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                  <text>Page-12- The Daily Sentinel .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

--Area deaths-----

EMS responds to 18 calls

Kasper,' Dayton; Mrs. Gene
(Cheryl) Allrire, Columbus, and
MIS. Harold (1eanlne) 'IBiley,
Bcnha M. Parker, 92. of Laurel Commcn:e, Texas; a son, Ccderic
ClifT Road, Pomeroy. died Satur- Parker, San Antonio. Texas. and a
day, Feb. 2, · 1991, · at Veterans son and daughter-in-law, Thomas
Memorial Hospital following a and Kate Parker, Pomeroy; 11
brief illness.
grandchildren and nine greatShe was a housewife. Born on grandchildren
.
Man:h 20, 1898 at Pomeroy, she
She was preceded in death by ht7
was the daughter of the late husband, Pearl, in 1966, and three
Thomas Radford and Amanda children, Manning, Gelaldinc and
Byrne Radford. She was a member Cleo Parker.
of the Laurel Qiff Free Methodist
FuneralselVices will be held at 1
ChW'Ch, the Laurel Cfiff Better p.m. Wednesday .at the Ewing
Health Club, and a member of the Funeral Home. The Rev. William
Women's Auxiliary of Veterans. Williams will officiate and burial
. Memorial Hospital.
·
wiU be in the Rock Springs
She is survived by tJuee Cemetery. There. wiU be no calling
daughters, Mrs. Herman (Gayle) hours.
'

Bertha M. Parker

HEAP deadline extended

'
The Gallia-Meigs Community
Action Agency has been notified by
the State HEAP office that the
deadline for the regular HEAP
program has been extended from
Jan. 3lro Feb. 15, by Gov. George
Vomov1ch.
This extension provides for an
additional · 10 days to apply for
HEAP. The emergency prognim,
however, continues 10 be in effect
through Man:h 29,
Assistance is limited to once per
heating seaSon which began Oct. I.
1990. ..

Low income persons with heatrelated utilities disconnected or
threatened by disconnect, or bulk
fuel persons whose supply is less
than 10 days meets the emergency
requirements of the em~ency
HEAP prognun. For further information residents may call367-7341
in Cheshire, or 992-6629 in Meigs
County. The Gallia County outreach program telephone number is
44CHl611 and the Meigs County
outteach number is 992-5605. The
toll free. hotline number for regular
Heap inquiries is 1-800-282-0880.

Proceeds benefit ODS
Proceeds of Saturday's dance at
The Locomotion in Pomeroy will
be used in crea~g a fund which
will allow the sending of boxes of
articles to the troops serving with
Operation Desert Storm, according
to Iva Sisson.
An event, "Support Simday," is
·
·
· · ·

Search continued
Meigs County officials are on the
lookout for David M. Persons of
West Columbia, W.Va., who escaped from the Mason County Jail
on Friday evening.
· lt is believed that Persons clim·
bed up the counhouse elevator
shaft and sonro the building's roof.
Persons, 28. has charges pending
in Meigs County stemming from an
indictment from the. Common Pleas
Court here, charging that he escaped from the Meigs County Jail
in August, 1990. Persons had
refused .10 waive extradition to
Ohio 10 face those charges.
The escapee is described as
being 175 pounds, 6 feet tall, with
brown hair and brown eyes, and
tatoos on bolh arms.

being planned for this Sunday li'om
noon 10 6 p.m. Nwnerous groups
will perform and admission is free,
stated Sisson. The event will aid in
sponsoring "'peration Feed Desert
Storm."
.
·
· Si$son reported that there will be
twO radio stations providing li~ ·
remotes from the event and anyone
interested in assis · should call
Mrs. SissOn at 992~097 or 7422187 no later duin Tuesday evening.
A schedule of events sbould be
released Wednesday, according 10
Sisson.

Hospital news
Vetenns Memorial Hospital
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS •
.Charles Bissell, Long Bottom and
Thcrea Hendrix, Pomeroy. · ·
·
SATURDAY DISCHARGES ·
Zelpha SteWart.
.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS •
William Hughes, Pomroy; and
Avanelle Bass, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES
None.

Monday, Febnlarv 4. 1991

RESCUERS RESPOND • The Pomeroy Emerxency Squad and
other EmergeJICY Medical Senk:e persoonel respoaded to tbls
scene. across rrom Smith-Nelson Motors In Pomeroy oa Moaday
monliag lll'OIUld 9 a.m. Mark Mattqx, a worker for lbe. Village
PoDJeroy, was apparently working llloag the riverbank when be fell
several feet over tbe edge of tbe bank. Mattox: was tranSported to
Veteraas MeDJorlal Hospital

AHA kicks-off campaign

Units of Meigs County' Emer·
gency Medical Services ~dcd
10 18 calls for usisiiUICC over the
weetencL
.
On Saturday at 1:28 p.m., Racine
units went 10 · McKenzie Ridge
Road for Orville McFI!DII. At 2:05
p.m., Life Flight landed at Soulba'n
High School and ~ MeFhann 10 Grant Medical Center. At
3:30 p.m., Rutland squad went 10
Hill10p Road for Woodrow Kuhn.
Kuhn wu taken 10 Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
•·
At 4:35 p.m.. Middleport squad
went 10 Soulh Third Avllflue for a .
tree fire. At 4:48 p.m., Rutland
sauad went 10 New Llma ROQII for
~ey NUlL Nutt . was ~n 10
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
5:57 p.m., Pomeroy · squads and
Chester Fire Department went to
Fllalwoods Road and Pomeroy.Pike
for an auto accident. Michelle
Friend, Leslie Gilkey and Linda
Gilkey were all taken 10 VeteranS.
At 7:39 p.m., Syracuse squad went
10 Nyc Avenue for Terry Day, who
was tteated bUt not 11'811Sp011ed· At
9:25.p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10
Pomeroy N~R and ~hab Cel;l·
ter for Thena . Hendrix. Hendrix
. Wll$ taken 10 Veterans;
. .
At. 10:08 p.m., Syracuse squad .
went 10 Srare 'Route 7. AnllCite
Pierce was taken to Veterans. At

.

IO:IS p.m.; Pomeroy squad wcnt 10
Pomeroy Nursing and Rebab Center for Bertha Palter. Parter was
traJISpOitCd 10 Veterans. At I :36
p.m., Middleport squad went 10
Oliver Street for Lena Martin. who
was taken 10 Holzer Medical Ceoter.
At 5:41 a.m. ' on Sunday,
Pomeroy squad went 10 Pomaoy
Nursing and Rehab C~ter for W'llliam Hughes, wbo wu tniJISPOI'tCd
to Veterans. At 12:37 p.JII., bcine
squad went 10 a brush lire at the
Huckwagner residence. At 3:01
p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10
Locust Street for James Ward.
Ward was taken to Veterans~ and · ·
later taken to Holzer. At. 3:52 ,p.m.,
.Pomeroy squad went 10 Liberty
Lane for Avanelle Bass.. Bass was
taken 10 Veterans. At 5:43 p.m.,
Scipio Township Fire Department
and Rudand !ire department went
to a brush fire at the Howard
property.
At 7:26 a.m., Rutland squad
went 10 Leadi!lg Creek Road for
Rena Marshall, who was trealed but
not lransporteil. At 7:41 a.m.,
Pomeroy squad went to Memorial
Drive for Sydney Woodson, who
was taken 10 Holi.¢r. At 8:57 a.m., .
Pomeroy squad and rescue went 10
East Main Street for Mark Mattox,
who was transoorted to Veterims.

Ohio Lottery

Pitt tops
Seton Hall
five, 86-80

Pick 3:845
Pick-4: 6759
Cards: 2-H; A-C;
6-D; A-S

Page.3

•

•
Vol .4 1, No .200
· Copyrighted .1991

Low tooigbt ia mid 40s.
Wednesday blgb near SO. Cbance
ofrain 50 percent.
•

1 Section, 10 Pages .26 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-:-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday. February 5, 1991

USS Missouri Shells Iraqis for second day
~Y DAVID ALEXANDER
United Press 'International

The USS Missouri shelled Iraqi
positions In Kuwait for the
second straight day Tuesday , the
Pentagon said, and sources said
the historic battleship would be
joined soon by It sister ship, the
USS Wisconsin. .
Saudi Arabia said It had made
arrests In the bus attack late
Sun&lt;!ay night In which two U.S.
soldiers .were .slightly Injured,
and Pentag9n sources sald Iraq
could be preparing for another .

T:wo Middleport women hurt in wreck

Two Middleport woman suf- apparently lost contr;ol of his
The 1991 door-to-door campa!gn Phail, Syracuse; Jean Alkire. fered minor Injuries Saturday vehicle and drove off the left side
of the Ameziean Heart AssocJation Racine; Millie Midtifl, Bedford after the car they were riding ln or the roadway . His 1983 Ford
will get underway this week. The Township; Kay Proffitt, Lebanon struck another on Meigs County Thunderbird then struck.a ditch,
overturned, and came to rest on
goal for this year's campaign is Township; Thrri Shain, Letart Road 26. ·
Its top.
Township;
Grace
Weber,
Olive
Linda
A.
Gilkey,
42,
and
Leslie
ss.ooo.
Sellers was cited for driving
Toiwnsh1p;'
Karen
Baker.
Orange
Gllkey,
20,
were
both
taken
to
Nora and Denver Rice have
under
the Influence and failure to
Township;
Janet
Bolin,
Rudand
.
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
by
~ lhc more than 200 packets
.He was Uninjured, 'accontrol.
wl!ich· will be distributed 10 area Township; Linda . Montgomery, Meigs County EMs after the
cordfng
to
a report from the State
Salem
Township;
.
Cathy.
Cooper
accident
In
Chester
.
Township.
·
chairmen. As volunt,ccrs move .
Highway
PatroL
and
Perry
Harris,
.
Salisbury
Linda
was
treated
for
a
shoulder
throu~h neighboJ'hoOds to cqllcct
conmbutions,they .will be di~bul· Township; Eva Howard, Scipio contusion and was later released,
ing information abOut bean disease. . To\vnship, and Rhonda Dailey, Sut· as was Leslie, a hospital spokes·
woman said .Monday.
Research, community, edpcation ton Township. (See phDIO page 6)
The · American Red Cross
Accord! ng to a report from tbe bloOdmobile
and professonal programs are sup-.
will be in Meigs
Gallla-Melgs post of the State County Wednesday, from 1 p.m to
ported through lhe contributions.
1 '
• ~•
Highway Patrol, · Linda Gilkey
Hean disease is the nwnber one
Continued
from
page
1
was
westbound when she ap· 5:30 p.m . .at the Senior C11izcns
killer in Meigs County, according
Mulberry
Heights,
preached the Intersection ot Center,
to latest statistics which show that set on fire. Another crashed on Its
Pomeroy.
heart disease accounts for 52 per- way and lts pilot was kllled,anda County Road 26 from County
cent of all deaths in Meigs County.. t~lrd landed on a road and was Road 25. Gilkey falled to stop for
As. a "thank you " . to the damaged ," the president said. · a stop sign at intersection.
Rafsanjanl added, "You know Gllkey's car then struck the side
volunteers who wil be going
/
throughout the county, McDonalds, that during the Second World or a crossing car. driven by
Pleasers, and Daily Queen have . War, Switzerland held about .300 Michelle L. Friend, resulting ln
South Central Ohio
donated (ood and beverage planes belonging to the warring · heavy damage to both vehicles.
Becoming cloudy Monday
Gilkey was cited for failure to
sides and kept them untll the end
coupons.
.
night, with a chance of showers,
The area chairmen in charge of of the war and thls was not . stop at a stop slgn.
seeldng volunteers to walk in their regarded a break of neutrality." · A Racine man escaped serious and a low In the middle 40s.
''The Iraqis will certainly not Injury Sunday after the car he Chance or precipitation Is 30
districts are · Susie Soulsby,
Pomeroy; Kathy Hood and Lois ask us to allow them to use these wu drl~ng fllpjled over off of percent. Cloudy Tuesday, with a
. chance of showers, and highs In
McElhinny,
Middleport;
Dee planes ' during the current war Meigs County Road 20.
Jeffrey L. Sellers, 29, was the middle 50s. Chance of rain Is
Brown, Minersville; Martha Me- and even if they ask us wewlllnot
accept," the president sal!J.
traveling eastbound when he 30 percent.

cross-border raid to probe allied
positions.
A top Soviet diplomat flew to
Tehran to discuss an Iranian
peace Initiative, and Iraq sus·
pended fuel supplies to civilians ,
indlcating that allied air strikes
against e Iraqi Infrastructure
have bee successful.
The
ssourl trained Its 16·
Inch
ns on Iraqi artillery
poslt1o11 on Kuwait's Persian.
Gulf ast and its 2,000·pound
shells found their targets, the
Pentagon said. On Monday the ·

A. senior .Pentagon officer .
Missouri opened fire for. the first positions in Kuwait and southern ston of the U.s . Central Comtime since the Korean War. Iraq, one senior mU!tary official mand in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, meanwh!le, suggested that Iraq,
targeting Iraqi conc.rete- said, "It's like poking Into a said at a ·news briefing Monday which has no air reconnaissance
reinforced bunkers In Kuwait.
rotten board. Once you poke that "a feasible explanation" for or satellites, might try another
Ready to join the Mlssourlln through, you can go like blazes ." the attack was that lt was "a foray . lnto Saudi Arabia In
the sheiUng was the Wisconsin,
Saudi Arabia said several free-lanl!f! terrprlst act ," possl- coming days to seek intelligence
which also Is equipped with . foreigners were arrested for an bly "someone upset with the on allied positions. The. Iraqi
heavy artillery, to join In the attack In the Red Sea port of situation here."
· force could approach dlvlslon
shelling of enemy targets, ac- Jeddah late Sunday night on a
Tight security has been In force strength of perhaps 10,000, said
cording !O a Pentagon official .bus carrying U.S. soldiers In In Saudi Arabia since the Iraqi the source.
who requested anonymity. Both which two of them and their invasion of Kuwait on Aug. 2, and
"It's very safe to expect in a
battleships have previously fired Saudi .guard were slightly In- Col. Ahmed AI-Robayan , a spa- few days that we will see an effort
Tomohawk cruise missiles at
jured by flying glass. The official kesman for the Joint Arab to probe o.ur lines," the official
Iraqi positions. ·
Saudi Press agency gave no · Forces of the .coalltlon, Monday said. "With no air (reconnassaDiscussing the Increased
details of the arrests.
discounted the threat of further lnce) and no satellites, he has to
do lt the old·fashloned way ."
Marine Mat . Gen. Robert John· attacks.
bombing and· shelling of enemy

Meigs County ·will lose tax
money if mines close down

Bloodmobile "Visit

I ranUJ' n

'
By BRIAN J, REED
SeDtinel News Staff

expensive equipment at the site and Wickline reponed Monday that
in the event that the mines were
Meigs County stands to lose a closed. the propeny .would
considerable amount of the $1.6 depreciate "tremendously", causing
million in taxes now paid by the taxes received to plummet.
· Southern Ohio Coal Company if
· Following an impomptu meeting
American Electric Power follow s· between AEP officials and the
through on lhe possible closing of county commissioners on WednesSOCCO-owncd mines in the . day, Commissioner Richard Jones
county.
· stated that county residents would
According 10 Meigs County see "big-lime layoffs and curtail·
Auditor William R. Wickline, real · mellt of county services" if the
estate and personal property taxes mines were indeed closed.
received last year from AEP on
Jones reported on Monday afterSOCCO property in Meigs County noon that plans were .undeiWay 10
added up 10over $1,627,000.
get county commissioners from all
~...,_,u:.i'-'1 , tf!@! $1.6 qlilliol}, $~~ P ., j(Tecf,¢ c.PII!lti.es and govemme.rual
was distnboted to tile A,lexaniler ·bodies · •toj!'clher with AEP and
Local School District in ' 1991 and SOCCO officials 10 discuss the fu$803,490 10 the · Meigs Local ture of the local mining industry.
School District.
Jones · had nothing concrele to
Wicltline said that the county report, however•.. but did anticipate
owes a lalge part of the appraised soch a meeting 10 be scheduled
value of the mines 10 the mass of

Weather

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

NEW CHAMBER OFFICE • The Meip
County Chamber or Commerce has relocated In
the Carnegie Buildilig (former Pomeroy
Library) oo East Second Street. Pictured, ten to
right, are Tom Reed of the Chamber of Com-

•

merce Board !I Directors, Chamber Director
Elizabeth Schaad, and Ruth Powers representing the Meigs CountY Public: Library. Tbe
Library's board of. directors authorized the oc- ·
cupatlon or the building by the c:bamber • free or
cllarge.

·Pomeroy Council approves
ordinance ·readings Monday ·
By BRIAN J, REED
Sentinel News Starr
The ' first reading on a fire
department ordinance and the third
reading .on the village wning or,
dinance were conducted when
Pomeroy Village Council met in
regular session on Monday evening.
. .
The lire department ordinance, if
passed. would establish a new set
- of by-laws for the department · in
compliance with the Ohio Revise&lt;)
Code. The last by-laws established
for the department were passed in
1946.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Danny
~irkle was present at the meeting
and gave his input to council on the
pro)Xlsed ordinance. The only
maJOr changes in the proposed or-

· dinancc involves-a limitation of active membership 10 40 (although
current membership would be
"grandfathered" in t)le department
if needed).
A clause regarding payment of
firemen who respond to fires was
also added at the meeting last night.
The third reading on the village
zoning ordinance resulted in the
fiJUowing vote: Betty Baronick,
yes; Bryan Shank, no; Bruce Reed,
yes; Bill Young, yes; Thomas
Werry, no; Larry Wehrung, yes.
That ·ordinance will now be
published ·in die newspaper in accordance with law before a final
vote.
Letters both in favor and in op·
position 10 an application for a liquor license transfer to a proposed
ravem and restaurant in the Starl&lt;
~uilding on East Main Street were

reviewed last night by council. Six
letters in opposition to the 11'811sfer
were nx:eived from members of the
Trinity Congregational Church
(which is located near the back
door to the proposed bar location).
In addition. a petition with over
)~ signatUres in favor of lhe bar
was presented as well.
A hearing has been requested on
the license transfer, but no date for
that hearing has been set by the
Ohio Department of Liquor Control
in Columbus.
Council also granted permission
to the Pomeroy Merchants Association 10 block off the upper and
middle parking lots for a car show
on July 20.
'
In final action, council approved
· the mayor's report of fines collect·
ed for the month of JanJUII)' in the
· amount of$3,981.

•

next week.
Jones said that AEP officials
were meeting wi lh the last two
counties affected today (Gallia and
Jackson) and that he ba&lt;! been in
contact with AEP people on a
regular basis since last week's announcement.
AEP announced a week ago that
it w.ould begin considering itS options in complying with the Clean
Air Act of 1990 - which forces AEP
10 decide between installation of
scrubbing equipment at the General
James M. Gavin Plant and fuel
switching to coal with a lower sulphur content. The Iauer, if opted
.for, .. would fo.,:e the. closing of
Meigs Mlii'CS '2 and 3 I, which
produce the high sulphur ·coal now
, being u:sed at Gavin.
,
An announcement on the fate of
SOCCO mines is expected to be
made by mid-1991.

RAC charges steelworkers
with unfair labor tactics
(

In a release February 4, · the RavensWOOd facility.
been a total ol 546 separate inciRavenswood Aluminwn Corpora"This NLRB decision along denis of violence and damage to
lion ~C) received official notifi· with the amendments Judge Fox property. Th.ere were approximatecation from the National Labor made to his injunction last week ly 110 separate incidents from
Relations Board that the NLRB has are important in helping us ensure November I, the date the strike ·
issued a complaint against the the safety of our employees," said started, to December 2i, the date
United Steelworkers of America Don Worlledge, presient of . the state.of West Virginia ruled lhat
and its Local5668 on charges that Ravenswood Aluminum Corpora- striking members of lhe union were
the USWA has engaged in unfair tion. "The increase in lhe harass- eligible for unemployment comlabor practices.
ment of our employees must be pensation benefits. Since DeCember
21, there have been approximately
The NLRB hl!S set a hearing stopped."
date of May 20 on 'two of RAC's
By scheduling a hearing, the 436 separa1e incidents.
Of all the incidents; 36 percent
five charges lhat the union. lhrough NLRB has found there is sufficient
its pickets, engaged in harassment evidence against the United Steel- have taken place at private resiof Ravenswood employees and workers of America to take the dences, 42 pencent have occurred at
damaged their propeny. These two maner to the next step in the pro- the plant's entrances and 22 per. charges have been consolidated and cess. Ultimately, this could result cent have happened at other locacite:
.
,
.
in the USWA bein~ ci!cd for unfair tions.
RAC deplores these senseless
• Blockmg employees veh1cles . labor practices agamst RAC.
acts
of violence and vandalism and
as they enter and leave work;
There has ·been a significant
urges
all indivi&lt;!uals i~volved in
· Threatening employees;
· increase in the number of incidents
this
strilce
to act with respect and
- Flattening tires and otherwise related 10 the strike by members of
damaging employees' vehicles; and the USW A Local 5668 against dignity for themselves, their families, local business, RAC employ• Shining lights into the eyes of RAC.
employees and sounding air horns
As of Janu~ry 16, there have ees and its subconuac10rs.
as these workers enter and leave

Major provision removed from bill

· What
of new services would you like to
see from Bank One?
·
'

Why would one of the most successful banks in
America ask such a thing?Simple.\\.e ~rurfuturesuc­
. (Be reasbriable now, Free samples and hot tubs cess depends on making you feci good about our bank.
don't.count.) Ifyou can think of something that gets you
So we're willing to go a little farther than the
excited about banking with Bank One, let us know.
average banker to win your business and keep it.
No fooling. \M! waru: to hear about it.
Along with new products and services, and
0&lt;991-0.""'""'"'

.

•

.

'the convenience and stability of one of the nation's strongest banks, this unusual attitude is what sets us apan.
.To see our approach
.,. · .
in action, stop by the I:JA AIV r.~:/1::!'
closest Bank One.
~wn
'-'.I"W'j;;'.
Our door's always open. \Vhatever it t'.ake{. ·

..

.

lofnnbuRJIC

__,_..,

•

·. 'I'
I

~·- __)

•'

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COLUMBUS, Ohlo (UPI) -A chlef sponsor.
,,
provision of a "living will" bill
~hat would have allowed lmme·
The Ohio Right to Life Society
'illaiP famlly members to make and the Ohio Catholic ConferPnce
'llfe·or·death decisions for their wanted lawmakers to remove the
terminally Ill and comatose provision that gives close relarelatives has been removed from lives authority to " pull the plug"
or ' to prevent ·someone from
.the measure.
The Senate · Reference and
being placed on l!le support
Oversight Committee heard tes· equipment, said Sen . Eugene
tltnony Monday on a substitute Watts, R-Galloway, chairman of
bill, which hicks an original the committee.
pr6vlslon giving close relatives
Gov. George Volnovlch also
the authority to remove life · had "some questions about the
support systems from hospital
language" In that section of the
patlents who have not signed b!U, said spokewoman Caryn
llvlng wills.
Candlsky, but :'he did not speclfl·
'l:he change leaves out ap cally ask that It be taken out."
estimated 85 percent of the - Watts said opposition to the
people who might be placed on language possibly endangered
life support . systems, . but the · qulckpassageolthebiU , whl!'hls
. Issue will be reconsidered In the ' a priority measure this year for
House.• said Sen~ Betty Montgo- Senate Republican leaders.
.,..ery; R-Perrysburg, the bill's
Griffith Thomas of the Amerl·
.j

-

......

----~-~-

can ~ssoclatlon of Retired Persons In Youngstown and William
Dunlap of the Ohio Hospital
Association said the provision
should be returned to the bill.
" You've taken out one of the
most Important parts of the bill,"
Thomas· told the committee.
•· We ' r e e xt r e m el y
disappointed."
The main thrust or the bill Is to
allow people to draw up living
Wills disclosing their wishes
shoul&lt;! they beocme comatose
and terminally 111. Close relalives would be able to appeal to a
probate court on narrow grounds
If they felt that medical workers
were not following the patient's
wishes.
OhlolsoneofonlylOstatesthat
do not have provisions for llvlng
wtlls.

-erlea

REGIONAL DIRECTOR • Nell ":~::!

&amp;epoD VD DIIKiui !I tile All

SoapiJCJK DerbJ,..-dY landed I mectb&amp; ol
tbe Melp COIIIItJ Soap Ia 0.111 "-dab.
He o«tml tlpl ud
ll*eiD... deriiJ
operatlolll proatl...., Tile All ~ Soap

adm

-- --~~-~~~~·---.-~,~·~~j~.~~-~~~----------·--~~7-----~~-~--------~--~~~~~----~~--~~

�.''

Commentary
•

The Daily Sentin.el .
Ill C011rt Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTE&amp;E8T8 OF TBE MEIGS-MASON AREA

A~

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ROBERT L; WINGETT
Publlaber •

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CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Geo~al Maaacer

PAT WHITEHEAD
AulltUII Publiiber/COIIIroller
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300.
words long. All fetters are subJect to editing an~ must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUl be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal~
. ties.

page-2-The Daily Sa~
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Tuesday. FebrUary 5. 1991

Some state Insurance fraud Investigators are Juallng 40 or
more cases at a time and simply
· are unable to determine whether
some claims are fraudulent.
In addition, some .state Insurance regull!tory agencies don't
want to fight a poor Immigrant ·
worker, even one who Is lying.
In any event, It Is the employer
who gets n~ed. The company
gets a bad name among l~u·
ranee companies lor Its "safety"
record, and Its Insurance preml·
urns are Increased. The cost of ·
that Is passed on to the com- ·
paily's customers.
One c.o mpany In a state with
many Hispanic workers told our .
associate Les Whitten · that 25
percent
Its compen5atlon .
cases are suspected to be traudu·
lent. And the company estimates
that 80 percent of the dubious
cases are filed by Hispanic
worKers - a figure out of
proportion to the racial mtx of tbe
company's workers. Many of the
cases were flied by the same
lawyers, using tbe same doctors
to buttress the medical case.
The company asked for anonymity •test It be accused of
discrimination or bigotry when.
Its Immigrant workers · had
simply !allen ~to a b,ad con game
out of poverty and Ignorance. A
spokesman said the great maJorIty of Its Hispanic workers are
honest. And a national survey
shows that honest workers' compensation claims far outweigh
the dishonest one~.

of

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK ·
UPI Senior Editor

Support Wednesday's bloodmobile
Dear Editor:
'l'lle demise of Marton EbersJ&gt;.
ach, Meigs County Chairperson
tot the American Red Cross
(ARC) Bloodmobile leaves a
fiagrant void. Plaques which
read for achieving 100% of goal In
blood collection' and 'outstandIng participation' was presented
to Marion by ARC for her
dedication and perservance In
attracting blood donors during
her 6 year tenure as Bloodmobile
Chairperson. Marion Ebersbach
placed these plaques at the
Bloodmobile collection 'site' to
acknowledge the blood donors for
tbelr loyal support; the people
wbo made each blood drive
successful.
Community support for the
blood drive Is 'ongoing' and more
uraent than · ever at this time.
Thanks must be given to the
businesses, service organ lzatlons, volunteers and news media
who promote each visit and

Insure-Its continuance. The Qual·
lty Print Shop of Middleport has
continually supported the Bloodmobile visits for 20 years, supply.
lng posters, free of charge, for
distribution. throughout Meigs
County. Otbet businesses have
also assisted, advertising the
lorthcm:nlng dates on their outdoor signs and In their shops,
donal!ng their food products to
promote blood donations, and
generously assisting the local
high schools In sponsoring their
ARC blood drives.
On behalf of the people, whose
lives are assisted and saved
dally, we Invite you to support the
coming Bloodmobile visit this
Wednesday, Feb. 6th at the
Meigs Senior Center from 1-5:30
p.m.
Sincerely,
Jeanne Braun
RSvP Coordinator
Meigs Senior Center

Proud o_f son
punesh you for your sins," and
signed himself Jesus Christ." My
son wants you to know, you
misspelled punish. And L want
you to know that my Lord can
take care of his own business.
To the people whO have written
letters of encouragement, whatever your feelings to this war, I
thank you.
I am very proud of my son even
If my heart Is brealtlni beeause
he lain constant danger. So do not
spend your eneretes tryine to
coulllrYJMII·
discourage him. Put tbem to
You bave tbe right to protest,
good use. Volunteer lor the Red
~~eeaue of men and women wbo
Crosa,
help the needy or Just go
f!Jbl for treedom. You do not
about
your
business, Leave our
bave tbe moral right to make
Troops alone.
their JOb !laJ'dlr.
Margaret Bishop
AI for the person who said "I'll l
Rutland, OH 45773
Dear Editor:
tlbll Is a letter to the people
wllo quote "Oppose the War, but
1IQIPIIH tbe troops." Enough
support! They do not need your
JdDd of aupport.
My.IOD, wbo Is a Marine on tl)e
fi'OIIt 11- of Saudi has recelv4!d
Jetter~ from tbe Athens Peace
coaJitiOD barUIIng and condem1111 b1m for bll participation In a
"aJDfUJ war". He not only has to
tllbl IIIUJII! Huueln but his own

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J.

UPI Sportl Writer
Revenge and Keith Jennings
have apparently cured the East
Tennessee State Buccaneers of
their fear of heights.
The Buccaneers celebl'3ted
their first-ever appearance Into
UPI'sTop 10 Monday with a 93-70
Southern Conference victory
over the Tennessee- Chattanooga
Moccasins.
East Tennessee State had
reached its previous higheSt
point In the poll two weeks ago
with a climb to No·. 13, but the
Buccaneers ran Into the same
wall that teams such as nontraditional basketball power Nebraska hit. When teams first get
to that point, something seems to
snap, and a poor . effort often
ensues.
" We didn't play well, and they
(the players) would be the llrstto .
admit that," East Tennessee
State Coach Alan LeForce said of
the first meeting between the two
teams , a 76-74 Tennesse.e Chattanooga victory. "We had
won 13 In a row but justcame,out
flat.
'
"Tonight · they remembered
that. They may have had a point
to prove. "

Jack Anderson

This Is the way the racket · The lawyers buttress their
bogus cases wtth doctors who, for
works :
a
price, will supply misleading
A poorly paid worker Is InJured
testimony
. For example, a
away from work, or h1,1rt on the
worker
gets
a minor toe Injury
Job In a minor way. Through the
·
while
playing·
soccer. He vows
grapevine of other Immigrants,
that
the
Injury
happened
at work,
he or she learns the name of a .
and
the
crooked
doctor
testifies
Ia wYer who speaks his own
that
there
Is
permanent
damage
language and ts wUI!ng to fake or
to the leg.
. · · ·
hype tbe workers' compensation
Insurance
companies
and state
claim. Many of the Immigrants
agencies
choose
to
pay
the
claim
go along because they think It's
rather
than
go
to
the
expense
of
business as usual In their new
fighting
It
In
court.
The
chances
country.
of proving the fraud are sum.

Yeutter's first gaffe

Letters to the editor

By .JOHN HENDEL

Fraudulent .i nsurance claims ·o n the ris~

·

WASHINGTON -It seems Clayton Yeuiter got Into the partisan
hurty-burly even before he was elected Republican National
Committee chairman.
Speaking In Lincoln, Neb., the week before the national commltiee
met to rubber-stamp his selection by President Bush, Yeutter said the
Democr(lts who voted against the resolution granting Bush tile
authority to go to war In the Persian Gulf would be called to account in
the 1992 elections.
Yeutter specifically mentioned Sen .. Bob Kerrey, D-Neb., as one
such person, and that set oft a !low! of protest from Kerrey, .a
decorated Vietnam veteran, and Democratic officials, who accused
the GOP-chief-to- be of trying to make crass political gains out of an
·Issue that should be non-partisan.
Well, In truth Yeutter's remarks were off.base, but not because of
the reasons cited by the Democrats, who of course were trying to
make political capital themselves out of Yeutter's slip.
Yeutter's problem was timing, and as one of the smartest political
strategists In the country, Richard Nixon, has said repeatedly, ttrnlng
ls,cruclalln politics.
·Specifically, Yeutter started polntlrig the finger at the Democrats
far. too soon. In the first weeks of fighting, few people In the country
want to hear politicians snapping at each other when there still is a
giow of national unity and majority support for the troops, If not the
p()Ucy that got them to Saudi Arabla.'.ln short, Yeu tter runs the r]sk of
oHendlng· his audience.
:There Is no doubt In the world ·that the votes that were cast on the
Pl!rslan G11lf resolu lion will be used In the next campaign, J:m t it Is
about 18 months too soon to raise the Issue.
·
A prudent politician would walt to see how the fighting develops Yj!utter should remember that many Democrats and Republicans
deserted Lyndon Johnson on VIetnam when the war went sour.
,It Is all very well to pledge supportfor the Bush policy riiiw, but It
01ight not be very popular when the body bags start coming back from
the Gulf and candidates who want to survive in 1992 may be looking
for some other position. And while Yeutter Is Bush's creature In the
politic~! are~a, ~e also Is supposed to be serving the entire GOP and
·.• ·
not just·the Republican In the White House.
In any case, ' Yeuw!r probably didn't help hny Republican
candidates with his comments In Lincoln and he ·may well have
telegraphed the 1992 Republican strategy so far ahead of the
campaign that vulnerable Democratsw.lll have plenty of time to build
d~fenses against such attacks,
·In fact, most of the people in Congress who opposed the original
Gulf use-of-force resolution In both the House and Senate established
sqme vestige of a defense against future political attacks by voting to
support the war effort lmmedlat.ely after the shooting started.
:Their 1992 opponents may disparage that as. in the old phrase,
locking the barn door after the horse has skedaddled, but it does give
ttiose people a pro-troops vote to point to.
;Allin all, it was a rocky start for the secretary of agriculture who
was transformed overnight Into a political expert by declaration of
the preside!) I. But Yeutter Is, by all accounts, an exceptionally bright
- ~rson and perhaps will profit from the on-the· job training he Is now
undertaking.

East Tennessee State dumps
Moccasins 93-70; ·Pitts wins

'

WASHINGTON · - A mix of
new Immigrants ~ the recession,
ln.s urance woes and sleazy doctors and lawYers has combined to
perpetijate an Insurance fraud.
And the con game Is manipulatIng compJU!Ies Into paying In·
creaslngly heavy compensation
for bogus worker Injuries.
Hardest hit are the construction, restaurant, hotel and manu·
facturing firms where numbers
of semi-skilled Hispanic and
other Immigrants find
employment.

·'

Tiered high school diplomas ·
performance based dlplo.mas.
Under the new ·rules, students
who complete their high ·school's
course work but do not pass a 9tb
grade proficiency test will earn a
"certificate of attendance."
Those who only pass the 9th
grade test will get a "diploma of
basic competence". A "diploma
with commendation" goes to
students whO pass both the 9th
and 12th grade tests. The 1994
class of ·high school graduates
will be the first ones to receive
differentiated · diplomas, II the
system stays Intact.
There are many problems with
this new, system. Many students,
especially the learning disabled ·
and handicapped low·achievers,
could suffer adverse effects from
dlplom·a differentiation as they
explore Job opportunities. High
school graduates could be Ia bled
as unnecessary stigma are assigned to them. Tiered diplomas
may also discourage students
are lnntct an even higher dropout rate. Some schools may also
be Inclined' to prepare students
for the test rather than teaching
the traditional curriculum. Many

Last fall; only 30 percent ofthe
state's 9th graders passed a test
designed to · show whether they
have achieved at least a minImum level of proficiency. Presently, only 40 to 45 percent of Ohio
high school graduates go directly
to college, well below the nation-.
wide average of 66 percent.
Clearly, If we are to compete.ln
Ieday's high-technology, global
economy, then we must better
prepare our. young people lor
these changing economic times.
One ''solution" that Is generating
~ lot of interest and controversy
Is a new state law that requires
high school students to pass a
series ot standardl~ed prof!·
clency tests as a condition for
earning a high school diploma.
Under this law, students must
pass the test before they gel their
diploma - regardless of how
successfu I they are In their
overall coarse work. The tests
examine students' competency
In reading, writing, mathematics
and citizenship.
In addition· to linking a stu·
dent's graduation to his or her
performance on a test, the new
law also calls for a series of

students may also concentrate on
how to pass the test rather than
studying all of their s)lb)ects.
'It Is easy to agree with the Idea
of tying proficiency tests with
tiered diplomas. Everyone wants
our high school children to
achieve more and receive credit
for their performance. However,
this form of proficiency testing
wiD on)y Identify !allures and will
not offer the necessary ldentlfl·
cation and Intervention to attempt to remedy these problems.
As the new system has begun to
take effect, teachers, students
and parents have voice~ concern
about the fairness of focusing so
much attention on a single test.
Because of these concerns, there
Is a good chance that the
legislature will rework the law.
Already four bills have been
Introduced to modify this law,
Including Senate&lt;l!lll 43, which I
have co-sponsored.
This legislation calls for a
single proficiency test to be given
to all 9th grade students enrolled
l_n Ohio public schools. The test
would be used as an evaluation of
students abilities In reading, '
writing, arithmetic aJid citizen-

Sen. ]an

ship. The test would be used as an
evaluation of ability and not as a
pass/fall option. The test would
target those students at risk and
give school systems an opportuntty to .Improve the . students
prospect for success. Senate Bill
43 also proposes that we return to
a single diploma and do away
with assigning different degrees
of achievement. High School
graduates should be able to read
and write on a 12t~ grade level.
However, an 18 year-old should
not suffer the stigma offallure or
the prospect of a bleak employ.
ment future due to result of a
poor test score and the receipt of'
a '.'certificate of attendance,"
but no high school diploma.
Hopefully, this legislation will
assist our , schools In assuring
that the best possible educational
opportunities are provided to all
our children. As always, ple,se
feel free to call or write me, State
Senator Jan Michael Long, if you
have any questions or comments
about these or any other Issues.
My number Is (614) 466-8156, and
my address Is the Statehouse,
·columbus, Ohio, 43215.
'

portions of the vanquished nation, ostensibly to redress unsat·
lslled territorial claims. Such
land grabs could lead to new
military confrontations.
. Toppling. Iraqi President Saddam Hussein woula leave a
power vaccum In a country .
where no leader In l)l'&amp;iern times \
has died a natural death. In fact,

. _____R_a_re_n_t_s_a~p~p_r_e_c_w_t_e_s_u~p~p_o_r_t______
Th'anks to Everyone:
On behalf of Steven Grady we
his parents would like to thank
everyone wbo has written, sent
cards or packages to him In the
last five months that he ·has been
stationed In the Persian Gulf.
Stevens dulles. have changed In
the last two weeks and free time
Is limited . He regrets he doesn't
have as muchtlmetowritebu.the
states that he thinks of home
often. Letters are golden now and
they help keep all men and
women over there going.
We would like to thank, eve-

ryone lor their support and kind
words and gestures since be's
been over there we appreciate It
beyond words. We hope all
service men and women come
home sate and the war will be
short. We !eel for them all very
deeply, ant! support them.
Stevens addresa again Is:
ASAA Steven I. Grady 278-76-0886
USS Midway CV-41 }M4AIMD
FPo· San Francisco, CA 96631·

mo

Thanks again
Paul and Cathy Grady

Veterans support servicemen
Dear Editor:
On the 26th day of Jan. the
people of·thls' area round time to
let every-one who would listen,
know just how they felt about our
service men and women.
They we'r e 100% behind them. I
find It Ironic that we would walk
In support of these young people
and yet when the pictures cami
out In our local paper not one
picture or even a word about the
fact that In the front of all the
people marching were the men
who served so many years ago.
I know that a lot of people wlll
say, big deal, why make a big
thing about something so trivial?
To the men and women who have
served our country In the past,

especially theone's who returned
to this country In the late 60's and
the 70's, It might just remind
them of how the country backed
us.
They didn't.
For Jusi that reason you will
find that most or this country's
veterans do back our youn1
people that are In the service.
I, Robert Smith, would like to
take tbli time to thank alb the
members of the American Legion, bollJ Middleport and Pomeroy, an~ the DAV for their
support of our service men and
women.
Disabled American' Veteran
Robert L. Smith

Iraq has a tradition of producing
Its leaders through coups, executions and assassinations rather
than any democratic process.
· Finally, the 'shame, rage and
resentment sp_awned by another
defeat of an Arab nation could
lead angry and desperate people
throughout the region to further
embrace the radical Islamic
fundamentalism responsible lor
earlier political convulsions.
Although this country's mil·
ltary planners devoted rnon,ths to
fashioning a military strategy to
defeat Iraq, there Is no evidence
thai similar care Is being dedicated to developing a post-war
rehabilitation plan for the vola·
tile region . .
Indeed, only a lew polltlca.lleaders such as Rep. Lee H.
Hamilton, D-Ind., and Sen. Albert Gore Jr., D-Tenn., have
publicly warned of the need to
prepare for a post-war ehv.tronment of almost certainly In tens!·
fled Arab hostility toward the
West.
Although Arabs constitute almost three-fourths of Iraq's
population, a significant Kurdish
mlnQrlty In northern province
accounts for more than one-fifth
of the total. The well-organized
dissident Kurds might well seize
upon war-Induced chaos In the
capital of Baghdad and mount a
military effort to attain the
autonomy they have lon1 sought
for their oil-rich region.
Almost 95 percent or Iraq'speople are Muslims, and Shiites
outnumber Sunnts by almost a 5-4
ratio. But Saddam Hussein doml·
nates a secular Sunnl·controlled
society that embraces no Ideo!·
ogy except a personality cult
focusing on him. ,
Occupied by British troops
during World War I, Iraq became
a British mandate of the League

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HELP - Seton HaD's Anthony Avent bas
no where to go with Pitt's Darren Morningstar

.. ... . ,_.

'.

Chent&gt;y 80, Alvernia 57

DreW 80, Muhlenberg 70
ouquenSI? 90, S1. Bonaventure 66 .
E. Stroudsburg 96, So. Connecticul
81
Gettysburg 73. Susquehanna 63
HamlltoollO, Hobart 67

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t
•

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Hartford 82, Delaware 68

I..a!ayelte 77, Widener 44
LeMoyne 97, Cannon 75
Loyola iMd.\ 85. TOW"/D St 84
Ly~omlng 96. Mlserlcotdla 66 r
MesSah 107. Goucher 43

Copplp St. 83., Morgan St 68
Davis &amp; Elkins 90, Glenvl\le St , 81
East Csrdlna 75. Navy 66
Eastern Ken tuc ky 7'2. Morehead St.
61
Grambling 93, Alrom St. 81
' Marshal\90, The Cltade\18
Marymount 72, Catholic 67
Mobile 89, Dillard 88
Murray St. 81. Prairie Vlew' 68
NC-Ashev11\e 73, Wlnthrq&gt; 64
NG -WIImlngtq~

76, American i2
NE Louillana 81, SE Louisiana 67

Moravian (!(;, Albright, 62
•
Mt : st: Mary's 109. LIU· Brooklyn98' ,. ·
, NYU 91 .. John Jay 18 ·
Plttsbu!llh 86. Setoo Ha\180
Rider 88, Falrltlgh Olcklnsm 67
Rober! Morris 80. Wagner 62
Scranlm83, Klng1 s tPa. l 82 OT
Shlppensburli{ ~1. Shepherd 73
St. Francis \Pa,\79, Md. Baltimore
Co. 69
J
St . J ose ph's 66,.Temple 60

No. CarcUna A&amp;T 93, Md. Eas _tern·
Shore 71
Ozarks 119, Harding 84
Rlchmood 61, VIrginia Tech 56
~Obf:rt Morr1$ 80, Wagner 62 ·

Salem-Telkyo 80. Fairmont St. 72
So. M isstsstppl 98 , Appalachia n St .

74
South Alabama 91. Va. COmmon-

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Campbell 70. Au~u:Sta 6'i
Central Florida 83, Rollins Cqll. 63

Dickinson 81, York 58

j

wealth 7B

Rose banned from Cooperstown .
'

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East
Bloilmsbdrg 110, Concorqla (~.Y.I
91

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St(lly Brook 98, Hunter 78
Yeshiva 89, SUNY Maritime 67
South
Alder son-Broaddus 107. CO ncord 98
QT
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..
Bartoo 90, Longwood 83. OT

Monday CoUeJr;eBalketballReeults
By Unlled Press lnklraaUonal

••

l

leading on bis back during Monday night's col·
. lege action in Pittsburgh. Pitt won, 86-80. (UPI) .

·'Cage scores

••

of Nations following the war. '
Under the leadership of King
Falsal I, It remained relatively
stable and pro-Western through· ;;
out the 1930s, 1940s and most of
·..
the 1950s.
A military coup In 1958, how- "
ever, led to the overthrow of the
monarchy, the massacre or the
royal family and the establishment ot a left-wing republic. New ,
revolutionary regimes were In· l
stalled following subaequent
coups In 1963, 1968 and i979.
Saddam Hussein assumed the
country's leadership In the last of
those violent transitions. He then
ordered the summary executions
of hundreds of members of his
own Baath Party, with the
political leaders he spared !rom •
death forced to share complicity }
lor the ruthless murders by '
joining the firing squads.
Moreover, 'Iraq's defeat Is •
likely to lead to similarly 'disas- ••
trous developmenta In much of •
the Middle East becaunltwlll be II'
viewed across ihe seething re·
glon as another In a long series of
humiliations of Arab states by
outsiders.
There Is, however, hope lor a
better outcome: Many of the
'\Yar's grievances could be as- :
suaged If this country Is as l
aggressive about presslna for a
I
resolution of Arab-Israeli ten\
slons as lt ·has been In pursuing I
mutt'ary action.
;
But any sustainable regional
'
security arrangement must deal
effectively with the Palestinian . '
Issue - a maddening problem :. 1;~
that can be resolved only If . ~
everyone Involved Is willing to
)
back away from Intransigent . I
positions and make subatantlal ··•
sacrifices.
~

- "Pound and pound and Inch for
Inch nobody has showed me a
better basketball player than Mr.
Jennings," LeForce said.
But East Tennessee State Is not
a one· man show. Even though the
Buccaneers · have played the
entire season without 6·11 Greg
Dennis, a mainstay on East
Tennessee State's NCAA tournament entrants the last two
seasons, . they have hardly
missed a step. All 12 of East
Tennessee State's players played
Monday with eight getting Into
ihe scoring column.
LeForce said, "The team Is so
balanced and that Is our biggest
asset. That was never more
apparent then tonight. We can
. always have fresh people ln."
The Buccaneers raised their
record to 19-2 overall and 8-1 In
the Southern Conference. East

push .Redmen .to win ·

Robert Walters '

.... .....

Jennings, whose nicknamed
"Mister", did most of the proving
with 26 points on four of four
three-point shooting and 10 of 10
free-throw shooting. Jennings
rounded his game with ·eight
assists and three steals. Two of
his three-pointers allowed East
Tennessee State to jump off to a
24-7 lead.

Erslan's 20 points

Long -~
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Who, and what, -will follow Saddam?
WASHINGTON (NEAl -Winning the war could be the .easy
part. Restoring some measure of
political stability to the Middle
East In general and Iraq In
particular Is likely to be a far
more difficult task.
At least half of the six nations
with which Iraq has a common
border might attempt to seize

The Daily Sentiniii:- Ft.ge 3

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Pete Rose, baseball's all-time Hall of Fame in next year's class.
hits leader, will not be allowed in Now, the Baseball Writers AsSociation of America, which votes on
baseball's Hall of Fame.
The Hall's board of directors · the Hall, is prohibited from putting
.
vo1ed 12.,0 Monday to accept a rule Rose on the balloL ·
. There are 16 members on the
stating that anyone banned from
baSeball for life would not be eligi- board of directors: fanner Amerible for enshrinement in the Cooper- can League preside.n t Lee
MacPhail, former National League
stown, N.Y., institution.
"The directors felt that it would president Chub Feeney, former
be incongruous to have a person Montreal Expos president John
who has been declared ineligible McHale, NL president Bill . White,
by baseball to be eligible for base· AL president Bobby Brown, Stack,
bali's highest honor," Hall of baseball commissioner Fay VinFame president Ed Stack said. "It cent, fonner commissioner Bowie
follows t~at if such individual is Kuhn, Hall of Famers Roy Camreinstated by baseball, then such panella and Charlie Gehringer,
individual would be a candidale for Milwaukee Brewers president Bud
Selig, Boston Red Sox owner Jean
election."
Rose was removed as Cincinnati Yawkey, Detroit Tigers chainnan
Reds mapager and banned from Jim Campbell, Cooperstown mayor
baseball in August 1989 for mis- Harold Hollis, St. Louis Post-Disconduct related to gambling. He patch writer Bob Broeg; ·and
would have been eligible for. the · Stephen Clarlc Jr., son of the Hall's
·
founder.
MacPhail, Feeney, McHale,
The Daily Sentine)
Brown, Stack and White were
members of. 12-mari special
CV8P8Jfi-HII
mittee that on Jan. 10 had recomA DIYIIIoa of Multimedia, I•e.
mended rule that prohibits any·
Published . every afternoon, Monday . one banned .from baseball from
through Friday, 111 Court St., Po·
en1ering the Hall of Fame. 1be vote
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pul&gt;
was 7-3 with two members absent.
llshlng Company/Multimedia, Inc..
Pomeroy, Ohio 4~769, Ph. 99'1·21:16. Se·
White
and Hall of Fame pitcher
cond class p011tage paid at Pomeroy,
Whitey Ford.
Ohio.
· The dissenting voles carne from
MembeR United Press International,
.
Stack
and Baseball Writers AssociInland Dally Prrss Auoclatlon and the
ation of America executives Jack
Ohio.Newspaper A.uoolatlon. National
Advertltlnr Repreaentatlvl', Branham
tang and Phil Pepe.
·
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
Last
week,
Stack
said
thousands
Nl'W" York, NPW York 10017.
of letters had come to the Hall of
~: Send · - ·c h Fame
protesting the committee's
to n.t. Dally Sentinel. 1ll Coun SL,
recommendation. He said "99.9
Pomeroy, Ohlo4576!1.
percent'' of lhoJe letters carne from
8VB8Caii'TJON RATIIS
Cincinnati, Rose's hometown and,
BJ Curter Dr Mellr .....
One Week ........ ................... ... .. ... 11.40
for most of his career, home team.
0nt'Month ....... .......... ............. ...11.10
On AI!&amp;. 23, 1989, Rose signed
One Year ·-···· ···-·---· -· .... ·-···-··--· -1'72.11)
an
agreement with then-commisSINGLE COPY
PRICE .
sioner A. Bartlett Giamatti that
illllly .... .. ., ........................... 2~ Cenlo
banned the Reds lnanager from
baseball for life. The agreement
Subscribers not dealrtna to pay the carrier may remit Jn advanct direct to
stated there would be no official
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, &amp;or 12 month
as to whethC:r Rose had
conclusion
bull. Oedlt WU\ bo Jllven Carr' II' HCh
week .
wagered on baseball, but Giamatti
said he penonally believes Rose
No sublcrlptlona by mall peo mliiANI Ill
areas where home cUTler l!f'VIce 11
bet on basebalL
avallable.
Under baseball r11les, anyone
banned from the game can apply
llalllwlle
1-Melp
for
reinstatement after one year.
IS Weelca ... ............................... llt.24
Rose, currendy finishing a jail tenn
26 Weelca ............ ........ ....... ....... 137.96
52 w..u .................................. l74.36
in Cincinnati's Talben House O..IIWe Melp C..IIIJ
'
halfway house - for failing to
IS w..u .................................. 1211.80
fully disclose his income Jaxes, has
26 W..U ............. ..................... $f0.30

Belichick
reportedly
Modell's pick
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Cleveland Browns owner Art Modell
reportedly will name New York
Giants defensive coordinator Bill
Beilchlck his new head coach by
Wednesday.
A source told The Cleveland
Plain Dealer in a story published ·
Tuesday that Belle hick met for a
second time with Modell Monday
night. The unidentified person,
described only as an NFL source, '
said Modell wanted a second
meeting to make sure he had the
right man for the job.
The source told The Plain
Dealer Beiichlck was prepared
to accept the job. He was also In
the running for the head coaching
job with Tampa Bay, but Richard
WUI!amson was named the Buccaneers coach on Monday .
' If, for some reason, the hiring
of Bellchlck falls through'; a
source told the newspaper Modell would conduct second Inter- '
views with ·Los Angeles Raiders
assistant Mike White and Kansas
City Chiefs defensive coordlna·
tor Bill Cowher.
Bellchlck's first Interview with
Modell carne last week. He was
picked up at Cleveland Hopkins
International Airport by a limousineand taken to the Ritz-Carlton
hotel In downtown Cleveland,
where he registered under the
name of Andy Robustelll. Robustelll played defensive end for the
Giants and Is In the Pro Football
Hall of Fame. '
. The nvispaper said Bellchlck
was registered under a different
assumed name Monday night.

MarkErslan's20potnts-18of
half. John Garrett and Greg
them from three-point range Zimmerer score&lt;! 14 and 11
led the University of Rio Grande
points, respectively, to lead the
hosts.
to an 80-41 pounding of Cincinnati
Bible on theGoldenEagles'court
The Redmen, 22-4, will go to
·Monday night.
Mount Vernon Nazarene on
Erslan, Rio Grande's starting Thursday at 7:30 p.m . for an
MOC game, while the Eagles, ·
shooting guard from West Alexandrla, was backed by double12·15, will host Tomlinson
figure performances from Brad
(Tenn.) College on Friday.
Schubert, Lester Smith and Gary
RIO GRANDE (80) - Gary
Harrison.
Harrison 4-0-3-11; Mark Erslan
The Redmen scored 11 unans·
1~6-0-20; Brad Schubert 2·3·0·13;
wered ' point$ In the first five
Jeff Brown 0-1-0-3; Troy Donaldminutes before CB's Rob Payne . son 5-0.0-10; Jawania Childs
netted his team's first basket . 1·0-0-2; Lyndell Snyder 1·0.0-2:
The Golden Eagles, who lost by
Terry Farley 1-0·2-4; Clift Brown ·
an 83-polnt to the Redmen on
1-0-0·2: Lester Smith 4·0-4·12;
Dec. Sat Lyne Center, mounted a
Kyle Schroer 0-1·2-5; Tim Chrisgood defense In the first half and
tian 2-0.0.4. TOTALS-%2-11·11-88
trailed Rio by 17 points at
· CINCINNATI BIBLE (41) halftime.
Greg Zimmerer 5-0-1-11; Eric
. Redmen mentor John Lawhorn
Gilpin 2-0-0-4; Jeff Curry 1·0.0·2:
substituted freely throughout the ,Rob Payne 4·0-0-8; Paul Carpen:
game, and the contributions, .. ter 0-0·2-2; John Garrett 5·0-4·14 . .
from thhe younger players added
TOTALS - 17.f.7-41
to a 26·3 run by the Redmen In the.
· Halftime IICOre - Rio Grande
first 10 minutes of the second · 35, Cincinnati Bible 18.

t.

:·1
•
•• •

- ~~

'

Tennessee State's other loss was· )
a five-point decision at No. 5 ·;
Arizona In the preseason NIT.
•
It was the 26th consecudve
home victory for East Tennessee
State. A record crowd of 12,884
jammed tbe Memorial Center,
which has a stated capacity of
12,000.
In other games Involving top
teams Monday, No. 12 Southern
Mississippi was a 98· 74 winner
o~r ·Appalachian ~tate; 13th·
rated Virginia romped ·over
Radford 87-54; and poll votegetter Pittsburgh posted an 86-81)
Big East Conference victory over
Seton Hall.
·
At Charlottesville, Va ., Bryant •
Stith scored 25 po!n ts and
grabbed 10 rebounds In VIrginia's rout of . the Rad,ord High·
landers. Kenny Turner added 18
pOints and a career-high 16
rebounds for VIrginia, 17-4. The
Cavaliers led 17-16 With less than··
nine minutes left In the first half
when Turner Ignited a 13-0 run
with 8 points and a pair of steals
as VIrginia opened a 30-16 advantage. Radford, 16-5, got 16 points
from Stephen Barber.
At Boone, N.C., Russell Johnson had 22 points and four other' ' ·
Southern Mississippi players '
reached double figures. A 10-2 ·
spurt midway through the first '
hall gave the Golden Eagles,
15-2, control and they pulled ·:
away early In the second period · •·
for a 65-50 lead. Darrln Chancel- ·· ·
lor had 17 points, Daron Jenkins · ·
15 and Bernard Haslet 13 for
Southern Mississippi. Steve ·' ·
Spurlock led Appalachian State, •
11-10, with 22 points.

SPRING VALUY CINEMA
446 4524

·'

:·•

•

tonightI

Cell us IJy 2PM and have

Krickstein wins
com- opening match

a

•=

52

w..u .................................. S71.40

not applied.

MILAN, Italy (UPI) - Aaron
Kr!cksteln, brushing aside fears
of playing In Europe, demolished
Amos Mansdorf, 6-0,6-1, Monday
in an opening round match of the
$600,000 Muratti Time ATP tennis tournament.
,
The Milan event. the first
tournament In Europe since the
outbreak of the Gulf war, was hit
by a series of late defections of
·top names, (ncludlng John McEn-.._
roe, BoriS Becker and Stefan
Edberg.
McEnroe, citing fears over
possible terrorist attacks on
Arnei'lcans, Is playing Instead
this week In an ATP event In San
Francisco, thousands of miles
fa,rther away from the Middle
East war zone. He Is a four-time
winner of this event and a big·
crowd favorite In Milan.
Krlcksteln, one of only three
Americans entered In the 32-man
field, said he Isn't worried about
playing In Europe.
· ."It's my job," said the sixthseeded American. "I won't stop
flying or anything like that. The
war Is Important, but there's not
anything I can do about lt.
"If McEnroe doesn't feel safe
here, then there's nothlngfQrclng
him to come. It's his c.hotce."

.,.
Call Cablevision on any of the following days (before 2 PM)
and watch Cable TV before you go bed that night!
Tuesday, February 51h
Wednesday, Febi'Uary 6'h
Thursday, February 7th

w

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,,'

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PLUS! If you order HBO, CINEMAX, SHOWTIME, or DISNEY
the installation is absolutely FREE.

Hurry, ftla Ollar lrida_February 7D'
Call 8711-188 or 1-800 144-1131

· .WJ:I

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Ctii"Po

______....._____......___.......
Serving the communities of Mason-Gallia-Meigs Counties

._

Some Restrictions May Apply, Offer Ende February 7, 1991
•

'

.·

�.'

•,Ohio

.'

6, 1991

Tuesdav•.

Bucks defeat Cavs,
I
03-96
.

ATTEMPTS TO SCORE- Detroit's Paul
Ysbaert, left, attempts to score ou Los Allgeles'

.~ngs

Daaiel Berthiaume (right) during first period
action Monday night. (UPI)

blank Red Wings, 6-4

.By United Press International
•_The Los Ailgeles Kings, known
for their offense; know It is
defense that will bring them a
Stanley Cup crown.
• The Kings' bluellners faltered
e,arly In the third periOd of
Monday night's game at Detroit,
surrendering three goals within a
2:57 span; then they shut out the
Red Wings over theflnal12: 57 for
a, ~ victory.
,;''T,he best defensive teams
have usually won the Stanley
(;up,'' said veteran John Tonelll,
w/lo ·played on four Stanley Cup
champions will! the New York
Islanders and also reached the
finals while playing with Calgary. "We've made a commlt'!lent to defense since the start of
train tnt camp.
.
, "We have great forwards who
can put the puck In the net so we
know we can score goals,'' said
Tonelli, who contributed a pair of
power-play scores. "We have to
take care of our end first and
work our way down the Ice.
That's the way we did It on the
Island and when the (Edmonton)
Oilers were winning those Cups,
ttiey really clamped down on
d~fense In the playoffs."
·Luc Robltallle' s second goal of
tlie game snapped a 4-4 tie at 4:05
' •he third period. Tomas

Sandstrom · gave the Kings a
two-goal cushion on a breakaway
at 16:57.
·
Detroit's Steve Yzerman
scored his 39th and 40th goals. He
tied the game 4-4 at 7:03 of the
third period. He reached the
40-goal level for the fourth
consecutive season.

Canaciiens 5, North Stars 3
At Montreal, Mike McPhee
registered a hat trick and Russ
CourtJU!ll contributed a goal and
two assists as the Canadlens
rallied from a 2-0deflcltwlthfour
consecutive goals. Montreal, the
second-place team In the Adams
Division, Is four potn ts behind
first-place Boston.
Goals by Sergei Fedorov, Paul
With the score tied 2·2 In the
Ysebaert l!nd Yzerman early in third period, Courtnall took a
the third period erased a three- pass from McPhee and slapped a
goal lead by the Kings.
40-foot shot through the legs of
Los Angeles Coach ,Tom Webs· North Stars goalie Brian Hay·
, ter called a timeout after the ward at 8:09, putting the Cana·
Detroit surge and it seemed to dlens ahead to stay . Sylvain
kUI the Red Wlitgs' momentum.
Turgeon boosted the lead ·to 4·2
''The timeout helped settle us , with a goal just 1: 45 later. ·
down and It took the crowd out or
After Minnesota pulled Its
the game, " Webster said. "We goaUe 1 Bobby Smith scored on a
. got back to playing smart deflection at 18:59 to pull. the
hockey."
North Stars within 4·3. McPhee
TonelllsaldtheKJngshavehad · ended the home team's come·
trouble bouncing back in sltua· back hopes by scoring Into the
lions like that. ·
empty net 26 seconds.
''It showed a lot of character on
Also scoring for the North
our part,'' Tonelli said. "They Stars were Dave Gagner and
had tremendous momentum go· Perry Berezan, whose first·
lng and we calmed It down. It was perloq goals provided a 2-0 lead
a key timeout. !!'let us get our at the first Intermission.
, heads together and we started \ McPhee. who has 13 goals on
, over."
the season, scored twice In the
In Monday's other NHL second period. He put home a
games, Montreal skated to a 5-3 rebound a 2:05and tied the game
victory over Minnesota and To- 2·2 at 8:07.
ronto knocked off St. Louis 6-5 In
Maple Leafs 6, Blues 5 OT
overtime.
At Toronto, Dave Hannan
,scored with 62 seconds remain·
lng tn ()verttme to give the Maple
Leafs a rare victory . Toronto has
just two wins In 1991 and Its
season record Is 14-35-5.

Rio Grande players .win
I)istrict, MOC honors
Two University of Rio Grande
basketball players have been bon·
ored this week by the Mid-Ohio
Conference and District 22.
:Kathy Snyder, 5-10 fcrward for
th'e Redwomen, was named the
District 22 and MOC Playet of the
Wedr. for her work between Jan. 27
and Feb. 2, while Jeff Brown, 6-5
forward for the Redmen, was
named the MOC Player of 'the
Wedr. for his efforts lui week..
- Snyder. a junior, scored a lOial
of 59 points, 28 rebouncb, eisht
assistS, duee blocks and two lteals
the RedWOfll!lll !janded loael to
Tiffin, Wihniagton and Ohio
Dominican.
For lhe week. she was 45.8 per·
cent (22-48) on field goals and netted 15 of 18 attemp!S from for 83.3
percent, including all 10 auempts
~nst Ohio Dominican. Soydet is
QUrrendy third on the third team in
l)ldividual field goal percentase

.

ByROBEBTJ. MURPHY
help the Bucks snap their nine· 28 points, 16 re bounds and fou r
VPl Spona Writer
,game road losing streak. Cleve· blocked shots from Larry Nance.
Only a day after NBA fans land was led by Brad Daugher· The Cavs nave lost 16 of their last
watched anxiously as All-Stars ty's 30 polnts.and 15 rebounds and 20.
Magic · Johnson and Bernard
KiJI$ ended up hospitalized In
unrelated yet slmDarty frighten·
lng Incidents, both were reported
on the mend and appeared ready
to return to action.
Johnson, the three-time NBA
Most Valuable Player, was released Monday from an Ingle·
wood, Calif., hosptiai after
spending the night for observation. The club announced he
would rejoin the team tor Tilesday night's game against the Los
Angeles Clippers at the Forum.
Johnson suffered a concussion
Sunday against the Chicago
BuDs. He was knocked uncons·
clous and suffered a mild case of
amnesia after being accidentally
kicked In the head by Chicago's
Horace Grant In the third quarter
of the Lakers' 99-86 victory. The
All-Star guard also appeared to'
hit his head on the court after
being kicked.
"All tests were negative, and
he · has permission to resume·
practice and playing,'' .team
doctor Stephen Lombardo said.
" However, we will continue to
WILLIAMS DRIVES -Portland's Buck WiUiaais drives past
monitor his progress."
Nets Mookie Blaylock on his way to the ~asket. Portland won the
Los Angeles has won 15
game,ll?-102 at Portland. (UPI)
straight games , (he second·
longest streak . In club history.
The 1971-72 Lakers set the league
mark with 33 In a row.
In the East, Washington
WHAT IS THE ADDinONAL
Bullets forward King was re·
STANDARD
DECUTION FOR
ported fine. During Sunday's loss
AGE? .
to the Celtlcs in Boston, King left
If your IISth birthday was on or ·
the game suffe~lng from short·
before January 1, 1991 , xou
ness of breath. After being
briefly hospitalized In B_oston, It
"~"""' · J can take an ADDtnONAL ST NDARD DEDUCTION.
was determined he had an
•If your filing stat is is "Single"
allergic reaction to an unspecl·
or "Head of Household,'' the
fled medication.
dollar valut of this deduction
The Bullets are off until Wed·
$100.
nesday's game at Philadelphia,
yaur
fling status is "Mcl'l'iecl
and King Is expected to be back
Filing
Jointly,"
"Maooiod Fiing
for that.
Separatel
,"
ar
"qualifying
Wi·
Elsewhere around the NBA
dowltri:Y
the
doiar
VaiU.
of
Monday, the Milwaukee topped
!lis
dedudian
is
$650
fM
taCh
Cleveland 103- 96, Seattle edged
KARL K~B~ER ,
eligibte taxpaytr. '
Charlotte . 100-93, Chicago
These additional amounts are added to y- regular stamlard deducdropped Sacramento 108-97 and ·
tion
to obtain the total standard deduction you can claim.
J
Portland romped past New Jer·
Do
you
have
questi011s
about
how
tht
tax
laws.
affect
your
r
turn?
sey 117-102.
Cal your local H&amp;R Black offke. letter yet, stop by the one nearest you.
Buek8 103, Cavaliers 96
We're ready to help youI
.
At Richfield, Ohio, Ricky
Pierce scored 20 of his 27 points In
the 'second half and Jeff Grayer
added 11 fourth -quarter points to
992-6674
POMEROY

'

..,•
'•

'

All Merchandise
In 30 Days
'

AUTO MECHANlCS • BiUy HyseU ud
Ducky Gilkey work on all engine in the.ir auto
mechanics clU58 at Meigs High School. Bo&amp;ll will
llave the opportunity to learn the use or computer diagnostic equipment during their two year
vocational coui'M!. All vocational classes _!Ire open

.

446~8051

ELLIOTT'S

to students from Eastern, Meigs and Southern .
High Schools. Aa open bouse will be htld
Thursday night and interested sophomorei ud
their parents· are invited lo view the vocatioul
activities iD progress anytime f'rOm 6 to 9 p.m.

Life in any home better than on street

C:All AHEAD FOR APPROVED CREDIT

'I

periods of related instruction during level employment, as a welder or
the morniJI$ and four periods' of pipe finer, a toOl, maintenance,
SoPhomore · Sl!Kients
from simulated 1abonltory experience in construction or similar welding oc·
cupation.
Eastem, Meip, and Southcm liigh theBeaf~. ---..... .
While certification is not a reSchools along with their parents are
gmnlns ...w.... semester,
invited to attend an open house at students · participata in ·on-the-job quirement for credits, students do
Meigs Hi_gb School Thursday eve.. COQPCfative employment at a local have the option of taldng advantaF
ing to VlCW the var1oua areas of health care or bolpital facility of that before leaving the ~n,
ACCOUNTING\COM
R
vocational training offered there.
during the aftemoon or evening
For those who arc interested in
The 6 to 9 p.m. open house is holn. SaJdcD!s are certified in carbeiilg held in conjunction with the diac pulmonar)' resuscitation and worlr.ing in an office, computer and
school's obaemnce of National first aid and also complete a 75 accounting skiDs arc almost a
."mUSL" Meigs High Sc!lool's two
Vocational EchK'IIion Week. At- bour nurse lide trainlnl
tending the opea house will .nve mtuiml by law to work inl",.'t; year Jrllgram to leaCh these skiDs is
available to all junior and senior
parents and lllllknts an overvic:-of term care faciljty.
vocational opportunities as weD as
One mdil toWIBd graduation is students in the county.
Emphasis of the prosram is on
the opponuaity to 8C1C students catned from each o( the ftllated
ac;counting
with secondary skiD
demonstratinl their skills.
. classes and twO credits are earned
development,
in word processing,
Lacal school competition wiU be from the coopet~~tive trainin$ sla·
filing,
business
math, buSiness
taking place in ID11C areas with ad· . lion fc:i a total -o f four credits m the
English,
and
all
othez areas of
visory personnel from ind11S11'y prosram.
general
clerical
skills.
Swdents
judging the work of the students.
Atcoiding to the inst:ructor,
develop
competencies
in
both
An"awards ceJCIIIO!IY will be held at Margie Blake, graduateS of the
manual
and
computer
accounting
9 p.m. at which time the students program have success in finding
\viii be ·recosnized and prizes from employment as nursing assistants in and after completion of the 1500
t&gt;nsincsses presented to the win· hospitals, nursing homes and other hour oourse are qualified to obtain
ners.
health care facilities. Th those positions in many business fields.
The junior year is mainly basic
The loCal winners will then desiring to further their education
compete · in regional contests in . in the health care field, the prosram development of skills and
Pike and Scioto Counties later this provides the acquisition of basic knowledge of business subjects 1114
month and the winners emeJglng skills and a good foundation which is obtained. through use cl ofli01
from those contests will go (ln to is beneficia[ In futuftl oourses of machines as well as simulations of
business situations. Durill$ the.
state competition.
study.
senior
year, skills are expanded lnd
At the open .house visitors wiD . WELDING PROGRAM
·
refined·
so that graduates arc acbe able to uavel freely through the . Richard Fetty and
Eblin are
tually
avliilable
for an entry level
school or, if they desire, have a stu· _inslrUCIOI'S in the vocational weldoffice
position.
•
dent guide. Teachers and other ins program, a ~o year course of
AUTO
MECHANICS
school personnel wiD be oo hand to study at Meigs Hi8h School The
One of the most popular vocaanswez any quesdons JIIOSpe~;tiYe prosnun is open to students from
tional
courses offered at Meigs is
students or their parents may have. all tluee high school who have an
auto
mechanics.
The two. year
la conjunction wid! the open interest In welding and culling.
prosnun
consists
of
a t1uee hours a
house, the Meigs Band wiD be
The program of instruction
sponsorins a homemade chicken provides a continuous tluee-hour day in actual shop experience and
and noodle dinner in the cafetetia block of time In shop or laboratory another 1-112 hours in related class·
with servinl to begin at Sp.m.
experiences as was related work.
.Junior students train on shop·
Electronics, cosmetology, auto classroom instruCtion of one and
owned vehicles and automotive
mechanics, accounting/computer one-half hours daily.
teehnoloay, office tninins, qriculThe laboratory and related . in- components. During their senior
tiD'C, home economics, welding, struction is based on occupational year they work on community
nursing assiSiatlt, marteting educa- analysis which includes skiDs, at- vehicles, the care of teachers and
lion, and occupational worlr. ex- titudes and knowledge required to the county. Currendy the. shop has'
periencc are all offered as voca- achieve the instructional obJectives the capability of housing 15 cars.
Modem computerized equipment
tiona! choices for high school for the program. The bastc prlnstudcnts of Meigs County.
ciples cl science and mathematics, is available in the teaching
NURSING ASSISTANT
wtth strong emphasis upon safety prosnun. There arc computerized
The nursing assistant program at are integraled into the instructional four-wheel alignment machines as
weD as computerized diagnostic
Meigs High is a one year~ units.
equipment,
brake drum and rotor
offered to students in !hell' senior
Mter completing the two year
year of high school.
. prosnun, students are capable of laths, and small tools needed for
·The prosnun consists of twO enterins the welding field at entry the repair of modem automobiles.

.

Dear Ana Landen: I am hoping kids that no maaer how bad things
you will print this leila', not for my are at home and how tough you think
sake, but to help your young readers your life is, it's 100 percent betW
who are having trolibie at home and than it would be on the streets. Stay ·
think their lives are lousy.
· where you are and work things ouL
I've spent the last four yean as a
If you feel like you need a break
runaway living on the sueets of Los from your family, go visit a friend
Angeles. I was never happy at home. or take a 10-day backpack trip, but
I didn't like it 'when someone in my don't run away. There arc already
family told me what to do. I fought thousands of kids out here who are
with everybody. I wish I had in the same spot I'm in, and Lord
listened. Now I realize they were knows how many there are in other
trying to help me becanse they loved cities. Please don't add to that numme.
ber. Stay home no mauer what. I
. Every day in Los Anseles has wish I had. .. TOO LATE FOR ME
bel;n a battle for my survival.
DEAR 100 LATE: Your Jeuer
Before I had spent a month out here, is sure to make an impact on some
I was into prostitution. I. was only of those kids who are now where
14 years old rve done a lot of drugs, you were four years ago. It should
lived under bridges and slept in give you some solace to know that
alleys off HoUywood Boulevanl. I've by writing to me you have saved
eaten out of dumpsters behind some lives. If you think I am overrestaurants and fallen in with statinl the case, let me assure you
psychos and winos. It's a miracle that I am not. I know my readers.
that I'm slill alive,
·
Please know that you are in my
Actually I shouldn't say it's a prayers.
miracle because my luck ran out. I
Dear ADD LaDders: My husband
just saw a doctor and was given a to whom I've been married for 24
death sentence. I'm now 18 years years, had an affair with his "pen
oJ4, I'm seven-months pre~t, and pill" in Mexioo. Before he returned
I have AIDS.
hollf••sl)e told him that sJ:1e was
I'm writing this leUer !0 teD other expectins his child. He has
/
·
promised to be present at the time
of the binh and offered to contriliute to the child's support. ·
My position is that there is no
scientifiC evidence that the unborn
Becky Mankin is the Chester child is my husband's. Therefore, he
area ehairlilan for the American has no obliption to be present at
Heart Assocation door·to-door fund the birth, nor does he have any oblidrive which is underway in Meigs galion to contribute support money.
County. Her name was unlnt.en- Aflc:ra lot of hell-raising ori my pan,
UonaJJy omitled from a listin of my husband has rmally agreed to
the volunteen whQ wil be
ask for a paternity test once the child
ing c:onaibutions and distributins is born.
infonnation about heart disease
He speaks of his need to show·

.Clarificaiton

SILVEl IIIDGE
PLAIA
GAWPOUS, OliO

:fa:,.

'
I·,

.

Must Liquidate

Golf

.'l!cond.

students to discuss oX}'gen safety. Pictured here
with him from tbe )eft are Lorrie Baker, 'Illi'a
Humpbeys, Tracy Ellis, Mike Fink, and John El·
liott.

618 EAST MAIN

.

WINS CONTEST- MlddlepartrwldeatFraakGheea (left) waa
tile wlaner of the eeve11&amp;11 u·r• GallfpoU. Bah lUten co.-.t,
whleh waa held oa Dee. I, 1111. PraceHI flwn the eveat wlllp
toward &amp;be 13th anaual Yoa&amp;ll f1lldatl DQ, wllleb will be lieN a1 the
Bob Evans Farm llleller'-- poad on May :Ill troin 1J Lm. to %
p.m. To Gheen'aleft Ia Vernoa Clifton, wbo aold the wln...IIICket

fniDg, busiaess math, buslnea Englilb ud
seneral elerical skills. Pictured Ia lbe classroom
· are from the left, Steplianie Bulls, Stephanie
Barrett, Teresa Deem, and MiDdy Harris.

H&amp;R BLOCK

statistics.

:. Meg Mallon posted a two:&amp;troke victory In the rain-delayed
~ 000 Oldamobile Classic at
' Wor111, Fli'. She birdied the
two holes In a final-round 71.
ie Dana La!lond finished

ACCOUNTING/COMPUTER ~ Preparlag
students for 11flice work II the . goal or lbe lit·
countiDg/computer vocational P"'IJ'IID at Meigs
High Sthool. Emphasis is on accounting wilb
secondary skill development in word proceasiDa,

NURSING ASSISTANT • Inservice programs
are a feature or the one-year nursing assistant
prognm at Meigs High School. Greg Kaylor ol
CoatiDuity ol Care recenUy met with lbe

No Reasonable Offer
Refused ••••
,.

Sports biref8

s:

Ken

ii !kk~Jr'.:::u:r.~ ~-

''

FetJI:uarv 5 , 1991

·By Cbarle• Hoefticb

He was 55 percent from the
Jield on 11 cl20 attempt and sank
~5 of 19 aies from the foul line for
;7.8.9 percenL Brown is currently
;tile 1C1111 leader in ~ and
ll i IIJo ...W for ICOrinl. indi'llidu-

•
•
•

'

Vocational training options available
to young people; open house.planned

MAKE U·S AN. OFFER

1M h PS' JIIIIIIFIIICI1t 1118.]0r,
is die 1011 of Lllry and Bev:erly Brown of Newart,
.

.

'

TIP.OF THE WEEK

.

r-:
l!rown

.. .
Tuesday,

.

Page

rebounllin8:.~-. map,
. .IS
'•~Snyder,
a mau ......hes
~~ daughter of Bob and Beverly
lnydcr cl Gahanna.
' A sophomore, Brown recorded
fl points in Rio Grande's wins
1ver Urbina and Tiffin. He had 25
_,bounds for the week, 15 of them
Over Tiffin, and added a tolal of six
assists, one block and five steals to

-~s season

The Daily Sentin.el

.

By The' Bend ,

u

l

.

Ann
Landers
ANN LANOt:RS
··1989, l.o" .\n,...l no
Tim,.,.

:oh· nd ln~l t'

11 nd

c:,,.••l.,:,. s ~ nd~ •.-.,.

compassion, integrity, honor and
decency with respect to this young
wpman, even l)lougb he confessei:l
that h.e deceived her into believing
that he was a single man and that he
would marry her. I say what about
displayins some loyalty. compassion. intesritY, hilnor and decency
to me? Mter ali, I am •· HIS WIFE
IN WEST, TEXAS
DEAR WIFE: It's ludicrous that
your husband, who has cheated on
you and lied to that young Mexican
woman, should ascribe to himself
such a list of virtues. 'Ibis man is a
24-karat, four-door, lying scoundrel.
Obviously, he does not want to
give up his young friend south of
the border. You need to decide
whether or not you want him undet
those circumstances. It you do,
fasten your seat belt, honey. There's
some bumpy road ahead.
everyw~re. They're
easy to use and l!llen
hoolctd on. If you ha~

Drugs are
easy to get,
easier to get

WELDING· c-lllllty projeela .are maay
times a·part or &amp;be vacatlonal program~ at Meigs
High School. Here Earl Hunt does aa arc weld
duriDs lbe coutrudioa or a bridge on HyseU
Ran Road. To become a certilled welder is an op·

Military rites given

lion, altlt!IUih not 1 reqairemeat, Ia the nro-,.r ~ ·
welding prognm at. Meigs Hlgb SchooL At
Thunday night's open house, a weldlnc competi- . ·
tlon will take place. Winners wiD be iiiiiiiiDDced
at a 9 p.m. awards ceremony in tbe cal'eterla.

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

CemeterY military rites for Don
Riffle aiid Kenneth Wilt were conductcd by Racine Post 602.
American l..elioo. Dinners were
ptqlat'Cd and served to approximaiely 160 family members 11
the Legion Hall. The funerals were
held on the same day.

•Lunch
...•Dinner

1/'J/f",

Birthday observed
· The 80th birthday of Mildred

SpCncer was obac:rved Sunday with
questions aboUI drugs, you need A1111 a dinnez at the home of home of
Landers' booklet, 'The Lowdown on Mr. and Mrs. Gary Wolfe. Others
Dope." Send a se/f-addrtsstd,/ong, there were Pauline Wolfe and Ellen
business-size en~lope and a check Amott.
or money order for SJ .65 (tlris illeludes postage and handling) to:
Lowdown, c/o A1111 Latotkrs, P.O.
Box 11562, Chicaio, Ill. 60611·
0562. (lrt CtJNMJ.a, selld $4.45.)

HOURS:
Monday thru Saturday 6:30 am • 8:00 pm
Sunday 8:00 am -3:00 pm

Kountrv Kitchen
3rd &amp; Pearl

949-2324

Racine, Olalo

�Pomeiov- Mic&amp;olaport. Ohio
Nile NotiCe
li!O'fiCI TO MDDt lll
Poroel No. 3 11eint the_,
Yll.U.QI! Of fiOOMIIIOY
- . oon..yld by Levi
UIIICOLN HILL
T - Ill ....... Torrell by
PUMP CONTIIOI.I
tiiiM,_rtllldM..,I, 1111.
In IDUI_I_ wlttl ....
InDeed look No. 117, p...
tiDn J07.11 ofllle OhiD II• 10, O..tl R-odo, Molgl
vlledC.... ...._.IIIdl_ County. Ohio.
be fiUhM toy the M.... ·'"'The above tllleorlbiil't....,,
Caunty ..... of Comntlio- hH ....,.... lite Perea!
..... In tllelr oltlce No. 14·00388.000 by the
la011ted In the CourttlouM. Mel.. CouniV TrMIUr8r'l
Pomeeorat. Ohio until noon on Office Md;
.
,.,.,., 22. 1111 . The bldo
WhlfNI, •uch judgrMnl
"""'be IPI tedel1 :30 P.M. artlllro ouch rMI propiiiV ID
on thlt dele ond ...s - d be oald by lite undorolg,...
for the fllauull11 Commun- to Nlltfv lite Ioiii omount Dl
lly O..llop ,._,
a1oc1t MICh judgrnotnt; And lito
Gram.......,:
!hot lllid porcllo bo oold lt&gt;· Furniohfnt •d lnnofllnt lllhlr:
N-. thiNfo,., public noof a OOIIIPIMIIy " ' - " "
ell eolltl _
_lledlo
tice II - v r!~ tho!" I,
...,._._.,.C-.oiMd ...,_ M. Sou
, Sheriff
D... Aoqulolllon (ICADAI of M... o Cou....,, Ohio, wHI
"'"""'; Lltloolol Hll, Pom· Mil reel propiiiV .,
eooy, Ohio.
public tlllctlon, for cMh, to
Complete opeclfioellono lhe hlg_, b l - theleoMr
lor IIIII projocl ....., be ot&gt;, of thl followlnt omounto:
,...._ from lhe Cleft of AI A t.lf morkel value of
lite lurd of Melga CaunteCh porel
IV Cammlllielnft. Court· 14-00388.000-· 100.00
llouM, leooltd , , . . , Pom- 14-00388.000· ••; 110.00
roy, Ohio 41711 llahiaan 1 4-00387.000· f2,030.00
the llourt ofi:IO A:M. altd
tor e toto! of ea.zeo.oo .
. 4 :30P.M., Mondey lltrat111h
II Thetolll ornount oftlte
Frtdlly. fPh. 112-21111.
lln4lng ......d by ...
lldden oltall UM their Court. Including oil ,..,,,
own told tonne. Front of the IIIMimllfttl, Chlrg.., pen·
.,....,,. conllin!"?. dte bid ahllt. and lnlorell ~MYebie
mull be morbd ' lid for IUbteqUI!II ,lo lite delfverl'
Uncoln . HUI Pump Con- ID lhe cou...., proNCullnt
trolo" . An orltl(notl bid bond eltorMV of tho delinquent
or ~lfled ......... rltldll DUI lencllu cartlflco,. or mall•
Ia lite -~~ CouniV Com· u.. of dollnqiMftl lriCtl ond
mlnlaMn In the amount prior to the .,trv of tlte con·
1 0" of lhll.,... bid mull 10- flnnottlon of Olio. beint tho
co-dtebld.
tum of e.3 .11111 .72 .
1M laerd of CouniV
Jomeo M. Soullby,
CornmlllloiiiFI mey oc...,.
lhertff of
lhelo-bldareoiHIIhe
Mligo CouniV. Ohio
beet bkl ,., .... lnt-d (2) II , 12, 11, 3ta

Now Under Construction:

Our .

;

•

RED, WIDTE AND BLUE • Tbe colors or the
American 8ag were tbe order or tbe day on
Friday in tbe Meigs Local Scbool District, where
almost aU or tbe student body and staiT wore red,
. white and blue clothing. These students at Salis. bury tlementary School went out or their way to
dress In a patriotic fashion. Front row, lef't to

right, are Zacb Glaze, Kim Peavley, Josb Dod·
son, Heidi Legar, Carrie Glaze, CJ Estep, Sandi
Gilkey, and Carson Mldklll'. Second row, lef't to
right, are ~dam Jeakins, Ryan Jdrers, Bobbi
Stewart, Amy Jones, Tricill Davis, Myea Haynes,
Cbelsie Dodson, alld Melissa RamsiJurg.

Salisbury FJemeatary Scbool are remembering
tbe troops by decoratlaga large evergeen outside
their clllllllroom. Several sludeats Ia the class,
• IUid WM:ber Mill Roulie Story, llave relatives
servill1llllbe war. Tbe tree, tberefore, Is an ba·
portaat remembruce. Pklured, l'roat row, are
David Gruflltl', wlto laas a cousin Ia lbe war;
'lira Gny, -wbo&amp;e stepfather Is in tbe war; ud
Kim Peavley, whole ratber, aacle ud

stepbrother are aU serviDI· Also Ia tbe class are
Marjorie Halar, Joey Pa~rson, Bobby Penaell,
Beverly Burdette, Clinton Hom, James· Bil·
llngsley, IUid Marissa Wbale7; Third row, Miss
Story (wi!Ose couln Is sei'VIng), Daniel Hyaep.
Ryan JeiTers, Morgan Mattbews, Matt MUih01n,
and Jelr Micbael. Not pictured were Anna Story
(wllose cousia Is In the gull), Kim Conde (wbo·
bas an uncle Ia the war), Lee Aaa DiU (wllb an
uncle and cousin) and TIITanie Harder.

'

Ual

Valentine's Day.
Greetings Section!

'

REMEMBERING· Tbe third grade class at

.

purpote 8IMI Nlllw• ~

Don't ml88 your ch&amp;nce t.o thrill eomaone
speciBI With YD\ll' very own me se or love.

._.•• l'blhu l'lolut
•Just 55.00 buys a 5·1ine greerinJl (a pprox imately 20 words&gt; or 83.00 buys a 15 -wnrd
or less line ad.
•Mail your !Y ped or nearly handwrit. ren message m Valemine 's G
i n~ s. l'are (~f rhis newspaper.

·'

,

THANKS T-HE

,.

Meigs County C au neil on A ging1 1nc.

1990 CONTRIBUTORS

Multipurpose Se.nior Center, 1st Floor
(614) 992·2161
Mulberry Hetghts. P. 0. Box 722, Pomeroy. Ohio 46769

•Your

~ree tin~

•••

rtmsi' bt- re-

ceived by Munday. Feb . 13
•All greetings will be published in a specilll senion
Valentine's D ay. Fe-

"- '·--

bruary 14th.

'

Doria Adem•
kety Anthony

Mr. I Mro. M - Etlllond

Em,.AUmt

Vlrg loEotoiJ
WonclaEblln

Ma~v.

Shirley Appllby,
John I Elhol Art&gt;ough ·
Trudy Andrews
,..,, A...,.td

AT 'tHE MULTIPURPOSE
SENIOR CENTER
'

j
Mildred 4rnold
Chtrl• Jttn Alkire
Adl lil ...l
Eltlt l.mhM

a

A lzheimer·s· Disease/Related
DiSorders {family caregiver (raln.1119 and support groups}

Lolo Boa

Burdell a. Effie llacll
Merg... Bowl•

Elm• C. ar.nctt
, Elmore Boice

Ell- Buell
J-holodllol
Vlolo Boyloo
Hugh a LoUIN loorho
E-Bochtlo
R-" I WMmo loR ...

Case Management (Identifying

£11\.. IIMJ:

problems and obtaining assiS-

VIrginia ...h.,..
llomlot
Bokor
Bomlot Ioiiey

R:\.0:: t

tance)

lonnte Brown
Mltfl~

IIMttnar
Mery F'l'lnon humg.ctn•
VIator llhr
H•lan a Atta 11111«1
.John a H... rletlt hiler

C ent~r Dining (nut.rUtous meals}
D ~y A.cllvll,es

Corl I H11ol lomhll
T.,_lvor
...........igl.
.
Edgor I Iotty Butchor

Educauonal Programs
Health Assessment
Health Clinics

hmioe Fry
EmmePo;~~:

EltlebMh Famr
He... Fl...«

o-Fhch

GlltWr

Recreatlonai/SOCiai.Acllvitles
.
Supportive A.ssislimce (for example. ftllfng out Insurance 1
medical forms and answering
benefit questtons)

Th...,.Morrls

Edna Tripl.n

Ethol Ha::•

Cloro PIIIIHoo
NolloPorkor

Norme ' - " •

.

D•tton Henry
Lull HM!ipton
Hilda Harrit

Lulu MH Outwr

Hllter • Helen Quivey

Corl I Dorothr Honclriob
Ron I Hlldo Hill
Ethol A. Hort

Doroth~

NMintl Hudlon

Anna Hllldore

Fade H.,men
MiJdrlll lhfe
Curt• J-*ineon·
M:.y.erwtJDhn•on
Be •Johnson

Fr1nce Aoulh

LNt.r

Aolbol

Cath..tne Ru111U

Dorothy Aollor
Nina Robineon

PouliMAidonour
ArtiiRUIIIR-ph
.
AIINII a 1.-o Aondolpll
MoryK. Rouoll
Moroh.. • Dobblo Rou oil
Tolill"'f Aond:
Wanette Red

E...,IR I Louro Cooort

Doril J •ckson
Edhh Jlvld"'
llrdloJollnooft

M-Co-11
Cion Coon•y
•-•Condo

Monrinltolly
AI&gt;Wialtoolllor
Kothryn Knilht

RON R?.:ldl

Morcial. ltorr
Glodyoltriotto

franklin a Wlftda Rizer
Loi1 Robenon

Florence Circle
HM"Gid a Oulds Ch...

Ann Cook

luclleCI~

Lnwrenc. . •rpem:er

E¥0irnCiorl

Llone Cl_.lftd
Chw... a Merte C1r10n

loroiiColdwoll
lannltl Conde

Loll Clork

Euntc. Chrloty
llubaiColdwoll
Helen c.,.,.

Meecrou..,

Doug Circle

Otto I Tolhho Cooto
Elbtebeth Carmen
EUubeth Davie

M:.bDovldoon
Leo, . Davidton

Eva0.11uar

WllloDivlo
llobortDucllII. II. Dur•
Dorothy Downlo
.___co a o - , Dougloi
Dr. Robert o.Mon
Jornoo I H- Dtvll
Em• OamtiWOOd

Mo:l,G.Dum

,Y
.. i ""&amp;':
n--

AI., I ""'lyEioN.. •
Gam• Ervtne
•
Merion Ebenhah ·

lrtoiiE._ booh
ldnoEvorw

......_

Watlt• • ICidlertne even•

Ch-1-olClorloolrwln

Evloolt~
Ellllb_,.. Ill•

ChMter • Annette K"'aht

Ad1K.._1

.

Oraoa Krider
ChlrflaiCIMr
Wm.

a Ootdle Kradlomb...•

CloorgoltouH

Tod I Cloro AHoy
Arnold a Ftor.nco Alchlfdo
EotoR-.
Edith I I HoroldaMorgorvRouoh
i.o9MK. Roodl

Frt1111Mofann

KlrmMMolny
H-MoHifllo
JudyMo-MoCiouol

Ellzobolh Wllllanl

Now Wa're

TllrouaJII

'-¥'

I
Thana_For Belnt Such I
a 811!"111 !'amiiJI

Respite Care (assiStance for
famUies wlw are caring for an
elderlu family member - in their.

31NCH AD ... 114.00

I LO\'E -TOU VERY

{lpprollmalaly 60 -d•)

MUCRI

JIAf'PY' VAUNTJIVE'S .

2 INCH AD ... '10.00

DAY

(opproximaloly 40 words)

\

home)

Cu}lid"a anowla atra,lght

and true
In bl'lnllnt this thoacht
of !Oft to yot,t.
I'm 10ftJ about the other
ntcht
.
· When we bad that ter·
rlble fllht. '
A Sentinel Lo•e Meo-

Gerold I Foye Wlld""""th
Mobol Wodtloll .
. D... Wining
Bernice Wlnn ·

$ A MONTH CLUB

Hei•Whht

Honry I " - Wollo

George • Grtce w..-n ...
·

J••

MoboiWolbum
EIID-Wollo

MonMWIIMn
NeiiWUton

CHECK ONE
I wiah lo join lhe
11 .00 Club (
16.00 C!ub (
110.00 Club (
120.00 Club (
I will pay mon1hly ( ·

J

1
)

I

1

OeorgloW...._
J-IKOIIIW-

Starting ... ... . . .. ..... ..... . ... ... . .. (date)

AnnWobo..,

I will pay_yearly (
Starting •.••••• •.• ••• ~ ••• ••. .• ••• •.. •• I date)

NoiiiiWMII....olt
Owinnie Whit.
Yoho
'

Cnh Zlmme""en
NIINe a Helll• Zert:ll

""11" wu 1 f!VO&lt;IIdeo
To allow bow much llo•e
yoa. Marla.
MAT WE ALWAYS HAVE
A WONDEJIFlJL LII'E
TOGETJiltRI

-.

....

TOMfHONIJ

WriUnll thlalo\'e mesaaae
me the opportunitJ

&amp;I•••

to teU you just how much
llo.-e you and enjoy bela&amp;
your bUJband. I

PH . NO .•.• •••• ••• ••• ••. •• ••• _•• ••••• • ~· ···· · · ·

sometimes I don't ahowlt

..............
a

Happ11

Valentine's Dau!

Or gel • 15 word or
letio line ad no «J'Iphleo
(no border)

n.oo.

........

,lt-lcott

""'

messa~e and tot~ amount to:

=·--

Jeo·MJ-Molll.,
...... lluby Mllor
E-..Moino

-a-

ADDRESS:_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;___

~----

n lolL wan &amp;tro....,

SIZE OF VALENTINE: -------------~----"-'--'-

A - • Clo11 lmllll
v...... elollln,
llmlrl:-t;
LlwrMM' • . , ltt11Wir'
Mr. I Mre. Horry l..,_b

TOTAL AMOUN"Ji.
.
....-. ENCLOSED: ............................................................................
.
ADS lUST' BE RECEIVED BY NOON, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 13 and PAID IN ADVANCE

...........lrlor.-

,)

--L. .I .

... ...
~

' .

~

..
'

•·

..

..

l' .

.

; ,. /"~

.
~

CEDAI

992-5517

MICIOWAYE
OVEN IEP All '

,

CONniUmON
992 •66 • 1
691·6164 •

•F-

-·-

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

SIGNS

I

tl.&amp;

B~

JAIIIS msn

IIAT TilE RUSH

l

DAVE'S SMALl ·'
INGINI IEPAII

'

'

DAN'S
fiANSMISSION
and AUTO IEPAII

'"T.!i?H, ... n , .

DoioyM. Ioyro

~

•e

~~~­

•

'

-·- ...........

INSULATION

NAME : ----~-' ----------~------~------7-~-

H. ltonloy '
llolpll a Mulno lholn

Myrtlo

OFFICIAL NOTICE
PurtuMI to TltiiiV of tho
lurt.ce Mining Control ond
Reclorillldon Act of 1977.
30U.I ,C. 1201 . , _., the
Ohio DIPtrt,..nt of Natural
" - " ' "· Dlvllion
of
Reolomallon, hlreby glvoo
11011ce of dte ovliltbllhy of ·a
FINDING OF NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT for on
•vln&gt;nmentol IIMIIrnotnt
wltlch co.....,• on obantlonld mined lend reclomo-.
lion project In lite Slolo Of'
OhiD. Tho Stoto of Ohio ho~
priP.,.d ond lite Office 'lfi
Surfoce mining Reolomo_, .•·
tk&gt;n
ond Enforcement,:
United Sto,.o Doport,.it~ .
of tho Interior, hoo 1 pprovo6
lite env'lro~mentol ·-·~
,..., for dtlli project whiclo,
tubmlttld by the Slota
In jjppllcollon for Title IV
nenalel oulll.,.. In ro-l
clolmlng and Nllarlng loridl
ond woter reoourcao odvor·•
Mly offoctod by Pill mining .:
A complete copy of tho ·~ -.
vlron ..
- -...1 ........enl 1.,
-ble from thl Ohio Do~
portmenl of Noturol Ao-1
oourcao, Dlvloian of lltl"
c1
lion 181111 F
1~
omo Court,
'
ounlo
lquore
BuHdlng
H - ~!\
11
Columbuo, Ohio 43224 . 1
Thl Dlvl01on plono on ob::
lalnlng raoolllnt mot0riol,
from borrow """'
ThemeterlolwlllbauNdll (:
trowlnt modlum far vogeto-.
lion whln lhe Dlvlolon ,.~
clllmo Ill ocreo of obon=J
d - llrip mlneo. lite pro-:
ject lo locatH In Section 18•
ond 22 of Scipio Townohlp,,
folelgo CouniV. Ohio. Thlo;
jlrojecl lo 100% feclorolly,i
lttnded.
•
(21 11. He
'"

J&amp;L

I l l Court St., Pomeroy, OH. 45769

John • Mary loulhern

dlotrlcl oonlalno ·approxlmetaly 1710 fwl of the - d
known 1 1 - Llrnot Rood or
County rold 3 which lito
northaftlter.orthernllound·
orv line of lhl Vlllell of llut·
lind corporellon Nmilo;
- I n • ooudtorly dlreafollowing lhl wHI
boundery ... of lhl oorpareolon Mmho to the pf!tae of
belllnnlnt .
Far 1 more delolled de·
tcrlpllon of the roel ,.,.,.
oanlllnld In lhe ...,...,....
Rutloltd Area. Senllory DietriciMd tlteoctual propiiiV
- M H _ , . . , , ell Inter·
Hlld -~~ can view lite
plat mapo of oold :- sonltorv
Dlllrictln dte Clerk Dl Coin·
mon Pleao Court of Maltl
County . Melli . CouniV
CourthouM. ,OmerOy, Ohio ·
. . . , _ tlte hauroaf I :JOa.
m . 10 4:30 p.m . Monday
through Frldey.
131 'thot a public hlorlnt
on lllclpellllon wMibe hod In
lllcl Court on the lth dey of
April, 1181 11 lite hour of
8:00 o.m. by the Court of
Cam'""" PIHI of Melli
cou....,. ol lite eourlhauM
in tho Chy of Pomeroy.
M~,,
Cou'nty , o~•-.
•
A per- on• public corporatk&gt;no ownlnt or InterHlld In reo! eoto,. within
the territory herein~
deocrlbld will be,, •., on
opporlvnhy Ia be hlord ••
the II,. ond pllco obove
-'liM.
Da,.d: 1/31 / 11.
larry E. lpenctr.
Clerk of till Court of
Cammon Pl. . of
Mlltt CouniV. Ol!lo
By Diane Lynch, DIPuiV
12111. 1 ~· 11, 3tc

,_.,,Ollie

The Daily Sentinel

Dovld S.Vro
Trol a Edno lchollllob
J....,..lnoltl•
~ - A. a Dorotltr Smith
Iotty I., ..

PubliC Notice

PubliC Notice

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Ewlyn lum-'llicl

Wm. Mona Sorel•
EfllolMlldrod IAololm~h

,,

-E-wa,.

but I really do.

l

0 Brbtg In or mall your

•••

YOUNG'S

knoW

WRITE YOUR MESSAGE BELOW:

•
.......................................
ADDRESS : .. . .. ...... . . ....... .. . ..... ~ •• •• •·•
................................................
NAME : ·

•
•
•

'";========;i

Happy Valentine's Day . j
Grandma. Gnndpa
.1
. Mom, Dad
Sister and Brother ·

L---- ~--------------------------------~

.VIoloiMCo....lnoMIIor
Nlllf•Moore ·

Alice W.nt...,.
Mtrg...etWeber

Erm~

Blue

(approximately 30 words)

JollnBholn

w..,... ......

McDodo
Moo MoPIIII
Vlrgl l!lcl!nr

Vloleta ue

"-'1111 Rend:lph

Morr M. Lron
Co"'ILH - I Ellrobodl LoiiH
Jolin a Koth.,.. l.orftbort
ROM

W~Wil10n

CtroiWin•
l.eoneW .. Kt
Wright
OeniViweWell
Anna Wolfe

Valendnn DO!/

· ,1"'1NCH AD ... '7.50

N::::c llobollt
H
Rloo
VIrginia A J....,..lno Altchlo
Ru- a Gollllo Aodollfto
llldi... R -

Wm. l ..nlloRotllll
Undo R01hburn

.. emieSweugir
Clerenoe • A..11 Sm.n•

Euro .....,

HappJI

R-ueRed . ·

•

Services

I~-------------------------------------,
.
I
.
I
I
I
I
I
'.I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
.
'
.
.
I

Calvtn Lana
Lewrence a Marjor" Leon~rcf
' Maruloe Lon
Pelrlene LH
NoriMA. L"
holm Lanning
Jeenett.Liwrwnce

Amb•Lohn

• ·(approximittly 20 'wordo)

Home Maintenance (mlnDr home ,
repairs}
Outreach

Norme Witton
Beuleh W•d

Grace Price ·

1 INCH AD ... '5.00

You Brolul My Heart

,...,tl
Edno Ploll1111

All01

J

Oorolhy V•nKamel

Dolor--1

. Elmw lllclcana
Son• P•aons

Dayton • INn• Phillips

Hei ... Howett

Ch61tlt VenMeter
Mr . • Mrt. l,.eo V1ughln

Homer • IWWI WHI.,d

Elrl • Oer~ldlne Cro11

.JenweeCh...,.,

·

Home Dellv~ed Meals

'

Ervin • Lucille PotNtz

Addle Norrll
Alman.non

MoryRinoh_,
H- R..,nolcll

CCH'dle Colln1

Ann1Tum•

·•.

CALL 614-992-7104 FOR APPT.

Business

_EXAMPLES OF SIZES AND PRICES:

'

Jlm 1Trevll

VWglnlt W.aton

..... _

Peui.AIICIIN._.

Milton Hood • Notal*ort
!lhodo Holl

Th ..ma CoiNns
Mary E. Chepman
MaroeMa Chepmen
EdMC1rm1n

r

Bob 6 Joan Tawbb.-y

Hom,e maker/Health Services

Wllllotm M - '

MlllhoCiondl
JomooC-ril

AoullonCoiHnt

I

Dor11 Thomas
Marg. .t Thompson

Jene Tilford

·~

992-2"156

SodloTruoooll

Petri. Praffin

~·Go

W-IVIdoG,_
Kothol I Tod Holfllicl
Ml'*od Honlo

.·IN THE HOME

Ellh• Metc.at

George • M.rg.,.t Nichols
AnneNlxon

'.

'·

Sh-M-hh

Fred• W.tling
Mat Weber
Curt Wilson ·

Irene Gilmore

SERVICES &amp; PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS

Chore Service (cleaning- ~)

Ru O' Brllll

Von• Gllhnwtter

--:-- - : - - - --..f,· _:;;
l'f·

8111 ThuritOn
Ecft• &amp; Oreftll Thomu

Tht Meplt R•identt
w.,ne Mlholn

Cl..,co I Ann Grlflhh

Oril Hubblrd

lem Cummins
Bernice CI~J*~ttr
Emllt a ladle C•r

a

SIM'aVOII

C1r0te Colemlfl

Mollndo Chrloly

a wheel chatr I!ft. are aua llaiJie
for personal/ medtcal trips) ·

Coello Mitch

David Dorothy Sayre ·
lAw!'lnCI Stewart
George &amp; Vytk:e S...,,

Club

Hoi., Norrio

Rill Buckley

M1nley Chrllty

Transportation and Escort (etght
uchtcles. including one uan with

8111 a Lou-. Stew1n

Haul VanCooney

Elolo Hln•
Ho1111Hood

Evtlyn C11to

•

MIY* Mon1

G - a M.-g- Nlcholo
Dorotho Noutzllng

Wm . • E lhbtth Hollttetter

1111~

Senior Citizen Squ1ra Dance

H""'Tipeon

.lohn a Merjoria 1...-.r

Flooolo lodalov

Florence Smkh ·

• Betty Meurer
JOWl " · Morrill

Eloloo MoAldl ... a M-1 M..,.r

I//"
'.

Mary &amp;eemlin
Herokl a Wlml S•rgent

Oon~ld

Chll'l• • Mtrglret Murrey
ltuct a Donne Morrie ·

\

~~

Albort.s chu ltJ

P_.Nomo

l ..bk:ehll

Jane lrown
Delft Bamltl:
Homer a Alphs

Moore

M!:lE--or
G oGroh. .
F-Googtoln
1'1110Corl • P"'lino Gorby
Thoh111G""""
Lrdlo onuv
M-Golt

Brldgo Club llonlor Ch-ol Hol111 Hlob
• • - Iloilo
Vl'lll I Morr Homm

Protcctivc/Legal/\ssbtancc

':.0'

Anna F..,.ll
Rubf Friel

Moly

joN • Virgie Miiac•ro
J-.n

Atv. Wm. MlddlM:\,- Motcolf
N1n oore

Jactde Hldlbrancl
a.mtoe H. .k

Aovo BolCh

Information and Referral

I

e...terdl¥

...... -lor
Ml'*od Fultz '
· Ead a Llloll Frockor ·
Eiii::;oFinl
,.
wtt... a .H.... Foa •
--F~A;dl ... a-Fttty

Noth.,l .... llggo

Care Support System ' (asSess·
ment of hiJsplltJltzed. sentDrs for
foUow-up care qfter cllscharge}

Tax Assistance

I

INDIVIDUAL CONTRIBUTORS

SERVICES &amp;: PROGRAMS
FOR SENIORS

FOR SALE IN RACINE

VERY Nlct LARGE HOME ON APPROK. 3 ~
ACRES- 4 BR, J boll-., 2t i raaes. rented I
BR aportment. ProPIIIY illdudes pond, IP·
prox. 4,800 sq. ft, llrm bid&amp;: ond mobile
homo . A reol borpin II 184,900.

rllh• to Nleot •nv o; 111 1111111
Public Notice
ond/ ar MY pert dteriCf. ·
Melgo CouniV
NOTICE OF SALE
CommialaMora
Mory Hobll..,.,, Clerk TO ALL PERSONS
INTERESTED
..
12) 1. 12. 2tc
, Cooo No. 91 ·CY· 22
Public Notice lo Horally
Glvon :
111 Thoton tho 3111 dey of
Jonuorv. 1891. purouont to
the Sanlllry Dlotrlcl low of
Public Notice
Dhk&gt;, lllero woo lilld In the
offlca of lite Cleft of thl
Court of Cammon P'-• 'Of
Mllgo County, Ohio, the peIN THE
tlllon of lite Vllllt• of RutCOMMON PLEAS COURT
lond lor thlellobllohment of
OF
1 .... Ill' Dl llr lcI to ...MEIGI COUNTY. OHIO
known "II Thl Rutlond Aret
Oeorp M. Calllno,
Sonlllry Dlotrlcl. Sold Dl•
Melto Cou...., Treoourer
Plolnllff lrlct lo Ia be elllbllolted for
tho following purpoMo: To
prevent Md oorroct the polM..., Evant•
lutk&gt;n of Leodlnt Cr.... and
Cole 81,.1,
othlr llllimo within 11\e
MiddlePOrt, Ohio 411710
D.tendant PfOpooM llllnllory Dl..,lct
·
Ano;ondto· pravldefortho
CoM No. IO· DLT,oz
collectiOn ond 11nllory dlo·
NOTICE Of SALE
polll Dl ,...,_ lnd Oilier II·
~ - - . . Judgment hoo
..,... rendered _.not - - quid we.,. produced within
telrt parotlo of .... poopertv lite ""'poold 8onltory Dlafor laUI, Ill ITI,.,.fttl, lrlcl ArM.
121 Thll dtl Iondo ooughl
.ch"''IH. penellltoa, .....,..,,
to be lnalu4Md In uld Dlo·
ond 00111 ao followo:
Parotl No. 1 : The folk&gt;w- trlcl compriM loltdt In Tho
lneruiHI... ollu...dlnlhe VIllage Dl Rutllltd end Rut·
Cou,.., of Meill- In the lend Townohlp In Melgo
" - of Ohio, Md In lhe County. Ohio, dnorlbld 1---.;..-....,_~-1;:=======::;
"
Townohlp of lalllbUry, •ond ..-tlllly 11 folk&gt;wo: · 1
llllingolldte,.le.,.to
bounded altd .........., 11
olluoted within lhollllloge Dl
folk&gt;-: lleglnnlng .. ollake
fifty (1101 ,.., """" of tho R utlend and I hot portion of
ea11 Md WHI line fmlddle) reel ellllt tditcont Ia tho
ofhctlon 8. Town 2 . 11anve Vllloge of Rutllnd oorporoSpecializing In
1 3 of thl Oltk&gt; Contpliny'o tlon Nmlto ollueiH within
Autamolic
of
llutlend
llle
Townohlp
PurchiH, thence Nord\ 2211
Tr-miNiont,
Broke1, ,
and
mo,.
po"lcullrly
dofwl, tt•ae EHI-100 - ·
Tu....,p, 011 Chonge,
oarlbed I I followo:
Iouth 221 - ·
llaglnnlnt ot lite oouthClutch R~~p~~lr.
•
-Well100fwltothe
FIIEE ESTIMATES ;
, . _ ., ...,..~ bcapl cor- of thl VIllage of
8 Yeoro Experien ce ·
fifty f•t
of
Iouth Rutland corporotlon Hmlto:
thMae in 1 ooutlteriV direcand of • - - lrHI ond tion·
1 dillonco of opproxl·
••..,. .... -onty-f!Vefwl
Ul l111t llaln
off of .t he North end of lllid motetv 1700 fHt to 1 point
belnt the oaulh- comer
c~eo..- trlct, being 1 otrlp
P-roy, OK.
of land obout 1DO fHI In of lite rHI eliot• contelned
!/ 1191/ 1 1110.'
length and oXIondlnt back within tho propoold Sonl·
tery Dillrict, for refwence I
r--~~~-----1
lhe width of nld kit.
.
Porcal No . 1 boint tte reel Nld line inllriiCio Leading
•Remodaling and .
..,.,. conv..,ld by Dovld CrMk .,
0pproxlmotely
Hol'l'll R•palra
Terrell, •• al, 111 a.nho Ter- 1 aao ,.., trom '"" point of
•Roofing
AU IUDS
rell by deld decordM Oct. bqlnnlng; lhoncoln on No11 . 1132. 1nDHdloolcNo. terly direction 1 dlllonco of
•Sidinll
lnnt It Ill Or We •
137. Page 311 of the re- IIPProx-..lv 11.30 ,_, to •
•P1Intlng'
Plcll Up.
cord• of DHdl· In the Re· • point beint tlte oauthleot .
01 'S &amp;-llfl E
Office, Mligo co,..oftltei'MIHtllecon·
corder'o
NO
JOI
TOO
SMALL
11
llined within oald f.ropoMd
n
rro.
C'
Cou....,, Ohio.
FREE ESTIIATES
SEIYICE
The obDVe deoarlbed trocl sonhllry Dlotrlcl, or ...,,.,.,
...c. .eldooulhemuneln&amp;E·
992-5335 or .
No. 14·00317.000 by lito _,. County Rood 13 lloo
915-3561
Melgo Coun'Y Truouror'o known .. Depot .,,.., "
opproxlme~oly
1112D ,_.,
or ..
..,... From hot OHkt
olfl...
•
117 1. S.CHII St.
Parcel No. 2: Tho follow· from tho oouth_, comer
I'OIIIIOY, OMIO , ' ·
Ina real • - lilu- In of thl real ·~~~~ tlllocriiMd
the Townohlp Dl •ellobury, 11 I 111 propoooa 8tnltory
t2-J 1-to-tift
. 3"/90/ H« I
oeld oouthern
Courilv of Mal11 and 111,. Dlotrlcl,
of Ohio, Dl iecilon I ," Town lloultdery line Dl thl reo! et2, Rtntl 13 Md dHcrlbecl "'• oltullod within the proI. ." ...'"
•• followo: hint aloout Ten poold Sonltary Olotrlcl oanCAIPI1
CliAIIIIS
1040
tolno
opproxlmeltiV
,
Hundrldtho (10/100) of in
CARPENTER SERVICE
•.t ftll fLOOI CAll
ocre 01! tho Et11ertv 11d1 of feet of the roed known 11
- Room Addlti0n1
Lot No. 20 of RHIOrd' o Depot StrMI or Coun'Y
•A..sonable llatea
- Gutter
Surwy. hlng the ..,.. Rood 3 which lo ollueled
oQuellty Work
oouthern
ltld Plu-..
pro- •• aenvevld to lOUth of lhl
llnot
of
the
VIllage
boundary
Contretel
work
Ettlm•t••
Marpr81 Torrell by Robert
of lludond corporotk&gt;n llm- Roofing
•C•rpet H•• Faot Dry
Dyke "'d Fk&gt;Mt101 R. Rue- 1 - I Ex•lor
Mil. Dev- of D. A. Rutooll itl; thence In 1 northwel"
Time
'
Poiftllng
d - Aprl 11th, torty dlrecllon 1 dllllnce of
by •High
Gloaa
on
Tl!e
31120 fwt 10
(FREE EITIMATE&amp;I
1114 ond - - In Vol. aopproxlmlloly
Floor Flnloh
point oltuoted an the ooo111. Poge 204 of lho ••·
cordo of . DHdo of Mligo ,.m boundory Uno Dl the VII·
llllllf liWIS. ow' - of Rutllnd eorporallon
County, Ohio.
992-6215
11.
-•• lutlond. 011.
Porul No. a bllne tlte r•l Umho, lor l"'lwronco uld
-..n
llouoldorv
llnll
Inter·
741-2451
'
ao""eyed by E. R.
11-14-'90 !In
Steffv, ., at. 111 hfthl Ter- _,.St.,. Route124 81 ep.
rell by tilled - - Oc· pro•l-taly 820 .... from
toller 11. 1132 In · DHd 111a ooudteoll .......,. oftlte
CttAtlllt
Book No. 137. Page 317 . rMI Hille deoorlbed 11 tho
propooecl
&amp;onltory
Dlllrlct.
DHd Roaordo, Mel.. County, Ohio. ond further fNieo· uld HltM'n baundery line Of
tele ao~veyld by Rolph R. . tht real ''"" olluoted
Snyder and La,.. Snyder within the oold propoMd
by
H101\J'ltlf . :
111 a.nho Ternll by tilled re- •••....., l;llotrlct aenttlnl
•VInyl
Sldlnt
ao-Octoblr11, 1132, 111 IPprOxl.....oly 1020- of
''
•lleptacemenl
Deed·- No. 1U, ·' - lite roM lno- H IIIIo
Window•
.... Deed 11-rda, M... t R-124-1111-IDI
tho • ....., bounclory line of
•llooflng ·
Cou,..,, Ohio.
olnaullllon
The ....... tllloaribW lrocl lite VIHogo of llutllnd corPoint Plealnt • 675-6925
porotlon llmllo: thlnca folNo. 14·00318.000 br lhe lowing the eenern boundary
992-2772 or
M...l Cou...., T,..ou,.r'o line of the VIII- of Rutlond
corporlllon llmlto 10 tho
Ofllca.
742-2251
Parcel No. 3: The folk&gt;w- northloll corner of Mid 1111Get yevr lawn and gar- :
131 Bryen "'"•
llmlto:
lnt tlllocrlbed .... ...... ' - corporeMlddlepon.
Ohio
tMII equl(llmlllt tunetl ., l
thence
continuing
In
1
ollutlld In llilobury Town. 11-14-tfn
ohlp, end being Lot No. 20 In northerly direction. 1 dltand bladtt sharponlil ~
opp,..xlmately
Rodford'• lurwy, _Town· tanoo of
for tht coming tHsenl
ohlp No. 21n llan.. 13, lec· 1920 t.llla o point which It
tho
northlall
corner
of
tho
DURING FEIRUARY '
t1Dn I. Ohio Cornpeny'o
PurchaM - -'tllol beint 10 fNI ..,.,. deoorlbod within
- Frti pldl• and •
lite propoHd lanllary Dlo.... liy 1 00 fMt ond beillll
trlot;
tltenoeln
•
_
,
.
,
Ill·
Mllnry In POIIIII'ay
pert of lite real de·
arMtl bytlleC-efCam· _,!on ...,_.,. "'"""....
IIIII M~Mepoft dty '
........,. 4120 ........ ........
...... In ltld fer lllcl
limits.
MollO County elite NDVem· . being the northtulll corn•
ber ,..., A.D. · 1117 to of .... real WE ALSO IERVICE 1
tlllocrlbed
Mlll'lllll D"'"ll 'In • tulllor - I n the propoold .........,
CHAIN SAWS
dlv- agalttet Jlltn o...nlo dlotrlct. fer - - o81d
norlhem line of lhe proH all..-y.
- • the ..,.. preml- poold ........., dlllrlct · - oold 11111 _,..,.d by Jouh - · County llold 3 known
11 N- Urnot Rolli al 811·
2JJ Wilt llaill St. ,
-TOIIOY byond
to JuM
Levi proxl,_y 1720 from"
tilled- .......
p._roy, Oh.
nerthe• aomor: lllid
27th, A- D. 1114, re- _.... 1n Vol. 111 . , _ .........,n bouout.y line of
284. Molgo County.- OhiO., tfte .... ..... d&amp;IOI lb ld
l-4-,1
- I n lhe propoMd oanlllry

.

Meigs County Councn
on Aging, Inc.

BULLETiN BOARD DEADLINE
j: SO P .M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

T·-

•

BOA~D .·

BULLETIN

''

..

.,

.,..._rd.

\

"""•

~·~ I

I

·~,

...

PH. 992·3922 ,

·"

'

,·'

', .

1

r • .il- ~."" •
I·

.. . -l'i'\· ..... ~ Dj', .,,

...' ..

'

�...

...,.

AnP ouneern0nt s

--

3 -AnnouiiCell'leiiR

....... ,.

-

llftll!o -

Opponunlty

Write: Hea;t...-oh, P.O. lox

INOTICII
OHIO VALLEY PUIUSHINO CO.
, cai"M11tftde lhM ~ do bu8f..

1043, Oilll....... OH 41Qt.

GOLD CREDIT CARG, 1 - oppooMd, IFI,&amp;OO. etodM line
money bock guoroniOO for canIIIOio Int. oOII 1 . - - G

bS. t...
llokoloA·Tookll

glvo

MOO wfth people YOII kMW1 and

NOT lo ooind- through tho
moll untl you line ln-lgotad

tho~

your

IWMthNrt I Mndii ade VII..,._

tine btlak- with a chocol.ta

goodlo. FrM dollvery

local oroo
on Valll"'llne ~· C.n IN 8t ~
Yogart, call to ace orura 304-

I?Wt37 oftor :00 Pll.

304..f82·:10M.

"...and sign· it 'Sincerely
yours' ... that'll fool 'em!"

.'

_6...;.._Lo_._st_&amp;,....Fo_u_n_d_ _ 9

'

8

"willa and gray rabbit, 1 yr old;
.

Public Sale
· &amp; Auction

~mole Doogle dog. 3Q4. · Rldo ,..,_, Auction Company
~ ouottono, n·
....U. tM df'fwiauce.
Lost &amp; Found

=W8nted

8
0IIIo, Kenl\ic:ky, Weal
,;,POUN="'o-,....:..;,.2.....,..tul,.l"f_l_ow_o_o-mo.....,.l&lt;l·l Yi'lllnla, SCM-T13-B711.

r.!::":u:raA~•:u.•::.:..~
"Tho Wlllfvnl" call 114-1112-2441.

wanted to Buy

"Goodon o.-tunlly'" ooind you

,...., .... to P:o. loa -ntiF carw of
tho Dolly -lnol, -...oy OH

411711•

.

.

Real Estate
'

-lat.

Help Wanted
-;;:::::--7.~=~~=::::AYOH • All orooo, Coil Marilyn
-•or 304-a&amp;2-2145.

11

LDIT: Largo lfOY I wi!Mo cat Wo want to buy ye&lt;~r olotndlng
wMb wtol1ii liillor. Ylolnly of tlmbor. H a - a Plne. ·Loaon
Codor I l'lool• .,...,....111.
~- 814-2111-4720, 114-:ae.

Wood s - , Inc. WANTED
~ wood 11 diameter max,
12ft or Ianger, do not want
tocuot, hadgo 1ppte or plno.
Locotad US 111. 33 ooot or Hoven obo¥e Aonorlcon Altoyo
· plant on right. :IC!4-882o!llUO.

.

- poroon uolng
I• nes 8 Servl· ces E x p o - nllflilwwlo,
1:00
BUS
---------r---------l
till 1:00
hr,

lmmacuillte 3br 2 bathl

In

w.. hlngton CKy Schools, 2

llreplac-. gat, CA, flnlahed
· baMrn~nl, aU appllancH,,Iota of

o&gt;rtrao. $59,900 814-446-8670.

Lot plllli Mobile Ho.me. 14x7o,

DLX SchuK, with oxpondo, 2b!,

2 both, CA, • - porcho1. 1t•
lot, At. 2 North of' Pl. Pl..nnt,

Pll
All, 14.21 f'OI
30of.'Tt2-lfll7
or 304 118 3130.

for Sale

·

homo for ala.
bedroom Colt botwoon

11-lp.m. 1-.:JIIH.

1110 Llbtrty mobll&lt;l homo
w/oddhlon tot1l 4 bodroomo,
1112 to 2 ocrao, bam and ·om111
ohod. 1NO. mlleo out Brood Run
lid, ,.... Havon, 304-182-3144.
1HO Cioy1on 14151, 2 bod·

HomtL 114-441-1340.

Middleport
H1nd Tufting

Drapee

36 Ye•u ExperienN

614·992·2321
Wt Soy. What Wo Do.
Wt Oo Whit We Soy.
10·19·1 mo.

USED APPUANCES
90 GAY WAftAim

WA!IIEIS-$100 op
D~US-$69 op

IUIIGOATOIS-$1 00 up
UNGIS-O..·Ett&lt;.-$121 up
FIIIII~S-S12S .,
MKIO OYINS-$79 up

liEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

·

·

21or t..nor 11nooc1 yonl, 1101,...
goo,
Wltw, ......... a
~· 114411
MOO -

~

3p.m.

.

Pomroy • lllddlell0f1 flf.lt2.

sua.

992-5335 • 915·3561
hross from I'Mt Offico
POMROY, OHO
10/30119 lfn

11· 12·90-tfn

·····-·
•Garaps

•Co•plete
.._.,int
Stap I Co...are
Fr11 Estllllllfes

985·4473
667·6179

·BISSELL
BUILDERS .

'

5-31."90 lin

• · 6-16·11•

Now In

. - . br"*. -

,_, -~..lint• oto. Cloiodo Win-

.... ... Qninda, OH Clll I'M-•-

5I

----.

u-·-hokl

,.,.

=

Ohio

Dopo~mont

:.:-~-OHio'J;•J.-A.eal.._•81f.
aa.:m .;, 114.f4Wiii. • - . iooo
u-·pol=.to,~'==-~====
USED APPUANCEI
1 bdnn, 2 !Mjnn. AU utHHieo
-.oo paid,
1~luml hod , 200 00 •
1 9A turn.

rJ:: tn Ylnton. Dop.

,.q'ed.l14-4

1141.

·.

1 BA, 1300/mo.; 2 BR, S400Jon!,;
2

...-na I ~tl11. ""

wa-. •ar .!ft".;a••·
o1ryoro, ••h(Foll-

fr.-A

,_rw:-

P~ "...::.'
, Colll1l 141

C
. NI!I

4

W4~

Wook II homo parontlng
olilldtwn. 81 ,.. lo Thooopoutli:
Footor P....... Call 114-4418281, ••k lor Home a...

AKC floalol-

-n

Drag

blue t~YM.

•*

H•kY

~;:oa.y Portion,
and HI'"""""" killona.

•tnd

....,_
4•a•u•tt•7p.m.
11t

•-1212.

•

- Doytono IS,- mlloo. y.
-oollo. No - b l o o"-r
ratu...r - consldor trodo ln.

I, air, oruloo, l U I - . AIIIFII

)

"

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11 El CaminO u lull
1 oonciUon, ....,.

.:"da

par =~
par - .
Aaltn. sm ~ -to. lllnrlte

-......a..
·A·

il

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"

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Polechaa, and olher con,.. •
=~ r.:r"~..J:'oxt"'r:na ::,,

OCNEANMiNT IEIZED . . , _
Inion 1100. Corntloo, ChoYyo,
.....neiL

1

I

;

::

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aooct. t700.oo.

smorl;14-141412t.

114"-1112'
·

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!~

1P~(;fA~

,,
:
•"1

'

$Lf.9~

.

loglo $4100 ooto ortrodo for
-~1114 -dow

po

11,000 ..... 11100 IM-Ja.asQ.

18IS Font F150

ILT,

a..,..

Cob,

....... -~~~. f3,ooo. 3114-5"11-

= r:·

WooiL 4 ~
--

.!

ALLEY OOP

~~~=~~.-:it::-"

.

S3

Antlquell

~~·
:!l£;''\"..c.~
Rent, 8t1~ 111211. 114-31'7·7110,

&amp;

-~~~

locollon
In . Pt.
IDift lovol, Iorick

11
~~a.-Will....

=;

_ , . e . - MaN In Foul To
AaHA Chuoolon S1 11!00, Moroh
r,4..~,::F" Olloalng, sm.

Wro-: Old wall clock, han
old alook. to oo1 or
trodo,
114-4411-4122
after
7·
Qulllo
-pro 1140 aood -ion.
Sand pholoo onil -~~~~ion to
1 Patton, Attoono. Ohio 41181 or

lnt-lonol 110
H1rto1no
(oxoollont~ Hollend 273
oquora Mlor..;,.koo, new 12 ln.
Ford~
monurt1
......-.. · drltlo, earn
,..._ othor llild roody ..
Fonn
noor, 'til. 124 I Mayhew
lld.,loclllll!fi 0H.I14-aii .IIMI.
Jloot'o Form laulpmool'-811. :15,
Weal, Goltlloollo, 114-W777;

~,'Z ';_ ~nAI=

1
~=
~:,:.o;:.::
t~aa ·
· ,:..,·

·=
=3Dp=.m.:.....-==----

IMJIIZ......,

c.tl
2-481.

or

1141512·

54 MIIC811..-.ecKJI

Merchandise

21" -

Wot-

-•ot• T.v. wlih
....00"
SIIIO.OO. l14-1112·

2Sot.

3Frick oow mtn. 311 ..,.
gino. '71 - o n for po~o. ..,.
Pl ..... 414 ·811-. '72
~ '10 Ford Horizon.
::l.n oa.o. a:'o':.r.'·~·~

aauortnl.lfUI.

·-·-

·~and-

0111
t24f:~1.

==-nt. '' .......

Wide ue.ctlon MW a UMII farm

tract- a lmploooienlo. Buy,
Mil, - · 1:-:00 -doyo,
SoL 1111-.
Aoglol- Land · 81110
_
_....... - · old, 11th of
,._,.l14-llfi.131Z.
··
'
Utltlly llultclng BPL: 27'131'11',
,._13"xr llillnjj Door, 1·3' Mon.
~. Choloe 01 13 Color.,
14,... Eroatod. lroft Horoo
lulldonr, 114432-tlllll.

_82,__w_,.;.,nl....;ed....;t.;.o,.Bu~y:,..,.
· _

'=to~i:i:""poort~m=
,•::::.••··--·----

63

Llvlllock

A8a•••r Oulrter ...,_., 4
yoor illd Goldng, I yoor old

2

MaN -

hovj -

outtlng

oft

liiWIIII.

,.
.,
73 Vans &amp; 4 WD's
' :
, ,·
1178 Che¥1' 11. P-1ngor '•' .
Church luo. ¥-1, auto, A-1 '· ,
ohopo, Modo bcidJ
wotlo. Mot. on ....
r. Soiling ·
=~ :a~8 .oftor lfp.m., .,

t1401o-.

·

--.-.pig........
-J =.&amp;t~~

fo f Sale.

' '

:;' ·

Accessories

::

ludael T,.MMIMkMia, lJMd &amp;
,.bull, •~tna o1 na; 114-2411Ford-IMulod--1
-~ and I to~ liloclo. 3111

Dllloo- -lloln - ·
PI-nt.
- . , 3 tR. a both. 2 office 8NII atonae room.
ltr.plocoo, lol. 114-441- and air, ut~·- paid, 0041 "'304-171-2171.
fJ'S.-.

- - ·· ....tonc:.=:::r

114 Ul

Hoytoraote._an_hY.

CJ..

flooauod lor

-

Soloo In tho Flold. 114-

224~11~·~··!!...-::-:---::--:--=-:-

H.,

for ....: Aouncl ......

410 or Oollvooy'o Avollolite.

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

= -=
10!12-

1,._

Hoy For
lqu. . boleo,
hoy, 1F1 par btl&lt;l. f14.2lfl.

•·

•

'•

.

,.

,.
,,•'

,.

8

BARNEY
ALL MY FELLERS ARE

OFF FLOAT FISHIN' AN' .
SNIF
SNIF

AN' HOW'S

MIZ BARLOW
THESE

_,. olllllanco ...,.ti'L WY
304.1f"IW:Iil Ohio 114-441-2414.
Sopt!a T... Pulllling_tiO_,_Gollla
Co. EVANS EHT1!Ar1111ES,
Joe-, OH 1~31411128.
Dn4l
-Yoc ........
Qu ... l:loolo Aol. Porto, oup~loup, and olollvwy. 114;;;::::;:::::;._

10:30QII Croolt ancl ChiN

11:oollle Iii &lt;11e o - •
(!) Night Court 1;1
CDIMwaw&amp;ll:h

91• ArNniD HMf Stereo. g
I Mllnll Vloe Stereo.

•
"
•

.:.=.
8

)

Plumbing &amp;

·

___

:

ao ......... ll1d Mrt. Klotg

11:301])• IIJl Tonlglit lhow .
Stereo.
,
(!) Mtdlcll Story
Ill Ad•m Sm111t'a Money

World

ASTR_O_·G_R_AP_H
_....,._

Hnllng

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

C-e .... 8oe VI Por A Free laapeclloa
IIIHI&amp;almate

Pit 614-915•3949 IOIIIIIY DUD
4726t St. IL 241

long loHoon. Oh. 4S743

113191/1 itiO.

I

ool

WATIR

·• Day ca.. Cantor.
Salt, •""' 1 ble, ot.Ndc rre. H

PR~

Aao! 2 •10.
.
....
·
s lc err au 111 1224. DnotHno

I LOL • 1:30 p.m.

Wll do olllco, or 1ouoJ.
, _ ctoonlna and Ironing han
.... .«1CI,1 1 *"~

Flll.11,1111

·~;:o- ali Dtllig.

Ill,-·
......,.....

,.._,.,lo(l,
...,
114-lii:Z.2410.

WILLI

t~

71'11.

. . &lt;I--

thaw an lmprov..,_t In the yeer
lhoecl, but H 11 likely to be tr8dull. AI
1or1g 11 you are mov:."'lllln ., upw~rd dl·

:t.or.:•t .

· Aon, rod, T..,,
ohor a:oo .... -

-."'--~
. . -and-· .

rec:tton, Clon"l tmplllenl.
AQUANUI '""" 11).11111. 11) UnciOr-.
tlllllllng fOUf cornpeiHton coukf pro- ,
dUOII IIIICie*tble resullt today. T...e
Poli111o cerefully evtholla lhe atranglli
of thole wllfi whom you 1ou11. Aqu.itol,
tru1 yoUrlllf to a birthday gift. Send for
your Altr01Jr1Ph predlcliOIII 1or the

CALL 1tl4 Clrc 9 , AC, PI, Pl.:;'

lllMCL

ANY1111: 114 -

"Why are we having this again? '
cooking show I wa1ch was, a rerun ."

DAILLIO,

Your llnanclli trendl lhould alar! to
-

,
- _ . ,_..
-- ......
llf'M.II.
bod

~·····

U.HG.MH~t-7111orl1f.IP.

0111.

'

(2:00)

DAYS?

•

year ~head by matUng $1.25 10 AatroGraph, c/o this .-.paper. P.O. Box
91428, Cleveland, OH 44101·3-428. Be
sure 1o state your zodiac lllgn.
PIICII (Pill. »&gt;llan:h :ID)It'slmpor·
tant thai you moln1aln a rMIIIlk:, pool·
live .clHude regordlng fOUf r•p tualbll·
llleil 1oday. H you Inflate Ihorn
unreaiOflabty. your tnlllatlft might !&gt;&amp;come tlot.
ARIES (Match 21·/4ptll 111 Your com·
mercia! survival today depande upon
your ability to function lndepandently.,
Oon'tlabor under the Illusion that uao-·
elates are looking ·out lor anything but
tholr own lnterea1a.
TAURUS (Aprll .....r :ID) II would be .
wise to vlalbly suppoo1 your mate In
1ront of otherltoday, evan though you
don't agrw wl1h your partner'• pool·
lion. H will holp Ia a potenllolly
-lout prOOIIm.
. _ (.., 21...1une 20) tna1ead Of
trying 1o lmpoa your ld- on co-work·
en todey, fleW out what IIIey htiM to
uy. They might heva SUQOOIIkinlthat
are IUI*10r Ia youra.
CAMCIII (.IUM 21......., 22) Be very
-.lui today about getting Involved In
jOint......_~ whore the lunclo you tn-1 are controlled by someone llae.
Thllll a cr11lcal area.

·-·. .

.. ...

~'rr::l;l
• Cliurcli llr'M1Itetlon

UO (Julr 23-Atlfl. 22) People over
whom you haiM autflorlty can be guldld
but nor bullledtoday. lf you come on 100
strong, you mllfht c-t• 1 altuatlon llilt
could gel out of hand .
VIRGO (Aug. 22 lapt. 22) Much Of your
1111001 tO&lt;!ay could be counterprodtoo:ltve. Thllll bocew you mar 1ry 1o IPpeeae Ut DCfe. . rltller 1ltan lelhere to
your own bell judg"*lt.
t.•RA (Bepl. 2loOct. D) Your apencl·
lng patrerns could be greatly ln-.cecl
by the company you keep today. 11
you're UIOCiallng with. high rolterl,
tr-e Ia 1 good chance You'll be more
extravagenlthan you thould be.
ICOIII'IO .COat. :M llotr. 22) You might
cater to lncllna11ono thai 1111 your will
agalnt1 1he will of lh- with whom
you"ll be lnvolvtd 1oday. Thllloll'l-·
Cill In Juverolte IO&lt;prelllon wh1Gii you
could IIIII" regret ..
SAGITYARIUt (llotr. 21 Dlo. 11) You
might to contend wl11i en lnCIIWid·
u.. w1to expoundt klell In • bofd and
drtmettc r.thlon lodey. Don't be tntfml.
d~lld by the PlitOiil, btU W 1111
ma • ge rn., leek IUbetlnOI.
CAPIIICORN (Deo. II ...... tl) HII bill
not 1o.,... a j01n1- today whirl
there 1sn:1 parity be1\ueen parUcipll'lll.
If the rolla are not equal, don't play 1111
game.

...

.

.. .......

~ ~ ·"-

'

. ..........

"'

8 lpart.Cin..,,

e

0 The lqllllllllf
QDNIIIi&gt;llle. 0 World CUp Of l'lg.,..
•811111nt From Kltchtnor.
Ontario (R)
l8l NewiNIIIIII
0 M0\111: l1l8 114otherl
O'TOOle (2:001

12:06 (I) M0\111: Cllelo'l !And (PGI
(2:00)
.

I]).

IJ)Niglillt18Q
0 LMI Nflht With

DevldLa .....

(I) 110¥11: The ao.t (Det
lOOt) (A) (2:30)

o ........ .._
ColwDICikM
a • 111n1 eap,
12:35 (i) ~ Cor;.-.c11on
1:00 (I) e Fd Guy 1;1

-

)
I

. ,, -....

.

..,

'

.

'
•

'

Answer
VIII's
sixth)
30_Hammer'
ends
31 Corpulenl
32 Sped
33 Foot
feature
38 Violinist's
need
39 Hem's
partner

'••
•'
•

.
.

!
I
I

'
'
\

'-

.••

Slaughter
28 Corral
29 Place
30 Nolorious
box
opener
34 Spanish
she-bear
35 Historic
period
31 Prohib~
37UIIIess

•

- '..

• • '

•I
!

i'

,
•

1

payment
40

.-

Eagle's

~ grabber

•

41 Stand in
lhe studio
42 Oodles · ·

I

.'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOT~ - Here'• how to wor\ it:

215

AXYDLBAAXR

Nil Pa.plal
aJeA111811oaTonlghl

12:30

.

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'

Al8lnlo IIIII "-&lt;1. C
liD Pen, MIDIIfl18 Wl1fi

•

'
... '''
.

Is LONGFELLOW

.•
I

One letler stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apostrophes, the length and fonnatlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
.

I'

'

CRYPTOQUOTE
!

2·5
WZAWNZ
GZIWAFP

REA

EMDZ

WAR Z G

ICJWNL.

X E Z L

'•
'
•

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EMDZ

FA

JCFPI

VSX

XE;ZCG

ARF. - CDL YAJWXAF·VSGFZXX
Yeelerdev'• Cryp10111110te: FORTUNE SOON .
TIRES OF CARRYING ANYONE LONG .ON HER · ···.
SHOULDERS. - GRACIAN
'

..__...;.

·.

:r-"T'r....--t:r-r..,.....,

12:00(1)elnlo Ilia Nlglrl Stereo.

•

-.
NORTH
U -lt
tt08H
.KJ 1013

43 Borg , lor
one
DOWN
· .1 He hit 61.
in '61
2 Grownup
3 Stately
4 Sphere
5 Square
dance
participants
game
6 Transmits
setting
7 Fury
19 Tubs
8 Involving - 22 Locale
23 Spreads.
feeling
9 Weias news
comed, as 24 Bizarre
a visitor
25 Famous
10·0oes
26 Threalens
ushering
28 Catherine
work
·
14 Hockey
(Henry

l8l Spartl ,......,.

11:351J) a-n Q

••

bailer

Generation

DH; tONESOME ME II

ACROSS
1 Fancy
home
6 Shankar's
strings
11 Worship
12 Blank lhe
lape
13 Gawks
15 Ailing
16 Cap
17 Casual
lop
18 Spielberg
and
others
20 G&amp;S
. princess
21 Noah's
boal
22 Dart
abou1
23 Liner
linlests
26 Bearings
. 27 Base·

e111r TNic: The Naxt .

l8l CNN Evening NeWI
0 700 Club W111t Pit
Roblmon
10:05 CIJ MOVIE: Mr. Mljfttyk IPGI .

-ng " " ·•

TV-·

_(Ill!!_ ... _

rviiR: . . . . . . . &amp;d,.l.. POll
OMoo, fll.
-.1:10 -

e,..

~~

Ron..
~In Zonlth 11oo
other bnnds. MouN call, at80 ·-

Newl

(I) • llilrtytomellilng
Nancy prfiP&amp;ras tor her tast
chamotharapy treatment.
Stereo. Q
Ill Vtetnlom: A TlleviiiOn
HfsiGiyQ
&lt;If
on the Prlae:
Amertce'l Civil Righll Yurt

i

..

IIIII Corpll Cloonlna Sorvlce,
$7.10 a 011rpet, or pacUoa daal
for I for ~00; oleo
hoo• I nina. col for """" In- - 114'3"1!1-21171.

Iii

I

undltlonodll!llloero,~

-

ON TI-lE BI-JTTON.

,.

:::::zr::rJItt.......
t'.'=*-=.
.,.,.
=:.1.;:r- ..............

W. ..... Chng111l Our loGtion fo
IV. . . hit 111 lt. 241 tlrough
Chest•, Oh.

PRI:DICTIONe Rk!ilt-CT

II

.
R

r--------·i·
SOMETIMEe. I. l-IlT MY

••
•, :
~

'

8:30 Iii (I) Coacli Christine
trias to reconcile a laud
ba1WHn Luther and a 1riend.
Stereo. Q
. 0 CGiege leekeiiMtll
10:00 Ill G 11)1 Lew I Order Stone
and Robinette are lorcectro
dismiss e gang rape case.
Stereo. !;I
(!)

On s.ff.N Sdlt~llll. eH lt. 141
(6141 4..·9416 or 1·100·171·5967

lEU P'S CUSYOM BENDING

e

-~HAP/

,.
.

82
Tr ,msport iltiOI1

18! Larry King Llvll

EEKLE AND WINTHROP

======w
Home
Improvements

IIINeth--

::

llf77, f~!.

81

i

Night

Flghta

o2·&gt;

Jot••-•

Auto Parts &amp;

1;1
o(At ~~J:teroo.
- .r .......,

•i

11111 -glooo flahlng - · ' •·
-or "
1....211 lop,
traitor -lvol 10011, llvt wei ••
.... "' trodo $1100 814-1112-21182 ••
or 1112·2121.
·
!•

76

Fo'ontllne Q

I

,

by THOMAS JOSEPH

Love' C88 T.,.~ Movie

'

•,:
,.

(!)

.. '

Comp lot• tho chockle qu-.1
by flll lny In tho mlillng -d•
you develop """ IIUp ~- 3 bolow.
2
5

CROSSWORD

a 1121e MOVIE: .... of

1111 Bronco II, 411, cnoloo, tilt, •.
air,
tlntad gl1a, · ruMina . :
boorclo, tow mlltogo, tlcoltoril
•'
=Mion, Evonlngo: 114-241- :'

...._,

Joclo·

Ill

'·

•,

a

'·

hook-.

P -.

arr lk.l
Lf;SS 11M~

.'

.,

.

ae s-•-

=:..:;,
~:-~c:~'loa, --~
wont pay
111 141 ltL£1 ' or ;. .

75 Boals &amp; Motors

e

e

a·

1~, . - - .
- - blociL 304.1fJ'S.1414.
~In BUlla Top llood Llno,
Servtces
1 x - auoi!J. I14 441 4344.

Rooms
_.. Full Langth •~
R - f l &gt; r - · - • - h . llr8nd
Donlunt _,...,. Outliiiclo Hay &amp; Grain
01 ·
-~ Golllo Notal Cool,
Aololna IFIOO; 1. ~=~~~~=:-:::=-:­
--·
· yoor aid .........,
Cliolr; MO. mlxad hoy, SI.GO bote. 304- ·
llf.37D.al4 ...,-.
I"/M2te.
Sloeplng ,_,. wlih oooldoog.
Aloo tNIIw -·All
Coooom o~"" 14, llonltor, .W, -lly1,- hoy. •10 por
Cottl •ftor 2:00 p.m., tiM·TIS- lllolc,
Pointer, drive, boiL Wayne Ouoh - . . , Rd.
t.SISI;....;..'Mo=-;....WV;....
. - - - - - · c-putor dHio, 211 pluo Aalno 1114- 2281!
t·
..........,., many ..,,... 1 ~ 1o-.:;:::::.,::=.,.=
...=lod..:;:_,::::.-."'.."""'ao=-po-r
48 Space for Rlnt
old, NIO. Colt - n ll.lf M 100 lb. 1ft. - • - . SI.OO per
Country lloblle H- Pork, woo~ootz.; M -ndo, SCM- 100 lb. Alfotlo Hoy. Morgan'•
- II .
Fomid. RL :15, e · 0 .,..'12 , _ ,
Routel:l,- o1
~·a P!lotio oop11o ~a-.
a.-,, 304.1f37.:ztnl.
~ala,
.
,
...,.,
·
Coil
8
l1171.

=r:':J

•'

:14ft. Dual Tooidom Axle Trollor !"
with Hydnoutto- Noell a . ,!
~lc - · 114-211 11123
"
M 1-IO lluor, y.. Ulllor
~

Ua~tlll

Monroa Shocka

dinosaur·fields. 1;1
IIJ Raoc...: 911 Two
women are swept toward
Niagara Falls alter a boating
accident. Stereo. g
liD 18 MOVIE: Allen (Rt (a:OO)
0 Murdar, She Wrole
Siereo. Q
·
a on Slltge .
l8l PrlmeNewt
Cllf MOVIE: Chenga of Htbll
(Gt (2:001
8:05 (I) MOVIE: A Force Of Ona
(POt (2:00)
.
- 8:30 Iii (I)
Oavlt l!ulet
Principal Davis finds
romance witll a teacher.
S1ereo. C
Chun:b
8:00 ill
0 In the HH1 of lho
Night The arrest of a drug
pusher tears apart a family.
· Stereo. C
Iii (I) Routnno · ·
Roseanne leaches a Iasson
in reality 10 Darlene·s etaas.
Stereo. Q

a

The son carne
onto the kitchen saw the man
and exclaomed, "At last. Now
we can live like ......... people
again!"
.

.K

g
(If Nova Paleontologists
visit one olllie most fertile

out_,..

BENNm'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG I COOLING
'

' •Hendle end lnlltall

•

'

21121.

MOBILE HOME FURNACES - HEAT PUMPS
AU FURNACE PARTS

•

yo&amp;.~7

.

.;;.
drift,
gooollne angina, . •
tronomloolon, air, '"
..
....,._.,.,
. . _ •· •··
....200• Contact ' lion thno flrl at 114411113411.
:·,
..._. ~- Blear, v.a_ .u ._ ::
gino, 4x4, olr candftlonlna. :,
tranoml-. tAl , •'
1 borlli!l
•
ooindlllon, 72.000 moloo. Wrint 0,

f14.

1

ANYfLA~E,

..-'IIIIi

'

C!c::'.:i'=."::a~~ :.-=~~~.~-=~ 1N4~8-10Biozor, 4-

........., - · 140,
=:.'r'
S100 -ood.

Tu

$U TffE ll'f'O~p
''JANPWICH" Llf TH~E

out_,..
-.AIIII'IISI-

14

poriF

/

e

·0

••••

. . _ . , Flinlly

Thfee'o Contplonr
tDCillfiiVeleoketblll
l8l Croltlife
7:35 (I) Sanford and Son
1:00 Ill G aJ Mattock Madock
defends a man accused o1
murdering his buslntiss
partner.
(!) MOVIE : Dealli Wllh If (AI
(2:001
.
Iii (I) D Who'• the lou?
Tony Is forced Into revealing
a long-hidden lear. Stereo.

f)(&gt;N'T

,.

IL'o, oak lor Ron, 114-

61 Farm Equipment

· you

C:~l.l,.

;

:::~~':"~a:'..:;":i •

::.

Do

liD

.

0AI2
'Responding to South's overcall,
ts
North pusbed witb an agcreuive limit
··.
raise inviting game. South accepted, WEST
EAST
but be hid to catch a little luck after tQJ7 2
discovering the bad trump split.
.Q8$
• ~ 114
East won the ace of clubs and re, • J 10.
OQ783
••
turned a low diamond. Declarer took t9H
·~QJ742
.
the ace in dummy and played a low
SOUTH
trump. When . East showed out, South .
tAK963
had 1o play just right. The first step
.7 2
.,
was to win the spade ace and play a ·
t KH
heart to dummy's 10. East took Ute ace
10$
and played another diamond, declarer
Vulnerable: East· West
..
winning the king.
Dealer: East
The play from this point may seem
sophisticated. but in fact declarer can·
Soootlo
West
Nort~
East
not lail as long as he leaves himself in
I•
a favorable position. So declarer
It
Pass 3+
Pass
'
played king of clubs, shedding a dia·
4+
All pass
mond from dummy, and ruffed a club.
Opening lead; • 9
He neil cashed dummy's heart king
and ruffed a heart , and tben ruffed his
tast diamond in dummy. Tbat 'left
. ..•.
nothing but trumps in tbe South and
.
West hands, so declarer ted the 10 of
spades from dummy and played low . king, pitching a diamond . ·He c:oilld •
West had to win the trick and lead then rulf a diamond, play king of elabl
back into South's K·9 to concede tbe and ruff a club, and•play u before. It's :
game-going tricks.
hard to admit, but even Willy Nilly ~
Why is it that declarer cannot fait' would li'ave made this contract ul111
His alternative play after winning tbe he gave up and resignedly c * llotb
diamond king would be to finesse the ace and the king of trumps rlpt
.
again in hearts and then cash the hea~t away.

==inmlnt

AND ERNEST

1 .1

.

By James Jaeoby

I01d Mrs. Klotg

1IlTonight S1ereo. g
(I) •

..

,

· The repairman arrived lo fix

BRIDGE

7:30 Ill. Ill 0 ~tdrl g

•
J?li)j()J %

'72 - out_tc,
tnock Y.lf, Rune
lioX
In ;;, •
Neil.
_,.,
looko

lportiCantlr ·

7:0S CIJ tteppy Dtor•

•i

.·''

sc~AM-Lm ANiWJa ~-·
•-• .
Noggin ~ Widow - Enjoy - Vendor ~ OWN GOOD
I ·had an ·argument with a neighbor. My husband said
that the quickest way to lose a friend is to tell them
sometl"\ing lor their OWN GOOD.

.

CUiNnt AIIM Q

8Bel......,':'

1

J

.,

18l~rH ...

. _,..

72 Trucks for Sale

llnorlde
"Edltlai1 Q
flftght Court g

'

e m~;R~UMBfRED I' 1 I, I' 1 I' I' ,. r I
~~~~:tBLE FORI I I I I I I I I I

11)1 elel ProgtMimlo.
0 Mec&lt;JJyer Sltreo. 1;1

11

:1481.

=
=

11Utl2411

(I)

.

.

: ~~ar:=~-=-liD

•

L.....J..
. ....I.L....J.-..L.-.L
. ....I

7 00

''

.

.

,. _I ·1 17 I' I' IG

~

N-.HourQ

.

-~====~=.:
1---ri:....:.;M,...Y:...,::O,..TT;-E..,.,..~.

. ,.

Iii' lnotent R8C8H
Ill . (If MICNtii/Lelwer

.

0 L C E V ·~

.

8:35::.,

m

-

l-:5,..-r.l6..:,l,..:.·..;:..::,.~ ~ j . the mtcrowave

iftll~~ Q

-.------.

'•
:• ·
,•

·

1111 Ton a 112 Do~m'WTnoc~tr
Condition, Rune • .. oru e11,
lui llno,_!o;!Pandlool
blodo, tl.- 1--41114.
011
•
•
1tllll Rood cornonondor,
Many iiOW pano, -W r i , . o d : - - - of
·
_, AKC rogi!toi'8il Chliuotouo
-11WIII-33M.
- 1 Roclno, OH

-Wood.,...
1.11

:.;;&gt;;

MUll Sell HW71-3000 or 171-

$#o6k/l

SPECIALIZING IN •.••
•Cuetom Bent Exheus1 Syshlma
•Complete Une of Exheust Suppliea

~ Wlkl

.

''. '

I 1· I I .1

.,'

llnd8r&lt;lleAmerlclo~~~:*"g
.. ~

ARLO AND JANIS

3121•

a:::a..
.
,
.
--------- .
o.-. ..
...,_..,

nllhod. • - · · mo dop. .,..
· 4INI10.
211r Ol*l•oont 11 Ato
roody tho 111 ot Fobnoory, o1oc1o
Noo1,114311-.
BEAUTIFUl APARTIIENTII l(f
BUDOET . PRICES AT JACKSON
·~- Ptu
El"t:••Es •••w:iTo"~~a
floniS.W..:."':"
~. - 4

PARK:

~·-~~·~·~ ! ~~
· ~·~·~· ~-~·-~·~-

:...J

114-21f:

l'loh "hnk, l!IIS Joc-n Avo.
Point P~Meem, ·:tOM71-2CMI!t,

·~
-and Choir, ..... par-.
2 IBR GO- opt,, - - : 101 I
fM.OI par
LoouM. lkM, ;.tria., ...., tu,.. .... . . . , ..... ....

you.

of Youth

•

c:r=- ~hi

1~

hook...,...

~,..~=1=:.'11:~ 41 HoUIIIforRent

To: 1.-.3"19..08'!!.

Pels· for Sale .

·---.~

44
both.,...., 30MI24141.
P'Jbtlo wator, no OMiolcllono, ThiN b1~.- d!l!llex 1n o.- uo Jupltor -Dflono. • • - ·
Mtv- oocl., lull lOIII _..... moiot ootl· Blocli
wlih ~- lronlogo, 304· 1ont
nttnt wlfeundry
304- ....,. 101. ';;~ce .....uti Dleh
Buoh Hog Equl_.t,
~a, 5 1,._.7lllorl711-3111.
. Pt-Coii1UIIIIH
•
And Sorvlco, Aloo Financing
'
.
Anllalolo, Crooo I Sana, Jock·
11(1 4llr lonoo lor
Rentals
eon, OH 114211 .. 51.
Furnished
45
ROUII 2 Aohton, 1 aero Iota 3

mlteo oouth Golllpotlo tocko,

·
- · and for
lndopondlng
Progr.mo
jwonllo Uvlng
dotln· . 2 ldnn, fumlohod.· 1 chlld1 no
ql*llo In naod of out-of-homo polO.--· 30W82·2•51.
piocemont. Employment Enhon- 2 b *oom homo In Now Hovan,
. - n Progrommfng (JTIIA 1%1
CUSTOM BUilT
Ia oloo - d. T~o Program WY. :10f.773-61181.
lnctuclo jcb dovotop. 3 bedroom hO.oo In S_yracuM. 3
HOMES &amp; GARAGES ohoukl
mont, job coaching, monHomg, bedroom houa In Roclno lor
"At Reasonable Pricos'" ole.
hooe hiving progr1mo Nnl. 114-111241127.
should eontoct John Hogo~y.
PH. 949·2101
3 BR wMh carport. Avol~
114-IM-2205 by 215111.
•bte now, nNr NbrafY. $325/mo.
Votontl010 '-111: Soli Avon. lnlormotion nollololo at Tor let. 949-2160
Froo For 1 Wook Only! CoR 114- Fumltwe.l14 441 0332.
.. 441-48112, 1--4317, Colloot
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CAllS

~

10.l1f

API II 100, Ina. _ . ilfl~ll• : •• :TOv. ...._ODin

=.

2722.

ond Uood Fonn Equl~:
Ovw 50 Uood Tract- to
Choooo From. llo~For..-., flonl Now - ·
and

~-

Building

55

~~~~n~
"!i!:'m 11 I" ,..,.._,SI:;::;..IP:;:IP:::I:;;Ie;.;s:,..._.':""'

...,.

- . ,c. '-...

Tho

IISSBl &amp; lUilE
COIIISTIUCnOIII

For Lee•

Counly

•LIGHT HAULING

USED RAILROAD TIES

=49

IOC7aflar4:cia.

Apartment
for Rent

SHRUB TREE
TIIM and
REMOVAL

BILL SLACK
992-2269

•

;,.:

T~E

1

~ _.,

=~~~oJ

l.ool:l"!
~ ••- . . . . .

81, (1)

Hondo Proluclo

ONCE MOii.E AROUND

ff;}

1,

,.

:-&amp;" -· - .J::""'

to .....

•FIREWOOD

concltkin,
114 Ul t22S,
. . .r

:='tio.
r:~ m'l:"aaa. ~
....,.., ftf'llngl Only. .

.._

3 BtdfOOII'I mobile holM . .
ilftl IPPI)&gt;X • .2 1/Z miloo. from

11111 14x71
hOmo In quliod. 114 4ill11123
•VINYL SIDING
Ml~=oot.
Call mobile
Tom Ando.....,
114- ,.....
•••a 0 ft or 5:00 p.m.
•ALUMINUM SIDING
G - lhrlng. 1 and 2 bod•BLOWN IN
OppoolunMy, Sand Enqul- To: No~= ':."Jmont On Uood Or
opo~:.:- ~A.:
INS ULATID N
Clo 012, Golllpollo DollY Trlliu~ 1 A
Mobil a Hcmoo. All
121ThlodA...,uo,Golilpollo,un You P1y to Tax And Tille Foo1.
rom
41131.
Uoo Your Tu Rotund. No Whoro
HOME TYPISTS, PC . uoo,. Eloo But El- Homo Cantor, 1· In Mlckltopoot, Ohio, N. Thlnl
Ave, 1 loa*oom fum- opl,
noodad. m.ooo potential. ~~12. ·
and ..._ncaa ,..
N. . . . . . . hilt
Doto11ot. Call (1 I 101 112- Raducod 1178 Wlndoor, 14x70, -qufiod, --2111.
'
Ext. 11-41112.
2br., CA, oklrtlnjo ~!'~~~ding,
211&lt; 4 112 mlloo from Go~
'"Free Eatlmatea" · ·
LEADING INSURANCE CQII. Quail CNok PI:~ Clfy Nloo
· •• •••
l toot~lo • :tNO ·poto. I'll. 949·2101
PANY- lnchlduolte IMn MoblloH-. I
· O.
11131.
_... 1 ~
and oporatotholr own 1-noo Solei Ita Dlocount' on 111 homn
or IlL 949·2160
- · W. ollor ~to 130,000 In llooli. Buy now and oovo. Nlcoly f u r - mol&gt;lle homo. 1
NO SUNDAy (AU$
par piuo bono11to
Fronch Cfty Mol&gt;lto Horna1. 814- mile HloW townb:;:::aldng
~~- 1 - o II
441-ti:MQ.
·
riVOij ~ - ·
, Rof.
31111
· :;·:::•::.1 110.000. All training poovidod.
L _ _ _ _ _..::;.:
811 • It ... 1.
For confldenllol lnlo!&gt;low c;an. 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
NEWLY AEIIOOELED wlih
tool Goorvo Puchovlch 114-'171·
1230.
1 oc11 lot St. At. 554, $41,500 will RENT and a tow dopootlto flt
EXCELLENT tNCOIIEI
trado lor J&gt;lck-up, - 1 volut, JOIIr budaoL 1 b l - 11131.
ptuo utllllloo, 2 .,.,... bodEa world - - olmple 114 388 1557.
&amp;
uoto at homo. 1·-1· 2 ......, St. At. 7, Thill mlln tor
11115. pOliO
utliltloe.
-1
•""tlo
,.,_,
momod
Elot. 11214. 24 houra.
So. of· Eureka, IFIO,OOO. 814-311- -~·'"-ton
Locol -~~ lumbor yood , _ 1117.
nndlng to oYO!d high motots. For , _ tnl&lt;innollon
hnoclrl':_l Outodrtv-lclll oocteooLr'."!'oet_
, For Solo: 10 ocroo, Roush Hot- till
304.e71-4100, 1175-2053 "'
l •
....., low Rood, Blacktop Ref, Aurll
1
resume to Box a... qara Poirw Water, 114-31f..7U7.
·
1/114411.
PI-nt Roglot_!!\,200 Main St.,
Point PI-nt, ,.. 21110.
L018 FOR BALE In Golilpono T1,. Town- Apaotmonto,
Forry. Wilt occo111 troll~.i"Y Etogont, 2br, 2 lloor, .1111 oq ft. 1
lor llllbt!.lllytloto. 514- wator IVOilobte. J'S. 1/Zl&gt;etho CA, CH, ~-.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

213 Jle, S.C1111d

-

a

KEEP 60tN6. DRiVER

l!~q f

aa,ooo !;•·

11,

.

lA NIIA
.18!
WorldToeltiy
TOCI8J
•0 Our HouM
i:OS C1J 1ewer1y Hlflblllflla
8:30 ~ • IIJl NBC !lgh1ly Newo

Chari o4 Ford ~. az.-rhaw- Wilt
~ At " - 114-281-f
.
-• ~··
4 111a
01AI ~7 1n - .......
"
•
..,.,_,.. •· )814 TraCt• and But~·; 121op,
HOURS: _ , . thno lot...,, SO" cult Buouo
· h Hoa I
.
roof!l!l.z centrll
1lr, all electric,
• \oltlllv;14t 1111
• la.m..ep.m.; l&amp;lndly, 12 Noaft..
30t-171-1171'
new,
S12,ouu.,
304-77:J.II1SII.
·.
U,IOO.
·
·
-Fum'ad. 1 _ , opr., oil utllll• lji.m.
JiOid,
1!Wo
both,
toSJmo.
...
IWAIII
AC
171
Trootor,
2200
~':,ig ~~'Tny R~una .:::t~
• • - 1 fiUANITU- •• Hcuro.$1,te0;0.17,ACwiPS.3
0 - . t - n Fob 111 I Fob leooniiAYo.l14o41JMI.
"""''"'"
"~ pl. Hftch tl teO 445 lllnApertMMI,
All ot~vea.,e.wpan ...... , Lllld n•~ M2.,uni Mc11 Front a Pw¥
_ .Qif.
~
1'14441 am, f14.JI2. "::
211th, 11111, French City Mobllo Fum.._

-llololtoWonted,
- r -ng
Homo A&lt;AIIa
...
-alft
Ful~
Tf"mo Soteo PooMieft, For
Eliolllonl

UPHOLSTDY

ooll f14.1112.7101 oftor

IIIIIHieo ~-11
lncludod.
,..
PICKEHS fiUANITUAI
quol•iod.
loloyofte allft 114...,..,..,+M-4223.
Noa1food
French CHy Mobile Homea. 114ot
Noo I "old -!'lnl· 112 MI.
448-9340, 30-.e7!-1898, 3042 bod......, fumlohod In ::t=.:~ :. " ,., WY,
6J'S.3313.
:C."':a~or":icoo~- F.:
MHT I OWN

-=-

piOpoiiO bullor

-

11117.

·=,...-- I nm
malitia
141115 2

A - Golllpoilo, "" 411131.

ol Mliil'''"

~~·

·r:r ::=..

ood

~--------'--------~-1 tlpolla
a-fh•.Dotty
Ae~iil!un.!
ta: ·cl8.1211
011~
1

,.

.

lip....

2 bldra aM $310 tnOnth I
lilllftloo, t mont1i dopooM, :no

nvu..
guo
1117"' 304:11J'S.212~.
3
Goods
and tufllllr """'Pot"
For ala by - · Loot chonco
- - · all lloctrlc, 14x70,
to oon boloro glvina to AooKor. -rna dh concowto pod. .... llli12
GoOMiloog. All-AH olyteo.
1210
Porto-k Soobcllvlllon: 3 BR, ·- arrfoond,
• mcioollol100.
POl
Julie
Webb. Cell
ranch, 1 112 bOth, bimlty room,
~ l~oC':I ~-=-­ G8I'PI! 17 tt:..,MalahM
.creened on porch,
==~=.:..::.:.:::-·::::;,.~.::.::;=tooliod AKC t..- Apoo P'JPpllo,
building, Mid $50'1. 11
• Totollloctrlc Homo, 3br,
1HII.
No Pot.. 114417·.-,au.......... - ~ toWoli hoono for

~ '::!'7;."'...J:r.:r'odd~ 32 Mobile Homes

otompod · - to:
Production ....- . ~.:Ln:="':..:Xoo:;:~olo::,•.::011=45:::31::5:..,
.
EJICILLENT IHCXIIIEI
World -lola Producto
All/orne, CALL NOWI1.f01·31f.
8242 Ext H2MI, Z4 Ho&lt;oro.
Expo- ModicaI Soc rotary.
Roqulromonto: Uodleol Tor·
mlnol&lt;!ft, Prollclont In Sllort
Hand I lYDl'!t; E1collent F~!llfe

a•n«*lenl
11oyo1

~.

unflnl.,..ed, 1 112 aerea,
9
tO Buy
AYOH I All Arooo I Bhl~oy Houle
2br, tbo., St.AI.7c ThiN mlln
.,.--,..-~...,...~~-.,- S,.ra, :104-475-14211.
So. ol Eurol&lt;o. IFio,OOO. 614o388-

-·y

ALL Yood Soleo MUOI Ia Pold In
Advonoo. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho day bo...._ tho ad Ia to run.
SUndar adhlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. - y odlion • 2:00
p.m. Soturcloy.
. .

31 Homes for Sale

WAKE UP. SALL'f' ...
WE'~E AT SCHOOL ,.

·

!

0~-E~n

?

r I

r-~F....;;,.I,.:.T..;R,.:.....:;D,......III

~::LFL·~r~~

••

llon.teh........,, •terltrMh l::========~------~;_1 11M R_. Z-24. alarul6c, M.
1
pold, . , . fOiuo tlopooll, . - r
toooloil, !!'.~. - · ookfna ..:·

Woontad: Junk Cora T&lt;~~CkO, I
F1nn Equipment, Running at 3 bod-. 2112 botho, ninch
Not~ For Sotngo, Wo Buy Soil
. .h aun roof and 2 cor&amp;~·
Or crads. lt4-388-8123.
~c;dtc&gt;ooll,
~J'S.

Employment Services

lf] ~:~ Q

..

:-

r \ z ~, c ,

,:
·

ONtWI

~·

'

Ottorrango
al tilo
lour '!;rambled -dr
low to form Four rlmplo wordr.

.EVENING
e:oollle Iii &lt;11e • ae

•

.

CLAY I. fiCII.LAN .....;;....._ __

e

TUES., FEB. §_ •

·

•:
,,

2lir In _ , Yl- ....;

2 llrldrn• oountry home, 304fll-7111.
.

Aron ~ oloVOI• WTELLIOENCE JOIB. All
i'OOiaND: USmoll ':f41ilack .~ ~h oboul20 • coli I
.,2724.
bnlnchoo. us euotomo, DEA,
coi r.
mp
_.noon • WOntad to buy, Stondng limber, ole. Now Hlrl~ . Call (1) 1105Aidile oroo. Colli 4II 0047.
~b Wllllonw I Sana 114-882· 112- Ext. K·'VIIII· .
Loot: lllll&lt;&gt;ld r,cturo • - :::!144,-1.-:--:---,-,.---,.. Corlltlod HOme Hoonh Aid: look·
~1 '.'9 ~-dr ""'Jr
. Lootllc.,..F•or~ Wontad to · buy: Junk co,. wlih lng lqr p~vJio homo wortt. li1yo
litllllliil ~ " "
u or without motofll 10r1p met· only. N~ WMklnda. If Inti,..
lielwoon FamilY Dollar ond L -· ~- ~lad, ColiiM-4411-0083. ·
"*!Jno. Colt 114-247-44tt:
;:•:.:·=~:.:.••::,.~::-::;:::.•·-·~...,......,....Woontad To Buy: J101k Auloo Coomeiooailiot - 1 ou. .,.
IPfT: ,_. I P"PPY In wlih or wliholll motor.. Coil toad ••-· paid _,lono. 114Helihborttc rnt Ad. .,.., s.tur.. Larry Unl IM-38M303
-.nez
.
""'· Chll.r.. pol. """"" to:
y.
.
_..._ N -n ool1: Wontad To Buy: Uood mobllo Eom 1000'0
OIUiftng ....
volopoo II homo. No nporltnoo
114.1 11 "'I
homM. au l-.......o1'11.

Ylrd Sail

1111

....._,

-

_ , g - y . 114 441 4011.
·LOST - · moclum ol~ Cock·
Toro - " . olool holM ~:::Ont"::!~~lotnt
"\'~·~ &amp; tin to g'-"r
~.e75-7Mt.

tl,100. ~411 .

~

jt

11-. ............ ,.._ -.. '

.

•

••

-r ,.

.lfon. A.,.•

.._

'\"::

..

LX. . . .. . ··~
mille ~
.,J~I PO, ·-t
, ~ AJ;, Bony
Tapa ,
- . lfand - """"
-

MA

LOU5V Cl'~Ji: 1

;1

top,

_ ..c ...- -.......,
a,7ilo. ~ oftw 5p.m.

HIM ,

/4. DAT!i FO~it HIM

,.••

.,.
.
flonl -.Alii~ 4

-

;

Colt
pm,

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I

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel
NA11011AL WEA114ER FOliECAST FIIOII71M H-f1 i O7111 ~7-11

WEATHER MAP - Temperatures will eoptipue to be mild
across the eou11try with highs ill the 40s to 70s. The lower Miss&amp;
sippi and Tennessee valleys will again see showers and thu!lderstorms. There wiD be scattered snow showers in the northern and
central Rockies. The rest of the eountry will be mainly dry. (UPI)

Weak cold front
approaching State
By United Pres~; International
It was cloudy with scattered
showers over ·Ohio Tuesday
'morning.
·
.
Skies were mostly cloudy dur·
ing the niglit as a weak cold front
was approaching the state from
the west. Showers were occurring ahead of the front with the
most numerous activity from
central through northeast Ohio.
Areas of fog were common
over northwest Ohio early Tues·
day morning. The fog was )Jeing
caused by cookir air spreading
Into the northwest and colliding
with the very moist air over the
s tate.
Temperatures were mostly in
the 40s. Low temperatures for
Fe b. 5 normally range from the
middle teens in the north to the
lower 20s south.

Tuesday, February 5, 1991

Pomeroy-Midclaport, Ohio

-

EMS answers
.
five calls .

Ohio extended forecut
Thunday throurh Saturday
. Cloudy skies will plague the
A chance of rain Thursday.
state Tuesday night. Rain will with fair weather Friday, and a
continue to be li~ely over the · chance of rain or snow S;lturday.
southern half of the state with a Highs will be In the 40s Thursday,
chance of rain north. Lows and ranging from tbe mid 308 the
Tuesday night will range from low 40s Friday and S;lturday.
the middle 30s northwest to the Overnight lows will be in the 30s
middle 40s southeast.
early Thursday,. and ranging
. The chance for rain will be from the low 20s to the low 30s
diminishing over the state on Friday and Saturday mornings. ·
Wednesday as the cold front
Soulh Central Ohio
moves southeast of the state and
Occasional rain Tuesday night,
· high pressure builds in from the wl th a low in the mid 40s. Chance
west.
·
of rain is 80 percent. Cloudy ·
On the Tuesday morning Wednesday, with a chance of
weather map, high pressure was rain, and highs near 50. Chance of
along the East Coast. A wea~ · rain is 40 percen I.
cold !font extended from ' Michigan arid Indiana to east Texas.
Another high pr~ssure system
· was over the Plains.
The higb along the East Coast Dally stock prices
will drift out over the western
(As of 10:30 a.m. )
Atlantic by Tuesday night.
Bryce and Mark Smith

Stocks

---Area deaths..;·- --Thelma M. Berry

Issues reminder

Bob
Hoeflich

•

Vot.41, No .201

' HUNTING ACCIDENT - Orville McFann or
IroaiOII wa II'IIUportecl to Gtut Medical Cen1ter In Columba from the Soatllern High Sdlool
football tleld Following a bunting accident ,ill

Low toolgbt lo mid 40s.
Thursday's high io mid 40s.

'

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Botll school levies on the ballot
of Tuesday's speciaJ ·election were
soundly defeated.
'
The Carleton School/Meigs
Industries 1.5 mill continuing levy
for maintenance and operation was
turned down by a vote of 60.8 percent of the 3,050 voters who came
· out for the special election. The
vote was 1,178 for the levy and
f ,826 against it.
The Southern Local School

genealogical workshop will be
conducted by MrS. Robert D. Ashley. Hostesses will be Mrs. Wilson
Cmpenter, Mrs.Jolm T. Cook, Mrs.
Nan Moore, Mrs. Daniel Thomas
and Mrs. Roscoe W1se.
Rutland trnstees to meet
The Rutland. Thwnship Trustees
will meet Thursday at 6:30 p.m. at
tile Rutland Fire Station. The public
is invited 10 attend.
·

bu11i1111S1 tn8Urllrice

District !hree year 4. mill operating
levy was defeated by a vote of 51T
10 406. The four mills would have
added $225,000 to the operating
budget for the district.
MM/RRLery
"Devastating" was the term used
by John. Lentis, president of the
Meigs County Board of Mental
Retardation and Developmental
Disabilities to describe the election
results.
· This was the fourtll time in the

· past two years that the BQard has
gone to .the public for additional:
funding for the school, workshop .
and supported home services pro- ·
grams.
•
Last fall the levy went down 10
defeat by a vote of 4,095 to 3,768:
Had the levy passed it would
would have generated $312,000,
providing more than the $270,000
which has been quoted by MR/DD
personnel as tile per annum shanfall to continue present servkes

a

pack-

broad·COYerllge.

retail

offer.ed through the v!Uious programs. The only local funding of
tile $1.1 million operating budget
comes from the 1.5 mill levy
already in place. That generates
$287,000, according 10 Lee Wedemeyer, superinlendenl
The programs of the MR/DD
Board serves an enrollment of
seven in its pre-school pro8flll!l and
21 in the school age classCs of Car- .
leton School. a caseload of 29 in
tile supported home tiving services,

WASHINGTON ( UPI)
Iraq's elite RepubliCan Guard
troops have been
"heavily
damaged" by allied air strikes
but not knocked out and In the
final analysis It ·will be up to
ground troops to finish the job of
· ousting Saddam Hussein from
Kuwait, a Pentagon official said
Wednesday.
President Bush, saying he is
"skeptlcal" an air campaign can
do the job, announced Tuesday
thathetsdtspatchtngthenatton's
top two 'military officials Defense Secretary Dick Cheney
and Gen. Colin Powell, chairman
· of the Joint Chiefs of Staff- to
Saudi Arabia to determine when
~ &amp;rP'\'Id ~· ~a'l'paie .. s~~u\9 .d
· commence.
. ~· .
Massive air strikes l)y·ccialltion

competitively-priced • plan
for

.

and 4 7 in ibe,workshop.
In addition, services are provided to 48 persons from the Gallipolis Developmental Center in a sec,ond shift of the Meigs Industries
workshop. It has been suessed,
however, that anyone from outside
tile county receiving services pay
for those services and local tax dol·
Iars are not being used to train outof-county Clients.
Lenlis said Wednesday morning
tllat he felt it was unfortunate that a

program wh ich has received
national awards mll)l have 10 lower
its standards because of tile money
problems. He also stated that he
understands that voters do not want
10 vote for higher taxes and while
they do not have control over state
or federal taxes, they do have some
control over local taxes by not voting for increases. ·
However, Lc;ntis, said that in lbe
long run not passing a levies now
Continued on page 5

Signs are increasing ·daily
of approaching ground' war

age. tNt is. It's SERIES
ONE.

2 Sect Ions. 1 2 Pages 26 Conti
A Muhimedia Inc. Newll)aper

Pomeroy· Middleport, Ohio, Wednas~ay, February 6, 1991

.

----Meigs announcements----..........
'

I

Meigs .voters tum ·down 2 tax levies

Raeille on Saturday afteraoon. According to the
Meigs . County Sheriff's Department, McFann
suffered 1 balid Injury after reloading .his ammunition. (Sentinel Pboto by Dennis M.Wolfe)

Alumni ebeerlelders needecl
valentine and a red. dessert for
Eastmn High School alumni t'efrcShments. Officers are to wear
chcerlcadtzs are needed 10 cheer street !Rsses.
· during the alumni twsbJball game
,
at the high school on Saturday. For
Movies to be shown
more information call 843-5220 by
''There's Something In My Attic"
Tuesday evening at 6 p.m. ·
and ''The Dog Days of Arthur
Cane" are the movies that will be
Chicken noodle dillner .
shown at lbe Meigs County Public
A chicten-noodk: dinner wiD be Library on Saturday at 2 p.m. Ad·
sponsored by the Meigs Local . mission is free 10 all area children.
Band BoosterS on ThUrsday from
Lodge to meet
4:30 10 6 p.m. or until all of the
food.has been sold. The dinner conThe Pomeroy Lodge No. 164
sists of chicken, homenlade will meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
noodles, homemade yeast rolls, , at the Masonic Lodlfl in Midslaw and drink, all for $3, with dlepoit;
·
homemllde dessens 50 cents extra.
This is in conjunction wilb th \001Great American Book Fair
lional Open House from 6 to 9 p.m.
The Great American Book Fair
Take out is available but containers wiU be held in the gymnasium or
will not be furnished.
Riverview Elementary School of
Reedsville on Feb. 11-P and 15. '
Eastern Star to meet ·
Books will be ·available during the
The Evangeline Chapter No. day from 9 a.m. 10 3:30p.m.
172, Order of the Eastern Star, wiD · The books and materials furmeet Thursday at 7:30 • p.m. nishcd in Ibis boot fair covet a
Everyone is to bring a home~ wide range of sclections.and inter"d • . ests with prices 10 fit most needs.
amage 881 DllDOr For more information call 667-

•

a1

Copyrighted 1 991

StOriiS.. offiCII,

church••· apltrtmentl' lnd
dNgatores. Call ua tore proposal a.nd quotation .

BOOKS PRESENTED - Carol Young, Melp ·
to earn their book badge. Other members workCo·u.nty Headstart, reeeived books frmb Jennil'er
ina ror their badge are Bonnie Rutter and Jessl. ,H~'-k,. tl!li•Andre,a Neu.~li'!J• aeinbe~ lJM,..,,., Hensley.
·
'i:i · ero Girl S(9~t troo
J!icb.lhey collected .-:•
· · · • .. H · · - - . . .... •
~ ~ ... ~
·~ ,'\/ ..,,yf..t. P~J!'! "'~
.
.. ..,.. 7'~1.~:··
:-l!t~ ·!.!:• V.'~ -~ .. --~~:o . . ;

214 EAST MAIN
P,OMEROV

ea

. 992-6687

aviators since the war began
Jan. 16 has been met with
virtually no resistance from ·
Sad dam's air force and navy. His ·
army is tlie main threat, as
150,000 of his Republican Guard
troops reniain heavily dug-in In
Kuwait
•
Coalition forces, a Pentagon
official said, will have togo after
those · troops and other Iraqi
army soldiers on the battle(ield,
in order to achieve the objective
of prying SaddamoutofKuwait.
''There Is a law of diminishing
returns In an air campaign. You
do get to a point where you really
have done just about all you're
golngtodofrom theair.Andthen
i!'. t'!e final analysis, you've io)lo ·
go to the tsround," the official
said." ' ·
·· '
·

He noted that while Pentagon
strategists and clvtltans had
' hoped air strikes would be
sufficient, military planners
knew a ground war was
inevitable.
''The tact is, we have always
recognized that · In the final
analysis , wewouldhavetohavea
ground campaign, The ground
campaign will be infinitely easier as a result of · our air
campaign, but the thought that
we wouldn't have to do it and
somehow the air campaign
would cause him to quit and leave
Kuwait - I don't think any
mtlitary person thought tllat," he
said.
The New .York Times reported
Wedn~~IIY, that alr strikes have
. Contlrlued·\:m Page 5 .

Gir.l Scouts
S,m ith ·found guilty; ·collect
books Ohio prison escapes said
sentencing March 24 for groups

,/!j

Slate Auto · .
lnaurance Comp8nie s'

.

Tom W. Smith, a fonner resident of Coolville, who worked in
p k b
~
··
ar ers urg, was ound gutlty by
jury trial Thursday of one count of
conspiracy to defraud the Internal
Revenue Service aitd one count of
filing a false 'federal tax return.
An indictment filed on Smith in
April, 1990, charged him with will,
fully conspiring with Russell T..
Poole and James R. Brundige, Jr.,
to defraud the United States. The
object of the conspiracy was 10 use
funds from the Vista Oil and Gas
. .m v·1enna an d.........
corporabon
.......ersburg for personal expenses and
investments and 10 claim interests
in oil and gas wells on tax returns
to reduce the. amount of federal
taxesdue.andowing. ,
Smiih, Poole and Brundige
operated tllrough various C'!'J'Orate
and other entities. In addition 10
Vista Oil and Gas, the entities
included P.B.S. Enterprises (a~nership which operated Parkersburg Healtll and Racquetball Club)
a lounge known as "Players." a

.

SPECIAL LIMITED OFFER

H

Cards: 7-8;6-C; ·

Page3

n

-· ---

Pick3: 143
Pick-4: 6491
3-D;A-4

,of Blunt, Eilts" Loewt
Am Electric Power ............. .'26~
S. Sgt. Richard (Thelma) BerrY. Ashland Oil ........................29',2
Davis Monlhan Air FOJte Base, AT&amp;T .......... ........... ............32'&gt;1
Tucson, Ariz.; Danny Berry .of. Bob Evans ............ ~ .............. 15%
Thelma ,Mae Berry, 67, of Utah; Charles Berry .of California; Charming Shoppes ........... ...12%
Clearfield, Utah, and ft;ll'lllerly of and two grandchildren, Stephanie City Holding Co, ........ :......... 14
Middlepon, died Thursday, Jan. 31, and Olester Wigal III.
Federal Mogul .......... :......... l5%
1991' in Clearfield; Utah.
. She was preceded in death by a Goodyear T&amp;R .. .................20%
Mrs. Berry was born Jan. 7, 1924
Key Centurion ................ .. :.11%
David.
in Atllens. She was the daughter of son,
.
. 6886.
.
Services will be held Thursday at Lands' End ......................... 17%
tile late Charlie and Edna Staneart I p.m. at the Fisher' Funeral Home Limited Inc . ....................... 22';4
Minor damage was incurred 10
·
Howard. She was a homemaker and in Middleport with Rev. James A. Multimedia Inc .................. ... 69
two vehicles iJt an accident on the
Round and squtll'e dance
·a member of the · Middleport Seddon officiating. Burial will fol- Rax Restaurants ............ ..... 'h
Sears parking lot Monday afterThere will be a round and square
Church of ChrisL She was formerly low at the Hemlock Grove Robbins &amp; Myers ...... : ......... 25% noon.
dance on Friday from 8-11:30 p.m.
married to Joseph H. Berry.
Pomero}' potice reponed that at the Tuppers Plains VFW BuildCemetery.
Shoney's Inc ........... :...... .. ... 13%
She is ,survived by one daughter
Maxine
Michael, Pomelll)', was ing featuring Specks of Bluegrass.
Friends may call at the funeral
Bank .................. : .... .. .. l8%
and son-m-law, Tech. Sgt. Chester home from 2 10 4 p.m. and 7 10 9 · Star
traveling
through the parting lot Ronnie Wood will be the caller.
Wendy's Int'l. ...................... 7%
(Opal) Wigal Jr., HiD Air Force p.m. on Wednesday.
.
when
Rebecca
Eblin, also of The public is invited to attend.
Worthington lnd .... :.. ....... :...22~
Base, Clearfield, Utah; three sons,
Pome~. backed out of a parking
'
DAR to meet
lot striking the right front J!IISSCnger
,_....,........,._..,........,.._~,
The Return Jonathan Meigs
dQOr. Eblin's vehiCle hAd light
A reminder to displaY. five digit rearCI1d damage. Neither driver was · Chapter of the · ~ghters of the
house numbers on mailboxes has injured and lhere were no citations American Revolution will meet
By
been iSsued once agaill b~ Sheriff since lhc aa:ident occurred ori Friday at 1:30 p.m. at the Heatll
United Methodist Church. A
James M. Soulsby.
private propeuy. ·
Soulsby advised that his department has been having an extra
number of jury venires 10 serve and
__ __... ___.,.......,.__ ..,._..., -· -· ---~---· -·
many of the prOspective jurors• 6~
Hilda and Alfred Yeauger of the Tonia has long talked about enter· digit addresses am not oo their
Minersville HiD Road had such a ing medical school 'and the good mailbox, eauaing delay in deliverwonderful time recently. ·
news 'is that she has been accepted ing the summons if the deputy does
Small wonder • they were ob- at Wright State University in the not lcnow lbe person.
serving their 6()tll w(ldding anniver- Dayton area. Tonia· will start her
Sheriff Soulsby advises that lhc
sary and for tile occasion their sons
classes in September. Isn't that five digit address is al$0 of help to
and daughters-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. great!
the lire departments and emergency
Gene Yeauger of Enon, and Mr. and
squads.
·
Mrs. Donald Yeauger of Canal
The fund drive of the Wmten's
Winchester staged a dinner and Auxiliary at Veterans Memorial, by
0SpltQ
reception in their honor at tile the way, is winding down. The ,
·
·
Holiday Inn near Galtipolis.
. volunteer group is so pleased 10
Vetenns MeiiiDI'IIII Hospital
There was a family dinner at have . ex.~ed all ex~ta'!&lt;'"s
MONDAY ADMISSIONS • Eva
noon followed by the reception from mdiv1duals and organazauons Mi1iiron, Middleport; and Don
which was attended by many, many who ~v~ a, helpf!!g hand ~~ the Betzing, Pomeroy.
friends and relatives. Hilda and ongaruzatJon s pro.JeCliO provtde a
MONDAY DISCHMtGES • ElAlfred had a great lime. Their son, w111e-screen television set for sie Barnart and Bunky Leach.
Don, did a video tape of the ac- residents or tile hospital's Skilled
·
tivities and nOW on a dull day, Care Facility. Latest contributor is
Hilda and Alfred jus! flip the tape Grace Crow Etch and her donation
iniO tile VCR and relive the occa- brought the total help 10 over the
sion. The anniversary celebration $1,739 which was n~ for the · Pomeroy Lodge 11164 wiU meet
was held on Jan. 20 - the actual television project. Any amount over on Wednesday at 7:~at the
·
date of their 60th was Jan. 25.
wiD be used towards the Masonic Lodge in Mi
Auxiliary's next project and it is
Dennis Saelens of Middleport, a
Pomeroy businessman, is in River· =':\!:.be a major one to assist
side Hospital, Columbus, where it
was expected that he would under·
Plck-3
James Holman who has been
go open bean surgery IQday.
845.
serving in the U. S. Army since
Dennis suffered a heart anack 1977 has received •a medical disTicket sales: $1,398,641.511.
last Monday and was taken 10 charge and has returned tb Meigs Payoff: $435,929.00.
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Dr. County.
Plck-4
·
Mark Brown, after ueaunent, or6759.
James is married 10 tile Conner
dered in tile Columbus hospital's Denise Roberts of Portland and
Ticket , sales: $256,398.00. ·
cardiac care mobile unit -and Den- they are the parents of a daughter, Payoff: $94,900.99.
nis was taken 10 Riverside for ex- Melissa, 10. The Holmans are now
Cards
tensive tests and consultations. 'His residing in Middleport.
Jack or hearts.
wife, Carla, many of you Jcnow as a
4 of clubs.
teaCher at the Meigs Junior High
6 of diamonds.
Will Mother Narure makes us
Ace of spades.
School.
pay for tile deligh'tful weather or
Ticket sales: $60,342. Payoff:
the past few days? Probably! Do
There is a mistake in· the Ohio keep smiling.
$18,990.
Valley phone book which you
might want 10 note. 'fh!s !s on page
Meigs I, the page hSilng emergency numbers. The number fisted
in the book for the Suicide Prevention Crisis Line is 1-800-252-5544.
Unfortunately, Ibis is actually tile
number of a fullelll home in
Florida. 1be comet number 10 can
in order to reach the Crisis Line is
1-800-252-5554.
· This could be very important information IOIIlOI'IOW lltbough it
might not seem like it IIOday. TJ:Ie
Oil change (up to live
next edition of ~ phone boolc will
992-2174 ·
quarts) using GM
have the same error 90 do note the
SOO
East
Main
'P-roy, Oh.
correction.
Goodwrench Motor Oil,

r.----·w--.------·___
Beat of
the Bend..

College
hardwood
results

Five calls for assisllncc were
answeted by units of Meigs County
Ema-gency Medical · ~ on
Monday.
At 12:58 p.m.. Racine squad
went to Apple Grovo-boocaS Road
for Johnny EVIIIS. He was taken 10
Veterans Memaial Hollpital At
2:28 p.m .. Pomeroy squad went 10
State Route 7 for Laura Mac Nice,
who was taken 10 Veterans. At 2:29
p.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Mul·
belly Avenue for Don Betzing,
Betzing .was transported 10
Veterans. At 5:46 p.m.,l'omeroy
squad went 10 Second Street for
Tony Quillen, who wa transported
to Holzer Mcdic:ll Ceater. At 8:41
p.m., Middleport squad went 10
Lincoln Street for Thurston Stone.
Stone was taken 10 Vetcnms.

Weather

Ohio Lottery

• / news

Lodge to meet

racehorse known as "Ruler's
Penny," and P.B.B. Entel]lfl'scs (a
· The Pomeroy Girl Scout Troop,.
·partnership which purchased and . in working 10 achieve book badges,
renovated an office building on collected books and=azines for
Market Street in Parkersburg).
Count two of the indictment one age level. The
s were 10
charged Smith with filing a false be given 10 a camp library, nursing
. 1983 tax return, An investillation home.• youth shelter, well baby
by Special Agents or the Cruninal clinic; day eare center .or veteran's
Investigation Division of IRS ho~~~·scouts collected for pre- ·
found that Smidt failed to disclose
b
all sources of income including school age as well as g(1lde sc 001
monies derived from cash "skim- age and the bOoks have been preming" from the Health and Rai:- sented 10 the Meigs County HeadLot c
start
. quetuoul
lub and Players.
. Program.
h Some
'tal will also he
10
Smith was turned over to the 8Jven area .OSPI s.
.
cusrody of the U.S. Marshall SerThe !ast thmf!: the scouts wtU be
vice pending receipt of $150,000 dmng IS learnm~ how to m~nd
cash or a full surety bond. The u.s. books and do a slmJ?Ie bookb~nd­
Assistant' Attorney, MaryS. Fein- !ng. They .will. tJ.e domg book~mdberg, requested that Judge Ch~ mg for thell' ~~~mal short s10nes.
H. Haden, 11, not release Smitll 00 ---,\ Ot~er acl'.vlttes. the troop h~s
his own recognizance stating that done mcludc explonng lbe hbrary s
Smith left West Virginia in 1985 resources, ~aldng .posters tllat were
after Vista Oil and Gas was forced dtSJ?layed ID var!!JUS bus1ness~s
inti&gt; bankruptcy. At that time Smith telhng what semces were availmoved 10 Arizona. A civil suit has able.
continued on Page 5
Continued on page 5

~

down during past 12 months

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Increased security is being eredlted · for a decrease in the
number of prisoners who escaped from state penal facilities
during the 1990 fiscal year.
The Ohio Department or .Reha·
bllltation and Correction reported Tuesday that prison es- .
capes during the 1990 fiscal year
were the fewest in three decades.
Mary Helen Van Dyke, correctton department spokeswoman,
said the declining escape rate is
the result or Increased physical
and technical security.
" We take escapes very seriously herP," Van Dyke said .
She said 15 prisoners escaped
from state facilities during the
fiscal year that ended last June
30.
The 15 escapes amount to 0.5
escapes per 1,000 prisoners -·~.h~ ·
lowest rate since 1972, when 'the
Department, of Mental Hygiene

Lottery numbers

and Correction was split !lito two
departments.

sion alarm systems .. doublefencing, and large gravel between fences to make it difficult
By comparison, 11 escapes for would-be escapees to run.
were reported for every 1,000 Colis of wire with extremely
prisoners In Ohio in 1957. More sharp barbs hav~ \Jeen placed
than lOOescapes were reported in atop fences .
·
each of the fiscal years 1957,1958,
The escape rate has dropped
1962, 1963, 1973 aitd 1974.
steaaily despite the sharp in·
Van Dyke .said .the falling rate crease In prison population. In
is not ·due to an increase In ftscal1990, Ohio prisons received
manpower . The guard-prisoner · a record 17,696newprlsonersand
ratio of 1 to 8.8 in Ohio prisons Is operated at more than 50 percent
among the lowest In the nation, over design capacity.
she said. The national average is
Captured escapees face escape
charges and additional prison
1 to 4.9.
She said. the Ohio prison time.- plus the loss of prison
system has increased security by privileges.
implementing strictPr control of
One prlsorier who escaped las t
keys and tools, starting perime· year is still at large. Robert
ter patrols 24 hours a day . set ting Ladany escaped from the Norup a state-of-the-an communica· theast Pre-Release Center in
uon system, and working closely Cleveland last April 11. Ladany
wt.th local law enforcement had served nearly nine years of a
officials.
14· to 50-year sentence !or aggra Physical security measures vated murder and aggravated
have been upgraded with lntru· robbery.

..

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SAVINII!

•

$}6~5

•

SMITH NELS.ON
MOTORS, INC.

I

Congruulations 10 . 'lbnia AJb,
RN, who has wortcd in lhe Emergency Room at VetelliiS Memorial
Hospital for the past six years or so.

_

... •

,

.'

genuine GM Oil FIHer and
lube job.
GMCAIS OMY

IIPIIIS J/15/91
I

~~:":.

Beneath the blaektop a cavity about 12 feet in
diameter bad been undermined, leavillg nothing
to-support the weight or tramc. For several
weeki now Racine' Village olflcllll lilld .reall:red
• problem In the dnlnqe or tbelr storm sewers
and had pinpointed tbe problem to this area.
The slnkllofe was caused .by lnappropr'late
repairs to the surface wale!' system by lbe eom.pany that Installed lhe unitary sewer system
which lies beneath the storm sewer system.

RACINE SINKHOLE-BEFORE: This sink
bole developed Sund•.r on Main Street In
R•clne, after 1!. car drivel by Bill Hohck,
·Racine bottomed oat while beading south on
Mala St. Hoback did not relllze bow lncky be
bad ben · until momeull later,wben after
lnspectlnfwbt bad bappeaed, be saw the pat ement sin itlto tile around rlpt before his eyes.
A larae cbunk or pavement approximately four
reetln diameter fell Into tbe.~ve r~-deep bole.
__ .._,_, • j
,I .

~

.....

\~.; . ~.-

-- ..

.:....

AFTER-REPAIRS MADE: With the help of
Jefren
np~~ln to
Stnet •
Racine IDd the llllillell,tna . . _ RWtl' aystea
were repaired within botln of the ca•e ln. Run·
nina surface Wile!' undertulned tile !Dole auregate around It wltU 1iaally the road above col·
lapsed. Tile caUH of the collapR wu attributed
to a faulty repair mtlde to the 1101111 sewer system seven! yean 110 wbe• the anltsry sewer
was Installed. A s.Dillller ten-Inch diameter pipe

lbal•a-

•

•

M••

wa Hnked to two etlds of the orlaiul a; o!t
aod· l;tse' lltr Xf •
Tile IDole ftt Cll Id Wile!' te low ....... of tile
pipe's ClllltalnmtnL Jeffers Excantln1 c:orrec:ted tlae problem after uvi111 to dJa netll'ly 18 reet
l'rom the aurface 11111 nulnalbe eorrect aize pipe.
Mlmlmal damqe wu done to the It'll' blaektop
which 11'11 Installed from Iss1e Two funds tb&amp;
summer.

-··tile....,.•••

••

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