
Twentieth Cer:tury Fund, Bode
was director of the Center for
Political Reform In Washington,
an organlza lion devoted to e lecUon law reform. From 1969 to
1970, he was research director of
the Democratic Party's national
Commission on Party Structure
and Delegate Selection. He has
atten~ed every national nominal·
lng convention since 1964.
Bode graduated cum laude,
Phi Beta i{appa from the Unlver·
slty of SOuth Dakota In 1961. He
received his master of arts and
Ph.D. from the University of
North C~rollna.
He was an assistant professor
ot political science at Michigan
State University from 1965 to 1968
and an asslstanfprofessor at the
State University of New York at
Binghamton from 1969 to 1970. He
has been published in numerous
periodicals, Including The New
York Tlme'l!nd Playboy.
"Ken Bod~nows more about

BODE
JfCKEN
correspondent
..

politics than almost anybod;Y In
television and more about televl·
slon than almost anybody In
politics," said David Broder of
The Washington Post. "The
combination would be dangerous, were It not touched with the
detachment and good humor that
he brings with him to every
story. ''

I

Manhunt continues in Ohio;
·Columbus sightings reported
'

By United Press International
Ohio law enforcement officers
have been kept busy lnvestlgat·
lng reported slghtlngs of a
convicted murderer who escaped
from a West Virginia prison last

- As· IS SPECIALS

a

HOURS

Reds defeat Astros, 5-4

-E-1

u.

Wf -

50 cents

Tentative
grilf course
opening J~ne 1

For Your Old Car or Truck
t

.

BOBBY DEAN STACY
Elcapee from W.Va.

88·87

60 mo.

86-85

54 mo.

84-43

48 mo.

BZ-Oider

36 mo.

strong lead.
Stacy escaped last Suriday
from the West VIrginia State.
Penitentiary In Moundsville
along with two other murderers,
Tommie Lee Mollohan and David
Williams. All three were serving
life sentences with no parole
possible.---'
Stacy, 37, was sent to the prison
for the 1981 murder of Huntington, W.Va., pollee officer Paul
Harmon. At the time of Harmon's slaying, Stacy was a
suspect In the wounding of Huber
Heights, Ohio, pollee Lt. David
Ford.
1n August 1981, Stacy surprised
Ford with a 12-gauge shotgun
behind a fast-food restaurant In
the Dayton suburb.
Ford was wounded In his leg,
side, and abdomen when he
confronted Stacy In a wooded
area near the restaurant. Ford
says a bulletproof vest saved his
life.

WHAT'S ON THE WAY! - Thla teuer
billboard can be seen In aeveraJ IocaiiOIIllln GaUl a
CoUDty, heralding lhe cumin&amp; of a new bulllaeaa.
There 18 no ladlcatlon on llle biDboard of lhe
potential bullilleu, but 110me speculate on a
llbopplog center, wbUe olhers Indicate a slarle

eetabllalunenl. a related matter, TheGaJUpolls
Plaoillq ComliduiOD will have a public bearing
May 2on behaU of Roy Price ol Columbus and the
David J. Gllmcber Company of Columbus to
eatabllah a llbopplng center In a river commerce
dlmicl. (Time1-8enlilie1 photo by Geoff Os~ '
borne). See story on A... •

I

JVS levy will provide CQntinued senices for students, .adults
By MARGARET CALDWELL
'Dmn S~nliael 8laff

•Payment figured with down poyment of $1000 CIS~ lir tr,de plus Ill &amp; lrtle -

'weekend.
Bobby Dean Stacy, a native of
Columbus, reportedly was seen
In a grocery store parking on
Columbus's north .side Friday,
but pollee officers were unable to
confirm the report. ··
Officers received six reported
slghtlngs of Stacy In Columbus on
Thursday night, said David
Hanna, supervisor of the FBI
Columbus office.
''People were beginning to see
him behind every tree," Hanna
satd.
The reports probably were
prompted by the distribution of
150 wanted posters, Hanna said.
The FBI has assigned nine
agents to help In the search.
Stacy also reportedly \Vas seen
In the Urbana and Dayton areas
during_ the week.
FBI spokesman Bob Siller In
Dayton said the agency bas been
swamped with slghtlngs In Ohio,
but none of them amounted to a

RJO GRANDE - The GalllaJackaon·VIntoll" Joint Vocational
Scbool District has placed a one
mUI operatlnf levy for a contlnu·
Ina period on the May 3 Primary
Election baUot.
The JVS dlltrlct bas operated
under on the 11172 ort&amp;lnal twg
mDJa for ten years untn the two
mDJa were renewed In 1982. ·The
dlltrlct's revenue bas not kept
the .pace with the conlinuoua
Increase In operauna coati, and
• Ia faclnf a S234,000 delldt by the
end of the 1988-88 ICbool year.
The one mill should aeaerate

approximately $750,000 per year. centra ted on an energy manageA "Yes" vote would allow the one ment system to reduce energy
mill to be used to offset Inflation- costs.
ary coats, erase the projected
Other saving methods Include
deficit, provide for dally opera- preventative maintenance and
tion, and to replace worn and using the staff as much as
obsolete equipment that was possible for repairs. The district
purebasad with the opening of the has Invested funds recelvecl on
IChool.
the same day to earn maximum
The dlatrlct bas tried to combat Interest. And to assure proper
rlslna operattq coati In several stafflna, a 19116-87 school year
ways. Tbreecompetltlvebldsare staff analyst• by the Office of
req1111ted on equipment and School Manqement Indicated
1uppllel. The dlltrlct purchased that the district waa neither
Ita telephone srstem and overstaffed nor understaffed.
challpd from eleCtric to
"We need your support," said
bollera, both with 2 % years ·John A. Sbump, auperlntendent
paybac.b . 'Ibe dlatrlct bas con· of the school dlltrlct. "Your help

a••

\

'

~.

with the Gallla-Jackson-Vlnton
J.V.S.D. one mill operating levy
will provide vocational training
and Job placement success to
both high school students and
adultl."
The Buckeye H!Us Career
Center II an Important educa·
tlonal link to the c!Uzeas of
Gailla, Jackson and VInton coun·
ties. BHCC provides 24 voca·
tiona! akW programs and six
special education classes to blah
school students as well as adult
education proarants.
Over 3,100 hiJIIIChoolstudents
have suceesfully completed ca·
reer programs.. With the p l to

.

.,
I .

l

.'

provide vocational education to
juniors and seniors In Gallla,
Jackson and Vinton counties,
students come to BHCC from
Gailla Academy, Kyaer Creek,
Southwestern, North Gallla,
Hannan Trace, Wellston, Jack·
son, Oak Hill and Vinton County
high schools.
An average of· 2000 adults a
year have participated 1n one or
more of -the adult school programs offered. More than 10,000
local Individuals have taken
advantage of the adult education
opportunities, Including full-time
employement training, commun·
lly computer lrlllnlnf, fire, EMT

'

and pollee training, financial aid ,
career counseling, job placement services, and customized
training provided to local businesses and Industries.
The North Central Assocla tlon
of Colleges and Schools granted
accreditation to Gallta·JacksonVlnton Joint Vocational School
District Adult Education In 1985.
The one mill levy would be used
to up-grade and replace equip·
ment aa needed and meet current
operatlna expenses, lncludlni
new textbooks, supplies, sa.l arles, equipment repair and bulld·
log maintenance.
(See JVS, AI)
I

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