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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH- Polnt Pleasant, WV

Page-DB-:-Su_nday llmes-sentlnel

January 12, 1992

Feds won't rush to cut iriterest rates despite new bad news
WASHINGTON (AP) - redcr·
., al Rese rve Chatrman ;\l.tn
Greenspan is d1scouragmg law makers anxiOus about so ur economic
new s in an elec llon yem from
expecting another cut m mtercst
rates anytime soon.
He said the central bank's three·
year program ol pushmg down
rates, cappc4 last month w1th a- dramatic full perce ntage p01nt cut m
the Fed's discount rate, should be
enough to get the economy 11101 mg
again.
"The moneta ry po lll') 111 the

ready to take steps necessary to
foster susuiinable econom1c expanSIOn," he said.
Anal ysts said the centrnl bank
chief's rcm:~rk s dashed hopes
among some that the Fed would cut
interest rates again before Pres tdcnt
Bush del1v ers hi s State of th e
Umon address Jan. 2!!.
" The basic thing 1s he's saymg
' Don ' t expect us to do anything
tmmcdwtely . .. . We're not gmng
rush 1nto anything, "' s:ud
econom1st Rob ert Dedenck of

pipeline IS by any h1stoncal standard far more than enough to tum
the e'conomy around," he told a
JOmt heanng Fnday of the Senate
banking and budget commiuees.
But, testify1ng just hours after
the government announced the
nation 'i unemployment rate had
surged (o a f1ve- year high of 7.1
percent m December, he conceded
he could be wrong and pledged to
reduce mtes further if needed
" We will continue to monnor
the situation carefully , and stand

Northern Trust Co. 111 Ch1cago.
Greenspan's caut1ous altitude
d1dn' t sat1sfy Dcmocruts, who arc
bemg pressed by anxious voters at
home. They urged Iurther mtcrcst
mtc cuts and tncd Jl nsllccesslully to
eliCit support for ~" cuts to spur
gro wth
"We need more I rom yo u,"
smd Sen. Donald W. R1eglc Jr .. DMich. , cha11man of the banking
p-Jnel. "We need a bolder str,ncgy
to get the economy going and to
reb111ld confidence m the co11 ntry. r

Redskins,
Bills to meet
for crown

thmk we arc losmg the econom1c

1s stalled.
He said th e evtdenee suggests
Sen. Jim Sasser, D-Tenn., casti- that industr!UI producuon was Oat
gated Greenspan for moving rates in the final three months of the year
down m meffective " baby steps," and the overall economy, as meauntil last month.
sured by the gross domcsuc prod·
Greenspan defended his record, uct, would show little growth and
saymg, "We have brought rates possibly even a decline.
·
down to the lowest level ma generBut, he was cool toward a ta~
ation. This IS not a modest program cut plan , suying he fe ared that
ol monetary easmg."
unless it was carefully crafted it
The Fed's last rate c uL~ occurred would s1mply swell an already
011 Dec. 20 when the central bank'
g1gantic lcdcral budget del1cit.
reduced liS discount rate, the mtcrBush has prom1scd to olfer an
est 11 charges bauks, to 3 5 percent, "action plan" for growth in hts
State of the Union message. Vari,
.1 27-year low.
ous
tax cut plans are bemg considIt also mo ved 1ts targe t for the
lederal funds rate, the interest that ered.
Retummg Fnday from a 12-day
b.111ks charge each other, down by .t
cd like a gangster. "
.
trade mi ssion to drum up exporr
quaner pomt to 4 percent.
"Why d1d Bush bnng such a
Even though Greenspan sa1d sales Ill Asia, Bush said he was
man'!" he asked.
.
,tlmt should be enough, he conceded eager to push a growth package "in
It was a good quest1on. Just why that economic indicators show the thiS vigprous and exciting politicat
did Bush venture abroad ncar the recovery that began earlier last year year."
s,tart of a pres1dentml c a~pmgn
w1th a large group of unpredictable
- and not that greatl y adnmed businessmen?
~

fulure."

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3: 993
Pick 4: 1492
Cards:
8-H; 4-C; Q-D;

5-S
Super Lotto:
8-21-30-34-37-44
Kicker: 496646

Pages 4-5

Winter stonn wat~h

Tuesday. Low tonight In 30s.
High Tuesday In tow 30s.

•

As style or substance, Asian adventure falls short

ny JAMES ~I. KEN NEDY
Ar llusiness Fditur
NEW YORK _ 1~ ~ 1 cor y . per·
haps, it migln h&lt;~vc worked A u.~tlc
m1ssion 10 J,1pan by the p1csulc nt
and lop Am en can cxceuu ves
should h,JVc at least scored publiC
rclallons po 1nts
But Pres1dent Bush' s not-soexcellent As1an .~ d vc nturc fatlcd to
produce rnuch poslll vc symboliSm
or substan ce.
The prcSillcn t returned to the
Umted States Frtday alter a 12-day
sojourn across the Pac1fic where
he lobb!Cd for lrcer access 'to markets in Australia, Sing.1pore, Korea
and Japan
While the ann ol the tnp was to
create JObs by spurring trade, hardly an upbeat note was sounded .1 s
Bush crusaded across umc zones.
By hiS arrival in Japan, the prcSJ dent was f1 ghtin g exh austion as
well as fru stration.
His ph ys ical collapse m Tokyo
sealed the 1mage of a trtp tl1a1 had
backfired.
"The worst moment symboli cally," said a front-page account in
The Wall Street Journal , "carne ...
when the president slumped over m
his chair at a state dinner ancl vom -

Wooster..

ned ~n ~rim e- Mi~! ster Kitchi
Mtyazawa s pant leg.
Japan was supposed to be the
centcf]llece of the tnp. The $41 bdlion trudc deflc!l w1th the Japanese
was the straw man the 1magcmakcrs set up lor the preSident and hiS
posse of exec uti ves to knock down.
Rut weakn ess, not strength, was
th e last111 g llllllfCSSJOII lclt by lhe
Amcnc,ms Th ough the president
b.tlllcd bdc k lront l11s mlmmt1cs to
proclaun a v1ctory lrom the meet·
1n gs 111 Jap.tn , 11 was cl ear the
c·ncountcr lcltmany d!Sappomted.
Jap.t n's loose pl edge to bu y
20,&lt;XJO more U S cars per year and
doubl e purchases of auto parts to
Sl9 bdlton by 1994 was publicly
mile~ zed by the B1g Three auto
ch1cfs who accompanied the president. Chrys ler Corp.'s Lee lacocca ·
le ft the country tn anger after
sccth tng through an unprecedented

meetiug w1th h1s Japanese counter-

part~.

He continued his personal tirade
agamst the_Japanese m a speech
back home,m Detrmt on Fnday.
lacocca s behaviOr parllcularly
nettled the Japanese. One Japanese
legislator observed that ~~e folk
hero of Amencan busmess sound-

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Continurd from U-1
PubiJ c Admlntstration from the
Umvcrs1ty of Oklahoma m 1976,
:md his Bac helors Degree in Political Science (pre-law) from Ohio
State in 1973. A graduate of offi- ·
cers cand1date school, he served in
the Untied States Air Force as a

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J 1rst IJ cu tcnant.
Cunlinued f'llnn Ill
TOP SALESMAN- Jim Walker, left, Lower Rh•cr Road, GalDoss ts married. He and his w1fc
on gross sales ol just under 28 mil- Lcs lt c ha ve tw o son s and one
lipolis, was named "Top 1991 Salesman of the Year" for Gene
lion pounds. Tins can be compared claughtcr, Hank Doss Jr., 21 , BranJohnson Chevrolet Olds-Geo, Johnson presenl~ Walker the awn rd.
to an average of $178.53 per hun- don Doss, 17 and Heather Doss, 8.
Walker has been associated with the dealershill since 1984. II is
dred for sa les on December 19.
goal in 1992 is to retain the top sales title.
Reports from the market uuhcate
the buyers to be very "p 1cky ".
Green, wet or mi xecl grade tobacco
seemed to be gettmg a lot of pnce
pressure. At some locations only a
hm1ted number of bu ye rs were
buying the "trash" bales. Concern
over not being able to ge t good
color during the curing process is
generating a lot of discussion Two
most common concepts arc: cutung
before ripe and sunburn ed in the
field before housin~.
A new theory 1s that thi s year
we expcn ene ed a cool periOd
around the first of Nove mber ca usIng the tobacco to "se t" color.
Much of the tobacco was not completely cured at th iS point because
We have proof: Pigs thai
start gaminp early have more
of varwu s reaso ns 111 cludin g
eflicient gams- clear to
crowdmg mthe barn .
market.
TH E annual No -Till mee ting
With High Octane• Baby
will be held Thursday, January 16,
Pig
Chow•
and High Octane•
at 7 p.m. at Buckeye H1lls Career
P1g
Starter
Chow• brand
Center. Featured sneaker will be
rations, we can help you get
David Brandt I roui the Fa irf1eltl
your pigs off to a running
SWCD. Brandt IS a longllmc prostan. Both ra11ons have the proper balance of amino
acids and energy. Both are easily digested as sow's
meter of no-till age H1s primary
milk. And p1gs love the taste.
topic on Th ursday evemng will be
Come see us for the proof on High Octane stoner
no-oil cover crops and tl1cir value
rations.
After all -the faster they start, the sooner
in the total crop rotatio n Local
they
finish!
fanners will share expenenccs and
Ag . Agency peo ple will he av.lt lable to answer questiOnS
Yes, there w11l be loc:1l classes
for Private Pesticide Ap piJ cators
again th1s year I am JUS t slow ge tting worked arou nd a lot of other
events and estab lishing th e dates,
times and locations. I hope to have
all finalized by nex t week's arttcl e.
The class for "Quicken" computer recordkccp1ng so ft ware is
full. We would still like to know 1f
you have an mtercst 111 case we
have a cance llation or have a
What We Offer To
chance to host another class. .
Insure the Best
Other events· Dairy Roml Show,
January 24, DistriCt Extension CenTire WeDr.
ter, Jackson , day; Multi -County
Swine Upd ate; Bu ckeye IIIII s
Co11puter Balance
Career Center, Januar y 28 ,
(frH wit• hrchaH of
evcmn g; "Farm Inco me Ta x
llrts)
Update" , January 29, D1 stnc t
Alfttne~t
ExtensiOn Center, day.

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
391 WEST MAIN STREET
992-3524

Pigs that
fast
faster.

POMEROY, OHIO

If There's An~thing
Wrone With These
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992-2164
Pomeroy
399 W. Main

No-Till meet
set Thursday
By CONSTANCE WHITE
Gallia S&amp;WCD
GALLIPOLIS - Farmers in Galli a County and th e surroundmg
area are invitcd to attend the annual
No-Till mee tin g to be held on
Thursday, January 16, at 7 p.m., in
the Buckeye Hills Career Center
Corral (next to the cafeteria).
Speakers will be Dave Brandt,
Fairfield SWCD District Techni cian, who will address cover arops;
Jim Rose, Gallia County farmer
whcl will speak on wheat-soybean
double crops and Wendell Tope,
Gallia County farmer who will
speak on high yield no-till corn.
A question and answer session
wtll follow with ,Ed VollbornOCES Ag Agent, Patty Dyer, District Conscrvationi st,and Jeff
Wctherholt, District Technician.
The event is bein g co nducted
with the ass istance of Glenn Gra·
hum, Farm Business Anal ys is
instructor, Buckeye Hills Career
Center.
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1 Section, tO PagH 25 contt
AUuttlmodle Inc. Newopaper

Electric
·customers
may have to
pay more
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbus Southern Power Co.
customers may pay more despite
delays in the company's request to
raise rates, the state's consumer
advocate says.
A Franklin County judge placed
a restraining order last week on the
company's proposed 28.4 percent
rate mcrease, which was scheduled
to begin today.
But the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio said the company
could defer costs if the ut1lity
d1dn 't impose the full mte increase.
The deferral could mean cusIOmers will pay more in a future
rate increase, Ohio Consumers'
Counsel W1lliarn A. Spratley said.
Spratley and City Attorney
Ronald J. O'Bnen filed a lawsutt
agamst the $202.5 m1l11on increase,
calling it unconstitutional. The
increase would add $16.21 to an
average residential customer's
monthly bill.
Columbus Southern asked on
April2 for the rate increase to help
pay for converting the Zimmer
power plant in Moscow to burn
coal instead of nuclear fuel.
Late last year, the company
announced it would go ai1ead with
the increase. The utility said it was
mvoking a state law which allowed
it to impose the increase if the
PUCO didn't decide the case within 275 days.

Mideast peace talks
begin on three fronts
what formula had enabled the reached before the last round
WASHINGTON (AP) Mideast peace talks are resuming move into the room.
recessed Dec. 18. But lhe Aiabs
Israel had resisted mce1ing the stalled in protest of Israel's decion three fronts, but with liule time
for trying to solve Amb-lsraeli bor- Palestmians unless they are accom- sion to expel 12 Palestinians susder disputes and working on a for- panied by the Jordan1ans and pected of mcitmg terrorism on the
appears to have the support of the West Bank and in Gaza.
mula for Palestinian autonomy.
The chief Israeli, Palestinian and Bush administration.
There were no meetings Friday,
The Israeli delegation, wh1ch the Muslim Sabbath, or Saturday,
Jordanian negotiators were the first
to meet. lakmg up a procedural dis- has been here for more than a week the Jew1sh Sabbath. Sources who
pute over whether the Palestin1ans waiting to engage the Arabs in insisted on anonymity said the
must include Jordanians in talks negotiations, said it plans to fly Arabs declined an Israeli proposal
w1th Israel over limited Palesunian home Wednesday mght.
to meet Sunday.
Today's meeung of the chief
self-rule on the West Bank and
The ncgouauons with Syria connegotiators - Israel's Elyakim cern Israel's control of the Golan
Gaza.
The three negotiating teams Rubinstein, Jordan's Abdul Salam Hc1ghts, which was Synan territory
started their meeting m a State Majali and Palestmian Hatdar until the 1967 Six-Day ·War, and
Department conference room rather Abdul Shaft -may determme Israel's quest for recognition in a
than the hallway where the delega- whether a compromise is possible peace treaty.
The talks with Lebanon deal
tion leaders had huddled through· on the procedural squabble.
Israel,
meanwh~e
.
was
holding
with Israel's occupation of a zone
out the last round in an unsuccessful effort to resolve the fonnat of separate negouati!Jns with Syrian inside Lebanon; which Israel and
the meetings, an Israeli offic1al and Lebanese delegations.
pro-Israel Lebanese militia usc as a
The talks were to have begun buffer to prevent attacks on Israeli
said.
It was not immediately clear Tuesday under an arrangemenr villages.
ARRIVES FOR TALKS - Israeli Elyakim Rubinstein, who
heads the delegation holding peace talks with the Palestinian and
Jordanian delegations in Washington, D.C. gestures to reportes on
his arrival at the State Department Monday. The talks resumed fol·
lowing a break in late De4:ember. (AP)
The PUCO was expected to
approve a phased-in rate increase
111 March or April that would be
lower than the $202 .5 million
request.
The commission staff has recommended a· rate increase of no
more than $170 million, while the

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suggested the increase be limited to
$85 million.
Columbus Southern Power, a
subsidiary of American Electric
Power, has 473,000 customers in
25-of the state's 88 counties . .

Campaign season in full swing
MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) What a difference plummeting poll
numbers and a new year make.
A year ago, with America on the
verge of war, it was taboo to bash
President Bush. Even after the war,
Bush's stratospheric poll ratings
kept cntics qu1et.
But now, with the president's
popularity slipping and election
season approaching, Bush-bashing
is all the rage.
Some of the rhetoric is personal,
most of it pointed, all of it aimed at
driving Bush's numbers down even
further.
Not all of it is from Democrats,
either. Bush 's Republican challenger in New Hampshire, conservative commentator Patrick J.
Buchanan, is piling it on as weU, at
times making the Democrats souhd
tame.
Bush ts just getting his campaign under way, so. the rhetorical
war has been vinually one-sided to
date. A recent sampling:
"I think his head is fixed,"
Iowa Sen: Tom Harkin tells audiences as he lobbies for votes in
recession-weary New Hampshire.
"He has the same view of the
co~try as Herbert Hoover - that

the president can do nothing. N1ce
guy, nice wife, nice dog, but his
head is fixed ."
From Harkin, that 's the soft
stuff.
The feisty Iowan is fond of calling Bush "George Herbert Hoover
Bush" and poking fun at the president's privileged upbringing by
telling audiences, "George Bush
was born on third base and thmks
he hit a triple."
Harkin by far has the sharpest
b11e of the Democrats when it
comes to Bush-bashing. But hi s
rivals often manage a bark or twq.
Arkansa s Gov . Bill Clinton
thinks he can attract Republican
and GOP-Icarung independent voters, so he tries not to offend many
of them with virulent attacks on the
president. He sull sneaks in a shot
every now and then.
"I've spent more than 10 years
trying to b.e what President Bush
calls one of those thousand points
of light, " ·Clinton tells his audiences. "But a thousand points of
light still leaves you a lot of darkness if you have no national vision,
no national stfategy to get this
country moving again.''
Most of the jokes told at Bush's

Governor's address will.
include health care proposal

LADY DRIVEN

a.wa.

Vol. 42, No. 175

Copyrlghlod 1992

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) to usc the speech to announce plans
G.ov. George Voinovich will dis- for the ftrSt major study of Ohio's
cuss new initiatives, including a state and local taJ( structure in 25
health care proposal, in his State of years, but the announcement will
the State address Tuesday, an aide be made later, Steiner said.
said.
.
The speech comes as the state
"About half Of the speech will faces an anticipated deficit of $457
be a report to the General Asscm- million by June 30:
bly on the things the administra- • Senate Prestdent Stanley
tion, with the Legislature's help, Aionoff, R-Cmc~nnau, and House
got done 1he first year," Curt Speaker Vern Rif~e. D-WheelersSteiner said. "The rest will be a bur¥, last week reJected the goverlook to the future."
nor s request for increased taJ(es on
Steiner declined to d;scuss alcoholic beverages and cigarettes
Specifics incltldell -in tile speech to to help balance the budget
be delivered to a joint session .of
Riffe also opposed_Yoinovich
the Ohio.House and Senate, but proposals 10 tum state liquor stores
siid they would include a health- over to private operaton and 10 do ·
c4re J)rti!JOSIII.
away w1th a 1.5 percent discount
"iJnlortimatel~. because of the. retailers get for collecting the state
economk: prob)cms, there will have sales laX.
·10. be 1 focus on how those probLast year, much of the 30lpms miJht be addressed," he said. minu1e speech concerned th~
Steiner said lhe speech will have Stale'$ fmancial problems.
a cooperative and optimistic 1011e,
"These arc ve!r. 10111h times,"
lli4er than 1 contenticius one.
he said last year. ' We have had to
· "The sovernor will aay that make some very luird choices, the
Ohio hu been very responsible most difficult that I have ever made
dUrlnB tough economic ttmes and in my life."
difficult budgets and we have to
He cal~ the 'effects of the 1991
141Y on the responsible path.'.' he state budget shorlfllll of$1.5 billion
lllldcd.
, "unperalleled" in Ohio history.
The governor had been expected
·
'

...

expense were getting ured JUSt
about the time Bush headed off for
hi s self-described " jobs, jobs ,
JObs" tn p to Japan.
The tide turned fast. Most of the
JOkes about Bush's affluent background gave way 10 barbs that the
president was a lowly beggar.
"George Bush is in Japan begging them to wait another seven
days before they take us over,"
was a favorite line of former Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas durwg the Bush trip. The Democratic
presidential candidate said Bush
"humiliated America."
Bush has been so good to the
Japanese that when his term is over
Tokyo will "inv1te h1m for a
speech and give him $2 million.
That' s the Republican trad1tion ,"
Tsongas'sa1d, refemng to former
President Ronald Reagan's muchcriticized speaking engagement in
Japan, for which he was paid $2
m1llion .
Nebmska Sen. Bob Kerrey said
Bush's trip to Japan had added a
new "L-word" to the American
political lexicon. In 1988, Bush
used the term agamst Democratic
nominee Michael Dukakis 10 stand
forliberal.
" The new 'L' word is 'loser',"

Kcrrey said, accusing Bush of surrendering America's economy to
the whims of the Japanese.
Kerrcy look to the airwaves w!lh
a tough-talking ad in which he
says , " We 're becoming a low wage nation, and all George Bush
docs is go to Japan 'and beg for a
few coocessions."
Adding to the anti-Bush chorus
1SBuchanan.
"They've struggled in deprcs·
sian for three years," Buchanan
say s of New Hampshire voters.
"And the president? He broke hts
promise not to ratse taxes and he
docsn't care."
_

Thacker named Schaad successor
A Gallipolis woman has been tee - composed of Chuck Kitchen,
hired to be Direc10r of the Meigs Dave Baker and Dr. Nick Robinson
County
Chamber
of - began advertising for applications
Commerc e{Econom1c Develop- in several newspapers in early
December, and then interviewed
ment Director.
Chamber President Lenny Elia- several applicants.
Thacker's appointment fills a
son .announced Monday morning
vacant
position left by Elizabeth
that Paula Thacker of Gallipolis
Schaad
in December. Schaad left
has been named to the position, and
will. ~,.ll__\l!'. th~.Au,.li.$~ of th: job the Meias County position to
·~accept "iiri appointment as Regional
begmnmg m t:"euruary.
Thacker, who will be moving to Development D1strict II Deputy
Meigs County as a condition of the Director.
job, is currently employed as the
Thacker will work out of the
Executive Director for the Gallipo- Meigs· County Chamber of Commerce office, located in the
lis Chamber of Commerce.
The chamber's search commit- Carnegie Building at 200 East Second Street in Pomeroy.

PAULA THACKER

Reasons given for liquor store closing
Low sales volume and high
operating costs are listed as the rcasons for the planned closing of the
state liquor store in Pomeroy.
John R. Hall , director of the
Ohio Department of Liquor Con trol , announced plans today to convert the state store located at 112
Mulberry St. to a private liquor
agency by the end of March.
"Due 10 the low volume of sales
(Fiscal Year 1991 sales at the store
tomled $290,000) and high operating costs at this Slore, the department 1s seeking to convert the sales
operauon to a private liquor agency," Director Hall stated.
"This proposed action is pan of
the department's effort to

convert/close 75 state liquor stores
as required under the 1992-93 biennium budget passed by the Ohio
Legislature," Hall said.
The predicted annual savings
from the cortversion of this store to
a private agency will be approxi mately $55,000. The savings would
result from the reduction in operatIng costs that mclude employee
salaries, leases and utilities.
The department is seeking proposals from persons engaged in
merchanole businesses interested
in serving as the liquor agent in
Pomeroy . Interested individuals
should contact the legal section at
644-2392 by Jan. 17 to obtain an
application package. The deadline

for submitting applicauons for the
Pomeroy agency is 2 p.m. on Jan.
31.
The department has the statutory
authonty to establish liquor agencies in municipalities of less than
20,000 population and in the unincorporated area of townships of not
less than 2,000 populauon in a
county of not less than 100,000
population.
• A~cnts sell spirituous liquor
provtdcd by the department at
prices set by the department, and
receive a six percent commission
on reta1l sales and a four percent
commission on wholesale sales.
The Department of Li~uor Control
has contracted with pqvate agents
since 1934.

Legion Post 39 supports prison site
A resolution of support for
locating a medium security state
prison in Meigs County has been
adopted by Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion.
In the resolution passed at a
recent meeting the legionnaires
stressed their support for the action
of local economic development
leaders in their efforts 10 have
Meigs County selected as the site
of one of four new prisons to be
built in Ohio.
The nCC!i for construction jobs
as well as permanent jobs which
would be created by a prison located bere was emphasized in the resolution.
·
Meigs, Belmont and Noble
Counties arc being considered ~or
construction of a prison in Southem Ohio. The other three sites for
new prisons have already been

selected.
The I ,250 bed prison to be
locatcd in Southern Oh10 wtll cost
an estimated $25 million 10 bu1ld.
When completed the prison is
expected to employ as many as 300
penple.
It was reported during the meeting that the post membership now
stands at 285. Persian Gulf veterans
are now being accepted _into. t.he
membership w1th the ehglblhty
dates bemg Aug. 2, 1990- to the
present. No cut-off date has been
announced, it was noted. Questions
concerning eligibility for membership should be directed to any
member of the American Legion.
First Lieutenant Vaughn J.
Spencer was welcomed into the
post as the ftrst Persian Gulf veteran. He waS sponsored by his four
uncles, Richard, Robert, Byrne and

Frank Vaughan . A graduate of'
Meigs High School and Ohio University. Spencer was commissioned
an army second lieutenant and
assigned to the Ohio National
Guard. He later attended 1he
armored off1cers basic course at
Fort Knox, Ky. and was placed on
active duty in March, 1989. He was
deployed from Fort Benning, Ga.
in August. 1990 for Operation
Desert Shield and arrived in Saudi
Arabia in September. He returned
to the state in April and is sull serving as an MIA I tank platoon lead-

er.

'

It was reported by some· members that excellent service is being
rendered by the Meigs County Veterans Service Office and at Chillicbthe Veterans Hospital.
Next meeting will be held Jan. 2
at the hall.

Convicted man sczys he just wanted to help family, friends
RUTLAND, Ohio (AP) - A.
man sentenced to up 10 40 years in
jail for corruption and theft said he
was trying to help family and
friends.
'
','Everything I did vias for making tomorrow a ~tter day for my
family and employees," Oldatun
Fasheun said al his sentencing in
'Meigs County Common Pleas
Court. "I have not stolen Bf\Y·
body's money.''
Fasheun, 36, .who owned the
Athena Trading Co. in Athens, was·
sentenced last week 10 a minimum

of 19 years in jail for corruption government and the Central Bank
of Nigeria probably weren't real,
and five counts of theft
He was convicled for making Story said.
The bank ran an advehisement
$672,386 in a scheme that involved
at leas I 10 victims, said .Steven in the Wall Street Journal Sept. 24
warning people about the scheme.
Story, county prosecutor.
"He was just very persuasive,"
Fasheun got loans by telling ~ic·
tims he could repay them using said Tom Scali, an Athens area
$15.5 million the Nigerian Nlllional plumbing contraciOr who estimated
Petroleum Co. owed him. He said he lost $40,000. "It sounds stupid
. the money was a commission on a when I talk about it now, but he
1, S61 : million sale of computer had us all convinced that he was
equipment, court records showed.
going to be' the richest guy in
Documents he used which soqlhcast Ohio.' ~
ap!!C¥t:4 10 be from the Ni$erian
Lee 0. Wood, 651 the owner of
. (W
I

t:!

a 415•acrc homestead in Meigs
County, said he lost $184,086.
Woo&lt;U aid he liked Fasheun when
he first visited the farm in March
1990.
Fasheun, the son of a retired
railroad executive in Nigeria, grad·
uated from higll school at 15 and
went to Athens to attend Ohio University.
He received a bachelor of science de~ in 1977 and master's
degrees ill business admioislrldon
and arts administration in 1980,
school records showed.
'
' I

�-··

Monday, January 13, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

'

•••

Commentary

Winter ~eather returning to O~io

OH 10 Weather

Page-2-The _Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy.....MJddleport, Ohio
Monday, January 13, 1992

Tuesday, Jan.l4
Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and
MICH.

The ~aily Sentinel

Serious reforms needed to control PACs

111 Coart Street

.

Pomeror. Obio

.

DEVO'IED TO THE lln'ZRE81'8 OP THE IIEIG8-IIASON AR&amp;\

ROBERT 1.. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Associallod Press. Inladd Daily Press Association and
the Alnerican Newspaper Publisber Association. '
LETI'ERS OP OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300

words loog. Allleuen -subject to editing and must be signed with name.
addiess and telepbone number. No unsigned let"'" will be published. Letter&gt;
should be m good taste, addressmg ISsues, not pmonalities.
·

Letters to the editor

WASHINGTON - If Congress
ever cleans up campaign fuuiOCing,
it will be due in p311 to the inspiration furni shed by one of the most
fabled campaign money raisers on
Capitol Hill, Femand StGermain.
In his la st three elections to
Congress from Rhode Island, St
Germain, a Democrat, was showered with more than $149,000 in
cash from political action committees that were bankrolled in the. .
1980s by the fast-and-loose savings
and loan indu stry. That figure
doesn't include the rivers of money
that flowed from individual thrift
industry offtcials. and other banking
sources.
St dermrun, as chall11lan of the
House Banking Commiuee, didn't
disappoint them. His name was on
the landmark savings and loan
deregulation bill that gave the
industry a ltcket for the wild ride
into bankruptcy .
Travels with "Freddy," as his
lobbyist friends called him, were

not cheap. A Justice Depanment
investigation revealed that at one
time the U.S. League of Savings
Instirutions, the thrift indUStry trade
association, spent upward of
52,00} a month just to entenain St
Germain.
The thrifts would do just about
anythtng to keep their congressman
happy. In 1988, St Germain was in
a Light re-election race that he ultimatel y lost One night, a financial
lobbyist was escorting St Germain
through a round of Wall Street
cocktail parties, passing the hat
among securities dealers for campaign conuibutions, when St Germain got a hankering for a Dove
Bar.
The congressman and his escort
had just left the last party about
midnight when St Germatn
announced his craving for icc
cream , but not just any ice cream. It
had to be a Dove Bar. The lobbyist
ordered thctr limo driver to find the
first open store. He sprinted inside,

but found no Dove Bars. The lobbyist bought what he thought was
an acceptable substitute. But St
Germain looked at the forgery.
exclaimed , "This isn 't a Dove
Bar," and threw it out the car window.
Jbe two men must have found a
Dove Bar some time during the
night .because they showed up at a
fund -raising breakfast the next
morning with chocolate stains on
their suits.
The stain left by St Germain on
the political process has not yet
been cleansed. Sitting on -a powerful commiuee, such as Banking.
means money for politicians. Rep.
Jim Leach. R-lowa. a member of
the commiuce, has made a rule of
not accepting money from political
action committees, but it has probably .cost him advancement 10 the
Senate.
"It is the reason I have not run
for the U.S. Senate," Leach told
us. " PACs have made campaigns

Thanks,jolks
Dear Editor:
. The Salvation Army, Pomeroy,
wtshes to thank all those who contributed to them during the Christmas season. Thanks to those who
gave in the Chrisbllas Ket~e. other
money donations. food products,
and used toys. Also all the volunteer workers at Kettles, for washing
and sorting toys, packing gifts for
the nursing homes, packing food
baskets and toys and for uansponaLion.
Because of the many who were
thoughtful in giving we were able
to give out 149 food baskets,
approximately 359 children were
given toys, 114 gifts were delivered
to Pinecrest Nursing Home, Gal-

lipolis, Ohio, 97 gifts to Pomeroy
Nursing and Rehabilitation Center,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 100 gifts to Overbrook Nursing Home, Middlepon,
Ohio, 35 gifts to extended care unil
and 13 gifts 10 Veterans Memorial
Hospital , Pomeroy, Ohio and 12
gifts to county infirmary. All
together approximately 900 men,
women, and children's lives were
touched. This ministry also continues throughoul the year where
needed.
Dora Wining,
Ou1post Sargent
Pomeroy, Ohio
Eloise Adams,
U.P.S.M.
The Salvation Army

/6

A special thanks
Dear Editor:
As 1 write tht s I, Ma ster
Sergeant Wayne Well, am currently home near Pomeroy, because my
mother, Florence Well, recently
passed away.
1 write this as a special thanks to
some very special people, m fact it
is to some of the best people m the
world.
1 spent the first 19 years of my
life growing up in southern Ohio.
\., The next 19 years I spent in the
'Yru1ed States Air Force and have
lived m Europe, the Far East, and
several places in the USA.
In all of my travels, nowhere
have I met a group of people more
genuinely smcere, helpful, and caring than those who have supponed
my famil y during this most difficult time. My father is truly fortunate to live in an area in which he
is surrounded by such special people.

There is something that makes
these people special when compared to all the other people I've
seen around the world. Although
they have freely given tremendous
support, these people consider their
support as just natural acts: not
something special: not something
they expect to receive thanks for:
some do not even ideniify themselves.
These people have instinctively
and unselfishly given their suppon
For almost a month, we resisted
in ways that most people could n01
the
tmpulse. Having read so much
believe even if I wrote the details
aboulll,
my wife and I were detcrhere.
mmed
not
to see "JFK," the Oliver
To each person who has supported my family in this dtfficult Stone film about the assassination
time, you each know who you are of Pres ident Kennedy . Ltke so
and what you have done for us. many other people, we had made
Please also know that you are spe- up our mt~s about the movie
cial people, some of the world's before seei it Taking hard-andbest people. My sincerest thanks to fast position on things you have
neither read nor seen is an occupayou all.
Wayne Well uonal hazard of pundits and politictans m Washmgton, where opinions arc sacred and facts are not
The film was garbage, we figured ,
and that was that
ty children and their families.
Curiosity got the beuer of us,
We wish to express our sincere finally, and off we toddled to make
thanks to all the businesses and our donation to the Stone retireindividuals who have helped us in ment fund. Now, having seen it, let
our effons, and who will continue me make a recommendation to the
10 help us in the years to come.
million s of Amencans who
This quote by Helen Keller pret· haven't If you decide to go and
ty well sums it up, "When we do don't know very much about JFK's
the best we can, we never know assassination independent of what
what mirncle is wrought in our life, will be spread out on the screen, do
or in the life of another."
a little homework firsL It will help
Ride Safe in 1992! m dealing with Stone's big lie,
Meigs County Bikers which is as maddening a combina·
Brenda Davis tion of agitprop, cinema verile,
arrnnt nonsense and powerful filmmaking as any of us is likely to sec
again.
A useful way of thinking of it is
as a vast canvas on which a skilled
craftsman has thrown everything
but the kitchen sink. Included arc
coun~ess buckets of manure, large

PA.

Jack Anderson,
Michael Bin_stein

.. IMansfield I 31 • I•
INO

more expensive, " he said. As
Leach sees it, Congress is becoming an oligarchy - a system governed by an elite class that answers
to monied interests. He sees the
5500 billton savings and loan scandal as a " cause celebre of almost
fictional proportions for campaign
reform." An examination of bank·
ing legislation in the last decade is
a deadly indictment of the whole
system of PAC panhandling,
according to Leach.
_
A sequel to the thrift debacle
may be unfolding. PACs affiliated
with banking, Wall Street and the ·
msurance industry invested more
than Sl2 million in the current
members of the House and Senate
Bankmg Commitlees and the
House Energy and Commerce
Comminee in the 1986, 1988 and
I990 elections. according to the
Campaign Research Center.
PACs connected with commer·
cia! banking alone contributed
more than S2.7 million to the 51
members of the House Banking
Comminee. That's an average of ·
S53 ,000 per member. What do they
want for their money? Less regulation and more power - the same
whine of the thrift industry 10
yearsago.
&lt;$
Congressional Quarterly points
out that the msurancc industry has
gtven an avera ge of $32,000 per
member La those on the House
Energy and Commerce Committee,
and S25,000 per member to the
Banking Comminee.
All spcctal mtcrests arc gelltng
more savvy about how they distribute their largesse. The securities
indu stry use s the art of
"bundling," 10 whtch a network of
individual contributors with~ com·
mlln cause make separate coniribut!Ons that are then delivered in a
packet for maximum impact.
It takes a strong candidate to
tum away the money - usually a
loser. Winning candidates for the
Senate in _1990 spent an average of
$3 .7 mt!ltoo, and House winners
spent S371 ,846.

Berry's World

measures of lcgiumatc doubt, bold
strokes of paranoia, drippings of
innuendo and pages of actual history pasted on intermiuenlly to give
the semblance of verisimilitude.
Cen0111 to the plot is an explicit
asseruon: John Kennedy was killed
as the result of a vast conspiracy in
which his successor, Lyndon Johnson, pl ayed a central role. Also
involved in that conspiracy, according to Stone , were elements of the
Pentagon, the CIA, the FBI , the
Dallas police, a few stray politi·
cians, the "military-indusirial complex ," in general, and i (ray
Cubans, Mafia figures, gays and
pro-war nuts, in particular.
Ccn011! to the movie's develop·
mcnt and resolution is the figure of
Jtm Gamson, former distnct attorney in New Orleans. Garrison is the ·
man who brought a New Orleans
businessman, Clay Shaw, to trial
for all eged participation in the
assassination conspiracy . A
Louisiana jury promptly repudiated
his case. Garrison, now a judge, is
m real life a political second-rater
wbose sense of fair play was, at the
time of the uial, vinually non-exis·
tent Garrison, the film character, is
ponrayed as a sincere, troubled and
driven seeker after truth by Kevin
Costner, today' s Jimmy Stewan. It
is inspired casting, and doubly
troubling as a result
Central to the· movie's believ-

ability is the Warren Commtsst6n
report. Throw together with
un seemly haste d inadequate
investigation, it off ed the public
and htstory the tidy hcory of the
lone gunman, Lee H ey Oswald.
The evidence that rna ers was then
put under lock-and-k in the name
of national securi , there to be
kept until well into the 21st century. The report was and is so full of
holes that it invites skepticism if
not downright rejection. II also
invites demagoguery , which is
what Oliver Stone has produced.
And that is what makes "JFK"
even more infuriating. While it has
demonstrable appeal to younger
Amencans and others with liule
background knowledge, it gives
legitimate doubt a bad name among
those who arc better versed. For
instance, while I am cenain beyond
a reasonable doubt that there was
not vast conspiracy, I am equally
certam today (as 1 wasn't then) that
Oswald did not and could not have
acted alone. Stone has many of the •
reasons for such doubt woven
throughout his movie, but they are
befouled by their association with
his life-as-conspiracy approach.
Now, when the subject is raised,
th~se who questton the report are
got~g to suffer from guilt by assoCtauon w1th Oliver Stone.
. Or perhaps, just perhaps, somethmg good wtll come out of what is

Hodding Carter III

"OH-OHI Hey, has anybody Hln my
·eoloriC gl,... kround here?"
,

•••

rose-

Lee Iacocca. his eyes flashing, is lacocc;~. Chrysler's chief is the best
shouting to be heard. He is shout· of his breed at realizing that there
ing from a TV sludio in Tokyo, up are times when the evidence is so
to a satellite in space and back
bad th~t Ulllh becQmes the option
down to a studio in a skyscraper of chotce. And so, -he quickly conthat is owned by Mitsubishi - but verts" "Today" into a very candid
which we are still allowed to call cam eta.
by the name of the old landlonds,
First, about America's cars:
who once viewed the world as their ''We may have built some lousy ·
oyster.
cars in the Jl'ISl, but 10 years have
"Red herring! Red herring!" passed and ·we're building good
lacocca's voice booms into the SlUff."
place..we still call Rockefeller Cen·
And then about America's
ter, the New York home off'IBC. It CEOs: "If the question is ... have
seems that "Today's" Katie · some salaries gotten out of line Couric has asked about a statistic yes, I !hinUo." ·-··
that the Japanese consider a sign of
Well, is i!lcocca wonh the $4.65
empty values undercutting Brother million he made last year, plus the
Bush's Traveling CEO Salvation $700.000 in stock options he exer,
Show.
. · cised'l ..
'
She's ll$ked not about the trade
"No ,.... hell not says Iacocca
imbalance, but the wary imbal· "I think they hired me as a .350
ance: Bush's touring company of hiuer. ... llld I'm hitting .215 . ... 1
chief cllecutive offlWS, the men may be paid 11;10 high, I admit that.
pleading for trade concessions to But I'm not going to apolnm- for
help tlleir Ooundetillg companies, ~··
~
'last y~ received (which should
So it is Ihat, without mc:anin1to,
not be miaehn for "earned") six President Bush may have ~
times \nore than their Japanese to Japan the one Americln·made
counlelpllltS. Couric asks: lsn 't that commodity that Tokyo ·has yet to
"wretched excess"? Isn't it time co-opt. ltJS this amcept unique to
for you auto execs to 18Criftce1
corporate America: that CEO can
"Red he(ring!" lacocca shouts unapolog~tically ralce in millions
yet again. But don't sell shon on willie his company is losina mil·

a

~

lions - and laying off thousands
of workers.
Thfre may be hope for us yet.
Bush s 1dea of taking American
CEOs to Japan (an idea born by his
PQlitiC:11 brainstormers who hope to
~alt hiS plunge m the public opinIOn poUs) may produce a result that
goes beyond trade and politics_
an~ oullives the marginal accomp!tshments we saw at Bush's
Tokyo summit.
~erhaps Japan's CEOs will
dec1~e to emula1e yet another
Amencan way- the executive gilt
without guilt. After all, the
Japanese have proven them !elves
~uprc~ely a~ept at· copying, and
101provmg, skills and traditions that
we once thought were supremely
CUB
·
They did it with ~r industriai
ways - first duphcating our:
aisembly !ines, then perfecting
With' robouc:s. They mastered the
financial art of leveraging. (No
doubt Mitsubishi's execs, faced
with the Japamese Jinpillic pro11lem ~·ed by the r's and r 5 in
En~hsh words, diJCOveml it was
eas1er to buy Roekefeller Center
dian~ i~)
.
. They did il wtth our IIIOVlel ~Uillnl from maldt~t thein to

Showers T·storms Rain Flurriss
Vis A&amp;socialed Press GrsphcsNef

-~

And, of course, there's baseball.
It all comes together in Univetsal's
new movie "Mr. Baseball." The
New York Times considered il
front-page news laS! November that
~n this movie about an aging Amertcan ballplayer (Tom.Selleck) on a
team in Japan, the script was
reponedly changed to !!lake it more
favorable to the Japanese.

loo

Sunny

Pt Cloudy

Cloudy

C1992 Accu-Weathef Inc.

-----Weather----Extended forecast
South Central Obio
Wednesday
through Friday
~inter storm watch Tuesday.
Wednesday, cold with nurries
Tomght, ram, probably changing to
snow toward morning. The low in and squalls in the northeast ScatLh~ low 30s. The chance of precipi· tered nurries elsewhere. Lows in
tauon near 100 percent. Tuesday, the teens and highs in the 20s.
wmdy and much colder with snow · Thursday, fair except for a chance
and blowing snow. The tempera- of nurries in the northeast. Lows
ture falling from the low 30s to the zero to 10. Highs in the teens to
low 20s. The chance of snow is around 20. Friday, a chance of
snow. Lows 5·15. Highs in midnear I00 percent.
20s to low 30s.

r--Local briefs-Three injured in wreck Saturday

.

Around the nation
Snow fell in New Mexico,
Nonh Dakota, Iowa and Washington state today. Clouds and drizzle
covered much of the East and
South.
The season's most frigid air
began moving south from Canada.
bringing rain to Chicago and
Detroit.
Fair skies prevailed across much
of the Wes1. Clouds and fog
shrouded Washington and Oregon.
Snow fell in Spokane, Wash.
A blizzard closed most roads on
Colorado's eastern plains Sunday.
Delays up to an hour were
reported at the airpon in Denver,
where 32 planes were moving an
hour, compared to the usual 80,
said spokesman Chuck Cannon.
Weekend storms dumped rain,
slush and snow across most of New
Mexico.

The Colorado storm was expected to move out of the Rockies ,
bringing snowfall and rain today in
the central Oklahoma. Thunderstorms were predicted from eastern
Texas to eastern Arkansas.
Temperatures were expected tn
the teens in Mmnesota; in the 20s
in Maine, Wyoming and South
Dakota; in the 30s in New England
lllinots, northern Texas, Montan~
and eastern Oregon; in the 40s in
New York, New Mexico and northem Oregon; in the 50s in Washington, D.C., cenlral Texas and Northem California; m the 60s in South,
southern Texas and Arizona: in the
70s in northern Flonda and Southern California; and in the 80s in
Miami.
The high temperature for the
natiOn Sunday wa s 79 at Fort
Myers, Fla.

Three people were treated for minor injuries following a two·
vehicle accident at the intersection on state Route 681 and Orange
Township Road 303 (Callaway Road) Saturday morning.
According to report from the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State
Highway Patrol, Ollie· E. Beaumont, 46, of Reedsville, was east·
bound on Route 681. A westbound vehicle, driven by William E.
Burke, 37, of Coolville, attempted to make a left turn in front of
Beaumont's vehicle. Beaumont was unable to stop and struck the
right-rear of BU!Xe's vehicle.
Beaumont was transported by the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Service to Veterans Memorial Hospital where she was
treated for minor in injuries and released. Two passengers, Jessica
R. Beaumont, 19, and 23-month-old Dewight E. Beaumoni, both of
Reedsville, were uansported by lbc EMS to Pleasant Valley Hospi·
tal where they were treated and released.
Burke and his passenger, Candace J. Bunting, 13, of Coolville,
were reponedly uninjured.
Damage to Beaumont's 1989 Oldsmobile Cutlass was listed as
moderate and disabling. Damage to Burke's 1982 Ford F-150 was
hsted as light.
Burke was cited for failure to yield.

MILWAUKEE (AP) - Jeffrey
L. Dahmer pleaded guilty but
msane today to the mutilation slayings of 15 young men, and under
Wisconsin law a jury must determine his mental state at the Lime of
the killings.
"! want to emphasize that the
dectsion to plead guilty is Mr. Dahmer's," defense attorney Gerald
Boyle said during a motions hearing. ·'This case is about his mental
condition."

Dahmer is accused of luring the
victims to his apanment, then drugging, killing and dismembering
them.
Wisconsin is among a handful
of states in which a person who
pleads insanity must first be convicted of the crime - at which
time no question of sanity is raised
- and then undergo a second, separate phase of trial on the sanity
issue.
The plea change wtll cause Dah-

-----Hospital news---Veteraos Memorial
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS·
Hilda Carnahan, Middleport, and
Benha Tuttle, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY DICHARGESJuanita Chapman.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS
Melvin Lovesee, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Rtchard Finlaw.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges
Friday, Jan. 10:
Tyler Barry, Mrs. John Beers
and daughter, Juanita Craig, Mrs.
Jim Freeman and daughter,
Pauline Freeman, Madge Goheen,
Odetta Graham. Lyda Hudson and
Jake Robson.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Davison,
daughler, Bidwell and Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer Parsons, daughter,
Crown City.
Saturday, Jan. 11:
Discharges
Nancy Blair, Jessica Davis,
Teresa Hutchison, Kenetha
Mccain, and Mrs. Steven Newton

and daughter,.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffery Haynes,
daughter, Gallipolis and Mr. and
Mrs. Ricky Jackson, son. Gallipo·
lis.
Sunday, Jan. 12:
Discharges
Patricia Davison, Mrs. Harley
Hendricks and daughter, Mrs.
Elmer Parsons and daughter, and
Mrs. Raben Petersen and son .
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Bright,
daughter, McArthur, Mrs. Mrs.
David Bush, daughter, Oak Hill
and Mr. and Mrs. Michael King,
son, Leon.

mer's jan. 27 jury trial to move
immediately to the sanity phase
dealing with Dahmer's state of
mind at the time of the slayings.
If judged sane, Dahmer would
face a mandatory life prison sentence for each of the murders. If
deemed insane, he would be committed to a mental institution for
the criminally insane. After undergoing treatment for a year, he could
petition for release every six
months.
"II changes everythin~." Assis- ·
Lant DtsLricl Attorney Greg
O'Meara said in an interview
before the plea was changed. "h
changes the way we position ourselves during the trial; it changes
the way we do jury selection: it
changes who we call as witnesses.
and it changes what questions we
ask them ."
He said it also would keep some
of the gory evidence or the case
from introduction, but legal expefl$
say releasing details of the slayings
cannot be avoided.
' 'The defense has to persuade
the jury that this crime was so
bizarre and so pathological that this
man can't be held responsible the
way olbcr people are held responsi·
ble," said Leonard V. Kaplan, a

professor of law at the University
of Wisconsin-Madison.
"I don't see how they can do
that and avoid the details,'' he said.
Dahmer was arrested last July
when police found body parts of II
males scattered around his apart·
ment- a severed head in the
refrigerator, hands in a metal kenle
and skulls in a box.
Police were led to Dahmer's
apartment by a man who said he
escaped from Dahmer's aparbllent
after being threatened with a knife.
In the following days, Dahmer
admiued to killing 17 males since
1978. He said his first victim was a
hitchhiker he strangled in his
hometown of Bath, Ohio.
The 31-year-old former candy
factory worker is charged with I5
killings in the Mtlwaukec area,
including three at hts grandmother's suburban home. Police said he
admiued keeping one man's he311
"tO eat later."
To be found innocent by reason
of mental disease or defect in Wis·
consin, Dahmer's attorney must
prove he suffered from a mental illness which either kept him from
realizing his crimes were wrong or
made him unable to stop himself
from committin~ them.

EMS units answer 17 calls over weekend
'

Meigs Coumy Emergency Ser· taken to Holzer Medical Center. AI Road. Carl Qualls was taken to
vices answered 17 emergency calls 6:19 p.m., Rutland squad went to Veterans. At 1:57 p.m., Racine
State Route 143 and Zion Road . squad went to Third Street and
over the weekend.
On Saturday at 9:37 a.m., Tup- Shirley Morris was transported to transponed Dorothy Sayre to Vetpers Plains and Pomeroy units went Pleasant Valley. At 6:37 p.m., erans. At 8:04 p.m., Middleport
to State Route 681 West and Cal- Pomeroy unit went to Condor unit went to North Front Streel.
loway Road for an auto accident Street Ronnie Eakins was taken to James Shartigue was treated but
Jessica Beaumont and Dwight Veterans. At 6:43 p.m., Chester not lransportcd. AI 9:21 p.m., MidBeaumont were taken to Pleasant station went to Scout Camp Road dlepon and Pomeroy units went to
Valley Hospital, and Elizabeth for a search and rescue. At I I:39 Sycamore Street for a fire at the
Beaumont was taken to Veterans p.m., Racine units went to Pine Burdell McKinney residence. Tho
Grove Road for an accident. No call was later canceled. At II :33
Hospital.
Nazarene Church on Route 73 in (Bambi) Fisher of St. Louis, Mo., Memorial
Hattie Alltop
p.m ., Middleport unit went to BradAt I p.m., Pomeroy unit went to injuries were reported.
and
Mrs.
John
(Amy)
Mullins,
Wilmington.
Funeral
services
will
On Sunday at 10:15 a.m.. bury Road. Mary Lathey was treat·
Hattie Alltop, 81, of Route 2,
Pomeroy Nursing and RehabilitaRock
Hill,
S.C.:
and
six
greatbe
held
there
Wednesday
at
2:30
Coolville, died Sunday, Jan . 12,
tion Center for Benha Tuttle. She Pomeroy unit went to Peacock cd bul not transported.
On Monday at 4:10 a.m., Syra!992, at Camden Clark Hospital, p.m. Burial will be in Wilmington. grandchildren.
was taken to Veterans . At 2:42 Avenue. Carl Roach went to Hofz.
Besides her pareniS, she was p.m.,
cr.
At
11
:51
a.m.,
Pomeroy
unit
cuse
unit weni to College Street for
Parkersburg, W. Va.
Pomeroy units went to East
preceded in death by her daughter.
went
to
State
Route
248
for
Helen
Goldie
Inge,ls, who was taken to
Born in Stinson, W. Va.,on Oct. Allie M. Carman
Main Street for an auto ftre . Julie
Bonnie
Marlene
Fisher.
Kibble.
She
was
taken
to
St.
Joseph
Veterans.
At 9:01 a.m., Middlepon
26, 1910, she was the daughter of
Moodispaugh was the owner. At
Allie
M.
Carman,
86,
a
resident
She
attended
the
Racine
Unill!8--'
Hospital.
At
12:52
p.m.,
Middleunit
went
to Overbrook Center.
the late William and Myrtle Postal4:40 p.m., Rutland unit went to
of
Stonewood
Apanments,
MiddleMethodist
Church
and
was
a
momport
unit
went
to
McElhinney
Hill
Cora
Webb
was taken to Veterans.
waite Mollohan. She was member
State Route 681. Jim Darst was
of the Carthage Gap Community port, died Sunday at university ber of the Racine United Methodist
Hospital, Columbus.
Women.
Church.
She was born Nov. 20, 1905 in
Funeral services will be held on
She is survived by two sons,
Garrell McKown of Barberton and Mason County, daughter of the late Tuesday at I p.m. at Racine United
TI1e Daily Seulinel
Dance planned
Membership meeting
Leeman Alltop, Jr. of Coolville: William and Amanda Hedrick Methodist Church, with Rev. Roger
(USPS 213·900)
The Gallia Twirlers Western
The regular membership meetGrace officiating. Burial will be in
two daughters, Karon (Spurlock) Fielder.
Publi11h r d every 111'lorn oo n, Mond11y
ing of the Middlepon Fire Depan- Square Dance Club will hold a
She was a beautician and fonner Letan Falls Cemetery.
Duley of Belpre, and Betty
through F'nd11y, I U Court Sl . Pomeroy
dance
Saturday
from
8
to
II
p.m
.
ment
will
be
held
Thursday
at
7:30
Friends may call at the funeral
Ohio by t.hr. Ohio Vallt:y Pubh!o!hing
McDonald of Tuppers Plains; a resident of Addison. She was once
There will be an in-service at the Henderson Community CenCo~p11ny/ Mulhmr. di" Inc., Pom eroy,
grandson raised m the home, the owner of Charm Beauty Shop, home on Monday from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Oh1o 45769 . Ph. 9~2 -21$. Sncond cla!i8
ter. Roger Steele will be the caller.
training
session
held
after
the
meetGallipolis
and
the
Carman
Barber
p.m.
and
7
p.m.
to
9
p.m.
and
an
Edward McKown of Akron: a stepp&lt;»~t.agc pHid 11l Pomeroy , Ohio.
ing concerning the cardiac The dance is open to all western
daughter raised in the home, Gwen- and Beauty Shop, Addison. She hour prior to services on Tuesday.
Member: The A:~&lt;tociated Prrs11 lnlan'd
Pallbearers will be Max Cale, thumper. All members are urged to style square dancers.
delyn Sumpter of Normantown, W. formerly attended Cheshire Baptist
DAJiy Pres111 Ati KOCiAhon a nd the Ohio
American Legion to meet
auend.
Church.
David
Fox,
Roger
Hill,
Tommy
NewspAper Ass6ciRtion NahonR \
Va.: three brothers, Russell MolloThe Racine American Legion
Trustees to meet
Advertising Represcnlativt., Dranham
Survivors include two Jtrandson. Hill, Carl Lee Robinson and Drew
han of Tuppers Plains, Jennings
N~w!lpRpcr Salr. s, 733 Third Avenue
The Olive Township Trustees Post 602 will mcet ·Thursday at
Mollohan of Cool ville, and Vernon Woodrow R. Burnett II of Gallipo- ,;.Fiiiisiiiherii.- - - - - - - · will meet Saturday a1 9 a.m. at the 7:30p.m. at the posrhomc.
New YOrk, New YOrk 10017
·
Mollohan of Bakersfield, Calif.; lis, and Jeffrey Scott Burnell of
Guest speaker
Reedsville Fire House. Appropria·
POSTMASTER: Send Addl"f';~t~~ changps to
two sisters. Violet Murphy Jones of Eaton: three granddaughters,
The DaiJy Sr.nhn~l. 111 Court St
The Rev. Eddie Buffington will
tions
for
1992
will
be
discussed.
Pomeroy, OHio 457fJ9.
·
Coolville, and Vallie Wheeler of Nicolynn Sue Burnett of Gallipolis,
speak at the Naomi Baptist Church
ill fY Yl Alb /\G O 1OIJI\ Y
Baltimore, Md., 10 grandchildren Jacolynn Rae Darst of Cheshire,
SUBSCRIPTION
RATES
in Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:45
8)' Carrklr or Motor Route
Trustees to meet
and three great·gnlndchildren.
and Laualyn Kay Burnen of
a.m.
The public is invited to attend.
gneoo Month
w..k.......... ....................... ..... $1.6(1
JAN.13
L
..
The Orange Township Truswes
Besides her parents she was pre- Columbus.
..... .......................... $6.95
Orie Ytlar....................... ....... - $83 20
ceded in death by her husband,
She was preceded in death by
1· 9· 4·2,...., will hold a special meeting Tues- Lebanon board meets
SINOLECOPY
day at 7:30 p.m. to complete approLeeman Alltop, Sr. in 1970, two her ftrSI husband, James M. Scolt;
PRICE
Gelman U·boats find the U S. East
There
will
be
a
special
meeting
'priations and discuss other matters.
brothers, one sister, and two step- second husband, Harley Carman:
.......
•
.
25
Cl!nl.'i
Coast Iaalmost asl'&lt;lQUng gallery,
The meeting will lie held at the of the Lebanon Township Trustees
one daughter, Carolyn Scou Bur- wllh ships sailing at night wilh lights
sons.
on Tuesday at 7 p.m. _at the town·
Sub!ICT'ibtln not dr.~ni RR lO PfiY th e ~rri­
home of the clerk, Susan Pullins.
Funeral services will be held nett; and nine brothers and sisters.
tr IMY remit in advnn co dirc&gt;ct to The
ship
building.
·
on, lighthouseS w01klng as normal.
Group to perform
GAllipolis Daily 'l'ribunr. on f\ 3.6 or 12
Wednesday 2 p.m. at the White·
Funeral services will be conradio mess~;~ges made wtlhout codes
month I.Nl!i l s . Crodil w111 be giv r.n ~rrier
The Spencers from Shiloh will
Blower Funeral hoii}C with Rbnzel ducted I p.m . Wednesday at
tnchwt!t:k.
arid few U.S. warships on patrol. On
FOR
L1FE
INSURANCE
perform at the Faith Baptist Church
Postal waite and JohlrEUison offici· Waugh·Halley-Wood Funeral
No suiJMcriptionM by mail pt!Tm!Llcd 1n
lhe Soviet front the Soviets widen
in Mason, W.Va. on Sunday at 2
ating. Burial will be in the Home, with the Rev. C.J. ·Lemley
areAs whr.re home carrier st'!rvic:e ill
CALL:
lhe
bu~ driven between Germany's
p.m. Also performing will be the
AYIIiJAb(t!.
Coolville Cemetery. Friends may and the Rev. Eamie Perkins offiCi·
2nd
and
41h
Panzer
Groups.
In
JEFF
WARNER
Renections
Trio.
The
public
is
call at the funeral home after 2 p.m. ating. Burial will be in Reynolds
Mall Sutw.ertptlont!
L.ondOn, the Allies announce Axls
INSURANCE
lnNidc Galllv. County
invited to auend.
Tuesday . •
Cemetery.
13 Wllck8 ....................... .. ............. ~21. 84
302W. 2nd,
war criminall will be punished.
Syracuse Council to meel
Friends may call at thti •funeral
26 WockH ........................... $43 .16
Pomoroy, Ohio
The Syracuse Village Council
52 Weeks ........................ .............. $84 16
home on Tuesday from 6-9 p.m.
David Arix
114·H2-5479
Outside Galli a County
will
meet
in
continued
session
on
David Edward Arix, 32, of
In lieu of flowers, donations can
NMilflllilllllrMIII.,.,..C....,. .......C.....
13 Wooko ................ ................... 123 40
Hliiii._Cft
........
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the village
26 Weeks .... ........... ........................ $46.50
Pomeroy, died ~unday, January 12, be made to the. American Cancer
~--~
52 Weoko ... ... ........................ ...... $88.40
hall.
Association or the AJDerican Hcan
1992.
Dance planned
will
be Associatibn.
Arrangements
Am
Ele
Power
..............
~
..
.32
3/8
The
Gallia Twirlers will hold a
announced by Bigony-Jordan
Ashland
Oil
.....................
J
I
1(2
half-way dance on Friday from 8 to
Mabel Shields
slimtt!Ung qootf's %ways Cookiri!J )lt
Funeral Home in Albany.
AT&amp;T
..
.............................
41
1/8
II
p.m
.
at
the
Henderson
Commu·
Mabel Virginia Shields, 73, or
Bank One ......... .................48 1/4
nily Center. John Waugh will be
Mary Beegle
Racine, died on Saturday morning,
Bob
Evans
........................
24
1/4
the caller.
Mary Wilson Beegle, 87, of January II, 1991 at Veterans
l.ocllld on Rl33 bttldt 11111011 Euon and Ill ion lllltel,llascin, WY
Charming Shop.................. 23 7/8
2582 Nonh U. S. 68, WilmingiOn, Memorial Hospil3\. ·
Open Sunday lhrough Saturday. 10 am·8 pm
City Holding ..................... 17 3/4
died ,Sunday, Jan. 12, 1992 at the
A housewife, she was bom ·on
Dance scheduled
Federal Mogul... ................ 16 1/4
There will.be a dance at the Rut·
Clinton Memorial Hospital In Man:h 6, 1918 in Apple Grove, the
Goodyear T.&amp;R .......... ....... .55 Ifl.
land Legion Hall on Beach Grove
Wilmin~ton.
. ~ · ·daughter of the late Earl and Bertha
Key Centunon ...................15
•Chicken SaniMich, Franclt FriO, Soup I Salad Bar
Road in Rutland on Friday from 9
She IS survived by her husband Stovr~ Robinson.
Lands' End ........................28 318
p.m. 10 midnight featuring Marlin's
of 70 years. the Rev. Ray Beegle, a · Surviving 1re her husblnd, Her·
•.BLT, Fl'8r1Ch Frtes, Sat4l I Salad Bat
Limited Inc............, .......... 28 112 and White's Hill Band. Performers
son and daughter-iri-law, David bert B'. (Pete)' Sbiel4s, als'O of
Muitimedia Inc ..................25 114 include Marli'n Wolfe, Benny
·Grilled fWn I
FrlneltFrllis, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
and Betty Beegle, a ~ugbter and Racine:. a P!ter, Mrs. Jack (Clara· Rax
Resr.urant .......~ ........ .. 1/4
Wolfe, Emily Wolfe, Robin Wolfe, ·
• Philly Sandwich, Frencl1 Fries, Soup I Salad Bar
son-in· law, Ramona and Frank Mac) SlfBCill. Racine; four brothRobbins&amp;Myr~s ................39 1/2
Rick
Saunders,
Tony
Combs,
Char·
Cox, all of .Wilmington, several . ers: Raymoild (Caro!yn) Robinson
· Hamluger, French Fries, Soup &amp;Salad Bar
Shoney's lnc ...................... 23 1/4 · lie Williamson and Jeimie Jeffers.
grandchildren and several greal· of New . Bern, N.C., Edward
Star
Bank
...........................
25
1/4
The public is invited to aacnd.
'IIISMT,&amp;. 1!_1!~!· ~~~~ ::::. -~-"'"
grandchildren. Also surviving are (Margery) Robinaon. Zepbyr'Hills,
Wendy lm'l........................ ll 3/4 . Board of Electlou til meet
several cousiflS in Meigs County. ' Fla.. Howud (Gweildolyn) RobinWorthington Ind................22 l/2
The Meigs County Board of
' Both the Rev. and Mrs, Beegle son of Ripley, W.Va., aRd WiDiam
St«k
npora
art
tilt
10:30
a.m.
Elections
will meet Thursday at 4
· were f~ly ,Qf Don:as.
. R~inson of Racine; three &amp;randVISA•
quotll
provldfll
by
Blu111,
Ellis
p.m . at the board office• .I08
friends JIIIY call tue9ilay From children: Mrs. Mark (Molly Ann)
3 10 5 .and 6 to 9 p.Jl1. at the !(rueger of Dover, Del., Larry_ and IMwl of Gallipolis.
Mechanic Street In POmeroy.

----Area deaths----

-Meigs announcements--

.

·
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-~

__Martin Schram .--.:
buying ours. Universa!l'ictures is
now owned b~ Matsushita Elecui1
cal Industrial Co.

0.

snow to develop over mainly nonhwest Ohio during the night
Tuesday will be a real winter
day in Ohio. Snow and blowing
snow ate expected along with
windy conditions and falling tern·
peratures. However, the snow
should taper to flurries over west·
em Ohio during the afternoon.·
Lows tonight will range from
the mid·20s in the northwest 10 the
low 30s in the extreme east and
south. Temperatures on Tuesday
are expected to fall to the upper
teens to low 20s by evening.
The record hi2h temoerature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 67 degrees in 1g90, The
record low was 14 below zero in
1977. ~
Sunset tonight will be at 5:28
p.m. Sunrise on Tuesday will be at
7:52a.m.

Dahmer pl~ads guilty, but insane to slayings

Until then, we have "JFK." It's
bad history, dishonest 311 and pro- "
fdondly disturbing cinema, but for .,
much of the American public, it's
the only game in town. Rigged as it · '
is, the outcome is cenain.

__,__....;;;;....._

\
W. VA.

otherwise an ahomination. Perhaps
"JFK" will rai se enough public
concern that the government will
be forced to reconsider the secrecy
that surrounds the evidence.

Maybe Japan will -adopt CEO salaries

•I Columbus I 33•j

mA

. •

It is se lf-evident that there are
no "national sccunty " reasons
worthy of the name remaining in
the way. The Sovl ct Union no
longer exists, and the Soviet Union
was the only national security rationale at the ttme of Lhe assassination. In fact, between newly opened
KGB files and yet-Lo-be opened
CIA and FBI Iiles, we might fmaUy
get a full picture of Oswald, his
killer. Jack Ruby, and the entire
cast of characters who parade with
such malignant pwpose through the
three long hours of "JFK." We
might finally be able to judge for
ourselves the adequacy of the
autopsy findings and the strength of
the evidence supporting the lone
gunman theory . We might finally
have a public inquest worthy of the
name and of the nation.

•
..
.. . ..

'JFK' is a Stone wall against history

Project exceeds expectations
The Chnstmas trimmings have
been put away for another year and
most of our holiday spirit has disappeared. But, once again , we can
feel good in our hearts that we have
helped make Christmas a !tule
bri ghter for several Meigs County
children.
The 1991 Meigs County toy run
has exceeded our expectations
allowing us to donate our usual
S I ,000 to an area community
(Racine) as well as making donations to other organizations in the
area for the benefit of Meigs Coun-

•

IToledo I 29• I .

By The Associated Press
Winter weather is returning to
Ohio with a vengeance.
The National Weather Service
issued a winter storm wa~eh and
said there's a chance of heavy
snow in parts of Ohio tonight and
Tuesday.
The watch area tonight includes
all of Ohio except the northeast
inland, east central and south cen·
tral portions of the state, where rain
is likely. Those areas are included
in the watch for Tuesday.
Forecasters say rain today will
change to snow over northwest
Ohio this evening and over the
remainder of Ohio during the nighL
Compounding the wintry weather tonight will be the development
of brisk northerly winds at I5 to 25
mph with higher gusts toward
morning. This will cause blowing

"•
)

..
.

.,
.•.
·•
•(
.-"
.~
.·,.
· ,.
· ·:
:;;

:&gt;

Changes like 1hat don't bother ,r ·
me - heck, I don't even care if
, ~ chan~ Rockefeller Cenlcrlll '"
· Mitsublshi Mall. But • ~ Amai· ,.
can proud Of ~ur traclluons, I do . ;;
ha~ one nag_gmg C.. My Jlel'\ID· .,.,_
~ mghlnln 11 ~while Wlldling ,
Mr. Baseball, I will tee the_. J
Japanese ~wd 111ncl up tor tlje .·:,
~venth·lnnmg stretch and bunt· •.
:''B~'~horus .~f "Take Me Out to
au~ame.
.,,
~nd I, for one, Clllllllll beef to
watch the lapanese commit Harty •.
C..y• .
•

WORlD WAR II

Stocks

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

,._~C»&gt;GI.

~~~

MASON FAMILY RESTAURANT

Chae•.

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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

·

EASTERN CONFERENCE
Allan tit:! Division

Team

W L

PeL

CB

II
14
19
21

.656
.600
.457
.417

1.5
6.5
8

Ne• Jersey .. ...... 1.4 21
Wuhington ........ \3 21

.400
.382

8.5
9

Orlmdo ..... ............... 7 27

.206

lS

New Yru:k .............. 21
ROIIttn ....................21
Philadclphi1.. ......... l6
Miami .......... .......... l5

Ct nlul Dlvlslon
Ch.ieago ................ .. 29 S .853
Cl~vt~land ..- ---..24 9
.711
Dcuoit.. ............... .. 20 !6 .556
ALhnLa ................... l8 16 .529
Milw•ulr.cc: ............. l7 \6 .S IS
lndi•na ................. 14 21 .400
Ch.ulotle .............. 10 25

4.5
lO
ll

Tum

Mldwt'llt Division
W L
Pel.

~ ~h ..................... 22

l5 . .595

San Antoruo ......... 20
1-lou.stan ............. 19
Denver .................. 13
D"llas .. .. ............... 12
fo..L.nnesou ___ .
_7

14
16

21
22
26

51

.5
2

7.5

OT

!
2
4.5
6
125

Saturday's scores
New Yor.k 100, BO«t.oo95
Washington 107. LA Clippers 96
Porthnd 115, 011dotte 9l
Cleveland 108, Phlladrlphlal02
Detroit 90, New Jmey 88
lndillnai38,Allanllll5
· Minnesru 101, Uah 96
Ch.icago 108, Miami 99
HousLOO 119, Sanlc 115
San Antonio 96, Denver 85
Sacramento 106, Milwaukee 105, 0T
l"'hoeni.t 130, Golden Slate I I 8

Stanford 78, Oregon 57
L'CW\ 89, Arizona 87
L'!\1. V 78, UC Santa Barbira 54
Ut.ah St. 89, Cal St.-Ful.lcnon 72
Wuhington 7~, Wuhington St. 73,
Weber$(. 96, K Arizona 61

Team

W L

Ohio Univ ....................... 2 0
Mi ami ... ...... .. ............. 2 0
C. Mich. .. ................. I 0
W. Mich .................. ! l
E. Mich ....... ... . ..... ....... l l
Kent St ........ . ........... ! 1
Ball St ........................... 0 1
Tolco:lo ...... .. .................... 0 2
Uowling Grccn . . .. . .... 0 2
Toni~: hi's

Tuesday's games
Dallu at New Jersey, 7:30g.m.
Indianan Wuhlng1.0n. 7:3 p.m.
Ne w York 11 Orlando, 7:30 p.m.
Milwaukee u Allant.a, 7:30p.m.
Poraland at Cleveland, 8 p.m.
Philadelphia at Olicago, 8:30p.m.
Denver at llooston, 8:30p.m.
Golden State at San Antonio, 8:30
p.m.
Minnesou at Uuh, 9:30p.m.
Chuloue at Scaule. 10 p.m.

South
82, t-.'E Illinois 56
Alibama St. BR, Akom St. 73
Atlunm 10\. LSU 90
Au~tin Pel)' 86, Murny St. BS
Ca mptlcll 69, Winlhrop 59
Charlcswn Southern 64, Dav idJon 59
Ciudd W, Appalachian St. 72
Clemson 94, N.C.-1\sheviUe 54
Del:~ wan: St. 96, Howard 95, 20T
Duk e 97, Gcorg_Ja To::h 84
E. Kentucky 84, Tcnnusce Tech 'J5
E. Tcnne.uce St. 80. Furman 75
/·l a . ]n tcmational 78, Stetsnn 62
norida A&amp;M 71, 5. Carolina St. 6&amp;
Florida SL 88 , Wli.c Forea: t 85, OT
Georgia Soulhem 88, Gcorgiil St. 87
Jilcklooville 78, Cent Aorida 74
h mCll M•dison 87, KC.-Wilrmns10r1

Kentucky 81, Florida 60
M1ddlc TCllll . 61, SE ;\iiuolrn 5E
M.1.uiui pp1 St. 84, Mississippi 72
Moreh~ d St. 101 . Tenncssc:c Sl. 75
,\ . CaroWu A.&amp;T 8S, Bethune-Cook -

min 75

K CarotiN St 94. M:uyland 88
S.C. -Charlottt. 85, Sollth Florida 7~
\"E Lm.usiana IM, NW Looisi1n1 8&amp;
Old Domlllion &amp;0, George M..on 73
Richmond 65, [ aS1 Carolina 62
SE l.a1imn• 90, CenLcnary 70
SW Lo wmna 79, W. Kcntud.y 76
Sunlurd 73, Men:er 55
S 1cn1 80, 1\.C .•Greeru:boto 61
Sc'A.Jthem U. 89,Jickson St 81
Tennes see 78, Gcorgi1?6
Tcnn. -Ch~tl.lnooga 86, Marshall68
VM.J79, W. Carolinl74
Va n d crb~t 79, Sopth Carolina 75
Vi1ginia Tech 73, Va . Cammr.n
wealth 12. OT
'
William &amp; Muy 70, American U. 66

Loui&amp;Yillo 1$, Kanau 71 ·
Loyola, ID. 76, Pootlood 63
MuqUOlte 66, AJa,.B......,..., !4
Milml. Ohlol9, Korn ~'
Mkhipn St. n,tllinoiJ 75
Miruteldl 73, Michif:ltl. 64

. Ohio SL liO, Nonb'II'INm .52
Ohio U. 16, E. Michiaan (II

Purdue 71, Jowa 69, C1T

,

' WiJ,.Qieo!Boy63, W.W.S•oM
X.via,otUoM,p.uoatlO '

Soutbwllt
u...-al, a.,tor 77
McN.eSI.U.IWT-ILil
- . \loll;y St. 11,-_ ..
Ncw~10.'-M

NolllrT.,. 61, ._ .........
Olr' hnm ILK Mt..a-0,•
IOOIII~'II.'f-­

· Soulllom - · 7J. r-AAllt.,
S,...FAUOliolO, T.u.-At!Uopl

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TeA•II,TuuTdl3

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Ak.rm Ccn -llower 59, Qe. VASl 57,

Akroo Coventry ~6. LordstO\ItT\ 44
Archbold 7E, Stryker 17, or
Ashland 70, Loudonville 44
Baltimore (Md.) Du nb ar 8"6. Day.
Dunbar 66
Bellbrook. 81, Day. Northridge 46
BCJk.Wre 63, Petry 41
Bexley 52, Jonathan Alder 49
Bloom-CuroU65, Berne: Unim 36
Boardman60, Poland 47
Brcdn-ille 49, Bay 46, OT
Buckeye Ccnt.rsl 53, Frcderic.k t.o wn

Cambridge 82, St.c:ubenville 68
Clf\ton Calh. ~3. Young. Ursuline 51
C1n ton McKinley 62. Cle. St. lg·
n.tius 60
Canton Timken 59, New Philadelphia

49
Cardinal 70, Gnnd Vall. (;f)
Cent.erbutg 91, Millersport 88
Cin . McNicholas 79, Cin. Glen Estc

47
Cin. Tal\ 58, Col. Walnut Ridge 50
Cin. Turpin 65, Clermont No!'\hc..ast Cin. Winloo Woods 67, Cin. Withrow

ll

Ohio Conference
Capiu.l91, Baldwin-Wallace SO
He1delberg 84, Marietta 78
Mu.Wngum 91, Hinm 17
Ohio No nhem Sl. John Cmoll47
Ottcrbcin I 03. MoWlL Union 80

Hathaway Bmwn 44, Col School for
GLrU 26
Hebron LU::ewood 74, Jonathan Alder
47
lndcpmdc:nce 46. Cuyahoga Hu. 29
John Glenn 50, Crooksville44
Johnstown Northrid ge 45 , liclung
Ho . 29
Kenton Ridge 69, Spring. Northean&lt;m JO
Kidroo 56. Cantoo lkriu.ge 34
Kinp 67, Middletown Madiaon 46
Wcland 34, Malvern 32
Lancast.cr 37, Newall. 2.5
UJg1n 71, Rocky River M1gnif1eat SJ
Logan Elm S8, Miami Tt~~:e 25
LoJiln Clcuview 44, Laraia C1Lh. 34
LoRin Southview 45, Elyria Cath. 43
Loudonville 38 Triway 36
Louinille Aquinu 49, Akron Kcnm~32

4l

North CDast Conference
G=vburg o-39, Hud100 38 0'1
Hlnlilton Badin 56, Cirt. St. Ursula
41

Garfi~d

Lutheran E. 18, Fairport llarditta 37
Lutheran W. 41, Colu:mbi1 38
Mmdield 61. Lorain Kina 46
M1 rioo Cath. 78, Buckeye Vall. 74
Mulittgton 66, E. Canton 52

40
Newark Cath. 40, Col. Kinley 29
Nonnandy S2. Shaker Ht1. 47
0\m..,gy 48, W. Jdfmm 22
Oimll.td Falls 71, Fairview Part 45

C..."'' Colh. 44
Ottoville 69, Columbul Grove 2A

Panna 47, Cle'ldand Hta. 4'
P~~m~ Holy Name 59, Co. C1tholic

Hebran LU:ewood 70, Johnstown 51
Hicklville 79, Pettisville 46
Hill~.q~74, Edg~ 58
HoUand Spring. 68 , Sylvan ia
Northview 51
lloti.ston 66, Miuisain1wa Vall. 43
lludson Wut.em ReseJ"'e 84, Pim ·
burgh Shady Side 60
Indian Vall. 74, Zanc:avillc Roleerans
42
Jndiana Dear 82, Cin. St. Rita 24
lacboo CAnter 54, Minsler47
Kalida 70, AUc:n E. 63
Kidron 68, Canton HcriLI&amp;e 67
Kyger Creel! S7.1ronK»n St. Joseph
56, 0'1
. "'
Lancutcre5, ac. Soulh 50
LeWtaton 67, Bcllcwe 60

Liberty·Bcntotl6S, Carey Sl
lickin&amp; Vall. 60, W. Jeffcnon 58, Or
Uma Sh1wncc I I, Delphoa St. John
79

Urn• Sr. 85, Wapakoneu 71

Ridaewood S4, Newtemmc.own 41
Rivet View 67, Philo 43
R001110wn 60, Moaadore 21
S. Chuleston Southeutern 81,
Gromeview 2A

Sholb160. BoJicvuo t7
SW1e1 IS, N - 39
Sp1tta Hia,hland 44, Frederir:lrtowtt
Sprina. Norlh 44, Sorin Soulh 26

B.t.f...,.,,

Sprifo&amp;. Showneo 61,
3!
Sl. Cllillvi1lo 62. CGoboelon l4
S1tubo11i 43, ConOCioft Vol!. :12

H1wlrm 60
Lorain Clcarview SO, Keyn.onc 37
Man1fleld Cu. 69, Ucaa 54
Man11icld MadiJon 94, Tol. Wood·
wud 45
M~t~afaeld St ~·. 63, Col, Academy43

MaplC1011 62, A-shland Crestview 48
Mo'llueUo 65, Ooi&lt; Harbol47
Manon Local .59, Ruaia 44
Ma1an66, Trenton Ed&amp;c:wood'S2
Mu1illon Wuhina1on 77, A.luon
Duchld S7
'
M&lt;Comb 59, Ado Sl
·
MiomiE. n,D.o4f&lt;ml49
Niemi Vall. 16, Covinaton (Ky.)

T.-MII '12, Spr;.a. IIOilh_..,
21
.
Toi.CioiolionSI, Toi. w....... l3 .
Tol. W.U. ~~. - - :10
11(Ufe4(, !oloufteld
ptolO
Trenloa· Ell1•woM 36, Pr•bl•

!.olin 3S

&gt;40

Lake60 •

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.
Tri·Vo\loy 51, ....... &gt;40
r ..,.........., "'· w. c1m1111oa

Mioldlo10Wo0.. 57, Tri-Cowny.N.

31

NlliC01ol Tni169, IlWe 55
NW B--.10, SPc;w... vw. 7?. ar

Now Laoiloo 7~ Ulilodole 53
Now Miuni 10, L.;;o~mu~~ Ou. 55
~ Rlood 70. 014 """ ~ '

1JDII$~~ II; a 4
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fl, I. (lo¥o1IM Sllaw
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Ntwut Js, Col. C.aenl•l 61
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P!n• Or~•• (\v,v, ,) Volley 66,
ButtJVillo6t
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I

I

I

THE . DAILY SENTINEL

In an attempt to probe the Uni- forcing 20 lurnovers out of 1he
versity of Rio Grande men's bas- Bears while keeping their own 10
ketball team's shooting strength 17. Matt Powell and Jeff Brown,
following its two-week furlough also scoring in the two-figure colfrom action, Pikeville (Ky.) Col· umn for the visitors, made their
lege Saturday engaged the Redmen presence fell in the offense. Brown
in a duel of the twos and threes at contributed seven rebounds and
Pikeville.
Powell had four assists.
Although both teams paced their
Jhe Redmen, who netted 12
·firing skills closely, the Redmen votes in the NAJA's second Dividefense and skill on the three-point sion I ranking released last week,
provide Rio Grande with a 116-105 were 56.5 percent from the field
victory, putting the team at 11-4 on (35-62, 21-38 from the three for
1he season.
55.3 percent) and sank 25 of 36
McHugh Jed Athens with 15
The contest drew strong perfor- !Iies at the free throw line for 69.4
'points,
and Dan Kiger added 10.
mances from senior co-captains percent.
The
Bulldogs
hit 21 of 60 from the
Brad Schubert, who had 27 points,
Pikeville connected on 38 of 73
field
including
three of nine from
and Mark Erslan, who added 24 shooting attempts for 52.1 percent
(21 from the three) 10 the offense. and were 33.3 percent from the
But it was center Troy Donaldson three (10-30). At the line, they conwho outscored all comers with 29 nected for 82.6 percent (19-23).
points, six of them from his first
Rio Grande enters Mid-Ohio
two three·pointers of the season.
Conference action for the frrst time
A 6-8 junior from Sebring, Don- this season Tuesday at Ohio
The Meigs Marauders took cd freely thioughout the game .
aldson connected on seven of II Dominican. Pikeville (11-7) will
trips to the free throw line and had also be occupied Tuesday when it advantage of a 22-point second Compston added four in the stretch .
quaner en route to a 60-21 triumph The spore was 49-19.
eight of Rio Grande's•24 rebounds. hosts KcnJuclcy Christian.
Not only did Meigs do outstandover Southern Tornado girls Satur·
The combined scoring of Donald· BoK score:
ing
offensively, but also defensiveclay.
so n, Erslan and Schubert was a
PIKEVILLE (lOS) - Chris
ly
as
in the third period they held
Coach
Ron
Logan's
gals
were
necessary ingredient in rendering Plummer, 2-1-0-7; Ban Williams,
SHS
to
just two points; free throws
led
by
a
trio
or
10-point
scorers;
Pikeville's leading scoring threat, 4·4-7-27; Chris Klonne, 3-1-7;
by
Amber
Ohlinger and Aimee
guard Ban Williams, and the work Brian Johnson, 8-1-17; Damon Vema Compston, Reva Mullen and
Mills.
of his teammates at the net incffec· S1cphenson, 3-1-7; Mike Newton, Lori Kelly. Tricia Baer added nine,
Meigs hit 27-72 from the floor,
tivc.
3-2-8; Jimmy Scott, 3-5·11; Jeff and Katrina Turner eight in a well- 5-15 from the line and grabbed 46
Williams finished with 27 mark· Nezbeth, 2-5·0-19; Twon Jackson, balanced effon a,s nine players hit rebounds to Southern's 29. Baer
the scoring column.
ers and nine of the Bears' 42 1·0-2. TOTALS 28·10·19-105.
Aimee Mills led Southern with and Turner each had nine rebounds,
boards, while Jeff Nezbeth added
RIO GRANDE (116) - Lyn· nine, while Christie Cooper and while Kelly had eight and Missy
19 points and seven rebounds. dell Snyder, 0-5 ·5; Kyle Schroer,
Sisson had six.
Brian Johnson had 17 poiniS and 0·1 ·0·3; Mark Erslan, 0-7-3-24; Andrea Moore each had four.
Meigs had IS turnovers, four
. Meigs took an 11-4 fiiSt period
Jimmy Scott was credited with II.
Brad Schubert, 1-6· 7-27; Matt lead as Vema Compston and Tricia assists, and 14 steals; three each by
The Rcdmen, shooting 58 per· Powell, 3-2·1·13; Brett Coreno, J.
Reva Mullen, Baer, and Compston.
cent in the first half, pulled oul for Q.2 ; Jeff Brown, 0·3 ·2- 11; Tim Baer, two Marauder strongholds,
SHS had 20 fouls and Meigs 19.
an !!·point lead in the remaining Christian, 1·0·2; Troy Donaldson, tallied four points each in the Quarler tolals
frame.
20 minutes and maintained a slim 8·2-7-29. TOTALS 14-21·25-116.
' The second period was much Southem ...............4 11 6 2 = 21
margin for the rest of the game,
Halftime score: Rio Grande more
upbeat offensively, but the Meigs ................. ll22 16 II= 60
53, Pike~ille 42.
·
Southern (21) - Andrea
result was a larger Meigs' lead.
Moore
2·0·0=4, Alimce Mills 40·
Lori Kelly added all 10 of her
1=9,
Amber
Ohlinger 0-0=2=2 ,
• (Continued fromPage4)
points in the frame, and Reva
0 0
Mullen and Katrina Turner each Beth Clark 0·0-2=2, Christie Coopadded
four en route to a 22-11 er 1-0-2=4. Totals.,..;-7·0·7=21
drive witiduamer' s.l8-yard TD
about. ·
Meigs (60)- Vema Compston
sweep
by
the hosts.
The defense also came full cir• pass to Willie Green.
5-0-0=10,
Tricia Jher 3-0·3=9,
Aimee
Mills
added
six
for
Suddenly, Kramer was hitting
, cle , shutting down a seemingly
Missy
Sisson
0-0-1=1, Kim HanSouthern,
but
Meigs
led
33-13
at
unstoppable offense 19 weeh after slant passes and sideline outs, using
ning
1·0·0=2,
Lee Henderson 3·0·
they first raised eyebrows around a two-step drop to avoid Washing- the half.
0=6,
Rcva
Mullen
5-0·0=10, Mary
A six point effort by Mullen
the NFL by thumping the Lions 45· ton's pass rush. When he wasn't
Cremeans
1-0·2=4,
Lori Kelly 5·0·
throwing, Barry Sanders was mov- sparked a 16-6 third period oul·
0 in the season opener.
burst by Meigs a,s Logan substirut· 0=10, Katrina Turner 4-0-0=8.
Things looked depressingly ing the ball on the ground.
Totals- 27·0·5=60
Washington pushed its lead to
familiar to DeJroiL
_
_
_
_
SVAC
cage
standings
_ _ _ __
· On DeJroit's first offensive play, 17-7 on a two-yard touchdown run
defen.sive end Charles Mann with 6:44 left in the half, but
(Overall)
sacked Erik Kramer atid forced a Kramer completed five of eight on
Symmes Vallcy .. .3 1 176 181
W L PF PA North Gallia ........2 3 198 201
fumble, which Washington quickly Detroit's next drive to•set up a 30- r Team
yard Eddie Mu,rray field goal Oak Hill ..............5 2 460 425
turned inlo a 7-0 lead.
·
Kyger Creek ........ I 2 97 110
attempt
jusl before halftime.
The Lions got the ball back, and .
Southern ...............~ 4 523 480 Hannan Trace ..... .! 3 163 204
The Lions had served notice North Gallta ........4 5 493 575
five plays . later, Washington
Oak Hill ..............! 4 198 231
linebacker Kun Gouveia picked off they weren't about to roll over and Kyger Creelc ........ 3 4 376 387 Southwestern.......! 4 155 185
an errant Kramer throw and ran it die.
Eastern .............. ;.3 5 530 588 TOTALS ..........18 18 1486 1486
After
another
Washington
field
back to Jhe Detroit 10. Chip
Hannan Ttace ...... 3 S 454 561
Lohmiller's 20·yard fiel\1 goal gave goal made it 20·10, DeJroit tried to Symmes Valley ...2 · 5 380 429
Saturday's scores
Washington a 10-0 advantage wflh continue its comeback.
Southwestern .......0 8 416 ' SS7 f&amp;¥}r Creek 57, Ironton SL Joe 56
Kramer, who completed 14 of
just 4:02 gone in the opening qU¥·
20
passes for 179 yards in the first
(Conrerence)
ter. .
Hannan 52, Southwestern SO '
half,
saw
his
first
a1tempt
of
the
Southem
..............
4 1 358 278
"When you get 10 points down
to that bi~ football team, you're in second half b!ltted down by defen· Oak Hill ............. .4 I 344 316
'This week's action ·
trouble, ' Detroit head coach sive Jackie Eric Williams. After an NorthGallia ........4 "1 311 280
.Tuesday '- Kyger Creek at
eighi·Yard completioq, Kramer felt Hannan Trace ......3 2 324 317 . Southern; Oak Hill at Soulhwest·
Wayne Fontes said.
Detroh guard Ken Dallafior pressute again and oveithrew wide Eastem ............ :...2 3 307 333 em; Hannan Trace at Symmes Val·
Robert Perriman.
Symmes Valley ...1 3 212 256 • ley; North Gallia at Eastern
.
called the first period "sgmething receiver
Thai se.t the Jane for the second· Kyger Creek ........ ! 3 206 218
Friday
Sputhem
at
South• of a shock. It was like walking into half.
,
,
·.
Southwestern .......O S 266 .330 western;, Hannan Traee at Notlh
• aSDakepit." ~
an
injury
to one of TOT ~LS ..........19 19 2328 U28 Gallia; Oak Hill at Kyger Creek;
Ironicallr,
AftJ!s that opening I
· WashinB19n s most valuable
play, ington, Detroit reeieJ of five
Symmes Valley at Eastern
ers
may
bave
pushed
die
Rodskins
(Reser.vea • SVAC onl)')
sttaight victories. Th~owcd the into IDQre zone coverage. Pro Bowl
Saturday - Southern at Ross
Team
W L PF PA SE; Federal Hocking ,at Eastern:
same resolve Sunday.
•
Early in the second quart~r, cornerback Darrell Gre~n was Southem .............. 0" 275 182 Minford at Oak Hill · · '
Eastem .....:......,..A 1· . 224 192
: Detroit capped an 11-play, 7S-yard inj~ trying 10 tackle Sanders

TOUGH DAY- Denver quarterback John Elway (7) grimaces
in pain after suffering a deep thigh bruise in the third quarter of
Sunday's AFC championship ga'lne against the host Buffalo Bills,
who won 10·7to advance to the Super Bowl. (AP)

Rio ladies dump Walsh
for fourth MOC victory
Gena Norris, starting point
guard for the University of Rio
Grande women's baskelball team ,
scored 13 poinls in Saturday's
Mid-Ohio Conference contest al
Walsh, adding eighl rebounds and
six assists to help the Redwomcn to
an 82-72 win over the Lady Cavaliers.
The game marked the fourth
consecutive conference win for the
Redwomen, now 15-2 overall for
one of the best mid-season records
to be compiled by the Rio Grande
women's program.
Rio Grande, which placed in the
voting for the NAJA's Division l
teams last month, went to a fourpoint lead at the end of the first
half, but the Lady Cavaliers put
four of their players into double
figures for the game in an attempt
to save their court. Mindy Montgomery came off the bench to add
21 pomts, 15 froiD the three, to
help put the Redwomen ahead.
Ann Bamitz supplied 19 points
and had nine of the Rio ladies•· 56
rebounds, with Stephanie Gudorf
adding 12 points and six boards to
the effort.
Walsh was led by Colleen·
Thompson. who had 16 markers
and seven of the hosts' 42 boards.
The Redwomen held their
turnovers to 18 and inflicted 28 on
Walsh.
"I thought we playe&lt;l hard, but
we didn't shoot the ball very well,"
Redwomen Coach Doug Foote
said. "But once you take the shoot·
ing away, we dominated the boards
and forced 28 turnovers. Another

'

(Boys)

I.

SPRING VALLEYCINEMA

·
Conf.Overall

TMm
W
Belpre ....... ................. .5
Alexander ... ............... .5
Wellston .................... .4
Meigs ......................... J
Trimble ...................... .3
Nelsonville-York.. ...... 2
Federal Hocking ......... 2
Miller .......................... 2
Vinton County ............ 2

L WL
8
8
3 4
3 S
3 4
4 3
5 3
4 3
4 2
I
I

Friday's scores
Meigs 84 Trimble 77
Vinton County 68 Alexander 60
Belpre 65 Wellston 46
Miller 81 Federal Hocking 67
Nelsonville· York- idle
Saturday's score
Meigs 81, Athens 54

44 0• ' 4524

•

. •• ' ...• ,

~" 'I 1' ...-1 ~ '

URGI. IN MATIN[(S SATUROAW • SUNDAY ,
!AII:GAIII HIGHT T\ISDAY .

I
2
6

4

5

5
6
5
6

(N· U)

1:20 ,9:20 DAILY .
~1 / SUN ~mE£S

1:2 0 l : 20

==

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·' '"DAllY.
sAT / SUPI
IIATHCHS nlt••v~­
\;1~1
1:00, ) :00

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00!1111

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HUU . Ill IAMAII lllilll

7:30, 1:30 DAI LT.

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SA~f \Ufj

SAT!SUN !U.TIIIE(S
J : lO l : lO

IIAT!N[[ $

1:00 ] :)0

n_Cclo.-Y-,

uc;auty.....

Tuesday's games
Meigs at Federal Hocking
Miller at Nelsonville· York
Trimble at Alexander
ViniOn Counly at Belpre
Wellston - idle

H.D. YES\. FINANCIAL
SERVICES
'

KARL KElLER .Ill, C.P.A.

Registered Representative

.
•

IRA's * SEP IRA's
MUTUAL FUNDS * UIT's
MONEYMARKETS

614·992·7270
ftuildil $1rvk~ _lie.
·lrftlg,TX75039

s

p ·

key was that we shot our free
throws well, which shows we have
to do the little things right Gena
worked very hard for us and we got
some great games out of Ann and
Mindy."
Rio Grande connected on 28 of
8~ field goal attempts for 31.5 percent, including 10 or 37 from Jhe
three (27 percent). However, the
Redwomcn netted 16 of 19 tries at
the line for 84.2 percent, with Norris going five-for-five and Damitz
five-for-six.
Walsh shot 44.8 percent (26-58,
lilree or 12 from the three for 25.
percent) and went 81 percent on
free lhrows (17-21), with Shelly
Allen connecting on eight of nine
aucmpts.
Rio Grande travels Tuesday for
a crucial contest with Tiffin, team
wih whom it curren~y shares the
MOC championship. Walsh goes 10
Urbana Tuesday.
Box score:
WALSH (72)- Shelly Dunroyer, 1-0-2; Stacy Richards,4-1·2·
13; Shelly Allen, 2-1·8·15; Colleen
Thompson, 7-2-16; Shelly Pilsitz,
4-3·ll; Tracey Taylor, 2-1-2-9:
Jodie Tckip, 1-0-2; Marife Melendez, 2-0-4. TOTALS 23·3-17.72.
RIO ·GRANDE (82) - Gena
Norris, 1-2-5-13; Michelle Crouse,
· 2-l-1-8; Jackie Hannon, 1·0-2; Tricia Collin s, 1-2·4; Mindy Montgomery, 2-5·2·21; Ann Bamitz, 75·19; Stephanie Gudorf, 3-2-0·12;
Melanie Miller, 1·1·3. TOTALS
18·10·16·82.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
39, Walsh 35.

TVC cage standings

.

.

__....,.

OrMito' I t , - Kmin 60
.....,_... -lhliao41 ' .
11M1J 62, Sherwood Foiovicw

three point range for 35% and hi1
nine or 14 from the line for 64%.
Athens pulled in 25 rebounds with
Sunny Kalu grabbing five.
In the reserve game, Meigs
outscored Athens nine to four in
the third period to turn a 15-14
halftime deficit around and go on
to defeat Athens 31·26 in a low·
scoring contest. The win give the
Little Marauders their seventh win
. in a row after starting the season
with two losses. On of the losses
was a 44·36 loss to Athens on the
road. Jack Slanley and Aaron
Drummer led Meigs with cighl
points each, Eric wagner, Brad
Anderson and Chris Knight added
five each. Anderson also led Meigs
with seven rebounds. Matt Bucey,
Ben Werner and Mike Dahn led
athens with six points each.
Meigs will travel to Federal
Hocking on Tuesday to battle the
Lancers.
Quarter totals
Athens ................ 20 8 13 13 = 54
Meigs ................ .18 24 17 22 = 81
MEIGS (81)- Shawn Hawley
6-0·3=15, LJ . Mitch 3-0-4=10,
Trevor Harrison 10-0·5=25, John
BcnUcy 4-2-2=16, Frank Blake 2·
0-2=6, Phil Hovatter 1-0·0=2,
Bobby Johnson 2·0-0=4, Todd Dill
1·0·0=2, Carllon Drummer 0-0·
l=L TOTALS- 29·2·17=81
ATHENS (54) -Justin Scholl
2-0-3=7, Reid Schaller 0-0-2=2,
l&gt;at McHugh 3-3-0=15, J!lSOn Reed
2-0-2=6, Paul Bresnahan l-0-0=2,
Dan Kiger 4-0·2=10, Scott Hillkirk
1-0-0=2. Sunny Kalu 3-0-0=6,
Kyle Lonas 2-0-0=4. TOTALS17-3-9=54

Redskins wzn

·

me.u.u 79, loladlooi1 !'Iaino n

....Noi«J

w--~t.ML

Madltan 16. H•mllton

. MidpOII: 60, N. Olmoi..J 46
Mill« Olf 98, Pondon·Oitboo SO
Monlpoiiw 6tfoycao47
N. C•n&amp;on Hoover 72, Uniontown

u-tt.-• ' .

.......... Sf,W.U..SI
4f.llotpno, . .

~i•dlewwn.

R011 7'

T-•Calllll,J-·Scio33 .

...."lsii
,. . ..
•. ..._.,

\

Mei11 8t,Aihens54 ~

into the locker room at the half
with a 41-281ead.
Meigs didn't lose a beat in the
third period taking their biggest
lead of the night with 2:30 left in
the period on a steal and lay-up by
Bobby Johnson to give the maroon
and gold a 59.34 lead. Then the
Bulldogs started to scratch back
into the game and cut the Meigs
lead to 59-41 at the end of the peri·
od on a three pointer by Pat
McHugh with21 seconds left in the
period.
The Bulldogs continued to claw
back into the game and cut the
Marauder lead to 12 (62-50) on a
Justin Scholl bucket with 5:17 lef~
After a Meigs time oul Harrison
scored eight straight points in a
span of 49 seconds and the lead
was back up to 71-50 with 3:581eft
in the contest. Meigs outsCored the
Bulldogs 10-4 the rest the way to
post the 81-54 win.
Harrison led the Marauders with
25 points, John Bentley added 16,
Hawley 15 and Mitch 10 to pace
the Marauders. Meigs hit 31 of 61
including two of seven from three
point range from the field for 51%
and 17 of 28 foul shots for 61%.
Meigs had 31 rebounds with Mitch
grabbing 10 and Harrison and
Hawley chipping in with seven.
Meigs had 19 steals with Hawley
getting five and Frank Blake five.
Blake and Bentley had five assist
each of the Marauders 13.

•

Peer pressure. The
desire to be a part of
the crowd is
especially strong in
young people. It's
one of the main
reasons so many
children get involved
With drugs.
·As a parent, it's im. portant for you to
give your child the
facts about the dan·
gers of drug abuse,
and the kind of
strength it takes to
say "no" to friends.
Talk to your kids. Get
to them before the
pressure does.

Lo~in Calh. 70,

Rawrw SE 51, Waledoo46
R,.... S5, Copley 32

.

Hll . 13, Fainiew Park 60

!Jmo temple 55, Bluff10n 52
London44, Bi1 W1lnu1 42

Plckcrir1J1on 91 .,RcynoldobwJ 36
PlqU162, o_,,;n, 60
Rnmna 70, T'frin•buta 45 •

w.

Strong
Enough
-To Resist
The
Pressure?

"6 1

Onvillc 43.

why it was top-rated in the confer·
Early in the third quarter, Elway
ence. Buffalo had it share of over- injured his right thigh . He was
thrown and dropped passes, missed eventually replaced by Gary Kubiblocks and bad running decisions, ak, who scored Denver's only
but mostly il was the Broncos out· touchdown late in the fourth quar·
playing the Bills' vaunted offense.
ter. By that time, Scott Norwood
Thurman Thom11s, Buffalo's had kicked a 44-yard field goal that
rushing-receiving threat, averaged proved to be the difference.
only 2.8 yards a run and caught
The Broncos recovered an
three passes for 15 yards. "I see onside kick following Kubiak's
why they )Vere rated No. I in touchdown, but, on the next play,
defense," he said. "They're real cornerback Kirby Jackson forced
aggressive and they don't make a and then recovered Steve Sewell's
lot of mistakes."
fumble to end a season that went
While the offense spuuered, the beyond expectations for a Denver
defense made things difficult for team that was 5-lllast year.
"We knew this would be a diffi·
John Elway and the Denver
cult task to come in here and win,"
offense.
The Broncos had no success head coach Dan Reeves said. "But
running up the middle, and we felt we could do it. We just
attempts to get outside were com- came up shon."
Following· Sunday's perforplicaled by linebacker Cornelius
mance.
the Bills know that their
Bennett. He was too quick for Denoffense,
praised
throughout the seaver's tight ends to block, and made
son,
will
be
questioned
in the two
three superb plays to tackle Gaston
weeks leading up to the Super
Green from behind.
Benneu wasn't involved in Carl· Bowl.
"Who cares?" Kelly said.
ton Bailey's ll-yard interception
"We're
going 10 the Sur.er Bowl
return for a touchdown that put the
and
that's
all that mauers. '
Bills up 7-0 in the third quarter,
although he had a good view of it.

Meigs beats Southern 60-21
Saturday to stay undefeated

Child

Hardin 1\'onhem SO. Cridmville l'cr·

Mcchanica:burg62.lndian Lake 31
Medina 67. Strongsville 53
Medina Hiahland 67, Tlllmad&amp;c 47
MeigJ 60, P.Kine Swthcm 21
Midview 59, Keystone 4\
Millet City 46, Ttnora 44
Millenpon 48, Hemlock Miller 47
N. C1ntofl Hoo'ler 58, Uniont.own
Lokd6
N. Uni111 Sl, Plea WI~ S6, 0T
New Albany 44, Col. Academy 20
New DOltOn 69, Raceland, Ky . 4S
New LelinllOfl S3, Sheridm 38
New Philaddphia 49, Canton Timkcn

.

Is Your

Gilmour 53, Clc. Uni.,mity 50
On:.enfield 54, Adc:na 31
Groveport 55, Tol. Soon 49
Hamilton 65, Cin. Wenern Hills 43

M•ssillon J1Won 44, Allianc:c 37

V-H.-.-71

during the second quarter of Sunday's NFC
championship game al RFK Stadium, which the
host Redskins won 41·10. OITicials ruled Gray
down and no fumble on the play. (AP)

7!

Col. St. 011rlea 65, Hilliard 54
Col. V/hctstcr~e 58, Tcay• v.n. 54
Cmatton VaU. 70, Edison N. 46
Cootincm..l 48, Leipsic 46
Covington 53, Vemilles 38
C11yahoga Vall. Chrisli•n 76, Open
Door64
Danville 43, Wcllingtoo 39
Day. Jefferson 100, lincolnview 63
Day. Meadowdale 83. 01y. SLebbins
63
Day. Oakwood 77. Milton· Uniewt 56
Defoance 60, Perrysburg 58
Delphos Jeffrnon 62, Arlington 50
Delta 8\ , Ubc:ny Center 67
En1lak.e 84, Cle_. Eu,t S4
Eaton 12, Tn·Yillage61
Elyri• W. 51, Obr.rlin 50
Fairfield Union 73. Liberty Union 60
Fairpon Harding 48, Lulheran E. 41
Flfldlay 76, Oc. A.d1ms 49
Filel1nds 56, Avon 52
Fc.wri• 58, Ti!rm Columbian 52
Fostona St. Wend el in 91, Kan sas
Lili.Ol.l61
FL Jennin$S 76, Columbus Grove 57
Ft. Lonrrue 50, St Henry 43
Ft. Re.covery 69, Franklin·Mon.me 48
Gallipolli: 66, Poin1 Pleasant, W.Va ..

o" ...._.,, r,.,s:s

NO FUMBLE - Washington linebacker
Andre Collins (56, left) and free safely Brad
Edwards (27) watch the ball come loose from the
grip of Detroit wide receiver Mel. Gray (bottom)

C\e. Catholic 6 I, Cle. M&amp;tshall47
Cic. Collinwood 56, Tol. libbey49
Cle. Rhodes 70, Tal. Rogen: 62
Cal. Briggs 77, Marion Huding 47
Col. Dc:Sala 66, Wol\hing\on Ou. 56
Col. l-l•milton Twp. 79, Col. Hartley

Grell Lake. Valley
KenruckyY/calcylf\ IOO,.Ashland 96

.. ..y,

""

om 39

Wis.-Otten Bay 63, Wright St. 44

r...

Redmen outlast
Pikeville 116-105

51

Miarru. Ohio 59, Kent 49
Ohio U. 85 . E. Michigan 67
W. Midligan .58, Tolcdo45

3l

&lt;

Boys

Rkhmand H•. 34, Drooldyn 32

CenLral Ml ch. 78, Dowling Grcetl71
CL11C\1Ullli 79, St. Lc:wJ.is 66
COflplll St. 84, Youngnown St. 65
C ' tonS 3, SW Miuwri Sl. 49
De au.l 83, Mcmphil St 80
E liMisSJ, Va\~46
ai'IJvjlle 88, Buller 8~
.-Chinao 73, W. Illinoil70
Illinois St.13, N. Iowa 66
Indian• 79, Wiscantin 63
Indi1n1 St Sl, Wic:hiu St. Sl
Iowa St. 73, Oklahoma 71
KWis St. &amp;9, SnJ-EdwudJVillo 74

straight buckets in a span of 58 sec.
By DAVE HARRIS
onds to give the Marauders a 15-12
Sentinel Correspondent
For the second straight night the lead with 2:44 left in the period.
Meigs Marauders placed four play- Jason Reed hit a lay-up right before
ers in double figures as the 1hc buzzer giving the Bulldogs a
Marauders rolled over the Athens 20·18 at the end of the period.
Jason Reed's bucket at the start
Bulldogs 81-54 in non-conference
basketball action Sa!urday evening of the first period gave the Bull·
dogs their biggest lead of the night
at Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
The win was the second in a at 22·18 lead with 7:48 left in the
row for the Marauders raising their first half. But Shawn Hawley
record to 54, while the Bulldogs scored five of the games next seven
under first year head coach Tim · poim and the Marauders took the
lead for good (25-24) on a bucket
· Smith falls to 1-10.
The Bulldogs jumped out to a by LJ. Mitch with 5:55 left in the
10-6 lead at the 4:31 mark of the half. With the Marauder defense
first quarter on a buckel by Sunny forcing Athens turnovers the
Kalu. Trevor Harrison hit three Marauders outscored the Bulldogs
16·4 !he rest of the half and went

Sunday

OT

did . Denv; r had more yardage
(304-213), first downs (20-12),
plays (69-61) and possession time
(34:53-25:07).
Instead, look a1 the score sheet.
The defense scored Buffalo's only
touchdown and, with the help of
Broncos kicker David Treadwell,
kept Denver off the board until the
game's final two minuteS.
It was a satisfying e{!ort for ·a
unit that had been , a{ best, an
afterthoughl behind the Bills'
league-leading offense.
True, the Bills must give some
of the credit to Treadwell. Rich
Stadium's swirling winter winds
have frazzled many kickers in the
past, and on Sunday got to Treadwell.
The Broncos had great field
position from the start, beginning
only one of the first five drives
deeper than their own 45. Three
times, the Broncos got close
enough for a field goal attempt,
only to have Treadwell miss from
47, 42 and 37 yards- the last two
hitting the right upright
The Denver defense showed

Meigs posts 81-54 victory over Athens

basketball scores

71

Midwest

a

Ohio high school

Mid.,,merlcan Cunfl'rl'nCI'
Cent. Mi chi ga n 78, Bowling Green

40

crs execuled than with rekindling
the emotional intensity that marked
the firsl few defensive series.
"We just played welL We did
what we were supposed to do and
we senlcd down," Petitbon said in
explaining Washington's secondhalf !Urnaround . "I thought our
coverage in 1hc first half, we made
some mistakes. In the second half,
we played better."
Wa shington's ferocious dcfen.
sivc play set the tone for the game
and gave the Lions, playing in their
first title game m 34 years, a taslc
of what high-level football is all
(See RED SKINS on Page 5)

Wisconsin 90, Ohio St. 79
Youngstown St. 92, Virginia T.:ch 81

games

Mld-Conllnent

A. l~bim ~

;

8

Mldwalern Collejlatr
Xavier, Ohio 84, Detroit Mercy 80

Wett V ~ima BJ, Duqt~cme 75
Y¥!c s1. r ~~.rl'idd 7&amp;

'

2

Creal Mldweil

Syracuse 73, Miami 57
VLll anova 79. Coonccticut 70

.. .

7

Cincinnati 79, SL LoWs 66

Delaware 90, Towstt~ Sl. 69
Fordham 74, Colg1lC 50
Georgetown 73, Seta\ Hall 65
l--larvud 41, Iru\mouth 35
Holy Cross 92, Lafayene 8~
Jan 70, Loyola, Md. 65
La Salle 85, Canisius 78
Lehigh 71 , Army 63
Long hland U. 82, Mount St. Mary's,
.\-ld . 15
Maine 76, Vcm1ont 60
Manhatt.an 72, Undley 52
Monmouth, r.;.J . 56, St. FnnCJ.s, Pa .
48
i\'iagm 82, D1 )'10n 64
t'ou-e Dame 88 , J'orth Carolina 74
PcM St. !02, Morgan SL 51
Pmshw-gh 83 , Providence 72
Pnn cewn 55. Penn 42
Rhode Island 66, S1. Peter's 57
St. Fr~ n ci.s, NY 83, IJrook.lyn CoL 71
St. Joh n' ' 85, Doston CoHege 72

. *"

3

Men· Saturday

Cornell 83, Adelphi 61

••

8
3

UlR Ten Con ferrnu
Ohio St. 60, to: oM western 52

East

•
•

4
9

0 hio college
basketball scores

Huck.ncU 78, Navy 74

W. Mid&gt;iaanli,Toi*~S

3

5 8

Wednesday's games

Major college
basketball scores

S. tllinoil 13, N. IIJinoi&lt; 6l
TuiN 1:1, Droko 1()

10

MAC e•mcs
Miami. Ohio at Elall St.
W. Michigan at KenL
Cent Michigan at E. Michigan
Ohio Unlv, It Toledo
NOB-conference ·
Bowlin&amp; Gnxn at Youngstown St.

Minnesru at Phocnu, 9:30 P:m.
Se&amp;ule at L.A. Clippers, to-.30 p.m.

:

1

J
J
4

Non-conferrnce
Defiance n Bowling Green
Cal St·S~cnmeni.O at Ball SL

Dallu at Daroi.l., 7:30 p.:a
Sa~nmcnto at Dmv_cr, 9 p.m.

••,.

W L
10
9

Capital91, Baldwin-Wallace 50
Cue Western 60, Denison 59
Cc:nlral St. 90, hWone 39
OaytM 76, Cincinnati 67
Oetwu;z78, Thann Morc:46
E. Mlchlaan 64, Ohio U. 63
HeidcJburR. 95, Maricua58
Kentucky 'Wesleyan 71, Ashland 54
Kenyon 48, Oberlin 38
We Erie 67, Geneva S9
Miami, Ohio 87. Kent 65
Mounl Vernon Nazarene 61, Oner·

Hard to believe Sunday's game
had been a close, 17-10 conte st
after two quarters of play.
At halftime, linebacker Wilber
Marshall stood up and said that the
Redskins would be fooli sh to
expect the offense to carry the day
and simply ou1score the Lions.
"He said , 'We've go! to lake
things into our own hands," defensive end Fred Stokes recal led. "We
just had to go throw our bodies
around, lay il on the line for aneth·
cr two penods."
Petitbon, Washingwn' s defensive coordinator, was more concerned with making sure his play·

bcin 59
Muskingurn 91, Hinm 77
N. Illinois 94, Cleveland Sl ~5
Ohio Northern 55, John C•rmll53
Rio Gr1nde S~ Walsh 74
Toledo 91. W. Michigan 53
UrbiiOa 59, Tiffin 52
Wilmington 75. Bluff\00 58
Wittenberg 79, Allegheny 57
Wooner 1~ . Earlham 36
Xavier 74, Butler S3

Conf. o~uall

Tonight's games

•

66

MAC standings

LA LUm 112. Orlando 99

••

Women·Saturday
Bowling On:en 82, Cent. Michigan

E•hlhition

Sundoy's score

••

Non-c:onfercnce
Bethany, W.Va. 74, Wilmington 68
Central Sl. 80, St. Xavier 72
Coppin Sl 84, YoW!gllloWn St. 65
Deft.ance 89, Ohio Wesleyan 70
We Eric; 89, Geneva 73
Niagua 82, Dayton 64

Missouri TI. St.a.rs ofCimcba 73

.5

By RICHARD KEIL
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP)- At the
half, it was still a football game.
Bu1 30 minutes and yet another
Richie Petitbon defensive adjustment later, the Washington Redskins were on their way to a Super
Bowl matchup with the Buffalo
Bills after a 41 · 10 victory over the
Detroit Lions in the NFC champi·
onship game.
Washington's defensive guru, 50 against run -and-shoot offenses
thi s season, now must turn hi s
altemion to the no-huddle frenzy of
Jim Kelly and Co.

Mld-OhJo Conference
Cedarville 83, TlffUl 70
Mou nt Vernon Naurt'!ne 75, Ohi o
Dominican 72

O~gon SL 77, Cahlomia 6.'i
Pacific U. 66, S1n Jose St. 52
Pepperdine 94, Loyoh Marymount S4
S. Utah 87, Sa n Dic:go St. 78
San Diego 67, San \.I Clm 58
St. Ma1y' s, Cil. 72, San francisco 70,

S.5
\3

PadRe Division
Golden Sute ..........2 l tO .617
[loflland ........ ........ 22 12 .647
PhoenU .................. 22 13 .629
L.A. Lakers ....... 21 14
600
Suttl~
.......... 18 16
.529
L.A. Clippers ........ .18 19
.486
.S acramento ........... 10 24 .294

6B

ZanciYillc 70, Findlay 60
Denison 60, Cue Rcac:rve S4
Kenyon 63, Oberlin 58
Winmbcr:R 64, Allegheny 60
WOOitCI67, Earlham 44

Far West

GB

.588
.S43
.382
.353
.212

Tcxn Southern 93, Grambling SL 70
Tellu-El Puo 64, Utah 62
reus-San A.n~onio 89, r-;'icholls St.

BrighlllTI YoUllg72, Colorado St. 51
Fresno St. 82, UC Irvine 55
H1wiii 17, Wyoming 55
Id aho 76, Boise S1.. 61
Idaho St. 96. Nevada 89
Manana 71, E. Washingtoo 65
Mootanl St. 104, Sfcnmento St. 84
Nebrask a 84. Colondo 74
New Mu.ioo 78, Alr Force 63
New Metlco St. 67, Long B~ch St.

or

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Wooaer79, Mu&amp;illm Pczry 26
Wynford S4, Ontario 40

73

11.5
155
195

.286

By JOHN F. BONFATII
AP Sports Writer
ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP)
- S1ep right up and take a shot at
1hc Buffalo Bills defense. Everyone
else did this season.
Can't stop the run, slow safeties,
npt a great pass rush.
For those who blasted away at
1he Buffalo defense all season,
cease fire. The Bills' other unit, the
one thai plays when the offense is ·
catching its breath, has come
together over the last month culminating .with 10-7 victo;y Over
Denver in the AFC .championship
game on Sunday.
It was the defense, not the
offense, that earned Buffalo a
return trip to the Super Bowl, this
one against the Washington Redskins on Jan. 26 at Minnespolis.
And the Bills' offense knows it
"Sometimes the offense.has to
win some and sometimes the
defense has to win one," Jim Kelly
said. "Today was the defense's
day."
Statistics don't provide an accurate picture of what 1he defense

Washington pounds Detroit
41-10 to capture"NFC crown

WaUICC&amp;1 S9, Evergreen 3S

Tc11n Christian 84, Arl.-Uu.l.e Ro&lt;:k
fi'J

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Buffalo tops Denver 10-7 for AFC ti e

Monday, Jaffuary 13, 1992
Page-4

Scot·eboard
In the NBA .••

Monday, January 13, 1992

Js

j

H.

�The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

•
Classi II

Monday, January 13, 1992
Page-6

.

Your Social Security Land transfers listed
0 y Ed Peterson
Social Security
Manager in Athens
If you work and receive Social
Security benefits, take a look now
at your ftnall991 pay slips or your
W-2 forms. If your 1991 earnings
are over Social Security's annual
limits, you will need to report them
10 Social Security.
The 1991 earnings limits are
$9.720 for beneficiaries who are
age 65 throu gh 69 and $7,080 for
beneficiaries who are under 65 .
The earnings limits do not apply 10
people who are 70 and over th e
entire year.
We used your estimate of 1991
earnings submitted you applied for
benefits (or when you filed last
year's earnings report) to figure ou t
the Social Security benefits you
would be paid in 1991. The purpose of this year's annual report is
to enable us 10 compare your aclual
earnings to your estimate 10 see if
you have been overpaid or underpaid. If you were underpaid , you
will gel a check for the additional
benefits. If you were overpaid. we
usually deduct th e ove rpaym ent
amount from your future benefits,
unless you prefer to make a refund.
In addition, the report must also
include an estimate of the earnings
you expeciiO make in 1992. Again,

Compiled by:
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio

Sherwood L. Meredith and Milyour benefit check will be adjusted dred Meredith, parcels, to John B.
to reflect any excess earnings antic· Meredith and Sarah Alice Meredipated.
ith, Chester.
If our records show that you
Eileen Hamlin and John C.
expected to have earnings over the Hamlin, parcels, to Clarence W.
l 991 limits, we will send you an Wickline, Lebanon.
Annual Report of Earnings form in
Vi ella Springer, dec· d, Life
the mail automatically. If you do Estate, Rebecca L. Mankin, Meigs.
not receive a report form by the
Lester P. Manuel ;md Carol
end of February, you can call our Manuel, parcel, to Harold E. Rose
toll-free number 10 have one sent to and Leah R. Rose, Lelart.
you. Instead of filling out the form,
Lester P. Manuel and Carol
you can give us your earnings Manuel, parcel, to Harold W. Rose
report over the phone if you and Melanie Rose, Leiart.
choose.
Esther C. Rudolph and Robert
You must ret urn the earnings L. Rudolph , ·.6 A. J.D . O'Brien,
report to us by April 15. There is a Orange.
substantial penalty for not filing in .. ·"" Evelyn Hess, dec' d, ce rt. of
an annual report of earnings on Trans., 10 Hilda Waller, Pomeroy
time. You ,an be penalized up IO Village.
one full month's benefits for nonMabel Brickle, dec'd, cert. of
filing, and also be required Ia repay Trans., to Donald L. Brickles and
any overpayment.
Cecil 0. Brickles, Bedford.
Fi ling a Federal Income Tax
Margaret A. Spencer, dec' d.
return does not take the place of fil- cert. of Trans., to Sarah J. Shone,
ing an annual report with Social ctal, Connie L. Ballard, etal, BrenSecurity. Note that the 1992 earn- da S. Weber, eta I and Loretta A.
.ings limits are $7,440 for beneficia- Brown, etal, Orange.
ries under 65 and $10,200 for beneJanet Manuel, fka, Janet Oyler,
ficiaries who arc 65-69.
nka, tracts, to Paul Black.
To fi le and earni ngs report or
Pearl A. Smith, Patricia L.
ge l more inform ation, call Social Smnh, parcels, .10 Waller A. Wilson
Sec urity toll-free at 1-800-772•

Library li~;S~

and Betty L. Wilson, Salisbury
Twp.
U.S.A. United States Marshall,
26.2 acres, to Fredrick W. Crow
III, Rutland.
Geneva J. Frecker, undivided
1_615ih int. , to Ed w. Frecker,
(}lester.
" Geneva J. Freckcr, undivided
II 15th im., to George E. Frecker,
Chester-'
Geneva J. Frecker, undivided
l/15ih im., 10 Robert K. Frecker,
Chester.
Geneva J. Frecker, undivided
1/ISth im., to Sharon Keck Downing, Chester.
Joyce E. Miller, parcel, Bren A.
Miller, Orange.
·
Edward Charles Scyoe, 3/4 A,
10 Virgil H. Roush, Betty J. Roush,
Donald Jeffrey Roush and Marie
Roush, Olive.
Mary Alice Morrison, parcel, 10
Joe P. McKen s1c and Rose M.
McKensie, Columbia.
Anna Marie Bichman, "dec 'd
cert. of trans. , 1o Anna M. Chapman, Pomeroy.
Terry R. Cull urn s and Lynda
Cullums, .44 acre, 10 Michael L.
Barr and Margaret J. Barr, Bedford.
Lawrence F. Scarberry, dec'd.
affid., Anne E. Scarberry, Racine.
Russell Drown, dec' d, cerl of
N' J
trans, to Ita anc Bro.wn, Scipio.

you very much, "Friends."
During a formal candlelight tapDavid Gumpf, senior member,
On Monday, Jan. 27. at 7 p.m. at
ping ceremony at Eastern High was Sir Scholarship, treasurer Julie
Well, another year is behind us the Pome roy Library, Jennifer School, fifteen new inductees were Rifne as Sir Secvicc, Sherri Wolfe
and we arc looking forward to the Sheets, local attorney will present a chosen to the local chapter of th e
Sir Leadership, and Vice-president
new year of 1992.
program on "Living Wills". The National Honor Society.
Tina Connoll y, Sir Character.
The past year was a good year pub li c is invited to anend thi s
Eastern's senior president Amy
Joining the seven senior memfor the library. We added 2,806 1nformn1ive program on a very new Well gave th e opening address, fol- bers were fifteen new sophomore
new books to the system, and had a issue of interest to most persons. lowed by the Pledge of Alleg iance and junior inductees.
total circulation of 135,615 with So, mark your calendars and plan by Ellen Brookover, senior memNew inductees included Jennifer
54,729 patrons being served.
to attend.
ber.
Roush,
Keith Spencer, Lorrie
The Meigs County Library has
Another volunteer tutor training
Senior member Danny Short Osborne, Nichola Pickens, Bobbi
three display cases for usc by indi- session is in the planning stages. gave the innvocation and secretary
White. Li sa Hoffman , Kim
viduals wishing to display a special Watch for date and times for these of the chapter Sherri Wolf intro- Michael, Carrie Morrissey , Sherii
collection. If you have a special sessions.
duced guest speaker, Rev. Sharon Smith, and Jeremy Buckley.· Othinterest collection or any collection
Children's movies continue to
ers included Letitia Holsinger,
yo u think might be of interest to . be shown at the Pomeroy Library Hausman.
Ne~ t came the ceremonial tap- Andy Wolf, Kathy Bernard, Charothers and you wish to share it, call on Saturdays and Sundays at2 p.m. ping of the new inductees. Amy lene Daily, and Jaime Wilson.
the library at 992-5813 or 992- and at the Middleport Library on Well read a narrative of the cereAmy Well gave the Oath Ia
57 13to make arrangements.
Mondays at 4:30p.m.
mony, while members representing office and Danny Short gave the
The "Friends" group of the
The past year has proved that both royalty and knightship of the
Meigs Coun ty Library has pur- Meigs Countians are finding their four branches of honor merit read Benediction.
The event was under the direcchased and donated 10 the library, library a resourceful place to visit. narratives for their respective tion of Mrs. Susan Arnold.
the 8 volume video cassette set of \f you haven't visited. come in and branch.
the Civil War, also the book which check us out.
accompanies the video set. Thank
By Ruth Powers

Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the calendar.

NEW EHS HONOR SOCIETY INDUCTEES· These fifteen
inductess were selected for service in the Eastern High School
chapter of the National Honor Society. This elite group of underclassmen represents the best of Scholarship, Character, Service,
and Leadership at Eastern. Picvtured are front, 1-r, Jennifer
Roush, Keith Spencer, Lorrie Osborne·, Nichola Pickens, and
Oohbi While. Second row· Lis Hoffman, Kim Michael, Carrie
Morrissey, Sherri Smith, and Jeremy Buckley. Back-Letitia
Holsinger, Andy Wolf, Kathy Bernard, Charlene Dailey, and
Jaime Wilson.

at Siar Mill Park.
LEBANON TWP. - A special
meeting of Lebanon Township
Trustees will be held on Tuesday at
7 p.m. at the township building.

MONDAY
POMEROY - The organizational meeting of the Meigs County
Public Library Board will be held
on Monday at I p.m. at th e
Pomeroy Library.

CHESHIRE - The Gallia-Meigs
Community Action Agency will
sponsor a free clothing day for low
income persons on Tuesday from 9
a.m. to noon at the old high school
building in Cheshire.

POMEROY - The Disab led
American Veterans and Ladies
Auxiliary will hold an organization,al meeting on Monday at 7 p.m .
at the hall, 124 Bunemul Avenue
. in Pomeroy.

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Orange Township Trustees will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
home of clerk, Susan Pullins, to
complete appropriations and discuss other matters.

'(UESDAY
POMEROY - The Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority
will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the
senior citizens center in Pomeroy.
All members are urged 10 auend.
LONG BOTTOM • The Flame
Fellowship Chapter will meet
Tuesday al 7 p.m. at the Faith Full
Gospel Church in Long Bonom.
Cass Twitchell, Ashland, will be
the guest speaker. Twitchell is a
field representative for World as a
Vision.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Merchants Association will meet
Wednesday at8:30 a.m. at the con- .
ference room of Bank One. All
members are urged 10 auend as this
is the first meeting of the new year.
SYR ACUSE - The Syracuse
Homemakers Club will meet
Wednesday at 10 a.m. Craf!S will
be in the morning. Bring men's
colored handkerchiefs, double bias
binding, eyelet or lace. scissors,
and needle and thread.

RACINE . The Racine Board of
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village
Public Affairs will meet Tuesday at Council will meet in continued sesI: IS p.m. at lite council chambers sion on Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
village hall.

The Racine Board of Public
AtTain will meet Tuesday at 1:15
p.JI!: IIi lhe council chambers a1 Star

,_JIIrlc,
' .

The Disabled American Veter·
ans and Ladies Auxiliary will hold
an organizational meeting on Mon·
ctay at .7 p.m. a1 the hall, 124 But·
temul Avenue in Pomeroy.

be

. '

Rat e

$4.00
. $6.00
$9.00
$13.00

15

10

16
15
15

Monthly

15

Ov~r 15 Words

.20
.30

42

.60

$1. 30 / day

.05 / day

Rates arc to. con5ecul•ve runs. b..ok~nllp difYs w•il be cho111g~
lor each day as sepa rat e ,ads
·

pi t!

"R~CtllVI~ $ ~Q diSCO\.lnl for ads p;IH)IIl a1tv.nu::c

Gtveawav and found ads t•n&lt;lttr l~ words w•lllw
nm 3 riatts lit no c harge
'P•• cll ul alllm all captl illlelte r s o!io douhiH- ~tt ce o l ad coM
'7 l)(lUt\ hn t1 tv~ e uuly u ~ell
'Sen lull~ ts not rttsponstble lor tltrOt!io atleo ln~ltl..., (Ciwd.
lo r t111 urs ln s t dav ad 1u11s '" pa~t!rl Ci!ll hclore 2 00 p m
difll ilh1 •r ~ubl•cal1on to maltt~ corr ect1on

'f rl:'e ads

'Ad s lltill must be pa1d

11'1

H &lt;~ PI'V Ad~

!11 Mt:mOrld m

Y;uU

1.'/a.&lt;Si.fit•d flliK'' ·'

S,tl c~

WWNFSDAV PA PER
THURSDAY PAPER
HUOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

Racine Baptist
holds dinner
The Faithful Servants Sunday
School Class of the Racine Bapti st
Church held its Christmas party
recently at Dale's Banquet Room
in Gallipolis.
A buffet dinn er was enjoyed ,
followed by singing of Christmas
carols, playing games and exchang·
in g gifts. Sunday School Class
Teacher Carolyn Powell and husband, Ivan, presented each famil y
with a poinsettia.
Martha Lou Beegle read '"Twas
the Night Before Jesus Came." Pastor Steve Deaver had devotions
usi ng th e Christmas story from
Mauhcw with closing by Charles
Norri s.
Members attending were Bob
and Martha Lou Beegle, Frank and
Delores Cleland, Billy and Laura
Cozart, Sam and Mary Curtis, Lil
Hart, Nondus Hendricks, George
Holman, George and Beulah Neigler, Charles an d Erma Norris,
Joannc and Harry Pickens. Ivan
and Carolyn Powell, Detty Sayre,
Orelha Snider, Dave and Linda
Spencer, John and Naomi Stobarl,
Mary K. Yost, and Pastor Sieve
.and Ellen Deaver. Also attending
were six guests.

Holiday guests
announced
Holiday guests at the home of
Ada Bissell and son, Kenneth ,
Long Bonom, were Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Groeneveld and son, Toni Jr.,
Worthington; Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Miller, Westerville; Mr. and Mrs.
Mike Shipkowski, Powell; Mr. and
Mrs. Mark Holter and son, Kyle,
Sugar Grove; Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Bissell and children, Michelle and
Dawn, Pomeroy; Mae McPeek and
Judy Holter, Long Bouom.

ledlcare &amp;

tlw

Gall1a Couni~ ~
Area Cnde614

Me1gs C o unty

Milson Co . WV

AreaCod e6 14

AutaCu de304

•••

Gollhpohs
Chethne

99&gt;

•••

Rio Gr;~nde
Guyo1n D1st

843
247
949
742
667

367
388 Vinton

,..

DAY BEFORE PUBLICAtiON
1100AM SATURDAY
1 00 PM MONDAY
~ 00 PM TUESDAY
~ 00 PM WEDNESDAY
2 00 PM THURSDAY
2 'lOP M FRIDAY

M1ddl~on

Pomewy
98. Chester

,.6
643 Arabra Oosl
379 Walnut

Pontand
Le11n Falls
Rac:•n e
Rutland

675 Pt Pleasant
leon
Apple Grove
Mason

076
773
082 New Haven
895 letBrt
937 Buflalo

G1ve;JWa~

5
6
1

Holppy Ads
lou and Foun&lt;l

Y•d Sale !pard'" advance!
Pubh c Sale &amp; Auct1011
9 WantHi ll! Buv

Help Wantud
St!uahon W anted
13 In s uran ce
14 BuSiness T11nnu1g
15 Sc:hools &amp; lns1ruc hurt
16 Rad•o. TV &amp; CB Rup"1'
17 Mts c1.&lt;ll anoou s
Wa nted To Do

"

22

23

Bu smeo s OpportUIIII~
Mo ney 10 Loan
Proless10nat St:t•vrct!!t

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992·7013 or

hOs nice homesltes

614-992·5528 or ·
385·8727

FOREVER
BRONZE
RACINE
.14 TANNING
SESSIONS • 51400
Offer Good Thru
Feb. 14
949·2826

OPEN 9 AM·9 PM
H-1 mo. d.

CAITLIN SWARTZ

FU TREE TRIMMING &amp;

New arrival

R(MOVAL
Pruning and Landstaflng
Frto hflmattl•25 Yn. xp.

Call ail• 6 pJI. -992·2928
(1]3, 1... ,.1

INSURANCE

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

o~t Ohio. Tho opp\lconto
al~ IMI 1M morgor Ia ~

form• only ond will not
ollocl oorvlco offorlnga or
operation•.
WiiTol ouka to expand Ita
cortillcolo to provldo MTS,
WATS, Colling Cord, 800,
•'

..._..siiiiUiii.IT-.E1i.iii12i.itV,iiii~L;;,;;LE;.;.YiiiiDR.ii.iiV-E;-.Pti.i.i,.~---.....;~

directory a11latance, and
Prlv•t• Line aervlc ..

lhrughout

Ohio. Any

tho inlormotion contolnod In
lhojolnt application and 1M
olfidavlto oubmiHod by the
oppllconto. Further Inform~
olion may bo obtolnod by
contacting tho Publlc
Ulllltloa Commla,lon of
Ohio, 180 Eoot Brood Slroe~
Columbus, Ohio 43266·
"573.
•
JAN. 13, tw.t

HERE'C A~Al.E
.FORf·You
IN THE

CUUHD
~

'"'

58
!iir9

84

El ect ri cal

&amp;

Aelr iQet"CJ toon

86

Mobt ltt H ume R11pa 11

87

Upholstery

1 card ot Thanks
NEW LISTING! Laurel CllH In Pomeroy· !9B8Skyline 24
' 52 manufactured home. 6 rooms, 3 BR's, 2 b&amp;lhs.

lndudes newer Heat Pump. cenlral·air, fireplace, dishwasher, range, relrig. &amp; skyl ight Home has added 1nsula·
· tion. Setup on renledlotorcan be moved to location of your
choice . ASKING $29,900

OWNER WANTS SOLD IMMEDIATELY I Will Reluse No
Reasonable otter for this elegant2 112 story Colon ial Sryle
home in Middleport. 7rooms,4 BR's,atticstudiow/sk~light ,
2 car garagu on ale119llol. ASKING $49,900 ....MAKE AN

OFFER!!

.

APPLE GROVE· VERY COMFORTABLE· I story block

home w.B.G. fumanoe , appliances, carpet &amp; drapes on 4 +
aaes. Has 2 septic systems plus an extra mobile home
hook up . Includes 2 sheds &amp; screened pord1. All for ONLY'

$26,900 TAKE A LOOKI

REDUCED! An older lrame !arm home with 66.33 acres.
· lndudes barns, crib'&amp;sheds. Aprime iocation in Racine! ·
WAS $79,900 NOW $69,900 - MAKE AN OFFER!
RED~CED-Piuu~l Ridge- NICE 1Sloryhomew/Srooms,

and mACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and

DeiYtr Wall wishes ·to

lllanlt weryane who htiP.O&lt;i

••ke
tho days afler his
wlfo's daa!h 11011 bo.aWt.
The supptrl ' f•ly, lrltttds

and neighbors 1rovldod
sln&lt;e Florence did was
IIOrt t~an Deovar rauld
han aa;ned pos..le, He
thnh .nor,yno old
tspedal y tfim fro•
He11la&lt;k Grove, Dtrwlll,
&lt;hester, Pa11oroy, ·Eastern
St• ••llo!lgt 1453. ·

\1

I

•Untleatab le energy savings
oCustom fiHI&lt;l inullation mw

f..all (or rrre

•Newer requires patntina
•SasheS llll·in ftw easy cleaning
•Lifetime rramr: wamlll ly

liMES IIIII

r.l

...

OFFICE..----·. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . ., .

Stock

AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUMPS and
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp; DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

BENNETT' Moai~E
HoME
HEATING &amp;

ORI~ei~~~f!lto

l0&lt;attd on SaffOI'd Sdoool Rd. aH Rt. 141
992·3838
(614) 446-9416 or 1-800-872-5967
1-13-'92'-1 mo. 1 L.--------,----....:4:.:;·2::!6:,:·9.!..11

FUEE ESTutATES

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
. EVERY
SAt NIGHT ·
6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • Replacement Windows
Room Additions * Roofing
COMMERCIAL and RESmENTIAL
mEl: ESTIMATES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No Sunday Calls)

factory Choka

12 Gaugo Shotgun Only

Strhtly lnforcod
9-1•-'o&lt;'-"·'

121311911

YOUNG'S

&lt;5JAYMAR

CARPENTER SERVICE

Quality
Stone.Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992-6637

-Room Additions
-Gutter Work

-Electrical and Plumbing
-Roofing
-Interior &amp; Exterior

Painting

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

Cheshire, OH.

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Sl. Rt.

Pomeroy, Ohio

7

WANTED

Low Grade Oak
POMEROY '
. Saw logs
$150 :per 1,00 last markdown
on shoes
Delivered To
OHIO PALLET CO before closing
store.
Pomer~y, Ohio
FRI. $ SAt
614·992•6461 OPEN
10:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.
1-7·92, 1 mo

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERTL
Displayed at The
Quality Prinl Shop

9-6-11

1/2/tln

11-14·'90·1fn

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

I•N11W Homes

H'OURS:

ReModeling
Stop &amp; Compare

8:30am-4:00pm

61 ~-992-3394
Or Call
42·3020 Eveni1~gs

Free Estimates

98S·4473 .
667·6179

12:2·91·1 mo.

•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofinp
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 ar
742•2097v

539 Bryan Place
Ohio
11/14/tfn

Mlddfopor~

INDEPENDENT
CARPET CLEANEIS
and TilE FLOOR CARE
•Reasonable Ratea ·
.Quality Work
•Flee Esti mateo
•Carpet Has Fast Dry
Time
•High Gloaa on Tile
Floor Finish
MIKE lEW\ I, Ownw
Rt. I, Roll111d, OH.

742•2451
'

OVEN
.
.

REPAIR

AUMAIIS .

lr..t "111M Or Wo
PlckU~

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SEmCE
992-5335 or
915·3561 .
·

lcrua fna ,_~ Olfl4o

217J. ...... St.

"IIIIOY, OliO · ·

.·,•

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Choke Only

REDUCEDI·1 floor block home in Reedsville, ?BR's, t car '

TRACY BFIINAGER...:.............. ~........................t4t--2W
~E~ 1RUISELL.....................................1..... .Me.HIO
,_,If2-lllt

Now In

fFJL

garage, rear SCI'eened porch, produce buitaing , ceiling

REALFASTIANDPLACEINVOURHANDSOMECRISP,
GREEN CASH!
,
tEftRY E. CLELAND.....................4..............: ... tn~t·lt'

'

992-2772

~MastiC

lron1 porch. Agood s1aner home for ONLY $19,900

WE NEED USTINGSI... YES, TOOAYI CALL RIGHT NOW
&amp; DON'T DELAY! WFLL HAVE SOMEONE TO BUY

eoo~u,~-.

MIDILEPOn

3 BR s, on 21ols of 50 x 100 each. Includes polio &amp; small

. fans. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! NOW $19,000. WHAT
ABUYJ ,
·
'

..

MASTIC®THE NATION'S FINEST
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

\

CALL 614·92-5528 or
385-8227
12-11-1 mo.

HOWARD
EXCAVATING
BULLDOZER,BACKHOE

"

J&amp;L BLOWN INSULATION

house wlbasement and
carport, tree g_as.

GUN SHOOT

80 homes.
JUST OFF RT. 33
Only $7Srr mo.

JAN. 18-KIDS' DAY
JAN. 21-23-ADULT SWEATSHIRT
DAY
MUST PRE-REGISTER
For more inlo call614·992·2549
TROLLEY STATION CRAFTS

provide upended lntarex- IUCh iiiUI, lhia mlltlr Will
chongo -otiono through· bo docldod on tho buia of

85 G1mt11"al Ha ll lony

Newly Re·Done
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

DARWIN, OHIO
7/31f91/lln

5weeflleArJ SpeciAl

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

Mu Stc:at lns u uml!flts
frutls &amp; Veg!Jiables
Fot Sale or Tratle

UMESTONE-mucKtNG

available for up lo

BOARD DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

oxpand W\ITel'o corlllfcato wrltton atatomont to that
of publ!c convenl~nci and effect and an accomp~nylng
nocoully to permit It to requeat for oral hearing on

56

57

992·5553
OR TOll FREE
1·800·848·0070

12-11 -1 mo.

Utiliti11 Comminion ·of Commlaalon a written
Ohio (CoH No. 91-1892-TP- 11atement detailing the
AAC) aHking aulhorlly to ra.. ona on or before
merge their telecommun· Jonuory 30, 1992. Unloaa
ication operatlonl, 1nd to the Commisalon recelv" a

•

81 Homelmprovoments
82 Plumb111g &amp; Heat my
83 E•c&lt;Natmg

BILL SLACK

Specializing In Custom

Real Estate General

antlty who can ahow good
WiiTel, Inc. and WTG-Eaat, cau10 why thla lolnt
Inc. hovo filod a joint application should not bo
. applicotion with tho Public granted ahould filo wl!h tho

Services

Anttques
M•sc Merc hand 1st
B w ldm g Suppllll$
Pets to r Sal t!

Starting al 5235 per mo.
Very nice 2 or 3 BR, 2 bath

Cal

Notice ia given that

Tru Cit 5 lor Sale
V;ms llo 4 wo ·!io
Mo t orc¥CIL"S
75 Buat~ &amp; Mo tors l o r Siilt1
76 Aulo Path II. Ac cessor tes
77 Aulo Repau
78 C&lt;triiP)ng Equ 1pnumt
79 C.1mpe r s t. Motor HonH:r~&gt;

51 H ouse hold Goods
52 - Sporting Goods

55

'

'

72
73
74

Merchandise
53
54

10 Buy

7 1 Autos lor SaltJ

Equrpnumt lor RIJIII
For lease

•FIREWOOD
USED RAILROAD TIES

992-2156

person, fiim, corporation, or

W;~nt ed

Trans orlation

H 011 S8&amp; tor ~en!
M ohlle Momes lu, Rcn1
Farms lm Runt
Aparlmenl lor Rt ~lll
fLtrn1shed Roonrs
Space tor Rent
WantedtoRen1

NICE 1 and 2 BR
FURNISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available in
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK

992·2269

Now that the weather bas cooled
down, why not heat things up a bit
by clearing your closets, attic or
basement of those unwanted items
and advertising them for sale in
the Classifieds?

LEGAL NOTICE

49

lihijhl@il

•LIGHT HAULING

The Classfie~,
Ml The Bouncy Is Yours!

PubliC Notlct

47
48

11

12

HRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
· REMOVAL

To put the Classifieds to work for you,
call our ad-visors, Monday-Friday -:

PubliC Notlct

45

46

Fam1 Equr pnutnt

62

63 Ltvt.&gt;slock
64 Hay &amp; Graorl
6.!i Sued &amp; fe ll+i +llll

I;GfiFld
41
41
43
44

61

Business Services

- When You Turn To

Caitlin Swartz, daughtei of John
and Carla Swartz, recently celebrated her first birthday with a
party al home.
Ice cream and a "Cookie Monster" cake were served to her sister,
Tiffany, and other aucnding, Eua
Cu\lums, Hel en Swartz , Gene,
Sheila, Pam, Brent and Marissa
Whaley, Brian Whaley, ~nd Mindy
Seymour.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mr's.
Allen Swartz and Eric.

31 Hunw~ IIH Sale
32 Mol.llleHomu ~ lor S.1l c
3 3 Filr(ll~ lor Sale
3 I . BusmeS$ 8u1ldmqs
35 lots &amp; Acre~ge
36 Real Estat11 Wanted

a

"

Farm Supplies
&amp; L1veslock

Real Estate

'·

.Reap The Rewar~...

$10 gift ccnificate from Buttons
and Bows, three boxes of Newborn
Pampers from Swisher·Lohsc Pharmacy.
A $!0 savings account from ·
Peoples Bank, Middleport, a $10
gift certificate from the Food Shop,
a free icc cream cake from Dairy
Queen, a box of Newborn Pamper
o.apers from Food land, a $10 gift
ce rtificate from the Middleport
Department Store, a first Bible
from Mill Street Books.
A $25 gift certificate from
Vaughan's Cardinal. a baby cup
from Clark's Jewelry Store, a free
meal 10 the parents of the baby
from Craw's Family Restaurant, a
three piece feeder set from K &amp; C
Jewelers, a $5 gifl certificate from
the Fabric Shop, and a $10 saving
account fr om the Home National
Bank.
Anthony Paul Frederick, Jr. is
the grandson of Romaine and Milford Frederic~. and Bill Roberts,
the step-grandson of Kay Roberts,
and the great-grandson of Lizzy
Wood, all of Racine.

4

2

Coolw1lle

arvest ABargain...

WINNER • Gifts from 17 area merchants will go to Anthony
Paul Frederick, Jr., son of Mary Ann Roberts, pictured, and
Anthony Paul Frederick, Meigs County's First Baby of 1992.

POMEROY -Meigs County's
First Baby of 1992 is Anthony Paul
Frederick. Jr. , son of Mary Ann
Roberts and Anthony Paul FrederickofRacine.
The infant was born on Jan. 1 at
8:07a.m. at Pleasant Valley Hospi,
tal in Point Pleasant. As the first
baby born in I992 10 Meigs County
parents, the infant and his parents
are the recipients of gifts from 1'7
Bend area merc hants.
The pri zes include a $15 gift
certificate from The Shoe Place, a
$5 gifl cenifi cate and 10 percent
off on all prescriptions until age six
by th e Presc ription Shop, a diaper
bag with $10 of pre-selected merchandise from Fruth Pharmacy, a

t'tll 'l' r

.followill}{ lt•lt•l•lu;,,. ••xdrrmK''·'· ..

111 I h e O ;uly St!llllll et (u

c lassohL"d d1~\)l.ty Husmt~s Caul 1 1mllt~al noltct~ s)
Will olhO 01\)\.Hidr Ill 1ht1 Pt Plcas ;ml Rl!tjl ~ llll •..-d \It!:: Gallt
pull s 0.1oly Tr+btl f\11. n!ach o1111 Olltl• 18. 000 hO!IIt!S

TUESDAY PAPER

J

C;ud o l Thank s
In Memory
Annouc: emerou

Service~

t t:l'l

COP¥ DEADLIN E
MONDAY PAPER

Announ cemen ts
1

Employmenl

advdll Ct: "'"

C.11d ol Th&lt;~r•h

'A c\ £~1\11~\ ;, llllt!rll~enH JHI p l,lt: o:d

•EAI, NOSE &amp;THROAT •ALLERGY
•HEARING AIDS • HEAD &amp; NECK SURGERY
Cart Fer Yeru
NEW FLAG • The Tupper1 PlaiDS VFW Poll No. 9053 receatly
donated a oew AIDerlela lila to Portlaad Elementary.• AttendiDc
were 86 studenllaud tcldlen along with memben rrom Post 9053
and the Ladle~ AuxUiar~. Pictured raisin&amp; the naa are Harry
Richard, Cblrtes CaJ;r, Victor Ba~r and Norman McCain.

M;~ s un COtlnlles lllu SI

Words

1
3
6

p a,fl

JO.HN WADE, M.D., INC.

. Board to meet DAV meeting set·

Mmy5 . Ga lll a or

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

~,

Da1ts

POliCif:S
"Atl~ ou ts.~tlc

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 9112·21 56
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

The Index of Leading Economic
Indicators is a composite of 12 economic meas urements that was
developed 10 help forecast likely.
shifts in the U.S. economy as a
whole.
EASTERN SENIOR NHS MEMBERS·Tbese senlon conducted
the.Ii;utero Hlch School Natioaal Hooor Society tapplnc cere·
111011ies, wtalcb nprl!lltDII exc:elleace Ia acbolanblp, service, leader·
lltlp, and cblrllder.Picturtd art, TIDa 'Coooolly, Amy Well, Julie
Riffle, Ellea Brookover, ud, Sberrl Wolf. Back· Daony Sbort aod
David Gumpf.

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

-

Anthony Frederz'ck, Jr..,·
EHS rnduc~s new National Meigs' first 1992 baby
Honor Society members

----

Pome~oy-Middleport, Oh io

. 3-14-'lt'Hn

,,

· ~

.'
•J

�IVThe Dally Sentinel

Page

Announceme,Jts

3

Monday; 'January

Sl\IAFU® by Bruce Beattie

11

I, Raymond D. Prkldy em nol

responsible tor any ~ebts but

my own.

Road construction Is expected
to begin this week on Letan

Township rd. 97 culvert. Insolation woril. Is being done by

Oravo Basic Materials Co. Inc.
d1reclly ott SA 338, and an ax-

Meet Araa Singles By Cholca l

Not Chance. Write: Singles, P.O.
Box 1043, Gallipolis, Ohlo 45631. 1

We'll pay you to type names &amp;
addresses from home! $500. per
1000. 1·900-896·1666 ($0 99/mln
Mln/18 yrs.+) or write: PASSE517M, 161 S. L.lncolnway, N
Aurora, IL 60542,

4

12

cess road will be available to
motorists.

Giveaway

:-::-...,....,~--=-=-=-1
2 Female Puppies To Giveaway '

11

Help Wanted

Surrogate Mothers Wanted, Fee
Ptu1 ·Expenses For Carrying A
Couple's Child. Must Be 19-35
And Previously Had A Child.

'''POSTAL JOBS"'
NOW HIRING
6
Lost &amp; Found
Clerks,
Sonars,
Carriers,
Mechanics. Start $11.41/hr. For
Lost. Bla ck And While Border Emptoyment Into. Call 1·216·
Collie, Female, Old, Lost In 324 ·2102. 7a.m. • 1p.m., 7 Days.
Rodney Area 614·245·9880.
AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn
Lost: Black Purse In Rio Grande Weaver 304-882-2645
And S.R 325 Area. Reward!
Oayt 1me · 614-245-5353 E11t. 219. ADDRESSERS WANTED Immediately!
No
E11perienca
Lost · Blonde Garman Shephard Necessary.
Process
FHA
Family Dog, Name: buke, Mongaga Refunds. Work At
Viei n11y· Kamper Hollow Road Home. Call1-405·321-3064.
From Rt.160, Gallipolis. 614-441·
1420.
Aerobic And Gymnas1ic lnstruc---:--::--,..--,---,-:::-,-1 tors Needed . Contact Gallipolis
Lost· Cat, Gray And White, Parks And Recreation At 614Modium L.ong Hair, Mill Creak 446-1424 Ext . 37.
Road Area. 614-446-9529.
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Lost· Heart Shaped D1amond Excellent
Pay,
Benefits,
Ruby Earring, Sentimental Value Tran.sportalion,
407·292-4747,
614-367-7528, Reward!
Ext. 571. 9a.m.·10p.m. Toll
----:-::---:----c-:-,----1 Rafundad.
Lost· mala, Siberian Husky, 1 =:::-:--:--:-:-:---:---c:-:::-:-:blue eye, 1 brown eye, very AVON ! All Areas I Shlrtay
tmmdly, reward, Craw rd. area, Spears, 304·675·1429.
:6..1:..
4·:..
99:..2':·71,_6:..8_ _::::-:----·1 Be on TV many needed tor
Lost : Tuppers Plains area, commercials. Now hiring all
black, male miniature poodle ~gas For casling Into call 615·
w1th red collar, please call 614· 779-7111 ext. T-237.
667-6655
Clarks,
sorters,
earners,
macManics. Start $11.41hr. For
7___v_a_rd_S_a_le_\,;__ ,mploymontlnlo. Call1·216·324·
12102, 7am-10pm, 7-day.
AL.L. Yard Sales Must Be Pa1d In
DRIVERS
Advance. DEADLINE: 2.00 p.m.
the day balore the ad is to run. earn to $650 wkly, will train,
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m. several opelngs, also pt,1·B00Friday. Monday edition . 2·00 231·1457
p m Saturday
Easy Work! Excellent Payl Assemble Products AI Home. Call
Public Sale
8
Toll Free, 1·800467·5566, E11t.
313.
&amp; Auction
Elderly lady seeks live- in
Rick Pearson Auction Company, housekeeper, comfortable home
full tim e auctioneer, complelt and modest salary, 614-992·7888
auclion service. Licensed OMio,
West Virginia, 304 -nl-5785
HANDICAPPED SERVICES AD·
MINISTRATOR for Child and
Family Development Program.
9 Wanted to Buy
Must have MAIMS Degree in
Honda Odyssey, Red, model in Special Education or Early
good cond. Call Kent 614·446· Childhood or related area plus
the Preschool Handicapped En·
431'1, 614-446-4682.
dorsement plus 30 ,..lated
Mauser .22 Cal. Smgle Shol graduate hour1. Must have ad·
Rilla (Sporttr 0\d Moael.) Par· mlnlstraliva tklllt. Salary baNd
tleutar Model Wanted , Good on quallllcaUons. Must have c:ar
Cond , 98o/. Or Beller, (Blue And wiiM valid driver's license.
Wood) Desired Prom. Price For Based In Huntington lo work In
Prem. GUn. Call John On lour eoutlas of Cabell, Lincoln,
Mason &amp; Wayne. TEACHING
Weekends At 614-446-0649.
ASSISTANT/DRIVER lor Haad
Wanted to buy, Standing timber, Start centar at MI. Flower
Bob Williams &amp; Sons 614·992- Elamentary School. Must have
5449.
HiQh School Diploma or GEO or
Child
Oavalopment Associate
Wa nted To Buy: Junk Aulos (COAl Credential
or AA in Early
With Or Without UoiOI'S. Call thlldhood.
Prasehool
IX·
Larry Lively. 614-388-9303.
penance prelerred. Must have
Top Prices Paid: Alf Old U.S. car with Commercial Driver's
Coins, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins, l. ic:nese (COL.) or willing to go
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop, through training to obtain COL
License. For application apply
1~1 Second Avunue, Gall lpont.
at Southwestern Community Ac:lion Council, Inc:. 540 Fifth Ave,
Employment Services Huntington, bltwHn hours 9-4
dally. Final day tor applications
is Friday, January 17, 1992.
S.C.A.C., Inc. Is an EEO
Help Wanted
Employer.
KUWAIT, SAUDI WORKERS
$2,500 CREDIT CARD!
Gllaranteed Same Cay Apo
NEEDED:
~i'o\1111 Also Quality For NO $35.00 &amp; Up Par Hour. Tn Free.
o.posit VISAIMC And Cash Ad· Both Skilled &amp; Unski lled For
vances. 1-800·264-6789 Ext. Into Call 615·779-5505 Ext K2524.
699.

,--,....,,-.,...,...,,..,.,,.,._,_,,...1

:....---------1

S1ove Lltz, Ally., 311·996·2000.
Wanled: Musician lor country
and wtstern band. Call 614·4469246 anytime.
We'll Pay You To Type ·Names
And Addresses From Home!
$500.00 Per 1000, Call1·900·8961666 ($0.99/Min.) Or Write:
PASSE· 33M, 16\..S. Lincolnway,
N Aurora, IL 60542
Needed: Adult trom Long Bottom/
Reedsville area to
transport students to Athans,
call614·985-4292 for information
Needed: Christian musicians drums, bass, guitar, keyboard.
Call Dale after 5:30 p.m. 304·
675-7'154.
Part time bookkeeper, computer
and typing skills halpful Apply
Box C-10 c:are Point Pleasant
Register, 200 Main St, Point
Pleasant, WV 25550.
Part T1me workers to provide in
homa personal care. Olploma or
GED requi red . Miximum 17 hrs
per weak. Apply to Prestara
Center, 213 Valley Onve, Point
Pleasant, WV. AAIEDE.
Part-lima L.lve-ln Babyslnar.
Must Have References. Send
Response To: Sox CL.A 105, cfo
Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825
Third Avenue, Gallipolis, OH
45631,
LABORERS
Earn To ·$450 Wkly. Will Train
Several Openings, Also PT, 1·
800·551·1545
Laborers, earn to $450 weekly,
will train several openings also
PT, t-800-551-1545
$400 WHkly, Stufilng Envelopes AI Home. Rusfl $1.00
S.A.S.E. 110 D&amp;A Supptlll, P.O.
Box 14431 Fairborn, Ohio 45324.
NEED AJOB I GREAT PAY!!
Ovtr 350 COmpanies NHd You
NOWI Work From HOME And
GET PAID, 301-631-5018 Dept.
03, 24 Hours.
NNCI Babysitter Gallipolis Area.
3 Evenings Per Week, 2
Children, Ages 6 &amp; 12. 614-446·

71

OO~''f

"'fRIN\ YOUF!. CAT'~ NAt~'&gt; I
'/OIJ MAY Noi NOO To VAcuuM So Of'Tf!N ...

Lots tor sale New Haven, WV.
304-m-saoa.

Autos for Sale

1985 Olds Cutlass Citra, Vary !
Good Condtion, V-6, 3.8 Liter,
AC, 6 Way Power Oliver Seal,
Windows And Door Locks. High
Mileage, Good Buy! 614·4463383.
1986 Camero Z-28, 305, 5 Speed,
AC, T-Tops, Low Miles, Great
Stereo, Gray Interior And Grey,
Burgundy EX1erior, 614-44&amp;4922.

Rentals

Business
Training

18

wanted to Do

Will Babysit In My Home. Rodney Area. Referances Available.
Call 614·245-5687.
Babysitting In my home, Racine
area, certilied and rei, 614·949·
2610
Chimney Cleaning And Stainless Steel Relining "Sel'\ling TriState 16 Years" 614·867·3618,
Caldwell Ch1mney Sweep.
Georges Portable SawMill, don't
haul your logs to tha mill just
call 304-675·1-g57.

Will baby sil In my homt, in
Syracuse, fenced yard, any age.
Pay negotabte, Tltle·20 Job certified, 614·992·6979
Will care tor bed patient 01 lnvilid in my Mom&amp; m Racine, OH,
614-949·2393, '
Will do babysitting any shift!

anytlmef weekends, langsville
area, 614-~2-2443
Will do housec:leaning. E•·
parlenced. 614-446-7715.
Financial

21

Business
Opportunity

!NOTICE!
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
recommends that you do business with people you know, and
NOT to send money throu~M the
mall until you have invesllgaled
the ofitrlng.
Local Vending Route Year
Round Profits. 1-800-955·0054 .
Private Pay Phonas Low Cost,
High Allum. 1-800.226·4503.

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money

31 Homes for Sale
3 Unh Rental, Situated On "112
Acre L.ot, Maintenance Free, Ex ·
callant Shape, 614-446·8568.
5 Rooms, Bath, Front And Back
Porch, Corner L.ot, Siding And
Rooting Lass Than 10 Yea rs
Old , $21,000. Call 614-446-7523,
304-675·1488.
Buy now: Low lntarest, just
reduced $18,500. 3 BR, 1-1/2
bath, full carpal, 2 car garage
751 S.R. 141. 614·446·7878,
Double Wide With 1 Acre L.and,
Gallipolis Ferry, 3 Bedrooms, 2
Baths, Electric:, Central Ai r,
$3'f.ooo. 30H75-721l
For Sale by Owner: 2 city tots, 3
bedroom home, large out bldg ,
convenient North Point Elaman·
tary and City Recreation Complelt:. 304-675·3278 tor appoint·
men I.
Split entry, 21/2 acres, 8 miles
oul Sand Hill, 2,240 sq ft,
swimming pool, 2 decks, 304895·3624.

32

Mobile Homes
for Sale

12x60 2-bdrm lralltr, located m
Rac:lnt. Includes 1tove, ref, AJC,
&amp; some turniture. Must be
moved from lot, as is condition,
$1200 abo, 614-667-3095 tor appolnlmtnl

Ci\8H?H
Turn your clutter into cash,
Sell it the easy way .•• by phone,
no need to leave your home.
Place our classi
ad toda •
15 words or le , 3· days,
3 papers,$6.00

'

fall our of]ir.l! for paid in advanr.l! r.nll!ll!

9·-----:--

14 acru, 2 bedroom mobil e
home, L.etan, WV, $16,500. 304·
895·3421 after 5:00.
1972 Castle, central air, under
pinning, porc:h, part furnished,
$3000, 614:'1'12·2369
1913 14x88 Shullz, mobile homo,
good cond, 614-992·211 1
1974 Holly Park, t2x70, 1112
baths, all electrlo,.--eomplttely
remodeled, $10,500. Investment
will ull$7,900. :W4·m·SB40.
1m Clairmont 14x7'0, 3 bed·
rooms, 1 bath, w/underpennlng
and fronl porch. gas heat,
central air, must move, $8,500.
:W4-882·2341.
1g81 Nuhuo mobllo home,
14x64, 2 BR, 1 bath, newly
recarptledt wuhtrldryer, h16
front porcn. Park Lana Cour1.
~1~~~:8732 '~-"- 5, $9,300.
1g90 Spr\lcorkftt, 1417tl, 3·
bdrm., 1·both, hi'! pump, 2.75
acrn, 2 mlln north of Chisler,
Rt 7, 614·1185-44g2 '
GIHI Sol..llon 01 RlpOoMIIId Mobllt Homn: Double
Wldn • $11000 Down A~d Slnato
Wllln • •500 Dlnm Whh ,lip.
provod ,Crldh. Coil Mid Ohio
Finlnco AI 1.e14-m·1220.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

40 ln. Round 5pc. dinette $70; 3
drawer bl1ck metal desk w/
typewriter stand $50. 614-4460020.

County Appliance, Inc. Good
bedroom trailer, pay own used appliances.. T.V. sets. Open
utltities plus deposit, 304-675- 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mon.-Sat 614·
2535.
446·1699, 627 3rd. Ave. Gal12x60 2br, Unfurnished, Holly lipolis, OH
Park, 1 1!2 Mile Past HMC,
Deposit And Reference Re- GOOD USED APPLIANCES
quired. 614-446-4369, 304·675- Washel'l, dryare, refrigerators,
ranges. Skilgge Appllancts,
2330.
Upper River Rd. Beside Stone
14x70 Wilh Expando 1 112 Baths, Crest Motel . Caii614-446-73H.
2 Miles From Town, Rt. 141,
Aaferenca And Deposit. 614-446PICKEN.RNO:URE
4824.
N~~
Household furnishing. 112 mi.
2 bedroom all alec, Ashton Jerncho
Rd. Pt. Pleasant, WV,
Upland Ad, Hud acceptad, 304· call 304-675-1450.
675·4088.
2 bedroom mobile home com· Queen size pine bed complete
with linens $260. Call 614·446·
pletely furnished, washer &amp; 2991.
dl)'or, AC, 304-m -5 958.
RENT20WN
2br Mobile Home On Large
614 -4 4 5-3158
Privata Lot, $215/Mo Security
Vl'ra Fumhure
Deposit, References. 614-446- Sol
•2591
a &amp; Chair, $11.10 Wetk;
2236 • 614· 44w
Rocllntr, $5.47 WHk, Swivel
2br Mobile Home, Must Have Rocker, $3.63 Wtek.Bunk Bed
Good Relerences, Deposll And Complete $8.41 WHk. 4 Drawer
Rent . Call614·367·7866.
Cheat, $3.26 W•k; Poster Bed·
:-:--::--,--,--::---,.,-1 room Sullo, 7 pc., $16.67 WHit,
3br Trailer In Crown City, Includes Btdding.Country Pine
$200/mo, Water Paid, Ouposll Dinette With Bench &amp;4 Chairs,
And Reference Required. 614· $10.98 Wuk.OPEN: Monday
0,25:..6-6-:,. .71.::
7·-,----::--::- l Thru Saturday, 9a.m. to 6p.m.,
Mobile Homes For Rani: Sunda~ 12 Noon Till Sp.m. 4
Rafurence And Deposit At· Miles H Route 7 On Route 141,
qui red. Call After 2p.m. 614-446· In Centenary.
0527.
Sofa bed, exc cond, Earty
::--:-:::---c-::--:---:-c:-::--1 American style, $200. 304-&amp;7~·
New 14tt mobile home, $199 per 6578.
month including lot rental, with
SWAIN
dulivery, complete setup, skir1ing, and steps, call 1·800.837· AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62
Olivo St., Galli polio, Ntw &amp; UHd
6625
lumiture, heaters, Watam &amp;
Total electric 2 BR, no pets. 614· Work boots. 614-446-3159!
367-7438.
VI'RA FURNITURE
Trailer &amp; lot for sale, Ocala Nat'l
614-448-3158
Forest Flqrlda, 2-bdrm, 2-bath, LIVING ROOM: Solo I Chair,
614·992-6183
$199.00;_ Recllnor, $149.00;
Swivel Hocker, $11.00; Cotfee &amp;
44
End Toblto, pg,oo Stt.DINING
Apartment
ROOM: Tobit With 4 Padded
for Rent
Ch1irs, $149.00; Country Pine
Dinette With Bench And 3
1 bdrm. 1.mfurnished apia., par· Chalrt, $299.00; Matching 2
tlal utilities tru, deposit and Door Hitch, $349; Or $589.00
reterancu required, 614-o992e Set; Oak Table, 421162 Wl1h 6
2094
Sow
Back
Chairs,
2 BR, CA, washer &amp; dryer $629.00.BEDROOM: Poster Sedhookup, no pats. $250/mo. 514• room Suite (5 pc.), $349.00; 4
446-4491.
Drawer Chest, $44.85; Sunk
Bed, 1229; Compllll Full Mon
2br Apartment, Located, 466-112 Set, $105.00 Set; 7 pc:. C1dar
Fourth
Avenua,
Gallipolis. Bedroom Suit•, $899.00.0PEN:
Stove, Refrlgeralor, Water Fur- Monday Thru Saturday, 91.m. to
nlshed. $235/mo $100 Deposit. 6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
:_61,-4·_4 46~·3:..B_7tl:..·-,--::-,-,--:c--:-l 5p.m., 4 Mlltl Oft Routo 1 On
=: 7
Roule 141 In C.ntenary.
2br Apartment, Total Electric,
E11tra Clean, On Neighborhood 52 Sporting Goods
Road, Gallipolis, 614·446·9155
Anytime.
1 Bear Super Magnum 44; 1
2BR, bath, kitcken. .. Newly Golden Eagle Super Hawk
remodeled. Nice area, big yard. Turbo, exc. c:ond. Call 614·367·
$325/ma., $325 dap. Days 614· 7289,
446·1157, Eve. 614-894·4501.
53
Antiques
3br 2 Baths, FP, OW, CA,
$475/mo. Deposit Aaqulrad, 614- Buy or sell. Riverine Antiques,
446-4222, or Evenings: 614-446· 1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy.
2114.
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 t.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sunday 1:00 1o 6:00 p.m.
Api Ior rent, goo d cond, good 614-992·2526.
location, new appliances, cor·
~;;. ~~6.S ix1h st &amp; Main, 304· 54 Miscellaneous
1

Apt. lor rent $175, house lor ronl
$100, Pomaroy. Apt. for rent
Middlt"""n $100, 614-992-7511
,.BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jockoon Plkt
from $192/mo. Walk to ahop &amp;
movies. Call614-446·2568. EOH .

Merchandise ,
H
p
10 OrN ow•r, G1sdollne Air
Comprtnor, Extra 10 Horu
Engine, $100. 614·319·9885 After
4p.m.
1989 Ford Eseort, L.X, Steal
Groy, Top Condition, Call 614·
256-6554.

Completly Furhlshld Small
House, $250/mo. Plus Utilities, 25 ln. consol• color t.v. Good
And Deposit. 614·446.0338. Call cond. $150. 614·446-2113.
Bufore 7p.m.
Antique
Sewing
Machine,
Furnished Apartment, 1br, ntX1 (Singer) Antique 11uHtt Hutch
to Ubial)', parking, central hoot, (Modem) 304·675·2503, 304.e75air, references. 614·446·0338, I ;6~5,..33-:.-::::-:-:-::-::-.--:--.-­
;;
Bo_to-:;r-a-7'-;
:; P·_m-:;,=.,---,;::-- I Big 4BR, 2 balh, DokOII drum
Furnished Efficiency, , Share home bul11 for you S2t,t95. 114·
Bath, SIBS, Utllilloo Paid, 701 886-7311. Dtoplor model now
Fourth Ava, Gallipolis. 814-446- I :o::'p_._:-::--::,..,..-,.,,.,,...,on
4416 After 7p.m.
Firewood For Sale, Will Deliver.
Groclous living. 1 ond 2 bad· I:I:-14----,2Siio62&lt;\:---::2-.::--::----:room apartments at VIllage For Sale: 7 Prom Drn•es.J_
Manor
and
Rlvertlat F
N y k c
6 2
Apartments in Middleport. From rom ew ot ) 111 14'
673 5
$196. Call 614·992·7787. EOH.
1 .,..~~·- - - - - - - Middlopon, Such St, 2 bad· Gooct uold washot ond dryor,
24
room lurnrlshad apt, utllldts 1:6::-14-:..;:.
-'7-'·3.;,81,:5-,:;--,::--:-:
paid, references &amp; deposit rt- Mtd!cat Supplln: New And
qulrod, 304-882·25&amp;e.
Uold Whlllchtlro, 3 Whlttld
Nlco 2 BR, 4-112 mi. ~om Gal· ScOOitrl• Llftchalfl, Ettctr1c
11 1 s
&amp;
1
Beds, ~otc. lnsurtnce And
pols. love ratr g. No pets. Mtdiclrt Ac:t::d. Call Advan·
$235/mo. 614·44&amp;·8038.
·
- 1020,
H fth 1
1tgiH,
-•·
Completly Furnished mobile MtM BliCk Leather Motorcr.:;to
home, 1'"'mlla below town 0\ltr•
looking rim. No Polo, CA. 614· Joclto1, Lllta ~- Col! e,., ngo
446.0338.
.
Or )V•klndo. 114·2!1W535,

=

One end
two
badroom RICOndHionld
Wllhlrl
I
:r.:.=T~~w.'ftio~: .
gonmonto lor rent. 304-e'TS53 or 615-4100.
lkyor ll!oppo. I14-4464 M4.

45

Furnished
Rooms

Rldlna lawn mowor, 1710. 20441$8·1SQ,

S o t - I 8piH Aah, O.k And
Apt
rent bw month or week, Hickory Firewood Dollvarld And
304-882-2586.
Sleckld, Don .Waugh, , _
1141.
'
Room• fat r1nt ·week ar month.
Stoning II $120/mo. Gtlllo HOIII, Sam 8o,....l1fl'o Armr Surlll,.
614·44~·9580.
by. S.ndyvll!l · Po111 Ofllco,,
Jocltoon County, WV, (EIII oil·
Sl..,.lng roomo wllh ·cooking, n
eom.n
AIIO lrollor OfiiCI. AM hook·upo, .-alii •20: pair. ,rl,, fit., .
Coli olfar 2:00 p.m., , J04.J73. S.n. H.- • . _ 011\~ *YI
&amp;851, Maoon WV.
... ·304-27Wiai.. Ui\IOn
nildt
llbolld 1 advon!Uig
·.:
Mcrchandt se
atthi.Chaln sow 011 S.por, noo
Or Otfor, 1114-441o341t.
·
Houeehold
51
.&lt; T-: Craft-, . !lila~.
'
'
Rldald, Prolo, 1!!*11 fookil.; .
' '· Goods.
,.....,..t,llandlrd ond ,...lc,
11+1'12·2001 '
'
42 Inch Slovt ' HOOd Exhllll1
Unit Wllh Fen, 114'4.,..21J3.
55 ·
Building
.
.

•or

Groom and Supply Shop.Pet
Grooming. All bruds, styles.
lam• Pel Food Dealur. Julie
Webb. Coli 614-446.0231.
AKC ChQJ:olata Labrador Puppl.. , Btautllul, 1 Weaks Old,
Shols And Wormed. Ready To
Be Placed! 1200 614-446·8111.
AKC
registered
Teacup
Pomeranian, 5 mos old, 614·
992·7841
AKC Sc:ollish Terrier puppies,
non shedding, 2-lett, heallh
guarantee, now laking deposits,
614-594·4&amp;n Athens
Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant, 304-675-2063,
full lint Tropical lisht birds,
small animals and supphas.
LOST8mo
old tamala
Weimaraner, si !\le-g ray with
blue eyes, Kingsbury Rd. &amp;
roadside rest 614·992·7201.
MeUad's
Pet
Grooming,
Poodles groamad, bathed &amp;
dipped $1!.00. Cocker Spaniels
120.00. Sm Collies 125.00. Lg
Collies $30.00, Extra Lg. Dogs
$35.00, Hrs 9am·9pm, no Sunday work, call Coolville, 614-6673915
Tools: Craftsman, Challenger,
Ridged, Proto, wrench sockets,
toolboxes, standard and metric:,
614-"142·2006
'

~

homo,

___ __

=...
~.

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Transportation

71

Autos for Sale

1911 Chl)'slor 300 Good Condi·
lion, tnsldo OUt, $1,000. 614·446·
81181, 614·446-7501.
1973 Cadillac Eldorado 83,573
Mllea, Tlras Ukt New. Needs
Some Work, $400, See At 76
Bulavlllt Road, 614-446-1821
1974 Nova for pans &amp; 1978
Dodge 4x4 plck·up, 614·;112·2185
11117 Chevy Mollbu, 4 Dr, :W5
Auto, Body Rough Runs Good
Dopondoblo. $300 Firm. 614-379:
9885 After 4 p.m.
1978 Chevrolet lmpolo, Good
On Clio, Nlct
Body, No HUll. 614-446-4959.
1971 Chryslar Cordoba, new
paint , new tlrts, $1000, 304·675·
st551ftt!Spm
Condlllon~. Eosy

1980 Monte Carlo, real nice, 304675-4437.
1881 Chewy Chevtlte, good
body, ln1trlor. 20, HB, AfT, AIC,
good tlrea. 614~46-3410, 44&amp;..
2ti0. $5500BO.
1884 Bulok Conlury, 2.5 Liter
Automatic, New Tlrn All
Around Now Pllnl Job, &amp;8,000
llltu, SN to Boll.,tl 614-3792409.
1884 C11111r0 Z.28, T·lopo, 350
eng, aulo, lolldld, $3000, 304115-3318
.
1884 Dodge AriH, 4 door, block,
AMIFM, c1111Ut, 4 cyl, new ••·
htull, 114·1112·1238, ...nlngtl
1.884 'l!ymoulh Grond Ful)',
1800. 11..441.o'r.ll.
'
1884 Pontloc Flrtblrd, T-tops,
IIIlO, rurogoOd, $2,300, 614·742•
23H
·
,

~(lfpi&gt;ENT

I

fC 0 foiOMy. Hff ON TOf ~
'r'HI~.).

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"-. MAYlE THAT:&gt;
WfiY HE CAN''I' SfE ~­
THf IDTTOM

.

fA/,LfNG OliT I
•
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ALLEYOOP
[ 'M NOT SURE! i\\E6Sf
t CAN NALL ' EM LONll
ENOU~ 'FOR VOU T 'liO
AN ' WARN 1\l,.q I.TUZ 1

NOW WAI T A
1"\INUTE~ 1\IN(,j
~U Z CIOESN'T
KNOW ~E
FROM AMMJ

•. ANO ( OON'T I-lAVE
THE 5 LI~t-jTEST IDEA

1-40W TO I.TET TO

1-11~

FROM I-IE~E .'

YEAH, YOU'RE

R.iqW! YOU'LL
~A~TA

WIT~

STICK

Mf/

IJlB

.

•

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.:!&gt; PRINT NUMBERED
~ LEITERS IN SQUARES

A

UNSCRAMBLE FOR

V

ANSWER

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS

1 - ••

Hsbre-'3aron-Gue~atu~ANSWERS
Third grade student to laacher: 'I'm' afraid of asking
a quastfon because ifll sound dumb." The teacher
replied, "There are no dumb questions, just dumb
ANSWERS."

NORTH

BRIDGE

~ MacNeiiL!:,ehrer
NewaHour

f!i!

1!11 Wheel of FOitune

IIJ II Family Feud

t:;1

=

a Be a Star Slareo.

Collage Beakelball
Villanova at Seton Hall (L)
18Crouflre
7:35 Ill Sanford and Son
8:00 (2J II Freth Prince ot Bel Air
Will learns a rival opponent
has more than basketball on
his mind. Stereo. []
(!) MOVIE: The Juage and
Jake Wyler (2:00)
!I) FBI: The Untold Sloriea
Tha FBI foils a plot to
ovarthrow lhe government
and solves a murder. Stareo.

!It llZ 11 Evenlnv Shade ·

EEKANDMEEK
'rW Kl.tW 11-IAT 11-1£
fWR AllAN ON 1!1f STffiT
7DDAY...
.

DID

Herman is loft Jo watch the
Newton kids and their
lnends. Stereo. t:;1
l!llll MOYIE: 'January Man'
Fox Night II 1111 Movlll (R)
(2:00) Stereo. []
0 Collage Bellielball Notre
Dame at West VIrginia (!,1
ID Murder, She Wrote Q
On Stage Stereo.
18 PrlmeNeweC
ID Prince Yattaiif
8:05 !ll.!!PVIE: Invasion u.s.A.
'-·tRJ'l2:00)
8:30 (2J G Blouom Blossom is
embarrassed lor having a
schoolgirl crush on her
teachar. Slereo. t:;1
(I) American DttacUve
Jersey City Pollee detectives
recover dope lrom you~
drug dealers . Slareo. Q
(f) Afl You Being S.nied?
till
Major Dad Casey's
new boyfriend Is Interested in
her and Impressed by the
Ma~r. Stereo. Q
On Stage Stereo.
10 Black St.lllon t:;1
9:00 (2J It MOVIE: 'Maid lor Each
Olhll' NIC Monday Night 11
. lha Movlla (2:00) Stereo. []
!Il MOVIE: 'RoboCop' Aat!"
Monday N_lghl Movlt (Ri
(2:00) Stereo. Q·
·
t1J Ame~an Experience
Stareo.
1
Ttave 1 Q
®I
Murphy Blown
Murphy befriends Corky to
get an Invitation to the White
House. Stereo. []
0 WWF Prime Time
WretUing Brlllsh Bulldog vs.
Warlord; Bobby 1he ~rain
Heenan, Mr. Partee!, Gorilla
Monsoon and The Reverend
Slick. ·
18 Nashville. Now Stereo .
18 Lltry King Llval
.
ID Falhtir Dowlng Mylltrllt
Sister Steve ,learns Dowling
·is the nextlargat of a priest
killar. (R) Stereo. t:;1
9:30 Gil llZ • Dtelgnlng Women·
Juila's son leaveS his wlle
and comes to stay with Julia.
Starao. C
1D Coltas[e lltlcelball
Kansas al Missouri (L)
10:00 (!) Ntwl
t1J Laaming In Amarlcl:
Education on Trial []
(I) It FBI: The Unl1ilii
StoriH The FBI lolls a Plot
to OYanhrow the governmenl
solves a I'IMJr~r. Stereo.

I!Z•

HAVEYCU
BEE:NWAinNE!
LON5~

WIN'TI-iROP.

a

rn

NOW THAT YOU
MENTION IT,
LOWEEZ.Y

ASTRO-GRAPH
BERNICE ·
BEDEOSOL

...'
I '

I

•(

''

"•

1'

.~

.

' ,....14,1111:1

What you do In the r- ilhud could
- have I8Vorable tlnd ler·rtachlng • ' •
that you mlghl nol ltlllillly apptec:lale.
Thla If a ~ wiMin averytlllng you do
will hl..e 1 definite tmpeCt. '
CAPIICOIIII(Dec.~tt)EndeiV·
ora,you~ or -'r0140!11d worlt
out qilltlwtll tor you lllhla lime. How·
- · gelling thlm on trialc - llld not
· Wf1111110 tor the payon- lhOUkllll vour
P111itt- ~. Know whel'8 to lOOk tor
' t-tca llld you'll ftnd it. The AalroGraph Malehmlker l(lllanlly , _ l i

,,

which signs are roman1ica11y ,perle&lt;:I lor
you. Mall $2 plus a tong, sell-ad·
dressed , stamped envelope to Match·
maker, c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box
91428t..Cieveland, OH 44101-3428.
AQUAftiUS(JMI. 20-Fib. 11) You mlghl
be subjected lo some ynforeseen
chang69 al this time lha1 affect your
most , imporl.tlnt lnvolvefl'!8'1ts: Don't
penlc ; thele Shifts could be beneficia,!.
PIICEI (F•b. 20-llarcll 20) ' Your
lrlends have beet~ 1alklng quile a bit
abOut yOu lately, bUt don'l be diSrTiaYe&lt;l.
Their comments have been complimen·
tary'. , Good things could result lrom
good rellllonshlpa.
_1
. AIIIIS (llaniii21·Ap0111) Your great·
ae1 _.rda al this time could come
ltom andaavora that are of a material
naiUre:'Trade on thllllreng11ltnstead
ol JOCulllng 1110111 on somelhlng frlvo·
toua or I~
.
,TAU!IIIt (April ....., 8) Probabltl·
~ llel tor IICIYII~ ,our Hlf4nterells
c.n be .,bltlntlllty anhanclld today H yOu~ things In wayo thai
JMkeyau mar. .lltcllve. LMvenothl!lll
to ClllnCI.
_.PI ,..., 2Wunl 1111 Lldy Luck
might nQt 1n1t1"'"' tn till .nY.III!Qel
Of 'fOII1' li)VallrMII IOCiay, IM!i aile
1110U111 give you
bOOII wt\111 the
finiSh lint Ia lh lllght:

•llie

;

'
CANCER (JuM 21·JUIJ 22) Obje&lt;:tlves
you and your malo e~lhuslaslically
share have excellenl ch&amp;nces lor sui:!'888 today, Each can make contrlbu·
tions of value .
LEO (Jutr 23-Aug. 22) c;areer matters
which could be financially meanlnglul1o
you should be glven •top priority at lhls
time. You're in a good cycle lor making
things coma out as you.desire.
•
VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpt. 22) Oon'l be relucton1 lo as!&lt; friends to do you favors
today - II you slnceretr In lend to,recip·
rocale 61 a taler date. Just be sure rou
don't take w~at theY do for granted .
LIBIIA (Sept. 2I'Oct. D) You ar~ pres·
enlly ln one Of Ihe mOIIIavorab)e C:ycles
rou'vt tieen In for a long lime. Mllerlat
condHions, sa well as aoclal onas, lOOk
very .hopelul. Makelhe most ot'allthll
IS offered.
'
, ,
SCORPIO ,(OCL ,M-Ilo¥. :li) A metter
you've bean wtlnling to r'legoliate ~
be lied dowll today, Howevtr, you May
have to mlkl aomeiiiQIIt coilcaslklns
~tWMan~,

IACIITT_, (IIDW.

2J.Oic. 21) Pro-

·vlded you pertorin UJIIO your capabiH·
mtJQr IICCOITIJI!Iillmllll• 11'8 pos~~­
ble · .today wt11rt your Work Is

'"*·

~. In lldd!lloil, lhl rtwlrds
mtol!l be ~traer tllan u111a!.

a•

1-13-tl
'·

tA QJ 4

1083
t9 3

PHILLIP

...
EAST

WEST

+109763

• 85
• 9 54
t AQ 8 5
tA K 52

ALDER

t7642
+QJ 9 6

SOUTH
+K2

Control and Kaos
continue to clash

'AQJH 2

t K J 10
"+83
Vulnera ble Ne1ther
Dealer: South

8) Phillip Alder

(L)

MQRT.VMEEKLEAND~W~~~NTH~R~O~P--~---------------,

.

.

+10 7 4

Generation []
@ • Entart8Tnmenl Tonight
Stereo.
1!J MacGyvar t:;1
Q) 5portaCanlor
18 Moneyllne
ID The Waltona
7:05 Ill Addams Family
7:30 alii IIJ Jeoperdyl []
(!) Now II Can Be Toll
!IJ Enltrlalnment Tonight
Stereo. t;1
MaiTied ...WIIh Children

Travela
College Beakelball
Notre Dame at Wesl Virginia

e

1 ~~I

~

usually
does
something
everyone elsa will ••••••••.
Complete 1he chuckle qua1ed
•
by filling in the missing words
vov develop from step No. 3 belaw.

(!]) 11 Star Trek: Tlie Next

(J)

~

i
. ''

act

husband commented that
when a man forgets himself he-

.K

a

'

1

(f) Legislative Upclale

gII t:;l

ts~

=;

tUfH 5AYf NOT T\' WoP/lY ACOUT THf "'
Of

'

R~r

.

g

Ron's TV Servlct, spec:lallzlng
in Zenith also servlcclng mosl
other brands. House calfs, 1110
somt appliance repairs. WV
30H'IIi·239~ Ohio 614-446o24.54, Davis
Stw.vac
Service, ~
Georgu CrHk Rd. P11ts, sup- ,
plln, pickup, and dellv1ry. 614• '

O~lo

• !

I

®l Curren! Afllllt g

Complata Mobile Home Sei·Ups,
Repairs; Commerlcal, Rnldenllal Improvements. Including:
Plumbing, Eitclrlcal. Insurance
Cl.almo kcoptld. 614-266·1611.
Curtis Homt lmprovemenls:
Yetrl- Experltnc:• On Older &amp;
Newer Homes. Room Addlllons,
Foundlllon Work, Roollng,
Kitchen• And Bathe. Frte Es·
timatesl Rtterenc:es, No Job To
Big Or Smalll614-441·0225.
Fretman's Plumbing And Heat·
ing, 614·256·1611.
•
·

'

,

!I)Intlde Edlllon t:;l'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lltatlme guaran•••· Local references tumiahed. ·
Free estimalts. Call collacl 1·
614·231.0488, day or night.
Rogers Basement Waterproofing.

•

1 I

We had watched a man

!.,7,..-;-1:...:;r,l8~;-~:...:;l"l.;;..lr--1 G

rn

Home
Improvements

Plumbing &amp;
-·- Heating ..

~~~

ME P R U L

6:35
Andy Grtnllh
7:00 ~ G aJl WhHI ot Fonune

Serv ices

82

ME A S U

1"',------...,,

Ill MacNall~hrer
NewaHour
(J) It Cencll Camere

I'M eoRI2Y
l'M L.A'TE",

Will build paUo COYII'I 1 decka,
KrHned room•, put up vinyl
tiding "' trollor oklnlng. 114·
245-i152.

.

ijj The JenaraonUl

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

«11.0294,

I

1D Super Bowl IX Highlights
ID New Zono t:;1

ALWAYfJ Kl.)OW WHY I'M
APOWuillr.l&amp;'

Tow \lehlete, 1984 Escort 4dr
with tow bar and light package,
good condition, 614-949-2941

81

1 1

1---r:"'"T....,.--,-.-1..,
5
6 _~••• very foolishly at a party. My

1D Scooby Dao

AH. CM~ o~·· I cwr

7128.

1867 Camero, 12,500, posslbla
tradu and cash, 614-&amp;gu·7049
or 614-698·7186

Reading Rainbow Stareo.

t:;l
t:;l

1975 GMC 4x4 Shortbed 350
Auto, Everything Works, Clean
Truck. $1,500, 0 .8.0 . 614-446-

79

ir

(!]) II Andy Grillltll

now buying all entry tickets to 454 over 40 Chevrolet motor
Ohio Lottery's cash explosion s~ .200 or best offer. 304·6756992.
geme, call 614·992·3703
Bud!JDt Transmissions, Used &amp;
63
Livestock
rabUIII, stanlng at $99; Auto
Pans. 614·24!i-56n, 614·319·
AOHA 1989 Chollnul Gtldlng 90 2263
Oaye Training, 1991 Martz Stock
Trol1or, Big Billy Royol Show For Sale: Parts For A 1981
S.ddto. 61(·286-6522.
Toyota In Vol)' Good Shape. 614·
446-1004.
Jeruy lamity milk cow,
presently milking 5gal a day, New gas tanks, body pans, one
c1n dell~er. $500, 614·992-6594
ton lruck wheels, radiators,
mats ate. 0 &amp; Fl Auto,
L.lmouslnt Bull, registered with floor
Ripley,
WV. 304·312· 3933 or 1·
papMS. Call after 5 p.m. 614·388- 800-273-8585
8875.
Will haul livestock. 614-446-1514.

AI2R

II-T.-,~~HI~E;;,.;;;I....;;;EI-lil

!DUpCioae
18 WO!td Today
ID R!n Tin nn, K·9 Cop
Stereo. t:;1
6:05 (JJ Beverty Hillbillies
6:30 (2J 8 aJ) NIC Newt
(!) Savlld by tiMI Bell
!Il (1)8 ABC Newt
Ill Wild Amerlcl Stereo. t:;1
~Square One TV Stereo.

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's

_,"=.... .... . . .

.

1 1;

Ql' a• CIS Newa Q

1979 Jeep CJ5, new top, 53,000
m1les, local owner, 304~75·1264 .
1984 Che~y Blazer, Silverado ·
package, auto, 305 engine, 4 '
wheal drive, V.S, PS, AC, PB,
sharp looking, 304-576-2652.
1984 Ford Ranger 4-whlel drive,
V·6 auto, cuslom wheels, topper, bed liner, running boards,
Fa rm Supplies
614·992·1'158
&amp; Livestock
1986 Bronco II, XL.T, 4 wheel
drive, V-6 auto, air, PW, PO, 2
tone paint, running boards, _
61 'Farm Equlpmeut
original paint, no rust, Z1e-Bart
undercoating &amp; dear eoat. Must
4020 JD Tract, With Big JD see to appreciate, askmg
Loader, $5,950; 1020 JD Diesel $5,500. 304-576·2919
Sharp, $4,995; 460 Long Dlosol
With New 5 Ft Bush H~ . 1986 Dodge Caravan LE, loaded,
$4,350. Owner Will Finance. 614- clean, 9"'7,000 miles, NAOA
"Book" value- $5900. Asking
286-6522.
$4900. 304·675-5306.
Gehl 95 grinder mixer New Holland 478 hayblne. New Holland 1986 5·10 Blazer 4x4, blue, 5·
460 9tl hayblne. AUc:e Chalmers speed, ask $5,000, call 614-985two row no till corn planter. All 4492
good cond. 304-213-4215.
1986, S-10 auto, 4 wheal drive,
Jlm'e Farm Equipment, SR. 35, $4,900. 304-675-3433 or 675-7109.
Wool Gallipolis, 614-446·9ffi;
Wid• eeiiCtion new &amp; ustd farm 75 Boats &amp; Motors
tractors • lmplem.nts. Buy,
ull, ti'ade, 8:00-5:00 wuekdays,
for Sale
Sal. till Noon.
12fl V bottom boat , 15ft trailer,
Warned: Used farm equipment, 4hp Evenrude motor, troUmg ·
anything you wanl to sell. 614· motor, Minkota, 304·675-7413
25&amp;·1308, 614·256·6040 ANor
6p.m.
76 Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories
62 Wanted to Buy

-'......

~-),

I

~

II Niahl Coun t:;1
ID Sinurfa t:;1

Far Sale: 1982 Ford F-250 4x4 . .
Very Good Condition, $3,500.
614·949·2127
1975 F-100 Huck &amp;1990
Kawasaki 4·wheater, 614·949·
2~86 a her 5pm and weekends
1978 Ch1vy pick up, 350 auto,
saoo. 304-675·245l
1976 International dump truc:k,
304-571i-2986.
1985 Ford F150, auto, air, good
condltlan, 614-247-3895
1986 Chevy S-10 Piek-Up W1th
Topper, Low Mileage And Great
Condition! 614-446·1961
1989 Chev S·B, Blk, axe eond,
Silverado, 27,000 miles, all options, $9,000. 304-895-3638 attar
5:00PM

Carter's Plumbing ,
10.___ _ __ lraNor
Mobllt
I IOfll IXIfl
R•-· ·
Fourth end Pine
hook-up, outbubdtnao,
· Gotlljiollo;
'•
lol!cld, 3 mlllli Pl. Pit, :tiOHll1111 fold Eot«&lt;, 2dt, 4op., olr,
'
114-441o3888
'1113.
·
"""' bolllry, iiOOrl llrll, ' r\lnl
.- _ _...........,_ lhort Tlmo On Job? POll c..dll
giliid, liking 1110,114·14•2715
.1.-------- 11 •.....,..
Hlllooy A P!Oblom'l MI!!Y
11111 Mon11 Corit!'•. T,.Topa, 84
Electrical &amp;
..._
Ropoou- llalollt Hom• To
••.C!.OO
Millo,
304.f15·
12.
4.-----'--......--~
ChOOH F'9ftl. 11!1111 Down
15...
'
=:::-'::::
. R=e~fr...::lg:.;.e;.;;ra;.:.;ll;.:on.:.....~ .,.
Poym1r11,; eon,1-IOO-IIIH'1'1t
IIIII Novo S SIHd
Good ~ooldon1ftl or COI!Imorclot ' ~
Woril Car, II,IIO•.tl......-4'112. 'Wiling, MW WVIoe or Npilra. .,,
·5·---~-- 1.1._....;....;..,--..,...;o.,-_ 35 Lots a. AcJ'8!1ae
Maatot LlctiuoiCI -rlcltn.
, . . llcGf1 1100; , ... Horillll
l1101rlcal, 304-415- ,,.
14.__,__..,.;---_
_
_
cOuN)'AY ACREAGE
'
.
,
.,..,
1. . ~mo. tow-··
6.---------__.,;,.
Noor Cortienlor IAihont
.
.""
~.., - · 11110. 204.Over I MNI: JltJi -dow1fncl.
Pan Wooded. Nloa llnl.fann
7._ __.__...__..,...-._.__ J 5.....,....__,_-,...----'-:-_ r.=,
LA,...'II'UR~-- · . Suppl"a • ' ~117 c,."~ ~· hiatt f!llltlao.
Wllh ~"' Cfullna.
Coli'!'"
...... :;~ llOol1. brtok.
~.~..
~
~
O.IC. 17.::
8~-.;..-....;.;...~-:--OvO!or Flrllhti..~OWnor,. ~~==
··r~''=
fllr =.. ' '.
. , '.
'-IIIIMIJ- ..~, r.ia.llo 114· i"$3'!...:.::: OH, &lt;:a• ~.. : :;
•

2. ------·~­

.

6:00(2)8 (I) (1)11 !It liZ.
ID News
(!) Video Power
Square One TV Stereo.

41 Houses for Rent

42

'.

EVENING

WHEN 'IOU LIVE
ON THE DESERT
THERE'S NOTHING
MORE EXCITING
THAN WATCHING
THE SUN 60
DOWN .

Retrain
Now!!!Southaastern
Business College, Spring Valley
Plaza. Call Today, 614·446~367f!
Roglsltrallon 1190·05·12148.

'

"''

SHuatlon

Real Estate

PIN down EXTRA

______

14

·n4a.

Want to

]..__

1 acre trailer 101 on Gtorg11
Crook Rd. Good locaUan.
$5,900. 614-446·1615 or 446-1243.
3 Acres: Old Hous1 And 8am,
Holt Flal, Holl Hilt. Swonn Crook
Road. Call 614·2~554 .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Wanted

To Good Home, Approx 3
Months Old Chow, German
Shepherd, Collie Mix. 614 -4461959.

~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Help wantee!

Part-time Netpllonist, mut t be
personable, l,.tve telephone
t ldlls, able to dtal with public,
and htndle general office
duUes, $4.60hr, "Pomeroy area,
sand resume' to: Dafly Sentinel,
Box 729H, Pomeroy, OH
Rtpreaentatlves wanted tor
A~on , no territory flecessary,
tr11 gift with sign-up, Call Kay,
614-992-7180

Announcements

13, 1992

spymg acliv1t1es of

East
Pass
Pass

West

Alte r fiscal cuts tn 1970 stopped the

Pass

Control and Kaos.

Pass Pass
those · two nval TV·Sttcom agencies
turned to brtdge After' four rubbers.
Opemng lead. K
Control led by \0 potnts. For the ft fth
rubber. Control was represented by
Maxwe ll Smart (Agent 86) and , the
Chtef Kaos ltelded Stmon the Lik able
•
and Steglrted. the German assassin
would ne the only defense if declar~r ,
"Simon the Likable." explatned the had 3-5-H distribution. However •. if ·
Chief to Max. " IS the most ruthless. · Max had the club queen, the Ch1ef
cunmng, evil and treacherous Kaos • should underlead his club ace at Irick ~
agent in the enltre world - and a heck • two. Then Max could swttch to a dta· :
of a nice guy •
mood, tn hope of gtvmg the defenders ..
Simon smtled. 1t was tmposstble to four mtnor-sutt trtcks.
dislike him
Stmon smiled at the Chief. The Chief
On the first deal , Smart overlooked continued with the ace and another
an importanl defe nsive play . Alte r a club. Stmon ruffed, drew trumps and ·
limit raise by Siegfried. Stmon the d~arded two of hts dtamonds on dum· '
Likable was in four hea rts. The Chtef my s spades to make hts game.
led the club king, under which Max
"Max, why didn't you play the club ,
signaled e ncouragement with the nine queen at trtck one, p~~mising the jack .
Now the Chtef had a problem. Was or a stngleton' Then tl s easy for me to :
the nine from a doubleton' If so. he lead a low club at trtck two.'
•
should continue wtth the ace and an"Sorry, Chief.'
other club, givtng Max a rulf. That
Simon the Likable smiled .

+

®

The World Almanac Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS

Anoworto Provloua Puz:do

34 Scold
repeatedtr
35 HI or bra
37 Lacquered
molalware
38 Adjust (a
motor)
40 Thraah
soundly
42 Inial
43 Drums - the
Mohawk
45 Selzt btlort
othtrl can
47 Horae's geat
49 Knlghl't tllle
50 Basketball
otg.
52 Catch
54 Tugs
auddenly
58 Yea-60 Film director
Jacque•62 Wialh
63 Twllchta
64 Video-game
movie
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4 Weekend·
welcoming
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8 Baseball'sSptaker
12 AuthorLevin
13 Shaketptat·
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-and Allee
22 French
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23 Complll pt.
25 Compet11 In
lootract
27 Coming up
31 Bungle

66 Awry
67 Safecracker
(ll.j
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II Leg bona
19 AnnapoHt
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24 - Bagnold · '
26 RtlidyOI- '
27 Doot column
28 ActorJulia ·
29 Lick ol
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30 The World
According to •

32 Fastan
33 Faver
38 Belonging to
Ul
39 Chamlcal
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44- rummy
48 Sooner than
48 SpriiCe
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53 Uncltcortltd
55 Peal
56~ Krlnglt
57 TrantmltiH
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