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Ohio Lottery

·Southern
Tornadoes
eliminated

Pick 3:

294

Pick 4:
2512
Buckeye 5:
6-10-12-15-18

Page4

Low tmilght In mid~

Rain. Thumay, rain. High Ill
low 40s.

•
~·

PAGE TWELVE

·RIVER CURRENTS FOR SENIOR CITIZENS'

MARCU.1993

What's happening in Gallia County ..
Marcil 11- 11:00-BIRTIIDAY
PARTY- Musical Entertainment
1-3-PLASTIC FLOWERSLearn how to make flowers out of
the plastic rings ·from pop cans.
Bring any plastic rings you.have
at home. We will be malting
these for the cenJer to use for dec·
orations for Senior Citizens Day.
March 16-11:00-LENTEN
SERVICE- Rev. Jack Berry~
Simpson Chapel United
Methodisl Church
·
1:00· AUDITOR'S OFFICE Guest Speaker- Mr
Drain
March 17-9-3-VITA
. 1:,00 RSV:P VOLUNTEER
TEA
March 23-11 :00'-LENTEN
SERVICE- Rev. John Jackson·
New Life Lutheran Church
March 24-9-3-VITA 10-12BLOOD PRESSURE- Health
DepL .
1:00- LIBRARY HOUR·
Christi Eblin, Bossard Library,
will be here to tell stories and
read.
. March 30-_11:00-,LENTEN

:Bob

Meigs RSVP volunteer and active member or the Meigs
Humane Society, Barbara Grui!Ser, Pomeroy, stresses the need
for voluntary contribution or materials and labor to enhance
appearances and eliminate sar~ty hazards at the Thrift Shop
workplace. The Society is currently seeking to employ an investigator to take craelty/neglect caDs. Prefer middle aged, public
oriented applicant with trustworthy vehicle, phone 992·5427.

Vol. 43, No. 218
Copyrighted 1993

!ContinuedfromPage9)

SERVICE- Rev.'Joe HefnerGrace Uniled Melbodist Church'
1:00- WIDOWS GAtHER,

ING-"Issucs ofFailb During Difficult Times"-Rev. Ar.t Lund
Chaplain- Holzer Medical Center

Racine OKs bidfor completion
of well project

'JOHNSON'S SUPERMARKEt
SENIOR CITIZEN'S DAY
EVERY tUESDAY
85 Vine St.

Jackson Ave.
. Point Pleasant,

Gallipolis,
Ohio

wv.

-

735 2nd .Ave.
Gallipolis, ·.
Ohio

MAYNARD'S QUILlS and FABRICS
SPECIAI.IZING IN HANDMADE AND
. MACHINE

J•••· West of7911
IMHJ Gola1 To Rlo,liraade
St. lt. 5U
OPEN 11:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.

614·245·5512

The Racine Village Council
approved a bid Monday for completion of the village's well casing
project
The wall casings on the two
wells are to be raised three feet
above the 100-year .flood plain so
that ground water canoot enter the
wells.
The project is the result of EPA
rules. If the village fails to mise the
well casings, then the village water
system could be dec~ a ground
source water system whicl1 would
force the village to construct a
water Jreallllent planL
Rose.Excavating, Racine, submilled the Iciw bid of $19,150
which was accepted. Singer Construction Co., Pomeroy, submitted
a bid of $25,875.
The village received a $8.800
minority enterprise grant from
State Issue II money.
. EIGHT OUT AND SIX TO GO • Cleanup continues at the
Tuesday elgltt or tb.e 14 underground tanks had been removed. ·
The council had appropriated
four-acre site or the former MGM Farm City on East Mala Street
The ~ther siX should be out in a few days, Bumgardner said.
. only $5,100 for the project; howevia Pomeroy now owned by David Bumgardner or Middleport.
er Mayor Frank Cleland and the
fmance committee reporled enough
money i$ in the water fund to
fmance the 1)alance of the projec:L
The wdi'k is to be done by May
15.
. ... .
•· __ ,. -llliCiiSS'fem~tery fund~ Council again expressed con. cern with cemelery fund.
·
Clerk Carolyn Powell reported
'
that the Greenwood Cemetery
By JIM FREEMAN
crly will perform ·a variety of director of a Methodist children's
Trustees recently met and raised
Seotinel News Stan
music, Thacker sal'd.
·
home, a professor of psychology at
the opening and closing costs for
Freshman Congressm!ln, and
Titltets will be available on a Shawnee Staie University and the
graves to $200. She .also reponed
member of the ·House Small Busi-. first-come basis .at the chamber consulting psychologist at Southern
that they raised the yearly lot care
ness Comf!lilt~e. !ed Strickland office on Second.Street, Pomeroy, Ohio Correctional Facility, a maxi(D·Lucasvllle) w1ll be the guest · until' March 19, Thacker lllid·. Ticlt· mum seci.uity prison.
fee to $12.
Council urges any resident havspeaker at the fourth annual Meigs ets will not be availAble at the doOr.
This 111st November, Strickland,
ing
relatives bi.uied in lite cemetcry
C~unty Chamber of Commerce
· ~hacker said the chambet ·is as a candidate for the U.S. House
to
send
their lot care fee to the .vii·
Dmneran_dDance.
.
hopmg to sell 300 of the tickets, · of Representatives, received 51
!age clerk. It was noted that there
The dmner and dance Will be . which' cost $20. People auendins percent &lt;if the vote in Ohio's Sixth
are residents who do not donate for
held March 27 at 6:30 p.m. at the the event should dJe$s semi-formal· Congressional District to unseat
mowing that have relatives bi.uied
Family Reson (formerly the Royal. ly.
,
,,
· incumbent Co!lgressman Bob
in
the cemetery.
Oak Resort Club) on Flatwoods
"This annual 'dinner and dance McEwen.
Financial report
R~ IIC8f Five f'?ints. .
wi~ give Meigs CountY, the oppor- ·
Strickland currently serves on
TED STRICKLAND
Council approved the financial
We are delighted that U.S. turuty to meet and rece1ve progn:ss .the House Education and Labor
Congressman Ted Strickland "':ill on the chamber's activiti~s. Jbis• Committee where ·he plans to prQ- is in creating an environment report:. Total balance of all funds,
be the guest speaker at the Me1gs will be an informative yet exciting mote legislation to broaden the favorable to the development of $178 ,482.06; general . fund,
County Chamber of Comme,rce evening" Thacker said. ·
·
educational opponunilies for south- small business in southern Ohio.
Annual Dinner-Dance," said Paula
'
ern Ohioans. He has also been
He has also placed a high prioriThacker, chamber director. "'This
About the speaker
assigned to a subcommitJee which ty on establishing a national health
•
Will give the people of Meigs
Ted Stricldand, 51, was born in oversees labor and mine safe.ty care system. He has pledged to go
Countythan opportunity to meet and Lucasville.
standards.
· without the health care offered to
talk to e congressman."
Growing ur in southern Ohio,
Strieltland also sits on the House .members of Congress until all of
In addition to Strickland,· other he was one o nine children of a Small Business Commiuee. His · his constiwents receive affordable
Government reimbursement for
dignita~es have been invited to steelworker employed at the primary· interest on this committee
health care coverage.
services
rendered is the key to surattend, Thacker said.
Portsmouth planL He was ,active in
vival
(or
small rural hospitals such
The dinll(lr and dance will fea- church and academics and becllflle
as
Veterans
Memorial in Meigs
'!;
twe a program recognizing former the only of his brotben and sisters
County.
1\
chamber of commerce directors . to attend college.
\' ~
This statement was among facts
" f ~
and presidents, Thacku said.
Upon graduating from Northpresented
to Congressman Ted
-II
t
, The program will also include a west High School, h~ attended
·- ' ¥.
Stricldana
Monday
afternoon when
i
f
progress report on chamber and Asbury College where he received
he
visiled
the
local hospital to dis·
economic developmem office a B.A. in history in 1963. He later
4
cuss with Hospital Administrator
activities. In addition, the goals and attcnded the Asbury Theological ·
••
Scou Lucas and others; various
'
objectives of the two offtees will be Semi!WY where he earned a Masaspects
of health care.
'
~
discussed.
ter of Divinity degree in 1967.
1oining
Lucas
Cor
the
meeting
"The Meigs County Chamber of
Continuing his studio.s at the
•
wil)t
Congressman
..
Strjcldand
were
ill
c;ommerce and Economic Devel- University of Kentuclcy, Strieltland
George Hoffman, the hospital's
..
opment Office has really developed was awarded a doctonle dOgree in
chief finance officer; Dr. lames
•
over the past couple of years," counseling psychology in 1980.
Witherell and Dr. Wilma Mansfield
Thacker said. "The dedication and
Stricltland is married to Frances
of
the medical staff, and Mrs.
the energy that the business com- Smith Strickland of Simpsonville, Rhonda
Dailey, RN, BSN, \lireclor
munity and the (CSidents of Meigs Ky. Frances, in educational psyor
nursing.
County has put forward has been chQiogist, is the author of a chil• ·
During a discussion on the
unbelievable. I'm very proud 811d dren's biography on the life of forimponance
of the small rural hosfeel privileged to serve Meigs mer Kentucky Governor Martha
pital,
it
was
pointed out that such
County as executive director of the Layne Collins: "The Little Girl '
hOspitals
oflen
are life-saving insti·
MeiJS County Chamber and diroc· who Grew up 10 be Govemof."
tutions
during
the period of time
. tor of the economic development
Slricltla!fd's profelllional back·
known
as
the
"golden
hour"-:.the·
offtee."
ground is in tho f101d of psychology
first
hour
after
a
heart•
attack or
The Gran Stand Band from !lev- and education. He has been the
some other serious ailment strikes.
The local hospital's proximity to
the patient was stressed as an
im~nant factor in providing
quaclter stabilization for these
patients in preparation to their
. Two one-car wrecb were investigated recently by deputiel of
beinJ
mllved to city hospitals for
the Meip CountY, Sheriff's Department.
.
·
specaai!zecJ
ttealmenL
.
The fint ICCldent occurred Saturday around 4:10 p.m. on Jlill ·
DuqnJ
Monday'sseasion,
Hoff.
Rold nea- Racine.
m• reported that Ohio hospitali
Al:c:ordlnJ 10 a sheriff's cle!Mmont report, RcJina Rousb, 25 ol
lost
a record 170.4 million on
HUI Road, Racine, wu nortlibound ·ud lott coiiiJOI or her 1989
Me
dlcare
for fiiCII year ending in
Buick on cinckn. Silo IIPPiied the l!raka antllk!dded off 1ho fOld.
1991.
.
way 011 dill rJaht in10 u tmblnbttent. The vehicle dtat tumed over
TM.
louos
wen
$29.1
ntliJion
01110 ill top.
No illjurlea
JOPOited, but 1ho car 8IUIIinod lteayY danaqe,

· Congressq~an

Care Package
A
Pleasant Valley Nursing Care Center, the e~phasls is on
rare. Quality medical care provided by a staff of registered

nurses on du~y day and night. .. And a doctor. who as med.ical
director works with each resident's personal physician to
develop that plan of care.
·
Jan Nitz, Middleport, Nonga Roberts, RSVP
volunteer, Pomeroy, Ellen . Rife, Middleport, al)d
Barbara Grueser, RSVP volunteer, Pomeroy assist in
maintaining operations at the Thrift Shop located on
Second Avenue in Middleport. Membership dues of
$10.00· per year, $5.00 for senior citizens, helps
support the spay-neuter program. If possible, please
include a stamped, self-addressed envelope to the
Meigs County Humane Society, Box 682, Pomeroy,
OH.45769 when remitting your dues.

Because we care about more than the physical
wellbeing of our residents. we also offer an activities
program designed t6 make the most of their abilities, and
special events arranged to involve their families and
friends in their lives. The services of a registered dietician,
a physical therapist, a pharmacist and social worker
supplement the care provided by our nurses and aides. And
our location on the Pleasant Valley Hospital campus
provides easy access to an acute care facility ~ hould the
need arise.
Quality care delivered with compassion. It' s all a part
of the Care Package at Pleasant Valley Nursing Care
Center.

1993 Membership
Meigs County Humane Society

Name:.____________________________
Add~~=---------------------------

2 Sectlono, 12 Pagea 25 centa
A Multlmtdla Inc. -paper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 3, 1993

to speak at

mantb~er-~ainner~·

aance ·

Strickland discusses health
care with Meigs officia-ls

..

•

PLEASANT VALLEY

Nursing Care Center.
Sand Hill Road, Point Pleasanl, 'w .va. 25550 (304) 675 ·5236
.

.

$28,467.85;
refuse
fun&lt;l,
$11,003.45; capital waJer, $5,100;
·capital street, $7.88; street m and t,
$23,153.31; state highway,
$2,390.74; fire fund, $43,780.54;
debt service, $1,697 .39; .water
fund, ·$49,895.79; cemetery,
$1,697.39; water deposits,
$4,603.85; cemetery endowmen,,
$6,800.
.
Council approved the second
reading on the pay ordinance aitd
approved a resolution transferring
money in the debt service fund
from principal to intei'C$t to make
the village books correspond with
the bank I'CCOI)Is.
. Othet action
In other action, the council:
- .Amroved the purchase of several items {equested by Street
Commissioner Glenn Rizer;
- Noted that rateS fer dumping at
the landfill are going up. A raise in
rates for village customers is not
anticipated at this time;
- Approved a request from Fire
Chief1ohn Holman to pay for the
36 hour basic ftre fighting training
for five firemen; ·
- Approved a request from
Councilman 'eff ;I'llo,uldn to purchase 30 tre~s for planting .this
summer subJeCI to them bemg
placed in_ actonlance with the map
that IS bemg developed;
- Purchased three lights to be
placed on the parking lot at Star
Mill Park;
.
- Reported that the park board
has 17 12 1/2 feet trusses for sale;
- Approved the purchase of
"children playing" signs;
·, ·
· Rec'essed until Monday, Marth
15.
.
Present were councilmen Bob
Beegle, Henry Betz, Scoll Hill,
Carroll Teaford and 1eff Thornton.
Ron Clark ·was absent due to work
schedule. Also present were Mayor
Cleland, Clerk Powell, Fire Chief
Holman, Fireman David Neigler
and Street Commissioner Rizer.

• ., *
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• ·" • . • '
• •• .•
•
"'

... ' • • •
• •.

·

Local briefs--

Deputies probe wrecks

the report 11144

w-.

t

•

meJrlnt II paid lea than til* CCIIII l"ar Cllial
increullllly difficult to cantlliue · lor both Medic.,e and Hadlcala
care fc)r .ilte poor and uninsured, patienll wilh tbe lhanfal1 wh' 1'11
in JII""!IIOCI fadlnl aid

atiael·

Hoffmln llllod.
Hoffmu brou&amp;ht out that tbe

•

l1lllladcally In 19!11, IICCOl 'I 1 to

Hoftinu'a NPOft. W"llb die,.....,
difficulty with Medicare ia lhat blc eliJI!iDa&amp;ion of lhe Hospital .
coas lftl dri~ larply by faciOn
Canllll•~• 0113
·.

..

I"~

••

same

~~to"::'...:! ~114~ ~:hospitals continae to be

ThiliiMMNIII ecclde.. cx:eurred Monday around 12:40 p.m. 011 pt.
vate JliOjliiaty In Rtrlrd
ACcaidlq 10 die aWoft. Melody A. Xlna. 110 wueDorted. Mid·
dlepon, -.::Z~"" Pard' rd ~ lnto a ilrlveway 011
New Lilna
lho bnUa fallld, The vehicle lltnal:i !be
.
~011 .... 3
.
'
.
i

hospitals cannot control such as tising caseloads from an aging population and higher costs for patienl
supplies, pharmaceuticals, equipment and other relaled costs.
According to statistics presenled
by Hoffman, Medicare represents
35 pereent of the.total hospital revenue in Ohio but at Veterans
Memorial,, Medicare rept;fSCilts Sl
percent of the total hosJ1i.tal revenue. Medicaid represents another
10 percent of the total hospital revenue in Ohio v.hile in comparisOn
at Veterans Memorial, Medicaid
represents 24 percent of the touil
hospital revenue. PriviiiCiy insured
patients make up 43 percent of the
total hospital rev~nue in Ohio
while at Veterans Memorial pri,
vately insured patients make up
only aboot 17 percent of the total
hospital revenue, Hoffm811 state~~;
At Veterans Memorial eight pet•
cent of the ,patients are uninsllred
and most of these are unable to pay ·
for their care.
In 1991. Medicaid oaid Ohio
hospitals 80 cents on the doUar for
oulpatient care, down from 8S ... :
cents on the dollar in 1990...nd •
approximately 74 percent of rural - ··
~ilals ~need~ 1oas in pro. - ~ .
vadini outpataent ·to Modi· . · ·
caid recipients, Hofl'mln iepc:cted. · •
The discussion bloulht outlhlt •
slliall rural hospillls IIUI:h • Veter- • ·
ans Memorial accordJna to gov:
emmental formulas receive less
reimbursement pay for lhe
services provided by I meimpoU11111

•

.,

&gt;

.t

...
..

�•

Wedne8day, March 3, 1993

•

Commentary

.
.
What bureaucrats need is a 'meeting meter'
.

'

The Daily Sentinel
.111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

·: DEVOTED TO THE II'ITERUTS or THE IIEIGS-IL\SON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETI
PubUsher
•

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less tban 300
words. All leltets are subject 10 editing and must be signed witb name.
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Leuers
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohi.o newspapers
1 yne .\8110(Jaltd Pms
Following are excerpts from recent editorials on national issues in
newspapen across the stlle. ·
Tile (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, March 1:
All aboard the Special Interest Express! A uainload Of lobbyists and
lawmakers chugged along the Amtrak rails last weekend as corporate
interests rounded up 123 of the 175 Republican lllelllbers of the House of
Representatives for a rolling influence-peddling party.
~ This trip should hive been sidelniCkcd. Symbolizinl! eVc:rydting that is
wrting with the inside-the-Beltway buddy system, special pleaders paid 81
lwt $6,000 apiece to transpon, feed lind bouse the GOP leaders who
attended a three-day, all eXJ?C:RSCS·paid "retreat" in Princeton, NJ.
: Some politicians just don't get it, even now. This lobbyist-paid outing
i~ the kind of special-interest gravy uain that voteR tried to derail on
Election Day.
The House Republicans arc hardly alone, of course. For generations,
membeR of both parties have eagerly exploited the loopholes in the lax
{edcraltobbying rules.
The Cap1tol HiD insiders have had a free ride long enough. Now it's
time for Congress to shunt the special interests onto a dead-end siding,
and put the public interest on the fast traek by speeding toward suict
ethics refonn. ·
.
The Clnclanatl Post, Feb. 27:
· DeSP.ite its irreJll:oachable humanitarian purpose, the Clinton adminis·
b'Blion s l'lan to airdrOp relief supplies to besieged Muslim towns in Eastem Bosma is flawed. Like the entire Western intervention in the war in
. Bosnia, this scheme is crippled by the pacifism 8t its cote. It seeks to
address a military -problem - Bosnian Serb militias' intention to srarve
Bosnian Muslims froriJ their homes and seize their land - by risk-free,
n.on"milirary means.
·
· In deference to Serb sensibilities, fighter escorts to protect U.S. cargo
planes were ruled out. This appeasement is intended to prove that the
Unl.ltd States is not raking sides.
All panics lcnow otherwise. The Muslims rejoice at wh81 they naively
believe to. be the long·aw~ted cavaJrr'cbarge coming_over ~ hjll.
The audrops may bnefly prov1de some Bosmans w1th 'food and
medicine. But they will not dissuade Serbians from blocking the ground
convoys that must bring most relief. They arc a recipe for ineffectual but
deepening and possibly eos!!)r U.S. en!lllglement
. The (Toledo) Blade, Feb. 25:
, It is a small and early step, to be sure, but it is one that is properly
taken if the civilized world is to punish those responsible for the hoiTilrs
in Yugoslavia.
: In one sense it is highly impractical for the United Nations to have
.Jpted unanimously to esrablish an international uibunal to punish those
£uilty of committing war crimes in the Balkans.
: The U.S. has proved as ineffective as most other bodies in trying to
epd the bloodletting in Bosnia·Herzegovina.
·
· Jn ·addition, some of the leading potential war criminals, such as Serbian President Slobodan Milosevic and Bosnian Serb leader Radovan
Karadzic, must still be dealt with by U.S. negotiatoR trying to end the
y;ar.
.
·• Still, a· moral imper{tfve .ex.ists here that has nothing to do with the
iRability of international institutions to bring to heel the monstrous war
n'Ow betng waged in the ruins of Yugoslavia.
The fact th81 it, has been impossible to fashion a worldwide fighr.jng
force to end the conflict should not deflect the U.N. from its task of beginning to affix blame for crimes against humanity - and ultimately punish those who arc responsible.
·. .
·

Letters to the editor
No place like home

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel

WASHINGTON - Bernard De .
Koven, foundct of the Californiabased lnslitute for Better Meetings,
th~ it's high time that the federal
government CC?nvene a meeting to
ban most meebngs.
.
De Koven has invented the
"meeting meter," a $39.95 computet program that he ealls a "llW
meter for meetings."
Before your meeting, you punch
in the hourly salary of each participant and then you put a liUie flag
down as if you were a cabbie. It
lets you gauge bo.w much the meeting is costing you- minute by
minute.
"I would donate it to the federal
government if they would use it
consistently," joked De Koven.
"The amount of money that's
being spent·on meetings is phenomenal. And it's even more b'Ue
in the government world than the
business world."
De Koven said that it would
have even been an effective tool
during the Penragon procutement
scandal, when Pr.nragon bo~s were
spending $400 for hr.mm ~rs and
$640 for toilet seats. "I can imagine them .all sitting around the

table, deciding that my meter eost
too much money and buying a
($7 ,400) coffee pot instead," he
said. '

;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednttdey, March 3, 1993

'Oc,'lartment 's Pension and spokesman told us. "You don't
W'clfll!o Oener:ts Administration have to be )IOIII)ded over the head
flew to Sa.1 .;'·ra.1ri\~·J r,: 11n annual to see the dtrection this adn!inistration is headed in. If it'i going to be .
managem~nt conf~l(llCe that
austerity,
everybody has got to ·
incloot:4 tt class on ''cultural diver·
pirch
in
and
do their part. The pres.
sity" w~i c h co'st $18,000 to
ulent
is
trying
to save money, and,
arrange 11Ius Ullvel, meals and lodg·
by
golly.
we
work
for the presj.
ing f91" all :.1~ executives.
dent."
·
The .lepartment told us it
Not all federal agencies have
couldn't possibly figure out the
to!al cost of that uip without wast· grounded their junketeer'S.
Less than 12 hours after Clinton
ing even more taxpayl)rs' money
delivered
his stirring eall for sacridoing the calculations.
fice
in
the
State of the Union
Re'Cently, we icarned that the
De Koven believes that Ctin·
Address.
19
executives from the
ton's vow to re-invent government PWBA was planning to continue
Environmental
Protection Agency
will have to start in the meeting its man,gement studies next
descended
upon
the eastern shore
room. "Government meetings month, with a five·day junket to
of
Maryland
for
a
two-day junket.
·
themselves have to be re·invent- Atlanra.
The fact that CliniQR's speech
ed," De Koven said.
A phone call from our associau:
"They're more ceremony than Ed Henry gave them second · included an across-the-board pay
freeze for federal employees didn't
actually resull·oriented. I think thoughts.
that's symptomatic of a governThe next morning, the agency's faze theSe ofticials. Their' geraway
ment that"S become more focused acting director announced the can· to the Harbortown Golf Resort and
on its politics than on .its productiv- cellation of the Atlanra trip during Conference Center had been
ity. If (bureaucra&amp;s) get paid to go a regularly scheduled executive booked a couple of weeks before
to meetings, they find that it's easi· staff meeting. The director. Alan Clinton took offtee.
"This idea of going on a reb'eat
er to not communicBIC well at these Lebowitz, cited President Clinton's
for
planning purposes is common
meeting because that way thefll push toward austerity as the reason
for the cancellation.
· for the government," said Mark
act invit::d tCJ o:her meetings."
De Kave~ would target meet"The cancellation is related to Green wood, director of EPA's
iJgs !ilce or.e we reported on last' the mood of the administration Office of Pollution ~:evcntion and
Toxics, whose bud.~lt was slashed
'.'&lt;~u ·. ~C\r.~ 85 exeeptivcs from the
Jan. 20." a
30 percent from lru:t year. In fact,
Greenwood said thai r.lillly government agencies choose that same
resort.
"Several EPA offices have ~ne
there recenity," ·he said. • The
(EPA's) general counsel's office
was there just last fall. A group
from the State Department was
there when we were there."
•
Indeed, there is a govcrmnentwide obsession with dressing·up
meetings as urgent necessities that
need to take place at an exotic loelltion instead of the dreary balls of
Washington's bureaucracy.
"We needed to get away (rom
the office so we could avoid the
interruptions of phone calls as
much as possible," explain~d
Greenwood. "If you sray in town· ·
and try to do it there you tend to
get pulled away by phone calls. It
was a preuy austere meeting. We
just had senior managers sitting
around a !able aying to make some
decisions."
. Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Features Syndl.cate, Inc.

mr

should propose right now: A quadrupling or his too-modest plan to
cut by attrition the federal execu·
tive branch by just 100,000 people,

"'
Martin Schram
. .
.
.
an $8 bdhon savmgs, ov~r four
years. .
'
A ~utck check of the-governm~nt s per~onnel facts reveals
Chnton has JUSt scratched the surface. l'h~ Office of~e~nel Man·
ag~ment s comm~nteauons officer,
M1ch~l Orenstem, says the 1992
separabon rate o~ ~ederal employ·
~s (~ho left.theu JObs due to restgnauon, ret_trement, transfers to
ot~er a~enc•es! death) was 19.5
percent, m a CIVllian force (excludmg posral workers) of2,200,000.
~v~~ year, some 400,000 f~eral CIVlhan workers leave thetr JObs;
a~d every year we replace them
wtth another 400,0!&gt;0. (Many of
those 400,000·plus JObs are filled
by people already on the federal
payr'?ll. The g'?~ernment fills. the
~emamder _by htnng 220,000 ctv1l1ans.) Wh1le Ronald R~agan and
George Bush campatgned on

promises to cut tl]e fedenil bureaucracy, our civilian work force acto·
ally grew by 202,437 during the
Reagan ~nd Bush years. None of
the growth was in the Pentagon.
If we only filled three out ot
every four of the vacancies that
occur through what the government
call~ "job separation," we'd be
savtng 1,00.000 jobs a year. Or,
, 400;000 jobs in four years - · qua·
drupling Clinton's planned cuts.
Can we get along with a govern·
. ment that fills only three of every
four vacancies? Better you should
ask: Can we affonlto continue paying the salaries, benefits and pen·
sion costs of a bloated workforce
that has been barely trimmed?
Since the Cold war ended, in
1990, the State Deparunent's civilian employees grew by almost
1,000 to more than 26,500 . If
Srate's payroll were cut by 10 per·
cent a year (2,650 employees)
through attrition, would· U.S. international policy be any different?
At the Agriculture Department
the payroll has swollen to 116 680
employees - way up from' the
110,755 in 1990. Yet the number of
small· farms operating in America
is dwindlinJt. The Government

' .•
' .,. t,.·

Accounting-Office reports that
, we're. spending $1,100 per farm,
per year on fedj:ral field service
admmisb'ltive costs, alone.
At Agriculture and throughout
the federal bureaucracy, we must
ask: Are we reaping what we sow?
. Enter the !}rim Sower: Replacmg only three of every four civilians who leave their federal jobs
will require some hands-on ornciai
management and shifting some
comfortable officials from headquarters to regional offices, the fllle
th~t befalls foJ!'s as jobs are cut in'
. pnvate enterpnse.
Now, the Glad Reapet: If Clinton orders these steeper cuts in the ·
fede.ral civilian workforce, we will .
reap, a sizable profit- $8 billion in
the rtrSt year, when his combined
b~dgetcu~ otherwise total just $20
b1ll1on. He D save $32 billion over .
four years on the federal payroll
alone.
Moreover, C~nton wiD reap the
reputallon of a Udy prophet-· the
captain who led by example and :
streamlined our bloated ship of ,
state.
· Martin Schram Is a syndicated .
writer for Newspaper Enterprise.
Association.
·

For 4 years, Clinton's best We've got .
Chuck Stone

Today in history

~~ru!~=~

"

MCH.

By Jack Anders.on
and
Michael Binstein

Cut ~100,000 federal .Jobs·a "y ear

'

,..

,I

r

ment will provide the UMW A·with
the tools we need to negotiate a
new contract and to enforce that
contraet once it's agreed upon,"
Trumlca said.
The union went on strike against
Peabody Holding Co. Inc . subsidiaries on Feb. 2, a day after its
contract eytired with the Bituminous Coal Operators Association.
"We are now where we should
have been last June when we first
approached the BCOA to begin
contract talks," Trumka said.

HUNTINGTON. W.Va. (AP)
- The United Mine Workers
union ended its month-old strike
Tuesday after reaching agreement
with the nation's largest coal qJer·
ators on the tenns of a 60-day contract extension.
'The agreemeni JUChed Tuesday
will extend the expired 1988
National Bituminous Coal Wage
Agreement until May 3, UMW
President Richard Trumka said.
"I am satisified that (tl]e opera·
tors') compliance with thi~ agree-

Lt., ;,

our little girl. We had a special
nurse whose name was Cindy and
we liked her best of all. As we sat
in our little girl's room, I prayed to
God each day to keep us safe until
we returned home. Our car was
running. pretty bad on the way
there, so I prayed alot hoping we
would make it home. We were so
excited to sec the Meigs County
and to be back with the wonderful
people we have the pleasure of
CJtpcel.
knowing
here. As the saying goes,
• We stayed at the Ronald
there
is
really "no place like
Presi&lt;jent Clinton's Srate of the indispurable facts or lite:
A major factor in this "great
Clinton's proposed campaign
McDonald House where the staff
home."
Union
address
was
an
outstanding
(1)
The
continuing
national
dia·
IS the power of the media·
'
d
ebate"
was very nice. We decided to sray
reform is a sironf first step.,
I
would
lilr.e
to
thank
the
staff
at
Iogue
over
the
merits
and
fairness
exercise
in
statesmanship,
and
But
the
absence of consensus
But
Am~Qca
s
biggest
problem
at the hospital when someone took
Holzer
Clinic
and
Hospiral
and
the
of
Clinton's
economic
package
will
nothing
I
read
in
the
editorials
of
among
the
nation's newspapers on
is
its
lackof
responsible
party
govadvan111ge of the Ronald McDonald
Children's
Hosjlital,
but
most
of
all
w.hat
the
president
said and sttessed
those
gracious
allies
of
the
RepubHouse. They stole a lot of conned
ernment. We have an outmoded
lican Party, The 'Wall Street Jotlfllal
food and someone also stole my I thank God.
system of cheeks and balances that was astonishing. A survey .of the
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Timmons and The Washington Times, will
wife's purse.
miraculously stagS~~rs forw!'"', like headlines of nine nationally promishake
that
conviction.
The nurses were very good with
Pomeroy
a benign drunk, to accomphsh good ne'11 newspapers and five North
By the same token, nothing I
and great things. In every other Carplina new.spapers yielded some
write in this column will alter the
democracy in the world, the party surprising results.
The Wall Street Journal headconvictions of many (and not just be heavily influenced, if not solely that wins the most voteJ. has a
line
,said that Clinton "stressed ·
Republicans and Conservatives) determined, by politically partisan majoricy of seats in the I41Slature
that Clinton's address was, ·iJi John and ideological considerations. and chooses the chief executive. taxe~ over spending cuts"· The
FosUlr Dulles' words, "a massive (Does anybody dispute that?)
George Bush, for example, sbo1!ld Raleigh News &amp;: Observer ~inc
By The Associated Pres&amp;
Today is Wednesday, Man:h 3, the 62nd day of 1993. There are 303 exercise in futility.''
(2) How the fourth branch of have had 'a Republican Congress to
The initial reaction of the pub- government - the media - {NICk· make him and his party responsible
days left in the year.
·
lic, however, was positive. Accord· ages the intrinsics of the Chnton for their decisions. But even CUIS. l
Today's Highlifht in History:
"'l'he Taxman" jeered the New
On March 3, 19 I, "The Star-Spangled Banner" officially became the ing to a USA Today/CNN/Gallup economic manifesto to the Ameri- responsible party government can't
York
Daily News. "Clinton
poll,
79
percent
of
the
vieweR
of
make
a
silk
purse
out
of
a
sow's
national anthem of the United Slates.
can people will have an accumula·
U~v.,ils 1-!i~ Plan to Create jobs,
Clinton's address supported his tiv~ ~mpact, good or bad, on public car.
On this date:
Tr11111. Def1cll, Restore Economic
plan. But that was before the con- oplDIOn,
In 184,, Florida became the 27th srate.
.
Like it or not; Bill Clinton's Fairness" cheered The WashlnJUlll
servative
columnists,
pundits,
polit·
In 1847, the inventor of the telephone, Alexander Graham Bell was
(3) The Congress and die Amer·
ieal spin doeiOR and radio squawk· ican people m'ust contain and economic package is hold, brilliant Post. "Clinton Goes After the
born in Edinliurgh, Scotland.
'
' and, paradoxically, benevolen.t,
In 1849, the Home Deparunent, forerunner of the Interior Deparunen~ show hosts had a chance to SWatlll severely limit the power of lhe fifth because its primary purpose is to Wealthy" declared Tho Winston·
Salein Journal. Im.,U.tiona at the
all over the publie with their odioua bfanch of government -lobbyiiiS
was ellablilhed.
bring relief to the American people. rival Ne\Y York Post and New
brant!&amp;
of
omphalo-contemplation.
. In 1875, the Georges Bizet opera "Carmen" premiered in Paris.
··
political action group~ and "~pceiai It is an exercise in executive com- York Newsday -laddna: bodt
Gtve us a break!
In 1879, Belva Ann Bennett Lockwood became the ftrst woman to be
mterests groups" -all of whom
used the same one-word beldiine:
Boif this extremely critical isaue selfishly place their individual passion.
· ldmitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Coun.
·
First National Bank of Chica· "OUCH!"
and
historic
debate
down
to
three
In 188,, the U.S. Post Office began offering special delivery for flrstinterests above the common good. go's chief economist, James
.For the next four yeua, Bill
clul mall.
.
•
Annable, summed it up as "hero· Clinton is lhe only preaident we'D
In 1887, Anne Mansfield Sullivan arrived at the Alabama home of Victor.
ic" bcc•nse "a .firSt-term president have, and the rllllllt chanee to get
Clpt. and Mn. Arthur H. Keller to become the teacher of their blind and
In 1969, ApOllo 9 blasted off from Cape Kennedy on a mission to test is doing something you might not this nation back on Its economic
dcal6-year-old dluaJ!ter, Helen.
,
the lunar module.
·
1
even expect' a seeond-term presi· track. Let's at least aive him a
In 1918, OeiiiiJny, Auttria and Russia signed the Treaty of Brest· chance to llteeeed
dent would do.
T~uJ,ht for Today: "Exercise is bunk. If you arc healthy, you don't
Litovsk. which ended Runian participation in World War I. (This treaty need·~ 1f you are sick, you shouldn't take it." -Henry Ford, American
"I don't even know how to
Chuck Stone Ia a l)'lldloated
waunnulled by the November 1918 armistice.)
·
respond to it," he added, "because writer fur Newspaper Enterprise ~.
auto manufacturer (1863-1947), (Ford supposedly also said, "u:..-, is
·
.
.•..._..,,
In 1940, Artie Shaw and his orchelitra rccorded ·"Frenesi" for RCA · bunk.")
It haan 'I happened be~ore~' · _
ADodatloll.
My wife and I had the sad fortunc of being in Columbus at Children's Hospital where we had our
~ix day-ola daughter who was
transported there from Holzer Hospital.
. The people in Columbus move
at: a very fast pace. I had lived in a
large city quite lilr.c Columbus, but
wife had never lived in a city
th1s big so she didn't know what to

Aceu-Weather• forecast for daytilllQ conditions and

•

....---------··-------------------"'

Give President Clinton this: He
has begun turning Washington's
.huge ocean liner- the U.S.S.
Gove"\l"ent- in a stunning ISO,
reversing a disastrous course that
had us heading toward a massive
iceberg in a sea of national debt.
But give the Grand Old Pany
naysayers this: Clinton's spending
cuts, as delivered, fell way shon of
his cuts, as promised. He promised
$2 in cuts for every $1 in taxes; he
wants us to believe he delivered
$1-for-$1. (But !bat's accurate only
if you agree to call his new Social
Security tax a spending cut)
Give us the bottom line: Americans are willing to pay the proposed higher taxes, but they're not
convinced the president cut government sufficiently. Th81's what people are telling pollsters; and it's
what folks from Richmond to Seattle told me the other night as I sat
at Mutual Rltdio's ralk show micro·
phones - Larry King's old latenight slot. Clinton says his budget
hatcheteers cut as deeply as they
could without dire consequences.
But either they have not told him
all the facts; or he has not !Old them
to us.
Here's one big new cut Clinton

UMW calls·off its month-old strike

Thunday, March 4

.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.....----Local briefs... -----,
Continued from page i
porch at the Williams' reSidence.
No injuries were reported.

sides bogged down over the
union's demand for information on
the operatorS' corporate structure. -

Strickland... contiauedrrom 1

,
,
Care Assurance Program in Ohio, hospital, Hoffman swes.
During
the
rsseat
year
of
1991.:
Veterans Memorial stands to lose
another $122.~ in reimbursement the decreased Medicare reimbul'led •
for general assistance and disabled amount to Veterans Memorial :
assistance recipients during the fis- totaled $64,096 Jess than that·
cal year of 1993. These recipients received in 1990 and the 1991 :
will be required to be given health' decreased Medicaid reimbursement ,
care services with absolutely no totaled $33,096 less than the •
·
reimbursed dollars provided the amount n:ceived in 1990.

Beat of the Bend.....
by Bob HtJeflich

Woman (l"ested on wa"ant

W. VA.

Negotiations began last Nov. 6
but subslantive talks apparently
never got under way as the two

A. former Shade resident was arrested in Charleston, W.Va., on a

Meigs County warrant on a charge ~f passing a had check.
Patricia Counce, Charleston, was allegedly connected with the .
case involving bad checks written in the name of Connie Stone,
I according to a report from Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
She refused to waive extradition and is being held in Charleston
pending a.warrant for her return to Meigs County.

The.cale.ndar says spring will ofwork. .
SUII'I on March 21. However, John
Blaettnar says that you can't go by
Congressman Ted Strickland
the cale11dar, you have to go by was in town Monday to discu$5
when the Pomeroy Fire Department · health care problems at Veterans
stages its fust barbecue.
Memorial Hospital with Sco'tt
So, according to John, spring Lucas, hospital administtator, and
will start on Sunday, March 14, other key people at the local instiwhen the department will hold its tution.
·
An Indiana woman charged with rwo felony counts of forgery
~------~-lVemher---------rtrSt
chicken
and
rib
barbecue
at
the
~uring
his
visit
he
was
presentpleaded guilty to the charges Monday in the Meigs County Court of
Extended rorec:ast:
" South-Central Ohio
nrc station on Butternut Ave. Serv· ed with a colorful cookie bouquet
Common Pleas.
Friday tbrouab Sunday:
ing
will start 81 about 11 a.m. and by Mary and Roger Gilmore who
Tonight, occasional rain. Low
April A. Weselowski, Mill Creek, was sentenced to an 18 month
Friday, snow likely. Lows 25·
·3S-40.Chance of rain near IOOperwill
continue as long as the supply were on the scene doing some
term of confinement on each charge witli both terms being served
•cent. Thursday, occasional rain, 30. Highs in the low to mid-30s .
There ' ll be full dinners, of video taping. Mary and Roger'
lasts.
concurrent) y,
course.
called it a gift from the heart of the
probably becoming mixed with or Slllllrday, a chance of snow. Lows
.In addition, she is, ordered to pay $,186.09 in restitution and
By
the
way,
the
depanment
is
valley, Meigs County, and the)'.
changing to snow by afternoon. in the mid-20s. Highs 40-4S. Sun·
$1,000 in costs. The second term was suspended in lieu of five
exteoding
a
big
thanks
to
good
Joe,
hope to interest the Congressmaq·
•~gh nea- 40. Clutnce of J1111Cipita· · day, a chance of flurries. Lows in
years of probation:
·
the 20s. Highs 4045.
·
lion 90 percent
Bob Thompson 'of Pomeroy. The in unusual gift items th81 arc creat-:
roof over the barbecue area had ed here. The Congressman was
suffered the worse for wear and pleased at the gesture. If you
weather. Bob showed up· with the haven't had any di~_ect dealings,
The Gallia-Meigs Post of the SraUl Highway Patrol issued two
necessary maUlrials and provided with the new represcnrative who IS
citations Tuesday.
Rev. Robert.Sa18er
•John Dill
them as well as the labor to rejuve- · relative new to our area then tie'
Larry E. Powell, 23, 536 Laurel Street, Mi(ldleport, was cited for
The Rev. Robert E. Salser, 78,
nate the roof. So everythmg's advised that he seems calm, cool.
John Robert. Dill, 78, of Coal
no operator's license and Russell E. Bateman, Jr., 42, Cavesville,
ready for the spring outing on and coUected and above all seems·
Street, Middlepon, died·Monday, of Charleston, W. Va., a fonner '
was cited for failure to display proper registtation.
·
March 14.
· to listen and understand problems.'
Marth 1, 1993 at the Pleasant Val· Meigs County resident, died Monley Hospital, Point Pleasant, W. day, March I, 1993 at the Vallie's
That's eocouraging. We only hqJe
Personal Care Home in Elkview,
. U•
~.
Va.
·
The Chester High School Alum· that he comes equipped with a biJ
The Cleveland Clinic Foundation, 9500 Euclid Ave., Cleveland,
Born on May 21, 1914 at W.Va. following a long illness.
ni Association officeR are malcing of clout. .
The.
Rev.
'Mr.
Sals~r
was
an
is
seelcing
a $64,642.61 judgment in the Meigs County Common
plans for the anqual banquet and
Pomeroy, be. was the son of the late
Pleas Court from Wayne Wayne Housel,l'ortJitnd.
dailce which has been set for SaturIn December, I sprinkled red·
Joshua Dill and Lulla Huggins Dill. ordained minister with the Church
He was a .retired laborer from of the Nazarene and throu$h the
day, June 5, at the present Chester mini lights in the ivy at the front cif
Elementary School. Dinner will be the house. A nice touch for the
·Imperial Electric Co., Middlepcin,
'and a member of the Christian \v~ ~~~~i~~i:~~.~Jrn~'MlU:~
served at 6:30 p.m. with a da111;e to Christm;IS season? Rigllt. Due to
Clendenin, Logan, Parkersburg,
Units of the Meigs Couqty Emergency Medical Service respond-.
Union Church.
begin at 8::30 p.m. A favorite of weather and an uncaring anitude,
'Elkins.
He
retired
ed
to six calls for assistance overnight.
··
Newell,
and
yours and mine, George Hall, will the lights remained. Someone came
He is sUrvived .by a step-grandTuesday • 6:33. p.m. Racine transported Beny Willis to Veterans
be providing music at the organ.
son, William Gordon Raptcbeff, from the Glasgow Church in 198'0.
by and said they were just right for.
Memorial Hospital; 9:22p.m. Pomeroy to Maplewood Aparunents
The classes of 1928, 1933, Valentine's Day. I ·conveniently
address unknown. His wife, Minnie He. served as home mission IJIISIOr
at Pinch Church of the Nazarene.
for GlacJys Blessing ·Who was transported. to VMH; l.J:03 p.m. Mid1938, 1943, 1948 and 1953 will bought the idea and the lights
Dill preceded him in death.
.
He
was
a
graduaUl
Qf
God's
Bible
dleport
to Ovcrb100k Center for Goldie Lovins who was transported
receive special recognition during srayed puL Howeve,r, SL Palrick's
' Graveside services will·be held
to Pleasant Valley Hospital.
·
the program. Invitations will be Day fast approaches. No one is
Thursday at 11 a.in. at the School in Cincinnati, and a mernber
of
the
Charleston
First
Church
W~nesday
•
12:09
a.m.
Racine
to
Slate
Route
338
for
Ron
mailed
the first of May so any ever gonna believe the red lights
Riverview Cemetery, ~ddleport.
of
the
Nazarene.
Capeli8rt
was
transJPted
to
VMH;
12:40
a.m.
Middleport
to
South
The Rev. Paul Taylor will olfteiatc
graduate having an address change · are appropriate for that Oh well!
Secood Street for i&lt;:yle Kinnan who was b'lllsported to Holzer Med·
and burial will be in Riverview , He is survived by his wife,
since last June should get in touch Do keep smiling.
ical Center; ?:03 a.m. Pome.roy to the sheriff's office for Buddy
with Opal Eichinger, Chester. Max•
Cemetery. There wiD be no calling Dorothy Wilson Salser; a daughter,
Karen
Cannon
of
Millsboro,
Dela.,
Kuhn
who
was
transported
to
Veterans
Memorilll
Hospital.
ine Whitehead, Reedsville, long'~ours. Arrangements were comand a son, Robert M. Salser,
pleted by Ewipg FWlCJIII Home.
time vocal music teacher in the
Athens, Ga.; two sisters, Ruth
Editor's note: All names,qes and addresses are pujllished as
Eastern District, and wasn't she a
SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
:Edgar Randolph
Wolfe, Racine, and Grace A.gre,, .__· ,;.tbey..;
·.::..,•,;.P;;IIW,.,;;...o_n,.,;o_ffi_c;..la;..l.re~po~rts.-----------· -__. whiz with all of those oper~ttas, is
446 4524
'
Morris
Plains,
N.J.,
a
brother,
Paul
.
•
!)resident
or
the
Chester
group
this
~ Edgar F. Randolph, 66, of &gt;North
year.
,Canton, died Tuesday, Mareh 2, ~·Albany; and five grandcbi(J ~-Meigs
,
1993 at his residence.
Funeral
services
will
be
held
at
-·
It's
a well-kept secret but I'll
Born in Flora jn July, 1926, he the Charleston Fint Church of the
the
Washington
County
Fair
tell.
Revival
was the son of the late Raymond
Nazarene with the Rev. C. Harold · Revival services will be held at Grounds, Marietra.
Jack Ambrose, long-time
.and Inez Randolph. He was retired
Smith,
the
Rev.
J.
Allen
Dean,
and
Consignments
of
rack,
clothing
Kro~er managerial employee, is
from the Mohawk Tire and Rubber the Rev. Merlin Provance officiat- the HyseU Run Holiness Church
off State Route 124 on County and trailers accepted berween 4 and rctinng and April 10 will be his last
Co. and was a member of the ing.
Burial will be in Meigs County Road 15 Monday night and contin- 5 p.m. the day of the sale. The fee day on the scene. Jack has turned
American Legion.
Memorial
Pomeroy where uing through March 13, 7:30 each is $15 or 10 pcrcen~ whichever is down attempts to make the day a
· He is survived by his wife of 47 graveside Gardens,
committal
services will evening. David ·Scott of Logan will greater. Food stands on the ~unds real occasion ·just wants to wrap it
years, Iris L. Boring Randolph, two be held at 3 p.m. Friends
may call
·sons and daughters-in-leW, Gordon at the Wilson Funeral Home, be the speaker. Robert Manley, wiU be available and the building is up quietly. However, he does have
heated, Proceeds will benefit the 45 years under his belt at Kroger's
'"Bud" and Evelyn Randolph of Charleston, W. Va. from 2 tq 4 and pastor! invites the public to attend.
Washington
County 4-H Saddle arid I don't think it would hurt a
•.
Wooster, and Cletus and Lucrecia 6to 9 p.m. on Thursday, and at the
Horse Program. Call 423·7636 for thing for you to extend best wishes
Soup dinner slated
Randolph of Lancaster; one daugh- church one hour prior to the time of
infonnation.
·
The
Syracuse
Fire
Department
·
for a happy retirement to Jack as he
:Ulr and son·in·law, Iris and Bruce services.
Ladies
Auxiliary
will
have
a
soup
moves
along towards th81 rmal day
Shreve of Hartville, Ohio: seven
In lieu of flowers donations dinner Saturday beginning at I I
grandchildren, eight grandgrand- may be made to the Greater
Scout-o-rama
'children, eight brothers-in-law and Charleston Area Alzheimers Asso- a.m. with chili, vegetable soup,
Scout·O-Rarna ''93" will be held
soup
beans
and
com
bread.
Eat-m
eight sisters-in-law.
ciation Chapter, 401 Allen Drive, or carry-ow is available. Bring con- March 20 from 9 a:in. to 3 p.m. at
Besides his parents be was pre- CharleSton, W. Va., 25302 or the
the Point Pleasant National Guard
ceded in death by one son, one Charleston ·First Church of the tainers for cany-ouL
Armory.
Admission is free.
.
·granddaughter, one brother, and Nazarene.
Demonstrations
will be presented
Tack
sale
two sisters.
on showmanship and the largest
The
Washington
County
Saddle
Funeral services will be held
Horse Advisory Committee will boy/adult registration for all P.roFriday at I p.m at the White Funer• '
l'Jafs Week's Speefal:
hold its third annual auction of new grams ip Mason, GaUia and Mdigs
.
at Hoine in Coolville. The Rev.
County
for
1993.
Phillip Sturm will officiate and . . Jon W. Pierce, Racme, flied for • and used tack on March 13 at 6
burial wiU be in the Cheny Ridge d~ vorce Monday f~om Anne_tte p.m., at the junior fair building at
Cemetery at Chester. Friends may P1erce, Pomeroy, 1n the Metgs
call at the funeral borne Thursday County Court of C;ommon Pleas.
•~Blood pressure clinic
from 7to 9 p.m.
,.
In adcbbOII,lj divorce~ !lrant·
The Harrisonville Senior Citi·
:~"'l R
,
ed Friday to Betty A. Johllson from
zens Club will hold a free blood
Veterans Memorial
~ ... 1 a amsey
Gay F. Johnson.
. Tuesday admi~sions • Betty press~ clinic at the townhouse on
' Mila Ramsey, 100, of State - - - - - - - - - - - Carsey, Pomeroy.
Tuesday from 10 a.m. to noon. FolRouUl 338, Racine. died WednesIn 1389. Geoffrey Chaucer. Poet Lau·
Tuesday discharges - Henry lowing the clinic there will be a
day, March 3, 1993, at the Veterans reate of England, achieved a grant for Thomas, Long Bottom; Luvenia potluck dinner, weather permining.
:Memorial Hospital Extended Care a yearly altowance of wine.
All members urged to attend.
Hayman, Long aottom.
MON.·S,UN.10:00AM·10:00 PM • 992·2556
lJniL
.
A housewife, she was. bom Feb.
8, 1893, in Aiken, Ill., daughter of
The D!li)y Sentinel
the laUl Columbus and Mary Sum(U8PI JIJ.IIOI
.men Gaither.
Publilhed enry an.n00111, Monday
A housewife and homemaker, 111~ ~a,. tn Coart 11t " - ·
Ohla bp tho Ohio VIIIOJ' p,;bltohtnr
she was a member of the Mt VerCompaay/N.. tlmeclta lacS.:=meroJ,
non, Ill., Methodist Chwch.
Ohio 46?811, Ph. t1112-21116.
d dUo
She is survivccl by: two daugh; pa1tap pDial Pbiaw~UJ. Oldo.
\
ten and IODI•iti-law·, Wil111a illd
M 'a . The~W.~,andthe
~ Shultz or ~ne and Helen
and Ray Burkhart of Yakima, Obto Nn~\naot&amp;-. ('Ia"-!
- -,.,.
lotift,
N......
, 715
Thl..t- Anaao,
Wash.; six grandebildltn; t3 pa~t· -Yaft,Now-1001.7.
·
· gnlldchildreq llld four gralt·grall·
Posni.wru:gnlldcbildre!'..
'· a Sister,
.
F8Mle
.
Tlto
Danr lloetlul, Ill Cotttl St ..
Also SUIVIVDlg,.
p
Brialter, of Downey. Clllif.
IVM!!':lJGH una
She w~ preceded in death by
''
I!Fc..t.or--to
o.aw.-.
tuo
her huaband, Frank R~y aad 0.0 Mcmlh.........................................
......................- ....................1111
seven brolhers.
o.a
-.....................
- ....--.115.10
Funeral amngements will be
llllfCJUI OOPr
,
PUCK
annouced later by the Ewing ~....................
- ...................215 Cenla
Funeral Home in Pomeroy. ' •

Woman pleads _guilty to charge

--.--Area deaths--

Two cited by patrol

$L4,u·L4'"' .6J JU
• d'gment SOUght

.EMS responds to six c-alls

7

.

annou_ncements---

ADOLPH'

DAIRY VALLEY

Dl"vo•ce filed

Barbecue Sandwich

Hospital news

SJ69

Attention Fanners

---fa

.,.ottio.,.,

... -...__
. .. ...,. ........m.
__,,..,.,Ia
,.
~

ots
Couples apply
pm.
for
licenses
No-.-.., matt .....
The followina couples aJIJ)lled

--

o.IIY lloellaol oa a ......,

-lh - · Cntlil wt1l ho

or II
oanlor

For details on borrowing for agricultUral purposes, call your nearest Bahk One
office or 1-~77-4994. Applications must be received by the office of the
Treasurer of State no later than March 12,1993.

tlod ill
onu-.. h-carrlor. oem..t.
au, N

.
.
.
.
=
.---------·-··- -... .........

' for ~ · - - recently in
Melp Couiity Plobta Coun:
• J•mea Martin Sava, 32, and 11 · - ---· - · -.............._ ......
........
....
Deni10
both of
Pomeroy;
I}'_ Allan Hufl'111111,
~--c....,
~ .0
·36, and Oadce Mae Day, 45, both II
-...........................
.10
.or l'otnclmy; 0eorae Keith Mara .............
37, Racine, and Losa Cbarlcn~ • - -.........-.......................... All
Grimm,3l,Letln, W.VL .

Gv.::rct, 34,

.

.

· -

t

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

MMtfDNE.

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

w-.._. ____. . . . . . . .

'.

Whatever it taltes7
Blrlk One. Adw:ns. NA,

Member FDIC

"-+;--------.J

'

••

•

~~------------------------~~~--~----~~~~ .-

r

•
'

1

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�•

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Wedneac:tay, Marc;h 3, 1993

Northwest girls slip past Meigs 53-48 in D-11 district cagefest

Wednesday, March 3,1993
Page-1

'

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel CCII'I'eSpODdent
Northwest outscored Meigs 105 in ovr;nime to post a 53-48 victory over Meigs in the fll'St round of
girls disuict tournament play.
. The Mowhawks (10·12) will
now play Athens Thunday at 8:15
p~ m . at Chillicothe High School.
Athens defeated Sheridan 5846 in
Tuesday's second game.
.
Meigs will close out its season
with an excellentl7·5 1118111:, a sec·
tional championship and a runnerup slot in the Tri-Valley Confer·
ence. .
The Marauders jumped out 10 an
early 7..() lead on a bucket by Verna
Compston at the 3:25 marie of the
period. But th!lt would be the last
points the Marauders would score
m the period. Northwest battled
back to tie the game at seven on a
Gail Detwiller bucket 81 the end of
the period.
The Mowhawks lOOk their fmt
lead or the night (17-16) .with 2:13
left in the half when Lori Thomas
hit two free throws. But Meigs lOOk
a 21·19lead into the locker room at
the half when Joy O'Brien hit twO
f.;ee throws wilh six seconds left
Northwest took a 25-23 lead
with 5:29 left in the third period on
a bucket by Patsy Suickland. But
buckets by O'Brien and Verna
Compston gave Meigs a 27·25 lead
with 4:14 left in the period. Meigs
built up a 31-27 lead.on a Missy
Sisson bucket with 3:01 left But
once ~ Meigs.hit a cOld sb'eak
and failed to score the rest of the
period,; Kelly Crabtree's l;las!,et
inade it a 31-29 game heading into
ihe final period.
. . o :Bnen's basket at the 3:35
·mark of the contest gave the
Marauders tl)eir biggest lead of the
night at 41-34. But N«thwest came
storming back and took a 42-41
lead on a Patsy Strickland baslcet
with I :25 left. Meigs regained the
lead (43-42) when Sisson hit a
bucket off the offensive boards
with a minute to go.
· Strickland hit the second of a

·Miller beats Southern 80-76 in D-IV sectional title contest
By SCOTT WOLFE
. Sentinel Correspondent
· Hitting 13-17 from the line in
tl)e fourth quaner, the Miller Fal·
cons halted a gallant Racine·
SOuthern comeback bid en rolile to
pl&gt;sting an 80·76 boys' Division IV
section.al championship victory
f~esday night at Alexander High

em missed two free throws in the

74.
Southern fouled immediately.
streak, hiuing only 4 of 8 charity
tosses going down the stretch.
Duffy hit the first of a two shot
With the score still 62-54 just foul, but missed the second. Reiber
under the four minute mark, Marl:: drove the lane wilh six seconds,
Allen grabbed a steal, but missed cutting the score to 78-76, South·
em's closest point since the first
the lay-up under pressure from 6·
foot- 7 Willie Peyton. After SHS
quarter.
As Southern pressed hard,
came up empty handed, Bruce Lan·
Brady
Daugherty broke into the
S"~:hooi.
ning, who nearly kiUed the Torna·
open and was fouled with three
:The Falcons (13·9) advance to does singlc-handedly, hit both ends
llistrict play at Ohio University's of a bonus, then Jeremy Duffy seconds left. The Tornadoes' hopes
went down the drain when the foul
c&amp;nvocation Center on Tuesday, drove the lane against the press to
was whistled as intentional, thus
March 9, when they meet the again boost lhe score to 12 (66-54
giving
Miller two shots and the
Lucasville sectional winner, at the 3:33 mark).
·
~rtsmouth Clay, a 59·53 winner
Evans hit two straight free
ball.
Those hopes dwindled even fur·
over Northwest
throws, Reiber drove in a lay-up
ther when Daugherty sank both
:southern bows out with an after an Allen steal, and Southern
impressive 11·5 record, ending the trailed by 66-58. Evans forced a ends of the two shot foul. Southern
got the ball out of bounds with :0 I
season ranked ninth in the state.
jump bali that went to Southern ,
left and WiUiams got off a shot, but
The comeback
and Singleton grabbed two more
it was too little, too late for the
: Southern's offense and defense steals. but SHS scored just once off
Tornadoes.
. simultaneously suffered an offen- the turnovers .. Evans buried the
Southern ,head coach Howie
siS&gt;e and defensive breakdown in three pointer and Southern pulled
the first half. Then, in the third to within five 81 66-61 at the 2:40
Caldwell praised his club and espe·
peiiod, thin$,5 became worse.
marie.
cially .his seniors for their great
After trailing by .. as much as 16
Before the nets could unfurl,
come-back bid. He echoed those
in the fml quarter, Southern pulled Lanning drilled a three pointer on
sentiments to his club after the
to within 10 81 37-27 at the half. In the other end, taking the sting out game, noting that the seniors came
tliC third frame Southern drifted to of any momentum SHS ~ mus·
~ficits of 45-27, 50-30 and 53-33. tered. Singleton again cut the lead
- Trailing 59-40 with 44 seconds to SIX,
· ""
•3 •
w-u
f
h
le t in. t e third round, Southern
In the nexl 52 seconds from the
~gan tts gal~a,nt come~k. ~usseli 2:04 marie to the 1:12 marlt, Miller
StngleiQn nailed a baselm~ JUm~ . hil 6-8 free throws, all sandwiched
w1th 15 secon~: then, a Miller ~·ss around a Reiber steal and score.
and Ry~n ~Jihams desperatiOn Those safeties pushed 1he score
tMee·po!DtJ~I?~r at the buzzer cut back to 10 75-65 with 1:121efi.
tfte score to :"''thm 14.81 59..45.
· Southern missed several shots
· ·southern s pre~, me~fecuve lhe during that stretch, but showed
first half, ~e ~o hfe wtth renewed . much poise and character in the
Tornado mtenstty. Sou.thern stole next minute that followed. Evans
the ball and forced several Miller buried a clutch 23-foot three point·
turnovers, but the ftrst three shots er, cuUing the score to 75·68.
of lhe qu~ter by both clubs fell
Duffy missed the fmt of a one·
sho~ of !hell' maries.
.
and-one, then another senior, Mark
Ftnally, a Robert Retber steal Allen launched a three pointer to
arid ensuing lay-up initiated the cut~ lead to 75-71 81 the 29 sec·
drive. On scores by Singleton and ond mark.
·
E~ans (two). Southern outsco~ed
Eddie Paige sank a pair of pres·
Mtllcr 6:2 tn the next lhree mtn· sure free throws for Miller just one
utes, cuttmg the lead to 62-54.
second later ihen Evans rifled
Despite cutting int~ the l~ad, another three:pointer through the
Southern farced some tll·advtsed hoop with 18 seconds remaining .
. shots and come up empty handed Southern and iis grea1 following of
despite two straight steals and a · fans clung to a thread of hope as
three second call on Miller. South· their club lnliled by just three, 77-

through in ,the clutch going down
the sttetch.
Evans, Allen, Singleton and ·
Jeremy DiU played their last game
for the purple and gold.
·
Caldwell said, "With the ex~
tion of one club in the state of Ohto
in Division IV, everyone is going
to Jose their final game. As I look
at the game· {last night's) we are
one of those teams; but are w.e real·
ly? Let's look at the acclimplish·
ments this club has: I) a number ,
nine ranlcing, 2) a 16-4 regular sea·
son record and 3) the club over·
achieved. Lots of teams in the state
of Ohio would like to own those
credentials."
"I'm proud of the seniors and
their accomplishments. They will
always have a special place in my
heart..We have a nucleus of a good
club coming back neJtt year. I just
hope they have the work elhic of
this year's seniors. We had a good
year, now we'll have to work hard
for next year."
Thenmdowa
Southern slruggled early, falling

S-ll at the line. Miller hit 19-44,
including 13·24 the rust half, was
8-12 from three point land and hit
18-29 at the line.
Miller outrebounded SHS 52·
38. Peyton had IS and Pai~e 10.
while Singleton had 11, Wilhams
quarter.
10 and Reiber seven. Southern had
Paige had 10 and Lanning niDe, 12 steals, 11 turnovers, six assists
all three'pointers.
.
_
and 19 fouls.
Southern cut the lead to 10 at
Miller had 7 steals, 18 rumovers
29-t9·at the.3:29 marie of the sec- - and 14 fouls.
ond frame and l8ler cut the lead to
•
32-24. T1ic half ended 8137-27.
MILLER
Paiae had 16 at the half and
(21·16-:Zl-21=80)
Lanning 13. Paige ended the night
Jon Plant 0-0·1=1, Bruce Lanwith 26 points and Lanning 32.
ning 3-8-2=32, Eddie Paige '1·0·
Singleton and Allen had seven
12=26, Willie Peyton 6-0-0=12,
points each for Southern 81 the half Brady Daugherty 1-0-2=4, Jeremy
and Willi4ms had six.
Duffy 2..().1=5. TOTALS -19·8·
Southern outscored Miller 31-21 18=80
in the final frame, but that was noi
enough. Evans, who ended the
SOUTHERN
nigh! with a ieam-high 20, was cru·
. (9-18-18-31=76)
cia! in thai drive. Marl:: Allen and
Mark Allen 2-4-0=16, Michael
Si~gleton added 16 each, R&lt;iben
Evans 3-4-2=20, Roben Reiber 6·
Reiber 12 and Ryan Williams 12.
0-0· 12, Russell Singleton 7·0·
Southeni hit 22 of 59 for 38
2=1
4-_1·1=12.
cent, hit 9-24 lbrees and was
to a 2 f -9 deficit at the end of the
first quarter. SHS couldn't buy a
bucket, either inside or out, and
was intimidated by Miller's size
and three early blocks by Peyton.
Meanwhile, Miller couldn'l miss
hitting '9-13 buckets in the first

In the NBA ••• .

'

: Here are the players sel!X!ted for
tlfe 1992·93 District 13 all-star
gj!'ls' basketball teams, ranked by
dwision:
•
Divlslou 1-U girls
Flrsl team
,Melissa Cooper, jr., Logan
(P.Iayer of the Year); Mindy Pope,
~. Galli!! Academy; Tez Kraft, jr.,
LOgan; Julie Coffey, sr., Jackson;
Efin O'Leary, sr.. Athens.
Secolld team
.I. Verna Compltoa, 1r., Melas;
~eabau Kolcuu, . 10. Gallia

'··.

.69&lt;1 .

CI.IM!LAND .......l7 21) .649 .
Cllorlqlro ....." ........ .29 ll!' "':537·"
lodluiH .................. .27 :Ill .412
Ad+nla ............. ,.... .26 30 .464
Dooail.,.... ,........... .24 30 .4+1
Mllwntoo ............ .22 34

BASELINE JUMPER- As Soutberu's Mason Fisher (33) sets a
pick apinst Miller's Jon Plant (middle),Toruado IWlrd Mark AileD
takes a baseline jumper durin&amp; Tuesday u]&amp;ht's Dlvisloll IV ledloual tide game at Alexander High School, where the Falconi won 8076. ADen rmished with 16 poiDts.

614·985·3556

.

Opoa Moa.·Fri. 10:7 or Sat. 10·4

Do you reel you are paying 100 much tor
your prescriptions? Then you should be

shppplng with us. Wilh the cost of medica·
lions constantly on the rise. we reel it is
our responsibility to offer our
CUSIOmers even· •dvantage posslb:e.
You see, we've made It a point to know
when generic equivalents ate available .
Then , working hW1d·ln·hand with your
doclor, we fill your prescription, exactly
as ordered, and vou &lt;ave In the process.
•Low Preecrlptlon Prlc;ea
•Free Parking (Video Touch Lot)
•Faa! &amp; Friendly Service
•Slore Charge )\ccounta
•Free Delivery to Home or Work
(Cheshire, Bradbury,
., Middleport, Pomeroy, Maeon,
Mlnarsvltle, Rulland, Syrac'use)
•

· WITHOUT PUT(lNG
A LID ON V4LUE!

'Re&amp;U?ir send ietlci"
~·ct

' ·

•EMit

17

T-

-

WLI'd.GI

S..AII...............l!

'

19

.641

.................34 21
lhah ......................3] 2:1
o......................23 32
MiDraatl ............ ~13 "
DillaM .......................4 ..,

.611
.!19
. ~II

.250
.005

hdlkDiwtolooo
Phocnil ..................~ 13 .755
S.lllo .................,.31 17 .691
.................33 19 .635
Lli. t.ot..+...........21 25 .521
LA. cu-......., 21 21 .SCJ!I
OoWon Sial0 ..........25 32 . &lt;!a!~
s -..........11 :n .m

.

SG&amp;::Mt .
Fla . ........dma166,Lamu64(0T) .

Missy Sisson 6-0-0,.12, Joy
O'Brien 3..()-4=10, Amber Black·
well 0·0·2=2. Totals - 19·010=41

o.,.......

SB001S IN TRAmC- Meip pard Ver111 Compstou (33; ·
widt-,.
3 ,- ,, ) ps .,lletwea two•Nortllwat deteuders to put.
....... sltllt ._.

z,._., llizltt's DlvlsioD U dlstrkt toun•eut ~

p=e iw OX ....... wticlt tk Molaawlcs wou 53-48 iu onrtime.

•r · I

t,;U..~psll'

'widt lilr poillll. (Callly Echnlrds pboto)

;

6.l

,.

12

13
17
2:1 •

Tourumenbt
N - c..-

.. Flnl- "
LonJ &amp;load 11. 1 0 , - Jolonja 77
MoriiDawh,NJ. 91, SL Prandl, Pa. 80

Tuelday'sNowY. . UI7.A-91
o.t.do 101,. M'
e· 19
lodlaM 109, Son Aaaalo95

Furniture

$488

~OFF

'

w/Remott

Mll--*•120,Dillul6
Dwww 127. LA. tM.i liS
Siilllo I 01, a.EVI!lAND I Ol (0'0
"""""'99, LA. ow-+ 13
l'l:lnlaad 102,- 91

•EadT•~es · ·

•LIII?IP Tables
•Safa

·

2SOL70 .Off
·

AH .Curios and
Gun Callinets

CARPET SALE

AIJSofas
Sectlonals &amp; Loveseah

~Dining

•dO.airs

25o/o OFF

one-year c:onttacl.

s..m...... ·....-

sr

992-2156

Mc£omb 61, Van Buren 42
. MeDonal4 ! .1, Colwnbiuo• 49
~ 71 ;FIMher Calli. 66 (OT)
Mohawlt 69, Old Fort 61
New Bremen II, WaynafieJd:Gt".htn
l7
Newatk ddt. 51, Tree ~Life 44 "
NO!Wallt SL l'!ul 75, B....W. 64
Pwwnouth
59, we~~em lAtham
l3
.
.
RJohmaod llu. 46, KWaod 36
R\1Uia47, Fair!.wn 410
stt,... 70, a..umn. 52
71, Loololown 42
Tol. QWl.SO, Tol. Emaniol BopL 42
v,.... Calnry Cv. 9J, ~ Sl

a.,.

Th•...:lay's ~:ames

DI-D

Alhali~l.-.o6

Looan Elm 56, Cal. BiMMh...t\ 27
Melloonoct NW l3. Map c-y ••

IG.If TO f9.9g

(0'0
~-~-··Te~ya Vall. 51. W"'~--'
....... .......--..
;J~

111.-m

• Budr&lt;yo Tnil !6. Welliville 42
UNrt,-Uaion IS, Marnl R.idaedaJo

l2

WALES CONFERENCE

.

5o+N !!;;stand !8, Col . ...dy 45

Vl. Muokillp 51 , lllnniballtiY&lt;t42

hlrtciiDMilon
WL .TPI&amp;.GFGA
PluoburJb ........ , !9 20 6 B4 264 211
Wu!Wopn ...... 32 24 7 71 259·2:16
Ne.w Jeney ....... 31 26 5 61 224 219
H.Y.!tlailon... 30 21 6 66 :16H33,
~.:v.a...21 25 10 66 245 234.
~ ...... 23 30 II 51 ~ 2.5l

' TtaiM

Recullr·ltUOD act?on

Cie. Hoyo+ 3~ 0.. Kiaa 30
Cin. s_.... 60, Cin. OMit Hill&amp; 50

....

A.... Dfv..._

MAmESSSALE

• · -........ 41 19
~............ " 20
s - .............. ]3 2!
Bulhlo.............. 31 2.5
lluU'"" ............ 17 41
Oa+.. .............. ' ,.

Serta and Spring"Air
Sffllt... AI

...

an ono-vcar oantnctL
SAN DIEGO PADRES - •~"'
' - . wilh FIMAk
~

-Seultltna;
Adlft 51
Mills.·
jr.,
Kris Giby. •~ AbecJcr, Radld
Jlosric. •~ RerhrJ Bo&lt;ric, •~ Fail'lud; J:.ie H
iq U., Miller,
Jill
rca.m..Ndsalvi&amp;-Y~

Dl"'klo I
Eullako N. 72, Clc. But 42
Miyf'..td 64, LJftdlnor+l Brulh 60
Milfcrill , Vandalia Butlor49 ·

In tbeNHL ...

Dishwashers. 5279 Dryers .......... 5299
llllgfls ...- ...5299 Refrigerators 5499 .
Wasbers-.. 5349 Miaawaves ..5 119

v-.

Keau Botlcnf"~d . r.&amp;c 'O ariliaa', Ckis
Nobloolz, Bill RWey ... s..p,
pdchen. and Jabn Vander Wa(; cufi II-.

Tournament acdon

"Demor.

*Yi

MONTREAL EXPOS - AJOI'Od"'
...... wilh Ivan Atloip. Mipol B-.

llolpiO &lt;17 ,l'ati&lt;villc 42
lloPowcll Laadon 75, ~ 62
!Wid+ !I, Panclon-Oilboi +I
·
Lima l'lnr ll,Uma TempleCht. 77
Luau 66. Budt.,..Ccn!nl61
L - - Clay 12, Mmchc!IU ll
ManmolofCu. 68, CrcitliAo 61 (01')
I.Doal64. Minoto:ll
Muim Pleuant 79, Moml Rid,ICdale

Philadolpbia at Phoaah., 9:30p.m.
L.A. L&amp;ke.n 1t Golden Su~a. 10:30
p.m.
.
HIMtOI!at Saenmlrdo,l0:30 y.m.
U11h 1t Now Yori, 7:3i:t p.m.
Odan4o. Now)_,, 7,30 p.m.
L.A. Clippen tl Wa•hinaton, 7:30
p.m.
Alluu n lndiuu, ?:30 p.m.
a.EVEI.AND .. NiMOiou, 8 p.m.
l'l:lnlaad
9 p.m.
Ch.uloaoat-IOp.m.

APPLIANCE SALE

1f4
Y4

$499

·20%

OCCASIONAL TABLES

·.Coffee Table .

Linoleum·

Maft, 01'11 I GnC-)'eU CQ'Itnct.

WANT
ADS
WORK!

Ohio high school
girls' basketball scores

DlliU Mi&lt;·llic+ao, 1,30 p.m.

''·

u.-

National
FLORIDA MARUNS- &gt;\pod oo
tenn1 widl Bnt Bart.ri.c, RIOIIDdlbuo-

v;.w.y a.r.90, W•lldiu au. :!8

UWt at Daral.t..l:lO p.m.

IN STOCK-18 PaHens

'

Replar·ltiiDII act?on

WuhJqlon It Nillmi. 7:30p.m.

Lamps &amp;
Pktures
OFF

TORONTO BLUE lAYS-A~~

!'

c -•• 73. PainaniDe Huvey 64

TonJtl~l'a p san A,a&amp;onio at bon, 7:30p.m.

..

""""will! Doua u.- ondl'at-pitchm.onanc-,- . ; dl

ma.

Sau-

Cllcafo 17. llewl-10

Sylvania
25" Color Console

Foitp&lt;!ot IWbor 62, Clo. Lulllcran E.

ootlDICU.

- Outy; l z.::~·~··••aerand
Clais1ic Moum.
I'OiDl; Betb
Milll:l', Rid:
ly MI:FIIm.
Red HiD; Tam Hampsbin: IIDII
Shelly Cook, Lopa; .Cyudy
Wasko, Jeuirer Menimu and
KdlyK•••yz..A' •s
Cudt el 1k Yar- Ralph
Taylor.'•&amp;
·
Diu. • m-IV &amp;iris
ftust ....
Jaiwle RolsiOD, jl'. Alexande[
(Pia:ru of die Yc:81'); Stepbak
0U.. sr., F 7 a; Qnie HiDl:?e,
sr~ Faiat.d; Ritki &amp;slaling, jr.,
Coal Grow:; Susan Cr.awfllld, jJ~.
Nc:mmwiiD-YOlk.

Hooorl!ble meutioo - Jaime ·
Wilsou ud Jessica Karr, East- ,
en, Amber OlaliDI'er, Soulllen; ·
Audra Andrews and Amber DaviS
Alexander; Christina Wamn, Nel: ·
sonville-York; Katie Maxwell :
.Federal Hocking; Amber Lou:
Wellston; Jodie Marks, Chesapeake; Nicole Bradford, Fairland.
Coacb or tlte Year - Laura
Hazelett, Fairland.

6l

i
San~ ll,CS N-.tpSI
Par Wilt

3

...

tnd Jtoaer Pavlik, pitcher, ·011 ODO-JIIU'

Hemlock Miller BO, Raciac Southern

lindley l9' Dol'lul53
Kaniu SL 71, Mi+laoui 67
Micbipnll, ..... 73 '

1.5
3
125.
21
30.5

with Rob Mlllm', :fim ...._

lerml

-49
liudin Nonhem 10, .Rid pont 58
76

s. a-......:~~

Ani""''
lloliobao S.. hila'• 59, 9L H....,. 58

FortJ....... 56, Onovillo so
Fort Launie 13, Rivenldo 47
Fol&amp;oria St. W«&amp;delin 69, S~oea E. SS
Fraatlia Fum1ce Q&lt;reen 54, New

v_,

StdJon 95; CeaL Floridll2
Vandaloih!IO,T-12(0'0

-DI-

·

~.;..;. 69. ~ vtli:67

42

M:~u.sa

l'luoloorp 17,
76
Proo'd
74, c
,,., 71
Xaori•, Ohio 73, La S.U. Sl

WESTERN CONFERENCE

$88 ~

6
.9
7
7
4
4

LEGAL IIITICE

II
II
73
69
ll

275 214
273 236
250 224
274 232
:106 21!
:12 ll9 m

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.
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T-

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Sile·.
3QOA, OFF .

W L T flo. GtGA,
:16 21 I 10 224110
............. 33 25 9 . 75 212 232
.. _ ........ 32 Zl 9 71 Zll 114

..,..._

Mvrrt· ...... _. 30 1S 9 69 234 219

IL ~ .......... 29 :Ill I 66 223 221
T-Bay ...... 19 40 5 03190241

,

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vmo.a"'
···-1· "33
!=aiF1J
.............

• · • -............ 9 55 2 20
lt elk 2 , ..., .....

Prescription Shop

m 210

Wlooipia ..... - .. 21 30 6 62 :MI ;lSI
' ' . ..... _,, 23 )I I S. :16 W

t751:ZS

Ttaeldat•-

'"·""

H.Y.IMIMMoaS,-2 .
PHI \1"5.1~4
v-s.1V
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0...7W' '1

lin!oooi,Oui-1 (011

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Lao """"' 6, ColpiJ 2

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MEN'S

11

LimlteP time savlngsJ · we - re proud 10 offer Voit®' Gol1d, our brand new
line of athletic shoes . Come try them on and tee-b the· pow ~ r· of gold!

PLUS SAVE ON r.rTANO

JliC" I

'

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AND SASSON FOR WOMEN!

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'
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SALE ENOS MAR 14, 111113
OPEN NIGHTS AND SUNOAYS

IIIII PlAZA

THE
PUBLIC
UTILITIES·
COMMISSION OF OHIO By: Gary E.·
Vlgorllo, Secretary.

I

BOYS' / MEl'S

INTIODUGIIG IHE VOII• GOLD SIIIIS

Alllnlerested parties will be given an
opportunity to bt heard. Further
informallon miy bt oblllnld by
oontacling!IWCommlaeiOilatt80Eisl
Braid S1rtet. Columbus.Ohio43266D573.

t9 ' 11 m 202
ZliO 76 256 223

Lo+Aoploi.-.. 21 29 1 63

~/

The Pttllic Utilities Commission of Ohio
has setlorpubflc hearing Case No.9302-EL·EFC, lo review the fuel
procurement practices and poiides of
ColumbusSouthernPowerCompany,
tha operation of its Eiactrlc Fuel
Component, and relatld mattn. This
he$rlng is schldufed 10 blgin at ille
Commission offiees at 10:00 a.m. on
March 30, 1993.

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

r'

2U N. Second A...

25
- 9·· .•.
12
13
14

.393

~enn~ wilh

on • on~,cu oonlracL
TEXAS RANGERS - Au..... oo

f~58,Northmor44

Sao..

FINDING THE OPEN MAN lithe talk rorm~~~~~t on the miDd or
Southem polut 11JU'd M,ldlael EvaDS (left) M MUter &amp;uarci Bruce
Laauln1 tries to readl for the ball durlna Tuesday Bight's sectional
cbamplonshlp pme at Albauy, wllkh the Falcons woa 80·76. Both
mea were the ICCiiDeleaden ror their respective teams.

METAl STORAGE
CABINETS
Low Sale Prices

--

11

MILWA~ -"""""

ta tcaftl whh Douc f'-7, pikh!r.. • a
one. )'ear coatmct.
SEATIU! M.U1NERS - .~oo

Jlanbury Laklllide 47, Oaawa Hills .t4
DelplloM ]df....., 43,
32

NationaJ eolle&amp;e
basketball scores

CaniDI,_

GET $1700 MINIMUM IN SCHOLARSHIP
MONEY &amp; UP TO A COMPLETE
..
FREE EDUCATION -

(

a!daeAco.l.!3

........

oa.............).......l9

B••··n

Ccalinantal S4, Columbu.s GlOVe 41
Cuyahop Van. Cu. 14, Elyria I..ak-

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Tnnsactions

Bellaire St. JoiD'a1S, BridaepcrtSI
Berlin Wutem. RuerYi 46, Lowdi.W042(011
Cin. Ccuniry Door 80, !Joo&lt;Joiown ~6
, Cin. Mui.t~~~om 79, Cin. Summit 52

AdulleTWLI'd.GI
Now YG ..............37 II .673
Now-,. ........... .31 25 .554
6.5
.................. .29 :16 .l27
I
OiWMio................. .27 25 .!19
1.5
Miomi ................... .21 32 .:196
15
Philld ':' ii HmU,_,ol 9 34 .~2
W·+hpn
.l6 31 ·~ ~

Thoro's a lar.. pool of scltolarAip aad grant
•••r• 29 billioa dollars wort•, tlrat NEVER •a• to
.. repoid. Part of ••i• •••r'is rours•. T•• rlecisioa
you Make Htor•i••• w•at ••,,.., to your port.
lilt stays w•oro it is aad ..co•s part of 12oxt
year's statistics of uaclai•d MOaoy.
2) Your MoHy will be ro~dlrectod to soiMOao olso.
3) Your Moaor will be diroctod to you.
THE-CHOICE IS YOURS!
To collect rour scHiars•i_p IHaoy coli

(J-14-l..U.~)
Vema
~. Lee
I' t. •w Hl-1=3, Lari Kelly 50-3=13, K.aiu Tllllla" 140:2,

(O••i••"'tn.IJ"IF4)
DI-IV
Ada 55, Blufi!M &lt;6
AIDoiiM 51, VMO!ue !6(2 a!)
AihlabuiM SL Iolui !!, Bloamficld 45

EASTERN CONFERENCE

Academy; Tracy Mullins, sr.,
Rock Hili; Matkessa Layne, sr .,
South Point; Brandi Munn, so.,
JacksOn.
•
Honorable mention - Missy
Slssou, Lori Kelly aud Katrlua
Turuer, Meias; Amy Morris,
Gallla Academy; Amber Statou,
Shelly Metzger and Beth Salisbury, River Valley; Heather
Exline, Jackson; Erica Hayes, Vin·
(See,SELECTIONS ofl Page 5)

..

Nortbwest
two shot foul with 43 seconds left
2= 14, .Gail Detwiller 6..(J...2=14.
.
(7·12·10-14-10-53)
to tie the game at 43 . Meigs ran
Totals- 2-l.(i=53
Lori Thomas 1·0·2•4 , Kelly
time off the clock and called a time
out with II seconds left to ~ up a Crabtree 6..()-0= I 2, Kristi Adkins
Meils '
play for the last shot The Maraud- · 1-1·0=5 •. Patsy Strickland 6-0ers went for the last shot and
Com{lston was called for a very
quesuonllble offensive foul Ill she ·
tired to drive the lane with two sec·
onds left.
_
Sisson and Strickland traded
buckets to start the overtime, and
. O'Brien hit one of two f= throws
with 2:03 left to 1five Meigs a 4645 advantage. Smckland gave the
Mowhawks the lead for good (4746) with 1:12 left with with a seven ·
foot baaline jumper.
,
·
Northwest increased the lead to
51-46 with 28 seconds left on
another bucket by Stric~. Sisson made it a St-48 game with a
basket with 18 seconds left, but
Detwiller hit two free 'throws with
nine seconds left to ice the victory.
Lori Kelly led the ~auders
with 13 points, Missy Sisson added
12 and Joy O'Brien 10. Other '
Meigs scorers inolud~d Verna
Compston wilh six, Lee Henderson
three and Amber Blackwell and
Katrina Tu111er added two each.
Vanessa Cpmpston and Heather
Hudson played b11t did not score.
Meigs hit 19 of 59 from the
floor for a cool 32% and hit on 10
of 19 from the line for 53%. Meigs
pulled in 38 rebounds with Kelly
grabbing 11 and Sisson 10. The
Marauders turned the ball over 18
times and had 13 steals led by
Turner wilh four.
.
Detwiller and Strickland led the
Mowbawks with 14 points, and
Crabtree added 12. Northwest hit
· 24 of 57 from the floor for 41%
and hit six off U rroln t1ie line for
SS%. Nmtbwest had 39 rebounds
wi~ Crabtree grabbing 12 and
Detwiller 10. Northwest had 19 •
turnovers and nine steals led by
BOMBS AWAY! - Meigs guard Joy O'Briea (left) eets lite sltlll
Detwiller with three.
off
jilst before McDermott Nortbwest's l'lltsy Stridtlnd (31) c:aa
Seniors playing their last game
block
It duriD1 Tuesday uipt's DivlsioD D district first-to t o .
for the Marauders were Lon Kelly,
test
at
Chllllcotbe Hl11t School, wltere the Mohawks i!Cipd tk
Missy Sisson, Verna Compston and
Mlll'auden
53-48 Ia overtime. (Catby t;.dwllrds pltoto)
Katrina Turner.

AU-District 13 selections ...

Meigs County gets 15
players on all-District
13 basketball teams ·
Here are )he players selected for
the 1992-93 .Districl 13 all-star
boys' basketball teams, ranked by
division:
.
Division I·D boys
First team
Trevor Harrlsou (Player or
the Year), sr., Mei1s; Cbad
Barnes, jr. Galli a Academy;
Nathan Kius, sr., Rock Hili; Sunny
Kalu, jr. Athens; Jerry Spurlock,
sr., South Point
SecoDd team
: ·· Nathan Miller, sr. Galli a
~cademy; Jason Cade, jr. Rock
Hill; Matt Walburn, sr. Jackson;
JCe Leith, sr., Ironton; Scott Chap¢tan, so., Alexander. ·
.
• Honorable mention
Charles Peck, Kevin Hunt lad
ltob Canady, River Valley; Jay
Cremeans and Jobu Bntley,
Meigs; Eric Horrmau, Gallia
Academy; Tom Smith, Logan; Jay
Gittlejohn, Rock Hill, Justin Scholl, '
Athens; Jason Williams, Vinton
County; Pat McHugh, Athens;
Travis Waggoner and Bryan John·
son, AleJtander; Hank Fletcher,
South Point.
_ Co-Coathes or tbe Year 1\;'like Mce~. Athens; Rick Scarber·
1}', Rock Htll.
•
Division ill-IV boys
•
First team
• James Dempsey, sr., Chesapeake (Player of the Year); Scott
Cheatham, jr., Wellston; Benji
t.:ewis, sr., Oak Hill; Brian Runyon,
st., Chesapeake; Chris Simpson,
S(., Oak Hill.
•
Second team
: Michael Evans and Russell
Sjngleton, srs., Southern; Bruce
Lanning, sr.. Miller; Chad Stewart,
si., Fairland; Chuck Jones, sr.,
Ironton St. Joseph.
.• Honorable mention - Mark
~len, Soutbern; .Rick Dillon and
Jerome Fuller, Symmes Valley;
Hi-ian Blackmon, Oak Hill; Brad
st~encer and Steve Hendershot,
. Wellston; Erron Archer, Fairland;
J.istin Gail, Nelsonville-York;
Mike Tomlin, C~esapeake; Bob
Hall and Greg Swartz, Coal Grove;
Reuben Kittle, Trimble; Eddie
PJge and Willie Peyton, Miller.
• Special mention - Gene Hall,
&lt;1ak Hill.
~ Coach of lhe Year ....: Norm
Persin, Chesapeake.

The Dally Sentinel-Page S

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•••., ..... 7 . . . . . . .
.,

( I

�Page

~

The Dally sentinel

•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio ·

Wednesday, March 3, 1993

CELDRift Ellftlll nDDLIIDI' IIA17

••

B
E!
.YOU'LL lllftCI ftll 1111111!

-------, EASTMAN'S FOODLAND VALUABLE COUPON

-Valid
-I

FOODLAND ·
SPECIAL COUPON

2121h1161113

I

~~~~--~:=~

I

I
I

~·

· ·s LB. PURE

· 146

•... ·.. . .,:·::· .
'...
: ..
.
'

Domino Sugar

~- :~.

C·.•
~

.:,
":.~

.,

~

.. ...

·.:•
.

John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor

na~~~~~J.1 ~ne:~wsmagazine that th!

III!IJ

2% Milk.

•

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_.'.·t;:
· ..•, . ....I,
..:.' .: .
.:.
...

'tr::..

Family
Medicine .

FR.SH FOODLAND

.·. ;.~
:":-.:.
'
·.-r ·."i,

CANE

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

J"eaturlnl OJafo
Vallq
J"oodland's t3th
Annfversa17 ·
andBurrOaJc
'P oodland's tst
Annfvft'MJ7!

..• .. .

~$-

.

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'

PLASTIC
GALLON

IW.
I \'-.:·::.:.·
.. _~­

"'"

---- ------

U•lt One with CoiiiOIIIIHI $10.00 or More AllllltloMI "'"""''

-----------

LIMIT1 WITH COUPON &amp; $10ADDmONAL PURCHASE

TYSON/HOLLY FARMS
GRADE A SKINLESS
.

.

Boneless Chicken Breast

lB.

I •

'•'t

dangers of asbestos have. been
greatly exaggerated. The anicle
said that except in rare circum·
stances it takes lorig-aenn occupational exposure to asbestos to cause
health problems.
This is'lhe exact opposite of
what I was reading a few years ago,
when experts were saying m.t even
· small levels of exposure for brief
periods could cause cancer and
other problems 10 to 50 years later.
I'm very confused. What should I
believe?
·
AD$wer: I can see why you are
having trouble understanding this
issue. Over the last decade, both
scientists and government OffiCials
have made conflicting statements
about asbestos dangers. I'll try to
put the question of asbescos risk in
perspective.
Asbestos is a mineral that has
been used in insulation around
pipes and boilers, in acoustical ceil·
ing tiles, in flooring material, in
brake shoes and in many other
manufactured products. Exposure
to asbestos in large.amounts certainly increases the risk of developing lung cancer and a rare type of
cancer of tile chest lining called
mesotheljoma. Asbestosis, as the
name· implies, is .also associated
with exposure to asbestos . This
chronic lung ailment can produce
· shonness of breath and lung· damage similar to that seen in emphysema.
Those of us involved wilh clini·
cal research know the conclusions
. reached in a study may only apply
· to lhe swdy group, not to everyone
:on. lhe planet. Unfonunaltly. !here
is a very normal tendency to gener. alize and exicnd the findings of a
. research study to oilier similar situ:a.tioflll. This generalization is a par·
. ttcular problem when the press and
our .legislators act before enough
scientifiC research has been done to
reach .a supponable conclusion.
Asbestos exposure and its· impact
on health is one of these situauons
"where· generalization of · the
.research data has led to unscientific
conclusions.
· Early ·studies of asbestos risks
used data collected about shipyard
workers ~~r!'ft:~'lf,.,~ in

even showed ihat those with low
levels of non·occupational expo·
sure had a higher incidence of
mesolhelioma.
These research findings were
responsible for le~slation limiting
the use of asbestos and mandating
its removal from public places such.
as school rooms. This legislation
was primarily the result of allempts
to draw conclusions about the
health risk asbestos poses to build. ing occupants and others wilh low
asbestos exposure from the data
gathered about !hose with occupational exposure. This is aoalogous ·
to saying peanut butter is hazardous because eating a jar full
each day causes an increased rate '
of obesity and .:iabetes.
A recerlt report from the BoSton
University School of Medicine,
however, compared 75 studies .
about asbestos risk. They found no
data that supports the assumption
that very low levels of asbestos
exposure, such as occurs to occupants of a buildin$ wilh asbestos.
msulation on heat ptpes, is hannful
Using my analogy,two peanut butter sandwiches each ·week should
present a health probleJII if the data
ob~ined from liigh levels of use
also extended to low lfvels of use.
As I'm sure you know; eating two
peanut butler sandwiches a week
presents no heallh ri$1, But at some
level of pean.. buuet1:onsumptioo,
the frequency of ob¢ty and diabetes would go up.
New research is needed 10 accurarcly determine the tlireshold limit
above which lhe
of asbestosrelated disease becomes high
enQugh .that it is w~ taking pre-.
. ventiye measures. So, to 'summariZe: high levels ofasbestos fiber
exposure is clearly hazardous, but
low·level exposu~ seems to be
much safer than was previously
thought.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column. To submit questions, wrilt
to John C. Wolf, D.O., Ohio University College of 0Sti(Opathic
Medicme, Grosvenor Hall, Alhens,
Ohio 45701.
)

,.

"*

Prom dress sale
The

..

·~~A~~~91P-aDd

·, .

.·
time lhc individulls ·~re exposed .. ' :ra:.t'.~ 6, Bl
to it, and ·the' sjze Of asbestos oarti·
Senior · ' Building Second
cles were relatively high.· These
and ·Horton 11ree11, ~Mason
studies d~monstrated that tbo~e
W.Va.
.
'
Registration j items for sale
individuals with !he hig~t levels.·
of exposure we.re most hkely to
will be at9:30 .,_.,,with the acdevelop asbe,stoSIS and lung cancer.
wal sale Slllrling"Bl 10 a.m. lllld
'I_'hey also showed that mesolh~continuing llllil5 p.m.
homa was much more. common m
Rcgisttatioa.fco Will be $2 pee
asbestos workers than m the g~ritem. DJesse1 sboald be on han·
al
Some other studtes
gezs and pricea clprly marked.
Young women are lovtted to sell
last.rear's dress or sbop for Ibis
year s dress.
'

•

lb.

lb.
FRESH "SILVER PLAITER" f1D-10.5·L8. PKG.J

RED, BLUE OR WHITE

seedless·Grapes

PtJikChops

BO~iELESS CENTEI? CUT PORK LOIN CHOPS LB ... 52.99

FULL CASE ... 516.00 lSAVE 10%J

we Clartlv
Accept Your
Federal Food

"

I

Additional
Quantities

stamPs

Fifth anniversary

COURTNEY LONG

RED orWHITE

Seedless ft
Grapes La7

9C

:-,iui" - - - FOODLAiD- - ;:per Towels.tll~.6 9 4 rt2121·1/6·91
SPECIAL COUPON
TUILIWER

$

.

Ice Cream ••••••••••

ASSORTED VARIETIES

Hershey Candy
10 CT.·
PIG.

2

.

-

.

I

1

-----------------

.

Ill aND FOODLAND

.,

lalllllomt..., .... laH 110G,IIIID.
oPml1'l. " -...., llloll"" ot polnlo ..
luly ~· '" •
pold ., ,... llhly
buying or
lai94CUflll ,.,,W
NlldJAII
. 4UIIIEII lllrERQT, l'otl ruj leduct
·• ·lntiiMI 01 loMo, .......... Mil alhor
,,_ ol dolll NIIIM to ,_ trlde or

'f{..-..

_......,.ill== t•••
.......
. ,..........._.......
.. ,..

·••

•
••'

,

.
KARL KElLER, EA

.._

•
Kt'Dier White Bread
24:01. LOAF ROUND TOP

4IVEITIIEIIT tiiTEAESt '"" dod•llolllot
ln¥1111111111 iiiiiiMI II ,......., 111111111 to

Ill JOU 11M quotllo •• ..... haw llwtu ' - 111111 ,_ lllllmt Cll your 1oot1 Hill

llfllotolllol.lhllor,.., ..., by tile ... - , . . . ..... ....., lo llllp ""'

II"IDUI

I 39-oz.
I

1
I

Kroger COHee

OF

50

WITH PRICES LIKE THIS. ..
WHY SHOP ANYWHERE ELSE

OLD COURT HOUSE

CONDtrfON.ER OR

Sliced

style
ShltiiPDD

•

11R

H&amp;R BLOCK·
I'

'

I~

51.49

VACUUMED PACK ELECTRIC PERK
OR AUtOMATIC DRIP

I

.

......... JOUPIJDII-,IIwowldlor ......lll,...,....(.... •-lolnllll
1101 dt d IOiilllt.

E"-ttve11n till. .... I, t• • UIDA l'aod II

,.

delll......, S1,ooe.ooe or 1
1

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to Umit Ouentl._ • Prl-

fir-·
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.....
••••11oo

BUY ONE~ET ONE

llaultlllll....,luly .......l&gt;lo.Ho•o"'•
oul ..... Octobtr 11,
1117, hllullloa ...,
Ito ..,_ I Iaiii

I

FREE!

700 W. FT I ltnet • . . . . .,, OW. • H2·Utl
0,••7AII-IIPM-.IIIrw .... -ls ••tl-·10 ...

v-

offOIIE ~GAGE IHTER~,-t
llomt
1-'cJI ....... OIIIpdn 'p'lldetaancl

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WHAT IIIDS OF INTliEST CAN I DfDUCT
ntiSYUI!

I

WITH (:OUPO~

EASTMAN'S

.J~~W

TAX TIP OF THE WEEK

(E!] 1

Mrs. Paul's
fish II
·.

•

$ 09

Courtney Anne Lon~. Vincent,
celebrated her third btrthday on
Valentine's Day at the home of her
grandparents, Lyle and Ruth Ann
Balderson, Reedsville.
Allending were her parents, Jay
and Kay LQng, Vincent, great
aunts, Lillian Pickens, Reedsville,
and Kaduyn Dieu, Belpre. and her
great·grandmother, Hazel Balder·
son, Vienna, W.Va.
Gifts and cards were presented
to the honored gOOsL
.
Bird cake and other

-- -1

40 Ct niCKS .
YllUI PICI PORTIONS

Dog .food •••• ~!.'el;... 299·
RLYET SUHR DIP
$ 99
SQUIRT

Third birthday

.The Hemlock Grove Wednesdav
·· Quilting Group celebrated its fifth ·
anniversary recently with lunch .at
Millie's. There were 17 in attendance.
In !hose five Ye&amp;l'$ Pie group has
quilted-liS quilts beSides numer·
oas wall hangings, crij) quilts and
comforts.
~
Meeting at the grange hall to
quilt and visit is coosidered by all
to be a therapy session. Anyone
liking to quilt or wanting to learn is
welcome. ·
Alltnding lhe anniversary were
Helen Quivey, Sara Collums, Leota
Smith, Belva Willard, Goldie Reed,
Sylvia Midkiff, Mildred Zie~ler,
Aletha Randolph, Lutchie Rtggs,
Edna Clark, Bernice Meets, SrcUa
Colburn, Vada Hazelton, May
Romine, Muriel Bradford and
Kathryn Robson. Guests were Eva
Nunnally. Piclteringl!ln; and Henri·
etta Bailey, Flatwoods. Unable to
au~nd were Bernice Hawk and
Janine.Offuu.

�..
P11g1

a

Wednesday, a.,rch 3, 1993 ·,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Dilly Sentinel

The Dally Senti

-------- -.

,,
'

Community calendar
Coaaaalty Caleadar !teas

music.

appear tft . , before .. eYelll
. lll!d tile day ol t•at eveat. Items
• mlllt be received wei ill advaDCe
: to -re publleatioll Ia tbe cal·

SATURDAY
MIDDLEPORT • The Middlepan Youth League will hold signup for the 1993 ball season on Sat·
: eadar.
urday from 9 a.m. to noon; March
WEDNESDAY
9, 6·8 p.m.; and March 13, 9 a,m.
· RUTLAND • Meigs County to ooon. Sign-up will be held at the
Holiness Association's annual Middleport Council chambers.
; indoor camp meeting will be held Anyone who did not participate last
at the Rutland Church of the season will need a copy of tly:ir
:Nazarene through Saturday at 7 binh certificate. Registration fee is
p.rn: nightly and on March 7 at 6 $10 per child, not to exceed $25
p.m. Rev. and Mn. Murre! Duffie per family .
are the music evangdists and evangelist for the camp~ Fern Grim will
RUTLAND • There will be a
be having children's serviJ:es for dance at the Rutland American
K-6 grade. A nursery will be pro- Legion Hall on Saturday ·from 8
. vided.
p.m. to midnight. Ml!sic by Pure
COuntry Band. Public invited. 1
LONG BOITOM- Revival will
be held Wednesday through SunSALEM CEN;:rER ' Star
day at Freedom Gospel Mission on G181lge and Slar Junior G181lge will
County Road 30 in Long flollQIII. meet Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Special singers nightly. Marvin grange hall near Salem Center.
~Welch, Charleston, W.Va.• will be Potluck refreshments will follow
: me speaker. Roger Wilford is the the meeting and all .members are
: pastor. Everyone welcome.
urged to attend.
'
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
HOCKINGPORT· There will
: Orange Township Trustees will · be a round and square dance at the

Doctor sets the record straight

Dear ADD Lucien: I was
Reynolds Building on Route 124 at ' ~hocked to tead the enclosed anicle
Hockingpon on Saturday from 8- in my loeil newspeper which says
11 :30 p.m. featuring "Out of the the AIDS virus can be tra111111iued
Blue,' Buzz Slater , Millie \hrough kissing. I am 71 years old, .
Reynolds, Bill Sharp. Joe Clark, so I'm not concerned about myaclf
Junior Wiblin, Denzil Bennett. . but I have several pandchildren,
Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
some of .them teen-agers, and this
TIJPPERS PLAINS - The Tup- news item made me uneasy. ls the
pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 information factual? Please check
Ladies Auxiliary will have a with your authorities and let me
Sl;laghetti supper Saturday begin- know. •• MARGERY IN GRAND
nmg at 4 p.m..Cost is $3.50 for RAPIDS
DEAR MARGERY: The article
adulls and $1.50 for children 12
you sent was an interview of Dr.
and under. Everyone welcome.
Helen Singet Kaplan, a physician
HARRISONVILLE • Har- specializing in sexual dysfunclion.
risonville Lodge No. 411 F&amp;AM · In the article, Dr. Kaplan states that
will meet Saturday at 7:30 p,m. saliva is an ideal environment for
Work in !he F.C. Degree. Refresh- the AIDS virus and that there is mare
ments served. All master masons virus in the saliva than in the blood
invited.
• of a person who is HIV-positive. Dr.
Kaplan made the unqualified
RUTLAND • The Rutland
statement
that French kissing can
Youl1! League will bold sign-up for
uansmit
AIDS.
the 1993 ball season on Saturday
I sent the article 10 Dr. Anthony
from 1-4 p.m. at the Rutland Civic
Fauci,
director of the National
Center. Anyone who did not partie·
Instiwre
of Alletgy and Infectious
ipate last season will need a copy
Diseases.
He is one of this country's
of their b.irth certificate. Registration fee is $10 per child, not to . most respecred authorities on AIDS.
exceed $25 per f~ily.
This is what Dr. Fauci said:
"Dr. Kaplan has either been
misquored or is incorrect. There lUll
no well-documented cases of
,
!liJDsrni$Sion of HIV by exchange of .
saliva Her comment about the viral
count in saliva being greater than
lead was too large 10 overcome, that in the blood or an HW -infected
said DaYid Poltrack, CBS senior person is also incorrect. It iS very
difficult to isolate virus from saliva.
vice president for research.
ln
fact, saliva contains HIVin·
CBS' last sweeps victory was a
hibitor
substances
which
work
year ago, in February 1992. The
previous sweeps race, in Novem- against the mv virus. It is extraor·
dinl!fily unlikely that 'a healthy
ber, went to ABC.
person can be infected by HIV
NBC's "Seinfeld,'' continuing through French kissing."
to gain strength in its new ThursDear AnD Landers: I was
day time slOt, tied for fifth place in inspired to write after reading your
the ratings with ABC's "Home column about what. women want
Improvement." ·
most in a relationship. Being a
NBC's "Cheers" was seventh. senior in high school, my letter may .
be a little different from most you
Here are the top 10 shOws, their receive.
network and rating: "60,;Minutes,"
I'm a 17-year-old guy. Does this
CBS, 22.8; "Ro~eann~ ... ABC,
ring
any bells? According to aU the
21.1; "35th Annual Gram my
experts,
I am supposed-to be at the
Awards," CBS, 20.0; "Murder,
peak
of
my
sexual drive.
She Wrote," CBS, 19.5; "Home
I've
had
quite a lot of sex, but
Improvement," ABC, 18.9; "Seinfeld," NBC, 18.9; "Cheers," it never made me happy. Even
NBC, 18.6; "Rio Diablo" (CBS though the physical stuff was
. Sunday Night Movie), CB,S, 17.3; OK, I always felt something was
"Full House," ABC, 17.3; "Mur- missing. The girls I slept with were·
phy Brown," CBS, 17.0. ,
pleasant, but I never cared about

::ro~-:=ert~~o~~:.C CBS wins fourth consecutive

• : RACINE - The Racine Youth
League Assoc.iation will meet
Wednesday at 6:30p.m. at the
· Racine tin~n building. Any·: one interesred m helping with base: ball or softball is encouraged to '
• attend.
FOREST RUN - The Forest
• Run United Methodist Chim:h is
; having a rummage sale at the
• church on Wednesday and Thurs; day from 9 a.m . to 3 p.m. The
· church is located on County Road
30.
THURSDAY

POMEROY • Meigs County
Women's Fellowship will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ. Jill
Johnson ·will be demonstrating
· .spring crafts. Bring a friend.
: RACINE - The Racine Ameri. ;can Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 8 p.m. Supper will
begin at 7:30p.m.
MIDDLEPORT~ Th.e Meigs

Junior High Academic Boosters
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the
school cafeteria. Kathy Shibley
will be the speaker. She will discuss pareniing skills. Everyone
invired.

week pro•iects
sweeps Wln
J
, .

I

1

By LYNN ELDER
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELF,S (AP) - C~S.
fresh off a fourth consecuuve
w~y ratings period vic!Ory, said
Tuesday it expects to Wll) the
important February '·'sweeps"
competition.
, A IS.I average rating made
CBS the most-war.:hed network for
Feb. 22·28, according to figures
released Tuesday by the A.C.
Nielsen Co. ABC was second with
12.S, NBC third with 11.4 and Fox
BmaclcastingCii. fourth with 7.8.
CBS 6ad the No. 1, 3 and 4
shows for the week with "60 Minutes," the music industry's annual
Grammy awards and "Murder, She
Wrote." ABC's "Roseanne" was
second.
CBS stayed atop the ratings
throughoul the month of February,
and although the February sweeps
competition doesn't end until
Wednesday, the network said it had
victocy locked up. The network's

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

Anc•la

having a real relationship with any
of them.
A ·year ago, I moved to another
state and eJVOIIed in a great high
school. There was a 'girl in one of
my cl&amp;'l!!CS who I really lilced. We
started doing things together and
$0011 bel;ame inseparable. We would
srudy together, go somewhere to l3lk
and end up holding one another ant)
cuddling, There was never anything
between us that could be called
sexual, . but it was a terrific
reiationihip, and I was completely
happy. I guess all gOQCI things must
end, because she moved out of row
and I lost her.
The gist of my letter is this, Ann.
It's not just women who love to be
cuddled..Men enjoy it, too. And sex
is not the first thing on most guys'
minds, eitlier. In fact, in my case, it
CHRIS IN
was the last.

·"

WE DO

To place an ad

DAYBEFOREPUBLICATION
1:00 p.m. Saturday
t:&lt;Xl p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
I :00 p.m. Friday '

Call992-2156
MoN. thru FBI. 8A.M.-5P.M. - SAT.B-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POUCIES
• Ado ........ doe ......,,... ad """' .... bo pnpaid

11562, Chicago, Dl. ()0611.(1562 .-nd ·

• Reeai.N dilcou.t for ada

paW in ad ... arce.

• FneAdo: Gi--y aad Fouad ado uad.r IS won!. will be ,.
· naa3da,..at ...........
• Price of ad far aU Apilalletten ~ doB&amp;e pr:ice of ad ~01t

enclose a long, self-addressed, :
business-size envelope. You'll be :
glad you did.
·

• 7 poiotliao type o.ty .....I

• s....... io""' ...poooiltle lor ....... ~,... r.... day (cbock

Anthony Perkins, the actor best ;
known for his role as Norman Bates
in the series of "Psycho" movies, died :
Sept. 12, 1992. at the age of 60.

for....,. 11mday ad """'Ia paper~ CaD belon 2:00 P·'"·
dar alter puWicalioD to .Ue eorrectio•
• Ad. tlaal•wt be ,_id ill ad"•c• an:
Card of Thaab
Happy Ado
• lo Mo.oriaa
Yo..I Sal.
• A oluoif..d ad,--..,, ploced iD doe Gollipolio Doily
T..U.... (aapl Cluoilled llloploy, a..u.- Card or!Apl
,
Nolieoo) will aloo oppoor iD doo Poiat PleauBt RepiOr aad
doe Doily Sen....,, N&amp;cbiat .... 18,000 ho-·

The Massachusetts Bay Colony en·
acted an income tax in 1643, but the:
first U.S. income tax was not created ;
until the Civil War.

Hi! I am

Dale (Dillon)
Thompson

Clou(fied pages cover the
follouiing aelephone e:scchonge&amp;,,
GaDta County , Melp County Muon Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Cod; 614 Area Code 304
367-ChMhlre

992-Mlddleporli
fomeroy

675-1'1. PIO..ant
458-Looa

388-Vlaoon

985-Cbootor

S7~ppleG...,.e

245-RioGnaM
256-G..,...n Dloa.
643-Anl.la Dloo.
!179-Walaut

843-Portland '
247-Ut.art F.U.s

882-New Hnea ·

446-GollipoiU

j·

I.

graduate of Valley
Beauty School, · ·
Marietta, Ohio in
Managing,
Cosmetologist.
I would like to inform
everyone ~at I am now
employed at. ••

_____ ____

TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers ·

tlainJ VFW Post No. 90S3 Ladies

AuKiliary will have 1 round and
lipllle dance Friday from 8-11:30
p.m •. Heritaae llxlftSS will provide
I

.:

Words

Days
1
3

tinda's Hair Loft

10
Monthly

39280 Locust Grove Road
And tQ invite you to call for an ~;~ppointment at

Rate

Over 15 Words

....-

BCLLETI:\ BO.\RD

CARPENTER SERVIa .

-Gutt.rWork

-a.ctri..l•nd Plumbing

bo8rd'a preaident, Harald
Graham, 36001 Slide Route

i

'

992·5335 or
915·3561

a.....
,,_ '"' Offk•
217 L S.CHtl St.
POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN TO PUBLIC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOKE
ENFORCED

1128/931tfn

. 742·2360

-Aoollng
-lnt.rlor &amp; Exwrtor
P•lnti1111
(FREE ESnMATES}

V. C. YOUNG Ill

992·6215

P-oy,Ohlo .
11·1 0·92·ltn

Quality

· Stone Co.

•

.•

Californ·i a
Broccoli

Food Club
Orange.
Juice

lJ!'-

88

"'*"""
n

IlDDLE PORT- This
wiMd the r.m11y - ·

3

bed_,, hame is lull

8110 hal a la'IIO living 1110m,

111111 cull 11118 noolc.•.tlaa
- ·2;.,.
- ~
... ._,...._._pump.

Lb.

d

WASS2UOO

Limit 4 Pkgs. Per Family, Please

8

•

MW

roof.

NOWONLY$21,900

WEI.Cti10WN ROAD- Need • nlerlot or a homeall•?
paroll hal electric, older oeptic, and
opofng - · F'ubllc-........ .klll,... your trailer ln.
sa.ooo

Thla , . Oil or Water Pock

•ootll Clult
Ch•k U1ht lu•a
6.125 oz. Can

BIG BEAR COUPON

Maxwell House

Mastealtlencl
·Coffee
:U.Soz. Can

Dr.

Mega

Pe~,

Mug Root Beer,
Ora9 Sr~ee Or

..
I

LANGIVIUJ! - 'lbu'l lcM l o - ItaiM Ill rata In 1M
-'ty, In .... 2
will aqo,;p,ed ldlcltin all -'
a1111ng 1111 11 Hyou enjoy ltun1iltg Ills lathe ploce
far you. WAS 142,100.
.
PRICE REDUCED TO S3UOO

'*"'*" ......

Crinkle Cut
french Pries

7•U'
12Poek
12 oz. Cant

5 Lb. Bog

3.!1

'•
•
'

I

1
r

'

f

· Approx. 4 mil.. North of Gallipoli•

and • mila• South of ChMhirl to

THE MIDDLEPORT
LIBORY IS EXPANDING
ITS HOURS!
Mon. 12:~0 p.m.·8~00 p••ni.
TUES.-SAT. 10:00 a.11.·6:00 p.m.
Sun. 2:00 p.m.·6:00 p.m.

EVERY THURSDAY

.EAGLES

CLUB

IN POMEROY

POOR BOY TIRES
ALIGIMENT - 4 wlttt~el
Dual Exhaad With Gloss Pitch
$109.95+1Gll
CoMputer BaiMcittB • Struts, Sltocks,
. Ca•bor .-rushing
Cbel:k our Price or We Both Lose
'
~tl LOCJIIOI TO SEIVI YH llm1 1.a 1 -•

SEE NEAL FOR THE DEAL!
(304) 773·5533

6:45p.m.

Guaranteed Scholarship Money=
for all college bound students.

· Rocky R. Hupp, D.C.U. • Agent

•ox 189

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
1111d TRACKHOE WORK
AVf\IL.ABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS, .
HOME SITES and
TliAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,

FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051·32

992-3838

LIMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES
6181'11211

REDUCED! Eogl8 Ridge Rd.• 3-4 bedrooms, bath, 112
batiiiTiant, electric &amp; full oil heat, TPC waler, 2 car
tiBl1IJII on approx. 1+ acre ol ground. ASKING S18,0C)fl

IIIDOLEPORT· One ftoor frame home In need ol rapalr.
Hu 2 bedloom11 bath, g11 heat, outbuilding. ASKING
...ooo (mu• an ofler).
SR 33·. 2 olory home with 3 bedrooms, completely ·
remodeled, nice modernized kitchen. includes moot
llppllancea, CIA, decking •nd one cer garage. ASKING

.

: DEXTER· t l/2 otary h6me with 4 lllldrooma, cellar,
ll8rden .,.., i8lge Iron!' pordl, newly painted. A quiet
.

•C!8'

IIDOLEPORT· 2 story lrame home With 3 bedrooma,
bath, IIMI raom, allo 24 X 24 g.,.ge. l.acatad just outtldl

'*'llajl ort. AIIICJI4G ,17,000
'

CHARLIE'S

SMALL DOZER
WORK,
DRIVEWAY WORK
and LIMESTONE
DELIVERY SERVICE
REASONAILE RARS

~

Snodgrass Up.olstery
''H~Iping

You To Recover Your Jn.,.stnunf'
Church, Home, Truck, Boat, Auto
and Office Seating

UCINE, OHIO
614-949·2202

II' YOU 11!1! SOMETHING YOU UKE...GIVE US A
CALL, WE'LL TAKE YOU TO GET A CLOSER LOOKI

.

614·742·2996

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC. ·-

. · . New Hpmes • VInyl Siding
·
New Garages • Replacement Wfndows
Room Additions • Roofing
·
COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTlAL
FREE ESTIMATES

614-949·2101. 949·2160
or 985·3139
(loS.....rCdsl

992·7553

POMEROY, OH.

112211 mo.

RIC EXCAVATING

992-2259

..

2/15/93/ I - pd

DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED

·

VACANT GROUND- SA 884 Harrisonville 28.219
lllang 11--' ro.d. ASKlNG S11,000

ASK FOR CHRIS

IIOW OFFERING..._.
OIL AND LUll SERVICE
TIRE REPAIR. AND ROTATING

Special Early Bird
$100 Payoff
Thla lid good for 1

Appointment

ham. In the cOuntry. •1 1,000

...ty)_

mil .. Of! right.

PH. 614·915·3949

ioiils

DEPOT STREET
RUTLAND
742-3190
Call for

lt'r,OOO

plaa- (by
appt.

Addison. Twn oft St. Rt. 7 onto
Addl•on Pike. Body •hop lppi'Ol. 2

47269 St. Rt. 241 • I Y. llile OH Rt. 7. ,
Tllru CHiter o• Rt. 241
·

tr•otora and farm

219/9

205 Nortll Slcol!d Ave.
Middleport, OH

IIUTl.NtO _,...., Llntlo """" - SpN=Iauo lo~ 3l\ acreo
·In -ljl!d a cu1e gingotoboudlllntnt8d, Ill ~ home
wllh a 1tac11a ama, a
oncl...,lppad ldlcheil which
.._been IWIIGdala- FORMERLY 131,000.
NOW AVAILABLE AT ~.000
'
.

your
.......
...
"""'·

KELLER'S CUSTOM
BENDING

SALES AND SERVICE
P•rta •nd Servi.. tor al
mak• •nd modala of

MYSIJQUE
TANNING

Fres

..,.,..

·St. Rt. 7
' c•esllin, OH.

Call 6 t4·992·
6637

£010 TkuUIEIS &amp; SAWS

NOW OPEN

RUTLAND - s.tem BINit- Something for Mom, a split
level home with "" Open oaloed haiRy hi hu beautitul
08k lailingo. Hall of • Clllllednil ceiling gives this home an
dllooplieoa of roamineoa. Haa 3 bedloomt, a laoga bath,
~ti~ty room, and a kitchen loaded with cabinets:
Something lor DAD: A detached 2% car garage with
woobhop, .....,... dolvefty, and .....,........., '"" aid·
ing. Buy 1.1 ..,.. and home lor $45,000 or buY ll acrv
anclhame.
_ FOR $42,000

·c ... u•l ·
w...m

Middleport, Ollio 45760
(614) 843·5264 1!20193/tfn •

· Real Estate

64oz. On.

I

0

.

OFFICE 99N886

From Concentrate

I

N...t on
nti ...t.t!

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

YAIDMAII
MOWER
2Cwdt ... 4Cylo

3 Announcements _

169 N. 2nd, MiddlepOrt
992-27.25

•

Wek:ome, Filer Glass Wort&lt;, Con'!&gt;lel• Ropaioilg &amp;
Refinishing, Frame Straig~ltning, Custom
SandJiasting, Martin Senour Mixing Syst9m

Life • Medicare • Cance~ • Fire • Health •
Accident •Annui.ty, IRA • Mortgage

!

Fulllnsurad

inapect or make a bid
the truck contact the

Monday-Friday, s :oo-5:00

Co~eriled EstirnlleS, Ouaity WO!)&lt; , Ins. Wool&lt;

•regardless of income ·
• regardless of grades
'plus $20k guaranteed loan
• regardless of credH
To collect your scholarship money
.
call 614-985-3556

-ROom Adcllllona

. Reasonable Rat1s

Mason Senior Cenler
Mason, W. Va.-Hrs.: 10-5,
$2.00 Entry Fee. Sponsored by:
Wahame Varsity ·cheerleaders

SERVICE

YOUNG'S

Public Notice

, l,

367·7444 • 446·6644
1·800·926·l032 (OIIio O•ly)

. AMERICAN GENEULLIFE lind ··
ACCIDENT INSUUNCE COMPANY

"

I

lARRY'S BODY SHOP

:ao•• AMIH1t I'IJ,.,•G.Uipfiu, OR• .,.,.

2·1 1 mod. pd.

WITH A .
ASSIFIEDAD
Public Notice

HOWONN!

Open Man.·Frl.1().7 or Sat. 111-4

Topping, Trimming,
Removal

PROM DRESs &amp; ACCESSORY
SALE SUN., MAR. 6

KEN1 SAPPLIANCE

I

143, Pomeroy, Ohio 45761,
or one"''f the other truate.,
Randy Butcher 742·2302 or
· Bobby Arnold 1112·7V07.
(2) 24; (3) 3, 10, 3tc '

AMY WOLFE .
IS NOW AT '·
KAY'S BEAUTY SALON

lllck Up,

.'

TO YOUR POCKET

8:0()..5:00 Tuesday thru Saturday

HOPE TO SEE YOU SOONI

All MAlES
Iring 11. Ill Or We

CATHERINe DUSt
lDD" DOLLARS,

Rates 10e for eoJUeCUtive runs, broken up days will be
charged for .ell day u separate adl.
·

985-4278

RACINE GUN'
CLUB
GUN SHOOTS
SUNDAYS
1:00 P.M.

31111 mo.

F&amp;l TUE SERVICE

Boneless·
Chicken
Breast

.

lin

HOWELL'S
BOOKKEEPING
&amp; TAX SERVICE

Jeanie Howell, EA
NOTARY

THOSE THINGS

$4.00
$ .20
$6.00
$.30
$ .42
$9.00
$13.00 .
$.60
$1.30/day , $.05/day

15
15
15
15
15

.6

&gt;

Lorge 14 Size· Green Tender

•

'.

742·2328

MICROWAVE OVEN
a•d VCR REPAIR

PHONE 992·7036

--~

{ ~ U , •'

Tyson Holly Forms Fresh
Skinless · Grode A

"

v

PERSONAL
CARE FOR
THE
ELDERLY
BECAUSE
WE CARE.
992·5858
696·1290

Quarterly and
Year-end Reports
REASONABLE .
RATES

667-Cool~e

,,•

. LOTTRIDGE · The Lottridge
: Community Center ·Association
-; will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at lhe
;center. Everyone is welcome.

•

895-Lotart
937-B.tralo

949-R•cine
742-R~tland

Marketplace

: - REEDSVILLE -The Eastern
: LOcal Boatd or Education wiD hold
·a special meeting Thursday at 4
·. p.m. at the bigh school regarding
: personnel.

; · POMEROY - There will be a
ilaby shower for Linda and Jeff
Warrrr.r on Friday 11 7 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Uilired Melllodilt Church.

773-MMoa

•The Area's Number l

I.

.

'

1

)_

RUTLAND - Rutland Township
Trustees will meet Thursday at
. 6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Sta;. lion.
,. .
·• ' POMEROY • The Community
Lenten Servic~. sponsored by the
Meigs Ministerial Association, will
be at Sacrell Heart Church. Rev.
: Roland Wildman will be preaching.

.

'!'.

ROOFING

20 Years Exp.

POMEROY • "How to Best
Handle Common Diseases and
Pests Around the Home Yard" will
;be given by Hal Kneen, extension
;agent, on Th'!fsday. from _8-9:30
.p.m. at the seruor Citizens center 10
:Pomeroy. Admi$Sion iS free.

LONG BOTTOM - Faitl! Full
Gospel Church in Long Bottom
will tiave· preaching and singing
Friday at 1 p.m. with local singing
talent. Pastor Steve Reed invites
the public. Fellowship will follow.

'

. .,,,

TROMM BUILDING5

. POMEROY • The Pomeroy
·. Group of AA will meet Thursday at
;7-p.m. at the JTPA building in
-Pomeroy. Call 992-5763 for mfor·
mation.

.
FRIDAY
.
· LONG BOTTOM • There will
·be a round and square dance at the
Long Bottom Community Bulld!ng
on Friday fiDIII 8-11 p.m. featw~nl
Buzz Slotcr and ''Out or the Blue.
Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
The cost is $S, for couples or $3
:Single. Refreshments will be
:served.

.,

~i

AND EVER:nHING UNDERNEAtH

. RACINE - Services at the Fel·
• lowship Church in Racine will be
: held Thursday through Saturday at
: 1 p.m. nigh~y. There will be spe' cial singing nighdy. Don Bush will
be the evangelist. Pastor Charles
Bush invites the public.

TIJPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW 'Post No. 9053
Ladies Auxiliary will meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the post home.

'

&lt;

:

-{

I

CONNECJ1CUT
DEAR CHRIS: You sound like a
sensitive, docent, highly principled
young man, and I lppRCilrc your
leaer, but you ll'C quite cliffemu
from a gn:at many 17-yca"-old pys ·
who write to me. Tbcy ll'C 1101 ·
content to stDp at ruc!clli!J8. They
want more. I might add that many .
17-year-old girls are more ;
aggressive than boys.
::
Today, more than ever, teen-agers
need to be informed about the
consequences of their sexual
llehavior. My booldet, "Sa and the :
Teen-ager," will answer your
questions. The price; which includes :
~c. is $3.65 (in Canada, $4.45).
Send a check or money order to .
Teens, c/o Ann Landen, P.O. Box '

~

'

•

.. .

-

BULLDOZING

BISSEll &amp; lURlE
COISTIUCnON
aJiewHo••

...•.,...•.•.,. •

PONDS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS

LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp; SEWER
UNES
. BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES

eCo~te

HAUUNG: L""-'one,
Dirt, Gr.V• ilild Coal

Stoll &amp; C011111•n
. FBI IITIIIA1'11

LICI!NIIED ondliONCIED

915-4473

Pll. 614-992-5591

FIREWOOD .
FOR SALE .
All 'HARDWOOD
Seasoned
$40.00 I lMd:

Delivered. :
(614)-992·5449

12-6-tln

667·6179

12/31112/lfn

•

CALIFORNIA

TRIMa&amp;MI
REMOVAL

v................

oUGHT HAULING

.....

· BILL SlACK

• TANS

u ...... •u

PloaPUI •uteof

ofiREWOOD

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

IUIITIUICE··
t4t•Utler
l-aONI7•1460

~

t...nll ....
Wttll:41111t

,, I..... , a ....
FrM'

9'

FIEWOOO FOft 1M.E

�0--The

Sentinel
SNAFU® by

March

Ohio
Bru~t

Beattie

32 . Mobile Homn

Aplrtment

3 Announcements

March 3. 1993

7i Autos for Sale

tor Rent

fOr Sale

1993

Ohio

ALLEYOOP

The World Almanac ~ Crossword Puzzle

BRIDGE

AEDUCI: loom oltlll- rou

!'_loop, IOU CPAL ~ clu!OIIo.. ...-

ACROSS

I E·
fnllh

PHILLIP
ALDER

NORTH

1-J.ts

.A93
. AK9S4
t K9 86

+s

EEKANDMEEK
' 11-\IS HA&lt;:_, BE£.1\J C1J; ~ .
"THE

~J(](IE'ST"

MDNTI-\S

il-it.Y IAJM.rt£D 10

HIT M GFnW
la.JWI"-lG ...

FIRST 11A()

OF Am

~EVJ

EAST
.KJ86

10 s 2
6

.Qi07 3 -

• s%

4

+K8 .7632

ADIAIIJ IS!R,moo 1JJ WJNJJ:f~......_,_ .___, .----,......

+Q J 10

SOUTH

+14

•a %

tAQJ t073
+A94

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
Soulb

We1t

Pass
Pass
Pass

'' BARNEY
HE'S GOT ME

BY TH'

ANKLE BONE II

I.4.

North

2+

Pass

1 Fool lever
6 Type of tea
11 Begin .
12 Wdl.)
12 Famod quarterbock
Johnnr14 1111. officer
15 Director
Premlnger
17 Spinning·
wltool bobbin
18 Timetable
tlbbr.
·20 In conflict
12 Wdl.)
23 Aa written
(nius.)
24 Sulk
26 Weird
28 Hello!
29 Foxier
31 Dlagraco
33 Port In
Okinawa
35 Time - hall

AnoWifiOP _ _ _

36 - toenoll
39 Grend- National Park
42 - li[lonl IUIO

race
43 Tropical flllh

45- ranch

46 Dlaplay

dovtco on
wrtotwotch

.4 8 ChUfCh

officio I
50 Actroaa
Farrow
51 - - of
brick a
53 Look
•
55 Alternative
word

56 Mlldoot
59 Aclcl-leatlng
paper
61 Gorbod
62 Breaks
suddenly

Scouta
2 - Paao
3 Unclaimed
mall depl
4 Llat-cuttlng
ant
5 Soprano
Lohmann

DOWN
1 Group of Boy

East

Pass
Pass ·
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: + 2

YO'RE TOO LATE I!
HE'S ALREADY

BURIED
fTI!

A tie to the past
is cut"
Yard Sale

7

...

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yord Soloo 1111111 lo Pold In

-on ·

Advance. DEAOUNE: 2:QO p.no.
tho day bo..,. thlo ad Ia ID run.
~

'' T~E FLOW OF
WIND OVER. THE TOP
a·F THE KITE MOVES
FASTER THAN TJ.lE
AIR 6E~IND THE KITE'S
LEADING EDGE mATING
A VACVVM W~ I CH
CAVSE5 LIFT .."

2:00 P,M.

.._.... llondar -Jon - 2:00
p.m. Soturday.

8

Public Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

Rick Puroon Auction Company,

full time •ucllanMr, .;:ampMI•
auction

eervJce.

Uc :

I

16e,Ohlo &amp; WHI VIrginia. 3041'73-57111.

•r.=: ~·ea.....
Call

- --·

o,_
ond luPPir
O~AI . . . . . . . .
w.bb.CIIIIM 441

1111 ...... Camonaho;. ....
01lleo, t7,500. ~
'
Dadp
L.E., ~
·~

oa1.

- · · Complolo
oft=, t

FRANK AND ERNEST

,•
'

Financial

J. D"l

21 .

AutO PI"" and·- -

... o ·buylng Junk..,. &amp;tnoeu.
304-773-5343.
.

Wanted oiiJidlng
......

Mcerieed

paid,

11-,

Business
OpponunHy

1111

1Dp

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

toaalng COmpany, ...

-

..-. o...u a,eoo,

With Or Wlthotil ....... call
LlrT)' UYOiy. IIWIH303.

S....,_aon . ftHdld. ~
Top I'Tiooa Paid: All Old U.S. ~~oy Ohloto P4-~. Box 172,
CoiM, Gold Rlnp Sllvw Colno, ~-~--;;;;;:';'
Gold Colnl. II.T.S. Coin Shop,
THE PAMPERED CHEF
1St Sac:ond A...,.., Galllpollo.
EARN OAUTIU
Wanted to buy: UMd mobile Do You IDVE Ta Coal&lt;? An Eo-

=="='-·=:=--

l-.ot75

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

chlng Conc:opt In Home
Party Plen
lncllwlt
... -~~~
In v... .._To

au... to ttom.

emplofmllllt, It

youwNtamoilellacdlram tho -

.., ,..., -

-,ruah$1andSASEiarif&gt;.
to: C&amp;C Compallf,

,.,_Jon

P.O. lol 111, ! l y r - Ohla

41771.

W

o141-t401Aftar7 P.ll.

Real Estate

GIIIIIICKS.

Fumlehed, 2 or 3bdrm., for rwnt
In CoUntty l!lobilo Pari!. Waahor/
dtyor, olr, •2311 mon., 811-192·

Coli RITA Aft• 4:00

114-~(COLLECT)

W.nlld:

2187,.14-31U227.
~

All realesta~wtnlalng In
lhls -.~JifiUbject to
tho F-al F8t. Hauolog Am
of 1lle8 whl&lt;l1 mokea It llegal
to advtttise •any preferenat,

Ga~

CleMrol
~11,
Ripley, WV cunontly hoi paai.
dOn anllab+e for -onctor of
Phplcal Therapy. Compollll"
oolary &amp; bonell ..... E• II •

W.Va. lieenM. SMCI MUm~~ to
P.O. Box 720, Ripley, WV 2S27t
ar conlact ~ otflce 304372·27:11 111 312. EOE.

Bmltation or dilcrimlnadon

18

baaed on raoe, cob'. religion,
MlC lamilialatatua or national
origin, or 81fiJ Intention to

Wanted to bo

make any such ptelerence,

Will

Bobyolt In lly llama. Fonood
In Play
· Expatlonald.
A.....
Cll -AvaUeb41.
Rodney

- · Colll14-2411-1117.

Imitation or dlacrlnlriatlon .~
Thia newspaper 'Nil not

.

k.-inglyaccept
adwtrtlaarnenll for real estate
wl1idlioln Ylolation ol tho
law. O.t ...- .... hereby
lnlonned that all dwellings
advel;lld In lhlo newl!l-

Elcotllnt Pay! .b- Aft. .tlano, -ng. llandlng,
oolnble Praducto At HomO. Coli 114--3.
ToU FrH, 1~17-&amp;see. Exl.
Bern removal: nMd an Old bern
313.
bnlughl_, &amp; aut a1 tho wov?
FEDERAL LAW ENI'OACEIIENT. Will lor ........ lf4..
Eatoy Wotl!l

llollf ,_tar. Anlilblo. Na Z!lt 1014.
Eopaflonc:o NocMoary. Far Apo
-ian lnl..,....lon Call 2111- oa..r and llabcol

wartc.

are avaiable on an equal

by thlo

~1 Ell. 011155. I A.ll. To I hour, rata. 11W4Mt23
or 114-143-1211..
P.ll. 7 Oop.
.- .
-

TilE FAR SIDE

. _..._,.

By GARY LARSON

opponunlty bolo.

Hom•,

No

I IR llflll~nwnt In Point
PINMnt. OUiol.._ ptiYIII, goad
nolghbathaad. 0&lt;50 par mordh.
l t l . - - 5 .. 304-175-1550.

'

m-;

.t: VII_.
APII. 148 or
colll14412-3711. EOH.

-

Aputllllftt For Rant: t BOICIQOVE~ -ES F- $1 _,, Flfll F-, In Go1ilpolla,
{U ........,. DoollnQ- Tu Call 114-448-1423.
I'Taparlf. ll_.atano. Your BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
Ill 101 111- Ell. QH. BUDGET PRICES AT ~ACKSON
10111 FOrCUmnl Aopo UoL
ESTATES, 131 Jackoon Plko
fl. - . trl-

11

::..
~~~·t:Jt ; D&amp;~A~.
glllllnd paal, ocldft- 2 bod-

oc-.
-

.,...._, 1414
-ttOII,OOO. CaN 11+441•

=~'l:':~.:.:h£&amp;.~

Furrtlehed 1 bdrrn .• 1 bath .on
tho rlv11, all utllltloo tuiiiiilhOd,
t35Giman .. $100 "-"· 114-

11141121.
Fumlohod s Raamo I Bath,
Larp Comotnpary on V... Cloon, Wltot Pold, In l'or'
17.1 Acne MIL .Wlllt lime And t• lra. 114 IM IDOD.
........,,no
- · Avoftolllo.
a Fu...Apt:p11c1.
1 lA,
llh
,.._
11/L Aloa
,...
mo. UtMHIH
111 120
111 IM
·
1111"":""'~Coli...;,:: aft• 7
."-""· tM 114 1177, ~·.........
0104.

t,':

1211.

32 Mobile HomiS
for Sale

. ::.:.7.'=:--=--::--~-:-....,....,.-

I H&amp;t.RD"Tl-1.4.T'IOU ~ Rll&amp;

'IOU1D &amp;ETTER 00 LE:SS
RUeBIN&amp; AND f31\TTIN&amp;

'rOLJR 5IOIAACH AND ~T'IO.JR
HEAD SIMULTANI:OUSLY.

:

AAI' /oN.::lRE ~1-16:. .

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

Ser vtccs

HERCULEAN c "' her-kyoo-LEEun ") means ".huge" or "or great diffi ·
culty," as in "herculean tasks ." If
spelling isn 't your strong suit, re·
member to start the alljective HER·
CULEAN like
the
related
HERCULES.
' Q. I ·can never remember how to
spell ACCUMULATE. Is it one M or
two?
A. To be accurate, your spelling of
the verb ACCUMULATE should contain only. one M. (Like ACCURATE,
the word ACCUMULATE doubles only
the C.) Of course, English spelling
often confuses; for instance, ACCOMMODATE doubles both thee and the
M, and I'm sure there are many other
examples of spelling problems that
you could accumulate.

e.chiltW 1r11he

.,_._.for llnOihw. Todey'a

dw; T «1UM F.

KRMIUC

Q R 8 Q

"IIGUPFBOU
GRU

• KOKGUA

GRU

. lBO

·, M P 0 U C

TMNSCVSF

G AU

TBGRUPK

RMYUC

ZNCFU

ZNKG

ZMRS

VG

I M N H C .• '

KVPVEI.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "'The teacher has to agitate. You cannot teach
acting. You can only stimulate what's there."' - Stella Adlet.

WOlD
tAM I

I ,; i tj~ I
I j. I I
R

VAGER

. voucanbasureofinlhis
and that's death and taxes."
_ . . _ _ '? Sacond old timer: "But a sure
' thing about death is, it doesn "t
r~---------.1 get worse. every lime -------1-TS~C;,r:..I,.:-X:....;r,E_..:E,_-1 changas!"

l6

s.

18

,

I
: I
.I
.
.
•
_
.
1
'
'-U..--''---'---'-_._.,....
_

•

U

Lomplete the chuckle quoted

by filling in tfle missing words
you develop f.rom step No. 3 befow.

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER
•

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
o -•
Keeper - Humus - Lanky - Depose - MAKE UP
A friend of mina comes from a small town. "There is
little to see or do, around town," he says, "but what
you'hear will MAKE UP for it."

Improvements
IIA!iiiENT
WATERPROOfiNG
,
UncandiUanol 11o11. . guaron-

IM. local , ...... I I

tumilhMI. ·

Coli l.aoG-m-G171 Or 114-23J.
0481
A..,.
9
nent ,
WolarptGafinil. '
Curtle Home llnpraw.,.nla: ~
y..,. Eoparlonco on Oldor • '

---Alklit-'
Klt- c••, £::•.
"-ianAnd Wort~,
- · .,
lolho.lllut.-1 RlllwM
No Jolt ·

Hay&amp;Graln·

TaallgOr-11--. ;
Davia lo!!Jni Mlchlno AndJ
Vocuum Cleonor Repair, ,,.. .
Plai!-U~ Dollvw!. Cllatgoo

=--==
_
=.u.=..--.
tz. • ltlo.

Hn. :IOU7f.altl0.

Creek
Ran'o

af ..,,

6-------·
·_
------~--7._ _ _ __ _ _ _ __

TV_..,..,......,.,
-=:lillna
,114

-..oH4. ·,

. ASTRO·GRAPH

••m

In Z.nllh moil
albllrbrondo.·304-171-H110tllo .......1454.

er can help you undersland what to do maneuvered into an undesirable posi-

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

Jockoan,DH1-.-.

Ti rH1Sj)t!lld!ICll1

10~------~---------

11.·---~---~·--~---

71 Autos fOr Salt

=. . =

12------------------13 •.___

=-~~ 'L~..!.~

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

tiiO.·

14----------------~-

,;;a

!!tUlly Biela IDI: :10·-·r
-.... Raaf,
811if
lltlao, 15'11'11111
- -· :1'.
-Man lldgo.
, _·
___ifoll
. 11,444

=.: ·-

W
l l - rooma,
polio - ~
.,....

•~

illlrtl~.

I

15~~--------~--~GaUipolle Daily Tribune
446-2342
Pomeroy DaUy Sentinel

'

992-2156

'I

Pt. Pleaeant. Regleter

675-1333
"

. ~ ··
I

'

changing. T,Ying to patch up a broken time.
tomance? The Allro-Graph Matchmak- VIRGO ("UG· 23-Sopt. 22) You might be

. . . . loiiO I lepllcTankPUIIIIIInaiiOLOIIIIo
11or A110, ,_ - . 114- Ca. RON EVANS ENTERPRI!IEB,

8. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
9. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,__.;...

•

OUR LANGUAGE

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.brity Cipher cr\1)togr11m1 ... CfMt«&lt; from quolauont b'f IMIOua ~. put Mel ~ .

Home

1-------------------

5._....__ _ _ _ _...-,--_ __

301. , _ pfMao IIIVI

.......... lloor ......

LIVIStock

Tum your clutter into ctuh·,
SeU it the easy way... by nhone,
no need to le~ve your home.
Place your dassified ad todqy!
15 UJOrch or less, 3 day, ,
3 pqpers, $5.40 paid in advance.

In town. ACiona •••ll•bto

room IKIII'- cloa to echoOI

-~~- ,

"'Ott, 1he box ot dud ftlea? ...,_ ge~ 1hem to me
Saturday night during hie cout'tllhlp dlepl8y....
Of courae, IIIey W..liiiWdy JUCI&lt;Id drv."'

63

-~·It•-• ·•lrw,
~j .HOlM
....
retrtaentor,
2bdrm. apta., lat•l etectric, apo
Nll"rBonk, Raclno. OH. e - . pllancoa lumlohld. laundry

hook~p, ret.r.nce 1. .ap;a.ll,
no polo. 304..7Wta.

-.

:.:::."!t,-&lt;1~,~=·o:::::

tonko. .,. tan truc1t

.

2. _ _ _ _ _ _...;.__ _ __
3. __________________
4. _ _ _ _..;___....;..;..._ _ __

2210.

~

$25Diman., 304-882--2411.

31....,115_·..,.E._o_.H_._ · - - - = 11111 Sq. R., .11 ..,. 1o1. 211 ,.
waite. 2 · ~• Hthl, dlnl!!tiJ 2 bedroOm, very clun, WID
NOm,llvlllg' n:aom, 3bdrm., ~
In _ . , lully aorpolad, 2 pot-

304-llHMI

-wttl1 .............
~~-~,.1'131, laldod I

c"an conciiUon. one chhd, no
pete, 1bove fMw Heven,

Apanment
for Rent

RlRmJTIIIN~

1114 Winnoblll!'1, :10 ft ..Chloltoln '

Two bedroom, fUmlehed good

2 bedroom Town Hou• apt1,
Iolii et.c, cloH to eehool,
lhoi&gt;JIIngl opplloncoo fumllhad 1
ata~lng o21o. Apply LlllfaJana
Apta, No. C-1 ar call 304-882-

31 Homes for Sale

79

Raclnl ...... ~~~5858 .

44

.........ANIIDILUIWAMN.

....,..r:IHa lana bod

3D44"ff..11M.

TWo bedroom mobllt hom. In

IY.t«&gt;T ~ ['~fiVlX

By Jeffrey McQuain

rooondltlanod lor 310 V-1
•til In box, $150.

4345.

I

·AFTEIUU.! • ...---::::...

Chevr. new

Pet1,

Why PlY r.m when you CIIR
own a 1883 14i70 Redman With
I yur warranty, ....,., tklrtlng,
dollworocl ond Mlur. lot tlt15mo.
Call lor lniDrinat on, 114-385.
111121 Ilk fof Bronda.

IWJ NOW FOR-.. WORt&gt;
~OOR~...

AAuiD...a:{pioy, WV. 304372-3133 or 1
~1.
f
Quodfllol 4 bomlt laelary

Rofaranco Roqulrocl. 114'717-

''

• - Tronomleolona, Uoad a
IHulH, all 'YPH, 111~1"\111 Ill;
·Panio""'
114-24WI77.
14-:171-,
Z!I:I,
114:tft-etoo.

-

'

304-1711;

.....

327 Chevy onglno, ol NW, SUO.
:IOW7I-2N2.
'

~~·

CA~HPH

....

,.. BORNLOSER

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

~Ina

lot ront. Rat. a
toq'od. Na polo. 811-146-

Mobile

Jackoan

dldete ""' ~ . eu lsch r'rr of
Sc..,_ In Pltyolool ~PJ.

co Livestock

N. . 2 a.draorna &amp; 1 Bedroom

SmaH carpon~ry,
5 l.odloo Wha Would Uko Ta Clearing Dutleo And v..
Mllntano-. Sand Roply Ta:
S.Uwan Cllll14 Ul3351.
CLA 2t2. C/o Gallipollo Dolir

tnctudlng:

wotldng houro. Cluiilflod can-

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

F.Hill Supp!1P·,

lloblleo -

RMp ~nalble

"AVON" ALL AREASI Shiro your Mllntananeo Pwoan Ta Holp
Rontal I'Toporty, Jabe
timo wlh uo. Yau'l thlo ... _

Trl-....1,21 Third Avanua,
DIRECTOR
OF
PHYSICAL llpollo. "" 411e31.
THERAPY

In Eurob, All Electric.

umlng Fl.......,., Corpatad, Now I Dtvor,
Cenlr'lll Air, A••nc.. R•
aulrod. $22Wa. Phano: lt4-

Dotorml• Your Own Hro, NO

OH45133.

2 ladraamo, llodam llabllo
~'::!,

.... a . I M y T-,
Na Dollvortoe, No Oua111,

"Miko · llg Bucko" Wartc At
~ Aulh S.A.S.E. 110 Ta
D&amp;A oupplleo, Bax II, HI-.,,

compallf. t-eoo-t1U311.

700 cc, 2,100 Ml,
•

15 112 Fl. ttml 8tororaft Boil
WHh till Ill""'"· Rune ~

811-3011 - - - ''31 .
W.ntad To Buy: Junk Auloe

-

Han~a .

tz.ooo. o.B.o. :IOW75-HtO.
75 Boats &amp; Motors
· tor Sale

As time passes: we lose touch with
the past. Take the beginning of con·
tract bridge. There were many e1·
perts who helped to mold the game,
but almost ~II of them are gone. One oi
the last, S. Garton Churchill, died laSt
December at the age of 92.
Known to his friends as Church,
learned auction bridge in 1916, before
progresSing to contract in 1928. He
was an innovative thinker, proposing
bidding methods that were ridiculed at
the time but within 20 years were generally adopted.
Church was proud of today'S deal,
which he played in 1960 in partnership
with Cecil Head. They won the- 1948
Life Master Pairs national title with a
record .average of 65$ percent over
·
the lour sessions.
Because of his excellent diamond
fit, Head, sitting North, reversed on
the second round. Three clubs was
fourth suit forcing, marking ·time.
Four diamonds was their "picture
bid,' promising lour-card support,
usually with two honors. Knowing his
partner had at most one club, Church
stood on ceremony no more, reaching
the ezcellent grand slam with Ol)ly 25
combined high-card points.
The play was a simple matter of
technique. Church won the spade lead
with dummy's ace, cashed the A-K of
hearts and ruffed a heart high in hand.
He c~bed the club ace, ruffed a low
club in the dummy alii\ trumped another
high. A club ruff was followed ' a diamond to the ace and a
1diiamrond to the king. Finally, dummy's
heart nine was cashed, upon
I w~•ich declarer threw his spade loser.

•

Contact• that you've utllblllhld with
people who reside at 1 dlllance !rom
you COUld prove to be of • - Ylllue
both - l y and ~oily In the

,..,.

__

PIICIS (M. 20 'lam 20)11 .WIU be
lrnpoulble lor you to be .. things to 111
peQple today. You know that a leopard
d.,.,"t cltartfle Ill IIPOII. 10 don't be
eurprtUd aomeone you've.,_. able to Pleue llhowa no lllgn of

'•.

to make the rllatlonohlp work. Mall $2
plus a lang. oell-addreoeed. atamped
envelope to Mllchm-. P.O. Box
91428, CieYelond, OH 44101-3428.
ARIEl (lhrcll 11•Aprll 111 Even aner
you ach._ your obJectlveotodoy, hang
on With 1 firm grtp. II not, there's 1 poaalblllty you could ,...., wliat- you've
· galnldthus tar.
TAURUS (April 211-1br 201 II could
prove emban&amp;lllng lor you today If you
pretend to be knowtedgeoble about o
topic you know nothing about. The
depth and 11tert1 of wltal you do know
will be determined by others.
Glllllt (.., 11.,_ 201 Don't be
heoltant about renegotiating orrange..
menta todoy you feel that you .,..
not being trtlllled fairly . Dlacrepenolel
CM be modified more to your liking.
CAIICIII (....,. """" 221 Your male
might not be u lkllllul u you are today
when dMIIng with unell!*led dellelopmenta. 11 you bel- your way 11 rtght.
p r - jual u you ho.,. envisioned.
LIO (oiUIJ II Alii· ; lt'l belt
to
attempt to do dllllcult ·
manntt today. To be
and allectlve,

tlon today where you have to choose
bet_, backing up a new acquaintance or supporting an old pal. Choose
the latter .
'
LIBRA (llept. 23-0ct. 131 Major
actlleyements are ~ble today. but
they might require a aecond ollort. If
YO\! lollllhort the llrst lime, regroup your
forces and attact. with gl"ll&amp;ter vigor.
SCORPIO (Oct. 14-Hov. 221 If you are
open-minded todoy. there's a chance '
you might learn something olllgniHcant
value lrom a source that you don't nee_,.Y ....peel.
;
IAGtnAIIIUS (No¥. a-o.c. 21) You
could beln lor a . , _ , ourprtoe today
a IIIU8tlon lhot IPPNred to be
working ogelnst you ouddenly does an
lbout-leoii Mel llartl'worklng lor you.
CAJIIIICCINII .(O.C. ......._ 111 Before
maldng a decillion today that you are
dubloua - 1 . ad- from peapie whole Judgment you trual. They
might have the AniMrl you need.
AQUUIUS (olen. »Peet. 111 ·Succeu
II ponlble today by concentrating iln
factors you can ~trol, ratltar than
working In areu wltn you have no Innuance. Openolelrom_your otrengtlta .

\

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'·

Wectnelday, March 3, 1993 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pegl 12....:..-n. Dally SenUnel

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PRODUOS

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Pick. 3:
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Pick 4:

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Kicker:

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2 LITER BGnLE

area surrounding the compound 'oltha
O~lclan sect in Its .-andolf wlth;lhe Bureau of
CUIt· , · Th8
AlcOhol, Tobacco and Firearms and the FBI:
ff ·
t do
san
'·

89(
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$

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Chuck ·ste ·-·---..lB. .1
BEEF BUCKET
$ 89
Cubed Steak..............La. 2
HAMILTON'S BONELESS
$ 9

99(

PEANUT BUTTER.

SJ69
STOKELY

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Tomaloes_..................lB. 49c
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PARKAY- QU~RTERS
FLAVO_
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Saltines..................La. aox
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Miracle Whip___...32 oz.

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MARQUEZ

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1 1 Good Only At Powell'• Super Value •• Good Only At Poftll'e Super V•lu•
1ll1 Olfer Good Feb. 28thru M•r. 8, 1993 . •• Otflr Good Fib•.28thru ;Mir. 8, 1993

11 __ _;!:!,~.!.~-t.!~!!!.'.!...--_.JIII
Umlt1 PerCullorner
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Iii

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Inc.,.._......,

Voinovich's education

reforDJ. package criticized
down the measure by a 2·1 majority.
.
Meanwhile, members of the
House Finance Commiuee said
ihey wanted more details on lhe
education plan that Voinovich
claims. can give Ohio the best
$Cbools in the country.
Ted Sanders, stale superintendent of public instruction, f!Cided
questions about the reforms for
several boun WcOlesday. He said
he realizes the chan&amp;es are ~~weep­
ing and will require "a diffteult
1l'811Si.tion.''
Along with programs to help
poor )'OUII8Siers, improve curricula,
expand testing and strengthen
teacher evaluations, the plan .
describes in genml terms a "performance-based" system with
Ieamer ourcomes and goals.
"There's noihing on this list

ihal says anyihin~ about reading
and writing," sa1d Rep. Robe~t
Netzley, R-Laura.
. Sanders said NeiZiey was read-·
mg a dnft and not 8Cillal SlandiKds
that will be adopted laler.
Rep. Wayne 1ones, D-Cuyaboga
Falls, said performance-based systems have been tried and abando~M:d in Olbet stales. "They don't
work, bec•n.,. students hive different circumstances and levels of
ability... he said. .
In the Senate, tile tailpipe telling
bill was IIJIPI'OVed 31-2. It would
initially affect owners of 4.5 mil-lion vehicles in the Cleveland'
Ali:ron, Cincinnati, Toledo and
Dayton metropoHmn·areas.
Sen. Gary Suhadolnik, R-Parma
Heights, said failure to expand ihe;
program beyond Cuyahop County· .
·
.Conllnued. on paJII! 3

I'

1
$ 39
Sausage Patties_.___ 2

OLE SOUTHERN-3 LB. BO!

Gov~

~ . Muidmedla

Agents
settle in for
long siege

180Z.

9

Tavern Hams.......-......ta.

2 Soctlona, 12 Pogeo 25 cenll

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 4, 1993 ·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A. miller Alan Spitzet.
. "We do not say this is a quiet
proposal to allow casino gambling
ftx
for Ohlo. or the city of Lonin,''
m the' port of Lorain and on lhe
but
it would help the local econoOhio River luis received its sccond
hearing, wilh proponents saying my, !laid Giardini, lestifying before
that casinos won't bring more lhe Home Swe Government Committee.
crime to northeast Ohio.
" I wouldn 'I be a part of anyGov. George Vouiovich's education reform package also got a · ihing bad for the stale or this city."
hearing Wednesday as lawmakers be said.
Giardini was one of three peocriticized some of its provisions
and recommende(l additions;
ple, all from Lorain, who leslified
The Senile passed. a bill to for a billlegalizinL::'bling on
ships lhal would be
in Lorain
~uire pollutiop leSIS of cars and
IJiht-duly trucks in 16 counties.
and on riverboats on the Ohio
And Senate Reeublicans out- River. No opponents lestifled durlined a biD lhey will introduce to ing the bill's second hearing.
limit contributions 10 state poHiical
Committee Chairman William
C8Ripaigns.
.
Healy, D-Canton, refenl:d ihe bill
10 a subcomlllittee for more study.
Lorain needs lhe boost far its
economy that casinos would proThe Legislature defealell gwnbling
bills in 1987 and 1989. The
vidt, said Anthony Giardini, an
8llllme
ho
.
.
following year, Ohlc! votm turne4
•
y w repre!iCDIS.casmo pro-

SNACK CAKES

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

30s.

542076

298 SECON~ ST.

POMEROY, OH•.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
PRICES .GOOD SUN., FEB. 29 THRU MAR. 6, 1993

Low IIIIIJabt around 30.

Reht. Friday, snow. Hiak Ia mid

Llmh 1 PerCu1tomer

·-~·--~.

'

SUNLIGHT
LIQUID
DETERGENT
220Z.

89(

p101Phet i-A·•:; armed cult

- :--Local briefs-___,
Roads, schools ~losed due to flood

Approximately two inches or rain fell on Meigs County
ove_mif::c~using flooding in areas and prompting the closing of
Metgs
$cbools.
. .· · •
·
Area aulhOrities repcJriCd lhe following stale routes were closed:
143 ncar Stale Roule 7, 681 ncar Snowville and Sumnei and 124
ncarR~
·
In addition, U.S. 33 at Burlingham and Besrwallow Ridge Road
in Bedford Township 8IC experiencing high waler conditions.
The fOllowing county roads were closecl: Leading Creek Road,
Jacb Road near Langsville,, Cotlerill ROild near Harrisonville, •.
Bradbury Road and Laurel Cliff Road . •
Water was reported being up 10 one f!JOt in deplh in downtown
Rolland.
. Sllldenlll aucnding Meigs Local Schools had.,..., day off for the
third dme in IWo weeks.
·
.,:-

Breaking and entering probed
Depulies·of the Meigs County Sheriff's Department are investi. · gating the burglary of the Many Dugan residence on Swe Roule

124, Rutland
&lt;
.
According 10 a repl)l't from .Sheriff Iwnes M. Soulsby, lhe inci.
CoatiDued on page 3
'

two ponable office buildings, ·
apparently setlling in for what
cou!ll be a long siege. .
Negotiations by lelephone went
on _sporadically into ·the night
betwealqents and those inside lhe
fortified compound overseen by
David Xoresh .
The 33-year-old leader of the
Branc!J D!lvidi811S got the FBI to
put a rambling religious message
on the radio Tuesday, but ·he
reneJII!d on a promise 10 Siun:nder,
saying he'd received a message
from·God to await instructions.
Tfi!Cks pulled in tWO ponable
bUildings Wednesday for uSe as a
commllnd post oulllide the 77--acre
compound, where more ihan 100
people have been holed up since a
gun baUie Sunday that killed four,
federal agents. A federal source
speaking' on condition of anonymity said at least 10 tultistS had been
killed. ' .
.
"The Joal is 10 resolve ihis situation ulumately in federal c&lt;!urt
with no furiher bloodshed," FBI
agent Jeffrey Jamar said.
The Houston Chronicle, citing
Coatlnued oa paae 3 ·

FBI says Se~bian g~oup . focus of Trade Center probe·
•

•

. NEW YORK (AP) -Investigators in the World Trade Center
bombing are said to be focusin~ on ·
the first claim of responsibility
received: a call from a Serbian
group that knew ihe si1e of the blast
before the public did.
·
"That's ihe most IU&lt;:ely direc- tion and ihat' s the first r•ace
theY're looking," said an FB offi·. · clal speaking on condition of
· anonymity.
The caller, who said he was a
member of a previously unknown
p called lhe Serbian Uberation
rr::u, was the fust of dozens 10
claim responsibility for ihe blast
thlt rocked ihe twin towers and
tilled atlcast fiVe people. '
. The caller was credible because
he "seemed to have information
that hadn't been OUI there"
• including the a•rage level wh.ere the
bolllb went oft' Friday, the FBI orne~ 1114 Wednesday.
. l!lut 81 • news conference

GROUND

BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE
I

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GROUND

.

people were involved.
Fox said finding the culprits will
probably take a long time.
"Bombing investigations in the
past, where we didn' i have a real
breakthrough, have taken years,"
he said. .
The threat of a cave-in brought
excavation at the trade cenler to a
halt Wednesday. Workers bope to

•be bact removing lhe rubble Friday :

nighL
"There's so much rubble
benealh your feetlhat you don't
trust when: you're wau:hing," said
Anthony ShOlTis, deputy executive
director of the Po1t Auihority, the ~
trade center's owner. "I don't even ·
. think the .dogs would go down
lhere 10 snilJ around for bodies.••
t

Jobless claims up
second week·in row

WASHI~GTON (AP) - The fell to 334,250, the loWCII since the·
number of Americans filing first- avenge reached 327.2SO during iho
time clailllll fq; unemployment ben• wcdc ended Sept. 30, 1989.
:
efits jumped by 26.000 in the week
Many analysta prefer to track
ended feb, 20, the lqest increase tho four-week average because it
in seven weeks, the aovemment smooths out the volatility of ~: .
. weekly numbers and more accU:#: •
reported IOday.
.
The advance was the second ~ly rdlccts the labor Jllllbt s~~q.:::
..... .
W~y.J1111esFox,headoflhe
stniaht weeldy increase, following auon.
·-~~
.
•~• .
~
biaent
IIIChod•
The
PBI'1 New Yort olllce, said of the three weeks of declines, and was
CIO: "There was no unique infor- . greater than many private uled to report ~bruary' 1 unem~::
ploymenllate Priday.
•:.•
lllllioB in iL Tho &lt;Wy lbina the ~ray economists hid anllcipaled.
The Labor Department llid neW
In addition to the se&amp;ullr -*11· ·
IIIII W11. 'This is aoaccidenL""
No calls warning of lhe blast applications for joblou benefits benefit claima, the Labor ~ : :
were received, investigators have totaled 351,000, up from 32.5,000 a ment reported lhat 21,204 othel-: ·
week earlier. Twenty-five lilieS jobless people 01ed applicldOIII fof. ••
said
R.dovan Karadzli:, !he lesder of ·and terril0rie1 reported inc~e~~e~; =loymoat insutance under ~ : •
Bosllian Serbs and a deloRate to 28 POIIOll declinol.
~
durina-: '
'l'be four·woek movina •veraae the Weell:
. • Tlw - •
U.N. talks in New Yort lillled at
bringing peace to the former of new claims dipped lliglldy ~­ d!lwn slilhtly from 22,405 filed • : •
:
Yuaoslnia, has denied that his ing the latest ~~~~ periOCI, It week oarllor, it said.
•

·cHUCK

10 lB; PACKAGE

SJ590 .

- VISTA HOTEL DAMAGE • tbls plloto·
grapb supplied Associated Press by the New
York City Bomb Squad abows damace to the
restaurant olthe Vista Hotel caused by last Frl·

BLOODMOBILI CONDUC litO • 11M ltll·
de•
of Mtlel Hill! llcHDI Hlted tile
AIUI'Ieu w
11a tntbU. .. w......
da)'. •rl ~~~ wltll ......at..... _.. ....
ben ot tbe ..... A•JNets l'fop•
B.O.E. Clau, ~~ep_!lllale Price,
right, Is

-•II

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c..-

••ted _.tile

.,

letured 111ert wltll Nant J•et Nailer, -ted
r.eft,
u 111t bell• tilt blooiJ doaatloll process.

LookiDI • llllal7 Wl!l!ew, aunlq amm'llt
lltudent tlild ltllcltnt - u -ber. A total of ·.
II atudeats and tuebtra 11ore blood and of
thOM, 63 'Wtl'tllnt tltile dotlan.

. en:t:"'l.r

.,

•

·I

11 .

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