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                  <text>ruellday, March 3, 1992:.

0 hio Lottery

Ohio State
defeats
Michigan

THIS WEEK'S GAMES
EAS,ERN EAGLES
BOYS
Completed season with 11·1 0 Record

Page4

Reedsvill&amp; Eastern (2)
Sat., Feb. 29-3:30 p.rri
North Gallla
North Gallla
Thurs., Feb. 27- 7:00 p.m.
Patriot Southwestern

'
Fri., March 6- 6:30p.m.
Southern

sat., Feb. 29-5:15 p.m.

Racine Southern

THURSDAY, MARCH S- District Tournament at Jackson
High School vs. Lynchburg Clay
at 6:30p.m.

Winner advance•
to district at
OU Convocation
Center, Athena

Trimble (1)
Sat., Feb. 29-7:00 p.m.

Hannan Trace

Trimble
Fri., March 6 - 8:15p.m.

Symmes Valley
Sat., Feb. 29- 8:45p.m.

Hemlock Miller

Miller

Winner advances
to district at
OU Convocation

GIRLS' DIVISION IV DISTRICT
AT JACKSON HIGH SCHOOL, JACKSON

SOUtHERN 'ORNADOES
BOYS
FRIDAY, MARCH 6- Sectional Tournament vs. North
Gallia at the University of Rio Grande - 6:30 p.m.

South Webster lower winner
Wed., March 4- 6:30 p.m.
Unloto upper winner
Miller

Sat., March 7-6:30 p.m.
Winner advance• I 0
regional at Meado wbrook
High School, Byeavllle

Wed., March 4-8:15 p.m.

GIRLS

Gallipolis lower winner
Eastern

Complete season with 1·20 Record

Thurs., March 5-6:30 p.m.
Lynchburgh Clay

Sat., March 7-8:15 p.m.
Winner advances 10
regional a1 Meado wbrook
High School, Byes ville

Gallipolis upper winner
Thurs., March 5-8:15 p.m.
South Webster upper winner

DEBS
BOYS

BOYS' SECTIONAL AT LYNE CENTER
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE, RIO GRANDE, OH.

Completed season with 12·9 Record

Gallipolis (2)

GIRLS
Completed season with 19·3 record

Low tonight In 40s. Thursday
mostly cloudy. High In mid~

BOYS' SECTIONAL AT LYNE CENTER,
UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE, RIO GRANDE, OH.

Kyger Creek

GIRLS

Pick 3:005
Pick 4:0102
Cards:
4·H; 6-C; 3·D;
4-S

Tuea., March 3 - 6:30 p.m.
Jackson
Meigs

Jackson
Fri., Feb. 28 - 7:CO p.m.

Proctorville Fairland (1)
Wellston

Tuea .. March 3-8:15 p.m.

Winner advances
to dlatrlct at
OU Convocation
Center, Athena
Winner advancaa
to dlatrlct at
OU Convocation
Center, Athena

Vol. 42, No. 211
Copyrighted 1992

2 Sectlona, 18 Page• 25 conte
A MuiUmedlo Inc. Newapopor

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 4,1992

Factory orders up 0.4 percent in January
By JOHN D. McCLAIN
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - Orders to
U.S. factories rose 0.4 percent in
January, the third increase in four
months, led by a big jump in usual·
ly expensive, long-lasting durable
goods, the government said today.
Both Federal Reserve Chairman
Alan Greenspan and a survey of
purchasing managers have said that

new orders continued to grow in
February, a sign the manufacturing
economy continued to ease out of
the recession.
Factory orders are a barometer
of manufacturing industry plans.
Continued growth could mean
higher production and an increase
in jobs in a sector representing
about 20 percent of the nation's
economy.

The Commen;e Depanment said
orders for durable and non-durable
goods totaled $235 .0 billion, up
from $234.1 billion in December.
December's 3.7 percent drop was
uimmed from a 3.8 perrent decline
first estimated but remained the
largest decrease since orders fell
6.2 perrent in November 1990.
Factory orders had peaked at
$254.0 billion in OciOber 1990.

Bills pass
House,
Senate

Orders for dura&amp;le goods, items total down in December.
But new orders for non-durable
such as airplanes and au10mobiles
intended to last more than three goods, including food and textiles,
years, rose 2.2 pen:ent, even more fell 1.4 percent following a 2.3 perthan the original 1.5 percent esti- cent decline in December. It was
the fust consecutive decrease since
mate reported last week.
five
straight declines ending in
They totaled $120.3 billion, up
March
199(
from $117.8 billion a month earliNon-durable orders totaled
er. A 5.0 percent decline in durable
goods orders had pulled the overall $114.7 billion, down from $116.3

billion a month earlier.
Indusuial machinery and equipment orders posted the largest gain,
up 6.9 percent after a 3.2 percent
decline the previous month.
Transportation orders were up
1.1 percent following a huge 13.7
percent plunge in December . .
Excluding the transportation category, orders inched up 0.3 pen:ent.

Bush sweeps three primary races;
Four of five Democrats share wins

By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
President Bush today claimed a
"very good" primary showing
after a three-state sweep, but his
spokesman conceded "there is a
'
protest vote out there ." Four
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Democrats found encouragement.
Separate bills that would scrap curbut
Super Tuesday still loomed as a
rent plans to award multiple types
showdown
between Paul Tsongas
of high school diplomas and let
and
Bill
Clinton.
.
adjacent disuicts build joint high
challenger
Pat
Republican
schools cleared the House and SenBuchanan finished second 10 Bush,
ate with ease.
\&gt;ut called his 36 percent showing
Also on Tuesday, representain Georgia "asiOnishing."
tives OK'd a bill to require that the
"I think it establisbesJhe credistate pay le~~DI fees of stale employbility
of this campaign," said the
ees who wm their jobs back after
conservative
commentator, who got
being unjustly frred .
30
percent
of
the vote against the
Sen. Eugene Watts, R-Galpresident
in
Maryland
and Colloway, won 32-0 passage of an
orado,
expanded House bill that would
While claiming enough support
eliminate a requirement in current
to
keep his longshot challenge
law for a multiple diploma system,
moving.
Buchanan conceded today,
starting with 1994 gmduates.
"I've
got
to start moving those
Instead, the bill proposes a basic
up,
no-.question •. And-1
numbers
high school diploma for students
need
a
breakthrough
soon.''
A
RECORD?
•
We're
not
sure
whether
the
80
degrees
regiswho pass the ninth-gmde exam and
Tuesday's
coast-to-coast
ballottered
at
Bank
One
Ia
Pomeroy
at
4
p.m,
:ruesday
was
a
recor~
complete other course requireing
spread
viciOries
among
four
of
high
for
March
3,
but
we
are
sure
from
s1tes
about
town
that
11
ments.
the
five
Democratic
~andidates, a
brought
out
lo
some
Bend
area
residents
that
lazy·hazy-crazyEliminated would be certificates
week before the 11-contest Super
days-of·summer feeUng that we sing about.
of attendance, which current law
Tuesday battle for 783 convention
proposes for students who fail to
delegates.
pass the ninth-grade test, and speTsongas, the former Mascial diplomas of distinction or comsachusetts
senator, won convincmendation to other students.
ingly
in
Maryland
and Utah, and in
However, disuicts could award
a
random
sampling
of Washington
a new honors diploma to those who
caucus
precincts.
pass a 12th-grade exam and meet
Clinton, the Arkansas governor,
cenain other criteria.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Black CNN and NBC explain how four picked up his f~r.~t primary win in
The bill also would expand the
Georgia and looked ahead to the
proficiency tests students must pass turnout was small but concentrated candidates could win - yet not nine Southern contests in the next
for a diploma by adding science, in Bill Clinton's favor. High- earn a gold medal - in Tuesday's
BUCHANAN THANKS SUPPORTERS • Republican presl·
beginning in the 1995-1996 school income voters turned out and gave primaries in Georgia, Maryland, week.
Former California Gov . Jerry
Colorado
and
Utah.
dentlal
hopeful l'lltrick Buchanan waves to supporters at a rally
Paul
Tsongas
a
lift.
Young
peQpie
year, to exams that already include
Brown
sq ucaked out a remarkable
President
Bush's
support
was
Tuesday.
Buchanan received about 30 percent of the vote in Georand
environmentalists
gave
Jerry
reading, writing, mathematics and
Continued
on
page
3
widespread
as
he
won
all
three
·
gia's
preimary
election. (AP)
Brown's campaign a Rocky Mouncitizenship.
states
in
which
he
ran,
but
it
was
"What we are now going 10 do, tain high.
Interviews with voters and the cratered with disaffection. Many
in shon, is cause Ohio schools to
exit polls taken for ABC, CBS, Democrats were unenthusiastic,
Continued on page 3
100, with two in five in Georgia and
Maryland saying they would like to
statewide primary, possibly in Eclcart of Mentor, who is not runCOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) sec SOllie other candidate enter the Legislative leaders say roadblocks June, that would cost taxpayers an ning for re-election, is being abolrace .
ished.
•
remain in completing passage of a extra $6 million.
The networks' Voter Research long·debated bill reducing Ohio's
The bill also must be signed by
The Republicans have agreed
and Surveys said blitck Democratic congressional districts from 21 to Gov. George Voinovich.
that two of their incumbents will be
Clarification on the American Red Cross pohcy of ass1stance to
turnout was down 10 16 perrent in 19.
In addition to the undisclosed placed in the same disuict but have
families who have had their possessions d~stroyed by fire was
Maryland and 29 perrent in Georpolicy
differences, Aronoff said not identified the incumbents.
Senate President Stanley
issued today by Rita Fields, Meigs represen~uve. ,
..
gia ABC exit polls had pegged it at Aronoff, who was negotiating bill drafters were having problems
An early Republican version of .
Fields said that the Red Cross doe.s not seek out farmhes who
26 percent in Maryland and 36 per- Tuesday with House Speaker Vern with the statutory defmition of dis- the bill put Reps. Douglas Apple- have been the victim of fues. but that 1f the agency IS contacted then
cent in Georgia in' 1988, when Riffe, told collesgues that a final uicts that must be virtually equal in gate, D-Steubenville, and Rep. :
assistance is provided on a set scale.
, .
Jesse Jackson ran.
Clarence Miller, R-Lancaster, in an
biD should be ready today but that population.
She said that everything depends on the fa1mly s~e ~d that
Clinton has the most to gain if "you should be prepared for a·long
. Sen. Richard Finan, R-Cincin- expanded lOth District.
assistance is done through a voucher sy.s~m. Flf!ll~~~al ctrcu~­
black turnout is high next week on day."
nati, and Rep. Judy Sheerer, DBut a version that later passed
. stances are not a consideration for deternumng ehg1bihty for assisSuper Tuesday. The Arkansas govAronoff, R-Cincinnati, said pas- Shaker Heights, who head the joint the House, endorsed by Republitance, Fields said.
r
ernor won 70 percent of the black sage is needed this week to avoid committee, said the talks have been cans from southeastern Ohio, mostThe Red Cross allows $110 for each person over ·12 and $80 oor
vote in Georgia, compared with 53 the need for a special primary to slowed by pressures placed on indi- ly preserved Miller's district and :
each person under 12 for clothing, $30 for..shoes for those over 12
percent of whites, according 10 exit nominate candidates for the vidual lawmakers by members of combined those of Reps . John ·
and $25 for shoes for those under 12, and $115 for the f~r.~t person
Congress seeking to protect or Boehner, R-West Chester, and :
polls.
November election, he said.
: plus $20 for each addi.tional person for food for a week, according
In Maryland, Clinton led
enhance their turf.
Willis Gradison Jr., R-Cincinnati, :
Ohio's primary is May 5. .
_ 10 the local representative.
Tsongas 49 percent to 32 percent
Riffe,
D-Wheelersburg,
and
in southwestern Ohio.
Secretary of State Bob Taft said
among blacks, while the former the new districts must be in place Aronoff have agreed that each
Meanwhile, it was learned that :.
Massachusetts senator won on the by March !3 to give local officials political pony would surn.:nder one Reps. Paul Gillmor, R-Port Clin· · ·
strength of a 43-30 edge among time to print and mail ballots 10 seat 10 account for the reduction in ton, and Rep. Mary Kaptur, D- .:
:
Assistant Meigs County ~utor George ~· McCanhy reJlC?ns
whites.
absentee voters and make other Ohio's U.S . House delegation, Toledo, have both raised objections • ·
• that on Tuesday, Timothy J. Tnplett voluntanly entered a guilty
CNN analyst William Schneider preparations.
which stemmed from national pop- to their proposed new 5th and 9th :
: plea 10 a charge of burglary in Meigs County Common Pleas C?urt.
said 44 perrent of Mar): ian~ DemoOtherwise, he said, he would ulation shifts recorded in the 1990 districts, respectively, in northwest :
According to Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Tnplett
cratic voters had fam1ly mcomes have to schedule a special Census.
Ohio.
was charged following the February 16 breaking and entering at the
The II tb District of Rep. Dennis
Continued on page J
Virginia Oiler residence in Racine.
Tripleu was sentenced by Judge Fred 'Yf· &lt;;row Ill to three to 15
rears in ~rison and ordered to pay restitution. A posi·S~ntence
• mvestigation was ordered by Judge Crow. Once that repon 1s completed, Triplett will be ttansponed to Orient Correctional Facility 10
begin servmg his sentence.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- despite lobbying effons by oppo- ously underfunded and said it year for an Ohio Plan liability that :
A JS year-old Racine girl .is 10 appear later in Meigs County
Hearings are under way in the Sen- nents, "none of the provisions is would create pressures for a major could total $1 biUion a year. "I ;.
don't think I like it," Suhadolnik •.
Juvenile Coon for her pan in the burglary.
tax increase.
ate on a major House-passed bill dead on arrival." •
:
But Sens. Eugene Watts, RJones said his bill would fdl the added.
that sponsors say would put basic
Jones said that in addition to the · :
health care within reach of all Columbus, and Gary Suhadolnik, gap between insured families and
R-Parma Heights, indicated they those with Medicaid and Medicare, iilsurance assessment, those who ::
Ohioans.
Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reportS that depu~es
have serious reservations - not and low-income families who can· enroll in the Ohio Plan would pay ;
It got mixed reactions Tuesday.
arrested 49 year-old ClifTon! Jar ]abe, Hudson Road of Rcedsv!lle
only
about the I percent tax but not affool insutance, those betwee~ premiums - based on ability to ;
Sen. Robert Ney, R-Bamesville,
on Monday night on a cbarJe o disorderly conduct by intoxication
chairman of the Financi81 Institu- about other parts of tbe heavily· 60 and 65 who do not qualify for pay - that would bring in about • .
following a complaint at the Coleman residence on Hudson Road.
Medicare and those .wi.th chronic $300 million a y~. Beyond that, : ·
tions and Insurance Committee, lobbied measure.
:
Jabe was lodged in the Meigs County Jail pending hearing in the
Rep. Wa'fM Jones, 0-Cuyaboga aihnents who cannot buy insurance he said the bill requires preventi~ ::
said he endorses many of its provi·
• Meigs County COurt.
.
health ca~e for children that would .;
Falls,
defllnded the J)TOIIOS8l, which · at 111y price.
sions and has an open mind on oth·
rellllt in lon&amp;-ranae savings.
·: ·
creates
an
"Ohio
Plaii"
thai
pro"The
opportunity
is
there
•
.
ers, including a coniiOvmial insurT~e
bill
contains
numerous
&lt;
vides discount insurance riiM for Everyone may not buy it (insur·
ance premiwn tax.
other
provisions
including
a
biD
on
:
He said he plans hearings, twice the working poor and othen w~o ance) but the opportunity is there,"
Anp Bradbury oC Oak Orove Road reponed.to ihe Meip CounbiDing for medical bills that exceed :
Jonessaid. .
· '
a week if necessary, to get the bill lack COvetl8e.
ty Sbaifrs Deputmen1 on Tuesday thaiiO!IICblllo afler 3 p.m. on ·
Meclicaid or Motlicue masimuma, • ·
Watts
said
he
has
doubts
about
Tbe
bill
passed
the
House
last
10 the Senale Door around the ftm
• Monday IIIII I Llll· on Tuesday bneOne had bealcn and destroyed
discounts
for non·smokcrs and : ·
the
pmniwn
tax
becauae
it
would
week
over
the
opposition
of
minor·
of April.
the top mdoor of her llllilbox.
standardized
claims forms.
;•
generate
only
about
$80
million
a
·
N'ey, who earlier intrOduced a ity Republicans who called it
Coatlliued oa pqe 3
·~·
similat biU in the Senate, said that "Medicaid U," claimed it was seri·
'•'
••
•.
•

Polls reveal voters
are discontent

....----Local briefs-----.
Red Cross policy clarified .

Vote due on redistricting bill

.

. Triplett enters guilty plea

Ney promises prompt action on health care bill

Reedsville man charged

Mailbox damage reported

'

-

.

-·•• •

�Commentary

Page-2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, March 4, 1992

Springlike weather continues around Ohio

OH 10 Weat her
Thursday, March S
Aecu·Weathe,.. forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures

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

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETfERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300
words. All Ieuers are subjecl lo editing and muSI be signed wilb name,
address and telephone number. No unsigned le11e11 will be published. Leuers
shouJd be in good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

!Excerpts from other
jOhio newspapers
•

By The Associated Press
Following are excerpts of reo:nt ediiOrials in Ohio newspapers:
The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer, Feb. 28
• Patrick J. Buchanan's "America first" hysteria makes for some dam
:good one-liners.
; Trouble is, lhey're not original.
• Congress hasn't passed a foreign-aid bill since 1985. A continuing res·
: olution supporting about $14.3 billion in aid expires at the end of next
month. The Bush adminisll'ation has a hard sell ahead for $620 million in
new Soviet aid - dollars 10 buy friends the nation once spent uillions 10
keep as enemies.
That altitude could also deflate an auempt to bolster the lending capac·
ity of the International Monerary Fund - essential if the IMF is 10 help
the 15 former Soviet republics move to free markets.
Butlhe IMF money, too, has become fodder for Buchanan, who calls it
"globaloney."
What is globaloney is the idea multilateral lending saps U.S. economic
strength. Yet such extremist attitudes are echoed on both left and right.
Opponents of the IMF increase have included Congress' only Socialist
and some of its staunchest conservatives. Lacking leadership from the
\Vhite House, Republicans have ~anged up on Democrats! ~ain thneat7n·
lrtg to make them pay pohucally if they support foreogn a1d on an elecuon
season.
For all its faults, the IMF has played a clear, positive role in the post·
war world, a force for stability and growth. As long as rich-poor divides
exist among lhe world's nations. the need will continue. An IMF conlribu·
lion is really an investment in a more secure world, and it should be treat·
ed as such. It does not raise the budget deficit; it yields interest payments
that enhance revenues.
Tbe Middletown Journal, Feb. 24
We cannot be reminded 100 many times about the importance of recy·
cting.
Don't get us wrong. The world won't end next week or next month if
y()u fail to recycle things like glass, aluminum and plastic. But some
future generations will certainly be hun if landfill after landflll is clogged
with materials that don' t disappear with time.
: Think of that next time you throw a glass bottle or aluminum can in the
garbage. If you live in an area where the b'ash hauler does not separate
tliings like that, your carelessness and lade of concern will eventually
cause a landflll10 fill prematurely.
:
Portsmouth Daily Times, Feb. 22
; Once, in a past that still seems less-than-distant, the threat of global
ll)lClear war hung above us in the darkest possibility.
. Events during lhe past few years, especially the evolving relations
litween the United States and the fonner Soviet Union, have softened
tl)at threat, and now nations such as the U.S., Russia, Great Britain and
F,rance have taken steps 10 reduce the proliferation of nuclear weaponry in
what has become the "global village."
: Reports during the past week, however, lead us 10 believe thai progress
~ global nuclear reductions is now threatened by a nuclear neighbor·
hpod. one coalition forces seemingly crushed during the Persian Gulf War
but presently seems 10 be rebuilding its strength.
:, Hussein remains, and the Middle East as a whole is ready to do busi·

ness.
: Unless the United States begins 10 feel as strongly about !he prolifera·

tion of nuclear hardware in the Middle East as it has auempted to impart
to nuclear suppliers and manufacturers, !here is the real probability that
tbe nuclear neighborhood will extend its threat beyond its boundaries.

Berry's World
W~Ai

vo

You 1HIN\&lt;.-

IS (1-\\S SuSf A

NAiLIRI\L

\1'\l~G.

OR IS

IT GL06AL WARMIMG?

\

•
•'

,•

Letters to the editor
•

OW editor,
' We the c:uatlllllen of Leiding
Qwt Conleii'IIICY -.e wondeling
i£ we ue aoiDIIO pt MIY ol that
IIIOIICY back In lower Wiler bills
... we were twindled out of. We
• woncllnd wily out Water bilb
~ 10 IIIIC:b llitller that other
waiM compnie1 were charting .
..S our wa1er 11 no littler than

...
f,I

I

. Now that .we know whele our
· money went II makes u1 all mad
and iJPI;CI to he cheated 10. I sure
w~ldn't Willi thll. upon my conICieDCCI come judJJIIait day. I will
repay llith tho Lord. Bec:au110 we
are Christians doesn't mean we
WIDt to be waited on.
Sincerely.
M'iddDoleport,UyWOhoods
,
10
-·---

Democrats move fast after Mitchell's miscue
WASHINGTON- For two
hours every Tuesday, Democrats
and Republicans in the Senate go
their separate ways 10 huddle, plot
strategy and talk politics over
lunch. There are no flies on the
waU at these members-only caucus·
es . Anything said within tHose
walls is supposed 10 stay there.
But when Senate Majority Lead·
er George Mitchell, D-Maine,
emerged from one Democratic
lunch last month and immediately
began defending his views on abor·
lion legislation, it was obvious
something had happened behind
closed doors. Sources later told us
Mitchell had been chided by his
peers for briefly breaking rank on
an issue that they all see as pivotal
in the November election.
The incident underscores the
high stakes the Democrats believe
they have in keeping the well-orga·
nized, well-funded pro-choice pea·
ple flrrnl y in the Democratic corner
this election year.
The s10rm began brewing early
on the morning of Feb. 4, when
Mitchell was quoted in the press as
opposing the "Freedom of
Choice" bill that top Democrats

Jack Anderson
are advancing. The bifl is their way
of checkmating a likely Supreme
Court decision later this summer
that could wa1er down or eliminale
abortion rights.
In published interviews,
Mitchell had expressed "serious
reservations" about the bill and
indicated that he thought a consti·
tutional amendment protecting the
right to abortion would be a beuer
way togo.
But House Speaker Tom Foley,
D-Wash., had already showcased
the Democrats' bill in his official
response 10 President Bush's State
of the Union message. It looked
like the Democratic quarterbacks in
the House and Senate - Foley and
Mitchell - were not reading from
the same playbook. Mitchell had
called an audible, one that nearly
caused a fumble with a critical con·
stituency group of the Democratic
Party.

Foley had said that "if the
Supreme Coun revokes the guaran·
tees of choice," Congress will
.. write it iniO the law of.the United

States." To pnH:hoice Democrats

w~o beli~ve the pro-choice position

will cut m their favor with voters
this year, Mitchell's comments
were dangerous.
Mitchell was making an argument suitable for a class of law stu·
dents- that " fundamental consti·
tutional rig~ts" cannot be guaran.
teed by a somple majority vote in
Congress because they could just
as easily be overturned by another
majority vote in Congress.
But the pro-choice lobby is in
no mood for debating the "how"
of this issue because the "when" is
pressing in on them. Prospects for a
constitutional amendment enshrin·
ing pro-choice guarantees would be
problematic at bes~ taking at least
five 10 seven years 10 pass, and not
a sure thing at that. In the meantime, the Supreme Court could
scale back Roe v. Wade this sum·
mer, leaving women in a holding
pauem.
The reaction from the prochoice constituency to Mitchell's
remarks was almost immediate.
Calls flooded into the offices of
Democratic senators. Sources say
those senators leaned on Mitchell

~1£ Mb~~~

IS EFFECTIVE ...
NOW WE NEED
To WORK

oN HIS

CHAR~~

MICH.

during the caucus lunch. A key
Democratic strategist told us,
"This was really viewed as going
off the reservation by some
Democrats." A second strategist
added, the senators feared that
Mitchell had made his remarks
''without a lot of thought.''
Mitchell emerged from that
lunch, took the Senate floor and
calmed the waters he had roiled.
Without mentioning the heated
caucus, Mitchell said he still had·
"serious reservations" about pro·
choice legislation, but that he
staunchly supported the "purpose"
of the Democrats' "Freedom of
Choice" bill, which is to canonize
the rights spelled out in the Roe v.
Wade decision in 1973.
Mitchell 's office didn't return
our phone calls. He now has a
grievance of his own with the
Democratic senators. He is angry
about leaks from the Tuesday
lunches.
FORBIDDEN FRUIT- Sen.
Steve Symms, R·ldaho, raised
some eyebrows back in 1983 when
he used campaign money to buy
$3,000 worth of apples from his
family's farm, the Symms Fruit
Ranch in Idaho. He shipped the
apples around the country as gifts
to his campai~ coordinators. Now
Symms is taking another bite out of
his campaign money for apples.
About $4,000 of Symms' lef10ver
campaign war chest from his last
run at the Senate has been spent in
the last year on apples from the
family farm . Symms is retiring
from the Senate at the end of this
year, so he doesn't need the
$500,000 he has in unspent cam·
paign funds . He says he doesn't
plan to keep any of it for his per·
sonal use, so his options are 10 give
it 10 charity or contribute it to the
GOP - or buy apples as gifts for
people who have helped to put him
in office.
It's a fitting end for Symms'
political career. His ftrst bid for the
House 20 years ago began with a .
TV commercial fellluring the boy·
ish Symms sinking his teeth in10 an
apple and declaring that, if elected,
he would "take a bite out of gov·
emmenL"
Copyright, 1992, United Fea· .
lure Syndicate, Inc.

IMansfield I 70°1•

•I Columbus I ?ool

William A. Rusher
Klerk 's candidate by a Conserva·
live Party member in a recent by·
election in Potchefstroom, a key
constituency. This was widely
interpreted as proving that de
Klerk's policy no longer had the
suppon of a majority of whites. So
the question before white voters on
March 17 will be:
"Do you support continuation
of the refonn process, which the
State President began on Feb. 2,
1990, and which is aimed at a new
Constitution through negotiation?"
As posed, the question presents
white South Africans with a difli.
cult choice. Most of them believe
the present social system must be
reformed in. some way, and vastly
prefer negotiations to the grim
prospect of civil war. But many see
no reason why the nation ·must
remain unified within its present
borders under ANC control - an
opinion shared by many other ele·
ments of the South African popula·

tion, including Gust for example)
the great majority of the 6 million
Zulus. A division Qf the country
into self-ruling cantons (Zulu,
Xhosa, white, etc.) is perfectly pas·
siblc, and would offend only the
ANC and liberal whites, who want
10 entrust the whole nation to Man·
dela's ANC.
On the other hand, if de Klerk
loses lhe referendum vote and the
present negotiations come to an
end, the ANC and black organiza·
lions to its left would almost cer·
tainly move 10 take over lhe coun·
try by force. They would be
opposed, of course, not only by the
powerful resources of the white
govemmen~ but by the Zulus and
many other ethnic groups, ranging
from the Asians (Indians) and most
of the mixed·race "coloureds" to
lhe large bloc of whites in the Con·
servative Party and factions to its
right. But no sensible person could
be very happy over the prospect.
Most observers. therefore, think
thai de Klerk will win his gamble,
at least in the short run - i.e., persuade a narrow majority of whites

W. VA .

Showsr.s T·slolms Rain Flurriss

.

Geotoe
R' Plagenz
b

given the middle name of Emerson.
Dean Emerson summered in
Maine and so did we. Each Sunday
we would altend his chun:h, set in a
little nook or the sea in Kenneb·
unlcpon where President and Mrs.
George Bush now worship when
their summer Sundays are spent in
Maine.
I made him promise to leave his
sermons to me in his will and be
had said be would. But be forgot.
When he died at age 92 the ser·
mons went to Trinity Cathedral.
I wrote and ll:ied to set them but
nobody seemed to ~now where
they were. Yean passed.
Then a month a1o a long-dis·
r.ance call carne frOm the.aecretary
of the ·current dean or Trinity
Cathedral. She had been rummag·
ing around in the ceDar of lhc old
chun:h wben she came upon a dust·
covered salehel. Inside were five
katbcr-boulld loole-leaf noeebocis
of typed enklii maUICripU.
1'hl1 JVe cache Ia .now in my
poueaion and I have been like a
·kid in a candy AXe ever since. Just
bofort wrltina lbls 1 wu readln1
ono of the sermons UUed, "The
Unseen Presence That Ble11e1. &gt;L
Toward the end tho 1e1111011 are
tbele won11:
''No m111 Clll Ilk Ouist to walk
with him and fail to sense his
bleaed preaence ill the way. There
is 1 dltTenat feelln1 for the ~
when Chrilt biOIICI It, there Is
men fun in oar rocreatlon when

or

more
JOY .m ~human fellowsh1p when
Christ ISm tbe group.
"There is no experience that is
not beu.ered by his sharing it. If it is
a.b~, it is lightened •. as a Yo!'e
diVI'!CS lhe load. There JS no gnef
that IS not lessened wh~n he sheds
hJ!If the tears. There is no failure
Without recovery when he counsels
and enc~urages. The~e is no fall
beyond ~1s reach, no sm be cannot
redeem.
As I read about this Unseen
Presence that bles~ our lives at

Sunny

lr:e

Pr. Cloudy

Cloudy

C1992 Acc:u·WIIthet, Inc.

Weather----rain 40 percent.
South·Central Ohio
Extended forecast:
. Tooight, becoming cloudy. Low
Friday through Sunday:
m the upper 40s. Chance of rain 20
A chance of showers each day.
percent. Thursday, mosUy cloudy
with a chance of showers or thun· Highs in tbe mid-60s to low 70s.
derstorms. High 65·70. Chance of Lows45-55.

Local briefs...
Continued from page 1

Skin-testing clinic Monday
A skin testing clinic will be held at the Pomeroy Fire Department
by Connie Karschnik, R. N. on Monday from 4:30 10 6:30p.m.
In accordance with lhe Meigs County Board of Health policy, it
is mandatory for all food handlers 10 have a current tuberculin skin
test. Area residents, including boosters clubs , PTO's, church
groups, and other residents who are in food service are urged to take
advantage of the free service.
For the convenience of working parents, this is an opportune
time for a child entering kindergarten next year 10 reo:ive his or her
skin test, Karschnik said. She noted that funds for the clinics are
provided through the tuberculosis levy and there is no charge for
any services from the Tuberculosis and Health Clinic.
Anyone with questions concerning any services through that
office may call992-3722.

EMS units answer 9 calls
Nine calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday and
Wednesday by units of Meigs County Emergency Medical Services.
On Tuesday Ill 8:20 am., Pomeroy unit went to Swindell Road.
Howard Swindell was taken 10 Holzer Medical Ce~ter.
At 2:56 p.m., Tuppers Plains and Olive Township units went 10
State Route 681 for an au10 fore. Richard Putman was the vehicle
owner. At 3:29 p.m., Middleport unit wentiO Bailey Run Road for
Brenda Templeton, who was taken 10 Veterans Memorial Hospital.
At 3:30p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 State Route 7 and U.S. Route
33. Stacey Price and Stephanie Price were taken 10 Veterans, while
Claude Cavian, Danzy Cavian and Mary Cavian all refused treat·
ment At 3:59 p.m., Rutland and Scipio units went 10 State Route
143 for an auto accident. Arthur Daniels was ll'ansported to Holzer.
At 4:57 p.m., Racine unit went 10 Rowe Road. William Morris was
taken 10 Veterans. At 10:32 p.m., Rutland unit went 10 Main StreeL
Jack Harrison was taken to Holzer. Atll:l9 p.m., Middleport squad
went 10 Overbrook Center..Inez Stallings was taken to Pleasant Val·
ley Hospital.
At 3:54 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy Nursing and
Rehabilitation Center for Gladys Taylor, who was taken to Veter·
arts. Syracuse assisted.

(perhaps 55 percent, or slightly :
more) to vote Yes on March 17.
That will enable de Kledc 10 go
back 10 the negotiating table and
continue edging the country into
the hands of the ANC. But do not
suppose that de Klerk and Mandela
will be able 10 impose their settle· .
ment, once they have reached it.
The opposition groups described
above would move 10 block imple·
mentation; the only difference
would be that _part of the govern·
ment forces (not all, for many
would side with the opponents)
would be found in de Kledc's cor·
ncr. Once again, the outcome ~
would be civil war.
Tragically, I see no way out..
Whichever way the referendum
goes, the blocs arrayed against each
other will insist upon recourse to
the arbitrament of force. The
ANC's opfonents - the great
majority o whites, Zulus, Cape
Coloureds, etc. - are surely as
entitled 10 self-determination as the
Kazakhs and the Croats.
(C)I992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

~hr!st approves it, there

Snow

V1.t AS50ciated Prest GrapNuNtt

Bi/[S••• Continued from page 1
work hard in creating, adopting and
implementing a model science cur·
riculum, much as we have done,
essentially, in forcing them to
adopt the model math curriculum
as a consequence of the proficiency
tests," WaliS said.
The bill now goes back to the

House for expecled acceptance of
Senllle changes.
Rep. Wayne Jones, D.Cuyahoga
Falls, said he introduced the joint
high school bill after the
Woodridge and Revere districts in
Summit County expressed interest
in sharing a building.

_ _ Area deaths--

Unseen presence enriches our
lives
!s

. When we were chlidren growing
up, there hung on the wall of our
dining room a framed picture of
Christ with these words:
"Christ is the Head of this
house, the Unseen Guest at every
meal, lhe Silent Listener to every
conversation."
I d,on't remember that anybody
ever directed our attention 10 that
picture and those words, but you
couldn't sit through many meals at
our dining room table and not be
aware of them Somehow !hey set
the tone or the 8peech and decOrum
around the table. I learned at that
early age that unseemly behavior
and conversation are out or order
when this Unseen Guest is watch·
ing and listenins.
Let me jump ahead several years
now.
One· or the early influences in
my life leadins me Into the minislly was lhc dean of Trinity Cadle·
dral in Cleveland, Chester B.
Emerson. When lltlended Sunday
morning services there, I &amp;11111 on
every word he preiChod. LI1Ct he
became my dear friend and spirltu·
a1 Jnelitor.
. He delivered the "charae to the
minister'' at my ordilatlon.
. "Be a man or the world," he
Slid, "ia Older 10 convert tbe world
but above all boa 111111 ol God that
the world will look to you and hold
out its hands for that heaUn&amp; fel;
lowship that comes only from those
who love God fmtud the world
list."
,.
He officiated at our wedding
and blptiud our fmt son, who -

By The Associated Press
Springlike temperatures bring
springlike showers.
Rain and occasional thunder·
showers are being forecast for Ohio
over the next four days and nights,
the National Weather Service said.
Temperatures will remain
unseasonably warm with highs near
70 and lows around 50.
The reconl high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 78 degrees in 1976. The ·
record low was I below zero in
1943.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:27

p.m. Sunrise on Thursday will be at
Several cities broke high-tern·
6:58am.
perature records Tuesday, includ·
Around tbe nation
mg Atlanta with 80, Cincinnati
A balid or showers and thunder· with. 77, Indianapolis with 77, and
storms stretched today from the Lowsville. Ky., with 80. WilisiOn,
Gulf Coast into the central Plains. · N.D., hit62, tying a record that had
Temperatures were mild across stood since 1921.
much of the East
Rain feU early IOday in Atlanta,
The unusually warm weather in
San Antonio and Oldahoma City. Georgia brought early blossoms to
Snow was forecast for the northern Bradford pear trees and some flow·
mountains of Colorado.
ering quince, forsythia, azaleas,
It was foggy in Richmond, Va., Japanese magnolias and redbuds.
WashingiDn and Hatteras, N.C., as
Jackson, Wyo ., reached 80
well as Chicago, Indianapolis, Lit· shattering the record of 74 set i~
Ue Rock, Ark., Omaha, Neb .. and 1989. Records also fell in Casper
Des Moines, Iowa.
and Sheridan, Wyo.

Rockefeller amendment approved

De Klerk wages a desperate gamble
Longtime readers of this column
will recall my repeated warnings
that South African President F. W.
de Klerk was not negotiating with a
broad enough spectrum of the
South African population. or leaving open enough possible alterna·
tives to " one man, one vote in a
unitary state," which is the flat
demand of the communist-riddled
African National Congress. I have
frankly been puzzled at the sll'ategy
being pursued by de Klerk.
Now , however, whatever has
motivated him (probably pressures
from the white business community), de Klerk has collided with the
realities I have repeatedly pointed
out. His response has been a dra·
malic demand for support by white
voters of his present policy, cou·
pled with a threat 10 resign if that
support is not forthcoming. As a
result, South Africa stands today
where de Klerk's obsession with
accommodating the ANC was
bound to lead it: on the brink of
civil war.
The present crisis was precipi •
tated by the resounding defeat of de

a

IND.

The Dally Sentinel-Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 4, 1992

Gaynen Clark
Memorial graveside services for
Gaynell Clark, 83, of Pomeroy,
who died Feb. 29, 1992 at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, will be held
Saturday alii am. at the Sand Hill
Cemetery. The Rev. William Mid·
dleswarth will officiate.

every tum, I thought back t&lt;:&gt; !he
Unseen Guc;st who sat 111 the dinmg
room table m the home of my boyhood and brought civility and grace
10 our family life and discourse.
This Unseen ~ce still~
get a person to show hlliiSCIC 111 his
best. It can also, as Dean Emer·
s.on's sermo~ shows, redirect our
hves from and pathways to where
the way is pleasan~ the air bracing
and the grass green . .
(C)l99l . NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
"

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS IIS·860)

Publi1hed every atlemoon, Monday
thn&gt;lll!h Friday, Ill Courl. 51. Pomeroy,
Ohio by lho Ohio Valley i'&gt;.ibliohing
Cotnpany/MulUmllldla lne., Pomeroy,
Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2tll6. Second ctau
JKIIOq• paid at i'wMI'O)'. Ohio.

Today in history

Member: The A11ociatecl Preta, and the
Ohio New1~per Auoclation, National
AdverUainJ Repre1entative, Branham
NeWapaper Salea; 733 ThiTCI Avenue,
Now York , ~"' York 10017 .

. I

By The Assodated Press
•
Today ls Ash Wednesday, March 4, the 64th day of 1992. There are
302 days left in tbe year.
Today's Highlight in History:
On March 4, 1933, in his inaugural address, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt pledged effective leadership 10 pull !he counlly out of the Great
Depression, saying,' 'The only thing we have 10 fear is fear itself."
On this dale:
In 1681, EnaJa!d's King Charles II pled a charter to William Penn
for an area of land tbatlaler bec8mc Pennsylvania.
•
. In 1789, die Cmsdwtion of the Un11ed States went into effect as lhc l '
fust Fedtzal Coogno.ss met in New Y orlc. (The lawmakers wen adjouined 1
for the laclr. of a q110111111.)
In 1791, Vennont boclme tbe 14th stare.
•
In 1829, an 1111111y crowd mobbed lhc White House during !he lnaugu· .. 1 .
ral recepdon for Plelident Andrew Jacbon.
·
In 1837, the Illinois stile
p1ed a city charter toCqo.
,
In 1861, Alnhlm Lincoln wu lnauJIIl81ed preaident of tho Uniled • ·
SlaleS; his vice }li'Ciident wu Hannibal Hamlin. .
In 1902, the American AulOIIIObile Aaoelatlon wu founded In Chicago.
In 1917, 7S ~..,,Republican Jeannette Rlllkin ol Molani took I
her 11e11 u a member or eoo,roa. the firSt woman to bo elecled to the
Houle or Reprelentldves.

POSTMASTER: Send addreaa changea lo
The Dailr Sentinel, 111 Court St.,
Pomm&gt;y, OHio 4fi769.
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Subaeribm nol 4eolrinclo pay tho earri·
er INIY nmtt in advuce direct to The
C1ntpa1l• D•lly Trib\lne on a lhree~ ail
or 12 month bOola. Crocllt will bt 11•••
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No aubocripllo"' by mall permitted In
anal when home carrier ••rvlce It

•lature

.,.new..

Molti-Jtto•

19

lnolde Galla Co•nQ-

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w-.. . . .............. . . . . . ....... . .188.40

Frank Woodgerd
Frank Raymond (Woody)
Woodgerd, 62, of 36 North Broad·
way, Zaleski, died Tuesday, March
3, 1992 at the home of his sister,
Frances Barnhart, Zaleski.
Born Oct. 15, 1929 in Carpen·
ter, he was the son of the late Lloyd
and Alma Marlcins Woodgerd. He
was a tailr.nner and camera man
in the U. . Air Force Tactical Air
Command, a Korean and Vietnam
veteran, a member of the VFW
Post 6281 in Edinonton, Ky., a
member of the National Rifle
Association. He graduated from
Albany High School in 1947.
He is survived by a .daughter,
Terri Harni110n, or Manilla, Iowa;
three sisters, Delores Cleland and
Betty Sayre, both of Racine, and
Frances Barnhart of Zaleski; two
brothers, Carrol Woodgcrd of
Dyesville, and Arthur Woodgerd of
Marietta: two grandchildren and
three great·grandcbildren.
. Besides liis parents he was preceded in death by his wife, Mary
Jenson Woodgerd on Dec. 13, 1991
and a lxother, Dale Woodgerd.
There ·will be no services.
AITangements were handled by the
James and Blower Funeral Home
in McArthur.

WASHINGTON (AP) - A
plan to bail out two funds that
finance health care for 120,000
retired coal miners and their depen·
dents faces an uphUl batUe in the
Senate, Sen. Jay Rockefeller said.
''I'd say the majority of senatO!li
are against i~" said Rockefeller, D·
W.Va.
"They aren't from coal·produc·
ing states. They don't know about
coal miners who have worked 30 or
40 years in the coal mines, what
happens to them. what happens to
their health," be said.

The Senate Finance Committee
voted Tuesday 10·5 10 add Rocke·
feller's plan to a tax bill as an
amendment.
The two United Mine Workers
health funds, which are overseen
by trustees independent of the
union, have a combined deficit esti·
mated at $100 million, blamed on
increasing costs and declining
numbers of companies willing to
contribute.
Rockefeller's proposal would
transfer money from lhc financially
stable UMW pension fund. It also
would impOse a tax of 75 cents per
worker hour on all coal companies
to help finance the health funds.
Continued rrom page 1
Rockefeller said the committee
win in Colorado, requalifying his didn't support his amendment until
low-budget campaign for federal he threatened to vote against the
matching runds.
tax bill sponsored by Finance
"It's an incredible statement," Chainnan Lloyd Bentsen, ()..Texas.
Brown told CBS . "A very strong
Rockefeller said he could have
feeling on the part of a lot of pea· scuuled the tax bill because it need·
pie that they want some real ed the votes of all II Democrats on
change."
the committee to overcome the
Iowa Sen. Tom Harkin won opposition of the panel's nine
Idaho' s tiny caucuses and led a Republican members.
sampling of Minnesota caucus
The tax bill was approved 11·9.
precincts. That put him in the win·
"What I was forced 10 do was
ncr's circle, but didn't give him the the only thing left for me 10 do and
significant breakthrough his strug· that was say I'd bring down the
gling campaign needed.
entire tax package unless these

Bush ...

Polls..

Continued rrom page 1
_.::.::.:..:.._.:......:....:::....___

over $50,000, compared with 48
percent among Republicans, and
about half the Democrats who
turned out were college graduates.
Tsongas, with his "no Santa
Claus" message, has done well in
these categories since the leadoff
New Hampshire primary. His vot·
ers again praised him for having

____

specific ideas, strength and
courage. according 10 exit poDs.
Brown, who left offiCe as Cali·
fornia governor in 1983, had his
best showing of the campaign in
Colorado, and his strongest support
there from voters under 30. He also
won three-fifths of Colorado
Democrats who mentioned the
environment as an imponant issue.

--Middleport court newsTen were fined and one forfeited
a bond in the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday
night.
Fined were Stacy L. Burns,
Cheshire, $10 arid costs, spinning
tires; Marisa A. Gray, Middleport,
$10 and costs, running a stop sign,
and $100 and costs, driving under
suspension; Curtis R. Dalton, Rut·
land, $100 and costs. driving under
suspension, and $15 and costs,
speeding: Jackie L. Kerwood, Gal·
lipolis, $10 and costs, illegal

Marriage licenses
Marriage licenses have been
issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to Donald Ray Folmer, 19,
Pomeroy. and Debra Lavada Sny·
der, 22, Cheshire; Floyd Charles
Hickman, 19, Long Bottom, and
Mary Beth Cremeans, 18,
Pomeroy; Willis Edison Dye, 63,
Ray, and !vel Kathryn Stoneburner,
64, Pomeroy; and to Stephen
Michael Kimes, 27, and Brenda
Faye Teaford, 22, both of Racine.

exhaust
Joey L. Pridemore, Jr., Middle·
port, $100 and costs, driving under
suspension: Judy L. Freeman, Mid·
dleport, $25 and costs, no opera·
tor's license; Danny R. Alderson,
Middleport, $25 and costs, disor·
derly manner; Lena Riffle, Middle·
port, $25 and costs, disorderly
manner: Tina Kauff, Middleport,
$25 and costs, disorderly manner,
and Earl 0. Pickens, Pomeroy,
$100 and costs, driving under sus·
pension.
Forfeiting her bond was June
Opal Johnson, Rutland, $60, run·
ning a red light.

Dissol~tion

sought

An action for dissolution of
marriage has been filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court by
Rebecca Jean Fisher and Dewayne
Richard Fisher, both of Middleport.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

Hospital news

446 4524

Veterans Memorial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS·
Virginia Phalen, Pomeroy, and
Arthur Roush, Mason, W.Va.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES •
None.

niiiiUMY n
,RIDo\l

" . . :: ..

t~n1

ttwu MAtiCH 1
Tlli.SDAYI

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, March 3 • Oris
Bumgarner, Linda Hasseman, Jen· ·
nifer Jerzak, Crystal Lovelace,
Clarence Miller, Gladys Riley, and
Harty Schnckley.
Births, March 3 • Mr. and Mrs.
Andy Fisher, a daughter, Gallipo·
lis. Mr. and Mrs. Steven Savage, a
son, New Marshfield.

120,000 miners were taken care
of," Rockefeller said.
"They had to have my votes.
They put in tax breaks for furs, for
jewelry, for big private airplanes. I
had to fight to barely get in
120,000 77-year-old retired coal
miners and their dependents," he
said.
The bill would make limited
cuts in capital gains taxes.
It also would give middle·
income families a tax credit of up
to $300 per child; offer a new cred·
it for many fust-time home buyers;
raise the income·tax rate paid by
the richest Americans to 36 percent
from its current 31 percent·

Temperatures IOday were fore· :
cast in the 70s al011g the Gulf Coast •
and southern Atlantic Coast; In the·
60s in tbe soulhem Plains, caiifor· ·
nia and southern Arizona; the 50s ·
across much of the West; the 40s ·
around the Great-Lakes and Rock·
ies; and the 30s in Minnesota and
New England.
The high temperature for the
nation Tuesday was 87 111 Laredo,
Texas.

Stocks
Am Ele Power .................. .30 3/4
Ashland Oil ...................... .30 318
AT&amp;T.................................37 318
Bank One............................49 1/4
Bob Evans .........................26 3/4
Charming Shop...................28 1/2
City Holding ...................... 17 3/4
Federal Mogul... ................ .l6 3/8
Goodyear T&amp;R ..................63 1/8
Key Centurion ................. .17 1/2 :
Lands End ........................ .32
Limited Inc . ...................... 28 1/2
Multimedia Inc ..................27 3/4 '
Rax Restaurant ...............,..! 4/16
Robbins&amp;Myers ................ 19 518
Shoney's Inc ......................25 718
Star Bank ...........................28
Wendy Im'l... .................... .l2 1/4
Worthington Ind................22 1/8
Stock reports are the 10:30 .
a.m. quo"s provided by Blunt,
Ellis and Loewi of GaUipolis.

-Meigs announcements__
D of A to meet
District 13, Daughters of Ameri·
ca, will meet Saturday at I p.m. at
the Chester Lodge Hall. All merri·
bers arc urged 10 attend. Plans will
be discussed by Beuy Biggs, Dis·
lrict 13 Deputy, for spring rally at
New Lexington on May 30.
Community Association to
meet
The Middleport Community
Association will meet Friday at
noon at the Middleport Village
Council chambers .
Dance planned
There will be a round and
square dance at the Tuppers Plains
VFW Hall on Friday from 8-11:30
p.m. sponsofed by VFW Post No.
9053 and Ladies Auxiliary. Music
will be provided by C.J. and Coun·
try GenUemen.
VFW Auxiliary to meet
The Tuppers Plains VFW Auxil·

iary will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m . All members are urged to
attend.
Bake sale planned
The Rock Springs United
Methodist Women will have a bake
sale on Saturday at noon in the'
basement of lhe church.
Gospel concert
Marty O'Bryant will present
concen of gospel music on Sunday
at 7:30 p.m. at the First Southern
Baptist Church on Pomeroy Pike.
The public is invited 10 attend.
·
Granges to meet
·
Star Grange and Star Junior
Grange wiD meet Saturday at 7:3Q
p.m. at the grange ball on County
Road 1 near Salem Center. The
fourth degree obligation will be
performed on all candidates:
Potluck refreshments will follow
the meeting . All members are ·
urged to auend.

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Wednesday, March 4, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Sports

Buffalo-Putnam beats Wahama 72-62 in sectional tournament

Wednesday, March 4,1992
Page-4

By Gary ClarkSports Correspondent

No. 5 Ohio State uses late run
to beat No.18 Michigan 77-66
By RUSTY MILLER
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - It took 31 seconds
for Michigan to show that the Wolverines can still
look like just a bunch of 19-year-olds.
The 18th-ranked Wolverines played fast and loose
with the ball three consecutive times in the second
half. Fifth-ranked Ohio State convened the wrnovers
intn three baskets during a 10-0 run, leading to a 7766 Big Ten victory on Tuesday night.
"I'll tell you. you'd better beat Michigan right
now because they're going 10 be a great team," Ohio
State head coach Randy Ayers said.
In other lop-25 games. it was No. 6 UNLV 65.
Utah State 53 and No. 7 Arkansas 106. No. 23
Louisiana SLate 92 in overtime.
For all but those 31 seconds, Michigan sLayed
right with the more-experienced Buckeyes. No one in
the capacity crowd at St. John Arena would have
guessed the Wolverines were first-year players after
they forged a 36-32 lead at the half and were up 5752 with 6:50 to play.
That's when lhings got nightmarish for Steve
· Fisher's lealll.
"We were holding our own until we had those
three straight turnovers,'· lhe Michigan coach said .
''That was lhe critical point of the game.''
After Michigan pulled to 64-61 wilh 3:57 left,
Chris Jent added lhc finishing touch with a threepointer that put the Buckeyes out of reach.
"The turning points were the three steals and
Chris' three-pointer," said Jim Jackson, who had 25
points, 13 rebounds and six assists. "Those plays
came from our defense.··
Well. partly - for !hose 31 seconds, lhe Wolverines treated the ball as a foreign object.
Ohio Stale trailed 57-52 after Jimmy King's layup
ofr an assist from Jalen Rose with 6:50 remaining

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.Buffalo Putnam overcame a 10
point Wahama White Falcon lead
during the final nine minutes of
regulalion before convening 10 of
15 free lhrows in overtime Tuesday
evening to hand coach Lewis Hall's
Bend Area cagcrs a 72-62 selback

lhat capped an 8-0 run. But Ohio SLate took th_e lead
for good in part because of Michigan"s generosity.
The victory moved Ohio State (20-5; 12-3) wilhin
a half-game of first-place Indiana, which visits Iowa
tonight
Chris Webber led Michigan (17-8, 8·7) wilh 17
points and 12 rebounds.
No. 6 UNL V 65, Utah St. 53 - Jerry Tarkanian
left lhe coun a winner again at UNLV in what appar·
ently was his last game.
The Runnin" Rebels (26-2, 18-0 Big West) got 15
points from J.R. Rider as they finished 1991-92 with
21 consecutive viciOries. The win over Utah State
(15-11, 9-8) was their 471h in a row a1 home. Both
streaks represem current national bests.
The season ended Tuesday for lhe Runnin" Rebels
because of NCAA sanclions against the program.
which will keep it out of any postseason play.
Tarkanian, who resigned prior to the season, bas
said he wants to rescind the resignation, but school
officials have refused.
No. 7 Arkansas 106, No. 23 LSU 92 - Lee
Mayberry made a school-record nine three-pointers
and scored a career-high 35 points as Arkansas rallied from a 15-point halftime dericit 10 win a key
Southeastern Conference game.
Mayberry scored 23 points in the second half,
including a three-pointer that tied it at 87 wilh 1:19
remaining and sent lhe game into overtime.
His two straight baskets in overtime got Arkansas
(23-6, 12-3) off 10 a 93-87 lead. Todd Day added 27
points, including 19 in lhe second half, as the Rawr·
backs took a one-game lead over LSU in the SEC
West.
Shaquille O'Neal, who had II poiniS and seven
rebounds in the frrst half for LSU (18-8. 11-4), finished wilh 21 points and 14 rebounds.

Rose's first year in Indians' system underway
. JACKSON DRIVES - Ohio State frootmao
Jim Jackson (left) drives into Michigan's James
yoskuil in the second half or Tuesday night' s

Big Ten matchup at St. John Arena in Colum·
bus, which the Bu£keyes won 77-66 to pull to
within half a game or conference front-runner
Indiana. (AP)

Scoreboard
•

:tn the NBA ..•

Wi.nnipef: 4, Dr.:rrcit 3
4, 8011«1 0

AU..Ik Dl&gt;illon

W L

New YoD: ..............36 23

.61D
.552

'801ton .................. .. 32 26
}lew Jcney ...... - ....27 3 t

.466

.Philodel!M ., .......27 31

.466
.4li
.322

.MWni . . ...............27 32
oWuhinpn ........... .l9 4&lt;)
tlrlmdo .................. l&lt; 4l
..

hL

GB

MIWfr.ll4, N.Y. handen 3
Butralo 4, ~ebec 4, tie

3.5
1.5

Piu.blqh 6. C&amp;l.luy 3
Ana"" 4, l'lilli4dphio 1

8..5
9

Tonight's games

17

22

.237

9
13.5

Dctroi1....................34 2.5

.S76

Alllnu ................... 29 21

.l09

17..5

Mil.waukoc .............26 31
'l:ndiant M.... 0'"' '' " ' ''' 27 33

.456
.450

20.5
21

:t;hu-1... ............... 21 36

.368

2l.l

u.

Keaain&amp; A1tcr 58, Eatm 47
Lake Cath. 79, Ash1abWa 62
Uma B•~ f/1, Poulding l2

New Jency at N.Y. Rangm , 7:35p.m.
Toronto It Edmorruln, 9:35 pm.
Lo.An&amp;elca 11 San Jr~~e , 10:35 p.m.

Lima Shlwnce75, Karton 71, ar
Little Miami 81 , Lemon·Monroe68
M.incrv• 80, Ra venn• SE 71
Newton Falls 62, TwirulburJ 57
Nrmtonia 63, Medin a Highland 55
Norton 91, R•venna n
Padua SS, Oe. Rhodt.a 53
Port Oin.tm 87, Peztins 4$
Portlmouth 71, S. Point 67
Prodonllle Fairland 54, Welllton

Thursday's games
Vancmver al 8D&amp;t.On, 7:35p.m.
Minniii!XIItDmvit, 7:35p.m.
Qucba; 11 Hartfwd. 7:3S p.m.
N.Y. lal.,dcn 11 Chi~;~!o , 8:35p.m.
TorontoatCalaary, 9:3 p.m.

=

t~. . . . .... . . . .. 2~ -~~
$an Antonio ........... 35 23 .603
p..,..., . ........ .......31 21 .lll

Dtrlvct ...................20 38

Dt.Uu .. ........... ........ l7 41
Minncuu .............. n 46

•

7.5
II
21
26.5

Oold&lt;n s..~ ......... 39 18

PhoaW: .................. 38
Sooalo .................... 33
Cli- ......... 30
LA. LU.c:n ............30
lO

u.

,.cnmcni.O . . . .......

.633

3

.559

7..5
10

.517
.J4S

10
20

Far West
Bri&amp;h•m Youna 100, CS Northridge
61

S. Otlh II, Idaho 70
\JNLV 6S, Uuh SL ll
86. AU Foooe 6ll

w,....,.

Ohio high school

Utah 123, Gold"' S\m 101

basketball scores

TonJcbt'a pmes

Orlando II B~. 7:30p.m.

Allanla at PhiWclpbia, 7:30p.m.
lndianaat Detroit, '7:30p.m.
Chulolle at Milwaukee.. 1:30 p.m.
Podland 11 Denver, 9 p.m.
San Antonlo at Utah, 9:30p.m.
New Jertcy at L.A. La.keu, 10:30

Girls-tournament action
Dl&gt;illool

Cle. Olenville !7, Mentor 54

Eu!Ute Nonh 59, M.yficld l7

Mill'on! 51, T..,.,,.;, SO
Vand.alia·Bw.lcr S9, ML Hulthy 49

at Sacramento, 11:31

U . Cippca•.t'Now"){cD,7:30 p.m.

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27f 227
2AO 2C3
66 273 W
61 :13l2A9
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· -........ ...... 30 26 9
Blll!alo. ............ :14 30 II
8u&lt;fa,s ............ 20 32 II
C)Mboo............. 1341 10

14 226161
69 221223
l9 m 246
Sl 200 225
36 119 2l9

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The win was lhe fourth straight for the Spurs. who
are 14-7 since Bob Bass took over as coach for Larry
Brown. They held Minnesota's Tony Campbell. who
played only 14 minu1es, without a point. He is averagio~ 18.4.
L1ke Robinson, Manning made the clutch play .
But his was an inbounds pass 10 Nonnan for tbe big
basket.
It was not all Manning contributed. He had 30
. points, 12 in the fourth quarter.
Glen Rice had 30 points for the HeaL
Also on Tuesday, it was Utah 123, Golden State
101; Portland 105, tbe Los Angeles Lakers 101; Indiana 103 . Chicago 101; Seattle Ill, Denver 92;
Phoenix 112, Houston 107 in overtime; Washington
106, Orlando 93; and New York 102, Dallas 83.
Jazz 123, Warriors 102 - At Oakland, Karl
, Malone scored a season-high 44 points and Golden
State had just 40 frrst-half points, a season low.
Malone also bad 11 rebounds and went 12-for-12
from the free throw line. In one stretch, Malone
scored 15 straight points.
Trail Blazers 105, Lakers 101 - At Ponland,
the Trail Blazers took over frrst place in the Pacific
Division.
Terry Porter matched his season high with 30
.:'points. including two game-clinching free throws

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MASON, WV.

a.- 69, Abon Bucbld 60

By JIM O'&lt;;ONNELL'
AP BaslletbaU Wr!ter .
LAS VEGAS (AP)- No boot
on Jerry Tarkanian can be closed.
If Tuesday night was his last
~ame as a college h'Sketball coach,
'Tark The Shark" closed his
career atop the record boot.
The man who was synonomous
with UNLV for the past 19 years
he rescinded the resignation he
submitted last summer,-but he Slill
accepted the gifts and honors
bestowed. on a· man leaving the
game when the sixth-ranted Run·
nin' Rebels beat Utah State 6S·S3. .
The 18,000-seat Thomas &amp;
Mack Center became the site of an
emotional farewell from a man
who is.the winningest COKh ever
by percentage, and for the school
and city be brougbt 10 the highest
level !I ooJ.Jeae ..,.,...,.n
"The ceremony waa really
beautiful," Tubnlan said of the.
30·mlnute presentation which
featrued a 10-mlnute video
recounting the .biJhlilbts of.the
put 19 ftall. "I feeiiOOIL I t - a
beiutiful ceremony liecause they
Included so many people. It we

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Smith said that he, Coope1 and
Uzelac had decided during a meeting three weeks ago that Smith
would return. But after Coope1 left
the meeting. Uzelac confronted
him, Smilh said.
''Coach Uzelac pulled out a tape
recorder and accused me. basicallr.
of damaging his family and h1s
career,'" Smith said. "There"s no
question about it, he suffered some
damage. Coach Cooper did and I
did myself. I think we all suffered
unnecessarily. but lhe mature lhmg
to do would be to put lhat all
behind."
Uzelac could not be reached to
comment. His home telephone
number is not published.

Akrm Eut lO, Allt&lt;llll!lkt 43
Akron O.rficld 56, C1nton Tim.ke.n

a.. m..

wilh 8.9 seconds left.
Mike Dunleavy was thrown out of lhe game as the
teams walked off the coun a1 halftime, his first ejection in 1wo seasons as Lakers coach.
Los Angeles. playing without James Worthy
because of a strained left knee, got a career-high 25
points from Elden Campbell.
Pacers 103, Bulls 101 - The Pacers handed lhe
Bulls just their fourth loss in 30 home games. Reggie
Miller scored 23 points and Chuck Person added 22
as the Pacers overcame a 22-point deficit.
Chicago"s Scottie Pippen was fouled with two
seconds left. but missed both free throws. On the last
au.emp~ the ball went off the rim and -the buzzer
sounded during a scramble for the ball.
Michael Jordan hit for 27 poiniS. Horace Gram
added 23 and Pippen 22 for the Bulls.
SuperSonics 111, Nu~gets 9_2 - AI ~eatt!e, the
Sonics got lhe l,OOOih viCtory m franchise hiStory;
they have lost 1,027 since joining lhe league in 1967.
Shawn Kemp came off the bench and scored 2I
points and grabbed 13 rebounds.
The Sonics (33·26) are seven games above .500
for the first time since the end of the 1988-89 season.
Suns 112, Rockets 107, OT - At Phoenix, the
Suns overcame 34 points, 15 rebounds and seven
blocked shots by Hakeem Olajuwon. Tom Chambers .
scored seven of his 17 poiniS in the first 3:30 of overtime, and Jeff Hornacek's three-poimer with one
minute left clinched it.
Kevin Johnson had 19 points and 17 assists for
Phoenix.
Bullets 106, Magic 93 - At Orlando, Washington continued its·strange season. The Bullets won
their lltb road game. three more lhan the team has
won at home.
The Magic blew a nine-point lead iJi the final I :07
of the frrst half by committing five turnovers when
harried by Washington's half-court press. The Bullets outscored Orlando 12-0 in the fmal67 seconds to
lead 60-57 at balftime.
·
Knlcks 102, Mavericks 83 -At New York.
Patrick Ewing scored four points, his lowest output
this season and more lhan 19 points below his average. Still, with Charles Oakley gelling a season-high
17 and both Xavier McDaniel and John Starks scar·
ing 18. the Knicks led all lhe way in banding the
Mavericks their 151h consecutive road defeat.
Dallas" last road victory came on Dec. 23, 1991,
at Houston.

Was the UNLV-Utah State game
Tarkanian·'s last at Rebels' helm?

Cio, Aik.,$1,Cio. W-w47
Elae l6, Cio. Toll s1
a.. Adoma 11. MopJe lba. 76,
C..Collln.....SI3,Madilonl0
0.. Mulhlll61, Pmna 60

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71 20:142 .

'

Cooper announces Smith's
return to OSU football team

Dl... lool

"'U
10
75

options during Tuesday night's Class A sectional
tournament at Point Pleasant High School,
which the Bisoos woo 72-62. (OVP staff photo)

By The Associated Press
Top picks make top plays. Just look at David
Robinson and Danny Manning.
Robinson. lhe frrst pick in the 1987 NBA draft,
made a layup with 1.4 seconds remaining Tuesday
night, lifting lhe San AniOnio Spurs over lhe MinnesoLa Timberwolves 103-102.
Manning. whom the Los Angeles Clippers selected ftrst overall in 1988, found Ken Nonnan with a
pinpoint pass 10 set up the winning basket in a 117 ·
• 116 victory at Miami.
Robinson"s basket saved San Antonio a major
.. embarrassment. The two points were the Spurs' only
· points in the final 3:25 as they blew a 17-point lead
before winning. The All-Star center had 25 points
and II rebounds.
Thanks 10 a pass from Paul Pressey, Robinson got
the ball with enough room to heat Tburl Bailey for
the decisive basket.
"Paul made sure I got lhe ball in that situation."
Robinson said. "Both he and Sean (Elliott) made
~ood passes 10 get lhe hall iniO me, and I just laid it

Boys-toornament acdon

: WALES CONFERENCE

Tuesday's first game at PPHS.
Wahama was forced imo mak ing an
early exit from the season ending
tournament lfllil with the While
Falcons compleling its 199 1-92
cage season with a 9- 13 mark.
WHS led throu ghout most of the
sectional comes1 only 10 have the
Bisons rally during lhe stretch run
10 knot 1he score at 58,58 at the end
· of regulation lx;fore Buffalo

,•

..

'

"

• ' 1 '

..

FAMILY HOMES .

' ''

~t. 7 Bypa11, Pomerof

1-992-2478
';

•

secured iiS 1hird win of 1he season
over its Southwestern Alhletic Con·
ference opponents by outscoring
lhe While Falcons 14-4 in overlime.
Buffalo conneclcd on 16 of 32
free throws in the conl(;sl which in cluded 10 of 15 in the three minute
extra period while Wahama made
good on 10 of 16 from the charity
stripe. "There"s no question aboul il
the difference was on lhe foul line."
a disappointed WHS cage coach
Lewis Hall said following 1he
game. "They made a nice li1~e run
at us late in 1he third quarter and
got some easy baskets off backside
rebounds which hun our chances
but there's no do~bt about itlhe difference was on the line.··
The contest featured 1wo lies and
seven lead changes wilh Wahama
leading by as many as len points
late in the third canto before Buffalo s1aged its comeback effort.
"Wahama controlled the 1empo extremely well and thai kept us from
doing what we wanted 10 do and
that was run offensively," velcran
Bison coach Chuck Elkins said .
"They had a good gar1c plan. We
couldn' t get speeded up and that
kepi us from gelling into any kmd
of rhythm. We wamed a game
where Lhe score would be in 1he
80's and they wanted one in the
50's and they wouldn '1 let us get
into thai high of a scoring game
added Elkins."
Craig Coon scored eight first
period poiniS for the White Falcons
as Wahmrta built an 18-15 lead afiCr
eighl minutes wilh Wahama
mainlaining its three point advantage throughout the second canto to
lead by a 29-26 score at the hal r.
Paul Boggess joined Brian Null in
keeping Buffalo close during fl rsl
half action with Boggess scoring
seven second period poiniS and
gatherin g in five rebounds for the
Putnam County team.

Robinson, Manning lead Spurs,
Clippers to one-point victories

DIYWDRIV
Danv:ille 44, Nnu:k Cath. 2&amp;
Liba17 llnion lO, Ccnlabu!J 41

f.m.

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4
6
9
I
7
:1430 II

Dlvlllon IV
Ado l l , Bioffion49
Aoadi.o 63, ~ lO
BO(..tins 52, hcbon Cen=48
Cin. Country O.y 71, WiU.ilmsbura

There's also the pressure that
Rose said. ''When Dad was in jail,
I went tD see him and I had !ears in comes with bein~ named after the
my eyes. I wanted !D take IJIY pop game's most prolific hitter.
"I'd say to myself. 'Hey, I"m
home with me.
Pete
Rose's son. I'm not supposed
"When I played, if people
10
strike
out. I'm not supposed to
didn"t like my dad. they'd take it
out on me. In one place, people are make an error,''" he said. "But if
chanting, 'IRS, IRS,' and waving I"m in 1he big leagues and I gel
dollar bills at me, saying. 'Bet you 4,255 hits, one less 1han my dad,
can't get a hit.' Nobody should people still would say I got !here
have 10 go through what I went because of my name.''
through when I was 19 and 20."

By BETH GRACE
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP) Ohio SLate running back Robert
Smith will rejoin lhe football team
he quit when it conflicted with his
academic career. head coach John
Cooper said today,
"I told lhe 1ea111 this morning he
is coming back and of. course.
they"re happy. I'm happy. Roben"s
happy,'' CooP.':' said.
Smith w1ll rejoin the team,
which was 8-4 last season. April 2
for spring practice, said Cooper.
Steve Snapp, Ohio State sports
information director, said Smith
also would continue competing
with the university' s track team
this spring.
Smith, who broke Archie Griffin '.s school rushing record for
freshmen in 1990, quil lhe f001ball
team in August in a dispute over
his studies. He said former offensive coordinaiOr ElliQU Uzelac had
told him to skip class to attend
football practice.
Uzelac resigned as an assislant
coach last monlh, saying he wanted
to pursue other coaching opportunities.
Smilh was not available 10 comment Ibis morning.
Smith said in p~blished reports
today that he doesn't blame Cooper
for problems he had with the
coaching staff.
"I lhink it should be clear lhat
coach Cooper and I have never had
a problem. Throughout all of Ibis
he's been a great help to me, and
willing !D Lalk to me." be said.

in opening round play of 1he Class
A Region Seven Sec1ion One basketball tournament at Point
Pleasant High SchooL
The come-from-behind win
keeps the Bisons' hope of a second
straight sectionalti~e alive as Buffalo (11-10) advances to the
tourney finals against Walton, a 5553 winner over Hannan in

LOOKING FOR OPEN TEAMMATEWahama's Mike VanMatre (42) searches the
court for an open teammate while Buffalo-Putnam's Mike Moore (24) looks to cut orr his

DhW011W
Jleolh Sol Marim Elain 38
Spuu ID&amp;)Uand,'l Utico 34

DolW at Wuhinpln. 7;30 p.m.
Chica10 It ~. J p.m.
t
Miami 1l HouAoft.I:JO p.m.
• Salllo tt Phoer&amp;il, 9:30p.m.
CknlaH at Golden Slllt, 11:31

WL
4220
37 23
!3 22
29 27
27 30

71

Dll'klon D
C~ . Booc:h&lt;roll 64, BW.y 6ll
Whild&gt;all,$1 BiaWalnutlO

&amp;...
•
Tbunday's &amp;ames

.... - . , .......
""""""' .........
!I.Y. IIJ.mdon ....

Gmway 17, W. Mu.Wngum 19
Uberty Center67 , Northwood 63
lJJOOn 53, United Loca1 40
Lorain Oearview 63, Mapleton 45
Lutheran W. 62. Bltc.k River 56
Muupel.i er 73, Sherwood Fairview 70
NU"WI)'ne 64, Covmtty 47
Ontario 59, Rivcniale 52
Onvillo 61. llillldUc 36
O...go 63,E"''J"''l4$
Pary 63, Gr.""VUL Sol
Plkecon 7t, Minford~
S. Range 72, Suady Vall S1
Seneca E. 58, 1-iuron 40
St::rcetaboro 44, Wam:n Kennedy 38
Tinon. 82, Archbold 61 '
Wynlmd 19, en.tliM ;t

Southwest

Se.ale Il l , Datnr 92

.

Crestview :5 1
Cothoctoo 66, C•ldwcll 60

HOUltOn 50, Tu u Chriltian 44

San Antonio 103, MinnCKU 102

'lfoohlnpn..... ..

Belpre 71, Aluandt r 44

Bruoilicld BO. Mincn.l Ridge 46
Co1dwalm' 58, Patkway48
CollinJ WMCm RCRrVe 6S, Alhland

Artantu 106, LSU 92, OT

Phoatix 112, HouMn 101. ar
lndianalOl, Chic~ 101
Pon!Jnd 1111, I.A. ~ ... 101

' II.Y.Rooaoa .....

Dl"'lon m
Allen E. 76, Oclph01 Jcft'erson 56

Ev1111ville 10, L.o~Ia. ru. 57
Notre Dune 87, X•vie:r. Ohio 86
ObJoSL T1, Mkhl&amp;ln 64

Tuesday's scores

t-

51

Midwest

Now Ycdt 102, DolW 83
W"l&gt;!!',..., 106, Or!lndo 93
L.A. Clippe~S I 17, Mimri 116

.....
" Chnlud

Waverly 73, JDIIIboro 57
Willard 74, Fooori• 58
Young. Rayen 60, Young. Unuline

Arb111u St. 76. Middle Tenn. 60

..5

.m

28
28
38

Warren Local 71, New Ltrlnaton
S3

Vizsinia 74, N. Cuolina St.68

.614

22
26

W. Holmea6\, Mc.ldowbrook 49

South

Pocllk Dl&gt;illon
II .690

"

l&gt;o.tiand ........ .......4&lt;l

Shelby 87, Upper SU1duaky 71
Steubenville 12., St. Clainvi.llc 64

Faididd 76, Imu S2
Manhanan 6S, St Pc&amp;cr'• 52
Pit11bur&amp;h 90, Br~~Lm Ccdlqe 66
Villanov•75, Providence65

Cll
3

.345
.293
.193

41

East

Mldw.a Dtrlalon

~

Hubbard 54, Stru!hm SO

basketball scores

: WESTERN CONFERENCE

",,

Gal\lpo\1147, JadtJOn 36

Major college

•

•

Day. Chaminadc-Juliennc 83, Ed gowood 50
Day. Dunbar If!, King• 5 1
DoYer 65, Win\Cm'ille 58
Ficld 80, Canton Cath. 74

MinDCIWI 3, Wuhinatoo I

Ctatral Dhllkln

g:co..r:.;d::::::::::J; ll ::cl

Sc:hool73

Hard'~

: EASTERN CONFERENCE
Tam

Cambrid~ 80, M.• ynille 53
Clc. Un1venity 83, Luther Ball

Tuesday's sc:ores

By CHUCK MELVIN
AP Sports Writer
TIJCSON, Ariz. (AP) - Physically. he looks a lot like his dad.
Kidding around, he can do a picture-perfect imitation of the crouch
hi s father used while collec1ing
4,256 career hits.
" You'd swear it was my dad.
Bul I don't use the crouch myself,
because I'm comfortable with my
own s1ance,'" Pete Rose Jr. said in
an interview at the Cleveland Indians ' minor league camp Ibis week.
" And I don"t walk to frrst base on
a walk, but I don't sprint there like
my dad did. That was his lhing. "'
The 22-year-old Rose is beginning his first year in the Indians'
system, his lhird organization in his
quest 10 make il in his fathcr"s old
world.
' 'I'm like Pops. I'm a workaholic. I'm going to get !here someday," Rose said. "I think I can be
up there in a year and a half or two
years. But if it means it La~s me
20 years. I' II stay down here that
long."
Rose is a third baseman, a band·
icap in the Indians' organization
because their sl.arling lhird baseman is Jim Thome. who's a year
younger than Rose. There's talk
that Rose might be asked to try
catching this year, to enhance his
value as a utility player.
The task ahead is daunting. partly because Rose hasn't developed
as quickly as some of his Cincinnati-area peers - he played high
school ball against Ken Griffey Jr.
of Scaule and Mark Lewis of
Cleveland - and partly because of
the weight of his name.
Rose was 15 when his father
surpassed Ty Cobb by geuing
career hit 4,192 on Sept. II, 1985.
Rose joined his father at frrst base
for a memorable hug during the
ovation that followed.
But in 1989.justasPeteJr. was
beginning his pro career. the fami·
ly"s world came apart. The elder
Rose )?leaded guilty 10 LaX evasion
for falling 10 report gambling earnings 10 lhe IRS. and he eventually
spent five months in a federal
prison in illinois.
"It was real tough when Dad
got suspended from baseball, "

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

•

•

·-·

·I

•

a1

the
from th
Speci 10 Bee
suwxm
C
fansanclcommunity.
·
Tarkanian. who bas l'll!ely been
at a loss for words, especially in
recent weeks when a battle witb
ss;hool president Raben Maxson
~
escala ted ' had·10 walk away rom
the microphone e he addressed lhe
crowd.
"I wantiO !hank everybody for
19 wonderful years,'" he said
before taking a sip of a drink. "I
can't talk."
He walked away aa the cheers
reached their highest level of the
night. After his wife Lois spoke for
a lew minutes, Tukaniln rewmetl
to the mic:rophone to tUlk his current 111d former ·poac!tiJII slaff and

the side of Tarkanian.
»layerS, COaCheS and fanS '
even those on lhe famed "Gucci
Row" at counside - wore black
and silver T-shirts with "Tark""
across the front and "2" on the
back. That's the number the school
retired in Tarkailian"s honor.
Many others in ,the sLands and
throughout the city wore shirts
which had "Keep ~ Tark" on one
side and "Fire Maxson" on the
other.
·
Tarkanian took the NCAA to
the Supreme Court over due -process in an investigation ~f his pro,
gnm, only 10 lose ind eventually
be penalized with sanctions that
kept the Runnin' Rebels out of
olaY«J.
,
postseuon play this year.
• tarkanian'a lawyers won't
Tlrkanian didn't lllkhss aiiy of
allow bim 10 talk of any possible tbe controversy at a postgame news
action 10 get his~ bact, but Max· conference, but he did present an
son hu said It 1 a closed matter · int.eleSting idea when liked about
beclllle the resignation was bind·· , his future plalls.
'
lng.
· ·
"If I'm not ~g. 1'!1 nm for
The claims and counterclaims Boanl of Regents, be said, referbetween tbe (110-MaxiOII and pro- .riiiJ 10 the publicly elected body
TarkaniaD camps reached their which runs lhe sbit.e university syszealth this wiiCk u ihe ftoai drew t.em.
near. p.c.aowtl was definltely oo
,,

.,

•

A pair of 1hrce-pointers by received a 15 point ou1ing from ,
Danny Hudson and two baskets Danny Hudson with . Craig Coon : '
each from John Johnson and Mike adding 14 markers, M1kc VanMatre
VanMatre lifted Wahama to its lar- 12 and John Johnson II. Boggess :
gest lead of the night wi1h lhe local hauled in 11 rebounds and Null 10
cagers opening up a 10 poin1 bulge for the Bisons while VanMatre
at 44-34 and again at 46-36 with owned II and Johnson nine for •
1:20 remaining in the lhird smnza. Wah ama.
The White Falcons sh01 37% .
Buffalo tallied the final six points
of 1he quarter however 10 pull tD from the Ooor on 17 of 39 Iwo :
within four at 46-42 with c1gh1 poim atiCmpiS and six of 23 from
three poinl range. Buffalo connccminUies to play.
In the final period the Bisons led on a wann 45% from the field
kept chipping away until Eddie on 25 of 52 from Lhe two point area
Thompson gave Buffalo the lead at and 1wo of eight from beyond the
51-50 with 4:48 remaining in 1hree point arc. The Bisons com mil·
regulalion. The lead then changed led 15 1umovcrs in the comes!
hands four times before Doug Huff while Wahama 1o111led 14 ball handropped in a pair of free throws and dlin g errors.
Danny Hudson sliced in a LhrecWAHAMA(62)
poinler to give Wahama a 58-54
FG 3pt FI'M-ATI Reb T
advan1agc a11he 1:23 mark. Buffalo D. Hudson 0-0 5-11 0-1 2 15
roared back !hough as Boggess C. Coon 6-15 0-0 2-2 3 14
nailed a basket, Null a free throw ). Johnson 3-7 1-9 2-4 9 11
and Boggess an01her free throw !D VanMeter 6-10 0-0 .0-1 11 12
knot 1he score at 58-58 with :31 D. Huff
1-3 0-1 4-4 5 6
second remaining. B01h teams had J. Zuspan 1-4 0-0 2-4 3 4 : ·
chances 10 win it in regulation bul a C. King
0-0 0-2 0-0 0 0 :
rash of wmovcrs from bo1h sides S. Ross
· 0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0 ·
sent the contesl into an exira period Albright
0-0 0-0 0-0 0 0
with the score s1ill standing at 58- Total
17-39 6-23 10-16 33 62 •
58.
In overtime Buffalo quickly
BUFFALO (72)
g:1incd the upper hand when Null B.Null
6-16 0-04-131016
sank a free 1hrow and Thompson P. Boggess 6-9 0-0 5-7 11 17 .
followed wilh a buckcl 10 make it Thorn pson 5-8 0-0 J. 3 3 11 . 61-58. VanMatre answered for J. Burgess 1-5 2-6 3-4 4 II :
Wahama to make it a one poinl S. Anthony 3-7 0-2 2-2 2 8 · :
game before Boggess added S. Cook
3-5 0-0 1-2 6 7
another field goal and Thompson a M. Moore 1-2 0·0 0-1 3 2
free throw for lhe Bisons. Huff ad- Totals
25-52 2-8 16·32 39 72
ded a pair from the line for
Wahama 10 make it 64-62 before
Buffalo scored 1hc final eight poims Score by Quarters'
12 340TTot
from the charity stripe 10 win by a
72-62 score.
Wahama
18 II 17 12 4 62
15 11 16 16 14 72
Each learn placed four players in Buffalo
doubl e fi gure scoring with Buffalo
being led offensively by Boggess Tot Fouls: Wah. 21 , Buffalo 13
with 17 followed by Null wilh t6, Fouled Out: Null, Johnson
and Eddie Thompson and Jamie Tech Fouls: Wahama Bench 2
Burgess with II each. Wahama Officials: L.Es1cp, P. Estep

SATURDAY
MARCH 7th

1st Annual

.Building

8

Materi~I/Productr

HOME SHOW

v
'

TIL 4 PM

:-.~

.....
•~

·"
'

Everyone Welcome!

Now everything you've
ever wanted to know
about home improvement
is easily located under
one convenient roof!

Exhibits!

SPECIAL DISCOUNTS
ON MANY PRODUCTS &amp;
SERVICES OFFERED!

Door
Prizes!

We have invited our
primary building
material suppliers and
manufacturers to
display their products.

Advice!

••
THIS IS YOUR CHANCE TO SEE NEW
PRODUCTS, MEET THE SALES REPS,
DISCUSS INSTALLATION AND THEIR
PRODUCTS

REFRESHMENTS SERVED AND DOOR
PRIZE DRAWINGS THROUGHOUT THE
DAY. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY.
NEED NOT BE PRESENT TO WIN.

BUILDING ANEW HOME? REMODELING? BRING YOUR PLANS •••

•
•

The following suppliers cordially invite you to attend:

'Stanley Boslltd! l'lleu11atlt Tools
*Appalachia Sasll•d Door
'CoiOIHI Stairs
•Awsco Windows
'Sa.,soa Door
'Pease Doors
'Celotex Tuff R
'Asllland Davis Yllyl Siding
*Gel. Oay Brick 'Four Sea111s S.• R0011

'Snavely Forest Product
*LP. 1.-.. Beams
'GAF Roofilg
'S.pola Supply .
'Nri S.Ha. L111ber
'Tr•blllladostrles

*AIIerla St.cl•d
'Lasco Fiberglass
•aopqy Garage Doors
•aasslc DDOrs

'Bruce Flooring
*Ar11slrD1g Ceiling Tile
'K..Ier
'Aqua Glass
*Delta FtiiKits
'Dyke ltltlastnes
'C•adco W.,dows
'Sherwla Wll.s P•t
'1&amp;1 WWesale
'AiderHI WWows

•

.
I

'•
'

~~
· co=::).
co~ r.-~~ ..
.

160
Store Hours:

Mon..aat.

.

OH
Phone: (614)446-2002
6:ooam to 8:00pm

I
!

I
\

L--.-"----. ~.~.-.au~n~~~~~~~a:~OO~--~~
· ~~ro~-.~6~~~--rn~~~.~~--~-~
..
~

\

•.

�Page--+-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 4, 1992

Wednesday, March 4,1992

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

'

..

Madness

SHOP WITH THESE
POMEROY .
MERCHANTS ALONG
THE BEAUTIFUL
OHIO RIVER!
• Anderson's
• Buttons and Bows
• Chapman Shoes
aClarl{'s Jewelry
• Fabric Shop
• Hood Family Shoes
• K&amp;C Jewelers
• Swisher &amp; Lohse

Bank One was selected by Paula Thacker,
Executive Director of the Meigs County Chamber of
CollJ.merce, as the winner of the Pomeroy Merchants
Association Window Decorating Contest. The contest
was held in conjunction with their annual Mardi Gras
sales promotion: Pictured from left to right are:
Thacker, Susan Clark, president of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association; Geri Walton, Dianna Lawson,
Marlyn Wilcox, Marilyn Robinson, Des Jeffers, Joan
Wolfe and Millie Midkiff, all of Bank One.
.....::c v

You're invited to come in
and sava ..on EVERYTHING!
THURSDAY
MARCH th

FRIDAY
MARC 6th

E
·sATURDAY

Machines Sale Priced

••.-;, FABRIC SHOP
'"

·7th

Whether it's your lsi, 5th, lOth or any anniversary in between,
this year tell her you'd marry her all over again.

MARDI

MAST

·~

E

!!~JEWELER,.

25% SAVINGS

PRICES GOOD THRU MONDAY, MAR. 9, 1992

· ·~ ·

Interfacing .......................... 20% Off I
90" Quilt Top Febrlc........... 20% Off\
45" Quilted Fabric ..............20% Off
20% Off All Reg. Priced
Craft Supplies
Patterns............................... 50% Off
~· ·•eat Shirts ........ Sale Priced $9.50
All Singer &amp; White Sewing

REESE'S PEANUT BUTTER EGG

-

.

1.20Z.

ONLY

35(

COLD

27(

POP

CAN

COMPLETE STOCK

300170 OFF ·
SUNGLASSES 'f2 PRICE

TIMEX
WATCHES

OFF

MAYBELLINE
COSMETICS
.
1
.

'
A
PRICE
SPECIAL CREAM FOR

-

3 OL- REG. $5.95

-

JUS' Anw RIISOIS
, · •.ftiiOPI'

COMPLETE STOCK

N•rst Mates, FlorsW11 and Red Wing.

NOW

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

-.
•

•

••

..

.

•

CltNIIIfta R. Pll.
ltontlll Ilea A. . . Jl.l'tt.
.
Moo. t11rv h . I:OOo.m. •llllp.m.

'••

1u...,

.•
•

10:00 . .... ••••o~m.
. PII!JCRII'I'IONI
Pll. ttz.atiQ
E. lloln
Fri.,tlly ..,lcil """-· OH .
Op..
"""'' .••

•

..•

'f"

J

STORE HOURS

M'nday 9:30-1:00
Tueday-Satunlay

9:30·5:00

.

TY'I, flOOI COYIIIH
OliO • tt2·1671 . .
·.

..
§]
'•

.. " The Soft Shoes Colle~tion

WAS $59.99

7-Prkest.ev~'s..ltdg•t
·~
. . .
.

•
•

' - ... NA TURALI ZE it

New Styles of LA Gear's
Regulator has arrived.

1~special Orden
2-Frieaclly Salespeople
3-Dry Clialllia Pkkup
4-S~Ip via U.'-S. ·
5-Haldllllde Socks
6-0ver 50 Bran Names

ONLY

'

I·Swlss, lA Gta•, Na11r...ztrs, Hush Pupplts,

· ·. aUI 1IOII a aDWS

ARTHRITIS

..-

STOREWIDE
MARCH Sth•7th

aunoNS &amp;BOWS
..
Pom.roy
.. ..

$48°'

The regulltor unit 11 built Into the tongue ot the shoe. The
compi'WIOI' button lnn.t• tht regulator and the rellasa
valve d1fllltl H"for easy adJuatmlnta to fit. lt'1 the
ultimate support ~Item for 1thl1tlc thou.
'

.

..

SELECTED GROUP OF DRESS AND
ftNIIS SHOES 50% OFF . , ~ .

HOOD FAMILY SHOES
210 EAST MAIN .

.

192-§254

POMEROY

I

'

. l

\

�•

Wednesday, r,farch 4, 1992

The Dally Sentinel ,

.·81G BEND••••••• ~_... .·

lh

JOAN OF ARC
LIGHT RED

sary·
BRACH'S

79c

dwor
.

.

/ ' · .·~\· LOW PRICES
.· ~
·
.. '\
·.

. i
•

'

'

.

,·

I

I

.;\11
,_

EIISTMIIN'S F06DLIINDVIILUABLE COUPON

130

(
69

GREEN
BEANS
or CORN

161

FOODLAND 2°/o MILK

I

PEPSI·COLA

t

DELMONTE

ES EFFECTIVE MAR. thru MAR. 7, 1992

DEW,.PEPSI·FREE, DIET or REGULAR

. •• ,,

5

.

.

EASTMAN'S FOODLIIND SPECIAL COUPON

\

15.5

298 SECOND SJ.
POMEROY, OH.
WE RESERVE THE. RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.

Foodlabd
180-1.2

$1000

.

KIDNEY
BEANS

STORE HOUR~- ..
Monday thru Sunday'
SAM-10 PM

Plar &amp; Win
fooillaad's / . We
fOOD&amp;
Salute
TREASURE
Ollie Valley
Wia Up To

Jelly Beans

.

The Dally

.

2 Utre
Bottle •

(

Plastic
Gallon

'

Chuck Steak••••••• 1

Limit One FrH With Coupon and $10.00 Additional Purchase
.Coupon Explrtl 3n/Wl
.J

---------------------------- L-----------------------------

• • •

Ono With Coupon anciSIO.OO Addhlonlll Puocheoe. Coupon
Explr•• 3/7112
·
.J

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND SPECIAL COUPON

~--

~----::---- ~

.

r)i ~~~ --E£
::1:

.

· ·

VELVET

SUPER DIP

1

?9J

ICE CREAM

5 QT.
PAll

NESnE CRUNCH
ICE CREAM BAR s199

Box

REG. • BUN SIZE • JUMBO • MILD

MARTHA.WHITE
FLOUR

Knhn'$ Meal Wieners
Buy One, Get One

Limit One Frtl With Coupon and Additional $10.00

L

Purchase • Coupon Exalres 317192

-----------------------------

SUPERIOR WHOLE SliCK

~

MT. BRAND BOLOGNA
BOB EVANS
FARM SAUSAGE

' $199 .

lB.

HI.

FRESH PORK BUn

Sliced Bacon••••

Limit One F!91 With coupon • Coupon Expires 317192

SLICED 16 .OZ.

CHUCK ROAST

Kahn's Meat Bologna

FREE -

C.HICKEN

.
.
L------------~~~~--~--------•-~
If-#

.

$ 79

•

11:2

·MOUNTAINEER-10 oz. LINKS

•

$129

·

Breasts...................La.

Limit One FIN With Coupon • Coupon Expires 317192

'

·

LB.

Buy One, Get One

EAST MAll'S FOO DLIIND VIILUIIBL£ COUPON

$259

3 LB. sox.

KAH~'S REGULAR OR BUN SIZE

CHICKEN

~

•·

119

39( -W1eners.. ••••••• 1
Leg Quarters•••••••L..
-

136

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

lB.

•••LB.

HIC~ORY BRAND SUGAR CURED

.J L----~-~----111!!.~----------------..1
EASTMAN'S~ FOODLAND VALUABLE

.$

.

STEAKS /ROAST

FREE .

$ 69

c

LB.

135

PLAIN • ·snF-RISE

:::· 69(

$ 99

l &lt;__ __ )~'

EASTMAN'S FOODLAND VALUABLE

125

'$ 79

CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

..

89(

French Fries

Buy One, Get ,One

FREE

5

$2

TAMPICO

CITRUS
PUNCH
HALF GALLON

99(

GRADE A

MEDIUM
EGGS
DOZEN

2 sl

Por Sausage:.~~·:~. ·
OSCAR MAYER
$119
Bologna....
·

' . ·5 lB. lAG ·FARMERS SELEC'f I

16 oz.

MIKE·SELLS

POTATO
CHIPS
Reg. '2.19 Package

NABISCO
. PREMIUM SALTINES

c

99,~
BOX

NORTHERN 12 ROLL ~'----=--"1
BATH TISSUE

$ 99

PKG. ·~

BAGS...l oct. 51.29

SnCIS or PORTIONS - 6·6.7 OZ.

PAGE

Mrs. Paul's Fish

PAPER TOWELS

Buy One, Get One

ROU$

$1

$129

fREE

MAIN~ KENNEBEC ~

Limit One FrH With Coupon • Coupon Expires 317/92

Seed Potatoes••••••

---------------

. REGiSTRATioN"FORM'
Or A Gift Certificate For
Free Frozen Food

_ PAG

1

I
I ~Na~me,_______ I
I Addi'8SII_ _ _ _ ___:_ I
' I Clty._ _:___ _Stlte
I

VALLEY BELL ·

$ 99
$179

.

2% Milk••••••••••••

6

GAL

UTILE DEBBIE
INDIVIDUAL

SNACK
CAKES

6

$1

ZESTA

~!=:;::;:::====-.1~

CRACKERS.

KEMPS 5 QUART PAIL

STARKIST .

Tuna••••••••••••6v,

Ice Cream•••••••••

I

POUND BOX
PAIL
'

TO~Y'S FROZEN

P1zza•••••••••••••••

~

., LAR~31s2

5169.
1

$U.
lAG

. ROILS

'

'
a.NOIIiAthwil'• s.,.
.

CIMIIftlAI,..,••Y•

111*1Pwent..

IIIIIIPw~

~

.

• •

.'

..

'~,
• •••

- •. .. ....

•. . ~·..

-

...
-

'

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..

.. "

Q!;,

• - ·

~

.

..........

.
· ~

,,_

~

.;

..

--· . . . ..

'.,

•.

-

'

.

• •

• 14}

SUNSHINE

DOG

FOOD _
20 LB. BAG

v•

011. ...... 1M •• 7, 1992

. •w•.u..... e,1m
:

.:J

DOMIJ{O SUGAR·

• BOUNTY TOWELS ......

....... - , J ·-·~· ~

$r_

. ~-

$299

�By The Bend

Wednesday, March 4, 1992

The Daily Sentinel

Annual science day set
at Meigs Junior High

Page-10
Wednesday, March 4,1992

Racine UMW discuss upcoming events
Several matters were discussed
at the February meeting of the
Racine United Methodist Women.
Lee Lee presided at the meeting
which opened with the UMW Pur·
pose and officers reports.
Sue Grace, reporting for Chris·
· tian Global Concern, told abo6t the
need for food and clothing in Rus·
sia.
Repairs and additions will be
made to two bathrooms at the
church. Tammy Hill, Alice Wolfe,
Margie West and Etta Mae Hill
will serve on the committee for Ibis
project.
A donation will be given to the
girl scout troops which the church
sponsors.
The county children's choir fes·
ti val will be held March 15 in the
sanctuary of the church at 3 p.m.
The public is invited.
The group will participate in the
UMW Reading Program to encour·
age women to expand understand·

ing of and participation in God 's
mission. Participants in the pro~ are invited to share the read·
mg list throughout the church and
encourage its use by all members
of the church. Alice Wolfe was
appointed to select and buy the
books for Ibis program.
The prayer chain list was dis·
tributed and it was decided to invite
the district shepherdess, Bernice
Carpenter, vice-president of Athens
District UMW, to attend a future
meeting.
Several items were added to the
calendar of events including OES
Inspection Dinner on June 10,
County Retired Teachers Dinner on
Mar 16, and the Athens District
Spnng Retreat on May I and 2 at
Camp Francis Asbury.
The penny fund collection was
taken, sick calls were reported and
get well cards were signed.
Martha Dudding presented the
program "God, Our World, and

· The IOth Annual Science Day at be given to students with outstand·
Meigs Junior High School will be ing science exhibits.
held Tuesday with judging during
Plaques for outstanding exhibits
the day and exhibits on display for will be presented by the Meigs
viewing in the auditorium begin· Local Teachers Association, Ohio
ning at 6 p.m. An awards pro~ Association of Public School
will be held at7 p.m. that everung. Employees, Ohio Power Co.,
Allt40 eighth gradets will have Meigs Litter Control, Dr. James
exhibits in the science fair which is Conde, the Meigs Junior High Aca·
directed by Rusty Bookman, sci· demic Boosters, Veterans Memori·
ence teacher. Purpose of the Sci· Iii Hospilal, Southern Ohio Coal
ence Day is to stimulate interest in Company, and the Meigs Junior
sciences, to promote research, to High Teachers.
promote scientific knowledge, and
The John Mora Memorial
to recognize high achievement in Award will be presented for the
attaining those objectives.
best overall science project.
Again this year Governor's
Judging will be done by bust·
ness professionals on the basis of Awards for Excellence in Youth
knowledge achieved, use of scien- Science Opportunities will be
tific method, clarity of expression, awarded to students in six cate·
gories - research in energy, water
aod originality and creativity.
Grades of satisfactory, good, resources, agriculture and food sci·
excellem, and superior witt be ence, litter prevention and recy·
given to exhibit, and certificates cling, and environ~~tal science~.
Students rece1vmg supenor
presented to the students during the
awards will qualify to participate in
evening awards p~.
Special recognitiOn awards will lhe district scieace fair to be held at
Ohio University in April.

Me." She explained to members
they need to be responsible care·
takers of the world and discover
what their individual responsibili·
ties are.
The group participated in the
reading of "Ten Commandments of
the New Earth" doing a recycling
check list and singing of a hymn.
The program closed with everyone
reading the prayer of commitment.
A skit, "An Exercise in Futility"
was presented by Margie West, Sue
Grace, Lee Lee. Quis Hill and Etta
Mae Hill.
Home made ice cream and angel
food cake was served by Gladys
Shields aod Etta Mae Hill.
Others attending were Karen
Walker, Ruth Wolfe, Sharon Hub·
bard, Dorothy McKenzie, Louise
Stewart, Frances Roberts, Margery
Roush, Lois Bell and Dollie Mees.
The next meeting will be held
March 23 at 7:30 p.m. at the
church.

Rutland club receives superior rating
;

'i

READY TO PERFORM-Annex, a Point Pleasant-based heavy metal band that has been making
~usic together for IS years now, will be performing Saturday in Gallipolis at the D.A.V. Building at7 p.m.
From left are: Jell Wamsley, lead guitar and vocals; Kenny Rorrer, drums and vocals; Dobby Vester, bass
guitar and vocals; and Mark Phillips, rhythm guitar and keyboards.

Local heavy metal band to perform
Uy Dan Adkins
.
OVP Staff
: GALLIPOLIS, 0 H.- After 15
Y,ears of making music, a Poim
Pleasant-based heavy metal band is
finally hitting the right chords and
tfte right countries.
· Annex originating in Point
Pleasant in 1977, recently released
tiJeir second album, aptly entitled
"Powers That Be" and with it has
received quite a bit of recognition
in European countries. The group
was recently featured in "Metal
(i!ory," a magazine published in
Europe. and has also received
favorable response in "Rockbeat"
magazine here in UIC United States.
,. The group's first album release.
':Breaking Ground," was released
i~ 1987, and plans are now in the
works for a third album in 1993.
According to Jeff Wamsley, lead
guitarist and vocalist for the group,
"Breaking Ground really opened up
some doors for ~s. ~ot us a few
gigs and some nottce.
:

with "Powers That Be."
Wamsley said people really began
to take notice of the four-band

group.
.
According Wamsley, Annex ts
going into the studio this spring to
record a two-son~ casscuc smgle
for release later thts year. Wamsley
added the single will feature one
song from the upcom ing album and
another bon us track not available
on any album.
Annex is scheduled to make a
local perfonnance Saturday. March
7, at~ p.m. in the Gallipolis D.A .V.
butldmg.
.
Saturday's set of numbers Will
include songs fr?m both of the first
two albums, whtle some cover vcr·
sions of Metallica and Qucensryc he
Will also be added IR.
Accordmg lD Wamsley, the
group's last local show was New
Year 's Eve at the D.A.V. and pnor
to that Annex performed at the
Ariel Theatre in September of

shows simply because that's really
the only way to make any money
when _you first start out," Wamslc,Y
satd. Plus th~l way we know 11 s
done our way.
.
Wamsley added that . ownmg
Cnmmal Records has defin.ttely had
tlS advantages as far as gtvtng the
group an extm boost that not all
&amp;'?.ups have the pleasure of havmg.
We really have used (Cnmmal
Records) as a sort of spnngboa~d t?,
get stuff out (t.~lo the publtc),
Wamsley satd. A lot of bands
don ' t ~.ormally have that kmd of
access.
.
_
. Annex has already stgned dts·
tnbuuon d~ls With Semaphore
Dtstrtbutors tn Europe as well as
the New Jersey-based Performance
DIStributors, he satd.
Ad vance uckcts arc for Satur·
day's show arc avrulable at
1990.
.
Cnmmal Records 1n GalhJI?hS for
That show, Wamsley satd, nearly $4 and at the D.A.V. Butldmg the
so~? out.
day of the show for $5.
We usually try to book our own

Eag1es Class t0 ffiake baskets
The Eagles Class of the Asbury
United Methodist Church in Syracuse met recently at the home of
Martha Moore and Ruth Crouch.
Irene Parker presided at the
meeting with opening prayer by
Mary Cundiff. Devotions were
given by Ruth Crouch on scripture
from Matthew, Mark and Luke
concerning the anointment of Jesus
by Mary. Helen Teaford read two

humorous poems and Martha
Moore also read two poems.
The class wiD make Easter bas·
kcts for the shut-ins again this year.
A bake sale was tentatively set
for March 21.
Refreshments were served to
those named above and Bob Smith,
Beulah Ward, Elma Louks, Hope
Moore and Mary Lisle.

'60 Minutes' leads CBS to Nielsens win

CYNTHIA NEUTZLING

Earns 4.0 GPA
SYRACUSE · Cynthia Neut·
zling, daughter of Ed and Nancy
Neutzling, Syracuse, earned a 4.0
grade point average at Hocking
College during the last grading
tenn. She is sllldying nursing.
She is the granddaughter of Mrs.
Clarence King of Middlepon and
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Neutzling,
Mason, W.Va.

LOS ANGELES (AP) - CBS
dominated the latest weeldy prime
time ratin~s race. airing half of top
10 televisiOn shows, including top·
ranked "60 Minutes."
In the overall ratings, CBS had a
13.3 average, NBC 13.0 and ABC
12.4 from Feb. 24 to March I, A.C.
Nielsen Co. reported Tuesday.
"60 Minutes" got a 21.4 rating,
followed by ''CBS Sunday
Movie" featuring Meredith Baxter
in " A Woman Scorned" with 19.5.
CBS also had "MWJ!hY Brown" in
fourth with 19.0, 'Major Dad"

ninth with 17.0 and "Designing
Women" lOth with 16.8. ·
ABC's Tuesday night comedy
lineup featured "Roseanne" in
third with 19.2 and "Home
Improvement" seventh with 17.5,
while "ABC Monday Night
Movie" featuring Charlton Heston
in "Crash Landing" was eighth
with 17.1.
NBC's "Unsolved Mysteries"
was fifth with 18.8 and "Cheers"
was sixth with 18.2.

Correction

The Tai Chi Ch' uan program,
presented by Eric Chambers and
hosted by tile Middleport Arts
Council, will be held March 12, 19
The Lebanon Township and 26 from 7 to 8 p.m. The dates
Trustees will begin clean-up of for the program were incorrectly
township cemeteries and have reported in Monday's edition. For
requested that an flowers and COD· further infonnation, those interest·
tainers be removed by March 15.
,ed may contact the M.A.C.

Clean-up to begin

The Rutland Garden Club met
recently at the home of Margaret
Belle Weber.
Pauline Atlcins opened the meeting by reading "A Crocus in The
Snow" from Ideals.
For devotions Marcia Denison
read "As Close As My Back
Door." The creed and collect were
given in unison and roll call was
answered with "A Shrub I Forced."
A letter was read from the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs State
Flower Show Chainnan stating the
Rutland Club received a superior
rating on their flower show. A let·
ter was also rend from Ruth Waller,
OAGC President.
Stella Atkins reported on the
sunshine plates taken to the Meigs
County Home on Valentine's Day.
Plans were made to go to Gal·
lipolis Developmental Center in
March for therapy programs.
Ruby Diehl won the traveling
prize furnished by Pearl Canaday.
Neva Nicholson had furnished
flowers for church. Margaret Belle
Weber and Pearl Canaday fur·
nished cookies for the open house
and dedication of the new piano at
the Meigs County Infurnary.
Dorothy Woodard had made a
Val en tine arrangemen I for Over·
brook Nursing Center. One will
also be provided for St. Patrick's
Day. She had a bean wreath made
with tiny vines and herbs on display.
There was a display of seed cat·
alogucs.
Neva Nicholson had an article

"Easy Growing Orchids" stating
they are no longer the green house
prima donna they once were.
Pauline Atkins had an article
"Kalachoes." She stated they are aU
succulent plants of varying size and
form. Dorothy Woodard had an
article on pests that attack plants
and remedy for them.

When

••ked to ,.t• th•

equipment they owned,
&amp;II% ol Sonnenbraune
Wolff Sylltem •nd seA•
owner• ratad their
equlpllllnt "problbly the
beat IVIIIaltle.' l'hat'a
llmollt twtoe • high a•
o-r• Ill other brand•
euch 11 Jt( !loltron,
MontellO IIY. luna!,

949·2642

~
~

Why settle for a cheap Imitation - when you
can have the orlglna~ German Wolff Syst~m?
I,

'

SYSTEM

POMEROY • The Trinity
Church Youth Groups will meet
Thursday at 5 p.m. at the church.
All children are urged to attend.
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT· Chicken noodle dinner sponsored by the Ev8!1·
geline Chapter No. 172 OES wlll
tie held Fnday from 11 a.m: to 7
p.m. in the basement of the Mi~e·
port Masonic Temple. Eat·JD or
carry-out. Cost is $3.SO.

Plr

CORN

•
lbp Com. 'It.e Way Nature Intended.

----------------

IMAMJFACTUREFI 'SCOUPON I EXPIRES 111»'121·

j

30 ·oFF

LONG BOITOM • There will
be preaching and singing at the
Faith FuU Gospel Chuitn on Friday
ai 7 p.m. featurins David Dailey
811d the Dailey Family plus other
local talent. Pastor Steve .Reed
mvites the public. Fellowship will
fpllow.
: ROCK SPRINGS • ~ Meiss
County Pomona Grange will meet
Friday at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock
~P Grange HalL Harrisonville

Any $LLY TIME• ·
Pop Corn Product.

qrange,will iCrYC refJeslunents.

',

•

20570

I

-----·---•-""'*
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TO Mil~ AU Tll,.,..,llll..._ . . . . '* IIMIIile~ l.llld
.. . . . ,.. ........ .., • .w.l'lii .. Cerll . . . .

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5

AprD Halley, Ryan Dalley, and Bryan Colwell.
Rusty Bookman Is science teacber and director
or Tuesday's Science Day activities at Meigs
Junior High School

Breakfast held

Shows canceled

The Future Farmers of America
and the Future Homemakers of
America of Meigs High School
recently held their annual staff
appreciation breakfast
Sausage, scrambled eggs,
muffins, fruit, orange juice and cof·
fee were served. The sausage was
provided by the FFA and the
muffins were made by FHA. Members of the organization were at
school early that morning to pre·
pare the breakfast. ·
FHA members will be compel·
ing at the regional rally on Satur·
day on the campus of Ohio Univer·
sity.

BURBANK, Calif. (AP)- This
is Andy Griffith's last season play·
ing a wily Southern lawyer on
NBC's "Matlock."
"Matlock" and "In the Heat of
the Night" were canceled by NBC
Tnesday because oflow ratin¥s.
"In the Heat of the N1ght"
paired Carroll 0 'Connor and
Howard Rollins in a Mississippi
police drama based on the movie of
the same name. It premiered in
1988.
"Matlock" made its debut in
1986.

Check Out Our New
Spring
Wearing Apparel.

TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers
Plains VFW and Ladies Auxiliary
will have a souP. supper with veg·
etable and ch11i, hot dogs and
desserts, on Saturday at4 p.m. fol·
lowed by Euchre Tournament at 7
p.m. Public invited.
MIDDLEPORT • A spaghetti
dinner. will be held Saturday from
noon to 6 p.m. at the First Baptist
Church in Middlepon sponsored by
the Cornerstone Sunday School
Class. Eat-in or carry-{)ut is available and deliveries can be made in
the Middleport and Pomeroy area.

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 '-rescription card. Our
computer will be abfe to give you
· instant credit for your deductible
through the TelePAID on-hne processing
system. We will be able to inform you
how much you owe on each
prescription.
WE WELCOME YOUR PRESCRIPTION
BUSINESS

UYAWAYS ACCEPTED
MoC:ullough• R .Ph.
ChO"IaRiffte. R. Ph
Ran .tel H.nnin". R.Pit.
Mon. thru Sat. I :00 e.m . '1o 1:00 p.m
Sundav 10:00 1.m. to4:oo,.m.

290 N.
SECOND

PRESCRIPTIONS
PH . 8UZ811
E. Mein
F1itndly Strvkli
Pom•ow. OH.
Op.,. W.. k NighU 'lilt

AVE.,
Middleport

SATURDAY
• MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port Youth Leque will bold sign·
up for tho 1992 0.0
Sat·
~.::' 9 a.m. 10 ~ at the

-.on

M1
Collx:il BuiltiiJI&amp;. Colt
1i SIO per cblld. not., exceccl $25

.5

I ........ ,.............. _

.
.
L-----·~-------------------------~--

e

Bear Hu

MIDDLEPORT · The. Meigs
Junior High Academic BIX!sters
will meet Thursday at? p.m. m the
school cafeteria. Parents and teach·
ers are urged tD attend.

No Artificial Flavors

WOLFF

PREPARING • These eighth grade students
assisted Autumn Conde Ia preparing for ber sei·
ence research project entitled "Do People bave
the power of Extra Sensory Perception?" Seated
on the noor, I to r, they are Cynthia Cotterill,

· OberUn College in OberUn, Ohio,
was the lint in the United States to
aclopt co-education when It opened IIJ
doon in 1933. Two yean tater, It refused to bar studenll 011 account ol
race.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
High Alumni Association will meet
Thursday at Pomeroy Village Hall
at 7 p.m. for a planning session. All
graduates of PHS are invited to
auend.

No Artificial Coloring

---------

Meigs bookmobile
stops announced

· POMEROY • A basement sale
will be held at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church in Pomeroy on
Thursday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and
on Friday from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

No Preservatives

•

.

-. ·~·

RACINE • The American
Legion Racine Post No. 602 will
meet Thursday at 7:30p.m. at the
post home.

1iy Our 100°/o
All Natural Pop Com
And Save 30¢!
~

.

REEDSVILLE · The Olive
Township Trustees will meet
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Reedsville Fire House.

Shop Daily 9:30a.m. 'til 5:00 p.m.
Mondays 'til 8 p.m.

Mrs. Emma Durst hosted the
February meeting of the Reedsville
United Methodist Women.
Mrs. Nina Boston presided at
the meeting during which 35 sick
and shut-in calls were reported and
the group voted to donate $25
toward the piano at the Meigs
County Infmnary.
Readings based on love and
''The Magic of Love" and "Where
There is Love" were given.
Secret pal names were
exchanged and officers reports
WC(e given.
Games were played and refresh·
ments served.
The next meeting will be beld
March I0 at the church basement
with Diane Jones, hostess.
Atteoding were Pearl Osborne,
Nina Boston, Diane Jones, Salty
Brown, Grace Weber, Nell Wllson,
Frances Reed, Gladys Thomas,
Mamie Buckley, and guests, Debbie Barringer, Barbara Baker and
MicheUe Barringer.

RACINE • The Racine Youth
League will hold its sign-up for
baseball and softball on Saturday
from 10 a.m. to noon. If this is the
fmt sign-up for a participant ~ birth
certificate copy must be furn1shed.
The cost is $10 for girls softball
and $15 for all others.

'

The Meigs County Bookmobile
will make lhe ron~ ~ Ibis
week: WEDNESDAY ·Racme, 12
noon to 4 p.m., and Le1art Falls, S
pm. to 7 pm.; 'IHURSDAY • T~~p:
pers Plains, I p.m. to 3 p.m. ,
Reedsville, 4 p.m. to 7 pm., FRJ:
DAY • Maples, 11:30 a.m. to I
p.m., Overbrook_. 1:30 p.m. to 2.
p.m., Pomeroy Pike, ~:.30 p.m. to:
4:30 p.m., Baum Addilion, S p.m.:
to 6 p.m., SA1URDAY ·Rutland,.
9 aJD., to I p.m., Danville, 2 p.m:
to 3 p.m., Salem Cenu:r 3:30 p.m.
to 5:30p.m.

THURSDAY
SYRACUSE - The Syracuse
Youth League organizational meet·
ing will be held Thursday at 6:30
p.m. at the elementary school in
Syracuse. can 992-5483 for further
infonnation.

Register For Door Prizes
Microwave Oven &amp; Gift Certificate

Reedsville UMW
hold meeting

will also be available at this time
for a cost of $1.

' ..

POMEROY - The Salisbury
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at 7 p .m. at the home
of the clerk, Sarah Gibbs, Ball Run
Road, Pomeroy.

20%oFF

2 BEDS FOR CONVENIENCE
7 YEARS OF EXPERIENCE

Puratlft, KI1I1Un 1nil
othn.

PAGEVILLE · 'The Scipio
Township Trustees will meet
Wednesday at the township build·
ing in Pageville.
·

Save
REGULAR PRICE STOREWIDE

n•!IUIIUD
gu. POl ODIIPICW.
DAY 'I' 1111118

•

MIDDLEPORT • The Soap Box
Derby committee will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at Middleport
Trophy Shop.

UCINE
DEPARTME
STORE

Sun 'n' Sand 'anning

....

WEDNESDAY
· MIDDLEPORT • The Middle·
port Arts Council wlll offer begin·
ning tap dancing classes beginn~g
Wednesday. Barbara Lawrence m
the instructor. Class times are 4:3().
5:15p.m. for five and six-yearaids; 5:15-6 p.m . for seven and
eight-year-olds; and 6-6:45 p.m. for
nine and ten-year-olds. Call 992·
32&amp;2 or 992·5696 to register or for
further infonnation.

(Thru Saturday) At

Salons Rate
SonnenBra1\lle Wolff System # l

qu•llty ol the tinning

Community Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
and the day of tbat event. Items
must be received weD in ad vance
to ISSUre publication In the cal·
endar.

Don't

The Return of a Legend
SonnenBraune Wolff
System tops the list.

Community calendar

Dorothy Woodard had the hint
for the meeting on "Shrubs That
Attract Birds." A number of land·
scape plants bear fruit and attract
birds. Some of the common o~es
with fruit are Allegheny Semce
Berry which is blue, red chokeber·
ry, American biuerswee~ flowenng
dogwood and red berry.

The Dally Sen~lnei-Page 11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•1

per family. Ally child not ~Yin&amp;
last..,.. will need acopy_ of their
blnb certl&amp;ate Menlbel'lllip cardl
't

Not Less Than 70% Lean

Ground Beef

c

Sold In
Packages or

a lbs. or
More

LIMIT 10 LBS. Per FamUy Please
Additional .

ltemi

Russet

aking.Po~""~"'~",..,:. .

Food Club
Vegetables
Mix or Match
Whole Kernel
or Cmam Scyle
Corn, French
Scyle or Cut
Green Beans

16 ID
16.5 oz.

~

Regular or No
Sal t Varieties

Gan

LIMIT 4 Per Family Pleue With

•to Additional
Items

Pun:base

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel '

Wednesday, March 4, 1992

SPECIAL GARDEN CENTER HOURS: OPEN SATURDAY AT 8 AM; SUNDAY AT 10 AM

RATES
Words
15

IS

Public Notice

Public Notice

about February 19, 1992.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The public 11 notil1od lhat Th11 dieoolution olthe corLoading Crook Wallrahod poration wa1 a voluntary ~~et
A••ociatlon, Inc., 1 cor- by the Board ot Directoro ot
poration organized under tho aloruald corporot1on .
lht IIIWI ollho Stale ol Ohio Any lnquirleo or claimo
on or aboul May 16, 1166, concerning tho aloreuid
hao lllod a Cerlillcato of corporation may be directed
Ditaolution ot tho cor· to 34481 Corn Hollow Rood,
poratlon wilh tho Ohio Rutland, Ohio 45n5.
Secretary of Stale on or (3) 4, 11' 2tc

01992 Kman• Corporauon

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

Public Notice

Public Notice

RESOLUTION 302 92
WHEREAS, the VIllage of

PUBLIC NOTICE
On Feb. 14, 1992, William
A. Barnhart. f1lod With the
Federal Communlcallons
Commiosion an application
lor a contruction permit lor

Monthly

THEREFORE, BE IT
a low power televi1ion
etalion. Said statioo will be RESOLVED thatlhe \lllago
Pomeroy
borrow
VH.F. Channel 27 with of
$120,000.00
lor
len
(10)
transmitter located off
Spring Avo. near SL John'• years from Bank One,
Comolory, .87 mlfeo Eaol Athens. NA al a variable
Northeasl ol Pomeroy, commercial rate of 4.88%.
having an oflocllvo radiated PASSED: 3-2-92
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
power ol5 69 kilowatta.
Larry
Wehrung, Pr0111dent
(3) 4, 1tc
Brenda L Morris, Clerk
(3) 4, 11 ' 21c

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2i061Xl2

10:00 A.M.

LOCATED AT 342 2ND AVENUE

IN GALLIPOLis, OHIO.
WILL BE SELLING THE CONTENTS FROM
CLARK'S JEWELRY STORE
IN GALLIPOLIS. OWO

\
I

112 Karar diamond cluster nng, lhree 1 Karal &lt;iamond
I ciliSter rings These four nngs w1ll be sold w11h reserve
assorted nngs - ciamond cluslers birthstone&amp;, 1Urqu01se
several other piOOils, old p1ns, wnst watches, JOWelry,
I ~~~~w~atch~es 2 Elg1n Timer Hamlom - DaVIS 2 IllinOis 2
I
WiU18111 Wise &amp;Son, Wallham, Skelton, Col1bfe,
- 17 Jewel IL, 21 Jewel Blinn Spe&lt;:lal, 4 • 7 Jew! Elgin IL,
17 Jewel Aula Crat South Bend 15Jewel, Burlington Walihsm
17 JoWl&gt; IL 21 Jewel A L1nooln Wallham 15 Jewel, AmenWallharn Ball WalCh Co 16Jewel Pocket Ben. Daylon 6
1 Jewel, Elg1n Key Wind, Ham1llon 17 Jewel. Elg1n Hunbng
Case Hampden Watch Co •Elgm New England Dollar WsiCh
Downs Cuslom Handmade Kmfe West Polnler, 17 Jewel
West Clox Pockol Mlrl, 30 pocket walehes plus many more,
several brand name lad~eswatches . 40 old Sllver~ alrs 1899
- 1900's, podlllt watch parts, assorted piOCes ch1na, several
pMlCOs of stor11ng hollow ware sle~1ng assorted pieces ol
sterling flatware, 1986 Hummelt279, two 1985 bells, 1985
plates 1st &amp; 3rd Edition, Hummel natMiy set 1984 Goebel
A1se &amp; Sh1ne F~gunne, m1rrors pictures. lncian Spearhead,
H A Bell adv Sign GallipoliS, OhiO Sign, SIUfted rooster,
I ie•ve~r des•k. two 2·pi9C8 showcases, antlq~~e 5-S h w1de
112 h tall showcases 2 large diSplay cabinets, seven 6-ft
showcases wilh slorage, 40 It plus of walls'-cases Wllh
lights and 110rage 1n bo1toms, a&gt;nSISbng of 4~ fl showcases
and cisplay cabinetWiih lights w111 be sold 1n partial or as one
unit, 8 h. counter. W1111ams, Woods &amp; Scns doctor tournai,
1874 Dictionary Medical Science, N1oo Collecbon 50-60
doclors toumalla181800 to early 1900 plusoihers, revoh11ng
rewelrycase. several watch part cabinets lull, L&amp; RPrecl11on
cleaning machine. M1010fiche system, slearn cleaner two
wato:h cleantng machines two Ultra Son1c cleaning machines, Electronic Vok Meter, small tiles, four drawer file
cabmetmelal. Vietor515caall mgislllr, melaldeskandchalr,
lhree drawer watch crystal eal,et four drawer oak walch
crystal cabinet. 5 otaci&lt; metal watch crystal cabinet loaded 24
drMers Litton mlcruwa\18, wooden ladder, plus more

\

'

JIRRY'I 11"'
, e In a hurry to cut ott
oon \ b
broken limbs
small, young,
small
Splint them With a
Lool&lt;.
d nylon tape
stiCk an
and tncks 'n
lor all my ~~~ une®senes

~eo~:~vallable lor 1 75

o h ~~your local Kmart
eac F ea~&lt;er 1991

$179

DeeorlltltJB

O.Jerl'i

Pine Bark
Nuggets

I·HP GAl IDGIR
9" steel blade,-powerful
Bnggs &amp; Stratton engme
with rewmd start, S-pos1t10n
handle, curb-wheel and
mount-depth adJuStment

Kawl

Sale: Prl«
l.a1

Mfr

\86

I

Mall-Ia Rebate

1,97
4.97Pkg
IPHA.NUM PIA' MOU
Ava1lable m convement l-eu -ft
pkg. Ideal for soil cond1tlonmg
4-cu..ft. Sphagnum Peat Moss, 8.97

Your Net Coli

Rebate
tom&amp; '•

AUCTION CONDUCTID BT

2.99Ea.

PINI IAIIIC NUHm
Great for mulchmg and
landscaping. Help retam
soil mo1sture 2-cu -fr pkg

COI,OUUL PLOWIR aULU

Rcbau: Limned To JO Hyponcx Products Per
Household

Mature specimensshown

(

~--------~------~------~-'

~

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEAJlSON

In a selection of popular varieties
ro bnghren your garden this spnng
Choose from glads, begonias, more

On Sale Weclnesclay, M~rch 4 Throuah Saturday, March 7 ,
Nursery Sccxk And

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.

Goods Avl!labte In Stores WUh Garden Center Lawn And Garden J[ems Available In W'ger Kq\art S1ores

MASON, WV

773-5785

I n =At.as•C..11l1 or Choclo with D

I Nell Rt....,olblo far-~~« loas of propony

llolniOd snd -od In Ohlli,l&lt;lntucl(y ,llld Well VIrginiUM

Iii
'

I

'

'•

21- 8ut1neu Opportunity
22- Money 1o Loan
23- Profs11onal ServiCN

$ 60
33- Farm• for Sale
34- Buaane11 Bu1ldmga
35-- loll &amp; Acreage
36- Real Eolale Wonlod

5-

13- lnaurance
14- Buatneu Trarnrng
15- Schoola &amp; Instruction
16-- Radro, TV &amp; CB Repatr
17- MtKe llaneout
18-- Wanted To Do

Happy Ada

6-- Lost and Found
7- Lo1t and Found

&amp;--- Public Sale &amp;
Auct1on

Real Estate General

Wonted 10 Buy

I \1\\1 :-ol 1'1' 1 II'

Wanted to Buy

L1veet.ock
Hay &amp; Cram
Seed &amp; Fertiluer

J;J . \ T\ 1.~
'

41- Hou.~ea for Rent
42- Mob1le Homu for Rent
~ Farm• for Rent
45-- Furnubed Roome

11- Help Wtmled
12- S1tuatron• Wanled

For Sale or Trade

q p

46- Spa~ for Renl
3- Announcementa
4-- G1veawa y

Mu.tealln•trumenLI
Fruou &amp; Veplableo

S I 1\ I· ·' I Ill 1,

$ 05/day

44- Apartment for Ren t

47- Wanted to Rent
43-- EqUipmf!nl for Rent
49-- For Leaae

\II :B&lt; II

\\lll~l :

51- Houoehold Good.
52- Sportmg Gooda

53- Anllquca
54- M11c Merchandise
55- Bu1ldrnr S upplte~

Molorcycle.
Boata &amp; Moton for Sale
Auto Poru &amp; Aw..ori ..
Auto Repau·

l

Camp1np; Equ1p111ent

Home lmporvemenLr

Plum biD« &amp; Heatinj!:
Excavating

Electrtul &amp; Re lr· ijeroolio~
Ceneral Haulrng
Mobtle Home Reparr
Upholltery

I

BusJness
Se ices
TBOY-BI£f

"FINEST"

$ 20
$ 30
$ 42

GET RESULTS • FAST!

Improvements.

Our Sprins Shipment or
Troy-Blh 1Uier• Now In Stock.
Your Local Tr!?f Bill Dacdar

992-2259

1.77

$4.00
$6.00
$9.00
$1300
$1.30/day

l ' i \ \ \ (1 \1.

:;----'----1

304-773-5037

GALLI A COUNTY'S

Over 15 Words

Pomeroy, Sewer Fund,
wishes to make payments
on a l oan lor the
Wastewaler Treatment Pfanl

DOGWOOD LOFT
GiFT SHOP
10 E Horton St. Mason. WI/
Open Window collection of
m1n1alure houses have arriVed.
Hrs Tues.-Sat 10:30-Sp m

4 . 9 7 B ag
KMAR1' FIR!ILIDR
Features fast-acung, all-purpose 10-10-10 formula For
trees, gardens, evergreens
and shrubs 40-lb net wt

15
15
15

Rate

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

9-

Kmart
Sale Prlct
Lese Mfr 's
Mall-ID Rebate

13

•The Area's Number ! Marketplace

Visit our GARDEN CENTER for colorful
FLOWERS and quality WN CARE.

5.97Bag
IC··IO LAWN IIAitTIR
18-24-12 formula helps new
grass develop v1gorous root
systems Great for new lawn
fert1hzmg 18-lb -net-wt bag

The

Ohio

608 EASTJMIN

POMER~Y,

OHIO

NEW LISTING- Beautihlllog home on 4 acres Includes
3 BAs, 2 baths Many, many addad features
$87,500
NEW LISTING - Foreot Run Rd Older 1 floor frame
home 4 rooms. 2 BRs on 2 29 acres of land
Aoking $24,900.

WAICEFtftD'S

b 50 Will, Ailm, O~o •l!3-381S

YOU WEAR IT HEAR
I~ ADMIRE I~ WATCH
IT, PlAY ITL uSE IT or
HEEu IT

IF

Yoo'lfllllll h Ia

EMilY'S AniC

We turn your nH and
NEW LISTING- P01t1and Wells Run Rd t floor flame on
2 81 acres
$8,500 MAKE AN OFFERI

good uoed ortlcloa Into

cuh and 11ve you money
on whal you noacL

CAll 992·6120

POMEROY - Handicapped accesSible homo Wl!h 3 BAs,
fireplace basement,la&lt;ge kitchen
$34,900.

Or IIOJ IJ

I02 E. Main 5trHt

Pomer-,, Ohio

LETART- Remodeled 2 story home, 3 BAs. 2 acres of
level ground la&lt;ge strav.teny patch
$29,900.
POMEROY - 1Y. story home 3·4 BAs. on two lots of
50x100 each.
Aoking $14,540.
PLEASANT RIDGE- 1112 story home 3-4 BAs on two
lots of 50x100 each
Asking $2t,OOO
MIDDLEPORT - Remodeled 1112 story home Good
location, fenced yard 3 BAs slorago bUilding closet
space
$19,500.
POMEROY - 2 story block home. 3 BRs, large front
poreh Home 1n good condition
$19,500.
WHAT DO YOU DO IF YOU WANT 10
UST YOUR HOME?
FIRST: Call Cleland Really. We have proleulonal
people to handlelholildng and aalo ol your home.
SECOND: We will advorlloe, ohow and anower all
quoationo concerning your property.
THIRD: You aimply aat bock and lei uo handle
verything and btlol of all ••• You don't pay ua a cenl
unloaolhe property 11 soldl Sound euyllliol GIVe uo
a call if you ora oarloua aboutsofflngf
Henry E. Claland.........................................992-11191
Tracy Brln~gar.... ............ . . . .....
. • 949-2439
Joan Tru11all....................................................148-2660
Office • ......................... .. .. .. . .....
. 992-2259

To Flnd,_'l!ll:!',~o

614-992·2549

314/9211 mo.

HOWARD

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZER,BACKHOE
and TRACKHOE WORK
AVAILABLE.
SEPTIC SYSTEMS,
HOME SITES and
TRAILER SITES,
LANDCLEAAING,
DRIVEWAYS INSTALLED
LIMESTONE-TRUCKING

FREE ESTI!IATES

LEADING CREEK ROAD-Hunt or farm on !hiS 18 acres
w1th a mce big bam This land la~s Hat has a great building
Site, and water and electnc available
$18,500
MIDDLEPORT-Vine St-A n1oo area lo live 1n ThiS homo
could have 3-4 bedrooms All rooms are mea SIZed Has
diShwasher, sto\18, retng • diSposal and fireplace Sns on
2 fenced flallots
$38,900
SYRACUSE-A fan!ast1c thnving grocel}' slore bus1ness
ThiS money maker comes w1th everybng mcluding the
stoek It has a da1ry case, walk 1n oooler all k1nds of
shelving. 3 deep lreezers. meat sheer gnndor, and mora
The upstalls could be made 1n1o a 2 bedroom apartment
11 you wanllo live over your busmess Cal lo make your
appoinlmenl
$138,900
REEDSVILLE-Co Rd 50-45 acres ol n1ce laytng land
Approx 2acreo tillabie, 10 acras pas lUre, 35 acres timber
Waler and electnc available
$25,000
DOTTIE TURNEfhllrokor ................ . .... .. ....9112·5892
BRENDA JEFFE,.,.................................. .. ....9112-3056
DARUNE8TEWART...........................................U2-&amp;385
SANDY BUTCHER.............................................ti2·5371
SHERYLWALTERS,ChHhlre...........................387-o421

New Homes,
Additions, Siding,
Pole Barns, Painting,
Garages, Porches
IRIE ESIIMATES

614-742-3090 or
304-773-9545
NO SUNDAY CALLS
21141'9211 mo.

11

2-3-'92-1

POLE BUILDING
MATERIALS

Imperial Rill Metal

Cut To Lenglh

1 WEEII DEliVERY
M•y Colws
C..nooboR Trock IIIII ,.
Auauirlu

BAUM
LUMBER CO.

Public Notice

SUN'S UP
TANNING

Help Wanted

TUN SPORT
DRIVERS
No Experleace
Necessary
Local • Natloawlde
Start Up To $351

Callllow
1·800·422·4983

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Bashan Building
EVERY

CALL 742·2778

15 StsROIL- - - "'25.00
12 StssiOIL----"'20.00
6 S.sslons..---·---'12.00
I S.ssl•--- - -'3.50
fRIE SISSION WITH EVIRY
RENEWAL
S.vwolklads ollorloas
SCA WOIFIIIDS

Slarling Sepl. 28
Factory

Choka

12 Gauge Sbolgun Only
Strhtly Enforced
9-t3-'91-tln

DARWIN, OHIO
7131f91/tln

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

BILL SLACK
992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES
6-t2-90-tln

Quality
Stone Co.

SIZED LIMESTONE
FOR SALE
Call614·992-6637
Sl. Rt. 7
Cheshire, OH.
1

2117/1 mo. d.

BISSELL &amp; BURKE
CONSTRUCTION

Ou SJirinl Sltl.-tet Of
Tr•y-Bdl 'I'UI.n Now In Stock.
YoW" L«al 'l!!r·BW Dtol.,

WAICEIIELI'S

II 50 hi, lllo11 Olio •SII-JIIl
Homee-Peii-WIIdllf•

Molorcyclea·Etc.

1\.fltnryn
Meadows
"SPECIALIZING IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Ridge Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 45761

Welcome Slates
$20.00
Cuslom Paintin~•
614-992-2242

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Z/14!8211 mo.

New Uma Road
In Ratland

TBOY-BI£f'

9-6-tl

Specializing In Custom
Frame Repair
NEW &amp; USED PARTS
• FOR All MAKES
&amp; MODILS
992·7013 or
992-5553
OR TOLl FREE
1·800·848·0070

CHESTER

PUBLIC NOTICE
Sealed b1d1 will be
received In the olftca ollhe
Clerk, Pomeroy Municipal
Building, 320 Eaot Main
Streo~ Pomeroy, OH. 45769
lor the following turnout
gear tor the Pomeroy
Volunleer Fire Department
12 Turnoul Coala- PBI
12 Turnoul Panta- PSI
3 Bunker Panle- Nomex
(white)
3 Bunker Costa- Nom ax
(white)
t8 Palre Glovea
8 Palla Bunker Boola
18 Hoods- Nomox/PBI
Spac!llcatlono may ba
picked up al tha Clerk'a
Otlice. Bldo may ba
oubmilled until 10:00 A.M.
EST March 16, 1992. Tha
Village raoervea lht right to
rejecl any or all b[do.
Bruca J. RHd, Mayor
Brenda L Morrla, Clerk
(3) 4, 11, 2tc

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

WHAlEY'S AUTO
PARTS

992·3838
OFFICE 992-2886

POMEROY-Make your appo1nlment today lo see lh1s 3
bedroom home w11h an open sta11way, trench doors, fire
pl~nd a lull basement
NOW $19,900

KING'S HOME
IMPROVEMENTS

MARCH 14: Fr• Demo
Jacket Sweatahlrt Claea1:00p.m.
MARCH 16: Stale Tole
Painting - 7 p.m.
SloP, To See Sample
MARCH 24- Baaket Clall
-6 p.m.
MUST PRE-REGISTER
HRS Mon -Sol10om-5pm
sundoy 1-5 pm
For Monlnfo Clll

1-13-'92'-1 mo

OWN YOUR OWN BUSINESS SOME OWNER FINANC
lNG AVAILABLE , WITH DOWN PAYMENT ThiS reslau
rant seats 38, IS well established, lully equ1pped, new
central""· anraet1ve d1n1ng room good gross sale f1gures
mce stor"lle bu1id1ng, ample truck parlung Owner prepar
1ng to ratl re Can purchase busmess and 3 acres for
$92 ,000 or business and 1 112 acres tor
$65,000

c•

TROLLEY STAIION
CRAFTS

Real Estate General

· 205lloftlt Second Ave.
Middleport, OH

COUNTRY MOBilE HOME
3 Nico Molodo Homts lor Rat
Jusl North of Po11oroy
Slarl.,g at '225 por 111.
614-992-ma
or 385'1227

RACINE GUN
CLUB

INSULATION
•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement
Window
•Roofing
•Insulation

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2097
539 Bryan

M1ddlepor~

R&amp;C EXCAVATING
BULLDOZING
PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER &amp;
SEWER LINES
BASEMENTS&amp;
HOME SITES
HAULING: Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal
Licensed and Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

12·5-ttn

MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

I~

MI. out lew
Lima Rd.
Rutltad, 0•1o

742·2341

15 Sessions.- ~5
Plus 1 FREE
Hrs. 8·10 Mon.tlru Sat.

NEW SCA WOlFF lED 24Sl

TCIIUtilt ProcMts Availalilt
Experio""o lAo
MI-.!~•• ' in Tallllin,y.

(allforAtiPoll-...

-3·2·1

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC.

•New Homes
•Garages
•Complele
Remodeling
Stop &amp; Compare

New Homes • Vinyl Siding
New Garages • ReplaceMent Wiadows
Roo• lddilioas • Roofiag

985·4473

614·949·2801 or 949·2860
(No Sundar Calls)
•

FREE ESTIMATES

667·6179

C:OMMERCIAL and RESmENTit\L
FREE ESTIMATES

2-7·92-tln

TROMM
BUilDERS
-New Conatructlon
-Remodeling
-Cabinet Work
-Commercial·
Realdentlal
FREE ES'nMATES
20 Yeara Experience

614·742·2328

lt:iiiTBt
., ..11 _

Air Conditioners
&amp; Heat Pumpe

•1 00% 2 year parts &amp; labor warranry
•10 yr. heat purrp colf4)resser warranty
•Frea eatimales

Bennetts Mobile Home Headng &amp; Cooling
1391s.fhnl SdMI RL
G1 1l1, Olilt
c.ll
446-9416 • 1-100-172·59~7

�.

March 4,1992.

P~14-The Dally Sentinel

Announcements

Wednesday, March 4, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

SNAFU® b y Bruce BeaUle

18 Wanted to Do

41 Houses lor Rent

11

KIT 'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wright

Ohio

BORN LOSER

Television
Viewing

Autos for Sale

2 Mlill South, Routo 7, 3 Or 4
1991 Santra S.E. Auto, Air,
Will Bobyoft In lly Homo. Rod· Btdrooms, 1 Acre, Dick, New
Showroom, New! 2,000 Mllea,
nay Aru. A•r.r.nc.s Available. Apr.llancu
3 Announcements
Cny
Schoola,
$10,300 Or 'Tiki Ov1r Paymantt.
CII1114·24S.5887.
R• •renee, bapoSn, $4QOJMonth.
614-441-1312.
Boauty P-nt Full Flguro Tri614
...
411-4900.
E 6 R TREE SERVICE. T-lng,
Co. April 13, Mondoy, Holiday
Trimming, TrM Removal, Hedge
1892 Eecort. l01ded, very very
Inn, 7:00 P.ll. Clll lllrto Polmot.
Trimming. FrH Ettlmalaal Sf4·
low mllu, 304-6~248.
614-387·11C12.
2-bdrm houn, lum, Lincoln Hill,
361'-1'957.
For sale- 1979 Chavy Caprlct
Pomtroy,
privata
11ttlng
MEET SINGLE GIRLS
Gocrgu Ponoblo SOwmlll, don't $250mc, l14.tl85-4258
Clualc, 305 automatle, .,-, pb
In Y""r locol ArN. 1·800-401'$375, 614-742·1400
loa• to the mill lust
1004, $2.115/mln. ll.u ll Bo Ovor
3br HOUII 112 Mile From C:tr
call
75-1l57.
ta, FonpoloiNiftl CA.
For Salt: 1980 Oldt CU11au
Umlt1, GrHn School District,
$400, llaka Good Work Cor. 614Have room In my home for tl· Reftrenct And O.posH R~
Reduce: Bum ott tat while you
dotty or take coro ot yo..-lovod· qulrod. 614.,.46-6541 aHor Sp.m.
446·1029.
alt.! Take OPAl, IYIIItbll II
onoo In thoro "-o; day/ night
Fruth Pharmacy, 181 N. Slcond
ahiHo, 20ynt 01panonc1 , call Fumlahod 3 room cottogo In
72 Trucks for Sale
Sl., lllddlopott.
anytlmo, 6-U-3014
town. No pota, dopoa~ l rat. ,._
tCO CO
qulrod. 614-446-2543.
1969 Chevy dump truck, 2 ton
Unaltachld? MMI ArN SlngiH
Illao PouII•I f~Y
ro ntor.
alngla 11 1.,. $2,800. 304-675-245'1.
Throuah Our Slnglll Nlwltlot·
Solo, oHordobla, chlldca~ M·F 42 Mobile Homes
ler. Ylrtte: Sinal••· P.O. Box
I Lm. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo •~10.
11174 Ford 112 Ton 414, 351 II. 11
1043, Go111pollo, Ohio 45631.
Bolorl, anor ochool. Drop-Ina
for Rent
Inch Lift, 36 Inch Aodlol 011nbo
wolcomo. 614-446-8224. Naw In·
lluddoro Alpin StotwO Syotom.
4
Giveaway
lent Toddlor Coro, 614-446-8221. 2 BR, Middlepott, Ohio.
614.,.48-7014.
Reference &amp; depoeh required .
~~~~:;:-=-;:;;;-:-::::
Brown Female Houu Dog To
Parttnthlp dance lnltroctlon 304-882-3267.
1978 Font F-250, 4x4, 400 auto,
Glvttway. 614-448-4514.
apoc:lollzlng In ono on oM In·
$1,200. tm Porolac Fkablrd
ottuctlon, blllrocm, country 2·bdrm moblla homo In Mid·
$500. 304-675-1626 or 175-7633.
t piyed,
German
Whitt,
wntem, latin, contempol'l!ry, dltporl, 614·H2·5858
Shtphard, to good home, 614·
fret ltylt. Call after 7:00 PM
1i81 Ford Courier pickup. 4 cyl,
992-3606
a304-675-3984 tor Anna 01 Jim.
2Nbr UHnfumlahtd. Mobile Homt,
5 •PHd tra 111, $1,200. •xc eond,
"The any explanation tor tills late-season snow Is
aor olzar HoopHol, No Polo,
304-875-2074.
6
Lost &amp; Found
all of ~ , must have tak
ff
fl I"
Rooting, Romodollng, Room $200/mo.
$100
DapoaH.
~~~~~~~~~~·==~~~·~-~~==lrlll~o;;your~~,.~IOW~;res~=:===i
Addhlano,
1982
Chavy E1callon1
Sllvaradolocly,
PS, 30S
AC
FOUND:
in Rio a.. nd• small
Aflor 5 P II cou
614 2Botaro
.. •ho8 A.M. Or Rolaranca. 814-44&amp;-3617. _
PB, Cruloa,
champagne colored temalt:t
' • • ~' ·
5 Room• And 81th, ln~ulr8 At
Auto, Won't Find A CfNntr
No cellar. To claim call 61
9 _Wanted
to_
Buy
Help Wanted
Wantod:
Houoocloanlng,
3217.
_
____
...,:.__ 11
oblo,
Oopandablo,
Honut, Ral~
114- 916 Socond Avonuo, Gall polla. ~~~;;~=~;;~;;;;:;T~~=~~~~~~ Truckl$3,995. 614-446-4514.
· :::.__;-;-;;-:-;;;::;::;:::--;;;:= l
AVON All aroaa Call M 11
446-8842.
Furnlahed 2 bedroom mobil•
1983 Dodge Ram 1121on pickup.
LCII : Addlaon VIcinity, Bloar Wanted To Buy: Junk Autoo Woava; 3 ~ ••2•264
• •.
or yn
homa, $250. par month, wotar, 51
Household
56 Pets for Sale
LWB n
Aut0 PS1 PB
_._
.,
Will
build
nwar
&amp;
trash
Included
304·
w opper.
Road Am. 112 Bugle And 112 With Or Without llotora. Call
.
or repolr llnco, ex·
_ • .
•
Goods
Naw· tiroo
• blnory. :.t~ood coo·'
512
Miniature Rat Terrier, Whitt Wilh Larry Lively. 614-388-H03.
Exchlng New c....., Oppor· ptrltnced and have rer.r~nctt, 16:;;,·~
:..::::::._______
AKC tHindt Boxer Pup, 14 wks dillon. $3500. 304-675-1450 or
Black And Brown Patchoo, 1
tunltlao With Loading Ccomatlc 304-458-187e.
,.
old, 304-882·3397.
614-388-!1173 (ovonlng)
y.., Old. Vory Small Fomalo. Top Prl. . Plld: All Old U.S. Company Expanding Into Tho
44
Apartment
llotchlng Couch, Lcvo-t,
Colnt, Gold Ring~ Silver CcHnt, Area. Cl.ll for Interview: 114· Will Do Babysitting In My Home,
Chelr, $250, Good Condition, Female Blue Heater pup, 304· 1985 Ford Ranger, V-8 auto, PS,
614.J67-013l, 614-367-0324.
:--:---;-:::::'::--;;::;::--;;;::;:;;::;:
1 Gold Colna. U.b. Coin Shop, 446-6184.
In Patriot Aroa, Ohio. 614-379lor Rent
8t4-44Wm.
675-3921.
PB, low mllao, toppor, 614-M2·
Loot: Lorge Malo Roddloh 151 5ocond Avonuo, Ooltlpcllo.
.
2428.
...,..,...._...:__:__:...___
PICKENS FURNITURE
Floh ~onk, 2413 Jackoon Avo. 3020 oflor 5pm -kdaya
Brown Dog In PalriCII Area,
Experienced Carpet lnltllllr,
1-bdrm ept In Mlddleporl ,
"
Chlld't Pet , 814·31't--2512 AHer
mutt have own vthlcla, toots, Will plow gardtnt In Mason utllllln turn, dip r~. no peta,
NewiUted
Point Pl1111nt, 304-875-2063, 1981 Chevy S..10, blk exterior;
5:00P.M.
cantr'ICI118 IICinN, Rtf. arR, ~4-773-5312.
614·992·2218
HouMhold tumiahlng. 1f2 mi. full line Tropical fish, birds, rtd Interior, w/alr, 4 cyt, 4 speed,
Employment Services WV
nHdtd. Send rnurnaa to PO
-,---,--=.:.:______ Jerrlcho Rd. Pt. Pluunt, WV, smell anlmall end auppllet.
sharp llnla1ruclc, 304~75-3324.
Box 801 AaveniWOOd, wv
1br Unfurnished Apertment, call304.f7'5·1450.
F
Yard Sale
7
26114, urtouelnqulrlea only
With Stove And Refrigerator, No
Full Blooded Rtd Chow or 1989 Chevy 4x4 , loaded, vary
Pett, $18ilmo, Wettr Included. Ratrlgarstor, Fro.t FrN, SN:r• Sail: 3 Montha Otd. 6~4·388· prally truck. $11,500. Call 614"·
11 Help wanted
.All Yerd Satt1 Must Bt Ptld In
lmmodloto opanlnga ovallablo
$100 Oopoelt. 614-446-361l
With lea Makar Elactrlc Clolhoa 8038.
446-697tlaftar 10:00 a.m.
·Advanco. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
$35MlAY PROCESSING
lor lull~lmo 11·7 AN Shift SU- 21
Business
Dlyor Color TV 614·256-1238
2 bodroom apt, utlllllao pold,
'
· ·•
·
S7
Musical
1990 GMC Slorta SLE long bod,
·the day before the ad 11 to run. PHONE ORDERS! PEOPLE paNI-. CompatHivo ,.. 1111 ,
dllloNntiol wHh ••-• anc 1
Opportunity
Hud opprovod, 304-675-2722.
SWAIN
350, A, AC, AT, PS, PB, olldlng
·sunday odltloo • 2:00 p.m.
CALL YOU.
~"
AUCTION 6 RIRNITURE. e2
Instruments
rur window, tlntod glaoo,
•
'Friday. Monday edition • 2:00 NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
lltxlble tchedullng available.
INQnCE!
2·bdrm apt In S~racuae, Olive St., Oa111polle. New 1 UMd
cruise, lin wh1tl, AM.faf cat·
p.m. Saturday.
t.aDD-255-0242.
~~~:.~h~~:"oC:~~~rwl~ OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING co. $12Smo, plut utilities, dep, 614· tumhure, h,~4'a Walttm &amp; Electronic orV'!n: 61 full tlza 11111 player w/5 band graphic
Plnocroat Drlvo, Golllpoflo, rocommondo lhM you do bual- 992-5732
Work booto. I
3151.
~yo, otondWI&amp;IIIooltk po$d2~ ~~ aq=uollzor, maroon!, hlhaa!!odoouty
S3501Day procnslng, phone or- Ohio. 614-446-7112. Equal oppor· nna with pooplo you know and 2 bd
l
.100
now,
ao
.
ngo, cargo I g ' •• . 0.
Gallipolis
NOT to oond monoy thro:;f,h the
rm. apt. In Mlddloport, ,.. 3 pc bodroom ouHoo 1124 · 38JI.II708.
-67&amp;.a860.
ders! People call you. No tl- tunlt• omployor.
1
'
II
ntll
ho
~
lod
ut
llllao
lurnlahed,
$2751
mo.,
oach.
304-675-lltll.
perience MICIIIIry, 1-80~255&amp; VIcinity
ma u you VI 1nv-, 9'
614-949--2217
Lowrey organ, exc cond liking For Sele or Trade: 1173 GMC
0242.
labor Work
the oHerlng.
1,---=.:.;.;..,______ Automatic ......,.t.P5 to $125i $550. It ln(aretttd 304-675-3273 truck. Runt good. 614-441-0871.
.Monday Thru Thursday: lnoldo, $800 WEEKLY POSSIBLE! Work· to $458 wlcly., PT· FT, will troln,
Aportmanta
1or
Ronl: oFioctrootrlcFreadryl,.,.,lrl$~70roto'o,. $12n5i or 675-30M.
1 a
Solo: 1987 Nloun Plck·Up, 414,
·Rain/Shine. Second Road Palt lng At Home! 37 DIHer~nt ~ piece work now available, 1·800- 1,600 Sq. Fl. Commercial Space Remodeled, great location, $260
Strip lloll, HI TntHic Aroa. For monthly $175 dapooll. Muot oldololdo, S75 to 50; otoctrlc
SEV6 AC, $6,400 . 614...48-11136.
·NGHS, N-1&amp;0, Somothlng For pottunhlu. Ruoh $1 And Soli· 343-7449
Mort Information: 614-446-6157. have reference. UtllltiH not In- 1'1~-. $75 to $150; gil ranr::,
Evtryonel 614-388-9655.
Addraa.d Stamped Envelope
Farm Supplies
LAW ENFORCEMENT DEA, U.S.
1 dod 304 •-7131
$- t $150 dl hw ho
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
~'or 675'" o
; a I I '"·
;
Moving Salt: Fumlture, Mini- To: Thomat BNvere, Rtd Box MARSHALL'S Now Hiring. No Rootaurant Equlpmont, Toblo • u ·
Erparlence
NHMII:l:
FOr
Af,:
And
Chllr1,
Ice
Uachlna,
a
Ft.
5936,
·
!I'
l
..
haped
tlnk
counter
top
&amp; Livestock
blinds, Curtains, lamps, Home 373 Mtritna, OH 45750.
with
cabJnets,
$300.
Dllben
1M2 4 WhHI Orlv1, Eaglt For
W1 lk In Cocl er, G11 GrIll • Bailment IPIJ. furn, ell utllltiB Swlther't UMd Appllencll,
Interior, Clothet, T,t, Win· 118 bed long tMn Clrt facllhy It plication Into. C.ll 21 75$o6l 1,
Sala. 614.,.46·1109.
dows, Glassware, Elc. outa 7, 7 ...king 10elal worker. Full tlmt Erl. OH155 8o.m. To 8p.m. 7 Ralrlgorotor, PNp. Tablo, Plua pd, $200mc, •omoroy, 814-11811- com• ol Rand and Parch St.,
ltamt. 614-441-1157 After 5p.m.
42o8
Kanauga. &amp;M-448-1'473.
Milas Below Eurtlul Dam. Mon· poshlon. Benefit package avail· Dap.
15181 GMC Van, tully aU1o, CUI·
61 Fann Equipment
day, Tuesday, Wldneadly.
able. BSW prtferrec[ Sind Load guitar ployor tar _. VENDING ROUTE: Got Rich I:B:':EC,:
tomlztd, low mllngt, grtat
AUT
=IF=:U"L-o-AP~A"'R=T"'M"'ENT=s-AT­
resume
to
Admlnlatr~tor, tabllahod vanaly bond, muat bo Quick? No Wayl But Wo Hava A BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
130 Caoo bockhco. 614-446- shape, $8,000. will negorlatt,
304-662-3473.
Pt. Pleasant
PIMcmt Caro COntar, 110 pro-lonal, 304...55-8130.
Good, Stoady, AHordabto, Busl· ESTATES, 536 Jackoon Pike 52 Sporting Goods
ni!Onnt. Wan't Last. 1-800.284- from $192fmo. Walk to thop &amp;
&amp; VIcinity
~~~raat Drlva, Galllpolla, OH
MDtorcyc les
liLT For A Fully Equipped 1 836
:,:.;_3:;,.-~--:--:-::,...-.,.,.-- movlaa. Call 114-44&amp;-2568. EOH. Solo-11•• uercln a~ttem, Buoh Hog log oplltior tor 3-pl 74
Phyolclano Olllco Lab. GOod 1 ,
hitch $300. Reveralbll Scoop
"v,-rd.,.,-=Ba..::k-a,-::C:-:ra:-::11:-!:S::a:::la. -;lit:;.· I Pomoroy Nu,.lng • Rohab. a...rltt, No Shift Work. Apply Vending Route: Local. Wt Have CompiAIIy Fumllhed Small phooa, 814-992-66n
lor 3-pt hllch $100 ..Spring tooth 1t76
Honda
86011our,
Flower School, Rt. 87, March Cantor lo ~piing Apo In Pereon: Yldical Plaza, 203 The Newell Machines, Making A Hous1, 1250/mo. Plu• Utllhles,
cunlvllor lor 3-pt hHch $75. 3hp wlndahlold, roar luggage ttunk,
plication a For Part-nmt LPN. Jackson Pike, Galllpolla.
Nk:e St•dr Cash Income. 1· And O.DOslt. 614-446.0338. Call
Garden tiller $75. Sit lractor garage .~!pt•. exc cOnd, $500.
6.!.7, 8:30.3:30. Mt. Flowora Rotating Shift Avollabla. Salary
53
Antiques
92 -:Ja
chain• 125. HRvy-cMy canvu :104-88!
Bolon 7p.m.
Par.ntt.
BaNd On Yurt Of Exptrilnct. Pooltlon Opon • Pan Tlma Con- 1104H55-0354.
latpo (2) $20. oach. Log chaine
Buy
or
tell.
Alvsrln1
Antiques,
EHicloncy apt . In Golllpotle.
E1clllont BanoiH Pocklga. COil lroct • W.I.C. HoaHh Proto..(21 $10. oach. 75 H 5/e" dla wlro 1984 three whHitr Honda 200-Pomeroy,
Deooelt 6 Reference rtqulred. 1124 E. Main Stroot, Pomeroy. ropa $20. All vary good cond. 11, $600. good cond, 304-675Clrol Kan~waiUr, RN, DON For tlonal. Qualltlcatlont: UcenMd
Houri:
M.T.W.
10:00
a.m.
lo
1:00
814448 487'9 or 814--NT-4345.
lntoNIIW At 814-lm-. EDE. Oltllclln Or Raaltttrtd NurM
Farm, Rodmond 2011C.
Middleport
p.m ., Sunday 1:00 to 1:00 p.m. Glonrtdga
With A Current LJCtnH To Pl'llc·
Ridge,
304.&amp;75-5504.
Atroblct I Gymnaltlca lnatruc- tlct Nursing In The State Of
1985 thrH whttltr Honda 110,
Fuml1hld 3 Roomt And Bl1h 614·tt2·2526.
&amp; Vicinity
tofll Wanted. Contaet 0 .0 . Mcln- Ohio RoqUl,.d. Application• 31 Homes lor Sale
Upotal,., Cloan, No Pota,
For Sail: 4230 John Deere, 3300 $475. exc cand, 304-875-2457.
Roleronca And DapoaH R•
Hourw, J.D. Plow And Disc. 614· Wa Buy, Soli, Trodo, Uood Har·
Frt, sat, Sun, 33118 New Lima tyro Parte Dlotrlct At et4-446- Will a. Accaptod Through
March 31 1992 At Tho Gotna Roducod To Soli: $48,900, qulnod. 814-448·1519 .
54 Miscellaneous ·
448-&lt;)527:
Rd Rutland OH, t - . tumHuro, 4812, Ell. 256.
laye, Par1• And ACCIItoriH
County HooHh Daponmant, 1B Chaohlro... Ohio. 904-832-6959,
clotha;, appllancee, air cond,
Merchandise
AUSTRALIA WANTS YOU
For
Sala:
e
HP
Walk
Behind
Avallablo.
814-41'1-7055.
Loculi
Stroot,
Oalllpolll,
OH.
904·932·T1170,
614-367.(1648.
Fumlohod
Apanmont,
4 Rooma
bed1, %&amp;: mo111.
E~rcallln1
Pav,
Banellts, Phono: 114-448-6851. Equal ,.,__
Gravely, Vary Good Condition!
B111ndyw Ina 14x'"
- horne, O.poelt
And BolhLHlferenc"
No Pall, Soc':,l'l
1
torm11
gown
by
Flirtation,
112:1
""Y"
19DO
614
407-282-47117,
75 Boats &amp; Motors
lnaldo, Wod. • Thuro., 1 V2ml., Tronoportatlon,
clair, double cor gantga, city 0444. '
·
11·12, ttltchld tllp, worn onct, 814-388-9032.
57'1 . 9a.m.·10p.m. Toll pottunlty Employor.
Hyoall Run oH .SR124, Rutland, Ext.
614-992·304~
t lk
oodod water, cable, graat locaUan,
• 1loph
Hord 128 oprNdor, $300. 5hp 20.
lor Sale
chtap prlc11, 8-4pm, 614·992· Rafundld.
'
ont 5 1 ttl n
' reasonable price, 304-8i5-3J76 Fumiehld
Apartment,
All
gallon
g11 air comprtlllf, $325.
5275
:00-II:OO PM, will or 695-3584 oHar 7:00 All.
U1111tln
Pefd,
Racantty Appolochlon Woodburnor, Bay
AVON I All Arel8 I Shirley avonlngo
Quick-Attach 1964 Chrio Craft ClvoHar 32 H
train, 304-1'75--1591.
Remodeltd, Second Avenue, Window, May Be Ulld As lnttmatlonal
Spoaro, 304-675-1429.
dual motora, good cond, SS,ooo:
loodor
$3200,
114·985-3373
Wa'll Pay You To Typa Names 3 bedroom brick ranch, large Galllpollt, No Pttt. 614-446- Fireplace lnHrt Or Ustd As
Public Sale
8
304-675-6699.
AVON 911 In on tht ground tiDor And AddrnsH From Home! frontroom w/Ureplaca, lluncfry 0523.
Frte Sttndlng, UMd One Win· Jlm'l Farm Equlpmont, SR. 35,
of Awona n.w ••mlng atructUft. $500.00 Per 1000. Call 1-90G-896- room, 1V2 c1r garagt, new
ltr. Bum1, 22 Inch Loga, Bar- Will Golllpolla, 614o44&amp;-9m; 20 Ft. 2 Sailor Soo,., 10 H.P.
&amp; Auction
t.aDD-1192-6356.
·
1666 ~S1.4i Mln118yrt.~ Or dtck, lerge outside wooden Furnished Apanment , 1br, next gain Pr1col 814-3117·7113.
Wide ttlectlon new &amp; uHd farm Motor, $1,200. 614...48-88111, A1.
b[dg , 114 acre lot, by to Utwary, pirklng, central hMI,
Rick Pu.r10n Auction Company,
troc1oro • lmplomanta. Buy, tar 5 P.M.
WrIt • : ASSE • 33w' 161 · Ll n- .-onga
BabytiHer
nMdld:
Chuhlra
Big
4
Bodrocm
Dakota
Droam
appofntmtnt only, 304-675--2287 air, references. 614-446-0338,
full tlmt auctlonHr, complete
aall,
lrade, 8:00.!5:00 wnkdays,
eolnway,
N.
Aurora,
IL
60542.
or
675--7851
attar
5:00
PM.
Bllor.
7p.m.
.
Homo $211985 6 Ut&gt;. BuiH On Sal. 1111
BOATERS
auction M~ice. UeenMd Ohio, ar~"-~t.rancu l'tlqulrld . 814Noon.
Your lot. ~H OUr llodol, 614·
Gulnnt Mtf'curyo Marlnt Strvlce.
3117"'""'·
Watt VIrginia, 304-773-5785.
We'll pay you to type nlmea &amp; 3 Btclroom, 2 Bath Homt, Upper Gr1cloua living . 1 end 2 bld- 886-731t
MatHY Ferguaon 250- Malley Mercury, Mailner, MercruiMr
•
CLEANING
:d000dns-:~;.;:~&amp;6'e'50011·11P%~
$SO's, Loceted Near Centenary, room lpir1mtnta at VIllage
Consignment Auction and Aaa
Farguaon 1085. MI•MY Fer- opoclallot. llorcul)' cottlllod .
4
· ' Groon Elomental)' School, Manor
and
Rlvoralda Bunk btdl, good cond, canor,y
Morkat, Sot. llarch 7, 10:00 All HouHkeapera Uaht Work, Earn • ·
Mobile, We come to you. 614Aportmonto In lllddlapott. From btd whhoUt canopy, m nl guiOn 255. New Holland Rownd 259-6918.
to 4;00 PM at lhl Arbuckla Stora To $550 Wk. All Shlfta, PT·FT. 1· mln/16yro•) or wrHo : PASSE· (Gollla County). 614-446-2906.
Baler.
Complete
lint
of
New Hoi·
511W,
161
S.
Uncolnwoy,
N
$1118.
Colll14·tll2-718lEOH.
800-221·8207.
lrampllne,
axtrcl..
bench
&amp;
on R1. 62, 1 mila S. of Leon, WV.
land and M....y Ferguson EGalllpollt Ftrry area 1 ltvtl acre
wolght bonch, 614-992-31114.
Auction at 1:00 PM con. Clunlng , houHkNpera light Aurora, IL 80542.
qulpmonl. F,.. financing till 76
AU10 Parts &amp;
lot, IICtlonal home. Lots aJCtrat, Middlepar1 Nor1h Third, 1 bed·
slgnmantt taken Frl March 6th, wo~ oom to $550. wk. Allah lito 12
llnplace, •love, fridge, dish- room fuml"'-d lpt, rtf &amp; dep Chino Cablnot • BuHot $75. Safl(t t on Troy.BIH Equlpmant.
Situation
4:00 to 8:00 PM and Sot 9:00 I ill PT... I , 1-800.221·8207.
Breaktut Ml wf4 chairs $50. Fal~oln Tractor Saloo, Inc, us ,....,_..,A,..c_ce.:..S;,.BO:.;_r_;le_;s_ _
wathar, microwave, ctntal air, required, 304.a82·2566.
noon. FIN markll space $7. or
Wanted
Small
tlectric bathroom h..1., Rt.
721
~n lllft 38• Rlployc WV, Bu~· T,.nomlaalon1, u--• &amp;
porehu, $35,000. 304-61'11- 7.
Mlddlopott, Booch St, 2 bod· $10. Choir
$10. wl1ablt. Into call 304-458CIMnlng
$10. Humldlllor $10. phona ' 304-312·118115154'111.
~ON•
1964. Comt HI whal'a happen- HouHkaaperw, Rm to $550Wk., Captain
11 Ohio 1nd w1 ........ , 11
robu n, llortlng at $99; Iron!
St1111111r,
Carpel In town two atory, thna bid· room tumrlshed apt, utllhln 304-675-4464.
all t hiHt, part• tlmt and tull· Cloanar $13.85 Por Room, 3 rooma, luu bailment, 1·112 bath, paid, reftrencn &amp; dtpoalt ,.
Ing In ARBUCKLE.
ng
••• n ·
whMI dnve atoning ot $149.00
time, 1~0().221-9207
Packard Bon, IBII Compatlblo Now Hollond 471, 7ft hayblnd. 614·24S.56n, 814-lm-6293.
Room Minimum. 1-800-694-8066. atlached 1-112 car garage. qulred, 304-882-2566.
366SX, $100 In Now Holland 480, 8 H hoy bind. F...- 14 Inch C~alumn olot
9 Wanted to Buy
CONSTRUCTION ALL TRACES Som·eone To Uve..ln For Room Central hNI and air. Evenlnga Modem 1 Bedroom Apartment, Ccmp,.or,
Softwar11 Alrudy -ln1talled. Now Holland SUpor 717 lorogo
0.
COil
814-446-8107.
-446-03
ALL
SKILLS
9
614
And Baord. 8t4-44e-3418.
harv181•r. Qehl grl...r-mlxer. whtell,.$100. 304
:rm.
Allis Chalmtr'• D-14 mowsr, 614·
$1,100 Firm. Cal1814-446.,.4111.
llajor lntamotionol Projocto1
1112-2014
Sectional
Home
For
Sale:
Above
Otlvor
10
ft
I
r
a
dloc.
All
lluot Rolocalo. HOIIIIng Ana Wise's Guns, 7958 112 Stste Averagt Condition, M y11 ra Newly decorated efficiency, ref
FREE INSTALLATION
79 campers&amp;
good cond. 304-m.4215.
Oon't Junk It! Sell Ut Your Non- Travsllng Exp~~n ... Paid. Excel· Route 7, North, Chnhlrt, Ohio. Old, $18,000, Negotiable. &amp;14· &amp; dtp required , no pat•, 304·
SWIMMING POOLS
Woridng Appllancn, Color TV's, lont Salarln And BM11IItl. COil Ordoro Only. 614·367-0436.
Only
$&amp;2.1h1Mo.
•
For
12llonlho.
381-1491.
675-5162.
Motor liomes
Oliver 3 Bouom Plow, 14 Inch,
"JCR't, Power Toolt, Etc . 114-- Wookdoyo g A.ll. To 7 P.ll. Sun·
11131x4 Pool lncludM ~ FIHtr, High Cloantnca, Tnp Shanll, Er·
TuPpor
Plalna,
Hlory
2·bdrm
Complolly
Fumlohod
mobllo
day N- To 5 P.ll. VICA CORP. 14
Laddoro, Hugo Dock Etc. collont CondHion, $600. 614-318- 1171 Corltlnonlol 14 ft, camping
256·1236.
Business
houtt, utlllly nn, attached home, 1 mila below town, over· (•Buod On Sailing Pr1co 01 2118.
tralllr, 2 owner, - , . till, blf·
301.03U070.
gtrap, 1.0 acre, 11o111r build· aooklng river. No Pett, CA. 614- S6H. $14.45 APR, Total Dalernod
UNCI Mobile Hom.., Call 114·
Training
tery or elec hook-up, new llrat,
En~ Woricl Excellent Pay! la446.()175.
fng $29,600 114·1119·271 .
446.0331.
Prlco: $154.92) Don't Boilovo H? Wanted: Utld farm equlpmtnl, nlca, $1,500. 30H82-3238.
Nowii!Southtatttm
oomblo PIOducta At Horna. Call Retrain
anything you 1nnt Ia aall. Call
Call
BPI
Wanttd To llast Tobacco Toll FIM, 1·800... 67-5566, Ex!. Bullnua College, Sf'l~~ Volley Wanled: houH from Individual: Ona
and two
bedroom
614·256-1308, 256-6040 aHor e 198t Sprinter llfth whool 24 ft
t.aoD-5411-1923
81111. Cell Anytime 614·368· 313.
campor $8,000. nrm wle4 Ford
Plaza. Call Todly, 11
-436711 $20,000 1o 130,000. In Go II Ipolio oponmonll lor ront. 304-675p.m.
Truck $10,500. 304.e75-5401.
9758.
or ciON. Wlll pay cath. 614-446- 2053 or 675-4100.
Roglotoration ~-S.12711B.
Livestock
0761.
Tan TownhouH Apt,; 2 Br, 2 Gonulo Nutrition PIOducto 63
floora 1,160 sq. tHt, 1·112 bath, !alluring Amino Acid Body ~::--=:-:-::=~=-=~
Serv1ces
32 Mobile Homes
CA, ck, dlohwashor &amp; dlopoool. 8uijdlng1 wtlght lou 1nd fal 12 Year Old Ttnn. Wtlk« Mlrt
Playground, 2 poola, atanlng burner rormufaa. Available IX· Boy, Goad Tem~, $1,000.
lor Sale
$309. Eltctrlc not Included. 614"- cluolvoly ot Rlto Aid Pharmacy. 614-441.(1020.
Th11ole way to dill .
3117·7e50.
Home
10180 older model mobile homt,
Chi·Anguo b"!f1 black, appro• 81
Gravely mowtr tor ult, 114-9t2· 750 lb. bom March
axe cond, 3Q4.57'6o2510.
1991. 304Improvements
45
Furnished
1153
7113.aotlt.
T11 And Title Down. P.. ownod
BASEMENT
Rooms
Stereo: Kenwood Receiver Whh
Mobile Homta, UM Your Tex
•
WATERPROORNO
Hay
&amp;
Grain
64
Refund. 50 Homes To Choose.
Uncondhlonal Mllllmt guar~n­
EIHa Home Center, 1.f00..589-- Roomator rant · - k or month. :A.'r,.~~ ~:~ Hay lor Salo $1.15, call tM.
locll rtferancn tumithtd.
Stanlng ot $120/mo. Oallla Hotat. 15" Woolen; $500. COIII14-4415110.
ovonlnga, 614.tld-6585
Frte ntlmatn. Clll collact 1·
et4-4411't580.
2100.
114-231-G488, day or night.
1984 two bedroom mobile Slooplng rocmo wnh cooldng. I:K:.::I:::._ 1/_w_ood
_ _bur _l _ ot_
New tobacco ttlcka for ale: Roge111 BaHmtnl Wlttrpr~
001
homo, 2 bdrm., 614-992-6122
Aloe trallor ar-e. All --upa.
ng
n ng cwo, lharp bo1h ende, 22 cent• each. ling.
:.:.;.:•..:.8 14-112
:..:..;.;:_;'2:;,7.:..Vt~---- 814-2411-8114.
1891 1Cx80 Sunshine Mobile Call oftor 2:00 p.m., 304·7'13- 1;$50
Complalo Moblla Homo Sot.Upo,
Largo plato glaoa: llnlod, 7ft . 1
Home, 3 Bedrooms, 2 Betha, 5651, Mooon WV.
Rtpalr•; Commerlcal, Rnlden~
Take ovtr p~~ymant1, $234
ln. long I&gt;Y 3ft. 11 wldo. $100. Ed
Transportation
till lmpravtmentt. Including:
monthly. 114-146-8325.
46 Space lor Rent
Brown. ef4-38J1.9913.
Plumbing, Eltc:trlcal. Insurance
1991 Manalon double wldt, Bualn- propatty, p,.vlouoly lltno 10 carl! gotd Tiger Eyo
Clal1111 Accoptod. lf4.256·18t1.
21164, ponly burned out, buay phyolclonl oHica, 6ot S. ring, olza 10, $65. 304-615-1297.
Cuttla Homo lmp"!Yamonla:
$10,000. you move ott lot, 3Q4. Third Ava. Middleport, Lg. Prom d,..HII full length, one 71 Autos lor Sale
Yoaro E1parlonca on Oldor '
ers.11n oHor 4:00PM.
oHicn • yard, 614-INIS-4231
13114, t7/18 I&gt;IICh&amp;' one 17116 tm Ford T·Binl$too. 1178 holt Nowor Homoo. Room AddHiono,
3 bedroom, 14170 mobil• homt, Trollor loto Golllpolla Farry, oil oink;. one 1110 wh •· 304-615- ton ~hovy·Uta~~· 11187 Foundollon Work, Rooting,
Ouod S
4 w
11,310. KHchono And Botha. F,.. U.
1
acr1,
extra
room hoolt up, :W4-61S.3216 or 675- nit
304·
ot.
tlmlf•l Rtfw~MM, Na Jab To
wfWOOdbumtr, cov«td porch, 2
RicondMionod waahiN
I
laval d11eka In back, woodshed, 48111.
Cllobrfty, P.S., A.C., P.B., Big Or Sm1111114-441-41225.
Trailer space, Burdltlt lddn, dryora, lOCh t100 lnd up. Wo 1182
groat cond, 304-518-2783.
- a n mokn. Tho
&amp; AUJFM, Auto, 0.0, Ntw Tlr.., Ronovatlono, Add Ono, Ropalr
304-6711-2204.
Eroallant Condftlon, Lew llllao. Painting, QuaiHy Work! coil
114 SchuHz 14xl5, 2BR, 1 112
Dl)'or a , _. I1H48.ZH4.
$1,750. 114-146-8350.
Rogar AI: 114-444-8581.
bath. c~o.ooo. 304-6711-3104 49
For Lease
or e75-3lf. .lllr 5:30.
_;,_....;...:;,.=::.:.;::.._ _ su~. rontol, - · anny 1i83 CUllen Supr1mt, new Roo'o TV Sarvlca, opoclall~ng
o1ot
Frl, Sat SUn, Noon •
Floor Apattmont F., 1:00 P • Sam iloiMrwllll'o, 5 point, 304-815-201\
In lonHh olao .rvtclng moo1
For Solo: 111H Rodman Donvlllo1 Sacond
LNII;
L.R.,
Oni
B.R.,
Baltf,
miiH Eoot of ~77, Ravo..-, 1tl311ozodl 0~ _..t, rune other brondl. Houoa callo, oiiG
TOial Eloctnc, Sai·Up On Rontoa
IOMI IPPIIInce riDIIra. WV
Lot. E1callont CoridHion. Call KHchon WI Stove 6 Ra!Jig. wv. ... SandYVIlle Ollie!, f&gt;Od, $600. 304-m.SI09.
Wotor Fumllhod. No Palo. Cor· 04hor houro-day., 304.z73.58
304.e11·2398 Ohio 11~-448-2454.
..
614467.ot31 Aftor 5 P.ll.
nor Sacond I Pine~ OolllpoUo. Union
madl
odYOrllolng 1814 Dodgo Atloo, 4 - · black,
Davia
Saw·Vac
SaiYica,
$230. Per llonlh; uopoolt r. -loHioo and motchoa.
Aflltfll.t. ca...Ue, 4 cyl, rww ••· 0~ Crllk Rd. Porto, 1upo
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
qulnod. Call 114-448-4241, 114houot,
oM-1192-12,.,
ovonlngo
pllll, pickup, and dlllvory. 814WATER WELLS ORILLIEO:
loll lor 1111~11010 ....,.. 441·2321, Or 114-441-4421.
WATER OAURANTEEO. ,...,... 18114 whMo Fr.o, luggoga rock, 441.02114.
labia. 30U15-•r.a.
Tobacco poundage, llalgo Co., nu .
auto, AC, PW, PL, AV.FM C.l, Will build patla ccwtrt, deckt,
loll In Oolllpollo Forry • tOO% calll14.012-1533 oftar lpm
~PJ ~~~~~~ 13.000. tlrm. tcrtlnld roomt, put up vinyl
....
.a
orf71.1i14.
ownor llnanelng ot $118.84 par
Building
55
aiding or trolr. lklttlng. 814monlh, tny OM of tour IDI•
Merchandise
1981
Buick
S~~nmorJII Rogal, 241-0l52.
SupplieS
ovolilblo, 30W15-272Z.
ahorp, $1,150. 30W1H457.
BlOCk, brick, _., olpoo, win82 Plumbing &amp;
loll In Haven • 1110%
1iU Town C.r, Signature
owMr tlnonclng M $101.41 par 51
·
lint
all,
otc.
Cloudo
Win•
Household
Heating
..., Alo Grandi, OH con eM- SariN, Good Concltion, Sun·
month buyo llllh,.. lolo, o304roct, Loathor Interior. Good
24U12t
175-2722.
GoodS '
T1(11, $1,000. 1'14-441-2190.
I ploM Duncan Phyfo OR ouMa,
1817 ChiVY 00 lpoctrum, 2
I !!'- ool1 'DR tatito, 3 ploM
hordllock, ••• - .... ..~
tHO 1 LA ouMo, CIM Joon Wotfl,
.... 10,000
$2,ouu.
t!ay.t14.112.2133 or nlght.,14304-8-,..1231.
.
MW113
.
Electrical &amp;
1817 ~ Ariel, outo, $2,400, 84
Refrigeration
1817 PIYinouth - · 40

8
IS

miW. If.&gt;

FOR DINNER!

HAYE YOU SEEN M'Y
BASEBALL GLOVE AROUND
ANYW~E~E ?

'' [ KNOW NOT ... AM I THE
KEEPER OF M'{ 8ROTfiER'5
GLOVE?'' 6ENES15 4:9

=

OSmu
lnaldt

I KNOW THE
VERSE ..

f:nll n11r nflir.t! fnr paid In

fllfl•nnr.i!

•

rntt!•f

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156
'

.,

'•

41 Houlll for Rent

1,100

tow - · -

............ N. .......

......,. -lor ...... · - · ~
au.

I

I

I

1

1

1

;

in Ihe office. One cutie purred,
"She got her good looks from
her f~ther . He's a plastic

I0

SUT T RV

L-.L.-.L.-

.L.-.L.-.L._J

CompleJo the chuckle quoted
by f1Hmg in the miu ing words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

~ PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS I

IN THE SE SQUARE S

; ' ODCBSNawaQ
liD • Andy Grtlfl1h
0 Scooby Doo

@) ~~fc:~~~~ER LETTERs

=~
!Ill New ZOllO Stereo. Q

I I III

To 1

1

The JeflerlonUl
(l)lnakll Edlllor.
(l) MacNII~rer
NewaHour

1:;r

c:-

NORTH
.JI 2
'KI097

BRIDGE

(1) Llglllatlvl Up@ll

I£.~.1.AIIa~ C

·

~T~:~Nut
!&gt;terao.
OM
trC
College Bailielball
SyrtiCIJse at Connecticut (L)
!Ill Moneyllne
!Ill Tlte Wallona
7:05 (]) Htppy Deyt·
7:30 (2). 0 Jeopardy!
{!) Nowlt Catn Ba Toi!
(I) Enlllllllnmlnl Tonight
Stereo. Q

t9 8 2

=

W
MlcNeiiiJ..eh..r
NowaHour 1;11

-

. ...,_

9) Whtel of Fortune Q
aJ 11 Family Feud
Ba a Sllr Stereo.
!Ill Crotaflre
7:35 (]) NBA Baekllball Atlanta
Hawks at Philadelphia 76ers
(L)
8:00 (2) D College Baakelbell
Kentucky st Florida (L)
{!) Colaga Baakalbal
DePaul at Marquette (L)
(I) MOVIE: 'Young lndllna
Janel ancllho C~ru Ollila
Jackal' ABC Movie Special
(2:00) Stereo. Q
(l) An Evening of
Champlonahlp Skating 1981
Ludmilla and Oleg
Protopopov; Bronze
Medalists Paul Wylie, Nancy
Kerrigan; Silver Medalists
April Sargent·Thomas, Russ
Whherby; Nicole Bobek .

a

.'

,.

J- 4® 1M:lby NEA _Ino;

i\o-',..VEs

ALLEYOOP

(1:00)
(I) • College Baakelball
West VIrginia at Duquesne

EEKANDMEEK

(Li

m~ MUST 5e INlEUJGENT
LIFE: VI' 11la&lt;E. ...
WI-t&lt;' cnJ'r 1HEY
CCME. rtu!N Hf.RE ?

111 @ D Davll Ruleo
Skinner arranges tor his
favorite teacher take care of
his g_l~lriend . Stereo. C
liD D MOVIE: Perry MUon:
Tltl Cain ollho Mullcal

Mlirdor (2:00) C

ALDER

College lliliatbal West
Vlrglna at Duquane (L)
9 Mlirdor, She Wrott C
Rodney Crowell; A Lila
Night In N111hvtll The
Grammy winner performs his
hlt!l at a Nsshvllle nightclub.
(1:00) Stereo.
!Ill PrlmeNawa C
Big llrolhar Jika Stereo.

a

8

MORTY MEEKLE AND
ITls PROBABL-Y

WI!!L.L., 0\N Ya.J 11-IINK

BROCCOL-I.

OF ANYTHit-«a GROeSE:R'i

ANYWAY~

1:30 (I) A,. You Bolng S.Nod'l
Ill liZ. Btooltlyn Brtcigl
Alan begins to wonder II he
really wants to be a doctor.
1 of 2) Stareo. Q
Maniac MlnaiOn Stereo.

1:
r:l

9:00 (l) Edae Slereo. Q
(I) An ~vtnlng of

C~U~mplonahlp Skating 1981

Ludmilla and Oleg
Protopopov; Bronze
Medalists Paul WYlie, Nancy
Kerrigan; Silver Medsllsls
April SargsnHhomas, Russ
Wilherby; NICOla Bobek.
(1:00)
Ill liZ. Murphy Brown
Miles seeks lhe help ol
several theraplst!l to deal
with his taallngs. Stereo. Q
9 MOVIE: Qulclcuncl: No
Eocapl (2:00) SJereO. Q
8 Nalltvllll Now Stereo.
Colllal Bultelball
Georgia tech at North
Carolina (L)

BARNEY

Sootb

can help you undarallltd what to do 10 VIRGO (Autl. 23-SapL 22) A close
make the relaltonlhlp work. Mall $2 friend mlghl have a tip tor you today
plus 1 long, 111111-acldrJIIMd. llamped lhat coutcl lither make or uve you
envelope to Matchmaker, c/o thla money. The purveyor of lhls inrormatlon
newspaper, P.O. BOK 91428, Cleveland, will have received It rrorn a reliable
BERNICE
OH 44101-3428.
IOUrce.
BEDEOSOL Alllll (lllrcii21·A!irll1t) lnatlncll... LIIIIA
(Sept. 23-0ct. 23) II you're mlk·
ly, you'll k - belt« lhan your peen lng an agreemenl today, scrutinize lhe
what Ia belt 101' you today. Establllh nne print. It will be the little details that
your own agenda lnttead or lelllng olh- turn OUI to be or greateo111gnitlcance In
era talk you Into doing counlerprocluc- the long run .
tlvethlnga.
,
ICORJIIO (OcL ~. 22) This Ia a
TAUIIUI (April...., :111111 mlghl be good day to rid youf'l!lll olallthe small
difficult lor you to keep aiiCNitoclay, ]Obi thlt hive plied up recently. Clear
but you should mlka overy eHorl to dp lhe decks- to mike room tor thlllm·
110. You don't want to,_. IOrMihlng Porlllll projaetlthatlle lhead.
told to you In conlldenelt.
IAGITTAIIIUS (NoW. D-Dec. 21) A 110GII.I ,.., 11...-. 8) A IIOdalln· clal cont~ you'w Mtabllllteel can be
v~t could prow 10 be bOth con- o1 help lo you at this time In another
atructtw
llldanJOyable today, provklecl of your llle. Thll Individual won'1
lll8rCII 1tt2
lt'a reatrlctld 10 a IRIIII group WhOM · 11111 put upon - II you oak tor a favor.
y might beCOme Involved In - a l. purpoM It to do JIQitlOthlltgllong pro- • CAI'IIICOIIN (Dec. 22-.1111. 1t) There Ia
OU lltdM oR in the 'JWI lhMd. AJ.• ducllve 1 -.
IOIMihlng lmporllltllhat lhoutcl be II·
, _ .,;. might be rel.uvety llnall, CAJICII (.ltlne 21~ •1 Sue c 111. In llndld lo ioclay which !~'fly you can
~ivereiUrnll could be eurprt• yourer •aaWOtallllklly!Odly. you hlive ··· llring 10 IIUCCIUful COIKilualon. ll ptr·
. tile Cl!lloily IO foaua In on ..,._.. 1 - IO your ~lo lllalra.
=·(it.~.. i1 all IIIII Think In · objeCIIM. Onot you'ft lltlbillhld a , AQIIAIIIUI (-.. . . . . 1t) There ill
a1 ama11 pro111a lodll' rather than ·. goal, you -'1 be f/11/111; " " at*!.
· critical maner you've bMn reluctant lo
1
...,.
Ulltt gltiM have a way of, LaO (.IIIIJ
II) Your WWI!a may cllltua with the other perticlpantl thlt
101 ualllllf1111gttlllo8nl. ao 1mpao1 o~~~era -.111111 you Nlllllto- .• hanging n.. lllhlllttma. "rytllle a probe -m· • • 11 Will • pound-con- : day. vou•,. notlllclly 10., too much· ;pfttouaday lo put the,_ on 1M lable
...!:"/ry~ng to palell ujl a bfOkan ro- but,- you do epalk, II will pr001e to ancl work nout.
The Aatro.Qrapll Matchmaker be of 'l8iua to thoM 'who llellll .

Eaot
Pass
Dbl.
Pa"

.....,_am

The Woll"ld Almanac ®Crossword Puzzle .
ACROSS
1 In readiness
(2 wda.J
6 Musical
group
11 Hot Mexican
opeclally
13 Rogal chair
14 Drink lo
llCIIt

15 Husky
16 BterHke
drink
17 52, Roman
19 Edge
20 Skin problem
21 Clo" relallve
22 Llvtr lluld
23 Total ~2 wdJ.)
26 Singlehanded
28 Drink slowly
30 Shttp
31 That girl
32 - llolnea
33 W11hlgh
37 Gertrude -

An•wtr lo Pr••loua Puzzle

41 Aatln·
producing

tree

42 Egg - yong
44 Woman's
garment
45- qua non
46 Wriggly ll1h
47 Hit ~II .)
48 Walk
unsteadily
50 Irrational
53 llakeo happy
"4 Sewing
Implement
55 Pa11over
lt811
56 Rice field

DOWN
I Canadian

2
3
4
5
6

t urprltt
7 lloat Ill·
tempered
8 Holand
humid
9 Store fodder
10 Swarmed

capital
Fastened
Loom
Soft hal
Hou11 wing
Cry of

12 Eleclnc
fl•h••
13 Diluted
18 Debtor'• note
24 Ftmllt
theater
attendant :
.
25 Oc:aanfronl •
attraction
27 Filla with
reverence •
28 Favoro
33 Sann• with •
longue
..-r+--t- 1-+-t--1 34 Crow'•
coualn
,....+--+-1--1 35 Newapaper
notice
(2 wda.)
.-+--t- 1--1 36 Bambl'e
mother
•
--~~~--136 -- t~w •
39 Prested
·
40 Linen
43 Having an ol·
tontlve odor
49 Poetic
conlracllan •
51 Short 1i1ep
52 lira. In
lladrld

.

......,......,....-n--m-i
-+-+-4- +--1

c•

(!)Newa
(I) MOVIE: Till WUd Bunch
(R) (2;:!())
Ill (I) • llomelronl A tragic

'IT'+-+--1

shOOting erupts during a
lOCkout ~ plant.
Stereo.
(l)QfNI

-

Culture Clallt performs
akatchea on the
Chicalll)oAmerlcatn

e~nee. s~. Q

(I) Edge Sllreo.

!Ill i121D 41

.

CELEBRITY CIPHER
• D)'.,_.,.._, Pllllnd ~-

RebeCca

Scllllellar's rnurderlr
explains 3aholand
klltd her. B
•Q

s.

Clllllrtry CIIIMr •;;tcow .. Cir'IIIMII hlrl 1'

--~

RL.tllunllr

' WUCFALU

RDbii'IMn

FAYIICIIIF,

0 700 Club With Pat

10:10. Cnlolt IIKI Clllaa
11 :00

Cll

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•-II

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Stereo.

...... - ... - ·r--.-"-"·
YM.I

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CEE

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I A .E E U L •

PREVIOUS SOLLrriON; "Myihlng thai lnlarl'erH with Individual
ultlmlllly will retard group progreaa." H. HOUlton•

a-vo

progr...
4

his

.

"

Norlb

L..---- ------__J

Dlllgnlng w-n
The Sugarblkers sneak Into
a competitor's design home.
(R) Stereo. Q
10:00 (2) • 0 Oulnlum Leap
Sam loses control ol a plane
while flying In lhe Bermuda
Triangle. Stereo. Q

ASTRO-GRAPH

West

There are times when your contract 1 •
Pass
2'
looks doomed to defeat. You mighl 4 '
Pass
Pass
think of a wildly unlikely distribution
that would allow you to get home . Bul
Opening lead: • J
often you will do better to play for a
misde fense. Always remember lhat
the opponents cannot see your cards. ·
To test yourself on today's deal, cov·
er the East-West cards and plan the
play in lour hearts. West leads the club
jack: king, ace, four. East lries to cash lhe second round , bringing down the
the club queen but you rulf. How do honor. But from the bidding, it is pro!&gt;you continue•
able that the spades are splitting :1-4.
Having lost one club trick, you can· With only two spades, East wouldn' t
not afford to lose three spade tricks. have doubled; and with five, probably
AI first glance, this requires finding an he would have overcalled two spades.
opponent with both the ace and the
South spotted a better cha nce. After
king. However, lhal is n't likely. East drawing trumps ending in the dummy,
cannot have both spade honors as he he called for the spade jack. East
has shown up with the A-Q of clubs and made a reflex mistake, playing low.
he passed as dealer. And if West had He assumed South had a guess with a
bolh top spades, surely he would have K-10 holding. Now South had only ,0
led one of ~hem, nol the club JaCk.
spade losers. Later he re-entered du •.)Alternatrvely,tl yo~ can lind an op- my with a hear t and led a spade t~
ponent wtth ace or kmg doubleton m ward his queen.
@ ...,
spades, you can lead the suit through
10 1111., .
him on the first round and then duck

Stereo. 1;1

8:30 111

Vulnerable: Easi·West
Dealer: East

By Pblllip Alder

(I]) Falht!.DowllniJ Myallrl"

\,

.,

.Q16
'AQJ84 3
+AKQ

Give him a chance
to go wrong

!Ill Lany king Llvll

.

JIO 5
•hQ65 2

SOUTH

=

•

•s+

• 7 6 43

tJ 10 9 7

0

WHAT I!:!&gt; "THe:·~
NATJO.IAL. PRODI.JC'i,'

EAST
t A853

WEST
• K 10 9
'6 2

PHILLIP

c

\liD Mai'rlacl...Wllh CIIIICI,.n

H -IZ

tK 8 3

liZ ·~=tnm8nt Tonight

•

1

SCWM.ETS ANSWERS
Uproot - Audit - Unarm - Renter - NOT to EAT
The best sellers in any bookstore are lhe cookbook
and the diet book. You buy a cookbook to tell how to
prepare the food and the diet book to tell how NOT to
EAT it.

1:35 (I) Happy Dtyl
7:00 \ilD 0 WIIHI of Fortune '

CllDCat

Three cuties were giving the

~-r,~r.,6,.:-..;,7,.:.;.1..:...rl--l

~~kl~~w
\fl. Squa,. One T'TStereo.

W

~~

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8:30 (2) D 0 NBC Nowa ~
{!) Silvld bk!M 8ol

rnanct?

0111 lulavlllo lid.

.

1:05 (I) Happy Daya

.:::::0::

LAYIII'I PURNIIIIIII
peo:.,..,iiil•~·· """'" tumlehlnat.

PGA Tour

!Ill Rln TJ!1. Tin, K-8 Cop
stereo. ""

w.-

•'7-loo.&amp;f·

I

0 RAL Y

h:~-.,..,.
5 .....--;;.....:...---l~ 1 once over to the new beauly

!Ill World Today

CA~tl?H

3 papers,$6.00
.

~'~~: : rl :r ::j: :GI~~~
:

One TV Stereo.

l!D:~IIaln~ Q

:::---;-;-"7:..:...:..:,=-

mlloo,

the
be-

8

WED., MARCH 4

~ Squa,.

- ------- -1

.I

::::

low to form four sil!'ple words.

ONawa
{!) Yklao Power

4

rliu·u yom· dultP.r into cnslr,
Sell it tire easy way... by phone,
rw need lo lcat'e your lromea .
l"lace your clastcified ad today!
15 words or less, 3 ·days,

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.f'lae" 16-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middle rt, Ohio

M·ates of workaholics
have to find some fun
"fromDtv Ann Landers: The letter
'
the woman 10 her husband

who worked aU lhe time really got
to me bec•nse rn y husband is also a
workaholic. He regularly works on
Saturdays and often Sundays as well.
He averages 10 to 12 hours a day.
. Our three children are grown
)IIIII doing well. We have purchased
annuities for them and our four
~dchildren . We give generous
g1fts of money for birthdays and
Chrisunas and enjoy the fact that
we can.
We have two cars. a lovely
horne, no debts and approximately
$1 million m assets. Sound good?
Well, we also have no hobbies. We
haven't had a vacatiOn in years
except for a couple of weekends
when we visited our children''and
their families.
I was a professional woman and
worked both inside and outs1de the
horne. We are both in our 70s. When
does the fun start? .. THE BIG Q
DEAR Q: The fun started for
your husband a long time ago .
Workaholics would rather work
than play, which is wh y they do it.
Mates of workaholics must make
their own fun . If you're 1n your 70s
and haven't discovered that, you're ,a
slow Ieamer, honey.
Dear Ann Landers: AIDS is
not about sex or drugs. It is about
knowledge and educauon. Parents
should explain to their children
what nol 10 do in order 10 av01d
contracting this deadly virus, but
riley also must teach them about safe
sex. If parents fail 10 do this, they
are gambling with their children's
lives.
.
Even education is no g\lljptntee.
Magic Johnson is an educail!d and
knowledgeable adul~ but he made a
mistake which, even if it doesn't
kill him, has tragically alt.eted his
life. Nonetheless, it is an absolute
cenainty that children stand a better
chance of avoiding AIDS if they are
infonned.
If you gamble that your children's
ignorance will not kill them and you
lose, you will pay a heavy price.
You'll spend the rest of your life
suffering from guilt.
If you are not capable of teaching
)OUr children, then see that they
are taught by someone who is
knowledgeable and competent.

Wednesday, March 4, 1992

_..,... llEM I'OUCV·Each ol t - ad\lllliood h..,. io required to be readily
avoilable lor ult In toch K~ Start, oxctplll opociflcoMy noted in mil ed. II we
do "'" out ot an l&lt;hlllliood hom, we wll ollet you your choict ol o comporoble
hom, when ovlilable, rollocting the umo uvlngo or 1 roinchec:k which wllonthlt
you to purcheu the odvortiood itom at the adverlloed price wilhin :KI claVI. Only
.,. vtndor coupon will be occeptad per hom purchaled.

COPYRIGHT 1811Z • JHE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES 1;1000 SU~DAY,
MARCH I, THROUCIH SATURDAY, MARCH 7, 1811Z,IN Pomeroy

Redmen lose
to Urbana in
tourney

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANmiES. NONE SOLD TO

DEALERS .

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS

• Sandra Dale Dennis was born in
J{astings, Neb . After a stint at
(llebraslca Wesleyan University and.
iome experience with local stock
tompames, she headed for New
)'ork and the Actors Studio and
10011 began appearing in off-Broad-

WaY·

Her films included ''Come Back
10 the Fiv.e and Dime, Jimmy Dean,
lim my Dean," "The Four Sea·

$paghetti dinner
to be held March 7
A IPI(heui dinner will be held
Slllldly from noon to 6~~
Plnl
Blipcill Cllwdl in '

fPIIIIIOied by the Comcntone

WI·

flY ,Sebool CluL Bat-in Ill' carry-

0111

is avllilable IIICI deliveries can

&amp;e made in the Middleport and
' Pomeroy area.

•

•
'

'

'·

J.s

Low tonight In 40s. Chance or
rain 60 per~ent Friday chance or
rain 80 percent. High In mid-60s.

your children. Do it for
)Ourself. .. R.W., CARPINTERIA,
CALIF.
DEAR CALIF.: If parents are not
v.·ell enough informed 10 talk to their
children about AIDS, they can send
for a free booklet by writing: The
AIDS Prevention Guide, Centers for
·Disease Control, National AIDS
Clearinghouse, P.O. Bo~ 6003,
Rockville, Md. 20849-6003.
Another bit of valuable 'infonnaoon appears in the next letter:
Dear Ann Landers: In a minor
news story, buried in the back of the
paper, I read that the Food and Drug
Administration was forcing condom
manufacturers to change their
labeling. Only latex condoms
provide protection against AIDS and
other sexually uansrnilled diseases.
"Natural" condoms (lambskin, for
example) do not.
It seems that the natural .condoms,
while effective for birth control, are
porous and therefore will· not slOp
the uansmission of diseases like
AIDS.
Ann, please use the immense
power of your column to let everyone know that if the condom isn't
latex, it isn't protection against AIDS
or any other venereal disease . ..
G.C., MARBLEHEAD, MASS.
DEAR MARBLEHEAD: I also
want to let my readers lmow that
the failure rate of condoms is
anywhere between II percent and
13 percent This means even "safe"
sex is sometimes not so safe. Only
total abstinence is 100 percent safe.
Planning a wedding ? Whal's
right? What's wrong? "The Ann
Landers Guide for Brides" will
relieve your anxiety. Send a selfaddressed, long, business-size
envelope and a check or money
order for $3 .65 (lhis includes
pos1age and handling) to: Bridts.
c/o Ann Landers, P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago. Ill. 60611-0562 . {In
CaMda , send $4.45.)

sons" and "The Indian Runner."
Her stage credit~ included "A
Streetcar Named Desire" and "Cat
on a Hot Tin Roof."
Dennis lived for many years
with jazz musician Gerry Mulligan;
they separated in 1976. She was
also romantically linked with actor
Eric Roberts.
Survivors include her mother
and a brother.

Services slated
The Pomeroy area churches will
be gathering for a series of Community Lenten Services beginning
Thursday, March 5, at 7:30 p.m. at
the Pomeroy Church of the
Nazarene with Rev. Ron Shreffler
preaching.
The series continues March 12
at 7:30 p.m. at Trinity Congregational Church with Rev. Laura
Shreffler preaching; March 19 at
7:30 p.m. at Grace Episcopal
Church with Rev. Kris Treintong
preaching; March 26 at 7:30p.m. at
Sacred Heart Catholic Church with
Rev. Roger Grace preaching; April
2 at 7:30p.m. at the Pomeroy United Methodist Church with Rev.
William Hoback preaching; April 9
at 7:30 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church with Rev. Glen McClung
preaching.
The community is invited to
observe the Lenten season with the
area churches in these worship services.

nalional,

VQlma Rue and Joan Corder
will be holle11es for the next meetin..
Refrelllmenla were leiYed at the
close of the meeting by Maida
Mom and Clitice Knl~.

25conll

Thursday, March 5, 1992

Senate approves new
congressional districts
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
compromise plan creating 19 new
congnessional districts in Ohio has
passed the Senate over the objections of some senators and reservations expressed by Gov. George
Voinovich 's adrninistation.
House Speaker Vern Riffe, DWheelersburg, said he expected a
favorable vote today that would
send it Voinovich for his consideration.
Senators approved a joint conference cornmiltee's report
Wednesday night but members of
both parties assailed some of the
changes and said they resented bav·
ing to vote without seeing detailed
descriptions of districts.
In order 10 meet a Friday dead·
line set by Secretary of State Bob
Taft to prepare for the May 5 pri·
mary, senators voted on a computer-generated map that did not
include precise boundaries.
Taft said if the bill is delayed
any funher, the state wiU have to
hold a separate congressional primary later at a cost of $6 million.
"1, for one, don't want to be
responsible for that. We have to get
this process moving," said Senate
President Stanley Aronoff, R-

•••••
I

I
I

partly circles Franklin County and
extends from Fairfield to Union
counties.
Earlier versions placed Miller in
the same district with Rep. Douglas
Applegate, D·Steubenville.
That plan was abandoned by the
Legislature following protests over
the loss of representation for ec~r
nomically troubled southeast Ohio.
Although no Democratic incumbents wound up together in the
same district, the plan absorbs the
districts of two Democrats who
decided notiO seek re-election.
One major compromise
involved the splitting of down10wn
Cleveland between Reps. Louis
Stokes and Mary Rose Oakar, both·
D-Cleveland. Earlier versions gave
the downtown to Ms. Oakar over
strong objections from the backers
of Stokes, Ohio's only black con·
gressman.
,
Reps. John Boehner, R-West
Cheslet', and WiUis Gradison Jr., RCincinnati, wound up with their
districts changed but mostly preserved. They had been paired under
a Senate version that drew criticism
from Greater Cincinnati, one of rhe

fastest growing areas of the state. .
Senate Minority Leader Roben
Boggs, of Jefferson, was among
Democrats opposing the bill. He ·
deplored what he said was a process of political accommodation,
such as rhe splitting of downtown
Cleveland. "Tilis process doesn't
serve the people,' 'lie said.
Sen. Charles Henry, R-Bunon,
said the ~ewly created 11th District
deprives his northeast Ohio area of
meaningful representation. "I
thought we were not going to vote
on any more abortion bills this
year," lie said.
Ohio wiU lose two of its 21 seats
in tile U.S. House next year
because of national population
shifts recorded in rhe 1990 Census.
The reali~n~ent ~as required to
keep the dismcts vinually equal in
population.
The negotiations were made easier by the decisions of Reps. Dennis Ecltan, D-Mentor, and Donald
Pease, D-Oberlin, not to run for reelection. Eckart's district was .
absorbed and Pease's was realigned
so as not to have an incumbent.

c

lb.

$12,952. Those Meigs Countians
who receive D.A. benefits have
Sentiael News Staff
been
certified as disabled by a
Elimination of General Assistance benefits on April I will physician, and are not effected by
"wreak havoc and devastation" on the cuts. However, a semi-annual
the lives of 675 Meigs County G.A. physical examination for D.A.
recipients, according to Meigs cases will be required to deterrn ine
County Depanrnent of Human Ser- continued eli~bility.
vices Director Michael Swisher.
G.A. recipients are sin~le or
Swisher and Gallia/Meigs two-person households Without
Community Action Agency Direc- children who are' ineligible for SSI
tor Sid Edwards discussed the and/or Aid to D"ependent Children
impending cuts with the Meigs benefits. In addition to a $100 cash
County Commissioners at the assistance check, each 1110nth, G.A.
board's regular meeting on clients are enridcid to $111 in food
Wednesday.
stamps and a medical card.
The cuts were ordered as a part
That medical card entitles the
of legislation passed in 199L That bearer to medical care, prescriplegislation restructured the fonner tions and other medical benefits.
G.A. program, dividing it iniO Gen- Fees are paid to local health care
eral Assistance and Disability and prescription drug providers.
Assistance. Under the new pro- The average total medical bill for
gram, G.A. recipients are limited to Meigs County G.A. recipients is
six months of benefits per year.
$80,000.
.
During the month of February,
The new G.A./D.A,. legislation
Meigs County's G.A. rolls totaled went into effect in Qctober, 1991,
833 cases, receiving $84,866 in and those who were receivin$ G.A.
state arid local money, An addition- benefits at that time will be
al 100 D.A. cases received removed from the G.A. rolls on
By BRIAN J. REED

U.S. GRAD! A CHICKEN TYSON/HOLLY FARMS

Split Chicken Breasts
COOK'S WHOLE 114·18·LB. AVG.I
WATER ADDED

Lenten Special!

semi-Boneless
smoked Hams
POund

AVg. Of 13·15

Grapefruit
Per sag

CONDmONER OR

· suave
Shampoo
16-oz.

KROGER

Kroger Chilled

111-Ct.

Gallon

Large Eggs

orange Juice

,,'
.

ASSORTED VARIETIES

CDUiltrv Club

FrDZen YDJUrt
~.,

NONRETURNABLE BOTTLE,
. CAFFEINE FREE DIET P£PSI,
DIET PEPSI

Pepsi Ctila or
Mountain Dew
2-Liter

.

U.S.D.C. INSPECTED NORTH A

Fresh·ocean Perch

•
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mula used to determine program
funding and would provide that
Sentlael News Staff
The Meigs County Commis- information to the board.
The public hearing is required in ,
sioners approved the continuation
each
county served by the J'f.PA
of the Me1gs County Job Training
program.
Pannership Act (JTPA) program
Hilhwar Department
during! theu regular meeting Tuesday.
'
. Meigs County Engineer Philip
JTPA Representatives George Rolierts submitted a request on
Arnott, Dave Gloeclatet, and Torn behalf of Royal Oak Reson for a
Reed presented a proposejl JTPA speed limit sign. That n:quest must
program for two years beginning in be submitted to the Ohio Depart·
July, along with a~ bu~eL meat of Transportation by the comThey also gave a brief overview missioners.
,
Robens also reported that his
of the pro~am and those Meigs
Countians 11 serves, providing job department was now involved in
a:aining and re-trainin~ for displace hand patching, grading and dry
workers, and summer job programs patching on gravel roads in the
for area youth ..
county, and .was cutting brush
A considerable difference wm needed, as well.
·
bptvleen OaUia and Meigs County
"The county's
bridge
proJl'llll funding was questioned inspecdon and invcn • wOrt is
' by Commi$11oner Ricbard E. Joael. now com'*""'- acciJrdlniiD Highfor example, in one of the J1'PA way Office · Manager David
prog!8111S JJI'OI)OSed, Oallia County Spencer.
funding wla $202,072, servinJ .68
Tho commissioner•. diltusaed
with
Roberta and Highway Superc~enll. !II MFJ&amp;s Cou!dy, !13 ~18
are to be served, but propoaed intendent Ted Wamer which
fundini il ,$1!17,681. Slmilar ·clis· brid&amp;es.were in noed of repair or
crepancies exist In Olher prog111111 replacement in the county, with
pellltiag IIICI Giber wert needed on
he would !he ~ Bridge near Mil\tDeport
seek further explanation of rhe for· ~·lielna ·~ly.
By BRIAN J, REED

"IN THE DAIRY Df.PT."

Grade A

April 1.. At that time, they wjU COR·
tinue 10 be eligible for Federal food
stamps, but their cash assistance
and medical card benefits will
cease.
When their silt-month ineligibillr period ends, those recipients
wi be penniued to re-apply for
G.A. benefits for another six month
This will create a six month
'on" period, followed by a six
month "off' period.
Projected monthly savings· due
10 cuts in cash benefits, according
to Swisher, is $67,000, and for
medical benefits, $50,000.
Sid Edwards, Director of Gallia/Meigs Community Action
Agency, said that his agency anticipates a large number of former
G.A. recipients to seek benefits
fromCAA.
However, Edwards said tllat
CAA only offers one-time assistance in specific areas. No cash
assistance IS available through that
agency, althdugh a one-time food
voucher or a $175 HEAP heat
Continued on page 3

Eod.

JTPA program ·approved .
by Meigs County Commission

WIT/I Pfl/CES LIKE Till$. .• WilY SHOP
ANYWIIEI?E ELSE/

lb.

Cincinnati.
Se~. Jeffrey Johnson, D-Cleveland, objected that the map does
not indicate the impact on black
voters. He said he intends to confer
with the Black Elected Democrats
of Ohio 10 see if a lawsuit will be
needed to prevent the dilution of
minority voting strength.
The bill emerged late in the day
after what was described as many
compromises between the Democratic House and Republican Senate.
The vote in the Senate was 24-9,
witll five Democrats and four
Republicans voting against iL
A top aide of Gov. George
Voinovich, Michael Dawson, said
he could not confmn that the governor will sign it. "A lot of
changes were made today," he
said.
The plan generally protects the
districts of all the state's incumbent
members of Congress, with one
major exception.
U.S . Reps. David Hobson, R·
Springfield, and Clarence Miller,
R-Lancaster, were paired in a new,
horseshoe shaped 7th District that

Agenc·ies -discus-s impending-·
General Assistance cutbacks ·

•

\

Kicker:603306

' I

Founders Day
plans discussed
Plans for Founders Day were
discussed at the recent meeting of
the Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, held at
the Episcopal Church in Pomeroy.
Founders Day wiU be held April
30 at lhe Sportsman in Athens.
It was announced that Cindy
91iveri will speak 11 the next rneetmg on March 12 and a lasagna dinner will be held March 26 at 6:30
p.m.
Reports were given on !he Prom
Fashion Show sponsored by Riverbend City Council of Beta Sigma
Phi.
.
Velma Rue reported a city council meeting she aucnded in Texas
and on a Valentine dance were one
gid ft:orn each chapter, nine total,
was crowned Valentine Queen. ·
Applic:alloni were given out for
quili ·and cuy recipes for a new
cookboot being publithed by !nlet'-

2-12-21-26-29-45

PageS

" IHI, Loo Aocoloo
TlmtoSyn4-aad '
Creakln S,.MMcMe.''

Sandy Dennis dies at 54

drip. t ~

Pick 3:603
Pick 4: 1200
Cards:
7-H; 6-C; K-D;
Superlotto:

•

WESTPORT, Conn: (AP)Sandy Dennis, who won an Oscar
as a whimpering wife in "Who's
Arraid of Virginia Woolf" and
played a tourist on an everything·
goes-wrong visit to New York in
"The Out ofTowners," has died at
54.
Doris Eltiolt, a longtime friend,
said she learned of Dennis' death
Monday from the actress' agent,
Bill Treusch, but didn' t know when
she died. Treusch did not immediately return a call late Tuesday.
The actress had lived in Westpon, but it wasn't immediately
known where she died. She had
suffered from ovarian cancer, said
another friend, speaking on condi·
lion of anonymity.
Dennis made her film debut in
1961, playin~ a supporting role in
Elia Kazan s "Splendor in the
orw:" but emerged as a star on
BrOadway. She won Tony Awards
:tn slijicession for ''A Thousand
9owni" and" Any Wednesday."
.... sl!e:foUowed that with the 1966
Academy Award for best suppon·
in~· ac~ress for "Who's Afraid of
Vttgil)ia Woolf?" The searing film
about a bickering couple also
starred Richard Burton, Elizabeth
:raylor and George Segal.
• Dennis played the wife of tile
;.oun~er of the two faculty couples
who tndulge in an all-night drink·
ing spree.
She starred as a teacher in a
tough New York school in "Up the
Down Staircase" in 1967.
• In "The Out of Towners" in
1970, she starred opposite Jack
Lemmon. Every time a disaster
,befeU the couple, she whined, "Oh,
my gawwwwwwd ''
Some critics found her intense,
almost nervous, mannerisms and
her muttering delivery irritating.
Pauline Kael of The New Yorker
pnce complained that Demis "has
inllde an acting style of postnasal

Ohio Lottery

:

•

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/!

According to Roberts, tile
bridge is within the corporation
limits of Middlepon, but remains
the county's responsibility because
it is part of a business route.
Warner also said that the depart·
ment was preparing for an equip·
ment sale, to held later this spring,
and Jones said that the commissioners would have an auwrnobile
and other merchandise to sell at
that time, as wen.
Other business
In other business, commissioners:
- AppJ'l)~ed a lease for office
space accupied by the Meigs County School Board at the Pomeroy
Municipal Building in the amount
of $!100 per month; '
- ApprOpriattid a donalioo to the
Meigs·CoUnty Parks District in the
IDIOWII of$ 1,200; ·
• Appointed Meigs County
Chamber of CornrnC~te lillecutive
Di'rectot/lieonomic Development
Director Paula 'l'hacket as a member of a reaionll adviaory commit·
. tee for OhiO Department of Development Rqiol\11' .
·Present, in addition to Jones,
were Co111mlssioners David
KobleDtz and Mannilla K. Roush,
and Clerk Mary Hobsleller•

schools later this month. Second doses or the
vaccine for measles, mumps and rubella will be
orrered free or charge to all sixth graders. Linda
Vanlnwagen, R.N. will also be assisting with the
immunizations.

PLANNING IMMUNIZATION PROGRAM • Norma Torres, R. N. nursing director
ror the Meigs Couaty Health Department, left,
aad T. C. Ervin, R. N. assislaal director, look
over materialS which they wiD be laking Ia to the

Immunizations for Meigs sixth
graders will begin later this month
Sixth graders of Meigs County
will be given the opportll!Iity for a
second dose measles, rnurops and
rubella (MMR) immunization at no
cost through a Meigs County
Health Deparunent program beginning in late March.
Norma Torres, R. N., nursing
director, said because the rnijority
of measles outbreaks in Ohio over
the past several years have
occurred among adolescents and
young adults, the school immuniza.lion requirements were recently
amended.
Beginning _in August, 1992, all
students en!Cnng lhe seven~ grade
must prov1de documentatiOn of
receipt.of two doses ~f MMR vaccme pnor to the openmg of school.
This, she ·said, will have an
immediale impact on reducing the

risk of measles outbreaks in sec·
ondary schools.
Money for purchasing the vac·
cine are corning from federal
Immunization Grant funds and
through the state budget. Three
nurses of the Meigs County Health
Department will be going iniO the
schools to give the shots.
While the MMR second doses
will be offered at no cost, students
must have parental permission.
Schools will be sending home slips
for approval prior 10 ·ihe ~heduled
immunization dates. Torres said
· that doses from a private 'physician
cost approximately $44 in addition
to lhe office visit call and encouraged parents to take ~dvantage of
the free immunization.
Torres explained that approxi-

mately 95 percent of children are
rendered immune to the three diseases after receipt of the first MMR
dose, but the other five percent
remain susceptible. This five percent of children constirute the over.
whelming majority of cases in out·
breaks, &lt;:S)JCCially of measles.
ln. Oh10 over the past several
years, virtually all outbreaks of ·
measles have occurred in highly
immunized junior and senior high
school and college populations.
Torres said that irnplerneotation of
the two dose MMR requirement
should over time virtually eliminate
school based outbreaks.
The nurse said that there is no
danger in giving a second dose of
MMR vaccine to a person who is
already immune.

Weekly jobless claims fall to 437,000
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
number of Americans filing fJtSt·
lime claims for unemployment be"efits fell to 437,000 in the week
ending Feb. 22, the lint decline in
three weeks, the ;~ovemment said
today.
The Labor Depanment said new
claims for jobless'benelita declined
by 21,000 Croin the 4S8,000 level
in lhe previous week, puUing them
atlheir lowest level since late January•

,

••

However, analysts cautioned
agaiiiSt reading 100 much into the
'.lecline, which they expected. It
occ:urml during a week that included the President's Day holiday,
which left jobless wOikcrs with one
less day lha!l usual to file claims.
The claims number can bounce
around from week tlJ week in any
case and economists look instead to
a moving four-week ·average of
. ~laims to dlseelil lfCI1ds, And, that
has te~~~ainedessentially stuck.
The average' edged down to

.,..

445,2!10 in the latest period, from ~ · ·
448,!100 for the four-week sttetch ·· • ;
ending one week earlier.
··
Despite hints of an economic
upiUill from other sta1istics - raetory orders, home sales, the government's index of leading ceonomic indicators - employment
has mnained in the doldrums.
New benefit applications have
fluctuated within I narrow ranp,
'430,000 to 480,000, for four
months now. ·

II
l

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          <elementText elementTextId="33205">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="33204">
              <text>March 4, 1992</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="205">
      <name>clark</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2331">
      <name>woodgerd</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
