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                  <text>·Pomerov-Midcl aport. .Ohio

Page 12-J'he Deily Sentinel
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Ohio Lottery

Buckeyes··
remain

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PiCk-3: 429
Pick-4: 8868
Cards: 3-H· 2-C·

·unbeaten

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Low &amp;oniJht ujiJ*r 30s. Sat·
lll'llay ,, hiJh In lower tea.
Chane of rain 70 percent.

page
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7-D;

(304) 773-5592
c
MASON, WV
2ND STREET

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Vo1.41 , No.183
CopyrightH 1991

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2 Sectlono. f4 Pogoo

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, January 11. 1991

A

25 Corito

Multlmodio Inc. N-IPIP"

·Voinovich. to .succeed .Celeste .• at noon. Monday
COLUMBU~ Ohio '(UPI) . _...
Statehouse, will become the 59th 25th Republican. There were five fran~ Lauscbe, a Democrat
Cuyahoga Co11nty was one of ·
'R ichardCeleste'ssecondtermas . persontoserveasgovernorsince membersoftheWhlgPartyand from Cleveland, served a two- only four Ohio counties In .1984
governor of Ohio ends Monday · Ohio was adrilltted to the union two from the Federalist Party.
year term beginning In 1945 and 1 won by Democratic presidential
when he will be replaced by
March 1, 1803. .
.
, . Much of the representation In four-consec!ltive two-year terms candidate Walter Mondale ' and
Edward Tltlln, a Democrat; recent years bas come· from from 1949 to 1957.
a1121 Cleveland councilman are
another Cleveland native, but
from a different political party,
from Ross County began the first ·..Cleveland. Providing Voinovl'ch
For Voinovlch, Monday marks . Democrats, but Volnovlch won
·of his two two-year terms on completes his tertn. the Celeste · a return to work In state mayoral races with 58 percent of
George Voinovlch.
Volnovlch, 54, during noon·
March 3, 1803. Tiffin was the first and Volnovlch eras will mark at government.
the vote In 1979, 76 percent In 1981
of 27 Dernlll!rats to serve as
least 12 straight years of CleveHe bagan his political career and 72 percent in 1985.
time Monday Inaugural cerernonles on the west lawn of the
governor and Volnovlcb Is the land rule In the Statehouse. And by being elected to the state
Voinovlch was crushed by
legislature In 1967 and was 600,000 votes In a race for the James Rhodes' lletenant gover- · Senate against ,Howard Metzennor forll monthss In 1979 before baurn In 1988, but .carne back
resigning to become ""yqr of · strong to defeat fellow CleveCleveland.
v
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lander Anthony Celebrezze In
. Between his work In· the ~tate tas t year's gubern;ltorlal race.
legislature and as lietenant gov·
The final' tally showed Voino· ·
. ernor, Voinovlch also served as a vlch with 1.9 million votes, or 56
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Cuyahoga County auditor and percent, compared with 1.5 mll·
· :commissioner.
lion votes for Celebrezze, the
He enjoyed enormous political Ohio attorney general who leaves
success In Cleveland, a · city office Monday- for a private law
dominated by Democrats, In practice.
winning three mayoral elections
After Volnovlcb Is sworn In
before deciding against running Monday', he . will lead a 50-unit
again In 1989 to concentrate on parade through downtown Cothe 1990 gubernatorial race.
lumbus - the first such lnaugu..

ral event In several decades, .
Voinovlch and Lt. Gov. Ml·
chaei DeWine an.d their famlUes
will walk the entire route of the
parade, which will start at
Nationwide Boulevard, head
south on High Street, east on
Broad Street, north on Third
Street, ending at Long Street. ·
Volnovlch will be joined by his
wife, Janet, and their three
children- George Jr., Peter and
Betsy.
DeWine and - his wife, Fran,
expect tq have most of their
seven children, who range In age
from 3 to 22, accompanying them
In the parade .
Volnovlcb and DeWine, after
leading the parade, will move to
the reviewing stand to watch the
remainder of the event.
The state's new top leaders
also will strike a famntar note IJI
the parade by Inviting bands
from their respective high school
and college alma maters.

to

Saudi Arabi,a
agrees
pay
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half the co~t for deployment
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i&gt;riWIII FOR .NOW • Despite Ibis week's wide
lluctutlon of
prices, the price ol gasoline saw
a drop in Melp County Th~y. Sevenl
.statloas In Pomeroy and Middleport had
: reduced the price of lbelr regular unleaded to

on

$1.30 a iallon. The price ol a plloD of gasolllle
bad hovered betweea $1.35 and $1.45 in lbe
• Bend area ror the pasl several inoalhs, even
· . before lbe five ceat per pllon rec1era1 to was
. added.
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Gov. Celeste conunutes death
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-seht~n~ ·of ~e1glltl~ itlrnate&amp;-.,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - • volved," he said.
Gov. Richard Celeste bas comCeleste s~ld a: strong racial
muted the death sentences of · bias bas put a disproportionate
eight lnmates,lncluudlng allf\)ur number of blacks on Death Row.
women on · Death Row, a cop Allfour women and 54 of101 men
'killer and a man· convicted of · on Death Row are black.
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sexually abusing and murdering
The commutations mean that
a 7-year· old girl.
eight prlson~rs will have their
Ce,leste. a staunch opponent of sentences reduced to life in
the death penalty, leaves office prison. Six of the eight will never
Monday, .succeeded bY Gov.· be eligible for parole but two of
elect George Volnovlch, who · the women could lle released on
~upports capital punishment.
parole.
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''The decision to grant or
Celeste also commuted the life
. withhold executive clemency Is sentence of ,Ralph DeLeo, con·
perhaps the most awesome re· vlcted In the 1977 slaying of
sponslblllty that comes with Columbus physician Walter
· being &amp;evernor~" Celeste said at Bond; set free country singer
a news conference Thursday. "It -Johnny Paycheck: and freed
Is not a responsibility in good Antoinette Taylor, a woman who
conscience I could leave unexer- · reportedly was a victim of the
clsed and unfilled.
battered woman syndrome.
"It Is my hope and belief that in
The commutations were:
-Lee Edward Seiber, con·
each of these cases the public
Interest Is served, not Just the P ,vlcted of a 1985 killing In a
. Interest of the Individuals In· Columbus bar.

-Debra Denise Brown, who
want on a five-state murder
spree with boytriend Alton Coleman In 1984.
-Leonard Jenktns of Cleve·
land, the fttst man sentenced to
die after state's capital punish·
rnent law was resurrected In
1981, after being convicted of
killing a policeman. ·
-Rosalie Grant, Mahoning
County, who killed .t]NO of her
three chtldren by setting their
home on fire.
-Elizabeth Green, Hamilton·
County, who killed a friend's
neighbor so she could buy drugs.
-Willie Jester, Cleveland. who
killed a bank guard during a
robbery.
-Beatrice Lampkin, Harnllton
County, who hired a man to kUI
her husband.
,
-Donald Maurer, Masauton,
who kidnapped, raped and killed
.11 ?-year· old neigl)bor girl.

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Rinehart- .drops ·.out of race ....
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COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI)
"I have become Increasingly ment would be great and that's
Mayor Dana Rinehart . says he convinced that my personal life something I sincerely wish to
bas decided not to run for - rather t~an my record as
avoid, " he said.
re-election and will support the mayor - would have aorninated · Befo,re his annQuncernent,
mayoral candidacy of fellow
the campaign a'nd obscured the Rinehart told his decision to
)'republiCan, former City Attar· debate that we should have about some of the city's most infiuen·
' ney Greg Lashuika.
~--:- olir future," Rl1111hart said. ·
· ;.tial business } eaders lncllldlng
. iUnehart. on Dec. 19, said he
BecauSe of.'th~se ·problems,' LesUe Wexner of The Limited,
would seek re-election to a third
Rinehart said be bad lost some J.W. Wolfe of the Ohio Company
term which reversed a decision
key supporters.
and Joh'n McConnell of Worthing·
" It became apparent that to
ton Industries.
·he announced last summer that
be would leave office.
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continue .this race, 1 would be
Lashutka, a former Ohio State
However, Rinehart acknowl·
doll)g so with 'some of rriy football player, called Rinehart ·
edged that his personal ·me,
previous supporters aild II)Y qneofthempstenergtzedmayors
Including an affair with Human
strongest financial backers In the history of Columbus and ·
. Resourc!!S Director Brenda Do- either actively opposing me· or ' thanked Rinehart lor his
drUJ, w.ould attract more at ten·
visibly neutral," he said.
endorsement.
tion than what he had accomp· "l'he potentialfor divisiveness'
City Councilman Ben Espy. the
lllhed In his first two terms. ·
ori both sides In such an environ· lo.ne Democratic candidate for
mayor, says "It looks like we are
leanlilg toward a (RepubliCan)
c&lt;insensus candidate tn Greg. •
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"I look forward to running
C
OJ
against him," E$py said.

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Meigs ounty Health Department issues
la ri.Jication -earl_ier press release
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Norma Torres, Nuning Director of lhe Meigs COunty tlealth
Depuuncnt. reports that a ~lease
from the depllrtment aniiOIDlcing
Public Health Week for Jill. 28 •
~.isd1y', ~~ ~Dailiny

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Sentinel, contained some factual a-·
ron. Pins of lhe rekasc in et(Of

should have read a. foUows:
Public Health Week celdntes
achievementa of the public health
S)'lt.elll llld helps 10 mate die
aware of services offered by
hllalth deplrtmenta, llid MI.
1'aml. The public: heabb l)1leiJI
llld tuberculosil department have

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succcafUily baaled communicable

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AB{} DHABI (UPI) - Saudi Baker and the king met privately for 'the trip to Saudi Arabia.
Arabia agreed friday to pay up for15.rninutes , thencalle'd lnU.S.
During his news conference
to haU thecostofthe deployment · Lt. Gen. Howard Graves, a
Wednesday after the failed talks
U.S. forces In the Persian Gulf . representatlveoftheJointChiefs with Azlz, Baker said the Aug. 2
following meetings With Secre- .of Staff, for several minutes.
Iraqi Invasion of Kuwait was a
tary of State James Baker, who
Baker. bad said earlier he . violation of International law.
met other Arab leaders In the would dlscuu bow Iraq's Arab
But the U.S. official, who
region.
,
.
enemies . would react to the . requested anonymity, noted that
Baker went 10-Saudl Arabia to possible Involvement of Israel In at his own news conference, Aztz
brief King Faluj on his talks with a war against Iraq.
. " did a very good job defending an
· Iraqi Foreign Minister Tal'lq
Before Baker returns to V{a·
exil'llordlnarlly bad brief" by
Azlz, and raised the .need for shington Sunday night, he
emphasizing that the United
more Saudi . financial · aid to planned to meet the exiled emir
States favors · Israel over the
bolster the U.S. deployment, a of'Kuwalt in Tall, Saudi Arabia,
Palestinians.
· ·senior U.S. official said.
Cairo, Damascus, Ankara, Lon·
Apparently that argument
A Saudi official said shortly don and Ottawa.
struck a chord In some parts of
before Baker left for Abu Dhabi
As he left Geneva, Switzerland,
the Arab and Islamic world. The
Friday that Saudi Arabia would Baker said, •'I continue to believe
State Department has au thorlzed;
pay "between 40 and '!!&amp;-percent that peace Is possible, " but a
the evacuation of non-essential
of all costs" Incurred by the ~nior U.S. official said his trip to
personnel from Its diplomatic'
United States In the gulf.
Riyadh was based on a less
missions , in I!aklstan, where· ·
anti-American feeling Is running:
Saudi direct contributions to· optimistic premise of preparing
Operation Desert Shield have for war.
high.
been abQut $1 billion per month
Alsoofconcernwastheresolve
Israel's Involvement In any:
. and Baker said be was satisfied of th&amp;,28·natlon,coalltion against
war against Iraq also coulif
with the agreement.
Iraq. The U,S. offlciai said the
create problems. Azlz said Iraq
Fabd complimented Baker on coalition "requires a Jot of care
would "abSolutely" attack Israel·
his "manner and deme~nor' ' in and feeding'' and was one reason
Jflt were attacked.
Geneva and assured him Saudi
Arablawouldcontinuetopayfor
most of the food, gasoline and
.
other supplies necessary to support the more than 4oo,ooo u.s
troops to be deployed In the gulf:
of.flcials from both countries
L, . h dam
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1g t.
~ge was. mcunw . 10
front right bumper area ot· lhe For"We and our American friends .two ve!Ucl~ m an OCC:Ident on L)ll· bes car.
will never disagree on burden coin Hill Fnday '!lo/"mg.
In an accident Thursday after.
sharing," a Saudi representative
Pomeroy _PoliCe . reponed. that noon. at 1:11 p.m. on Court SIJ'eet
said on behalf of the king.
George Harris of L'!lcoln Heights, Mrutin Woodard, Jr., Pomeroy, was
Although State Department Pome~y. was ttaVelinll down Lm· charged by Pomeroy Police with
briefing officers said little about'&lt;! coin J:lill about 8:14 am. when a failure 10 yield-right of way and for
preparations for 'war after the . car. driven II}' Melody Forbes. who driving without insurance.
Jan.lS U.N. deadline authorizing resides o~ Lmcoln Hill, pulled from ·
W~ backed from a parking
force against Iraq they said he.- parkin&amp; area ~d struclt. the ~ace mto a car driven by llarbala
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Harris car. She was Cited for failure Pierce, Racine. There was light'
,
10 yield the right of way.
damage 10 the door on the left side
The back feilder on. the left side Woodard's truck had !ight
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of the Harris ~ar. had light.,damage,_ damge on the left sioo; - • -·· ·
-There was also hght ~ge to the
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N0 one m
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• two
p omeroy
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auto IDIS aps

p 001emy" · '· ·
man
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day in a Columbus Hospital as the
result of a gunshot 'wound 10 the

head.

f

-Porileroy man died yeSia'·

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Al:cording 10
County
Sherilf J1111CS M. S
, 73-yearold Cbestt:r NBuck" Ragen died at
4:4S ~~ being aanSJ)Oited
fronr
10 Grant Medical
Centttbyl.ifeFUghL
SouJsby ~. that Meigs

and infcclious - diseases such as Travis ap·prehended ~ty E!~y Medi~ Sertuberculosis, polio, influenza aM
·
VICes received a call regarding the
typhoid, she nOted.
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James Roben 'Il'avis, 33, W.. ar- incident at 1:42 p.m. When
Because soinc of the most rested Ill a Racine reoi"""rA on deputies lind BMS peisonnel ar·

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OD BlESS DUB
SERll&amp;EME •
l TME SUtF

the . Monday evening on 1 probalion rived on the scene, IIIey found
.violation warrant from nn.-.
Ragen on, the lloor in front of a
~8 ro ·a Meip County 11replace.
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. Sherilf's Department DeWI release
Ragen Indicated 10 one ol die ·
dated Friday, 'Il'avis 1111 waived ex- EMT'a on die sc:ene that he had faJ.
tnldilion 10 Meip County, 'James. len with rbe gun, which he did not
Thunday's report incomctly 'se.e, and lhat be wu b...ported blow was Joaded,llld the gun disSilted that the health - - . . " ' tbere this m.,...; ..,. by Mejn charged.
proviclea --mn, IDd ~·7; County,~~ .Ropn alto llid thit die heard
IUberculollil. MI. 1bma reports .
n-avis was oqiDIIIy clwged men ihln one shot. although be
that tubclcuiOiil screeninp IJid tea- .with -ua1 ~4
pticed- on was lfnlck only oooe. . .
GOD BLESS • AI lloplllade for aYOkiiDI
In lbe Pen1m
linao • provided by the Meigs "'""'"lion. He II
wilh failSoullby reponed lhll the incl· . Gllll llpl of concet D ud com,..._ are .bellmtlDIIO 11ppear Ia
CcMmty Th&amp;etculosls n-..-ftL . t;;g'IO report 10 the
oftlccr dent remainl under invatiption, · Bead .,. commwaldei.TIIll one IIIII !be wlnilow atlllpll C•. · ~w·-·
and for moving wi
t permission. and dill no Nling has been made.
· Ia Ml~ ' . ·
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ICriOIIs . illneues

affecling

Pl!bliC today are !,ftventable. health
_depattment av~ces abo include
screening llld resdng for seKU8ily
ttansmitled diseases, llypertensiOn
and cervical canc:er.

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Commentary
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TQ.e . Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON .:_ The Pen· reportedly went so far as to pasi
lagon has been stung by procure- around copies oJ. Betti's testlrn·
ment scandals and embarrassed ony last summer ·before Conby not a few overpriced tollet gress, which was looking lrito an
seats and hammers. You would epidemic· of contracting
· tblnk. the. · brass might have scandals.
·
le.a rned a Jesson. B~t you would
At one awkward ll!Orneni In a
he wrong.
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congress tonal hearing, Betti was·
The look-the-other-way school stUmped by a crucial question.
of purchasing appears to be altve He could not n.ame one project
and. well at the Pentagon, under · manager who ever got promoted
the tutelage of the new acting for alerting the Pentagon to
Defense Under .Secretary fo.r problems with a contract.
Acquisition Donald Y~key.
Yockey says he did not camYockey salled Into office last palgn for Betti's job, and dentes
month as hts predecessor, John tliat he spread around copies of
Betti, sailed out on the wings of a Betti's bumbltng testimony. But
procurement scandal. Betti was · regardless of how he got the job
nailed with part of the blame for- Yockey does riot look Uke ~
the bungled A' l2 Avenger Navy savior. Sources Inside tile Pen- _
war plane contract. The project lagon told us that Yockey's mali1 - ..
was.rtddled wtth long delays and . goal Is to ''mtnln;tlze government
massive cost overruns.
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Interference with contrac:tors."
Yockey had worked for Betti,
In an Internal memo on June
and , sources say had· openly 26, Yoc.key satd as much : "A
· 'i"mpatgned. for Betti's job. He common complaint of Industry ...

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA.
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. ROBERT L. WINGETT
·Publisher

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geaeral Maaar~r

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PAT WHITEHEAD
A.. tiiCant Publleher/ Controller
A MEMBER of The Un!ted Press International, Inland Dally Press
Ass&lt;?Ciat!on and the American Newspaper Publishers Assocl.atlon.

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LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should he Jess than:WO l .
words lonr. AU letlers are subject to edttlnt and rnust be signed with
na me•. addreSs and telephone number. No unsl(ned letters will be pub
lls hed. Letters should be tn good taste, addressing Issues, not personal!-.

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·.Letters to the editor .·
Additional facts are given

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Th~~~~ti:~r:n~artic~!~ . Mrs.
~~~~r~~:in!.s~
.
Mrs.

County Museum and the Me1gs
Leo Story, Mr. and
County Pioneer and Historical George Genheimer, Mr. and Mrs.
Society, I thoupt your readers Fred Geoglein, Pauline Atkins, Mr.
might be interested in a few addi· and MIS. Pat Lochaty, MIS. Gladys
tional facts. Mr. A. V. Howell served Morgan, Ml;.a and Mrs., Wallace
as president of the society from Bradford and many olhets.
' )951 to 1966 foe 15 years. With · ~~ is reported . that • Sybil
Charles E. Blakeslee, ~nt Ebersbaugh is the one who suggesfrom October, 1969 to OCtober ted the purchase of the fonner
1984, the two men share the honor Finsterwald Funeral Home for
of the longest tenure of any presi· museum use. The boil~ W!l$
• dent of the society.
purchased for $32,000. S·
g the
The earliest indicalion of an in- agreement to pwchase the prCperty
terest in a museum 13110 in the an- were Charles E. Blakeslee; adisoD
nual meeting reportS rl the 1880s Hobsteuer and TheodorC Reod.Jr. ·
and 1890s. Ul!da' Mr. Howell the
The Meigs County · MIISeum
first concrete eff91U mataialized today shows' the result of com·
towards a mUICUIII. Mr. Howell munity support and dedication to a
secured a SO ·year lease from the cause. The museum ean continue to
Meigs Count)r Commissioners for serve the community only with
land at the entrance to the continued suppon.
f.iulds
the )lJeSCI1t Rock
A further historical story was
Spnngs Grange mini-park foe the revealed this summer about Meigs
consll'IICtion or a museum. Possibly County. There is a copy of the
about the same ti,IDC. the SllglM' Run Meigs C90nty property map which
School WIS COIISidered for museum we published m the 19(9 County
purposes. However, Mr. Howell did History in the British Library in
open a mUJ!eum in the rooms in the London. Michael Conzen, Profes·
basement of the Courthouse that at sor of Geography at the University
one lime had hoq~ the County of Chicago has seen this map. We
Exlelllion Service offices and now atlributed the date of 1867 to this
house the county ' tax map office. map of Aaron Stivers basin~ the
This operated unlit the present dale on the end of Aaron Suvers'
museum wu purcllale!l. renovated term IS county ·auditor. Professor
and occupied.
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Conzen says there .is a date Q/.1874
Edison Hobstetter became presi- Written in pencil on the map in
dent in 1986,
until 1969. London. He believes that is a more ··
During his tenure; he mvolved Wil- correct dale.
.
.liam Hencher, who was 11 Pomeroy
Professor Conzeil has studied
~ve and COIJ¥Dunity '!endactor, COJ!DtY ~ps and atlases all over
m the museum · projeCt. Mr. · Ohio and many other states. He
Herscher became so in~ he believes that .our Hardesty History
C(lltnbuted $25,000 to the pro,lcct. printed in 1883, but written by
Later, an additional $5,000 wu ad· · James Evans is one of a series
ded. $6,000 was spent oo ~tac· · published in the United States
tural plans for a building to be 0011· during the 1870s and 1880s. He
strueted on p1opeaty just north of points out that the atlases were
the ,present Mei~ .C?unty H~. published . for private profit, but .
The County CommiSSioners gave a clearly depended on a sufficient in·
SO year fease' on this property. teres! to return income over the
. Again, lack of .comrmmity support · ~ investment. It was a risky .
blocked the pro.JCCL
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business, and as..many lost money
Sometime later. after the deillh of . publishing these atlases IS made
Mr. Henchef, a member of the money. Whether .the 1883 lfardes·
Board of Trustees of the Herscher ty's Historr. made oe lost money
Foundation
traveled
through )lftlllably will not be known.
Pomeroy and could lind no
The .Larkin's History fubUshed
evidence of a musewn built 'with in 1908 by the nephew o Stillman
Mr. Herscher's donation. At the Cart« Larlrins nine years after the
time of the change in presidents death of Mr. Larkins was probably
from Mr. Hobstetler to Mr. Blakes·
ted by priYale funds. The Ervin
lee, a Jetter from the Herscher
·
rll949 apparendy WIS not
Foundation Board of Trustees re:- · pub!'
at a profit
quested the ?etum of all monies
It may ; well be that the only
plus intaest.
Meigs County History published at
On the advice of the Board of a profit and paid for at the lime of
Trustees of the Meigs County publication was the 1979 Meigs
Pioneer and Historical Sociely, 'COWity, Histor)', Volume One.
President B~lee w.rote the
the SUJlP.O'l of COf!!munily .
Herscher Foundation statmg that a businesles, family memonals and
musuem using Mr. Hencher's : sale rl books, the 1650 originally
money would be secured. The . printed were paid foe and a balance
Herscher Foundation resoonded of around $17,000 was realized. We
that if the community woufd raise later. ordered an additional 700
. $10,000
fcir
operation
and copies and it took nearly eight
· main~ !II !!Ill: ygr· ~y · · yr,an 10 sell the extra copies. .
· would let us keep the money.
Again, community .suppon is the
Tiuough the cooperation of the key.
Board of Trustees, rllicers and
Charles E. Blakeslee
many other intereSted individuals
Past President
and groups, the money was raised Meigs County Pioneer and Histori·
and the Hencher Foundation gave
.
cal Society, Inc.
the approval to use the money.
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Is that there are fa; too many
government oversight personnel
tn contractor facUlties ."
And we'rfl sure a common
complain of the fox Is that the
farmer never leaves the hen·
)lous~ door open at night , But In
this case, the farmer Is caving IIi
to the fox's whining.
Yockey ordered a study to see
It the contractors had ll valid
complaint. Our associate Jim
Lynch has seen a draft copy of
the result - . a report' that
recommends reducing by 10 to 20
percent to amount of time·
government Inspectors spend In
contractors' plants. According to,
the report, the Pentagon
"strongly · suppprts contractqr

s~lf-governance programs.' ~.

. The recommen"datlon to give .
contrjjclor~ . more freedom will
satl eastly through the Pentagon
bureaucracy. Congress doesn't
technically have the authority to

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Jack Anderson ·'
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stop the Pentagon from __dQ!ng •.. · ,
thts; but Rep. John Dtngell, · .
~Mich ., wtll register a loud
'
protest. Investigators for Din·
gell's En_ergy a niL, Coinn'ier~ • .
Subcommittee on:•!'Sight and .
Investigations are currently exa- '
mtntng the proposal to teduce
·on-stte Inspections.
Yockey has not yet been ,
offered the job as permanent
acqutsttton chief, but sources tell
us he Is the likely nominee. It so,
he might be forced to answer
some tough questions. when the
Seriate holds hts confirmation
hearing..
·
Now. Yockey has spun back
through the revolving door. One
top Pentagon source told us that :.~~
Yockey's effort to curtatl con- . : : ~
tract oversight ts . the "latest : :.;
manifestation of the look-the• · .~
other-way management."
•· '

By .JOE ILLlJZZJ
Hall of Fame will meet Feb. 4 In
VPI Spona Wrl&amp;er
New York !o rule on. the recomNEW YORK, - Baseball le- mendation. Rose's chances don't
gend Pete Rose, three days out of appear good because the boarclla
jatl, Is one step closer ·to being compoeed .mainly ·of hard·llne,
barred from the Hall of Fame.
bueball ottlclala.
A corn:mtttee to review Base- . Rose, bjaeball's ·all-time hit
ball Hall of Fame election rules leader, ordlnarlly would become
voted 7-3 Thursday · to recom· eligible for the Hall of Fame next
mend that· any player on base- year. A player muat walt ttve
bal)'s Ineligible Jist· also he years after retirement before
declared llll!ltglble for the Hall of · beiD&amp; conSidered tor the Hall. ·
Fame.
,
R.ose wai bUned·ln 1989 by the
'J'he Board of l'&gt;trectors of the late Commlaploner . Bart Gla·

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EMS staff thanked

On December 18, 1990, J .came. time they did ·a,nd the·tiidy that kept
very cl011e .to losing my youngest us cilm and -guided us through the
son, Steven.
.
next few moinents, I would be 181k·
My son became very ill and had ing to my two year old ·son
a very high fever and had quit graveside. I
·
breathing.
.
1b these individuals, I say - from
M.Y wife caUed the Middleport
30
. a very pateful father - thank you
fire department at about 3: am., very much.
while f tried to revive my son.
James Hudson
If it werm 't for the men lhlt toot
35 Riverview

the time 10 answer that call at the
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Middlejlort, opio 45760

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ExP resses
0tp'PrecUJtWn

My husband and I would 1i1re t0
thank all the Telidentl d Meigs
County for their support and CODcan about the Middle Eat criJU.
My husband his been ovm lhenl foe
. four and a half 1110111111 IIIII has
received a lot of leUm from f'rlends
and friendl or our flmiljra that we
don't even really blow. I bave
decided 10 !'elide In our borne • Fl.
Stewan and I have m:eived
jusa
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. as

man

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y "'-'
uu•stmas cards and Ieuers
also. Your thoughts .and concerns

~~~,1 ~uc!
Best "

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from home thiS Y-ear. Reggie,
tl!tller scored 12 or hts 21 points
tor the Pacers.
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Patrtc)t Ewing had 42 potntswhich Included a career-blgh 18.
foul shots on '20attempts ..,..~nd 16
·rebounds Maurice CheekS added
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a seaso~.- high 27 points for New
York, 7·11 at home this year.
Bulleta 111, Cllppen 110
At Lando~. Md., Bernard
King scored ~ points ~nd becarne the NBA's leadlua scorer
as Washington won for the
seventh tlnle In 10 games. Ktng,
who led the league In 1984-85, Is
averaging 31 points a game.
"That's never been a consider·
atlon," said King when ask~
about hts posttton as ~~ N~ s
top polnt·producer. I ve ac·
com pUshed that and It's always
an enjoyable exll!,rlence ., . but
It's a long season.
.
Benoit Benjamin had 24 potnts
and 19 rebounds for Los Angeles,
which has lost eight of Its last

nine. ·
. ·
Spun 117, Mapc 111
At San Antonio, David Robin·
son equaled hts career high with
43 points and addl!d 12 rebQunds
and 10 blockl!f;l sholll as the Spurs
rallied from a seven-point deficit
te "' th · ftn 1 · od
en. r ••g e a pert . Rookie
Dennis Scott scored 23 tor
. Orlando.
Becket. 1M, NuaJet• W
At Denver, Ver_non Maxwell
scored 26 potnlll and Kenny Smith
added 25 fQr Houston, which
bettered the team record of 151
points set against Cincinnati .In
1970. The loss was the eighth
straight and 13th In 14 games tor
the Nuggets, 6-28.
.
113, Sc!n1ce 113
At Seattle, Mitch Richmond
score~ 32 polntsand Golden State
hit 11 or 16 shots In the llnal
period. Ttnn Hardaway added 23
points and 11 assists for the
Warriors. Derrick McKey paced
the Sonlcs 'with 19 points.

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TUCSON, ·Ariz. (UPI) - Fo\,
lowing ··an UDUJual debate with
, PGA otflclals, Hal Sutton tapped
tn tor btrdte ·1bursday to corn- ·
plete an S-under-par G4 and take a
share of the first-round lead wtth
Boli Tway In the $1 mtiUon
Northerit Telecom Open.
Si!tton,. using a stx-tron, •ernbedded his ·166-yard second shot
on the par-4 .44Q·yard 18th on the
Up ·or the cup, but tt did not drop.
He twlc'e attl!mpted to mark' Hts
ball, but both tlples It dropped to. ·

Tway played on the TpC · Arizona State, Mickelson s~ted
Sutlon wanted an eagle.
''Since the ball was S.Stbs of the Starpass course - one of the two at Starpass wtth a . bogey but
way to the hole, I thought It used In the 72-hole tournament- birdied seven of hts next 10 holes.
"I was a little nerwus at the
should have counted,' ' said and said hts approach · shots
beginning, and I even had fo
Sutton.
made the dttference.
lUter a 20-mtnute debate with
"The greens were pretty quick make a 15-footer to save bogey on
otttctals, Sutton placed his ball here'bttti placed the ball well and number one," said Mickelson, a
about a halt-Inch from the hole gave mysel! a lot of chances to left-bander, appearing In his
and tapped lttn toftnlsh his round make birdies,'' satd Tway, who sixth Tour event. ''When I saw
at the Tucson National Go!! Club, , collected seven birdies and an my name on the leader board I
got even more nervous."
"I don't agree wtth the ruling eagle.
Two shots oft the pace are Jim
U.S. Amateur champion Phtl
but I'm happy with the 64," said
· Sutton, a seven-time 'winner on Mickelson, 20, stood In third Hallet, Gary Hallberg, Morris
the PGA Tour.
·
place after a 65. A junior at Hatalsky, John Cook and Nolan
Henke. Deteildtng champion Ro1 bert Gamez, who attended the
nearby University of Arizona,
shot a 70.
Taj Mahal, bllledas"Nightotlhe armed ·robbery al Annandale
The final two rounds of the
Heavyweights." The card also . (New Jersey) Correctional Fa· ·second event on the PGA ca· .
showcases heavyweight pros· clUty, Is 15-0 with 12 knockouts. lendar wtll be played at the ·
peels Tommy "The Duke" Mor· Rlbalta, 31-5·1. also has lost to ' 7,010-yard StarpasscourseSatur·
rtl;on ,and Bruce Seldon. MorrlTyson.
day and Sunday . First place Is
son, a star of "Rocky V," takes
Seldonwetghed227andRtbalta worth $180,000.
on veteran trlalhorse James
232 ~Ttlllls, and Seldon battles Jose
.
Rtbalta.

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·, .,) ·,Mercer challenges for D~ani's WBO title
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VPiN AIR-Wublnpon'aHarveyGraat(teft)1aupln!healrll!l, ·

If the liberals have th.e tr way,

some of the strongest Republican
arguments will be r.uled out of
bounds In future election campaigns - Including the 1992
presidential contest. The RepubJtcans wtll simply be forbidden to
raise them .
.
On.e of the most Important Is
race quotas tn htrtng. The Demo·
crats are determined to ram
through the new congress. as
they did through the old, a btll
compelltng any employer who Is
sued for racial discrimination to
prove that the charge ts false.
This violates the . tnstlnftlve
Amertcan presumption that a
person Is deemed Innocent until
proved guilty, but Congress can
shift the burden of proof this way
If tt wants to. ·
President Bush vetOed the last
btll, pointing out that !t would
Indirectly force employers to
adopt a racial quota system as .
the best way of d!sprovtng

accusations of dtscrtrntnatlon.
He wtll probably veto the new one
too , for the same reason, but that
will be all right with the Democrats: · What they want Isn't the
btll, but the Issue.
•
They g~t t,urlous. though, If
anybody describes the btll as a
"quota btU," as Mr. Bush did
when he vetOed the previous one
~and as·SenatorHelmsdtd Inhts
successful .campaign for reelection. The sponsors had decorated
the btll wtth gratuitous declarations lhat It was not Intended to
compel quotas - declarations
that were utterly worthless,
since that was precisely what the
btll effectively dtd.
The rn~la took the position
that when Helms's opponent,
Harvey Gantt (who supported
the btlll. dented that It tn effect
compelled quotas, Helms was
forbidden to argue otl)erwlse. A
Helms TV commercial, sh 0wtng
a patrofwhltehandscrumpllnga

rejection slip while the announcer's votce explained that a
less qualified member of a
minority would get the job, was
denounced as a vicious example
of racism.
It was no such thing. On the
contrary, It was an effective bid
to block the kind of reverse
~actsm that the Democrats engage tn all the time.
What was Helms to do, tt he
was peremptortly forbidden ·to
point out to white voters that hts
opponent favored a bill that
would compel race quotas In
hiring, at the expense of better
quallfled whtte applicants?
Arid while I'm 'a t tt , would
somebody please tell me what
was so terrible raside from Its
devastlng effectiveness) about
the . pro-Bush TV commerlal ·In
the 1988 camp~lgn that featured
Wtllle Horton? M(chael Dultakts,
as governor of Massachusetts,
had authorized repeated fur-

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'William Rusher
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toughs for Horton, a convicted
murderer theorettc'ally lrnprt·
soned for life without posstbtltty
ot parole. On ·his lOth weekend
furlough, Horton raped a Maryland \\lOman and brutalized her
husbarid. Dukakts wouldn't even
see them when they. came , to
Massachusetts to protest.
Baloney. Does · anybody imagine the ad wouldn't have been
used If Horton had been white?
The Issue was the color of
Dukakts's ltver, not Horton's
.
sktn.
I hope the Republtcans will
steel themselves to raise thes·e
Issues whenever they are pertinent , ~nd disregard the hysterl·
cal charges of the ltberals that
they are engaging In "racism."
Where's the First Amendernent
'
when we need II?

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Wipe spon~rship off football bo~ls

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Robert Walters

WASHINGTON !NEA) - HeExpress Oran~ Bowl, USF&amp;G other commercial constde~are'sk a modest proposal for a
Sugar· Bowl and Mobtl · Cotton ·.· ttons ·now dominate bowl gafl)es ' · -"----'-'-~..::.....:.:.-==::::.:::
New Year's resolution: DurtQg
Bowl- followed bY pl'oltteratton · that theoretically are amateur second bowl game. Indiana Unt·
1991, let's attempt to clean up one
that produced the Sunklsl Fiesta athletic contests Is Ulustrated by verstty, with an even more ·
of the most scandalous aspects of Bowl, Mazda Gator Bowl, Eagle the genesiS of a new event known dismal 6·5-l record , Somehow
college athletics - the commer·
Aloha Bowl, Domino's · Pizza as the· Blockbuster Bowl. '
qualified for a thtrd contest.
ctallzatlon of post-season footbatl · Copper Bowl and even the
That deal produ~ the Block- .
bowl games.
'
Poula n/ W
. Thecontestants
other three
major
games
. eed E a t er I nd epen d. .....
,.us ter. BowI' w.ht.ch IoIns the lure
with
guararttees
Bec&amp;\l&amp;e there are almost no ence Bowl. · .
.
,
Raisin Bowl, Freedom Bowl
of at least $3 mlllton per team,
exte~nal controls over , those
In return for multlmtlllon· Peach Bowl, HQlldi\Y Bowl, Lib: while no self-respecting. second·
contests, the recently concluded
dollar payments, spunseirs are erty Bowl, Citrus Bowl, Hall of Iter bowl game would consider
round of bowl .aames, produced
allowed to precede the bowls' Fame Bowl, All American Bowl provtdtng compensation or leas
excesses previously unlmagtned.
traditional names with , their and all the bowls Us ted above.
than $1 mlllton tor each team .
In earlter years, the Rose,
chosen corporate or product There are now 19 of them.
That's why football differs
Orange, Sugar, Cotton and a few
ldentltlcatton. But even that
That requires representation from basketball, baseball, VOl·
. other bowls provided clvtc prom- arrangement Isn't satisfactory to from 3!1 colleges. Unfortunately, · leyball, swimming, gymnastics,
oters tn selected Sun Belt cities companies that want all the.glory · there aren't that ·m any football lacrosse, wrestltng and every
with a harmless opportunity to for themselves.
teams 'with regular season responsor holtday season sports ·
For example, John Hancock, a' cords distinguished enough to other college sport.ln all of those
festivals that would lure tourists leading marketer of Insurance qualify tor what used to be the cas~s. post-season championship
and ttietr money, attract favoraand other financial services, paid
post·se~on honor of playing In a tournaments are organized ·
ble national attention to the tor the right .to . abolish the bowl game.
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under the auspices of the Nacommunlty and perhaps even ttadlttonal nam.e of the SUil Bowl ·.
Well, we can't have everything ttonal Collegiate A th letlc
Association.
.
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produce a mythical national and replace It wtth a no-nonsense . we want. In one recent bowl
But so much money ts now at
champion among the contending corporate designator- the john game, North Carolina State, wlth stak~ In the bowl games· ·that
teams.
Hancock Bow!.
a 7-5 record, , faCed Southern
The extent to whtchk televtston Mississippi, with an 8·4 record.
nothing less than a revolution
Then carne transmogrification
t
h
1
Th
A
F
will
be required
to switch to the
· _o_t~o..:.se~co::.:n::.:tes=.:ts:.l..:.n..:.to:.t..:.h:.:.e.:.F..:ed..:e:.r:.:.a::.l_~ra..:.l:.n:;g::.:s,...:s::po=nso=rs::h::t::.p..:m:o:n:e::_Y::.a:n::.d
e lr orce Academy carried senslbl
It
.
·
1111 mediocre 7-5 record Into 8
e a emat1ve of playoffs

houlfa'::!~~ ::;re:;:f~=~:die 00ur5 Today ~ 'hj;(~eyt~e

of concerned"p.-ents, working with

of ,

work by these JNRnts. The gym
a shining exam: of the

Elemen111y School. 1 : :c:tm~~-~ets
•• , _ deep ..,_
ll do I&lt;Ron
- ..· ..... we
ne
HUI, Head 1eac er ·
pl'eellllon from .the students and .
Chester Elementary School

Chester

1f 1

NCAA. '

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By United Press International .
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Today ts Friday, Jan. 11, the 11th day of 1991 with 354 to foUow.
The moon ts.wantng, moving tnward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury and Mars .
'J'h
nt sta
v
•.
The evebo ng
trhslared en us and Juplter.
ose
rn on . s . ate are under the stgn of Capricorn. .

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:OVer the

he iriat io block tile L.A. Cllppen' Benoit Benjamla (00) from
paallng In the ftrat quarter of Tbunclay nlabt'a NBA game In
Landover, M!l. (UPI)

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Simply.telling the truth isn't racist

,_,_) wou!«J _like . 10
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24th lnf. Div.

inatti tor gambling on bueball. him for the Hall of Fame.
a blow to the Baaeball Writers lonattme baseball official; Hall
On Monday, Rose was released
"Evel')'!lne knows Pete Ro~ Association of America, which or Fame pitcher Robin Roberta;
after a 5-month stay at a federal was a great player. There's no · has been charged by !he Hall , Buck O'N'eU, Negro Leagues
prlson • ln Marton, ·m.. tor tax deatre to detract from what he wtth -voting In members for 55 . ·expert; tonner National Leape
fraud. He ts completing hts dldonfteld,"MacPhallsald. "As years.
President .Chub Feeney; and
sentence.a~ a Cincinnati hallway
far as election to the Hall of
''Tlie main thr\ISt of the discus· John McHale, former president
house.
·. Fame, ·the crtterta calls for slon (In favor of Rose) was 'Let of the Montreal Expps.
Utheboardofdtrectorspaases Integrity, character and sports· us (the writers) decide,'" said
The dtsaenters were Pepe,
the recommendation, Rose's fate mansblp. We didn't feel someone Phil Pepe, a former president of Jack Lang, the executive secrewoulll rest with the commls· who was permaneatly l~ltglble the BBWAA and one of the three tary of ·the BBWAA, and Ed
sloner, tbe only person who can could meet those qualttllcatlons. to vote agatns~ tbe proposal. Stack, president of the Hall of
lift hts ban.
It In the future Mr. Rose ta "That's the democratic way. U Fame.
Fotmer ·American League reinstated, he cOuld become . he gets on' the ballOt, there's no
National League President Btll
Presldeat Lee MacPhail, one or eligible tor coastderatlon.
guarantee he'll get ln." ·
White and Hall of. Fame pitcher
the .s even to vote tn favor. of the
"I would thlllk the board would
Thesevea whovotedtnfavorof WhiteY Ford, two other c!)mmtt·
the recommendation were: Mac- tee members, could not attl!nd
committee's proposal, satd a back the action of • the
player's off.fteld behavior can· committee.-"
Phall; AL President Bobby the meeting.
. · not be'_lillored when considering
The.comrnlttee's vote was also Brown; Charles Segar. tormer ·

Sutto!l aml Tu;ay share PGA' lead at Tucson

.::i~::l~~: ~ =~u::s ::C~~ floor· ~

SGT. Hairy
Fon Stewm, Ga. (Formally of

The Daily Santinti-Paga 3

an

servin'

'fhr!l!IJII

Pomaoy-Midclapor.. Ohio

By MIKE BARNES ;.
. Wayman Tisdale Injured hla toot
UPISpo~rtter
midway through the first quarter
The sacramen
can at and did not return.
·
least sa" th · sco~'double
"What went wrong?" · Motta
uarter. But said. ''Shootjng;.J&gt;asstng and
ligures ~n ~er
they can't say m~c~ more
drlbblmg. It was
ugly." , ·
·
ed.
th
Added
Sacramento's
Antoine
Sacrarnen t o manag
e
.
aecond·lowest ·point total stnce Carr, who somehow scored 21
't he NBA lnsdtuted the shot clock points: "I've never had a worse
tor the 19M-55 ·season, cr.umbllng ·experience In the l"BA. We've t1Cit
101·59 to the Hornets at the todowhateverwecansothatthts
Charlotte Coliseum
never happens again."
"I just wanted th~ floor to open
Johnny Newman had 29 points
to lead Charlotte to Its second
upsowecoulddisappeS:r "Ktngs
Coach Dick Motta said. '
victory In three games.
In dropping Its fourth straight
Elsewhere, Indtanll downed
to tall to 7·25 on the season
New York 129·122, Washington
SacramentO came close to t~ defeated the Los Angeles ·
post-clock record tor fewest Clippers 122,110, san Antonio
jlotnts. The Milwaukee Hawks edged ·Orlando U7·lll, Houston
mana ed just 57 tnts a atnst ' outgunned Denver 156-133 and
, the S:stoil Celttcs~ l95S. g
· Golden State be~ I Seattle 113-103.
.• The Kl1lll5 took just 74 shots
.. Paeen lll9, Knlcb 112
and made 2§ (29.7 rcent). They
-At New York, Indiana became
collected only i2~sslsts They the latest team to cure 1111 road
ted uarter sco · s of t2 15 20 Ills while In Manhattan wtnntng.
~ 12q points. Leiding ~~r tor Just the second u.:ne away

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Charlotte Holnets thump Kings, 101-59

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l{OlJ KNOW WHeRe·l(oUR CHllP~N A~?
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Rose one .s tep ·c loser.from being_barred from H of ·F

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Pentagon . purchasing · ~till amu~k .

Ill Court Street
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Friday, Jllnl8Y 11, 1991

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Friday. Janu.-y 11. 1~1

Page 2-The Dtly Sentlntl _·"';_
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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (UPI).
- . Frailcesco Damiani, the hea·
vywetght champion few people
know ·about, risks hts IItle for a
ch11nce at recognition ·Friday
night ,·against 1988 Olympic
champl~n Ray Mercer.
Damiani has held the ltgbtly
regarded World Boxing Organl·

• ed t0 8 (0p · . .
BengaI8 det eriiliJ1
Bo Jackson.in playoff battle ~~: ~!~\!":.!~ c~S:~~ so-r:oe::.t~::~~~~te~~fr~:~
~

the Italian, however. whtle the of experience.· Mercer, 16.0 with
rhe
I'll be surprised."
real titles brought mtlllons to 11 knockouts, Is 29 years old and
Cincinnati Bengals are taking a
The problem ts several
\'dike Tyson, Buster DOuglas artd Damtant, 27-9 with 23 knockouts,
"No Bo" vow·
runners have toped s0,.8nd even
now Evander Holyfield.
Is 32. Damiani won a stlver medal
TheBengalsaredetermtnedto · ' lOO,yardsagatnstCtnctnnattthls ·
Damiani weighed In at 229% tn the 191M Olympics, and
prevent Bo Jackson from runsea!ion.
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pounds and Mercer 215. The avenged ·hts loss In · the gold- ·
ntng crazy \ agatns t them In
th Be
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Ty 11
sunday's playoff game against
In one game,
e
nga a . · winner .may ·not be taken arty medal bout by stopping
re
the Los Angeles Raiders.
defense surre~ered 122 yards 10 • ,more· seriously as heavyweight Biggs as a pro,
But Bo knows the Bengals' Craig Heyward and 115 yards 10
champion; but at least he might
"I don't think he.htts hard,, but
defense_ and loves tt.
Rueben Mayes of New Orleans.
be tn· a better position to chal- he's always 19 tremendous
Bo lias personally wrecked the Ertc;, Dickerson was having a
lenge for the genuine article.
shape,'' Mercer said of Damiani.
Bengals twice . tn the lastctwo horrible year until the Colts ·
''To me, really, thts fight here "He don't move. He's right there
seasons _ unleashing Bengal· played the Bengals and Dicker·
ts really going to set things ott," and I hate chasing people. I don't
Mercer ·satd. "Once I have the have to use a lot of energy
son rambled 143 yards. Even
busting runs of 92 and 88 yards Kevin Mack of the lowly CleveWBOtltle, lt's·gotngtoopenalot chasing this guy. It's going to
that sparked the Raiders to land Browns belted the Bengals
of doors. It really depends on who work for me."
victories of 27·7 and 24-7.
. for 85 yards.
has the WBO title and what a
Morrison Is 23-0 with 19 knock·
Cincinnati's defensive coaches
A\Jd then there's Bo.
person does with tt ." .
· outs and Tillis' 37-17 record
and players have ~n plotting
''I think It's great to play
''The WBO title Is like a Triple Includes losses to Tyson, Holy·
allweek'onwaystostopJackson, against Bo," said Grant. "We
A title,'' promoter Bob Arum fteld a.nd five . other former
¥arcus. Allen and other Raider .can't give hlln any seam or he
said. "It puts the champion In heavywelght .champlqns. Morrl·
r~~ter!~Y of them rea.c h 100 'will beln·theendzone. We have to position to go for a major league son weighed 227 lh and TilliS 226
'll be
rl ed ..
td contain btin. "
.
title."
.
· lh- ·
. ·
yar ds, I,
surp 8 • sa
·· A month ago, Jackson rushed
Arwri ts promoting Friday
Seldon, who learned to box
- Bent~al~. defensive e~Jd Davtd · 117 yards on etght carries
ntabt's 'pay-per.vlew card at the
while. serving four years tor
• .G':.an.!;._If any of them reach 60, agatnst-ctnctnnatt, with 88 or

C~CINNATI (UPI) -

.. '

Cincinnati

Minutelli .

those yards comtng on a broken
~ siana 8PAava_
play tn which Jackson cut back . .
~---ee~
. after he _was seernlngtr .
. ' CINCINNATI· (IJPI) - The earned . r.un .av.erage .'with . the
(QPsliMtl)
trallped,
ran
ne~rly
the
width
of
. · Ctnctnnatt Reds · Thursday · Reds' Class AA ·Chattanooga
A Dlvlll• afllolllm..la, loc.
the field and then raced down
reached contract agn\ement farm team last season and 5-2
Publllbed every altemom, Monday .
the sideline.
If
G
B
lhrourb Friday, lll Court St .. ,J&gt;o.
''The miStake we made was
wtth ou !elder lenn rag", with a 3.22 ERA at Class AAA ·
meroy, Ohio, by tbt Ohio Volley Pul&gt;
that we had that play stopped, who had been eltglble for arbttra· Nashville. With the Reds In two
lllhllll Compaey/Multbnedlo, Inc..
relief !lPpearahces, he had no
b t the ba k side (or the Bengals
tlon, and pitcher Gino Mlnutelll.
i'ol'llf!'oy, Olllo 4!1'769, Ph . 992-21!!4i. Seu
c
d
d Bo
Bragp, who signed a one-year record and a 9.00 ERA.
cond c1a11 po1t11e p&amp;ld at Pomet'oy, ,
Ohio,
defense) over-pursu~ an
,
contract, batted .299 for Clncln·
The signing or Braggi left eight
got
outside
me;and
that
W!'S
f~i
liatt
lalt
season
and
made
a
Reds eligible tor arbitration tr
Membtr: United Pre11 Intemat1011al,
said Bengali strong sa Y sensational Iean•ftg catch In the theY, can't come to agreement
Inland Dally Prooo Auoclatloa and the
David Fulcher.
""'
Oblo NtwiJ)8JN!I' AuoclaUon. Nattoaal
lUter Dickerson rail wild • alxth game of the ~at tonal with club officials - . Todd
Advtrtlllql!epr....ta live, Branham
NewiiPa....- Saleo, 733 Third Avenue,
against Cincinnati tn the ttrst Lea~ playoffS to preserve the Benzinger, Norm Charlton, Ma·
N"'Y Yorll, New Yor1110017.
. half
rlano Duncan, Btlly Hatcher,
t the Colts game the ~ vlctbry over the Pitts· · Barry
. Larkin, Randy Myers,
o
•
burgh
Pirates.
I'Q!I'MAS'n:R: Send acldteu chanaeo
Bengals went to a five -man
Mlnutellt who also signed a Jose iUjo and Chris Sabo.
to The Dally Sonllnol, 111 Coun Sl..
Pomeroy, Ohio 45lll9.
defensive ltne tn the second half one-year d~al was 9·5 with a 3.99
and succeeded In stowtng down
•
IIJIIIC&amp;IPTION IIATII:II
Dickerson.
lp Cllrrler o r - · - .
But Cincinnati says It can't
ODe.,........ ............ ... ................. ,,1.10
ODe Month .... ................... ........ .. M.tO
afford such a bnrury against Bo
one Yoor ................................. S'll!.IO
and the l!fld~rs.
·
The Astros recently have lost a
HOUSTON (UPI) -TbeHousIINGU:COPY
·
"You
can't
play
dtve:man
ltlie
pa(CJ:
ton Altroa Thursday traded star ' number of veterans who were
against thiS team becau11e they'll
Dally ........ .. .. ......., .. .... ......... " Cen!l
ftnt
baseman Gletul Davts .to the . free agenlll, and the club haa
kW you on the pass,'' satd
SUIIIcrtWnDOt dHII'IIII IOPIY .........
been put up tor ~ale by owner
BalUmore
Ortolea fQr pitchers,
BeD&amp;ata•· defensive line coach ,
l'le".'o~~ay rtmlt In adv..,.. 4lnd to
John
McMUII!!n.
Pete
HarniSch
and
Cilrt
SchWing
The Dally Senttao! .. a 3, I or 12 DIIR!tb
Chuck Studley.
· Davll, the only Astroa playtr
bull. Credit ..UIIIo IIWII eonler •ell
and outflelde!' Steve Finley.
Defensive coordinator Dick
Davll, 29, beco(nel a tree ajent · ever to hit 30 or.more home runs
LeBeau admlta his unit suffered
tn three seasons, ilvel the
No 111llacrlplt- by mau pennltled ta
after next season. J{e had asked
a ''mid· seiSon swoon," but
area wllere liome ciarrler ~ &amp;a
Orioles the right-handed power
the
Astroa
tor
·a
contract
that
available.
contendt there haa been tm·
hitter they had been aeeldni·
would pay hbn $5 mUilon a
ptovement In recent weeks. ·
- Harnisch was 11·1.1 wttb a 4.34
seuon,
making
him
the
highest
..... t
''I'm tremendoUily proud of paid pJa"yer In the baseball.
ERA
last season. Schllllng1 '
u
m.u
thts group,'' said LeBeau. ''They
reliever, posted a 1·2 record with
26
137.11
The
two-ti!Jie
All-Star mllsed
have . Improved, no quesdon
52
a . 2.!14 ERA. Finley Ia one of
moat of lalt Halon with a torn
""-owi"li~····CMiJ · .. "'·•
about it. In all ntne of our
baleball'l · beat delellllve out·
muscle In Ills left rlb ca11e and
13 .,..-............................... ...
:IIW-.................................. .10 r vlctorlel, we. have contrlbu led flnllhecl !he season batdng .251 fielders. He hit .2S6wtth 3bomers
algnlflcantly .''
'
52WIIIIio .............. ,.................... .ttl
and "S1 RBI.
Wltb 2~ home.rims and 64 RBI.

The -o· ally Sentinel ·

,

•

Houston trades Davis io Orioles

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·=
w-.-·
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w-................................
.... .

EJO

·--""""'---·-_..;.'!l---------- - - ..-. --- ·- VI

. SPRIN6 VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524
.

•

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•·t.

'I

~,

. ...
.

'

••

$2.75

. '·

IWI&amp;AII MATINEES SAT\JRDo\1 •
IIAA10ArN NIGHT TUESDo\1

..
'

. .91 S-ALE

.

••s
1986 Ford Bronco II "....... ....... sseoo

1986
.
.Pontiac
. .· .1000 . 4 .· P~ .........
.· '• s'33'S
...
1914 ·Mercury Cougar....;..... ;..... 3995
1986 Olcls Cutlass Citra 4 DR...... SS99 5
1983 Ford LTD Crown Vic ......... S399S
·1917 Dodge Ari11 .4 DR......."'"' S499S
1913 OMC S15 X Cab .......:....... $3995 "
1989 Nissan Pickup A/C' ........... S699S .
1986.Mercury Topaz '4 DR........ S419S
1984 Ford Tempo 4 DR............. '2995
1917 Chew. Cawalltr 2 DR........: '4995
191' Renault
AUiance 4 DR ...... ~299
5
'
'
1979 Chew.· Moftte Carlo ........... S1695
1916 Chew. Nova 4 Dr.............. 14495
1914 Chrysler New Yorker """' '499 S
1979 F~rd F150 Pickup .......~.... s16' 5
.,

.

54991
52891
53491
54991
S3491
53991
53291
55991
53991
52291
53991
S2291
51491
53891 .
53991
51291

·MONDAY THAU THURSDAY 9:30-11:30
FRIDAY 1:30-8:00; SATURDAY 9:00·1:00 ·

UIISU•U
111 • 1 1

BA./1/K F/fi/A./1/C/l'/G
A.I'AILA.BLE

..",.

..

NOW '

~

Ull DAVIS

OWMI

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..,.

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Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

· Pomerov:-Middeport. Ohio

'

•

· Friday, Janu.-v 11. 1991

•

Ohio State bombs ·NorthWeStern, I 02-62
By Ualted p.,_ Iateraado..;.
Coach Randy Ayers said that
~o. 4 Ohio State had alotofpop In
Its legs, To Northwestern, the
pop must have sounded like an
explosion.
Mark Baker scored 8 of his 19
points during an early 18-3 .run
11Junday night that vaulted the
unbeaten Buckeyes io a 102-62
Big Ten rout.
.
"I just· thought we hlld some
freshneJs In our legs today,"
Ayers said. ·'The plip was lri our
legs, and we got going, gcitln the
passing lanes, and that's
. encouraging." .
.·
Baker had 14 points and Perzy
Carter 11 In the opening 20
mlnl!les, helping the Buckeyes
, mount a 44-26 . lead . at. the
Intermission. The Buckeyes then
blew It open by running ott tbe
first 11 points of the second half
and led by as many as 45 before It
was over.
"A long .night," Wlklcats Coach Bill Foster said. "I
though! Qblo State was · awesome,, but we cOntributed to that,
not only the turnoyers. I j\lst
thoughtwhenwemadeamistake
or bad a shot blocked, we just
deteriorated as a team."
Ohio State, 13.0 overall and 3-0·
in the Big Ten, saw all of Its
starters score In double figures.
Jim Jackson finished with a
game·hlih 23 polnts,lncludlng17

At Tucson, Ariz:; &lt;;hris Mills Kevin Swann scored a l!ame-ltigb
scored 21 points and Arizona 25 points for ·Central Connecticut
survived a· late scare to ·extend
At Johnson City, Tenn., East
the nation's longest home-court Tennessee State forced 3!1 Libwin11in11 streak to 55 games. ertY turnovers and placed four
J;lrlan Williams added 18 points players in double figures In the
-fer the Wildcats, 12-2 overall and easy win. East Tennessee State
2-1 In the Paclflc.10: Harold was led In scoring by junior
Miner pbured In 26 points and forward Calvin Telford, who:
Ronnie Coleman had. 24 for the finished with 17~ pqlnts: Keith
Trojans, 8-3 and 0-2.
Jennings, Major Geer and Alyln
,
•
. West added 14 each, Llbetty was
At Tempe, Ariz., Trli:cy Mur- · · led by the 20-polnt effort of Mike
ray scored 22 _p oints. and UCLA
Coleman. The Buccaneers 1mmade 73.9 percent of Its .shots lp
proved to 11-1 and lncr~ased their
the second half to down the Sun
home court win streak · to 22.
Devils. Don ·MacLean added 21 consecutive games, fourthpOints and Darrick Martin had 14 longest In the nation. Liberty tell .
for the Bruins, .)Vho .outscored
to 1·13.
Arizona State 49-33 In the second
At Iowa City, Iowa, Rodell .
lullt UCLA ' Improved to 13-1
Davis scored a career-high 22
overall and 2-0 In the conference.
polntsand Val Barnes added 17 to
The Sun Devils tell to 10-3 and 1-2.
pace the Haw keyes. Iowa, which
Jamal Faulkner had 14 points for
Improved to 13-2 lor the season
Arizona State, Isaac Austin and
and 2-1 In the Big Ten, got 15
Tarence Wheeler contributed 13
points from Acle Earl, Including
apiece and Lynn Collins had 10. · afreethrowwith17.9seconds.left .
;;
.
·that gave the Hawkeyes a 79-1!\
At Storrs, Conn., Chi'ls Smith
lead .. Earl missed a pair of free
· scored 23 plilnts· and the Huskies
throws with 7.4 seconds-remllln·
held Central Cpnnecticut to 24
lng and James .Voskull hit a
percent sboodng. Connecticut,
three-point basket justahead of
which has won 9 straight, lmthe final buzzer tocutlowa'slead · ·
.proved io 12·1. The Blue Devils
lo one at the.end. Michigan fell to
havel9st 121n a row and dropped .7-6 overall and 0-3 in.the Big Ten.
.to 1·12. Scott Burrell added 17
At Columbia, S.C.; Clarence
· points, John Gwynn 16, Toralno
Weatherspoon scored two crucial
Walkerl4andRodSellers13and
baskets late In the second half
14 rebounds for the Huskies.
and the Golden Eagles made 6
free tbiows In the linal16 seconds
tor the win. ·Southern Miss
Improved to 7·1 · and 2-0 In the
Metro, while . the Gamecocks
dropped to 11-3 and 1-1. Darrln
Chancellor led the Golden Eagles
with 11 points and Weatherspoon
added 14. Jo Jo English paced·
· South Carolina with 16 points . .
under the perimeter and they limiting Its losses to 10.
At East Lansing, Mich., sopho·
made us pay for it. It was a good,
Overall, the Redmen were 51.5
more center Mike Peplowskl
Intense game, only we couldn't percent (34-6$) from the floor and
scored 15 of · his career-high 19
get a rhythm going."
suffered from Mount V:eniDn's
points In the second hall to lead
With both teams shoo"tlng ev- "....assault on Its three-point shoot-. Michigan State. Peplowskl,
enly .(51 per(ent) In tile first half,
lng by holding the Redmen to six
whose previous best was 12 ,
neltherallowedeachotherawlde of 17 attempts (3!1.3 percent).
points, hit all seven of his .
margin. Although , Rio Grande · However, the same strategy . !ll~ld-goal attempts In the second :
· won tbeleadearly,ltw~ntonly~s
workedagalnsttheCqligars,who
hall as the Spartans overcame a
high as 10 (39-29) a:n~54 before
were 51.4 per.cent from the floor
five- point deficit. He also led
· Mount Vernon, led by Jamie
(32-72) and sank orily eight of
Mlchlgari State with nine :
Peroiek with 22 pOI.n ts and 13 their 26 tries from the outside for
rebounds.
·rebounds, went on a run to slash' 30.8 percent, From the toulllne,
ln';·the second half while carter
haif 17, Jamaal Brown 11 and
Trea Lee 10.
The Buckeyes 'have won 12 of
the last13 meetings with Northwestern, which dropped to 5-7
overall, 0-3 In conference. Charles Howell led the Wildcats with
14 ·points, while Todd Leslie
added 12, but 11 of those came In
the first half.
In other games involving
teams in UPI's Top 25, No. 2
Arkansas topped Texas 101-89:
No . . 6 Arizona nipped Southern
Cal 87-85, No. 7 UCLA topped '
Arizona State 82-68, No. 9 eonnec'
tlcut routed Central Colliii!Cticut
115- 47, No. 17 East Tennessee
·State thumped Liberty 86-55, No.
20 Iowa njpped Michigan 79·78,
No. 23 Southern Mississippi
edged No. 21 South Carolina 64·58
and No. 24 Michigan . State
· downed Wlscorisln 65·50.
·
At Faye\teville, Arll:., Arlyn
Bowers' two three-point shots
highi'lghted an Arkansas surge
early In the second half and the
Razorbacks fought
a Texas
comeback. Bower.s, normally
overshadowed by several ot his
high-scoring teammates, scored
16 of his 20 points In the second
half to help bring the Razorbacks
their lOth consecutive victory.
Arkansas Is 14.1 overalland3-0in
theSouthwestCon!erence.Texas
Is 2-lln the league and 7-4 overall.

-· .

...

~ Funderburke

enrolls -at OSU~
.

.

. Scoreboard ...
Eastern Confennce
Atlantic IMvtllon
Team
· W L Pd.
f'loslon ............. .... 28 5 .848
P hi ladelphia .... :... 20 14 .588
New York .. ...... .... 1418 .438
Washlngton .......... 1418 .438
' New Jersey .......... 1022 .313
Miami. ...... ............ 9 24 .273

Adams Dlvlaloa
8\c\
131\
13\c\
17\1
19

.
Central DlvlAion
Mll waukee ........... 25 9 .735
Chlcago .... .-.. ... ..... 2310.697
lletrolt ................. 2311.676
Alla nlA ..... :.......... 1913 .594

Sentinel Calendar

............. 1121.343
Cleveland ............ II 23 .324

Sm71he Dlvloloo
cat gary ....,.'........ 24 15 5 53182 '38

'We8tern Coatereaee

• Mldweol Dlvloloa
Team
W L Pet . . GB
San An1CIIIo ......... 23 B .742
1\c\
5 "
11
131\
16
18\&gt;

Paclftc Dlvlllon
Portland ....... ....... 30 6 .833
• Phoenix .. ..... : ....... 2111 .656
7
L.A. Lakers ., ....... 20 11 .545
7\c\
• • 'Go lden State .:...... 18 15 .545 . 10~ ·
· Sea'ttle .................. 15l7 .169 13 :
L.A. Olppers ....... 12 23.343 17\c\
Sacramento .......... ·7 25 .219 22

Tbundlay'• ICorea
Indiana 129, New York 122

Was htna:too Ul. L-.A. CUppersllO
Charlotte 101, Sacrament&lt;? 59

San Antmlo 117, Orlando 111 -

Hou ston 156. Denver 133
.Golden State 113, Seattle t03

ToDIIhl'l gartles
L.A. Clippers at Boston, 7:30 p.m.
Mlnnescca at Miami, 7: 30p.m.

Portland ai Detroit , 8 p. m .
Atlanta at Chicago, 8: 30p.m.
Philadelphia al Milwaukee, 9
p .m .
· Utah at Dallas , 8: 30 p.m .
HoustCJa at PhOenix, 9: ~ p.m .
oevetand at L.A. Lakers. 10: 30

p.m.

.-101···-·
•

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.

AtlaoiA at /'lew York, 7:30p.m.
NewJerory,at Philadelphia, 7: 30
p.m .
Bostoo at Washington, 7:30p.m .
Chlcaao at Charlotte, 7: 30p.m. ~ ·~
.Miami at Detroit, 7::JI p. m .
.. Milwaukee at Indiana, '1: 30 p.m. •
Or Iondo at Dol las, 6: 30p.m ..
Utah at San Antoolo, 8: 30p.m .
CleVeland at~nver, 9:30p.m.
Phoenix at Golden State, 10:30

p.m.
.
Seattle at Saa'amento.lO: 30p.m.

In the NIH..T-

· N.Y. Rupu
P11t1brup
Pl!tlldolplllo

.,

'

WII•Oo-e '
l'lohtdi-

.New JOI'IO)'

2514 T5'1 173140

2HO UUJO 171

211! • •
~
1917 f47ll71$2

.

.

204 Condor St.

FRIDAY
The Senior
POMEROY
Citizens Dance Club, Pomeroy, will
have a round and square dance on
Friday from 8-11 p.m. at the center
with music by .the Happy HoUow
Boys of Athens. Bring snacks for
.
the snack table;

TUPPERS PLAINS· There,wiD
be a to\llld and square dance' at the

Tu_pper:s Plains VFW Building on
Fnay from 8-11:30 p.m. featUring
Specks of Bluegrass. Ronnie WOOd
wiD be the caller. Public is invited.

· CHESHIRE - The Gallia-MeiP.
Community Action Agency will
hold a free clotlling day on Fri'!&amp;Y
from 9 a.m. to noon at the old high
school building in Cheshire.
LONG ROTIOM • The . Faith·
Gospel Church in Long BoiiOID
wiD hold its monthly ltymn sing on
Friday at 7 p.m. Local talent as
well .. as others wiD perform. Sieve.
Reed, pastor, invites the public.
.
SATURDAY
POMEROY • "Incident at
Hawl:'s Hill" and "Alexander Used
· to be Rich Last Sunday" will be the
children's movies pm~C~Jted at the
Meigs COunty Public ·L ibrary on
Saturday at 2 p.m. All Jirea children
are invited.
·

Pomeroy, OH.

Fall &amp; Winter Hours

992-6839

~THE

P~ople

'·'

Boston 5, Quebec 3 ·•

Chicago 7, Toroo.to 2
Hartford 5, Vancouver 4
l.Ds Angeles 5, Buffalo 2

Masof) .F.amily Restauran
Friday Night Is

Toallht'a camee
N.Y. Rangers at ~trolt. 7:35 .
p.m.
'
. Ca,lll!li'Y a)l\'aah!ngiQI, 8:05p.m.
. Ctltcago at ~Innlpeg , s: 35 p.m. • ,

Sal...,.• _ .

Edmontm at
p.m.

~ew

Jer!Ey, 1:35

Philadelphia at Boston, 7:05p.m.
St . Louts at QuebEC, 7: M p.m.

This week's games

12 oz. T-BONE........~ ................. ~-~•...~10.95

ThlsWeek'•
.
Ohio College llukelball Sclleilulo
· l!rldij¥, Jaa 11
No games !IChdlulecf
Saturday, 1111 U

Wl!iiConsln at Ohio State
C~ntral Mi chigan at Bowling Green
Oh io University at Easter·n
Michigan
·
Miami a,t Kent State .
Western Michigan at Toledo
Western llllncis at Akrcn
Clncinnat I at South CaroUiJa
North em lowa at Cleveland State
Daytoh at EvansvUie (lnd)
WI!!Consbi-Mtlwaukee at WriJht

-

SNYDER DBIVE8- Blo Grande r-rw IUJU'd Lynden Sayder
(IS) drlva apcolll1 aplaat an ualdenUfled Mount Vernon .

Ross to stay at Georgia Tech
1

CapU.aJ at Hiram

John Carroll at Heldel~erg

Moun' Un ton at Mt.lskbiaum
Bethany (W Va) at DeniJon 1 .

,Kenyon at Case Rewrve

Oberlin at Wit"'nberr
'
OhloWl!sl")'an ·~ Allflfhenf (Pa)
Wo01ter at EarlhaR) (lnd)
Kentucky Wesleyan at Ash.Lind
Wllber1o"'e at Florida Atlantic
Waloh II Ttllln
.

Vernc:n Naz.aren~ · at CHilo •

Defiance at RloGrando
Findlay ar Wttmtqtm
Golhen at 81 lflm .
Dyke at Llk Erie
.Shlwnee Slate t Central State

.
All Dinners Served With
All-U-Cafe..To-Eat Soup, Fruit &amp;·Salad Bar,
Choice of Baked, Mashed or
French Fried P~tatoes,
Rice or Onion Rings, and
Homestyle Dinner Rolls.

.J

State
.
Chicago State at Yo~~~~g~townSttite
Mar !!etta at Oh"lo Northern
Otterbein at Baldwi~·Waltace ·

Urbana at ~darvtlte

10·oz. RIBEYE ................................... ~s9.95
5 oz. SIRLOIN......... ~ ........................s6.99

Nuarene pla7er d•rlilg Thuntlay allht'a game at Lyne Center,
whlcb &amp;be Bedmen won 10-7%. (PboltJ by KaaiUDt lwase) ·

· CLEVELAND (UPI) - Geor-'
gta Tech football Coach Bobb)'
Ross has removed hlmtelf from
. the runnlnf for lhe head coaching
l~ with the Cleveland Browns . .
Ross,,who led Georgia Tech to
an 11-0-1 record and the UPI
national championship, met
Tuesday nl[lht wlth Browns
owner Art Modell but then
removed himself from
COIIBlderatlon.
"Basically, .I'm very happy ·
wbere I am," Ross said Thurs. dey. ''The people hmr-tat Geor·
gla Tech) have beea very good to
me and I'm very pi~ with
what I have. I'm not going to
Cleveland."
.·

Ross said heBlreed to meet
With Modell at Modell's suburban
home because ~odel.f ''was very
persuasive In get dng me to come

there."
Ross said salary was discus~
only In va[IUe terms, no job wa~
offered and no second Interview
was mentioned.
"It never got to that phase,"
Ross said.
Ross said hi! was ''pretty
strongly committed to Georgia
Tech," but told an Atlanta
television statloa Thursday the
only o&amp;ber head-eoachlng job he
would be Interested In was Notre
Dame's.

*'

JOIN US FRIDAY NIGll.T
AND TASTE THE DIFFERENCE
•senior Citizens Receive .10% Discount,. ·

Mason Fat.nily Restauran
Rt.33

.. (304) 7'73-5321

Wolf Pen .happenings
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle-Knapp, Aslt·
Mr. and Mrs. Kev!"

I~ Knapp and

"

'Bok

Mid4l~}xui:
CCL meets ·

,.

,alumni. basketball game on Saturday at 6 p.m. Call Rick Edwards o~ ·
Gordan ·Fish&amp; at 992-215.8 for information .

The

and Quol Anderson. .,

POMEROY • A 12-si.ep A.A.
meeting will begin Sunday at 7.
p.m. at the J.T.P.A. office,l17 West
Second St. in Pomeroy.
..
ROCK SPRINGS • The Rocl:
Springs United Methodist Church
will be holding a special J;llllY&amp;
service for the Mid-east Crists and
those serving in Operation Desert
Shield 011 Sunday at 7 p.m. The
public is invited to attend,.

.

.MONDAY
·.
.
CHESHIRE- Women A11ve will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at ~ '
Kyger &lt;;reek CluJ.lhouse. Refreshments waD be provaded, .

Mason,
WV
' .

~

.

--

Haggy.

Mrs. John Douglas of Columbus
spent the weekend with her mother,
Mrs. Emma Fox. •
·
. Mrs. June Soulsby vi~ted ller ·
sister in Lancaster recendy. - •

COLONY THEATRE

Oonch takes
part tn event.

. ·

·

· S. Dance set

J-ogram

.'L APAKOSCOPIC
CHOLECYSTECTOMY

-

,.

.'

in the news-.- -

I'

Mr. ·and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs, lnwagen in Cincinnati.
·
and Mrs. ·Denver Nelson and
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Jacobs, Sean
Mr. and Mrs. ErneSt Van lnwagen and Kristi of Florida spent the
attended the wedding of their niece holidays with his parents, Mr. llld
Joyce Dill and Jamie Ash at AI- Mrs. Clifford Jacobs.
•
bany.
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Williams,
Mrs. Jean Wright and Becky Michigan, spent a few days with
Eblen attended the Festival of the Rev. and Mrs. WiUiam WiiLights at Oglebay Park in .Wheel· Iiams. .
.
ing. W.Va. ·
.DarbJe_Dam, Marysvillc, spent
Mr. and Mrs. Jas Gilmo~e and · the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Jsa
granddaughter, Kim Haggy, atten• Gilmore and Mr. and Mrs. Ernie

Mr.

ded the gr~~duation or Deanna Dorst
in Columbus recelidy.
· Mr. and Mrs. Frank Williams,
Toledo, spent a few days with bis
· parents, the Rev. and Mrs. William
Williams.
Mr. and MrS. Clifford Jacobs and
Mrs. Jas Gilmo~e -attended the.
funeral of Margaret Ann Stein in
AMY CLONCH
denL ·
•
Groveport.
An ornament and gift exch8nge
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford Jacobs,
waa held and secret sisters we~e Mrs. Shirley Frazier and . Betty
revealed Nwnes for 1991 we~e Wills and Leona Martin spent the
•
drawn. '
•, day in Gallipolis recently.
Packages were judged and winMr. and Mrs. Ernest Vanlnwagen
·nm w~ Uncia Broderick most spent the ltolidays with .their son
A~ny aonch, daughter or Dale orillinal; ~ Steele, p~tties~. and family, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Yan
Clonch, Middleport, and the late and Thmrna Mash, most unusual.
·
,
· .
Augustine
, · Clonclt,
,, and
granddaughter of Bob and Kalhleen
A donatiOn WBf made. to the
The Belles and Beaus Western
ClOI!Ch, recendy)participalcd in the · i:holarship fund · m memory of 1
Square
Dance Club will. spon.S?r an
Ohio State Competition in· Colum- Thelmas Sines.
·
open
dance
at the sentor clbzens
bus for modeling.
. Guest p e r for · the January
center
in
Pomeroy
on Jan. 19 from
She won lmt place hOIIOIS as meeting will be Wendy Halar. She
state beginner queen in her age will present a
on children 8 .to 11 p.m. The caller will be
Homer MagneL
group of 10.12 y~olds.
·
with speclal needs.
The competition was judged ac·
cording to appearance, sratcfu1ncss
and techniques, mOdeling and poise '
and appearance.
·
s~e has beelllllodeling for three ·
years· and this was her third first
plaCe honor in competitiOn.
She models and twirls for the
e
•
Ruffles and Flourishes Baton COqJ
ins.tnlcted by April Harmon Gf
Pomeroy.

..

CNEXTTOMAsoNEXXON) .

-·

Becky Steele ~ded at the
business meeting in wltillh -plans
wete 1ina1lzed for the Spring Con·
ference in April.
Thys, clothing and food were
brought in ror a needy fwnily.
·
•
•
A thank-you note was received
from Americare for favors made for
the patients.
·
·
Holiday greetln~s were received
from Jean GiUipste, district' presi·

LOITRIDGE - Countty Music

S()NDAY .
SYRACUSE • "The Living
Praise" of" the Mount Vernon
Nazarene College· will present the
gospel of Jesus Christ in music on
Sunday at the Syracuse Naz8re!1C
Church. TheY will be ministering
during the 10:30. am. morning
worship. The pul?lic is invited.

Laurel Cliff happenings

annual ChriStmBs dinner of
the Milkllepc!rt Child,Conseryation ·
Leaauc was held recendy at the
Rocl S~ ~United Methodist
Church Social ROORl. A catered
dinner ~ served to the members
and two guestS, Clarice Kennedy

POMEROY • A County·widC
bllstees and clerks meeting will be
held Saturday at 7:30 P..m. at the
senior
citizens
building
in
Pomeroy.
Night at the Lottridge Community
Center will be held Saturday from 6
p.m ~ to midnighL All bands are
welcpme. Refreshments . will be
available and the public is invited
to attend.
·

with Debbie and Tim DesJIIOild.
Cassie and Justin of S~ Hill,
. Fla. They also visiled wath Mr. ~
Mrs. Joseph Evans. Tyson and
Jonathan, Racine.
. New Year's Day guests of Mr..
and Mrs. J:R. Mwpll)' were Mrs.
Jospeh Evans, Tyson and Jonathan,
Racine, Barbara Divis, Ashll,
Joshua and ~ of Min!nville,
and Jeff and Peggy Bole, Homer

Knapp were New Year's Day
\lisilors of Mr. and Mj'S. Charley
Smith.
. '
.
·
Chrisbllas Day visitors of Joh11
"·. and Idli Murphy were Robert and
· Robbie Murphy, Ellgle Ridge Road,
Pam • Miller and daughter of
· Ptlmeroy, Debbie and Tim DeS·
mond, Cassie and Justin, Spring
Hill, Fla..
"
Hill Road.
.
C8nnel Evans. , Tyson wad
Robert Reeves was a Saturday
Jonathan, Racine, John E. and Julie visitor of Mrs. Dorochy Reeves.
Chris, Racine, Amber Cumings,
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank. Sarah
S~use. Jeff and Peggy Bole, Beth and Matthew, Tc:us R\)tld,
Homer Hill Road, Elaine Downs; we~e Saturday evening visitors of
Adam, Eric and Dicke, Glouster, all · Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
stayed overnight with B~arn Ronald
Michelle. Knapp was a recent
Davis; Ashli, .Joshua and Mirinda,
Minc{!lville · ' •
·
· · visitor of her pilrents, Mr. and Mrs.
Jeff
spent ~ few days with · Jack PeterSOn, New Uma Jl.old.
.
,.
'
·._ -t '
his mother, Mary Bole of StockChristine. Bailey was a 'Sunday
. tDSTORY BOOK DEADLINE NEARS • D 1 1ine ror or4ering
.port.
evening . visitor of Mr. and Mrs. ·
Peggy Bole spent a few days Robert Bailey Sr.
·
the pidorlal blstory ot Melp County, "''bru &amp;be Yean In Picture,"
is Tuesday. Tbls plloCoataplt II typkal ot Wlllt tile book will COD·
with her mother, Ida Murphy.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Lavender and
Ida Murphy and Peggy Bole son we~e recendy visitors_of Mr.
tain. The picture ~bows ft!elp Couaty World War ~ soldlen near
visited with Robert Murphy wad and Mrs. Kevin Knapp, Michelle,
the telephoae oftlte on SeColid Street.
Robbie, of Eagle R~e R.-oad, wa~ Amy and Ashley.

charged with smashing
b · ·
to get

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Friday, Januwy 11. 1991
Page 6

·/a
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G ss Sau:sman

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GRAVELY
SYSTEM

.

REEDSVll.LE - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet Satur·
day at 9 am. at the ReedsviUe Fire .
House. Approp1iations for 1991
ROCK S_PRINGS • The Rocl:
wiD be discussed:
SJ?rings Uruted Methodist Church
'
wm·be open for anyone wanting to .
BURLINGHAM • The Burlincome to pray {or the situation in the
gham Modem Woodmen will have
Middle Bast and for those serving
1_
an bean and oyster soup supper on in Operation Desert Shield.
SaiUJday-at 6:30 p.m. Bring a pot·
luck dish. Hot dogs will also bC
POMEROY • The Disable
served. A shon business meeting
American Veterans and Ladies
.
will conducted to elect officers.
Auxiliary will meet Monday at 7
SOrn(! UHneSS
p.m. ' at the hall on Butternut
·.
POMJ:,ROY - The Meigs basket·
Avenue:
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A ,
ball program will sponsor an
veteran plate glass salesman·
faces arraignment this month on
charges he shot out hundreds of
storefront windows with a BB •
gun, and au thorltles were lnve&amp; tlKating whether he did It to drum
'MARRYING MAN;, SET NOT BLI88 - The set of "The
\IP busln~ss.
Marrying Man," a Disney !lim starrll)KKlmBallngerandAlec
Richard Joseph Angona, 39,
Baldwin, was not a happy place, according to Premiere
was
linked to a live-month spree
magazine. Tl)e stars, who moved In together durlng the !liming,
' of . v.andallsm durlng which 367 .
. ~DadEHife miserable for .the crew wiV!, their dema.Dds and their
shop windows worth a total of ·
.. attitude: Basinger at one point told !llmwrlter ·Nell SlmQn,'
about $180,000 were shattered,
· ":ntis Isn't tunny. Whoever wrote this doesn•t understand
mostly along a 12-mlle stretch of
comedy," Simon, who has written more funny movies and plays
Ventura Bo\llevard, the San
than most people can count, turned on his heel and left the set,
Fernando Valley's most expen·
rarely to be seen again. Acrew member, requesting anonymity,
slve shopptng and business
offered an explanation lor the · behavior: "We create the
thoroughfare . .
monsters thai they beCome. When the studios grant their every
Angon~ was arrested Wednes·
whlm, what do you expect?"
day as he drove to work along
Ventura from his home 'In Wood·
JACKSON TO TOUR AFRICA- Megastat Mlehael Jackaon
land Hills to North Hollywood
will make·. a 10-day tour of Afflca starting Jan. 21 at the
Glass &amp; Mirror Co., where he was
lnvlta~lon .of Gabon President Omar Bongo. In addition to
head salesman an'cl a 21-year
Gabon, he will also visit Tanzania, Nairobi and the Ivory Coast.
·
employee.
Ja&lt;:kson, who last visited Africa nearly 20 years ago, will make
·A
search
of
his
home
turned up
a video memoir of the trlp, hoping to capture' the beauty of
a
gas-powered
·BB
pistol
and a
Africa and to assist In Its preservation.
box of carbon-dioxide gas ·
cartridges.
.
.
CHECK YOUR HAIR AT THE (CELL) DOOR ~ Going to
"We
belll!ve
It
was
based
on
the
prllon ti bad enough but a convicted Junk bond king Mlellael
profit motive," pollee Lt. WilMllken will have fo go without hll curly brunet hairpiece.
liam J ; qalda said of the attacks.
Department of Prisons spokesrila!' Dan Dunne told Parade
But other poUce o(flclals said
ma1aztne that Mllken will have to leave his wig home unless
they were not su~ what the
there Is a: medical reaeon· for wearing lt . "Hairpieces are
motive was and the Investigation
banned," he said . "The purpose of tbe restriction Is to prevent
Is continuing.
•
balrplecds !rom being uled aa part of a dls[llllse or to conceal
. Gaida also·sald An1ona's boss,
weapou, keys or contraband." Mllkeil was sentenced to 10
Wayne Christensen, was unyears for Wall StFeet lrre[111larltles at a prison yet to be
aware of the alleged link between
determined.
the shootings and !Ill company.
ETC. - Jazz trumpeter Dluy Gllleeple, 73, Is home
recover InC from cataract IIUrgery at lhe New York Eye and Ear , . Christensen said his company
bandied a bout 10 window reInfirmary In Manhattan ... actor Marloa Bnado may fly to
placement .Jpbs resulting from
Parll to see hll daqhter, Cber-. who Is there for treatment
the vandalllm.
,
folk!Wing two sulctde att~:mpts In Tahiti ... A hot ,Item on the
· Angona Is free on $5,000 ball
menu at Clint EaahrOod'a Hoa•s Breath restaurant In carmel,
pending arraignment Jan. 30ona
calif., Is the Dirty Harryburger,
felony vandaliSm charae.

TUESDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 A.M.·Il P.M.
• SAT. 9 A.M.-1 P.M.
CLOSED MONDAYS

•••truct•'

Thursday'• results
PlttsbU!l!h 5. catgary I

.Dominican

W L TPio. OFGA

dar.

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

llkk Newel •
· for llert lnformatl• Call

Los Angeles ........ 24 14'5 53174140
Edmootoo ........ ... 19 20 2 401:12133
· Vancouver ........... 1824440147171
Winnipeg ........ .. .. 13 25 8 34146167

Mt

w

. Thurs., Jan. 1 7
7:30p.m.
At Carleton School

.

13
f4

Uia h . ............... .- ... 2311 .676
Hou stoo ............... 1914.576
Dallas .. .. .............. !219 .387
Ml nnesota .... ...... .. 10 22 .313
Orlando . ........... .... 9 26 .257
Denver ............ .... . 6 28 .176

Starting Wl11ter Quarter

· W L T Plo. OF OA

Chicago .............. 29.14 3 61156118
St. Louts .. .......... . 2413 6 54156127
lletrolt . ......... ...... 2119 4 46151154
Mlnnesota .. ...... : .. 12 25 B32134 157
Torooto .. ...... .. ..... 12 29 3 2712!1179

.(ndlena ..... - ~ ........ 13 21 .382 12

Commumty Calendar Items
appear two days before liD even_l
and &amp;be day of that event. Items
., musl be received iD edvaate to
assure publicalioll In the calen·

Tonight's' games

Norrts IM~IIIoa

Team

.

the advantage to 40-39 at 3:20. A the Redmen emerged~with 72.7..
Cougar three-pointer at 2:15 · percent (16-22), while Mouht .
gave the ylsltors their only lead Vernon netted lour of seven tries
(42-40), which was promptly tied
(57.1 percent) .
Southern at Hannan Trace
by a Troy Donaldson basket, then
The Redmen conclude a busy Eastern at Southwestern
erased by a field goal and a palr - week of action Saturday at 3 p.m . North Gallla at Oak Hlll
when they ·host Defiance for· Kyger Creek at Symmes Valley
of fr~ throws from Harrison,
giving Rio Grande a Jour-point . Holzer Clinic Day, while Mount . Ga111polis at Jackson
lead at halftime.
Vernon (11-5, 1-1) goes to Ohio Marietta at Warren I.;ocal ·
With his five. starters playing Dominican Saturday:
Logan at Athens
at full tilt, Lawhorn's club .went Box·ICOre: ·
. Chesapeake at South Point
on a run through effective
RIO ' GRANDE (80) - Gary Wilmington at Greenfield . ·
penetration of Mount Vernon's Harrison, 11-6-&lt;28; Mark Erslan, Ripley at Pt. Pleasant ·
defenses and had Its highest lead ·4-3-1-18: Brad Schubert, 2•2·6·16;
waverly at Wheelersburg
. of the game (82,61) with six . Lester Smith, 2·0·4: Darius Willi- Portsmouth at Greenup
fillnutes ·to go. ·
·
··
ams, 2-0-4; Jet! Brown, 3-1-2-~1;
VInton County at Meigs
Whllethereboundingwasclose Trgy Donaldson, 4-1-9. TOTALS Nels-Yorll at Alexander
Wellston at Federal Hocking
- Rio Grande had 43 to the 28.._16-80.
Cougars' 36 - Jeff . B~own
MOUNT VERNON (76) · Trimble at Miller
·
brought down the balllO times I? Aaron Reynolds, · 1·0-2; Troy Wahama at Charleston Catholic
clear the way lor Harris_on and Balo, 1-2-0-8; Dave Shoewalter, Belpre- Open .
teammates Mark Erslan and 0·1·0·3i Jamie Perozek, 5-4-0-22; . Saturday's games:
Brad Schubert, who·had 18and 16 Ron Holmes, 9-0-18; Dennis Mar- Point Pleasant at Gallipolis
Warren Local at Fort Frye
points, respectively. Rio .Grande tin, 1·0·2; Jeff Korblnl, 1-0-2;
held Its turnovers to nine and Steve Gregory, 4-3-11; Darrln Marlon Franklin at Portsmouth
Molint .Vernon was-successful-ln.. Brooli.t, 2-1-1-S: TOTAlS U-8-4- South Webster at Wheelersburg
78. . ·
North Gallia at Federal Hocking
Halftime JJCore: Rio Grande 48, Symmes Valley a!Ironton St. Joe
Mount Vernoa 44.

KARATE CLASSES

By- The.Bend

·The deadline for ordering the history of Meigs Councy in pic~.
Eictorial history .of Mei~ . Coun~y,
The committee is now in the
'Thru the Years .in Picture,',' lS ~ of . selecting the final
Tuesday, · ·
. ·
photogo~phs to be used. If .some
. Orders may be mailed or left at . areas. seem under represeated. an
the ~e•gs County Museum, 14&lt;1 appeal will be m8de for pictUres in
Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy, 45769, diOse specific areas. Althougll the
Tuesday through Saturday from I· deadline
for
sobmilling
4:30p.m.
.
photograplls has passed, presons
The book of approximately 168 ltaving pholllgraphs that they wish
{lllges will contain several hundred 10 have ·considered for the book
photographs of Meigs Councy his· should conta:t the museum at 992tory. Most . of _these photographs 3810 by Tuesday; If the pictures are
have never ~ published. Many in a category or area-in which the~e
are _from the personal collections of is a . shon.age, a ,time will be
Metgs County fam•lie~ . The~e are schedilled for copying.
photographs of floods, fires, disas·
'Thru the Years in Pictore" is the
~· busihe~ses; fonns of. tran~(lor-, first photographic history of Meigs
taboo, . agnculture, scemc v1ews, County. The book will be a COR)·
parades, homes, communities, panion book to Volumes I and II of
churches,
school
buildings, Meigs County .Family History. The
employee groups, RJills, and many anticipated delivery date is midother categories that help tell the summ&amp;.
·

off

Campbell Conference

1\c\
2
5

C ~arlotte

23 14 B 54 159147
2317 5 51147139
19 21 442128148
16 17 10 ~2144140
10 28 7 27127198

Boston
Montreal
Har't!oni
Buffalo
Quebec

GB

J'he Daily ·Sentinel

Mttseum History Book
order ·deadline nears

·Redmen
defeat
Mt.
Vernon;
."
.
.
Harrison scores .28 points
One definition of Intensity ·Js
"exceptionally great concentra·
~
....
tion, power or force," and fans of
SLAM DUNK- Michigan Staie forward Dwayne S&amp;epbennlam
the University of Rio Grande
dunks over Wisconsin's Louis Ely In lhe firs&amp; half of Thunday
men's basketball team attending
,itlght's Big Ten ~~:ame In Eul Lansing, Mich., which lhe Spar&amp;aaa
Foodland Night at Lyne Center
:.won 611-50. (UPI)
·
Thunday saw that and more as
. the Redmen defeated Mount
Vernon Nazarene, 90-76, In the
second Mid-Ohio ·Conference
. (
.
'
game of the season for both
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) based on that, we could admit . teams.
Lawrence Funderburke, a 6-foothim to school," said Ayers.'"But
Gary Harrison, thesenlorpolnt
9 iorward \\)hO played six games
as far as basketball. he cannot guard from Gallipolis, exploded
a t Indiana last .season, has
work out with this ballclub this tor 28 points and 'five asststs In
e~olled at Ohio State University
year.''
not only his best game of the,
ati&lt;J will be eligible to play
Without the approval of Indl· campaign, but lor what coaches
basketball for the Buckeyes
ana Coach Bob Knight, Funder- · from both teams felt was Rio
beginning next January.
burke cannot receive an athletic Grande's premier effort to date:
Ohlp State Coach Randy Ayers
scholarship at any school he
"It was a complete game for
agreed to accept Funderburke as
attends, and as an lntraconter· us," Redmen mentor . John Lalong as the former Columbus
ence transfer, he ls.notelglble for whorn remarked as his team's
~htle Iijgh School star's acaathletic aid at any . Big Ten record went to 13-3 and 1-1 In
dlon\lc
record
was
acceptable.
School.
conference play. :'In the second
• .
1. '
,.
Funderburke, however, ex- half, defense was the key, and we
•"I didn't want him having to
pects to quality for financial aid saw a good team effort. Gary ran
plaY. catch-up," sald.Ayers. ''We
at Ohio State.
the break, scored, dished off didn' t want him havlngtotake22,
"We've . provided hlni- with a what ' more · can I ·say? Mark
2 ~ hours and always being behind
second opportunity," Ayers said. Erslan did a great' Job defen"Now the rest Is up to him to sivelY, but he had a lot of help
th~ eight ball.
prove to us that he wants to be In from his teammates .
I'But he was fine; the Information he gave us was fine and
the program. "
"Now we have to understand
we have to play that way from
here on out," he added.
"Rio Grande was the better
team ~ere," Cougars Coa_ch Scott .
. Flemming noted. "For· a good
part of the game, we took away
washlngtoo
20 22 2 42 115144
In the NBA...
N.Y.Islanders 15 23 5 M 121150
the threi!-polnt threat, but we got

•

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This is·the ~nly ·way . . 1 .
to go as far as 'I'm concerned.
1

Thinks IOIIICW rurp:al ~gh laJOWnas
I..apwoecopic Cllolecya~Cetomy, pitlents lite Junior
· Powell, 1 dairy farmer ID Apple Orovc. 10 home in
leu tlwl24 boun and JeCOvel' fuUy ID days. '"I'bis is
the only'way to 10 as r. asl'm concemed." says
PoWed, who h8d hla pllbladder miloVed and was
baCk 011 the family ram milking !Ocows and tending

a !Dblcro erop a week laler.
'I
·
Usilll apeclalized illllrllments. IUIJcons at
Jlka• Valloy Holpitalltllb four dny openings in
the abdomen. leavina almolt iaviaible lean. Since
there's no 1on1 inclllon, there's almolt no post·

·

•

operative pain. And that means you can "'*11m 10 your
normal rouane within days rilhct thin weeb
If you're 1111011g the One out of mry 10 1*J111e
in the United s~ who suffcn fiom pll•o• ar
gallbladder disease, one of the I1IOil COiiiiiiDII ..... . .
live diudels, ask yOur doctor about lapulcoplc
gallbladder surgery, or c:all ~ of our aqeona.
Young l. Olol, M.D., at (304) 675-1666or JaM.
Levine, D.O., at (304) 67s-J460. Uparl*oplc
~llleetomyatPVH. YetlliiOiberi'IIIOII to·loolt
10 ua for high quality ,ltlle-Of·the-lit .tecllnolotY in
healthcare.

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL··
Tht family ol prolessionals

.

Vahy Driva, Point PleiSIAI, WV 2S&amp;50 + (31M) 171 4Ml
.I

••

·•

�.'?'11•
•·

.

..

·~

'I '

. -"-

...

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8 The o.lly •• itilial

iinapproved vaccines

- ·r ''\ - ...... -

Pomwov-MiifiP~

._

~ldier tvants ·inforTrted .
·~nsent ·before get~ing

.

- ...

-~ -....

·.

,.,.;

. r

•

t

•

will

'

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;·· · ·

~-

'·

ho~ ·waa now tttelrs'- no one

."'

;j,.,

•.','

... •
..h~'

~

_,· ~ ·

""
J '1

. Memorial Ho.tal .
liS E. ..._Ill Dr.

·~·!1114

.

"

a. "'-.--ted

Pr..Cr. .~•

992-~978

,. SERVICES

ftZ.SUOI'any

at cotumllus;o.
1
104 w. Main

I).

H2-2lll Pomeroy

.

'

'

.

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

te•lltltnjltAwe.

'"

TIAC'I'OI SALES

MEIGS nRE
CENlU, INC. ·

P. J. PAUllY, AGENT-·
Natio. n.wlde Ins. Co.

nawas fOI M1Y OCCASIDII
(6141 "2·6454

...., -=.-

214 L IIIIi

204 (...... St.

,.....,.,,011.

John F. Fultl. Mtr.

.

. 992·2975

Ph. H~· 21tl . -

Pamerey

-~::--~b-~

·K&amp;C JEWELERS
212 (. Main Strttt
992·3115, POIIIIIIIJ
Jericho on Thursday. Two reserve soldiers m1111 llghl ma.Ch!De
guns. The Israeli armed forces are on a heightened state of_alert.
(Reuter
., . .
: · . ·· ·: · ·.
. UPI)
. '.
.,
.

SYRACUSE FlliST UNITED l!RESBY·
TERL\N .- SulldaY Sdloal, 10 ... m.;
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11n1 tDII tblnl-.ro, c p.m. ·
·

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RUTLAND CHURa! OJ' GOl&gt;, PuW,
Jollll J'. Cor&lt;oriL Buday kilaoi lD:OII ~
riiM~:ay MOI'IIIDI!¥oi'abip 11: 00 un.

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

•• Clnnel u Wod.,lp.m.
..... -~ YGIIII
- ·.
1i1c Sorvtee7:01p.m.

..

LIMb•'

communicate directly with lives on hold In order to stand for ..
them".''
peace."
·
Bush, who has likened Saddam
"Many are younger than my
to Adolf Hllter, joined the Navy In own children," said Bush, the
1941. He wa~ only 1!!. and he had !atber of five, ages31 to44. "Your
Just graduated from high school.
age, most of them."
Within a year he )le'came one of
Bush then quoted a Christmas
the service's youngest combat card he recerttly: received from ..
p!!ots.
· '- Army Sgt. Terry Hatfield, a
He went on to fly 58 missions,
"young soldier" from Fort Ste·

~.

WI..

=~

Rt. IJI, J

.,

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C!MtCR. ori

mu• tr..,. l'oi1Ja•'-l lot-

EWING FUNDAL HOllE

·· . . . Rlrl,
-.
, ,.,a.m.:
. . . .putor
. . ........ ._. . ......
Ill:., a.m.: - Y - - - · 7:311

"Dip II)' a11d Sen•ln AI-r•"

Establlllhed 1113

992-212\
'

Including .one In which he was · · wart, Ga.

'"', a, ll!l'rtor. Jfll Halle',

JRA me~r

arres~ ~ · armored

car heist plot

•

·sm·pe·r:·,.slaymg·,·

VICTORY
BAPTIST

·GOD'S SIMPLE PLAN
OF SALVATION

SEE

SUGAR
RUN
FLOUR MILLS
FOR ALL YOUR

'

BIRD FE,ED

brOUiht to
l!ourlle ~cb to a~¥alt
~t .
.
·'In the wake of the Dabrowski
, . RVeral other people
reponed bell!i shot at by
Ia JOUtheastern Masaa·

1- ,,_

0

'

. . . l!aET
A
AD

-= -""" ....----'-~::....:...-----t.o.il:..-....;;._

•IIRD FEEDER

SUNDAY 5(H001, 1DIDO A.Mo

MOINitG WOISIIIP', ~
11:00 A.M. .
SUN. EVENING, 7:00 P'.M....:
WID. -.£ STUDY, 7:00 P.Mf~

SUGAR
RUN
MILLS
110 M. .ny AwL .
ttJ-2115
'

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"2-2772

. FUNDAMENTAL

, -·
'

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.

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INDEPENDiNi

..•

.,.;

•

IIY laclor:

ICAii: u:rru:ao:NT CIIUJICH, Sun·

.., - - - a t t :• . Tburrila~
... . . . . .-atT:IO,
•
IIAP1'IIT CIIIIRCH, Mu..,, W.
Vi. - · Watla&lt;t Mlnp, putw. su...y
..,_ •a.m.: -ay ....._..-vteo, 6

ulelloOI
Rciu"'
yluPt· ·-y
t..,· .....
a.m.: _ . . . - p U11

"'Mr. President,. I just.wanted
you to know my soldiers and I'are
ready todowhatevermlsslonyou
decide. Freedomasweknowand .
enjoy has been taken away from
another country . and. must be
restored.
:
~ " 'Although we are separated
from family and friends, loved
ones, we will do what must be.
done . ... We stand ready and
~ailing. GOO !:!less ypu ~n~ the ,
U.S.A."'
'
.
'
Bush said, "Terry understands
the moral obligation that . has
compelled our extiaordinary
multinational coalition to make
tills stand In the Gulf."

ranking

Report said

992·3325

,,,,,, ,,,.,,, ! ••,

INSURANCE~

172 llll'tlt · - ....
......,,Ollie

' BOSTON (UPI) - One of six
· inen chafge4 \vlth trying to rob
an armo~ ·car has been ldentl·
' • -~. ~ ; . fled au, blah·rankiilrmember of
~ ·• • ·""' , , " the lr~ RepQbllcan Am\y. the
,.,. ,. :;!'* .:·., ·BostOn· Herald reported Friday.
.../;;· ' '
Michael Oliver McNaught, 45;
.· ~ .• t .,.
· ' an Irish national, was arrested
Selllplure eo.._t'ln ·llle Klaldom of_Breeken·
Wednesday along with fiVe othrkl 1 e, 'Cole. (UPI)
·•
. ers as they waited outside an
.
. . Abliigton banli for the·arr!veal of·
an armored car, federal and
stateauthor!llesssld: Oneoftbe

.
,
.. .

'

216 S. Second
PollltrOy

Symuse

·ar.-wamer .

992·7075

'

Mill WOrk·
Ctblnet M1kl111

ttHtSS

SAil$ I SIIVICE

·cHURCH

Ill"· ·

•

The Oily S1ntil'lai- Pigs ;:i.
~ ....

.'

~

'NIFiiiDOCiort'

' . P-y .

SNOUFFER
FIRE &amp; SAFETY

the murders last May of two aUthorities 'decided to arrest the
Australian
tourists who appar·
six.
"
·'· ,
entiy
wer~
mistaken
,for British · Two were arrested In ·a car '
r
_,
soldiers.
near the bank, three others,
,
•••
,.,,
lncludiR¥ McNaught, In a van
William J . McMullin, a spokes- parked nearby and the s!x.th as be
, man lor the FBI , said, ·:we're
stood outslde.the van. .
.,
.
run~tlng checks In _!he case of
.; LETITSNOW-NtcoleCharrter,FrenchTeam
McNa\lght to verifY his Identity
The slx were ordered held
qMinller, worlla wllhs- Dying In her faee on the
and lind any records we can
without ball pending a detention·
Fieacll entry ta lbe Amerleulnternatlolial Snow
concerning his connections.! '
hearing Tuesday.
•
•
·
Thirty FBl agents, state and
m·
Bostonpollceambushedtheslx
n.J'"'~
other'sus~ctlbadservedttmeln outside
a Bank of New England
·•
jail for fl!llnlng guns to the IR!).. branch bank In Abington after
•' .......
:
.
lnvestirators declined to SpeC· keeping thern under surveillance
·sou ..... E, Mass. (UP]) - chusetts In recent weeki:
tile 13 students and ~e .~rlyer,
lillltt on any ,connectlon between for six months.
Sl4te pollee arrested tbree Ills•
Garrison and Alalstant Bar•· , •a• pr011~unced dead t ·shOrt ·.', ·the.IRA and the alleged robbery · Thomas A. Huges, special
~· 'l'lluraday night and early . stable County Dlstrlet Attor'llly " 1111\e later at Toby !fb•pllltl In :•-.attempt. .
agentlnchargeoltheBostonFBI
· fP'd8y In the aatper slaying of a_ Joseph Gaughan, )Vho Ia he. .llll , . 11\'~hllm.
'
· ~ ~ · The , newa(laper, quotlnr a office, said lhe men were sus14-year-old rtrl who was killed up the prosecution, told a ..,. .~•. .susan Arruda, 14, also ·of New . source. said McNaurht was the peels In ·earlier armored car
525 N. 2ND ST.
· rlll,\;tl to a high school basketball conference, however, there was .adford, lllftered a minor Injury .;. •'hilliest· level IRA operative robberies. On Wednesday mornr-.m.e on Cape Cod last weekend. . n~ apparent connection betWitll :when the bullet that killed ever arresled" In the United .lng, agents saw the . suspects
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
State pollee said William Ferffie girl's death and the otlltr Debrowskll!'azed her.
States.
switching Into two stolen vehicles
"Everyone ·Welcome"
reti'a, 42, of Wareham was· · Incidents.
•
Pollee ssld the fatal shot was
The Herald· said McNaught ts that were then followed to
arrealed at the state pollee
"We have no evidence a.t thla.' fired from. a )llgh·powered. gun, believed to be related to Donna . ,. Aiilng'toii. .
: · · :~. , · .• :
bl!r~cka ID Bourne where be was time tl\at they areconiteeted, ~~ 4e~~ertbed asan M1 rifle. '
Maptre . 24. ·. an alleged IRA ·
When Jtwas determined that a ·
~ queatio~ In the death · that matter Is belnr looked Into," , A motorist told' pollee that his , terrortst' stahics to go pn trial In Transit Service Inc. armored car ,
SatUrday ll)Omlrig of ' Rob)'J!
said Garrison.
.
.,.
white Mercedes was fired at the Nethe~lands next month for was due at the bank branch,
Ditirowskt of New Bedfoflf.
He said at tack on the bus, ,several moments after the attack
l, " All heve alnned." Rom1n1
taren Stenroos, 32, also of which was carrylq13atrll frGm 011 the bus.
3:10, "for Ill IIIVI linned
Wlrebam, was arrested at her New Bedford's Technical Htrh ' The shootinas sparkecl a mas·
and qome lhort of the glory
hoAie and charged with be!JIII an School to a girl's basketball . stv~ searcb for tbe atrl's kWer,
of Ood ... " Romena 3:23
a*aiiOJ'Y ·lifter .the fact of . game In · Falmouth, was. "u •with helicopter. and pollee dogs
1.
"Sin
muet be paid for:" Ro.4 '
mel! 5:12, "for the weg11 of
~ In the shootina. Which
Intentional, but apparently ran· ' ICOUriJII thj! area.'
.
eln le deeth but the gift of
oc!ilUn'ed OD Route 251n BoUrne, dom act.
·
· '· O.fl'(loa refused to, d!aclose
Ood le etemel lit... " Ro·
• • pollee ·Lt. Lee Garrison ,
"There waa no connecllon 11. what 181 pollee to the ~uapecta,
men• 8:23
between the people chat'IM and , ueept 10 say that- "Information
Ill
....
Jeaue Chrllt Plid for our
!l'lle third suspect; Scott Chip- the Victim other than the untortu- developed b)' the Bourne pollee"
alna: " Romana 11:8, "but
man, 24, •a• arrested just after nate Incident," said Garrl1011.
ha.ll heft Instrumental In 10Ivlng
Ood commendeth Hla love
The driver of the bus drove tlw! the cue.
.
npillltabt at 'his Dennla home,
· toward u1.' In thet while we
s~te pollee said.
vehicle tci the Bourne police
Tile Bolton Herald aatd Frl·
Wll'l yet linner1, Chrllt diad
for ua . ..
tGarrllon described the shoot· station Immediately alter tbe day, howeverfrthe break In the
1v: ''Whet we mull do. " RoiQ u an act of " random · ' shooting.
cue came om a tip from '
m•n• 10:9-13, "For Wlio·
olenc:e."
.
Dabrowski, whose tnother, Stenroos' boyfriend, who was
,....,.,
ahall cell upon the
Ferreira and Stenroos were Joan, was on the bus along with . faclll&amp;' a drunken drlvtnr char&amp;e.
Mme
of·
the Lord 1h11l be
. ~I!D 10 tbe Bourne barracks lor ·
'· · ·
·
liVed . u
,
"•BIRD SEED •THISTLE SEED
IIJIIIU!Rl Frld,a yta Piymouth
. . . . . . ._-. V. "How we Cln know we 1r1
trlct CoaJ:t. rtrre!ra comi t - _ ...,,
on our wiv to Heevan:"
•SMORGASBIRD WILD BIRD SEED ·
ned at clllilt palM and was
·. John 3:38, "He thet belle.Y.·
!fUll to TDby Hupbl Ill Ware·
eth on ha Son h11 everlalt·
.•WHITE MILLETT •SUET CAKE
.
lianl wbele lie ~ ." under
lng life., ." ·
· · ··~ ·'
•ILACK SUNFLOWER SEED
.VI. " " - - t..:" I John 11:14
cfllervaUO.." State police aald 11
lfllllll, "Andlhilll1hl~
not~ whea be WOUld be
"
eSTRIPED
SUNFLO.WER
SEE.
D
.
. _ thlt- haw In Him. ' 'd.
lped.

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T:IOP,IIL
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CHURCH , lllllr•· Dllaao lyWaitll '1r, PMt•· ....., lcllool I a.m.;

p.m. Sa...y.Y-Poo-

l:JdJdrej a ,t'llardl Uld Aftft Bll&gt;lo
W........y·at1:10 p.m.
'
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II. - - ' · Alii- ..1111 - Con-. David Bryall,lr.. MJ.
. &amp;allay lchHI 10 a.m.: MomiDI
woroblplla.m.; ~ ...._Tp.m.:
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SEVDITH·DAY ADVDITIIT, Mul·
benyHofPtallood, P -.Putwa.b
Snyder; !lallbotll .._
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RodaeyiiDina. lollbot' lclloalbol,l• ati
p.m. '"' !la!Unllly allll'lld wttll - p
lei'¥~ fOII!lwiDJ at S:OO p.m. J:wr)l•o
welcomtt.
.:.....
R~D riiiST BAPTIIT aro....n
- Slatet'Han'tttt Warnw, •upt. S,..y
Scbool9:.0 a.m.; ~ 1\'Drlldp, 10:1!1

a.m.

· POMEROY ~ BAPTIIT, Eut
MolD. St. Sleft ~::.
SldJmer, Swnlay
.
Suaday !lclloal, 1:30
Mara... Wcrutp 10:10
,_...
pra~DII

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IIIIITED METIIODIST,

Preacld.,. t:30 a.m. lint a l l l l - lim·
· days oleaell mOotll; llllrd alld fiNrtll !loll·
day each - l b •=.::•-at7:Jtp,
m.; Wldll~ """
at 7:10 p.11.
Praf"r aDd Btlllellhady.

..

wo-.lorvt&lt;e,lOO:m.; lluDIIcy.,..lllf
HI'VIct, 7:00 p.m. w••tly alfbt llbl~
••T:•p.m.
' .r .

-..2.-

lift', OLIVJ: OOIIIMUNlTY CIIUit,;n,

La••...... putar.
t:IO a.m.: ....Yud W'*

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WI~ Ainlotqw, S. S. lrpt.: Buday
· lebooii:IIO a.m.; MomiDI W"'*bt lt:30

GRAHAM

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Conot S,eam&lt;ft alld lt&lt;ontl Sta., J'o.
,_.,.,Tile fte¥, Laura A.. LHcll. ...-.

== " -ylellaall;411a.m.Clnl"'~nrvlcell
· IACftiD HEART CHURCH, - · .
A.atllall)' Gtaaamare. Pb. • • · Satur..,. a:-1111 Mall 7:110 p.m. : - . y
MUa, 1 a.m. aMllO a.m. Coaf- oat
lllllr llofcn nl.'ll - · · ceo clallll,
Ua.m,...,....y.
_
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VICTORY IIAP'nl'l'.' 525 N. 2DII St.,
Jam11 E. Knote. ll!l'ttor.
S-y IDIImlnl _.,., 10 a.m.: ll:wtl·
-

Mid.._..

T p.m.; W-tlday OYellllf
Wlll'lblp Tp.m. Vlaltatl.,'!hnday 1: 110 p._

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MOUE CHAPEL aiURCH: David

Culfmall.

putor.luDIIaJI.._~lOa.m.;

won111p HI'VIct 11 a.m.: S
won111p 7:110 p.m.:

nllllt
toll

pra,., ...,Ice Wed"/:tf T p.m.
W13LEYAH I
HOLDnaD
aroRCJI ol Jollde_., lilt., 71 Plarllt. '

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Rew. 1... Myoro, putar: JIOpr Ma!N)o,
SdiDal Sapt. ~ t:IO a.m.: Moralll Worolllp 111:10 a.m.;
- . . w..-tp ' ' " p.m. w~-r
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lillie *'bo. prayor ud prallt

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1:10 a.m.; ~1'111111
luday.,c •. tT:III . .
p.m. {IUmnlf!' T;IO p.m.); Wodil-y
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. JPIIPLIEPOIIT tLHILW&amp;lAL, Tlllrll
A.... loY. CWII . . . ., ....... Cer~
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w-.~~t•a.m.;

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~~~~·= at T:10 p.m.~~~~....,._ l"rr,
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lll'lllllw Qtocll ltle..........,,
·

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7:10 - ·Rt, 7 Oil .....

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"-ted oa 0. J . Will• ll.alld o!H..,.ay

0.

·r .. r

- "'"'--

MSIIR &amp; UltsE
..PtiMIIIICY G1

-!::.-.. Veterans ··

would. hestitate about what must

;

~-.

..

Tlaia Mattp and Clwreh ~ Spo,!Y»red By The I~

be done," Bush, ss~. '

..

( '

.. --,-

"

forced to ditCh his ' burn big'
torpedo bomber at sea. His two
"And thai 11 why we cannc)t crewmen died.
hesltateaboutwhatmust~done
The president, In 'hts .Jetter,
"·· · lialtway around the world In · offered few details of his days as
Kuwait," said Bush. 'The facts a combat pilot.
·
are clear. The choice unatnblgu· · But, he said, "I have been fiii'
ous. Right vs. wrong. "
, war, I know the terror orl
The White House said Thurs· combat. "
· day Bush's two-page Jetter was
"And I tell you this with all my
' sent .to about 460 collegiate heart: I don't want .tbere to be
publtcaUons, many of whose war ever again. I ani determined
pages have become a forum for todoahSolutelyeyeryl]llngpos~lgulf debate.
•
ble In the search for a peaceful
· MarUn FitZwater, ·the pres!·
resolution to this crisis."
·
dent's preSI secretary_, noted
The' presldenr·also salu.~d the . ·
that many· of the students have
at least 370,000 American troops
frlendslntheglilfandsald, "The
now In the gulf- "young men
president felt It was Important to
and women who are putting their

..

'i

lpmaD W&amp;l a!IO

,.,.

.'

•.

B
,
h;
;
.
.
d
·
.
·
.
.
.
.
.
.
d
.
tot~· t·. 08 !seb 8 ope
· rr 1et_
:t_er. t.o co11eae
e . stU ents .. ·c.. ,.

.

.....

"

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
have serious and unknown side
soldier stationed In Saudi
effects,
abla and hi$ wtre planned to
SuUivan's $JIIlkeslll&amp;n. John
lie suit Friday against a .iecent
Gibbons, said he could , nor ..
~raJ ruling allowing soldjers · comment on the matter until · .
o 1M! given unapproved drugs or ·after the s!llt is filed .
a~Jnes without their lnformed
The Defeli5e Department said .. •
.
. 1J114!nt.
at a Jan. 8 briefing on tbe 111&amp;tter.
~ The drugs and vaccines In · that noneofthedniporvac¢Dfl :·•
don would lie used tqcounte-. for which tntonnedc&lt;illlellt IUI.if.
a11t 11r prevent the dev,a statlng
ers were requested have !Iebar· : ·,
~ of chemical and blologllor modtflcatton side effects. It ~.
&amp;1• warfare In a coilfrontatlon noted, however, t~ t llceJIMd
ib Iraq.
drugs available for.uae In *'!e lull ,._
•
'the suit Is being flied for the may have such · i lde l!!ffecta; ~
to•ple In U.S. District Court fo.r
Including high doaes ol atropiM, .
~ District of Columbia lly the
used for nerve agent exposure, Of·
~ISUimer advocacy group Pub, · morphine for pain.
.
IC CIUzen. It names Defense
On Oct. 31, the Pentapin
Jetary Dick Cheney . and
requested an eJ~;ceptlon to the
lllth !!ecretary Louis SuUivan .. Food and Drug AdmiDiatratlon'a
e case Is being fUed on behalf Informed consent replat10111 for
f all u.s. mUJtary personnel In . military personnel. II!~~: , .,
!the Persian Gulf: . . . ·
.
the FDA amended Ita replat1o111 ·
r·The soldier and his ·wife are
allowing· the mllllary to reQuett
eeplng their Identities anonym- waivers for certain substances • •, ;
us for privacy reasons and out of Those waiver reqUHta ftloe'
ear they might be harrassed by made on Dec. 28.
• .,
utborltles, sal~ Bob Dreyfuss, a
FDA spokesman J'effrey Nes.l ..,
pokesman for Public Citizen.
bit said It Is up to the Pen.taJ(Oil,'
The II'OUP was to hold a news not the FDA, tJ&gt; .a p - .
nterence in Washington Frl· whether waiver req•ts . have ,•
ay to discuss the suit's details.
been gran ted. The Penta con haa
''We're not opposed to the use not made such an announcerneitt; ;;
•
.
. .
.
oftlle drugs. We're opj)osedto the
ON AtEaT IN .IIBAEL - All laraell Arply 'Safari' vehicle
He said the regula tiona coUld ..
use without informed consent," have alreadv been •waived and ' . CbJ!I"U IIJI ,jlu.t •u I~ S!feepe along the laraeJ..Jordaa·llo
.. qer.near•
.,
Dreyfuss said.
'
the drugs administered
to the ~· . ·
•
''"' .';,. , ; '· · ;,
.
, · , ,,. . ·
''&gt; · : ,,,..
'The drugs Jl1ay )le Important • troops, but there has beeR no ...
··~
and useful ... but to use these
off.tclal. ainlounc!!mellt
experimental drugs without ln- effect
.
'
.
•.
. "
.
.
for;p~ed co~~~ent ·meana the law
" Soldiers ·are belna' fully
.
._ · · . ·
'
· · · •
,
· .
ani! constitutional rights are briefed In accordance !VI.th' a ,
WASHif:'GTON .(UPJ) .:..1n an many of~ whom hllve Joined a
•bl!m&amp;- flouted. And the ·Nurem· specific Information packet, ' ,open let.t er to "Amertca'!l 14 growlq ·anti· war movement,
rg Co,des, which took Into. developed by the FDA and the · million coUep stlldellta, Prest·• that. he will try to end the crisis
fleet t))e medical experiments Defense Department prior to any
dent Bub recallect biB days u a · peacefully; aad asked them to
Nazi docton dlirtna world , vaccination being given for teenage co'(llbat ' pUot In Work! support his itand against Sad·
ar (1,. also would millta te which a waiver was requested,"
War II and quoted a le~r he dam Husieln: ·
,
galnst tbe use of human guinea . the Pentagon said, add!nc m!!·
received from a · soldier In the
"If armed mentnvaileda home
I&amp;J," he said.
,
.
IIa,ry personnel
not be ask~
Pen!ail Gulf.
, · •
,
in thla country; kUied ·those In
dreyfuss 1\0ted tiled~ could to sign consent forms ,
'
Bush also promised· students, ,theti',. way, stole what they
-..- . ·'
~
'
·
.
' ;. , -' .. . ,. •w~n~ and then· anadunced the .

......
,.••.,

'"'

•

p..s.

•'

.. - - -·

.

-·-

t

...

- '

friday. Janurt 1 ~. 1991

Ohio

. ..'

•

....... -Drab, I . I . . . .

w......._.-.NO

-.y

w•....

..,_,,.,a.IIL; MtnlaiW-IplO: :III:
EWllas
7:•·p.m.;
Y
p.m. _
J'Arl'll IAP1'IIT CIIUitCII, Ralll'OCd
I I . , - ....,.....,.11 ..m.; MOill·
... ... ' \ U LilLi.!:' •
~ p,

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...•
IlL,...,.,_,---·-·
...
..t~Y.u.•.

FOUl!' ltUN IW"nn''', llc\&gt;, Nyle
- . •. - . . CDntcllu 111111c11. Mlpt .

·- y .........
-•

a.m.; -

....

1 r•-*!tl..vlcieatt:.,p.

�'

.

'•

Ohio

'

, ,. ,., .....

-

N

JUT 'N' CARLYLE~ byl.al'l')' Wrl1ht

,.,,,.
'4

.•.

Classi
. TO llAU AN AD CAll 992-2156
' MONDAY thru FRIDAY I A.M. 'to 5 P.M.
I A.~ pntil NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SlMDAY
~-"
"Ads ouuidc Metg.

.....

61111'11

M.-un

Of

6

Rate
Ov" 16 Words
14.00
.
.20
11.00
.30
1,11.00
.42
113.00
.60
1 1.30/day
.05/ doy

II

16
16

2
5·
I
7
8
9

IOf ·~ dl¥' 11 . . .ate .ch.

•

32 MoWle HotnM tor Sal.

33 F•lftalor.lle
Jt •Uiin•slultdinp
35 l..oll • Ac:tet!lll ·
31 Re~ E11at1 Vlhnted

Heppy Ads

LO•I and found
Yard s•eiPiid in advance)
Public Sitla &amp; Auction
W•ledlo Buy

,\
41

-.,.county, 1
Area Coct. 114

AreaCGde304

••• Gallipolis

982 Mr¥1111041

COPY DEADLINE

· 318 Vtnton

875
458
576
773

Pt Pl..._.l
leon
,Appl• Grove
M••on

882

New H•en

367 Ch.....,e

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION

1 1 .00 A.M . SATURDAY
2 :00P.M , MONDAY
2;00·P M . TUEIOAY
2 .00 PM . WEDNESDAY
2 :OQ PM . THUA&amp;D ... Y ,
, 2 00 P'!l:_ FR!OAY .

'

til

-..
c ......

843 .._._
247 .....,. Fills

2•6 .Rio Grande
211 GuYM Diu
143 .• , .... Dill.
379

w_, · 949
742

R.ane

Rvtt..d
.617 COotvill•

. Pubic Notice,

..........."u'

wll .... fllr .... ., ,......
1t1 111~ M their IIMIIII,
: '
ttu
GIIC
T...........
•tGnte14A7C2101147
· The

11 - H. Vf•ted

12 Silu.tiOn W•ted
1~

82 WantN to luy

13 liv.. ,~

!

'

H8y &amp; Grain
65 ~ Seed &amp; Fertilinr

84

'

~••"for Rnr

Tr ,111 sdo rId II un
.

'

71 · Autos tor S-'•
72 Trudia lor Sal e
73

Vttns 6 4 WD 's

71 Motcwcyclw ·
7&amp; 80111 &amp; Motors tor s ...
78 ».uto P•ts • Ac c•$01'+•

11 AuloRep.W
7 8 Camping Eqmpnutnt

51

r
\

HOMiehold000dl

U - S.... tingG-

53

Atlliquft

81 Homelmprovem•h

· 14 Mtlc. M•m...-.

Bufl.-o

82 · Plumbing • HeM;ntJ

65

8bHding Su ppti•

51
57
51
51

Pett for Slle
"-'ulicel ln11rumlf'h
Fruita • Vee•*•
For Sale or Trttte

. 83 · hc:wating

'

84 Eltctricll .• Relriu••tion
86 Gun•• H•finil

81 Mabile Home R~~P•'•
87 Upholst..-y

PubDc Notice ·

PubliC Notice ·

-t -..
of·-• ,.,.,.

· You

tre

'
I1INby notified

that .., tha 20111 tliy' llf No·
- · 1110. llaallll Hutg i l - llf tha parion

I'UBUC Ncmcl!

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SICIIN'i
-•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

"" .........

=

"Free Elltiln8tel••

mJ • u"' _, or c-.N......,fO.cv.r.;., lheCourtofCon~mow"-.

neltMIOwllMrllttp,ttlad,
hrMIII .. ..-.IOdtyellf
. . . . . llfthlonollllt.Ut,...
IMiioa&amp;J&amp;&amp;1811Mrd flf .__.
' - · 11m. 100. US I!.
T - at.. Cllllllll1114 Olt.,
43111. NotloellfMJ......,
.....wlll1ll1
be .........._ 1'1
3 - ... tpuf
.,
wiiD:tc . . 'tln•fllill.,..
loila I wrlfttol Jll .lltlfM
.... fll Td .. . . . . .In
I ILSS&amp;j
...

Mllga Counly, Ohio,

allot·

lnt that lltahel H-n.
.-IIOw llf Vl1illt II. Bur-

..... 949·2160·

THE

YARDMAN &amp;

GROOM
ROOM

.ECHO DEAIIR

EMiliE MERINAR

· •Any . length • chain a end lldceaaorlaa
loK..-oHna Stovea It
Wlckl
We Do Wlek Repair

Owner &amp; Operator

MORRIS EQUIPMENT

Pll. 949'·2101

Con... fl Grooming

110 SUIIIAY

Alllrllcls.

ford Ia the ....,.of the tal·
........ dua•lhJ llf

-' dMignettd 11
......., Number t ,_ iald
ao.. _nt u ~--.:··
.....,No.1:
'
The Jalaudl• ,._. 11t1te ·
- - 1 Ill •• •
I
IJ411
.......
14.
Tows.....
..lfp·ofRUt-•

with........ __...

IV_, .

614-992•6820

742-2455
SiMIII 111111, lutlcintl
12·24·90-1 •.

, _. .,, 'Ohio

==-~-=.=.~ llolrndldlftdi'
===~lilt~·::.:
a ldafol..

I .

.._ ........

• ...
. . . . . . . , fNadon

...., . . . . . .IIIIJII8 . . . . . .

-·

l:t:f:ll:l!.:"· ,_ • .
*'" ,......., •- -...,,....._ ......

GUN SHOOT

/ a t RAII-I,.. AltiiiW'
draft
10
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IIIII- . . .wlthlll
,
d. "Ao..,.._.........
........ . . ..... ...... . . Corql .................
t10t.,

c::=•···~ J,

...........;;.;~....

IMidol el INII'l ... NIIDL

111 - - 11 11 1 111t11 Ill
••
11 ,.. a.,
OIPA. ,,o.
Otl........ OH. oiU8I Ot48
"'· 111•1 144-ans. eo.

a..t04a.

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IUit

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til
·
I 101- of Clnlfl.

IIIII
11111
...1 OH.
,
'l!tfeoU 1 Oete: 12131110
1NI ltitl ...... t10t - ·

.....
"'t:t: .. deotlaulld
It
I!IJI. .....

m•

' Mldcllaport
138 Bryan Pllce
Ohio

:=~.":~

- .... • .. ,. 11 ,.,
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llf fna.

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lo.id a""
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11011 11. T - .......... 14

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JOdi: .:;_":..~a:.-=
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fw.tfle
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W ll;•tf:.

IMIOO

felt.._ Mfth

. . • I . . . . . . . . . . . .,
,... c-w ..... Number
11,
to ......
.,.._ . . . . . . . . wflll tile

100-

--...l'itolitr

•uGHT HAULING
·~RfWOOD

· rt SlACK
-992-.2269

...... (PeJtllt illardor

..

CAIN'
S
Of Ml ••lepert

SERVICE AND IEPAII

11114/tfn

UPHOLSTERY

ON ZETOI TUCTOIS

Hand Tufting
Cultom Drapea

.... OtiMr ...... ......
Cllecll Out Our ...
Prius ....,..... Ztttr
Tracton 111111 Eqttipnllnt
Jlew Ill S'-cltl

'MY..,.~rlaoe

614-mua

IU 1ert11 S.•ll

We S.y Whet We Do.
WeDoWIIetWe

· MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
.

1

.

·--. --

-C-Wollt
-Roofing
. . : 1 - • Exlll'lor

£-,.,1

'.

:::: :174:
121:

v
....... 111,
v....
171.

Far . . - . . - - Coli 81&amp;l'llllll.
T..U.
JOBS. All

I

CIAIIIBMI J ~
''

992-2156
,,
I

ServiCes ·'

Real EsiJie

lOAD fVRr 12 Hotlllf

................
····-

....

COIISTIUC IIOtll

iun.

Ctornnthl lntoNiaAh"' DEHTAL

tor a poopta
, IIIah quality denial
Part:JIIM • ~~­

HYOIEN!Iml

- ..,ovalloblo.
be
tho atoll -ol Ohio,
8imll eamr' tr r.urn.. 1o 80K

et••!lllte

~"'at'~:':.:..~

~

llp!lllo, ~ 411831.

.

Stap &amp; C :•~
Fne lttk011t•

.

Town o f - Hovan now - • ·
fng applloltlona tor gtnonl
lltiortr. Appllcl!lan• can be
plcllod up at city bullllng .

WANTED: Boalnnlng actDII tor
T.V. Commorclalo, movlllllt,.o

1nd ..,... ahow contntant1.
lllllf - · No oxptrt.,..
llaQulrwdl Co)l For Dotollo,
12111) - 7 5 El(T. 1802. ,
,

'

'

915·4473
667-6179

'·•,

"·\
••
,I

,.
,\

~

'

'

'

rno.-.v'J.

~

.,•

Construction

·-DS
CIISM•T ··

HJ·SM9

NOIIS&amp;tallll

"Atl1

.... 949·1101
••
...... 949·2160

..,.
•

prelly ICIIS.

••

(

lx1IOIIPII-. MO. KIIchon
Dai'JIO! II Jd, llcllohon film~
tu,., R. _, rlorth. 114-48-llloM.

-·:1.

oUt. hunclreda of

IIR on Dalod,

-•1!11

61 Fann Equipment •
10811 MF T-«l.olr Hra ~1fl!!!i
all MF ...... H,. PIIIIO; 11G Dual R - • $4,ilii; Sf MF
Uvo PTO ~lSO· 0Wnor Will
F1na1101. 1'14-Dttm ·

1211 lntomotlonll ,..,
, , _ aab, 1Diir - . N,NO;

blc lot, ,_.,. oar-'

plow, 13,111; 11-mlnlomotlonll
With
dloc..._ouMivltar1.~
~~OWnorwol

mtnor

-IL

so.ded.l1t
F-211011141012.
-

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

~ :!. U2pnfl;-. 114.m.
lt1obllo- tor 1111 • Nlit.

--ltin-·--

441.0-· •·Nlco

,

2br, II5DIIno.

..... trede. 1:-..:00
Sat u11-.. .

l12J!ootl.

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

· Apartnllnt
for Rent

y..,. llpatllal: M.F. 220

-

Bolar, lito ~1411.

1 IR, ~I Ill, ~i
PICKENS I'ORNnuRE
2 ' • ......._ 81711.· ...
,.._
utlltloo 1no1.-. Oopaol . ,.. Hot uhold IUmlo!tlnc. 112 mt
aullod. Coli Lafllwno Moll 114- JorrtohD Rd. Pt. PI-nt, WV,

-·-pOint,
....
- .... -·

•••td ••.

~no

111.000

2111.

.._.... 11 s.Herd

aell - . - .

==~=R~DIT~2~0W~~~--­

_.
and Chelr, M.llpar -11.
1 Pelcti w-. $14.01 par
. L""''id
-·
lllldlna
ancl Chelt•unk
at Drnlr'l
lnoiudtllil

$lUI

POl'

-.

· For -

Clllt

63

Livestock
Nubian lilly !leal· Mixed Flrawod, ·~.00 plcho
- · Ear-o,30M1'5-tffi'.
Ml1od h a - II.... $10.00 I
bundle. Wllltda¥1 7:30 a.m. •
3:10 p.mJ. ..OttiO Petlol Co.,
Puuu•or, urwo. 114412-1411.
Opon COlli lhlpod wood ......
- . jllpoa Included, lito now,
$100. Clrlnl
aoo.-

Rovl•od
Dojipll

-

13M.

....- .

.!"l:_.,.. -

""

cr:a~i::O~·:'m:

, ~ :!

'· ;

air""""

64

Hay • Gmln

...,

t*-·

aoo.,....

5p,m.

7132.
SWAIN
It Waot Apl. 2br, I both, prlvato AUCTION • FURNITURE, 12
ono- patio,- to...-r OtiYelt., Oolllpollo. - . Ulld
lumNtn, hooln, Waotam •
•
-l
~trashpro
did.~

.,.......oi&gt;Oppl::.'l-;.
. -· --·-8-111.

... ·air,"'·- .!.":i.~:fd'
........
''
74

Motorcycllt

1117

1Ca

100 lb. ~-·,....

prompl _

4 ·'

-75.en~~~---------------,.
Motors
Boats •

••

for Sale

...
.._..a
00 ....

... tor

.·,

Clllt...._,. . _
1. .

:110p.m. ,,,

• . . _ ,'

COfun -

lti tMO.

=
...... ---·
11,1110. -

•'

==~· '

BIWA- YeDII 11'71 •

• Tl210 ';

2111.
Cn•lllrs
KoMer Gen.. ......,. .•
and
_-, -...:.
2 '•
AIC, IMII
- ·lnl,,Yo!Y
luml...

2484141 onrtl,..
'""' lot4:00
........,.
• sun.Plo1 100 lb. Allalfa ..,.
l'ann. IlL N, I a.,.12, ft90R, Clllt ... ww
R-.ct~lonld _he,., Dr;on. Monday.lllhlnlay.-

oua..ntlld

~

II

whuJ'Tr, 1110. CIOftdw , ........... '

1972 17 ft. lt""nft Trt-Hutl ·
- : 121 HP, ........
~

- 1 ocllor, MA4 par-.
Good ..... ~ Hay,:
"'"'....
11711 ·•tf.IIO-lL
~~~-·
with
4 Chat,.,
par . 4 I'/1-141S.
-110- be-·a,_ lad, $12.20 por l'rotllriY
Mil.
toxllO, 23111 Mon..,.
- . • • DriMr Choat !&gt;!
Drawora,IUO
Rt 141, A... $1,000. oa to. Goo -lui'- Good quality hoy lol 1111. $1 por
4 11111 011 At. 7 In c.ntanary. , _ with oil porta aoo. ,.... ............t-2217.
•
HOUII8: Monday thru Bot-y, - · · ........ dllh
.
.
1
,
_..,
P,l10
par
la.rft.-tp.m.; l~y, 12 Noon- ,.ltiDVo. For ln"""'"'lon 1414-

-?p.m.

Srrvwrs

...........
-,,..
·.Tho·-htr
Dryer lhopPL
. . . ..

..., ..... - Clonr. TlmolhY. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,
SAM -E~VILLE'I Alttif
........ llondwlllo Poil ~- In die l'lold- '"" 81
Home
·•
, _ hotn, Frf, ~~~ sun.
:10 PM. HMvy ..., - · ..... caa
mprov'ements
olcthlng - · In atcck on wtntor, ""
IM-IIa-IAiartla-1712.
IAKMIHT

~

Colhllf lrlad bl~_ oovorotta
off NQutar pnca, (Ronta1 lllllod . , _ hoy $1 -

10%

....,.,. auiA14~ :1044/WIP.

114-

111147111.

I I - ,_.L Yard- llltp,. ........ belli of hoy,
I
nod -ccd: roduaad IU SMI IWI.
141 pick-up · lood.' Dcn'a
Lannoaplng. 111 ........
~"'
.......... lor ....
f1.110par .... . . . . . - .

Btccli, brlolr, -

Ill- ...,..

-._llntllo, ;1c. ClaUde Win- . Rio - · 0H Call 114-

71

58 · Pets for Sale

'14 · - -·
...•:f.t.l
;i...::=:."
11]1:

:MMI21.

WATERPROOFING ·
u.-MIItlcolll llllllono ~ •

, ... ~ lifLUftlll

tum.......

FrM 1111- Clllt ft4..mo0411, diJ or

!:!
.. - •...

1•

nfghl• • ·

·=-pi=·

Woterpfoo. .

Comptott Mobile Homo Ill

Transporlalton

'

AUtos for Sale

.......

·-

"P!'~

~

Ill - - • rooftlla.
Dallce.- iiO. R

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

AI a

IHQI

.,,

l.tl......._ 1

101 ....

_....

nOottodlnlhellaciL$4111.114~;

1m Unoctn Town

Car,

•= ,,___....-

Plumblngl
Hlatlng

oxcolo 82

lint
· " " .......
boctrrunning
not .... -uii1W41110t.

1m -...., :\.:..

=.=~71114.

C.rtar'a-ng

•

.....

'

,_ondPTno
Qolllpotlo,Ohlo

-....................

,......._.

........
INC.

ADVEBTISE It ·

•

~

l

''
'•'
~
'

,••
T

....,..111!181 "

__ ;

R··--,_,
.
.
;
..,..,.,
85 QenlraltlaiUng ' · :

•
•••

JM.OOD

•

1'
•att'';.Rf.IIW'
=-==~:.:-:;;::::;'::;711.=.,

'I

.,

~

bo(\fiY,
........
$400
tloblo.
Col aftor
1. pm
, ,- . _

•ON-SITE SERViCE; REPAIR
•CUSTOM
PROGRAMMING
'
'
.
•SAI.ES
•ON-SITE .ClJSTOM TRAINING

(' '

•~

1111a...~Wo.v•,AC, ';

s•eil N."eH lt.141

CoMruJD

m"-

.................
__ ___ ........,__

-~7710. 114-31J.7118S.

1211.

16141 ......." - , .....71·1967
C.L

m~

PI, PI, AIIIPII mwl;tl, tii'UI• •.
llloohlnory
81IPL: oontt'DI, 11,~. 114-37f.~.
•'Kd'x11'1 1-1..1:11' lllkllng
door, t-3' rnandoor, choicl of 1:1 ' 11111 PlrmMdh ¥ovagar lllnl ;
Vtn, :10',000 !!'!~.._ !!!•. Ill, ,
oruiH,IIO,I00.- 1. .
HorN BUI
I 114-332-17U.

Two lbr trOtlor tor ront, ~par
jll. . . . . -tlo. Cil1
,... ., la.m...:tapJtL , _ , .,
1
ms.

1bi --locurlty ......
no polo, on l'lftlt ...,_, iiOil
par _,... pluti ut1111111. iMI-7103.
2 b:udluuu tumlltMcll In Nlw
Hovan, wv. lfCurttY dopoalt
and ......... ~. ...
1114117.
I niDiti opotl_,., partially ·tur-

lea ; ' 77IM'tta. luy,

tractON '

Depoelt, 1114w 21111 INisS •

441·7731 or 441~

-·

bind. 'IJ::WHolland
1pl tonga
-..._,,
-- ~hoy
- -law eo.... -1M Ill
Von.1417,
""" ',
304-273-4211.
.-,
8undiy Cillo.
Jlm'o Fonn Equl~r'••rl;, Jf•
auto, v.e, ,
Will - 1 1 ,
; 11111 Ranaor 4•41

::oMH711:::;:::;::;:,·

a-.1117!1.

70111nt---.-

'*""'-

m111mo. ...,. $100 dapoaiL '*

44

73 V.na l 4 WD'I

""""Nil.

,_,

.

c-r. · - '•

.._ ltl. Truck
tall.

IDO:MI and

-·--7311. .

'

..... 13,100. · -

oommone. IM/~82-~IH.

Big •
linn bull far
-.-.
.,...., ....... up. . . . - ar, 12110, 112 1111111 . - tWIC - - ...... """" palntod,
on Rt.
l
wltlto,
lrlllor hoovy duly, .....
Roqulrod. . lf414t 1311, CARPET
ulo, fiil 0&lt; Indo.. Ciill
5711-1/10.
\
FURNnuRE
ovoninga.1114-t1U121.
1 bod.- doUble with llollohon Fumltvre l .Ca.....L
At;
7Honh.,l-.11144
.
,...... No Jll!!a..11• milo olf IlL
on 141. Dopoa11

-

F,111n Suppltr'
S. LtvPstock

ltttbatl . . . . 20'Ift below ...

- i o n.

19711 Dodao - , tuM good,

PUCH FOlK ID.- Showcaellll:hentbull·ln tlilhiiiSI!,'!t
Jenn-Air 111111. oven and mlciiiWive. hrM bldr-,.1111
baeiMIII, arid lals of lite nice IIIII for shade -slll_llll en 2

••••ar

Goodl '

"""---

-~ ._-,v..,atr '

-.... b-01
-IOW'if-7211.

---.4~'1"·5

rladlo.... andtlah-

~~

Housahold

$0(.471.

$1m Carvallo. lllolohlng 14

•o•u

POIEIDY - ...;o;l Aw. - Compllltlr l'lftlodelltl wllll •
new lllndows, new cirl)lt. new llmasl MIY!hln' Ha 1dlfi; ·
Ina toom, Nvina room, 3 ballrooms. tvrer. tllthen wlh new
cabinets, new blth,and 1 fuM baement !lith lollotwlndon
and Its own new furnace. .
lUST lEE $34,01111

" .....,.

·,

........

.. 400. Centoat: ttarttld Gaorga,
liOn.thru F,rt a1 114 111 1345• .

HIA11NG I COOliNG

EASY ll¥1118 - In this 4 yr. old 1~d0 SuniiybnloiiiiiGIIIe
home. Hhis a Clthllhl c:elllnator diNisloft IRtlala!NtY
r - with shelm"'or storalt.tgullloed llill:hen, two illlf.
rooms and I~ bilhs. It isljellllifullnd In new CGftdlllan.
SlUDII

....

•

Kanda-· p 10111.

Suppllee ·
~

'

~ &amp;,?

MOW HOME F..NACES- HEAT PUMPS .
All FUINAC~ PAm ·

I,ETAIT - I£T YOU'LL LOVE IT - Just riaht lor 1 family .
HIS 4 bedrooms, dlnlne room, new kitchen cabinets, new
ran~t,and entire home ha been remodeled nicely- iMide
· and fMil Alio ha 1 view d 1111 ri'lllf.
SU_.IOD

·-..i..

'5I

I:GOp.ol. .

"'

\

~ Do you have anything i~ your
~ ·.ho~e that can tum rnto .· ·

Sttekll

IIACIIIE - Acres - Acr.... - AciiiP - Approi. 28 .
acres of land. Has approx ..6acres tillable. Great place IG DUI
a home.
·
. .
114.!1,00 ·

.··

Merc11andise

t1 toat dual ~· Inlier, -"'I
11200 or wit tor molorCYOio ol ...... ...... oowf,:

Building

'

Ntwl•

1!!:::

DOmE &amp;.· TURNER. BROKER

Ih~:::;::it:=~t:: l,..;..;;o;..;.;._ _ _ _,.

31.-

-

A-1 eon,_ ......... -ptot•
•111 ,_.,, 114/t12-11010 ottor

'&gt;,

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

IMIS

2 BR porllaiiJ lum'od, -

ovallobll. lloiUtlflll
ICanalltL -

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

.•
CALL
VICKER'S WOOD HEAnNG.
,._.(31M) 1'1W2SS llhr $

--In

2 bod-. llldiii•P n, Ohio.

ProfeSSIOnal

. . . . . . corm I I

OFFICE 812·2888/HOMI! 882-1882

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

----7.
aw•• .
•

_on

..
..............
-u.,.,.,.........,.. ''

,201 NORTH.8ECOND AVE.

C..llfW •:Iiiii

I

v.--·

"'"""

'

RE-NGAND
1IOUilE SHOOTWG ·

of-·.........
'"'-".....
---.If..,, .....

=:

~-A- WaiiiL
-La...,_,Conllrvllo, 011--......
[oftor -~
Quail-To...-lllol!lilr

· tor

........ tHat-....
~-·.-...
'-'_

'

w.. dll

...... rflllill

... ,...... ,_., Vot..
11, ..... 111: Voltlmo 11.
...... ~: y...... 101.
:172: ~ UO;
t47,
. 481:

to -

Ot

Ttf.ltala - ·
I (, • E T ; - ,

we Are~~W:.'«;

.

· ....,.,....,.,o.tao........ _

•ssEI.L &amp; IUIII

ROUTE SALEI

PreMswf lut ,_ Nao 1rry.

Ascwwa -.irNl IQ4.I7I..

-after 1:110 Pll.

Ill!" ON T.V. Many -

· Real Estate General

EIKliiCAL SEIYKE

lloiiiiiWool• .,.........
.

Rotol

~-~~~~
l'il.i lot, 4:110 Pll 1111 1:110 All.

.,......,_.,_lnlll_hlluia.

'

Ell. L-

Ouortlnllld life.

THE H~RDY OUTSIDE WOODBURNING
HEATER WITH INSIDE THERMOSTAT
,,..TENTED)
.n.,:-_ _

__ , ...... OHice

loin~~: 1:

..
C.H Vou. , ..,.

Painting '
:'
(FIIf!E E8TIIIATE81

V. C. YOUIG II
. 2-6215
'
...,, 1111./ttn
Olllo .

1111141'1Q Twnllot•.oxcond. Mi up In •Goltlpollo ......
lotoolattnCIIIIWII4014. .

·--··
-!=·;. . . . . .
--·

OWN 8018 •

. ..

/

mora

=

~ ~·~

~

... ....., ...............
c..

a

........ TMtlnl-.,

·-

111M a... S.IO · - · 4 .ut..tlo tMMI lulan, ...,,

-----------.1
21

11om home. For liie dotolto,
BUBI""'SB .
lind 111f.odd,._ llttm~
''"'
.,, ...,.
to ACL. 10110
Opportunity
~=~""'· Boltlmon,
INOTICEI
~~ TYPIST$, PC VALLEY PUBUIHING CO.
~ SU,OOO JICiandll. ,._.,.,...thai ,.... • - .
DolaHo. (1) - - E l l . 1- ,__pecptorcuk.-,ond
4112. ·
NOT to aMitl _,.,through tha
IIIII! until rou ·hlva t.-rgatod
HOSPITAL JOBSI To 1011.110/hrl the~

.......,

Counly ~~- N....._ .tt"'
lite plaae "' llliclnnlno aon·
. ttlnlng two 121 or flu.

mall,

-·.,..

-:--~~r"".o....: =~.~·=~'=r.-­

!::-m..1: :'::4.

-ltoom Ad &amp;litton a
-GiittarW...
-Eiactrtalil • Pkimblfti

U·ll ·IO·tfn

snv•a
992-5135 ... 115-3561

C ..,.,..,...
•-blo,

'•

992·6641 or
·691-6164

lEN'S

a- ,......_

101 Ill
057, Thlnl
Qol.
l!potlo
- "'' ...
Tribuno,
27III•117W121.
Employmenl Serv1ces -..., Go'lilpcllo, 0 H FEDERAL OCNERHIIENT IS ......... Dar C.tw Cantor.
HIRING f11.000412.000 ltlll'· Bola,
ohlldoa,., JI.F
Col 1101111144100 1!11.01 til 8 Lm. • 5:10 p.m. Aoo! 2 ·10.
11 Help wanted
lor lnamld&amp;at• r r -.
DfotHna
1
AVON • AH a,_, Cltl lllorllyn
GALUPOUSAAEAI .
w-vor-..ca.
'I'OSTAL JOBS"
$lUI • $14.10/hr. Ho aport..,..
- · For utm and appllc•.
lion Information, coli 1.zle.ll~

WPENIU SEIVICE

CEDAR
CONRRCTION

11· 10-lftl

Wtalo-.

77N171.

YOING'S .

NO .101 TOO SIALL
' .FREE ESTIMATES

f t NEID USTINCS!

banaltta.-

haul your lo lhe m(lt luM
oaii30M711-1117.
·
tnt- and Ell- Painting, 10
Wollpi,::

· W.nlod To Buy: Junk . Autoo l m - • Oponlnc.., • _ .
with or
withoUt
- Colt wlth 1 P.C. Ptollollncy, a B.F. In
u..y
Unty.
,,..,..1m.
-~~andacood
•lllytlaot mind. Com~
oupor olnglo, •••or _. tnnca

Good - - n g w l l h

.~

Sltlehlll lloatl, Rutland
12-24·90-1 MO.

USED IAIIIOAD liS

the Wwt .... "' Calftly
..... Nu. . tl: ......

oorcl,

•••raa•l

BOYIIIS.IB
HOUB!Soi.OTS•FAIIMS
tCOMIIIIICIAL

-....
Elplrilnaa&amp;l Flnllnclll Anltpt,

Eam he I dl1ca~ lingerie,
Hoot a CatMo Uncaill Party.
Colt Diona 311W7WII37.
0"
Sl-..111 don't

1837 lunAOp.m. 7 dap.

. 142-2455

,_.,.,, IIMIOO '-to

992-2156

11Me614·9f2-56t2

'

W.ntod to bUY: Junk· ,.,. . . h
01 wtlhoul molofa I ocrop ,.,.
a!, 1114-3'111-2828.

Dllll Ill ..,_.....,IIY_

. JMIS
·
tt2-2m 742-2251

=...,,he..,_._

!ISM. S.aRIIStrwt · '
...UPOIT, OliO 457.
. Offici 614-ftl-2116

•Ramodelng and
· Home Repelra
•Rpoflng
•Siding
iPalntlng

a.,..
~:Onlr
Strklly It

•lnauletlon

,..

'

PGIIIIOY,

Clieb

12

. •Roofing

r - -.--A
.-llefttl,...
. .-......
M IW

. 6:30P.M.

•RepiKement '
Window•

...,": ::"""'-~~~~·"!'_!:

. ;0::-...tal
:.,::.-;:.,

992-5335 .. \15-3561
, • ..., ....... .Office
117 L S.C. l'nlr:ty

•VInyl Siding

llilllln VLIYIM 211,1t
..... 121 "' the o.cl II•
oorcto. Mt1111 County. Ohio.

111 -

SAT. NIGHT

--

J

-

lalhan •lldln1

lEN'S APPUANCE
SDYICE . .

DEPT.

·rvny .

••s•• •noN

.J::r~r:::!!'::

1n ,.......,"

of rt I nl

OMs

~~~~~

I ' ......
-ofllllln1ultotha=

....,
,._
_, ....., - "' - ,.,,.... m••
llf furtlier wile..,- .....,_ -orlua.

.,....., •"-'•••I ..,._
, . . 111a •• .... ,., •• 111

J&amp;L

lila,......_

uculr

AU IWIS.
lrlnt It In Or we·
' - Pklllp.

~FilE

•::-:~~~"::::.=.a: . I~=====

. -' =-~~ ~ . . . •
...........lnt.lfJII ... tl

:'!

.

lMry E. lpa-,':"
Cletlt llf Common,._,
Court, Melga C-.y, OhiO/\
11217. 14,21. ze: ,, •• n ,,
1111 Ito
' • ' .

MICIDWAYE
OVEN IEPAII

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

11111141 ....... .., -

~rltpne Horrlaon

Business ·. Services

BISSELL ;~
SIIIIG CO~ ·

.c::;.t~~~101
~-==
::.:.:.~~= =-oO~Ill
-end I
.... llf 11111nt llllnttMOh llf
• If ... .,........_......

,... O\'fl- llf uld poroole llf '
.... _ , . . . .aortbad
uld COtlllllll!ll.
l

•

•*• - .......,.
-·
Ol1lo eno1-"' VIrile 11. au..
--' "••lee: ,.,_, • lnaamptte •• ...,..

nlli lalla
oo~.= •~'~~~ liJ\' •
~

.,.-1

daacrl- aa

J, Stlilllllury,

...

vou 1nt1 ~~~o~ntil. wtil 11e aJ. '
Juclgad by thla Court to

Parcel No. 1 in thia com-

Hom•

-

Public Ncitlce

_

-~-----·~
PUbliC Notlct
•~
_,;...;;;;;;.;;;;..;.::.:;::::_~

PubliC NotiCe

plaint ana that Plaintiff.
Aochet Hunon "' be held to
heve -.1 tlt1e to aald percet
of ,.,, tltata dnarlbld 11
Porcat No. z in dlia complaint: die .........

"'-"

. ltonallttry, de•

Public Notice

......... dun die Plaintiff
Vlrote R. lutfortl. an lneom·
be hald 10
have good title to 111t1 pareat

and

3.

18 wanted to Do

9;; Wantad to Buy

................
--·d·

f1111,14.11, 3te '

Rr nldls

.

79 Campeis a Mol or Hon11:11

17 MilceiiMIIOII~
18 Wanted To Do

895 Let•t
137

lnsurMce

14 ~ Busin•s Traintng
15 · Schoo&amp;s &amp; lnltruct.On

21 Bulin•• Oppottunttv
22 Mon., to loan
23 PTol••km•l sar..,icn

Hdltr-.tothtun·

The " - .W.IIoMI ......
FIIIIO/M ,... right Ut IIIII .t

·~

1&amp; Radio. TV &amp; Cl R epa1r

heoh G-11-. Rutllnd.
Ohio. otlwi £ltle u•:awn

.....t-ot,..._._
........

...,_..,011

61 -· f•rm Equipment

•• ~ .,.,lmn tor A..,t
45 · -Furnhhld Rooms ,
41 Spece tor Rent
47 W.mect 10 Rent
·41 · EquipmMt lor Au"t
49 . FQ, le..
·

S;:r·m~:.

Ma•onCo .• WV

LE...., NOTICE .
To . Cort Coopar Hatne-'
.... wlloM flit ........
..... of ,. •••• iW'
-...

............ ., ........ Oitlo

...,_, c-y,

. P•raonal Pound Pupp!M, cuto

•

.t

tor12:110.

Wtth·-·-·211.

L,,,::,:uLk

'

42 MilliMe Mom• tor R•'t
43 Fatm1 tor Rent

Eli·Wiuyll f~nl

dassifit•tl '"*''·~ l'lll'l'r tilt•
fultowifl#{ tt•lt•phlit!f' t•xt·li~ll/{1'.~ ...

6

31 · Homee tor SMe

In M-.n01y

3 -'•u'louc-.n ... ts
4 Givtawey

-'

'

Gallia CfK1nty
, Ar.. co ... l14

On,_.., 11, 1Ht
tO:OOA.II.,IIIeH.... Na.

good

r,1:r1 "'~J!JU I+JS
1 Car~ of Thntas

RM•are for con•QUWe run•. .. allen up'd.-, aMI M dl•ged

·

"A c;:l•s•f•od adY•rliMm••t pJ.:\1\!tn The Oatly Sttnl •llll Cu e-"
ch111&lt;~h«J dtspNw, B~si11 .. S: C•rd und lugal not tee~)
wtl ltlstl iiPPII'fl' 1ft tlut Pt _·pta_.,., A•fl•lvr and thtt GaMt
pOtts Dally Tnbu'"'· rtl'a~::hing owr 11.000 homa.

'u&amp;IC NOTICI! ,

I b&amp;J awn 11o1M. ·1 to I . -,
..-ble, Oallll or

-

-10\Wl'WISL

10
Monthly,

••!

MOND ... Y P"PER
TUESDAY PAPER
WfONESOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
tHtUAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

, .Glveeway

F- ...,..., Oootl naturod,

aa oan ·bo, they · wont good

Wordl
16
16

· Daya
1
3

t ..IO deaCOU!"' fo't ·~ Plild 1n advMnc•.
,
•free .tl
Grve.-•y •nd Found adt und., 15wordt w1W tnt
fUll ] d .. I al l"jO Ch•p.
• '
.
"Ptu:• of 1d for 111 C_.IIIMiti'lill double pru:e of tel cotl"7 po•t lin• tyP41 ontv uMd
' Swnt.n .. .,.. itOI r"POftlittlte tor effOfl ilf'IUI ftnl d.,. IChlftll
tor •"on fit II ,d ., ad ruttl •n papdfl . ~ ~~~~ bltfore 2:00p.m,
d~ .u.. publlcauon t o mMlw c:on•t;t•ur~,
·
"AdS th" must be pa~d '" adv•ntif
(:'ard of lh . . k1
Hi11PPY Acb
In M.tmor~n,
't' • d SiiiUI

"AufiiW't:

,...... - · liD - . . . . - .

_
. .htl_ ........ ._
'

Halls~ Soanlal Other hiH
:.:f.proK. 7 wko. old, 114-411-

~~

.

· -....
.1
.........
" . .1,, ....
Sa LDika,

RATES

.
-

count,..,""'''' b 1111 pr•

''

• The Area's Number ~1 Marketplace
.
.

71

38 ' Reel Estatl
Wantlid

-...'

·'' 10

'

.,......_.,
Aut08 for Sale

,..._

·,

.

____

lheOeily

.

LAFF·A-DAY

Anno LJI)femcnt s

.,_,

'

'

11, 1991

·sulletin Board· A(tvert1sement In The Daily Sentuw! t:ldS!)Iticrl Section.

.

. I,

614-992-2156
304-675-1333
.614-446-2342

-.... ......... .

..n.."weiiLinwni .. III~.IOD or '
1.001 .......... ,. a.~ ... .

..

. . . ._ i i

.,

~!Itt (

annnrrr·a ,...._ ........, .._ ,

~
, ....
:
:::;:::=.:::....-__
orouMI, UDD ...... IFPB= •

. . . _..,_.=
~

Up11018ttry

I

:

~.;;;;;.;..~..~111~..;-..;;~;; J:

..
; ;,.;;,;;.,;;..

·-"

'*" In Mrilhn - · ·
Col IOM1I-41I4 . . . . . '

�•

'

-

· Friday. January,11. 1991 .

Paga 10-The Deily Sentinel

,.

Seven~n ~ses processed

Northem Ohio receives &amp; oozing ·rain, sleet

.in .Meigs County _Court

••

Sunddy

75 o:nts

.•
•

•
NAllOIW. WEATHER FORECAST Fl!CIM 1 All1·11·9l T011111·1:141
By Ualtecl Prela llltenalloa&amp;l
Inches was observed In southern
A . mixture of freezlna rain, · Ashtabula County In extreme
•
--~
·
sleet
and snow continued toOb
fall northeast'Oblo.
:.
•
. Seventeen cases were proc........ costs;
A low pressure system movl~~&amp;
)ly Meigs Counry Court Judae
Oyde King, Ciown Cily, passin~ over extreme nor\hern
to
•
slowly
northeast trqm Missis· on "'-'--~·
bad checks , ~.our c.-..
""Friday morning, wltb a winter
Patrick H. O'B nen
,...,......,...y,
~. $2 ,
sippi
and
Arkansas
wtll
keep
Fined were: ·Craig C. Fole).'. costs, and restitution -on each; ·weather advla!D'YCo In l!ffect for
Reedsvj).le, OWl, 10 days in jail, T"li!IOthy
Gillbride, RaCine, ·areas Including nneaut, Cleve- . pumping moisture Into the ~uck•
.
$300 and costs, operallir's license failure to tllgister ICC authorily . land, Norwalk and Tol_edQ and eye State.
•
·
The
low
pressure
system
to
suspended for 120 days, driving with PUCO, $100 and costs; Thnya Defiance. under ~sion, $100 and costs, Wooten, Cheshire, di$orderly con- - Temperaturesacrossthatarea Ohio's' south wtll move Into
ro dayS m jail_suspended to 10, duct, $100 and COSIS, resiJ'aining ranged from, around ~ to tbe Kentucky and Tennessee Friday
ntgli't. Rain wm continue over the
~Oiicurrent with OWl charge, tllr&amp; order issued; Mary Jeffers, Shade, lower ~s. buttbeyw:ereexpected
Buckeye
State Friday night. Low
'-·"'- "'·'
Ue•~
· bad chec"·
to rise and change
the mix
years pro""""'.;
nuter '"'661•
passmg
~. $100 and costs •
·
th ·ot
temperatures
will ~ In tbe
Rolland, failure to control, $30 and restitution, five days in jail, precipitation over the nor to
mlddleto
upper
30s. ·
costs, improper JIISSinB,_ $25 and suspended; one-year probation; Jeff · rain by noon.
·
costs; Marisa Gray, Middleport, no Proffitt. Racine, OWl, . $600 an_d
Rain moved Into southern Ohio.
On the · .-Friday · morning
pperator's license, $1S and costs, coots, 60 days ·in Jail suspended to late Thursday afternoon. The
)hree days in jail, suspended upon three, operator's license suspended preclplll!tlon spread Into central weather map, low pressure was
proof ·of valid operator's license for 120 days, probation of ofle year, Ohio as a mixture of freezing • over Arkansa.s and Mississippi. A
:Within 30 days;
driving -under suspension, $10 and rain, sleet and snow during the warm front extended east !rom
· Jerry Uribe, Pomeroy, driving costs, 60 days in jail suspended to evening hours arid Into northern the low to Florida. High pressure
WEATHER MAP - A stonn s,ystem movmr tbrOIIIb die East ;
·under suspe~~sion, $100 and ~os!S, three, concurrent with OWl charge, Ohio around midnight.
was over southern Quebec.
wtll brine t11a~eratorm1 to Florida, 8bower1 to the mlii·Atlaallc :
The low will move Into Ken'three days in jail; Carl :Smith, driving privileges 'cancel~ed;
·Temperatures slowly warmed
slates llld saow, freezlar rata and rain to tbe Norllleaat. Wch ·
langsville, OWl, $300 and costs,
Charles R. Stewart, B1dwell, $50 during the night over central tucky . and Tennessee Friday
prHaure will briar parily cloudy to moetly 11111111 US. ·and
.three days in jail, 60 days - and .costs, 10 days in jail Suspel)· Ohio and this changed the mix of · night and be over Vtrglnla early
warmer temsien&amp;urea to the Plains aad the Soutbwest. Tliere will
Saturday. A warm front wtll
•operator's license' suspension, POI ded, one year probation: David precipitation to rain.
be cbaace of llbowen In tbe Pacific Northwest, wltb IDOW in tbe
·treatment assessment; James L. Greene, Ratliff, OWl, $300 and
Rainfall amounts across the · exti!nd east from the low while a
blcher elevations of tile Ca&amp;lladea an~ ~e norlben Rocldea. (UPJ)
.Terrell, Middleport.. driving undet costs. three diys in jail; 60 days central and south mainly were a cold front will trail south from
•suspension, $100 . and costs. ten operator's license suspension; Wil- quarter ofan Inch or less through the loW to Florida. Meanwhile,
'dliys in jail suspended to five; Wal- liam M. Idng, Vin10n, failure to early Friday ml)rnlng. Snowfall the high over Quebec will move to
Newfoundland by Saturday
let H. Schartiger, Middleport. coni!OI, $100 and costs, $500 for- · across the north was generally
snow, Saturday, with highs In the
Soutb ~atral Oblo
·
iower 40s. Chance of preclplta;
domestic violence, $100 and costs, feiture to Law Enforcement Trust an Inch or less, but up to two morning.
Occasional rain Friday night,
:ro days in jail suspended to 10, one Fund.
.
·with a low In the upper 30s. · tlon Is 70 percent. ·
:'Jear probation; S~ Yonker,
Forfei_tin~ bond was ~s Col- _
Chance of rain Is 80 percent Rain
,.
·Pomeroy, failure 10 yteld, $10 and lozo, Wilmmgton, Del., .disorderly
likely, possibly changing to
Oblo extended forecaat
:.
conduct, $80.
Sunday tbrougb Tuelday
Fair Sunday and Monday, and
" Uves~ock
a chance of rain or snow on
WASHINGTON (UPI)- U.S . . decline In U.S. output slowed to
OAUJPOLIISTOCKYARII8
Tuesday. Highs will be mainly In
389,0011
barrels
a
t!ay
In
1990
IAN.
1,
»&gt;I
demand f!lr on dropped for the
. Six calls for assistance were Flight.
first time In seven years In 1990
to. the 500,0011 barrel
. Foedor cau!O'I.H 1o '·" ~. veo1 the 20s Sunday, In the ~s.
·· answered by units of Meigs COiinly
At 12:42 a.m. on Friday, depressed by the slowtng econ- compared
· Monday, and ranging from the
drop In dally production In 1989.
c.J....-17. llllldlwCoor...ateofJ. .
:Emergency Medical Services on Pomeroy squad went to Scout
middle 30s to the middle 40s
"As
a
.result
of
the
tall
In
--I'Nmei6Uieon:
·
watm weather and higher
;ThurSday and early on Friday. ·
Camp Road for Bernice Levacy, omy,
moderation
In
-~~~~
..............
:
...........
tut-ni.H
liveries
and
the
Tuesday.
Overnight-lows wll\ be
-1111. ......................... su•n•.H :
·. At 9:57 a.m. on ThllfSday, who was taken to Veterans. At 4:10 prices foilowtng Iraq's Invasion . de
the
decllite
In
domestic
produc..,,..1111
.....
,
......................
'IUNI.It
In
the
20s
through the periOd.
:Pomeroy squad went to Americare a.m., Levacy was transferred·· to of Kuwait, the 'on hidustry tlon, 1990's Imports, which had
:.:i:m·Fhiiiel'6'1'iifii;,n;,._-... ·
;for Wilh\ Gum, who was taken to Holzer. At4:09 a.m., Rutland squad reported Friday.
•
risen
markedly
In
each
of
the
·
tliL ......................... a .• 1N.H
.
The
American
Petroleum
InVeterans Memorial.
went to State Route 681 for James stitute, the Industry's trade previous lour years, were
-~~~~- ............................- .•
...'1111111............................'!UN'I.H
·At I :39 p.m., Pomeroy squad Darst, who was taken 10 Holzer. At
roughly 'even with the prior
'IIHIP .................................- , . , .
-went to BaD Run Road for Chester S:55 a.m., Syracuse squad was sent group, sal«! In Its yearend repor)e- year's
level,"
the
report
foun!l.
rnWd•udllollo:
that
tor
the
year
as
11.
whofe
:Roger, who was taken to Veterans. to State Route 7 for John Pick, who
Deliveries of gasoline, which
,
~1:.......................11.. .,....
deliveries
tell
2.1
percet\t
after
:At 3:51 p.m., Rogerwas transpor- was Jaken 10 Holzer.
were running 3 percent less than
UiiUIIn o .tt-tf.H: Caaoer/Coller Dally stock prices
being nearly fiat In 1989.
;ted to Grant Medical Center by Ufe .
u..-.11:
welptt... - · ......
(A&amp; of 10: ao 1!-m.)
"Higher crude- and product 1989a~thndoftheyeiir,fell1.7 18.Hdowo: IJpl
Bdf.,.optotUI.
Bryce
aad Mark Smith
_......., .
prices following the Jraql Inva- percen on the year, "the first
In
Ullllllol
U.ll-tl.lt:
Caoaer/Caller
slgnlf
ant
annual
decline
of Blual, Ellll a. Loewl
sion qn August 2, the slowing
Veol Cahw:
•
economy, and mild weather In eight years," the API said.
Am Electric Power .............27\2 .
Factors contributing to the
C..lee/,rlme U.ll-1_U.tl: Modlam
·Darrell Cozart
Edila Lee, and Ethel Sqent; and both the first and fourth quarAshland on ..........~ ...........:.. 28
decline
were
higher
prices,
Bar*•
c..o:
m.-•
v.w;caJr
: Darrell E. Co•e" 64, of Route 2, two brothers, Perry Riggs aild Har- ters, which depressed heating1
AT&amp;T ..........; ......................29%'
Com.
Bai&gt;J Calve• 1115...
'
_.,
ley Riggs.
. related demand, all contrlb- which Included Increases In state
Bob Evans ..... , .................... 14%
Dixon Road, Coolville;\ died
Funeral services will be Saturday uted," the API·sald.
and federal taxes, and the
do!w~,; llqwo: •
ThUrsday, Jan. 10, 199181 St. at 1 p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home,
Warm weather accounted for slowing.economy, It said.
tiHttlllo......:.................... U.If.fl.'!l. Charming Shoppes .............. 10%
City Holding Co.' ................ ,. 15
"The effects of .higher prlces
..........
.
Joseph HoSpital in Parkersbutg, W. with Rev. William WiiUamsl about half ofthe drop In demand,
,.., Bop: .,., ...........
·
and weakening economy were · -tllo..............,............ •.••·"~~· Federal Mogul.. .................. l2%
• Va.Bom in New Brighton, Pa., he is officiatin~. Burial will be in Bur"'-~ the report found.
Goodyear 'f&amp;R ...................17%
clearly
evident In the dropoft In
Pip b, Rood: 11·- · •
the son of Nellie Cowdery CQ;aut lingbam emetery:
- It said the decline In deliveries
Key
Centurion ................ :.. J0\2 .
Friends may call at the funeral In the last three montbs of the highway travel towards the end WllliaJilll
. of Coolville, and the late William
Lands'
End .••.•..•.. ..•. .• .•..•. .•. 14%
·. Cozart. who died in 1978.
home from 3 to S ·p.m. and 7 to 9 year were running at 5.4 percent or the year."
Limited
Inc. ·....................... 19%
Gasoline deliveries had alCharles Williams of Racine has
p.m.ll?daY·
.
less thall 1989. Deliveries roughly
f
Mul.tlmedla
Inc . .... :....... ...... 60'!4
• He was a U· S. Anny veteran
In lieu of tl~ers, dOilllllons mal' equal demand over the long term · ready fallen 0.9 ,percentyear-to- been-recognized by GTE Telephone
Rax·Restaurants
......... , ..: .. 15L32 ',
World War ll. He ~ the be made to Metgs Coun~ Chapter
Cozan Saniralion Service and the
.
.
whelichangeslntheamounto!oll year prior to the Aug. 2 Invasion, 'Operations for completing 2S years . Robbins &amp; Myers ........... : .... 19%
It reported. .
o( service with the company. He is
former Cozart Landfill
of.the Amen~ Cancer oc~ety or In storage tanf!s even out. . •
Demand
had
risen
2
·
to
3
a central office equipment installer Shoney's Inc ....................... 11\4
Besides bis lilothet, he is sur- Athens ~ICC. at Box 173, . Demand was d.!lwn 1.4 percent
In the ftrst seven months ot the percent annually - from 1985 at· Athens.' He and ·!liS wife, Alice, Star Baak ; ......................... .15%
vived by his Wife, Florence Miller Athens, Ohio 45701.
through 1988 and were down only m~ide oo Vine S!reet in Racine. Wendy's lnt'l.............. , ....... 6%
tozan. three sons and daughters- Shell Proffit
· year prior to the Iraqi lnyaslon marginally
Worthlngto~ lnd ...... :., ... , ..... 20%
In 1989, API said.
They ha.ve four children.
in-law, Gerald and Melody Cozart.
ey
t
. largely because of the ullusually
Shelley M. Wells Proffitt, 36, of . warm winter, the trade group
peorge and Sylvia Coz1Wt, all of
· ·
·'
Coolville and David and Brenda · 55776 Route 124, Portland, died said.
Sheffield; two daughters . ~&gt;: Jan. 8, 1_991 ~t Ohio State
Thanks mainly to efforts to
and sons-in-law Fay and Gene Uruvers1ty Hospital m Columbus Increase Alaska crude oil produc- •
Westfall of
Bouom and Jen· after an extelllbl illness.
tlon after the Invasion, the
pie and Jim Neal. Pleasant Valley,
Born -in Pomeroy, she was the .
·
W. Va.; a grandson, Mickey Cozart, daughter of the late John M. Wells
iaised in die home, along with three and Judy Johnson Wells O'Coonor.
(IIIIer
gntlldsons and
nine Mrs. Proffitt was a clerk and
pnd&lt;!aughtera.
worked in retail sales in Pomeroy.
. AlsO surviving are two brothers,
She is survived by a brother,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP.l)
Salllford lmd Liwis Cozart of Gary M. W~s 0~ Cleveland; a Former Rep. Donald "Buz"
Lorain · and two sisters, Nellie brother and SISter.m-law, John S. Lukens, R-Oblo, was released
of California, and Helen and Carol Wells of Nelsonville; a .from jail Friday so he can enroll
Dailey~f Reedsville.
niece and nephew, Malinda In a program for sex offenders.
; In addition to bis father, Mr. JohnstonandJohnW. WellsofNelDu~lng a hearing Thursday,
Cozan was pccedcd in death by sonville, a grand-nepheW, John Eric· Franklin County Juvenile Judge
one son Clarence, in 1949, and a Johnston of' Nelsonville, and a spe- Ronald Solove s1111pended the
brOther, Vuion.
cia! · cousin,, Danny Roush of remainder of Lukens' 30-day
Friends may call at' the White Ponland.
sentence.
Funeral Home, Coolville, S81Urday
Besides her parents, she was
Lukens, 59, was released froin
after I p.m. FuncniiiiCIViccs will ~ preceded • in death by her the Franklin County jail after
'
~eld Sunday at 2 p.m. at ~ Wh1te · gran~ms..
'
· serving nine days of the sentence
.
Funeral H~ in Coolville and
Servtces will be held Saturday !11 for having sex with a 16-year-old
burial will be in the Fairview 10 a.m. !11 Soue~ Fune~ Home m Columbus girl.
Cemmry.
Ne~yille ~th . Bill_ Roush
"SOciety has benefitted to the
off!ciatmg. Burial_will be m Mount extent that they wtll beneti~trom
Evel~ Stanley
Ol.1ve Cemetery m Long Bottom. your Incarceration. Now, It's
Evelyn Stanley, 79, Willow Fnends .may call at the funeral time tor you to benefit," Solove
· Creek Road in Pomeroy, died on . home Fnday from 7 10 .9 p.m. ·
told tbe Middletown Republican.
· Thursday, Jan . . 10, 1991, a1 her
dsughter's home in Shade following an extended illness. She was a
l!ousewife.
• Born on OI:L 8, 1911, she was
the daughter of Herb and Anna
Bolin Riggs.
·
Surviving are four daug~r.en.
Donna (Ben)ard) Orueser, Ironton,
Mary (Jack) 'Iipley, . SL Pettn, ·
Mo., Joyce (Bob) Bowen, Pomeaoy,
andianet (Dan) King, Shade; a son,
Jack StanleY.• Pomeroy; ooe sistl:l',
Esther G1U, Columbus; two
brothers, Fred Riggs, Pomeroy, and
Wallace Ri~, San Antonio, Texas;
II grandchildren and II great·
grandchildren. . .
.
· She was preceded in death by her
Times have changed since the
· Let them know how you feel .
tMbancl. Hanford Stanley; four sisdays of "Reading. 'Kiting and
tal, Eleanor Heilman, Edidt RifDe,
about drug abuse and fUtd out how
·they
feel. Try to ease their
.
'Rithmetlc.~ Kids today learn about
H011pilal newe
everything fiom space
square
confusion and listen to their point
. . Veterans Memorllll H .. ltal .
dancing.
"
·
ofvlew. ·
· TIIURSDAY ADMIS~S • As
early
as
elemcntary.schOQl,
By talldna to your cbllttren In a
Miry Machir. Letart. w. Va.. and
HairY OiiUand, Shade.
children also learn alxlut drugs.
calm, rational mmner, and really
·111URSDAY ·DISCHARGES The .problem With this IUbjcct ~
listening to them as well, You may
l!ealric:e Williamson and Jane
that not all of the teachlilg comes .
be able to teach them~
Thy for:
from
tl\e
right
inStNcton.
While
·
about
dnig abuse. and about
•
•
teaChers are busy pointing out the
relating to ocher people.
·· ·
· Contest winner named
'
. It may be the most Important
negatives of drus ~· Other
.' Normin-Mallcin of 47440 Mmlstudents offer the ~e that It's
lesson of their lifts. You may learn
ill$ Star RC*I. Racine, was the
wtnner of S!Diay's mysay farm
0.1( to use drugs. .
something, too.
cOOICSL' Matson, a1ont with three
All thete mlvcf signals can be
olbers, comedy ideJIIiW.the farm
confusing. One way to help your
al that or ~ Sayre llld his
children son out the mcuages Is to
IIIIDe was trdecfed by loaery. He
establish IJOOd lines of \ ·
will Jeeei.e a Si c:bect from the
Ollio ~ PUb1iiiiiDa Co. which
communil;:ation.
POMEROY, 0~10
co-spon10n the COllie• widt the

.··

.
dl8ea8e
&lt;'

)linies Sands:

program ·

c.

Gallipolil' finlt worban dodor IJtumped
for
of 18th Amendment _ 8-4

··. . available

J------------------------4
,'
Beat of the Bend:
-...,-

..

, ~ageB-l

·

p-·-

II

_Despite Penian Gulf ~is and dark
.1........all
A
'""'-! days, not
n,ewe is bad- 0U""t"

..

,

:squads respond to siX runs

U. S. demand for oU- drops
for fkst time in 8 yean

.

report

=.

·- .;_._Area·deaths--

Stocks

........

'.

··-···*·• •••":

E\lltortal ......................A2
Farm ...• ,....... ~ . .......... Dl-8.
Sporta ...........·............ c1-11·

CoDgress backs Bush. on mili

: WASHINGTON (UP!) -Con- of a lonna! declaration of war, an
gress, In an agonizing ahd action the United States has not.
momentous decision, approved taken since Japan _attacked
~turday a war against Iraq at
Pearl Harbor In 1941.. ·
any time a.fter midnight Jan. 1§
It Is the first time Congress has
to drive Saddam Hussein's Inva- passed it resollltlon authorizing
sion force out of_j{uwalt. "
force since the now-reviled Gulf
·The Senate ancH!ouse, deepiy of Tonkin 'resolution In 1964.
divided by tlie prospect of young · At tlie White House, Bush said:
Amerlca'ns once again going Into "This action ·by the Congress
.c~mbat, passed a resolution unmistakably demonstrates the
1/-Uthorlzlng President Bush •to United States' commlttment to
use any means - Including a the International demand for a
mtlltary offensive- to evlctlraq complete and unconditional wltb, ·
from Kuwait, wblch has occupied . drawal of Iraq from Kuwait. Tbls
since Aug. 2.
clear expression o! the Congress
The authority, passed by Con- represents the last best chance
'
gress after three ,days of SOJII· for peace."
searching debate; falls just short
Outside the White House alld on

.

How they ooted...

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The 52-47 vote by whlcb ,the Sfitate
Saturday approved a resolution authorizing a war against Iraq. ·
For- (52)
·
•
"Democrats for (10) : Breaux, La. ; Bryan, Nev.; Gore; Tenn.;
Graham, fla.; Hefiln, Ala.; Johnston, La.; Lieberman, Cq,nn.; ~eld,
Nev., Robb, Va., and Shelby, Ala.
Republicans for (42) : Bond, Mo. ; Brown, Colo.; Burns, Mont;
Chafee, R.I.; Coats, Ind.; Cochran, Miss.; Cohen, Maine; Craig,
Idaho; 'D'Amato, N.Y.; Danforth, Mo.; Dole, Kan.; Domenlcl N.M.;
'
.(See BOW, pare .U)
Capitol Hill, hundreds of proiesters chanted antl·war slogans
and carried signs opposing milItary force as the (:ongress

l

io

•

The
Daily Sentinel

Meigs Soilllld Water

r&gt;isliict..

'

I

Con•• ....,.,
,

(

(

t-

debated the resplutlons.
Although Bush has repeatedly
said he has not decided whether
to go to war, a massive ~oncen­
tratloil of.mnltary
mightmost
.
'

12 S..:tlono. 78 Pogoo
A Muttlmedloi,lnc: Newtjloper_

attack

of It American ..;. Is poised to
attack In Operation Desert
Shield.
But Senate Democratic leader
George Mitchell warned his
colleagues that they were "auth,
orlzlng war Immediately" . and
many others said that Bush may
be on the verge of pulling the
trigger.
·
Meeting In a rare Saturday
ses·ston, Congress approved the
resolution, first In the Senate and
then In the House, but far from
the "solid front" vote Bush
wan ted to convince Saddam and
Iraq that the 'l!nlted States Is
fully, united.
The Senate passed the resolu:
tlon 52-47 and the House com:

pleted approval by 250-183.
In the Senate, all but two
Reyubllcans, Sens. Charles
Grassley, R- Jowa, and Mark
Hatfield, R-Ore., voted for the
resolution along with io ·
Democrats.
In the House, 164 Republicans
and 86 Democrats voted for the
resolution and 179 Democrats,
three Republicans and Independent Socialist Bernard Sanders
voted against lt. ·
A short time earlier, Congress
rejected a Democratic alternative that would have Instructed
Bush to continue employing the
tightest embargo In modern
times and diplomacy to squeeze
Iraq out of.Kuwait.

from Aiken County, Ga., where he
Hess, who was residing with the
had been apprehended several victim's mother at the time of inci,
l • weeks ago. At the time of his es- dent, is now being held in the
POMEROY · Three men, one of cll)ie from the jail, Bass was char- Meigs Counly Jail.
them an escapee . from the Meigs' ged with domestic violence.
_Proceedings in Meigs. Counly
. · ~ounly Jail, pled gUilly to in·
John Hess pled guilly 10 gross against Hess followed his extradi·
dictments before Meigs Counly sexual imposition ori Friday. · .
lion from Logan Counly, W.Va.
Conu,non . Pleas Judge Fred . W. . Hess was charged with three Bond was continued in Hes$' case
- Crow m on Friday.
.
counts of sexual· contact with a in the amount of $50,000.
· ACconlin8 lo ~ias County • female minor, all three counts Both Bass and Hess had earlier
~~··· Prosecuting Attorney Sr.even L. being third-depee felonies.. ThCJ in- been . ~ indigent and arc
Story, Brian Bass; 34, Racine, pled cidents; according to Stoiy, occur- represented by r.felgs Counry
guiltyiOescapeooFriday.
·
red lie!Ween August and Novem- PubUcDefenderCharles·H, KnighL
Bass, along with Jonathari ber,l989. ·
Srory also reports thai a third •
Shawn Cline. escaped 'from Jhe
The name of t1w 9-year-old vic- defendant Thomas M. McCoun,
Meigs County Jail in August by tim is being withheld.
pled guilty .Friday to an indictment
chipping through the ceiling of the
· The coun accepted the plea and charging him with breaking and en'second tloor ceDblock and cm:"'ling deferred sentencmg pending the tering, a fourth deg~U felooy.
!h£c?ugh the att!'=· As charged Iii ,tl}e completion of a Victim Impact
The charge against McCourt
Indictment agamst Bass, eseape IS a StalemenL The ·sentencing has been arose from the breaking.and enter. fourth degree felooy.
set for Monday.
. ing at the Middleport residence of
Oine was app.-ehended in
Prosecutor Srory has recommen- Wallet Roush in August, l990.
Lebanon Township several days_af. ded a sentence of two consecutive
Sentencing of ·. McCourt is
ter the escape, and is now serving a two-year sentences on dte first two scheduled for Man:h 1, following
jail sentence on lbe c:Jtarge..
counts, and a concurrent two year the completioo 'o f a pre-sentencing·
. Bass was extradited th1s weelc sentence on the third.
investigation.

Lukens released
.from jail today

,

•

By BRIAN J, REEl)
·
Tlmes~Seatlnel News StarrJ

Loni

I

Partly sunny. Wgh In lower ·
'308.

·'fhree plead ·gullty.'to charges

cozan;

·School May Be ~ore
C~nfusing Than ·
.You Think '

'

I

°

.

.Insa"d·e:

Jlreata. •••• .t••••••••••• •••••••• A5

~ ZIINo. 48
Capyrig!J-.1 1891

reco8Jlized

..

C-1

•'

.

oonzaie.

.

Alont'tbe River ......... 81·8
Buallteu •..•..••.••••:...... :01·8
Com~ .................... lnaert
Clualflecls ................. Dt- 7

a

_...;..;....---Weather.....,_____

'

.

Road to Taritpa resu•nes

Alzheimer's

..

'

TilE BEST LAID PLANS of mice
and men fall short of expectations, which lire
demoiMtraled by Ibis exuberant Hannan Trace
faa prior to' Friday algbt's aame agalul SVAC

arel)rlvallloulben, wblcb the vlaltlnc Tonadoes
woa .7J:e0 to take tint place from I he Wildcats. See
the slory on C-2. ( Tlmes-Sentlael pboto by G.
Spencer Osbone)
~

•

·FTn#A .can .help low, .middle Vbiton _County. accepts·:o~fer income families. buy ~omes
of Mid-American ·on landfUJ ··
. .

~

Bf CHAI.lLENE 'HOEFLICH

income, tbree-m_ember fan\ily, with
a
total income of $14,500, she said
Tunes-Sentinel Slaff
that
family could qualify for · the
MIDDLEJ'ORT • Many low and
purchase
of a $40,000 home with
middle-income working class
locate a new landfill within the 1992 and would be capable of fan!ilies are missing out on ~ good
By MELINDA POWERS
no down payment and minimum
county, but said that they may accepting 1,000 tons of trash per deal when it comes to financ111g .the .
Tlmes-Sentlael staff
monthly payments of a low of $119
later · decide to oppose the con- day, .the article said.
· purchase of a new home or improvto a high of $324. .
. GALLIPOLIS - Commission- s tructlon of the landfill, the
The Gallla County ' Commls- ing the one they now Uve in.
·
The loans are given on a 33 year
ers In VInton County last week Wellston Sentry reported.
sloners are currently negotiating
That's ·the word from Jean Trusterm and the borrower must pay aU
Mid-American. of Canal Win- a contract with Mid-American
·agreed to accept an offer from
sell, Meigs County's housing
of the principal and a portion of the
_:__1\fi!l:,o\merlcan Waste Sys terns, chester, has applied to the Ohio dealing wtth the future opera tlon
specialist in Middleport's Office o.f
interest - at least one percent.
Environmental Protection of the GaiDa County landfill. Community DevelopmenL She
~~ the same company curSalaries of the loan recipients are
rently negotiating a landfill con- Agency to establish • a new Mid-American Is not asking to · works with the Farmers Home Ad·
re-evaluated each year and; contin. tract with the c:;allla County 133·acre landfill adjacent to the build a new site, as In VInton
ministration to ~vide lo.ans to
~ent upon increases in income, ad·
current 25-acre VInton County County, but are wanting to obtain
Commissioners.
·
Meigs Countians 'who arc not able
JUSunents are made as to the
· The . VInton commissioners site near · McArthur . .If the a permit to allow thj!m to !!ring In
.aniouitt' of the interest which the
to walk into • bank'and get a loan."
. agreed In a ·2·1 11ote to accept an application Is apprgvecf .by the ul&gt;-to 1;000 tons of waste per. (jay ·· . Accpnling · ·10 MrS. Tril~ll ·
~- tamily must pay..· · ··
..
: ·,
·. offer from Mld:Amerlcan to OEPA,·the facl)lty would open In .. to the Gallla Couniy site: ·
whose office is located at MidTh1s means, she explained, that a
T
Another significant · point _In . dlepon Village Hall, there are
family now may be able to pay
JEAN TRUSSELL
Mld-Amerlcan's agreement with
thousands of . dollars available to
only ooe percent, but six years
Vinton County Is· that no out-of- residents of Meigs County who
down lbe road, may have enough
.
state trash could be brought'lnto
hold jobs but find it impossible 10 solnewhal disappointing and feels . income that they would be .able 10
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis released on $2,500 bond, 10 the Vinton site without the . save enough . f~r a down payment that pan o( this is due to a lack of pay fiv~ or six · percenL However,
:woman was arrested Friday In ·.percent ·secured, Trooper Steve approval of the Vinton commls- on a home or 10 handle the large l!llderstanding about what _the she said, tliey would never be re-connection with an alleged as- Jagers stated Saturday.
'sloners. _It the Gallla. County · payments which are required' with program offers.
quired tO go back and
up the
:S.ult
on
a
patient
at
the
GallipOlis
A
Ia
I
t
1
lvl
·
Aceordi ng tosh
Mrs·' Trussell
.n., 1 prn . tal Center
coq~p n
nvo ng one Commissioners were to slgri regular bank loans.
.
.
- ,' those balance of interest
· those
....,..ve o en
·
patient at GDC led to arrest of Mid-American's current prop- ·, In_fact, she says, the FmHA has applying must ow some repay- earlier years.
• Tamara M. Jones, 31, was Jones , Ga1lla COunty Prosecutor . osai, waste from any of tl!e five . in its' l991 fiscal.year budget a total ment ability." She said \hal many
Applications for lo.ans are in.4rrested · Friday morning and Brent Saunde~s sa1li Saturday . contiguous states to Ohio could of. 5,000 to go to residents in familicl qwJify fot' FmHA where itiated through the Middlepon
· ~barged wl.th patient abuse, a ·Further details as to the .Inc!- be brought In, wlthou\.commls- the "very low" iJIC9nie category f~ both the husband and wire worlt but office ·(Phone 992-6782). It takes
·lourth degree felony . after an dents leading to Jones' arrest sloners' -approval. . ·
·
housinl!, .and .5823,000 for those Iii for minimum or slightly abo~e only $27 to determine eligibility for
Investigation . by the security · were not released.
The dissenting "vote · on . the . the '1ow" income ~ for wages.
one or the loans. Once • ~n
otflce of GDC and the Ohio State . A prell!nlnary hearing Is to be.· Vinton County commission, ~lm residents of Meigs, Athens and Yin.In many cases such families, she qualifies it takes approxima~ly 90
Wgbway Patrol led officials to scheduled with In five days of her . Beckner, said he was opposed to. ton Counties. All ~counties are said, cannot save""enough for a · days 10 get the loan approved
her. She was later arraigned and arrest; Saunders said.
the location of the landfill be- served by the
m1 Fanners down payment for a home or have
The onl chtiries besides the liPcause It wi1uld be above .the Home Adminstrati Office. ·
enough to . handle the. large plication
are the· closing costs .
~11'8·
aquifer that provides the 'drinkMiddleport Vtllage Counc'il liP- paymen!S·Wh1Ch folm, so they are which are usually between $4SO
.1'.
_
lng water to most of VInton . plied for and received an Ap- not eUg1ble_, for resu* banlc loans. and $500, Mrs. Trussell said. That
· • POMEROY ; Me~s Counry's Judy .Poner, paternal grandparents . County, Including McArthur, the palachlan Regional Development But, she pomted out, they probably iitcludes the atiOI'IIey's fee, the first
lwnner 'in the 1991 Ftrsl Baby of are Harok! and Charlene Thomas, Sentry reported. •
. . - housing Gnuu to ·open the Mid- · would qualify for a Fanners Home rnoiuh's payment and the required
· ihe New Year ConiCS! was Tessa Jo and paternsl great-grandmothers
.A geologist hired by Mid- dlcport office to serve as a so-bet- , Administration lo.an. .
· insurance.
.
Thomas, daughter of 'Illmmy Lan- ate Stella ~ IJid Mabel Wal- American believed the proposed
ween for Mcip Counlilns wanting
''The FmHA housmg program
Mrs. TrusseD llso works with
, . elm and Tunothy Thomas, Mid· burn, aU of Middleport.
site can support the landfill loans and the FmHA ciflice in for low and middle:income families . low-income elderly and handicapdleport.
·
. · A1l winner of the First B8by con· because of the presence of 250 to · AdtensCounty.
using a sliding scale may fund the ped Meigs Countians oo rehabilitaThe infant was born on Jan. 2 81 test which closed It noon Fr:iday 300 feet of Impermeable rocK, the
The office opened in May, 1990 purchase of either an existing house tion grants. She said that it is pos1:10 a.m. a1 the Holzer Hospital, . the . baby and her_ parents will attlcle said.
and 10 dale there have been 19 ap,. or new construction, without a sible for persons 62 or¥ over with
OaUipolis, She weighed seven rec;e~ve numerous. gifts from loc_al
Tbe Galli&amp; Coul)tY lan'dflll Is ·· plications
141 . purchase
or down payment, and with monthly their home paid for to qualify for a
pounds one ounce, and was 20 in- merchants. These include a $10 gift 'not located over an aquifer, and rehabilitate housins. .Six of those payments which a family can af. · 55;000 grant 'for home improVements required 10 make the
cbes long.
certificate frQm The Food Shop, a . presents little danger to area applicatioils have ainiatiY. been .liP- 'ford." explained Mrs. TrusselL .
The new baby has two sisters, $S gift certificate from the Mid· water tables by leaking, accord·
proved llid the odNn arc m variOUS _, Down payments are not ~ired home "safe and habitable." The
Iordann and Ashley, and two i11epon Department Store, a free lng to W. Kent Adklils, a . stages toward approval. · .
and the FmHA subsidizes the mter· only requirement for thole qualilled
brothers Michael · and Adam. meal a! Pleascrs, a $10 gift certifi· hydrogeologlst with Mid-. · Mrs. TrusseD describes the .,est;~. Trussell emphasized. .
to teceiVe . the gr~~~~t is thit tltey
Matemai grandparents .-e Tom and
(See FJRST, page A5)
Am~rlcan.
. response 19 the local . service as
US1f18 the example of a very low · remain in ~ home for three years.
.
- - 9- -~ --- -

.'

Charge made in GDC assaults
.

g:

sss

.t

--·

fee

of 1991_hom m· MeiD'S
-e .

. \

.

•

.•

••

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