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                  <text>Thursday, March 11,1993

Page 12-The Dally Sentinel

Library lines
Program teaches student
RU'J'H POWERS
driv~r~ cellular phone safety TheByMeigs
County Public

READING TO CIDLDREN • Members of
the National Honor Society at Meigs ~1gb
School are taklag time out this week to read to
elementary .students in Meigs Local Here, Kat·

rina Turner, Lori Kelly and Michelle Young
read a story to Mrs. P11ula Whitt's kindergarten
class at Middleport Elementary.

:Council to offer Tai
Chi Chu' uan classes
Beginning March 22 and each
Mpnday evening through April 5
from 7·8 p.m., the Middlepon Ans
Council will continue to offer a
!eries of Yang style Tai Chi
Ch'lian classes to be held at the arts
council center located on North
SecQIId Avenue in Middlepon.
The cost of these classes wiU be
$1 5 and Eric Chambers is the
instruCtor.
Since these classes began over a
year ago, numerous people have
asked many questions about the
nature of these classes and Tai Chi
Ch 'uan in general.
Tai Chi Ch 'uan was developed
by Chang Shan Feng, a man born
~ n the early years of the Yuan
Dynasty about .the year 1278 A.D.
· He was very intelligent and during
his boyhood began the study of
C.onfuciansim. At about age 18,
Chang was admitted to the Shaolin
Temple in Hunan is a student
undu the instruCtion of the fantous
Priest Chou Yuan Monk. There he
studied Shaolin Kung Fu for 10
~· The Shaolin Kung Fu generally belongs to the hard, external
fighting arts. Chang's skills origi·
nated from the Shaolin Ch'uan
(fist) and his martial arts techniques reached a perfect and unpar-alled state. After leaving the
Shaolin Temple, Chang began to
develop a new and higher form of
Shaolin Ch 'uan which he called
Tai Chi Ch'uan (supreme pole fist)
which was based upon the yin
(dark) and the yang (light) Tai Chi
symbol. Chang thereby turned !he
quick movements and hard acuon
of the Shaolin Kung Fu into a gentle and soft exercise with the
emphasis on the bre~~thing and .~e
cultivation or the mmd and spmt.
Thus, this martial art is intended
for good health as·well as self-protection.
. Tai Chi Ch' uan is an exercise
ror the whole body. The body may
be kept in a condition of relaxati~.
quietness, slowness and tranquility
without violent or tense movements. Yet irs aim is to strengthen
the muscles.
· This is a martial arts exercise

By CAROLYN P.IONE
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS '- A high school
sophomore say~ taking part in a
trial program on cellular telephone
safety has convinced him he needs
a car phone.
.
"''I used to look at them as saict·
ly a trend, but now I see it can also
be helpful too, if you might run out
of f.!S• or in any kind of emergency, ' said Casey Goodson, a student at Nonhland High School.
The cellular division of Chica·
go-based Ameritech announced
this week it is expanding a program
that teaches driver's education stu. dents how to use a car phone safe·
ly.
The companr will offer the program free to h1gh schools nauonwide beginning this fall.
Ameritech spent $800,000 oil
the trial program for students in
three high schools in Columbus
and eight others in Illinois, Michigan, Missouri and_Wisconsin,
Nancy O'Connell, director of safety education for Ameritech said

Wednesday.
All the trial schools plan to continue the progiam.
The company expects to spend
$2,500 on each school ·at fmt and
$600 a year after that, Ms. O'Connell said.
,

She said the company has not
projected possible sales to instructors, students and tbeir parents,
although several people who participated in the trial program have
bought cellular phones. ·
"It's purely a public safety program. But irs nice to see the other
benefirs from a marketing standpoint," Ms. O'Connell said.
She said the company hoped to
recoup some of what 'it spent on the
program by selling the material and
ideas to other cellular companies.

OUR WEDNESDAY FOODLAND AD
SHOULD HAVE REA~

S.A.F.E.

U.S. # 1 White Potatoes
20 LB. BAG

BE A S.A.F.E. FOSftR PAREN7

WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE!
EASTMAN'S

As a S.A.F.E. foster pareat you CCIII receive up to $1240 per
. mont~ for each foster dlild 11 your home.

FOODLAND

FOR INFORMATION CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-331·9989
l(outh Devel9pment Corporation of America
A MULti-SERVICE PROVIDER

ERIC CHAMBERS
that does not restrict the number of
participating persons. You can
practice it alone or with two or
three other persons. Even a large
group can practice it together.
Almost everybody can perfonn
the movements as long as they are
interested in Tai Chi Ch'uan male, female, old, young, strong or
weak, healthy, sick, etc.
One may do Tai Chi Ch 'uan at
any time or ;my place under any
kinds of weather conditions.
You may do the movements
regardless of the time- early in. the
morning or late at night. Do the
postures and fonns for 20 minutes
or more each day. Naturally, the
more you do the better.
Tru Chi Ch'uan requires no special clothing nor any equipment.
Just put on comfortable clothing
and soft shoes without heels.
Since this ·is a gentle exercise,
there is no panting or hard breath·
ing. With these manial exercises,
one will eventually learn a method
of self-defense to protect yourself
as well as the cultivation of your
mind so that you will become more
diligent, stronj&gt;er, more active,
patient, optimisnc and peaceful.
Further infprmation may be
obtained by calling 992-2675 .

A soup dinner was planned for
March 19 and a discussion was
held on a upcoming retreat.
Devotions, "Ordinary But Beautiful" and scripture from Isaiah
were given by Virginia Wears.
· A closing poem was given by
Frances Goeglein.
The meeting dismissed with
prayer by Norma Balcer. Refresh·
ments were served by the hostesses, Frances Goeglein and Virginla
Wears, carrying out the theme of
St. Patrick's. A shamrock was
given to each member.

Boosters to meet

Justin Ira Eblin, son of Roger
and Karen Eblin; Columbus,
recently celebrated his first birthday with a party at the home of
grandparenrs, Ira and Hope Eblin,
Syracuse.
A teddy bear theme was carried
out. Cake, ice cream and potato
chips were served to each with
favors for each child.
Allending were Cyndi and
Jimmy Coleman, Northup; Paul
Morgan Jr., Terri ,Wright, Kim,
Sean and James O'dell, Debra,
· Charlie and Megan Mills and Luck
Sword, Gallipolis; Heather and
Larry Cundiff, Racine; Bob, Diana,
Robert and Dawn Brush, Centerburg; !lonnie and Debbie Krautter,
Geraldine Hanel, Edith Barton,
Betty Reed, Pomeroy; Tyson Lee,
Tyler Stewart and Eileen Snyder,
Middleport; George, Jean and Tony
Moore, Columbus.
Sending gifts were Jim and Jean
Brush, Centerburg, and Briggitta
and Terry Johnson, Middleport.
Sean O'dell won the door prize.

I

I

\

Frances Goeglein presented the
program "Our Savior Lives" at the
recent meeting of the Rock Springs
'United Methodist Women.
• Dorothy Jeffers opened the program with a reading, "What Easter
Means." Other readings and scripture were given by Michele
Showalter, Pandora Collins, Tracey
Beaver, Rita Radford, Thelma Jeffers and Norma Baker.
Norma Baker presided with
Sharon Folmer giving the opening
prayer. Officers repons were given.
Betty Wills reponed on sending
cards to the sick. Prayer requests
were talcen with Lenora Leifheit
leading the group in prayer.

JUSTIN EBLIN

'I

SPECIALIZED ALTERNATIVE FAMILY ENVIRONMENTS
RECRUITING HOMES IN MEIGS COUNTY
Welcome Into Your LHe A Chdd Who Needs Yoilr
Support, Nurturance, Guidance,and Encourage11ent.

Toledo
eliminates

Pick 3:

•

ou 85-84

508
Pick 4:

6807

Low tonight In mid 20s.
Snow. Saturday, snow, high In
upper 20s.

•
· Vol. 43, No. 222

Copyrighted 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, . Friday, March 12,

2 Sections, 12 Pagoo 25 oento•
A Multimedia Inc. N-poper

19~

No one injured
in fire at MHS
'

No injuries were reported following a fire this momin!l at Meigs
High Sc~ool in Rock Spnngs.
According to a Meigs County
· .Sheriffs Department dispatcher,
.llte fire was reported at 9:52 a.m.
Pomeroy, Mi4dlepon and Syracuse
fue departments responded to the
··scene, the dispatcher said.
According to a report from a
. person at the scene, units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medical ·
Service'were also on the scene..
An unofficial source reported
the fire staned in a storage room on
the third floor of the building. One
observer
said
'.
... heavy,
. black smoke

was seen billowmg trom the third
floor and roof area.
Approximately 700 high school
students and 100 Meigs Junior
High School eighth graders, who
were to11ring the building, were
evacuated. Buses were· called in to
return
. . students to their homes.
Otje observer said the scene
seemed to be calm and that the
evacuation proceeding in an order·
ly manner.
. Fire departments were stiU on·
the iicene I;IS of press time. Further
details will be released when they
become available.
.

~

STUDENTS DISMISSED • Students at Meigs High School
were evacuated this mornina when a r...e broke out in the top level

of the building. The Pomeroy, Middleport and Syracuse nre
departments were still on the scene.at presstime.

.F BI traces money in WTC bombing probe
NEW YORK (AP)- The FBI was used for the bombing, possible where in Gennany the money came
. is trying to pinpoint the source of escape, safe houses and other ter: from and whether it was meaht to
·thousands of dollars in overseas rorist activities," the investigator .underwrite the bombing.
'
·wire transfers that are believed to said. "Our main thrust is where the
Gerinany has one of the largest
have paid for the bombing of the money came from."
Muslim communities in Europe
World Trade Center, a federal
The source would not say where and has beeo a base of operations
investigator says.
·
in Europe the transfers originated ~ for}&gt;iiddle Eastern terrorist organiBank records in New Jersey but The New York Times, citing zauons.
show that money was transferred unidentified sources, reported
Finding the source of the money
· from Europe into an account held today Ihat .$8,000 wired to the would hell! investigators detenhine
:jointly' by the two Palestinian accoun.t of Mohammed Salameh a motive m the Feb. 26 bombing
bombing sq5pecrs under arrest, the and Nida.l Ayyad has been traced' to !'t~t killed at least five people and
investigator.said Thursday, speak· GerJ)Iany:. t , •. • ,- • /
IDJured more than 1,000. The bomb
iiJ&amp;J!D.co..n4!tion o,f!'"ony"!'!t)'., . ,
Investigators told. fbi: Times, wen.t off in.a ganjge .undemeath the
. ~.~We'SjieCatamih~~~r,,:fowever, that t~ey ~ ~.~qte ",twin IIO·story to\\'~rs. , . , ,
·
·
·
·
While the federal investigator

would not disclose how much
money had been transferred into
the acco~nt. he said there were
probably several deposits of under
$10,000. Deposits of that size
would avoid federal laws requiring
the reporting of cash transactions
of$10,000 or more.
Salameh, 25, is an illegal alien .
from Jprdan who was arrested
March 4 in Jersey ·city, NJ., where
he was living, Ayyad, 25, ·a Palestinian-American chemical engill'&lt;Y• was Jli!J:.Sted .W. ednesday at
his home ili]itii,PlewO!Jd, jiiJ. ·
Both are charged with aiding in
•

the bombing. Salilmeh is alleged to
have rented the van that held the
bomb. Ayyad's alleged role has not
been disclosed, but investigators
said he has the know-how to mix
explosives.
Ayyad and Salameh share an
account at a Jersey City branch of
National ·Westminster Bank, and
the transfers went into that account,
investigators said.
James Espbsito, chief of the FBI
in New Jersey, said late Thursday:
"We have a high sense of confldence we will be able to_detenn.ine

•

and track ... the origins and traffic
of that account."
Other links between the two
men include attending services at
the same mosque in Jersey City.
And both Salameh and Ayyad have
been close to El Sayyid Nosair,
who was acquitted of murder in the
1990 assassination of the anti'Arab
extremist Rabbi Meir Kahane but is
in Attica state prison on related
charges. · ·
'
· Investigators said Thursday they
doubt.Nosair played a role in the
~oml&gt;ib!l put was a · ~ 'martyr or
hero" for tlie suspects.

.Two Ohio operations targeted for closing
B.Y The Associated ~ess .
Oh1o took a double htt today tn
military installati~ns that Defense
Secretary Les Aspm recommended
for closmg. About 4,800 jobs are
affected.
.
.
. The Newark A1r Force Base m
Heath and the Defense Electronics
. Supply Center in Kettering are
among 31 nationwide that would be .
closed ander the lllail.
. Two other Oh1o operations were
on the list, but how they would be
affected was not immediately clear.
They are the Defeo~ Infonnation
Technology Service Or~nization
in Dayton, a data processmg center.
and a regional Readiness Com mand center in Ra,venna.
As~ in said that during the six
years 1t will talce to implement the

ALL

IN STOCK!

,.,.,_,,
••
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'Dinner, retreat planned

The Eastern Athletic Boosters
will have an emergency meeting on
Sunday at2 p.m. in the high school
cafeteria. All parents and friends
are urged to attend.

Library has a full calendar of
evenrs for March and April.
Events which you should mark
your calendar for include:
· March 20, Easter Cmft for Kids
at 2 p.m. Registration requested;
March 21, Music by Sharon Haw·
ley and Group at 3 p.m.; March 27,
Teen Talent Show, sponsored by
the Meigs County Library Youth
Council 'at 7 p.m. There will be
cash prizes and trophies; March 28,
Community Band Concert at 3
p.m.;.Apri118·24, National Lilnry
Week. April 19, Ronald McDonald Show at 6:30 p.m.; April 22
"Night of a Thousand Stars" with
Reading by Senator Jan Michael
Long at 6:30 p.m..
The library invites everyone to
come and enjoy the events we have
planned.
·

Ohio Lottery

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• Cellular telephones • Cordless phones • Desk phones
• Decorator telephories • wan phones • Speakerphones
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AIDS AWARENESS DISCUSSED' · A program on AIDS
awareness was presented Thursday evening at Eastern High
School. Jean Donado, director of the Athens AIDS Task Force, dlli·
cussed the virus and the truths and myths about the disease. The
event was organized by Sue Arnold, physical education coordiDa·
tor at the school.

AIDS
awareness
.
program held

First birthday

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preci~ measurements for military
operauons.
. The base lost about 600 posilions dunn!&gt; a round of military
budget curs m 1991.
.
The base h~ .an annual payroll
of about $87 million. The Air Force
said that in 1990, the base con~
tributed $254 million in economic
benefits to 16 Ohio counties. It also
was responsible for creating 2,068
jobs off the base.
·

Pomeroy man pleads guilty
to three charges of rape

--Local briefs-__,
Man pleads not guilty to charges

to the Ohio Revised Code, is an
aggravated felony or the .first
degree.
Nonnan was sentenced to five to
25 years confinement on all three
counts with the second and third
count suspended to five years probation after the fust term is served.

Deputies investigate theft

child or from a nursing mother to
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that deputies
By JULIE E. DILLON
her child. She also stated the distook a report Thursday evening from Randall Johnston, Langsville,
Sentinel News Staff
who reported $30 and car kers were stolen from his trousers while
Jean Donado, director ·of the ease is increasing in teenagers and
he was practicing track at Me1gs High School.
Athens AIDS Task Force, present- women.
According to Donado, over 25
. The bouom of a locker was forced open allowing access to the
ed a program on AIDS awareness
. trousers, according to a sheriff's repon.
·
aJ Eastern High School last nighL percent of new AIDS c~ses are
people
in
their
20's.
She
says,
on
Anyone
with
information
concerning
this
incident
is
asked
to
T~e event was organized by Sue
average,
it
takes
eight
to
ten
years
contact
the
principal's
office
or
the
sheriff's
departmenL
Arnpld, physical education coonli·
for the first symptom of HIV to
nator.
The Athens AIDS Task Force is appear. After that, a J?c:tsOn who
an organization that strives to build has been diagnosed w1th the HIV ,
Units of the Meigs County Emergency,Medical Se~ice reSpondap awareness of the scope of the · virus can expect to develop full ·
ed
to
five calls for assistance Thursday.
.
blown
AIDS,
on
average,
in
about
AIDS problem both nationally and
Responding
were:
804
a.m.
Pomeroy
to
Smith
Road
for
David
ihree
years.
An
person
with
fullat the local level. .
1
King who '!&gt;'US transported to Veterans Memorial Hospit.ll; 1:31
AIDS (Acquired Immune Defi· blown AIDS, on average, can die
p.m:
Middleport to Pearl Street for Barbara Krautter who was treat·
within
two
years,
says
Donado:
clency Syndrome) Is undoubtedly
ed
at
'the scene; 3:12 p.m. Syracuse to State Route 124 for John
Donado
stated
"AIDS
is
someone of tho major concerns of the
Krawsczyn
who was transponed to Veterans Memorial Hospiral;
thin~
we
have
to
talk
aboijt
in
our
population today, and according to
4:40p.m.
Tuppers
Plains to Riggs,Crescent Manor for Buddy lam·
Donado, it is presently spreading famtlies. Commtu~lcation is imporben
who
was
transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 4:38 p.m.
.
faster in rural areas than in urban tant."
Middleport
to
State
Route
7 for Viclde ·PhiiHps to Pleasant Valley
Practicing safer sex, according .
~·
Hospital.
DQnado discussed HIV (Human to DonadO, greatly reduces the fisk
In addition, at 11:04 p.m. Sll:ymed !fBDSported James Ne~n
immunodeficiency Virus) and its of conr:racting the disease, but, she
from
VMH to Riverside Hospital in Columbus.
stresses the onlr way to be assured
end result- full blown AIDS.
DiJcussing ways of tile di~'s of protection 11 total abstinence
cransmission, DOOado S\Bted 1t can from sexual relations. Donado stat·
only be III)IOid through sexual con- ed by the time of pduatipn, about
A request for a judgm~t ,of $12,836.62 was filed recendy in the
tact, lharing needles (of any type), 7S percent of all students will have
.
·
. Coatlaued on paJ!t 3
and from a mother to her u~born
Contlaued on paae 3.

EMS responds to five calls

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1

base clo~ings, the Defense Depart- . base's public affairs offlce said.
ment w11l reduce 1ts force by Officials also planned a news con24,000 .m.i~itary personnel and ference there thisaf~oon.
:
57,000 CIV!hans.
· The base opened m 1962. It IS
Th'e .Air Force base emp. Joys part of the Air Force Materiel
. 1.?~ CIVlhans and has about. I~O Comll_l8l1d, which has.headquarters
m1htary personnel. The base 1s m at Wnght·Patterson Au Force Base
Licking County about30 miles east near Dayton.
of Columbus. .
The Newark base repairs naviThe electronics supply center, in gation systems for missiles and
the Dayton suburb of Kettering, military aircraft. It also is the Air
employs about 2,800 people. It Force's metrology center, making
buys electroruc parts for all branch·
es of the military. It is in the.Dayton suburb of Kettering.
Stephen Stromp, a spokesman
for the. electronics supply center,
said he had no information and
A 39-year·old Pomeroy man
declined comment.
Einployees'at the Air Force base pleaded guilty to three counts of
were to. be told about noon ..the f8pe Thursday in the Meigs County
Coon of Common Pleas.
Gary Norman admitted to
enRaging in sexual conduct with a
child under 13 years of age on July
I, 8 and 15, 1992. RaP«:· according
A Penland man charged with two counts of breaking and entering and one count of contributing to the delinquency of a minor
pleaded not guilty to ihe charges in Meigs County Coon.
Sky Flynn, 19, was arrested Tuesday evening by Meigs County
Sheriff's Department deputies for allegedly breaking into the
Clarence Conger property and a cabin owned by a Dayton area resident He remains Jailed in lieq of $25,000 cash or property bond.
A preliminary hearing will be held later this month, according to
a sheriff's deparunent repon.
A juvenile was also arrested and was released to the custody of
his parents.

-~~~~~-

$12,836.62 judgmentsought

I
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•

GOOD EGG TREES • Memben of the Women's Auxiliary at
Veterans Memorial H01pltal are pictured preparlaa eggs for their
annual GOod Ea Trees Easter fund-raiser. Residents are lavlted
to place an egg on a tree Ia tribute to their "favorite aooci ell''
The name of each honoree will be placed em 1 pastel en aDd ~
en placed on one or three trees to be featured tbls year. C01t 11 $5 •
an eg. Names and money are aow being accepted. Honorees wiD :
be alvea tbe ens tor souvenlra after Easter•. Trees "'" be located :
In the hospital lobby, the careterla and the sua room of the tddlled :
nursing facUlty. Pictured readying tbe Eater el11ia ror the project : •
are, from tbe len, Jessie Wlllte, Libby Flsber, Jeanette Lawnnce .•
and Betty Sayre. All proceeds IIi to the hospital's Women's AuxU· lary.
.
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Friday, March 12, 1993

;~Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

Saturday, March 13
Acxu· Weather• fonx:ast

. By The Associated Press
A snowy wc:ielcend is forecast for
Ohio. And the southeastern qu&amp;rter
of the state could get significant
amounts, ihe National Weather
Serv~e said.
,
A winter storm watch was
issued for east central and south
central Ohio .for Saturday. Cities in
the watch area included
Portsmouth, Athens, Cambridge
and Steubenville.
Forecasters said the snow would
spread into southeast Ohio tonight
and over all of the sl8te on SaWr·
day. In the watch area. the snow
may ·accumulate 4 inches or more
by Saturday evening, the weather
service said.
The wintry weather will contin·
ue over Ohio Saturday night and
Sunday.

conditions and high

MICH.

Seattle's trash may be neighbors·' problem

WASHINGTON .- The latest friendly cities in America ..:... involved as a Sl8lC senator. When cern." iuecommended that San
round hi' America •s escalating again-st its poorer cousins to the the city ofSeattle, which for acver- ' Diego County 'use "extreme cau111 Court Street
'
"p:bage wars" is taking p~ in eaSt. " If you scratch beneath the al yws bad_been shipping most of tion" before contracting with
.
Pomeroy, Ohio
.
.
a
sleepy little eomerofWi.SbirWon surface of the proclaimed conctm its household garbage to a site in WMI.
• : DEVOTED TO THE IJII1'ERBSTS OF THE IIEIG&amp;-IIASON AREA
neighboring Oregon, first began to
It didn't take long for WMI to
state, 'bUt it's atlractinjl some oldie
'
looli: at Adams County as a p18ce to fight back using the best hired guns
biggest names in politics.
send
its waste, Murray stood up in in the business. Less than two
Trash disposal in America is
,·
protest.
Speaking up against Seat· months after 1he district attorney's
quickly adopting a David vs.
tie's
garbage
maneuvers earned her n:~ was released, WMI released
Goliath quality. Large cities with
a
membership
·on the board of a 'critical analysis" of the report
l '
overflowmg landfllls are increas·
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
directors of the Organization to signed by no less .a figure than
ingly tapping Slllall, ~ cornmu·
' '
Publisher
.·
Preserve A$ficultural Lands, the • Wmen Christopher, who at the
nities as places to dump their uash.
only orgamzed group currently time was- working as a partner in
The cities and their contractors
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
- .. PAT WHITEHEAD
the prestigious Los Angeles law
arrive on the scene promising jobs. for the enviro!lment, what you'll fighting .the landfill.
· General M~nager,
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer
and reassuring local residents that fmd is just another big city whi(:b
As a tJ. s. Senate candidate, firm of O'Melveny an~':r~s .
their landfiUs are environmentaUy made a deal, signed a long-tcrm Murray left' OPAL's board and bas Christopher's report, prod
~th .
, .,
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less. than 300
safe. But many in these. farming contract with a company with Utile since been noncommit18l on the another partner at the flflll, claims ·
words. All letters are ·subject to editing and must be signed with name,
communities don't want a landfill or no regard of the past perfor- landfill saying only that she wants the district attorney's office used .
:
address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will bo publisbod. Loners
"biased sources" and that it bad no
in their backyard any more than a mance of the fum they've hired, a •'fair:. review of the facts.
..
sbould be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.
and
absolutely
no
regard
for
the
OPAL
is
fighting
the
landfiU
on
evidence
to support its allegations
city does. .
quality
of
life
for
lhe
little
town
in
Such is the case in Adams
two fronts. The group is trying to that WMI is tied to organized crime
·~----~----~--~~~~~--~
County, Wash. At issue is. a pro· a srnaU wheat·fJeld covered county make use of a report by the district or engages in public cllmiJ!Iion. . ·
posal by Wasil: Management Inc. in Eastern Washington," said one attorney of San :Piego that was · · OPAL's other weapon IS a peu. highly critical of Waste Mana~e- lion submitted by a locl!l enviC'On·
to build a solid-waste landfill in landfill opponenl
Though Foley has declined to ment Inc. The report, comm1S· mental group 10 the Envuonmental
this rural enclave that could satisfy
Seattle's garbage disposal needs for get directly involved. the dispute sioned during a 1992 dispute over a Protection Agency to classify the
the next 60 years. Coincidentally, over the Adams County landfill landfill permit, comes out firing aquifer that sits below th~ prllP,ISed
the landfill lies in the congressional and Waste Management Inc. also against Waste Management Inc.: site as a "sole-source aqu1fer.
,·
district of House Speaker Tom i:8ITies the fingerprints of two other "The history of the company pre- That would mean that Ada~s
:::
!IY Tile Allociated ,Pre,ss
. .
. Foley.
prominent Democrats: Newly sents i combination of environ·- Couno/ takes more lhan half of tts
•· FoUowing are excerpts from recent edilonals on national 1ssues m
The dispute ironically pits the elected Sen. Patty Murray and Sec- mental and anti-trust violations and drinking water from that source,
•newspapm .:ross the Slate.
city of Seattle - long considered retary of Sl81C w'amn Christojlber. public corruption cases which must and it would give opponents of the
•:
Sprba&amp;fleld News-Sua, ~reb ~:
.
Murray initially became be viewed with considerable con- landfill a whole new layer of Ceder·
one of the most environmentally
•:· Early last fall, Angola had reason to consuler Itself somethmg of a
al protection under existing clean
. :diplomatic success story.
watcr laws. But even if the aquifer
••· Here it ·was a ·Slrife·torn land about to be set on the road to recovery
is claSsified as "sole source," it
:~ recoru:ilialion thanks to the intercession of the United nations, and
would mean no guarantees of
:~ially of the United States.
slalling the landfill.
THINK THE PLAN
••· Tragicalll. the peace process there has been deliberately sabotaged;
The Washington war is just one
: ~ds o Angolans have lost their li\oes in new fighting; and hundreds
of
sevc:nl
similar battles across the
•
;«if thousands more are in mona! danger of succwnbing to starvation and
country. In Indiana, Republican
ONLY~L£CUD ~I.Jlf
senator Dan Coats made a cam&gt;farnpa\nt disease.
·
.
s
·
b'
Blame for this biuer turn of events lies principally w1th Jonas avun 1,
paign issue last year out .of the
the longtime cutthroat leader of what he bas liked to style as Angola's
huge amotints of garbage his Slate
anti-Communist guerrillas. It was ~ who ~ed a~ay last f~ after losimpons annuaUy from New Jersey.
mg the fJJSt round of national eleclions 10 his arch-nval, President EduarHe hal sponsored a biU that would
do dos SantoS, and dten ordered his minions to take by forte what he and
curtail the intersl81C flow of uash.
they could not win in a fair and square vote.
.
Senator Frank LautenberK, D-NJ ..
Eleven million Angolans deserve better and the Umted Sl8tes as a
whose sl8te produces die refuse
lonpirn.e backer of the chief instrwnent of their torment bas a panicular
that Coats fmds so unpleasant,
prefers to believe that America's
obligation to help out.
·
·
Tbe (East Liverpool) Eveaina Review, March 5:
.
urbage problem deserves a
Our nation's pastime bas enough problems these days - out-of-s1ght
~"•national solution."
ticket prices. an owner getting suspended for making racial slurs and too
WMI has been through fights
many salary arllilration cases.
·
like this before. In this case, their
Now it bas another: The Veterans Comminee of the Hall of Fame.
representatives insist that Adams
The commiaee last week failed to elect imyone 10 the "Hall" in ConpCounty ~y does want I! landfill.
. crstown for the second time in five years. That's because the 16-memba:
They claim OPAL is a group pri: ~Janel coul~ 't agre;e on giving a candidate the necessary 75 percent sup.marily driven by those who have a
port when 11 came ume to vote.
.
vested interest in pre~entinJ th,e
ln these days of player making $1 million a year or more for batting
landfiU, such as corpomtc compeu. :270, how can greats like Nellie Fox, Phil Rizzuto and Gil Hodges not be
rors.
· Hall of Fame material?
·
.
Jack Anderson and Michael
· It's easy. The Veterans Commiaee is not doing its job. There are severBinstein are writers for United
, ·a1 candidates from which to choose. .
Feature Syndicate, Inc. ·
~ If these panels can't agn:e on at least one when they come down from
their ivory towers once a year to cast their ballots ... maybe they aren't
doing their jobs. Marbe this panel ought to be dissolved.
, · That's because its the great players of yesteJday who should be in the
·· sj,otlight making n~ws, not some bickering committee that believes it's
the fJJSt question lll!Bht be, why phony, that would prove that count in his favor, and investigalOIS
Mal I rise to say a word in
··Jbove them all.
·.
behal of Mr. Mohammed rent a van at all? Why not use some Salarneh himself was the thief, and might ao off on a wild goose chase
The (Toledo) Blade, March 7:
By waitin$ until literally the last minute to obey a court order and Salameh? He is the Jordan-born vehicle already owned by one of that he bad intended lirceny from after the non-existent "thief."
or course we now tnow, in the
'cover up a p1cture of Jesus in a high school hallway, Bloomingdale, Palestinian whom the FBI arrested · the conspirators? But perhaps the start.
Even
so,
of
course,
the
police
after
be
returned
to
a
Jersey
(;ity
light
of hindsight, that Mr.
Mich., school officials obeyed the letter of the law but made clear their
might
never
find
him,
or
even
try
car
rental
agency
to
claim
the
$400
Salameb,
1hougb not guilty of Sbl·
: llisagreement with the intenL
.
yery
bard.
But
what
if
the
FlU
deposit
on
a
van
he
had
rented
pidily,
was
certainly guilty,of opti- .
It is another example of bow schools and school districts around the
9001ebow
comected
this
particular
there
and
subsequently
reported
as
mism'
.
The
very
papera he handfeil,
country tend to push the limits of what the courts will aUow.
.
stolen
van
in
Jersey
City
with
the
stolen.
The
van
was
the
one
in
making
out
the ~port of the
: · In this case, a U.S. District Judge told oCflcials to cover or remove the
explosion
in
Manhauan
(IS
in
fact
involved
in
the
explosion
at
Man·
van's
"theft,"
contained
traces of
· ~-by-3-foot picture at the Bloomingdale High School, agreeing with one
nobody owned one, or at least not .
they
did,
tbaiiks
to
some
numben
hattan's
World
Trade
Center
on
· of the school's pupils that the artwork amounted to an endorsement of
the explosives be had apparently
one they were willing 10 part with.
Feb.26.
Well, then, why not steal one? discovered on a partially cleatroyed helped to carry or load. And once
Christianity.
·
If Mr. Salarneh is indeed ~lty , But that would give rise to the risk axle)? An unknown man of Mr. invc:stiprtn zeroed in on him, they
:: The Supreme Court has handed down several rulings in recent years
as
charged, of involvement m the that it might be reported, and spot· Salameh's description wottld have found m his possession or under his
··that have removed religious symbols or practice from public schools.
explosion,
I would have no II'Oilble, ted, and stopped. on its way 10 its been the object of one of the great conlrol enough additional explo-: · The case should never have gone this far, nor should school district
man-hunts of all time. •.
as
a
judge,
imposing the death destination.
. offtcials have waited to be prodded into action by one of their Own Stu·
sive chemicals and related bardpenalty
if
it
is
legally
available.
All
right,
then
rent
one.
But
ware 10 open a bomb store.
dents.
But Mr. Salarneh has been wide- why on earth did Mr. Salameh rent S~~b:se:lt~~r :n~!. ~~
Now even his court-1\)pointed
w*ited for, the explosion, and lawyer has begun argumg that
ly accused, not only of conspiracy it tlnder his real ruune?
to murder, but of stupidity, and it is
Think for a moment. This par- promptly tbereafter reporiCd the nobody could possibly have been
from the latter charge that I see.lt to ticular vehicle was never going to van IS stolen die night before, and stupid enough 10 have done what
exonerate him. That, after all, be returned to the agency. What pressed for the retwn of bia $400 Mr. Salameh allegedly did But if
involves his pride.
end-game was Mr.• Salameb plan- deposit, he would be in a milch bet· by that be is referring to Mr.
Let us assume, for the sake of ning to play? If he s,imply never ter position. His actions would Salameb's dealinJS with regard to
the argument, that he is indeed showed up again, the 8$eRCY would appear to be thoSe of an innocent the van, I beg to differ.
·~ - A month ago. your library start· Meigs Countians will stand up and
• ed a petition drive to preserve the be counted, when something guilty. His role in the conspiracy, report the van as m1ssing, and mal). Even if, by some mischance,
William Rlllber Ia a syadkat·
: 6.3 percent of the state income tax important to their lives is threat- then. seems to have been to acquire would 'ive the police a careful the van was connected with the .eel writer ror Newsp1per Eaterthe van that wasused, and a1'Jl8f· description of Mr. Salameh. If the explosion, the sheer openness of prile A81oc:latloa.
· which is the primary funding ened.
Your )ibW)''s funding is still ently to help handle the explosives. n_ame on the rental papers was his conduct would in retrospect
: source for libraries in Ohio.
'
• The legislature has had an 18 very n1uch threatened by the cut
proposed
by
the
governor.
If
you
• month freeze on this fund and the
: language in the governor's new want to be heard from about this
: budget calls for a cut from th~ 6.3 cut, write your State Senator and
· %to 5.7 %. This cut will make .a Representative with your ooncems.
Thank you, thank you Meigs
; real impact on Ohio's libraries. The
"I took the baby from them and etched in Price's memory took
Just as it can be unseuling if vices.
: overwhelming response from the Countians for being there when we
carried
her to the altar," Price place at .St. Stephen's in 1949. A
Eventually,
Price
recalled:
"I
your doctor dies of the same iUness
• people of Meigs County to our needed you.
recalled.
"I asked the mother and mother whose baby boy was born
he or she bad been treating you for, was witnessing physical beatings
Sincerely,
: petition drive was very heanwarm·
father
10
lmeel
at the chancel rail.
with a club foot almost embedded
: mg and appreciated. Well over Meigs County Public library Staff so it can be reassuring if he or she among the many who came to our
"AS
I
prayed,
the baby began to in his leg tclephoned Price to ask .
is
elderly.
.
• 1,000 signatures were obtained and Trusteees Ruth Powers. libraricry. She kept on crying - even whether she could bring 3-year-old ·
Dr. Alfred Price's longevity : through this drive, which proves
an
after I RlJinled her 10 her parents. Bobby to a healing service. Price :
he was 92 when he died recently She cried for two solid days and said yes.
•
:
apparently was evidence that his
•
nights. The parents were frantic.
·~He couldn't kneel at the altar, ·
method
o(
healing
worked.
services,
but
I
Was
having
no
sue·
'
To be sure, Price was a clergy- cess with organic disease. Func· But when she stopped crying the so his mother knelt, holding him in :
man, not a medical doctor.
tiona! disorders were yielding to second day, a perfect cure had her arms," Price remembered. "I ·
••
placed my hands on both their :
As a spiritual healer, he often my miniStration, but not congenital taken lace."
B~y
Nancy
grew
up
into
a
fine,
•
beads and prayed. Bobby's mother :
got the cases the medical profes- or incurable diseases "
.
••
said she had a wonderful feeling ·
sion bad given up on.
.
:fben, after thc ·conclus10r1 of robust girl and woman.
Tbia
.
w
as
the
breakthrough
Price
,&gt;
Shortly after coming to St. one healing serv~ce. Price~ a had been waiting for - praying that all would be well and knew :
God would heal Bobby."
.
.
Stephen's Episcopal C~urch in young C!&gt;uple With .a baby walling
~
for.
'
Each da~ from then on, as she •
Philadelphia as rec:tor tn 1942, , to see ~un. The ch1!d, the parents
~ ·
;'
"If God can heal one organic
Price instituted healmg pmycrs at told Price, was spastiC - unable to disease,
he can cure them all," he
the Thursday noon worsh1p ser- grow or.develop properly.
..,,.
said to himself. "What is ttue for the end of six niontbs, Bobby was •
one persOn is potentially true for completely healed with no trace of ;
••
•
all."
j
••
the club foot that bad crippled him. :
In the following years, Price . How did it happen?
••
.·•
••
said he saw people healed of every- · Price, a bup man with a boom· :
,.
thing from colds to cancer, emche ing voice who looked more like a ·
' ••
By The Alloclated l'ms
.
10 epileply, arthritis to alcoholism,
••
stockbroker than a minisrer, llllin· :
Today is Friday, March 12, the 71st day of 1993. There an: 294 days
'
mental depression to mental talned that GOd •s healing powers :
left in the year.
dalnpnenL
are burled within each of us, just ·
Today's Highlight in History:
.
When be died, he was rector waitina to be re""-'1.
''
;
Sixty
years
ago,
on
March
12,
1933,
President
Franklin
D.
Roosevelt
'
of SL Stephen's and inler·
When we pray. said Price, we. '
delivered the fust of his "fJ.teside chats," 1elling Americans in a radio emeritus
nllioaal Warden o( the Order of SL can 10 forth with the knowledge :
••
broadtail what was being done to deal with the nation's fmancial crisis.
L'*'
the PhysiCian, an order whole that Ood hallltl free recuperative "'
On this date:
I '
5,000
Include doctor!, powera to heal ua.
In 1664, New Jersey became a British colony as King Cbarle$ n grant· nunes,membera
.;
and lay people.
cleqymen
It was Price's conviction that
edland in the New World to his brother James, the DulreofYcxt.
••
They
believe
.that
the b-eallng •'cleraymen, if they knew hovi to .
••
In
1912,
in
Savannah,
Ga
..
Juliette
'Gordon
Low
founded
the
Girl
••
power of Gbd can be channeled pray, could probably do 75 percent •
••
Guides, which later became the Girl Scouts of America.
through prayer·groups, the Messing of the healing wcxt of physiCians." ,
~.Jn 1925, Chinese n:volu~ leader Sun Vat-sen died .
••
of
the doctar'a work and the laying
Georp Plapu Ia a syadleatIn 1932, the so-called "Swedish Match King,'' lv•:JCreuaer. commit·
,.••
ed
writer ror Newap1per Eateron
of
bands.
ted suicide in Paris, leaving behind a ftnanc:ial empire tbatlUmed out to be
•••
A81oc:latlon,
prise
One
healing_
that
remained
worthless.
'•

'

'

.

By Jack Anderson
and
Michael Binstein

• lco1umbusl2s•

I

(

jtxcerpts from other
~Ohio · newspapers
.

!

toN'T

\WRKS_YOU'VE .

WNG

CANCER

The proble1n of the rented ·Van

''

••

William A. Rusher

0

Letters to the editor

Still time to expres_s your concerns

Usin·g prayer to try to heal' the .sick
George R. Plagenz

Berry's World

--

.

~ ~ifoot ~ ~~; :~~~~:

Today in history

.
.

....

,.
'.

-

.

'

.' ,

I

J

i

Paoli• 3

Southeastern Ohio included in storm watch area

OHIO Weather

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, March 12,1993

••

The Dally Sentinel

to reach the Middle Atlantic states
on Saturday, with fierce gales and

Colorado and New Mexico.
The Far West should remiin
dry, with continued unseasonabkl
warmth.
:
Daytime temperatures we(e
expected to range from the teens in
the northern Plains to the 20s llid
30s in the eastern half of the nati~
as far south as Dallas. Highs in tl)e
40s , 50s and 60s were scattered
elsewhere. Highs in Californ ia
should reach the 70s and 80s.
'
Reports of heavy snowfall during the six hours end i::l.l' 7 p.dt.
EST on Thursday incl1
3 iJJcb9s
at Lander, Wyo., 2 inches at Pona
City, Olda., and I inch at Bismai"·
ck, N.D. and Ponland, Maine. · •
The high tern perature for the
nation Thursday was 91 degreea )It'

pounding surf that could cause
coastal flooding from the Carolinas
to New England.
Winter storm warnings were
~ posted through Saturday over parts
of South Carolina and Virginia.
Snow advis,ories were posted
through tomgbt across western
Tennessee.
Storm watches were in effect
over parts of Alabama, Mississippi,
(leorgia, North Carolina, Ken tuclty, Maryland and Delaware,
where heavy rain was forecast.
Heavy snow warnings were
posted for tonight over parts of
Oldahorna and the Texas Panhandie. Kansas also could get some
sn0w, along with the mountains of

Thermal. Calif.

AIDS...

W. VA.

~~~~~~-....~-----•,..._..,;;Sunn;;.;;;y~Pt~.~Cioudy~~.;c;;;"";.JCI•y
Via Asoociatod Press Grap/icsNot
011193 Accu-Woother. Inc.

~-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, cloudy. Snow develop·
ing late. Low in the mid-20s .
Chance of snow is 80 petcenL Saturday, occasional snow with brisk
.winds. High in the upper 20s.
Chance of snow is near 100 percent.

Lake effect snow could be
heavy over northeast Ohio.
Blustery winds of 20-"30 mph
Saturday night wiD cause blowing
and drifting snow along with wind
chill readings weU below zero.
The record-high temperature for
this date at. the Columbus weather
station was 75 degrees in 1990
while the record low was I ·in 1948.
Sunset tonight wiD be at 6:35 p.m.
and sunrise Saturday at6:46 a.m.
Around the nation
A major late-winter storm brew·
ing in the ·Gulf of Mexico threat·
ened a wide area today from the
Florida . Panhandle to the
Appalachians. A separate storm
front bore down across the central
Piains.
.
' The eastern storm was expected

Extended rorecast: ·
Sunday tllrougb Tuesday: .
Sunday, a chance of sn.ow.
Lows 5·15. Highs in the 20s. Mon·
day, fair. Lows 10- 15. Highs 25·
30. Tuesday. a chance of niin or
snow. Lows in the 20s. Highs 35·
45.

-----Area deaths----

Coatlnued rrom page 1
had sexual relations.
Because of that staggering
statistic, Donado exbibifed the
proper use of a condom and she
distributed a variety of types of
condoms throughout the audience.
She also had available an abundant
supply of printed material pertain·
ing to the disease and safeguards
from it.
Donado sl8ted one reason the
virus is spread so quickly is that
upon infection there is a three
month "window" during which
time a person will test negative
even though they have contracted
the virus. After that time, tests. win
be positive. During that window
period a person can spread the

Pornogr·
•

,. .

,.

.Ill.

'

,.

.j

, .

Victimizes Wo.._ell ,.,.
and ·Children.

•

American Family Association

v~onado

stated there are two
-· ; · types of tests available. QI)C is con11111m against pornll[l1'8phy about two yan-qo.
BATTLE CONTINUES. The Middleport
John
Krawsczyn
Sr
•
fidential
and
the
ot)ler
is
anonyMlalsterlal
Assoclatloa
and
the
chrclln
of
with
a white ribbon camp1ign alld haw coatlll· '
Linnie Akers
• .
mous. Both are av11lable through.
Middl~port
are
coatinulng
their
battle
Jiaalast
ued
with
aewspaper JKivertlsements. Tile uaod·'·
Word bas been received of the
John ~wsczyn Sr., 64, M1d- Planned Parenthood in Athens.
poraography
with
billboards
In
two
locltioalla
atlon
charges
that pornoaraphy vlctlmlaes
Feb. II death of Linnie Mae White dleport, died Thursday, ¥arch 11, Donado also stated the task force
women
a
ad
children.
··'
Meigs
County.
The
Associatioa
began
Its
proAkers, 92, of St. Petersburg, Fla.
1~3. at Veterans Memorial H!!SPI- provides the tests free of charge to
Born in Alfred, Meigs County, tal m Pomeroy.
.
anyone who thinks they may have
she was the daughter of the late
Born May 20, 1928, mScarbro, been exposed to the virus. John Edward and Nellie Biggs· W:Va., be was the son of. the late
Bill Holman, a member of the
White. Mrs. Akers was a member M1chael and Mary WoJIOwlct task force, also spoke during the
of the Church of Christ in Lavonia, Krawsczyn.
.
pro~arn. Holman stated he tested
Mich.
A mc;mber of the H~th Umted pos 1tive for the virus in 1985 and
She is survived by a son, Frank ' Method1st Church m Middleport, now is in the stage of full-biQwn
By ROBERT E, MILLER
The Ohio Education Associa- news eonference 10 oudine
. Alters of St. Petersburg, Fla.; a he !"as a U.S. Navy veteran and a . AIDS. He shared f'reely his experi·
tion,
the sl8te's largest teachers'
ABsoclated
Press
Writer
amendments theY plan 10 offer.
daughter, Frances Allen of Toledo; mamtenance foreman for the ences of living with the virus and
union,
expressed
concerns
about
COLUMBUS
The
Black
They said the plan ignores ll)e
eight grandchildren, 14 great· Southe!JI Oh1!&gt; Coal Cll!D~Y· . · answered any questions from the
new
teacher
licensing
procedures.
Elected
Democmts
of
Ohio
joined
dropout problems in big cities and
. He 1s surv~ved by: h1s w1fe, B,1l- audience.
grandchildren, nine great-greatOthera have questioned goals does little for poor students in city
grandchildren, and seveml nieces he Jo Houchms Krawsczyn, M~dThe speakers bureau division of other groups and individuals
and nephews.
dleport; two daughte~ and sons-~n- the task force consists of swdents, P!OfXlSinJ! changes ip Gov. George the Voinovicb plan sets, such as schools.
The goals in Voinovich •s plan
Besides her parents, she was law, Mary and Dav1d Pnce, M1d. community members and HIV. Vomov1ch's education ·reform instilling an app1eciation of creativ·
ity
and
a
concern
for
the
environ·
include
measurable "learner
p8Cksjle.
preceded in death by her husband, dlep~rt, and Martha and Donald· infected individuals who travel
ment,
saying
they
involve
issues
This
week,
the
-Catholic
Confergoals"
and
"learner outcomes,"
a daughter, Marge, and three broth- Unrem, Newpon Ne~s, Va.; two. around ~theastern Ohio, giving •
ence
of
Ohio
came
out
against
a
that
should
not
be
the
business
of
tlcfined
as
what
students should
ers, Otis, Seldon and Clyde White.
sons and daughterS·II!·Iaw, John presenl8tions on the AIDS virus to
requirement
for
parochial
students
the
state.
ltnow
and
be
able
to do upon gradKrawsczyn and &lt;;eha McC~y. education, community and church
On
Thursday,
Rep.
Vernon
to
pass
ninth-grade
proficiency
uation.
Pomeroy, and Dav1d and Jenq1fer groups.
·
',
Krawsczyn,
Pomeroy;
rosier
grand- ~
· · •·
· .· . tests to get a.high school diploma. Sykes, D-Aitron. president of the
. VETERANS MEMORIAL
Public
school
students
already
are
black
Democrats
group,
and
Rep.
11011 and wife, Sammy and Tammy
don't play thai game. 1We
Thursday admissions • Betty Little
CJ. Prentiss, D-Cieveland, held a can"Let's
required.
of St. Clairsville; ·eight
measure and measure but noth·
Lambert, Reedsville.
grandchildren and two foster
WASHINGTON (AP) -Janet
ing
is
going to ll_aPP.en until we put
Thursday discharges • Virginia
grandchil~.
.
.
'
Reno
was
sworn
in
today
as
the
up
more
resources. ' said Ms. Pren. Sayre, Middlepon.
· Also survl\:mg are: two Sisters nation's fust woman auomey gentiss, a former member of the state
Board of Education.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER and brotbers-m-law, Mart_ha .and era1. She pledged a quick but careThe minority plan provid~s
Dischqes, Marth I i · Nathan Joseph Dockman of MISSIOn, ful decision concerning the future
grants to urban and rural districts
· Fairchild, Amanda Kriner, Mrs. Texas, and Paula and Dennis ·of embanled FBI Director WiUiam
thai have the highest dropout rates.
Billy McGuire and daughter, .J~nes TD!Btas of Michi~; a sister, &lt;;lara Sessions.
WASHINGTON
(AP)Prices
Rainey
of
Sanger,
W.Va
.•
a
s1sterReno
who
won
unanimous
Sen·
February
'
s
increase
was
the
Sykes
noted that most of Ohio' s
Parsons, Lena Hatfield, Karen ·
paid
,
b
y
wholesalers
jumped
0.4
largest
since
an
identical
rise
in
in-law,
~ille
Kraw~zy~_.
Huntsate
app:Oval
Thursday,
took
her
big
cities
have a dropout rate of.at
Vanco, Joseph Davis, Shirley
percent
in
February.
the
biggest
Novemba:
1990,
early
in
the
recesburg,
and
several
spec.1al
fnends:
place
in
a
Cabinet
in
a
White
least
SO
percent,
led by Cleveland' s
Roush, William Woomer, Do!Wd
sion.
Since
then,
the
slow
economy
in
more
than
two
years,
the
.
rise
.
R~
WIS
preceded
m
~th
by
a
House
ceremony
attended
by
Presi·
58.7
percent
·
·
Saxon, Pearl Russell, Charles
government
said
today.
bas
i:Iampened
demand,
keeping
a
SISter,
Leona
Jacobowsk1,
and
a
dent
Clinton
and
members
of
her
Students scheduled to graduaie
Stone, Avonelle Cobb, Elizabeth
Large seasonally adjusted lid on prices. Despite today' s from high school in 1994 and 1995
Michael
Krawsczyn.
fam1'I y. Supreme Cour t, J us t'1ce
Liter, Harry Ray. Cathy Haning, brother
.
·u
be
held
da
SeiVJces WI
5un y at Byron White administered' the oath increases for home heating oil, report. most analysts believe infla· would be excused from the exislihg
Stacy McManis, Jessica Cremeans,
gasoline, tobacco and new cars lion will remain moderate this year. requirement to pass proficien~y
2
p.m.
at
J:feath
~&lt;;
with
t'!e R~. of off'JCe.
·
.
Judy Toland, Sylvia gilliam, Kyle
In February, overall energy tests.
more than offset declines in the
Frank
Sm1th
~ffiC1atmg.
Bunal
w1ll
Clinton
said
his
new
attorney
Dray, Diama Eads, Manhew Crabprices
rose I.7 percent, the biggest
prices
of
fruits
and
vegetables.
the
·
general was a "strong and indejlen·
Sykes said the tests are unfair 'to '
tree, Jamie Allen, and Mrs. Derick folio~ m Me1gs Memory Gardens.
mcn:ase
in
eight
months.
The
cost
Labor
Department
said.
.
Fnends
may
caii.Sat~(day
at
dent
person
who
will
give
me
your
those
students because they lack
Stwnp and daughter.
of
beating
oil
soared
18.5
percen~ the advantages of younger studeri~S .
In
advance,
llfll!lysts
were
lookFisher
Funeral
Home
m
M1ddlepon
best
legal
judgement,
whether
or
Births, March,ll ·Mr. and Mrs.
ing for a milder 0.3 percent rise in the largest rise in a year, following who will have had longer 10 Pfb·
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
not it's what I want to hear."
Bruce Sll:rlzbach, son, Gallipolis.
pore.
For her part, Reno pledged to the department's Producer Price a 0.6 percent decline in January.
Index,
which
measures
prices
paid
administer justice fairly. "There
will be a new spirit in America to producers such as factories and
where people wiD want to become farmers.
·. In January, it rose 0.2 percent.
one wanting to lceep flowers sllbuld involved in public service because
Birthday celebration planned
For
the first two months of the
it is the greatest undertakin' you
The annual binbday celebration have them removed by. that date.
contiaued rrom page 1
year,
producer price inflation was
of the American Legion will be
can commit for your nation, • she
Meigs County Court of Common Pleas by J.B. O'Brien, Pomeroy, ·
running at a 3.4 percent annual
Athletic boosters to meet
held by Drew Webster Post No. 39,
said.
against
Eva Marie Stocker, Cincinnati.
.
The Meigs Athletic Boosters
Pomeroy. at the senior citize11s cen·
Reno began her day with teievi- mte, more than double the 1.6 per·
cent price rise registered for all of ,
ter on Tuesday. Dinner will be will mtet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at sion interviews.
served at 6:30 p.m. All members Meigs High School. The winter
. "I don't feel any pressure last year.
.and their spouses or friends are sports banquet wiD be Thursday at except 10 do the women of Amenca ·
A 1986 Chevrolet station wagon belonging to Hazel V. Colas- ·
6:30 p.m. Bring a vegetable and proud," Reno said when asked if
urged to attend.
ante of Weber Road, Columbus, was recovered in Pomeroy
dessert dish. Meat, drinks and rolls she felt overwhelmed by the tasks
Wednesday nighL
_
wiU be furnished by the boosltts.
Cemetery cleanup
awaiting her in her new job.
Pomeroy police reporied thai the vehicle was found at 10:45 p.m. •
; Cemetery clean-up will begin in
She vowed to use the governAm Ele Power....................35 3/4
abandoned in front of the .Pomeroy Cliff Aparunents. There was .
Dol A to meet
•Olive Township on April 12. Any·
ment's law enforcement powers to
Ashland Oit .......................28 1/2
some damage, it was reponed. The incident remains under investi- .,
Chester Council No. 323. protect .the right or women to
AT&amp;T.............................:...57
galion.
Daughters of America, will meet choose abortion and said. the enviB8J!k
One...........................S3 1/2
Tuesday at 7 p.m. Quarterly birth· ronment, civil rights and safeguardBob Evans ......................... 18 1/2
The Daily Sentinel
&amp;
days will be observed. Potluck ing children from abuse were rop
Otarming Shop.................. l4 118
(U8P8111·980)
refreshments will be served. Prac- priorities.
Quantities of cigarettes and some money were taken from the
Cbmp lndustries ................. ll 1/2
tice for the spring rally on April 3
Pubtiahed every aR.emoon , Monday
Food
Shop on East Main Street, Pomeroy, in a breaking and enterCity
Holding
......................
22
Reno said a decision on ·Ses·
lh""''!h Friday, Ill Court SL, !'oonm&gt;y,
at
will
be
held.
District
13
ing
there
early Friday morning.
Federal M&lt;lg\11.. .................. 18 1/2
Ohio by l~e Ohio Volley l'ubllahinc
who is midway through his
pracuce at Logan will be held . sions,
Compa.n)'IMulUmedia lne., Pomeny,
Police
fllponed that about 3:36 a.m. a patrolman attcmpted to
Goodyear
T&amp;R
..................
74
718
10-year term !I$ FBI director,
Ohio 457611. Ph. 9112-3156. So&lt;ond elo.
March 28 at 1 p.m.• All members would be "one of the most urgent
stop
a
vehicle
which was weaving as it traveled along East Main.
Key
Ceniurion
...................
22
3/4
P"'tap ,.ad al Poiowo 0), Ohio.
1
are urged to attend. District 13 conce~." But, ·she said, "I cer·
The
driver
speeded
up and the patrolman pursued unlil be lost the
•
Lan&lt;b End .......................... 27 1/2
Member: The A..oci.Led Pruu. •nd tho
lod~ members have Easter candy tainly won't prejudge that issue."
vehicle at Five Points. During the chase several cartons of ciprata
Umited
Inc
.......................
24
118
Ohio Newl papr!T Auocialion, NatiOhlll
ava1lable. Order from any member.
were throWn out the car window. They were laiCI' recovered.
Multimedia Inc ..................36
Advert.i11in11 Rcprmm~~tivc, Bn~nh•m
The breaking and entering remains Ulldc:r investigation.
Nowapapcr SaiM, 733 Third Avenue,
Point Bancorp....................l3 1/2
Rax RestauranL ..................5/16
NcwYork.NewYork10017.
. ~ ----Livestock
Reliance Electric................22
POSTMASTE~ Send ..w,... ch a - to
1'ha Daily Sentinel, 111 Cuurt. SL.,
Robbins&amp;Myers
................20
COLUMBUS,
Ohio
(AP)
84.00; select 70.()().77.00.
Pomeroy. OHio 45769.
.
Shoney'slnc
......................
2S
Direct
livestock
prices
and
receipts
Cows: steady; all cows 55.00
SUBIClUPTION IIATES
Star
Ban)l;
....................
.......
36 3/4
IIIDiec;,ted buying points Friday by and down• .
a,. C.rrler or
One Wmk ............................................ uo
Wendy
lnt'1..
.....................
.13
1/2
the Oluo Departirient of AgnculBulls: sready; all bulls 61.50 and
One Monlh ....................................... .. M.tlfi
Wlirtbington
Ind
................
25
1/2
ture:
'
~
down.
()ne v~..r ... .. .................................M0"0$83.20
Stock
reports
are
tile
10:30
SIHGLJ: COPY
Sheep and lambs: very uneven,
, Bnrows a~d
, ilts: mostly
PRICii
a.m. quote. provided by
sieady;
demand
.
4.50
lower to 8.00 higher; choice
Dolly............................................. 25 c....
U.S. 1-2, 2 260 Ills., country · wools 75.00-84.00; choice clips Kim per Securities, fnc., o
Sut.c:ribcni not dathiniJ Ia Pf')' tha carriGaUlpolla.
polnta, 44.00-44.75, a few 45.50; 75.00-84.50; feeder lambs, not
1'11' may romit in -...nee •imet Lo Tha
jJIInu 44.75-45.75, a few 46.75. . available; old sheep 42.50 and
~ily StmUnc1 on • lt'tftlft, st.. or 12
,.....u. hllMiM. Credit. wtll 00 gjvr:n c:uricr
,U.S. 1·3, 230-260 Ills., country down.
.
Met. wnck.
potnll, 42.50-44:00.
COL&lt;mY THl ATRE
It·:
.
.
f • :', .....
No •ubKrtpthH'III by mail pcnrriU.ed i.n
U.S. 1·2. 21().230 lbs., country
Fll. ntiiU THUAI.
an"tlll wham home c.n1ar 1110rrice 1•
CLEVELAND (AP) - Here are
polats.
41.50-43.00.
awailftb1o.
· ' ,
JEAH-CLAIIOE VAN o.-e
~
· Recelpts11tllllday 8.100. Esti- Thuraday night's Ohio Lottery
II
Mall a•crt.U••
selections:
·
, ...... ~~e~p t•••Q&lt;
mated
recoiptl
FridaY
7
,500.
NOWHERE TO RUN A
'1a weo~u ......................................... ~.....
Prtc:el from The hoducen Live· Pick 3 Numbers
IHOW1'111U
:111 Waello .... ............................. :........ ~.l6
5..()..8
·IIDCk A'W'C!ation·
FRI., lAT., "'"- 7:10 I e:111
~ Waeli ~... ... ,.................................. S84.76
liON. THAll THUAL
O...We lololp C..nl)'
(five, zero, eight)
Cauio: 2.00
JS Wac!II11 .... ............~ ...... ...............1... U3.40
OlE
E-IIIOW Uo
Pick
4
Numben
Slaughter 1teen: choice 74.0021 wae~~ ........................................... f.'&amp;.&amp;O
ADI•IION
11.10
6-8..()..7
511 w.............................................. aauo
83.50; lelect 71.00-80.00.
.
uean
(aix, oight, zero, seven) .·
Slaudler helfen: choice 74.00-

Black Democrats, others Jt!ant to chang~
Voinovich's education reform package

,Hospital news

Reno sworn' ··n

Producer prices up
0.4percent in.February

-Meigs announcements--....-

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

fr"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""'i'

Vehicle recovered in Pomeroy

Stocks

B

E probed by police

Losan

report---

Motor..... .

.

Lottery numbers

lliiher.
,,

.

•

�..

Friday, March 12,1993

The·Daily Se~tinel

Sports

Friday, March 12, 1993
Page--4

In NBA action,

, .

Heat tops Chicago 97-95 to snap 20-game losing streak vs. Bulls
By Tbe Associated Press
,The Heat finally got to the
Chicago Bulls.
,It took 20 tries until the Miami
Heat could take the two -time
defending NBA champions. It hap~ned Thursday night as Rony
seikaly had a season-high 30
points and added 23 rebounds.
S1eve Smith scored seven points in
.the final 2:33 and Michael Jordan
m.issed his last four shots in
Miami's 97-95 victory.
'
"This win breaks a psyctiologi:
·
·
'
'

cal barrier," Seikaly said. "It
shows lhat we're capable of playing great basketliall against a great
team."
.
Miami was 0-16 during the regular season and 0-3 in the first
round of last year's playoffs
against Chicafo. The victory
extended Miamis franchise' record
home winning streak 10 nine games
and halted Chicago's road winning
streak at seven.
Jordan led Chicago with 29

r
'I

'

I'

,' ;• I n th e NBA •..
'
,
•

li'

I
I

'
1
•
'

I'

EASTERN CONFERENCE
AoJuue DIYIIlon
T....
w L P&lt;L CB
NcwYarL .......... AO 18 .690

•New JanCy ............ 35 25 .583

'

l•

l

I
,
,
l

'

Phlhddph~ ...........20 38 .345
20
Woohin................l6 42 .'Z16 ZA
.
CetUraiDI&gt;illon
Chieogo..................41 19 .683
CLEVEIAND .......40 21 .656
u
Chodoue ................ 32 "rl ·542 . 1
~~~:: :::::::::::::: ::~ ~l
12

'

sonJ....- ...- . 10 S'1 2 22 115 337
·~pla,..crboo\h
Thunday'sKOreS

~~~4
~4.1AI=r3(0'1')

uw. .. H....... I ,30p.m.

St.LouiSs,s..;_., 1

Now lcncy~l
'· ' p.m.
DolluolSommcolO, 10,30p.m.
Sunday's games

·r-•·-6, o...;, 3
•
--..-.
Tonlgbt'sp111es
T-Boy"T-. 7&gt;40
:f:.;

Panland11San~~~··9·::pm.

d

t~: t!:':.O:..:t:::;;~'30pm.
~.';1~?.-'a"::~~i~.~~·

Saturday'ta-•
tp.;,,I,IOp.m.
OaowanDooran,lo40,.S"'·
=~:) "':'s,IOp.m.
N.Y. Ronaan "Wuhiqlan, ~:40
p.m.
·
QaomooaMaao.J,I,IOp.m.
NcwJaocyotC1J&amp;ul',l'18p.m.
-1tSLLouia,lo40p.m.

Lao.....,_ .. p,a

Po&lt;lneDI•blon
""""'" ..................4s 13 .m
............
LA.Clim
• ppcn .........
OoldonSoa..
2S 36

s

·410
.......... , 9 41 ·317

ocmncnoo............

·

~~:..;:::: ~l ~ ,j n~m
33

6

27

s

72 z,o 1 234

~~Y.1:b.~::: 32 29 6 70'ZI0242

:= . .: : ~n~ ~ ~ ~ fJ

s

~·lhu..-"
N.Y. ~&lt; """· HO
St.Louioo&lt;--.,Hop.m.

Bull'olo
.............. 33
26 B 74287243
u--•~
20 43
4 44 226 300
~-~-............
OUawo .............. 9 56 4 22167 3"rl

2I.S
~

••

Thursday's scores
Miomi97.a.icogo9s

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
NorrulllT..m
w LT .... CFCA
~.:::::: :::: ~ ~ I~ ~
Ton•na ............. 35 24 ' .79 235 191
MinnDIDU ......... 33 27 9 75 Z3l 'lSI
s• ......, .......... Jl 30 1 10 233 23S
TompoBoy ....... 21 41 5 47 2al2SO

CLEVEIANDII8,Ciwloue99

=iltl.tf';~~~os
""'""" 104, l'ootloNI 9f
New!.,., I03,Go(dron s.... "
Sommorna 109. Minneoo~a 95

Tonlghl'sgames
Milwa,.,...u...,..,7,30 p.m.
·
I.A. Loken a&lt;Phi!.dctptu., 7,JO p.m.
New Ymhl Woohington. 7,30 p.m.

1 10 p.m..

v"""'"""Cala"'· '

National college
basketball scores
Regularseo!JOiuc""n

m

:1

SmJlht Ill"''"'
37 22 9 13 217

v......... """"

,

~:~.:,'4'{40'f?"'·

1

9i!
17

nc1

· Phi!Molphin&lt;
u ay·sp.ilord'"anl, lo40p.m.
...,....._ .. Buffuo,~IOp.m.
r-.DoyllW::rJ; 2'10 p.m. .

l'bilod~phio.. .... 2S 3211 61 260"riO
Ad~m~Dl•hlon
~-MoolRII ........ 42 22 6 !10 286m

'

d

d

WALES CONFERENCE
PotrldlDlYIIIoo
y..,.
. w L TPII. GFGA
PllOiborJh ......... 41 21 , u m 219
1

~~~:=~~~~;!_tar
Northwestern 76-66 ·
~- .......

Toumlllltllts

-..n. ~'t":;

For W..
Arizano 11, SollllomCal76
C.Ulomio71,CropoSL72

Or.&amp;oa14.S....Coo!73
ud:A n ........... SL 74

217

·Adulk
1t c..,.,_
ChUiplonilllp

M•a·+o·m• ~. T.,plc61
Allulk c..,a c-....
Jll&amp;~t CWtrentt

·

.

osu women down

L ..

away

~WIA'i IY.Iolll\0 U lOillS

,

·

Klnp 109, Tlmberwolves !IS
Lionel Simmons came baek
f
f oL.
f
rom one 0 UIC poorest games 0
his career 10 score 2Sro;ints. Simta r
tb first
mons, a non-s r 1e or e 1

EVANSTON, Ill. (AP) _Aver'II R be
d 24 ' I r
r1
0 TIS SCOre
potn S oOr
No.3 Ohio State as the Buckeyes
sn........t Northwestern's six6jame
"~'~""' Streak With a 76winning
win
1
S•l;~:!!.5r:,_
~~:s~i~~~:~~~: ~c~~o~~::C~~: Th~~ (23 3 52 B'
""'s.
57
Suns on Tuesday, made 10 of 21 led h 1~.c 18~th • • reml• . !8 Tend).
6
T~.·2'.'0hi•?.·!':'*c0Tlw..o-so
field goals and 8 of 9 free thlOWS.
-uu WI 2:4 3
ammg an
w':""'~65.a Mkhipa57
He hit only three of 23 shots shut out the Wildcats to score the
M"'-"'" Coii&lt;Jiol• Coolina&lt;e
against the Suns and had shot 32.9 final nine points in the ·Buckeye's .
Flnlround
.
fo
·ninth suaight win.
BOIIloor71,LoS.U.10
~
peroeMarnt inh~~~VIOUScdurMipmes.
Northwestern (18:8, 12-5) went
Doq
59.Dsrai1MOO&lt;po
Ollmi1Aey pac
ROCSO·
21-4
·
fi h f
Ev-m.69,Do,...66
Ia, which lost its fifth straight road
on a
run m the 1rs1 al and
~7o.,~:O.:,~:;!
game, with 24 points and 12 oheld a 41-31 halftime lead . But
,..,...d
boo ds both ·
hi hs
hio Slate .outscored the Wildcats
AJobomon,s-c...un.79
re
n
•
career
g
·
45-25inthesecondhalf.
,
..-;.n, M' · 'ppl s.. 56
C•vlllen 118, Hornels 99
;;;;r.FPi 67,Fioddo 62
At Richfield, Ohio,· the Cavs
"We didn't run lhe offense well
T-71A-.76
. .
lfl
fl d
in the second half," Nonhwestem
Soo~l••....,; Alh-c..r.moved wtthm 1
games 0 ea • coach Don Perrelli said. ·'We
...k...
u
struggled! moving, we weren't pass-St.IOO,ProUioV'-70
po'nts
·
ing we I and we weren't spaced
Mill. V.U., St92, Tau Soutbom74
ITh. b·
se..no-u 1os Grom"""'S "
f
Mart
n.:-- bas- weD."
. .
-• •
e a sence o
co""'
A dre B
red
.
17 pomts,
w~Q~=C:C'""'"
not hurt Cleveland because Terrell
u Y urcy sco
8....., v...,.M.HowoH 71
, .. Brandon bas passed for 38 assists Katie Smith had 14 and Nikki KeyNc*"lai&lt;o'12.FnoooSt.41 :
h'l
· •
·
f'
ton added II for Ohio State.
Tcou·E1Puo70,Col doSt.65,
w t e c~mmlldit.llngl.2JUS~ andlve Roberts tied a Welsh,-Ryan Arena
UlabU,s.nJlioioS•M
turnovers, Inc u ng
IISSISts
record by makh\g all six of her
Ohio H.S. girls'
~0 wmobv~d~.~~n,ht. Tee three-point shot attempts.
tournament scores -·
as een Sl e me
c ast our
Northwestern's Maqreen HologameS with a sprained thumb.
· Dl.tsloo IV
Gerald Willtins added 23 points, han scored 20 points, while Palricia
u·~-c--&gt;&lt;•,w~-42
Babcock and Moll'8' Kennelly each
n:;:;u;sl:~:iJ-·-•
including 14 in the first quarter,
Fronld'"' Adeno so. Fnaktia F and Larry Nance had 18 for Cleve- added 12 points. Donna Groh
a.... 30
added 10 pomts for the Wildcats.
land.
llitSkrcoor.,....
u.•oSt.6!Fin,M.:.::::"'so .
WcborSt.9l, Mon.... SL 72
CraiMid-Conrtnoco
Flnlround .
Dd'lul ~
- AJo.-a........,....."'
-~

~·;;~%;,;;..!.,'9~~

.In the NHL...

. . . ...

-~~m.-.70(01)
Jd u 7,Miuni40

?1

0

~!:"'::'r,~:..........3

O.ic~o, IIDcuoi~noan

• WESTERN CONFERENCE
Tw.
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tims:;,t~~.7,30pm.
IndltnutNcwYodr.,8:30p.m.

:!:l 1
,'\ =~;;;;:::::: ::::::~ ~ :;:J ~l

l

.

a.EVELAND va. Wuhingt.on al Bal·

~.;;:::::::::::::::::
i~ ~ :~ ~~l15
Mi&amp;mi .................... 2S 33 .431

Flnlrouod
Mary!and7,,N,CuolinaSlS5

longest in t!lc-NBA; this ~· i's · Larry Johnson led lhc Hornets
the second longest 10 dle~r bts~. wtth 2} pomts and 11 rebou~ds.
The Rcxkets have won 25 l)f their
PIStons 112, Nuggets 104
last 31? games 1;0 .s'!lge 10 lhe top of
Even with~ul its starting frontthe Midwest ~IVISIOII.
court of Denms R~man (SI!S(!CndA 22-6lhlrd"quarter run was ed) and Mark Agutrre (fOOt IDJUfY),
decisive.
.
host ~it had too much for ~nHak«:tm OlaJuwon paced Hous- ver. lsiah Thomas scored 33 .Jl01n~
!on w1th 27 ppmts and 10 and fellow quar.d Joe Dumars ~a~
rebounds.
25. Olden Polyruce added 20 pomtS
Nets 103, Warrlors.91
. and ~4 n:bounds,
:
New Jersey won tts second
D1kembe Mutombo led the
sttaight game on a four-game road Nuggets with 27 points and 18
trip, thanlcs to its backcoun. Drazen . rebounds.
Petrovic scored 28 points, making
SuperSonics 116, Bucks lOS :
seven sttaight from the field at one
At Milwaukee, former Buck
stretch. Rumeal Robinson, contihu- Ricky Pierce led the way wilh 27
ing 10 play well at point guard in · points and Eddie Johnsoil added 10
the absence of injured Kenny of his 16 in the fourlh quarter as
Anderson, added 20 paints and six seven Seattle players scored in ·
assiSts.
double figures.
·
The Warriors suited Ull iust nine
Fnmk Brickowski led the Bucks
players and lost their fourth with a season-high 32 points.
· h J ff G
T' H d
Sttalgandt.
!~~~~:...ll~ .ar~

as

Salurd•Y.'• games
Da&gt;•cri&lt;Philodclpbil,7,30p.m.

6

and ~onland Trail Blazers for the
fust lime.
.
Elsewhere, Houston won liS
12th in a row, l 04-91 over Portland; New Je~sey took Golden
State 103-91 ; 11 was .Sacramento
109, Minnesoll 95; ~leveland 118,
Charlotte 99; Detroit 112,. Denver
104; and Seaule 116, M1lwaukee
105. .
Rockets 104, Trail Blazers
At Houston, the Rockets 12game winning streak, the second

Colpty ...._._, 34 :Mto 71 26'1235
Lot Aop~oo...... 30 31 7 Gl 272
Winaipea .......••• )I) . :Jl 6 66 251264

Od•do•Adanoa, Bup.m.

o.u~oao. a....,., a,30 p.m.
P.,Uu•tPh~,_ 9:JOp.m. Minn.,..." L.A. Clipp&lt;n. 10,30 jun.

points, but in the fmal 2:50. he committed a turnover and m1s.sed all
four shots he took. Glen R1ce had
25 point$ for Miami.
· "They closed the ball game.
which they haven' t been able 10 do
in the past against~ ... Jo!dan said.
"The law of averages Will finally
catch up 10 you."
.
. . .
Phoenix (12-0 agamst Miam1) IS
now the only teal'l! the _Heat has
never beaten. Earher th1s season
Miami beat the Los Angeles Lakers

67

n.Km•

1

s.a~..:.=

=~ &lt;i:':~od:u~e~~~J:~~si~~

Pomeroy ..ddleport, Ohio

The Dally Sentinel

With last-second jumper by Brown,

.

Toledo tops OU. Bobcats 85-84 in overtime in MAC tourney
.

By RUSTY MILLER
said. ''It was a hell or a pme.''
inThorsday"sfirsl.._
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- Of
As the Mid-American Confcr:Ia UK uderdcJI fasllion, the
course Toledo coach Larry Gipson ence heads into its semifinals fiflb.w •11 Ror:tcu stutt around
was biased. But he still was right
tonight at Battelle Hall,, it wiU be jasa Joac,.. p IIIII dim gcu 15"I would have paid a lot of hard 10 10p Toledo's 85-84 over- filaljw+:l fi1D s.a Brown with
money lo watch th 1s game," he time victory over Ohio Univcniry • s«AJJ'dleh to ruia • 34-point
effort by MAC frullmm of the
yearGaryT.-..
Ia otbufirn-round aames,
tbird- lied Western Michigan
Ileal EuiCnl Mic:bigao 65-57
pick in June's NBA draft.
By ROBERT MACY
beloiDd tbe play of guards Leon
Ber10lino's passing grade in lbc
LAS VEGAS (AP) - The
Datid: Bmob; top·UNLV basketball program, dogged lhree-unit English class last fall pul
hllbll S.. rode. its bic men
bY. problems in the past 16 years, Rider over the 24-unit annual mini- 10 a 77-57 wii:aay ow:riCcm; and
haS been jolted anew with a report mwn needed to become elip,le fill' Ma Kamer: llil6 or 1 diRe-point
that an instructor was pressured lhe 1992-93 school year.
s11aa 10 • • •••u few llllcf fd5 18
·into giving a passing grade to leading scorer J.R. Rider.
UNLV officials, who have liken
beat for forcing the resignation of
fonner coach Jerry Tarkanian last
year, were quick 10 deny die accusations.
':1 find it unimaginable that any
·instructor would let anyone pressure them into giving a grade,"
UNL V president Robert Maxson
said Thursday.
David Chambers. a former
NCAA executive and now UNLV
compliance officer, said his· offICC
•
had infonned NCAA headquaners
that lhe university had checked out
Thursday's copyrighted story in lhe
Las Vegas Review-Journal.
Vicki BeriOiino IOid the newspaUIJZ JS
per she was pressured by two peo.US Is
ple in the athletic department 10
FREE DELIVERY!
F'IIUIL
.give· Rider a grade even though he
*FREE
FINANCING
.
had not completed his work. She
Up To
(•W~h Approved Cftldit)
said the pressure came when her
&amp;S%01f
husband ·was recovering from a
~
heart attack, 1111d lhat one call was
made 10 her at the hospilll'where
he was being treated
' "We have looked in10 it and are
·satisfied that the grade is projler
and he is eligible to compe1e,"
Chambers said.
IIW.Piic8s.
· Rider is the nation's second(See . . . )
, leading scorer at 29.2 points per
game, and is expected 10 be a top

UNLV prof claims pressure
used against her to pass Rider

Mel"-_.

na ULE.

.
DOORS OPEl SDNIIY!!!:

It!!

GOODS 10 IE
EIPEDmD TO
PUBLIC SUIIIJI.!

DISPERSAL

King first to
reach Iditarod
· in sled dog race

OPEN 8 HOURS ONLY! .
SUNDAY 1 P.M.
'TIL 9 P.M.

••i•

IOTICE: Purclt•••• •ust 1M
for ltr C•slt, PersH•I.
Ch•ck, •••••rC•r•, Yis•,
lcce,t•ltle Crt-It
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ALL
SALES
FINAL

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

IDITAROD, Alaska (AP)Jeff King led a breakaway pack of
six mushers into this abandoned
gold-mining community that marks
the halfway point of the ldil8rod
Trail Sled Dog Race.
;-. Officials said King .arrived at
;:"lditarod at 1:10 p.m. Thursday and
:,Picke4 up..$3.000. in silver ingots:.,
• - 539 coins - for leading,at lhe
·o~teial midpoint He drove inlp lhe
..checkpoint five minuteS aheall of
~·defending champion Martin Buser.
,. King said that while racing for
~ the silver wasn't his goal, he was
• glad to get it.
· "I didn't have 10 rush at all. The
timing was just right," King saia.
' Four other mushers -Rick
~.Swenson, Susan Butcher, Dee Dee
: Jonrowe and Rick Mackey • pulled in within 67 minutes of

••tl•r

fills Is •
S.le ... • • H
ClllllltKtM 0. 11le Pr•IMs S.IIHr.

·o· o

UP
TO

SUNDAY

P.

I:OO.P. • 'TIL 9
All GOODS
NOW

MAllET .'SIIIDAY

HOURS

MEICIAIIISE lllftiW 8
_,.1~

TO

•

BISSEn • FLEISTEEL • SPRING AIR • SMITH
BROTHERS • ENGLAND • KIMBALL STEWART •
RESTON IC • JIMSON • COROLLA CLASSICS •
CALDWELL • VAUGHN BiSSETT

IE PLAQD 011

._

'

poi.nts, Brown had 24 and Craig jostling with Ohio U.'s Chad Estis:
Thames 13 - amassed 67 points in the backcourt before shaking•
and five assists.
free 10 get off the shot just beror&amp;
Brown had hit a three-point shot the buzzer sounded.
;
from behind the NBA arc with 19
" We wanted the ball in hi~ ·
seconds left to put the Rockets hands. He's done this several times
ahead 83-82 in lheovertime.
lhis year," Gipson $l!id.
But Trent, who hit 10 of 15 . In Western's win over Eastern,
shots from the field and tied a McGee and Brooks led the way In·
MAC tournament record with 17 . a 15-7 first-half run that gave th~ .
free throw attempts (making 14), Broncos the lead for good.
"·
was fouled with 9.6 seconds left
The Broncos came into the ·
and hit both of the free throws to game with a 3-10 mark in MAC
put the Bobcats (14-13) in front by tournaments, the worst record of
a point.
any league member.
.
·~
Brown took the inbounds pass
Mc&lt;ke had 18 points, 14 in thO·
and brought the ball downcourt, fmt half. ·
• ·~

~------------~-------r----------------~
SftJRE US BEEN
CLOSED ftJ PREPARE :·'

.PUBI.IC
NlftFICAftllll!l

. .....
ORDIIID -

points in leading second-seeded
Miami of Ohio 10 a 63-50 viciOry
over Bowling Green. His threepoint shooting tied a tournament
record.
Ball Slate (24-7) meets Toledo
(12-15) in today's first semifinal at
5:30p.m.. at Battelle Hall, while
Western (16-11) takes on Miami
(20-7) in the nighiCap.
"We're like a pest." Gipson
said or his Rockets. "If you don' t ·
swat us, these little guys will bite
yoo in the end."
Gipson wasn't kidding about littie guys. His three-guard offenseArchie Fuller had a career-high 30

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P •
March 3
~ ' Lea1ue - Early Wednesday
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·
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•Roofing (53), Banks Construction
~). Sports .t Stuff (43), Rutland
:Xmerican Legion (42), Teaford
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, . Second-highest series- Jack
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•· Hlah 1 ame '- Jack Follrod
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• Seeoad-hllh aame - Bub
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: Meanwhile, Buser continued to
: sing his team's praises.
•· "I'm just speechless at how
~good they're doing, and, of course,
: lhe question is how long can lhey
keep doing it? They have been
• above and beyond my expecta; lions," he said.
• lditarod is about 535 racing
~miles from the stan of the 1,100" mile endurance run from Anchor·
r age to Nome, which began Satur"'day.
• • None of the mushers have been
.;reported leaving lditarod for the
•next checkpoint at Shageluk, 65
~iles down die uail.
'-= Five-time winner Swenson left
:::the Ophir. checkpoint, 90 miles
~efore Iditarod, at 12:24 a.m.
~ursday, followed a minute later
~'by King. Buser departed at I: 15
,.a.m.
:;'" As of Thursday afternoon, more
'!t han 30 mushers had departed
~hir.
:;:" The ldiwod features a $400,000
r purse, wilh $50,000 going to ~e
"winner. Sixty-three of 68 'swung
~" ushers remained in competition.
Race officials say leaders have
~all completed a manda1ory 30-hour
::rest so that standings reflected
: actual position in' lhe race.

1

PMO•
•••·1405

'

�.

By
The
Bend
.

Long distance·love can work
Dear Au J.aeden: I'm SIR that
your columD about lbe sltor18&amp;e oC

Ann
L an defS

women in Chetwynd, British
Columbia,. resullcd il1 hlllldreds of
inquiries. I know bow desperale
IJIO!IC litCn are. bet:•nse I was once

one fl them.

ANN LANDERS
"1993, LGo ADcela
Tim.. S)'llc!l....

VIRGINIA
.
DEAR HIP: you are right when
you say most people are not "pure"
anything. Many African-Americans
have one or more white ancestors.
Some African-Americans abo came

here from the Caribbean or South
America, which could make them
c,...,n Syndlcoie"
pan Indian and/or European
{Spanish, Dutch, Portuguese,
people claim that they are "all English or French).
white." Hispanics sbould be the last
Fourteenth century Arabs
ones to make that StalemenL They probabl)'"mixed with Spaniards,
are really a beautiful mixture of Conquering Spaniards intennarried
African, European and Middle·East- with the Indian ·populations in
ern herilage.
·
Mexico and South America. One
··wht' te Hisparu"c· admiUed that would have to study world history
ber Cuban family traces its to know all the racial and ethnic
ancestm to the south oC Spain. Sbe . variations possible for each etbnic
shotJid look at a world map and see group.
how close Spain is 10 Africa, Also,
1 would rather concentrate on the
students of Spanish history know similarities of humans instead of
that the counuy was once ruled by their differences.
Moslems from the Middle East And
Cuba, in the 1800s, had sugar
Piatuung a wedding? Whal's right?
plantations thai were worked mostly What's wrong? 'The Ann L!Jfl(iers
by Africans.
'
Guidi! for Brides" will relieve your
So be proud to call yourself IJIIJUty. Send a self-addres~d. long,
Hispanic, because you are not all business-size en~lope and a check
white. Tbesamecanbesaidforital- or moMy order for $3.65 (litis illians. Jews and Greeks, who also ci!Uks postage and handlillg) to:
clainJthey.-eaUwhite. Bytlte- Brides, c/o AM l..allders, P.O. Box
token,African-AmericansarenotaU 11562, Chicago.IIUi0611-0562. (ln
African. -- A HIP CAT IN Canada , send$4.45.)

I had been pllcin8 penonalllls in
the · Edmonton · and Vanco11vcr
)1ipen for months, Jookina foi thai
ljicciBI iomeone. After your column ·
ippc:aRd. I spotted some penonal l
Cbl ses in the local paper from
~ and Tennessee. I answen:d
several. The most interesting
response came from a girl in
ro~..~--._,............,..
·weconesponded fur four months.
tine or four letten every week. and
we spoke on the phone almost
nightly. The phone bills were
11$110tl0f11ical, but I didn't mind.
I invited "Beth" to Cltetwynd for
a week, and I knew I was in love
before she arrived. When I picked
her up at the airport. I already had
my speech mldy: "WUI you marry
me?" She later confessed thai she
was mldy to say yes instadly.
·well, she did nwry me, and we
are now living happily in Temessee- I know bow you feel about
pe!!OIIIllllls and getting friendly
wilhsttangers,butthisisalovestory
ihat.rcally did come true, and I
wanted you to know. -- CHATTANOOGA. TENN.
. ,DEAR CHATTANOOGA: You
are right. I do, indeed, caution
ADELAJDE, Australia (AP) against getting involved with
Paul
McCartney is canceling the
stJangen. but that plea from the ·
remaining
news conferences on his
Cbelwynd man really touched my
Australian tour because he' s bored
heart.
Strangrn can be da~Jsaous,ltld I by trying to answer the same questions from reporters, a promoter
reilrll* my warning about being too said
Thursday.
lrtiJiinll. I've had many mote 1et1en . McCartney,
50, met the media
from readers wlio were taken before shows in Perth and Meladvantage of than those with bourne, but the reporters kept askI_tappy endings. So the watchw&lt;rd ing questions like whether the surfrom he~ is "be careful." Mean- viving BeQtles might reunite, a
. while, COIIp'lllulatio to you and spokeswoman for promoter Paul
"Beth." You can name the baby Dainty Corp. said.
after me.
She said McCartney wo.uld
Dear Aaa Lander&amp;: I'm writing rather talk about the enviionment
· in response to "White Hispanic in and the hole in the ozone layer.
Sama Monica" who was offended
McCartney has toured Australia
that people thougltt Hispanics were only twic.e before- with the Beatles in 1966 and with Wings in
not white.
I'm sick and tired of bearing 1975.
Australia is the first leg of
McCartney's five-month world
tour that has stops in the United
States, Canada and Europe.

-People in the news-

Students named ·
to dean's list
'

. The Office of Records bas
released the University of Rio
Grande' s Winter Quarter 1992-93 •
Deans Honor List
.
. , The following students from
t&lt;f~igs County were ~ted: Brian R.
l!ailey, Chester; Lesley D. Carr,
Pomeroy; Timothy A. Curfman,
Racine; Ami Jo Davis, Langsville;
Heather L. Finlaw, Long Bottom;
'Sheila M. Harris, Middleport; Timothy W. Lawson, Racine; Teresa
.·M. Lieving, Pomeroy; Matthew J.
:Lyons, Middleport; Terry A. New.some, Pomeroy; Gina N. Johnson
Pines, Pomeroy; Donna K. Smith,
Langsville; Jennifer D. Smith, Gallipolis; Bobby J. Stanley, Racme;
Jody L. Taylor. Pomeroy; AmyL.
Warth, Pomeroy; Sharon C. Wickersham, Racine; Darci M. Wolfe,
-Middle!l(Yt; Tara M. Woods-Gates,
Racine.

New arrival
Steven and Tamara Bachner,
Middleport, announce the birth of
-their first child, a son, Brandon
Clark Bachner, on February' 10 at
Holzer Medical Center.
He weighed eight_pounds and
iO ounces and was 20 mches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Robert and Johnetta Davis, Racine . .
• Paternal grandparents are Jack
. and Carolyn Bachner, Middleport.
Great-grandmothers are Pauline
Cunningham, Mason,_ W.Va., and
Virginia E. Davis, Rac1ne.

while she was a child.
On Wednesday, she told a Senau: panel that abuse victims should
be able to sue to help pay for the
psychologiclil treatment they need
to recover.
The law currently gives people
six years to sue from the time of
the alleged crime. The bill would
start the six-year statute of limitalions clock ticking once a person
was able to say the assaults happened.
Mrs. Atier said she was spurred
to discuss the assaults when her
daughter reached age 5, the same
age at which her late father's
assaults had begun.
Sen. Dick Mutzeliaugh said he
believed the bill would be used by
lawyers as a "shotgun approach in
suingalotofpeople."
• The Senate Judiciary approve(!
the bill on a 6-3 vote.

sTORRs. conn. (AP)- SP,ike. •.

Lee says_he's just~ film maker imd
the pubhc shouldn t expect hun to
act.~ a S!l?kesman for blac~.
That s no!. my ro!e, I m not
Jesse !ackson, he S81d: Wednesda~ mght before lectunng at the
Umvers1ty of Connechc~L
.
He sa1d he wa~ts h1s_ m!'v1es,
wh•ch often deal w1th rac1al1ssues,
to~ for tl!ernselves. · .
I m trytng for truth tn my
films, not t?, be a s_pokesman for the
black race, . he S!lld.
Later, Lee told abol!li,OOO students ~at be Wl!l con~:~n~e to seek
altemau~e fundmg for hts movtes
des]!lte h1s.success.
..
There s a glass ce1hng on the
amount of money Hollywood w1ll
spend on a mov1e made by a black
director," he said. "But Hollywood's only one place movies are
made. I think there will always be
independent movies.''

DENVER (AP) - Former Miss
America Marilyn Van Derbur A~er
urged state lll_wmakers to approve a
bill making it easier for ch1ld abuse
victims to sue their abusers.
Mrs. Atler, the 1958 Miss
America, said in 1991 that her
fat~ e r had sexually abused her

The Daily Sentinel
•

AIIENDIHG SECTION
5Zt.CII(a) OF THE
COOIRED ORDINANCES
OF THE VILLAGE OF
POMEROY.
BE IT ORDAINED BY
THE VILLAGE COUNCIL
OF POMEROY, OHIO, AS
f OLLOWS:
.
• , SECTION I : Seclioil
521.0$(•1 of the Codified
Ordlnllnc• of the Vllt.ge of
P_..,., Ohio, Ia hereby
8..........,10 rud u followa:
(al No o - or occupant
, of Iondo abutting a olde-

Page-6

By LAURAN NEERGAARD
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA- The U.S. infant
mortality rate dropped to a record
low, but black babies died at more
than twice the rate of whites and
the gap is growing, federal health
officials reported Thursday.
For every 1,000 births in 1990,
9.2 babies died before age I, down
from 9.8 in 1989, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
said. It credited most of the drop to
a new way of treating the underdeveloped lungs that kill th(lusands of
premature and underweight babies.
"That kind of technology is
exciting and, yes, it saves li-.:es,"
said Rae Grad, executive director
of the National Commission to Prevent Infant Mortality . "But
wouldn't it be .better to give mothers better prenatal care so their
babies are born with big lungs
instead of tiny lungs?"
The rate in 1990, the most
recent year for whi c h data are
available, propelled the United
States up two notches - to 20th
place - in UNICEF' s ranking of
mfant mortality in 23 developed
countries. Japan' ha~ the world's
best rate, 5 per 1,000; the United
States ranked below Italy and
ah~ of Greece.
From 1980 to 1989, the U.S.
infant mortality rate dropped about
3 percent annually. But the 1990
rate dropped 6 percent, primarily
because the new wng treatment
eliminated almost one-fourth of
infant deaths from respiratory distress syndrome.
Premature and underweight
babies - those born weighing less
than 5 1/2 pounds - often have

First meeting
· The Meigs County Shepherds
Club will hold its first meeting
March 16 at 7 I'-m. at the Meigs
County Public L1brary in Pomeroy.
Anyone in!Cfested in taking sheep
to tile fair should contact Buddy
and Sally Ervin at 949-2136 or
Tom and Judy Avis at 985-4443.

, The Long Bottom Community
Association met recently with Janie
Fitch, vice-president, conducting
the meeting.
The meetin!! opened with the
Pledge of Allegumce.
Officers reports were given by
Mae McPeek and Melody Roberts.
A collection was taken to pay
for the .evening supper. Ruby
Brewer and Phyllis Larkins prepared the evening meal.
Another round and sqWl(C dance
will be held at the community .
bUilding on ~h 19 with music
by Buzz Slater and "Out of the
Blue." Ronnie Wood will be the
caller. The cost is $5 per coliple or
$3 single, Everyone is welcome.
Refreshments will be served.
· Prizes for games were purchased by Melody Roberts and
Janie Fitch
A vege~ble soup supper preceded the meeting.
The meeung closed with the
Lord's Prayer.
Attending were Ruby Brewer,
Phyllis Larkins, Dorset Larkins ,
Stanley, Juanita Well, Janie and
Brandon Fitch, Melody Roberts,
Judy Holter, Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeek and Delores Hawk.

lUngs that aien' t completely de vel)
oped: Doctors once just gave them
oxygen. Now, they manufacture a
chemical often missing from the
lining of the babies' lungs, allowing them to breathe, said Dr. Marian MacDorman·of theCDC.
Despite this technology. 38,3 51
babies died in 1990, down from
39,655 in 1989. The Distric.t of.
Columbia had by far the deadliest
rate, 20.7, followed by Georgia
with 12 .4 and Mississippi with
12.1. Vermont had the lowest rate,
5.4.
The mortality rate for blac k
infants was 18, compared with 7.6
for whites, .and the disparity is
growing, the CDC said.
· The risk of dying was 2.3 times
greater for black infants than
whites in 1989, but had crept up to
2.4 times by 1990. Th e rate -of
black infant deaths decreased 3
percent between 1989 and 1990,
while the rate for whites decreased

Name omitted
Susan Baker' s name was unintentionally omiued from an article
listing the board of·directors for the
Middleport Arts Council. Mrs .
Baker serves as computer communicator for tile officers of the board.

6 percent.
Low birthweight was the leading killer of black babies , while
birth defects claimed more white
babies.
Socio-economic factors probably are to blame for the high de&lt;lth
rate among blacks, MacDorman
said. Nearly three times as many
bl!jCk as white infants were born to
families living below the poveny
line in 1990, and more black
women are likely to be uninsufed,
she said.
·

wallc; curb, or gutter ·ahall
fall to keep ..id alclewotk,
· curb or gutt.&lt; In ropalr end
free from •now, k:e or any

·.nulaance. AI to •i••lka,

rl!fNIIr u uaed herein ohol

it more than v.n wide.
2 • . Adjoining oldawotk

. ' block• or portiono thereof
, whou edgea diller
· vertically by more than 1!1".
, 3. Sidewalk blocka thai
·liave bolea In them t• or
.•more In dl11111eter or have
looee or mlaalng plecea.
4. Sidewall blocka having
depreaalona or reverae

Po,.,oy, OH.

SPRIWIIID SDMMQ
lOUIS
.

'Cf011·110pe1 eloping IW.Y

from

.....

Mon.-Fri. 9:D0-5:00
Sat. 9:0~12:00

wt~llr,

or

1ny other subablnce.
5.

Sidewalk blocka hllYing

a croaa-alope in ex:cHa of

3/4" vertical per one foot
horizonIll.
6. Sidewalk block• that
c•uae •n abrupt ch•nge In
the longltudin.. grade ollhe
· oiclewolk.

GUIELY

SYftEM

7. Natural atone alab1,
brick or
sandstone

oidewalb which hve
deflection• or racka gr..ter
than u aet f - In ltema 1
ond 2 contained herein.
SECTION 2: Tho preaent
aecllon 521 .06(o) of the
Codllled Ordlnanc• of the
Vllloge of Pomeroy, Ohio, Ia
. hereby ,._led,
. Paoaed thla 1at day of
Februory 11183.
urry Wehrung
Pr•ldent of Council

REDUCTION OF RE,.,AINING
WINTER . CLOTHING
Middleport
Department Store

Pomeroy, Ohio

ATTEST: Kelhy Hyaell
Clerk of Council
Approvad thla 1•1 day of
·Februery, 1!19G.
Bruce Reed, Mayor
1315, 12, 19, 31c
PubliC Notice

992·3148

LEGAL NOTICE
Southern Ohio Cool
Company, Melge Mine No.

'

3t, P.O. Box 490, Athena,

Ohio 45701, hoa aubmltted
on oppllc•Uon to revlae o
Co•l
Mining
ond
Recl.mation Permit numbencf 0-4354-2, to lhe Ohio

·thing

Deportment of Notur•l
Reoourcea, Oivlalon of

_._...,,li!!"Propo-

cOIII mining and recloml!·•on operation will be conducted In llelga County,
Solem Townahlp, Section•
11, 111111d 24 Gollla County,
Morgen Townahlp, Sec:tion
17 •nd 23. The r,ropoaed

our

underground min ng ar...
encompa.. 13 acre• .nd
are located on the

Wllklavllle 71!1 Minute
U.S.G.S. quadrangle map,

.... . Nin(l 0.1 mila *"uth of

lolem Center, 0.11 tnllea
WIOI of Danville and 1.5
mil• aoulh- of Danville.
pro- to
expend the - - for room
and pller underground and

The-"-

pmductsis
closing

full coal u:tr.alion mining
by longwallrnethoda.
:rha applic•tion ia on file

•t:the ollicaa of lha Meiga
County Recorder, Meiga
County Court Houae,
Second Street, Pomeroy,

Ohio 45761 and lho GoUla
County Recorder, Golllo
. County Co uri Houae,
Locuat SlrHt, ' Gatllpollo,
O.hlo 45831 for public viewIng. Written COliJmlnte
oncVor requeata lor on lnlorIMI coni......,• m8J be Mnl
to the Oivlalon ol Recla-

•

TJ,ere al'eiJ'tany.
.

mation, Founlaln Square,

'

•'

Building H:3. Columbua,
Ohio 43224, within 30 daf11
of the laat date of publlcollohof-nollce.
!3112, II, 26; (4) 2 4lc
PUbliC Notice
OROINANCE tt4
Ordinance Adopting
the U. S. Se«atay of

An

PUCE: SillER SIWIII CEIIIIS

THE FABRIC SHOP
POMIIOY, OHIO • 992-2214 .
Open t to 5 Monday thru s.turday

· WhenyougetaBankOne cases:That's an advantage
Home Equity Loan~we pick you dontgetwith other types
up the tab on closing costs that of financing.
would nonnallyrun you hunStop byyournearestBank
dreds of dollars: You pay no
One and ask for a home equity
points, and no attorney's fees. application.
And no appraisal or title search
Or call593-6681 orl-800-·
fees, either.
.
677-4994 ifyou prefer. In closGetyour home equity loan ing, it won't cost you a thing.
now and your timing couldn't .
·
be better. Because interest
rates are still at some of the .
lowest leve~ in years.
And as you probably kn.&lt;:M;
Whatever it takeS.
••
•
interest on home equity loans
Bank One, Athens, NA
Member FDIC
is tax deductible in most
G:r
l!:l 1993 BANC ONE CORPoRATION ' Consult your tax advisor for spec~ic conditions and details. Subject to cre~il
- approval. Offer exptres March 31, 1993..
·

•
•

. '·

the street. 10 a1 to

Impound mud or

50%
.

•baence of the

followlllfl delecta:
1. A aldewolk block
having o creel&lt; or cracks In

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

~

~

mun

That means they don't have
access to technology like the synthetic lung chemical, Grad said.

204 Condor Sl

Public Notice

OIII*AHCE SIS
AN ORDINANCE

u.s. infant mortality h-its record low
.

Ohio

Public Nollc:e

Friday, March 12, 1993

Association meets ·

Due to overstock, this Singer sewing machine dealer Is
offering for sale to the public a llmlled number of new
special 1993 heavy duty zigzag and open arm sewing
machines that are made to last, and sew on all fabrics:
denim, canvas, upholstery, nylon, stretch, vinyl, silk,
EVEN SEWS ON LEATHER! No attachments needed
for buttonholes (any size). It monograms, hems, sews
on .buttons, satin stitches, overcasts, dams, appliques
and more. Just set dials and see magic happen without
old-fashioned cams or programmers. These Singer
Heavy Duty · Machines are · suitable for home,
professional or schoolroom sewing. Twenty·five year

EMPLOYEE OF THE
MONTH - Steven Lane, floor
maintenance mail, was recently
selected as ·the employee of the
month at Pomeroy Nursing and
·Rehabilitation Center. He has
been employed at the facility for
a year and a half and was,selectid u the employee of the month
based on his dedicated pride In
irii work and respectfully courte·
· out attitude toward the residentS.

Friday, March 12, 1993

lntllflor'a Staru*dr For

Rehebllltllllon ..d
Guldel-for

RahobHitallon Hlatorlc
Bull...ga • Bulldng

Rehobllltetion -.clorcla
wilhln the Cl~of :o-oy•a
Central Dlatrict
ond Adopting the Pollcin
- Pr..-AdopiM by

lheContrai Buelnaaa
Dlatrtct Commlulon Declerlllfl An Emergoncy
WHEREAS, tha Vlttoge of
Pomeroy haa created the

Central Buolneoa Dlatrlct
Commiaalon, • ncl
WHEREAS, the Central
Bualneoa Oialrlct Commlaalon ia reaponalble for

furthering the purpooe of
reatorlng and prMerving

the area of the city known
aa the Centra l Buain•••

Public Notice

PUblic Nollce

PUbliC Notice

ellecliva dale of th le
ordinanco; ot the and of the
Initial thrae-yu r Ierma, one
of aoid bu alneaa repreaanlative terms oh•ll be lor
a lerm of one yeer, one term
Oh!lll be two yeara, and one
term ahaU be throe yeora.
The term of the Council
member and the •rchltect
appointed by tho Mayor
ahall be at the pluauro of
Council Preoldlnt and
reapecllvely. A!l .

where nlnaty 1110%) percent
of the bulldlnga and ninety
(IO'Ifol porcant of public
Improvement• ore In a
clilopld.lted ondlor dlterlorated condition u deflned
by the Ravll•tlzatlon
Progrom and lltuatrotad by
a defined contlnuouo
boundary ahown on the
aU..hedmop; and
WHEREAS, the. Pomaror
Contr.. BualnMI Dlatrlclla
ouch an .,.. whi ra thoro

ond • lime achedute lor the
provlolon of raplacement
dwelling unlla; and
.
G. Tho boola for
concluding that .. ch
replocernont dwelling unit·
will remain alow/moderot•
Income dwelling unit for at
leaol tO ya.,alrom the d.lte
ollniUal occupancy.
7. · An an olya la
detarrninlng whether a
dwelling unit propooed to
be
demotlahed
Ia

Dlotrlct: .,d
,
mam
a hall aerve with· are building• or im ·
WHEREAS; It Ia • oul comperiaation. Vacan· provementa; whether realrequlrament for p•rtlci- cleo cauaod by death, dentlal or non-ruldontlal,
peUng within the COBG resignation or otherwl•e, , which be reaaon of
downtown revitalization ahott be filled for the dllapldotlon or detorlorprog,.m thot particlpotlng unexpired term in the aame oUon, .O.orobaollacanco,
communitiea adopt auch m•nner aa original op- Inadequate provlolon for
deaign standard• compar- polntmanta oro made.
venttl•llon, light, air,
able to tho Secretary ol -oRGANiZATION.
aonllrltion, or lha axlatance
lntarlor'a STANDARDS FOR
Aa ooon aa convenient, of condltlono which enREHABILITATION
ANO after the appointment by the danger life ·or property, by
GUIDELINES FOR REHA- Mayor and the Council fire or other cauau, or Ia
BIUTATING
HISTORIC Preaiclenl, the Commlaalon detrlrnenllllo public )1eolth,
BUILDINGS.
ahall meet and organize by aafety, morata or watlare:
NOW THEREFORE, BE IT election of a Chairman and and
ORDAINED
BY
THE Sacro•~. They may adopt
WHEREAS, the Pomeroy
COUNCIL OF THE VIL- rulea -of• procedure of tho Centr•l Bualnou Dlalrlct
LAGE OF POMEROY, OHIO Cornmlaalon and provlda ar.. alao hal Inadequate
TMAT:
for regular ond apeclal parking, deteriorated otleySECTION'ONE: Council m•tillfiL
way a and aldewalka,
hereby odopla the lot- ...()UTIES
deteriorated curbo and lack
·lowing: 1) Tha Secretory ol
The dullea of lha of rampa, .de!.rlo.ratlng
Interior'• Standarilo for Commlaalon oholl be 11 wallrllnao •nd aewera, tack
Rahoblll!atlon ond Guld• followo:
of lighting and alreel
lineo lor Aehabllitoling
Ia) To aolve the problema
BE IT
Hlatorlc Buitdlngo.
and
determine
the
ileeda
of
l:~gi\i~~to
BY
THE
2) The alloched pollcln
Vltl•go .In furthering tho
OF THE VIL·
and procadurea adopted by tho
purpoae of reatorlng and
F POMEROY
the Central Bus ineaa preserving the area of the
0
·'
Diatrict Commjaolon.
Village
known
oa
"lho
ONE.:
Th
_
e
MaySECTION TWO: Thia C tr I B I
en • Ill neoa Ol.trlcl
or the Vltta- ol Pomeroy
Ordinance ia an emergency
(b)
To
determine
what
d h -• •- III eel
necessary
for
the lagialatlon, if any, Ia be an er.uy au or1z 1°
prea~rvation ot: lha public
doctoro the Pomeroy
to preaerve, Central Buainua Diatrict a
peace, health, oafety and necaaaary
.
welfare, and lor the further reatore ond devalop tho blighted •ea.
Central
Bualneaa
Dlatrlct
SECTION
TWO:
Thla
Rure..on that the deaignation and
to
recommend
Ia required to be made prior leglatation to the Council.
olutlon lo an emergency
to February, I 993 ·ao that
(c) To perform ony olher leaolution naceaaary lor lhe
the grant applloaticn Iunde dulioa eatabliahed by thla preaervation of tho p~bllc
may be releued.
ch':l:ler.
peace, beotlh, aafety and
Paued lhia tot day ol
welfare ond lor further
I ) To provlcla lor regular roaoon lhot lh.e daaignotion ,
February, 1993.
apecial meeting• to ·
..__
de 1
urry Wehrung and
occompliah the purpoaaa of lo raquirad to - mo pr or
Praaldent of Council paragr•pha (a) and (b) to ....... , 1993 ao tho granl
Pom•oy, Ohio hareln.
appllcolion lunda may be
ATIEST: Kalhy Hyaell
-"CENTRAL BUSINESS rei.::.~ thia lot day of
Clerk ol Council
CREATED
Approved thla 1al d.ly of DISTRICT"
There Ia h....,_.-..tellln
1993.
February, t 993.
tho Village of Pomeroy, a
Larry Wehrung,
Bruce Read, Mayor dlatrlct to be known .. the.
Preaident ol Council
(3) 5, 12, 19, 3tc
"Central Bualn•• Dlatrlct" ATTEST: Kathy Hyaell
bounded and deacrlbed aa Clerk of Council
fotlowa:
Approved thlo tat d.ly of
Public Notice
(a) The area of tho Vltloge Februery, 1993·
that Ia bounded on the eaat
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
ORDINANCE 617
by
Sycamore
Street:
on
the
1318,
12,
2tc
.AJt ORDINANCE
ENACTING CHAPTEA....OF weal by Butternut Avenue; .;..;,_ _ _ _ _......,;....,;_
on the north ·by Second
Public Notice
THE CODIAED
Street: ond on tho oouth by
ORDINANCES OF TME
Main Street
RESOLUTION
. VILLAGE OF ~MEROY,
lb)
above
bound.lrlaa
NO. 1207.82
OHIO, AND
ahatl lnctuda oil propertlea ANTIDISPLACEMENT AND
SECTIONS.......THEREOF.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE within or abutting theoe RELOCATION ASSISTANCE
boundarlea. R~rdleaa of
PLAN
COUNCIL OF THE
the Intent ollhe ,ownor, no
TABLE ~I
VILLAGE OF POMEROY,
proparty abutting the
Raoidenlial
OHIO, AS FOUOWS:
Anlidiaplacement and
SECTION ONE: Chp· aforeaaid boundarlea,
ter... of the Codlflod Ord- whether deacrlbed aa a Relocation Aoolatanco Plan
lnancn and Sectione ......•e. Vllloge lot, part lhareof, or under Section 1D4Idl ol the
olherwlao, ah ..lbe aplillnto
Housing and Community
hereby enacted aa lotloW8:
aoparate parceta, or Development Act ol1974,
CHAPTER......
olherwlae clivl~ed ao •• to
ao Amended.
Central Buaineoa Dlotrlcl
-PurpoH
ovoid the-,proced~a and
-Central Bualneaa Dioirlct requh.menta or " lhla Providing 'for One-loi-One
Raplac..,enl Unlta and
Commloalon
choptar. In tho event thol
Relocation Asaiatance
-()rgonlzation
any auch apllt or other
-OuUeo
divlaJbn Ia herelnafler
- "Central Buoineaa Olatrlct" made, the propertY ohott . The Vlllaga of Pomeroy
continue to be pari ol the will replace all occupied
Cruted
. Central Buolneaa Diotrlct • and vecanl occupiable
-PURPOSE
The purpoae. of this II there hod been no ouch lowfmoderata • Income
dwoltlng units damollahad
chapter lo to lmpoH certain apllt or other dlvlalon.
1
SECTIOI!, TWO: Thla or converted to a uaa other
requirement• and pro.
ordinance
ahall go into than •• lowlmoderotecedure1 a to an ••a of the
Village to be known oa the .affect from •nd ofter the lncome houalng a• o direct
"Central Bualneat Dlttrlcl." urlleot dote permitted by result ol activiti• •••lated
with lunda provided unclar
The intent of Council Ia lo law. •
Houalng
and
impose requirement• and
Poaaed lhla lot day of the
Community
Oevalopmanl
February
t
993.
pro-cedure• In oddlllon lo,
rather than in lieu of, the
larry Web rung Act of 1974, aa amended, •
requirements and proPreoidenl ol Council deacrlbed In 24 CFR
ceduru that are otherwiae
Pomeroy, Qhlo 570.496 •lb)lt).
All replacement housing
eatabliahad by law. ·
ATTEST: Kathy Hyoell
will
be provided within lhraa
-CENll!Al eUSINESS
Clerk ol Council
DISll!ICT COMMISSION
Approved thio Ill day of yeara ol lhe commancement ol tho
Tha Central Bualneu February, 1993.
demolition
or rehabilitation
Dlatrlcl Commlaalon, conBruce Raed, Mayor
relating to conversion.
alatlng ollive (5) membera, 13) 5, 12, 19, 31c
Befo re obligating or
Ia hereby oetabllahed. One
expending
lunda that will
member ahall be 1 member
Public Notice
directly
reaull
in auch
of City Council and dldemolition or converaion,
aignaled by tho Council
RESOLUTlON
the VIllage ol Pomeroy will
Preaidenl Three members
NO. 203.113
make public and iubmil to ·
ahall be bueineae repr•
ARESOWTION
the
Office of Local
aenlltlvo$, which term ahall
AUTHORIZING THE
Government
Services the
mean 1 person who It MAYOR OF THE VILLAGE
loltowlng
Information
In
directly involved with a
OF POMEROY TO
writing:
buaineaa wilhln the Central
DESIGNATE A PORTION
I. A deocrlpllon of the
Buaineea Dlatrjct: fhe
OF THE CENll!AL
propooad •ilated activity:
buaineas ahall be eilher a
BUSINESS OISll!ICT A
2. The gonoral tocallon on
go : -,g concern or 1
BLIGHTED AREA. IN
bualnua to be ealabllohed; ACCORDANCE WITH THE a map and approximate
the bualneaa repreaen- STATE OF Otl0'8 SMALL number of dwonlng unHa by
olze !number ol badrooma)
talive'a lnvolvemant ah•ll
CITIES COMMUNITY
lhot will be damoliahed or
be by ownerehlp, manDEVELOPMENT BLOC!(
converted
to 1 uae other
agerial atatua, or em·
GRANT COMPETITIVE
than 11 low/moderate ploymenl. One member
DOWNTOWN
Income dwelling unlta aa a
aboll be an orchitecl. The
REVITALIZATION
direct
reoull of the aulated
architect and the bualneaa
PROGRAM, AND
activity;
reprei.entativea shall be
DECLARING AN
3. A time echedul• for the
•ppolnted by the Mayor,
EMERGENCY.
commencement
with the approvol ol a
WHEREAS, tho Pomaroy completion ol and
the
malority of Councilj Council Control Buolnaoa Olatriot,
cleOtOUtion
or
convareion;
opprovol may be effectad by ldoaignated •• the orao ol
4. The general tocotlon on
motion , resolution, or tha VII- that Ia bounded
a
map 1nd approximate
ordinance, as Council ao on the aoot by Sycomor•
choOan. The lerm of each Slreat, on lha weal by number of dwaltlng unita by
of 't he three bUalneae Bunernut Aveiluo, on the alze (number of badrooma)
rapresenl8tivea ahall be an north by Second Straa~ •nd that will bo provld.ld oa
Initial tlrm of lhrH yeora, on the aouth ·b y lha porJiing replacement dwelling unite;
commen~lng with
the lot woll Ia • bllghtad ore• · 5, The oourca of funding

The

occupiabll or QOI.
8.
An
a naly a la

determining whether

1

dwellln'g unit propoaed to

be dernoliahed or convorled
conaldered
a
looori,.,.Dclaralol-in•con•• unll·
The Village of Pomeroy
wUI provlda relocation
oaalatence, • deacrlbed In
570.416 • lbl (2), to aoch
low/moderate

• Income

lh• chedt or utter ot Creclt d.ltermlned by The Ohio
wiNthan be raturnad to lhe Deportment of lnduatrlal

the

converalon

of

a

placement ol ,.,.aona aa 1

reoutt of •alated octivltlea.
The effective d.lte ol thlo
plan ond certlflc•ttlon Ia
February 1, 1993. the dale
ol tho aubmlulon of thla
application.
Bruce J. Roed, Mayor
Resolution 1207.92 passed
February t, 1993
(3) 8, 12, 2tc
PubliC Notice

__...;_~;;.;;.~.;;.;;.;;__
RESOLUTION
NO. 201.93 .
A RESOLUTION
ACCEPTING TME
CENll!AL BUSINESS
DISTRICT DEVELOPMENT
PLAN AND DECLARING
AN EMERGENCY
BE IT RESOLVED BY
THE VILLAGE COUNCIL
OF POMEROY, OHIO AS
FOLLOWS:
SECTION ONE: Village

... Council of

!WIIIono.
No bidder may withdrceaolul bidder• when the
.hla bid within olxty (60)
contracl Ia executed.
.daya •ftar the actu•t dot. of
or
aucceeaful and unsuc ..

2) A Bond for the full
amount ol thla bid. The
own• will rllrlln the bond
of the -. uccaaaful bidder but
the owner will return the
bend ol NCb unaucceeaful
bidder after 1 contreot hu
been executed.

Bidder• are required to
comply with tho Minority
Bualnesa Enterprlae (MBE)
requlramenta oat forth In
Section t 64.07 of the Ohio
Rovioed Code, •nd Rule
164-t -32 of the Ohio
AdJninietretive Coda. In

port, thia meana that any
bidder, lo the extent th•t It

a'u bcontraclf work, ahall
award eubcontracte to

houaehold diaploced by the C.rtiflad Minority BUainHa
demolition of houalng or by Enterprloot In •n aggragat.
low/modarate-lncome dwel·
tl ng to on other uae ··a a
dl rec t raoutt of oaoiated
activlllea.
Conalatent with lhegoata
and oltjectivll of activltiot
oullted under tho Ac~ tho
Village of Pomeroy agroea
to provide aubatantiallavata
of aaaiatance to peraono
dlaplaced by HUD-.. oiated
progroma and witt further
oeek. to minimize dla-

-

Public 'Nollce

PUblic Notice

Public Notice

dollllr value ol no I•• than

five parcent 15%1 of the
prime contract. Bidder
procurement aclivltl•. to
the extent that it procur111
material• and/or aervicH,

ahaH reault In the aword of
procurement contracts to

Certified Minority Buolnoaa
Enterprlaea in an aggregate
dollar velue of no laaa than
two percent (2%) ol the
prime contract. The bid

apecllicotlona provide fur-

ther detail• on theae
raquirementa.
All contractors and
aubcontractor1 involved
with the project will, to the

OKiant preclicebla uae Ohio.
producta, materials, aery.

icea, and labor in the
Implementation of their
project. Additionally, con-

tractor compliance with the
Equal Employment Opportunity requirement. of Ohio
Adminlotrathle Code Chap,
ter t 23, the Governor'•
Executive Order of 1172,
and Governor'• Executive

Order 84·9 aholl be
required.
Blddoro muat .Omply with
the prwolllng woge ,... on
public Improvement• In
Melga County, Ohio, ••

Pomeroymu-

aulhorlze the

i&gt;oriiero!i -.to oct k!
on

Itt • ~

opening thereof.
oppllcotion ond to provide
All bfde oball be properly ouch oddltlonat l ~formatlon
•
algned by on authorized u may be raqulrad;
NOW, THEREFORE. BE IT
reprr rsntatlve of the bidder.
All blda aholl be aNied RESOLVED BY THE VIL•
and plainly morkad "Seeled LAGE OF
POMEROY,
Bid for Storm Sewer OHIO ,
AS FOUOWS:
Projeo~ lllddl-'- Ohio."
SECTION ONE: The Vi~
The owner rHervee the lage Council of Pomeroy.
right to 'eject any or all blda Ohio aulhorlzu lha Mayor
aubmltted, Md wolve •ny 11 the official rapr...nt.tiv'
irragul.ttiM.
of the Vlllaga of Pomaroy,
Fred Hoffman, llayor Ohio to moka application '!'
Vill9 ol Middleport portlclpota in the Stele of
FEB. 26: liAR. 5, 12
Ohio, Department of o.votopment Small Cltiea
Community Development
Public Notice
Block Grant Downtown
Revitalization Progra m, and

RESOLUTIOI{

to provide all Information
and documentation 'required
A RESOLUTION AUTH- In aald Application for
ORIZING THE MAYOR OF aubmiaalon.
·
THE VILLAGE OF POM·
SECTION TWO: The
.
EROY, OHIO TO APPLY TO Counci l hereby approve•
TIE STATE OF OHIO FOR lillng an appUcalion for
PARTICIPATION IN THE llnanclal auialanca under
SMALL
CITIES COM- the Smotl CIUea Comm1111ity
MUNITY DEVELOPMENT Oeve.l opmenl Block Grant
eLOCK GRANT DOWN· Downtown· Revitalization
TOWN REVITAUZATION Program.
PROGRAM. •
SECTION THREE: The •
WHEREAS, the Stale of Council hereby underatendo
Ohio, Department of and
•greu
tha i
Development provldea participation In the Prograrn
flnancl., aaelatance to local will raqulra compliance with
government• for the program guideline• and
purpoaa of oddreulng local aaaurancea.
neede; and
SECTION FOUR: The
WHEREAS, lho Village of Council hereby commito
Pomeroy deal rao to itoelf lo provide the toc•l
participate In the Program ahara funding 11 described
to receive financial In the application.
aulatence for Revitalization
Paoaed thla tat day of
undar the Sm•lt Cltlea Fabruary, 1993.
N0.1208.e2

Community Development
Block Grant Downtown

Revitalization Progr.,: and
WHEREAS, lhe Council of
lhe Village of Pomeroy, Ohio
haa the authority to •pply
lor financial aaiatM'Ice and
to administer the amounta

·Larry Wehrung,,

Pr8aident of Pomeroy
Village Council
ArnST: Kathy Hyaett,
Clerk of the Council
~pproved thia tat d8J of
Februery, 1993.
Bruco J; Reed, M8Jor

received from the Stall of
Ohio, Department of (3) 8, 12, 21c
Development through Ita
Small Cltiea Community
More Legals on·
Development Block Grant
Page 9 &amp; 12
Downtown .Revltailzatlon

Council. accept• the C.nb;al

Buolnaaa Dlalrlct Oavelop-

ment Plan, which comprlua
a · document on til• In e

office• ol lhe Mayor •nd the
Service Director.

SECTION

1WO:

Thla

Reeolutlon Ia an amer·
g,nay neceaeary for th•

im mad late preaarvotlon of
the public peace, health,

aaf8ty and welfare, and for

the further purpoaa of
complying with certain time
limits ontalled In the City'•
appllcalion for 1 grant for
tho downtown ravltallza:tion
program.

Paued thla 111 day ~~
February, 1993.
ATTEST:
Kathy Hyaelt
Clerk of Council
urry Wehrung,
Pr•lillnt of Pomeroy
Vlttoge CouncN
Approved lhla 111 doy ol

1993 PONTIAC GRAND AM 4 DR.

February, 1993.

Tilt, cruise, air conditioning, rear defogger, antilock brakes and much more.

Bruce J. Reed, Ma}ror ,j
13) 8, 12, 2lc
Public Notice

SALE

Stock •2936

ADVERTISEMENT FOR
BIDS

____

/ - ~. ...... -....._
.._.

Sa•led blda will be
received by tho Village of
Middleport at the office of
the Mayor, 237 Race Street,
Mldcleport, Ohio 4$710 until
3:00 o'clock p.m. Thu~.
March 25, 11113 •nd then at
the offloa of the Mayor the
bide will be pubNoly opened
ond road aloud lor the
lot lowing:
Storm Dralnoge Improvementa to Include 1000 lln10r
,.., of 24 Inch chmeler

;-

.

.

$12,4 29

-~.

;,,-;

1993 BUICK CENTURY
3300 V6 motor, auto/overdrive trans., power
windows, power locks, air bag, cassette.

concratwa....,.

Stock #2929

Controct apoclflcotiona
and bidding document•

SALE

$15I 20q

may be reviewed at the

office ol S.B.A. Conoultonll,
Inc., i0247 Chillicothe Pike,
P. 0. Box 730, Jackaon, OH.
45640, and moy be
purchued for fifty dollora
(550) wh lch Ia nonrefundoble.
A bid x::ranty, ••
required by
Uon I 53.54
of tho Ravloed Code of
Ohio, ahall ac'!OmpMY - h
propoaal aubmilted, ••

lollowa:
. I) A Cerlilled Check,
C.ahlar'a Check, or Letter
~~ Cradlt equal to tO percent
oltha bid. A Latter ol Cradlt
may ba revocable only by
the owner. Upon entorlng
Into 1 controct wllh itte

own•, the

contractor mutt

then Ill• • bond lor the
omount of the contract, -

•

1993 PONTIAC TRANSPORT
Keyless entry, defogger, power seat, 3800 V6
engine, power door locks, power windows, 7
passenger seating.
Stock #2938

$19
200
SAlE
1

'·

LEGAL NOTICE
Tile Public Utllltias Cornmis· ·on of
has set for publlic hearing
No. 93-01-EL-EFC, to review
fuel procurement practices .
po~cies of Ohio Powar
:nmniOnv the operation of Its
Component, and
maners. Tl11s hearing Is
1c~:: to begin at the
:0
offites at 10:00 a.m.

March 16, 1993.
interested parties will be given
opportunity to be heard.
r ....
information may be
by contacting the
Commission at 180 East Broad
Street, Columbus. Ohio
43266-0573.

h..

1993 BUICK LESABRE 4 DR. CUSTOM
Power seat, trunk release, power windows, splH
seats, power locks, wire wheel covers, air bag,
anti-lock brakes.
_Stocki2925

SALE

$18·1 900

REBATES APPLIED TO SALE PRICE, TAX AND
TITLE NOT
IN SALE PRICE.

-

•.

•

�·/
'

.
Friday, March 1

Pomeroy llddleport, Ohio

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

..

1893

Bl'LI.L'll\ BO.\RI&gt;
BUWnl lOUD DEIDLIIIE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

Church of Chnst

Apostolic

l'Otoero1 c~.,.. or or111

212 W. Main St.
Pastor. Aodn:w Milel
Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.rio., 1 p.m.
Wodnooday Services - 7 p.m.
Pomer&lt;o7 Wablcle O.Jdl of Orlll
33ZZ6 Children'• Home Rd.
Sundor Sd.&gt;ol· 11 o.m.
Wonllip -lOLm., 6p.m.
Wodnooday Services • 7 p.m.

Pu&amp;or: Rev. -,-·~-.~··
Sundly school·
Lm.
Worship · II Lm.
1 p:m.
Wednolday Service· 1 p.m.

Free WUI B"''~ ptumo ·
Alb S... Mid4leporl

East Main Sa.
Paouw: Dr. t.e Morris
Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip , 10:30 a.m.
F1nt South .... Baptist
4187l Pomcsoy Pil:c
Putor: E. Lamar O' Brymt
Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 Lm., 7:00p.m.
Wcdnco&lt;lay SeMcel · 7:00p.m.

,.

Bradbur7 Cbureh of Chrlll

PaiiOT : Tom RW'Iym
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Tuppen PlaiA Cbuldl of Chrt•

Putor. Bill Wines
Suadly School • 9o.m.
Wonhip · 9:45a.m., 6:30p.m.

F1nt Baptistl Churdl

6th ond Palmer St.
Putor. RCY. Jamca A. Seddon

Sundoy Sd.&gt;ol · 9:15a.m.
:
Wonhip · 10:15 Lm., 7:00p.m.
.
A.B.Y.· 5:30p.m.
: I..Drd's Supper ht Sunday of every month .
'. ·
Wednesday Scrvic:e- 7:00p.m.

Sunday Sd.&gt;ol· lOo.m.
Wonllip . lla.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneaday Scrvic:es·7:30 p.m.

•
MI. UnhMI Baplllt

Putor : Joe N. Soyn:
Sunday School-9:45 a:m.
Evcnina • 6:30p.m.
Wodnesday SeMcel · 6:30p.m.
Bclhldl.,. Baptist

Pastor : Rev. Earl Shuler
• SUndoySchooi-10:30Lm.
Wonhip ·9:30a.m.
Thundoy Service•· 7:30p.m.

••

: Old Bdloe

•

!

h.. Will Baptist c......

HUIIIde Bapllll Chur&lt;ll
St. RL 143 jull ltl RL 1
Putor. Rev. James R. Acm:, So.

,

'

Sunday Sd.&gt;ol· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • llLm., 6p.m.
Wodnolda)' Semc:ea ·?p.m.

•
•

Succe11 Road Church of Christ
Pasoor: Jooepb B. Hookins
. Sundoy SC:hool · 9 a.m.
~Wonhio- 10 a.m •• 1 o.m.
Wcdnco&lt;lo~ Servic:ea • 7 p.in.

o......

Pu10r. Woody Coli
Sunday Evenin1 ·6:30p.m.
Thundoy SeM&lt;e • 6:30p.m.
LanpYille Chrtlll.. Chuldl
Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol ·9:30a.m.

Wonllip • IO:lO a.m., 7:30p.m.
w.........y S.rvioo 7:30p.m.
Pasoor: Chorleo Drmiaan
Sundoy ochool · 10:30 Lm.
Wonhip . 9:30 o.m., 1 p.m.

~La:.:opcllt

Follll Baptist Chureh
Railro~d St., Mum.

Sundoy School • 10 o.m.
Wonhip • ll a.m., 6 p.m.
w....eoday Services ·1 p.m.
Forat Rua BaptiJI
Pas1or : Arius Hurt

Sundoy SchOol • 10 a.m.
Wonhip · I I a.m .

Roednlle Clourdl of ChriJI

Pu10r. Philip Stunn
Sundoy School: 9:30a.m.
WonhipSeM&lt;e: 10:30Lm.
BibleSiudy, Wodncsdoy,6:30p.m.

Chnst1an Un1on
H - Clluldl of CloriJIII
Cltrllllus Unloli

Putor: Theron Dum..
S&amp;nlay School - 9:30a.m.
lfveninc -7 p.m.
Wednesday S.rvia:o • 7 p.m.
Hlll'llord Chureh of OriJIIn

MI. Moriah BIIPIIII
Founh 4 Main St., Middleport

. .·

Braol'ord Church of Chrlll
St. RL 124 &amp;; Co. Rd. 5
Pallor: Deoclt Slump
SWidoy SehOol - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30o.m.,7:00p.m.
Wodneoday Services-7:30p.m.

Ht1nlock Gron Cllurdl

SZ5
Pu1or:JarnesE.K..see
Worship· lOLm., ?p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

,•

M_. Churdl ofChriJI

Uberty Clorllllal Cia-

28601 St. Rt.7, Middlepon
Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
Evenina · 7:30p.m.
Thundoy SeMcel -7:30

••

p.....,
underwood
.s...doy
• 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip · l&lt;l'.30a.m., 7p.m.

Miller St., Muon, W.Va.
Sundoy Sd.&gt;ol· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II o.m., 1 p.m.
Wodnooday S.mou ·1 P·I!\-

Slnr R. . Baptist
Pastor: Bill Liule

,.
·'

Pallor: Ouil Stewart
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 Lm.
Wednesday Servia:o • 1 p.m.

Euc·

Stmdoy Sd.&gt;ol · 9:30a.m.
Wonllip · 10:40Lm.,7:00p.m.
W - y SeMcea · 7:00p.m.

•
•

. Doter Cbur&lt;llof ChriJI

· Rullaod OIR'do of Cllrlll

Radoe F1nt Baptist
Youth Putor Ridt Harril

Pos10r. Rev. Gilben Cnoia. Jr.
'Sundoy School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip. 10:45 Lm.

ClrillluUnlooo
Hanford, W.Va.
Paooor: Rev. Dovid McMonis
Sct.&gt;ol • II a.m.

•

•

AntiQuity Baplllt

••

PallOr. kemeth Smith
Sundoy School • 9:30 o.m.

•
•

Wonhip - 10:4~ a.m.

Thundoy Scrvia:o · 7:30p.m.

,·

Rudaod Free Will Baptist
Solan St.
Putor. Rev. Paul Taylor

Sundoy Sehool· 10 o.m.
Evenina . 1 p.ni.
Wednesday Services · 1 p.m.

•

Pastor: Rev. ~~" _s~~oficld
Sunday Sct.&gt;ol . • ....
Bvenina - 7 p.m.
Wednoaday Sema:o • 7 p.m.
RuU&amp;od Our&lt;ll ot Gocl

P.-: Jolwl F. Coroolan
Sun~Sct.&gt;ol·lOo.m.

Wonhip • II a.m .• 7 p.m.
Wedncscfay S.ma:o • 7 p.m.

Catholic
,
So&lt;nd Hnrt Catloolk Chordl
•)61 Mulbeny Ave., Pomeroy, 992·5898
Panor. Rev. Woller E. Heinz
S:tL Con. 4:4S·5 : I5~m.; ~~~- 5:30p.m.
•
Sun. Con. B:45-9.1lo.m.,
Sua. Mus • 9:30 om.
Doiley
Muo · 1:30 Lm.
•

Chesler

Poiu.: Gory ~

Suadly Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Worshi_p • 6 p.m.
W..tnosday Servieet - 7 p.m.

Ep1scopal
G.- Eploeopal Clouldl
3Z6 E. Main St., PomeiO)I
Rector: Fr. Bill Lyle .

R-11-Haii_Cio_
New Lima Rood, Rolland

7Jon Chur&lt;ll Ill Cllrlll

Pom.....;. F1nt Baptist

New Lift Cbureh of Gocl

Keoo c•umoof Chrlll
Worship· 9:30a.m.
Sunday sChool · 10:30 Lm.

Pomeroy, Hani...,ville Rd. (Rt.l43)
Panor: lnaerim pu&amp;or
s...c~oy Sd.&gt;ol · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - 10:30 o.m ..7:30 p.m.
Wedneoday Services ·1 p.m.

Sundoy School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 o.m.

Sunday School' 10 Lm.
WoiWp • 11 a.m.
Wednesday '1-rvia:o • 7 p.m.

Holy Eueharitl ond SIDidoy Sd.&gt;olllLm.

Wonhip .- 1&lt;1'.30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Saviceo • 6:30p.m.

RuU&amp;od Flnt Bapllll Churdl

p_...., "" Hensoo

Mlddlt'port c•urc~~ or CbriJI
5\h .... Main
Pastor. AI Han"'"
Sundoy Sd.&gt;ol· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 8:15,10:30 o.m.,7 p.m.
Wednelday Service&amp; · 1 p.m.

B•rwallow Rldp Clourdl of Chrlll
Pastor: Jods Colepuve
Sunday Sc:t.&gt;ol -9:30 • ...,

-Marl&lt; Monow
Sll1lrday $eMee . 7:30p.m.
Sundly Sd.&gt;ol · 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II Lm., _
Wednolday S.Mc:e-7:30p.m.

ClourdlofGoclofPr~·itiL
0.1. While Rd. off St. L I

s 1- - ChurdlofGad

Apple and s-.1 Sts.
P.-: Rev. David R,.sdl
Sundoy School ond Wonhip- 9:30a.m.
Evenini SeM~- 7 p.m.
Wednoaday Sorvi001 -7 p.m.

Calree ' - followln&amp;

Holiness

c...~n~a­

AIIou11 (SJraa.)

Pwor: Dcron Newman
Sundoy Sehool • 9:45 o.m.
Worship • 11 o.m.
Wednaday Servia:o -7:30p.m.

WaleJan Bible Holl- Cbun:h

.,_, Jmy Collin•
Sundoy Schoo( . 9:30 .....
Wanhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wodneadiy Services - 7:30p.m.

Lutheran
St. Jolin Lutheran Cburdl
Pine Grove
Pastor. Georae weiriclt
Worship · 9:30 o.m ..
Suadly School· 10:30 a.m.
Our Savlow Luthenn Church

Walnul ond Henry Sto. , Rav.nowood, W.Va.
Co-puton:·Revs. Richard &amp;.
•
Patricia Bondo· Ksua
Sunday ~ool • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·11 a.m.
SL Foul Lutheran Churdl
Comer Sycamore ASecond St., PomeiO)I

Pallor: &lt;Jeors• weiriclt
Sundly School • 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip -11o.m.

(fr;ji;; United Melhadlll
Wonhis&gt; • 9:30 Lm. (Ia &amp;; Znd Sun),
7:'30 p.m. (3rd A 4th Sua)
W.........y SeMce ·7:30p.m.
Mt. Olive Unllod Molllodl•
124 behind Wiltuvill&lt;
Pu1or: Cwleo Jones
Suadoy School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 1 p.m.
Thundoy Scrvia:s • ?p.m.

orr

Melp Cooporadoe Porlslo
NortlleuiCiuster
AlfM
Panor. Sharon Hausman
Sundoy School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip - II o.m., 6:30p.m.
Ch-

PIIlOr.: Sharm Hausman
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sundoy School · 10 o.m.
Thundoy Scrvic:ea • 1 p.m.

Joppa
Pas.,.: Br&lt;ndo Weber
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Sunday School · 10:30 o.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m .

Po•.., Cllurdl of lite lfn Riov. 'l1llmu McCJuna
,.,..., Sd.&gt;ol · 9:30 .....
Wonhip · l0'.30Lm. ond6p.m.
Wednoldoy S.. oica • 7 p.m.
-

"~.:J.~~·

PartCbapel

lo l.aller Day SalnU
-·Rocine Rd.

CloeiterCbordlof ...

PameroJ.
P1110r. Eunhae (Giace) Kee
SIDidoy S&lt;:bool · 9:15a.m.
WonhiJ&gt;. 10:30 Lm., 6p.m.
w.......fay Servic:eo • 7:30 p.m.

•

N_,_

RuU&amp;ad Churdo oflbe N.......,t

F - Bible Chur&lt;ll

Pamr.SamudBuye
• Sundly Sehooi . 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 6:30 p.in.
Wcdnco&lt;loy Servic:eo • 7 p.m.
Purlluid Fin! Church 111M N-nn•
Pu1or: William J.U•
s...Iay School • 9:30a.m.
Wonllip. 10:40 Lm., 7p.m.
Wodnetday S.rvica • 7 p.m.

NewHavaCMrcboftbeNn• ene
Puler. Glendon Stroud
Sundly Sd.&gt;ol · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.SL, 7p.m.
w.........,s..oica-7p.oa.

RodtSprtop

Postor:Keilll Roder
SIDidoy Sd.&gt;ol · 9:15 a.m.
Wonhip · lOun.
Wedneoday Service&amp; • 6 p.m.
Rulland

Soi•Ceoter
Pulor:RonFJCn:e
Sundoy Sehoo(. 9:15 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:15 Lm.

Trillll1 c...,........w CIMtrdl

•

PUIOr. Rev. Roland Wildman
' Chun:h • 9:1S Lm.
Wonllip • 111'.30 un.

Pu1or: Flon:na: Smilh
Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol • 10 o.m.
Wonhip • 9 a.m.

,..e Salndelll :4r,n1
115 Buuemut Ave., Pouo:IO)I.
s...doy School· 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip . 10:00 o.m., 7:30p.m.

BelllaiJ
Putor: Kemelh Boker
Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol - 10 o.m.
Worship· 9 a.m.
Wodnetday Scrvic:eo • 10 o.m.

Mldd'-IC-=l~rdl
515 Pead St., .

Pastor: Kenneth Baker

Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S Lm. (Znd A 4th Sun)

F1ldl Taba dm Cb•rdl
Bailey Run Rood
Putor. Rev. Ernmelt Raw1011.
s...c~oy School · 10:00 Lm.
Evmm1 7 p.m.
Thu~ Semce • ?.p.m.

Mornlna Star

Pastor: Kenneth Boker
Sundoy Schoo! · 9:45 o.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm.
Thundoy Servioeo ·7:30p.m.

Eui!Mart

Pastor:RocerG"""'
\
SWidoy Sd.&gt;ol· 10 o.m.
Wonhip- 9 a.m.
Radne

Posoor: RoprGr&gt;c:e
Sunday School- 10 a.m.

••

Wo. or 8fY'OIImenl cal:
Mll&lt;l&lt;l CaitO, 675-3888

500 N. Znd Ave., MiddlcpoR
Paaor. Lawrence foranan
Suadoy School • 10 o.m.
Wednesday Servic:ea - ?p.m.

Public Notice

Clouldlof J - Christ,
ApooiCIIIc Fallb

1/4 mOe_paa Fon Mr:i&amp;• on New Uma Rd.
Putor: William Van Meu:r
Sundoy-7:00p.m.
Wednesday-7:00p.m.

t"tlhodl• Chuldl

Pu!Dr. -rTranblay
SIDidoy Sd.&gt;ol · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.,? p.m.
Wodnoodoy Services - 7 p.m.
RuU&amp;od Bible MellladiJI

Pu10r. Rev.lvan Mym
Sunday Sd.&gt;ol· 9:30 o.m.
Everlin&amp; • 7 p.m.
Wednolday Service• · 1 p.m.

Chrllll.. F - l p C011ler
Sallin Sa., Rutland
Pastor: Roben E. Muuer
SundlySct.&gt;ol -lOa.m.
Wonllip. 11:15 Lm.,7 p.m.
Wodnolday S.rvioo • 7 p.m.
Mtne Chapel Clourdi
- SUJl.:Mil&lt;e Mauon

·,t..; ·..,. ...:.

Pentecostal
r..-.IA-biJ

St. RL 124, Racine
'
Pamr. William Hobodt
Sundoy School · 10 i.m.
Evenifta • ?p.m.
Wednesdoy Services -7 p.m.

1

Sundoy Sd.&gt;ol· 10 o.m.
Worshi~ • 9o.m.
Tuesdoy Semc:ea • 7 p.m.
Btlhtl Ourcb
Townohip Rd., 468C
Sunday School • 9 a.m.
Wonh!P - 10 a.m.
Wednetdoy SeMcet • 10 a.m.
Ho&lt;ldiiJporl Chun:~
Worship- II a.m.
w....etdly Servicu . 8 p.m.

Roodnllle

ToldiCburcb

GrudSin:&lt;t
Suadoy Sehool · lO o.m,

W

Co. Rd. 63

Tllpp&lt;n Plains St. Foul
Pastor: Sharm Hau1m1111

Pa-.: Thomas L GIICI, H
SIDidoy Sd.&gt;ol · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · IO:l0a.m. , 6p.m.
W.....,...y SeMces ·7 p.m.

Middleport , _ I
Third Ave.
Paotor. Rev, Clark Boker .
Sundoy Sc:t.&gt;ol - 10 o.m.
Evenina· 6 p.m.
Wednesday SeMcet -7:00p.m.

Presbytenan
Ho-YIIlorr..loflerlu Chwtll
Worship· 9 Lm.
Sundoy School · 9:45 .....
Mkkllepart l'nlbJieriM

Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol • 9 Lm.
Wonhip • 10 o.m., 4 p.m. (2nd&amp;. 4111 Sun.)

Falth~ordl

~~-9:30a.m.

Seventh-Day Adventist

MI. Olm C..muoiiJ Charcb
. Paotor.Lown:ncellwh
Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol • 900 Lm.
E-a·7p.m.
Woclnoday Servic:e • 1 p.m.

United Brethren
MLU..oa 'Uallod-

Uolted Flllh Chuldl
RL 7on PumeiO)I By·PUI

lo Cbrlll Clouldl
Texas Community off CR Ill
Putor: Roben Sanden

P.-., Rev. RobeR E. Smitll, Sr.
Sunday Sct.&gt;ol ·9:30a.m.

F!dl c_. IJchl33045 Hiland Rood, Pomeroy
Pulor:RoyHuntcr
Stmdoy School • 10 Lm.
Evenina7:30 p.m.
Tuetday &amp;; Thursday ·7:30p.m.

Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· lO:lO a.m., 7:l0 p.m.
Wednolday Scrviceo -7:30p.m.

Eda Uolled Brdllrnlo cluia
~ 1/2 miles-" d ReodoviUe
..,SiouoR.... I24
Pu1or: Rev. Ri&gt;bertMsrkley
Stmdoy Sc:hoal - 10 a.m.
Wonhip - 7:30p.m.
Wednolday Semeos · 7:30pm.

I

Mill Work
l· ·v '' '·"I '·~
Cab1net Makon ~ ~ · '· ..
Syracuse
992 3978 ~ I \!L:'

r"'"".::..r t .
U .

•.GJMSOUICK£L
:
AGENCY INC.
... 'N8IJRANCI
., .... ;,,.·
'
~

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

.··;"":·~ ._

~. ~~ ,:

. .......

:POMEROY, OHI0- 992-6617
•

· K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Street
'92-3785. Pomeroy

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
J.MM:u~Fultz

•••Mill'

Ph.lt2·2101

BILL OU ICKEL

FISHER ·
FUNERAL HOME
992·5141

211• 5ot!th 2nd

Middleport

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE
: SERVICES ·

--=~

214 E. M1ili
992·51!0 Pomeroy

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
204 Condor St.

I

Nalionwide Ins. ca. ·

P-roy, 011.

nt Columbu" , 0 .

992-2975

•n-ntl Pomeoror

I.

to• w. MAin

filten YDll Ualet
with aWilt~

card ot Thankl

Dopartinont
of
Tranepor11tlon to COMlder 1
looolblllty oludy for lho
replacomonl oloold bridge.
PASSED: March I, lllt3 .
Bruce -,llloyor
Lorry -rung,

PrMidtnl of P~
Kllhy Hyoell,

Crow'a Family Restaurant
..,...,.,., Kentuolly FtiMI Chldlw!"

228 W. Main St., Pomeroy

992·5432

Shep _!M;\.

·~

..2.....

f

271 Rorth

Stc....
Mkltlltport,
Olola

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
Veterans

Memorial
Hospital.
.

11 S l. Mt!Mrial Dr.

,_,.,

EWING FUNERAL MOil
"Dip~ It~·

" nd S..rl'iu .4/o·n~•"
Establ,labed 191~

992-2121
106 _ . " ' An.

r-oy

~~~~! r~!
rr~\(rlpl•on~

1911111

P ()mtrov•

I wish to thank
my family and
cloae friends for
the -beautiful
flowers, and the ·
many cards,
. · visitors and phone
, calls during my ten
day confinement in .
Pleaaant Valley
Hoipltal. I am aure
all who have had
eerioua surgery
and had a stay In
tha hosr.ltal knows
what th a means to
a patient. The last
two days of l'llY
Stay they brought
Into mY .room an
old friend of 30
years, Wan Manley,
· of the Tuppers
Plains area. We
· had quite a talk
· and the time
pauedmuch
qutcker. I have 5 ot
6 weeks at home
with examinations
each week at
hospital then hope
to be b8ck on my

Clerk· Tra•ur•

S~lES

&amp; SERVIU .

992 -7075
172 North S1&lt;onol Avt.
Ollio

lni.Worl&lt;

;;

&amp;

•BACKHOE
•TRACK
•TRUCKING

D. -- BOSTON
EXCAVAniiG
(614)
667·6628
.·
.

3-8-131 mo.

IISSILL &amp; IUUI
CONSTRUCIIOII

•New loiMI

-c;.,....

,..... _
I

UCINE GUI

CLUI
GUN SIOOJS
SUNDAYS
I:OOP.M.

··••••i•t

NOW·O PU

915·4473
667·6179

MYSIIQUE
TANNING

Step&amp;c..., ....

THE BOOK
BARil

JIIIISliii&amp;TEI

IUY • $UL • TUDE
31711. 2•d St.
Middleport, Ohio
Molls•Frl. 10:00•5:00
Satunlty 10:00·6:00

--

c.lll4112IQ7

- ...

,. kiL7
,.

Closad S•ndty

992·3577
3-12·93·1-

I

Public Noll~:&amp;
PUBUC N011CE
Foraat Acree Park (Fort
Melge), Now Lima Road,
Rutland, will be olooed for
brlclge
repolro.
L:====:I:IW1:::""':·~(3) 12, 1•,
IS 310 '
f

----Rea-1E..,.II-81-,...
Ge-nera--:1-.- - - 1

OFFICE 992·2886 .

-

•

:r,;

Gl18'8nteed Scholarship Money
for 811 college bound students.
•regardless ol income
•regardless o1 grades
•p1us $20k guaranteed loan
•regardless ol cred~
11 ct your tchollrshlp money
cal 614 88~556
Open llan.-Frt. 1CH or Sal 111-4

IMIII.&amp;t:e"
'IMI

placo(by

-.y·ollop approx. 2

........

SCAWolt.Bed
15 Session $25
Depot St., RuUand
742-3190
Call for
Appointment

---

W&lt;wttl

...

10
OIWO

fl.

--~

OPEN TO PU.BlllC
12 GAUGE ONLY
FACTORY CHOK:E
ENFORCEQ

c.... ,

I .........
,.,...

S::!!.

•Co!llll•te .

. • In mii'IY tft!nga
~gain.

to 111 and Good

Health To Alii

BeiT*d D. Qlllwy

·310 Aeh ltlwt
M~llport,

Oh.

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
RUTLAND - Salem StrHt - Something lor MOM: A
oplit level homo with an opan raiHd hallway that hao
beautilut oak railings. Hall of a cathe~ ceilng glvltolhia
home art atmosphere of roomif'IIIS. Has 3 bedrooms, a

large bath, utility room, and a kitchen loaded wilh
cabinets. Somelhing lor DAD: Adetached 2Y, car. ga~aga
with wortcshop, conc~alo driveway, and mainlenll!l"" lree
siding. BUy 1.8 acn" and home lor $45,000 or buy y,
acra·and home
FOR ·~z.ooo

POMEROY - Ebonozar Streot- Feels like homl with 3
bedrooms, one bath, beautiful kitchen cabinets, 1nawer

rool and lon:ed air natural gas furnace.

$18,500

-·--c.d ,_

"1

I .

._IIIII

IBSEii IUILDEIS,.INC.
· tll.wtbn1n • VInyl Siding ·
c g11 e Replacement Windows
Room Additions e Roofing

HOWARD
EXCAVAlli&amp;

«:()MIIIliiCIAL ...t RESIDENTIAL,
no: ESTIMATES

BULLDOZER, '8ACICHCE
- TAACKHOEWOM
AVNA'IBIE

614-MI·-1 • 949·2160

SEPTIC ltl I ?'
HOIEIITB-·

wtU-3139

Pie ••••• , c.ll)

12 S.•li•• :$20
16S.•·-

us

11a EID1TIIIN&amp; UNDERNEATH

ELDERLY

BUILDERS

BECAUSE
WE CARE.

742·2328
•

992-58

992·2417

.MAIIIEIIIIICI

LONG BOTTOM - Haymon Rood - Thio 7 year old
modular hat 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, family room, garden
balhtub, fireplace, island bar in kitchen, new heal pump,
and a oummer kitchen. All in good cOI)dition. Aloo o 1973
100blle homo with 2 bedrooms with new ca~l and
winde&gt;wi. All of this on 3.31 acres.
$50,000.

949·2Hier
1·10G-·J7·1461

,

·

10 baths on the 2nd and 3n:l floono. Could be converted
Into apartments. Call !or your appoinlmont today.

$45,000.

PEARSOL ROAD - Must sal this Gambrol rooltd 2
llory home with full basement. Ba~utiful kitchen, 2~
balho, and is totally privale.
.
$51.100.
............~ ................:.. 812-5612

neighbors who

-1290

L.vnllcukeg,
WIILtil .&amp; ...

Shrub

1:
~~~ant

~nou ..
... a COMnwolll

F-e•-

FIAEWOOD FOR SAl£

Glfttarbread House
PRESCHOOLJCHLDCARE

· HOWEU'S

514 ...... SieolotA-

IOOKKEEPIIIIG
&amp; TAX ·

• J:l ; art. Ohio 45710

I

Quarterly and
Year-end Reports

provided food snd

eentftowers.
To tKhand
evetyone who used
Calvin's peln end
lonell11111 with e
vlalt, 1 call, a
moment of pr1yer
with him, or whoremembered 'him Ill
prayer we thank you.
We 1110 wish to
thank Flsher.Funll'lll
Home for their
excellent eervlce,
Calvin's Psstor,
Amos niBs, for
holding the Hrvlcel,
ancleVItyOM who
trlvelld to
Charluton for the
burlsl Hrvlces. ·
We Thank Yout
Celvln'e brothera
aliotera, Roy, Harvey,
Joyce, C.rol

II. 124

NOW ONLY $21,100.

$23,900.

.

The Fsmily Of
CAlVIN O'DELL.
Wishes to thank 111
his friends snd

..........
2••·-····

FIIEWIOI

......
IJriua
--

~

IEII'S
·SIIIICI
992-035•
NEW UITINQ - Rouoh l.ano In Chtoblre- I+' acre
wilh I 87p mobilo homo, block oflicloncy opt., two tcldi·
tionallrailt! hoolt-ups. Graat "'"tal invnlmanH $24,800,,.

SWe liver Saddle Shop
OJSTOM SADDlES,
lUTHER·REPAIR
_.IAil GLOVE REPAIR

F. s••E

All'''ll

.._,_,...

Sa a •

....

,

915·3561
217Lieu.. tt.
POMI..Y,OIIO

........

.......

I

3&amp;!'51 SR 7

...

IEWrS CUSTOM

CLEAN &amp; AFFORDABLE HOlE located on PIMMnt
Ridge. I~ olory with 3 bedroomo, two lola, dodtlng, omol
tronl porch. $18,100. Owner may conlidtr ,.uonablt

.

JUIT OUT OF RACINE - t2+ acreo ol nlet Wood

IICroegt. Malco good hunllng or homoolte. $10,000.

MANUEL RD. - Ont ..,. of gn&gt;und thai could bo ultd

C:-G·

lo"B -:r -from
{J montluto 22
)'BGI'I,

Happy Birtladay

STUDMAN

REEOSVILLE - Cut. I floor blook hoft,, wt1h • btdn&gt;ome, I car gal'llliO, ,.,r ..,...... pOteh, nloe Irani
yaod, lnd proGtce bulding. Alking$11,000.

YOUNG'S

- - ua SIIIICI

. . - -2/llln/1•
IIOIII1H ..

-IU1 UFIIlittl·
Kmai...CI

Cllftlld SE,..IV'....,IQ

Lile ••
Cnr.c:.r • Flnt. Health •
III '.. T-.\nnufty, IRA• Mortpge
I

..LPI WANT!D - PROPERTIEI OF All. IHAP£1 I
IIZII IN 111101 COUNTY! WE HAVE SUYIRI
....COULD Bl ·YOU HAVI WHAT THEY W~ IF
YOil'IIIIIIADY TO IELL GIVE US A CAW
ttEfti:IY I. CLILAfl)..........................................~111
TRACY

1Yt lllle Off lt. 7
n..OiiiWHlt. 241

---.......
..,., ....
..
. ..
--..."
Ill. SIMI
tti·Dit

IYRACUIE- 1188 modular with . ,bad!Oomo, bolh,

doddng. oome oppllonctt, pal1tonctd yaRI, molll olor·
oge bulcing, Yo ocralot, conlrallir. Ntodto - lo oppM·

"'·moNt hamt or buiclng lilt. 13,100. Malco an oir.d

••••••

. . . . . - .

... 114:915:3949

·~.

.

Oh. 45720

141tn-see

GREAT INVESTMENT PROPERTY! - localld in
Pom1roy, 3 atory building lllat willl a little woli&lt; coold bo 3
unit opt .. good location, with 50+ x 100 partclng orH.

olalll ..7,500.

Chester,

985-3406

$

HappyAds

Of

We will NOW serve children
&amp; mo:dlts to 12 ye.-s of age.
c.l• tor more lnformutlon

RATES

992·2259

o,.
....
IHir
t/Wtller Protr••

liS . . .

..,

REASONABLE

$29,500 .

5

ROOFING

WE DO

new wiring, and even has a new, hMt purnp. Was

with 2 businesses downstairs, and approx. 23 rooms, and

CerdofThankl

PERSONA•
CARE FOR
ntE

IIIIDDLEPORT -This spacious 3 bedroom home is just
what llle family naedo. II aloo has a Ia~ living room,
nice lize kitchen·with a cute ittle nook. Hu nt\W roof, .

MIDDLEPORT- North Seoond- Acommercial builclng

feet 1nd wry active
My sincere thankl

FIRE &amp; SAFETY

Vllhoge Counc I

{3) .. 12, 211:

THANKS

.'
RACINE PLANING MILL

·,

PO!noroy . _..Ia the Ohio

CARD OF

SeY&lt;niii·DoJ Ad-lit
Mulbeny Hu. Rd., l'omeiO)I
P.-: Roy Lowinoky
Soturday SeM&lt;eo:
Sabbolh Sehool • 2 p.m.
Wonllip • 3 p.m.

W.,Wp • 10:45 il.lll., 7:30p.m.
Wednolday7:l0p.m.

..:

IAWUNGS.(OATS

l- •

link bolwHn lllldclloport,
Pomeroy, Md Muon.
WHEREAS, the Yllt.go ol

Service • 7 p.m.

Wonhip. 10:30 Lm., ?p.m.
Wodnooday Servioo - 7 p.m.

Paotor. Rev. Seldon Joh....,
Wonhip • 9:30 o.sn.
ht &amp;; 3rd Sundoy ·1::10 p.m.
Sundoy School - 10:30 o.m.
Wednesdoy Service• · 7:30p.m.

ir

A Very Special
"THANK YOU"
To All of 0\lr Famiy
and Friends for the
flowers, cards,
contributions, and
food that was
given to us during
the illness and the
loss of our
daughter, Chelsea.
We appreciate all
of your prayers
and kind words of
sympathy.
God Bless You Alii
Lin end Kevin Lute

Sundoy School · 10 a.m.
.Wonhip ·II Lm., 4 p.Di. (Ill .t. 3rd Sun.)

w~.:r.; 11 . ..... 7 p.m.

tha Village of

Pomeroy lo concerned
about tho futuro ol the

s,.._ Flnt United Presbrlerlu

~odlool · lOa.m.

Coolvlllt'Unlled MotloOdiJI Parish
Pastor: HelCII Kline I
Coolvlllt Clouldl
• Main &amp;; Fifth St.

I T RESOLVED

whareaa

Friday-7~.m.

Sundly School . 9::W .....
Wonllip • 10:30 Lm., ?p.m.

0301.03

B E'

PubUc Notice
Ponioroy Muon Bridge, u
11 OOJYM so a vi"" economic

RESOWTION

IIJ'tnlae c...... ltJ o -

Worship· llo.m.

•DOZERS

1:00.5:00

..

WEDNESDAY
8:30 p.. m. 881109111 (Co&lt;Jptos)
Fox Trot, Swing, Walz, Pol&lt;&amp;
P.S. You could bo ,one col my dotocoro going
on T.V. Club Dance- Whit MofM Cafe!

ReJoldnc ure ctour&lt;ll

HOld C..•uoil1 CIMtrdl
OORL 124
Pastor: EdJel Han
Sundoy - 9:30 lUll.
Worship • lO:lO Lm., 7:30p.m.

•

. -:

:

Swaalhead Scottllh Md ...,.,,

Pastor: Dovid Dailey
Sundoy School9:30 o.m.
Evenina • ?p.m.
Thundoy Semc:e ·7:30p.m.

s,......_

Sulton
Pastor: Kemelh Boker
Sun!lay Schoo! • 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 a.m. (lit&amp;; 3rd Sun)

Electric Slide, Boot Scootil' Boogie, Toxu
WaHz, F~lng 8; Ton Stop Polkl, COnonEyl&lt;l Joe, Tu9h Push, Elvira, Sid ~Is.
Montana, Slap l,.aalhar, Louie,
Turrtlolewled, and motel
8:3t)otO:OO p.m. (Couptool) COuntry
Loom tho- plltnordorasl
Two-step, Boot Scootln Boogie, Tuu
WaHz, Cowboy Polt&lt;a, Ton Slop Polka,
COwt&gt;oy Cho-Ciio, Cofton-Eyod Joe, Prltty
Woman, Mon1an1, Western .Swing,

sn..rnllle WonlofFallh

1411 Bfidceman St., Syracutc
Puoor:ltoy (Mike) Thomptor1
SundlySd.&gt;oi · IOa.m . .
Evenina • 6 p.m.
Wodnolday ~"" • 7 p.m.

742·2MI

6:45p.m.
Special Eelly Bird
$100P•yotl
Thla ad good.tor I
FREE card.
Lie. No. 0051

TUESDAY" '
Point Pleasant Youlh Cetjt8l'
$:00.7:00 Co&lt;Jntry &amp; WMttf11 ·
Leam tho lltoot lno dancoll Ad:rj Broalcy,

Pas&amp;or: Rev. Victor Rou1h
Suodoy Sct.&gt;ol 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wedneldoy Servia: • 7:30p.m.

-Sam Anderson

Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol 10 a.m.
Evenina ·7:30p.m.
WeclneldoySeMce - 7:30p.sn.

Cat:m&lt;l

BegiMOt'SI All Ageol Slower Paoel

Pomeroy Pil:e, Co. Rd.
Pu1or: Rev. Blacltwood
Suadoy School · 9:30 Lm.
Worship I 0:30a.m., 7:30p.m. ·
Weclneldoy S.Mc:e ·7:30p.m.

CaiYIIf1 Pllplm Chspll
Harrisonvi.Ue Road

(• Bulfinaham chun:h off Route 33)
Pa-.RobenV...,
Sunday wcnhip • 10 a.m.
Wedneldoy oe,Mce • 6:30 p:DL

Snawfllle

"LEARN TO DANCE!"

Ca1•1117 Bible Churdl

Failla Fil-Ip Cruade for OriJI
Pastor: Rev. Franldin Dickmo
Service: Friday, ?p.m.

I"_.,. . .,..

, Putor: Anhur Cnobtreo
Sunday Sct.&gt;ol • 9:30a.m.
Wonbip. 10:30 Lm.
Thursday Services . 7 p.m.

l.ajlrol Cllll'Free

Lesan, W.Va.RL 1
Pastor: )...., Lewis
Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol • II Lm.
Worship · 9:30o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednetdoy Servi&lt;e • 7:30p.m.

Other Churches
Ill I

DIET CLASS
Now Location: Big Bend Haallh &amp;
Fitness - M~l St, Middleport
Exercise &amp; Dial Plan Combination
8 -k• $99.00 {can pay as you go)
{Includes uoe olexen:ioe oquipm!lfll)
lnlroOJclory meeting Mon., Mar. 15,
5:00 D.fn. Cal1992-3967 lor details.

.,..,. .....arar.,elk,O&amp;•••••
367·7444 • 441 6644
I Ill IU.2tl2 (Ollie Orlr)

POMEROY

Opening Soon in Middleport
. .THE BOOK BARN
Buy-Sell-Trade.
Many back issues of many .
diffe rent magazines. Watch lor
open ing ad. 992·3q77.

Freedom Gospil Mlalon
Bold Knob, on Co. Rd. 31
Pu1or: Rev. Roser Wil!ford
Sundoy School· 9:30 Lm.
· Wonhip- 10:45 un., 1 p.m.
Wodnooday Sem011 • 7 p.m.
White's Chapel Wskfao
Coolville Rood
Putor: Rev. Phillip ~denour
Suaday School • 9:30 a:m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Wedneoday Service . 7 p.m.

. Pamr.Rev.llosbootGSundly School · 900 a.m. ·
Wonhip • II a.m., 6 p.m.
Wodneocfays.Mceo • 7p.m.

-

LooaBoctom
Paator: Rev: Seldon John ton
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip - Hl::IO a.m.
Wednesdsy Servic:eo - 7:30p.m.

Sundoy School · 9 o.m.
Wonhip · 10 o.m.
Tuesday Servia:o - 7:30p.m.•

-

Pamr. Ro¥. Glom Mc:MillaD.
Sunday Sdlocl · 9:30a.m.
Wonllip • 10'.30 Lin., 6p.m.
WodncsdoySaviceo-7p.m.

· Pastor. Dcron Newman
Sundoy School· 10 .....
Wonhip • 9 Lm,
Thundoy Services ·6:30p.m.

Pastor. Smilh
Sundoy School· 9 a.m.
Wonllip - IOa.m.

Roorp- Churdlof JOIUtChriJI

CarWoe l81erdtaumlnallonll Clnwdll
KinasburfRood
Putor. Clyde W. Hendenon
Suaday School • 9:30 Lm.
EveninJ • '7 p.m.
Wedncoday Servia: - 7 p.m .

ForaiRuo

Wonhip - 10:30Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wodnuday Service· 7:30p.m.

Latter-Day Saints

s,_..C..rdlof ... No

EAGLES
CLUB
IN

r•••r•s .IODY SHOP

Toppi!lll. Trimming,
Rilmoval
R-nebl• Rata.
FuUinaurecl

EVERY THURSDAY

POMEROY BOWLING LANES
614-992-3432
POOL TOURNAMENT
Starts a112:00 Noon on
Sunday, March 14
Open Bowling 12:00 Noon

Sundoy Sct.&gt;ol • 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a-!"·· 7 p.m.
Wednoldoy Service ·1 p.m.

.

FlalwGOdJ

Mln....lllo
PallOr. Dcron Newman
Sundoy School · 9 Lm.
Wonllip • 10 a.m.

Ha-•lleHoii-Chapter
Putor: Rev. Jolon Neville
Sundoy School tO t.m.
Wonhip -11 Lm., 7:30p.m.
Wednoldoy SeMce ·7:l0 p.m.

S..Uo -~~ NewT-..ent
Silw:rRid
Pu1or: Duane Sy;:,llricker

..
Pa-.JohnW. I\naala•
Sundoy Sd&gt;ool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:4S Lm., ?p.m.
Wodncsdoy SeMces • 7 p.m.

Pu1or: Keilh Rader
Sundoy Sehool - 10 a.m.
Wonllip • 11 a.m., 6 p.m.
Thundoy SeMcet • 7 p.m.

Pine GroYC Bible Roll- Chur&lt;ll
I /2 mile ltl RL 325
Pastor: Rev. O'Dell Manloy
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.

· Sundoy Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.. 1 p.m.
Thundoy Service - 7:30p.m.

Sundoy Wonhip · 2:30p.m.;

Thundoy oervices ·7:30p.m.

a..ra flltiM N"

Sundoy Sehool· 10 o.m.
Wonhip • 9 a,m., 6 p.m.
Tuesdly SeM.cea ~ r p.m.

Sunday Sd.&gt;ol · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 Lm.
Wedileodoy Servia:o • 6 p.m.

Hyllll liun Holln• Chureh
Putor: RalieR Manloy

N - - e a t Churdl

R-IIFIII-Ip

Enterprtoe
Pusor: Keilh Rader

Pasoor. Rov. Dewey Kina
Sunday school· 9:30a.m.
Sunday worship -?p.m.
Wodnetdo)l pnyer meeoin&amp;• 1 p.m.

75 Pearl St., Middlel&gt;orL
P111or: Rev. Roy Mct:.ny
Sundoy school • 9:30 Lm,
Wonhip -10:30o.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;e -7:30p.m.

. Mldclltpal1. C..rdl ., ... N . - P.-: Rev. Lloyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sundoy Sdlocl · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • lO:lO a.m., 6;30 p.m.
Weclneldoy Saviceo · 1 p.m.

Country Western Dance at
Middleport Elementary
Saturday, March 13, 8-11 p.m.
Cost is $5 per couple, $3 single.
Sponsored by
Middleport Arts Councii.

. . . . . £11ft

FU 1111 RIMCI

I

992-6215

p I

ey,OW.

''

.,

••

I. I ,., I.C.I. • .....

992-3470

. . . . . . . . . . 45760

;;
•

:
'
'~
j

~----·-·~··--·_4.__5~---='~==:J (

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, March 1 1993

Friday, March 12, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

Ar•nou r• :· ,. :nc r1t-,

71 Autos for Sale

- Pont;..

;.3

The Dally

ALLEYOOP

'

aunirlnt GT. v-el
111111o. aop., load::
4 • d114-l'IZ:
~~ .....

Announcements
: -:!tllllll=::ll"'i-CAI=N-:::"T::-:FIGU=-:::RI!,;;.:..,DUT=
: lilalliN? CALL OUR GIRLS
, f'l)R IOOYICEII 1--~~
.-lilt. MaO, .,. .. Per Min. 111101
• h 11 y,., Unlotar Co. 102-131·

r,

·-·

._, .-..-.

- .. IDo-lcl:t Toll To

0 11'11111 1
-·
· un~otv
SUI Per
Min. - m.
•:o,11.
• 11y,._
eo.""""
.
,_,

-

..

PHILLIP
ALDER
NORTH

+AKIOf
.K 8 6 S
tAJ
+a s2

;!"J

-~. *"" np.

WEST .
+H7
.102
+K Q 10 f
+KHt

l

11112 Col Automatic, With All\
12;000 llltaoJ. M,!100~!114- Nil'
un 200SX u, a~l
"• s~
root, .. ,~i...·- ~ 100
Aolomatoc """ Air, Cnllio ctrol, .,,100, 114-251-'1210.
•
11112 N.._ SIJinu XE ~
111111, Tlu Over Poymonto ot
RIIIMI"'IO, CaU 114 381 1048. I
l

72 ' Truckl for Sale

'

EAST

.AQJH

CCIIQfMr

150 Enclrcltd

51-

53"""' bl'
llolllar
Hlebr'•55 llotctricMia

.....

11 llolher of

......

82E•r--

84~811¥·

21~

28 ,_,d

. factured

lllfr
31 Tolen! pale
33 Pan point
34 BooltkHtlfng
enlrJ (lbbr.)
35 OIWII .

.

85 Iefort Wed.

••

.. telttcllned

17 Cowbor
ROIII'I

8 Conlkllr
I Allgltor'a
ltln
10 Rullllar ....
11 lroacl atrlpt

DOWN

gocldau
37Ad-

+32 .

1 Ballpoint pen
brand

+AQ?

11 Troolcll ·.
lleaket fiber

~'&amp;r.=

Vulnerable: North-South
· Dealer: South

...

''

17 Weirder
tlltabrew

&amp;:!:""-"'""

+&amp; &gt;2
.94
+8876&gt;
+1o 9 a

44=
,.._rn

Iaiii•

21
22bc:24 TV'•" PupiJI

SOUTH
+QJS

•

•

S-11-tl

AMWI .. P&amp;e¥1111 Pill*

3t - plue llllrl
40 ltlliilld
rn.tr.ent
42Zoclaclltft

13=coltl ......,.,...
·~ Ac1rM&amp;
Ill I l l

Pontiac
Orand
loodod,
11,000 .......
VII)'
oondltlon, S12i000 OBO, 114,

••

"""*"

I4 Y-awalf

14 - - lllocle
15 (loclal

l'ofitloo FlrHitd, T-tapj(.
loodod, 11,000 lllllool_nc COilil;
304-171-'IIIN oflor a:w PM.
,
0

1 Jau lllliiiCianlllda"tck•

cond.,

....... llltghl~
"""'-~
13,000
Mlloo, 50 II
IIIII llePIIrabla,
.,._....
....... 0110.
.....,..-:t

:lf11.

ACROII

BRIDGE

11

BARNEY
I WISH YOU'D
TRIM YDRE
TDE BI.ADES I!

PAW. l! AFORE I
FRESH SHEETS
ON TH' BED--

22Theraal23 Soulhent

•

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
AL.L Yard Sa .. • Must Be Paid In
•AdvnCI. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tt11 dly before the ad il to run.
Sunda~

1m 01c1a Dorta u, ftZOO
Woddlng a-n wltb c-1,. lrado lor pick up ar """• 11141411-3005
...... 11.. 11-14, m 0110,

Movlog Solo: RCA, VCR 4
Mantha Old $200j Wlnch••r
Pump Shot Gun 12 Ga. $100;

Building
SUpplies

S.al"l WaWr $140. All New
P1rt1 In stock, Reduced 21%
DIYtrS~po.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

VIC'nll ADVOCATE: Full Tlmo
Poolllon Anllablo · To Work
Wool&lt;.... And Evenlngo. Will

""""on

. Rk:k PNroon
Company,
full tim• auctionMr, completa
auction awvlca.
Uctn..t
,.,Ohio I Wnt Ylrglnla, 3C)4.
773-5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Buy: Tobacco Poundlge, 814·

3711-2471.

.

Work~!~!~

Wllh

w-

And

p-

Unklgo Wltft CammiMI•y
R_u,..o. Al&gt;ollcanl Ha.. · Tranoportatlon.
Roq- An Ao- .
ooclatn Daa- In A Social
Sorvlco Fiola, BA P - .
RoplyToP- Dopan-t,
P.O. lox 454, Cllllllpoll1, OhJo

J &amp; D'1 Auto Parts and S.lvage,

also buying Junk care &amp; trucka.

304-773-5343.

Bo

Cllldron To Provide l.ogal Ado 2 bodoaan~~~,
vocecy, ln~1Uon, And buomont,

.

45031.
Wanlod: Baoo Slnoo&lt; Sing
G - Muoio. 111111 Bo Willing

Want«~ 11andklg ·umbtr, top
priCII piild, tr.. 11tlm1t11,

To Travel. FDI" More lntonnatlon,

815-3055 oif15'3838.
W.nt«i To Buy: Junk Aut011
Wllh Or Without llotOI'I. Call
LIOfY Uvely. 814-3118-1303.

F- olghl wool&lt; Jab proporallon

llconood loQQing company, 304-

Wlnttd lo buy: junk tutot, muM
be towoblo, 6t4-tt2-53n.

Wontod To Buy: PoD-Up Cam,.,., In Good CoodHron, PIHH

Call 614-357-0558.
Top Prk:n Paid: All Otd U.S.
Colno, Gold Ringo, Sll"' Colna,
Gold Colno. IUS. Coin Shop,
151 SiCond A - , Oatllpollo.
Wontod to buy: 1*&lt;1 mobile
hamM.. 114-446-0171

Employmenl Services
11

Help Wanted .
"llako Big luella" Wortt At

Hamt, Ruth S.A.S.E: 110 To
DAA SuppiiM, Box 81, Hllloboro;

OH 45133.
•AVON" ALLAREASIShaoo your

tim• with ue. You'll love the
comPiny. 1.aoo..te2.QII.

5 Ladln Who Would Uu To
Soli Avon Call tt4-44643S8.
AVON I All Arooo I Shl ~oy
SpoaiS, 304-675-14211.
Drlnrs:
Sn•ral
Delivery
Drivers NMded For Llg~ C.O.D.
Must Have Own Auto, Know
Ar.. Extromoly Will. CUh Paid

!)ally. Apply In PoiSon At: 450
Stcond Avenue, SuU.
LNdlngtlam R•l Eatale.

102,

Qver the road drivera wHh 3 yrs
v.trltlable flat bed txpel'llnet.

Prefer HAZ-MAT licensed. 8:00
tMI 5:00, M-F, 1-800-22W658.
Houukeeper wanttd, dutiH lnlt:Ude all hoUII work, tome e1r1

6 yr old child. Roply to Bill

~ v.

htpman, 1203 Vllnd St, pt. P1t,

Clll ............el85 Aak Foi Dav&amp;.
monoyl

w.....: ...........

progl'lm aboul nontraciHionll

=:.ont, (ONOW), 1 -

18 - Wanted to Do
Will Balmlt IO My · Fon•
cod In Play - · Expafi......S.
R.,....., Aval".._ Rodner
Aroo. Ca11114-2U-11817.
Barn remov11: nMd an old bam
btou!lhl &amp; out ol1ho wov?
Will remove for IIIYIQI. li42S8-IOM.
Doollr and Iobeii - ' . lw tho
hoW, - · 1114443.11123
or 814-143-1281.
.
""R TR E E-..,..
E S "'-E. T-ng.
Trimming, Tr11 Removal, Hecla•

coli
75·1TI57.
Handyman hoi truck, tooll, lod·
dot'O klllll u... ~d blo &amp;
•'

w.ry

1
Y com-

r81aonlble. Worll

""!""r

-1-nntonoa

uDelalrl, pi heat, CMCI'II air,

vinyl tieing, ISpl-- winFumlahed, 2 or 3bdrm., tar Nnt
· ...,..od,
... oondAvo,
' In Counlry lloblle Pall!. Wuhori
locat'-,
2e14 Jael!ooft
dryor~...~lrl_$2351 mon., 1114-62304-17W324 ahr a:30 II • F.
3 Mdroom, 2 Mlhrr!!~lf room,

2117.

.-M~W227.

t

living roam, lmng room, llobiiOO homoo lor - · Rot. &amp;
kl1ctian, dining room, coil 114- Doa. roq'od. No pota. 814-44fl.
0527.
'
192·7725- aprn.
2
bodraom
mobile
homoo, 1250.
4 bedroom an paved
~- -mont, born, garage, month Willi' l pe plkll, 304-. .
·poot, 3 miiM off Rt. ~ ettllltie, 575-2434.
-d~llod""'lno.
..
Y water, clotorn,
Why pay you can
.n, 22.11 ..,..,• own
1 1M3 MM AedrMn wfth
$21,000, .........1-210.
I ·year warrantY, ltape, lklrtlng,
1nd MCup lar Sttlmo.
La"' Contomoart On dellveNd
Call lor lnlormallon, 114-38517.8 1111.
-- ..........
And tniukloriiNnda.
Swlmmlna
- - Awaflalllo.
u
,.._ lilt. Aloo
l'ar
lllorw lnlonmallon Call • 1111 44
Apanment
Connell ·At Donna ,.......,
for Rent
Realty. 114--31-Wt77, a14-3M-

mt. ·

Nlco 3 Bod,_~ I Car AI·

Gorago, z &lt;:Or u....
tochod Qarogo.L. CA, Small Oardin Space. "',OM To Gavin
Plant &amp; Alvor Volley H.S. 114-

3111-1114.

Spring Volley Ar11, Ook Drlvo,
Brick 3 Btdr9QrM 1 112 lithe,

Carport, AC, 011 Hill, Full
Baumont, Rocontly Ramodalod
Throut,"' p,•-- ~ 100 a••

Trimm~. ftFroo Eatlmatool 8Jio 448-1 '·
31•~
A .or4fl.m.
Otof911 Pon.ble Sawmill, don't
haui,Lo_:' toa• to thl mil )ult

dining

·

-= -· ' -

ThrM Blldroom ranch etyle,

large ldlchen, living room, fo\1
of ckteel•, tOial iilldrlc, new

vinyl 1iclng, ..rrlflllllor, range,
chimney, toeatod
1.32 ..,.,,
near p..,.roy •nd .ha.phel.

on

FNtt tr. ., celllr ho-..e two
MW taulldin'"', 114..ga~n73 for
·appointment.

2 bedroom opt, Oaillpollo F•OIY.

wv 304-1711-25oll.

-trlc. opo
lumlahod, laundiy

2bclnn. apta., totol

'

Pus

27 Roadtldt

Pass

All pass

28 Crlllcl 8IIHI

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

jOOI'

month Including ohl

-~

..

llaht

1

.;;d;:;....;-

11~41-8187

•fler 4 p.m.

tllod llvoln holp, room, boonl l

wagH,
~II;

3CJ4.882~2.00

1t1-r 7:00

Or•••

,

'·

'.
'•

•

I

•

,.

BORN LOSER
,.~. WIIO CAA IDL.Iff. WAAT
~/Nil~·~?

'tOO KNOW ... &lt;i~ ll\05£ l'I-I&lt;Hlb

TAAT m£ '(00 -ro

---~~

lnd30TheM1 .
3 2 - - fiUit
- (ov-'11
31111rJ,NwiH
38SGMI1111111•10

+K

.......

41 Ordlt
43FreMII,_
45111U.Ik,47 C.pet

Mather Ntlluro.. wlhout
-lcldoo. Ao1t RIO FM11 6

SuiiiiiY,

114-ttz.21M

body -..... lniOIIor
.....
. Mcloklng, $400. 104-

loodod,

-~

rillouc I7B-III5

HAPPY JACK TABUCKI. Cl!ew-

11M - · o\ulo,

All~ll

-nutrltlouo.For ...... l -. - · Haw TnO. Bot1orY,
Ex1811or ·Rcuah _... Ooocl
a• ·slcsl
Runo-.ff00,114-M-t1U.'
.,,
..,..
Instruments
.a4 Celtllrlf CL. - . - mUla,
$2,300, ..............! door,

=-

Ac-

P - lull IY
='Js~pla Flnlah ~· ll4-

*"1U7ftallara:eo ....

79

''" -bate!.• ft. Chlaftal~
-

homo. 12_!,000. -

tiN

llolord

:wlt:;h:;•;:;"';;;-::::::304-1:;..:~,..~1731=.-=·:
. . _ With

114 Ut Mil,

•

Q. I've been using "dire straights"
in my writing. Is thai considered acceptable?

MORTY MEEKLEAND WINmROP
eu-t eveRY eo

THOSE 6EilMSARE. R::l!..lDWING
Aa.\IN.~ KE:EPING

'

TINY €&gt;NEEZ.E.

veRY QUIET•••

'

lpotnlor 22''
E.C. Coli'

No.,,...,.,PIM~
~

-r

A. No, thai's incorrect. The adjective DIRE means "urgent " or "exlreme, " and Ihe word that it modifies
in this trite expression should be
spelled STRAITS . This plural noun
means a narrow passage or, by exlension, a tight or difficult situation.
You'll wind up in dire straits if you
continue to use the mi sspelling in
"di re straights."
·

FW sa:ave,
1:1'11--l~ KNa:IC
a=F l'I-\I,TSNEEZ!Net
'wQJ

CAEN, I HeAR A

~EOO&amp;'O&lt;

HO'\I.E!

Chovrolll Cllallon &amp; 1151 laM'I I I'·
•
Ford 2 too lrucll. $1.000. ooch.
LN lolnl ~- or 171- 117 PaM "';"t~, :14' 'TWin Bodo.'
4418.
.
lotH lllh
Tub~
~. Dill Wood Worll . . . .,
1114 Oldl r:r-u. goad cond~ Six, -avo, T.V. h -o
tkNL R
I lble priM. 104-171~ Condlllonl114-441·1440.
1111.
-

'--•·

Serv1ces
F,nn1 Supplrrs
S I rvrsto1 k

RIFF

you ..... to make good moner
from 1M comfort of rour awn
homo, Nih S1 and SASE lor Information to: C&amp;C c--.,
P.O, Box 841\ lyrac-. 'OhfO

45771.

VENDING IIOUTI: Gal Rich
QUick? No Way! ... W. Havo A

-dv.

Good,
A-":!oBuot.
nooo. Won't' Loat. I
214-

Vf"d.

anytime. an. lpnl, _.._...

a ft ...... Hog. Kl"' Cutlor,
goocr cond. 304-175-

S221. ,.IY

lUI.
John Dooro 1\oo &amp; Four -

11U Nlacan - - 114,000
IIIIIOo, Ful . . _, -

=./f"~uira~~ ===~114-.
- . Hoy llolrM
•••~•re. Dllka. ,...,. Panna~l 1117 Honda Aaoonl ua. au aPT-ar
I P - Hlloll-'IF..,.
Ot'JW · - · 11-. tlrll'
Roodl'•-•e-lntotiO&lt;.'III.-1:,
llacltlniiY,''"''J........ Olllo =l-~14 Itt :11100 l.iiMft. 114- : 114 211 ltU.
alorlpm.
- - -lac
liP 211 'l'lulor, · •-• ·
-1110, ou

=====~=~~~==~~i;you'll
ASTRO·ORAPH·

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

...110; 1010 liP M,ISO; 111 11F oond, 11.100. 010. 304-1711M.IIOj •• .., M.IIO. l'lnorio- ,2::'::22;-;:•:,:m.11'71:=~·--=,.---,1 117 Trona Ant, \T~~
lng-blo.114*"122
1
..... Holland 411 ""' bind. """" - .• . . . ~.•
110llllrtgo ....... 1171.
10ft t i l - - · . AI
goad cond, 104-111-4111.
Til bad utility t ........ lor

-

rldlna -

IITV,- 1 -

1111lui ·~-­
• __
-...._

..._.....,_

of._. . . .

... -

L,ool!lng For A Doll? Conoldor A

.....OWnod llobllo Honlo, Largo

... -

-ton
""""' ·
III::UpLow
And Dtthoory.
151H7t0.

.
'!

!

1

_,~,,.

5 lOrN, fenced In, 3 lA rnobhe

homo build-on, 4 . outbulldlngo,
wtedN tr11l..r hook-uD. 2 air
oonciHiontr!r._~- miiOo North Rt
f2.1D4of71.:,..,.
I

cenaor.

TAURUS (Aprtt zo.lllay 20) If a firm or
Individual· ha&amp; IIUQg you In lite past
you've done bual,_ with them;
don't HI youroolf up aa • "palsy" agllln
·todly. Deal only with lftooo whom you
trust. ·
"'- ~
GIIMIM (1118J 21..JuM 20) • - • II I
poalblllty thai. IOmaontl wllh whom
you're Involved hu rather IUCicy
,_lly, and today, lhlaluc:lt could helP
In lhe yur - d ; you could be ex- you u well. Kelp your nngM. aroUad.
tremely fortunate lllrough parinershlp CAIICIII (.IUH 11-.1411J 8) Petty dll-

.::83~~
- L::lv:.:est;:.~OC~k==
iioc~ •-'IIIII Yoar Old,
..

find II. The Astra-Graph
. Matchmaker Instantly ,....... which
signa are romanllcally perfect lor you.•
Mall ' $2 plus a long, setf-adllreaiad,
stamped envelope 10 Matchmakor, elo
this newspaper, P.O. Box 9142, , Cleveland , OH 44101-3421.
AlliES (......., 21•Aprll 11) 11:a lmpor·
1anlloday that you •• aware of the lacl
thai others have the right I~ expo-..
their opinions, • - II they dC)n'l eoln·
elde wllh yours. Don 't be a setl-appolnted

lor. lfotldiiidj, ~-

~~

........414-:::

-. --

-. ...

4 D'..'::J. Auto, NJ,

Electrtcsl &amp;

Retrlgll'lflon

II MilL

By Jefftey McQuain
A forefalher or ancestor is a PROG ' as in ,;the progenitors of the
infant. " Generate the proper prontin··
elation of the noun PROGENITOR by
sounding it out as "proh-JEN-ih-tor."

.......

campera&amp;
Motor Homes

($) ~ NIWIPAPIIIINIS&amp;

OUR LANGUAGE

-.. . ty--.
,

Are you and your partner hoping to
break Into the big time? Are you hapPY tQ read tnt like "But the difference
between 'blithe' and 'blitbering,' especially as pronounced . in partner's
mouth, may be indiscernible"? If so,
you'll want to buy "Bridge Toolkit" by
Jim Jacoby and Allan · Falk (Zookeeper, $13.95, 2010 Cimarron Drive,
Okemos, Ml 48864-3908). The book
was being written when Jacoby died
so unexpectedly in 1991. Falk has finished and published it.
All aspects of the gamo:,are covered.
The level ol the deals varies from the
relatively simple to the rather complex. Today's deal I rom the book falls
in the middle.'
Personally, I dislike the authors'
auction. I think North should make an
immediate forcing heart raise. However, the slam is reasonable.
West leads the diamond king. Alter
winning the first trick with dummy's
ace, you should draw trumps and run
your four spade tricks, discarding a di·
amond from hand . Now lead the diamond jack.
If East unexpectedly produces the
queen, ruff, cash the club ace and lead
trump to the dummy - you did keep
an entry, didn't you? Finally, play a
club to your queen. You will make the
slam whenever East has ~ club king
or West began with king doubleton.
However, when East plays a low di·
amond, calmly discard )'OUr low club.
West wins with the queen bu_t is endplayed. A _diamond return concedes a
ruff-and-discard. A club switch is into
your A·Q tenace..
l

..-~­

TilE H05PITN..

liMn working on something 1hat could
be meaningful to you ftnl!lelolly, mike
c:onc«tod effort to tie II down lodey.

Try 10 do 10 before noon, 11 this Ia
poN!bla.
UIIIIIA (lapl. 2J.Ocl, 22) Endeavors
which you personally Initiate or eoncalve have bettor than a..,.age chane.a
of being IIICCIItllful today. Work on your
...,... projec:la, ond dcin'l go on on a
Iangan I.
ICOIII'IO (Oct. M Noi. 22) You are
now In a l:ycte _ , you could derive
benelltl from lltuallonl,lhot you partlc:lpale In, but don'tlnlllale. Your eontrlbullon to thtt eo-vor will be
meaningful .

IAQITTAIIIUI (Now• . . - . 11) CondllloMere rathttr unrq,. today, ond you
mlglllflncl yourlllf In an arranaeo-t
- y o u bocome a banefactor you
frllltd.
C~OIII (OM. II I• 1t)ln ea,_ llftlldaM loday, Lody Luck, ....

=.

tho • •...,, migllt audcltniY - · 111

irrlt1lll"'*'te
fogt_te_co--.eould- appllt-lllha dtna jOu'l lllod hor
tho moll !Iowa... to be on tho ..,.
IUN, fiiCIUOII 1t1ay mlgflt 1111 product d - the - b l y line today If you •
lkle,
upon younall.
low
lhtm
to
aurfllce.
Treet
....._
banllltl In n!&amp;terlal W&amp;yl;
ACIUAIIUI' (.till. • I'IIL 1t) SOma
PIICIS (M. • Ill all •1 Ohangea coutlaCIUtly.
could • • .,._ today 111at ~ won't
be able IO 001111'01 ci!NaiiY. Ho~l . .,

a.,....._

when lllay play lhemwl- .... You
COuld OOtM to
111at you
...ldn't ...... dlllgnod litem any bel·
ttr. KnOW .....,. 10 tool&lt; lor romance

1110...,

LIO C.ltllr D-Attl-111 1M M allanltw kno 'afgl you'vt

,.,.,tty

~

•

0-loclay, tile.... you !lllghtr.m COUld ..-10 be Of OOIIIfdlr abla -'II
oiiC!'M(hlng lhal you CWI 81I[)Wid Uf!OII to ~ today. Tllll re diiP.'te tfla fact
and - Ia your acfvanlllfllln I'O'A' pre- that wllan you flied II a.y, you may
-fpllns.
mtrelyVIIIOO (A... 2Jolapl. 21) II you'YII .

-ltlougflt" -

•

.

'"'-lilt

•

.

41-"- .
52 llnltt airline
54 -~:~' ' .

HUKIIIM

........ pit

5_7~

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10 AII!IMPI •
13 ..... , . , _

CELEBRITY CIPHER

c.lebrMy Cipher g JPICQ ••• . . CNited from quolatloM by IMIOul ~ PM1 Mel
Eecn ~t~n•ln IIW Cipher .ll'ldS tor~- ToUr'• CJNe.· Z ~ U.

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VHJJDM
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: " I think the botlom line Is that you need beauty:
and dreams to make life worthwhUe." -

Hugh Hefner. ·

'::~:t;~' S@R~lA-l£~trs·
ldiiH
ClAY I. POlLAN

a

t
''

.lorN

IICI-IIcin

-+-~

We.

m

hav• r•ferencee,

,_.

i;;;iji.;Acc~~-~IO~rle~S~di!

:3

e:::::...

'

lj\,

.. FRANK AND ERNEST

21

A tool kit
for bridge repairs

tongth. lrll' wlplald ·~
bMn dry cfeanld, no.
Nooth 4th lllddlopooot, Ohio. Z 2428.
.
&lt;
bedroom turnlohod
dop &amp;
For
Soloo
lllzo
moclum
.lolloo
~......,---'----­
~I requl~, 3D4-882.
.
wlnlor coat, c1ooi1m w1 toathor IS1 Fsnn Equipment
One Bedroom 1part-.rt. Fur- trim, UM new, wu hi, now
Care. CaU U. For A Vlatt. Infant ,_,., t3,500; 111110 Hondo .... n 1thod-1.;, ~orv_ cltoan. No paiL MO, paid $110; a1oo mlac. lolloa ,3000 l'inl 01.- - · · lvt
IToddltoiS 814-&lt;141-82:17. p,.. coni, AC, I SpMd, 1100 080, 304 ·~1 • 11
olotnlng; ooll 814-62-2115, 11. - · - cl..ch, IOOd-.
.
chooltoiS /School Ago 814-44fl. 81+3711-25141.
Small Unfuml1h1d Apartm•nt, lpm or•~ •ft•lprn. ' ~14710,
..........1050

$152.17

llodam1 BR apl . 114 4 tl 0310.

Mlee Paull't 08Y Clrt Center 1 month• helot ..nt, new 14170,
Brook Woot Of HliC On Jacklan clollvorod ond HI up, aldrtlng
PIIuo M.f 5 A.M. -5:30 P.M. II
Qualfty And Elpoolonco Ia Tho and • - · 1..-a37-tl~5.
1t1 Conom1 FDII' Your ctdld'e 121!11 Amhom Traitor, 2 Bod-

tiounkHplng, .ame cookrng

'

I7.4:::00~P::II::·--,-.,----,--:1no a-y Altn&gt;, goad ·oond,

"''""'""'

:rh ~=":,.~~Homo,lor, =C:~po 11o• No PolO, -=~~~ For Bale: Ant!Q.. · Sow Ull;
1~
Hololonco,
W-n ~ ao· Con Opalw
Btovo, $1,500. 814-..11.
' ~:::.........: - - - - - -· 120. Col 114 441 1112, ·Qr .....
·lll'ld driving, priVItl room,
1m 121c10 Foaodom Mobllto
Furnished
. 441 tUII.
·
board, Mlary, llvt·ln 5 deye,
45
rtfllrenc:H requlrtd, 614~593Homo, Clol HNt &amp; Range For-; -- u m Ul;
Stop By Stop L!rwn ea,., Cam- ll:..lrlgorPioa
lf34.
. at':e:
~er~
Room!!.
Sc- Doo1t flO; Tablo LIMe
pltotolo- Sotvlco, Wo ~.II. All,
Jbln the leader In tM eon.umer 614-441-0925.
.
114-~45-111Uftor3:30.
Roomolor-·-ormonlh. ~=- 114441ts• Qr 114f'lnancial S.rvk:ll Industry.
Stanlng 11 S1201mo. Qallla Hotll.
hnmlldlate oppcl'rtunHy
tor WIH do gtMral -nlng, 1H3 Folrmont Mobllto Homo, · 114
441-1580.
OenNil Nutrition Praduata
e~r•r mlndtd lndlvklual to . .
rooldentlll « commorclto~ hove 141'10, 2 Bodroomo, 1 Bath,
Allllno AcidondlodJ
MUM 1 challenging ~hlan. Na
IIJ*Ience 1nd ret.r•u:n Eloc. Hut, Undorpannlng. AllOr 9 1 - ,_with~- tooturlng
Building, wolahthtl
•perlence n..cted. Carn- Contact Poulo ot 114-141-2447 I P.M. 514-441--3044.
AltO troi!O&lt; - · AU hook-upo. bumor -lorm&amp;l'oo. Avallablo a·
prehenslv. training, manag• 1fttr2pm.
11183 Rk:lllrdoon 14x'IO, 3 Bod- Call alor 2:00 p.m., 304·773- clullvoly Ill 11110 Alcl Phonnaoy.
nl opportunHy aVIIIIIti...
Tho ulo woyiO dill.
roomt, 2 Battt.. C.n&amp;enary 5181, Maoon WV.
Will
Do
Hou-IOonlng
Have
.... cen Kmn Smtih,
Exporlanco
&amp;
RaleroncM,
81451
nager, 814·112·2111 tor lmllonuat troodmiU lor Wllll!lhg1 I
Rood, 4-:m.2UO.
47 Wanted to Rent
rwtdlile conaldllrltion. Smoke 388-80711 Call Dobblo.
-'tlon lncllno. price m.va.
11M
141711
Clayton
3
Bodroomo,
1
-::=::::-:~~..;:..-:.;~~~
, _ and dNg lrM MWironment.
Will plow I dloc gordon toto In 1 112 Both, 2 Tono B--. Gao Fomlll' Looking To Ront 2 To 3 Muot-to._toto,114-tt2EOE.
Polnl Plouant aroa, 304-17S- Hut, llony EX1rul114-31ll-'1041. Bedroom - . In Country, ~
Lboklng for a rellaiM farmer to JII841.
1111 Shultz ~-. Cl• udlfo Ha.. Outoldo Oooo I Ho-o. lllcrowevo m. Long ~
·titlp pul up 40 acrel of aood
-nlng, 3
2 lui Ploaoe Coli CaiiOct: 115-153- (12) $10. Rol - y .....
Frnancial
hay nNr' Dexter, 114-11tZ·25f1.
a..,.
cllolog 131-A m t.thl, garden tub. txtru, 304o 4720 ·
8711-11100.
773-11111.
Moko Big Money From Homo:
r.lerchandrse
$100 Wrilcly~ From Homo! Bond
Oi1o WilY rtllllno tlckoiO IO
11111 Bkyllno Holly Ridge Mx70,
Bu1lnea
Tompo, Flo, AIM11 7111. 304-t71112.00 • SASE To: O&amp;A Supplloo, · 21
111
.Oioc,
Z
bodroomo,
NC,
11ft aft. 1:00 'PII.
PO Bol 81, Hllloboro, OH ~8133.
_.,od porch, kHchon laland,
Opponunlty
.
otooago
·
bldG._
undo1110nnlng,
51
MeNger For 1tt3 Summtr
Household
0no o1c1 11r1a1o
llu now, 304-1~~&gt;-2454.
INOTICE!
SlaSon At London Pool.
watorbad whh llghto, ....; fl•
Goods
f!numo Will Bo Accoptod UntM OHIO VALLEY PUBUIHINO CO. 1111 CIO~ Narlla Traitor,
le,.h floor . - TV,
hli 114-81~7102.
rocommondo lhlt you do bull· 11x10, 2
Ap~l \ 1113, By Janlco l.awlon,
oon11, 2 e.thl,
Vltlage Of Syrtcu•, Clerll nooo- poopla you k,_ ond CA, 514-245-1713.
-li'NiLifW,
Third
StrHt, NQT to aond ......., tlwough tho
moll untK ,.... hovo lnnollgltod 2 IMidroom 12180, pe hMI, AC,
Sy...- , OH 45771.
thootfoflng.
stove, rofrlolrltot', drape1,
dlrtlmo babyoln~&lt;, Outdo 10 holM omploymont, II ...,.ly tumlofiod, good oond,
OrHn SchoOf Olltrlct, mutt
104-1711-1071.
Noodod:

I-lOW CAN 'fOV 6E
CALLED 6REAT IF
't'OU'VE NEVE~
SERVED ON A
50&amp;-COMMITTEE?

0

1110 Allro Conver'-n val'\,
loodod, ftO,OOO. will conoldor
cor u trado, 304-ftll-3335 aftor

llrandE--•:,:.C..::",:.:-·

-cr.

0

DID SEETJ.IOVEN EVER
SEINE ON A
SUB- COMMITTEE'?
I-lUI-I '?DID HE'?

.

•x·

COIM1 814-012-7123.

40 IIPQ,
1514.
Fordood _!l!l!nd.mlrd. an

a.-•ns.

plated. 304-175-1125.
Have v..oncy lor bodlall or u-. II ~·- 0110 ~ t
Hml lnvllld lody, ,._noble ·-• - -•r ~
nuralng care, 8'14-041·2276.
room., 2 car carport, nMt
;;.::.~:..::;:.::.;:..:.;.:,::..::;:.:;_.,....._1 pump, oenlnl air, ralrlgentor,
lnt.Sor I uterlor palnllng. ..ove, IR "M3. P~, Ohio,
wuh - n mo1111o homo, A - $15,000, liking Second Avtnue, Gaiii'-.GIII,
Shoro Both 11185; UtiiHioo Paid, Fl~: All HlnlteDQdl Spill
howtl, will do odd fobo. Froo $14,000, 114-1112-3330.
Dollv...r $40 Pk:k-Up Lood.
514 411 141SAftor 7 P.M.
Eetlmatll. 15 yra ell)lritnce.
614-256-1318.
IXC l'lferenc.., 304-t?$.4933 If.
Gracloua living. 1 'and 2 bodtere:OOPM.
1nl
room a,.rtrMnlll at Vlllag• 2 flu8h mounted Fluow
32
.Mobile
Homes
MallO&lt;
and
RIVOIIIda lklhlo. bulbi lncludod. :14141 tnJoy't Daycar• CW'Ified,Apartmonta In llldclopart. FfGfft clioo, as. - · 304-t'lllotS04.
paoloncod, rolar.,_, Ill agoo,
for sale
$115. Call 814-62-1851. EOH.
rettonlble 1111•, clrop..lna we&amp;o
· Far..._..~...,._DOIII:,ful

8224.

Houokoapor

11n

&amp; Loollo OOod, Automottc,
$1,500, 114-251-13211.

_ _r, a - ..nton, 8~ - , tlrao, lor moos ....
Block, brick, - •~=· Wlnwin- 2221.
lormatoon 0011304-m-.111. ,.·
Merchandise
lorw, nlo llnnde, OH Coli 114lOft. black ......, ~
1m Lincoln Contt'*llll lion 1111 OMC . . . ~7':1i..s~z'i
•
Taohlba TXR 80, rocolvor 1 ox·
a, 2 Dr Coupo, 12,500 814-311- 4wd. Low ..._ .
trao; all oamoto, $1200; Coal 1 . STEEl. BUILDINGS. Factory S.. 11141.
1112 Au~ atar LX, l.aiMI.d, All
·---~to.
....
Wood ··-·
ow•,
~-- l't. To
20,!100 Ia. l't. 1,2GII
Con 1971 Cllryotor ~. gqocl
· uu - . Prlco Nogo- _
28.. firebox, $500; I'Mall2-7134.
Dillver, can crwct. Will DilL wortl oar, IAOOi tra~•nl ran
~
~ Y•r 0k1 Tar,dv 1000 · /TL2 Dull CoMir. e14-448.o?'71. out of 1m Thunderlllrd, 171, tlablo. - · -·
Homo ComiiUiar 411 IIEQ Ha111 .._:WI.
514--t
74 Motorcycles ' '
0~. .1 3,., And a 114 •
1m ~- nd 11110
llonftor· Koyllurd Halll Drtvo 56 Petl fOr sale
,_....,.. a
1188 Yllmalle 200 4 · -·
Ha1 Appro~. ssoo or Bo-.. -'--==-~7~;:-=::~:-. Chrplor1
114 • 1150
2 &amp; $110 . . _ . alloW *In, -~~~
IIIII.
QOod oondhlon. 11500,
On ft. PhonO: 114-241-1113, After
and ....,ry 1~ (:-~~li=;';""'¥~·~;;;;e4;11.~;='~1~1iiOH.
•
3:30.
All - .
111711 Ford
a o-, 104-11140l11.
lama Pol Food ·
Ito Ru..,- . 1m l'c!nl 4 o-,
3 woad living , _ chalr11, Webb. Call_114o44M231.
T• loo: at Thlnl , . _ , oar. 75 Boats &amp; Motors
IOVIIUI, hldl • bed, glu• top
llpolll.
~I ond IObiOO. -lng- AICC Poodle, -........WI,.
tor sale
chino, korooun hootorw, 2 c~b, Fo1 T•rlar, -on 1..r., L~'lt,
111711 Chevy van bodJ, 304-I'JI. D:~tm...,._ , - 0 . ......,
Hll'tnd 14' Dlllrgluo llahlna - . IOhD
tllit3.
·
Wo!ng Nocooa .....-_ 1-1· 14
w Tl-. . llobull Trano, fftOIOr and trllller, 1'70o, 114-'JIII~.!
0404.
$1,500, CoiU14 Ul 110~.
2141.
~
I' 1-gto. utotllto ...,.
ploto wHh - · m - . S7110, AKC Roglol...r lloUr - · 2 11171 Plymoutll - . . . , ...,. - · ,,_, II' Y-"4
.
- · . , . , _ or 1111- (IIUo ,...,, Tn&gt;tUng mater o1uo
.304·773..a'I0'7.
3537.· UOO oach, ll'l4-ft2- goad,
lory, $3IIG, 1M Pearl Sl, llldo olCtrao. $4,100. WOII kopt.. !104Alyce DooJ.; poom diSII, lull
• ...._ Ohio
175-1111.
ltongth. I
~oil AKC
......rod
l o - ....,...,,
'
1hoilldoro, llpiK to lh 11, ChinOii All- pujoploo, S04 • It H. 1110 Dodge Dlplomll, ruHio orauild ohou
; looutllul Eyod rune fOOCI, body good, ilroo
Slzo e, SZOO, 814-M!I-31110 Hull!y Fomato, FuQ 81oo dldh 7 lfOCIII, , _ ..,.. !Opalr, $325
v-iiGit- l'lllllna - . 2
ovonlngo.
-ho Old, ltoclc, a..,, Wh ._ :.0.,~·
- . - .. hhor, 1110
Sooond,
Oalllpatla.
•
Bolono Q-14 Gonion Tnoctor, 4 $50.114-441o1127.
· I=::::-=-;;=;:=:;:--.--::--::-::-:-8101
rart~~ Now,
01- Flail Tank, 2413 ......_ An. :!!!!, ~?::tan•.!-~":';
76 Auto Parts &amp;
"'•
•
Point P-nl. 304-171-2013, ,_., ~1434 --v
•
Burpoo and bulk oood lull tlno Tooplcol flail, l!lnlo, 1:$150,::::~1114-::-.-:---.;:-·;__....,,_
now on Mle et Pal,. Ph•. 2801 .,..., •nlme,. and........
1112 CUIIHI Supr.me, aiiMr,
Jocklon A~~nt Plouont,
:IIOR, ihlft 1111, CO ptaMOyer, lllnn, luctgll Tl••4nl ~·u.ct a!
WV, ~
.
1'11pPY Palaeo I'll ~ ARE c1
1ono NC.
II ...~
' LoCatod In o.c........ Co. Qat. for dllll':'304-1~ "·000•
114--MHin
1+3711-'
Calltor ID bo'!..!'! mtlll&lt;lfY, na..r tlpolla. Now · 114-t4HMM. 1~:,:;.:::;;;:::~:..::;;::::::::.·- - 2211, '-roy: 114-etHIOO, ;
uood, $41, 1114-112-1116. W.Vo.
11113 UIICOin Town ca~IG~~·
only.
Roglllorod Border Pup.
oond
" ~':',r' lria, on. ton touc!&lt;;
......_
Slood
~~
•~
fiO'II!!r.. "'-.
Ilion, I
.
..;._._, ~-~- 4 ,....,
op
304-7h-ol
••
Klrldoncl ..~-'"~~
--~
pool, uoo Ia
114-211-1011.
R
WV.3114-o
grovo ollll lot 3311-A, Helton D,
1"- Pont~- .... 4 ~- llo.DeRAuto
t.
•
54011. oach. 304-1711-1583,
SCart now 10 riRvent 11oM .......,
- · 3711-31133 or 1

pllancoa
room lacllftloo1
to I!ChOOI
In ICMn. Appllcllllon. .V811tb~
at: VIllage ·o-, Aoto. Mt ar
coli 514-ftz-:m I. EOH.
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENT$ AT
BUOQET PRICES AT JACKSON
EITA~ 131 ' • an PIH
lnlm
/mo. Woll to ohoD I
mavloo. Coli 514 445 2558. EOH.
- h Bt-t lllddloport, Olllo, . . , _ Complng -rahlp
I 100111 lot, rot &amp; clop, utllftiH For Solo, a-,; Phone: 114pa!d. 3D4-W:-2511.
181-4147.
·
2 pr 41&gt;13l
B-.rdo Apartmonto, I Bod- Dinouur
,_.,
.....
Rohlgntor, d.. poo..... pillow ohom, · - · ·
1..,.80 nlco *•poo $39.
WI""!!._ Dryw Hook-Up, 814- 110.
448-lo;u.
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Very C1Nn, Waiter Ptld, In Par. Ga. Tanlto With Gupploo, .SO.
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til' ArM. 814-381~000.
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SPICI Healer $150; Mini Wuhlr
&amp; Dryer SHr1, S250i Ali'nond

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or 1m 4a4 a..., Sulluobln Rune

odltlon •· 2:00 p.m.

Friday.· Monday ldhlon ... 2:00
p.m. s.turdly.

' 'f'OU'RE ALWA'fS
SA'f1N6 BEET~OVEN
WAS 50 GREAT...

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PRINT NUMIIERED LETTERS IN
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' ."

Sicken : Moum • Floor· Truism - MORe it COSTS
My n-,Jhbor was celebrating his ninetieth birthd!IIY
I heard htm tell a friand that life insurance and fun 11aci
a Jot 1n common. The older you get the MORE H

COSTS.

'

'

'

�Friday, March 12, 1993

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

56 years after nightmare
date, couple marries

Community calendar
Community Calendar Items a round and square dance on Saturappear two days before an event day from 8-11 :30 p.m. at .the old
and the day or that event. Jtems legion hall in Middleport. Music
must be received weD In advance will be by CJ and lhe Country Gento assure publication iu the cal· tlemen. Children are welcome with
adult supervision. Bring snacks for
eadar.
the Sll!ICk table.
FRIDAY
. RIPLEY, W.VA. - The Liberty
. HARRISONVILLE · Sign-up
Mounraineers will perform Friday for the Harrisonville Youlh League
at Skaleland in Ripley., W. Va
will be Saturday from 10 a.m. to
noon at Harrisonville Elemenlllry .
.LONG BOTIOM - Faith Full A youth league meeting will be
Gospel Church in Long Bottom held at 6 p.m. at the Scipio Fire
will hold a special hymn sing on Department.
Friday at 7 p.m . featuring The Dai·
ley Family Singers, Harmony Boys
RUTLAND - The Rutland
and other. locai singing wiD be fea- Youth League will hold its second
tured. Pastor Steve Reed invites the sign-up Saturday from 1-3:30 p.m.
public. Fellowship will follow.
at the Rutland Civic Center. Anyone not participating last year must
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup· provide a copy of their birth certifipers Plains VFW Post No. 9053 cate. Registration fee is $10 per
Ladies Auxiliary
sponsor a child, not to exceed $25 per family.
round and square dance on Friday
RUTLAND - There will be a
from 8-11 :30 p.m. Music will be by
True Country Ramblers. Public dance at the Rutland American
Legion !:!all Saturday from 8 p.m.
invited.
to midnight. Music will be a by
MIDDLEPORT - A gospel sing Pure Country Band. Public invited.
will be held Friday at 7 p.m. at lhc
RACINE - The Racine Youth
Believers Fellowship Ministry on
Route 7, one mile from lhe Gallia· League will hold sign-up for the
Meigs County line. Pastor Mar- 1993 ball season on Saturday from
garet Robinson invites the public.
9 a.m. to noon and Monday from 68 p.m. Final sign-up will be March
SATURDAY
20 from 9 a.m. to noon. Sign-up
t.IIDDLEPORT - The Middle- will be held at the Southern kinderport Youth League will hold sign- •. garten building. Registration fee
up for the 1993 ball season Satur- will be $10 for softball players, $15
day from 9 a.m. to noon. Sign-up for baseball players, not to exceed
will be held at the Middleport $25 per family. Anyone who did
Council chambers. Anyone who not participate in lhe Racine Youth
did not participate last season will League previously will need a.copy
need a copy of their birth certifi- • of their birth certificate. ·
cate. Registration fee is $10 per
child, not to exceed $25 per family.
GALLIPOLIS - The Galli a
Twirlers Western Square Dance
MARIETIA- The Washington Club will hold a dance Saturday
County Saddle Horse Advisory from 8-11 p.m. at the C.H. McKenCommtttee will hold its lhird annu- zie Agriculture Building in Galal auction of new and used tack on lipolis (across from Holzer HospiSaturday at6 p.m. at lhe junior fair tal). Bill Gene Evans will be the
building at the Washington County ealler.
Fair Grounds in Marietta. Call423LOTTRIDGE · Country Music
7636 for furtller information.
Night will be held atlhe Lottridge
MIDDLEPORT - There will be Community Center on Saturday
a country western dance at Middle- from 7 p.m. to midnight. All bands
. port Elementary on Saturday from are welcome. Refreshments will be
8-11 p.m. sponsored by the Mid- available.
dleport Arts Council. Admission is
$5 a couple or $3 per person .
SUNDAY
Refreshments will be Sold.
POMEROY - Colin Christensen
will speak at Hillside Baptist
FAfRPLAIN, W.VA. - The Lib- Church on Sunday. Sunday school
erty Mountaineers will perform begins at 10 a.m. with morning
Saturday at the Jackson County worship at II a.m. Evening serJamboree in Fairplain, W.Va.
vices are at 6 p.m. Christensen will
speak about his previous missionBURLINGHAM - There will be ary work in Mexico, the Phillippine
community public dinner on Sat- Islands and his future work in Hunutday at the Burlingham Modem gary. Rev. James R. Acree Sr.
Woodman Hall at 6:30 p.m. The invites the public.
camp will furnish spagheui, meat- '
balls, salad, french bread, coffee
MIDDLEPORT - Rev. John
and pop. Bring a covered dish. A Haley wiU be preaching 81the Midmeeting will follow at 7:30 p.m. dleport Community .Church on
regarding information on a fire Sunday 81 7 p.m. There wiU also be
dep;lrllTient for Bedford Township. special singers. Everyone welcome:
Representatives 'from the Scipio
SYRACUSE - "Born Again
Fire Department will be guest
Believers"
will sing at the Asbury
speakers.
United Methodist Church in SyraMILLFIELD - There wiiJ. be a cuse on Sunday at II a.m.
round and square dance Saturday
POMEROY - Beginners country
from 8· 11 p.m. at the Russell
line
dancing classes will begin
Building in Millfield. Music will be
Sunday at Pomeroy Village HaU
by Ramblin Counlry.
•
from 2-4 p.m. Donation of $2 for
MIDDLEPORT - There will be the class. Call 992-7853 or 9492455 for information.

will

a

Public Notice
RESOLUTION
206.83
BE IT RESOLVED, by lhe
Council of the Village of
Pomeroy, all membera:
That the Villoge .of
Pomeroy hereby eupporta

th• Revitalizallon Program
lor the Village of Middleport.
Thio program would be
beneficial
lo
all
communities Involved.
PASSED: Feb. I, 1993
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
Larry Wehrung, Pruldent
.Kolhy Hyoell,

Clerkllreuurer
• (3) B, 12, 2tc

Public Notice
RESOLUTION
NO. 202.83
A RESOLUTlON
ACCEPTING
RESTORATION
GUilELINES AND
DECLARING AN
EMERGENCY
BE IT RESOLVED BY
THE VILLAGE COUNCIL
OF POIEROY, OHIO AS
FOLLOWS:
SECTION ONE: The Vii·
loge hereby occepto the
• tully detailed In a document
on file In the office of the
Mayor. •
SECTION TWO:
Thio

A"olution ia .an emergency

-11ry for 1M immediate
prMervllllon of the public

Vlllllgll Councol
· ATTEST: Kathy Hyaelt,
· Clerk of tha CouncN
ApPI'oved thlo 11t day of

. FabMry, 1119:1.
Jlruce J. Read, Moyor
' (3) I, 12, 2lc

.,

I.

By DANIEL Q. HANEY
AP Science Writer
BOSTON - Scientists have
tracked down a defective gene that
may cause nearly a third of all
human brain tumors, opening 'the
way fot new strategies to.stop these
cancers.
The genetic error causes neurofibromatosiS type 2 - or NF2 a disease that is passed through
·families. However, researchers
believe that defects in the same
gene also frequently cause b~ain
.tumors that occur sporadically
rather than being inherited.
About 15,600 Americans are
diagnosed with brain tumors each
year, ·and 11,500 die from them.
Doctors from Massachusetts General Hospital, who discovered· the
gene, said Thursday it may be
implicated in nearly one-third of
these cases.
• "This is an enormously exciting
discovery," commented Dr. Nancy
Ratner of the University of Cincinnati. "We hope that discovering
the defect that underlies NF2 will
help us understand enough of the
biology 10 treat tljis disease.•'

The defective gene appears to
trigger two slow-growing forms of
brain tumors - acoustic neuromas,
which often lead to deafness, and
meningiomas, which are cancer of
the membrane sur,ounding the
brain.
The gene was isolated by a team
led.by Dr. James F. Gusella. They
reported their findings in lhe latest
issue of the journal Cell.
Among the implications of the
discovery:
.
-It could enable doctors to ·
learn whether members of families
where NF2 is common have inherited the bad gene themselves. t
-It could give scientists new
targets for designing drugs or 'geneth·erapy techniques to treat the
brain tumors. The only current
therapy is to remove the tumors
surgically.

Pro gram scheduled
A group of 40 'students from the
Toledo area will present a drug
program at Southern High School
on March 26 from I: 15-2:15 p.m.
The pt~~gram is open to the public.

Last stand for Custer
at elementary school ·
DETROIT (AP)- Gen. George
Armstrong .Custer has had his last
stand at an elementary school.
The Detroit Board of Educatio!l
voted Tuesday tO change the name
of George Custer Elementary
School to Thurgood Marshall Elementary Sc(Jool after the late
Supreme Court justice.
''Historians now consider
Custer vain and an incompetent
military officer," said Jor-dan
Rossen, who auended lhe school in
the 1940s and spent years fighting
to get rid of the name.
..
"Looking forward to Thurgood
Marshall is like looking forward to
Michael Jordan. He's a superstar,"
said Thomas Williams, a sixthgrader at the school.
Custer spent part of his childhood in Monroe. He became a
Civil War general and Indian fighter and died in the 1876 Battle or
Little Bighorn after underestimating the number of Sioux and
Cheyenne Indians he was attacking.

bou ought to, according to H&amp;R
lock, the income tax preparation
service. If the IRS sends a notice to
you at your old address. the notice
IS considered valid. Any delays
caused by mail being forwarded rna~
mean that you miss important IR
deadlines.
It is wise to keep IRS informed
of your address changes in advance
of filing your next tax return. This
way you reduce the possibility of
missing important correspondence.
You may use Form 8822 to notify
the IRS of your new mailing.addresS'.
The form asks lor your social security number, name. your old address
and your new address. In addition,
he form provides space to indicate
~pat type of tax return you file. Form
822 should be sent to the IRS
~~rvice center for your old address.
If you want to be extra safe, mail
our change of address via certified
mail, return receipt requested.

618 E. Main
Pomeroy

Theatre planned
The senior class of Southern
High School will present the dinner
theatre, "Made in the U.S.A.," on
April 10 at 6 p.m. at the high
school.
Tickets will be available starting
next week and the cost is $4 for
adults and $2 for students/children.
The variety show themed presentation will feature selections
from the Big Band era, songs of tHe '
Silver Screen, as well as pop, coun•
try and jazz tunes.
The public is encouraged to
attend the event and support the
mu:Pcal program at Southern Local
which is under the direction of
Melissa Stewart.

MAbl

1\ lH?AI

IJif I l Ill NCI

'

STOCK# 1041

LOADED

1993 DYNASTY·

RACINE - There will be a
turkey and ham dinner at Southern
High School on Sunday at II a.m.
sponsored by the Racine PTO.
Menu includes turkey or ham,
mashed potatoes, homemade noodles. green beans, slaw, roll,
desserts and drinks. Price is $4 for
adults and $3 for children under 12.
Carry-out available.

TO CELEBRATE BIRTH·
DAY - Hattie Gertrude Nolan
will celebrate ber 95tb birthday
on Monday, March 15. She and
her husband, David A. Nolan, are
tbe parents or four sons, David
and Loren Nolan and the late Lee
and Calvin Nolan; one daughter,
tbe late Faye Lamm; 25 grandchildren, 46 great-grandchildren
and four gr.eat-great·grandchil·
dren. Cards may be 1ent to
Gertrude Nolan, care or Garry
Lamm, 253 Fairview Rd., BidweD, 45614.

1993 FIFTH AVENUE

·NOW$14,995
STOCK# 10013

Tax Levy On House Trailers
All owners of house trailers having a shus In
the State of Ohio and subject to the tax as
provided above MIJST register such trailer
w~h the County Audhar an or prior to the date
the tax is due and payable.

RESPONSIBIUTY
OF HOUSE
TRAILER
OWNER-

a

Upon the transfer of ownership of house
lraHer the certnlcate • • • 811 to such trailer
shall expire, and the original e~wnar shall
Immediately remove such certlicate from the
trailer.

TRANSFER-

Every operator of a house trailer caurt or parte
or every owner of property used for such
purpose when there Is no operator shall keep,
a register of all houae trailers which mllke use
. of the caurt, park, or prcperty.

OPERATOR OF
A HOUSE
TRAILER
COURT-

HOWARD .E. FUll,
MEIGS COUITY IIIASURER

'·

1993
ACCLAIM
.
.

Now·sa 950

A Multimedia Inc. -•papar

}Worst snowstorm in years strikes area
By staff and~ reports ·
GAll.IPOLIS- A late wmtcr storm dumved more
than 16 inches of snow in the Meigs..Qalt!a-Mason
:County area over a 14-llour period Saturday; paralyz:inglll:8rly allac:ti.vities in the region.
Lcical authorities were urging all non-emergency
vehicles to slay off the roads Saturday as snow drifts .
. reached three feet or more. The Gallia County Slieriffs Department declared a snow emergency at 11
a.m. Satunlay and reported count)', road$ were irnpas. sible and treacherous.
It is the worst winter storm to strike this area since
· the famous 1977 and 1978 blizzards.
Several mOtorists found it difficult to gel out of

.
.·

their parking lots and those who did had to travel at a
snail's pace, or wound up in a ditch. Salt trucks and
graders were out in force, but the strong winds and
freezing temperatores appeared to be winning ciut
late Saturday.
:
Concerts, band contests, the district final basketball g!lflles at OhiQ University in Athens, and .mii!IY
church activities have been canceled. The d1stnct
tournament was rescheduled for this evening, but it is.
liltely those games will not be played. Snow was still
falling up to .2 inches an hour 814 p.m. Saturday.•'
Weight of the heavy- snow cauSed the roof on one
of the boat docks to collapse at the Gallipolis Boat

Club Saturday afternoon.
.
Around Ohio
.
A storm that dumped up to 2 inches of snow an
hour in southeastern Ohio Saturday closed roads,
postponed sporting even is and caused transportation
delays throughout the state.
The State Highway Patrol said no fatal injuries
were reported, despite winds of more than 40 mph in
eastern Ohio and snow of at least 15 inches in the
southeast
A bliizard warning was in erfe.ct for the eastern
two-thirds of Ohio through Satutday night. A less
severe winter weather advisory was in effect for the
western one-third of Ohio through the evening.

Light snow fell over parts of northweslelll Ohio,
where I to 3 ~hes of snow was expected by SliDday.
·
By mid-afternoon, Ironton in southeastern Ohio
reported 15 inches of snow. Forecasters said th~
could be 16 to 30 inches by Sunday morning.
·•
•
Roads in Lawrence CouniY in southern Ohio were
. closed to all but emergency traffic.
·.
''They can't get a handle on it to get the roads
clear," said John Smith, a traoper at the patrOI'.s
Ironton post. •'They're out there working, but they
plow it and the winds cover it right bli:k up.' '
He said drifts were several feet deep.

Sites proposed for ne·w regional airport~..

New stacks
.
· at Gavin are
taking shape Locales in Bidwell, Rodney areas would allow for expansion
CHESHIRE • Construction
c rews have begun placing Concrete .
,Jor the first of two new 830-foot·
'·tall concrete sracks that are being
built at Ohio Power Company's
General James M. Gavin Plant at
: Cheshire.
The new stacks are a rnajor ele·menl in the insrallation offlue gas
· desulfurization systems (scrubbers)
' at Gavin' Plant, according to Jim
, Howard, project manager for the
AEP Service Corporation. Ohio
· Power is one of seven operating
; ·~panics in lhe AEP System.
"Installing six scrubber absorber
·vessels with each of the ~wo 1,3()().
megawatt units at Gavin Plant
requires that each unit has its own
exhaust stack," Howard said. "As a
resultj the two new stacks are being
~ built to replace the existing 1,1()().
foot stack that presents serves both
.·Unit I and Unit2."
. .
Placement of concrete for 'the
' Unit I Slade begin on· March 8, and
~~ bejng done in a "continuous
· slip," .24 hours a day, five days a
: week. Howard said the ~~w staclc is
• progtllllinl upward at the rate of
about 1 folll~.I\Qur. . . - ·• ·

GALLIPOLIS - An 18-month
airpprt ~ite ' evalpation study has
ll&gt;eated. two possible sites for an
new Gallia-Meigs Regional Airport
which wouli! be capable of meeting
·the future aviation needs for the
&amp;rea, a spokesman for the GalliaMeigs Regional Airport Authority
annopnced recently.
The preferred site is located in

Rodney south of and ·parallel to . include a 5,46o;foot runway wilh a
U,S. 35. The airport authorit(s precision approach to one eild.
• s~cond choice is ·lot:aled between
four eXJstin!l public and private
Btdwell and Porter west ofilndpar' · · airports in Metg~ Couno/·and the
allel to Sq~te Route 160.
regional airport m Galba County
According to a report from lhe · were considered for the. site. All
authority, the current airport with but the regional airport failed to
its 4,000-foot runway would be meet the criteria, the report said,
inadequate to serve futore business due to site constr•ints which
aircraft reQuirements, which . impacted development potential..
'

.

FIGHTING A LOSING BATTLE- Betty
Plymale and ber llve·year-oJ4 lfUdson, Aaron
Thompson, team up on the snow Saturday
morning to dear a sidewalk on Stc:ond Aveaae
In GaDipolla. No amoant of ~mwork, llowever,
'

'

.

wu a match for tbe winter storm - the snow.
was falUn&amp; almost .. fllllt as they could shoveiiL
By·4 ·p.m. Gallla County bad around 16 inches
of IIIIOW, drilll lnduded. (Times-Sentiuel pboto
by Kevin PlnaoD)

;:wind-driven drifts are making it
difficult for road crews to keep the
~highways clear.
· .

.

Meigs receives $679,379 )j
for Issue 2 program~
:j

SURVEYING THE DAMAGE ·The ftre at
Meigs Hllh School Friday started In this old
restroom, more recently uteJ1 81 a storage area,
on the upper 'eve! or the building. Here board

M' •

I .

memben, l'rclm tile lefl. Larry Rupe, Jolla Hood,
Roger Abbott, Randy Humpllre,a and lob Bar·
ton join S~pL Jam11 CIU'plllw to look over the
damage. (Photo by Cha..- Hoelllch).

•tt b

.. E=~~~~:e~~~~!::~ . e1gs c assrooms WI
~:!~~~~~~~=~~ready

.e

for students Monday

').3) when he lost control, sli~ten of
·
.
·
POMEROY - Cleanup from Fri- which struck the building Friday
eenter and struck a northbound
Oallia County I..oeal Sehoot .Dis- clay's file at Meip High SChool is mamina and then ·toOk the board
; tilct sehool bUJ driven by Brenda taking place this · weekend and member&amp; 10 the upper level to '\&gt;lew
:K. Sanden, ,39, 1026 Second Ave., claurooma will be ready for SIJI· the darnap-a bt;lmed out storaae
prown City.
.
dents on Monday, Supt. JIUIICS Car- room, walls stamed with black
; Hurlow was cited for driving penter told Moip Local Board of watec markings, damaged eeiling
~rt of cuter. The report. did not . Ed.ucatlon members It 1 special tile 111111 Uaht fiaturea in the halb,
what caused liim to lose , meeting at the hiah sehool Friday .bliltered paint on doors, damqed
:eonuo . ·
evening.
loclan, 1111111001 covered desks and
:. · CoatiaHd on A·l
· .
Carpenter reported on the fire equipment
•
\

GALLIPOLIS - John L. have two sons and five daughters:
Schlater, senior vice president/portMcDade pointed out, "The
folio manager of the Ohio Co~pa­ chamber is most fortunate to have a
ny, and president/The Cardmal gentleman with the fJilancial
Group of Funds, will be the fea- rience and competence of
tured speaker at the 56th annual Schlater as the featured speelmr
dinner meeting of the Gallia Coun- our annual meeting. when 110
ty Chamber of Commerce, at 7 . attention and concern il"flx:q...S'
p.m., Thursday, April IS.
our nation's
economy~~
~ 'The event wiD .be held in the -spe.cificall
y' tJie,.
fiJIIIICial.
James A; Rhodes C&lt;Jmmunit{ stu- G~ ~OIJ!liY ~.the .
deilt center'ill' tile il'niversity of Rio area. . . ·1
.
•
Grande, Rio Grande.
Tickets for the meeting, are
Acco~ding to Ronald G. available al the ch;in!ber office.
McDade, chamber president,
Reservations .must be made no
Schlater' was named president of later than April 9, Individuals may
the Cardinal Group of Funds, the call the chamber off~ee, 446-0596,
mutual funds group that is man- for additional information.
aged br the Ohio Company, in January o this year. He continues also
in his position at senior vice president/portfolio manager of the Ohio
Company.
·
A chartered financial analyst ,.
since '1983, Schlater is a graduate
of St. Joseph's College, holding a
Bachelor of Science and Finance.
He has done post graduate sJudies
at the Graduate School.of Business
at the University of Dayton and the
National Trust School at Northwestern University.
He is a member and past president of.lhe Financial Analyst Society of Columbus and has 17 years
experience in portfolio management. He has been with the Ohio
Company for eight years .. ·
·
Before joining the Ohto Company, he was senior portfolio manager of·Trustlnvesunents at the Huntington National Bank.
Schlater and his wife Debbie,

•==

··travel only if absolutely necessary,
.. as the rapidly-falling snow and

•peciCl

Meigs County were evaluated,
including the :ruppers Pl~ins ~nd
Big Bend areas, the surround•ng
topof'BJ!'IY iftlpacted the ability \0
obtain clear approaches to the runway tnds of the airport," the n:pQn
.
said
Ave possible sites were locarect
west of Gallipolis during this stage
of the study. The sites were subjected to a screening process that
ranked each site in term of their
ability to meet eight evaluation criteria ' which included incompatible
.
land uses in the runway protecUon
zones, power lines, topography,
and road relocations and closures.
Contlniled on A·3

Gallia County Chamber
banquet to be held AprillS'..

Four injured
· in accident

;;. · Four people received minor
:.'injuries in a two-vehicle accident
~Friday afternoon, the patrol report'
·ed.
Driver Lori A. HuU, 190 Maple
Drive, Ga!Iipolis, and her passenjlec, Amy L. Hull, 6, same address,
were treated at the scene by Gallia
County Erpergency Medical Ser• 'yice, as were the other driver,
;Penny L. Burleson, 41, 194 Hoover
~Road, l!idwell, and her pAssenger,
• Sarah E. Burleson, same address.
~ According to the accident
report, Burleson was southbound
~~on State Route ·160 when she
• turned left at the intersection of
~'Rodney Pike (County Road 3~) and
c..collided in tile intersection with
. Hull's vehicle, which was westi1ound on Rodney Pilce.
• · No citations were issued. Both
··vehicles sustained moderate, dis. 11blin- damage. Hull's vehicle
•tematned at the scene and
l'!urleson's vehicle was towed.
· · No injuries were reported in an
accident Friday afternoon involv-

The regional airport was also
evenlually ruled out because urban
encroachment )eft no room for
e~pansion and because the site is
located below the 100-year flood
plain.
The FAA will not fund airport
improvements at sites located within the 100-year flood plain, the
spokesman said.
Potential undeveloped sites
capable of .s~rting the prototype
airport facthnes were then mvesu-

kated
. a num ber or·
·
"Whtle
sites 1n

.Placil)g concn;te .roqhe·l.Jtlit 2
•stack m May. The pro.JCCt team has
a goal ol ·c01npletlng tfle Unit 1
stack shell in May and the Unit 2
stack shall .In July.
, Each of the new Gavin stacks .
. has an outside diamew of 62 feet
·at the base and '54 feet a1 the top.
The thickness of the stack shell
•measures 27 inches at the base.
Concrete for lhe foundaljon of lhe
Continued on A-3

' dents.
The patrol is urging motorisU to

LOADED WITH ALL THE EXTRASI

14 Sec:llon 141 Pog•

Mlddleport-Pomeroy.......Galltpolls-Polnt Pleasant, March 14,1993

. GALLIPOLIS - Tbe Gallia;'Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol was buckling down for a
long winter weekend Saturday
morning, but as of 8 a.m. had not
. reported any weather-related acci-

NOW$11,865

BURLINGHAM - The Burlingsponsor a family together program
on Sunday at 2 p.m. at the hall. Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Sanders, Gallipolis, will be putting on the program. All are welcome. Juniors
will serve refreshments.

•
:tm:es-

•:-:cllll•till.;uojL~w{wiiJ ~arl!'

ham Junior Modem Woodmen wiU

Revitallzolion Progr-.
Pnoed thlo tot day ol
Preeldanl of PomerOY.

Scientists find gene that.
causes brain tumors

TaxNews

STOCK#2034

gr•nl for • Downtown

February, 1119:1.
Larry Wehrung,

BEE WINNERS - Nancy Whaley, right, seventh grade, dliU&amp;bter or Mary and Delmar Whaley, Middleport, was the wiuner or
the ·spelling bee at Meigs Junior tllgh School. Adam Thomas, son ·
or Debbie Jenkins, Pomeroy, and Tim Thomas, was the runner-up.

REEDS VILLE · Eastern Athletic Boosters will have an emergency
meeting Sunday at·2 p.m. in the
high school cafeteria. All parents
and friends urged to auend.

pe•c•, halllth, Nlety •d
weHora .,d lor the further
purpoae of complying with
. -l.lln Umlla anloiled In the
• Vlll11g11'1 application for a

.

POMEROY - Colin Christensen, missionary, will speak at
Hillside Baptist Church on Sunday
at II a.m. and 6 p.m. Public invited.

R••tor•tlon Guldelinea,
which GuidellnH are more

.

at the start of the year. He introCOLUMBIA, Pa. (AP) . David Gentzler made a pretty bad duced himself a few weeks later to
impression lhe pight he crashed his the woman liviflg down the haU.
Mrs. Gentzler, 71, who is blind
car into a light pole while trying to
and
bedridden, said she immediatekiss his dale and drive at the same.
ly
recognized
the voice.
time. ·
.
·.
~1
guess
this
is the way it was
"I had both hands on her
instead of the steering wheel," he supposed to be;" she said.
After reminiscing about their
said.
·
His date, Bernice Neff, broke nightmare of a date, they began a
her glasses . His car - a 1925 whirlwind romance that ended in a
·
Maxwell he bought only two days proposal last week. ·
The
ceremony
was
a
simple
one,
e:artier for $30 - was demolished.
with
cake
and
punch
.
for
the
resiThey parted ways that night, 56
dents and a romantic dinner for the
years ago.
·
But wben they met again earlier newly)VedS, topped off with some
this year in a nursing home, they bubbly - ginger ale.
remembered each other. They
rekindled tbeir romance. On
Wednesday, they were married
They can laugh now about their
blind date i!ll937.
"I did get two kisses." Gent·
zler, 75, recalled triumphantly.
hy H&amp;R Block
Soon afterwanl the young
woman 's family moved . Years
MOVING?
passed.· She married, had children,
LET THE IRS KNOW, TOO
was widowed.· In 1988, she moved
to Heatherbank nursing horne in
When you move. you notify a
this southeastern Pennsylvania
wide variety of people and organizatown.
lions
about your change of address.
Gentzler, who is confined to a
Do
you
include the IRS? If you don't, •
wheelchair, arrjved at Heatherbank

He repclk1ed to the bolrd that the
insllliJICe adjaiiOr hid been there
and that the clelnup work woukl
Jakc_placeoverlhe-.•d end. While
repairS, 10111e Jllintinuncheplii:Cment of the eamna ille cannot be
completed lnlrriedllltlly, the clallrooms should bo eleaned up.and
ready for atudeata Monday, the
Colltlll... Oli A·l
•

By CHARLENE HOEFLlCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
MIDDLEPORT- Issue 2 funds
totaling $679,379 were awarded for
Meigs County projects at last
week's 111eeting of the District 18
Executive Commiuee, Ohio Public
Works Commission, held in Marietta.
Meigs County's committee
members, Fred Hoffman, who rep·
resents Middleport, the hirgest
community in the county, and B9b
Eason who was appo,inted by the
Meigs County Co'!'mission':rs ,
attended the comm1ttee meetmg
where Round 7 allocations of Issue
2 funds were made to the·lO Southeastern Counties in District 18.'
Hoffman reported that of'¢e
total funds awarded for Meigs
Coumy projects, $500,000 went to
the Meigs County Highway
Department for resurfacing roads,
$41,912 was awart!ed to ~sbury
Township for pavmg Bwley Run
Road $62,467 was given to Middlep~rt Village for resurfacing
work· and $75,000 was granted to
the Tuppe~ Plains Sewer/Waste
Water DtstneL
All of thG projects funded with
the exception of the Tuppers Plains
one require some local funds, Hoff·
man reported. ·
Figures provided by the COn:'·
mittee members show that thts
year's fund~ng brings the total of

1

Issue 2 monies allocated for pro:
jccts in Meigs County to over $3
million. This year's allocations are
the highest in the program which is
now in its seventh year. ,
Meigs County Hlahway Funds
Eason, who is Meigs County's
engineer, said that the $500,000
which the county received along
wilh a II percent loclll match will
go toward hot mix paving of a
number of Meigs County Roads.
Since the County Highway
Department did not receive any
funds in the Round 6 awards last
year, the application this year
included road work estimated to
cost $870,000. Since thai amount
was not received by the hif.iway
department, the engineer satd that
his department will now scale
down the project and decide what
roads are to be paved. Only those
roads which were included in the
Round 7 funding application will
be considered however. In other
words the selection of roads to be
paved ,will come from those listed
m the application, the engineer
said.
Tuppen Plains SeWIIIIe Pro.J«t
Sue ·Maison, who serves on ~·
Tuppers Plains Sewer/Waste Wm:r
District, sees the $75,000 in IJsue 2
grant monies as the funding which
will allow the district to move forward.
COIItlDMCI OD A·l
'
. 't

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