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                  <text>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

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•

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
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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

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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

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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.

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'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.

�.r ,
J

Friday, February 28, 1!192

-commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF 11IE MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGEIT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant PubUsher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned lette11 wiD be published. Letters
should be in good tasle, addressing issues, not petSOnl!itie5.

:Letters to the editor
National Volunteer Day
Dear Editor:

Saturday, Feb. 29, is National
Volunteer Day. We at Planned Par- ~nthood of Southeast Ohio would
like to thank the volunteers who
have graciously given their time
"and effon to our organization.
This past year, more than 100
. volunteers throughout our eight
·county area have helped PPSEO
with mailings, copying, fundraising, letter writing, shredding,
accounting, filing, phone calling,
preparing inventory, cleaning, serving as receptionists during clinic
sessions and much more.
Dollars are saved and efficiency
is improved when caring people
donate their time and talent to help
liS carry out our mission. They are

essential to PPSEO's ability to
stretch its limited resources.
The reasons for volunteering are
varied. As the climate surrounding
a woman's right to choose worsens,
more and more people are needed
to help preserve the reproductive
rights of women and to help make
services available 10 all who need
lhem.
The board of trustees and the
staff salute the PPSEO volunteers
of 1991-92. Anyone interested in
joining our ranks, may call Sonya
in Athens at592-3375.

Jack Anderson
of necessity, must regard themselves as their own favorite charity.
Some of United Way's 2,200
local affiliates announced that they
were unfazed by the repons, but
others were quick to see how the
bad news could hurt their own
fund-raising efforts, and are distancing themselves from the
national organization. Five large
affiliates, including Chicago,
Washington, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle, have announced
that they will withhold the dues
they owe to the national organiza'
lion until lhey see how the current
controversy shakes out.
United Way of America counts
on those dues for its operating
cash. Local affiliates pay the
umbrella agency about one cent for
every dollar donated to them. In
return, United Way of America
advises them on fund-raising techniques and promotes lhe mission of
United Way as a unified charity
ralher than a collection of competing organizations.
The relationship haS&gt; worked
well under current United Way

President William Aramony. He
has won the suppon of corporate
America and turned United Way
into the most efficient machine for
collecting and distributing charitable dollars around the country. But
along -the way, Ar&amp;lnony has done
some things that don't mesh with
the altruistic mission of United
Way.
He created subsidiaries to provide services such as banking and
bulk purchasing for United Way
affiliates, but some of !hose subsidiaries have spun off into thriving
private ventures employing friends
of Ar&amp;lnony, and Aramony's son,
as generously paid staffers and
consultants. Ar&amp;lnony himself has
lived the life of a Fonune 500 president, flying on the Concorde when
he was in a hurry, hiring chauffeurs
to feny him around, treating some
executives to Super Bowl trips, and
collecting salary and benefits of
$463,000 a year.
Thomas Merlo, a friend of Aramony 's and the chief financial officer for United Way of America,
was the subject of a two-year federal investigation. In 1979, Merlo
was in business for himself as an
accountant, and the General

Ban Henshaw, board of trustees
president
Kay R. Atkins, executive director

Should visit school
You will be amazed of all lhe kind:Dear Editor:
This letter goes to the Gallia and ness and love that lhese children
received.
&gt;Meigs County Head Start.
I was there for there lunch. They .
' I had the pleasure of visiting the
had a fine lunch consisting of a
·'SChool on Tuesday.
_. I have a granddaughter who is a casserole dish, corn, salad and
volunteer there. I was met by a fme milk.
My prayer goes out to each vol•lady named Lilly Haner, who
unteer,
teacher, cook and to Gallia
~ showed me around to lhe classes
and
Meigs
County officials. They
·and invited me to stay for lunch.
are
doing
a
wonderful
job.
. · All the workers were wonderful.
Thank
you
all
and
may God
Those who haven't visited that cenbless.
'!er should.
·
Rosetta R. Goodman
, That was my first trip, but I will
Point
Pleasant, W.Va.
:be going back. I will be attending
their PTA. meetings each month.
''

Upset with referees

at the ~arne knows who he is. I
·{)car Editor:
· If I may take some time in your would ~ust like to say to that offi··paper, I would like to congrawlate cial - 'U you can't officiate fairly
'·Mick Winebrenner and the South- at all games, then you shouldn't
··ern Junior. High Seventh grade officiate at any games.n you do a
' basketball team on their fine season great injustice to the young men
this year. They won all 14 regular who do their very best everytime
·season games. This is a wonderful they play a game.
· group of young men who played
Thank you for letting me get
, hard all season long and never gave this off mr chesL And while some
-up. They were a joy to watch.
may criticiZe me for my views, I'm
They came in second in the sure there are several who will
·Trimble Tournament, but in my agree with me.
· upinion, they were not beaten by
Sincerely,
' the olher team. They were beaten
Mrs. Ann Zirkle
by lhe referees - one in particular.
Racine, Ohio 45771
·He knows who he is and evcry:me

:Hurtling toward
&lt;stalemate on taxes
By WALTER R. MEARS
AP Sp«ial Correspondent
wASHINGTON - Meanwhile, back at the countdown, congressional
Democrats and White House Republicans are hunling toward their
jnevitable collision on taxes.
· Neither side has the power to win outrigh~ each can block the other,
~d lhe deadline President Bush tried to impose for approval of his eco}lomic plan is three weeks from tomorrow_
.
• "From the day af~ that, if it must be, the batde is joined," he said in
llis State of the Union address, although neither he nor the Democrats
waited that long. Bush already has flunked Congress for its progress "on
my 52-day deadline." And Democratic leaders have dismissed his program as leftover Reaganomics tilted unfairly toward I8X breaks for the

We Americans are a demanding
son. and for years we've demanded
just one thing of our political leaders: Lie-to-Us.
In 1984, we confronted our
leaders and demanded: Lie-to-Us
about the deficit that will be
tripling in the Reagan-Bush
decade. Walter Mondale tried to
feed us castor oil: "Let's tell the
truth. Mr. Reagan will raise taxes
and so will I. He won't tell you. I
just did.'' Instead, we eagerly swallowed Ronald Reagan's sugar-pill
politics: "It's Morning Again in
America.''
In 1988, we demanded: Lie-toUs about taxes. A new non-committal Democrat, Michael Dukakis,
served waffles. We preferred the
unvarnished vow of his opponent
"Read my lips. No new taxes."
And we also demanded: Lie to
us about Jaw-and-order. So Candidate Bush told us all about Horrible
Willie Horton. But he forgot to
mention that nearly identical furlough programs ex1sted in Calif~- .
nia under Gov. Ronald Reagan; and
even, in 1988, in Bush's own
Texas, under his own state cam-

Martin Schram
paign manager, Gov. BiD ClemenL
- and in those states some furloughed criminals committed major
crimes again. Once in office, our
law-and-order president spumed
lhe pleas of our cops 3r1d refused to
crack down on crime by banning
rapid-fire assault weapons that
have no sporting use but are used
by the drug gangs that terrorize our
cities.
In 1990 and 1991, after our
taxes were raised, we demanded:
Lie-to-Us about the recession. And
our tax-raising ventriloquist-president, George Edgar Bergen Bush,
assured us that we didn't have a
recession, and anyway, it's over,
and Happy Days Are Here Again.
Comes now 1992. And the most
important question for us to decide
has to do not with our candidates
but with ourselves. Are we going to
be demanding more of the same?
More lies? Better lies? Or are we
ready, at last, to hear a few truths?
One Democrat is betting that he
can court us with candor. Paul
("I'm not Tsanta Claus") Tsongas

bmtkinf

r:"..J.:

lhinks we're ready to swallow bitter medicine - no to a middleclass I8X cu~ yes to a five-cents a
gallon gasoline tax to raise some
money and force conservation.
Bush is betting lhat all we want
is politics as usuaL In his State of
the Union address, he told us: "It's
time to allow families to deduct the
interest they pay on student loans.''
But he didn't mention that anv
amount we deduct for student loans
would be subtracted from the
amount we can deduct for interest
on our home-equity loans.
He also told us: "There's one
thing we can do right away: Ease
lhe burden of rearing a child." He
said he wanted "to raise the personal (lax) exemption by $500 per
child for every family. For a family
with four kids, that's an increase of
$2,000." But he didn't mention
that, for a family in a 15-perccnt
bracket, that is a deduction of just
$75 per child; for wealthier families in lhe 31-percent bracket, it's
$155 per child. Bush's plan makes
sense only if you argue lhat it's a
greater burden to rear a rich kid.
And get this - when Bush sent

William A. Rusher

What fascinates me is what this
tells us about the liberal mentality.
There is not the slightest recognition of the fact that all wealth is
created, in the first instance, by
individuals. They don't "get" that
wealth from anybOdy - certainly
not from government. As the late
Jolm Houseman used to say, "They
make .it the old-fashioned way:
They EARN it"
What's more, in lhe beginning
anyway. an individual doesn't possess a mere 47 percent, or 3.9 percent, or whatever, of what he has
earned. He possesses ALL of it:
I00 percent. Then along comes the
government and, by using whatever

•

lroledol

force is necessary, up to and
including prison, extorts from hilll
anywhere from a qllarter to a third
of it every year. It then priiceeds to
spend this loot on what it likes to
call the public good, though much
or it is simply distributed to the
politicians' friends and s~.
What people lill:e LeWIS seek to
do is instill a totally unwarranted
sense· of guilt in every American
who has been able to make a bettet
than average life, in material terms,
for himself and his family, In so
!foi~. they insult every perso~ whQ
1s trymg to do the same.
(C)199Z
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

d
•
h
•
·
t
0 ay ID IS ory

WI
e

PA.

IMansfield I 34 I•
o

'·

•I Columbus I 34• I

W. VA.

. Showers T-slonns Rain

lcs

Flurries

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

-----Weather----South-Central Ohio
Tonight, cloudy and brisk and
.turning colder. A slight chance of
. rain showers early changing to
·.snow showers. Low around 30.
Chance of precipitation 30 ~rcent.
Saturday, mostly sunny. H1gh 40·.45.

Extended forecast:
Sunday through Tu~ay: .
Fair through the penod. H1ghs
in upper 30s to low SOs Sunday •
mid40s to around 60 Monday and
low 50s to low 60s Tuesday. Morning lows in the upper teens to mid20s Sunday and in the mid-30s to
mid-40s Monday and Tuesday.

~-Local briefs...·- _,
Continued from page 1
lhe current administration perpetrated on the division of forestry;'
Abel said. "We have attempted to provide suppon for funding for
smaller fire departments wherever possible."
.
Abel said that only 40 communities out of a total of 360 ap~li­
cants received funding from the rural comm'!ruty f~e protecuon
program. In fact, three other departments tn ¥el~~ County Chester Pomeroy and Middlepon - were deemed mehg1ble for the
progran;, based on a consistent set of guidelines set fonh by ODNR.

Mullet a"ested on charge
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reponed Friday 31
year-old Richard A. Mullen of Langsville was arrested by the
Holmes County Sheriff Department on a capias from Meigs County
Court for failing 10 appear.
He po~ bond in Millersburg for a later appearance in Meigs
County Court. Mullett was arrested in Holmes County on a routine
traffic stop. Officers found that he was wanted when his name was
run on th~ LEADS system.
.

Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby has urged Meigs Cou~­
ty residents to stan assisting each other to prevent break-ins at thCJT
residences.
"When you are going to be gone," Soulsby said, "let a neighbor
or relative know that they can keep an eye on your property."
"Immediately repon suspicious vehicles and persons in your
area," Soulsby said.

Units respond to 8 calls
Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service respopded to eight calls for assistance Thursday afternoon and early Friday.
At Z:43 p.m. on Thursday lhe RutlaiJd un,it went to Meigs Mine
No.2 for James Vance who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At4:18 p.m. the Middlepon unit·went to Short Fourth for Patricia Shane who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
7:24 p.m. the unit went to Second Street for William Stewan who
was treated but not transported.
The Rutland unit at 7:36p.m. went to Meigs Mine No. 31 for
Stewan Coleman who was taken to Holzer. At 10:31 p.m. both Rut. land units were called to Red Hill Road where Roger Denny was
taken to Veterans and Chester Stewan Jr.
Don Doheen were
taken to Veterans.
At 10:43 p.m. the Pomeroy unit went to Route 248 for Helen
Will who was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital. ·
On Friday at 12:52 a.m. the Racine unit went to Main Street for
Carol Teaford who was taken to Holzer.
At 2:48 a.m. the Middlepon unit responded to Overbrook Center
for Virginia Estep who was taken 10 Veterans.

and

I'

.

-----Hospital news----

llind
''

The Daily Sentinel

1

W. Qilmer and several other people were killed when a 12-iljCh gun
abolid the USS ~ .exploded.
·
· ,
In 1849, .thuldp California arrived at San FranclsCo, carrylits the first
of the gold-scebn.
•
:
In 1861, tbc Territory tl Colorado was orpnizetL

Lottery numbers

IUIIPS ~13·860)
' Publithed every a~oon , Monday
, lhrour~ Friday, Ill Court St P...eroy,
.Ohio by , tho Ohio Valley p,;bllohin1

of vetoing a middle-class tu
reduction, so they "developed a
package they knew was destined
for an early demise."
But some Democrats caution
against assuming Bush will veto a
tax plan that includes economic
stimulus and a tax cut for more
than 80 percent of Americans even if it does mean higher taxes
on the rich.
,
House Speaker Thomas S.
Foley. D-Wash., told reporters a
Bush veto threat is premature at
least. The bill will be amended in
the Senate and later in a conference
to work out differences between
the two versions, Foley nOied.
Overriding a veto is not a serious possibility in either house.
While House Republicans tried
unsuccessfully to sen Bush's bill as
the right prescription for a sluggish
economy, Democrats focused their
rhetoric on "tax fairness" repairing some of the damage they

CompanjlMulttmedia lne., Pomeroy,

· Member: The Aaocia&amp;ecl Prm1, and the
.Ohio Newtpaper Altociation,1 National
Advertitinl' Repretentalive, Branham
Newspaper Salu, 733 Third Avenue,
'·New Yort, Now Yorlt lOOt 1.

0

fOSTMABTER; Send oddr011 changl!l lo
The Dtily Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, OHio 45169.
BUBSCIUPTION ~TBS
·

87 CUTler w Motor Roate

One Week.......... ......................... ........ $1 .60
One Mmth............,............................ 86.915
One Year. ............... ........... .............. .$83.20
BINGLE COPY

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Dai!y... ..................,.....................".211 Cont.
~

•

said middle-income families suffered in the 1980s when the weslth·
iest Americans wOil big I8X cuts. :
The DernocraiS' I8X cuts, up 10
$400 per couple this year and next,
"are so little they won't be noticeil
in a worker's paycheck," said RCP..
Bill Archer, R-Texas. "That won't
stimulate the economy."
.
The two-year I8X credit f~ w~
earners would be paid for by rBISing the 31 perceill maximum
income tax rate to 35 percent,
which would affect about I million
people wiih incomes over $105,000
(single) or $185,000 (couples). A
new surtax of up to 10 percertt
would be imposed on taxable
incomes over $1 million.
The bill includes a far differellt
capital-gains reduction than Bush
proposed. It aims to prevent taxi.tion of investment profits causeli
by inflation and gives a major
break to those who invest in smaUbusiness stock.
.
As Bush recommended,
Democrats included in their bill a
more generous·incentive for businesses to buy machinery this year.
They also are offering special tax
relief for real estate investors.

Candidates••.
(Continued from Page I)
run against President Bush, who
fought in World War IL
Clinton picked up the endorsement '!'hursday ofJim Wiggins, a
Georg1a prosecutor who won the
third-highest military honor, the
Silver-Star.
Kerrey, he said, "was one of
three people in the Senate who
voted against Desen Shield. If you
want 10 talk about electability. you
know George Bush would use that
against him."
On the Republican side, Quayle
said Buchanan was "masquerading
as a conservative.... A true conservative would not have opposed
President Bush on the Persian Gulf
W11."
Quayle's remarks followed a
television ad for Bush criticizing
Buchanan for his position _on the
war.
Buchanan denied he opposed
the war once it started, and said, "I
was a strong conservative ... when
Danny Quayle was still playing
spin-the-bottle."
,
The Bush campaign said
Buchanan's ads accusing Bush of
share a laugh during a post-summit news conPRESIDENTS LAUGH • President Bush,
supporting
federal funding of
rerence
in
San
Antonio,
Texas
Thursday.
rigbt, and Mexican President Carlos Gortari
"blasphemous" an were "disgusting lies."
Iowa Sen. Tom Hadin, buffeted
by conventional wisdom that his
campaign was ending after dismal
ers
called
on
European
and
Asian
showings in New Hampshire,
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) States could not give its neighbors
countries, singlin~ out Japan in par- Maine and South Dakota, sblmped
- President Bush and six Latin all the help they requested.
•'These are not easy times for ticular, to share m both the finan- for Minnesota's caucuses and
American leaders concluded a drug
summit Thursday with renewed the United StateS," Bush said at a cial burden nf the war on drugs and insisted he still was a contender.
"I'm the imderdog, yeti have
pledges to combat narcotics, but news conference at the close of the to join in cooperative interdiction
effons.
more
pledged delegates now than
one-day
meeting.
Bush cautioned that "at a time of
The
summit
nations
will
send
a
Instead Bush and the Latin leadanyone else in the race. It's a funny
rather sparse resources" the United
delegation, with one member from year, isn't it, when the person with
each country, to visit Europe and the most delegateS at any one point
Japan and seek bilateral and multi- in time is asked if he's going to
lateral agreements on aid and coop- drop out," he said at a St. Paul
eration.
news conference.
In
a
Declaration
of
San
Antonio,
Harkin has 46 delegates, but has
Herman Cole
Rock, Calif.; Mrs. John (Alice) the panicipants agreed to a series
little
money left to campaign for
Herman E. Cole, 66, of Route I, Cordray of Fullerton, Calif.; Mrs.
of
steps
that
for
the
most
part
lhe
Soulhem
primaries. Instead, he
Chesterhill, died Thursday, Feb. Clarence (Gamet) Hammersmith of
expand
upon
existing
efforts
to
is concentrating on liberal caucus
27, !992, at Selby Hospital in Belleview; Mrs. Harry (Myrtle)
combat
coca
production
and
money
stateS
lilce Minnesota.
Marlena.
Morehead of Gulfpon, Fla.; two
White House spokesman Marlin
Born in Meigs County , he was brothers, Russell and Lawerence laundering, increase training of law
the son of the late Viola Chute Cole of Chesterhill, and several enforcement agents and improve Fitzwater conceded the political
the sharing of intelligence.
. discontent embarrassing Bush in
Cole and Elmer Cole.
nieces and nephews.
They
also
agreed
to
hold
annual
He was retired from the B. and
Besides his parents he was pre- high-level followup meetings to two states so far would probably
not subside until the recession
W. Power Plant in Barberton where ceded in death by two brothers,
assess
progress
in
lhe
war
on
drugs.
does.
"You 'vc just got to tough it
he worked for more than 34 years. Aoyd and Garrett Cole.
out,
got
to live through it."
He served in the U. S. Marines in
Funeral services will be held
The United Slates and Australia are
A national poll of Democratic
World War II with a tour of duty in Monday at I p.m. at the White
Iowa Jima, and was a member of Funeral Home in CoolviJle with the world's largest producers of lead voters by the Times Mirm' Center
lhe Masonic Lodge 293 in !Janl~tt. Tim VanHorn officiating. Burial metal. Transportation accounted for for People and the Press showed
He is survived by hiS w1fe, will be in the Fairview Cemetery. the major end use in America with 75 Clinton ahead with 32 percent to
percent use&lt;! in batteries, gasoline ad· Tsongas's 27 percent. Jerry Brown
Juanita Hopkins Cole, three step- Friends may call at the funeral ditives
and other applications. Other . placed third with II pen:ent, Kersons Donald Sells of Akron, Gary home Sunday 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. uses include
emergency power supply rey 7 percent and Harkin 6 percent
Sells of wooster, and Billy Parrish
batteries, construction sheeting, The poll of 1,227 adults conducted
of San Francisco, Calif.; two step- Virginia Eastep
sporting ammunition and TV tubes. Feb. 20-23, had a margin of ~
daughters, Kimberly Martinez of
major mine producers include
Vir$inia F. Eastep, 76, Middle- Other
Norfolk, Va., and Terri Davidson
the
former
Soviet Union and Canada. or 3 percentage points.
of Orlando, Fla.; nine grandchil- pan, died Friday morning, Feb. 28,
dren two of whom resided in the 1992 at Veterans Memorial Hospihom~ Richard Glen Da~dson,Jr., tal.
Arrangements
will
be
and shelby Don Davidson; five sisannounced
by
Fisher
Funeral
Horne
ters. Ann Price of Athens, Mrs.
Robert (Sylvia) Martin of Little in Middleport

Leaders conclude drug summit

--Area deaths--

SPRING VAllEY CINEMA
446 4524

BAR~ III

'"TINfES SATI.IROAY l SUNDAr .
WC'.AIII NIGHT Tll(5r:iY .

' ', ;, '

CLEVELAND (AP)- Here are
Thursday night's Ohio Lottery
selections:
Pick 3 Numbers
9-3-7
(nine, three, seven)
Pick 4 Numbers

·Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Second ctau
, pootop poid ol p..,..roy, Ohio

!

tit 1844, Secretary of State Abo! P. Upshur, Navy Soc:reiai:y 11tomas,

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Feb. Z7- Mrs.
Darren Arms and daughter, Kimberly Christopher, Julia Curtis,
Sophia Henry, Cheryl McCoy,
Shasta Nibert, Allen Romaine,
I ulie Thompson, Bryan Waugh and
Catherine Wilson.
Births Feb. Z7- Mr. and Mrs.
Roger McDaniel, son, Gallipolis.

Veterans Memorial
THURSDAY ADMISSIONS Raymond Justice, Mason, W.Va
, THURSDAY DISCHARGES 'George Rumfield, Gerald Sellers
Naoma Hoschar.

I

D:eialu;theBaltimoreandObioRailruadCompany,was~

around.
The Senate Finance Committee
will write a smaller bill on Tuesday. Instead of targeting I8X cuts on
wage earners, as the House bill
does, Chainnan Lloyd Bentsen, DTexas, wants to restrict relief to
families with children. He wants to
expand Individual Retirement
Accounts and offer new incentives
to busitiesses and individuals to
make job-creating investments.
But chances that a tax cut will
become Jaw in this election year
have been clo.uded by Bush's oftrepeated promise to veto any bill
that raises income taxes.
"Every Democrat knows this
bill will be vetoed." House Republican Whip Newt Gingrich of Georgia said while the Democratic proposal was being debated.
That is no accident, said Republican Leader Roben Michel of IUinois. He suggested Democrats
wanted 10 put Bush in the position

01992 Ac:cu-Weather,lnc.

i

1
By The Associated Press
.
. Today is Friday, Feb. 28, the S9th day_or 1992. There are 307·days le~
10 the year.
' .
'
Today's Highli&amp;ht in History:
,
i
. . On Feb. ~. 18S4, some SO ~nts to slave!¥ met at~ sclloolhousl:•
· 1n Ripon;·W1s, 10 ~I for, a JltW pq)iacal grQUJl. J~ Dr&amp;lUUZ8tion would!
later becotito known as the Republiciit farty.
·
/
:
. Qn tltll dale:
.
'
I
· In 1827, the first U.S. railroad chartored 10 carry passenger• and:

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
House-passed tax reduction for
wage earners is heading to the Senate, where Democrats have their
own ideas of what a "middleclass" cut should look like.
But Democratic leaders in both
houses agree the tax reduction
should be paid for by raising taxes
on the well-to-do - and President
Bush says that is not acceptable.
"The richest I percent of Americans will pay more" so that 90
million wage earners will have to
pay less, said Rep. Dan Rostenkowslti, D-Ill., chairman of the
House Ways and Means Committee.
On a 221-209 vote, Democrats
pushed their tax plan through the
House Thursday after rejecting the
president's shon-term proposal by
a 264-166 margin.
Bush called the House action
"terrible ... political" and predict~
ed the Senate would turn the bill

Cloudy

Sheriff issues advisory

Congress his Seven-Point Top Priority Plan, this item was missing.
On NBC's "Meet the Press," Elizabeth Drew called that to the attention of Vice President Dan Quayle
and asked: "So did the president
mean what he said in the State of
the Union or not?"
' 'Absolutely,''
answered
Quayle, explaining lhat "it's not in
the shon-tenn package," but Bush
put it in his lower priority "jobs
package," for action later. Drew
wondered: "Why isn't it in the
short-term package if it's something we can do right away?''
·
"Elizabeth, Congress is a very
complicated animal and Congress
has a very short attention span;•:
said the man who is just a he&lt;ll1bea~
away from being President Dall'
Quayle. " ... We didn't put itiO:
there. U the Congress wants to pu(
it in there as part of the president's!
overall package, put it in; he 'U sign,
it."
'
We may be in for a long year.l
But it's still not too late for us to'
demand a dose of truth.
(C)l992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

]l

conditions and

MICH.

What liberals believe .about wealth

a

=

Accu-Weather• forecast for

Are we ready to demand the truth?

Every once in a while some
incident or. remark explodes like a
star shell over the battlefield of politics and discloses the deployment they're correcL And let's acknowlof the troops on the darkling plain edge, too, thatlhere is and always
below.
has been a big gap between the livOne such remark occurred in a ing conditions of the top fifth and
recent article by liberal columnist the bouom fifth in this country Anthony Lewis in The New York and in every other COuntry. (Oliver
Times.
It ~es carefitl attention Wendell Holmes Jr., in one of his
)ich.
. Democratic leaders are determined to vote before Bush's deadline, but for what it tells us about the real letters to Harold Laski, remarked
not-Bush's way. "And come Marth 20, if the Democrats send me the views of Lewis and his fellow lib- that it seemed to him that "social)nessage they're ta1kinJ about now ... I will veto it and aend it back," the erals.
ism never sot far beyond look at
The general theme of the article the biJ-house and look at the little
~ident said ~ the House went ID work on tax legislation.
·
. What's likely out of all this is a stalemate, a campaign-long argument is the large and (Lewis argues) one.")
growing difference between
What fascinates me is Lewis'
pver the blame. but no major I8X legislation.
. Ironically, that fits the advice a procession of econoll)ists has been giv- "Americans with incomes in the repeatCd use, in the quoted passa~e,
ing Congress, many of them saying slut-term I8X changes would come top 20 percent" and everybody o( the verb "to get." Usten &amp;¥am:
!00 late ltave an impact on recovery from the recession llld mi&amp;ht actually else. Man of the former have cOm- "The top 20 percent of Amencans
prehensive health insurance, send now~ 47 percent of the country's
~et in the way.
, Bush had neither the vOles nor the leverage to.enforce his tams or his their children to private schools, totaliiiCorRe- The boUom ftfth gets
lnd live and work in pmniles pro~e when he announced them on Jan. 28. He's got lea now, after a
.
tected by alarm syslems lnd private ~=~·t!MI~IDtdssopatentl)'
troubled beginnins in his camplip for a second lel'lll.
· When Republicans put up a sisn near the Capitol countins the days aecarlty pards.
But think biL Lewis is talking
ilown toward tbe deadline, Democratic Chairman Ronald H. Brown · Lewis quoces 1 fellow writer as about disparate shares of "the
. laugbctl and said he'd lhou&amp;hnhe decreuinl number wu Blllh'sl'llilis in . observins that, "F~ doe elite, .life country's total income." Ali
iJ Rilly IW Iller tltali it UIOd Ill ba, income, in other words, belongs in
!he lis;
, 'Crall scoffed at the Bush popW!t wltile the president toot tbe Food ilso much better. Hotels are the first instance 10 "the country"
luad. urging vocen to demand thll ~ li)tiiOYed his plan ~(Ole his more sumptuous. The variety of - represented, naturally, by its
and dismiaalna Democraue "feel.oocl&amp;immleb." As IJDnllernents·available, tho sports, government. Never mind where
ts maneuYaed. die White ~ llid tbeir
wu to force the liiVOI - h'• a cornucopia. For that income came frOm: There it
thefew,"
·
veto llldemllfn.-tbe edm!•IJDlGon.
sits, in the public fiSC, ~vid .with
Or
more·
precliely,
Lewis
· The tax iaue ltlded ltlllllh'stlllu'aln 11 till New Ht ,...., .,.a. ·
all 1101'11 Of tooihltJme
ibilities.
uaerti, fCI' il:e lllP oae-fiftlo tl die
dential primJry, wbrR he- beltll8 53 pt»OIIit of tile Republican..,..,
'lbat tolon&amp; comes~pen:ent of
' Chaflellscr ~ I. ~. wbo JO' 37 pciiCAIIII, tw tend BUilt JJilPbllllioto "Tile 1DP 20 perceat of . tbe population- apparently
for
biJ 1988 ftld-my-lips pamile of no new IIXCI, IOCltled the Alnerlc:IM," hedccn, "aow set shrewder and qtticker t1oan the rest
prt8ident o reneglnJ on a
lnlk pnllliled tltll year,lllll bmad- 47 percent of the country's total -and "sets" 47 pen:cnt of itt
ineomo. The bottom filth gell 3.9 The rest of us "set" smaller.
tasa a bturlic rA eamplip
ccaa•eilll on bodt poilU.
perc:a:L
','
,
' The capit11 piaa 111 cut BUilt baiOtlllllllilce becclnlat pelldeat II
. llllnil,lllll doe "boaom" ftfth for
I
have
no
idea
where Lewis SOi no leJltim~~e reason, "sets" ;,my
lhe centerpiece of bil dlldline plan for - i c ~; ~uchallln
thoso statistics, but let's assume 3.9 pen:ent
..
·
apee19fl Iltat piOJQ'f,llld WIIIIIIR evepiii!IJIU~IIO!I.

••JIY

Saturday, Feb. 29

Accounting Office issued a repon
alleging that he had overchar~ed
Medicare for $1 million in semees
to home health-care agencies. At
the time, Merlo said his fees were
reasonable and, in 1981, a federal
prosecutor declined to charge him
with Medicare fraud, saying that
the ''ambiguity'' of Medicare regulations "creates enormous problems with law enforcement."
Our associate Alicia Mundy
informed United Way of America
board members about the investigation. They responded that they did
not know about iL Last week, Aramony put Merlo on leave with pay
and Merlo began negotiating an
amicable departure.
We also informed board members about a former chief fmancial
officer for United Way of America
who told colleagues that she didn't
like the "unusual" financial
arrangements between United Way
and its spinoffs and subsidiaries.
She left the job in 1989, and we
have learned that she reportedly
signed a confidentiality agreement
saying she wouldn't talk publicly
about her misgivings. Sources say
that agreement includes a clause
that she can talk to United Way
board members about her experience, but apparently they aren't
interested. We asked II board
members if they would contact the
woman, but they declined.
The board then· announced that
lhey would do their own investigation, apparently without the help of
this former chief financial officer
who could point them in the rig~t
direction. Then, without even waiting for that investigation to be fi~­
ished, the board announced two
weeks ago that they had given Ar.imony a resounding vote of confidence.
Meanwhile, United Way's idea
of countering the negative publicity
has been to swamp their affiliatos
with fax warnings in advance of
our column advising them how to
compose a rebuttal when the column appeared in their local new~ ­
papers. United Way officials have
consistently refused to answer oitr
questions direct! y, preferri"g
instead to do damage control with
their afftliates via the fax machine'.
Copyright, 1992, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
:

111e Dally Sentlnei-Pape-3

Democratic tax bill passes House; Senate acts next.

OH 10 Weather

Page---2-The paJJy Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, February 28, 1992

United Way scrambles to refute criticisms
WASHINGTON - United
Way of America has been rushing
to put out brush fires all across the
country in the two weeks since we
revealed the inner workings of the
national headquarters .in Alexan dria, Va.
With an annual budget of almost
$30 million collected from United
Way affiliates around the country,
tb'e national headquarters pays
salaries to its top executives that
are more fitting for a profit-making
venture than a charily. And, United
Way of America has spun off a net·work of private companies that
employ relatives and friends as
double-dipping staffers and consultants.
Since our story broke, it has
been a bad two weeks for United
Way, with a lengthy expose in The
Washington Post last week and a
blistering story published this week
in Regardie's magazine.
The United Way of America has
tried to rebound from the negative
publicity with explanations for
business-as-usual and superficial
housecleaning, but it will take more
than that to restore the confidence
of donors. United Way faces a lean
recession year when more people,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

aRl.tinl
SHINING
THROUGH
~

~!

...,

S-94-9

(five, nine, four, nine)
Cards
K (king) of Hesns
4 (four) of Clubs
7 (seven) of Diamonds
10 (!CD) of Spades

SlAN
CONNElY
LOIIlAINE
BRACCO
i
;t ~

C!llUNY IIH-. AiflE

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

-~cw,

..

...,.,::::~,...,

EFFECTIVE MARCH 1, 1992
Swisher·Lohse Pharmacy will be able
to·fill prescri~tions for American Electric
Power Employees and Retirees who
have the PAID ~rescrftion card. Our
computer will be able to give you
instant uedit for your deductible
through the TelePAID on·Une processing
system. We will be able to Inform you
how much you owe on each·
prescription.
WE WELCOME YOUR PRESCRIPTION
BUSINESS

! t

'Sublcril&gt;ori no\ dalirinclo PlY \II• cani•
er miY feDl in .chance direel to The

OantpoHa DaOy Tribune on a dane, til
'"' t2 mqoth bulo. Credit 'will bo fivon
-urrier each week.
'No oublmpllono by malt permUted in
areal where home canier aervice lt .
a"ailable.
r

K-iou~ac·,'!W,.-,...."'.

llallht.arlptiDDI
, I..Wo Oatlla CnnQo-

i

-

llanail - . . ft .....
- - tiN . .. I :OOo.m . •till p.m.
lundlf 10:00 • ·• · •o•:oOp.•.
.
PAIICAII'TIONa
Pit 111-2115
E. Moln
'Frl•dly hnrtoo - • .,. OH:

13 Wooki .........................................m.ll4

.26W-.......................................... .16
a w..u.,...................................... .7s
Olataldo OoWo COilDQ'
ta w.u ........................................,.m.40

•w-.
... . . . . . . . . ,. . . . . . . . . .
51 w-.........................,................ .40

l)p..

..........

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�1I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 The Dally sentinel

Friday, February 28, 1992

Eastern defeats Southern 39-18 to capture Meigs sectional crown
BY SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Correspondent
Outscoring SoUihem's Torna-

does 14-6 in the third period, the
Eastern Eagles broke Oj?Cn a 12-6
halrtime score and handily dereated

its cross-county rival 39·18 to
claim the girls Division IV section·
al basketball championship at

Meigs High School Thursday
evening.
Eastern advances to the disUict
tournament at Jackson High
School, f here it will meet Frankron Adena - a 44-30 winner over
Mowrystown Whiteoak · in the
Unioto upper-bracket title game on Thursday, March 5 at 6:30p.m.
Dawn Heideman's Eagles are
now 15-6 overall, while Southern
bows out at 1-20.
Eastern's Tabby Phillips led all
scorers with 11 points and five rebounds, followed by TiiTany Gardner with 10 points and a game-high
14 rebounds.
SheUy Metzger had nine points,
three assists and a good passing
game.
Christi Cooper led Southern
with six points and seven rebounds,
while freshman Andrea Moore
added six points and six rebounds.
Southern point guard Amber
Ohlinger had three assists, three
steals and three points.
Heidema~sfllted, "It's hard to
get physic lly (fr d up when
you've beat n a
twice and
their record isn't very intintidating.
Like before, Southern played hard,
but got tired, and that's where our
depth came in. We kept fresh legs
on the coun and kept the tempo up
on the transition game. Our defense
and our numbers were keys in the
game.
"It's nice to play bad and still be
sectional champions. We went
from nervous to frustrated at the
beginning of the game. We skipped
right over our confidence and that
put us in the hole. With the experience or this tournament game ,
we'U be ready for next week's opponent. We have no idea who we'll
play, but we'U be ready."
Eastern hit a meager 16 of 71
for 22 percent from the Held, but
played good derense through out
the game.
Heideman concluded, "We're a
dominating team. We can do the
job on offense and we can do it on
defense. I was very proud of our
defense tonighL Anytime you hold
a team to just 18 points, you're going to win."
Jaime Wilson put Eastern up 2-0
at the 5:03 mark. Cooper netted
Southern's first points to tie the
score at 3-3 at the 4:31 mark.
Southern played a deliberate of.
fense, and Eastern could not initiate
a fast break, resulting in a low scoring game. That was also com·
pounded by a terrible shooting
night by the Eagles.
Eastern led the firSt quarter 54.
Nora Eastman hit a rrce throw at
the 5: 13 mark for the ftiSt score of
the second frame. Cooper added a
free throw to pull SHS closer at 6·

possible tom cartilege in her knee.
Similar injuries have been treated
at Ohio University, and players
have come back to play within a
week or so, according to Heideman.
Quarter totals
Southern ...............4 2 6 6 = 18
Eastern ..................5 7 14 13 =39
Southern (18)
Player
2s 3s Ff Pts.
Aimee MiUs.............I 0 0 2
Amt~er Ohlinger ......I 0
I
3

Andrea Moore ......... 1
Christi Cooper ......... 2
Linda Mangeroy ...... 0
Totals
s

I
0
0
l

Reding, Penny Aeiker, Debbie Gray, Tiffany
Gardner, Jaime Wilson, Tabby Phillips,
MicbeUe Metzger, bead coach Dawn Heideman
and assistant coacb Tammy Capehart. In tbe
back row are Michelle Guess, Amy Redovian,
Jennifer Roush (standing between rows),
Michelle Schultz, Nora Eastman, Tara Congo
and Ruby Burke. Manager Renee Gray is seated
in front.

Scoreboard
In the NBA ...
EASTERN CONFERENCE
t\llanUc Dlvblon
Team
W L PeL
New Yea ............ 34 22 .fiJ7
801ton .................. 31 2S .554
Mi.ami .................. .. 27 29 .482

Philad&lt;lphi&gt; ........... 26 31

Tol il~on 74, Tot Catuot 73
Tol. W~;~~66 . Oregon Strit.ch 42

Tonight's games
N.Y.lalmdeu It New Jc:ney, 7:35p.m.
Philadelphia 11 Edm&lt;mton, 9 :3~ p.m.
Mont.rulat San Jose, 10:35 p.m.
Winnipeg 11 Vancoover, 10:35 p.m.

GR

.456

New Jcncy ............ 25 31

.446

8.5
9

Wuhins,too ............l8 37

.327

15.5

Orlando .................. l4 -'2

.250

20

Cenlnl Dlvlllon
Chicago..................46 II .807
Clen lllld.----1' 11 .667
0etmiL .... ............... 33 24 .579
Atlanu ...................28 27 .509
Milwaukec ............. 25 30 .455
Indian• ................... 25 :32 .439
Chulotte .... .. .... 20 36 .357

Saturday's games

J
1

Pac:lnc Dlvltlon
17 .691
Golden St1t.e .......... 37 17 .685
Phoenix .. ................ 36 21
.632
Saule .................... J I 2.5 .554
L.A. Ukm ............ 30 25
.545
L.A. Oippcn ......... 27 28 .491
SacramGlto ........... .l9 37 . 33~

TCJ.u-Arlington 97, NW Louisi• na

82

Far West
Arizona 104, Oregon 56
Brigham YDLms81, Hawaii 64
Ca.l St-Fullmtoo.76. Pacific U. 62
Idaho 66, Montana St. 63
Idaho SL 89, E. Washington 85
Mmtana 71, Boise St. S'8
New Mcxioo 60, Colorado St 56
Ortton SL AO, Arizma St. 72
SanDiego 81, San Fnnci11eo 74

801tm at Wuhingr.on, 12:05 p.m.
Edmonton 11 Wirmipea, 3:CJ5 p.m.
Ph.iladelphia 11 S111 J01e. 4:3S p.m.
Cllpry at V111COJvcr, S:OS p.m.
C¥caso 11 Buffalo, 7:0S p.m.
Minnt10t1 It ToiOtlto, 7:05p.m.
Hutf&lt;rd 11 N.Y. Rangers, 7:35p.m.

13
17
20
21
25..5

Sanu. Can 79, St. MU)''I, Cal. 60
SGU!hom Co\83, UCLA 1?
Slmford 78, Wuhingt.m 66
Tcxas-El Puo 73, Wyoming 72
UC lrvine 78, Sat! Jose St. 65
UNLV &amp;4, Fresno SL 67
Ut1h 84, San Diego St. 70
Washington SL 79, Cilifmtia 72

Major college
basketball scores

GB

Tournament action

East

4
8
16.:5
20.5

I
2
I

6
6

5

18

I

Eastern (39)
Player
2s 3s IT Pts,
Shelly Metzger ....... .4 0 1 9
Jaime Wilson ...........2 0 0 4
Tiffany Gardner.. .....4 0 2 10
Tabby Phillips ........ .5 0 I II
Ruby Burke ............ .! 0 0 2
NoraEasunan ......... .l 0 I
3
Totals
17 0 S 39

rure58

BMaven -

Hofstn 92. Broak.lyn CoL 56
Long blind U. 94, SL Franci1, Pa. 74
MauaehLIIetta 74, We.t Virginia 69,

2.5.5
OT

Ponl~nd ................. 38

Niqm 83, SL Pc&amp;cr'a 55
St Fnncia, NY 84, Robert MorTis 68
SL J01cph'1 100, i)uQueane 87
Tonplo 6'1, Rhode I.fand 62
Vermcnt 17, NoJ1.bcutc:rn 67
Wagner 82, Marut 80

.S
3
7.5
i
II
19.5

?I

Ohio high school

basketball scores
Girls-tournament action
DMilonl
Akron Garfield 56. Akron N. 49
Amhunt SO, N. Olmsted 41
Ooverleaf 57, Pllm'la Hts. Holy Name

South

Thur&gt;day's scores

Ccntc:nary il, Stmford 58
FlOOda SL 110, Nonh Carolina 96
OclofiPa South.cm I 04, SLCtSOn 76
GoorJia Tech SO, Wake Form61"
Howard U. 79, Delaware SL 6S
Jacb:o-willel02, South A11bt.ma 85
Liberty 68, Cou\IJ Carolina 58
L.oui&lt;wlo 17, Tuano12
Mercer 16, Fla. lnll::matiOI\Il fiJ
New Odeana S4, Louililna Ted! 53
SE Lw.iliana 78, GeorKia SL
SW LouiJ:iafl.l 97, McN"ce&amp;c St 83

New Jeney 98, Portland 96
Chlrlotte 136, Philadelphil S4
Od.roill 04, Mihnukec '1T
San Antonio 17A, Golden Stlte 103
Seaa.le 130, Uuh 124, OT
Sacn.mcnto 110, New Ycrl: !09, OT

Tonight's games
Portland at Wuhington, 7:30p.m.
Orl111do ulnditna, 7::30 p.m.
8011or11t Al1An1.1, 8 p.m.
Phoenix 11 D.Uu. 8:)0 p.m.
Chicaao at Milwaukee, 9 p.m.
HOUlton at Den..-er, 9 p.m.
Miami 11 LA. Clippen, !0:10p.m.
Clneland at L.A. lalur1, 10:31
p.m.

n

Midwest

54

CUyahoga Fall1 54, Akron Buchlt! 4i
EutlU.e 7.5, ac. Eut 47
MamiJm ladson 45, Alliance 41
Musillon
Wuh in gton
61,
Wad,wonhS9
Mayfield 42, Mldiaon 40
Modina 59, Puma 51
Sylvania Southview 65, Tol . Rogen
ll
Tol. SL Ursula 46, Maumee 45
Wutl.ake 46, Cle. Manhall45, OT

Chicaao SL 96, NE DJ.inoia 8.5
Cincimati 70, Marquette 59
Cleveland St 81, AkMn 58
rllinoi.l SL 79, Crcip~ 62
N~ Damo 76. Loyall, W. 67

Saturday's games
New Yorll, 1 p.m
Philldelphi• at Wuh ington , i :30
MinnCIOI.I It

Division 0
Akron Hoban 43, Revere 41
A1h1.1bW1 Harbor 52, Asiu.abull41
Avon J..Ue67, B•y 49
Beaver Local .59, Union Local 50
Credwood 49, Field 44
Dover 38, Claymont :32

Southwest
Ark.·LttleRock 82, W. Kentucky 12
NE Louisiana 9S, North Teus 81
Step hm F.A11.1tin 61, SW Teua St.
Aruonia 49, S. Qulmton Southeastom 41
Aymville 4,, HDJaat.c 28
Buvtr Ealttfll 61, Unloto 4l
Fnnldln Furnact Green 49,
Mlllchtlter46
·
fnnklin·MtmOe63, Tri·Vi.llage 60
·Om way 64, P~ Ulteland 31
tbnnan Tract Mt Kner Crttk 21
LeeuJni.a 61, HowWtd Ch.r. 31
ern ~bura Clay 89, Latham W•t·

p.m.
Indiana at Chu!()IW, 7:30p.m.

New Jcmy It Dct;roil, 7:30p.m.
DatvCJ 11 San Antonio. 8:30p.m.
Miami at 4Jo'den State, \0:30p.m.
Suttle at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.

Sunday's games

Portltnd at OUcaso. 1 p.m.
Alllnta ll Milwaukee, 2:30p.m.
Ulab 11 P'hocaiA, 3:30p.m.
New Ycd at New Jmey, 6 p.m.
D.U.• at 801ton, 7:30p.m.
L.A. Qippers It Orlando, 7:30p.m.
Clenland at Su.Uie, 11 p.m.
HOUIIM ul..A . Lakm, 10:30 p.m.

fhmil"" Badin 47, Springboro 39
!dfc::non 70, Plincsvillc Harvey 47
Moo"' 41 . K&lt;a&lt;ring Aile&lt; 23
Medina Buckeye 4S, Cle. VASJ 24
Medina 1--liahJ.tnd 59, Nordcnia43
Olentangy 40, Ccl Unden-MeKinh:y

l'l
Teays Valley 46, London 43

WtrreniVille ,3, Clo. Brieview 43
WaWnl Mcm&lt;Kial " · Marylville 24
Whitdull SO, Col. Eut 39

MUter 53, Trimble 35
Ntw Botton 59, Porllmouth ClaJ

ll

In the NUL ...

Rudnllle Euttrn Jt, Racine
SoliiMnll
SO\IthinJ\CR 46, Colwnbiana 2S
Stryker 34, Fayette 24
Srmmet VaiL 461 N. Callla U
TIIICUIWU Calh. ,1, Berlin Hiland

WALES CONFERENCE
Palrkk Dl'o'llklll
Team
W L T Pll. GFGA
N.Y. R...... ..... .0 20 ~ 14 249 205
Wuhinf\00........ :r7 21 l 19 269 21l

Now Jer10y _, ..... 32 20 9 73
62
N.Y. !s!.oadon .... 2621 1 l9
Pilila4clphia.:.. .. 23 21 II l1

Pirllboqlo .........• 7171 I

lO

234 192
262242
22l2AO
I!10 204

Rttular·.uon action
Muaillon Chr. 30, Medina F'JJ'Il Bapt.

23

Adami DlvWon

•·Ma\oW ......... :r7 21 · 1
Boo.................. 2.9 2l I
Buffalo ...... :........ 24 2110
lladfooL. .......... II 31 II
Quob« ............... 1341 9

11 216 t56
66 212213

. Boys-touraament action

Dl ... looll
•
• Col. Eato 61, Col. BtOOklla•"' 6l
Faid&gt;om l7. Plquo -44
Oalloway WeNand .(9, Col. Walnut
Rldao47
'&amp;bet H&amp;t. Wayne 13, SprinJ. Soutb
l2
66, Fnn&gt;lin llu.l1

51 22l234
~7 117 212
3.! tll2ll

Pick""""'"

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
NcrrrloDI- ·
TW L T 1'11. GFGA
Dcaoit.............. .. ll 19 9 19 Ul203
SL LouU ............ 30 2l 9 69 226212
Chico&amp;•·············· 71 2313 ~ 201 tU

MJru-u .........• 26 31 l l7 196 215
r ................... 21 36 6 41119235

S•JIIIt-

Mocllanil..... 63,lr14iln w. 21

Dl•hlaoD
John rn.... 67, Mamn 64
Tri-Valley e;, JUvarVi~M" 3l

..

Phillips, Ruby Burke and Gardner each hit field goals in the last
rour minutes to give EHS a 12-6
lead at he half.
Eastern put together a great tran·
sition game in the second hair to
get its frrst uncontested lay-ups of
the game, but still had trouble offensively in its half court game.
EHS led 26-12 at the end of the
third round.
In similar fashion a tiring SHS
squad succumbed to the more up·
beat Eagles, 39-18.
Southern hit 6-42 overall and Ill three-pointers. They hit 5-15
free throws. EHS hit 5-I9rrom the
line.
Eastcm had 42 rebounds led by
Gardner's 14, Wilson's eight, and
Phillips' five. EHS also had 15
fouls and 16 steals, led by Gardner
and Metzger with live each.
Southern had 32 rebounds, led
by Cooper's seven, and Jessika
Codner and Andrea Moore six
each.
SHS had five assists, 13 steals,
nine turnovers and 18 fouls.
Southern head coach David
Gaul stated, "Our girls played another good game. We JUSt didn't
get our shots, and the shots we did
get did not fall . When we slow
down the tempo, we have to make
our shots."
· "All year long this grouP, never
gave up. They've worked ham and
hustled every night in practice ~~
games. We ended up With a srarurig
line-up of freshmen and sophomores. Their record doesn't reflect
their performance. The wins will
come in the future. They wiD bave
a great career if they stick togeth-

Alcorn St 88, Alibama St. 84
Miu. Valley St 112, Pnirie View 79
S(J.nhem U. ll4,JacbonStiOl
Teus Soulhem 103, Grambling St.

43

Dl¥lllool m
Avon S9, Blick River 51
Bunr E•tern A, Unlolo 42
C.diz 52, Ri•or49. OT
0Uppcwa12, Hillldalo 11
Cin: \Vyomina 37, Cin.-Mariemont 25
Columbia ,l,iairvicw Parle 37
Felicity 49, Sardinia P.uu:m 47
HtmtinJUin 50, Zane Tnoe41
Uoboo 44, LoWsvi11o Aquina 34
LueaniiM ValleJ 57, Peeblt143
Mlptcton l2, W. Sokm North.-on

.

Minford 47, N. Adarna .U
·
l'lunbouJ Sprina.l3, Youns. u .....
ty45
•.-.
Predonllle falrla•d ss. Coal
Cr6te46
.........., ~.Windham 31
s. w.-s, Wbeohnbura4'

er."

''Eastern bas a fme team and we

wish them well in the tournament."
Eastern senior Lee Gillilan was
out of the line-up Jllld is out indefinitely wilh stretched ligaments and

w. MuWaauor 62. Ridp~ood so

WaiCtloo 63. Aluao Elml32

~Omlt!Une

MASON FAMILY

RESTIUUNT

1S 211 "'
({I 2342!1
1
-W.................
... ········•· 212t
25 71 II·' · 63
61 2!7:140
193196
c.Jaory ............ 25 2t ' $J 234234,
s.nJ..............;. )~ ... ~ :12 164212
• -cjinobool pla)"&lt;lf -

.

80ftem. -'· TCII(Iftt.o 2

StLoioili W.....,_!
Pblhd';;w' ,. CllpiJ' 0
..... ""'oleo 4, Qullroo 2 .

Ji.Vi,ai. DAT DIETJil'l IPitiCJAL.-::=::-..:ct;
OPEN SUNDAY, 10 .. .,., 8,.
CARRY CUY CIIID!IIUYAUILE (30C)77U321
.

~

The Dally senllnei-Page-0

3.4 points a game.
Out front for the Marauders will
be a pair of lightning-rast 5·3
junior guards. Reva Mullen is SI.Jr-

ing 9.1 points a game, and Vema
Compston scores 11 .5 points a
game. The pair have been a thorn
in the· side or Marauder opponents

- - - - - SVAC cage standings---(OveraU)
Team
W L
Oak HiU ........... .16 5
Southem ........... .l3 7
Eastezn .............. ll 9
Hannan Trace .... IO 10
North Gallia ........9 10
Kyger Creek .•.•...•8 12
Symmes Valley ...6 14
x-Southwestem ..1 19

PF
1442
1433
1352
1252
1194
ll08
ll74
1127

(Conrerence-rmat)
Southem ........... .l2 2 1065
Oak Hill ........... .12 2 998
Hannan Trace .... !O 4 943
North Gallia ........8 6 938
Eastern ............... .7 7 925
Symmes Valley ...4 10 817
Kyger Creek ........4 10 771
Southwestem .......O 14 728
TOTALS ..........56 56 7185

PA
1185
1220
1396
1323
128?
12015
1288
1504
784
793
891
930

945
902
876
1064
7185

(SVAC reserves - final)
Team
W L PF PA
Southem ............ 14 0 802 475

Eastern .............. 10
Symmes VaUey ...9
Oak Hill .............. 8
Hannan Trace ..... .4
Kyger CreeL .... J
North Gallia ....... .3
Southwestern ...... .3
TOTALS ......... .SS

4
5
6
9
10
11
II
SS

644 575
617
636
547
501
505
50 I
4753

626

600
632
574
661

all year. Mullen has picked up 87
steals on the season, while Compston has come up with 54 . Lori
Kelly, a 5-foot-6 juniQr, Katarina
Turner, a 5-foot-6 junior, and ·Lee
Henderson, a 5-root-4 junior, are
the ftiSt off tlte Marauder bench.
The Marauders, like Logan's
teams of the past, do not reature
one star. Meigs uses a balanced

TERRIFIC TENNIS
SHOE SALE

610
4753

Thursday's tournament scores
At Univ. or Rio GrandeNorth Gallia 74, Southwestern 57
At Athens H.S. -Oak HiU 80,
NelsonviUe-York 53
Tournament action
Saturday - Eastern vs. North
Gallia at 3:30 p.m., Southern vs.
Kyger Creek at 5:15p.m., Glouster
Trimble vs. Hannan Trace at 7
p.m ., and Hemlock Miller vs.
Symmes Valley at 8:45p.m. (all at
Univ. of Rio Grande); Oak HiU vs.
Belpre at 6:30 p.m. (at Athens
H.S.)

scoring attack with rour players
averaging froni just under eight
pomts a game to 12.5 points a
game. Any one of four or five players can hit double figures in scormg.
. The winner or Saturday's game
w•ll advance to district action on
Thursday, March 5 at 8:15 against
the Coal Grove sectional winner.

25%on
.

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

BIG

LEAP YEAR SALE
At
Middleport Department Store
.

20°/o

GARDNER SHOOTS ..- Eastern's Tifranay Gardner (32) takes
a sboUn the paint iD front or southern's Andrea Moore (20) during
Thursday night's Division IV girls upper-bracket sectional championship at Meigs High School. Gardner scored 10 points to belp the
Eagles win 39-18. (Photo by Scott Wolfe)

SAVE
STOREWIDE
OFF REGULAR PRICE

ALL SALE SHOES FOR WOMEN and
fH1iDREN
0
NOW
PAIR

10°

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

VALUES TO 151.99

CHAPMAN SHOES

IIDDLIPOIT, OHIO

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

OPEN EVERY FRIDAY 'TIL 8:00 P.M.
LAYAWAY NOW FOR SUMMER!
Support Your Loe~l Merchants

BYPASSES TORNADO- Eastern's Shell?. Metz~er (rigbt)
, !IYpasses Soutbern's Amber Obllnaer on ber way llito tbe p;a)nt during Thursday night's Dlvlson IV sectional n.litl at Meigs High
School•.Metzger bad nine points iD tbe Eagles' 39-18 victory. (Pboto
by Scott Wolfe)

SERVICE • SIZE • SELECTION

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104 EAST MAIN

DON 'ATE CHEVY, OLDS, CADILLAC~ GEO IN POMEROY · .

.INVITES YOU tO THEIR FEBRUARY BASH -)I( FULL DAYS ONLY@ DAYS
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LEFT
NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED. PRICES GOOD UNTIL 8 P.M. MARCH ·I, 1992
NEW 1992 OLDSMOBILE$

NEW 1991's -CHECK OUT THESE DEALS
HANDS TO THE HEAVENS -That's wbere Southern's •••••· ··'
ka Codner (12) and &lt;;bristi Cooper (14) bave their bands as they go
for tbe· rebound during Thursday night's Division IV sectional title
game against Eastern at Meigs Higb School, which tbe Eagles won
39-18. (Photo by Scott Wolfe)
·

WAS

LEAP YEAR SILE!
SATURDAl FEB. 29, 1992

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

Bright red, V-6, T-tops, S ap. Trana., air, AMIFM caas, roar
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1991 GEO StarmGSI-·-------513)15 511,724.00

4l)oor, beige, loaded.

1991 GEO Storm HatchbQj:k

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Flash yellow, automatic Iran e., air, 4 cyl., AMIFM cassette.

1991 Chevrolet S·10 Pickup 414--·51(100 $12,750.00
Apple red, 5 ap. trans., 4.3 litre V-6, aluminum wheels, AMIFM

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12 NOON·4 P.M.

IV-6, AMiFM call., auto., charcoal, 6-way power aeat.

l991 Shletlt Mini Yat~------52~8 517,601.66

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161 FIHr UIIJI Footbiii ...........................- ...- ........................ S1.DO pock
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161
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U IPEORUM............................................... $3,950
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2 Door, 111nOn, tit, 111r cond., quad 4 engine, cruloe, Alma!

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Red, V~. eir, auto., lllioe, alum. wheels.

1992 N1NETY·EIGHT REGENCL...- ........$26,074 $72,950.61
4 Door sedan, V-6, teab,er trim, charcoal. '

1992 NINETY·EIGHT REGENCY_,_,......$25,195 522,194.46
4 Door Iedin, V-6, leather trim, white.
••"

v~.

air, auto., Tahoe, rear jump seats, while.

1992 Cltevrolet Full Size PU...... $16,075 S14,149.II
AMIFM stereo.

1992 Cllevrolet Ful Size PU...... S16,078 S14,151.66
V-6, auto., air cond., locking dlfl., sliding rear window,
5 speed, alum. wlleels, chroma step bumper,

The Power of Intelligent Engineering

.

FANTASTIC DEALS ON
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s

Silverado, r111roon &amp; white.

1992 S-10 5WB....................... $11,027 $10,022.63
2.8 V-6, alr, 5 spHd, Aspen blue, Tahoe, AMIFM
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5

1991 METROS....__.............. 139- 139 ...
1991 CAVAUER.....................S164- 5164 ....
.
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1991 CORSICA....-...- ........... 169- 169 ....
199.1GEO PRIZM..•••~.........................S7999

1992 S-10 SWB......~............... $10,959 $9,963.83
2.$ V-6, air, Sspetd, Tahoe, black, AMIFM cassette.

1.992 5·10 SWB....................... $11,027 $10,022.63
V·6 2.8, 5 speed, Tahoe, air, AM/FM casaalta,
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1992 5·10 EL........"....:........... $9,284

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1991 WMINA or CUTLASS SUPREME's
YOUICHOICE $)0,999
1991 CAPRICE................................s12,990

2.5 4 cyl., 5sputl, R•lley Wheels, charcoal.

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1991 WMINA APV VAN.:...............S12,990
LWB, IUIO, al~ bad Hnar, V-8 engine, maroon •

lilt MI.

1992 S~104X4 Ext.Cab...........$17,744 $16,042.25
V·6 Auto., air cond., LWB, red/charcoal Silverado,

U .CADILUC ELDORADO
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•

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1992 S·104X4 LWBC0\1t" ... $16,294 $14,737.15

tl 'l-10 IIAIILi••·······-····....................... S16,tiD
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2Door, ,...,.,..., loaiiid.

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

i.eathw trim, Towing Package, maroon, air, auto.

1991 Caclllac Sedan Dtd1t-----S3tl21 $28,017.54
4.8 v.a, leather trim, pt.tinum, loaded.
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1992

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

1991 Biavada4.3------S2~4 $21,978.31

OFF ALL
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In Stock New Mere h.:
1992 Donruss
Strllsllll
1982 Flttr Baseball
1982 Upper Deck
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THE 'CARD BOX

Thunday'siCor..

IWII""I·-~
ChiooJO
~ llolnil1

By DAVE HARRIS
Heather Exline, a 5-foot-7
Sentinel Correspondent
junior, will probably get the nod
The Meigs Marauders will batde · from mentor Chuck Dorsey at one
Jackson for the girls Division II f~ard, while the starting line-up
sectional finals Saturday at 7 p.m. wtll be rounded out by either 5at Oak Hill High School.
foot-5 freshman Chasity Foster, 5The Marauders will head into foot·8 sophomore Annie Blankenplay with a 19-2 mark, while Jack- ship or 5-foot-8 sophomore Ronda
son is 17-5 on the year. Meigs will Keams.
lle out for revenge, Jackson elimiJackson beat Vinton County 52nated Meigs from the sectionals 38 and Gallipolis 52-27 to advance
last year with a 54·39 victory.
to the finals. In both games Jackson
; Jackson heads into the game led · pulled away from a close game at
~Y 6-l junior Julie Corfey, who the half for the wiD, Jackson is the
li_Verages about 19 points per con- top seed in this year's tournament.
test artd pulls in 12 rebounds a
The seconded seeded Marauders
game. Coffey has already scored are coming off an exciting 73-69
f\IOre than 700 points in. her career victory over Rock Hill in overtime
and holds the Jackson High record in the ftrSt round of the tournament
for most points in a contest with behind Tricia Baer' s 27 points and
3~.
Vema Compston's 21 pomts.
· Correy is joined in double figBaer, a 5-5 senior forward is the
ules by 5-foot-5 freshman guard Marauders leading scorer with 12.5
Brandy Muon, who averages 12.5 points a conres~ Rim Hanning a 5.
points a game. Jennifer Hill, a 5- 6 senior forward will join Baer
fQot-4 senior, will join Muon at die underneath she averages 7.9 points
gpard position, Hill averages 9.6 a contest. Mary Cremeans, a 5-6
pomts a contesL
senior, will start at center for coach
Ron Logan, Cremeans is averaging

'

v................... 33 20 9
...., Aa o~eo ....... 21 :14 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TOMORROW IS THE

5.

Southwestern AthleUc Conr~rence
F1nt roond

Bostm U. 64, Hartford 55

Georae Wuhingmn 14, St

Anunio 76. S1m Houstm

Tulsa 85, Dn.kc 8l20T

Sunday's games

8.5

Tc~u - San

St63

Wuhing100 at 801t011., 1:35 p.m.
Bulfalo II Pk':'burJh• 1:35 p.m.
Hartford It Minftescq, 2:0.5 p.m.
New Jemy at N.Y. Wandell, 7:35 p.m.
Chie~~o at Tomn!o., 8:05p.m.
Dttro1t1t SL Loui1, 8:3S p.m.
Monttc~lat Lol An&amp;e]ea, I 0:35p.m.

WESTERN CONFERENCE
Mktw•l Dlrltlon
Twn
W L
Pc:L
U1.1h. .... ................... 38 20 .65.5
San Antonio .. ......... 33 23 .589
Houst.cn ................. 29 2i .518
Denver ................. 20 35 .364
Dilln ........... .......... l6 39 .291
Minncsru. .............. ll 44 .200

l?

. friday, February 28, 1992

Meigs girls to face Jackson for D-11 sectional championship Saturday

t~

CELEBRATE CHAMPIONSHIP - Tbese
Eastern Eagles celebrat~ Shortly after Thursday night's 39-18 win over Southern iD the Division IV sectional tournament championship
game at Meigs High School. Eastern advanced
to the district tournament at Jackson on Thursday, March S with a 15-6 overall record. Pictured in front are (L-R) assistant coacb Laura

.

5

1991 FULL SIZE !4 PI(KUP.............. 12,890
(114)

. (880) 837·1014

1992 S·IO LWB...................;....$13,019 $11,749.23
V-6, 4.3 air, auto., Tahot, AMIFM caMttt, rtdlsllver.

1992 5·10 Blazer._,...._ ...... $21,938 $19,795.29

ve, 4.3, auto., whitt. ·

ALL PAYMENTS SUBJECT TO CREDIT APPROVAL .

•ALL REBATES TO DEALER
•TAXES AND TITLE NOT INCLUDED
•GMC SMART LEASE

.PDMDOY

�(
~

'

PPa!g~e~6:=Th~e~O~a~ll!y~Se~nt~ln~e~I----------------------------_!P~o~m~e~ro~y~l~tl~dd~l~ep~o~rt~,~O~hl~o~----------------------------!F~n~da~y~,~Fe~b~ru~a~cy!!28~,~1~99~2

~ -

...
~

the season - an' NCAA Division I
record.
The Trojans (20-4, 12-2) saw a
14-point lead with I5 minutes left
cut to 77-75 with 1:55 left on a
three-pointer by Don MacLean.
Rodney Chatman scored South·
ern Cal's on I y field goal of the
final 5:59 with just under I :30
remaining to restore the lead to
four and the Trojans hung on.
No. S Arizona 104
Oregon 56
Arizona blew out Oregon for the
se,;ond time this season and handed
the Ducks their worst-ever home·
court loss.
Just last month, the Wildcats
beat Oregon by 51 in Tuscan.
Chris Mills scored 21 points,
including IS in a 58-point firSt half,
as the Wildcats-(21-4, 10-3) moved
within one game of Pac· 10 co,lead·
ers Southern Cal and UCLA.
Seven Arizona players scored in
double figures. Orlando Williams
scored 18 for Oregon (6-17, 2-12).
No.7 UNLV 84
Fresno St. 67
J.R. Rider scored 22 points,
Dexter Boney had I9 and Evric
Gray added 18 as the Runnin
Rebels won their 22nd conse,;utive
game.
Coach Jerry Tarkanian's teams
have won seven straight in Fresno
and 16 straight overall against their
Big West Conference ·ovals.
UNLV (25-2, 17-0) put the
game away in the second half,
opening up a 29-point lead in the
first 12 minutes.
Tod Bernard scored 26 points to
lead Fresno State (I5-13, 6-10).
No. 22 Florida State 110
No. 10 North Carolina 96
Sam Cassell, Chuck Graham
and Doug Edwards combined for
72 points to help host Florida State
clinch second place in the AUantic
Coast Conference. ·
The II 0 points equalled th e
most ever scored again st North
Carolina (18-6, 8-5).
Cassell finished with 25, Graham 24 and Edwards had 23 points
and 12 rebounds. In its fust year in.
the ACC, Florida State (19-8, 11·5)
swept North Carolina, Wake Forest, Georgia Tech and North Car-

victory. " ! thought back to my 22 Florida State upended No. 10
freshman year at UCLA when !hey North Carolina 110-96, No. 15
chanted 'Tmnsfer' and 'First place, Tulane lost at home to Louisville
87-72 and No. 19 Cincinnati got
last place • and were mocking us."
In other games involving Top past Marquette 7()..59.
In a Southweslem Athletic Con·
25 teams, No. 5 Arizona crushed
Oregon 104-56. No. 7 UNLV ference tournament game, winless
defeated Fresno State 84-67, No. Prairie View lost its 28th game of

Philly's loss to Hornets worst in Sixers' history
By The Associated Press
It"s hard to say which was worse
-Philadelphia's behavior or its
play.
Charles Barkley and two other
76ers were eje,;ted from Thursday
night's game at Charlotte, which
featured a bench-clearing brawl in
the third quarter. But the game
already was out of hand before the
fight.
Led by Dell Curry's 22 points,
the Hornets routed the 76ers 13684. It was the worst loss in 76ers'
history and the most points ever
scored by Charlotte in its four-year
history.
"We jumped all over them real
bad and that's probably why tern·
pers flared," said Charlotte's J.R.
Reid, who was ejocted along with
Barkley and Philadelphia's Jayson
Williams following the fight.
Johnny Dawkins of the 76ers
was thrown out earlier in the quar·
ter after getting two technicals for
arguing with officials. The argo·
ment occurred after Barkley committed a flagrant foul against
Tyrone Bogues.
Barkley also triggered the brawl
when he collided with Reid and

was called for an offensive foul
with 4:28 re maining in the third
period and CharlotiC leading 90-51.
After Reid and Barkley
exchanged words, Barkley threw
the ball at the Charlotte forward
and both benches cleared. The fight
spilled into the stands before order
was restored.
"Tonight, Charles sunk real
low." Reid said . 'M!W hat he did
isn' t called for in this lea~ue ."
Philadelphia coach Jim Lynam
said the brawl was triggered by the
lopsided score. The 52-point defeat
was the worst in team history, topping a 48-point loss to th e New
York Knicks in 1972.
"We were down so much . it
was just frustration," Lynam said.
Barkley, who had 10 points and
seven rebounds, said he felt Char·
lone ran up the score.
"We just didn' t play well, but
you don't humiliate a team when
they are up by 20 or 30 points.·' he
said.
In other games, it was New Jersey 98, PorUand 96; Detroit 104,
Milwaukee 97; San Antonio 124,
Golden State 103; Seanle 130,
Utah 124 in overtime; and Sacra-

menlO 110, New York 109 in over·
time.
Nets 98, Trail Blazers 96
Terry Mills, getting a rare start,
had 16 points and a career-high 19
rebounds as New Jersey beat visit·
ing Portland.
Trailing 93-83 with 1:56
remaining, the Blazers pulled to
97-96 on a three-pointer by Clyde
Drexler with 43 soconds left After
Chris Morris missed a shot, Port·
land had a chance to win. But
Drexler's high arching shot near
the basket was blocked by Mills on
a play that could have been called
goaltending.
Drexler had 31 points for Port·
land.
Pistons 104, Bucks 97
Joe Durnars scored 26 points as
Detroit extended Milwaukee's road
losing streak to 13 games.
John Salley and Orlando Woolridge each added 18 points for the
Pistons, while Dennis Rodman had
16 points and 22 rebounds.
Frank Brickowslci had 16 points
for Milwaukee.
1·
Spurs 124, Warriors 103
David Robinson scored 37
points and matched his career high

with 24 rebounds for San Antonio.
Terry Cummings added 23
points and Donald Royal had a season-high 16 for the Spurs. Chris
Mullin led Golden State with 28
points.
SuperSonk:s 130, Jazz 114, OT
Eddie Johnson scored 32 points,
including II in overtime, as Seattle
handed Utah its third home loss of
the season.
Johnson made a layup and hit 9
of 10 free throws in the fmal 1:34
of overtime.
Ricky Pierce scored 29 points
for Seattle. Karl Malone led Utah
with 35 points.
Kmgs 110, Knk:ks 109
Mitch Richmond scored a sea·
son-high 37 points and made a key
steal for Sacramento in the closing
seconds to hand the Knicks their
third road loss in four nights.
Anthony Bonner hit the se,;ond
of two free lhrows with I 8.8 seconds left to ~ive the Kings a one·
point lead. Richmond then knocked
the ball away from John .Starks
near halfcourt as the Knicks
worked for a final shot following
two timeouts.
Reserve Kiki Vandeweghe
scored 25 points for New York.

Lefferts to start for San Diego after Myers' arrival
r

B The Associated Press
Craig Lefferts wants a new start
with San Diego. so the Padres'
stopper would like to become a

starter.
Lefferts was the Padres' closer
last season, leading the team with
23 sa·tes. But San Diego traded for

------Sports shorts------Basketball
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) Hall of Fame center Wilt Chamber·
lain will remain hospitalized for the
nc•t few days to undergo tests to
find the cause of an irregular heart
beat, his doctor said.
Chamberlain, 55, was resting
comfortably after being dia~nosed
·• with a slight heart arrhythmia at
· Centinela Hospital Medical Center,
• Dr. Ellen Goudlock said at an
• evening news'conference.
Chamberlain was taken to the
••. hospital from the on Forum
:: Wednesday night after having what
·: Goudlock called "a gastric upset"
: · He was admitted to the coronary
; : care unit after an irregular heart
, beat and elevated blood pressure
~ were detected.
~
Hockey
UNIONDALE. N.Y. (AP) U.S. Olympic defenseman Scott
Lachance signed a four-year con·
U11CI with the New York Islanders
. for $1.2 million, including a
~- $200,000 signing bonus. The 19.. year-old Lachance, who played one
:; season at Boston University. was
·- the fourth overall selection in the
;· 1991 draft.
•
Hockey
•
WINNIPEG. Manitoba (AP) : Tbe Winnipeg Jets traded 31-year·
• old defenscman Moe Mantha to the
' Philadelphia Flyers for future con·
siderations. The Jets loaned Man·
tha to the U.S. Olympic team for
' the Winter Games in Albertville,
;: France.
Hockey
. ''. ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St.
Louis Blues signed French
: Olympic star Philippe Bozon to a
: multiyear contract Bozon, 25, had
• three goals and two assists in seven
·• games in the Olympics.
Hockey
::
INGLEWOOD, Calif. (AP) . The Quebec Nordiques claimed
: forward Gino Cavaltini on waivers
· from the St. Louis Blues. Cavallini,
29. had nine goals and seven assists
in 48 games for !he Blues this sea·
son.
Tennis
ROTTERDAM. Netherlands
(AP) - Jan Siemerink upset topseeded Stefan Edberg 7-6 (7·5), 6-2
and se,;ond-seeded Boris Becker
beat Anders Jarryd 6· 2, 6·4 to
advance to the quartetfinals of !he
ABN AMROWorld.
:
Teanis
: SCOTISDALE, Ariz. (AP) · Fourth-seeded Alberto Mancini

beat Gabriel Markus 4-6 . 6-4, 6-2
and fifth-seeded MaliVai Washing·
ton defeated Jaime Yzaga 6-4, 6-3
in the second round bf the Pure•
Championships.
Tennis
INDIAN WELLS . Calif. (AP)
- Top-seeded Monica Seles
defeated Tarni Whitlinger 6-2, 6-3
and third-seeded Conchita Mar·
tinez beat 12th-seeded Nicole Pro·
vis 6-2, 6-2 to advance to the quarterfinals of the Evert Cup.
Boxing
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo.
(AP) -Two-time champion Javier
Alvarez of San Antonio advanced
to the 201-pound fmal with a 33-24
decision over Sammie Senson of
Colorado Springs in the U.S. Ama·
teur Championships.
Alvarez will face Shannon Brig·
gs of Brooklyn, N.Y .• in Saturday's
final. Briggs advanced with a 21-11
decision over James Johnson of
Lawrence, Mass.

relief ace Randy Myers in the off.
season and plan to use him in that
role.
After the deal that brought
Myers from Cincinnati for Bip
Roberts, Lefferts called Padres
geneml manager Joe Mcll vaine and
proposed that he move out of the
bullpen.
"I put it to him, like, 'This is
probably going to make you
laugh," · Lefferts said Thursday at
training camp in Yuma, Ariz .
" Then !told him I wanted to be a
starter, and he didn't laugh."
Lefferts has pitched in 581
games, all but five in relief, in his
nine-year career in the majors. His
only starts carne during his rookie
season in 1983.
Lefferts was 1·6 with a 3.91
ERA la st season. He also blew
seven save chances.
"Mcilvaine said at the end of
the year that his priori•Y was to get
a closer. so obviously he didn't reel
I was the right guy for that job.
That's one of the reasons why I
thought there may be an opponunity to go into the rotation," Lefferts
said.
In other moves. of sorts, the
Pittsburgh Pirates hope Orlando

Most consecutive years with at
least one professional victory

1955·81
1976Arnold Palmer 1

Jack

Nicklaus 1962·78

.

19511·71
Greg

Nonnan 1976:90

Lee Trevino
Sam Snead 1948-61

Merced can help fill the void left
by Bobby Bonilla's defoction to the
New York MeiS.
Merced, an outfielder in the
minors, platooned at firSt base last
season as a rookie with Gary
Redus, hit .275 with 10 homers, 50
RB!s and 83 runs scored.
But with Bonilla gone, the
Pirates l'lan to play Merced full·
time in nght field.
"!told him, 'This is your home
now," ' manager Jim Leyland said.
''This is where you are going to be.
As long as you are a Pirate. I want
you to be a right fielder."
Playing right field is particularly
signific~t to Merced, whose boy·
hood friends included the three
sons of Pirates Hall of Farner
Roberto Clemente.
"It means a lot to me," Merced
said. "Clemente was my hero. He
was my neighbor. I was friends
with his family. Now I am playing
his position. I never thought this
would happen. I never thought I'd
be standing in the same position.··
Bonilla. meanwhile, arrived at
practice in Pan SL Lucie, Fla., and
predicted the Mets, not the two·
time champion Pirates, are the team
to beat in the National League East
Especially, he said, if Dwight
Gooden returns to fonn.
·'I like us a lot," Bonilla said .
"I don't like putting pressure on
one man but Doc can set !he tone
for this team.
"If Doc throws the way he used
to and can be !he force that he is,
his presence will be very good for
this club," Bonilla said "IfDoc is
back and healthy, the~trhis staff has
four pitchers that could be No: I
starters on a lot of teams. It's going
to be nice not facing them anymore."
Bonilla hit .302 with I g home
runs and 100 RBls last season. He
said he will try not to worry about
any added expoctations because of
his five-year. $29 million contract.
making him baseball's mostexpen·
sive player.
"It's somethin~ I'm going to
have to face but it s not a hangup
for me," he said. "I'm just hoping
that! made things a little better for
the players."

Louisville 87
No. 15·Tulane 72
Despite coach Perry Clark's
pregame plea, a shower of Mardi
Gras beads hit the court after Matt
Popp scored Tulane's fmt goal. A
technical foul was called on the
Tulane fans. resulting in a 4-point
swing - two free throws and a
basket on the continued possession
- and Louisville never looked
back.
Dwayne Morton scored 23
points and Greg Minor had 14 to
lead Louisville (17-8, 6-5). The
Cardinals' win prevented the Green
Wave (19·5, 7-3) from clioching a
tie for the Metro Conference title.
No. 19 Cincinnati 70
Marquette 59
Cincinnati played its final home
game of the season without coach
Bob Huggins and was able to pull
away from the Warriors in the second half.
Huggins was sitting out a onegame suspension for an on-court
outburst.
Anthony Buford scored 20
points , including six straight to
Ignite an t8-0 se,;ond-half run gave
Cincinnati (21-4, 6-2 Great Midwest Conference) the win. Mar·
queue (13-12, 3-5) went 6 !(l min·
utes without a field goal during !he
Bearcats' rally.
Mississippi Valley State 112
Prairie View 79
Prairie View (0-28), which
played this season with only two
scholarship players, broke the
. record for losses shared by four
teams -George Washington Uni·
vcrsity in 1989 (1-27), U.S. International in !985 (1-27), Pacific
University in 1984 (3-27) and
Washington State in I953 (6-27).

INSURANCI

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01'4 ....... f'llll. t;ot.Ma OH 43211

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•, • A. DECIDUOUS describes trees
, Olat drop their leaves or lhed durlnc
:l:ertaln aea10111 of tbe year. Pro~·~~~~~"thls~

"ferb .mea•Inc 'to fall off' or 'to cut

H&amp;RBLOCit

)I tile verb or.ctnm. wblc:b 'cull off'
-pel 'mUon tbe decision hal .
" - made.) F.U for DECIDUOUS,
~ ldjletlw for trees that lole their

"'MElOY
611 EAST MAIM STREET
992-6674 .

Mrw from tbe Latin DECIDERE, a

at.• {Tblt Latin vwb (J abo tbe root

----------------------~
•\

. .. . . .

. The Sutton Township Trustees
will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in
the Syracuse Municipal Building.

Clinic slated
A public turkey clinic will be
held in Meigs County on March 15
from 1-5 p.m. at Eastern High
School.
The course is designed for the
beginning turkey hunter and topics
will include safety and ethics, a
his!O')' of turkeys in Ohio, hunting
techmques and equipment as well
as calling and scouting.
Instructors are John D. Riebel
Sr. and Keith Wood and space is
available for the fmt 50 who register by calling 1·800·282-3557 by
Marchl3.

Surprise ... 3 out
of 4 who file a taX
return get a refund!
Chances are that
means you. So the
sooner you file the
sooner you get
money back!

mas programs, songs and carols
from !he public schools. Sbe is also
trying to stop all reli~ious pro·
grams on radio and television.
Joanne Wildmai) spoke on one
of the missions of the National
Congregational Church. Their primary concern is to bring Jesus
Christ to the Indian people. There
are schools for boys wirh behavior
problems. Also health care and pre·
natal care for !he Indians. All of the
money donated to this mission goes
to the mission.
Hostesses. Marie Hauck and
Pauline Mayer, served a dessert
course. The table was decorated
with a pink floral arrangement.
Favors were note papers designed
by Nancy Jo Saltz.

Come to Shoney·s for ou r Bile-Size Shrimp Dinner- a
hea rty helping of shrimp fried in IOOo/o vegetable oil. served
with cockta il sa uce. dinner hread. your choice of baked
potato. net or fries. and Shoney's All-You-Care-To-Eat
~oup. Salad and Fruit Bar. l!"s a big meal at a small price'

Chili dinner set

Reme:rber Sboney's Seafood Bar

Friday an Saturday starting at 5:00 p.m.

The Lottridge Community Cen ter Association will sponsor its
annual chili dinner on March 21
from 6-9:30 p.m. Cost is $2.50 for
adults and $1.25 for children under
12.

.ONE DAY'ONLY- SATURDAY, FEB. 29

Prices Like This Only Come Around
Every Four Years!

APuill&lt; SeM:• o1
Ths Pubi!CallOI\ &amp;

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·COFFEE

JUICE

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POTATO CHIPS

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30 oz.

19

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PHARMACY IN YOUR EMPLOYEE
PRESCRIPTI(!)N PLAN

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AEP EMPLOYEES &amp; RETIREES :
FRUTH PHARMAeY IS APARTICIPATING
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give you pea.~ce~ofll!!m!!!!!liiindii!.~.alllllllllllllll!lllllllllll

--

I can relate. Take Care.

POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE RIGHI TO LIMII QUANTITIES.

America's Tax Tum -

We guarantee your satisfaction. And our experience
In preparing complete and accurate tax returns.will

Maye Mora presented Lhe pn&gt;·
gram "A New Hean" at Lhe r«ent
meeting of the Friendly Circle of
Trinity Church.
Mrs. Mora's program was based
on February as being Hean Month.
She spoke of the fust heart tmns·
plant in December 1967 and also
on scripture from the bible about
the heart. An article "But It Is a
Miracle" was read which stated
"God works miraculously. A mira·
cle is God's extraordinary manner
of working in which the laws of
nature are suspended, modified or
counteracted. Whether God's work
is contrary to nature or introduces a
new agency operating according to
a higher law, it is nevertheless con·
trary to the natural laws which we
know."
Plans were finalized for the Ash
Wednesday Breakfast which will
be held Wednesday at 7:45 a.m.
A petition was discussed regard·
ing the stopping of Madelyn Mur·
ray O'Haire. It was stated she is
campaigning to remove all Christ·

298 SECOND ST.

'
.

Trustees to meet

The Elm City Kennel Club is
donating dog and cat food to the
West Haven Emergency AssistanCe,
Task Force, .which provided food,
fuel, clothing and other assistance
to needy people.
"We would rather give them
food than have them give Ul! !heir
pets or have the pelS euthaniZed,"
said John Ferrie of the kennel club.

FCTC discusses petition

STORE HOUR~
Monday tin Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Jellrey McQuain
.:.ay
• .

:: Q. What are trees called that drop ·
ibeir leaves? And why are they called

If you live in the vicinity of
Pomeroy and were given an empty
plastic grocery bag on Saturday, try
to put a non-perishable food item
or two inside and wait for the
weekend.
In conjunuction with "Food for
Scouting", the bags were distribut·
· ed by Pomeroy Troop 249 and Cub
Scout Troop 249 last weekend. The
same young men will pick up the
(hopefully) filled bags on Sal\lrday.
The non-perishable rood i~ems
will be donated to the Meigs Unit·
ed Methodist Cooperative Parish
for distribution to the local needy.
This is a worth while, annual event.
Please, do your pan.

Howard Pennell, Carl Searls, Bob
Sloan, Marion Slater, Mary Snyers,
Homer Tate, and William Weaver,
five year awards.
It was voted to purchase the
property adjacent to the hall for
$2,000.
The legion agreed to sponsor
two girls at Buckeye Girls State to
be held in June, and noted that a
flag had been donated to the Salem
Center School.
Charles Carr. second vice com·
mander and entertainment chairman, reported !hat he had complet·
ed arrangements for the profession·
al wrestling match which will
include lady wrestlers and midget
wrestlers on the card. The event
will be held on April 9 and is open
to the public.
.
Jimmy Snyder talked about the
Sons of the American Legion. The
Eighth District Commander's
Homecoming to be held on April
II at New Lexington was
announced.

MILFORD, Conn. (AP) - Pets
also suffer when their owners have
financial problems, so organizations are setting up pet-food banks.
"If people can't feed themselves and they've got pets, they
cenainly are not going to feed the
animals,'' said Chuck Hopkins,
supervisor of the Milford food
bank.

.

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

•

of Huntington, W.Va. announced
its plans to purchase the Covert
Bouling Company on Fifth Avenue
in Middleport. The "ultra-modem"
facility was expected to bottle 250
cases of RC and Nehi soda per
hour, one of the fastest tines in the
state.
Also in late-February, 1950,
Pomeroy School Board J.O. Roedel
was warning voters in the village
that teacher's salaries would be cut
if a two-mill levy failed in the May
primary. The levy was expocted to
generate $7,020.
Washington •s Birthday closed
down the Pomeroy business district
this week in 1950. According to
The Daily Sentinel, streets were
nearly deserted.
"The few visitors are taking
parking spaces of their own
choice," the newspaper reported.
"That is at least one welcome
aspect of working on the holiday
and certainly an unusual occurence
in Pomeroy."

Awards for consecutive membership in the American Legion
were presented at a recent meeting
of Feeney-Bennett Post 128, Mid·
dleport.
Henry Clatworthy, post adju·
tant, presented awards to:
Marvin Kelly, 40 year award;
James Thomas, Robert C, 1kle,
Donald Mills, Wi!liam Ratlifl and
Joe Schuler, 35 year awards: Raymond Kloes, Hobart Lee, P. A.
Scott, William T. Thompson,
Ernest Van Inwagen, and Pauline
Wolfe, 30 year awards: Edward
Evans, Sr .• Franklin Rizer, and
Bern Walker, 25 year awards.
·
David Wolfe and James Young,
20 year awards; Clifford Christy,
Jackie King, Lanny Tyree, Walter
Wilson, Joe Clark, Roger Morgan,
IS year awards: Kermit Buzzard,
Jim Hudson, and George Miller, I 0
year awards; and Kenneth Davis,
Guy Bing, Arthur Connan!, Don
Ellis, Woody Gammon, Rae
Gwiadowsky, Jack Hawley,

Gathering food for needy animals

'

Is the most important element In winning golf tournaments.
So 1t s not surprising that consistency Is the hallmark of some of the great·
est names In golf history. Between 1955 and 1981 , Gary Player of South
Africa put together the longest streak ever of seasons with at least one pro
victory in the United States or elsewhere. Spaniard Seve Ballesteros is cur·
renlly working on extending his 17 -year string, which is tied for the second·
longest ever.

·: SCARF wolfs down or eats quickly.
j'lever mlsUJe the slang verb SCARF.
« your readen are likely to-choke.

The reeently-COIICluded Winter
Olympic games will certainly leave
. many lasting impressions on those
around the world who watched.
. They were the first Olympics
smcc the end of the Cold War, and
the fierc,e competition between the
Soviet Union and the Americans
was rel'laced, somewhat. with a
compeution between our team and
the Japanese.
That mostly-friendly competition aside, we Americans certainly
took Midori ltct under our "wing"
when the Japanese press started to
hound her. I'll never forget the
gleaming smile on Midori •s face in
t~e exhibition skating on Saturday
mght, once the pressure was over
and the silver medal was won.
Then, there was the adulation
expressed by .Nancy Kerrigan's
mother, legally blind, who watched
her daughter's exquisite skating
performances just inches from a
television monitor.
And, am I the only person who
. thinks the Olympics are just not the
Olympics without Jim McKay?

It's been a while since we
looked at historic headlines from
past issues, so let· s travel back to
1950.
Royal Crown Bottling Company

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113 W. 2nd
Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-So179

Co~~lstency

•

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By Brian J, Reed

Jeff 'W•rner ln111uranee

.

I

Friday, Februacy 28, 1992
Page-7

Post honors members

Consider this ...

FOR HEALTH INSUAA"'CE

lti1llll Ola

The Daily Sentinel

•

olina State.

CALL:

.

By The Bend

Miner helps No. 13 Southern Cal beat No. 4 UCLA 83-79

giving USC a two-game sweep of
By The Associated Press
UCLA may be ranked higher its crosstown rivals.
Afterwards, Miner savored the
than Southern Cal in the national
win
and thought back to the days
polls. In Los Ang.eles, though, USC
when UCLA dominated Southem
is No. 1.
Cal.
Harold Miner scored 29 points
"This is so nice," he said with a
and grabbed 13 rebounds Thursday
smile
after the Pac-10 Conference
night to lead the 13th-ranked Trojans over the No.4 Bruins 83-79,

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The

Friday, February 28, 1992

Sentinel

The Dally Sentinel-Page 8

Beat of the Bend...
by Bob Hoeflich
Many of you probably will want
to remember Vickie Boso who has
undergone pancreas and kidney
transplants at University Hosp•tal.
Her Mother, Ann, reports that
she's getting along pretty well.
Viclcie's address is 984 West Doan
Hall, University Hospital, Columbus, Ohio.
And if you haven' t been able to
reach Shirley Quickel at her
Pomeroy home recently it's probably because she's spending quite a
bit of time in Gallipolis. Shirley is
teaching ballet, tap and jazz dancing at the French Arts Colony in
the French City. The phone number is 446-3834.

---

And sad news from Charles and
Jan Lochary, former residents, no.,v
living at 1952 Golf View Drive,
Bartle!~ II., 60103. .
Their new grandson, the son of
their daughter, Meg, and her husband , John, died on Jan . 19.
Named John Robe~ the infant died
unexpectedly although there had
been some health problems
involved after his birth on Dec. 6.
An autopsy disclosed that one-half
of the baby's heart was enlarged.
Such a sad time for the family all
of whom had looked forward to the
baby's coming and the happy times
ahead. Meg and her husband
reside in Matthews, N. C. Both are
doctors. Meg is a dentist and her
husband a medical doctor.

zational meeting on the subject to
be held at 7:30 )i.m. on March 9 in
the Carnegie Building, E. Second
St., Pomeroy-that's the former
Pomeroy Library. If you're interested in the development or the
reunion but can't make the March 9
meeting contact Eleanor Smith at
992-2639; Marvin and Lois Bun at
992-3101, or Linda Mayer, 9925954.
Now let me 11et this straight?
As I undersland 11, prisoners in the
Ohio Penitentiary were injected
with cancer cells in 1961-and no
one apparently followed up on the
·results until now? I never cease 10
be amazed.
So you're not an entertainer but
you might like a summer job at an
amusement park? Okay, here's
your chance.
Interviews for seasonal jobs at
Cedar Point will be held on Thursday, March 5, at Hocking College
in Nelsonville. No appointmenl is
necessary and prior experience is
not required for most jobs-about
100 different categories- everything from ride operators to hotel
hosts and hostesses.
Wages start at $4.25, slightly
higher for food hosts and hostesses.
However, if you complete your
employment agreement you get a
35,cent per hour bonus. The
majority will work a six-day, 48
hour week with a chance for additional hours during peak season.
Housing is available for employees
with on-site living amenities
including a post office, laundry
facilities, worship services, a low
cost employee cafeteria, free
admission go Cedar Point, Soak
City and use of the beach. The
park also does cost-free special
events for employees, six nights a
week.
Interviewing will take place
from II a.m. to 3 p.m. in Oakly
Hall at Hocking College.

School days, school days, good
old golden rule days.
Remember your days at the
Sugar Run School in Pomeroy?
The school was constructed in
1875 with eight grades being
taught there until 1929. From that
time on, the school had only six
grades and in 1961 the school was
closed as the Pomeroy Elementary
School on Mulberry Avenue
became the site of education.
Several former students of the
Sugar Run School feel that it would
So we learn that the head of the
be great to hold a reunion of former
students-a time to relive old United Way has been receiving a
salary of $463,000 a year. Incredimemories and to chat about them.
If you're interested in such a ble. Do keep smiling.
reunion be sure to attend an org:mi ·

FRIDAY
HARTFORD • A benefit gospel
sing for the Eddie Casto family at
the Father's House Church in Hartford, W.Va, will he held Friday at 7
p.m. with singm Victory, Joy and
the Turley Family. Pastor Clyde
Fields invues the public.

or the year on Saturday at Royal
oak Resort. Music will be provided
by Gea-ge Hall from 8 to 11 p.m.
Membership dues will be accepted
at the door. Dues are $40 per year.

RUTLAND · There will be a
round and square dance at the Rut- ·
land American Legion Hall on SatPORTLAND- The Lebanon urday from 8 p.m. to midnight with
Township Trustees will meet Fri- music by CJ. and Country Gentleday at 7 p.m. at the township build- men.
Fitch will be the caller.
ing in Portland.
The pubhc is invited to attend.

Rar

TUPPERS PLAINS - The Tuppers Plains VFW Post No. 9053
and Ladies Auxiliary will hold a
round and square dance on Friday
from 8 to II :30 p.m. with music by
C.J. and the Country Gentlemen.
Public invited.

SUNDAY
RUTLAND - "Jesus Will Outshine Them All" will be presented
at the Rutland Church of the
Nazarene on Sunday at 6: 15 p.m.
by the teen class and adult choir.
The public is invited to attend.

KANAUGA - The Silver
Memorial Free Will Baptist Church
in Kanauga will host a pastor
recognition day on Sunday at 2
p.m. There will be preaching an
singing by different groups. The
HOCKINGPORT · There will public is invited and refreshments
be a round and square dance on will be served.
Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at Hockingport at the Kenny and Millie
POMEROY - There will be a
Reynolds. Music will be provided 12-step AA meeting at the JTPA
by the Hot Point String Band. Ron- office in Pomeroy on Sunday at 7
me Wood will he the caller. Coun- p.m.
try, bluegrass and gospel music is
played there every Monday at 7
LOTIRIDGE - A smorgasbord
p.m . The public is invited to attend. dinner will be held at ·the Louridge
Community Center on Sunday
LONG BOITOM - The Faith from noon to I :30 p.m. Cost is $5
Full Gospel Church in Long Bot- for adults and $2.50 for children.
tom will host preaching and
singing on·Friday at 7 p.m. featurMONDAY
ing local talent. Pastor Steve Reed
RUTLAND • The Rutland
invites the public. Fellowship will Township Trustees will meet Mon·
follow.
day at6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire
Station. The public is invited to
POMEROY - An AA meeting attend.
will be held at the J1PA office in
Pomeroy on Friday at6:30 p.m.
POMEROY · Meigs Local Band
Boosters will meet Moriday at 7
SATURDAY
p.m. at the high school band room.
TUPPERS PLAINS - A Prom New officers will he announced.
Dress Exchange will be held Satur· · All parents are urged to attend.
day at the Tuppers Plains VFW
Post No. 9053. Dresses may be
PAGE VILLE . The Columbia
dropped off between 9 and I I a.m. Township Trustees will meet Manand a fee of $1 will be charged for day at 7:30p.m. at the ftre station.
each dress. Unsold dresses and
money should be picked up by 6
MIDDLEPORT - The Middlep.m. Call 843-5137 or 985-4161 port Garden Club will meet at the
for further information.
home of Mrs. William Morris on
Monday at 7:30p.m. Mrs. E.G.
RACINE - The Racine Youlh Schaelcel will lead the program on
League will hold its sign-up for lawn care. Roll call is 10 tell of a
baseball and softball on Saturday lawn problem solution.
from 10 a.m. to noon at the kindergarten building. Other days for
CHESTER - The Chester PTO
sign-up will be Tuesday, March 3 will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the
from 6-8 p.m., Saturday, March 7 school. All parents and teachers are
from 10 a.m. to noon, and Satur· encouraged to attend.
day,. March 14 from 10 a.m . to
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
noon. If this is the fust sign-up for
a participant a birth certifiCate copy Orange Township Trustees will
must be furnished. The cost is $10 meet Monday at 7:30p.m. at the
for girls softball and $15 for all home or the clerk, Susan Pullins.
others.
SYRACUSE · The Suuon
Township
Trustees will meet MonREEDSVILLE - Girl Scout
day
at
7:30
p.m. at the Syracuse
Thinking Day will be held Saturday at 4 p.m. at Eastern High Municipal Building.
School.
LETART • The Letart Township
Trustees
will meet Monday at 6
POMEROY -The Royal Oak
p.m.
at
the
office building.
Dance Club wiD hold its first dance

Fetherolf presents slide
show to DKG members
•

Judy Feilterolf presented the Tables were decorated in a Washrl!isonal growth program when the ington-Lincoln motif. Favors were
ha Omicron Chapter, Delta Valentine candies.
pa Gamma, met recently at
susait WiU presided at the busiden Masonic Hall.
ness meetin~ in which officers
,..,Mrs. Fetherolf showed slides reports were giVCn.
· d crafts. She and her husband,
Viola Gellles, legislative chair·
o\lie, served at Southwest Indian man, reported on education bills in
hoot near Phoenix, Ariz .• where the legislature.
taught classes and he used his ·
The pres\dent distributed $,h~ts
peponce in woodworking and announcing Alpba Delta State I..eg~s 10 aid the school. 'll1is is . islative Day on March 24 at Rime
bolrding school and those attend- Center and State ~iiOl in Colum. must be at least SO percent ·bus and ''How to VISit Your Legis·
dian. She stated alcoholism lator." She tl\anked the bost~ss
s die people and that the youth ·committee and cooks for the meal
i~ide rate ts hish. The school and Bernice Mapes for her newlet·
·e1 to he~p thesut~th adjust to ter.
.
.·
SOCICty. ~ ...,. s wed pi~·
Jackie Fain's Wellston Junior
of the school and students and Hi h Chorus
C28i · ben
homes and hogans of the ~~next
will
ai
: &lt;:rafts were from the Hop,. Grace United Medlodist OIUrdt in
Jlttche and Navaho tribes. Later, waverly on Man:h 14 at 12:30 p.m.
Fetherolfs served Bellltiny MiJ. in charge of Beta Tau Chapter.

00

m':t.S:V :"'held

E/rJ:~~tz of the hostess . ~~~:!m= ~~at'S6

Catholic

Church of Jesus Christ Aposlolk Faith
New Lima Rd., next 10 Ft Meigs Park
Paswr: Robert W. Richards
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
WednesdaY Services • 7 p.m.

Sacred Heart Catholic Church
161 Mulberry Ave., P&lt;meroy. 992·S898
Pastor: Rev. Walter E. Heinz
Sat. Con. 4:45-S:IS p.m.; Mass· 5:30p.m.
Sun. Con.· 8:4S-9 .1S a.m.,
Sun. Mass -9:30 a.m.
Man · 8:30a.m.

Church of Jesus Chrlsl Apostolic
VanZandt and Ward Rd.
Pastor. James Miller
- 10:30a.m.

CHESTER · The Shade River
Lodge annual inspection will be
held Friday with dinner at 6:30
p.m. Members bring two homemade pies.

VMH Auxiliary to hold sales

FIVE GENERA TION·s • Pictured is the five generation ramUy
of Susie Fischer, Racine, seated. She is the great great grandmoth·
er or the infant she is holding, Kayla LaRae Bachtel. Otliers pic·
tured are, 1-r, Shelly Wolle, mother, Gloria Michael, great grand·
mother, and Brenda Hickle, grandmother.

Apostolic

The February meeting of the
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital was opened
with the Auxiliary Prayer by Grace
Warner.
Jessie White presided at the
meeting in which officers reports
were given.
Scali Lucas, hospital adminis·
trator, discussed the furniture for
the new sun room recently added to
the Extended Care UniL It has been
ordered and will be delivered soon.
At a recent meeting the Auxiliary
agreed to help with the cost and
donations have been received.
The group voted to purchase a
pulse oximeter for the hospital.
Fundrasiers were discussed and
a candy sale will be held the Friday
before Easter on April I 7 in the
lobby. A bake sale will be held
later. ·It was suggested by Lucas
that a chili cook-out would be a
good project.
·
Round robin cards were signed
for Marcia Wells and Carrie

Kennedy. There will he a pig-in-apoke sale at the next meeting to be
held March 17.
The meeting adjourned and the
group went to the Extended Care
Unit. A party was held for the
patients with group singing and
games. Winners receiveJI prizes. A
Valentine King and Queen were
selected - Herman Martin and
Amber Warner.
Refreshments of cake, ice
cream, cookies and punch were
served.

Pomeroy Westside Church of Christ
33226 Child""'' Home Rd.
992-3847
Sunday School · II a.m.
Wonhip·l0a.m .,6p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

• The ctassk fairr tate "RIJMftlesltii~kin"
wiD be presented at the Middleport Amertcan Legion
by the
Columbus Junior Theatre on March 13. Here, two performers
from the troupe are pictured in a scene from the program.

'Rumplestiltskin' to be
perfonned March 13
"Rumplestiltskin", the popular
fairy tale from the Brothers Grimm,
will be performed by the Columbus
· Junior Theatre at the Middleport
American Legion Hall on Friday,
March 13.
The performance is sponsored
by the Middleport Recreation
Department.
The traveling troupe of perform·
ers has performed in schools and
community centers for 21 years.
During the current touring season,
the company will reach approximately 70,000 youngsters, provid.ing for many their only exposure to
live theatre.
Audience participation is a vital
part of the program, and it is especially recommended for boy s and

girls aged kindergarten through
grade five.
"The trouping program is an
inherent pan of the CJT's mission,"
a spokesperson for the CJT said.
"We make theatre accessible and
affordable to students from all
walks of life; we stimulate and nurture the creative instincts of the
young mind and generate a genuine
appreciation and respect of theatre
in these students - our young audiences of today, our adult andiences
of tomorrow."
Admission will be $2 for adults
and $1 for preschoolers and stu·
dents. Information is available
from the Middleport Recreation
Department, at 992-6782.

SHS students compete
Several members of the Southern High School band and choir
participated in Lhe Ohio University
District 17 solo/ensemble festival
held recently in Athens.
Emily Shain, performing "Turkish March" by Beethoven as a
xylophone solo received a superior
rating, the highest rating given in
Lhe competition.
Students competing in vocal
solos and their ratings were
Michelle Brown, "When Love Is
Kind", an excellent;' Heather
McPhail also presenting "When

Love Is Kind", an excellent, and
Bridget Powell performing "AIIelujah", a good. ·
An ensemble consisting of
Emily chain, Mary Chaney, Rhon.da Spaun, Leah Matson, Heather
McPhail, Michelle Brown,
Michelle McDaniel, and Bridget
Powell presented ''The Trout". The
ensemble received a good on their
performance.
The choir and band at Southern
are under the direction of Jeff
Arnold.

Turkey hunting permits available
Forked Run State Park will be
stocked with fish from the London
Hatchery about noon on Tuesday,
Keith Wood, game protector for the
Division of Wildlife, announced
today.
He also announced that turkey
hun1ing permit applications are
available from him at 985-4400, or

from the Division of Wildlife at
594-2211.
He said the applications must be
filed not later than S p.m on March
10. The permits are $16 and the
hunting season is from April 27 to
May 16. One bird for each hunter is
permiued. A two·bird season has
been proposed for the 1993 season.

Contest deadline announced
High school students in ~igs students in grades 9-12 is to
County are reminded that Sunday encourage young people to increase
is the final day to enter the I 992 Lheir knowledge of soil, water and
High School Essay Contest spon- related natural resources. This
sored by the Ohio Federation of year's topic is woodlands. Brieny
Soil and Water Conservation Dis- discuss the historical and current
tricts (OFSWCD) and the Meigs starus of woodlands in your county.
Furtller information may be
Soil and Water Conservation Disobtained
by calling the Meigs
trict.
The contest, which is open to SWCD office at992-6647.

Tandy announces
award nominees
\

Pomeror
2t2 W. Main St
Pa11.0r: Andrew Miles
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.

Free
u~\\ii'd~~;;
Ash.Will
StrecL,
Pastor: Mark Mn1""w
Saturday Service· 7:30p.m.
Sunday School- 10 11.m.
Worship • 11 a.m.,
Wednesday Service-7:30p.m.

Mlddlepcrl Church or Christ
Sth and Main
Pastor: AI Hanson
Sunday School-9:30a.m.
Wordtip • 8:15,10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services~ 7 p.m.

Rulland Flrsl Bapllsl Church
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.

Keno Church or Christ
Worship-9:30a.m.
Sunday School· 10:30 a.m.

Wor1hip - I 0:45 a.m.

Pomeroy First Bapllst
East Main Sc..
Panor. Steve Fuller
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services-7:30p.m.
First Southern Baptist
41872 Pomeroy Pike
Pastor: E. LamuO'Bryant
Sunday School - 9:30 a.m.
Worship · 10:45 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
Mlddleporl flm Bapllst
Comer Sixth &amp; Palmer
PaslOr: Rev. James A. Seddon
Sunday School - 9:15a.m.
Worlhip · 10: IS a.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Racine F1rsl Baptist
Pastor: Steve Deaver
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:40 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.
Silver Run Baptist
Pastor: Bill Litde
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services ·7:30p.m.
MI. Union B•pllsl
Pastor: Joe N. Sayre
Sunday School· 9:4S a.m.
Evening · 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services ·6:30p.m.
Bclhlchem Bapllst
Pastor: Rev. Earl Shuler
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.
Wonhip - 9:30a.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30p.m.
Old llethe Free Will Baptist Church
28601 St. Rt. 7, Middlepcn
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evening · 7:30p.m.
Thursday Services · 7:30p.m.
Hillside Bapllsl Church
St. R1. 143 juSI off R1. 7
Pas1or: Rev. James R. Acree, Sr.
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship- lla.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.
Hope Baptist Chapel
S10 Grant SJ.. Middlcpcn
PaslOr: David Bryan, Sr.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Wonhlp ·II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servires- 7 p.m.
Vlelory Baptist
52S N. 2nd Ss., Middlepon
Pastor: James E. Keesee
Worlhip · 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Fallh Baptist Chun:h
Railroad St., Mason
Sunday School· to a.m.
Worship . II a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 p.m.
Forest Run Baptist
Pastor; Arius Hun
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wor:ship. Jla.m.

MI. Moriah Baplbl
Foorth .t Main St., Middlepcn
PastOr: Rev. Gilben.Craig, Jr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m.
Anllqully Baplbl
Pastor: KeMeth Smith
s...day School· 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · 10:4.5 a.m.
ThundayServices · 7:30p.m.
Rulland Free Will Bapllst
Salem St.
Pulor: Rev. Paul Taylor
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evenina - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services • Tp.m.
Ash Street Freewill Baptist
Middleport
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip • II o.m.
Wednesday Service -7:30p.m.
Soturday Service - 7,30 p.m.

Bearwallow Ridge Church of Christ
Pastor: Jack Colegrove
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services - 6:30p.m.

Zion Church of Christ
Pomeroy, Harrisoovillc Rd. {Rt. 143)
Pastor: Interim pastor
Sunday School· 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip- 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m .
Wednesday ServilZs - 7 p.m.
Bradbury Church or Chrlot
Pastor: Tom Runyon
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Worsh.ip · 10:30 a.m.
Tuppers Plains Church ofChrlsl
Pastor: Robert Foster ·
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship- 9:45 a.m.,6:30 p.m.

Dextu Church of Chrlsl
Pastor: Chris Stew an
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip ·10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Rutland Church vi Chrlsl
Pastor: Eugene E. Underwood
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Worwp · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.

Mason Church or Chrlot
Miller St., Mason, W.Va.
Sunday School · I0 a.m.
Worship · II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.m.
Bradford Church of Ch.rlst
St Rl 12A &amp;. Co. Rd . S
Pastor: Derek Stump
Sunday School • 9:30 a.m.
Worship. 10:30 a.m .• 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service• · 7:30p.m.

Sucte!iS Rood Church ofChrbl
Pastor: .beph B. Hoskins
Swtday School • 9 a.m.
Worship ·10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Woclnesolay Services -7 p.m.
Llbes-ly Christian Church
Dater
Pastor: Woody Call
Sunday School - 10 o.m.
Evening • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.
Lanpvllle Christian Church
S101day School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday S.rvi"' 7:30p.m.

Hm11ock Grove Church
Pas10r. Charles Domiaan
Sundapchool· 10:30 a.m.
Worshtp . 9:30a.m., 7 p.m.

Christian Union
Holl..., Church of Chrillln
Cllrlstlan Unloa
Plstor. Tlten&gt;n Durham
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evenins • 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servicea -7 p.m.
Harlford Church of Christ In
Chrlsllan Union
Hanford, W.Vo .
Puler: Rev. David McManis
Sunday School • 11 a.m.
Worship· 9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Servi&lt;es ·7:30p.m.

Racine
Putor: Rev. Jamea SMtcrfield
Sunday ~I • 9:45a.m.
Eventns • 7 p.m.
Wednelday Services • 7 p.m.
Rudand Cllurdl of God
Pas~Qr : John F. Corcoran
Sundar School · 10 a.m.
Wonhtp • II a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Scrvice1 -7 p.m.

Syracuse Church of God
Apple and Second Su.
Pastor. Re\1, David Rusiell
Sunday School and Wonhip· 9:30a.m.
Evening Services- 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7 p.nt.

Central Cluster
Asbury (Syncuse)
Pastor: Welley Thatcher
Sunday School · 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip • It a.m.
Wednesday Services -7:30p.m.

Cllun:h or God of Prophecy
OJ. White Rd. elf St Rt t60

Nazarene
Racine First Church otthe Nazarene
Pastor: Thom11 L Ga1e1, ll
SWidl)l School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 o.m .• 6 p.m.
W....,sday Services· 7 p.m.

Enterpri,.
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Worship · 9 a.m., 6 p.m.
Tuesday Services -1 p.m.

Pastor: Paa Henson
S111day School· 10 a.m.
Wonhip ·II a.m.
Wednesday Services -7 p.m.

Middleport Chun:h or the Nazarene
Pa110r: Rev. Ucyd D. Grimm, Jr.
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m., 6:30p.m.
Wcdnclday Services - 7 p.m.

flatwooda
Pastor: Keith Rader
Sundar School-tO a.m.
Won:htp-l1a.m.,6p.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m .

New Life Church or God
C. ester
Pa~tor : Gary Hines
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip- 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services • 1 P-'1'·

Reedsville Fellowship
Church flthe NIZirene
Paswr: John W. Dooglas
Sunday School . 9:30a.m.
Wor1h.ip - 10:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.m.

Forest Run
Pastor: Wesley Thaleher
Sunday School· 10 a.m.
Wor1hip- 9 a.m.
Thursday Services - 6:30p.m.

Episcopal
Gra&lt;e Epbcopat c•un:h
326 E. Main St, Pomeroy
PaslOr: Rev. Dr. Rov C. Myers
Sundoy school and won hip • ll :30 a.m.

Syncuse Church of the Nazarene
PaslOf: Rev. GleM McMillan
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wo11hip • 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.

Healh (Middleport)
Past.or: Frank Smilh
Sunday Sch.ool· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednc:.sday Services · 6p.m.

Holiness
Pine Grove Bible HoNnea Church
I /2 mile off Rt. 32.'5
Paswr: Rev. o·o.u Manley
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service ·7:30p.m.

Pomeroy Church orthe Nazarene
Pastor: Rev. Thomu McClung
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Worship · 10:30 a.m. and6p.m.
Wedneaday Services· 7 p.m.

Minersville
Pastor: Wesley Thatcher
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 o.m.

Chester O.urch of' the Nazarene
PtsJor: Rev. Herl&gt;en Grale
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.• 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services ~ 7 p.m.

Pearl Chapel
Pastor; Florence Smith
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worsh.ip - 10 a.m.

Wesleyan Bible Holiness Church
75 Pearl St, Middleport.
Pastor: Rev. Roy McCany
Sunday school · 9:30a.m.
Worship - 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
Hysell Run Holiness Church
Pas1or: Roben Manley
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Womup · 10:45 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday Service-7:30p.m.
H.arrhwnvllle HollntSS Chapter
Pastor: Rev. John Neville
Sunday School 10 a.m.
Womup . II a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service· 7:30,p.m.

Latter-Day Saints
Reorpnlzed Church of Jesu• Christ
In Lolttr Dar Salnu
Portland-Racine Rd.
Pastor: William Roosh
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Serviteo - 7:30p.m.

Pomeroy
Pasler. Eunhae (Grace) Kee
Sunday School· 9:lS a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 6 p.m.
Wednesday Services - 7:30p.m.

Rulland Church flthe Nazarene
Pastor: Samuel Basye
Sunday Sehool · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m .,6:30p.m.
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

RockSp~ngs

Pastor.Keu.h Rader
Sunday School · 9:1S a.m.
Worllnp · 10 a.m.
Wednesday Services . 6 p.m .

Portland First Church lithe Nazarene
Putor: William Justis
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonh.ip - 10:40 a.m., 1 p.m:
Wednesday Services- 7 p.m.

Rudand
Pastor: Anhur Crabtme
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.
Thursday Servica: - 7 p.m.

New Haven Church of' the Naurene
Pastor. Glendon Strood
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services· 7 p.ni.

Sale11Cen1tr
Pastor: Ron Fierce
SW~doy School- 9: IS a.m.
Worship · IO:IS Lm.
SnoW\IIIIe
Pastor: Aorence Smith
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wor.~hip - 9 a.m.

Lutheran
Sl. John Lullles-an Churth
Pine Grove
Putor: Laura A. Leach Shreffler
Worship · 9:30 o.rn.
Sunday School · 10:30 a.m.

Southern Cluster
Apple Grove
Pastor: Carl Hicks
Sunday School· 9 a.m.
Worship- 10 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thursday SeMces • 7 p.m.

Our Sulour Lutheran Church
Walnut and Henry Su .• Ravenswood, W.Va.
PaslOf: Rev. George C. Weirick
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • II a.m.

Bethany
Pastor: Kemeth Baker
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship· 9 o.m.
Wednesday Services· 10 a.m.

SL Paul Lulheran Church
Comer Sycamore A: Second SL, Paneroy
PastOr: Laura A. Leach Shreffler
Sunday School • 9:45 a.m.
Wonhip • 11 a.m.

Carmd
Pastor: Kenneth Baker
Sundoy School· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:45 a.m. (2nd&amp;. 4th SIUI)
MorningStar
PAAOr; KeMeth Baker
Sunday School· 9:45a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m.
Thunday Service• - 7:30p.m.

United Methodist
Grabm United Methodbl
Worship · 9:30a.m. (ht &amp;. 2nd Sun),
7:30p.m. (:lrd &amp; 4th Sun)
Wednesday Servia: · 7:30p.m .

Sulton
Pa.uor: Kenneth Baker
Sunday School • 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10;45 a.m. (1st&amp;. 3rd Sun)

MI. Olive United Methodl11
Off 124 behind Wilkesville
Pastor: Otarle.s Jone1
Sunday Sehool· 9:30a.m.
Wonhip . 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Servicc1 · 7 p.m.

East Letart
Pastor: RocerGI'ICC
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Worship - 9 a.m.

Racine
Pastor: Roger Gnce
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.

Meigs Cooperative Parish
Northeast Cluster
Alfred
Pastor: Sharoil Hausman
Sunday School· 9:30a.m.
Wunhip · II a.m., 6:30p.m.

Lou rei ClllrFree Methodist Church
Pallor: William Williams
SIRlday School - 9:30a.m.
Worship· 10;30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Sc:rvicr.:s - 7 p.m.

Chester
Put.or: Sharm Hausman
Wcrship · 9 a.m.
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Thunday Services - 7 p.m.

RuUaod Bible Melhodbl
Pastor: Rev. Ivan Myen
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evenina · 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Services· 7 p.m.

Joppa
Pastor : Brenda Weber
Worsh.ip · 9:30a.m.
Sunday Sehool - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday S.rvices - 7:30 p.m .

Coolville Untied Melhodlsl Parish
Pastor: Hamid E. Alloway-Priddy
Coolville Church
Main &amp;. Fifth St.
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Wonhip · 9 a.m.
Tuesday Sema:s · 7 p.m.

Lon1 Bouom
Pastor: Otarles Eaton
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wcrship·10:30a.m.
Wednesday Service• - 7:30p.m.

Bethel Chun:h
Township Rd., 46JC
Sundoy SChool -9 a.m.
Wonhip • 10 a.m.
Wednesday Scrv.ic:es - 10 a.m.

R....,vllle
Pastor: Rev. O.arles Ealm
Worship· 9:30 o.m.
SWlday School - 10:30 a.m.
Wednesday Service• · 7:30p.m.

Hodd~ Church

Grand Strut
Sunday School · tO a.m.
Wonhip · II a.m.
W....,sday ServiCiel • 8 p.m.

Tupper• Plalno St. Paul
Pastor: Shan:. H•usman
Sunday Sehool· 9 a.m.
Wonhlp · 10 a.m:
Tue1day Services. 7:30p.m.

Ton:h Churth
Co. Rd. 63
Sunday School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m.

'

Other Churches
Trlnlly Congr'1atl011al Church
Pastor: Rev. Roland Wildman
Church · 9:1S a.m.
Worship· !0:30a.m.
The Salvation Anny
115 Butternut A'Ye., Pomeroy.
Sunday School· 10;30 a.m.
Wonhip · tl);oo o.m., 7:30p.m.

Middleport Communlly Chun:h
S7S Purl St, Middlepon
Pastor: Sam Andenon
Swtday School 10 a.m.
Evening ·7:30p.m.
Wedne~day Service · 7:30p.m.
Faith Tabernacle Church
Bailey Run Road
Putor: Rev. Emmett Rawson
Sunday School · I0:00a.m.
Evening 7 p.m.
Thunday Service - 7 p.m.

Syracuse Mission
1411 Bridgeman St., Syraane
Pas10" Roy (Mike) Thompson
Sunday School · 10 a.m.
Evening · 6 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
Hazel Communlly Chun:h
OffRti24
Pastor: Edsel Hart
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 o.m., 7:30p.m.
Oyesvllle C&lt;Hnmunlly Church
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip · 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Burllncton Community Church
Burlingham
Pts10r. Ray l.audennilt
Sunday School · lO a.m.
Wonhip · 1 p.m.
Wednelday Servia: • 7 p.m.
Chrl511an Feltowslllp Center
Salem S1., Rutland
PtsiOr. Roben E. Musser
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Worship • II :15 a.m., 7 p.m.
Thunday Service · 7 p.m.
Morte Chapel Cllurth
Sup&lt;.: Mike Mauon
· Sunday .ut.ool · 10 a.m.
Wonhip · II s.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service • 1 p.m.
Fallh Goopel Church
Lon&amp; Bouom

Sunday School . 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip • 10:45 om., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday 7:30p.m.
MI. Olive CommunllJ Church
Pastor: Lawrence Bush
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wedneday Service · 7 p.m.
United FaMh Church
R1. 7 on Pomeroy By-Pass
Pas&amp;or: Rev. Robert E. Smith, Sr.
Sunday School · 9:30a.m.
Wonhip • 10:30 a.m., 7 p.m.
Wedneaday Service· 1 p.m .

Full Gospel LIJhlhouse
3304511iland Road, Pomeroy
Pa110r. Roy Hunler
Sunday School - to a.m.
Evenina7:30 p.m.
Tuesday&amp;. Thursday · 7:30p.m.
Nease Setllelllent ChurciJ
Sunday Wonhip ·2:30p.m.:
Thunday ervices -7:30p.m.
Soulh Deibel New Testament
Silver Rid&amp;e
Pastor: Duane Sydcnslricker
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 1 p.m.
Wednesday ServilZ · 7 p.m.
Carleton lnlerdenomlnatlonaJ Church
Kingsbury Road
Pastor. Clyde W. Hmdersm
Sunday School ·9:30a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service -7 p.m.
Freed&lt;Hn Gospel Mission
Bald Knob, on Co. Rd. 3 t
Pu1or: Rev. Roger Willford
Sunday School -9:30a.m.
Wonhip- J0:4S a.m., 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7 p.m.
While's Chapel Wesleyan
Cool ville Road
Pastor: Rev. Phillip Ridenour
Sunday School · 9:30 a.m.
Wonhip · I0:30a.m.
Wcomesday Servia: - 7 p.m.
Fal..,.lew Bible Chun:h
l.Ctan. W.Va. Rll
Pallor: James Lewis
Sunday School • II a.m.
Wonhip ·9:30a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service · 7:30p.m.
Calvary Bible Chun:h
Pomeroy Pike, Co. Rd.
Pastor: Rev. Blackwood
Sunday School - 9:30a.m.
Wonhip 10:30 a.m.. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Splrilual Fallh Church
State 338, Antiquity
PaslOr: A. Stewan
Sunday Sehool· 10 a.m.
Evening· 7:30p.m.
Thunday Servia: -7:30p.m.
Cat..ry Pllllflm Chapel
Harrisonville Road
Pastor: Rev. ViClOr Roush
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Wonhip- 11 a.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Service - 7:30p.m.
Stlvcrsvllle Word or Faith
Putor: David Dailey
Sunday School9:30 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Thursday Service · 7:30p.m.
ReJol&lt;lng Uft Church

sao N. 2nd Ave .• Middlepon

Pastor: Rev. Michael Pangio
Sunday School- 10 a.m.
Wednelday Services - 7 p.m.

Pentecostal
Penl...,..l A..,.bly
St. R1. 124, Racine
Pallor: William Hoback
Sunday School· tO a.m.
Evening · 7 p.m.
Wednesday Services · 7 p.m.
Middleport Pentecostal
Third Ave.
Pastor. Rev,. Clark Baker
Sunday School - 10 a.m.
Evenins • 6 p.m.
\Vednesday Services · 7:30p.m.

Presbyterian
Harrl...,vllle Pr...,ylerlao Cllurth
Wonhip • 9 a.m.
Sunday School · 9:4S a.m.
Mlddleporl Presbylerlan
Sunday School · 9 a.m.
Worship· 10 a.m., 4 p.m. (2nd&amp;. 4th Sun.)
Syracuse flm United Presbyt&lt;rlan
Sunday School · 10 a.m .
Wonhip · II a.m., 4 p.m. (1st .t 3rd Sun.)

Seventh-Day Adventtst
Se..nlh·llay Adventist
Mulberry Hu. Rd., Pomeroy
Pa110r. Bob S.yder
Saturday Services:
Sabbath School · 2 p.m.
Wonhip • 3 p.m.

United Brethren
ML Her.oo Uolled .........

to c - Cloun:h
Teus Conunlllity off CR 82
PlsJor: Robert Sanden
Sundoy School · 9:30 o.m.
Wonhip -IO;lQa.m., 7:30p.m.
Wednesday Services • 7:30p.m.
Eden United Brelllrenln Christ
2 1/2 miles north cl Reedsville
on Stile Route 124
Pastor: Rev. Roben Martley
Sunday School · I 0 a.m.
Wonhip - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Service• • 7 p.m.

.

A teacher and two students of
W~11111~ High School bave been
nominated for.lhe Tandy Technology Schtilan, 1 program 10 rccogntze academic excellence particu·
lady in lite areu of mathematics,
science IIIII COIIIJ)IIter science.
Awards 1018llng $3SO,OOO will
be made this year. This is the third
year that the prosram has made
aw~ to leachen Ind.graduating

.

RACINE PLANING Mill

3 LIS.

' Mill Wo1k
Cabinet Makin~
Syracuse
992·3978

K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 E. Main Strttl
992-3785. Pomeroy

RAWUNGS.COATS

(row's Famill Restowant

FIS~ER .

"1uhi11•1Kulf' , Fllti C4/du "
228 W. Main St., Po1111roy

FUNERAL HOME
992-5141

U4 South 2nd

992-5432

MilWltport

senior$11 American hiah schools.
One 'huadred teachers will

~eive

Ectlesla Fellowship
128 Mill St., Middlepoo&lt;
Pastor: Oauck McPherson
Sunday School • 10 a.m.
Evening - 7 p.m.
Wednesday Servi"' ·1 p.m .

"'·'"'
s...-

f 271

llerth

MW41tpert,

·IIIII•

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

$2;500 each and IOO·Ilu-

t~~~! r~!

denll wiD receive c;lilh ldtollnhlps
of $1,000 UCIL· AU nomiQeel w1Jt

receive oenlflcalel. ·
. .
'lbe Wlltama Hiah School DOID·
inees wbo NC:eivel certlfacates ill

Prl?'l.tnplton\

rccoaaitlon of excellence are
ROnalll B. Vance, lltath, science,
and computer science teacher:

FIRE &amp; SAFETY
S~lES

Stanley Lee Cook, olttstandina
math, ICienc:e, and ·computer ICI·
n(mlitee gave the invocation should bo ICIIt by Mlrch 6 to Mn. 'eace IIWt; and Andrea L. Jef·
~ lhe chictm casserole meat, Miry Oeuulell, 677 v.uery Rolli.
~,~wo percent aclde~.lc ,

&amp; SEIYIU

9'12-7075
106 . . ."' ....

~t.lle4 . by the Masonic women. ' waverly;Oblo456110:
I•

'

,.

112 North Soconol ' "·
·Ollie

..•

�•

Porneroy-Middl~ep~o~rt~,O~h~l~
o _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:....Fr:..:.ld=a~y:..:
, ~·!_~~·!~_2...:.B,_1~99l2

•The Area's Number 1
Marketplace

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

A•A

VACAllON

Words

3

15
15

6

15

10

15

I

COPY DEADLINE

Call 992-2156
MoN. thru

FRI. 8A.M.· 5P.M . •

Wednesday Paper

SAT.B-12

Tbursday Paper
Friday Paper

CLOSED SUNDAY

Sunday Paper

POLICIES
• Acb ouliKie Gallia, Muon or Me.ga counhea mUll be prtpllld

BARGAIN

• Free Ad. G1ve.way and Found ad. under 15 wordt Will be
run 3 day• at no e harge
• Priee of ad for a ll eapJtallett.era 11 double pr1ce of ad coat
• 7 po1ot hne type oaly uaed
• TribWle Ll not rapona1ble for errora after flr1l day (check
for crrora firat day ad run• 1n paper) Call before 2 00 p m
day after pubhcallo n to make correc tion
• Ad. that mwl be pa1d m advance are

$400
$600
$9.00
$13 00
$1.30/day

15

$
$
$
$

20
30
42

388-VInlon
245-Rao Grande
25~uyam Dill.
643-Arabla Ditt.
379-Walnul

Happy Ad.

In Mernoraam
Yard Sale~
• A clua1fied advertt.ement placed 1n the Gallipolu Da1 ly

Trtbune (except Claat,fied D11play, Bu.meu Card or Legal
Nollce•) w1llalao •ppear m the Poml Plea1ant Reg11ler and
the Dally Sentinel, reach1ng over l8,000 home•

992-Moddlepo•li

675-Pt Pl~an nl

Pome roy
985- Chl';ller
843-Portland

576-Apple Grove

247-letn1 FaU•

882-New llaven

949- Racme
742-Rutland

895- Lelut
937-HuiTalo

21- Buuneu Oppor~un1ty
22- Moaey to Loan

23- PfG{.,IOnal Servtcet

60
$ 05/day

GET RES1JLTS • FAST!

Ga!Ua Counly Meig! Counly Mason Co., WV
Area Code 614 Area Code 614 Area Code 304
446-G .!UpoUo
367-Cheohi.e

11\\\(1\1.

56- Peb (or Sale
57- Mut1cal ln1trumenLI
58-- Fru1U &amp; Vegetablea
59- For Sale or Trade

Alrflra. CruiHI Hotal1 And

tAM ••

Exl. M77.
BAHAMA CRUISE
5 Doys, 4 NCghto, O.Ofbought
Traval ~acbg .., Hotel Pald,
1

VAr,

4511-Leon
773-Muon

-!H\T\1 ....;
41- Ho111et for Rent
42- Mob1le Home• (or Rent
43- Farml for Rent
44- Apartment for Rent
4~ Furn11hed Rooms
46-- Space (or Rent
47- Wanted to Ren t
48-. [qu•pment for Rcnl
4~ For Lea1e

3- Announccmenll
4-- Gaveaway

II- Help Wantod

5- Happy Ada

13--lnturaneco:

~ Loal and Found
1- Loll and Found
8-- Pubhc Sale &amp;

\11·.1\&lt;.11

14-- 8w1neu T rrunms
ls- School• &amp; I natruct10n
16-- Rad10, TV &amp; CB Rq.a1r
17- M1tcellaneou1

52- Sportmg Cood.s

9-

667 -CooiVlUe

Auct1on
Wanted to Buy

12-

Satualaoru Wanted

\~lliSE

S1- Bouallhold Good!

53- Anhquet

54- M1ac Merchand11;e
55- BUIIdmg Supph cs

18-- Wanted To Do

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

ORDINANCE NO. 1253-92
An OnlnMtCI to Regulate
the PIMiting of Tr- within
the Vllloge Rlahk&gt;I·Wayo.
Be It ordafned by lhe
Council of tho VIllage of
Middleport • followo:
THAt It Ia the purpoeo ol
thla orcln•co to promote an
dprotoct tho public health,
nr.ty, and general wollaro
by providing lor tho
regulation ol the piontlng.
molntenance, Mtd remo¥11 ol
11111, ohruba, and other
plante within the vliloge ol
Middleport.
SECTION ONE. Tree
Authority - Whereao 1 Tree
Authority Board h11 b11n
croalod and 11tabllohed by
R11olution No. 473, dalod
Juno 24, lltl, and uld
Authority to conolol and
doll conolol ol live
momboro, cltlzeno and
rooldonta ol the vlllogo,
hovlng b11n appolnlod by
lito mayor with the opproval
ol village council.
SECTION TWO. Term ol
Office- Tho torm olthellvo
peroono appointed by lhe
moyor oholl bo thr11 yoaro,
except that the tarm ol two
of lhe m. .blro appolna.d to
lho llrot b-d ahall be only
ono and two yean
rMpoctlvely. In the ovonl
lhot a vacancy oholl occur
during the term
any
m. .blr, hla ouoc-r ohal
be ar,polnted lor tho
unexp rod portion of oald

loglalatlon which tho board
ohall find or determine to be
naceuary or odvlaablo lor
the care, pre11rvat1on,

any pereon who propoaea

Cotllna and W.ndl Mochello
Collina, Minora.
ESTATE NO. 27145 - Anal
and Dlalrlbutive Account ol
Golda Rodchllo, Executrtx
of the Eolalo ol Ruuell
Radcliffe, Deceaoed
ESTATE NO. 25002 -Stxlh
Annual Accounl ol Rochard
E. Joneo, Truatee of the
Trual Created by Item Five
of tho Loot Will and
Teatamenl of Manning D.
Wobeler, Decuoed.
Unleu exception• are
filed lhtrolo, oald eccounta
will bo lor hurlng before
11ld Court on the 30th day
ol March, Ui2, II which
time oald accounle will be
conoldered and conllnued
from dey lo day until finally
dlapoood ol.
Anylllop•raon
tnl••••t•d
may
written exceptions

medocal and aoctal oervoce
agencies In Me1go and
ad1acont countoeo
The Metga County
Councol on Aging, Inc.
tnvolos com menlo and
proposals
I rom
all
onterestod public , private
and paratransol operators
lncludong laXi operaloro, lor
I he
p rov ltlo n
oI
lranoportaUon service to tho
elderly and handicapped
wothln our aervlce areL
Operatoro who are
tnleruled In ollerlng
propoula to provide
aervoco should contact S..lh
Thetu, lnlerim D~reclor, al
Moiga County Council on

Agmg, 1nc., p. o . Box 722 •
Mulberry Hetghla, Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, to obtain lull
dolaola ol the type of
transportatton oervtco lhal
ia needed prior to preparing
1 propoaal.
Wrillen commenla or
propooalo
muat
be
aubmltted wtthln 30 dayo to
lhe ~gency at the above
address with a copy 10 the
Ohio Department ol
Tranaportallon, Dlvtalon ol
Public Tranoporlallon, 25
South Front Stroot, Room
716, Columbuo, Ohio 43216·
0899; Allenhon • Deputy
Direclor.
(2) 21, 28, 21c

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT, PROBATE DIVI·
SION MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO IN THE MAITER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS, PROBATE
COURT, MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
Accounls and vouchers
oltholollowlng named lldu·
clarles have been llled In lhe
ProbaleCouri,MelgsCounty,

term.
SECTION THREE. Mom·
bolo olllte Board ohall oorvo
wllltOtll compenaallon
SECTION FOUR. Powere
ond Dull• -The Boord ohall
have powor to aludy,
lnvHIIgato, plan, advlae,
report and rocommond to
council ond tho ma~or any
octlon, program, plan or

2

In Memory

In Memory of
WANDA
GUINTHER
who passed

away five years
ago today, Feb.
28, 1987.

trimming. planting, replant- apeciea

Ing. removal, or diapoaltion
ol 11111 and ohrubo within
llrHI rlghle-oi·Wiya, peru,
and public placao of tho
village.
SECTION AVE. Tho Board
ahall choaa• ila own
olflcora, make lte own ruleo
and rogulationo and kHp a
journal oflta proceedlngo. A
majority of tho memboro
ahall be a quorum lor lhe
lranaactlon ol buolnua. All
plana, llndlngo, advice,
reporla and recommenda-

tion&amp; made by the board
oholl be In writing and
dHignale by nomo lhoae
mombon ol tho boord
approving or concurring
thareln, and mombero who
do not oo approve or concur
lherern ohlll hove Ute rlgh~
•• part ol ouch report, to
atalo their roaoona lor
reluolng to opprovo or

concur.

The
Board,
whon
roqueoa.d by council or lhe
mayor, ohall roconalder,
lnveadgate, make lindlngo,
report and r1commend
upon any opaclal matter ol
quutlon coming wllltln the
ocope ollla work.
SECTION SIX.(a) No
penon ohall her•llor piMII
any trll or ohrub upon any
public way, otr11t or alloy
unl111 he ohall havo llrat
obtelnod a permit In wriUng
from the village opocllylng
tho alzo, typo, opoclu and
location on the public way,
alrHI or allay, ollhelrH or
ahrub to be planlld.
(b) Any poroon vtolaUng
tht provlolon horool ahall
bo fined not more than
$15.00 and tho coata ol
piOHCUtion,
(c) Tho Council anci/or
Mayor ahall deny a pormlllo

2

In Memory
In Memory Of

CHARLIE FRYE
Who passed away
March 3, 1986
during Bike Week
In Daytona Beach,

found

to

be

undealrable by the Tree
Aulhoroty Board ol oo found
to be undealrablo lor lhe
location propoaod; or deny
1

permit to any peraon who

propoaeo to planl any lrH
or ahrub upon a public way,
otreol or alloy II ot a
location found by the board
to bo ol 1 olze or typo
unoultable lor planting treea
or ahrubo.
7.
Thlo
SECTION
Ordinance ohall lake effecl
and be In lorco from and
altar lhe earlleot date
pormlttod by law.
Paoaed the 241h day of
Fobruory, 1gg2.
Alleal: Jon Buck, Clerk
Dewoy M. Horton, lo 1ald account• or to
Prealdenl ol Council
malllll pertaining
to not
lhe
(2) 28, II&lt;:
execution
ol tho lruot,
Public Notice
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN lHE r.tltmR OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Account&amp; and vouchero
of the following namod
llduolarl11 havo b11n fllod
In lhe Probate Cour~ Moiga
County, Ohio, lor approval
and Hlllement:
ESTATE NO. 26348- Final
and Distributive Account ol
Marione Friedman, Admin~
atratrlx of tho ttlale ol
David J . Goodwtn, Do·
coalld.
ESTATE NO. 25606 Fourth Account of Mary Ann
Horrla, Guardian ol Timothy
Eugene

Harrla,

an

In-

leoo than five daya proor lc
lhe dale
oat lor
Robert
E. h111lng.
Buclc, Judge
Common Plea Court
Probate Dlvlalon
Moill8 County, Ohio
(2)

II&lt;:

Public Notice

OFFICE 992-2886

on• • • ahared,

111M 111 bullet me go.
For thla lo a loumoy we
lll..talllliM
And IICh m.. t go olono.
II II all 1 part ol the
........ pl..,
A atep on lhe road to

holM.
Wltoll you ••lonely, llld
aiGk of hlll1
Go IDirlendo we ltnow.
And llury row oorrowa
In doing lioocl doodo,
llaaM-butlatiMgo.
lolly mlmd 111

'::.=

IF

3 Nlct Moltllo Hotatt lor Roar

Homn-Pels·WIIdllfa..

Motorcycltt·Etc.

Jutl North el Pouoy
Startitg II '225 p•mo.
Calli 14·992-5521

1\ptfiryn
9vferufows

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building

EVERY

SAT. NIGHT

6:30P.M.
Starting Sept. 28
12

Factorr Choke
Gaug• Shotgun Only
Strlclly Enforced
9·13·'91·11•

"SPECIAUZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Rldgo Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Welcome Slates

$20.00
Custom Painting•
614·992·2242

WHALEY'S AUTO
PARTS

Specializing In Custom
frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
FOR ALL MAKES
&amp;MODELS
992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOLL FREE
1·100·141·0070

DARWIN, OliO
713tr91/lln

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No Sunday Calls)

MOBILE HOME ONLY ·A 14X70 Nashua mobile home
wnh 3 bdrms. 1 112 balhs a newer metal oulbuolding, front
porch, declc, underpmnong and wondow aor conditioner
ONLY $7,500

2128127 - 12127/91

""'""lowthe love Uta!
R-blr

COUNTRY MOBILE HOME

COMMERCIAL and RESIDENTIAL
FREE ES'I1MA'D'.S

In Loving Memory:

on, Fly on.
theapeedol
aound.
rather ' " you up
'"you down;
IIIIIYI me, Hyou

IIHdto,

wlllatiU~

HYSELL RUN RD-If a kotchen woth lois of cabmets ts what
you need thts home Is for you II has 3 ba&lt;Fms, a large
kiichen, and a large lovong room Comes woth 314 of an acre
and a pattO
$2t,900
LANGSVILLE-Co Rd 10-Approx 2 acnos of beaubful bol·
1om land Walar and eleclric avaolable A great home or
mobtle home stla
$6,500
RT 7·Approx 16 acres of land w1th an 8 room 4 bedroom
farm house, droNed W911, and TPC walar l.ocaled near lite
Elstern Hogh School
$30,000

-

POMEROY-Mulberry Ave-Look at this Hosloncal home
Thts home has cherry cabtnel&amp;on lite kiiCiten, a beautiful
wooden archway, and large wooden ~I doors soper·
aang lite livl!lg room lrom lite clnlng area. Alto has an open
slalrway, 3 b8ama, and a garage
WAS U2,INIO
NOW $28,100
POIIEROY•RI33•Aillte edgaof !own II a block home with
3 bedrru and a nooa alzelot:Haa a private lanced patio and
a cellar building Could be made cula
JU8T .17,000

.

NEED It BMitLL BUSINE81 BUILDING? Wantlo 11art
your own bualnen In Langavtlle? ll'a a nice buldlng on
approK 1 ac:reiOI Hat wlfllr, - .. and rea~ooon Bu1lt
to regulations WAB $30,000 NOW $:15,000

utility

rm,

attached

air,

reterencu

71

111~ AMCA~ ~~d.SIERY

1890 Muotang V-8, A-1 Patfor·
monco, 5 SptOd, Loodod, 30,000
Mllu, $1,500 Coli AI 114-367012'1

AHNI!AI- AWAf?f:h NIC!IIT ....---:----'
I
I

114 ue 0338,

1880 Pontile: Am, PI, PS,
lolclacl, 304-875-5HI.

F... ute. 1m Chevy caprice

I

Claeelc, 305 autom1tle, pt, pb

$375, 614-742·1400
F... S.to 1H4 Chovy Cltt¥1111,

83,000 MU.., Auto RURI Grill ,

1
$800, 0 B0. 114 4ol
44111.

Gracious living 1 and 2 bid·
room apartments at Vlllaga

for Sale

Autos tor Sale

Manor
and
Rlv•sh:le
Apartments In Mlddlaport From

$228/C&lt;iuptal LlmHtd Number AI

1196 Clall614·1192-7781 EOH.

Thlo Pricei404-3M-8233.

171·- Aulol (or Sale

72- Truck• for Sale
73- VaM &amp; 4 WD'•
74-- Motoreycle•
75-- Boat. &amp; Motora for Sal e
Auto ParU &amp; Aw,.ooorieo l
Auto Repa•r
Campang Eq).upment

Home lmporvemenll
Plumbmg &amp; Hea tmg
[xca vatmg
R&lt;fo·ig,.~ti&lt;'~

Elecyocal &amp;

Genf~~tllle.u lm g

Moh1le Home Rcpaar

Up hol8tcry

Public Notice
Freddie
I Houdashell,
f
E Admin·
IL
lstratr x o the state o tona Kohl, Deceased
ESTATE NO. 25590 ·Final
and Distributive Account ol
John T Wolle, Execulor ol
the Estate of Gemude Hall,
Deceased
ESTATE NO 23493·Sixlh
Parllal Account ol Judy
Gibbs, Guardian ofthe Per·
son and Estate ol Hoalher .
Lynn• Rouah and Jooeph
Frank Roush, Jr, Mlnore
ESTATE NO 23224 • Sev·
enlhCurrentAccounloiJohn
T Wolle, TruSiee olthe Tru sl
of Creed Janes
Unless EKcepllona aoe
flied therelo, osld accounts
(Continued on

TRDY-BI£T

8 wk old pan TerrlerfGirman
Stlaphwd puppl .., 3 m~lea, 2
remain, 30+815-3125.
Fret

Pu~y,

Black, Female, 6 151 Second Avenue, Gatllpolle

SSOO for lnlormallon
feadlng lo lhe arrest and
convlcllon of the person
or persons Involved In lhe
breaking and entering of
the Raclnt Gun Club and
the theft ol several
prtlcles fronr lhe estab·
llshment. An Information
wdl be kapt confldanlial.
Call 614·949·2671

21121112

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING

•Complete
Rtmodelin1
Stop &amp; Compare

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

•NtwHomts
eGa rages

PONDS

FlU ESTIMATES

98!·4473
667·6179

RACINE GUN

CLUB
GUN SHOOT

1:00 P.M.

SUNDAYS

Starting Sept. 22
12 Ga9 Factory

Cholit

TROMM
BUILDERS
-New Construction
-Remodeling
-Cabinet Work
-Commercial·
Realdentlal
FREE ESTIMATES
20 Veara Experience

614·742·2328
2·28-1 mo.

2·3· '92·1 mo.

JAYMA
Quality
Stone Co.
SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992·6637
St. Rt. 7
Cheshire, 0 H.
1/2/lln

SUN'S UP
TANNING

New U11a Road

In lutland

CALL 742·2778

15 Stslhlt.--- -'25.00
12 Stslhlt.-- -· '20.00
6 S.stlaas..--·--'12.00
I S.stlaa ---'3.50
FREE SESSION WITH MRY
RINIWAL
Sov•al kWs ollotl•s
SCA WOLF! liDS
2117/1 mo.

lmBT~B~rf.

•rM.,fiiMIN

MICROWAVES _
VHS CAMERAS·:
AUTO RADIOS
REPAIRED

H.E.C.

391 WEST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO
614·992·3524

1·22·'92·1 mo.

r-----::J-=-&amp;L=--...,;
INSULATION ;i
•Vinyl Std1ng
•Replacemenl
Window
•Roolln~

•lnsulatton

JAMES KEESEE
992·2772 or
742·2097

539 Bryan Place
'~
Middleport, Ohio
••
11114ntn .:

Air Conditioners
&amp; Heat Pumps

•1 00% 2 year parts &amp;labor warranty
•10 yr. heat PUilll col1llresser warranty
ofre estimates

BeMetts MobUe Home Heating &amp; Cooling
1391SiffdScWR..
G~,OW.
c.l
446-9416 ar 1-IOH72-S967

fREE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK
992•2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

POLE
MATERIALS

lntplllal •• Melal
Cillo Leag..

1 WIEI DEUYEIY
lbyc.lert

c..ww••
Lu.IICO.
CIUIII

KING'S HOME
IMPROYEIUNJS
New Homtt,
A!ldiftlor1s, Siding,
Barns, Painting,
Garage~, Po~hea

Employment Services

Fret To Good Home 2 Calico
Cata, 9 Months Okl. 614-379-

2502.
-------"--Magazln01, Roada10 Dl9o11, Na· 11
Help Wanted

tlonal
8329.

Geographies

814-446-

Upstairs apt, above Callary Hair
Art1,
downtown
Pomaroy,

AVON e All areas, Clll Marilyn
Wtavtr 304..&amp;82·2645

l175mo, 614·1192·2290

Sill, blac:lcl whhll tan ,.:.:..:::...:.:.:,::=-:::..:::,....-::-c-.,...
mala, appror 1 yr old, mixed Pomeroy Nursing &amp; Rahab
braad, 814-992-3577
Clnler Ia Accepting
Ap-

Six

(6) lull·

llock

rootten, 614-742·2754

plications For Part-Tlmt LPN.

33 Fanns for Sale

BaNd On Y11r1 Of Experience

EJCellent Benelh Package Clll

To giveaway- 1 hamster 614· Clrol Kanawaleky, AN, DDN For

992·2219

y,,,.

614·256-6028

cllrillrtctptlonlat,

Young Brown, Shy, Outdoor Cat, physician

previous
11perlanca

office

Hat "Shott, Juat SPIYtd To preferred A11pond lo Box C-25
Good AUI'II Home Only. 61-H46- care Polnl PltiiiRI Reglatr, ZOO
0~1
~M~
o l~n~S~t·~~~P~II~,~WV~25~i5~M___

AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
Lost &amp; Found
Excellent
Pay,
Btntflta,
Tranapor1ation,
407·2V2-"'J1117,
Found· Naar Kerr Road, Rodney Ext 571 9a m ·10p m. Toll

5

Pike lnlerHCtlqn, 1 Voung
Fama .. , Black lab 1 Voung
Famale Black And Whit• Baagla

614·245-5192

Refunded

AVON I All Areas I
Spure, 304-875-1429.

Shl~oy

Lost Addlaon Vlclntt~, Blazer AVON get In on the ground floor
Road Area 112 Beagla And 112 of Avon• new earning atructure

MlnlaiUII Rat Terrill, Whlll With 1-800-992-1135,

Black And Brown PatchH, 1
It chanalngl More wap to
Yur Old Vary Small Fam111 Avon
make
moneyl Repreatnlallvu
614-387-ot~ , 614·367-0324
wanted, frH glfl wfth sign up,

7

Yard Sale

=..,-...,..,...,.....,.,.....,....,:-:-:-:-:-1
ALL Yard Sat.. Must Be Paid In
Sunday tdHion · 2 00 p m
Friday. Monday tdiUcn • 2 00
p m Saturdl~

Garage Sala Mile Clothing,
HouHhold ttems, Christmas
Dlcorallons, Fr•zer, Plnblll
Machine, 2 Belmont Ortva,

Salurday 9-5

Inside And Out. 14728 State

554,

Bldwllll

Private

Horne,

Hnd rHume to So)( C-26 care

of Point Pleasant Register, 21)0
Main St, Point Plt111nt, WV

25550

Stylllt Wantad For High Traffic
Sllon. Cllentela Helpful, But Nat
Nec1111ry We Can Help Build

Mlnulas From Galllpollo Day
Shift, Monday Thru Friday.
Reterenen Aequlrtd Call 514682-3010
CONSTRUCTION ALL TRADES
ALL SKILLS
Major tnllmotlonat ProjiC!o,
Mull Rotocelo Houolng Anc
Traveling ExptnSH Paid E•ce~
lent Salariel And Benetl11. C.ll
WNkdoys 8A.M To 7 PM S""'
dol Noon To 5 PM. YICA CORP
30 -936-11010

Man:h 2, 11192. Employmanl Will
Be For 30 Workdlyt Or Lilt.

You have worked for the rest ,
now work with the bat Top
c:ommitliOfll, lnaurancea, tr.~ln­
lng, quality producta, no In·
vestment Related txptrlance
not required Fun or part-tlma.
For details write Royal 011 CO,
P 0 Box 646, Fort Worth Tx

wanttel
ntw
roj.ct at $22 hr Ctrpenlers,
abOrers, Pllntera, drywall,
maaon• &amp; helpers 1-800.551·

r.

Old 011 Lompo, Horloy DovkJ.
.on, And Colee Cola Clocka, 0163
Will DrsoMr, New CUlt Rtgll-

Bual11111 Col1tgo, SDI'Ina Valley
Ploza Clafl Tcdiy, 51 4-141-131l7fl

I·R~III;:;.;;;.;lsl•~ra~tlo:;n;.;fDO.O;;.;..;.;S....;12lOI;;;.;.B;;__

18

Wanted to Do

I:WI=.-11-:B~abys~l~t~ln;.:M::.y~Ho:;m..:o-=Rod~·
ney ArN Referenc.. AYiflabfe

Catt614-24 5-5117.
1 ~::7=::-.:::==-=-...,..E I R TREE SERVICE Topping,
Trimming, TrH Removal, Hedge
Trimming FrH Esllmatea! 6f438, 7l5'r.

1 --·...,...-~,.....-=-.,.­

ExperlencH Mother Will Cart

tor children I lduhl, To Peraonntl Dept~rtmant, Hol....,.., bid Clolhoo, IIC
zar Clinic PO Box 344 Ga~
llpollo, OH 455~. No Phono

81

Fmancial

Public Sale

Cello.
Business
&amp; Auction
MLT Far A Fully Equlootd 21
Physlclano Offici Lib. COed
Opportunity
Rlqk ........ Auction Compony, Bonelfto, No Shll Worft AriDtv
full time tuctlonMr, corftl*tl In P•r10n• Me.aal Plaza, ' :10~
INOTICEI
a~lon Hrvlce LlcMIIId Ohio, Joclloott Plko, Clolllpolla.
OHIO
VALLEY
PUBLISHING CO.
VIrginia, 304-773-5785
1'8C0mnwnda that you do bull- with _ . . JOU know1 and
NOT lo oand monoy lhr""''n lhl
moll until you ltmi lnvOIIIgoltd
tho otlotlng.

i

Want to:
PIN down EXTRA

'..

•

.

•

CA&amp;H?H

Turbo, Automatic, $2,000 6MV

53

Livestock
Rtglotortd Thoroughbltd colt,

Second Floor Apartment For
L.e111 L A , One B R , Bath,
KHclttn WI S1ovt l Rt!rig
Water Fumlellecl No Peta Cof.
nor S.C...t l Plno" Galllpollo

axc:alllnt pedgi'M, $1,500 304-

llep ladder· $19 99 Burpae gar·

den sttda- 20% ott r1gular
price Palnl P4ue, 2415 Jackson
Ava 304-675-4084

mlac. 614

1238.

lame Pel Food DMI1r Julie

2·1R tnaller In country, $175
monthly piUI depolit, uUIIUee,
l'lt.rence r.qulr8d, 114-114..2833

Automstlc onohl,..,f75 !9 $125; Wobll. Clall614-446-0231.
electric .-yara, Sm to 1125, AKC Battll puppln, 111dy to

4br Unlumlatttd, 2br Fumloltttl
on Con Mill Raid Off Rl.321,
No Poll Otpoal1 I Rtfnnct
Raquiiid. 114-245-5822.

ronges, S75to 1150, gaa roiiJIH,
S75 to $150, dlohwalltoro, 115. AKC Cltlnnt Pugt, Ptklngoao
8' t..hapocf tin~ CG&lt;IIIor lop &amp; Cocktr Sptnltla Special

with cablnlla, 1300

Fwnllhed 2 bedroom mablll

Swlaher'e

per

mont~,

water,

Frost FfWI F8trtger1hw and l:!fOO, FA Bendum, 614-&amp;67eklelalde, 17!1 to 1150, electric

com.

or

UHd

Delbtrt prlcol. 304-576-2207

Appllancae,

Rand and Perch St., AKC Reglllortd Yorltohlrt, Malo

Konauga. 514-446·11113

Pl.. COlt Bab'l Faco $150,
Grsat W~h Chlfdrtnl 514-2511·

52

11183

Sporting Goods .

Flah Tank, 2413 Jackoott Avo
Point Ptoaaant, 304-1175-2063,
lull llno Troplcel flahl blrda,
amall animal• and tuppl u
For 1111 or trade, 2 dog kennele, one 20x10d f1 wJdlvlde r.

ottt15xl0x6 ft 304-875-1010
Aeglatarad

I~L APAIITIIINTI AT
IUOOIT PRICU AT J"'*mMrl,e, 111 1 lltrn Pllto
INI!Ifftlnto.-lllltoa.l
~. Colll11 411 1111 ECIH.
Coolftlol~ Fom- 1111111
~ -Dhfto. Ptuo Ulllllloo.
And DIOOIIt. ,,, •• one. c.11
lolon?p.m. .

=":'·

- - 2111 Aporl-•••
. . . . Avotttlt, Clonljtallo.

•

II

•;:':A'

RlforeniN,
• 1M
44112M, •

Australian

Hoater Pu- 614-256-1352.

Blue

~ ~~~~
~~~~~---

Rtglllortcl
Miniature
Sctonauzars wlptdlaroao 6-wka
old, 3-mlltl ..tf, wormed,
lholt, $150, 114-985-3UO

For Sale
59
l --......:o;..:r..;T~ra:.d:.e;..,......,._
Tracto For: 12 To 14 Fl. Boot
Trot tor, 1978 fmpola Sttllon

Wtgon, S50 Englna, Automatic
TranemiuiOn. Clll 114-SIII 1101,

Allor 4p m.

Autos tor Sale

F.11m

I Prom dlnue, llze 1-1. 104-

-

rra.

-

'

...,..,, 11447t-

61 Fann Equipment
1Nt John 0ooro D Alllo
~ H.D f
~r
lloct11o Forft Lift. I
•

5

lhp -

-

rolo IUIIf'IOrw blft,

M eu.-,

Hrm,

111 111210:15
TO- :140, I way blldo,
ciondHion,l4800, 114-

;:u;'

drtvfo!"'

PB, AC, AT, Vcr1ex V-8 motoi '
304-8~119 or 304..ft5-3191

',, 1

711 Chevy 4x4 truck, PS, PB, nni 1

point, 2'1,135 actual mlltl\•rl
$3,000 304-875-3197 aflu 5 00 •-~

liS
Catobr~y
2.8L·FIIOD
Loaded $2650 B14·36JI.Ot22 If· For Sale 1983 Full Size 8~~~~~('1

4 WhHI Drive, Runa

t1r!pm

1157 Chavy Cor po~a. $500, call

perflct Interior,

22MPG, aaklng $850, 514·742·

1 ~\j

$2,200, 0 8 0 614-251-6251

_

74 Motorcycles
::-:--:--:..,.:..,;_;:.,:.....:..:.

_.;..· "'

We Buy, Sen, Tn~de, Uaed Har.... lays, Pans And Accntorln 1\.l
Available 614-4Jl..7055
.. ,

75 Boats &amp; Motors
lor Sale
BOATERS

"''''
~

GuiMa Mercury lbrin1 511'\'lc'- ~
Mercury, Mariner, Mercrulllf
epeclallll Mercury certii*P. "
MobUa, Wa come to you. 114,-.:"t

258-511711

75

Auto Parts &amp;
Accessories

'·~

Budget Tranamlnlons, UHd &amp; "

robulfl, llartlng 11 SII9L ~ont

wheel drtve ttanlng at J149 00
614-245-56~

79

614-112-82'13

,,

campers&amp;
Motor Homes

-18"84,.,..,E~oc...;on;.:..:..,G.,.L,;.:..;4d.;o,:.;.5-_spotd-· :

0

1tand1rd, good eond, make ot·

=·"2·~~~4-8~49-~~~·---------· :
Travel MotOf home

n

Dodge

chaaalal fully Nit contained '

Low m loagt $5,299 614-3116· ;
~

0911.

Services
81

Home
Improvements

----":====--- ,

:

WA::~~~~NG

Unconditional lifetime guaran- •
IN Local refarancn tum5shH. I
Frw tttlmatM. Clll coll~t 1· •

514-237~88.

day or night · '

3141 af1er4pm
Roger. Ba11ment Walerproo1184 PontiiCl G111nd Prl1, V-8, Air ling
Cond., PS, AMIFM C.ISitte, 2dr, Compltll Mobile Home Sei·Upe
Qood Concltlon. 12,800, Or Re/"'lra, Commerlcal RHiden:
0 &amp;.0. 814-245-1018
tla lmprovemante Including.
Plumbing, Elec1rlcal Insurance
1084 white Fltrg, luggaga rack, Clllme ACcepted. 614·251·1111
au1o, AC, PW, PL, AM-FM tall,
CB, gi'Ht condll $3,000 firm. Curtla Home lmprovamenta
304-675-3888 or 675-6664
YNra Experlance On Older &amp;
1088 Dod~• VIsta Mini Van, act Newer HDmea Room Additions,
Foundlllon Wool&lt;, Rooting
63,000 m II, 12,100 1987 Cut- Khchent And Bath• Frae U.:
lnt C~rt $2,nl5 1086 Ford Es· timatHI Aeferencn, No Job To

~

,
•
•
~

'

:
•

can $1695
JNp
4 apotd
truck
$2,7001987
1977
Jttp
CJ.S 11g Or s mo 116
I 14-441~5
$2,500 1910 Ctll'lller $3,500
1983 Ford Rapger 414 blua

Rtnovatlonl, Add Ont Repair, '

Painting, Quality Work! Call
$2,515 1984 Ford Banco II Roger .111.&amp;14-448-8581
llbuln motor IUIO $2,900. 1111S
Ford F-250 $2,i!C!O 1H5 F·150 Ron'o TV SaiVIca, opoclatlzlng

tNCk $2,150 tVCJa Ford Ranger In :Z.ntth also •rvlelng moal '
4x4 ehcwt bed f2,100 1185 other brlndt HouH c11Tt, lito 1

Plymouth Vayaaor 12.,600 Sect· some tppllonco -111 WV •
tys Uatd Claro, 304-18&lt;-37112.
304-578·2396 Ohla 614-446-2454 •
1186 Parlalenne Pontiac, muat
a,_,reclate, 304-175-2513

1t1 to

Davia
Stw-Vac
Service, "
GeorgM Crtek Ad Parta sup- ~

pltn, pickup, and dtllvtry 114· •
11188
Pt,mouth
Turlama,
tow«e
::::-:.0=284:::_-,.-------'• ,•
mil•, tun root, $1,000. 1187 ::Hollzon 40 mllta gal, $1,&amp;50. Will bullcl polio covtll, tllckal /
304-875-2440
tcrMnlld rooms, put up vlny 1
---,,....,.-...,.,....,.,..,.,..,.....,,....
j
oldlng or trailer aklnlng 114.
1817 lonnevlllo LE,hlgh mlllo, :.24;;:5..:-91~5;;:2:....._ _ _ _ _ _• '•
txc cond, lolctod , 114-742·3602
1811'1 Ford Aero Star van, tow 82
Plumbing &amp;
,i
ml*'••exc. cond, 1-owner, call
Heating
,:
614·992·321111 or 912-3657
--....,....,....,;....,,.,....:.,._.;__
~~~--....,~~~- 1
:•
1817 Olda Oil! a 68, 118.000 Mlloa,
Cla~sr's Plumbing
All P-r. Air, Exctlllnl Cond~
FOUith •nd Plrtt
Oalllpollo, Ohio
lloll. $5,500 511 Uf 4225, Allor
S14-44W888

!

l

Twbo, 32,400 Mllla,l4,1110.114211-n.a

11H11l

.....,..l'
w_.Lw
--l'tlr 0.linn
Ill .......
.

.

wht~

~~
'
11• Chl'ylllr New YorUr, 4IC - - - - - - - - - -

Supplle''
&amp; Livestock

l.noomo;

NO SUNDAY CALLS '
21141'1211 InD.

71

I ;.;...-;.;,:..,.:.....:.;_,;,.-=- "'"' SJOOd:,

TV. 1 ~ 1 IIWi haer; Groom and Su~y Shop-Pat
ISirlgorii~S:,Ia!tooo doyor, olhlr Grooming All &amp;rMda, ltylla

...

614·742·3090 or
304-773·9545

Transportation

wllkoncla, 514-992-3733
and aonHatlcn Included. $110 Compilct alectric 2 temperatwa S.•rw ref $100 Floor model
month 304-I'IS.1IIOCI or 1175-5037. dryer; ell wood 7 drawer deek &amp; lleno 150 Glasa top kitchen 1SI61 Muatang Faal Back; 1985
4 drawer d11k, 17 cu f1 chilli labll S40 Domutlc aewlng ma· 5-10 Chtvralll, 614-37!1-2845
fr'Mm, f111h detrott Sllrt chine $50 Orea11ra Horida 3
Cotdapot; all wood tabto with threo wi!Hitr S200 304-875- 1976 Lincoln Contlrttntll, good
Rentals
shape, $805. 304-882-2052.
dropleat, alnale built body rria• 6591
•go•. 114-241-9171
Treadmill 1175. three wheel 1176 Monte Clrlo, 350 auto,
41 Houses for Rent
Four Ploct au- Slza Bad- blcycto $50 Long a shcr1 moat runt, nlldt repair, $300 neg,
614-112·2'158 8-apm
lOOm Suna. Good Condition, hoolta, 304-875-4464
2 Mltn South, Routt 7, 314 ltd· $400~ Firm 614-441·1221 Afttr
WATER WELLS DRILLED 1177 Ford LTD, Good Work Car,
room, 1 Deck, New Appllancll, 5:00 ...
351, V-8, Automatic, Air Cruiae,
City Sch~!J
Roftrenct, 0000 USED APPLIANCES WATER GAURANTEED 614-886· 614-245-5697.
7311.
DoposH, $40WMonth 614-446W11her1, dryert, retrigeralors,
41100.
Ford T-Bird SIOO 1!1711 half
rongn Skogga Appll*'cea, Wedding Bouquet For Sal• 1m
ton ~hovyck-up $1,000 1H7
2·bdrm hou•, tum, Lincoln Hill, Upper River Ad BHidl Stone Aleo htor11d Wedding Gowns Guad
S
4 whooltr 11,350
For Sale Or Renl Size 6 To 18
Pamtror,
private
eettlng Croll Mottl Colt 614-446-7386
304·
011
Formal
Gowns
For
Sale
Or
Rant.
$250mo, 614-185-4258
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
can Antr 4 PM 614·245-5151 or 1979 Oldt Delta 88, Broughman,
3 Bedroom Ranch HouH In Complete home lumllhlngs. Stop By To Sat Our Display, At 48,000 Actual Mllst , All -pgwer,
Mason, WV 1 112 Both, Family HOUI'I Mon-Sat, 1-5 614-446- 35, Jackson Pika, Gallipolis Air And Extoa Cloan 614·367·
Room With Flr~plact, Private, 0322, 3 mlln out Bullville Rd Come Put Bodlmars Exxon, 7182
$350/mo With 1 Monlh Oopoall, FrM Delivery
2nd Wh~t Hou11 On 1.111
1 Rtloronct 614-446-3934
MaJQ round/oval dining room Wlndthllld And Slddlt Bag• =7 ~~~· Supreme $200
3 BA r1nch, 112 acrt Jawn. Ntw tabto, hutch, 4 chairs $425: For Ha~ty Davldaon 614-446home
Excellent condition. wooden aptcoaavtr c~b $15 00. cm;;.;,;.8~------­ 1083 Buick LeSabra, Limited,
Security deposit &amp; rtfeNncn can 1·304-1175·7121 or 304-CI'Is. 4dr eedan, beautiful family car,
rsqulrtd 304-675-671'1 or 304· 2'154
all aqulpmtm, 307 V-8, 11995,
Building
55
882-3699
614-m-11719
PICKENS FURNITURE
Supplies
New/Uotd
3br Houao 112 Mila From CHy
1184 Chavrolet Camaro, rad ,
LlmHo, G-. SchooC Dlllrlct, Houllhold lumlahlng 112 ml Block, brick, HWer ~Mpee, win· euto , air, till, AMIFM/etereo,
Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pleasant, WY, don, lintels, etc Claude Win· new tim, ladr drlv.n, •xtra
Ret.renc~~ And O.poatl R..
qulrtd 614-44S-11141afttr 5p m. can 304-1175·1450.
tere Rio Grande, OH Call 614- oltarp. Muot HI 14 500 nogo1labll 614-367-0409 olior &amp; p m
2 bldroom apl, 2101 112 JtHtr· Refrigerator, $65, Waoher &amp; 245-5121
Oryor1 $150; Sltroo With 2 Special· Twa car garagas, 198-4 Dodge Arl-. 4 dODJ, black,
son Blvd 304-1176-1365.
Spuxars, $!0 614-446-'1055
Z4124Xte 13915, 2~l21xh AMIFU, ~uttte, 4 cyl, MW IX·
Z713211h S46H, PrHI· haull, 114-992-723&amp;, evenings
42 Mobile Homes
Solo Ukt Htw, S300 Finn 614· 141119
lion Pott Frame Bulldara, 614·
441·1221,
Aftor5:00
PM
1884 Flreblrd, V-8 auto, T-taps,
for Rent
112-3541
aharp car, runa grNt, 12300
Sofa Slllper, Like New, OuHn
UIIIHy Building, 30x40x10 10x12 obo, 614·,.2·2357 ofttr 6 OOpm
2 bedroom rooblle horn. cam· Slzo. Phont. 614-446-1409.
plellly fumlahad, waaher &amp;
llldlng door $5899.00, 24x40x10
1884 Ford LTD Cr&lt;Mn Vlcoorta
dryer, air cond, no pttl, 304·
SWAIN
10.10 sliding door 14900.00, 4dr
sedan, like naw, ail equip773-58511
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE. 62 Preclllott Potl1 Fremt Bulldtrs,
~~~1,
302· Y· 8, $2100, 614·992·
Sl., Galtlpolla Now I Uttd L5;;,14-~992=·.;.;354~1~----­
2 BR, Mlddltpo~. Ohio Oliva
fumlture, heat.,., Wutem I 1 •
Rafarence &amp; dtpoalt required wortt boola &amp;14-446-3158.
56 Pets lor Sale
1984 Plymoth Alllent, no rust,
304-882-3281

Nlco 12d0 2 bldrooma, lg yd
cHy acltaol dlotrlcl, Kanauga
aystem,
1,100 ~ Ft Commercial Sptce 614-446-11173
Slrlp Mall, HI TroHic ArH For
44 Apartment
~ lnfomtsdon: 614-44H157.
Antiques
53
tor
Rent
Compulw g.....- po~roH
luy « all. Rlvorlnt Antlquoa,
......._ for ulo: Stall cl tho
1124 E lloln IIIIHI, p...,.,.y
I
bdrm.
aftl,
In
Ml-.,ort,
ptr·
a~ oqulpmonl, Including: I'* )II
Hours MTW 10 Olla.m to 1:00
print«, color video camera, l llatty turnlahtd, corp~~, ctopooH P
m., Sundor 1.00 Ia f:DO p.m
• ooqullld. 514-112· 514-992~6
com~M,Ir ODtrate your own
15071
bue!nass m~klng t4hlrta, poa,..., l catfso mugo. I yoar old. 1-bclrm apt In Mlddlapaat, Antique loll, love Mil &amp; chllr
Pold $14~000, will oacrlllco tor utllftlao tum, clop 1111. no plla, ::514-::.:::~:::;::.::;_ _ _ __
11,1100. uroal kir mana l 1111 514-112-2211
msllcll. 11WM-1112.
54 Miscellaneous
2 • tiiOO-. opl, utili leo pold,
Reolourllll Equlfllllll)l, Tobto Hud
Merchandise
-vtd, 304-11'15-2722.
And Cltoln~ leo! Machhtt, I Fl.
walk 1n ~. ou Ortll, 2 Badi'OOIII, Kanouaa, At. 1 c:-p1o1o ,.. 01 aunk - ·
....,~~~l:"·
T~Plus t-~';;'· Wotor, Troolt, Clooa o -Condition. fM-3Noff14.
H-.
nl7 Aler
.......
ng.
$210/mo
Pluo 2 gordon rolctlltoro, -trio
Dapioitlt. 114-246-Hlll
wattt pump, ~x com
Real Estale
2 bdrm. aftl. In Mlddtopon, crueher, 1 .-fqu~ lrDn bMhllllll.
UIIIIIIM lun\lotttd, 11711 ma., Iron a -hOmo 304 111:1121.
l-..m7
I Prom Silo II, $!(!
l!ach, Only Want Onao. 114-441•
- - apl~ tum, 111 Ul(tliiN ooot.
- o y.......

FRHESnum

1988 S-10 Bluer 4

ftr 614-245-5328

114 99 por gallon 6 fl wood

lohan Clarplla, 614-446-11144

Trailer 101 for rent. Water, tiWir

Cover, Hllter, Drawers Bnt or~

PIHtburgh IIIII ceiling paint·
110 98 PI' gallon Wall l l~m
Uat latex palnt• $1199 per gal·
lon S1ml-glo11 latex palnt•

Big Savlnga On All Carpet In
Stock Cash And Carry, Mol·

ttomt. 1250.

'

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

675-3030 or 575-3431
'7V CJ.5 .toop. lop, 53,000
mU.. $1900 3Q4.&amp;7&amp;-12M
.. '"'
Por Monlh; uopooll R• Now $1,200, OuHn, Chorry, 54 Hay &amp; G ral n
qulrtd. Call 114-446-4248, 614Wavele11 Waterbed, Plllowa, ::--:--..:.,..,-....,.,.,...,:-:-:= 1882 4 WhNI Dolve, Eagto Fori,,
4«1-2325, Or 614-4411-4425
ShOlto Comfo~ll, Mlttltu Hay Squall eatn, 614-441-1m Solo. 1114-446-7609

Household
Goods ,

HW., I traah lncluditd, 304I'IW512

73

$230.

Merchandise

For Your Chlldron In Hor Homo
F~ondlr Atmosphlrw, Hot Moata
Drtvers
ter, Storw Shit¥-. 8 R lee
And Snacko~Any Shift: D101&gt;-lna
Cream F,..ztr, F.nton And Ia $550 wfoiy, PT· FT, all ohiHa, w.acom.. HID Grande Ohio
Other Glloowaro, Old ac.. And uvel'll op~~nlnge now avallabll, A101. 514-215-112115
1-600-321-11389
Whitt Granhoware, Old Colno
Portable Sawmill don't
Lorgo CloUting Soli Name Exptrtonctd Clrpol lnotalllf, Caorgee
haul,X:: loCI• 10 1ho min jull
Brand, Stl1t Route 553, Crown mutt have own vehicle, toolt, call
76·1l51
CHy. March 2nd &amp; 3rd 10ol Un- WV controcttr• tlctttoo, Rtl.
bollt¥abll Pllcool
nHdod Send roau- to PO Have room In my home for II·
Box 801 ReveniiWood, WV derty or take care of your loved·
llavlng Sale M11ch 3, 4, 5th. t- :M164, ooriauslnqulrtoa only
onM In there heme, da~/ nJght
3. 11111 Brick School Aotd
thlfll, 20yn experianct, call
(Bthlnd Addavllto Elomornary)
Laboron wantod 10 $15 hr no anvtlme, 114-148-3014
oxp. WIN 1roln PT.fT Llahl foe·
Yard Sale• Clay Tcwnha~•, tooy wollc. 1.f00.5'12-520f.
Mia• Paula'a Day Clre Clnter.
S.trudoy 2128 Baby ltd, Cor
Sail, atfordablt, chlldca11 M·F
Slit, Swtng, Wilker, lanln-' ,
LABORERS WANTED
o.m • 5:30 p m. Agoa 2~10
Changing Table, Lola 01 Baby To $15 HR No Exp Will Troln PT· 6Before,
af1er tchool Drop.lns
Clottt.. liiiC.
FT, Light Factory Work. 1-eoo- welcome 114 446 1224 NIW In5'12·52t3.
fant Toddlw Car., 114-448-1227.
Pomeroy,
Mkltllolon EototH Gtaup Partenahlp dance lnatructlon
Middleport
HomH For Eldotly, WID Dl• tpeclallzlng In OM on one lnatructlan, ballroom, country
~.And Receive emp~Dyn_Mtnl
&amp; VIcinity
ADDilcotlono Fer Dlrecl Clara w.tem, lllln, contempor1ry,
!llatl, 314JI2,
Mom· 11M otyto. Clal aftsr 7 00 PM
All Yord Solao Ia Pold In Ina: 10:00 AM on Chotoau o304-171-3184 for AMa or Jim
Ac!va1101. DoariiM: 1.00om the 11®1, Clalla Drive, Dolllpollo
~~ bllora the tel Ia lo run, Ohio For Rl~hor lnfomtstlon Will build or ropolr IInce, IX·
~r tdHian- 1 OOpm Frlcloy,
'*"need and hittfl referenc..,
~y
tdHion 10 001 m can 814-44&amp;-2283
!lo4-418-1878
MLT (ASCP) Dr Equlvalont For
~y
Will Oo BabysHtlng In My Homo,
R,..mogo Solo, Foroat Run Hotzw Cllnlo, Proclorvllto, Ohio An~;" Rnpo~alblo Adult
Pcthlon, · 11
adlol Chun:h, Much 3-4 Fult·Timo
2-bdrm mablla homo In Mid·
2152.
Frldoy. CompatHI.. SoiOry, "Ex·
dltport,
514-992-5858
d. 11 F""" 8:00-3:00, cellent
lenltlte s.nd A8Miml

_eta,

Some Body Work, $1,750, 1085.',

Loll tor sato,_!~olltro accop- ..:4;;.9_....:.F..:o;;.r..:L:::e..:a..:s;:.e_ __

6'15-2722

Business
Training

For Solo· 1D88 Oodgo 0.50 PickUp, 4 Cyllncloo, 5 Spotd, Rut
Nice CondHion, Only 26 0~
Mlln, $4,200, 1987 Dodge 0:50 '
Pick-Up, S SPIId, 4 C"ytlndor,
Good Condition, $2 900 11165 $--'
10 Plck.IJp Runs GOOd, Nllda: 1

256-825t
.n .
Wanted 1960 To 11iN Full Slzi '
4x4, Good Shlpt, 51WM-1160 , •

table 304-675-il722
Loll In GaiiiP.DII• Ferry • 100%
owner financing at $~ 64 per
month, an~ on• of ~ur lots
available, 304-675-2722
Lots In New Hevan • 100%
owl"'lr financing at $10145 per
month buys alllhrH loll a304·

cept Applle~tlont For A Pari·
Time Program Aaletanl And A
Part-Time Field Attillant On

NowtiiSouthtllflm

6'/5.8860

Lg

Mlddllport,

attic" &amp; yard, 114-MS-4231

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

can Clarol King, 614-446-8922
Tht Gallla County ASCS OHk:t,
52'1 Jackson Plko, Room 308-A,
Gallpolls, Ohio 456~ Will Ac·

Retrain

SDrinas, cargo light, $10. 304,

Chryater LoBaron, Oood Condition, 74 000 IIIIIs, 4 ~ •

Third Avo

Your Future, Far Appointment

30

Ohio.
February 29th March 2nd, 3rd,
10 A.M. Ta 5 PM. Baby ClolhH
And FumiiiM't, KHchen Ap. Canslruc:llan
pllancee, FLI'nhure. HorN Harn-. EJect Hammond Orpn,

AN or LPN wanted for pan time
poalthm local Doctors oHice 1

CANNERY WORKERS/ALASKA
Hiring $800+ Wkly Over 8000
Optnlngs
Mato!Fomalo
Trtnsp.lHouslng . Call E I C
Nowl 1·206-136·7000 Ext 161788 76101
Cortltltd Nu10lng Asslotonl 14
Needed,

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Routo

call Kay 614·992·7'180

MICa playtr w/5 band graphic

equalizer, maroon, heavy duty

Raama tor rent • Wllk or month
Starting at $120/mo Gallla Hotel

35 112-aere farm near Rutland 614-448-95110
OH, nlee 2-ttory farm houtt,
large b.m, 7-outbultdlngs, 112· SIHplng rooms with cooking
acre well stocked pond, lois of Al10 tra11er IPI~ All hook-ups.
fruit trees1 .grapevlnaa and blr· Call after 2 DO p m, 304-7'nrlea aaKing $37.000 call 5851, Maton WV
evenl~s 614·")12-2728
48 Aeret, 2 Story Hou.e, Bam, 46 Space tor Rent
poo lb Tobacco 811&amp; Balow
propert,- p,..vloUBiy
t.ureka Dam. $32,500 114·256- Bueln...
buay phy.lclans office, 509 S.
1953

lnltrvlow AI614·992-ICIOII EOE.

White Malt Mlnlatura HU1ky, Ar.. phyaklant oHict nNdt
Approx 2
Old Phone full
llrn1
billing

1990 GMC 911111 SLE lang bid'
350, Fl AC, AT, PS, PB, slldl.grnr wh1dow tintH glue,
cruise, IIH whMI, AM-Fir Cia-

Furnished
Rooms

Santy Rotating Shift Avollabla Salary

Advonce OEAOUNE: 2 00 p.m

REWARD

Top Prien Paid: All Old US
Colno, Geld Ring'!, Sllvtt Colno,
Gold Colllo. MTo Coin Shop,

WHks Old. 614-245-5986

the day btfort the ad Ia to nm

l~~~~~~~~J
.;;......;;~~--------i

Ntw Homes • Vinyl Siding
Ntw Garages * Rtplact•tnt Wiadows
Roo• Additions * Roofing

"ANNIE"
Nina Katherine
Yates

menl:
ESTATE NO 26162. Final
and Dlolrlbullvo Aooounl ol
Jam11 W Hobsteller, Execulor ol 1he Eslate ol Edison
Hobaleller, Deceased.
ESTATE NO 25143. Final
and Dlolrlbutlve Accounl ol

Real Estate General

Sadly missed by
children and
grandchildren.

When I come to Uto ond
ollhe road
And Ute oun luto aot lor
me.
I wont no rites In a gloom
fllletl room,
Why cry for I IOU! Ill
lree.
llioo me 1 IIIUHul not
too long
And not with your hlld

1---------,______

TRDY-BI£1'

l:;.;~~;~~::r:

Ohlo,lora~frovalandoelll.,.

8 USIDeSS
servi· ce 8

PUBUC NOTICE
Tho Melgo County I~=======~
Council on Aging, Inc., lo
which Ia a private non·profil
corporallon In tendo to
o ... 51'0'1"8 Slolpm... or
aubmllan apppllcation lor a
capital grant under the 1'Ny.:Od1 '1\Uen Naw In Sloek.
Your Lotol ~-Btlt D•alu
provlalon ol Section 16(bM2)
WAKEFIElD'S
ol the Urban Mau
It so 'NI!I, loltos. Olio •513·3815
Tranoportation Act ofi9Ci4,
aa amended, to provide
lranaporlallon aervlce lor
lhe
elderly
and
handicapped within Molga
County (Routu are
demand·reoponalve and

competent
Poraon.
Threqueal
1 gran
ESTATE NO.
26741 -Final
will
one1
Van (VA-14-0)
and DlalrlbuUvt Accounl ol
Victor E. McCloud, Exec:ulor
air-conditioning.
ol tht Eatale of Chariot
It lo prolected that 80
Rou McCloud, Deceaood.
elderly and hondlcopped
ESTATE NO. 25148 - Fifth
will uae Ute oervlco
ltnnuol Account ol Tina
daya a Wllk, 52 WHka a
Mario Colllno, Guardian ol
lor varlouo actlviUoa,
tho Eotato of Tracy Dawn
lronaportallon to

garage

KIT 'N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

i"\B\1 :O:li'I'I.II .:O:
,, 1.11 1: ~ rou,

1--------;;;~----;;;:-----...1.---------t========:;:
e

I

or31H227

cover all areaa of tha

car

ONLY

Med

to planl any lree or ahrub
upon a pubhc woy, alreet or
alley of any olze, type or

h1Dr17p m

h0U11,

(EST) 1.aCIO-M6-1858

For

32 Mobile Homes

1·112

Centro! hoot and air Evtnlngs
ca11 &amp;14-4411-870'1.
Tupper Plains, 1·otcry 2·bdrm

Ronlol car $348 00 Psr Ptroon
[Dbl 0..1 LlmHtd Trlpt Fellin'

Good

oaro_go, u ocre, otoror build·
rng WI,IIOO 514-HI-271

Aplo tor ront, 1 &amp; 2 bdrm , 614112-24031-6pm.
Fumlaltttl 3 Rooma And Bath
UplloiiS, Clean, No Plio,
Raloronce And Otpoah R•
qulrtd 114-441-1518.
Fumlaltttl Aponmtnt, 1br, noxt
to Ubrary, pori&lt;lng, control hoat,

attachld

Nights c-roto O.llboughl
Trtpo. MUST SELL Round T~p

Apartment
tor Rent

q p
32- Mob1le Ho•e• (or Sale 6
62- Wanted to Buy
33- Farm• (or Sale
Rates are for consecutive runs, broken up days wtii be
63-- Lavettoc k
34-- Buttnell Bulldmga
1
64-H•! &amp; Gram
charged for each day as separate ads
35- lota &amp; Ac,..ge
165- ~ioe&lt;l &amp; Fertthzer
~------==--::-:======-----! 36- Real Estate Wantod

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ...

• Receave duco unl for ada pa1d m advance

Cud of Thank.

Monthly

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
I 00 p m Saturday
I :00 p m Monday
I 00 p m Tuesday
I 00 p m Wednesday
100 p m Thursday
I :00 p m Fnday

Monday Paper
Tuesday Paper

Over 15 Words

Rate

th,., bed·
100111a,lun baoamont, 1·112 bath,
In town two llory,

Florida, Bahama• a Oa)'l, 7

Gre~t lntematlom~l,lnc.

44

31 Homes lor Sale

3 Announcements

1t ~ M

Days

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

Announcement s

The Dally Sentlnei-Page--11;;

/:' ~'!:~
=~:
t4111 010, I - ·lll45
- Subolllllllicn wogon, air,
allllftttiCHMICt, -~ loolla,
IIIIII'I~Windawl, 1 ......
rack, 52.-~ llllrl
otoan,
514-Mt-mo
1111 Goo lllloa LSIIII,DIIO4dr -fnt co-•llf! so "'PI!·
:;:_~bit car Q,800 ull

J.::*l'

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

I

:t
·~

...;...;,.;;;.;;;.W1~ad
=~; ~=..leo :.=.~ l
Rltlonour EIICirlcol, 104-e,.:J
1711.

iiR;;.r,
•.,i;d
••i;i,,..=.,;;-~

.,

=

UphOlstery

· · u............
~...
.---,.~· ..
lnt lrf - y - 21 JOIII.

~~ ~rr,:'·;!

tttr.tM. (
f

�Dally Sentinel

Ohio

Meigs County to feel Veteran actors shine
in 'Boys of Twilight'
impact of telethon
The National Easter Seal
telethon that airs Man:h 7 and 8 on
WTAP (Qible Channel 9) in Meigs
County, will have a direct impact
on Meigs County. according 10 Sue
Miller Smith, progmm director for
the Easter Seal Society of the River
Cities.
Throughout the telethon, any
money pledged from Meigs County
will be clearly earmarked 10 serve
Meigs County people who have
disabiHties.
The River Cities Society concentrates its resources in Meigs
County to bolster the weekly
speech and hearing clinic that is
offered in the Meigs County Health
Department building.
Wanda Reynolds, director of the
Easter Seal Society of the River
Cities, researched and wrote a
lengthy Children's Trust Fund discretionary grant request that, 1f
approved, will provide the bulk of
the funding for the Meigs County
Clinic. Mrs. Reynolds then spent
most of a day at a hearing in
Columbus last month arguing for
the allocation.
Easter Seals, which on its own
contributes thousands of dollars to
the Meigs County clinic, continues
to . explore additional support
options for the clinic.
Telethon donations from Meigs
County will be used to suppon and

improve the clinic's services. ~t­
er Seal Society of the R1ver C1bes,
however, provides numerous other
programs that Meigs County residents may participate in, including
overnight camp, therapeutic horse·
back riding and swimming, equipment loan and suppon groups.
The telethon airs from 10 p.m.
Saturday, Man:h 7, to 8' p.m. Sunday, March 8, with local segments
between 10 p.m. and midnight Saturday and 11 a.m. and and 8 p.m.
Sunday.
Fund raisers for Meigs County
now collecting advance pledges
from individuals and working during the telethon at 800 numbers
are:
Paula Thacker representing the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce taking calls from noon to l
p.m. Sunday, March 8 at l-800695-6081;
Brian Collins, WMPO, taking
calls from I to 2 p.m. on March 8,
at 1-800-395-3763;
Lenny Eliason, WMPO, taking
calls from l to 2 p.m. Sunday,
March 8, at 1-800-945-4552;
Emma Paugh, representing Peoples Banking and Trust Co., taking
calls from 2 to 3 p.m. Sunday,
March 8 at 1-800-695-6081.
Donations by credit card will be
accepted at 1-800-753-6128.

By SCOTT WILUAMS
AP Television Writer
i NEW YORK (AP}- ~'The
Boys of Twilight" is as comfy as
an old rocking chair, but that
doesn't mean only the blue-rinse
set will enjoy this droll mysterysuspenser joining CBS's lineup on
Saturday night
It's a contemporary police procedural in Western boots and an
old, old Stetson, and stars some
excellent actors.
Richard Farnswonh ("The Gray
Fox") is Sheriff Cody McPherson
and Wilford Brimley (Quaker Oats'
"Right Thing to. Do" guy) plays
his crusty chief deputy, Bill
Huntoon.
They're the law in Twilight, a
mountain village that has become a
runaway for the rich and famous
or, failing that, the well-to-do and
obscure. Louise Fletcher is Cody's
wise, insightful wife, Genelva.
famed for her salmon loaf and butter beans.
The tone of "Twilight" is set
from the opening scene, when we
fust see the portly Huntoon standing on his front-yard hitching rail,
doing Tai Chi exercises in his red
long johns, much to a neighbor's
chagrin.
Sheriff McPherson investigates.
Huntoon protests that his exercises
are good for his poor, damaged

WEEKLY

hean and produces the tapell print·
out of his EKG as proof of his hean
attack.
"You went into the hospital
with a six-burrito bellyache, and
ever since you got out it's been
toast and mille," Cody rejoins.
"Now, to me that doesn't say hean
attack. That says fat gut."
Ah, but that EKG tape, surely as
a pistol on the wall in an Ibsen
play, is going to be back again.
And again. And again. It makes a
nifty running gag:
There's a blessedly brief exposition in which we meet the new
deputy, the mayor's nephew Tyler
(hunky Ben Browder, who seems
conspicuously present for the
younger demographics who've
strayed into the audience). Tyler
has a bit of a problem, though :
Loud noises make him faint
Then it's straight on to this
week's murder. A young woman, a
ski instruc!Or, dies and the coroner
(longtime TV character actor Robin
Gammell) suspects it's arsenic poisoning.
He confirms the news at Cody's
BILL AND DEBBIE MORRIS
home, with a pizza box under his
arm. Why are you carrying the
pizza? "Your crime-stoppers bulletin last month, sheriff. It said not
to leave valuables in the car.'' Ah.
Special services will be held at and Sunday, March 8 at 10 a.m.
Get the picture?
the Rejoicing Life Church in MidThe ministry of Bill Morris has
dleport with the Singing Morris spanned almost 30 years. Having
Family.
·
sung and played music in church
The schedule of the services are: since he was a child, music has
mother-daughter tea, Friday, March always played a role in his min6 at 7 p.m.; men's breakfast, Satur- istry.
devotions from Psalms enuued day, March 7 at 8:30 a.m.; in-conFor many years he and his wife,
"This Is The Day The Lord Hath ccn, Saturday, March 7 at 7 p:m. Debbie,
and daughter, Andrea and
Made." Officers rcpons were given
Leah,
pastored
local churches and
and World Day of Prayer was
traveled
across
the United States
announced for March 6 at the Trinministering
in
crusades,
concerts,
ity Church in Pomeroy.
revivals,
seminars,
camp
meetings,
There were 70 sick and shut-in
recording sessions
A potluck luncheon was held conventions,
calls reported.
and
television
appcarnnces.
Refreshments were served to the recently by the Busy Bee Class of
Pastor Mike Pangio invites the
members and guests, Mildred the Middleport First Baptist public
to the services.
Arnold and Marybcl Warner.
Church. Rev. James Seddon gave
the blessi ng.
GRAVELY TRACTOR
The March meeting will be held
Derby meeting slated at the home of Lillian Demoslcey
SALES &amp; SERVICE
The regular meeting for the and will be the annual "White EleCondor SL
Pomeroy, OH.
phant
Auction."
Soap Box Derby will be held
The April meeting will be a lunFILL I WIIITER BDURS
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the MiddleCLOSED MONDAY
cheon
at
Ponderosa.
pan Trophy Shop.
OPEN TUESDAY lHRU FRIDAY
Attending were Dorothy Evans,
9AM-5PM
Ruth Ebersbach, Freda Edwards ,
Caroline Miller, Beulah White,
Pooch
Brewer, Rosemary Lyons ,
The regional meeting for the
Soap Box Derby will be held Betty Gilkey, Lillian Demoskey,
March 9 at 7 p.m. at Pleaser's in Betty Denny, Elizabeth Searles,
~~~~~~::Neil Vanderbilt will be Elizabeth Slaven, Nora Jordan and
Rev. James Seddon.

RIVER VALLEY BOYS

Quartet to sing at Carmel UMC
The River Valley Boys of Lancaster, a southern gospel quartet,
wiD perform at the Carmel United
Methodist Church in Racine on
March 8 at 6 p.m. Rev . Kenny
Baker invites the public.
The River Valley Boys is comprised of Don Lemley, lead. Steve
Hayes, tenor, Steve Peters, baritone, and Terry Peters, bass.
The group averages well over
!80 dates a year since its formation
two and one-half years ago. They
have performed at churches,
revivals, homecomings, songfests,

•

crusades, socials and concert services, charity activities, social banquets, parties, company picnics and
bazaars . In addition they have performed at the Ohio State Fair and
other regional county fairs and festivities. They have performed with
professional groups such as The
Nelons, The Gospel Harmony Boys
and The Perry's, along with Living
Word Outdoor Drama. They were
also selected as one of the eight
finalists in McDonald 's All Ohio
Gospel fest Competition.

Study: moms can identify
their newborn by touch
By MALCOLM RITTER ·
NEW YORK (AP) - Mothers
are so attuned to their babies that
most blindfolded moms in a new
study could identify their newborns
by just feeling the backs of the
infants' hands, researchers say.
Nearly 70 percent of mothers
who had spent at least an hour with
their newborns since birth could
later choose their own child out of
three sleeping babies, researchers
said.
That's far better than the 33 percent one would expect by random
guessing, researchers said.
The women apparently had
learned identifying features of their
babies' skin during routine contact,
because they were not allowed to
study their babies specifically to
prepare for the experiment, said
study co-author Marsha Kaitz.

Kaitz, a psychology professor at

Hebrew University in Jerusalem,
presents the work in January's
issue of the journal Developmental
Psychology with co-authors at the
university and the Shaare Zedek
Medical Center in Jerusalem.
"It's pretty amazing, it's pretty
exciting," said Tiffany Field,
director of the Touch Research
Institute at the University of Miami
School of Medicine.
Dr. Michael Yogman, an assistant clinical professor of pediatrics
at Harvard Medical School, called
the study "a pretty impressive
piece of work."
He said he suspected the mothers were using other sensory cues,
such as hearing the babies' breath·
ing patterns, because he doubted
touch alone would produce enough
information to identify the infants.

Public program to be presented
A public program, administered
by the Ohio Association of Historical Societies and Museums, for the
Ohio Humanities Council, will be
held at Campus Martius/Ohio River
Museums in Marietta on May 9
from 9:30a.m. to 12:30 p.m.
Each group of ten attendees will
discuss the character of the region;
its economy, its language and its
geography. A ~el of five community leaders will provide comments. The program will conclude
with a general discussion which
will give direction to the Ohio
Humanities Council future programming.
Volunteer participants are invit..
ed 10 describe the character of their
regional community.
Anyone interesled in attending
Ina)' contact Margaret Parker,

Trustees to meet
~ Orange Township

Trustees

will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. at
the borne of. the clerk, Susan

Pullins.

.

.

regional representative for the Ohio
Association of Historical Societies
and Museums, at the Meigs County
Museum, Tuesday through Saturday from I to 4:30 p.rit.

(ConUnuod from P910)
will bofor hoorlng before uld
Court on IM 30lh doy of
March, 1882, at which time
..lei occounls wilt buontld·
lied and continued from dl!y
fo day unUI finally dlapoNd .
of.
Any peraon lnt-ted
may file ...rt1sn oxoepllono
to tlld tOCOWIII or to mat·
IIIia por181nlnglo the .-eo...
tlon !)I!Mlrllot, not !eM lhtn
ftVtdiY.t prior to lhedttuet
lor hottlng.

Huntiiii!OI

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Nullflllt

WINI

WOWK
WTAP

USA

NASH
ESPN

CNN

WSYX
FAM

ID SportaCentor

MOFININQ

Spans

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Forni~

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Report
IIJ) (TU,WE,lH,FR) NBC
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Sem
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(I) (TU,WE,TH,FR) Gomer
Pyle
5:30 Ill Thlt Momlng'o Butlneu
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(I) CNN Hoedllne Nowt
8:00 12) II 0 NBC Nawa II
Sunrlto
(!) Shepherd'• Chapel
Documenllry
(I) ABC World News Tille

·

.

Morris family to perform

Busy Bee Class
holds luncheon

8 DtyWetch
QJI Heart to Heart With
Sheila Weith
11:30(I) Seume Street
1!2llll (TU) Price Ia Right
l!2l Clattle Concanll'llllon
iiJl Divorce Court
ID Body by Jeke

ecrter a co

QJI Peld Program

AmRNOON

(I) (MO) Agelm All Odds:

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Regional meeting set

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1:30 III BolO
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all Woody Woodpockar

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: Ill (J) a 1lJ1 Live With
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lunch

all. (TU,lH,FR) Pilei

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a lntlde PoiiUca '92
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4:35 (I) B111dy Bunch
5:00 12J • Cotby Show
III (MO,WE) Lltllt Mermeld
III (TU,lH) Kldcl VIdeo
ill (FA) Power Teem
()) Meury Povlch
til Roldln~ Rainbow
illiJ Who a 111o ao..?
1IDl Jeoperdyl
liD II nny Toone
Advlllluret
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Dlgoll

8 Sonyl Uve
QJI (MO) MOVIE: Afrfco
Scroema
QJI (TU) MOVIE: Mr•
Belvtdtro Ringe tho Boll
0 (WE) MOVIE: My SWHI
QJ1 (TH) MOVIE: Tho Now
Htlllrl
QJ1 (FR) MOVIE: Rln nn Tin
end lho Peril Conaplnlcy
1:05 {I) (MO) MOVIE: A Force of

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W (TU) MOVIE: Defiance

l!2l Donahue
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W (WE) MOVIE: Prl¥tll

Filet ol J. Edlllr Hoo..,

Ton of Ue
aVIdeoPM
ID (MO) Scholastic Sport1
Amorlco
9 (TU, lH) Montier TNck
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9 (WE) Women's Pro Snow
Skiing
8 Et~yP~m•
1111 Super Ma~o Brot.
Supellhow
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III Fllnlltonet
(I) (!) WhoiW In lho World Ia
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all Ill Mr. BelvldO,.
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1D E)UpCioH
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5:3&amp; (I) (MO,TU,TH,FR)
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13 Deya to Glory (PI 1 of 2)
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llolullful
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iiJl 8uporlor Court
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ID (MO) Women'• College
lluktlbiH
1D (WE) Sid World
1D (I'R) BMw SkHng
2:00 12J 8 0 Anollllr World
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Tume
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12:00 12) • (I) ill II llJ) 1!2lll
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(!)Geretdo
(!)lTV Pnlgrammlng
I!DII Madock
iiJl Tho Judge
a Coolcln' USA
ID Bodlet In Motion
8NewoHour
12:06 W (MO,TU,WE,TH) Perry
M-n
12:30 12) G II)) A Clour Look
Willi Fifth Denlolt
(I) ill II Loving
til lTV Prog111mmlng
llJ) 1!2lll Young end the
At1U111
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a (MO,FR) Country Klk:hen
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ID BoclySheplng
QJ1 (MO,FR) ~morican Baby
QJI (TU,lH) Hoelthy Kldt
QJI (WE) 11192 Pllllbury
Bake-oft .
12:35 W (FR) Andy Grtlffth
1:00 12J
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(!) Nowa
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til (TH) WoriCI'• uugoat
Concert 11192
liD II Andr Grlffllh
il1l Superior Court
aTop Card
ID (MO) Amerlco'o Cup '92
ID (TU) Top Rink Boxing
ID (WE) U.S. Olympic
Women't Me1111hon Trlala
ID (TH) Bell of Sundey
ConveruUont
1D (FR) Thoroughbred

Ch.l~le

1111 Popeyo

1

Workahop
(I) (WE) Art of William
Aluandlr and Sheron
Perkin•
(I) (TH) Llndocapea bV
Norma
(I) (FA) Joy of Country
Painting
Cll (MO,TU) GED
(!) (WE) What't Heppenlng
In Kenewha County Schools
(!) (TH) Economlet USA
(!) (FA) Adventures In Scale
Modeling
llJl 1121 til Guiding Light
ll] (I) Chip 'n' Dale' a AIICUe
Range,.
iiJ1 Hollywood Squereo
a Cookln' USA
D (TU) Beat of Ame~can
Muocle Magulne
9 (TH) Black College
Sports Today
9 (FR) NCAA Final Four
Hlghllghlt
8 lnlernaUonel Hour
1111 Fether Knowa Bet!
3:05 (I) Tom end Jerry's
Funhouse
3:30 (!) Saved by lho Ben
(I) Mlaler Roger•'
Neighborhood
(!) (MO) Magic ol Olt
Painting With Buck Paulson
(!) (TU) Creative Living With
Sheryl Bardon
(!) (WE) Welcome to My
Studio
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(!) (FR) Art of W1111om
Alexander and Sheron
Perkin•
liD II Tale Spin
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Final Four Hlghllghls ·
9 (TU,TH) NCAA Final Four
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Flnel Four Highlights
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Tour
1111 Father Knowa Beat
4:00 12) D 1IDl (!]) Oprah Wlnlrev
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(I) (MO,TU,WE,FA) Geraldo
(I) ()) 1J (TH) ABC
Alterechool Special
(I) Seume SINe!
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Jonea
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all II Dorkwlng Duck
l!2l (I) GOlden Gl~a
iiJ1 (MO, TU,WE) $25,000
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a ClubDenco
1D (MO,TU,WE,TH) Global
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a Ee~yP~me
1111 Haroea on Hot Wheala
4:05 (I) Fllnlatoneo
4:30 (!)Chip 'n' Dale' a Rescue
Ran go,.
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liD ID BtoUejulce

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8:30 12) II llJ) NtWI
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10:05 W (MO) MOVIE: The
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W (TU) MOVIE: Thll Child
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10:30 12) G One on One With John
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1!2lll FamHy Feud
11:00 12) G Meury Povlch
(!) Joan Rivera
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SATURDAY
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WEEKDAYS

.

Public Notice

WPIY

--

SAT., FEI. 21

I

••

Forest Run UMW gather
Faye Wiggins presented a program on "The Earth ... A Sacred
Responsibility" at the recent meeting of the Forest Run United
Methodist Women held at the
home of Kathleen Scott.
The program's purpose was the
explore what the Bible has to say
about creation and to examine the
human family 's role in God's creation.
The opening song was "America" and Mary Nease read scripture
from Psalms and Genesis.
The leader rr&lt;~d about water, air,
soil, minerals and plants and animal life and space. She also said
"All creation is the Lord's and we
are responsible for the ways in
which we use and abuse it.''
The special was read by Mary
Nease entitled "His Mysterious
Ways." The closing song was "For
the Beauty of Earth."
Edith Sisson presided at the
"":'"".''!! and Mrs.
·

---------

LO&amp; ANGELES (AP) - Elizabeth Taylor and Larry Fortensky
donaled $100,000 from the sale of
their wedding pictures to fight
AIDS in developmg countries.
The money will go toward prevention progmms in Latin America, includirig needle exchanges and
conaom distributions, the actress .
said Wednesday.
Miss Taylor, who turns 60
today; married the 39-year-old
Fortensky in her eighth uip to the
alw on Oct. 6.

---- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ~ Cvtng WHh ·Animala

~ 'rugal Oourmet Sttreo.
liZ II Whtre'a Weldo?

MORNING

Paid Prog111m

5:00 II)) NBC .Nlghlsldo
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Honolulu (1 :30)
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disappear, leaving children
around the world at a loss
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9:00 12)
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~ l!2l ~rflold and
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Bunny I TwMiy
Cll
Clllld and Campanr
oa Beck to 1M Futurt

§

8 NWA Pro Wretlllng

aaJ=HouM
by81dt

• ..,.._and
~· WifUr'e

C., Clllo;dalu

·:a~.
1.1:30 lll•II!Md br •

Ill E;l

aJ My Sieler Sem E;l

a GOing Our Way

.

ID SportiCanler

8 Co119 Beakelblll
Preview
1118 Not Jult the Newt
AFTERNOON
12:00 12) G Babe Wlnkltmen't
Good Flthlng TaCkle and
techniques for summtllme
walleyes; Nale Berg joins
Babe on a take trout fishing
trip.
(!) Soul T111ln
(I) From a Country Gorden
Ill m Dwight Freemen
Marshall blskelball.
(I) VIctory Garden
llJ) AI Lindner'• ln·F aherman
aJIID MOVIE: King
Solomon'i Mine• (2:00)
1!2l1D KkltMegl
0 NBA lnaldo Sluff E;J
i1J1 MOVIE: The Tiling (A)
(2:00) Stereo.
Qll Rtmodellng and
Decoreting Today
1D NCAA Flnel Four
Hlflllllghla 1990: Nevada-Las
Vegas. Duke, Arkansas and
Georgia Tech.
8 NewoDay
a D Bob Vlle'e Home
Ageln
QJI Tilt VIrginian
12:05 W One Child - One Volco
Seven children from around
the world jo1n together to
discuss what they can do to
save !he earth's
environment. (1 :00)
·12:30 12) II Unoolllld Mytterlea
Two suspects are Involved in
a robbery in Nevada; a !emily
reunion. Stereo.
(I) VIctory Genie
ill II Mountll_, aaezlne
Cll Tille Old Noun
llJl Babe Winkleman • Good
Flllhlng Tackle and
ltchnlques for summe!lme
walleyes; Nate Berg joins
Babe on a lake trout fishing
trip.
1!2liD Hlgh-Q
0 Ill D Peld Progrem
a Gmt American Outdoo,.
Stereo.
Ill Evens end Novek
1:00 (!) MOVIE: Oklahoma Annie
(2:00)
(I) G111a1 Americen Qulh
Stereo.
ill II PGA Golf Chrysler
Cup, 3rd round from
Sarasota, Fla. (L) E;l
(I) Hometime
llJl Stuntmlllert
1!2liD Peld Pnlgl'llm
II)) NBC Spone Toyota Grand
Prix of Miami (T)
Qll NASCAR Reclng
Goodwrench 200 from
Rockingham. N.C. (L) Stereo.
ID College Baoketbell Xavier
at Dayton (L)
8 NtwtDay
llllfiJ Collage Betketball
Ohio State at Michigan State
(L)
1:05 (I) MOVIE: Sole Survivor
(2:00)
1:30 12J Sportoconter
(I) Strip OulltlnY.,
(I) Adventul'llt Scele
Modlllnft
1!2l• Bll y Packer'• Collage
Betktlbll
8 Newemaker
Seturdly/NIWI
QJI Wegon Tl'llln
2:00 12J II Collage Belkelblll
Louisiana State at Alabama
(L)
(I) Se~wnh Nency
ill II
SpoHighl on
W1111tilng
(I) Tl'llvtll Stereo. ~
llJ) MOYIE: Love Me ender
(2:00)
liD 18 MOVIE: Allan
Ouatarmaln and tile Loti
City of Gold tPGI (2:00)
1!2lll W-n·a Collage
Betkolblll VIrginia at North
Carolina Stale (L) E;1
iiJl MOVIE: &amp;IIndman's Bluff
~00) S!ereo.
NIWI/Hol WHk
2:30 (I) Bet! of .Joy of Painting
II)) LPGA Golf Kemper Open.
final round from Kihei, Hawaii
(L)
a Ntwt/Stylo With Elll
Klentch
3:00 MOVIE: Troop Beverly
llliPGI (2:00)
(I) Woodcarving Willi Rick
Butz Siereo.
illfiJ PBT Bowling Florida
Open from Winter Haven,
Fla. (L) '
~The Attronome,. Stereo.

!?.

S'i

5.!

a

,51

lljl

College Beakelblll
Sou!hern Illinois at
Southwest Missouri State (L)
8 Newt/On tho Menu
111• Collage letktlbiU
Wisconsin at Purdue (L)
Gllllg Vlllty
3:05 W MOVIE: DretNd lo Ktll
(R) (2:00)
3:30 ~ W;:!ghl't Shop
tereo.
Qllln·FI rman Angling
Adventul'lll Cetchlng bass In
tidal rivers: Stereo.
Newatyour M-y
4:00 12J D LPGA Golf Kemper
Open, final round from Kihei,
HawaU (L) (JIP)
(I) Marcia Adtmt: Hoerlland
Cooking Stereo.
(I) WhtiW In tho World II
~- Sendlogo? Stereo.

e

I!Ze PGA ~ Nlssan
Los Angeles Open, 3rd round
tliacHic PaiiNdea, Calf.

·
.~~=a~:WE;I

Ill Dlnce
.
Gatling the moatlr;orn
eniflctlllll'... Slsreo.
8 lllwi/Sportl CIOH-UP
Ill Ounanl!*o
4:30 ~ l'rugol
Slereo.

aoun-

8 Wltll World of Bporlt
World GymnutiCI
Chlmplonlhlpe, women's
ell-eround compatltlon frOm

Indianapolis (T); lilltlrod,
lllrt end preview from
Anchorage, Alaaka
E;l
Cll Squere 0nt TV
I!D 11 Paid Prugrem
iiJl Jutllho Tan of Ut E;1
Ill Tile Bellm-I'll secrets
of bass ' seasonal behavior
from pro RiCk Clunn. Stereo.
8 Newo/FutuN Welch
5:00 (!) Streo! Jutllee
(I) Tlllt Old HouH
Cll LonJ.:,o a Far way E;1
I!D II
WIWtUing

ij

9,

Chill~

il1l My

o Dldl
Qll Hank Perkar't Outdoor
Me~lne Stereo.
ID lege llukotblll
Southwestern Athletic
Conference Championship
from Baton Rouge, La. (L)
8 EerlyPrimo
111m Wide World of Sport•
Wo~d Gymnastics
Championships. women's
ail-around compelltlon from
Indianapolis; ldilarod. start
and preview from Anchorage.
Alaska (T)
QJI Bonanze
5:05 W Fishing Willi Roland
Marlin
5:30 ~New Yenkea WOtkohop
Wind In the Willow•

il1l Gonzo Gameo

Qll Remodeling and
Deco,.Ung Todav
8 Newtmeker
Saturdey/Nowa
6:35 W Flohln' With O~endo
Wilson

EVENING
6:00 12)., Ill Ill 1IDl 1!2lll
NIWI
C!l Llltstylot of tile Rich I
Femou1
~ Newton'• Apple S!ereo.
·Wild Amence Slereo.

liD II GNd!ll Match

E;l

II)) Wide World of Klde

il1l Counlerllrike

a ln-Fioherman Angling
Adventure• Catching bass in
tidal rivers . Stereo.
a World TOlley
QJI Bordertown Stereo. E;1
6:05 W Wo~d Champlonehlp
Wrettilng
6:30 12). IIJ) NBC Newt E;J
(I) Wild America Stereo§
ill II IIIII ABC N ~ Newton'• Apple Sler .

l!2l II CBS Nowa ~
Ill Country Bell Ster .
8 Newt/Pinnacle
QJI New Zarro Stereo. E;l
7:00 ~ D 1IDl Whnl ol Fortune
Runaway With tile Rich 1
Famou1
(I) Neture Stereo. E;1
illOHn Hew
(I) LlwNnCI Welk
liD ID iiJl Stir Trek: The
Nell GaneretJon
1!2l~ Beywa!ch
il1l ecGyvor
@SporlaCa r
8 Ceplllll Glng/Newa
aiJNowt
QJ1 Aln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo. E;l
7:05 W MOVIE: Cheyenne
Autumn (3:00)
7:30 12)
llJ) Cllh Exploalon
(!) 100,000 Fortune Hunt
a Church Streot Stilton
1D Snowboarding OP
Nalionals from Copper
Mountain, ColO. (R)
8 Newt/Sporll Seturdey
aD WKRP In Clnclnneti
QJI Black Sll111on Stereo. 1;1
1:00 12J D 0 Golden Gl~t
Blanche gives a
moonlight-madness pany;
Sophia hopes to stop a

.Jt.

8

P,

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curse. Stereo. ~

(!) MOVIE: The Hng(PGI
(2:00)
(I) Advtnturat ol Robin
Hood
())lit a Cll Cep~ol Crll!ert
Max's caffeine overdose
causes Jemmet to become
concerned about Opie.
Stereoy£
(!) Tra 1 In Europe With
Rick Sltvot Stereo.
\II) 112111 MOVIE:
'Shl~wreckld' CBS Sl~y
Mov o~PG~~2:00) Stereo,
liD ID 0 New Orleans
pollee face Mardi Gras
madness on Bourbon Street

;,stereo. ~

MOVIE: ilght Night Pert
(2:00) Stereo.
Ill !)pry Bectelsge S!ereo.
D Tht Olympled Athletes
that overcame
insurmounlable obstacles are
prollled, Including Mary
Peters, Undy Remiglno and
the 1956 Yale lour-man crew.
8 PrlmiNoWI !j;!
Gll Willard Scon • Arnetour
Hour
8:3o ill Ill a
Who'• tho
Bo11? Tony can'! resist
meddling In Samantha and
Hank's affairs. Stereo. ~
(I) Now Ex~loro111 Slere . E;l
II)) Nunee andy
reconsiders her standards
and contemplates dating
Cha~ey. Stereo. ~
Qll Orand Oto Op Uve
Stereo.
8:00 12) G II)) Empty Noel Harry
has a personality change;
Barbara llckles a domesllc
dispute. ~tereo.
(I) Autin City U
Stereo.
ill IlliG PerfOC1
Sll'llll!llfl Llrry comes up
with iln Idea on how to get
Wayne
llek11s.
Stereo.
(I) Wer II: Chronology In
Europe
liD Cop Klllera Pollee
offlcors from dllferllnt
regiOns of tha country profile
1:/Mitlvas and their ~
kiiiZJ! :00) Sllreo.
Ill
lroe. Stti'IIO.
(R)

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ita

a

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=....

of Sundey

Convtrutlonl
8 llotll Sidle WHh ..._
.llctlion

Gll MOVIE: Fallllr Dowling:
R•r~ede Prlatt (2:00)
8:30 12). 1lJ1 "'-' Sanely
recons~ her ltandlrds

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'

Television

~'I'W

6:00(2)11

(I)

II)) Nowa
(I) Vldoo

=·

IIlii 1!11

Powar
\Zl Squirt One TV Stereo.

rn

,.

W~AT DOES IT DO :

RudlnMalnbQ!! Q
liD • Niall Court I;J
II! !rmurfe
=Motow Cl
Q! World Todly
0 Rln Tin Tin, K-9 Cop
Stereo. Q .
6:05 (I) Beverly Hlllbllllol
6:30 (2)11 II)) NBC Newa
(I) Saved by the IIIII
(I) IIlii ABC NIWI
(ZJ Wild Amorlca C
Ill Square One WStereo.

ij

IJ
II)) Cll CB&amp; Newe Q
liD C11 Andy Qrllllth

II! Scooby Doo
=UpCiooe
0 New Zorro Stereo. Q
6:35 Ill Andy Qrllllth
7:00 ~ 11 IIJ) Whlll of Fortune

00 The Jelleraona...D

Ill tneldo Edlllon t;r

MacNollfJohrer
Nowe Hour
Ill mCandl Camara
C!J Leglalatlve UIJ!!ate
iiDl Current Affair ~
I!]) Ill Star Trek: Tlie Next
Generation C
IIJ) • Entertilnmont Tonight
Stereo. C
II! MacGY.,er Q
= SporteCentor
Q! Monoyllno
0 MOVIE: Island of the
Blue Dolphlno (2:00)
7:05 Ill Addama Family
7:30 (l) 11 IIJ) Jeopardy! C
(I) Now It Can Be Toi!
Ill Entertainment Tonight
stereo. Q
~~~ mMtirled ... With Children
(ZJ

C/1.-L of

II

f&lt;IGHTJ
O~IGINAl.

(}copy

rnNawsHour
MacNelll!,ehrer
I;!

Z·2 B

· T.-. A V~ S

~ o{) 1W2 ~y NE~ Inc

iiDl WhNI of Fortuna Q
IIJ) Ill Family Feud
~ Be a Star Stereo.
=Ski World
at Croullre
7:35 (l) Sanford &amp; Son
6:00 (2)11 101 Matiock Awealthy
producer is killed. and her
husband has an airtight alibi.
Stereo. []
(I) MOVil: Detour to
Nowhere (2:00)
Ill (J) II Family Matters
Steve makes a deal with a
blues singer to serenade
Laura. Stereo. []
(ZJ WashingtonWeek In
Revlow Stereo. Q
iiDl @Ill Search (Pilot) A
talking dragon settles In with
a typical family. Stereo. Q
(!])Ill Amerlca's Moll
Wanted APenthouse model
is murdered on her birthday
for no aeaarent reason .
Stereo. L,l

II! Murder,.She Wrote Q
~ 011 Stlge Stereo.
= Pro Snow Skiing From
Snow Summmltt;iCalll. (T)
Q!PrlmtNIWI
8:05 Ill MOVIE: Pony Muon: The
C111 of the Notorioua Nun
(2:00)
8:30 (I) Ill

mStep by Step Dana
finds romance at the local
country club. Stereo. C
\Zl Well Street Week Slereo.
Are You Being Sarvod7
I!Dl II)) Cll Flah Pollee (Pilot)
Inspector Gil sets a tra&amp;or
two criminals. Stereo.
~ Te•ao Connection
reo.
9:00 &lt;2lll IIJ) I'll Fly Away
Forrest campaigns tor
attorney general with his
daughter. Stereo. C
(I) IIlii Baby Taif Maggie
is put In jail after Mickey
picks up some goodies at
the store. Stereo. C
(ZJ ...Talking With ifllvld
Frost Actor, director and
producer Warren Beatty.
Stereo. C
C!J Waatil'ngton Week In
Review Stereo. Q
iiDl IIJ) Ill Tequila and
Bonenl An autistic man helps
Bonetti and Garcia solva a
murder case. Stereo. 1;1
liD Ill SlghUnga: Ghotll
Paranormal activity is
Investigated by
parapsychologists Loyd
Auerbach and Kerry Gaynor.

rn

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
-Fn~~~BW:=T~I~~~~~~~~
I W.Jie 11-IINKIN!a OF1..-aAVINE! MY DJAR'( TO
'100 INMYWtLL . ..

AFRA.ID YOU'D

R56D IT.

,,., ...........

BARNEY
TH' GALS ARE
GIVIN' ME A

SUSPfliSE
PAriTY !I

AFORE YOU TROT OFF--

FIX ME A SUSPRISE
LUNCH fl

AS'l'RO-GRAPH
envetope to Matchmaker, c/o this

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

YOII might participate In an enterprise
whirl you'll play a secondary, but rewarding, role. In thll case, prolll will be
11r more gratifying than praise.
PIICI!B (Fob. 211-MMch 20) Your .lntu- ·
ltlon could ba a valuable aaaet today.
Size up situations logically, but don't Ignore the murmurt ot your lnner.volce.
Know where to look lor romance and
you'll find it. The Altro-Graph Match·
maker lnltantly reveals whtcli ligna are
romantiCIIIy perfect tor you. Mall $2
plus a long, setl-addr-, stamped

own. Once you rev up, there may not be

newspaper, P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland. anyon e around to bail you out of
OH 44101-3428.
trouble.
ARIES (Morch 21-April18) When deal- LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) You might exing with friends today, try to stay as perience some pressure 10 participate

open-minded as possible. If vou show

in something you'd rather not today.

Don't be a party-pooper; be a good
might have to deland an indefensible sport and abide by the will of the
majority .
position .
TAURUS (April 211-Moy 20) A major SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) Your effecachievement Is possible today, provid· tiveness today will not ~ determined
ed you make It your top priority. If you by how much you do, but by what you
spread your forces too thin, significant are able lo finish . Leaving things undone could lessen your taallngs of self·
results aren't likely.
·
GEMI"I (Mor 21..,juno 20) Do not put estaam.
limitations on your thinking today, es- 8A~tnARIU8 (Nov. 23-Dec. 21)
pecially il you are fore&lt;:asting a future You're apt to ba more montatly restless
evant. It's Important you allow yourself than physically restless today. Link up
with companion&amp;with whom you can
ample room to maneuver.
CANCER (~une 2Huty 22) Your great- ••change views and ldaaa.
est asset today Is your ability to profit .CAPRICORN (Dec. IN8n. 11) An oplrom sudden changes engineered by portunity mlghl present Hoell today
outside influences. They might catch which will enable you to lly a foundation
for luture accompllahmonta. Have your
others llat-loottd. but not you.
LEO (~utr 23-Aug. 22) Keep in mind to- bricks, trowel and mortar ready.
day that there are t~ aides to every Is· AQUARIUS (Jan. 211-Fob. It) Appearsue, so that you don'l jump to errone- ances are or paramount importance tooua concluliona before you have all tht day, so If you hope to Inspire or direCt
facts. flke lima to wolgh and analyze. others, conduct yourself In a poaltlva
VIRGO (Aug, 23-lopt, 22) Plan ehoad laahlon. To be a leader, ypu must look I
'
today so you don'tllart aomethlng that like on~.
Is too cornpNcattd lo manage on your .
indications of bias or prejudice. you

, .... 21, iH2

~J

I

Stewart
awaits
patent for
rnvention

tht

bt·

PHYNEH

.

I 1I I I
1

I~,~Li'ITI
lj
=;E:;P:H~W=~, ~

Two lellows were ta lking
about the ollice romeo "I don't
know how he does it," sighed
0
'-:~~==~=~ one lellow, "the only thing I've
E LU N
done behind my wife's back is

I I I IJ ;._
z

I• Is I I I IQ~~~P;:t~·

you develop from step No. 3 below.

9 PR INT

NUMBE RED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

I

UN SC RAMBLE ABOV E LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

SCRAM.LfTS ANSWERS

H 7

Belief - Dimly - Croup - Legume - FIGURED
I had just learned how to use all the gadgets I had
gotten as gifts when I read a classified ad that made
me laugh . It said, "For Sale. VCR. Like New . Never
FIGURED Out. "
NORTH

BRIDGE

+K 10 3

Vol. 27, No. 4
Copyrighted 1112

PHILLIP

ALDER

·---

.A 108 5 3
t8 4
.AJ1643

.Q92

•Ks

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South

2.

South

Wnt

1+
2•

Pass

Nortb

East

2t

Pass
All pass

4•

RALLY HELD • A solidarity rally of union workers was held
yesterday (Saturday) at the Rutland Civic Center. Tbe rally was
geared to th~ revival or labor union support ia the Be~d area. The
rally, orgaa1zed by Woody Call, Steelworkers Loca~ Raveaswood
Aluminum Co~ and MaJrWhidatch, far lett, United Mine Workers
or Am_erit:l!, MeiKs County, was attended by several district repre·
sentatives ,1ndudtog, l·r, Terry . .
UMWA Lot:al
-1857;
Chad
' 'I
.

Opening lead: t 8

'------ -- - - -__.1
and led the spade 10. but East didn't
cover with the Jack. Now declarer had
to try to return to ,hand to draw the
last trump. He led the club five, but
East alertly put in the nine. South covered with the king, but West defended
accurately, winning with the ace and
returning a low club. East won with
the queen and switched to the heart
queen, killing the contract.
A little unlucky, but once West had
overcalled in clubs, it was more likely
that East rather than West would have
four spades. This makes it correct to
lead the spade king first (or the 10 to
the ace, an unblocking play).

•
15 Soctiono, 140 P~gaa ~
AMuiUmedllllno, Now IP lllilt

.

','

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) '- An
official of American Electric Power
Co. says it may decide by summer
whether to inslall scrubbers at its
coal-burning Gavin power plant in
southern Ohio.
Gerald Maloney, executive vice
president, said officials are awaiting decisions in Washington on a
system of emission allowances that
will help coal-burning utilities with
scrubbers comply with the federal
Clean Air Act.
"I would hope it will be over
and done with in the next three or
four months," Maloney said, referring to the drafting of rules for the
allowances program by the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency.
Meanwhile , he said AEP has
spent between $30 million and $40
million to keep the scrubber option

open at the Gallia County ~la~t.
which gets its coal liom a mme:In
Meigs County where about I ,ZOO
jobs are atstake.
·~
But Maloney also said the company ha~ obtained extensions on
bids and other commitments from
clean-coal producen in Olbcr Slates
and that die option of swilCh~ng
from Ohio's high-suHur coal is stW

open.

:

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio found in September
that scrubbers - costing about
$800 miUion - would be AEP' s
most economical altcrn:ative.
However, the PUCO predicated
its fmding on AEP's ability to use
allowances to ease the impact of
pollution abUtements required
beginning in 1995 under the fedeial
ac ~

Patrol shows concern
..
over section of U.S. 35

An•w•r to Prtvlout Pullll

Middleport's·· consumer
survey will begin this week
6 Epoch
7 Mra.ln
Madrid
8 - of Tror
9 Simple
10 Clutch
11 Onterlo city
16 Cosmoneut

,_

'

Troopers will make a concentrated enforcement effort on
35 looking for left of center viola·
lions, Lt. Woodford, commander of
the patrol post said.
Woodford expressed concerned
about the sudden increase in aashes on U.S. 35 and stated troopa:s
wiD be enforcing traff'u: laws in tlie

u.s.

area.

·

Despite the two recent fatal
crashes on U.S. 35, in 1991 fatall·
ties were reduced 33 percent in
Gallia and Meigs counties compared to 1990, Woodford reported:
The nine troopers and three
supervisors of the patrol post had
another busy year in 1991, Wood·
Continued on A-6

Katlic to address Gallia chamber

·

CELEBRITY CIPHER

~ ClpMr crypiOQI'IIM Itt ntttcl frOm quofltklne by tamoul PIOPif PUt and ~~
Ed lttt« In lht clpNr ttlndl fGr 1n0tn1r. TNiy't CIUI.•E ....... D.
.

{!;

~Stereo. Q

BTPEAYDLD

Q! 'Hid lltwl
0 700 Club WIJII Pat
Rall1rt1an

NXVAPWXI
ITPEAII

USA/Moblf Indoor Nat'l Track

·Z PEZJ. '

JPEYAIN

IJN

L~~erprevention activities begin·Tuesday
offic«
tboy
=:lie
litea. diiDolinl
Truli'baulan

XIJX

rOIIIIItCt w111n hltookalor a

=·

·.

RACINE • The Village of
Racine will seek Issue Two funds
--··
..
- for-sneetpi\'iiig, following ·a recent
recessed meeting of the village
council.
Council members authorized
Mayor Frank Cleland to file .an
GALLIPOLIS - The GalliaIssue Two application for $48,103 Meigs Post of the State Highway
during the program' s upcoming Patrol investigated two fatal aash·
round five awards.
es on U.S. 35 west of Gallipolis in
Council also approved the the last five weeks.
.
mayor's recommendation that a
Both were head-on collisions
recent $1 ,000 gift from the Meigs caused by left of center violations.
County Bikc:n be used to purchase
Hilda Helm, 73, Wellston, died
a piece of playground equipment from injuries in a wreck Dec. 30,
Max Whitlatch, United Mine Workers of Ameri·
SUPPORT EXPRESSED • Tbe Rutland
called "The Dome".
ca, Meias County. Several district representa·
Civic Center was packed with uoion supporters
1991.
The board approved the use of . According to the patrol, Helm
lives attended lbe nlly to boost labor union sup·
at the solidarity rally ,Saturday afternoon. Tbe
the nnnex on March 4 for Richards was eastbound on U.S. 35 and went
port in lbe area. iflmes·Sentinel photo by Julie
event was organized by Woody CaD or tbe Steel·
and Sons' annual safety meeting. left of center and struck a tractor
E. Duton)
workers Local, Ravenswood Aluminum Co., and
Also approved was a request from and double-trailer rig.
Dravo for use of the facility on
Edna C. Coole, 83, Rio Grande,
April I for its annual safety meet- died
from injuries sustained in a
ing.
similar accident Feb. 3.
Council approved the recom·
Both wrecks occurred within a
mendatiolt of the Board of Public mile of each other.
Affails to raise the salary of Glenn
Rizer in the amount of $800 a year,
with the cost being shared by the
ment oi' Devel(,pment, according to The cooperation of residents is village and the Board of Public
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Jean TrusseD, Middlepon's funding needed, Trussell said, in answering Affails. An ordinance must now be
Tlmes·Sentlnel Staff
.
the questions on the survey. The passed before the raise can go into
MIDDLEPORT • A consumer specialisL
It
wiD
be
conducted
over
a
two
time
required is about 10 minutes effect.
survey geared to determine what
week
period
with
the
caUs
to
conand no names will be taken.
auracts Meigs County shoppers to
Councilman Bob Beegle reponWhile the questions include zip ed on the prices of copiers, both
Middleport and what improve- tinue until 300 responses have been
ments in the village's downtown received. That figure represents a code, 88e range, number of persons new and used. Mayor Cleland tee·
in household, household mcome ommended that the village pur·
section would malce it a more desir- required silt jlercent of the county.
Trussell etpplijJizeq lh•t the •catesory, and loc4tiQ11 of employ- chase a used CaliOII machine liom
~ble si!opping 8ri'JI will get underconsumer lllrY~Y is •one of the ment, ntCIIt relate to' Middleport as Superior Office SupPly in Huntingway this week.
The survey is one of several requirem~ts o( community asseSs· a shopping llfCII - what merchan· ton for $850. The copier had been
required before the villa~e can ment to be completed prior to soU- dising changes would be appealing, used as a rental and had little use. It
apply for downtown revitabzation mission of the downtown revital· what needs to be improved io make will also come with a new copier
funding through the Ohio Depan- ization grant ~equest application.
Continued on A-6
warranty. Council. approved the
'
pun:hase of tile copter.
Fire Chief John Holman reponed that a contmct had been signed
for the brush truck from the Ohio
,: GALLIPOLIS - J. E. "Jack" American Electric Power Service of America.
Department
of Natural Resources.
Corporation,
Fuel
Supply
Depart·
In
January
he
was
appointed
to
Katlic, senior vice president of the
. '
Holman
also
requested pennission
ment, Lan~aster, will be the fea· the national Inland Waterways
tured ~er at the 55th Annual Users Board, whicli advises the to buy a new radio to go into the
Gallipolis Area Chainber of Com· secretary of the Army and new tanker truck when delivered.
merce Dinner Meeting Thursday. Congress on inland waterways pr;. The department plans to take the
April 9. in the James A. Rhodes orities and f~g. He received the radio from the present tanker nod
· Commuoity Student Center at the "Coal Age" ma,azine award for putting it into the brush truck. HolUniversity of Rio Grande, begin· 1987 in recogniuon of bis signifi· man is to produce written infonnaning at 7 p.m.
cant contribution to the coal indus- tion about the radio before action is
Accordins to Ronald G. try. In 1988 he ·was honored as taken by council.
In other action, council:
McDade, chamber J]relident, Katlic Ohio's "Coal Man of the Year" by
• approved the girt of steel
is responsible for the F,a1 man- the-Ohio Mining and Reclamation
drums from the Racine Hydroelec·
agement of the coaJ mming, prepe- Association.
ration atid ·transportation sub·
Prior 10 joining AEP, Katlic was tric plant;
• discussed with Letart Townsidiaries of theAEP system's opel· e~ecutive vice president engineership
Trustees the m'etl,tod of han·
,ating utilities, as we~.~ overall ing and aovernnient relations of
dling
monies that the village
fuel procurement activities.
Island Creek Coal Company in
A leader in the coal industry, L=xin
ton :Ky. Island Creek Is a received from the township as pay·
Katlic is chainnan of lbe National subll
Or oCcidental Petroleum ment for fii'O protection;
Coal Association and is a director
·
oa.
• adjourned until Monday.
JACKKA'n.IC
Coalinued on A-6
of the BiiUJninous Coal Operators 1

DOWN

I Skinny fishes
2 Cover (a
package)
3 Architect Saarinen
4 Non·Jew
5 Hortt (si.J

Yang,.
International;
Barnett, lntenatioaal Union
UMWA; CecU Roberts, UMWA; Larry Ward, President rl District
6 UMWA; Orley Vore, District Representative for UMWA; Bob
Turner, AFSCME; Lee Potter, UMWA International; Bernard
Evans, UMWA; and Donnie Lowe, President of UMW A District
28. {Tunes-Sentinel photo by Julie E. Duton)

Issue 2 funds
are sought for
street paving

@ tiiZ, NEWIPAPII'I EIITEM'IUU: ......

41 Raised
43 Lend a hand
45 Reagen's son
46 Become
twlatad
49 I.e., In lull
53- de
cologne
54 Final
58 Chemical
suffl•
59 Europoan
shad
60 Drivers' org.
61 ActorMineo.
62 Ebbed and
flowed
63 Bl plus one

'ULDZA

11:00(J). I]) Ill • •
illlltwl

mid 40s.

•.

The World Almanac®Crossword Puzzle

Jack.rloalls 1 painful

1UGJ 1111 tllal~'llk• .
• Cloolllnd C111H

Sunny. Hltlb around 60. Low Ill '

•

f96
SOUTH
+ AQ9 1 5 4
.K6
• 532

By Phillip Alder
Experts love a safety play, which
guarantees the contract whatever the
distribution of the opposing cards.
Howeve r, sometimes a player makes
what he thmks IS a safety play, bu\ tt
costs the contract. This is called an unsafety play. The declarer found an unsafety play on today's hand.
After a di amond lead, clearly the
only da nger to the contract is a 4-0
trump spli t. If West had btd three
hea rts over two spades, as many
would . it would have made life easy
fo r Sou th. Knowing onl y East could
ha ve all four trumps, South would lead
dum my's spade kmg al trtck two.
When West disca rded. South would
lead dummy's spade 10. ptcking up the
trumps and winning 12 tricks.
But as West had bid only his club
sutt, South didn't know qui te so much
about the hand . Thtnking he saw the
perfect sa fety play to ensure no spade
loser, South led a low spade to the ace
at trick two. However. when West discarded, South suddenly noticed a snag.
He played a spade to dummy's king

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.QJ 9 4

(J) NoW.
I]) Ill• 20/20 Sttneo. C

. &amp;FIIId

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decision soon -~·
on scrubbers &lt;

EAST

WEST

The unsafety play
was unlucky

aheep
4 Grind
together
9 Hen trult
t2 Before
(poet.)
13 Tidal wave
14 Macaw
15 Of the voice
box
17 "S" In RSVP
18 Pour forth
19 Arab country
21 - Tin Tin
(movie dog)
23 Yoko 24 Aristocracy
28 At a distance
32 Salf-aateem
33 Serlll of herole events
34 Euy galt
35 Confederate
37 - - •pat
39 Gravel ridge
40 Soccer star

Along the river ........... - B1'7
Business/Farm...............Dl..8
Classified .......................DJ-7
Dealhs ............................... .AJ
Editorai ....................... .Al
Sports.............................Cl oo8
Weather...........................A-3

AEP expects

+to 5

1 Female

.'.

Pleasant, March 1, 1992

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w•

10:0111l u.a. 01rm111c OGid

Mlddleport...Pomeroy-Galllpoll~olnt

.1 2
fAKQJl0 1

ACROSS

Inside

•
ltttts,.

the chuckle quoted

(1 :00) .

product~lrrtn. lllltty.
Stereo.
,
G1 1D IIIWII Are Wid

Gallipolis attacked by Union troops
during Civil War ··James Sands • A-8

by fill ing in the missing words

II! Beyond Roallty
~ Naahvtlle Now Stereo.
= Top Renk Boxing USBA
Flyweight Championship:
Scotty Olson (20.0, 16 KOs)
vs. Louis Curtis (111-5-1, 6
KOs), 12 rounds, from Las
Vegas (L)
at Llny King Llvel
8 Fllh!!.Oowllng Myattrles
Stereo. L,J
9:30 I]) ChNtt C
Cll•llllly Blity's positive
lnfluenca on the kids
lmpre- Mary. Stereo. Q
-~ wen Street Willi Stereo.
aJ Rey llrldbucy Tho10:00
101 Nightlnlre Cole
(Pilot) Customers at a cefe
get a chance to change their
llvaa. (R) Stereo. Q

Ill Amtllcan Mlllera Th[
tHe ot Sarah Vaughan, ona of
\!11 greatest ainglra of jazz.
~ ...TIItdng With Dlvld
'roll Aolor, director and

Some unusual stories are told
by Atty. Fred W. Crow • Page A-2

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Buckeyes defeat Spartans 78-65 - C 1

B-1

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rl

75 rl'llh

lAM I

law to form fou r almplt word&amp; .

EVENING

MUJfUM

'::~:~;~' S~"\\4\llA
~ "~~s·
141tt4
CLAY I, 'OLIAN ....;;...._ __
0 four
~torrangt ltHtrl of
ocrornblod wordo

ei&gt;UEV&amp;t
'- 1'1..1'-lW lf'l
'TilE 80~ ~

Sunday

WOlO

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X I J X

B I C

.
PREVIOUS SOLUTION:

IJRAN

X lAC
iTNN

DTNX
IJVX.

'
the lows could lf)lik lof
would complain of tha lawyers." - Sir Qeorgo Savlltt.
"II

0 -ttrNEA, ...

C T L

u*naatvta

'

they
'

1

28 '

•
'I

GI\LI,.IPOLIS - The Gallia
Co!DUY Ll!tet Prevention Program
will begin collection and law
enforcement' activities Tuesday.
'l'bDic ICiiviliela .-nla11&gt;' funded
by lbe AOJHVM SOlid WIM Dil·
lrictiO help W11111epl dump site
clean up and enfon:ement.
• 1be mw.or ~J. supcrvlled by
Stephen Pielce, ww pick up mad·
~

side litter and clean small dump
sites located on
ri&amp;ht-ofwaya. Clew 11111111 . ..., llllped
tbrnuJii the Oallipolia Muaiclpal
Coun and Oallil Cotaty Depart·
meltt of Htllllltl Servicel.

aeanltl siltll will bo IIIODibetl

by the litter law llllbtcnlell Oft!.
cor eontriCtld tJttouall tbo Ollila

Couilty Sheriff's ~ 1be

will patrol !be county, concentntlilta on repeat clttmJ)ina
iasulna llttetiDB cltadona aad

are responsible for'propcrly
of dtelr Jlllbale, · ·
.
fn Gallla eo'unty
enfucbcll!tet laws.
are lequired 10 be licensed by the
A. a Nllllnder to .U COUDty R
health department. A list of
4enta, litterin&amp; or poUutin1 11ate Ucenaecl baialed II available from
land cr ·n1m ·~ • .Yioladon of die the Utter preveoli011 offiCe or the
Olllo Reviled Code.
, heallb depmDtt!DDL Both oflicel n
1be liltct provcnlion proJW11 located in the OIDia County Coun·
1111111F reminrll aD residents tltat bouse..
~

n.e

=
iii

ILLEGAL DUMP - Tile Glllla C-IJ Litter Pit:
Oftloe
will be taJ1edltl people tlllqlllepl d. . . . fAICIIM &amp;II ... olr ....
Route 7 about two . . . -* ofCrtnnt CltJ, .....
COURt)' Utter pmtlllioll prop• TiJadiJ. ftlllltelal ....
~
100 Jlrdl "'the OOo Rher (. . . Ia ......~ ,....
aad smtl)'lnlmal arc1
1\e Mlrah, iiWII)' deer, . . . . .
appear to be discarded raad kilL lldlvldlli1a ulq &amp;IIi
com11llllq 1 lblrd.clep'et ............. Ul!:ll, ~ tD
.
matlon fnlm the litter coatrol olllct. willie ......_. !tJ 1111
Cn11a~ Litter Law Eaforce•ellt Ofllm. (TbaetoStlltbill,._
Jim Freeman)

t11eJ........ -

'J

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