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                  <text>Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Tuesday, February 11, 1992

FISHER BIG W EL * BIG BEND FOODLAND * CONTINUITY OF CARE *
MIDDLEPORT.TROPHIES * P.D.K. CONSTRUCTION * G&amp; J AUTO PARTS
* KAY'S BEAUTY SALON * HYSELL'S USED CARS * FOR THE ·BOTH OF YOU
* MIDWEST STEEL CORP. * GALLERY HAIR ARTS * McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
* DAIRY QUEEN BRAZIER * PORTSMOUTH BEAUTY SUPPLY *'FARMERS
·BANK &amp; SAVINGS CO. * GILMORE'S GOURMET DINING * VAUGHAN'S
CARDINAL FOODS * McCLURE'S 3 IN ONE * POWELL'S SUPER VALU *
ANDERSON'S FURNITURE &amp; APPLIANCE * HAIR HAPPENING STYLING
SALON * WMPO RADrO STATION * CHATEAU BEAUTY SALON * THE DAILY
SENTINEL * CLASSIC CUTS BY PECKY * RICHARDS &amp;SONS INC. ·* SUGAR
RUN FLOUR MILLS * VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL * ·PLEASERS *
McDONALD'S * SUBWAY * SEARS* KRO~ER'S * DRAVO CORP. * PIZZA
HUT * BANK ONE * DAIRY VALLEY *.O'DELL LUMBER CO. * MEIGS
COUNTY E.M.S. * THE ADDED TOUCH * MOTOR PARTS CO. * DELTA
METALS * DON TATE
R·LE
ILE/CADILLAC/GEO *
* GENERAL TELEPHONE
* GEORGE WRIGHT
* INGELS FURNITURE
* IMPERIAL ELECTRIC
* SHEAR ILLUSIONS
* HAIR HIGHLIGHTS
* THE VIDEO TOUCH
* STEWART'S GARAGE
* OVERBROOK CENTER
CARLETON
SCHOOL
*
* FANTASTIC SAM'S
OHIO
VALLEY
BANK
*
* BOB'S ELECTRONICS
DEPARTMENTAL ADVISORY
EE
BERS * APPALACHIAN
POWE·RCO. * TWIN CITY MACHINE &amp; WELD.ING * SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
.~~~co. * HEADQUARTERS BEAUTY SALOON * RIDENOUR'S TV &amp; APPLIANCE
* FIESTA HAIR FASHIONS * SMITH-NELSON MOTORS INC. * JEFFERS COAL
&amp; EXCAVATING * POMEROY NUR·SING &amp; REHABILITATION CENTER *
.PARENTS &amp;COMMUNITY * SMITH -&amp;ASSOCIATES ACCOUNTING * LINDA
WARNER, ATTORNEY·AT·LAW * MEIGS COUNTY·HEALTH DEPARTMENT *
MEIGS COUNTY COUNCIL ON AGING * DAVIS-QUICKEL INSURANCE
, AGENCY * BERNARD FULTZ,- ATTORNEY·AT·LAW * O'BRIEN &amp; O'BRIEN,
AUORNEYS·AT·LAW, JOE'S COUNTRY· MARKET * ·MEIGS COUNTY
'EXTENSION OFFICE *)DOWNING CHILDS·MULLEN MUSSER INSURANCE *
STEVE" ·sTORY, ATTORNEY·AT·LAW * CROW .·&amp; CR9W, ATTORNEYS-AT~ ·
~W * PORTER, LITTLE, SHEETS &amp; LENJES, ArtORNEYS·AT·LAW, JEFF
·wARNER INSURAN~E .

Pick 3: 669
Pick 4:6352

Cards:
10-H; 3-C; 6-D;

J-S

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Vol. 42, No. 196

Copyrighted 1992

Columbia Gas unveils new
program at Meigs Chamber

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT FUNDING • Paul E. Kloes,
president or tbe Farmers Bank and Savings Co, presented a check
· ror $1,000 to Paula Thacker, Meigs County's Economic Develop·
. ment Director. The check represents the bank's second installment
on a three year pledge towards runding the new position.

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By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr
"With smokeless tobacco,
you're out!"
nThe message from a.new program of the American Cancer Society and Health Recovery Services
is plain and simple, and pre-teen
students in Meigs County arc hear·
ing it loud and clear: don :t use
snuff and ch~wing tobacco.

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"Spittin' Image", a program ment programs through the nonoffered through the American Can· profit Health Recovery Services.
cer Society is being introduced to They have also been trained at the
youngste~~· throu~l)out the c~unty expense of the Meigs Unit of the .
m the form of a VJ_deo and dtScUS· American Can'cei"Sociely lo"jne· •
sion session, conducted by Dan and sent "Spittin' Image." In addition
to training the Romunos, the ACS
Sue Rom uno of Harrisonville.
The Romunos, volunteers for has provided a video tape for use
the Volunlccrs in Service to Ameri- by the Romunos when they visit
ca (VISTA) program, conduct vari· area schools.
ous addiction pTCV£ntion and treat·
Continued on page 3

SPONSORS PROGRAM • The Meigs
County Volt orthe American Cancer Society has
underwritten "Spittln' Image", a program
directed at elementary and junior high school
children. VISTA volunteers Dan and Sue
Romuno have been trained by the ACS to lead

. the project, and tbe local unit also purchased the
videotape used and the brochures that are distributed to children. Here, ACS Unit Director
Ferman Moore, center, and the Romunos are
pictured with some or the material used.

Everyone talks tax cuts,
·but millions .could pay more

SPimN' IMAGE .'A program developed
to discourage pre-teenagers rrom U$ing smoke·
less tobacco is being completed In Meigs County's tbree school districts. Under the direction or
VISTA voluntee·rs Dan and Sue Romuno, the

program combines •a video presentatloa and a
discussion period. Here, Mrs. Romuno .leads a
group at Chester Elementary School in a run
exercise•.

Bill1 targets· welfare reform, school dropouts
.

WASfUNGTON (AP)- While
families and investors a wail word
on how big a lax cut they will get
from Congress and President Bush,
millions should be watching
inslead to sec how much their taxes
are goinf 10 rise.
Bush s budget, with its proposals for a reduction in capital-gains
taxes, an increased exemption for
children and a new credit for some
home buyers, would be financed in
part by tax increases exceeding $21
billion over the next five years.
Among the targets: State and
local government employees:
boaters; pay-phone users: securities

rnC:~c:~~~il:.rs of certain life

A Democratic plan to give a
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ing benefits 1hrough the General that punishment is often·not a good temporary credit of up to $200 a
1'he sJ)onsor of a bill that would Assistanc'c or Disability Assistance way to help improve people's life year to wage-earners would be
slop high school dropouts under programs. Recipients would have . possibilities."
financed by higher ta~s on cou~! 22 from collec1ing certain wei- to hold a high school diploma or its
Mot~ said the Ohio Department pies with incomes in die $200,000'M benofits'Siiys .the ·measure isn't equivalent, or be working toward of Human Services was unable to plus range ($100,000 for singles)
' rtleant to bash the General Assis· graduation.
determine how many dropouts and a new surtax on millionaires.
·,lalKleprogram orrecipiCilts.
General Assistance provides were receiving such benefits.
The House Ways and Means
• Rep. ,Ronald Mqttl, D-Parma, benefits of $110 monthly on ~vcrHowever, he said an analysis Committee will begin deciding
s'ilid the bill instead is a way to age to about 140,000 adults . A prepared by his office showed the Wednesday what kind of tax-cut
CJICOurage some people on welfare change in.the law which lOOk effect measure could save $500,000 to plan is called for and how it should
to complete their education.
last Oct9bbr limits benefjts to si~ $1.5 million annually. The study be financed.
: "I JUSt feel that we've got to - months;.
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was based on the -percentage of
the Democratic-controlled
break 'the welfare cycle, and the
Rep. Tom , See~e, D-Akr9n, General Assistance recipients of panel is likely 10 reject Bush's proway 10 do, it is through education," rai~ questions about linking ben- high school age, and average posal, which the president billed as
ltfot~ said Tuesday after .ICS(ifyitig "efiis to a grading system, arid about school dropout rateS.
.
desirab)e to boost the economY..
before the · House Hum.an those who refuse to abide by ·the · The estimate assumes that at But the committee probably wtll
Itesourees Commiuee.
. terms. "What if they don't want to least 20 percent of recipients are send the president's biU 10 the full
: ·"We've got _to hold ·out some go?'' he said, referring to the high school age, and pegs the aver- House for a voto, along _with a
oarrot approach that says, 'Hey, school requirement.
· age dropout rate per year statewide 'Democratic substitute aimed at
y,bu can get General Assistance like
David McCoy, director of pub· . at3 percent.
· ·
. pleasing the middle class.
you always have, but you're going lie. policy for. the Ohio Council of
"'u~t as government is cibl~ged
Bush, like Ronald Reagan, relIc do orie thing for the taxpayers. ·Churches, sat~ _the group ~ad not • !O· ~rovtde a saf~¥ net for soc.ety: ishes a repu'-tion as a tax-cuuer
You're going to continue your edu· yett.aken a post~on on ihe btll.
mdtvtduals recetvmg welfare have flatly opposed 10 any tax increase.
cation,' ·'' he said: ·
"This one certainly doesn't .an obligation to taxpayers to edu- But Just as Reagan si'"ed a dozen
Mottl's bill would prohibit seem to go in the direction we · cate themselves in order 10 avoid tal( mcreases in his et&amp;ht ¥ear! as
dropouts under age 22 ~rom receiv.· · ought .111 be ~oin~:" McCoy sai,d · long-term welfare dependency," . presidcnl, Bush relented m 1990
after the heanng. Our concern ts Mottl said.
·
and agreed to ~igher taxes to

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results will be evalualed this sum- through.&amp; local insurance agen1, be located has been postponed for
and Thacker said that she was in six months. A depanment
Chamber President Lenny Elia- the process of meeting with local spokespersqn reported to Newell
son introduced Paula Thacker, the agents to detennine specific premi- that the department' s work is on
chamber's new executiv e um s, deductibles and other specific schedule and that the delay does
director/economic development details.
not apply to the corrections dcpanPrison discussed
director. Thacker distribuied informent.
mation concerning a proposed
A brief discussion was held
A meeting is also being schedhealth insurance plan for chamber regarding the chamber's progress uled for later ibis week with Buck·
on attracting a proposed state eye Hills/Hocking Valley Regional
members and their employees.
According to Thacker, Gallia prison to the county.
Development District. The purpose
According to Executive Secre - of that meeting will be to ob~;~in
and Jackson Counties have fanned
an insurance group for the purpose tary Pamela Newell, the Ohio funding for a sewage treatment
of providing low-cost health insur- Department of Rehabilitation and plant at the proposed Salem Center
ance to members, and Meigs Coun- Corrections has refuted a report . site, so according to Newell ,
ty's chamber could join that group. frqm the Governor's Office that the "sewage is no longer a problem at
The plan would be administered decision as 10 where the prison will
Continued on page 3

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News-Staff
A new program designed to
assist public schools was presented
by Columbia Gas at Tuesday's regular meeting of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, held al
Pomeroy Nursing and Rehabilitation Center.
Jake Koebel of Columbia Gas
introduced the video presentation,
entitled "How to Help your Child
in School". Koebel stressed the
importance of quality education in
communities served by Columbia,
and encouraged parental participation in every aspect of the educa. tiona! pra&lt;:ess.
The "Education 2000" program
is now a pilot program. An employee coordmator has been named in
each of Columbia's districts to
over see the program, and those
coordinators are permiued four
company hours a month to work in
a community' s school system. The

Message is loud and clear: Don't
use snuff and chewing tobacco

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2 Sectlono, 14 Pogeo 25 cen,.
A Multimedia Inc. Newopoopw

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, February 12, 1992

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Freezing rain tonight.
Thursday, high In mld-40s.

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Ohio Lottery

Seton Hall
upsets No. 10
Syracuse

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reduce ·the budget deficit.
The president's proposal shies
away from any general laX increase
- but millions would feel the sting
anyway. Among the proposals, and
their five-year costs:
-Two million slate and local
government employees who have
held their jobs since before April I,
1986, would be required to pay the
1.45 percent tax that finances
Medicare hospital in surance .

Workers hired since thai date
already pay the lax. All but about
300,000 of the 2 million already
are covered by Medicare because
of previous employment or their
spouse's coverage.
The change, which Congress
has repeatedly refused to approve,
would cost workers more than $8
billion , which their employers
would maleh .

•

,.--Local
briefs-___,
-.
More B&amp;E's reported
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Wednesday
1hat his department has received reports of three more breaking and
entering incidents.
Mark Miller-of Swindell Road reported that he had left his residence around 7 p.m. and when he returned at 9:30p.m., he discovered 1he house had been entered. A videocassette recorder was
stolen.
On Sunday evening, Fred Green of Horse Cave Road reported
that the rear door of his trailer was kicked in. He reported a black
and white television, a stereo, gun rack and a pair of binoculars
were stolen.
. James Circle reported Tuesday evening that his house on Bashan
Road had been entered. A video camera; cordless drill and a shotgun were t.akcn. ·
Entry was made through the rear door.

Shields reports vandalism

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Randy Shields of Tuppers Plains reported to ihe Meigs County
Sheriff's Department on Sunday that sometime the previous
evening, the windshield and hood oh his 1988 Chevrolet uuck were
damaged.
·

Preparing for aerial photos
Local citizens may be wondering about tile white arrows painted
on portions of Main Street in Pomeroy in front of Kroger. The
arrows will make the way for aerial photography of riverbank emContinued nn page J

�,:C1Hilmentary
The Daily Sentinel

Page-2-The Dally 5entlnel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, February 12, 1992

.Secret report reveals Desert Storm chaos

WASHINGTON - One year
111 Court Street
ago, Operation Desert Stonn was
Pomeroy, Ohio
raging in the Persian Gulf with
DEVOTED TO THE INTERBIITS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
awesome precision. From the U.S.
perspective, it was a triumph of
technology- or so it seemed.
Today, the "hottest document in
town," as one source called i~ is a
Pentagon assessment of the war
ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
that is being .watered down before
it
is delivered to Congress. Sources
Publisher
have detailed for us the latest draft
of
this report, and it proves that
PATWHITEIIEAD I
CHARLENE HOEFLICH
things
arc not always as they seem.
Assisiant Publisher/Controller
General Manager
· The "Nintendo war" that the
world watched on television was a
AMEMBER of Th~ Associaled Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
front for a chaotic campaign. The
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.
•
truth is that the U.S. high-tech
intelligence system collapsed under
LETTERS OF OPINION an: welcome. They should be less !han 300
fue. Field commanders didn't have
~rds long . Allletten are subject to editing and mwl be signed with n·ame,
the timely information they needed
address and Ielepbone number. No unsigned le!Iers wiU be published. Letters
for the battle. Some targets were
"should be in good taste, addrt$sing issues, not personalities.
repeatedly bombed after they were
already destroyed. The allied
troops faced a much smaller Iraqi
force during the ground war than
was previously estimated. And they
killed far fewer Iraqi soldiers than
the I 00,000 estimated after the
war.
Congress has been pushing for a

Excerpts from other ·
Ohio newspapers

By The Associated Press
Following are excerpts of editorials published recently in Ohio newspapers:
Porumoutb Daily Times, Feb. 6
With company and union bargaining teams scheduled to resume meetings next weelc 10 a new effort to end the long stnke at the Portsmouth
Gaseous Diffusion Plan~ we welcome this weelc's statement by a nuclear
physicist that .clears the air - literally and figuratively - of the specter
of~ritical mass, explosion and radioactive fallout.
.
Responding to Daily Times' questions, prompted by safety tssues
raised by union leaders, Dr. Richard Dittman of the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee said that even if mishandled it is ''absolutely im~ssi~le
to cause a critical mass of uranium-235 and set off a nuclear explosiOn.
No good pur)iose, then, is served by charges that a "lethal stew" is
, 'being brewed by "unqualified, operators': at the U.S. Dcp~ent of Energy uranium enrichment facthty. Pertodtc revtew of operaoons, m fact,
confums that the hourly and management employees now on the job arc
adequately bained for the tasks they arc performing.
Let's dismiss the ill-conceived hyperbole, "critical mass," and urge
. company and union leaders to make _an honest~ critical reappraisal of posi. ~ons that triggered and extended thiS long strike and Its devaslaung economic fallout.
·
·
The Cincinnati Enquirer, Feb. 8
· The unexpected face-off between president Bush and some Democratic
governors gave a good indication of how politics overrides everything in
government The economy, defense, environmen~ the nation's future, all
take a back seat to the constant infighting for political advanlage.
No good purpose was served by Demo~rati~ Colorad? Go~. Roy
·Romer's SUIJlrise atlliCk on the proposals outlined 10 the.prestdent s Slate
. Df the Union speech. His do-this, do-that aP,Proach was wmed at the pres!. ·dent but directed to the media. As a practiCal matter, however, hiS httle
· Wltrum wasn't worth the wind expended.
.
President Bush made that point quite well when he asked Governor
• . Romer 10. explain how he would accomplish what he was asking. The ·
. president challenged the govanor to name the bases he would close, and
the defense industries he would decimate, to double the administration's
proposed $50 billion in defense cuts. G~vemor R~me~ charged the question was unfair, because be had not stud1ed the pa111culars.
.
Political differences arc a natural and necessary pan of the democraoc
· process. !lut they arc supposed to be subordinate to the national interest
The success of the system depends on reason and compromise, on the
. willingness of elected leaders to recognize when conditions are too seri ·
ous for political games.
The Columbus Dispatch, Feb. 8
A House Banking subcommittee has upbraided the federal agency that
regulates national banks fotlfurnishing its new executive offices "lavish. ly."

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. Certainly the U.S. comptroller of the currency 1S entitled to comfortable quarters. Nobody is demanding that officials live a Spartan existence,
making do with linoleum floors, card lablcs and foldmg chall"s.
But there must be common-sense limits in the other direction. Particularly at a time when some banks are experiencing financial problems,
·:·good judgment should diclate a degree of modesty, by way of example.
:. .· Does the comptroller really need an $11,626 floor made of cherry
:; )llood fi'Qm the Brazilian rain forest?

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· ~ Today

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in history

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By The Associated Prw
. . . Today is Wednesday, Feb. 12, the 43rd day of 1992. There are 323
:·.days left in the year.
·: Today's Highlight in History:
• . On Feb. 12, 1809, Abraham lincoln, the 16th president of the United
.: Slates, wa.! born in a log 'cabin in what is now Larue County, Ky.

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·~Bush

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rull accounting. from the Pen1agon
00 the "lessons learned" from the
war. The military coughed up an
interim report last July, and the
final report was to have been submitted two weeks ago. But it has
been held up by the Pentagon that
is still arguing about how to tell the
story. They have no intention of
telling it all.
The "Secret" draft we have had
access to suggests that the war was
really won in the first 72 hours. and
after that a kind of controlled chaos
descended on the "Black Hole"the Air Fo~te's command center in
a basement storage room of the
Royal Saudi Air Force headquarters in Riyadh.
Among the conclusions of the
draft report arc these:
The number of Iraqi casualties
during the 44-day war appears to
be between 20,000 and 40,000. In
fairness, when the Defense Intelligence Agency issued its 100,000
estimate, they said the numbers
could be off by 50 percent either
way.
Gen. Nonnan Schwarzkopf had
been told by the DIA and CIA that

there were 540,000 Iraqi troops
deployed when the war began. In
reality, there were 400,000. Before
the ground war began, thousands of
those had fled for home and 87,000
eventually crossed over to the
allies. By one estimate in the
report, less than 175,000 Iraqi soldiers were ieft "when the ground
war began.
Reconnaissance photos of Iraq
and Kuwait were few and far
between. u.S. troops relied on a
half-dozen satellites code named
"Keyhole." A couple of them are
so sophisticated that they can read
a license plate from 500 miles out
in space. But the troops weren't
reading license plates. They needed
a bigger picture. Using the Keyhole
photos was "like looking at the
battlefield through straws," a
source explained.
The ideal photos would have
come from SR-71 "Blackbird"
reconnaissance planes that could
have swept over the baUiefields as
often as needed _ if the Penlagon
hadn't foolishly retired the planes
in 1990.
W()en photos were available,
~N!01o l'oltrwom'~Dat·~'E*0" t'l'!A
t.CJ. IIVIJ.tE"

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they were badly managed. Photo
transmission equipment broke
down, so the military resorted to
couriers hand delivering the pictures to the battlefield units. One
A-10 atlack plane unit complained
that they were often given only
three photoS to be shared by eight
squadrons. Gen. Schwarzkopf,
knowing of the shortage, once
chewed out a subordinate for giving the general better pictures for
his briefings than the troops were
gelling for the actual battle.
·
The lack of photos meant pilots
hit the wrong largets, were unable
to flnd their targets, or hit the same
wgets over and over again, risking
their lives to hit a site that was
already demolished.
In an interview with our associate Dale Van Atta just before the
air war began, Schwarzkopf
acknowledged that bomb damage
assessment would .be a problem. He
began relying. heavily on video
cameras mounted on planes, and
even on CNN reports.
At least a third of the air strike
missions were changed at the last
minute. Distribution of the orders
was cumbersome. They had to be
hand-delivered to the Navy because
the Air FoiCe and Navy computers
were incompatible.
The last-minute changes meant
that each unit's intelligence section
would work all night on infonnation about the larget, only to throw
that information away the next
morning and scramble to advise
pilots on the new largets. Near the
end of the war, intelligence units
gave up on photos. Fighter units
were then assigned "kill boxes"
defined by latitude and longitude,
and told to destroy anything in that
neighborhood.
The last on the priority list to
receive photos were special operations units, including the people
whose job was to rescue downed
pilots. Only three of 64 downed
pilots were ever rescued during the
war. Had the Iraqis killed them, the
bumbling of photo intelligence
would have cost lives and would
have been a public scandal.
Copyright, 1992, United Feature
Syndicate, Inc .

will rise from Soviet carcass?

William A. Rusher
It would be nice to be able to
say that the situation in Russia is
gradually improving, but it would
be untrue. Every report indicates
that things will get worse, probably
much worse, before they can begin
to get better. That means that the
world is facing times that may not
only be dark, bu~dangerous.
Similes can be misleading, but
what is left over from the death of
the Soviet Union can in many ways
be compared to the rotting corpse
of some huge animjl( . It cannot be
revived, and even individual organs
(e.g. the distribution system, such
as it was) may be impossible to
"harvest" and transplant. Scavengers abound, hunting for edible
scraps of flesh. Ultimately the carcass will simply rot into the
ground, enriching it, and in time
new fonns of life will spring up as
a result But that road to the fuuue
leads through a period of total
decay.
• A nation defeated in war may
sometimes - like Germany and

Japan after 1945- make an aston- familiar human solution for situaishingly fast comeback. But in such tions that get wildly out of conuol,
cases much of the old social and and it is called the Man on Horseeconomic infrastructure remains in back. He appears in response to
place, and in addition the ingrained widespread desperation, imposes
traditions of the society, such .as the social and eco~omic order by brute '
work ethic, have usually survived folte, and is obeyed because peo- ·
inlaCt. But the very nature of com- pie see no alternative but to obey
munist totalilarianism requires the h1m.
uuer destruction of any infrastrucIs Boris Yeltsin that man? We
ture, or any traditions, save its own,
must hope so, but it seems unlikely.
so that when communism dies He is too enmeshed in (and respon. sible for) the present situation, and
nothing useful survives it. '
So Russia today consists of the present situation is exactly what
three whole generations of people the Man on Horseback proposes to
who have spent their lives cheatmg demolish and replace:
their despised bosses out of an honIf a Man on Horseback appears,
est day's work, and who have been will the rest of the world be able to
taught from childhood to hate any- do business with him? We will
one more prosperous than th~m ­ have no choice but to try, but the
seives, living amid the ruins of a success of the effon will probably
tolally destroyed economic and depend more on his temperament
social order and grubbing desper- and diplomatic skills than on anyately for a means of survival.
thing we can do. But he is certainly
Maybe a democratic polity and a not lilcely to want to eliminate Rusfree-marlcet economy can be con- sia's nuclear missiles- and not
jured out of that mess, but I don't · only because of their value as barbelieve it for a minute. There is ·a gaining chips.

re-election effort is in disarray

WASHINGTON (NEA) ~ "If time. Today most voters only dimly
Lee were still alive; ,all this recall the Gulf War while the slate
of the economy has emerged as the
·wouldn't be happening."
.· The speaker of that line was a campaign's towering issue. As a
: Republican Party official con- result, the president's popularity
.:cemed over the disorganized, drift· mting has plummeted.
Sources say the Bush camp h~
·;ing re-election campaign of Presibe ~n polling furiously in recent
.·dent Bush . .
·: Many GOP insiders believe that we..~~. trying to assess how far the.
has aciUBlly fallen in pub&gt;Lee Atwater, the late GOP leader, president
tic
esteem,
and how voters in dif::would have had the Bush campaign
ferent
parts
of the country view
·:under firm control and in high gear. ' Bush's performance.
Reportedly,
:; Actually, Bush's previous cam:!paigns were jointly managed by the some of what they are discovering
:Jiery Atwater and Secretary of has them in anear panic.
Some of this polling data sug-;Slate James Baker. Now, however,
gests
that a growing number of vot:•not only is Atw~ g~. but Baker
ers
are
starting to view George
~is so tied up with the Middle East
Bush
much
as they ,viewed. fonner
':and Eastern Europe that he is 1.-ge·
president Jimmy Caner before the
·:,y unavailable for campaign duty.
1980. contest, which he lost to
• The problems Bush is now facRonald
Reagan. Recently, respect'!ing have cropped up with almost
ed
Republican
pollsttr .Lance Tar.~ ;,m,reeedented s'uddonnen. Laic rance
IOid
a
reporter
that he sees
:UStsummer, when Bush and his
"strong
.parallels
between
v01era'
~dvisers gathered in Kenneb·
,nport 10 plin Jeneral campaign perceptions of Jimmy Carter in
1980 and Gcorp Buslt today.':
IIIIIIICIY• it 'Nil uuned he c:aold
Says one Bush campaign
:l:ollt lD an cuy viclllry • the man
1011te:
"In some ways the geaeril
&gt;Who won lhe Gulf W• and PRiid·
clill!lle
iJ beeomlac similar. The
~ l1'lffl the eoliiJI"' of the Soviec
ecoaom~ iJ in allilspin and ~le
Vlliool.
· Howcva, the Bush team f(IIJOI f t 111111118 t:'J~on the StWng
presidont's
. hip ability, and
~that American voten havo the
his
lbiHty
lD
manage
lhe economy
world's shonest memorie~ - in . in the future. ..
pollliQ lil 1J1911lhs Clll be I life: .
Thm has heal confusion within

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, February 1,2, 1992

the Bush camp about how the president should respond. Charles
Black, a senior campaign adviser,
S&amp;ys what is needed is a "transition
in emphasis" from foreign policy
accomplishments to "economy and
pocketbook issues.''
Insiders say pan of the confusion results from there not being a
single strong hand in charge'of the
re-election campaign. Also blamed
is the general upheaval at the White
House, with fonner Transportation
Secretary Sam Skinner replacing
John Sununu as chief of staff.
Many early political deeisions
were made by campaign general
chairman Robert Mosbacher. Insiders say it was the former commerce
secretary who urge!! Bush to
change the theme of his Far Eastern
trip to jobs and take along the
dOzen COIJ!OI'I(e CEOs. The' Bush
caml' now views that trip as an
unmnigated disaster. As a result,
insiders predict Mosbacher will
play 1 l~ly cereaioaial role in
the~ flom now on.
There iJ also conlidenble fric·
lion~ between the campaign
staff, headed by chairman Robert
TCeler, and the White House staff,
headed by Stilner, Skinner would
clearly like 10 hive a dominant role
in the CIII)Jllign. Jnsidm II)' that
although he and Teeter are old

Here we arc in uncharted
waters; but add to the dangers
implicit in a Russian Man on
Horseback the uncertainties that
will be inevitable in a world in
which something on the order of 20
nations will possess atomic
weapons of their own , and one
begins to see that the 21st century
will not be lacking in geopolitical
problems.
That is precisely why it is so
desperately imporlaDt for the United Slates to continue developing a
system of satellites in earth orbi~
capable of detecting and destroying
nuclear missiles shonly after they
have been launched.
It simply beggars belief that the
congressional Democrats would
reject President Bush's plea to fund
such a system just because it was
first proposed by Ronald Reagan
and they have historically opposed
it Before, it was•a brilliant idea but
not essential. Tomorrow it will be
absolutely indispensable.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

Berry•s World

Message...

--Area deaths-Friends may call Thursday from
7-8:30 p.m. at the funeral home.

Hospital news----

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Winter stonn watch tonight and
. Thursday. Tonight, snow or snow
· and rain mixed with freezing rain
. possible in the evening. Steady or
. slowly rising temperatures. Chance
· of precipitation 80 percent. Thurs.
. day, ra in likely. High 40-45 .

Mamie Ellen Cook
Mamie Ellen Walker Cook, 89,
of Point Pleasant, died Wednesday,
February 12, I992 at her residence
following a long illness.
She was born July 10, 1902 in
Henderson, the daughter of the late
Charlie and Iva Belle Walker Lee.
She was preceded in death by her
husband of 67 years, John William
Cook, Sr., in 1988; two infant ·
children; three grandchildren; two
sisters; and one brother.
Survivors
include
seven
daughters, Virginia Gibscn, Mary
Belle Pasquale, Donna Sheline and
:nons Henry, all of Gallipolis, Ruth
,Northup .of Gallipolis Ferry, Mar·
garet Pic1tc of Point Pleasant, and
.Lucy Mitchell of Belleville, IllinOis; five sons, Walter Cook and
John Cook, Jr., both of Henderscn,
Charles Cook of Grove City, Cecil
Cook of Gallipolis, and Larry Cook
of Gallipolis Ferry; two brothers,
Lee Walker of Gallipolis Ferry, and
Forest Lee of Pomeroy, OH.; one
sister, Lena Criner of Gallipolis; 29
grandchildren;
32
great·
grandchildren; and one great-great·
grandchild.
Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 2 p.m. at the Wilcoxen
.Funeral Home with the Minister
Mike Mitchell and the Rev. James
Bunn officiating. Burial will follow
.in the Beale Chapel Ceme!Cry, Ap·
,pic Grove.
.
Friends may call the funeral
.home Thursday from 2 to 4 p.m .
and from 7 to 9 p.m.

:Oliver J. Crooks
Oliver James (Jim) Crooks, 82,
:of Gallipolis, died Tuesday, Feb.
II, 1992, in Veterans Hospital in
. Huntington, W.Va.
Born June 24, 1911, at Cabin
;creek, W.Va., he was the son of
, the late W. Earl and Blanche Watts
.Crooks.
, He was a retired mason and a
1World War II Anny veteran.
. He was preceded in death by his
"wife, Reva J. Banks Crooks, on
April 13, 1990.
' He is survived by one sister,
Amanda Cornell of Minford, and
several nieces and nephews.
Services will be held Friday, II
a.m., at the McCoy-Moore Funeral
Home in Vinton with the Rev.
Marvin Sallee officiating. Burial
will be in the Vinton Memorial
Park.

The Dnily Seulinel
(USPS 213-lHIO)

The GOP timp his beet! polling
furiously, ttying to asseu bow far
the J1reside't bu ectually fallen in
pubHc eateem. Reponedly, some of
\Yhalthey n diacoverina 11u them
in a near panic.

Published every af'temoon, Monday
through Friday, 1 n Court St., Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio ' Valle;y Publi1hing

Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio •6769, Ph. 002-2156 . Second cla u
po~~t.age

paid at Pomeroy, Ohio.

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Daily Pre111 AIYochlt.ion and th11 Ohio
New t paper A111ociation,, NationRI
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POSTMASTER: Send addrNI cMnae- lo
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POmeroy, OHio 467llll.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrh.1r or Motor Rout~

ono w..w.l......................................... at.GO

..

I•
•

.j
I

•

.

D~

• .;. . ,

I'IJ1 afte~ is one of those
.;utive pay, packages."

Ono Moolh .... .....................................aa.!lll
One YoRr,....... .......................... .~•..$83.20
· S!NGLB.COPY
PRICB
DPily...... ,.............. ....... :...... .......... 25 Cftntl

.,

SubiiCriUrli not d..ning to po)' the Cln'i·
er mny rcmh In ad•anco direct t.O The
C1llipoli~ Daily Tribune on a 3.6 or 12
month ,bl.1il . Credit will be given anTler
e1ch week.
NO .~blcriptionil bf moil permitted in

Chance of precipilation 70 percent.
Extended forecast:
Friday through Sunday:
A chance of rain or snow Friday
and Sunday. A chance of rain Saturday. Highs in the 40s Friday and
Sunday and mainly in the 50s Saturday. Lows in the 20s Friday, the
40s Saturday and the 30s Sunday.

Alice A. Stockton
Alice Amelia Stockton, 86, of
Hemlock Grove Road, Hemlock
Grove, died Tuesday, Feb. II,
1992 at the Veterans Memorial
Hospital Extended Care Facility.
Born on March 7, 1905 in Sutton Township, she was the daughter of the late Thomas Elsworth
Holter and Belle Birch Holter.
She was a housewife and a
member of the Hemlock Grove
Grange. She belonged to the Morning Slar United Methodist Church
and attended the Hemlock Grove
Christian Church.
She is survived by ·six daughters
and four sons-in-law, Mildred and
Ralph Bernard, Coolville; Ruth and
Daniel Bernard, Stewart; Linda and
John Watson, Canal Winchester;
Marilyn and Doug Martin, Gallipolis; and Ernestine Stockton and
Donna Stockton, Dayton; a sister,
Ada Van Meter, Portland, and a
brother; Thomas Holter, Jr.,
Racine; seven grandchildren, and
one great-grandchild.
Funeral services will be held at
I p.m. Saturday at the Hemlock
Grove Christian Church. Charles
Domigan will officiate and burial
will be in the Hemlock Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home Friday from
2to 9 p.m.

Paul E. VanMeter
Paul Eugene VanMeter, 62, of
Dump Road, Rutland, died
Wednesday, Feb. 12, 1992, at Veterans Memorial Hospilal, following
an extended illness.
Born in Hallwood , April 29,
1929, he was the son of Edward
Bell VanMeter and Clara Mae Bass
VanMeter.
Hewasarctiredcoalminerand
a member of the United Mine
Workers of America, Local 1890.
He attended the Free Will Baptist
Chulth, Rutland, was an army veteran of the Korean Connict, and a
member of the Stewart Johnson
P11St 9926, Veterans of Foreign
Wars, Mason.
He is survived by his wife of 35
years, Mary (Nancy) Schuler VanMeter, Rutland; a daughter, Debra
Dailey, Rutland; three sons, Tony
VanMeter, Rutland , John Van Meter, Columbus, and Michael
VanMeter, Bellefontaine; three
brothers, Harold VanMeter, Point
Pleasant, William and Ray Van
Meter, both of Mason; two sisters,
Eunice Hallscott and Nora Van
Meter, both of Mason; four grandchildren several nieces and
nephews. '
Besides his parents, he was preceded in death by twin daughters,
Clara Mae and Tina Marie VanMeter, three brothers and two sisters.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m . at the Birchfield
Funeral Home, Rutland, with the
Rev. Paul Taylor officiating. Burial
will be in Adamsville Cemetery,
Mason. Friends may call at _the
funeral home 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Thu~ay at the funeral home.

M .......

I·

O•t.llclo Galli• coUnt,

t3 w...kt .........,................................pa.;o
26 w..u .......................................... ac&amp;.w

&amp;2 Wecb ................ ~ ......................... $S8.40

Middleport police
arrest 91 in January
The Middleport Police Department made 91 arrests during January, and investigated three accidents. Parking meter collections
were $627 with merchant police
collections being $206. A total of
192 parking tickets were written
during the month.

Ten were fined and seven others
forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Bruce Reed Monday night
Fined were Timothy Coates,
Pomeroy, $313 and costs, destruction of property, and $113 aqd
costs, .Public intoxication, with an
order to pay restitution for damage;
Chandra Van Meter, Pomeroy, S63
and costs, driving while under suspension; Shawn Goble, Ewington,
$375 and costs, and three days in
jail, DUI; Alben Cupp, Vinton, $63
and costs, expired registration ;
Rick Little, Middleport, $63 and
costs, open flask in a motor vehicle; Robert Martin, McArthur, $63
and costs, open container in a
motor vehicle; Sandra Lee,
Chester, $63 and costs, open flask
in motor vehicle; Tammy Hupp,
-

Point Pleasant, W. Va., $50 and
costs, speeding; Martha Storms,
Albany, $88 and costs, consuming
under age 21; and Sharon Harris,
Syracuse, seat belt violation, $20.
Forfeiting bonds were. Michael
Edge, Vinton, $42, speeding;
Bethany Jo Mayer, Pomeroy, $80,
failure to control; Debra Young,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.. $105, open
flask, $80 failure to control, and
$27 no child restraint; John Hewitt
Anderson, Pomeroy, $77 speeding;
Yvonne Persinger, Long Bottom,
$60, failure to maintain assured
clear distance; Maiena Maynard;
Reedsville, $63, failure to display a
valid registration ; Kyle Buck,
Springfield, $80, failure to display
a valid registration, and $80, driving under suspension.

Middlepl)rt Cl)llTt news--

A Gallipolis man was fined on
five charges and received jail sentences on two when he appeared in
the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred H:offman Tuesday night.
Richard E. Ellis; Gallipolis, was
fined $150 and costs and sentenced
to three days in iail on a charge of
fleeing from pohce, $425 and costs
and three days in jail on a charge of
physical control of motor vehicle
while under the influence or alechoi or drugs, $100 and costs for
driving under suspension, $150 and
costs for resisting arrest, and $25
and costs for running a stop sign.
Others fined in the court were
Shannon C. Williams, Racin~.
$425 and .costs and three days m
Jatl, phySical control of a motor
· vehicle while under the influence
of, alcoho.i or dr~gs, ~nd $10 and
costs, exptred reg1strauon; Harry R.
Butcher, Middleport, $25 and

costs, discrdcrly manner; Larry H.
Efaw, Athens, $25 and costs, discrdcrly manner; Doy Ray Nltz, II,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, running a
stop sign; Anthony Moore, Middleport, $25 and costs, no operator's
license; Daniel G. Karnes, Shade,
$25 and costs, opeq con!ainer; and
Lori l . Pierce, Middlcp&lt;&gt;~ $25 and
costs, allowing an unlicensed persen to operate her'vehicle. ·
Forfeiting bonds on five charges
were Earl R. McKnight,
Langsville, $60, running a·stop
sign; $50, speed; $60, expired registration; $210, reckless operation;
and 5235, fleeing from police.
Also forfeiting bonds were G.
Randall Bunce, Middleport, $60,
expired registration; John H. Day,
Pomeroy, $60, no valid registration; Scott L. Howell, Bidwell,
$60, improper backing; and Samuel
A. Smith, Bidwell, $56, s)IC9ding.

bcr office.

.

endorsed a con sumer survey that

rcq ucs.Lcd lhut 1hc cham her endorse ·

will be conducted in conjunction

the telephone survey.

---Local briefs... --~
&lt;.:ontinued rrom pagt• I
sian along the street, particularly in front of the store.
.·
Those arrows have been requested by ODOT District 10 Director ·
John Dolwer and Operations Engineer Paul HQffman. Countour :
maps of the affected area will be made from the aerial photographs. :
The exact date wh en the aerial photographs will be taken in .
unknown.

s.v.••• ,.. ....
. . . . . . . 7...
Alii IIIIISIJt
44Hft.l

'·
•·

·

;

To date, there are no plans to repair the eroded bank. However, :
because the location has been identified as a possible trouble spot, ,
ODOT is gathering information in anticipation that the bank will be 1
scheduled for repair within the next few years.
·

Green cited after wreck

_

A Pomeroy youth was cited to Meigs County Juvenile Court for ;
a Saturday afternoon accident on State Route 7 near Big Wheel. . ;
Phillip C. Green was traveling west on Route 7 and was pass10g .
a school bus. He reportedly tapped hi~ brakes and lost control of his :
1973 Pontiac on the slippery road, and hit a guardrail.
.
•
Moderat e damage was listed to the car, but there were no :
injuries.

'

EMS units answer eight calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services units answered eight
calls for assis1ance on Tuesday and early on Wednesday.
. ·
On Tuesday at 1:13 p.m., Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 2 for
Thomas Ferguson, who was treated at the scene.
.
On Wednesday at 12:03 a.m.,.Syracuse squad was sent to Min· .
ersville Hill' for Goldie Reitmire, who was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. At 1:10 a.m. , Rutland unit went to Dump Road. Geile Van
Meter was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 2:51a.m., Rutland unit went to Beech Grove Road. Eva McKinney was taken to
Veterans. At 3:28a.m., Rutland unit went to Meigs Mine 2. Bernard
Hudson was taken to Veterans. At 5:39a.m., Middleport units went
to a chimney fire at the Marvin Roush residence on Bailey Run
Road. At 8 a.m., Rutland squad went to State Route 684 for Frances
Young. She was laken to Veterans. At 8:38a.m., Chester unit was
called to the Ed Bacr residence on Hartinger Road for a chimney
fire .

__ Meigs annl)llncel1lents _
Swettheart dinner
The Mo~nt Union . Baptist
ChuiCh will host a sweetheart din·
ncr on Friday at 6:30 p.m. in the
new fellowship hall .
Dedication planned
.
The dedication for the new
piano at the Meigs County Infirmary will be held Sunday. Feb. 23
at 2 p.m. An open house for the
lnfumary will follow unti14 p.m.
Plans for future projects will be
announced and refreshments will
"be served .
Dance planned
The Belles and Beaus Western
Squcrrc Dance Club will sponsor an
open d3ncc at the senior citizens
ccmcr in Pomeroy on Saturday,
. Feb. 22 from 8-11 p.m. Dave
Stulhard, Reynoldsburg, will be the
caller. All western square dancers
arc invited. Refreshments will be
served .
Singles gathering
A singles gathering will he held
Sunday fro 4-~ p.m. at Royal Oak
Resort in the lounge of the Horace
Karr Center. The cost is $3 per person and reservations should be
phoned to 985 -4 312 by 2 p.m. on
Saturday .
Dance planned
Th ere wi II be a round and

Stl)cks

square dance at the Rutland American legion Hall on Saturday fCQm
8 p.m. to midnight with music by
C.J . and the Country Gentlemen.
Ray Fitch will be the caller. The
public is invited to attend.
Valentine Dance
There will be a Valentine Dance
on Friday from 7 to II p.m. at the
Middleport Legion Annex. Tom
Payne of WMPO Radio will pro.
vide the music and Ihe cost is $5
per person. Snack table included.
Belles and Beaus
Belles and Beau s Western
Square Dance Club will sponsor an
open dance at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy
on Saturday, February 22 from 8 to
II p.m . Caller will be Dave
Stuthard of Reynold sburg. All
western style square dancers are
invited and refreshments will be
served.
Singles to meet
There will be singles gathering
on Sunday from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m. at
Royal Oak Resort in the lounge at
Horace Karr Center. Cost is $3 per
person. Phone reservations are
required by Saturday at 2 p.m. and
can be m;1de by calling 985-4312.
Lodge to meet
The Shade River lodge 453 will
hold a regular meeting on Thursday
at 7:30p.m. Work will be in the FC
degree. Refreshments will be
served.

Am Ele Power .................. .31
Ashland Oil .......................33 1/4
AT&amp;T.................. ......... :.....37 3/4
Bank One ......................... ..45 1/8
Bob Evans ............... ..........26 1/8
Charming Shop...................27 1/2
City Holding ........ .............. 18
Federal Mogul.. ................. .l6 7/8
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. 61 1/8
Key Centurion .......... o.. .... .. l5 1/4
Lands' End ........... ,.'........... 32 3/4
Limited lpc. ............ .......... 31 3/8
Multimedia Inc................ .. 26 3/4
Rax Rcslaurant .... :............. ! 1/8
Robbins&amp;Myers ............. :.. 17 1/2
Shoricy's lnc...............,......24 7/8
Slar Bank ........... ................ 25 1/4
Wendy lnt'l ........................ l21/4
Worthington Ind . ...............25
Stock reports are the 10:30 a.m.
quotes pro•idtd by Blunt, Ellis
and l.oewi of Gntlipulis.

BARBECUE
. $159

';

on all winter clothing
Shop· Fridays til 8 P.M.
.

ADOLPH'S DAllY VAWY ·
"At 11te W ef ..e Pa•rY I 111 .......
fOIIIOY, o•o
,.. tn-zss•

,,

. ..

~, .~~

.

iJ/dfiPvU

-

SPIIILME

wi th 11l ~ dow nto wn r~Jv iuli :t. LtiiOn

At the request of Jean Tll b&gt;ell, projec t 1n lvllddlc porl . Trusse ll ,
the ' chamber 's members hip ·Mi ddtcpon 's projcc l &gt;pcc laii St,

'Special of the Week!

WITH FRIE$,,.........'2.29

l...tclo Oallla Count,

~t

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Merry ,
daughter, Thurman.

Ten fined, seven forfeit
bond in Pomeroy court ·

,nw.FIIAY

,.,hero hom&amp; carrier 1orvice t1
available.
'
111•11 Soboortptlono

t3 Weeka......................................... nt.k
i6 Wccu ........ ,.........-........ .............. 143.16
G2 Wccki .......... ,.... !............ .....
tlc.'f8

Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS
Christopher Hendricks, Racine.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Michael Hubbard, Jerry Grogan,
and Goldie Lawson.
·
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER '
Discharges Feb. 11 - India
Boykin, Charles Boyles, Eva
Brown , Su san Cummons, Betty
Holter , Belly John son , Mrs.
Charles McNeely and son , Brian
Perry. Ralph Thomp son , Belly
Weemes, and Mrs. Michael Wells
and son.
llirths Feb. II -Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Cummons, daughter, Dexter.

COLONY THFATRE

llf'C!RI

~~v....,.._
" ' 199l ~~~ N£A It,,,. r !I

"Basics//•
'
exorbita ·

labels, similar to those on cigarcuc
packages, arc now, placed on cans
and pouches of smokeless tobacco.
What provokes youngsters to try
snuff and chewing tobacco?
Culiosity, peer pressure, and adult
role models who use smokeless
tobacco are considered to be the
three factors that most influence
children to try snuff and chewing
tobacco, and boredom, loneliness
and low self esteem further contribute to continued smokeless
tobacco use.
Smokeless tobacco products
contain several substances that
"sound unappealing by them:&gt;elves:
nicotine and 19 other cancer-causing agents; sugars and salts for flavor; sand and grit; and 2,550 other
chemicals.
The Romunos are themselves
recovering drug and alcohol
addicts, and now counsel teens
with addictions. ·
Dan tells the students in "Spittin• Image" sessions that nicotine is
a "gateway" drug. The addiction to
nicopne (the active drug in' tobacc~
productS) often leads to more sertous drug addictions.
In fac~ Romimo said last week
that most of the teenaged drug and

alcohol addicts he works with start- that site."
ed with smokeless tobacco prodThe question of sewage disposal
ucts.
. has never been a probfem at the
The "Spittin' Image" program IS Racine site, since connection with
presented· to all students in grades the Racine sewage district is
four through eight in Meigs Coun- believed to be possible.
ty, and the Romunos are now com.
SEORC update
pleting the circuit, with only one
Steven L. Story, who represents
more school to be visited. All Meigs County on the Southeastern
together, 1,500 boys and ~iris have Ohio Regional Council's Highway
been expo~ed to the 'Spittin' User's Committee. reported to
Image" program, and Romuno says chamber members that he and Eliathat in each group, he and his wife son along with John -Weeks and
are given the opportunity to inter- Elizabeth Schaad of the Departvene with at least one smokeless ment of Development met with
tobacco user.
ODOT District 10 Deputy Director
According to Ferman Moore, John Dowler on Friday to discuss
the Director of the ACS Unit in highways in Meigs County.
Meigs County, the "Spittin' Image"
The importance of th e
program has received good reviews Ravenswood Bridge Cohnector and
already.
Athens· to Darwin section of '
"We've received many qnso- the
U.S. Route 33 was discussed, Story
licited compliments about this pro- said.
Construction on the Rock
gram already," Moore said, "and Springs
to Five Points section of
after the program was presented for the connector
is set to begin in
the unit's board of directors, they
1994.
were also very impressed."
According to Story, the SEORC
The ACS also underwrites
another program for elementary- has set a goal of 2000 to have all
aged Meigs Countians. Entitled targeted highways completed or
·"Smoke-Free 2000", this program underway, and a brochure is being
provides teaching materials for produced for mailing to influential
legislators and officials.
third and fourth grade teachers.
"For the first time," Story said
The program is aimed at disyesierday,
"the state now recogcouraging cigarette smoking by
those students when they reach nizes that highways are a key to
adulthood - in the year 2000, and is development. The traffic count
funded entirely by the Meigs Unit alone could never justify these
of the ACS.
roads, but the economic imponance
The mouo used in Teen Institute of them does make them necesand other teen-related addition pro- sary."
~rams led by the Romunos is also
Other business
mtroduced to youngsters in the
The
chamber's
annual
"Spittin' Image" program: "Know dinner/dance will be held at Royal
the facts before you act."
Oak Resort on March 21. Tickets
"Spittin' Image" is a perfect arc $30 for couples and $15 for sinavenue to inuoduce those facts to gle admission, and will be available
youngsters in the community.
from board members and the cham-

RobertJ. Wagman
friends, and are in constant communication, there are deep differences between the White House
and the campaign staff.
This -gulf was apparent in the
confusing campaignmg Jlior to the
Slate of the Union ad~. Teeter
wanted major policy initiatives to
be .introduced by the president one
at a time in the· weeks before the
speech. Skinner wanted no previews so that the speech could have
the greatest impact Teeter feared
thai this would build up impossible
expectations for the speech, opening the possibility for disappoint·
menL
In the end, Skinner won· this
&amp;r81!111en~ but it worries insiclers. ·If ·
the State of the Union battle was
only a sample of what is coming,
the Bush campaign may never reallyget on trlll:k.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
E~RISE ASSN. .
.

{7l)[lll1llJitz••• ~c~o-nt~i~~~u~ed~t-r_um~p~a·g~e-l_________________~----~----~---

Continued from page 1

• At the heart of the program is
_ : the goal of targeting pre-teens
before smokeless tobacco use
begins. As surprising as it may
seem, use of snuff and chewing
tobacco usually slarts by the age of
10, or while kids are in the fifth
grade.
. ·The story of Scan Marsee, a
· high school track star, is a major
· part of the "Spittin' Image" pro. gram. Marsee used four and a half
· cans of snuff a week for six years,
· and died at the a~c of 19 from oral
.. cancer. Before hiS death, however,
· Marsee endured surgeries to
. remove parts of his tongue, neck
. and jawbone. He also underwent
radiation treatments for treatment
of the cancer.
or course, the risks of smoke. less tobacco use are now wellknown: oral cancer; cancer of the
esophagus, bladder and larynx;
· gum disease and tooth loss and
, decay.
· Snuff use accounts for 87 per' cent of the cheek and gum cancer
, in the U.S., and cancer risk increas. cs by 50 percent when snuff is
· used. Radio and television advcrtis: ing or smokeless tobacco products
• was outlawed in 1986, and warning

file Dally Sentlnei- Page--3

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The Daily Sentinel

Sports

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streak to the Orange men and which
set off a celebration usually seen
about a month from now.
"We were getting tired of hear·
ing about the streak;'' Seton Hall
guard Bryan Caver said. "It's over
now. We want to start a streak of
Seton Hall over Syracuse."
The Pirates have done that courtesy of a solid defensive effort and
some good free throw shooting in
the final minutes. Seton Hall made
15 of 18 foul shots in the last4:57.
The only field goal in that span w&gt;~S

Scoreboard
63

EASTERN CONFERENCE

.

NeYibury 31, Pymatwling V1ll. 30
Northmor 50, Clear Folk 41
Norton 49, Green 40
Orange Chr. 78, Youna. Ouisti1n 14
Omillo 64, Norwtyne 37
Ott.aw1-Gl•ndcxf 72, Paulding 59
Rer;ina 44, LAurel 38
Reynoldlburg 83, Franklin Hu:. 39
Riverdale 48, Colonel Craw£ord 38
Rocky Riv~:~47 ,lndqx:ndcnce 43
S. Cl!arltliton Soulhcestc:m 68, Fair·
hmks 37
Shelby 62, Norwalk 20
Spring. Catllolie 82, Yellow Spring1

W L

PeL

GB

.&amp;Sl
.596

2.5

Philadelphia ........ .. 24 24
Miami .................... 23 26

.500

NewJersey ............ l9 .29

W•shinK'OR ............ l6 ]I
Or\amlo .................. \2 37

.340
.245

.

61

New York .............. 30 16
B~ton .................... 28 19

.469
.396

Col. Lndcn-McKinley 10, Col. Eut
CoL Marion-Franklin 81, Col. South

All•nlk Dlvklon

Ttam

1
&amp;5
12

14.5
19.5

Col . Mifflin 79.Col. Northland (:fJ
Col. Wheu.t one 68, Col. Bd!chcroft
64

Coldwalcl 62,- Ouawt·Giandorl' 56
Columbia 44, Brooklyn 33
Columbiana 73, Co!umbi•n•
Ct'CII tview 58
Columbus Grove SO, Pandon·Gilboa

19

Central Dlvklon

9

.816

Clevebnd.-~..... ..31

U

·"4

7.!

Detroit.................28
Allanu ........... ..... 2A
Milwaullee ...... ...... 23
Indiana ...
... .20
Chuloue ...
. 15

21

.571
24 · 500
24 .489

12
15.5

Chioogo.................. 40

16

29

.408

2(l

33

.313

24.5

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Mktw est 01¥1sloa
Team
W L P~l.
Uuh ................ .... 32 18 640
San AnlOrlio ..... .... 28 19
596
Houstcn ... ... ..... 25 23 .521
Denver .................. 17 30 .362
DaU11 ................... n 34 .m
Mirmcs:ota ....... ...... 8 39 .170

GB

2.5
6
13.5
17.5
225

Paclnc Dlvlsloo
.702
.. .. 33
Ptmm il.. ........... ...32 16 .667
667
Golden State ... ....30 ll
617
L.A. Likert ..... ..... 29 18
.5 10
Se~tlle ..... ...... ...... 25 24
L.A. Oiwe11 ... ... 22 2l .468
)40
S"ramc:nlo ... .. \6 J l
Portland

"

l.l
2
4

9
II

11

Tuesday's scores
lndiana\00, Orlando 98
l'hiladdphial \4, Miami 102
Char!01u: 113, AllanLa \08
L.A . Wc:rs I 16, Minne&amp;aLal08
San AnlOnio 100, 801Lnn 14
Chicago 133, New J er~ey I I 3
Milwaukee 104, Detroit &amp;7
Utah 111, Clevel•nd lt9
rortland 121, Denver 11 2
Scallle 105, Hou.s1011 99
Colden St.ate 139, Washington 127

I

Thursday's games
Chicago at New York, 7:30p.m.
Allanlllt Miami, 7:30 p.m.
Mini!Clol&amp; II DeJroil, 7:30p.m.
Char\oltc at Milwaukee, 8:30p.m.
L.A. Lake.rs II Ut.ah , 9 ~30 p.m.
San Antonio 11 Gol dt!21 St.ate, 10:30
p.m.

Major college
basketball scores

Soulh

Hannan Trace 80, Ohio Valley Chr.

!I
Hawken 81 , Orange 65
Hcri.ugc Or. 64, Ptrml Southwest·
em Cht. 4of
Holland Sprin&amp;. 63, Perrysburg 56
Hoonon 65. Jacbm Ccnler 52 ·
Howlan d Otr. 85, Po~ttrsville Ott. 68
Hubbard 53, Yoong. Libcny 43
Huntington 6S, Paint Vall. 53
In dia n I...Ue 50, Triad 48
lndi.n Vall. 45, Dover 31
Ironton 9S, Porumoul.h W. 67
Jacbm 69, WJve.r1y 49
Je.ffenon 82, A1ht100\a 63
Johnstown Nonhridse 38, New Al ·
be.r.y 37, OT
Kalida 82, Van Duren 38
Kennon 76, Crestwood 63
J..akewood 79, Normandy 55
l.eb.anm 59, Mitrnisbura; 55
l.&amp;:etnn1a 68, Edi.5m N. 37
Liberty Chr. 73, MOLlllt Vemlil Chr.
l!
Um1 Cult. 48, Elida 45
Usbon 67, Southem Loct] SS
l..nckl•nd 62, Cin. Seven llilh 56
Logan 81, Nelsmville·York 67
Lorain Cath. 72, Brookside 69
Loudonville 52, DanviUe 35
Louitv ille Aquinas 69, Garfield Hts
Trinity 58
Lucasville Valle)' 53, Ponsmouth
Clay 52
Madison 75. Ashtabula St. John 69
Marion Calh. 59. Lucu 56, OT
Maumee V1U. 81, DanbUI)' Lakeside
fiJ
Mad ina 56, StrongMlle 51
Middletown Or. 113, Fayetteville 39
MiddlelOwn Madi"m 67, Miami Vall.

Vandalia-Butler 63, Northm~Wtt 44
Viclory Ou. 69, CaJvary Bapcisl44
W. Bnneh 11 , R•vcnn• SE 69
W. Ctrrollton 6S, Greenville 64
W. Geauga 62, Ch1grirt Fall.l 56
W. Holmes 58 , River View 32
Weirloo (W.Va.) Madonnt 62, Cadiz
l7
Wellington 61, Dcilwlll: Chr. 41
Western Brow n 85, Peebles 84
Westervill e S. 13, l.ancader 65
Wheeling (W.Va .) Lindy 73,
Steubenville C1lh. 64
Willi•msburg 79, Felicity-Fr-nklin6S
Willtmghby S. 59, WickliJTe 68
WindhiOTl 73, Ravc:nnt 63
Woodmo~ 69, Ott.awt Hill1 52
Woodridge 63, Field 51
Young. Eut S9, Young. South 52
Young. Rt)'&lt;:ll 85, Yoong. ~ane~
Young. Wilson 64, C.mpbdl Memorial 57, OT

'3

Bc:lishire Si . Gnnd VtU. 51. OT
8eme Unioo 65, New Albany 26
81oom·Carroll 36, Logan Elm 35
Buckeye 49 , Columbia 38
Bucyrus Wynford 52, Ont.ario 42
C1n1on Calh. 69, Altroo Elms 28
Can ton McKinley 52. Akron Hoban

4S

Georgia 64, LS U 62

37

61

Ohio high school
basketball scores
62
Aleundcr 67, Vinlon Coun1y 57
Alliano~~70, Culaho&amp;a Fa11160
Ann Arbor (Mieh.) Pioneer 71, ToJ.
80Mhc:r64
Aruonia 7S, Tri·County N. 54
Anthony W1yne 6,, Bowlina Groen
A1hl1nd (Ky.} Ro•c Hill 61, Now

lO

Cin. Winton Wood1 52. Fairfield 48
Cin. Woodward 67, C1rt. Setoo 54
Cin. Wyoming 73, Cin. Finncytown
21
Cin:leville 66, llamilton Twp. 61, OT
Cle. G\cnville 56, Oc. Mus~aU 44
Cle. VASJ 66, Pa rma Hu. Hl)ly
N1me 51
Cl11. Wcra 'Tach 57, Cle. Collinwood

Col.

Rinn*-46

AUIU1 77. Lu\hcran W. 67
B•rbmon 41, Nordonia 31

""""'11. w.u.on n

S•lan51

Bellin Center Wcau:m Rauve 70,

l•ebon-Milton 69

"

Col. Marion·FrarU.lin 96, Col. South
17
Col. Miffiirt 53, Col. Northlartd 47
Col. School £or Oirla 47, Mtranalht

!I
Col. Wl!lllandll,Col. Briap6S
Cuyaho1a Valley Chr. 51rAkron

o.,,illo 11, w....,...,. a. ll

Maache&amp;~a43

IM&gt;tin 3l, Wonh"'- Kil..;.,, 31
Euclid U, Bedtord 35
F.m., 47, WJ)'nedlle 39
Fu.iloJl2. Marionllud~1 24
OarrloiW Hta. Trinily 66, Alt:n:r~ Sty.

SLM-4S
OM!ow64,Anme.. 30
~56, K.n.., RwJC"

41

~o7l,Coll&lt;hn31 '

27
. I

Howland Ou. 46, PMemWo Chr, 43
Jdlnltown Ncnthrillp 50, E. Kno1 36
JC.\onjl , Rhw Vall. !10
ICldoui OW. Ol, Smllh.;a.4t
Kilip 5 9 , - Rooo .,
~ n. o.m~oa.~~e 50
Llihim w..m 6l, P~Nmoulh E.

IM-ll.Nnyll
1.6ofty!Woo,,l'llhOrC.IIL&lt;O

!C
.......
..
um

1• .

Cin. LaS.Uc 63, Cin. Wet!an HW•

60

· Cin. N. CoUeae Hill 76, aw.e.!-TaWI

Cia, Purceii· M•riaa.5fi, Cin. ld~i·

..... u

CJo. Toll 11, Clo. Woln111 Uillt 61
Cin. w-..62,CJo. s..x.vtorlO
CJo. W-..1 69, C.. Alkll66

-.lt

O...W1l,B-l7
Col. ,_,'~-

•• 5'1, CoL c · ...
.
....... awa..

l-47

.

Uala
~ · :w ·
L 1
.~pna
a t111'71. W. Sa-.
Nanhw...

•lf'

.......,. dO, Clo. !ft6lo IDU 2S
Mrf111111Sr. 41.Nnw:t33 ''
...,...,.n,w......w. 35
~s.,..._v_.,

~64.

.......

'fddl.ee-.. MUfNn 36

Nwilloa Juban 59, UIUontoWJI

Muaillon Peny 52 l;ouinHit
Aq......l
•
. .

-lliaNMd 59, ..... &lt;0
~6t.N.R~35

N, hMI Toylor ll, Cin. CAP!!.,,

to sponsor

Rio-Tiffin game
Bob Evans Farms will sponsor
the men's basketball game between
the University of Rio Grande and
Tiffin University in Lyne Center on
Saturday, Feb. 15 at 7:30p.m.
Tickets for the game are available at the Bob Evans restaurants in
Rio Grande and Gallipolis. The
firm plans a children's hoop shoot
at the halftime, in addition to a
drawing for a $100 savings bond, a
$50 savings bond, gift certificates
and sausage samplers.
A donation by Bob Evans Farms
to the Rio Grande Athletic Boosters organization enables the university to continue seeking out top student-athletes through the awarding
of scholarships. The firm's longtime support of the institution was
hailed by Redmen Coach John
Lawhorn and Athletic Director
Tom Perdue.
"Through the sponsorship of
organizations such as Bob Evans
Farms, the institution and its athletic programs have benefited greatly," Lawhorn said. "Bob Evans
Farms has always enjoyed a close
relationship with Rio Grande and
we appreciate everything they have
done for us over the years."
"It's only right that two organizations such as the University and
Bob Evans Farms, being neighbors,
should mutually support each
other's efforts," Perdue remarked.
"What they have done for us in
terms of helping the institution and
supporting our search for quality
athletes and citizens has been noth·
ing short of tremendous."

·~

t.

The University of Rio Grande
men's basketball team started the
weelc in fifth place in Division I of
NAIA District 22, while the
women's team maintains its grip on
second place.
Within the Mid-Ohio Conference, the Redmen are fourth and

•••
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rth Gallia ........6 8
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mmes Valley ...4 12
Southweitem .......2 15

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I

.....

By DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
The 1991-92 Tri-Vallcy Confer·
encc girls basketball championship
will be on the line on Thursday
evening when the Meigs Marauders
host the Federal Hocking Lancers.
Coach Ron Logan's Marauders
heads into the game with a 17-2
mark overall and a 14-1 mark in
the Tri-Vallcy Conference. Federal
Hocking, under the direction of
Coach Kim Chadwell, will come
into the contest with a 16-2 mark
overall and a 13-1 mark in the
TVC . The Lady Lancers have a
makeup contest left with Vinton
County.
The Lancers have won the last
four TVC championships and have
a 100-7 record over the last four
seasons. Out of those 107 games,
the Lady Lancers have won 77 of
79 TVC games.
The Lancers arc led by 5-9
senior forward Jeni Pierson, who
averaged 20 points and 10
rebounds and was second team all·
district selection last season. She
scored 23 points in the Lancers 4947 win over Meigs on Jan. 10, with
19 of those points coming in the
second half.
Lauren Webb is an outside
threat for Federal Hocking. The 5-5
senior guard scored 14 points in the
win over the Marauders, with most
coming on jumpers from around 15
feet out.
Other possible starters for the
Lancers arc 5-3 senior guard Teresa Hines joining Webb at the other
guard spot, along with 5-4 sophomore Katie Maxwell and 6-0 senior
Becky Stover.

I

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"ll

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....... ....... _.,_...

~" -

I - .. ........ .. .. ~ .• ! .... .. ~ . . ....... ., •.• , . , ....... ,, "

.

..

..

Weekend aaptes
Friday- Oak Hill at Southern;
Hannan Trace at Eastern; Symmes
Valley at North OaUia; Kyaer
Creek at Southwestern
· I
SaturdaJ- lr!lllto.n SL Joe at
Kyser Credl:

' ,,

(

•

............"-~l:
.. ,. ,.

·~.

•

~-

end of_ the lo~gest champion~hip
streak l.n·the htstory of the W1ilter
Games may be in si~hL
''Our ~ountrr as just. broke
down," satd Tamara Moskv1na, the
couple's .coach. "I think there. will
be a deClme '"·the lev~l of a~h1evem.ent,and,!hls decltne w11Jiast
some nme.
Elena Bechke and Denis P~v
of the Umfied Team got the silver,
and Canadi~ns Isabelle Brasseur
and Lloyd Eisle~ too~ the bro'!l~ as
the top SIX placmgs m the ongmal
program remruned th~same..
. The top t:-vo Amencan pallS prov1ded no ev1dence of a future challenge to the Russtans' three-deCade
hold on the sport National champions Calla Urbanski and Rocky
Marva! tripped and flipped their
way to lOth place, while Cal1f0rn1ans Natasha Kuchiki and Todd
Sand were shaky but held onto
sixth.
. On 3J!Other -rink an hour's drive
h1gher '" the Alps, the Unl!ed
Statesscrappeditswaytoasecond

Meigs features a balanced scor·
ing mu1ck led by 5·6 senior forward
Tricia Bacr scoring 12.3 points a
contest. Joining Baer at the forward
spot will be 5-5 Kim Hanning scoring 7.5 points a contest. At center
will be 5-5 junior Lori Kelly, who
is averaging 4.9 points a game.
These three arc capable of scoring
and arc not afraid of mixing it up
on the boards .
· ·
Out front will be the spark plugs
for the maroon and go! ~ ·~:3 junior
Rcva Mullen and 5-4.JUftiOl' Vema
Compston. Compst'oh averages ·
I 1.8 points a game, wMc Mullen is '
scoring at a 9.0 point a.galne clip.
Both of these girls lend ,the, defensive charge for the Marauders ..
Mullen leads the tealn in steals
with 72 while Compston has 53 on
the season.
'
The first th'rec off tho bench for
Meigs will be 5-4' sophomore Lee
Henderson, 5-6 senior Mary Cremean s and 5-6 junior Kalarina
Turner.
The last girls team that Ron
Logan coached nt Meigs went 26-1
on the season coming within minutes ·of the stale tournament before
losing to Wellsville in the regional
finals four years ago. One of the
strong points of that team was
tremendous fan ·support, and this
year, despite the team's success, it
has been disappointing.
Conch Beth Schneider has an
excellent young reserve team at
Meigs. The reserve game with Fed·
era! Hocking will gel underway at ·
5:55p.m. Thursday, and the varsity
game will follow aobut 90 minutes
later.

straight victory, 2-0, over Italy on :
~~y. for it$ best Olympic start
s1.nce 1ts unbeaten gold-medal team ,
of 1960.
.
·
Ray LeBlanC made 46 saves in '
recording America's ftrSt Olympic ·
shutout since 1964, and Marty
Mcinnis and Ted Donato scored :
power-play goals.
.:
But Americans dreaming of a
Lake.Placid II take note: The wins·aren't coming easily here and five :
other te:tms arc 2-0.
:·
"There are six very good reams·'
and each of th
·
od
1eams deserves ~~~~~~~~!l:~~d ~
coach Leszek Lejczylc of Poland, :
whose 0-2ieam does noL
Despite moving into position
today for a sweep of the women's
singles luge medals and a possible
gold in the men's Nordic com- di , k
h th
bined, Austna dn 1 now w e er
to celebrate continued wild success
:~~h~d~;::-~ames or bemoan
Sabine Ginther, one of the
biggeststarsinwomen'sskiingand

~r~~s~~~il~ ~~~~~~ ~=~

and was being sent home to Aus-

triafellow Austrian Hubert Strolz
was only 100 feet from becoming
the first Alpine skier to win the
same event in two Olympics when
he skidded off a bump and missed
a gate in the final slalom run of the
men's Alpine combined.
"Nowit's up to Alberto to
iml&gt;rO\'C our Olympic record,"
ventured.

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·'
•'

. .DINNER SPECIAlS

.•

· ·

.

·· . . Tuesday'UCOI'fll . ..
Southern 55, Warren Local 52
Oa!c Hill 72, Northwest40
Hannan Trace 80, ovcs 31
Racc)and 77, Symme&amp; Valley 51
Southwestern 72,'Hannan 71 (01)

~0

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....... ...

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Meigs girls to battle Federal
Hoc king for TVc crown

TH~~ARDBOX

576
'581
673
651
648
640
638
825
5232

Trimble ............. :.20 10 12 18 = 60
TRIMIILE (60) ..:... Charlie'
MEIGS (59) -John Bentley 1- Gntchcl 7-1-2=19, Jared McCauley
5-0=17, L. J. Mitch 8-0-0=16, 0-0-2=2, Reuben Kiule 5-0·2=12,
Shawn Hawley 4-0-0·8 Trevor Justin Day 4-0-0=8 Dave Gatchel
Harrison 5-0-3.. 13 ·Phil Hovatter 2-5-2=19 TOTALS -18·6·6=60
1-1-0:5. TOTALS :._19·6·3=59
·

Mt"shkutt"enok-Dmt"trt"ev team keep.
.
Russtan domination of pairs skatt"ng·· ··· alt"ve

Women's division standings
.the Redwomen continue to occupy
show
the top spot is again held by
second place.
Division I men's rankings listed Shawnee State (20-4), followed by
Cedarville (20-4) rust, followed by Rio Grande (23-5), Central State
Findlay {17-5), Urbana (18-6), (19-6), Northwood Institute (10Malone (19-7), Rio Grande (18-7), 14), Urbana (7-15) and IUPU·Indiand Central State and Shawnee anapolis (6-16).
MOC men's rankings placed
State (each 8- I7) in a tie for sixth.
Urbana (8·1, 18-6) at fi{St, followed by a tie for second between
Cedarville (7·2) and Walsh (7-2,
15-8). Rio Grande (5·3) was fourth,
followed by Tiffin (5-5, 18-8),
Shawnee State (3-6), Mount Vernon Nazarene (2-9, 7-16) and Ohio
Dominican (1-10, 5-21).
Shawnee State's women maintained their hold on the top spot in
Southern pulled in the rebound and women's MOC action at 10-0, foltook home the victory.
lowed by Rio Grande (10-2). Tifrm
Roy Lee Bailey continued his (7-3, 1S-7)·was third, followed by
steady ph1y for Southern with 21 Ohio Dominican (5·6, 14-9),
points and collected 16 of the Tor- Cedarville (4-7,12-11), Urbana (3nadocs' 39 rebounds. Codner 7), Walsh (3-8, 4-20) and Mount
added I 3 points, and Evans Vernon Nazarene (1-10, 5-17).
chipped in with 10 to pace the winThe Redmen were at Mount
ncrs. Southern hit 24 of 49 from the Vernon Tuesday night and the Redfloor including 0 for 6 from three women sqUllred off with Shawnee
point range for 49 percent. South- State at Portsmouth on Tuesday.
em made 9 of 16 from the line for
In national standings, Redmen
56 percent. Southern had 13 assists center Troy Donaldson was again
(Jeremy Roush led with four), three ranked in field goal percentage,
steals and 13 turnovers 'in addition where his 66.7 performance won
to com mining nine fouls.
him severlth place. In last week's
Eric Harper led Warren Local ~ames, Donaldson netted 50 points
wi1h 12 points all coming from and 23 rebounds, and shot 71 perthree-point range , Cravens and- cenl.
Harris mlded 10 each. The Warriors
Tbe Red men scoring average of
hit 20 of 53 from the floor for 30 99 points per game resulted in the
percent including 4 of 12 from long team being ranked sixth nationally
ran ge . Warren had 24 rebounds in that category.
with Harris and Brackenridge grabThe Redwomen, who were 3-0
.bing six each. The Warriors had six last weelc, saw center Ann Bamitz
steals, seven turnovers and lS~ome Rio Grande's all-time leadfoul s.
.
· career reboundcr when she
Ryan Williams scored 20 points b ke the old record of 814 set by
and Andy Gruescr added 11 as Holly Haslings in 1985-89. At the
Southern defealcd Warren Local in end of last week, Barnilz had
the reserve game 50-45. Phil brou¢'t down 816 boards since her
McGraw led Warren with 13.
. playmg career at Rio Grande began
Southern will bost SVAC front- m 1988.
runner Oak Hill and will try and
Nationally_. the R~dwomen were
force n two-way tic for first with a ~ked 15th m sconng margm (18
win Friday night. The reserve game pomts) and 12th 10 rcboundmg per·
wil start at6:30 p.m.
centage (54.9).
.
Quarter totals
The schedule for the remamdcr
Warren Local ....... 9 20 9 14 = 52 of the week finds the Rcdme~ at
Southern ............. l5 14 JJ 15 = 55 home Saturday, 7:30p.m. agamst
WARREN LOCAL (52) Tiffin for Bob Evans Farms N1~ht.
Brackenridge 4-0-1=9, Cravens 5- The Redwomen are at Cedamlle
0-0=10, Dennis 0-0-4=4, Harper 0- Saturday afte!"oon and host Lake
4-0=12, Harris 4-0·2=10, Merrells Erie in their regular season finale
J-0-0=2, Ruble 2-0-1:5. TOTALS · Sundayat2 p.m.
-16·4·8=52
DISTRICT NOTES: All seven
SOUTHERN (55)- Allen 1- men's teams in Division I will
0-0=2, RouSh 3-0·0=6, Evans 4-0- qualify for the playoffs, slated for
2=10, Lisle 1-0-1=3, Codner 3-0- · March 4, 7 and 10. Seedings will
3=13, Bailey 9-0-3=21. TOTALS be based on the Hunter Rating Sys·
- 24·0·9=55
tem.

(Reserves. SVAG only)
Team ,
W L PF PA
Southern ..............9 0 572 330
Easteqi _...............8 1 460 389 ,
Symmes ~alley ...S 4 432 459 ·
Oak Hill.i............4 5 416 414
Kyger ct~ ....... .3 5 335 375
Hannan Trace ......3 6 403 481 ,
North Gallia ....... .3 6 363 448
Southwesti:m ....... l 9 373 458
TOTALS.-..-·40 40 3354 3354 ,

:

~312 Eastem Avenue, Ga]UpOIIs

614-446•1744

(

PF PA
1073 915
1028 1046
))24 1017
1059 JJOS
832 943
805 915
925 1026
951 JJ91

(Conference)
Oak Hill ..............9 I 709
Southern ..............8' 2 756
Hannan Trace ......8 3 750
Eastern .. ............6 4 662
North Gat1ia ....:...6 4 . 650
Symmes Valley ...2 8 568
Kyger Crrck ........2 8 527
Southwes'tem .......O 11 610
TOTALS ..........41 41 5232

;.

: .. Wtdne.y, February 12 • 9:00-4:00 . ·:

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SURROUNDED- Seton Hall's Jerry Walker (21) is surrounded
by Syracu~e cage~s Dave Johnson (4) and Adrian Autry ~uring · ;
Tuesday mght's 01g East contest at East Rutherford, N.J., which :.
the Pirates won 86-76 for the first time since 1981. (AP)

«;TESTS

Ia Dr. A. '•cboa Balles' OHice.
110 -.c•aalc Strfet, Po•eroy

1

Dy DAVE HARRIS
Sentinel Correspondent
Joshua Codner's two free
throws with I :00 left gave Southem the lead for good, and Michael
Evans hit two free throws with IS
seconds left to seal the victory as
Southern defeated Warren Local
55-52 in a seesaw non-conference
battle Tuesday evening in Racine.
. The win - the Tornadoes' first
&lt;)utside 'the SV AC - boosted
~outhcrn 's overall record to 9-7,
Y.!hilc the Warriors drop to 7-10.
·· Southern came out of the blocks
fdst and held a 15·9 advantage at
tl)e end of the first period . But
Warren Local clawed back to tic
tHe score at 29 at the'half.
:: Both l~ms traded buckets in the
t)Jird period with Southern holding
tQe biggest lead with a four point
advantage. The third period ended
~th Southern holding a slim 40-38
l@d.
:·Warren Local built up a five·
pbint advantage with 6:15 left in
t~c game when the Warriors took a
47-421ead. But Southern refused to
give up and came back to take the
l~d on Codner's foul shots. After
Evans gave the Tornadoes a three
point lead Warren had one last
c~ancc. Jason Cravens missed fired
oR a three-pointer, but the rebound
w~nt out of bOunds of off the purpi): and gold. This time it was Jason
1-!~rris that missed the three and
I

,

The Dally 'Sentinel-Page 5

Kitde added 12. Trimble hit 24 of will tty and take a slice of the TVC
62 fr~m the floor for 3? percent crown with a win, wil play at6:30
and SIX of ll from the ltnc for 55 p.m. The varsity to follow at 8
percent. The Tomcats had 24 p.~..
rebounds with Justin Day grabbing Quarter totals
·
nine,
·
.
.
t-feigs.................. 17 12 12 18 = 59
Bentley Jed Me1gs With I 7 1
.
points, with 15 of those coming .
from long range. Mitch added 16 .
.
and Harrison added 13 Meigs hi
•
25 of 67 from the noor"for 37 percent and three of six from the line
for 50 percent Meigs collected 42
By DAVE CARPJi!ITER
rebounds with Harrison leading
AP Sports Wr~ter
the way :.Vith 12 and Mitch and
ALBERTVILLE, France (AP)
Hawley geuing 10 each.
-Talk about your sports dynas·
In olher TVC action Belpre ties.
clinched at least a tie for ihe TVC
The Boston Celtics, the Montre·
crown with a 78-32 win over Well- al Canadiens, even the ghost. of
ston, Alexander defeated vfnton Knute Rockne could learn a thmg
County 67-57 and Miller ·downed or two about winning tradition
Federal Hocking 68-62..
from what the Soviets and their
Reserve game _The Maraud- . political offwring have achieved in
crs took another step toward the pairs skating.
TVC crown with a 66-SS win, their
After Tuesday night's masterful
sixteenth win in a row. Meigs used performance by world champions
a balanced altack to down the Tom-· Natalia Mishkutienok and Artur
cats placing four players in double Dmitriev, here's what the country's
figures. Jack Stanley led the way top pairs finishes look like in the
with 15 points, Brad Anderson · eight Winter Olympics dating to
added !3, Eric Wagner 11 and 1964:
'
Aaron Drummer IO Josh McClelGold. Gold. Gold. Gold. Gol.d.
land led Trimble with 18.
Gold. Gold. GOLD.
Future games_ Meigs returns
The world champions- Rushome 10 play Federal Hocking on sians competing for the Unified
Friday evening. The reserves who Team - broughl the crowd to its
feet and were first with all nine
judges, eru:ni~g. seven near-perfect
S.9s for arusuc 1mpress10n.
ButevcntheRussiansthinkthe

Southern edges Warren
Local 55-52 for first win
of season outside SVAC

Tennis
BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) Top-seeded Stefan Edberg of Swe·
den beat Sergi Bruguera of Spain
6-4, 4-6, 6-4 and third-seeded Boris
Becker of Germany defeated Jonas
Svenson of Sweden 6-4,.6-0 in the
first round of the Donnay Indoor.
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) Third-seeded David Wheaton of
the United States defeated Sandon
Stolle of Australia 7-6 (&lt;1-7), 6-3
and sixth-seeded Brad Gilbert of
the Uni1ed States beat Nicklas
Kulti of Sweden 7-6 (7-2), 6-3 in
the second round of the Federal
Express International. •
CHICAGO (AP) -Top-seeded
Steffi Graf of Germany defeated
Rika Hiraki of Japan 6-0, 6-0 in the
second round of the Virginia Slims
of Chicago. In a ftrst·round match,
eighth-seeded Pam Shriver of the
United States beat compatriot
Peanut Harper 6-2, 6-2.
Basketball
SAN DIEGO (AP)- Jim Brandenburg, mired in a 14-game losing
streak during his fifth losing season
at San Diego Slate, has been fired
as the Aztecs' coach. Jim Harrick
Jr., the 27-year-old son of the
UCLA coach, was elevated from an
assistant's job to interim head
coach. Brandenburg was 2-19 this
season and 52-87 overall at San
Diego State.
Basketball
BOSTON {AP) - Center
Robert Parrish and the Boston
Celtics agreed to a one-year contract extension through next season. Parish, the oldest player in the
NBA at 38, will make a reported
$3.5 million in 1992-93.

'

,•/

'

Sports shorts

FREE H

Pomeroy--'Middleporl, Ohio

.women secon d R"10 men are fjf
'
e
(
th
R d
in his week's Divisi"on lstandi"ngs

COUPON

.

Hawk• 56, Halhaw•y Brown 26
U..lh 09, Gnnville &lt;0
Hebron lAkewood 47, LickinB Vall.

.

Bob Evans Farms

···~·················

Htmil1&lt;111 71, u...;.., so

BI04Idloldl~

BemaM S.
Cin. ELiot 16. Covlo.... (KyJ Ctlh.

River Vall. 88, Buckeye Vall. 56
RoouiOWn 70, Slrectlboro j3
Roa£ord 81, Sylvania Soullwiew 65
Runawiy Chr., Mich . S4 Emanuel
Baptist 52
'
S1lcm 64, Mtrlin&amp;lon 62
Sebrin&amp; 72, E. PalC6tine S5
Shc:nand01h 60, C1ldweU 57
Sidney 76, Piqua?]
Skyvuc 81, B1mcsville 78
Solot 60, Mayfield 43

Col. Independence 67, Col. Wcst46
Col. LU\den · M~K.inley S6, Col. Etst

42

c.-_
64, MaDoo\ c..b.l9
Clwnplulll,

Cin. CounlfJ D&amp;J ?j, Cin. Sl.

Ccn~tr~nia l

Co\. E.111moor 47, Col. Walnut Ridae

8c;tbnJ;'71, R11111i.a 57

en
w.. •· Hamila. • • M
Cin. Colliala 61, FtUWd 55

71, Col. Whcutonc

Col. Brookhaven SO, Col.

Berlin H.illnd 17, Oanway S7
Hloarn.Carroll 64, Ubaty-Unioo j5

Bri41~ 61, Shadyaidc 45
'Briolol 7~.........., 43
"""" 6l, Ulhltall7
Combridpl09,z..-!lle7l.·

Piketon 71, Aden• 49
ProetONille Faitland 73, RO&lt;:k Hill38
R•celand, Ky. 77. Symmc.~ Vall. 51
Racine Southern 55, Warren Loc1l 52
ReynollhbuiJ 78, Fr-nklin HIS. 65
Richmond Dale Southeu tem 46,
Zane Trace 43
30TRichmond H1.:1. 70, Independence 68,

26

Boech"ood 13, Cuyahop Hts. 54
8e1l.aint 42, Mmlnl Fair 32
8e11btook 73, Cedmil.lo-47

"' Boajamin Loa•n 72, W. Libcny.

ace~hcro!t

30

26

Bc:.wn 60

Alhllb.ila Edaewood 62. Painmville
Han-ey S6
Athllhlll• H1rbor 51, P•intavillo

Cin. Wilhtow

Cin. Reading60, Madeira 41
Cin. St. llenmd 57, C'tn. Summil 34
Cin. TW'flin 47, Cin. M cNi~ holu J1
Cin. Urs~line 63 , Cin . Walnut ll tl4

lO

Boys
Abut EU11. 6S,Rtvere57
Ak1"01 St.V-SLM 63, Akrm Fuwooc

~8.

Jl

Soulhwest
Soulhr:m Me&amp;h. 44, Teus A&amp;.M 31

Midpalk 65 , Brunswick 53
Milan Edi&amp;on 74, Sand~sky S1
Mary's 73
Milbury LU.e 48, Mtwncc 44
MillCJ 68, Federal Hocking 62
Mogadare69, Garret~ville 50
Morgan 81, New Lcxin,mn 65
Mt Vcrnoo17, Marysville S2
N. Baltimore 76, Northwood 55
N. Ctnlon 71, Uniontown Lake 57
N. Royt!ton 98, Berea 81
Napolecn 57, Sy! ~anla No rth ~icw 32
Natimtl Trail71, Centervil le, Ind. 56
New Miami 68. Ci.n. Swnmil 65
New Richmond 7 I, Clermont North·
ICIIJ.r:m 66
Newlon Falls 76, B1dfer S3
Norton 82, Akrm SpMg. 72
Norwood 49, Cin. S}'Cimor~: 46
Oak Hi.ll 72, McDennou NW 40
Ohio Deaf 65, World Harvest 22
0pe:n Door 62 Grand River SO
Onnae Otr. j8, MemorO!r. 52
Otsego 78, Gibsonburg 74
OUoville 57. Pukw•y S4
Parma 89, E. Clc~eland Shaw 7S
P11ri.a1 Southwestern 72 , Ht nnan,
W.Va. 71 , 0T
Pickerington 47, Wali.iM Memorial

Ci n. Marianont 43, Cin. Deer Park
Cin. Mourn Hulthy

Midwest

lllinoi176, Punlue 71' or
NE ntinoil95, S. Utah 8S
Notte Dune 64, Sllnford 63
S. IUinoU 6S, llllnoit SL 64
Wis.· Milw•ukec 89, Sacnmc:nto St.

5()

Cardinal 47, F1irpon Ilarding 22
Centerburg Sl ,lutll 47
Chardon ND·CL 56, Cle. St. Aups·
tine 26
Cin. Aiken 73, Cin. WaltJJI Hilh 42
Cin. Anderson 45, Cin. H u ~es 23
Cin. Ctlvery 58, Cin. St. Rita 28
Cin. CoUIIU)' Day 63, Cin. Glen Elle

45

. 011. • 1 -

lO

OT

l)o.c!On U. 91, N. Carolina A&amp;T I?
Coli. of CharlC51on 7), S. Carolina St.

.

Wadswanh 69, Copley 44
WestcJVille N. S9, WesteiVille S. 31
Westfall45, Mitmi Tmc42
Willoughby S. S6, Nordonia 50
Wooster73, Triway 39
Fr•nklln Fum1ce Green 57. Ironton
Sl. ]OIIcph 40
Freeport Lakeland 53, Ridgewood 30
Frm~on1 Rou 81 , Bodford, Mich. 74
Frmtic:r 90, Wawford 55
FL Frye as. Wood!lfacJd 69
FL Loramie 86, Sidney Fairlawn 48
Genevt 70, CoMceUI 56
Grove City 69, Galloway Westland

Girls

lltnford 7S,lama r 73, or
NonhC.asulfn 68, lo11 65
Robcn Marris 91, Canislu&amp; 76
Seton llall 86, Symwe 76
SL Jm.cph'• 84, t.. Salle 80, OT
Towwn SL 78, Rider 75,0T
Va. Commoowce hh 42, New Hampshin! 37

"

24

Steubenville sg, Claymonl41
Stow 77. Akrm N. 60
SuashufJ 88, MalvC2'T1 62
Talawan da 10!, lanon· Moruoe 81
TaUnndge59, Kent R~t 55
Tifftn Calvert 96, Vartlue 71
Tipp City 12. D•y. Oakwood 58
Tol. Centtal71, To!. Libbey 6S
Tol. Christi1n 82, Ypailarni (Mich.)
Cal vary 70
To!. Scou 68, To!. Waite 53
To \. St. Fn.ncis HI, Tol. Woodward
60
Tol. Stal165, To!. Rosen 64
Tol. Whi1mer 64, f011oria 55
Tree: of l.i!e 84, Mann.atha 61
Trimble 60, Mei,BI 59
Trolwood·Mtdisoo 42, Troy 37
Tu1cuawu Cuh. 74, Newcomer·
SIO\Im 61
Tus\a w 75, Tuscan. was Vall. 45
Upper Arlingt~ 64, Groveport 46
Va lley Forge 82, Shaker Hts. 81, 2

OT

c.t. arl

Tree o£ Ufe 70, Xenia Wilson 44
Upper Arlina,ton 6S, Groveport 38
Uppe;r Sanduaky 50, Bellevue 32
Vermilion 53, Sandlllky 41
Via.ory Chr. 39, Meadville (Pa.} Chr.

49

East

c.tB~fl.~dO

)4

Spring Vall. 64. Cent.u l !hplist 37
St. Clain.ville 52, Uellai~ St. John 'li

57. /l.trny 5I
h irlc igh Dickin1on 88, Muill 87,

61

Spring. Shawnee 78, Spring. North·
western 44
Springboro 53, Goshen 34
Tallmadge 48, HJdsiKI. 47
Teays Vall. 75, Amanda -C lcercreek

48

R ~tkncll

S4

28

Cmonm Vall. 61, Jewell·Scio 53
Cortland Lak.aiew 76, LaB rae 44
Croum~d1 60, l...ak.e Ridse 50
Cuyaho&amp;a Vall. Christian 70, Akron
Hoban 66
·
Day. Bdmool70, Bcavcrcrcck 63
tny. Jeffcrwn 74, Xmit 63
Day. Pattc:n:on 66, Day. Ch1mi nade·
Julienne 6S
·
DeGraff Riverslde 82. Mechanicsburg
61
Delawtre 66, Whitehall 54
E. Livc:pool60, Rayland Buckeye S8
Elyria F1n.t Baptist 89, A.lroo Chr. 48
Spa ru Highland 54, Fredericktow n

Tonight's games
. New Jemy 11 f7niladelphia, 7:30p.m
New York atlndiana, 7:30p.m.
!1011100 at Dallu, 8:30p.m
Clcn land at llcnvn, 9 p.m.
Ponl111d .u Phoenil, 9:30p.m
llounon al LA. Clippen. 10:30 p.m
Wuhin&amp;ton at Sacnmento, 10 :30
p.m.

couple o~ free th(o~s with 1:54 left
to make It 28-26 Tnmblc and BentIcy gave th~ Marauders the _lead
when he dn!led· a three-pomter
~uh 1:05 left m the half. But Char~:; J~9m~tT~-~ar%'yt~eo=~g~ 1hcdGatcthhehl g1afve.thhe Tomca~s tthhe
.
.
.
ea at c a Wit a Jumper m c
Tuesday evemng at Tnmble High lane and Tri~blc went -into the
School. . '
locker room With a 30-29lcad.
The w1n g1ves the Tomcats a 10Dave Gatchel gave Trimble
6 record overall and 9-4 in the - another five point lead :-vhen he hit
TVC. Me1gs drops to 10-8 overall an01her three-pomtcr w1th 4.:3VI:ft
and 8:6 m the TVC.
m the t~ird •. but ~.J. Mitch who
. Tnmble jumped OUilo a 9-2 scored s1x thwd-periOd pomts led a
lea~ at the 6:12 mark of th~ first Meig.s c~meback and ¥eig_s pulled
pefn~d wf_hcn Dhave Gatchel h11Tohne tf~ wl!hm. 42-41 hcadmg 1nt0 the
o IS 1ye t ree-pomters.
e mal pcnod on a ·Shawn Hawley
Tomcats m_creased '!le lead to 20- bucket _
.
.
12 wah 1.~6 · 1eft m t~e penod
Tw1ce m the fourth penod T~1m when Charlte_ Gatchel hH a bucket blc. led by five, but each 11me
off the offcns1ve boards. But Me1gs Me1gs hll a b1g three-pomtcr to cut
scored the last f1ve po~nt_s of the mto the lead. Bentley h1t. the first
quarter and pulled to w1thm 20-17 one wah 5:37 left and Ph1l Hovatal the crid of lhc first period when tor hit the ~ond with 2:10 left to
Trevor Hamson scored w1th 23 keep MCJgs m the g,nmc. Tnmblo
seconds ~eft.
.
went on top 60-53 ':"1th 46 seconds
Jo~n 1Bentlcy hu a long baU at lcfl on a Ruebcn Kmle free throw,
lhe 7.45 mark of the second penod but the Tomcats m1sscd f1ve free
to t1c tHe game at 20, thmeen sec-· throws down the stretch. The
onds l~ter Sha":n Hawley gave the m1sscd free throws gave the
Maraud~rs thw f~rsJ lead ~f the Marauders one last gasp and Dentmght wnh a lay-m to make 1t 22- Icy drilled two more thrcc-pomtcrs
20. But Dave Gatchel led the Tom- but the last came as the clock ran
cats bac~ wah two thrcc-pomtcrs.to out and Tnmblc escaped w1th a 60give Tr\~blc a 28-24 l?ad wnh 59 win..
.
3:51 left, m the half. Hamson hu a
BesJdes the Gatchel cousms,

two free throws by Verncl Single-..
a slam dunll by Luther Wright that beating the Orangemen (16-4, 8-4) with 22 points.
ton.
·
started a three-point play with 16 got a lot bettcr.when redshirt freshGeorgia 64, No. 20 LSU 62
Lillcrial Green, who finished
At Baton Rouge, Georgia with·
seconds left and capped the night's man John Leahy made a four-point
scoring.
play 'with 4:57 left that gave the stood a rally by 20th-ranked with seven points, far bdlow his '
Louisiana State as Kendall Rhine average of 20 a game, hit two free ·.
In the only other game involv- Pirates (14-6, 6-5) a 70-61 lead.
throws to put Georgia back out in
ing a Top 25 team Tuesday, GeorHis free throw started a run of scored 21 points.
LSU (14-6, 7-2 in the Southeast- front, and the Bulldogs went on a .
gia beat No. 20 LSU 64-62.
free throws for the Pirates and
The last time Seton Hall had Syracuse was never closer than five ern Conference) could get its up- 13·5 run to lead 60-53 with 4:31 to'·
tempo game going only in spurts go. Rhine had six points in tbe run.":
beaten Syracuse was Feb. 21, 1981, the rest of the way.
Shaquille O'Neal, LSV's 7-1:
the Pirates' only victory in 26
Leahy had I 3 points and was 4- against the deliberate Bulldogs (I I·
All-American
center, fouled out
9,
4-6).
games since both schools joined for-5 from 3-point range.
with
6:11
to
go
with
19 points, nine
LSU
took
its
only
lead
since
the
the Dig East Conference in 1979Jerry Walker Jed Seton Hall
rebounds
and
seven
blocked
shots.
80.
with 17 points and 10 rebounds. first point of the game at 48-47 on
Seton Hall's chances of finally Terry Dehere and Bryan Caver
matched Leahy's 13 points as six
Pirates reached double figures.
David Johnson led Syracuse

Cal. lndepcndCNllll69, Col. we.1 57

In the NBA ...

se!ii~.t~~r:RRIS ·
Co in Ch I' pond~n~
d h u1s s d 9r 1e. an ave
T:~~l s~o~ 1f pomts each and
1k e e d of r" MeigS come·

Page-4

Seto,n Hall defeats Syracuse 86-76 for first time since 1981

.

trrimble overcomes missed ·free throws to slip past Meigs 60-59 .

Wednesday, February 1;!, 1992

•

'

By JIM O'CONNELL
AP Basketball Writer
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(AP)- A lot has happened over
the last II years, enough for a few
chapters in a history book.
' Nowhere could it be mentioned
in that span that Seton Hall had
beaten Syracuse in a men's college
b;~Sketball game.
.
That all changed Tuesday mght
when the 25th-ranked Pirates beat
No. 10 Syracuse 86-76, a victory
which ended a 23-game losing .

Wednesday, February 1:l,1992

.,

aOsiOUI'H 1U Itit llttO WAl PAC IS ... IIUCTit Wll NCIJ
be c.d Box
a ...... oelee~iojo ol c-Jo Boab
6o. OW 1o New lor lite c-le Book Colleeton

I

WED.: Roast Pork with Plum Sauce•••~.s~.25

'•

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.THURS.: Spaghetti (AD you c• eat)..... 5.95
. SWEOHURT DINNER .. FRI. &amp; SIT•.
. Flet Jlt• hbtl Potato,
SaW, Bread,

•

ve

•J

•'

:-,.

Spedll Dessert ••
•· . '
'$15.00 per pll'lll
$25.00 ,... ~pie

11111••

••
•

•'~

• Now You &amp;Ptek Up Your Moulbly Bueh.ll, 1·
.I
Foo..!!!!!! aad Bllkt~tJ.D Bee9U!
.•

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1992'

Ohio

.

·'''l

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=···~ •••t Your Community

ed
Low-Priced Supermarket

By The,:Qend

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Beat of the Bend...

KINSTON, N.C. (AP)- Who
says cheerleaders have to be teenagers?
Not members of the Wilmington
Golden Porn Porn Girls - 17
women ages 57 to 75.
"When. people tell me they're
too old to do what we do, I tell
them, 'I do it because I have arthri·
tis and it's the only thing that keeps
me going,"' said Raye Woodcock,

by Bob Hoeflich

•
•

Congratulations are again in
order for Rob Landers of Pomeroy.
•.••
Again Saturday night Rob
appeared on Ohio's Cash Explo·
• sion Lottery television ·show and
"outspun" two competitors on the
wheel to win $100,000. He will be
'
'
on the show again this Saturday in
:. an auempt to win the top prite of
$200,000. If he fails, he still will
' • be awarded the $100,000 . We
'•
could all live with that couldn't
• we?
.,'• Rob has represented Meigs
County well in his appearances on
•
...' the show and we will rub our lucky
foot on his behalf Saturday
•', rabbit's
night.
,, .
~ •
Quite a farewell reception for
~ : Joan Tewksbary who has retired as
~
Meigs County's- Tuberculosis
•: Nurse and from the nursing profes·
:• SIOn. About 50 people were
· ·: expected to attend the reception for
:: Joan held in the conference room
• of the Multipurpose Building, Mul·
: berry Heights, Pomeroy. Over 200
• attended to wish Joan- and·
_.• deservedly so-a happy retirement.
•
•
Vo lunteers arc needed in the
•• Extended Care facility of Veterans
': Memorial Hospital to help with
• activities for residents there•, games, reading, entertainment. If
; you'd like to get involved 'do con• tact Kathy Varcalle , activities
.: director of the facility, or her assis·
tant, Sharon Vickers. You can get
• in tooch with the facility by calling
~ 992-2104.
•
,.·'
Mick Williams, Pomeroy barber, has returned to his work at his
~ Mick's Style Center after having
l undergone major back surgery at
: Riverside Hospital in Columbus.
• Mick is well pleased with the
1 surgery and the care he received at
the hospital anp cx.tend.s a big
'thanks to all of his friends for the
kindnesses and get-well wishes
extended in his direction. Of
I'

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F

lND GROCERIES INSTANTLY!
·EcAsH AND PRIZEs ·toTALING ovER

Get AFree Game Ticket Every Time You Come In

-·

.

WIN CASH FROM s1 TO s1 ,000

Or Your Share Of 64,000 Groce,Y Products
-~ ~·

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H 141111.\\ II

BONELESS
s189 lb.

LB.

~I'H

'4a\ent\ne
S1£l\l ond .
l10 sl\.t

Round Steak

69

"

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USDA CHOICE BONE·IN

~~·

I \1 4 HI 1'0\

1.: I

U.S. NO. ONE

RUSSETT POTATOES!

(

s
SIRLOIN STEAK ••
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BONELESS

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FOODIUD

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10 LB.

BAG

99
Umlt I Bag

L.

Additloool Purchase.

1992

ALL FLAVORS

BOB EVANS $269
BURITOS · u oz.
·

·.

WHOLE STICK
KY. BORDER

:J

BOLOGNA

LB.

ADC or PERK

0

39

oz.

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LAND·O·LAKES

WHIPPED BUTTER

$

19

8 oz.

By c ·indy S. Oli•eri
And the "Buy American" campaign does, as I mentioned earlier,
I can still remember my ~nts
seem to be a confusing situation tellin$ my sister and I, "You ve got
to drmk your niilk". This wasn't
across lhe nation.
.
Interestingly on Sunday, the 60 always an easy request to follow,
Minutes television show pointed unless there was a dessen involved
out that Hondas are made m Ohio in the bargain. Even though I grew
by American workers; Toyotas are up on a fann, milk was never one
made in Kentucky by American of my favorites.
Now as an adult, I still struggle
workers; American auto makers are
using Japanese parts in their autos with the n~tlon that I've. got to
and at one American plant three drink my f!lillc, but for a different
vehicles are absolutely identical reason. This week, Contemporary
except the name .which is attached, Living takes a look at the impprsome names bemg Japanese and tance of calcium in the diet and
others an American name; and recommended daily allowances for
Chrysler is counting on a new car individuals.
Calciuin is an essential mineral
to really put the company on top.
That car IS being made in Canada. that is needed every day throughout
If all that doesn 't confuse you, it life for a number of body functions.
should. Guess as far as cars--or It is used primarily in the building
any other produc~ for that matter- and maintenance of the human
are con~erned w~ as con~umers skeleton, and 99 percent of the
should JuSt buy .the vehicle we body's calcium lies in the bones.
think is the best product-that is, if Contrary to popular belief, bones .
. are not inen s~bstances but living
we can afford to buy any.
Do keep smiling.
tis~ue, constantly being resorbe~
and then rebuilt. Calcium is also
needed for such functions as muscle contiaction and regulation of
bean rh)'cl),m.

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rcr~:EAM BAR$"6 paleS P
EAGLE RIDGED

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POTATO CHIPS
J
SPELLINO BEE WINNERS ·Wesley
, place winner of llle•spelllnc· bee at Pomeroy
' Thomas, right, was Che ~d IIJKe winner. On
at 7:30 p.m. the Annuli! Meigs C'ounty Spelling Bee
at Meigs High School in the vocill music room.

$ 99

iI

14!4

oz.

1 Easterday

wins grange contest

I .mctThe RacineiheGrange
No. 2606
home of Chuck
and Jean Alkire.
The meeting opened in rihialis·
, . tic form and the Pledge of "'liegiance was given in unison. Offi.: ccrs reporiS were also given.
• · The legislative report was·given
: and members were encouraged to
• contact state officials on various
: issues and to keep in mind the
: upcoming elcetion.
·
•
Emma Adams, lccluret, ~sent·
: ed a progrom on "Valentines Day"

PILLSBURY
CAKE MIX

c

•

:; N le· [Sen •S fOp J0

BOX

JOAN OF AllC

GREEN GIANT

u.s$1

OL
CAliS

.'

$
·

Help Schools Save
Schools:
Enter8Win. • • Campbell's Label$.

15.5
OlS. ·

FLOUR ~

c

SLI.

lAG

Clll'IRL'S

HUIGRYJACK

TOMATO SOUP

.BISCUITS.

79

dri~, your milk Prince!ton hoa~
I

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) - A
such 8s milk, yogun ~nd cheese;
man
who fabricated his academic
canned salmon and sardines.
record
and swindlt:d Princeton Uiii· .
How does your d~et stack up?
versity
out of $22,000 in scholar;
How about your fanuly members?
ship
money
pleaded guilty to thCft
N~xt week~ tips on adding calby
deception
and faces up to nine
ctum
Ill your diet
1
months
m
prison.
,
DID. YOU K!'I&lt;;JW THAT:
Prosecutors dropped charges of
Accordmg to statistiCs from the
for~e•y
and falsi,fying records
Offtee for Substance Ab.u~ Preagamst
James
A. Hogue, 32, unde~
vention there an: 20,700,000 junior
a
plea
agreement
entered Monday. '.
and se~ior high scho!&gt;l students in
Hogue
enro
lled
in the Ivy
th~ Um!W States. Only 8,000,000
League
school
in
1989
under t~e ·
drink milk weekly! How do your
name
Alexi
Indris-Santana.
He wa8:
teens measure up?
arrested last February on a uiah
warrant for jumping parole after
serving six months for stealing rae;
ing bicycles.
..
He claimed to have been self.
educated and employed on a raneh
in Utah. University officials swd
interviews, documents' and Iris
youthful appearance seemed io
suppon his story.
He was arrested in class after
poHcc were tipped off, and later
was expelled from the university. ·
A sentencing date was not set.: .:

•only seven percent of women
and i4 percent of men aged 19 10
24 get enough calcium ·
, only 24 percent of pregnant
and nursing women get their RDA
of calcium
• approximately 15 percent of
women and 23 percent of the men
over age 25 now meet their RDA
of calcium.
Everyone, regardless of their
age needs at least three and in some
cases four servings of calcium rich
foods daily. some of the most com·
mon sources include dairy products

...

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4 c!l

.c1ooz..
TUBE

1112• UIDAFoocl

1

end WIC Coupon. tgg 1pted • Not Reepolllllle for

or Plctorlll Error..

lAS &amp; ILEC. UIGES

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

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Collins graduates
Cathy S. Collins, Coolville, has
graduated from the University of
Akron with a Bachelor of Ans ·in
Spanish. She received her degree
during commencemenc eJercises
Dec. 21. 199!.

Named to dean's list

'

DOWNING CHILDS
M_,LLEN '-'USSER ·

4·8x10s ••
4 • 5 x 7a
32,· WALLET~
1G ·GIANT WALLETS :
'JII ,.-•11.1 •

FREE"

INSURANCE

BUT.iONS AND BOWS .

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

.

100 E. MAIN STREET IN
POMEROY
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 13 .,
2:00 P.M. t117:00 P.M.
Portraits Delivered:
•
Wednesday, March 4
:
. 11 :00/I.M.tll12:00 P."!. •

•

Kristen A. Slawter, Middleport,
has been named to the Dean's Ust
at the University or Akron for the
fall semester.
·
S~e is a freshtru!n majoring in
nursmg:
:

CHILDREN'S .

ill.

The meeting closed with the
sing of "BI~st Be the Tie Thai
lt NEW YORK (AP) - Here are Binds/'
• the prime-time ratings as compiled
• by the A.C. Nielsen Co:Cor Feb. 3: 9.
:
Aq "X" -in parcnth~s denotes
_
, , &lt;, , .
a one-time-only presentation.· - · ·. 'Jibe Green Elementary School
,
!. (l) "60 Minutes, " CBS, PTO is sponsoring a double' elimi: 24.2, 22.3 million homes. '
nation grade school girls basketllaJJ
~
2. '(X) "XVI Olympic Winter tournament. · ·
: Games-Sun ,," CBS, 23.5, 2!.6
First round games will begin
-i million homes.
Feb. 22-23. This is a roster tourna3. (2) "Roseanne," ABC, 22.9, ment, no aU-stir teams permitted.
; 2!.1 million homes.
The registration fee is $15 per
·~
4. (32) "Kindergarten Cop" - team. For tnore information call
~ "NBC Sunday Movie," 21.4, 19.7 446-3236 (day); 446-6S41; 992· ·
million ~omcs.
'
2638; or 446-8320. . · . ,
5. (4) "Cheers," NBC, 19.7,
18.1 million home!.
.
GOOD USED
. 6.• IX) ."The ¢osby Show Spe·
WASHERS, DIYE~ i
ctnl, NBC, 19.6, 18.0 million
homes.
RbRIIIUTOII, IYi,
· 6. (3) "Mutphy Brown," CBS, '
, 19.6, 18.0 million homes.
. ' 8. (6) ''Coach,'' ABC, 19.3, .
17.8 million homes.
· ·
;, , 9. (9) "Home !"!provement/'
'• A:BC, 18.7, 17.2 mtUIOn homes.
:• 10. (11) ''Unsolved Mysteries,"
627 3rtl An., llllfOII
·: NBC, 18.6, 17.1 million hOmes.
PIL4*169t
:l 10. (9) "Major Dadt CBS,
HOURis I A.llt-6 P.M.
. '• '18.6, 17.1 million homes.
'

PROGRAM PRESENTED • Slephen Dixon, a magician from
Marielta, recently presenled a program at Pomeroy Elemenlary
on "Jusl Say No" to drugs. Pictured with Dixon is Wendy Sbrim·
plio, a sixth grade student, during ooe of his magic tricks.

'

Easter
·o utfits

r;
. . ' fi

. IV

SIZES: Preemies thru
24 Months ·

'i

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PILUBUR't

and heart month as well ah nuttitious diet and cxcreise program.for
goOd health.
'
Four entries were subiliiucd for
the baking contest and Mary N.
Easmrday was the winner.
The deadline for submitting
recipes for che new Sl&amp;l~ grange
cookbook is Sat~rda~. Members
are asked to _send m rectpes.
, The annual grange banquet has
been tentatively set for April 10 at '
tl)c Salisbuiy School. · ·,
Several members were reported

foods
can weaken, increas·
ing
chances of osteoporosis
later in life.
Bone loss is a natural pan of the
aging process. Medical authorities
have said that getting enough cal·
cum throughout life can act as a
preventive shieJd in later years,
According t U.S. Public Health
Service statistics American women
over age 44 on average consume
oil1y ·sliglidy more ·thait cwo servings of calcium which is jusc slight·
ly more chan half of the recommended level. The recommended
dietary allowances for various age
groups are as follows:
• Children up to age 11-800
mg a day (or 3 servings) ·
• Teens and young adults 11-24
- 1200 mg a day (or 4 servings)
• Pregnant and nursing
women-1200 mg a day (4 servings)
• Adults 2S and older~ mg
a day (3 servings)
Unforcunately a USDA study
provides some disturbing statistics
about how mariy flCQple an: actual·
ly meeting these m:ommetlded lev·
els. According to USDA's National
Food Consumption Survey. nearly
seven out of icn Americans are gel·
ling Jess. than lheir RDA of calcium, .and for women over 35, the
number jumps to !10 peicenL The
most recent slaustic contained the
PHS report fmd that:

Tourney slated

BEANS

BEANS.

FIVE GENERATIONS- J!ldu'red a~ ,a recent Smilh, great-greal grandmOiber; Breit aad TomaS:
gathering In J?eliaoce, ObiQ, Ire liVe geaer~t!Ons • Spires, and Tom Spires, graodrlitber. Ellen SmiJft·
with lbe youngesl, Tom.as Spires, being betd by his is a resldenl ot Middleport with lhe Spires rami~ ·
rather Brett Spires. Others In lhe pictwe, left,to lies residing in Deflllllce.
I
•
right, are Dolly Spires, Jireat·gran'dmother, Ellen

Contemporary living;

•
•

reccn~y_ at

w.

--

' Gallia
You might have noticed.
County residents are expressing
.concern over the price of gasoline
in that county-higher than other 69.
"I played basketball and did
places but not higher than in Meigs
County. There's a great deal of acrobatics as a youngster but never
talk in our county because often we did any physical activity again to
are paying 20 cents .a gallon or sp~k of until I joined this group
more over the charge at the pump four years ago," she said .
The group, formed seven years
in places like Lancaster and
ago,
performed Cheers, stunts and
Columbus.
'·
Sen. Jan Long and Rep, Mary pompon rou_tines last week for tcsi ·
Abel are requesting state offic,ials dents of a nursing home in Kinston.
to look into the maqer an~ to come The group usually performs at
fonh with some explanation as to Wilmington area nursing homes
why this situation exists. Both and at University .of North Carolihave received letters from Meigs na· Wilmin~ton basketball games.
Countians requesting an explana·
tion. Have you written? Letters
sent to the Statehouse, Columbus,
Ohio 43266-0604 will reach them .

•

9

PKG.

3

tions so soon after surB:erf,
doing well.

$ 99

CAN
•
•
•
•

course, he's under

•••

VELVET SUPREME
SPECIAL ROAST
I
E
CREAM
~~FOLGER'S COFFE

$ 99

.

·Never' too old .

•

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Wednesday, February 12, 1991

Pageo:..t

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The Daily Sentirief

Special Order fralil our ln·Store
,. Catalog through February 29 .
o·PEN FRIDAYS 'nL 8:00 P.M.
.

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ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

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Come t i !!lm,
~

20%SAVINGS

she\ too spei:lal for a poper Volenftne.
get her lhe f916Y6r klnd. Choose from dQzen! of
. Milgs. earrings or pendonll ~ diamonds. rubles
or .the beoUIIful rhodolite garneb. Browse. M&lt; us
quesllbnS. 'ltlu'll be our welcomed guest, Come
find her Just the right 'Volenflne: .. . '

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�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 8 'the Dally Sentinel

Wednesday, February 12, 1992 ..

W•dneaday, February 12, 1992 .

.

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11 . ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

,n

I
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ALL NAPIER
JEWELRY

HELIUM FILLED

BALLOON
BOUQUET

I

.

I

See Store For Details

'

The •Big Bear Hug!

BASIC STOCK

25%TO
50%

CHO.OSE FROM FOIL,
SATIN 01 VELVET
HEIRTS!
Sllop FruM";Larrllry ·

Atouch of aeativity turns
our balloons into
masterpieces.

~J

For Yow Fovorit•
lu11111 Stor11

$ 99

C••4rl

Pork Loin • Sirloin BONELESS

ALL
COLOGNES

Pork

lb. .

U.S. No. 1 · Russet Baking

FOR MEN AND WOMEN

One lb. Quarters • Regular Or Light

•
Margarine
'

OFF

35°/o OFF ALL

2 lb.

BLACX HILLS .GOLD
C.C0.1007

():)

CHOOSE FROM OUR
SELECTION OF PRECIOUS
MOMENTS ACCESSORIES

~

25°/o o·,,

:.A
'

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~ voi.l

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gg

Hi\VE TOOC HfD

SO ."\ANV HEARTS"'

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J~Jno

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''' - - - ~--

The vtN heart of Va lent ines Da\· IS in
the e;.:pr~ICJn oi low:. For f11m•lv. fr&lt;ends
lind sweetheans. you·u finCI " delightful
gift from The ENESCO PRECIOUS
,"\QMENTS• Collect1on.

()

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~

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OD

'fV
~

CO
. 00

~

fmm vour own heart. Our e.\tens•vt ~lee:·
tior-~ oHers \ ou ii ne =' ~EC:CtJS

t:s)

..,QME:'il'S CO I I~ i b les '!'1at SIOctn!IV
ronvev vot.Jr ·.r.arm. :houanlful meuagu

"

... ----...&lt;....-_.-.c.,.-... .

-

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CASE
KNIVES·

25%

Limit I FREE Box Per Family
Please With Coupon And
Additional Purch..e
(excluding items prohibited by

I •

.•

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eer1os

I
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--------~-~~- ~---------------~
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OFF

1115

Pink lee In
·Time For .'JJ
Valentine's · ;(j;a, ·
Da,.
M ~

. . . . ,. -.

---------,
.
law) Valid Thru Feb. 16, 1992

We Have

·'...

:A

DOll.$ &amp; FIG-IllS NOT IIICLIDID

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G.

the r1ght g•ft :Mt sOt~ks

;

Is 0 '"• Bo'

~f

Qi$C01Jer

-1.1

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• Food Club

Bl&lt;' Ill \I{ Bl&lt; I Ill' \1{ I'll " ( Ol 1'0'1

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Limit 3 Per Family
· Pleaae With ' 10
Additional Purchase
(excluding items
prohibited by law)

.

'(J

Swanson Original
Great Willi
Crinkle·Cut

•
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•

We Will Gift Wrap For You.

ftnlou

'

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Ll•h I l'l!r Fullly
...... Whk Mdlllootl
Pift-(aclldtq
ilelu prat a!' 1 by llw)

''

28 oz. Box

..

-785 .North Second .St.
Middleport,
Ohio; 45760
.(6'14 -992·6491 .
'

'

364 Jackson Pike •· 2501 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant,
. Gallipolis, ·
. .West VIrginia 25550
· Ohio 45631 .
(304) 675~2303
'(614). 446·6620 .

.

'

Roast Beef

Ulall IOJa.._ Per

,...

99

From

7 d l'wdiMe
-~-t='i&amp;'~
7

Our Dell

,

-

.

lb.

.4.5 oz. Jar

'
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--·

Bear
Minimum
Pri
:. Items and·Prices Effective
at:

.

.'·.

only

·'

GALLIPOLIS BIG BEAR STORE

\

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•

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Baby Food

•

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~:-~. ~ "''"""·· ..

00

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Cooked To Perfection

FriedMetaChicken ·

'8

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Beechnut Stages Strained

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.

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�Pomeroy....-Mid~leport,

Page-10-The Dally Sentinel

Community calendar
Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items.
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY • The Meigs County 4-H Shepherd's Club will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at lhe Meigs
County Public Library. Anyone
interested in joining the club is to
invited to attend or call 949-2 136
or 992-5547 for information.
LONG BOTIOM • Jerry Cot·
trill will be the guest speaker at the
Mt. Olive Community Church in
Long Bottom on Wednesday at 7
p.m. Pastor Lawrence Bush invites
the public.
THURSDAY
POMEROY · The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
, p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Church. Bring a gift for an auction.
Vera Crow and Rose Sisson are the
hostesses. All members arc urged
to attend.
POMEROY · There will be a
Valentine Social at the Senior Citi·
zens Cemer In Pomeroy on Thursdi&amp;Y from 6 to 8 p.m. Rita and
Junior White, AI Windon and Bill
Ward will be playing old time
favorite music. The public is invited to aucnd and !hose attending arc
to bring snacks for the refreshment
table. A free will offering will be
taken for lhe musicians.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m. atlhe hall.
POMEROY - There will be a
homemade chicken and noodle dinner on Thursday from 4 10 7 p.m. at
the Meigs High School Cafeteria
sponsored by the Meigs High
School Band Boosters. Cost is
$3.50 for adults and $2 for children . Dinner also includes
coleslaw, roll, dessert and drink.
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the post home.
FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
dance on Friday from 8-11:30 p.m .
at the post home. Music will be by
C.J . and The Country Gentlemen.
POMEROY - The Meigs Wid·
ows Fellowship will meet for lunch
on Friday at 12:30 p.m . atCrow's.
ll!~~ POMf.ROY • jl.cturn Jonathan

'tiielgN:!haj&gt;ter, D.A.R., will meet
Friday at 1:30 p.m. at Grace Epis·
copal Church in Pomeroy. Karen
Butts of the Ohio University ROTC

JUSTIN KIMES

program will speak. Hostesses are
Mrs. Dwight Milhoan, Mrs .
Michael Elberfeld, Mrs. Clinton
Fisher, Mrs. Gary Moore Jr., Mrs.
Linda Russell and Mrs. John Rose.

Ohio

UW:RTISI.D mM POLICY-Each of these advertised items is required to be readily
available for sale in each.Kroger Store, excePt asapecificanv noted in this ad. lfwa
do run out of an ad\tertised ilem, we will offer you vour choice of a comperabkl
item , when available, reflecting the.aame livings Of a raincheck which will entittl
you to purchase the advertised item at the advenisad price within 30 days. Ontv
one vendOr coupon will be accepted per item purchased.

Wednesday, February 12, 1992 ti

Ohio

COPYRIGHT 1992 - THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, FEB. 9, THROUGH SATURDAY, FEB . 15, 1992 IN Pomeroy

•The Area's Number l
Marketplace

SOLD TO

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT
DEAlERS.

LONG BOTIOM • The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot·
tom will havo a hymn sing on Friday at 7 p.m. featuring Jim Blair
and the Southern Gospel Aires .
Pastor Steve Reed invites 1he public. Fellowship will follow.

RATES
Days

Call 992-2156
MoN. lhru FRI.

• Ada ouuide Callia, M..on or Meip countiee mwl be prepaid
• Reeeive dilcounl for •• d. paid in advance.
-

• Froo Ad. : ·«;iveaway ·ud Found ad. under 15 wonb will be
•.~11.,1!.). "-'X~ ••·no oharp.
•lirice of ad for all eapilalletlen it double price of ad coal
'1 polnllinelyp• only uood
• T rlbune ia nol re.pon1ibl~ for erron after flrtl day (cheek.
for errort firu day ad runt in pt~per). CaD before 2:00p.m.
day after publication lo make correction
• Ada that mwt he pt~id in adnnce are:
Card of Thanlu
Happy Ad.
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A clutitmd adverli.eme!}l pl.ced in the CallipoU.. Daily
Tribune (except Claaaified DUplay, Bwine.• Card or l...qal
Notice•) will alto appear in the Point Pleatant Regilter and
the Daily Sentinel, reaching over 18,000 home•

&gt;

HARRISONVILLE · The Harri sonville PTO will sponsor a
Valentine Day Dance on Friday
from 7-10 p.m . at the elementary
school in Harrisonville. "Easy
Country" will provide the music
and lhe cost is $1.50 for adults and
$1 for students.

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I :00 p.m . Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday

SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange will hold a potluck supper
on Saturday at 6:30p.m. at the
grange hall. Fun night activities
will also be held. All members and
potential members urged to attend.

~······~················I
I

HENDERSON - The Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance on Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. at the Henderson
Community Center. Billy Gene
Evans will be the caller. The dance
is open 10 all western style square

I

I
I

4-Ro

I
I ;

4%-GolUpoUo
367-Cheehire

992-Middleporll

388-Vinlon
245-:Rio Gunde
256-Guyan Dial.
64:J-Arahla Da.t.
379-Walnut

985-Che•ter
843-Portl•nd
24 7-Letart r.u.
949- Radne

Pomeroy

742-Rutland

675-Pt.. Plea.. nl
458-l.eon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-New Ha"en
895-Letart
937-Buffalo

Pkg.

dance~.

WILKESVILLE • There will be
a\ sweetheart dinner at the
Wilkesvillc 'Pythian Hall on Satur·
day at 4 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults
and $2.50 for children under 12.
The public is invited.

·•I :t
Allllltlonal 1 ~

Otlantltles ·
4·Roll Pkg. II

sse

280 SHEETS PER ROLL 1·PLY,
BATHROOM

a:
~

lb.
U.S. GRADE A TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

Whole Fryers

u.s. Grade A rvson!Hollv Farms cut·UP Fryers
or 9-Piece cut-up Frvers lb . .. 59C

I
I
I

~cottonelle
i

Gift Cartif~alo for your valen ·
All Regular Penns $35.00
Thura., Fri. I&gt; Sal
Featuring SUoan Hayes

•

Another Sunday Buffet at
Oscar's Restaurant
Feb. 16-$4.50-$7.50
Shtiogs at 1:()()..3:00-5:00 p.m.
For Reservations Call 446·9545
Court Sl
Gallipolis, Oh.

•
I
~,
••••••••••••••••••••••
60

9- Wanted to Buy

Meigs High School Cafeteria
Sponsored by MHS Band .
Boosters
AduHs: '3.50 Children '2.00

tiJ) .

THE RITZ BAND
AT OSCAR'S
VALENTINE'S P.M.

Red

992-2156
. :.

1

!

••

TROLLEY nATION
CWTS
Fe•. 10 thru 14
Special Valentine
Hours -10 to 8
FEB. 18- Adult Basket
Claao•- 6:30p.m.
FEB. 24- Beginner Acrylic
Painting Cla10

-Eioc~lcaland

-Roofing

205 North Seoond Ave.
Middleport, OH
CHESTER· This reslauranl seais 38 and alreaey sellslolt
ol grea' food. lnclu~ed is 3 refrigerators, 4 fre8zers, 2 deep
lryer&amp;, 2 small steamers. a large grill, and lolt mont. Yob ·

-Interior &amp; Exterior

Painting

,

nrog~,

Bunc,I..I .
·

Fresh Broccoli

Jl AI

YJ-oallon ·

$ ,,

MoUntain Dew::'
2·*t

.

;

'~

:.

NOW $11,900

1

,.

'·

l

YOU'Ll JUST ADORE THIS. a 2 story home In Racine, 4
BR's, 2 baths, endosed front portl1. red cedar, walnut &amp;
oak woodwork. many now repatll completed around home.
lnclud&amp;ol car garege &amp; possible additional lot. $41,500
BRING YOUR HOUSE HUNTING HONEY· 10 Hemlock
GrovelVI&amp;Wthis 1 t/2 story loglookhomew/3BR'o, oquipt
ki1chen,largeporch &amp; doclt. Ailmiralhe sunoundlngs. Stop
hunting! You've found your LOVE NEST for only $27,900
neslle up ... make an oflerl

SYRACUSE·A fanlasdc thriving grooery store buair'leti·
Thll money maker comes wtih eveoythirig including tho
stock. It has a dairy case. walk-in ooolt!, al kinds of
sheMng, 3 deep fntttZ81'1, 1119111 ~leer. grinder, ond more.
Tho upllllira cauld.be mal&lt;a lnm a 2bedroom opartnent-~
youwamedtollveoveryourbusiness. Callus to mak&amp;vour
BALL RUN ROAD-ApproK 72 acreo .othunting land. Wildito gator~, or could make a groat lOp of the hllll&gt;uit:J~~·
.
.
.

CUPID AIN'l' STUPID..H~'S DIRECTING YOU TO CLE,
LANO REALTY •• WHERE WE LOVE TO MAKE YOU
HAPPY IIF YOU ARE WANTlNO TO BUY OR SELL...S!E
US FIRST! WE HANDLE AU. OUR CUSTOMERS WITH
TEND!lR, LOVING CARE.

'

.· ,

'

~j

.

AREAL HEARTTHROBII..ocaledln Middepor1a hll&gt;ry.
' tO room-S bedroom beaul)l. Including carpet 6 drlpal,
largo living room wllh fireplace, modemltitchen wlacounlry
' fo81 .. 1car garage, padownumiture. VERY NICEI:roo many
features to list. COME SEE I$79,900

YOU'LL JUST TINOLE- Over th11 1987 Forest Pari&lt; Mobile
Home on 1.10 AC. 3 BR's, most fumlthlngo, with 17 K 52 ·
Carports. large-· Perlect for new eot.ipfelstartlng ou1
or older -lhnrls wonting con111nlent &amp; comfortable
livir)ll. Astdnp ~-!iOO
· •
YOUR FUNNY VALENTINE- Wil be dalirioua with this
ddt lA 1 ftoorfranle home w/3 BR's, N.G. I W.B.FP. New
roof &amp; doclt, 1 car ~"'ffO, lui boSOm&amp;n~ ,pn 2. 13AC WI
gonion ipaee. ASWEETOEALAT$31,000Check ltO!ltl

apppintrnenl.

$131.toG

EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

21

....

Using I he Classifieds
Is as Easy as ..•

~
HOWARD
EXCAVATING

BULLDDZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTiftiATES

992·3838

Nowln
Stock

PONDS

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

SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;

'
MOBILE HOME
BENNETT
.
.
HEATING &amp;
locatttloa SallorUchool Rd. off Rt. i41
(614) 446·9416 or 1·800-872-5967

1t-t4 -' 90~1

Ltldlng CrHk-Hunt or farm on this .18 acres with a nice '
big bjlrn. This land lays flat, has a great bulking site, and
water and electric available.
t18,1500
POIIEROY·Make your appointment today IQ see thla 3
bedroom home with an open stairway, freoch doors, ireplace, and a full basement
NOW S11,800

1/31/92/1 mo. pd.

2112102

Pomeroy, Ohio

MIDDLEPORT·Vfno S1-A nice area to live in. This home
could have 3-4-bedrooms. AI rooms are n~e sized. Has
dishwasher, slovo, refrig., disposal, and fireplace. Sill on
2 fenced flat jOII.
$38,100

De''U'v:e
Ice cream· .Pepsi cola or :;
~r

MEIGS
GOLF COURSE
MEMBERSHIP FEES
Men...............'275 ea.
Women ........ ..S22S ea.
Cauple.................14SO
Family............1SSO 141
Buslnm....... ..S650 (4)
Students ..............Sl 00
College ................1l SO

V. C. YOUNG II
992-6215

su!ies lhat are In stock. also has

stairwa~. finiP!ace, and mainlenance tree sid_i~_g.

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
Cf,FFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI. .
.
DIET PEPSI,
1

(FREE ESTIMATES~

I

sla&lt;ago buildings. Has only of room for trucl&lt;aro 10 pari&lt;
and·a inle picnic area. an purchase buslnen a'!d 3 8CI8S
for $92,000 ·or purchase bu~ness and t 112 acres lor
$65,000. ONners will help with financing.
·
'f
LAURELL CUFF•Pomoroy·Sining on a lillie leas than I
acre of level· land is this 3 bedroom house with an open

Plumbing

wS8H227

USED RAILROAD TIES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860

-Gutter Work

•LIGHT HAULING

Open Mon.·Sat. 10 •m·6 pm
Sundly 1..S pm

COMMERCIAL and RESIDEIYI'IAL
FREE ESTIMA'IT.S

SERVICE

3 Nlco MoYtllttlts lwllll
' Just Nortlt ol ,_.,
Star!Mt ot '225 rorCai614-992-S521

BILL SLACK
992·2269

For Mare lafo Call
614-992-2549

COUNIRY MOillE HOllE

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•FIREWOOD

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garag11 • Replacemeat Windows
Roo• Additioas • Roofing

CAR~ENTER

..

You Made it
Big 50.

lor

-Room Addition•

.·

Using the Classifieds
Is as

and

YOUNG'S

WAS $23,000

Mobile Home Repair ·
Upholttery

992-2156

INo Sunday Calls)

~urchase

Happy Ads

General Haulins

Slfporl.

Real Estate General

can ewen

5

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

lv

:.:"•

rent business organization late last
month.
The band' s bankruptcy filing
listed $1.2 million in debts, much
of it owed to companies owned by
the ba nd's manager, Don Powell.
The band and Powell arc disputing
how much is owed.
Powell, who also was th e
group 's producer, said MCA
Records told him Monday it was
dropping the band. He said a new ·
album is about 95 pcJI'I!nl finished,
but didn't know wllat would happen 10 it.
'
The Jets, based in the MinncsoUI
town of Dayton, performed at the
White House and the 1987 World
Series and for the king of Tonga.
the home country of their parents.
Its members are Kalhcrine Noga
and Elizabeth, Heinrich, Moana,
Leroy, Rudy and Eddison Wolf;
gramm.

54- Mi1c. Merchandi•e
55- BuildiRf! Supplillll

HAPPY 35!!!

OFFICE 002.2888

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - Dance
and mm sw Gregory Hines, seek· ·
ing inspiration, flew in for a day to
coach some Uip dancers.
"What I get from this is inspiraMINNEAPOLIS (AP) -The
lets, a.pop music ¥,roup whose Top tion, and I need that," Hines said
10 hits included ' You Got It All" Monday night after leading a class
· and "Rocket 2 U," · are in fot 25 dancers. "I like to get.out
bnnlcrupiey court, but a lawyer said and cheek ·out the scene. and the .
Tuesday the group would continue ~i:ne here is ¥ood. These poople
can really tap.' · . ·
pcrformin~.
Hines suggested the class Jasi
"This IS a fresh sUJrt for them,"
said Allen Saeks,rwho represents wee~ duiing a ~Ciephone conversa·
the seven brothers and sisters who · tion with Sharon Leahy, artistic
make up the barid. The. band filed. director of Rhythm in Shoes, a
under Chapter 7 of tbe federal Dayton tap and clogging dance
b&amp;nktup!CY code to di.ssolve its cur· company.
I

to my

their

11·22·92·1

Friday, Feb. 14,
6:30 til ?

.·

. 53- Antiquet

prayers{
Rev. David Russel
the outstanding fun11ra
servlu, to
Insulators of the
Spora Plaat for
and the
biggest
of all

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

Real Estate General
FRESH CUT LONG STEM
PINK, YELLOW OR

51- Houtehold Good.
52- SporUns Cood.

po

Plumbin1 &amp; Healin«
Excavatin1
El«tricol &amp; Relorip•otion

lor

People in the news
FAYETTEV ILLE, N.C. (AP)
- Danny Glover brought the triumphs and tragedies of black history 10 life in a dramatic reading
from the poetry of Langston Hughes.
Glover read more lha 25 short
poems tiy Hughes for an audience
of about 500 in a Black History
Month celebration at Fayeneville
Swte University on Monday night.
Hughes, a poet, playwright and
song-lyric writer, died in 1%7.
Glover said poetry can ease
inhibitions and bridge communication gaps.
"Lan~ston made black people
feel posiuvc ahout lhemselves," he
said. "He made us laugh, cry and
dream. He made us move forward
with a sense of purpose and with
lovcfor ourselves."
Glover has sUlrred in such films
as "Lethal Weapon," "The Color
Purple," "Silverado" and the cur,
rent "Grand Canyon," as well as
the television miniseries "Lonesome Dove."

5 · Happy Ads

I would like to offer a
thanks
IIlll~:ai::~~e~~Jordan,
to the
I Svrt11use First Churth
and the LlOD \OUrttn I

Jo puttbe Clasllfteds to wtirk ror yau,
call our ad-vl~en, Monday-Friday at

HOMEMADE CHICKEN &amp;
NOODLE DINNER
THURS., FEB. 13-4:00·7:00

COUPON COOD SUN. Fll. S·SAT. FEB. 15, 1992 . , .•.

•

lnturance
14-- Bu1ineu Trainit18
15- School• &amp; ln•truction
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- MYcellueo1u
18- Wanted To Do

Business Services

·

Tissue 1I

II . ~

I~

Candy Arlx
Now that the weather has cooled
down, why not heat things up a bit
by dearing yeur dosels, attic or
basemeat of those unwanted Items
and advertising them for sale in
'
tbe ClassiOetls? .
And, you an put that mra
cash to good use by checking
MARCUM
the Classlftetls for local ~::n
sales, Rea markets and bl
CONTRACTING
In your aeck of the weeds. ~-41'11 · -New Homes

t -304-773-5352

./~JlfJt~ !o~~U,~f~:fn~r

I_DF

12- Situabont Wanled

Auction

667-(oohiUe

When You Turn To
The Classfie~s,
Ml The Boun~ Is Yours!

LIMIT 1 4·ROLI. PKG. WITH $10.00
0

11- Help Wanted
4- Giveaway
~ Happ)' Ada
6- Loti and Found
1- Loll and Found
8- PubHc Sale &amp;

Wuled to Buy
Livatock
Hay &amp; Crain
Seed &amp; Fertiliaer

17t-- Au,.. lor Sale
41- HoUle. for Renl
172-- To•u•~• for Sale
42- Mobik Homea for Rent
Va01 &amp;.4 WD'a
43- Farm• for Rent
Moton::yclu ·
44-- Apartment for Rent
&amp;at; &amp; Moton for Sale
4$- Fumilbed Room•
Auto Parll &amp; A..,...ri,eal
46- Space for Rent
Auto Repair
47- Want.ed to Rent
7&amp;- CampiD1 Eq.aipmeat
43-- EquipmeDt for Rent
~1-.li\ II 1 .~
49- For Le.1e

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

Reap The Rewards...

VALENTINE SPECIAL
SHEER DESIGNS U LIMITED
Mason, W. \G.

3Z- Mobile Homa for Sale
33- Farm.~ for Sale
34- Bwineu Buildingw
35- Loll &amp; Acroago

Meigs County Mason Co., WV

ABargain...

Glass of wine, cup of soup, salad
of choice, vegetable of choice, 6
oz. filet mignon &amp; snow crab
meat, sundae.
For Reservations Call 446-9545

I 11\\1&gt;1 1'1'1 11 '
,\ I I I I &gt; 1111 1,

GET RESULTS • FAST!

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges .••

DEADLINE
4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
Valentine's Day ~ep ..14
At Oscar's Reslaurant
Dinner for Two 127 50

F"'i" &amp; Vepwloo
For S.la or Trade

HI ·. \T

1 card of Thanks

.

Muaical lnall'u•enLI

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.0S/day

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

IS
lS
IS
1S
1S

, . . - - - - - 36- Real Eotat&lt; Wantod

~--__:~;;;::-:::;;;:::;::=~==~=----l
Gallla County

.

Over 15 Words

Rates are for consecutive runs. broken up days will be
charged for each day as separate ads.

I:OOp.m. Tuesday
I:00 p.m. Wednesday
tOO p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

.·.
...
..

SATURDAY
POCA, W.VA.· The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Saturday at Poca High School in Poca,
W.Va.

Scott D. and Lori L. Kimes,
Homestead Air Force Base are
announcing the birth of a 'son ,
Jusun Ryan, on Nov. 27, 1991.
He weighed nine pounds and
seven ounces and was 22 and threequarter inches long.
Paternal grandmother is Helen
Kimes, Mason, W.Va. Paternal
grandparents arc William and
Nancy Kimes, Racine.
MaternaJ -g~t grandfather is
Ross Stewart Sr., radbury. Maternal grandparen are Rollic Stewart, Pomeroy, and Linda Stewart,
Homestead, Fla.
The couple has a daughter, Ashleigh Meghan Kimes .

8A.M.·5P.M. - SAT.8-12

CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES

POMEROY - Janet Bolin, a volunteer ambassador with Ameriflora '92 in Columbus, will present a
program on that event on Friday at
7 p.m. at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy. Mrs. Bolin
will present a video and also
answer any questions pertainin~ to
AmeriFiora. The public is invtted
to aucnd.

New arrival ·

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesdliy Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

Rate

Words

I
3
6
10
Monthly

·.

HOCKINGPORT • There will
be a Valentine round and square
dance on Friday from 8-Jl:30 p.m.
at Hockingport on Route 124 at
Kenny and Millie Reynolds. Music
will be provided by "Don and
Buddy and the Smokey Mountain
Drifters." Ronnie Wood will be the
caller.

POMEROY · "Treasure Island"
and "What Mary Jo Shared" will be
shown at lhe Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy on Saturday
and Sunday at 2 p.m. and at the
Middlepon Library on Monday at
4:30p.m.

. The'Dally

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashtn Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
. 6:30P.M.
St~arting Sept. 28
12

o..,.

H.E.C.

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

Choko

614-992-3524

ltrhtlr

INSULATIO..
•VIny'l Siding
•Replacement
WindOw
•Rooune .

~~~1SKEESEE
992·2772or
742-2097

HENRY E. CLWHD.....................................tt2..1t1
TRACY BRINAOER.. ,_,_ ....... ,......................... .Miollll
~IANTRUIIELL.-----..·•··..
OFPICI..-.• - ----·--........ - .....___ .........

Ulllryan

-··---.M"IMO

..

MICROWAVES
VHSCAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

llkldlojlolt,

.,

t·22·'92·l

Quality
Stone Co.

BISSELL &amp;BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

I•NIIW HDIIIII

II.......

LIMESTONE
FOR SALE . ·

Re•odeliag
Stop &amp;Compare.
Frn Estimates

.Call614·992-6637
St. Rt. 7
C..s.lref OH.

985·4473

. 667·6179
"

RACINE GUN

CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
.. SUNDAYS
'Stilrttng Sept. 22
12G.c9facttry

eMu

,,
-'

·;

I

�2-The Dalllv SenUnel
Announcernenls

Ohio

SNAFU® by BrucJ &amp;attie

3 ,Announcements
Meet Si ngles : Guys • Girls. 1·
900--407-1004, $2.95/mln. Mutt

Be Over 18, Fonptls Irvine CA.
REDUCE; Bum Ott Fat While

You Sleep, Take OPAL AvaUablt
AI: Frulh Pharmacy.

Mobile 11omes
tor sale
Co1mtlolc.gl1t Nltded: G1ur1n·
tltd .,10 Per Willi Paid
1111 Nuhua 14x70 .,~ Oood
Vacttlont, Ctlll14-441-?'211.
Condftlon, Alii .,0,100. 114-441LABORERS WANTED
JaM.
Elm To S58e Will Tnln. Pltct
Work Alto I»" Contr1ct. 1-800- Rocluood: Skyllno lootlonol
28112, 3br, 2 -1M, Country
22t-1741.
Ltborers wtnted,

Hm

to 5688.

Ltbortrl Wanted
Earn to $588, will train, piece

11 Autos for S&amp;le • - ,
-----,----....;·.·.:"
~.

HHI..ear.fA C.Ur!tt Miwlt¥&gt; I~
fl1!il'. TH6 MOml Jll6 ~FECIEP

.

Town Clr Loadlcf · •
I2 100Dml Will ' , •
~
l.oolliy owntcf
oHtr 114-441-'1104 . • ~

OUR TfJN'WJUIIES...CU UIW
~·r THI~ MlH&gt;, l~tGJ 2'

.'

I

Television
Viewing

IT'!&gt; TWI(6 16 't/IIJt..
lo.~ THI~ mMIW6,

THm IIIATI

/

Khchen, 10x2t Atlechtd Porch,
Sptelll - Low Prlcl, Er:ctlltnt
Fin•;:!~ Available! French
Cltv
•
!nc. lt4-44f134o Or 1-ID0-231-4481.

•

WED.. FEB. 12

(I).

MARSHAll'S Now Hiring. No

Couch To Giveaway, 614·441·
0234.

Ext. OH155 8a.m. To 8p.m. 7
Days .

c.

8:00 (Ji. (I)
Ill
ONawa
'
())Vldao-

Exporiance Necessary. For Application Into. Call 219-755-6661,

'' ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS
ARE .. .''

Mala rd Ducks to a good home,
lor use as pets only, 614·992·

I~ j Yj wi'IJ

Biife'";
:!J

LAW ENFORCEMENT DEA. U.S.

Black &amp; white dog to gi veaway.
304-ti75·1 178.

•

EVENING

Ho-,

work also by contract, 1·800.
221-8741

Giveaway

ONE OF TJ.IE GREAT
TRIES OF ALL TIME, SIR

"-T.IR_Y.,. I_J. ,EIsr:-k,.I. .-1.:~ JJ

~

Young man to coworker, "I
used to wo11dar ill could afton!
'-·_.._...
_-L..-...1•......1 o to get marr1ed, now I wonder
if I can get along without a

lnaldt
POA Tour
QI ·WCIIId Today
0 Rill l1n Tin, K·l Cop
Slereo. 1;1
8:051]) Bavtrly HlllbltiiH

1090

o • cas

Ntwo
• Andy Qrtffltlt
IIJ 8cooby Doo
@BporlaCertter

Lost &amp; Found

male, Walker Coon
dog, Pomeroy Pike area, 614965-4420

Rentals

Found : Small BrowrvWhite male 9
Wanted tO Buy
Beagle w1collar &amp; name tag. ::-=--::=,..-,..---:::.,..=
Vory st1y, Vicinity: Plnnlel &amp; Portable Refrigerator, Call 614Biacklord Ad. 614-379-2674
446-8594 after 5 p.m ..
los t Dog : While Samoyed, Tickels lor lhe Reba McEntere
Shoestring Ridge, Reward! 614- concert, 614·441 ·1305.
-1 41 ·0619.
Used Mobile Homes, Call 614·
lost: Brown, White Spaniel 446.0175.
Name And Phone Number On
Coll ar, Vicinity: Kanauga/MUI Wanted To Buy : Junk Autos
Creek , Gallipolis. 614-446-9535.
With Or Without Motors. Call
larry Uvel y. 614-388·9303 .
lost: male Blue Healer dog,
Rac ine / Port land area, 614-949- Top Prices Paid; All Old U.S.
2455
Coins, Gold Rings, Silver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
lost: Wl'1i te 9ird Oog Wlt11 Slack 151 Second Avenue, Gallipolis.
Spots, Rewa rd OHared! .Vicini ty:
Georges Creek Road, Gallipolis,
614-446·2445, Ask For Paul.

5I

14

pe:;~~;;:p~:~~~:~
tu
I
person whomaIs

sensilive to birth control and
reproductive health needs of
clients. Must be well organind,
accurate wllh ligures and
record keeping, nave superior
communication skills, must be
ab le to work under guidelines
with minimal supervfslon . Re·
quires reliable transportation,
ability to work In Meigs, Gallla,
lawrence Counties and other
7
Yard Sale
sites It neaded.~ nme and out ol
county travel paid. Start $5.50.
1:::-;--H:-e::'lp'--W-a_n-:tcce::-d-::-7"- Send
ALL Ya•d Salos M"'t Ba Paid In -;-1;::
resume and two employ·
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn ment - reterenc.s to Planned
!he day be tore lhe ad Is to run. Wuver 304·882·2645.
Parenthood ol Southeast Ohio,
Sunday edition • 2:00 p.m.
396 Richland Avenue, Athens,
Friday. Monday edition - 2:00 AVON ! All Areas ! Shirley OH. 45701 by February 16, 1992,
Spears, 304-675-1429.
JJ .m . Saturday.
EOE/ESP

Employment Services

Business
Training

41 Houses for Rent

Retrain
Now!!!Southeaslern
Business College, Spring Valier.
Plaza . Call Today, 814-446-4367.!
Regisleration 11190-05·12748.

18

Wanted to Do

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

Will Babysit In My Home. Rod·
ney Araa. Relanmces Available.
Call 614-245-5887.
Georgas Portable Sawmill, don't
haul your logs to lhe mill just
call304~75-1957.

Miss Paula'• Day Care Center.
Sate, affordable, childcare. M·F
6 a.m. - 5:30 p.m. Age~ 2~10.
Before, after school. Drop-Ins
welcome. 614-446-8224. New In·
fant Toddler Care, 614-446~221.

3 DR 2 full Baths tlrepiact, deck
S350. P•r monlh Dep. + 2
R•ferences required 614-446·
~04

3br, 2 Baths, Double Wide,
Southwestern School District .
614·245-55.118.
936 First Avenue, Gallipolis ,
Ohio. 1br, Partially Furnished,
$175. Call 614-446-4038, 614-446·
1615.
House lor rent or sale, call Scoltys Used Cara, 304·882·3752.
Hou111 tor salt or rent on land
contntct, down payment Is nl·
golia~e. 614-992-3027
Small house, 2 bedroom, 1813
JeHeraon Blvd. 2 bedroom apt,
2101112 JeHarson Blvd. 304·675·
1365.

42 Mobile Homes
fO\ Rent

·CLA~~IFIED AD~
FILL THE

Will do flooring lnatallatlon &amp;
repair, rees'ona6Je price, 13 yrt
exp, 304-67S.52n or 675-81n

Will Do In Hom• Nurting Care.
Have Referencet. 614-446-4441.
Will do Income taxes. Phone
Gallipolis Farry.

304~75-3939.

Will haul and/or supply labor for
various Jobs, pay Is negotiable,
304-675--5277 or 675-6171.

PIN

CA8H?H

Late model mobltl home, batl1
and half, Sand HIH Road, 304-

Business
Oppol1unlty
Mobile Homes For Rent
Reference And Deposit ReINOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. quired. Call After &amp;14-44&amp;.-0527
recommanda that you do business with people you know, and
NOT to lend money through the
mall until you have inveatTgated
the offering.

lfler 2 p.m.

31 Homes for Sale
3 Unil Rental, Situated On 112
Acre LothMaintenance Free, Excellent S ape, 614-446-8568.
For Salt by Owner: 2 city lott 1 3
bedroom llome, large out blag,
convenient NOflll Point Elemtn·
tary and City Recreation Com·
plex. Prico reduced. 304-8753278 tor appolntmenl.
In town two story, thrtt bedrooms, fun biSemanl, 1·112 bltll,
at1acn.d 1·1!2 car garage,
Central heat and air. Evenings
Call 614-446·6707.

Apanment
for Rent

72 Trucks for Sale

AUCTION

SWAIN
&amp;

..

player plano wflk:h ne.cte very
little work, talrcont4, rauonabJt
otfar,614-843-5174
Bunny Clarinet, 614-446-8720.

53

Antiques

Ludwig drums, 3 pc. wilh high
hat, Zlldjian symboll 1 $400.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Condlllonl 1250. 6t4-446-0963.
614-44&amp;-7371 AfterSp.m.

Auto .Maytag Wast'ler, S75; Penncrall Clothet Dryer, SSO;
Electric Hot Water Heater, $25.

For salt· Craftmatic bed, good
cond., $650, 614·992-3367

For Sale: Good UN&lt;f Doors, Ex1·bdrrn apt. In Mlddl1port, tsrior Doors And Pallo Doors,
utlllllll turn, dtp req, no ptls, Reaa·onable Price, 614-446-2303.
6t4-992·22t8
For Sale: Sears Waler Distiller,
2 bodroom apts in Point lllco New, $50. Call 614·388·
Pleasanl1 modern, claen, Hud 9~9.
acceptea, 614-446-2200.
lc• Parlor Table &amp; Chair For
2-bdrm, part lum apt, newly Sol" 614-146-8720.
redacorated, WID hook-up,
Pomeroy, 614· 992~886 aftsr L.edlas Genuine L.eatl1er Coals,
Sill 14, Tobacco Color; Ladles
6pm
Blue l.aather; ladles Brown
2br Clean, Apr,nances Water, l.latller Jacket, Size 12; Ladlu
immediate Aval eblllty, C1a.e To SIH 10 Blue Susdt; Ladlu
Sllopping, Kanauga, $230/mo. Suede Capt Light Tan Size 12;
Pluo Deposit. 6t4•245-92111.
M1t11 Leather Coats, All Above

dloc. All
4215.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1'um your dufler into (~ash,
Sell it the easy wuy ... by plume,
IW neetl to lem'e your lwme.
Place your clussilied ad today!
15 woniR m· less, 3 days,
3 paJim·s,$6.00

Tax And Tille Down . Preowned
Mobile Homea, Uu Your Tn
Relund. 50 Homes To Clloose.
Elna Home Ctnter, 1~0.5{1Q..

5710.
196~

B1ron 12x65, 2br, 2 AC,
Underpinning, Wa1htr, Dry1r,
Relrlgerator, Stove, Pari Fum.,
Good Condition! 6\4-446·287'1
After.Sp.m.
1973 14x70 Fairmont mobile
homl. Remodeled. Nice kitchen.
Throe bedrooms. $6000. Call
304-713-5868.

1181 Oranvlllelu14x70, g11 hut,
3 bed roo~,;:. mlal1ed, $111,500.

I "-------·--

2. -----------------

'),

________

W~-----

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

11.- - - - 4·.·- - - - - - 12.- - - - - - r:
J.'J •._ _ _ __

·'·----------------------I___________
6.
.14-•.________
7. _ _ _ _ __
15..________
IJ. _ _ _ ____,__

4·46-2342 675-1333
992-2156

linn. 304.. ,,...97.
.
1987 Clayton Ridgewood, 3BR, 2

lull bftlls, pertlaUy tum'ed. Now
on renttd lat. 614-446-1847.
1987 Plnecretlc 14x70, 2 bed·
room, 1 bath, total elee hut
pump, tlumn eidlf19, ·t2x20 front
J;'_ch, 30.·576-2119 all• 8:00

1U9 1• Aidmen Dlnvllle 14x72 •
On rtnttd lot 2 lull bltll•2BR.

ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
from $192/mo. Wallt to thoP 6
movies , Call614-446·2568. EOH.
Completly Furnltlllld Small
House, $250/mo. Plus Utllitlee,
And Deposit. 614-446..0338. Call
Before 7p.m.
Furnlslled elflclency apartment
wltl1 kitchenette and bath.
Deposit and rtfarencea required. No pete. 614·446-4879.
Efficiency apartment. Newly
decorated. Rtflrenct1 deposit.
No pall. 304-675-!182.

Elllclency apt. tor rent 1 beautiful
carpet, nice couch ana bar, 304675-6042

enFrom. 9mell Down
Payment. Call1-800oiiN'Ilt

Uaad Whetlchalrt 3 Whatltd firm. 1179 Corvette 54,000 actual
Scooters, Llhchalrt, Electric miles, nery option, southern
Beds, Etc. Insurance And car, $4 500. firm. 1a&amp;1 Kawaukl
Meclcare Accepted. Cell Advan- 750 LT 0, 13,000 mlln, like new,
tage Health, 1-800·589·1020.
$12,000. 1PI Suzuki 125 cc dirt
bike S250. 304-875-5438 after
Reconditioned
washlrt
&amp; 5:00.
dryert, all
IICI1
$100The
andWaSher
up. Wel~\o.~~~;;;;;~~~
strvlcs
makn.
&amp;
Cullall, 36,000
Dryer Slloppe. 614~6·2944.
Original Mlle1, 350 Rocket, 4
Barrs! Carbol'llor, Exclllenl
Reduce your Wetat.t, take "New Condition! $4,000. 614-441·1ll03.
Shepe Diet Plan and H~drex
wst1r pills. Available Fruth
Pharmacy.
Size 11 Wedding Orata And Vall
In Very Good Condition , 614-446-8278 Afl1r 5p.m.

Tlif~t'J'

AT Tfff END Of
THE C/.IFf.

NowoHour~_•.

i

Ill Wheal of FOrtuna

•~

...

for Sale

~i

EEKANDMEEK

. •.,
'

·'·'

Rogers Basement Waterproofing.

·'

.

Complete Mobile Home 981-Ups,
,•
R~t~~alrs; Commerat, Rltldan,
llal lmprovtmenta. Including: : ;.
Plumbing, EleGtrlcal. Insurance·
.•
Claims kceptld, 614-256-1111. _ -~

Curtis Homa lmprovwnenlt: . • Years Experience On Older &amp;.. .. . '
Newer Home1. Room Addltlone;
Foundation Wort., Roofing( - ·
KMchena And BalM. Free Et- ' ' .
llrnetnl Reltrtncu, No Job TO:
·
Big Or Smolll114-141.0225.
'· ·,
FrHman's Plumbing And HNt'l • .
lng,614·256-1611.
•
R.lnovallont. Add Ona, RtPII~ ~. '.
PalnUng, 0'--lltY Worlll Cli~ ; .. .·
Roger At : 614~41-8561.
, .,•,

...
BARftfflV
I FINALLY L'ARNT
OL1 BULLET HOW

TO T~EE A
'POSSUM II

AIN'T NO·

'POSSUM It

1:30

In Zenith 1110 Hrvlclng 1ft0;1111; • • •
other bnnda. HoLIH ulll, al-.

Modem 1br Ap.artment, 614-446--

t

55

Building
Supplies

82

Block, b'lck, aewer plpaa, win•
dowe, ilnleil, etc. Claude Win·
oblie tlrt,
Rio Graftdl, OH Call 614ov.r- 241-612L
looklnL'ivtr. No Pets, CA. 814·

\

.::::•1 EIHo

. -

11141lodgoo-.44oyt,
- ·...,
blool.
-.:=to,
... 117

tv•••

...

Upltolllery
hlull,
7ft~,
:::::::::::::-~:::::~~ -,-1''
Mowroy's Upholot!':fnl IJirYio.· •
1114 Fonl Tompo OL, 411r.. Ina trl-y . . II JO!If.l. :!Ito,
lldln 11110 111 extru, new blit In fun\llt.n up110111""". 1
UNO, 't.iiutiM oor, J;!tOO, wUI Coli 104o171-11M for he ..
PlY . . . . . · - ·
limit•

82 Soap

·lngr1dl1nt

DOWN

ap~rt~Mnt

. 32 Pour down
3411111

IIJ

3511ollo1t

37

Slltdllval

R-nolbl~

I

=:::bird

.38- Guevara
40 Provlda

a~=..Un,·
....t

2 Be overly
fOOMI
3Wklt-

7 Aitllylo(oro)

a Tumid

4~

ltltldle of
I FarmlllimM

10 Folt linger ·

Anylltlng ~ L.owo

w(I).

.

Ctvlt w.. The
~altlp. of a . - dog Is

;:~
l·

. Healing '

.

448 .o3 '
·
56 Pets for Sale
E11y AI 1, 2, 3. File You'rt Tax.. Single Efficiency, PutliiiY Fur- ,..---~:::-~-::~=
Htre And Buy ...,., Kill You're nllfiod, . Wotorl'l'414~:'a Dopoo1t Groom ond Supflly Sho!&gt;-1'01
' 720.
Gfl&gt;omlng. "All bl-, otyloL
Landlord
Homo Roqul,.d,·Call
Cinttr,11
1710.
limo Pol Food Doollr. Julio
45 ·· Furnished
-b. Call114-~&lt;1-02:1t.
, .'Rooms
tyroid-~~ -~or., cat~
.
_,.., no _ . , $50
Apt for ront by month or -'&lt;, 114-112-- uk lor Mllncla
304-882-21141.
AKC Fom~lo ,Boot011 Torrlor. 4
Aoomoior""' · -orononth. monthl old. B1ac1c I Whlo.
Stoning 111120/mo. Gollla Hotlll. $100. t04-87Pr17311.
IM-I4fl.-.
.,.C raglotorocl Mlnill..l
Slooplng ,_,. wltl! looking. SCIIno- puppy._llft I popper,
AIIOiriiiWI-.
Allhoolt-upo.
· - · 0110. COO
Iller .2:00 p.ll,
11114·7?1- ~c:.:.ll:;__.,..-_ _ __
r

Plumbing. ~

(I).

(I)
Mike

(I)

.

.

~)

eor~­
bolt-d
boat
.
81 NllrtOIItllda

Siereo. 1;1

f.r'"''

.

Will build palio ,covere, dtekl,
acrHnld rooms, put up vtny~
aiding ot t,aner alllrt~. 114-t- .
245-9152.
&gt;'\
~ ••

0390.

Arabia

5t Buddin

unexpectedlY tllkes a
romantk;lnlertst "in Robin.
Stereo. (;I
10:00 (2). 0 Night Coult
Chrlsllnl maeta her
.
opponent; Dan moonlights aa
surrogate. Stareo.

D1via
Sew-Vac ' Serv~e.
Gtorgn CrMk Rd. Parta, eupo·
plln, pickup, and dellwlfY. 614-

.qul,.d, 304-812-2561.

58 GUlf-Africa ond

0 Fdtt!.Dowllnfl Mv.-a

:;-'':':-;;;;'-:;-c:,:..::.:.::....,-::"-:--1 " •
Ron's TV Service, •Ptclallzfnfl• •,1

446.0294.

gl~

--lii!W

TH' MAILMAN

50Marrill

54YH-55TIIIaci1Nia

15 1"1111-tll

1:00 Cll
Doogla
- ·over
· a
M.D.(l)e
Ooogle
II furious
talevislon otllr"s a~nt
manipulation. s:Lr;J
ClJ Eclat Stereo.
(f) Scllnllftc A
Frortllerl Tho lhaoretlcal
slondard ol artificial
lntatl~la examined.
Slareo.
0 8tln A Iormor
baseball player vias for
Elaine's attention. Staroo. 1;1
0 MOVIE: tlurltcl ~
(2:00( Slereo. 0
1111
Stereo.
D CG1at10 Balk-1 Duke
at GaorgTa Tech (L)
Ql Lony Klnfl Uval
·

·'
·'

ole Recent (Pfol.l
47 llloftd

18 A rm
t7 Arid
18 Wltolahllrled .
20 Acknowledge I
grMUng
23 Bautlol
IMHden
24 - battery
28 Tlmlng
device
31 Hortnt

8

BODIES ARE euRIED.

44 DIHxportinl

4St-d
8 Piece of
jewelry
12 AtpmMI
14TW19111

without lookl?&amp;d 10 lhe
g_~. Stereo.
(f) Art You
Sorvod?
M«ttac Mon
Stereo.

I KNOW WHERe 1l-te

I c)U€1T1tX.DH~ I
WANTEO ITAND eHE
~ve lTTOME.

..... .

42 Hkiii-ITicllolt

1 - to Joy

(J)eWander Yaara

..

614-237&gt;0488, clay or night.

ACROSS

1:05 (I) MOVIE: The Shtdow
- ( 2:00)

..
..

Cl-••n•••,.,,.,.••,.. -

The World Almanac:®CrO.aword Puzzle

e

...•

Unconditional litetlm• guarantll. Local raferenc11 fumlshld.
Frte ltllmatll. Call COIIIC1 1·

10

h,!!,-and-run ac:ddenl.

:'~,Slit Wrvte 0

MORTV MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

-

L-----------J

MOYIE: llvaiboard (PO)

1:30(1)Kevin tries to imPfeas a

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: Soll!h

I believe it was lbe eccentric chess
P ua
Bobby Fischer who said lbat
Pus
have found a good move, you
Opening lead: • 3
sboo1ld keep thinking, becauae lbere is
one available.
· ~The same idea may be applied to
1~ridge_. When you have spotted a good 1
..
of play, keep analyzing, becauae one spade, seven hearts and two dla·
might be an even better ooe. To moods. ADd most declarers WOII!d will
I ~~{.~~~ on tnday's deaL cover the · the first trick wilb the di•mond ace,
II
bands and plan lbe play iD cub one or two rounds of trumpe, and
four hearts West leads lbe diamond discard their club Ioaer on the dla·
three.
·
· mond kiDg. But when West lmpolllely
North's one-no-trump response was ruffs the Irick, lbe declarer is left wllb
forcing ·for one round - a popular three spade losers and the contract
treatment in tournament circles these finlsbes one down.
days. It is made wilb almost any hand . True, lbe 6-1 dl~ond bruk is unin the 6-11 pOint-range that Iacu a likely, but there 11 a better IIDe. AI
suit biddable at the one-level and trick two, South plays the ace and andoesn't have support for partner'a suit. other spade. Assume East wiDs and,.
South lben sltowed lbat be .counts turns a diamond. Decl~nor ruffs btp,
playing-tricks, not poinis. Wilb seven ruffs a spade iD the dummy, cubes the
wioners, he would have been W1111tg to heart ace, rut!• a dlamolld, draWl
nobid only two bearts. Norlb bad an trumps and clauns. Tbe diamond klllc
easy raise to game.
isn't needed.
There appear to be easy tricks:

IDB¢ara-arill
Slallll' Valalttlna Show
Larry Galin and the QaUin
Brother1, Roben Glllaume.
(1 :00) Stereo.
.
8flllmeNawor:;l
IIIII _ , Jakt Slereo.

•• .,1

tQJ 107U
+ltlOI

tA

I&amp;"'"~

Florida man Is wanted for a

mlcrow•ve, TV, ltii'IO, AC,
many axtrsa, S9,000. 304-8~ ~ • .:
5409.
'"•' ·

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

r;J

0 UnsoiYad Mptallao A

Budijel Transmletlona, Used &amp;
rebu•n, slartlng ll $99; Auto
Pans. 614-245-S&amp;n, 614·37~ .

••

+QIO$

+J

By Pbilllp Alder

(2:001

de~

•au
u

tA76S
.QJIOP87Z

Don't jump
to conclusions

e

.•tt

EAST

SOU111

CeFamllyFtuel
1111 Ba 1 lllar Stereo.
Ql Croaoflrt
7:351]) Sonlotd and Son
1:00 (2). Colloga Balk-N
Alabama at Kenlucky (L)
()) MOVIE: Dud ql Night
(2:001
(I) (JJ
Dlnooaura Ethyl
suprls8s lhe Slnclalrs when
she has a near-death
experience. Stereo. 0
Cll Scl1ntlflc Amertcln
Franllerl The theoretical
standard ol artlllclal
lntelligella examined.
Stereo.
l!ll 0 XVI Dlyntpic
Winter Qameo Speed
skating. women"s 1500m;
alpine skiing, women·s
downhl combined; fraeslyle
sklll'll, moguls; women"s luge

•

WEST

.KH2
+AQIII

~::=Hh~-

.

...

•.o.K ·

PHILLIP
ALDER

E.-lnmant Tonlgltt
Stereo. 1;1

I

1-JI.H

•• 4

tUSH

(I)

1-tv/'fT

oomo oppllonco ropolrL WY.:.,
304-171·239e Ohio 114-146-2414. '

Middleport, SIKh St, 2 bedroom tumrla111d ap~ utllllln
paid, reftranc11 I dtpotlt re-

IIUI, IIIMnWV.

_

·'~

..,,·.

NORTH

BRIDGE

•au

' 1ilLGtt:r~cS

f(oNoMYJ

~~~~~~~~~
Will pay caal1 tor used moto~-t· : '~
cyle parta. CaU 614-4711·1055
~:'-'~

Transportation

Grecioul living. 1 and 2 bedroom apertments II VIllage
Manor ·
tnd
RiYtnlde
Apartmenta ln Middleport, From
StiMI. Colll14·1112·778t EOH.

Call (6t4) 367.ot31aftar 1 p.m.
2568.
Short Time On Job? Put Crocllt
Hlotory A , P - 7 llony CompleUy Fumiehtd
Ro_uad_HomMTo home, 1 mila btlow t

/

.'

Services

.

7:051]) Acldama FamUy
7 30

cond. 304-273- _226_3_.- - - - - - - '.• ·. :::
79 Campers&amp;
Usad baa suppli11, exc cond,
Motor Homes
•
complete lllv11, supers, misc.
=:--:=--:-....,.,,...--.--:-'-:::.
...
:
~:
~
~
~-~-·~~-2~~-6~·~----~~ 1SI89 Mallard 5th whHI wflhl • ' ·

StHICaH Executive Deale, 11t0 ChiiVwolot Captlco Cl,..
Furnishod 3 Rooms And Bath 3&amp;"x70" $125; CommodOI'I sic, 4dr.1 MClin, 1r1ra aharp.
Upslairs, Cl•an, No Pets, Compl.ller Wltl1 Disc Drive, lixc. cond.1 XIS V-8, $1&amp;50 1 114R1f1rence And D1poslt R• P'lnter, Colot Monitor, '63 Anor- 1112-6719
qulrad. 614-446·1518.
ted Programs And Computer
1!181 Buick Elsctra, good ehape.
Furnlahed Aptrtment, tbr, next D.l lk, $500j 19" Color Tellwlalon dlj)lndablo, v.a, $500, 114·702·
With
Stona,
$100.
Call
114-146to Ubrary, parking, cenlt1l heal,
2956
air, referencee. 614-44&amp;-0338, 85il.
Before 7p.m.

New Htvsn, ont bedroom fur·
nished apt, deposh end
reference requlrtd, 304o882-

~;~IIAT:J' 'Ttff LArf.fr oN THF

I

good

Wanled: Used farm equipment,
anytlllng you want to Mil. Call
$14-256-1308, 256-6040 after 6
p.m.
.

I

OTltaWIIIorto

•'

1~3 C-Ray1 21 Fl. Cudd~ Cabin,
4020 JD T,.ctor, lolder, $5,950; V-8, Excelllnt
Condi•Jon, In·
Late Model 4000 JO, $l850; cludn All Eqvlpmont, Call Aft"
long 460 Diesel Traclor, Bush &amp;p.m. 614-441-17&amp;3.
Hog, S4,450. Owner Will
1985 15' bin boat, tralltr1 55
"
Finance. 614-286-6522.
HP Yamahe. Llvewell, rodlockar; • : •
Jim's Farm Equlpmenl, SR. 35, stOflgt, p.ct. Male, eatraa. 304· · •
Wast Gallipolis, 614-446-9777; 675-1616.
•
Wide seiKtlon new I used farm
treclors &amp; lmplltiMnta. Buy1 76
Auto Pans &amp;
Hli 1 trade, 8:00-5:00 wHicdaya,
Sit. till Noon.
Accessories

New Holland 457 flay bind 7 ft.
New Holland Super 717 forege
llarvnttr. Gthl as wtndin
mixer. Oliver 10 tl tl'lnaport

A man bought his pregnant wile drinks and popcorn
at the concession stand. He spilled the drinks and drop·
ped the popcorn. A woman asked ,"You aren"t going to
let him HOLD ~the .BABY a~e 1ou?"
. ...

QIMonoylna

1988 Ford F150 4x4 XL.T Lariat,
loaded, IX1tndad cab, 511,000, •
614·992·7663
•.

81
Aut fo Sal
71
Eoch. 422 Second Avonuo. =--:::-o;.,s;_..,r,_:,.:-e;_--c
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT $100
Galllpollt.
1911 Cllryller 48,000 actuel
BUDGET
PRICES
AT
JACKSON
149,900,
Meckal Supplies : New And mliu, 4 door, exc cond, $2,300.

Reduced To SoJJ:
Cheshire, 011lo. 904-932~959,
904-932-7670, 614-367-1)649.

FRANK AND ERNEST

61118.

61 Farm Equipment

SCI AM LlfS ANSWIIIS
• ·"
F{Jthom - Lobby- Vodka • Kingly-HOLDtheBABY

~Tw= nre Next
C e Entorb'C.mant Tonight
Stereo.IJ
IIJ MolcG~r IJ
@ CoDaga Bailit1balt .
Providence at Miami (L)

Owner, low Mileage, 614-446-

75 Boats &amp; Motors

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THES E SQUARES

6 GET
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO I
ANSWER
•

~ ~:~:::rd'"

good, 304-675-33•4.

74 Motorcycles
Buy or etll. Riverine Antiques, Prlco nogotloblo. 814·245-5948.
~h;:N:::I;:or:-,-:g:::ood:-::· ._
1124 E. Main Street, Pomeroy. Old Wellington up~oht plano. ~t9;;8T:;-;-H;:on~d::,-4:---..
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 $50 or but olflr. 304-875-?IM.
condition, asking $1100, 614p.m., Sunday 1:00 lo 6:00 p.m.
992·7467 or 814·711"2-3154 nk lor." ~
'
614-912·2526.
G•~
)• •

Farm Supplies
&amp;L1vestock

r;J .

lnalde Edition ~:;~·
(!)Mac~..,.
Nawlllour
(l)eCand Comota

....
..

FURNITURE. 62 2-anllque upright pianos, 1- 1987 Ford Efronco. Full Size, 1

Olive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; Used
furniture , heaters, Western &amp;
Wort; boots. 614-446·3159.

8

(I)

Ragls1ered blaclcl whhl male
Cock" Spaniol puppy. 9"•t 73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
gift, $200, no checka, 614·992·
2607
1979 Jetp CJ5, new top. 53,000 ·
dog
started
tor
Ale.
mlln,local
owner, 304-675·1264.
Squirrel
PICKENS FURNITURE
;.
New/Used
304.e75~131.
1980 Dodge Snow Commander'
Housel1old furnishing . 1/2 mi.
Ram Charger 4x4 Btazw, has , .·
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Plaasant, WV, 57
hydl'lullc snowplow, 111rallnes, • .·
Musical
Clll304·675-1450.
318 aLIIo, PS, PB1 runs &amp; looks
Complete llome furnishings.
Hours: Mon-Sat, 9·5. 614-4460322, 3 miles out BulaviiJa Rd.
Free Delivery.

Instruments

-

(Z Tlta Jo-t.D

LAYNE"S FURNITURE

Nice 141170 Mobllt Hom•, Near 114·256-1638.
Porter1 C.ntral Air, $250Jmo Plus
Secunty Deposit. 6t4-446-6189, Firewood tor tale: Oak, ash, &amp;
hlcltory. O.llversd locally $40 a
614-146-6865.
load or 3 tor $100. 614·367-7013.

44

Real Estate

Dalmatian Puppies! 6 Weeks
Old, Had Shols1 Been Wormed.
AKC Reglsterea. Bl &amp; WH. 614·
446·260IJ.

1978 Chevy hall ton pickup. 305,'
Big Savings On All Carpet In
4
apd., white spoke wllHI. $700.
Stock. Cash And Carry, Mol· l?og Houses For Sale: Several 304-075-7633
or 304-875·1626.
Sizes. 1 112 Mile Out At 141,
Iehan Carpets , 614-446·7444.
Wtyna Sl1oemaker. 614-446- 1986 Bronco II, 6-cyl., standard, '
Color T.V., Small Fraozer, Bat- 0593.
4 wttHI drive, sunroof, $3500,
tery Chargar, Power Tools, Beta
VCR ,
Electric
Typewriter, Fish Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave. 614-742-2:357 altar 6pm
..
Point Pleaunt 1 304-675-2063, 1988 Cl1evy 1 Ton Delivery
Cloths Dryer, 614·256-1238.
full line Tropical tlah, birds, Truck,
MO
Engine,
12x8
Ft.
Box,
For Sala; One Large Sofa, Rose lmlilln[mtlland IUppiiH.
Good Shape, $5,100. Mork Btl·
Color, in Good Condition, $25,
Male
BuH
Cocker
Spaniel,
12
WHn 5-7 P.M. 614-367-0411.
.
Call 614·388-9609.
wks. old, has shots, S75, call 1991 Ford Ran~r, 19,000 Miles,'
GOOD USED APPLIANCES 614·985-3828 after Spm
•.:
61..-.
• •4 , 731.
..-,500.
Wash;rs, dryers, rstrigeratOI'S,
Registered
4
yr
old
male
Gerranges, Skaggs Appliances,
F-150, Body great shape, 00,; ~ ~:
Upper River Ri'l. Barude Stone man Sl'lepherd, great wltll Auto, PSIPB, anglne nltds- • ·
children, good lloma only, 304· some work, $1,600. 814-388Crest Motel. Call 614·446·7398.
..
675-6711P.
8291
..

Mobile home for rani, S225. 6 Piece Living Room Suite, In·
month $100. deposit, unfur- cludee Coucll, Cllalr:T Rocker,
nlsMod, 304·675-11::7 eftlf 8:00 Cott.. Table, 2 End abJts, 2
Matching Ltmpa, Very Good
PM .

21

down EXTRA

3 nice mobile hornet for r11nt
lust south of Atl11111, starting et
$225/mo., call 814-992·5528 or
614·385-8227

675-3834.

Financial

Want to:

14x70 Wilh Expando, 1 112
Baths, AI . 141,2 Miles From Gal·
lipolll, 614-446-4824.
2br Mobile Home, References,
And Deposit Needed. 614-367·
7866.
2br Unfurnishtd, Locat.ct On SA
5B8, $226 Plus Ulllili.., Call614·
446-3968 After &amp;p.m.

Household
Goods

L.

0 Zona Stereo. 1;1
8:35 I]) Andy Clrllfttlt
'7:00V1je 11J WhHI of F . -

FOUND·

q··--~

chuck'-

...JIL-...II_'...1.1-.L..I-L..I...J you dovolop
by IIIIi.; k:"t~~o mllll~ .:::h
from llwp No: 3 below.
6

~~-~-·~
Squa~JJstareo.

;

~T-..,1·····-c·omwpil'~ ~-

r-1--::S-:E:-::-D-:G:-:-I

1:301il!~ N~~ R

6

3

The
'

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wrlaht

Help Wanted

will lr&amp;ln. Pltct War'k, 1110 by
contract, 1-800.22HI11111.

Unalt ached? Meet Area Singles
Through Our Singles Newsltt·
ter. Write: Singles, P.~~ 18ox
1043, Gallipolis, Ohio 451~

4

11

Ohio

Wednesday,

.

addrMUd, otomped .. envelope to
Matchmlker. c/o this newtl)aper. P.O.
Box 91428. C~and. OH « tOt-3428.
PISCII (feb. »Moroh 20) Praloeand
cradK won"t be ao Important IO you to~ u doing what needs doing will be.
Provide lhe dlrec~on. bullet uaoclalu
who require ego gralllleallort toke the

.

might prefer operating lndependenlly
lodoy, you could find that the"motl proplllousarrangoments arelhoaeln which
BERNICE
yoo hove a partner.
BEDEOSOL
VIRGO {A... ~I opt. 22) II' I lmpor·
lint loday thot. you h~ .wtll-definad
oblecll-; you are In a good achleY6ment cycle - · you alloul&lt;l be sue·
ceutu1 · porlormlng w(thln your
.yllll ( - 11·Aprtl1t) Your (nllu· Clllabllillea.
ence over your lntlmete apllere of UIIIA {llepl. 2So0ol. :IJ) Over the ntXt
- 1 1 more ~vtlhtn uoull at ·few day~. lndlvldualo you know IIOCial)y
thlo lime. U11 lhlo Ullt conatructlvely . could be Yery hltpful to you In other er·
.to PfodtiCOI - t o lor all.
ou ol your lilt. Don't be rtluctlllt to
"tAWIIII {Aprl., " 1 20) Vou'rt now · mix bualrtell with plellure.
In aliVOt'- ~ lor -•1111 inat••, ICON'to (Oot. MoNo¥, 22) Wltat.you
'·' ell. ..,; 1•
rial galno. Thlrt are twO lltuatlortl, In do YGII'II do wtll today, and dlllrable
par~~c:u~ar, that Cll! be IIIIIIIICied upon ...na ~ bt In the oiling. The
condhlortlln · to lldd to ojrNt ~ well-btlng. • · ertt II to bt lnvOMMIIn rn~a~•IQful 111·
WEI"{llolr 11.,.,. 20) A profound , deaYOrt and llnllh whit ',ou IWI.
lhl-you·re~ln~wlthmay IAGITT~= D Dea.l1) Evprovlda you with 10m0 lrtiiQht laday orythl:• ,
today,_, 1111111·
hi could haVI a lavQJon ' Ilona
I appear to bt lnlllldble. K
yoAJJt .,.._, ptana. WIIQit II 1UQ011- you'd
a to rMdjtllt 111 arrtngan•tt
1toi1t .....,...,.
YGIIIMIIIilnfllr, give h a go. ,
· CMICD(,_I1 IIIIJB)Do"not-1. CAFRICQNI(IIea. • • 11)Co!Mfi.
. 'wllll fr...-. ... . . _ lllat mltlllt Ilona In fiiiiiiiiiOOIIqulllfloiGIIIII.IOr.
provide a - - o i l - It
*"Y llotll
tllllttma. -r-coukllltmuclt....,to
IIICI IICICIIII)y. 8aal1 !ft.·
daulloplllanratu..-.
WlvGinaotll balh--.
'

-t

BiOIIIIII .,.

woe••*• .,e-_ ~you ., .
•

disputed; a fudge - · 1
boy"alate ..Stareo: ~
(!)Cirlll~l

cltooeqgrr'"1;1

oance
Jones perlortils.

.

lie

r.

0 700 Club Wilt Pat '

Aab•ttton
10:011 (J) 1!10VI!: lltatalto (PG)
(2:1&amp;1

10:30S Croollllld eM,o
11:00(1). (I) (J). dl

0-

=·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~==1;1
• AIMo lllf ,~lareoi

.
.

'YE'J6SIIIaW
Larry .Qallln and the Gatlin

I

Brotltan, Aoblt1 GilluM.
!j,~1111
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11tl0 •
,

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P111V10U1 IOLUTtON: "'11'1 aaator to flgltl far ona'J p(,uiOiplll then 1o
... up 10
Allied Alltlt.

"*"·" ,. .

•

,
~

~ 'it!"'N ~:•·•;,..¥'•--1~~

�CRISCO
SHORTENING

s

Monday thru Sunday'
8 AM·lO PM
•

Gophers
upset
Hoosiers

3 LB. CAN

STORE HOUR~ ·

298 SECOND SJ.

99

POMEROY, OH• .
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

MAXWELL
HOUSE

PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 9 THRU FEB. 1S, 1992

INSTANT

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3: 136
Pick 4: 2976
Cards:
K-H; 6-C; 5-D;

J-S
Super Lotto:
4-7-8-22-38-42
Kicker: 899242

Page4

Vol. 42, No. 187
Copyrighted 1992

COFFEE

Low tonight In mid 30~
Friday high In mld-40~

2 Sectlono, 12 Pogo• 25 conto
. A Multimedia Inc. Newopoper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February, 13, 1992

aoz.

s
99c
Por k 1 s•••••••••••
$ 69
Chuck Roast•••••••• 1
$ 39
Round Steak••••••• 2

99
Miller
endorses
Democrats'
proposal

5

R'!LbE

ARMOUR

lb.

VIENNA
SAUSAGE

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

1b.

5 oz.

s

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

ta.

ECKRICH

Breasts•••••••••••••••~ .

5 29

1
$159
Pork Lo1n••••••• ~••••1a.

'14 SLICED

Bologna••••••••••••

KRAFT
MIRACLE
WHIP

LB.

•

32 oz.

s

•
$139
Wteners •••••••••••••La.
SUPERIOR

Sliced·Ba.con•••••

99

r- ~-----,

1 Jt~ m~·

$109

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$

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4 1
$ 79
1
2Yo Mtlk••••••••••••Gal.
2
$
1
.Margar•ne••••••
Onions........... ta.

I

•

La.

JIF

.

Peanut Butter••••

$1'', 89

l&amp;oL

I

KEMPS 5QUART PAIL

Ice Cream•••••••••

s 99 ·Dumphngs•••••••
Cheese ·P1zza......2a.s oL ·

CHEF BOY·AR·D!E

I

$669
oz.
~AII'MI'tS.,.Y. ·
Olltr
F&amp; t .. f&amp; IS, lift

I P«C

I

---··--

$299
Pall

.FLAVOR~E SUGAR •
j

6·654
OL

· ·-

s.,.rv•

IS.Ift2

2 Uter Btls.

(

89(

5U.
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129
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..

.

' CLOROX BLEACH
GALlON

79(

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1.--s. ltft

Oltr 111111

By JULIE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Start
Plans for annual fashion show
of the Pomeroy Merchants Associ~tion were discussed at that group's
regular meeting on Wednesday.
Susan Clark, president.
announced the· -s~ will be held
April 3 at 7:30 p.b\'."at Pomeroy
Elementary School. This year's
theme is "Spring Revue '92" and
Mrs. Clark is again show chainnan.
To date the following stores will
be participating: Bullons and
Bows, Chapman Shoes, Clark's
Jewelry, The Fabric Shop, K &amp; C
Jewelers and a newcomer this year
to the show - Middleport Depanment Store. Tickets for the show
will soon be available through
association members at a minimal
cost of $4.
Planning meetings for lite fashion show are held every Tuesday at
noon on the second noor of The
Fabric Shop. Any member of the

1%131f

.

By BRIAN J, REED
. Sea~lnel News Staff
D•s.cusstOn about a_proposea1
one-mill_le-:y for~ Metgs County
Par!tS Dtstnct .tonun~ed. when the
Metgs County ~ommt$SIOners met
'" regular sesston on Wednesday
_!!ftemoon.
.

CHOPPED HAM-

'...-·

.. ·

A Gallipolis woman's vehicle sustained light damage in a deervehicle wreck on U.S. 33 in Salisbury Township 'Wednesday

ev~~tmng to a n:port from the Gallia-Meigs l'osl of the State

Hijhway Patrol, Vivian G. Saunders, 43, wu e8stbound on U.S. 33
, · in a J990Dodge Caravan when she struck and killed a deer that was
- crossing the road.
·
,

=·

: Three-vehicle 'jfreck probed
·

No injwies were ceponed

u.s. 33 in Bcdfml Town!ltip W

llne-whicle accident on.

tt

llllllllnJ.

··Accclrdi!'IIO ,,...., .........
Mllill .PIIIl of lite Slllt
- •Hiabwl)' Pilrol, 1 1991 Buick Rep! driven1 baa C. Bvw, :!.4,
· of Pdmeroy,llld a 1990 Ponl Peld¥11 *iveo Janii E. c:arnwn·

Klng, 30, of RaciJie, were nordlbound oa U. • 33 and iiiOplll!d for
• • IK:hool bus.
,
.·
A third vehicle, a 1977 flonl P.150 drl._ bY Juon P. Howard,
.
CootbluedGI , . ,
. .
~-

.l

Pomeroy Merchants Association and Jackson Counties have fanned
who would like to work on the an insurance group for the purpose
show is encouraged to attend.
of providing low-cost health insurDuring the meeting it was voted ance to members, and Meigs Coonthat proceeds from the fashion ty's chamber could join that group.
show will be used to purchase The plan would be administered
"welcome to Pomeroy banners through a local insurance agent,
for Main Street in the business dis- and Thacker said that she was in
trict ,
;,._.,~,..,~ -·:r~,_... .•
IK.Qiir,&amp;&amp; af.~li!!&amp; YJitl).local
It was also-announced auring agents110 determtneospecific premithe .meeting that Bank One will urns, deductibles and other specific
again donate $500 of its annual details.
Christmas ornament sales to the
Pageant discussed
banner project with the understandPamela Newell, executive secreing that the association match that tary for the Meigs County Chamber
contribution.
of Commerce, also auended the
Thacker Introduced
meeting to alert the association to
Paula Thacker, the new execu- the Miss Ohio River Valley
tive director and economic devel- Pageant, a preliminary to the Miss
opment director for the Meigs America Pageant, that will be
County Chamber of Commerce, staged on April 4 at Meigs High
attended Wednesday's meeting at School under sponsorship of the
which time she spoke of a proposed chamber Contestants for the
health .insurance plan for Meigs pageant ~ill be women between
County Chamber of Commerce the ages of 17 and 26 ft'Qill Meigs,
members and thetr employees.
Athens Gallia and Washington
According to Thacker, Qallia
Continued on palf'
o

·z b d
h.
· k
P(ltro pro es eerr:- ve Jcle wrec

GROUND BEEF

lar order, are Trevor Depoy, Heather Thomas,
Whitney Thoene, Tyler Reed, Jordan Shaak,
R.T. Roush, Clay Roush, Brandy Thomas,
Jamie and Lauren Schmal, Anna Sayre and
Brook O'Brien.

p ark boand lS• not requzred to .seek
permission from county for tax levy

A Middleport man was inJ'ured and two vehicles were heavily
damaged in an accident at : a.m. Thursday morning
State
00
7 57in Middleport ·
Route 7 near the Hobson Bridge
According to Middlepon police, Charles J.'Thomas, 31 , of Middlepon; pulled from Shady Cove Road into the path of a car driven
by Bethany Jo Mayer, 22, Cave St.;Pomeroy,
Thomas suffered a head laceration and was taken by the Middle-'"' H ···• h he
port emergency sq uad to .Vete!'8f~S Mem?'"" ~pt .... w ere was
treated and released. He was ctted for failure to yteld.
The right front of the Mayer car and the left front of the Thomas
vehicle were heavily damaged on impact.
Light damage was incurred to a car owned by Don Young, East
Main Street, Pomeroy, in an accident early Wednesday evening.
. According to Pomeroy Police, Tim Deen, Pomeroy, had parked .
the Young car in the driveway at the Young horne. It apparently
slipped out of gear and drifted down the driv~way, across the roadway, and into a utility pole. There was no damage to the pole and
minor rear end damage to the young vehicle.

COKE

wiD be delivered today. Pictured, in no particu·

Merchants fashion show April3

Man znjured in accident

REAM'S fRO!EN NOODLES or FLAT .·
,2 oz.

MA
VALENTINES - The Meics
Countr, Public Ubrary has sponsored a ''Have a
Heart' program tor the area nursing homes
during wblcb children came to the library to
make Valentines. Pictured are only a few of the
children who made over 200 Valentines which

oo

. '

1'

TIDE DOERGENT
i36

·.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
House cotnmiuee has called for
more testimony on proposals of
both parties to draw 19 new Ohio
congressional districts.
Rep. William Healy, chainnan
of the State Government Committee, said he hoped to have a bill
ready for House noor action by
next week. Hearings were to continue today.
On Wednesday, his panel heard
an unusual endorsement of the
Democrat-drafted House proposal,
-from GOP Congressman Clarence
Miller.
Miller's lOth District in south:east Ohio would be left mostly
-intact under _the bill sponsored by
:Rep. Judy Sheerer, D-Shaker
.Heights.
But his district would be combined with the present district of
·u.s. Rep. Douglas Applegate, D·Steubenville, if a GOP measure
already passed by the Senate were
to become law.
..Healy's committee heard arguments·for both measures;.which'ate
expected to be put into a single bill
sometime before the end of this
month.
Miller, a congressman since.
1967, voiced strong opposition to
the Senate bill.
He said the mostly rural counties in his present district should
stay togelitc;r because of their common economic interests.
"They all share a bond," he
said, adding that if the Senate bill
rbecomes law, the new di.strict
wq~ld be difficult to represent in
Congress.
.
Miller, of Lancaster, said while
he hopes the Legislature will enact
the House plan, he wiU run for reelection in any case.
"If gerrymandered, I still plan
to run. If consolidated wjth another
member of Congress, I stiU plan to
prevail," he said.
The congressman smiled when
reminded he was endorsing the
plan of the opposite party.
" I got a better deal from the
DemOCratS," he said.
Ms. Sheerer said her bill represents a commitment made by
DemocratS to draw a proposal callContinued on paRt '

brz"ej!S•
r----' ·LOCal
,

VA~EY BELL •
PARKAY

Discuss Salem Center location
in relation to water service

•

Oran~e

Mary Powell, the district's
director, approached the board at
their meeting last week, asking permission to place the levy on the
ballot (County agencies, as a rule,
are required to seek permission
from the board before any levy
request is filed.)
Yesterday, the commissioners
inforined Powell that her board was
not required, according to Ohio
Revised Code S_ec~on 1~4S.2l,_to
s~k the commtSstOn~rs permtssc 0n befor~ the levy ts filed. The
parks district board must only pass
a resoluti~n stating the millage,
length of bme and proposed uses ~f ,
the le.vr funds before the )'e(!UesttS
filed wtth ~e board ofelecuons. .
Accord 1 to Powell levy
·
be ....... ~ de' 1
montes w~
""""' or v~ ,opment of nverfront co"!muntttes,
communtty parks "!~tnten~nce
grants, par~ and fac!bly mamtenance, salanes, matchmg funds and
proll!lUD developnx;nt.
The board appom~ three n~w
members t~ the Metgs Coun!y
TuberculoSIS ~oard. Melante
W~ was. appomted. to represent
Racme •Vtllage; Frttz Goebel,

Olive,
and Chester Townships; and Joanne Williams, Sutton,
Letan and Lebanon Townships.
A riverfront subdivision in
Lebanon Township, proposed by
Edward A. and Patricia Schaekel of
Chester, was approved by the board
yesterday. Those plans were
"signed off' by the board and will
now go to the county engineer and
the Meigs County Regional Planning Commission for final
approval.
. .
The commtsstoners agreed to
re•m.burse the general fund for a
~re~toustapproved.advance to the
etgs ountthay Ltlledr Control
account,_ now t. the epanment
has recetved the fmal payment of
tts 1991 grant montes.
The board also approved a
·
•
$l,IJ90 transfer from the county s
conun~ency fund to the unemploymentmsurance fund to pay for
unemployment ben~fits prevtously
patd ~y the O~to Bureau of
Employment Servtces. .
Pre~ent at the meeung were
Com'!'tSsioners Davcd ~oblentz,
Manrung,K. Roush and Rtchard E.
Jones, and Clerk~ Hobsteuer.

J:r

-

Former chester resi"ent
•r,-'

·
.

· ,

,

killed bl\7J fiall in Co'lumbus
A former Chester resident died
Wednesday after fallina 25 feet
from aiClffold at a Nonhwest Side
COIISUUCIIali llile in Columbus.
Vernon Cleland; 46, of 523
Whitethome Ave., Columbus, fell
at.the Bllildilr'1 Sauile·lillie llllller
coniiiiiiCtloa on Ilublln.Oranvillo
Road, Columba•, aceordlnc to
Columbua pollee. The atore II
beln.l bulk by Lincoln Constructon.
tho accident occurred about
1:30 p.m. Cloilnd, a welder, was

-.

· taken 10 Riverside .Methodist Hospital .whore he died' at 2:32 p.m..
offiCials said.
'
·
Born on )IIIIC Z7, l~S. he Is the
son of Enna Cleland, Cheslel', and
the late Ross Cleland. He Ia also
suryived by his wife, Bedty Cloland, Columbus, lllld IWO brothers,
Jerry Cleland, Lawton, Okla., and
Urty Cleland, Chellcr,
Funeral arrancementa, will be
announced later by !lie Ewing
Funeral Home.
.

,,

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
availabie in the way of grants for
Sentinel News Start
the district
A letter of suppon for locating a
A petition for rural water in the
new prison in Meigs County and a Danville area was presented by Mr.
commiunentto providing water for and Mrs. Larry Barr, Patricia Ann
the facility should it he located in Barrett, and Jeffrey and Crystal
the Leading Creek Conservancy Baughman. The area oflocation fo(
District's service area has been sent the possible water extension is
to Gov. George Voinvoich and the from David Gardner residents on
Ohio Department of Rehabilitation State Route 325 to Clifton Jude
and Corrections by th e LCCD propeny on State Route 325, which
Board of Directors.
would include Sanford Davis Road
At a recent meeting of the which has two interested parties in
board, the Meigs prison sites, and geuing water.
more specifically the Salem Center
A cost analysis on the line
location offered by lite Ohio Power extension will be presented by
Co., were discussed viith emphasis Williams at the Feb. 20 meeting.
on the Salem Center location as it
At a special meeting of the
relates to water service. Elbert Board Tuesday night, 47 applicaWilliams , an LCCD employee, lions for the job of general manager
noted that the proposed prison to · were reviewed and four with
house 1,250 inmates would require appropriate qualification s were
187,500 gallons of water daily. He accepted for funher evaluation. A
said that a tank would have to he decision is expected to be made
inslalled at the prison site but that within the next two weeks, Russell
there would be no problem in sup- reported.
plying water to the facility.
She said that after the resignaBob Snowden, board president, tion of William Sorden from the
suggested writing the letter to the position of general manager in
officials giving a commitment to November, there was some board
supply the needed water, and the discussion on operating without
other board members, Fenton Tay- filling the vacancy. However, Don
lor and Charles Barreu, Jr., agreed. Sommers, assistant district director
Representatives of Rutland Vii- of the Fanmers Home Administralage, Mayor Ed Martin, Steve Jenk- tion, LCCD's financial agent, felt
ins and Jerry Black, Council utility the district needs a general managcommiuee members, met with the er.
OOiiftl to 4J$j:llSS R!llraritl Vl11o'gc!''s ~-"c-an earllei'"ineccling the'mlittier·
water tales and a delinquenl of·Fred Rider and a aelinquent
account.
account was also discussed and it
, The question of an $253.80 was decided by the board to let the
electrical surcharge dating back to matter proceed through Small
1986 was discussed along with Claims Court. Greg Peckham, an
negotiating a new· contract for employee who has been on sick
water service. Action on the mauer leave, asked to return to light work,
was postponed until the Feb. 20 · but the board decided since there is
meeting.
no "light work" that he should stay
Hank Craft, technical advisqr, off lite job until he is released from
Ohio Association of Rural Water the doctor to return to regular work
Systems, auended the meeting to capacity.
doscuss a systems analysis with the
The secretary, Carol Russell,
board members. He reponed that presented to the board a "mutual
he had gone over the system with . release" from contracted service
employees, Paul McDaniel and from Attorney Charles H. Knight.
Eiben Williams, and made 15 rec- lt was suggested by Taylor that T.
ommendations for bringing the sys- E. Eslocker of Athens be contracttern up to standard. These included ed to act in that capacity.
everything from installau_on of mThe possibility of hiring a ceruters and aerators, to pa1nung tanks, fied public accountant for consul·

•

~~~v~~t~~ ~:e~~:~~~i~; :~~~r;~\~~~sodiscu~ but

Hunter, Clark to be sworn ID
Secretary ofState Bob Taft will
administer the oath of office IQ new
and reappointed members of boards
of elections from 10 counties during ceremonies at 3 p.m. on Thursday in Jackson.
Among those board members
will be Evelyn Clark and Henry
HunterofMetgs County. ·
The Jackson County Board of
Elections is hosting the swearing-in
ceremonies at the Ponderosa
Restaurant on Main Street
Taft will swear in members

~~:ms~h~~~~~~~Gi~fia~~~~~!~~~ .

Lawrence, Meigs, Pike, Ross,
Scioto and Vinton.
Board members are appointed
b T f
f
b ed
Y a Ito our-year terms, as

upon recommendations from the
local Republican or Democratic
pany executive committee.
After board members are administered. the oath of office, Taft will
address them brieny about board
duties and responsibilities.
Evelyn Clark was recommended
for re-appointment by the Meigs
County Republican Executive
Committee to serve on the board,
while Henry Hunter was recommended for appointment by the
Democ111tic E~ecutive Committee.
MaryHunt~r wi~l r~llce ~s boardwife,
, w o res•gn rom e
to accept the appoinl11lent of Meigs
County Democratic Party Chairman
·

Carp, ch anne1 catfiIS h ad Vlsory
•
.
ffi . 1

still in effect, 0 ICia s say
A fish consumption advisory
issued for carp and channel catfiSh
caught in the Ohio River will
remain in effect because of contamination by chlordane and/or
polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs).
Officials from the West Virginia
Division of Natural Resources and
Bureau of Public Health renewed
the advisory after tissue analyses of
carp and channel catfish revealed
the presence of PCBs and chlor·
dane in amounts exceeding limits
considered safe by the U.S. Food
and Drug Admlnistllllion. ·
The warning is based on information collected by the Ohio River
'Valley Sanitalioll COIIUilission and
other as-les clurin&amp; the fall 1991
fisheries IIUdles.
S~ 1111111pled during the"'"
vey tncluded carp, chlilnel catfislt,
blue caillsh, flathead caiftlh, spot·
ted bass, smallmouth bw, large,

mouth bass, white bass, hybrid
striped bass and sauger.
Fish fillets of each species were
also tested for DDT, dieldrin and
the metals mercury, cadmium and
lead. Nqne of the species sampled ·
exceeded the FDA action limits for
these contiuninants.
Only carp and channel catfish,
both bottom feeders, tested above
the FDA's level for PCBs and ·
chlordane.
"PCBs and chlordane are envi- :
ronmentally persistent and tend to :
cling to the mucky sediments of streams and rivers," said Eli '
McCoy, chief of the DNR's WIIJ:t ,
Resources Section. ''They also are ··
soluble iii the fatty tissues of ani- :
mals and accumulate niore in fish··
species that share bouom-type :
habitats and feeding habits."
. ~
lmmediale human health effects •
C011daued 011 pap'
:

''

·'

.'

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