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Tuesday, January 7

Ohio Lottery
Meigs girls
defeat
Wellston

THIS WEEK'S GAMES
BOYS
Friday; January _10-Hannan Trace ••••••••••••••••••• A

GIRLS
Thursday, January 9-Hannan Trace·................ H

EAS
1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE
JAI-j. 1D-AT HANNAN TRACE
JAN. 14-NORTH GALLIA*
JAN. 17-SYMMES VALLEY*
JAN. 18-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 24-AT SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 25-SOUTHERN
JAN. 31-AT KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 1-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 4-AT SOUTHERN
FEB. 7-0AK HILL*
FEB. 14-HANNAN TRACE*
FEB. 18-AT NORTH GALLA*
FEB. 21-AT SYMMES VALLEY*

Pick 3: 656
Pick 4: 6137
Cards:

5-H; 7-C; 8-D;
10-S

EAGLES
'

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE
JAN. 9-HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 13-AT NORTH GALLIA*,
JAN. 15-AT MEIGS
JAN. 16-AT SYMMES VALLEY*
JAN. 23-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 27-SOUTHERN
JAN. 3D-KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 3;-AT OAK HILL
FEB. 5-TRIMBLE
FEB. 6-AT HANNAN TRACE*
FEB. 1D-NORTH GALLA*

Vol. 42, No, 172
Copyrighted 1992

Friday, January 10-0ak Hill .......................... A

GIRLS ,
Thursday, January 9'-0arHm •••••••••••••••••••••••• H
Saturday, January 11-Meigs ............... (4:30) A

JAN. 10-ATOAKHILL*
JAN. 14-KYGER CREEK*
JAN. 11-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT ROSS SOUTHEASTERN
JAN. 22-RAVENSWOOD
JAN. 24-HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 25-AT EASTERN*
JAN. 31-NORTH GALLIA*
FEB. 1-AT SOUTH POINT
FEB. 7-AT SYMMES VALLEY*
FEB. 11 - WARREN
FEB. 14-0AK HILL*
FEB. 18-AT KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 21-SOUTHWESTERN*
'-Indicates SVAC games

BOYS
l

Tuesday, January 7-Wellston ••••,.................... A
_) Friday, January 10-Trimble ............................ H
Saturday, January 11-Athens ........................ H

'-Indicates SVAC games

TOKYO (AP) - A frantic
pushing and pulling scene among
reporters and Japanese security
agents greeted PresideD! Bush as he
walked toward his limousine after
collapsing at a•state dinner.
Bush looked pale and haggard
as he walked by, steadily but slowly through the front hall of the
prime minister's residence. He was
surrounded by over a dozen security agents but was moving under his
own steam. He wore a green overcoat and his coUar was loosened.
Asked by a reporter how he felt,
he said "I feel good." But the tiaggard look on his face suggested
otherwise.
Several minutes earlier, pool
reponers clambered out of tbe windows of a holding room onto a
ledge when w~ heard an ambulance
pulled in front of the building.
Coverage of tbe state dinner was
limited to a small group of
reponers. referred to collectively as
a pool, and Bush's collapse was not

GIRLS
Thursday, January 9-Federal Hocking ••••••••••••• H
Saturday, January 11-Southern••••••••••• (4:30) H

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE
JAN. 8-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 9-0AK HILL*
JAN. 11-AT MEIGS
JAN. 13-AT KYGER CREEK*
JJAN. 16-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 23-AT HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 27-EASTERN*
JAN. 3D-AT NORTH -GALl.IA*
FEB. 3-SYMMES VALLEY*
FEB. 6-AT OAK HILL*
FEB. 1D-KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 12-WATERFORD
FEB. 13-AT SOUTHWESTERN*
*-Indicates SVAC games

AFTER COLLLAPSE - President Bush
waves as he is led to his limousine after collaps·
ing at a state dinner at Prime Minister Kiichi

MEIGS MARAUDERS
1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE

JAN. 7-AT WELLSTON
J~N. 1D-TRIMBLE
JAN. 11-ATHHENS
JAN. 14-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 11-NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 21-AT BELPRE
JAN. 25-AT WARREN
JAN. 28-MILLER
JAN. 31-VINTON COUNTY
FEB. 4-AT ALEXANDER
FEB. '7-WELLSTON
FEB. 11-AT TRIMBLE
FEB. 14-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK

JJAN. 9-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 11-AT MEIGS
JAN. 13-AT KYGER CREEK*
JJAN. 16-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 23-AT HANNAN TRACE*
JAN. 27-I;ASTERN*
JAN. 30-AT NORTH GALLIA*
FEB. 3-SYMMES VALLEY*
FEB. 6-AT OAK HILL*
FEB. 10-KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 12-WATERFORD
FEB.13-AT SOUTHWESTERN*

AMultimedia Inc. New,opaper

Bush says he 'feels good'
after coll~psing at dinner

SOUTHER TORNADOES

BOYS

2 Sectlono, 12 Page• 25 cents

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 8, 1992

'-Indicates SVAC games

~--------------~
1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

Low tonight In 40s.
Thursday, high near 50.

Miyazawa's residence in Tokyo Wednesday.
Bush was reportedly suffering from a bout of
thenu. (AP)

--Partners in education ...----

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· ·

·

rowning defends Voinovich's .pl~n

JJ
,

OJ!ir,· ·

·

'You can't taX yourself out.of a"
'receSSion," he said. ,
' ' Browning defended the laXes as
but a small,part- $69-mil.IiOn -

•

suspects, collecting evidence and
working with various local, state
and federal law enforcement agencies.
•
While working at the Prosecutor's Office, he wrote tbe ·original
Meigs County Community Correc·
tions Grant and served as tbe initial
program coordinator. In addition,
he initiated the first federal forfei·
ture in a drug case in Ohio.
In January 1989, Gerard left tbe
Prosecutor's Office to become
Criminal Bailiff-Assignment Commissioner for the Common Pleas
Coon, a position he holds today.
G'erard has been active in a variety of community affairs, being a
past president of the Meigs County
Jaycees and a past president of tbe
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce.
He also served as District Director
for the Ohio Prosecuting Attorney's Investigators Association and
bas been a member of the Citizens
Advisory Board for the SEPTA
Center since its inception.
In connection witb his duties as
investigator, and now as criminal
bailiff, Gerard has completed a

Paul Gerard, 44, of Mlddlepon,
has filed his petitions with the
Meigs County Board of Elections
to become a candidate for Meigs
County Sheriff. A Republican, Gerard is the ftrst person in eitber party
to file for the office.
Gerard grew up in Middlepon,
graduated from Middlepon High .
School in 1965, and attended Ohio
University where he earned about
200 hours of credit toward a bache·
lor of science degree. He left col·
lege to accept full-time employ·
ment witb the local cable TV com·
pany, and spent the next seven
years tbere, producing local news,
sports, and public infonmation programs.
In 1979 Gerard left the cable
company and went to work for
then-Prosecuting Attorney Fred W.
Crow Ill, a position he held for just
over nine years. As the prosecu ·
tor's investigator, his duties includ·
ed the review, processing, and
preparation of all criminal prosecu·
tions. In nine years, he conducted
hundreds of investigations, includ·
ing interviewing of witnesses and

Racine Village Council mc.mbers passed a resolution declaring
Frank Cleland Racine's mayor
when they organized at Monda_y
night's regular ineeting.
The res olutions was ado!lted
that in accordance with O~io
· Reviscd Code Section 733.02 lind
related case law. that tbere was a
vacancy in the office of Mayor and
that Mayor Cleland was still the
mayor due to the fact tbat no sue:
cessor had been elected and quali- .
· fied for the position.
Robert Beegle was elected to
serve as President Pro Tempore for
1992, and Cleland appointed the
following committees: Finance;
Insurance and Security Committee·

s~~r~dRg~o~~·-~~~~~!::~:

co llision) comparee to tHogan
Warner's bid of $12,720 (with
$250 and $500 deductiblcs.)
The council approved payment ·
or tbe rcgisuation fee for a mandatory Clerk-Treasurer Workshop for
tlcrk-Clect Carolyn Poweli.
Council authoriz.cd Fire C~ief

Carroll Teaford and Jeff Thornton:
of the. package and said dri!lking cent disc~nt tbat retailers receive Park . Beegle and Teaford.
and smoking are costing Ohioans for collecung ~sales tax.
.
Glenn Rizer was appointed to
hundreds of tbousands ,of dol~ a
Bot)! were leJ~tcd by tbe Leg~~- serve ~ Street Commissioner for
year in added health-care costs.
lature mdehbera~ons on tbe state.s 1992, and Frank W. Porter, Jr .. as
"I'm not mofalizing. That's just two-year, $27 blllton buggetlast village solicitor.
a fact of life,'"·lie said:
summer. .
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.
1992 Appropriations totaling ,
Voinovich already bas taken
Vomov1ch al~ _ wants authOt;11Y $188,713 were approved as folsteps to resolve $254 million of tbe to spend $IOO.mil~on !\'St. the sta~ lows: Genenil Fund, $57,000: State
deficit, mostly with spending cu_ts has been Jr;eq&gt;mg m a · ramy day · · HigHwa~, $2,000: Cemete~y,
but -also with Jund tr-nsfers and fund .
.
' .
54,700; Fire, $23,675; Street Mainother belt•tightening, Browning
S:o"ee~ey sa1g ,that cnd!ng the tenance and Repair, $18,188: Debt •
'said. '
·
_
, ret~1lers tax discount wtll hurt Service, $13,70; Water, $55,000;
.The governor is 'asking for an busl~~ ~se they maY. ha~e . Water Deposits, $1,000: Refuse ·
increase ,in 'tbe cigareuc taX from to;CIIse pnc~. A !ot,orre~erSJ~ Collection, $25,780. .
,
18 to 30 cents a p~l:age and a thts 5!8~.~ ~ 1_ng by tliear fir!After extensive discussion and
boOst of a few cents'in tbe taX on gegaus. he ~d. .
..
: . comparison of coverag~ lhe vilalcoholic beven~ges - 3 cents on a
weency Sll~ ~ acbmDIS~Uon !age Insurance contrac~- awardsix-pack of beer, for instance.
~hof~ld be corisiderin' bonddJSothsues ·- ed to Buckeye Administnton hanBrowning rene"ed tbe adn)inis- . to 1napce construc~on 81\,
cr died by J(inder lliiWIIlC:o A~y
tration's plan to 1111"' operation of p~jects that create JobS. , All_of in the amount of $12,106.60 (wilh
Ohio's retail liquor SIDI'fJS over to - tht~.(JJac~o) shOtlld be job·driV· a ~eft&gt; deductible on the compreprivace agents and end a 1.5 per· en, ·he said.
. . hensi~e a_qd $100 deductlble · ~n
- ~

PAULGERARJ)
number of specialized courses ·
through the Ohio Peace' Office
Training Academy, Hocking Technical College, Shawnee State Colle~e (Arson Seminar in conjunction
.w1th State Fire Marshal) and the
Ohio Supreme Coun.
Gerard is married, resides with
his wife and daughter in Middleport, and attends tbe Heatb United
Mctbodist Church.
Gerard is an elected member of
Continued on page 3

Racine _Council reorganizes;
Cleland stays on as m~yor

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::cOLUMBUS , Ohio (AP) _:
Budget Director Greg Browning
has defended Go x. George
~inovich's eaii for higher tobacco
and alcohol taxes to help erase a
$1157 d9ficit i!} the state budget. ·
. . He responded :rue~ay to_critiCI~m. by House -F1nance Chamnan
.. Patnck Swe~ney. D-CI~veland,
... whose committee was bnefed for
. ·. tHe., first time on the recently
ai)Dounecd, rccession~aused . shon- ·
·. fall.
, ·. ·
· Sweeney a~d other Dem~r~ts .
sa1d they ar~ cJ!saJI!lOmled ':"lth the
plan because 11 does not mcl~de •
ptoposals to stimulate 9hio's econ.:
.

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the entry way.
In tbe meantime, White House
officials · accompanying the
reponers tried to intervene, shouting , "Let them do their job!"
There were no White House
instructions to prevent photographs
from being taken, U.S. officials
said.
---· As tbe president approached, tbe
reporters burst out of the holding
room and were met by Japanese
security agents who tried to shove
them back into the holding room.
Secret Service agents stood by
as the Japanese security agents
roughed up the reporters. saying
"It's not our dinner."
After the president got into the
waiting limousine accompanied by
White House doctors, United States
Information Service officials
whisked reporters away into a wait·
ing bus to try to get access to Bush.
The ambulance that pulled up
earlier was not used.

Gerard files for sheriff
on Republican ticket

'-Indicates SVAC games

The Meigs County Partners in Education program was
"kicked oil" on Tuesday night at Meigs High School. Motivational
speaker Harvey Austin, leN, was the keynote speaker at the ceremony. A' former guidance counselor, Austin praised the program 's
parhcipants., 'I have told people in inner Cb'icago to go to Nelsonville and Mei~s County if they want to see schools that really
need help," Xushn said. "But Meigs County's kids are good kids
with good Am~rican val~es. They have just lost vision. You can be
heroes to these k~s." The program teams eac.h school building in
Meigs County with a local business in a cooperativ~ agreement.
Abo~e, Vicki Haley or Harrisonville Elementary $chool and Mike
Lively from Southern Ohio Coal Company are pictured as they
sign their agreement for the 1\191-1992 school year. Also pictured
is Teacher Becky Triplett, who helped organize the program, and
Pam Newell or the Meigs County Chamber or Commerce, which
co-~ponsors it.
.
.

witnessed at the time by the bulk of
tbe press corps in Japan.
As photographers tried to take
Bush's picture on his departure
from the residence, Japanese security agents and police immediately
began shouting "No, No, No!"
and tried to slam ,.the windows shut
and force tbem back inside.
"The Japanese just went nuts,"
said Dennis Cook, an Associated
Press photographer. ·'Finally. it got
to the point where we had to
retreat."
"They were very rough," said
Charlie Cole, a photographer from
Newsweek. "One guy was grab;
bing my leg from the outside,
another guy was grabbing me from
tbe inside.
"They wanted to make sure
there were no pictures taken."
As the pushing match on the
ledge continued, Japanese police
held up white sheets to block photographers from getting a view of

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John Holman to purchase a set of :
batteries for one of the denart. mcnt's pumper truck, an~ Holman ·
reported to council about a clarifi- ·
cation regarding the new tanker
chassis. Holman also reponed that
due to the ~ umber of requests, the
Continued on page 3

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Wednesday, January 8, 1992

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Commentary

PaQ~2-The

Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, January 8, 1992

WASHINGTON - Senate
Banking Committee Chairman Don
Riegle, D-Mich., bu ~s t onto the
political scene in 1967 as a newly
elected congressman with a 15-year
plan to capJure the White House.
Then, he was a young man in a
hurry. Today, he is fending off
political funeral notices.
His relationship with failed savings and loan tycoon Charles Keating has nor only left Riegle reeling,
but some Senate sources believe it
has permanen tly impaired his ability to perform effec tively as the
chairman of the Senate Bankmg
Committee at the historic moment
when the economy and fi nanc ial
system are in such fragile shape.
Riegle tried to use the reconfirmation hearings of Comptroller of
Curren cy Bob Clarke last fall to
rehabilitate himself as the fiery
populist th'at was his cultivated persona in the pre-Keating days. But
he came off as hollow.
To man y a·bservers, watching
Riegle scolding Clarke about lax
regulation and supervision was like

lll Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

t.~MULTIMEDIA. tC
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher '
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

)

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association .

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome . They should be Jess lhan 300
words long . All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name ,
address and lelephone number. No unsigned letler. will be published. Letters
should be in good taste, addressing issues, nor personalities.

Letters to the editor

a defrocked priest presiding over Caper.' ' The casi included Riegle
Bible study. After all, it was Riegle and a staffer,·a teen-aged Senate
who was the catalyst for meetings page, a deaf mute and a mailroom
to scold thrift regulators who were clerk.
then bearing down on Keating' s
Some s~na tors would flounder
excesses with Lincoln Savings and like lost tourists if they had to
Loan.
locate their own mailrooms. Thus
Reviews of Riegle's sometimes · there ~ere gasp~ of disbelief the
inept handling of the recent bank- afternoon that Riegle trooped into
ing bill before Congress also left the mailroom of Sen. John McCain,
many in the Senate wondering R-Ariz. McCain and Riegle were
whether he hadn't been mortally both members of the Keating Five,
wounded by Keating.
and each was trying to cleanse him. Riegle's political prospects went self of the Keating stain by telling
'nto a free fall after the Senate thetr versmn of events to the Ethics
Ethics Com'!'ittee opened up an •· Committee.
1nvest,gauon mto the role of R1cgle
A page had mistakenly dclivand four other senators who mtcr- ercd a document to McCain's mailvened for Keating after accepting room that contained sensitive inferlarge political donations. .
. mation Riegle was preparing for
On the eve of those ~eanngs m the ethics panel.
Novem~er 1990~ Riegle involved
When Riegle and his aide first
h1mself man mc1dent that not only walked into McCain 's mailroom
shattered the Senate's typical comi· they encountered a lone aide wh~
ty, but still makes the rounds couldn't speak or hear, a fact that
among those ~ho believe that seemed to test Riegle's patience.
stress has taken 1ts toll on the man When a second McCain mailroom
from Flint, Mich.
worker returned from lunch minCall it the "McCain Mailroom utes later, he initially walked in to

Committee addresses issue
The Committee for Restoring muni ty function s and with the
the Reedsville Voting Precinct is kitchen, bathrooms, phone, etc., it
challenging the Meigs County provided a very adequate and conBoard of Elections on four reasons venient place for voting.
given to our Honorable Raben A.
3. The Consolidation Plan was
Taft for the consolidation of their Adopted AFTER Considerable
old precinct into South Olive and Analysis and on Site Visits by the
North Olive Precincts.
Staff or the Board or Elections.
Upon the study of a copy of
Strangely, the (JQ)l workers do
Robert Taft's letter of reply to the not recall visits prior to the board's
board fo llowing a tic vote in action until that cold winter day,
December on the motion to restore February 7, 1989, when Ms.
Reedsville' s Precinct, we found Frymyer was forced to drive clear
discrepancies. Our readers should to Reedsville to place locks on the
understand that when a tie vote ballot boxes - a neglect on someoccurs letters written by board one's part. She found fue trucks in
members and the director are to be the building. the fir emen had
submitted to our Secretary of State requested that they remain there
stating the reasons given for their due to frigid temperatures and the
vote. The Secretary of State is to chance of them not starting in case
study these reasons before making of fire. This was the only time that
they had ever been left in the veta decision on the issue.
Please also understand tliat the ing place. Poll workers ex pee ted
voters of the Reedsville area were that the special election would
never heard by the former Secre- bring out less voters so complied to
tary of State, Sherrod Brown, nor the firemen's req uest.
by the present Secretary of State
Thi s was Ms. Frymyer' s first
Roben Taft. Request after request excuse for the board's action and is
was submitted to Mr. Brown by not a fallible one since the board
area voters, only to be ignored or received the consolidation proposal
denied. A submitted petition was at the November meeting in 1988,
not even acknowledged until four months prior to her visit. We
months later.
also would like the names of the
The Committee is aware thluthe board members who have visi ted
Board of Elections and the director, our form er voting site on the day of
Jane Frymyer, have the much an election.
greater advantage in an issue of this
4. The Consolidation or the
magnitude and our "hats are ofr' to Three Precincts (Reedsville,
the Republican members, Mrs. Long Bottom and Olive Dale)
Clark and Mr.. Wells, who listened Have Not Caused a Decline in
to our pleas and acted accordingly Voter Registration and a Change
by their voting. We do appreciate in in Absentee Voting.
· their persistent and gallant effort.
Many eli gible voters in the
: · Now, let us list and study four Rcedsv!llc yea have chosen to vote
: inajor reasons stated to Mr. Taft by absentee, and several have ceased
:opposing members of the board for to vote due to having to drive anywhere from a 10 or 18 mile round
·: their stand on this issue.
1. The Savings of Thousands trip to a remote place for voting.
: of Dollars as a Result or the Con- The majori ty of our res idents travel
north for work or business (Belpresolidation or Districts.
The Committee maintai ns that Parkersb urg, W.Va. area) rather
in 2 1(2 years time with few elec- than South.
tions that impressive amount could
The Committee for the Rcstoranot have been saved. Elections are tion of the Reedsville Voting
· not that costly IQ local precincts. Precin ct regrets that the sincere,
We also do not understand why combined effort of both Republican
small wards in the Middleport area and Democrati c voters of the
were not consolidated which had a Reedsville area became a political
smaller number of re.gistcred voters issue rather that a people issue with
than Reedsville in 1989. The incon· the Board of Elections. We are
venience caused could not have convinced that the unfounded reabeen as great. The Committee also sons given by the opposition were
questions the frugality of the board only used to support its determinain the voting of pay raises for its tion to cover up a serious mistake
members since that time.
and to have its way. Voters were
2. A Sarer, Cleaner and more not considered. Voters are the
Accessible Environment.
losers.
. Our committee takes offense at
Sincerely,
me accusation that our fanner votCommittee for Restoration of
ing place was not safe, clean and the Reedsville Voting Precinct:
accessible. We admit that with the · Alison Cauthorn-Kreiss, Ethel
housing of firetrucks, the Olive . Mundry," I. .G. Westfall, Grant A.
Township Firehouse, located in Smith, Kirk D. Reed, Grace Weber,
Reedsville, docs get dirty, but ln~z Boring, Geraldine Hol3inger,.
cleaning takes place before com- Muine Whitehead, Ruth Anne
Billdcrson.

Berry's

orld

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HoT OFF TME PR~~S . .

E:XTRA,
~XTRA...

NEWSPAPER?
NO.
WORLD
ATI).c;

jack Anderson,
Michael Binstein

defe nse was engaging in " graymail" - trying to force the government to back off the case by
demanding something they know
wi ll not be surrendered. This is
what happened in the Fernandez
case: It was dropped when the Reagan administration refused to produce certain classified information.
"Fictional secrets," independent
counsel Lawrence Walsh called
them, nuggets of information that
have been published but not formally acknowledged.
Why ·docs the CIA so fear the
disclosure of a few secrets?
They say it has to do with the
national secwity. I say it has to do
with the CIA's security. According
to the sworn testimony of expens,
99 1(2 percent of the government's
secrets are innocuous and shouldn't
be classified. Of the 750,000 pages.
George's lawyers want, in short,
746,250 are harmless.
Let's put it another way :
Release of those documents would
expose the CIA .as the fraud that it
mostly is. Ergo, the agency will not
cooperate, and Clair George will
not be tried.
While you're chewing that over,

let me put a few more mcd~illon
dessecrets.onyourplate:
According to the Information
Security Oversight Office, the
agency charged with keeping track
of class ified information, the governmcnt created 6,797,720 new
seCrets in 1990 - notcountingany
related to the Persian Gulf war.
And that's a big improvement over
the Reagan years, when as many as
15 million new secrets were ~ing
created annually.
No one knows how many ofli·
cial secrets tbc government has.
When asked by a Knight-Riddcr
reporter for a total figure, the director of the security oversight office,
Steven Garfinkel, responded: "A
mountain .... Tens of mi~jo ns or
hundl:cds of millioqs or billions.' '
The Knight-Rtdder reporter,
Tim Weiner, filed a Freedom of
Information Act request for the
oldest classified document in the
United States and turned up one
dated Apri115, 1917. It concerns
American troop movements in
Europe shortly after the United
States entered the war, It is classi'
ficd confidential because the Army
says its release would harm the

.

'

". :.Then, on 16, I hiJO a goOd drive. For my
SIICond shot, I uiiJ(J a 3-lron and pulled it to
the/eft, In front of ih~ tr8p.... "
· ·
[J

,.f

.

..

with blizzard conditions Tuesday
that closed highways, schools and
offices.
Forecasters also predicted snow
farther south in northern Arizona
and New Mexico.
Along the Gulf Coast and as far
north as Tennessee, rain fell this
mooting. Later in the day, rain was
expected to stretch from Florida's
panhandle to central Texas.
Highs today were expected in
the 20s in nonhem New England,
the northern Great Lakes and the
upper Plains and Rocky Mountairi .
regions; the 30s and 40s in the
Nonheast, the northern half of the
Midwes~ the southern Rockies and
Plains and the Pacific Northwest;
the 50s in the middle Atlantic!
states, the Midwest, western TexaS
and most of California; and the 60s
and 70s in the Southeast and along
Southern California's coast
The high for the nation Tuesday
was ~0 degrees at Harlingen,
Texas.

Gerard...

--Area deaths--

Continued rrom page 1
the Middlepon Village Council and
ing. Graveside service and burial
the Meigs County Republican CenLillian H. Napper
will follow in the · Lone Oak
tral Committee.
Lillian H. Napper, 78, of 32879 Cemetery in Point Pleasant.
Gerard cited his 12 years experiFriends may call the funeral
Township Road 202 .in Racine,
ence in all phases of the criminal
died on Wednesday, Jan. 8, 1992 at home Thursday from 5 to 9 p.m.
justice system as a solid backHolzer Medical Center following a
ground for the job of sheriff.
Herman Nibert
brief illness.
"The office of sheriff is nothing
more or less than a job, a job that
She was employed by the Ohio
Herman Nibert, 84, of Point
requires the highest degree of perUniversity Food Service Depart- Pleasant, died Tuesday, January 7,
sonal
integrity and dedication to
ment.
1992, at Pleasant Valley Hospital
duty and a commitment to profesMrs. Napper was born on Oct. following a long illness.
sionalism," Gerard said. "A sheriff
20, 1913 in Meigs County, the
Bom July 23, 1907 in Gallipolis
Monday night. Pictured, left to right are Mayor
OFFICIALS WELCOMED- Two members
must serve all the people, safeguard
daughter of the late Robert and Ida Ferry, he was a son of the late WilFrank Cleland, Councilmen Scott Hill and
or
the
Racine
Village
Council
and
two
members
·
lives and property, without any
Bumgardner Laudermilk.
liam and Missouri (Henry) Nibert.
Henry W. "Duke" Bentz, and Board of Public
of the Board or Public Affairs are pictured takregard for personal feelings, prejuShe is survived by a son, He was a farmer and had worked
Affairs members Ivan Powell and Bob Roy. The
ing their oaths or office Tuesday •.Council memdices, or friendships."
Lawrence (Dorothy) Napper of for the railroad and the West Virlatter
two
men
took
their
oath
of
office
on
Tuesbers
were
sworn
in
as
the
council
organized
Gerard sai d he would come
West Union, Ohio; by three grand· ginia Department of Highways. He
day
arternoon.
down hard on drug offenders, espechildren and four great-grandchil· attended
Wyoma
Penucostal
cially those selling drugs, saying he
dren; and by a special friend, Allen Church in Gallipolis Ferry.
~co=
n=tin=ue=-d
=rro=-m-=-p.:.::age_1
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
favored longer, mandatory scn·Dill.
0
He was also preceded in death by
tences for drug traffickers. In addi'
Besides her parents, she was a son, two sisters and three
Ohio
Department
of
Natural
truck
that
the
council
had
applied
land
and
Incoming
council
mcm•'
tion,
Gerard said he would place a
preceded in death by her husband, brothers.
Resources
has
not
made
a
decision
for
bers
Scott
Hill
and
Henry
W.
Bentz
renewed
emphasis on the most
Lawrence Napper, and a sister,
Survivors include his wife, on the request for the surplus brush
The
mayor's
report
of
fines
and
were
given
the
oath
of
office.
common
crimes
- theft, breaking
Gretchen Sprouse.
Mildred (Pearson) Nibert of Point
bonds
was
approved
in
the
amount
Attending
in
addition
to
council
and
entering,
burglary,
receiving
She atte nded the Forest Run Pleasant; a son, Dallas W. Nibert of
of$302.
members
and
those
mentioned
stolen
property.
"I
want
people to
United Methodist Church at Mt. Point Pleasant; a sister, Reba Sines
Prior
to
the
meeting,
Mayor
Clewere
Clerk
Jane
Beegle
and
Marfeel
secure
in
their
homes,"
Gerard
Hermon United Brethren Church of Stow, Ohio; five grandchildren
Three were fined and nine othshal Don Dye.
said.
and was a member of the Forest and seven great-grandchildren.
ers forfeited bonds on charges of
Run Ladies Aid.
He cited his many years of
Service will bei[riday, January speeding in the court of Pomeroy
Ml U
working closely with village offiFuneral services will be held on 10, at 11 a.m. l!f"the Wilcoxen Mayor Bruce Reed Tuesday night.
Veterans Memor•"al
Eleven were fimed an d •our
r
oth - . cials and pledged to maximize usc
Saturday at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funer- Funeral Home with Rev. Robert
Fined on the charge were
TUES DAY ADMISSIONS - ers forfeited bonds in the court of of available resounccs at all levels.
al Home in Pomeroy with Robert Hall and Rev. Isaiah Crump Patrick Cleland, Racine, $51 and
Burwell
McKinney, Middleport.
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Sanders officiating. Burial will be officiating. Burial will be in cos ts; Debra Roush, Mason, W.
TUESDAY
DISCHARGES
Tuesday
night.
in Rock Springs Cemetery.
Va., $50 and costs ; Shawn E. Edgar Brewer, Jane Evans, and
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Fined
were court Sherman OcrFriends may call at the funeral
A warning was issued today to
Friends may call at the funeral Ste pp, Athens, $50 and costs; and William Morris.
1
h
Lc
w. va., $10 and costs,
ac
,
tart,
home on Friday from 2 to 4 p.m. home on Thursday from 7-9 p.m.
Jc1frey Hazen, Jr., Vienna, W. Va., HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER running a stop sign; Ryan S. Jcf- those who have failed to pay the
and 7 to 9 p.m.
fines and costs after an appearance
$49 and costs. Haze n was also
Discharges
Jan
.
'
Mrs.
fcrs,
Middleport,
$16
and
costs,
in "the court of Middleport Mayor
fined on a DUI charge, $~75 and
Phyllis Sines
Roge
r
Cotterill
and
son,
Timothy
speeding;
Jeffrey
N.
Stone,
Connie N. Mash
costs. and sentenced to three days Dobbins, Diana Evoc, Mrs. Blaine Pomeroy, $10 and costs, expired Fred Hoffman.
Unl ess regular pay ments arc
· Connie Norena Mash, 68 , of
Mrs. Phyllis Mae Elliott Sines, in jail.
Gilliam
and
son,
Lester
Lathey,
registration;
James
R.
Buskirk
,
started
immediately or some
Happy Hollow Road in Middleport, 64, of Point Pleasant, died Tuesday,
Forfeiting bonds on the charge
Long,
Clayton
Miller,
CurMiddleport,
$10
fine
only,
rulljting
Eleanor
arrangements
made to pay the fines
died on Tuesday, Jan. 7, 1992 at January 7, 1992, at Pleasant Valley of speeding were Steven Bradbury, tis Ramey, Wilma Scarberry, James a stop sign; Rosalie Walker ,
and cos ts, the offenders will be
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol- Hospital following a long illness.
Gallipolis, $46; Edward Notting.
. Pineville, W. Va., $10 and costs, arrested on a contempt of court
lowing a brief illness.
. Born February 7. 1927 m Gal- ham, Pomeroy , $50; Beverly Talbott.
Births - Mr. and Mrs. Jim improper hacking; Claude E. Eblin, charge and jailed, a spokesman for
She was born on May 23, 1923 · hpohs, she was a daughter of the Eak ins, Syrac use , $46; Roger Freeman,
daughter, Gallipolis.
West Columbia, W. Va., $10 and the mayor said Ibis morning.
in Rutland Township to the late l~tc John H. and Roste (Turner) EI- Arm s, Logan, $48; Patricia
costs, failure to display a valid regAustin Pierce and Maude Conkle holt She was also pr~eded m Weaver, Middleport, $57; Crystal
istration.
Pierce Haley. She was a homemak- death by her ~usband , Cectl Smcs. Sellers, Portland, $47; Randy
Larry E. Laudermilt, Vinton,
Survtvors mclude a daughter and Westmoreland, Evans, W. Va.,
SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
cr.
$25
and costs, open container;
Mrs. Mash is survived by her son-in-law, William and Sharon $54; Gerald Moser, Waverly, W.
Douglas
Merriott,
Middlepon,
$25
446 4524 ",'.,'. :;;,·'
husband, James L. Mash, Sr., Mid- Sturgeon of Point Pleasant; sons, Va.,$46.
and
costs,
open
container;
Ruby
F:
BAR!'.AIN MT IIIUS SATUIIDAY l SlltDAV .
Al so forfeitin g bond s were
IARGA!tl NIGHT TU£SI)I,l' .
dleport; two sons, Harley McDon- Fred Gaul, Jr. of Point Pleasant and
.
Nakao,
Racine,
$25
and
costs,
fail
ald, Middleport and James L. Mash Kevin (Bobbi) Gaul of Point Charles Kearns, Jr., Letart, W. Va.,
. Metgs County Emergency Scr- ure 10 diSplay an operator's license;
of Harrisonville; two daughters, Pleasant; two sisters, Betty Gibeaut $63, expired regi s tration ~ Richie vtces un• ts answered stx calls for Walter H. Barrett, Langsville, $10
Connie Nicole Mash, Rutland, and of Point Pleasant and Imogene Blankenship of Albany, Mark Rus- asStStance on Tuesday and early on 0 and costs, fictitious tags; Randy K.
Tamara K. Riffle; one brother, Stover of Gallipolis; a brother, sell of Portland, and Chris Wan- Wednesday.
.
L:ee, Middleport, $10 and costs,
Evcreu Pierce of Middlepon; three Jackie Elliott of Point Pleasant; dling of Albany, each $63 on
On ~uesday at 10.14 a.m., Syra- . expired tags, and $21 and costs,
sisters, Flossie Hysell, Rutl·and, four grandchildren; three nieces charges of consuming alcohol cusc untt went to Condor Street for speeding.
.
under age of 21; Cindy Smith, Gal- Nelson Watson, who ref~scd tr9&lt;1tFlorence Barker of Columbus, and and 10 nephews.
Forfeiting bonds were Shawn E.
Service will be Friday, January lipolis, $43, stop sign violation; ment, At 1:45 p.m., Racme squad Steppe, Athens, $60, failure to disNettie Goble of Ashland, Ohio;
10,
at 2 p.m.. at the Wilcoxen John Davis, Middleport, $63, oper- went to Th1rd Street for Lon Hall, play his license plate: Jack A.
1-lf~'·ifii\~CD' and tWO great•
lltiS1IN ltllti
Funeral
Horne with Rev. William ating under suspension; Atncia who was taken to Pleasant Valley Justis, Racine, $60, failure to disgrandChildren. .
.
IOI'I'IWIWIWW
Besides her parents, she was Banks officiating. Burial will be in Randolph, Middleport, $43, illegal Hospttal. At 2: 12 pHil., Middleport play a valid registration; Syvic R.
left turn at Butternut; ·and Sally squad went to South Fourth Street. Snyder, Middleport, $52, speeding:
preceded in death by a grandson. Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Calling hours will be Thursday at Yates, Pomeroy, $10 finc ·only, no Burwell McKinney was transponed and Vicki c Patterson Cheshire
Michael Evereu McDonald; three
t"l
1:DO,II :l0 DAI LY.
child restraint.
brothers: Archie, Clarence and the funeral home from 7-9 p.m.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At $5 1, speeding.
'
'
SAl/W" ltAWIEES
9:08 p.m., Rutland unu went to
l :OO.J : JO
Elmer Pierce; and two sisters, Nellie Hysell and Augusta Pierce.
an~Jouncements- Main Street in Rutland for Vona
· Services will be Thursday at 1
Gillenwater, who was rransportcd
South-Central Ohio
Presbyterian Church. Anyone wish- to Veterans.
St~r Garden Club to meet
p.m. at Birchfield F uneral Home in
Tonight, periods of rain. Low in
The Star Garden Club will meet ing to participate is invited. •
Rutland wi"th Rev. Adria Eblin offiOn Wednesday at 5:49 a.m. , thelow40s.Chance ofrain 80 perPast Councilors to meet
ciating . Buri aI will be in Miles Thursday at I :30 p.m. at the home
Tuppers Plains unit went to State cent. Thursday, rain likely in the
The Past Councilor's Club of Route 7. William Grueser was morning. Cloudy with a chance of
of Mrs. Chris Diehl in Rutland.
Ceme1cry in Rutland.
Chester
Council No. 323, Daugh- treated but pot transported. At 7:18 showers or drizzle in the afternoon.
Shower
to
be
held
··
•
Friends may call at the funeral.
ters
of
America,
will meet tonight a.m., Racine units went to Green- A morning high ncar 50 with tcmThere
will
be
a
community
mishome from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
(Wednesday)
at
7
p.m. at the home wood Cemetery Road for ~ false pcraturcs falling to ar~und 40 by
cellaneous
shower
for
the
Frank
p.m. on Wednesday.
of
Jean
Frederick
with Elizabeth
·King family wbo lost their )lome to
Hayes
as
co-hostess.
fire. The shower will be held Frialarm.
•.
D ~~" ~rccn....Vona Gillenwater
day at 7 p.m. at the Harrisonville

Racine c uncil...
Pomeroy Court

Hospital news

'd'-l[eport Court

Issues warning

By Joseph Spear
national security.
The official histories of U.S.
foreign policy arc missing essential
facts because the intelligence community refuses to declassify critical
documents. In 1990, Michigan
State University Professor Warren
I. Cohen resigned as chairman of a
State Department advisory committee on diplomatic documentation
because the U.S. government, he
said, "is hiding 30 to 40-year-old
'secrets' and publishing a misleading record."
In a democratic society, an omcial. history with classified holes in
it is absurd. Seven million new
secrets a year is asinine. The notion
that a 74-year-old document about
troop' movcmcnts is critical to our
national security is fatuous. The
possibility that a government official charged with felonies could
evade a tri al because it might
reveal too many secrets is a
damned obscenity,
Hiss and boo to yqu, who tolerate 1t.
(C) 1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN

Squads make 6
runs Tuesday

llOok

--Meigs

lam A. Rusner

5

The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 66 degrees in 1937. The
record low was- 12 in 1942.
Sunset will be at5:23 p.m. Sun-.
rise Thursday at 7:53a.m.
Around the nation
Snow fell early today in the
Rocky Mountains, adding to more
than a foot of snow already on the
ground in some places. Meanwhile,
it rained along the Gulf Coast and
in the lower Midwest.
Snow was reported this morning
in parts of Colorado, Nebraska and
Utah, and more snow was expected
in Wyoming. The region was hit

On Monday, Clarence Hall of Southern Ohio Coal Company
reported to the Meigs County Sheriff's Depanment that sometime
between Thursday and Monday, the chains on several gates were
cut and 500 feet of MCM 250 wire were stolen from the property,
Value of the wire stolen is listed at $7,500.
·

The misroutcd sheaf of yellow
legal pape.r with notes held t.Qgether
by a black binder was fmaUy located, and returned to its nghtful
owner. In the meantime, Riegle
meted out a severe tongue-lashing
to the young page. Several sources
witnessed her walking away with
Riegle, who had sternly instructed:
"You, come with me. I want to
talk with you."
The page could be seen sobbing
so hard that even an hour later her
eyes were still beet red from tears
brought on by Riegle's tonguelashing.
Of all the tawdry tales associated with the Keating Five scandal,
the mailroom caper is a bizarre outtake - a snapshot of Riegle in an
unguarded and unscripted moment
Yct the mailroom mishap fits into a
larger pattern since March 1987.
That's the month that Riegle's fatal
attraction to Keating began - the
month that the man from blue-collar Michigan crossed the tracks to
Keating's world of Dam Perignon.
After Riegle began taking campaign money from Keating, and
then trying to pull strings for him,
the senator has been alternately
running for political cover, suffering memory .loss of near clinical
proportions and trying desperately
to return from the political dead.
Riegle would not discuss 1he
mailroom incident with us, except
to say through a spokesperson that
he never raised his voice.
Copyright, 1992, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

Cuo~o _
couldn't.h~ve won presidency
U!'l{'
r.

;tY

Thursday will eud the rain from the
west. Drier but cooler air will f!.lter
A low p}essure system with an in_ behind the front. Temperatures
associated warm front into Ohio w1U drop from morning readings in
will cause gulf moisture to stream the 40s to the mid and upper 30s by
north into the Ohio valley. With evening. Its also J(OSsible that some
temperatures not only above freez- drizzle or flumes will develop
ing but also above nonnal the pre- across the north in the afternoon
cipitation will be in liquid form. and evening.
High pressure building in from
The rain, will spread into the eastthe plains will bring fair skies and
em sections early tonight
The rain will overspread the cooler tempellltures through Saturentire state ahead of an approach- · day. The exception will be in the
ing cold front tonight. Low temper- nonheast on Friday as a nonhwest
atures will remain mild in the upper wind could develop lake effect
snow into the snowbelt of the
30s and lower 40s. ·
·
The passage of the cold front nonheast.

SOCCO reports va_ndalism

il'!"

A couple o~weoks reflectiOn on Republican-controlled, and Cuomo where politicians named "Mario"
Marm Cuomo s announcement that knew very well that its leaders, not- arc few and far between. •
n l
he w11l not be a candtdatc for_thc ing his pledge not to run for the . But personally I don't for a
Democra.t•c prestdenllal nomma: presidency until a bud$el had been moment believe that Cuomo's deci- knows, too, how poorly th~ weluon hasn t changed m~ mmd about agreed upon, would s1mply delay sion was based on c'ither of the fare-oriented "compassion" of his
the reason for h1s declSlon. It was any agreement until it '!las 10? late above ~ts of consideiations. Able own party, and even of his own
the obv1ous one:
for Cuo_mo to launch h•s cand•dacy politician that he is,, he is well political style, resonates· with the
Let me adm1t, though, that the - spec1fically, unul after the dead- aware of the immense strengths ctirrcnt moot! of American voters.
Mario Cuom'o knew, in short,
deciSion surpnsed me. Why' I won- line for filing for the New Hainp- that President Bush will bring to
that
if he ran for the Democratic
dered, as the m?nths dragged o~, s h~re Dcmocrauc pnmary. .
this year's presidential contest: the
nomination
and won it, he would in
would he put htmself, th~ med1a
That ts, .of_ course, preCISely power and weight of incumbency;
all
likelihood
be buried by George
~the c~untry through tht~ ord~l what happened. So Marto Cuomo a brilliant record (further adorned
1f the ulumate resu!t wasn t gomg was ab)c. to tell the world (and him- by sheer good luck) in foreign poli- Bush in November. And that, this
to be the long-awa1tcd announce- self) that those lousy Republ1cans cy and defense matters· and an proud, sensitive and hugely ambipreven_!ed him from doing w~at, economy which, after th~ current tious man was ·simply ngt prep8rcd
ment that he would run?
In retrospect, I failed to under- othcrw1se, ~e would most cenamly relatively anemic recessio11&lt; is quite to endure.
(C}l992
NEWSPAPER·
stand the r syc hol~gtcal cost, to .. have done. '
. .
likely to be bounding back to
ENTERPRISE
ASSN.
Cuo!"o, o a dec•s•on not t_o run.
Sure. You beL But why, m fact, health by November. Cuomo
Mar•o Cuomo wants the pr!lS•dcncy didn't he run?
,
.
·so much his chest hurts. To refuse a
There are those who speculate
chance. - perhaps his last chance not unreasonably, that Cuomo ~ .
- to run for H w_as counter to in his .background some slceletQn,
every f•berofh•s be•_ng.
. capable of destroying him, that
But let us assume that, for what- would predictably be unearthed.
.
By The Associated Press
ever reason ,Cand we shall ~etum to during the caml'aign."That is not
Today_ is Wednesday, Jan. 8, the eighth day of 1992. There are 358
that r~n m a mqment), he came impossible. Presidential campaigns days left mthe year.
·
·
to the gnm C()nc.luslon that ~e must do tend to tuft! up dirt tliat has been
Today's Highlight in HistOry:
not run fol die JOb. Then, m of!!er overlooked or disregarded in earli- '
_On Jan. 8,_1935, rock 'n' roll legend Elvis Presley was hom in Tupelo,
to bear _tl)e agony of a~nouncmg er,.lessconsequential ·baides,
Miss.
·
·
· ·
th&amp;l d~1S1on, he had to con~t a
Then · again, self-confident · On this date:
·
•
scenano, tha! made the dects1on .though he is, Cuomo is perfectl
In 1642, astroiiomerGalileo. Oalil~i died in Arcetri,ltaly.
· ·
~- an mev•table toD~\ICince of capable of assessing ~is weaknesJ.
ln-1798. the 11th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratifJCd· it
. circumstances -over which he had es as a campaigner at the national prohibited a citizen of one siate from suing another state in federal oowi.
no control .
. .
' level. Humanly, he may iend to
In 1815, U.S. f011:es led by Gen. Andrew JackSon defeated the llritish '
Hence his' preposterous c~e minimize those over which he the~ .in the Batde Of f&gt;!ew "Orleans- the. cloSing ·engagement of the War of
of hagghng with the state legtsla- oretically has some irol _his 1812.
·
•
·
ll!fC over,the next state budge~ and notoriously thin skin~ fCit!Mtlm
In 1911, Plui4Mt Wlboo outlined his 14 poinb for peace afta World
,. announcmg loudly .that he coul~ for getting into unncc:cssary q ar- Wu I.
not and w~uld not run for the pres•- rels, etc. But he knaws wellln-1918, Missis~i ~the first state to ratify a proposedamenddency unul that budget had beeJt indeed, may cxauerate because he · ment to the U.S •.1Constitution prohibiting the&gt; sale, manufacture cr tiaDs,. agreed u~n,
..
.
cail hardly be bllmaclfor diem ponation of liquor.
.
·
·
·· · ,
h1
~e~s ter.ouss becau~ the probltms· an ltalo-American · In 19S9, Cliarlca De Gaulle wu inaugurated u p!esident of France's
t _e ew or tate en ate IS candidate race~ in llle many states ' Fifth Repllblic.
. ·
· .·
'

Rain fo~ecast tonight. for' pa-rts of Ohio
...

Kim Hayman of Route 2, Syracuse, was arrested on Tuesday
afternoon on a warrant charging him with"havin~ a weapon while
under disability.
·
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the warrant charged,Hayman as a result of a November 2 incident on Tanners Run Road when a fireman reported that someone had fired
shots while they were fighting a brush fire.
Hayman is being held in jail on the charge pending a hearing in
Meigs County Coun on Wednesday.

Few secrets really need protecting
Here's a prediction, and I invite
you to hiss and boo if I turn out to
be wron g: The criminal case
against Clair E. George will never
go \lUria!. There are simply-too
m~y senseless litUc secrets to protect.
You remember Clair George. He
is the highest-ranking CIA official
to be acc used of wrongdoing in the
Iran -contra sc andal. He was
charged last September with 10
counts of obstructing and lyi ng to
Congress and to a federal grand
jury abo ut Oliver.North's secret
suppl y network for the Ntcaraguan
contras.
The first thing George's lawyers
di d was de man d some official
secrets- more than 750,000 pages
of them - without which, they
arg ued, they could not mount a
defense. They wanted all of the
classified documents that had been
used in the prosecutions of Nonh
and former CIA official J oscph
Fernandez - and more. They said
they were also planning to ask for
additional sensitive docwnents that
had not yet been revealed.
The prosecutor suggested the

The Dally Senllnei.,...-Pag&amp;.-3

By T~e Associated Press

Hayman arrested, jailed

fi nd Rieg le hu nc hed over a desk,
while the deaf colleague quaked
before the powerful senator.
"Can I help you, senator?" the
McCain aide asked incredulously.
Ricglc remained si lent. "Riegle
was so quiet that he was nervous
quiet," one witness on the scene
told us. Riegle's staffer was livid:
"Can we get someone in here who
can communicate, please? A page
delivered something here. Where is

Ohio

,·

The Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Identification
has been caUed in to assist the Meigs County Sherifrs Department
m the in vestigation of the breaking and entering at the Tuppers
Plains General Store.
Ac~ording to Sheriff James M. Soulsby, the store was entered
someume between 7 p.m. on Sunday and 6 a.m. on Monday.
Money, cigarettes, ammunition and auto pans were reported missmg.

Weather

e~v.c:n:in=g~.C:h~an~c~e o.f~p.re•c~•P.'ta•u•o•n•70-~=========~

Vona Gillenwater, 91, of Main
Street in Rutland, died on Tuesday,
Jan. 7, 1992 at Vete!DDS Memorial
Hospital.
Arrangements are under the
direc tion of Birchfi eld Funeral
Home in Rutland anll will be
announced at a later date.
•

•

•

Fay Barnett

· Fay Barnett, 70, . of Point
Pleasant, died Wi:dnesday, Jan~ary
8, 1991; at Holzer Medical Center
in Gallipolis.
'
, She was born Julf 5, 1921, ln
Leon, the da~ghter o the late Norman and Ora (Par~ns) Thornton.
A retited secretary for the Pqin~
Pleasant Maiine Company Am~earst Coal, she ·had also,previously
worked arthe Marietta Manufacturing Company and for theWes' Vi~­
ginia ·State. ~partnlent ·of Highwars. She was a member o(.. the
Hetghts United Meihodist Chu~h.
Aside from her parents, she was .
also preceded in death by a brother,
Claude "Buss" Thomton.
She is survived by her husband,
Carl E. "Bud" Barnett; .one-son,
Keith lt Barnett o~ Parkersburg;
and two grandchildren.
.
· Funeral services will be conducted '~t I p.m. Friday at the Crow.Hussell Funeral Home with the,
Rev. tJichuel S. Chapman ()fficiat-

·rodayin histdry

•

•

Tuppers Plains B&amp;E probed

Riegle scrambles to}istand his groun~

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h1.84
U3.16
184.76

Oe41ddo GaOia Ccninty • :
IS W•ka ..........., ....................... ....... l23.40
26 w..u ................. ,..... :.....,...........f46.150
~ w..a ....... :~ ..t .....................~....... l88.40

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Sports

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B!Uih 71 , Willoulthby S. 'S9
Bud:eye Local Sj, Oak Glen, W.V1.

. In the NBA ...
39

EASTERN CONFERENCE
At la.nll c Division
Tum
W I,
Pel.
GD
1\'ew Vorl: .... ..... 20 10 .667
Bosr.oo ............... 20 12 .62S •
I
Miami ... ,................ l5 18 .455
6.5
Ph.i.lldelphia ........... \4 18 .438
7
New Je11ey ............ 12 20
J75
9
.375
.194

CMtra l Dlvlsion
Chict!o............. ..... 26 S .839
Cine Mnd ......
..2:2 9 .710

9
14.5

4
9.5

AthnLa... ................ l7
OewiL ..................J7
lndiana .................,. J3
Charlottc .................. 9

15
16

.531
.515

9.5
JO

10

.394

::

24

.273

.....

Pacific Dl.-is ion
Goldt.n S~tr: ... ..... 21 8
l'onlartd ..
... 21 II
LA. L&amp;kcn .. .......... l9 13
11ttomi~ .. .. ... . .... 19 iJ
SeatLie ........... ......... l7 14
L. A.Clippcn ......... \7 17
Sa~ramento .............. 9 22

.724
.656
.594
.S94
.548
500
.290

3.5
4

1.5
9
15

\.5
15

15
5
6.5
13

Tuesday' s scores

Tonighl's games
New York at Da&gt;too, 7:30p.m
MinnesOllatl'ew lcr5e)', 7:30p.m.
!-loUIItoo at Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Chicago at Miami, 1:30 p.m.
s~cra mento at Dctrtllt, 7:30p.m
L.A. Clippen at Indiana, 7:30 p.m
L.A. Wcrs at San Antoruo, 8 p.m
Uuh at /1.1i lwau.le.::, 9 p m
Dcn~cr at Phocni.J., 9:30 r m.
Orlando at SeatLle, 10 pm

42

v

Montteal
ll attford ..

Jlulfalo ..... ..
Quebec .. ..

18
15
13
11

14 2

56 136 93

11 5

41
35
33
T1

J8 5
20 7

24 5

139 143
121 134
128 145
127Hi()

CAMPBELL COI"FERE~CE
Norrl1 Dh·blon
Team
W L T Pls.. GF GA
DetroiL .. ......... 2.5 12 4 54 166132
St. Louis ......... ... 1S 16 i 43 142 137
Cl\ic;~go .............. 17 17 9 43 \47 IJS
Minne4ott .......... 18 Ill 3 39 127134
Toton\1) ......... . 11 27 5 T1 112161
Smy1hr Ol"h;ion
Vancouver ...&lt;. .. .. 2312 7 53149123
1
Winrtl pcg .....
17 18 8 42\29136
LosAngeles... 17 16 i 41 149153
Calgary .......
17 18 5 39 147140
Edmonton
. 16 20 6 38 145159
San J01e ...
9 30 3 21 102177

Tuesduy's scores
N. Y. ltlandc.n 5, Detroit 2
JIWfllo 5, ~ il adclphia 5, tic
Los Ang.cle-~5, f'iu&amp;bw-gh 2
Minnaota 5, Wuhinglon 3
Van~ouvcr4, San Jose I

Tonlc;ht's games

·

Quebec at Bufralo, 7:JS p.m
·ll011on at Montreal, 7:35p.m
St. Lcuu: 11 N.Y. Ranger~, 7:35p.m.
Edmonwn at Winnipeg, 8:35p.m.
Sa n 1llle at Calg.ary, !US p.m.

llartfurd at N.Y. blll'l dcn , 7:)5 p.m.
St. Loua at New Jemy, 7:35p.m.
Loa Ange les 11 Phihdc\ph ia, ·'1:35

p.m.
To1011t.o .11Chicaso. 8:35p.m.

Major college
basketball scores
Ei1Sl
Conr.ecucut 85, St. JOOn'' 76
Delaware 103, Md .· Daltimorc CoWliY
IOI,OT

Lehigh 9S, Brown 85
MarUI 79, ~\ . Franci.J, Jla . 63
Monmo uth, 1\.J . 74, Moun t St .
Mary'• , Md . 63
Robert Morri1 61. Fairleigh Dt ckt n·
SCW'I 57
Seton I J.aU 64, /lob ami 52
S 1 t~~a 70, Nonhemem 64
St. rrancil, NY 83, Loog b land C 73
St. Peter'• 66. Cania:ius 64
Temple 75, KUJgcrs 61
Vetmmt 78, Cornell 65
William &amp; Mary 49, Army 4l

Euclid 57, Mayfield 37
F.i.rbanU 55, Benjamin L&lt;tgan 51
Fran.Hin 80, T rcntoo Edgewood 69
FronLJer 75, Bealliville 50
Guaway 79, Ncwcomenotown 68
Ganctuvillc 44, Crestwood 36
Girud 69, Poland 59
Grccnoo 82, Spring. Northwcuem 75
Gmvcport 72, Col. Marion· franklin

Wynford 38, ~\line 32

62

n

llillidalc 57, Norwayni: 51
Howland 80, Young. Ouncy 46
Hubt.ard 61 , Champion 49
Huntington 49, Gn:cnfu,1ld 48
itldian We 88, Way ncdi cld· Gmhcn

Jllinoii St.69, SW Miuoun St. 55
Jndu.n• St.63, Ctcipoll 60
!owl St. 92, Loyola, Ill. 69 .
,.
Ohio Sc. ,2, Michlpn Sl. 46
•

Southwest
Tun Chritt.ian 13, Tu•• A&amp;M 71

Colcn4o 71, S~n ~o 63
WuhinJIDn 11, Jllwll.i Pacific 12

Ohio hjgh school
baske.tball scores

Maple !Its. 61, Emlake60
Musi.llon Otr. 60, Medina Baptist47
McDennou NW T1, M~nehesteJ' 74
Mead owbrtd 67, Shmand111h S4
Mi•mi Vall. 44, Xen ia Cllr. 43
MinU\'a 85, F•irlcll64
Mingo 64, Weirton ('H.Va .) Madonn~. 62
Mogadore 86, Sttcelsboro 65
Mor$an 62, Riv~r View 26
N. RLdgevillt 70, Lenin 58
N. Royalton 69, Medina Buckeye 49
Napoleon 66, Bowling Green 56
Sel.ionvillc-York. 53, Vinton County

Dlv~lon

5. Reynoldlbura S.O ............................. 74
6. Rocky Riw.r Maanificat9· 1 ............. .57

7. Vandali1 Butler f0-() ........................ 54
8. Garfield Hts. Trinity (I) 7-1 ....... ..... .51
9. Daytoo Dunbar (2) S..O .......... ..... ......44
10. Cin. MOOtcrnfMucy 8-3 ............... 43
OH1en rettl~lna ll or mort points:
II YoungstoW'L'l Boardman (I) 26. 12. Al·
liance 25. 13 . Brunswick 2.3. 14. lllmilton
19 . 15 . Col~mbua South 17. 16. Milfmd
14 J7 . Sylvania No nh view 13 . IS .
Amhcn.t Staelt 12.

New Boston 76, Patriot SW 45
New LcWtgton 61, Pl\ilo 51
Ncwtoo J•alls 80, Rrook.field 59
Orsn gc Chr. 58, King's A_cadcm~ 48
Odord Tall wanda 93 , Lcm011-Mon·
~66

Division n

Painc.svillc Harvey 81. Madilioo f.~
Parma83, Nonnandy7S
Portsmouth Clay 71 , Fremont Rou 51
Porumouth E. 56, L1iham Wea te m

1. LouiJville (5) 10.0....... ........ ..... 100
2. Columbus Hcechcrofl (I) 7-0 ......... 78
3. Mil.lenburg W. Holme~ {4) 9·0 ........ 71
4, um.na (I) 8·0 ..... .............. ....... ........ 62
5. Pataskala Watkin\ Mcrn. (\) 8·0 ...... 54
6. Che:ittr1and W Geauga (I) 9·0
.. 49
Hamiltm Dadin 8·1 ............ ... .... . ...... 49
8. Dru.dcn Tri- Valle~ 8·0 ............. .. ..48
9. Onville 8-1 ......... ...........
. .. 42
Sh.clby (I) II·D....
.. .......... ..42

53
Riehmond Hts. 79, Luthcrll'l W. 65
Ridgewood 60, Jcweu.Scio 5g, OT
River 74, P1den City, W.V1 . 69
Roufurd 52, Genoa 44
Ruuell, Ky. 60, ll•Man Tra~ll4 1
Sandy Vall. 60. Cova~try 40
Shadyside 66, McMechen (W .V1.)
Don1hull 62, OT
Shaker Hts. 11, Lakewood 35
Shuoo, Pa. 44, Nile~o 41
Sheridan 69, Maysville 59
Slr:yview 59, Fl. Frye S7
Spring. Kenton Ridge 60, Urban• 34
Spring.·Va ller Academy 76 , Cin
llillcrut 47
St. ClairSville 60, Ilridgcpon 51
Steut.enville Cath . 49, Union Loca l

Olherl rH d ~lna ll or more polnU:
II . Canficld 41. 12. Oberlin Firclands (I)
34. 13. Clc"dand Villa Angela-St. JU5cph
25 . 14. Cincinnati Roger Bacon 22. 15.
Akron ilob•n 16. 16 {tie) . Mog1dorc
Fi eld, Willard 12.

Division ni
I. Hc..11h (12) 9·0 ........ .. ..... . ..... .... 151
l Brookville (2) 6·0........ ........ .... .. .. 90
3. Cincinrllti Wyoming (1) 8.{) . .. .... 79
Coldwater 7·0
.... .... ..
5. Loudonville8..0 ... ............. .......... ..42
6. Bucynu Wynford (I) 9·0 .................40
7. Minford (I) !1.0 ...... - ..~-· ... -......... .J':.l
8. Bd lbrOc'X 8·1....... ............... .............. 38
Zanea:ville W. Muskingum 6-J .......... 38
10. Broolllyn 8-0 ...................................32

41

SLOw 108, Ravenna 63 .
Sttnbuf164, Tuscara was Cnh. 54
Sttongsville 68 , Olm1ted Falls 64
Symmca Vall. 82, Ohio Vall . Chr. 3 I

Tec:urnsef1 76, S?ring. Shawnee 60
To!. Ch.rUtian 67, Oltawa Hilla Sl
To!. Whitmcr63, Tol. Rogc:n: 60
Toronto 74, Bellai.re SL John 56
Tri •d &amp;J , Ridgemont 5 1
Trotwood ·Madilm 81, Grcawille 67
Tuslaw 59, Manche~ot.er 54
Twimburg 59, Qudon 50
Valley Forge liS, Clc. Heigh Is 72
Vt.rmilim 12, Lorain Southview 45
Vi~tory Ott. 73, E. Livmpool Clu . 59
W. Gt.~uga 53,0nnge 43
W. Liberty·Silem 69, DqJrlff R.ivcr'ide 66
W. Mu&amp;kingum 73, Cmaklville 6S

Othcrl recelvlna 11 or more poinll:
11 (t.ie). Av on (l), Dorleslown Ch1ppcw1
·(\) 'Il . ll Versailles lS . 14. Dlocm·Cttroll1A . IS. Chlllltotht lluntlnaton 13.
16 Sudinia Eutern Drown 21. 17 .
Gr~ndview Hts. Ill. Ill (tie), Clncinn1ti
M.uiemont, Welhvillc 17. 20. Brook.Held
112 1 (ti18). 8el"cr El•lern, Utic•l2..

Division IV

W. Union6l, BcanrEuccm 52
Warren Ou-. 81, Ak1on Ott. 49
Wureraville 7(), Oe. Glowille 64
Wated'ord 68, Woodlfield 60
Wa~doo51. Field 46
WavCl'1y 66, hcbon 63
Wellston 53, Mtiga50

I. Danville {5) 9..0 ...... ........................ 112
2. Cin. Country Day (3) 5·0 .. ..... ..........76
3. S. QarlalOtl SE (3) 7.0 .................. .73
4. Miria Stein Marion (2) 7·0 .............. 72
.5. Z.nesvil!e RrKtiCtlnli 7·1 ...... ............ 62
6. CentcrlNr1J8· 1...................... ...... ..... .42
7. NewRie&amp;d 7•1 .............. ................... 37
8. Eu1C.nLOn (1)7·1 .......................... 36

Wellsville 109, Edison N. 43
WhcclinJ (W .V1 .) Centnl .58, Mar·
tins Ferry 52
Wi c~ffe 60, Ola~ Falls 53
Woodridac S3, Wmdham 49
Young. Libeny '70, lABa-.e 52 •

9. Fort Recovery (I) 3-4 ...................... .33
10. Bcllaile St. John' • 9-0 ..................... 32
Othtrl rec:ehlna 12 or more polnu:
11 , HouStOn 31. 12. Fuull•y l.ibcr\y Om·
ton (I) 29. 13 (tlc). Bcititt Ullan d, Lock·
land 25 . IS (tie). New Madison Tn.VilJasc.. New W11hinaton Buckeye Central
24. 17. B1ltimoro Ubctt.y Union (I) 23.
18. McGuffey Upper S.ciot.o Valley I II.

YDUng. Rayen '79, Boardman 52
Young. South 53, Youna. Mooney 48
Zane Trace 54,£, Clinton4S
Z..ncnille 92, Loaan 49

Girls
31, Wlftlall 34

Akron Ccnt·Howcr, Aiton Lady of
Elma 31
Abo! a..41,
a.. 30

AjCII.W.&lt;io4,1\,14mlnp 40
B1rbcnm !19, Kent. Ro01cvclt46
Baluhilo 39, Onnd V.U. 33
Bane l.lniGI4S, Wdlii!Jton 40
Baley 31. W. Jell'caan 24
Canton Mclinl•j 43, ··c.ntcm
ClalOU 36
C.."""'IJ 61. Lu&lt;oo 45
'

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110 Mec•••lc Street,
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1312 Eastern Avenue, Galli DOlls
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ChWl&lt;ooho5~-.....

35

Cin. MadQnJ 5$, Cin. Deer Plrt 5 I
CiA. Mere,. .5:t Cin. Mount ~1lthy
&lt;49
\
•
Cin. Mounl~olre Dam• 61, Cin .

Woodwlld SS
Cin. North,.. 56, Ciri. Ullllllne 36
Cln. Plltclij-Marian 64, Cin. HuahM

'

Ci&lt;l. RM.W..t
35
Cin. Sti.OII !12, Cin. Wilhlow .fl .
Cin. St. Unull .fS, Vi.l.bt M1donna,
X1., 37
·
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c;,s-"·"""""'5'
·
Citl. Turpin 49, CiiL MeN'u:hobt• 34

""Clo. .....

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Girls' High
School Class Ring
~~

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In IOK Yellow Cold
with Cubic Zirconia
Diamond or genuine gemltone a)l(l//otl/1 for

May 3/, 1992.

an additional chorye.

OFF~RED EXCLUSIVELY BV

OSUhands
.. No.9 Michigan
State 62-46 loss

.•.

Orter upirts

R. JOHNS, LTD.

By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer

..

COLUMDUS.Oh~(A~­

Lawrence Funderburke said it was
wonh the wait. So did a crowd of
13,276 at St. John Arena.
Funderburke, playing his first
college game in more than two
years, contributed seven points.
three rebounds and three blocked
shots as seventh-ranked Ohio State
rode a powerful defensive showing
in the second half Tuesday night to
. a 62-46 victory over ninth·ranked
Michigan State.
"That was most definitely the
most nervous moment of my
career," Funderburke said of the
standing ovation he received when
he first stepped on the court with
··Ohio Suue trailing 12-8 wilh 13:41
left in the first half.

SVAC cage standings
•· TAKING AIM~ With
(32) moving in for
.the block, Meigs Marauder Mary
(-12) takes aim as she
goes for two of her 13 points against . the vis!ling Golfen. Rockets
.Monday night. The Marauders won 61-21 to 1mprove tbelf record
:to 9-0.
·

Metgs girls record 61-~1 victory
over Wellston to stay unbeaten .
. Meigs jumped out 10 a 27·'
halflime lead and rolled to a 61-21
viclory over visiting Wellston in
girls Tri-Valley Conference baskelball action Monday night at Larry
R. Morrison Gymnasium.
With the win, the .Marauders
raise their record 10.9-0 overall and
7·0 in the TVC. Wellston drops to
2&gt;4 in both the TVC and overall.
The Marauders came out of the
block$ fast and o~ned up a 13-4
lead at the end of· the quarter.
Despite Marauder head coach Ron
Logan using his entire bench in the
second period, Meigs outscored the
Lady Rockets 14·3 to open up the
20 point halftime advantage.
Meigs hilS of 10 shols from the
floor in the third period, outscoring
Wellston 17·6 and hit 15 of 23
·from the floor the entire second
.half for 65%.
Katiina Turner had the hot hand
tfor Meigs going seven for seven
)'rom the floor while scoring 15
'POints, Mary Cremeans added 13
,points and Reva Mullen adde4 10.
, The Marauders' hit 26 Qf 49
1rom the' floor for 53% and eight of
, 8 from the line for 44%. The win'ners pulled down 23 reboun&lt;ts, with
:J'ricia Bacr leading the way with
'five. Mei$S had 12 turnovers, five
pssist.S wtth Baer and Mullen· get·
ing two eachand !'3 s1cals with

•.

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.•Myer'~

·sump Pump

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••
I

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•Wayne

P\Jrch~~ yoornew All American !lome h~ Mlft'~ .~I. 19!12 and rtrriW' 1 S\.000
.

Sump

ina!'lll(Ktum~ reh1te Whal's more, rou111lf hvm111n ynur nwn 11frordable.

Qualil)'·hulll ~om~ thl~~rillA.'·

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',_,. -vbll'oUf Model home.today for {uU details.
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,~ P~J.mps

I

apalal D.•l Now Av•IIG•Ie for Our

~ ·j~t Pumps

. x..r.IBom•

FAMILY H

211
257
235
247
258
191
162
269
1830

(Reserves • SV AC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Southem ..............4 0 220 155
Eastern ................ 3 I 169 147
Symmes Valley ...2 I 125 133
North Gallia ........ 2 2 !50 150
Kyger Creek ........ ! I 70 73
Hannan Trace ...... I 2 118 149
OakHiiL ............. l 3 171 176
Southwestcm .......O 4 118 158
TOTALS ....,..... 14 14 1141 1141
Tuesday's scores
Chesapeake 74, North Gallia 39
RuSsell (Ky.) 60, Hannan Trace 41
New Boston 76, Southwestern 45
Symmes Valley 82, OVCS 31
Weekend action
Friday - Eastern at Hannan
Trace; Southwestern at Kyger
Creek; Symmes Valley at North
Gitllia; Southern at Oak HiU
Saturday ~ Kyger Creek at
Ironton SL Joe; Hannan at Southwestern

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Quarter Iota~
Meigs ................. l4 8 14 14 =50
Wellston ............ .J4 14 14 11 = 53
MEIGS (SO) ~Frank Blake 20-1=5, Phil Hovatter 2-0-2=6, LJ.
Mitch 7-0·0=14, Jay Cremeans I·
0-0=2, Shawn Hawley 3-0·0=6,
Trevor Harrison 5-0;5=15, Dobby
Johnson 1-0-0=2. TOTAL~ 21.().
8=50
WELLSTON (53)~ Shannon
Weber 2-0-0=4, Jason Weiland 40·0=8, Brett Fink 4-0-0=8, Sean
Weber 2-0·2=6, Brad Spencer 1-00=2, Scoll Cheatham 12-0-1=25.
TOTALS- 25.()·3=53

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, TVs,
GAS &amp; ELEC. UNGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

627 3rd Ave., Gallipolis
Pit. ~46·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

446·5381

INSURANCE
111 Second St., Pomeroy
YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

HOLZER CLINIC
HURRYSALE EHDS
JANUARY

WIITER

O'DELLS. IMPROVEMENT
SAVINGS
HOME

25, 1992

1RU-IEST
SPECIAL

HIGH·HIDING
INTERIOR PAINT

698 GAL.
Available In white

7RU·IEST.
EZ·KARE FLAT
LATEX INTERIOR
FINISH

1098. GAL.

COVERED BRIDGE
BIRD FEEDER446617

SATIN FIHISH-14.98•
GLOSS FIHISH;,.16.98•

WAGNER ·BIRD fOOD .... Sib••• 99'

•cu1tom colora

CEILING TILE
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GRENOBLE
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CEILING TILE ."'-·. :_ :. ·-: .·
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,·

17840

PANELING

LAKELAND
BIRCH

'

WOODGRAIN

" .

PANEL

'

595

'\

.
''

1258

· .

~ ft. (art~~

4'18' LB

2·395

449
CASI&amp;IID CARRY

USG

WILDERNESS
HICKORY

TOPPING or
JOINT
COMPOUND

WOOD GUlli .

2'X4'
CEILING
942

. ~418

~4112

!G. 21.9S

PAIIEL
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ft. Cart..

895

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YOUR CHOICE

SGAL

DRYWALL
SCREWS
1Yi 1,000 ,;,, 38.9 5
2n 3,500111. 31.95
iw• 2,5oo .-••• 59.99

CHANTILLY
SPRAY LIONITE
PANEL

11~ 1992-11:00 A.M.
By the Farm.ers lank cind Savings Co •
1982 Chinnpion Mobile Home

.14x65 - 2 bedroom, up~lc. systef11, Leading Creek
water, electric, telephone, 2 (m/1) acres located at
35299 ~oop Rdad, Rutland, Ohio. Approx. Y. mile past
Fort Melga on Loop Road: Contact Scott Shank 614992.3293 for. more Information:
.

.

992·21~8

MULLEN MUSSER

JANUARY

i

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DOWNING CHILDS

.

P.urthtr, lht above collateral will "' 10J51 In the
otl.'ctltiD,It ,lt I~ In with no expl'tUICI or lnjplled

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•,

while Athens lost to Chillicothe 55-

54.

MAMMOGRAPHY
ULTRASOUND
OB/GYN

.
' PUBLIC.AUCTION
.

.• PICIINS
.

-

r

·-

'

Total Health Care for Women

'

The·fannera Bank and Savings Company, Pomeroy,
Ohio, resii'Ves the right to bid at this sale, and to
wlthclraw. thl above coll~U~Jal prior to· 1111, .further,
1118 FIJ'!I111'a Bank and Savings C~y "!~rves the
right to reject any or al,l bids eubmlttJ'd. . ·.
,

:•Tanks.

Route 7 ly•pclll
.,~
.

.

th!lle coming wiljtout injured point and only three of •15 rrom the line
guard John Bentley.
for20%.
·
Meigs jumped out to a 8-4
Harrison led ·Mei·gs with 15
advantage on a bucket by Mitch at poinls, Mitch added 14. Meigs hit
the 5:03 mark in the first period. 21 of 55 from ihe floor for 38%
But Wellston came back to take a and hit eight of nine from the line
14-10 lead with 2:15 left on a for 89%. Meigs had 33 rebounds .
bucket by Weber. Buckets by with Mitch grabbing nine and Har·
Shawn Hawley and Trevor Harri- rison seven. Meigs had 14 steals
son tied the game at the end of the with Blake coming up with six and
period at 14.
six ~ssists with Hawley getting
Wellston jumped out to a 20-16 three.
advanlage on a Scott Cheatham
"Our kids played strong aggresbasket with 6:05 left in the half, but sive ddense the entire game," a
two haSkeLS by Mitch and two free dejected Phil Harrison said after
throws liy Phil Hovatter tied the the game. "We have 1o cut down on
score at 20 with 4:34 left in the out lumovers and do a better job of
half. With Brett Fink scoring six of pulling ihc ball in the basket to
the next eight Rocket points Well· win."
In the reserve game Eric Wagnston opened up a 28-20 lead, but
Jay Cremeans hit a 15 footer with er, Jack Stanley and Chris Knight
two SC(:Onds left and Meigs had cui scored 12 points each as the Little
the Golden Rocket lead to 28·22 al Marauders rolled to their ftfth win
in a row 51-33 over Wellston .
the half.
In the third period Wellslon Coach Rick Edwards and his crew
opened up a 42-33 with 24 seconds now own a 5-2 mark on the season.
In other TVC action, Alexander
left when Fink hit a shon jumper.
But Harrison completed a· three- · continued to lead the way with a
point play with four seconds left 74-57 win over Federal Hocking.
and the Wellston lead was cut to Nelsonville.York defeated Vinton
42-36 heading into the final eighl County 5345 and Belpre defeated
Miller 86-46. Meigs will host
minutes.
Wellston opened up a five poinl Trimble on Friday evening and
advan1age (5146) at the 2:40 mark Athens on Saturday evening. Trimon a short jumper by Cheatham. ble was idle on Tuesday evening.
But Frank Blake came up with a
steal and lay-in with 1:45 left and
Blake came up with another s1eal
and assist to Mitch to make it a 5150 game just 25 seconds later. That
set the scene for the wild finish and
Weber's heroics.
Cheatham a fine looking 6·6.
225 sophomore led the way for
Wellston with 25 points and 12 of
Wellston's 27 rebounds. Wellston
hit25 of 51 from the floor for47%

PF PA
393 366
464 413
460 513
428 530
335 364
379... 491
25'f4 275
310 444

(Conference)
Southem ..............4 0 299
Oak Hill .............. 3 I 277
North Gallia ........ 3 I 246
Hannan Trace ...... 2 2 249
Eastern ................ 2 2 237
SymmesValley ... l 2 167
Kyger Crcek ........ O 3 145
Southwestem ....... O 4 210
TOTALS .......... 15 15 1830

'

Anyont whe ·hiltroulilo ._.lng or underlllncllng=lo!l •
•11 ·litvltMI-Io hive 1 FREE hllllfrig t•t to - II thlil
c1n 1
help«~. Bring,tbl• coupon with you lor your FA E iiEARINQ 1
•
I
1 TfST, I S76,00 Vllue. · ·
1
••
UIIWA • UAW • ~ICER8 COMPEN8ATIOII FUNO
• ·
.ARMCO, AND ALL 0'111ER INSURANCE PROVIDERS
.
•
. .
• WALK-INS WELCOIIE ·

.i

Mullen leading the way with three .
Jennifer Ousley led Wellston
with eighl point.S, the Lady Rockels
hit three oO I foul shois for 27%.
No olher Wellston stalistics were
available.
There was no reserve game
played,
Meigs will travel to Federal
Hocking to play the Lady Lancers .
on Thursday. Federal Hocking is
the four-time defending TVC
champs and .went into Monday
night's game at Trimble with a 5-1
record in the codference losing
·only at Vinton County. The game ·
with Federal, Hocking .will complete the first half of the season fot
the Marauders.
Quarter totals
Wellston .............. .4 3 6 8 = 21
Meigs ................. 13. 14 1.7 15 = 61
W~llston (21)- Amber LottI '
0-3-5 ; Jennifer Ousley 4-0-0=8.
Holly Maxwell 2-0·0=4, Jenny
Jenkins 1·0-0=2, Brandi Lambert
1-0·0=2. Totals- 9·0·3=21
Meigs (61) ~ Reva Mullen 4.0·
2=10~ Vema Compston 1-1-0=5,
. Tricia Baer 4-0·0=8, Kim Hanning
1·0-0=2, Mary &lt;;:remeans 6·01=13, Lee Henderson 0-0·2=2,
Katrina Turner 7·0·1=15, Missy
Sisson 2-0-0=4, Ginger Findley Q.
0-2=2. Totals~25-3-8=61

· (Overall)
Team
W L
Oak Hill ..............4 2
Southem ..............4 3
Eas1em ................3 4
North Gallia ........3 5
Symmes Valley ... 2 4
Hanflan Trace ...... 2 5
Kyger Crcek ........ l 4
Southwestern ....... 0 6

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$~~95

:be

Cot .1Jo4oa·~ 7~ Col. C..·

""""' ~ \
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Wednesday, January·8 - 9:00·4:00

: '- CIH loll '"' I•IOD-5a6$ ftr ••lll•dlltt ...........
• . lilt ltlls wiU•IIftll 1tr 1 Uc11Mtl !lelri11'AW s,.llnst

C~. Wolnot UW. 61, Cin. Ttl\ 39
Ci&lt;l. W)-176. N. ~""' T•1l'" 3t
Cll. ~,Co.Cdlinwood 40
Cll.lt.
33
Cll. W• a 54, i:lo. VA.sJ l9 ·.
Col. - 6 5 , ~ lloit43
c.t Bri,ut37,Col. WalnutlUciJC 34
CoL Lldlif'l 1 J'T, CoL EuUI'IOOI

'·

RIO GRANDE (72) ~ Gena
URBANA (71) --' Chris Robin·
Norris 0-6-3-21; Michelle Crouse,- .. son. 2-4-8; Ki!D Fields. 6-1-13;
0·2-2-S; Jackie Hannon, 1-24; Tri· Denice Martin, 4-2-10; Sarita
cia Collins, 4-1-9; Mindy Mont· Brown, 5-12·22; Jennifer Jennings,
go!Tiery, 0-2-1-7; Ann·Barnitz, 5-5· 2-0-4; Cindy Frere, 7-0-14.
15; Stephanie Gudorf, 1-24; Kathy TOTALS 26·19·71.
Snyder, 0·1-14. TOTALS 11· 11·
Halrtime score: Urbana 36,
7-72.
Rio Grande 35.

FREE HEARING TESTS ·

Cin. Aik111 &lt;45, Cill. Rot« 81CU1.40
Cin. Finne~wn &lt;4!), cln. lndian Hill

"·CAP!!

The University of Rio Grande
underwent a shock to its system in the fo.rm of a hungry Urbana
University offense - but recovered sufficiently to wrest a 72-71
victory in women's basketball
action Tuesday at Lyne Center.
Rio Grande's Mindy Mont·
gomery connected on a one-of-two
~ ppeara n ce at the free throw line
with a second left to give the Red·
women their third consecutive
Mid-Ohio Conference win, capping
off a game that saw the. Lady
Knights in charge for most of the
contest.
"You have to give a lot of credit
to Urbana," Red women Coach
Doug Foote remarked. ''Their team
played hard and had five kids who
were out there for 30 minules.
They wanted it."
.
·
Urbana, coached by Cindy Sper·
ry. had four points on the board
before Rio Grande knew il. and
from there it was an extended chase
scene for the Rio ladies as Sarita
Brown hit a total of 13 first-half
points and Kim Fields snatched six
rebounds for the Lady Kn ig his to
assen control.
The visitors were up 19-10
when Gena Norris, 5-2 sophomore
point guard from Kingston .. ftred in
two consecutive three-poinlers to
put the Redwomen back within
hailing di stance, where they
remained until Tricia Collins' basket at 5:05 gave Rio Grande its
only lead of the half (27-26). Norri s had eight markers, Collins seven
and Jackie Hannon a toial of seven
boards to trail Urbana by one going
into halftime.
The work of those three underclassmen was crcdiicd by Foote
with keeping the Redwomen in
contention not only then but for the
rest of the game.
.
"Gena had foul trouble early.
but came out for a great second
half," the coach said. "The ones
who really saved us were her, Tricia and Jackie, both offensively and
defensively. We',re gelling good
games out of those three."
Urbana, utilizing the strength of
center Cindy Frere and the speed of
guard Denice Martin, held a slim
grip on the lead until Ann Bamitz's
free throw s at 10:59 put Rio
Grande ahead one more time by a
single point (52-51) . From there
both teams exchanged leads by the
barest of margins. Frere's basket at
2;04 gave Urbana a 69-66 advan·
tage, but Montgomery's trey 21
seconds laler knotted the score. The
Lady Knights advanced by 1wo on
another field goal, but Barnitz
came through with one of her own
at :27 to tie things up at 71. Montgomery's attempted three with seconds leftfailed, but a foul called on
Brown set up Montgomery's win. ning~harity toss.
"Defens ively, we were not very .
good." Foote commented. "The
thing we did well was shool free
throws , which we hadn't been
doing very effectively. And we got
on the boards and we outrebounded
them by four."
Leading the Red women in scoring was Norris, whose 21 points
marked one of her best scori ng
nights yel. Bamitz added another
15 points and seven boards, while
.Hannon was responsible for II of
Rio Grande's 44 rebounds.
The Red women shol 34.4 percent (22-64. 11·27 from the three
for 40.7 pereent) and connected on
17 of 23 attempts at the line for
73.9 percent. Overall. the ICam had ·
16 turnovers.
Urbana's Brown finished with
22 ·points, with Frere adding 14,
Fields 13 and Marlin 10. Fields
broughl down nine of the team's 40
rebounds.
From the field, the Lady
Knighls were 39.4 percent (26-66)
an'd unsuccessful on all five
allempts at the three. They were
luckier on free ihrows, sinking )9
of 21 (90.5 percent). The team suffered 15 turnovers.
·
The Redwomen (14·2) face
Walsh on the road Saturday, while
Urbana (4·7) hosts defending MOC
co-champion Tiffin Saturday.
Box score:
·
·

COUPON

· Cl)anei39, 0..Ludtenn.W. 29

.

By DA VEJfARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
· A •steal and two free 'throws by
' Sean Weber with eight seconds left
gave the Wellston a three-point
lead, and the host Golden Rockels
went on to post a controversial 5350 victory over Meigs in Tri-Val·
· ley Conference basketball action
Tuesday evening.
.
With Wellston holding a 51-50
· lead Weber intercepted a Mal)luder
pass and an intentional foul was
called on Meigs with eight SC(:Onds
left. Wellston as a team had hit
. only one of 13 foul shots, and
Weber was 0 for 7 beforehand, but
Weber calmly walked to the line
and made both shot.S giving the
Rocket.S a 53-50 advantage.
L.J. Mitch denected the
inliounds pass and Frank Blake was
called for a foul in the scramble for
the loose ball. The Wellston clock
operator failed to stop the clock
and the buzzer sounded well afler
the foul was called. When the
Marauder bench protested the call
the official called the game, and
walked off the court when there
EYES ON THE PRIZE- Meigs ce,11ter LJ. Mitch (23) keeps his
should
have bci:n at least four seceyes on the hoop as be splits the Wellston defense for two of his .14
onds
remaining.
; points during Tu. esday night's TVC contest at Wellston, which the
The win gives the Rockets a 4-2
Golden Rockets woo 53·50.
·
mark in the TVC and 4·5 overall.
Meigs drops to 2-3 in the TVC and
34 oveiidl. The loss was the third
in a1row for the Marauders, all

•••••••••••a•••-••••••

w....

'11

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I. Piclteringtc.~ (7) 9-1 ...................... 153
1 Celina (3) 9·D................ .............. I 05
1 w()()ltjU (I) 9.0 ....... ......................... 90
4. t..oaan (4) lD-\.-------·-.....87

45

14

Lan ~u tcr

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - How 1
m tc Janel of aporu writcn 1nd broad·
~lli\ctl ntea OhLo high school gills bls·
l:ctbtll tc.IITI.I in the fltl t wcdcly regullr·
season poll for The Auocilted f'rcss, b y
Ohia High School Athletic AuocLatmn
div~ions, with WOJI·Iost roco~d through
gtmcs of Jan. S'and \.Ota1 pDUilS (ftnL ·
place \'OlCIIR puenthcse~o) :

61

CSNorWid.l3, Fciri.Lewilll

53,

Ohio high school
girls basketball poll

W el•n tl S2, M~lvcm 65

Far West

R o.ccra n ~

48

Lebanon 64, Miam.iabu rg 63, 20T
Li rru~ Cath. 71, Ot\.lwa·Gbndorf 57
louisville 84, Ur~iontown lake 67
Mtruficl4 St. Pc~et's 63, Col. RCildy

Aden~

Midwest

Z.nc&amp;ville

Jefferson 65, Gcnev' 59
Kent on Ridge 60, Urbana 34
K.mgs 72, HamiliOn R01' 54

SOI.lLhcm Miu. 79, E. TcMeucc St.

Alt,. ·~ irmingham 7S,,Wa~ 69

Mcdin1 Highland 74, Revere 50
Mentor 48, Dcdf'Oid 35
Miami E. 49, FairlaWII 48
Miami VaU. 37, Xenia Ou. 18
Mill'ord 61, Glen Este 40
Newton 35, Tri·County N. l4
Norton 45, Onal 38
.
Orange Chr. 58, King'• Academy 21
Ravenn1 Sl, Stow 36
Reynoldsb.ug 62, Franklin Itu. 41
Richmond Dale SE 56, Paint Vall. 51
Rocky River Magnificat 55, Akron
Ho ban l4
Russi• 54, Minstct 53
Sha.lter His. 41, Luthenn E. 33
Shelby '59, Clear Fodt 34
Spring~ 64, Valley View 48
Tree of llic i7, Delaw1n:: Ciu. 25
Tri·Vill•gc65, Covingtm 63
Un.ioto 49, Zane Trace 46
Upper Sandlllky 69, Ri ver VaU. 52
Wadi wOrth 50, CopleY 2~
Wanauvillc 50, Oe. Rhodes 2S
WC51c.r¥ille N. 40, Marion I larding 32
Willard 62, l.u. ingt01130
Willoughby S. 67, Brush 49

50

Kentucky 78, Gcoraia 66
So~th Aorida 73, Fla. lntemat iona1

63

Mauillon Wuhington 68, Fairless 47

h

South
52

Hamilton Roa 46, Cin. Christian 30
Hawken 34, Kirtland 24

tin20

Edi.Jon S. 74, Beaver lncJ I 59
Dyria
Midview 49
Syria First Haplist 44, LAke Ridge42
&amp;mnuel Bapusl 61 , Lenawce, r.1ich..

Thursday's games
Quebec at Br:.tm, 7:35p.m.
Minne~oota at Detroit, 7:33p.m.

G1hanna 65, Hilliud 49
Gilmour68,Aurora 26
Grove City S4, Thomu WorUiington

Hu4son 45, TaJlmadge 28
Huntington 62., Piketon 39
Kcuerina Alt.cr :54, DWe 40
Lcdgemont 49,Perry 31
&lt;Lorain 51, C1c. Lncoln-West 36
LouiJ:,ille Aquinu 65, Canwn llcr·
itage 8
Uwdlnd 48, Cin. Mariemont 41
Marioo J..oo.a150, Annl 30
Mum 40, Norwood l6
Mulillon Cu-. '11, Medina First Bap·

CoL Undcn·McKin ley 71, Col. Ccn·
ICMitl 58
Col. Mifflin 83, Col. Whetstone 74
Col. Nol't.hltnd 60, Col. Brookhaven
58
CoLSouth 96, Col. West 75
Columbia 73, Auron 56
CoMea ut 85, Alihtabula St. JoM 42
Convoy Crt:atview 53, Park way 39
Cuyah.osa Fall•73, Akmn Spring. 44
Day. Carroll 76, ~iiddlm.own Fenwick
62
Day. Jefferson 121, N. Adams 87
Day. Wayne 69, Xenia 68
Dayton, Ky ., 66, Cin. Christian 60
Do.-er 73, Coihocton 61
E. Canton 57, Tuscatllwu Vall. 49
E. Cleveland Shaw 51. C!e. KCMcdy

Dl•l!lun

Adams Dl"bLon

Citt. St, Demard 711, Cin. Lan dmark

53

WALES CONFERENCE
W L T Pts. GJo' GA
T1 15 I 55 164 140
26 14 3 55 187 144
23 15 4 50 191 136
20 14 6 46 152 117
14 20 6 34 1501 67
1219 8 32112136

Frodcriclno'NII 42, D\lckeyc Central

Cin. Walnut H i ll~ 88, Amelia 55
Col. Academy 61, CoL Hartley 43
CoL Brill&amp;' 67, Col.. Walnut Ridge 51
C&lt;!l. Eut 71, Col. DczchcmlL 58 ·
Col. Eutmoor 71 , Col. Independence

In the NHL ...

D!Xtoo ... ....

Co1m.el Cnwfotd 46, Oruario 29
Cuyahosa Falls 45, Akron Sprinj 35
Danville 68, Worlhin~ Chr. 2
E. Knol. 46, CoL Academy 14
E. LiverpOol Chr. 51, Victory O!r. 29
Eutllke 71, Maple HUI. 26
E11clid 49, Mayfield 38
Franklin· Mortroe 64, Arcanwn 30

Day40

Thursday's games
Cle.-cland at Waih ington, 7:30p.m.
s~cramMto at Charloue. 7:3Up.m
Ddl u u At.lanu, 7:30pm

Tum
/'.'.Y. Rlflgen .
Wuhmgton......
Pmsburgh .
,
New Jcrsc:y ......
N.Y. lslandef1 ....
Phibdelphia .....

uol30

38

GO

ALiantl \09, New Yolk 94
Cle~\:la nd 113, Minnesota 118
Chicago 102, Washington 89
L.A. LUers 104, Dallas 80
SeatLle \06, Denvcr 99
Portlind 104, Orlando 89

l' atrl~k

Col. South 64, Col. Wst 27
Col. We~tJand 54, Worthington Kil·
bourne 52
CoJdw1ter 71, Celina 69, OT
Collinl WIIIIWII RcsctVe 33, S . Cen·

Cin. Elder 75, Cin. Taft64
Cin. La Sa Ue 70, Cin. Hughes 46
Cin. Princeton 58, Cin. Sl. Xomcr 44
Cin. Roger Bacon SO, Cin. N. College
llill47
Ci n. Seven llilh 45, Cin. Co\ln uy

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Midwest D l ~l si on
nam
W L l'ct.
U~.ah .. ........... .......22 12
.647
San Antonio .... ..... 17 14
548
/lou.sLon ...
.... 17 15 .531
Denver
. 13 18 .419
DJ!.las
... 12 20 .375
Ml.l1.nesou
. .5 25 . 16 7

B~ckeye Tnil 14, Cadiz S1
Cambri dge 78, Bam~:~ville 69
C) mpbcll Memoria l 57, Slrulhers 54
Carlisle 61, Middletown Chr. 58
O.agrirl Falls 63, Salon 52.
O.eupeake 74, N. Gallia 38
Chillicothe 55, Athens 34
Cin. Aiken 90, Cin. Mt. Healthy 50
Cin. Anderson 60, Cin. Nonhwes\51
Cin. Colerain 74, Cin. Weslem Hilli

55

59

Miff!.in 53, Col. Whcutcr~o 30

• The

Ohio

Wellston gents post 53-50 win over Meigs

One-point victory over Urbana gives
Redwomen third straight MOC win·

Col. School fot Gir!J 59, Wadd Huverr. 39

Cin. CoWJI.ry Day 64, Cin. Lock.land

.533

y

Col.

43

Mi.lwaukec ............. \6 14

January a; .1992-

Wednesday, January 8, 1992
Page--4

Scoreboard

WuJungton ...... ...... \2 20
Orlando
......6 25

The Dally Sentinel

I

·10

95

Alst nolla•l• by t.h• pound.

AUO
FROM
FIRE CODE CEILING
PA.LSIIIItiiD
TO MElT YOUI CODE
SPECIFICATIONS

liQUID
NAIL
PANEL AND

CONSTRUCTION
ADHESIVE
IOOZ.

1.59

!'1111-)'1ft

,.,.R
Lilli

SIIUI

15 91~L
Whllo 318051

\

.' O'DELL

LUMBER

6341t MAIN
'

.' I
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. ,~,,'

.

�...

:Page-&amp;:-The Dally 5entlnlll

i . Community
Community Calendar items
appear two days berore an event
· ~nd tbe day or tbat event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
en dar.
WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND · Leading Cree~
Conservancy District will hold its
regular meeting on Wednesday at 7
.p.. m. at the board •s offices. The
meeting is open 10 the public.
HARRISONVILLE · Mission·ary services will be held at Har·
.risonv ille Holiness Chapel on
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. with Rev.
·Donald Dell from All Tribes Indian

•.. . .
•'

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, January 8, 1992 ·

calendar · S&amp;WCD Ladies Auxiliary offers p~ck~ts
'

.

will be a door prize drawing and a
shon business meeting. Everyone
is welcome.
POMEROY. The movies "lnci·
dent at Hawk's Hill" and "Library
World" will be shown at the
Pomeroy Liblary on Saturday and
Sunday at 2 p.m. and Middleport
Library on Monday at 4:30 p.m.
All area children are invited to
view the movies free of charge.
FAIRPLAIN · The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Saturday &amp;t the Jackson County Jamboree in Fairplain, W.Va. .

The ~eigs Soil and Water Conservation District Ladies Auxiliary
is offering for sale tree packets aild
ground cover plants.
This year they have quantity
bundles of 25 seedlings .for $7.
Vru:ieti~ for sale this. year include
whue ptne, scotch ptnc and Col·
orado Blue Spruce. .
.
Oth~r packets avatlable mclude
Canadt_an Hemlock, 10 seedhngs
for ~6. Japanese Snowball , 10
seedlin~ for $7 ornve scedhngs for
$4; ~htte flowenng dogwood, 10
seedli~gs for $6.
.
Frwt tree .packets ao:e also avaolable contammg two each ~f Cort·
land and Smoothoe apples for $20.
For those bare and steep bankds
that cannot be mowed, there os

crown vetch ground cover. It is
available in 72 plants for $21.
C:own vetch is a perenniallegu~e
wtth dark green foltage and pmkosh
lavender 10 white clusters of flowers. Plants obrain a height of 12 to
18 inches. It blooms from June to
September and reproduces from
both seeds an.d un.der~u.nd ~.ts.
Crown vetch IS uruque !ntiS ability
toestabhsh and prestst on poor
s01l.
.
Other ground cover p~ants av:UI·
able mclude Enghsh _Ivy,
Pachysandra, and Purple Wmter
Creeper, 50 P.lants f~r $15.
The ~enean Woldllower pack·
et contains one ounce _
or seeds for
$2.50. Thts packet wtll seed 250
square feet.

For further mform.auon,,or to
order, COI)tact the Metgs Sotl and
Water Conserv~n District O,ffice
at 992-6647· Qr wnte .33101 Hiland
Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. ·
All orders must .bc prepaid and
be in by March 10.
I

W""e•dn~e~s!!!d~ay~,~Ja~n~u~ar~y;8!,· 1~9~92!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~=~=~•P•o•m•e•rolliy-M•
• •ld•d•le.ip•o•rt,I.O•h•lo•lllll••••~~. .- - - - ·· The Dally Sentlnei....:Page-7 .

P.?f,ls~e.:£?2!!reeJ~u:

Ql/+,t'
c·erS elected
'jj
.

Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the Bashan Volunteer Fire Depanmcnt.
Elected were Ralph Trussell,
president; Paul Riley, vice presi·
dent and assistant chief; Luke
McDaniels, fire chief; Theodore
Pullins; financial secretary; Phyllis
Lattimer, fire reporter. Trustees are
Theodore Pullins, Ralph Trussell
and John
Rose.

SUNSHINE

Christ" was presented recently by
ihe Pomeroy Nazarene Youth
Group under the direction of lead·
ers Steve and Shari Blackwell
·
Participating were Rob and
Katie Northup Amber Arica and
Aja Blackwell)eremy, 'scott, Kim·
bcrly- and Megan Johnson, Shaun,
Daniel and Leah Whittekind, Rainy
Walker, Amy Smith, Lisa and Scott
Taylor, Trish and Rachel Carey,
Jimmy Weaver, Tammy Pletcher.
Randy Snider was narrator.
After the play, a poem written
by Shari Blackwell, was read enti·
tied "Chrisunas Season."
The Pomeroy Nazarene Youth
Group meets each Wednesday from
7 to 8 p.m. at the Pomeroy
Nazarene Church.

DOG FOOD

NeV~Ie InVItes 'tJie pub1tc:-

10 LB. BAG

STORE tlOURS
Monday thru Sunday

$149

8 AM-10 PM
298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
..

COPYRIGHT 18112 •THEI&lt;ROGERCO. ITEMS AND ~ICESGOODSIJNOAY. JAN. 5. THROUGH S.&lt;TVADAY,JN&lt;.
11, J8112 IN POMEROY
.

·~~l· !l!~,,i!l9or.i.M~ ;.vUlm·
;$&amp;;;:,~&amp;,, 11 ·cr~·· :Rev. tonn

ARMOUR

VIENNA
SAUSAGE

RICES EFFECTIVE JAN.·5 THRU JAN. 11, 1992
.

\

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLD TO DEALERS.

5OZ. CAN

CHESTER · The postponed
meeting of Chester Garden Club
will be held Wednesday at 8 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Donald Mora.
"Turning Winter lniO Spring" is the
theme of the program by Mrs.
Richard Barton. ·

5

2 1

POMEROY • There will be a
college financial aid wor~hop for
all Meigs County high school
seniors and their parents on
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the cafete·
ria at Meigs High School. The
workshop will deal primarily with
parents and students completing the
Financial Aid Form .

PORK

TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup·
pcrs Plains VFW Post 9053 will
meet at 7:30 p.m. on Thursday at
the post home.

R1b Steak•••••••••••

LB.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOnO~

$2 49

lb.

CARNATION

HOT COCOA

.

MIX

$ 119

CO~NFIELD BRAND .

Shced Bacon•••••••

20 OZ. LOAF

10 CT. ENV.

LB..

Round Steak•••••••
TYSON CHICKEN·PATTIES GR
$199
Br.east Fillets. ot
ECKRICH
$139
ologna•••••••••••••u.
LB.

9·10

FRIDAY
HOCKINGPORT • There will
be a round and square dance at
Hockingport on Route 124 on Fri·
day from 8 p.m. to midnight with
music by the Pleasams County
Boys. Jim Carnahan will be the
caller. The public is invited.

•

/

KRAFT

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE

Box

7.25 oz.

lb.
u.s. Grade A Perdue or Wampler/Longacre

.

Split Chicken Breast

Regular $1.99

: TUPPERS PLAINS · There will
be a round and square dance on
Friday from 8 p.m. 10 II :30 p.m. at
the Tuppers Plains VFW Post. The
band will be "Second Cullin" ,
sponsored b~ Post 9053 and the
Ladies Au~ohary . The public ts
invited.

U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED

U.S. GOV'T GIMDED CHOICE,

ioneless .

oenuine
Ground Chuck English Roast

RIPLEY · The Liberty Moun·
taineers will 'j:lerform Friday at
Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.

·

Pound ,

.

Pouticl . .

$ '' ,,,

LONG BOTTOM • The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot·
tom will hold a hymn sing featur·
ing local talent on Friday at 7 p.m.
· Paswr Steve Reed invites the pub·
lie. Fellowship will follow.

1-----s :r.1
.
"7.-: M;::' S

.
SATURDAY

lfln' IIICIP

)

REEDSVILLE • "The Pfeifcrs"
will perform at the Fellowship
Church of the Nazarene on Route
124 in Reedsville, near Forked Run .
State Park, on Saturday at 7 p.m.
Rev. John W. Douglas invites the
Jlublic.

4.6-QZ. PUMP Ole

Esprit Frozen.

~.!:!

. . 6.4-oz.
.·

.

·

~r"ASSOmD VARIE;TIES

roft'l:~ste

,,,, .. ,,.
FROZEN ASSCNrTED
VARIETIES ..

·KrDIBf ·

PizZas · ·

·lnd

7A-;7.&amp;«

, ·aallon
Chilled

~

.

·'

:·Kroger orange Juice . ..

•.

DORITOS
9.5 oz.

IN THE OELI·PA~ SHOPPE ·

"DOZM DOifiiT SAil'
ASSORTED VARIETIES

ttuce,,,,, •••
PAR KAY
Margarine........

Fresh Deli
Donuts

19-:Z:Z~Z.

HEAD.

DOz.

,,.

GRADE A
GOLDEN fliPE

•

DOle

•

•

Bananas
-lbs~

-

'

•

•

••

••

.
·'
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPS),
CAFFEINE Ffl!l PEPsi, . ',
.
· DIET PEPSI,
·•
NONRETUflNABLE'BOTTLE·:

L

Hymn
sing .sl4ted
•

$349

U • ·cHOICE BEEF

POMEROY . Tbe Meigs Coun·
ty Democratic Committee will
meet on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy. A regular business meeting will be held,
and a recommendation will be
made for the new member on the
Meigs County Board of ElectiOAS.
The public is invited.

•

BREAD

79(

.

Chicken Parts••••••

POMEROY · Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
will meet on Thursday at 6 p.m. at
Grace Episcopal Church and Parish
House. The program will be "A
Time for Surprise".

~w..w~.:~~:~
..P·widl aactm, conr
11111 corree wW be rumisiiCcl
:::1.~e camp. Those attcndi~JI
. ihould brina •I'Oiluek ciWI. ~

$139

. ..

PIX·O·CHIC ·

ROCK SPRINGS · Rock
Springs Grange will meet on
Thursday at 8 p.m. at the home of
William Radford.

RUTLAND • There will be a
round and square dance at the Rut·
!abd American Legion HaD on Sat·
(i(day from 8 p.m. to midnight. ·
Music will be provided by the
· Country Kin ~and. ~y FiU:h ~ill
tlc the caller. The pubhc is tnvoted
10auend.
•
• •t
"
· BURLINGHAM : The Burling·
. iwn Modem WoOdsmen will hold .

BETSY ROSS
GAY 90's

Spare Ribs ••••••••u.
MIXED CHICKEN
49(
Fryer Parts•••••••••.

THURSDAY
POMEROY · The Pomeroy
group of AA and AI-Anon will
meet Thursday night at 7 p.m. at
the Sacred Heart Catholic Church
in Pomeroy for discussion.

CHILLICOTHE • There will be
a revival at the Chillicothe Wesleyan Holiness Church on Diehl
Street in ChiUicothe. Services will
begin at 7:30p.m. and will be held
(In Friday. Saturday and Sunday .
Rev. Juddic Pey10n from Bedford,
Ind. will be the speaker.

..

·Peps/ CD/a·o~.
·M6Untl/n.11elf
.
:l-uter

,,'
1

·'

•

LB.

•

.

(

Large Eggs.~•••••••ooz.69

GROUND
BEEF
.

.·. . . ·79 c· ·.. INTER.STATE. . · . $
Cake 1xes•••••••rooND
french Fries...2ooz. 3
· · ·..1
FRANCO·AMERICAN
.
$l . KEMP'$
$ 99
·- Ice.Cream••••••••• 2

. 10 LB. PACKAGE

•

SQUART PAIL

. .

PAIL

·.

.

• ,IWT'IliW • •

··:·~0-~

MIUQEWHIP

. TIDE DOERGENT ·
~

136

.SALAD DRESSING I

$62!__.. : ..

•. OL .

~.::~=-~.~
.... , .. c..-

• .32

: oz.

,:

.
.

·'

.

$169
'

I

.

•

·(HICKEN
B·REAST
10 LB. PACKAGE ;

$1l90

�The Dally

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio•

.Page . B . The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, January B, 1992

I

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
'

.

'

'

RATES

TO .PLACE AN AD CAll 992-21511
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

15
16
15
15
15

1

3

6
10
Monthly

POl\CII:S
' Atb o ut1tdc Mt: IQii. Gall•a or Ma$1.111 counhe:o; nuo $1 be pr~
paolt

Ov~r

Rate
$4.00

Words

Days

Announcemenls

16 Words

.20
.30

' $6.00

$9.00
$13.00

.42

.60

$1 30/ day

.05 / day

RatesOKc fo• conwa..ttve turu. t..okenupd~ s w1ll be charged
lor each d"V as sepa.ra te ads

"Rt:Cel\11' $50 d iSCOUnl f01 a d{ IJiiiHIIrl atNilli CC
· F 1el~ ;nls
G 1veaWay and Found ads und •~ 1 !J wofd5 w11t tn:

um 3 dift' S at nu charge
'Pntlll ol ad lot all c ap•tatleUt~t!i. ·~ lllot•bltqm cc o l ml cos t
'7 pomt lm~ IVIJU uuly ttsOO
·
'Stlllllllt~ 1s not responstble tm errors !111m lu s t •I;Jt (Check
101 ~rruf5o first d4fll ad "mns 111 pap11r) Ci111 bHIOre 2 .00 p Ill
•tav otlhn pubiLl: .. tiOIL t o make COUeCIIUil
aar;c, •p.f.'tliiri li~

tbp .. 'II !Ao,b

Ill IIIICt lLUIIillll

Y;trd S&lt;tltr.i

L:i(UJ&gt;i,ji,,,d

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM MONDAY
. 1UESOA'Y· PJt,J'ER
2 00 PM TUESDAY
W£0NFSDAV PAPER
2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY PAPER
2.00 PM THURSDAY
~t:tiUAY PAPER
2 t]'Q PM FRIDAY
SUNDAY PAPER

COPY DEADLINE
MONDAY PAPER

Galli a Countv
AreaCode614

Metgs County
Area Code 614

446 Galltpolls
167 Chesh11e
)88 VintOO
245 Rio G11nde
256 Guyan D tst
64) Ar1bia Dtst ·

992

379 Walnut

84]
247
949
742

667

C~o lvtll e

985

BULLETIN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
Jinny Beyer's "Color
Confidence" Video Showing
2:00P.M. Thurs., Jan. 9. No fee.
Beginner's Ouitt Class Tues ..
Jan. 14.
(Pre-Register at lhe Fabric Shop)

15

Schools &amp;

16 Radio, TV &amp; C8
17 Mtsce11anoou 5
1.8 W;uued To Do

675
4!:i8
576
713

Pt Plua.ant
luon
Appltt Grove
Mas9n
882 . New HiveA
895 leuut
917 Ruffalo

Any Size Pkg, Limit 10 lbs.

U.S. No. I Russet

Fresh Crisp

21

8usineu Opp(!rluruty

22

Money 10 loin
Pro fesi!Onil Sefllic~:S

23

Saidinapplication
be
heard
aald Courl will
at1 :3D
p.m. on tho 10th day of
Fobruary, 1992, at Molga
County Common Pleu
Courl· Probate Division.
(1) B1lc

Fr.. Es..at-2SYn. lp.
cailaft•6p•.-992-~2a

(1)3, tM.f14

Real Estate General

lb. Bag

UMIT 2 Heada, Per FamUy With '10 Additional Pun:hue
(excludlnc item• prohibited by law)

OFFICE 992-2886

POMEROYrOHIO

•

.

Gentle

•

•

.,

4Roll

Pkg. ·

,•

Prices Effective

18 oz. BOx .
LIMIT 2 llouo Pleue, l'llr F..U, WI.. 'IO'ddllloaal
Purcllue (-ladlat lime .....lblted .., ...,

.

J~uary

'

8 ~ Sunday, January l2, 1992

•VInyl Siding
•Rapl-mant

10:00A.M.·3:00P.M.

614·992·6461

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

GUN
RACINE
FIRE DEPT:

\

- -- ~·-

-·

. -- ··

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEI,IS,
LANO CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER UNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAUUNG: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Groveland Coal

11/14/ttn

YOUNG'S

Starting Sept. 28
Foc!ory Olob
12 Gauta Sholg11 Only
Striclty Enforced
9·13·'91 -tfn

,

WHALEY'S
AUTO PARTS

BRONZE

Quality
Stone Co.

Swtttheatf Special

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Dffer Good Thru

Speciallling In

UCINE

C,stom Framt

leplir

NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALl MAKES &amp;
MODELS
992·7013
or 992·5553

14 TANNING
SESSIONS - sl400
Feb. 14

949·2826

· - Raom AddHiona
- Gutter wortt
Cheshire,
Eitctrlotl work
•nd Plumbing · ..__
-- Concrete
_ _ _ _..,::::::::...

REDUCED! PRICED TO SALE IN RACINE12 $tOry home
w/4 BR's, 2 baths enclosed porch, insulation original
woodwork. Very nice home that has had newer rePairs and
is waiting for you lo come see! REDUCED TO $44 ,900

01 TOLl FilE
1-100-141-0070

OPEN 9 AM-9 PM
1-6· I mo. pd.

DAIWIII, 0110
7 / 31 / '91 tfn

-:-Roofing
- Interior • Ekttrlor
Ptlntlng

!FREE ESTIMATES)
REALLY CUTE! 1 lloor plan lrame home with 4 rooms
Hardwood! carpet flooring, fireplace. wood stove . on two
lots. ASKING $17,000

V. C. YOUNG Ill

POMEROY· 100' 290 VACANT LOTs, water. etectnc &amp;
city sewer available Nice location for a trailer. ASKING
$6,500

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6215
1

li·t4-'90 lfn

NICE t and 2 BR
FURNIISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available In
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
S1artlng ot

POMEROY· Very nice 2 s"tory business building 1·2 apls.
upstairs with commercial room down. In very good shape!

Public Notlcl!

$27,000

AN A+ QUAUTY HOME! Frame split level w/9 room s, 5•
SA's, 2 baths, deck, woodburner, garage on .45 acre in
Riggs Crest Manor. ASKING $69, 500

PUBUC NOTICE
NOTICE 11 hereby given thai
on Salurday, January 11,
1992• at!O:OO a.m., a public
ulo will bo hold at 105
Uniqn Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio, to eell for c••h the IOI·
)1
owi7ng ~NIIDaAiorCoiiV:IC 4 DR., S
98 7 HO
SPEED, AIR
. Sf lHGEC4537HA036671
The Farmo11 Bank and
Sovinga Company, Pomoroy, Ohio, raoorveatho rlghl
to bid al lhit nlo, and to ·
withdraw tho llbovo collotor·
ol prlot' to nit. Furlhor, Tho

MIDDLEPORT· COMMERCIAL SITE! J commercial build1ngs including a small 20 x 27 garage building. GREAT
INVESTMENT PROPERTY! Call lor delails!
WE NEED LISTINGS! IF YOU'RE THINKING OF SELL·
lNG THIS IS THE RIGHT TIME TO DO IT! AND OUR
OFFICE IS THE RIGHT PLACE TO GET A·C· T-1-0·NI
GIVE US A CALLI
HENRY E. CLELAND.........................................&amp;92-6191
TRACY BRINAGER...........................................94!1-2439
JEAN TRUSSELL.. ............................................ 94!1-2660
JO HIU.............................................................. 985-4466
OFRCE...............................................................&amp;92-2259

Further, the 1bove coll•l·
oroi will be aold in lho con·
dillon II Ia In with no
oxprouod or Implied war'
rondoo glvon.
.

FOr'mor•lntor.,atlon ton·

!oct Scott Shonk, at 992·
3293.
8, 8, 10, 3tc

A visit from Santa Claus was
!he special event for children and

Apanment
. tor Rent

aduiiS.
Aucnding were Ray and Bernice
Midkiff; Larry,' Linda, Eric and ..
Chelsea Montgomery; Maxine,
Opal and Patty·DyCJ:; Virginia Carson; Joyce Good; Joe, Zack and
Joshua Bolin; Howard, Marie and
Jim .Birchfield; John Holliday.;
Fre4a Smith; John, Catherine and .
Ashley Colwell; Allen; Vickie .and
Peggy Smilh; Ralph, Chip and
Mike Macomber; Tina, Autumn
and Joshua Slaier; D01·olhy Bolen; ·
Anna and AlaliHalliday; Clair Netsop; WJiid Nicholson; Dan and
KIDS ON THE BLOCK • Linda Weiss, Coordinator to~ the
I
Rulh Evans; Elsie McCoy; Mary . Kids on tbe Block, and Shoncla Strodlbeck,from tbe SEO-SERRC
" Walker; Kenneth and Martha ·Center, .In Athens, prsented ~ program on epilepsy and learning
' Ward; Wl!lter and Vida Gr~n; Earl
disabilities to -!)le third ~nd fourtb graders at Sallti~ury Elemenand Georgia George; Charles and
tary. Students were llYia lnformatloa on botb topica and were
Mildred' Acltins; Nonnan and Aileallowed to Ilk qpaliona. Studtalll te.raed lUI neltber eplleJIIJ or
Ira Will; Raymond and Lydia
1 learalnt.,..UitJ Ia uylllln(_to be ull~med abOut. Students
Smith; Earl and Dorothy c;;ray;
learned tllat TOll Crulaet Cbtr, Henry Winkler llld Tllomu Edi· Vk:ki Taylor; EldOn and Rose Bar~ had Jeai'alna dllabWIIel. studenll were IIICOIII'IIed to join· the
rows; and Mellin Miller.
Kids on the Blocl Fila Club atno charge.
· . .
'

Now accepting eppll·
clllona for 1 bedroom

oportmonto.
elderly,

'

·

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM .an_d
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD
·
••

BILl SLACK
992-2269

Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Foctory
(hake Only

Cal1614-992-6528 or
385-8227

USED RAILROAD TIES
i-12·90-tln

9-6-tln

12-11-t mo.

INDEPIIIIDINT CAIPn CLIANEIS
and nll FLOOI CARE
•Reuo~eble flat e.•

•Quality Work
•FrH EstimltH
•Carpet Has Fast Dry

Time

~

0

••

.,.•• HOJtMI .

•Gar.tl...

.eCompl.ta
le1110tWing
Stop &amp; C...are
FrH Estlmat'la

•

•

•

••

'

•

'

•

••

•

•••••••••

Appllcalllono IN IIVIU•

Displayed at ne
a.aliy Prlit Sllop

StonoWOoda Apt. 2!15;

HOURS:

P.M. II tho .office of

1100 l!owell Strtet,

Mldclllapo•rl.! Ohio.

8:3b am-4:00 pm

614-992-3394
Or Cal

742·3020 Ewlllts

12·2-11·1 noo. pd.

·

',I

.,
•

0

••

!'14) 4411·9416 or 1-100-172-59117

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
· New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
. .Room Additions • Roofing
Commercial and Residential
FREE ESTIMATES

614·f49·2801 or 949·2860
(No Suaday Call)

ll/311'~1

JISUJ.Iftll

JIL
('

~

1 ma.

'.

'

llble Mondly through
Frldly 11:00 A.M.-3:00

•

Located On Safford School ld. off lt. 141

66~·6179

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERn .

••••

~::~:G'

BENNETT'S

,15·4473

Only

0

MOBilE HOME

742·245'1
3-1 '91·11•

BISSELL BURKE
(ONSTRUCTION

Now ./JJ.

- HEAT PUNI'S and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE.&amp; DOUILEWIDE HOMES

'

•High Glooa an Tile ·
Floor Finish
Mill lEWIS, OwMr
II. 1, lut~nd. OH.

'

· '$fook/l

lmpolrod

'

••

$235 por mo.

. bath house
wlbuement and
carport, flee gea.

mobility

or hond_lcop
noecj !ipply. Financed
by Former• "'ome
Admlnlllrotlon. Equol
Houolng 'Opportunity.

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2

'

,

6:30P.M.

FOREVER

St. Rt. 7

\

EVElY
SAT. NIGNT .

PH. 614-992-5591

CARPENTER SERVICE · Call 614-992-6637

'"

Bashan Building

Uconaod 111d BondH

JAYMAR

539 Bryan Place
Middleport, Ohio

POMEROY·Hyiell Run Rd.-Hunter's Dream-7 1/2 acres
ol wooded land on a nice black top road. $8,500

(\

ID/3Df891fn

•Roofing

1

'

150 per 1,000
Delivered To

Pomerov,11 Ohio

12-5-tfn

742·2097

'

Saw Logs

Windows

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or

I•

,

OPEII FRI. &amp; SAt

•Insulation

'

'

992-5335 or 915-3561
Across From Post Office
POM!ROY,OHO ,

Call
614-992-5528 or
385-8227

INSULATION

TRULY EXCEPTIONAL! Located 1n Middlepoo- 2 story
lrame with 10 rooms. 5 SA's including carpet &amp; drapes. 2
112 baths , fireplace, woodbumer, gas fieat. 1 car garage w/
workbench , shed &amp; patio complete with furniture &amp; gas grilL
J130 sq.n. olspacious-elegantliving COME SEE I ASKING
$79,900

MIDDLEPORT-North Second-Corner Lot-Could be Residential or Commercial. The house has 3-4 bedrooms, 1 11
2 baths , 2 lots, garage, lots of insulation, and a carport.
Great Location.
$26,900

.

8~ E -,c ._,atmg
84 Elttt'triCal &amp; RelrtgMt~hon
85 Gcnt!fal Hauling
86 Mobtltt Hum u R ~p a tr
87 Upholsturv

Ohio Pallet Co.

has nice homesites
available for up to
80' homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33
Only $75 per mo.

J&amp;L

re~trve•

12 oz. Cans

'

B 1 Home ln1provernenh

-82 Plumbmg 1St Hll•tllg

markdown
on shoes

·

COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

I'OMEIOY,

righl
Farmora B~nk .ond tho
Saving•
~:;::::::J::=~~~;;:t========:r:==:;;~~~~~ Company
to r•j••t. ony or all bida

Corn Losta Pop
Soft
.
D
ri.nks
Flake·s.

Services

befo;:o;~~sing

aubm tted.

Bath Tissue

'

Newly Re-done

217 E. iocollll

DOTIIE TURNER. Broker................................. 992-5692
BRENDA JEFFERS............................................ 982-3056
DARLINE STEWART.......... ............................. 9f2-6J65
SANDY BUTCHER............................................. 992-5371
SHeRYL WALTERS. ••• :..................................... 367-D421

Ca•nptng Eq11lpmen1

79 C11mpet10 &amp; Motor Ho111 mo

KEN'~E:~~ANCE

- ···

Aaou Fro• PMt Office

MIODLEPORT·If you want privacy near town with a great
view then we have the place for roo. On !hi S6.nacres you
can build your dream home. There is water &amp; electric:
available.
HAS A GREAT PRICE AT JUST $17,SQO

78

Merchandise

FHmts-sm up

992·5335 or
915-3561

MIDDLEPDRT·S. Second-A roomy eKe&lt;:utive type 9 room
home with 4 bedrooms and 3 lu ll baths. This modern
kitchen is &amp;~ery woman's dream with the solid cherry
cabinets, Jenn-airrange, Corian counter tops, dishw&amp;;sh~r.
and island work area . Now on to the fam1ly room w1th tts
skylights, cathedral ceilings, peactltre8 doors &amp; windows,
and beautiful fireplace with a buck stove insert. .The man of
the house wilt enJOY !he 2 car garage with storage over top ,
the new wiring and the lull base men!. Bring the lamily to see
this home toclay .
PRICED AT $79,900

7 1 Autos lor Sale
72 Tru cks lor Siile
73 Vitni&amp;4W0'§
74 Motorcyc lus
75 Bo;us &amp; Motors lor S•le
76 · Auto Parts&amp; Ac ces souC!I
77 Aut o Rep ;m

IIFIIG'EIArOI!-S100 vp
IAH&amp;n-c..-n...-sm up . 1a.11:t1

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SYRACUSE-4th St.-Need an extra income? You can have
it il you buy this 4 bedroom , 2 bath OupleK located close to
the park &amp; pool also included is an eKtra .trailer lol.
ALL FOR $28,000

Hav &amp; Gram
Stted &amp; Frrtth1111

II~::=:::::::::::=:::::::=:;r;::======:::;Tr=:;;;;;;:;;;:;;=:::;']r;:=======:;
F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;
USED A"UANCES .
WAN.TED
REMOVAL
90 DAY WAIIANn
wASH IIS- $100 up
PICK • A• PAIR LOW Gr1 dI 0a k
Pruning and lancfscarlng
Dtns-s69 ., ,., '
POMEROY

AlL 11&amp;1115 .
lrlnt It In Or We
Pick Up.

· HYSELL RUN RD.-Two nice laying 2 acre lots. These
would make bealitilul homesiles.
$6,000

ltve~to ck

Trans ortalion

House h&lt;lld Good~
62 - Sporting .Goodli
53 Anttques
54 Mtsc . M&amp;tch..,dtse
55 Butldin g Supplies
56 Pets lor SM e
57 Mu Sical lnstrument s
58 Frmts &amp; Vegt!litbles
i9 for Sale or TraMe

OVEN ,IEPAIR

DANVILLE-Red Hili Road-You 've got to see this home. It
is beautifully decorated and has plenty of room . You'll love
the 2 lull baths with the master bath having a garden tub.
The house has 3 bedrooms, formal dining room. family
room, and living room . All sitting on approx. 3 acres.
$100,000

Farm EqutpmUflt
Want ed to 8uv

51

IIIKIO ovENS-179 ''

RUTLAND-Beech Grove Rd .-You'll love lhis 3 bedroom,
1 112 story home. The house has cistern well and LCCO
water being installed. Home is sining on approx. 2 acres of
nice laying land.
$26,900

Head ·

. I;J®FJJ.t

Rt!p a~r

ljhihiMHII

Real Estate General

205 North Second Avt.
Middleport, OH

61
62
63
64
'6.9

Business Services

Darrell S1archer.

608 EAST MAIN

lb.

Fd•ms lor Sate
Busmess Butldmgi
lots &amp; Acr eage
Real E&amp;tate W.-.tcd

lnstf\IC I •~tr~

992·2259

lb.

31
3I
35
)6

14 _B usineu Tram1ng

Public Notice

PUBUC NOTICE
Nolie• 11 hereby given
.thet the undereigned filed in
Cate No. 27287 application
to the Common Pleas Court
Prob1te Oivi1ion of Meige
County, Ohio for en order to
change hi1 name to Tony

Homt~s for Sale
Mobtltt Hom as lor S~le

H ous&amp;s lor Rent
Mobile Homes hn Att1L
Farms· lor Attllt
44 Apa11ment tor Rent
45 ,• Fwnished Rooms
46 S pau tor Rent
47 Wanted to Rent
48 Equtptnlffit lor Rent
49 Fo r leillle

1 1 11elo W01n1 od
12 SihJ~I•On Wanted
13 Insuran ce

Mason Co . WV
Area Cude )04

MtddlqJurl
Pomttroy
Chester
Po111and
Let ;n1 F.Jlls
R;u:me
Rutland

Public Notice

BULLETIN BOARD

•
SPLIT FRYER
•
IC en
reast

till'

.fu//owirl!.[ tdi'/lh,im· ••xdianJ.:''"--·

'A cl;.sstl •t.!'ll ;uht~tliW•IlL~II ttl..t o.: ctl tn The Datly StJn tulel t e~
ct!pl
cl ;1sstltt..'CI tl•spl.ty . 8u s uu..o~s Card .tntl lt..~Jill noltc~s)
w11l .thu ·•~peoilr th tlw Pt Plu;IS;mt Rt!HISit!t and lh11 Galh
puhs D;uly Tt•btti\IJ. tcilch•nu qvm 18.000 ho111 1:1S

Not Less Than 70% Lean

('lll:i'f

31
32

41
42
43

Employ men!
Ser VICes

flll~' ·' ·

Farm Supp ltes
&amp; Ltveslock

Real Es tale

1 Card ot'lhanks
2 In Mem01y
J Annouceml..'lll s
4 Giveaway
5 H011ppy Ads
6 lo11 a nd Found
7 Yilld So~l e lpa!d •n aclvancol
·8 Pubhc Sale &amp; Au&amp;tion
9 Want vel to Buv

MASTIC®'I'HE NATION'S FINEST
REPLACEMENTWINOOWS

1 oUibeltableenettr••ri••

-ur---

'oCu&amp;tam fit·IIO il'lllallll.IOD 11*1. .1
poillloa
I·

oNe"',..,..

C4Jifi , _
~ tla.,

,.0:.. .:.:._

-fll.flrcr..,.cloollts\ -

..-

�. '
'
'

Pa;ge-10"-'Th•~

D1111v Sentinel

Pomeroy-·Middleport, .Ohio

SNAFU ® by Bruce Beattie

3 Annoui1Cements

12

Road construction 11 allpttltd

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

41 Houses for Rent

71

Towns"hlp rd. 9i culvert. lnaola·
tlon wor~ ·la being dona b~
Dr~vo Basic Materials Co. Inc.
dlt~ttlly off SR 338, and an U·
ens road will be auilablt to
motorists.

dull... Will PIV rent. Pl1111 call

btlw11n aa.m.-12 nOon. 614-446·
0603.
..

Would Like A Place To Live
Clos-. To Town, Wltl'l Aoomate
To Wast'! Clothts, Fix Dinner In
Allum Will Pay. Rent. 814-4463658 II No Answ.r Pltau Call
Baek.

Mnt Aru Singles By Cholet
Not Chanet. Write: Slnglts, P.O.
Box 1043, Gallipolis, Ohio 45031.

Giveaway

deck, pallo, country uttlng, 10
min. from Gallipolis. S351Jimo.
Dep. &amp; 2 ref't. req'ed. 614-44671104.
Small Unlurnlstlld House 3
Rooms, Ball'!, Air Condltlonlng1
C11pettd, Dla~es, Scratnea
Porch, Prlult Ptrklng, 614·4462602.

"l

l·male dog, mad. size, mix
breed, approx. 1-yr old, black,
lin, &amp; wt'ilte to a good home,
&amp;14·992·35n

14

2 Baagla puppies approx. 3

Retreln
NowiiiSouthallltrn
Bualna• C~iege, Spring .Valltv 2 bdrm moblla home tor rent,
Plaz..t. Call Today, 614·446-4367(1 approx. 3 miles from Pomeroy &amp;
Middltport, Iotti ettctrk:, 614·
Atgllttratlon 190-05-12148.
992-5858

mos. old. 6'\4-446·2052.
5 puppies, 8 wks old, Mother
Australian, 304-..882·2855.

Business
Training

(

0

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

)

c
'

2br Mobile · Home On Llrgt
Privata Lot, S2151Mo. Security
Deposit, RtlereneiS. · 614·4462236, 614·446-2581.

p.m.

Trailer &amp; lot tor stle, Ocala Nat'l
Fqrest Florida, 2·bdrm, 2-balh,
614·992·61113
Trailer In Htnderson tor rent.
wllh washtr &amp; dryer. 304·773·
5248 anytime.

local Dental Ottice Seeking
Full-Time Hyganlst, Par1·Time
May Bt Arranged. Send Resume
To: CLA 104, CIO Gallipolis Dally
Tribune, 825 Tl'lhd Avenue, Oat·
lipolis, OH 45631.

Will do housecleaning. Ex·
pertenced. 614-446-1715 .

Financial
Business
Opportunity

a

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBUSHING CO.
re commands that you do busi·
ness with peoplt you know, and
NOT lo send monty thro~h tht
mall until you hava lnvesttgated
the offering.

Rick Pearson Auction Company,
full time auctiQnear, complete
auction sarvlca. Licensed Ohio,
West Virginia, 304-n3-5785 .

9

Wlll care lor btd patient or lnvllld In my home In Racine, OH,
614·949-2393.

VENDING ROUTE : Gat Rich
Ouick1 No Way! But Wa Have A
Good, Steady, Aftordable, Busi·
ness. Won't last. 1-800-284·
8363.

Wanted to Buy

Honda Odyssay, Red, modal In
good cond. Call Kent 614·446·
l3TT.
Wanted to buy, Standing tlmbtr,
Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614·992·
5449.
Top Prices Paid : All Old U.S.
Coins, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
t51 Saeo!!d Avenue, Gallipolis.

Real Estate
Uva-ln housekeaperl com·
panion tor 97 yr. old lady, avail·
ablt now or near lutura, nursing
ski lls not required, call collect
614·698·2755

31 Homes tor Sale
Buy now: Low Interest, just
reduced $38,500. 3 BR, 1-112
bat~ full carpel, 2 cer garage.
751 ::;;.R. 141. 614-446·7878.
Double Wide With 1 Acre Land,
Gtlllpollt Ferry, 3 Bedrooms, 2
Battis, El1ctrie, Central Air,
$37,000. 304-675-7217.

Want to:

PIN

Split entry, 2112 acres, 8 miles
out Sand Hilt, 2,240 sq tt,
swimming pool, 2 decka, 304·
895·3624.

down EXTRA

Trailers For Rent; Also Trailer
Lots. 614-446-1279.

44

Apartment
tor Rent

$173 Per Month Will Buy You A
New 1992 Deluxe 111x70, 2 Bath
Home With A Wtrm, Cozy
Woodbuming Areplact. In·
cludtl Culclc. Delivery, Setup,
Skirting, SI•PI, BlockslAnd Up
To 8 Months ... Fr.t••• ot Rtnt.
Llmlt•d Time OHar. To Sat A
Time To S11 Thl Home Call 1·
800-466·7611 And Ask For
E.lalnt Or Brenda.
1 bdrm. bas•ment 1pt., fur·
nished, utillli81 paid, $200
monthly, 614·949-2526 tfter 6pm
1&amp;2-bdrm apts, In Rtelnt OH,
unfurnished, 614-992-6569

2 BR, CA, washer &amp; dryer
hookup, no pats. $250/mo. 614·
446-44111.

2br Apartment, Located, 466-1/2
Fourlt'i Avenue,
Gltlipolls.
Stove, Ratrigarator, Wallr Furnlshad. $23S/mo. $100 Deposit.
614-446·3870.
2BR,
bath, kllchln... Newly
ramodalad. Nice arel, big yard.
S3251mo., $325 dep. Days 514·
446·1157, Eve. 614-8g4-4501.
Apt. lor rant $175, house tor rent
$100, Pomeroy. Apt. lor rant
Middleport ttoo, 614-992·7511
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 535 Jackson Pike
from $192/mo. Walk to stlop &amp;
movies. Call 614-446·2568. EOH .

32 Mobile Homes

Complatly Furnished Small
House, S250iffio. Plus Ulilllies.
And Deposit. 614·445~338 . Call
19n Castle, central air, under Befort 7p.m.
~ --"
pinning, porch, part. lurnlstlod, Furnished Apartm1nt, 1bf, next
$3000, 614·742-2369
to library, parking, cerdrel hat!,
197314x6B Shultz, mobile home, air, references. 614-446·033~ •.

tor Sale

CA&amp;H?H

good cond, 614-5192·2111

1974 Holly Park, 12x70, 1112
baths, all electric, completely
rernod•led, $'10,500. Investment
wlilstli $7,900. 304-m-5840.

I:B~·:··~r;;o~7P~-~m~.:i::r~~~~

1979 Cttlrmont 14x70, 3 bed·
rooms, 1 bath, wlunderpennlng
and front porch, gas heal,
central 1ir, must movt , $8,50(1.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators,
rengas. Shgga Apptlancu,
Upper Alvw Rd. Basicit Slona
Crttt Mottl. Call 614-446-7398.

PICKENS FURNITURE
New/Used
Housetlotd turnlstllng. 112 mi.
Jarriet'io Rd. Pl. Pl11sanl, WV,
ea\1304-675·1450.
RENT2 OWN
614-446-3158
V1'111 Furniture
Sofa &amp; Cl'lalr, $11.10 Wtek;
Recliner, $5.47 Watk, Swivel
Rocker, $3.63 WMk.Bunk Btd
Com'j)late Sll.41 WHk, 4 Orawtr
Chest, $3.26 Wtek; Poster Btd·
room Suitt, 7 pc., $16.67 Week,
Includes Badding .Country Pine
Ointllt With Bench &amp; 4 Chairs,
$10.98 WHk.OPEN: Monday
Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to 6p.m.,
Sundty 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
Mil., Off Route 7 On Route 141,
In Centenary.
Sale On All Carpet In Stock!
Vln~l, $4.99 ~d. Carpi! $4.00 Up.
MoOohtn Carpets. 614-446-7444.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; Used
furniture, heat1n, Wnttm &amp;
Work bools. 614-446-3159.
Uttd Tappan microwave tor
11le. 614-446-3498.

SupJaf es
Block, brick, IIWer pipes, win·
dowl, llntals, etc. Claude Win·
tara, Rio Grande, OH Call 614·
245-5121.

56

Antiques

Buy or 1111. Alvtrlrtt Antlqun,
1124 E. Main Str11t, Pomeroy.
Hour1: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. ta 6:00
p.m., Sundly 1:00 to 6:00 p.m.
814·992·2526.

1989 Ford Escort, LX, Steel
Greyl Top Condition, Call 614·
256 .. 554.
25 ln. console color t.v. Good
cond. $150. 614·446·27'13 ..

Bnuutul St . Benard puppies,
full blooded bYI not reglster11d,
taking deposits, 614·742~2025
Dregonwynd Cttlery Persian,
SiameH and Himalayan kittens.
614·446·3844 attar7 p.m.

61 Farm Equipment

Weal . Gallipolis, 614-44&amp;-9m;
Wlda IIIKiion new &amp; UNd farm
lraetors &amp; lmpltmtnla. Buy,

1111, trada, 8:00·5:00 weekdays,
Sat. 1111 Noon.
W•ritld : Used farm equipment,
anything you want to 1111. 614·
256·1308, 614·256-6040 Attar
6p.m.

now buying all ,entry tickets to
Ohlo Lottery's cash explosion
game, call 614·992·3703

Baby crib, b.asslnttl, h~h chair,
ewing, rocker, drening ttblt &amp;
car Hit. Furt slz• btd, twin t~lz•
bed, compl.tt colfH tabtt &amp;
end pltetl. 304-&amp;75-4548.

'l'rtm yonr clntter· into (~ush,
Sell it the easy way ... by phone,
no nee1l to lem,e your· home.
Place your clttssified ad tmlay!
15 words m·less, 3 days,

3 papers,$6.00

Big 48A, 2 bath, Dskoll dream
home buih tor you $2SI,il5. 614181·7311 Display model now
opon.
Big Llttls John wood burning
stave $100 with pipe. 614-:.u:;.

LiVeStOCk

=2~~~~~T~ra~U~o~r~~~w~Pa~l~n,~.~Nn=
Tlr.. , $1,195; 1990 AQHA Geld·
lng, SliOO; 8 Year O.d Paint Mart,
$650. 814-286-6522.

limousine Bull, registered with
C:f:.rs. Call titer 5 p.m. 614-388·
Will hlullivntock. 614-446-1514.
Yearling Angus And CtlarO!als
Built For Safs. 614!-446-4447.

""·

Transporlation

El.clrtC tlol Wlt•r tenk, ~2 gal,
good cond, $!10, 814-1112-3117

Short Time On Job1 Past Crtdll
History A Problem? Many
Rtposstaatd Mobile Homes To
Choou From. Sm111 Down
Payment. Call 1·800·589-5nt

45

Furnished
Rooms

Apt tor rent by mon!h or week,
304-882· 2566.

1D MocNIII~Nr
· NewaHour

(()a Clnd

...-..

(!) Stale of

1Di

J\

•

rrrr!?:J-

Y-IATCH ANP

Jfwft,Y ~fPA'~ (~, ,

'-~
~--

·- •- .- .......··

_:ct"
c; ( :r

JIJJr A) SOON Af
CAl" .fiNP !VIY

· ·6~- ~d~•;

@)~~ •A . ..,.
..~,'"'o·

DOf'I'T WOfflY, SIR, J•tt 11AVE
"(Oilf (ZOJ.fy. FIXfP

"I

&lt;;&gt;-~""" L
•. .....

'riAMM!~ I

~

1979 Cl'lrysler Cordoba, new
paint, new tires, 'S'IOOD, 304·6756155alt:tr 5pm

9 . _ __ __ _

' ~------- Jo _ _ _ _ __
2 . - - -- - .'J •.- - - -- - ll.~----4, _ _ _ _ __
12.-------

1.'1. _ _ _ __

14.-________

r:

·'·-------6,
_ _ _ _ _ __
7. _ _ _ _ __

15...________

"·-----'
·'
446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

'"

·-· ·.

•

COUNTRY ACREAGE
Near Ctrptnttr (Athena area),
over S ICrH : PJirl metdowland,
part wooded. Nice mtnl-l1rm
aite with strum crouing.
MobUa homu o.k. $7_,1!50,
Otpoelt $750 paymsnts :'Jl22.
Owner financing. Call owner 1·
800·921·21111.

-

, .

..

'""""&gt;

,

'll li91 ov '-E• w

1·8 ·"n

Rentals

51

ALLEYOOP

2 pr dropao, 57" long,

cplor wlllgltt blue, like

~
ca..

Dtpoo~ And
Rlf~rtnc'"e Alqulrtd. Na Pets.

614-44&amp;-417!1.

vloRuleo

PROM&amp;LY \~+JAt B ~
AT elNq SINEi.

OUR NEW PICINCIF3'~
l'tlLO Me !HAT eEFORC
He r::AME HeR,e .. .

(I)

Dooflle _..,, iJ.D.

Kalhe~no

and Raymond · ·
rounfte with friends from ll1e
past Stereo. C
ID (!) MGyoroJMinlmtlm
Wogoo A focus on blue
collar worl&lt;ers du~ng a trend
of lower Incomes and fewer
benefita. tt:OO) Q
Ill De .loki Ond the
F.....,. Jake worf&lt;a
undercover as a ~ket
10 lind 1 killer. Stereo. Q
iiJ MOVIE: DrtWo Lllo
LlghlnfiiG 12:00) Steroo. Q
NtlhVtlle - Stereo.
~ Colllto Bllkllbll
Boston Colage at Vilonov1

HC!~M 1niprovtmtnts:'
Vtar1 Experltnet On Older 1

Cur1ie

Homta. Room Addition~,
Foundttion Work, Rooting,
Kitchens And hths. Frwe Ettlmattsl A•f•renctt1 No Job To•
Big Or Small! 614-441.0225.
·

WATCH

out:,. TATER II

TH' PAR:.vN'S

A WILD KICKER II

Fratman'a Plumbing And Heat·:
lng, '"·256-1111.
Ron's TV: SaMet, IPKIItlllng1
In Zenith tlso servicing mosl
othtr br11nds. House calls, tlso'
some "appliancs • repairs. WV,
304-576-2398 Ohio 614446· 2454 .•

ACROSS

Opening lead: t K

Antwet' IO Pr"loUI Puu ..

""'"-

forest

42 Earphon11
44 Goddna of
earth

46 Naurtal'laa

47 Sltuala
50 Roman

bronze
51 Belli
52 Outragtou•

18 Go bad
1g Of ollro
21 Confection
24--ina
poke
25 Of tiny

nest

IPICIS

27 Oowity duck
31 Republican
party,
fomiHI~Y

32 Actor
llonllnd
34 Golf term
35 Jocob'a lwln
37 Cuotard
IPPII

3g YIH with a

57 Voko58 Edlblt
IIIWetd
59 Row
60 Hoovtno
61 Hiding piiCO
62 Chongooto
leather
5 Lure
I - Angolaa
7 Reoclr ·for ac·
lion 12 wda.)
8 BIUOI linger
- Smllh
9 Maturing
ogont .
10 HIIWkiYI

DOWN
1 Borrollobbr.l
2 Beam of Nght
3 Hacke,· great
Bobby"'-Strongo por"oon (11.1

Stoll
11 Ploywright
-Coward

16 Demurely
20 WHkondwelcomlng
abbr.
21 Encloaurea
22 Developod
23 Allan country
24 Slnge1- ·
Fronklln
•
26·Aclteu
Gerdntr
28 ExUngulllt
29 Wonl Hill¥
IOLHHt
33 R1111rd
38 Parhflht
oyo
•
38 Mort IIeure :
41 Wily
•
43 Remov. iodlum chloride
from
45 Slngor-

a

(L)

•

a Llny 111ng u..t

1111 F - Dowtlng MM~ye11011111111111

Dowling Mlkl to pro.. tho
Innocence of a !11Ift who may

be hla oon. (R) Storto. Q
t:30(I)e Night Court Horry,has
ll1e chance to give Mat

"-

Tonne an award. C

build patiO COVII"'I, dtekl,
tcrHned roomt, put up vinyl
aiding or . trailer skirting. 814-

ASTRO-GRAPH

245·~52.'

Plumbing &amp;
!!eating

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

never cltlntd or w11hld, 304875-4583.

Electrical &amp;
Rllfrlgeratlon

........ 1112

fhe year -

IIIII t.M Jules
and Mlka toke Marty with
them on lhelr wild weekend.
Steroo. Q
10:00We OOUIIntum LNp
Sam btcornoa an ector
who'l promoting tire of hlo older lover. Stereo. Q

47 Thlllond'l
ntfthbor
48 Plgrn oound
4g Pol
$() Culturt

(I) Anything

llonahlp work. Mall '$2 plus a long, self·
addreaaad, slamped . envelope ·IO
Matchmakll[, c/o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.
AQUARIUS l.lon.r »Fob. 11) Don'l
1ooa In lhe lowol now regarding sec:ret
· desires lhat, thus far, you've been unable to lulflll. Tile harvest Is much
nearer than you n\ay reellze. Keep

you form loday for apecl81 purposes
should work oul u both parties antlcl·
pate. o,. could tum oul to be slgn~i­
cenl and enduring.
LEO jJuty IS-Aug. 22) Your in8Uncta
are on largtl regarding something you
perceive as having P!)tentlal value. Be
P8,11ent. hOwever, becauMit will require
effOr:tlo change It from a llabiHty to an
plugging,
asaet.
PIICII (Fob. 20 March 20) Several VIIIQO (Aug. ZS.hpl. 22) Eliciting
nowpoopltyou'verecentlymetares~et- ~could be In lhe offing at lhls
lnlloly worth knowing beltar. Make It a · "time-. your soclai Hie is concoined.
pojnt lo _,,,.. ol cornmunicallon 10 You ate now In a cycle that may aneach one.
,
hance your popularity more lhan .
· ARIII (Illicit :ti·AprH11IIn order _10 , before.
~ effocllveloday, yoli mull not ali\lle LIIIIA (hjlt 11-Gk.D) Your probayouriUihorlty. Diilr-,_ltsconbe biHMI for oubotontt.tlloocmln ~
IICIIie'M bJ keeplrig I loW fl!oiiW and motlrill llloiro look Oxceplktnifly
pulling ..._from bohlnd tho - · prOfllltinO now. ~ pdelltve trondt

TAUIIUICA!irii•TT i •llflllllrllnl couki-IOUtOtho_.l_.

could be an exu -~ cltangelln your 1111 could bogln ICOIII'IO coout llou. 22) Your oblllty
~- one for you. Frllnda """ ploy kay· to tranaplro "*J. Allo, lriln4l ond to 1111 or pOl,. ptiiCiuctl or , _ In 1t1tp1ng you ,..._ your con11Cto you mlldl In plooM you lt8ve 1
Ill-• bat·
lllllr8llonl
coukl_, prove vwy . . . - .
w now.lhlll ft hal for quiiiiCimlllmt.
CAPIICORII CDoo. ..... 11) Don'( 0
I .,.,.. . , Opporlunl- Wltlt you ,..IOhllly contrOl could
feltful Of tlldnt on 11VW111111d11u till to ltiCIIIII yow • • • • or llold- · PfO'M 10 Ill biiWII•••·
~I«Juttr. Unc1W- oand~ lnga lllnluglt ,..... llton your IAOITT- Cillo- D Ilea Ill ....
lltfl may not Ill a 00011 - · but ua\111- lopk ...,llDniiiY promlllng II
dllll 111 11111 ume , _
IUIIIMOflllllllntl-- Trylnt 1111111 tlllll. ~~~~open mind lllton WhoraJaurGOIIHIIIlclal.,.,. . . aan.
lfMIIIupallnlkiii-'ITlttAI- · til 1Mt1 to tho mlilarlal tMqll II of .«**IICC. You mlgll1 nol,fiMI tho 111(11
Mlldlmllcor con ttorp you ~.
.
•
you'rolloplng far unto ft 1 lime to wrap
undel'lllnd what to do to melle tho Nil· CAIICIII C..,_ :11-.lutr 22) Alllol up tho - · :

...._.In,._

.,

II
\

(1)(I) (()

..

. medium

63 Bird (comb.
lonn)

54 TV'IPeeples
55 TV co.
56 Word of
IIHOI

.

e Civil w.. A ftlm

star lliat 10 ytln hla wile biCI&lt;
In I OWI[buckilng (juel.
Steroo.
·
1D (!)
Will TNOII tot
Alnorloll? Or8duatel from
.top coflegel commit
·-lo-rglor

:r= tho=·
r=a·sw.o·
8

ICitool
In dilti leis. 1:001 . .

·41-

I

of llllgll ~ chaH

·

1110111: !ll!lt a =·~
!i!lrf-!2:::1;1 ' .
1D •

Alllllto 1111

.'

UZDYH

'H W D

MEZRV

_YZD

AWYVD

1111 700 Clolt With Pat

lila' 11101\
'
111:01 (() IIOYtl: Cllllllllllll
12:001
I
, . . . Cllloll ond Ct-. ""

Ea1t
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Norlll

3+
I'
6+
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

7•

pedeolal
40 Tropical rain

member

1:00 (I) a Sllnflld A subway ride
lums adventurous as Jerry
meats an undreaaad
passenger. Stereo. []

West

+
+

The World Abnanac®Crossword Puzzle
1 For~head

e

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

gleton agains~ a grand slam is often a
bad idea, as you cannol hope to get a
quick rult. However, here the lead removes a dummy entry prematurely.
Declarer wins trick one m the dummy,
ruffs a diamond, cashes one top
trump, plays a heart to tte ace and
ruffs another diamond. But now he
cannot jloth get to dummy to ruff the
last diamond and then return to dummy to draw trumps. without letting
West score a club ruff. Declarer would .
be left to rue lhe lack of the spade seven or eighl in lhe dummy.
dummy reversal .
Who is lhe Sesame Street charac• It would have been a different slory ter' The Count, of course.
@ , _ IIIEWVANJI ENI US lUll! AMM.
if West had led his club. Leading a sin·

5 Lump
9 Own (Scotl
12 Dltcloet
13 Flrot-rate
(2 wdo.l
14 Sllcky otuH
15 PDIII
11 Flock

8:05 (I) MOVIE: Blue Howoil
(2:001
8:30(1) Wondor VHII Kevin
undergoes lhe grueling
torturelia. driving teet
Stereo.
all D .,_IJn lktdtll
Sopnlt's daughter Sylvia
announces she is dlvorel~
her huablnd. (A) Stereo.
Monloc M1nllon Stor .

+KQI09 1

Soutb
I
4
St

One of the inhabitants of Sesame
Street would make a first-class bridge
player. Which one'
Today's deal requires an ability that
thi•characler has to overllowing. AI·
ter an aggressive auction involving a
limit major-suit raise and lour cuebids, South was in seven spades. West
led the diamond king. How would you
plan the play'
You have live club tricks and the
heart ace. So you must win seven
trump tricks. These can come only
from four winners and lhree ruffs in
hand. Ruff the diamond lead and cash
lhe spade ace. getting the bad news.
Now play a club to dummy, ruff a dia·
mond high, cross back to dummy with
a heart to the ace and ruff the last dia·
mond high. Lead the spade eight to
dpmmy's nine, draw lhe last two
trumps, discarding the two heart los·
ers lrom hand, and claim - a classic

PrimoNiwa []
~ Blq lira- Joko Stereo.

Complete Mobile Home Sat ·Ups,
R!lpslrs ; Commerlcal, Asaldantitl lmprovtmtnta. Including:•
Plumbing, Elactricel. insurenct ,
Cltlms AC:cepCed. 614·256·1611.

84

By Pbitlip Alder

a

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

....

'10 9 7

The bridge .expert \
of Sesame Street

IE: Parry Mlt1011:
of the Shootlug
Star (2:00)
-iiJ Muillel', She W-I;!
1111 Eddy Arnold: An lnllile
Look Ralph Emery vlaits"NNth
famous country singer Eddy
Arnold. (1 :00) Stereo.

..

'KJ 2
tAI0602
+7 63 2

tAKQB7

The

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

EAST

SOUTH

7:35 (I) S.nlord and Son
8:00 W 8 UniOivod Myolortao

Stereo.
liD.

1·1·11

•...

WEST
+6432
' 'QBS3
t KQJ B

+a

(l)~acNIIIr

41 !:louses for Rent
2 Badrodli1 Houoa,

of

Wast Virginia at

Tow vehicle, 1i84 Escort 4dr .
with tow bar and light packtg ..,
good condition, 614·949-2941

new

W Fr.: Q

OM1cGyvor
D Collftl iBI 111111 Wake
Forest at VIrginia (L)
a Monoyllnl
1111 Tile W111Dn1
7:05 (I) Addlmo Family
7:30 (I). lUI Jeoperd¥1 []
(j) Now II Con iB1 'toiCJ
(I) !ntertalnmont Tonight
Slareo. Q
\II• Moiried...Witll Chlldron

Massachuselts (LI

EEKANDMEEK

NORTH
tJ1091

PHILLIP
. ALDER

dulles for a talk-show job.
Stereo. []
ID Blue Wetar HunDiving wilhoul oxygen lanks;
40-year-old undersea
phOtograpny. Narrator: Peter
Fonda. (1:00) Stereo.
(()a lUI Collftl Bllkotlllll

Wtnling to go Into lh used car
pans business, ovtr 40 cars,
over 2,000 pans In' stock. Call
after 6:00p.m. 614--445·31172.

'"""1-

UNSCRAMBLE FOR
ANSWER
.

t971

about John Wilkes Booth. (R)
Stereo. []
(l) MOVi!: Howling V: Tile
frllllrth (R) (2:00)

.,_

Will

Household
Goods

No. 3 below.

+A J 4

Two historians make claims

Davis
S.W-Vac
Strvlc:t,
GtorgH Creek Rd. Parte, tupplln, pickup, tnd delivery. 814l
445-0294.

Mercha ndise

Slip

'!t'

Ole Fomltr Feud

Roam tddllions, tiding, roollng1
vinyl rtplactmsnt windows:
carpentry by At Tromm, 614-742·
2328. CALL COLLECT
'
3 Acres: Old Houtt And Btrn,
Htll Fttt, H1lf Hill. Swtnn Cr.. k
Roed. Call 614·256-6554.

you dovolop from

• A6 4

a So I Star Stereo.
a Crooofl,.

Auto Pans &amp;
Accessories

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uneortelillonal lltlllmt gu1r11n··
tn. Locel rtltrtncn tumishtd.
FrN Htimatea. Ctll coUtct 1·
614·237.()488, day or ntghl.
Rogtrt BaHmar.t Waterproofing.

ct.ucki• q••••d

by filling In the missing words

•

BRIDGE

Q5- or Fortuna Q

,

·.

Kawasaki KDX 80 Oh1
exc cond, used very litue,
$500. 304·576·2919.
:

Home
Improvements

.

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS IN SQUARES

·Camero ·
lite Stato

(l) Dlnouura Fran
relinquishes her hOusehold

New gas tanks, body parts, one
ton truck wi'IHis, radiators,
floor mats, etc. D 6 R Auto,
Ripley, WV. 304-372·3933 or 1·
800-273-8585.
.

•

all Curront Affo~ !;I
liD
• Star
Tlie Noll
Qonorollon
·
01•~Enrta nmem Tonight
Stereo.

Ntwtr

Emaraon ·mlcrowava $35; allroo71
·,:,_..:A~u::t:.:O;;:S_;t.:,o:..rSs:,::l:.:e:...__
w/apukarl $50; airwave com-puttrtzed axtrclu blkt $75. 614·
441-7055.

t;r

Budget Transmissions, Used 6
rebulll, :starting at $99; Auto
Parts. 614·245-5677, 614-3792263 .

•

just an------··?"

SCIAM-t.m .ANSWERS
'"":1
Florai-Tasty-Cholri-Welghi-WHO LOST
Some films could only have been cast in one way.
Screen tests were given and the parts were given to
·the ones WHO LOST.

8:35 (I) Andy Q~ffitll
7:00Wa Slllo of till Sllle

J.:_Il_.....:.M..:o..:.to:..r:..:c:!y..:c:..:le;;:s;__
1

81

I

1111 New Zorro Q

· OK ... OK ...

1986 S·10 Blazer 4x4, blue, 5speed, ask $5,000, call 614-9854492

Services

8

•

clark

took a short break. A woman
came
upthis
behind.
meorand
asked, 'Is
line open
are

OScooby Doo

1986 Bronco II, XLT 4 wheel
drive, V.fJ auto, air, Pw, PO, 2
tone paint, running boards,
original paint, no rust, Zit-Bart·
unCiercoating &amp; clear coal. Must·
see to appreciate, asking
$5,500. 304-575·2919.

62 Wanted to Buy

e AIIC Nlwa

@SporloCent.r

1982 CJ7 jeep, 304-882-3397.

79

.

(l) The Jllforoon~
(I) lnaldo Edlllon

1986 Dodge Caravan LE., loaded,
clean, 97,000 miles, NADA
"Book" value- $5900 . Asklno
$4900. 304-675-5306.

I continued to unload my

grocery ftB.rl while the

I
you
I~7•r1:..:.lr:8;....;1;:..:.;1..:.:..TI~ e eo'"P'•" "'•
L.: : : : · : : : ·: : : : : · : : : ·

OJ DeCBSNiwoQ

1975 GMC 4x4 Shortbtd 350:
Auto, Everything Works, Clean,
Truck. $1,500. 614·446-TT28.

76

I 1• I'

f.:f!'\t"'

liD • Mdr Clrlftltl1

73 Vans &amp; 4 wo·s

&amp; Livestock

8ft. ChOYrolallrU&lt;k bod. Call al· 63
tar 5 p.m. 614-446-3243.

Olds Toronado 191'9 low miles,
ahtrp, tsking $1495 obo. must
sol! 614-992-:f4711
.
Stall9f'Wigon 1971, Chtverotel
Malibu, aulo, PB, PS, ntw tirtt,
$800, 614·992·2117
We buy 1111 or trade. Jim·
Cochran Auto Center, 5th and-'
Viand St, Pt. Pit. 304-675--1985.

IJ

R0 y S I
1--.;.:...:,.,:;..;.-=.,-...l"'
1 1 ~
=·~:·
,..
L I P E MA

\Zl

Mintture Dachahund puppies, 1989 Chav S·B, Blk, axe cond,
$200, :W4-675-3526.
Silverado, 27,000 milts, all op· ,
AKC Poodle puppies, toys &amp; tlons, $9,000. 304·895·3638 after
tiny toys, miniature Schnauzer, S'OOPM.
malt, silver, Coohlille 614-667· 1989 Ford F-150 Custom 23,0(10
3404.
Milts, 6 Cylinder, 5 Spead, Bad
AKC registered Bo•er puppies. Llntr, AMIFM 614·446-4316.
304-882·3397.

AKC Scottish Terrier puppies,
non shedding, 2-lett, health
guarantH, now laking deposits,
614·594-46n Athens

3

ID Wild Amertc. Stereo. Q
SqUIIN Ono TV Stereo.

one
low_
mlltagt,
Eves.
61:.:'..:"':owner,
~
46:.·:.94::3.:0·:_
.:
___
_;

1983 GMC dlesal, eicc. cond .,
1 Rtg. Britttny, 14 mos. old. low mileage. Call after 4. 614·'
Mu1,t ..11. Make otter. 614-446· 446·7252.
3496.
1985 Ford F150, aut o, air; goocf
•
Groom and Supply Shop-Pat condition, 614-247·3895
Grooming. All breeds, styles. 1986 Ford F·250, V-8, 4x4, 47,0Qo
lams Pel Food Dealer. Julie Milts, Call After 5p.m. 614-446··
4413.
, ..
Wtbb. Call 614-446·0231.

AKC
registered
T•acup
Pomeranian, 5 mos.· old, 614·
992-7841

.r- 1 1~ I I . !

0
Q
DUpCioM
a World Todlty
1111 Rln Tln Tin, K·9 Cop
Stereo. Q
8:06 (I) lllvo~y HIHblllto
8:30 (I). lUI NIIC Newo ~
(l) Sowed bJ the IIIII
(I) (()

Pets tor Sale

185 AIUt Chalmers 0'-stl Trac·
52 Sporting Goods
lor, $5,950; D-14 AC With Loader,
1 Bur Super Magnum 44; 1 $2,950, 0-17 AC With Plow, Cui·
Golden Eagle Super Hawk llvatar, Grain Drill, $2,950; 614·
Turbo, exc. cond. Call 614·367- 286-6522.
7289.
Jim's Farm Equipment, SR. 35,

53

THOUGHT ALICE ..

72 Trucks for Sale

:~r.;nT:~~~it:':;~-~~~~

6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
5p.m., 4 Milas Off Routt 7 On
R 11 141 1 ~- 1
ou
n .....n tnary.

THE MOST CURIOUS
THING I EVER SAW.''

form foorr limpio wordo.

+..T...:,U,.:..E.;;.. .RT~~~ .

Power
~ 8q1111re 0no TV Ster~.

..AND ENDING WITH THE GRIN

to

ANOMOR

(j) Vldoo

_____

~fi\\t

LIVING ROOM: Sott &amp; Ct'ialr, Fish Tank, 2413 Jtckson Ave.
$199.00;
Recliner, $149.00; Point Pleasant, 304·675·2063,
Swint Roek11, S99.00; Cotftt &amp; lull line Tropical tish, birda,
End Tlblts, $89.00 SII.DINING a mall animals and supplies.
ROOM: Ttbil With 4 Padded
Chtir~, $149.00; Country Pine Iguana tor sale, 304·773-5372.
Dinette Wlttl Btncl1 And 3
Chairs, $299.00; Mttct'ilng 2 Tool1: Crattsm1n, Challengar,
Rldgad, Proto, wronch sockots,
Doat Hitch, $349; Or $58l1.00 toolboxes,
slandtrd and metric,
Sat; Oak Table, 42x52 With 6 614·742·2006
Bow
Back
Chairs,
$629.00.BEDAOOM: Poster Bed·
room Suitt (5 pc.), $349.00; 4
Drawer • Chnt, $44.115; Bunk
Btd, S229; Compfttt Full Mttl
Farm Supplies
Set, $105.00 Set; 7 pe. Ctdar

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

•

~ RMdlng Rainbow Stereo.

Eagle 198B Station Wtgon lour
whttl drive, complste power,

lis

Goods

-7,-i;;;.;;;,;jf~R.;;i:::iiMCF~~.. • .VI'RA_FURNITURE
2br
Apa-rtment fOf'
..,.'I'M.....,:nsa· · -Plus Deposit In Crown
Ot'iio. 514-256-6495.

1988 Pontiac Grand AM, ali'4ar, 4
door, 70,000 mlt81, good cond,
304-675-6060 btfor11 5:30, tfter
304-182-2837.

li·!·

J-A~

low

=·

01-

1990 Ford Escort GT. Aeklng
15,600.614-441.0731.
'

Deposit Required.
No Pats. 614- ~~--=========:;====:•::":'':":":"':·:"":· ~
446-3968
After 6p.m.
All electric unlurn. mobile
home. Clean, good toeallon.
614-446-0130 bolwaen 5 &amp; g,3o 5I
Household
55 , BulldlnJI

FOUND: 4-5 mo. old lamala
puppy. Yellow
Lab. mix.
Netgt'iborhood Ad. area. 614·
446·1139.
FOUN D tamale Beagle near .,.,-,=---,:::----:--,,.-;c;--,Mason Bridge, no collar, 304· AVON • All 1raas, Ctll Marilyn
n3-5626 or 773-5531.
Waavtr 304-882-2645.

1:00(%). (I) ((). Ill

0 four
R011rrango lanoro of lho
Krarnblad word1 be-

•

1988 Ford Exp. standard ahltt;
LOw mileage. Exc. cond., t
owner. $6,500. 514-446-7094.

:..c.:~:.:::.:.:.:_

2br Mobile Home, Rl.588, Galrtoplla, $225 Plus Utilities,

WED .. JAN. 8
EVENt NO

1989 Buick Cenlury Custom Y·6l
1 owner, 48,000 mlltt. LDts o
extras, $7,000. Cali after 5 p.m~
614·245-5946.

2 BR mobile homt, $200/mo.
614·367-7802.

Moblls Homu For Rent:
Reference And O.po1ll R•
qulrtd. Call After 2p.m. 614-446·
0527.
Total electric 2 BR, no pats. 614·
367-'M38.

•

Chivy Nova: high mileage,
repair. Good lransporlt·'
car. $1,5(10. For mort lnlor·
ma!lon Call 614·446·2342, Ask
lor Ptul.

1

TilT lAlLY
" PUZZLil

Television
View_ing

TH~ IIJAAT~ TH~
DIFF~?

11186 Ford Bronco II 4 WD,
Automatic, Air, A·1 COndition,
S5,800; 1986 Olds Cullast cttra,
4 Door Sedan, Automatic, Air,
Clean, $2,200, 304-675·3708, Or
614-446-1044.

3 BR, · 2 lull baths, fp, wood

The oau

Ohio

Autos for Ssle

1985 Nov• ·5 Speed, Real Good
Work Car, $1,650. 614-446-4782.

3 BR houu lor rent, pt,
Call: Gtnllaman needs home Pleasant. 1 112 bathl 1 dlposlt.
and halp with some houMhOld Ret. raq. 304-6.75-2088.

to blgln lhlt Wllk on L.etart

4

Situation
Wanted

.
.
January B, 1992

MTRII
ZDO.

II ·

~DIXRD

H WE AD

HZDD~

•

DLYJCDII

XIIYJH

..

HWYH · HWDO
ATH

JDODZ

MWE

HWD

, tJYDZ.'

KIIDYDDZ.

PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "I want Into nx:k 'n' roll bociUit I cairkln'l
anybody to ploy tho' d¥"1Dol mUIIc I wrote.'' - Fronk Zappa.

get

I

• 111111Ji NIA, ...

'

••

sw.o.-

•

I

•

�.

:- .

.

.

. .

.

.

.

.

.

.'

·rP.,agiioe-••1•2•
- •Th•e•D•a•l,;;,ly.O.S.O.en.t;,;,ln;;;,e;.l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.:;P;o:,::meroy;-Middleport, Ohio

... YOUR COMMUNITY MINDED
LOW-PRICED
SUPERMARKETS

Ohio Lottery

Duke
•
remains
'
unbeaten

FOODLAND NITE
SATURDAY, JANUARY 18

University of Rio Grinde
BASKETBALL

Pick3: 789
Pick 4: 1565
Cards:
2-H; 7-C; 10-D;
7-S
Super Lotto:
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Kicker: 090732

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·Val. 42, No. 173
Copyrighted 1992

Utility customers are
being asked to pay
cost for rate increase

ARMOUR MEAT -12 OZ.
REGULAR • THICK

auvSliced

Bologna

1ii·FREE
•

SWORN IN • Edward Martin , elected
mayor of Rutland in the November general election, was given his oath of office by Mei~s Coun·
JIOODI.Alm
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the plant will go into operation this
week. Dale Hart of Racine was
hired as the sewer system opera10r.
Council was also advised that
T.A.M. Conslruction of Westerville
will be returning 10 Rutland Monday 10 beg in installing grinders.
Every home and business establishment in the area served by the system will have a grinder pump 10
pulverge the sewage generated and
propel -i~ into the main lines which
lead to the treatment planL
The resignation of John Spires
as Rutland police officer effective

Dec. 31 was accepted and several
individuals are being interviewed
for the position.
Meigs County Judge Patrick
O'Brien was present at the meeting
10 swear in Jo Ann Eads, new to
Council. and Vickie Fink, who was
re-elected for another Lerm. Mayor
Edward Martin presided at the
meeting and other council members
auending were Steve Jenkins, Jerry
Black; ·and Keith Molden;· The cur·
rent term of ·Sandy Smith, clerktreasurer, who was re-elected in
November, does not expire until
April!.

General, special revenue fund ·
budgets appJOved by ,county

POODIANDSPECJAL COUPON

POODUUID
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.10VARIETIES
·-·OELIIICWII·-HOO!.

Rutland residents will begin
paying for sewage treatment this
month, according lo an action taken
by Rutland Village Council at
Tuesday night's meeting.
Since the entire project will not
be in operation until May or Junc,
it was decided that the residents
will be billed only the minimum.
$16.12 a month. That figure covers
the usage of 2,000 gallons of water.
Warer usage is the'basis for the
sewer charge. The monthly charge
has been set at $8.06 per I ,000 gallons of water used.
II was reported to Council that

POODLAND
SPECIAL CQUPON

AEG.-IJNSAL TED-WHOLE WHEAT

ty Probate and Juvenile Judge Robe-rt Buck
prior to Tuesday night's meeting or Council.

Rutland residents to begin paying
for sewage treatment this month

12 OZ. • HORMEL

.FOODUUID
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2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 centl
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 9, 1992

POODLAND
SPECIAL COUPON

SLICEO -12 '0Z. PKG.

Armour Bacon

Low tonlghi In mid 20s.
Snow nurrles late. High Friday
In mid Jlls.

7 VARIETlES - 8 OZ. CUP

Light 'n Lively Yolurt

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Prosecuting, Attorney, $178,234.92;
Bureau Qf In spection, $45.000:
County Planning Commission,
$8,784.
Common
Pleas
Court,
$77 ,194.09; Domestic Relation s
Juvenile Court, $57,270.27; Pro·
bate Court, $30,787 .59; Clerk of
Courts, $134,395.83; Coroner's
Office, $27,626. 78; County and
Municipal Courts, $101,530. 70;
Board of E!1)ctions, $123,873.15;

the grand jury fallowing a prelimiBy JIM FREEMAN
nary hearing Dec. 23.
OVP News Staff
A Pomeroy man accused of
Simonaux was originally
stabbing a Gallii?OiiS man 10 death charged with murder, punishable
in an early morntng altercation put- by life imprisonment. However, the
side the Addison Club Dec. 20, gra nd jury indicted Simanaux
1991 , was indicted on a charge of Tuesday on a charge of voluntary
vol untary manslaughter by !he Gal· manslaughLCr.
Section 2903.03 of the Ohio
lia County Grand Jury Tuesday.
Revised
Code pertaining to volunA trial has been scheduled for 9
a.m. March 9, 1992, in the Gallia Iary manslaughter states "no person, while under the innucnce of
County Common Pleas Coun.
Lloyd A. Simonaux, 25, was sudden passion or in sudden fit of
arres ted soon· after the stabbing rage, either of which is brought on
incident whjch resulted in the death by serious provocation occassioned
by the victi':ll ihat is reasonably sufof Terry E. White, 31.
Three other men were injured in fiCient to 1ncne the person into
the altercation: James Taylor. 25. usmg deadly force, shall knowingly
Dennis Coughenour, 32, and cause the death of another."
The section continues, "WhoevDaniel Darst, 27.
·
Simonaux was bound over to er violates ibis section is guilty of

LCCD meeting set

WITH COIJPON.

more than $600 million to cover
the Zimmer conversion.
The consumers' counsel opposes making customers pay uti lilies'
rate-case COS!$.
"Rate-case expenses should be
excluded in the cost passed on to
the consumer," said spokeswoman
Beth Gianforcaro.
The PUCO traditionally allows
companies to pass on such cosLS to
consumers, but it recently eliminated about one-third of a $1.5 million ·
reimbursement sought by Ohio
Edison.
Utility customers also pay the
consumers' counsel's .cos! of fight·
mg rate mcrcascs, wh1ch so f:JI has
amounted to S190,000 in th e
Columbus Southern case.
Ohio residential utility customers arc. assessed 52 cents per
year by uulay companies, whiCh
pass on the money to the utility
watchdog agency .

voluntary manslaughter, an agra·
vated felony of the first degree.'
An aggravated felony of the first
degree is punishable from· five-to25 years confinement and a maximum fine of $10,000.
Simonaux plead not guilty to the
charge of voluntary manslaughter
at his arraignment following the
indictment
.
Simonaux is currently being
held in the Gallia County Jail in
lieu of $120,000 bond.
Gallia County Prosecutor llrcnt
Saunders said he was satisfied with
the grand jury's indicunent.
Simonaux' defense allorncy,
Ronald R. Calhoun, was out of the
county and could not be..reachcd
for comment

Southern Local Board adopts budget

Local briefs·-__,

ifiFREE

convert the Zimmer power plant in
Moscow, cast of Cincinnati, to
burn coal •nsLCad of generating
electricity with nuclear fuel. .
The Ohio Office of the Consumers' Counsel, the PUCO and
Columbus Southern arc negotiating
the •ncrease request. The cons um~rs' counsel represents consumers in utility rate cases. ·
Columbus Southern had said il
would impose th e rate increase
request without.PUCO. approval
because the commission had failed
to act on it within the 275 days provided in state law. But late lasl
month, the company said it would
delay imposing the increase to
allow for more negotiations.
The other co-cwners of the Zimmer plant - Cincinnati Gas and
Electric and Dayton Power and
Light- are seeking $1.4 million
and nearly $1.3 million, respcctively,to recoup the~ expenses.
The three companies sought

Meigs .man indicted on charge
of-voluJ!tary manslaughter

Capital lmprovcmcnts, $50,000:
Maintenance and. Qperation ,
$196,881.67; Sheriff, $405,805.99.
Recorder, $78,312.77; Disastcr
Services, $6,975.48: County Public
Defender Commission, $22,777.W;
Agriculture, $93,993; Registration
of Vital Statistics, $200; Children's
Services Board , $102,950: Soldier's Relief, $49,535.77; Veteran's Services, $35,432.86: Public
Assistance, $78,188; County Park
District, $27,716.33; Engineer,
$43,67 1.46; Law Libraries,
A budget whi ch projects a
$1,396.20;
Hi storical Society, deficit
r---$236,080 in operating
$8,000: Insurance on Property, monies of
in
the
general fund for the
. $146,876.35; Miscellaneous. 1992; 93 sc hool
year has been
$22.1,987.21; Transfers, $50,000.
by the Southern Local
The regular meeting of the Leading Creek Conservancy District
Special Revenue funds apfropri- adopled
Board
of
Education.
ated were: Dog and Kenne Fund
Board of Directors v.'lll be held on Thursday at 7 p.m. at the board
According 10 Dennie Hill. trea(hall),
$65,14.67: County Board of surer,
offices in Rutland. The public is invited.
anlicipated revenue for the
The date was reported incorrectly in The J)aily Sentinel.
Mcnral Retardation and Develop· 1992-93 school year is $3,490,600
mental Disabilities, $582,300; Pub- while anticipated expenditures total
lic Assistance Fund, $3,924,134; $3,726,680.
Litter Control and Recycling Fund,
The bond retirement revenue is
A spokesman for Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soul sby · $54,000: Real Estate Assessment
repof!ed Thursday that Faye Clifford of Bryson Road reported that
Fund, $200,220.60; Litter Conltol
on Fnday, lhelf etght·mOnlh-old female We•mancrdog was stolen.
and Recycling Gift and Donation
The dog is gray. with blue eyes, and was wearing a bright green
Fund, $574.84.
.
collar.
Motor Vehicle and Gasoline
'J'ax Fund, $1,971,596.16; Soil and
ATiffiNS - 'J')Je Athens County
Water Conservation Special Fund,
$52,000; Youth Service Subsidy commissioners contend they have
A Eastern Local School District bus driver was cited after a busGrant Fund, $31,915.91 ; EMS Spe- legally withdrawn from a six-count
pickup wreck on Lebanon Township Road 39 (Smith Ridge Road)
cial Levy Fund,.$407,230; Tuber- solid waste district and have 10ld a
Monday afternoon.
·
culosis Special Levy Fund, landfill in their county to stop colAccording to a report from the Gallia-Mcigs Post of the State
$124,384.15; Children's Services lceting fees for the district, accord·
Highway Pa1tol, seven children were on the bus driven by Bruce D.
Fund, $123,038; Marriage License ing the Columbus Dispa~h .
Myers, 61, of Long Bottom. Nclne of the children were injured.
The Ohio Environme~l
ro Special Fund, $4,114; CDBG 91 _ Myers·was northbound on Smith Ridge Road, went left of center
tcetion
Agency
and
Lane
·
n,
92, $339,060; CDBG RLF, f:XCcutive director of the w
m a curve and struck a southbound vehicle driven .by John P. PickS;
$18,652.60;
State
Funds,
cns,70, of Portland, the patrol said.
say the commissioners e
$18,494 .76; MR/DD Special trict,
.J'ickens received minor visible injuries, !he !)lltrOl reponed but
wrong,
sraLCd the article.
Assessment for Bond Retirement,
was not treated. Myers was uninjured.
·
'
The
Ohio
EPA has yet to rule on
$16,725.28; Computer R.esearcli, Athens Counly
Damage to P\cken,s' 1984 Ford F-150 was listed by the patrOl as
~ s request to with$2,294.97; Petcrs Memorial Trust draw and form iLS own waste dis·
moderate and dtsabling. Dama11e to the Eastern School District's
Fund, $12,540.94; Law Enforce· trict, said Rob Berger, an agency
19831ntematio~al S-1700 was hsted'3S light
mept Trust Fund, $29,314.70.
Myers was c1ted by the patrol for failure to yield one-half of the
Other
funds
totaling spokesman.
· .roadway.
"We are awaiting a fonnal attor$302,874.40: Juvenile Court Com· ney general's opinion, and until we
muoily Corrections, $4,688.50; get illhey .(Athens. Coun!)') may
Indigent Drivers Alcohol Treat- not with~raw," he was quoted as
ment, $2,800: En(orcemimt and saying,
Meigs County is one of nine Southeastern OhiO collnties where a
·
Education, $2,362.20; Delinquent
new license agency contract will be awarded thiS year 10 provide
Athens
County
is
the
first in
Real Esl8te, $30,604.75: M.R. Gift
driver license and vehicle ~stration services on behalf of the Stare
Ohio 10 attempl to withdraw from a
Fund, $5,724.82; Special Emergen- solid
Bureau of MOf:DC Vehicles (BMV). .
,
waste district, Berger said.
Qy, $7.,072.70; MR/DD Residential,
',1
BMV officials announced today that the the agency will issue a
The
includes Gallia, }Jock$78,396.45: Indigent Guardianship,
request for proposals on Jan. 13 for tlie seleefion of more than half
Meigs, and Vinton
$60; . MR/DD-,-T-aD$~Ortat:ioJt,. ..,:;;e::
~
l,
ofthesiat.e's&amp;eascaacnel.cs.
~ ~ -,. .... , .
·
Tile Jl!aciil wm Will Wllll '~rete~no 11e h!id in .. '$8,4"30.47: •.co·uruy Home,
The counties joined in 1989 to
$112,653.81; EMS TranSfer, fulfill
. seven Cities during the week of Jan." !3-17. BMV offtcials are hold·
requirements of House Bill
$45,000; Emergency Manage· · 592, which
· ing tile conferences to help fakniliatizc potential proposers with the
allows governments 10
ment/Einergency Services, $5,100. form multi·C9Ufity districts 10 regusystem.
·
. Continued oa page 3
Issue Two Funds, $270,443.62.
late waste disposal and lantlfills.
The Meigs County Commis sioners approved the county's 1992
general fund and special revenue
fund budgeLS last week.
The general fund budget, totaling $2,92·1,167.68, was approved
as follows: Board of County Commissioners, $205,717.18; County
Autlilor, $196,443.38; County
Treasurer, $!08,310.91 ; Buckeye
Hills/Hocking Valley Regional
Development District, $2,298.70:

POODUUID
SPECJAL COUPON

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Columbus Southern Power Co.
customers facing a $202.5 million
rate increase arc being asked to pay
for the cost of getting that increase
approved. according 10 documenlS
filed with state regulators.
The company included the
$640,000 cost in its request for rate
tncrease or · 28.4 percent. If
imposed in full, !he increase would
add an average of ~16.21 io resi ·
dcntial customers ' monthly bills.
As p&lt;ut of the r~lc-setting process, uulay compan1es customarily
try to re~oup the cost of seeking
mcreascs m requests filed wiih the
Public Utilities Commis sion of
Ohio.
. Columbus Southern's request
mcludcs the cost of legal advertising, expert witnesses for rate hearings, transcripts and other expenses.
The company said the increase
would cover its share of the cost 10

Sheriff reports lost dog

projected at $27,900 with expenditures of $27,688. There is also
anticipated a carry-over in that
fund of $31,159, Hill reported.
Budgcts for other funds for the
1992-93 school year as adopted by
the Board include:
Principal's fund. $40,000:
Activities Fund, $58,000; Di sad·
vantagcd Pupil Program Fund,
$38,000; Lottery Fund, $25,000;
EMIS information manage ment

system, $5,000; math and science
(Dwight D. Eisenhower) $4,000:
Title 6B $35,000; and Chapter I,
S 165,000; drug abu se. $5,000 ;
Meigs Rural Assistance Program i~
cooperation with the University of
Rio Grande, $61 ,000; food supply,
$245,000; uniform supply ,
$2 1,000, and Student Activity
Management Fund, $31,000.
The district's millage stands at
3.5 inside, 19.5 ouLSide, and bond
retirement, one-half mill, Hill said.

Grpups at odds over Athens landfill

School bus driver cited in wreck

'·

Meigs to get-new BMV contract

- -·-·-- ..
'

Commissioners were dissatisficd with the dislticl's proposed
5olid waste plan because !hey claim
it is inadequately financed and the
county's recycling program s arc
more advanced that other~ in the
district, according to the Dispatch.
"Our words went unheeded, so
•

we said, fine, we'll just withdraw
and form our own district," said
Commissioner Roxanne Groff.
The commissioners hired Conner
Ohio Atlorney General Anthony
Cclebrezze to represent them.
Groff said Cclebrezze.advised them
they could withdraw from the district

'
The Meigs County
Commissioners appropriated funds for the
Meigs County Deparunent of Liner
Conttol at their regular meeting on
Wednesday.
. Upon the-request of Director
Kenny Wiggins, the county's general fund share of lhe department's
operating budget in the amount Of
$12,000 was appropriated as follows: $10,325 for salary and fringe
benefits; $250 for supplies; $100
flll''ecfuipment: $100 for .contraCts
and services; $900 for tr8vel; and
$325 fot otller expenses.
The commisSioners approved .a
$312.62 funds transfer from the
treasurer' s office advanced real

estate fund to the undivided real
estate fund. That transfer completes
a transaction involved in the Kerr's
Run intersection project.
A request from Recorder
Emmogene Holstein Congo for a
$50 petly cash account was
approved, as was a request from
Treasurer Howard E. Frank for a
carTyover of vacation time for an
employee in the office. •
·
A le~tcr from Meias .C11unty
!'.tannins Commissioa Bx~ulive
Director Chlftles Blakesloe
reviewed. In the letler, BlpJeo
indicated that the terms of CCIIDIIIssion member Joh.n Lontoa and
Continued on paae 3

Commission appro.ves
appropriations, transfers .

"'
' ••

war

.'

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