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                  <text>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.

..

YOU'LL LIKE tDIE

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....,.•••

••

�'
Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

~ ))

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

/ Wednesday. February 6, 1991

Simpson says re~arkS nBiSCODtrued~~------~V~· --__k_ck_A_n_~_r~~n
live Including Simpson. "We ' chemical weapons,
" Members of the delegation, I
cannot stress too firmly our
know
that chemical weapons
conviction," the letter said, "that
have
been
banned In the Geneva
your efforts to develop a nuclear,
AcciJrds.
I
have not forgotten our
ch~m!cal and biological capabll·
commitment
that we have
!ty seriously jeopardize- rather
·
s
igned.
'However.
are chemical
than enhance - your security,
weapons
more
·
dangerous
. to
potentially threaten other na·
mankind
than
are
·
nuclear
lions of the reg!oi\ and provoke
bombs?"
dangerous tensions throughout
· Saddam protested that 'h e
the Middle East.
wanted
peace, but blamed Israel
"Your recent s.taternents
for
forcing
him to bolster his
threatening to use chemical
m!l!tary
power.
He also comweapons against Israel have
plain~
about
America's
procreated anxiety among nations
Israel
fa
vorlt!sm.
throughout the world. In your
What was Simpson's reaction
own interest '!nd In the interest of
to
all this? He blamed the media,
peace in the Middle East, we
as_
Is his habit. Nowhere In the
urge you to reconsider pursuit of
transcript
Is . their a response
these dangerous progtams and
from Simpson to Saddam's
provocative assertions."
threat of chemical 'warfare.
The Iraqi ruler didn't even
.
Instead,
the senator used h.!s ·
bother to deny that he had a
time
to
say:
chemical arsenal. He admitted
"I believe your problems lie
freely that he had violated the
· Geneva accords. which ban

WASHIN.GTON From
windswept Wyoming, Sen. Alan
Simpson, R·Wyo., bas raised an
almighty howl abOut a column we
wrote last August on his perfor·
mance In a meeting with Sad dam
Hussein . Simpson protested be·
fore the Wyoming Press Assocla·
lion recently' that we had taken
some remarks he made to
Saddam out Of context. We are
happy to provide the context.
Simpson was one of five Senate
leaders who called on Saddam In
Baghdad last Apr! f. .By colncl·
dence, the meeting occurred ·at
the same time that we were
writing about Saddam. We
warned that he was " the emerg·
!ng mad dog of the Middle East"
and criticized the Bush admiQ!S·
tratlon for doing business with
him.
'
The Senate leaders presented a
letter to Saddam, signed by all

Power: When to use it
I

Power to the people and the
prudent use of power were the
underlying themes of the Pres!·
dent's recent State o.f the Union
address to the nation. In · an
unusually long and emotional
message, the President real·
firmed U.S. resolve and !nten·
lions in the- Persian Gulf while
outlining his domestic agenda for
the year ahead.
As with most State of the-Union
addresses, his speech was rife
with references to popular propOS;llS he would like to see enacted
into law, but relatively void of. specifics as to the mechanics of
those initiatives. I don't say this
critically because the con·
stralnts of time normally do not
permit very expansive explana·
!Ions of proposals being put
forward.
·
What one did draw from the
brevity of specifics, however,
was that the President's reclta·
lion of his domestic propOsals
. was more a recitation of a wish
list than an agenda he actually
expected to see move forward In .
the Congress. In the President's .
defense, It would be highly
· Improbable, given the pressing
conditions we as a country face
lor any of his more costly
Initiatives, · or lor that matter
those of Congress, to reach his
desk for signature. With our
nation at war, with our economy

Cong. Clarence Miller

In the throes of a recession,
realistically, .one cannot . look
very far ahead . with much - - - - - - - - - - - - assurance or confidence.
lures, the speech overall was
So It is In this context that we
generally
upbeat in tone. Brackshould view the President's com·
eted
by
the
early successes In the
ments. If all conl!nues to go well
Gulf
and
by the astounding
with the war· and it can be wound
effectiveness
of many of our new
down rather quickly, and the
· sys~ms,
high
tech
weapons
economy springs back as a
there
was
a
clear
attempt
on the
result, then perhaps much of
President's
part
to
plug
Into
what the President has proposed
can gain Congressional consider· America's deep sense of pride
ation. Butlf we as a nation have and patriotism regarding these
accompl!shmen ts.
to remain focused on the war In
In conclusion, it was a. State of
the Gulf for months to come,
the Union . speech that was
there Is little likelihood that there
will be an aggressive domestic outside the norm. It was a speech
delivered while a major conflict ·
agenda coming out of the White
rages on the other sIde of the
House, or for that matter, from
world. It was a speech delivered
the other side of the aisle In the
while much of the nation's eyes
Congress.
and ears were honed in on the
With that said, let's look at
news coming out of the Middle
what was said by the President.
East. Because of this, much of
Topping his domes tic agenda
what
the President said was
were proposals that would accen·
directly
related to our country's
tuate individual Initiative and
Involvement
In that conflict. It
responslb!l!ty. Proposals to !m·
was
a
speech,
which out of
prove our nation's education and
necessity,
was
long
on lnterna·
social service systems were
tiona!
~oncerns
and
the
shaping
aimed at giving Individuals and
of a new world o.rder. It was a
local governments a more direct
speech that evoked a lot of
hand In the management and
positive emotion by spelilng out
administration of those systems.
much of ~hat Is right abOut
Acknowledging our nation's fallAmerica while offering limited
ing infrastructure; the President
hope in the way of immediate
called for a full scale effort to
assistance for some of the more
upgrade· our national highways.
pr.esslng problems here at home.
Though somber at some june.

T~ little seafood inspeetion . .
MOUNT PLEASANT, s.c .
(NEA) - When fresh seafood
r:ang!ng from swordfish to
shrimp is delivered by boat to the
c)Jmmerc!al fish companies bOr·
der!ng Shem Creek, It's packed
in poxes, Iced down and shipped
in refrigerated trucks to markets
stretching from New York to
F!lor!da. There's no official
h)i'a!th or safety inspection.
· That's typical of the situation

. elsewhere in the nation. Although

all of the poultry, beef, pork and
lamb consumed 111 this cOuntry is
subjected to mandatory !nspec·
t!on, there's no comparable ex·
;tmlnatlon of -most seafood from
the time It's hauled aboard
fishing bOats until it's consumed
in homes or restaurants.. · .
That's cause for concern at a
time when seafood has become
an important comoonent of the

.
COngress ~ea1.;'7.08
• ts toll
. • take
.
·. ar WI
11
W
1
.a'

.aLA./

By STEVE GERSTEL
WASHINGTON ( UPil -Having voted to authorize the war against
Iraq, members. of Congress have joined all other Americans as
combat junkies ""' sometimes giving the Impression of paralysis on
Capitol Hill.
· In fact, the war has produced more activity and prompted the
passage o( more legislation than normally occurs at the start of a new
&lt;:;ongress in times of peace.
· Granted. Congress has. at best, a per(pheral role in the conduct of
the war, although members do get top-secret briefings on the battle in
the Persian Gulf two or three times a week.
And most of the !egis!at!on passed, by unanimous votes, is either
directly re.lated to the war or spurred to speedy passage partly by the
outbreak of hoslltles.
For Instance, Congress, realizing that the war will take its toll ,
quickly approved a 5.4 percent cost·Of·lf.vlng Increase for disabled
veterans. This war will swell their ranks.
· Congress also approved tax relief for the servicemen and
servicewomen in the gulf, freeing them from the April 15 filing
dead!!ne and making sure that they will get interest on any refunds
due.
. In addition, the House has passed, and .the Senate will shortly, a
r&gt;ackage of protections for reservists called to active duty so that their
£am!!!es do not get thrown out of their homes or are hounded by
o;;red!tors.
· Although not directly related to the war, Congress approved a (lew
system of deciding what cancers were caused by the defoliant Agent
Qrange, making more disabled Vietnam veterans eligible for
d!sab!ljty compensation . .
: ''We probably have done more in this Congress a't this stage of being
in session than In most that I remember," House Speaker Thomas
to ley said last week.
·
· When It was noted that most of the legislation was gU!f·related,
Foley said, "that is true, but most of the time at this juncture, we
would Just be organizing the committees and there would be no
substantive legislation being considered ·by the House."
Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell also pointed to the
normal, slow pace at the start of a new Congress and predicted that
the war " will not have the effect of significantly retarding action."
In fact, the process of organizing committees and subcomm!tees is
just being completed, setting the stage for he~rlngs In the coming
months.
Even the committees are moving on pace slightly more rapid than
In other years.
A round of hearings have broughi the administration's tbp experts
to Capitol Hill to testify on the recession and other economic matters;
Senate panels are holding conf!rfnat!on hearings to fUI vacancies at
the top In the agriculture, labor and education depariments and a
House subcommittee · has slarted exploring the problems of a
post·war Middle East.
.
Unques Ilona bly, members of Congress are fixated by the war and a
number of other· bills providing be~eflts for the fighting men and ·
women are now near fruition. But the pace of congressional activity is.
not slower at this time than In other years.
The best testament Is the Congret~s originally planned to convene
Jan. 3 and then recess until Jan. 23. Instead, the war turned that
recess Into a series of sessions that prOduced legislation.
.

.

Robert Wftlters

.
- - - - : : - ._.::.__ __
diets of rapidly growing numbers
of health·consc!ous people: .Aver·
age annual consumption has
increased by · almost 60 percent
during the last decade and now
stands at about 16 pounds per
person,.
Commer!cal seafood landings
total 3.5 b!l!lon pounds annually
(some of which are exports.)
while l~ports account for
another 3 billion pounds yearly.
The total reta!! value of both

categories
exceeds s28
bn!!on, with now
substantial
growth
pr&lt;id!cted for the future.
But seafood accounts for a
disproportionately high share of
all cases o!food·borne!llness and
disease reported to the federal
government's Centers for Dis·
ease Control - 14.7 percent for
fish and 5. 7-percent for shellfish.
(CDC estlma tes that toxic
microorganisms in all types of
food, ranging from botulism ·
cause by Improper canning to
staphylococcus In rancid meat,
loads to !!!ness for 6.5 million to33
m!f!!on people, k!lls another 9,000
and requires $420 m!lllon In
medical expenditures every
year. )
Both houses of Congress last
year enacted measures mandai· ·
!ng seafood inspection· by the
federal government - but the
legislation died at the end of the
session when members of a
conference committee were un,
able to agree on a compromise
between the House and Senate
versions.
·
That !allure was attrlbutab,le,
In great measure, to the continuIng lnab!l!ty of either Congress or ·
the White House to resolve an
especially nasty bureaucratic
feud among these three agencies
competing for principal seafood
inspection authority:
- The Health and Human
Servjces Department's Food and
DI'1Jg Administration, which al·
ready conducts inspections,
which already conducts lnspec·
tlons of the nation's 4,000 seafood
processors, shippers, packers,
warehouses and Importers.
Among Its weaknesses: Each
facility .!s visited on an average of
only once every four years and
the inspections focus on plant
sanitation rather . than food
purity.
- The Agriculture Depart·
ment 's Food Safety and Inspec,
tiim Service, which already mon·
ltors meat an poultry
sl11ughterhouses as well as other
production facilities but has
Increasing been criticized tor Its
unenthusiastic oversight of . the
Industry.

.

"

with the Western media and 110t
When we published the trans·
with the U.S. government. As
crlpt l;~st August, Simpson diS·
long as you are Isolated from the
puted it because It was supplied ·
media, the press - and it Is a
from a tape made by Saddam's
haughty and pampered press staff. Before we printed ex·
they all consider themselves
cerpts ,' we checked with other
political geniuses. That Is, the : senators who were at th_e meet·
Journalists do. They are very · lng, and they vouched for Its
cynical. What I advise is that you
accuracy. It Is unllk,e!y that in
Invite them to come here and see
April, when Saddam wp.s. trying
to court the United States, he
for themselves."

In the NBA Tuesday night,

Our .. ual
. Valentine's Day
Greetings Section!
'

DRIVES BY MAGIC - ·L.A. Clipper guard
Gary Graat (right) drives by the Lakers' Magic
Johnson, but not before committing the charge In

IQ*liG lor"""glftfaaCIIIlillrllq 14,1111

the second quarter of Tuesday night's NBA game
In Los Angeles, which the Lakers won 116-102.
(UPI)

Don't IIIiB8 your chance to thrill eomeone
epeclal with your very own me81181!e of love.

Jlert'l 'rile lhlta I' Bolta1
•Just S5.00 buys a 5-line weeti~~ rapproxi · .
mately 20 words) or S3 .00 buys a l5·word
or less line ad .

•Mail your typed or neatly handwritten . message to Valentine·s
in~s. care. of this newspaper.
•Your ~reerin~ mlisr be re·
reived by Monday. Feb. I ~

•All weerings will be published in a spel'ial .sel:tion
on ' Valentine's Day. February 14th .

Sp,

.,

For &amp;11 the hea.rtwai-mlng det&amp;lls, call

992-2156
EXAMPLES
OF SlZES. AND PRICES:
.
.
1 INCH AD .•• '5·.00

.

1112 INCH AD .•• '7.50

(approximately 20 words)

{approximately 30 words)

HapPfl Valentine's Day

Happy Valentine's. Day
Grandma, Grandpa
Mom. Dad
Sister and Brother
Thanks For Being Such
a Swell Family!

R - u e Red
VIolets ue Blue
You Broke My Heart
Now We're ThroUihl

3 INCH AD ... '14.00
(approximataly 60 words)

MUCH!

HAPPY VALENTINE'S

2 INCH AD ... '1 0.00

DAY

{approximately 40 words)

."

Cupid's anowls strlllght
and true
·
In brlnglnll this thought
of lo•e to you.
rm sorry about the other
nllht
Whea we bad that ter·
rlble ftgbt. ' .
A SenUnel Love Me•·
Bage was a good idea

To ahow how much I lo•e
you, Marla.
MAY WE ALWAYS HAVE
A WONDERFUL LIFE
TOGETHER!

,.

I LOVE YOU VERY .

HOLDING BACK THE DEVIL Is a lot easier
with Calgary's Stephane Matteau (left) holds
' back New Jersey Devil Vlacheslav Fetlsov and
keeps him away from the puck during the third
'T'
da
h
in the NHL , ues y nig t,

TOMYHONEI

e

Happy Valentine's Day!
Or gel a 15 word o:
less line ad no graphir•
(no border) 13.00.

WRIT£ YOUR MESSAGE BELOW:
i------------------------~----------~-1
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I

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Bring In or mail your message and total amount to:

•

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TOT AI: AMOUNT ENCLOSED: .................................... ;·...............................,......,

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ADS MUST BE RECEIVED BY NOON. WEDNESDAY. FEB. 13 and PAID IN ADVANCE

·

'"
"Then we started to play very
.• By United Press International
aggressively and the forwards
The best dreams are childhood
kept the puck down near Edmon:dreams, and that's what Ken
ton's goal, " Boston rookie goal·
,Hodge Is fulfilling as he becomes
tender
Norm Foster said. "We
•a hero at Boston Garden.
kept·
plugging
away and gaining
· The 24·year-old rookie com· .
on
them.
n
pleted his first career hat trick
Edmonton's Kevin Lowe said
with 1:08 left ·in overtime Tues·
his
team failed to sustain its
day night and the Bruins rallied
early
effort.
from a three-goal deficit for a 6-5
"In
the second period, we
victory over the . Edmonton
started to slack off and Boston
Oilers.
,.
.
has a great history as the type of
Hodge, the son of former
team that never gives up," he
Bruins star Ken Hodge Sr.,
said.
"Especially In this
gathered a loose puck and firM a
building."
lO·Ioot backhander from the slot
The Bruins, who have won six
as he was falling. The moment
of their seven games. ended ·
,ihe puck went past Edmonton
Edmonton's · winning streak at
goalie Blll 'Ranford, Hodge was
four games. Boston tied the
mobbed by his teammates and
Chicago Blackhawks for the. best
the roar of 14.448 fans at Boston
record In the league, at 72 points.
Garden was deafening.
Scoring for the Oilers were
"It's a dream come true," said
Petr
Klima with hls second hat
Hodge. "And hopefully there will
trick
In four games and Craig
be many more to come."
Simpson
with two goals.
Hodge, who watched his father
Boston
trailed 5-3 after Klim~ 's
play for the Bruins In 1967·76,
said Tuesday night's winning
play seemed to develop In slow
motion.
ITATI 0' 0"10, DI!PAitTMI!NT OF ltiiiUit·
ANCI, ClltnPICAT! OPCOMPUANC! . "''
"It seemed like It took 10 or 15
undefiiiAU, lu,..ltctct'*nt ot tn...-c:. of
seconds, though It was probably
tM .... of Otl~ '*"w ..,.,._ thM M!D·
WilT MUTUAL INIURANCI COMPANV of
only two seconds," he said. "The
W.O. Me-. ..... ofklw•h• _,.,."
................................. _d ..
puck just Jay there, I got my stick
.,ttoolaM IMtftt rhl ourrtm yNr totr.nHCt
on It and It went tllrough his legs.
1ft tNI .-o U .,......,.. !MI.,._ of lrl111r·
This Is definitely the thrlll of my
- · ... fiM..al ............ """"'" ~ "'
MmMI........,.. to ht!Vt laHn ",..,..,,."
life."
0.0....., 11, 1-: .-..::111114 AI·
, , , , oao;no.217.oo: UIIIIIM._
The Oilers, the NHL's defend·
1.11,712.111 .00: lu,..... 111.041,121.00:
lng champions,- used their skat·
...._. IU.I.U.I-.00: .•• .......,._
111,701.111.00. IN WITNIII WMIRIOP, I
lng and siZe to dominate the first
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . "" .. .,_ lftd
portion of the game. They led 4·1
.,...... ...., ... to W atHnd It ColumM.
0No
Md•....
1. 1110. Gto....
early In tlie second period and 5-3
• • · . ....,...,.... of 1ft..,..._ of Ohio.
early In the third
..,;erlod.
(IIAI.I
,.

tNe..,

'•

sealed the victory with his third. three-point goal .
By CHUCK KLONKE
with 36 seconds remal nlng.
\JPI Sports Writer •
In other NBA action Tuesday night , Orlando Detroit Pistons head coach Chuck Daly knew
defeated
~ew York 118·116, Atlanta beat Cleve·
the good times would end eventually.
'
land
118·114
, Minnesota stunned Utah 94·93, , .
"rve had, a couple years off with these guys.
Golden
State
upended San Antonio 112·106, Dallas ·
Now I have to work harder with Islah (Thomas )
beat
Indi11na
114·109, Phoen ix outgunned Denver
out," Daly said after the Pistons used a
126·103
and
the
L.A. Lakers topped the L.A.
second·half comeback Tuesday night to post a
Clippers 116·102.
107·98 victory over the Philadelphia 76ers.
~aglc 118, Knlcks 116- At Orlando, Fla .. Scott
"We haven't had coaches meetings for a couple
Skiles scored 21 of his 23 points-after halftime and
of years and now we've had them the last two
Greg Kite hit the winning basket with 37 seconds
days," Daly said. "Everybody has to work
left for the Magic. Skiles fueled a 10·0 run at the
harder. We !)ave todej::ldehowwecan incorporate
end of tbe third and start of the fourth periods that
our people and talk about the changes we have to
erased a 85·75 New York lead. Klkl Vandeweghe
make offensively."
had 28 points for New' York.
Detroit has gone more to a half·court game
Hawks 118, Cavaliers 114 - At Atlanta, ·
since Thomas went out with a wrist injury.
Dominique Wilkins scored 40 points and puUed
"We have to pass the ball around more," John .
. down 13 rebounds to help the Hawks snap ·a
Salley said. "Most people don't like playing
defense for 24 seconds . Maybe we can tire people · six-game losing streak.,The victory was the 15th
In a row a:t home for the Hawks, leaving them only
out 'by making the extra pass."
two shy of their all· time record of 17 set spanning
Mark Aguirre scored 10 of his 21 points in the
the 1978·79 and 1979·80 seasons ,
fourth quarter to spark Detroit's comeback.
Tlmberwolves 94, Jazz 93 - At Minneapolis,
Vinnie Johnson also had 21 points and Joe Dumars
Sam Mitchell's basket with 11 Seconds left gave
added 19 for the Pistons, who wori for the sixth
Minnesota its first win over ihe Jazz In eight
time .in seven games.
meetings. Utah tra!!ed by as many as 11 paints in ·
· .Charles Barl\ley led Philadelphia with 23 Points ,
tl\e third quarter, but took the lead late in the final
but was held scoreless In the fourth quarter, and
quarter.
But Tony Campbell scored Minnesota's
Armon G!!llam tossed In 22 points.
next
five
points as M!nnesoU!,..won for the third
Although Detroit had one of its most productive
time
In
four
games.
offensive games since Thomas got hurt, it was
Warriors
112,
Spurs 106- At San Antonio, Chris
defense again that decided the game.
Mullin
scored
32
points and Tim Hardaway added
Philadelphia, which scored 37 points In the first
23
to
help
Golden
State upset the Spurs. The loss
quarter, managed only 34 points In the second half
was
San
Antonio's
second in a row, the first time
and suffered Its second defeat in two games.
this
season
the.
Spurs
have lost back·to-back
''We made some changes in defensive strategy
games. David Robinson led the Spurs with 21
In the second half," Daly said. "We were playing
points. ·
stralght·up in the first half, but we went to
Mavericks 114, Pacers 109- At Dallas , Derek
trapping their big guys on the bOl: and th~t helped
Harper and Randy White were successful on
us."
follow shots in the final 11 seconds to lead the
Philadelpl)!a head coach Jim Lynam agreed.
Mavericks to victory . Dallas won tor only the lOth ..
"It was a tale of two halves," Lynam said.
time at home this season. The loss was Indiana's .
"They tightened their defense and got back really
19th on the road,
quick in the second half. They pl,ay an entire team
Suns IZ8, Nuggets 103 - At Phoenix, Kevin .
defense. That gets them and their crowd into it."
Johnson scored 21 points and handed out12ass!sts •
The Pistons used a 6·0 spurt at the end of the
to lead the Suns. Dan Majerle added 19 points and ·
third quarter to draw within 83-82 to start the final
Xavier McDaniel contributed 17 as Phoenix ·
period.
registered Its sixth straight win over t.he Nuggets . .
Johnson hit a jumper for the first two points of
Phoenix
held Denver - the NBA's highest·
the fourth quarter to give the Pistons their first
scoring
team
- to Its th!rd·lowes t point total of the
lead since the first three minutes of the game.
season.
The lead changed hands two more times before
Lakers 116, C.llppers 102- At Inglewood, Calif.,
Dumars drilled a three·point shot with 5: 07left to
Magic
Johnson scored 22 points and recorded 13
put Detroit ahead 94·91.
assists
just two days after suffering a concussion
Hersey Hawkins missed a layup and Gilliam's
as
the
Lakers
·posted their 16th straight victory.
jumper from the free throw !joe bounced off the
The winning streak Is the second-longest fn ..
rim as the 76ers made two attempts to tie thl!
· Lllkers history. The victory. also was the Lakers'
· game In the closing minutes.
26th straight over the Clippers at the Forum.
Johnson followed with a drive to give the
Pistons a 100·96 advantage and Bill La!mbeer

Villanova defeats
St. John's 61-51

By TOM WITHERS
UPI SpoJ:ts Writer
The Villanova Wildcats are
hoping a February full of vlcto·
r!es can make up for a December
and January tainted by failure.
With slightly more · than a
month remaining before the
NCAA selection comm!tee picks
64 teams for its postseason
tournament, V!llanova, already
strapped with 10 losses. was in
desperate need of a qual !ty win.
Behind James Bryson's 21
points and a tenacious man· to·
man defense, the Wildcats took a
major step towards extending
their season well into March with
a 61·51 victory . over No. 7 St.
John's in New York.
"That was a must win for us
period of Tuesday night's NHL game on the
again," said V!llanova head
Devils' home Ice. The Devils edged the Flames
coach Rollle Massimino, whose
2·1. (UP!)
team was In a similar pred!ca·
ment last season. "We always
seem to be In that situation. This
was a night where we had to
respond, playing a Top 10 team at
MadlsonSquareGarden."
---o
Bryson matched his career
high and the Wildcats used an
18·4 run In the second half to

• k g~•veS
. od_De 'e' s f•IrSt' hat t.nc
:-; H
0
•1
:. Bruins 6•5 WID over I ers
·

Wrltlnll this love message
ghres me the opportu,nlty
to tell you just how much
I love you and enjoy being
your husband. I know
sometimes I don't sl!owtt
but I really do. ·

•

Pistons beat Sixers 107-98

would have .deliberately mJs.
quoted five senators In a trans·
cr!pt that he prepared and gave
to the U.S. Embassy.
In the end, Simpson said that
the quotes were correct, but that
his meaning was misunderstood.
He said lie was simply trying to
gain more access to Iraq for the
Western press.

Now Under Construction:

.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pornavv-Middleport. Ohio

Ju"

third goal of the game, at 1:32 of
the third period. But Hodge
scored his second goal just 19
seconds later, off a Cam Neely
pass, and Peter Doutls put home
a 12·foot backhander at 6:38 to tie
the score 5·5.
Boston outshot Edmonton 40-24
In 'the rematch between last
spring's Stanley Cup finalists.
Boston took a 1·0 lead on Craig
Janney 's lO·foot shot 6: 251nto the
(See NHL on Page 4)

~:~~~e~~~~:. overalland5·5in

coach Lou Carnesecca said of
VIllanova's offensive rebound·
!ng, "We gave then too many
seco'nd chances and you can't
afford to do that against a team
as good as V!l!anova."
The Redmen, 164 and 7-4,
managed only two field· goals in
the final 9: 22.
(See HOOPS on Page 4)

MIZWAY
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The Wildcats trailed 39·33 with
11: 02 remaining before going on
their decisive spurt.
Lance Miller . ignited Villano·
va 's spree by na!l!ng a jumper to
bring the Wildcats· within 39·35.
Bryson then hit one of two free
throws and on the miss Mark
Dowdell grabbed the rebound
and kk:kea the ball out to Chris
Walker. who buried a three·
pointer .to tl.e the score 39·39.
"We lost our concentration a
little there," St. John's· head

1985 NISSAN KING CAB

The Daily Sentinel

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'

Page 4-The Dllily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middeport. Ohio

Euiera Confmncf'

Allaotlc lllvlol011
W L Pd. GB
Bostoo ......... .... ..... 3.112 .733 Philadelphia .. ...... 2121 .533 9

Tf'am

NE"wY ork ....... ..... 2026 .435
W aS h l n~oo .. .. ...... 20 26 .435
N(&gt;Y.· JerSE'y-..... ..... H 32 . 30~
Ml a m L . ..... ...... 12 35 .255

13 1.,
131:
19 ~
22

Oet roit .. ............ .. . 3 ~ H .i 08

-

·_~~:E{~t~:::::::: :J~ H:~!i

r~

Indiana ..... ....... .... 19 26 .42:!
Cit"\'(' land ........ ... . 15 31 .326

~r"!

CharlotiP ......_..... .. J..l ,l l .311

18¥.1

WPStt&gt;rn C. nlerence
Mld ~s r

Team
San Anloo io ... .

Division

II' L Pel. ' GB
.1 113 .705

Utah ...... ...... ... 30 16 .652
Houst011 ....... .... 2521 S43
.. .. ..... 1621 .312
Dallas .

2
1
H I;

MJnnPso ra .. ....... ... 16 28 .364

1~

O.nwr ... o.,. ......... ll3l .311 111;
Orla ndo ............. 1333 .283 19
Padftc Dlvlllon
Porlla nd .............. 39 8 .830_
L.A. Lakers ......... 3511 .76f 31;
P~cr nllc

..... , ... ...... 30 15 .667

8
12

Go !denStare ........ 2619 .57R

SNttl• ........... ...... 2ll1 .488
LA. Clippers ....... 1531 .326
Sacrammto .... ~ .... l231 .279

16\;
231;
25

'IWid&amp;y'!l resdti

Orlando 118. N..,. Yori&lt; ll6
Atlanta 118. Cleveland 114
O.trolt 101, Philadelphia 98
Mlnnestta 94, Utah '3
Dollu 114. Indiana 109
Gold.a State 112, San Antonio 106
Ptu:enlX 126, Denver 103

L.A. Lakersll6, L.A. Clippers 102

Tonllht'• rame~

CharlDI:tt' at Bostpn, 7: 30p.m.
Miami a1 New Jersey, 7: 30p.m .

WashJngtCII a1 PhUad~lptUa , 7:30

p.m.
Houston at Mllwauk('(', R: :W p.m .
Phoentx 'at Utah. 9:30p.m.
L.A . CllppPrs at St&gt;attlf.' , 1q p.m .
Portland at Sacramml o, 10: 30
p.m .
Thui'Hda)''l'i 'prnes

Boston at Nr.w York. 7: :JO p.m.
S"""" ..)'t~r!IPy at W!lshiftRIOR. 7: 30

p.m.

MinnMola at Or~ndo . 7: lO p.m.
Charlo1tc at A.1lanta . 7: :ll p.m ,
Houston at Clt"Yeland. 7:30p.m .
Chlca,io at Detroit. II p.m.
GokiMt State at Dallas. 8:30 p.m. '
Indiana at San Anlonio. ij: 30 p.m .

In the NHL".
Walt~

ConfereacC!
Pllrtck Dlv.U•
Teom
WLTI'I•.GFGA
N.Y. Ran~~s ..... 2719 9 63 197 171'
Ptttsbul'l!h ......... 292.1 3 6123.\203
• Philadelphia ...... 2124 6 60 188111
New Jersey ....... .23 21 10 .'i6 194; 179
Washl~on ........ 2!i 21\ II 5.1 17R 1R8
~ . Y . lslandl'l's ...18 28 R 14155189
Ad11m11 Dlvllolen
Bosron .... ........... 321; R 12 210 !8.1
Monfl"('al. .......... ...., 20 6 661911~
Hartford ............ 23 25 f\ !\2 1~ JRO
Buffalo ............. .212210 ~2 18.~ IHI

Qurbre .... :......... 11-14 q :n

Scoll Brackenridge hit a ~t
off the offensive boards with just
12 seconds left to give !he Warren
Local Warriors a. 51-50 win over
the Meigs Marauders Tuesday
night.
The win was !he flflh in a row
for !he Warriors after opening the
season with 12 srraighl losses. The
loss drops the Marauders record to
6·11. •
Warren Local jumped out to a
15·12 lead at !he end or the f1rs1
quarter behind the scoring or 1ason
Reed who scored eight fJrSt quaner
points including six from three
point range. Trevor Harrison and
Fr;ank Blake led the Marauders in
lhe period wilh four points each. .
Meigs outscored W~ in the
second period 12-9 to tie the game
at 24 at the end of the first llalf.
Jason Wright. Shawn Hawley and
Harrison led the Marauder charge
wilh four points each. Brian Bowe
added foilr points for the Warrim.
In the third period the Maraud·
ers went on a 15-11 run .to take a
39-35 lead into the final periOd
behind Jason Wright's five points
and Harrison an!l Hawley's four
points each. Brian Bowe kept the
. Washift81011 County learn close by
scoria~ six third period point$.
Meags held as much as a eight
point lead with just over five min,

Cortland Lakevt.,. 73, Brookfield
51
Cres~wood 66, RoCfstowa 63
Cuyab011a Falls 63. Alllane&lt;&gt; 60
Day Cham Jul63. Fairborn 48
O.flance 54, mhbold 46
· Dr..deo Trl Val 65, ZanesvUJe 60
Dublin a:;, Col West 63
E Cantm 67, Navarre Fairless 60
· E Cle Shaw 92. Parma 10
E Uverpooi 88. Wintersville 65
E Palestine 72, Columb Crestview

GO

C.entral Division

15~240

C~t.mpbeU Confere~Rr

!\iorrt11 DlvMion
" . L T PltoL GF GA
Chic:a·p:o ...............1-lli -1 i21R1141
· .S1. Loui~ .. ........... :10 16 7 fi720716.'l
Ocr rolf ........ ....... :?4 2T !1 .'i3 1!=17 200
Mipfl(&gt;SO(&lt;I ...... ... .. 17 .l.l9 .J.1 Ji2 197

Tum

To root o............... 1~ .l'l .1 .1:1156 2:!6

Smytht• DlviKton
........ :mIB 5 6!11 21., tn

L.o~ Anacl~

Calgary .... .. ... ..... 2M 21 .'i 61 21i li:l
Edmauon ........... 27 21 3 !\i }AA 172

Wlnnlpc&gt;5: ............ 20 29M -IR 1116 20:!
\·ancouvC'r .......... 19 :n 5 -t1171 212
TUt&gt;Kda,·'"- reKulll"
Bo~ron fi.- Edmooton !ltOn
Lo." An~clf"!l 3, Phlladclphla 2
:"~· JN~~· J. Cal,aary 1 ·
Washin.lltoo :'i, Vanrouvrr .1
To•llhl'~ ~amf!!l

f:dmorrtoo at Hanron:l. 7:3!ip.m.
:'\".\' . l!\land&lt;'rsat 1'\.Y . Ran,ller".

7: :15 p.m.

St. Louis ai Butralo. ~ : li p..m.
at MontR"al, i : .l!i p.m.
. Toronto al Winnipl'l! . M: .15 p.m.
'111urMa)' Gamftl
Cal~ar~ at Bostoo, i : 35 p.m.
C' hlca~o

VanrOU\'('r at Philadf'lphla. i : 3~

p.m.

Mo ntl'('al at Qu('bec. 7:3.') p.m.
Toronto at Mlnnt'!!;Oia. 8: J.') p.m.

Eas Hake N 84. Chardon 74

Esn Brown 72, 'Felicity 60
Everareen 55, Mo~ct CMich. 1 44
Fairbanks 82. Way...,fid Go5hen 65
Fairpoi1 84, Newbury 34
Federal Hock 115, ReedsVille ·Esn
80
Field 91, Mogado,. 88
Forest Park 62, On Anderson 55
Gat Mli Hawken 67. Cl• Bapt 49
Girard 69. Poland 62
·
Goshen 10, Uttle Miami M
Green Hills 80, Cln McNicltolas13
Hannan Trace 78. Jackson 65
Hannibal Rivet 67, F.Tmtler 65
HoJrate 68, Patrick Henry 47
Hudsm Wsn R~ 69, Akr Eller 54
Indian Lake 8~. Triad 51
Indian Valley 61, Dover 55
Jacks011 Milton 58, McDonald M
· Kldrm 71, Elyria Door 41
Klrtla:nd 57, Perry 47
La brae 66, Hubban:J 64
. Lakewoa:t 62, Parma Nomtandy 52
LebanM 69, CarUisle 49
Liberty 81, Kinsman Badger 58.
Liberty Union~. Lane~ster F1sh56
·Lisbon 60, Union Loca149
Lockland 91. Williamsburg 81
Lou.isvtlle AqUinas 67, Minerva 57

Lucasville Vol 67; Port Clay 53
Lyndhursr Brush 79, W Geauga 67

Madism 53, Ashtabula 43
Masm 13. Hamiltm Ross 66 t 20T1
Mass Chr 75, Can Heritage 63
Mathews 62, Grand Val 41
Maumee Val 85, Lakerldg• 63 .
Mayfield 58. Wick!Ufe 51
Medlancsbrg 65, Oegr&amp;f Riverside
64
Miami Val 75, Cln Hillcrest 68
Millon! 511. Hillsboro 56 lOTi
Mlllonl Chr 83. Cln Central Bapr78 .
_Min~ral Rldg~57, Ber

Ctr Wes Res

Mln~o 16, Cadiz 64
N Central 56, Hicksville 50
· N Gall Ia 91. Trimble 90
Napoleon 59, Tlnora 39
Newton Falls 83, Champion 78
Oak Glen !W.Va . J 65. Edison S47
Oregon Clay 54, Fremml 50 10T1

L

Ottawa Hills 58, r-.lorthwood 54
Palnes Harvt'y 63. Ashtab Harbor
53
Patnes Riverside 63. Jefl Area 53
Pymaruntng Val 86. Ledgemont 49
· Ravenna, 66. Medina 60
,
Ridgewood 18, J..,.tt Scio 69
Rocky River 58. N Royaltoo 52
S Webster 97, McDermou NW 44
Shaker Hts 82. Parma Val Forge 71
Shenandoah 89, Fort Frye 59
Solm 40. Gar Mtl Gilmour 38
Southern l.oC'al 71, Leetoola 53
Spring Val 56, Temple Chr 36
Springboro 81, BJanchester 54
St GlaJrsvUie 69, MarUn's Ferry 66
StOW' 80, Altr Cen Hower 36
Streetsboro 64. Dlamood SE 53
StrMgsVJIIe12, N Olmsted 58
Struthers 64. CampbeU 61 ,or,
Symmes Valley 64:. Ohlll Vall Chr55
Tallrnadiiif' 79, Ravenna 70
Tipp City 69, Bethel U
Tol Bowsher 66. Tol Macomber 57
Tol Central 52, Tol Ubbey 56
Tol Chr 50, Tol Em Bapt 47
Tol Sron 66, Tol WaitP 58
Tol St Francis 38, To I Woa:lward 22
To I St Jot:m 72. To! Dt&gt;vllbisS ~
To! Start73, To! Rodgers 57
Toronto 55, Steubenville 52 !OTl
Tusky Val65, Tuslaw 47
Uhrtchsv111!' 67, Cerro! Iron 56
Union Local 58, Bridgeport 53
Unlontawn Lake 56, Louisville 52
Vincent Warren 51. Meigs 50
W Hobnes 69. Zanes Ro!!ecrans 51
w Lib Solem 56. Ben Logar. 53
Waldron IMil 68. Fayette 64
War~nsvDIP Rl. Cl~ SOuth !i9
Westland 90. West Jeffersoo iS
WIUo-HIII 79. El)'rJa Bapt 65
Windham 67, Watf'rloo 58

You Chr 76. SharCJJ 1Pa. 1 Chr 57
You Rayttn n, You Wilson .'&gt;4
You SQuth 9~ You qJaney 48

Tuesday's girls
cage soores
Akr Chr 51. Medina Bapt 25
Akr Hoban 56, Can McKinley 39
46, Sprlng NW 45

Ber Hiland 52, Waynf!dalt' «
Black River 56, New London 22
Centf'rburg 88, Johnstown N'Riclge
50
Ciri&gt;Aiken 59. Cln Tafll9
Cin Mei'C'y Rl, Cln Wtth.row 39
Ctn NW 52. Cln Anderson 37

Tuesday'&amp; boys

basketballl'ftlults
Akr Covontry 81. Akr Spring 16
10T1
Akr Hoban 13. Cuy Vol Chr 511
. Akr Manrheo...- 80. Sandy Val n
Akr Vlncenr92, AJcr Buch..,l78
Ashtab Edgewood 107. AlblabJolm
78
A. Ihens 62, Nf'lsonvlliP Yor1l5~1()'f)

Aurora 55. Columbia :51
Austintown Fitch 78, Niles 47
Barbf'rlon 75, Wadsworrh 62

BarnesvUie 88. Wocdsfleld 84
Batavia 57. Fay~! te-vlllf' 53
Beachwood 71, tndependft\te 62

8eawrcrt&gt;l'k.74. Day MPadowdale
41
Bella"' -IOhn 89. Weir IWVt Madna
48
Bert'an Chr 8'1 , Ftndlay Hf'rl1ap:e72
&amp;rltlhlrt' 62. ·Midl«.&gt;fiiPid Cardinal

61
Bioort'\-Carroll86. Logan Elm 511
BIO&lt;I'IIfteld 66. Southi"-'!11 6.'1
Bristol e&amp;. Lordltowtl 19
Brooklyn 6~. Cuyahotla Hto 50
Bryan 59. Hilltop 5.1
Buckeye Local i6. Bt-avt"r Loca160
Buck(')'&lt;' Trai163. Moadowbrook 49
Caid..,l I ~. Skyvue 62
Cambrklli[e81. Marlena 7R tOTI
Canfteld 68. Sal.., 66 lOT&gt;
Care.v 11. Arcadia 51
CedarvlliP 86; 8PIIbr00k 70

Centervl (Ind.! 57. Nail Trail ~6
Chai!Tin Failo 'II .. WiiiOIIj(hby S 4;
Cln Aiken if. Ctn Purcf'll 5~ .
Cln Country Day 77. Clm Es1r 5R
Cln LaS.IIo 84. Cln Wilhrow 70
Cln Landmark 6~. Cln Cal Chr 37
Cin SUmml1 60. Clermcrn NE !'i6
Cln Tah 14. Cln NW 62
Cln 'l\npln 80 Amflla 53
Cia WoadWIU'd 70; NoNood 54
Cl• O&gt;IUn-U. ~onl ~I
Cl• Holy Namo 12. Cltonlon Nd
Cathd
Clo Luth W &amp;3. Rldlmand Hu ~7
CIP Rhodet16, CJ• Unlv 71
0&gt;1 Br . ., 93, Olllndepotldfft&lt;e 68
Col Br . . . . . . II. Ool Wll.,.tMe
71
•
Col &lt;:ellltllllai1S. Oolllo.,.crtll ~1
Col CIIM 10. 011 WatiPr.., U
0&gt;1 Eorotmocr M. Oollaotltll 115
0&gt;1 Ham Twf 11. 011 Hlrtloy 61
Col Llndfft 1 , Oil Mllllln 63
Col Mar·Farnktln ~8. CoJWal Rid!!•
51
Col Maranatha 52. Col Tre•LIIU1
Col Nonltllnd 1t. 011 Eorot ~7
Col Nortlllld•1t. OIJF'roodom eo
011 Roady 13. Worth C!tr f2.
Con-ui11, Geneva 69
ConHnenUI 51. Wo.vne Trace 31

Ctn Setoo 65. Waltoo Verma 46
Cln Ursuline 36. On Wsn Hills 35 ~
Cin Wal Hills 43. Cin !II&lt;Nicholas 35
Clp 1\n~ela-JOt' 15.. Cle R"'!!na 27
Cleo Augustine 74, Erieview 68
Cle Beaumonr ~. tb&amp;Jrln ND·Cath
42
Ci• E Tech 53, Oel.iocoln W 10
Cit- Kttnnaly 38. War~nsvme 34
Cle Mqnl!l"'t 81. Cie Joe 61
Coi Beechcrolt '15. 0&gt;1 Centenlal21
Col Brookhaven &amp;1. Col Whetstone
23
Col Independence 41, Col Briggs 20
Cot Lindfft 71. Col Mlftlin 52
Col Northland 64, Col Easr59t20T!
Col South 16. Col Easunoor 43
Col Wal Ridge 59, Col Mar Frank 21
Col Well 'Ton 69, Col Maranatha 42
Colerain 50. an Pu"'ell39
Conotlm Val 48. Can Heritag• 40
Cuyah018 Falls 66 Akr O&gt;piey 3~
Danville 59. Worth Cbr ti
E Knox 49, Luca• 43 .
EIJ!IW- 53. Hopowell Loudon II
• Frankton Adftl8 41. WHifall21
Gahan1111 63. WPStland 48
Garfield Hts 33. TwlnsbUrR 31
Gat Mil Hawken 43. Cle Andrew 10
Grovo City 56. Wes.,rvllle S 44
Ham Jiron Ross 49, Harrston 45
Ht&gt;a1h &amp;ti. Newark Cath 51
Hebroo L.akt"NNod !H. Johnstwn ~9
Hilliard 48. Delawa'rP 40

Hudsm 78. Aurora 34
Hudsm Wsn Res 63. SliM' n
Independenc~ 31, Rcxky River 29
10Tr
· Jonathan Alder 70. Col Wesr 49
KrntCI'I Rlctae 44, St Paris Graham
40
lA,kewood 55. Avm LakP 36
LlckinR Val !5. Utica 41
Unla Bath 67, Findlay ~2
Lorain 68, Sandusky l3
Lorain S'VI&lt;'W 60. N Ridgeville 41
Loudonvlll• 69, Mount Gileod 29
Mariemont 69. Mlidelra 40
Marlon Pleasant 57, N Union ~6
Milfonl11, Fairfield 41
Mounr Vernon 48, C1'11llicolhe 29
N Bend Taylor 31, Flnneytown 29
New Ril$lol 50, Buckeyo Central15
Non:tonla 58. Tallmadge ~2
Cln Oak Hilla 48, an RDpr llocon
~~

Parma Padua 53, Cle Marllia1145
Plclurlnrtm13, Reyooldlbu!l42 \
Readlltl 5&amp;. Loveland 38
s Amhorst 39. Medina Buckey. 36
Sprtn1 Shawnee 51. SprlngGreenon
51
Tiffin Calvert 52, N Baltimore 40
Tiffin O&gt;lumblan ~3. Shelby 48
Upper ArUnlflll 118, W.,tervUie N
56
,Upper Sandusky 56, Bellrvue 38
Urbana 66. London 45

.

.

Meigs ...

utes remaining, but Bracbnri.
The dilf&amp;&amp;ICe in the pme was
MEIGS 12. 12 . 15 I 1-50
led a Warrior comeblct wit1l stx from line poilll!IIIIC • the WarWARREN IS 9 11 16-51
fourth period points inclpdinl the riois hit -ea sbots aood enough
·
gaine winner m the line with 12 for 21 poinll, wltile the Marauders
MtlGS-Juon Wright6.().S·I7,
seconds left in the contest. Bowe were0for3fnJIIIIonsnnge.
Shawn Hawley 5·0·0·10, Mike
added four points to the Warrior
In the resene contest, the Van Meier 1..{)..0.2, Trevor Harricause, while Eric Harper and Kilt Manudcn OIIKored W1m11 Local son 7.0.1·15, Terry MI:Guire 1..{)..
Huffman added keY three pointers 21·12 in the fOI!dh quanerto brealc 0·2, Frank Blalte 1-0-2· 4, Phil
down the stretch. Wright led lhe a 28-28 tic and post a 49-40 vic!Ory Hovau.er 0.().().(), TOTALS 21..().8Marauders in the final period with over the Warnors. Todd Dill led SO
three points.
'me way with 21 points, including
nine in the fourth quarter. 1ohn .
WARREN-Todd Fouss ().().().(),
Bowe took game high scoring Bentley added 10. Crav.en led the Jason Harris 1·3..().11, Erie Harper
honors with 18 points while Juon Warren attack with 14 and Pierte 0.2.()..6, Scott Brackenridge 3.().28, Ryan Dennis.0.1.().3, Killt HuffHarris added 11 points includipg .added 13.
nine from three point range. No
Meigs will host the Trimble man 1·1-0.5, Aaron Merrclls 0..{)..
other statistics for the Warriors TOIIICilS in TVC action Ibis Friday 0·0, Chris Carpenteil 0-0-0-0,
were avllilable.
nigbl, with the reserve conieS! get- Brian Bowe 9-0-0-18, TOTALS ..
14·7-2-51
Wright led a uio of Marauders Iiiii underway 816:30.
in double figures with 17 points,
Harrison added 15 .JIOil\ts and Hawley added 10. Meags hit 2 I of 42
~.
(21 or 39 from IWO point range and
0-3 from !he three point range)
·
from t.he floor for 50 percent.
Meig~ hit 8 of 11 from the line for ·
73 percent. The Marauders were
State-ranked Federal Hocking · pointlliDge, hit4 of 18 dtree point·
only able to grab 14 rebounlls for scOred its seccnd higMA offensive ers, and 20-30 at !he line. Federal
the night wilh Hawley gelling live output of the aeuon u it bUstered hit 39·64 and 7·18 dtree pointers,
and Harrison four. Meigs had 15 !he Eastan Eagles 115·80 Tuesday while connecting ali 16-26 at the
turnovers, 13 Sleals wilh Harrison · night 11 Stewllt.
line.
.
gelling four and Wright. Blake and
Federal's run-and-gun style or
,Federal had 65 rebounds, llel!fly
Hawley three each. Meigs luid 10 offensive weaponry pushed them to doubling Easlan's 36.
assists led by Wright with four. wilhin· four points of the school
Nat Watson had his finest night
The Marauders were called for nine record (119) set earlier this year. wllh 26 points and 22 lealll·ieading
fouls.
The game also marked the second . rebounds. Shuford had 10. Eastern ~
straight pme Eutem has given up was led by Randy. Moore with 12,
mcxe than 100 points.
and Mark Murphy with nine.
&lt;Continuedtrom Pagel&gt;
Federal placed five men in dou·
FH had 10 steals, 12 rumovers,
ble figures and was Jed by Nat n~· assists (six by Co~ut), and 24 .
After Walker tied thesc01-e, the
"Coach told me to play hard WaiSOII with 26 points, followed by I fouls. Eas1em had 11 s!eals, seven
TlliCY Bobo wilh 22 poiniS, Mike bl!lcks, five assists, 16 rumovers,
teams traded baskets before the and .be aggressive." said Bryson,
.
Wildcats went on an 8·0· run to who made nine of his I3field-goai Summerfield with 15, Randy Shu· and 20 fouls.
ford
with
16
and
Mickey
Cozart
Federal
won
the
reserve
game. ,
take a 51·43 lead with 4:28 left.
attempts. ''Tonight, I kind of felt
66-52 led by Viney with 24, .and , .
Malik Sea)3, who led the it. When I got the bali things just wilh 14.
Eastern was led by junior 1eff . Bentz and Bennett each with 14. ..
Redmen with 16 points and 11 started to happen. Tonight just
Durst
with 28 points and three Wes Holter had 16 for Eastern and
re~X&gt;unds, brought St. John's
seeme&lt;l to be my night."
followed by senior g,uard Chris Carleton had seven.
steals,
back with four straight free
The liming couldn't have been
Mau
Finlaw,
who had 20 points
throws but Villanova was able to better for his team.
and
five
blocked
shots. Tim Bissell Score by quarters
convert from the free-throw line
Elsewhere in the UPI Top 25,
.
down the stretch for the triumph. co-No. 22 Oklahoma lost to chiDDed in wilh 15.
Eairemi8-15-J9-28=80 ·
"
l!anem jumped into an immedi- Federal Hocking 17-33-25-45=115 •
Sealy, despite scoring 16 points Kansas State 95· 70 and the other
FEDERAL (115) -Cozart 4·2and grabbing 11 rebounds, had No. 22, Louisiana State, defeated ate 18-17 first period lead, then
107-88.
tailed
off
as
Federal
Hocking
Kentucky
0.14,
Bentz 1·1·3, Shufonl 7.().2. -.:
his second straight poor shooting
whisked
away
all
!he
momen\Um
At
Manhattan,
Kan.,
Jean
16,
Bobo
7·2·2·24, Swnmerf!Cid 2- · ·
performace. He made justfourof
with
a
33-point
second,
period.
Derouillerl!
scored
23
points,
Jeff
2-3-15, Oalver 1.().1·3, Bemen 1his 17 shots from the !loor and
w.!!,en he did go up for a shot, there Wires added 21 and Maurice EHS meanwhile suffered a drought 1-0-5, Nat Watson 11·0-4-26,
Brittian 20 and the Wildcats as Federal pushed 10 a 50.33 f&amp;st Gillitll 1.().2, Harris 2.().1-5, Marwas a Wildcat han!! in his face.
tinee 1-0-2-4. TOTALS. 39·7·
"I'm not losing confidence," rolled to a surprisingly easy win' half lead.
Federal eonlinued its barrage in 16=115
said Sealy who suffered through - over the Sooners. It marked the
EASTERN (80) • Finlaw 7-2.().
a six of 19 performance in St. third time in four seasons that the third frame (75-52), then
John's last game, against Seton Kansas State,12·8 overall and 2·5 poured it on for an unbelievable 20, Bissell2·1·8·15, Murphy I-0.
Hall. "I'r:n still going to step up In the Big Eight, has upset a 45-point fourth quarter to. push the 1·3, Durst 9·1·7-28,. Moore 1.0·3· ··
5, Savoy 3.().6, Hager l'l-1·1, Reed
and shoot the shotthough. They'll ranked Oklahoma team. The score to 115-80.
Eastern hit 24-61 from two 1.().2. TOTALS· 24-4-20=80
Sooners were rated third in both
fall ."
"Malik took 17 shots tonight 1988 and 1990 when they lost to the
•
and I don't think he took a bad one Wildcats. Oklahoma, . whic.h lost
fl
.1, , 14&gt;
, '
ail night." said Carnesecca, who fOr the fifth time in seven gameS,
last Saturday became the 30th fell to 15-7 and 4-4 .
At Baton Rouge, La., Shaquille ·
Hannan Trace's girls basketball
Hannan Trace was led by Lucy ..
coach in NCAA history to win 500
O'Neal
scored
20
of
LSU's
first
29
team
defeated
the
Eas1ern
Eaglettes
Mullens'
game-hi!\h 32 points and
games in the Redmen's victory
points
and
finis
he&lt;!
with
33
to
lead
for
the
second
straight
time
and
15
rebounds,
whtle Kim Triplett
over Seton Hall.
of
Kentucky.
eliminated
.the
Eagles
from
the
the
Tigers'
rout
added
eight,
Tammy Thomas
"I think we maintained a high
O'Neal
added
16
rebounds
and
SVAC
title
race
with
a
54-46
vic10-·
Stephanie
Dillon four,
seven,
level of intensity on defense but
blocked
seven
shots
to
help
the
.ry.
Sanders
two
an!l Michelle
Missy
we struggled a little · gtren·
Oursone.
·
sively," said Carnesecca. ''When · Tigers score more than 100 points
togs
Eastern was led by sophomore
you shoot I8 of 53 you had b(.tter for the first time in 21 years '
Stephanie Otto with 13,1enny
against Kentucky. Harold Boud·
have some canons."
(Overall)
Roush 10, Tiffany Gardner and
Bryson seemed to be the only reaux added a career-high I9
W L PF PA
Sbelly Metzger each seven, ".
big gun on the floor, scoring some points for the Tigers, who im- TEAM
easy baskets inside and giving proved to 7·4 in the SEC and 14·6 Southern ........... ~ .13 4 1254 l047 . Suzanne Clay five, Lee Gillilan
two and Ruby Burke two.
overalL Kentucky, ineligible lor Hannan Trace ....13 5 1303 1051
the Wildcats. who were sluggish
Hannan Trace took an early 10.
and tenalive offensively in the the league title, has the SEC's Symmes Valley .. 11 6 1055 1035
Eastern .............. 9 8 1182 1289
best record at 9-2 and 174.
7 lead afler the first period and
first half, a huge lift.
North Gallia ....... 8 9 1423 1396 widened !hal to 27·21 at the half.
Oak Hill .......... ~ .. 7 11 1184 1275
Eastern held on in' the third
!Continued rrom Page3&gt;
l(yger Creek ....... 2 15 1014 1266 frame, but could not gain ground
Southwestern ...... 1 14 851 1081 ort a 39-31 score. the two clubs
game, but the Oilers then scored 3-2 and Igniting the comeback.
played even the final round for the
on four or their first six shots on
Devils 2, Flames I - At East
(Conference)
54"-46 finale.
goal -with the two missed shots Rutherford, N.J., Chris Terreri "Southern ............ 11 I 925 726
Easiern had ·54 rebounds, led by · '"
bouncing off the crossbar.
made 37 saves and Claude Hannan Trace ... IO 2 930 674 Otto ahd Roush with 12 each, and •·
Simpson's first goal tied the Lemieux and Brendan Shanahan Symmes Valley . 8 4 732 720 Gardner nine. Mullens had 15 of ..,
score 1·I at 8:52 or the first each scored, leading the Devils. North Gallia ...... 7 5 1018 899 liT's 56 rebounds.
.,.
period, when he redircted a Terreri. who won for the third Eastern ............. 6 6 857 916 Quarter totals
Kevin Lowe pass inside the near time in four games, also paced Oak Hill ... :........ 5 7 762 850 Hannan Trace 10.17·12-15=54
' "
post for his 24th goal. Klima put the Devils to their third triumph Kyger Creek ...... 1 11 700 908 Eas1em 7-14-10.15=46
Edmonton ahead 2·1 at 12:34 in their last four outings. AI Southwestern ..... 0 12 639 870
....
when he scored from the edge of Macinnis, the NHL's seconcl· TOTALS ............ 52 52 8M3 6$63
the right circle.
leading scorer among defense"
Simpson's 25th goal came at . men, ruined Terrerl's shutOut bid
(Reserves)
Tuesday's
~Is
'~
· l
16: I3 of the first period, on a one· in the final period with his 20th
(SVAC only)
••
•
handed shot' from the slot for a goal of the season.
soores
TEAM
W L PF PA
power-play score. Klima boosted
Kings 3, Flyers 2 - At Hannan Trace ..... 10 2 684 526
Vennlllon M. Elyria 32
the lead to 4·1 on Edmonton's Philadelphia, Luc Robitaille North Gallia ........ 9 3 715 517
Watkins Memorial 60. Granville 30
first shot of the second period, at broke a thlrd·period tie with his · Sopthern .............. 9 3 664 516J
Whitehall 50, Franklin Hts4l
·~
"v
Willard 64. Bucyrus 36
3:48.
•
30th goal of the season to give the Oak Hlll .............. 8 4 641 580 ·
Willoughby S 63. Lako Cath 35
"
Boston pulled within 4·2 on Kings their !lith win in six Eastern ........ :.. .... 6 6 548 639j
••
Worth'lngtm 74, Grovt&gt;port 37
Hodge's first goal, a man· games. Wayne Gretzky played in Symmes Valley .. . 3 9 553 664
Wyomln~t 70, Cln Deer Park 36
You Chr 36. Sharm rPa.J Chr 30
advantage score at 10:21 of the his 900th NHL game but was held Southwestern ....... 2 10 441 602
•o u
Yoo South 59, You Chaney 40
second period. Glen Wesley cut without a point for only the fifth Kyger Creek ........ I 11 452 654
You Wilson 52, You Rayen 34
the deficit to 4-3 with a shot from
time in 53 games !his season. The TOTALS .. .. ....... : 52 52 4888 4888
close range in the final second of Kings failed to score In the first
~
r:
the second period. Referee Blli period despite outshootlng Phila·
Tuesday's acores
McCreary allowed the goal d~&gt;s· delphia 14-5.
Hannan Trace 76, Jackson 65
__,
•
pite the green light coming on
North Gailia 92, Trimble 90
before the goai·signlfying red
Federal Hocking 115, Eastern 80
light.
Transaction
Symmes Valley 64, OVCS 55
Elsewhere in the NHL Tuesday
Jlueball
night, Washington overcame
Boston - Signed shortstop Luis
Friday's slate
Vancouver 5·3, New Jersey
Rivera to 1· year contract .
Kyger
Creek
at Hannan Trace
ChiCaRO INLI -Signed Pilcher
nipped · 'Calgary 2·1 and Los
.' .'
Symmes Valiey at Southern
Steve WilsOn ro 1-year ~onlract .
'H H
Angeles edged Philadelphia 3·2.
Ctnclnnatl - Signed pitcher
North Gallla at Southwestern ·
Nonn Charlt~ to l ·year contract.
Capitals 5, Canucks 3. - At
"1 11
Eastern
at Qak Hill
Mlnnesora - Signed rree-agenr
Landover. Md.. AI Iafrate's
Saturdll)''•
game
pltchw Jack Morrts 1o 1-year
short·handed goal, the Capitals'
con1ract, plus options for two more
".
Kyger Creek at Ironton St. Joe
seasoos; deslgnatt"d.IDtleldf'f Chip
second of the night and fifth in 10
·•4
Hale for ass1«nment.
games, highlighted the Capitals'
New York fALl- Named Glenn
•
four-goal rally ln the third
Sherl«k man•ger, Tim Uhlaader
third base coach. Mike Brown
period. Dino Ciccarelli scored
•II
pitching coach and Darren Londop
the 400th goal of his 728.game
The
quick,
easy
~
trainer at Fort Lauderdale of
career with 5: 05 gone in the third
way to colorful
Florida State Leacue (A~.
••
period, narrowing the defiCit to
decorating

r-v..... ..leral

Hockmg·.
•OO
roasl8 Ea
. Sl em 115-()

·College hoops: ..

45

Bellefonrain~

Wedn8sd8y, February 6, 1991

Warren Local hands Meigs· 51-50 .loss

Scoreboard ...
In the NBA.••

•I

Wednesday, February 6, 1991

Uannan 'Ppnce gz••ls wzn
I

-~

SVAC ·stand'

NHL ·act;on
.. ...

case

..

"'
, L

-;;;==~· ··

..

· ~
4-'

'

-

~

..

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Continued from page I

to supply schools with adequate
fundmg could mean that Meigs
County wiU suffer in the long nm ..
. "We need to see beyond the shon
tenn," the Board.president said.
Lentis said that he is no! sure
what will haPP.:n now but certainly
the board w11l do !he best with
what !hey have. He pointed out that
!here is no olher source of income
10 finance !he programs since !he
state is looking to cut mcxe funds,
and [~era! funding is expected to
decrease, so he anticipates thai the
levy will be back on the May Primary ballot
Wheli asl:ed whelher !he plan is
stili· to close all or the programs for
three months to take care of the
fmancial shonfall. Lentis said !hat
the "Board will be looking a1 !he
figures and making that decision."
He we.nt on to point out that
school age children are requlred by
law to be served by the.local school
dislricts in Meigs County and !hal
if !he MR/DD Board does not have
sufficient funds to do that, then
regular school districts must. ~·so
even if programs have to be cut,
those children will be served and
the financial burden will fa11 on !he
regular school dislrict," Lentis said.

The Deily Sentinei-Page-5

Pomeroy IYiiddeport. Ohio

Some decision is expected to
made within the next 30 days,
accordinJ II! Lentis who asl:ed for .
commuruty mput
• Sout~n
Bob Ofd, superintendent of the
Sotilhem Local Board of Educa·
lion, expressed !lisappoin1111ent at
the defeat for a second time of the
4. mill three year opemting·Ievy.
In the General Election in
November the levy was di!teated
by a vote of 947 to 810. Ord Stated
Wednesday morning that he will
recommerul&gt;to the Board that thelevy be put ba~k on !he Primary
Election ballot m May because the
dislrict does "have to pay its bills."
As for olhd options, Su. pt. Ord
said that !here is always the inoome
tax, or going inlo the srate loan pro.·
gnun. .
Numerous cutbacks in personnel
have been _made over the past two
years as the District has struggle&lt;!
with ways of coping with less
money. Tax collections from !he
Hydro plant which has pumped
thousands into the system have
been decreasin~ over the pa$t sev·
erai years ieavmg the district with
less and'Iess on which to operate
while expenses continue 10 climb.

Dense fog covers most of Buckeye State
By United Press International
It was foggy over the Buckeye
State again Wednesday morning,
· combined with widespread show.
ers over southern Ohio.
The fog formed early Tuesday
evening and lowered visibilities
in many sections of the state to a
quarter of a mile or less.
Some ·ImproVement occur~d
during the night with·visibilities
at 5 a. in. generally around a hal~
• mUe across the state. Visibilities,
however, were · near rero in
places over extreme northern
Ohio.

The much lower visibilities in
the north early Wednesday inorn·
ing were being caused by
· warmer ajr passing over the
·
.

colder surtace of L;~ke Erie,
forming .the dense tog. Northeast
winds of! the lake were pushing
the log inland.
A low pressure system was
moving through the Tennessee
Valley Wed11esday · morning
along a stationary front that
extended north to the Ohio River.
Rain· was widespread across
southern Ohio during the night .
Rainfall amounts betJNeen 7 p.m.
Tuesday and 4 a.m. Wednesday
at regular reporting stations ·
totaled nearly a tenth or an inch
il) Dayton to nearly half an inch in
Cinclnn&lt;&gt;ti.
Temperatures early Wednes·
(lay morning ranged !rom the
lower 30s in the norlhwes t to
ar()und 50 in the far south. ·

On thl! morning weather map,
a nearly stationary front extended from New Jersey to the
Ohio River. The front than
curved South to an area of low

·,

·,

pressure near west Tennes!Mle
and then continued on south to
the Gulf ·or Mexico. High pres·
sure was over the northern
rockies .

.·,·.
•,

..

'
I '

••

Area deat
· hS - - - -'

Ernest M. Wiseman

WEATHER MAP· The mid-Atlantic Coast wUI have a cbance
Ernest Merrill "Ike" Wiseman,
of showers as a low pressure system moves ol'fsbore. Tbe rest of the
64, of -4 17 First Ave., Gallipolis,
nation will he dry and mUd as a very large bleb pressure settles in
died Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1991 at
over
the central United States. The western half vi tile natl011 will
Holzer Medical Center.
again
see very mUd temperatures while it wiD be cooler but still
He was boni March 8, 1926, at
.
·
above normallll the In the East. (U.fl)
Cadmus, son of !he late Ernest N.
and Alice Clyse Wiseman.
He married Kathryn Edwards,
Aug. 27, 1950 811ackson, and she
Exlended Forecut
Soulll Central Ohio
· survives with one son, David Wise·
Friday
lhrough Sundll)'
Occasional
rain
and
a
chance
man or Gallipolis; two daughters,
Fair
Friday.
and a chance of
of
dense
log
Wednesday
night,
Ron Wise said.
Mrs. Jan DooliUie of GallipoUs and
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif.
rain
or
snow
on
Saturilay and
low
between
40.
and
45.
with
a
Thomas
.
celebrated
.
his
77th
Mrs. Thomas (Tami) VanAuker of
(UPII - Entertainer Danny
Sunday.
Highs
will
be mostly in
is
80
percent.
Chance
of
rain
Akron; one brother, John C. WiseThomas, best known for his 1950s birthday Jan. 6. He had just
the
40s
Friday,
and.
ranging
from
cloudiness
.
Thursday,
Variable
completed a tour to promote his
man of Pl. Pleasant, W.Va.; ·three
television series "Make Room
the
mid
30s
·
to
the
low
40s
with
a
chance
of
rain
in
the
for Daddy" and his patronage or autobiography, "~ake Room for · sisltts, Mrs. I.E. (Betty) Brown of
Saturday
~nd
Sunday
.
Overnight
morning,
and
·highs
in
the
middle
Danny."
~
Minford, Mrs. Richard (Hope)
St. Jude's Children's Hospital,
40s. Chance of rain Is 40 percent. lows will range from the low 20s
''He
·
w
as
a
sweet,
sweet
man,
·
~
·
Davisson of Riclunondale and Mrs.
·died of a heart attack Wednes·
to the low 30s through the period.
Brokaw said. "I grew up with
Davi!l ( Rosena) Rees of Rio
day , He was 77.
him ln the business . .He was ·a Grande.
Norman Brokaw , head of the
.
marvelous man."
He was preceded in dealh by
William Morris Agency and
Thomas is survived by his wife, one brother, Harold Wiseman.
Thomas' long· time agent, said
Rosemarie.
· and . his children,
Mr. Wiseman received his B.S.
the aCtor suffered an apparent
Guest speaker to appear
cialion will meet Wednesday, Feb.
Mario.
Teresa
and
'Tony.
Degree, secondary education from
E . M. WISEMAN
heart attack at his Trousdale
David Carpenter, BellviUe, W.Va., l3. at noon in the,meeling room of
Marlo Thomas. wile of TV Rio Grande Collese and altended
Estates home about 1:30 a.m .
will be the guest spealcer at the Bank One. All members are urged
talk·show. host Phil Donahue, for the Ohio State University; he · Beautification Project c/o Dave SliversviUe Word of Failh Church to attend.
Paramedics took Thomas to
Cedars·Sinai Medical Center.
a time eclipsed her fat~er's fame coached basketball in Tuscarawas Shaffer, 100 Cliffside Drive, Gal· on Thursday at 7:30 p.m. The pu~­
where he was pronounc(O'd dead· ·with her "That Girl' ' TV series in County, Southern High School, lipolis, Ohio4563l.
lic is invited 10 altend.
. School funding meetin11
at 2:01a.m., hospital spokesman . 1966: Tony Thomas is a television Meigs County; was named one of
There will be a meeting of
'!he top ten Ohio coaches by the
producer. ·
Trustees to meet ·
school
districts intetested in
Fred Brinker, Sr.
United Press in 1953: ·
The Bedford Township Trusll:eS becoming a pan of the Ohio COali·
In 19 S5 he became a special
Fred E. Brinker, Sr., 82, of wiU meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the tion for Equity and Adequacy or
agent for the Prudential Life Insur· Lelarl, died today, Wednesday,'Feb. townhall.
· School Fun!ling· on Tuesday at 10
ance
·company,
Portsm9uth
an'
d
a.m. at the Radisson Hotel, Sinclair
6, 1991, in Pleasant Valley
ContinUed from Page 1
· ContlnuP,d'. from Page 1
held !he position of District Man· Hospital.
to
meet
Merchants
·
and Morse Roalls, Columbus.
t
,,
.....
not depleted Saddam's Repubii·
ager. In 1959 he joined Wiseman
The Pomeroy Merchants Asso·
Born
Feb.
2,
1909,
in
Lewt.
he
now
been
flied
in
Arizona,
copcemcan Guard troops to any signifl·
Agency selling insurance ~d .real was a son of the late Elmer E. and
'ing his business activities.
. · ·'
cant extent.
estate:
He later mainly specialized Abbie E. (Shirley) Brinker.
· Lottridge Community Center
Poole and Brundige are torrent·
The Times quoted one official
•
in
real
estate,
retiring
from
the
The Lollridge Comll)unity CenHe was a carpenter, member of
with access 10 bomb damage Iy serving sentence~; or three years Wiseman Real Estate, Inc., in
ler
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m.
the Carpenter's Union Local 1159
assessment information as say · each for fi)ing false federal tax
The
public is invited toaltend.
1989.
of Point Pleasant, and attende&lt;l
ing, "By my personal es\lmate ... reltims in 1983~
He
was
a
member
of
the
Grace
The
center is. located on Athens
LeJ.ilrt Guiding Star Advent Chris·
.
.
.
Judge lii!len set sentencing for
we bave not reduced his (Sad·
County·
Road, five miles west or
United
Methodist
Church,
Oilfside
tian Church.
D1von:e acuon has been ftled m
dam's! ability to supply his March 25 11 4:45 ·p.m. in !he Park· "Got( CoillSe where he was a co·
Coolville.
He was prece&lt;led in ~ealh by his the Meigs County CC?mmon Pleas
theater forces below his rate of ersburg Federal Courthf!use. A recipient of 1he Primer Mover brother,
Ben F., two half·brolhers, .. Coun by John Martm, Pomeroy,
to
defmud
charge
car·
conspiracy
consuming those supplies. SCI it
Dance to be held
Award,
Thurman,
F&amp;:AM
Lodge
Claude E. and Merch R. Brinker, against· Patricip Lynn DeMoss,
has not been necessary for him to ries a maximum sentence of five
The Belles and Beaus Western
371,. Gallipolis Shrine Club, three half-sisters. Bess McBee, Ag· London; and by Wanda Molleu,
start feeding on his in-place years imprisonment and/or
Knights
Templar,
Gallipolis
BPOE,
·
Square
Dance Club will hold a
nes Clark, Alina Hart.
Long Bottom, against Clinton Mol·
$100;000 fine. Filing a false tax
stocks."
dance
on
Feb. 16 from 8-11 p.m. at
the
Gallipolis
Chamber
of
ComSurvivors include his wife, Alice lett, Tomahawk, Ky.
return carries a fine of $100,000
the
Senior
Citizens Center in
merce
and
the
Gallipolis
Retail
(Rollins) Brinker; two daughters,
A divorce has been granted 10
and/or three ~ imprisonment.
Pomeroy.
wilh
Billy Gene Evans.
Merchants Association.
Linda J. Meadows of Letart, Carol Hood against Harold Hood;
Funeral services will be con- Sharon L. Heiss of Tallahassee, . Mary Lenora Custer agamst Dav1d
!lucted I I a.m: Friday a1 Gr.ace Aa.; 1wo sons, Fre&lt;l E. Brinker, Jr., Edison Custer; and Theresa Lynn
Unite!! Methodist Church with William R. Brinker, bolh of Lewt; Rider against Larry Alien Rider.
Continued from page 1
Rev. Joe Hefner and Rev. AI a brother, Ardath 0. Brinker of
Dissolutions have been granted
iohn G. Hayes, Middleport. was
Each member read a book just MacKenzie officiating. Burial will Lewt; sister, Freda E. Kesterson of in the coun 10 Vaughn L. French
SPRINu VAll f Y CINEMA
44b 45/4
fined on four charges when he for !his badge and then shared what be in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Letan; eight grandchildren and two and Barbara A. French; Jeffrey L.
Frienlls
may
call
at
the
McCoy·
appeared Tuesday night in the !he book was aboUt-with !he others
great-grandchildren.
Housebolder and Edna May Housell ... u.lJIMTJIHS . . , _ , I _ ,
r-...:;":.;:
·011 UMArl 111111' TUliMT
courl of Middleporl Mayor Fred in the troop. Each also wrote a Moore Funeral Home, Wetherholt
The funeral will be Saturday, I holder; Brenda K. Maines an!l
Hoffman.
shon story of at least 100 words.
Cha~I. Gallipolis, Thursday from p.m., ,at !he Foglesong Funeral James B. Maines; and Darrell L.
He was fme&lt;l $25 and costs on a
They also viewed books at the
6to9 p.in.
. .
Home, wilh the Rev. James Looney Krauuer an!l Arlene F. Krautter.
charge of driving under suspension, library illustrated by five children's .
In lieu of flowers, contnbutions officiating. Burial will be in !he
$100 and cosd!s. for fleeing the artists, particularly Caldecott
may be sent to Cancer Reseach c/o Lelarl Evergreen Cemetery.
Pat Boyer, 200 Second Ave., Gal·
police, $425 and costs wilh a three Medal Wmners.
·
Friends may call a1 !he funeral
day jail sen~nce on a charge of
Troop members working for
lipolis or Cliffside Gqlf Course. home Friday from 6 to 9 p.m.
physical control of a motor vehicle !heir badge are Bonnie Rutter, 1es·
Veterans Memorial Hospital
while. under !he influence or alec- sica Hensley, Jennifer Heck and
TUESDAY
ADMISSIONS •
hoi, and $10 and costs on e1tpire&lt;l Andrea Neutzling.
Franklin Imboden, Syracuse; Lois
Pauley, Pomeroy; Theodore Strom,
tag~ined on three charges in tast
Pomeroy.
night's court was lames L. Games,
TUESDAY DISCHARGES •
Eight calls for assistance were At 9:23 p.m., Racine fire dep~·
P( omeroy, $25 and costs, &lt;lisonier· .(.,.
Paul
Haifield and Dorothy
answered by Meigs Emergency ment went to Yellow Bush Roa!l .
ly manner, $50 and costs, con· J
Bigelow.
Medical Services uni!S on Tuesday. for a utility pole fire. At 9:37 p.m.,
ceale&lt;l weapon, an!l $100 and c&lt;ists, - Meigs County Sheriffs deputies
AI 9:S9 a.m .. Pomeroy squad Pomeroy squad went to High Stm:l
petty theft
·
· ·
rt f m
Others fine&lt;! in the court were are mvesugatmg a repo
ro
went to Americare for Iva 1ohnson, for Paul Bush who was ueated but
David Klein, Pomeroy, $25 and PDK Contruction at Rocksprings
who was taken to Holzer Medical not transported. At I 0:49 p.m.
Center.
At ·J0:13 a.m., Racine Racine squad went to State Rou~
manner·
,
RObbie
that
gasoline
had
been
~tolen
J!am
isorderly,
Cos19. d
the vehicles lhere dunng the mght.
went
to Rowe Road for 124. Chris Pullins was treated but
squad
Clonch, Middleport. $25 and costs, . Sheriff Soulsby reports that arrests
Katherine Philson, and nnsported not lranSported.
disorderly manner; Kelly 1. are e1tpected on this .case liS. t.w.o
her to Holzer Medical Center.
Thomas Vinton, $10 fine only on
th
At 3:33 p.m .. Pomeroy squad
squealing tires; John C. Hite, .~d- s . t s were spotted m e YlCIBI·
REMEMBER
went
to
Bailey
Run
Road
for
WITH
FLOWERS
dlepon, $100 and costs, dnvmg ty. Mrs. Harrison Smith of Pine
Theodore Strom. At 5t30 p.m .,
To
1eacl • beautllulty
un!ler suspension; Donal!! L. Grove Road reported on Sunday
Pomeroy squad went to Oliver
d .. tped funeral
Denny, Gallipolis, $15 fme only on evenin~ Iilii someone bad cut !herr
arran,.-ernent, jllat
Streel fqr Sherman l,luckley, Jr.,
.'speeding.
renee m several places on Friday
who was taken to Veterans Memoeall or "•••
and Saturday evening.
'
rial Hospital. At 7:05 p.m ..
POMEROY
·
On Tuesday evening at approxi· · Pomeroy squad w~nl to Village
FLOWER SHOP
mately 7:20p.m., KendaU Weaver .Green Aparlments for Belly Tem..Th If'~ Amer it'd Send•. l.qve"'
of Sratt Route 143 in Pomeroy was pleton. She was taken to Veterans.
PH. 992·6454
.
cited 10 Mei~s County Court for
I '
.
Marriage licenses have been failin~ to mwntain control after he
grajited in Meigs County Probate ran hiS 1982 AMC off the roadway
Collfl. to Timothy David Bonecul· on the IcC!, struck a 1ree and coolin·
1 · 8 X 10
ter,;24, Portland, and Bonme Sue ued across the yard through a
Bumpus, 36, Portland; and to Paul barbed wire fence into the pasture
2·5X7 .
Ed ward Perry, 21, Pomeroy, l!Dd field. Moderate damage was listed
· Rebecca Marie Graham, I 1 • to. !he lefl fronl fender of his vehi:
8 Jumbo Willets
cle.
Pomeroy.
I(OIJA~ PAPE R

Entertainer Danny Thomas,
77, dies after heart attapk

------Weather--------

'
'
'

'
..'

'

_ .Meigs announcemen:ts __

Signs...

·Smith

Divorces and
dissolutions

Middleport
Court news

Girl Scouts

'
•

Hospital news

Gasoline stolen
,:om PDK company

EMS responds to eight calls

.

:·

ONLY

FRI., FEB. 8

·10·7

Couples apply for
marriage licenses

'

.'

•

•

.~ HOLZER
•
•
•'

.•
••

NOW

CLINIC

s4!~ELIYERY

.

LET'S BE PED PALS

1988 PONTIAC SUNBIRD

' 95°

4 DOOR

4 cyl., auto. trana., air, AM·FM starao. rear defogger .
Thi1 11 an affordable carl
·

''••
•'•

.

•

HURRY!

..
PediatriCS lr
•

: 992·2188

,,

'

! \

POMEIOY, "OHIQ

500 EAST IUIN
--·-

•

D.O. STUDIO TAKES MilliE TIME TO GET THAT SOM£THING SPECIAL
. . - 11 1111111 be
Ill tlr PINftl
. ALL AOES AND
ILlES

-Iii
FA

$5895

Smith-Nelson
Motors,
Inc
•
992-2174 .
·--~-1.

•-~·...._..-

DEPOSIT

LIMIT ONE SPECIAL PER FAMtl Y
SPECIAL SCENIC BACKGROUND NO EXTRA CHARGE
GROUP PICTURE $1.110 PER ·SUBJECT. PAY WHEN TAKEN .
BACKGROUND SCENIC AND BLACK

POMEROY BIG BEND

FOOD
LAND
_.,....,

:.P

�..
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesdav. Februii'Y 6, 1991

.. ,

STOCK

By The Bend

YOUR

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.

·POMEROY, OH.
. PRICES EFFECTIVE
FEB~ ~ THRU FE(t 9, 1991.
,
.
,.

Plans were made for remodeling

9(
Whole Ch1cken .••.L!·. S
9

CHIC:KEN
BREASTS
10 LB. PKG.

CHICKEN

Leg Quarters •••• ~••• 4 &lt; CHICKEN LEG

$ 69
W1eners................ 1 .
KAH~'S REGULAR or BUN SIZE

FRESH PORK BUTT .

. .

LB.

LB.

BUCKET BEEF

$l 29

Cube Steak ..•....!. $2 79

Steak/Roast......... . .. .
COUNTRY ·STYLE PORK

$]·
29'
Spare Ribs •••••••••••
ECKRICH .SLICED
Bologna ......... ~ ..~•. $1 79
.

· LB.

QUARtERS
10 LB. PKG.

$.4.90

.

.

BARS

ECKRICH

£HOPPED
HAM

·smoked

10 LB. LOAF

$1290
ASSORTED

U.S.

·~o.

1 WHITE

·

·

Potatoes ..••...•• ~:·~~.

$

PORK
.CHOPS
10 LB. PKG.

129

$1
59
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
FLAVORITE

.·

.KRAFT PARKAY

-

MAXWELL HOUSE- .12. OZ. JAR _

$

Instant Coffee......

GAL

•

Margarine •• .'!.~-:!2/

.

99
3

$

/
$r
Macaroni ....•1;L:~~:~s. 3/$1 To~y' s Pizza .••• ~.. 3 . ~ ·
AssoRTED

· .

·

·

'

1 $1 59·0.

99
Ice Cream •.••••.. !~~ 2 ·

FLAVORITE SPAGHETII or

GROUND
CHUCK
PKG.
10 LB.

$

KEMP'S S QUART PAIL

(Plus Save An Additional SJ.OO With Coupon Below)

•

.

$1690

'TURKEY
DRUMSTICKS
10 LB. PKG.

$ 90

'.

CHARMIN

SUNSHINE

TOILET TISSUE ·
12 Roll

Pkg.

$2 99

Geed Onlr At Pewol's Silptr Yalu
Good , •. 3 tlwu ,... 9, 19t1
limit 1 Ptr C..t•

DOG FOOD .
2DLI.
BAG

•

CA..BELL'S CHICKEN

$2·99

NOODLE SOUP
o

ID.75

oz.

3/S-1

LWI 1 r.r ( U i t -

"

•'

th ·
ou would not mk that you
could get burned in the bathtub, yet
each year over 37,000 young
children are severely burned in. the
bathroom from hot water scalds or
in Uie kitchen from hot liquids,"
"'- Marg
announced . "''·
ie Lawson of
. :::n~eigs CoiiRty Health, Dep~According to the National SAFE
KIDS Campaign and the Ohio
Depanment of Health, bums are the
second leading cause of accidental
death among young children in this
counny, Each year bums kill 1,300
children and disable three times as
many. Every day at least 100 yOI)IIg
h;Jdre0
b.-.... '
1
~:k,ugh to r:uire ;;;;;enc~~~[. '
cal ireatmenL Nearly one-half of
child burn victims are small
children under the · .age of live. .
Children age 5·15 account for
about 50 J1Crcent of child !henna!
bum victims. "Most medical expens agree that a bum is the most
devastating and painful injury a
human bemg can sustain and survive.
·
"Hot water is lilce liquid fire to
young children, and when hot water
touches a child's skin, it can cause
a devastatino
scald "In
bum,"
ex1e time
lained Dr ,La..,
pthan •'t ••.:.. '!sonans, wer
tele·
........, ...
phone, a child can turn on the hOt
·watertapandreceiveaseverescald.
burn. Because chi)!lren's skin· is
thinner, they wiU sustain more
serioUs bums at a lower temperature and in less time than adults. In
fac~ a child exposed to hot tap
water at 140 degrees for just three
seconds can receive a third degree
or full thiclcncss bum requiring
. n'on and skin grafits."
hospitaiiZB
In an 'effon . to raise public
awareness and educate parents and
other caregivers about these tragic
childhood bum injuries and what
can be done til prevent scald burns
to young children, the Meigs
County Health Department, in
cooperation with the Ohio Department of Health is providing the following preeautions that can prevent
· tram~ burn injuries to young
..-

'

.!:

BEATRICE GREENWALT
Commander, Chip Rogers (614)
593-7405.
.

children,
·Bathtub scalds happen wben

ch::!rek~t unattended in the' bath-

By Ed Peler&amp;ODI
Social Security
Branch Mauager in Atbens

Mistakes made by employers in
reporting their employees' wages
' cause processing delays· for Social
Security and could eventually af:
feet benefit amounts.
Many of the errors could easily
be avoided. According to Soci8l
Security records, the most common
enors are:
Leaving OU\ the Employer. Identification Number (EIN) or usmg an
invalid number;
Omitting an employee's name 6r
reporting a name which doesn't
match the employee's Social
Security card:
Failure to. submit wage reports •
some employers that go out of
business during the year don't
supply W-2 information about their
employees;
Submitting duplicate reports one on paper and one on maanetic
I

'.,:

' ,1"

Four Chaplains Sunday
observed in Middleport ·

i

. A FAMILIAR SIGHT - These fifth graders at Salisbury Elementary School were respo~ble for the small yellow ribbons that
adorn four small trees in front of the school. It is their way of
remembering the troops in Deser~ Sto.rill. Adding the lioal touches .
a·re Heidi Legar, Josh·Dodson and Melissa Ramsburg.

Racine UMW meeting held
A pledge service was held
during the January meeting of the
Racine United Methodist Women.
Margaret West presided at the
meeting and Louise Stewart con·
dueled the program, "Magic Pen·
nies." Ruth Stem and Lee Lee assisted. Alice Wolfe gave a closing
prayer and members twned in their
pledge cards for~year.. . .
on Ml$SJons
· Sue Grace re
and Maybelle I le reponed on the
Children's Mission How-.
Several women have been meet·
ing at the church to sew quilts for
babies with AIDS .
.
·
The group served a dinner fol·

lowing a fWJenl for a member of
the chiD'Ch and a thank-you note
was read from the family,
It was voted to purchase a new
clothes dryer for the parsonage.
The group also donated SSO toward
the fund to keep the lighted cross in
Pomeroy. . · .
An invitation was read from the
Trinity Church in Pomeroy to at·
tend an Ash Wednesday breakfast
on Feb. 13 at 7:45a.m.
Cards were signed for the sick
and shut-in of the community. Sick
calls were reponed.
Refreshments were served by
Etta Mae Hill and Gladys Shields.

·Star Grangt: .has.1Jz.eeting

WITH COUP.Ot-# BELOW

• •••••••••••••••
HURRY/
2113191
PONDEROSA'S

Kansas Ci~ ..
Strip Steak Dinner

__

h.dua., Kamo~ Ciry Srrip 5-..k will&gt;
and
....,., AR·You·Can·&amp;t~':'

,.,•

\29
,...,_."·"-"

..-:1 in CCWI'iblnallon ,.,.., ltlj Olher ClQUCXII'I Dr
CNCOII!II Qtllr. Tu noi iiiCflldld. ~/Wid M
lllfi!C&lt;I)ali"I)IOcltionl " riCH IIIII\' •w

Rl'vervz'ew gali·deners
meet
.

wrong government agency - some
employers senCI repons to the State
·or to. IRS, instead of to Social
Security· and
Subniitting reports that can't be
processed by machine because !hey
are formaued incorrectly.
..
· Peterson said ~mployees can
checlc their Social Security record
to be sure all their employers reported' their wages correctly by send·
ing for. a "Personal Earnings and
Benefit Estimate Statemen~" The
request forms are available by call·
ing Social Security at 1-800-2345·
SSA (1-800-234-5772). Or, if they
wish, people can write or COllie to
the office, located at 221 112
Columbus Road in Athens.
Employers who hav~ questions
can also contact SSA at 592-4448.

~~:~~~~:r~ss;!nfNew onbe~l!v~~~=~';;daprogram
.herbs. Sl!e told the group "What

Year" and •"Make the New Year a
Stepping Stone" was presented by
Mrs. Delores Frank. Devotions
concluded with silent prayer and
the Lord's Prayer. Roll caU was
answered ~y members giying a
. goal for spnng.
· The club went on record as sup·
porting the levy for Carleton

'

Herbs Go Best With." She told
which herbs can be used for salt
free diets and how to preserve and
dry herbs.
·
Mrs. Marlene Putman conducted
a team game.. The door prize went
to Mrs. Phyllis Larkins.
· Refreshments were served and .
book markers distributed to . the
above named and Pau6ne Myers,
Mary Alice Bise•. ~ranees Reed,
Janet Connolly, Marilyn Hannum,
Ella Osborne, Maxine Whitehead,
Nola Young, and Ruth Ann Balderson.
The next meeting will be held at'
the home of Phyllis Larkins.

AII·You·Can• Eat ·
Grand BuffetTI' Dinner

PONDEROSI\
PONDEROSA'S

KIDS
MEAL
(FOIICIDS 10 AND UNDER)
YOUR CHO/Cf OF: Hot Doa &amp;Fn.o. Hamburger&amp; Fri.,
or AI· Yo•rCan·Eat Grand luiN/:0

'

Elliott in Persian 'Gulf

Named to dean's list

Failure 10 balance individual
wage repons with IIIIIIIIW)' totals
Maria Eliubeth Mendicjno,
sent 10 Socii! Soc:urity or with dlughlet of Mr. and Mrs. Franlt D.
quancrly 1wap 1epor11 Milt to the Mendicino, Marietta, hu . been
mtetrial Revenue ~ (IRS);
named 10 the Dean's List at Van·
SendiJI8 wage repons to the · dabllt.Universlty in Nashville, Tn.

....

'

Fom ,Chaplains Sun4&amp;y was ob- American Legion flag which was
served at the Middlepon First Bap- posted at the front of the chiD'Ch.
list Church Swulay.
The pledge was led by Howard
· Members of the Feenef-BeMett PillllCll. post commander.
.
fost 128, American Legion, and its
Recognized were Cathy Riggs
AIJlilliaiy, as well as a group of boy and Adelle Wbite, scout troop
scouts and · their leaders were leaders, Stacey Shank, Eagle scout,
recognized.
and the legionnaires and •uxill:1.
.
The.Rev. James Seddon, pastor, members attending, Dwight W used "The S~" as the topic of his lace, Sarah Fowler, Thd and
sernton which mcluded the story of . Clarabelle Riley, Jean Newell,
the Four Chaplains. There was Edna and Howard Pinnell,. Gmy
group singing of seveml patriotic and Virgil Parsons, Lloyd and Arsongs dwing the service. The della Johnson, Fred HWUiell, Junior
chun:h was decorated with red,&lt; White, Jean an.d Bob Gilmore, John
white and blue ribbons.
and Kalhelyn Metzger, Pauline
The legionnaires and auxiliary Greathouse,
Freda
Edwards,
members gathered outside the Porothy Long, Eileen Snider, Iva
cbiD'Ch and entered· in a group led . Stewart, and John Fultz. .
by Fred Hunnel bearing the

tub and the child turns. on lhe hot
water; are placed · ill water that is
too hot· are in the tub when another
child tOO.s on the hot water; fall
~into a tub of hot water.
·To protect children rrom lap
water Stllld burns:
' Never le~~ve yow- child alone in
the bathtub; test the water before
you put your child in the bathtub;
run cold water first lhen adjust the
temperature wilh hot; face your
child away from the bathroom
fixtures. Cl!lldl:en are less :lilcely to
ri'i!mii&gt;u~ts ~ 'ate out of
sight,
. "February • Birthdays" was the
A communication was read from
Hot llqul · and rood burns hap: theme for the prQgram presented at .. George and Ruth Ann Roolcs conpen wben children:
·
the recent meetin$ of Star. Grange cerning agoal of five new members
Grab dangling appliance cords; · by Women's Acuvities Chainn~ per pge by June 30, )991.
.
grab pots off' of the sio~e; pull Catherine Colwell. ·
Neva Nicholson, deaf chairman,
hanging tableclo.ths and placemats.
Readings included ''The Local aslced members to savt hearing aid
To.S~ cbildrea from bot li- Grange; by Larry Montgomery; batteries and old eye glasses for the
quKeepu~dren out of the kitchen "Why Do Women Buy Things~ bY, stale projecL
, th
Maxine Dyer; "Rurally Speaking"
Inspection was set for the May 4
when cooking. ·If you can t, en by Patty Dyer; "There Were in the
·
create a "no zone" that children Hospital- by Ray Midkiff; m=. were made to serve
wiU obey. Keep appliance cords out ''Thoughts for. Your Wedding Day" . Pomona Grange on March 3.
·
.of children's reach. Put pans on by Christine Napier. "Battle Hymn
Plans were made to construct
back
of the R.epublic" was sung bv
all..b
d
· ""' s · 0
handlesburners
iowardand
the turn
back all
of pot
the
1
an erect a s•gn ne upport · ur
stove. Keep hot foods away from
The fegislative report, gJven y Troops." Larry . Montgomery and
Ray Midltiff and Eldon BaiTOws, Rick Macomber are in charge of
the table's edge.
concerned the Meigs Coal Mines, the projecL We will work on it on
Knowing what to do should a and writing State Senator· Jan Feb. l6and 17.
burn occur to a small child can Michael Long with opinions of
11re fun night and work sessio
make a sufbsthetanbtial d!fl:erence ~n the abortion; Congressman Clarence will be held Feb. 16 at 6:30p.m. at.
severity 0
urn mJury an may Miller with opinions on a War Tax; the Salem Center Fire Station with
~ve a child's life. Remember these and Representative Mary Abel con- a potluck supper at 6:30 p.m. fol·
Important steps.
cerning waste disposal. All mem- lowed b
rk
t d
Stop the burning by removing bers were asked to write individual o
Y wo on proJec an
the source of heat. Remove all bur- letters with their own personal g~~ork session will be held at
ned clothing. Apply cool water over opinion,
the srange hall on Feb. 17 with a
the bumed area. Do not pack the
Catherine Colwell, CWA, an· potluclc lunch all p.m. followed by
burned area in ice. Do not appIY nounced that judging for the state work session.
·
ointments, buller or any homemade sewing and national needlework
.There were 40 members and
remedy to the burned area. Always contests would be at the June meet· . juniors present for the meeting.
seek medical attention as soon as ·
possibie.
mg.
' .
For further' infonnation concern·
ing childhooct bums, caU the Ohio
Depanmerit of Healtl! at (614}'466~
14SO or the Meigs County Health
·
Department~~ 992-6626.
The January meeting of the School and Meigs Indusaies.
Riverview Garden Club wa~ held at
Members are to bring fruit for
the home of Mrs. Grace Weber with baskets to the February meeting to

your Social Sec.urity

media:

G0141 Oldy At r.w•'• Sui* Valu
.... fill. J lllru ,... 9, 1991

Good tWr At Pewel's S.,. Yalv
Goool Fill. 3 tin fell. 9, 1991
u.it 1 r.. C..ll••r

Camp Governor William Denpison Number 125, Sons of Union
Veterans of the Civil War will hold
its annual Lincoln Day Dinner and
meeting on Feb. 12 at 6:30 p.m. at
the Bonanza restaurant in !ackson.
The featured speaker will be
Beatrice E. Terry Greenwalt, Past
Nation;tl President. of the Auxiliary
to Sons of Union Veterans. Mrs.
Greenwalt previously served as Na•
tional Palriotic Instructor and .has
been a member of the Auxiliary fcir
almost 35 years. In her hometown
of Alliance, she is active in many
civic and fraternal organizations
and is a volunteer at the Alliacne
Community
Hospital.
Mrs.
Greenwalt's presentation will focus
on the Women of the Civil War:
Customs, Clothing and Manners. ·
The dinner and meeting JII'C open
to any who have an interest or an
ancestor in the Civil War.
For additional in(onnation con·
tact Commander David Meden,
(614) 775-7913 or Junior Vice

"Yi

.$1'.290.

'

'

I

Buckley and

Burn Prevention Week set

10 LB. PKG.

•

•

..

BULK ISLI-CED
. BACON

'

I

SUV Lincoln Day d~nner
scheduled for Feb. 12

10 LB. PKG.

·•

••

For refreshments, each member

meeting in which 20 .shut-in caDs . Buckley, Mamie
were reported.
Grace Weber.

BEEF

GRADE A

.

.Wednesday, Februii'Y 6, 1991

the church basement at the January brought a covered dish. .
meeting of the Reedsville United · Auending-,were Sally Brown,
Methodist Women.
· -Diane Jones, Fnmces Reed, Gladys
Frances Reed presided it the . Thomas, Pearl Osbo~, Nancy

.GROUND

.,

.

Reedsville UMW meets

10·L·s.
MEAT SALE

Monday thru Sunday

..

Page-7

FREEZER

STORE HOURS

The Daily·
Sentinel
.

MARK D. ELLIOTr

Mark D. Elliot~ 5on of Julia (EI·
liott) Monk, Pomeroy, has been
stationed in the Middle East with
Operation De5ert Storm since
December.
Elliot1 is a former 1987 student
of Meigs High School. He enlisted
in the UniuKI Swes Marine Corps
in 1988.
Cards ·111d louers can be !lllllto
Mark D. Ellicltt, HQ 8th M*files,
FPO New York, N.Y. 09502-m?O.

•

~

•

GALLIPOLIS

..

I'

.: ~tt'jll'... .~~
....
,.

.

Upplr River Rd.
.
(Ac:ross fJMI the Airport)
i'

�.,
Page-8- The

Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport,

Video Views
By Jeff HUieary
.This month, a departure from the
nonnal fonnat as we take a look at
two excellent concert videos featur·
ing two of the best and brightest
musical talents. One from England
and the olher from the states who
have dOne their best to make music
enjoyable for everyone. If music is
the universal language !hen these
people shoulll be considered its
most . qualified instrucrors. I'm
speaking of course, about Phil Col. I ins and Debbie Gibson.
Phil Collins SE!UOUSLY LIVE
IN BERLIN is a three hour ex-

travaganza · that showcases his ·
talent not only as a singer but a
musician who goes all out 10 give
his audience what they ex(iect arid
deserve. From die beginning to the
end you are treated to songs like
" Another Day in Paradise" to "Do
You Remember?" and die the
finale, where he does "Take Me
Home" to round a non-stop experience that serves to demonstrate
the fact !hat though we are a large
world that seems to be at each
others throats periOdically, for . at
least art evening we can forget dis-

Ohio

Wednesday.

tainm~Jt for supplyiag die fi.lms for
this month. I couldn't have done it

tance and the limitations of
To me it wu surp1sing 10 see a
language and just enjoy a great and celebrity actually going out of tw
versatile perfonner. Expect some way 10 be accessible 10 .her fans. As
great visual effects throughout chis a rule lhosc in tbe spotlight shun
that serve 10 underline the splendor their fans, but this girl does her utof ·an unequaled performance die . most to draw tbem into the act and
invariably succeeds The best
Ollll and only Phil Collins.
.
Surely no one combines die post· words to descn'be this are energetic,
· tive aspects of youth, beauty and exciting and enjoyable. If you have
talent like the vibrant and en- a chance to see either of these
thusiastic and very Sincere Debbie please do so.
My thanks to A* Vision EnterGibson who in DEBBIE GIBSON
LIVE AROUND THE WORLD
uses excerpts and in~erviews to tum
out one of the best examples of
what a talented young person can 10
to bring us closer by music and
dance. This tape has several music
videos interspersed with a·behind
the scenes look at Debbie Gibson's
studio where we .are allowed to see
H:IWMIU IIIIIIII&amp;'IAirMIIIIIIII$'4
the person behind the phenomenon.

without you.

Next monlh, dear reader. expect
10111e swprises as well as a look at
a
ftbn from die pnimiu martial
artist. I'm spPJ~king, of course,
about Jean Claude Van Damme and
his new movje, "Deaab W81T811t."
Until then, be tind and rewind
those !apes and of course be sure 10
support our trllq&gt;S in die Gulr.

new

f~i!l2!1f;
ItS Allin 1lle WADAIJJ- .

Februawy 6. 1991
Wadn81Ciay,

~ii~~~~~~~
· :;==r-=~~~====~==~~~~~D~~~
·~~~~~~~ Public
Public Notlet

6. 1991

OUR LANGUAGE

ii

Classified

Spelling BAGEL sllouldn't be bard.
Put the E before the L in sp!lllng lhla
hard roll, or the ending of BACEL
won't gel.
ABSTRUSE deseribea something
deep or difficult to understand. Tbe
pronunciation of ABSTRUSE, though,
isn't very·complicated: "ab-STROOS."

• ·The Area's Number 1 Marketplace
TO PLACE AN AD CAU 992·2156

Q. At my computer job. I'm told to
"input in the data." That ill wrong,
isn't it?
A. Yes, it is wrong. ·The verb IN-·
PUT, in use for the past 4S years,
means "to enter or feed Into a com·
pute'r." Using IN with the verb. wbjcb
already contains IN, causes redundan·
. cy. You can "input data," but "Input
in" enters that data once too often.

MONDAY thru ·FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.II\.
8 A.~ until NOON SATURDAY
y
•ACit 01.1111de Me•V'· Cdlh1 or M11on count11i must be tHI'

IN•d

m•e CO,IICUon

•Aosthlt rmn11M a.id rn eav1nct 1te
Caret Of Ttli~lu
ln ' Mem-or~.m

COPYRIGHT. 1991 • TH~ KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOO SUNDAY , FEB. 3, THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, FEB. 9, 1991, IN OOIIE•ov ITOIOt

·

Happy Ad&amp;
Yard sa~.

•A clauifred achr•n. .m..,t Dltcfdln Tfte ·OiiiY

Senunel l l~ ·

cep1- cl••f•«&lt; iiiPI ..... lu•.n•• Cerd enelleg .. noi1 ces

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.
'

will 1110 IIPPN' ffl " ' ' ~ Pl. . . nt " .... ,., lf'd the Gill •

PGhl Deily TtibUne. N8Ct\1ftf 0¥1' 11.000

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY-Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for
sale in each Kroger Store, except as specifically noted in this ad . If we do run out of an
advertised item, we will off~H you your choice of a compa rable item, when available,

ttom•• .

BULLETIN
.
- BOARD

8-oz.

·-

BOARD DEADLINE
P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION
'

VALENTINE'S DAY CAKES

-lbs.

Order One Today For Your
Special Sweetheart!

Kroger
·Orange Juice

992-6194

Weddings, Anniversanes. Bi!lhdays.
Holidays, Showers. Etc.

LAYNE FURNITURE
MATTRESS OR BOX SPRINGS
FULl OR TWIN SIZE

REGUlAR .......................................... 178
FIRM .................................................. •88
EXTRA FIRM ..................................... 198
OI!THOPEDIC KING SIZE SEIS.......'350 &amp; UP
QUEEN Silt: SEIS.......................$275 &amp; UP
BUNK MATTRESS........................... '48 &amp; UP
BED FRAMES
REGULAR .................................................. 125
QUEEN .......................................................135
KING .....................................,................... ..150
HOURS MOlt THIIU SAT. 9-5
Pit ._.6-0322

~~

I, ,

'
I
I
I

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I

Q.

PUblic

:::&gt;

0

0

,_
•

untry Clu
Ice •Cream

•

Pound

lllnda •nd tenement•.

250 SHEETS

.White
Bathroom Tissue

CDmm.nalng •• •n Iron

96

Hi-Dri
Paper Towels
Single Rol!

For

Coca Cola
"Classic

ggc

Glll!lll

···--

,.•

•

,

'"'to

BOTTLE, DIET COKE,
CAFFEINE FREE DIET COKE,
CAFFEINE FREE COCA COLA CLASSIC OR

Grade A
Larra..~us

--

•

2-Ltr.

•

•

lo~

pin In the oout-t corntr
of Lot Number I of F1lrlano
subcllvlaian .. ...ordod In
Plot e - 4, Pago11 1nd 11
In lhe record• of tho Malgo
County Recordor'o Dlllco
ind the exletlng -lttrly
right of wey line of Page
ltr-; thonCII 8. IS dog.
24' 21' E. along • Uno.
20.00 -toerall...,.dopl&lt;e
In lhe ullllng c:ontwllno of
Plflo Streit; lhoncol. 4 dog
BO' 311" W. liang tho .. Itt·
lng oonllfllno of Pogo
...- . 121.11 !tot 10 •
point: thoncaS . 34 clog. 04'
00" W. olong a Ina Mid Pilling on iron pin a140 .871oot
• totol dlotance of 129.33
!tot ta •n Iron pin; thence S .
17 dog . 04' 4S" W. elong a
lino, 1113.41 to an Iron
pin; thence 1. 82 d1g. Ill'
20" w. olong • llno. 71 .00
!tot to an ~on pin In the
if-on northoaat property
; thonCII 8 . 32 clog.
33' 011" E. elong tho grantori eaet property llno and
paotlng on Iron pin In the ••·
lltlng northerly right of WIY
lin• of P-all s - t at
147.84 !tot etotal dlltenco
of 172.•1
a point In
the gronton ooutheolt prop·
erty corntr 1nd tho oxlotlng
centartlnl of Pow.ll It_.:
lhon. . s ... dog. 10' 13"
w. IIOfll tho grantOro oouth
property llno and tho oxllltlng oonterllne of Powell
ltr-. 101.24 to tho
rial point of blglnnl"ff lor
tho ' lend horeln cloecrloocl;
......... 10' 13"
W. .-tlnulntlalontiAidllne
7 0 - to epolnt 1n thooran·
tort eouth.,_. pro....., oor..,, thanoo N. 32 clog. 00'
27" w. tlong tho gre-ral
Watt prOfiiiiY llno end 11111-•
ling . , Iron pin In tho Mlllt·
lng northorlr right of way
llnotlf l'owolll- NnoMd
ptlling Milton pin In tho ....
lotlng northorly right of way
11no of Powell S - t lit

SLICED
INTO CHOPS

KROGER

al

IoWa:

4-Roll Pkg.

. · Kroger
Homogenized

Public Notice

1212 Powell
ltr-.
Middleport, Ohio
457110. Acomplotalogaldo·
101lption of tho r•l oltete Ia
1olol-o: ,
·
Sltuote In Soctlon 29.
Town 1, Rong• 13, Sallebury Townohlp. Vllloga of
Middleport, Molgo Coun~.
Stall of Ohio and being
"""" tully dnc:rlbod oo fol·

•

Pound

Nollce

NOTICE OF SALE
By vll'tuo of on Orclor of
S.le l-ed out of tho Com·
mon Plou Court of Malg1
County, Ohio, In tho CUI of
Diamond S.vlnge a Loon
Company, Plolntlfl,
VI.
lommle P. Plante. at 11 .. Dofondants, upon o Judgment
lhorolft "'"~ad. . being
Call No.IO·CV-2411n·eald
Court, 1 wUI oltor for Ala at
tho front door of the CourthouM In Pomoroy. Malgo
County, Ohio, on the 1 lith
day of · M1rch. 199t. ot
10:00 a.m .. tho following
..,...

rter
Pork Loin

•

•I

.eo

.0&amp;/ dly

rl.., 1 $ MOirltl •dl

Classified pafles_.cot-er the
following 1elephonl? exchan!les ...
G.ll•• County
,.,,., Codt 614

Melfi County

446 - ~lhpolil

112-MidcM•on

'367-Cn•hire

. Pom•ov

Atll Coele &amp;14

M111on Co . W V

Arta Code 30•
67S-Pt , Pl"''"'

.-sa-L.or~
576-AP~· GfO\It

311-VInton

11&amp;-Cn••'

2•&amp;-"10 Grendt

143-Ponlilnd

773-Muon · ·

2'7-leten Falls

812-NIW Hevtn

143-Areb•a 011t
379-W..no t

141- A•e.ne

196-Letert

742-Autllftd

937-luttalo

2&amp;6-Guwn D•st

18'- Coolvill e

O·et Rt~ulb Fast
to accrued rMI eatlite taxaa
lor 1991 .

IlEAL ESTATE APPRAISED AT: f17,000.00 . Tho
rul
annot be aokt for
leta then t-·thlrdo the IP·
prelud veluo.
TERMS OF SALE: Caoh
on clollv~ of doed.
·
.
J • - M. Souleby,
lhorlff of Melgo County
(21 I, 13. 20. 3tc

••t•

It

\'

28.01 feet • total dlotanco
of1211.01 loot to on Iron pin:
thenco N. IS deg. SO' 13"
E. olong allno. 70.00iaet to
on Iron pin; thence a. 32
dig. 00' 27'.' E. olOflO allno
and 1111ulng ·~Iron pin In the
oxlltlng northerly right of
woy line of Po-ll Slraat at
100.00- a total dlltonce
o11211.01 foot to tho point
of beginning end containing

0.20f

ICfll.

Together with an Mae·

ment for ingre11-egrt11 be·
lngllftoon t1 &amp;I foot In width.
lOVan ond ono·hall (7.SIIoot
on althor olclo Of tho follow·
ing de.aribed centerline;

Commencing •t· en iron
pin In the eouthellt comer
of Lot Number 8 of Folrlono
Subdlvjolon ao racordod in
Plol Book 4. Pago 16 ond 11
In the rocordo of Malgo
County Racorcloro Office
ond the oxlotlng weotorly
right of wov llno of Pogo
Strtllt: thence S. 88 dog.
24' 21" E. olong . 1 Una,
20.00 loet to a rallrood opl&lt;o
In the exlltlng centerlne of
P~ta Straat; thence 8. 4
dog. 110' 31" W. along the
oxlltlng centofllfll . of Pogo
Street 1121.81 foOl to a
point; thence 1. 34 dog. 04'
00" W. long a line and poe·
ling an Iron plnat40.97faat
• lotai dlltence of 1zt.33
!tot to an Iron pin; thence S .
87 clog. 04' 48" W. olong a
line, 1'93.41 follt to on Iron
pin: thence S. 82 dlfl . 118'
20" W. along • liM, 7!.00
f•l to en lfon pin In the
gr1ntor1 northeaat property
comer; thonce S. 32 dag.
33' 09" E. along t1oo gran·
tor• 1181 property line end
paoolng an Iron pin In lho ox·
lltlng northerly right of way
line of Powell Btraal at
147.84 loot a total dlltenca
of 172 . Ill feat to • point In
the grentora 10utfl111t prop·
erty corner and the tJd•inu
centerline of Powell Straot;
lhlftco S . IS dog. SO' 13"
w. elong tho grontor~oouth
property line and tho ..let·
lng cont•llno of Powell
Strtllt, Ill. 74 f - to lho real
point of beginning lor the
••mont heroin doscflbed;
t h - N. 32 clog. 00' 27"
W. along the contirllno of
Aid aaumont. 1211.01 loot
to • point and there to tarmi·

.....

Subject to all legol hlghWIYI end HMmetitl of fl·
cord. .
.
D-rlptlon lor ·t ho above
cloiCrl- trect being U.. re·
ouho of a ourvey .mede by
Richard C. Gl•"'l-· 1'1. 8.
No. 1181, deted November

28. 1177.

R""'ance Dood: Volume
281, Pall 803, Malge
County Dood R-do.
laid rill hos boon
•-lnod Auditor' o Parcel
Nu-: 11·01100.
, Pnlporty a
1282
Powell
Middleport,
Ohlo411710.
leld real ttotato Ia oubjtret

"••u:

s-.

No, 31! thanco woat to tho
pltreo of beginning. contoln·

lng 33 end 17/100 acreo,
more or ....

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
George M. Collins.

Dood l'latonncoo: Volumo
110. Page 37; and Volume
234, Ptga 411, Malgo
C11Unty Deod R-do.
Porctl 3: Tho following
de1ariHd
premlae1, aitu·
ueted In tho To-hlp of
Orange, County of Malgo
ond Steta of Ohio end
bounded and doocrlbed eo
followo: Bolng In Section
No. &amp;. Townohlp No. 4 1nd
Range No. 12 of the Ohio
Company'• Purch••· and
beginning In tho mlddlo of
Steto Highway No . 1180, on

Meiga County Tr111urer.

the North line of Section No.

NOIIce

Yo .
Tho Ohio Valley Manulacturing Corporetlon, ol al,
Oefondont
CASE NO . BO-DLT-01
NOTICE BY
"··
PUBLICATION
To W. A. Ooboin. whoso
laet known addrtoo woo
Tupporo · Plaino.
Ohio
411783; To W. Fred Oobom.

II. 44 rado 14'h foot Wall
!Tom tho Northooll comor of
Mid Soctlon No. 8; thence
weot 28 roda 1O'illaotto tho
Chriotlan Church lot; thence ·
South 8 rodo: thonco Welt
10 rodo: thence South 21'h
rodo; thonce Etlt 82 rodo
and 2teot; thonco North 2'h
rodo: thonco Well 11 rodo;
thence North 27 rode to tho
ploco of beginning, contllln·

who11 lett Jc:nown eddr•••· ingl5.28 ecrea, more or le11;
woa Tupptrl Plelns, Ohio excoptlng the following do•
411783: To Audrey Cheval- ac:rlbod premise• conveyed
io&lt;. whole laot known ed· , to Blaine Hardwey by Florrlo
dreu w11 Long Bottom. 0 . Lamb and bounded and
Ohio: To Hernan G. Ooborn. cloocrlbod u folowo: loginwhose laot known oddro11 ning 311 loot Eeot of tha
wee

long

Bonom·.

Ohio

Nortt\e..t comer of lot No.

411743; To Guy G. loggooo.
whoselut known addrooo io
unknown; To W. F. Kampf,
who• loot known addrou lo
unknown;
To Ander""
Brotharo
Sawmill, Inc..
who•laot known eddroao io

3 In W. W. McCuna'a First
Addition 10 the VIllage of
Tup111ro Plalno. Ohio, In the
contor of tha TupPifl Plaino
and Allred Road, now on
plat ao Mill St.; thence Ealt
170 loot: thonoo Iouth 206
fMt; thence Weat 110 feet;

named defendant In a logtl
tctlon onthled Goorgo M.
CDIIIno. Mlllgo County Trooourer, vo. Tha Ohio Valley
ol, Dol.,dtill. Thl" acolon
boon aealgned ceoo
haa
number 90-DLT-01 ond 11
pending In tho oourtofCommon Pleoo of Molgo County,
Pomeroy. Ohio 46789.
The obj10t of tho com·
plaint lo to loreclollthe de-

linquent real 111111 taxea

Stete Hlghwey No. 7 Wen

agalnot lho roal oetata
located 1t:
Parcel 1: Situated In the
County of Meigs. Siato of ·
Ohio, end In the Townohip of

29 rodo I to1t. and South
18'h rode from the North·
Met corner of uld Section
· No . 5: thanco Woot 11 rodo
to on Iron pin: thence South

Orange, and bounded and

8Y2 rode to . an Iron pin;

deocrlbed oo followo:
Bolng In Section No . 5,
Townohlp No. 4 ond Rongo
No. 12 of
tho
Ohio

thence Eoot 18 rodo: thence
North 8'h rodo 10 the piece
of beginning. containing
0 .88 of an ecro, rnore or

Company' a

len, and being a part of the

01

PurcheM

1n

Or•nga Townahlp. Molgs
County, Ohio, blfllnnlng 1t

~

~-

ond Mynlo C. Boggan, tholr
helra end 111igna. to con·
otruct. maintain, ._lr • obi
Inch aewer llna to • run on

Rules of Civl Procedure,

Grentors, Guy G. BoggesS

aald !•1 aotehl. together
with tho right oflnp111 ond

judgmenl by defeuk will be
rendofed egainet you lor tho

. .,... for uld Gr•ntora,

relief demanded in the com-

thalr ogento, aoolgno and In·

plolnt.

vltees, to conltruct malntlin

and repair tho Aid _ . ,
Uno.

Subject to Ill IIIIIMml

ond hlghwoyo of record. ·

Forrelt A . Werd by·warrlnty

11.21acrotractollondo1The
Ohio Volley Manufocturlng
Company, . • corporation.
deocrlbed In dood rocardod
in Book 191. at 111g1 283 of
the Deed Rtreordo ol Malgs
County, Ohio, thence South
Ill dog. 25' Eatt 244 !ott:
thence North ,79 dog. 30'
Ea11t 2721oot to tho Eatt llno
of lends of Guy. G. · and
Mynle C. Bog1111. thence
Nonh 77.8 flit to tho South
lint of Aid 5. 28 ocri trect,
thence Welt 475 feat along
tho South line oloold 11.28 ·
trect 1to the
of be·

doed of dell M....,h 17.
1944, and r-rded Aprl
17. t944. In DHd Book No.
1111 . pay• 321. D- 1'1•·
cordo o
Molgo County,
Ohio: over and tcroeo the
flrot horolnabovo doocrl&gt;ed
pramiAI elthor 10 the ditch
running through the flrot
above doocrlbod promlllo
and crooolng Stet• Highway
No . 7 or to the revlno running North and Iouth on tho
flrot ebovo doocrlbed prt·
miMI. which ravine Ue1
Walt of tho hou• on the loot
above doocribed premlseo,

oil and gaa underlying
preml- aa haretolor1

uld
dreln or_.,
laid
ot
• depth
oo eo nottotobe
Inter·
fife with tho forming Of cui·
tlvatlngoftheflrltobovtdl·
~erlbed pramlseo and baing

excepted end reaerved by
previous granton.
•

the 11me property conviyed
by Forrelt A. W•rd end Eule

And bolno Plrt oftha rool
ootata convoyed by Eddo
Boggan to Guy G. and
Myrtle C. Boggaoo by dMd
doted Octobo&lt; 21. 19110,
and rocorclod In Book 118,
et poge 99 of tho Dood Ro·
corde ol Molgs County,
Ohio.
·
Oeod Relerenc.: Volume
1911. Pago 719 ol lht Malgs
County DNd l'ltreordo.
Parcel 2: Sltuatt in the
T-thlp of Rutland. In the
County of Mal go ond Stato
of Ohio:
Baglnnlng about eightyono rodo ond fourt- links
Mot !Tom tho contar of waot
llno of S.ction 31. Town I .
the Ohio
Range 14 of
Compeny'o Purch1u at tho
northoolt aomtr of .J oaap.
hue
Cerpontlf'•
land;
thanco 1outh 44 rodo to tho
northw•ot corner of Gront
l'lomlno'o lend; thonce aalt
70'h rods to tha northoalt
oomor of Grant l'lomlno' o
land; thlftce oouth 18 rodo
ond 23 llnllo; thence sell 77
roclo and 221&lt;\ llnka to tho
Nno of Jamao Chopman'• lend; thence north 10
roda to tho Cllnttr of tha
rqad; thonco IIDIIth 17'h
clog-• we• 11 rod1 and I
llnlia: thonoe north 7S~
clogrllo watt 14 rode;
thonco north 4 rodo to tha
contar of tha Nld oootion

1. Ward. hlo wife, to H. A.
Cole and Onolta Colo, by
deed
dated Auguot 24.
1945 end recorded In Book
1113, at Page S17 .Of Daad
l'looordo of Molo'o County.
Ohio,
excopt 0 .38 acro
tharool convoyed by H. A.
Cole ond Onolta Colo, huobond and wHa. to Ide Allee
Coo111r by deed doted Aprl
3. 1147. and recordod In
Book 189 at page 230 of
oald D- Racordo.
Bolng tha ume r•loltate
conveyed to H. A. Cola Lumboo' Co .. Inc .. by Homer A.
and Onolta Colo by daod rt·
cordtcl In 0 - Book 1 S5
Pago 204. Molgo County
DMd Rocardo .
Daad Rateren01: Volume
111, Page 213. Melgo
County DNd Recordo.
Perctl 4 : Tho loll-Ing
,_1 oetato being In 810tlon
11. Town 4. 1'11nge 12.
Orange Townohlp, Malgo
COI.inty, Ohio, end bounded
and clotcrlbed 11 lollowo:
Bagtnnlngln tho contlf of
State Route No. 881. where
the Wttot Nno of tho Chrlltlln
Church Carnotery lnt•-•
the oontor of Mid State
Route: !honea- 807.11
tlong the conNr of oaid
ltate Routa (to whore tha
Woot llna of Guy logge11'
117.14 ecre farm, delcrlbed

Join the Healthcara Family at Vetarans Memorial Hospital. lmmadi·
'
ate openings for Registered Nurses
toworkinEmargencyRoom.Home

..

Health Nursing, Special Care Unit,
and Acute Care (Mad .-Surg. l . Sa·
lary commensurate with experi·
ence. Excellent fringe benefits.
CONTACT:
Rhonda Dailey, RN. B.S.N.
Director of. Nursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital

115

East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio .4 5769

(6141992·2104,

Ext .

214

R111 Estate Genarsl

/d;

'•l"
~~\

-

P-.:.....- - -

205 NORTH SECOND AVE .
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992·.2886/HOME 992-6692
DOTtiE S. TURNER , BROKER

~M­

C&lt;&gt;unty DMd l'lacordo.
ond tho praytrletoforocioil lnterolt owned by you
ond lor cooto.
You .,. required to anawer the comp.. lnt within
28 cloyo aftor tho flrot publl·
cotlon of thlo notlco which
will' be publiohed once o
- k for th- consocutlve
- u ond ahall lndu• tho
date on which a oacond Mlo
will be conductad Hno bid Is
accapted at tho flrot ule.
Any number of 111r01lo may .
be Included In one edvortiM·
mont. Tl)o flrot ""bll..,lon
will be m•do on lhe lth dey
of Fobruery 199hndtho 28
doyo for an ow.. w.lll com·
mence on thllt date.
In 01se of your lallu,. to
anawer or ottt.rwl• re•
pond ao required by tho Ohio

RUTLAND - Nice lenced back yard - and a 2 stor~ frame
home wrth 4 to5 bedrooms.dining room, big living roOm,and
an equipped kitchen. Low utililies, carport, playhouse and
sto1age building.
$32,000
PORTLAND- Bi1 Lot- One story home. Acute 5 room. 2
bedroom home with attic space for more rooms.One car garage, level lot, wei) insulated_for economical living.
.
$25,000

•
'

DARWIN - FA•II - 166 ac1es of! and with an older 2story
home. Has six rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2 barns, and lree gas to
heat your home. Approx. 20 acres tillable.
$15,000
BRADBURY- Close In- Small one lloor plan home wHh 3
· bedrooms.. Appro~. 1~ acre with garden area, storage build Ing, and mce s1ttmg porches. Newer carpet in some rooms.
and newer range. Pnce was $16.500.
REDUCED. $15,000
EASY LIVING- In lhis4 year old 14x60 Sunnybrook mobile
home. It has acatltedral ceiling lor dimension and alaundry
room With shelves for storage, equipped kitchen, two bed·
rooms and I\\ baths. It is beautiful and in new condition.
PRICE WAS $14,000.
REDUCED $12,500

'!::=============------!'..

Lany
E. ·spencer,
Clerk
of Court, ~
Mtlgo. County Common
Plooo Court
(21 I. 13, 20, 3tc

Real EBI8te General

Business Services.:;.
BEAT THE RdSHI

G11 , _ lawn anti gardon equipmenl tuned up

POMEROY, OHIO

992·-2259

and blades sharpened
fOf lhe coming s1111sonl

DURING FEBRUARY
- Free pickup ancf
deli"'" in Pomeroy
anti Miclclltport city
limits.
WE ALSO SERVICE
CHAIN SAWS

DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE REPAIR
253 West Main St.

POIIIII'IIYr Oh.

PH. 992-3922
2-C- 1 I

SUMNER ROAD- CHESTER- Owner wants to seii"NOW".
Bi·level country home, la1ge living 100m, stone fireplace. 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, 2 car gmge,large deck, 24'x24', on apPIOX. 1.485 acres. All in excellent condition. Call fo1 your appointment!

J&amp;l
INSULATION
•Vinyl Sldln1
•Replacement

Windowe
•Roofing
•lnauletion

JAMES KEESEE
992-2772 or
742-2251

umo premlooo convoyed by
Flo"lo 0 . Lamb. at al .. lo

the Southw..t c:orner of 1

r.~~=,~:.~.~:=:~~t~~0~-~9;&amp;

placa of beginning. contain·
lng 22 .38 tcroo.
Exceptlng and fiMrvlng
to tho former Grontor, Eddo
Soggeoo. hor admlnlatTt·
tore. executon, htiu •nd II·
algno, ona-olxtMnth (1/t81
of ell oil and gao lying under
and w~hln the -promlhoraby conveyed. developad. produced end romoved
the&lt;alrom.
Subj~ to on oR and gu
laoaalrom Edde Boggooo to
· 8 . H. Putnam deted April
24th, 1948. ond rocordod In
Vol. .1. pogo 38 of tho
Laoao Racordo of Malgo
County, Ohio.
Subject to tho right of the

REGISTERED NURSES

O.Odl: Vol.
111. , . . _
111, pep 11: end volume
227, ..... 401. Malgo
County Daad l'lacordo.
Parcels: sttueted In tho
County of Malgo.ln tho
State of Ohio. end In the
T
..,1 o1 01 •.- bo nd-"
..,-d
c1ooc'r1~~ M
....fo_u 1 . Baing ti:"Wlllam on•·
haH of tho_"'..., one-half
In F•action 32. r-n 4.
Range 11 of tho Ohio
Company'o Purchua. and
beginning a1 the IOUtheut
como• of oald F•ectlon No.
32. ond l'llnnlng wellt to
tendo now owned by uno
Vlnayord (fo,....,ly owned
by Rluben Wobato•l : thooce
north for enough to moke .
ono hundrod acroo: thane•
Milt to tho F•actlon line;
thancuouth .( Othopltcool
beginning, containing •-•ty 11
·
•• va ecroo. more or ~u.
and lying In the WtltOfn onehall of rNI ootlltt lvnnafly
owned by Luey Osbom. da·
.,..ud.
Baing tha Mmt retlaotote
conveyed unto w. Fred Oo·
born by Hamon G. Oobofn
and Allee Oobom. hlo wllw.
by deed dlttd Ociobo&lt; 1 0,
1112. recor- In Oaad
Book No. 217 at Poga 89.
cloed RICardo of Malgs
County, ohio.
0 - Rotorence: Volume

thence In e Northweaterly

direction to tho place ol be·
ginning,, .Ontllnlno V. of en
1cre; raHIVIng tha right 10
lay and molnteln 1 drain or
aewer from the hou• now
on the tvllowlng doocrlbod
promlseo:
Sltuotad
In
Orange Townehlp, Malgl
County. Ohio. being In Sec·
lion No. 11. Townohlp No. 4,
Flange No. 12 and bounded
ond deoc:rlbed ao lollowo:
Beginnlng ,ln the middle of

M1nufec1urlng CorporetiOn,

Melgo county Daad R•·
oonh. lnt•••at• t h o - ·
of Mid ltal8 I'IOUial U..C•
oouthOdlg. 22' -721 .1
IMtalongtheotld-llne:
thenc. oouth 81 dig. aoot
2017.81 t.t "' the Clint•
of Stale Route No. 7: thence
no•tt• 4 clog. 40' 90
t.t along tho centll' of eald
• - Route. to tho oouth·
comlf altho Ohio Valley M.,ul..:turlng COfp,;
thence North 87 clog. 10'
349
10h
10io
1 nov w
wa~d
Ow.- b1Mtt"'ho
Y
• 1•
ley Manulocturlng COfp.;
thence north 2 clog. 1D'aaot
1211 !wet with thallne of oold
Ohio v111oy Mo...toctUring .
Corp; thence ooulh 79 •g.
30' watt 272 foot with the
lint of oold Ohio Valley Mtnulavturlng COfll.:
thane• north H clog . 28'
wallt 244 whh the line
of oald Ohio Vtlloy Man'u·
lecturing COfP.; thence
north 1 dog. 48' ooot 221.8
t,.t with the line of oald
compony to theoouth lint of
tho Chrlltt.n Church lot:
thence weot 331 feat along
tho oouth llno of tha Chufch
lot and lha oouth line of tho
..,.awy to tho oouthwoo1
con;~ar ol aald carnatory;
thence north 0 dig. 38' toot
2111 .1 foot along thl wolt
~of~ .. ~~IOtho

Public Notice

Public NOIIce

unknOwn; you are hereby
notHied that you have been

U.S. GRADE A HOLLY FAFIMS

Boneless
ChickJtn
.Breasts
•

3 MILES OUT BUllVIllE

I0
lb.

S1 .30 1doy

1S

Plaintiff

Specializing in Cakes For All
Occasions

1

Boneless
·
Ribe e Steak. . . :. . . . . . . . . . ..

59.00
113.00

.20
.30
.42

Rat • .,. tor eonMcutwe ru n1. broken uP d..,, will be cl'l ll'tlld

PubliC

LAURIE'S CUSTOM
CAKES

FROZEN CONCENTRATE
. ,REGULAR OR WITH PULP

$

15

15

Monthly

- .2:00P.M . MONDAV
-2 :00P .M TUESDAV,
-2 :00P .M . WEDNESDAY
- 2:00 P .U THURSDAY

Country Oven
Vanilla Wafers

U.S. Gov't Graded Choice
Gra~n Fed Beef
.

lS

.

-11 :00 A ..M SATURDAY

~-----=ilem~~- ~~·~----~~·­

"W

3
6
10

oe.oo

Over 16 Wordl

DAVIE FORE "UIIl!CATION

reflecting the same savings ·or a rain c h~k which will entitle you to purchase the advertised
itern al the advertised price within 30 days. Only one vendor Coupon will be acc.epted per

~~~~\.)'

,

.

•Free ldt - Q..,e...-y enct Fo~o~ncl aes u'naer 1i wo;os will o•
run 3 dl¥'1 •• no m•oe.
'
.
·~•• ot ad tor etl c•n•r '•'"' 11 ctcn.t~• o r1ce ot ad co11
•7 po.nt ltne type Oftly .,..d
· ·
•sem·iftli is. not mPOns._,.e tor ln'ort af'ltr fir11 ' o... l Cl'ledt
for1nars f1nt a-, 1d 'U"I "'11 .... 1. C•il betOr• 2 :'00 ~ m

RATES
Rate
Words
14.00
t5

Days

••,..,. S.tiO de1counr tor •a• ~id ti'l adv.nce

d., ltl.- DvbitCIUO" 10

~}

Notice
In Vol. 111. 11 of tho

By Jeffrey McQUID

639 Bryan Place
Middleport. Ohio
11-14·11•

ROUTE 7 - NEW MODULAR- This
home. I\\. baths,carpeted , insulated .
Large level I acre lot. Eastern DistrictC.ASKING JQ•I,:IIIti.UU

YOUNG'S

c'lea.tlllt

SIGNS

by ttck H1CIIIfltl(

B~rby
~UALITY
Point Pleasant • 675-6925

~~, ~­

Tuiiiu: 1.1 Rc " IT 1
205 N. Second 51T•t

IIIDDUPOIT, OHIO 45 J60
Office 614-992·2116
HOM£ 1&gt;14-.. 2-5692
DGniE S. TIIINO. 11010
HOUSES•LDTSHAI'IMS
COMMERCIAL
We Need Llollnp!
11 - 5-~lltl

IIIDEPIIIDEIIT
CARPET ClEAIIEIS
and nlE FlOOI CAn
•Raaaoneble Rate•
•Ou,llty Work
•Froo Eatlmatea
•Carpet Hea Felt Dry
Time
•High Glou on Tile
Floor Flnl•h
Mill UWlS, Ow""

lt. 1, llltln!l, Ott.

742·2451

CARPENTER SERVICE

NEW LISTING- POMEROY- Th1s neat home is ready for
immediate occupancy. 3 bedrooms, large lot and many other
features, and it's only $11,500.00.·

-Room AdditJon•
-Qutt•r wort

- EitctrlcJI •nd Plumbing

- Concrete work

. RACINE- A HUNTERS PARADISE! Approx. 32\\ acres with
2 bedroom mobile home with aporch plus a 14'xl8' 1ot and
pole building. Cellar house, utiity building, and an 8'x35'
New Moon !railer. Beautilul site and very PRIVATE!
$26,500.00.

- Roofing

ALL IUDS

• - lmertor • Extlflor
P•imlng

!FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

CO. 10. 35 - Ranch style home wHh 7 rooms. 3 bedrooms.
recreation room w/fireplace, large living room. Very neatly
landscaped . 7 miles from the Ravenswood Bridge. MAKE AN
OFFER. $45,900.00.
-

~....,.,,Ohio

·

MICIOWAYE
OVEN IEPAII

11·14-'90 lfn

lri111 It In Or Wo
Plclt Up.
KEN'S APPLIANCE

SEIVICE
992·5335 or
915-3561 .

Atroll ,,... l'ott 0Hk1
217 I. s.c-1 St.

POIIIOY, OlltO

MIDDLEPORT- 2 story brick home on 21ots, with 4-5 bed rooms, 2\\ baths lor the lar'e lamily. Other features include
· a garage and carport, a 15 x25'' Stolage shed. N.G.F.A.Iurnace. And for a little touch of country it has wood floors.
Owner wants asell a.nd has reduced the price to $47.900.00.

DAN'S
TRANSMISSION
and AUTO R-'&amp;11
Spoclallzlng In
Automolic
Tranomloaiono, Brakaa.
Tuneup, 011 Chango.
Clutch l'lapilr.
FREE ESTIMATES

ALL THIS fiOUSE NEEDS IS TIC -This older I\\ story home
needs some work by an enthusiastic handyman' Lois ol po·
tential. 4 bedrooms, part basement and a nice la1ge lot in
town. MAKE AN OFFER. $12,000 00,
LONG HOLLOW RD. - II you want country scenery but still
be close to town, this is it. ApPfOximately 133 acres with
older country home on it that needs some repair, or build
you1 dream home in the country with plenly of room to grow!
ASKING $45,000.00.
FIRST TillE OFFERED- This listing has ju'st come in; you
can be firSt to see it! However, with all irs got, this listing
won't last long- so call noyt and amnge to see afl th~l Fea·
tures include 69A of Hround, 1987 Modular home. buift·in
stereo system, lree HIS to home with royalties, carpet
throughout most of the home. all.drapes and plenty of closet
space. So much, this is a illust see! Call for your appointment
immediately!
•
You'll hiYt I WORdtrful fHiin&amp;lllltn YOu put JDUrstll in
our bends, Wllttber you're ho111 hunt1n1. 1111in1 or both
- rour intartstsara "OUR"Inttrtslll Our blcilpound of
experltncaiuxt111slvt ... aRd 11 rudy to lfrvt you. Satisfied cll•nls lllvelllllla our repulltlOII. So wily not come in
and put yoqr hausin&amp; prabloms in our handsl

• v.... ExPI'Iort. .

992-5517

Ullott Main

Po1111ny, OM.

f/819111 mo .

3/6/90/tln

•Remodf!ling and

•R~~';:gRe~airt
•Siding
•P1inting

NO JOB TOO SMALL
FAEE ESTIMATES

CIDAR
CONSTIUCnON
992-6641 or
691-6164

12-31 ·10-tln

•VINYL BIDING
·'
•ALUMINUM SIDING '
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

.... ._ ....

"Fr• Eltimltoa"

HENRY E. CLELAND .......................................992-6191
JEAII TRUSSELL..........................................94t·2S60

... ····1101
tr .... ····1160

JO Hill ........................................................ 915·44&amp;1
OFFICE ......................................................... 992-!259

NO SMAY CAliS

213 Nt. S.CIIItl
Mltltll1port
H1nd Tufting

Cullom D111pa1
s6 Ye•r• Uperlenee

614·992·1321
WI S.y What WI Do.
We Oo What

J.ll-tln

,,

'

�..

.

. . ·--__......
..

•

1991
An now h

Pomerov--:-Midclaport. Ohio

BORN

,,,, ""\! ,

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

Television
Viewing

3 Annoui'ICenl....

~

HIM2' drMfft'-.._to

-

=--:--~=
and drJ ut -..

====~~ -~.0. ..
llflll!e

....

CAlli, -

CIOU) -

M

aelww

1043, CaSJ t'g I OH ......

....

_....,..Gill ,•••a•
.

The

WED .. FEB. 8
EVENING

w • tJl Ill •
iiJ Nawl

1:10

111

....

WOII

•

II r ul t CI 'T I I
2R

c•

rJ)~~CJI?Q

.,

23

Prot11110na1
Slrvlcel

=:r ':'.r.'W:.""::

...., ........ ildvldt•. To
tlncl oul - 1Uitlw-...W~
thll

.......
.,.J
- t o P.O.._,_.,.

-·

of

tM a.llr ....... ,_, • .,. OH

"I'm making an appointment
for you with a specialist.
friend of mine. He's a tailor."
11

::&gt;MtLL.T~E

=

FOR6ETIT..
TI-lE ROSES
ARE ALL
OUT OF

8:05 ([)

r~ (COJ~G

HelpWantld

8

c!I.·~Q

. ...1..1.--'.-.1..-L.

8

Dlp::tnta.o

8:35 ([) Andy GrlfiHII
7:GO ~ 11\..IIJ Whlel of

111

()) I ~

GD ~'t,.,rt...
ll2l CliTem Altoli:'r;l
IIJ MKOrvw Stereo..:!;~
DCalagaa.lllllbeH

I

/

.....
8-~
Scarectow

.

lnd Mrs. King

H

IIJI ~""~ Q
tJ)
• 1!.-..111111111
Tanigftt Stt1eo. r;l
Court r;l

())• . .ma•a Family

GD • TliiM'* Compeny

aCroaaflre

~

Yll'd 8ell

1 ·

l PIPfol'r HAVt TO
(;11/E up ANYT'Hif'l6
MY Nfw YiA(l~S:
f!f/Ot.VTION~ -· •

Ti'4E fCONOMY
8EAT ME 'Tt' IT.

1

FO~ ~

·

7;35 ([) 88nfonl ancl Bon
1:00 (]) • Unllllveci My~te~tee
Five delllis are attrtbuted lo

a wocnan aean:..a
a albli!lll. Sttreo. r;1

voodoo;

lor

()) MOVIE: Jollnny flcicco
(2:00)
tJ) 'The Wonder y..,. Kevin
laces the mortality of loved

~
,!

ones alter he attenda a
funeral . Stlreo. C
(!) (!) Nlllonalllto 0 I'IPhlc
.,_..,Stlreo. Q
·
(I)
11J1 CaWIGI BlllcatiNill
tjltale • Houra ster119.

I

;

f

a

G

0 • MOVIE: Outland IRl '
'(2:00)
IIJ Murder, She Wrote
Stereo. !:J

G1 Ranclj Trevlli: Happy

T"lla Randy Travla, Roy
Rogara.and friends go on a
'Montana cattle drive . (1:00)

tar ....

11177 - l e -

14Jrll a taalhcm c.. bMw::N:rt
Mp.lft.l14 •

. - . . . .1--·
wa ...e~~ to lour. , _ .,. -

al. f1W1NIII,

Aut•
Cool

.
,
.
r;,:-,-:::;:dt::
- ...., -.

•·-'o -~~.;=
...-n

o--~~-

-

IIIII Uooc1 Fa110 lqulpeo&amp;~:

~ "':...

;;;....lon•lllltaoo, 10M Saloon

.......,7"'"Aiao

•
servi ces
8 us1ness
·

·

fllmrrrlry.
1 ,....
$£
tar 11a1o1
To:BoibloMIIIar:~
AIM need

o1o1tvtty - .
..
Inn .... P-nt, Yfll

llfttr 5.00 p.m.

.............
......
,.....e-•

BUILDERS

"At RMIIIIIIIIII Prien'!

Step&amp; 'C0111pore ..
·FrH lttfmlfea

915-UU
667-6179

5-31-'10 lfn

SHIUI &amp; REE

TIIM-and ·--

7 PH. 949-2101
., .... 949·1160
Day 11 Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

....

•LIGHT HAULING

•FIREWOOD

~ Rap

..
tallvOa
To
""""
To Countlea. EJdat..
1!'1 Qlaoa
PM - . Laad

=. . .

~-

-

~lat.

~

1171 W'.ndear, 14170,
oldnln&amp; oo6o•dlng.

?.:"0::

'-$110 1J1

1111
._ H, tot;
llr, llnlod glow,

.....,_

--

Dally

125

74

45

r

-IU11111S-SIOO 1Ji
IMIIS---$125 IJi

lleoolna-wlth .......

HIWIIS-$115 1J1

all,·•eonwv.

Mt-SUS t1 915-3561

USED RAILROAD TIES

POMIIOY, OHO

.'

'

.,

2-C.

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP .

1

a

Y00 K~ lot:A'T' IS
THE FIRSTO.t.YOFTHE
R!:ST OF YOUR. L.IFli.

•I

or lroda 114-1112·2112
....
-2121.
•I
78 Auto Pan• •
.1
1
Acc11180rlll

1

992-2269

,
'

1H7 lloorgllohlng molor
- · o•
1111-21
h,. JohMon
ll'llllw W/Wiwill ...., Hv• ... I

---· -lOWJI-

liEN'S APPLIANCE

Moton:yclll

75 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

:ma.

· BIU SLACK ·

a•

:

' I'

.......1-281'7.

For-: 10 _ _ _
loW llload, 1-..p Ad. Awol

iai;;udi;,;:i•'iT...
;;;,.;;;
.......Ia;;;;..;:-,uui;;wo:dd••
,. , ••nina . . -. .,.....
1177. 11WJ1.221S.
.

Alacilnoli• ~· All-.upe.
Call . . . 2:00 p.m., lllt-771-

·
IICIIO CMIIS-SJt 1J1

••

•
1111 liondil VII llogna, 1100 •
mllea. UIIOO. Cllltfttr 1:00 p.m. ; , •

I

~-· IM..Jil-7127.
LOTI 1'011 IALE In Goltlpollo
Fony. Win .tnllan, cHJ

tiR,
runnlna

cnoiM,

-•·

35 Lot• &amp; Acreage

{f) Ttlklng Wllh David
Frost A~draw lloyd Webber
and His Fiance Madeline
Gurdon Stereo.
1111
Jak. . nd 111a
F a - Jake 's lather who
haa been abient lor 2~ars
returns hOme. Stereo. 1;1
«Jl MOVIE: Fetal Expoaure
(2:00) Stereo. '
all Nalhvllr. Now
D College a.lllllball
Ltony King uvel
9:30 (}) a hlnteJd Jerry
discovere that buying an
expenalve jackat does not
make the man. Stereo. r;1
tJ) Anytlllng But Love
Hannah and Many reassess
.their lrlendahlp. Stereo. Q
'10:00.(])
IIJ L.A. Law Jane
Pauley hosts a retroapectlve
Of the L.A. Law Hrieii·With
Interviews and memorable
momen11. Stereo. r;1

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Qual fiOUTE SALES: Old Ettablllhlcl Mobile
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HOMES &amp; GARAGES

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8:30 Ill Orow~ltl Paine Maggie
and Jason go on vacation,
leaving Mike and Carol in
charge. r;1
9:00 (}). Ntght Court
Bull,looking lor love, goes to
a matchmaker. Stereo. Q
·
Ill Doogla HowNt, M.D.
Vinnie joins the Howsars on
a lather-son outing. Stereo.

EEK AND

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Spacial John GOodman. Julia
Robens and Tha Judds ~re
interviewed. (1
(!) (!) Moy"'
1 Are
Frea Willi Bemlce Jollnaon
Reagon Blll Moyers
diiCusses the power of song
with S.rnlce Reagon, the
founder and lead a1nger1of
the female a cappalla' group
SWeet Honey i~ the Rocfc .
(1 :00)
Ill 1121• WIOU Nealis
forced to lower his
iournallsllc standards.
Stereo. Q
tm Nr Trek: 'The Next
GeMiellon
CNN Evening Newa
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wil,;;;; flgurlld Edgar's hlblt ollhrOWing
alarm clocks at lhe wall would lake
care of his toolhache.

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understand whal to do to make the reletlonahlp work . Malt $2 to Malchmaker,
c/o this newspaper, P.O. Box 91428,
Cleveland, OH 4410 1·3428.
,
1
PIICEI (Fab. -.:11 20) Oon't
lhrow In '"" towel 11 you are confronted
by a formidable obstacle today. You're
much mora clever than you may realize
In Circumventing obatructlona lllat
btoc:lc your path.
ARIEl (Morell 21·Aprll '11) It may be,
neceasMy lor you to review your OP·
tiona and revise your plana today In order to accommodate currll'1t devek)pmentll. Minor cllangee can be h11'1dled

to yourMH.
~0 (Julr 23-Aug. 22) Fun aetlvttln will
be very helpful today In ralroahlng your
outJootc and attitude. II you get Involved
ln.oomethlng SOCial that Ia comJ)elltlve,
don't molce winning too lmponllnt.
VIRGO (AIIII. 23-e.pt. :t2) The concerna of thaee lor whom ,you ara reapon- llloutd !Ilea precedence over
your other lntor- today. However, II
might be hard to keep prlorltlel In

orCier.

·

LIIIRA (lap!. a-oct. 23) Your pollibllltlel
tor fulfilling hopea and eopecta.'
tlona 1oo1&lt; ~ · good todi\I~=VIdad
you don:t rnBalmpulalve ch
once
' COilltructlwly.
-•••on a ..,_Ill tl'lldc .
TAURUI (Aptji20-MIJ 20) You lllould
ICOIIPIO (GeL - · :t2) When It
be able to olclillully manage arrange- cornea
tc negotiating something of a
menta which aorve your personal inter· material nature, you should be In your
811Uoday. HOwever, II they are of a fl • element today. Ouiolde oft.. commer,
Fab. 7, 1111
arena. your jUdgment may be l88a
noncl~;al~na~t~ure~, the trade-ott may leave clal
dapendable.'
YoU may be
reoourceful, and ~d·
·
21..,_ 20) Your judg- IAGITTAIIIU8 (Nev. 23-0aa. 21) Be
venturous in the year ahead th.n you ve
been In the past. you will Increase your
reuonably good today but, ..beoooett of aaeoclatlona torange ollntereata, as well as your pOIII-· .
up to II* of your mate'a; day, becMIN Mlrac1ort Will not differ·
bllltlea lor oucceaa.
partic:UIIon,• I~ rega;d to an Important lto- entilte bettuaan thtHr bllhavtor and
AOUAIIIUI (Jan. 20-Fab.. tt) ll's beat - that your' pennar Is more lamiHar youra. All will be tarred by the same
to keep things on a purely social bUll :;t:.l:han
.lll you(~ _....._ :t2) Thll 'could bruit!.
. with friends today. Mllce H a point to
~.
CAPIICOIIfl (Dec. 22-.lan. 11) It will
stay out of their commercial affairs and be a very Productive day lor you, pro- g!W you greet"' leellnge of gratllleat!Qn
bar them from entry Into youi'll. Trying vtded you do things at your own paca 11 you !*P .
you know you are
to patch up 8 broke~ roma~ce? The Ato- and wtth a minimal amount ol supervt- neeclad today - withOut being Ukad.
tro-Graph Matchmaker can help you · Slon. Try not to cell tal&gt; much att11'1tlon Good thlnge happen to good peopla.

~

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BEDE OSOL

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MOillE 110• MtiACIS - HfAT PUMPS

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PRINT' NUMBERED LETTER S IN
·THESE SQ UARES
.

1

.

..

BRIDGE

NORTH

An interesting development in the
world of'bridge is I hat young players
are being encouraged by their national
organizations to train as lulure inlernationa1 competitors. Today's deal
features young English player Andy
Bowles, working out the winning conclUSion in the play of four hearts. .
After North's artificial two-club responae searcbilll lor a major-suit fit.
East doubled. South bid two hearts and
was q11ickly raised to game. Weal led
10 of clubs and East played the A·
Declarer Bowles ruffed the tblrd
with the king of hearts, figuring
that at least one heart honor would be
with West. and then paued the se¥\'n
of hearts. East took the jack and returned a spade'. South won the jack,
played 10 of hearts to West's queen
and dwnmy's ace, and drew the Jut
opposing trump. He now played two
more rounds of spades, discarding a
diamond from dummy.
That left him needing to bring in the
dlaniond suit without a loser, with Q-7·
H lacing A·J-3 in dummy. Normally
the best chance in this combination is
to catc:b West with K-x of diamonds,
but Andy Bowles had taken note of
East's distribution. East had shown six

H ·ll

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Vulnerable: East-West

Dealer: South
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•12-11 hlgh-&lt;:ird points

Opening lead:

Allpua

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clubs and had followed to three rounds
each of hearts and spades. So he could · '.
hold only one diamond.
Declarer's only chance was that the
lone diamond in East's hancl was the ·
king, so declarer played to dummy's
ace and was rewarded when the king ~
came tumbling down.

(2:00)

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you develop from shfp No. 3 below.

By Jamea Jaeoby

7:01 ([)Happy Daya

7:30 ())
(2)

Complete rhe chuckle quotod

SCIIAM-LnS ANSWIRI
,.r
Zodiac - Drift - Clove - Molive - CIVILIZED
lhe repairman arrived lo fix the microw'lve. The son
came into lhe kilchen saw lhe man and exclaimed. "At
last Now we can live like CIVILIZED people .again!"

(!) -cNIIIJLehrer

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TO GE r AN SWER

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CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
42 Mush·
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room lype
·old bread DOWN
•
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1 Aspata ·
10 Danger .
gus .
11 Oasis find
pieces
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2 Service
sland
pieces
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resort
slore
14 Godzilla
4 Whoppers
and King
5 Building
17 Tied up.
Kong
wing
20 Boxing
15l'oet John 6 ~ a one
wins
16 Nancy's
(zero)
· 21 Boot
spouse
7 Piano
feature
17 Val
piece
24 "You are
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8 Follower
here" map
19 Surveilof33
25 Like a
. lance job
Across
monk's
22 Pay-phone 9lmbibed
quarters
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11 Annie's
27 Beasl of
23 Fasl food
Daddy burden
drink
15 Twosome 28 Mortar26 Winnow·
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businesses
29 Chewed
down
32 Before tee
33 Gan.
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34 Spelunkers
36 Domino· or
Waller
37 Martini
garnish
38 Ceremonies
39 Chopped ·
!:m-++-+-1finely
40 Cherish
41 Cole and
Turner
.

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

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30 Shire of
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35 Times
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name
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DAILYCRYPTOQUOTFS-Here'e how to work II:

a .RIIIIdy Travta: Happy

T...... Randy Trevio, Roy
Rogers end lrllnds go on a
Montana cattle drive. (1 :00)
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POWER RESPOND S'IMPLY. TilEY I lAVE. NO MINDS
BUT THEIR OWN. - IVY COMf'TON-BURNETT

..

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..
Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

~

Ohio

BIG BEND ·Your Locally Owned,
Low Priced Supermarket

ALL THIS
WEEI···

SUPPORT
OUR
TROOPS
WITH
·PRAYER!

••

DOUBLI
MANUFACT-.11$
COUPONS

$4
.
99
RC COLA ..
DID RITE

Ohio Lottery
Pick3: 408
Pick-4: 1049
. Cards: 9-H; Q·C;
9-D; 4-S
Super Lotto
. 2-18-19-26-33-38
Kicker:899330

Georgetown .
rolls over ·
Providence ·
Page3

24

COTTAG_..c_ Buttermilk
$119
CHEESE
24 oz.
CAN

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•

Vol.41 . No.202

Baker: IRA apparently staged mortar attack
. LONDON (ili&gt;I)- In a failed wall, pOlice said.
·
.
.
De.spite stepped-u_P. security very deep," Scotland Yard
attempt to kill Prime Minister John
"This ~kless aaack appe!Ul! to since the swt of the gull crisis, the spokesman Stewan Goodwin said.
Ma~r 11nd his ~ar cabinet, su~t- be the work of the provisional IRA, terrorists were able 10 la~h three
Three people, including two
· ' ed Irish Republican Anny terronsts " Home Secretary Kenneth Baker mortar rounds from a wh1te Ford police officers on the diplomatic
· r~ three .mOI'ta! rounds Th~y told _the House of Com~ons. ~e van on Whitehall ~I. about 200 security squad, were hospitalized
at h1s official restdence at Downmg wd 11 was an attempt to kill MaJor yards froni 10 Dowrung Slreet, the for slight wounds Goodwin said.
, Street, a government official said.
and cabinet members-meetin~ with prime miniscer's home ami office, The officers rec~ived cuts and
. At least three people were · him at Downmg Street to discuss pOlice said.
bruises while a passerby suffered a
. slightly wounded in the daring day- the Persian Gulf war.
One round landed about 4S feet twisted llllk1e, he said.
· light aaaclc in central London that
There was no immediate claim behind No. 10 in a l!llfden 11nd two
The white v11n exploded after
· poli~ said had all the hallmarks.of of responsibility from the IRA but others struck the Foreign Office the mortars were fued but it was
· an IRA strike. Three mortar rounds , Baker said there was no apparent lawn, one of which detonated.
not known if anyone was inside.
. were fired, one of which exploded link between the attack and '·. ·" There was scorching to the Goodwin said the van had been left
: in a garden behind Downing·Street, . Britain's in:volveme.nt in the gulf rear wall of No: 10 and a bit of a next to a stall!e of Lord Mountbat'·
crater ... some ·feet across and not ten, who was killed l&gt;y an IRA
: shattering windows and scorching a · conflict

a

: ~OLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) He said he hopes for as few as ilame and pic~ when new chief
. Ohio colleges and universities need poss.ible 11nd that pay increases executive enters office.
· to tighten their belts and plan to dli already negotiated with public
"I view such operations as
a more efficient job, Gov. George employee unions will be honQred. wasteful lind unwarr11nted, espe·
Voinovich said Wednesday, adding I:towever, the governor indicated . cially considering the ·severe bud·
that some state · layoffs are· his 11dmionstration will bargain getary siiuation Ohio faces," the
inevitable.
toughly with the unions in the governor silid.
Former Gov . Richard Celeste 'future.
.
Voinovich said the state has
and the Legislature cut $271 mil- · • :'It's our job to get the very best more than 300,000 maps qn-hand
lion frorn the slate budget late lasi ·deal that we Clln for the people," with the fonner governor's picture
year and Voinovich slashed another · he said. .
·
on .them.
$127 million in January from the · · In · another money-saving
He is also urging the -state's
$12 billion annual budget. _:chan~e. Voinov ich ordered slate
Congressional delegation to work
Voin.ovich has told higl)er educa' agencies and departments to conmore closely together and delay ·
tion officials they will have to work '-tinue usin$ literature an_d other implementation of new Medicaid
with a 5 percent to 15 percent .cut • _published mformation they dis·
mandates for at least two years.
tribute with Celest~'s pictures on
Voinovich pushed that idea at a
.in the next budget.
"The issue is how can they do ' thein. State government has tradi·
conference of the nation's govermore with the money they have," tionally thrown out literature connors in Washington earlier this
the governor said at an afternoon - :;ta::;m:,:i:.:;ng~th:e;.:p::.;r.;;ev.:.;i;;:.o.;;us:..::,go:.v..;e_rn..;o_r'_s__w_eek~.--:--~-:':'...."':':'"7:'"
press conference. while adding he
.
_
.
saw no reason for tuition increases. ~ l:lmted. :steelworkers uruon memAbout a dozen c•taUons were isHis campaign goal of decreasing •·-.hers left jobless at RaV!l!l§Woodl trafsuedfi-c_thrisothmeoriTIVI_ ingau·~ •.Jr!IS8l~g
Ohio's tuiuon to the natioDal averAluminum Corp. slowed pant
"'"' '"'
age ·may have to be delayed, he
traffic today for the fourth u~e lh1s
. "It's not a violation of the law to
Sillf!•·Ohio tuitions ·are about one- . week to protest a contract dispute, drive by that pja,nt It's a publiC"
third higher than the national aver- . authorities said.
roadway. If you've got a replace·
age.
• About 75 cars were slowl1 driv- ment worker or a tractor trader
Asked if proposed departmental
ing in a circle on a state road l~d: going toward the plant, you have a
cuts will lead to the loss of jobs,
mg to tl_le plant today, .choking lead vehicle slow down to 1 or 2
Voinovich said, "Of course there , traffic. sa1d Sgt. OJ. Manin of the mllh," Martin said.
are going 10 be layoffs.''
· ~s~tat;;.e;.:po~h-ce_d_e_ta_c_hm_e_n_t.,.m_R_•;..pl..;ey;_.- - - - - - - - - - - - : - -

0

COFFEE

~. $489

PIE FILLING

. By MELINDA POWERS
Just days before the anticipated
arrival of the revised district plan,
citizens and members of the six
county Solid Waste District are still
uying 10 iron out communication
problems with the community.
At Tuesday evening's Athens.
Gallia, Hocking, Jackson, Meigs,
Vinton District Policy Committee
meetin~ in Jackson, members of
lhe audience including four MACE
representatives, called for an
increased dissemination of information about the plan.
"The policy board is just not
getting the message across," s;Ud
Bobbie Holzer. member of MACE.
"Members of the community just
don'i lmow what's going on.v

SLI.

lAG
25 LB. BAG ~4.89

•

SHOWBOAT

LIBBY PEACHES

PORK &amp; BEANS

311.99(
3 MINUTE BIANb

OATMEAL ·

99(

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POTATO
CHIPS

IIOZ.$

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..

Accident damage( cqr
The Meigs County Sheriffs Dej)arunent investigated an auto
aq:ident at Five Points on Wednes&lt;laj'·evening.
According 10 a deplllll1lent news :release, Rhett A. Milhoan, Flatwoods 8oad, was backing at the esrablispment when he backed into
a 1990 Buick owned by William L: Wi!l of Pomeroy that was'
parked behind him.
,
.
No damage was sustained by Milhoan 's truck, and light damage
was reported to Will's car.
;_, ,'
•

"But suggestions and amendments·
to the plan from the public must be
considered by the policy committee.''
Audience members were
encouraged to stay in contact with
their respective newspapers.
In other business, the committee
voted to implement an advisory
council for the director's use. One
representative appointed by the
County Commissioners from each
county wiU meet with Wilson each

week.

Meetings with the dit~tor wi!l
begin as soon as the disUJCt plan IS
ratified.

Desert Storm
messages
sought ·

The Daily Sentinel is requesting
families of all Meigs County service men and women who are currently serving in ~ration Desert
S10nn, to either mall or bring into
the office a photograph of the service person for future publication. .
In additon to the photograph,
.. ...'
The Daily Sentinel requests infor'
mation including the person's full
name, nickname, address and par- .
The Meigs County Senior Citizens Dance Club will hold a round
ents' names. Those bringing in
and square dance on Friday at the .centc~ from 8 p.m. to II p._m. .
Music will be provided by Happy Hollow Boys of Athens. Bnng '
photographs should also include a
telephone
number in the event of
snacks for the snack table.
; •
questi(lns from the staff preparing
the supplement All photos must be
submitted by Thursday, Feb. 14, to
be included.
.
The pictures dd information
Howard Shawn Smith, Parkers· · for I988· t~ be approximately will be used· in a special supple·burg, former area resident, was $82,500 w11h a tax owing of ment 10 pay tribute to those serving
sentenced to three years imprison: approximately $26,700 from his in the Middle East. A copy of the
ment for one coWlt of failure to file marijuana sales.
supplement will th~n be. mailed
his 1988 federal tax return and one · :· Smith's three year sentence is 10 free of charge to each service m11n
count of distributing marijuana ' . run concurrently with .a state sen- or woman whose photo appears in
A b1U of lhformauon was filed , . ~nee-of two years which he is curtile supplement It will be published
on Smithm August, 1990, charging, rently serving on other charges . in February.
him with two counts. In November, -Upon completion of his imprison· The address to which photos or
he appeared before Federal Judge ment,.Smith was sentenced to an · infarmation should be mailed or
Charles H. Haden, II and pled . a~diJional three years supervised
brought is The Daily Sentinel, 111
guilty 10 both counts. An investiga~ .. probation and ordered 10 pay a $75
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 457.69.
tion by IRS special agents deter- · criminal assessment
Information can not be tak:en over
minP.tl Smith'c; nnrP.TY\+tl"t1 in,.nmp ,
•L - • · ' · -\.. - - ..

.

CHASE &amp; SANBORN

COFFEE

bombin -1979.
·
.
"H was driven to the junction
and abandoned,'' . the S~otland
Yard spokesman smd, adding tllat
~Y ~onds elapsed between the
t1me 11 stopped and the mortars
~ere ~ire~. He said police were
mvesugaung reports two people
were seen running away moments
before the attacks began.
Smoke from the burning van
bUlowcd up and mixed with snow
falling in Britain's worst winter
storm in four years. The .entire
Whitehall area, the government

off~ce district, was sealed off and
Jll&gt;lice ,searched for other unexplod-

ed dev1ces._
.
. ")t the Ume of the attack, MaJOr
was meeting w~th the foreign ll;Rd
defense secretaries 11nd other sen•or
official~ ~ his War Cabinet to discuss Bnush effons to secure rm11ncia! contributions for its role in the
war agamst Iraq.
. After the blast, Major said, "I
think we'd better start 'again some. where else," according to a Downing Street spokeswoman.

Phone system approved by
Meigs County Co_mmissioners
By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Spending for a new phooe system in the Meigs County Probate
Coun was approved at Wednesday
afternoon's regular meeting of the
Meigs County Commissioners.
The purchase of the new system
for the court was approved yester·
day, following a cost-saving proposal presented to the board by.
Judge Roben Buck. Currently, the

court is paying $83.58 per month
. for phone rental. The court yester·
day granted Buck permission to
purchase five phones at a cost of. \
$109.95 each, eliminating the
monthly rent payments, and in tum
paying for the purchase in saved ·
rent in a matter of a few months.
-Meigs County Engineer Phil
Robens discussed existing wejght
limits and speed limits in the Horse
Cave area, where heavy timbering .
··now underway. Both Roberts and

the commissioners expressed concern with potential damage to
county-owned and maintained
roads due to the increased trafrlC on
those roads.
·
Commissioners also discussed
the status of Rocksprings Cemet,ery
Road; which has aaparently been
renamed since the road reverted to
the control of Salisbury Township.
The commissioners explained that
if the name of the road was
(Continued on Page 12)

Support ·.

Sunday
. scltedtile
The schedule of activities for
"Suppon Silitday: Operation Feed
besen Stonn" at the Locomotion
Dance Hall on Mechanic Street in
Pomeroy has been announced.
The event, which will be held
from noon to 6 p.m. on Sunday,
will feature a variety of entertainment which is free to the public.
However, according to Iva Sission,
organizer for the event, donations
will be accepted. All donations
given at the event will be used to
send food to personnel serving in
the. Gulf War with ' Operation
Desert Storm.
Support Sunday Schedule
NOOII· Power Ex!J'eSS. '
12:15 p.m. - The Rainbow.Cloggers.
12:30 p.m. - Virgil McClain and
the Mills Brothers. .
1 p.m. - Rap Dancers, •
1:15 P..m. - Dance routines from
Quickel s Dance Srudio. _
1:30 p.m. -Silver Wings.
2 p.m . • J11n 11nd Kathy, a gospel
group.
2:30p.m. - The Midnight Cloggers.
3 p.m. - To be announced.
3:30p.m. - Gabriel's Quartet
4 p.m. - Rarely Herd, a bluegrass group.
.
4:30p.m. -The Gallia Twirlers.
5 p.m. - The Madrigals of Gallia
Academy, a choral group.
S:30 p.m. - To be announced.
In addition to all of the entertainment, radio station 102 from
(Continued on Page 12)

lfi!Dnl:t_!r firemen were
· lale ,Tuetday nlgllt to
u electrle pole which
tarred. The firemen llllisted
~.c~·ew of-power company
jiiroble•. (Pidure lly Den-

.

Dance scheduled

90Z.$.2 99
JAI

.

Smith to.serve..three years

MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE

'

DlfT OR REG.

PEPSI COLA
•"" .

- . ·The policy committee admitted
'tO· having communication problems, pointing out lack of media
cov~rage. However. internal com'rtmnication was also lacking. One
· 'member of the policy committee
. had yet 10 receive a copy of the district plan - a document that had
sent to the Ohio Environmental ~otection Agency late last year.
· Lance Wilson, newly appomted
director of the district, told. the
-audience that pubhc heanngs
would be scheduled as soon as
reVisions on ·the plan were received
.. fium tl\e EPA. .
"We really have no idea what
revisti&gt;ns will be required or neces~ -from the EPA,"_Wilson said.

Local briefs------___,

:9. 9&lt;
INSTANT

01

Waste policy comtnittee, public lack
cQmmun}cation, MACE member says

(

~9

20-21
OZ.CANs7

2 Soctiona. 1 2 Pea•• 25 Canto
A Multimedia fne. New.eper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, February 7, 1991

Copyrighted 1 f91

·Colleges face _tightened budgets

lUCKY LEAF

-l -

•

••

· FOODLAND

Cleari.ng tonight. Low in
• mid 20s. Friday, sunny.

99&lt;

. .

..

'

~

'

school biiS sent ll boxes ol food to tile troops as
well 115 reading material and numerous ltt.ten.
Pictured, 1-r, are Alliloll WUIIIIII, Laura Arlx,
Andrew Vanee, Kenton WUU11115011, Joeb Wandling, Devin Curfman, Brian Young and Jt~~t·
. DIUoo. I .
·'

PAINT A YELLOW RIBBON • The slllth
grade students of Debbie Lowery at HarrisoDvlUe Elementary painted yeUow ribbons on
all ollbt scllool windows lo show support or lhe
troops serving in Operation Desert Storm. The
1

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