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                  <text>· !!!pt;1~T~• Dallx lt~llnel :z

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Jtamtroy-Miilaltpart, Ohio _

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J'uelday, tMroh 10,1pn

:'Where Angels F~ar to Tread' Woman fights to keep genetic history
onens
March
20
nationwide
away
from
insurance
c.
o
mpanies
:r
II
I
I
°

li · 11 · 0
Y 81 TPrH MWASII

the p

baclkJ
lthOtlhter t d'
1

LUte most ot
AU&lt;K! ated · 81 r er
"Anltl!" deals w
e m il '
,. he. i1,.0 "&gt; 6hh oberfl.M, • Fors1ter ventu m or ullliaht Btrltla~!i in the
(1 879 19 0
1
to th~ !C~een~~~~h~~~~te~g~ ~' ~~~~~~fvcr~~
~~r.n~
them were written earlier In the 4 olsh woman newly rree from 1
century, thO fll'!t molor adaptation consttiCtlnw .n illrl,e. 'nle w.ealthy
· D id , • • il'A ... ~, · t~
d
1 dJ
was av ....an s ra~oage u widow l.l es her ami •Y .an · ·out·
India" In 1984. The film wu over· neys to Italy where she fills in love
ptilduced, but It e•hlblted Lean's with an lmpeiU\IUI youna niili
genlu~ tor sweeping epl~s.
(Oiov~nnt Ouldellll.
James Ivory beRaii 1 trilogy of
When the widow become•
FOt1ter tales with the wonaerfut ensaaed/ het flllllhtr•ln•liw (&amp;lit•
''A Room With a VIew" In 198~. bata Je ford) d apatchta a ton

J.:.'.k

India -,y·· alvi l'lui·',Ja"""'or· a telephone lntetvlew Monday
maliail,InII do t.ma Mlrrfn"ind ttom.lier.ornce In Steul)tnvllle, In
ouldeiiL
.eilt6rn Ohto ''They jutt Uld I
The Jllne Line Jleaturel retwe couldn't h.ave 1nllltln~e. Jlii'IOd,"
I' p·C1 but unltkeJv to lnterUt
She talked Ill iliti lle~. Mike
•
'
'
·
Poa, Mfimlltoi\, wh~ help.d l!rt·
rf~~n·:~!~nCel. Runntna time: Plrt letlllltlon that ~auld proftlblt
lnauttnce COIIII!illlu trorn eonsjd·
etlna atnetlc hltiOrlea when dec d•
ln&amp;_wlletliertoMIIpoliclu
·rhe meaaure Wlied tho HiluM.

board, lild .Jhn. Heth~tinat.on,. "Till.• tllina II jUil. terr.tbly lnald.l·
lpoketman l'ot Arn•rican tlnhed ou1." .
t:lte lit lndllli~P&lt;JUI, lhi COIII~ny
Ma. Mctelll JOt IIIII CIOII 00\'•
that rt)to~ Mt. Mareut,
erage friJtll hit ti'IIIIIOyer, Iouth•
Howe¥erJ Donald. Whjt•, 1 eaitern Ohio I.Aal( 'ervlctt, and
·~klltlllll lOt ihl Meallh diur• IYiftltlliiiV 101 dlliblllty CoYilllt
anaa Auoolation or Amerloa In under a aroul! IIJIIICY thrOUJh 11\1
Wuhlnaton, ..,a hone or the 300 American Trfall..awyert AtiOilla•
comme!lllllhlllth lnlul'inoe cam• uon.
·
panlu In tU oraanlutlon ulea
But her rejection lnaplred hlr to
aenetle IIlli lei oh60.. eUjiM\ettth,
work lor ohan~o.
''I d i '
I
h Ui·~
h
t oe n t lila lit we • •
"No one I ••yin a hero I
cllnditlonJ•aenttlo In nature. '"No wouldn't mind i hither premium,
one 1hould be dirtied coveuae," 1he llld. "llul why lilto u1 out or
he ~~alhlln Mo~ ldvoclcy 0001• 111 tnalltWe?"
dlnatar ror.the
York·baaed
HuntlnJtOn Dtau•• Society of
Ameilaa, uld the Ohio bill could
.., ,
hav.. n lrriPftCI nalki!llllyl
AN AHIIIM, Callt. (AP) 1
"II WOuld b• the Ctnt I me Thlffl"'"'DII onlhe Plralh of tht
llllli6thinJII Plltln place that Cuttibllii'boit tide It Dllntylilld
would anrNII tlli n~tf!• ot.Pt!llll• beo•m• lit lind the tide wil tem•
wl~nellc dl~, hi lild.
~ly lltut down and IYICIIIIIId,
. ,,.re '11'11 lllltuw ietlllll dlteCt plltk omcllllllld.
.
alo[kluell•nemlt, eyaOo tl~ill,
T.he cauae ot lhe Satutdl" n1•ht
Huntlnatonli· diMIUi hemoplillll, •lckneu W&amp;l IIIII undetelml:td
Due henna and myotoniC muiDular today but park lni~Ototi did the
dymophy and other dt au•••· popu{ar awaahbuckllna altriotlon
1
Puturi Iaiii Could lllrteft or hlah Wallate and it WU reopened an
blood P.reuure, dy!loxla, hour latar, 1ald park •POkolman

week It htd bO!TOWid 141.5 miiUbn
holding hearlnJI Cln
from ha emDioyee penalon fund
''II'•~ 1 tot ea1ler to deil with
linea I an. f to underwrite The thl1 typ1 or an ll1ue In advance,
Chrlathlll Selene. Monitor and the ruher Ihan waiting ror this to
Monitor Chinnel.
become uanditrd practice In the
Boatde the peniiOn
the market," Pox llld.
church hu borrowed S20 mhllon
AbOUt 20 llttetnt of the lftiUI•
from h1 own endowment and 55 ance o01111!1ftlil In the United
million from an accounttltablllhed State• check aenetlc hiltorlea, he
In N•w H1mpahlti by lhi wiU of utd.
.
.
Bddy, church oltlotall have
Law1 ptohlblttna tn1urance
aeknowledpd,
companlea trom dolnt to would
mean hlaher prtmlumi acroaa the

many other dl~u 111 hereditary
and hope to corne up wllh aenetlo
•craenlns tells.
M8, Morelli wu rejected with·
out hlvlna lUI. She urn•
m,OOO I year and 11ld she can't
aCCord the Huntln.alon't dlaeAnue
tel~ which OOilllbOUt $5,000, d
ahelan't ready to l'tce what lhillllt
li\1-htthow,
'At thli point ot my life I
couldn't handle It," aha eald.

11

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·y• · rrtd ~· b I t 1

"A I , •
~tu ~ r n to j nJI 1 ·
11111
~.· •11,!}.. oht
1 'J;t~~ lhrldti , 1.d1
~~: wi~ t~
and &amp;rik
Oruatr, who JlfP4ueed, u he did
for ''llrldlihUd." Tllill 11\IIIUII
rto · ...
,;.. Yl · ~"lik
• ru ....1Jl911 w• ewer "" 10
• lentl• woi'ld wttll UftdercilJTirltj
orlldklll.
llappllx, lhUut lhaludU tllree
prevl11u 1 tnte~tetiri ot Pomer.
Helena 8onfial'il Cirter 1 the
wldOw'tldlltllna oom""ton who

s7trvA:

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8·' ROb~ AUBliEY
4.-oalllltcl Prill Writer

COI.UMJliJS Ohlo (AP) - At
fltit, 'l'hetttl M'orelll Juat wAnted
IOII'Iel~alliartee. Now 1he'• '""Ina
to previiltlnaurance gompi~lil
ttom chooatna customers baaed on
what'allllhelr tlmll~ aenel.
'l'he ttaht beaan two yea~ iao
when MI. More. IU, 29, wu re ected
whe.tl lhU""Iled for dltfl IItty
tnaunnce.
. .
The
cbrnpany
blamed
Hunting·
1
ton 1 dlillill1 a ct.pnuatlvO' netve

:~: ~~::rreg~P!Frl~=~~~~iU:~t:~~ :'~:~:;:,:~~~,~~;~~~~J~~§1~~~~~

woman who Is detetmlnllil ttl deny
the younal·-'lan· anv .of the '1111111"
IIU
'
"
'
fotiUne. She pieCipltat68 the
ttsgedy that underscores Ptllltet'a

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By JON MARCUS
. Assodat4!d Press Writer
BOSTON (AP) - The chair·
lllan of the board or the Christian
Selencc Church, beset by contro·
venle! that Included the use of
employee pension funds to prop up
media operaUons, resigned today.
The church also put Its cable
television operation~ up ror sale.
Church leadeu said that, if no
buyer can be round by June IS, the
Monitor Channel will be shut
down
Church board Chainnan Hstvey
W. Wood resigned and was
replaced by VltRinla S. Harris who
had been a board member: '
"This internal reatructutlng 1s a
return to lhe original rotm or
administration eatabli!hed by
(church founder) Mary Baker
Eddy," Harri! said In utaternent.
Annetta L. Douglass manager
or the Christian Science !&gt;;;bUshing

Society ror two yest!, also hu
re~lgncd, thu!llh offlclali said, She
w1U contlnue a~ executive ptilducer
or radio and telovlslon ~rogram·
mlng and as president or Monitor
Television the.
'I' he Monitor Channel, w~lch
went on the air lut May, toat 5250
million to launch and taltet S4 mil·
lion il month to operate. h hal
roughly • million nble sub•
scrlbert, plus 2 milliOn ¥Iewers In
the Boston area who can receive
the broadcaltl on the church·
owned looat ltatlon,
The Chrls~an ScleneeMonltor
newspaper will not be affeclld by
the Qhllnael, bhuroh offlclala llld.
Oftlclala laid last week that the
newspaper laloslni about $13 mil•
lion a year. One•quarter Ia being
paid for trom the church endoW•
ment and the tell out of the aenenll
operating fund.
the church acknowledled laat

11

· n Sct" entt'
ze.
. 1st'1a
. S.ts to reorgant'
- ·.
C.hr'
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Low tonight near IS.
Thursday, snow: High In mid
30s.

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ed" for television, now offers a
• Forster 1tory, "Where Angelsl"ollt
o 'ftead:" It proves once more lhat
ttreasures
can be found In the work!
of mMicr stotytellers.

Pick 3: 858
Pick 4: 2434 .
Cards:
8-H; 7-C; 3-0;
7-S

Page 8

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:~~or:~r:r.~~~.P~~re%~:·,:~~
· ~~o~fo~~~~c~~~~;:~~~~~~~e:~: i:i~::t~u~~m~~ 1~!~~~~~::. :~vA~~ o=v:!:~~~t:~:~ has hid tt rot abollt 14 yean. She
lliility with "Maurloe" In 1987. tlsgeilready hu ~enpllllle. '111en Wllh • VltW." Otavtl alao COUI4.aetlt100.theoonlpanyutd.
coming thl! spring: "Howard's eomea the new! that the bride II •PI*'iC! tn 11 Matltlee," Davt• wu
"There'• no evldenoe t even
lind.' •
uenltAI
fllllft
tn
"A
p
uaae
to
have
Itilt will hive h," lhUiid In
1
1
. h•rles Sturrldge, wh~ spent preanhaenw, hole af"'lt lnf~"·'•••• Uie
C
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T
••
un ...

Ohio Lottery

Southern
tradition
continues

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11
People become ·. 1
on Dl'"ne·..,land ride

Vol. 42, No: 211
Copyrighted 1992

Meigs board adopts goals, objectives for district
piled by the board and Meigs
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Local administration. There was a
Sentinel News Staff
Goals and objectives for the brief discussion about each item.
Meigs Local School District were Carpenter said that emphasis will
adopted by the board of education be on geuing the district out of the
during Tuesday night's meeting at loan fund and that will probably be
done through passage or a levy[
Salisbury Elementary School.
The list includes achieving
As for parental involvement he
financial stability, increasing said that everyone must look at the
parental involvement in education, fact that education has changed
improving the image of schools over the past several years and that
with the public, improvement of parents will need to become more
student test scores and achieve- involved if student perfonnance is
ment, upgrading bus lleet and bus to be improved.
"We want people to look at the
garage, and seeing that teachers
and students have access to current schools and say 'we are working to
do the job', commented Carpenter
tc~ts. materials and supplies.
The list, according to Supt. when the board discussed the
James Carpenter, had been com - Himage" situation.

Al~~:~~:rd~~u:~ r:o':''that O~·:~~o:c\ft.1 out lOll and didn't

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i~'::'~:\:!i 1!4 1~~~~~!.:"~

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 11,1992

nnd anytlilna.' uld Albrteht, not•
Ina pueingen on only two ot the
hua• boaII eomplainid or rumn
"It wu tmrnldtalely ;one."
AIIIUt IlK people Wllllrtllld
Satlll'dlly for couahlq, tl&amp;hlllill In
the cheat, burnln1 eyu1 1kln
blotehea ind nau.... "TwO Mtd thtlr
doctott told them 11111lmU1t to
Mm could have oau11d their
aymptome. No one waa hoapllll·
t&amp;ed overntaht,

As for the need to upgrade the
bus fleet and the bus garage, the
superintendent said that some of
the buses have over 150,000 miles
on them. He also said that the bus
garage location at Rutland is not
satisfactory and that there needs to
be a different facility.
Randy Humphreys, board member, said that the major function of
the board is to have a set of goals
and then work to achieve those
goals. He said that it is important
for the district to move forward and
that the support of the community
is important to do that CII!J&gt;Cnter
defined the goals as "realistic".
Board president Bob Barton talked
about bringing "harmony" to the

district through working· with the
employees, while Board Member
John Hood stressed "listening to
the people."
The resignation of Norman
Wood as a bus driver effective
April I was accepted with regret. A
plaque will be presented to the
long-time driver.
Maternity leave was granted to
Jo Dunn from April I through the
remainder of the school year, and
Teresa Carr was granted a one-half
dock day to attend a funeral. Jef·
frey Baker and Michael Mullen
were added to the substitute teach·
ers' list for 1991 ~92 school tenn:
Approval was given for pay·
ment of $40J9 for cleaning up the

football field after the Big Bend
Youth League football game on
Nov: 12.
The board approved a redistri·
bution of monies in the Carl
Perkins grant fund for vocational
programs at Meigs High School as
recommended by Treasurer Jane
Fry.
A letter was read from Rutland
Village Council regarding the need
for installing a grease trap in the
cafeteria kitchen sink at the Rutland Elementary School because of
potential damage to equipment of
the new sewer system. The superin·
tendent was authorized to secure
estimates so that the work can be
done over the summer months:

Board member Larry Rupe
brought up the matter of the water
rate which the school now pays,
$100 a month for between 25,000
and 30,000 gallons of water, and
the possibility that the village will
be asking that the figure be renegotiated.
Aiso read at the meeting was a
letter from Rutland Village Council
about acquiring the land behind the
Rutland Civic Center. The letter
asked that the area including the
ball fields be deeded to the village
for $1. The board moved into e~cc­
utive session to discuss the matter
but no action was taken when they
returned to open session.

Bush, Clinton celebrate
landslide primary wins
By JOHN KING
AP Political Writer
President Bush and Democrat
Bill Clinton celebrated Super Tues ~
day landslides today and aimed for
knockout blows in the industrial
Midwest. Rivals Patrick Buchanan
and Paul Tsongas vowed to fight
on.
The president soundly defeated
Buchanan in the eight GOP pri·
maries Tuesday, but the conservative challenger insisted "we
haven"t changed our de~tnation
at all.'' He said he would remain in
the race through California's -June
2 primary.
Tsongas, the former Mas sachusetts senator, sought to down·
grade his losses, saying the Super
Tuesday contests were principally
on Clinton's home turf.
"Now that we get into Illinois
and Michigan where there's neutral
territory, I think we're going to do
fine," Tsongas told television

•

PLANS MOVE FORWARD· Neal Vandivi·
er or Dayton, right, the regional director for the
All American Soapbox Derby, was in Meigs
County Monday to confer with Charles Neul·
zllng, local derby director, and other committee

members on plans for the Second Annual Meigs
County Soapbox Derby to be held on July 4 in
Middleport. The two reviewed plans for the new
stock car division.

interviewers today.
Arkansas Gov. Clinton also
appeared on the interview shows
and rejected the argument that he
benefited from Southern pride.
"'I just don't accept that analysis,"" he said: "Sen. Tsongas
fought very heavily in Texas and
we got two~ thirds of the vote there:
It is not a traditional Southern state.
He made a real effon in Tennessee
and we got two-thirds of the vote
there: And, of course, a majority in
Florida where 80 percent of the
people,..~ not born in the state."
But Clinton was not ready to
declare himself the victor. '"This
race has got a long way to go," he
said.
Clinton won eight of II Demo.cratic contests, picking up a huge
cache of delegates and regaining
the front-runner label he hild lost to

a swirl of controversies in New ·
Hampshire:
"I must say it is only tonight
that I fully understand why they
call this Super Tuesday," Clinton
said after big wins in Florida,
Te~as, Tennessee, Mississippi.
Oklahoma, Louisiana and Missouri
- including whopping majorities
amon~ black voters. He also won
HaWBii's Democratic caucuses:
Tsongas carried his home state
or Massachusetts, neighboring
Rhode Island and Delaware.
Bu.sh equated his [eight·.state
sweep to suppon for his legislative
priorities. "We are winners again
tonigh~" be declared after his vic·
tories in Florida, Texas, Louisiana,
Massachusetts, Oklahoma, Missis·
sippi, Tennessee and Rhode Island.
The latest Associated Press del·
Continued on page 3

Fire destroys
Rutland home

The Jerry Black residence on
East Main Street in Rutland was
destroyed by fire late Tuesday.
According to Rutland Fire Chief
Bill Williamson, the fire is believed
also operates five retail outlets in Meigs County. The decision as to to have started at approximately 10
various locations: Gallipolis, Park- where the prison will be located p:m: near a woodbumer in the sin·
gle-story, frame house.
ersburg, W.Va., Charleston, W:Va., will be made in four to six weeks.
Willtamson silid that the strucand a spring and fall operation in
Executive Director Paula Thackture
was a "total loss", although he
Florence, S.C
er discussed several fund raising
said
that a portion cif the contents
All together, Bob's Market and projects for the organization in the
was saved: He estimated the dam·
Greenhouses produces 200,000 upcoming weeks.
age
at $50,000 to $60,000.
flats of bedding plants, 25,000
Thacker said that plans arc
The
Rutland fire department
hanging baskets, 25,000 fall mums being made to print and sell a diswas
assisted
by crews from the
and 10,000 poinsettias each year.
count card, which will offer disdepartments
in
Pomeroy and Mid·
According to Bamitz, his fami- counts and other promotions from
dlcport
A
total
of 24 faremen were
ly's plants have been used at Walt participating merchants and area
on
the
scene,
along
with sheriffs
Disney World in Florida, at Opry- businesses. The card will sell for
who
Williamson
com·
deputies,
land U:SA and on city proj)erty in $5 and discounts and other offers
mended
for
their
assistance
with
Orlando, Fla.
will be in effect for a year. Thacker
Other business
said that she hopes the cards will traffic conuol.
A resident of the house and
Executive Secretary Pamela be~ available for sa)e at the
Todd Snowden, a fireman , were
Newell discussed this week's dinner/dance.
announcement that a prison selec·
The annual golf outing has been transported to Veterans from the
tion committee had been formed to tentatively set for June II, and scene of the fire for treatment and
detennine the location of the medi· plans are being finalized for the release.
The residence was insured ,
urn-security prison bein~ consid· annual dinner/dance on March 21.
Williamson
said.
ered for three counties, mcluding
Continued on page 3

Business profile chamber topic
AltPIItiA110N JIUQtJ~ • Kay Htmllty, on bth-lt or tht
lhady RlYtt Slill~ 1 Prilttlttil iJli4ui t~ ·Piultlti Hil'riiOtt,
rl1bt, at 11 appreelauon eoclal 1111 In ht~ bonor Sunday afttr•
noon •t tb1 Allllrlel11 LQlOllliiU In Mlddltpart.

Paulette Harrison honored
by Shady River Shufflers

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
Scott Barnitz of Bob's Market
and Greenhouses in Mason, WVa:
was the guest speaker at Tuesday· s
general membership meeting of the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce, held at Overbrook Center in
Middlepon.
Barnilz presented a brief history
or the family-owned business,
which was founded in 1969
Founder Bob Barnitz was born and
raised in Meigs County. His family
owpcd and operated a truck fann in
the Letart area for many years.
The current business was sf4rled
as a roadside market and just a few
greenhouses in Mason. Since that
time, it has grown to include 50
greenhouses, located on three acres
of growing space. In addition to the
Mason location, the B itz family
I

A IUI'P!Iae appreciation eoc111
IIOIIOtinl Pltllllll HllrfiOn, dltecl·
lor ot Ilia Shady IUver lhufnen,
Wli atqed Sunday .ntrnoon It tht
Arnetlcan t..aion IIIII In Mlddt•·
port.
Aboui ~0 tnemben ot the
tlftl lMin llid thtlt flmiUil, if6li&amp;
wlih aom• tormet Mint btu aatft•
ered !Q ~~~~~ trtbuli Ill Harrlaon. On
b.ohalf th• lhldV RIYit IM•
:llora, l(ay H•m•J•~ DrU1nled a
I ut IIIICttid " iliiiiOIIUN WI
1111111 with

ckla•

or

&amp;g:;.! !J!!I!Ii"'!

•
tilt ,ha

,..ind~!'J~...

..

...,..... diOoraiOd

hm tht lfOUP en.Jovlld

retreahmenta and 1 video tape or
tribute! from cloglqtun mem•
ben. H~nl.oft lib 1*11 tMChtna
oiOIIIltllllr lite put N~ ,...,
Oilllltplay wtra plotwtl ot per•
rorlltantel, ililll!llil ot Ilia \'111'111111
uatumel worn over the r·~~·~
jlOCifli wtltllll Abollt thllft!~p, ana
memorabUia cOit;clid lirl trlt~~.
NlllonaiiY. known otaulftl
tnallildi.Oi' Jett Dtllli madt 1 ••r·
prl1e Yllltln 1111 1fternao11 •nd
COlldllltad ' tWOoltOiit dlnH worll•
ahop. He itOppetl tbtrl while
tti!Outllcl ht. hom• in IL Alblll•

l't&amp;ll Jlllllllt Pllfll, Tlnn.

celebration held

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from the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court in Pomeroy showing
Berkhimer pleaded guilty in 1976
to "contributing to the unruliness
of a miilor."
John
David
Caudill,
Berkhimer's attorney, said the
Ohio conviction ·has "absolutely
nothing" to do with the current
charges against his client. Caudill
said Berlthimer, of Paintsville,
maintains his innocence.
A Kentucky State Police report
said Betthimer had sexual contact
with the girl on an ll!ldi9closed dale
last November and egain on Jan. 9.
Floyd County Attorney Jim
Hammond ~d he found probable
cause to seek the more severe
charges egainst Berkhimer. Caudill
said hif client is alleged to have
touched the girl.
Berkhimer,was released Tuesday after posting 10 percent of a
$20,000 bond. He is scheduled for
Continu.ed on page 3
I

I'

I

RedistrictJng plan rejected; election delayed until June 2

Ex-EHS eacher arrested
on sexuat bose charge
WHEELWRIGIIT, Ky. (AP)A high school principal accused of
sexually molesting a female student
told a PQlneroy, Ohio, judge in
1976 he had learned his lesson after
being convicted of encouraging a
17-year-old girl to run away from
home:
' "I am fully aware of the fact
that what I did was wrong and I
accept full responsibility for my
a~tions," wrote Lewis Berkhimq,
a teaeher lit EaStera High Sc~ool in
Reedsville, Ohio, when he was
~used. "The incident is a pan of
my past, and I fully intend tQ keep
it that way."
.
Betldluner, 45, now principal of
Wbeelwright High School, was te·
arrested Tuesday on charges he had
sexual contact with a I 5-year-old
girl at his school. Two misde·
meanor counts filed Friday were
upp1ded Tuesday to first-degree
sexual llbwe, a felony.
Records were released Tuesday

HOME DESTROYED • Firemen from Rutland, Middleport .• .
and Pomeroy were on tbe scene or a structure fire at the Jerry ·:
Black residence on East Main ~tree! in Rutland yesterday. The ::
home was destroyed. Accordmg to Rutland Fire Chief Bill
Williamson, the blaze is believed to have started near a woodburn.
er. (Sentinel Photo by David Harris)
·

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)Republicans say they likely will
appeal a coun decision that invali·
dated Ohio's newly created leg isla·
tive districts and ordered adelay in
the primary election from May 5 to
June 2.
A panel of tluee federal judges
rejected 2-1 Tuesday a plan created
by majority Republicans on the
state Apportionment Board.
The coun also appointed a spe·
cia! master to draw up a new {'lan
that complies with federal gu1de·
lines:
The board had submitted revi·
sions in the Ohio House and Senate
districts, which the court had·
. re~ted earlier, but the judges said
it still ·violates the federal Voting
Right.! Act.
N.~ Victor Goodman of Columbus, counsel for Gov, George
Voinovich and the otber GOP
boanl members, said he wiU probe.
bly recommend an appeal to the
U.S. Supreme Court.
"We haven't yetlinalyzed it,"[

Quilter and Ferguson claimed,
Goodman said.
among
other things, that the GOP
While the decision orders a
plan
violated
guidelines set by the
delay in the primary election for
federal
and
state
constitutions and
the Ohio House and Senate to June
2, the coun reserved the right to the Voting Rights Act
Aronoff, along with Voinovich
pick yet Qnother date based on
and Secretary of State Bob Taft, are
future circumstances.
Senate President Stanley the Republicans. They had made
Aronoff, R-Cincinnali said the revisions in the plan Feb. 20, after
decision eases ~ure on current the federal coun rejected an earlier
deliberations m the House on a version Jan. 31.
The panel ruled that the revi·
Senate-approved bill creating 19
sions
did not satisfy the coun's ear. new congressional districts in Ohio.
tier
objections.
The House tried on Tuesday, but
The coun said it illegally diluted
bogged down in a partisan controversy, tO pass the congressiOnal biU '!Jlinority voting strength by "pack·
in advance of Friday deadline to ing'' big city districts with minority
avoid a delay in the Mar sprimary. . voters in a manner that lessened
Aronoff said in view o the federal their influence in adjoining districts.
decision, the Hou.se need nOt rush.
Taft's office said it was not cleal"
The federal decision came fuJn
a panel of U.S. District Coun in whether the decision would affect
the presidential primary, because of
Akron in a case filed by Rep. BtU'·
ney Quilter, D·toledo, and state the possibility of an appeal.
TIJe panel consists of Judges
Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson as
minority members of the Appor· Nathaniel Jones and John W. Peck
of the 6th Circuit U.S. Court of
tionment Board.
Appeals, and Judge David Dow.d of

a

the U.S. District Court, Northem
Ohio District. Dowd dissented in
the.opinion.
Jones and Peck are Democrats.
Do~d , a Republican, said the
maJonty members of the Appor.
tionmcnt Board met the Jan. 3i
order to make changes to comply
with the Voti~n~ Rights Act. The
maJOllty dec1S1on described the
changes made by Yoinovich and
the others as meager.
The court appointell La wn:nce
A. K~e Jr. !IS ~e special master.
Kane IS the Cu.:mnati lawyer who
serv~s as special counsel for the
Ohio attorney generil in legal matters remaining from the 1985 collapse of the CinciMati-based Home
State Savings Bank.
Kane. was authoriz:Cd by the
court to "employ an expert or
experts versed in the subject area
. and such other e~pen and Ia)' assistance as may be appropriate." · ,
The coun said Kane's costs will
be assessed against the state.
1

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

ROBERT L. WINGE'IT
Publisber
·. PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
General Manager

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
: words. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with name,
address and tolepbone number. No unsigned letton will be published. Letten
·' should be in good tasl&lt;, addressing issues, not penonalities.

Excerpts from other
Ohio newspapers
By The Assodated Press .
Following are excerpts of recent editorials m Ohto newspapers:
(Elyria) Chronicle-Telegram, M~rch 5 . .
Ne ws that York International seemed to have tncked Elyna mto granting an unnecessary $2 miUion tax abatement rightly sparked a ftresto~ .
We are relieved it was all a mtsunderstandmg. It occurred when York s
local manager gave a speech ~fore some 135 Rotary members and was
understood to say that his firm s deCISI()n to move .certam operations to
Elyria did not depend on tax abatement and had, m fact, already been
made when the abatement was being discussed. But th~ York man was
talking about a warehouse in Medina, not abo~t the major plant m Kentucky that figured in the Elyna abatement negouauon.
,
.
· But to be relieved that Elyna was not snookered on thiS particular tax
:abatement is relative relief.
.
. ,
,
.
. , .
,
Abatements to "attraCt new mdustry and retain extsung mdustry
!lfe a joke. Abatemen~;S. coupled ~ith Ohio's total exemption of busmcss
and industry from paymg school distnct mcome taxes, have helped de vas.late Ohio's ability to pay for public education. Abatements do not bnng m
.new industry or retain existing industry. They do provtdc a way for bust·ness and industry to whipsaw one commumty agamst another, one state
:against another.
.
· Abatements are not an Ohio or an Elyria problem, but a nauonal one.
tJ.S. Sen. Howard Mctzenbaum is often on the wrong track but he'~ on
the right track here. At Mctzenbaum's urging, a Senate subcommittee
voted unanimously to order the General Accountmg Office to study the
i:ffect abatements have on school districts. He wants a Senate amendment
to end federal school aid to any state that allows the abatement of school

s

w~

·
The Cincinnati Post, March
. Presidents seldom apologize, so lack of practice may explain George
Bush's blurred regrets for breaking his "no new ~es:· pledge.
· Bush can't be blamed if the poll numbers gJVe hun a fnght. For the
first time since 1983, the Democrats inspire more confidence than Republicans when it comes to managing the economy. ,
.
· But Bush won't win back former supporters until he r~grets not JUS! the
iflak" he has taken for raising taxes but also the economiC damage he has
ilonc.
·
He mus1 of course
· Bush needs to back up his apology wt'th acuons:
keep his promise to veto the tax mcreases congresstonal Democrats are
fixing to send him.
.
· And he should make some personnel changes. Rtchard Darman and
Nicholas Brady respectively budget director and secretary of the treasury.
were architeCts ~d defenders of ihe misguided 1990 budget agreement.
• If Bush really regrets it, he should show tbem the door.
Akron Beacon Journal, March 2
· No one wants to be ihoughtpf as anti-children, least of all politicians.
Hardly a day goes by that someone is not asking that government do thts
or :do that because "children are our future." And rare IS the pohuctan
who fails to promise action. .
.
.
However, national and state surveys show that when It comes to Children •s concerns, the reality is, it,' s o~ly the t!Jought that counts: Candt&lt;!lites promise to ac~ if the pubbc w11l prom1se to pay. There, progress
usuaUy stalls. .
. .
b th N · a1
.. ,Bul a nationwtde survey commtsstoned last Novem~r y e atton
ASsociation of Children's Hospitals and Related Insutuuons n;t~es stgmfieant fmdings ihat should alter the way we approach children s tssues thts
election season. Here's pan of the backdror the survey pamts: .
·; ·In the 1980s. virtually all indicators~ children's :"'cll:bemg showed
;ltinificant national decline~. More children arc hvmg 10 hunger and
~)lerty; 20 percent of all chtl~en have no health msurance; the number
qt children not immumzed has mcreased ... .
.
, • 'The figures tell of deepening worries about ihc prospects of children
fix! a parallel lack of confidence lhat government ts wtUmg or ready to

,.

~~~What people seem to be asking is that politicians not simply declare

~ether they are for education reform or for health reform ... but precisely
~~

they will do to guarantee that children are immunized, or that they
6pve adequate education .....
•. This is ihc season for spec1fics.
The (Canton) Repository, Feb. 28
:·
• ;.It's time for President Bush to level with the American people on U.S.
f~reign policy as it relates to Is~!. The a~i!"s~tion has.reversed long!(ilnding U.S. policy by supporung Arab pos1uons m the Mtddle East.
'· 'I f the l!lf&amp;e amount of aid this nation sends to Israel is the problem, the
~idcnt should say so. If the State Department's Arab desk has persuadea·the president that the future of the Middle East belongs to Arab hardliners
and dictators rather than ihe region's democratic state, let him say
,
so:In such honesty, there is a chance for ~sraeli supporters to challenge

.;tiortal policy on rational grounds. Such IS not the ~ when the P~l­

&amp; 1 and Secretary of State James Baker coofuse the tssue by declaring
sO~ for Israel while ~o~g the agend,a of Arab. states that have
npk no bones about their obJective of desbOymg Israel.

•

Today in history

•
•
:
By Tbe AJsaclated Press
· •Today is Wednesday, MarciPll, the 71st day of 1992. There are 295
• left in the
.
~oday's Hi~t in Hisuxy:
: Fifty yWI ago, on March II, 1942, as Japanese fOJtes continued to
idvance in the PacifiC during World War II, Gen. Douglas MacArtbur left
cim~dor in the Pltilippines, bound file Ausiralia. In a message bdore
d4Jerling, MlcArthur uttered his famous vow: "I shallle!um."
•On this dale:
1810, Emperor Napoleon of France was married by proxy to Archdtl:lless Marie J.,ouUe of Ausuia.
.
•In ' 1861,
the Confedcntle convention in Montpne:y, Ala.,lldopied a
.

:1n

.
sJiens.-

COIISDIIIIIOII.

' In 1865, duriDJ die Civil War, UDion fon:ea UDder Gen. William T.
occ~ Fayeaeville. N.C.
.
:In 1888, the flmoal "Biimld of '88" ltniCk the nonbelllenl UDitecl
In the days rbat followed, IOIIIe 400 people died ... raul!.of the

~ ~rUmer Praidatt llld U.S. CbltlJuslice William Howard Taft

. . ~ ill AtllnJIOII Nlllioilll Cemeray.

·

11141, Presidellt PnDtlin p, Roolevelt aiped into law the LendU. Bll, piO'Iidia&amp; .,.. aw'ielto COUDtriel fijlltiDc the Axis.
.
54, the U.S. Anfl'/ c'-aecltllll Wi~eonsin Se.n. Joseph R.
y 1114 hi1 ~IDee '1 chief copnlel, Roy Colm, had uJCd
~~~~

·

=

Thursday, March 12
Accu-Weather~ forecast for

10

oiJtlin favCIIed
INIIIIIellt fOr PYt. 0. David Scllinc, a former
,
I

Cauulllllt to die •D:n••.r rc.

daytime conditiol)S and high temperatures

IND.

•
•

Robert], Wagman

Forget about the dream

~andidates

According to the exit polls, the liberal Democrat ·
acuVJsts believed as they desperateAmerican people believe this is the
And yet, many of us seem to be I~ sought to persuade Dw1ght D.
election year from heU1 They don 't spendin~ ~ lot of time moanin.g and E)SCIIhower to run 11;5 a Democrat m
like the state of the natiOn and lltey complamm~ about the qualtty of 1948. \Yoodrow Wilson was electdon'tlike the character and pro- the compeution. Where 1s Mario, ed to h1s ftrst term only becaus_e
s of the candidates. Even larg- Bill, Sam , Lloyd or Dick? - a Teddy Roo;oeve!t spilt the Repu~Ii­
~umbers don't record an exit question you've heard from this can vote W,lth h1s Bull Moo~ thlfd
oil opinion because they aren't
party candidacy, Abraham Lmcoln
~othering 10 vote. All seem to
won ~ewer popular ~otes than the
yearn for something or someone
combmed total of llts opponents,
·rulefmabl beuer.
.
comer, toci. Why does the altema- and fewer, too, than the totally for1 To put1t bluntly, that attitude is
tive to Bush have to be Buchanan? gettable predecessor, James
self-indulgent. self-defeating and Aren't Tsongas and Clinton Daltia1 ~ucllanan, had won four years eardownright dumb. Tbe candidates men, each lacking strengtfis the her.
, .
who hive come forward in both other offers? Where is that ideal
From ~ of ihis, II ts not nece~'es may not include any tower- candidate, the complete embodi· sary ,to beheye that one of 199~ s
paru
n
iants but few are midgets. ment of the people's aspirations?
candida17S will tum out to be a Lm1
c~J ared' to past years, there is
In the same place the ideal can- coin, Wilson, Roosevelt or even a
nothfng uniquely mediocre about didate has always been, hovering in Truman: Bu.t it d~s suggest that
this year's contenderS- Included are the mists of myth and faulty memo- easy drsmrssal 1s the wrong
war heroes, Phi Beta Kappas, ry. On those rare occasions when approach to tbe current f~eld .
Rhodes Scholars, former gover· the people professed overwhelming R~ther th~n t.ummg away w1th a
nora, senators and congressmen, pleasure wiih the quality of their sntff of disdain, a ~tier approach
businessmen and even political choice, as in the eleclton of an would be to examme .carefully
journalists.
.
'
Ulysses S. Grant or Calvin what each of the ~and1dates has
Moat have been successful in Coolidge, for instance, they have act~ly done and IS actually sugtheir pall ventures and repeated been proved overwhelmingly ~esllJii about what he mtends to do
• ~fll:laries of the voters' trust ill wrong. In most of tltose instances if elected or·re-etec:ted.
their home IWCS. One, the incum- in which the eventual winner
In ~sidcnt Bush's case, the
bent peaident, won a landslide vic- turned out to a great president, he record IS ~re. for every~. to see.
tOry In his last outing. Even oo his did so despite earlier verdicts by · The que~on. tf you don tlike ~
worst day, each of lltese men has his contemporaries that he was less record, 11 whether he can or will
somethina interesting to say about than an exalted human being.
chanp and whether he .deserves a
the current .ec:Onomic and political
Franklin Roosevelt was a man . second chance even 1f he can .
scene. Between them, their posi· of little substance, an amiable dilct- ~lnce !K' has~ around for a long
lions cover virtually the entire ide- tante, sniffed that·great political u~. II sJlou!dn I be hard to make
ological range of current main- anal):Sl, Walter Uppmann. Harry
an Flnformedtlt J~dgmenL the
sltellll politics. Yau can have any- · Truman was nothing but 1 political
or e o ers, we, . voters,
thing from a nativist ri,llt-wing' hack a machine politician from
have to work harder to JOt the
America Firster to a umon-label Miss~uri, or so many New Deal
answers. But democracy 1s not a

\,

0

••

Showers T-slonns Rain Flurries

Snow

Ice

Sunny

Pt. Cloudy

Henry's southbound! 985 Chevrolet
struck Blake's vehicle broadside.
.. After the coltision, a third
vehicle, driven by Cecil E. Newell,
45, of Leon, apjlroached the scene.
Newell attempted to avoid the accident, but lost coritrol of his 1978
Dodge d11e to the road conditions
and ~truck Henry's vehicle.
At presstime, Henry and a passenger in Blake's vehicle, Ronald
R. Stark, 27, of ProctorviUe, OH,
were being treated at Pleasant Valley Hospital, a hospital spokesman
said.
Blake's and Henry's vehicles
were listed as total losses. Newell's
vehicle received $300 damage.

Friday through Sunday:
Fair on Friday. Chance of snow
Saturday and chance of rain or
snow Sunday. Highs in mid-20s to
mid-30s Friday, 30s to the low 40s
Saturday and mid-30s to mid-40s
Sunday. Morning lows 15-25.

Sylvia B. Blake, 60, 1670 Lincoln Heights, Pomeroy, died Tuesday evening, March 10, 1992 at her
residence following an extended
iUncss.
.
Born July 26, 1931 in Turkey
Creek, W.Va., she was a daughter
of the late Andy and Lottie Johnson
Bird. She was a homemaker and
she attended the Westside Church
of Christ
She is survived by her husband,
John E. Blake, Pomeroy; a daughter, Tamara ·wetzel, New Albany,
two sons and daughters-in-law,
John J. and Tammy Blake, Rockport, Ind., David A. and Tammy
Blake, Butler, Ind.; a son, Charles
E. Blake, Pomeroy; two sisters,
Roberta Abbott and Zelma Law son, both of Hurricane, W.Va.; two
brothers, Elmer and Virland Bird,
both of Turkey Creek, W.Va.; six
grandchildren; an uncle, Clarence
HaU Hurricane; and several nieces
nephews, brothers-in-law and sisters-in-law.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded in death by a brother,
Haymond Bird, and two uncles,
Calvin Hall and Munsie Bums.
Services will be Saturday at I
p.m. at Allen Funeral Home in
Hurricane, W.Va., with Brother
George Erwin officiating. Burial
will be in Valley View Memorial
Gardens in Hurricane.
Friends may call on Thursday
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. at Fisher
Funeral Home in Middleport, and
on Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 at
Allen FunCllli Home in Hurricane.

Jenevee Chesher

rose garden and no one· ever said
that informed citizenship would be
easy. Even so, behind all the glib
television punditry and llorserace
coverage, tltcre is a wealth of information being churned out about all
of the candidates.
Whatever you may think is
important, the material is available.
Just what is BiU Clinton's record as
governor of Arkansas? Is Paul
T.songas more than a Jollnny one- .
note? How unfair is the "Governor '
Moonbeam" tag hung on Jerry ·
Brown, g'iven his clear-headed '
demands for major political ;
reform? Are there consistent '
themes available in Pat Buchanan's :
treasure house of old columns and
commentaries to establish his ·:
intentions?
:
'!)~ere _is one requirement in this :
presJdenUal year that has nothing to •
do with the Candidates and every- :
thing to do with the voters. We ;
have to decide what we believe is •
important, wllat we believe is nee- ;
essary and wJtat we actually wan\- ·
For many of us, that requires com- j
ing to Jrips with contradictory ,
strains m our own thinking. Deep •
down inside, many of us continue :
to believe we ghould be able to ;
have out cake and eat it too. Sort- ·
ing out the contradictions and :
thinking tluoup the dilectiom we :
would like Wlllhillgton to embrace 1
are the ·cssential fD'It slqls toward ,

Jenevee Blackford Chesher, 77,
Middleport, died Tuesday morning,
March I 0. 1992 at her residence
foUowing an extended illness.
She was born June 27, 1914 in
Chauncey, a daughter of ihe late
Tom and Mary Blackford. She was
a homemaker, a member of the
Heath United Methodist Church,
the United Methodist Women and
the Afternoon Circle. She was past
matron and a member of Evangeline Chapter No. 172, Order of the
Eastern Star, Middleport.
She is survived by a son· and
daughter-in-law, David and Jl!"ice
Chesher, St. Charles, Mo.; a SISter,
Leota Schaeffer, Middleport; and
two grandchildren, Shane and
Nicole Chesher, both of St.
Charles, Mo.

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.11iii. ·±w'l .'b
~·

~1~1~
..,m=!lh=bla=l•;,;*ll ;:tnbe ·Biven

!

•II

Besides her parents she was preceded in death by her husband,
Harry in 1981, four brothers and
three sisters.
Services wiU be Thursday at II
a.m. at Fisher Funeral Home in
Middleport with Rev. Frank Smith
officiating. Burial wiU be in Greenlawn Cemetery in Nelsonville.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today 2 to 4 p.m. and 7-9
p.m. Eastern Star services will be
today at 6:30p.m.

Joe Neal
Joe Neal, 81, of Veterans
Memorial Extended Care Unit,
Pomeroy, formerly of 508 Oak Dr.,
Gallipolis, died Tuesday, March
10, 1992.
He was born in Harrison Township, son of the late Thomas and
Effie Boster Neal.
He was a member of Grace
United Methodist Church.
He was preceded in death by his
wife, Doris L. Love Neal on Feb.
27, 1989.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced later by Waugh-HalleyWood Fune.ral Home.

Donald Williams
Donald E. Williams, Sr., 49, of
520 Pennsylvania Ave., Marietta,
died at Marietta Memorial Hospital
Tuesday, March 10, 1992.
Born on March 26, I 942 in
Rinard Mills, Ohio, he was the son
of Mrs. Mary Pugh Williams of
Chester and the late David Luther
Williams. His family moved to
Chester when he was a child. He
anended Eastern High School and
had been employed by Rich-Loaf
Bakery and IaUer Pennington Bakery. More recently he was manager
and head maintenance man at Putnam Place apartments.
On July 20, 1963, he married
Shirley Ingles who survives along
with two sons, Donald Williams,
Jr .,. Marietta and Christopher
Wiltiams, Charleston, W. Va., two
daughters, Nicole and Amy
Williams, both at home; and a
grandson, Kelby Ryan Williams,
Marietta.·
.
Also surviving are four brothers,
Denzel Williams and Dewayne
Williams, both of Chester; David
Williams, Mason, W, Va .; and
Earl WiUiams, Marietta; and a sister, Delores Dobbins, Marietta.
Funeral services will be held at
11 am. Friday at the McClureSchafer Funeral Home in Marietta
with the Rev. James Satterfield
officiating. Graveside services will
be held at 2:30p.m. in the·Qdd Fellows Cemelery at Mason, W. Va.
Friends may call at the funeral
home at 6 p.m. Wednesday until
time Of seiVIceS.
.
.

NEW OWNERSmP - Jim Snodgrass of Racine hll,'lassumed
ownership of Snodgrass Upholstery, formerly owned by his motlter, Ruth. Tbe business is located on Third Street in Racine, and is
open Monday tbrougb Friday from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mrs. Snodgrass opened tbe business 3S years ago.

Ex-EHS..

Ten fined in
Pomeroy court
Seven were fined on failure to
comply with a court order to pay
old fines in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Bruce Reed Monday night.
Fined $80 each on the charge
were Anthony W. McGrath, Rut, land; Kenny Lundsford, Pomeroy;
James W. Barton, Pomeroy;
Jonathan L. Barton, Pomeroy; Gerald Arnold, Pomeroy; Harley Barton, Pomeroy, and Leroy C. Barton, Pomeroy.
Others fined in the court were
Todd Evans, Middleport, $63 and
costs, squealing tires; Doy Nitz,
Sr .. Pomeroy, disorderly conduct,
$63 and costs and assault, $213
and costs; and Randy Lee, Middleport, $73 costs included, speeding.
Forfeiting bonds in the court
were Larry Davidson, Pomeroy,
$80, disorderly conduct; Randy B.
Ebcrsbach, Racine, $80, no operator's license, and $392, DUI; John
Hunnell, Pomeroy, $80, operating
under suspension; Henry Kniffin,
Sod, W. Va .. $80, expired regiStration; Laura Fry, Pomeroy, $80,
weaving course; James Polcyn,
Middleport, $68, speeding, and
$80, driving under suspension ;
Shirley Day, Hockingport, $42,
valid registration not displayed ;
Gerald Ulbrich, Guysville, $80,
failure to control; Elizabeth
Roberts, Syracuse, $60, assured
clear distance; Jason Anderson,
Mason, W. Va., $60, stop sign violation; Richard Smith, Long Bottom, $60, failure to yield right of
way, and $67, no insurance.

Hospital news

w-.............,............................
w-....................................... . .
j . ., ,......... , ................. ...

Berkhimer was originally sentenced to six months in jail but was
later allowed to enroU in a vocational-educational release program.
He was placed in a Cincinnati
halfway house so he could attend
classes at the University of Cincinnati .
The sentence was reduced by
about two weeks following
Berkhimer's Oct 30, 1976, written
plea to then-juvenile Judge Manning Webster. In it, Berkhimer said
he would like to spend the Thanksgiving holidays with his family.
Floyd County School Superintendent Ron Hager said Berkhimer
will be suspended with pay pending the outcome of lite case.
Meanwhile, Hammond said
state police are investigating allegations that the girl is being
harassed at schooL He said the
girl's parents had removed her
from school.
Berkhimer was a teacher at
Johnson Central High School
before being named principal at
Wheelwright last year.

Bush...
Continued from page 1
egate count gave Bush 554 to 51
for Buchanan and one for David
Duke. In the Democmtic contest,
Clinton had 707 .25; Tsongas
347.25, and former California Gov.
Edmund G. Brown Jr. 81.25. A
total of 288.75 Democratic delegates were 11ncommitted and handful of others were scanered among
former candidates.
The fight in both parties now
shifts to St. Patrick's Day clashes
in•lllinois and Michigan, where
Tsongas must win to-keep ·clinton
from sprinting away from the
Democratic pack.
"You're not goin~ to pander
your way into the Whtte House as
Ion$ as I'm around" was Tsongas'
def1ant election-night message to
Clinton. ·"What the Democralic
Party needs and what America
needs is more courageous lions and
less pander bears in the zoo.''

.------------,------·~
SPECIAL ~SPECIAL - SPECIAL

Veterans Memor.ial
TUESDAY ADMISSIONS Robert E. Lee, Shade; and Mary
Gilkey, Middleport.
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Virginia Phalin, Roger Athey, and
Helen Williams.

VICTORIA'S PROM
&amp; BRIDAL BOUTIQUE
.1' SPECIAL HOURS THRU MAY

Monday -·Thursday, 12 noon-8 pm
Friday &amp;: Saturd~y, 10 am-8 pm
Sunday, 1·5 pm

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges, March 10 - Edith
Byer, Melissa Esiep, Mary Froendt,
Mrs. Robert Lehman and daughter,
· Delorce McNerlin, Denise Miller,
Joyce Osborne, Juanita Peyton,
Melva Sheets, Delmer' Skidmore,
and Plul Spies
.,

(AND BY APPOINTMENTI

.)

SIGN -:o UP FOR DRAWING

Around the nation
A powerful storm moved into :
the Northeast today, dumping snow ·
on Indiana, Ohio and western :
Pennsylvania.
:
A blast of frigid air in the Soullt ·
produced snow early today i.n :
Atlanta and KnoxviUe, Tenn. Rain :
feU litis morning from Washington ,•
to Maine.
:

Business ... continued from page

''•

I

;
According to dance committee to participate.
membership
drive
is
expected
'
A
chairman Kenneth Utt, the band
to
get
underway
in
the
near
future,
:
"Grandstand" will perform at the
:
dinner/dance, to be held at Royal as well, 'fll.acker said.
The general mem~rship voted :
Oak Resort. Tickets arc available
from any board member or the in favor of the appotntments of •
Paul Reed and Jeff Thornton to the :
chamber office.
Thacker reported ihat 13 groups chamber's board of directorS. Reed •
have enrolled to date in ihe cham- will represent Pomeroy; replacing :
ber's health insurance program, his brother, Bruce Reed, and :
and stated that three of those Thornton will represent the Racif!e_
groups joined the chamber in order community, replacing BiD Nease. !:
•

EMS units answer nine calls
Nine calls for assistance were answered on Tuesday by units of
Meigs County Medical Services.
At 11:24 a.m., Middleport unit went to Holzer Clinic. Brandy
Call was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 5:41 p.m., Middleport unit went to Overbrook Center. Mary
Gilkey was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital. At 5:56 p.m.,
Middleport unit was sent to Overbrook Center for Stanley Roush,
who was taken to Pleasant VaUey Hospital.
At 8:56p.m., Rutland units went to State Route 124 for a structure fire at the Jerry Black residence. At 9:01 p.m., Pomeroy unit
was sent to the ftre scene, and at 9:09 p.m., Middleport unit assisted. Chris Ellis was taken to Veterans by Rutland squad from the ftre
scene.
At 10:33 p.m., Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine 2 for Mark
French. French was taken to Veterans. Atl0:42 p.m., Pomeroy unit
went to Lincoln Heights for Sylvia Blake, who was dead on arrival.
At 10:47 p.m., Rutland squad went to the Jerry Black residence and
took Todd Snowden, a fireman, to Veterans. -

_
•
·· ·
·

--Meigs announce"!-ents-.:
Class to begin
Eric Chambers will begin
instruction of Tai Chi Ch 'uan on
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Middleport Arts Council chambers.
Spaghetti dinner
Salem Center Elementary will
have a spaghetti dinner Saturday
from 5-7 p.m. .
Reunion planning·meeting

There will be a meeting of all
!952 Pomeroy High School alumni
at Pleaser's Restaurant on T~'
at 7:30p.m. to finalize plans for the·
40th reunion.
·
BaU sign-up
·
The Syracuse Youth League:
wiU have baU sign-up tonight froin
5-7 p.m. at Syracuse Elementary. ·A '
birth certificate is necessary if this
is the ftrSt sign-up. Registration
$12.
. ..

JUST AIIIVEDI

HORSESHOES
and
HORSESHOE

'is

SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

. . .

NAILS

PICKENS
HARDWARE
MASON. WY.

FARMERS BANK CUSTOMERS:i
'

Your Bank for life ...

CORDIALLY INVITES YOU
TO JOIN THEIR
TRAVEL CLUB
FOR INFORMATION CAll JOANNE WILLIAMS
AT 992·2136 FOR DETAILS

.

'•

•,

:

'.

APRIL 3D-PHANTOM THE REAL STORY .

At laCormedta Dinner Theatre lund! Buffet

'•

MAY 7, 8, 9- TULIP TIME IN H®JND, MICHIGAN_ .'
.

.... ·.' .
.. . . ... .

~1led In

w-.
. . . . . .. .. ..................
. . . . :. . ........ ..
w-............

Continuedfrompagel

an April I pretrial hearing in Floyd
District Court.
The exact nature of the ·Ohio
charge was unclear.
Carl Hysell, juvenile probation
officer for Meigs County, said lhe
charge was filed by the girl's father
after she ran away from home.
Records show Berkhimer was
scheduled for trial June 22, 1976,
but pleaded guilty,

'

.....~ ~ tr~ tarrier 1tf¥~ct is
anillble. '

Mall811ltocrlpllo110
IIIII.. GaiUa ColmQ&gt;
13 Wllka......................................... l21 .84
21
Ut.ts
62
184.'18
O.laWo OaDia CownQ&gt;
11
~.40
:i18Weekl•... ,..
t45.GO
a
$88.40

-,

Anthony L. Phillips Jr., 22, Columbus, was arrested Monday
evening on traffic charges of driving under the influence and no
operator's license.
.
.
According to a report from the Metgs County Shenfrs Department, Phillips was also charged with having a sawed-off shotgun, . .
carrying a concealed weapon and having a dangerous ordnance
while under disability. The report stated Phillips has been convicted : '
of aggravated trafficking with a drug of abuse. These weapon ·
charges are fourth degree fel_onies according to the report.
.
Phillips appeared in Metgs County Court and entered a guilty
plea to lhe charges of driving under the influence and no operator's
license. He was given 10 days in jail, a $450 fme and costs and one
year suspension of license. On the no operator's license charge, he
was given 10 days in jail, to be served concurrent wtth oilier charge,
and a $75 fine and costs.
A preliminary hearing on the felony charges was set for Wednes- .
day, March 18 at 2 p.m. Bond was set at $5,000 on each charge ,of .
carrying concealed weapons, dangerous ordnance and weapon wlltle ·
under disability, and according to the report, ten percent on each ...
charge was authorized.

--Area deaths-Sylvia Blake

p.m. Sunrise on Thursday wi1J be at
6:47a.m.

Man a"ested on numerous charges

-----Weather----South-Central Obio
Tonight, variable cloudiness
with a low around 15. Thursday,
snow likely with a high 35-40.
Chance of snow is 60 percent.
Extended forecast:

Some flutries will linger in the
northeast tonight. Otherwise skies
will be partly cloudy . It will be
cold tonight with lows 10-15.
Tbe best chance of snow Thursday is over extreme southern Ohio,
but accumulations were expected to
be light
Tbe record high temperature for
this date at the Columbus weather
station was 76 degrees in 1990. The
record low was 8 in 1948.
Sunset tonight will be at 6:34

·-

..---Local briefs--

Cloudy

C1992 Accu-Weather, Inc,

Via Associar&amp;d Pmss GtaphicsNet

McAllister. In a matter of minutes,
a clear night can su&lt;ldenly be
brought down to zero visibility
with snow. Then too, when lhe
cargo loaders open the hold to kick
out the pallets, temperatures in the
planes drop to as low as minus 90
degrees within less than a minute.
"But we have always boon suecessful in making the drops,"
McA!tistcr says, "and 'I know our
efforts are appreciated by the men
and women on station."
The biggest project now going
on in Antarctica is a several-yearlong attempt to construct a permanent "blue ice" landing strip on a
5,000-foot-thick ice sheet near
McMurdo. This would allow large
wheeled transports to land up to
nine monihs out of the year.
"Right now we spend about
600-llight hours just bringing peapie out at the end of the summer at
the mte of about 30 people per skiequipped C-130," explains Erick
Chiang, NSF's Manager of Polar
Operation s. ' 'If we could use
wheeled C-141s we could bring
people out 125 at a time, and we
could free up perhaps 400 flying
hours annually to use in direct scicntific support. That will make a
major difference."
(C) 1992
NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE ASSN.

ChoosinR a orealdential candidate.

0

•I Columbus I 30° I

W.VA .

Antarctica is lab for ceo-research
learn how fish can live in waters
cold enough to freeze all bodily
fluids.
Although all bases are manned
year-round, 95 ~ent of the scicntific research ts done during the
Antarctic summer, which runs from
October to Febru!lfy. The McMurdo population, which falls to about
200 in the winter, swells to more
than 1.500 in the summer. Only 22
people spend the winter at the pole
Itself. The summer population can
exceed 200.
Getting these people in and ou~
and resupplying aU the bases, is the
job of the ships and planes of U.S.
Naval Support Force Antarctica,
headed by Cmdr. Jim McAllister.
His job is a seven-day-a-week, 18hour-a-day grind for six months and then six months are spent
preparing to do it over again.
With one exception. In June the middle of the pitch -black
Antarctic winter- using the full
moon, one danger-fraught 18-hour
resupply flight is made both to
McMurdo and the Pole, bringing in
fresh food, m:iit and needed equipment Tile planes cannot land, so
protected pallets are dropped at
ve7.low attitude.
'One of the biggest dangers is
the speed with which the weather
can change down there," explains

winds were causing drifting on
northern highways.
Temperatures dipped into the
teens and wind-chill factors were
below zero.

A Huntington man
was
pronounced dead at Pleasant Valley
Hospital following a three vehicle
accident Wednesday morning on
S.R. 2 in Rollinstown, accOrding to
a spokesman for lite Mason County
Sheriff's Deparunent Three others
were injured in ihe accident.
David A. Blake, of 654 31st
Stree~ Huntington, died shortly after the 7:44 a.m. accident According to ihe sheriff's spokesman,
Blake was ttaveling north on S.R. 2
and attempted to round a curve. As
a result of icy roadways, another
driver, Donald E. Henry, 45, of
Sciotoville, OH, said Blake's 1984
Oldsmobile was sideways in the
road while rounding the curve.

IMansfield I 30° I•

Jack Anderson

CHRISTCHURCH,
New built on ice-free volcanic rock on
Zealand (NEA)- The South Pole, Ross Island, about1,200 kilometers
with its cold, wind and six months from of the Pole, and accessible six
of constant darkness annually, months a year by ship.
Palmer Station on the coast of
remains one of the most inhospitablc place on Earth. But for sci- Anvers Island off the Antarctic
enlists, some of whom now remain Peninsula, used mainly for ecologithere year-round, Antarctica has cal and biological study.
become one of the planet's most
Amunsden-Scou, the geodesic
important laboratories.
Where the north polar region is
actually ice-covered ocean, Antarctica is a solid continent This pro- dome-covered base at the geovi des a wealth of scientific in for- graphic pole itself.
mation not obtainable in ihe north
According to Dr. Chuck Paul,
polar regions. The continent's alti- head of the NSF's Antarctic effort,
tude, up to 10,000 feet in places, " The more environmental and ecoprovides space scientists with a logical problems affect the Earth,
high-altitude solid platform, and the more there is for us to do and to
the Earth's best view of the heav- learn in Antarctica."
ens.
The work currently underway in
The U.S. Antarctic Program the Antarctic includes astronomy
run by the National Science Faun- and astrophysics, biology and meddation and funded by Congress for ical research, geology and other
about $160 miUion a year - is the earth sciences, ocean and weather
most ambitious scientific program studies and glaciology.
on that continent
Among the most Important curIt is headquartered in a series of rent investigations arc those on
ultramodern buildings adjoining ozone-depletion, ultraviolet radiaChristchurch's international air- lion in the ·atmosphere, studies of
port. This southern New Zealand the ocean food chain and its
city is the closest international changes, ice sheet response to globgateway to Antarctica.
al wanming, ice core sampling at
The U.S. program maintains various deep depths to determine
three major bases in Antarctica:
the makeup of Earth's atmosphere
The central base at McMurdo, in the distant past, and attempts to

By The Associated Press
Most of Ohio received 1-3 inches of snow overnight, but half a
foot was measured in the northeastern corner of the state. Gusting

Man killed in accident

Humana llealllt management orga- vacation in Cancun, Mexico. In lite
nization, sponsored a golf and ten- case of the trip, the employee had
nis tournament for the doctors who submitted a suggestion that hospital
use those hospitals. The day-long · officials said would save them
evrnt at an exclusive San Antonio $42,000.
Spokesmen at the hospitals
club cost $7 ,592.58, including tennis lessons, liquor, gift certificates defended their expenses as the normal cost of doing business in the
and sport towels for the players.
The inspector general also private sector, and are ?DIY a l'ra&lt;:·
looked at Allied Management Ser- tion of the cos\ of runnmg a hosptvices of Scranton, Pa., which runs tal. "Employees are the strength of
rehabilitation hospitals and a nurs- our organization," an Allied
ing home. The company spent spokesman said, addin~ that only
more than $7,000 on a mountain $40,000 of the company s $62 milhospitals, sources say the Health reJreat for its top 19 executives last lion budget last year went to these
and Human Services Deparunent' s year. Allied says it was a goal- morale programs.
The idea that a business could
ne•t step will be to require that all planning session. Last year. Allied
hospitals complete a self-as~ess­ also spent $7,097.74 on sweat- operate without perks for its
ment of their overhead expenses. shirts. In 1990, the company employees is "puritanical," the ·
·
The inspector general will then bought 1,460 turkeys for its Humana spokesman told us.
But the patients who suffer ·
check up on a random sample.
employees, costing $15,423.~3. .
Our reporter Allison Hawes
The audit at lhe Albert Emstem sticker shock when they get !'Jeir
obtained documents detailing the Medical Center in Philadelphia bills, may not agree. And ne1tl)er
findings from the four health-care turned up a $3,143.30 charge for · may the federal govemmen~ wh1cll
organizations that have already moving one doctor's 7,000 pounds is picking up an increasing share .of .
been investigated.
of books and furniture, $300 for a those bills through Medtcare. Wtth
Three hospitals in the San Anto- fashion show on Secretary's Day, hospitals agitating for higher Medinio area, all managed by the and $880 to send an employee on care reimbursements because thetr
own overhead costs are going up
and with momentum building for a
nationalized health-care system
that would have no room for friUs,
Congress will want to see more
audits before buying the hospitals' ·
argument that they are doing all
they can to contain costs.
GAFFE INSURANCE - Vice
President Dan Quayle has been
practicing his speaking skills with a
private microphone. In his office in
the Old Executive Office Building,
Quayle has a vice presidential
podium complete with a microphone and TelePrompTer to feed
him speeches. A group of college
siudents touring Quayle's office
were told by their guide that the
vice president is used to informal
speaking on the stump in his home
state of Indiana, and is not very
comfortable in front of large audiences. Thus, the private setup for
practicing. This should be good
news to GOP campaign strategists
who live in fear that Quayle will
revert to his anything-goes stumpspeaking style while campaigning
for President Bush this year.
Copyright, 1992, United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
committee will learn that, in one
case, a hospital spent more than
$15,000 to buy turkeys for its
employees at Thanksgiving.
That is just one expense from
one of only four health-care organi·
zations that the inspector general
looked at. Investigators had questions about at least a third of the
expenses they reviewed. Since the
investigation just looked at a few

Hodding Carter Ill

••

Winter returns to Ohio; more snow forecast

OHIO Weather

Hospitals probed on employee and doctor perks
WASHINGTON - While
patients are digging d~eper i~to
their pockets to pay theJT hospital
biDs, some of their doctors are getting Club Med ~reaunent thanks to
hospital employee perks.
Hospitals across the coun~ry
keep their employees happy wtth
Mexican vacations, fashton shows
and golf touman_Jents. At. the 5a!"e
time, those hospttals are mcreas!ng
their patient fees and are lobbymg
for higher Medicare reimbursement
rates from the taxpayers.
The hospitals say rewarding
employees with special perks IS a
sound way to do business. But our
sources say that the expenses worried the Deparunent of Health and
Human Services enough to send its
inspector 11eneral to investigate the
non-medical overhead costs of
some health-care organizations.
The results of that investigation
will be unveiled March 18 in a
hearing before the House Energy
and Commerce Oversight and
Investigations Subcommittee. The

The Dally Sentinel-Peg~
•
•••••
.·~
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 11,1992

..· .. .

Jeff 'IV_ I_.....

~- ~-

-. ..

To Be Used Towards Gown Purchase

GUYS-

.• .

. ..·.

liS 'IV. 2Jid .

.

· PomeN)', Oltto

..,

614-992-U79
.

. ....

' ..

. .,

GIRLS'100.00 • •so.oo •'25.00 Certificates

.

2 FREE Tuxedo RenWs
DRAWING· MARCH 31,1992 ·
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
NEEDNOTBEPRESENTTOWIN ·
407 Main Street 675-2186 Point Pleuant '

~Your Bank /Ytli/f:···

Fo
.. ...t.. .&amp;.

...L. ...

.

U:U:UVW

~~~~;?,~~~.~,ani
1'0 llo.I•02fi

f~u,•my, Ott. ot57G9

··:;

----·:\1

flO Oox :tt9
Tuppml Plllin1, 0-1."5713

1Ji---·~~~·.M~~~0~~~~-2~~~130;.___illllln·"li'""•'•·J~~IO.l

.. "•'

! . I .I

�'
Page 4 The Dally Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sports

-

Wednesday, March 11, 1992

K5torttho...,.

AIMIIliiiO ITOII'IIUCY·Each of th010 odvortiud itemolo required to be rudily ovlillblo for ulo in each
we do run ""t of.on odvertiood it~, w~ wUI offer V"" your cholc:o ofl comparoble itam, when ovolllble, r ·
ontldt V"" to purchoulhe advart1ood nom at lhe odvertiaed price with;,, 30 davo. Only one vendor coupon

except 11 IIJOCKically noted In 11111 ad. If
..W.III oro roincheck which wll
be occepted par 1tom pu~chaled.

COPYRIGHT 1892 • THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND PRICES : GOOD: SUNDAY, .
MARCH 8, THROUGH SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1892, IN Pomeroy

-Area sports br,iefs

Wednesday, March 11,1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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

.

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS.

Visit our GARDEN C ·NTER
for
colorful
.
FLOWE:RS and quality WN
•

:Boat registration renewals available
: The Ohio Depanment of Natural Resources announced I992
·boat regisb'ation renewals are now avrulable and can be P.urchased
:from regisb'ation agents located throughout the state. Reg1sb'aoons
:purchased in 1992 are valid until March 1,19?5.
· ODNR's Division of Watercraft 1s remm~g ~rs an~ agents
:that the boat regisb'ation must be completed m fullmcluding Utle
:number, boat length and propulsion information: Boat o_wners
should cbeck their registraUon carefully. Inaccurate mformanon on
·registration forms should be corrected at the nearest watercraft
agent's office.
. The local boat registration agents are the park manager at Forked
·Run State Park near Reedsville and William C. Quickel at Davis
:Insurance, located at 114 Court S1. in Pomeroy.

·southern game tickets on sale
Tickets for the district finals between Trimble and Southern will
.be on sale at Southern High School this week. Southern will get a
·share of the sales sold at the school. Southern will play Trimble Sat·
urday at1:30 p.m. at the Convo in Athens.

Eastern sports banquet Thursday

we

G/atliV
AccePt Your
Federar Food
StlmPS

LDWPfites.
A

'••
••

8.97
sconn••••••
Bag

Covers up to 5000 sq. ft.
Greens grass quickly without surge growth, burning.
10,000 Sq. Ft..........16.97

The Eastern High School winter s]JOI1S banquet will take place
Thursday, March 12 at 6:30p.m. at Eastern High School.
Auendants are instructed to bring a meat, vegetable or dessert
dish. Beverages and table service will be provided.

14.97Bag
scom...,

Youth league signup
to start Saturday
Sign up for the Harrisonville Youth League will be Saturday and
Sunday from 2-4 p.m. at Harrisonville Elementary's elementary baU
fields. Players and parents are to bring a copy of the child's birth
certificate plus a $10 regisb'ation fee.

Boosters to sponsor
Eastern alumni cage games

99
1
Chicken Breast,. f
OSCAR MAYEI/ REGULAr/ DR rlED rlii'ID

The sign-up date for the 1992 baseball and softball season in
Rutland will be Saturday, March 14 from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
. The cost is $10 per child. Children not playing last season will
need a copy of their birth certificates.

Meat Bologna
...... 1·1b.
$2.39

'

I

WVMS to open Sunday

DOi6"
If
Bananas........._......... J.b,

No. 92·01·El-EFC, to
review the luet procurement practices and
policies of Ohio Power
Company. the operation
of its Electric Fuel Com·
ponem, and 'related mat·
ters. This ·hearing is
scheduled to begin at the

Commlulon ofllces at
10:00 a.m. on March 16,
1892.
All inlet llted ,.,.. wll
be given· 8!1 oppOrtunity
to be liM. lUther lnfor.
maUoil may be obtllliid
by coniiCting the Com·mlulon at .180 Eut,
Broad Strlet. Coltlnbus, .

lllio 43286-0573.

F~

97
269
.......,.......

(pOly)

MUIIAYMIWII
Features 5-HP Tecumseh
premier-engine, 21" reardischarge cut deck, 2.5bushel-capacity vacuum
catcher, single-lever height
adjusters, deluxe V-forrn
folding handle.

,~ . Pr·~e

!

I

SAVE AT LEAST . .. 64C

"IN THE DELI·PASTRY SHOPPE"

11008 ComplieS "'ith A.N.S.I. sifuy standanb
Scyle and mfr. ll'llly ¥VY

Fresh Baked

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

24·0Z.V!

PRitl

IIECULA/1/IETAIL ... 52.99 PKC. TillS WEEK ONLY . .. 51 .50

Steak sauce . . .
NONI/ETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET PEPSI.
DIET PfPSI,

Pepsi cola or
Mountain Dew
2·Uter

PEPSI

1 Pri~e

h

11.S·OZ.
SAVE ATLEAST 51 .14

€

rl"' \. ~

Kroger

~::s . . . . . . . .48-ct.% PRitl·

/

"IN THE DAirlY

CA~ ICROCE~
..

Frenclt omon DIP . 16-oz.
'REGULAR RETAIL .. . 51.29

,

dry soil, add 1 cup
remoisten already
to your 2Q.ga\.
of children's sham~ays place a golf
hose..:nd sprayer.hose..:od sprayer to
ball to the jar ~~ed up! LOOk for all my
keeP thlnSS s arden uoe• series
'
tipS In th~le for 1.7) each at Kenan·

Prl·ce
~1
~

bOOks, 3

1991

•Jerry ·Baker• .

l1.::·~

"IN THE DAIRY CASE" INDIVIDUALLY WI?APPED
AMERICAN CHEESE SLICES

·r~:~ ~~. ~. . . .

.
. ..

To keeP soU fro

SAVE AT LEAST ... 64C

Alpine Lace

·~. ·

.

k·

~·:a••..,.."'''
. m drying out, orto

SAVE AT lEAS! ... 8SC

WL-S's Frederick named top coach

The Public Utilities Com·
mission of Ohio has set
lor public hearing Case

JACUOIII WHD1 .,,.OW
4-cu.·ft. capacity, large pneumatic tire, hardwood handles.
Your choice seamless steel or
poly tray.
5W (M«I)

rlECULAR RETAIL . . .

Point Pleasant league to sponsor
spring softball tournament

LEGAL NOTICE

$24

~ECUI.A/1 /IETAIL . .. 5399 PKC. SAVE AT LEAST . . $1.99

Light Bulbs ..........
. .4-Pak
$1.29

Galion Northmor High School, located near Galion; is inviting
;u-ea wrestling teams to enter its Spring Wrestling Tournament on
March 21. For further information please call419-946-3946. Entry
fee is $5 if pre-registered by March 20.

ful as the reserve coach at Southern, where he played his high
school career. He was a member of
the 1982 state runner-up team.
Scott and his wife Darlene live
in West Liberty, and are both
employed by the Champaign Coonty Board of Education.
Frederick is the son of Milford
and Romaine Frederick of Racine.

tertilizer

Sliced
Turkey
1L
Breast ..... 1·1/J. Pkg. ~~
60 WATT.
75 WATT OF/ 100 WATT
COST
CUTTER

Wrestling teams sought
to enter spring tournament

Scon Frederick, a 1989 graduate
of Rio Grande College and a 1982
Sodthem High School graduate,
wa' named Champaign County
Coach of the Year iri a meeting of
his Peers last week.
frederick earned the honors as a
result of guiding the West Libflly·
Sal¢m boys varsity basketball team
to an 11·9 overall record and an
11·~ rinish iii the West Central
Ohip Conference.
West Liberty started the season
with a 1·5 mark, but Frederick
regJ;Ouped his troopS for a 10-4 fin.
ish.:In his second season as varsity
coal:h, W~st Liberty went from a 5·
!6 ~verall record and 5·11 league
mark last year, to this season's
winning record, the first winning
season at the school in tlwe years.
Frederick,
to moving to
Ubl,rtY··Salem, was success·

Pr
•1'e
~' ~

THORN APPLE VALLEY

Although practice sessions were washed outlast weekend by the
spring rains, West Virginia Motor Speedway, located at Mineral
Wells, W.Va., will open its regular season Sunday at nooo with a
complete program of Late Models, Semi-Lates and modifieds.
.
Racine's Chris Diddle, who won each race there last year, IS
again a favorite 10 defend his semi-late uack title in 1992.

: The first David Bass Softball Tournament will be held on April
I I and 12 at Ordnance Elementary's soflball field in Point Pleasant,
W.Va.. according to information from tile Point Pleasant Girls Soft·
ball League, the event's sponsor.
There will be a $60 fee and two ~gulation softballs required for
registration. The double-elimination tournament will have a minimum of 12 teams participating. The rain date for the event will be
April 25 and 26.
For more information, call Rick Halstead at 675-7618, Fred Sur11augh at675-744 I or Jim Stearns at675· 1598.

\awQ

~

4.99

---

Gardeoet4

12-oz.

/t 'RI~I

millet, milo, sunflower
seed, and grain products.

RfCULAII .RETAIL ... 52.95 SAVE AT LEAST .. . 51.47

Kroger raters . . 32-oz.

IS.II.-ntHtl.. bee

I~f.Price
I .

SAVE" AT LEAST . . . 71C

-en•••

FROZE~

10 ......

·llich'S

::&amp;::~~~~···

'h '~~~~

APPlE~

•

.Grape Jelly ........ . . 1o-oz.

Pn·ce
1' . ·.

, .,

SAVE AT LEAST • .. 42C '

PINI
MUI.CII
Rliminates the need for soU
cultivation. Helps retain .
soil moisture. 2-cu.·ft. pklz.

_,

..

12·0Z.
REGULAR RETAIL . . . $2.29 SAVE AT LEAST .. . $1.14

KROGER

Bag

Spedal gourmet wUd bird
food mixture. Contains

1

FROZEN

ldJIIt Umiled To 10 HJ'I)Otlelll'wod~MD ~

I
I

.I
I
I

...

. NU DIIIIIUOW MINIU
Completely compll6te&lt;!,
naturally orpnic soU con·
. ditloner in 40-lb.-net·wt. bag.

hfi 01 ' 110111- lOlL
Leta 10011 develop f"reely and
helps retain nutrients and
water In sail. 40-lb.-net·wt. bag.

--

-

·--ToiO_,_ ....

..,_ UtNied To 10 ttypona.Prod~~a~ Per

.'

O• ••• Weclnesclay, March II .through Saturday, March 14
.......,. Sttd.wla..cl OoodiA...... In Scorellft!h o.den Center I.IIM'I And o.drft lten. o\Willlbk: In l.afFr liMn: !tom

'

I

APEAI HOIIT:!It1

.

I

'I
.l

I

'•

SAVE AT LEAST . .. $1 .19

rlEGULAR rlETAIL . ..

Boosters to sponsor
Eastern alumni cage games

I I

,

•,

I

America'S
favorite

REGULAR RETAIL ... $3.99 LB.

Rutland sign-up day Saturday

The EHS Athletic Boosters will sponsor the annual Eastern
Alumni basketball grunes on Saturday, March 14. The women's
game begins at 6:30p.m. with the men's game to follow.

!!!ri~lder

soneiiSs/HOLLYFARMS

The EHS Athletic Boosters will be sponsoring the annual Eastern
Alumni basketball grunes on Saturday, March 14. The women's
game begins at6:30 p.m . with the men's game to follow.

IUILtlllllLUI
Greens quickly whlle
controlhng common weeds.
Covers up to 5000 sq.·ft.

l.

�'

'

h=g~e;:6~Th:e~o:al~ly~~~nt~ln:ei.........................:Po:m:e:ro~y;~:A:Id:dl:ep:o:rt~,O~h~lo~..........~........~~~w:e~dn:e:sd:a~~:M:ar:ch~1~1~1~9:~

The Dally ~ntlnet-Paga 7:,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday; March 11,1992

,..

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Prices Good 4 Days
· March 1992
. WedneSday, March 11
Satu.-day, March 14, 1992 .·

I

Bear
Items

'

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~nd

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Prices Effective only at: ·

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GALLIP&lt;DLIS BIG BEAR STORE

I
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�_Page · 8 The Dally Sentinel

-------- --·--·-· ------ ..

Wednesday, March 11, 1992

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, March 11,1992

tSouthe.rn's
basketball
tradition
shows
commitment
to
winning
.
"''
;
•
:
' "•

i.

SIXTH GRADE BOYS
Syracuse

••
.' '
~

~

:
;"
"
•:

BradbUIV F'ISher

-.

••

..~

..
-."•
,
••

6:00

Pomerov

..

•••
•

BradbuN

6:00 3-9-92

7:30

Pomeroy

3-9-92

-

3-4·92

Friday
7:30

Beale

3-13-92

Salisbury
Rradbu"!:.'&amp;'Jn.
7:30

Salisbury

7:00 3-9-92

"

Washington

3-6-92

Washington Elem.

•
~

••
'&gt;

.
,,-

FOURTH GRADE BOYS

~

,•

--

i

'1

'•

~

-.

..•:

---.
•

Pomernu Abbott

6:30

5:30

Pomemv Abbon

3-2·92

Pomerov Abbon

3-4·92

6:00

Harrisonvill ..

..

-

•

3-11 -92

Bradbury

,•

:'

~

:

Coolville

-•.

6:30

::

Rooseveh

6:30

3-3-92

Bradburv

~

3·2·92

Coolville

..'• -

6:30

~

:-•

:.

';

:

'

Friday

~

_3-13-92

Beale
Rutland
7:30

7:30

Beale

3-3-92

Rutland

3-2-92

Salisbun~

7:00

3-11 ·92

'

.

Pomeroy Shank

.

7:30

.

Gallipolis

0

3-5·92

Gallinnli•
3rd Place
Friday, 5:30 3-13-92

..
"

..

Eastern's Gillilan makes 'Who's Who' list again

~

By SCOTI WOLFE
:'
Sentinel Correspondent
•: Elona "Lee" Gillilan, daughter
~i&gt; f George and Linda Gillilan of
: pomeroy , was named to the
"l'Who's Who Among American
4figh School Students" for the sec·
iond consecutive year.
~ Gillilan. a senior all-sports ath·
~ e tc at Eastern High School, had
!her biogmphy published in the 25th
·
of lhe publication.
In
she was also chosen

as a representative to be in "Who's
Who in Sports" among American
high school students,
Gillilan is a member ,or the
Nauonal Art Ho.nor Soc1ety, a
member of the semor play cast and
an honor roll student in addition to
havmg per:fect attendance for four
years. Dunn~ he~ school years, she
has been acuve m softball, volleyball and basketball. She has lettered
m these sports and has rece1ved
many awards.
This year in volleyball , she
received all·state, all-SVAC, and
all-Dislrict 13 honors for her
efforts as the Eagles' top server and
holder of the team's top spiking
percentage.
Gillilan was a member of the
Eastern girls sectional champi onship basketball learn, which
completed the season at 14-8 overall. She recently injured her knee
and missed !he sectional fmals and
district semifinals, but plans to play
softball this spring.
She earned all-SVAC honors in
volleyball three slraight years and
received honorable mention as a
freshman . She won lhe Most Points
, Scored award for three years and
had the Best Serving ('ercentagc
two years.
In softball, Gillilan has won the
Most Hits, Best Batting Average
and Most RBls awards at EHS in
the last two YCJirs. She was allSVAC as a junior and received

. HANOVER

mai!lrain a full schedule of fresh- Tornadoes".
By SCOTI WOLFE
man basketbal.l games. Jonathan
Assisti~
Caldwell this season
Sentinel Correspondent
s
'ckl'
B ·
Sometimes sports scribes are Rees was the coach lhis seaso11.
are cott. 1 me, Jay osoc and
accused of over-using the word
Caldwell believes lhat Soumem· Ronnie Quillen. Brian Weaver and
teams
are consistently successful David
"!radilion" in describing the suew·1cDeem
kl ' are
• the statisticians. 1
cess of the Southern Tornado bas- because of their s1r0ng fundamenme s reserves recentty
kctbalI program. When one actual- tals an.d "good, hard work ethics" won their
·ue.second slraight SVAC
1
k
th
bolh
dun'
ng
!he
season
and
the
off.
reserve
U
ly takes a oo at e record, one
s
• h f 11 ·•
cannot overlook just how rich '!bat season. This bas. been a solid founFor outbem .ans, ope u Y uoe
winning tradition actually is.
dation for continuing tbe lradition !radition will continue Saturday at
An informational fact sheet, of the Racine Southern "Hustling 1:30.
compliments of the Southeastern
Ohio Sports Information Center in ------Sports shorts-----Jackson and SEOSIC director
a conditional dmft choice.
Baseball
Quebec also was busy, dealing
Randy Heatb, renects just how Ira·
PORT CHARLOTIE, Fla. (AP)
dition-rich Racine Southern basket- - Kirk Gibson, who left Kansas away goaltender Ron Tugnutt,
ball actually is.
City's camp last week because he 1roubled defenseman Bryan FogarCurrently Southern is 16-7 over- didn't want to be a backup, was ty and enforcer Greg Smyth ,
all going into the district fmals Sat- !raded to the Pittsburgh Pirates ror Tugnutt and left wing Bmd Zavisha
urday at 1:30 in Ohio University's pitcher Neal Heaton. Gibson, 34, went to Edmonton for CzechosloConvocation Center in Athens.
hit .236 with 16 home runs and 55 vak forward Martin Rucinsky. FogThis year's team became the RBis·Iast season. Heaton, 31, was arty, who has been in an alcoh?l
rehabilitation program and was m
14lh SHS team in I6 years to win 3·3 wilh 4J3 ERA last season .
atlcast a share of the Southern Valthe
minors, went to Pittsburgh for
Hockey
ley Athletic Conference title .
forward
Scou Young. Smyth went
The New York Islanders sem
Southern has also won sectional defenseman Ken Baumgartner and to Calgary for right wing Martin
titles 14 of the last 16 years.
right wing Dave McLlwain to Simard.
Overall, SHS has won 21 sec- Toronto for center Claude Loiselle
In other deals, San Jose sent
tional championships in each of lhe and right wing Daniel Marois and defenseman Bob McGill to De!roit
following seasons: 1992, 1991, Burfalo acquired Petr Svoboda for left wing Johan Garpenlov,
1990, 1988, 1987, 1986, 1984, from Montreal for rookie Kevin Hanford acquired goaltender Frank
1983, 1982, 1981, 1980, 1979. Haller in an exchange of defense- Pielrangelo from Pittsburgh for a
1978, 1977, 1965, 1964, 1963, men before the NHL's 3 p.m. EST 1993 draft pick and lhe New York
1962, 1959, 1932 and 1931.
Rangers sent center Mark Janssens
lrading deadline .
Southern teams have an 18·14
Toronto also dealt right wing to Minnesota for center Mario
ovemll district record.
Lucien DeBlois to Winnipeg for Thyer and a 1993 third ·round dmft
In comparison to other teams in left wing Mark Osborne and sent choice.
the district tourney this year, New center Dave Hannan to Buffalo for
Boston has won 10, and Trimbl e
and Paint Valley have nine each.
GIRLS' TOURNAMENT
Southern has now won seven
dislrict titles (1988, 1982, 1980,
1979, 1965,1959 and 1933).
SHS ha s placed as a district
semi·finalist on 30 occasions and 6:30 3·5·92
owns a 103-57 overall tournament Salisbu Girts
record . (Note: Some years there
Thursday
were no sectionals and teams

PORK&amp;

honorable mention as a sophomore.
In basketball, she earned the
Best Free Throw Percentage award
as a ~homore.
.
G.tlllian pl!llls to attend lhe Umvers1ty of R10 Grande where she
will major in physical education
~nd health. She al51! ~o~ to co~unue her sports parllCipauon at RIO
and p!arys,to c~h 10 the sports she
has paruc1pated 10.

8AM·10 PM

Sieam clean your own
carp~ts the war

S"

prolessionals
do .. . but al ~
a lraclion ol . 11411F
the cos!.
rlllllal

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES•

PRICES EFFEC'FIVE

thru

B~;~sts. . . . . . . -.........-.LB.s1
BUCKET

Cubed·Steak. . . . . . . . . .LB.
WILSON CORN KING

Sausage. . . . . . . . . . . La. RoLL

29

$269

79 (

$ 169

Chuck Roast. . . . . . . . . . . LB.

$9''

CONFECTIONERY

SUGAR
2 LB. BAG

PARKEY
JUMBO
SPREAD

PEARL STREET
RACINE, OHIO

3LB. TUB

949·2550

$139

'

DARIIUND
SLICED lACON
4
·LI.

59

SHEDD'S COUNTRY CROCK QUARTERS

Margarine. . . . . . . . . . .LB.

DAIRY LANE

Ice Cream. . . . . . . . .

$129

,LAY'S REG. s1.99 •

Potato .Chips.___. _,_

OFIRC

'

.

. .
Vz GAL.

BANQUET

TV Dinner. .~. . .~.1o-12 oz.

39(

2/99 4

•
1
•

PRICE GOOD WilLE SUPPliES lpl

z

•
Ill

:

We Reeerve The RiPtto I ;imit Qu..dtle,

YOU CIN DO THE·BEST AT CROSS'
IN RACINE SINCE 1860
••

•

'

'

MAXWEU

MASTIR BlEND
34.50Z.

$3~'

DAR

.,MAt &amp;CHEISE

r~oJ·2/5 1

DOMINO SUGAR su.
~9 .
BAG

$1
.

'

$119

89(

HEINZ KETCHUP
uoz.

99(

,,

AIPt...'sS.,. . .
14,1992

" a.H~,_..,s.,.v• '

Offtr GeM

GROUND

BEEF

lEANS

lAYAWAY NOW FOR SPRING/

JUICE.

DOMINO

WAID CROSS'
SONS

These are the results or recent
action at the Pomeroy Bowling
Lanes.
March 4
League -Early Wednesday
Mixed
Teams - Mike Sells (46-26)
Hacll:ett's Roofing (46·26), Tony'~
Carryout (41-31), Shammy's Carryout (36-36). Banks Construction
(33-39) and Boaters Bowlers (1458).
High series - Larry Dugan
(552) and Debi Hensley (565)
Second-highest series - Bub
Stivers (545) and Dottie Will (526)
High game - ·Larry Dugan
(217) and Debi Hensley (209)
Second-hi&amp;b game - Bub
Stivers (201)and Dottie Will (195)
Team series- Shammy's Carryout (1823)
Team game- HackeU's Roofing (647)
·

TOMATO

69(

Sliced Bacon. . . . . . l2 oz.
OSCAR MAYER
$ 119
Bologna......-.. . . . . .~.LB.

AND 4 LARGE DRINKS

oz.
$199

360Z.

$119

SUPERIOR

WHIP

• DELMONTE

p
k
L
•
s
149
/4 · or
o1n. . . . . . . . . LB.
Wi~~;;;~:~.-. . -.. -..-.18.79 c

USDA CHOICE BONELESS BEEF

MIRACLE
32

1'

2 MEDIUM PAN PIZZAS

Blues, ·lena, Chic,
.,Levi's, hJ;s.

AVE.,
IIIHipDrt

SQUEEZEIT ·
DRINKS

14, .1992

$ 79

811 West Main, Pomerov:992·2124

PBL results

$1

6PAK

6:30 3-12·92
advanced directly to the district, or PPQ!D.!mllU
advanced from local county tourna- ...
Pomero Blackwell
ments).
5:30 3-4·92
In comparison, Trimble has
been a district finalist 10 times with
a record or 45-57; New Boston, 18
times with a record of 89-67; and
Paint Valley, 10 with a record of
FIFTH GRADE BOYS
31-32.
Southern was regional champi·
on in 1982. 1980 and 1933, a state l'P~o::.:m~e!!ro:L.---.,
Harrisonville
semi-finalist in 1980; and state run- r
5:30 3-6-921-....!.l~~~;:...,
ner·up in 1982.
5:30 3·3·92
Harrisonvill
Southern's last district win
Harrisonville
Thurs.
before Monday was a 77-54 win
7:30 3-12·92
over New Boston in 1990.
Salisbu
Southern's Howie Caldwell, in
his seventh year as varsity mentor,
6:30 3-6-92 1--...:S~a~lis:!b~u:.L....l
is now 1194 7 overall.
Bradbu McClure
Caldwell has continued Southem's winning ways with a string of
six of seven sectional tides, a district crown in 1988 and a regional
semi-finalist team in 1988.
Southern's 1radition is nunured
in the early grades with informal
pre-elementary team involvement
and a solid elementary program .
Caldwell renected back to the
times wben Soulhem would win an
afternoon tournament game, and on
the bus !rip home would see the
gmde-school kids shooting baskets
on the school yard, replaying each
play of the game they had watched
earlier in the day.
"That's a part of the winning
!radition," Caldwell said.
SHS also has an established
junior high program with veteran
coaches Jim Lawrence and Mick
Winebrenner in the mnks. SHS is
one or the few schools of its size to

Sun••~

210N.
SECOND

4

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH•

EN'S &amp;LADI·ES'
DENI SHIRTS
ARE HERE!

RIHSEil{IVAC

14.5 oz.

Monday thru Sunday

,

REHTOUR

BEANS

STORE HOUR~

Domino's Knows
You'll Love Our
Pan
Pizzas

'

The Dally Sentinel-Page-&amp;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.I tlri •• 14, 1"2

10 LB. PKG.

$1390

GROUND . - -

·cHUCK

�The Dally

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel:

By The Bend

Public Notice

BULLETIN BOARD
~:30 P. M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

'·Wednesday, March 11,1992

Page-10 :

Public Notice

ment, United Statoa De·
pertmant of the lntarlor, hlo
approved the tht environ·

OFFICIAL NOTICE
Pu111Wlt Tille IV of the
OFFICIAL NOTICE
S..rfllco Mining Control Wid
Tille IV of the
Rtcllmation Act or 1877, 30
Control 81\d
U.S.C. 1201 II aeq., 1111 Ollio
of 1877,' 30
O.po~rtment of Natural Re·
II aeq .. 1111 Ohio
IOURlll, Oivilion ol Rtclem·
of Natural Re·
allan, ~~~~~ give1 notic;e of
Olvilion cif Rad8ril·
tha availability of a FINDING ation, hiiNby givu nolict of
OF NO SIGN.IFICANT IM· the availability of a FINDING
PACT for an anvironmantal OF . NO SIGNIFICANT IM·
UNI-t which concemt PACT lor an environmiMIIal
an abancbned mined land liHitllltnt which -m1
reclamation project In the an abancbned mined land
Stall of Ohio. Tht State of reclamation prolect In the
Ohio hu prepared and tha Star. of Ohio. 11ra State of
Public Notice
Office of Surface Mining Ohio hal pnopued ond the
PUBUC NOTICE
Reclamation and Enforce· OHice of Sulface Mining
The public t. notified that mant, United Statal De· Reclamation 81\d Enlaroe·
loading Craek watwahed partmant of thll lntarior, has mant, United Statal ~­
Aaeoclotion, Inc., a cor· approved the the environ· partmant of the lntallor, has
por.Uon orgonlzad under mental uaeaoment tor thia approved the the 111vlron·
the lawt of the Stall of Ohio project which waa Ulbmittad mental UHIIIIIIIII lor .Ut
on or ebout May 11, INS, by 1111 Stall in application lor ~Sta~ln'";~~~
hu flied a Certificate of ToU.IV lnancial auiatance in
"'
-·""
Olnolutlon of the cor· !ICIIiming and res!Dring land iUe IV financial ual&amp;t•ica In
poratlon with the Ohio and water reeourcea ad· noclaiming and realoflna land
Secretary of State on or voraaly aftactad by put and wotar raeource1 ad·
obout February 11, 1192. mining. A completa copy of vorooly decled by pall
·Thlo dl11olution of the cor· the environmental ouaaa· mining. A compt.ta copy of
porotion woo 1 voluntary oct m1111 io available from the tha anvironmontal ouaot·
by tho Board of Olroctora of Ohio Deportment of Natural menl II avoUable from lha
the otortoold corporation. Raaourcu, Division of Ohio Daparlnlllnt of Natunrl
Any lnqulrloa or clalmt Reclamation, 1855 Fountain Ratourcu, Dlvition of
concerning the alora..ld Squ.,. Court, Building H-2, Reclamation, 1155 Fountain
corporotion may bo llrocted Columbut, Ohio -432241.
Squore Court, Building H·2,
to 34481 Corn Hollow Road
Tho r,rojoc:t COWIIId by Ills Columbut, Ohio -432241.
Rutland, Ohio 45775.
' IC!ion • titled 'lyon," located
Tho pmjoc:t covtrtd by Ilia
(3) 4,11, 2tc
on 7111 Strael in Middeport, oction It tided 'Jeuio Craok,"
Ohio. Tho propoMd work located in s.ctionl3lllld 31 '
lnvolv.. Installing a oub· at Rutiand Township, Malgo
aurfaco dralnago ayatam to County, Ohio., Tho p111jacl
Re~ ol...divert mini watar away from lnvolvea reolelming 10·110
U\1 U ~
Nval'll homu and rood ocrea of abandoned aurflco
aurfiCI. This project it 100% mine. Th~U' it 100%
fedonllly funded.
-rally
...J..!:(3:!,).:,:11~,I:,:IC:,__ _ _ _..J.:(::3)..:1:.:1·.:;11c:__ _ _ __

to

mental a11eumant for this

project which wu Ulbmittad

bY the Stall in application tor

T'OU. IV financial atolotanca In
rwclalmlng and ratloring land

Oul~OOliNG IN FIFTH GRADE •

lured are students in the fifth grade at Tuppers
Plains Elementary that received outstanding
honors with their projects for that school's

annual seience fair. L~r, are Josh Hager, Jessica
Brannon, Tommy Coram, Jaymie Osborne,
Lacy Bunting and J.T. White.

ST. PETER, Minn. (AP) Spike Lee accused Warner Bros. of
skimping on the financing for
"Malcolm X," saying the studio
had thrown away much more
money on bad movies by white
directors.
The black filmmaker, whose
movies include "Do The Right
Thing" and "Jungle Fever," spoke
about racism and Hollywood to a
standing-room crowd at Gustavus
Adolphus College on Monday.
Lee detailed the obstacles he's
had to overcome, saying his fll'st
hurdle was with Warner Bros.
" They're not making black
films now because they want to
help out black people," he said.
"Hollywood rs mterested in
money.''
Lee ran $5 miltion over budget
on "Malcolm X" and came under

'

l
OUTSTANDING IN FOURTH GRADE·
These fourth grade students at Tuppers Plains
Elementary 'were selected as having outstanding
projects for the school's annual seience fair by

OUTSTANDING IN SIXTH GRADE .. Bill
Sc_arberry, Chris Buchanan, Lamar Lyons,
Mrchelle _Caldwell and Joey Weeks, 1-r, received
outstandmg honors for their science fair pro·

j~dges,

Bill Buckley, secondary supervisor, and
Brll Costanzo, elementary supervisor. Pictured,
1-r, are Steve Weeks, Meghan Avis, Leah
Sanders, Mall Caldwell and Matthew Boyles.

je~ts

at Tuppers Plains Elementary. The annual
scrence fair was held for students in the fourth
fifth and sixth grades and all students partici:
paled.

"60 Minutes" and CBS keep winning Golden Rule Class
By DEBORAH HASTINGS
and NBC with 12. Each ratings
AP Television Writer
point represents 921,000 homes.
LOS ANGELES (AP) - CBS
CBS also had finished No. I in
and its series "60 Minutes" con- the recently completed February
tinued their winning streaks in the sweeps period. The network has
latest network ratings contest
won the overall ratings the last 10
Overall, CBS finished last weeks and 19 out of 25 weeks so
week's race with a 13 average rat- far this season. "60 Minutes" has
ing, followed by ABC with 12.9 been the most-watched show for 14
/'
outof25 weeks.
1
S 1St
"60 Minutes" got a 22.1 rating
last week, followed by ABC's
The following Meigs County comedy series "Roseanne" with
students have been named to the 22.2 and the CBS newsroom comeDeans Honor List for the Universi- dy "Mwphy Brown" with 19.8.
ty of Rio Grande during the winter
ABC scored high with last
Tuesday's "Happy Days Reunion
quarter:
Lesley D. Carr, Pomeroy: Ami Special," which ranked fourth with
Jo Davis, Langsville; Terry S. a 19.6 rating, and its new adventure
Fields, Pomeroy; Heather L. Fin· series "The Young Indiana Jones
. Iaw,l.Long BQUqm; Terri L. Hill, Chronicles," which finished lOth
~~; Gina ·N. Johnson, Rutland;
with 16.6.
·· '''fOOil t.' Johnson, Pomeroy; Janet
ABC's "Home Improvement,"
L. Nakamoto, Rutland; Terry A. starring stand-up comedian Tim
Newsome, Pomeroy ; Joyce D. Allen, placed fifth with 18.9. Tied
Otto. Pomeroy; Trevor A. Petrel, for sixth with 18.0 were CBS's
Racine; Krista M. Roush, Racine; "Murder, She Wrote" and ABC's
Mark T. Shrivers, Middleport; "Full House."
Timothy E. Smith, Middleport;
"Woman With A Past," the
Carin S. Taylor, Middle~rt; Den· NBC Monday night movie, ranked
nis L. Thornton, Langsvrlle; Judith eighth with 17.5, and CBS' ensemA. Williams, Syracuse; and Darci ble cast in "Designing Women"
M. Wolfe. Middleport
finished ninth with 17.0.

0 n dean

members gather
The Golden Rule Class of First
Baptist Church in Middleport met
at Holly Hill Inn for a Valentine
Dinner hosted by John and Marilyn
Fultz.
Jean Thomas presented devotions by reading from Romans and
Song of Solomon.
John Riebel presided at the
meeting during which a discussion
v:-as h~Id about having a prO$fes·
srve dinner for the Man::h meetmg.
Mrs. Fultz asked each present
how they met their mates. It was
noted there are couples in the group
married between 30 and 42 years.
June Kloes will write an article
for "Spotlight" on Sunday school.
Attending were Rev. Jim Seddon, Norman and Sis VanMatre
Dale and Marjorie Walburn, Jack
and Coke Ambrose, Jean Thomas
John and Marilyn Fultz, John and
Glenna Riebel, Mark FuliZ, Gene
and Zelma Gray and Donna Grindstead.

Dance planned
There will be a round and
square dance sponsored by the
Tuppers Plains VFW Post No
9053 and Ladies Auxiliary on Fri:
day from 8-11:30 p.m. with music
by Happy Hollow Boys. A comfcwr, made by the ladies auxiliary
will be given away.
'

the control of a completion bond
company. The movie, starring Denzel Washington as the slain Black
Muslim leader, was originally budgeted at $28 miltion.
Rob Friedman, president of
advertising and publicity at Warner
Bros. in California, did not return a
call Tuesday seeking comment.
In response to a student's question, Lee said colleges cannot claim
cultural diversity unless they start .
actively recruiting more minority
students.
In the meantime, he suggested
that black students who are uncomfortable at P.'edominantly white
institutions 'study hard, get good
grades and get out of there."
NEW YORK (AP)- In "Article 99," a dark comedy patterned
after "M·A·S·H," Kiefer Sutherland tips his hat to his father, Don·
aid, who starred in the 1970 movie
about a mobile army surgical hospital in the Korean War.
Kiefer Sutherland and Ray Liotta play doctors at a veterans hospi·
tal who have to contend with inade·
quate funding, insensitive regulations and a coldhearted administrator. "Article 99" opens Friday.
"When I saw the movie, I
thought, 'Oh my God. the compar·
isons to M·A·S·H ane going to be
quite strong," he told ABC's
"Good Morning America" in an
interview scheduled to air Wednesday.
"And in fac~ I did one thing in
the movie. I put on a little service
hat like my father wore in M-A-SH, and it was my way ofkinda saying hello to him in the film."
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)Barbara Mandrell says it took her
four years to get the courage to
drive again after suffering serious
injuries in a 1985 traffic accident.
"Four years later, I still couldn't
bring myself to drive a car," the
country music singer said in a 30·
minute cassette tape promoting
driver safety. "It wasn't until 1989
that I finally decided to apply again
for a driver's license."
"I find that I'm much more
aware and defensive than I used to

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

992-2156

YOUR INDEPENDENT
AGENTS SERVING
MEIGS COUNTY
SINCE 1868

u• ·•

·1111111

IIIII

IIIMIIS

5AU CONDUCTED I f

GOOD EGG PREPARATION • Mrs. Edna Triplett active
member or the Women's Auxiliary or Veterans Memorial Hospital
is pictured working with pastel ribbons and wooden Easter eggs t~
be placed on three "good egg trees" being prepared for use during
the Easter season at the hospital. Residents can have the name of
their favorite "good egg:• inscribed on a wooden egg which will - .
decorate the trees. Cost IS $5 per egg for the fund raising activity.
Some five dozen eggs bave already been purchased for tbe trees
which will go into several locations on March 19. The revolving
white trees will remai~ in place until after Easter on April 19.
A;fter that tbe eggs wbrcb are also refrigerator magnets will be ·
grven to the. honorees as souvenirs. Those wishing to P.articipate •
can send the1~ money .and names or hon~rees to the Awnliary, Veterans Memorral Hosprtal, 115 E. Memorral Drive, Pomeroy.

•

Special of the Week!

'

AUCTIONEER: RICK PEARSON
MASON, WV
773·157815
TERMS: Calh or Check wnn 10.
Nor Rtsponllblt b !IC'idenll Of lou ol property
licensed and Bonded in Ohio, Kenrucky , and WeSI Vi1ginia 166

NOTE
EVERYTHING MUST BE REMOVED

.

·.

.

VA£ATION BIBLE · ~
StDOOL WORKSHOP ::1

At

,_:f.

::.-t
-• •.

.

MIDDLEPOR~ DEP·T. STORE
2nd Level
·
''We'll help you enhance your ~mmer chureli
program."

For Mort tllfonllatlon Call

992•6657

RESOLUTION 302.92
WHEREAS, the Village of
Pomeroy, Sewer Fund,
wishes to mako payment•
on a loan lor the
Wastewater Treatment Plant
Improvements.
THEREFORE, BE IT
RESOLVEO that the lllllage
of

Pomeroy

$120,000.00
,.n Dna,
(10)
years
from lor
Bank
Athena, NA at a variable
PASSED: 3·2·12
commercial
rate ol4.88%.
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
Larry Wehrung, Pr•idont
Brenda I. Morrla, Clark
(3) 4,11, 2tc

PUBLIC
AUC,ION
10:00 A.M.

OFFICE 992·2886

l

AIICTIONEER: RICK PEARSON

UJ1tCR

~.

Chodl wllh D.

wv

(Lf\SSIAED ADS

I----::=:-_.________

B·ust·ness Servt·ces

~=:;;:;::;:::::::=iTr:;~ii~~;::~rr=======:;:rr:;~~===::;
"'I
11

'Bf·B/£7'

o..,s,....sr.r.-.. or

Troy.Bilt 'IU1en Now Ia Sutek.
foiU' I..oeal ~-B£11 D.aler

It so w.t, Atioll, Olio •SI!-311l
212011213 mo.

TROLLEY STAIION

CRAFTS

HRS: IICOI.·SII.10 om-S pm
Sundly 1-5 pm
For llorolnlo COlli

205 North Second Ave.
Middleport, OH
MIDDLEPORT-High St· Timd ol searching lhrough lhe
newspaper? Well, search no lurther. This3 bedroom llouse
has cen~al air, leMOX pulse GFA lumac:e. t car garage,
equipped kitchen , privacy lance in backyard. and a bas&amp;ment.
$39,900
MIODLEPORT·Brownell Ave-A neat hnle 3bedroom home
wilh basemen I and garage, equipped kitchen , and cenuat
aor.
$24,000
HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD·A linle over 16 acres wilh a
newer 2 story home, huge living room, 4 bdrms upstairs,
and a 27X36 unfinishec::f room . Has a cute little covered
pcnic shelter and 2 slorage buikiings. $29,900
HEMLOCKGROVE·You want seclusion in a great area,
you need to see this . Appro•. 48 acres with small ~uit
orchard, grape vines, workshop &amp; large shedlorequipmen1
storage. Home os tully carpeted andnas 3 bedrooms, 1 1/
2 baths, noce dee!&lt;, screened in porch, equipped kitchen ,
dining room , Andersen windows , and a 1/2 basement.
$54,900

MIDDLEPORT-Russotl St·Great Neighborhood. In town
living with oounory setting. A 3 bedroom, t 112 bath home
wilh a lull basemen!, 1 car garage. aod a large lot
NOW $56,000
DOTTIE TURNER, Broker..................................992·5692
BRENDA JEFFEAS............................................992-3056
OARUNESTEWART...........................................992-1385
SANDYBUTCHER..............................................992·5371
SHERYL WAlTEAS, Chathlre............................ 367.Q421

614-992-2549

314/WI mo.

EXCAVATING

BULLDOZING

PONDS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS
LAND CLEARING
WATER&amp;
SEWER l.INES

BASEMENTS&amp;

HOME SITES
Limestone,
Dirt, Gravel and Coal

HAULING:

Ucented Md Bonded

PH. 614·992-5591

TRUf-BI£T'

TROMM
BUILDERS
-New Construction

-Remodeling
-Cabinet Worll

Real Estate General

-Commercial·
Raaldentlal
FREE ESTIMATES·
· 20 Years Experience

614~742·2328
2·28-11110.

,.....................
c• 114·992-5521
COUNTIY MOillE HOME
JotstllortlloiP-or
St•t11111 '225 ,.--.
erSIH227
2J

992-2259
608 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
..
'· OHIO.,

REDUCED-IIilldleport; 2 story, 3 ~om h~ wi~~
basement large lront porch . Nioe location. $14,000
REDUCE(). 1987 Forrost Park Mobile home wilh large
garage and carport&amp;. Home is 14x70with3bedrooms t tO
acre. Reduced lD $211,000
·
FLAlWOODS.RD.·BrickRanch with 3bedrooms 2balhs
glassed on lam1ly room . Home in good oonditioo $49,900'

LilT WITH UI•• EXCIPT THE PROPERTY YOU NO
LONGER WANT. WE HAVE BUYERIIH EVIRYDAY..
·ONE MAY WANT EXACTLY WHAT YOU HAVEl THE
ONLY WAY YOU LCII! II ••JF YOU DONT LilT WITH
CLELAND REALTY ...TODAYI
•
-.

H!NIIYI!.CLUND---------·------......__ .:__..M1t1

•

Olio,~-

.

llhH...

CALL 742·2771
s.s..
'25.00 SIZED liMESTONE
s.s....___'20.GO

FOR SALE

'12.00

Call614-992•6637
St. Rt. 1
Cheshire, OH.

.......
,,.lo
742·2341
Plus 1FREE

,.........

M1~·•r•·.,....

Clll fw Jrfellls I,

3-2·1•

Xptliryn
'.MecufMus
"SPECtAUZING'IN SLATE
OR CANVAS"
39815 Gold Rldgo Road
Pomeroy, Ohio 457SI

"

Welcome Slates

-l
...
'ii
~

. $20.00

Cuatonl Pllnllnga

614-tH-2242,

.....____,.;;,;;..;J...,...J

.\TTE\TIO\

Howard LWrltesel

ROOFING

\I· .IIIII ,, Il lli lhh

NIW-REPAIR

•10 yr. heat PU1111

compresser warranty
•Free estimates

•

Bennetts Mobile Home Heating &amp; Coolin&amp; ••
ll91Whnl Sd!MIRL
.
G .. I, GWt

949·2168

(11(6141 446-9416 • 1o100-172·5967

M/12/t - - pd.

SHRUB &amp;TREE
TRIM 'a.-d
REMOVAL

BISSELL BUILDERS, INC
New ...., • Ylayl Sl4illt
Ntw G•nl" • RtpiM....

WI•••
.....................

•LIGHT tfAULING
•FIREWOOD

COMMDlCI.U. ... RI'SIDENTIAI.
I"BEE ESTIM.UI!S

· BILL SLACK
992·2269
8-12·10-11

'

Fnaces

FREE ESTIMATES

C»FFK:E.....:.-----·····-············-··-····--·11·

'"'

Worr•tyl Dill

Gutter Clalnlng
Painting

USED RAILROAD TIES

..,

II"''
''""" I"
l {!": :

!

JJntps llOTr. c-oa~t~

Gutttri
Downspout•

··--.MI---

1'RACY IMtAOER.........- ....·-····--·..
~~LL....-·-····..·-·-··..- .:.._ ..........

... -·•louol "'-"
.., . . . . In
and WOtiVr,lnla lit

u.....

MINERSVILLE AD.· 6 room, 3-4,bedrooms IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION I ASKING $22,500 Make An Offer!

IT'S TliUE...F WE DON'TBELL YOUR PROPERTY...YOU
DON'T PAYI THERE'S NO-n.IQ TO 1.0111! WHEN YOU

773-57811

1Y!IILOII •••

Hn.8-101oL*-Sit.
NEW SCA WOlfF lED
.......... Anllti...

AEDIJCEI). Slum Bubdlvlllon 3 bedroomS, lull biMment oc:taohed gorago E11tem School District Vary nice
home $57,900
.
.

_Quality
Stone Co.

.... u......

MYSTIQUE'
TANNING

15 Sessions- ~5

PilE GROVE AD.· Ranch style with 3 bedroamt, 2 car
gngo, 3.2+ llCr8l woodbumer, B.Q. heat TCP &amp; opring
Wllllr $25,500

SUN'S UP
TANNING

6 S.Sslels--

IIIDDLEf'&lt;?RT· One floor frame home with ded&lt;, hard$~~oonng needs some repair...eftoradabte housing!

RACINE· 2 slory 4 bedroom home t 112 balhs 2 car
garage, largo front pOrch . MANY EXTRAS $45,900

AI1CIION CONDIIC'I'ID I f

:j

Read the Best 5eler

MUST PRE-REGISTER

Chip &amp; Date style high boy wilh claw and ball leal, 24 pane
ftwall CIJpboard. niaJ oak kllehen cablnel, beaullul carved
mahogany bedroom suito, 2superlancy oak sido board$ with
clawl~~ho!BI wash stand, laney dressers, gale leg table,
Voc:tonan !OW seat, Victorian ladies chair, fancy oak chair, 4
press bact&lt; chairs. 7h. oak harvesllable, wash stand, French
table, muaic thesl, Morris dlair, oak pier mirror, round oak
table, nioe selactioo olantiquegla ..ware. compodes, bowl•.
large ele:hed bowl, elchod bowl oed, 3 game bird plalas,
bultennold, Mtique ooy car ~lction toy 6 112 ' 17 112 inch long
and more.
·
STONEWARE
lwll• blue and white water cooler wilh Polar Bear llid
chlppe&lt;l), Warwick china water coolor, blue and while Spanish lacia deoot., 4 gal. lriplo zipper, legal redware chum,
beehive jar, 2 gat. Wolman &amp; Brother Pin. Pa., 2 gal. E. B.
Taylor Ricllm8fl Va . zipper laackDd hanole), White ways
Dewn cytMr cooler, 8 gal. WiUiam &amp; Repart with ears chum,
~~~~ - wholesale stoneware. Depot Cin. Ohio, Penn.
slipwlro flower pot has chip, 3 gal. butter croci&lt; with lid limp
&amp;plll'dllcor.&amp;toneware, milkerocl&lt;s, 4 gal. jug NoH Brothers
T~~- Ohio(c:rackod),lootwarmer. blue and white pilcher
and salt crock with swat otick panern, blue and white pile:her
with love blrdo, pottery ..-nbrella stand.
MODERN FUftN(TURE ANP MISCELLANEOus
W11nut OJeen Anno dning room &amp;et, tabla and 6 chair&amp;,
Iuper 2 pc. huoch, 6 pc. westom style iving room suke, 2 pc.
Eorty Amoricln IMIIg room &amp;uite, 2 maple end oables,
ilul rocker. roiiOp dell&lt;. bar atooto, luloiza bed, bra11
·
board. OJeen Soma bed with tubet, desk, oak draa...
night &amp;Iandt, ml&amp;oellneout ehalrs, smal Hot Point refrigerator, Monrgomery Ward mlctowaw, same as new Speed
Queen wether and otyer, Jim Beam coal miner, collector&amp;
pltiN, stereo, Wll(IOII wheal lamp, &amp;ad lrono, pollllild pans,
plct.na, Ctrfco colectlon, Autumn Bouquet 8 plaoe Mtting,
marble limp, atd jlwltry box, Mary Waluof painting, Encyclo-

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.

PUBUC NOTICE
Sealed bld1 will be
received In the olflea oltha
Clerk, Pomeroy Municipal
Building, 320 Eaat lloln
Stroe~ Pomeroy, OH. 45761
lor the following turnout
gear lor the PomeroyVolunteer Fire DaparbnenL
12 Tumout Coata- PBI
12 Tumout Panta- PBI
3 Bunker Panta- Nomex
(whitt)
3 Bunker Coata- Nomex
(while)
18 Pllra Glovoa
8 Pllra Bunker Boots
18 Hoodo- NomoxiPBt
Spoclltcatlono may bo
picked up at tha Clark'o
Ollice. Blda may ba
tubmltted until 10:00 A.M.
EST March 16, 1992. Tho
Village reoorv01 the right to
reject any or all bldt.
Bruce J. Reed, Mayor
Branda I. Morria, Ct•k
(3) 4, 11, 2tc

MARCH 14: Fr• Demo
Jacket Swoatahlrt Clan t:OO p.m.
MARCH 16: Slota Tole
Painting -7 p.m.
Stop To See SM!ple
MARCH 24 - llllkll Clua
-6 p.m.

orwfbllno:ht•. pus mort.
•

Public Notice

WAKfllftD'$

Real Estate General

Booki,Jighodooollllbjectselltaughl,sledgehlmmer,
hand lllolt, 14• tim, gas gril, pool chair lounge, picnic

'1

Il=~~to

992-2156

borrow 1

ANTIQUES

.9:30 am-5:00 pm· .

.

Mom, wo hold you In our
hearta and creole you In
the doptha of our aoula.
Wamlaoyou.
Your loving aona,
Tom •chart•
Voughan

Public Notice

LONGBOTTOII·Hoymon Rood· This mini-farm has appro•. 7 acres wilh a 5 yr old modular. II has 3 bedrooms 2
baths..lamily room, wet bar, garden bath rub, lireplaCe.
1sland 1n kitchen , heat pump . and a summer kitchen. All in
good oondition.
NOW $49,000

LOCATED AT THE YOUTH CENTER ON
CAMDEN AVENUE IN POINT PLEASANT. WV.
MR. i~nd MRS. POWELL HAVE MOVED AND
WlLL BE SELLING THE FOLLOWING ITEMS
PLUS ADDITIONAL ANTIQUES
FROM OTHER COLLECTORS.

........-;1~.....~~~~~ ·...
.,
-----------------------·-·--·-·-..1
wu•••

RICK PEARSON
AUCTION CO.

SATURDAY

SATURDAY, MARCH 14

.

lim.
For •• long •• we can

POINT PLEASANT YOUTH CENTER
CAMDEN AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WV

•

11:00 am-7:00pm

'"~ ~W::C'~camwsa;: Is ~td to hnu
. you- FRflllfAIIIIG ===S.~ut. raupon wllft you far

to accept me for what

rememb•
You wore the person we
looked up to;
ao giving; yet needing
10 alrong; yet unaltivo
ao pretty; yot Iunny.

OVER 100 ROLLS OF BRANO NAME CARPET...
STAINMASTER, BERBER, ETC.

'

versely a«ectod by paat
mining. ~ complete coPY of
the anvuonmantaJ a11111 ..
mtnl it available from tha
Ohio Deparlnlllnl of Natural
Raoourcea, Division of
Reclamation, 1155 Fountain
Square Court, Building H-2
Columbu1, Ohio 43224.
'
Tho Projoc:t covered by this
action os titlod 'Woh/
Swilher,• located In Pomeroy
near Salt Street. Tht
propoud work lnvolvu
inttaling • drainogo tYSIIm 1o
divert Willer coming from 1111
abtndoned ung111und mine
away from houoaa and alraata
In the .,... Tht mine taepl
are curranUy making the
hilsida unitable. Thlo project
II 100% -rally lundod.
(3) 11' lie

to glvo conftdenca

New Curved Glass China Cabinels
New Living Room Suites, Recliners, Dinenes, EIC.
PLUS ALoad 01 New Merchandise

MILL STREEl.BOOKS
FRIDA'( MARCH 13 ·

I
I : :"::... --.,. u-~,.,AM ....

In Mamo!Y Of ·
NINA "Annie YATES
Dear Mom,
HAPPY 65th
BIRTHDAYI

For at long 11 we can
remember
You ware everything you
ahould bo • • mother;
full of uncondiUonll
lovo
lull of laughtar
lull of ten
lull of "luat being you. •

'

Presented by

IELTONE lUliNG

IIID,AIIM1-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

•
·
•
·
;

111 Second St., Pomeroy

13121•ttn Ani• liMte 7), hll•lls
I
·
614•446-1744
WIDIESDAY, •••• 11-9:00 1.11.•4a00 p.ll.
I
Ctl Tol Free 1-100-434-5265 fir •lml fr't Ajlpolnlnlitt

I
I
L

,'-------~--------~

INSURANCE

FRIDAY, IUICI 13-taG0-12:00
•• 1r. a.
....... Offk•
110 ••••lc

1111 :

.....,
'

In Memory

For 11 long •• we cen
rom amber
You w~re elwoya on our
aide
.

CARPEt 8
NEW FURNITURE
AUCTION
SUNDAY,
MARCH 15, 2 PM

DOWNING CHILDS
MULLEN MUSSER

BELlO EHEARING AID CENTER

fflitm.
I

As of January 1988, hospitals are
required by the Joint Commission on
Accreditation of Health Care Organizations to have formal policies speei·
lying when doctors and nurses can re!rain from trying to resuscitate
terminally ill patients.

2

toglvocourog~~

8

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

1

J

Middleport, Ohio
$5.00 per person.
Public Invited

WITH FRIES••••• $1.34

WI be~ve1ll Meigs/Galla Coaatles ~

I·

Music by George Hall
American Legion
Annex

64c

FREE HEARING TESTS
.I

March 13, 7 to 11

CORN DOG

COUPON

I

LOS ANGELES (AP) - Most
people remember Wemer Klemperer for his Em my-winning role as
the inept Colonel Klink on the old
"Hogan's Heroes" television
series. But Klemperer also has a
classical side.
The actor is a solo narrator with
symphony orchestras, vice president of Actors Equity and a children's storyteller. On Sunday,
Klemperer narrated Tchaikovsky' s
"Francesca da Rimini" at the
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion .
But Klemperer- whose father,
Otto, was one of the great orchestra
conductors of the 20th century isn't sore that he's most identified
as the acerbic Nazi in charge of a
Gennan prisoner-of-war camp.

DANCE

MARCH 14, 1992

---------··-,···-,···.till

1
I

be," she said on the tape, recorded
for the Pontiac division of General
Motors. Copies of the tape will be
distributed to Pontiac drivers.
Mandrell suffered head, leg and
other injuries in the two-car acci·
dent in suburban Nashville. Her
two chi!dren were hurt and the
driver of the other car was killed.

Public NOtice

Public Notice

and water raaaurcea ad·

public, involving landowners, individuals and families will be presented by the law firm of Porter,
Little, Sheets and Lentes.
The three meetings will be held
at the Meigs County Public Library
on March 23, 30 and April 6 from
7-8 :30 p.m. The seminars are open
to the pubtic.
Some of the items covered in
the first session include wills,
estate administration, powers of
attorney, Jiving trusts/wills. Session
2 talks about real estate law, deeds,
easements, foreclosure and mineral
rights,etc. The last session will be
family law. Some of the topics covered will be divorce, dissolution,
child support, adoption and more.
The meetings will be informal an!l_ . •
will allow time for questions.

1

,.. ..,.,c..,
- -' . -

614·949-2101 or 949·2160

) '

�Wednesday, March

SNAFU® by Bruce Beattie

3

March

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Sentinel

41 Houses for Rent

18 wanted to Do
Ooorgto Porllbto Sawmill, don,

Announcements

KIT 'N' CARL VLE® by Larry Wright

houl yow toao to tho mill lull
colt 504-176-1157.
lltoo Pouto'o Dly Coro eontor.
Solo, oltordoblo, chlldcoro. ll.f
I a.m. • 5:30 p.m. Agoo 2~10.
BoloJO, after achoot. Drop-lno
'llnloomo. 111111 8224. Now Intint Toddler C•rt, 114-44N227.

11, 1992
~V~H

•

4

1V87 Clvalltr, 2 door, 4 C)l •
ll)lld, Rlnl I IOCikt: eJ:C, 12,300.

'

_ __ _ ;.._,;;; 14ito4

O Roorrango

leHtra of the
four ~eramblod words ba·
low to form four simple word1.

EVENING

Second AvlnUI, Gllllpollt.

Will cora tor lnvllld In my homo, 42 Mobile Homes
Racine aru, ruaon~ble, 1514tor Rant
MI-23H
_

1:00 (J) • (I) (I) •
(JJ News

iiiJ 1121 •

~1-.-r.;.,.;.l~;,. ;.i ,~IJ

e

8

(J)VIdlo Pow.

...:.,.c

~OM TV Stereo.

[6~~~1;1

Will ploW gordon loLl, 304-8953481.

HE'S LEAVING ME !
I'MBEING ABANDONED!
MWFE 15 RUINED .

Ftnancia l

50 LONG, OLD FIZIENiD 1WE
BACK IN A FEW DAV5

HERE'Sl]EWORLD
WAR I FLYING ACE
BEING LED OFF
TO PRISONER OF

COMEON,D06 .. LET'5
INSIDE ...

----

CAMP ..

Stereo. 1;1

r

.

1:05 (I) 111vertr Hllbllea
1:30

lJl u NIC.,:C R
[JJ ~:L
SqUirt

Employment Serv ices
RICiuc.: Bum ott tat whllt you
- 1 Toko OPAL, avolloblo 11

Frulh Phormocy, 786 N. Socond

St .. Middlopori.

11

Experltnctd

Help Wanted

=.,...,.,......:...-...,..,..:..:-&gt;.,__

$25114476 por -kl 33 mlilon
•
Sl
(up 22% ovor lui
Unlitachod? Moot .. rN ng111 Amorlcono
ytar) work lull or pirt tlm1 *I
ThrouGh Ow Singlet Newaltt- hom~ 11mlng axctllllnt pi)'.
tlf'. Write: Singlet, P.O. Box Hundrtdt of compeniH nHG
t043, Go ill polio, Ohio 45631.
homoworkoJW Nowl ~-It tor
-

reconlld muaagt. 804-768-ltiTJ

4

Giveaway

Uphoilloring Fumlturo
Sowln&amp;,Onty. 114-441-313a, 61444B-4 ·
E1po~.,..d llocrotory Rocoptlonlll, All RHumn ConHdtn·
tlal, Send Rnume To CLA Box
110, C/o Golllpolla Dolly Tribuno,
IW Thlnl Avonuo, Galli polio. OH
4S&amp;31.

$35MlAY PROCESSING
PHONE ORDERSI PEOPLE
CALL YOU.
NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY.
1-600.255-«142.

HVAC/R Sorvlco lion Noodod.
Muot Havo Eoporlonco in Com·
morclol And Rooldontlol Ropolo.
3 Yooro bporionco Roqulnod To
Apply. Sond Rnumo And Poy
Requirement• Ta: BaJ: CLA 108,
cJo Gslllpolla Daily Tribuna, 825

Smell blk l Lin Torrior lypo dog, S80Q WEEKLY POSSIBLE I Worll·
one yr ~d, 304-675-2749 -or 675- lng AI Homo! 37 Dllla...,t OD1881 after 5:00 PM.
ponunltiH. Rush t1 And Soli·
Addrtllod Stompod Envolopo
To: Thomoa Buvo10, RtH Box
373111rlotto, 011 45750.
6 Lost &amp; Found
· Found: Pony In Patriot. For ln-

lotmollon CIIIIM-64:1-1125.
FCMI'Kf: amall brown Terrier, Rut·
..... 11'01,114-1112-2454

In
Or

Pmon

Thlld Avon .. , Ooillpotlo, OH
45631.
Rt1taur11nt

&amp; VIcinity
Lorgl yonl-, WNihor pormll·

tintj; 101 lth llreot, Now Hovan.
llli'clt 13th and 14th.
V..,lllo, llorch 12 a 11 Jmy'o
Run Act. Jovco Holloy'o. II-?
Woothor ponnltltng.

2 btdroom apt In Htndtrson,
flmilyroom wlflrtplace, 11undry WV 304-675-t972oftor 5:00.
room, 1112 car g~regt, new
deck, l1rge outside wooden 2 bodroom opt, utllltlu . pold,
alarag1 biC:Jg, 1f4 •crt lot, Sale Hud 1pprovtd, 304-175-2722.
rlco $68,500. Gtlllpollo Forry,
Untumlahtd,
C
ay oppolnlmont only, 304~75- 2 Bldroom

22S7 or 675-7651 oftor 6:00 PM.

llon, Paid Holldayt, And Paid
Sick Dip. &amp;c~ltnt Advanc•
men!: Opportunlti• Far Thou
Who Oimonltratt Additional
Ability. Good Driving Record A

Romodllod Gorogo Apo11mont,

Stova, Athtatl'ltor, $250/mo.
Utllltr.s.
Atfnnct,
3 Bldroom, 2 81th Home, Upper Plua
S50'a, Loc•ltd N11r Centenary, DopooH Roqulroct. 614-441-3717.
OrHn Elemenllr)'
School, 2 BR Ul)atalrt 1~ . ICI'OU from
(Gollio CountY). 614-'141-21106.
Unlvtrtltr of Rlo Gr•nde. All
4 rooms &amp; bath, carport, gar•g• utliltloo pold.I14·318-IMI.
W/work ahop. 8110 1Crl1 Will 1 bedroom lpls. good Joclllon,
water, rur1l water, achool but 101 Sixth ond Mlln St, nowly
route, uble available, 2 mllu rtmode1ed wllh new epplllncta,
from New H11v1n! c111 tar 1po UUI"in not Included .. O.paall

polntmont, 304-86 ·:MI59.

....,

One~Stereo.

SCRAMoi.ETS ANSWERS
, _,.
Caudal - Thick • Snowy· Manure -ACCOUNT
The teller gave me a check jor the balance in my
savtngs accounll had closed. I·asked lor cash but she
refused because I no longer h_
ad an open ACCOUNT.

porchu, $35,000. 301~75-7217.

Fumlohod

SmoH

Old, t1S,OOO, Nogotloblo. 614· F,..hly Pointod 2Br Aponmonl,
383-64111.
Dullt, Rnldlntlal Neighbor·

hood, Clrpeltd, Furnlthtd Or
Simi, Garage With Electric
O~ntr, $250 • Ulllhl11 And
Dopolil, 114-441-7729.

lor Sale

nt to:

IN down EXTRA

446-304ll.

For sail· Craftmatlc bed, $32.5,

814-HZ-3317
For lilt: prom drwu, lrrldH·
cent tlfttt1, bu~andy, size 14,
$55, 11W85-4411

FREE INStALLATION
SWIMMING POOLS
Only $62.111/llo. • For t211ontho.
11X31x4 Pool lncludoo FIHor,
Loddoro, Hugo Dock Etc.
('Buod On Soiling Prlco Of
$111. $14.41 APR, Total DltorJOd
Prlco: $754.112) Don't Botlovo H?
COli BPI
t-1100-MII-11123

Education

1991 14x80 Sunahlnt Mobile
Homa, 3 Btdrooms, 2 Blthl,

Toko . ovor poymonlo, $231

Fuhlon And Rock N" Roll
llagodnoo. Mull Bo Abto To 33 Farms tor Sale
Woik WHh AHigh Enorgy Qooup
01 IS To 2S YNr Old Buolnoot Form Fot Soli: J. David Atho,
Mtn And Womtn. Must Be At 115 Acm, 76 Acroo Tliioblo.
LHat 18. EducatiCN'I And Ex· 14,000 + lb. Toblcco Ball,
porionct Nollmporllnt. APloo• Pond, Born, Silo And Unioodor,
lng PoroonoiHy And Tho Ability Bunk Foodor, Now Fonc!!IG, 8
To Worll Unaupo,.IHd io A Room Houu, Larao - Family
Mull.
Sto~
lmmodlototy. Room Wllh llo1Cony, __2 Full

CA&amp;H?!!

Tranaportatlon Provkted, It ~

coptod. Eoponooa Advoncod

And
Flet~~o~m
Trana;ponatlc.n
GuarantMd. For A Pet"'IRRI In·

torvlow S..: Jim At Tho Btuo
Fountain llolll, Rt. ~ 1 Milo
South Of Brldgo, uaiUpollo
Soturdoy 3114, r:30 To Noon
Room 133. P•tnta Welcom1 At

lntorvlow. · No Phono Cillo
Ptooool
Von Driver, ADIIIY In Poroon At:

Carcll'lll Dry .CIIIII ..., 1t Ohla

Rl- Piwl, Golllpotlo.
Wtmcl: llobyoHtor tor 2
ohlidJOn. Norlli, Point School
lllllriot. Rollllna thlftt. Rot. ,..
qulrod. :J01.471.330t.

Tum your clutter into cash,
Wit the easy way... by phone,
110 need to leave your home.
Plqce your claujfied ad today!
15 lbonU or le88, 3 dan.
3 pqpen.$6.00

Wlnlod: Ouloldo lOP lor
bultcllno ·- 1
ouooty.
Tobotf uporlouco holptul.
Sond -..,. to: clo Point
P I - fl!gl. .ri&gt;t~! P·S, 200
lllln II. POint
ant, wv
21550.
Wo'l ·Pq Y011 To ~po NomM
And Adi:lrua• From Homtl
• .00 Poi-·Colt uoo-

tMI !11.411 llln111rrul Or
Wrlto: PAIII • :uw. Ill
II I . Un1LIOI42.
oolrMoy,

N..._,

CaB ,our oflke for paid in admnce raleol

14

1--- - -

Gtnnia

Wodgo Apto, 501 Burdlllo St,
Polnl Ploollnl, no ooto, 1 and 2
btdrooma, 304-e7S.2072 1flsr

5:00.

45

Training

Nutrition

Product• ·

Furnished
Rooms

Mlcraw~~vll

av.n, taola, alteplng
bigs, old ga11a, lott mlac. 11c-446-lflG.
Portable lighted changNblt Ill·

Aooms for rent · week or month.
Stonllf 11 $1201mo. Golllo Holll.

lor
otan
$211.
Fdlllvorynolloro. Plootlc lottoro
$47.50 box. 1-100.5»-3453
onylimo.
R_,.,Hionod wuhlro 6
diJOro, $100 and up. WI
-~~~ mokoa. Tho Wo- &amp;
Dryor Shoppo. 114-446-21144.
...., mochl ... loothlr
~· 11ppon
. oloo rongo .$80.

111 4 115110.

Stooolna """"' wHh oooklng.

AIIO troll• · -· All hook-upo.
con allor 2:00 p.m.. 304-773a.u.., New Furnace wnh CA, 11851,111-WV.
Locotod On Slota Htghoroy, Por·
loot PI- To Roloi Ctlltctront 49
For Lease
Shown By Appotntmorn Only, ~=:-:=~=--~,814-37t-2111.
Sooond Apo~rnont Fot
~: LR., One I .A., Bllh,
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
Kftehon WI l Rlfrti. - 773'5211'!
Wttor Pulnloholl. No Polo. Coi· SU'Piut, Nnlll, denim, anny
1001150 . Drift, 011- nor llocllllf I Ptno, ClaiHpollo.
llpotlo. 114-441-7231, Allor lp.m. 1230. Por llonth; Do"'*t Ro- clothing. Fri, Sll~n, N- •
rvUio'a, S
qulnld. Coli 1~2-11, 114- 1:00 PM. 11om
miiM IIIII of 1•771 R•veniWOOd,
For ul•, 2.see •s.oc;:adld, 4414321. Or 114 441 4425. .
WV. by Sandyvlllo Pool Ottlco,
oH Flatwciods Rd.,
, 114IIVZ-6641
olhlr hou""""", :104-273-5615
Union
illlctO
advortlllng
Merchancltse
~oHiot and motchoo.
WATER WELLS DRILLED:
Loll In Gllllpollo Forry • 100'Ko 51
WATER GAURANTEEO. .,,._,
Household
011nor tlnonciltg 11 118.14 por
7311.
month, any ono of four toto
Goods
WHITE'S IIETAL DETECTORS
·-bto.~
Blftll ........,_ JWtrlgontor; Ron Allloon, 1210 llocond
Lolli In HI- • 100'Ko
A-uo, Gonlpollo, Ohio, 114011nor flnonclna 11 t10t.41 por NOh or s.tao. lor bath. 11,~ 441-4331,
·
·
1225.
month IMoyo otllhroo lola, o304- btu 111.- air oond $o400• ..,...
6'15-2722.
17S-86113 aftor 1:00PM.
Building
55
LoiiiJolnlnf Point • 101111. - r Comptolo oil moplo kltchon
Supplies
financing ot $101.41 por """"h
ooblnolo. Incl.-: - -·
~. '" throo loll. 504-171- oooldop, doubto · - ditft; Block, brick, - • olpoa,
and link lltlh dopoul. . _ , llntlt1, ·etc. dt.LHII
1-., Alo Grande, OH ~I
,Royal Ook Rooor1 propo~y· ... Phono 114-441-2212.
tltt Hll, 0111 IQI..73HMO lftlf ~=amP~~~• -llytO wllor bod, 24Ht21.
5prn
$150, :IOW7Ulllt
56 Pets lor Sale ·
Troltor tailor rant.
-r
lnd unHIIIon Inc
. tt 10
montll. J04-171.1101 or I7WOn

Mn11y F1rguton 250. Malley
Farguaon 1085. MilA)' Ftr·

Hay

LAYNI'I I'URNITURI

"··-~--5...;__.;__
__

41

eare ,,.. .._

HOUIMIOr Rent

2 bodroom -

a elliot_,

II RT-IIIMCI. l f . i
Tit ndag. TreiRIMaNI,
Tlls..llni. ,,.. Ettlmatolll •
IIIII...

II~

.....

l

'

446-2342 675-1333
992-2156

Str1w far ule, 01.11 att.r 1:00

Pll, 304~7.1-2443 .

Wontod To Bm t'tergo RoUnd
Bolli Of Hoy. I
IOU.

Transportation

.........

Alu.ll4·2411-ta11.

11111044-.

'I

-~-----------------------------•

.

AUCTION

•wAIN

a

SOMEBOOV'S COMtN',
FOOZVt LET'S HIT
fl.l' et.IMIES!

__ )

MY TRUSTY SI'EAAI

EEKANDMEEK
WIWS

17USH ~A') A!&lt;tAt..
. PltJBI.fM WllJ.l

"THAT '~

!Ill e MOVIE• Thl Glitter

filS Rf.·fl.ECJ'/00 ..

Doml(2:00)
1171 lilY Clnthltm March
CI'UIIIde Singer Steven
CurtiS Chapman ancl former
qualltlback Or. Gary Cuozzo
join Billy Grham tor hll
addreaa. (1 :00) Stereo.

e

8
11J Murdlr.:.~-

QII Funny
Willi
Cltartll Chill IX
Country-music stars become
lht ~ of Charlie
Chua s praCiicll jOkes once
again. (1 :00) Stereo.
18 PllmiNewa J:J
lllfllrolhtr Take Stereo.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
THe-.' 66-Y IT ISN'T

AND 'Ia.! OIN'T

WISE TO L-IVE' IN

L.IVE' IN THe:

eo

ij

I~e.ss

TH151SIT,

1:05 ()) MOVIE: Nevldll 8mlllt

FIJiURE ...

THE PAST.. .

(2:45)
1:311(1). Doogle Honer, M.D.
Doogle IIIIIs In lOIII with
NurM Speuld(ng. Stllreo. 1:1
IJIIIIOoltlyt! lrlilgl (P1 2
~SMreo.

·-........ ..._

Wattrpr~

B•nwnl

DID YOU FINO PAW'S

·

Stereo.

~

WINDOW!!

HACKSAW?

1 -11

,, . i

understand what to do to make the rela·
tlonshlp work. Mall $2 plus a long, selladdressed. stamp8d envelope to
Matchmaker, c/o 1hls newspaper, P.O.

' .

!::~(:.!~~~~~~1~~~!·:~ .

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL .

l

tHa Pontile Bonnovlilo olltlon
~-PB, I cyt; 11,200.
Plumbing &amp;
Hilling

' lV....~-

-.uu.- .

·

aH_..Iwl_,
-_. UIIWGJ'

.,

,

Mini! 12, 1lil
•

Relrlle;.lon

mt

""'C".a a-

£!i..1f·ao.-.':: - - - -- '

'\ • I

•

&gt;"

c

, •

.

84 . Electrical &amp;

'

'

:r.:.:::r.:r£.

'

,

·

it you hlndll you( opport..,lttea proper·

'":.,~.:::

=

- - Mltaftmllt•
I

)

o

•

II

Clll

tttiP ')IGU•

::: ,:;~~~~. aubstiMe tolerance

be a rewarding day tor yoo ma1erlsliy, UIRA (Sepl. 23-0cl. 23) ~our tlnonclal
provided you develop your opportunl- prospilcts ore muclt better than you
ties in the rlgh1 manner. Friends and II- may realize at thls11me, aq elevate your
nance make a compalible mix. Blind expec:talions. VICtory Ia aided by well·
both.
·
defined 1argeta, too,
·
TAURUS (Aprti»Mar 20) You might SCORPIO (Oct. M-Nov. 22) Yootre belhave to eon1end with some frustrations 1er equipped· to· rn~nage a promlltng
eertv In the doy but, later on, things In qiiVIfopment than theM you'H be Ingeneral should make a pot!tlve ahltt. votved wtth tOday. Titer might 111111se
Uneertllnllel lbout Important matters 1hle even before .you do, ·10 1hey 'NOit'1
wnl be dlmlnlllted.
'
ob/eet to rou tlklng Cherga.
QEIIN' (...J :n..,;une 20) Patience, SAGITTAIIIUI (Nov. 23ollec. :11) The
which lutwayn ¥1111111, Is yoor greatast · ln1arnol tor1hude you PD 11111 might not
811111oday. Your IIUCctiSIS might not .be evldtnt today,- until you are pUt to
be lmrnedlele, bll1 you.should entlrQII the flit. 1Yoor reKtlon to chllitngll
vlclorloUaln the long run.
may - . lilrpriM you.
, •
CANCIII (..... 11""ulr 22) Viable al- CAPIIICOIII (Dec. iNIII.11) You'rea
tametlril will become app.,-ent todly teat atudy today, tllld h ~~~you to
In In area - · you ~ prevtoully . 8XPQII your rittnd IIi 101t11 type ollnteiotymlld. Oon'1 be llfrald tqieku CIIOu· IICIUII purault. WMI you lll(n C111 be
latld rllk In order to lmpr,ove Y..,r, adiJilad to your prewtl rac;ul,_ll,
pOIItlon.
.
AQUAIIUI (,lin: »Paal, 111 N you'll
LIO 1• D-Aug. Ill You're now In an lklr111taugit to .-gn11e them, !11ft
inltlllllllll .,.,.. ll*tgllhoUid .,..__,WI!YiyouCIIIIlddtoyaur . .
-'t out to your uttlmltl ICiventage, allure. today, Be mallrtlllaltc 111C1
prov!Ciell you h.tmt the wtn 1~ •ter the . priiQI!IlltiO, but don't begflli!IY.

..., •II tllld . . , _
, tong.fllltll LMII!r
ma'f,':L;-:?· ttl. all ..,..,...
w fit tn',aur -~ iltltlor&gt;' '
todar· Yod 11M 1 Gllllcir tl1lklno
....__IIIP!*IIIIr both you fllld
u--r
(... T..-..
llloM-!Ifllll t1i111t11 you amc 1' ••••
tcillilcih1fllllirQittin~, ht.Mo COUIII.

·

VIRQO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22) Yoor first In·
cllnation w~en you encoonter OPPosi·
lion today might be to meet Ioree with
Ioree. Fortunately, 'however, yoo'll be

,,

'

tJI093

•Kss

.

.7SOUTH

Entry-killing play
by a junior

.QJ7
tQ876

.Al09 6 2
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: West

By Phillip Alder

In 1975 the European Bridge \ Soulb
West Nortb Eall
Pass 1•
Pass
League organized its first biennial Ju- 1
Pass 3 t
Pass
nior Camp. Last year the ninth was I NT
Pass Pass
Pass
held at Feriendorf Fiescb In the Swiss 3 NT
Alps. There were !64 participants, all
Opening lead: • 2
under 26, from 20 countries. Each day
there were morning lectures, afternoon sports events and evening bridge '-- - -- - - -- -...:....J
tournaments. Everyone was encour· switched to the diamond two and East
aged to partner someone of a different played the three. Declarer ran his
nationality.
clubs via a second finesse .. But when
Today's hand was played in the be played a spade to dummy's IPII&amp;
First European Junior Pairs Champi· East won with the ace and the defendonship, which preceded tbe camp ers cashed three diamond tricks for
proper. It was won by Tillman Seidel one down.
and Alexander Wodniansky of Austria.
The right play is to win the first
Maybe South should have raised to trick in band and lead a spade to the .
four spades, which probably would be king immedi!ltely. U it wins, declarer
beaten only if the defenders took a switches to clubs, getti111 his nine
club ruff. Three nl)-trump can be de- tricks be/ore tbe defenders can estabfeated by a diamond lead as long ·as lish and run the diamonds. And If the ·
East is careful to play the three, not spade king loses, East's entry i3 &amp;lint!.
the jack, at trick one. But West chose a and the first club finesse i3 taken Into
beart. How should the.hand be played~ the band tbat cannot burt declarer In
At the table, South won the first diamonds.
trick in the dummy and led a club to
(C 1WI. . . .APBIM(IIU Nil MilL
the 10 and queen . However, West now

The World Almanac: 11 Crossword Puzzlt·

••

An1wer to Prevloul Puzzle
•'

ACROSS
1 Marr!td wom·
1n'a Utle

4 Slr'a
counterpart
9 Electrical
unit
12 Ovor lhtll
t3 Rt1ln
14 Long time
t5 Meat dlah
(2 wde.J
17 Franch
nobleman
18 Mort than
onough
19 Laluoz·21 Dawn
23 Tranamlltad
24 Tum upaldo
down
27 Conganllally
lolntd
30 Do larm work
31 Rot't kin
33 - - anglo
34 Singer - Te

Kanawa
35 Pinch
36 Melon, e.g.
37 Ileal cunning ..;+.;,r..
39 Wears
41 Requtltl
42 Neighbor of
Md.
43 Name tar a
cat
45 Stingy
person
49 Actrass llocGraw
50 lnqutoltlventaa
54 Uncia (Sp.)
55 Flower spike
56 Ona Day- Tlmo
57 Evon (poet.)
58 Obaolttt
2 LHway
59 The Third 3 Break In two
4 Shoollng alar
DOWN
5 Clarlcel
veatment
t - Brsckln·
6 Actrsaa
ridge
Sandra -

•••r

1 $0111 (Fr.)
8 lr~od
9 Pondered
10 Time dlvlalon
1t Formerly
16 Moat Inclined
IO dOJe

20 Capital ot
Marjlend
22 Oorin9 Ieete
23 Exhluattd
grlduellr
24 l~rllatat··,,
r-1--'---1-... 25 Pfl,..r!lht ·
"'
- SlniOII ,
28 Dewlltlctitl u
28 RICard IotTY
29 Adam's ··'
granci.O.
32 Mulical nola
38 Airport porter
40 Far
43 Klaa Me 44 Tannlo plaftr
~+-1~+4
Naalaat
46 ThiUand
47 IIIII Kttt of
lhe cam(ca
48 ACtOI O'Ntal
51 Aclraaa
Thurmon
52 Tttlng !n law
53 Tttoaaln

Mini!
Singer Steven

CurtiS Chlprttan ancl folmtr
quelltlbad( Or. Gary Cuozzo
join BIHy Grhllll tor hla
address. (1:00) Stereo. 1:1
De Jeke end the Fl1iilln
While overcoming en aiOoltol
1~, I lorrntr rock Star
Is slllked. Stereo. Q.
Rid Wlnll (2:00)
• Mullc Clly ..... Cauntry
Songwllllln AWII!Ia The top
COIIItry aongwrtttra ot 1991
are hOiloratf 11 the Grand Ole
0pry HOUII, Ave from
Niahvllle, Tenn. Haste: RICky
Ven ShettOn and Mlrll

1

-

r+-1-+-...
- -+-+--+-i

OlmOncl. (1 :30) Stanto.

18 LMy King Livel
P.:.O~Dowllng

.H3

,10862
t K 54 2

P:!

l:i

=:&amp;'irtol

e YOIIIIIIitdlanl JqriM

• ..,1

OUTSIDE HIS
BEDROOM

SHERIFF II WHAR

F,.. ootlmotoa. COli colloct 1· ,
114-237-o411, doy or night. ·

EAST
.AJ4

ClnniDita A 17-year-okl
tndlant .Jonll lolls In love
with 1n §::suffragette.

BARNEY

tH, Locll ref111ncn fumlahed. :

or

~

t:OO a&gt; e 11J lelnleld George .
11111 gull1y after aettlng a
bulbOr !Ired. (R) 'Sw80. Q
(I)

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
•
UncondHiontl Miollmo guoron-

a

1:1 "!MMIIC-....,. Stereo.

....

Home
Improvements

••lclna '

wv.'

=:::::.~~~ It l

I'LL FOLLOW YOU,
()() YOU HEAA.?
Ni SOON'S I GET

w..-,

'

a

My_.a A haunted old
mansion and a hotel exhibit
bizarrelrrences. (R)
Stereo.
()) MOVI : O.acendlng
A~2
:00)
Ill
lalkatiMtl Ohio
State at llnola (L)
(I) OrHI Perlot n11nceo
Luclltto Pavarotti, Placido
Domingo ancl many other
artists perform. Stereo.
(I) 8 Wonder Y11ra Kevin's
grades tall wheO he begins
to worii]JQ a basketball star.
Sta~ . lj!
·
(!) Qolng Hctma to CJoljlet
WHit Patll l..lbelll The
Barren Slaters, Albertina
Hunter, The Mi{jhty Clouds ot
Joy, ancl Edwin Hewldns join
In a oelebretlon ot gospel
music. (1 ~30) Stereo.
111 Dlvla Rlllla Gw.t learns
her ex·lilln&lt;:e still wanta IQ
mirly her. Stereo. C

ALLEYOOP

•

I'URHITURI.
· Noo11gl1n lit
Oho a, 0 . .; IL Now I UHd
:;!:;::;_ _ _ __ __

81

~

-IMI'UtiNITURI

Er"rtonood , . _ Will COra
For YOIIr CttttdNto In Hot Holnt.

e

.. .. ... . . . . . : .. ci&gt;:.''''

ling.
:
71 Autos lor Sale
191'3 Chevy Novo Super Spo~, Complolollobllo Homo Sot.Opo, '
"--n; Com-Ical, R.....,_ '
body NI•UP lor llondofd or tlof
lmpoo,.monto. (ncltollng: :
auto, 8M~43-St72
Pturnbtria. Etooltlcot, lnluroncot .
Ctotmo Alicoptod.l14--1111. .
Cu~la Homo, lmllrOvomonla: ·
Ywa Exj&gt;orlonco On Oldor I ·
1177 Lincoln Town C..r, 304-17&amp;. -or Homor. Room AdctHiont. ;
Foundltion
Rootl!!v
2111.
KMc:hont And Botho. Fm, Eo!
1180 CutiiH Su;nmo Allll'll
cou, Good n.... iiOOd BrokH, =';"'c:j!:l.r~4i.:Z.~ T~
Rune Good, $118. 114 441 0014.
Ronovotionl, Add Ont, Rof!ll~
1111 Clmero, V.f, elr, tllrtO, Pointing, OUIIMy Workl COli
opoltor, aood tim, aood oond., R - AI: 814-1411-1511:
$1100; 1m Com.o,'lOS onatno,
good tlr•, Nnl gNit 1 ftOO,
Ron'•
TV ltmoo,
In
ZonHh
tloo
614-Mt-2511
olhlr bnndt. WI,
tiBt Grond
. Prix: ~ lhopo,
run1 ~. PSIPB, air, ~ng
$1,500. 504-171-4181.
-VIc - .
1082 Clmoro, 1912 Flroblnl: Dnti
01~"" CrMil Rei. Parte. eupboth good oonciHion, both run pllla, pickup, lnd dollvory. 114'
.
ood. Both v.e. $2,500 uch. 441-0214.
14-311-1770.
.

honroll Ffd
I 1Afrta;;alor1

Molalfwld twa' 111,.. 112
11&lt;1. Pl. , .....

7:35 (I) Slnlord ancl Son
1:00 a&gt;
0 UniOIVICI

Servtces

OUI IUttvltlo Rd.

MOll, tl4 •• , . .

offloe

Frlonjlly Aim oap hl!'.L Hot liM II
And
......
~-=~
w.......
, hJO
~ Ohio

-

18 Cfoalftre

-1013.

11"-Tf,...., """"'-a ll.u at, I

...

=-~-

fl.

..

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- : ......... H. .,.....

:r.:
:n::,:.ro,=. :'7a!
eta.
.
L------..,.,-----------..,.J .IIP-'1111."

r.::o:.::.

tummt~~~t~natllitinao

(L)

c111n Mixed ~:I· Ntwtr wet,

$1.25 Bolo. l14

e Fanily FIUCI

Q

ID Coleae llultltlblll North
Atlantic Conference
Toum1111ent, championship

75 Boats &amp; Motors

&amp; Grain

... WHit Children

Whlll of Fortuna

WEST
•953

•Qa

Qll Be I Star Stereo.

~"

tor Sale
guoon 251. Now Holland Round
Bolor. Comptllolino of Now Hoi· 171'1. Aluminum Orummonland and Mllll)' FerQL!ton E· Clnoo· Would Llko To Buy Or qulpmont. Froo llnanclng till Trodo FOi 14Ft John Boot. 81,..,
Soolt 1 on Troy-BIH Equlpmont. 446·1751.
Fa(rj,laln Tractor Ill.., Inc:, US
BOATERS
At. 33 • 1·77 111t 31, Ripley, WV,
phono 304-372·VB7516471. SoJVo Qulma Mercury M1rlnt Service.
Mtrcury, M1rfner, Marcrulttr .
lng Ohio ond Woll Virglnil.
apec:lllllt. Mercury Ctrtltlld. •
Now Holllnd 7 ft hoyblnd. Now Mobll1, We come ta you. 11ih
Hollond I ft hoy bind. Now Hof. 259-am.
lond Supor 111 Forago Horv...
101. Gthl VS grlndor-mlxor. All ox 76 Auto Pans &amp;
cond, 304·2'13-4215.
Accessories
Wlntod: Uood """ oqulpmont,
•nrthlng you want to 1111. C.ll lx5 n olumn truck toppor, nod, '
15M-2sa-;1308, 251-1040 after II $225, tlko now, 304-875-2580.
.
p.m.
ludJ:. T10nomlooiono, UHd 6 ·
63
liVeStOCk
•'"~. 'driotvorll11ing1 n~ot$_!IlL )!_on
.OOI :
~::--=,.,..,,.--,.,-,..-..,,.·• .,..
ti Yoor Old Tom. Wolkor lllro 114-245-&amp;1177, 1142113.
Bay, Good Tompormont, $1,000.
614-141.0020.
79 Campers&amp;
Motor Homes
Angus And .Cht-Anauo Block
Built Roooonobly Prlcod. Slota
Run ~ormo, Jochon, Ohio, 114- 1190 Jaiyco IK'P'UP c.mper, 1008
Dltuxe, tlltp-11 Ma furnace:
266-5395.
uood vory Unit, 13,300. 114-MtHoao ond Plgt lor oolo. Colll14- 2933
31f-1252
Clmi"!J_ oloopo olx, olklng
Llmouoln
yurllna
butts t1300, 0110,114·1'12·2311
purobnd. 2yr. old Llmouoln il
Sonto Oortrudlo bulla, nice Trovot Trolilr, 32ft. Holiday
bulla, rouonobly pricod, 114- Romblor, Full Soli Con\olnod,
cll8;,;,;
·2,;.76;;5_ _ _ _ _ __ - T o llotllll4-3111-11331.

Rentals

&amp;:.--- - - -

i

INC.

1111, trodo, S:OD-5:00 -kdoyo, 171-2G81.

Sot. till Noon.

Er:t:
Ti
l
n
l
g
hl
.

Siereo.
Ma

Fo80i'CJ,

Good COndHion. ta,OOO. 814- -:,m=-::Tri~u~m~ph~B;.:on:_:no:.v~l:7-llo~750=cc367-7554.
Y.ory. Good Shapo, 12,000 Milot.
Hll Wagon Now Hollsnd Rokn :304::._::-11M~:.:305:::..= -c=----::l 5quoro Baloro, P.T.O. llonuro 1982 Yomoh'!J XT 250 Dl~ Blko, ·
Sprlldel'l, Cuhl'llton, CuHI· Nft' Tlrll, ltJ:hlu.. And Tune
Poc~oro, WhMI Dltkl, Pick-Up ~- Exclllorri CondHion, 3,100
Dl1k1, SMd.,., . Sub Soller,
Com Plonloro U1UHy Tnllor, ~~~01,!!_$5~50~.~11~t~44~6~34~11~.--:::':'
Howo'o Form Mochlnory. Jock- 1984 Hondo Shodow 70o; ·
oon Ohio. l144811-51144.
5600111,$1500, 814·1'12·2545
. '

PHIIJ,IP
ALDER

e

(I)

NORTH
1-11-11
.KQ10882
.AK4
tA
.J74

.

ylllll
lllJ The Wallorta
7:05 (I) Addlma Fatnllr
7:30 (2)
0 ~niYI C
()) Now h Cln Bl toiiJ

FRANK AND ERNEST

n11 WhMI, Automatic, Power
91•rlng, &amp; Brakn, $2,000. 614317-7013.

looturing Amino Acid Body
Building wolght 1011 ond 111
bu- iormuroa. Avalloblo oxctuolvoty ot Alto Aid Pharmacy.
Tho Nil WIY to dill.
King Slzo Wllorbod, Foncy
llolld-d · WHh lllrro NoW Hootor 11.011 EMFJ. 114-IIWIIM. 64

'i:':'d

Bullnen

2.- ----

t

ger, Fot Mort Information, 614·

m1111 Sarvlc11 otflca . O.adllna

ADS

4. WD, 1983 Full Slzo Foid
Bronco, 4 Spold, $2,100; 19870..
50 Plck.Op Dodoo, 2 wo;
12,aoo. lt4-2!11-e2st
·
For Sill: 18'19 Ford Bronco, Air,

,,

BRIDGE

18

1124 E. Moln Stroot, Pomoroy. 61 Farm Equipment
Hours: M.T.W. 10:00 1.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sundl)' 1:OD to 8:00 p.m. 8t' wood on cottlo rockl, tHo 'S9
614·HZ-252t.
Chovorolot, 114-112-41035
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
Ferm•ll
SuDer
C
trlictor.
WHh
54 Miscellaneous
plOWS, cuttrvatora, mowing me· 19815 9 ..10 Bluer, V-1, Auto, AC,
clllno. Now point, Good condl· 15,000 MIIH, $4,100. 614·251Merchandise

bollor. 304~71-2811.
Elactrlc Whloicholr WHh Chor·

ttamera nectlllry. Teaching monthly. 114-44t-8325.
C.nlflettl I piUI, but not r•
quiNd. AppUceUont avaltlblt at 3 bedroom, 14x10 mobile home,
Ohio Bureau of Employmtnt 1 lecut•td .:re, 11tra room
StNICII.
wfwoodbum~r, cav•td pgrch, 2
llvel deeD In blck, WDGdahtd,
TRAVEL
groot cond, 304-576-2713.
lmmtdlate O~nlnga For 15 Men
And Women Who Art FrM To Nico, 1Dx45, 2bdrm. trollor, tully
Trani Entire U.S.A. On A Ran. corootod, IIG'Io l JOtrigorotor
dom Itinerary Doing Publlahart lncludtd, n- hoi: wltll' helt•r,
Contact Work Fot Major Spor1a, $3000, 114-1112-27H

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

Buy or 1111. Rl't'erlnt Anliquat,

Culligan wat1r 10ft1ner 3 yra
old $80. AD Smith Hydronlc

tor application• Is March 13,
1992. Potting Otscrlption 11 11
followt: PT ConHact Position 1

March 23, 1H2, lhrougft June
30, 1M2. Experience wflh adult

'

Antiques

BoNo! 7 Drowor, Moplo WOOd
Dllk, $350 Etch.IM-441-6308.

llpo lttwMn 10 A.ll. I &amp; P.M. ter, 7 W. Twenty· nine
WMk p .
Drlvt,NalaonvUit, Ott, 45764 .
Applications may only be obltlned tram &amp; rllurnad to your
local Ohio Burt1u of Employ.

Basic

53

Couch Makla Cu11n Size IK

Muot Apply In - A t: Rtnlll Southaastern Prabatlon TraatKI~
S Ohio Rlvor Plozo, Gol· mtnl AHematlvt (SEPTA) Cen·

AduH

Solo-flex extrclll machine,
good 8hipl, ICC:Ipta all aH•chmtntl, 614-H2-H17

181·731t

Englloh, Sond R11umo ~o: P.O.
Box 213, Goilipollo, OH 45631.

Taachtra. Adutt Baalc Educa·
lion teachlr1 n.dld beginning

rle:s~
-~-

ID

verado, ~ad , 30,000MI, black
wlclnlury lap,.r, very 1h1rp,
$14,000, after Spm 814·992·7360

Noh, .,00 lor all, 8t4-9411-2106
Big I Bedroom Dokoto DrHm
lkimo1 ~,115 I U.. BuiH On
Your LOU. - our llodlll, 614·

NMded: Engllah lnatructor.
Mult Have IS DegrH In

IN THE
ED

~~_l~nt ;:ht

tt88 Chovr s-to, 4 crt., 5 opel.,
304·773-5700 oftor 4:30pm.
lVII ChiVI' 112ton 4WO Sl~

clubt.
Exii'Cill
bike. Hnton PT-10 tft hlybtn1. Oliver Hondl 50. N11d minor work. :
Rsrrlaerator. Weight bench. 304· grain drill on rubber. 20ft lim• c.ll514-317--0138.
don oxlo tnltor.l14-3aMI84.
.:::::,:,::7.:;:..:.=.,.,..,.,.,::-=
8'15-7NS.
1188 VZ V1m1h1 125, $1,100. 304·
3 uHCI •wnlng l~IM aluminum Jtm'o Form EqulpmoniJ.SR. 35, 111-2111.
window• two 4 x4' and one Wnt Galllpolle, 114-441-177'7i
4'10' w"h pk:1ure window In Wldo ootoctlon new l uooc1 '""' Hondo XR 250, oxc cond, tt,200,
canter whh screen• &amp; ttarm trooto10 l lmplomonto. Buy, Trl County Spono Shop, 30&gt;1.

HouM, S2501mo. Plua Utllll'-s,

S.ctlon.al Home For Salt : Above And DopooH. 114 441 0331. Coli
Av«age Condition, 14 Ytara Boloro7p.m.

32 Mobile Homes

~5:""*,2

. o tx12 f4 shooting, $.25
per foot. 2dxt2• $3.35 IICh . 40
aol. gu wllor holtor, $40. 4x8
hall Inch plywood. 304~'151004.
3 pc ooctlonot. Sot kldo golf Heavy gu1g1 uHd roofing tin. 1114 Hondl XRBO 1nd 18'5

tram $:1P21mo. Walk Ia ahop &amp;
movloa. CIII614-441-256B. EOH.

Complotly

U:C~IJL
c.:..tt c-rt

2000 fl

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jockoon Plko

Comp loto lito chuckle· quoted
by filling In tho missing words
you devolop from slop ~b. 3 below.

(I).

podl$200. 6 -441-41412.
2 petite off- shoulder prom
drtaHI, 1 rG)'II blue, IOUthtm
bollt llylo, olzo 4, 1 INI 10•
qulnod, olzo 415, 114-9411-2270

5136.

Old timer lo young fellow: •
"If you take too long In , ·
dectding whal lo do with ~
your life, you will ·lind o~t
youhavealready---- ··." ·

De CISNe. . Q
• Andy Clrtlftlll

(I) lnlkll Edltlan ~

tlon. Mutt 111 lo •PPf'ICiata. 11434.
1 Yoor Old 15 Gol. Floh Tonk, $1100. 304-882-3231.
WHh Clblno~ Comptotty Equip- Foo Soto: 9 Ft. Hlr Sino, Vory 74
Motorcycles

roqulrod .. 304-675-7131 or 1'15-

I

L.-.L.-1..-1..-1..-'·"-..1.

~ The Jellerlona,.P

Ohio.

3 bedroom brtck rench, large

S.tklng A

Spoo10, 304-8'15-1129.
Tribune, 825 Third Avenue, Gtf·
AVON got In on tho ground lloor llpotlo, OH 45631.
u.t: black. whitt &amp; brown of Avon• new taming structure.
MLT For A Fully Equipped
walker Coon dog an Sharon 1-80~H2-6356.
Phyolclono
Lib. Good
30
7
Rd., Raclno, OH., 4-7 3-50I5
=c-:,AH:,:N.,:E:;R:.;Y:.:W=OR"'KE=R"'S"IA
'""LA"'S"'K""
A Bonol~a, No ONico
Shift Work. Apply
Hiring $100• Willy. O.or 1000 In Ptrwon: Mtclcal PlaZii, 203
Openlngs.
MaiiiFtmaJe. Jocklon Pike, Gollipotlo.
Tronsp.JHouttna. con E.t.c.
Yard
Sale
7
Nowt
1·206·738-7000
Ext. NEED EXTRA MONEY FOR
SPRING? Sail Avon Earn At
151MB3.
ALL Yonllloloo lluol Bo Pold ·in
Much At You NHd. 1-800-281·
Advo,... DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m. Coomototoalll NHdod: Gouron· 4801.
tho doy boton tho od 11 to run. tHd $170 Por WHk, Paid
Sundly odHion • 2:00 p.m. Vocotlono, Clll614-441-7267.
FrldiY. llondoy odHion • 2:00 Dellvtry Person: We Art I.Dok·
p.m. Sotunlly.
lng For Good Ptopla To Handle N-d: Cl~lllod Nursing At·
Dtll¥1rlol And Plck.Opt. Wo 01· llltant ICF for long term cart
tor Con\potltivo Wlgoo, Pold flclllty, Clrohovon of Point
Medical fniUI'Inct, P"ald Vac:a- Pt11ant, 304~76-3005.
Pt. Pleasant

lllddlopon,

304-6SZ-3287.
2·bdrm mobllo homo In Mld31 Homes tor Sale
dlopon, 114-1192·111.!1
110 High St., Pomoroy, 4 baths,
3 full troo,.,guebo overtaoklng 2br, Rant, 6 Mllll OUt Rt.ZtS1
Dopooil
Ano
village, urlaua lnqulrlu only, S3001!"o.
Roloroncot
lloqutrod.
614-251114·1141-2188 III'HI m•llgt
1251.
Roducod To Soli: $49,900,
Chnhir'!!_ Ohio. 101-m-6959, 44
Apanment
a01:932·1l170, 614-3117-G849.
tor Rent
2 Blocks From Golllpollo City
P1rtt. Grut For In-Home Bual- 1·bdrm opt. In lllddlopo~.
nanJ Rotl10d, Or Schoolo. 614- utllltln lurn, dip req, no ~II,
251 .. 815.
614·1192·221S

For 9•51 or Atnl, 3 bedroom,
A•panalble p.,.an Far A natural gu heat, ctnlral air,
Wor1dng Manage,. POtitlon. gorogo, llooon, 304-882·35113.
WlUing
To Troln Tho Right Por· G111lpolla Ferry aru, l1vtl acr1
AVON • All lrHI, Call Marilyn ton. Send
LAtter Of lnltmt And
WNvtr 304-fl82·2145.
IICIIonal homt. I.Dta tx1r11,
Work Exporionco Alol)g With lot,
flrtp1aCI ltOVI 1 fridge, dllhAVON I All Arou I Shlnoy S.lary Aequlrtmtntt To: CLA WIIhtr, 1micrOWIVI,
centll tlr,
Box 109, clo Golllpotls Dolly
LDc:ll

BR,

1

I

e

Alf«lnCII &amp; depDIII required.

I I• I I

J AN0 0 1
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304~75-140S .

5 Roomo And Both, At 44 Olivo
St..ot, Golllpollo. lnquiJW At 111

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homo. Excollont -ion.
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

71 AUtos for sale

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11 , 1992

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W L I P W W P A ' P T N •·
PREVIOUS SOLUTION: "It don't make rnucll dHteret!ct what you study,
10 10ng u you don't like it." - Finley P11ar Dunne . .

11

!•'Ii
I ..

�14-.-The

senunel

R_ac~nefFA. com.pete!
Mtchcllc F~en!l, Chns. Hamm
and Stephan1e SaY,re. recently
attended the 1992 D1stnct Pubhc
Speaking Contest held at Jackson
High ~chool. . .
.
Fnend partiCipated m the
advanced prepared speech division
of the contest with "Agricultural
Jobs' Fut~re in Marketing." She
pl~ced th1rd and rece1ved a gold
raung.
.Harnm took part in the extempo-

raneo.us speech divt~!on. The title
of h1s ~peech ;:vas Ag.ncuhu~e
Revcl~tromzed. He rece1ved a silver ratmg.
. Sayre panicipated i~ ~e beg~nmng prepared speech d1vts10n w1th
"A Standard of Excellence." She
placed second and received a gold
rati.n~. S.he will go to the state compennon. m June.
Dunng FFA week the group
conducted several activities to

EQUIPMENT DISCUSSED • Glen Thoma,
· representing Baum Lumber Company, Chester,
explains his equipment and various safe uses to

conduct activities

mvolve area ~tudents and adult
community. members. Under the
direction of the public relations
chairman Jason Ervin several
lo~al co~panies were ~sked to
bnng garden equipment to demon·
strate at the garden show.
Glen Thoma of Baum Lumber
Com~any, ~and Steve Morris of
Morns Equ1pment, and Richard
McKee of O'Dell Lumber, spoke to
kindergarten students in relation to

safety .aroun!llawn equipment and
also discusse!l their product with
th.e students of Southern High
School and also people from .the
com~ unity.
M1chelle Brown and Michelle
Friend, committee chairmen the
chapter also conducted a peiting
zoo and open hou_se for the gneenhouse. It was esumated that over
400 people attended this event.
FFA members discussed nubitional
requirements and other care for all
livestock as well as plants. A cactus was given to each kinderganen
student who participated.
Billy Long and .Michelle Brown
were in charge of teacher and staff
appreciation dily. Along witli a
tour, all teachers and staff were
treated to coffee and doughnuts.
During District 10 evaluation
the chapter was given to BOAC
Area Award and also was rated as a
superior chap1er. The officer books
were judged and received as follows: treasurer, Tom Adkins, silver; reponer, Stephanie Sayre, silver; and secretary, Christie CoopCr,
bronze. Stephanie Sayre received
first place m fruit and vegetable
production and will receive $25
and a trophy at the district banquet.
The chapter was also encouraged to participate in the Meigs
Soil and Wa1er Conservation Essay
Contest. Thiny-five essays were
written on the topic ''Woodlands."
These essays briefly discussed the
historical and current status of
woodlands in Meigs County. The
students described their ideas on
the future of woodlands in relation
to philosophical, economical or
cultural arguments.
New officers elected were
Stephanie Sayre, president; Clifford Smith, vice president; Jason
Ervin, treasurer; Chris Hamm,
reporter; Chris Brown, sentinel;
Christie Cooper, secretary; and
Kathy OtUnan, student advisor.
The annual banquet will be.held
March 19 at6:15 p.m. All parents,
students, alumm, teachers and
administrators are invited. Those
attending bring a covered dish and
advise of the number attending.

high school students, teachers and kindergarten
students during the Racine FFA garden tractor
show held during FFA week.

......,M "

'"

'·'" ·~ .

Eric C!apton
makes rare TV
appearance

LAWN MOWER SAFETY • Richard McKee,
representing O'Dell Lumber, Pomeroy,

By DEBORAH HASTINGS
AP Television Writer
LOS ANGELES (AP) MTV's acoustically corr~ct
"Unplugged" series features a rare
television appearance tonight by
rock's ubiquit.ous Eric Clapton.
Taped Jan. 16 at Bray Studios in
Windsor, England, the show - to
be broadcast at 10 p.m. Eastern and
Pacific times - is a showcase of
new work, never-recorded work
and old work with new arrangements.
The progmm's taping came 10
months afler Clapton'Je!;&amp;ear-old
son, Cooor, feU to his
from a
53rd-floor apartment in New Yotlc.
Clapton's grief is reflected in
"Tears in Heaven," which he
wrole as pan of the score for Lili
Fini Zanuck's feature film

explained the safe use or a lawn mower tn students during the Racine FFA garden tractor
show beld during FFA week.

"Rush."

kinderaarten students on lawn miiWer safety
during FF A week at Racine.

SAFETY DISCUSSED.· Steve Morr.ls ol
Morris Equipment, Rutland, instructs various

Wolf Pen area news
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Summerfield
and Crystal, Medina, were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Roben
Ruuell and family.
Mli. and Mrs. Robert Reeves and
Cln!Uy, Chesler~ were Sunday afler·
noon visitors .of Mrs. Dorothy

1

"It was really needed to illustrate loss," Clapton says in offstage remarks explainin~ the
soundtrack's genesis. "And 11 was
a good opportunity to write about
my son, about the loss of my son,
and have somewhere to put iL And
I really wanted to say something
about what had happened to me.''
What happened to Clapton is a
long line of tragic events . Before
his son's death, Clapton had faced
the news that a helicopter crash
took the lives of his agent, Bobby
Brooks, crew members Nigel
Browne and Colin Smythe, and
friend and fellow musicUUI Stevie
Ray Vaughan.
Preceding that was a life marked
' by battling personal demons with
alcohol and drug abuse. He has
been sober fQr five years.
Clapton's selecuons in tonight's
"Unpfugged" segment (the series
is so named because performers
P,lay without amplifiers) include
'The Circus Lert Town, ' another
song written about the loss of his
son.
The title comes from the last
time Clapton saw Conor, :ovhen
father and son spent an evenmg at
the circus.
"There's not much I can say
about these (songs) except they
helped me get throUgh a very rough
pitCh in my life," Claptnn says.
The song begins, "Little man
with his eye~ 011 fR and his smile
so brigh!J In his hands are the toys
you gave lhll filled his heart with

Birthday celebration held

delighL"

A party washeld recen~y to celebrale the second birthday of KayIa
Gheen at her home in Middleport. ·

The ho·ur-long program also
touches 011 earlier entties in' Clap·
ton's voluminous Portfolio that
spans three decades and at least
foil' groaps, including Creani and

Guest.l were Frank and Doima
Gheen, grandparents; James and
a.-.
Saturday visitors of Naomi Scot Gheen, unc:lca; LuCy Gbeen,
Stnidl were Mr. and Mrs. Doyle aunt; Shari Wnpt, Lila and Llura
IC1app, Mrs. Kevin Knapp, GbeeD, c:ouslns.
Michelle, Amy and Ashley •. Mrs.
0111~ attending were ChristoClllrles Knapp and Kail Kilapp and pher
and Maartolia Nltz, Bettina
Tanda Salser.
and
Gabriel
Ifill, Tllny and Ariel
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
K1ien
with
Brian
Nitz, Bobby Rupe
Slllb and Matthew, Texas Road,
Jr.
and
Jeri
Lynn
Hawley.
wn Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Wn. E111Dae HtninS and ROIII!d.
A "Sesame Street" theme wu
ltt/i4IIJ Knapp WM 8n O¥emighl
.... Other plitdplretlll, Mr. and carried out with cako, ice cream,
roya I!M' pmea enjoyed bY all.
... Doyle Knapp, 011 Satunlay.

,,

Derek and lhe DomlDOes.

Aux~iary

to hold
smorgasbord dinner

The Buhu Ladlea Auxiliaty
wiD have a lllnl~ dinner on
Sunday from I~· to 2 p.m
M~nu includes bated chicken·
ham, mashed polltoel lnd gravy:
dreulng, green bew, ro1b, ~
made noodlcl, cole 1law, deaa"
and ckinb.
$4.50 fer ldalts
and $2 for ciiUdren llllCieJ 12. Ti1te
0111 available.

eo.•

'

osu tops Big

Beat of the Bend...

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3: 538
Pick 4: 1743

10 race after
82-70 victory

by Bob Hoeflich
Monday was such a glorious Maxine's earlier years in Rutlaild
spring day. The calm before the and at the bank were on display.
stonn, perhaps, but wasn 'I it great No doubt, Maxine shed a tear or
two als!&gt;-happy ones, again. By
while it lasted! ·
the way, he husband, Chuck, was
Two favorite friends of mine- on hand in the background to proand yours, too, probably, were hon- vide his good moral suppon.
Both honorees are so deserving
ored in tlhe past three days.
and
what a nice gesture to give
On Sunday, members of the
lively Shady River Shuffiers, their flowers to the living.
spouses and friends held a surprise
And bouquets to Eugene and
bash for their director, Paulette
Harrison, at the old American Elizabeth Carpenter who will mark
their ti4th wedding anniversary on
Legion Hall in Middleport.
St.
Pabick's Day, March 17. Now
Kay Hemsley, one of Paulene's
that's
a long, long time. Cards will
many friends, appeared to be the
reach
them at Carpenter Road,
engineer for the event held a few
days after Paulette's birthday. Kay Portland, Ohio 45no.
had made a video of members com·
Roger Williams of the Middlementing on their membership with
the fast-moving dancing organiza- port Village Recreation Departtion. Playing that video for ment keeps things hopping down
Paulette was a feature of the after- that way.
He's announcing that there will
noon. You can bet they all paid
high tribute to their director who be a live children's theater presenhas been a fantastic leader not only tation of "Rumplestiltslcin" by the
in keeping the group together for so Columbus Junior Theater Group at
long but for the numerous details 1 p.m. this Friday evening at the
she handles in accomplishing those American Legion Hall on South
sharp and numerous appearances. Fourth St. It should be very well
Before the afternoon was over, done and is something the lcids will
Paulette shed more than one tear- enjoy. Do see that they get there.
happy tears, however.
And, by the way, the Middleport
On Monday, Bank One honored Recreation Deparunent is also stag·
Maxine Griffith with a reception at ing a youth bowling tournament for
the Pomeroy Bank. Maxine young people from eight through
walked through the doors of what 15 on March 14 at the Pomeroy
was formerly the Pomeroy National Bowling Lanes. Registrations
Bank exactly 50 years to the day- could be closed, but you might try
on March 9, 1942. She was calling 992-6782 if you're interest·
employed by Pomeroy National ed.
many years before it was purchased
by Bank One and of course, she's
Now if I understand this correctstayed on. Maxine is now doing all ly, our Representatives in Washof those Senior Champ bips-and ington, D. C. have "bounced" II
do they ever get around! Bank million dollars worth of checks.
employees served refreshments to These, our leaders-we select them
the many visitors on Monday and yet. Just makes you feel so proud,
Maxine was delighted to again see doesn't it? Do keep smiling.
so many friends . Mementos of

Cards:

6-H; Q-C; 5-D;
7-S

Super Lotto:
16-20-35-39-40-45
Kicker: 401127

Page6

••
Vol. 42, No. 217

WEDNESDAY
CHESTER · The Past Councilors Club of Chester Council No.
323, Daughters of America, will
meet Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the
home of Ethel Orr with Lora
Damewood as co-hostess. Members wear something green or bring
something pertaining to St.
Pabiclc's Day.

Commission discusses revised solid waste plan ·
By B!UAN J, REED
Sentmel News Staff
The revis~d plan for the
AGHJMV Sohd Waste Plan was
d1scussed. when the Meigs County
CommiSSIOners metm regular session Wednesday morning.
Commission President Manning
K. Roush presented the voluminous
plan to the board yesterday, and
reported that it would be placed in
the Meigs County Public Library in
Pomeroy from March 24 through
May 5 for public review.
. After that time, public hearings
Will be held a~d the plan will ~o
before tow~sh1p tru!tees .and v1l!age counctls for rauficauon once

agam. The ongmal diSI':'ct pl~n to Roush, mclu~s that snpul~aon.
was passed overwhelmmgly m . Roush explamed that wuh the
Meigs C~u~ty last year, but failed dissatisfaction exp~sed in Athe~s.
topassd1stnct-w1.de.
Vmton and porllons of Galha
The ~ew rev1sed plan makes County on the ftrst plan, the new
concessiOns to Athens County, plan must pass nearly 100 percent
Roush said, despite the fact that m the remaining counties (HoekAthens Coun!Y 'Yants to leave ~e mg, Jackson, and Meig~). If the
AG HJ~V d1strtc.t to form then plan does not pass ~n th1s seco~d
own sohd waste distnct. The EPA try, the EPA w1ll1mp!ement tts
has rejected their request to with· own pl~n, and the .district's residraw and Athens County has de~!S w1ll foot the btl!;
.
appealed.
,
W1th th1s plan, Roush sa1d
. At t!'C heart of A~ns County s yesterday, "we have a chance at
d1ssat1sfaCllon. w1th the . fmt h~vmg $13 P.Cr-ton garb~ge fees. If
AGHJMV p_lan ~~ thetr deme. to th1s pi~ fatls, the ~nvtr~nmenlll.l
manage thetr ex1stmg recycl~ng Protec~on Agency w1ll wnte a plan
program. The new plan, aecordmg that wtll set fees at $60 per ton.

POMEROY • There will be a
round and square dance on Friday
from 8-11:30 p.m. at Hockingport
on Route 124 at the home of Kenny
and Millie Reynolds . Music 6y
Smokey Mountain Drifters. Ronnie
Wood is caller. Country and blue
grass music is played there every
Monday at 7 p.m. The public is
invited.

and $1S for aU othen.

'

·

'

passed on to the pubhe.
"If tha.t'.s what we want to .get
for our Clll_zens, they ~hould JUSt
run us all of the coun.ty.
Other busmess
Commissioner Richard Jones
~uggested that the bo~ consi~
ms~~bo.n of a new heaung and atr
condiuonmg system at the County
Home. Jones suggested that the
funds for the new system come
from the Peters Grant. That grant
was bequeathed to the county severa! years ago by a county resident
for use in improving the welfare of
the county's elderly populat1on.

By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Stair
Engineers for the Ohio Depanment of Transportation unveiled
the newly-completed road alignment for Phase I of the
Ravenswood Bridge Connector
when the Meigs County Commissioners met in regular session on
Wednesday.
Tom Hedrick, an ODOT location and design engineer, Project
Engineer Victor Wolff, and Saleh
EldaeldabaJa. a .design engineer,
discussed wtth the commissioners a
series of maps showing the tenia·
tive location of the ftrst step of the
long-awaited bridge connector

MIDDLEPORT · The Widow
Suppon Group will hold a potluck
dinner on Friday at noon at the
Middleport Church of Christ. All
widows invited.

'I.

~.cost w11l

The money has been saved for possible HVAC installation at the
home.
A request for a reduced speed
limit on Flatwoods Road at Royal
Oak Resort was discussed. Commissioner Jones said that the Ohio
Department of Transportation
requires that a traffic count and survey be performed and plans are
underway for that ~nt
The commissioners also:
. discussed upcoming repairs at
the county jail, the courthouse and
the extension office;
. announced that renovations in
the auto title office were complete,

and that the computer system is
ready for inSiallation·
• discussed grani sources for a
Disabled American Veterans
(DAV) project with representatives
of the Ohio Young Democrats of
America;
• authorized advertisement for
bids for bituminous materials for
the year for the Meigs County
Garage.
Present, in addition to Roush
and Jones, were County Engineer
Philip Roberts, Highway Superintcndent Ted Warner; Commissioner David Koblentz and Clerk Mary
Hobstetter.

Commissioners view Phase I plans
of Ravenswood bridge connector project

Music by George Hall. Cost is $5
per person. Public invited.

THURSDAY
POMEROY • Rock Springs
TUPPERS PLAINS • Round
Grange will met at 8 p.m. Thursday
and
square dance Friday 8-11 :30
at the hall. Video of Pomeroy will
p.m.
sponsored by Tuppers Plains
be shown by Roger and Mary
VFW
and Ladies Auxihary. Music
Gilmore. Baking contest will be
by
Happy
Hollow Boys.
held.
SAnJRDAY
MIDDLEPORT · The Bradbury
BURLINGHAM
• Modern
PTO will host a banquet for stu·
Woodmen
of
America,
Camp
7230,
dents and their parents at the BradBurlingham,
will
have
a
potluck
on
bury School Thursday at6 p.m.
Saturday at6:30 p.m. at the hall in
TUPPERS PLAINS • Tuppers Burlingham.
Plains VFW Post No. 9053 will
POMEROY • Belles and Beaus
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at the
Western
Square Dance Club will
post home.
sponsor an open dance on Satunlay
CHESHIRE • There will be a from 8-11 p.m. at the senior ciufree clothing day sponsored by the zens center in Pomeroy. Billy Gene
Gallia.Meigs Community Action Evans is caller. Refreshments
Agency on Thursday from 9 a.m. to served.
noon at the old high school buildCHESTER · A skating party for
ing in Cheshire.
Girl Scouts will be held Saturday
POMEROY • Preceptor Beta from II a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the
Beta Chapter, Beta S1gma Phi Skateaway at Chester. A litter
Sorority, will meet Thursday at olympics will be held March 28 at
7:30 p.m. at the Episcopal parish the Meigs County Fair Grounds.
house. Cindy Oliveri will be the
LOTTRIDGE • Country music
guest speaker. Hostesses are Joan
Corder and Velma Rue.
. night at the Lottridge Community
Center will be Saturday from 6
REEDSVILLE • Eastern High p.m. to midnigllt. All bands welSchool winter sports banquet will· come. Refreshments sel"o'ed. Public
be Thursday at 6:30 p.m. in the invited.
high school gymnasium . Bring a·
RUTLAND · Sign-up for the
meat, vegetable and dessen dish.
1992
ball season·in Rutland will.be
Beverage aoo table service providheld Sawrday from 9 a.m. to I p.m.
ed.
at the Rudand Civic Center. Cost is
$10 per child. Birth certificate must
FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT • "Rum· be provided if this is the first signplestiliskin" will be ~resented at up.
the Middle(&gt;!&gt;n Amencan Legion
CHESTER • Baseball and sofi.·
Hall on Fnday at 1 p.m. by the
Columbus Junior Theatre Touring ball siJD·up for Chesler Bise~l
Group. 1icket prices are $1 for stu, Association will' be Sawrday 10
a.m. to noon. Call BUI Buckley at
dents and $2 for adulls.
992-2996 for information.
HARRISONVILLE • HarMIDDLEPORT • The Middle'risonville PTO will sponsor a St.
pon
Youth League will hold sign.
Patrick's Day dance on Friday
up
for
the 1992 ball season on Sat·
from 7 p.m . to 10 p.m. at Harrisonville Elementary School. urday from 9 a.m. to noon. All
There will bC a live band, "EZ sign-ups will be held at the MiddJe.
Country". Admissioil ·is $2 adults VO!.': Coupcil Buildina 111c1 the cost
IS $10 per child, 110110 tlcecd $2,1
and $1 for students.
per' funily. Any child not playial'
LONG BOITOM • There will last season will need acopy of their
be a hymn sing 11 tbe faith Full birth eertiflCIIe. Mcmberlhlp carda
Gospel Chuttlt in Long Boillllll 011 will also ~ available ·11 thls tim~
Friday 11 7.p.m. featuring Russ for acost of •
•
.'
'
Spencer and the Southern Hill
RACINE • The Racine Youth
Smgen. Pastor Steve Reed inviteS
Leaaue will hold sign-up Cor basethe public. Pellowship will follow.
ball and aoftball on Saturday 10;
a.m.
10 'noon. If this ilthe first
· MIDDLEPORT • There will be
sign-up
for a ptllliciJ*It a bini! cera SL Palriei's Day dance CIIJ P!iday
.
tiflcato
eopy must be fumilllld,
from 7-11 p.m. at the American
The
cost
Is $10 for prls aoftblll ·
Legion Annex in _Mi4dl~port.

2 S-=tl'::d 12 Plllft 25 cen11
A Multi
l1 Inc. New1p1per

Pomeroy·Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, March 12, 1992

Copyrlghtlld 19112

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

Low tonJabtla mJa-•s.
Friday, sunny. High near 35.

road.

Along with the projected road
alignmeJ\t, the¥~ discussed
whicn properties wOO!lfliflifleeted'
by the new road and purth8sed' by
the state in the road construction
process. Construction on the first
-phase could liegin as soon as early
1994.
According to the design present·

JMPO~TANT LESSON· Debbie Lowery's
sixth graders at Harrisonville Elementary
School were givea a CPR demonstration on
Tuesday, compliments or the school's Partner in
Education, Southern Ohio Coal Company. Pic·

ed yesterday, an intersection near
the Pomeroy Gun Club will connect an access road (which will
include a tunnel under the neiv
four-lane) to nearby properties with
the new section of State Route 7.
Also at that intersection, a new section of County Road 25 (Pomeroy
Pike) will connect remaining property owners with the new highway.
The first portion of the existing
C.R. 25, nearest Rock Springs, will
serve Meigs High School as an
access road, while PDK Construetion will be served by another
access road.
Homes nearest this new intersection will be demolished, but
m~st _of the residences alonf the
ex1sttng Pomeroy Pike WI I be
saved. The only other residence
that the state now J!.lans-to')Jul'Cilase
and demoli$li fot' ih~ roadway is a
h~use ov~ooking State Route 7 at
F1ve P~mts, where an off-~amp
and~ ulun:'ately, ~ cloverleaf mter·
secbon will be butlt.
All plans reviewed and dis-

cussed yesterday were tentative,
but are not expected to change dramatically between now and the
time bids are awarded in 1994. The ·
purpose of the meeting yesterday
between the ODOT engineers and
the commissioners was to discuss
access roads and details involved in
the process of abandoning roads or
transferring ownership of those
roads to townships.
The commissioners plan to
coordinate a series of meetin~s
with ODOT officials and township
trustees to discuss these procedures.
The required environmental
studies on the entire connector pro·ject (Phases I, ll, and lll) are now
being completed, Hedrick S8ld yesterday.
..:~ A 1publit heating on-tlic ncvr
roadway is expected to be held next
winter, and ODOT anticipates
meeting with affec~ed property
owners prior to that ume. Properyy
purchase is expected to begm
shortly afterward.

tured with the students Is SOCCO training
supervisor Chuck Wood. He was assisted at the
schcol by SOCCO secretary Chris Bailey. The
school's P.I.E. representative is Vicki Haley.

Pomeroy Merchants receive
update on revitalization project
By JUUE E. DILLON
Sentinel News Stair
John Musser, spokesman for
Pomeroy's revitalization commit·
·tee, updated members of the
Pomeroy Merchants Association on
th~ progress of that project at the
association's regular meeting on
Wednesday.
Musser stated the committee has
selected Mike Stroth of SBA Consultrtnts, Jackson, to perform what
would be the flllit step of the revitalization process • a cenmil busi •
ness survey, at a cost of $2,000.
This survey will attempt to identify .
the needs ·that could be fulfilled in
applying for revitalization.
The revitalization committee,
through members of the merchants

association, and any other interest·
ed party' will attempt, by the rust
pan of April, to raise the money
necessary to complete the survey.
This survey, according to M~­
er, is part of the work which must
be completed anyway. It will show
whether or not there is the necessary backing of business and property owners to proceed with the
central business plan. The plan •
not the survey • is necessary before
application can be made for revitalization funds. The plan would cost
an additional $10,000 which would
come from the merchants associa·
tion an~ hopelullf. from Pomeroy
Village Counci , according to
Musser. He streSSed the importance

-~. Local

briefs---,

Pair being evaluated in Athens
Two men, charged with criminal activity in Meigs County Common Pleas Court, were sent to the State Mental tfealth Cenler in
Athens for evaluation earlier this week.
Meigs Co~ly Sheriff James M. Squlsby reported Wednesday
that Dotts Rollms, who IS charged with aggravated murder, attempt·
ed ~n. and tMie counts of aggravated menacing, was talcen to the
hospital on Tuesday evening for evaluation.
Rollins had pled not guilty to the charges, which stem from a
New Year's Day incident on Cherry Ridge Road, in which Rollins
allegedly threalened members of his family with a gun an&lt;! auempt·
ed to bum the family's mobile llome·
Soulsby -reponed that a ·second defendant, Harold Howard
attempted to inflict harm to himself while housed in the Meigs
~ty Jail, lnd wu cornmiued 10 the hospital on an emergency
bull by Probate Court Judae Robert E. Buck.
.
Howard is in state's custody pending trial on drug charges. Both
Rollins and Howard are represented by Meigs County ·Public
· Defll!ldcr Cwies H. Knight
, . . Sheriff, Soulsby anlicipales tliat both men wiU be returned to the
)81lsomettme on nnnday.
' ·
·

. Rutland woman ciied in accident
A Rutland wam111 - cltetl afler a two-vehicle accident on State
Route 1 in Salisbury Township Wednesday mornln~•
COI!tlnued 011 ge 3

of the support and cooperation
needed ofrom village council, as
application for revitalization funds
must be submitted by council.
Susan Clark, president of the
association, updated the group on
the annual fashion sbow to be held
Friday, April 3, at 7:30 p.m. at
Pomeroy Elementary.
The theme is Spring Fashion
Revue '92 and tickets are available
from panicipating merchants for $4
each. Stores panicipating include
Buttons and Bows, Chapman
Shoes, Clark's Jewelry, The Fabric
Shop, K &amp; C Jewelers and Middle·
port Department Store. The
evening will feature what is avail·
able in the anea as well as offer a
variety of entertainment Entenaln·
ment will include perf11111ances by
the Southern High School Cheer·
leaders and the popular clogging
group ·The Shady River Shuffien.
. Chamber events dltcussed
Paula Thncker. executive direc·
tor of the Meigs County Chamber
of Commerce, atlended the meeting
to discuss plans or the chamber.
She stated the chamber is planning to print and sell a discount
card, which will offer discounts
and other promotions from partici·
paling merchants and area businesses. The cud
sell for 55
and discounts and other offers will
be in effect for a year. Thacker said
she hopes the cards will be avail· ,
able for sale 11 the chamber's din·
ncr dance on March 21 at Royal
Oak Resort. .If .possible, according
to Thacker, there may be a second
discount card. She encouraged any. one ln1ercsted in being a sponaor
on the card to contact her at the
chamber of&amp;:~, 992-~'Thacker alao sueased the lmpor·
tance of tcepinaa positive lllitude
in regards 10 Meip
selected u !he site for the
minimum security prison.

will

eoun:.=

missioners David Kobleatz, Manning Roush and
Richard Jones, as well as ODOT engineers
(front) Sahle Eldaeldabaja, Victor Wolff and
County Englaeer Philip Roberts. (Sentinel Photo
by Brian·J. Reed)

PLANS UNVEILED • Meigs Conaty Commissioners got a llrst glimpse at Phase I or the
Ravenswood Brldae Connector Wednesday
when, ODOT en~rineers unveiled tbe·road alignment for the project. Pictured are (rear) Com·

Logan man convicted on 16
charges·by Franklin. County jury ·
•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Hocking County man has been
convicted of operating a statewide
theft ring from his home.
Paul Warren, 49, of Logan,
showed no reaction Wednesday as
verdicts to 24 charges were read in
a Franklin County Common Pleas
CoUll.
A jury convicted Warren of 16
charges, including engaging in a
pattern of corrvpt activity, receiving stolen property, complicity to
commit aggravated robbery and

aggravated burglary, and failUre to
file stale income tax returns.
The jury also found him guilty
of nine ftrearm specifications, each
carrying a mandatory three-year
sentence that must be completed
before he begins serving sentences
on the 16 charges.
Sentencing was scheduled for
next week. Warren faces up to 150
years in prison.
Seven counts of forgery and one
count of conspiracy to traffic in
marijuana were dropped.
'

Assistant Attorney General :
Smith .said Warren operated.:.
the nng for SIX years beginning in:1982. Home$ and businesses were :
targeted.
•
The Ohio Organized Crime :
Investigations Commission investi- •
gated the alleged theft ring for 16
months.
Warren was the founh person
convicted in the case. Twenty pcO. ·
pie pleaded guilty, and four await :
Ro~

bial.

•

.

Riffe says Congressional'bill alive
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) cosllotaxpayersof$6million.
Speaker Vern Riffe says a SenateHowever, a fcderal(:oun decipassed bill creatinjt 19 new con- sian on Tuesday, dlrowlng out the
~districts tn Ohio is alive state's !ICWly created lesislative
despite failure of the House to pass 1 disttlcts and nescheclullng the leg·
it this week, iS planned.
· islative .primary for June, changed
Secretary of State Bob Tari had the siwatlon, klffe said Wednessaid he needed the bill no later than 'day.
today tn avoid the nee&lt;1 for a speRiffe said he and Senate Presl·
cia! C9flgreslional primary -after dent Stanley Aronoff, R-Cinc:in·
the regulir prlm!lfY May S - at a nati, agreed to change the date for

..

,t

,I

..
'

all ~m~.f!es, including tho presi-=:-:
denual pnmary, and that there is&lt;
now more time to enact the con-&gt;

gressional biD.

.:

But he said he would liq to seC-·
the House complete passage of the:
bill as recommended by a joint"'
conference COIDmillee rather than:
stan
from scntch, •• some:
lawm
have sugesled
&lt;

:f:

•.

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