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                  <text>Tuesday, January 21, 1992 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

To sue or not: women with
breast implants w·ant to know

FIREFIGHTING BROTHERS • The Shank
brothers have a long tradition -or serving in the _
Pomeroy Volunteer Fire Department, holding

By LISA LEVITT RYCKMAN
AP National Writer
NEW YORK (AP) - Thousand; of women frightened by the
possibility that their illnesses are
related to their silicone-gel breast
implants have been frantically call·
ing lawyers to find out if they.
should sue.
In many cases, the answer is no.
Because of the cost and time
involved in suing, only those with
the severest illnesses will find
someone to represent them. But
there may be far more badly damaged women th an anyon e had
imagined.
"From wha t we've been hearin g, some big· litig ators from
around th e cou ntry have been
wa tch ing and decided to jump in
th is area," sa id Minnea polis
illwycr Fred McNeilL
On Jun. 6, Food and Drug Commissioner David Kessler asked for
a 45-day moratorium on usc of sili·
cone-ge l implants to assess new
safety data. The implants have been
blamed for such disorders as lupus,
scleroderma and arthriti s, but no
link has been proved.
Since the FDA mo ve, lawyers
across the nation say they have
received hund reds of call s from
women who arc sick or fear they
might become ill. Dan Bailon , a
s,m Fmnc isco lawyer, got 100 calls
in one day.

several offices. Pictured, 1-r, are Bryan Shank,
Jeff Shank, Stacey Shank and Chris Shank.

Shanks active in Pomeroy VFD
•

The four brothers in the Shank
family of Pomeroy are all active in
the Pomeroy Volunteer Fire
Department , holding various
offices and positions. Their
involvement has beco me a long·
standing tradition dating back to
their childhood days.
Bryan Shank joined the department in 1976, and has served as a
firefighter, a lieutena~t and a cap·
tain . He currently se rve s as a
trustee for the deparunenl.

Bryan's brother, Jeff Shank, is
an 18-year member of the department. He is First Assistant Chief at
the present time, and has served the
department as Second Assistant
Chief, President, Captain and firefighter.
pris Shank, who joined the
deparunent in 1984, is currcn~y the
department's first captain. He has
also served the fire department as
Second Captain, ~irs l Lieutenant,
Second Lieutenant, Third Lieu-

tenant and is a firefighter.
Stacey Shank, the youngest of
the Shank brothcrs,ll; a firefighter
and trustee of the department. He
joined the deparunent in 1988.
Prior to becoming full-fledged
mem bcrs of the department, and in
their childhood days, all four brothers assisted the department in
washing and waxing the l!ucks.
The fire-fighting Shanks are the
sons of Scott and Ethel Shank of
Union Avenue in Pomeroy.

It has only one light-weight

mov ing part - a loudspeaker and therefore vcbratcs less tha n
con ventiona l coo ling sys tems,
imporumt for motion-sensitive telescopes.
Garrett's system relics merely
on so und and inert gas, and therefore is envi ro nmentally safe. He
says there's no reason why it co uld
not replace home refrigerators and
air conditioners, which can leak
ozone-destroying refrigerant chemicals imo the atmosphere.
"It h~s a good number of applica ti ons in space and al so on
Earth," said Tom Dixon, flig ht
ope rations manager for NASA's
Get Away Special program.
The shuttle ri de, which cos t
SIO,OOO, is "only to certify the
flight worthiness of the refrigerator," Garrell sa id. "The physics,
the performance (on Emth), has all
been measured. Th ~it 's all hi story."
The principle was discovered in
th e early 1980s at Los Alamos
Na tional Laboratory in New Mexico.
Garrett said tllC 199-puund cooler is embarrass ingly low- tec h.

STOCKHOLM , Sweden (AP)
- Paul McCartney and the newly
independent Baltic states .arc
receiving $173,000 each as winners
of the first Polar Music Prize.
The Roya l Swedish Academy
said Monday the former Beatie was
chosen for having " revi talized
popular music worldwide over the
last 30 yea rs." Estonia, Latvia and
Li thuania received the money to
support their national music. ·
The $692,000 prize, described
by the academy as the largest in the
music world, will be presented
every two years. It was made possible by a $7.6 million donation by
In stead of a motor-driven compres- Stig Andcrsson,thc man behind the
sor, it consists of a modified loud- 1970s pop group ABBA.
speaker - "designed for Bonnie
McCartney, a millionaire, said
Raitt's voice, notthermoacoustics" he will give away his prize money.
- fi shing line glued to plastic film
The award will be conferred in
that is rolled into a tube, helium May
by King Carl XVI Gustaf.
and xenon gas, b:1ttcrics and a data
recorder.
NEW YORK (AP)- Entertai The loudspeaker generates 160 mcnt reporter Dorothy Lucey and
decibels of sound , enough to "burn anchorwoman Rolanda Watts arc
your ear drums," Garrett said.
Linda Dana and Jerry
Gas molecules nrc compressed replacing
Pcnacoli as hosts of the Lifetime
~md heat up when soun d waves
bla st from the loudspeaker. The
molecules arc shoved into the plastic and transfer their heal, which
makes the gas progressively cooler.
Garrell ex pects the cooler, in the
Micky Williams and Frank 'A.
shuulc's cargo bay, to dip to 140 Vaughan, members of Drew Webbelow ze ro Fahren heit when Dis- ster Post #39 of the American
cove ry is in darkness 187 miles Legion in Pomeroy allended The
above Ea rth . The temperatures Ohio American Legion Mid-Wimer
ins1dc the unit should hover arou nd Con Ference on January 19 at the
40 below zero when the cargo bay Raddison Hotel in Columbus.
is pointed toward the sun.
Conference speakers included
Unl ike conventional vapor-com- Dominic D. DiFrancesco, National
pression systems, like your home Co mmander of the American
refrigerator, the sound-chiller docs Legion; John F. Sommer, Execu not turn on and off to adju st to tiv e Director of The American
shi fting temperatures. lt'Y ·simply a Legion,
Washington D.C. office;
maucr of volume controL
and Major General (Retired)

exccp1 in the ri nal moments. The
small town is supposedly peopled
with Capra-CS&lt;IUe chan\Clcrs. But,
like the woman who fla shes
Polaroid cameras in people's faces
and the neighbor who kee ps offering cookies, ~1ey arc chmmlcss.
Davidson's comedy timing is
off, so that potential laughs never
develop. He makes good usc of
Texas landscape, and th e confronta tional scenes play well . But
there is a tentativejceling about the
fi Im, a! ~hough the participants
wcren 't sure of where they were
goi ng.
Petersen co-produced " Hard
Promises," and he obviously
designed it as a breakthrough vehicle for himse lf. He is one of th~
best new actors in films. and the
movie allows him to present his
winni ng p~rsonality . At times he
uppears to be trying too hard, but

there is no doubt of his potential as
an enduring star.
Sissy Spacek is winning as
ulways in her familinr role as the
beleaguered regional housewife.
Kerwin is s~llwart as the other side
of the triang le, thou gh the script
wavers between showing him as a
nerd and a nice guy. Olivia Burneue is especially winning us the
Pcterscn-Sp:iCCk daughter, the only
one who wants him to stay in town.
Marc Winni ngham makes a
good impression as Spacek's best
friend, and sleepy-eyed Jeff Perry brings more to his role as
Petersen's buddy than is indicated
in the script
The Colum~ia Pictures release
was produced by Petersen and
Cindy Chvawl. The ruling is PG,
with mild sweuring (also one scene
in lamcnwble wste). Running time:
95 minutes.

Gold~n

Globes divided among--Htajor
films like 'Bugsy' and 'Beauty~
By nOB THOMAS
Associated Press Writer
\
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)
- The Golden Globe awards gave
Oscar handicappers no clear
favorite, spreading honors among
"Beauty and the Beast,"
"Bugsy," "JFK" and "The
Prince of Tides."
Disney's "Beauty and the
Beast" got a pre-Oscar boost by
winning three awards SaiUrd~y
night from the Hollywood Foreign
Press Association: best musical or
comedy. best song and best original
'score.
·
Other Golden Globes at the 49th
annual ceremony went to director
Oliver 'Stone for "JFK"; Jodie

cable network's tnlk show "Altitudes."
The new hosts will be in place
Feb. I 0. The change was made
because the network, whose target
audience is women, wanted to
return "Attitudes" to its previous
format with two women as cohosts, spokesman Alex Wagner
sa1d Monday.
Lucey works at KCBS -TV irl
Los Angeles, Waus at WABC-TV
in New York.
Lifetime is seen in 53 million
households, the network said.
LOS ANGELES (AP) " Boyz N The Hood" director John
Singleton is direc ting Michael
Jackson's new music video, which
stars Magic Johnson, Eddie Murphy and the mOdcllman.
The video for "Remember the
Time" from Jackson 's "Dangerous" album will premiere Feb. 2
on Fox Broadcasting, following
"In Living Color," and on MTV
and Black Entertainment Television, a Jackson spokesman said

Monday.
Jackson caused a stir with his
first video from the album. "Black
or While" sho:....cd him grabbing
his crotch and smashing windows.
He apologized and cut lour minutes
from the 11 -minutc video after its
release in November.
LOS ANGELES (AP)- Nirvana's hit album "Nevcrmind" is
giving listeners their money's
worth and more: The compact disc
has a 13th track that follows 10
minutes of silence.
The label on the "Neverm ind"
CD lists only 12 songs, including
the smash single "S mells Like
Teen Spirit." But most copies have
the extra song, "Endless Nameless." Cassclles don't have the
bonus track.
Chrissy Shannon, a spokeswoman for the David Geffen Co. in Los
Angeles, said the unadvertised song
is typical of the band.
"That's Nirvana," she said.
" It' s just supposed to make you
wonder."

Legion members attend conference

'Hard Promise~' opens Jan. 31
lly UOn THOMAS
Assoduted Press Writer
Like William Holden in "Picnic," Will iam Petersen invades a
small, unsophisticated town and
di srupts the populace with hi s
unruly charm. Unlike ihe Holden
chawctcr, Petersen is no str:Jngcr.
He is a hometown boy addicted to
the wandering life.
Joey Coalter (Petersen) has hurried home from cowpunchi ng after
receiving an invitation to the wed·
-· ding of his wife (Sissy SpacckY to
his boyhood fri end (Brian Kerwin).
Joey doe sn't know she has
divorced him.
So fm so good, a likely setup for
a 1930.1 domestic comedy. But this
is 1992, and simplistic plots and
predictable characters do not a hit
comedy mukc.
The fault lies in Julc Sclbo's
script and Martin Davidson's direction. The plot offers no surprise,

''They don't roll o~.er a_nd seule
just because y~u file, smd S~san
Feldstein, a B1rm1ngham, M1ch.,
attorney who has s:t~ed five breast
implant cases. "II s very d1ff1cult
litigation. Auorneys know they
have to be ex tremely choosy,
which sh uts out women with legiti·
mate claims who have less than
catastrophic injuries."
There have been several. multimillion-dollar judgments in breast
· implant cas_cs, the largest and '!lost
damaging m the case of Manann
Hopkins, Bolton's client The fed·
cral jury found not only that the
implant was def~tively designed
and manufactured but that Dow
Corning commiued fraud.
A Houston lawyer filed 78 cases
the week of the moratorium
announcement and has !00 more
cli enis. An auorney in ·San Jose,
Calif., has more than 200 clie~t s,
all with immune-system diseases.
And in Minneapolis, McNeill's law
firm , Zimmerman Reed, has filed a
class-actioh consumer fraud case
against Dow Corning. The firm has
about I00 breast implanlilicnts.
" It seems as though there is no
question that there is u very cleill'
case of liability," McNeill said.
"Dow Corning had this information ... and this information .was
never given to the women who
bought the implants."

The Golden Globes also gave a
Foster as an FBI trainee tracking a .
serial killer in "The Silence of the' shot in the arm to "Bugsy," the
Lambs"; and Nick Nolte as a trou- mob movie suurin~ Warren Beatty
bled man who falls for a psychia- and Anneue Bcnmg, whose off.
trist in "The Prince of Tides ." screen union produced a baby girl,
Miss Poster and Nolte won for born last week:
In accepting "Bugsy/s" award
drama.
.
· i
1fu
pest drama, Beauy said of Miss
The Golden Globes are the offiBening,
"For me, she has the
cial kickoff of HollywOOd's award
greatest
knack
for bringing things
season and often give clues to the
Oscars. Oscar nominations will be to life."
Bette Midler from "For the ·
ar;mounced Feb. 19. ·
,
and Robin Williams from
Boys"
Disney has been conducting a
"The
Fisher
King" won for best
campaign for ''Beauty'' to be nom·
acliess
and
actor
in a musical or
inated for an Academy Award for
•
'!tCst picture. The Academy of comedy film.
Germa~y's "Europa. EuroJ!a'~­
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
has never before so recognized an got' the foreign language -film
award.
animated filin. ·
·

Belpre
slips by
Meigs 64-63

Bernard F. Losekamp.
bers. Ohio is the fourth largest
National Commander DiFrance- membcrshio state with over
so praised the Ohio American 160,000 members. Cincinnati resi·
Legion for its membership accom- dent Bob Ray is the State Com·
plishments and support of the Fam- mander.
Williams serves as the Fourth
ily Support Network. The AmeriDivision
Commander of the 8th
can Legion Family Support Net·
District
and
is the 8th District
work provides assistance to mili tary families of regular active duty Chairman of the Korean War
personnel and those who have been Memorial.
Vaughan, meanwhile, is the
activated in the National Guard and
State Americanism Chairman, the
Reserves.
The American Legion is the 8th District Americanism Chairworld's largest veterans organiza· man and the First Vice Comman~er
tion with over three million mem- ofPost39.

i"

Pick 3: 890
Pick 4: 3375
Cards:

6-H; 10-C; 7-D;
3-S

Low In upper lOs. Chance ol
rain 90 pmenL High In mid 40s.

PageS

Vol. 42, No. 182

Copyrighted 1992

2 Soctlono, 12 Pageo 25 cento

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 22, 1992

AMultlmodla Inc. Newopaper

Individuals, agencies show
su_.pport of prison site in county

---Names in the news---

Want to chill that beer? Just pump
up the volume of space-age fridge
Dy MARCIA DUNN
AP Aerospace Writer
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(AP)- A cooling unit powered by
sound is to fl y aboard the space
shutUe Discovery this week. It wi ll
rock 'n' roll 10,000 times louder
than a Rolling Stones concert.
But the shulllc's ;revcn as tronauts won't hear any of it - the
noise will be contained within the
cooler, a thcrmoacoustic refrigerator, in a pol lu tion-free chill mg system being tested in space for the
first time.
Discovery is scheduled to blast
ofT wi th the sound-chiller and nine
other Get Away Special ex peri ·
ments- sponsored by students
and scientists from six countries at8:53 a.m. Wednesday. The sc ienti fic research mission is to last one
week.
Steven Garrell, a physimt m the
Naval Postgrnduatc School in Monterey, Calif., and his research tc:un
designed ~~ c thermoacousllc r~fng­
erator for usc on sa tellites with
electronic insl!umcn ts that need to
be kept cold.

"They're saying, 'I was told
they were safe . If I had known
everything we're hearing now, I
wouldn't have don e this,"' said
Bolton, who last month won S7J
million for a client who argued thnt
her cri ppling immune-system discase was caused by ruptured silicone-gel implants.
Silicon'c gel breast implants
have been used for more than 30
years, and more than I million
American women have received
them, mostly for cosmetic purposes.
Dow Corning last week disputed
allegations it rushed the product to
the market in 1975, and it released
an indcpendenrreview concluding
the implants arc safe.
It also said that newly released
company memos questioning the
safety of the implants arc not scien·
tilic data, but rather the give-and·
Wke that guides product devcloprncnL
Dow Corning won't say how
many lawsuits arc pending against
it. In the past, it has kept a lid on
litigation by seuling before trial
and winning protective orders to
keep potentially damaging documents out of the public eye.
The cost of such cases, from
SSO,OOO to more than $100,000,
and the time involved, gcncrully
about ~uec years, also have a chilling effect.

Ohio Lottery

- ,.....

:·

---......._-

LETTERS OF SUPPORT • Meigs County individuals, organiza·
- lions and businesses are responsible for over 100 letters of support for
the location of a medium-security prison in Meigs County. Here Pam
Newell, Executive Secretary for lhe Meigs Countr Chamber or Commerce, and Charles Kitchen, Acting Chamber D1reclor, are pictured
with some or the letters that have been received by that office and
sent to the state corrections department.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
More than 100 letters in support
of a prison site in Meigs County
have ·been received by the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce,
and will be forwarded to state officials.
Late last year, Governor George
Voinovich announced that Meigs
County was one of three Southeastem Ohio counties being considered
as a site for a medium-security
state ~rison. Belmont and Noble
Counties are also being considered
as sites for the prison. Since that
time, county officials and the
chamber of commerce have spearheaded a campaign to locate the
prison here.
Two potential sites have been
chosen as the most likely to be con-

sidered locally. One o( the sites is.
Southern Ohio Coal Companyowned land in Salem Center, the
other is privately-owned property
near Racine.
Individuals from Meigs and surrounding counties, along with five
village councils, both political par·
ties, three water districts, Emergency Medical Services and volunteer
fire deparunents, local utilities, the
local bar association, veterans service office, local labor unions,
American Legiqn posts, churches
and religious organizations, township trustees from all townships,
school districts and businesses of
all sorts have wriuen leuers in support of the proposed prison.
Long, Abel comment
SJpport has also come from the
stale level through State Senator

Jan Michael Long (D-Circleville)
and State Representative Mary
Abel (D-Athens).
On Tuesday afternoon, Senator
Long said that he was in contact
with state officials regarding .a
prison location in Meigs County as
early as last fall.
"Last year, with the coal mine
situation as it was, I talked to (former county development director)
Elizabeth Schaad about economic
development activities in the county," Long said, "and we chatted
about the possibility of locating a
prison or youth rehabilitation facili·
ty in Meigs County."
Long reponed yesterday that he
then contacted Department of Corrections and Rehabilitations Director Re~inald Wilkinson to report
that officials in Meigs County were

interested in such a site. Long also
urged Schaad and other county
officials to be vocal in their support
of the location or a prison in the
county, since the deparunent dces
not have a strong record on local·
ing prisons where there is heavy
opposition.
Since Governor Voinovich's
announcement in December that
Meigs County was being considered as a potential site, Long says
that he has sent an "urgent request"
to Wilkinson concerning Meigs
County's position in the selection
process.
·
Long said that he cited Meigs
County's hi~h unemployment rate
in relationship lD other areas of the
state in his contacts with the Corrections Department
Continued on page 3

·Voinovich, study group hear
•of education deficiencies
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) . Gov. George Voinovich and his
· Governor's Education Management
· Council have heard a mixed review
of the progress Ohio is making
toward Its goal of achieving excellence in education.
There are gaps in the system
. that must be closed.
.. But Voinovich and the council
· also were told Tuesday that the
: stale has taken some positive steps
toward achieving six national goals
that the administration endorsed
., last year.
They were briefed on the
progress of an ongoing "Ohio Gap
:. Analysis " by consultants Peggy
· Siegel, program director for the
· Center for Excellence in Education
.: of the National Alliance of Busi·
' ness, and David Hornbeck of the
·. National Business Roundtable.
. One gap mentioned was a lack
· of coordination among various
:: commissions and task forces that
• make studies. Another was "dis·
• cottnected" priorities,.performance
'; standards, incentives and account• ability.
. Also mentioned was lhe promis. ing or programs and projects that
. · rise and fall on the availability of
.: money, the continued funding of
.: existing programs without their
~ success being demonstrated, and a.
~ system that is driven by school dis·

trict compliance instead of student dination with other state agencies
performance.
'
that deal with the social aspects of
Hornbeck, a consultant for the education.
state of Kentucky, which restruc·
"That's kind of a general frametured its schools under court order work," Sanders said.
in 1'989, went over a list of things
The GEM Council is to submit a
he said Ohio should be doing to report, with recommendations to
meetlhe national goals.
Voinovich and the Legislature, in
Among them were expansions November.
of the use of rcchnology in the
The siX national goals include:
classroom and removing barriers to
-Having all students ready to
learning for economically disad· learn when they enter school.
-Increasing the high school
vantaged students, including
"health services and parenting graduation rate to 90 percent.
skills for all individuals in need."
- Demonslrated competence in
But Hornbeck said Ohio has English, math, history and geogramoved faster than many other phy at specific grnde levels.
states with laws that help identify
.,.-Making U.S. students rust in
deficient school districts and the world in science and math.
encourage better districtS to make
-Giving all students the skills
further improvement and become to be responsible citizens.
models for olh'ers.
·
-Making all schools free of
Hornbeck said Ohio is ahead of drugs and violence.
other states with its commiunent to
expand the Head Start program to
include all eligible students.
· "This is a shiny, gold star in
Ohio's cap," he said.
The council also heard from Ted
Sanders, superintendent of public
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) inslrllction, on a swdy of reorganiz- The American Civil Liberties
ing the Ohio Deparunent of Educa- Union of Ohio today filed a lawsuit
in an effort to block a new state law
tion .
He listed a realignment into that will require women to wait 24
major divisions that would be hours before having an abortion.
The ACLU filed suit in Franklin
responsible for finlll1&lt;:t::• opemtions..
County
Common Pleas Court to
results and accountability and coor·
prevent enforcement~lle measure that is to lake ef~ May 29. It
was filed on the 19th anniversary
of the U.S. Supreme Court decision
legalizing Qbortion.
The state law requires that
reported record net income of women be given material printed
$38.6 million, or $2.40 per share, by the state at least24 hours before
compared with net income of $26.4 having an abortion. The material
million, or $1.60 per share, in would have to provide details about
1990
fetal development, risks of an abor·
·
tion and information about altemaRevenues rose 9 percent for the lives.
year to $444 million, Ashland Coal
Susan Looper-Friedm.an, a prosaid.
fessor of law at Capital University
"Higher sales volume and lower and a member of the ACLU board,
costs made possib)e'by the continu- said the law would subject women
.ing development at Mingo Logan, to unnecessary delays and biased
aided by a shifltoward contract . infonnation.
s_ales, contributed to 1991's record
"Only in the case of abortion
results," Payne said.
does the state presume to substitute
Mingo Logan's new Black Bear a prescribed script reflecting the .
Preparation Plant began opemting views of the bill's anti-choice
in December.
backers for the professional judgeAshland C~ is engaged in the ment of the doctors performing the
mining, processing an&lt;U!IIe of low- procedure," Ms..Looper-Friedman
sulfur Steam coal. It markets its said at news conference Tuesday.
coal principally to electric utilities
"It's hard ·to imagine that any
in the easrem United States and woman who seeks an abortion
into the export ~ets.
hasn't already given a great deal of
,.
time and tboughl ro her decision.
Rather than provide··useful information, this law seeks to secottd·
.
~uess that choice and to coerce her

Abortion law
is challenged

~Ashland Coal Inc. earns

:record
$38.6 million in 1991
-

·: HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (AP)
.,_ Ashland Coal Inc. says it col-;:lee ted higher revenues while
:tspending less in 1991's fourth
!,quarter, boosting its net income to
:..su.s mil~on. ·
,. Net income for the pepod ended
:t&gt;ec. 31 represented 72 cents per
:Share. Net income in.the 1990 quar,. er. was $5.1 million, or 30 cents
~ share, Ashland Coal said Tues·
. ;:ctay.
:;:: Revenues for the period rose 5
jpei'Centto $II 1.7 million.
-:; The earnings reflect increasing
«Sales to two customers, which the
.:2:ompany would not name , and
:Jower production costs since the
-3taitup of Ashland Coal's Mingo
"Logan Coal Co. subsidiary, said
;vmiam C. Payne, •Ashland,Coal's
.:txesident and-chief executive offier•
1'. For the year,. Ashland Coal

"'MU Cheer}eader Charge d.

~

~ith

rape of Gallipolis girl

Columbus Southern lowers
proposed rate increase
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Columbus Southern Power Co. has
offered to cut its proposed $202.5
million rate increase by nearly 25
percent.
The utility , in a motion filed
Tuesday with the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, said it agreed
"in principle " to lower the
increase to $15 S miII ion unti I the
commission decides the rate case,
expecte4 this spring.
Columbus South.ern tried to
impose a 28.4 percent rate increase,
citing its part of the $2.3 billion
cost of the Zimmer power plant
near Cincinnati. The new filing
would lower the increase to 21.7
percent and reduce the boost in the
average monthly residential bill
from $16.2lto $12.40.

The utility is a partner in the
Zimmer plant with Cincinnati Gas
&amp; Electric Co. and Dayton Power
&amp; Light Co.
State law allows a. ij(ility to
impose a rate increase, subject to
PUCO approval, if the PUCO
d'oesn't act upon the request within
275 days.
The city of Columbus and Con·
sumers' Counsel William Spratley
filed suit in Franklin County Commoo Pleas Court seeking to prevent
Columbus Southern from imposing
the rate increase. Judge Richard
Sheward issued a temporary
restraining order Jan. 10 against lhe
company pending furthi:r review of
the case.
The plaintiffs said the state law

allowing utilities to impose rate
increases is unconstitutional.
Columbus Southern appealed to
the Ohio Supreme Coun, which is
considering.the case.
Spra.tley· said the company 's
offer lD lowu its proposed increase
is "basically moot," since the suit
is pending.
.
PUCO spokeswoman Stacie
Gilg said the commission is
reviewing lhe. new proposal.
Columbus .Southem spokesman
Thomas Holliday said the $155
million proposal IS slightly below
the midpoint in the $148.8 million$170 million range (ecommended
last year by the PUCO staff.
He said the lower rate could
only be imposed if the court rules
in Columbus Southern's favor.

Dexter man held in jail·on 5 charges
A Dexter man is being held in
the Meig~ ~ounty jail pending a
bearing in Meigs County Court

and ordered it to attack the officer.
The dog grabbed the officer's
trousers.

cer. .
Ac.cording to Meigs County
Sheriff-James M. Soulsby, 18 year
old Michael Hudson was arrested
Tuesday evening on charges of
reckless opcratiott of a motor vchi•
cle, two counts of resisting arrest,
one count of disilrderly after warn·
ing, and the aggravated ·assault
charge.
,
The sheriff said that as the offi·
ce~ attempted 10 ll1TeSt H~4son, th~ .
Dexter man released a VICIOIIS dog

allegedly interfered with the arrest
of ber son. She was cited to Meigs
County Court and is to appear on
Jan. 29. ·
Also arrested Tuesday evening
·at Dexter was Douglas C, Gloyd,
30, on a domestic violence Wilmln!·
He is confined to the_jail pending a
hearing in Meigs County Cow1.
·
· George Kuhn, Sr.. _Dexter, was
·arrested Tuesday evenmg ott a war· ·
.rant char~ing rcceivi~g sto~ P!'QJ!··
.' erty. He ts cllarged w~th bavmg two

~i~~l:.g~~~~~ \'!u~ifiati:8 ~=v~~~~~~~~e:·r:u:~}~ mo~~!~. a~i~~e~d 'i~~v~~~s~n~~

her," Ms. Looper-Friedman said
l A Marshall University cheer· lion, where she was met by frincds,
The Ohio Rlght to Life Society
~er was charged Tuesday with lherepatsaid
,
said the ACLU action could pre·l;aping a IS-year-old Gallipolis girl,
Halley was released from the . vent many women from receiving
Jc:cording to the Huntington Her· Cabell County Jail Tuesday on informauori needed to make an
;Q/d·D4patch. ,
·
$S,OOO bond. Jfis arraignment is intelligent and informed decision
~ · Melvin Robert Halley, 2'1, of schGeduled for Jan. 28,:·
•
about abonion:
·
.
:iOo\3 1/2 9th Ave., allegedly · . ary ,Rt~h!«, Mats~l s sports, · ''They're only basically going
~saulted the girl at his apartment mformauon dilector, declinecl com- this route ·to .stall the·information
jctwoen 2 and 3 a.m. Ian. 11. after . ment,Tuesday -night. He didn't from getting into the hands of
:O.e two returned from a movie: ~now rf Halley hac! been suspended ·' women who desperately need it,"
:t:lalley dropped .the Jlrl off later from ~ cheerlcading team. ,. :
said Janet Folger, the society's leg· ·
· •
·
.:\IW·momingata Gal~poHs gas sta·
islative director.

•

Demands Urgency". Here, Denver and Nora
Rice are pictured as they pack the educational
kits to be used in the campaign. (See story on
page 8).
.

CAMPAIGN UNDERWAY· The American
Heart Assocation is gearing up for its annual
door-to-door fundraising campai~n. The theme
for this year's campaign is "Th1s Emergency

'

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'
12-week old black Labadore
Retrievers reportedly stolen from
the Westmoreland residence in
Mason, W.Va.
·seveml breaking and enterings
remain under investigation by the
sheriffs department. The Racine
Gun Club was broken into sometime Monday as was Southern
High School. The Sheriffs depanment is assisting Racine Police in
the invesligation of the high school
incident where it was repoited·lhat
the buhdin~ was "messed up. n
Bf(lken mto sometime between
Thursday and Sunday was the
Hazel Congo residence on Hayman
·Coatlnued on page 3
·

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I

Wednesday, January 22, 1992

Commentary

Labor is .still undecided about Clinton

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
-Pomei'O)', Ohio

WASHINGTON - Arkansas tough for Clinton to get re-elected Arkansas during his 10 yea! ~ in
Gov . Bill Clinton is stumping tliat year.
office, But they say he has done litacross America advocating htgher
But Clinton bested them. A few tle if anything for wages, workers'
wages for the "forgonen middle days before state labor leaders held compensation, safety, unemployclass." It plays well during a reces- their annual convention in Septem- ment benefits and other blue-collar
sion and in places where people ber 1990, Clinton announced that concerns.
don't know Clinton's record in his aides had helped broker an
A recent study ranked Arkansas
Arkansas - a state that ranks 48th agreement between Morrilton Plas- last in preventing worker-related
in wages for manufacturing jobs.
tics and its employee union. deaths. The state scored only II
Plenty of workers in Arkansas Because of that, Clinton got the points out of a possible I 16 in a
don't see the Democratic presiden- support of the state's unions during study by the National Safe Worktial front runner as their champion the election and he won.
place Institute. Of the 53 job-relatat all. It's not simply that the state's
But that wasn't the end of the ed deaths last year in Arkansas, 23
workers are at the bottom of the story. The labor agreement was no~ of them were not even repo(!ed .10
nation's wage heap. It's more that in reality , sewed up. Morrilton the federal Occupational Safety and
his backing of worker issues has Plastics backed away from the deal Health Administration.
been half-hearted at best. Some and the dispute remains unsettli;(l.
Instead of standing up for worklabor leaders in Little Rock go so l'.abor felt betrayed when Clinton's ers, Clinton has backed a developfar as to call Clinton a "strike people later failed to stand up for ment strategy that lures businesses
buster."
the union during a federal invesu- to Arkansas by advertising a cheap
That label was pinned on Clin- gation of the alleged breach of the work ·force and a "right-to-work"
ton after his administration helped contract. Clinton recently threw philosophy. No one we talked to
Morrilton Plastic Products Co. sur- another bucket of gasoline on the recalls Clinton ever demanding that
vive a union strike in 1990. Morril- · coals when he appointed Morrilton corporate heads compromise with
ton rode out the strike with the aid Plastics' lead attorney to the state their workers. "I've never seen
of a $300,000 loan guaranteed by Ethics Commission.
him make industry bend on anythe Arkansas Industrial DevelopThe story is vintage Clinton, thing," a veteran labor attorney in
ment Commission. After that, the according to labor attorneys in Little Rock told our associate Jim
United Auto Workers and other Arkansas. They admit he has Lynch.
·
In Washington, the headquarters
labor unions vowed to make it helped expand businesses in

DEVOTED TO THE INTEREST8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

-PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisber Association.
LETfERS OF OPINION are welcnme. They should be Jess than 300
words long. Allletlers are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
add!ess and telephone number. No unsigned Jette!&gt; wiU be published. letters
should be in good IISte, addressing issues, not pc~&gt;onahbes.

These fans think they outloyal
anyone anywhere'anythne
By MIKE FEINSILBER
Associated Press Writer
· WASHINGTON - Washingtonians like to believe that no football
, fans on earth are as loyal as themselves. They tell themselves that when
the Redskins are engaged, a bowling ball could traverse Pennsylvama
Avenue and encounter only pigeons.
They tell themselves, too, that in a city where most people come as
adults fro.m somewhere else, leaving roots and loyalties elsewhere, the
Redskins are a unifying power. They bnng mto common cause black
Washington and white Washin~ton, poor and nch, Georgetown and Anacostia, city and suburb, Repubhcan and Democrat
.
.
.
The Skins, they say, are great levelers, somethmg _that hmousmc dnver
and li{llousine passenger can talk about on equal fooling.
It is the conventional wisdom here.
It is heard more when the Redskins are winning than when they're losing _ but they haven't been a consistent loser for more than 20 years ..
Even tben, Robert F. Kennedy Stadium was sold ouL Ttme on the wattmg
list for season tickets is measured in decades.
.
.
"This football team symbolizes what most people wtsh Amenca were
today, and this is a ~ollection of people of all classes~~ _races, workmg
together giving thetr very best to achteve a great goal, ts the way tlts
put by Carl T. Rowan, the columnist, television commentator and fan ..
Rowan has been a seasoo ticket holder since 1962, when the Redskms,
under pressure from their fcd_eral landlord, finaUy allowed a black player
in the lineup. He loves hts Sktns, but arc they umfiers?
It is true that on game days the Metrobuses flash the message, "Redskins will win today."
.
Jt is true The Washington Post sent out a reporter on a man-bttes-dog
mission, assigned to find and interview people who were not Redskm
fan(Among others, the reporter found Chris Marks, 22, research assistant
on Capitol Hill, who groused, "The Redskins ts all you hear a_bout m thts
town whether you arc a fan or not. You actually come to dtshke them. It
just gets to be overkill.")
.
.
a is true that Washington, a city of bureaucrats, finds _tis heroes m the
offensive line- the "Hogs," the workhorses, foot soldters, bureaucrats
among football players.
,
.
.
And it is true that Molly Turner, 24, who s been seemg thts young man
in the Virginia suburbs, _son of a nauve Washmgtontan, turned down hts
parents' invitation to thetr Super Bowl game Sunday.
"It just wouldn't work out,'' Molly said, according to her father, Dou. glas Turner, who is Washington bureau chtef for the Buffalo (N.Y.)
:: NeF:iher and daughter are serious devotees of the Buffalo Bills, the team
• that meets the Redskins in the Super Bowl.
.
Father scoffs at the notion that Redskin followers are the most fcrvtd
·• offans.
d • th. k !h. ·
"It's kind of synthetic," he says. "You sec, 1 on t tn
ts ts a
hometown. It's not Scranton. It's not Pittsburgh. In Pittsburgh, you have
people with cousins and uncles and aunts g&lt;?tnt back for generatiOns.
Pittsburgh is like ButTalo. Buffalo ts a farntly clly.
..
.
At the University of Nonh Colorado, where he holds a JOID! appomt• mcnt in sociology aQd kinesiology (which used to be called phys ed),
George Sage judiciously handles the questton of random superfandom-

nes~e has hear~ it before, from spo~writcrs in San ~rtmcisco an~ Denver, who called in other years to mqutre tf the1r ClUes fans wcrcn I truly
the most inanely lovably loyal. .
"It really is a case of every ctty that has the Super Bowl team has
about two weeks to be quite bizarre,'' Sage says. "Some people m the
Denver area painted their entire house orange.
,
.
"To pick out one group of fans and to say they re more dedtcated,
you'd have a hard time making that case," he says.
.
"I've been in the Washington area a couple of ttmes before they
played in the Super Bowl, and I would admit that it is wild and crazy,''
Sage says. •'And people there arc adamant that they are the most dedtcat: ed and the most loyal."
He seems to think it docs no harm.
EDITOR'S NOTE; Mike Fcinsilbcr has covered the capital since 1968.

, Berry's World
.·..
•

'wE'RE ~IN6 A ,URVE)' ON INSTANT 6RA11FICA1lON,
A'RE YOU iE'ffE~ OrF il-l~ MORNIN6 'TM.\N
'IOU WERE YE$TE~VAV AFTERNOO~ "?

Jack Anderson,
Michael Binstein
of the AFL-CIO is keeping an eye
on Clinton. Despite a recent
endorsement by a public employ ees' union in New York, many
labor leaders hope that Clinton's
front-runner status is only temporary. They would rather back Sen .
Tom Harkin, D-lowa, who, unlike
Clinton, opposes free trade with
Mexico In language that speaks to
the middle class, Harkin says,
"When I'm president of the United
Stales, every double_-breasting,
scab-hiring, union-bustmg employer in America will know that the
working people _of Ameri~ have a
friend in the Whtte House!
Arkansas is a small state run by
a few big companies, the heads of
which arc very tight with Clinton.
But his rise to the top of the Democrauc heap has led most labor leaders to muzzle their complaints.
Labor traditionally backs the
Democrat, no matter who it is.
Clinton has tried to distance himself from labor's liberal agenda, but
during a recession, the labor vote
can be very important.
Those who know Clinton tell us
that he may have some success
convinc ing voters that he is labor's
best hope. He can fish concise
labor stalrstics out of his keen
memory. and he knows how to use
that information to tell people what
th ey want to hear.
·
In Arkansas, Clinton's critics
among the labor unions are running
for cover. The state AFL-CIO chief
Bill Becker has lambasted Clinton
in the pa st. Less than two years
ago, Becker's organization said that
Clinton had ''deceived us with broken promises of support ... tricked
us on taxes and, by his actions,
Gov. Clinton has forfeited the support and endorsement of the working men and women of Arkansas."
Now Becker will only say, " We've
had our differences."
Labor lawyers in Lillie Rock
will talk about Clinton, but they
don 't want to be quoted by name.
They've seen too much of the governor they call "Slick Willy" to
rule out the possibility that he may
become the 42nd president of the
United States.
Copyright, 1992, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc.

NEW WALK-UP, CARRY;OUT INSIDE· A DeW reature or
the Crow's Family Restaurant is a walk-up, carry-out _counter ror
Kentuckl Fried Chicken inside the restaurant. The carry•out
counter 1s located at the end or the setvin11 counter just inside
Crow's. Danny Crow, manager, cited convenience as one reason
ror adding the inside area ror carry-out customers.

OHIO Weather
Thursday, Jan. 23
Accu-Weather• forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures
MICH.

"

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"GOih, chief, dOBS fh/6 mun I'm not left 'out
of !Mioop '?''
·
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,,
•

The Curmudgeon is deeply
appreciative of the suggestions that
he pm in the New Hampshire primary, but he really prefers contributing to the political process via
the printed word. Besides, he cherishes his anonymity and so fears
losing it that he is writing this with
a blue dot over his,face.
The. ftrSt question today comes
from the Sooner state.
Dear Curmudgeon: I'm sure
you've heard that the Rev. Oral
Robens ~ warned a million of his
followers of a "satanic conspiracy
to stop God's healing ministry"
and asked them to cough up $500
apiece to thwart iL That's a lot ·of
dinero for a delivery person. Does
he really need it7- Tom in Tulsa.
Dear TNT: The Curmudgeon
has a lot of soun:cs, but none wfio
claim celestial connections. 1 can
thereforc eire only circumstantial
evidence - the fact that the Vati·
can, for example, has 1uth0rized a
Pial-a-Pope service for people who
need an octasional spiritual bracer.
. You dial a 900 number, you hear :·
some snippets from some recent
sermons, you get biJJed around $2 a
minute. Like everything else,
God's rates have gone up.
Dear Curmudgeon: Were you
watching .the ne~ the nightl'll:si,....-dtm-.l!ush and the former !losla,gcs
rried Ji.IJiJht the natioria1 Christmas .

sa

,,

•I Columbus I 40° I

'

The interior has been redecorated and refurnished.
lvo'ry, blue and mauve are the
predominate colors in the new
booths and tables and chairs used
in the dining room, as well as the
stools at the counter.
Attractive mirrors with lights
adorn 'the newly painted ivory
walls, and accents of wallpaper
enhance the overall appearance.

The decorative wooderi window
pieces have also been painted to
blend in with the color scheme.
Added to the inside front area of
the restaurant has been a walk-up
carry-out counter for Kentucky
Fried Chicken, sure to be more
convenient in cold weather than the
exterior window at the back. However, the back window will remain
open for business as wiD the popular drive-through order area.

1ndividuals... _co_n_un_ue_dr_ro_m..:...pa_;;,ge_l~.. _ __

Announcements

Winter weather returns

Dexter...

--Area deaths--

c

G u.~,ldJ'e Ingels
Goldie L. Ingels, 71, of Mason
died Tuelday, Jan; 21, 19?2, in the
Mt. Cannen Hospital, Columbus,
. Ohio.
Bom Marth 29, 1920, in Mason
she was a daughter of the Jare Mar,
· tin llld May (Oliver) 1ohnson.
' She wu also pmlCdod in death
by her hllllllnd, Thapw 1. lnJICls
in 1956; ooe 1011, 1 daughter, four
. liJial ftllhree bnlthers.
Sbe wu a llomemakor.
Smlvlni ue five daugbrers;
tlanieu Ll)vlennilt of J(acine,
Ohio, Pllpcla Liudermilt . of

Mason, . Shirley Williams of
~Ia, Ohio, Kathryn Young of
Point Pleasant. \\mda Burney of
Pomeroy; I sQn, Thomas In~ Of
Mason; 19 cdchildren, ei~ht
great-~ dreil, three soas-mlaw, a daughter-in-law, and several
nieces and nephews. ·
·
the funeral will be Friday, 1:30
p.m., at the Foslesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. James Sauerfield ofllcialing. Burial. will be in

.

the Odd FelloWI Cemetery.
Friends may call 11 die funeru
home Thtrilay from 2 ·10 4 and 7
1o 9 p.m. Grtmdsons will serve as
pallbearers. ·
.
·'

\

.a

ivory, mauve and blue. Here Susie Knight, longlime waitress, takeS a rood order rrom Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Will of the Rutland community.

Crow's Family Restaurant
has taken on a new look

-----Weather-----

Joseph Spear

aao.

PA.

A NEW LOOK • Tbe dining area at Craw's
Family Restaurani has been redecorated and
realures all new booths and tables and chairs in

"A facility of this nature would the Ohio State University Cooperabe an amazing economic developLive Extension Service.
ment boost to this region," Long
Letters in support of the facility
said, "·and I asked (Wilkinson) to are still being accepted at the
consider those factors and use chamber office, and can be mailed
those statistics as a basis for locatto the Meigs County Chamber of
ing the prison in Meigs County."
Commerce at 200 East Second
State Representative Mary Abel Street in Pomeroy . Leuers are
has also been in contact with the being forwarded 10 state officials
Showers T-stomiS Rain Flurri.. Snow
Ice
Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
corrections department since Meigs and the corrections department as
they are received.
C1992 Accu·Weath«, Inc. County became a proposed prison
v;, Associattd Press GrapfiC5Nfi
location.
According to Abel's Legislative
Aid Joe Savarise, Abel has personally expressed support to the corFriday through Sunday:
South-Central Ohio
Dance planned
Friday, snow likely nonheast. A rections department and has looked
Tonight, occasional rain. Low in
into
the
site
selection
process.
Abel
chance
of
snow
elsewhere.
Lows
in
There
will be a round and
the upper 30s. Chance of rain is 90
then
relayed
that
information
to
the
the
20s.
Highs
from
the
mid-20s
to
square
dance
on Pnday from 8 to
percent. Thursday, rain changing to
local
level.
low
30s.
Sawday,
a
chance
of
11:30 p.m. at Hockmgport on
snow in the afternoon. A morning
Savarise said that Abel's office Route 124 at the home of Kenny
high 40-45, then temperatures snow. Lows 15-25. Highs 25-35 .
falling to 30-35. Chance precipita- Sunday, a chance of rain or snow. has received many letters in sup- and Millie Reynolds. Music will be
port of the facility from individuals provided by Ramblin Country. lim
Lows in the 20s. Highs in the 30s.
tion 90 pcrcenL
and organizations in Meigs County, Carnahan will be the caller. CounExlended forecast:
and has also relayed that infonna- try and bluegrass music will be
tion to the correcuons deparunent.
played every Monday evening
Abel was in a committee meet- beginning at 7 p.m. The public is
ing until late o~ Monday, and was invited to attend.
unavailable to comment personally
Country music night
a week relented today, but a on the prison issue.
By Associated Press
Country Music Night will be
An approaching col.d front will warmer front also was expected to
Crow
credited
held at the Lottridge Community
spread rain over Ohio tonight. bring snow and freezing rain to
Locally, Common Pleas Court Center
on Saturday from 6 p.m. 10
Some sleet and snow could mix most of the region by tonight.
Judge Fred W. Crow Ill has been
Snow also was expected over credited by many for auractmg midnight. Refreshments will be
with the rain over the north as temperatures fall close to the freezing the northern Great Lakes region, state auenlion to Meigs County for available and the public is invited.
mark. Overnight lows wiD be in the with rain predicted for much of llli- such a site. Crow wrote a letter to
To meet Jan. 30
nois and Iowa and parts of Mis- Wllkinson 's office following the
lower to middle 30s.
Another planning session for the
The cold front will cross Ohio souri, Georgia and Tennessee.
"Take Charge" program last fall, 1992 Soapbox Derby 10 be held in
The warm front that sent tem- inviting state officials to.consider
on Thursday and will usher colder
air into the area. Thursday should peratures shooting up to the 60- Meigs County as a potenUal pnson Middleport has been set for Thursday, Jan. 30, at 7 p.m. at Middlebegin with rain over the state, but degree mark in Iowa and Nebraska site.
port
Trophies, River.view Place.
as the colder air arrives the rain on Tuesday was 10 begin breaking
Crow
was
a
participant
in
"Take
Charles
Neutzlin~. derby director,
should change to snow from west up today, with highs not expected Charge", which was a cooperative
is
urging
anyone mterested in help·
to east. High temperatures will be to get out of the 40s.
program between the chamber and ing with the derby to attend the
from 35 to 45 degrees Thursday
meeting.
momin¥ and tumble in the 2os and
Tarnllbed medal
30s dunng the afternoon.
The !988 Olympic Games in Seoul,
Library movies announced
Cold weather with perio4s of
Continued rrom page 1
South Korea, featured a lon1-awaltecl
The movies, "Frog and Toad
snow is expected across the State Road. It was l'llponed that • VCR, · showdown in the 100-meter dash. Ben Together" and "Hand Me Down
late in the week through the week- TV, and microwave oven were Johnson, Canadian sprinter and world Kid" will be shown at the Pomeroy
end. Nonnal highs f~ late January among the item.s removed from -the record holder, faced arcbrlyal Carl Library on Saturday and _Sunday at
range from near 30 over the nonh house.
Lewis of tbe United States. Johnson 2 p.m., and at the Middleport
to the upper 30s in southern Ohio.
David Ellis, Cornhollow Road, won the race in world-record time; Library on Monday at 4:30 p.m.
Normal lows range from the mid Rutland, reported Tuesday that a three days later, he was disqualified The movies are free of charge and
teens nonh to the lower 20s south. Gravel'y mower deck had been · because he testecl'pDilltlve for ·anabo- · all area childfen are welcome to
lie steroid!. Lewis received the gold auend.
The record high on this dal!l in- taken from his garage.
··columbus was 71 in 1906. J.he
Tuesday afternoon, Dan Salyers, medal.
record low was minus 16 in 1936.
II Fisher St., Pomeroy, reported
Sunset tonight will be at 5:38 that his Golden Chow dog had been
Tite Daily Senlinel
p.m. Sunrise Thursday will be at taken from a residence on Laurel
(USPS 213·900)
7:48 a.m,
• Cliff. Salyers said that he was m
PubHMhed every anernoon, Monday
. Around lhe nation
the process of moving from one
through Friday, lll Court. St, Pomeroy,
Ohlo by the Ohio Valley Publi1hing .
Rain fell oil Oklahoma, K~esidence 10 another and had not
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
and Arkansas early today, while ~ed his dog 10 his new resiOhio 46769, Ph. 9W·2156. Second claa
poolo(e poid al p..,.roy, Ohi~
much of the rest of the nation was dence when it was taken ..
shrouded by cloudy or foggy skies.
Charges w!ll be filed in_ Meigs
Member: The Allociated Pftu, Inland
Winds whipped across the County 1uventle Court agatnst the
Dail)' Preu Auoctalion and the Ohio
N'ew1paper Auoc:i•~ion, N•&amp;ional
northern Plains, and a high wind two 14-year-c;&gt;ld boys who alleged·
Adverti1in1 Representative, Dranham
· .watch was in effect early today in ly stole a car _in Syracuse early
Newapaper Sale~, 733 Third Avenue,
· Wyoming with strong gusts alsb Monday mornmg. The two boys
New YOrlt, New YOrlt 1Q017.
'.'forecast fo~ South Dakota.
were in the vehicle when !t was
POSTMASTER; S.ild odcbao cha,... to
The 81Ctic air that kept much of stopped on the Kroger parking lot
The Daily Sentinel, Ill Courl St.,
·the Nonheast in the deep freeze for in Pomeroy.
"""""'Y· OHio 46769.

People who favored the latter
course (and that includes many
conser!(atives) simply haven't
thought the matter through. Taking
Baghdad would have been no
breeze; there were still 20 fresh
Iraqi divisions prepared to defend
it, at an unknowable cost tn Amencan lives. As for Saddam Hussein,
there was next to no chance at all
that we could have captured him,
given his popularity among many
of the Arab peoples of the region.
Above all, what docs it matter
whether we capture him or not? At
best. he would be replaced by some
Iraqi military officer only slightly
less squalid. It may happen - in
fact, will probably happen- sooner or later anyway.
But whether it happens or not,
the great strategic point is that Iraq
has been reduced from a nucleartipped threat to the global economy
10 just one more Middle Eastern
nuisance. And that was a consummation devoutly to be·wisbed.
fCl 1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Today in history

e

\\\\\

William
A. Rusher
·

tree and the switch wouldn't work?
Dear Dinkperson: You are corI happen to know that President rect. But Naismith definitely
Reagan always used a fake switch tmproved on the game when he did
and the tree was turned on by an away wilh that rule about decapitat- and have learned a Ioi about prehistoric heartburn,. but there's no word
unseen technician. - Wired in ing the losers.
Washington.
·
Dear Curmudgeon: What are yet of excessive gas emissions.
Do you really think the CurmudDear Wired: I've been telling these things called "neutrinos,''
readers for a long time that Ronald which are emitted by black holes? geon ought to run in New Hamp·
Reagan was a Milli Vanllli presi- - Baffled in Battle Creek.
shire? I guess someone as bellicose
dent who lip-synched his words.
Dear BNBC: My scientific as Pat Buchanan ought to run, just
NQw we know he switch-synched, sources say it's a new cereal.
to give the bull barge a little bal·
last.
too.
• Dear Curmudgeon: I've heard a
Dear Curmudgeon: I recently lot of theories about why dinosaurs
Nah, they've got this rule that
bought a pair of jeans, and the clerk became extinct, but the latest is candidates must have served in a
told me I needed the wide-seated beyond belief. Could they possibly statewide office to be eligible. The
version designed for Grumpies. have gassed themselves? - Curi- highest public position the CurWhat is a Grumpie?- Do-l-Real- ous in Camden.
mudgeon ever held was the chairJy-Want-to-,Know in DaDas.
Dear CNC: That's the theory. person of a co-op covenants comDear No-you-don't in the Big D: .Indiana Univenity reseai-chers who miuee, and that was 20 years ago.
A Grumpie is a Yuppie who is have been studying fossilized
The proceedings were not teleexpanding into middle age. It dinosaur dung say they ·were flatu- vised, thank heavens. The'y didn't
stands fOJ grown-up, mature pro- len!, beasiS who may have created have the blue dot technology back
fessionals, and marlceters of con.- thetr own greenhouse effect and then, and the Conn udgeon would
sumer products are scurrying tQ suffocated themselves. Did any not be able 10 prowl the corridors
serve them. llad as it soundS; it's primitive peoples suffer a similar of power as surreptitiously as he
better' than the crowd the Cunnud- fate? AnthropoloJists at the Uni- does now.
geon is ~ining ground oti: O'Fup- versity of Mich1gan ·have been
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
pies; wh1ch standS for Old Fogeys probing fossilized human waste EN1ERPRISE ASSN.
with Unsi&gt;und Pal)s. ~
f
Dear Curmudgeon: You think
European-Americans invented
.
everythini . Did you know that
Seventy-five
yea1
on
1111.
22,
1917,
President
Wilson pleaded for
James N•ith did not invent basketbaU7 It was being played by the an end 10.war in Europe, •yilll dwe had 10 be ''peace withotit victory ••
•
Aztecs' w~n EIJillllCl\IIS arrived in (By April, howevc-s, Am~ was also at war.)
On
this
dale:
.
M_e~ic:o ~early s~ years ago. ,7""
In 1901, Britain's Queen Viclmiadiedat age 82.·
Dintum ln_Durtlarri.
.

IToledo I 35oJ

IMansfield I 39° I•

Who can complain about Gulf War?
Many people who complain sein to withdraw from Kuwatt? But in persuadtng a minonty of the
about the outcome of the Gulf War you can bet your bottom dollar he. congressional Democrats to vote
resemble some mid-19th century would have used the time to finish with the Republicans and thereby
critic who didn't want to fight to constructing nuclear weapons produce majority support for his
save the Union in the first place, while unscrupulous businessmen policy. They were unwilling to
but later condemned the Civil War poked holes in our economic block- appear more dovish, even, than the
as a failure because Jefferson Davis ade, the usual "anti-war activists" U.N. Security Council.
got away.
staged rallies in every major city,
The military operation itself, as
To be sure, the situations are not and Mitchell &amp; Co. called for a fur- directed by "Stormin' Norman"
altogether analogous. Lincoln's !her extension of sanctions.
Schwarzkopf, was such a success
objective was to end the rebellion
At that point, we would have that it has all but silenced those
and thereby save the Union; Bash's been facing stark disaster - nuclc- who were preQaring to criticize it.
was to oust Saddam Hussein from ar weapons in the hands of a mega- It doesn't take much imagination to
Kuwait and deprive him of the · lomaniac within inches of control- picture what we would have heard
power (including the deadly ling the whole Middle East, while if American casualties had been
prospect of nuclear power) to bend America's doves kept us effective- higher, or if the struggle had settled
the entire Middle East, with its ly paralyzed.
down to some dcbilitatin~ son of
indispensable oil, to his sovereign
Fortunately George Bush had trench warfare. As it is, the critics
will. But each achieved his objcc- more gumption than that. We con- have been forced to complain about
live brillianUy.
servatives, being understandably our tragic losses from friendly fire
If Senate Democratic leader indifferent to most of the preten- and, of all things, the "excessive"
George Mitchell and the majority sions of the United Nations, Iraqi casualties.
of Democrats in both Houses had haven't spent much time admiring
·So most of the Monday-morning
had their way, the 18-month period Bush's tour de force in lining up quarterbacking has involved Mr.
within which they wanted to try overwhelming Security Council Bush's decision to halt our forces
purely economic sanctions against suppon for a military ·strilce if nee- when Kuwait had been cleared,
Iraq would be nearing its end about essary, and persuading doubters . instead of ordering Gen .
now. Is there anyone who still seri- like China to abstain. He may not Schwarzkopf to proceed to Baghously thinks that such sanctions have needed that resoluuon much, dad, occupy it and"seize Saddam
would have forced Saddam Hus- but it was later enormously useful Hussein for trial as a war criminal .

.

•

••• 0.

Fans ~rge Curmudgeon to seek office

..
'

Middleport ·
Court news

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
Wednesday, January 22,1992

.

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag~

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w-.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
lno!do Gall!a .Co•nty

w..~ ..........................................r.t t.k

.-

H3.t&amp;

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1~ Weeki ...............................:...... ....W.40

26 Weekl ...................... 1.... ...............1415.60

112 Weekl ..........................................$88.40

SHOP
PICKENS
FOR ALL
YOUR
HARDWARE
NEEDS.
'PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON,WV.

A new charbroiler has been
added to the kitchen equipment and
Craw's is now offering a variety of
charbroiled meals for dinners and
sandwiches. ·

Nine were fined and five others
forfeited bonds in the coW1 of Mid·
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night ·
Fined were Kenneth S. Brown,
Pomeroy, $50 and costs, ~ing li ,
fire arm under the influence of
alcohol; Peggy A. Wilson, Stewart,
$19 and costs, speeding; Daniel .E.
Wright, Gallipolis; $25 and costs,
open container, and $25 and.costs,
consuming alcohol under a~e 21;
Stevie A. Bonecutter, Galhpolis,
$25 and costs, consuming alcohol
under age 21.
David R. Priddy, Rutland, $42S
and costs, and 3 days in jail, physical control of a motor vehicle while
under the influence of alcohol or
drugs; Walrer Haggy, II, Rutland,
$10 and costs, expired registration;
Patrick S. Cleland, Pomeroy, _$10
and eosts, expired registration;
Melissa A. Manley, Pomeroy, $10
and costs, expired registration; and
Keith V. Lamm, Gallipolis, $42S
and costs and three days in jail,
physical control of a motor vehii:le
while under the influence of alcohol or drugs, $100 and costs, driving under suspension, and $10 and ·
cosiS, fictitious registration.
Forfeiting bonds were Kim W.
French, Middle!Klrt. $50, speeding;
Kim Greene, Ripley, W. Va., $52,
speeding; Christopher S. Reapp,
Gallipolis, $60, going the wrong
way on a one-way street; John P.
Westfall, Gallipolis, $60, expired
registration; and Harliss R.
Blankenship, Jr., Cheshire, $460,
physical control of a motor vehicle
while under the influence of alcohol or drugs.

¥eigs EMS squads respond to 6 calls
Units of the Meigs• County
Emergency Medical Service
responded to six caDs for assistance
on Tuesday and early Wednesday
morning.
On Tuesday at 2:47 p.m. tile
Rutland unit was called to Route
684 for Leslie Riggs who was
transported to O'Bleness Hospital.
At 7:42 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
went to Kingsbury Road for Jerry
Si'x who was taken to O'Bieness.
The Bashan Fire Department, at
8:49 p.m., went to Hayman Road
on a trailer fire at the Wayne
Deavers residence. The department
was on the scene until9:19 p.m.
At 10:43 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
responded to Rose Alley Road for
Charles Dill who was taken to Vetertms MemQrial Hospital.
On Wednesday at 12:()4 a.m. the
Racine unit responded to Long Run
Road for Max Folmer who was
transported to Veterans, and at

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS James Anderson, Racine; Herbert
Hoover, Middleport: and Eleanor
Werry, Pomeroy.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Charles Kiser.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, Jan. 21 - Ruth Alii·
son, Opal Bush, Betty DeCoy,
Karen Dill Beulah Hern, Fleeta
Sheets, Gertrude Stewart, Louise
Thomas, Mrs. Charles Williams ,
and daughter, and Gary Woodruff.

12:36 a.m. the Pomeroy unit was
called to Boy Scout Camp Road for
Goldie Krackomberger who was
taken to O'Bleness.

.,

Court news
Divorce, dissolutions filed
Actions for dissolution of marriage have been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun by
Bus G. Daniels and Karen H.
Daniels, both of Dexter; and by
Daniel Gheen, Long Bottom and
Dawn MicheDe Gheen, Racine.
A divorce action has been filed
by Diana Sue Cross, Pomeroy,
against Ernest L. Cross, also of
Pomeroy,
Marriage license granted
A marriage license has been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to Tracy William Lee, 20,
Pomeroy and Sonja Kay Stanley,
17. Middleport.
SPRIN~

VAllEY CINEMA

446 4514

Lottery numbers
CLE YELAND (AP)- Here are
Tuesday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
8-9-0
(eight, nine, zero)
Pick 4 Numbers
3-3-7-5
(three, three, seven, five)
Cards
6 (six) of Hearts
10 (ten) of Clubs
7 (seven) of Diamonds
3 (thr~) of Spades

R SERIES

n•u•n

SCHOOL CLASS RINGS

95

.

UP TO $70 IN
SAVINGS
INCLUDING

FREE
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OfFER E'-l!S
fl'o&gt;Yll . 1992.

874

-·..&lt;»
.....,

~
.~

m E. Main, , .~'!'~roy

,.

BRING Tins AD

�Ohio

Sports

The ·naily Sentinel

~

Wednesday, January 22, 1992

4

·Freshmen shine for Redwomen
in 79-65 defeat of Cedarville
A late sec'ond half rally allowed
the University of Rio. Grande to
build upon its small lead over
Cedarville in women's basketball
action at Lyne Center Tuesday.
putting the Redwomen back on the
winning track w1th a 79-65 decision over the Lady Yellow Jackets.
"We can pretty much credit this
one to the freshmen," Rio Grande
mentor Doug Foote reOected afterward. While he received "normal,
solid games" from upperclassmen
Ann Barnitz, Kathy Snyder and
Gena Norris, it was the work of
first -year players Kim Sowers,
Melanie Miller and Elizabeth Gan,., nelli which left a lingering impression on him and the crowd.
All three saw most of their playing time in the second half, and a
trio of three-pointers by Miller
helped lift Rio Grande to a double·
figure advantage over Cedarville.
The game opened without any
scoring until 16:35 when a Barnitz
layup gave the Redwomen the lead,
which it held until 10:46 when a
Cedarville free throw gave the vi sitors a one-point advantage (15-14).
The Rcdwomen won back the lead,
but lost it again when a series of
: fouls on Amy Zehr gave Cedarville
the opportunity to get ahead on foul
shooting. Zehr, who had 22 points
in the game, went 10 of 13 from
the line, six of nine during the first
half, while senior cen:er Diane
Rank accounted for much of
Cedarville's other scoring.
Foul trouble and guarding
slowed down Rio Grande's
offen se, which Foote credited to
the visitors' defensive skills.
"Cedarville is very good in that
area. They always have a way of
making you look bad, and that's a

credit to them," he said. "Their
defense is strong."
The defense chipped slightly in
the closing seconds of the game
when the Rio ladies, also advancing on their foul shooting, tied at
32 on Miller's charity toss (:14).
Gannelli then gained control of the
ball and went in to score two to put
Rio Grande ahead 34-32 at the tialf.
Cedarville never saw the lead
again, thanks to effective scoring
early in the second period by Norris and Barnitz, but the Kathy
Freese-coached Lady Yellow Jackets remained close .on Rio Grande's
heels. That was when Miller, a ·5-9
guard from Ottoville, Ohio, hit all
three of her treys for the game to
put the Redwomen ahead 57.44
with 7:32 left. Rank's free throws
at 4:09 boosted Cedarville to an
eight-point deficit (65-57), but
Gannelli and Stephanie Gudorf
connec ted to offer their team a
comfortable advantage down the
stretch.
While pleased with the team's
offense, which saw nearly every .
member of the bench score and
overcome some of the bad taste
from last week's pair of Mid-Ohio
Conference losses, Foote felt the
defense needed improvement, particularly in the number of times
Cedarville went to the line (19 of
26 for 73.1 percent, compared to
Rio Grande's nine of 13 finish for
69.2 percent).
"We've got to quit putting people on the line where everybody's
shooting 90 percent agamst us.
That's just bad defe'nse," he said .
"But we rebounded well and our
offense was good. I know it's
tough coming back from last week,
but we have to do things beUer."
Hi~h scorers for the Redwomen

were Barnitz and Norris with 15
points apiece, while Miller was
credited with 14, in addition to
eight of Rio Grande's 45 rebounds.
Michelle Crouse added seven
assists. ·
In a(jdition to Zehr, Rank scored
21 points and had eight of
Cedarville's 34 boards. (Rank's
free throw at II :37 in the ftrSt half
made her the second-highest scorer
in the history of the Lady Yellow
Jacket program.) Brown had 12
points.
From the field, the Redwomen
were 40.5 percent (30-74, 10-29
from the three for 34.5 percent) and
held turnovers to 19. The visitors
hit 22 of 49 attempts for 44.9 percent, but managed only two threepointers out of two tries.
The win boosted the Redwomen
to 16-4 overall and 5-2 in the
MOC. Cedarville, which joined the
conference this season, fell to 7-9
and 2-5. Both teams will see action
again on Thursday, when the Redwomen travel to Wilmington and
Cedarville hosts Ohio UniversityChillicothe.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (79) - Kim
Sowers, 2-1-0-7; Gena Norris, 2-32-15; Michelle Crouse, 0-1-0-3:
Elizabeth Gannelli, 4-0-8; Jackie
Hannon, 1-2-4; Ann Damitz, 7-115; Stephanie Gudorf, 3-0-6;
Melanie Miller, 1-3-3-14; Kathy
Snyder, 0-2·1-7. TOTALS 20·10·

9-19.
CEDARVILLE (65) - Rachel
Howard, 2-2-6; Cinnamon Brown,
1-0-2; Mindy Humble, 3-2-0-12;
Amy Zehr, 6-10-22; Kim McCoy,
1-0-2; Diane Rank, 7-7-21.
TOTALS 20-2-9-65.
Halrtime score: Rio Grande
34, Cedarville 32.

No. 4 Indiana tops No. 16 Michigan
89-74 to stay unbeaten in Big Ten
games over Ohio State and Min- I Duke 95, Boston University 85:
Tennessee 107, No.8 Kentucky 85:
nesota with a 5-0 record.
Sounds like the theory is hold- No. 19 North Carolina Charlotte
ing up nicely.
82, Davidson 70; and No. 21
Villanova 's 70-60 victory over Tulane 87, Virginia CommonNo. 13 Syracuse on Tuesday night wealth 85 in overtime.
No. 41ndiana 89
vaulted the Wildcats into first place
No. 16 Michigan 74
in the Big East with a 5-1 record,
The Hoosiers won their 12th
one-half game ahead of Connecticut and a lot beuer than their over- straight as Damon Bailey and Calall mark of 7-7.
bert Cheaney had 22 points each.
So much for that theory.
Indiana went to the free throw line
In other games involving ranked an Assembly Hall-record 50 times,
teams on Tuesday night, it was No. making 33.
Bailey was 8-for-10 from the
free throw line, grabbed a teamhigh five rebounds and tied team~te Chris Reyno ld s with five
assists.
All those foul shots meant a lot
: In basketball stand ings issued
In the MOC... Walsh, whom the of fouls, and three of Michigan's
earlier this week by the District Redmcn play Saturday, was first at heralded five freshmen fouled out,
~2/Mid-Ohio Conference informa- 3-0, with Rio Grande second at2-0.
including Juwan Howard, who Jed
).ion office in Cedarville, the Uni- Cedarville, Urbana and Shawnee the Wolverines with a season-high
'Versity of Rio Grande men's and State were tied for third at 2-1, with 26 points and 10 rebounds.
women's teams are at or near the Tiffin sixth at 2-2. In seventh was
The Wolverines (10-4, 2-3)
top of the heap in Division I.
Mount Vernon Nazarene (1-4) and closed to 53-51 , but Indiana rallied
The Redmen, who started this Ohio Dominican finished eighth at with I0 straight points, five by Baiweek at 15-4, placed second in 0-5.
ley, to build a 12-point lead with
Division I behind fir st-place
Shawnee State placed first in II :26 remaining.
Cedarville (15-3), while the Rio women's conference play at 4-0,
Villanova 70
ladies remained in first place at 15- with Tiffin (3-1) at second. Rio
No.
13 Syracuse 60
4, which improved to 16-4 follow- Grande (4-2) was third, Walsh (3Wildcats
Rollie Massimiing Tuesday's win •over Cedarville 2) fourth, Ohio Dominican and no admitted coach
his team was affected
at Lyne Center. The Redmen play Urbana tied for firth at 2-3,
by
playing
for
first place.
at Tiffin tonigh~
Cedarville seventh at 2-4 and
"We
were
a little apprehensive
Following the Redmen in third Moupt Vernon Nazarene eighth at
early,
I
guess
because
of the intenplace was Malone (14-5), while 0-6 .' ' .
sity'
of
playing
for
first
place,"
Findlay (13-5) was fourth. Urbana
·'Division I men's national statis- Massimino said. "! told them at
(12-6) was fifth, Shawnee State (6- tics saw Redmen center Troy DonU) sixth and Central State (5-17) aldson place sixth in field goal per- halftime it's only a game, just
relax, and play like you know
seventh.
centage at 68. The Redmen are how."
The Red women were trailed in a fifth in scoring offense with an
That means defense, and Viltie for second place by Central average of 100.9 points per game.
lanova
held the Orangemen (13-2,
State and Shawnee State (each 14The Redwomen were ranked S-2) to their lowest output of the
4), with Northwood Institute 13th in offense at 82.6 points p~r
(Mich.) in fourth at 7-9. Urbana (6- game : 13th in scoring margin season, 22 points below their sea9) was fifth and Indiana Universi- (19.6) and 15 in rebounding per- son average.
David Johnson had a season-low
ty/Purdue University-Indianapoli s centage (55.5).
eight
points for visiting Syracuse,
SIXth at 5-)).
welll)elow his 22.8 average.
A 12-2 run by the Wildcats,
-----SVAC cage standings----- capped
by a jumper by Chris Walk·
er,
who
had 17 points, gave Vii· .
(Overall)
TOTALS ..........26 26 2126 2126
lanova
a
57-44 lead with 5:35 to
PF
Team
W L
PA
play.
.
Oak Hill ........ ......? 3 661 583
Tuesday's scores
No.
1
Duke
95,
Boston
Unlv, 85
Southem ..............6 5 774 675 Southwestern 75, OVCS 54
~hristian
Laettner
had
25 points
Eastern ................6 5 762 787 Wahama 49, Kyger Creek 40
for
the
Blue
Devils
(13·0),
who
,Hannan Trace ..... .5 5 583 677
won
their
19th
consecutive
game..
North Gallia ........4 7 621 723
Weekend slate
Kyger Creek ........3 7 506 590
Friday - Hannan Trace at Visiting Duke took advantage of its
Symmes Valley ... 2 7 490 564 Southern; Symmes Valley at Kyger height advantage and spent a good
Southwestern ...... .! 10 598 783 Creek; Nonh Oallia at Oak Hill; portion of the night at the free
throw line, making 36 of 56.
Eastern at Southwestern
Trailing 85-61 with 7:45 left,
(Conference)
Saturday - Southwestern at
the
Terriers (5-8). went on a 24-9
Southem ........ ......6 I 538 383 Hannan Trace; Southern at Eastern;
run
to get within nine wilh 19 sec··
Oak Hill ..............6 I 490 :408 Kr.ger Creek at North Oallia; Oak
onds
!eft":'Jason Scott had a careerHannan Trace ......s 2 453 433 Hill at Symmes Valley
high
pO
points for the Terrien.
Eastern .. :............ .4 3 461 . 455
North Oallia ........4 3 439 428 .
Symmes Valley .. .! 5 322 - 391
~~-~~~-----..;.-Kyger Creek ....... .! s 296 372
~uthwestem .......O 7 373 S02
TOTALS :.........17 27 3372 3372

By The Associated Press
The Big Ten and the Big East.
Two basketball conferences always
listed among the nation's best, it
seems only lot:ical their first-place
teams, even thiS early in the season,
would be among the country's top
teams.
Fourth-ranked Indiana remained
the only unbeaten team in the Big
ren with an 89-74 victory over No.
1·6 Michigan on Tuesday night,
increasing its overall record to 14-2
and its conference lead to I 112

Rio teams lead district, MOC;
players make national listing

I

I
[

r--...

..

·ap·D BOUIE .

JIIIUARY 25, 1992

~ea~Rnerm-~vtcon,1&gt;

PA

Southem ..............7 o 376 242
£ulan ............... .6 I 321 276

Symmes Valley .. .3 3 2SJ 278
North Oallia ........3 4 m 284
JCyaerCreek ... t....z 3 184 212
HIJIIIIII Trace.l.... 2 4 · ·~6 274
Oak Hlll ........ J ,..2 S 276 298
Southweslern....... l' 6 195 262'
.I

day night's non-league game in Mason, W.Va.,
which the White Falcons won 49-40. (OVP photo
by Dan Adkins)

SLIPS INTO SEAM - Kyger Creek's Craig
Kingery (12) slips into the seam or the defense
ofrered by these Wahama cagers during rues·

Lewis Hall's Wahama White
Falcons captured its second straight
hardcourt win Tuesday night, as
senior forward John Johnson and
junior guard Danny Hudson scored
in double figures to lead the Bend
Area cagers past a cold-shooting
Kyger Creek sq uad by a 49-40
score.
The visiting Bobcats, despite
shooting a miserable 24% from the
floor in the nonleague cpntest,
trailed by only three at the half and
:-"ere down by just five po,ints late
m the game, as Kyger Creek connected on II of 17 free throws to
stay in contention before the White
Falcons pulled away for the ninepoint victory. The win moves the
Bend Area team's season slate to 54 on the year, while Kyger Creek
slips to4-7.
The White Falcons led in the
contest from start to finish although
Kyger Creek fought back from an
early 8-0 deficit to knot the score at
16-16 behind Brian Davidson and
Chris Crace before Wahama moved
out to a narrow 24-2l ·lead at the
half.
The Bend Area t&lt;:am increased
its advantage to 40-29 late in the
third quarter as Danny Hudson
sank a pair of three point goals and
John Johnson added five points in
the period to afford WHS its largest
lead of the evening. The Bobcats,
after falling behind by II,
outscored the Mason County team
8-2 during the early stages of the
fourth quarter to close to within
five at 42-37, but Kyger Creek
would get no closer with Wahama
receiving baskets by Hudson and
Johnson and a pair of free throws
by Mike VanMatre down the
stretch to hold off the Bobcat rally.
"We didn't play very well
tonight," Hall said after the game.
"We may have been guilty of look·
ing ahead to a pair of games this
weekend against top ranked Vinson
and league opponent Van and
although toni~hts win w;tsn't very
pretty, a win ts a win. We got into
sonic foul trouble but received
some quality minutes from our
bench and that was probably the
difference in the game Hall added."
John Johnson paced the
Wahama offense with 13 points in
addition to leading the Bend Area
team in rebounds with 13. Danny
, Hudson tallied II points for WHS
while Mike VanMatre added seven
markers and nine boards for the
White Falcons.
Chris Crace led all scorers in lite
contest with 15 points with Marc
Villanueva netting 10 ana Brian
Davidson eight for Kyger Creek.
Davidson totaled eight rebounds to

lead the Bobcats in that
category.
In the junior varsity contest,
the visiting Bobkittens snapped a
two-game Little Falcon winning
streak as Mike Bradbury scored 18
points to lead Kyger Creek past
Wahama by a.sum of 43-42 score.
Tommy Mayes and R.J. Roush
scored nine points each for
Wahama as the White Falcons
junior varsity season record falls to
3-4 on the year.
WHS will return to the hardwood on Friday and Saturday
nights with an away date at topranked Vinson on tap for Friday
followed by a home contest with
the visiting Van Bulldogs scheduled for Saturday. Both games are
Southwestern Athletic Conference
encounters with starting times of 6
p.m. and 7:30

Quarter totals
Kyger Creek ......... 6 15 10 9 = 40
Wahama ............. l113 1619= 49
WAHAMA (49) -).Johnson
6-0-1=13; Hudson 1-3-0=11; VanMeter 2-0-3= 7; Zuspan 2-0·2=6;
Coon 2-0-1=5; Huff 2.0-1=5; King
1-0-0=2. TOTALS-16-3-8:49
Free throws- 8-18 (44.4%)
KYGER CREEK (40) Crace 5-1-2=15; Villanueva 2-06= 10; Davidson 4-0-0=8; Bradbury
1-0-3=5; Covey 1-0-0=2. TOTALS -13·1·11=40
Field goals -14-60 (23.3%)
Three-pointers- 1-12 (8.3%)
Free throws- 11-17 (64.7%)
Rebounds - 25
Blocked shots - 6 (by David-,
son)
Assists- 4 (Villanueva 3)
Steals- 8 (Villanueva 3)
Turnovers- 7

lWIHG ·

cumiN

COSMETOlOGY

to ,Those 'hO,IQUIIIIfy
•Approved By Ohio State
Board of Cosmetology
V
'
t

Clneland.- --..25 12
DeuoiL ............. ...... 22 17

2 , •••••• IHI

j/

\4.5
19.5
23.5

lnditna ................... IS 25

.375
.275

Midwest
Butler 79, Pain SL 74

lndianal9, Mi&lt;:hiJin 74
Iowa St9:2, Dtate 61
Loyola, W. 81, Canil.ius 72
Nolte O.mc 69, Marquette 63
Xavier, Ohio 77, Dayton 69

2.5

3.S
9.1
12
J7j

8

51

Akrm N. 96, Wumuville 79
Akrm St. V-St. M 59, Aknr1 Oadlcld

38

Tonight's games
Phocni- 11. New Jcney, 7:30p.m.
New YM 11 Philadelphia, 7:30p.m.
Wa..ru,gtonal Milmi, 7:]!:) p.m.
CIU.caao at Qi.rlotte., 1:30 p.m.
Indiana 11 Ck!veland, 7:30 p.m.
Milwaukee at DaU11, 1:30 p.m.
San Anwnio u Uuh, 9:30p.m.
Atlanta 11 Golden State, !0:30p.m.

Thursday's games
Detroit at MinnCIOla, 8 p.m.
L.A. Clippm at Houaton. 8:30p.m.
Utah at Dmvu, 9 p.m.
Ponlond 11 S..ale.IO p.m
.
L.A. Liken at Sacnmm to, I 0:30
pm.

Shop Fridays 'Til 8:00 P.M.

Boys
Akron Fin:&amp;LOO.e 80, Barbclton 63
Ak.ron Hoban 76, Louilville Aqllirw

15

Orlando lOS, Minne.ota 92
Ponlond Ill, LA. t..k01192
Chicaao 108, Phocni.I 102
IIOUILOO 117, Milwaukoc 107
San AnlOOio 114, L.A. Clippers I00
Adanu. 128, Seanle I 19
Sar:nmmlo 94, Denver 85

Order from our (otalog tlrough
February 29

Ohio high school
basketball scores

I
1.5
4

1.1

Alliance 66, Uniontown Lake 47
Amanda -Clcucrcck 48, Fairfield
Union40
Amelia 70, Be&amp;hel·Tar.e 52
Ashland, Ky . 61, S. Point SO
A•httbllla 59, A&amp;tnabula St. John 51
Aahtabula Harbor 6:5, A1hlabula
Edgcwood44
Avon 51, Midvicw 53, OT
Bat.avia 64, FayetleVillc 44
Bell"'64, M~116l
.
Bmjamin Logan 81, Rivmtde 73
Beru 65 , Brunnlt'ick 49
Bedln Hillnd 94, Ridaewood 61
Heme Union 69, Millenpon 66
Bovd Couatv. Kv. 59, Ironton S3
Campbell Memorial 64, Salem 60,
flf
Canal Fullon NW 50, Nortm 37
Canfield ~l, Poland SO
Cantoo Cath. 76, W. Reaervc ?0
C.rdin&amp;IM 61, Buckeye Vall. 57
0\agrin Falh Kernl.oo 61, Cle. Mu·

In the NHL ...
Patrkk OMslon

'

OliO

Adama DIYlalon
Monuoal. ........ ,, 29 tl 4
Bouon ................ Z2 II S
Bulloto ..........•... 16 22 8
Honlonl .......... ,.• ll 22 6
Quebec ............... II 29 l

SALE!
Rack of

s and Turtlenecks.........Now
l·Rack

·

', • TMinn-•
.......... 20
oroniD ...•.. .. ...... 12 29
S~nythe

$ 99 ·

6 .
'

2SOL
:
nfants /Toddlers.......~. 70 Off
.·.

ALL BOYS Jean Jackets and

flf

62 tS2110
49 159157
40 160111
36 1331l0
21 141 186

lO 168163
SO 160147
211 3 43 t 411l6

400l
!
Jeans................ 70 Off :

1 Rack .

129 Ill

168 113

Tuoa
W L T
DclroiL. ......,..... Z7 ll 6
Sl. LoWa ,........... 21 II I
Chicaao.............. 20 1110

•-/Boys Wear••••••••••••••
..
.
1
Sweaters•••••••••••••••••••••• 'h Off

1

School Jackets••••••••••••••••••• ~ Off

•

l

29

11.6110

•

v.................. 26 13 1 l9 t6613l
Winnipe&amp; ·········· 19 211 9 47 t481ll
CIIJir)' ·"""""'.' 2019 6 46 17lll9
Edmonlm .......... l823 1 43113111

-ILIPORI, OHiO·

.. ep~~ 11

Oahtnna 15, FMklin Ha. S~

Ollmour 61, Clo. Collinwood ll
Gnham ~S. Xmton Rid• 49
Onndview 61, Wetlin.,.. 39

WinniP'J 3, lknltnd 3,11o

Vancouver S, Quebec 3
. SL J..ou.il S, Bu1falo 4 ,
Edmon\01'1 9. S.n ]Ole :2

Ton]&amp;ht'szames

Wtvc:rly

Alcundcr69
W5tcm Brown 61, HilllboroS&amp;
Wkoolm""'a S9, Luc.uvillo Voll. S1

Team

Thunday'111mes

MooUu1 11 Bailon, 1:3l p.m.
Vancauv. at Oetrcil.7:35 p.ll'l..
Toronto 11 N.Y. bllnden, 7:35p.m.

p.m.

~ 11Cidctt...4~p.m.
•
Loa An ..... 11 St. Lauia, 1:35 ~.....

·N.Y........ " ' -...... 9:1S P"'

.

......Ein16l,CIIIIIW.,.......l6
Lonln J2j Lonln Callt. "
Lonln Cllonlow 16, u-. W. 74
Lonln Witlplll£ 65, l4odina Sl

-1t.Oon.,.y69
Mlrioa·Pnnk."lin 63, Cot. ll1unoor
61
•

Mlallllm Jociaon 14, Now Phllodtt'phla46
.
Mm'lhle Perry.,, CulOn Ttmkm
&gt;13
Mcaaln '10, Vinlal c-,
McMNhtD (W.Va.) Donahu 12,

4' '

F.d;.LN. 6l

loi•IDrLf'Colh.11, l!uo!W~

86

64

CHAPMAN SHOES

62
30

Pomeroy's Quality Shoe Store

w.L Pb.

1 Ciacinnati Wytminl (2) ...... 12-0
1 LCIIdonYillo ...... ,................... lt-0
4. Bndvillo (1) .................. , ..... 9-0
S. Coldwater............................... 9-l
6.8.,)'NIWynlonl(l) .......... .lt-O
7. Mlnrord--------·•t-•
l.lletl- .... .......... ,............. .10-1
9. Sardinia F.utern Brown .......11 ·0
tO. ZaneavilloW. Muotinpn.J0-1

Girls
Atrm Cent·Hower45, SI.Ow ~
Akron Elm• 55, Ak1m Knnore 52
AkrM N. lO, Tollmod .. 30
Akrcn SprinJ. 51, Nortm S4

116
tl1
t 77
104
93
74

lryOur 100%
All Natural Pop Cont
And Save.30¢!

l2

49
46

Olht'rl rtctl•l"-: ll or llort polntl:'
11. ChillicotM HunQnaton 23. 11. Utica
21. 13. Venaill• 20. 1... Avon 17. U.
Brookfield ( I) IS. 16. Gnndvicw Hu. 13.

Akron S1. V-St. M 61, Ai:ron Fire·

.

Doy. s-...l3
B'*ohtro4.1,Kirltlnd 16
Beane U.a.im7S, Tree rl illo 49
B""*'yn 31, 0... Door Zl
Bldce)'CI cmtra154, Onwi.o 43
Bucio)O V.U.l4. Bit Woln111 ll
c..... c.lh. l9, w..... a--..ss
BcllbroGi1~

Division IV
Tttm

w.L PU.

t.Ctn.Counuylloy(I4) .........10-0 191
l S. Ott,._ SE (l)............ J 0-0 181
3 D.nville ...............................J 1-1 tl9
4. Z..... villeR"""""(2) .....JO-t Ill
5. Maria Stan Marion Local .... ! 0-1 112
~ c...mu!J-···.......................12-t
98
7. New Mad110n Tri-Villaae ...JO.I 62
8, Bd~tro Sc lolm'o (t) ......... t0-1 61
9. New Riead .........................~9-1 li

c~ 13. E. Kno• 46
C1e. Erimow C.lh. 91,Cic. SCIIIh 40
Col Booehmh 69, CoL Mifllin 41

Lind~·

Col Eooo S9, Col WhOUione 3l

Col. Eutmoor 61, Marion-Fnnklin

10. Baltimore l..iheny Unim. .. .&amp;.l-2

Col Northlond 14, Col Con......W :1A
Col Solllh 86, CoL lndCfl"'dorl"' 4l
Col WOII lO, Col Bri&amp;l' 49
ColdMia'IO.An:anum 13
Colmd Cnwford 61, Fiederick1.0wn

3S

Othtn rtctlvln111 or lftOI't polnU:

Eooo CUIIOn Z7. 12 (tie) -Hou...,.,
Soud\ina1Dft Chalker (1) 1... 14. Findlay
11.

~

No Preservatives

~

No Artificial Coloring

~

No Artificial Flavors

Ubeny 8on100 13.

Copley l3, AkrM Buclud 42
Crilmiow 39, S. Conual36
D.nville 69, NaoWidaell
Dublin 36, Ma'7'vllle 34
E. c:a-Sl.Ma.-....32
Ebyia C..lh. ll, C1e. Colhotic 32

GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
REFRIGERATORS, tvs,
GAS &amp; ILEC. UiGIS

GrlhlmSt.Ontroon41

Onnd VIII. SO, Pony 43
Harn.ilton Badin 75,.Lcmon-Monroe

I't!P

1/JIJ•CORN

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

lbp Com. The Way Nature Intended.

62~

3nllwt., IIIDpoll•
. Pl. -446-1699
HOURS1 I A.M.·6 P.M.

O;r.

Ucklnallla. SS, H•lh St
UmaCallt. SS,AMa46
L.odllani!ll, ~4,
Lot1i a...taol 14, N. llojlllon 61

Division ill

i

t. Heolh 111) ............................12-0 212

flf

Kidron S7, Mo.. Uton
3l
!A;"""'
10, S1mbuoa 31
. l.anCU« !1, Otilli&lt;&gt;oiho 46

123
too
89

Da"""

Wic:klilfe31, Hawkcn!H
Willoughby HillJ 86, Etyrio fliCS 68
Windhom 54, S.-boo&gt;49
Winlemillo 66, Eclioon S. lO
W-62, Can100 01..011160
Yooo&amp;. Uberty6S, Nila 31
YoooJ. Royen 93, YOWIJ. WU.m 62
Youna. South Sl. Youna. Chaney 51
Zana~vUlc 66. Maricw 35

I

THURSDAY
FRIDAY and
SATURDAY ONLY

W-L 1'11.

Oth•• renlvlna 1l or more polntt:
II. Patukala Wat.kina Memarial 21. 11
Conlidd 21. 13 (lio)C•nol~
Wuhinaton Court Houae 16. 1.5. Avon
W.o(t) IS. 16. VCIIIIilioall.

Key•lono 67, Medina Buckeye 63,

t...o. AnJelelll MimMII, I:OS p.m.
· N.Y.R..,... IICalJIIY,9~S p.m.

Division U

4.Dreada1Tri·Vallcy ..............12-0
10t...,..ndW, Ooa•s• .......t2-t
6. Onville (1) ........................... 12-1
1. Sllelby .. ................................ 11-0
l Mlllenbwa W. H...... ....... 12·2
9. 11uniluonllodift(l) .. ,........... ll·t
tO,ByoMIIoMadowbnloii(I)II ·O

Konaut..k..,ll, Hopcwctll1

B01tcl\ at Toronta,1:1S p.m.

OFF

t. t..uiMIIo (13) ...................... 13-0 .2m
l Col....... Beech"""(l) ..... lt-0 110
1 Ud!ona (1) ........................... .12-0 Ill

Je--ScioSI,No_,..4S

D•kdl,-U.Il
Faldliah ~ 17, S\. Fnacia,

1

sc~

Ddroil 1,1'hilodclphia 3

NY Ill, :lOT
HolY Claal69, """' 6t

Twa

W. Bnt~cb 101, OUud 82
W. Oeaup 61, Cle. Adam• SS

70, McDermott NW 49
"" Wclii1Dn13,

42

.

ll

W. Holm~ S4, 0&amp;)11lCIIt46
W. Uberty Salem 51, Triad 4.5
W. MulklnJIIIIIIl6,1olm Otenn lt
Wahama, W.V1 49, Kyp_C,_ 40
Walnut Ridao 66, Col DeSai~ 48
WIIRII Xc:nnody 51, Youna. MCGley

21

38

11. Younptown Boardman (l) 27. 12.
Colwnbw: Swlh 23. 13. Amhent Steele

Uni~o 7~ Piki:Wn 40

Col. Brooihavon 63, Col.
McKinley !I

10. Cin. Mother of Qarcy ........... 9-3

30% - r~

OtiMra rec:tlvlna 11 or more polntJ:

Onnville S6, Uberti Union S2
Hamll""' Twp. ll, T•YI! Vall. Sl
Howl1nd 6l, Boardman :57
lndiuit.lke 63, Mochaniolbwt 61
lndiu ValL 71, TU~U•wu Clt.h. 35
Jackacm 74, New PhilldtiDIUI-41
Jdfenon 14, Comcaut 'TI

Eaat

290 SICOID lliiR

FilhetCath. 6S, New Alblny 50
Franklin Furnace Groen 60, lnr non

Tuesday's srores

Bull'do 11 Pllllburjo,1:3S p.m.

!.

Fodcrtl Hotkina 13, Nel1onville· .

9 43 162 l1l
2A 118209

Major college
basketball scores

ill

Illy. Nonhrid&amp;o14, Tli.C-rN. 31
E. Uv-1 14, Bucko)O Locol69
Etyrio Colh. 12. Colwnbillt
.• foirbonb 13, Ridl"""" ll
flinno&gt;nl 14, Woyno 69

Sanla.e ....... ...... 10 33 .tl

WinnlP'J11~.1 :35

:

Col. Bcuhci'Ul61 , Clll. Miffiin49
Col. Briw II,Cot West63
Col. Easi 96, COL Whe:lltant 14
Col . Lindcn·M~;Kin l e~ 75, Col.
Brookhaven 67
Col. Nonhland 60, CoL Ccntcnni1156
Cot. s... ~ 7'1, cot. lndepmd- 66
Conoloon VIII. !4, Cadioll
CuyahOII FaU1 72, Akson Buchtel46
Illy. Bolmo•" 14, Sp!jna. Nonh 13
0.~ . Chamin1de·Julienne 66, Day.
C.noU49
·
Day. Moa4owdalc ,7, BeaYC!t'Cftltk SS
O.y. Miami Valley67, xn. au. 46

8:1

FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN

76
I.Cdina .......... ""'""'" "'" "'"".ll·2 50
9. Rocky Ri"" Mo.,u&amp;oi.......I0-2 49

Univm:ity 73, Parma 67
Upper Arlin1ton 70, CoJ. Wulland

1100CI 2S

6. Reynoldlbtq .......... :............ ll·l

1. 1loyiM tJunliu.......................9-l

TwitllburJ: SS,lttvcnn• Sl

Circlcvi11e 56, Bloon·C.nol149
Cle. Lincoln W. 66, Clc. South 65,

Yodl63

Olvblon

Loo Antol .. ....... ) 1 "

Cin . Winton Woods S1, Cin. Roaer

Bacon 54

Norrlll Dlvlllon
PU. GFGA
60 192 Ill

499

49

203169
171134

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE

$

•r-:·..

GFGA.

119159
2041ll

Team
W-L Pll.
1. PicllerlnBIM (16) ........ ,........ 12·1 214
2. W001tcr(2) ..........................12-0 190
3. ...... ~l·------·13-1 115
4. Vmdalia Outlet (1) ..............ll-0 151
S.Gufioldiiii.Trin. (l) ..........lt·l 106

Tto)' I~ Sidnoy 10

Cin. Princcon66.Cin. Etdotc62
Cin. SL Xaviu6.5, Cin. AndmCI!. 62
Cin. Tafl71, Cin. Aiken 76
Cin. We~lem Hilla 74, Cin. Hupca

ALL -SNOW BOOTS

Division I

Cin. LaSalle 12, Mt. Healthy 61
Cin. Northwcat66, Milford 44
Cin. Oak Hilll61, Cin. PurceU Mari·

WALES CONFERENCE
Tum
W L T Pta.
N.Y. R"''"' ····· 30 J1 I 61
Wuhint""········ 28 tl 4 60
Pilllbw)h .......... :1A 16 l ll
New Icne~ ........ 22 U 1 Sl
N.Y. IIIIIIden., .. 11 22 6 40
Philldelphio.. ..... 14 22 9 31

River VaU. 64, Mallon Cath. SS
RootJtown !Ol,GarrduvilleS I
Ra~lfc.d 78, Swant.oo 47
S. Wllbder71, Portlmoolh W. S6
s.nctuuy 11, Etyrio 67
Sheridan 73, Martan S9
Sprinaboro 72, Middl"""" Modioon
70,20T
s...bcmillo 63, c.m,u.., l4
Stronanillc 56, Brccbvillc 51
Tot.Chriruon 18,1loaf'odd. Mi. lO
Tol. Start n, Tot Woodw&amp;ld 68
Tol Wai~e ~9, Ma~ 51 '
Toronlo64, Wellnille62
Treea1Uiel3, DellwareChr. 13
Tri.YaUey 64, M1y1JViDc 61, 20T
Trinlblo6~. Mill" 61

~2

SALE

acason poll for The AuocillOd ~. by
Ohio Hiah School Alh.letic A.uocittion
divilioru, with wm•lOit. rcc:ord lhrouah
Jlme&amp; of Jan. 19 and toW pointJ (ftnt·
pllce VCMI in pualU.C.) :

flf

Cheupeakc 113, Rock Hill 60
Cin. ChrisU.n IS, Cin. Landman: 71
Cin. Cwnlt)' Doy 40, N""'ood ll
Cin. Glen E&amp;t.c ~8. Cin. Walnut Hilll

an

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- How •
ltate panel of 1~11.1 wri\tt1 and broad·
cutcn ratet Oh1o hiah 1chool aidl b11·
k.ctbal.l tcama in the ~ wctkly tqular·

Reynoldlbul'J 75, Wemrville S. ?l,

l3

BOOT BOttfiHZA

Ohio girls prep
basketball poll

Peuinille S3, Maurnoo Vall. 49
Philo 62, CroWvillo 60
Ponenville .50, Howland Ou. 43

ahall61

l1

ON THE MT" IN MIDDLEPORT

Onvffie 101, Chippewa 47
Ouawa HillJ 75, Emanuel BapQn 62
PainCIVille Harvey 72, Geneva 60
Puma Pod'" !2, ND-CL 42
Patriot Southwestern 75, Ohio VaiL
Chr.l4
Poeblc. 66, Pot\&amp;rnO\Ith Notre Dame

Southwest
Baylor 64, Tew Ouiltian6l
HoWiton 110, SL l...a.!.i188
Lamar 90, SW l.ouWana 84

GB

Tuesday's scores

J•n. 24 a25.

Pomeroy,·Ohlo

ll

.SOO

Paclrtc Dlvl1kln
Golden State ..........~ 10 .714
Ponllnd .................26 13 667
PhocniA .................. 26 14 .6.50
LA. l..akm ............ 2l 16 .590
S..ttle ............ ,....... 20 2Q .lO!)
LA. OJ ppm ......... 20 21
.488
Sacnmento ........... .J2 27 .308

SIZES: Preemies thru
24 Months

Wllft'IDI CNft c•••••••
n
..

614- 112o6008

.53&amp;

Milwaukee ....... ..... 19 19

Midwest Division
Tum
W L Pet.
U111h .......................25 1S .615
San Antonio ........... 22 17 .S64
H(JWt.on .................21 18 .538
o.n... ...................ll 24 .381
Dallu .................... .l2 26 .3\6
Minne~OUI ................ 7 32
.179

For Your 'Little One'

COUNTRY C.UFIS AND VIDEO ..
220 E. Main St.

Atlanta ...................21 II
Char!(ltte ................ LI 29

W. Kmwclty 30, Atkanw SL 66

8
12

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Register for FREE RENTALS
Drnlng held during Open Houtt,
•
· Alk for dltltlls.

.676
.564

Orlando at Ba.ton, 7:30p.m.

Reg. 9.99 Long Sleeve
MONEY

~

~

~

Easter
Outfits

5

TRAIN FOI

By DAVE HARRIS
threc·pointer with eight seconds throws. Another Marauder turnover Miller 69-67. In non-conference
Sentinel Correspondent
remaining in the half.
gave Belpre the ball, but Williams action, Vinton County lost to
Two free throws by Erin Hall
Belpre had their biggest lead of missed a free throw with eight sec- Greenfield McClain 70-49.
·
with 25.seconds left gave the Bel- the night at 41·27 when Wilcoxen onds left. After a Marauder time Quarter totals
.
pre Golden Eagles a 64-63 victory hit another three-pointer 30 sec- out, Meigs brought tbe ball down, Meigs .......... :.. .. .18 9 19 17 = 63
over the Meigs Mar3uders Tuesday onds into the third period. But like and Bentley was suipped of the Belpre ................ 14 22 16·12 = 64
night before a packed house at Bel- the first game between the two ball as he drove the lane and the
MEIGS (63)- John Bentley 0·
'pre Hi~h Sch09l. The win avenged schools, Meigs came. storming buzzer sounded, and the Eagles 2-0=6, Frank Blake 2-2-2=12.
an tJ~rher 65-61Ioss to Meigs, their back. Mitch scored seven straight eseaped with the win.
Trevor Harrison 7-0-2=16, L. J.
only loss of the year.
points and Meigs had cut the lead
Wilcoxen, who led the Golden Mitch 7-0-4=18, Shawn H;twley 2The Marauders came back from to 48-46 with 2:12 left in the peri- Eagles with 16 points, was fol- 2-1=11. TOTALS-18-41-9::63
a 15-point third-quarter deficit and od.
lowed by Williams (15); Hall (13)
BELPRE (64)- Tony Bradley
took a four-point lead with 52 secBelpre built the lead back to and Tony Bradley (10). Belpre hit 5-0-0=10, Erin Hall S-0-3=13,
onds left, but the Golden Eagles eight (54-46) with 7:31 left in the 27 of 54 from the floor for 50% Chad Williams 4-2-1=15, Matt .
scored the last five points of the game, but Frank Blake drained a and 4 of 7 from the line for 57%. Wilcoxen 2-4-0=16, Russ Jacob ~game to post the victory;
three-pointer to start the Marauders Belpre had ·27 rebounds, with Hall 0-0=4, Travis Wells 1-0-0=2, Cbad
· Belpre (Il-l, 8-1) came into the on the road 'back. Chad Williams f!l'llbbing nine.
King 2-0-0=4. TOTALS - 12·5·
contest ranked lith in state in the hit a fifteen footer to give Belpre a
Mitch took the game's scoring 4:64
latest A.P. rankings. Meigs falls to 56-51 lead, but once again Blake honors with l8 points. Harrison
5-4 in the TVC and 7-5 overall.
hit another three-pointer to cut it added 16, and Blake had an out- TVC cage standings
Meigs jumped out on top early . back to a two point game. Hall standing game with 12, while Hawand held a I Q.JO lead on a L.J. completed a three point play with ley added II. Meigs hit 24 of 53
Conf. Overall
Mitch three-point play with 32 sec· 4:20 left in the game and Belpre from the floor including six of 14 Team
W LW L
onds left in the period. But a bucket went back on top 59-54. Two free three-pointer for 45%, Meigs Belpre ....................... S I II I
by 'Hall with 20 seconds left and a throws by Mitch once again cut the cashed in on 9 of 13 from the line Alexander .................6 · 3 9 4
· steal and lay-up by RuS.s Jacob with Belpre to three (59-56) with 3:36 for 69%. Meigs had 28 rebounds, Meigs ........................5 4 7 5
eight secondi left cut the Meigs left.
with Mitch grabbing II. Blake had Wellston ..... ,.............5 . 4 7 . 5
lead to 18-14 at the buzzer.
' ·The Marauders had their best four of the Marauders II assists
.....................5 4 6 6
John Bentley gave Meigs a 21- fan support of the year and they and tbe Marauders had II steals, Trimble
Miller
.......................
.3 5 4 6
14 lead 13 seconds into the second about blew the roof off of the gym with Hawley and Blake getting
Federal
Hocking
......
.3 7 4 8
.
'
period, but Belpre went on a 17-4 when Trevor Harrison came up three 'each.
......2 6 3 7
HAWLEY SHOOTS- Meigs forward Shawn Hawley (33) takes
run to take a 3!-25lead with 3:47 with.a steal at half court and went
Meigs took over sole possession ,Nelsonville-York
Vinton
County
..........
2 6 2 9
a shot rrom the baseline In rront or the derense offered by Belpre's
left on a bucket by Travis Wells. in for the one-handed slam and of fi~t place in the reserve title
Mat Wilcoxen (30) during Tuesday night's TVC contest at Belpre,
Mat Wilcoxen gave Belpre a 36-27 with 2:20 left and Meigs was with- race with a come-from·behind 51Tuesday's games
which the host Golden Eagles won 64-63.
lead at the half when be drained a in one at 59-58.
. 45 win over Belpre. Both teams
Belpre
64,
Meigs 63
T~e decibel level was raised had been tied for the top spot going
Wellston
73,
Alexander 69
another notch or two when Hawley into the contest. Eric Wagner, who Federal Hocking
70, Nelsonvilledrilled a long tree pointer and led Meigs with 15 points and 10 York63
Meigs took a 61-591ead with 1:52 rebounds, .was followed by Aaron Trimble 69, Miller 67
left in the contes~ Blake hit a pair Drummer (12), Chris Knight (10) Greenfield ~cCiain 70, Vintoo
of pressure free throws with 52 sec- and Jack Stanley (nine). Jon County49
onds left and Meigs held a 63-59 Wotring and Joe Mundy led Belpre
Manhattan 8S, F1irfield 12
Miami TrKCl70, E. Clin~ 49
advantage.
with 13 points each. The win was
FOR LIFE 1r. ,Uf&lt;I'I.'J E
· In the NBA ...
Middld'•cld Cudinol 69, Au""' •l4
MuiJt 103, Lon~ Jd.and U. BS
,
But Williams launched a three- the 12th istraight for Coach Rick
Mount St Maey a, Md. 87, St FnnMidd}d(lwn Q.r. 74, OWe 31
Middletown Fenwick 69, Lemoncil, Pa. 84
CALL:
EASTERN CONFERENCE
pointer despite heavy Marauder Edwards and his Little Marauders.
SL
Jc.cph'l
75,
Rutp
70
MooroeSO
,
A-tlantic: Dlvlllon
defensive
pressure
and
Belpre
cut
Meigs
is
8-1
in
the
TVC.
JEFF WARNER
Villanova 70, S)Tieuie 60
Mincrlol6, E. Potootine 48
Ttam
W L Ptt.
GB
Waaner61, Moomooth, N.J. 58
Minford 64; Pontmouth SS
the lead to one (63-62) with 38 secMeigs will travel to Warren
INSURANCE
NewYork .............. 23 14 .622
Moaadonl49, Wued0o47
Bo.too ....................24 IS .615
onds
left.
Local
Saturday
night.
302W. 2nd,
Moaackno Field 89, Ctutwood 62
Philldetphio ........... t 8 21 .462
6
Pomerov,
Ohio
N. ltidacviUe 71, LoraiD Brooluide
Meigs was stripped of the ball
In other TVC action, Wellston
Miami .................... 18 22 .450
6.5
South
MmQI
&amp;14·192-5478
INIURINCI·
46
the next time down the court and upset Alexander 73-59, Federal
New 1cracy ...........J 7 21 447
6.5
Ba~too CoUeat51, Miami'SO
New
Bolton
86,
Wat.em
Latham
Sl
............ .._c..., ......
WnhinJ1on ........... .J4 24 .368
9.5
Georgi• Sc 8l, Deuoi1 14
Belpre took the lead with 25 sec- Hocking slipped past NelsonvilleNew IM.inJim 46, River Viow 35
.-.01111: O.IIIIINJiill ,..._
CIIGII
Orlando .................... 9 29 .237 14.5
N.C. tharlooe 82, Davidl0!170
New Richmoad 61, St. Bemard 39
....... ..................... fJ
onds
left
when
Hall
hit
his
two
free
York
70-63
and
Trimble
beat
Tenn~10e 107, KenJUck)' &amp;$
--........--~
Ctntral Dhillon
Tulane 17, Va. Commonwulth IS,
No!'hwood 71, o;~&gt;oon~&gt;&lt;q 6l
Chlugo .................. 34 S .872
flf
Onnao Chr. 63, t..ko Ridp 41

=

See Our Special Order
Catalog of

.

edges Meigs 64-63 Tuesday·night

Scoreboard

Wahama posts 49-40 victory
over Kyger Creek Tuesday
By GARY CLARK
OVP Correspondent

B~lpre

.
.
;
\

'

..

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

' '.
DOWNUIG CHILDS
MULLEN ,.USSER .
'

-

. .

'

INSURANCE
Ill Second St., Pomerof
YOUR INDEPENDEN
AGENtS SERVING
MI.IGS COUNn
SINCE · 18.68

I
I
I

I
I
I

'. I

.

TOoENJII:.IOU.YTM'W Com.!" rtimi»• .......... ~ M 111111
ill~ ... OP.f 01111 . &amp;OOCI only Oil JCUYlM"' Cool•• • II
M191.IIWOiel prrMna llfdel ri
ftllllt lltf,lillll.'¥del ~ c:opilll,
.... ~tw "*'*!. CUSIIntl_.lile! ll. ~- .l/i11c:d . Milt
IOOd tlliT&amp; N. M. G'ICQ.CIOI'I~~ ....

Ulicllll-

••n•

·I
I "'!'"'.'.a.•-.,•.,...!i~

. .
L-----------------------------·----'

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,.

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Page 6. The Dally Sentinel

·'{i.edn~es!!day!!:,Jan!!ua!!ry~22,!!199!!2~~~~~~=~Pom~er...
oy•-M•Id•dle~port~,O~hl•o~

Wednesday, J_anuary 22,1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7 .
.,
'

".-ZEST
BAR SOAP
STORE

3 PA~
5 OZ. BATH SIZE

Monday thru Sunday
· 8AM·10 PM

s

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

PRICES EFFECTIVE JAN. 19 THRU JAN. 25, 1992

Any Size Pkg.

Not Less Than 70% Lean · FRESH

ULTRA
TIDE .
DETERGENT

roun

Limit 10 lb&amp; Per Family Pleaoe With Additional Purchue (excluding Item• problblted by law)

FOOD CLUB Fresh Frying

Chuck Roast •••••••

•
rums IC s

Round Steak•••••La.

10
lb.
Bag

. . CHICKEN .

Food Club
)

Limit I Per Family With
Additional Purchase
(excluding Items
prohibited by .law)

.

·

•

.

Hams•••••••••••••••••

•Breasts•••••••••••••••La. .
USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF
$ 199
Rump Roast ••••••••u.
ECKRICH . .
$14.9 .
Bologna•••••••••••••

8 10

-

.

.

Diet Pepsi, Caffeine Free
Diet Pepsi, Mountain Dew

'

..

MR. BEE
POTATO

$189

COLBY LONGHORN

Limit I Per Family With
Any Other Purchase
(excluding items
prohibited by law)

eese•••••••••••••••

•
UICe

CHIPS

LB.

14 oz.
REG. $2.49

s
Lettuce•••••••••H,Ao 2

'

.

Ultra Tide

Roast
.

'

4246 oz.

.

Pure ,
Premium .

Box

U..R I flor F..uy Wlllt AllY Oilier
• d.. I I Purcbut (eldudlnl

_............,...,low)

Round

-..

Juice . .

Un~eelited,

With Bleach

·Beef

.

Orange

Regular,

USDA
Choice

Freezer Queen

Mega • 20

VALLEl BELL

99

az. ~

Sou

I

I
I

10.5 oz.
~an

•

.

'
'

.. ...
.
~

•.,.

...

Monday 7 a.m. lhru
saturday M~ .

'

SUDday 1 a:m.

'til 10 p.m• .

'

·~.

·'

'

.

..

',1'

, .

Prices Good 4 Da)rs
January 1992
Wednesday, January 22
Saturday, January 25, 1992.

ARMOUR

••

· GAUlPOLIS BIG 'BEAR STORE
..

Treet•••••••• ~•••••••

..
I ~

•

~}

..

r

.

•
:
•

•

. . tl

••

$179

·

GAL

·

.

FUNK &amp;

.

12 oz.

.

.

· VOL. 1- 9C
VOL 2-99C
VOL 3·29 - $5.99

. . TOILET TISSUE .

.

10 oz.

sQz.

CHARMIN .·

·,Bear
Minimum
Prices
· Items and Prices Effective only at:
'

VA~ DE CAMP ~SH FILLETS.or

.

RoLL

~

~

BARBECUE

$199

2 ·$1
$ 29 ...---------,
Towels •••••••••••
F1sh St1cks•••••••••• 1 WAGNALLS
s109
NEW
ENCYCLOPEDIA

· BRAWNEY

Food Club Chicken Noodle

Potatoes

.

2°/o.Milk•••• ~ ••••••

64 oz. Ctn.

Shoestring.

Family

C.heese.~ ••••••••••• 12 oz.

Troplcana

69

VIETTI
PORK or BEEF

s1

.

'
•

. KRAFT IND• .WRAPPE~ SLICES

Top Round

99
'

L••

20 oz.
Box
Laundry Detergent

s

LB.

Limit I Per Family With
Any Other Purchase
(excluding Items
prohibited by law)

.Kellogg's

BONELESS

$2 49

$139 SUNSHINE
DOG
W1ene.rs •••••••••••~.LB.
FOOD
fi.AVORITE BONELESS
· . $189
$ 139
20 LB. BAG
ECK~ICH .

Russet Baking

Regular or Natural

LB•

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEf BOTTOM

U.S. No. I · 10 lb. Bag

•
Sl

$169

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF .

Chicken Thighs or

.24 pack
12 oz. Cans

69

12101.l
FAMILY
PAl

$299.. .
·

'
•

v•

"'"Chlly '' ,...,. Stptr
OHII Goo4 )Ill. , .... J.. 25, 1992
llltil 4 ,., C.stt. .

HELP YOUR CHILD
ACHIEVE A
BRIGHTER FUTURE •
SEE nORE FOR DDIILS.

'

-~

l•

�· Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. Page .8 The Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, January 22, 1992

OhiO

~.;. c_t_~_m...~-un-1~-y-C.-~-en~-a:-·~. ; em-" 's-~- ~.;.-" 1~;.,~-. -~?~arkin~ -,~ -ava~i~IJlb~ s.~~l:.'lrrlJ.~ ~ •~}~a.~t!!~.,.S?~P.Hl.$..~"" ••

!

...
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received weD in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.

•
m the paring/playground area
behind the school. The C0$1 of the
dinner if'$3.50 per person, which
includes spaghetti, salad, b~ad.
beverage and dessert. AU ~
. will go to the operation of the
sch0\)1. lnfonnadon is available by·
calling992-6279.
-

•

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

the Me1gs .County Div~l?" ~f ~e mg place. Once they take a few· "but if you or someone else has · ·call Cair at991-3222 or l'rymyer at
. Amenc~n Heart Assoc1.a_t10n 1s seconds to learn the symptoms, '!'e these symptoms, act quickly. It is 696-1285.
·~
..
·once agam making preparations for want tltein to know the fast action an emergency that demands urgenThe AHA, w1th 3.2 mlihon volits door to door campaign in Febru- is needed in order to save that per- cy."
unteers, is .the nation's largest volary, American Heart M~. Pack- so~;s life." .
•
Working on the campaign with untary health organ~tion dedicaters are assembUng the kits used ~Y
Symptoms may vary, Frymyer Carr and Frymyer are area chair- ed 10 fighu~g heart d1sease, wh1ch
wal~rs :ovho collect. for the drive said,~but the usual warning signs · ""en Kathy Hood, Lois McEihin- annually k11ls almost one million
. and distnbute educabonal mforma- are u~comfortable pressure, full- ney, Susie Soulsby, Dee Brown, Amencans. Last year, lt~e AHA
tion.
ness, squeezing or pain in the cen- Joyce Sisson Jean Alkire Jeanette spent more than $193 million for
RIPLEY, W.VA.- The liberty
Donna Carr and Jane Frymyer ter of. the chest lasting two minutes Lawrence, Milli~ Midkiff, Susie research support and public and
Mountaineers will perform Friday have been named 19n campaign or"longer."
Karr, Jay Proffitt, Terry Shain, professional educabon and oommuat Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
co-chairmen.
Pain spreading to the shoulder, Grace Weber. Marilyn Robinson
mty programs.
,"The theme for this year's cam- neck or arms a~d J?ain with li~ht- Jmln May, Linda Montgomery:
For more information. about the
RUTLAND - There will be a paign is 'This Emergency Demands headed ness, famtmg, sweatmg, Cathy Cooper, Judy Humphrey~. Amencan f!eart Assoc1aMn and
dance at the Rutland· Legion Hall Urgency'," commented Carr. nausea or shortness of breath are Robin Butcher and Rhonda.Dailey.
early warnmg s1gns of a heart
on Friday from 9 p.m. to midnight ."We're drawing attention to the also symptoms, accordmg to
Anyone interested in assisting attack, call the Central Oh1o AHA
featuring a variety of perfo.rmers. fact that more lives could be saved Frymyer.
with this vital campaign to help office at I (800) 282-0291. We're
T_T_he_.Jl.l.:;U;...bl_iic_is_l..,.
·n_vi_ted_to_a_ttentl
__
. ___
ev_ery..:....:y_ear_if,.:.pe_op_:_le..:.jus_trec_o_:gn_ized
_ _ _.._Th_·o_se_si.:gn_s_m_a-:y:::n:::o:::t:::oc:::c..,-ur:::i:-n=r:-:ed::u::ce=·~ear=l~y::d:=:ea:::th=an~d;d;isa~bl~
·li~ty~-fi_:_gh_u_n_:_g_for_;_you--rl_i~:-e._ _ __

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Literary Club will meet
Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the
home of Mrs. James Diehl. Mrs.
Forrest Bachtel will present a program on "The Romantic Poets."
Roll call is w recite a few lines fro
a favorite poem.
MIDDLEPORT. Debbie (Brennan) Ha ptons tall, principal at
Pomeroy
Elementary,
will be
the
guest speaker
at the Meigs
Junior

AIMII111t:D !TIM fiOUCY • hen oltf'llll ~ 1tentt 11 rtQutrtcllo bt riiiiiUy availlblt lor 1M in MCf'l KI'OI)II' Sloft.
e•cept u Sl*llicllily noted m thil ld . II we dO run out ot an .avert1111d lt.m, wt will otter you rour chOicl of 1 eompwaDII
Item , wntn awall&amp;tllf. ltiiiCIInQthe same Sl'o'lngi"'f I rllt'ICfltcll. wnlcn Will tntiltt you to purcn... the IIN'tntled ,,.., It
the ad\lti'11HCI pnct Wlltlln 30 oav•. Only ont vendor COUPGI:l Will be acceDIIIG per Item purcniiiCI.
,

· h
d · B
·
Hlg Aca emlC ooster meeung
on Wednesday at 7 p.m.

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-21 Sb
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CL05ID SUNDAY

Monthly

nm 3 d.,.s a1 no ch•ge

' Pr ic~~t

ot ad lor all capilli! letters 11
'1 point lmf!lype only uU!d

doublt.~pnce

diJII illter pubhcationlo mak~ correctMm
' Ads thll must be paul.o ad\lilll Ctt ilto!
Card of lh an~ s
HilllP'Y Ads
In Mumollillll
YMd SalliS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTIT!ES. NON£ SOLD TO DEALERS

COPY DEADLINE
MONDA'Y PAPER
tuESDAY PAPER
W[DNESOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
~HIOAY PAPER

we Gladly Accept

SUNDAY PAPER

Your Federal FDod

PUBLICATION
RUTLAND LEGION HALL
Beach Grove Rd., Rutland, Ohio
MARLIN'S
WHITE'S HILL BAND
Featuring good old country
music with Benny Wolle, Emily
Wolle, Robin WoHa, Gary Jacks,
Tony Corrbs, Charlie Williamson
and (Jeanie Jeffers from Shade),
Everyone Welcome.
Admission $2.()()4Jndor 12$1.00
Evory Friday Ni!#it9-12 P.M.
Round Dancing-&amp; Tharol

Make Kroger vour superbow1
Party Headquarters For Partv
Travs,snacks,aeverages, And
Much, Much Morel

Public Notice

coca cola
Classic

or Sprite
I

"Silver Platter" Fresh

1

Assorted Pork Chops
SOLO IN PKaS. OF 1D-10.S·LBS.

FRIDAY

HARRISONVILLE - There will
be a youth rally at the Harrisonville
Holiness Chapel , Route 684,
· pomeroy, on Friday at 7:30p.m.
Rev. Bryon Myers will be the
·speaker and Rev. John Neville
invites the public.

KI10CiEI1

fulluwin!{ I t•lt'llhmw t•xdrrriiJ{I'S ...
Galli• County
Area Code 614
446
367
388 ,
245

Gallipolis
Ch•hire

Vinton
Rio Grande
256 Guyan Diat
643 Ar•bi•Oist .
379

Wilnu'

Me1gs Couni'Y
Areit Code 614

992

Mason Co , W\1
Arn Code 304

M1ddlepo11

Pomeroy
·
985 Ch•ter
843 Porll•d
247 let411r1 fillls.
949 Racine . · .~

742 Rutland
667 Coolville

675

Pt. Ple•ant

458

Leon
•
. Apple Grove
Mason
New Hllvfln
Leta.t

576
173
882
895

.- 9Jl Oullillo

Kroger
Skim Milk
Gallon

Annoucemenls

4

G'ive4111Wty

5

H1ppy Ads

31
32

JJ
3l

6

Lost •nd Found
7 YardS.!BIJNiidinad\lan.cel
8 Public Sale&amp; Auction
9 W•t~ to Buy

16

Help Wan1 ed
Silu•tion Wllnted
Insurance
Businesslrain1ng
Schools llo Instruc tion
Radio. TV &amp; C8 Rep;m

17

Miscell1n110us

1~

Wanted To Do

11 ..
12
.1 3
14 ·
15

35
36

41
42
43

Housel lot R..,t
Mobile Homes tor Re.1t
tor Rent

61 - Far ~ Equipment
'62 W111t~ to Buy
G3 li\lestod•

,64 Hay • Grain
6,5 - Snd &amp; Fertih.rtf

1;®1111

Tr anspo r1 a11 on

f••m•

71 - Autos tor Sale
72 Trucks lor Sale
73 V11ns &amp; 4 WD ' s
7A Motorcycl•
75 Botu 6 Motors for S1l1
76 Auto P.,tt &amp; Acceuouel
77 -- Auto Rep1ir
,
78 Camping Equipment
:
7 9 Cllmpers. &amp; Motor Homlfi

44 - Ap.~nment tor Rent
45 -- Furnished Rooms
46 Space lor Rent
47 W111t11d to Rent
48 · Equipment lor Rent
49 for Le•e

Merchandise

Ser vic es

51 Hou111hold GoodS
62 - Sporting ,Goods
B1

Antique1 .

Ousin•• Opportulllly
Money to Loan
Professional SIHvices

Home tmpro'o'8menc·s
I Heaing

82 - Pit~mbing

54 - Mile. M..-chltlldise ·
55 Building Suppli•
56 Pets f()r S1le
S 7 · Musicallnurumenu
58 . Fruits llo 'Vagel:•bles
i9 for Sale 0! T,.!le

liihijUIHBil
21
22
23

Hom,8'1 lor Sale
MobiiH HomM tor Sale
Fifrms tor Sale

Business Buildings
Lens &amp; Acreage
Real Estate W111ted

53

83 hc:111ating

·

84
BS
86

£1octrical &amp; RelngBr•lion
Gunlll'al H•ulrng
Mobil a Home R~tp•tr

87

Upllolstery

I

sea/test
Ice cream

•

Yz-GaiiOn

1-lb.
SLICED

ole carolina · Bacon

•t•. 2..JS

JQQ! S. MISCELLANEOus: Air powerad jad&lt;, air lmpon
wrenches, transmiuion jad&lt;, hy&lt;hulic lloor jack, 3/8' drive
rachel, assistant gear puller, air powerOd grease gun.
regular grease guns. oil suction gun. 114' electric ctill. 112'
ext8n~on bar set, Craftsman tO incl1 bench grinder and
grindng -Is, largo electric welder, me&lt;ium olectricwalder,
two whaelbalancers, coats 30-40 A. air tire changer, bearing
and gear putters. pans cleaning tank, small IDOls. stack-on
IDOl boxss, tool box on wheels, mechanics Cf811per, ·big
electric grinder. air chisel hammer, one inch driver socket se~
electricalsystemo repair kit, timing ligh~ Sum Hex Key Set, air
concllioning rechargek~, hydraulic hoi&amp;~ 112' electric: impact
wrench, pipe otrel&gt;her, battery tooter. bulbs, fu ... , oU filters.
fan belts, radiator hoses. cash regi&amp;ter, Ning cabinet sale,
gra850pump, sparl&lt;plugwinlo, stop leak, fuel injectnrclean..-,
lead oubltitute, battery callles. heater hose,
shoes. muffter clamps, tailpipe hangers,
lacx•tyo1no gauge end hOsos, pluo iruch more.
AUctiON CONDUCTED U

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.
AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
LUNCH
MASON, WV
773·5785
TERII:C.horOMckd LD.
Not R-lllt For Aooldonto Or Lou 01 Pnipotty

LANOSVILLE;Look at this nice t story home lhatlill on
appro•. 31 acreo. It has 3 bedrooms. 2 tllma, heat pump,
and woo&lt;llumar. Some or the land is ti!able. olu1 it would
be a groat fll*"llor hunting.
WMJ $49,900

B.Piece Party Pale

~$47,100

REEDBVlLLE-Co Rd 50-45 acres or nioa laying land.
AIIJIIl&gt;x. 2 aaeo ~table, 10 acres pasture, 36 8CI9S timber. ·
Watlr' and electric available.
$25,000

bedroom,

Recine a......! Ad.·this 3
2 bath home ·- . but coUd be mode nloo wilh the riaht handymon'o

CHEITER·Bium Addltlon·Heyi wllh the riq~l touch, this
oplit levll home oould be belutifil . It hu two 11111 bed&lt;Qomt
up and two do!on. HM a opoclouo llmly room and two
bello. A1111 clo- and otorogoo...,..hoie you look. wltl1
a one cat garage and a paJlo. All sill on -~· 11a11.
·
. JUST $11,100

Fresh

cauliflower '..

"'-"

..

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
-New Homes

-Remodeling
-Garages &amp; Room
Additions
985·4141

11·22·92-1 mo.

"

.

,

bam,=

LANOIYILLE-11 RL 124·Approx. 60 OCI81arm with a b1a
and about to ICI8I · Also hao • 1 112
~house';:3w1~~~"1 18181~~~~.0: 7
I!AOLI! lltDCIE ROAO.Approx. 7 OCI81 or vocant ground.
Molt It ,_ In! lnd 1111 • grotl bulldlna iile. Wallr and
_ . , II twlllb!o, Owner wll ftnonoe With • rouoilabte
do!on pay.-l
S10.100

H.E.C.

311 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614-1182-3524
1·22·'92-1 ...

POMEROY
Last markdown
on shoes
before closing
store.
OPEH FRI. &amp; SAt
10:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.

RACINE GUN
CLUB

C.JAYMAR
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

1211211 mo.

GUN SHOOT

GUN SHOOT

1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS

Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factoiy
Choke Only
9-6·11

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
. CONSTRUCTION

Call614·992-6637
St. Rt. 7
Chshire, OH.

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

1121tfn

WANTED

Facto~ Chk•

12 Gautt otgun Only
Slrldly Enlorcod
9-13-'91-tfn

I•N•·· · Home•

Low Grade Oak
Saw toys
$150 per ,00
Delivered To
,OHIO PALLET CO
Pom•roJ~ Ohio

614·99 •6461
1-7-92, 1

TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
USED RAILROAD TIES

HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER BACKHOE
and TAACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TAUCKING

FREE ESTIMATES

AACfjE-BeoutifuiH':~;~~:~=~~~

3 BR's, 2 fireplace a,~

has had ••cettent cera and must be saen to appreolatel
ASKING $53,900
NEW USTING· Pornoroy- ~ANTASTIO PRICE! On lhis 2
bkx:k home 6 rooms, 3 BA's, large front porch
baseman!, built in cabinets in DR. Large storage closets'
Home in goodconcjtion located on a paved street.$t9,soci

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 ar
742·2097

531 Bryon Plooa
M!ddloport, Ohio
l1114111n

NEWLiSTING-RRln•111211oorframehomewiBrooms ·
4SR's, carpet &amp; paneling, blown in inouletion, patio~ block
builcfng "/gu a electrical on a 65 • 119+ tot. A~KING
$21,000

RACINE . •'·

5wcetfl..,.t 5JN.efal

14 TANNING
SESSIONS .. s1400
Offer Good Thru
Feb. 14

AN ABSOLUTE""DOLL HOUSE"! Briel&lt; Ranch wl21ot1
fireplace• central --~-attic a lull basamanl 'could bli extra
roomo'. rront &amp; ..,. f)Orchel, garage w/storage. Good
locallon! ASKING $45,000
.
. ·
MIDDLEPORT· GREAT UTTLE VALUEI1 llhtory l&gt;ome
3 BR'I, fenced 1n yard, front porch, otorogil' building .,;
abundance or clooet space ASKING $19,500
IF YDU SEE aOMETH!NG THAT INTERESTS
YOU.. .sTOP JNI W&amp;'LL BE OLAD TO SHOW YOUI
PI!OVIDE fii'OIIMATION I ANSWER QUEITIONSt
NOW..JF YOU WANT TO lEU AND -NEED ASS!tiTANCE lit THE ABOVE SERVICES OIVE US ACALLI
WE'RE YOUR DO IT ALL REALTY CO.! · ·
tBRYI:CIIIliA-----·--·.HN1t1
111ACY-IMIR.-~-~--~---····.Iftl4•

.11AN1'1lllllt.L..----------·-·
Of'FicE
-----··v. .•. .,____...........IJII

BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER I
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS I
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llmeatone,
Dirt, Grevel and Coal
Ucenood ond Bonded

·• nd

r:•·
CALL 614-92·5 28 or
carport, fru

PH. 614-992-5591

12-5-tln

Nowln
Stock
• AIR CONDITIONERS • HEAT PUMPS atd
FURNACES FOR MOBILE &amp;DOUBLEWIDE HOMES

'
MOBILE HOME
BENNETT
.· . HEATING ·&amp;

949·2826

hcatlll 11 SaffGrd Scl!ool Rd. eH II. 141
. (614)446·9416or 1-800-872-5967.
4-26·91

YOUNG'S

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

OPEN 9 AM-9 PM
1-6·1 mo. d.

CARPENTER SERVICE
oom Addltioh•
ttor Work
-Eloc:klcll and Plumbing
-Roofing

-Interior &amp; Exterior

New Ho••• • Vl•yl Sidi•g
Hew Garages • Repl•e•••t Wi11dows

Roo• Additlo•• • Roofing

.

COMMD\C::IAL.end RESIDENTIAL
FREE ES'l1MATfS

PolnUng

(FREE ESTIMATESI

V. C. YOUNG II

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

992-6215

·

Pomeroy, Ohio

c

R&amp;C EXCAVATING

385-8227
12-11-1

FOREVER
BRONZE .

story

OWNER WANTS "SOLD" SIGN in lhe yard ol this 1974
Now Yorker Mobile homo wllh 5 rooms. 2 BA's, expando
and additional room bui~ on. Front &amp; rear porches. I car
garage .69 acre. ROOMY $16,500 mako an oflerl

2BR
FURNISHED
MOBILE HOME
RENTALS
Available in
COUNTRY MOBILE
HOME PARK
StorUng $235 ~., mo . .
nice
3B ,2

992·3838

J&amp;L
INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window ·
•Roofing
ofnaulatlon

Deli Fresh
Fried Chicken

MICROWAVES
VHSCAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

SIMON'S
PICK·A·PAIR

UoonotdlndBondtd~

OFFICE 1182-2886

"IN THE DELI·PASTIIY SHOPPF."
"RUNNJIII!. BACK Sl'fCIAL "

IIECULARL Y, UNSCENTED OR
WITH BLEACH

KraFt . .Ultfa Tidet
Miracle
WhiP oe..ergen
. !2«.
'(14-11 UNJ 4HS IU

LOCATED ON 1ST STREET, UNDER 111E
SHADLE BRIDGE IN POINT PLEASANT, WV.
WATCH FOR SIGNS.
WILL Bit SEILING 11IE TOOLS OF 111E
LATE RALPH MILLER FROIITIIE FORMER
EXXON STATION IN POINT Jll.I:ASANT, WV

8·1

205 North s.coiKl Ave.
Middleport, OH
II!DOLEPORT-Rutllnd SL·A nice 2 ba&lt;toom l2X60
mabie home siDing on t26X200 loL It ~ao a nice parch and
omal oulbuilcfng. • Was $15,000
- S13,500

REMOVAL
Pruning and Landsta~lng
Frot lslflla1tt"25YrL 2P;
Call aft• 6, ... -992-29 •
1113,1-. ..

10:00 A.M.

Real Estate General

IDUCh.ltlitoon 11.11~ acre lot that hu afantaot!c lliewol
lht countryoldt.
. $11,100

REGULAR OR LICHT

JANUARY 25, 1992

F&amp;A TREE TRIMMING &amp;

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

992·2269

.,,. .,. IJ!

Ingels hospitaijzed
Mrs. Goldie Ingels, Mason,
W.Va., has suffered from congestive heart failure and ·i severe heart
auack.
. She has spentBCveral days in the
. cardiac care · unit ~~ Veterans.
· ·Memorial Hospital and is currently
: in CCU at Mt. Carmel in Colum: -bus.
.
• .. Her condition has improved
• sliabOy and she would appreciate
• cards.
:
Her mailing address is: Mrs.
·• Goldie Ingels, Mt. Carmel West
; Medical Center, CCU Sth Floor
Room 33, 793 West Slate Street,
Cl)lumbus, Ohio 4 3212.

FROZEN FAT FI?EE YOCUtrr,
FAT FREE DESSERT OR

caret of Thanks

TOOL
AUCTION
SATURDAY

CONDITIONE~

-; -t .•
2... r gg,. 2,., r

MIDDLEPORT ·Rejoicing Life
Christian School at 331 North Second Avenue in Middleport will
hold a spaghetti dinner in the
scboollunchroom- on Friday from 5

t . ,,

U.S. GRADE A 14-l ·LB. AVC.i

. Premium Frozen Young s6:~1oo
orange Juice Turkey Breast 15-oz

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Au~iliary will sponsor a
·dance on Friday from 8 to 11 :30
p.m. at the post home with music
by C.J . and The Country Gentlemen. The public is invited to
attend.

..

12·Pak

12·oz. Cans

lb.

1

The Family Of
NOTICE OF
EDGAR
BREWER
APPUCATION
Public notice hereby to
Would like !o thank
given that Molgo Tranoeveryone tor their
portoUon Com pony hot filed
oupportand
with tho Public Ulllllleo
axpre11lono
of
Comml18lon of Ohio an
sympathy
alter
the
oppllcaUon for 1 Con ~oct
Motor Corrler Permit to
de.th ~ their fether/transport property •• 1
grandlether. We
Controct Motor Corrler for
especially want fo
Addington, Inc., 1431 U. s.
thank theefalt at
Route ·60, Aahlond, KenOVerbrook
Center,
tucky 41101. Applicant proVeteran• Memorial
poooo to un 35 truckt.
lnlorlllod portlot moy ob- .
Hoopftal and Dr.
loin further lnlormollon by
Manofleld for the
oddro11Jng tho Public Utilexcel lent cole given
11111 Comml11ion ol Ohio,
him dutlng hit long
Cofumbuo, Ohio 43266·
Jllne11.
Thanks to all
0573.
who 10nt flowere,
MEIGS TRANSPORTATION
cardi and called
COMPANY
8751 North State Route 7
during thlo time of
Cheshire, Ohio 45620 grief. A apec:lal thMkt
:
Appllcont
10 the friend• 1nd
· SANBORN, BRANDON,
Dorea~ nelghbore who
. -DUVALL&amp; VALENTINE
. provided our family ·
- CO., LP.A.
2515 Wool Gronvllle Rood
with to much
. Columbuo, Ohio 43235
wonderful food.
· Attornoya for APplicant
We deeply apprec late
:·(1) 15, 22, 28, 3tc
· !he cere given to
arrangemenlt for the ·
aervlce by Ewing
Funeral Horne and the
Rev. Kenneth Baker.
Your klndneu will
alwayabe
remembered.

DIET COKE,

RUTLAND - The Leading '
Creek Conservancy District will ·
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the i
office . The public is invited to
attend .
'

· • · The Meias County Veterans
; .Service Commisiion will meet
; ·Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Veter~z 4Jll Service Office in _Pomeroy. ,

.05/ day

Clrr.~sifit•tl IIIIJ{t '.~ mt•t•r t/11•

OAV BEFORE PUBLICATION
11.00 A.M . SATURDAY
2 00 P.M . MONDAY
2 .00 P.M . TUESDAY '
2 .00 PM . WEDNESDAY
2 :00PM . THURSDAY
2 QO PM . FRIDAY

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tup: pers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
· · will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Sixth year anniversary will be
observed and the Auxiliary will
serve food after the meeting. All
members are urged w attend.

\

$1 .30/ day

In Mem01y

J

Business Services

MIDDLEPORT - Meigs Local
Chapter 17, Ohio Association of
Public School Emplovees. will
meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at Meigs
Junior High School.

.

.60

S13.00

2

Farm Suppll•!o
&amp; LI V1.SIDI:k

Re al Es tale

stamps

REEDSVILLE - The Riverview
: Garden Club.will meet at 7:30 p.m.
on Thur~day night at the home of
·· -Frances Reed. Delores Frank and
Janet Connolly will provide the
program about birds, and Grace
Weber and Gladys Thomas will be
assistant hostesses.

'

.42

C1rd of Thanks

lor truon. hrsl day ad 1uns n1 papor1 . Call bt!lore 2 00 p m

POMEROY - BeUes and Beaus
Western Square Dance Club will
• hold a special dance on Thursday
· from 8 p.m. to II p.m. at Royal
Oak Resort with national caller
Gary Shoemaker from Tennessee.
All western style square dancers
are invited.

I }

$9.00

1

Empl oyment
Ser v1ces

claU1hud ~~~play _ Bu,iruJSs C;~rd omd h.'IJ&lt;II !'Oiic"l
Wtll ;tl'o appear "' the Pt Plc&lt;tSant Rfl{JISttH 1nd the Galli·
pt~h Dally Tubunu. reachmg owur 18.000 1\on\1!'5

POMEROY - The regularly
scheduled board meeting of the
Meigs County Library Board will
be held on Thursday at I p.m . at
the librarY.

·vsc to meet

.20
.30

ol ad co st

c ept

MIDDLEPORT - The Mei$s
County Women's Fellowship w1ll
hold its monthly meeting at Bradford Church of Christ on Thursday.
The public is invited.

~

.

·
' Sllllltnult' not nt~pon11ble !Of tllf015 ;~h'er first day . !Cht!dl

MIDDLEPORT - The Middle- port Fire Deparunent will hold its
: month in-service training on Thursday at 7 p.m . The session will
cover auto extrication. All mem. bers are urged 10 auend.

I

16

Ann ou ncemen ts

OV4)r 15 Words

$4.00
S6.00

R.teSIJO ler conMc:utiveruns. brokenupd.-,sw•llbech•ged
lor uch d., liS sep•~te •ds
.

•••

RACINE - The Racine. American Legion Post 602 Auxiliary will
meet on Thursday evening at the
legion hall at 7 p.m.

•

15
15
15

3
6
10

Rate

'Rectmrtt $ .50 di~countlor ;~dt paid 1n adv illl CI:I
Give1way and Found ads under 15word• will b-:

THURSDAY
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
·. Alumni Association will meet on
. · Thursday at 7 p.m. at Dairy Queen
· : Brazier. All interested alumni are
• welcome to .attend.

o

15

1

'A da5s1l1od a..tvertiSttllllltlt pl;tc ctl u1 The Dally Stml1nul !e•

:
•
:
'

Words

Davs

'Free ads

;~:s~~wp;,;:~~FR CO. ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY. JAN. T9. THROUGH SATURDA Y

- . POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
·. Beta will meet at the Episcopal
Parish House at 6 p.m. on Thursday. Bring a sack lunch. Dessert
will be provided.

The Dally

lito Su•day Calls)
12(,11111\ 1

1M 4·'1111&lt;

DK's FARM TOYS
by ERR
Displayed al The

Quabty Print Shop
.

·J&amp;L BLOWN INSU
,.

~

I

H'OURS:

8:30 em-4:00 pm

614·992·3394
· orCall ' ·
742·3020 Eveill1nlt
12·2·81·1 mo•

MASTIC®THE NATION'S
FINEST
.
.
REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

"'""""''"-.....
-llll-bll&lt;r..,-..
-""""'"'........
oCIIII1IID. flHD 1 ,....... I

•

.

-~.

~--

.....

--

. -~--,

.......

�1992
Ohio

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlpt ·

Annou ncernents

3

Announcements

71

• • l1k1 OPAL llbl..s 1nd E·

Yop dlrtllc. Avolloblt II Frulh

Dnlg.

Giveaway .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
112 Acr., Flat, On At. 2, Nonh Of
Point Plusanl, Stpllc Sylltm,
Electric Hook-up And Wllltr.
Ready For Mobllt Home. French
Chy Mobllo HomH, 614-4469340, 1-1(10.231-4467.
Loti for salt, trailers accep-

toblt. 304-675-2122.

Rt.141, 8 Miles From Galllpolla, 2
Story Log Cabin, 14 Acres, 7

HAV&amp; !(IDS ~ Hf.1£Dff~

•

After &amp;p.m.

ONewa

(!) Vldlo

6

Lost &amp; Found

Found: B11gle, Rt.325, BetwHn
Alo Grandi And VInton. Coll1r,
No T1g1. 614·24S-5497.

Loat : Bltck And Whitt Bu_.
Hound VIcinity: At.175, Raccoon
County PaM!:, On Taylor Road,
Has Brown Collar, With Tags,

Ani\Qrt To Namt:
Rewardl614-446-9503.

Cleo,

LOST; brdwn &amp; while Nmal•

Bugle, Rodmond Rldgo back ol
Hend1rson, belongs to Elm11r

Kapp, NOll Rd, Pl. Pll.

Yard Sale
~

ALL Yard Salet Must Be Paid In

Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
the day blifort lht ad Is to run.
Sunday tdlllon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00

p.m. Stturday.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction
Rick Purson Auction Company,
lull llmt auctlonur, complete
auction wvict. Llctnstd Ohio,

Wnt Vlrglnit, 304·173-5785.

9

Wanted to Buy

Wanted lo buy old tube radios,
Junkers or mint eond, big
monty for some models mada
beto,. 1942. Phone Chuch 304-

882-2220.

41 Houses for Rent

Top Prlceo Pold: All Old U.S.

Z bedroo.m homt, bath, kitchen,

Colna, Gold Rings, Sliver Coins,

dining-area, large llvlngroom,
basament, 1 mile out Sand Hill

Gold Colna. M.l.S. Coin Shop,
151 Second Avenue, Gl lllpolla.

Rd. 304-675-2272.

Would Like To Buy UHd T•n·

nlng Bod. Coli Aft11 Sp.m. 614·

2 Bedroom Houu, Deposit And
Aeferance R•qulred. No Pets.

446-G929.

814-448-4879.
2·3 bdrm houst, S2851 monthly,
caii614·9B5·3997
Small 2br House In Galllpolls.

Employment Services
11

Help Wanted

S4oo WHkly, SluHing Err- 12

Situation·
volopao At Homo. Ruoh StOO
Wanted
$350/DAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE S.A.S.E. 110 DIA Suppllto, P.O. :;:-:,,...-,,.-,,--- -:--:-Box 1443, Fairborn, Ohio 45324. Call: Gnlltmln nHds homt
.CALL YOU.
and htlp with some houuhotd
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
Pay Off ThoH Chrlatmll Blllt! dutltt. Will pay r1 nt. 814-448·
1-800-255-0242.
Eam Extra Cash Proc111lng -sa 11 N A
PI
C 1
--;;::;;::;;~;;:;-;:;;;:i:::;;;:---

AVON • All lrNI, Call Mtrllyn Mall. Bt Your Own Boll. FrH
Information And Application.
Wtlvtr 304-a82·2645.

Back.

o nswer

1811

al

Send Long SASE: Musklngum
lm- Area Putillthlng, Box 8151, 14
Business
mtdlatttyl
No
Experlenc:a Zlntsvlllt, Ohio 43702.
\
Training
Necti Ary.
Procus
FHA
Mortgagt Ratundt. Work At Pomtro~
Nurelna
And A.trlln
NowlllSouthNtttm
Home. Calll-405·321-3084.
Rthlbll ation C.nttrlt Accept- Buslnn• Collo-, ~·n~ VolloX
lng APilllcatlons For Pan·Timo
~
"
Attention! Eam $300. to $500. LPN. Rototlng Shih Available. Plaza. Call Today, 8
4 -43!71
wMidy reading bookt at home. Solory BaNd On Ytart 01 Ex· Rogllloratlcn IIIIHI5-1214B.
ADDRESSERS

Fullfptl1·timt,

WANTED

guar~ntMd

p•ltnct.

Excellent

B1ntlll

paychockl 1-501-4114"·1000 txt Package.
Call
Carol 18 Wanted to Do
478.
Kanawalsky, AN, DON For Inter- :;;;;;-;;::;:::::;:-::~~:-::-:-::""7
vltw At &amp;14-992-6606, EOE.
Will Babyth In Mr Home. Rod·
AUSTRAliA WANTS YOU
nty AI'N. Rtfertncts Available.
E•c•llent
Pay,
Bentflta, Quality Care 1-iomt IV Sarvlc11 Colt 814-245-!!887.

407·292-47117,
Trantpor1atlon,
E11.
571. 9a.m.-10p.m. Toll
Rafundld.

51

gr.::.'¥.1!1~ SteiiO. 1:;.1
WI-lEN YOU'RE
D~IN6, '(OUR. '
HET6ETCOLD

I TI-HWK M'f BLANKET
IS

TOO SJ.!ORT..

Now

Accepting

Appllcllions

From Rtglaterld Nurs11 lnler·
el1 td In Tht Position 01 Homt
Infusion

Coordinator.

Ap-

DRIVERS
pllcanla Must 81 Rectivtd By
Earn To -$610 Wklr, Will Train January 27, 1992. 101 E11t Main
Stvtrtl OQtnlngs Also Pl. 1· StrH~ Ook Hill, OH 45858, 614·
800-231-7&lt;157.
882~&gt;30 EOE.

Dozer work, reasonable ra111,

3 ·bad room houu In 'country,
one mill from Maaon, $250. pn
mo, daposll required, 304 -~

5332.

bedroom
house,
Mlldowbrook Addn, ,405 Cedar

3

Sl, 304-875-3753.

3br 2 Baths, FP, OW, CA,
$475/mo. Dtposlt Requlrtd, 614·
446-4222, or EVInlngs : 614-446·
2174.
3br

Home
In Mtrearvlllt.
Reference And Deposit. 614-446·
1158.

3br Ho1.111 For Atnl, O.posh
And
R1terenc:ta Required,
Loava Mn11g1 On Answering
Machine. 614..C46..aoD2.
3br, 2 balhl, Northup, Hannan
Trace District. 814·256-1168,

304-675-7104.
E l ATREE SERVICE. Topping,

Small

Trimming, Trea Remov11, HMtgt
Trimming. FrH Esllmtttsl 614·

Carpeted,

36H115T.
Gtorgn Portable Stwmlll, don't
hauiJ:: loat lo the mill Jut!
75·1~57.

call

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

References Atqulrtd. 614-24'·

9375.

Untumlah~

Houst

3

Roomo, Both, Air Condhl~
Ora~rill, Scr
Porch, Prlvato Parking, 614-4462602.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Mise Pault's Oty Car• Centar.
Safl, attordable, chlldcar1. M·F
6 t.m. • 5:30 p.m. Ag11 2~10.
Before, afttr school . Drop-Ins
walcomt. 614-446-8224. New ln-

2236,114-4411-2581.

beginning organ 1111ons n my
home, prtllr studenta, 10 and

home. Clean, good locaUon.
614-446-0130 btlwatn 5 &amp; 9:30

tant Toddler Cort, 614-44H221.
Plano lesaont, all leveltl ond

over, Abblt Stratton, 614·992·
6103

2br Mobllt Home On Ltrge
Private lot, $215/Mo. S.curfty
O.poall, Ralertncn. 114-446All

p.m.

tltetrle

untum.

mobile

·~

Now 14ft mobllo homo, SIH per
month
lnclu~na lot mrtal, with
Will Do HouH Cltanlng And ,
compJete Htu£oo_~r1·
Oftlct Cltanlng, Experlanctd. delivery,
lng, and atepe, call 1
.,.

8t4-4411-m5, 8M-441-tT11.

Ci\C&gt;tl?H

Financial

6625

44

· Apartment
for Rent

Business
Opponunlty

2 bedroom 1pts In Point
PIN11nl1 modernL~~tln, Hud
ICCipiiCI, 114-446-zzoo.

INOTICE!

OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
rtcommandt thai you do bull·

2br F..nlohtd, $2251mo. 458
second Avonuo, Golllpotlo.
security Dtpotlt, Roflrtncao.
114-44&amp;-2238. 114-4411-2581.

tha oH•rlng.

Avonuo, In Clalllpollo. 114-4411822t

21

nttt whh PlOP'~ you know and
NOT to aend monty lhrough Ihe
mtll until you tlavt lnvtt11galtd

Aptrtmanl For Rent, On First

I'm Involved wHh some bual·
nne peo~t In a markatlng net·
won. We re wanting to expand
In this tl'lland ,,. fooklng for •
butlneta mindtd plrtntr who It
inttf'Nttd In a HCondary In·

como. For oppt. call Grog, 614·
7&lt;12-2157
VENDINQ ROUTE: Got Rich
Quick? No Woyl Bul Wt Hovo A
Good, Study, AHordablo. Bull·
nt11. Won'f Last

VEND.

J•lace your clflssilied ad lotlay!
15 wonls m· ~ess, 3 days,
3 papers,$6:oo

upright

SWHper,

$125. 301~75~119.
Kenmort
Waaher,
'71;
Whl~pool Waohlr Woo $150, Cul
To $125; Whirlpool Wtthtr Waa
$125, Cut To

S9S: G.E. W11htr,

Llkt Now, Woo $171, Cui To

$1!50;

Kenmo,. Washtr!Drytr

Sot, A Bargoln At 175 Each. G.E.
Dryor Woo $125 Cvt To $95;
Whirlpool D~r, Now 595; Frost
FrM

At

trltor,

Slr.o: Porlable llllldtd chong•
ab 1 llttar algn Alt. FI'M lilt·
torldollvsry. Plutlc 1111tro
$47.50 box, 1.-355-$453.
Thr1110 Fl. 8 1 - lflllora,
Uttd 1 Ytar, $50 APilei, Excel·
lent Condition, 814-3417--0401.

Squire One

55

$85;

Ntw!Uaed

ll'lund, vat

c~ktd,

304475-

Houllhold tumllhlng. 112 mi. 2193.
Jtrricho Ad, Pt. PINNnt, WV, elondt and whho Cockor
colt 301-175·1450.
Spaniel, male, 7 wkl old, $100.
301~75-641111.
RENT20WN
114-446-3158
Fl1h Tank, ·2413 Jacklan A'(e.
Vl'ra Fumhura
Point Pluunt, 304-875-2083,
Solo I Choir, $11.10 WHk; lull
llno Tropical flohl blr&lt;lo,
Recliner, $5.47 WHk. Swival lmlll •nlmtll and auppl n :
Rocker, $3.83 WHk.lunk Bid
Compltle 18.41 W•k, 4 DraWIIr Pan Colllo pupploo, black &amp;
ChiOl, 13.21 W11k; Pooler Bod· whlto, $5.00ta, In ordto to got
room Suho, 7 pc., $11.67 Wttk, mommy opaytd. 614·1&lt;12·3118
lnctUdll Btddlng.Counlry Pint
Dlnano Wllh Bench 6 4 Cllatro, fi1
Musical
StUB W..lc.OPEN: Mondor
Thru Sotur&lt;lay, lll.m. to 6p.m.,
Instruments

1-800.284·

EA"•",e
Ill .• f.:..~
stereo

ii)MacQ

l' /.L CHfCjc, lilT ' .t f&gt;ON''r

g..

.i• , 'rHtf'I/C. Wf MAVl'

.' .

., TMf CHATfAU~fi'IANf&gt;
:, . IOU9VfTif~~f
~TOI&gt;Ay.

ta87 Ford R_r_Shoop. S21QO.

304~71-2457.

• ,,,~ ....~
..,_ ._.

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
!!, ~. 1&gt;8,

sharp looking, 304-ztlt)-A:t&lt;~.

.'1.- - - - - - - - - - ll.- - - - 4. _ _ _ _ __
12. _ _ _ __
~
1.1. _ __ __
·'·----------------------6. _ _ __ __ _ 14. _ __ __
.7._ _ _ ___:__ 15.._________._

"·------

446-2342 675~1333 '
992-2156
~-

..

~:.:.-L,w~ Cllfldten
~wtHour
•
1111 Wheel F-na Q

0 • Family F.ud
Gil Be 1 Sllr StereO.
taCtonflre
7:35 Good Tlmla
1:00
Coltlgt Blllltllbllll
Mars~l at West VIrginia (L)
(I) I!J) • The Elv!a
Conaplrecy Host Bill Bixby
e•amlnes lite clrcumottnces
surrounding the singer's
dealh. (2:00)
(I) Collaill lltlltefbllll Ohio
Slate at l.linnesote (L)

m

National ~plllc

e

EEKANDMEEK

ii5 UniOIVICI Mytttrte•

Pollee believe a woman was
relrllterafed alter she was
killed. Stereo. Q.
iiJ Mllldlf, She W!Oie Q
Gil Tile Olllfna: Short StOrflo
Larry GaHin and lite Gatiln
Brothel'1 present home video
footage lrom their music
lours. (1 :00) Stereo.
8PrlmtNtwaC
R - (Pl 3 Of I) (2:00)

7WA'r'

&amp;u.'r'-UP

8

5P£CIALS

•-ion

1:05 ~VIE: The Amlf) '-"e

(RI (2:25)
1:30 (I) WO!Idlr Yean Kevin
pursues a ~lrl despite his
O!lfBCIIOII. (R) Slereo.

e

lift"'"•
W,.,. You BRig SerVId?

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
t 1VEtSOrA

'lrOWI..D 'rCI..IR NOTHSRS
ei6TER BE 'rQJR

QLJ5STJON

Benny ha&amp; a crush on his
(Pl 2 ot 2) Sttreo.

. F;-4..lv\C05 F"a&lt;

'AUNrANT"~

R:lRYOI.J,

Serv1ces

IIIIC.Brooktynlriclgt

AN"re ARE I-JOT'

~asmafe.

'THEIR SENSE

i

lltlite of ... hOpll
Interviews, debates and
analysis leading to lite
Prealdent"a State of lite
Union Atldreaa. (0:30)
9:00 (!) Arnericllt l'llyllouM A
marature profeaaor fall! In
1\lra wilh a betutlfullllren.

OF~.

ANT.

Lloyd

Home
ImproVements

.... . ......
. (((

-

(f e

Doogll Ho-r. M.D.

Coogle axomlnes a

'

BARNEY
WHAT AILS
YOU,
PAW?

ND WONDER II

I NEED ME
A UTILE
CHANtSEII

ALL

YOU DO

IS

PLAY CARDS EVER'
BLeSSET NIGHT!!

WEST

THAT'S
WHA1 I NEED
TH'CHANGE
FER!!

~~r~:f

mummy. Stereo.
C!l Nlflonll
~!~~*~Stereo.

111

ceJM•

EAST

+z

t76H

•as

•usu

•JBs

.Q1052

t K7 Z

+AJBI

.

SOUTH

.KQJI
.AKQJIO
4176

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder

On today's deal, the declarer felt SHill
Well
Eul
p.,.
Paa
confident that the defenders wouldn't I •
Pw
Paa
find the best play. He was wrong ·and · Z+
Pw
Paa
went down when an alternative line I +
p.,.
Paa
would have left the .opponents power- S •
Pass
Puo
6
less to defeat lbe slam.
.
+
Cover the East-~t cards and plan
Openi~t~lead: • 7
the play in siJ: spades, West leading
the spade seven. U the trumps break$-,
"incluclhilargve 12 easy tric!&lt;"' five spade~ " '-ly-,-at_tri
___ck-lhree
--dec:-:la-re_r_l:-ecl-:-a~tlla::-'·
11
two ruffs), frve hear~ and mood to the 10 and king. DeclaN.r was
So you win lbe first trick In hoping to ruff a diamoatl in fl:aad draw
and cash a second top trump, but trumps and nm the hearll. Honm-,
Ioo~!ilt,dulSCO'e' rds a club. How do you East switched to a heart, cattlllc de.North correctly respo·ndecl two d1"a· 'clarer's communications. Now be
'couldn't come to 12 triclll.
·
1~~~ not one spade. Since be had Instead of trying to take the ruff iii
1e
strength to force to game, he band, declarer obould have taken a
longest suit first. After revers- .ruff in the dummy. AI trlcir. three, be
ing, South bad nothing to add, so he ihould bave wheel the A·K of clubs.
setllecllor l011r spades. Then.tP,&gt;eue- "l'bell be follows with lbe A·K of
· made it clear to Soutlttllit North hearts, dlacardinl dummy's club los.had neither the diamond king nor the er. The club ollie 11 ruffed with the
Holding the key singleton, South ·spade ace, lbe lrtllllfll are drawn and
the slam.
.
the llearts cashed lor 12 lricb.
When the hand was played original·
e~---••=•

-

The World Almanac:® Crossword Puzzle
~

ACROSS

39 Largo knife

40 Give oH

1 ActorO'Neol
5 Econ.
lndlcllor
8 Bumo
12 Own
13 Etnlt,

fum ..
42 Wily
43 Reagan'•
dough tor
46 Aectlvt
49 Chrlatmat
C•ol
character
50 Judgn
54 ElCHoiYI
lon of 1111
57 Wandtr
58 Aclro11
Martha59 PhontUc:
aymbol
80 Singer Jerry

m"nle,

minty,14 Bralnatorm
15 TJI)Iofworm
18 Lacking ..,
'
11r for mualc
18 Conductor
- PrtYin
20 GtnaUcm•
lariat (tbbr.)
21 Famtll word
22 Shlp'o crow
25 Large
tntalope
28 llachlnt gun
H Sltln opening
33 Expou to air
35 HI~ In
bfllllnfl
36 Arllll Vtn 37 Stdenllry

81 Kind of
ch82 Aclroll Ruby

2A~~~edolt

3 Enlhtllllltllc

4c-tcloH

83 GrtHtd,ln
htrtldry

5UKUMt
8Chlclten IOtip
7 Typt Of Htg
8 Mtkt lrH
I IIVtllgll

DOWN
1 Ottrlch

.

...

Fllmlln Jakl comt1 to ll1e
aid of il shoplceeper whO Is
\lllllled by a gang. Sltreo.

ii 8al~feld Jerry regrtll

encouraging Elaine 10 move

~ h_
Ur bulidlng. (R) Stereo.

· GJ MOVIE: AN You

~ Tonigl!t (2;00)

re~~~"='-=eoLMy tung U..l

buy, anti/or
Gllllo County on
Pllcad In tho 20'1.

~~~

t30 (I). Anything lui Love Tile

Mobile Homes
for Sale

staH i1 iJIKP'IHd lo leam
wllal to do to ma~e the relationship LEO (JW, D-Aug. 22) Rotallons can
C.tlleriLaa 1pou11.
' work. Mall $2 plus a long, self--ad· · sub,lanllatlylmproved today with an
Slli'IO.
dressed, a1ampad envelope to Malch· dlvldual who haa ne- 11.-n too
0 light
Mao tries to
maker, clo lhls newspaper, P.O. Box po/Jive ot you In the past. Take ach•an--1
11m extra money by polling
91428. Clevtltnd. OH 4410.1·3-428.
tagi of your opportunlly lo tum
an underwear ad. Stereo.
• PISCES (Feb. 20--Mirch 20) If you're adversary Info • lrlend.
required lo make a decltion loday lhal '111100 (Alii. ZS.SepL
BERNICE
10:00 (I). 0 au.ntum LNp
BEDEOSOL aflacta a close lrlend , bend your think· find yourlllf In a position
Sam bl&lt;:ornal a llllvlllon
lng a bll to 1111 In lhlslndlv!dual'a lavor you can share
rtllOI"IIr. coveri!!Q • 111111
rather Ihan make an obj«:Uvo ·vidual Who
kliltr.
Sllreo. Q
judgment
lion. 11 m11y
(J)Newl
.
ARIES (Mirch 21·April11) You should prolll, bill I
(I) (I). Cfvl Wilfl A
be ablelo gel along qulle well wllh ofh· ~liRA
woman lUll IW h!Jibattd tor
ora today, pr~ competitive· ele-- eaaary
Mlllng lnformltioiiiO
·menta aren't lltowed to enter the pic· o,. a
llbloldl. SinO. C
lure. EQoe coold be eallly brultMid, :done In any
. (l) I"Ndwlclt ....1:Mmattd
- ·Inc= yours.
• •anlmoally.
... ... NIIIOPIIft
(Aprll:.llq20)Yourpoael- .. ICOIIPIO(OcLit No•.ll)ll'tbeottor
. ,TA
i.lndlclpl WliiiCt
_. ·blllll~ lor deriving mllerlll blnelltt you to follow your humanelnat!ncta toFredii1Cic Law Olmaled .
lram other than your UIUIIIOU!qiiOOk 1d11y rtUw than :be vlndlc:tlve. E- H
CtWIId ,.., 2.000 parfcl
....,_ 21, 1811
.
. good todlly. FOflunafel)l, though, you .your -~• )ual, the . . .no_,.,
~ ... Unltld StatM.
._
coold aloo reep gllnolhrough your CU8- Worth lilt qullh.
,
There II a poalbfllty you might makea · 1011111Y a.,rtnell.
.
'IAGITTAIIIUI (llo¥. 11--D1o. 11) A
illlrltln prolaaiCII!alli In
rjltjor chMae 1n lhB ~ lltMd. , m 1 ,.., 11...,_ 301 Cfthlrt 101111 . 'c1oee lrfelld m1gttt be In naed
You could 1111• alflkl while your 11"111 1 do y(!Uf bidding today, provldld you fig·.' .moriiiUpport todly. Hyou truly bellow. 1
~ with a bHutlfullllt'en.
glltallnd ltllnll can bl. utKIHd to youl 'uti out 101111 Wily tor tltlm to lhn or . In tNo lndlvldull anc1 wanl to mtka ..,
110ur1 Thl
~~-=
1l) You're · 1'pertldplte In wfllt you hope to gel.- lmplct, don"t do lhlngo perflllly. Go 111
AQU
.
,_....._ Hepplly, you'H Dt In a rether generoua . .file
blllll- ...
llltlly to haW 1ft elllremei)IIIYIIy ••......-- ·' mood.
.
, ,
1N1n. 1t) An
nllfon todlly.ln file morning, you mlglll CAHcu (JuM
22) "l1*lgt ·
li
;:
be 1 trflle ntlgiiiYe, but -.IIIW· lhOuld OQ amootNy tor you todlly, pro- · ·KJIIlov.
,_.,, you'H bltiiOM apllmlltla; pollllvl .~ yoU put your frutl In lndlvfdUIII . 1ng ~
{lltlfiiUC cllltd. TfY!liO to peldl liP • ·whO hive~ ~r l'!lll..,.llty In the pmctp~e~
lbllllcln t'0111111101?. The ~ ' put. H oometfllng lan"l brolcen. don't . reputation.
~ 01111 help )IOU" undlrltooN bOIIW to fix~ ·~ ,

8

1

r.1e rc lr&lt;~ 11 cl1·, f'

•

Sie~,.'il

Spacltl Slereo.
(I) DlrtoHunl leading
paleontolOgist uses fhe
Sinclair family aa an
example. Stereo. C
Ill 0 . DIYII RiJeo
Dwlghl goes to great lengths
to tlleet an attractive
~rleader. (1'11) Sttreo.

Ranch style home, 3 bedroom•,
2 full btlha, HI In ldtchan,

32

I·H .

(I)

(!)

1114.

2, _______________ 10 _ _ _ _ __

PHILLIP

assume
misdefense

!Jl!w,
Enle!llllnment Tonight

w.

1984 Chavy elalor, Sllvorado

31 Homes for Sale

9·-----:-----,-

To--~ ....VEs

pacbgt, auto 305 enalnt 4

iocotlon, f3U95. ~-3818.
Cralt Modulora: Now lo Tho
Tlmo To Buy. Many Sino And
Floor Plano Avallabto. Sta At
Fronch Cfty Mobile Hom11, Gil·
llpollo, Olf 614-446-9340, t-800231-4417.

tQI065S

ALOER

7:05 (J) Mlllde ·
7 30
'
t:~j

1-IWI

.7

Connecticut al Providence (L)
GIMoM)Iflna
-1111 The Wallont

dll!lng . roo'!', atlchtd gortgo,
loettid
unlverSIIY ~ Lant,
166,500. 30M71-11:1Z .. 175-

I .___ _ _ __

c

:ht

NORTH

tA •IO 13
tAKI

C Cologt llilillbiiR

cond, $1,100. -

aero, garbage plck·up, cny
water, cablt op11onat, good

PRINT NUMBE RED LETTERS
IN THE SE SQUARES
·

BRIDGE

Ill Leglallllvl u~

1181 Cualom dtl~ao Chevy
lruck, IIIII ton w~h 1-r. 8 cyt,
lllandanl llhlft, edr11 tlr-, rune

4 bHrooma, hilt baeement, 1

you would rather

_ . SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
•·&gt;~
Vandal • Stung • "lbuth • Heckle • CHANGE
Drivers ar.e "!de and generally unkind. I've always
WO"&lt;!ered ~hy it's always the guy 4 cers behind you
who rs the. first to see tba.liqht CHANGE.

(() • c.;Ml C.men

mlltlgo,1o4-1115-3N7.
1178 tnltJnatlorral dump kuck,
3114-47WNB.

3 Unit Atrial, Shuated On 1f2
Acr11 LDt 1Maintenance FrH, Excellent Shipe, .1w..t46-1568:

Ovetheard it 1ec1un1 at our
1oca1 college: "Wiadoin 11111e
o reweld you get from life for Ill·

Mlc"!"jl;lh..... .

1178 Ford XLT. 11184 Fonl EICOil

81

~~
1

. , UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO "I
GET ANSWER .

.ms:tltlon 11 .

.,_d

Two maNI tnd ant 2 '/r old
con, 304-175-JIIIIt.

8

The ...lfereoil~

".sso;

614 441 4151 Or Sta
Bleko.

' .

;.....;;lr.'~l--1
Complate tho chucklo qliolod
· ' ---'·-'· __,_-'-·__._.___,
by llopllling In lht milling wordo
you d!Wa
from """ No. :f bolow.

m

aher 5pm and wllktnd1

11184 Jttp Chorolcat, 4 Wholl
D~vt. l14 141 38611.
1988 Ford Club Wogan, HanSunday 12 Noon Till 5p.m. 4
dicapped EquiPI&gt;fd With Whtll
Mil" OH Routt 7 On Routt 141, Eplp/lona Glbton oltdrfc till Chair Uft. Can Ba SHn At ~~
In Centenary.
iolultar, lne thin yqr old, Stcond Avonuo, Galllpotla,
ohapo, 1350. 304-182· Ohio.
Slda-oy..lde
relrtgeralor,
81.
-.ltctrlc double oven ltovt,
19811 S.tO Blalor 4•4l blue, 5$250. taCh both $410. after 5:00
tPNd, Ilk 15,000, cal 814-liSPll, 301~75-5593.
4412
Farm Supplies
SWAIN
74 ""'torcyctes
&amp; Livestock
AUCTION &amp; FlJ RNITURE. 12
Olivo Sl., Galli polio. Now &amp; Uttd
1910 Ytmtha WIJTior 4 Whotlor,
furniture, he11e,., Wntem &amp;
Work booto. 614-4411-31511.
350 ~ Motor,
...
cludtd;
Httmtl,- I tt , And
61
Farm Equipment
VI'RA FURNITURE
Kidney Batt. $1,100, "Uara: 114814-446-3158
5000 Ford 01-1 Traclor, 448-a:lll; Evtnlngo: 114-:1711UVING ROOM: Solo I Chair, $5,850; loti Model 4000 Fora 2715.
S111.00L Rocllno~~ SMI.OO; With Loodor.
11111 Morltl
SWivtl HOCkar, fll.uo; CoHat I Stock Tralllr, 11,895. 0... Will 75 Boats &amp; Motors
End Tablll, $81.00 Sot.DININO Flna-lt4-2Btl~522.
ROOM: Table With 4 Padded
lor Sale
Cholrt, $141.00; Couni'I Pint 1ft. Lacutl - .. 614-~30612 ft tlbtJQtosa seart fan boat,
Dinette With Boneh nd 3
·Cholro1• UII.OO; Molchlng 2 FamHIIauper IITA, Farm...lll, $175. 30~2711.
Ooor HMch $348• Or 16611.00 Farm..ll aub with auHivator,
hom ploW and bltda, 12ft Y bottom boll, 15ft troltor,
set; Ook Tobie, 42il2 WMh I
4hp Evtnrucla motor, trotting
low
BaCII.
CMirl, 114 . . 3513
h28.00.BEDROOM: Potter Bod- Jlm'o Fa_rm Equlpmlnl, SR. 35, malor, Ml..ota, 304-875-}113.
.room SuMo (5 pc.), $341.00; 4 Wool Qolllpotlt, ,614-4411-1777; 76
Auto Pans &amp;
Drawer Chnt, 544.95; Bunk Willa
naw &amp; Ultd tann
Bod, 12211; Comploto Full Man lractO&lt;I &amp; lmpt~~nontt.
Buy,
Accessories
!'11 $105.00 Sit; 7 pc. Collar 1111, trldt, B:00-5:00 wttlcdayo,
totaroom Suitt, SB91.00.0PEN: Sol. lilt Noon.
s
- T.. -iont UHd a
Monday Thru Saluodar, la.m. to
robuTh, otonlng tt SH; Aulo
6p.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till Wanted : U1td firm ~lpmenl , Porto. 614-245-5177, 114-37115p.m., 4 MIIH Off Roult 7 On anything yau want to stll. 814- 2283.
Roult 141 In Ctnttnary.
254·1308, &amp;14·251-8040 Antr
lp.m.
Now gu lanko. body pa~o, one
ton ln.tck Whltla, raclstDI"tt,
52 Sportl ng Goods
11- m~~r Me. D I R Aula,
Livestock
Ripley, "'· 304-372·3933 or t'
4 StMrl And 2 Halflro. Slmmon- 800~73-1585.
tol Crot~,IM-241-5515.

1

r
. ,'-.-r.C. ,A,. .N~K,;.;K,.- .~1"'1
~1
.......__..__,_---L....JT U L I E D Il:~ng ~n
G
I1--,,,:----'rl-"-rl

T:OOIJl•

Ahlr 2p.m.IM-44W243.
1178 F-too truck, tM-841-28811

whtol d~vs, V-1,

LAUDON

I /I I I

1:35 (I) Jellenono
OIWheetofFOJtuna

Chevy PU, 'V2 Ton. Call Anyllmt

~~

~mplo words.

nNCI

Special Edl~on .

Our lnltant Tax

IJ:C

TV Stereo.

.·

· ~1:::;:1;:;I~F~I

all New Zono Stereo. .Q

Rotund, El- Homo Contor,
114-m-1220.

cond.

I

Ill Spot1ICtltter Super Bowl

AU For Paul.

dielel, good

low to form four

iiJ 8coobf Doo

1973 Chivy, PU, 314 Ton; 1982

Whirlpool At goroiOr, Copper· Block, brick, HWir Dlpes, ·win·
lona, Woo $195, Cvt To $110; 20 dowa, lintels, •tc. Claude Win·
Inch Goo Range, $15·1t 3G Inch tort, Rio GJando, OH Call 614·
Eltclrfc Rongo, Wh o, $85. 245-$121.
Skaggo AppRanc11, 114-4467311, 1-1110-411-341111.
56 Pets for Sale
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
~==:-::=::-:=~
Comptoto honw tum~l~i:· Groom and Supply Shop-Pot
Hourt: lion-Sol, 1-5. 1
Grooming. AI bfttdo, ttyltl.
0322, 3 mllol ou1 BuiiYIIII Rd. lama Pol Food Dulor. Julio
Frtt Dollvtry.
Wobb. Colt 614-441--0231.
AKC roglltorad lllnol ..o Oach·
PICKENS FURNITURE

-0 four
Roarrongo loltoro of lht
ocromblod worcfo · be-

• Andy Orlllltll

72 Trucks for Sale

Building
Supplies

lojllo4

D. CBS Newa 1:;,1

;

o-.

Abo~

'::~:t:~' S(C\\~lA-~£~s·
lor ClAY I. P011AM __;;.,.- - - -

"' 1s I I I

nc...... ij

3'1 ,000 lllln, $4,000. For Mort
lnt01matlon Coli 114-441-2342
Aak

'iit PQA Tour

Ill World Totllly
1111 Aln 1J!! T1n, K·l Cop

m.....
~ ild,~~reo. 1:;.1

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1987 Chevy Nova: hlah mlttogo,
need• repair. Good 1Nnsportltlon car. Reduced: StlOO To
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614-446-2342, Alit lor Poul.
1181 llodgt Charger, 2.2.
Automallc, Good Condtlonl
$2,500. 114-3711-2884, 614-4461414.
1981 Dodge Shelby CSX, 2.2
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OSU outlasts

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Minnesota
five 72-69

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Cards:
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Page6

9-16-23·3~42-44

Low tonight In mid- 20s.
Chance of rain 90 percent.
Friday, high In mid 40s.

Kicker: 463190

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January ~992

Vol. 42, No. 183
Copyrlghtod 1992

2 Socllono, 14 Pages 25 cent&amp;
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

County officials may
seek restitutlon of jail
expenses from inmates

GRADE 'A'

PICK 0
CHICK
1

99c

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Staff
Inmates incarcerated in the
Meigs County Jail could be forced
to reimburse the coun1y for expenses, if a proposal introduced at
Wednesday's regular meeting of
the Meigs County Commissioners
is approved.
Commissioner Richard E. Jones
made the proposal, based on two
sections of the Ohio Revised Code.
The primary code section quoted
by Jones yesterday was Section
341.19, which states: "Commis-

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sioners may require a person who
was convicted of an offense other
than a minor misdemeanor and
who is confined in the county jail
to reimburse the county for its
expenses incurred by reason of his
confinement, including but not limited to, the expenses relaling to
provision of food , clothing and
shelter."
According to that ORC section,
a civil suit CIUI be filed by the county prosecutor on behalf of the board
within a year after the conviction of
the subject in question. The amount

of the judgment is then paid into
the county treasury.
The second ORC section read at
yesterday's meeting outlines the
hearing process required in such an
action.
Jones pointed out that many
convicts spend several weeks in the
coumy jail prior to being convicted
while awaiting trial times. After
they are convicted, they are transporlcd to state prisons to serve their
sentences.
Action on the proposal was
Continued on page 3

Paper glut delays Mas·on pulp mill
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Roberts will seek
Gallla · E·ngln-eer's ·post

Meigs County Engineer Philip
oberts will be stepping down
rom that position at !he end of his
current term, and will seek the
same office in Oallia County in the
May primary.
A Mei~s County native, Roberts
was appomted to the office in 1980
upon the death of Wesley Buehl,
who died in office two days prior
the 1980 Republican Primary.
Roberts was appointed to the office
by the central committee and then
eli(Cled the following November.
He was subsequently re-elected in
1984 and 1988.
Robens is the son of the late
Marvin Roberts and Frances
Roberts, a retired school teacher

190

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)The state and Ohio's largest public
employees union have agreed to
work together to find ways to
reduce lhc cost of health care benefits, negotiators say.
Health care was one of the
issues left unresolved in a fact-finder's repon of recommendations for
anew two-year contract. Boih the
slate and the 35 ,000-member Ohio
Civil Service Employees Association recommended that the contract
be approved.
· TIKi agreement calls for a freeze
ill basic wages until July 1993,
when a 5 percent increase would
like effect.
.: The pact will be adopted in two
weeks unless 60 percent of the
Uition's eligible membership or 60
P.Jrtent of both houses of the Ohio
Legislature reject it.
·
: Administrative Services DirecIQr Stephen Perrr said !~creasing

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from Racine. He graduated from position in the upcoming primary.
Southern High School and Ohio James Baird, a Republican, now
University, with a bachelor of sci- serves as Gallia County's engineer.
ence degree in civil engineering.
As of yesterday afternoon, no canFrom 1967 to 1979, Roberts didates had filed for that race,
worked as· a project engineer with alihough several candidates have
the Ohio Department of Trans- picked up petitions.
portation. While in that position,
Roberts surveying office is also
Roberts was responsible for work- located in Gallia County.
ing on the Gallipolis and Pomeroy
"When I was appointed in
bypasses, the approach and inter- 1980," Roberts said yesterday, "I
change to the Silver Memorial realized that there would be a time
Bridge in Gallipolis and various when !here would be Meigs County
bridge and road projects for people who would be qualified for
the position, and I now feel that
ODOT.
Roberts, who now resides in that time has come."
Galli a County, said Wednesday
"It's a ~ood time for a change,"
afternoon that his "plans are to fi ie" Roberts satd.
for the Gallia County Engineer's

health-care costs tor employees are
one of his department's biggest
concerns. Fact-finder Harry Graham did not recommend an
increase in the portion of insurance
premiums that employees pay, but
suggested the stale lind union work
together to control costs.
"The union leadership and the
state of Ohio have agreed to try to
work toward a manageable health
care program for employees ,"
Perry said. " ! think that's one area
where we are hoping to be very
sueeessful."
·
Paul Goldberg, OCSEA's executive director, said health care, job
security and wages were the
union's priorities in negotiations.
"State employees' concerns in
regards to health care weren't so
much how to improve the benefi~
but ... how they could afford to
hang on to what ihey've already

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

'FREE COFFEE

.: Police probe two .B &amp; lis · .
·
• Two breakings and entcriitgs of churches ~hich occurte~ ei~r
· late Tuesday night or eartr Wednesday monung are under mvesu-

BUY ONE, tifT OIIE .FRfE AT CHlCKour
on AnY 7 01.-tAIII&amp;'s CIOia.
. N'WII' COttu

. gation by the Pomeroy Pollee Deplrunenl
.
· At 10:19 a.m. Wednesday it was reported to pohce that the
. · Sacred Heart Catholic Church at 161 Mulberry Ave., had OO,en
' entered and several items taken. A basement window was broken
' out to gain entrance 10 the chareh
,
·
.
• Taken.were a three-channel wireless micrQphone sys~m, a cas·
selle deck, several can!l'es, and a small amountc;~f money from a
candle box. All of the ttems were recovered Wednesday afternoon,
Chief of Police Gerald Rouaht reported, after on a tip from a local
resideni. No anests have been made, Rouaht said.
The Pomeroy Church of Christ at 212 West Main St. was elso
· entered but there was no report bf anything being taken, Rought
1
COiltiaued on jll!!f j
·. , ·
,.,

.

-0\
. ..
GOOD WEEK OF '
1·11-11 to 1.JM1
ONLY II FOOOLAHD

I

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1o UmH Oulntltlll I Prlcel
•

I .

..

Potential sheriff candidates qualify
Meigs County Common Pleas disclose any criminal record , mined and cenitied to lite Board of
Coun Judge Fred W. Crow III has according to Judge Crow . The Elections thal both men qualify to
reponed that two additional per- record check revealed that neither be candidates.
Paut"Oerard of Middlepon and
sons have met all the requirements Beegle nor Rought had a criminal
James
M. Soulsby, Pomeroy, were
to become candidates for the office record. No person may be a candipreviously
ccnified 10 lite Board of
of Meigs County Sheriff.
· date for sheriff who has a felony or
Elections by Judge Crow. Gerard
Roben E. Beegle of Racine and serious misdemeanor record.
Gerald E. Rought of Pomeroy have
Both Beegle and Rought have has filed his petitions and will be a
previously submitted fingerprint also .made statements to the court, candidate for sheriff in the Repubspecimens, as the first step in the in writing, that they each meet !he lican Primary on May 5.
February 20 is the filing dCI!d·
qualification process, and those fin- other statutory requirements to be a
line
for all candidates in the Repubgerprints were sent to the Ohio candidate and thereafter to serve as
lican
and Democrat Primary elecBureau of Criminal Identification sheriff. Upon review of the infertions.
and Investigation (BCI) for a mation provided by Beegle and
search of state and federal files to Rought, Judge Crow has deter -

Health care issues are left
Adkins, Rouse lead RGCC board
unresolved in fact-finders report

L------------------------~------------------~

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

'

~ Phil

$ 59

1·. \"'' I"\'\" ~ H ~4 ~Ill.\ '\II ~I'ECI \I. COl 1'4 1'\

15 LB.

700 W. IIIIIIW\ POMaGY, Glllf

'
Pomeroy, who was 1\'~stbound on West Second
Street at the time of the accident. Both cars
received light to moderate damage. The accident
was investigated by the Pomeroy Pollee
Deparbnent.

ACCIDENT PROBED - Randy Roble of
Pomeroy was cited for failure to yield right of way
following this accident on West Second Street at
Mulberry ;\venue on Wednesday afternoon. Roble
struck a vehicle dtiven by Melody Forbe.•, also of

"There's no guarantee that dumped into state rivers and
CHA'RLESTON, W.Va. (AP)
- A paper market glut is delaying they're even going to build !his streams.
plans to build a $1 billion pulp and plant," Burton said Wednesday.
The federal Environmental Pro- )
paper mill project in Mason Coun- "The earliest they would even be tection Agency recommends that
considering this would probably be dioxin, a toxic brproduct of the
ty, a company official said.
"There are some delays in 1993 or 1994."
pulp manufactunng process, be
John Ranson, state secretary of limited to .013 parts per quadrillion
going forward l&gt;ccause of perceived
market conditions at this point in Commerce, Labor and Environ- of water.
time," said Ken Goddard, a vice mental Resources, agreed that the
The state Water Resources
president of Parsons and Whine- mill is far from being builL ·
Board has agreed to increase the
"If they do it, it's years away," maximum allowable amount to one
more Enterprises, parent company
of Alabama River Pulp Co. of Per- Ranson said.
part per quadrillion, the equivalent
Up to 1,000 jobs were forecast of one drop per 13 million gallons.
du~ Hill, Ala.
"'"lab!lma River recently opened for the Apple Groye plant, wl\ich is
Tile Ho.uso and Senate Judiciary
another .P.~apt in Alabama, said op~9).1&gt;r labor and environmen,; . ~ommiuees will consider a bill to
Steve' Burio'n\ spbkesmah for the tar groups because the company 'addjx \he board's recommendation
Tri-State Building and Construc- wants to ease limits in the legal next week.
tion Trades Council.
amount of dioxin that could be

\

·'-

•

'

gol, " Goldberg said in a news
release.
Perry said state officials dis. cussed the repon with Gov. George
Voinovich on Tuesday.
"We reviewed it with the governor and the governor's direction
was that we recommend to the Legtslat.ure that they accept the
repott," Perry said in an interview.
"I would characterize this
agreement as being very fair and
reasonable, considering the fiscal
situation facing the state of Ohio.··
Voinovich and the Legislature
are working on plans 10 cut a $457
million budget deficit in the current
fiscal year.
.
Goldberg said the·fact-finder's
repott didn't give the union every·
thing it wanted but addressed most
of its concerns. .
" We have a packagl that
employees, taxpayers. managers
and legislators can more than adequately live with," Goldberg sald.
The union'.s final proposal
called for a 3 percent raise in base
wages during the first year of a
thn;e·year agreemetlt, 6 percent the
second year and a cost-of-living
adjustmel1t the thin! year. The slate
offered no raises in base wages.

Charles I. Adkins. Gallipolis,
was elected chairman of the Rio
Grande Community College Board
of Trustees for 1992, and Elaine B.
Rouse, Cheshire, was chosen the
board's vic.e chairman during its
recent meeting.
The board set !his year's regular
meeting dates for March II, May
13, July 8, Sepl 9 and Nov. 11.
Adkins has been a member of
the board since SepL 11, 1985 and
has been president and chief executive officer of Holzer Medical Cen. tcr since April 1984.
A native of South Charleston ,
W.Va., Adkins attended Marshall
University, West Virginia Universily and the Unive'rsi.ty of Rio
Grande, Prior to joining the staff at
HMC in December 1970, Adkins
worked in production/managemem
for the FMC Corp. in South
Charleston, and later in sales man·
agement for Baxterfl'ravenoll.aboratories and Skyland Hospitlll Supply.
He began at HMC as director of
purchasing, rater becoming vice
president of general services.
Named vice presidefit Qf professional·services in 1977, he served
as the hospital's interim chief exec·
utive officer from Se_ptember 1983
until the spring of 19\!4. ',

'

and treasurer of !he Gallia County
Retired Teacher~ Association.
Other members of ·the bOard are
Andrew R. Adelmann· iJr.,•
McArthur; Carl G. Dahlberg, Wellston; Thomas B. Hart, Pomeroy·
William McDonald, Jackson: Man:
ning E. Wethcrhoh, Gallipolis; and
John T. Wolfe, Racine. An addi tional board member is to be
appointed by Gov . George
Voinovich.

The Issues:

Parental notification
for minors' abortions

EDITOR'S NOTE- The Associated Press asks the major presidential candidafes a question each weekday about their views on a
particular issue and assembles their responses. President Bush has
(eclined to participate at least until after he forml\lly launches his reelection campaign. Responses were not available for all candidates.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Here are the views of the major presidential
candidates on the question: "Do you supper! any parental notification
requirements before minors can obtain an abortion?' '
•
DEMOCRATS
- Jerry Brown: Not available.
- Bill Clinton: Favors parental notification requirements.
- Tom Harkin: Opposes mandatory parental consent.
·
-Bob l&lt;errey: Opposes parental notification. "While it's an idea that
sounds terrific, what government would havQ «i do10 make it work would
.
beawu
· .
. _
f I."
Named Oallia County's Man of
-Paul.Tsongas:
"I
oppose
Jaws
requiring
parental
notification
or con:
the Year in 1991, Adkins served as
sent
for
abortion,
because
they
result
in
young
women
seeking
abonions
president of the Gallipolis Area
Grand opening Frjday Chamber
under dangerous conditions. Decisions about abortion should be made by
of Commerce in 1988-89 women
themsolves ... limitations should not be imposed by government at
. A grand opening celebration and was co-chaiqnan of the Gal· any level,'
'
· ·
· will be held at the Middleport lip9lis Bicentennial Commission
REPUBLICANS
office of !he Peoples Bank located fQr five years. He is a member of
-Patrick Buchanan: ''The 1.6 million abortions performed each year
. at 97 North Second St. tomorrow numerous professional, community
in
this
country are a disgrace. Until Roe v. Wade is ove~. the states
and public service organizations,
(Friday).
..
Ribbon cutting will take place and serves on the advi59ry board of should undertake legaf measures to protect innocent lives, including
. at 8:30 a,m. The celebralion will the University of Rio Grande's enactment of laws to ..pre~ent,!"il\\)rs from having abortions without · ,
parental consent or nouficabon.
·
.
.
continue to S p.m. with refresh- Holzer College of Nursing,
Duke:
"Yes,
I
do
favor
parental
notification
requirements
·
-David
Rouse, a member of the board
. ments being served dtrougltout the
·
since Oct. 11, 1985, served as the before minors can obtain an abortion.'.'
®y.

.-

'

•

board's vice chairman in 1988 and
1989. She retired from a 31-year
high school teachinl\ c~rcer in
Meigs and Mason counues m 1977.
Rouse received her A.B. and
M.A. degrees from West Virginia
University, and is a member of the
Gallipolis. chapter of the Amcncan
Association of University Women.
She serves on the board for
Planned Parenthood of Soulheastern Ohio, and is a past president

.'

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