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P1g1

wednesday, Febr~ry 26, 1992

12~The~D=a~lly~se~n~~~~e;I. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .~~~~~~~~O~h~lo~...

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EASTMAN'S FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPO N

Your Community Minded
Low-Priced Supermarket

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O-hio Lottery

Brides

1992

Pick 3:598
Pick 4: 7177
Cards:

4-H; 2·C; 10-D;
10-S
Super Lotto:
1-9-11-25-30-38
Kicker: 071925

Insert
EASTMAN'S FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

.,,"

Low tonight In mld..JGs. Friday
partly cloudy. High In mld·SOs.

••

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Vol. 42, No. 207

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

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Copyrlghtod 18112

3 SecUono, 31 Poge. 25 conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 27, 1992

AMultimedia ,Inc. Ntwepap.r

Health care problems said ·
'extreme' in southern Ohio
TENDERBEST QUALITY ASSORTED

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$ 29
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FROM THE DELl ...
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House sends health care
reform bill to Senate
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Major provisions of a health care
reform biU approved by the House
and sent to the Senate on Wednes·
day:
Creates the Ohio Plan, a major
funding pool to help pay bills of
Ohioans who cannot afford or .
acquire health insurance. It would
consist, in part, of $I 00 million to
$125 million a year raised from a I
percent fee on_insurance premiums
and a ~ x on hospital income not
related to hospital business. Some
Medicaid money may become
available.
,. . tdoplifie~,p.«Jple !lJis ~bw for
· ci&gt;verage by the Ohio Plan·ns: ·•
- Those who have been turned
davin or had coverage canceled by
two insurers.
-The self-employed whose
income does not exceed 200 percent of the poverty level.
- Any ~n not covered by an
employer if the employee's income
does not exceed 200 percent of the
federal poveny level (now about
$6,620 a year for individuals and
$13,400 for ,a family of four). The
Ohio Plan would establish sliding-

LB.
ARMOUR SLICED

COLUMBIA BACON
12

$

oz.

PKG.

scale premiums charged to employ·
ee based on ability to pay.
Specifies that Ohio Plan cover·
age will include major medical and
hospital services. "basic" medical
surgery - inpatient and outpatient
- mammography screening, pre·
vcntivc care for children to age 18,
diagnostic X-r~ys, and tes.ts ~nd
drugs that requrre a prescrtpl.lon,
including insulin and syringes.
Medicaid and Medicare recipi·
ents are not eligible for the Ohio
Plan, but it prohibits health care
providers from billing for charges
that exceect amounts set by Medi·
carorOhio-Pian would cover retired
people or surviyirig sp(j~ses l oo
young to qualify for Medicare.
Requires claims to be filed on a
standard form and instructs the
departmen~ of health, human. ser·
vices and msurance to devtse a
provider reimbursement schedule
based on fairness and equity.
Protects businesses that employ
three to 50 employees from cancellations and provides tax breaks for
small businesses and self-employed
people who buy and maintain coverage for employees.
~

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J\":0:·-.-..

WASHINGTON (AP) - More
than 1.5 million Ohioans don't
have access to basic health care
services. and the problem is most
extreme in the state's soutbern tip,
acc&lt;l'ding to a study released today.
Nationwide, about 17 percent of
Americans have inadequate access
to a health care, the National Association of Community Health Centers concluded.
Some of those people live in
nual counties with few doctors. For
others, finding a doctor isn't as
much of a problem ns paying for an
office visit, medicine, vaccination
or prenatal care.
In Ohio, a doctor shortage
accounts for a small part of the
"medically underserved" head
count, the repon said.
Researchers identified most of
the estimated 1.56 million medically needy·people in Ohio by lOOking
at such· things ns deaths from preventable diseases, babies delivered
too small or too early, and emer.
gency rooms used as a substitute
for regular medieal care.
The estimates considered those
and other factors as well ns doctor·
patient ratios.
"In only a small proponion of
states does a physician supply
problem alone lead to medical
lDlderservice,' ' the report said.
The study concluded that based
on the 1990 Census, 122,451 people needed better care becanS~: )hey
live in comrpiiJl!ijes where dOctors
are 'scarce. The other 1,443,339
were so classified for all the other
reasons.
The study identified Cuyahoga
as the county with the greatest
number of medieally needy people:
289,203, or 20 percent.
But the percentage wns greater
in eight other counties, most of
them rural: Adams, Jackson, Jefferson, Lawrence, Mahoning, Meigs,

Pilc~~do~~~o:.

home

Youngstown. is an urban county.
Jefferson is largely rural but
includes Steubenville. The others
are in the southern tip of Ohio, in
counties .with long-depressed coaldependent economieS.
"We had no idea that it would
be so widespread," said Daniel R.
Hawkins Jr. , one of the study's
authors.
The researchers concluded that
42 million Americans are medical·
ly needy.
· The government, by compari·

,

READ WEEK • The week of
March 2-6 bas been proclaimed Rilbt lo Re.d
Week in the Meigs Local School Dlslrlct. Etlcb
district school' will participate in the obser·
vance. Piclured are Righi lo Read coordinators
from ea~b school. Slandlng, 1-r, Karla Brown,
Bradbury; Vicki Haley, Harrisonville; Marsha
Radabaugh, Middleport; Liz Slory, Middle·
port; Ron Drexler, Meigs Junior High; Janet

~f

A drainage problem on county
propeny was discussed when the
Meigs County Commissioners met
in regular session Wednesday
morning.
Water has drained from the bank
behind the Meigs County Jail for
several months, but the problem
has increased in recent days.
The commissioners • suspicion
that the water drainage is from an
abandoned coal mine has not been
verified. Water samples are being
collected from the site, and will be
analyzed by the state.
The commissioners authorized
spending to improve drainage at the
site, including trenching and
installing a French drain and
drainage pipe.
.
The commissioners expressed
their "thanks and deep apprecialion" 10 Pastor Eugene Underwood
and his committee for the fund
drive to purchase a new piano for
the County Home. The piano and
related items were dedicated at an
open house at the home on SlDlday.
(See related story.)
Commissioner Richard E. Jones
reminded the board that the time
was appoacbing 10 discuss repairs
, to the exterior of the jail. Work

.·•.-:•:•.

Potato Chips

Coca·Cola

$ 59oz.
10

2 LITRE

BAG
40Z.
BI-RITE

Black
Pepper

PIANO DEDICATED • Residents at I he
Meigs Coanly Home are aow enjoyln1 their aew
Baklwln Studio plaao, purthued witll donatloos
wblcb eame tram ..e community. Plclured with
tbe Instrument, are l·r, resident Artbur Reeves,

Eu1e.ne UnderWood, who h.eaded up the fund
drive, resldenl Leona Martin, county home
employee Mary Letaad and resldeal Josepblae
Mallory.

• ·
h
d
R
Meigs County Home receives aczne man c arge
•
• assau lt
new ·piano;
open h ouse he}d wtt• h fielonzous
YELYET-Yt GAL.
IATUW ROUNDS $259
ICE CREAM~••••

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.....

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- ~1 ICE

ASSORTED HilTZ MT.

DE
PIG.
...

12P-I

$149 '
'
IJIIIII au....
• Prlolll!llllollve lllrv llolr:::-1"..,

CREAM
SAN

Following a successful public
appeal', the Meigs County Home
now has a new piano.
·
The Baldwin Studio ~iano, dedi·
catcd duriag an open use ceremany Sunday, now occupies I spe·
cial pla:c in the dining room at the
Meils County Home.
·
The need for a new piano was
lint recognized during the holiday
ICUOD last yell', when the home's
old piano w~ deemed 'irreparable.
A fu~drive was Initiated.- with
Joan ay or RutIand .ervIna as
treuurer. ~ bepn 10 J,IOUl'
in f10111 lndiviUUIIIII, orpnizlliOnl
and a few
llld the DilDo
waa purchased, aionl whll an.
atlniCtivelnillamp and a bench
-'.
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,_.Accordlna to Busene Undcr·

,.,a_.,

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wood, who headed up the fu_nd·
raising C81!lpaign, the drive wns so
successful that the group had extra
money, which bas been, and will
:L
continue to be used for oUJer
need·
ed improve~nl$ at the hoine.
Dining room tables have been
repaired and•scats were replaced
with a pan of the extra money, and
Underwood iald that plans are in
place to complele other repairs al
the bonte ns funds allow.
'
Donati0111 are still being accept·
ed in care of ..
,..._•.' May at Ban k
One'sRUIIand branch.
SO'"'I wore led and _.,aimed
at thodedicatlon b6.:!,Je'wtse,
Donna Jenldnl IIIII's
Hawley,
who alona with Ralph Werry
aervec1 on the piano selection commlaee.

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Hoffman, Pomeroy; Jonl Jeffers, r~~r~;::J
Bryan Zirkle, Rutland; Paula Cbucey,
and. Harrisonville; Cindy Allen, Salem Center,
and Barb Mathews Cro\'f, Salisbury. Seated are
James Carpenter, superintendent, and Wendy
Halar, director of federal programs for Meigs
Local. Not plclured • Ellie Blaettnar, Mei~s
High School librarian. (See story ou page 8)

Drainage problem commissiQn topic

to

EAGLE THIN

SPRITE •DIET or REG.

is doing just that. asking for a $90
million increase for community and
migrant health centers in the presi·
dent's 1993 budgeL
But last year, the administration
wanted to puU $24 million out of
the program to pay for an initiative
to reduce infant mortality.
Congress eventually provided less
than half of what the administration
requested for the infant mortality
program but did it without taking
money out of the community health
system.

son, estimates that about 35 miUion
people live in areas with inadequate
access to health care.
The group that commissioned
the study lobbies for improvements
in health care for needy areas. It
gets its money from membership
dues, Hawkins said.
The study said .the solution to
the problem is for the government
to put up money " to develop and
support community-based comprehensive health care."
The Bush administration says it

such ~ roofing, chimney and trim Elections. The bid opening was set
repair, taM window replacement is for 2:30p.m. Friday. The lease on
being planned. The board will pre- that space is about to expire and, by
pare a complete list of necessary law, must be re-advenised,
work and an advertisement for
bids.
Attending were Jones, CommisNoon Friday was set as deadline sion President Manning K. Roush,
for submitting bids ror office space Commissioner David Koblentz,
for the Meigs County Board of and Clerk Mary Hobsretter.

Eason seeks county engineer
position on Republican ticket
Robert H. Eason , a registered
professional engineer and surveror,
is seeking the Republican nomtna·
tion in the May S primary election
to run for Meigs County Engineer.
A resident of Morgan Road in
the Flatwoods community, Eason
graduated from North C_arollna
Srate University, College of Engi·
neering and Agriculture in 1950.
He is a veteran of World War II.
and has lived in Meigs County for
the past 40 years. He has more than
39 years experience in engineering
and management, and is currently
retired from Gavin Power Plant ns
the performance superintendent
Eason says that he has the man·
agement supervisory training and
experience which he feels can be

~a~~~~~~!!~.igJi;~~ri~::~

~;:r~·:a~ki~;m:u::~=~~:

includes work with engineers, tech·

maximum sentence of three, five, construction and repair work.
A Racine man wns charged with
. •
He has been a member of the
felonious II3SIIult following a fight seven or up to 25 years 10 pnson, American Congress or surveying
that sent another man 10 a Colum· along with a S7 .SOO fine.
· d
·
d th Pro' 'onal
'181
Roush
wns
folDld
indigent
and
an
mappmg
an
e He
oesst
bus hospt ·
, ed p bl ' D f d
Land SurVeyors of Ohio.
served
Detner "Pete" RoUSh IV • 22, has was reoeiT to u tC• e en er as a member of the Carleton Schciql
been cliarged ·in :t&gt;{eigs County ~~.les H. Knight for lq)resenta· Board for six yearS, the lnst two ns
Court with feloaio.us assault, an ""''
ITesident. He is a member of the
aggravared second-degree felony.
· Roush remains in the Mei~s · nited Methodist Church and
""Roush appeared before Meigs County jail•.According to Shenff Drew Webster Post 39, American
County Cliun Judae Patrick H. James M. Soulsby, the hiah bond ,Legior
O'Brien Weme.clay, Inc! O'Brien 'Nil aet due 10 the serious 'lJIUre of
~oo and his wife, Nora, have
set bond at $50,000 cub. O'Brien theclagC.
~
'
h'ldren
thC.ir oldest
1
· ...,......,,
_...._ by Iaw, "'.,.,_
a Plea Racine,
Jeff Conno'II'J.
·•ao of .our
•
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llstod m . 23 "'concli·
lives cat home,• R
R:, a profes·
11 In-"'ve -"-- Un""u·
in the case. If probable catUC is ••An m· tbe
sional surveyor, -lives In Pomeroy
11
r,..-" tbe 111111er 'I'DI be lbferred to ""
_.. .....,,.
lth his w"e Krista and dau""tcr
~on Plea Court lot poeaible GranI Medical Ce111er followlnj · ~- H~bert "&amp;eyw wboiive8
grand jury "'Uon. The probable ~IIJpry !aletooa:uonbydatjf~'CN~ at home and is a IWdent at Ohio
cause "hcarlna has been act for ll'IJISI)Orledy
• ..._ .... ;.,..ldont .,..;.-.::!~
University; and Linda Wamer, 1
Wedneldl
_ ,v,
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sbortlv aftr. w"' .,..
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contlnue.a" ·on pa•e· 3
lf'convicted.
f
Roush could race a
Continued on .....,.
"""" 3

An=la

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ROBERT H. EASON

Sales of existing
homes decline
WASHINGTON (AP} - Sales
of existing homes fell 1.5 percent:._;.
in January, the first decline in four :~­
months, a real estate lr~de group ::
said today. All regions except the ·:•
Midwest posted losses,
· ·-·:
. The National Association of:.:
Realtors said sales of previously: -::·
ov.:~ barnes totaled a seasonally: :;
ad)uated annual rare of 3.22 mil' •··
lion, down from 3.27million in .::;
Decetnber•
't .....
•••
The Reallin lllribured 1bc ~ ••
to riains mi!"PP rates llld al30 ~
said ~ beginrilnl 'of tbe year Is a ·
slo~ tilDe for home Iiies.
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�Thursday, Februaiy ~. 1992

:1·Commentary
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••

The Daily Sentinel

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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

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f8MULTIMEDIA,INC.

J

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•'

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisher

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PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOE11LICH
General Manager

AMEMBER of The Asso&lt;iated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and
the American Newspaper Publisher Association.

••

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LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
wonls long. All letters ... aubjec:llD editing and must be signed with name,
address and tclepbone number. No unsigned !etten will be published. Lellers
should be in good taste, addressing issues, not penonalities.

George and Pat go·to the trenches
Joseph Spear
Lord forgive me, I'm having
some unchristian thoughts and I'm
fil\(l.ing them sweet indeed.
George Bush and Patrick
Buchanan are circling each other
like a couple of fighting cocks and
the feathers are about to fly and I
can't wait I'd pay to see this fracas
and I'_m getting it ~or free. Sin is so
tempungly ambrosial.
When Buchanan opened his
campaign in December, he
promised he would not attack Bush
personally. But in ensuing weeks,
the conservative challenger relent·
lessly decried Bush's budget
deficits, globalism and broken vow
not 10 raise taxes.
In hopes of avoiding a battle
with another Republican, Bush bit

Declared Bush himself: "I've
been very ldnd and gentle. I'll still
be ldnd,and now I'm debating how
geode I'll be." ·
ResP.onded Buchanan, with a
dry smile: "We are terrified." .
It'.s going to be such wicked
fun.
I know it's not nice to chonlc. I
know I should be fostering peace
and good will among all God's
children. I know I should pray they
setlle their differences peacefully.
And I do. On Nov. 4. Meantime,
I am glad the playing field is finally level, with Republicans every bit
as .divided as the habiwally discordant Democrats. And I am thrilled
by the prospect thai George Bush
will get a taste of his own
medicine.
After trashing Sen. Raben Dole,
R-Ka11., in 1988 as a straddler on

.
; ~--------~--~----~~~---------------------------,

~= Letters

to the editor

... What would you do in this situation?

;
What would you do to survive if
' you were faced with a situation like
: this?
-:. Single, receiving $100 per
; month General Assistance, food
• stamps, and a medical card. You
: are told that in Apri11992, you will
: no longer receive your $100 a
; month, and will lose your medical
: benefits.
• The obvious answer to the ques; tion is to go out and find a job,
; right? How convenient, if there
• were jobs to be found. But let's say
: that one cannot firnj a job, what is
; the alternative? Anyone have an
: answer? Then what is one to do to
: survive in:-this job-scarce economy
; we all know exists? The people of
:: Meigs and Gallia Counties that are
: now working may feel secure in
:: their jobs and I am sure many arc
, secure. But, I can tell you from
; experience that there are many with
• jobs today that could be facing the
: same situation soon, ask those
;. G.M. workers how secure they feel
,. today after the announced plant
:: closings.
·: My point is that we are in a very
:. depressed economy right now and
:: persons receiving G.A., in many
·: cases, would rather have a job but
: cannot find one. Now the safety
. net, meager as it is, is being
:: removed and they will have noth-

-~ RagS

ing but food slamps afier April I,
1992. How many of you can sur·
vive on nothing? Are we to see a
drastic rise in crime in our area?
How many of the 1500-1600 peo·
pie that I am talking about will
become truly homeless? Call local
charities and local government step
in and solve the problem? Not on
your life, they do not have the
resources to compensate for such
drastic measures.
I know that most people are car·
ing about their fellow man and do
not enjoy seeing one suffer unnecessarily, and I think to remove the
safety net at this time is totally
unnecessary and cruel to the bone,
excuse my term, but that is how I
feel.
Some will say that I am a lone
voice crying in the wilderness.
However, I know that many feel as
I do about this situation and I ur~e
them to let their voices be heard m
Columbus. Tell the State of Ohio to
stop this madness, do not remove
this safety net, find a way to prevent further suffering of our people, and do it now. This bothers me
and I trust others will sense the
urgency and act by writing their
area representatives in Columbus.
Sid Edwards,
Gallipolis, Ohio

to riches?

.•

By Tom Tiede
WASHINGTON (NEA) -Times in America have gone sour, they
say. The experiment is ending, they add. The recession goes on and on,
· the unemployment lines are getting longer, wages are static, big business
; is teetering, small business is bankrupt, and thus the increasing wisdom is
· that the nation has seen its better days, and the sad furure will be one of
.: diminished expectations.
~
Right?
...

No.

Look on the bright side - you'll never have to change that silly little light
bulb in your refrigerator again ....

Area sports·briefs

taxes and slashing Michael
Dukalds as an unpatriotic coddler
of criminals, it is entirely fitting
that Bush get his comeuppance.
And it doubles the pleas.ure to hear
the naming hypocrite moan ·and
groan about negative campaigning.
In ttuth, Bush doesn't know the
meaning of mean and won't until
he locks horns with Buchanan. The
man brims with crackpot ideas, but
he was born to brawl. He brags of
his battles, revels in them. Before
his 30th birthday, he was confidendy advising Spiro Agnew how
to "tear hell" out or his enemies.
He was a major campaign strategist
for Richard Nixon. He assembled
the "assault books" and dreamed
up the "lines" that NiXon's surrogates used to hammer George
McGovern into oblivion.
Indeed, Bush and his advisers
are now having second thoughts
and are talkin~ of the need for
George to remam "presidential."
Let the surrogates wallow in the
muck with the pretender, they are
saying, and let George be the
statesman.
It won't work. Buchanan is a
masterful goader and Bush is a natural goadee. The New Hampshire
results were barely tallied before
Buchanan was whacking away at
"Kin~ George" and his membership m the "Exeter· Yale GOP
club." When he heard that
Japanese Prime Minister Kiichi
Mtyazawa had pooh-poohed his
chances, Buchanan allowed that
Bush and the Japanese are so close
that "a Bush-Miyazawa ticket"
was probably in the works.
George Bush is too high-strung
and thin-skinned to take that ldnd
of pounding day in and day out A
confrontation is coming, and I'm
stocking up on refreshments and
ordering more cable oudets so I can
get CNN in every room.
·
I've never seen a mud wrestling
match before. Do they use real mud
or some ldnd of synthetic stuff? Do
they wear rubber suits? Speedos?
Would you get me a beer while
you're up?

Boat registration renewals available
The Ohio Department of Natural Resources today announced
1992 boat regis~tio~ renewals are now available and can be pur·
chased from reg~stranon agents located throughout the state. Registrations purchased in 1992 are valid until March 1, 1995.
·
ODNR 's Division of Watercraft is reminding boaters and agents
that the boat registration must be completed in full including tide
number, boat length, and propulsion information. Boat owners
should check their registration carefully. Inaccurate Information on
registration forms should be corrected at the nearest watercraft
agent's office.
The local'boat registration agents are the park manager at Forked
Run State Park near Reedsville lind William C. Quickel at Davis
Insuranee, located at 114 Court SL in Pomeroy.

Southern-KCHS game
tickets on sale at SHS
Tickets for the Southem-Kyger Creek boys Divisional IV tournament game, set for Saturday at 5:15p.m. at the University of Rio
Grande's Lyne Center, will be on sale at Southern High School this
week.
Tickets will be $3, and Southern will receive a share of the ticket
sales for those tickets purchased in advance.
·
In claiming yet another victory with a 61-32 win over Eastern on
Saturday, Scott Wicldine's Tornado reserves won the SVAC championship with a 14-0 record.
The Southern varsity picked up a share of the SVAC title with
Oak Hill, as both ended the season with identical .12-2 league
records. That title gave Southern _the title, or at least a part or the
SVAC title, for 14 of the past 16 years, beginning in 1977 under
Portsmouth Clay mentor Carl Wolfe's tutelage.
Current head coach Howie Caldwell has continued the winning
tradition in his six years at the school as the Tornadoes finished the
season at 13-7 overall.
'

Boating class set for March 7

Ben Wattenberg
A silly friend or mine, from
Mars, is confused about American
politics, both Republican and
Democratic.
Why, the foolish Martian asked
me, was Pat Buchanan declared a
winner when he only received 37
percent of the New Hampshire
vote? Hadn't the pundits said he
had to break 40 percent to make a
dent? Didn't George Bush beat him
by 16 percent?
I explained: There was a faulty
exit poll early on election day that
showed Buchanan and Bush running almost even. The journalists
got all excited by the flawed data.
Oh, the Martian asked absurdly,
why didn't the journl!lists correct
their stories later? Isn' t there a big
difference between rurtning almost
even and losing by 16 points?
Then my Martian friend, who
doesn't understand our ways, asked
another dumb question: Why is
Buchanan's claim accep!ed that he
is the heir to Reagan conservatism,
when he opposes Reagan's views
on trade, isolationism, immigration,
the Middle Eas~ the magic of the
market, foreign aid - and even tax
increases? (The Martian knew how
many times Reagan increased
taxes, even afier promising not to.)

Hadn't Reagan made American
conservatism inclusive, and isn't
Buchanan doing the opposite?
This mindless Martian has a
problem with Buchanan. He asked
more questions: Was it true that
Buchanan wrote columns·attacking
democracy and praising fascists?
Did he like democracy better now
that he was a practitioner?
(He asked another strange question: Why is it said President Johnson was "forced out" in New
Hampshire in 1968 when, in fact,
he didn't put his name on the ballot
and told friends months earlier that
he wouldn't run?)

: Don't look for pessimism here. This is not a story about gloom and
Enough,I~d.Iaskedifhehad
· doom. It's about a man named Tom Harken, and that means it is about
any
inane questions about the
~ hope rather than haplessness, opponunity instead of the opposite, and it's
Democrats.
; about the still evergreen notion, as he puts i~ that if you can dream it, you
Well, yes, he ~d. Why is Paul
• can do it, and make it big.
Tsongas
only a regional candidate?
~ Harken is the founder and rresident of Tom Harken and Associates. He
Why
is
he uncharismatic? Why
;. is also a timely illustration o the classic American ideal. He started with
won't he travel well in other prima. nothing, but he caught hold of the great dream. He says he has wrned a
ry contests?
: belief in himself and the S)'stem into the kind of success the grimsters say
That's obvious, I said. He's
·. is on the skids:
regional
because he comes from a
:. "!am just a 55-year-old guy in Beaumon~ Texas. I am shon and fa~
region.
He's
uncharismatic because
;: and I can't read or write very good. But I work eight days a week, and I
he
challenged
the liberal DcmocJ:D.t·
·: hit the floor running. I wake up early, and I go home late. Doo't tell me it
ic
orthodoxy
on
ecooomic matters,
;. can't be done in America anymore. If I can do it, anyone can do it AU
because he beat cancer, because he
·: you have to do is keep at it."
.
ran for the presidency when it was
:; Harken is one of the winners of this year's Horatio Alger Awards. It
said he had no chance. And he
:· puts the shon, fat guy from Beaumont in some kind of company. The bonwon't travel well because he's a
•. ors are presented to people who lriumph over adversity, and the list now
regional
candidate and he's
:. includes Dwight Eisenhower, Thurgood Marshall, Billy Graham, Bob
uncharismatic.
:: Hope, Colin Powell - and Tom Harken.
f\Jy witless Martian friend kept
~
Horatio Alger was a Unitarian minister who became an immensely
asldng questioos: If Tsongas has no
.• popular writer in the 1800s. He sold 20 million books (one title was
:: "Luck and Pluck") about kids of the day who overcame sundry difficul·
·: ties by way of personal goodness and perseverance. The Horatio Alger
;. Association was formed in 1947,10 further the principle.
·; The Alger association is now headquartered in Washington's suburbs.
~ It still preaches the virtues of luck and pluck. It likewise dismisses the talk
~ that fulfillment is a thing of the past The group grants scholarships to
Prince Charming would phone,
: promising students, and it gives 10 awards annually to distinguished
too.)
·
• "Horatio Alger heros."
~
Henry Kissinger is one of the 1992 heros. So is Supreme Coun Justice
'For my eighih biithday 1 asked
It's been a long journey from
·: Clarence Thomas. But Tom Harken ntay be the most deserving of the lot for a Cinderella watch and got iL I there _to adulthood, to fmding out
;, ~ was born in outback Michiga11, raised in a small family grocery store, felt like the luckiest of lillie girls to · ol~ Cmderelh! was lymg a'1out _that
~ and he was pummeled quite early in life with a pair of Algeresque negahave that magnificent jewel Prince ~hanmng deal. B~t if Prince
• tives: polio a11d illiteracy.
.
beautiful CindereD&amp; looking up at C_liarmmg ~ call, I wtU not.hear
: He got polio when he was 12, and spent some months in the supreme me serenely every morning as I htm. I, hive ~ !ele~, none
: ni~htmare of the period, an iron lung. He lost school time t11en, which wound her, promising me that ~f whtch I can hell!' when I m out ·
' he d not used profitably anyway. He entered the 7th grade as an under- someday·, too, my prince would !n the yard f!C ev~n m _the bathroo!n
m the monungs llsteDII!J to the din
: achiever. After his classmates called him "dummy," he says, he quit come
; without knowing his letters:
Mid boy, could that old gal keep of ~a~ Public Radio. The aci;~ · "I remember wOilting for my dad in the grocery store. I broke out in a
time. In fact, even a&amp;r 1retired her enufic brai~ ln!Sl has ~ ~
, cold sweat whenever I had to rate an ll'der over the phone. They would as too uncool at age 13, she contin- the most stgntficant IDvenuon _of
~ say they wanted flour, coffee, eggs, and so on, and I didn't knoW how to
ued to run in my jewelry box for tJ:le 19th century_~nd. reduced ns
• write it down. I had to do it from memory, and hope I remembered it all. another 15 years when I'd remem- Slf!al ·to somethmg like that of a
~ Ulircracy is tenible."
· bet to pick her up and gently stroke cnckct calJlng its mate, Ill' at belt a
;' Still, ~n had an auitude, if he didn't have a library. He also had a her stem. What a grea1 invention! I tlllkey wattle., How doel ~~
. ralhcrty ldmonition 10 "do exacdy the opposite or everyone else." He thooght at the time, becau!!C 1was a Graha~ Bell s marvelous lifeline
: began selling vacuum cleanen door to doo', and educauon followed in simple child who was never much c~I us m 19927 A,~OUI Barney
•,kind; he says.he quicldy ~ that he had 10 become litmte in order 10 good' in science. You wind her F1fc lurker. call! B~~dbl-duhdl·
fwrile the u1es tmtracU.
once in the mOJ'IIina and she tens duhdl~-dubhhhh.
; He dt.aned up, of counc. And he did it the old-fashioned way. Ha says you how much time you have
I parted with m~ wonderful
knocked
on
1 hundlal dcxn to ~ up a few appointments, whele he
before
le'cess
is
over,
or
how
many
.
~n:r
phone,~ With the heart}'
• ~milht sdl one cleaner. Ah, the g1oriel or penlstence. And saatcgy. He more minutes you can talk on the RINOllUNOI,
a few years ago
:says it wu Important to ciOIC a deal lnunedialeiy, "or the next morning ·phone 1111til yriur dlld grabs it out of 'I( hen all tbe TV· consumer
your-hand.
.
• ~ told.me 11 wu coolribut-·
~~onutSem."
.
·
.
:later created an S8 mlllion-l·yeat ~ess brokcrinl remTho. phone. Now there was 1!11 !Dille nabQ!IL deficit by con·
; ationll vehicle~,
wealthy in the proc 111, and in time he turned another sreat Invention, llbougbt, unumg 10 ielle .• pbonc wbeit thele
•to fnnehilinl naoriu.
puldlued die Cia Ole family-style mtau- especially after we went orr the . were so ~any IDCX)IODiive _phonel
;1'1111 c1llln in Tuu, llld bepn ICIIina 1 spinoff meet-and-eat spot f!lf party-line S)'Siem 1 could call m · to buy on the JiluteL I kcJit look·
call me
ing {or a pli~ wltb a beD, 10 I
. :JIII!III people called Crazy Jaile'L .
.
, friend.l or they
: Tcifay, 'Tom Harten IIIII Aasociatel employs 600 people - h41f Qf a1 times a night, and 1always .beanl co~ld sate my IJ)Oilod·conaumer
· . •them .,. mlnoritW, in 10 a women- and the bollsayt be knows illS long 1 wu wilbin tWO furlongs whilli to actually bear it, but none
;every ODe of dlelr llllllel. He allo sayw he tnows how to get them to fol· or my house. (Cindoretla used to .of rhein had one.- -~ for the
.•low his eumple: Ha IIIJI he "CUll their legs off'' when they do some- look up ill me fnim the jewelry.bmi AT&amp;T store, whic~ SliD
a few
•thing MUll; IIUI wiD help rhem grow rhein back right awav:
and tell me that real soon my of the old models like I d been

appeal nationally, how come he •
almost even with Bill Clinton in the
national polls? Don't most of the
Super Tuesday states border on
Arkansas? Does that malre Clinton
regional? Isn't Maryland a South·
em state according to the Census
Bureau? Does that mean that
Tsongas won't do well there? Does
Jerry Brown's good showing in
Maine make him a national candi·
date?
Look, I ~d to my inine Martian buddy, you just on 't get it.
Clinton made a c eback . He
called himself " e Comeback
Kid." I explain that he spun his
results better than Tsongas.
Martian: Didn't he lose?
Me: Clinton says his message
gave him a comeback.
Martian: What was his message?
Me: He broke with the liberal
onhodoxy on some social issues,
like welfare. He stressed personal
responsibility. But he stopped giv·
ing that message when he became a
front-runner.
M8rtian: So how did that give
him a comeback?
That nutty Martian went on and
on. You should have~ some of
his other crazy questions:
Why don't Democrats ever say
anything nice about America? Why
do they alwpys say "Bush" when

:he

bemmma_

cailit

rtvri.

they are referring to the president?
Doesn't that show disrespect for
the office? Why don't Democrats
smile? If Tsongas is so sman, how
come he says he favors giving out
condoms in high schools without
further qualifying it? Why doesn't
Clinton go back to his message?
What does it mean if many South·
em women won't vote for Clinton?
Won't race -in the form of wei·
fane, quotas and crime - still be a
big issue?
Why can't George Bush sum up
what he believes? What do moderate conservatives stand for, anyway? Why are all Bush Republicans so boring?
Silly stuff. Then this dumb old
Martian asked a real lulu: If
Tsongas gains by challenging the
liberal economic orthodoxy, and
Clinton gains by challenging the
liberal social orthodoxy, why don't
the Democrats ever nominate
someone who challenges both?
That was the last straw. I j!Ot
angry and said: Why don't you JUSt
go back where you came from! ·
Those folks pn Mars aren't
ready for serious democracy.
(C)l99l
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
Ben Watteaberg, a· senior rei·
low at the Amerlqin Enterprise
Instibfle, II aullaor ol "The Flnt
Universal Nation," published by
The Free Press.

•r ''

m

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•

t

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Daily Preu Aaaodation and the Ohio
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Member: The Auocla!A!d l'nlu, Inland

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Malllubocrlpllono

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w..u. ........................................
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, •'

'

.,

Argentina in the opening round.
Agassi and Sampras each won two
two singles.matches, while McEn·
roe and Leach won the doubles
match.
Tennis
ROTTERDAM, Netherlands
(AP) - Paul Haarhuis upset thirdseeded Ivan Lend16· 1, 7-5 and
sixth·seeded John McEnroe beat
David Prinosil 7-6 (7·1), 6-3 in the
second round of the ABN AMRO
World. In fiCSt-round matches, topseeded Stefan Edberg defeated
·
Palrick Baur 6-4,7-6 (9-7) and Jan
Apell upset fourth-seeded Omar
Camporese 6-4, 6-2.
Tennis
INDIAN WELLS, Calif. (AP)
- Sixth-seeded Judith Wiesner
defeated Rosalyn Fairbank-Nideffer 6-2, 6-2 and seventh-seeded .
Gigi Fernandez beat Kirstin Dreyer
6-3, 6·0 to advance to the third
round of the Even Cup.
Tennis
SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (AP) · Eighth-seeded Andrei Cbesnokov
beat Dinu Pescariu 7·5, 6-0 in the
second round or the Purex Otampi·
on ships.
FoothaD
EL SEGUNDO, Calif. (APl Linebacker Aundray Bruce, select·
ed.fillt overall by the Atlanta Fal·
cons in the 1988 draft,, signed 1
contract with the Los Ana:eles
Raiders as a l'lln B &amp;eo agent.
PootbaD .
. PHOENIX (AP) '- Offensive .
lineman Mart May, who tpe111 10
seasons with tho Wasbinltoo Red·
sldnJ IDd one with tho S'an. Diego
Cbqera, aigoed 1 cODII'ICt witb
the Phoenix ClrdinaiJ as a l'lln B
ftee&amp;JmL

.,

'

•

,,

..,.•

SALE$599°0

• Persona] Preference custom tuning memory

• Full monitor performance with S.Video input,
Audio/Video inpu~ and outputs, Variable Aud1o
outpuiS, option~ RF Switcher adaptor and
Surround Sound speaker jacks
• Channel Guide and full alpha/numericChannel
Captioning
• Parental Control
• Channel/Time Reminder option

adjustments and feature selection
resolution

$479

SALE

• Volume mute
• Cllannel Remind.er option
• One-button picture rtRt
• Coolrut 52 I00' picture tube
• High performance oolor chassis
• Electronic volume cootrol
• On·scrten status recall
• 6' oval speaker

• ToW remote "menu" oontrol tuning system
with mulli-&lt;Olor on-screen d~plays
• ZS-button remote oonttill
• Random channel access
• 120-minute sletp timer
• 178 total channel upability
• Programmable ICln tuning
• Alternate channel
Model No. RP2786B

27" St.eo Color MonlloriRocelv• wllh "Smart Window
lor VCR ond Cable

..

Color

SALE

REG. $899.00

• Electronic volume control

• Programmable scan tuning

• On-scretn status reall

• Allernate channel

• 6" oval speaker

SALE

REG. $679.00
•
infrared
Unifitd remote
• 155-&lt;honnel Frequency Synlheaized PLL tuning
• 4 evtnt/1 month programming with I minute
bad-up
• On-screen ''menu'' control

• Auto Repeal
• Contrul52 picture lube
• Variable Slow Motion (I /51h·II30th·seoond)
• 30, 60. 90-minute sletp &lt;imer
Model No. CRM202
20" ella. TV/VCR Combination with Infrared
TV/VCR Unified Remote
• Stereo hi-fi sound system wilh built-in MTS
decoder
• Universal Remote for TV and virtually all VCRs
• Remote four-way directional mntrol of picture
adjustments and featureselection
• Total remote "menu" forl!lll tuning system
with mulli-oolor on-screen displays
• Audio/Video patch pand with AIV inpuls
• Random channel acws

• Stereo hi·fi sound system with
decoder
• "Smart Window" - Picture-In-Picture with
"Action FretJe" when used wilh • VCR
• Unimal Remote for TV. VCR and Cable
• Remote foor-way directional mnlrol of picture •
adjustments and feature selection
• Total remote "menu forl!llllunlng system
with mulli-&lt;Olor on-scretn displays
• ''Smart Window '' - Color Picture-ln-Piclure

when used wilh a VCR
• Universal Remo11 for TV, VCR and Cable
• ZS walls RMS per channel, 8 Ohms,
ZOHz·ZOkliz, 0.5% THO

• Ruill-in MTS/SAP deooder with db•• noise
reduction

• Dolby"' Pru·Loik Surround Sound system with
Standard. Systemand Dolby® 3modes f

SALE

• 1~0-minute deep timer
• 178 total channel apability
• Programmable scan tuning
• Alternate dianne!
• Volume mute
• Channel Reminder.oplion
• One-button picture reset
• Coolnlt 52 too• picture tube
• Two 5' oval spealters

SALE

$499

599

• 500 • footlamberU
• Stereo/Video inputs ond outputs, with two
S.Video inputs, Pro-L&lt;Igic audio oulpuls, optional
RF Switcher adaptor and Surround Soun'll jacks
• Remote control convergence adjustment
• Channel Guide and Parental Control
• High Rright 5-tlemenl color-oorrected lenses
• Cleir View cnnt.rol

• 5511&gt; Iinrs horitontal resolution ·

$21

lCD
.
.........

lft!I.U II 114
'

'599

• Audio/Video patcll
Variable Audio ootputs
• Seleclahle Engl~h/Spanish displays
• Random channel actUS
• 120-minute sletp timer
• 1781otal cllannel capability
• On-scretn clock
• Programmable scan tuning
• Alternate channel
$
REG. $781.00
SALE

REG.

'

$479

• On-screen real-time munler
• Record Ead Search
• Time Search/Channel Search
• TV Monitor function
• 27X latching forward/reverie Search
• One-Touch Record with SUndby
• Audio/Video input jacks
• Auto Tracldng system
• Quick mechanism

REG.$699.00

'

$6

• Volume mute
• Channel Reminder op&lt;ion
• One-bullon picture reset
• Contrast 52 100' picture tube
• High performance oolor chassis

• Total remote "menu" formal tuning system
with mulli-&lt;Olor on-scretn displays
• 25-bullon remote control
• Random channel aa:ess
• 120-minute sletp timer
• I781oWchannel capability

Sports shorts

(USPS 213-1160)

SALE $388

• Comb filter delivering 600 lines horizontal

The ftrst David Bass Softball Tournament will be held on April
II and 12 at Ordnance Elementary's softball field in Point Pleasant,
W.Va., according to information from the Point Pleasant Girls Soft·
ball League, the event's sponsor.
There will be a S60 fee lind two regulation softhalls required for
registration. The double-elimination tournament will have a mini·
mum of 12 teams participating. The rain date for the event will be
April 25 and 26.
For more information, call Rick Halstead at 675-7618, Fred Surbaugh at675-7441 or Jim Stearns at675-1598.

Published every afternoon , Monday
through Friday, 111 Court SL. Pomeroy,
Ohio by the Ohio Valley Publiahing
Company/Multimedia Inc., Pomeroy,
Ohio ol57691Ph. 992·2166. Second cia•

REG. $599

• Remote rour-way directional control of picture

Point Pleasant league to sponsor
spring softball tournament

·The Daily Sentinel

oOarkllte 100 picture tube
•High performance color
chassis
Model SRW 2520

MTS/SAP decoder and dbxmnoise reduction
• "Smart Window " -Color Piclure-ln·Piclure
when u!&lt;d with a VCR
• Universai .Remote for TV. VCR !nd Cable

The Southeastern Ohio and Hocking Valley chapters of the
National Wild Turkey Federation will host the Ohio State Turkey
Seminar, Calling Contest and Banquet March 7 and 8 at Hocking
Technical School in Nelsonville.
Featured speakers will be Dan Stuckey, 10-time Ohio state calling champion and past grand national champion; Wayne Bailey, the
"Dean" or America's rurkey hunting; and Rob Keck of the NWTF.
For more information, contact Dave .Graber at 373-9613 after 5
p.m.

'.0

capa~lllty

• Surround Sou nd stereo system with built-in

•• ,.

Tennis
NEW YORK (AP) - John
McEnroe, Andre Agassi, Pete Sam·
pras lind Rick Leach will play for
the United Sta,tes in its Davis Cup
quarterfinal match against
Czechoslovakia in Fort Myers,
Aa., on March 27-29.
The same four,;mme led !he
United States to a
victory over

•"SuperWindow"- Pictu,..
In-Picture with "Action
Freeze"
•3-ln-1 SupeRemote
•Stereo hi--ll sound system
with bulit·ln MTS decoder
•Audio/VIdeo patch panel
with Variable audio
outputs
•Total remote "menu"
tuning system
Model SPA4565
REG.$799

Smart.Very smart

Turkey hunting seminar slated

in history

·
_.,
By Tile A~lated Prell
.
·Today II Thuraclay, Feb. 1:1, tbil .58th day or 1991. '~'here n ~ diya

$1699°

o2S.button remote control
•Total remote "menu"
format tuning system
•178 total channel

SALE$599°0

The 11 annual Parkersburg Baseball Card Show will be held on
March 7, 1992 from JO a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Holiday Inn in Parkersburg, W.Va.
A Topps 1968 Nolan Ryan rookie card will be given away at the
close of the show. Admission is $1.50 which includes one ticket for
the Ryan rookie Card drawinR. The winner does not need to be present A major card auction wtll be held at3 p.m.
·

leasing, rebuilt. "We don't make it, ,-,Do you have the p,iper thai
them anymcxe," the salesman told . came with tbe watcb? ' Papers?
me.
Cinderella )lad had papers, and a
I bought stem-winding watches warranty from Timex. The only
until a few years ago when I papci- dial came with my·new hifh·
couldn't find one I thought was fashion quanz wall:h was a pnce
attractive enough. All the pretty ~ IS times higher than Cinderelones were "quani" wall:hes that la s had been::
.
required batteries, and my new
I IC8lize we're a heck of a lot
watch and I got alOng pretty well better off !han when Cinderella
until the battery ran out I pried first enticed me from the .S&amp;H
open its back with a knife and Green Sta!DP catalog: We finally.
found the dt.ad littlt cell beneath a have medicme that knocks men•
metil tab that I couldn't budge with strua! cramps (altho~gh 1 STILL
my fmi,U1llil, so I' stUck the tip of say 1f men had cramps some ·
the-lmile under ~ 100. The bat- physician would have irained
tery went flyinf ~eross the room leeches to cure them back around
and will not, I m' convinced, be ~ year 1400), and we have Easy
fo11nd until I mdve. I took the Spmt pumJ,lS that allow us to play
watch to a discoon't Slore and up to basketballm higb heels. But with
the waleh·llllltcry COWI!a'.
all our advlllCCS, we seem to have
"I'm sorry, ~can't 8el1 you a lost the ablUty to say, "Beclt: to the
new baUery unless we have the old · drawing bdlrd," or even a bumble ·
one 10 look at,'' 'the salesperson "whoops!" when the new docln 't·
told me. I told her it might be under IIICIIUie up to the old.
·
tbe recliner, but if it was, it was
(C)lfU
NEWSPAPER
down .in One,of the cracb Of ~e ~SEASSN • . '.
sculptured carpet and I couldn't see

Toda~

ONLY

0

Parkersburg Baseball Card
Show scheduled for March 7

New things aren't necessarily better
Sarah Overstreet

•"SuperWindow"-Pictu,....
In-Picture with "Action
FI'H.Ze"
•3-ln-1 SupeRemote
-stereo hl--fl sound system
with built-In MTS decoder
•AudloJVIdeo patch panel
with Variable audio
outputs
•Total remote "menu"
tuning system
Model SPN 4567
REG. $799

-color 411n. Stereo
Monitor Receiver
oColor "Supar WlndowPicture-ln.Picture
•3-ln-1 SUpeRemote
•Menu format tuning
system
•160 deg. wide-angle
screen/&amp;00+ loo•lamberts
peak brightness
•7" liquid-cooled tubes
oStereoNideo Inputs and
outputs

The Division of Watercraft is offering a one day Ohio Boating
Basics class covering the fundamen!als of boating, navigation and
safety. Successful completion of this course may result in savings of
I 0 percent or more on boat insurance premiums. Swdents complet·
ing this course will be invited to attend an on-the-water session
which will cover launching, trailering and docking procedures.
This class will be held Sawrday, March 7, from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
at Ohio University in Athens. Those interested in registering may
contact Ohio University at 1·800-336-5699.
Questions concerning this or other boating safety classes should
contact the Division of Watercraft at 614-439-4076.

Martians sure are dumb!-

The Dally Sentlnei-P!IQe-3

Sports

Page-2-The pally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .
Thursday, February ~, 1992

his tongue and resisted the urge to
"go negative." He slipped Into his
victim mode only twice. On a trip
to the Granite State, he started rant·
ing about ''smart-aleck columnists," "carping littJe· Jiberal
Democrats" and "crazies" who
espoused "scatterbrained ideas."
In a radio interview, he lamented
how difficult it was to lead the
nation when h'e was being
''attacked from the right.''
Then came primary day and
Buchanan's stunning showing37 percent of the Republican vote
- and the Bush ream started talking tough. Buchanan got a free ride
in New Hampshire, they said. The
Bush camp would "have to be a
little more direct in pointing out the
differences" between the chief and
the challenger, said White House
press secretary Marlin Fitzwater. .

Pomeroy.o.o.Middleport, Ohio

l

v

�Thursday, February 27, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, February 27, 1992

Hurley's return sparks Duke ·in 76-67 win over Virginia
By CHRIS SHERIDAN
Associated Press Writer
Bobby Hurley had been out with .
a broken foot and Grant Hill came
down with a sprained ankle. That
apPeared to leave Duke without a
poUlt guard.
But Hurley made an unexpected
return to the Blue Devils' lineup
Wednesday night and led a second- .
half surge that gave Duke a 7&amp;-67
Atlantic Coast Conference victory
over Virginia.
" Needless to say, I wasn't
expecting anything like this," Hur·

ley said afler handing out nine
assists - including four in a crucial second-half sequence - scor·
ing four points and committing
only one turnOver in 26 minutes.
In other action involving Top 25
teams, No. 6 Missouri beat Iowa
State 75-71 ; No. 8 Ohio Srate lleat
Purdue 71-64; No. 9 Arkansas
defeated Auburn 82· 74; No. II
Kentucky downed South Carolina
74-56; No. 14 Oklahoma State
crushed No. 25 Nebraska 71-51;
No. 16 Alabama beat Mississippi
State 79-69; No. 17 Michigan was

Arkansas (21-6, IQ-3) wasted a
upset by Wisconsin 96-78 and No. and flipped a pass 10 Laettner for a (18-9, 4· 7) iost for the third straight
IS-point
lead in the first half and
time despite making 11 3--pointers.
18 Georgetown lost 10 Seton Hall, 3-pointer.
trailed
f\uburn
(11-13, 4·9) by
73-71 in overtime_
The closest Virginia (12-12, SNo. 8 Obio State 71
three
with
7
1/2
minutes
10 go.
· Purdue64
Hurley, who broke his foot in a 8) got was 64-58 on a shon jumper
But
Day
tied
the
game
on a
Feb. Sloss to North Carolina, made by Ted Jeffries with 3:1.81eft.
Mark Baker scored 17 points
three-point
play
and
Roosevelt
his return one day after Duke lost
Laettner scored 32 points and and Jim Jackson had IS 10 lead the
Hill.
grabbed 13 rebounds.
visiting Buckeyes over Purdue as Wallace put the Razorbacks ahead
Duke (22-2, 12-2) was nursing a
No.6 Missouri 75, Iowa St. 71
Ohio State (18-5, 10·3) pulled for good by scoring off a rebound
51-47 edge with II minutes left
Anthony Peeler was 10 for 10 within one game of fi!St-plaee Indi- with 6:09 remaining.
No. 11 Kentucky 74
when Hurley took over. He fed from the free throw line - includ- ana in the Big Ten.
South Caronna 56
Christian Laettner for a dunk and ing 4-of-4 in the final minute--:- as
Purdue (13-13, 5-9) trailed 61The
Wildcats
put up 27 3-pointThomas Hill for a short jumper on the Tigers held off Iowa State m a 50 but scored eight straight points
ers
and
made
12, which was
consecutive possessions. On Big Eight game.
and pulled within three on a basket
enough
10
beat
visiting
South CarDuke's next tnp down the floor,
Jeff Warren led the Tigers (20- by Woody Austin with 3:53 left.
Hurley passed up an open jumper 4, 8-3) with 20 points. Iowa State But Ohio State answered with a 5-0 olina.
Deroo Fel.dhaus hit three 3run.
pointers
and Richie Farmer sank
No. 9 Arkaasas 82
two
during
a 17·7 run in the fli'SI
Auburn 74
half
that
put
the Wildcats (21·5,
Todd Day scored 21 points and
leading scorer scoring 12.5 points a outside. Bobby Johnson, a 6-foot-1
10-3
in
the
Southeastern
Confercontest, also in double figures is 6- junior (1.7 piS/game) and 6-4 junior Lee Mayberry had 18 as the visit- ence) comfortably aliead.
foot-0 senior forward Mike Mor- Jay Cremeans (2.5 piS/game) flU in ing Razorbacks held off Auburn in
South Carolina (10·14, 2·11)
a Southeastern Conference game.
gan, who is averaging II points a off the bench.
lost
its lOth straight game.
Frank Blake or Phil Hovatter
game. Rounding out the starting
line-up is 6-foot-0 senior guard will fill the fifth position and lead
Brad Munn (7 .3 pts.) and Brent the Marauder defense. Blake started most of the year until an wrist
Jewell a 6-foot-4 senior (6.7 pts,)
Meigs finished with a 12·8 injury caused him to miss four
record and featured a balanced games, the 5-7 senior really came
scoring attack placing four players on strong scoring 13 points in the
in double figures led by 6-1 for- season's last game at Nelsonville
SATURDA~ FEB. 29, 1992
ward Trevor Harrison. The junior while picking up six steals. Hovatbecame the fi!St player to average ter, a 5-foot-6 senior, also is a pest
20 points\a ~arne in Meigs history for the Marauders on defense and
with 21.1 )lOmts a contest. Harrison filled in for Blake during the
is joined in double figures by class- injury.
Meigs is scoring 65.8 points a
mate John Bentley with 13.5 points
contest
and is giving up 62 a game.
OFF All
a game. The 6-foot-1 point guard is
Six
of
the
Marauders
eight
losses
the quarterback of the team and
SHOWCASE
also leads the team in steals (36), have been without starters Bentley
CARDSAND
assists (71) and blocked shots (25). or Blake due to injuries.
SUPPLIES!
The last time the Marauders and
The Marauders' center is &amp;-foot·
3 senior LJ. Mitch, who is scoring the Ironmen tangled was tWo years
CLOSCOUT PRICES ON:
11.5 points a contest and is leading ago in the sectionals. Meigs came
1111 Pro-SOt PiltiiMim Footboll SOriMtl 1................... _ ................ 75f pock
home
with
a
49·26
victory.
Meigs
the team in rebounding with about
1111 Ftotr unro Footbiii..................................... -............................ S1.ao pock
1111 llowmln Fooiblll............................................................................ ,.1.00
nine a game. Shawn Hawley (10.9 outscored Jackson 33-11 in the sec1111 Pociftc FoolllltL.......................................................................... iOJ pock
ond
half
ID
pull
away
from
a
16-15
pts./game), a 6-foot-1 senior for111142 Flelr 8"lrelt.ef!,_ ................................................................... SIS1.00
lead
at
the
half.
ward, can hit from the inside or
1181 score FoolblitBIIolor Pockl .......................................... 101 Clift Q.SO

Meigs to play Jackson in D-II sectionals Friday
bye.
By DAVE HARRIS
Jackson heads into tournament
Sentinel Correspondent
play
with a 11·9 mark. The IronThe Meigs Marauders open
men
are avera~ing 60 points per
post-season play Friday at 7 p.m.
game
and are giving up an average
against Jackson's Ironmen in the
of
55.
Jackson features three scorboys Division II sectional tournament at the University of Rio ers in double figures, led b'/ center
Willy Woodard, the son o former
Grande's Lyne Center.
The battle berween the two for- Pomeroy resident Bill Woodard.
mer SEOAL rivals will get under- The 6-foct-5 senior is scoring 17.9
way at 7 p.m. The winner will points a game and is averaging
advance to the finals on Tuesday, seven rebounds a contest
Matt Walburn , a 5-foot-10
March 3 at 6:30p.m. against Gallia
junior
guard is the team's second
~cademy, which drew a fi!St-round

-

:eastern girls to face Southern
tn D-IV sectionals tonight
._
·-

By SCOTT W,OLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
~ At 6:30 p.m. today the top
seeded Eastern Eagles will face the
Southern Tornadoes in the girls
Division IV sectional tournament
finals at Meigs High School's
Larry R. Morrison Gymnasium.
: Eastern finished the season at
14-6 overall, while Southern finished atl-19. Three of Eastern's
losses came at the hands of Federal
Hocking, who is now 17·3, and
Meigs, the TVC champion at 19-2.
The others came against Southern
Valley Athletic Conference champion Hannan Trace (twice) and
Symmes Valley (once). Eastern
defeated Meigs at Eastern in January.
· Dawn Heideman's Eagles,
favorites to win the contest, know
that records can be deceiving. Eastern defeated Southern in Racine
49-32, but at the end of three quarters the score stoOd 33-28.
- Southern was close in the middie of the last quaner, but with only
six players, the Tornadoes ran into
foul trouble and finished the game
with four players.
Probable starters for Eastern
will be sophomore Jaime Wilson, a
5-foot-6 point guard, who is a
~leady shooter and play maker;
'Ijffany Gardner, a 6-foct-0 senior
post player and top rebounder; Jennifer Roush, a 6-foot-2 center and

another top rebounder; Shelly Metzger, a 5-foot-9 junior swing guard;
and 5-foot·9 guard Tabby Phillips.
Phillips and Metzger are good
outside shooters and drivers, while
Roush and Gardner are excellent
within the paint.
Often starting, and playing a key
inside role is S·foot-10 senior Ruby
Burke. Burke is an aggressive
defensive player and driver. while
5·foot·9 senior Lee Gillilan adds
defensive depth and is a good outside shooter.
David Gaul's Southern squad is
led by sophomore playmaker
Amber Ohlinger, a 5-foot-3 guard
and the team 's highest scorer.
Sophomore Aimee Mills, who
recently had a 31-point game, is a
5-foot-4 shooting forward. Jessika
Codner, a 5-foot-7 freshman, adds
a good inside game and is a good
rcbounder, while Andrea Moore, a
5-foct-8 freshman, is a solid scorer
and rebounder.
Foreign exchange student Linda
Mangeroy has been starting and
was a key defensive figure in
Gaul's man-to-man defense, but
she was hurt in the last couple
games of the season and did not sec
action. Either Mangeroy, a 5-5
sophomore, or Christie Cooper, a
5-5 sophomore will start in the fifth
slot. Junior Jennifer Cross, a key
player from last year has been out
sick the latter part of the season.

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· Racine
Department Store
Will Open
Monday, March 2

=~;::.~.~~::n~:~lkliiiOii:·uiiii'SOil::::iiiMii'Oii·Ai':r::.

1992 Donruss
Series I &amp; II

1992 Fleer Baseball
1992 Upper Deck
Basketball

949·2642

WAS

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1992

Flash yellow, 5 ap. Trans., air, 4 cyl.,AMIFM cassette.

1992 CUTLASS SUPREME SL ..................... $19,450 $17,079.76

1992 5·10 4X4 LWBCO\t''"" $16,294 $14,737.15

V-6, loaded, 2 door, red.

Red, V-6, air, auto., llliOe, alum. wheels.

1992'CUTLASS SUPREME......................... $18,262 $16,060.76

1992 NINETY·EIGHT REGENCY-........... -.$26,074 $22,950.61
4 Qoor eedan, V-6, leather trim, charcoal.

1992 NINETY·EIGHT REGENCY _,_.........$25,195 $22,194.46
4 Door eedan, V-6, leather trim, white.

4.9 v.a, leather trim, platinum, loaded.

1991 Nlnety·Eight RegiiiCJ Elt•---S2§C24 $21,944.44

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1992 Cltevrolet F1ll Size PU.u... $16,075 $14,149.11
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1992 Cltevrtlet fll Size PU...... $16,078 $14,151.66

Lamher trim, Towing Package, maroon, air, auto.

U CAlliS.................................................... $6,190

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1992 S·10 4X4 Ext. Calt...........$17,744 $16,042.25

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OPEN EVERY FRIDAY 'TIL 8:00 P.M.

LAYAWAY NOW FOR SUMMER!
Suppert Your Loc1l Mereh1nts

Three Meigs frosh
take second in TVC
wrestling tourney

NEW 1992 OLDSMOBILE$

I

!hiM.
H ANNAH

School.

SECOND IN TVC TOURNAMENT - Four
Meigs Marauders rmlshed as runner-ups In tbe
recent Tri-Valley Conference wrestling tournaments. Pictured rrom ldtto right are senior
Dennis Edminston (171), Adam Sheets (140),
Jerod Cook (112) and Brent Smith (103). Sbetl:;,

4 Door, beige, ioaded-

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1991 GEO Storm GSI.., ....., ... _ ................SIJ)IS $11,724.00

3.8 v.a, ntlroon, luther trim, loaded.

back row are Amy Redovlan, Jennifer Roush,
Ruby Burke, Penny Aeiker, Tara Congo, Lee
Gillilan and Michelle Schultz. Standing above
the othen; in lbe back row is Mk:beUe Metzger.
Ab,ent was Tirfany Gardner. The top·seeded
Eagles will play Southern in tonight's Division
IV sectional tournament opener at Meigs High

OPEN MONDAY·SATURDAY 10 A.M·6 P.ll
CALL 667·6092 FOR SPECIAL APPOINTMENT.

Loaded, 4 door, maroon.

4.3--------..

sa Guess, Debbie Gray and Jaime Wilson. In lbe

VARSITY EAGLES- The 1991-92 Eastern
Eagles girls varsity basketball squad, directed
by second·year bead coach Dawn Heideman and
assistants Tammy Capehart and Laura Reding,
recently completed the regular season with a
fine '11·3 SVAC record, and was 14-6 overall.
Kneeling In l'ronl is statistician Renee Gray. Pic·
lured in the rirsl row are (L·R) is Tabitha '
Phillips, Mariko Tayama, Nora Eastman, Me lis·

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1

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1992 CUTLASS SUPREME......................... $18,722 $16,510.76

Flath yellow,.automatlc trans., air, 4 cyl., AMIFM ca~telle.
1991 Chevrolet S·IO Pltkup 4X4-.--.S10GO $12,750.00
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1991 Chevrolet Cornaro R/S.,,.... _ ......... $1f(90 $12,443.00

1991 GEO Storm HatchbtKk-...............-.Sit(2S $11,302.00

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1990 BUtt. II Tdvll Sllcklr Kit.............. (over 800 B·BIU Sllcklro)lol$5.00

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NOW

JUNIOR HIGH EAGLES - The Eastern
Deb~a Dillon. I~ the first row are Nicole Nelson, .
Christi Grossntckel, Laura Eastman, Crystar ~
junior high girls basketball team, led by Scott
Wolfe, t:'mlsbed second in lbe SVAC Ibis season
Holsinger, Martie Holter, Amanda Milhoan 1111d ·wilb an 8·2 league mark and 11·3 mark overall.
Patsy Aeiker. In tbe back row are Wolre, players
North Gatua, which Eastern dereated in the last
Krist! Warner, Jessica Karr, Beth Bay, Crystal ·:
game or the year, won the SVAC at 9·1 and was
Morns, Lauren Young and Rebecca Evans, and .
13-1 overall. In rronl are (L·R)..;s11
taiiitiiiistiiiiciliailnli.s--m•a•na.;;glllerlllC.r;,;ys.;;ta;;.lS;;;m;;;i.;;tb;;,.------~
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'

cel4) ~4 c•, 117·1•

·

PGMDDY

By DAVE HARRIS
Host Nelsonville-York landed
either a champion or runner-up in
ea~h of the 13 weight classes and
ran away with the Tri-Valley Con·
ference wrestling championship at
Nelsonville-York High School
recently.
The Buckeyes had 282 points
compared to 176 for runner-up Bel·
pry. Defending TVC champions
MejgsR) which finished in third
with 127 pointS, was followed by
Federal Hocking with 78 points
and Vinto~ County with 48.
Alexander, Miller, Trimble and
Wellston do not have varsity
wresding.
Top Individual honors went to
119·pound champion Chris Carroll
of Federal Hocking who was
selected Most Valuable Wrestler.
Coach of the Year honors went 10
N- Y's Toni McLaughlin.
Meigs had four wrestlers place
as runner-ups in their division,
including, three freshmen . Freshman Brent Smith was defeau:d by
N-Y's Heath Smathers in the 103- ·
poUnd class. FftS(lman Jerod Coot
lost in the finals to Tmis Rosser in
the l 12-pound class and claSsmate
Adam Sheets finished second to
Ma.tt Nolan in the 140-pound class.
Senior Dennis Edminston was runner-up 10 John Phillips also of Nelsonville in the 171-pound class.
·Meigs will take part in the sec·
tiona! toumamenl! this Saturday at
Warren Local.

Cook and Smith are rresbmen. Meigs finished In
third place in this year's tournament behind
champion Nelsonv1lle·Yorknd Belpre. Meigs will
wrestle Saturday in tbe sectionals at Warren
Local High School.

•

25%0FF
FRIDAY, SATURDAY &amp; MONDAY
SELECT GROUP OF TENNIS
SHOES FOR MEN and BOYS

1992 FORD RANGER XLT
" .......................................'1 0,435.00 •
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Anderson resigns as
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h,eatl basketball.coach

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. PAINESVILLE, Ohio (AP)The ."((ODen 'a basketball cQaCh at
I:.ato'Erie College~ Ito's ICiipling because of the turmoil caused
by inVOIIfJ.aliODI lnto alleged
financJa111d itrel'llariliea at the
IChool, I DOWipip6i llid.
. Coacb Richard Anderaon on
Wednellday WIJ rcluc:tant to di.l·
cull hll mlpation· which tatea
effecl In May, the Plain Dealer
repcxted today.

FORD
MERCURY
LINCOLN

•
•
•

/

'

J

�-·

•'•

K

·~

..

. . ..

•••

... .

~

..........

,

~'

'

'
~The Daliy Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio expects warming trend expected Sunday

Friday, Feb. 28

By The Associated Press .
The roller coaster weather pattern for Ohio continues, forecasters
said.
A blast of Arctic air was expected to bring colder temperatures and
snow on Friday.
Then a warming trend will begin
with temperatures possibly reach·
ing the 60s on Sunday.
The National Weather Service
said the warmer conditions are likely to continue into next week.
The record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather

Accu-Weath.,.- forecast for daytime conditions

.

·:.

/Mansfield / 42•

ell\

l•~

·.,.·.,.·

..

•/ Columbus/ 43• /

T·siMns Rain Flurries Snow

Ice

Pr. Cloudy

Sunny

Cloudy

0 1992 .t.ccu·Weather, Jnc.

Via Associated Pmss GrapticsNel

------Weather·----Fair and warmer through the
period. Highs from near 40 to the
low 50s Saturday, 50-60 on Sunday
anq 55-65 Monday. Morning lows
25-35 Saturday, in the 30s Sunday
and 40s Monday.

--Local briefs--..
State official addresses Rotary
Lynne M. Crow, administrative assislant in the Marlena office of
the Ohio Deparunent of Development, was speaker at the Monday
night meeting of the Middlepon-Pomeroy Rotary Club held at Heath
United Methodist Church.
Crow works under Elizabeth A. Schaad, regional representative
in the Marietta office, fonnerly executive director/economic development director for the Meigs County Chamber of Commerce.
The counties served through that office are Meigs, Athens,
Washington, Monroe, Noble, Morgan, Perry and Hocking. The
Marietta office is one of several estabhshed by Gov. George V.
Voinovich as a part of his economic development program, for the
state. Crow said.
Richard Vaughan. president, introduced Crow. He welcomed Joe
Young, who has been absent from several meetings due to illness.
Dinner was served by the women of Heath Churth.

OAPSE to meet
Meigs Local OAPSE will meet on Thursday at 7 p.m. at Meigs
Junior High School.

Squads answer calls

.

.

.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Servtces umts answered SIX
calls for assislance on Wednesday.
.
At 10:34 a.m., Middleport squad went to Hobson Bndgc for
Steven Hayes. He was taken to Veterans Memorial HospitaL At
11:37 a.m., Middleport squad went to Overbrook Center. Vugmta
Estep was transported to Veterans.
Atl:56 p.m., Middleport squad went to Logan Street for George
Siders who was taken to Veterans. At 5: II p.m., Racine squad went
to Thkd Street. Floyd Cummings was taken to Veterans. At 8:50
p.m., Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine 2. James PoweU, Jr. was
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital. AI II p.m., Pomeroy squad was
sent to Rose Atley Road for Charles Dill. Dill was taken to Veterans.

UW rally scheduled
A rally of union workers will be held Saturday at I p.m. at the
Rutland Civic Center. Woody Call, Steelworkers Local,
Ravenswood Aluminum Co., and Max Whitlatch, UMW A, Meigs
Local, announced that several district representatives are expected
to attend.

Man charged in shooting
of Waterloo woman
A Patriot man was arrested
Wednesday evening by the Gallia
. County Sheriffs Department in the
shooting of a Waterloo woman.
Ernest Jeraldine Adlcins, 24, 557
Webster Rd., is in the Gallia County Jail charged with felonious
assault.

Dry, mild weather was expected

elsewhere, with temperatures in the
nothern Plains expected to average
about 20 degrees above normal.
Highs in Billings, Mont., were
~ected to reach into the 60s

T~~peratures along the Pacific

Coast, which were running as much
degrees above normal on
esday, were expected to drop

=

.

'

A record high of 60 degrees was
set Wednesday in Annette, Alaska,
and a reading of 56 in Juneau also

,_

Katie Owens, 30, 21846 state
Route 141 was transported to·Holzer Medical Center by the Gallia
County Emergency Me~ical Service after being shot at about 8:30
p.m. Monday.
Owens was listed in fair condition, a hospital spokeswoman said
this morning.

was cut by $78 million this year,
would be exempt from future
spending reductions.
But he said higher education and
other areas would not be protected
if the revenue package is rejected.
"!think that what happens is
that there will be Draconian reductions in some other parts of the

.budget," Voinovich sairl. "There'll
be a lot of people out there that are
going to be in for some severe cuts,
and various parts of the budget that
haven't been touched in the past"
Voinovich said he fundamentally agreed with a call Wednesday by
the Ohio Coalition of Educational
Organizations for no more cuts in
state aid to schools between now
and June 30, 1993.
The coalition, whose members
include the Ohio Department of
children; 21 great-grandchildren; Education and the Oh1o Education
Ruth Brown
four brothers, Fred Byas of Sioux Association teachers union, held a
Falls, S.D ., James Byas of New
Ruth Armstead Brown, 91 , of Baltimore, Mich .. Richard Byas of series of news conferences around
170 Pinecrest Dr., Gallipolis, for- Jackson, and Joseph Byas of the state to propose restoration of
merly of 900 Third Ave., died Delaware; three sisters, Wanda the subsidies, and a long-term plan
Tuesday, Feb . 25, 1992, at Grover of Amanda, Freda Wilson to provide adequate, equitable and
stable school funding.
Pinecrest Care Center.
of Hillsboro, and Mrs. Joe (Pearl)
State School Suverintendent Ted
She was born March 10, 1900, Greene of Falmouth, Ky.
Sanders,
the coalition spokesman,
in Rutland. daughter of the late
She was preceded in death by
Charles and lzetta Armstead.
said
students
ultimately bear th e
one son, James A. Jenkins; one
She was a 22-year resident of grandchild; three brothers; and one brunt of budget cuts.
Gallipolis after moving to the area sister.
"Once a student's learning is
from Columbus. She was a member
inhibited
by out-of-date textbooks,
Funeral services will be held I
of the Paint Creek Baptist Churth,
Saturday at the McCoy' Moore or by less one-on-one instruction
Emeritus of Missionary Society, p.m.
Funeral Home, Vinton, with the due to larger class enrollments and
Ladies Aide, and teacher, officer Rev. Paul Taylor officiating. Burial fewer teachers, that student will
and choir member at the church. will be in Vinton Memorial Pari&lt;.
have an extremely difficult time
She had been a assistant music
trying
to catch up," Sanders said in
Friends may call at the funeral
director anJ a member of the Lewis home
on Friday from 24 p.m. and a news release.
Manley American Legion Auxil- 7-9 p.m.
"These kinds of education cuts
iary 263, Pomeroy.
don 't heal," he said.
Survivors include, son-in-law,
Voinovich pre-empted the coaliJack Carr of Gallipolis; daughter- Wilbur Ransom
tion
announcements Wednesday
Wilbur A. Ransom, 50. of
in-law, Martha McCarroll; 12
with
a
news conference of his own
grandchildren; over 100 great- Maringo, Ohio, and formerly of in which he said some of the $78
grandchildren; several great-great- Racine, died on Wednesday, Febru- million in school cuts could be
grandchildren and great-great- ary 26, 1992 in Morrow County restored if legislators would quickgreat-g randchildren; one niece, Hospital in Mt Gilead.
He was born on February I , ly pass his revenue package.
Charlotte Houston; and one
He is proposing an increase in
1942 in Mammoth, W.Va. , son of
nephew, Paul Gomer.
She was preceded in death by the late Everell Edward and ·
her husband, Frank Brown; one Gemude Proctor Ransom. He was
daughter, Hazel Carr; one son, a former employee of the City of
Raben McCarroll; and one grand- Delaware and was a bass player for
Virgil Phillips, candidate for the
the United Gospel Singers of
child.
Democratic
nomination for Meigs
Maringo.
Funeral services wiU be held 10
County
Commissioner,
is cenified
Surviving
arc
his
wife,
Connie
a.m. Saturday at Paint Creek Bapby
the
Meigs
County
Board of
tist Church, with the Rev. Dennis Snyder Ransom; a sister, Lillian
Education
to
serve
as
a
substitute
Hurt and the Rev. William Ward Scarbough of Napoleon , Ohio; a
teacher.
It
was
inadvertently
reportofficiating. Burial will be in Pine brother, Ronald Ransom of Racine;
ed
earlier
that
he
was
a
substitute
a step-sister, Treave Kimes of
Street Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Waugh- Racine; three step-brothers: Jesslee teacher in the Meigs Local School
Halley-Wood Funeral home on Fri- Lusher of Olive Hill, Ky., Willard District
day from 7-9. Lewis Manley Amer- Lusher of Charleston, W.Va., and
ican Legion services will be held Marvin Lusher, Baltimore, Md.
In addition to his parents, he
8:30p.m. on Friday.
Marriage license have been
The body will be taken to the was preceded in death by his step·
mother,
Beulah
Gay
Ransom;
four
in Meigs County Probate
granted
church one hour prior to services
brothers,
a
sister
and
two
stepCourt
to
Mark Allan Salser, 25,
Saturday.
brothers.
Racine, and Christy Ann Koenig,
Pallbearers will be Bobby
Funeral services will be held on 19, Racine; and to Randy Kevin
Casey. Donald Borden, Cecil Vinson, Jesse Saunders, Lewis Green, Saturday at 2 p.m . at Bennett- Lee, 25, Pomeroy and Lisa
Brown Funeral Home in Delaware Michelle Lewis, 19, Letart, W.Va.
and Larry Robinson.
with Pastor Henry Spencer official·
ing . Burial will be in Radnor
Helen I. Jenkins
Cemetery in Radnor.
Helen Irene Jenkins, 76, of
Friends may call at the funeral
Actions for dissolution of marWard Road, Bidwell, died Wednes- home from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. on Fri· riage have been filed in Meigs
day, Feb. 26, 1992, at Pleasant Val- day.
County Common Pleas Court by
Icy Hospital, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Judith L. Stewart and Barry J.
She was born Sept. 30, 1915 in
Stewart, both of Middleport; and
Ziesing, W.Va .. daughter of the Carl Young
by
Deborah Lynn Halfhill and
Graveside services for Carl A.
late James Alexander and Nannic
Wilmer Edwin Halfhill, both of
Young, 76,Racine, who died on
Bell Woodrum Byas.
Racine.
She was a member of the Rut- February 21, 1992, will be held at
A divorce has been granted in
Beech Grove Cemetery on Saturland Freewill Baptist Church.
the
coun to Patsy Price from Henry
Survivors include her husband, day at I p.m., with Rev. Florence
Paul Price.
Walter A. Jenkins, whom she mar- Smith officiating.
Military graveside services wiU
ried Aug. 24, 1932 in Addison; one
son, John A. Jenkins of Canton; be held by Racine American
three daughters, Mrs. Henry (Dar- Legion Post602.
There will be no calling hours.
lene) Whealdon of Patriot, Mrs .
Lester (Shirley Anne) Elkins of Arrangements are under the direcDublin, and Mrs. Jeffrey (Linda) tion of Ewing Funeral Home in
Brumfield of Bidwell; II grand- Pomeroy.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Gov. George Voinovich is turning
up the heat on legislators to adopt
$200 million worth of revenueboosting measures by predicting
sharp budget cuts after July I
unless action is taken.
Voinovich said Wednesday that
state aid to local schools, which

Qa

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low
30-35. Friday, cloudy: High 50-55.
Chance of rain 20 percent.
Extended forecast:
Saturday through Monday:

station was 65 degrees in 1896. The
record low was 11 below zero in
19-63.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:20
p.m. Sunrise on Friday will be at
7:07am.
Around the nation
· Clouds hung over the Northeast
at dawn today and snow fell in
some cities near the Great Lakes.
An Arctic front was expected to
move south from Quebec, bringing
snow to areas east of Lake Erie and
Lake Ontario. Cold winds were
forecast in northern New England.

.

set a record.
Temperatures today were forecast in the 30s in Maine and the
Great Lakes region; the 40s i~ New ·
England and the Rocky Moonlains
states; the 50s in Oregon and Vir- •
ginia; the 60s in Washington state
and much oi the Southeast; the 70s ·
in Northern California and the
Southwest deserts; and the 80s in ...
Miami and Southern Cal.iornia
The high temperature for the ~
nation Wednesday was 90 degrees ·
at Jacksonville, Fla

--Area deaths--

Correction

Licenses granted

To end marriages

Eight were fined and five others
Trustees to meet
forfeited bonds in the coun of MidThe Letart Township Trustees . dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
wiU meet Monday at 6 p.m. at the
Wednesday night.
offiCe building.
Fined were John S. Thomas,
Goipel sing planned
Middlepon, $10 fine only, running
The River Valley Boys, a southa stop sign; Kenneth R. Carpenter,
em gospel quartet, will perform at
Gallipolis, $100 and costs, driving
the Carmel United Methodist
under suspension; Alice L. May,
Churth in Racine on March 8 at 6
New Haven, W. Va, $15 fine only,
p.m. Rev. Kenny Baker invites the
speeding; Earl A. Goode, Middlepublic.
port, $25 and costs, driving an
unsafe vehicle and $25 and costs,
no operator's license; Johnny G.
Little, Middleport, $42S and costs
and three days in jail, physical conVeterans Memorial
WEDNESDAY ADMISSIONS ttol of a motor vehicle while under
- Gerald Sellers, Pomeroy, and the influence of alcohol or drugs;
Clellan Siders, Middleport.
WEDNESDAY DISCHARGES
- Aleta Billingsley, Charles Tyree,
Douglas Enoch, and Flossie

Trustees to meet
The Scipio Township Trustees
will meet Wednesday at 6 p.m. at
the township building in Page ville.
Smorgasbord dinner
The Lottridge Community Center wiU hold a smorgasbord dinner
on Sunday from noon to 2 p.m.
Cost is SS for adults and $2.50 for
children under 12. The public is
invited to attend.
Lenten breakfliSt planned
The annual Lenten Breakfast at
the Trinity Congregational Church
will be held Wednesday at 7:4S
a.m. The breakfast will be followed
by a brief program of meditation
and spiritual renewal with Joanne
Wildman as the leader. All in the
community are invited to attend.
Rese:vations may be made by calling Pauline Mayer, Marie Hauck,
Joanne Wildman, or the churth at . Mohler.

Hospital news

American Lqloa to meet
The regular meeting of !he
American Legion Drew Webster
Poll No. 39 will be held Tueaclay at
the poet home with dinner at 7 p.m.
.... meeting at 8 p.m.
Mftlln1 date ch•spt'
The group, Women Alive, has
cillnJed ill regular meeting date
from the firat Monday or each
month to the leCOIId Monday of
each month.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Dllcbarlet Feb. 26- Melissa
Dempsey, Bva Gahm, Lois Green,
Brenda Hill, Ronald Hunter, Joy
Imboden, Brandon 'Jones. John
Mayea, Jillian Moody, Ralph
Moore, Clay Mullen, Russejll\1'sons, Virginia Ray and Jesse

ThomJIIOIL

Blrdll Feb~ 26 - Mr. and Mrs.
Dlmn Arms, dau~. Wellslon.

Page-7

is

alcohol and tobacco taxes, elimina- ·
tion of a discount to retailers foC:
collecting sales taxes, and private
operation of state liquor stores. .
"If my proposals were enacted, :
the price of beer would go up 3.:
cents a six-pack. And the cost of~
smoking two cigarettes would .
ir)Crease by a little more than one .
penny. Small prices to pay, I:
believe, to maintain progress in
education," Voinovich said.

COMMENDATION MEDAL AWARDED - Tecb. Sgt. Todd R.
Rawlings, right, bas been a.warded the Air Force Commendation
Medal. In presenting the citation ·which accompanied the award,
Col. Russ Stewart commended bim ror his outstanding work as a
maintenance scheduling technician.

Eason ...
Continued from page I
lawyer and assistant prosecutor, :
and her husband, Jeff, an insurance :
agent, who live in Pomeroy.
·
The candidate is the son of Mrs. ~
Lucille Eason, and the late Hubert
Eason, a lawyer who served as
prosecuting attorney in Gates '
County, N. C. He is the son-in-law ·
of Gladys Riggs, Pomeroy, and the .
late Perry Riggs, longtime Meigs
County auditor.

Todd Rawlings receives Air
Force Commendation Medal
. Tech. Sgt. Todd R. Rawlings,
son of Richard W. and Betty L.
Rawlings, of Mason, has been decorated with the Air Force Commendation Medal.
A citation to accompany the
medal said that Tech. Sgt. Rawl ings distingu(shed himself by meritorious service as an Aircraft Mainfenance Scheduler, 80th Aircraft
Maintenance Unit , 8th Aircraft
Generation Squadron, 8th Tactical
Fighter Wing, Kunsan Air Base,
Republic of Korea from Feb. 4,
1989 to March I, 1991.
The citation reads, in part, as
follows:
"Sgt. P,pwlings mastenninded
the scheduling and maintenance
plan for exercise Cop Thunder 90-6
which yielded a 98.5 percent fuUy
mission capable rate and a 99 .I
scheduling effectiveness rate.
Sergeant Rawlings carefully monitored scheduled maintenance on a
daily basis and built the schedules

Racine...
Continued from page 1
and was reported paralyzed at the ·
time of the incident.
Sheriff Soulsby refused to speculate as to the cause of the argument, stating that Connolly has
been under sedation following
surgery and has been unable to give
a statement concerning the alleged
altercation.
When asked if the fight could
have centered around a labor dispute at Ravenswood Aluminum
Corporation, Soulsby said that
"there has never been any indication that that's what the argument
was about"
SoulsLy said that the investigation is continuing, and more am:sts
could follow.

THURSDAY
RACINE - OAPSE 453 Southem Local wiU meet Thursday at the
high school at 6 p.m. AU members
are urged to attend.

Stocks
Am Elc Power ................... 31 1/8
Ashland Oi1 ....... ............... .30 7/8
AT&amp;T................................. 37
Bank Onc........................... .49 3/4
Bob Evans .........................26 3/4
Charming Shop...................273/4
City Holding ...................... 17
Federal Mogul.. .................. ! 5 3/4
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................61
Key Centurion .. ................. 15 3/4
Lands End .......................... 32 5/8
Limited Inc ....................... 29 3/8
Multimedia Inc .................. 27 3/4
Rax Restaurant ................ ! 3/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ............... .18 3/4
Shoney's Inc ......................26 S/8
Star Bank ........................... 26 3/4
Wendy lnt'I.. ...................... J2 5/8
Worthington Ind .............. .. 24 1/8
Stock reports are the 10:30
a.m. quotes provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of Gallipolis.

STIVERSVILLE • Evangelist
David Carpenter of Belleville,
W.Va. will be at StiversviUe Word
of Faith Church on Thursdar at
7:30 p.m. ·Pastor David Daoley
invites the public.
POMEROY -The Salvation
Army wiU have a free clothing day
on Thursday from I0 a.m. to noon
at on the first floor of the building,
Area residents in need of clothing
are welcome to come.
TUPPERS PLAINS - There will
be a joint meeting of the Tuppers
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 and
Ladies Auxiliary on Thursday at
7:30p.m. Dinner will be served
prior to the meeting. All members
are urged to attend.
REEDS VILLE - The Riverview
Garden Club wiU meet Thursday at
7:30 p.m. at the home of Janice
Young. hostess. Kila Young and
Phyllis Larkins will be co-hostesses.
POMEROY - The regular meeting of the Meigs County Public
Library Board of Trustees will be
held Thursday at I p.m. at the
library in Pomeroy.

Robert E. Hupp, Jr., Cheshire, $100
and costs, driving under suspension; Joseph R. Gilkey, Jr., Middleport, $20,and costs, speeding; Ron
E. Starcher, Langsville, $10 and
costs, fictitious tags.
Forfeiting bonds were Robert T.
Southern, Jr., Middleport; $210,
driving under suspension; John 0.
Blake, Middleport, $110, contempt
of court; Mark A. Haley, WoodSide, Dl.. $460, physical control of
a motor vehicle while under the
influence ci alcohol or drugs; Johnnie R. Ohlinger, Letart, W. Va.,
$61, speeding; and James M.
Werry, Jr., Racine, $60, squealing

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Youth .League will meet
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at the Middleport Council Building. Anyone
interested may attend.
DEXTER - The Meigs County
Women •s Fellowship will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Dexter
Church of Christ. A program on
genealogy will be presented by
Vada Hazelton.
MIDDLEPORT - The Bosworth
Council No. 46 will confer the
S.E.M. degree on Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at the Middleport Masonic
Temple.
·

tires.

REEDSVILLE - There will be a
reen rally 11 die Fellowship Church
ot the Nazarene Thursday through
Saturday with Jeff and Kathy
Edman of ParkcrsburJ, W.Va. ttl 7
p.m. nightly. The public is ipvited
to attend.

.

Soup lnclude1 Good Hearted Woman, He Stopped
Lovblf Her Todsy1 C. C. Rider, Satin Sl!eets, Help
. Me Make It Throll8h The N!pt, aild !DilDY morel
ADMISSION: $5.00 per couple
I
$3.00 per pet'lon
$1.00 Chlld,.n- Under 12 FREE

RACINE - The Racine American Legion Auxiliary will meet
Thursday at 7 p;m. at \he hall.
Buckeye Girl's ~tate deleptes will
be chosen.
.·

POMEROY • The Blg Bend

I,

••

w

,)

'

•••
'•

••

that ensured an unprecedented
12,767 forties and 17,205 flight
hours were flown with all statistical
indicators far surpassing Pacific
Air Forces standards.
"He developed a comprehensive
maintenance scheduling and flying
plan for the August 1990 Phase II
Operational Readiness Exercise
which allowed the 80th Aircraft
Maintenance Unit to effectively
generate 172 out of 179 sorties for
an 'excellent' sortie generation
effectiveness rating. The distinctive
accomplishments of Sergeant
Rawlings reflect credit upon himself and the United States Air

Force."
Tech Sgt Rawlings is a maintenance scheduling technician at Hill
Air Force Base in Utah. He will
spent six weeks at Chanute Air
Force Base this summer and will
also be visiting relatives a'nd
friends in the Bend area.

Esther Smith read a correspon·
dence for other state and national
officers.
The district meeting will be held
at Chester on March 7 at I p.m.
"Whose Job Is It" was read by
Esther Smith and "What's In a
Name" was read by Doris Grueser.
The meeting closed in regular
fonn and refreshments were served
by that committee.
Attending were Jean Welch ,
lnzy Newell, Laura Nice, Opal
Hollon, Charlotte Grant, Everell
Grant, Faye Kirkhart, Elizabeth
Hayes, Mary Barringer, Jean
Fredrick, Helen Wolf, Betty
Young, Esther Smith, Ethel Orr,
Marcia Keller, Doris Grueser,
Bulah Maxey, Mary Holter, Thelma White, Sharon Bryant, Martha
Durst, Mae McPeek, Ada Bissell,
Lora Damewood and Alta Ballard.

i

...
I

Girl Scout Leaders will meet
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Trinity
Church in Pomeroy.
RACINE - The Racine Village
Council will meet in special session on Thursday at 7 p.m. at Star
Mill Park for the purpose of taking
action on Issue 2 applications for
the water well project
FRIDAY
POMEROY - There will be a
special meeting of the Meigs County Commissioners on Friday at
2:30p.m. to open bids on space for
the Meigs County Board of Elections.
HARTFORD - A benefit gospel
sing for the Eddie Casto family at
the Father's House Church in Hartford, W.Va. will be held Friday at 7
p.m. with singers Victory, Joy and
the Turle~ Family. Pastor Clyde
Fields invites the public.
PORTLAND - The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet Friday at 7 p.m. at the township building in Ponland.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will hold a
round and square d,ance on Friday
form 8 to II :30 p.m. with music by
C.J . and the Country Gentlemen.
Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT - The United
Pentecostal Church of Middleport
will have a chicken-noodle dinner
on Friday from II a.m. to 2 p.m.
Deliveries are available in the Middleport and Pomeroy areas.
POMEROY - Church Women
United will meet Friday for a planning mectin~ for World Day of
Prayer on Fnday at I p.m. at the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy. AU key
women from Meigs County
churthes are urged to auend.
CHESTER - The Shade River
Lodge annual inspection will be
held Friday with dinner at 6:30
p.m. Members bring two. homemade pies.
HOCKINGPORT ·• There will
be a round and square dance on
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at Hockingport at the Kenny and Millie
Reynolds. Music will be provided
br die Hoc Point Saing Band. Ronrue Wood will be the caller. Country, bluegrass and go5pel music is
playt.d there every Monday at 7
p.m. The public is invited to attend.

Plans for taking orders for
Mother's Day flowers were discussed at the recent meeting of the
Salisbury PTO. A book fair was
held prior to the meeting.
The fundraiser will begin in
March with flowers to be deUvered
the week before Mother's Day.
The PTO wiU serve the grange
dinner on April 10 and donations
and workers are needed.
It was announced that wooden
benches will be placed on the playground and that there are plans to
repair and upgrade the ball field.

SAR dinner, contest set
Ewings Chapter of the Sons of
the American Revolution will meet
Thursday at the Meigs County
Museum in Pomeroy. Dinner by
reservation only will begin at 6:30
p.m. followed by the business
meeting and program at 7:30 p.m.
Reservations may be made by calling the Meigs County Museum at
992-3810 or 675-3746.
The speaker for the evening will
be a representative from the local
office of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (F.B.I.) Visitors are
welcome to auend the meeting.
The chapter is also soliciting
entries for the Douglass G. High
Historical Oration Contest, which
is sponsored by the S.A.R. This

·Janet Peavley presided at thr
meeting and it was announced that
new officers wiU be elected at the
April meeting.
"Juggling Jeff' will present a
program for the students gn Friday.
The third grade class is ahead to
date on the membership drive. The
winning classroom wiU be awarded .
with a pizza party.
The room count was won by
third grade.
The next meeting will be held·
March 9 at 7 p.m.

Rice, Bowen to be honored

John C. Rice and Joyce Bowen,
who are retiring after many year of
service from the Ohio Cooperative
Extension Service, will be honored
at an open house on Sunday from
1-4 p.m. at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
The ~ublic is invited to auend.
contest is open to all area high
Rtce has served as County
school sophomores, juniors and Extension Agent, Agriculture, for
seniors. Each contestant - male or 27 years. He holds the rank of
female - must speak from five to assistant professor with the Ohio
ten minutes on a topic related to the State University and also holds the
American Revolution and then con- position of community and natural
nect its relevance to something in resource development agent and
today's society. Students interested county office chairman. He has
in participating in the local finals been recognized by his peers with
on March 26 may send their the Distinguished Service Award.
request to Keith D. Ashley, 34465 the highest award given to agriculCrew Road, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. ture agents and is a member of
A set of contest rules will be Epsilon Sigma Phi.
mailed.

Mrs. Bowen is retiring as office
manager, a position she has held
for 27 years. She has worked with
many clientele in the county during
this time period and has been
responsible for office coordination,
accounting, publications and dayto-day office operations.
The retirement reception is
being hosted by the Meigs County
4-H Committee.

Fundraiser to be held
The Southern Local High
School Sophomore Class will be
conducting a fundraising project in
approximately six weeks. For further information contact Rose
Yocum at949-2029.

Plans finalized
Plans were finalized at the
February meeting of the Bashan
Ladies Auxiliary to have a smorgas\XJrd dinner on March I 5 from
II a.m.to 2 p.m.
The menu wiU include chicken,
ham, mashed potatoes. gravey,
dressing, green beans, roUs, homemade noodles, cole slaw. desserts
and drinks.
The cost is $4.50 for adults and
$2 for children under 12. Take-out
is available.

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Community calendar

FRIDAY NIGHT DANCE AT
RUTLAND LEGION HALL
Marlin White's Hill Band

1'.

Thursday, February 27, 1992

The Ch, Jter Council No. 323
Daughters of America met recently
at the hall with Thelma White,
councilor.
'The pledge to tbe Christian and
American flags were given in unison and the fust stanza of the Star
Spangled Banner was sung. The
Lord's Prayer was given and there
was a reading from the book of
Psalms.
It was announced that Goldie
Krackemburger home from the
hgspital as is Mildred Caldwell.
Mary Moose of Perry Council had
a stroke and is now out of the hospital. The death of Erma Cleland's
son, Vernon, was noted. Bob Harden of the Guiding Star Council is in
the hospital.
Mary Holter, reporting for ways
and means, presented a tax paper
for all members to fill out and
return to her.

DANCE CONTEST - 8:00.to 12:00' P.M.

992·3172.

The Daily Sentinel

D of A hold meeting PTO fundraiser to begin

-Meigs announcements-- Middleport Court news
•

By The Bend

Voinovich wants tax hike, no school cuts
W. VA.

-ts

Thursday, February 27, 1992 ·:

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singing on Friday at 7 p.m. featuring local talent Pastor Steve Reed
invites the public. Fellowship will
follow .
SATURDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - A Prom
Dress Exchange will be held Saturday at the Tuppers Plains VFW
Post No. 9053. Dresses may be
dropped off between 9 and II a.m .
and a fee of $1 wiU be charged for
each dress. Unsold dresses and
money should be picked up by 6
p.m. Call 843-5137 or 985-4161
for funher information.

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RACINE - The Racine Youth
League will hold its sign-up for
baseball and softball on Saturday
from 10 am. to noon at the kindergarten building. Other days for
sign-up will be Tuesday, March 3
from 6-8 p.m., Saturday, March 7
from 10 a.m. to noon, and Saturday, March 14 from 10 a.m. to
noon. If this is the first sign-up for
a participant a birth certificate copy
must be furnished The cost· is $10
for girls softball and $1 S for all
others.
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REEDSVILLE - Girl Scout
Thinking Day will be held Saturday at 4 p.m . at Eastern High
School.
POMEROY - The Royal Oak
Dance Club will hold its fust dance
of the year on Saturday at Royal
Oak Reson. Music will be provided
by George Hall from 8 to 11 p.m.
Membership dues will be accepted
at the door. Dues are $40 per year.

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RUTLAND - There will be a
round and square danee at the Rutland American Legion HaU on Saturday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
music by C.J. and Country Gentlemen. Ray Fitch will be the caller.
The public is inv,ited to attend.

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KANAUGA - Square dancing
and clogging at the DAY building,
8-11 p.m. Music by the Salem
Ridge Boys. Open to the public.

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SUNDAY
RU1LAND - "Jesus Will Outshine Them All" will be presented
at the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene on Sunday at6:15 p.m.
by the teen class and adult choir.
The public is invited to attend.

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Buill NMtllooi PCa Irion S'ltl to 13211.
Tlh $100 Otf !lot Rtpflf or ~ 11ft
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this coupon must be surrendered at ti)TIIIIl1 purthiSt.
l)le coupon per saln tlclctl. No phOtocopies ICCfptefl
No casll vlkle . Coupon is valid at partil:ipa!ilo Radio ,

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KANAUGA - The Silver
Memorial Free WiD·Baptist Church
in Kanauga will .host a pastor
recognition day on Sunda~ at 2
p.m. There will bo preachmg an
'
singing by different groups. The
LONG B01TOM • The Faith . public iS mvited and refreshments
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot- will be served
tom ·will host preaching and

fe2f

·

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~-lnd "'8-DOSIRoQ. '1M e n d - oncl ~ .._
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'""' Corpo(lllon.
•
PRICES APPLY AT PARTICIPATING STORES AND DEA~ERS

•'

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•

LowAa
Ptr125

Monlh•

�. '

Page

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. .. ...

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~~

8 The Dally Sentinel

"

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·~·

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-~-·

..

·contemporary
Living
Herbalists elect officers
s.
Cindy Oliveri
County Extension Agent
QUICK MEALS
American family life seems 10
f sh.
h·
have beco~e,one 0 .~ •ntg ....~s 1
tog to Y(O• ....o.m~..,,gs, 0 sc 00 •
to famtly aCtivttles. Wnh twocareer farmhes wor~ngh40h hours
or more per_ wee. • t e orne~ook~made f~m scr~ch m:~ls
ve f 0~~ a ;g~ de~ ~;
~any 1amt tes. ~ enf s ~ Yhas
1
f e on ~ odpportu,mty tah amthy me
or a stt· own oge er, o ·
made meal
Th'
· k C 1 mporary Living
•s wee one
r
takes a look at ways to, make you
qmck meals more nutnuo~ .
.
On~ of the ftrst declSlons that
we ml~ht COnSider IS whether 10
spend ume or money. Take a good
hard took at your lifestyle and
decide what is most important to
you . If time .... family time .... is
important to you, don't feel guilty
b t the extra costs of fully or
~:Jy prepared meals. If you have
the time. cooking from scratch may
save money. But many of us will
find ourselves with a short supply
of time and money. It becomes a
matter of deciding when to spend
money and when to spend time.
Menu planning is an important
first step in saving time and money.
The menu doesn't necessarily have
to be for a week or more; it can be
for a few days. The advantages of a
menu are several.
They incl~de: having an accurate grocery hst so that repeat tnps
to the grocery store aren't necessary, making left overs, planned
overs instead of forgotten foods in
the back of the refrigerator and
planning meals with variety instead
of repeating the same few ideas.
To save time or money at the

Thursday, February 27, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

grocery store be sure to read food
ads-take advantage of sales only
tf you wtU use the product, chock
specials to make sure they. are
money·savers and comp~ ~nces·
use coupons if the fmal pnce IS less
expensive than the store brand.
Also don't shop on an empty
stomach when everything looks
good, buy seasonal fruits and vegetables; check the deh for QUICk
meal ideas and buy small portions
of fresh chopped vegetables from
the salad bar if you're too busy to
chop
,
Kee~ a few basics on hand to
add vanety to qwck meals such as
quick-cooking brown rice, non-fat
dry milk pasta for salads and use
with lefiovers, an assortment of
herbs and spices and foods with
.
•
.
Ion~ shelf life such as dried beans,
lentils and nee.
'
'
Start a rcctpe coUocuon of qmck
meals an.d tdeas. W1.th a hectbc
schedule 11 may be easter to stop y
a dnve-through fast food restaurant on the way home.. Eaung wtth·
out cooking an~ le~vmg the mess
to someone else s kitchen ts hard to
~eSISl. When your dt~n c r menu
tocludes a stop at the drive- through
or carry out .. select foods that arc
brmled or gnlled, baked potatoes,
salads and salad bars. Try to cut
down on htgh fat and h1gh sod•um
foods. A fast-food sandwtch and
fresh frutt or salad can be a nutr•·
uonally balanced. qm.ck.meal.

'"-f;
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\

.. '

4-H actlvztzes set

The Canter' Cave 4-H Camping
organization is planning to have a
day full of activities and demonstiations in tapping maple trees and
making maple syrup on Saturday at
Canter's Cave 4-H Camp off Route
35 outside of Jackson.
A pancake dinner is also
planned.
The demonstration s will run
from 10 a.m. 10 4 p.m. and dinner
will be served from 10 a.m. to 4
p.m. The cost of the dinner will be
S4 for adults, $2 for children ages
12 and under. Pancakes, sausage
and beverages will be available at
the all-you-can-eat dinner. ~
Further information may be
obtained by calling th e Meigs
County Extension Office.

Officers were elected at the
recent meeting of the River Valley
Herhalists held at the home of Connie Hill.
.
Officers are Nava Couch. pres•·
dent; Linda McCoy, vice-prestdent;
Debbie Gilmore, secretary; and
Betty Jones. treasurer.
New chairman were appointed
and it was agreed that the by-laws
will be amended. Changes mclude:
officers will be elected to a two
year Lenn and the treasury will be
audited with the election of new
ffi
o tcers.
Guests at the meeting were Jane

Alfre d
comm
' unity
ne W s

Gwisdalla and Lauana Carafiol, a
missionary from Bolivia.
The cillendar for the year was
presented to those present ~nd
members were remtoded to brtog
their handbooks to the next meet·
ing for updating.
The group created a "friend·
ship" bath bag using comfrey, rose,
thyme, sage and lavendar.
A garden rock workshop was
announced for March 21 at 9 a.m.
It will be a fundraising project for
the herb fesL

The herb-of-the-month report
was given on comfrey, an easy and
fast growing herb, well suited to
background and foundation plant·
ing. It tends to look clumsy and
rough and it overruns other plants.
It is a vegetable, a tea, a healing
.herb, compost activator, a supplemental feed for livestock and soil
conditioner. It has been grown for
centuries as a medicinal plant and
aU around tonic.
It was noted that now is the
'.'thyme" to start an herbal workbook by collectin$ information,
making a list of thmgs to try this
year and designing a new garden or

just a new "theme" bed:
Tbe meeting ended with a birth·
day pany for Connie Hill. Refreshments of cake and sorbet, chicken
salad and raspberry cream were
served by Linda McCoy, Jan Gerhold and Nava Couch.
Tbe next meeting wiU be held at
the home of LouAnn McDonald
near Ravenswood. Tbe herb-of-themonth will be mints by Linda
McCoy and refreshments will be
served by Denise Arnold, Paige
Winebrenner and Sue Hayman.
Linda McCoy and Janet Theiss will
teach the group how to plan their
gardens:

. Thursday, February 27, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

IOWA CITY, Iowa (AP)Prince, known for some pretty
fancy footwork, will leave the
dancing to others in a coUaboration
with the Jaffrey BaUet.
The rock star will compose
music for the ballet "Billboards,"
including one piece based on
" Thunder," a song from his album
"Diamonds and Pearls."
Laura Dean, Charles Moulton,
Peter Pucci and Margo Sappington
will each choreograph a section of
:the baUet.

"I have always been intrigued
by billboards as I've traveled the
highways and byways of Ameri·
ca," Jaffrey artistic dim:tor Gerald
Arpino said in a staLement Wednes·
day. The premiere wiU be in January at the University of Iowa.

spokesman for Dino De Laurentiis
Communications, the movie's producer.
"It's a beautiful place to rilm
and it takes us out of some of the
hysteria we would have in Los
Angeles," he said Wednesday.

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) Madonna's next movie, "Body of
Evidence." casts her as a woman
accused of murdering her lover.
Filmin~ begins in Portland in
April, sa1d Gordon Armstrong,

NEW YORK (AP) ~ Warren
Beatty says he loves being a father
and wants lots more children with
his girlfriend and "Bugsy" co-star,
Anllette Bening.

Pat and Larry Spencer gave a
surprise party recently at the Sargent Recreation Building honoring
the 22nd birthday of their son,
Larry Brian. Refreshments of birth·
day cake, ice cream, potato chips
and soft drinks were served. The
guests enjoyed games. Others present were maternal grandparents,
Charles and Marie Sargent, paternal grandparents, Guy and Evelyn
Spencer, Mr. and Mrs . Dennis
Gumsi and Kim , Roger Spencer,
Carol, Paul and Jamie Erwin, Joe,
Kay, Chris and Beau Bailey ,
Chuck, Janelle, Cory and Kyle SargenL
Debbie Brooks entertained the
Eastern Junior High Cheerleaders
recently with a slumber party at the
end of the season. The group
enjoyed a pizza meal and sharing
memories. Present were Heather
Well, Melissa Demby, Jeanie
Newell, Courtney Knatt and Jamie
Erwin. Heather Howard was ill and
unable to attend.
Donna Stoler of Centerville,
Va., visited her parents, Marguerite
and Delbert Stearns over the weekend.
Katrina and Rick Specht of
Wellston are visiting the Lloyd
Brooks family. Recently the
Spechts and Bob Brooks attended
the musical, Cats, in Columbus.

•MEAT LOAF •SCALLOPED POTATOES
•BAKED BEANS •HOT ROLL

JONATHAN BISSELL

Receives promotion
Jonathan Bissell, a 1990 graduate of Eastern High School, has
been promoted from PFC to Spe·
cialisl/4.
Spc. Bissell returned from
Kuwait in December where he
received the Anny Medal of Commendation for his role in supporting the lith Annored Calvary Reg·
iment.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Glen R. Bissell, Long Bottom. He
is currently stationed at Fort Polk,
La., with the Fifth Infantry Division. His address is Spec. Bissell,
Jonathan, P.O. Box 432 1. Ft. Polk,
. La .. 71459.

GROUPS OF 4

$13

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OR SINGLE

$335

NOW OFFER I~(; PIZZA WITH IlELIVEHY
I~ RACINE &amp; SYHMTSE

SONYliS COUNTRY KITCHEN
(Across From Home National Bank)
3rd Street
· Racine
949·2324

Enjoy Big Savings On Appliances By
Gibson, Kelvinator, F:f:"igidaire and Maytag
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH • FREE DELIVERY

Days
6

By Gibson and Kelvinator

To place an

UPRIGHT FREEURS

Call992-2156

5 cu. ft ............. $249.95 16 cu. lt............ $469.00
8 cu. lt. ............ $299.95 19 cu. ft. ........... $499.00
10 cu. lt. ........... $329.95 21 cu. lt............ $549.00
16 cu. ft ............ $399.95
23 cu. ft ............ $499.95
26 cu. ft ............ $599.95

MoN. thru FRI. 8A.M.-5P.M.- SAT.8-12
CLOSED SUNDAY

POLICIES
• Ad1 oul.lidc Gallia, Maaon or Meip countie~ mwt be prepaid
• Receive di.leount for ad1 paid in advance.
• Free A.dt : GiYeaway and Found ad. under 15 word• will be
run 3 daya at no charge.
• Price of ad for all capilalletlen ia double price of ad c0o11
• 7 point line type only u1ed
• Tribune U nol re~pon•ihle for errora after tint day (check
for erron !tnt day ad runa in paper) . Call before 2:00p.m.
day after publication to make correc:Uon
• Ad. that mUJt be pa1d in advance are:
Card of Thanlu
Happy Adl
In Memoriam
Yard Sale~
• A cluaified adverliaement placed in the Gallipold D1ily
Tribune (except Clauifled Die play, Ow ina• Card or Legal
Notice.~) will a lao appear in the Point Pleuant RegUter and
the Daily Sentinel, rea ching over 16,000 homet

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WITH TRADE

12 cu. ft ...............$399.95 w/t
14 cu. ft ...............$449.95 w/t
15 cu. ft ...............$469.95 w/t
16 cu. ft ...............$489.95 w/t
18 cu. ft ...............$499.95 w/t

4:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBliCATION

95

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PRICE REDUCED!

95
$399

Panill ""'u froMiltJ "'ilblo. Tho IJit 00. boto

rodoced 1o ~. ~ 173,900 ord ow~
roaMog ci 11J Ia BOll ci ~I QIIIOII\1 till\' bo ~
bllor quoilviai penoolo"" ,., ,,, """ 01 3~ "'
" i1 Rocioa: ~ U, 3brtils1 i go~•nted I Bi Ill·
P1apor1y iKOdos 4,800 "'•·~""
(ai61~99HI114for
.

WITH TRADE

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.
STATE ROUTE 124

RUTLAND, OHIO

742·2211
Public Notice

All sOFAS
SECTIONAL$ and LOVESEATS

25%oFF

anter

OCCASIONAL TABLES

25% OFF!

15 STYLES REDUCED
'

STOlE HOURS

Molllay 9-.30-1:00
T-.,.SIIWday
9~5:00 .

I

LOW SALE PRICES

LAMPS and PICTURES
20% OFF
IN StOCK LINOLEUM
$5 49 OFF

DINING TABLES
&amp; CHAIRS

25%oFF
HASSOCKS
25%0FF
ALL CURIOS
25%0FF
CARPET SALE

METAL STORAGE
CABINETS

OPEN STOCK

BEDROOM
FURNITURE
SYLVANIA 25" COLOR
OFF
(ONSOLE Tv
SAVEl
SAVEl
SAVEl

AND.

s4aaoo

BERKLINE RECLINERS
0
.
'$199°
Starting At · · ·

SoN··s
TV's, FLOOR COVERING
OHIO • 992·3671

'

'

PUBUCNOnCE
In eccordlnce with lht
requirement• of tilt Job
Training Pertnenhlp Act of
1112, Section 104, lht lollowing Job Training
Progrom It avolllblt for
publlcrevl•.
PY't2
GAWA COUNTY I
MEIGS COUNTY PLAN
{1ll'llt lronton-LIIwr...e
CAO It lht Admlnilll'lllvt
Entity of SDA 124 JTP.()hlo

CHARLES DILL
AND FAMILY
would like to thank
everyone for their
prayers, cards and
flowers during his
stay In the hospital.
They would also like
to thank Rev. and
Mrs. Keith Rader, the
doctors, nuraes and
staff at Vetenns
Memorial Hospital,
the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad
members and the
Home Health
Services.

To allrelatlvee, dear
lrlende and Immediate
lamlllee we extend our
thanke for your pray•
era, llorolerrengemente1 pllntere, carde,
food oollldlone, vitlletlone end ell other
conelderatlont.
We wleh to thank the
•Plnecrelt Cere Center
for llther"• ·FO!! care
while there, Dr.
Slbbllh, the nureee
and workt,., the emer·
gency ~u~1 ':1olzer
RoeP,lllllnd veteran•
Hoepltelln Huntington,
W. Ve., 8110 phyelclene
endnuiiNthlrt.

~ndldthenkltothe

Comnilndlr 1nd llllmbe,. of o- Webeter,
Poet 38, Amerlcen
Legion lor their IIIVIc•• It the funerll home.
Children of Orrle E.
Herrle: Mr. lind Mr..
Peul Hlrrla, Mr. end
Mre. Mlhon Roueh,
Mr. end Mr.. Mlaon
Fleher._Mr. and Mre.
trn,atHitrll

2

In Memory

IN MEMORY OF
GARY HART
who' paslld away
one year ago,
Feb.27, 1991
"Time passes so
quickly, but It cannot
steal the treasures
we carry In our
hearts."
Sadly missed by
family

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
1 :00 p.m. Sa!urday
1:00p.m. Monday
1:00 p.m. Tuesday
1:00 p.m. Wednesday
100 p.m. Thursday
1:00 p.m. Friday

COPY DEADLINE
Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper
Wednesday Paper
Thursday Paper
Friday Paper
SWlday Paper

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ..•

Rate

Over 15 Words

$4.00
$6.00

$ .20

Words

~ ~-4

SAVE ON FREEZERS
CHEST FREEZERS

oyster shucking operations.
Some 711 of 3.4 IS samples
The agency has not yet released frQm the Pacific- 20.8 pen:entthe findings, which were reported were in violation of fe&lt;Ieral health
in today's Los Angeles Times. or marketing standards, the newsStatistics from only the Southeast paper said, The region consists of
California, Oregon, Washington
and Pacific were available.
Health violations included and Alaska.
decomposition and contamination
In the.,Southeast, 284 of 1,885
with rodent hair, insects or mold. food sa~ples- 15 percentMarketing violations included were in violation. The region conimproper labeling and short sists of Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas.
weights.

RATES

1 card of Thanks

Anderson's

LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
Food and Drug Administration says
one-ruth of the seafood samples it
teSted in the Pacific states violated
the agency's safety standards. So
did 15 pen:ent of samples tesllld in
the Southeast.
The fmdings were based on an
FDA inspection of 3.852 seafood
processmg plants nationwide,
including salmon canneries and

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

RE368N

POOR MAN'S SPECIAL
FRIDAY, FEB. 28-4 to 8 P.M.

A fifth of Pacific seafood tested
violates safety standards; FDA says

APPLIANCE SALE AT '
RUTLAND FURNIIURE COMPANY

•

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-8

10
Monthly

15
15
15

$9.00
$13.00
$1.30/day

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

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

GET RESULTS • FASr.

GalUa County Meig&gt; County Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446-Gallipolla
367-0.ethi··
388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande
256-Guyan Dilt.

643-AniMa DUI.
379- Walnul

992-Ttliddlepo•li

675-Pt. Plea1anl

Pomeroy
985-Che•ter
843-Porll•nd
24 ?-Le11r1 Fall•
949-Racin.e
742-Ruth•nd

458-Le&lt;&gt;n
576-Apple Grove
773-Muon
882-New Hnen
895-Letarl
937-Bufialo

667-CoolviUe

Public Notice
!undo. The Gollle·lrttlgt
CM It the oubrec!f~l•nt of
JTPA Iundt lor G lla end
eounti...
~2 Tht Galll•lrttlgo CAA
wi I deliver program activ~
tiet tor the lollowln~ JTPA
dUoa: nllt UA 71'1Co, lit IIA
3%, nu. ItA '"'· nu. Ita
and nuetu EDWM.
{3) Tht Ohio Bureau of
Empoloyment Strvlcu will
provide Intake and rtlenel
tervlcM to dtltrmlnt and
varlly lht IcltnUIIc.Uon or

u•rr

~ Farm• for Sale

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

ll- Help Wantool

3- Announcemenl.l
4- Giveaway
5-Happy Ado

12- Situationa Wanled

6- Lo.tand Found
7- Loll and Found
&amp;- Public Sale &amp;
Auetion
9- Wanted to Buy

14- Bwine.l Trainif\8
15- School• &amp; ln1truuion
16-- Radio, TV &amp; CB Repair
17- Milcellaneow
16- Wanted To Do

Public Notice
Public Notice
carHr planning oxplor•
oil or plant ctoolng.
tion octiviti•, end rtmeclo
Actlvltltt
Include
Ill education.
Att•amtnt, Job Club,
E. Ill EDWAA: Thlo proand Claloroom Training.
grom tervoo dlatocatod
{7) Golllo-lrttlgt CM wiN
worktrt who are unom- oubmlt oloclronlcollr, to the
ptoyod duo to a moao lay- SDA 124 Admin otrllivt
Entity lht characlerltlict of

Ill \'1'\1

Seed &amp; Fertiliur

~

Au toe for Sale
Truck. for Sale
Yana &amp; 4 WD'1

41- Houiel for Rent
42- Mobile Home. for Renl
43- Farm• for Rent
44- Apart.menl for Rent
45- FumLihed Room•
46-- Spau for Rent
47- Wanted to Rent
48- Equipment ror Rent

Moloreytle.
&amp; Moton for Sale

Boat~

Aulo p.,la &amp; Aeceaaorioal
A~o~lo Repair
Cam.pi.ns EquipiMilt

4~ForLeue

\11

Public Notice
opplictnlt and porticlponto
to the extent to which tho
acUviUu mHllho relevant
portorm.. ce altndlrdt.
{8) All program funding
ltvtlt ond performance
ollndtrda are tub]tcl to
Ftdtnl, Stile, and SDA 124

Livatock
Hay&amp; CrJ.iR.

34-- B1;11ine.1 Buildins35- Loti &amp; Ac.Fea~e
36- Real E.tale Wanoed

t:~

11\ \1)]~1-.

po
Plwnbiq &amp; Heating

51- Houoebold Gooda
52- Spo•ting Gooda

Excavating

Electrical &amp;

Rel•·ogen"io~
General Haulin8
Mobile Home Repair

S~Antique•

54- Mi1e. Me;ehandlle
55- Buildiog Supplies

Public Notice

Public Notice
Dlrteti-.
The above il a

Upho~lery

1umma~

Gallla-lrttlga CAA JTPA
Admlnltlrotlvt Olllct In
ChMhlre, 367-7342 or 112·

of Gallll·lrtelga CAA JTP
programming lor PY '02. H2t.
Complrtle programming dol·
Golll•lrltlgo CM It an
ello lrt available lor review Equal Opponunlty/AIIIrm•
by lht public. For further live Action Employer.
infarm•tion, pleaee·c•lllhe

12) 27, liD

Business Services

ell~ble ~lclnte.

Go lla-lrttlgt CAA
do Ivera Itt f.'~""'' In
accordlnct w lh t policy
Our s,..,. SbJpm. . or
tbolod In lit Ftbrutry 23,
1182 publlahod EEO·AAP Ttoy-Bil11lllen Now I• Stoek.
SllttmenL All Fedlrel ond
r."'mfiJ;fj9("
Stitt Lllwt concwnlnl Civil
Right• and
qual It 50 Wtst, iJioa. Olio •513-llll
2I20IIV3 mo.
Opportunity art followed
and lllltr8d to.
.
{51 Galllll lltlgt CM u. POLE BUILDING
1 doubl..,try ocoounUng
aytttm ID lnourt oound lla·
MATERIALS
col control, accounting,
Imperial
R• Metal
audl~ and debt oolltction
Cut To Length
procodurM and lho proptr
dltburaol end occounUng of
I WEEI DEliVERY
Iundt rtctlvtd In occor·
_!WColars
donee with required Iawa
(
'Jradt •6 all
and ~tallon..
ACIIIIOrltl
(6) rogrMR tctiviUu ptr
tide- •Jollowo:
BAUM
Aanttllltnt It uetd to
LUMBER CO.
htlp tiCh cUenl pltn the
ochltv.ntnt of cer•l·
CHESTER
job golfe, end at • flret
2114ft211 nio.
altp to lht oounty clu•
room training welting llal
AttMtmtnt It Uttd to
http oppllcenl8/clltnte
accttt other funding
touroM and otrvic• In
lht event JTPA fun41ng It
unablt to http due to
GUN SHOOT
lund llmlllllont.
1:00 P.M.
AcUvltlto, ·Length of
nme:
SUNDAYS
A. nue UA 7Ro: (11 Job
Club, Z·3 WHkt, (2)
Starting Sept. 22
Ctauroom ·Training
12 Gauge Factory
{CRTj, varlet to 1 muJ.
mum of 52 WHkl per
Cho~e
program , . ., but not to
ucittd 104 w..U. Firat
conalderatlon will bt
given to funding clltnlt
&amp;:tttttlng lett !han •
cceloureate, (S) Onlhwob TrlfnlnJ, varlet
~., contract, ( ) Youth
ry.Out, Z50 hcura mu~
•Vinyl Siding
mum. ~Ill conelcltr•
·R~Iacement
lion w II be Jlven to
in dow
veter1nt on hend~
•Roollnfc
capped lndlvlduelt
olntulat on
through tht "10%
JAMES KEESEE
WindoW" with tllgl.blllty
992-2772 or
verified by OBEL
742-2097
B. ndetiA ~= Thl•.r,:
539
Bryan Ptact
willagee
"""15o a11d
c1tr .
lrtlddltport. Ohio
orkera
11/14/tln
ov• wiUI ectlvHite lim~
4)

1RIJY-BI£1

CLASSIFIEDS
A
l!d,h!Jdca!

COUNTRY MOBILE HOME
3 Nlct MaltlltiiHits lor Rill
Just Nortlt tl P-oy
Stcrl~ at '225
Call 14-992· 528
or31H227

rs; ...

tl""'

Classilicd today
and hold oul
your hand ...

2 3 92 , ...

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK

992·2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
6·12·90·tln

SUN'S UP
TANNING
•••U•at01d
In l1tlallll

CALL 742·2771

15StsiiML----'25.00
~ StsiiML----'20.00
StsiiMs.---'12.00
I StsiiH
---'150
FREE SESSION WITH MRY
RENEWAL
S..•al ~~ tllotl•s
SCA WOLFE IEDS
2117/1 mo.

RACINE GUN
CLUB

J&amp;L
INSULATION

~Place your

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

&amp; Heal Pumps
•1 00% 2 year parts &amp; labor warranty
•1 0 yr. heat purf11 COrf11resser warranty
•Free estimates
Mobile Home Heating &amp; Cooling

1391Stffft SdiHI R!L
G 'IJ all, Olio
' Cll
446-9416 •l-800-172-5967

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.
New Ho••• e Ylayl Sidiag
New Garages • Replace•••• Wiadows
Roo• ldditioas • Roofiag

COMMERCJ.U. and RESIDENTI.U.
FREE ESTIMA'I'I'.S

614·949·2101 or 949·2160
(llo Sunday Calla)

• Ow Sprioa lllol...... Of
'n-ol.;BUt '1\Den Now I• &amp;.ek.
' )I r l.otol
D.ol.,.

\

fiJ;IJib.ID'S

WAKE

.lf. lll Wtst, .... Dlio•lls.Jlll

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS &amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Licennd and Bonded
PH. 614-992-5591
12·5-tln

•New Homes
•Garan••
•Co•p eli
Remodeling
Sto~ &amp; Co:lare .
F EE UTI
ES :

TROLLEY nATION

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS:

CUFTS
Felt. 10 tltru 14

Air Conditioners

TRIJY-B/£1'

s'pecial Valentine
Hours -10 to 8
FEB. 11 - Adult lllaktt
C!Htoa- 6:30p.m.
FEB. 24- lllgln- Acrylic
Painting eta..

For More lifo Call
614-992-2549
Open llon.-s.t.10 om-5 pm
SUndiJHpm

Quality
-flone Co.
SIZED LIMESfON
FOR SALE
Call 614·992-6637

St. Rt.7

985·4473
667·6179
·2-7·92-tlo

New Homes,
Additions, Siding,
Pole Barns, Painting,
Gara~es, Porches

FR I ESTIMATES

614·742·3090 or
304·773·9545
NO SUNDAY CALLS
2114f9211 mo.

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS
Specializing In Custom
Frame Rl~alr
NEW &amp; USED ARTS
FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODELS
992·7013 or

992-5553

OR TOLL FREE

I·100·141•0070

Cheshire, OH.

DAIWII, OHIO

7131f91/tln

2112192

tar to ..... "" liA 7fi.

n••

c.
lA .,, Thi• "'"'
gram wiU ""' tdulll Ill

.

long ltrm lnlnlnj] It publlcly lundtd · - Inldtu-

""pol=

!lone
tohool
lrllnlng. 1'11 P-'11
In
1hl1 training proirall
muet be In lonl term
lrolnlng. Four ( rnr
dtt':.l'ogreme '"
r.«"Titlli II: 'llllt Protrani
lllglll puth II·
121 ,...,.
~:I
thetll'l'F
tltrough Work Experl·
Mloe, Job Club, other

of.:::..

IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
31!111 Gold Aida- Rotd
Pomeroy,
Welcome Slates

Ohio.,...

$20.00

CuiiOII Pllnllngo

81441N242

MICROWAVES
VHSCAMERAS
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED
H:EeCe

MEIGS
GOLF COURSE
MEMBERSHIP FEES

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Buildiag
EVERY · .
SAt HIGHT

6:30P.M.

Starting

28

Men...............'27S •·
Wollllll......,;•.'225 ta.
'450
F ly............'550

&lt;:;t..........-....

�27 1992

1o-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcements

18

Thursday, February

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

41 Houses for Rent

Wanted to Do

71

'2:1, 1992

Au1os for Sale

OhiO

LOSER
Ill Olti:U. TO

GO£ .. ,I [)t)t.li

r.'Hil£ '100~

011,00 I

~'(OI)R

KOOI!IIT ... . . - ' - .

AT IT, WE'LL

KNOW 8Y
H&amp;AR'I'!

~lES&gt;T BY - ; ; , ! r i

l'U. HA'£

fol.&lt;A)

PIIOHb,~

10 LOOK

YOORCftDIT

~'iOJR

tlUD

Television
Viewing

ITL

~·

~~ITOP

~~~IT"(

THU .. FEB. 27

•

EVENING

~

til til • !Ill
illl Howl

8:oo (2) •

a •

.

11
· .~__,P,..O~C_U~R:..--1 ~~~
I" 1 I'---1..1-l.!.,1

~=~:;;·~80

Br:t!
"
1111kll
Sonlor

I LOVED VOUR
REPORTTODA'i' ON
RAINWATER ,SIR ..
I ~OPE M
TEAC~ER GAVE
Ll.l.l,...,.,._ YOV A GOOD

~

3

1

PQA

I
I I 1 I I I'

Todoy

18 Rln nn nn, K·9 Cop

G

Sterso. 1:;1
·
8:05 (I) Btvtrty HHiblllel

.

illl. Andy Qrlfftlh
9ScoobyDoo

Giveaway
8
s-puwlu, pan Chow, 614·742·

~2

Public Sale
&amp; Auc11on

~~~~~~--Rick Purson Auction Company, to

8 wk okl pari T1rrler!Gtrman
Sttephtrd pup!Mtl, 3 malu, 2 11.111 tlmt 1uctlonMr, complete
tuction H"ict. LletnHd Ohio,
females, 304·895·3925.
Wnt VIrginia, 304-773-5785.
Famale Pftbull &amp; 3 Pltbulll

Shephard pups, 814-949-247'9

Froo Puwy, Bleck, Fomalo, •
WHkt Old. 614-245-5986.

9

FrH To Good Home: 2 Calico
Cats, 9 Months Old . 614·37i-

Hsrley Davidson, rauonablt
prlca, after !ipm 614-843·5279
ask lor Jim

2502.
lull· stock
roostart, 614-742·2754
sr.:

11

(6)

Banly

To giveaway- 1 hamster, 614·
992·2219

Wanted to Buy

;:;::::::--;::::7.;::::-=--::.:~=

Used Mobile Homea, Cell 614·

~~;;..,::;:·~~::::---;c::o:-7":'­
44 6

17 5

Wantld To Buy: Jun·k Autos
With Or Without Motors. Call
Larry Lively. 614·388·~ .

KrutY. 5PEOO K

Driven

ec-:

6:35 (J) Andy Qrlflllh

!liGHT

7;00

WITH /If, FRI[),I.Yl

Financial

SSSO wkly., PT· FT, all thlfts,

Ill.

l1l MtcHoll~lhrer

21

Business
OpponunRy
INOTICEI
LABORERS WANTED
To $15 HR No Exp. Will Train PT· OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
FT, Ught Factory WCM'k . 1-800572-52b3. .
Laborer~ WantMI
to St5hr., no nperlence, will
train, part·Umt, fuii.Cimt, 11~1
factory work, 1-800-572-4203

Training

Retrain
Nowii!South•attern
Butin... Collage, Sf~~~ Vallty

Plm. Call Todliy, 61

-136711

Raglltll'ttlon dO-OS.1274B.

PIN down EXTJU

New1Hour

• star!;'TiHo

_,.lion

f.:OE':If"i

I
SALE;
NoT· !f'JTI~ fLY·

614-367-G64i.

'79

i

1088 S·1D Bllztr 4 whiM drlv1,
PB, AC, AT, Vortex V.. motor,
304-875-61151 or 304-805-3198.
•

'

'' c•a

NtwtHour

!Ill Whtel

lllall-11 Nort11
Carolina al Flortda State tL)
1111 Cronftre
'
7:35 (J) Sln!Oid ond Son
1:oo Ill • illl eoa~~, Show c11t1
Is forced 10 reallz~ Rudy has

bedroom
304-615-

""t.

Small furnished apar1m1nl, 116
Tex And Titl1 Down. Pr~ownld Slate St . C'all614-446-3356 .
Moblla Homas, U11 Your Tax
Refund SO Hom11 To Choose. Small furnished a¢. on MI. Ver·
EIHI Hom1 C1nt1r, 1-800..589· non Avt, upslalrs.'~1 bedroom,
sno.
$225. plus IIIC, 1111 &amp; dep, 304-

44e-1037.

11tl 14180 Sunahlrtt MobUa
Hom1, 3 Bldrooma, 2 Battis,
Taka over PIJmtnts, $234

675-2651.

Tal'll Townhouu Apl.: 2 Br, 2
floors 1,160 sq. 1111, 1·112 bath,

CA, CH, dllhwaaher &amp; dlapoul.

Playground, 2 poola, atar11ng
$308. Electric noc Included. l'fot=.

387-7650.

4

5

monthly. 114-446~325.

2 acras with 12l!5 moblll homs,
$7,500. :JOC-571-2550 etter 5:00.
3 bedroom, 1411:70 mobile homs,
1
ac111,
llfra
room
wtwoodbumer, covartd porch, 2
l1ve1 decka In back, woodthad,
grut cond, 304·576-2783.
Sholl Tlmo On

Furnished
Rooms

Rooms tor rent • wuk or month.
Starting at S120fmo. Gallla Hotel.
614-44&amp;.9580.
::c--;----,.,---,-SIIIplng rooms with cooking.
Alto tnller apace. All hook-ups.
Call after 2:00 p.m., 304·77:15651, M11on WY.

Job? P..t Crodlt 49

For Lease

Hillary A Probltm? Many ::--..,:-::,...---:---'"""
RtpotNUid Moblll Homta To Second Floor · Apsrtment For
ChOOM From. Small Down Lilli! L.A., One B.A., Bath,
Payment. Call1-80().589-5711.
Kitchen WI Stove l Refrig.
Wat1r Fumlahld, No P1t1. Cot·

14xll, 2BA, 1 112 nar Second •

Plno~

~.~..~~-Angle Iron. 64 Hay &amp; Grain
Paclcard BelL IBM Compa11blt ;;H,::-y::-:s=-q-.:.:,.::!.:aa=,:.:,.:,
.
6;:1;,:4;,:u='=e"'-1=m.
Computer, 1111SX, $700

In
SoftWIF11 Alrudy lrwtlllld.
$1~00 Firm. Cll1114-44&amp;-447i.

lArge plall

lila: llnted, 7ft. 7

~i!~e\'l~~do. 1100

For Slit: 1~ Aidman Oanvillt,
Totll Ellclric, Set-Up On Rented
Lot Exctlllnt Condition. Call

51

33 Farms lor Sate

Big Savlnga On All Cerpot In
Stock. Call! And Carry, Mol-

31114.

Household

i-71i::--::A;:ut::.:o;,;s:,l:.:;o~r.:;S::;a:.:le~'81

15111.

Tralltr
door,
tlomlmiiSa n•g~,

34"1:&amp;:~~~
At~trl OliHU

' "':ss'"'n3631
bow ··-· 2 o111o,

-..

Trudmll 1111. thr11 wh11l
bicycle~~~ ahort meat

~~ f:~, usa is

.

Chromo -IL oruv. 304-1751121 or 175-111:13.

1080 Cutllll NMda Work, Runs
$400. 114-31'-7723.
1084 Chavrollt CIIIMI'O, red,
auto., air, tllilt AMIFMiallreo,
niW 11'", II y driven, extra
•h•rp. M1.111 •• t4 aoo MgOo
tlable. 814-317.(MQ9
1 p.m.

,ft.,

Motorcycles

Coldopo1; a11 wood teblo with
ll9•r.l14·246-l171.

55

lohan Carpite, t14-44 .. 71144.

Compecl oleclrlc 2 lemparotwe
dryer: all wood 7 draw• daalll

4 ..... dltk; 17 cu. ft. c:hMt
frwttr, flaah dlfroet. Sllrs
dropleal, tlnglt built body ma•

•rt•

o.B.o.e~4UIIIt.

month buye 1U hroo lola, a304571-2722. ·
L.ot•.lolnlnt Point • 100% owner
tlnonclng at I10fM por morlh
buye, en '"'" 304-6712722.
Nice Building I.GI1/Z To Ucroo,
AvellabiO Ori AodftW Plu, lloer
-u.s. :sa a-: R-od.
Afteri:OO,Calf-.

U- Rlwr Ril. Baakle c.oot Moll!. ean _ . , . . , .
LAYNl'8 I'URNITUIII
Complolo 11omo tumllh'11oo 111, w. 114-*~ OU\ I-IIII Rd.
·
Mallil ..... dining ·""""
1eblo1 .hutch, 4 llhaln 1425;
--uvorortb-

=:::;:;:::::..,.,=:-==="'

per ranges. '

suoai

ANdl,::

-=

~•.'·3114-&amp;,._1'117 or

11nlllll"" ii.ikidtd. .1110 ·-·
monlh. -110101 178-1017. llayllg . . . - dryll,

-

and

no1 , _

=:,.:z. ·=~ ::.v.':f::
ta·TUI

PICKENS I'UAI!ITUAE

$4

Qlti:

"L 2M2xh

r:;,::;r.:•

1

or arHM4.

1NI Jlarllllnne ~~t!!!, muot
1M to apprecllt~t :NOH~2513.

11111 Plymouth Turtamo,

low

mllw, sun root, S1,DOO. 1187

Horlton 441 mil" gal, t1,510.

• ,,..,_ 304-678-2440.

:,n.;:t Fr- ,.U.ro, 114:.::,::,:~:::,:.,.,.---,::-::---

Haunhokl tumleNng. 112 mt

2

UlooAftw
Now.I:DO
1100
441-1221,
P.M....... 114-

121 PtlmeNowa 1:;1
18 That'l My OOll Stereo.

10 DRII-JK ..

wh.-4 drive .tartlna at 1140.00

79

Travtl Motor home:

n

THE: 1='/&lt;lt=NDSHIP CUJS~

All P-r Air liltlollenl Condl·
lion. 11;i00: t14 Ul 4225, Altlr

~DEVER ...

Oodg1

R

ID ._llrNt Slortoo

Serv1ces

ereo:. 1;1

illl. -.ry HIHI, 10210

Dylan and Branda are faced
with lh8 temptation ot
che~tlng. Stereo. Q
9 MOVIE; Cop iRJ (2:00)
Holhvtll Now Stereo.

....................... ~·
Home
imprDV8m8nJ8

---;,;:;;=:::::;,::.::.:.:__
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Uneondhlonal llfttltU guaran-

tll. Local refwlnc•

fum~.

Fr11 eatlrnlt... Catl eolltct 1·
514-:!Sr-11411, clay or night.
Aogtrl Blurntn1 WatM'prooo.

a

121 unr KJno uve1
ID FotlttLDowtlng My.-a
S"tereo. ljJ
1:30 Ill • t1J Wino• Helen lrles
stand-up comedy after s
cer~l suggests ~.
Srereo.
~
llltkllblll UCLA
· al Southam California (L)
10:110 I]) • illl L.A. Law Rollins
reprasants his father In a
r,:::ation cese. Stereo.

BARNEY
I'M GOIN' OFF
FLOAT FISHIN'
FEll TWO
SOLID

MIND IF I

TAG ALONG,
SNUFFY?

WHOU KEEP
AN EYE ON
TH' RIFFRAFF,

PERZ.ACTLY
WHY I'D LIKE TO
TAG ALONG!!

SHERIFF?

WilKS II

tmpre~.,...,.• :

Home

Curtle

YMro Expwlloooa

On Oldar 1
Ntw., HoimH. Roam Addi:IDnl,

Foundation

KHcllono And

won.

aa...

..-.g,

_.,!tina

Qaa~

S....YIC ·

........

Ci'Mk Ad, Putt, •.-

pllol, pickup. ond

441..214• .

dol-.114-

Will build polio - · daclur
..........or · itolrllrrg.
""' .. vln-;;
oldlng
lrollor
1j4:

.

Plumbing &amp;
Heating
Carter'a Plumlolng
Fourth and Pine

G~~~~:.io

84

ElectriCal &amp;
Ralrlgltl'lllon

.U..'l:l• 1 lllyr
=· otC::.."':lt'.ral!a!""h
oa.
.....

Graph. predlcllons today by mailing VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sopl.
$1.25 plus a long, self-addressed. , willed associate mlghllry 10
stamped envelope to Astro-Graph, C/o

cislbns on you today In a

this nowtpaper, ~.0 . Box 91428, Cleve· where you should be exercising
BERNICE
land, OH 44101·3428. Be sure to SIBle own judgment. Don'! cave ln.
LIBRA (&amp;opt. 23-0c:l. 23) Responslbll·
BEDEOSOL your zodiac sign.
ARIES (lllrch 21•Aprll11) Through lhe Illes that require Immediate attenllon
g&lt;&gt;odausplcesotothers, asltuallon you ·should be' attended to loday and
have to roaotva could pr01jress ralher' . put off until later. Don't be oblivious
smoothly today. It would be a different their urgency.
story It you had to manage II unasslst· . SCORPIO (Oct 24-Hov. 221 There
e&lt;l, though.
s1rong Indications you might be upllgh!l
'TAURUS (April 20-Moor 20) You mlghl today, a result ot placing too
'hava1o deal today wtth someone who Is , nlllcance on trivial Issues. It you're gO·
ralher .unreuonable. However, II, you ' lng to wooy, wor,Y about some!hlng
employ IIIIer once .,d potlence, you can . :-'hwhlle.
l'ef!10Y8. this lndlvldu~l'a lange.
'SAQnTARIU8 (How. 23-0.C.
QIMINI (llllr 21-.lune 20) Even though · .' lei your ego ·lake control ot your beh.av-t
you fMY not UN the moallffoctlvo lac- :lor today In alluallons that put you be........ 1112 .
Ilea today, It loolcallke you'll be able to tore tiMI' public. You might think
Y011 wUI 'have emP.Ie opporturltlelln the 1 acllleve an lmportanl obtoctlve. Onjy, look good, but !he general
year llhead, but you mlghl not capltollze 1 yoolr ~ory mlghl not be Iota!.
·:m•y dlugrao.
on
properly In lhe early montha., CANCIII (June 21-.lulr :at) You may CAPIIICCIIIII (Oec. 22-.lln. 11)1n
IJ1d rewll'dl orellklly to f have1o -'&lt; ~today wtlh an lndl- to advance y011r Mlf-lntoroota
'
lhe l8lllr holt ollhe yew.
i vldull Who -lhli!Q. from a dlfflrent mltllt be -•o cl......-01~11~'\:~''f; 1:
(l'lb. io IIIINtt 201 The good , porafiiC(Ive then
do. This arrange- 1 • who you know trom 0,
oneS your m.to '!'lohl · ment will hove .to be handled m..,. your ldwrury thin
o game plan 1111111 ,- dlplooMIIcally.
AQUAIIIUI (.lin. \i)ROb·bmg
IIMI'JI//ty egrMd upon, I~ ICIIonl ot, LIO (olutJ D-Autl. :at) Be very ~lin ; Pot01 to Poor P111111 'nota
IIICih
you oaukl prove countwpro- : bull-·m.tttrllodly. You don 1wont · mlniiQI your rooourcoo
~. Gel 1 tumP on life by ur)der- to wuto 1 lot of time end effort 11omcould pul you In a position
you'll
ttatdtltG the ~ governing you -'no out whll you think Ia a good ' he,. two olrolno on your budget lnotood
In the ,..O:,~. I!end for your Aolro- , .,dell, only to flnd oullllen't.
ot jllolone.

(•

,,

~'

..

.'

-

Start by counting lhe points. Th~r~
are 16 missing and West has produ~
three of them . So surely East has the
club and hear! kings for his openiog
bid. You run the heart to dumrqy'.s
.eight, repeat the heart finesse and
draw East's king. Nexl cash your d\3"
mond tricks. When everyone follows,
it is possible East has a singleton club.
Lead a club to dummy's ace and hope
the king tumbles ~own.
~ ,._ NIWIPAPER ENTIM'NIE ,...,..

rOH

21 Fllghtleu
bl1d
22 Wriggly tlah
24 Snaky !oiler
26 Mlddlo
30 Pickpocket,
o.g.
; 34 Lengultl

,

auHlx

59 Drunktnnea•

62WWIIorll
63 Regu11110n
64 Emil coher·
onllltht
65 D1wn
66 Mild Ollh
67 Went quickly
68 Aclrooa
Susan -

DOWN

35 RUIIiln no
37 Tan

3 Calllo lho
phone
4 - Slandtrd
Time
5 1,051,

Roman

6 Blltballlr

1 Traublll

38 lmpiiUOUI

Ananr to Previaua Pu11t.

40 Sllghl
lnlonllonally
42 Vegelablo
box
43 Exlorior
45 Subjocltcl to
vapors
47 Long lime
49 Gumo
·
50 Sup~rlatlvo
ouftlx
53 Joyful
uclamallon
55 Brolhor ot
MOitl

2 Knock II otl

Berra
7 Campacl

8 Conctll

9Ytt, - !

..

10 Spenloh trt11t
11 nmt- -

17
tg
23
25
26

-

hill
:: ::
Flbor
Allow lo
Placn
The women
M~c:kortl 'a

r1IIUY1

27 Jacob't twin :
28 Blrd'o
birthplace
20 CurYtcl glooa :
31 Mloallubbr . .
32 American ,.
Indian

:

51 Cozy

:

33 Sum ol
,
mo111y
36 Bl!'-rlna'o
lklrt
3g- Haw
41 Stopped (on ;
boord ohlp) ·'
44 Lluth loudly 1
48 llolorllts' •:
arg.
•,
48 C11WI
~
50 Emorold lolo '
52 Layer at

•

UIIUI

•

54 Accumuletlo~

Rallartlon

..,..+-+-i

10:1M (I) MOVIE: PMy - : Tile
CaN of the Sl-.g lhar
(2:00)
10:30(!) Woahfrtglon Report
Croolt """ Chl11
11;ool])e (I) (JJ• a
It)-

Pass
Pass

sive shot at game. West led the spade
queen and continued with the spade
jack. East overtook wilh the king;
cashed the spade ace, West discarding
a club, and switched to the heart six:

ail::"'
18 700 Club With Pot
a

Ealt
l•

Opening lead: • Q

Sumner; V~l unOKptcted
help. Stareo.

.,

t ..

Pass
Pass

aPierce
c•
~~nota unc11no
lllamplllo murder

M

Pkll Cill 1111'1 ',Faot. NO,
Gl8lf: With Chlldrtnl 114411-

Nortb

Pass
2+
Pass

(I)

Roger At : 614 44ftlll.

101M epphnce I'JPIIra. WY
304-611143111 Ohio 114-141-24114.

2"
4"

West

~PtlmeTimt Live
Slareo.
11) A
ttn1 ot Robin
Hood
I!)Undlrflre

Proa b-

timl1aol
" " " ' - No Job To
Bit Or SOMIIII&gt;l-141-02211.
Renovotlone, Add Ono, Roopal!
Pointing, Quollty · Wcorl11 Can1

Dlvle

1 Snake
4 Frolhwaler
tortoise
8 Jane Austen
IIIIa
12Call-day
13 Uly genua
14 Ptotll
15 Diary
16 AdVIrtlalng
fixture
18 Vorloly ot
whtal
20Arooe--

9;00 (2) e

9915.

81

ACROSS

Stereo.

IDJ Chllrl Frasier and
Lllllh agree lo renew their
wedding_ vows. Srerso. C
cZl ·l!l Myi*Yf Polrolliis a
rosa named In his honor at
Chelsea Flower Show.

Sou1b

The World Almanac ®Crossword Puzzl• .

18 You Atktcl for I~ Again

chu11s fully Hlf contained.
Low m1l11g1. $5,211. 114-SII-

'1..":£•

a-rt and ..,.... lhopPot
I
121111 or tn-3157
-oolnQ. All llieida, IIYIII.
1917
Olda
Dlbl II, 11,000 lllioo,
;:,_: ~~=r. Julio

FRIEN~ R:&gt;R~

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North

heart support South took an aggres- ·

§ Amerlcln Mulk: Shop
THROI:6H 600DTIME5.AND
a&lt;l.[;l TH I&lt;OUEIH THIO&lt; AND
THI&lt;!OLl6H THibl ...

+s'

Pender bidding system.
Flint died in 1989. bul Freddie
Norlh has revised the book, leaving in
alithe best malerial !rom the firs! two
sections and updating the final pari.
"Tiger Bridge Revisited- (Maxwell
Macmillan Bridge, $15.95, 212·866·
5860) contains a lot of sound advice.
Today's hand is one of the easiest
from the book. North's two-spade cuebid showed a maximum pass with

seves Sprtngtleld from a
lllfleer disaster. (R) Stereo.

YOU GET Ml: /le'IWR

+K

which concentrates on the Flint- How would you continue?

~Are YOII Being Sttvod?

WHAT DO I EiET IF I -JOIN

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

+9765 32

.AQJ104
t AQ4

In 1970, British expert Jeremy
Flint, in collaboration with Freddie
North, wrote "Tiger Bridge." It fol ·
lowed Flint's successful lour of Norlh
America, where he played with Peter
Pender. Flint sel a record - only bFoken in 1989 by Sabine Zenkel - by be·
coming a Life Master in under II
weeks. The book was divided into
lhree parts: "The Mind of the Tiger,"
wilh technical pointers on bidding and
play; "The Jungle," with tips for doing
better at both duplicate and rubber·
bridge tables; and "Tiger Language,"

Scoundrel t2:00)
1:30(2). i111 Dllltrwnl World
Dwayne Is caughlln a
compromising situation In
Wl1111ey's room. (PI2) Stereo.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

• K7 6
t10753

The tiger
is back

illl• Tile Slmp10n1 Homer

S14-24S-Se77, 114-62-1213.

1117 Ford Aero IW Vln, low
UC. cond, 1~~ call

..

CAN'T 1-\VRT HIM

•s

EAST
+AK987

+112

CaN of the Sclnclllout

Jontcho Rd. PL PI~, WV, ·jtll3~-;;~~fiiiii;;,:;i"'i:
OIIIM-171-1410.
1111111 AR~ Rtglllued, 2~ ...; - r I ~1111 ......1oa-.:.1rr old,

=-.ii'o.==

~ITT!.£. MAI&lt;R!Mf.

WEST
+QJ
3
t8 6 2

SOUTH

8:05 (J) MOVIE: ....., MalOti: Tile

AKC fl!llallood VCIIklllln, IIIII

Nttt''lld

A

Auto Pans&amp;
Accassortas

76

;;,;.;..;;;;=;;;...--...,.--

4p.m.

l:l:l'&gt;fT MVC ..

1-'(JiA..!

-lallat. Me"'ury cerillled.
Mobil!,_We come to yo&lt;o. 11425i-lo1V.

=~~ r.;,. ~=
--.

reo:··~Plil~r.:.l
potooo. 104-11W207
.

AND DI(INI\!NG

I3UT J. 'miNK If A&amp;.H

~y i&lt;J,O,US

for Sale
BOATERS

241ft2.

UIU(ty lulldlng, 3011401110 10ll12
elldlrig d- 1 -.00, 24x40110

56 . Pets for Sale: ,

W IUIFE: SAYS 11\ARI&lt;'!AGE.

1964 whhe Floro, 1-111 reck, Ron'e TV Service,
auto, AC, PW, PL, Alf-FII cau, In Z:.nllh OliO llr¥tcina mooil
9!', ~~ f"".!L~1~. firm. othlr brlndl. Houa ealll,·lieD
;MM-8

shettare&lt;l and Bart is thrtlled
by lhe news ot itltude
scores. Stereo.
9 Murder, She rote 1:;1
8 Oft Stagt Stereo.

75 Boats &amp; Motors

tlng.
Complete MobMe Homo Sllt.Upe,
Roopaloo; Commtrlco~ - .
llal lm-ta. Including:
Plumblnt, Electrical. 1n1unnC1
1084 Flrablrd, V.. IUIO, T-topt, Clelmo Al:cepted, 114-251-1111.

Alw A•ortH Wielding ~"'
For Selt Dr Rent. Site: e To 11. shlrp car, runt great, $2300
Formol Oqwno For Ball Dr Ront. obo, 114·'742·2317
I :DOpm
Call Aft.- 4 P.M. t&gt;l-2-51 Dr
stop ly To Seo Our Dttplay, Rt. 1014 Plymuth Rllllnl, no rwt,
38, Jacklon Plica, Clalllpolla. runo sjood, plfttCt Interior,
Colftl Peal Bodlmoro Erxon, 22MPO, tailing $110, 114-lQ·
3141aft•4pm
2o\d Whle Houao On Left.
1il4
PonUec Grand Prlx, V-1, Air
Wlndehleld And Badelt Baae
For Haney Dlvldeon. 114-141- Cond., PS, AIIIFM C....ne, 2dr,
Good Condition. 12,100, Dr
mt.

Goods

1121• Top Cops Acop
Interrupts a rape In progress:
an otflcar chases an Aalan

EEKANDMEEK

Buclatt Tr1ntmllilonl UNCI &amp;
2.6L·FIIOD. oobulll,
etanlng It Iii; ~ont

Calebrl1y.

e

Van·1MO Chevy Aatro only
13,000MI, hla Hartland converalon package. M1.11t ... to apjnelatl clll 814-VI2-21011 attar
4:00pm, $15,000

WATER WELLS DRILLED:
WATER OAURANTEED. 514-864- 1VI4 Dodge Artn, 4 door, bl1ck,
7311.
AMIFML CliHltl, 4 C)'l, new IX•
Wllddlng BouqUII For Sale: h1U11, a14-MQ7231, evtnlnp

evallablo, 304-676-2722.
Lola In New Haven • 100ll.

Rentals

Transportation

Mlcrowavt1 Electric Ty~rttar, Loaded. $2650. 614·~22 lf·
2 Rldlal Arm Sawe, 1 Bench ttr!lpm.
Saw, Other MIIC. 114·251-1238.
1VM Mu~ang FISt Back; 1V85
PIHaburgh Iaiii ceiling ptlnl~ S.10 Ch•vrolit, 814·371-:2645.
110." per gellon. Wolf • trim 19117 Chevy Nove SS. Alto
!lot la1n paln1· $11." per gal·
11ft bolt wllr.llar I
ion. Sam4looo lain polnt· Crellllner
HP Evenrud1 motor. C1ll af·
114." per gallon. I ft. wood 85
olep ladder· lit.". Burpoto t•r· lor Spm. ~75-11133.
den llfdt. 20% off 111gular 1971 Lincoln Contlnantal, good
prtce, Point Plua, 2415 Jacilon lha~ $8(15. 304-882-2052.
A... 304-6711-1014.
1m Ford T-Bird SIOO. 11111 halt
Suro rot 1100. Roor model ion Chev=lck-up 11,000. 1817
ltno $50. Glau lop kHchan Ou1d S
4 whlller 11,350.
tablt 140. Domootlc -1no m• 304·773- 011.
chine $50. DrMo- Hor\da 3
three whttllt $200. 304-675- 1t1111 PonUac Flro'!l.!!l1 v-e, ,,. 0 .

. Building
Dlnatta Nt(woodln table &amp; 4
Supplies
chairs) S125.00 304-875-1841
Block, brlclc, Dlpoo, tolnFour Piece Ol.letn Slu Bed- -..Jintell, oto. Cllildl Winroom Suitt, Oood Condition, ton, - Orondo, DH Call 1141400L. Firm. &amp;14-UI·1221 Alt11 24U121.
· S:OO P.M.
0000 USED APPUAHCE8 =::•~ Two oar
Woohoort dryoq re.frlll!nl
24xh
xh
1
11

Trtolltt lot for-· Wllll -

2: Tile lltalnnlno !RJ 12:00)
tolumbo A
villainous psychic murders a
magician wilh his Irick
llloUna. tR) Stereo. C
Tho Aotrano"*l Slerao.

(I) (JJ

Gulnnt M1rcury Martne Servic1.
Merc~ry. Mariner, MtrcruiNr

Ed
LII Ul help you buy or 11t1 your $450 obo, 1~0 Ford F1lrmont,
prom gownt. $'10. fM. Foxy Nns great, nlldt mulller, 614Loc:kt, NIW Haven, 304-882"· w.!-1931

Galllpolla. 514-

bath. CA, 110,000, 304-875·3278 $230. Plr Month; ueposlt R•
after 5:30.
qulrad. C1ll 6t4-446-4241, $14·
446·2325, Or 614.,.4&amp;-4425.
Esay Al1, 2, 3. File You'rt Tun
Hart And Buy Htre. Kin You're
Landlord OoOdbv•l EIMI Homt
Merchandise
Canter, 1-800.5Q.571D.

$tOUe

Stereo.

(I) MOVI ; Milling In Action

§

W1 Buy, StU, Tmle, Und Hlr·
leye, Puts And Acceuori11
Available. 814-4,...7055.

1887 Fleming 14x70, 3br, 2 Full
Bath1,
CA,
Underpinning,
Stor1ga Bulldl ng, Wuher And
Drier. Muot SH lmmedlaloly.
Take Ovar Payment, N'o
AHionaiMe Offer Atll.llld. 61~·

roached~dolescence .

12,200, O.B.O. I14-2SI-6251.

74

One
and
two
1partment1 lor
2053 or 675-4100.

Family Feud

~ Collogt

For Sail: 1983 Full Site Bronco,
4 Wh"l Drive, Auna Good,

Sectional Home For Stla : Above
Average Condition, 14 Yeart
Old, $18,000, Negotiable. 614·
381..!491.

1:;1

fortuftl

8a o Stllr Sterso.

79 Chev~ 4x4truck, P9, PB, new
ptlnt, 2i,135 ICIUII mll11,
$3,000. 304-875-3187 attar 5:00.

In town two 11ory, thrtl bid·
rooma, lull b111m1nl, 1·1/2 bath,
atlachad 1-1f2 car garage.
C.n1rtl heal and air. Evenings
C1ll 614-446-8707.

lor Sale

PHILLIP
ALDER

By Phillip Alder

/ij MecNo~thnr

u,aoo

Fl1twood Area, Pomeroy, Large
Country Hom1, New Kitch•"·
81th I Carpeting. Low $30"t,
Qualflltd Buyer. 8f4-446-2359.

owner fl01noln, at

• ••

Ntw top,

mllea. 11800. 304-175-1264.

Lots In Gallipolis Ferry • 100%
owner ftnenc:lng at 118.64 per
month, any ont ot klur Iota

•• - J,..

CJ.a JNp.

0129.

Lots lor tale~lltrs ICCiplabia. 304.f15-ocru.

Cnll pur ~flir.e f~r j11Jid In nflt'flnr.e ratn-r

Ill• Moirled...WM ChHdren

73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's

3 Bedroom Brick Ranch Style,
Baument Full, Built On Garage,
2 Acrea, $60,000 Home: 614-367-

35 Lots &amp; Acraage

3 gqpen,$6.00. .

Slerso.£;1

1

CA~J

31 w ..c,. tarm near Al.ltland
OH, nlc• 2-atory larm houtt,
~rga barn 1 7-outbulldlnga, 112·
ICrt wen stocked pond, 101:1 ol
lrult tfHI, grapevltlle •nd blr·
rial aaklna ~1000 call
lvtnlngt 814-.,.2-zra

1itrn your duller in.to cash,
SeU it tlte easy wa.y... by pholle,
no need to leave your /rome •..
l'lacP- your clcusilied ad today!
15 words or l.es8, 3 'dan,

·,

fO/Z

S14-367-0131Afttr 5 P.M.

CA&amp;H9rl
--------- ...

8portiContW
1111 Manoyl111
18 Tile Wlllant
7:06 (J) Acldem• Family
7:30 (2). illl JtoplrtiY! c
(I) How H Can Bt toiiJ
(I) Enl8rlllnmlftl Tonight

.. rofl.tiGIY

32 Mobile Homes

Nfll1

~

To Sell: $49,900,
Ohio. 904·932-6959,

~-132·111111,

tKJ9
+AQJIO

9 MocOlvor £;I

31 Homes lor Sale
Chethir~

"982

ITonight

"

1-Z'I-tt

+10 6 3

Cu1NIII Allelr C

Real Eslate

R.clucld

NORTH

BRIDGE

Corntro

Cond

IJ)Legl-~

recommends that you do buslnell with peopl• you know, and
NOT to ""d monay through the
mall until you have lnvn.lfgated
the ofterl"g.
Compultr ganerated portrait
business tor sale: State of the
art tqulpmant, Including: Ink jet
prlntar, color vkllo camera, &amp;.
computer. Operate your own
buslnns ma~lng t-tfllrts, pos·
ters1 &amp;. coHN muga. 1 year old.
Pala $'14 000, wllf ucrlllct lor
$6,500. Grut lor malll &amp; 1111
market. 814-256-6182.

84 Schultz

Want tc:

If scienlists really want to end world hunger they
should find out how lwo ounces of sour cream can turn
into live POUNDS of FAT!

illl Whlll ol Fortune

ro Tile Jefflrlontil

1-800-327-6389

Lllborwl wenltd to $1!5. hr no
exp. Will lr~ln PT.fT. Ught fac.
tory work. t..aoo-5'12·5203.

\318

ro In- E- r:;r

IIYtr'll optnlnga now IYIIIIblt,

Middleton
EetltH
Group
Homu For Eklerty, Will Dlt·
penu And Aec.. ve Employment
Top Prien Paid : All Old U.S. Application• For DlrKI Care
6 Lost &amp; Found
Coint, Oold Rings, Sltvar Colrtt, Staff, 3141'92. W1dnuday Mom·
Found: Black &amp; tan pup In New Gold Coine. M.T.S. Coin Shop, lng: 10:00 A.M. On Chatuu
Have n aru. 2·23·92. 304·882· 151 Second Avenu•, Gelllpolls.
8206, Ctrl1 Drtva, Gallipolis
3723.
Ohio. For Furthlr lnlonnatlon
Found: N1ar Kerr Road, Rodnty Employment Services Call 614-418-2283.
Pika lntarttcllon, t Young
MLT (ASCP) Or Equhl'alent For
Famale, Slack Lab· 1 Young
Holzer
Clinic, Proctorville, Ohk&gt;.
Famala Black And While Baagl1.
Fuii·Time Position, Monday •
614-245-5192.
11 Help Wanted
Friday. Compethlvt Stllry, Ex·
Lost : Addt, on VleinH~, Bleur --,~3~~~A~Y~P~ROC~E~SS~I~MG::--­ Cllltnt Btnelltt. Sind R11um1
Per"'onnal Dlplr1rMnl, Hol.Ro.d Aret. 112 B•glt And 112 PHONE
ORDERSI 'PEOPLE To:
zer Clinic PO Box 344 Gal·
Miniature Rat Ttrrltr, Whllt With
CALL YOU.
llpolls, oH 45&amp;31. No Phone
Slack And Brown Pitch.., 1 NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
Calls.
·Year Old. Very Small Female.
1-100.255.0242.
614·36Ht131, 614-367-0324.
MLT For A Fully Equipped
Physicians Office lAb. Good
Lost : Black &amp; tan female lox· AVON • All areas, Cell MarUy" Benallts, No Shift Work. Apply
hotJnd In Lion arn. 304·89S. Weaver 304-882·2645.
'" Parton: Madlcal Piau, 203
3338.
Pomeroy Nursing &amp; Rehab. Jackso:'l Pltc., Gallipolis.
R.ward: tor milling lilm111 C.ntlf It Acclptlng ApNHdtd: Rtsponslbla Babytltler
R~:~tw.ll.r. Lost, ltraved, stolen, plicallona For Part·Timt LPN.
In Our Home. Mon'a Thru Frl'a.
klltad. Rts. 21817e0, MercaNille. Rotating Shift Avallabll. Salery Call
614·256-1191 For Mora In·
~ave Info.? 614-251..a369.
BtMd On Yea~ Of Experience. tormaUon Afltr Sp.m.
Exca11tn1 Bentllt Packaga. Call
Carol Kanawaltky, RN, DON For
R.N.
Yard Sate
7
lnlervl1w AI 614-992-6606. EOE. Now Accepting Appllcallons For
ALL Yard Salll Mult Be Paid In Area phyalclalll ottlcs nHdt RN'a Who Want To Utlllzt There
Valuable Clinical Aunsmant
Advance. DEAOUNE: 2:00 p.m . full
tlmt
blUing Sklllt In A Long Tarm Care
the day bltore the ed Ia to n.tn. cltrklrecepllonilt,
previous
Sundly edition • 2:00 p.m. phyelcian oHice experience Facllltl11 Whart Rehab S.rvic11
Friday. Monday ldlllon • 2:00 preferred. Rqpond to Box C-25 And Skilled Nurslr~g Cere Are
Emphasized. Plaast Contact:
p.m. Saturdly.
car• Point Pl11sant Rtglsar, 200 Scanlc ' Hills Nurtl"g Canter,
Main 51, Pt. Pit, WV 255"50.
614-446-1150 F01 More "Details Or
APply In Pereon.
AUSTRALIA
WANTS
YOU
Gallipolis
EJc:allan1
Pay,
Benetus, RN or LPN wanted tor part time
407~292-41117,
Transportetlon,
&amp; VIcinity
pos,itlon local Oocto~ oftlca,
Ext. 57t h .m.·10p.m. Toll Mnd return~ to Bole C·26 care
of Point Pleaunt Rtglatar, 200
Garag• Salt: Mite. Clotnlng, Refunded.
HouMhold hems, Chrlstmat AVON I All Arau ! Shitlay Main St, Polrll Pleatlnt, WV
Decorations, Fr1111r, Pinball S.,..rt, 304~75-1429 .
25550.
Maehlnl, 2 Belmont Orlv1,
AVON get In on the ground floor Somaona to take care ol 1ldtrly
~turday t-5.
ol Avon• new 11mlng atruclura. ~pl1 In privati care hom1,
IMkll And Out. 14728 S1a1a 1-iOO.iiZ-6351.
614-992-6940
'-,:'c.:;..;.c..:.::..._..,.-....,...,...,.-.Routt 554, Bidwell Ohio.
Stylill
Wanted For High TraHic
F1bruary 29th Mlrch 2nd, 3rd, Avon Is ct1angl11g! More w1ys to
10 A.ll. To 5 ~.M. Baby Clolhle make mor11yl Repr.Sintalivll Salo". Clientele Helpful, But Not
NICIIIIry. W1 Can Htlr. Build
And Fumttura, Kltchtn Apo wanted, frN gltl wUh sign up, Your
Futura, For Appo ntment
pu.neea, FI.Wnltura, HorN Mar- call Kay et~-9~·7180
Call Cerol King, 614-441-8922:.
.nen, Elect Hammond Qrgan,
Old 011 Lampi, Hartay Dlvkf. CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA Th1 Gallla County ASCS Office,
Hiring $800+ Wkly. Over 8000
.eon, And Coke Coli Clocks, Openlnga
.
Maii!Famala. 529 Jeckton Pika, Room 308-A,
'Wall Orlilllf', New Caah Real• TrantplHouslng.
Call E.I.C. G1Uipolls, Ohio 45831 Will k ·
W , Slort Shalvu a R. lc.
Nowi1·206-Tl6-7000
Ext. 1617B8. cepl Appllcetlons For A Plrt··
Cteem Freeur, · Fenton And
nme Program Aulalant And A
'Othtr G~aswara , Old Blue And C.rtlfild Hurting A11lttant Part·Tima Field Asalstant On
Whitt Gr~nitiWirl, Old Coins.
NNdtd, Private Home, 30 Merch 2, 1992. Employm1nt Will
Minut• From Qalllpolle. Dly 81 For 30 Workdays Or Leas.
:Largs Clothing Salt: Nam1 Shift
, Monday Thru Friday.
.8Nild, Still ROUII 553, Crown
You hav• worbd lor thl rllt,
(!lly. Mereh 2nd &amp; 3rd. to-4. Un· Reftrencu Rtquirtd. Call &amp;14· now work with thl belt. Top
1182-3010.
iiltiiVtbll Prien!
comml11lons, Insurance•, train·
~lng Salo: March 3, 4, 51h. g. . CONSTRUCTION ALL TRADES \ng, qualtty DI'Oductl, no In·
vnlm1nt. Related experience
·a.' .1111 Brick SchOOl Road.
ALL SKILLS
lllhlnd Addl~llll Ellmentary).
Msj01 intematlonal Projactt1 no4 ~ulr.d . F1.1ll or part-lim•.
• ,
Must Relocate. Hou1lng Ana Fot deteila, write Royal Oil Co,
Travallng Expanlft Paid, Exctl· P. o. Box 648, Fon Wonh, Tx
Pomeroy,
ltnl Salarlll And Ben1flts. Call 111101.
Wt~kdlys I A.M. To 7 P.M. SunMlddtepon
day Noon To 5 P.M. VICA CORP. 14
Business
305·9384070.
&amp; Vicinity
Conlfructlon
wanttd
new
AumrMgt Sale, Forti! Run projtct 11 $22. hr. Carpentert,
Mt\hodtlt Ch1.1rc:h, March 3--4 labol'll'l, pilnttrl, drywall,
Rd. 11 From 1 :0~3:00, masons &amp; halpers. 1-800.551·
clotMI few chUdren I adultt, 0113.
dlthH, bed clo4hn, etc.

18 How ZOft'O Slerso. 1:;1

CAI.l MY 1-.l~W FRI~~D.

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all the gadgets I had go"en as
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�Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Thursday, February 'l:T, 1992 ~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Local schools announce Right to Re~d Week · activities •
The Meigs Local School District

is plannin~ a wide variety of aclivities for Right to Read Week which
is March 2-6.

Bradbury Elementary

. ..
Activities at Bradbury Elemen~will center ~d the.theme of
The Story Hour. Plans mclude a
reading slogan C?nte~t; Wm, Lose
or Draw game usmg ntles of !J?oks:
Wheel of Fortune, usmg. utles;
desi~n badge contest usmg the
readmg theme, wacky word contest, and a book sale ": 11h used
books ~tudents w1ll brmg m to
trade With other students.

Harrisonville Elementary

Harrisonville Elementary will
celebrale by focusing on countries
of the world. The slogan is "Reading and Math Around the Worl.d."
The emphasis wtll be o~ reading
and JTI!Ith w1th other subjeCts such
as soc1al studies, language, health
and sc1ence bemg mcluded. Each
classroom, the library, office and
kitchen will have a different co~ntry. Countdes represente~ durmg
the week wtll be Australia, India,
Ja~an, Ge~many, Egypt, Peru,
Chma, Bnush Columbia, Canada,
· N nca
· 3 nd
Bl1lZI·1 ·
Mex•co,
.
. Datly acttvl!tes tnclude sustamed silent readin~. world affaus
from newspaper ~cles wh1ch will
be mounted and displayed .outs1dc
of the classrooms, book f31I, daily
math problems-wtth a pnze gtven
for the winner, decorate a door
contest reflecting the ccuntry the_y
represent, making a flag of thetr
country to be displayed, foreign
currency guess and a World TOI!f
Day when each classroom IS
encouraged to .make a display of all
the items com~letcd dunng the
week to share wtth the other classrooms.

Middleport Elementary

Middleport Elementary will eelebrate with the theme "Celebrate

Reading and Math." Activities will
include holiday trivia, reading contracts; sustained silent reading. and
a reading corner in the school
lobby. The kick-off will be celebrating birthdays and "unbirth·
days" with ice cream cakes donated
by Dairy Queen.
Students will decorate a "Christmas Day Tree" with ornaments that
have the name of the student and
their favorite book. "Easter Day"
students will guess the number of
jelly beans in ajar and draw a mystery egg and read the book listed
inside. "Independence Day" students will be asked to wear red,
white and blue.
To honor the veterans, students
wi~ parade around Middleport and
invne veterans back to school for
refreshments and singinl! of patriottc. songs. An .assembly 10 the gym
wtll follow w1th a ~teran speaking
to t~e students : ThanksgiVlng
Day students will be thankful for
books wtth a book exchange and a
ptzza party of classes/students who
read the most for their reading contracts.,
,

flays 10 the ~lassroo~s, reports_ on
amous Oh~oans, !1brary skills
lessons and library VISits, book farr,
~naledlabooks
th~ studen~ to
a! e~ c ssroomfro• ranlasses, readmg
ou excerpts. m c •cs and/or
~n novels. w•th follow-up actiVI·
u~, fllmstnps about a~thors, filmstnp and cassett_e versiOn~ of novels! ne_ws~aper m educa~on week
actiVIt_les mcludmg sumval read10 ~ skills and daily consumer type
SkillS, b?ok contests and g1 veaways w1th students guessmg the
number of pages 10 a gJft wrappect
book, reference .book contest ~tth
students tswenng quesuonnarres
ust.ng re er~nce ooks, creauve
wnt_1ng assignments sparked ~y
readin~ poems •.f~bles, etc., specl3l
:-voJ.d hsts pertal~m.g. to words used
10 e ~anous acUvJUes:

ern:

Mezgs Chapter ]

In the new Chapter 1 program at
Meigs Junior High students will
have silent reading and brain
teasers with prizes awarded, slogan
and drawing contests reading
fables, famous Ohioans ;eport read
into cassette recorder, completing
Melf!.S
questionnaire on newspaper artiM . H. h S h 1 .11 h
cles as to who wha• when where
e1gs tg c oo wt • .ave why•and how, making
•
~
• strip·
a comic
book reports on c.urrent liVIng about reading and math, calculator
authors, a DECA wmdow d1splay, and computer activities complete
students vtslttng elementary activities concerning life skills in
kindergarten and fust ~ade classes purchasing items from a menu with
·~the &lt;!iStnct and reading _them sto- students receiving $5 and writing
nes, displays and bulleun boards out their food order total cost and
promoung r~ng, sustamed silent ti .
•
readmg, da•'r announcements on PP
the electromc bull~ !In board to
spark mterest m readmg. book, curPomeroy Elementary has as its
rent events usmg magBZJnes, news- theme "Reading+ Math = Dollars
papers to d1scuss current local and &amp; Sense." To kick the week off
world ~vents.
,
,
st~dents will att~nd their citizenShip assembly With Clark Jew~lry
M . J . H. h .11 h
and Bank One represenung
classeroo•gsm us1"1e•onrt retagdl'nwgltl'meavae Pomeroy's Partners in Education to
. . ' discuss their different careers. Stubook cover contest wtth pnzes to dents will be completing daily
be awarded, classroom book d•s- money trivia questions with prizes
plays and talks, bulletm board dts- awarded by Bank One. Other activities include door decorating. bookmar" design, badge day, and a
resource packet for teachers with a
you look at a typical case exam- wide variety of activities to use
pie," Peterson continued. "A r54 during the week. Classroom story
year old woman with a history of time will include community readmedical problems hasn't worked ers visiting with careers varying
outside her home. Her husband from doctors, lawyers, bankers, etc.
dies. And she applies for disability
Students will be asked to guess
benefits as the widow of an insured the amount of money in a locked
worker.
money bag from Bank One. Stu"Until last January, the law dents will be reading for dollars
required that we evaluate her claim with "fake" dollars made from
without considering factors such as Bank One and the student placing
whether she was actually going to their name and story title on the bill
be able to do a job."
and placing them in the hallway of
Now, the same standard that the school. St Jude Math-A-Thon,
applies to aU other Social Security Jump-A- Thon will be held during
disabilily claimants also covers physical education class with final
widows and widowers.
winners in grade one through three
Disabled widow and widower and grades four through six. Prizes
benefits are paid to applicants who will be furnished by Bank One and
met the disability criteria and who Clark's Jewelry. Plans also include
are at least 50 years old, but not media announcements on WMPO
over 60, who are the widow or wid- explaining the activities the stu·
ower of an insured worker, and dents will be doing during the
who haven't remarried.
week.
Anyone with questions about
Pennies for Books will see
Social Security disability provi - Chapter I students bringing in pensions for widows or widowers nics for a donation to their school
should contact the Athens Social library with the proceeds, students
Security office at 592-4448 or the will also participate in a Bargain
national toll-free number 1-800- Store Day with points they have
772-1213
earned so far this year in their class
·

Omeroy

collect sponsors who donate their :
money to cancer research for each probl~m students have compleled:
m theu booklet, honor.roll which:
has student's name placed on the•
shape of a wliale in the main lobby ,
of the school, math problems and
brain teasers, best reading and math ,
Salisbury Elementary's slogan student of the week with prizes ;
is "There's No Doubt, Books Are awarded, students completing ·
Something to Spout About" written books will place the title, author :
Rutland Elementary will be by Tricia Davts, fifth grade. The and their name on a whale paper ;
working with "The Wonderful overall theme for the week is which will be placed in the hall- ~
World of Reading and Math... :·spout About Books." Activities way, new books about whales have ;
Activities include decoratin a mclude decorate a door contest been purchased by the hbrary and :
door, S.Q.U.I.R.T. (Super Q~et with the winner to receive a prize, Chapter I classroom teach for stu- (
Uninterrupted Reading Time) sustained silent reading, bookmarks dents to read, lunchroom menu for ;
viewing "The Rotten Truth About with the winning .student's theme the week will have a whale theme."'
Garbage ," reading about their printed on it, read and count button Kn?ger, Salisbury's Panner in Edu-':
world, bringing in articles in maga- day, blue whale day w~en st~dents cauon, wlll make a ·:whale cake" :
zlnes and newspapers about envi- are asked to wear theJI Salisbury for the students . D1ck Warner, ,
momenta! issues which will be dis- No. I shirts or any ~ther clothin,g manager at Kroger's, will speaic at ~
played on a mural in the hallway, that ts blue and ~hne, St. Jude s ~e ~w~ds assembly and asstst m_;
stude,?ts will b~. designing their Math-A-Thon wh1ch has students d1stnbuung awards for the week. ,
own btg boo~.s with the words
::
from the song What a Wonderful
World," gues~ the poP cans in the
bag contest wtth a pnze awarded.
. Kenny Wiggins •. Meigs County
Lttter Control offtcer, wtll vtslt
each of the classroomsto d1scuss
the Importance of recycling and llt. day with
.
ter control, wear a t-shm
students wearing one they
designed, students will share their
big book with other students in the
building, pop can collection ccntest
$47.95
and Chapter 1 students will make
tcnariums out of tw&lt;&gt;-liter bottles.
•Black

N. Second Ave. •

,
PINNED UNDER VEHICLE • The air bags
· on Middleport's new ladder truck were put into
: use Thursday afternoon to raise a car off Patricia Shane, Middleport. Shain had jacked up her
car and gone underneath to do some repair
work when the car slipped orr the jack and

PLACE

992-5627

•

Middleport

COLUMBVS, Ohio (AP) Seventy-seven Ohio counties and
hundreds of school districts hope to
collect almost $23 million in real
esrate and personal property taxes
owed by Columbia Gas System
Inc.
Columbia and its subsidiary,
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp.,
filed for protection last year under
Chapter II of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code.
Attorney General Lee Fisher
said Thursday that Columbia has
asked a federal court in Delaware
for authority to pay the taxes.
He said Columbia listed tax bills

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week's primaries in Maryland,
Georgia, Colorado and Utah, and
caucuses in three other states.
While President Bush remains
in Texas today, Vice President Dan
Quayle heads to South Carolina
and Georgia to campaign against
Buchanan, while Buchanan focuses
on Georgia.
The Democrats today are focus ing on the Western states holding
caucuses, plus California, which
doesn't hold its primary until June
2 but which has plenty or wealthy
campaign contributors.
The 504 delegates at stake in

contests on Tuesday, Friday and
Saturday, and another 783 on
March I0 are more than enough to
separate the pack. With three different victors so far and a draw in
Maine, the Democratic race is
without a front-runner heading into
the South, where Clinton is heavily
favored. ·
Kerrey, a Vietnam Medal of
Honor recipient, continued his bar·
rage Thursday in Florida, saying
the reasons Clinton gave for not
serving in Vietnam were
"baloney" and that only he could
(Continued.on Page 3)

Petitions o{ two candidates for public office were rejected by the
- Meigs County Board of Elections Thursday.
William Francis, a candidale for the Meigs County Republican
: Central Commi~ in the North Olive precinct, and William Snouffer, a candidate for county ccmmissioner candidate on the Demo. ·. cratic ticket, both submitted petitions with insufficient signatures,
according to the board.
.
Neither candidate is now eligible for the May 5 primary election.
Snouffer could run as an independent or write-in candidate in the
general election in November.

A hit and run accident ·Thursday evening is under investigation
by the Pomeroy Police Department.
According to the report, a 1979 Ford owned by Beuy Morton,
Pomeroy, was parked on Spring Valley Lane in Pomeroy when it
• · was sllliCk by a car which failed to ~top.
• The left side rear quarter panel and .taillight area of the vehicle
· : was damaged.

;Local fire units funded
Stale Rcpreacntadve Mary Abel (D.Athens) announced Thursday two rue deplittltents in Meigs County will receive pts for
l'llral ccmmunityfire pro~eetion frOm the Ohio DepartmcJ)l of Nalu·
rai Reaouroel' Divisi011 of Focal!}'.
.
The SyracUse and Racine FR Dcpertments wiU receive a total ~f
· more thin $2.600 to be uaed for uppdinJ equipment and to ass1st
with llpl'izadooaJ, training and equipment COlli.
·
''The provision of lhiJ funding is vital considerinj the cuts that ·

·

t,

Tuesday March 10, the candiwites
aren't bothering to mince words.
Clinton, speaking of Tsongas'
economic recovery plan, said he
was "tired of coldblooded stands
being passed off as ccurage.' '
Tsongas didn't let that one lie
for long.
"Is Bill Clinton now our resident expert on courage?" Tsongas
fired back, picking up where
Nebraska Sen. Bob Kerrey left off
in attacldng Clinton for not serving
in Vietnam.
The negative onslaught, both in
person and on the airwaves, continued throughout the week as the five
major Democrats prepared for next

· Hit and run mishap probed

speed, air, tilt, cruise,
cassette, 1-owner, local
trade.

SOFA

I

By WENDY BENJAMINSON
Associated Press Writer
The presidential race bogged
down in accusations of I ying anil
cowardice as each of th1l Democratic candidates - and Patrick
Buchanan - tried to persuade
Southern and Western voters that
he's the one to beat George Bush.
Polls showed Arkansas Gov.
Bill Clinton leading in the South
and among Democratic voters
nationally, but former Massachusetts Sen. Paul Tsongas was
leading in Colorado and Washington.
With I ,287 delegates to be allot·
ted between March 3 and Super

· Petitions rejected by board
1989 GMC
C 1500 4X4

V-8 power, ::1uto., air, tiR, cruise,
loaded, 1-owner..

Fisher said county governments
should file proofs of claims as soon
as possible with the offices of their
county treasurers.
He said that his staff also has
been in touch with John Murphy,
executive director of the Ohio
Prosecuting Attorneys Association,
because the problem involves so
many county prosecutors.
Counties not lisled by Fisher as
being owed personal or real estate
taxes by Columbia were Adams,
Clermont, Defiance, Fulton, Henry.
Lake, Monroe, Pike, Portage, Van
Wert and Williams.

--Local briefs

'Auto., air, 4-door, cassette,
defroster.

1988 Chrysler
5th Avenue

pending in 77 of Ohio's 88 counties - $20.2 million for tax year
1991 and $1.6 miUion for 1990.
Fisher said $13:6 million of the
total is owed to school districts
within those counties. But unless
the bankruptcy court grants
Columbia's motion, the taxes cannot and will not be paid, he said.
He said he is gathering information for the court "to show just
how devastating the non-payment
of these taxes would be on Ohio's
political subdivisions, especially its
school districts, and the resulting
and significant impact on. the State
of Ohio and its citizens ."

.

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stair .
Several coaches were hired and
a lengthy discussion was held on
facility improvements for spring
sports at Thursday night's meeting
of the Meigs Local Board of Education.
·
Hired were Mike Kennedy,
assistant track coach, Jodi Harrison
Glass as girls' reserve softball
coach, Cliff Kennedy as girls' varsity track coach, Zane Beegle as
varsity baseball coach, Keith Dettwiller as reserve baseball coach,
Robert Ashley, Jr. as junior high
track coach, and Bryan Swann as
assistant junior high track coach.
Beegle, now in his thin! year of
coaching baseball for Meigs, met
with the board to discuss the
upgrading of the spring sports program through improving the facilities. He spoke of the need for fencing and general improvements to
the fields. He said that the
improvements would "entice more
students to come out to take part
and would bring out the best in the
players." Charging admission to
watch the games was also proposed
by the coach.
Supt. James Carpenter said he
talJced with Gordon Fisher, athletic
director, and suggested Fisher contact the youth league to come up
with some priority of what needs to
be done to the fields.
The board suggested that the
superintendent get recommendations on field improvements.and
bring them to the next meeting.
Graduation was set for 4 p.m. on
Sunday, May 24, in the Larry R.
Morrison auditorium.
The board set the time and
place following a lengthy discussion during which time board
member Larry Rupe reported on
contacts with him on the preference
of some students for an outdoor
graduation at the football field. ·
High School Principai .Fenton

Taylor discussed the matter of the
outdoor graduation noting the disadvanrages including weather, field
damage, dirty bleachers, parking,
shortage of seating capacity at the
stadium, possible damage to the
field, the problem of transporting
the band and vocal music students,
and restroom facilities.
The board voted to enter into
purchased services agreements
with Marge Barr as a tutor for a
student who is homebound student,
and with Shirley Van Meter for a
health handicapped student. .
Revisions on two board policies
were adopted to conform to
changes in scboollaw. One was on
suspension and expulsion and the
second on handling of student
activity funds.
Field trios were approved for
DECA and VICA. Both willlle
making the trips to participate in

competitions. The board voted that
on such trips copies of insurance
coverage policies must be filed
with the superintendent's office
before trips will be approved by the
board.
Open enrollment was discussed
and the superintendent was requested to check the sratus of neighboring school districts on the policy.
The board adopted a resolution
of suppon for locating a proposed
I ,200 bed state prison in Meigs
CQunty. Meigs is one of three
counties being considered for a
prison sile in Southeastern Ohio. A
decision on the location .is expecled
within the next few weeks,
Financial reports were given by
Treasurer Jane Fry. Others attending were board members, Bob Barton, president, Larry Rupe, John
Hood, Roger Abbott, and Randy
Humphreys.

Candidates continue attacks

Don't Miss Thl s One!

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struck her across the abdomen. After raising the
car and releasing Shain, she was taken to Veter·
ans Memorial Hospital where she was treated
and released. The Middleport unit or the Meigs
Emergency Medical Service and the firemen
were called to the scene at 4:18 p.m.

:Counties, school districts
due almost $23 million

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Page4

Rutland Elementary

Salem Center's theme is "Wild
About Reading and Math." Daily
activities include question orthe
day and silent reading. Other activities include door decorating contest, malted milk ball guess, gurnmi
worms guess, class murals with
pictures and short stories of animals contest, camp site buddy reading with a camp site set up wi1h
students from intermediate grades
reading to primary students,
favorite stuffed animal day. students writing stories about their
animal with fiCSt, second and third
place winners chosen, alphabet
cereal, spelling contest, mystery
guest speaker, dress-up day, teacher exchange and reading to another
class, wild about parents and
grandparents day, animal book-

Mezgs Junwr Hzgh

*449

Pick 3: 937
Pick 4; 5949

Salisbury Elementary

S[ C
a em enter

·
erne ntary

Our Socl·az Securz·ty

Widows and widowers bwli~o
apply for Social Secunty disa 1 e.~
beneftts based on thm spous
work record are now Judged by ~.e
same standards as all other disab •ty applicants.
.
i_
Basically, .to be constdered ds
abled, a physical or mental tmp31~ment must be e~pec~,ed to k:;\~ ~
person from domg subsla .1
work f~.r at least a ~;ar· or result m
dea~. Substantial IS defined for
Soc1al Securtty purpos~s as earnmgs that exceed a certam level cw;,ently_ $500 per ~o~th. .
..
. Soc tal Secunty s. d•.sablltt,Y
gu1dclmes say that an mdlvldual s
imparrment must be severe enough
that he or s~~ can't do the work
they used to, explruned Ed Peterson , Soc_i,al Secunty manger 10
Athens. And thaL, cons_1denng
such factors .as age, educauon, and
:-vo~k ex:&gt;enence, the •hndtvtdu~l
t~n table to do any ot er wor •
ett~~r. .
.
.
It IS certamlyappropnate th?t
our agency consider a women s
vocauonal profile when she applies
for dtsabled~w•dmv benefits.
"The stgnlftcance of the
changed standard can be seen 1f

Eastern girls
advanc.e to
district play

mark and ani~al diorama contest,
Make-1t Take-11 Workshop for All
O.apler I parents in the district and
all Salem Cenier parents, awards
assembly, movie and ll'eats for the
students.

The old soft
shoe.

Hzgh School

El

for com\)letiqg their work· with·
their ach1evement level determming the 1\ffi~t of points. ~warde~.
Student~ w1ll also parttCIJ?ate m
math learning center da~ wtth students moving from statiOn to stalion on computer, Charlie, Tutor,
and other computer type learmng
equipment.

Ohio Lottery

' CODIID'*! ~ paae 3 . . .

.- ·

..

'IS IT 'PVFF'? • A eolorful aDd friendly drap - taklna
shape at Baak One and 011 aurrondinl Court Street windows 01
Tbunday afternoon. Baslneu owun tbrou1hont dowatOWJ
Pomeroy are preparln1 ror a window deeorltina contest, to be beld
on Friday Ia t:OIIjanctloa with the Pomeroy Merchaall ~a­
tiOD't "Mardi Gru Madneu" pmaotloll. The ales pl'llllotloa will
be held Mareb 5-7. Pictured are Bank One empl~ Gerl Waltoa
and Dlinaa LaWBOII as they work on the 12-root tempera painted
draaoa.

PROPER DENTAL HYGIENE EXPLAINED • Amy
Oblinger: a dental hygienist in the office or Larry D. Kennedy,
D.D.S., Middleport, takes time to explain proper dental byglene
and Its importance to Cory VanReeth, son of John and Gloria
VanReeth. February is National Children's Dental Health Month
and Dr. Kennedy's office, along witb Margie Lawson, D.D.S., in
Racine, will spoliSOI' a toothbrush drop tomorrow (Saturday) from
10 a.m. to noon at each omce. At tbal time any child who brings in
his or her old toothbrush will be given a new one, compliments of
the Rebwibkle Dental Society, as well as educational information
and a tour or the raciUty.

Prison escapee refuses
to waive extradition
EL RENO, Okla. (AP) - West
Virginia may not have an escaped
trooper-killer back for months,
after the man refused to waive
extradition from the western Oklahoma county where he was captured.
Fred G. Hamilton, 34, a(llleal'ed
in Canadian County court.thursday, a day after his capture at a
Hinton farmhouse.
''He indicated in court that he
refused to waive extradition, so
they'D have to go through the regular extradition process (and) forward the request from their governor to the governor of Oklahoma,''
Assistant District Attorney Gary
McCurdy said. "All of that could
take months."
"He's committed to a life sentence and he knows when he goes
back to West Virginia, he'D be in
isolation ·and confined," Undersh·
eriff Mike Rutledge said. ·
Hamilton was assigned a public
defender. He is charged with
attempted robbery with a fuearm
after a former conviction of two or
more felonies.
The charge stems from the
alle~ed attempted robbery of a convemence stiiR.on Jnterstalt 40 near
El Reno late Tuesday.
· Clerk SueiBlair said slie refused

to give up the money, and thai
started a massive overnight search
that ended Hamilton's seven days
on the run.
He and two other murderers
escaped Feb . 19 from a
Moundsville, W. Va., prison after
allegedly using garden tools to dig
a 32-foot tunnel from the prison
greenhouse to the other side of the
penitentiary walls.
Hamilton, who was serving
three consecutive life terms in the
1977 killing of a state trooper, told
offiCials he tried to rob the El Reno
store to get money and gas for his
trip to California.
Hamilton said he wan led to play
golf at Pebble Beac~.
Rutledge said Hamilton has
been a talkative bul cooperative
prisoner.
·
"He's having the time of his
life," Rutledge said. "It's a kind of
travel opportunity for him. It's giving him a chance to see places he's
never been."
"They could tack another sen-.
tence on to what he's already facing, but what difference would it
make?" he said.
Dickerson set a Ma!th 27 preliminary hearing. If convicted,
Hamilton could receive a sentence
of 20 years to life.

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