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OH-Polnt

1992

Ohio Lottery

Grinding
grain
was
earliest
industrial
occupation
•

By WENDELL TOPE
Eartb Team Volunteer
GALLIPOLIS - Grinding grain
was the earliest industrial occupation. Its discovery dates back to
Remote Antiquity. It is as simple a
. grinding food between ones teelh.
The fust millstones were nothing
more than a large flat rock upon
which ancient man crushed seeds
by pounding lhem on top of such
Stones.

GAI.LJIA FAIR
• The Gallia County
fair board was awarded a ''Certificate or Achievement" during tbe
·recent Ohio Fair Managers Convention. Fred L. Dailey, lert, Direc·
. tor or the Obio Department or Agriculture, presented tbe award on
behalf or Governor George V. Volnovicb . Dailey bestowed the
recoanltlon before more than 1,000 Fair supporters during the
anaual meetinc between tbe Director or Agriculture and the state's
94 agricultural societies. The Gallia County award was accepted
by Gary Roach, right, on behalf of the fair board.

Farm Flashes

Second annual open
steer, heifer show Feb. 23
By EDWARDS VOLLBORN
Gallia Extension Agent
GALLIPOLIS • The Sec.ond
Annual Gallia County Preview
Open Steer and Heifer Show wiU
be held on Sunday, February 23
starting with the Heifer show at II
a.m. and lhe steer show to immediately follow at the Gallia County
Junia' Fairgrounds.
Animals may arrive anytime
after noon on Saturday and before
10 a.m . on Sunday. The Gallia
County Caulemen 's Association
with the cooperation of several
local businesses started lhis show
last year. 'The activity provides a
nice mid-winter family activity for
both exhibitors and spectators.
We had estimated that Gallia
County would increase tobacco
production last season by about
450 thousand pounds. Some of lhe
preliminary figures from marketmgs indicate that we have slightly
exceeded that goal to bring the total
production in the county above the
2.5 million pound level. Final fig.
ores wiU be announced by the local
ASCS office in the near future.
The Annual Hannan Trace
Tobacco Production meeting will
be held at Hannan Trace High
School on Tuesday, February 25
starting at 7 p.m. Tom Hutchins
from Rickard Seeds in Winchester,
Ky., will be the guest speaker. His
presentation will focus on variety
selection and curing quality tobacco. He will also cover remodeling

barns, insect control, float plant
production and market outlook.
This meeting has enjoyed a big
attendance in recent years. All producers and friends of lhe industry
are welcome. The meeting is spon·
sored by the Hannan Trace F.F.A;
the Gallia County Pride In Tobacco
Association and the Gallia County
Extension Office.
An industry sponsored meeting
will be held Thursday evening,
February 20 in Gallipolis. The
meeting will review several of the
corn, soybean, and alfalfa varieties
that are available locally, including
a new alfalfa variety and some new
com hybrids. Call for details.
Winter is flying by and spring is
just around the corner. Tum-around
time is still good on soil samples.
Cost per sample for farm -field
samples is still $5.50. If you have
questions regarding soil samples,
call the County Extension Office at
4467007. The local Soil and Water
Conservation District provides
notill drills on a rental basis . If you
want to use the drills this spring,
contact them (446-8687) now to
get your name on their lisL
A special thanks to all those
who attended the Wednesday after·
noon' session to discuss lhe stock·
yard issue for Gallia County. Tbere
were no immediate solutions, but
we began pulling together ideas
and started to see some trends in
thinking.

This was followed &lt;by using a
saddle stone, which was a stone
with a slighlly concave surface.
Grain was placed on the concave
stone and crushed by rolling the
grain against the concave stone.
This was many centuries before
mankind learned to accomplish the
task of grinding by revolving an
upper stone on a lower or stationary buhrstone.
For ages the milling of seeds

was done by slave labor or prisoners. Maybe, this is an explanation
for lillie progress in the milling
industry.
In the 1211! century individuals
were allowed to build and own
grist mills, soon afterwards the
Bohr Mill we know today was
invenred.
The first flour mills in our
region were built on the Muskingum River late in !he 17th century. Their existence was short lived
because of marauding Indians
burned these early mills and murdered many of the owners.
.
For instance on January 2, 1791
the settlement at Big Bottom, IS
miles up the Muskingum River was
attacked by Indians killing founeen
settlers. Other Indian trouble continued until General Mad Anthony
Wayne defeated the Indians in the

battle of Fallen Timbers in 1794. cleared and readied for grain.
Mills were sometimes built in
This action only deepened the
anger of the remaining tribes and peculiar places in onlel to take care
roaming bands of angry Indians of sufficient water to power lhe
mills. Many were located in tight
· continued to strike the settlements.
• In order to save their lives near· valleys or on edges of cliffs wilh a
ly all of lhe white settlers in the mill pond or dam to power the mill
nonh east section of Ohio either wheel. A mill race was dug from ·
moved to West Virginia or those the dam or pond to the mill. A mill
who could get transportation by gate was placed at the mill end of
barges moved down the Ohio River the race to regulate the speed of the
andestablished homes in soulbeast· mill wheel.
ern O.hio. Many of the people we
Mills built on nat land someknow today living in Meigs, Gallia times had a long mill race to supply
and Lawrence Counties are descen· the necessary amount of water to
daiiiS of those early settlers.
supply the wheel.
"Those new settlers in southeast·
These early mills provided an
ern Ohio built saw mills, as . interesting and vital chapter for the
described in other issues. Before development of the economy of our
they could build homes however, state. Many are now forgotten, but
lean·tos and sheds were build with the village or city that sprang up
logs as there was an abundance of · near the site of the old mill still
timber. As soon as shelter for the bears its name.
families was provided, fields were

February 17

!992 burley tobacco program are:
• A crop marketing quota of 670
million pounds, down from the
1991 quola of 726 million ~unds.
Determination of lhe quota ts based
on purchase intentions by domestic
manufacturers of 445.5 million
pounds; unmanufactured exports
(3-year average) of 187.6 million
pounds; a reserve stock adjustment
of 36.9 million pounds; and a disCrelionary adjustment of zero
pounds.
. A suppon level of $1.649 per
pound, up 6.5 cents from !991.

affecting specific products, the
report said Japanese orange juice
imports in the 1991-92 marketing
year are forecast at 70,000 metric
tons, 89 percent above the previous
season.
"The lifting of the orange juice
impon quola on April I, !992, in
accordance with the U.S.-Japan
Beef and Citrus Trade Agreement
of 1988, is the major reason for
expected higher imports,'' it said.
The report also noted that in

recent years, Japanese consumer
demand for 100 percent citrusjuice
has been growing significantly, in
part as a result of an increasing
preference for more natural foods.
In late January , th e Spanish
Ministry of Agriculture agreed on
procedures permitting entry into.
Spain of apples and pears from the
Pacific Nonhwest, lhe repon said.
The procedures include preventive
measures to fight bacterial blight,
cold treatment and in&amp;I'Cction .

'

• A basic quota decrease for
each farm of about 7.5 percent
from 1991.
• An effective quota of about
830 million pounds , 16 million
pounds below 1991.
• A marketing assessment of
0.8245 cents per pound pn both
growers and buyers, for a total of
1.649 cents per pound, under
requirements of amendments con·
tained in the Omnibus Bugget Reconciliation Act of 1990.
Tbe no-net-cost program assessment will be announced later.

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) Muslim fighters and Israeli-allied
forces traded rocket barrages in
south Lebanon today, a day after
Israel killed the leader of the proIranian HezboUah in a lightning air
attack. At a funeral procession
today for lhe slain leader, mourners
screamed: "You shall be
avenged!''
In the artillery duels, rockets
landed in northern Israel for the
firs) time in nearly a year, Israeli
media said, but no damage or
injuries were reported.
The fighting began Sunday,

The report noteo that since
1988, imports by the European
Community of canned sweet corn
from the United States have
climbed from 17,372 metric tons to
a record 29,286tons in 1990.
"The trend is continuing as January-November 1991 U.S. exports
totaled 41,907 tons," it said. "The
United Kingdom , Germany and
France are the three largest EC
consumers of U.S. canned corn."

WILMINGTON, Del. (AP) Columbia Gas System Inc. reported
Friday that fourth quarter net
income rose 34 percent and managers said the results show the natural gas distributor' s bankruptcy
filing hasn't hurt.
.
.
:rhe company lost $694.4 mil.lion in lhe whole year.
The fourth quarter was the ftrSt
"weather-sensitive" CJ,uarter sinCe
Columbia and its principal pipeline
subsidiary, Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., each filed for Olapter II bankruptt:y protection m
July.
"These results demonstrate the

basic soundness of (Columbia) and
its various subsidiaries and that
Columbia ' s business operations
have been affected very little by the
bankruptcy filings," Chairman
John Croom said.
Fourth quarter net income was
$81 ,5 million, or $1.61 per share,
compared with $60.8 million, or
$1.25 per share, for the same period a year earlier.
Columbia said it was forced into
bankruptcy because of long term
contrai:!S with natural gas suppliers
that were signed before natural gas
prices plunged. The contracts
. required Columbia Transmission to
buy natural gas at above-market

.

fem~L

The square batteries hang from

beltS wilh cables stretching up our

l!leks to the flashlights. When we
don the getups, we look l_ike
Jefugces from a McDonald's p1ck·
up window.
The lights themselves rest atop
11e1mo1s ihat resemble those worn
by •iaen about to tunnel into a
.,. tr'n.
earns.
We Ceel u If we were about to · McMahon g!Yel us an example.
' do ICIIIIIdlin~ similar. Wllhin 15 He urges hiJ mule, Driftwood, atop
tn11u1ea we re wnneling into the an embankmenL "Watch this," he
• ...._ Tbe pllce: McMahon's Mule says.
·
·
linn. 1be pi: To hunt raccoon.
He turns the mule and walks it
Aclually, the hunl serves as down a bank so ~lhat a human
JIICiftl rA • ucuse than a JOII. 'f!lis try~o de~cend 11 would have
111 biRt OUI rA tile ordina,ry. Unlike tu
onlid down.
llulllerl who ~ 81110111
'"U lhlt ~ been a horse," he
dltlllladrt 111111 on foot, we ritfe llyl, "llpubilbly would llav~aot·
• • ltllri
!MIIInOI!I1 JfiiiiCked and tned to
Wllill die aperieace II IIIW 10 JUIIP doWiJ IL ·'
·
. . .., ~her Mlke Noll· - We crols the suelmbed of anm
l .

shonly after the killing of Sheik
Abbas Musawi, leader of Hezbollah, or Party of God.
Hezbollalt vehemently opposes
Middle East peace talks, and the
killing raised fears that intensified
Arab-Israeli violence could cripple
peace efforts.
The group, which was founded
and primarily financed by Iran, is
the umbrella organization for the
extremist Shiite Muslim factions
that held American hostages in
Lebanon. The release of almost all
the remaining Westerners last year
may have emboldened Israel to

strike out at the fundamentalist
group with less fear of retaliation
against hostages, although two Ger•
mans remain held by a Shiite
group.
In Lebanon today, Muslims
staged a protest slrike in mourning
for Musawi, 39; his wife, Siham,
33; and their 5-year-old son, Hus·
sein, who were killed along with
him and four bodyguards in the
Israeli attack. Schools, banks and
businesses were closed in Muslim
areas throughout the country.
In Beirut's southern Shiite
slums, 50,000 male mourners,

some wearing black headbands,
took pan in Musawi's three-hour
funeral rrocession today. Thousands o wailing women waved
white handkerchiefs and tossed
flowers from balconies and
rooftops onto the wooden caskets.
Musawi supporters clenched
their fists and shouted: ''Death to
America and Israel!"
The coffins were driven to east
Lebanon's Bekaa Valley town of
Baalbek, where another funeral
procession was set for Tuesday
before the burial in the neighboring
village of Nabi Sheet, Musawi's
hometown.

By JIM FREEMAN
OVP News Stall'
A six-month-old infant died Saturday night in a trailer ftre in Huntington Township near Vinton in
Gallia County.
The Vinton Fire Department
responded to a call at the Rosa
Brewer Lawrence residence at 410
Sherman Road at approximately
7:40 p.m., according to a re~n
from the Gallia County Shenfr,

Quality not included
in disaster aid relief

WASHINGTON (AP) - Some
lawmakers are urging lhe Agriculture Depanment to take crop quality losses into account when calculating a co110n farmer's payments
for disllster relief.
.
According to Rep. Larry
Combest, R·Texas, current fCderal
prices.
U.S. Bankruptcy Court allowed disaster aid calculations measure
the pipeline subsidiary to break the only the amount of loss, and not the
loss in quality.
contracts last year.
The annual loss of $13.74 per
Combest said many cotton proshare, was due primarily to the ducers with signifteantlosses in the ·
high-priced contracts, spokesman quality of their crop will not
H.W. Chaddock said. In 1990, receiye disaster aid because much
Columbia earned $104.7 million or of the cotton will be harvested:
$2.21 per share.
"Quality equals price, and the
Robert Gillon, a natural gas ana- quality of much of this cotton is·
lyst with John S. Herold Inc. in practically worthless," Combest
Greenwich, Conn., said the year- said.
end loss was expected.
USDA is taking applications
. But the fourth quarter "is a bit from farmers who lost crops to bad
better than what we have seen most weather in 1990 and 1991.
of the gas pipeline companies do," Congress has approved near! y $1
Gillon said.
billion in aid to covu !hose losses.

. PRESIDENT'S DAY • Tbe Lions Club was out earJY Monday
morning displayinl American flags in tbe V~lage or Pomeroy in
observance or President's Day. Pictured is Bruce Teaford as be
places a Rag at tbe corner or Court and Second Streets.

Ohio Supreme .Court
OKs new voting districts

. COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) • prise a majority of the five-memj)er
Ohio's Supreme; Coun ruled late state Apportionment Board.
Frida&gt;; t¥t .a R~publicait·d~awn
• State Audi!Or Thomas Ferguson
De~ll.
P.im crea~~N..new ,di~cts fm:,lll~ . and.&amp;p. JJ~U~CJ~.Quiltu, ,D-Iole....
· · ., U.Piin arrival;-tht"ttre- ·depan•..,. Ohio General Assembly does not do, lhe tioard's·.Democratic mem' m~n[ discove[ed the trailer was violate the 6hio Constitution.
bers, were named defendants.
ertgulfed lit ~s and was advised
HoweVei-, the decision apparentQuilter sought to remove the
that the infant. Paul Brewer, was ly does not affect a pending federal case to U.S. District Coon, but the
inside.
coun case in which a three-judge federal court said it lacked jurisdicFirefighters extinguished the panel ruled that the Senate and tion over state issues and remanded
blaze and discovered the body in a House districts violate minority it to the state court.
bed in the living room,the report voting provisions of the federal
Quilter is the plaintiff in a sepa.•
stated.
Voting Rights Act.
rate federal lawsuit which led to a
According to the sheriff's
The Supreme Court vote was 4- · rulill$ Jan. 31 that the plan violates
repon, Susan Doss, a neighbor, 3, with all three of the court's fedeial law. The three-judge panel
reported_that La~. carne to her Democrats dissenting.
gave the GOP majority on the
residence to get CigaretteS and that
Tbe coun ruled at the request of Apportionment Board until Feb. 20
some children discovered the trailer Gov. George Voinovich, Secretary to make corrections or show that
was on fire . Lawrence and Doss of State Bob Taft and Senate Presi· the plan does not dilute minority
approximately 7:40 p.m. and discovered tbat tbe
.FATAL FIRE - A 6 1/2-month·old infant
were unable to enter the trailer dent Stanley Aronoff, who com· voting strenglh.
inrant, .PIIul A. Brewer, was trapped Inside. The
died In this trailer rtre on Sherman Road near
because
of the heaL
iarant.'s mother, Rosa Brewer Lawrence, was
Vinton Saturday oi1ht. According to a report
Two
squads from the Gallia
transported to Holzer Medical Center where sbe
rroiJ!
Gallla Counly Sberllr's Department,
County
Emergency
Medical Ser·
was treated ror trauma. (OVP photo .by Jim
the Vinton Fire Department respooded at
vice
were
dispatched
to the scene,
Freemin)
The remains of a nude, lalloocd Department reported it is handling
an EMS spotesman said. Lawrence body found in an open field in the case as a homicide. Sheriff Watwas trans)XlltCd to Holzu Medical Franklin Furnace, Ohio, Saturday terson stated the victim was shot
Center where' she was treated for has been unofficially identified as five times in the back of the hcnd.
trauma, according to a hospital Michael Oliver, 40, of Point The time of dcnth has not yet been
spokeswoman.
Pleasant, who was reponed missing determined but it appears the subThe Ohio Fire Marshal's Office in November 1991.
ject may have been dead for apwas called in to investigate the
Although official identification proximately four to six weeks, the
blaze.
will not be determined until an Scioto department revealed. The
The
Wilkesville
Fire
Depart·
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi- netic weekend spin through the this state substantially" in Tuesautopsy is completed in Hamilton body was also missing three apment
provided
backup
\0
the
Vindent Bush is winding up his drive state that left his advisers cautious day's New Hampshire primary. But
County, Ohio, Mason County pendages, including a right hand,
for votes in New Hampshire by about his prospects.
·
his aides sought Smday to discount ton Fire DeparllliCnL
Sheriff Ernie Watterson reponed left foot and penis.
The infant was transported to today that he is positive the body is
Oliver was reponed missing by
long-distance telephone after a fre.
Bush declared he _would "carry what could prove an embarrassing·
his sister, Jeannie Fellure, who
ly strong showing by challenger the McCoy-Moore Funeral Home that of Oliver.
in Vinton.
stated the last time he was seen was
Patrick Buchanan.
Paul
Brewer
was
born
July
24,
According
to
Sheriff
Waucrson,
Friday,
Nov. 8, 1991, ap,
Buchanan predicted ~e would 1991, in Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., the
Deputy
John
McCoy
took
proximately
2 p.m., when he left.
do "extraordinarily well . ... We son of Rosa Brewer Lawrence and
photographs of the many lattoos home with Wonhy Siders, Jr.
stand a chance to shake up this
Danny Saxon.
Oliver had to Scioto County and
The Scioto County Sheriff's
nation.''
In addition to his parents, he is matched up three from a video tape Department reponed that Saturday,
.
A Pomeroy man won $200,000 in Saturday night's Cash ExploBush today was back at the survived
by two brothers, Noah the Scioto County Sheriff's 10 a.m ., the department received a
•. · siOJI television game of the Ohio LoUery Commission.
White House, spending part of the
Jake
Robinette
and · Joseph Department had · of the body. call from a subject who was in the
: Rob Landers, making his third appearance on the show, came
federal holiday in telephone interLawrence
Jr.,
and
one
Crys- Among those matChing were a car- Franklin Furnace area looking at
closest to .the target number when he spun the lottery wheel to win
views with New.Hampshire news tal Dawn Lawrence, all sister,
at
home.
:· lhe $200,000. He- was competing against two other contestants.
media in a final effon to shore up
toon-type devil on the chest area propeny adjacent to the land where
Also
surviving
are
paternal
.: . Landers ftrst appeared on Cash Explosion on Feb. 2 and came
holding a pitch fork with "hot the body was located. The subject
supp&lt;in.,
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Cluirles stutr' inscribed below the devil: a spoiled
:; : out·the top winner"' the game with $10,800. In aecordance with the
body in lhe field but at
Suon or Bidwell, and maternal tattoo on the left shoulder area, and the timethe
:: .· rules of the game, that amount was doubled. That night he vie~t on
thought
it may have been a
The president was expected to grandmother, Doris Brewer of Vin·
:· · to take pan in the wheel event and came out the new $50,000 chamone
other
tattoo.
deer.
When
he
approached
the area
win the primary, but his campaign ton,
·: . pion which qualified him .to return to the show on Feb. 9 to try for
Along
with
matching
the
tanoos,
closer,
he
discovered
that
the
would take .a setback if Buchanan
Services -will be conducted It a St. Christopher .medal and a
: , $100,000. He again was a winner qualifying for Saturday night's
remains was that of a white male
managed to get a share of lhe vote a.m., Tuesday, at the McCoy·
:· , spin whm he won the I!!P prize of Cash Explosion.
double heart nng th't Oliver wore subject, and contacted the sheriff's
in
the
range
of
35
percent
to
40
. '
.
Moore Funeral Home in Vinton at lhe time of his disappearance
deparunenL
percent or more. ·
with the Rev. Elmer Geiser offici·
·
Both departments are continuing
Bush campaign chairman ating. Burial will be in the Brush were also on the body.
The
Scioto
County
Sheriff's
their
investlgations.
Roben Teeter predicted only that Cemetely. .
~
Two.guilty pleas wac entered 'on Friday by defendants charged
Bush would wm "comfortably."
Friends may call one hour prior
with felonies in Meigs Cbunty Common Pleas Coon.
He siid, N~w Hampshire " always to the service 81 the funeJa) home.
• According to Meigs County Pro~uting Attorney Steven L.
has been a :tough state,"
·
SIQIY, Owen Miller, 27, of Long Bottom entered a guilty plea on
"We'~e had a very difficult
Friilay to a felony ch.qe of rape and two counts of .gross. sexual
economic tlme in this country, par- U. S., Russia agree on
imposition. Miller was accused of the 1991 rape of a m1110r gtrl.
ticularly In this state, for the last international center
Jud&amp;e Fred W. Crow In scntenced Miller to 1 term of seven to.
year
atid·• half. And when that hap· 2S yean on the rape chargea, and ,\WO years oo the count of grou
pens,
the p-esiden.t's .~proval ~t· ' MOSCOW (AP) - The United
Incwn~t~~sCOOnty~
.; · scxual impoeitiorl. ·Thoee .sen~ will be!served co~tly, or ·
mgs
read 111 JO down, T~!e!et wd 1 States and Ruuia agreed Monday surer Howard B. Frank has filed hiS
· at the IIDIC tlme. • " ·
.
.
on ABC·TV's "This Week With 111 establish an intern81iona1 centot petition of e~ndidlcf for the
Lisa Whltlni pi~JUilty to four counts of forgery on Friday.
Dl!vid Brinkley.'~
to help nucl.- ~elontim flllm tile Republican nomination 11 1ho
Accudin_(10. Story, Whilinll wis accused of forging ~er81 stolon
Cormot
Soviet Union tum their pany'a treaurer Cllldidale with the
.; ·checb. Whlllllg. who is pregnant, will be sentenced by Jtidge CrOw
White House chief or staff skilli to peacei\11 ....
Meigs County Board of Elections.
; at allier dale.
•·
,
1
Samuel
K.
Skinner
urged
repllda1·
Tho
.two
sldel
also
epecd
dw
;•
I
•I
oot to focus on the mar&amp;ill pf the the United Stain woald provide
likely Busb viclory.
Ruala with 1111 c:ara llld otllcir tools
~ Racine B&amp;E
"We'll
do
well
.•.
but
this
is
to uanspon abon·ranle nuClear
·~ Tho Melp c!owuy Sheriff's DepaiW1ent repoited ~ n:\()M·
New Hampshire and New Hamp· weapona to storage and eventual
~ ina dill die V~ Oiler realdeace on Sixth Street in Racine had
sbire hu a record of talking 'pracll- destruction.
'
beetl onlllled on SII!ICfay aflemoon. .
··
· •· .
'
cally,"
Stinner
said
"Some
voters
·
·
'ibe
accords
were
reached
at a
j' .
Oller told lbo ~tmcnt thai the ~ wu made at ~li·
Frank is ICICkin&amp; thC ~..:
nomtnl'ion In the May 5
•r !IIIIIIY l p,!JI. yi&amp;lisJiy, and ..... itemt wore srolen,:induding -. . i" Now Hampahlre YOlO 'QilPOiitc" three-hoar meotlnJ betweon ~­ and
If llotlinlted will nat b elec·
the ~bent. bo ~tary of Stale James A, Baker Ill
~ tnournlirttcolnj;:r .
.
. 1'' "\ ; 1 •
·lion
to lbe post in the November
• Buc:hiDan, ~While, is keep· and Runlail President Boris N.
: , . depl:nmebl ~ to investigate the ineidenL
/
HOWARD FRANK
Gentnl
Election.
' I'"
I
~'
· ••
?l• ~. •
' ing up a slwpJ~ on Bush.
Yeltsin.
..
'
., ~~;t".
If\) '
y

Pt. Pleasant man found dead

the

Raccoon hunters rely on mules in southern Ohio
between some hills. Warmer tern· cles to start working again.
peratures have brought a thaw that
McMahon unstraps a saddle bag
causes the mule's hooves to sink and removes two thermos botdes.
about a foot deep.
"Anyone for hot cocoa?"
We arrive at another nm arid my
.Before we finish the drink, the
mule, Cimarron, pauses' and, before dog is bafing. "Where's the cam·
crossing, moves a couple of feet to era man?' someone yeUs.
the left of where I had directed her.
We tether the mules to some
· Was this contrariness or did she trees and, while McMahon and
notice something I hadn'.t?
Gilbert look after them, Neilson
A log looms acres$ a po~ori of and I stumble through the leaves
the pathway. When my .miner's hat after Crites and Gatrell.
·
illuminates i~ CimllllOn, Jteps deft·
The baying leads us to a huge
ly 10 the riaht llld detours tL Why oak which the hound is guardinl as
•Joa when you can step it throws back it's heail and bays
. Anotbu 30 mlnuta aerilss the with such 'force its front paws seem
..... ··-• bri
the P,nd. .
s....
_ ... n np as to an old to leave
"There 11 is," Gatrell says,
roadbecl. Mcl.1ahori decides to stop pointina to a spot about 40 feet
~.meaL
•
"Why·don't you fellows step above the pllllld. The beam of my
dow~," he says. "Maybe if we miner'slighllttikes it, but all I can
wall llele far • while, llio do&amp; will see iJ the orange glow or it' aeyos.
Pl bared and., iiUilllna-"
It is the momen1 Cor which the ,
Tho cold ltll.lllnled my Jep to hunter waltl. Blll, fer tonlaht, 11 is
1lua 111d, wllin my feetllit tho onOQJIIro hive IOOIIIL Tho rae·
lfllund, illlba about five back· coonln • tloeen't COIIIJIII' with
wWitepl down a hJJJ far my mill• , the effort to find llint. ·
.
'
'

A lluhlmedlll Inc. Newtp8per

.

infant dies
in blaz.e

'

son, it's old hat (but still fun) to
McMahon and his friends - Lou
Crites, Dan Gatrell and Edward
Cilben.
As we head away from lhe ba,rn,
the miner's lights reveal a surreal
landscape of the winter woods at
night.
Mules bear the burden of an
undeserved negative reputation,
McMahon believes. It is not espe·
cially stubborn, just sensible.
But the mule's agility brings it
the .llrgest portion of the respect it

1 S.Ciloll, 10 P1111• 25 011111

Galli~

WASHINGTON (AP)- The
sheep and lamb inventory in the
United States on Jan. I totaled 10.9
million ~d. down 3 percent from
a year earlier.
The value of sheep and lambs
totaled $666 million, 9 percent
below a year earlier, the Agricul·
lure Department said this month,
and the average value per head was
$61.40, down 6 percent from a year
earlier.
· The number of operations with
sbeep during 1991 totaled 105,710,
down 3 percent from 1990.
The lamb crop of 7. 70 million
head was down fractionally from
the 1990 lamb crop . The 1991
lambing rate was 104 per 100 ewes
!-year-old and older on band .Jan.
I , compared with 101 in 1990.

Ohio Valley Publishing Co. Leave your name,
address and telephone number with your card
or letter. No telephone calls will be accepted. All
contest entries should be turned in to the news·
paper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday. In ease
of a tie, the winner will be chosen by lottery.
Next week, a Gallia County farm will be rea·
lured by .the Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
Distri".

Rain tonlghl. Low In mld40s. Tuesday, high In mid-50s.

·Palestinians still planning
to continue with peace talks

Columbia Gas quarterly earnings
up 34 percent; posts year-end loss

CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (AP) The moment Ray McMahon hands
us the lighting gear, we .realize
we're in for something really dif-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 17, 1992

Sheep and la.mb
inventory down
three percent

MYSTERY FARM ·This week's mystery
farm, reatured by the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation District, is located somewhere in
\V[eigs County. Individuals wishing to partici·
·]late in the weekly contest may do so by guessing
the farm's owner. Just mail, or drop orr your
guess to the Daily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769, or the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune, 825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio,
45631, and you may win_a ~5 pme rrom the

AGILE MULE - Ray McMahon encourages Driftwood to
demonstrate the agility of mules to jump over blgh obstacles last
...tllln Cambridge. The mules are used to scamper among tbe biDs
d•ID&amp; ...Ccoon hunts In the easkrn Ohio woods. (AP Photo)

11-19-2641-4246

Vol. 42, No. 199
Copyrlgh1.,. 1992

Horticultural exports up 14 percent in November
WASHINGTON (AP)- U.S.
horticulwral exports totaled $551.6
million in November 1991, 14 percent above the same month a year
earlier, the Agriculture Deparunent
says.
Fresh citrus, apples and tree nuts
registered the largest increases,
more than offsetting declines in
wine and dehydrated vegetables,
the deparunent said in its February
Horticultural Products Review.
Looking at some developments

Super Lotto·

Kicker:744090

Burley farmers to vote next week
GALLIPOLIS •
Bur Ie y determine whelher growers favor
tobacco growers will Vote February lease and transfer of burley tobacco
24-27 in a mail referendum on poundage quotas across county
whether marketing quotas on a lines. If more than 50 percent of
poundage basis will continue for producers voting in this referendum
burley tobacco for the next three favor cross-county leasing, then
beginning wilh lhe 1992 crop, lease
years.
Quotas will remain in effect if and transfer of burley quota from
less than one-lhird of the voting one farm to any other farm in Virproducers vote no. Burley tobacco ginia will be permitted.
If 50 percent or more of the
1s grown in Kentucky, Ohio, Tengrowers disapprove, then lease and
nessee and surrounding states.
In a separate referendum, Vir· transfer of poundage quotas will
ginia burley tobacco growers will continue only within counties.
The following provisions of the
vote Feb. 24-27 by mail ballot to

Pick 3: 856
Pick 4: 8100
Cards:
3-H; 2-C; 1-D;
Q·S

Bush WQrking phones on eve
of :New Hampshire primary

--Local briefs---

·. Landers wins $200,000 in lottery

... MiUer, Whiting enter pleas

Frank seeks treasurer's
post on R~publican ~icket

:..Sovr:,

•

-

EXPANDING BUSINESS - TOIII R-D rA To•'• Alto Clillct
recatiJ auoUKetl tile ..,...... ora ll4.'!lllll '"" • Ia •lm • "'
Stcoad' Aftllf,..,. , _ tile pOll olllct. A~ Jo ........ :
Eric R..U,IIIon llert, tile IIIW bl'llldl of T• I AlltO Ca.tc ,._, •

npelr'-'::"

~..:_II~!!f-lub'!#'::~ ..~.
.,... ,,
1111'"cfra,
""' ••.,.. • · - - - rilf er.• ..,
11rUe .,. ,•
.vice• Tile lfW locltloa ~~~~~~ ftJr lllllfa• MtJMI,J, Pft. 10.
l'

·-

~~

'

1

.'

d \

probed ""

. .

,t

.

�.

.

'

-~--"~~~·F_e~b~ru~a~ry~1-7~,_1~-·-2--~~----~----------------~P~o~m~e-~~y~-M--I_d_dl_e~po_rt_,_o_h_lo------------------~-----------Th~e~D~a~lly~S~e-n_u_n_et__P_a~g.-3--~;:

•

Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday,
February
17, 1992
. .
.

More rain expected around OhioThesday

OH 10 Weather
Tuesday, Feb. 18
Accu-Weathe~ forecast for

Washington cost colonial taxpayers plenty

'T he Daily Sentinel

MICH.

Jack Anderson,
Michael Binstein

for five horses and a carriage.
WASHINGTON - George simply not enough to tive on.
We
were
led
to
this
story
by
the
Two things are evident from our·
111 Court Street
Washington's binhday will be celebrated today by people going to General Accounting Ofnce, which research: There were pleniy of
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
.
malls and scoopin~ up discounted had sonie original ledger sheets frills ibat Washin~n considered to
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
merchandise. But 'discount" was signed by Washin~ton. If the GAO be "necessaries,' and claimed for
a concept Washing10n never under- had been around tn Washington's his personal prope!'l)' after the war;
One ur two barbers did weU on
stood. During ibe eiBbt-year Revo- day, his expenses would have been and neither he nor his servants lowlutionary War, Gen. Washington curtailed.
ered themselves to bargain for the his account. He tisted nearly $500
(or $25,000) for Jla!bers in the ~trst
ran through an expense account
Washington was used to fine best price.
ROBERT L. WINGETT
roughly equivalent to $22.5 million living, baving married the wealthi·
In November 1781, a month year of the war. Today, a barbering
today, all paid for by war-pinched est widow in Virginia, Martha after the British surrendered at bill of roughly $2,000 a month
Publisher
colonial taxpayers.
Custis. And he wasn't about to set- Yorktown, Washington recorded would demand a close look at the
CHARLENE HOEFLICH . When Washington a~reed to tie for less just because there was a the purchase of 20 pounds of tea general's coiffure. But barbers
PAT WHITEHEAD
become commander-in-chtef of the war on.
for "public use." No doubt the often doubled as dentists, and
General Manager
Assistant PubUsber/Controller
colonial armies in 1775, Congress
.Estimates vary for the value of troops deserved a cup after all that Washington's notoriously ~ tee~
offered him a salary of $500 a Continental dollars compared to had been thrown overboard in needed more attention than h1s hm.
A MEMBER of The Assoc:illod Press, Inland Daily Press Associlllion and
month. It was generous- $25,000 today's currency. The ratios are Boston. But the price Washington
the Am&lt;rican Newspal"' Publisher Assoc:illlion.
a month in today's terms - but anywhere from $20 to $100 today paid was die equiv81ent of $1,170 a
One of the more intriguing
Washington
turned
it
down.
"I
will
for everl dollar in Washington's pound in 1992 money.
household expense categories was
LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
keep
an
exact
account
of
my
day.
We
ve
settled
on
$SO
for
purWashington's
household
"washin~," on which he spent
words long. AI! letters are subjec:tto editing and must be signed w1th name,
expences,"
he
said.
"1bese
I
doubt
poses
of
estima!ing
ho!"
much
expenses
during
the.
war
came
to
$1
,141 (ibe equivalent of $57,031) :
addre11 and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiD !'" published. Letters
not
(Congress)
will
discharge,
and
Washington
spent
tn
today
s
terms.
$157,330
($7.87
million
today.)
He
in
si~ years. Journals of the day •
sbould be in good taste, addreiSing tSsues, not personalities.
that is alii desire.''
The National Archives obliging- savored fine food and gained 28 make it clear that it was acceptable .
Fourteen years later, when ly let our associate Dale Van Alta pounds during the war. He even among gentlemen to pay ibe washWashington was elected presiden~ examine Washington's original charged the government for ice er woman or her daughters for serhe again offered 10 take no salary, expense-account book.. The bri.ttle, cream, a novelty in his ~Y . Wash· vices other iban laundry, with no "
but expenses only. Congress, hav· yellowing document 1s kept tn a ington was not a b1g dr1nker, but scandal auached. But wiibout beneing seen his expense accounts, vault there. From the beginning of was a generous host. Between Aug. fit of supermarket tabloids to
respectfully declined. They award- ibe war Washington belrared his 8, 1775, and March 19, 1776, he record the story, we bave no way of
ed him a salary of $25,000 a year taste fo; ibe best. On the ftrst day spent at least $6,160 ($308,018 in knowing if ibat is why Washing($1.25 million today), and Wash- that he kept accounts, he spent toda(s terms, or $38,500 a month) ton's laundry bill was so high.
ington later complained that it was $7,845 ($392,000 in today's terms) for hquor.
project
on
Route
33,
between
· Dear Editor,
The general had to be mindful
I don't write very often, but here Shade and Athens. My wife and I ,
of
Martha,
who made several yisits
several times lately, have observed
goes.
to
the
front
wiib a full entourage.
In these troubled times, and 3 and 4 state pickup trucks at the
The
last
expenditure
in his book is
truthfully so, there is a lot of talk field trailer when no work was·
for
$27,665
($1.4
million in
being done on ibe project. Is this
about cutbacks, lay-offs and so on.
today's money) for ".Mrs. \_VashQuestion: Why is it ibat it is waste? When you replace culvens,
ington's
travell Exps. m cornmg to
always the working class and the or bridges, or any projec~ why not
and
returning
from my Winter
ones on fixed income ibat always do it right ibe ftrSt time.
Quarters
per
accts.
rendered.''
Hopefully the Ohio State Hi~h­
gets selected to bear ibe brunt of
Washington knew this one
the so called belt tightening when way De~ent won't fix anyibmg
would need some explanation. He
our elected officials in Washington else (it s always worse afterward)
apologized for dumpinJ all of
and our state government can vote like ibe culvens in Syracuse and at
Martha's travel expenses mto one .,
themselves a raise? Besides that, ibe upper corporation of Syracuse
on State Route 124. Is this waste? I
final bill, and said he had his
we all know there is a lot of waste.
I call your attention to the ani· could name several ibings like this,
doubts about whether it was f.roper
to bill ibe government at a! . But,
cle in Thursday's Sentinel (1-30- but the point is, I for one am s.ick
and
tired
of
these
people
wasung
he wrote, the war had kept him .
92) captioned (quote) U.S. 33
away from his family longer than
STUDY GIVEN "GO AHEAD':. our money. Come on, let's quit
he had planned, "and ibis expence
The article stated 20 years ago thiS playing politics and get on with the
was incidental thereto, &amp; consesame study was made. Now they things ibat need done, like the conqnent of my self denial ... ''
have appropriated $1.6 million for nector road from : Route 33-7 byanother study. Why didn't they go pass to the Ritchie Bridge at
· He added that he had become
ahead with the project at ibe time Ravenswood, and Route 33 from
less
reluctant to cllarge the governof ibe first study? Is this waste?
Darwin to Athens. They can get
ment
for Martha's bills "as I find
I agree wiib Senator Long when highways and other p~ojects d~ne
upon
the final adjustment of these
he said, (quote in ~) Okay now, in Lawrence and Galba Counues.
Accts
....
that I am a considerable ·
here's the study. Lets push to get Why not Meigs?
loser - My disbursements falling .
I commend the one 's pushing
the road completed. (Unquote) If
a good deal shon or my Receipts, ·
you ask anyoneabout this, they for the prison in Meigs County. It
"This is all very strange to me ,.. Mounting a national campaign without a &amp; the money I had upon hand of .
will say, there 1s no money. ~r is my understanding that it is supmy own ... ••
course they said Jhat about Kerr s posed to be minimum security. If I
Cold War adversary? I've never done that!..."
Run project in Pomeroy. We can't had enough room they could build
do it for X more years, no money. it in my backyard. I worked prisonWonder where they dug it?. How ers for a period of time in Southern
many times was ibe survey crew on California The security at that road
this little project? Six or seven camp was very suicL·No one could
times. Maybe eight or nine. Was get m or out wiibout clearance. So
don't be afraid. Let's get it done.
MacFarlane and Oliver North on a
We've been targeted by a spe- cials said today."
this waste?
secret
We
need
the
jobs.
Also,
to
our
mission to Iran, we never
Don't misunderstand, I'm glad
cial opemtion that has all the mak•
elected
officials
at
the
state
and
it is done, but when you tell me
ings of policy-by-leak. Call it the
Feb. 8, The Los Angeles Times: read a headline the next day telling The leaks, thus, become part of a
there is no money, I expect you to federal level, Meigs County is not Washington Water Torture.
"CIA AUTHORIZED TO TAR· us: "BUD &amp; OLLIE FLY TO policy - waging a War of Nerves
be telling the truth. I am not ~.e in West Virginia or Kentucky. IT
Headlines keep falling on our GET HUSSEIN; The Administra- AYATOLLAH BEARING GIFfS: against Saddam.
A BIBLE, A CAKE SHAPED
one to judge, or to call ibe pobu- IS IN OHIO, located right along heads - and it's not just drip, drip, tion Eannarks $30 Million ..."
Politics: Many Americans who
cians liars, however, I have known the Ohio River in the southeast cor- drip. We're talking deluge, deluge,
LIKE
A KEY, A COVERT PLAN voted for Bush in 1988 are unhapFeb. 9, The New York Times:
some to stretCh the truib. But, back ner of the state.
deluge. And apparently it's the " PLAN ON IRAQ COUP TOLD TO SELL MISSIT..ES."
py that he let Saddam remain m
If
you
need
further
directions
to
to the point. I am glad that the
But after the latest torrent of power. The leaks are a way of ·:
government officials who've been TO CONGRESS; Bush Gave Notibridge is in at Racine (across the Meigs County, my number is in ibe doing the talking.
fication In Fall Of Covert U.S. leaks, Bush's wasn't apoplectic, telling Americans that Bush
Yellowbush Creek) even though it phone book. Remember, there is
merely elliptic: "Don't believe remains on the case, working in ..
Feb. 7, The Wall Street Journal: Operation.
is bumpy. Wonder where the state always anolher election coming up. "BUSH ADMINISTRATION
everything
you read in the newspa- semi-secrecy to finish the job.
Think about what's really hapAn opinion,
Inspectors were?
pers.''
EXPANDS PLANS TO PURSUE pening: "IntelliBence officials"
If Bush's plan is to follow the .. :
Charles P. Bailey, OUSTER OF SADDAM HUS· and "administration officials" are
Maybe they were all over in
Some officials contend the War in the Gulf with a War of
Syracuse SEIN - ... In recent weeks, the leaking details of a highly classi- coven plan merely provides food
Athens County at the little bridge
Nerves and little more, chances for
administration has secretly sent fied plan of coven action - and and medicine for the Kurds and success seem slim. Hopefully, he .. '
Congress a new notification that it ibe White House is not screaming others in Iraq. But, of course, such knows more, and plans more; than .. ,
will use contingenc7 funds avail- that our national secwily has been mercy missions bardly need to be he's telling. For the world will "
In regard to le.tters fubli~hed external patrol and detection able to the Centra Intelli,ence compromised.
covertly cloaked. What seems to be know no peace as long as Saddam · •
against the location o a pnson devices. The list goes on.
Agency to pursue covert acuvities
We've seen presidents erupt in going on behind Jhe headlines is a Slays m power. He thumbs his nose
In addressing points made in a aimed at ousting ibe Iraqi presi- rage- ac1 irresponsibly, even ille- fortuitous confluence of policy and at the United Nations inspection ,,
faeility in Mei~ COIDity.
The Meigs Counly Chamber of leuer published January 31, 1992.
dent. The program would include gally - because of leaks. Ricbald politics.
teams just for lite perverse sport of · -~
The payroll and spin off payroU some military aid, intelligence offi. Nixon responded to a leak by creat·
Commerce is working ditigently on
Policy: Iraq's dissidents - the i~ in his barely disguised quest to
many development projects i~~d­ would create tax dollars for cials said."
ing his White House plumbers to Kurds, ibe Shiites, even some of join ibe nuclear club. He'll surely ,ing the locauon of a pnson facihty. schools, county entities such as
Feb. 7, The New Yort Times: commit black-bag burglaries and the ruling Sunnls - no doubt were succeed someday, and live to ...
We are interested in any and all road maintenance and township "GATES, IN MIDEAST, IS SAID illegal wiretaps.
skeptical of intermediaries bearing wreak nuclear blackmail -if he''s :,
types of economic development for budgets. Therefore the roads to thiS TO DISCUSS OUSTER OF HUS·
word that Bush would support their
We've
also
seen
that
when
pres·
·'
·facility would be maintained SEIN - President Bush has dis- idents w'ant to keep an operation move to topple Saddam. They allowed to survive.
the betterment of Meigs County.
Somewhere, old Bill Casey must . "
The location of this facility extremely well.
heard
that once before, only to dis- be beaming. Surely, the notioo has .,;,
covert,
it
stays
covert
for
years
patched
Robert
M.
Gates,
the
The letters of support that were
would boost ibe economy of Meigs
cover Bush was more talk than crossed the lale CIA cbiers mind: "·.:
received
by the Chamber of Com- Director of Central Intelligence, on noihing leaks. CIA directoo don't action.
County greatly. The Ohio Data
Now the deluge of leaks that young whippersnapper, Geuge '&gt;,
an unpublicized mission.... to has- bave their cover blown - unless
Users Center released that the con- merce were not received by 100 ten the downfall of President Sad· that too is part of the plan. When tells the would-be coup"makers Bush, may be planning to give Sad- ...,
struCtion phase of ibis facility will individuals, they were received by dam Hussein, administration offl- Ronald Reagan sent Robert "Bud" (and Saddam and the world) that dam an October Surprise of his
~enerate 766 full-time equivalent civic, business, county and local
Bush has formalized his Intentions. very own.
JOOS for one year period and that organizations such as the Minisleri·
the annual operation of this facility al Association,~ountCommis·
will be associated with approxi- SIOIICIS,
e
·
v~
· local tR
schoOls, tmions,
mately 626 full time equivalent departmellll.
.jo!ls. Out of ibis 626 job total, 3SO etc.. which 1epTCW1t many individ·
JobS will be located at the prison uals.
(CODESA for short), whicb is curWe feel the letters of support · When I heard Jhat Mangosuthu
facility. The ~g jobs will be
A.
peoplethe.
Iezt· 1s
· a b'11 Ileavter
· now, renily meeting to discuss negotiaBu
received
represent
a
great
pan
of
Buthelezi,
political
leader
of
die
located in indusuies Jl'Oviding supplies and indusuies benefiting from Meigs County's voice. At this time Zulu natiori, was to speak to die in middle age, but his -voice and tions and (quite imprbperly) to
participate in the pew democracy. .: :
·
prison employees spending part of only three letters of opposition World Affain Council of Nortbem bearing were as young and vigor- engage in them:
"CODESA is comp&lt;)Sed of 20 He founcl that he wu duped, and . . :
have been received and ibose let· California here in San Franciseo, I ous as ever, ana his message WIS
their'wages in the local economy.
political parties, but excludes the the (communist) political power- " •
We would like to addras poinls ters represented individuals not hurriedly reserved a IICIL I hid no crystal-clear:
"The African National Consemtive Party and white par- play that followed resulted in a ., :
made in a letter published on groups or orpnizations.
idea he wu even ill Jhe counuy February 5111, 1992. It is true die · The Depanment of Corrections our liberal media almost never Congress is demandins a Con- lies end tntdc unions to the right of div1ded Angola being the :fie j :
a ;1 :
Deplrtlllent of Comctions would taka ev~ ~ution jlossi)lle to mention him. 11w migbl spoil tiMI stituent Assembly before June this it It IIIIo Cl!Cludel the Pan-African aftenmatb of violence." It
IS-year
civil
war
and
500,000
-:
yca-.It
is
recaining
its
priYIIeanny,
aecare
a
facility
of
this
type
and
Consraa, AZAPO, Will other polit·
impression they haw 10 carefully
IICI1d in dleit own P.ODP.Ie for cas~alties
to
unite
the
couatry
'•
Umkbonto
we
Sizwe,
inlacl,
and
it.
haw
lllled
they
would
become
a
of the jobi In the flcility. This is
ica1 orpnizations on the left. II is
cultivaltd, that Jhe wlli" govem.:*'
true, of the location of any type ol p111t ol 011' community.
mellt of Primt Millister de Klert is still secreting caches of urns just not sufficiently rep~Qentalive ......
Do de Klerk and Mandela really " •
The. Competitivene:ss jn iodustry and Jhe communl11-riddled black . around Jhe counuy beciUIC it wants of the total political spectrum in
. new facility. Tbe Department of
. ibink ihey,can hustle Soudl Africit · '
eortections his stated IIley would is razor ~- This is true as well terrorist movement called lhe to Slbre-rattle to get ill own way.
Soudl Africa. ...
"The IFP (lnkatha freedom
brins in temporary experienced for this racibty as we are com~- · Africu Nlllional Conpea, lwet'ed
"Quite frankly, mere are times into the hands of the ANC over the
~ to train and orpnize the Ina with two other counties. Th1s is by Nelson -dell, II'C lbo only Party, whicb Buthelezi lads) 111ys when It is so clearly evident that oppo1ition of 6 million Zulus, not -o
a areat opportunity for Meigs two political f&lt;ma in Soulb Mricl an adamant No 10 a Con1tituent \be ANC and the goveromOht II'C · ro mention minions of otbCr Soudl ~ ,
~both white end blaclt?
·; ;
A corrections officer would County to share ill state funds we ihll matler.
~bly before June this y..... conniving behind the scenes and
Not 1f Buthelezi can help it: :
make about 530,000.00 aanually have not '*I befare as thele II'C no
But J hacl interviewed Butbelezi Tile pine! is not equally lo~· for llleillptinsiO use CODESA to rub"We
want a true mulli-party ·~ •
all
pOikical
.
.
.
willa
il
c:Oalel
whicll incllldel a ' • ,II J*bp llllllll facilili-. in ~ County.
(Of lbo lint .... 20.1'111. ~~Do IIIli I
ber·IIIIIIP thO decisions they make
Tile Cllanhr wiiiiN to thank llld ...... 11111111 m.tli. .. Cllli· down political callpllpi11- inpri¥Mellldin~~Cn~C.Ml,_ democracy 1Dcl, colloquillly put, • I
.... S1G,QOO.OO 1 71111:· 1\e llliil
payroU for till• fadlkf woalcl aB ol ... iJidhidtsala wllo .. ,lup- Ill of It..Zulu, Ia 1917; IDd I '111n WI._ wbidln WI I· for the linin. oo
we are goi11110 ~there 10 ·' :·
w
llldmo portlna tbll piOjact llld encouraae kllew, llclllavo ~ llid II IIIia ed !'_1 tbo ANC wbere ao odler . Wbal if, nevertheless, de Klert enuo that SOuth
do ..ve ~ l
diOIC
wllo
believe
in
mil
endeevor
w t I opailll butlpt 1IOIId be
•f
colua•, dial DO future fCif Soalb polb II J1111Y dn lallapt Ill bold simply lelll out to !be ANC? One a mulliplicity ol cboicel."
10 wrile I letfer oiiiiiJPCift Ill The Africa, w~ e. . l'cir ptl Of ill, c. Ul m,!'
· 14 ediModallws ,
·
Doubter• iboulcl read a,1aln ~ ' 1
I pim alimPic ol tbe ptlliilliliTllo .. apu 1 ~ lit:IJIIy lu Chamber of Coamarce, 200 11.
Nor 11 Batbelozi · !lYerly
1n11 ·• ,
in Budielezl'&amp; uf ~alii tile "'11111 Wlliliil o1 IIMI·
md• eacvltJ IMifitJ wid u SMoad Str.,t, Poaeroy, Ohio
iapllll d wllb die Calfereace fCif trqic uperienc:o of Mighborill the manJ other historlos tblt ·• :
llllillllled lit 'I'M Dilly S I IGe 45169.
1 Democratic Soutb . Africa
.-sibe die wwiib qualidea oldie I
Sincetely Yoan.
,...., 29, 1992"' Cllulller
A~: Savim~ wu .wed that Zalu nation, With Moscow no ,., :
'
l'lmelaNewell,
~tsotad 1M Olllo Dlpai lll•t of
up milillri- (~ :
.
an Interim Goveromelll after die lonaer able 10
Cllut:k Kildaen, c:o-chaiiiDen,
• n dA pa geJs:uallr •e ·w .
Tboupn for Today: "We are efrecti~y deltroylns ouraelvea by~ wilhtlllwll of Palliiilflllm ~ ly HciJon Mandell may find South '
pia~-. 200 II. SeccJIId 1enc:o ~ u Joo.oe. oo - R.D, Laing. Scattilh p~yChillrlll (llr.t:'~ ' 11 wauld p"'l all poUdcll l*tlis
HCIIfkJ wlllcll ..114 HCurt
Atric:a a IOUII* IIUI tO cndt M .: :
St~~e~,
Pomeloy, Obio 1919),
~:....;
pa'
2A
1 tiDMn,
'
f1ir l'l"ipldon and OjijKIIUIIil.y 1D
.n" 'I

IMansfield I 52" I•

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IND.

' ' '' '

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Wants something done- now!

No need to cry over spilled secrets

Martin Schram

00

Addressing the points

Third .power rallies in South Africa
William

Rusher .,, i
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-

Letters to the editor

W. VA.

i)Qa· ·
Showers T-siDnns Rain Flutries

Sunny

Pl. Cloudy

Cloudy

01992 4ccu·Weelher,lnc.

_...,;.__ _ _ Weather----Wednesday through Fritlay:
A chance of snow showers
Wednesday. Fair on Thursday and
Friday. Highs in the mid-30s to
mid-40s Wednesday and the 40s
Thursday and Friday. Lows mainly
in the 30s Wednesday and in the
upper 20s to the mid-30s Thursday
and Friday.

Soutb-Central Ohio
Tonight, occasional rain. Thunderstorms possible. Low 40-45.
Chance of rain is near I00 percent.
Tuesday, showers likely, mainly in
the morning. Thunderstorms poSsible. High in Jhe mid-50s. Chance of
rain is 60 percent.
Extended forecast:

By The Associated Press
More showers and thunder·
storms are in the Ohio forecast to
Tuesday as a low pressure system
moves through the area, the
National "Weaiher Service said.
The low, centered over the Central Plains today, was drawing large
amounts of moisture into it from
· the Gulf of Mellico. Rain from ibe
system was to spread across the
state tonight and continue on Thesday.
Forecasters say locally heavy
rain could create a flood threat,
especially in northwest Ohio.
Following passage of the low
pressure system, cooler temperatures will move into Ohio and snow
fluiries are possible Tuesday night
and Wednesday.

Paul A, Brewer

Reynolds Cemetery.
Friends may call at Cremeens
Funeral Chapel from 6-9 Monday.
The body will be taken to the
church one hour prior to services.
Military graveside services will
be held by VFW Post 4464.
Pallbearers will be James
Arrowood, Joey Rife, Jackie
Arrowood Jr., Jackie Henson, Chris
Lane, and Michael Massie. Honorary pallbearers will be Vaughan
French, Larry Hood, and Ernest
Quillen.

Paul Andrew Brewer, 6 1/2·
month-old son of Rosa Brewer
Lawrence and Danny Saxon, died
Saturday evening when fire
destroyed their home. He was born
July 24, 1991, in Pt. Pleasant,
W.Va
In addition to his parents, he is
survived by two brothers , Noah
Jake Robinette and Joseph
Lawrence Jr., and a sister, Crystal
Dawn Lawrence, all at borne.
Other survivors include paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Saxon of Bidwell, and maternal
grandmother, Doris Brewer of Vi~ ­
ton.
Services will be conducted II
a.m., Tuesday, at the McCoyMoore Funeral Home in Vinton
wiib ibe Rev. Elmer Geiser officiating. B.urial will be in ibe Brush
Cemetery.
Friends may call one hour prior
to the service at the funeral borne.

MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) The five Democratic presidential
contenders stuck to familiar ibemes
as they made an eleventh-hour
appeal for votes in a televised
debate that restored civility to a
New Hampshire primary campaign
that had turned a bit cantankerous.
Missing from Sunday ni$ht 's
curtain-call debate was the smping
that has marked the campaign in
recent days'. The only concerted

'

Roben W. Henson, 67, of 122
Honeysuckle Dr., Cheshire, died
Saturday, Feb. 15, 1992, at Holzer
Medical Center.
,
He was born Aug . I, 1924 in
Addison, son of the late John
Samuel and Mildred V. Vance
Henson.
He was a retired carpenter, anll a
member of the Carpenter Local
1159, Point Pleasant, W.Va. , serving as business representative from
1970-73. He served in the U.S.
Army during World War II with
the 364th Service Group and was a
member of the VFW Post 4464 and
the Addison United Methodist
Church.
Survivors include his wife, Virginia R. Arrowood Henson; two
daughters, Diana L. Campbell and
Teresa J. Ours, boib of Gallipolis;
one son, Wade Henson of Gallipolis; Jhree brothers, Arihur Henson
of Addison , Jack Henson of
Cheshire, and Gene Henson of
Alexandria; two sisters, Mrs .
William (Clara Lou) Shaver of
Easley, S.C., and Mrs . Harold
(Georgia) Poner of Gallipolis; and
seven grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held 2
p.m. Tuesday at Addison United
Methodist Church, with the Rev.
Ernest Perkins. Burial will be in

(UBPSIIS-180)

Publi1hed every aRernoon. Monday
throUgh Fticloy, I U Court St. PomOIV)',
Ohio by tho Ohio. Valt11 p,;bliohin1
Company!Mulllmedia lnciia~o,:eroy,
Ohio 467~ 1 Pli. 992-211511.
cluo ·
poollp ,.,. at Pomeroy, Ohio.

SPRING VAl tEY CINEMA
446 m4

POSTMASTE!t Send addnoa cho .... ,.
Tho Daily Senllnol, 1lt Court at.,

Pomeroy, OHio 4157611•

,

By Carrlor or Motor ~to

One Woell. ..........................................&amp;t.IIO
One Month.........................................l6.96
One Year.................................- .. &amp;83.110

SINGLE COPY
PJIC&amp;

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Sul.rlbtn not olollr1rw 10 pay u.. ram·
• OilY nalltln .., .... di- lo Tho

Oantoolla Dal~"1"""' oe a U or II
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I will bo II- raftitr

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Ne oubocripllono by Mil pormltled ln
aru1 when home carrier· M"ttt ta
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Geraldine Layne

None.

.

Member. The A~led " ' -• Inland
Daily "'- AuclatiOtt and.lho Ohio
N1w1paptr At~ocitttoft. National
Atnrtioinl Repre~~nlaliYo, Bnnham
Newopapoo Sal•.l J3S Thinl Av.,uo,
NIWYOr'ot, NewYun 10017.

11

this date at lhe Columbus weather
Slation was 67 degrees in 1911. The
record low was 7 below zero in
1979.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:09
p.m. Sunrise on Tuesday will be at
7:21am.
Around the nation
Rain fell today in parts of the
Midwest and Southeast. Snow
·Shrouded the mountains of the
West.
Mornin~ rain dampened Presidents Day mcities including Birm·
ingham, Ala., Memphis, Tenn.,
New Orleans and Omaha, Neb.
Temperatures early today ranged
from the 30s in carts of ibe West
and New England to the 50s in portions of the Souibeast

On.Sunday, a storm in the central Rocky Mountain region pro·
duced 4 to 13 inches of snow in the
high elevations of southwestern
Colorado before heading to the
Plains. In the Sierra Nevada, 12 to
18 inches of snow fell in the 24
hours ending at 9 p.m. EST Sunday.
Skiers in Utah welcomed more
than 15 inches of new snowfall
over ibe weekend, with a generous
dose along the Wasau:h Mountaii!S.
, "S~in~ is great, Utah's powder
IS at us fmest now," said Peter
Schory of the Snowbird resort.
Salt Lake City got 4 inches of
new snow overnight
To ibe East, snow lingered over
pans of eastern New York state and
New England. Caribou, Maine,

.

broke .its snowfall record for the
date Sunday with 8.4 inches. The
previous mark was 6.7 inches set in
1967.
"
In Alaska, winds gusts of more
than 60 mph were reported Sunday
in Valdez, producing wind chill
readings of 30 degrees below zero.
The cold weather was expected to
continue this week.
The nation's high Sunday was
85 degrees in Homestead, fla.
The afternoon forecast called for
flurries in the Rocky Mountain
region and thunderstprms along a
cold front in portions of Louisiana,
Arkansas, Mississippi and Alaba·
ma. Temoeratures were expected to
be in the 30s and 40s in New England and the Plains and in the 50s
and 60s in most of the Southeast.

Criticism was directed at President Democratic voters and Arkansas power was low on his list - but ::
Bush and at New Hampshire front· Gov. Bill Clinton by 20 percent. preferable to relying on fossil fuels.
runner Paul Tsongas, for his sup- · The two senators in the race, Bob And he stressed that he has the
pon of nuclear power.
Kerrey of Nebraska and Tom most backing among New HampWith no knockouts, ibe debate Harkin of Iowa have 10 percent shire environmentalists , their
was unlikely to change much head- each and former California Gov. staunch opposition to nuclear ..
ing into today's frenetic final day Jerry Brown has 7 percent. Six per- power notwithstanding.
of campaigning before Tuesday's cent said ibey planned to write in
Tsongas also promised to play ..
leadoff primary.
ibe name of New York Gov. Mario economic patriot if Japan kept its
Joining the live Democrats in a Cuomo. The survey of 578 people markets closed to U.S. goods, say7 •• •
political blitzkrieg of lhe state is had a 5 percentage point margin of ing he would use the presidency to ...
Republican challenger Patrick error.
urge Americans to buy American.
Buchanan, who predicts Tuesday's
Tsongas entered Sunday night's
" If the Japanese are not going to .
results will wound ibe president.
CNN debate expecting attacks and be reasonable, you have to play , ..
Looking to prove Buchanan was ibe favorite, if infrequen~ tar· hardball," he said.
,
wrong, Bilsh was back in Washing- get
For Clinton, the debate offered a .· :
.ton today but planning 10 conduct
"We' re not trying to gang up on chance to shift auention to his mes- . ·
telephone interviews with New you, we're not saying that you're sage after weeks of questions about
· Hampshire news media in a final wrong all the time, but I ibink you his personal life and Vietnam draft
are on this particular issue," Ker- status. Neiiber controversy came up
effon to shore up his support.
A USA Today-CNN-Gallup rey said as he took issue with Sunday.
Tsongas' suppon of nuclear power.
trackin~ noll taken Saturday and
Instead, CliniOn used his time to
Sunday showed former Mas- Harkin and Brown joined in that push policy proposals ranging from
. an apprenticeship program for high
sachusetts Sen. Tsongas in the lead, chorus:
Tsongas countered that nuclear . school graduates who opt against
favored by 40 percent of likely
college to a middle-class tax cut he
said would be a ''down payment on
.,
tax fairness ."
He said II years as governor set . .
him apart from the field.
For his part, Kerrey called
reduction a "moral obliga"I'm certainly not playing it deficit
CLEVELAND (AP) - Repub·
and
on several occasions
tion"
lican Lt Gov. Mike DeWine, who that way," Glenn said in an inter· termed Bush " massively indiffer- "
is challenging Sen. John Glenn. view Thursday after stopping by ent" to average Americans and
clearly remembers lhe day 30 years University School in suburban their problems.
ago Thursday that Glenn became Shaker He~ghts, which was staging
H~rkin has been the spark
the first American to orbit the a simulation of his Feb. 20, 1962, behind
much of the acrimony in the
fiighL
Earth.
campaign's
fmal days, criticizing
"It just happens that the 30th
In 1962 DeWine was a freshman
Clinton,
Kerrey
iltld Tsongas in his
at Yellow Springs High School, anniversary came up this year,'' ads and public appearances.
··
where his future wife, Fran, also Glenn said. "That's a facL I didn't
But
he
took
a
different
tack
in
··
arrange it that way. It's there.
was a student
ibe
debate,
prQmotin~
his
Jheme
of
"I remember listening to radio Whatever people make or don't "rebuilding America ' while paint- · ·
accounts and tistening to television make out of it, that's up to them,
ing himself in the mold of Harry
when John Glenn orbited the Earth not me.''
Truman,
Franklin Roosevelt and
Glenn said he expects to mark
in '62," said DeWine, recalling
.
that he was in science class when the anniversary as he has in past John F. Kennedy.
Brown engaged Tsongas in a years: with a quiet dinner out wiib
he heard ibe historic news.
give-and-take over nuclear power · "
\
''We all felt a great deal of pride his wife.
but ' Pc' nl most of his time on his · •
"Annie
and
I
usually
celebrate
as Americans that day," DeWine
fa vo ru c subject: the corrupting ·. ·
the
anniversary
wiib
dinner
out
or
said in a telephone interview from
something
like
that,"
he
said.
influence of money in politics.
Dayton.
"That pride has not diminished "We'll probably do something like
or dissipated. We 'all stiU have that. that. That will be about it"
John Glenn was a national hero.
John Glenn will always be a
national hero."
But, DeWine added, his camMeigs County Emergency Med- Road at the Henry Thomas resipai~n wiD focus on the future.
'The issue in the 1992 election ical Services units answered 10 dence. At 10:15 a.m., Racine squad
is ibe future of the state of Ohio. calls for assistance over the week· went to State Route 338 for Elpha
Stuart, who was taken to Veterans.
We're going to have a good debate end.
At 6:16 p.m., Middleport squad •
On Saturday at !0:43a.m., Midabout ideas and issues, where Ohio
should be going and where the dleport squad went to Mill Street went to Overbrook Center. Guy ·· ·
country should be going. I think we and transponed Mildred Riley to Priddy was taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. A 8:53 p.m., Mitldle- ·
should look to the future," DeWine Holzer Medical Center.
port
squad was sent to Cole Street.
At 1:08 p.m ., Porrieroy unit
said.
.
Nellie
Perine was taken to Veter· "
Glenn, D-Ohio, said it's just a went to Peacock Avenue. Carolyo
ans.
At
9:26 p.m.. Pomeroy unit :' ·.
political coincidence that he will Wert was taken to Veterans Memowent to Laurel Cliff Road for ·
launch his campaign for election to rial Hospital.
On Sunday at 12:09 a.m., Sharon Smith. She was taken to · "
a fourth six-year term on the 30th
anniversary of his space flight Columbia Fire Deparunent went to Veterans. At 9:37 p.m.. Columbia ..
Erickson Road for an elecuical fue fire department went to a fire on :
Thursday.
at
the Joseph Rupe residence. At State Route 143 . At 10:15 p.m.,
Glenn said he unders!ood some
people might feel 'he was ready to 1:30 a.m., Chester untts went to a Pomeroy squad went to Mulberry ..
take political advanta$e of the smoke odor report on Oak Hill Avenue. Amy Sayre was taken to '
Veterans.
·..'
anniversary to promote his re-election but said that wasn't his intent.
'. "

Glenn filing for re-election
on 30th anniversary of flight

Squads have 10 weekend calls

-----Hospital news--------

The Daily Sentinel

B~PnONRATEI '

Funeral services wiU be held on
Wednesday at I p.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home in Pomeroy with
Alan Blackwood officiating. Burial
wiU be in Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m. and 7
p.m. to 9 p.m. on Tuesday.

Geraldine Elizabeib Layne, 84,
of New Haven, W.Va., died Satur·
day, Feb. 15, 1992, at Pleasant Valley Hospital in Point Pleasant ,
Joseph Rupe
W.Va
Born July 26, 1907, in Spencer,
Joseph William Keith Rope, Jr.,
2 1/2, of Route 3 in Albany., died W.Va. she was ibe daughter of the
on Friday evening, February 14, late Harry L. and Ona Belle Sinnett
1992, at Children's Hospital in Dyer.
She helped operate the Haven
Columbus. The child drowned after
falling into a well near Albany on Theatre with her husband, Harry 0 .
Layne, who preceded her in death
Friday.
He was born in Riverside Hos- in 1980.
She was a member of the St.
pital in Columbus, the son of
Joseph and Ruth Ann Brewer Paul Lutheran Church in New
Haven where she was the church
Rope.
organist
and Sunday school teacher
He is survived by a broiber, T.
Christopher Rope, at horne; mater- for many years. She was also a
nal grandparents, James and Paula member of the New Haven Garden
Brewer and paternal grandmother, Club.
She is survived by three sons,
Georgia Hallan, all of Columbus;
Harry
Robert Layne and James
maternal great-grandparents VirHerman
Layne, both of New
ginia M. Frank of Columbus and
Haven,
and
John Dyer Layne of
Eugene F. Brewer, Sr. of WesterWilton,
Conn.;
10 grandchildren
ville; paternal great-grandmother,
and five great-grandchildren.
Gloria Sharpe of KirkersviUe.
Other survivors include: one
He was preceded in death by
two grandfathers, Raymond Marion brother, John Lindberg Dyer of
Scott Depot, W.Va.; a sister, Betty
Rope and Kenneib Yale Erickson.
J
o Hendershot of Concord, Calif.,
Graveside services will take
and
a sister-in-law, Mrs. James M.
place at Radcliff Cemetery at II
"Babe"
Dyer of Norfolk, Va.
a.m. on Tuesday with Msgr. DonBesides
her parents and husald Horak offiCiating.
Friends may eall at the Bigony- band, she was preceded in death by
Jordan Funeral Home in Albany on three broihers: Nigel, William and
James.
Monday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.
Services will be held I :30 p.m.
Tuesday
at St. Paul Lutheran
Carol Knotts
Church
in
New Haven with the
Carol Ann Knous, 48, of 37007
Revs.
George
Weirick, Patricia
King Hill Road in Pomeroy, died
on Sunday, February 16, 1992 at Bonds-Krug and Richard W.
Holzer Medical Center in Gallipo· Bonds-Krug officiatin~ . Burial will
lis, following an extended illness. be in Kirkland Memorial Garden.
Friends may call Tuesday 11
She was a housewife.
a.m.-1:30
p.m. at the St. Paul
She was born on November 28,
Lutheran
Church.
1943, the daughter of Anna Welch
In lieu of flowers, conuibutions
Griffith and of ibe late Willie Hancan be made to the St Paul Luiberings urvi~ing, in addition to her an Church, New Haven, WV
mother, are her husband, Brady 25265.
Funeral arrangements are being
Knous, Pomeroy: two sons, Timohandled
by Foglesong Funeral
iby Knous and Brad Knotts, boib
Home.
of Pomeroy: two broibers, Eugene
Haning and Robert Haning, both of
Pomero1.; a step daughter, Mrs.
Fertell (Patty) Stover of Houston,
Veterans Memorial
Texas; two grandchildren and sevSATURDAY
ADMISSIONS eral nieces and nephews. .
Carl
Dill,
Pomeroy;
Grace Call,
Besides her father, Mrs. Knotts
Pomeroy;•Charles
Kiser,
Pomeroy;
was preceded in deaih by two aunts and Ronald Jeffers, Pomeroy.
and two uncles.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES -

Robert W, Henson

The record high temperature for

Democrats make final appeal for
New Hampshire votes in TV debate

----Area deaths _ _ __

Mallhboorl$!'111
I..W.O.Dia
•tr

::
'

SUNDAY ADMISSIONS •
Margaret Wyatt, Pomeroy, and
Marie Roy, Racine.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
Ronald Jeffers, Grace Call and Carl
Dill.
Holzer Medical Center
Dbchlraes Feb. 14:
Brittany Arthur, Mrs. James
Fish and daughter; Mrs. Stephen
Halley and daughter; Mauhew Kelley, Jeffrey Kittle, MarSarei Oiler,
De,nna Roff, Dorothy Thomas,
Mrs. Joe Williams and daughter
and Melissa Wray.
(Blrtlls Feb. 14)
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Maier, son,
McArthur; Mr. and Mrs. Ken
Deckard, daughter, Bidwell; Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Werosing, son,
Point Pleasant and Mr. and Mrs.
David WilBarns, Pomeroy.
Dllc:lllrsa Feb. 15
Allen Abel, Gretta Cole, Mrs.
Nathanel Johnson and daughter;
Charles Klaht, Barbara Magneson,
Mrs. David McClarren and daugh-

ter; Nora McGuire, Kelli Potter,
Samuel Saunders and Orie Sickles.
Birtb Feb. 15
Mr. and Mrs.'Darrell Sands, son,
Hartford, W.Va.
Discharges Feb.l6:
Ronald Davis, Jesse Halley,
Mrs. Rick Maier and son; Clayton
Miller, Mrs. Kenneth Decker and
daughter and Mrs. David Williams
and daughter.
Births Feb. U:
Mr . and Mrs . Aaron Kerr,
daughter, Wellston and Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Ross, Waterloo,
daughter.

•'

GCfipel slog
A benefit gospel sing will be
held at the Father's House Church
in Hartf0!4, W.Va. on Feb. 28 at 7
p.m. Singers will be Victory, Joy,
The Turley Family. The benefit is
for Jhe Eddie Casio family. Clyde
Fields in ibe pastor.
Racine Legion to meet
The Racine American Legion
Post No. 602 will meet Thursday at
7:30p.m. at the post horne.

Democrats to meet
The Meigs County Democratic :
Executive Committee will meet ·
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Car- •· ·
penter's Hall in Pomeroy. ··
· ·,
MCCLtomeet
The Middleport Child Conservation League wiU meet Thursday
at 7 p.m. at the Rock Springs Unit- · ·
ed Methodist Church. Tammy Tib- ·
bits, O.B. Nurse, will discuss pro- · ·
grams for needy mothers.

Lottery numbers
Super Lotto
11-19-26-41-42-46 '
'
(eleven, nineteen, twe~tr · SIX,
for~y-ooc, forty-two, fony-su)
The jackpot is $12 million.
Kicker
7-4-4-0-9-0
(seven, four, four, zero, nine,.
zero)

Pick 3 Number~
.8-S-6
(eilht. live, six)
Plck4Numbm
8-1-·0-0
• (eight, one, zero, zero)

II

I

--Meigs annoucements---

'''

MONOAY-Grlled Ham &amp;Clleete, Fa Frlft, ~ &amp;Salad Bar

....

TUESDAY • Mushroom Buger, Hash &amp;owns, So\4) &amp;Salad Bar
WEQNESOAY ·ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT SPAGHETII (ALL DAY)
JHU!!SQA'( • Cl*:kan Sendwlch, Fa Frlft, ~ &amp; Salad Bar
fB!DAY'· All-YOU-CAN-EAT FISH lALL DAY)

'

...

-.

EYUT DA1' DII:TIR'81RCW...,,.•4.48
111SMU
IUAJ 11111101 CIIIMIII'S a&amp;.

Ill

..,...,....

__ __
..,,,

__,

••
.......

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�The Daily Sentinel

·Sports

Monday, February 17, 1992
Page-.4

Lakers retire Magic Johnson's No. 32 in Sunday ceremony
By JOHN NADEL
AP Sports Writer
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) -The Magic Johnson era officially ended when the Los Angeles LakCI'll retired his jersey and displayed it high above the
Forum court along with the Jerseys of four other former superslarS.
The new Magic Johnson era might begin any day
now.
"I'm looking forward to playing in the Olympics.
I hope if I do decide to come back you won't be
upset if we do this all over again," Johnson said Sunday at the conclusion of the emotional 45-minute
retirement ceremony.
Johnson was honored at halftime of the Lakers'

game against the Boston Celtics. After the game,
which the Celtics won 114-107, Johnson repeated
what he's been saying recently - that he might
return to the Lakers.
Sounding like a man who hasn't made up his
mind, Johnson said he'd announce a decision shonly.
"Today might have been the most difficult day
because he was here and I was here," Johnson told
reporters, referring to injured Celtics star Larry Bird.
"I'm gone and he's right around the comer. We're
going to play one-on-one soon.''
When asked about using the word gone, Johnson
said, "''m retired, so I'm gone, what can I say? If
that changes, then I'll be back. I'll tell you I'm coming back. You old timers, you know I change my

all sides determined that Sunday's retirement ceremony should go on as previously planned.
Johnson was honored a week after his Most Valuable Player perfonnance in the NBA AU-Star game, a
29-minute effort in which he had 25 points, nine
assists and five rebounds.
It was the only game Johnson has played since he
aMounced his retirement on Nov. 7 because he had
tested positive for the virus that causes AIDS.
Johnson, 32, wore No. 32 for the Lakers for 12
seasons.

mind.' "

About the retirement ceremony, be said, "It was
the right time. If it sticks, this was the right time,
wilh Boston and Larry here. It was grea~ the intensity and the excitement was here because of Larry and
the Celtics."
While stressing that he hopes Johnson does the
right thing for himself, Lakers coach Mike Dunleavy
said he hopes Johnson announces a decision soon.
Johnson first mentioned publicly the possibility of
his returning as a professional player on Jan. 29. But

Scoreboard
In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Tum
W
New York .............. 31
8 01 lal .................... 29
Miami .................... 24

PeL
.633
.580

L
18
21
!7
Philadelpbi&amp; ...........24 T1

.47 1

8

.47 1

8

Newltll"'ey ............21 30

.412

II

33

. 340
.255

Od.• •do .................. l3 38

g;:f~·· :=:::Ji

1:

:ll;
.569
.500
.480
.423

.320

2j

FarW.a

14 .l

16J
17.5

O...d 7~ H..Uonl 56
Duq-· 77, s.. loocph'• 74

20.5 ,
25.S

Fairleiah Dickinaon 81. Mount St .
Fordham 67, Bucknell 57
Hofma68, Rider 6!5
Holy Crou 71,Aany67
ION 80, Falrfldd 70
Lehigh 92, Nav~ 18

CB

l.oyolo. Md. 77. M&amp;nh&amp;Uift 7l
Mmmoulh, N.J. 6S, St. Francia, NY

4
U

64
New Ham pi hire. 66, Northeutern. 64
NOlte Dame I 01, Syncuae 98
Penn 86, Brown 67
Princeton 46, Y•le 3S
Robert Morri.t 93, St. Francis, Pa. 61
Rutp 86, SL Peu:r'• 73
Sola! Hall Bl , Providonco 77
Siena 92, Can.i liua 76
St Jcit.n 'a 84, Pitta butah 74
Towaon St. I I J , ~ d .- Balt im ore
Coun!~ 103
Wagner 71, Long bland U. 68
Wett Vlralnla 71, St. Bonannture

14
18

23.5

D
2.5

6
9.5

10
18

"'

Saturday's scores

Cleveland 121, "New ,Jene7 t1
lndion• l l7,Mmnoo... l01
Chicaao 99. New Yod: 98
Dallas 103, HoultOn 99

S&lt;&gt;ulll
AJa.·Birminghun 64, Ma«iUeu.e 60
Ahbuna St. 116, Tuakep. 93
American U. 69, East Carolina 66
Appalac:him SL 82, W. Camlina 79
Bcatume-Coalm&amp;n 102, Dellwm St.

Utah 106, Dmver 93
Phocnil. 124, WuhinJlOtl91!

Ccn~t.n~ry

Today'• games
Atlanta VI. Wuhington It Ba.lumcn,
I p.m.
New Yodc at Miami, 7:30 p.m.
Qu.rloue at lndiana, 1:30 p.m.

E. Kentucky 83, SE Miuouri fiJ
E. TCMICIIOC Sl. 13, Tn.-Chatllnooga

67

Aorida AllM 'M, Md. ·E. Shme 69
florida SL 80, Georgia Tech 67
Gocqlfown 7S, Miami 58
Geotaia Southern 79, SE Louisiu'll

n

Georgi• SL 71, Stetson 66
Kentucky 93, W. Kentucky 83
Ubc:n.y 76, Otarlc.IOrl Southern 60
l..ouiJiana Ted! 103, Lamu 67
Manhall19, YMI n
Middle Tenn. CJ7, Tennessee Tech 76
Mill. Valley St 98 , JacbM St. II
Mcnhcad SL 90, Auatin Pal~ 83

Minnaouat Houston, 8:30p.m.
B~ton at UWt, 9:30p.m.
Phocnii at Seattle., I 0 p.m.
Stn AntMio at L.A. Clippers. 10:30
p.nl.
L.A. Wen It Golden Sllte, 10:30

Mumy St 75, TenneuceSL60
N. Carolina A.tT 66, Howard U. 65

N.C.-Aaheville 78, Win~ 75
N.C.-Wilming\On 67, Georee Muaa

p.m.

64
New Orlearu 94, Cent florida 64
North Carolina 80, ClemJOO 72
Old Daninim 72, Jame~ Madison 71
Radford 72, O.vidlon 63
Rice 81, Gnmblina St.49
Richmond 83, Williun &amp; Mary S4
S. Carolina St 98, Moraan St 68
Samford 60, Fla. lnlt:matimal S6
Swlh Aorida 70, N.C. O!arloue 63
Tcnneuce68, Dayt.on 67
Vandabilt 76, LS U 69

S•cmnenlo 1tNcw Yotk, 7:30 p.m.
Orlando It Dl:troit, 7:30p.m.
Cleveland al Mll•aukte, 1:31 p.m.
Philadelphil 11 Oallu, 8:30 p.m.
PhoatiJ.u Portland, 10 p.m.

In the NHL ...
WALES CONFERENCE
Palrlc:k Dh1slon
Tclllll

V ' ' T&lt;doi9, TW...7l
W~ormt 69, Viqinia 60

W L T PI&amp;. GFGA

N.Y. Rqm ..... 31 19 3
WuhingtDn ........ 33 20 S

New Ieney ........ 31 18
Pitt~bura)l ..... ..... 26 2A
N.Y. IIIanderl .... 1126
P!Wod&lt;Jpllio ....... 2125

7
7
7
ll

71 233190
71 246197
69 216171
~9 2A3 222
53 21022.5
l3 174190

Mldwat
Ball SL 60, W. MichiJ.-! 46
Bowlin&amp; 0.... 68, E. Mkh~•n 17
Cent Michlaan 61, Toledo 61
CinMnt1i 19, St.l..Ooli160
Ocvdand St. 10, W. Illinc:U fiJ
. E. Illinw 6~ Akron 5S

Adami Dlvlllon
34 21 5 73 197 149

Montrul ............
s c.m....... ....
BWI•lo ..............
HarJc.d .............

EvanMlle 71, Butler 69
IU.inoia 74, Miruaw 58
lllinoio SL S8. Bndlo1-t6
Indiana 91, NorchWCIItczn 60
Iowa 80, Purdue 61
Iowa St. &amp;4, Oklahoma St 83, OT
K&amp;nlu 12, Colomdo 4S
l.oyolo. lll. 93, o.u.n !9,lOT
M.ichiaan St. 10, Mi.chia•n S9
N. IUinciall, Valpaniso 75
N. lowa 96, Omke 14
NE lll1noia 74, YCU~pDwn St. 71
Ohio St. I?, Wleconll• 6l
Ofllo U. II, Ktol "
SW MiMowi SL 72, Cmplal S6
W'tdilia Sl. 73,1nd.ilnl SL 58
Wrip S..IO, Wia.-o.- B•y 62

17 22 a 62 19.5 194
23 26 10 S6 213220
16 29 \0 42 171 197

Quebec ............. 12 3R 7

31 168233

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
Norrl.l DM.IIon

Ttam

W L T Pu. CFCA

Dewit ................ 31 11 9 71 249 193
StLouis ............ 26 23 9 6! 201 192
Chicago.............. 25 21 12 62 187 174
MiMC&amp;OLI ....•..... lS 26 S SS 1871 91
Toronw .............. 21 32 S 47 166 212

Smythe Dl villon
Vancoova ......... 3019 I
Winnipeg ........... 24 21 II
u. Ao1d ......... 23 22 13
Edmonton .......... 2:5 28 1
CaJsur ........ ..... 22 11 9
SanJ c.e ............. 13 41 4

Soulhwelt
Muuu 19, South Ca:rdina 73
Ml:Neme St. R6. Sam HBUtM SL 73
Ni&lt;holb SL 71, '""""' F.A..un 67
S. Dlinoi-174, Tulu 66
SW Lou.iliana IS, Adi:.-Lillle Rock

6S 199 115
S9 177173
S9 206m
51 220229
53 212213
30

15026~

7S

Saturday's scores

Phlladelphil a, tidmCillOtl 5
New Jcney 4, Hartfi'Jrd I

Dcuoi1ll , San J010 1
N.Y. Idandc:n ], Vanc:wver I
Minn-.l. Pi..bwJh 2

Quebec 4, Mm trt.al4, tie
Winnipes 3. Toronto l
Sd .ouio 7, Calauy 2
LooAnad"6, Wuhinpon 3

Sunday's scores
New Jcncy4, N.Y. Ran1cn l
BW!alo S,lblllonl4
Pi.....&amp;h '· P!Ul&amp;delpltl• 3, lio
Tomnco 7, Edmutton S
C&amp;lpry S. OU..ao 5, lio

Today'•c•m••

Vancouver 11 N.Y. Ranaen, 1 ~ 3 5
p.m.
Wlnnipet "N.Y. lollndon, 2,0S pm.
s..... " Lao ""fd!'. 4,0S pm.
St UuilllDcuoil, 7:35p.m.
MinneMU II Morlreal, 7:3S p.m.

.
''

,·

.

••

.

,I

·'·'
'.
'

-

Dob7t,N.~k~
_,.,.~.1

lloooflllo 11.10•. _ - -61

nndllr 76,o.r..... 61

F""""' 67, Hopowoll·Loodoo l3
Ft. J~Mnina• 56, ~OOs Jeffenon SO
Pt. W•yne (Ind.) Canl.t.rb.uy 'M, Mendon Union 66
Oahanna73, Col. Waln\11 Ridge 65
Genoa 60, Woodmon: 54
GibaanburJ 91, Mohawk 72
Clilmour 61 LU.e Cadi. 58

or

l4

farWell
Air Fcwoe"· Tuu--El Puo72
Arizctolll, Wllhlnalllll 51
BW. S.. 74. Wiho Q
CS Northrida• 10, Wi.I.·Milwallkcc
69,0f
c.t S..·Pulten&lt;tol6, UC1Mno68
CalondoS..It, Ullh 72
llnnii 66, Soa Diop S..ll
tdoho Sl 1$, N. Aril&lt;&gt;nl73

u Scll•ll.lldPMI v...,ao

LayaU Mar)'maual 106, Su. Dl.cao

-11,WoborSL61
Nno Maloo k 12. S. Jo. SL l7
~11.92.-Col71

;irlbw
s.-....99
e. oaoa,.16

p

ll

Latham Wea~m~ BI,Adw 66
Lim• Cath.. 8!i , Day. Je!fcnoo 60
l..iulc Miami 74, JWniJ.Lal R011 6J
I....ockland 51, Cin. Wyoming 47
lAnin 47, W. Gcauga 46
L..oW.villc: Aqu.inaa 60, Ahm Coven·
try 48
Madi1on Plain• 72, S. Charles ton
Sm!\heull:m 70
Mansfield Sr. 90, Murillon Washing-

""' 81

Mansfield St. Peter's 57, Frederick·

town48

Marion Harding 53, Tiffin Columbian

43
Marion Local 48, Jackson C.erner 34
Mu1illon Pcny 60 , Canton Tim.lr:en

59

Mawne~C

72, Orqm Suildt 56

Maumee Vall. 10, BI'Xi.Mlle 61
Middletown Chr. 71, Cin. H u !he~ 60
Miller City 71, Cary RaWIM. 61

MW&lt;rd 60, Parumoulh E. 4l
MOJidOR! 72. K.idnln 67
N. Central 86, Edac:rton 76
New London 57, Fi.rdandJ 47
Ncwuk 60, Thomu Worthingtm 34
Newalk Calli. 80, Amelia S4

Norwa.lk 63, PI:Jkin1 55
Onnge Clu. 63, El)'rio B•[Xiot 5S
OrM.lle 63, Wadi worth 57
Padua~ W.Va. 51 , Lancm cr49
Patrici. Henry 47, Hol&amp;ue 36
Pecble~71, Beaver Eul.cm 51
l'looUnl 71, Elp S8
PM Oinlal 62, Bellovucl9
Pon.1mouth 73, Wonhington Kil boomoS4
..,...... ! Vall. 81 , t..dganont S6
ReodlviUe Emcm 61, Walc:Jford 59
RivO' 7S, Sltyvuo 71
RivcrV.U. 71, N. Union 58
S. Raqe67, I.4Wville 58
Sandy VaU. 51 , Cm~m - Vall . SO
Sprina. Nonhweatem 6 3, Sprin g.
Northwlem 60
.
Sprina. Shawnee 71 , Urbana 58

S1. Hcnry73, Van Wen 6S

Stalbenville7l. YounJ. Mooney S6

SU)'ker 70, Liberty Ccncr 56
Tot SL John't63, Tot Wait.c 59, OT
T010n&amp;G 12. Bellaire St. John'• 53
Tn10 of Li!c 6l, Marion Calh. 5!5
Tri·V&amp;llcy Sl, C...Uvillo SO

l4

Tyler County. W.Va. 64, Shadylidc

Union Lal61, St. Oaitlville S9
~W Sc:io'o Vall. 75, Danbury

42

Utica.IOI,E. Xnox7l
Vi~OIY Ov. 60. Moadvillo (Pa.) Chr.
W. Cha:ter I..Uota 92, Huber flu .

Wa)M64

Wlllh l•uh 67,C.Ift014S

WapakonMI57, Swanlon 56

so

W.......W.64,Ce.Eul57
WOiklno Manorial 61, Tom Vall. S6
w...... I7,0uopl7
W1ync Tnce ' '· Convoy Cratvicw

Weinoa (W.Va .) Madonna 71 ,
Wo11Mlk69

s.-

ll

WlloolonbwJ 67,
6!
W........... Ov. 70,Cal. Wollin...
Xclo W- U, Triod II
Y-.UnulJM7t,Colvii)'Ov. 63

!2,S.. 0..41

. ... ....,•• Cal.

Ponlaod

57

- - 92, Colil- 66
IICIAI4,~6!
IJNLV66,I'Iolllo U.SO
Ullh SL 70, UC Suu B..t.nl4
...,..... 61, Now Noaioo61

Ohio high school
boys basketbaU seores
~J.:•acdol
Adott,
60
Akroa W.acbelttr 61, cu,ll!.oaa
Vtll. CUillilo 64
AlloB B. 61, ~ Ptlry ll
Alba 74, k!om 5I .
,.&amp;mm+C
wlr:M,a.a.~

S6

Grctnfield 55, W. Unioo 33
Oreenon S4, Kenton Ridge SJ
HunillOn SS, Day. Me.adowdale 61
Hlwken 78, Lulhcntl W. 66
Hcriuac Chr. 66, Elyria Open Door

Hi.lliud 57' Dublin 41
Killtop 72, Montpelia 5S
Hudson Weuem Reserve 79, Pir.L!I bWJh Shady Side 56
Jackson 66, Wellston 38
Jduutown 67, Johnatown Nort hridge
58
Jmalhan Alder 70, Fa.itblnka 66
KiW Pn:p, Pl. 82, Clc. llnivmity@
K~gcr Cred: 59, Ironton St. Joseph

t01,201'

-II.M,B. W......... 7I

Cbhen 62, Muoo 49
Gnham 70, Tipp City Bethd 53
Granville 63, Li.ctin v.u. 53
Chealeview 68, Ye~ow Springs 66,

--Sports shortsTennla
CHICAGO (AP) - Secondseeded Martina Navratilova
~e the all-time singles titles
leader by beating third-seeded Jana
Novoma •7-6 (7-4), 4-6, 7-S in the
final of the Virginia Slims of
Chicago on Sunday.
Navratilova won her 15Sth
career singles championship and
12th ChicaJo Slims crown. She and
Chris Evert, who retired in 1989,
had beeq tied with 'I S7 cham pi·
onships.
\

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

time or the Celtics-Lakers game. The Lakers
retired Johason's jersey arter Bird presented
Johnson with a tile rrom the Boston Garden's parquet floor. (AP)

BIRD HONORS MAGIC - Boston Celtics
star Larry Bird (rigbt) speaks to tbe crowd at the
Forum in Inglewood, Calif., Sunday to honor rormer L.A. Lakers superstar Magic Johnson at hair-

Bissell's last-second layup_pushes
Eastern 61-59 win over Waterford
was able 10 increase the lead to II
By DAVE HARRIS
McCutcheon led Waterford with
at the half (34-23). Eric 18 points, Larry Brooker added 15
Sentinel Correspondent
Tim Bissell's hit a lay-up with McCutcheon was a thorn in the and Stcve MiUer II. The Wildcats
one second left in the game to give side of the Eagles in the first half hit 22 of 45 from the floor for 45%
the Eastern Eagles an exciting 61- picking up most of his 18 points off and hit 14 of 20 from the line for
59 come-from-behind victory over the break.
70%. Waterford had 32 rebounds
Eastern came out of the locker with Miller grabbing eight. WaterWaterford Saturday night at Waterford . Bissell's bucket came after room in the second half playing ford had 14 assists with Powers,
Terry McGuire came up with a excellent defense . Th e Eagles Brooker and McCutcheon each getsteal and fed a perfect bounce pass forced Waterford out of there run- ting three. McCutcheon had silt of
to Bissell who beat the buzzer with ning game and Eastern cut the Waterford's 16 assists.
deficit to seven (48-41) heading
the shot.
Waterford won the reserve game
The win gives the Eagles an 11- into the fmal period.
in overtime 65-60 over the Eagles
Eastern stayed in the full court Jeff Brooker and Chad Ponchack
6 record on the season, Eastern 7-4
pressure
in the fourth period and led the winners with 13 points.
in the SV AC will play the fust of
came
UIJ
with
four or five big steals Jeremy Cline and Randy Kaylor
three straight conference games on
outsconng
Waterford
20-11 setting led Eastern with 13 points each.
Tuesday at North Galtia. On Friday
the Eagles travel to Symmes Valley the stage for McGuire and Bissell's
EASTERN (61) - Terry
before closing the regular season at heroics.
McGuire
1-1-6=11, Tim Bissell 5JeffDurst led the Eagles with 18
home Saturday night against archri0-5=15,
Jeff
Durst 5-2-2=18. Chad
points, Tim Bissell added 15 and
val Southern.
Savoy
1-{}-0=2,
Char~e Bisseii2-0·
Waterford jumped out to a quick Terry McGuire II. Eastern hit 20 3=9 , Pat Newland
0-2-0=6.
10 point lead in the first period of 46 from the floor for 46% and
TOTALS
-15-5-16=61
with a running game before Eastern nailed 16 of 22 from the line for
WATERFORD (59)- Tyson
was able to cut the lead to 17-12 at 73%. Eastern managed only 16 Powers
2-0-1=5, Larry Brooker 4rebounds with Durst grabbing 10.
the end of the period.
Jeff Huck 1-0·0=2, Eric
Poor shot selection hurt the Eastern turned the ball over 13 0-7=15,
McCutcheon
5- 1-5=18, Denny
Eagles early and Waterford was times, came up with 17 steals with
Sands
1-0-0=2.
Tony Schwcnderdominating the boards. the hosts Durst leading with six and the man 1-0-0=2, Steve
Miller 5-0Eagles had IS assists with McGuire
1=11,
Brian
Spencer
2-0-0=4.
getting five.
SVAC cage standings
TOTALS- 21-1-14:59

By The Associated Press
For those expecting more than a
stumble or two for Duke on the
way to getting to defend its NCAA
tournament championship, the past
12 days had to allow for reconsideration.
In two days less than two
weeks, the top-ranked Blue Devils
bounced back from their first
defeat; survived the loss of their
point guard, arguably the best at
the position in the counuy, to a
broken foot; and handled a fourgame road trip that had enough pitfaDs to catch any monal team.
The road swing, which staned
Feb. 5 with a 75-73 loss to North
.. Carolina, concluded Sunday with a
71-63 victory at North Carolina
· State, the Blue Devils' first win in
Raleigh in six years and their third
. in a row with a 40-minute point
· . guard named Grant HiU.
· HiD, a 6-foot-8 sophomore who
· · had played some at the point when
· Bobby Hurley was healthy, has
taken to the position beuer than
· expected. Just ask Hurley.
· "He is doing a great job of controUing everything, and everybody
has just picked up the slack," said
Hurley, the school's aU-time assist
leader as a junior who may be back
in tim.e for the UCLA game on
March J. .
In games involving ranked
teams on Saturday, it ·was: Iowa
State 84, No. 2 Oklahoma Slate 83
in overtime; No. 3 UCLA 84, Oregon 65; No.4 Indiana 91, Northwestern 60; No. 4 Kansas 82, Colorado 45; No. 6 North Carolina 80,
Clemson 72; No. 7 Arizona 85,
Washington 51; No. 8 Ohio State
. 67, Wisconsin 63; Notre Dame

The regular season came to an
end on a ~ood note for the University of R10 Grande women's basketball team with a pair of weekend
victories over Lake Erie at home
Sunday and against Cedarville Saturday at Cedarville.
At second place in Division I of
NAIA District 22, it appears the
Redwomen will earn the second
seed irrthe playoffs. If that occurs,
Rio Grande will have a bye this
coming weekend and wiD face the
winner of the Northwood Institute
(Mich.)-Urbana game at Lyne Center on Monday, Feb. 24 at 7:30
p.m.
The victories have put the Red·
women at 25-6 overall, the best
regular season finish yet in the program's history, and 11-3 within the
Mid-Ohio Conference.
RG 92, Lake Erie 56
The season finale pitted the Rio
ladies against the Richard Anderson.coached Storm, a team that in
spite of its record will probably
have a postseason of its own in the
Division II playoffs. Coach Doug
Foote observed.
"It's not that they are a bad
team, it just that we came out and

A

r---

101, No. 10 Syracuse 98; No. II .
Arkansas 89, South Carolina 73;
No. 12 Michigan State 70, No. 17
Michigan 59; Oregon State 92, No.
13 Southern Cal 78; Virginia Tech
89, No. 14 Tulane 73; No. 15
UNLV 66, Pacific 50; No. 19 Kentucky 93, Western Kentucky 83;
Vanderbilt 76, No. 20 Louisiana
State 69; Air Force 75, No. 21
Texa.s-EI Paso 72; South Florida
70, No. 22 North Carolina Char- /
lotte 63; No. 23 Florida State 80,
Georgia Tech 67; No. 24 Cincinnati 89, St. Louis 60; and No. 25
Se10n Hall85, Providence 77.
Duke (20-1,10-1), which visited
Louisiana Slate and Georgia Tech
on the road trip, has won 20 games
for the ninth consecutive season
and the Blue Devils have a I 1/2.game lead ovrz North Carolina and
Florida State in the Atlantic Coast
Conference.
The Wolfpack (9-15, 3-8) lost a
school-record ninth in a row.
Tom Gugliotta was plagued by
foul trouble but led the Wolfpack
with 23 points.
Iowa St. 84, No. 2 Oklahoma St.
83,0T
The Cowboys (21-3, 5-3) lost
their second in a row and third in
four games and are two games
behind first-~1:.:; Kansas in the
Big Eight. 0
ma State led by
18 at halftime and by seven during
the overtime. The Cyclones (18-6,
4-4) made 24 of 30 shots after halftime. with the deciding points coming on freshman Fred Heiberg's
three-point play with 8.9 seconds
left.
Iowa State's Justus Thigpen,
who was kept out of the starting
lineup in a disciplinary move,

Tbis week's slite
Tuesday - Southern at Ky~r
Creek; Southwestern at Oak Hill;
Eastern at North Gallia; Symmes
VaUey at Hannah Trace
·
Friday - Kyger Creek at Oak
Hill; Southern at Southwestern;
North Gallia at Hannan Trace;
Eastern at Symmes Valley
Satutday ,-. Southern at East·
ern; North Gallia at Oak Hill;
Symmea Valley at Kyger CJedt: (all
makeups)

t
b • f:
rea spor s rJe s---.

scored II of his 22 points in overtime. Byron Houston led Oklahoma
Slate with 21 points.
No.3 UCLA 83, Oregon 65
T18Cy Murray was 6-for-8 from
three-point range and had 22 points
as the visiting Bruins (19-1, 10-1)
took over sole possession of fust
place in the Pac -10. Antoine
Stoudamire led Oregon (6-14, 2-9)
with 17 points.
No. 4lodiana 91
Northwestern 60
The Hoosiers (18-4, 9-2) uailed
by 10 in the fust half but blew it
open in the second half be~ind
Damon Bailey, who rebounded
from a scoreless outing in the loss
to Minnesota with 12 points and a
solid floor game. Calbert Cheaney
and AJan Henderson each had 17
poipts to lead Indiana. which is
one-half game behind first-place
Ohio State in the Big Ten. Cedric
Neloms and Todd Leslie each had
16 points for the Wildcats (8-13, !10).
No. 4 Kansas 82
Colorado45
TheJayhawks (19-2. 7-1) forced
30 turnovers, one off Colorado's
school record, as they took a twogame lead in the Big Eight. Rex
Walters had 22 points to top
Kansas, which led 42-16 at half·
time. Pancho HodjleS and Joe
Stephens each had rune points for
the Buffaloes (11-10, 2-6).
No. 6 Nortb Carolina 80
Clemson 7:1.
The Tar Heels (18-3, 8-2)
almost blew a 17-point second-half
lead, but they made 10 of 14 free
throws in the last three minutes to
seal the road win. Hubert Davis' 23
points led North Carolina. Andre

Division IV girls sectional
tournament dates announced
The Division IV girls sectional basketball tournament, to begin
Thursday. Feb. 27 at Meigs High School, wiD feature Eastern and
Southern playing .the 6:30 opener. Miller and Trimble will play in
the 8:15 p.m. nightcap.
The victors of those games wiU advance 10 the district tournamen~ slated for March 4-7, at Jackson High School.

Southern basketball team
to sponsor men's cage tourney
David Grindstaff, a member of the Southern Athletic Boosters
Club, announced that the Southern High School boys basketball
team will be sponsoring a men's independent basketball tournament
scheduled for Feb. 22 and Feb. 23.
The entry fee is $100 per 10-man roster. Trophies will be awarded to first. and second-place teams, and there wiD also be ftrst· and
secood.place sponsor trophiea to the champion and the runner-up.
For more infonnation, please call949-2025 (Racine).

~-

'"

KCHS club to sponsor. tourney
The Kyser Cleek High School Pep Club will sponsor a men's
leap basketball tournament acheduled for Feb. 29 and March 1.
'fl)c entry fee for this double-elimination toumamen~ which wiD
be open to the rtrst eight ~e~~~~s wlioenter, il $lOOper team.
For more inrormalion, call Torn aiccardi at 367-7377 (Kyger
Creek H:S.).

Surprise ...) out
of. 4 who file atax
return get arefund!.
Chances are that
means you. So.the
sooner you file the

sooner you get .

. money back!

'

Turkey hupting seminar sla~ed ,
'

·

jl '

•

The Southeastern Ohio and Hocking VaUey chapters of the
National Wild Tuitcy Pedcrliion will host the Ohio State Turkey .
Seminar, Caiilllg Coatest inti Banquet March 7 and 8' at Hocking
Technical Scbool ia Nelloavllle.
.
·
PeiiiiNd IPC'e!ren wW bo Dan Stuckey, 10-tlme Obio atate callilll chllDPIODIIId put pllld •l!onfll champion; Wl)'lle Bailey, the
"DDIuw ol Amedcl'allltby llundJI.I; llld ltGb Keck of the NWTF.
For more inromiadon, con11e1 One Gmbr.r 11 373-9613 after S

p.m.

which went to 10-14, drew a 16point performance from Jenny
Grundza. Cheryl Burden led the
rebounding with eight of the
Storm's 44 boards. The Redwomen
suffered II turnovers and committed 21 against the visitors.
Rio Grande shot 40.8 percent
from the floor (31-76, 13-33 from
the three for 39.4 percent) and connected on 17 of20 trips to the line.
The Storm was 32.3 percent on
shooting (21-65, 3-18 from the
three for 16.7 percent) and made II
of its !6 free throw attempts.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (92) - Kim
sowers, 1·1-0-5; Gena Norris, 1-1 2-7; Michelle Crouse, 2-3-!-14;
Elizabeth Gannelli, 2-2-6; Jackie
Hannon, 2-2-2-12; Ann Damitz, 53-13; Stephanie Gudorf, 1-5-3-20;
Melanie MiUer, 2-2-6; Kathy Soyder. 2-1-2-9. TOTALS 18-13-1792.
LAKE ERIE (56) - Kim
Scharf, 2-1-1-8; Amber Game~ 11-3; Jen Calvey, 2-0-4; Jenny
Grundza, 4-2-2-16; Angie Kane, 20-4; Carol Peterson, 1-2-4; SheUy
Shupienis, I-0-2;Julie Staska, 2-59; Cheryl Burden, 3-{}-6. TOTALS
18
score: Rio Grande

-~~~~if!e

' 54, Lake Erie 26.

The Division II girls sectional tournament, slated to begin
tonight at Oak Hill High School, will have lOp-seeded Jackson laking on Vinton County in the 6:30 p.m. opener. Second-seeded
Meigs will face Rock HiU in the 8:15 nightcap.
Gallia Academy and the Jackson- Vinton County winner will
play Thursday, Feb. 20 at 7 p.m., with the finals pitting the MeigsRock HiD winner against the Feb. 20 winner on Saturday, Feb. 29 at
7p.m. ·

(Conrerence)
Oak HiU ..............9 2 767 650
Southern ..............9 2 830 639
Hannan Trace ...... 8 4 819 755
Eastern ................ 7 4 744 720
North Gallia ........6 5 723 728
Symmes Valley .. .3 8 648 713
Kyger Creek .. ...... 3 8 587 679
Southwestem .......O 12 651 885
TOTALS .".&lt;.....45 45 5769 5769

Saturday's Scores
Eastern 61, Waterford 59
Kyger Creek 59,lronton St. Joe 53

played better," Foote remarked.
"Basically, our kids plared very
weD, because they knew 1t was an
emotional thing for them. The ftrst
30 minutes of the game was just
absolutely super. We got some nice
effort from our players."
The Redwomen took off for a
15-5 lead in the opening five minutes and nevu looked back, posting
a 54-26 halftime advantage.
Employing its defensive skill with
strong rebounding and balanced
scoring, Rio Grande pulled away
from the S!orm for a comfor1able
lead that allowed Foote's younger
players to get in on the action.
First-year player Jackie Hannon
finished the game with 12 points.
Bamitz and Gudorf dominated
the rtrSt half scoring, with Gudorf
hitting four of five three-point
attempts. Damitz, who had II for
the half, needed six at the start of
the game to become Rio Grande's
second-highest women's career
scorer. and she accomplished that
feat at 10:49.
Gudorf went on to record 20
points to lead all scorers, while
Bamitz had 13 points and 12 of the
team's 50 rebounds. Lake Erie,

Meigs to face RockHill tonight
in Division II girls sectional

(OveraU)
Team
W L PF PA
OakHiU ............ l2 5 1131 989
Eastern .............. 11 6 1171 1171
Southem ...... ......IO 7 1198 1075
Hannan Tracc ......9 9 1128 1187
Kyger Creelc ..... ...7 10 924 1009
North Gallia ........6 9 905 1023
Symmes VaUey .. .5 12 100$ .1099
Southwestem....... 2 16 . 992 1251

(Reserves· SVAC only)
Team
W L PF PA
Southern ............ IO 0 629 370
Eastern .......... ......9 I 517 438
Symmes VaUey ...6 4 478 498
Oak HiD ............ ..4 6 456 471
Kyger Creek.. ...... 3 6 380 421
Hannan Tmce .....J 7 452 538
North Gallia ........3 7 402 494
Southwestern .......2 9 419 503
TOTALS ..........44 44 3733 ·3733

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-5

Duke beats N.C. State 71-63 to remain No. 1

: Regular sea~on ends for Rio ladies
with wins over Lake Erie, Cedarville

ElyD. IOJ, a. H"sJ&gt;• 92

FJyria Cath. 75, C~.t~ton C1th.. 60
FWp&lt;xt Humng l9. Kirtbnd SO
Fattell, Pa . 83, Wurm H~tding 78

SW Tau SL 81, NW Louiliana 61

Tuu Sauthcm 73. Alootn S.. 64
Tuu Tech 14, Da7~ 19
Texu·Adini'On 100. NoM Teua 90
Tuat-Pan American 67, Florida Al·
WW.66
Te1M-·San Antonio IS, NE LoW:ilnl
72

Moiooi:J,-U.6'1

.._,, · n 61,T-"52
NY1J "· w t' ... ko. 71 .
1 1
U,C 1' WIDaa47

C&amp;n. Moclla- 7S, Cin. Sycamore 44
Ci.n. Seven HillJ 72, Cin. Madeira 68
Cin. Woodward 65, Trotwood M.ad.iaon. 61
Clc.. Benedictine 73, Lakewood St.
Edward S2
Clc. VASJ 74, C!e. Catholic 5fl
Cal. Academy 4S, Grandview 40
Cal. Ccru.emi.tl 57, Col. Wlltel!!IOO 41
Coldwa\a 63,1..ima Shawnee 61
Colonel Cnwfonl f:IJ, Ridaedalc 52
Ca~hoctnn 71, Carrollton l1
O.y. Dunbor 100, Tol. Libboy 69
Dova 45, Cl&amp;ymoot 38
Ediaon S. 68, Steubenville Cnh.. 52
Edon. 41 , Antwap 34
Elida S7, Kmton 52

S9

Major college
basketball scores
a.-M,Ialallot*ioi73

63

Southan U. 114, PrWie View'"
Te11u Ouiltian 10, Southcm Metb.

T!Millay's ~·, 7:3S p.m.
PbilocJolplPul New
r ...... "PllubouJ!I, 7,35 pm.
_
.. Quoboo, 7:1! p.m.
W......... •S..Jooo. t0:3lpm.

Sullda(!8l:t1011

Cin. CAPE 13, Cin. Readina flO
Cin. McNic:holu 78 , Cin. Andmon

Tl, Mereer 1S

Uudd 85, Fwman 78
Coll. of O!ulaton 12, Coppin St 59

Clcnland al Chlcaao, 1:30 p.m.

Tuesday's games

Canlon MdGnlcy 61, Ak.ron St. Y·
SLM52
CIMinal 65, """ 58
CIMinpon 60, MI. Oil"d S9
CcliM 84, P•uldJo&amp; 60

98

Sunday's scores
Detroit 90, Ph.iltdc.lphi.ll3
Orlando Ill, Milw11akoe 104
Chulou.c 126. Miami 109
Bt~~lOn 114, LA. Lalr:cn 101
SUI Antonio 112, St m mmto 106
LA. Oippcn 107.P..W.d 106

Bluffton 61, OUovillc 56
Bld::cye Tra.il66, Shenandoah 5 1
Canal Fullm NW 75, Fairlea 50
Cwon Hai.up 66, ()pm Door S4

Eut

8011m Cal.lcs.c 82. Villanov1 46
Cent Connocticut St. 74, Buffalo 69
Colglle 70, Llfayettt. 61
Columbi1 74, Dan:mouth 54
Carnell 73, H.anrud SO
Delaware 79, Yennont 73

8.l
ll

Golden Sute 140, Se.aulc 122

Bkaom-CmoU 68, Col Hartley 62

Saturday's acdon

19

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Plt lnc Olvbl0111
Port!""' ......... .. ..... .3S 15 .700
Golden St.ate .. ,...... .ll 15 .681
~ocniJ. .................. 33 18
647
L.A. l...aken ............29 21 580
Seattle ................... 26 2j .510
LA. Oi ppcn ......... 2S 25 .SOO
Sacnmmw .......... ,. l7 33 .340

BamCIVillc 100, Wooddicld 52
8~64, Weirtm, W.VL 43
Bcllefonlaine 76, Tccutn!lt.h 51
Bi&amp; Walnut67, Buckeye Vall 39
BlanchCI!lll' 77 I Kil'lp 62

Arizona SL 71, WuhiJ1&amp;ton SL70

Muy'•. Md.76

Mldwst DMsion
Team
W L
PeL
Uuh ....................... 34 18 .654
S&amp;n Anwnio........... 29 21 .580
H~ton ............... .. 26 2.S
.~ 1 0
Dc:nvcr ............. ..... .l9 31 .380
Dallu ..................... IS JS .300
Minneaoc.a ........ ······· .9 40 . 184

Alhani7S, Tlimblo 6S

Oklah&lt;m1 104, Kansu SL75
Tau 98, CicorJia 93

GR

Central DMIIon
OctroiL ...................29 22
Atlmll ................25 2.5
M.ilwaukce .............24 26
Indiana ...................lZ 30
Owlouc ..... ........... 16 34

"

Sol.llhw.t

Allanlk Dhillon

wuJtinaton............ 17

Arcadia 58, Emwood 57
Archbold 52, Tinon 50

Midwest
DcPtull4, l..ouilvillc 81

Monday, February 17, 1992

.

Bovain led the Tigers (12-9, 2-8)
with 18 points.
No. 7 Arizona 85
Washington 51
The Wildcats (19-3, 9-2) won
their ninth suaight since a twopoint loss 81 Washington. Arizona
ended this one early with a 25point rtrst-half lead. Khalid Reeves
led the Wildcats with 18 points.
Mark Pope and Chandler Nairn
each had 13 points for the visiting
Huskies (10-12, 3-8), who have
lost six suaight Pac-10 games.
No. 8 Obio St. 67
Wisconsin 63
The Buckeves (17-3. 9-1\ held
their one-half game lead over Indiana in the Big Ten with their fifth
Slraight victory. Ohio State scored
the first nine points of the second
half to take the lead for good and
Jimmy Jackson, .who finished with
29 points, had.a dunk and four free
throws in the final minute to seal
the road win. Tracy Webster had
24 points for the Badgers (11-13,
2-9).
Noire Dame 101
No. 10 Syracuse 98
The Fighting Irish (9-11) won
their third straight game in the Carrier Dome and ended Syracuse's
20-game winning streak there
behind the 28 points and 15
rebounds of LaPhonso Ellis.
Dave Johnson had 31 points to
lead Syracuse (16-5).
No. 11 Arkansas 89
Soutb Carolina 7J
Isaiah Morris had 21 points to
lead the Razorbacks (19-5, 8-2) in
the first meeting of the two new
schools in the Southeastern Conference.
Jeff Roulston had 17 points to
lead the injury-plagued Gamecocks
(10-11, 2-8), who dressed only
eight players and lost their seventh
in a row.
No. 12 Michigan St. 70
No. 17 Michigan 59
The Wolverines (17-4, 7-4)
turned the 1ables on Michigan with
the win on their intrastate rival's
homecourt. Mike Peplowsk:i had 18
points and Michigan State
outscored the Wolverines 18-3 over
the game's final6:05.
Jalen Rose had 19 rints for the
Wolverines ( 15-6, 6-5 .
Oregon St. 92
No.13 Southern Cal 78
Scott Haskin scored 33 points,
bagged I0 rebounds and made his
last I 0 shots from the field as the
Beavers (12-12, 4-7) ended Southem Cal's nine-game winning streak
and knocked the Trojans from rlfSt
place in the Pac-10. Harold Miner
had 30 points to lead the visiting
Trojans (17-4. 9-2).
VirgiDia Tecb 89
No. 14 Tulane 73
The Hokies (8- !3. 2-6) snapped
a five-game losing streak and handed the Green Wave their first loss
of the season in the Metro Conference. Thomas Elliott had 22 points
to lead Virginia Tech, which
dressed nine players and broke the
game open wtth a 12-2 run midway
through the second half. David
Whitmore's 20 points topped visit·
ing Tulane (19-3, 7-1).
No. 15 UNLV 66, Pacific SO
The Runnin' Rebels (22-2, 140) won despite going just 1-for-20
from three-point range and extended the nation's longest winning
streak to 19 games and their home
winning streak to 45 in a row .
Elmore Spencer had IS points and
15 rebounds for UNLV.
Tony Amundsen paced the
Tigers (8-13, 4-8) with 21 points.

RG 1s, CedarviUe 62
The Lady Yellow JacketS, a previous victim of the Redwomen in
MOC action. sought to split the
season result and drew balanced
double-figure performances from
Diane Rank, Amy Zehr and Mindy
Humble 10 trail the visitors by three
No. 19 Kentucky 93
at the half.
W. Kentucky 83
But playing a smart defense and
working to dominate the rebound·
The Wildcats (18-5) completed
ing, the Redwomen emerged with a the sweep of their four instate
scoring cu~ion in the final minutes opponents with the easy home win.
to coast to the win, which marked Western Kentucky (16-8) was
their final conference game of the within 66-60 with 11:32 to go, but
season.
the Wildcats went on a 19-9 run to
Gudorf, again netting most of seal the win. Jamal Mashburn had
her 23 points for the game from the 26 points to lead Kentucky, while
three - where she hit six of 14 Harold Thompkins had a careerattempts - led the offense with high 28 for the HiUIOPJ)erS.
assist from Barnitz, who had 12
markers and nine of Rio Grande's
43 rebounds. Norris supplied 18
points to the effort. eight of them at
the line (on 10 altempts).
While only scoring two points.
Cedarville's Christine Copeland
emerged as her team· s top
O'DeU Lumber Co. will spoosor
reba under with nine or the team's the men's basketball game between
42. Rank and Zehr added eight the University of Rio Grande and
apiece . The hosts suffered 31 Walsh CoUe~e on T~esday, Feb. 18
turnovers while Rio Grande suf- at7:30 p.m. tn tyne Center.
fered had 15.
.
Tickets for the game are ~~ail­
The Redwomen were 39.1 per- able at the 0' Dell Lumber locacent on shooting (~7-69. 10-32 tions in Gallipolis and Pomeroy.
from the three for 31.3 percent), The game will be the final home
but made 11 of their 16 attempts on contest of the regular season for the
free throw shots count for 68.8 per- Redmen.
cent. Cedarville was 41.5 percent
· A donation by O'Dell Lumber
overall on shooting (22-53, two of to the Rio Grande ttthletic Boostsilt from the three for 33 J)Utent), ers organization has aided Rio
but made progress at the line, Grande in its efforts to ~t qualwhm it was 61.5 percent (16-26).
i!)' student·athletes to the campus.
· Boxaccn:
·'The Universi!)' is doing a lot in
CEDARVILLE (62) - Ral:hel the area of scholarships to bring
Howard, 3·1·7; Andra Traucht, 2- good students who ~ good people
1-5; Christine Copeland,, 1·0-2; to Rio Grande." Redmen Coach
Mindy Humble, 2-2-S-15; Amy John Lawhorn commented. "Busizein', 4-8-16; DilDo~. 8-1·17. . nesses like O'Dell Lumber and its
TOTALS ZD-2-16-62.
employees; however, play an
RIO GRANDE (75) - Gena important part in that pr9ces~.
Norrli, 2-2-8-18; Michellc Crouse, Without the support of their organt2-0-4; lactic Hannail, 1·1'-0-S; tri- zation, througfi its donation and
cla Collills, 4-0-:8; Ann BamiiZ, S· promotion of our
our pro·
2-12; Stepllmie Gutlorf, 2-6-1-23: . gram and other ath~ ptopllllS at
Kathy Snyder, 1-1-0-S. TOTALS Rio Grande would be the pottrri."
"We very much appteciate the
17·10-11-75.
.
lntereat
O'Dell Lumber hu shown
Halrtlm~ score: Rio Grande
in
athletics
at Rio Grande and in
34, Cedary!Ue 31.

SMACK! - Nortb Carolina State's Tom Gugliotta (right) takes
a wrist In tbe race rrom Duke's Antonio Lang during Sunday's ACC
game at Raleigh, N.C., whicb tbe Blue Devils won 71-63. (AP)

Redmen hold off Tiffin
for 88-81 conference win
A round of free throw shooting
in the final minutes of Saturday's
game at Lyne Center lifted the University of Rio Grande men's basketball team to an 88-81 win over
Tiffin University.
It was the kind of game, Redmen Coach John Lawhorn noted,
that's played by "two teams getting
ready for the title race." But it was
also one that •s representative of a
typical Rio Grande- Tiffin
encounter: basket-to-basket actioR
where anything can happen. and
usuaUy does.
The Redmen. looking . to
improve their standing within the
Mid-Ohio Conference, opened
strong before the Bob Evans Farms
Night crowd to match the effort put
forth by the Jim Hammondcoached Dragons. The work, boosted by an intensified defense, paid
off with the lead within the first
few minutes of the half.
The game was stopped briefly at
17 :24 when Tiffin starter Mike
Clark, a 5-10 guard from Perrysburg, dislocated his left sho~lder.
Clark collided with a Rio Grande
player during a defense of the
Dragons' court and feiiiO the floor.
suffering the injury when he
attempted to get back on his feet.
Clark was transported to Holzer
Medical Center by the Gallia
County EMS, where he was treated
and released.
Clark's departure failed to discourage his teammates, who kept
the margin close as Jeff Ward and
Thad Patrick pumped in 10 points
apiece for the half. Rio Grande
center Troy Donaldson, nationally
recognized for his field goal percentage, demonstrated his skill on
inside shooting by posting 14
points , the only one of his teammates to hit double figures for the
period, to help the hosts 10 a fivepoint halftime lead. Jeff Brown
brought down six rebounds to aid
the Redmen offense.
Lawhorn's club started shaking
off the Dragons for a lead of 10 or
more points midway through the
second half, but ··there was a period of three minutes when we didn't
play well and Tiffin came back,"
he explained. "And that's a credit
to them."
Ward, who led all Tiffin scorers
with 17 points (aided by 16 each
from Patrick and Steve Mittendorf)
spearheaded a late run that put the
Dragons one point (77-76) behind
the Reclmen at 3:52. Ward hit for
two points at 2:59 and Tifnn led

0'Dell Lumber will sponsor
Rio Grande-Walsh matchup
the university over the years," Rio
Grande Athletic Director Tom Perdue commented. "We know the
game and our efforts to offer scholarships to students who excel in the
classroom and in athletic competi- ,
lion will be bound to succeed with '
the help of this firm and its
employees."

·.

DOWNING CHILDS
· MULLEN MUSSER

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

H.D. VEST FINANCIAL
SERVICES
KARL K.BLER Ul, C.P.A.
Registered Representative

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

=•

~·

(78-17) for the fu:st time since the
early part of the opening half, but
Brad Schubert answered for the
Redmen with a basket 45 seconds
later. Mittendorf's foul on Donaldson at 1:50 started a series of Rio
Grande trips to line that netted the
Redmen nine extra points. Ward
fired off a three-pointer with three
seconds left to score Tiffin· s last
hurrah of the game.
"Both teams played very hard,
and we rebounded well , well
enough to get some breaks,"
Lawhorn said.
"I think our kids played hard,
showed some fight and spunk,"
Hammond noted. "With Clark au~
that hurt some, but we got some
good effort from our bench. Rio
Grande did a good job and executed when it had to."
Both teams were equal on
rebounding, recording 16 apiece
for the fii'St half, and then another
17 each in the second . Brown
ended with 12 for the Redmen ,
while Ward snatched nine for the
visitors. Donaldson, who had 26
points, added eight to the cause.
The Redmen endured 12 tumovers
and inllicted II upon Tiffm.
Shooting-wise, Rio Grande
emerged with a 53.3 percent performance (32-60, 5-19 from the
three for 26.3 percent) to Tiffin's
52.2 percent (35-67, 6-12 from the
three for 50 percent). The Dragons
saw the difference at the line,
where their five of 12 showing
(41.7 percent) was outmatched by
Rio Grande s 90.5 percent (19-21).
In that category, Schuben was nine
for nine and Donaldson hit aU eight
of his attempts.
Rio Grande, which hosts Walsh
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. for O'Dell
Lumber Night, improved to 20-7
and 7-3 in the MOC. Tiffm. set to
host Urbana Wednesday, went to
19-9 and 6-6 in the conference.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (88) - Mark
Erslan, 4-1-0-11; Brad Schubert. 41-9-20 ; Matt Powell, 4-2-2-16;
Brcll Coreno, 2-1-0-7; Jeff Brown,
4-0-8; Troy Donaldson. 9-8-26.
TOTALS 27·5·19-88.
TIFFIN (81) - Jeff Ward, 6-12-17; Mike Clark, 1-0-2; Mike
Homer, 2-0-4; Thad Patrick, 5-2-016; David Dennis, 1-2-1-9; Chris
Ward, 2-0-4; Steve Mittendorf, 61-1-16; Dale Kuhl, 6-1-13 .
TOTALS 29-6-5-81.
Halrtime score: Rio Grande
42, Tiffin 37,

KEYS
61 ..·992·7270

IIYest•t Sultln, lie,

TX 75039

-·

�Monday, February 17, 1992

.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

The Business Professionals of
America Club at Meigs High
School participated in regional
competiuon recently at Vern Riffe
Joint V ocalional School.
Winning the following awards
were: office specialist, Kathy
Willianns, fourth; Melissa Rollins,
third; and Stephanie Haggy, second. Information processing assistant, Lorena Oiler, fifth. Administrative specialist, Jennifer Masters,
fifth; Stephanie Haggy, fourth, and
Kathy Williams, first. Financial
assistant, Tammy Queen, third;
Windy Clark, second; and Jennifer
Profitt, frrst.
Financial specialist , Mary
Hawk, sixth; Sheila LaUimer, fifth .
Payroll accounting, Sheila Lat-

tim·er, fifth; Mary Hawk, third;
Me6ssa Rollins, second. Document
formatting, Lessie Osborne, third.
Elltemporaneous speech, Jennifer
Masters, fourth. Business law, Jennifer Proffiu, third. Business math,
Sheila Lattimer, sixth. Personal
finance, Mary Hawk, third;
Stephanie Haggy, third;· Kathy
WiiUams, second; and Sheila Lattimer, fusl In promotional display
the club placed fust
. Advancing to state competition
in Columbus on March 27-28 are
Lorena Oiler, Wendy Clark, Jennifer Profitt, Kathy Williams,
Stephanie Haggy, Melissa Rollins,
Sheila Lattimer, Mary Hawk and
the promotional display created by
Sheila Laniloer and Mary Hawk.

FOWler to represent DECA

Hawk, Sheila Lattimer and Wendy Clark.
Standing, 1-r, are Stephanie Haggy, Kathy
Williams, Lorena Oiler, Jennirer Masters,
Tamniy Queen, Melissa Rollins and Lessie
Osborne.

The Meigs High School Marketing Education Students belonging
to DECA competed in District
Competitive Events at the Lancaster River Valley Mail recently.
Linda Chapman captured first
place in the fmance and credit competition. Jody Fowler fmished third

The frrst of the year Social Security
took a leap
That raise, they say, cost Uncle
Sam a beap
But the increase the people can turn
into cash
Seems like a vapor, gone in a flash
Medicare eacb year takes off in two
ways
More off your check and less that it
pays
Medical insurance to fill in the gap
Throws a double premium right m
your lap
I'm Bushed
Governors of states all over the
land
Have it rough trying to keep com·
mand
Cuts from D.C .. unemployment on
the rise
Taxes go up till they mount to the
skies
People are worried about food for
the day
A budget to balance and no way to
pay
Cuts in every department that helps
the~r

Whtle prices keep going up more
and more
at the Lancaster River Valley MaU recently. Pic·
tured are, l·r, seated, Linda Chapman, Jody
Fowler, Kelly Winter. Standing, John Bechtle,
Marjorita Tromm and Mark Haley.

Community calendar
- Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
and the day of that event. Items
must be received well in advance
to assure publication in the cal·
endar.
MONDAY
: RACINE • The Southern Local
School Board will meet Monday at
Vp.m. at the high school.
TUESDAY
REEDSVILLE - The Eastern
local School Board will meet
liuesday at 7 p.m. at the high
~hool.

WEDNESDAY
; POMEROY - The Middleport
Litmty Club will meet Wednesday
tt 2 p.m. at the Meigs County PubJic Library in Pomeroy. Mrs.
I(~~:~~~~~F~~isher
will review
~t
" Roll call is "some-

thing famous built at great cosL"
MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Arts Council will offer another
beginner's class in Texas style
dance beginning Wednesday at
7:30 p.m. Cost is $7 per couple.
Call Mary Wise at 992-2675 for
information.
SYRACUSE - The Third
Wednesday Homemakers Club will
meet Wednesday at 10 a.m. at the
usual place. For the doll, bring a
two-inch Styrofoam ball, small
dowel, two packages of black or
brown rug yarn. For the towels
bring a kitchen terry-cloth towel,
lace and material.
RUTLAND - The Rutland Fire
Depanment Ladies Auxiliary will
meet Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the
ftre station. All members are urged
to attend.

Ladies Night set
Ladies Night will be observed
when the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club and the Pomeroy
Lions Club meets Monday at 6
p.m. at Gilmore's for a dinner
meeting.
Plans for the joint meeting were
announced by Richard Vaughan,
president, at this week's meting of
Rotary at the Heath United
Methodist Church.
John Rice presented the program using handouts entitled
"Stress in Perspective" and "The
10 Commandments of Leadership."

President's List
Bridget Hart and Cheryl
Leatherberry, both of Coolville,
have been named to the President's
List at Mountain State College for
the fall quarter.
In order to appear on the President' s List, students must earn a
grade point average of 3.5 or
above.
Dianna Domigan, Coolville, and
Janine Gheen, Long Bottom, have
been n'amcd to the honor list at
Mountain State College.
In order to appear on the honor
lis~ students must achieve between
a 3.0 and 3.5 grade point average
for the quarter.

Grammys are
overrated: Brooks

RADNOR, Pa. (AP)- G~am­
my nominees Natalie c;ole and
Qarth Brooks have unusually
forthright opinions about what the:
awards mean.
"Bouom line, of all the award
shows, the Grammys mean
money," Cole said. "It can
increase your album sales. If you
arc a performer who goes out on
the road, it can incrwc your fcc. It
really does tmn into dollm.'.
Brooks told TV Guide for its
Feb. 22 issue that award shows

"are hl&amp;bl .OYCITIIICd."

"I tfoo ~ want to bite tbc hand
that feeds me, but I don't have too
much feelinl for lbcae aWII'dl," he
lllid. "W'mninl may laid to mate
you look boacr than you are.''
Cole receiwd four~
inclucllnJ one for album or the )'Oir
for "Unfoqouablo," t lrlbuto to
her father, tho lale Nat "KiaJ"·

Cole-

.

Not allowed in

RATES

TOKYO (AP) - Mick Jagger
was refused entry into Japan on
Sunday because of a past drug
record immigration officials said.
Jag'ger, lead vocalist for the
Rolling Stones, was confined to a
hotel at Tokyo's Narita airport
Sunday night so he could appeal
the immigration decision on Mo!l·
day, said Kenji lshiyama of the arrpon ·s immigration office.
Jagger, 48, was allowed to en~r
Japan for solo performances tn
March 1988 and for concerts with
the Rolling Stones in February
1990 after the immigration office
consulted with the Foreign Ministry, Kyodo News Service reponed.
Jagger and his then-girlfriend,
Marianne Faithfull, were arrested
at their London home on May 28,
1969, and charged with possession
of marijuana. Jagger was found
· and fined $480. Faithfull was

Days

an ad
Call 992-2156
tJ'.L&lt;I'-''V

They're Bushed
Yet it seems some in very high
places
Sit back with big smiles on their
faces
They voted a raise in their own
income
Which has brought a frown on
faces of some
In an election year this could cause
concern
I do without, you with money to
bum
The rich get richer with tax breaks
galore
The poor get poorer and numbering
more and more
We're
Bushed
Homeless and alone with no where
to stay
More and more of them as jobs
fade away
No work, no pay and a family to
keep
Causes fathers and mothers to cry
and weep
Homes are lost for lack of pay
Banks can't wait anolher day
Welfare is cut with more people in
need
Causes folks to steal. their babies
to feed
They're
Bushed
Drugs and crime are much worse

~and abortion growing in a big

way
"Have safe sex" is today's b.attle
call
But the only safe sex is no sex at
all
Our children are not taught morals
and pride
Teachers s6p them condoms on the
side
lncouraging the youth to give it a
try
.
Not telhng them chanches are
they'll die
That's

Bushed
No new taxes, not in Ibis four years
"Read my lips", be ~ from cares

News notes .
Powerf)lllwin fiippen and a tor•
pcdo-sblped body enable -a monk
Seal to Ott)I!!UMIII* I alwt, IIYI

Nadonal Ooopljillc.

the Poralan Gulf baa had the

SllllO ume Iince a:lenl

o•

and
Romlfl tim.es. Perala rormal!y
bcclme llln In 1935. A1 OliO limo.
Jbo Shill rlllln Wlllred to 1at11110

Jhe JU1f tho Iranian owr. 1n 1958,

Iran protested 1n IraCji Cabinet
decilioa io call It lhc Oillf ol Ala-.
biL

COPY DEADLINE

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.·5P.M. • SAT.B-12
POUCIES

CLOSED SUNDAY

• Adt outlide Callia, Muon or Meip countia mut be prepaid
• Reeelve d~ountlor ad1 paid in adYance.
• Free Ad.: Giveaway and Found ad. under IS word• will be
rua 3 day• aL no charge.
• Price of ad for all capitalletten i• double p~iee of ad coat
· • 7 point IU;.e type only u•ed
• Tribu.ne ilnol re.pon1ible for erron alter fint day (che~::k
for error• firat day ad run• in paper). Call before 2 :00p.m.
day after publication to make correction
• Ad. that mutt he paid in advance are:
Card ol Thanlu
Happy Ad.
In Menuuiam
Yard Sales

in apparel and accessory and will
represent Meigs DECA at state
competition in Columbus.
Also placing were Kelly Winter
in full service restaurant and team
management .consisting of ! o~n
Bechtle, Mark Haley and Marjonta
Tromm with fifth place finished.

• A claaified _advertiae~en.l placed in the GaUipolil Daily
Trihuoe (except Cla11ified DYplay, B111lnea• Card or Legal
Noliee.) will alto appear in the Point Plea1~1 Rcgilter and
the Daily Sentinel, reaching over 18,000 hornet

1 :00 p.m. SaiUJ'day
1:00 p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

We'll balance that budget, wait and
see
Go to the polls and vote for me
Things will be better than ever
before
I'll get to the problem, right to the
core
I can clean up this mess, I know
how it's done
Just elect me, I am the one
BREANA HEMSLEY
All Bush
Look back through time, I'm sure
you'll see
It's been a little tiny you, and a
Roliie and Kay Hemsley,
great big me
Pomeroy, announce the birth of
Campaign promises are made to be their daughter, Breana Danae, on
broken
Aug. 28 at St. Joseph Hospital in
Remember "Read my lips", the Parkersburg, W.Va.
very words spoken
She weighed eight pounds and
Prices and taxes are sure to go up
13 ounces and was 19 and one-half
All we can do is drink the bitter inches long.
cup
Maternal grandparents arc Mr.
Things will get worse as days go and Mrs . Brownie Vujaklya,
by
Noble, La .. and Mr. and Mrs .
Prepare yourself now, the end is George Wyant, Cottageville,
nigh
W.Va.
Paternal grandparents arc Mr.
Mary F. Smith and Mrs. Harry Clark, Minersville.

Birth is announced

446-Gol&amp;po&amp;o
367-Cheohire
388-Vinlon
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dill.
643-Arabia Ditt.
379-Walnut

992-Middleporli
Pomeroy

bids. to relect eny and ott
right
JERRYWRAY,
Dlractar at naneportaUan

675·1244

cuns

Feb. 10 thru 14

Racelpta..............66,81 0.11
lnteroat ....................1,733.08

Special Valentine
·Hours-10 to 8
FEB. 18- Adult Bukal

ctaaa•- &amp;:30 p.m.

FEB. 24- Baglnnar Acrylic
Pointing Clau

far More lrdo Call
614·992·2549

Opoo\ llan.-&amp;11. 10 ano-5 pno

luncllylolpno

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER SE~VICE
-Room Additions
-Gutter Work
-Electrical and Plumbing
-Roollng
-Interior &amp; Exterior
Painting

(FREE ESTIMATES~

V. C. YO.UNG II
992·6215
Pomeroy, Ohio

IH4-'904rn

I

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Total Traaeury
Bal111ot............. .3t,516.37
!Au Outallndlng
Checka ................ 10,1et.f4
TOTAL
BALANCE...........21.404.43
SUMMARY OF
INDEBTEDNESS
Outatanclng
Jan. 1, 1111 ..-....42,250.53
NawluUH...............- ••..-GRatlltd .................... 11,484.35
Outatanclng
Dac. 31, 1ff1 ......30,766.10
I cerdfy llolt report Ill be
co;rectllld true to the beat
ol my knowltdgt.
Ftb.12,1ff2

Bashan Building
EVERY
SAt NIGHT
~:30 P.M.
Starling Stpt. 28
fallorJ Choke

12 Gauge Shotgun Only
Strhllr Enlorctd

~.'QI.Hnl

Public Notice

8enoh Glblle, C1trk submitted wtth ·~bid.

Sold Boord ol Educetton
rettrvts the right to welve
tnformelltlas to eccept or
reJect any 1nd att or pwtt ol
eny end ell bide.
No bide may be
withdrawn for 11 11111 thlny
130) deys alttr the
echedulad cloelng time lor
receipt ol bide.
Boord ot Educetlon of
Elllttrn Locel
School Dt1trlct
Elol1t Boston, Tre11urer
Euttrn Loctl Schools
38tOiJ S.A. 7
Aeed1vllle, Ohio 4Sn2
(2) 3, 10, 17, 24, 41c

Sallabury Townhlp
Batt Run Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45711
614-ff2-7008
(2) 17, Ill:
34041

INSIDE LOOKING OUT ... THROUGH THE GLASSED
IN FAMILY ROOM of lhio 3 BR brick ranch home. 2
111111, WBFP, goad location on Flatwoods Rd. ASKING
$&lt;18,1100. Come IM ... rnaka an offer.
COMIERCIAl LOT - Pcmeroy • Main Sl - Great s~t
for 1111riau1 patantial use1. Dra1tically r.duQid 1o $40,000.
Mlb 111 oiled .

1 Dr. Pl. "•••

TRULY THIS HOUSE IS ASUCE OF PERitCTJONJ At 111 unboolovablt pricel 2 sb:uy frame, ~ Iota-n~ 3
BR1, 211 boolht.• 2+ acres, CJ1tdtn space, 1 ot{ CJiragt
w!Worbhop, CA. deck, firaplaot. Only S31,11001

I

We are sorry for the inconvenience 1
that has been created in the
MEIGS COUNTY TITLE OFFICE
due to renovations to accommodate •
computers.·
1
Our employees are attending 1l
co...uter school and we have been'. 1
short handed!.
1
We hope to be into normal ·. .·
operations by March 30th. ·
I

TROLLEY STATION

Balance............... 37,016.37
IMYIItrnent.•••• ,,,,,,,,,2.500.00

r---------------------------------------.-, ,

.

11·22·92·1

BALA,.CES, RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDilUAES
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTSTuoa......................3&amp;,332.58
Ucen1•, PermU. .,d
Fett..................... .2,700.00

Fund Caah Balance
Dac. 31, 1ff1........ 2,500.00
Dtpotllory

v•
~------~--------~ !
wr. 112,

985 ·4141

Jan, 11 1111 ..Hoooooo2,500,00

•Snorlilg ·
•Malla...ent of Skin &amp; 1
Facial Lesions
IAIDIWE ASSIGNM1N15 ACQP11D

CONTUCTING
-New Homes
-Remodeling
-Garages &amp;Room
Additions

Revanue............... 1,n8.11
TOTAL
RECEIPTS ........1ot,354.76
DISBURSEMENTS:
Generet Govemment ...................21,157.81
Public Sefety......- ..2,830.00
Public Worka.........60,830.66
Heotth ...................... .2,16&amp;.t7
Capital
Oudey.................. 12,6t3.&amp;e
TOTAL DISBURSE·
MENTS..............108,471.13
Total Recelpta Over/
(Under) Dlab............ B75.63
Fund Caah Blllonce
Jill. 1, 1111 ........26,028.80
Fund C•h Balenct
Dac. 31, 1111......26,104.43
ReMrvefar
EncumbrancM
Dac. 31, 1ff1 ........ 4,065.07
NON-EXPENDIBLE TRUST
FUNDS
Fund Caah Balance

.
1

AEDUCEOISPAING FEVER? READY TO PLOW THAT
GARDENI GRAZE ntOSE COWS?... Hera ygy go! A
frame firm home wfBO+ acrao, Y, baMmtnl, ci118m &amp;
TCP walar available. Immediate posMnlanl $49,000.

I'!

1/31/92/1 mo. pol.

r

~

, '·

,.

41- Houte~for Rent
42- Mobile Hoftlea for Rent
~ Farm• for Rent
44- Apartment for Rent

47- Wanted to Rent
48- Equipmen.t for Rent
49-- For l..ate

51- Ho... hold Good.
52- Sporting Good.
53-Anliq ....
54- Miac. Merchandi.e

72- Truclu for Sale
73- Van~ &amp; 4 WD'a

74- Motorcyelet
75- Boatt &amp; Moton for Sale
76- Auo. Parta &amp; AccoNOri·ul
71- Auto Repair
78- Campias Equipment

:--1.1\\

...

'

.

.'

1.:--

•
8
' p
82- Plumbi"'l &amp; Heatins
~Excualins

84- Eleclrieo.l &amp; Rofri«onolio,j
8~ General Haulins

55- Buildift8 Supplie~

86- Mobile HOme Repair

87-. Uphot.tery

Now 1n :

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

HOME
BENNET' I MOBILE
HEATING &amp;
located 11ft Safford Sdtool Rd. off Rl. 141
(614) 446·9416 or 1·800·872-5967
4·26-91

Ntw Homea • Vinyl Sitling
lltw Garages • Rtplact•tnl Windows
Roo• Additiots • Roofing
COMMERO.U. and RESmENTLU.

FREE ES'IDIA'IES

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
INa Suaday Calls)

2-3·'92·1 mo

MICROWAVES
VHS CAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

H.E.C.
391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614·992-3524

· 1·22·'92·1 mo.

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER , BACKHOE
end TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES end
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEARING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
UMESTONE-TRUCKING

FREE ESmfATES

992·3838
POLE BUILDING
MAHRIALS

lntptrfal R. Metal
Cut To Llngth

I WEEK DELIVERY

..,Color.

c....w 'hck ....
Acaislllfts
BlUM
LUMBER CO.
CRinER

21141'8211 mo.

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
In

Frame

NIWIUSID
FOR All MAKIS
&amp; MODIIS
992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOLL FREE

1·800·841·0070

TRIM .and :
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

DARWIN,

SUN'S UP
TANNUIG

lltw U•• 1014

In 1•11-'

CA11742·2771

15 Stsllal~
'25.00
12 Stsllals.
'20.00
6 S.sllalt...---·-.'12.00
1 S.stlla..----'150
fill SESSION WIIH MIY
I[JIWAl
Sn•al kloooh of lollots
SCl WOUE liDS
211711 mo.

J&amp;L

INSULATION
•VInyl Siding
•Replacement
Window

•Roofing
oJnaulatlon

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097
539 Bryan Place

RACINE GUN
CLUB
GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
SUNDAYS
Starting Sept. 22
12 Gauge Factory
Cho~e

Middleport Ohio
11114/tfn

BISSELL &amp;
CONSIRUCTION

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE .
CaD 614·992·6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.

•Ntwlo•••
tCilrlltl
eCoillpltlt
Rt•otltli•g
Stop &amp; CoMpare
· FilE ESTtMIIU

915·4473
667·6179 .

2114f8211

'

II

conlcHon ol the Jtnoa
or persom lnYolved In the
b1eaklng and enf!rlng of
the laclnt Gun Club and
t•e theft of several
~rtkles front the estab·
lilhment. All Information
wdl bt kept confidential.
Call 614·949·2671

NO SUNDAY CALLS

.

...

li I \ I \I '

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC~

614·742·3090 or
304·773·9545

V

LivealOc~

Hay &amp; Graia
Seed &amp; FerllU..r

REWARD

SSOO for lnfor1tallon
feadlll!l to !Itt 9Jrtst and

THE ONLY THING THIS HOME NEEDS IS••YOUI Ont
tloly ranch ttylt In Riggs Craot Subdlvl1lon. 3 BR'1, 2 '
baths, all. CJiragl, tltc. FA. Ready &amp; waiting Iori.
HELPI WANTED ... UITINGI, WE NEED UITINGII.
. . , - YOURI WITH Ul TODAY! GET REIULTII WE
HAVE IERIOUIIUYERI FOR IERJOUI.WASI

'I

MEIGS
GOLF COURSE
MEMBERSHIP FEES
Men...............s215 ea.
Women ..........1225 ea.
Cwple.................S450
Fomlly............S550 (4)
8•s.ess
t.
.........1650 (4)
Students............ ..S I00
College ................SI50

VACANT LOT - Pomeroy - 60x100 on Maln Street.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Asking $3,&amp;00. Make 111
otltd

~.500.

qup
Waated to Buy

e

NewHom11,
Adclhiona, Siding,
Barna, Painting,
Garagea, Porches
FilE ES1111ATES

MlbiiiOWtd

j

13- lnturance
14- Swine.. Training
IS-- School• &amp; I nt lruction
16- Radtt:., TV &amp; CB Repair
17- . Milcellaneou•
18- Wanted To Do

MARCUM

s~M"=~ ~~

ISN'T 1HII WHERE YOU WANT 10 BE? - 1978 .
Ban1ngl0n s.dJon- 31o 4 bed100ms, F.A. tlec. heal, full .
bait., patio, appll111ce1, 1% acre, In-ground · pool.
ASKING $57,000.
·

I \li\1 '11 '1'111 ':
,\ I I \ I ' II II 1, '

t;::=======ilr==::;:;:;==:;rr==::=====::t:=======~

FINANCIAL REPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
Far Fiocel y- Enclng
Dectma 31, 1111
SAUSBURY TOWNSHIP
Collnty of Melsl•
"Thle 11 111 unaudllad

•Hearing Aids
.
•Recurrent Ear Infections l

For Solo or Trade

32- Mohllrl Jlo•e~ for Sale

e

Public Notice

SPICIAUZING IN
•Adult &amp; Pediatric Allergy

22- Money to La..
23- Pro(.,ioaat S....ic01

Mutealln1trumeDU

sa- r"';" &amp; v,..oah~eo

BUS IDe 8 s . se rvice 8

All Other

l.

ll- Help Wanted
12- Situaliont Wanted

(2) 11. 24,211:

.

•R~Nose

895-Leaarl
937-BuiTalo

Di~e:~·ireclor roaervoalht

Notice

21- B1111t- Opporlunity

46- Space for Rerlt
2-ln Memory
3-- Announcement.
4-- Giveaway
S- Happy Ado
6- Lott and Found
7- Lott and found
~ Public Sale &amp;
Auction
9- Wanled to Buy

Public Notice

IOARD CERTIFIED

•lsth•a
•Headaches ·

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

I I\\ \I I \I

4S- Fumiohed Rooa~o

667-CoolviUe

PubliC

I
l

$ .20

GET RES1JLTS • FAST!

882-New HIVea

949-Racine
742-Rulland

EAR-NOSE-THROAT
ALLERGY

In Children

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

33- Farm• for Sale
34- Buaiaeu Bui.ldinp
3S- Lota &amp; AereaB"
1------::;;-";~====:;:;-----j ~Real Etoaoall'ano.d

6.75-Pt. Pleuant
458-Leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon

985-Cheller
843-Portland
247-Leoar\ FaUo

JOHN A. WADt M.D. INC.

Naomi Smith retwned home last
Tuesday after spending six weeks
with her daughter and family, Mr.
and Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy,
Daniel and Stephen, Daniels,
W.Va.
Naomi Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Knapp, Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Lavender and son and Mr. and Mrs.
Dano King an4 Julie, were Tuesday
evening visitors of Mr. and . Mrs.
Kevin Knapp, Michelle, Amy and
Ashley.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsville, were Friday evening
visitors of Naomi Smith. Also visit·
ing was Charles Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Russell, Harrisonville, was a recent visitor of
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Russell.

Over 15 Words

Gallia County Meigs County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304

between MarCh I and May 31 with
enclosed planting inslructions. The
6-12 inches trees arc guaranteed to
grow or they will be replaced free
of charge.
To become a member of the
Foundation and to receive the free
trees, send a $10 membership contribution to Ten Dogwoods, :
National Arbor Day Foundation,·.
100 Arbor Avenue, Nebraska City,.
NE, 68410, by Feb. 29.
.

Wolfe Pen news

15
15
15
15
15

Rate

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

Classified pages cover lhe
following lelephone exchanges ...

Dogwoods to be given.away ·
Ten free white flowering dogwood trees will be given to each
person who joins the National
Arbor Day Foundation during
February 1992.
The free trees arc part of the
non-profit Foundation's Trees for
America campaign.
"The white flowering dogwoods
will add year-round beauty to your
home and neighborhood," John
Rosenow, the Foundation's cxecu·
tive director , said. "Dogwoods
have showy spring flowers, scarlet
autumn foliage and red berries
which auract songbirds all winter."
The trees will be shipped postpaid at the right time for planting

Words

1
3
6
10
Monthly

DAY BEFORE·PUBLICATION

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
Sunday Paper

"SUBTRACT'' THOSE
GATHERING DUSt
'1\DD'' DOLLARS
~.. TO YOUR POCKET
WITH A
CLASSIFIED AD

Poets comer...
BUSHED

DECA COMPETES • The Meigs High School
Marketing Education Students belonging to
• :DECA competed in District Competitive Events

•The Area's Number I ·
Marketplace

Monday, February 17, 1992
Page-6

Meigs students compete

COMPETITION WINNERS - The Business
:Professionals of America Club at Meigs High
School participated in regional competition
recently at Vern Riffe Joint Vocational School.
Pictured, 1-r, are, seated, Jennifer Proffitt, Mary

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7
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�Page

8

The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

11

Help Wanted

Monday, February

22 Money to Loan

$2,500 CREDIT CARD!
Guaranteed Simi Day ~
prov011 Aloo Quollly For 0
Deposit YISAIMC And C11h Advane... 1o800-264-8789 Ext
2524.

KIT 'N' CARLYLI!® by Larry Wright

71

Real Estate

II

31 Homes for Sale
3 bdrm. houH: for Nit, 5 acras,
dock, gorago, trun 1,.01, go,.n
spot, 614 •74 ~ 2328
3br Framt Home, Large Kitchin
With Appllanc.a1_ Clnlrlll Hut
And Air Condnlonlng, Back
DtckL Fenced Vard, Newly Ad·
did tront Porch And RoOt On
Larg1 LDI, In Jackson Ohio.
$4.5,000. 614-288-436, Aftar 5
P.M. During Thl W11k.
1n townl two alory, thtel bod•
rooms, rull baumtnt, 1·112 bath,
anached 1·112 car garage.
Be on TV many naldacl tor CtntraJ heat and tir. Evenings
commsrclals. Now hiring all Call 614-446-8707.
. For calling Info 615-779~
11 lXI. T437.
Cheshire,
To Sail:
904·932-8959,
$49,900,
Rlducld Ohio.
City ot Point Ploaunt now IC• 904·932·7170, 614·367"'48:
44
Apartment
ctptlng lppllcallons tor part·
Dl•ocl••·
for Rent
tlmt
Roc,..tlan
auollflod oppllcan1S should 32 Mobile Homes
ha'lft experience In supervision
1-bdrm ON. In Mlddlopa•,
.."
&amp; managtmtnt. Salary &amp; hours :-,:-:-=:::-:~-,~--:
for sale
I utllltlta turn, dap req. no pete.
art ntgoUabl,, Submit resum 11
614•992 .2218
to Mayors Oftica, 400 Viand Sl, Tax And Tille Down. Prtownad
Pt. Ph. WV 25550 no later than Mobile Homes, Use Your Tax 1br Efficiency, Utllill11 Ptid, Ex·
Friday Fob. 28, 1992, botwoon Rolund. 50 Hamoo Ta Chaooo. copt Eloclrfc, . Dtpoolt And
hours 8:30AM &amp; 4:30PM , Mon- Elsea Home C.nlar, ~-800..589. Raltrtnca, $165/mo, 614-44S..
day lhru Friday
5710.
Tt30
·
0:::'-::--::-c::--::--:--:-::- 1 ~-..,.·-.,.----,--,,--::-c:-c
Cosmetologist Neaded: Gauran· 1969 Baron 12x65. 2br, 2 AC1 2 btdroom apls In Point
t11d S170 Per Weok, Paid Underpinning, W1sh1r, Dryer, Pltasant1 modern, titan, Hud
Vtcatlons·, Call614·446-7267.
Aelrlgarator, Sto\lt, Par1 Fum., acctptsa, 6'14-446-2200.
Good Condition! 614..,.46·287'\
DRIVERS WANTED
Afltr 5p.m.
2·bdrm, part tum apt, newty
Earn To $620 Wkly. Small Pack· :,:::::..,:=:...,.- :- :-:=--.,..,-- 1 radlcorated, WfD hook-up,
aga Datlv•ry, All Shirts Pt·FI. 1· 1979 Sunnybrook 14x70 mobile Pomeroy, 814·192-6886 after
800-452·6881.
homo, modo by Hallypark, 2 6pm
bodrooms, 1 bath wfgarden tub
DRIVERS WANTED, eam lo &amp; shower, llreplace, 111 tloc:trlc, BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
S620. WNkly. Small package outside dtck Included, very BUDGET PRtcES AT JACKSON
dlli'&lt;ltry, All shifts, Pt-FT. 1·800. good cond, 304·675-:147'1.
ESTATES, 536 Jacklon Plkt
452-6881.
from $102/mo. W1lk to shop &amp;
1987 Clayton Ridgewood, 3BR, 2 moYita. Call614-446·2568. EOH.
priven~ Wanted
full baths, partially fum'td. Now
aarn to .620 wkty., small patk· on rented lot. 614-446·1647.
Comp1etly Fumlshtd Sm111
age clalinry, all ahlfls, part·
Mouu, $250/mo. Plus Utilities,
lime, lull-tlmt, 1·800-452-6881
1967 PlnterHk 14x10, 2 btd· And Depoalt. 814-448..0338. Call
room, 1 bath, total lite, heat Before 7p.m.

1987 Dodge Shelby Shadow
CSX, 2.2 Turbo, lntercooltd, 5speed, AMIFM ctu., AC, PS,
PB . Serious i~ulrlss only!
Evonln•s 614-992 125

haVe leftOvers

exact same COnversati.On

we had

we have the

befOre,

tOO?"

-=========:r-==========-r;=~~=:::=:::::==-1
:
9 Wa ted 1 B
Announcements

3

0

Announcements

Announcements

"Freo Single Bulletin, Personal

Ads. Box 184, Massillon , Ohio

&lt;4648."
r will not be llltponsible any
Cl ebts other than my own, slg-

Uy

Por1able Relrlge,.tor, Call 614·
446-8594 aflsr 5 p.m.
Ustd Moblla HoiTIII, Ctll 61 4446.0175.

Unallae:hed? Meet Area Singles
----------! Through
Our Singles Newsletter. Write: Singles, P.O. Box

3

0

1043, Ga llipolis, Ohio 45631.

Wanted To Buy: Junk Autos
Wltll Or Without Motors. Ctl/
larry Livaly. 614·388-930:1.

4

Giveaway
--..,-.,..-..,..,....:....,...-

2 small B wka ~d pupplts one
female one malt, half SPflnger
&amp; Lab, 304·882-3793.

Wanttd To Buy: Large Round
Baits 01 H1y, $5 A Bait. 614·
ned Ltt H. Flora .
446 .1052.
4 Cute Puppies, Mixed Brttd,
Meet Singles : Guys • Girls. 1· 614·256·6348.
Top · Ptlcts Paid: All Old U.S.
900-407-1004, $2.95/mln. Mus t
Coins, Gold Rlnga, Sllvar Coins,
Be Over 18, Fonpals Irvine CA.
Free: To A Good Homt For
1
Oran9e Tom Cat, Had Shots,. rs~ g;!~"d'A!!~~~·.8: \~~~t:.p, Possible S400, Wook Stulllng
EnveiCiptl At Homt,Get Credil:
Outstdt Cat, Moving Can't Tah.
C.rcis, Loans E111n Wllh Btd
614·245·9172.
Crtdll Or No Cradll. Rush $1.00
Part Graat Danel part Oobtr· Employment Services S.II·Addrnltd Stamped En·
man, 8mo old , 614-""2·2754
vtlopn 110 To: D&amp;A Suppllas,
B011 443 ' F1Irborn,OH 45324
11
Help Wanted
RaporttriPho'-rapher
tOr
6 Lost &amp; Found
1
.'"V
grow
ng
weskly
nawapaptr,
•xLOST Flatroek area, Blk lab EISy Work! Excellent Pay! As· narltnct nocoollr• m s1 ho
'' u
""
wfwhlte undtlr rt~~ck, male, wear- semble Products At Horne. Call ,....
Toll Frtt, 1-800-467·5566, Ext. writing and lay out skills. Send
Ing rad cottar d111glng chain, 313.
resume Independent Herald,
304-675-2207.
Box100, Pinevllla, WV24874.
Expanding Successful Agency RN &amp; LPN d
1 Y1 or evenings,
7
Yard Sale
AYeraga lneome For Salu Reps home htalth case,
one on ont
15,00Q We Offar:
nursing . Your homa arta. Kim·
•opportunity For Satisfying btrly Quality Cart, call Pam or
ALL Yard SaliS Must Be Paid lr~ Career
Rodney, 304 •346•966 7.
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m. "Training Program
the day bator~ the ad Is to run. "Excellent Frln~ Benelhs
Wanted: DoctOr's assistant .
SUnday tdillon - 2:00 p.m. "Pald Office Span
Must like working with people,
Friday. Monday tdl11on • 2:00 "Secretariat Anlslance
be tHicient &amp; have Insurance
p.m. Saturday.
Call Mr. Shirley At 614-446-0372, experience. Excetlenl worklnn
•
Wutern-Southarn
Ute
Incondll1ont, good ulary a Iring•
surance EOE.
8
Public Sale
benatlta. Ou!ttanding ClrMr
Sand resume to:
KUWAIT, SAUDI WORKERS opportunity,
&amp; Auction
Doctor's Altllttnt, P.O. Box
NEEDED'
Rick Pearson Aucllon Company, $35.00 &amp; Up Per Hour. Tax Free. 282, Middleport, OM 45760
lull lima auctioneer, eomplale Both Skilled &amp; Unskilled For WE'LL PAY VOU For Easy
auction aarvice. Lltanaed Ohio, Into. Call 615·779·5505 El:t. K· Tabulttlng Worlt From Home!
699.
West Virginia, 304-m-S785.
Up To S106.00 Paid Dally. can 1900-976·7377 ~$1.49 Min, 18 Yrs.
+ 0 r WIt
r e: P SEE • 33 9, 16 1 S.
L ncolnway, N. Aurora , IL 60542.
We'll pay you for easy tabulatinq work from home! Up \16$'106.
Paid dally C.ll 1 900 9 73n
·
• • •
1$1.49
Y" 161
•J ais.wrl1"
PASEE mln/18
• 517B,
Lin·
tolnway, N. Aurora, II 80542.

1

Using the C/assifieds
Is as Easy as .. .

l

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

12

Situation
Wanted

Will haul gra'lffl &amp; do odd joba,
call614-949-2288 evenings

CL\8H?H

14

Business
Training

Retrain
Now!!!Southaa81ern
Buslneu C~tege, Spring VaneX
Piau . Clll Todaiy, 614-446-4367 I
Reglsleration 190-0S.1274B.
18

Wanted to Do

Will Babysit In My Homt. Rod·
nay Area. Ralerence1 Available.
Call 614-245-5887.
E &amp; R TREE SERVICE. Tapping,
Trimming, Trw Removal, Hldgt
TrimminQ. Free Estlmattsl 614·
3&amp;7-785T. .

Gtorgtl Portable Sawmill, don't

haul your toga to th1 mill just
ca11304-675-1957.

Ml11 Paula's Day C..rt Ctntar.
Salt, affordable, chUdcare . M-F
6 a.m. • 5:30 p,m. Agea 2Yt-10.
Before, after school. Drop·lns
welcome. 814-446-3224. New In·
tam Toddler Care, 614·446-6227.
Partntrlhlp Dance lnalruc11on.
Prol~tslontl
young coupla
teaching Country Wnltrn,
Ballroom, Lllln and Modem
par1nershlp dancing. Singles,
Coupln and groupa welcome.
For Into piNH call after 7:00
PM aak tor Anna or Jim, 304·
875-3814.

'I',,., your t: Iuttm· mlo
·
f:trsh,
Sell it the easy~wtry
, ... by IJiione,
rw neetl It• lem'e your lwme.
Place yoiu· cltlssilied ad tmlay!
I 5 wortltt m·less, 3 days,
3 paiJen,$6.00

Want to do houttc5unlng &amp;
oftlea ciHnl~. Hava rtleran·

en. 304.e75-5413.
WUI cl11n and paint garage,

attic, haul awey
1rath. :J04.11S-3e44 or 815-3062.
biHmtnt,

Fmancial
21

#..____ _ _ _ ___

2, _ _ __ __

9,. _ _ _ _ __

lO----.;......__ __

.'1.---- -- - - - l.l.---,.----

4,_ _ __ __
(!

12.-~-----

·'··-------~~----6,
_ _ _ _ _ __ 1.'1.,_~---­
'14,,_ _ ~~7._ _ _,---_ _ 15._______,..._
IJ. _ __ _ __

446-234·2 675-1333
992-2156.: .
'

·,

. 't

Business
Opportunity

INOTlCEl
OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHING CO.
............. !hill ""' do butl·
-with_.. rau k,_, ond
NOT to Olild """"YIIWOIIOn thl
mall unlll ~ hlvtlnvntTgated
thl olflrlno.
11 Opp0~unlty In USA Todoy
D&amp;B Uotod --A.fan Rauto,
Call ·-1111-zm.
'-1 S""ck Vondlng Routo
R - - Pnooll....,. Coli
Now 1 - 4 M.
MEDICAL CLAIMS PROCESS.
lNG

-klo

Sto" Full Or Pllt·h. A Fow
Houra Pol W•k Con
Up
To 11,000 btntlnc_ll_ly.
Wt "'" A NIIIOnll Compony

=-Ot~-~=

tloMit. 'Titlo II A loinl lutiOpportunity Aod IIIQul,.
a8ollwWt
""""'or "·"'·
No
bDirllnoe
PIU.'1J'
AI
Wt Tilln You. IPAIIGLER

Info

oWrOIIATID IIEDICAL SEA·
VICII.INC. Fet
Coil
...-m eew (24 Htt).

~

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

lx12l6h. Portable ch1ln link
dog ktnntl $150. 30,000BTU
Warm Morning gas haaler $30.
lJMd chicken cages $1.00 ptr
halt. 6-Fioh oquorlumo $5.0001.
Wood ralls tor pick-up truck,
36" high oil 4.. 1. . $30. Living
rm c~alr $40. Parrot cage
wtlland S55. Bar llool $10.00.
Dog
t111naponatlon
boxn
prictd to tlzt, 614-843-5211
Emtral grun &amp; black lormal,
size 14, tltered In at wtlat, $140.
304-675-1916.
let Cream Parlor Tabts &amp; Chair
For Sa.. , 814-446-8720.
M1dlcal Supplits: New And
Used Wh•lchtlrs :J WhHIId
Scooters,~. Uftchllrs, Ea.tlrlc
Beds, ~tc. lnturence And
MedlcaN Atcapted. Ctll Aclvln·
tane HNhh, 1-80().5811 •1020 .
•
Rlcondltloned Wllhel'l &amp;

1

~~~:a~~~~~~~~ !~~~ ~~ci

Furnished tfficltncy apartment ~~r:,.r..~T~~w~ft..~:
with kltchtnttle and bath. n...er Sh-. 11 ~ 044 .
Deposit tnd ,.feranc11 ,.. ""'r
._..._
1989 • Redmtn Danville ~4x12 · qulred. No ptla. 614-446-4679.
Surpluaarmy camlllwge, dtnlm,
on rtntiKi lot. 2 lull baths-2BR .
C.rhart, rtntal clothlno. Jr.
Call (614) 367-ct139 after 5 p.m.
EHiclency, apl. lor rent, buutltul lit• cemiJawJ:4 Sam Som.
carpet, n ce couch and btr, 304199'1 14x80 Sunshine Mobile 675-6042
rvlllt'e llnct 1 t_btakM S.nHoma 3br, · 2 Baths, Pay OH ;:-:=,.=.:;-;-;:;--;-:--.-:= dyvtllt POI1 Ofta, Jlckson
Ramalnlng Loan, &amp;14·446·8325.
Fumllhed 3 Roomi And Bath COunty, WY. 5 mil• Ealt 1·71,
Upololro, Clun, Na Pols, RaveniWOOd. Frl h Sal, Sun,
1991 Sunshine 14x&amp;5, 2br, 2 Relerenct And Deposit R• noon.e:OO PM. 01 If day• for·
Baths, Now On Rantad Lot, 614- Cl'lired. 614-446·1511.
hours call 3011·27'lo5655 before
441.0313, 614-441·1016.
11:00 AM. IUnlon made Political·
Furnished Apartment, 1br, next Buslntu$peocltllti. .Matchn).
Short Time On Job? Put Credit to Ubr1rv, .,.rklng, central hilt,
HI story A p ro bltm ? Mtny air. rtferenctl.
., ,...
614-446-0338, Wood ChiPI For BI ddl ng And
Rtpollllsed Moblla Hom•• To B•lort 7p.m.
Mulch For Sale. 614-258-6119;
Choose From. Small Down
After &amp;p.m. 614-256·1353.
Payment. Call1·800-589-57'\1.
Eosy Ao 1, 2, 3_File Vau'ro Tau• Gracious 11vlno. t ond 2 bod· 55
Building
Here And au" Here. Kill You're room tpanmants at Vllla9'
Supplies
'
Menor
and
Rl111r1i 1
Landlord Goodbya! Elsea Home Apartments In Middltf':rt. From
~-ntor 1 ••o.sa9 5710
·
$1
Black, brick, HWor - • win·
-.:.~=.:.·=-==·.:..:...::.·--- I 96. Ctll614·992·m. . EOH .
dowt, llnltll, tic. C aude
Win·
33 Farms for Sale
Mlddtepa", B~~eh s1, 2 bed· ters, RJo Gr~ndl, OH Call &amp;14-51
1.
-::-':"""=--::---::---...,::--= 1 room tumrtshed apt, utlllll• 245 2
4B5 AcreTs, Nt ew !'~~·· GaBrage, paqidlrocl',.3~!'::"2"'~~!_. dtpOtit ,. 56
c:ft"s _~~~~ ~o-c:co '"· u • _._ "&amp;OIUU.
;;::=~P::et:;l.:.f~o=r Se:;;.l::;e:-::-::-.
Complttly Fumllhad mobllt Groom lnd Supply Shop-Pet
home, 1 mill bllow lOW!'~ ovtr· Grooming. All bfaeds, ttylss.
34
Business
looking river. No Pets, """· 614· tams Ptl Food Dialer. JuUt
446.0:138.
Webb. CaU 614-446-0231.
Buildings
Single Effleleney, Partlalty Fur· AKC
Chocolate
Labrador
For Sale : Commtrclal Building nlsfitd, Water Included, O.poait Ratrlaver, BNutltul Ftmall
And lo! In Euraka. Contacl Required, Clll614-446-8120.
Puppy, Shota And Wormed. 614·
Owner: 614·256-.1243, Alttr6 P.M.
Furnished
446-8111.
45
AKC
reglstei'R
mlnlaturt
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Rooms
hSchnauur~upprr;••"" &amp; po~r,
48 A 8 A
Brl k A
oute bro In, 50. 304 75·
oom c anch, Lr &amp; Rooms tor rent • wtlk or month. 2588 ·
3
DriFp, DoniFp, Kc, Brk. Room,
Slonlng ot ~20/mo. Oolllo Haoo1.
Br, t 112 Bath, Full Flnlohtd
-44i-1580
"
Dllmotlan Puppltsl 6 Wttluo
·
OkiJ. HH 9!'0"1 BHn Wormed.
Blstmtnt, Fuel Oil Fumactl AI· 114
tached Woodbumtr, Single AI· SIMplno rooms with cooking. ~c..ReglsiiNCI. II &amp; WH. 614tached Gr/Oplntr, PIUI 2 C1r Alto lrllllll' space. All hook·U~ ~1101.
Garagtl Work St.op, 2 Ltrgt Call 1 11 2 oo
......
D1rn1. Crib/Shed. 314 Mll11 OUt
er : p.m., .-..
Flon Toni!, 24t3 J&amp;ckoon AvL
5651
Po-Int PltaNnt, 304-175-2063,
Rt.218. 614-446-2380, Evenings
• Maaon WV.
lull lint T10piCII floh, blrdo,
AHar 7:00p.m.
46 Space for Rent
small anll'l'lllll and auppiiN.
Lots tor tai•.L-.!~IItra acctpSoniNnl to share 'my houM LAST CHANCE Ptrfocl Volon·
1oblo. 304-675-&lt;r.u.
wMh, fll111ooUo Forry, 30W'IS- tine Gift: Boslon Tenier PupTrailer lot tor rent. Water, sewer t2!18, 8:00 All tlf 11:00 Pll.
Now Avaltab'-, Will Ttka
llopooiiL 614-448·21113.
tnd tanltatlon Included. $110
month. 304-675-1806 or 875-5037.
Roll WeUtr Pup German Br.d,
Merchandise
Poron11 O.F.A. 1 IIIIo. $300. AKC
36 Real Estate
Roglotlfocl. 614-245-5161.
Wanted
doa 1t1rttd fOf ule.
Squlrrtl
51
HousehQid
304-67W131
N11r Molztr Madlcti Center 3
Goods
bedroom, 1 112 balht, kllhcen
Musical
living &amp; dining rooms on 11 Big Savlnga On All Carpet In S7
ltalt: 3 or more tern mostly Stock. Cath And Carry. Mol·
Instruments
flat with main road lrontage. lohln Corpolo, 614-446-11144.
304·578-2631.
Bundy Cforlnlt, 614-441-1720.
Full tbe btdtoom suite, $200.
304.f71HOft.
Farm Supplies
Qu Dryer, 2 YNrl Ktnmotl,
Rentals
$150i Round Oak Table 4
&amp;L1vestock
Chol~?1 _$100; Hl.owoy Bod,
PM.

r,-•

14

7

85

*·

41 Houses for Rent

::,O;':Ioto.:C:Wh~Mo::Co,-nop-y-,B:-od-:,-,Wit=h

Now Bo1 Soofngt And llattrou.
Twin Size, S7S. 114-381-850l
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
W.shn, dryera, rlfrl~rators,
r~ng11. Skagga AlltlllaRCH, ·
Upptr River Ad BHldt Slone
Crotl llofel. Coll.llf4;446-73N.
G""' Topon Goo Ao',T.: $125;
G·E· RIn~~trlltor, Wh t, $125·

2 bdrm. houu, no lnald1 pets,
dopao" roqulrod, 614-1112-3080
3 Bedroom 1 112 Baths Fann
HouH. On 2 Acre Wltl:l Bam,
Rio Grande, $400. Aak For Amy.
cc&amp;t_4-4_46_4,4_1o.,..-,.-.,..,--,:,..,-·)
3br, 2 8olho, Double Wide,
~
Sch-1
So"'h we.,em
- Dl-rlct
•• ·
:,",..4-.24.:;5-"'
: ;"-;
&amp;588_..--;-- -:--:-:-:I ~~ ·
' ·
Nlc• 2 a.ctroom houH acrotl Hlr a,PI. ret.• $15; ringer washer,
from Goodyar Plant Apple $151i tutomatlc w~ihlf'l drvtr.
Grove, 304-875-1972 atitr 5:00
11"&amp;21" aolor TYt,
PM.
BTU Lannox F""""o, $381;
::'-:-:-:::---:--:--:c:-:-,-- 1 Hoggtrty APOI~nca Slart, llkl·
Polnl Pleaunt Art11: 2010 Mar· dttport, OhKi
·
quettl, 3br · HouH, Csrplled, '
·
Newly
Rod-lltd
Nlco
LAYNE'S fURNfTUII£
Neighborhood Ancl Ct- To Compltle homo lumlohlngo.
SchOols, S4001mo. Fltflt'tncQ Hourw: Uon-Sat, trl. 114-441Roqulrod.
614-44f.3537 11322. 3 mllte aut lulovlllt Rd.
E¥tnlnga.
FM o.tivtry.
1\' '
PICKENS FURNITURE
42 Mobile Homes
NowJUood
,
Hauothold lumlohlno. 1111 mi.
for Rent
.ltrrtcho Ad. Pt. PI-nt. WV,

:6

61 Fann Equipment
Jlm'o Form Equlpmont, SR. 35,
Wtlt Golllpaflt, 6M-446-m7;
Widltlltcllon new 1 wNd farm
trtetort ' lmplemantt. avr.
1 -•·
kd
: 1,' Jf~IICH:OO w• "''·
;:MF::-:211:::-;;T-=~=-·::;•=-·C"I-:-=110::·-"'· ....
rpt ••·
1130 IIF TNCior,
1\.~!
_35 MF;

Trtctor, $2,115. uwnw Will
Flnenct. IM-21&amp;4522.
Nlw Holl.lnd 417 hay bind 7 lt.
New HOlland Super 717 tortge

hiiVtitor. Oth1 85

grlndlr

mlur. 011- tO ft trondltc. All good c:ond. 304-m.
4215
·
Now Holllnd Har Rokee, And
Square 1...,., Mowtra. 2 And 4
Row Corn Pllnttro, CU1Ipodl·
..... Cunivalon, W~ Dllllt
Mt.nuN Spreadarw, Ot~ Fiiki
R - Equlpmtrtt. - · • Fonn
lloohl•oy• .llcklon Ohio. ,,._
aft.fM4.
·
::'2"':bocl~=,_=m-::lllf~tlto~.-=-~- lcon30W71·t410.
W.nlod: 111oc1 firm oqui..Uplond Rei, Hud - o d . IWAiil
MYihlni you wont to •11. Coli
675-40111.
'
AUCTION l FURNITUII£. 6Z , , . _ , . , - 0 otter 6
2 boclroom uofumlohocl 11o1o Oliva II.. fll1flpolli. Now l 111oc1 ::;p.m;;;;.,
. -~--~-1ypork 12x10, holt mile poll lumft!O, Mottrl, Wilt.. •
Ll OCk
HMC, depapolf l ,.....,,.. ,..
I~H.
~~~Yittl~=::-:=
qulrocl. , 614-441-43Q ar ~71- ••
;:~
•2330
....
Antiques
2 Horot Tllllor"'-~~2''· -;
AQHA
v..-h
II!'Y ., .... _... ........ or Tho V•r. 2 Silver
1114 L lloln 11-. ,_...,, Roytl lllddlto, lrood
Hourt: II.T.W. 10:00 iJw. to I:GO Ill-~­
4br Unlumllhocl On Con! Mill II.OI&gt;J"!MioY t :00 ' ' 1:00 p.m.
·
84 Hay &amp; Grain
Raod Off AU26, No Pelt, lt4 - - .
Dopooll Req~lrocl. ltH14MI22. 54 Ml~j:elllneout
~-=-.-......,....:..-=-:-tto'!"ito-ot~ho-,y,

63

Work-··

";:;-';iLii~~~iiiUiO: -

Lot·--==.:.--·"
,_,.,_=:··
=1
__ _.............. _
ond holt, Bond HI~
I'IWUII.

noqulrocl. "' ..........

.....

A•:•• And DIDDIII Alquhtl. Coil Allor ~ llltl

t41711--.-

VIIIDIICI ltOU1I: '1111 Rloll =-~;;11.:::;'"':=-:::-:-::-::-~­
._,No""'I ... W.Hml .....

. . .=:rut·. . . . .

-.
· .

::.:-•...,tt.:,._t ..
hloMrf. Dtl. .otl

•

DO&amp;, OR MAYBE A PAMPERED PET

OF SOME RIC~ LADY LIVING IN
A TOWN HOV5E, OR MAYSE:

.

e

(J)IMil:k
......

~

t)

aecu~~ew~Q

• Andy Clllfftttl

GJ 8caciby Doo

Z01111 Stereo. I;J

1:35 (I) Andy Clrtflllh

7:00

Fallow in waiting room of doctor's office: ' The doctor
told me to exercise more, so I slopped watchmg golf
on television and started watching BASEBALL."

111• IIJ WltMI of -

..

~TM.IIIflloontll

SJ·-~-

No~
(1).
c-.

'ii!i-

•

o•
Stereo

-

+KQ83

Tonight

1m F·150, 4x4, 614-992-698:1,
Ilk tor JtH

116·--..

'

-~

==~

AC, PS, PB, ..a al.llo, topper, ,
btcl liner, will take guns on 1

!121

2•17

-·

::;;;;-':;.';'::.C..:.-:-'- +..c...,:-:;- ,

1968 Chloq 1 Ton Dallvacy s
Truck, 350 Entne, 1:Zx8 Fl. Box,
Good Shape, ,700. Mark Bel·
wHn 5-7 P.M. 614·367.().411.

!121 Cologe lllktlblll

Pittsburgh a! Seton Hall (L)

Cl1ttfbJNE,Io,W:

QICniUftrw
7:35(1) 8ollfonl """ Son
1:00 (J) e 11J Frnh Pllnce of
Ill Air Will's appeeranca on

1988 Dodge 4x4, 53,000MI, 614· ,

a TV garna show Htmo

~114;:9,:·2::226::;...-...,-,,....,---,-,= ;

doomed. Stereo.I;J

(J) lull Eye

1989 ChlvtrOitl truck, 2500. '
1...
b
· •
Hr..-. clu cab, 350 cu. in. ~.
oU1o,
olr,
•76oo
obo,
614-992·
...._·
•
. ,,
-

e

(I) (I)
FBI: Tile Untold
- A 17J.~r-old hijacks
a plano and
ando her
nd be set free. ~reo.

1

F·150, Body g,.al shape~OD
"
Auto. PSJPB, angl01
some wortt, $1,ti00. ti14·:WI ~,

IIIIo[]

e XVI Qlymplc

. •

u,..,

Winter Cllmoo Flgtn
skating, Ice dancing IQng
program !medals aw.-dld);
NOtdic combined. ski jumping
por1lon (I); hlghllghte and 8
~:..- ~-1 round
liD ..lio~E: 'WIIIItllld Ill
- · · ·(PG13)
Foo Nlaltt
(2:110) lillie
Stereo.

74
Motoncycles
-::::::-::::::::-:-:-:::::::-----.....,.
,-988 Hondt ltR200, txc cond, :
304-GT5-4506.
,

.......
1M-~:;~
1111geS1ereo.
8 PalltwNI•: 5'
illl Pllnce Y
Stereo. t:;1

'·''

Renegade, auto '
tra.nsm1111on, PB, PS, "" wheal,-•,
Levi pkg 1 hardtop. 38,000 actual
mllq,304-615·15&amp;4.
;
1179

CJ7

1984 J11p Cherokee Chief, 4:
whtl4 driYI, kyl., PS. PB, llr, '
lin, amlfm, low mlltago, 2 ,'
ownera, new
good cond.,
$4800, 614-949-2585

76

EEKANDMEEK

I:Oii(l) MOYIE: ......... Ill (PGI

(3:001

Auto Pans&amp;
Accessories

1:30 IZie IIJ IIIDIIOftf Blos110111
Is joined by san 'N Pepa 1n a

Budget Tranemlulo,.. Ulld 1 :
,.bull!, lllrtlng II $98; Auto
Partt. 614·24~677, 6'J4.3n.

~rtf1day video -

roNIA-Cieveflnd

2263.

Four 0..15 Buckshot radlal tires , .
ntw, $425, 814-985-3949

79

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

C.v~

(I) (I)

t:OO (J). IIJ IIOVII: '111 -

fjlgltt~llowltl 12;00)
Stereo.
! ....... ICe

w~=s.n..

BASEMENT
WATERPROORNG
,
Uncondlttonal llfttlmt guaran-. '
tH. Local raltNncn lumllhtd
FrM ellimat•. Call cofltet: ?';
814-237·0488, doy or night :
Rogtrl Basem.nt WaterprO«F'\
ling.
) l,
Cohlpleio Mabllt Homo Sti·Upo, l
Ropolro; Commtrlcel, A~ 1
tl.ll lmproviiMittt. lnoludb"': t
Plumbing, Eltclrlcll. lnouronqo 1
Clolmo kctii&lt;od. 114-2H-11tt. ~
Curtis Hom~ lmprovtft'lt.nta: :
YNrt Experltnct On Okf., &amp; 1
Newer Homn. Room AcldiUone, •
Foundation Work, Roof~, r
Kitchens And Balhw. F'" Et- ~
tlmat11! Rtfarenc", No Job To ,
Big Or Smaiii614..CC1-G225..
t
7 :
;;R:;on::av':':o:;11;:an::,::..::;Add~.;:On~o=,::;R:Co-polr
Polnllng, Ourtllly Work! c.u, '
Aagar AI : 614-448-8568.
•;
Flon"a TV Service, aptclaliztng ~
In Z.nllh 1110 HrV~Ina moM
Olhtr branct.. Hou• call, atlo

VI. liujy Boyt lnd Nllurll

Dluilters.
Ill rtuh.. -

an clollt

=·In•
55 Dale

M Appfoached
57 Ariz... ctty

DOMf

2t SWIIIP
2t- kebab
31 Ytrllcll air

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tabllr.)

20looln

Adllnl

4!o~f

loll

HAI_..I

IMtrumlftl

13-AviY

....

20AIIr-

17 And 10 011

7 SUIJ8 Safety . ,.
llntlfMCUon

38111... -

33 On the WIY
35

·e-Hiwa11on

1 Swift llltcran

5 Dtpotlt

(11*.1

21 ....

10 ..,••t bit

22Two-of

12 Won11 (II.)

23='-' :
11125..._

Nobralllla II Mltaourl (L)
10:00(ZJ ltCNI FilM: w...........
Olfgilllll

u .s. ~

HCirftg-.

27-

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3011111ftct -

to

32 llllcltii-

34Unc="l
.
bfo
;

..... OYII' 40 yell'llgo . .

recan1111JCted,llltpillllzlng
lltllr imP.OI1IfiCt to ... Gull

The

10:31111 Cloalt n C111M
11:00!2le (I) (I) 111e

lltll'nped envelo))e to Ma1CIImlker. c/o '"bl1antlll retumt- , . - , , PfO'
' : lhllnewtpaper,P.O.Boxl1428.~ · - you do whlll - · doi"O r81her
18nd, OH 44101-3428.
•
thin jult talk lbDu1 n.
,
PIICII I'*' ·10" ol\ , •1 Gu8rd VIIIGO lAIII- 12 llpl II) You're the

De ......
(ZJ ltUN81;11
liD e A1M11o IIIII

-...

FOUI1h oncl Pint
I~WIU

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

-

,·

l'lb. 11, , _ ·
•:
'
You....,.thipoteultlltoriDIIdaciiM-1
. - I n the yur llhMd. llul,you might~
hllye 10 NIVIIo )fCIU1' I8C1Iolln llfiii!IO

fill iDDd.......

. . . . . (...... l'lb.

111

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" - ~ kM. tooklllce n11 go1ng toj thoulh !I'IW r1111 n1nt1 m1g111Ill
bl•t1118
- - - t1t8n you •lllelpat· fulllr todly, you'M d 111t81y 1o b1 ar.rt
· ad. Know Whn .to loDit -~ 1011- ~hough to llflllltclllle IIII.·IIDfl!dii!DI

.

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.

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In llld lliUf1d

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. '

Ill

11:30 !Jl 11;111•
(ZJ
~

)fCIU1'

l8!et on IOMy, .

' .,.. you till In ......... •IIII'Onl
Plllillllty you'l em !pl8h )fCIU1' bill .

::; ,::;:;;:-'roriiO:'I.':i.":

lila lltota could blcOrno

ll'llndilll
qullutranglllllll-. but IAIITTAIIUI
~~~·
t.,_.lllflylntheoltl~lwnt.n'tlnlnll·
PWt· IIIIM.
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-IICqllllntonc:e wiiO'I M1 II coo-11111. do ltOI
.
, r
ttidt
under •llulltll todiJ. H
11..-.. 110) T o o r- ~IdeM
IMolld llltllvlll-.
bllt8r ..... mlkl

-·
47==
h8lr

11:G5(1)110VII:'... IIIIIOIY:
Tile Quell fir.,_ (POl
·
12 00)

2

flllllpollt, Ohio

'

45Go¥1.1-

Qllpolll onltrllt
111 ~ lllno: Q

:

• LM Ooi!IMII~n

.. ... :
tr

.

MIIMIII

42 At"-Ptr:nlln
43 OIIIIMd
44 Long, tltlck

I •011-:'rSireD
a .

malt.,.

lgllnll the lncllllllllon lodly 10 think " .... w110 ..
ttie m8jor conlrii!&lt;J·
II you end notlhe Other guy wiiO.mlk... lion 1o 1 )Dinl-ltnln which you',. ln-.
alllhe COOICIIIiortl end cOmpromiMI. volvld,notyourcounte;p811. VolrmiQIII
In lnl1h, Wyou IIOOd blclt a bit. you may not Mllhll. but - . wll.
Qlll111.on1lrelydlfllllltlplcture.
..-tA (lljll. JI.Oal. II) Develop.U.I (lllrlhi1·Apjtl11) There II~ ...... you - 1 o ..... the IIIII conportun11y II'OUtld you loday, but you 1101..., could blthe.,... thlllnllk•
might not bllldlpt II reed... ttiellg- 1y to you with the l8rgllll.
nail. Uevlloprnonll begin 1 o - pro- -.lllthll 11mo. Trulll your luck.
pHioul, don't Ill ntg~tlvl lhlnlclng con- ICG...O (OM. ·M-IIM,II) Avail your·
olhelwlee.
.
. IIIII today to groupe-. you·~....,.
T
(AjllltiO MtriDI Yourlnftu. p ttwv lor tlllldnllilflulnltll con-

•••

40 Pl8rflllwller •

7GO CIW- Pill
IIIU- ·

wfllch

ligna. n ·I'IIIMitllcllly portect lor you. lrllldl ""'Y enc:ouriQing 11 thla
. Mill $2 plul • long, M i l - -;· ttme. Your problb1flt._ for gonor•lll)g

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

38

q=~IC :.5'
Ill

=~.====~======"'.
•nd you' llftncni. ·
Aalra-GriiPh oorntUIIi&gt;ti ~hi' o1 your P8111clpallili1. .
ASTROORAPH
.MatchiMker lno1ontly , _
UO (.lilly 11-Aflll. 121 Your fi11811Cill '

Cli11f'l Plumbing

84

52!0C8PI
54 ConNnHr

t:3011i Cal1g1 ......,..

llf'MIIIId ... Gull Tile

Heating

a-

t5:;rof
11 Grlln of corn

Sludl Arlbla lnd .......

doll-.

*'
...,.... - . - -.

FER ME

roDAY!! ·

.......
Rei. Pa.ta. •ur

&amp;

IS GOOD ENUFF

GARDEN

-VIc

Plumbing

41 - Slanderfl
Time

~:.c,-,Dowll-alllllll¥1illtllllr"1111H•

"IN KIDDY

Oaorges Cf'Mk
plfto, pickup, ond
Iff'
44f.0284.
Will build polio ............
ocrotnocl roarne, pU1 up vinyl
aiding or treller tklt1fnt. 114241-11S2.

82

4ISU1118111mll
43 Sool

f2 wdl.)

Sleno.
QIL.-rr King LMI

NUMIERDNE

'SHE SAID HE'S TH'
WIJ$$ 'UT·UP
SHE fVER SEEN!!

=~:8:~o.:Z::..

Davlo

Jim

0uaa11n and Sgt. Slllughter

~ARNEY

of

. . - !n Lll

WI • • Ei!t1111111111g
!Hrn1118fdl:New
Foundltlon, H8ckSIW

3'::r'
CrJ
....,...
4511rHihlln

worthl111

24=·-

S"lertO.

'

14 Somollllng

Cllcket

37 lllulng
IDUIId

40

12""'-1

"::="u
,_ ..

(ZJ

-:----:-:-----'''
'•
81
Home

I SUpiiNUnt

18

Uo Do Pert' NIC _ ,

''\

ACROSS

kindlY tOWIId

(IJ llllck ll8llon Slereo. t:;l

•

Improvements

e MOVI!: '1'8141

Eul

The World AJmanac:"Cros•word Puzzle

131ackpoHd

Ill On IIIII Sleno.

!-lOME L.l6 N'I6Hr:i

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

'-----------.J

11 FuNotloall

al

~=.~~~:r.~r:.~

'THEN WHAT HAF'f'ENEO 10
PIZZA Nt1 CAD ePal!itlr

.

SOUTH
+AKI
.. 3
t K J 10
+AJI076

U you compare cul'l'l!nt tournament . INT
Pass
Pass
bidding with that of yesteryear, you s+
will find many more conventions in
Opening lead: • K
use now. True, most enjoy limited popularity, but those with clear technical .
merit are used by almost everyone.
One sueh convention fs Lebensoltl,
first described by George Boehm in
The Bridge World magazine.
Lebensobl was devised to combat
interference after partner has opened
f Ollt n,o-IJ~rr!p. By sacrificing a natural he would have gone through the Letwo-no-tnmtp raise, the responder can bensobl twe&gt;-no-lrump routine.) Hav·
describe hls hand more accurately. U ·lng no heart stopper either, South
the responder bids two 11&lt;1-lt'lllltp, the jumped to game in clubs, knowing
opener must rebid lhree clubs. So the dummy would have llllme supporl
responder may make a bid at the
West led off with bis three top
three-level either Immediately, which hearts. Declarer ruffed, drew lnmtps
Ill
or after going through the and cashed bill spade winners. At this
tw&lt;&gt;-no•tnunp Lebensobl route, which point, West was known to have started
Ill usually a sign-off.
with sit hearts, three clubs and at
In loday's band. following West's in· least three spades. He bad room for at
advisable overcall, North's three no- most one diamond. Declarer cashed
trumo sbowed a balanced raise to dummy's diamond ace and finessed
1~~·~· but withoul four spades or a the diamond jack to make his game.
stopper. (To show four spades,
ue llrrff«&lt; l o - cor&lt;i-IIl'1 . responder would have cue-bid - IDI'Irllllp Aldor, lor caro Ill WI -per.
three hearts. To show a heart stopper. no, ... " " - ool, ....... 1jo " " -·

5 Actor lilt-

Rldlr' AIC Monell!~

197'5 Nomad, 31 ft ., Nlc:t, CINn, ·
Air, Awn. Mutt Move. Open For •
OH1r1. 1818 Chathtm StrMf, :
Gallipolis.

Services

· Stereo.

Chiclgo Bulls (L)

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

tQTI432
+4

Sto,.

e F1illly FIUCI

Ill It • 8l8r Stereo.

T,......,.es

A convention
,
that aids accuracy
By PIIIIUp Alder

Ill WIIMI oi"F- t:;l

trade, 304·11175--1564.
·
g••
B
II
6
I
nd
rd
•
1 - ronco , -c:y ., sta a ,
4 wtt.al driva, sunroof, $:1.500, ,'
614-742·2357 arter 6pm

•Ja

.AKQIOSI

+112

t.E~inmlt1t Tonight

-::-:,..-:=-=--=-=-o-:-- •.
1981 ltLT Ra,., F-150 pickup, :

EAST
+10172

ti

7:30~L,~:~s

1981 GMC 1500 Sltl'l Granda. :
4sp. on tha lloor, dual tanks, v. 1
8, aood cond., $3200 firm, 614· ·

&amp; 4 WD's

WEST
+JDS

7:G5!1l Addamo F1mlly

1

Vans

PHILLIP
ALDER

!E

1

+Q&amp;i

.7 6 2
tAl I

Stereo. t:;1

GJ

~~~n

NOIITH

BRIDGE

(!) ............ ~

1976 Chevy Lon n,ooOml, ·
$300, ll'lds for approx 5hp boat
motor. Ping pong table $30, 614· · •

73

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCJIAM.LITS AHSWDS
Obtain - Lusty - Natal - Unable - BASEBALL

DUpCioH

U-

-d•

THESE SQUARES

lqunOnl
. WStereo.

;

•

&amp; PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN

~·~"WI;J

:·
·
·

Last summer 1 noticed an
elderly neighbor on her knees

I8

w I DRA N

I

I:GI(I)ihverty 1111111•••
1:30 (J)
11J NIC Newii;J

•

=·=:·~·~

=·~:·:;:::·

1..

r-

=·~Tin, K-1 Cop

A SHEEP DO&amp; IN AUSTRALIA ..

7

in her garden . "What are you
growing?" I asked. Getting up
stiffly she replied ," ... --!"
1--,r-;.j.:...jr-:.;,,...:.;-,1'15~
Complo1t lht chuckle quafed
br fillln; In lho milling
.......1-.&amp;.--'L--'--.&amp;.....1
YOOI dOYtlop from lltp No. 3 below.

QIWOIIdTodiJ

197'1 one ton Dodge 11atbtd, 311,
$1200,614·742-2541 1ttar Spm

&amp;293.

~. . ,I.A_Q.:Ir".-O.,IU;.-.;1,T,. . p.JJ

IB:r~

I COULD HAVE BEEN A SLED

UMCI Pick-Up On Trad1. 614· .
446-3485.
For Slta: 19~2 Oldl Omega
Good Condftlon: CIIJ 614-44611195, Afttr 4p.m. M-5. All Day
Saturday.

. Mlrclllt'ldil8 ' ..- .._,ao, Mns
ifGid, ltoth
=~:::-::~~~~ ·
2,100 ft 11112 lloA :Z..~="'

· ......
utiMIM
pold, forr......
o -fum,.
I

I

"""""'~~&lt;

~~~-

(J) 'lldllo ~ &amp;qun Onl TV Stereo.

1itl Mustang GT Rldt Loaded ·
With Sunrool, Will Tau Good :

Nr-4276

~-I.,..I"T"Y-nr-rL1--ill

1:00 (J). (I) (I). 1111 !121.

1988 Toyota Pick-Up Truck,-.
Aut om111c, New T1 res; 44 ,ooo· '
Mil•; 1985 Renault Encore, ·
Auto, Air, 53,000 Mllts. 614-446· ·
8111.
·

992:-51&amp;8

I

TIWRER

EVENING •

. ·.

72 Trucks for Sale

I

M

MON., FEB. 17
fl1!of•.' 1Yl ·' ' ''! ' '" l ll\1)0 11\ T~

1988 Ford Muttang LX. 5.0 liter, .·
5spd, AC Loodld. Naw u.... :
52,000 mllas. 304-52:1..o473, 30461'5-6002.

--------------- 1614-2~~

1

-. w..~ ...... 1 114-··-··floo·ot~
VIND.

54

M

1ta4 Fl1ro SEl.! Cyllnd1t1 4 ;
SPNd, AC, AMIFM Calllltt, ,
PW, 614-25S..1778 Ev'"lngs.
:
1185 Nltsan Stntra 2clr, 1
Automatic.
Very
Clean. •
S2,500.00 Call 61~6-6262.
'
1986 Oodgt Ornnl, R11d Good, '
Auto, 64,000 MllH, S1,150; 1915
S.10 Plck.Up, $1,750, 614-25&amp;- ,
6251.
"'
18"1111=-=r.-y-.,,..,-:M
::R"'·2"'.-...
-po-..,.lno"""'
&amp;·!
1poHCI ralld Ur11, very aood •
cond, rtd, S5,000. 304-675~331 '
betora 10:00 PM.
,:
1187 Chevy No'&lt;~a: high mlltagt, ;
nMdl repair. Good tranlporta. ~
tlon car. Rtductd: $1,000. For ,
mora lnlormallon Cell 814-446- •
2342, Aak tor Paul.
•

r:::=::::======r::========1 •

"HOW COme when we

Television
Viewing

Autos for sale

tm 401Q COE, lnt'l 280 Cum· •
mlngs, Big Clm, 10 Speed, ~
M,SOO. 304-273-3447.
·
1184 Dodge AriH; 4 door, black, 1
AMIFM1 Cllllttl, 4 cyl, ntW IX· •
hault, t'M-192·7231, evenings ;

813-751~200.

AVON • All areas, Call Marilyn
Wtavtr 304-882·2145.
AQJ Hort Auoclatt Agsnt posJ.
tlon, 75% FTE, B.S. rn agrlcu~
ture, hortlcunure or ralattd tltld
,.qulred. Lllderlhlp and communication ekllla Hltnllal,
$'1~,03CJ..11,002, contact Meigs
Cooperative Extension tor mort
Information. An Equal Oppor·
tunfty Employer; oppllcotlon
""=;;dl':';ln,:•=lo:,;F,:;
·•b;:·,::25::C,,::18;:9,:;;2=- i
AUSTRALIA WANTS VOU
ExC.IItnl
Pay,
Benellts,
Trtnlpor'latlon,
407·292-4JI7,
Ext. 571. 9a.m.·10p.m. Toll
Rttunct,d.
AVON I Aft Aroaa ! Shlr1ey
Spu,.., 304-615-1429.
AVON get In on till ground lloor
ot Avons ntw umlng structure.
1·800.912-e356.

·ohio

'

GET A MAJOR CREDIT CARD
THAT CHARGES I 1/2% INTER·
SoESndT. A Soli Addrooood En·
vtlope, No Money To: W.tP.
5852 14th Strwt. Well Br1den·
Ion, FL 34207. 813·751-3300, Or

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17, 1992,

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might be loll." - OIJblrl Ktllh Cttlltlrton. .

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•

�'•
''
Monday, February 17, 1992 ,

•

Ohio Lottery
Meigs girls
advance in
tournament

THIS WEEK'S GAMES
EAS,ERN EAGLES
BOYS
February 18 - North Gallia•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A
February 21 - Symmes Valley•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A
February 22 - Southern•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H

GIRLS
February 22 - Division IV Sectional Tournament
At Meigs High School vs. Southern - 6:30

EASTER EAGLES
1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE
JAN. 1O-AT HANNAN TRACE
JAN. 14-NORTH GALLIA'
JAN.17-SYMMES VALLEY'
JAN. 18-FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 24-AT SOUTHWESTERN'
JAN. 25-SOUTHERN
JAN. 31-AT KYGER CREEK*
FEB. 1-AT WATERFORD
FEB. 4-AT MILLER
FEB. 7-0AK HILL*
FEB. 14-HANNAN TRACE'
FEB.18-ATNORTH GALLA'
FEB. 21-AT SYMMES VALLEY'·

JAN. 9-HANNAN TRACE'
JAN. 13-AT NORTH GALLIA'
JAN. 15-AT MEIGS
JAN.16-AT SYMMES VALLEY*
JAN. 23-SOUTHWESTERN*
JAN. 27-SOUTHERN
JAN. 30-KYGER CREEK*
.FEB. 3-AT OAK HILL
FEB. 5-TRIMBLE
FEB. 6-AT HANNAN TRACE'
FEB. 10-NORTH GALLA*
'-Indicates SVAC games

SOUTHERN TOR ADOES
BOYS
February 18 - Kyger Creek.................................~•••••A
February 21 - Southwestern•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• H
February 22 - Eastern••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A

GIRLS
February 27- Division IV Sectional Tournament
At Meigs High School vs. Eastern - 6:30

1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE

JAN. 1O-AT OAK HILL •
JAN. 14-KYGER CREEK'
JAN.17-SOUTHWESTERN'
JAN. 18-AT ROSS SOUTHI=AC:T~RN
JAN. 24-HANNAN TRACE'
JAN. 25-AT EASTERN*
JAN. 31-NORTH GALLIA'
FEB. 1-AT SOUTH POINT
FEB. 7-AT SYMMES VALLEY'
FEB. 11-WARREN
FEB.14-0AK HILL'
FEB. 18-AT KYGER CREEK'
FEB. 21-SOUTHWESTERN'

JAN. &amp;-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 9-0AK HILL'
JAN. 11-AT MEIGS
JAN. 13-AT KYGER CREEK*
JAN.16-SOUTHWESTERN'
JAN. 18-AT NELSONVILLE·YORK
JAN. 23-AT HANNAN TRACE'
JAN. 27-EASTERN'
JAN. 30-AT NORTH GALLIA'
FEB. 3-SYMMES VALLEY'
FEB. 6-AT OAK HILL •
FEB. 10-KYGER CREEK*
FEB.12-WATERFORD
FEB.13-AT SOUTHWESTERN*

'-Indicates SVAC games

Cards:
Q-H; 3-C; 9-D;
K-S

Page4

Val. 42, No. 200
Copyrlghtocl t992

Pomeroy to seek Issue Two monies in March
enter into an engineering contract
By BRIAN J, REED
to make improvements at tbe water
Sentinel News Starr
Pomeroy Village 'Council will reservoir on Lincoln Hill. Funds
seek funds fo( two projects when targeted for that project have accuround five of Issue Two grant mulated, according to Anderson ,
money distribution begins in and should now be adequate to
March. Village Administrator John fund tbe reservoir projecL
Anderson also received counAnderson unveiled plans for tbe
cil's
permission to apply for a
application process when council
water main replacement project in
met in regular session Monday.
Anderson requested, and West Pomeroy. According to
received, council's permission 10 Anderson, the project, if funded,

would entail replacement of a
water
main
from
the
Middleport/Pomeroy corporation
line to the Monkey Run area.
Although no official work has been
done on that project, Anderson said
last night !bat he estimates that the
work will cost approximately
$120,000 to $150,000.
While the government deter·
mines where tbe funds come from,
Anderson said lhat he would antici-

MEIGS

Two Mason County men have
been arrested and charged with tbe

f M' h 1 01'
40 r
IVboder, ' o
kl' Y ;as
oun Ohau ay mrd. ran '"M· ur·
nace,
10, acco mg to ason
County Sheriff Ernie Wauerson.
.
h d be
· ·
·
01 1ver
a
en m1ssmg smce
November 1991
·
ed D ·d
Sh en·rr W:atte rson
repon
av1
Lee La ham so 0 r p01· 1 PI
1
d W&lt; nrtb ·0 's d ~ .r.;sanr
:rcnde~/ we~ ~~~~icJ· · for' ~e
murder. Lanham was picked up for
questioning Monday afternoon and
·
· ed
r · th
has smce
Sign a con esswn a1
he actually was the one who shot
01'
~~· Scioto County Sheriff's
Department presented fugitive warrants for !he two men Monday then
Watterson signed fugitive fro~ jus·
tice warrants obtained from
MA istrate John Re nolds
/iders was arresied at J:30 a.m.
this morning at tbe home of a
female friend in Gallipolis Ferry by
d

~~r crpf
IC a\
f 010~ S~~ 1• "!

ERS

BOYS
February 18 - Nelsonville·York•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••A

GIRLS
February 17 - Division II Sectional Tournament
At Oak Hill High School vs. Rock Hill- 8:1 S

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE
JAN. 9-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 11-SOUTHERN
JAN. 13-AT VINTON COUNTY
JAN. 15-EASTERN
JAN. 16-TRIMBLE
JAN. 23-AT MILLER
JAN. 3D-NELSONVILLE-YORK
FEB. 3-AT BELPRE
FEB. 6-ALEXANDER
FEB. 1Q-AT WELLSTON
FEB. 13-FEDERAL HOCKING

pate that the money, if granted,
would come from t~e Issue Two
program's Small Government
account.
Gear discussed
Fire Chief Danny Zirkle reported to council !bat the department
was planning to replace its turnout
gear. The turnout gear selected by
Zirkle, consisting of special coats,
pants, boots, gloves and other relat·
ed apparel could cost as much as

$12,000, based on an estimate or
$1,700perfU"eman.
According 10 Chief Zirkle, some
discussion has been held at the
department about tbe possible pur·
chase of a new fire truck, but Zirlde
said last night !hat he sees tbe new
gear as a priority.
"I'd rather be see lhese guys be
safe in an older, reliable uuck !han
drive a new truck and use the old
turnout gear," Zirkle said. "We're

talking about items that have been
neglected over tbe years. and I'd
rather see the department buy these
guys !he equipment !bat !bey need
instead of a new uuck,"
Mayor Bruce Reed requested
that the needed equipment be listed
so that an advertisement for bids
could be prepared for publication.
Finances updated
Reed updated council on the
Continued on pa2e 3

Two Mason County men are
charged with Oliver's mu,rder

MEIGS MARAUDER'S
JAN. 7-AT WELl,STON
JAN. 10-TRIMBLE
JAN. 11-ATHHENS
JAN. 14-AT FEDERAL HOCKING
JAN. 17-NELSONVILLE-YORK
JAN. 21-AT BELPRE
JAN. 25-AT WARREN ~
JAN. 28-MILLER
JAN. 31-VINTON COUNTY
FEB. 4-AT ALEXANDER
FEB. 7-WELLSTON
FEB. 11-AT TRIMBLE
FEB.14-FEDERAL HOCKING
FEB. 18-AT NELSONVILLE-YORK

1 Section, 10 Pog• 25 cenW
A Muldrnoclla Inc. Nowapopoir

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, TUesday, February 18, 1992

'-Indicates SVAC games

1991·92 BOYS SCHEDULE

Cloudy tonight. Low In mid·
40s. Wednesday, high In low 50s

1991·92 GIRLS SCHEDULE

'-Indicates SVAC games

SOU,HERN 'ORNADOES

Pick 3: 903
Pick 4: 3619

l&lt;lNISHING TOUCHES • Andersoo's of
Pomeroy hu begun putting the ''flnishincloucb·
es" on the new headquarters of the Meigs County Department of Human Services. Construction
on tbe $1 miiUon buildiag, which utilizes a part

or ·

Sheriff Watterson Sgt Gordon
' . ·
Clark and Trooper M1ke Roach of
the Point Pleasant Delachment
West Virginia Slate Police
Lanham and Siders .appeared
before Reynolds Tuesday morning
.
·
fm arraignment. Siders refused ar·
rrugnment on !he Oh10 charge of
.
aggravated murder, but s1gned the
papers for a court appointed attor·
.
ncy. Lanham was amugned
and
chose to waive extradition. Accord·
ing to Watterson, an appointment
w1ll be made for Lanham wuh
Judge Holliday on extrad1L1on back
to Scioto County since that is the
'
r
location tbe body was oound. There
was no bond set
The remains. of Oliver's nude ,
lattoocd body were found in an
open field in Franklin Furnace
Saturday by a subject who was
lookmg at property adJacent to the
land where the body was located.
The sumoct spotted the body in the
field, but at the time !bought it '!lay
have bee~ a deer. When the subJect
realized 11 was a body. !he Sc1o10

County Shcnrr s Department was
notified
AI h · h
. .
. .
l oug offic1al 1denuficauon
will not be detennined until the
autopsy is completed, authorities in
botb Mason and Scioto counlies
appear confid t that th bod
th t f ot·cn M c CY was
a o
1ver. ason ounty
Deputy J R
Mc
k
· · . c oy too
photographs of Oliver's lattons to
sc·I010 coun1Y sun da y, w here he
matched up_thrce laltoos on a v1dco
tape tbe Ohro department had taken
of the body. Also found on the body
were lhe St. Chnstopher medal _and
the double hean rmg !hat Ohver
wore at tile time of h. d.
IS
1sap·
(JC&lt;Irance.
Oliver had been shot in tbc. back
of the head five umes, accordong to
S~enn: Watt~on. The body was
a soThmlsspmg rce appendages.
e 01nt .Pleasant f!lan . was
reported m1ssmg by h1s SISler,
.J?anme Fell ore , whcr·st:atcd the last
umc he was seen was Fnday, Nov.
8: 1991 when he left home w11h
S1dcrs.

Two union officers disagree
New Hampshire's voters cast on company's latest offer
.
'
r·
t
.
b
II
t
.
natIon s Irs primary a o s ~~~~~-~~~~:.~~~~~a~~~

May," Ramey said. "While there
what transpires," Matchett said.
Two top union leaders say !bey are still areas of disagreement witb
would brief tbe I ,070 members on the company, the proposal is worprocessmg plant remam unre- tbe proposal today.
thy of a vote, and each member
solved, tbe union president said.
Local president John Knauff Should be afforded tbe opportunity
But another union official said said no vote was planned today and to have a voice in our future."
Another Martin Marietta
management's latest offer deserves said tbe company's proposal was
a vole of tbe membership.
spokesman, John Christian, said he
"not worthy of a vote."
Members of tbe Oil, Cbcmical
But Vice President Jim Ramey hoped Knauff would let tbe memand Atomic Workers Loca"l 3-689 disagreed.
bers decide.
began strilcing June II over issues
"This whole package means a
"Significant changes have been
including seniority, overtime and made to the contract proposal lot of money for the union memsafety.
rejected by the membership last bers," he said.
Last weekend, Martin Marietta
Energy Systems, which operates
the plant for the Department of
Energy, offered a three· year con·
PIKETON, Ohio (AP)- Major

MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) New Hampshire voted today in a
leadoff primary that will deliver tbe
fmt verdict from voters on George
Bush's presidency and serve as tbe
opening cut in a tumultuous race
between five Democrats.
As voters turned out on an
unseasonably warm morning, can·
didates were waiting to greet !bern
at the polls, hoping one last handshake would translate into one
more vote.
"It's always a risk," Nebraska
Sen. Bob Kerrey joked outside a
Manchester precinct. "I cqu ld
always be talking !hem out of it."
Bush's challenge in the state
that saved him four years ago was
to weather tbe pugnacious conservative punches of Patrick
Buchanan, who claimed symbolic
victory before the polls even
opened and promised to continue
regardless of today's results.
For tbe Democrats, New Hampshire voters ranked a lineup that
has seen two preseason favorites
stumble and a late surge by former
Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas.
New H'mpshire's results most
likely will determine whether talk '
or late Democratic enlries stops at
justbdt.
·
Witb Tsongas and Kerrey on tbe
Democratic ballot were Arkansas
Gov . 'Bill Clinton; Sen. Tom
Harkin of Iowa and fo~r California Gov. Jerry Brown. New York
GoV. Mario Cuomo was the subject
of a write-in effort.
·
For both parties, recession.·
slammed New· Hampshire was a
teSting ground of economic themes
sure to dominate the 1992 cam·
paign. .
.
,, As New Hampshire voters cast
ballots today, they hal! the economy In mind. ·
· .
"He's doing as good a job as he
possibly can," relired posl&amp;l worli:er Harold Wonben Slid .rthr voting
for Bush. But holel ICCI!rity guard
John Sreward said be hid switched
his party affllillion trom RopubUcan so 1te could vote for Democ..t
Clinton.
Polls Were open from 6 a.m. 10 8
p.m., witb about half the state's
electOrate expcctect. 10 pattleiiJII,e;
140,000 or so in the 1\epulllica"

primary, 125,000 on tbe Democrat- 35 perGent of the vote in New
ic side.
Hampshire.
"I'm extremely confident,"
"The president has said a win is
Buchanan said outside a Concord a win and that's our approach," he
pollin~ place. "We're going into said. Dixville Notch, a tiny reson
Georgta and Super Tuesday with hamlet witb 31 registered voters,
enormous steam."
opened its polls at 12:01 a.m. and
In Washington, White House closed tbem five minu1es later. The
press secretary Marlin Fitzwater surprise winner was Libertarian
was asked today if Bush would be candidate Andre Marrou - who
seriously wounded if Buchanan got garnered II votes.

Hartenbach seeks GOP's
·nomination for commission
Robert C. Hartenbach will seek
the Republican Party nomination
rot tbe Jan. 2 term of Meigs County
Commissioner in tbe May SPrima·
ry Election.
The former Meigs County Sheriff filed his !,!Clition of candidacy
witb the Me1gs County Board of
Elections Friday.
· Born and !Wed in 'Minersville,
he is the son of tbe late Otto and
Anna Hartenbach. He and his wife,
Viola, now live in Chesler Township. They.have two adult children.
Besides serving as Meigs sheriff
for several years, Hanenbach also
was chief deputy sheriff of Gallia
County for 12 years. He has had
experience in county government
in Meiss and Gallia Counties.
Hartenbach served in the U. S.

Navy during World War 2 from
1942 to 1946 and is a member of
the American Legion Post 39,
Pomeroy, and tbe Veterans of For·
eign Wars, Post4464, Gallipolis.
He is a member of tbe Buckeye
State Sheriffs Association, the
National Sheriffs Association, !he
National Rifle Association, the
Ohio Township Trustee and Clerk
Association. He also belongs to
Ducks Unlimited.
.
For three years he served as a
security guard for the Farmers
Bank in Pomeroy.
Hartenbach said "My interest is
in Meigs County and tbe future of
tbe county, and I want to work with
tbe Commissioners for bener government. This is my goal."

Ord re-hired Southern
superintendent by board
Bobby J. Ord was.re-employed
as Superintendent of the Southern
Local School District when the
Soutbem Local School Board met·
in resular session Monday
evening.
In othe~ action, the~ voted
to disconunue the J111duauon serylce for kinderganeD students. '!'hal
action was cleeined necessary I1IICe
the ldndrrprten ~ iJ an all·
day pwgram, making it diffteull to
carry out the ceremony. An awards
ceremony is belna; planned for
thOle children, dill! dellils wiU be

8IUIOURced.

• •'

Dorothy E. Bentz was employed
'

'

.

as a substitute teacher for the
remainder of the·school year.
Lorcnl'e ·Pyles made a $300
dOnation 10 the diStrict's computen
in education prosnun. on behalf of
her two granddaughters, Suzanne
and Kimberly, and !bat donati~n
was acknowledged and tbe board s
meetin~o
.
Present at the meeung were:
President Scott Wolfe, Vice President Sue Orueser, Board membQrs
Joeeph Thoren, Tcim Roseberry and
Denny Evana; Clerk/Treasurer
Denny Hill and Superintendent
Bob Ord.

tracl

Negotiations resumed Friday,
and early Saturday, the company
made an offer for a three-year contract The union came back Saturday afternoon with a counterproposal, which tbe company rejected.
The union's e~ecutive board
rejected the company's offer on
Sunday.
Company spokesman Tim
Matchett said the company made
concessions in the contract, )lut
declined 10 discuss specifics.
"We're just waiting to hear

Middleport Council
to make decision on
Miller Monday night
Middleport Village Council met
in special session Monday night to
consider chafges against employee,
George W. Miller, Jr. and determine what action, if any, should be
taken as to his employment status
with the village.
· Miller has been indicted on rape .
charges. A pre-trial hearing has
been set in the case for March 3
and a jury trial on June 2 at·9 a.m.

~~~ec~~g~;~~~t~~~~~~

SEARCH SCENE· A report that someone was beard scream.
ing and seen golag down for tbe second time resulted in dragging·.
and some diving operations late Tuesday night and early Ibis ·
moraing in the area below lbe Middleport levee. Diver Keany
Byer, pictured here, was among lbe searchers at lbe site.
·
•

'Dragging operations resume
for possible drowning victim

Common Pleas Coun Thursday and
after .posting 10 percent of a
Dragging operations were .
$2S ,000 bond was released from resumed Ibis mcrming by the Mid·
custody.
. dlepon Fire Department and £merCouncil, on request from gen·cy perso~nel ~or ~ possible
Miller's attorney, agreed 10 contin- drowning in the Ohio River below
ue cpnsideration of the maner of !he Middleport levee late Monday
·employment until Monday night's nighL
re'-ular meeting in order to give
Emerfency Medical Services
Miller the opportunity to be heard personne reported that !be fli'C and
at that meetins.
.emergency squadmen went to the
Miller is cunendy on sick leave scene at 11:26 p.m. afttr a woman
from ,his employment with the vii- · reported that she heard screams 1114
lage ofMiddl~.
·
saw som~ go down twice.

Dragging and some diving operations beg!l" immediately and con:
unued .until2:0S a.m. this morning.
Dragg1ng was resumed Ibis morning at 9:S2 a.m. The Coast Guard
and Corps of Engineers have been
alerted to be on the lookOut for a
body. .
.
A spokesman Cot the Midd1 ' ·
Police Department said Ibis
ins thai there have been no lePOt'ls ·
of mis~n$ ·persons and no iban•·
doned vehteles ~ve been found. ·

0::

~I

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