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                  <text>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.

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USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF BOTTOM

ta.

ECKRICH

Breasts•••••••••••••••~ .

5 29

1
$159
Pork Lo1n••••••• ~••••1a.

'14 SLICED

Bologna••••••••••••

KRAFT
MIRACLE
WHIP

LB.

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32 oz.

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$139
Wteners •••••••••••••La.
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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'
:

''

·'

.'

�...

.. .

,.

... .

•
More rain, snow likely Friday night
Thursday, February, 13, 1992

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

Page-2- The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, February, 13, 1992

Bush budget reneges on Reagan vow
loopholes and how to usc them. ·
In the landmark 1986 Tax
Reform Ac~ the White House and
Congress agreed to eliminate or
phase out more than half of the
loophole deductions.
Equally important, the congressional leadership and the Reagan
White House agreed to stop using
the tax code as an instrument of
social policy. No longer would programs and favored segments of the
economy be indirectly SU(lported
through tax breaks (the one exception being the interest paid on
home loans).
President Bush's budget turns it
back on this agreemenr. Bu sh
would like to aid various secJors of
the economy _ from the middle
class with heavy tuition loans, to
working families with heavy child
care e xpenses, to investors in
stocks and bond s, to employers

WASHINGTON (NEA) - At

~e hean of George Bush's recessoon reco~ery proposals! as con-

Ill Court Street
Pomei'Of, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMB ER of The Associated Press, Inland Dail y Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

LETTE RS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone num ber. No unsigned letters will be publisDed. Letters
should be in good lasle, addressing issues, not personalities .

Letters to the editor

tam~ m hos new budget, os a repudoatoon of an agreement Ronald
Reagan consodered among the most
1mponant of hos pres1dcncy.
For more than 20 years,
Co~gress and the Whtte House
mdirectly funded favored .programs
or mdustnes through adJUStments
m the tax code aimed at benefiting
a g1ven busmess sector or program.
As a result, th.e tax cod~ grew in
complexuy unul even ordmary taxpayers had to hire experts to wade
thro_ugh thousands of pages of regulauons.
.
. The tax code grew so nddled
wllh l.oo~holes that many of the
nauon s nchest people prud hnle or
no taxes. Among those wbo profited enormously from th1s state of
affrurs was the army of lawyers and
accountants who understood the

seeking to provide health care for
employees, to investors in reseiln:h
and development or new businesses. To do so. he would insert new
deductions, preferences or special
tax rates back into the tax code.
~~ wo~es many is that if the
a~m1~1strato?n creates a new tax
boll fdl~d wothpreferences, every
special mterest m town will clamor
for a tax break. The result will be a
partial return to the old loophole
era The biggest winners will once
again be the now-underemployed
tax lawyers and accountants who
long for the good old, bad old days.
Budget briefs . .
.
Buned deep w1th1n the budge.t 1S
a wonderful Washmgton soluuon
for how to handle bad news.
Each month a unot of the Bureau
of Labor Statistics compiles and
releases the numbers of mass layoffs that have occurred in Ameri-

HetGue.ss Wll&lt;lT? aFreR
3LL. ntos.e YeaRS of LPOKiNG

OUT rQR Me., NoW T~eY waNT
To Hei.P THe MiDDLe. CLaSS!

Fears are misdirected
Dear Editor:

interscciions, railroad tracks, high
To engage in free and vigorous tension power lines. sawmills, oil
. debni.C, the cornerstone of a demo- and gas wells, schools, farms, bars,
-cratic society, is the right, indeed, playg rounds, etc. Compared to
: the duty of every responsible citi - many of the above, a prison is quite
. zen, and the issue of a medium benign. It doesn' t pollute the air. It
. security prison locating in Meigs doesn't damage the wa ter table. It
Count y ce rtainly merits such a doesn' t cause health problems. It
debai.C.
doesn' t poison our waterw ays. It
But ift here is to bea dcbate,lct isn' t n9isy .lt doesn' t em it fo ul
: it be one based on factual informa- odors. It just sits there and provides
· tion, statistical data and logic, not peopl e with good pay in g jobs,
: on unfounded fears . rumors and draws attention to our oft forgouen
. ignorance. Those fav oring the county, improves access highways
prison (of which I am among) have and may - just may - serve as a ·
argued along the lines of the for- deterrent to those among us who
mer. Those in opposition have, as . would operate outside the law.
: or the writing of this leuer, argued
Concerns have also been raised
: only from the position of the Iauer. regarding escapees from tl1e prison
• Aside fr om the prison 's more harming our loved ones. Granted,
·obvious benefits such as three hun- no facility is one hundred percent
drcd new jobs, many of which will escape proof, but the likelihood of
go to local res1dcnts, and a payroll escape diminishes considerably
in the millions of dollars, there arc with the numerous precautions
_other advan tages that thus far have · taken at a medium security prison.
· been less wel l-defin ed. For I have visited d1c Lebanon Correc: instance: an y new jobs, whether tionallnstitution (a medium sccuri. f1lled by a local labor force or by ty facility), and was most
an in nux of trained profess ionals, impressed by the security measures
serve only to increase the tax base taken at both entry and exit.
by the rec ipients' ownership of
I was surprised to learn (as I
propert y with eith er existing or believ e mos t ordina ry citi ze ns
newly constructed homes. This in would have been) that it was not a
. tu rn helps to support the local max imum sec urity facility what
: school systems and oth er vital with the double and triple redun. co unt y services. In add ition to dantlocked passageways, inspeccnhancing the constructi on indus- tion of both body and property ,
try, the entire service sector of our guard towers, electronic surveil economy benefits as these new lance, 16-foot-high walls and
ga infu ll y employed res idents fences topped with razor wire and
: require food, automobiles, clothing, an inner and outer perimeter.
. insurance, fu rn itu re , appli ances,
Taking all this into considera: entertain me n~ ei.C.
tion, as well as statistics showing
To allay som e of th e more whom you are most likely to be
: vn rcasonable fears expressed by victimi zed by, I submit that th ese
some on having this facility located fears arc misdirected. The likel iin our county, I offer thi s: many hood of harm from a relati ve,
. .Meigs Countians (as well as much friend or neighbor is much greater
: or the population of th e planet) th an from an indi vidual loc ked
· already live ncar some entity , safely away in prison.
: whether natu ra l or manmade, that
As pre viously stated, I believe it
· is far more annoyi ng or damaging is the province of a free society to
to perso n and propert y than a vigorously debate important issues,
prison co uld ever be.
but, please, let's keep it on a level
To list a few: creeks an·d bot- deserving of the subject.
toms subjeCt to frequent noocting,
Sincerely,
Roger Gilmore
: landslides or rock falls. coal mines,
Pomeroy
: power pl ants, bu s hi ghways or

Candidates scoff at
:the numbers -game
•

~UH fQR iT,

BUPDY!!

..

..

e:ISI'eit-1 rq.._ Nea
lilo« ~- NeWS ZG

Dems: Make tsense tsocially
The polls say that Sen. Paul
Tsongas can win the New Hampshire primary . Tsurprise! More
important, Tsongas has shown that
a Democrat can break with kneejerk liberalism on one of the two
big problems haunting the party and not go to the penalty box when
primary votes are counted,
Tsongas concedes he is - just
imagine! - "pro-business." He
says you can't be "pro-employee"
these days without being "proemployer." Many of his other economic ideas also make sense. He is
againstllllde protectionism and for
a capital gains cut He thinks the
middle-class tax cut is silly. He
even says we need nuclear power
- heresy for a liberal Democrat
If a Democrat can break liberal
taboos on The Economic Issue,
what next? Will some Democrat
finally have the gu!S to face The
Social Issue?
In 1970. I co-authored a book
with Richard Scammon tided "The
Real Majority." IJs.thesiS was elemental: The old single-issue electoral model (The Economic Issue
counts above all) had been replaced
by a two-pronged version (The
Social Issue is of co-equal weight,
and can be a wipe-oot issue.)

Robert J, Wagman

can industry. No number has been
quite as gloomy during the recession, and no statistic has more dismayed the White House, as it is
widely circulated in the press.
The solution could not be simpler.
In his new budget, the president
completely eliminates the $6 million spent annually to gather and
analyze mass-layoff data. ·
No money. no uni~ no data.
In Washington , it is always
much easier to kill the messenger
than cure the problem.
Buried deep in the budget is an
idea that troubles many experts.
Billions of dollars arc tucked away
in Individual Relirement Accounts.
No taxes have yet been paid on this
money, and none is due until people begin to draw out and spend the
funds when they retire.
The president is now proposing
that people be allowed to pre-pay
tax on some portion of their IRA ·
accounts now. This would give the
Treasury a quick infusion of cash
and help fund next year's deficit
In exchange, taxpayer's would
be allowed to escape any future
payment of tax on that portion of
the IRA being prc-payed now including any tax on the income t,he
IRA accumulates over the years.
One congress ional tax analyst
said that while this would result in '
a shan-term gain, over the long run
it would mean a whopping tax
break for those with the largest
IRA accounts. He likened it to
allowing taxpayers to pay 1994 tax
liability today at 50 cents on the
dollar. It gives the Treasury a big
boost now, but what will happen in
1994?
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
The president would like to aid
various sectors of the economy
through new tax deductions, preferences or special rates.

Ben Wattenberg

What is the Sl? Yciu know it
quotaS.
when you see it. Consider the
Voters are right to assign a high
words that have touched upon its priority to the SI. It's at the root of
essence in recent decades: crime, our most serious domestic probrace, values , busing, drugs, lems. Thus, American poverty is
"Blame America First," disrup- mostly now due to the high rate of
. tion, quotas, welfare, homosexuali- households with only one parent, a
ty, pornography, patriotism, draft- condition not ascribable to mean
dodging, dependency, permissive- Ronald Reagan.
ness, capital punishment, and perThe Sl will likely be big in 1.992
haps, and alas, personal sexual his- for another reason: With little to
tory. (We shall see about that)
brag about in a sour economy,
The Sl surfaced in the 1960s · Republicans need it. Because the
and hasn't gone away. ll was up issue of race is tied into many
front in 1988 when the Republicans a~pects of the Sl, the campaign
used flags , the Pledge of Alle- may well get heated, making 1988
giance - and Willie Horton. It was look genteel.
on the anvil again recently when
The DemocraJs need an SI inocused by David Duke in the ugliest ulation. As it stands now, they will
way.
be characterized (at least) as proOver the years, liberal Demo- quota and pro-welfare. As Tsongas
crat ic interest groups have arro- has done with economics, they
gantly said that the Sl is mere dem- ought to stan talking sense about
agoguery, that Sl concerns are not the SI before it is forced upon
"real" issues. They have cowed them. The silence is almost total.
Jhe candidates into silence. That
Only Gov. Bill Clinton has had
sets up a difference between the the courage to touch the issue,
panics, making the issue salient.
albeit gingerly. He favors capital
But voters decide which issues punishment And he says this about
are real. Many of them are afraid to welfare: "We' re going to put an
walk the streets of their neighbor- end to welfare as we know it ...
hoods. They resent paying taxes to welfare should be a second chance,
support the indolent indigent. They not a way of life .... "
want to compete equally, without
Ironically, it is now harder, but

more necessary, for Clinton to go
further . The roots of the Social
Issue arc Lightly wrapped up with
American attitudes toward the perceiyed values and lifestyle of an
entore cohort of American liberals
who were young in the 1960s. (All
the current crop of DemocraJs qualify.) Sex and the draft won't alone
sink a candidate; but the whole
constellation of SI concerns can
easily sink them all if not
addressed.
Republicans, . campaigning
amongst themselves, are quiet now
on SL But the Bush campaign has ·
hired the election consultants who .
have nailed Democrats on the quota
issue. The SI attack will come and
it's a real issue.
'
Now that Tsongas has shown ·
Democrats that he can make sense
and make votes by breaking with
liberalism on The Economic Issue,
why don't Democrats try to do the
same on the Tsociallssue? ·
NEWSPAPER
(C)I992
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Wattenberg, a senior fellow
at Jhe American Enterprise Insti- ·
tute, is author of "The First Uni·
versal Nation," published by The
Free Press.

Sharing couldn't hurt U.S. and Japan

By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Special Correspondent
MANCHESTER, N.H. - They scoff al the numbers game, but rival
I remember well the ftrSt Stories improving itself. So it's not surpriscandidates are nonetheless playing it by their own rules in the windup I read about modem Japanese soci- ing that the chief poop-purveyors in
week of the New Hampshire presidential primary campaign. They read ety, before the current round of both countries have been working
. the polls like everybody else.
intercontinental name calling start- overtime bashing each other
: Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin played it in his home state's Democratic presi- ed. I was appalled at the lack of instead of studying things the other
•dential caucuses, bid high and won the wager.
pleasures their careers brought the country docs better so we can learn
: He garnered a record share of the Iowa caucus vote, and he said it Japanese, despite their efforts: the something.
1:should help in New Hampshire. Harkin needs help; he's lagged far back
This makes as much sense as
12- to 14· hour, six · day work
· in the five-man field.
weeks; the inability to buy even the someone like me looking at other
: Expectations are up for rival Democrat Paul Tsongas, the former Mas- · tiniesi, yardless houses; entire lives 1 writers who are making more
;sachuseJts senator, elevated toward the top in the New Hampshire candi- spent in small, spare apartments; a money and getting more attention
date polls. He's trying 10 keep them in check.
ngid educational system where and criticizing their cultures or
;. Tsongas said the surge could tempi him to be passive and protective of even 60 perce,nt of elemeillary stu- · lifestyles. "Hey, 'dya see that dan;his new standing if he paid too much attention to 1L
dents report fatigue and occasional . gling participle in Ellen Goodstress headaches; tllld a fate called man's last column? It's that decay•' " So we have to forget the polls," he said.
: Well, maybe not entirely. "ll does give you a little lift," Tsongas said. "karoshi," which sometimes ing New England wort ethic. She
:it lifted him into a virtual tie with Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton. who had befalls Japanese workers - death was too preoccupied with the
weekend on Friday when she wrote
•just emerged as the front-runner when he was hit with questions about his from overwork.
it,
~nd couldn't proQfread it right
I'm sule enterprising Japanese
:pcrsoriallife. ·
Monday
because she •d played too
•, A climb in lhe polls boosts a candidate's fund-raising efforts. Not to journalists are able to make our
:tnention. as Tsongas quickly did, that the polls also have moved him up culture sound as scary to the hard Saturday and Sunday. And
:the list of national Democratic rankings.
·
Japanese as theirs did 10 me,- our why are those Missouri newspapers
·: It's a technique President Bush used to employ in the days when his hi~ crime raLe eompan:d widt their taking her column inst,ead of mine?
:ppproval ratings were at hisUllic peaks - in saying he didn't heed pblls, m1croscopic one; increasingly So what if her$·is better and people
;he made a point of noting just how high his numbers were. , .
unruly and disinterested students, would rather read it? !live here and
.: Now l.bat they've sagged; !lush can say he never paid that much ~ten· some of them - n g guns; par- buy Missouri newspapers, but all
:Jion when they were up.
·
'
ents with beuer. 1!1!11• to do than she buys is The Boston Globe and
:. And beyond saying that he'll beat conservative challenger Patrick get involved wilh their kids' educa- . The New York Times.••I don't have time. I'm too busy
·BucbanliP 10 next Tuesday's primary, the president and his men are steer- lion; jobs where people worlt most
:inl clear of numbers. They don't want to set a victory margin as the stan- of their lives only to kicked out readins everythins 111 Ellen Good·
4ald of succ~; ~l's been cost!~ 10 candidalel before. . .. '. _
ihe door just bofOie retiroment ~as man or a Dave B~ wriles. trying ,
; "For&amp;et ~~ that s one game I m sman cnoqll not to play. Slld R1ch opposed to Jap~ocsc oompanoes to disseCt their thooght processes
Bond. the now'Repul)lican Nlllional Qxnmiaec chlirmln.
·.
where ,an ct!)ployee is virtually and figure out how they do what .•
: BllCIIaUI has iaJd he won't diller, allhoUIIIIIe's also said that lilly-. · promised a job for life in returil for th~y do. I don't know a bcttcr way
lhinJiike the 42 patten~ pined by ~- l!uJene McCanlly against ~i- ~ hit loyalty). . ·
to become successful than to study
, ,
~
:ctena L~ B. Joltnion would bo a map vtetory.
·
.
,
It's not aD that hard to lake the the successful. ·
lmasine
a·
culture
that
blended
. He 1 ~ of~~ in GOP pOIIinJ, b11 says BUS!J ,backing is ~.~d
went aspects of a society and cre1111 Wldlc~ YOlo IS ~UinF,. Buchanan aiBOu-er 'II I I
sh?C It S 81C a ~IIY grisly portia\~ even if the successes of J~ and Ameri- ,
T.,.. a vt. !'Ill Rcdskina,_ ~ challc~t~er
~Y·
.
there are plenty of·positive thi.Ogs cal Com)llniel, that employed the
• .HuldA. blltlm• from bolulld 1~ the lllew Hlmpslure Democratic cam· to focus on, too. It's especially easy egalitariati muagemc:ntlly~ of the '
gup. had no cltotee ii!Jlto aim hii!t in the Iowa caucuses, where he~ if you're a professional politiciin Ja)llll!eSe, allowing each employee
ilnc:hlllenaed 11110111, his own constituents; the other DelllOCiliJs wrote 11 more adept II .shoveling poop ~ input in decision-miking. Workers
~.10 onfy the marg.m .wu in doubl..
leading your country into ways ()f dcdicaled to worlting harder during

boom times without expecting
extra employees to be hired, knowing, as Japanese employees know,
that they won't be laid off during
leaner times.
School systems blending .
Japanese tenets of behavior and
discipline with American encouragement of creativity and free
thought A litde less personal'sacrif!Ce from the stoic Japanese work·
cr. a little ritore from the'American.
I'm not sure how the average .
Japanese would view tra4lng"ll~S •

Sarah Overstreet
with me, but I believe America ·
offers me a better chance to have the kind of life I want Still it's
impossible for me to. under;Iand ·
why we would risk losing any com·
peutive edge we might ·have over
the Japanese·by not emulating them
where we should. If they would
rather ~ash ·us th~n copy our suecesses, that's their business.
.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER ·
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
·

1'

loa'

..

,,

more rain was expected later today.
Soow fell this morning in a band
from Chicago to Washington, D.C.
It rained over parts of Tennessee
and Alabama·and in the Northwest.
Severe stonns in Southern California over the past four days have
flooded scores of houses, closed
highways and left at least five people dead.
More than II inches of rain fell
in the past three days at Woodland
Hills in the San Fernando Valley
nonhwest of Los Angeles.
Rainfall totals for Tuesday and
Wednesday included 6 inches in
the Los Angeles suburb of Glendale, 5 inches aiEl Taro and Monrovia, and 4 inches in downtown
Los Angeles.
The Pacific storms were expected to move over the Rockies and
bring mild and wet weather to the
area from the Northern Plains to
the Northeast
Forecasters said snow will
spread from the mid-Adantic states
into the Northeast, with a few inches accumulating from southern
Ohio to coastal New Jersey. Up to

•

February 13 thru February 22, 1992
Some Items art limited to stock on
hand and will be available while
quantities lrisJ.

KV Shelves
Traditional Wood Shelf

in receipts and $12,931.15 in disbursements. In the water system
improvement fund there was a balance of $2,209.55 with no receipts
nor disbursements.
'Other funds with receipts, disbursements, and balances listed
respectively were water, $8,918.24,
balance, $14,227.59, receipts, and
$16,078.77, disbursements; sanitary sewer, $5,308.82 balance,
$11,762.04 receipts, $19,075 .16
disbursements; swimming pool,
$1,124.62 deficit balance, no
receipts, $1,162.01 disbursements;
cemetery, $1 ,819.03 deficit balance, with $1625.33 receipts, and
$3,690.47 disbursements; water
meter trusts, $21 ,397.98 balance,
$480 receipts, no disbursements.
Arts Council, $679.68 deficit
balance, $35.50 receipts, $782.08
disbursemenJs; Issue 2, $16,067.10
deficit balance , no reciepts,
$16,102.38 disbursements; revolving fund , $3,610.67 balance ,
$1,834.90 receipts, no disbursements; $2,490.22 balance ,
$9223 .81 receipts, $8,739 disbursements; and litter control, $4,764
with $4,764 in receipts, no disbursements.

SAVE20%
OFF

RETAIL PRICE

TOY PIPE

ure.

Analysts said that given the
weak economy. the jobless rate,
which remained stuck at a five-year
high of 7.1 percent in Janaury,
would undoubtedly worsen further
in coming months .
Some economists believe the
jobless rate could top 7.5 percent
by mid-year before the economy
.begins to mount a sustained recovery from the recession.
The drop in jobless claims
martell the second straight weeldy
decline. Claims had hil 460,000 in
the week ending Jan. 18 but then
dropped by 10,000 in the following
week before recordinR the 13,000

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Jobless claims down 13,000
·in week ending Feb. 1
WASHINGTON (AP) - Jobless claims recorded a second consecutive weekly decline as 437,000
Americans made forst-time visits to
unemployment offices for the week
ending Feb. I, the government said
today.
The number of Americans filing
initial claims for jobless benefits
dropped by 13,000 from the previ. ous week's mark of 450,000, the
Labor Department said.
The drop was something of a
surpise to economists, who had
been looking for a small increase.
Analysts, however, cautioned
against reading too much into any
one-week change in the claims fig-

Saturday ·throu~h Monday:
A chance of rain or snow Saturday through Monday. Highs45-55
Saturday and 40-50 Sunday and
25-35 Saturday aud
and Monday.

South-Central Ohio
Tonight. cloudy with a. ch111ce
of rain early. Low 30-35. Cbanee
of precipitation 40 percenL Friday,
mostly cloudy. High in the mid,
40s. Chance of precipitation 20
percent.

BY T(M)T()MI 0...

Village's financial
report released
The balance in all funds of Mid~leport Village Council at the end
of January totaled $40,822.84,
according to the report of Jon
~~~,_cj~rk-~urcr.
.
:~., ReceiJ)IS for the month totaled
$99,724.62, while disbursements
were $130,382.25.
· In the general fund the balance
was $3,467.03 with receipts of
$39,536.95 and disbursements of
$17,392.52 from the general fund,
$19,880.28 for safety and
$2,379.16 from income tax funds.
There was a deficit balance of
$3 ,862.578 in the street maintenance fund with $5,223 .55 in
receipts and $9,088.69 in disbursemenJs. Mini-golf showed a deficit
balance of $303.86 after disbursements of $346.94; fire e&lt;~,uipment a
balance of $10,099.56 w1th $7,675
in receipts and $782.16 in disbursements; fire truck, $7,264.50 with
$143.75 in disbursements and no
reciepts, and waterways, $2,745
with no receipts nor disbursements .
Economic development for the
month showed receipJs of $791.95,
disbursements of $1,807.73 and a
balance of $2,788.35. The public
transportation fund had a deficit
balance of $10,384.22 with $2,544

Weather
Exteoded forecast:

6 inches of snow were expected In today in the te~ns in Maine and
New England.
.
North Dakota; the 20s in MinnesoForecasters predicted highs ta and upstate New York·

'

b
.
e

!'-

..

By The ABsoclated Press
Ohio was hit with a mixture of
freezing rain and snow just before
the morning ~ush bour today.
snarlmg traffic m urban areas. Up
to an inch of soow feU on pans of
northern Ohio while ice covered
much of the southern half of the
State.
The National Weather Service
said the precipitation would end ·
tonight and temperatures will be
mostly in the upper ·20s and low
30s.
Friday will be a cloudy day with
highs in the upper 30s and 40s.
More rain and snow is likely
Friday night before things start to
wann up over the weelcend.
The record high temperature for
this date al the Columbus weather
station was 68 degrees in 1938.
The record low was 13 below zero
in 1899.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:04
p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
7:38a.m.
Around the nation
Skies cleared early today over
flooded Southern California but

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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'17 98
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�The -Daily Sentinel

Sports

Thursday, February, 13, 1992

Page-4

Southern to host Oak Hill ·in crucial SVAC matchup Friday
A Tornado win means a tie for
first place in the conference. A win
by the south Jackson five means
that Southern must win its last two
games while hoping that the
remaining teams on the Oaks'
schedule - Southwestern and
Kyger Creek, which are a com-

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
OVP Staff Writer
Doug Hale 's Oak Hill squad
will be the guest team of Howie
Caldwell's Southern Tornadoes in
a critical SV AC showdowrl Friday
nig ht at the Charles W. Hayman
Gymnasium.

bined 7-25 - can pull off upset
wins.
The Hill, which has won its last
four games, has Mr. Outside, a.k.a.
junior point guard Benji Lewis
(15.7 pts./game), Mr. Inside, a.k.a.
junior postman Chris Simpson
(1 4.2 pts./ga me) and Mr. Any-

Tales from the hardwood ...
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
8:1fnightcap.
OVP Staff Writer
Gallia Academy and the JackTonight's the night that two var- son-Vinton County winner will
sity girls teams- Ed Moore's play Thursday, Feb. 20 at 7 p.m.,
Jiannan Trace Wildcats and Donna with the finals pitting the MeigsWilson's Symmes Valley Vikings Rock Hill winner against the Feb.
- will, as guitar rocker Eric Clap- 20 winner on Saturday, Feb. 29 at 7
ton said about 20 years ago, "let it p.m.
all hang out" in the final night of
The Division IV Meigs sectionSVAC girls basketball competition. al, to begin Thursday, Feb. 27 at
However, they won't wait until Meigs High School, will feature
after midnight to do so.
Eastern and Southern playing the
. These teams have one thing in 6:30 opener. Miller and Trimble
common - an 11 -2 record in con· will play in the 8:15p.m. nightcap.
ference play. If Hannan Trace (14The victors of those games will
5) beats North Gallia as the Pirates' advance to the district tournamen~
final regular-season guest, the slated for March 4-7, at Jackson
Vtkings, tonight's guests of Dawn High School.
Heideman's Eastern Eagles, can
The Division IV girls sectiooal,
kiss their title hopes goodbye. Val- scheduled to start Sarurday, Feb. 22
}.~~~llt~;&amp;M.,.,...at:Gallia,Academy High Sch&lt;?&lt;JI.
1:-i!li!f'.::
-~'illf"'§~arl'et and gray w1ll have Southwestern go1ng
kn~ked off the Eagles at home against Kyger Creek a1 1 p.m. The
earlier m the season- and a North winner will take on top-seeded
Gallia victory to capture so~ pos- Hannan Trace Thursday, Feb. 27 a1
session of the crown. But tf both 6:30 p.m. for the upper-bracket
co-leaders WI~, or both lose, they tide. Following that game, secondwill share the utle.
.
seeded North Gallia and Symmes
Other SVAC games mclude Oak Valley will battle for the lowerHill at Kyger Creek, and Sourhem bracket championship a18: 15 p.m.
at Sout~westem. , .
Makeup dates posted
David Moore s PITates are 0-5
The Eastern boys varsity and
against the rest of the upper_half of reserve doubleheader against
the conference, and cons1d_enng Waterford, originally slated for
their lack o(hetght (5-foot-7 JUDior Saturday, Feb. J, has been reschedce nter Becky ~cCormick, will uled for Saturday, Feb. 15 al
head mto battle wtth 5-foot-5 fresh- Waterford High School.
man Nickie Meade and 5-foot-6
The Southern-Eastern boys varsophomore Dama Twyman at th~ sity and reserve basketball contests,
forward spots agamst the Wildcats postponed from Jan. 25, will be
front line - 6-foot-0 center rescheduled for Saturday, Feb. 22
Tammy Thomas, 5-foot-11 forward at Eastern High School.
Michelle Ours and 6-foot-1 forThe North Gallia-Oak Hill boys
ward Stephanie Stapleton), they varsity and reserve games, also
will have a hard time on the boards. postponed from Jan. 25, will be
The Pirates, like the rest of the con- played Feb. 22 at Oak Hill High
ference, know what scoring profes- School.
sor Lucy Mullens (21.8 pts./game)
In other tourneys •••
can do.
At Radne, David Grindstaff, a
The Eagles' principal advantage member of the Southern Athletic
will be the ability and height of Boosters Club, announced that the
their baclccourt, starring junior Southern High School boys basketShelly Metzger and smiors Tabby ball team will be sponsoring a
Phillips and Lee Gtlhlan . The men's independent basketball tourVikings will have to get thmgs nament scheduled for Feb. 22 and
done with forward/center Jennifer Feb. 23.
Owens (5-11, sr.) and center/for·
The entry fee is $100 per 10ward Cathy Krausz (6-1. Jr.). who man roster. Trophies will be awardcombined for 44 points to derail the ed to flTSt- and second-place teams,
Wildcats by a 66-52 count Monday and there will also be first- and secnight.
ond-place sponsor trophies to the
Girls tournament
champion and rhe runner-up.
dat~ announced
.
For more information, please
The Division II guls s.ecuonal call 949-2025 (Racine).
tournament, slated to be!\m MonAt Cheshire, the Kyger Creek
day, Feb. 17 at Oak H1ll Htgh High School Pep Club will sponsor
School, will have top-seeded Jack- a men's league basketball toumason taking on Vinton County in the ment scheduled for Feb. 29 an~
6:30p.m. opener. Second-seeded March 1.
Meigs will face Rock Hill in the
The entry fee for this double-

elimination iournament, which will
be open to the fiist eight teams who
enter, is $100 per team.
For more infonmation, call Tom
Riccardi at 367-7377 (Kyger Creek
H.S.).

where, a.k.a. senior forward Bill
Potter (I 1.3 pts./ga me) as the
expected magnets of the Tornado
defense. But unless the Tornadoes
seek to help the Oaks achieve more
offensive balance than they have,
they had better pay some attention
to senior forward Mike Turner (9.3
pts./game), who has racked up dou·
ble digits in four of his last six
games.
The Tornadoes, who claimed
their first non-league victory - :i
55-52 decision over Warren Local
Tuesday night- after five straight
defeats against non-conference
teams, will send Roy Lee Bailey
(15.9 pts./game), a 6-foot-1 senior,
in the paint against the 6-foot-7
Simpson. Unless Bailey can use his

quickness to get Simpson out of
position, it will be a long night for
the veteran of last year's conference championship team.
Senior point guard Jeremy
Roush, who had 10 straight games
(if he didn't play in the Tornadoes'
97-64 win over Southwestern ori
Jan. 17) in which he sank at least
one three-pointer before scoring six
points - all inside the arc against Warren, will check in with
a 12.2 points-per-game average.
Beyond those two lie several players capable of scoring in double
figures, and the Oaks' mission is to
find out from which hurricane the

most damage will come.
Junior guard/forward Michael
Evans (10.6 pts./gamc) and senior
·guard Scott Lisle (8.4 pts./game)
have demonstrated their ability to
score in double digits on several
occasions (eight for Evans, six for
Lisle), as have junior guard Mark :
Allen (five) and senior forward
Josh Codner (two) . As in years
past, it's a shell game.
Hannan Trace vs. Eastern
Hannan Trace will need the
solid rebounding skills it showed in
its 80-31 win over Ohio Valley
Christian Tuesday night in its
(See SV AC on Page 5)

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Rio ladiesfall .70-60 to Shawnee State
Looking to dent the perfect 29 for the game to stay on top in
record in the Mid-Ohio Conference Division I and the MOC.
held by Shawnee State University,
Ann Bamitz led the Redwomen
· the University of Rio Grande scoring with 13 points and conwomen's basketball threw every- tributed seven rebounds to the
thin g it had at their rivals, but the offense . Kathy Snyder added 10
Lady Bears emerged with a 70-60 points, while fres~man players
victory Tuesday in Portsmouth.
Jackie Hannon and Tricia Collins
While the Redwomen, who kept the game flowing with five
went to 23-6 and 10-3 in rhe con- and seven boards, respectively.
ference, kept pace with the hosts
Sue Bowling added 13 markers
and sliced theiT lead to but a few and eight rebounds to Shawnee's
points on several occasions , effort and Jenni Wessel supplied
~b~w,qe ..)JI;PI!~~ P,l\ 1,11~ gaqo another 10 points. The Redwomen
11\li!llllln a:few ·s~ps ahllitd, thariks endured 28 turnovers to Shawnee's
to Tracy Riehl, the Division I and 23.
MOC player of the week, who
The Rio ladies shot 32 percent
posted 29 points inthe game.
from the floor, hitting 16 of 50
· The Lady Bears took off for a attempts, including seven of 28
healthy lead in the first half, but the from the three for 21 percent. At
Redwomen came back to trail by the line, they were good for 21 of
eight at the half. Shawnee went on 26 tries for 81 percent. Shawnee
another run during the second peri- was 26 of 55 on shooting for 47
od that the Red women matched .to percent, but connected two of its 10
come within two points, but the auempts from the three for 20 perhosts outrebounded Rio Grande 35- cent. The hosts hit 16 of 24 from
(Continued from Page 4)

the line for 73 percent.
The win improved the Lady
Bears' standing to 21-4 and Il-0 in
the MOC. Rio Gnmde concludes its
conference schedule Saturday ·at
Cedarville.
Box score:
SHAWNEE STATE (70) Ashley Allen, 0-1-2 -5; Annie
Mains. 1-0-2; Tiffany Clayton, 0-f0-3; Tracy Riehl, 9-11-29; Sue
Bowling, 6-1-13; Tammy Mullens,
4·0-8; lenni Wessel, 4-2-10 .
TOTALS 24·2·16-70.
RIO GRANDE (60)- Gena
Norris, 0-1-4-7; Michelle Crouse,
1-1-3-8; Jackie Hannon, 0-2-3-9;
Tricia Collins, 2-2-6; Ann Bamitz,
3-7-13; Stephanie Gudorf, 0-2-0-6;
Kathy Snyder, 3-1-1-lO. TOTALS
9-7-21-60.
Halftime score: Shawnee State
37, Rio Grande 29.

Minnesota
posts.71.;.67
upset
win
• a w-ed nes.
. d ay
over No. 4 I ndIan
·

By Tbe Associated Press
took to compete in the Big Ten.
Minnesota's freshmen , over- Now they &lt;\o," said Arriel McDonshadowed all season by Michigan's ald, whose free throws with 13 secF.ab Five, have grown up enough to onds left clinched the win. " We try ·
tum a 50-point swing on Indiana.
not to think of it as revenge. We
The Gophers, who were crushed expect to win at home."
96-50 by Indiana on Jan. 9, beat the
Lenard's three-pointer with
fourth-ranked Hoosiers 71 -67 10:37 to play gave the Gophers a
Wednesday night and two members 50-49 lead. He followed with a
of the Class of '95 were responsi- layup and Walton scored on a tip-in
ble.
for 54491ead. The Gopheis led the
Voshon Lenard had 17 points rest of the way, with Lenard scorand Jayson Walton added 16 for ing seven and Walton six of Minthe Gophers (15-9, 7-4), who are nesota's last 24 points.
still in the Big Ten race despite not
being given much of a chance
before the season with such a
young team.
"I think the first Lime our
younger guys didn't realize what it

299°

that Kentucky team a 4-0 record
against the SVAC (a previous win
against Valley and two victories
over Hannan Trace) this year.
But North Gallia, who bombed
Valley 65-45 at home on Jan. 10.
must take the Vikings seriously,
because this is one 4-12 team that
can, if presented the right opponunities, send the Pirates to the reefs.
If the Pirates have any doubts, all
they need to do is to talk to Hannan
Trace and Kyger Creek, teams that
had to struggle in the second half
of their ga mes agai nst the mid·
Lawrence crew to pull out wins.
Kyger Creek vs. Southwestern
These two teams, which served
up a 61 -56 thriller at Cheshire on
Jan. 10 that Kyger Creek won,
should provide more of the same
when they meet in the final boys
varsity game to be played on the
Gagecoun.
This is one game that should be
dominated as much by the Bobcats'
smothering defense and the marksmanship of frontmen Phil Bradbury
(16 .7 pts./gamc), Chris Crace
( 11.6 pts./gamc) and Paul Covey
(9.5 pts./gamc, 13 game~) as well
as the inside moves of Southwestern center Chris Mandeville and
the three-point shooting of senior
teammate Adam Simpson.
Kyger Creek will host Ironton ,
St. Joe Saturday night.

An eight-minute shutdown of
Mount Vernon Nazarene's offense
in the first half propelled the University of Rio Grande men's basketball team to a I 06-73 victory
over the Cougars in Mid-Ohio
Conference action at Mount Vernon Tuesday.
All five of Rio Grande's starters
scored in double figures to boost
their team· s record to I 9-7 and 6-3
in the MOC. The Cougars went to
7-17 and 2-10.
Brad Schubert, who scored 24
points to lead the Redmen, got
things started with a three-point
jumper at 19:47. Rio Grande led
14-9 at 13:35 when Mark Erslan's
trey launched rhe run that ended at
5:25 with the visitors ahead 37-9.
The half ended with the Redmen
leading 52-25, and in spite o.f the
scoring efforts of Mount Vemon's
Jeff Korbini, who had 22 markers
for the game, the Cougars couldn't
dig themselves out of the gulf Rio
Grande created for them.
Rio Grande outboarded the
hosts by four (4945, 13 from Rio
Grande's Troy Donaldson and
seven by Tim Fenlon for Mount
Vernon) and held their turnovers to
14, The Cougars had 22.
The Redmen were 46 percent
from the floor (36-78, 16-37 from
the rhree for 43
and con-

nected on 18 of 22 attempts at the
line for 82 percen~ Mount Vernon
hit28 of 78 tries on shooting for 36
percent, including II of 28 from
the three for 39 percent. The team
was six of seven from the line for
86 percent.
Rio Grande will return home for
its Saturday meeting at 7:30 p.m.
with Tiffin for Bob Evans Farms
Night. Mount Vernon enters the
first round of the King's College
Tournament in New York Thursday.
Box score:
MOUNT VERNON (73) Aaron Reynolds, 1-0-2; , Tim Fenlon, 24-0-16; Jamie Perozek, 2·1·
2-9; Todd Thomae, 1-0-2; Chuck
Speelman, 0-1-1-4; Cleveland
Brown, 2-04; Eric Pennington, 21-5; Sam Hampton, 1-1-0-5; Jeff
Korbini, 44-2-22; Eric Thome, 204. TOTAL&amp; 17-11:6-73.
RIO GRANDE (106) - Mark
Erslan, 14-0-14; Brad Schubert, 26-2-24; Matt Powell, 5-3-0-19; Jeff ·
Brown, 3-1·10-19; Troy Donald:
son, 5-3-13; LyndeU Snyder, 2-1-5;
Kyle Schroer, 1-0-2; Walter
Stephens, 1-2-4; Brett Coreno, 0-10-3; Jason Curtis, 0-1-0-3.
TOTALS 20·16·18-106.
Halftime score: Rio Grande
52, Mount Vernon 25.

WHY PAY MORif

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W L
OakHiU ............ I2 4
Eastern ................9 6
Southem ..............9 7
Kannan Trace ......9 8
North Gallia ........6 8
Kyger Creek ........5 10
Symmes Valley ...4 12
Southweslern .......2 15

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Southeqi ..............B 2 ·756 581
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lionh Gallia ........6 4 650 648
$ymmes Valley ...2 8 S68 640
Kygez Cieek........2 8 527 638
SOuthwestem ......:o II 610 825
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Minnesota missed five of six
free throws _in the last minutes, but
Indiana scored ~ust one basket in
the last 3:30. The Hoosiers had the
ball trailing 69-67, but Damon Bai·
ley's pass was knocked away and
the ball ended up in the ha.nds of
McDonald, who was fouled and
made the clinchin~ free throws. ·
" We're all sming here quiet
because we can't really believe we .
beat a team like Indiana. It's a
dream come true to beat Indiana," ·
.Mc0onal4 said. .

Monster rally gives Rio
106-73 win over MVNC

1n the svAc. ..

encounter with the Eagles at Tuppers Plains Friday night because
Eastern's sharpshooters- seniors
Tim Bissell (18.1 pts./game) and
Jeff Ours! (17.1 pts./game) promise plenty of ftreworks.
But that's not all to rhe Eagles'
offense, as 5-foot-11 senior forward Terry McGuire (I 0. 7
p~s./game) and freshman center
Charlie Bissell (10.7 pts./game)
demonstrate. But at 6-foot-1, Bissell is the only player taller than six
feet in the Eagles' lineup, and
unless they are extremely accurate
f(tlm the field and can get most of
their foul shots to drop in (translation: at least 75% ), they will be in
big trouble. Why?
. Trace has been shooting 77.1 %
ftom the line (27 -35) in its last
three contests. That may spell an
advantage in its favor, considering
that the Wildcats have 6-foot-2
junior Dave Poling (12.5
pts./game) in the post, and 6-foot-2
senior Chad Swain (17.7 pts./game)
~nd 5-foot-11 senior Jimmy Brace
(I 0.2 pts./game) at the forward
spots. Height plus accurate foul
shooting may equal victory for
Hannan Trace.
Eastern will play at Waterford
Saturday night.
North Gallia vs. Symmes Valley
· Will North Gallia put two wins
together for the fiist time this season, or will Pat Stout's Pirates do
what they have done after each win
this season? Symmes Valley, the
host team in this affair, holds the
key.
· The Pirates possess the tools
needed to break the trend of fol·
lowing up each win with a loss. For
example, junior center Kevin Hunt
averages 16.1 points per game, and
junior point guard Charles Peck
will enter Friday night's game with
a 15.8 points-per-game average. ·
In addition, junior forward Rob
Canady, who will check in with an
s: I pomts-per-game average, sacnfices his offense to collect somewhere between 10 to 12 rebounds a
game. But a shallow bench (North
totals eight on its varsity roster)
may, if any of the starting five get
into foul trouble, work to the
Pirates' detriment. ·
· Symmes Valley, which has
some big guns of its own in sophomore guard Jerome Fuller, senior
guard Jimmy Jenkins and senior
forward Andy Lester, hasn't pul
~cry many wins in the ledger for·all
its firepower. Though the Vikings
beat Portsmouth Notre Dame 73-70
Saturday night, they fell 77-51
Tuesday night to Raceland, giving

The Dally ~ntlnei-Page-6

_PQmeroy-Middleport, Ohki

$VAC cage standings

0

$

Thursday, Februaiy, 13, 1992

Rutland, Ohio

�Thursday, Febr~ary, 13, 1992

Any job is better than no job

Prom show planned Sunday
"Unforgettable 1992," the latest
in gowns, flowers and shoes for the
1992 prom year will be presented
at the Meigs County Pubhc Library
in Pomeroy on Sunday from 2 to 4
p.m.
The event is sponso red by the
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority River
Bend City Council in cooperation
wi th Briuany's Boutique of Gal·

lipolis and Athens.
The public is enco ur aged to
attend and a limited number of
tickets arc available for $2.50 per
person fro m any Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority member or from Nichola
Picken s at Eastern High School;
Holl y Williams and Kelly Doidge
at Meigs High School; and Amber
Cummi ngs at Southern Hi gh

'Dear Ann Landers: "Unemployed in Conn." hit me when; I live
because I, too, am unemployed and
sick to death of people who tell
me to "cheer up." I'm a coUegeeduca!ed, white-collar professional.
I lost my job last April. Since then,
I've applied for 130 positions and
spent over $900 in job search and
travel expenses. After eight months
with nothing but rejection, I feel like
a loser. Meanwhile, some financial
analysts say there is no recession,
and I am eating peanut boner and
jelly sandwiches and living in an
unheated apanmenL
I dread running into fanner coworkers or college classmates for
fear they will ask, "What are you
doing now?" It's a daily struggle to
get out of bed in the morning and
write application letters and make
phone calls. I know that I need a
·positive attitude in order to get a job
but after months of failure, it's hard .
My bills are piling up, and I'm
afraid I've messed up my credit
rating. I've been told that fast food
places are hiring with flexible hours.
I don't have a problem with people
who work at fast food spots. I did it
in high school. But college-educated,
prof~ ional people don't work in
those places. The pay is terrible.
Thank you, Ann, for printing that
woman's letter. You really made me
feel less alone. -- UNEMPLOYED
IN THE FOX VALLEY. ILL.
DEAR F.V.: You didn't ask for
advice, but you're going to get some
anyway. I suspect you are reluctant

School. Any rema inmg tickcto wi ll
be ava ilable at the d&lt;x&gt;r on Sunday.
Re.frcshments wi ll bo served and
door prizes awarded.
Models parti cipati ng in th e
show are Daniclle Crow, Ka ri
Black, Holly Will ia ms, Kelly
Doidge, Anna Chapman, Nichola
Pickens, Heather Fin law , Missy
Woods, Missy Ne lson, Dawn
Shuler and Michelle Laughery.

Mere hants... _:C::o::.nt::::inu:.:.ed:..:f. .:.rom_:_pag.::.e_l_ _---:----:--:::---:-:---:---'

--·

.... .

PLANS FINALIZED· A prom fashion show
will be presented Sunday from 2·4 p.m. at the
Meigs County Public Library. The show,
"Unforgettable 1992," will feature the latest in
gowns, flowers and shoes for the 1992 prom
.year. The event is sponsored by the Beta Sigma

Miller...
Continued from page 1
ing for each pany to sacrifice a dis·
trictto reflect a reduction in Ohio's
districts next year from 21 to 19.
Ohio 's delegation is being
reduced as a result of faster population growth in other parts of the
country, reflected by the 1990 U.S.
Census.
Her bill would put Republican
Reps. Willis Gradison of Cincinnati
and John Boehner of West Chester
in the same southwest Ohio district
while parceling off the current dis·
trict of Rep. Dennis Eckhart, D·
Mentor, to other areas of northeast
Ohio.
Eckart and Rep. Donald Pease,
[)..Oberlin, are not running for reelection. Pease's disuict helps form
an open disuict'with no incumbent,
under Mrs. Sheerer's plan.Sen. Eugene Watts, R-Columbus, reviewed the Senate proposal,
which generally protects incumbents of both parties, except for
Miller and Applegate. He indicated
their districts could be included in
negotiations with the House.
"This process is just beginning," Watts said. He noted that
leaders of the House and Senate
have named a joint conference that
will seek to iron out differences
after the House has passed its version.
State Government Chairman
William Healy. D-Canton, said he
would hold hearings again Thurs·
day and that he hopes to have a
measure ready for floor ac tion next
week.

.

Phi Sorority River Bend City Council in cooper·
ation with Brittany's Boutique of Gallipolis and
Athens. Pictured are city council members
Susan Clark, Maurisha Nelson, Darla Staats and
Becky Triplett.

-Meigs announcements12-step meeting
A 12 step AA meeting will
begin Sunday at 7 p.m. at the JTPA
office, 117 West Second Sueet in
Pomeroy.
AA meeting
There will be an AA and
AIAnon meeting on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Sacred Heart Catholic
ChW"Ch.
Baseball meeting
The Racine Ball Association
will meet Sunday at 3 p.m. at the
Racine kinderganen building. Elec·
tion of officers will be held. Any·

.. _ - '

one interested in urged to attend.
Orders taken
The Trinity ChW"Ch of Pomeroy
is talcing orders for homemade veg·
etable and chicken-noodle soup.
Orders can be made by calling 9925480, 992-3777 or 992-3222 by
Sunday. Soup will be ready for
pick-up after 4 p.m. on Monday.
The price is $2 per quan.
Pancake dinner
The Carmel United Methodist
ChW"Ch, Racine, wiU have a potluck
dinner on Saturday from 5:30 to 7
p.m. All proceeds go to the youth
group.
Group to perform
·:voices of Praise." a singing
group from Kentucky Christian
College will perform at the
Pomeroy ChW"Ch of Christ on Sun·
day at 7 p.m. The public is invited
to auend.
Special singing
Special singing featuring local
talent will be held at the Mt. Union
Baptist Church, three miles south
of Carpenter, on Sunday at 5:30
p.m. Pastor Joe N. Sayre invites the
public.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. .3 t 1/8
Ashland Oil ..................... .34
AT&amp;T ................................ .37 7/8
Bank Onc........................... 45 7/8
Bob Evans ............ .............26 1/4
Charming Shop ...................28
City Holding ...................... IS
Federal Mogul.. .................. IS 7/8
GoodyearT&amp;R .................. 61 l{l
Key Centurion ................... 15 1/4
Lands' End ....................... .33 5/8
Limited Inc ....................... 31 l{l
Multimedia Inc . ................. 27 3/4
Rax Restaurant .................. 15/16
Robbins&amp;Mycrs ................ 19 l{l
Shoney's lnc ...................... 26
Star Bank ........................ ... 26
Wendy lnt'l.. ...................... 12 3/8'
Worthington Ind . ...............25 1/4
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

.-----Local briefs--.
Continued from page I
16, of Guysville, failed to stop and struck the rear of King-Camahan's car pushing it into Evans' car.
Damage to all three vehicles was reported as light.
Howard was cited by the patrOl for failure to _maintain assured
clear distance.

EMS units answer 6 calls
Six calls for assistance were answered by units of Meigs County
Emergency Services on Wednesday and early Thursday morning.
On Wednesday at 1:36 p.m., Middleport squad went to North
Front Street. Genevieve Demosky was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. At 4: 16 p.m., Syracuse squad went to Country
Mobile Home Parle. Gladys Blessing was sent to Veterans. At5:12
p.m., COlumbia unit went to State Route 143 for a grass fire. At
9:25 p.m., Middleport squad was sent to Overbrook Center for
Emma Chapman, who was taken to Veterans. At 10:48 p.m., Rut·
land unit went to State )Wute 6&amp;4. Pamela King was taken to Veter·

ans.

On Thursday at3 a.m., Middleport units went to State Route 7 at
Hobson Bridge for an auto accident Chris Thomas was sent to Vet·
erans.

Court news
Divorce, dissolution filed
An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Coun by
Bernard D. Cole, Pomeroy, and
Shirley Marie Cole, also of
Pomeroy.
A divorce action has been filed
by Steven Ray Hoover; Pomeroy,
. against Rhonda Ruth Hoover,
Pomeroy.
Marriage licenses granted
Marriage licenses have been
granted in Meigs County Probate
Court to Frank Ray Nelson, Jr., 27,
Pomeroy, and Anna Virgene Taylor, 29, Pomeroy; and to Terry Lee
Brewer, 45, Portland, and Bonnie
Sue Proffitt, 45, also of Portland.
Foreclosures sought
'
A judgme~t/foreclosure action
has been fil ed in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court by American
General Finance , Gallipolis,
against John R. Hunnell and Violet
Hunnell, both of Pomeroy. The suit
alleges default on a promissory
note, and asks for judgment in the
amount of $4,479.95.
Also in the court, a foreclosure
suit has been filed by Star Ban~. ·
N.A., Gallipolis, against Harley W.
Eblin, Sr., Bidwell, and others, in
the amount of$44,253.09.

Carp ...
Continued from page I
from eating PCBs or chlordane
contaminated fish have not been
documented. However, frequent
consumption of such conuuninated
fish may increase an individual's
long-term health risk, McCoy said.
The West Virginia DNR said
individuals who decide to eat Ohio
River channel catfish, or carp
should take the following precautions to reduce any potential
adverse effects:
• Keep only smaller fish.
• Only skinless and boneless fii.
lets should be eaten.
• Remove dark meat from sides
and fat from the belly and top of
the fish.
• Bake, broil or grill fish on an
open rack to allow fats to drain
away fro.m the meaL
• Discard the fats that co uld
cook out of the fish .

Joins program
Office Service and Supply at
11 2 West Main St., Pomeroy, has
joined the. Internal Revenue Scr·
vice's Volunteer Income Tax
Assistance (VITA) Program.
The program is targeted for the
handicapped, disabled, low and
moderate income. Donna Tillis is
the volunteer tax preparer and is
available at the business which she
and her husband operate for tax
consultation on an appointment
basis.
The service is free.

Counties. Aoyonc living, working
or attending school in the fourcounty area in the age range, a high
school graduate, never married and
a U. S.. citizen qualifies to enter the
contes~ Newell said. The winner of
the local pageant, according to the
chairman, will be awarded a scholarship. Businesses in the four counties will be solicited for contnbutions to the scholarship fund .
Mrs. Clark, on behalf of th e
association, expressed support for
the pageant. She stated the associa·
tion would do anything it could but
that members' time would be limit·
ed due to th e fashion show the
night before the pageant
Mrs. Newell also updated the
assoc iation on the chamber's
efforts in amacting a proposed
medium security prison to the
county.
A le uer of support for the prison
will be submitted by the association.
Mini-park discussed
Effons by the welding class at
Meigs High School, with assistance
by George Wright, have begun to
repair the fence around the mini-

park. Avenues arc now begin
explored to locale a place through
which stee l could be obtamed to
complete the repairs. It is the hope
of the association that this material
can be donated.
The assoc iation voted to hire
Curly Wiles at a cost of $10 per
week to maintain the mini-park
during the summer months.
Other matters
Mrs. Clark reviewed a letter to
the association from Roger
Gilmore of Aardvark Sound in
which he lists the wide variety of

services offered by that company .
Gilmore has also produced a promotional video for Meigs County
for the Meigs County Park District
and following a showing by the
Park District the video will be
made available to the public.
Also noted was a letter from
Bank One, Athens, N.A., stating
efforts are underway to locate an
automatic teller machine (ATM) in
the area. This letter was received
after the association sent a letter
urging the importance of such a
service for the area.

The Meigs Creek 4-H Club met
on Jan. 5, at Tuppers Plains, with
16 members and two advisors present
The group discussed steer
wei'ghing and requirements,
upcoming events and project work
began. The project lesson was on
what to look for when choosing an
animal for your project
A Health Report was given on
"The Key to a Healthy Animal" by
LeAnn Rowe. Bicycle safety was
the topic of Jeff Rankin's Safety
report. A demonstration was ~ivcn
by Stephanie Hoffman on the Items
needed and their use in grooming a
steer.
A dodge ball game was enjoyed
by parents, advisors and members.
(Tim Epling, News Reporter)

SKILLS COMPETITION TONIGHT· As a part of the annual
vocational education opeq bouse at Meigs High School tonight, 6 to
9 p.m., students will be competing in the Vocational Industrial
Clubs or America's skills contests. An awards ceremony will be
held at 9 p.m. following judging by the Industrial Advisory Coun·
cil. Jimmy Parker,left, and Don Randolph are enrolled in the auto
mechanics program, a two year course where students learn to
inspect, repair, and maintain functional parts of machinery and
automotive .and mechanical equipment.

BAHR'S HAS GIFT SUGGESTIONS FOR YOUR

VALEN'I'INE!
'·~~·'

•COSTUME JEWELRY
•SCARFS
•SWEATERS
•BLOUSES
•COATS
-JACKETS
•SLACKS
•DRESSES
•JOG SUITS

I

The Alfred 4-H Club met on
Jan. 26, at the Guess home in Tuppers Plains. Three advisors, three
parents and nine members auend·
cd.
The following officers were
elected: President, Michele Gu.ess;
Vice President, Shawn Rollins; ·
Secretary, Rild Barringer; Treasurer, Melissa Guess; Health and Safe·
ty Reporter, Jessica Barringer;

•TIES
•SHIRTS
•JACKETS
•SWEATERS
•BLAZERS and SPORT
COATS
•SUITS
•WALLETS
•HATS
•CAPS
•JOG SUITS

The family of Raymond Lam·
bert recently honored him with a
dinner, cake and gifts to celebrate
his 76th birthday.
Attending were Pat Harmon, Jin
and Charles Williamson, Ray and
Juanita Lamben. David and Shawn
Lambert, Brian, Kathie and Charlie
William son, Denise and Adam
Lambert, Doug, Shirley and
Christopher Lamben, John, Angela
and Joshua Spires and Steve and
Kelly LamberL

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDLEPORT

i.lPEN MON.-SAT.
9:30-5:00

2ND STREET

773·5592

MASON,WV

"Justlmagine...Lincs (Livi~g in
New and Creative Styles)" was the
title of the program preSented by
Mrs. Kathryn Windon and Mrs .
Carol Erwin at the recent meeting
of the Chester United Methodist
Women.
The purpose of the program was
to raise consciousness of the need
for responsible choices in an
increasingly commercialized soci·
ety and to envision how these
choices can make a positive differ·
ence.
The group sang the hymn "This
is Our Father's World" with Belly
Dean as pianist.
The scripture read was Psalm
Ill.
Each member brought a bundle
of newspapers which will be shredded and g•ven to Roy Holter to use
for bedding for his cows.
Some toilets have devices to
reduce the amount of water used.
An average flush uses five to seven
gallons of water. With a tank
device, one to two gallons can be
saved on every flush . If 10,000

familles would add this device, 58
million gallons of water could be
saved a year.
The junk mail Americans
receive in one day could !l!ovide
250,000 homes with a days energy. More than 15,000 trees could
be saved daily if 10,000 people
would stop their junk mail.
Mrs. Mae Young presided.at the

business meeting with 13 members·
present and 56 sick and shut-iri
calls reported.
:
Belly Dean will send the prayer·
and self-denial offering. It was
noted that the carpel bill had been:
paid.
•
The group will serve a group of
ministers at the chW"Ch on Wednesday at 10 a.m.

Classes offered
The Middleport Arts Council
will offer beginning tap dancing
classes beginning Wednesday,
March 4. The first class will be
held from 4:30-5:15 p.m. for ages
five and six; seven and eight yearaids should report at5:15 p.m. and
those ages 9 and 10 should come
from 6-6:45 p.m.
Barbara Lawrence is the instruc·
tor and the fee is $20 per month.

m;,.

s1JOE' PL
,

.J

A f •I_ • .._,,~

tl.'-'c.

•

The Forestry Association of Ameri·
ca, founded io 187&gt;. lays cia im to
40,000 members.

992-5627

219 SECOND

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Cal'leton
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Russell
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precious little niece or nephew.
I don\ know who the donor was,
but his family has my undying
thanks. That transplant saved the
life of a wonderful person. While I
was sitting in church praying at
my brother's wedding, I was also
thanking God for that family's
generosity.·· PATil OF PUEBLO,
COLO.
DEAR PATil: And thank you
for providing me with yet another
opportunity to ask my readers to
become organ donors. Let me make
it clear that it costs nothing •• the
recipient pays. Write: The Living
Bank, P.O. Box 6725, Houston,
Texas 77265orcalll-8()().528'2971
for infonnation. Bless you for your
generosity.
When planning a wedding, who
pays for whor? Who srand.r where?
"The Ann Landers Guide for Brides"
has oil rhe oi1SIO!ers. Send a selfaddressed. long, business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $3.65 (rhis includes
posroge and handling) ro: Brides,
c/o Ann l..muius. P.O. Boz JJ562,
Chica go, Ill . 60611 -056 2. (In
Callilda. send $4.45 .)

Making a positive difference: UMW

You lound it. ••

David and Penny Hysell, Rut·
land, are announcing the binh of
their first child, II son, Wesley
"Tanner" Hysell, on Dec. 23 at
O'Bieness Mcmoriitl Hospital.
The ir.lant wieghed seven
pounds and 15.9 oun~es and was
21 inches long. ·
Maternal grandparents are Bill
and Carolyn Biggs, Pomeroy .
Maternal great grandparents are
.Nathan and Bette Biggs, Pomeroy.
Paternal ·grandparents are
Harold and Twila Hysell, Rutland.
Paternal great grandparents are
William Stewart, Clifton, W.Va.,
and Carl Hysell, Rutland.
TABITHA J!HILLIPS

.
, t • I . . . COif) , .
'
·
We'" Orerttofittl Atltl • .,,,,.,,, I• "''"' ro .Gol

ANN LANDERS

"1Hl, Lol An1ele1
'llmoo Sy. ._llld ·
CreMon Srndlta&amp;e."

they met on Jan. 10. Two advisors,
18 members and three parents
auended.
Business included a discussion
on donating to the Building Project
and donating to the 4-H Club candy
sale instead of selling candy. It was
also decided to donate to Project
Lift Off as in past years.
Election of officers was held
and members discussed what projects to take and cost of dues and
books.
Scott served refreshme nts
members and visitors. Members
were reminded that for the next
The Meigs 4-H Pleasure Riders meeting they needed to decide on
had nine members, two advisors . their projects and also that dues can
and two visitors present when they be paid for the year at anytime. The
met at the St. Paul Lutheran next meeting date is to be
announced.
Church in Pomeroy, Ohio, Jan. 20.
(Crystal Vaughan, News
A discussion was held about the
Reporter)
4-H horse bam at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.
(Sara Craig, News Reporter)
Advisor Bonnie Scott's home
Wl!S the meeting place of the Salem
Center Go-Gelters 4-H Club when

New arrival

VeteraDS Men:aorlal
WEDNESDAY· ADMISSIONS
.• Frances Young, Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
• Naomi Hoschar.
·

DUSftC IIDDI:nlllll fi'S IIPPLIUCII

Ann
Landers

The Dally Sentlnei- Page:-7:

Recreation Leaders , Andrew
Rollins and Chris Barringer; and
News Reporter, Mendy Guess.
Candy for the 4-H candy sale
was distributed and projects were
selected by the members.
Refreshments were served by
Michele, Melissa, Mike and Mendy
Guess. The nex t meeting will be
2:30 p.m. Feb. 23, at the home of
Riki and Chris Barringer. Demonstrations on health and safety will
be given.
(Mendy
Guess,
News
Reporter)

Birthday observed

Hospital news

MASON ro~ffio
FURNITURE'S

to take a job in a fast food place for
fear you might be seen by some of
your .friends and fanner colleagues.
Please remember that no honest job
is beneath your dignity. Besides, it's
better than sitting around fee.ling
sorry-for yourself.
On your time off, you can
continue your search for something
more upscale and it is possible that
being employed will give you a
badly needed lilt. Good luck, fella.
You're due for a break.
Dear Ann Landers: My brother
was married on Oct. 25. Your
readers may ask, "So what?" Please
consider ·the obstacles he had
overcome.
.
"Michael" was never a typical
teen-ager •• he was too sick. High
school was a place he fought to
anend and when he finally
graduated, his en tire life revolved
around the dialysis machine.
After several heartbreaking
kidney tran splant failures , he
received one his body didn't reject.
Michael is now one of the longest
surviving transplant recipients io the
country. I wonder if the family
members who saw clearly enough
at their time of loss to donate
organs realize what this unselfish
act has meant to me, my family,
my brother, his new bride and her
family. ·
Since that fri ghtening day of his
transplant, Michael has built a
successful career and finally had
enough confidence in his health to
marry. Perhaps one day I'D have a

Meigs County 4-Hers hold meetings

Hospital news
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Disc harges , Feb. 13 ·Susan
Banks, Leonard Beverly, Phoebe
Frazee, Derek Harold, Mrs. David
Haynes and daughter, Mary Hennen, Frank Otworth, Tammy Petitt,
Gary Reese. Coldon Roush, Patricia Rowland, and Raymond Shelton.
Binhs. Feb. 13 • Mr. and Mrs.
James Fish, a daughter, Rutland.
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Halley , a
daughter, Middleport. Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Williams, a daughter, Wellston.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·Thursday, February, 13,1992

Tabitha M. Phillips, daughter of
Lawrence and Barbara Eblin,
·Pomeroy, has been 'accepted by
Bauder Fashion .College for t~e
fashion merchandising program
beginning Septembel, l992. She
will lie sllidying fashion merchan·
· ,dising a~d plans .a career in· thai
1
· · ·field upon Riad.uat)OII.
:' · ..;, · During lier two yean at ·Bauder,
"She will be acdve in civic and col· ,
lege 8lltiYltles including •Qeld trips
to museums, manufacturers, dis·
play and advertising departments ln
tetail stores, fashion and 'l"ade
~hows, •nd modelinJ. lratnee
assignments.
.

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Admlnlllratlon, In II._, tbere· .,.,..
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ljle or 'N In the United States.

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�Ohio

Thursday, February,13, 1992

Missionary Society names comf!Zitt~e .members ·

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
received less than 12 complaints
against Rican. You and I know
that you can get more complaints
than that just on the way you part
your hair. Fisher is "protecting"
us-. · I think I would feel more
proleCted if I were paying 20 cents
a gallon less at the pump. And, by
tile way. I enjoy Fred Rican's tele·
vision advertising-at least it's
entertaining.
I am the fli'Sl 10 ~· however, t11at it's much eas1er to send a
constituent a form to complete
rather than to move a little and
come up with an answer.
No wonder the American public
- -is
fed
up with government, its offiPlans for tile Easter "good egg
cials
and
their red tape. I can relale
trecs"-a fund raiser by the
to
that,
can't
you? The bottom line
Wom en's Auxiliary at Veterans
is-and
you
may
have noticed th~l
Memorial Hospital, that's the hospital 's great volunteer group-are gasoline has dropped a few cents 10
Meigs County very recentlygoing well.
Don Beegle, head of the hospi- apparently we're not going to get
tal' s maintenance department, is much relief and about the same
cutting the trees and will spray degree of an explanation. The
them white. They will be put into more I tllink about tile old saying,
revolving holders and one tree will ''You can't fight City Hall''- the
be located in the hospital lobby. truer it gets.
Let me remind you, my friend.
one in the cafeleria and one in tile
The government has a form for
extended care unit.
And here's where you come in. everything-it makes for bigger
The trees will feature Easter eggs, and better bureaucracy. I know it's
each inscribed with the name of not easy. but do keep smiling.
your "good egg"-be it a relative,
friend, business associate or even
your$elf·. The- thfee.. inch wooden
eggs to be used on the trees are also
refrigerator magnets and will be
available to the "good eggs" after
the Easter season. They should
make nice mementos. To get your
"good egg" on a tree send $5 10 tile
Women's Auxiliary, Veterans
Memorial Hospital, 115 E. Memorial Drive, Pomeroy. Be sure to
indicate which of the three locations you prefer for your "good
egg". The fund raiser just started
and already several dozen "good
eggs" have been designated.
The trees will be decorated by
March 19 and will remain in place
until after Easter, April 19.
Already it's proving an interesting
project and the trees should make a
nice Easter accent for the hosp1tal.
I'm your friend. I remind you
that 10morrow is "hearts- and flow~rs" day. You're now uav;ling at
your own risk. If you don t function- put the blame on Marne-not
me.
Congratulations are in order for
Dude Gibbs who will be observing
a birthday on Valentine Day. Dude
has been returned home from the
hospital and that's good. The had
pan is that following his discharge
both he and wife, Sarah, picked up
the flu and that wasn't easy.
Dude's address is 34046 Ball Run
Road. Pomeroy.

The Bertha M. Sayre Mission·
ary Soeiety met recently at the
Racine Baptist Church.
Devotions were given by Mary
Curtis using the American Baptist
Theme, "Weaving New Patterns."
Barbara Gheen presided at the
meeting and a committee was
·

appom~ for the mother-da~ghter

banquet 10 May. That commutee 1s
Jeri Harris, Dcbi Bradford, Marjorie Grimm, Mary Curtis, Lillian
Hayman, Mildred Shuler and Ellen
Deaver. The nominating commiuee
was appoin!OO to recommend officers .for the l)ew year as follows:

B~ Gheen, Sue L1ghtfoo1, Jen
Harris and Donha Salser.
A program was presen!OO o~ the
new _structure ~f the ~mencan
Bapust ~omen s Mm1str~~s by
Mary_CllrtiS followed by a ume of
quesuons of ~swers.
The love gtft prognun was presented by Martha Lou ~eegle and
monies were presented by each circle chairman.
Roll Call was by circles. Mary's
Circle had Jeri Harris, Debi Bradford, Linda Powell apd
Shuler. Ruth Circle bad

Gnmm , Geraldme Cle!and, L10da
Gnmm, Nondus Hendricks, Emma
Adams, Naom1 Stobart, Mart~ a
Lou Be~gle and Mary. Cur~1s.
Esther S•rcle members auend!ng
w~re L1lhan Hayo:nan, Ora Htll,
M1ldred Hart, M1ld~ed Shuler,
Velma Taylor, M~d1e Long ~nd
Florence Adams. VlSItors auend10g
were Stephanie Shuler, Cassie CleIand, Sharon Cleland, Libby Fisher,
Lillian Weese, Mary Cleek and the
pastor's wife, Ellen Deaver.
Refreshments were served with
the Ruth Circle as hostess.

: WASHINGTON (AP) -House
Democrats, disavowing any election-year bidding war, are writing a
narrow tax bill that would give
relief to the middle class, hit the
rich and provide some incentive for
investment.
.. Democrats on the Ways and
¥cans Committee began negotiat·
mg among themselves after rejectihg key parts of President Bush's
tax plan, including his proposed cut
in taxes on capital gains.
·
: "This is going 10 be a Democratic consensus package," Rep.
Dan Rostenkowski, D-Ill. and tile
Ways and Means chairman, told

_.... ______
_ - 992·2124
WEST
MAIN STREET
-----~-----

I lARGE
PEPPERONI PIZZA I :
,ITH 4 COlAS I

$8.99

,
.
,
.
.
.
.
.
..
.
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.
.
.
.
.
.
.
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.
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......
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.... -

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.... . . . 44 •

.

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..... .. ..

. . .. ..... . ...... . ~

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· · ·· ~·· ~ to.

.

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_
----------

......
- ..........
~.. ... ................... ........
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_.........
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·-,
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·.,·· ··-.......
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reporters. "Don't be surprised" if
it inc:ludes a sunax on millionaires
and higher tax rates on those with ·
incomes above $100,000, he said.
Such tax increases would
finance a credit for wage earners or
some ocher tax cut that would benefit malnly tile middle class.
Meantime, Republican leaders,
stinging from a party-line defeal of
Bush's plan by the Democraticcontrolled commiuee, asked that
the House be allowed to consider
tl1at plan next week under unusual
procedures that would require a
two-thirds vote to pass.
Tba~ Rostenkowslci said, would

be equivalent to kiclting a 90-yard
field goal.
"The American people should
not have to wait for action just
because you do not yet have your
package," House Republican
Leader Robert Michel of Illinois
and Rep. Bill Archer of Texas said
in a letier ID Rostenkowski.
The bill on which Archer is
seeking that vote was rejected 2313 by the committee. It included
only 'seven of the three dozen tax
proposals Bush outlined in his bud~~ message - seven that tile prestdent considers necessary for quick
economic stimulus.

.J

Call 992-2156
MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M. • SAT.8-12
CLOSED SuNDAY

POLICIES

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tueoday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thun;day Paper
Friday Paper
SWlday Paper

• Ad. outlide Callia, Mason or Melp countiu mual be prepaid
'

• Ptiee of ad for all upitallett.en it double prtce of ad coat
• 1 point line type only uted
• Tribune il not rupontible for erron after linL day (c:hec:k

Gallia County

day after publication to make correetion
• Acb that mutt be paid in advance are:

Card ol Thanlu
In Memoria•

446-G.,tbpo~•

992-M;ddlepo•lf

367-Cheoh;re

Pomeroy
985-Chetter
843-Portland
247- Let•rt.
949-R•dne
742-Rulland

388-VInton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dill.

Happy Acla '
Yard Sale.

• A cluairled adverliaement pl.ced in the Gallipolil Daily
Tribur.e (except Clauir.ed DYplay, BUiinua Card or Legal
Notice.) willal..o appear in the Point P&amp;euant Regiiter and

643-Ar•bi• Diet.
379-Walnul

r.u.

BULLETIN BOARD

675-Pt. Ple~~unt
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773- Muon
882- Ne:w H•ven
895-l...etart
937 .. Bulf'alo

...

COUNTRY MOillE HOME

Friday, Feb. 14,
6:30 til ?

.

. Mater111l Jrandparenll are

' E_. aad Sharon Miclllel, Wea
Colullbla, W.Va. Oteat IJ'Ind·
zap f la Cecilia Mitch, Pamemy,
llid die late 1o1m Mitch and Mr.
. llld Mn. Everett ~bel, Brld·

~ JfiiiCipml)ll are 1ohn· ·
. n1e a Mikhd N8111. ¥"ocJdlepM.

...

Blrkllne• Reclining Rock-A-Lounge~

with
hancll•ectlv•lld "FNllwrglldt" mechlnleml .

17- Milcellaneou•
18- Wanted To Do

RACINE GUN
CLUB

11-1 L'OIUI.J

Ads

TROLUY RATION
CWTS

-New Homes
-Remoclel•g
-Garages &amp; Room
AddiHons

Special Valentine
Hours -10 to 8
FE&amp;. 11- Al*llt llulllt
a .... - 1:10 p.m.
FEB. 24 -lleglnMr Aoryllc
Paining Cilia

985·4141

AF,INIE'S SPORTS
·
LOUNGE
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, WV. ·

MEIGS

Presenis

•

,_tin

5

MARCUM
CONTUCTING

11-22·92·1 IIID.

•

STORE HOURS
·Mawlllay 9-JO til P.1.
Sat.
9:30 115 p.1.

SERVICE

Pomeroy, Ohio

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

j

THE INTERNATIONAL
CALENDAR MEN

. AJM-.Rewa
. , ~EB. 13, 1992 -7·9 P.M.
Act.~ance llc:kels: ~1 0.00
.
$12.00 at the DOor

,~

\11.1{( II

Auction
9- Wanted to Duy

992·621 5

F1b. 16- $4.50·$7.50
Sklings al1 :00..3:00.5:00 p.m.
1 For R... rvatlona Call 446-9545
Court St , ·
Gllllpolla, Oh.

71-· Aui100 for Sale

Au10 Poria &amp;

A.,,...,,;,.,l

48-- .Equipment for Renl
49--ForLoue

11- Help Wanted
12- Situatioru Wanted
13-ln•urance
14-- Dwinell Traimng

\\1)1 :' 1·

51- Ho~~~ehold Gooct.

S2- Sportin1 Cood.
~Ant~uea

S4- Miae. MerehandUe
55- Building Su.ppliet

Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE

Genen~l Haulins

-

Mobile Home Repair
87- Upholalery

, ••• 10 ..... 1.

for..,.ltfoCal
614-992-2549

OH.

2-7·92·1fR

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

GUN SHOOT

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building
EVERY

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS

FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODElS
992·7DI3 or
992-5553

OR TOll FREE

F1ctory Chokt
12 Gautt Sholgun Only
Slrldly Enforced

1·100·141·0070

DAIWIM, OliO
7/31f91/lln

S·13-'91-lln

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAl

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING .
.PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWERUNES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Llm.,.tone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Ucenald and Boncltd

•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

PH. 614·992-5591

Opon llon.-111.10- pm
_,1-lpm

.12·5-tfn

Now In ·

lndow
•Roonne
•Insula! on

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772or

742·2097

539 Bryan Place
M;ddlopor~ Ohio
11/14/tln

MICROWAVES
VHS CAMERAS .
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED
H.E~C.
391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY. ottO
614-992-3524
1-22·'92·1 ...

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER, BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOlliE BITES MCI
TRAILER BITES.

LANOCLEARIN~
DRlVE~VSlNSTA
D

UIIIES NE-TRUCKING
FREE ESTIMATES

992-3838

.............,............
lew .... • Jla,t Sl...1

····~···toll··

CGMMBaQU.UII usmiNTI.U.

lElNEn' •:W.A

.61~tA.Afi':ict-tuo
Cli .....,

Li.t.. • Salf•IS"'IIl elf IL 141
(614)446-MI6wi-100-172•S967

•R~lacemenl

BISSELL IUILDERS, INC

0 1
:

1/JI/92/1:......1

•VInyl Siding

Homes

Stof. &amp; co:zare
F EE ESTI
ES
985·4473
667-6179

AIR CONDinONERS • HEAT PUMP$ altl
FUINACES FOR MOilLE &amp;DOUilEWIDE HOMES

AV......GilYou Wouldn'

•New

Remodeli•g

Stock

..

J&amp;l
INSULATION

eGar•s••

Call61 H92·6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire,

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION
•Co•p ete

6:30P.M.
Starti1g Stpt. 28

Oscar's Restaurant

1\1-.\111'-

17?-- T ....... for- Sale
41- Houu for Rent
Vana&amp; 4 WD't
42- Mobile Horne. for Rent
Moton::ycle.
43- Fu•• for Rent
44-- Apartment for Rent
Boall &amp; Mo10n for Sale

SAT. NIGHT

At Oscar's Restaurant
Dinner for Two 52750

Push~Button Reclining Mechanism

'

1s- School• &amp; I n1truction
16- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair

Valentine's'Day Feb. 14

Chalae effect Rock~· Louna.r• ·
·with S~on ..,...hergllde"

I 11\\1 '- I 1'1'111'
,\ I I\ I :-. I I II 1,

7- Loat and Found
8-- Public Sale &amp;

Work
and Plumbing

Using Jhe Cla5sifitds
Is 115 Easy 115 ...

padded and

DUSTIN NASH

lonJ.

Giveaway
Happy Ada
Lo..t and Found

Addition•

' Another Sunday Buffet at

are announc:inJ the birth of their
son, Duedn ,Alan, on Jan. 22 at
Holz« )todicll Celller.
.
: He "ioahe,d six pound• and
ellht ounc:11 and was 20 inches

Ann ouncemenU

CAR~ENTER

cushioned for super
comfortabllltyl ·

1'm1t lliCI Lori Nub, Pometoy,

3456-

YOUNG'S

Berkllne®
Contemporary
Recliner is plushly

For Sale or Trade

45- Fumilhed Room•
46- Spa« for Rent
47- W.ated to Rent

9-6·11

REG. ~49

r..;b &amp; Ye!elabieo

32- Mobile Homea for Sale
33--- Fum• for Sale
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days will be
M- Bwineaa Building.
charged for each day as separate ads.
35- Lo" &amp; Ae.....
~---------------~ 31&gt;- R..t ulalo Wanl&lt;d

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

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

\

Mwtcallndru~nenLI

$ .20
$ .30
$ .42
$ .60
$.05/day

Business Services

HOMEMADE CHICKEN &amp;
NOODLE DINNER
THURS., FEB. 13-4:00·7:00
Meigs High School Cafeteria
Sponsored by MHS Band
Booate11
•
Adu"s: '3.50 Children '2.00
Berkllne• Reclining Rock·A·Lounger• with
TouchMotlon• "Feathergllde" mechanism!

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$13.!il
$1.30/day

GET REStJLTS - FAST!

667-Cooi..;U,

the Daily Sentinel, re.chirll over 18,000 home•

l

15
15
15
15
15

Rate , Over 15 Words

Meigo County Mason Co., WV

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

.

Many pany leaders believe his
comments about the draft for the
Vietnam War being "illegitimate"
will damage his candidacy, particu·
larly in tile South, presumably his
base.
Harkin and Kerrey, who both
served during the Vietnam War,
moved quickly to capitalize, but
focused on Chnton's latest statements, not on his position on the
draft, reflecting the ambivalence
Americans feel about that tumultuous period.
Kerrey, a disabled Vietnam veteran and Medal of Honor winner,

Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 3 04

for error• firtt day td runt in paper). CaU before 2:00 p.m.

Our Entire
Stock Of
Berkline
Recliners Is
Now On Sale

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATJON
1 :00 p.m. Saturday
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

Words

1
3
6
10
Monthly

Clauified pages cover rhe
following telephone exchanges ...

• Receive di.eeount for adt paid in advance.
• Free Ad.: Civeaway and Found ad. under 15 wonl. will be
run 3 day• at no charge.

'

1

me

tem."

"It's just the Democrats," Bush
said of the vote, while he toured a
plant in Hookstead, N.H. His
spokesman, Marlin Fitzwater, said
Democrats "put the party on record
as being against economic stimulus
and economic growth.'.'
Rejection of tile slimmed-down
Bush plan was not enough for
Democrats. They demanded that
Bush's full proposal, including
some tax increases to help finance
it, be put to a vote. By a 22-14
vote, tile committee sent the bill 10
tile House floor witllout a recommendation.

Days

Berkllne• Reclining
TouchMotlon• "Feathergllde" mechanism! ·

said, "I dO mink I have an obliP,;
lion to say I'm proud of my mili•
tary service . ... I think it's for
rather 10 say, 'Governor Cilnton,
can I trust your record ... ?'" ·
.
The Clinton draft controversy,
"just again' raises another question·
as to his veracity of character,'!
said Harkin, who has embellishe4
his own military record by saying
he was a pilot in Vietnam, when he
really ferried damaged jets for'
repairs in Tokyo.
:
Kerrey's new ad promotes birn
as the Democrat with the best
chance against President Bush in
the fall.
As for Kerrey, Harkin said the
Nebraskan's plan to reduce nonentitlement federal spending by 25 .
percent "would deeply cut programs essential to millions of
Americans.''
The Clinton draft controversy
and the unsubstantiated tabloid
alle¥atidns about an extramarital
affatr- which 'CiiniOn denies have thrown the Democratic presidential race in10 disarray just five ·
days before the New Hampshire :
primary.
·

The letter appears to conform
with Clinton's earlier accounts of
what happened with his draft status
and deferment- but not with why,
raising new questions about his
motives.
Clinton has said he pve up his
deferment after anguishmg over tile
issue and deciding it wasn't right.
In his letter, he says he was troubled about not going, but also gave
up his deferment "ID maintain my
political viability within the sys-

•The Area's Number I ·
Marl{etplace

1

Birth is announced

for "saving him from the draft,"
and explained his decision to back
out of an agreement to join the
reserve officers' training program.
Clinton released the letter
Wednesday after he received a
copy of it from ABC News, who
said it was obtained from another
University of Arkansas ROTC
recruiter.

~

· ··· - ~' "'""'

BERKLINE®
RECLINER

Fool around with the government and you're sure to get turned
off- but quick.
Personally , I'm fuming.
Through Sen. Jan Long, I received
in me mail an Ohio Attorney General Lee Fisher official "consumer
complaint" form-this is a delailed
and completely inappropriate form
for the situation. The form was
sent as the result of a note I sent to
Sen. Long reque~ting some _explanation as to why gasohne pnces m
Meigs County often run 20 cents or
more per gallon than places like
Lancaster and Columbus. How
does me form relate to the request?
It doesn't.
I suspect the form-and if you
wrote to Sen. Long, you're probably gonna get a form 100--«iers a
lot of people from following
through with their complaints.
Who has time or the patience to
hassle with the form and why
should one have to do that 10 get an
explanation on whY. the price differences exist? lsn t that typical of
government today. You knowsend the complainers a form to fill
out, that'll stop 'em. And the
excuse that nothing is done, of
course, will be mat we didn't com plete form A67BC93-YU-2000-13.
Not necessary at all as far as I'm
concerned . If there's a simple
explanation to the gasoline price
situation, let's hear it WITHOUT a
form.
I have deposi!OO the unrelated,
inappropriate form in file 13.
Remind me tile next time ID accept .
me inevitable and not expect from
government any logical ex planat.ion for any circumstance facing :
me.
Attomey General Lee Fisher is,
by tile way. the official who this
week brought a $650,000 lawsuit
again Ricart Fora. According 10
the account I read, Fisher had

sion Wednesday night for the second time in a month, trying to
quash another controversy jeopardizin~ a candidacy thai topped tile
poUs JUSt weeks ago.
The , Arkansas governor
appeared on ABC's "Nightline"
after releasing a 1969 letter in
which he thanked the head of the
University of Arkansas ROTC unit

8.99 ' :II

I .
I
.L

Tom Harkin launched new campaign ads and Harkin, fresh from
his homes tate victory. left New
Hampshire to stump in Maine.
Former Massachusetts Sen. Paul
Tsongas, leading in the, Granite
State polls, held fund-raisers in
BoslDn but otherwise took tile day
off.
Clinton was on national televi-

Democrats writing middle-class tax relief

Pizza Feast

FIVE GENERATIONS· Sarah Congo of Racine, wbowUI mark
her 90th birthday on March 8, became a part of a five generatioD
family with the birth in 1990 or her great-great-granddaughter,
Amber Conley. Tbe family consists of, from left, Lee Conley,
father of Amber, being held by her grandmother, Barbara Conley,
with Icy Dailey and Mrs. Congo. All reside in the Racine community. Mrs. Congo is currently a patient at Overbrook Center.

Candidate Clinton defends Vietnam conduct
BEDFORD, N.H. (AP) Democrat Bill Clinton is trying ID
put a Vietnam draft controversy
behind him but.is drawing new fire
from rivals sensing an opportunity
to move up in the final days of the
New Hampshire primary.
Less than a weel(before next
Tuesday's leadoff primary, Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey and Iowa Sen.

Domino's Knows
You'll Low Our
Pepperoni

2MEDIUM
PEPPERONI PIZZAS
AND4 COLAS

The Dally .S entinel-Page 8 .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Clll)

4·26-tl

~------------~~~
\

·'

�Ohio

0-The n•llv Sentinel
SNAFU® by

Announcements

Dna~ Bottle

11
Help wanted
AVON got In on tilt g'""nd floor
of Avons ntw taming atructurt •.
t.SOO.I92-835&amp;.
Coornotologlot NMdod: Gouran·
tHCI $flU PO&lt; W11k, Paid
Vacations, Callet4-44f.7287.
-lblo $400, WMk Stuffing
Envotopu At Homa,Clel CrodR

3

Announcements
Mtot Slngtea: Ouyo • Qlrls. 1·
1100_.01-1004 U.llllmln. Muot
Be Ov0&lt; te, ~onpalolrvlne CA.
Unaltacl\ed? MNt lru Slngln

Throuah Our SfngiH Newllt.l•

C.rda, LDina Even With Bad

ltr. Ylrlte: Singlet, P.O. Bo1

Crodlt or No Crodh. Ruoh noo
Solt.AddmHCI SCami&gt;Od Envet- 1110 To: D&amp;A SuJIIIIIos,
Box1443, Folrbom,OH 4532~.
WE'LL PAY YOU For Eaoy

1043, Golllpollo, Ohio 45831.

4

Giveaway
B01utllul S - Blacll Cat Very

Friendly, To Good Mom•

Tabulating Work From Homt!

side Pot Only. About 1 Year Old,
614-2!16-1793, Loave Meougo.
Black &amp;while dog to gtv..wey.
304-87S-1118.

lld

m

Are Slack. 6~4 ·245·5986.

Mlli!rd Ducks to a good home,
lor use u pets only, 614-992-

malnt1lned

firm. 304-17!1-W7.

e2,000ml

Locally

W•U.

owned

33 Farms lor Sale

$5,1100 or boat ottar 614·446-7&amp;04
1886 Toyota MR·2, now point •
epttd l'llld tlrat, very aaod

C58 acrtt ' bllwun Kanawha

cond, red, 15,000. 304.SM331
boloro 10:00 PM.

34

1867 Chivy Nova: high ;:r:lloo,
nMds re~ir. Good tr~~ns
•

River and Rl. 62, 304-675-8979.
Business
Buildings

tlon e~r. Reduced: 11.
more lnlormatlon Call
2342, Ask for Paul.

For Salt: Commercial Building

()

Part Terrier/ part Pomoronlon,
m•lo, 2yro. old, not good with

8

Two 6 mo. old malt puppitt,
part
Lab
&amp;
Norwegian
E. lkhound. 304-67~35 .

Rick Pear10n Auction Company,

chlklran, 614·742-2754

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction

11

II

a:oo !2l
D (I)
aJI Newl

• Fot

614-4~

1&amp;87 Dodge Shelby Shldow

PSI

Evenings &amp;14.Q92·6125.

I'M 14AVIN6 TROUBL.E IN
SCHOOL AGAIN , Cl-lUCK .. DO
YOU HAVE AN'1' SU66E5T!ON51

dolly. Call 1-!100-976-7377

DO YOUR HOMEWORK .DOth
SLEEP IN CLA55 ..AND NEVER
TR'( TO 61VE A REPORT ON A
BOOK YOU I-IAVEN'T READ ..

[ ~ATE TALKING
TO '1'00, OWCK

Dog:

Whitt

Situation
wanted

(l) WHd

i

Help Wanted

full tlmt auctioneer, · comp\111

Alo

alng1r

nMdld

for

"Reftoctlons Trio". P1MH rootw
to At. 2 Box 314-B, Lotart, WV
25253.
Yard Sale
7
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Excetltnt
Poy,
11enoms,
407412,.1117.
ALL Yard Silas Must Bt Paid In Tronoportatlon,
571. Da.m.-10p.m. Toll
AdVJnct. DEADLINE: 2;00 p.m. Eat.
Rotundod.
tht day betore thl ad Ia lo run.
Sunday edlllon • 2:00 p.m. AVON I All Arou I Shl~er
Friday. Monday edition • 2:00 Spor~ro, 304-87S-14211.
p.m. Saturday.

Merchandiser To Stack &amp; lnvantory In Two Loc:al Slor11; Approx 8 Hrt Par MONTH. 1o80G-

Pt. Pleasant
&amp; VIcinity

818·5796, Coli 10A.M• 3P.M.

Moving Salt: turnltura, anti·
ques, lays, dlstln, 304-875-

6979.

Laborers Wanttd
Earn to $!181, will train, plect
work also by coni111CI, 1-800-

221-8141

SCIIAM-lm ANSWIIS
~ -••
Grotto - Waxen -Jerky - Digest - WORKING
Young man to coworker, "I used to wonder if 1could
afford to gel married, now I wonder if 1 can get along
without a WORKING wife!"
·

.4

BRIDGE

Ntwlllottr

NORTH

tAKJ 102
+K943

IDe E~nment Tonight

PHILLIP

OMic&lt;l~rD
1Z11 SportiCente'r

ALDER

SIBreo. C

aMoniJIIne
a)TheWeHona
7:06 (I) Addama Fldllly
7:30 (2) D aJ1 JIOfllt"CWI []
(J) NBA Balkllbllll C11fcago
Bulls at New YQrk Knlcks (L)
rn Ente!JIInmem Tonight

rJDTiflNG fO! Mf,

Patient Sarvlca Aulatant, tpproximately 20.2!5hrs. per WHk,
must bt energttlc 1nd eblt to

work tltxlblo schldutolncludlng
day, evening and Saturday
hours. Mtdical offici IX•
partenca helpful, will train mature, r..pon~lb't ptrtOn who It
atneltiYa to birth control and
roP"oductivo hatth nelldo ol

TI"'AN/C.f ·· · I'M
Farrn Suppl tes

Will do flooring lnllallatlon &amp;
,.ptlr, ruaonatilt prlc1, 13 yrs

oxp. 304-87S-5m or 675-8177.

Will Do In Homt Nuralng Cart.
ctltnte. Muot bo well organl1od1 Have
Rtftrtnc•. 614-446=-4441.
accurate with tlgur11 ana
rocord kolplng, hiVI 1-'"&lt;

61

communication 1klll1, mUll bt
able to wortc undlr guldtllna

wllh minimal aupervrelon. Atquirts reliable transportation,
ability to work In Melga, Gtlllt,
Lawrence Countlea and othar
11111 It needed. Tlmt and out of
county travel paid. Start $!5.50.
Send resume and two empJo)l·
mant rtftrtncn 10 Planned

or 675-8177.

Financial
----------------

Poronl'-&lt;1 of Soulheaot Ohio, 21

Business
OH. 45701 by Fobruory 16, 1992,
Opportunity
EOEIESP
INOTICEI
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
3M Richland Avtnut, Athena,

14x7o With Expando, 1 112
Baths, Rt. 141, 2 Mile1 From Gal·
II polls, 614·446-4824.
2 bedroom all etec, Ashton
Upland Rd, Hud accepted, 304·

675·4088.
2br MobiJe Home, Atfertnctl,

And Oaposlt Noldld. 614-3677866.
2br Untumlshld Located On sR·
recommend• that you do butl· 588, $225 Ptuo Utllltloo, Coli &amp;14nHI wflh peoplt you know and 446-3968 After ep.m.
·
NOT lo ttnd money through the
mall until you have lnv11trgattd late model mobile hom,, bath
and halt, Sand Hill Rood, 304lha otfarlng.
675-3834.

Real Estate

PlN down EXTRA

31 Homes tor Sale
2 brick hornet, 4 miltl out At.

62, 304-417519111.

3 Unll Rental, Situated On 1!2
Aero L.othMalntanance Fra~ Ex·

Ci\8H?H ·

Farm Equipment

4020 JD Tractor, Loader, $1,950:
Lite Model 4000 JD, $U50;
Long 460 Dl-1 Tractor, i!iuoh

Will hlulancUor aur,ply labor lor
various Jobs, pay 1 negotiable,
304-875~277

1978 Jnp CJ5, new ·top, 53,000 ·
mllet,local owntr, 304-675-1264•.

Mobile homt for rent, $22!.
month 1100. depoalt, unfur-·
nlshed, 304-67S.1137 after 8:00

PM.

Homes For Atnt:
Raferanc:e And Dapaall R•

Mobile

qulred. Call Mer 614-448.0527

aher 2 p.m. ·

~

I04-i32·7U70, 614-367-G649.

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

~~;;rnu;~;;;;;;:p;;;;~j
~
yu
And Thla Down.

redec:oraltd,
W/0
hook..up,
Pomeroy, 614·992-6886 ahtr

&amp;pm
2br Ctoon, Applloncos Water,
lmmodlato Avollablllty, Clooo To
Shopping, Kanauga, $230/mo.
Plus Deposh. &amp;t4-2U.I2JII.

Mobile Homoo, UH
Rotund. 50 Hornu To p_h_o~!
Et... Homo Cantor, 1-800.589- BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
5710·
ESTATES1 _ 531 Jockoon Pike
tHI Boron 12x65, 2br, 2 AC, from $19&lt;!mo. Walk to shop &amp;
Underpinning, Wllhlf, Dryer,

1hm you,. du l.ler into cash,
Sell it tire easy way••• by pltone,
JW n.eetl to letwe your home.
J•lace youl' dassilied ad tmlay!
l5 wonls m· less, 3 days,

movlea. Call t14-448-2!ia8. EOH.

Relrlaerator, Stove, Part Fum., Comploll• Furnlah·• Smoll
Cloocf
Condltlont 614-446·2871 Houoe, $250/mo.
•
"" Utlllllul
•n
Plus
Beds, t.lc. · lnturanct And
~ er 5p.m.
And Deposit. &amp;14-446.0338. Cal Medlc:are
Acc:a&amp;:o,d. Call Advan·
1173 14x70 Fairmont mobllt Befort 7p.m.
·
laQI H..flh, 1
588·1020,
home. Rtmocltlld. Nlct kitchen.
Thi'M btdrocJM. $6000. Call Furnished aflk:l~ncy apartment Surplus arm~ Clmflluge, denim,
304·773-SHB.
with kltchenetto and both. C.rhlrt, rutal clothing. Jr.

'·

3 papers,$6e00

t9111 Sunnybrook 14x70 mobile
homo, made by Hollypark, 2
bedrooml, 1 blth w/gtrdtn tub
• ehowtt, ftrtplacel all electric.
outoldo dock Inc udod, very
good cond, 304-1175-3471.
t167Ctoy1onRidgowood, 3BR 2
full bathe, porttellr lum'od. Now
on rontod lot. l14,.4&amp;-te47.
1D67 PlnocrMk 14xlll, 2 bod·
1 bath, tout elec, hill

Deposit

and

referenctt

qulrad. No pols. 614·448-49111,

rt·

I IZH camOIUQI, Sam Someo
rvllle'o since 1H4 boaldo San-

ap~rtment . Newly dyville Poll Otilce; Jackaon
WV. I mllol EUI ~77.
dtcoraltd. Rtftranct, daposlt. County,
RovenlwoQd. F~, Sa~ SUn,
No poll. 304-675-5162.
nooH:OO I'll. Ot..,
Jar
Elllcloncr, apt. tor ront 1 boaulltul hour11 cell 304-273-11111 .lloloN
:~ ~cecouch onabor,304- "11:00 AM. (Union modo Polltlcai-

Effrclancy

•ro.

4

Buolnea S,.OiaiKiol-llatchoa).

Fumlohld 3 Roomo And Bath
Upatal ... , Ct11n, No Pita,
Reftrenc• And Deposit A;..

55

Building

supplies

qulrod. 614-448·1518.
.
alumn tiding, 12x20 front
Block, brick. _., alpn, wln1,,.......,, 304-578-21f9 aflor &amp;:00 Fumlshld Apartment, tbr, next dowo, llntoto, otc. CiaUdo Winto Library, parking, central holt, tore, Rio Orondo, OH Call 11+
air, reftrtncu~ 614-448-«1331 245-612l
Befort 7p.m. ,
1

Pets for Sale

9, _ __ _ _

'~------2 . - - - -- - '"----~-

2263.

79

=ndeblo, V-B,

,100, 614-742•

AI.H"THIA.JG ..

=.,....,.,..,....,.--..;_~;_­

IJ Amt~c;an Mualc Shop

mlcrowavt,

(!I You flaked for It, Again

TV,

stereo,

5401.

"

81

WILt.. 'rOL..II-\El..P ME
REHEiAI&lt;'OE? MY~
R:)RlHESCI-ICOL PLAY'i

otc;4.Y, WHERE '10U

[X)N'r

ALL 'IOU HAVE:lO
CO te L.COK AT 1--$
ADORINet...Y.

NEeD

~MY

L.INEe...

LINES'i

'

you In the year ahead . send 10/ Aquartua' Aatro-Graph predictions today by
mailing $1 .25 plus a long, self-ad·
dressed. ttamped , envelope to ABtroGraplf, 'c/.o this ntWipeptr, P.O. Box
91428. CIMand, OH 44101·3428. Be
aura to otalo your ZOdiac: sign, ,
PIICII (Feb. :Ill" ch :1111 You mtghl
not be too lUCky inltterlally today, but
who cal'lltl? You'll make up for thlt deli·
cit In what rtllly count&amp;: love.

.

~llritll Mlnllllnt

ln(o"h

U
tho.:WIIh wiiOm you•,.lfMIIM,

~, ,

. . _, j

• '

•

. .. . "' ....
.

\

anowm1n

Bt Ill
Cry of pain
Difficulty

.

Tar~blt

,.,Aword--

20- pool

21 Superlallvo
IUIIIX
22 Dofttt
25 AdYiriiiY
28 Telk back to
(II.)
29 Anlmal'o
otom~eh

33 lllumlnatto
35 Actrt.. Gerr
36 lnttr - :
emong
olhoro
37 Lto'o aon

Anawtr to Pmrlouo Puulo

39 Attention·
gtttlnQ
oound
40 Duckllke bird
42 - Kopltal
43 Come forth
46 Tltlck milt
49 Chemical
lUff! I
50 Baakat
willow
Sol Of high lnlor· .

..,,.,..

57 Fill
58 Cul·pllc:t
dNI
• 59 Sltndlr
plnn~elt

60 Concolta
6f Author
Gordner
62 Swift llrcrall
(abbr.)
63 NegiiiYI
command
(cont.)

DOWN
1 Sac

2 Divorce
capllel
3Rit·-·4 Strength
5 Short-llwtd
roohlon
6 Tonlohow
7 Wlpoo
8 Aclr01o

ONIWI

~==Q
A1Mni0 IW Stereo.
a~.,::'si.eo.
Ill "*" l0111g11t .
.

s•

Ill llanllltown Slerao' Q .

1t:30(i) tcollll
·

I.

of ' ~ ~
,irtnlftli. ~
I

....._

c

Cl).laftn MCLaughlin'• One

.. . on

on.

.

'
.

UE~arou~
'82
D
WiniW Glmtl.
=~ tlalll Millie lhciP

'I C U

t11e

.

A Jl •H W J 0 ll

. I~~
. . . . Jill

a.o.

1

(n the

,.

*11&amp;~::
''

F

ETFPil7

F

LMJ I Y

ZFLK

J .I 0 W ; F 0 L W N P M T U • '

Plliii(OOKK
IFZZFWIIO •.
PRIVJ&lt;iOS SOLUT!ON; "Without lilY gl-. I'm no loi1gor Aobtrt Q.
Lftll. I '"JCOr'M1.... tort 01 a ..... VlctQr Jary," ~ Rollort Q. lftiL ·'·

,c.-·

.
(i) CIIMit 0 '

y F y

I'

11:31(1). ill TwtWIIIIIow

==~~=-~-c:a
x:::r)rr;~:u.-r:abr~
nat fll'ill tlllkt your dly -~bul flld; . .Mgealll Plf'JDII. EwYOM •

•

·

Robertllllt
10:30(1) WellltlnQton·Rtport
. a1 Crooll and Chait
1i:ooCile (I) Clle 111 oe

LEO (Jtllr 2S-At10. 221 Others, apt to be
very conlllderale of your personal
needs today, might offer you a·sslstance
wllhoul needing to be asked . Reinem·
bel' to shO'fl proper gratitude.
YIIIQO (Atif, ....,._ 22) One of your
major.-. today Is your natural ablli1y to lngratllto yourself wtth lndl'llduals
who ale Important to you In both your
w-t and futur'e plana. Just be
yourMII.

m•n•

, . •

clubs, South would show a second suit,
. bid no-trump or raise diamonds.
North's four no-trump is RKCB an~
the five-heart response shows t~ key
cards (two aces, which is the situation ·
here, or one ace and the club king)
without the club queen.
.
South won trick one with dummy's :
heart ace. He drew trumps, played a ·
diamond to dummy's ace, cashed the
diamond king, discarding a heert, and
ruffed a dtamond in hand. With the 4-3
break, the band became easy. ~lor­
er played off the spade ace, ruffed a :
spade, ruffed a diamond, ruffed a·
spade and discarded the heart queen:
on the established diamond jack.
•
1!&gt;---~~~•m••=-

il~":.!i

In soCiallnvol-11. If polllblt. pill) . day. Thla 9011lij be due to the fact that
an acti'IIIY 11 your place where frleildl Lady Luck will be al your dlspoaal just
can ef110Y your wermth and hOipltiJity. · when 'yoU nMd her the mOlt .
TAUIIUI (April :11J.111J :Ill) LadY Luck ICOIII'IO (Ool.ltl-llo¥. 121 Signlftcant
tend1 to Javor yoU today In endllvon hopel'l\aw 811 excellent ~ of bethat heW an o(ement bl CIIIMCI. II you lng lulflllld at lhll ltrnl, p;ovided you
1w1 111ft •IGIMtlllna of a !ll*ll~ltivo are not tao ltructuNd. CIIII1C8 """" be
~that (OOU promlllng, I CIICUII1• !rea to awtllllnftutnet.
ectrtek f'llillld be In order.
·
IAGITTAIIIUS (llltl. :a Dao. 21) Joint
(lllr lt.....~you·,. ap- ...,tu.... look quite promillng for you
.,at~n~ CJ11 flmllllr turf
, you !*lid today. ' - your -ay on the pert·
be IliON fortunate lhllt
In genii· nlrlltlp IIIII offwa you 1111 or-t•t poa.
1111111 aulltllntiel glint. The- might llbllltlal far ~nollre tru1t 1n untriiCIIr-.
cQmc Qmt (Dio. ......., •1 Your

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156 "

. L------~---­

Ill 700 Club With Pal

:=~= =~~~ i;':C:! ::":IJ&lt;::·.::=~~o;':,l:~~~

11 •.- - - -- -

Opening lead: • J

(J)UndtrFI,.

'
·'

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

•

Pass
Pass
All pass

Pass
Pass

Ill MOVIE: Polttrttllt (POi
(2:30)
(I) (JJ!:rnenme Live
Stereo. ·
crJ Adv w..a of Rollin .
Hood

..U.: _., 11110:

~:~lb:.O

Eut

Pass

(!) NeWI

Ron'o TV Stlvlco, ljllclolillnG•'
In Zenith el!ro -'lclna IIIOil'

Pluinblng &amp;
Hutlng

13
14
15
16
18

a

1

82

1 SIUII
5 Communlctllonugcy.
8 Sholltioh
12 Abomlnabto

e

=-""a~.i.~·n~;
Roger .li: 814-4
•

o4hlr brlnda.

ACROSS

Stereo.
9:00 (2)
aJ1 Ch"ra Rebecca
tries to prove she Is able to
run the ~ by hersell.
Stereo. Q
crJ (J) Myateryl Polrot
discovers lhe political
stabili~
· of his counlry is at
stake.
I!] CD vtrty H... 90210
Mel proposes to Jackie;
Brenda and Oylan ptsn a
special evening. Slereo. Q
0 MOVIE: Amlzlng Stori81:
The Movie 'IV (2:00~
Ntlhvllle Now lareo.
8 Lany King Live
9 Fathtr Dowling Mylterltl
Stereo. Q
9:30 (2) D aJ1 Wlngl Chssrs
regulars Frasier and Lilith
Crane visit to film a video.
Stereo. C
1Z11 ColitGt Sell&lt;etbll
Temple at Memphis State (L)
10:00 (2) D aJI L.A. Law
Markowitz arranges 1 movie
star's taxes; Kelsay dates
the baby sttter. Stereo. Q

MORTY MEEl{LE AND WINTHROP

3+

IVett

The World Almanac® Crossword Puzzle

Stereo.

AC, ,

meny axtru, Si,OOO. 304-175-

Caller'• Plu_r!JoJng
Fourth and Plno

y ....

1

·~ ,.,. You Being Served?
I!] • Drextll'l CIIH Otis Is
happy about his ex-wire's
~is ion to remarry. Stereo.

oome ot&gt;Dttenco ....,... wv,
304-I11-2SU Oh~ 1~2154. 1
1182 Sulek Perk Avonoll, 4dr.,
Hdln, bNutlfut tlmltr car, ax· Devto
Sow·VIC
Sorvloo,
collant, 12100, will pay tax • II· au~ Crttll Rd. P.,.._ ,.,.
lie, &amp;14-192-8718
~-::kup, ond doiiYOfY. 1!41812 Trln!"~ Low mlltago.
1113 ChoYII1•. Qood Condition,
A~.
· ,~} ... ~
~.L-' 1 - 3 .
114-448-73n AftO&lt;Ip.m.

1 1 . - - - -12 . _ _ _ __
4-·-- - -....,.,----r..
1.1 •. _ _ _ __
·'··----------------------6._._ _ _ _ __
.14·. _ _ _ _.,...._
7. ___________ 15..._______

NAAOJAL LOTTER:r'
llUICE A Wf£1&lt;..

Gc&gt;IA.X.3 10 .'.O'.V£

Caii114-14H1VI

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

oa
a

CamperS &amp;
Motor Homes

Home
Improvements
mU•, 1'111'Y option, IOUChem
car, $4600. l~m.1Ht KIWHOkl
BASEMENT
750 L'i6, 13,000 mllol, llko ,_,
WATERPROOFING
$12,000. 11Jl!t Suzuki m cc dirt
blko $~. 304-47H438 oHor Uncondhlonal 111otlmo gua,.,. ·
tM. Local roloroncn turnllhod. :
1:00.
FIN ntlmatn. Coli cottoct 1·'
tm Oldomobllo Cuttuo, ~.ooo 814-237.(1488, day or night. '
!Jrlalnal Mllll, 350 Rockot, 4 Rogoro BoHmont WotorprooSerio! Carborotor, Excellent tlng.
Condltlonl $4,000. 114-441-11103. Complllo Mobile Homo Sol'.upe ·
tm Impels, Good lntettor, Ror1lre; Comm1rlca1, An~
Runo Qood, $200, 080, Mull tla lmprovomonta. Including:
Soli, ·eaR t2:00p.m. ·And Plumbing, Eltctr~al. lnaurenca
4::JOt!.m. 614-448-818&amp;.
Claims Ai:cop4od. 814·258-1&amp;11. ,
1976 &amp;1179 Dodga Magnum Curtlo Homo lmprovemonli; •
part1 wanted: buy, 1tll or trade, YNro E1portonce On Older • '
lrom 1-plecl to 1 complltt ·car, Ntwer ~· Room AddiUone, ~
114·11411-2883
FOII!Idotlon Work, Roall!!tl •
Khc~ And Bathe. FtM ~ ;
11178 Pontile Oran P~x. 301
tlmetMI
- · - No Jolr To i
Motor; Rebuilt 350 Tranomll- Big Or SooioHIIM-441.-.
alon, Aoklng $1,000 But Will
Notrotlato. Cill 304-675-5227 AI• Froa~Plumbing And 1111~ :
tO&lt;lp.m.
~~:·~~~~W~tt~------ ;
1110 Chlve&lt;oltt Caprice Cia'"

1181 Iuick Electro goDd ahapa,

Winter Oame1 Figure
skating, men's short
program; alpine skiing,
women 's slalom combined;
freestyle skling...hockay, USA
vs . Finland (T) .,.
.
I!] m Tho Slm~o Mrs.
Krabappel places a personal
ad, and Bert &amp;"~swers lhe
letters. Stereo. ~
Murjl1f. ~1),! ... rote Q
On 8tage o ereo.
PrlmtNtWI Q
D Thll'l My Dog Stereo.
1:30 (2) D aJI Dlfle,.nt World A
Hillman alumnus pays special
p~~ention to Whitley. Stereo.

1981 Mollord 5th whHI wl1h '

71 Autos tor Sale

tic,. 4dr., Mdan, tX11'1 aharp,
IXC. cond., 305 Y-l, _$11801 114·
1192-1711
'

Stir Stereo.

I.,.

Soatb
The Blackwood ace-asking conven·
tion was devised in 1933 by Easley
Blackwood. After a slow start, it was
adopted worldwide, remaining virtu·
ally unchanged for 50 years. Then
someone decided it would be useful to
include Lhe king and queen of trumps
in the responses, and Roman Key Card
· Blackwood was developed.
Almost all experts have taken up
RKCB, but the drawback is that the
trump king isn't equivalent to an ace.
To try to clarify the potential probterns, Eddie Kantar has written "Roman Key Card Blackwood, the Untold
Story" (Granovetter, $8.95, 800·8?2·
2081).
As Kantar expected, I didn't agree
with everything in the book, having
my own "improvements." BuL Kantar
has some excellent ideas that I hadn't
conSidered before. Also, there are 30
pairs of htnds on which you .can test
the convention. Today'sdealshowstbc
last of Lhese.
South's Lhree·club rebid guarantees
at least a six-card suit. With only five

~ The AalrOnomera Stereo.
~ 1!2le XVI Olympic

I

Services .

1971 Chrytlor 48,000 ICIUOI
mil•, 4 dOar, 110 co""- $2,300.
firm. 19111 CoMito 54,000 actuot

~~

a

A "fl.\REE NVMBE.R

tl
+AJ8H2
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

By Phillip Alder

Florida State at Virginia (L)
Cnoaaflre
7:35 (I) NBA Baakatball Atlanta
Hawks at Miami Heel (L)
8:011 (2) D aJI Coaby Sl1ow [] ·
(J] Cllll Columbo Columbo
visHs a sex therapist who he
suspects of murder. Stereo.

-rt•;x (lJfS AREIJ'f

tQJ0973
.K42
t765
+Q6

.Q9~

The new form
of Blackwood

1Z11 College Baakelball

EEKANDMEEK

EAST

SOUTH

aJie Family FAUd

a Ia I

~go:ood:::-:::,3:.:04~·.::675-~33::2:.:4:.:.------:.

Ice Parlor Table &amp; Ch1lr F01

Sate, 114-448-8720.
Ladlol Qenulno L.Ntlter Coeto,
Sl,. 14, Tobocco Color; l.ldiH
Blue L.Nthar; Ladlol a-n
l.oalhor Jocko~ SID 12; l.ldlll
Sin 10 Bluo Suldo; .tAdloa
Suodo Cape Ught Tan lbo 12;
Mtno Loathor .eo.to; All ......,.
$100 Exch. 422 Sacond Avenue,
Gallipolio.
-•II Suppllol: New And
UHd WhHichelra 3 Whlaled
Scooter•• LIHchalro, Electric

NtwaHour
Ill WhHt o Fom•nt Q

APVIJ'Of?.

1980 Dodge Snow Commander'::
Ram Charger 4x4 Blazer, has ,
hydraulic snowplow, ntra linll, ·
318 auto, PS, PB, rune 6 looks·

Hog, $4,450. . Pwnor Will 1987 Ford Bronco, Full Siz.e, 1·
Anance. 6M·288-6522.
Owntr, low Mileage, 614-441·
6JIIe.
.
Gravely gardtn trac1or w/all attachments, 304-875-6919.
74 Motorcycles
SWAIN
lnltmallonal Cub With Cui·
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 tlvotoro, Good Shepo, 614-446- 1987 Honda 4· whttler, good:
Olivo 91., Gelllpollo. Now &amp;UNCI 3498.
condition, aaklng 11100, 814·.
992·7467 or 614o'Jf2o3154 ask tor_.
fumhure, hNttl'l, Wuttm I
Form Equlprnent1 .SR. 35, Gary
w
W
·;;o;;rk;;boo::.::t::•·:,:81:;;4-44:...;;11-31:..::::":.·___ Jlm'o
Wnt Gallpollo, 114 ...1-1777;
Wide utoctlon ,_ l uHd farm
~5.:3_ _;,A:;.n.;,;t,;:lq:.::l,l;:e;:s:.,_,__ trw:t01'8 I lmplem1nt1. Buy, 75 Boats &amp; Motors
tor Sale
Bur or Hit. Rlvo~no Antlquoa, Nil, trade, I:OD-5:00 wMkd1~1,
1124 E. Mtln SCroll, Pomoroy. Sat. ~II Noon.
1983 C.Roy, 21 R. Cuddy Cabin,:
Hours: U.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 8:00 MF 285 Tractor, Sharpl S7,e50· Y·B, Excellent Condhfon, ln-.
p.m., Sunday 1:00 tq 6:00 p.m. 1t30 MF Tractor, $3,_950; 35 MF CIUdOI All Equipment, Call Alto!'
614·192·252&amp;.
•
Tractor, S2,H5. uwntr Will ep.m. &amp;14-446·1763.
'
Finance. 614·286-6522.
54 Miscellaneous
1985 15' ball boat, trailer. 55
Now Holland 457 hay bind 7 ft . HP Yamaha. Llvawtll, rodloclctr '
Now Holland Super 117 torogo storage, ptd, 111l1, extras. 304·
Merchandise
harvnt1r. Q.hl 95 grinder 875-1616.
. ..
.
6 Pl.ct Living Room Suite, In· ml11r. OU-ver 10 h transport
ctudtt Coucn, Chllr, Rocker, dloc. All good cond. 304·~73· For Salt: 17ft. Aluminum Canoe,
Cottu Table, 2 End TabiH, 2 4216.
Wonlld To Buy: 14 Ft. John
Matching Lampl, Very Oaod
Soot. 6t4·448-1759.
'
CondHionl $250. 614-441-0163, Uud btt ll.lppiiH, IXC cond,
614-446-7.171 After 5p.m.
comptlle hlv•, JUptrli, mlac. 76 Auto Parts &amp;
304-11714318.
Firewood tor ult: Oek ..h. &amp;
Accessories
hickory. DeNvlfod '-tly S40 a Wonted: Uood lann aqulpment
load or 3 lor $100.114-3117-7V13. envthlng you wont to Mil. c.tl =au-,d=aot~T=-,.-n-•m"'t'"..~tono--"',u"HCI....,.'""&amp; :
114-211-1301, - 0 after I rwbufH, otortlng ot SH; AIAo
Flrawoodet4-«N210.
Will Dett.er, C. II Aflwr :.;,;.;;....
p.m. _____________
5:00p.m.
Porto. 614-245-5877, 114-311- ,

Nice 14x70 Mobile Home, Near
Portar, Central Air, $2SOJmo Plua
collont S ope, 614-146-8568.
Security Deposit. 614-446-6169,
For Sale by Ownor: 2 chr tots1 3 614·446-6665.
!&gt;edroorn homt1, Iorge out btag,
Apartment
can'llflltnt North Point Elemen· 44
lary and City Rocr111ton Com·
ptox. Price roducod. 304-87Slor Rent
For ..... c ..n..ttc bod. good 63
Livestock
3278 lor appointment.
7
1·bdrrn opt. In Middleport, cond.,$&amp;50,I1WI2-3311
=2~Hoi:-.,..-::Tr
. ...olor::-::-.~~.,.Det:::-,u1-,-,'::$1115:::::-;
In town, two story, 111r11 btd· ullliiiOI turn, dop roq, ·no poll, For Sale: Good UHd Dooro, Ex· 11H AOIIA uotalng, YoiAh
rooms, full basernenl, 1·V2 batn, 614-992-2218
to~or Oool's And Patio Doaro, Horoe Of Tho Yur, f Sliver
altached 1·11'2 car garage.
Ctntral htal and air. Evenings 2 bedroom apts In Point Roasoneble Price, 114-441-2303. · Royal Show Sadcln, Brood
•
Call 814-446·6707.
Plaasant1 modarn1....~Ltan, Hud For Salt; Stara Water Dlstllltr, Marti. '*Z8M522.
Like New, $50. Call 114·388accoploa,
614-441·•"""·
Rlducod To Soli: $49,900,
Transportal ion
Choshlrt, Ohio. 904·932-6959, 2-bdrm, port tum apt, newly 11808.

~ MacNeiiP.ah,.r

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&amp; ltvestock

1-IJ.H

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Want to:

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Complete tho chuckle quotlld
by filling In tho mining worda
you dovelop frorn 110p No. 3 below.

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Employment Services
Help Wanted

I
19 I I I 8

PRINT NUMBERED
LETTERS

(J] lnoldo Edition Q
(l) Mac:N~eh,.r

15'1 Stcond Avenue, GaHipalll.

Lost: While Bird Dog Whh Black AVON • All arua, Call Marilyn
Spots, Reward OHtrtdl Vlc:inlly: Wuvor 304-Be2-2&amp;45.

Georges CrHk Road, GallipoUs,
614·446-2445, Ask For Paul.

8

Anttrlca C

Square One TYStoteo ..

~The JoHoreonUJ

Wanted to Buy

Portabla Aalrlgerator, Call 614·
446 ..a594 after 5 p.m.
Used Mobile Homtl, Call 614·

11

I

6 ,

L--1..--1..-1..--1..--L.--'

7:00 tj3jD 0 Wheat of Fortune

Lost: malt Blue Hea .. r dog,
Racine/ Pof11and at.a, 614·i4D-

II

~:35 (I) Andy G~lftth

Wool VIrginia, 304·773-5785.

Samoyad,

~455

1I

.. Andy Ortfflth
0 Scooby Doo
IZII Up Close
0 Zone Stereo. Q

With Or Without Motors. Call

Nam1 And Phane Number On
Conar, VIcinity: Kanauga/MIII
Cr.. k, Gallipolis. 614-446-95l5.

I

"My grandchildren came in
person to !hank me for the
1
L-J.....JI......L....J.....J
o holiday money I gave them,"
.--~..,.-.,......,,......,--·---. sighed the grandma, "on!¥
SA GERY
because I didn 't .... the ..... ,_·

a

Lorry Lively. 614-3118-9303.
Shoestring Ridge, Reward! 614· Top PrlcH Paid: All Old U.S.
441·0619.
Coins, Gold Rlng1, Sliver Coins,
Gold Coins. M.T.S. Coin Shop,
Lost : Brown, Whlt1 Spaniel
l:.ost

be-

1-_,.N_Y;,.;.K;,;.;K17,. ;I:1.,. .-1J~-~

~ rm:~: ~" Q .
IZ!IInaldt llli SeniOr PGA
Tour
World Today
0 Rln Tin Tin, K·9 Cop
stereo. Q
6:05 (I) Beverly HllbiUiea
8:30(2)D 0 NBC Newa ~
® SPed br ,.,. Ball
(J] CllD ABC New1

PB. Serlout lnqulrln only

Found: Small BrcwrJWhita mala 446.(1175.
9aaglt wlcollar I name ta11.
Very shy. Vicinity : Pennltl &amp; Wanted To Buy: Junk Autot

Blaeklord Rd . 614-379-2674

I AILSCI

a c•

(I) •

tho

low to (orm four llrnplo wordo.

~ Rudl~ Rain~ Q

CSX:, 2.2 Turbo, lnttrc:ooltd, S.

opaod, AMIFM cue., AC,

0 llearron;.
iotltrt . of
lour scrombllld. worda

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FEB.

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I))VIdaoPower
\Zj Square One TV Slereo.

,

aucllcn sarvlca. Llcanstd Ohio,

9

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........

'::~:ti~' s~~~lA-l&amp;t.trs·
14tto4
CLAY •• POLLAN __,;,._ _ __

EVENING

colnway, N. Auror11, lt 60542.

12

THf: WN.t., 1{()0 P 'A
fRI&amp;/-.IC&gt; TO ~ · \'00
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ffiRDU(,H ...

YOU'I!li D!»&gt;lll1116
OOI#fS,;.I.£T iff; ~
~lliiNu toll~ voo ...
..
/

LoadMf

mln/18 yr1
or write:
~$1.49
ASEE • 5178, 1111 S. Un·

"Eskimos have 25 words.for snow. Dad's
got 25 for when It snows!"

3090

985-4420

oplons.

+)

-

FrH Puppill Mothlr Rag_l ..
tered G~dtn Retriever, Pupplo

FOUNO. male, Walker Coon
dog, Pornero~ Pika area, 814·

all

The Dally Sentlnei--Page-11

Television
Viewing

·AAOVOUR ~N#J~T

I CAA56t

We'll pay you tor tlly tabulata
ing work from home! Up tp $106.

0234.

Losl &amp; Found

1986 lincoln Town Car

tiN Clntnvlltt. 14x7V, gas hNt,
3 !&gt;edroomo, fumlohod; $1,500.

•1

Couch To Giveaway, 614-441·

6

71 Autos for Sale

fpr Sale

And Lol In Eureka. Contact
Up To $106.00 Pold Dolly. Coli 1· Owner: 614·256-1243, After 8 P.M.
IIOO.f78·73T7 ($1.49 Min, te Yrs.
Or Write: PASEE • 33B, 161 S.
l ncolnway, N. A!JrOra, IL 60542. 35 Lots &amp; Acreage

For In·

BORN LOSER'

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

32 Mobile Homes

Ohio

Pomeroy--Middleport,

.Thursdavr·Februafy-,13,1992

1992

.
.

"
'

'

,.

·,

~.

:'"

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

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

7 p.m. at tbe Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy. Mrs. Bolin
will present a video and also
answer any questions pertainin~ to
AmeriFlora. The public is invited
to attend.

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs County 4-H Shepherd's Club will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at tbe Meigs
County Public Library. Anyone
interested in joining tbe club is to
invited to attend or call 949-2136
or 992-5~47 for information.

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

LONG BOTTOM - 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
tbe public.

CARPENTER • The Mount
Union Baptist Church will sponsor
a sweetheart dinner on Friday at'
6:30 p.m. in the new fellowship
building.

THURSDAY
POMEROY · The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Grace Episcopal
Chun:h. Bring a gift for an auction.
Vera Crow and Rose Sisson are the
hostesses. All members are urged
to attend.
POMEROY · There will be a
Valentine Social at tbe Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy on Thur.&gt;day 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 a11end and those auending arc
to bring snacks for the refreshment
table. A free will offering will be
taken for the musicians.
ROCK SPRINGS - The Rock
Springs Grange will meet Thursday
at 8 p.m. at the hall.
CHESTER - The Shade River
Lodge 453 will hold a regular
m ee ~ng on Thursday at 7:30 p.m.
Work will be in the FC degree.
Refreshments will be served.
POMEROY • There will be a
homemade chicken and noodle dinncr on Thursday from 4 to 7 p.m. at
the Meigs High School Cafeteria
sponsored by the Meig s High
School Band Boosters. Cost is
$3 .50 for adults and $2 for children . Dinner also include s
coleslaw, roll , dessert and drink.
TIJPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at
the pest home.
FRIDAY
TIJPPERS PLAINS · The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will sponsor a
dance on Friday from 8-11 :30 p.m.
at tbe pest home. Music will be by
CJ . and The Country G cn~ emcn.
POMEROY · The Meigs Widows Fellowship will meet for lunch
on Friday at 12:30 p.m. at Crow's.
POMEROY · Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter. D.A. R., will meet
Friday at I: 30 p.m. at Grace Episcopal Church in Pomeroy. Karen
Butts of the Ohio University ROTC
· 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.
LONG BOTTOM - The Faith
Full Gospel Church in Long Bottom will have a hymn sing on Friday at 7 p.m. featuring Jim Blair
and the Southern Gospel Aires.
Pastor Steve Reed invites the public. Fellowship will follow.
HOCKINGPORT - There will
be a Valentine round and square

dance on Friday from 8-11 :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.
.

SALEM CENTER - Star
Grange will hold a po~uck 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.
HENDERSON . The Gallia
Twirlers Western Square Dance
Club will hold a dance on Saturday
from 8-11 p.m. a~ the Henderson
Community Center. Billy Gene
Evans will be the caller. The dance
is open to all western style square
dancers.
WfLKESVILLE - There will be
a sweetheart dinner at the
Wilkesville Pythian Hall on Saturday at 4 p.m. Cost is $5 for adults
and $2.50 for children under 12.
The public is invited.
POMEROY - "Treasure Island"
and "What Mary Jo Shared" will be
shown at the Meigs County Public
Library in Pomeroy on Saturday
and Sunday at 2 p.m. and at the
Middleport Library on Monday at
4:30p.m.
POMEROY • The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance Club
will sponsor an open dance at tbe
senior citizens center in Pomeroy
on Saturday, Feb. 22 from 8-11
p.m. Dave Stuthard, Reynoldsburg,
will be the caller. All western
square dancers are invited .
Refreshments wiD be served.

Vol. 42, No. 198
Copyrighted 11192

EXTRACTING RESOURCES - Students in Chesler Elementary's first grade class recently conducted a week-long science lesson on coal. Here, Brandon Werry and Brent Buckley attempt to
"surra~ . mine" tbe chocolate chips from a cookie. In completing
I be actmty, students gained a better understanding or the diiTicullies associated wilb extracting a limited resource rrom the earth
and the potential for destruction.of the land. Eacb student set aside
some of their "extracted resources" for land reclamation. The
activity is from the Lead Teacher Project at Ohio University.
-

TRY IT ON FOR SIZE· Jessica Baker, a first grader at
Chester Elementary, tried on a miner's hat when Mike Fetty or
Southern Obio Coal Company visited the class. Felty made a film
presentation, sbn"':ed the students the equipment used in mining
and distributed coloring books and stickers. Also pictured are Carl
Brewer, Jennirer Thoma, Sonya Frederick and Mtehael .Long.

Ruritans to meet

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

The February meeting "of the
Racine Ruritan Club will be held at
Dale's in Gallipolis witb a sweetheart dinner al 6:30p.m. on Feb.
25. Members wishing to attend .
should call Ann Zirkle at 949-2031
or Mary Ballot! at 949-2343 by
Feb. 18.

446 4524

• . "'"'

" "" II J'&gt; ""( S1

lA~ lN "'YUlEE! SATUUI,YfSIJNDAT I I«&lt;NM~ .

T

IARGAtN NIGHT TU£SDAT.

~~, ,ICT UU ! fH' "'"

~~

COLONY THEATRE
TONIGHT

Dan

Buy One Seafood Dinner at the
Regular Price of $8 49 and Get
Second Seafood Dinner at
$2°0 Off (Includes Coffee or Tea)

Ia mil' Lee

Aykroyd

·

Curti~

..

Beauty..;d·;heBeast

On The Cornu At The Ught
RAVENSWOOD, WV.
13041 273-9031

,.,,,..,,., '' "'u n111 tiC IIIII "''"''"'''·'"r
•••~ •~~ .. , r..,.,

SPICW.IU.TINUS
SAt AND st*. AI t-oo P.M.
ONE MHING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSIONS l.SO

WINNERS IN WELDING • After tbelr
welding skills were evaluated atlbe vocational
education open bouse at Meias last nlaht,
awards were presented to four students reteiving the highest scores by tbe judging team •.Todd
Reitmire took r~rst and was presented a welding
helmet and other gifts, Keith Hunt, second, Matt

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall'
The resignation of Gordon Fishcr as varsity girls' IIllCk coach was
accepted and two aides and a
mechanic were hired at Thursday
night's meeting of the Meigs Local
Board of Education.
The meeting was held at the
Salem Center School in accordance
witb a board policy adopled in January which states that one or the
two meetings held each ·montb will
·be held in a school and lhe other in
the board's regular meeting rOom.
· Approximately a dozen parents
attended the meeting. A tour of the
building was included as a pan of
the meeting.

'
I'

.' ' ..

Appro•dmatety 88% o1 the
A£P liylltm't powt! """'
.-.. capac~~y 1t COli-fired,
It n.uclear and lhe
r.malnder 11 oll-llrtd or
t¥~oa 11 trlc. The Company

"'

' '

LOOK .FOR RED
HEART TAGS

FIRST COME
FIRST SOLD

lin ilylt8m
IOid. to p!OYidt lot Ill ttlecltvt

year.

-

EMPIRE LOVES THEIR CUSTOMERS WITH
FlEE DILIYIRY • FREE SET•UP
FURIIIURE LOVERS PRICES FOR FRID.AY
..... nLIP&amp; ·
SATUUIY I A.M. nL 5 P.M.
IIOIIAY I U. 111. 5 P&amp;
FIIAIC.I FOR EWIIY IUHit

142 , ••••••

Jlhene ••6·1
Gelll,.lh .
I

.

I.

•

Hired ai the meeting w~re Judy
Eblin, aide for tbe remainder or the
. school year at the Bra4bury-Mid·
dleport schools, and Carolyn
Nicholson, part-time aide at the
Pomeroy Elementary Schools for
the rest of the year.
Goeffrey Wilson was eqJployed
as a mechanic for the retna1nder of
the school year and Karen Lyons
was hired through a purchased services agreement to tutor a student
who is homebound.
Tlie board also approved the
transfer of Bill Greene under the
involuntary transfer artiCle of the
contract from a position of
mechanic to custodian.
Necessary actions were taken by

James W. Hayman of 333.00 · afternoon.
Hayman Road, Long Bouom,
Hayman is a Meigs County
announced today tbat he will seek native having served on the Repub·
\he Republican nomination to the lican Central C~mmittee for LeboJiln. 3 term of. Meigs County Com- nan Township until he resigned to
missioner in the May S Primary go to work at the Long Bouom
!llection. Hayman med his petition Post Office where is a substitute
of candidacy witb the Meigs Coun- carrier.
}Y Boord of Elections Thursday
He spent 23 years in the U. S.
Army and after retiring as a rust
serfeant, returned to Meigs County
in 986. He had two combat tours
of duty in Vietnam.
He is a life member of the Disabled American Veterans and the

... f*W1 ~ICI

btlltvtt that ill . coal IUPpilei ... llltqualt to enlble
Hto mttt the ll1liclpattd ellctrlc -slY .-qul.-ta Of,
ita cutiOintrt during the

Cook, third, and Todd Workman, fourth. Tbe
runners-up to Reitmire received !lfveral gifts
including jackets, welding gloves, bats, and safety glasses. Tbe program at Meigs is taught by
Richard Fetty and Kenaelb Eblin. (See story .
and additional photos on page li).

· Hayman eyes commission
· post oil Republican ticket

March 18. t98t .Ihe Company
hereby appriaes the public
or the state of electric supply
in hs service area.

"

year development that the Bush
administration is anxiously anricipating.
Economists believe the pickup
in economic activity will not ·be
accompanied by a rise in inflation,
in part because they are forecasting
that tbe recovery from the rcccssion will be one of tbe weakest in
history.
For all of last year, wholesale
pric~ actually fell by ~.I percen~
the first annual decline in five
years.

The pr:ce decline in January was 22.9 percent drop in the price of .
led by a 7 percent drop in gasoline eggs. Coffee, fruit and pork l'riees
prices. It was tbe biggest drop in were down as well but the pnce of
gasoline costs since last March and vegetables shot up 17.9 percent.
Outside of the volatile food and
followed a 1.6 percent December
decrease. Home heating oil prices energy categories, wholesale prices
dropped 10.9 percent following an rose 0.3 percent, an increase that
even larger 16.9 percent December ~as pac~ by a 1.5 percent increase
decline while natural gas and elec- mcarpnees.
Higher prices were also registricity costs posted declines as well
tered
for newspapers, women's
in January.
clothing,
soap and luggage.
Food costs fell for a third month
If
January's
0.3 percent decline
in a row, declining 0.3 percenL The
Continued on page 3
fall in food costs was led by a steep

CHARLESTON, W.Va., (AP)
-The exlnldition of aSwiss businessman to the United Stales could
help end a bitter, 15-month labor
dispute at a Jackson County alu·
minum plant, a union official said.
"I don't know whether he'll
resolve it, but I'm certain that his
activities and his involvement and
direction to some of tbe people he
sends to tbe negotiating table could
certainly change," said Jim
Bowen, director of United Steelworkers District 23.
The union contends multimillionaire businessman Marc Rich is
involved in decisions being made at
Ravenswood Aluminum Corp.
Rich is wanted by federal authorities to face 65 counts of tax evasion. Switzerland has no exuadilion
agreement with the United States.
··we've got 1,10.0 members
locked out, that's the problem,"
Bowen said. "We think he should
be involved in resolving this mat·
ter. We thinlt he certainly has control of the situation through a web
of ownership and exchanges."
More than 1,700 steelworkers

have been idled at the plant since
tbeircontractexpiredNov. l, 1990.
The United Steelworkers union
says its members have heen locked
out, while tbe company says tbey
are on strike.
The union alleges Rich controls
Ravenswood through otber companies and has funneled loans to tbe
aluminum planL
"He has constructed, because of
his indictment," a corporate structure thai we spent a full year unraveling and we stiU have questions in
our mind thai remain unanswered,"
said Joe Uehlein, director of special
projeciS for tbe AFL-CIO.
"Our contention is that Marc
Rich is in a position of control at
Ravenswood Aluminum," Uehlein
said.
A public hearing was held
~ed~y•.beiore the -Senate Judi·
Clary Committee 10 hear testimony
on Rich's alleged involvement witb
the company. Chairman Jim
Humphreys said he wanted to hold
the hearing before introducing leg~latictt that would limit a fugitive's
mvolvement in West Virginia cor-

porations.
R~venswood Aluminum, which
dechned to send any representabves to the hearing, denied in a letter Wednesday that Rich holds any
s~~ ~the company.
It s regrettable that one side
adop!-S the position they are ahove
pubhc accountability or responsibility to the government "
Humphreys said.
'
Humphreys said Rich's influence has contributed to tbe somebmcs violent dispute at the Jackson
County plant, where hundreds of
replaceme~t workers have been
hired.
"Marc Rich is an international
c~m~,al. ~·s a fugitive from jusuce, sa1d Humphreys DKanawha. "He owns Raven;wood
through front organizations thlit's
been established. ·
'
"That is manifested in West
Virginia in the ways and conduct of
Ravenswood Aluminum toward the
people who have worked there over
the years and toward the community in which theY are situated " he

~-

.

Board hires two aides, mechanic;
Fisher resigns·tas girls track coach

POMEROY - The dedication for
the new piano at the Meigs County
Infirmary will be held.Sunday, Feb.
23 at 2 p.m. An opeo house for tbe
Infirmary will follow until 4 p.m .
Plans for future projects will be
announced and refreshments will
be served.

ELECTRIC ENERGY SUPPLY

sales climbed a surprisingly strong
0.6 percent in January, the biggest
jump in eight montbs, while sales
of North American cars and light
trucks sw'ged 23.8 percent in early
Febfll!lry.
Additionally, the number of
laid-off workers filing new claims
for unemployment benefits fell for
a second week in a row.
Analysts said these develop•
ments offered at least a glimmer of
hope that the economy was begmning to turn around, an election-

MOM'S SMORGASBORD

ELECTRIC POWER SUPPLY FACIUTIES

•

0.1 percent December decline.
It marked the fust back-to-back
declines in wholesale prices since
June and July of last year and it
was tbe biggest drop since a similar
0.3 percent decrease last March.
The news on wholesale prices
showed that a weak economy was
continuing to keep inflation in
check.
However, there have been at
least faint ~limmers that the economy IS turrung around. The government reported Thursday tbat retail

. '
~o~; s;Hf'll

BUFFET INCLUDES SHRIMP, SCALLOPS,
OYSTERS, CODFISH, CATFISH, STUFFED
CRAB, FROG LEGS, CRAB LEGS
Buffet Also Includes Fried Chicken, Baked
Steak, and Many Other Items For Those Who
Don't Like Seafood.

~~,. ,, ,~, ,

•

By MARTIN CRUTSINGER
AP Economics Writer
WASHINGTON - Prices at
the wholesale level in January took
their biggest drop in 10 months,
falling 0.3 percent in a reflection of
sharply lower costs for gasoline
and other energy products, tbe governmentsaid today.
The Labor Department said the
January decline in its Producer
~icc Index, which measures infiauonary pressures before tbey reach
the consumer. followed· a smaller

SEAFOOD BUFFET
VALENTINE'S DAY
FRI., FEB. 14
3 p.m. to 8 p.m.

J)3£0M. j; ~·
7:10 PM DAllY .

TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be an open house in honor of Opal
Harris on her 80th birthday at the
VFW Hall in Tuppers Plains on
Sunday from 2 to 5 p.m.

•

2 SocUono, 14 PagH 25 c.nll
A llultlmedll Inc. Newapaper

Committee conducts hearing on
fugitive's interest in Ravenswood

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Rev. Eddie Buff.
ington will be the ~uest speaker at
the Naomi Bapttst Church in
Pomeroy on Sunday at 10:45 a.m.
The public is invited to attend.

prowarn "' ~ 11111...
nance o1 genemlng llcllltl!oo
IRd to allow lor random lhut·
Clownundloaclng "CUIUlllnllllll
of generating unltl.

Rain tonight . Saturday, hi~l•

low 60s.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, February 14, 1992

SPECJAJ,

RUTLAND • There will be a
round and square dance at the Rutland American Legion Hall on Saturday from 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.

capabiUty. Margins ol at least
this level ara a•pected to be
available throughout the year
IRd somewhat ltss - abo\lt
2t% - during the peak load
perkld of ne•t winter (t 992·
1993).
Generating.CIPICity -~~~
are .-qulred In order to meet

..

·

January wholesale prices drop 0.3 ·percent

PUBLIC NOTICE
FROM ·OHIO•.POWER COMPANY

• The Company's slectrlc
power supply facilitiesincluding power generating .
ptanta, major tranlmlulon
fllCillliH IRd interconnections
With neighboring electric utl~ty
syatems-,are adequate to prDvide relllble electric ..l'llct to
Itt cui!Omtrl. During t 991 , •
excluding temporary pcwer
..... to other utility . . - . '
llll*llintl CIPICiti merglnt ol
lilt Amt!tcen Electric p._,
(AEP). Syt~em, ol WhiCh Ohio
f'oi!Mr It I part, W.Nij)piOK~
mataiV 23 perctnt (or more) o1

Cards:
A-H; 10-C; 2-D;
5-S

February 14

POMEROY • A singles gatbering will be held Sunday from 4-6
p.m. at Royal Oak Resort in the
POMEROY · Janet Bolin, avol- lounge of tbe Horace Karr Center.
unteer ambassador witb AmeriFlo- The cost is $3 per person and reserra '92 in Columbus, will present a vations should be phoned to 985program on that event on Friday at 4312 by 2 p.m. on Saturday.

Pursuant to the Company's
C8pacily an&lt;l Energy Emer·
gency . Control Program
approved by the Public Utili·
ties Commission of Ohio on

Pick 3: 024
Pick 4: 0026

in

MIDDLEPORT · 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 provide the
music and the cost is $5 per person.
Snack table included.
SATURDAY
POCA, W.VA. - The Liberty
Mountaineers will perform Saturday at Poca High Sehoul in Poca,
W.Va.

Ohio Lottery

Happy
Valentine's
Day

..

' . II

.•

•

Vetcratn of Foreign Wau, and
belongs 10 the Masonic Lodge and
lhe Order of the Eastern Star.
Hayman is married to the fonner
J~ Kestenon or Columbul, and
they have one son and dlugbltr-inllrw: James and Melinda 11ayman,
and a grandson, Josiah, who also
live at Long Bouorn.
, ·
In announcin1 his candidacy,
Hayman said that new ideas, such
as the esllbllsbment of an ~­
al park are needed if lbc county Is
. to develop and grow econom~ally.

tbe board to meet the requirements
of the recent change in tbe law
regarding self-funding insurance.
The board approved the coniillCt
extension with tbe Meigs Chapter
of the Ohio Association of Public
School Employees for a period of
tbree years.
It was also agreed to enter into a
contract with the Ohio School
Boards Association for 1992 for
collective bargaining and arbitra·
tion services.
Approved at tbe meeting was a
code of etbics for 1992 for members of the Board of Education.
A discussion was held on the
date for commencement but action
on the proposed date of Friday,
May 22, was tabled until tbe next
meeting.
An executive session to discuss
personnel was held. Attending
were SupL James Carpenter, Treasurer Jane Fry, and Board memhers, Bob Barton, president. Larry
Rupe, John Hoo~. Roger Abbott.
and Randy Humphreys.

FIRE SAFETY ST\lESSED • Tile Middleport Fire Department, In an enort to educate the
pub He regarding fire safety, Is living smoke and
fire detectors to selected winners. Upoa leamina
of these efforts, Kina Hardware offered to

donie the smoke delictol'l. Pictured, l·r, are
Tim KIDI of King Hardware, Art Skinner, win·
ner ot the first smoke detector, and Tom Geary
or the fire department.

Meigs County School Board ·--Local briefs--..
Business scholarship available
supports prison project
High School sophomores and juniors across Ohio are·being invitA resolution of support for . expanding the Jobs program with
locating a new medium security the Meigs County Deparunemt of
prisoo in Mei$S County was adopt· Human Services.
ed by the Me1gs County Board of
Plans were ·made to attend the
Education at Tuesday night's meet- Ohio School Bo.,-ds Association
ing held in the board offices.
,
spring conference in Athens on
Meigs is one of ~ proposed March 10..The regularly scheduled
counties for t6cation of a new !"Cetins on ·that same date was
prison . The other two are Noble changed to swt at4:30 v..m.
and Belmont Some decision on the
It was decided to sell the Mita
location is expected 10 be made by copier and the board will accept
the Ohio Department of Rehabilita- sealed bids on the machine until
tion and COITCCtiQIIS in"March.
noon on Marcb I0.
Supt, John Riebel, Sr. reported
Bills were approved for payon JeSUits of the ninth grade JI"Ofi· ment as was ·the financial report
ciency test, the tural education given by the ll'eiiSIIM.
demOIIJIIIIion project which Meigs ·
Auending werc .Qris ·Smith,
has·in conjUDCiion with Rio Grande pn:sident, Bill Quickel, vice presi~
Collqe, the Ptutnen in Educallon ilenl; Robert Burdette, and Jeff
pro,am which links schools with Harris.
busme~s. and the possibility for
..
'

ed to apply for the Ohio Business Week Scholarship .
The program, which will encompass a week-long stay at Kenyon
CoUege July 12-18, offers students the chance to acclimate to campus life and to get a glimpse into the "real world" of the free enterprise system.
·
Applications and a list of qqaliftcations are available from ·Meigs
Coonty·Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Paula fl11acker at
200 East SecondS~ (m-SOOS), who)s willing to work with any'
local applicants.
.
According to Thacker, sophomores and junitirs from Eastern
Southern and Meigs High Schools are urged to ajlply.
'

Reedsville B&amp;E probed

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reported Friday that the ·
residence of Marvin Ketbaugh of Reedsville was entered sometime
onThunday:
A videdc•sseue recorder, SUJlS. a man's waach and a conlliner Qf
change were~ missing.lnvelliplion Is conlinuinJ. ·
Soulsby agam advises are1 residen11 '10 record the mal numbers

· ' Conllaued onpqe 3

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