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Page-08--Sunday Times-Senunel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Point Pleasant,

Stock...
Continued from paae D-1
have spent ~h 10 lteep the market from going higher.'' ·
He also said optimism .about the
economy brougllt on by the recent
drop in inrcrest rates has been an
important source of fuel for.the
rally, as has"the feeling that the
Mideast war will end relatively

soon..

MYSTERY FARM - .This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Gallia Water Conservation .
District, Is located somewhere In Gallla County.
Individuals wishing to participate In the weekly
contest may do .so by guessing the .farm's owner.
.Just mall, or drop off your guess to the Galllpolis
Dally Tribune,' 825 Third Ave., GaiHpolis, Ohio,
411631, or the Dally Sentinel, Ul Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win a S5 cash

Meigs County
Agent's Corner

prize I rom the Ohio Valley Publillhlns Co. Leave
. your name, address and telephone nwnber with
your card or letter. No telephone calls will be
accepted. All coratest entrlea should be hirned In to
the newspaper office by 4 p.m; each Wednesday.
In c~ of a tie, the winner will be chosen by
lottery. Next week, a Meigs Couaty farm will be
featured by the Meigs SoU and Water Conservation District.

Basic questions addressed on
purchasing computer system

By John C. Rice
Co. Ext. Agent,
Agriculture

. &lt;

wv

"But I never thought the market
would do this, and I don't know
anybody else who did," he said.
However, Alfred Goldman, market Sll'1Ue$iSt at A.G. Edwards &amp;
Sons Inc. m.St.. Louis,-said he was
not surprised by what the .market
1
has been doing these diys.
"This is just a continuation of ·
the bull market that started on OcL
11, 1990," he said, noti-ng the
Dow's low close last year of
2365.10.
.
. "This is a full-fledged bull market, and the word is lliW!y getting
around 10 the bears that som¢nng
serious on thC upside is going Qll,"
he said. "It's a fei-.ding frenzy with ·
panic buying by the bears who
have been fighting the miKkeL''
l.f this is still a best market,
Goldman said, it WOUld have. 10 be
the most profitable one he has ever
been part of: "This bull.market is
doing what every ·one classically
does - drives the bears crazy till
they can't stand the pain any

February 10, 11191':;:

Seedling~ •..

Continued trom:page D·l

.

In addition to these packets we

' ..--.:

designed to attract b-utterflies to :::
your garden and the packets cover r·:
a 250 square foot area.
.~
.For information on packets sizes :.
and costs, please contact the Oallill t·
SWCD office at 529 Jackson Pike, ""
Room 308-C or call 446-8687 ,.;
Orders must be paid for in ldvanc:e ::
and plaCed before Marth 18, with •·
picll;-up dales planned for Marth 28 ;
and ·29. Start planning for your ~
spring planting now.
::

will have White, Scotch, and Austrian Pine, and Colorado Blue
Spruce. The Hybrid Poplar is
offered again this y~.
A Fruit Tree Packet with four
trees is offered which contains four
apples, two Wealthy and two
Northern Spy.
~
Crownvetch seed packets and
Myrtle leads for ground cover. are
available.
.
. !be Willlflower Jl!ICkcts are

Ohio Lottery
··Meigs wins
first wrestling
championship

•

Page3

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\

TUB RAILS getting in ond out ot bllthtub
Stendllrd mod~ lito modern tubo.
chrome finloh. oMmbled 8'1.1'' lligh •

z Sectlono, 12 Pogea

Vol. 41 ,'No. 204
Cop.,.hted 1991

Allies de-~troy four more
mobile Scud launchers

SE~T

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IACI FOR SHOWER ON TUB

COitlplintltr lUll ,..._.
may only want data to. do your must be backed up by a use~· s
em .... ...., proot.
tax return. But once all the data manual that explains how to use
ltro.g stUI'IIty ..cr_
Jl:" ...
COnl1rucUon
are entered, you may want to get the program aDd has examples of more.n.
.,.......wolttllftgend
typical
entrll!s,
such
as
pay.
data by individual enter.prlses,
....,..Nfatyln~d
On the trading floor this week,
out of n.b. Moldd ~·
POMEROY - Is there a
by employees, prepare a Balance ments on loans and statements
.,.,....-..
General Motors - despite
- . ltMvydury .. ~
simple computer program that Sheet or accrual Income State· with multiple purchases. Look
announcingrestructuring
moves
and
chnwne
pl..:~ legs
. will ·keep my records like the
ment, etc. Not every program through the manual. Is It readawith nOft·llip rubt.r
a
big
cut.
in
its
quarterly
dividend
IUCtiOn , ....
farm account books? While there
ble to you? Does It allow you to · - was the most active ISSue, up 1
will allow for such growth.
A. SAFID WITH SEAT
Is no program that mirrors the
start with a simple set of records
If you know you want to greatly
1/1!
to
37
1/4.
WITH lACK
Ohio Farm Account Boo, many expand J:'OUr use of the computer and · expand? Is there a good
Philip
Morris
followed,
up
2
3/8
B.
SAETliATH
S£1
.
can duplicate It . Today there are over time, It may be easier to Index? ·
NO lACK lEST .
10 59, 1/4. Citi~ was third, up l
several commercial software expand wUhln a syStem, than to · Hardware ·- Once .you've
1/8 to 14 3/4.
.·
'
programs that can do an excel- purchase another .system. . .
selected the software programs
. The )\lqtional Association of
lent Job of recording basic
.2) The system should be "user ·you wan) .to, buy, see wha,t
Securities
Dealers composite index
Phone 446,2206
·l)lcome and expepse data for
friendly". Many computer pro- hardware (computer) ·they resurged
19
.II
to
end
the
week
at
666
Jackson
Pike · Gallipolis. Ohio
farmers, plus quickly summariz- grams available today are menu commend. A common purchase
436.80.
Ing and preparing reports such driven and have "Help Screens" toclay Is an IBM compatible
as data for Schedule F and cash that lead you lhrough the process computer with a 286 processor, a
flows.
· of e11terln~ data and generating 3.5 Inch fioppy drive, and a 40
This article addresses some of reports. I also like the ab!Uty to meg hard drive. Such acomputer
the basic questions you should
either show the report on screen can be purchaSed for around
consider In selecting a computer or print It onto paper. This option $1700. A dox matrix printer can
record-keeping system. By ,com- saves a lot of paper when you be purchased for under $200. This
puter record keeping system, · I only want toseeafewnumbersor combination will do .an acceptaInclude both the hardware (com- · you are not sure ·u you've . ble Jol&gt; and will bandle both data
puter and printer) and the selected the right report.
a!ld programs .for mo$ t farms for
many year. ·
software (CQmpu ter programs
3) Accounting knowledge
that perform various tasks). This should not be necessary to use the .'
Next week, some farm ac·
article will mainly emphasize sy~tem. The "Help Screens" counting software. ·
The New Symbol For Quality
software considerations.
In America.
iiiiiiii~liiiii~iii
Some Initial Considerations It this Is.· your 'initial use of
computers, don't start with a
complex system or extensive set
of data needs. Many people have
gotten discouraged and aban..
. doned the com11uter, simply
because they tried to do too
much, too fast. Start with a
. simple system, and get comforta. ble with It before Investing a lot of .
money In hardware and
software.
.
Three basic considerations
are: 1) The system should record
all operations of the farm, with
Rock of Age. offel'8 you a choice of 8 different colored
room for expansion. Most acgranites.
Whatever your requirement• may be, complete
' counting software, even the $50
sati1faction.la
a1111red whh Rock of Agel.
·
variety, will handle a large
Winter Houl'8: Open Fridly 9:00 a.m. 'til 4:00 p.m. .
number of entries, especially If
Other Houl'8 by Appointmant-193-8688 or 448-2327
you have a computer with a hard
disk. Expansion may be add!·
SAUNDE~S
tlonal enterprises , but Is more
apt to be additional forms and
352 Third Awe..
Ph. 446·2317
G..llpaHs, ON.
types of reports. Initially you

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199l .BUICK.

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MONUMENTS

'90.PARK AVENUES
BALANCE OF 36150 WARRANTY

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Th.u's 110( possiblr.of courst. Bur )W '·'"work with
who ~nd all ct,&amp;oir 1inx doing wtiiu'5 brsc: for you.
Like 1hc pruple ill Ctntroal Trtist. Ftc:lrtltC'omminN 10.
gi\·ins yuu prucb:n and !ilr\'icts wirh dininct ad\•anta~n..
They c:~n m~kr :.1 rtlll fin~tiKialdift'crmc:c in yOUr lift-.
And gi\'t you rhc winningedgr.
ba nk~r~

.

ccamWork.
That's whr lliYrn~d when mr co .~&lt;:h ~ht in a
piB)'. Or a rcc&amp;&lt;ivtt told me ht t.:oukl bt;u his man dttp. ,
Just like: llisrtn today when my Ccnm•l Tru~r banker rtfls
me I ~hould handle my fimmcc::t diffrrm!ly.
,,

MRIT'SkfiiiAO.li11UIWDlH.
But 1ha1's ~II:.)' tQ !iOI\'C,
'just call or stop b)' ""•' c~rr;~~l Trust
off.cc.
'
It won'1 t•lc.c ~ loo1 to find uut whitt I've k~· n
for a lona time. Wilen you·~ reamed up with Ccnmd
Trust, you juM C'lln't be ~~1 .

· Toclily, lhr only 'fo'aY to kttp up wi1h all t~ ch&lt;~ngiQ8
Fin 11 ncial op(tom; ism bccOOI(' a full-time banker.

CENTRAL TRLST

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$7.700

Only 53,000 Low Miles , .
C::hestnut bi'QWn finish, new Buick trade-In

WAS'9900

Let's Talk About
This Quality Car!

rilht bank.

it cornn ro banldng.

,

$12 ·900

I( you·~ flndint~ ir m&lt;Wdiff~uk co.:opc with ~II tile
pm.surn and oplion5 in your fin~ncild
life, ~uybc ruu 'ju.r: ha\'Cn'r found the

Yoo lllr'E IIL&amp;rnll 11111 EXPDITS.
. E\t'rything was a lot ~implcr when I was'growing up in
otuo. Norurally, all of thar has changtd. Esp&lt;cially wlo.o

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APtfCBANK

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SM·ITH BUICK-PONTIAC
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

1900 EASTERN AVENUE
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.Effective cleanup of weapons
plants unlikely, study says
WASHINGTON (UP!) . Despite extensive cleanup plans,
the Enetgy
The cleanup effort is headed for
ttouble because the dePartment has
not established credibility with the
· public, does not have adequate
cleanup technology or personnel
and has not done the careful health
risk assessments needed 10 ensure
it focuses on the most threatening
contamination problems, said analY.sts with the "congressional OffiCe
ofTechnology AssessmenL
In a report summarizing a yearlong assessment of the cleanup prolfB!II, the OTA said Congress had
tctirrake ~or, P,9!1CY, chR!Iges 10
get the massive 'eleallup progratn

on the right track. The report was years.
"The OTA report adds indepenscbeduled for release Monday but
advance copies were made avail· dent confirmation of the fact that
this is a problem of enormous pro· able 10 reporters.
•
· "OTA finds that effective portions and will require yet
.cleanup of the weapons complex in unavailable technnlogr and trained
the nex( several decades is unlikely · pe~onnel to resolve It," Watlcins
and that significant policy initia- said in a statement
lives are required if those prospects
Watlcins did not comment on the
are to be improved," concluded the repOrt's findings that, despite his
report. entitled "Comflex Cleanup: efforts 10 improve environmental
The Environmenta Legacr of practiCes at the weapons plants, the
department still does not enjoy
Nuclear Weapons Production.'
· Despite the harsh criticism, public conftdence.
Energy Secretary James Watlcins
The OTA cited that lack of consaid he welcomed the OTA study fidence in recommending Congress
because it underlined many of the give anoth_er agency power to regu·sam-e CO!lcern' expressed liy 1~ 11\l.l'l!dioactive wasre managedepartment officials in recent ment atiiv'ities at the weapons
plan~;S.

Cheney.says still pl~nty of
targets ,left for allied warplanes
"WE SUPPORT OUR TROOPS" • The
names of more than 200 service men and women
from Meigs County serving in Operation Desert
Storm appear on· this banne~ which hangs in The
Locomotion on Mechanic S~ in Pomen&gt;}'. The
baliner was made in conjunction with the "Upela-

tion Feed Desert Storm" support rally held there
Sunday. Approximately 300 people attended 'the
benefit, under the orgaruzation of Iva Sisson, which
provided a variety of entertainment throughout the
afternoon.

PRESENTING THE COLORS • The West
Virginia National Guard presenred the colors &lt;lur·
ing Sunday's support rally for the tl'oo!JS at The
. Locomotion in Pomeroy. The .benefit, "Operation

Feed Desert Storm," wu beld j) raiJe money that
will be used 10 send care packages 10 men and
~omen from Meigs County serving with Operation
Desert Storm in the Gulf War.

Local Executive's. Carl

'87 PARK AVENUE
'

Light Blue
· Experience Buick QuaiHy and Drlveablllty

WAS'9$00

! ,.. 'L.

Ruby red finish with aluminum Wheels,
tully loaded.

RETJtiCETJTfJ

'87 PARK AVENUE
\t_lucky enough to
won il ftM football g:unesO'o'tr tht
~ars . Whether it wa~ in high ~hool.
A&lt; Annapolis. Or for oht Dallas
Cow hoy•.
Bur I didn't do it alone. It roal:

,·1'

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Allied · forces, meanwhile,
Saudi capitaL
.
pressed
.their intense bombing cam.
"I personally anticipated som\l"
paign
against
Iraqi targets, flying
thing would happen Saturday
nigllt," the officer said. "But I'm . 2,800 aerial missions during the
beginning to believe that we have · 24-hour period and bringing to
degrdaded him so badly now that 60,000 the number of sorties flown
he might be incapable of picking in the Persian Gulf war.
·The high rate of sor\ies against a
his nighL"
The last time lnlqis fired a scud wide range of Iraqi installations .
at Riyadh was Thursday night, the suggests that a ground battle with
day before Cheney and Joint Chiefs Iraqi troops may still be weeks off.
· In the war zone, many expect
of Staff Chairman Colin Powell
arrived. The missile. was.~suoyed the land attack will start soon. Con. by a U.S.-made Pattiot rniSSile.
Continu~d lin page 12

WASHINGTON (UPI) While Defense Secretary Diet
Cheney dismissed an indefinite
extension 10 the alliod air campaign
' in the Persian Gulf war, U.S. military officials Sunday insisted
"there are plenty of targets" left
for ccalition warplAnes.
·
Cheney. and Gen..colin Powell,
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
S'taff, wrapped up meetings with
· allied military leaders in Sa11di
Arabia and prepared 10 meet with
President BuSh Monday to recom·
mend the next steps in the war 10
liberate Kuwait from Ir~~qi forces.
The session could go a long way
toward determining the timing of a
possible full-scale ground assault
by allied forces.
· "Some have suggested that we
could contiilue the air campaign for
six.to 12 months or indefinitely,"
Cheney said during a news conference in the Saudi capital of Riyadh.
"I think there's a limit to how long
we can dO that usefully."
"There's a point of diminishing
returns," Cheney said. "When
you've struck all the targets you

Despite 3 1/2 weeks of an
can strike from the air, when
you've done all you can 10 limit the intensive air assault that has
resupply (ability of Iraqi forces),
involvod about 59,000 air missions
when you've destroyed all the over Iraq and Kuwait, Neal said the
armor and artillery that you can get so-called Kuwait theater of operaout from the air, then you might tions remains "a target-rich envithen have to' use other forces in ronmenL''
order to achieve your objectives.'' ·
"We're not actively searching
Cheney and Powell refused to out the baalefaeld for (new) targets,
tip their hand on what advice they " Neal said. "There are Plcl!ty of
would give Bush.
tar~ets and I don't anticipate that
The war on Sad dam's forces
we II run into a shortage of targets
almost exclusively has involved air in the near lenn."
·
bombardment and naval shelling of
Neal did not say how long he
Iraqi military targets. A ground war believed the air campaign would
10 push dug-in Iraqi forces out or remain fruitful.
Kuwait is likely to result in large
. "I thinlc the capability of U.S.
numbers of casualties on both sides air power to do damage to Saddam
and could lead to Saddam HusHussein's forces is still consider·
sein's use of chemical or biological able and I think it will continue,"
weapons for the first time in the Cheney said. "But let me empliawar.
sizci ... we don't see a )loint in the
Congrc:ssiomtl leaders of both campaign when you stop using air
panies are urging Bush not 10 rush power. llven when we move to the
miO a full-scale land campaign.
next phase of the campaign, even
Marine Brig; Gen. Richard Neal,
when you would be$in ground
briefing reporters in Riyahd, indi- operauo~ or amphibious operacated that the allied forces had not tions, y~ would also want to conyet reached the point of diminishtinue the·air campaign simultaneIng returns.
ou~y."

WAS 114,900

.'

"A Lor~ Clw&amp;D SIC liSE DAYs." ·

•'I

1:

RIYADH, Sapdi Arabia (UPI)
~u.s. mililary offic:ia1s said Monday American pilots destroyed up
10 four mobile Scud launchers and
damaged a fifth one in eastern and
western Iraq during the past 24
. hours.
Olie high-ranking U.S. officer
who asked not to be identified
expressed surprise that Jnlqi leader
Saddam Hussein did not auempt to
launch a Scud missile t9ward
Riyadh during Secretary of
·Defense Dick Cheney's visit to the

'89 PARK AVE

Choose From "3" Factory Progtam
Lu)Cury Parle Avenues

Local Executive's car

S,H F.

. 1

· LARGE SELECTION

STANLEY A.

SJr .J ar ,

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'

SKYLARK SEDAN .

·B UICK'

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25 Conti

A Muttimedll Inc. Newtp1per

11"wide.

• SIDt

Low in 30s tonight Snow
flurries Tuesday.

•

--·

ETY .AIDS

RAISED TOILU

Pick 3:054
Pick 4: 7940
Cards7·H;9-C;
~J.D; 2-S
Super Lotto: ·
6,7,17.23,25,26
Kicker:359532

(614) 446-2282

•

•

Bad fuse reason bomb did not
go off last we_ek in Norfolk _
NORFOLK, Va. (UP!) - An
aaempt to blow up a cbernical stor·
age complex last weelt failed only
because of a bad fuse on one cxplo. sive device, and the plot was aimed
at collecting million- of oollars in
insllllUICe rnoney, the FBI says.
· Feclc® authOrities said they had
. arrested three men and charged
; them wiih planting six pipe bombs
; on two storage tlll1b at Allied Ter. minals Inc. · ~'
The attempted bombinalast
· Monday occurred leas than 10
· miles from the country •s tara est
~ Navy base and initially had
protnpled fean 'of taroriam 1iDked
. 10 tbe Pmian Gulf war. Thousands
·· : of 111a residents bid to be eva:uat-

,.

ed while !i.e bombs wae ranovocl.
"This joint federal and state
investigation has determined that
this incident was apparently not
related to terrorist activitr, or to any
terrorist investigation, ' said W.
Lane Crocker Jr., special agent in
charge of the Norfolk FBI OCftcC.. '
Investigators determined one
explosive device, riued 10 I link
containing 500,000 gallons or
volatile methanol, "apparently
. failed 10 delooa~ only because .of a
faulty fuse," authorities Slid in an
affidavit flied in U.S. Diltrict Court
on Saturday.
·
One of the tanks Was 1cascd by a
company with financial problems,
and the conspirators allegedly
·~

.
I

sought to gain $2) million in
insurance l"ocecds• Crocker said.
Authonties took two men mto
custody in Phoenix, Ariz., on Fri·
Clay night and atrested the third suspect Saturday In Ellic:qU City, Md.
The three were chstged .with conspiracy to commit a bombln• in
furtherance of a mail· and wtre·
fraud~-

Authorities identified them as:

C. Edward Gresham; 57, of E11imtt

City, Md., owner of AppJiod Tech- ·
nology Inc.; Joseph Wayne Openshaw, 36, of SL John's, Ariz., aftil·
iated with I in Dou Co. of Hong
Kong; and Cecil Ross, 31, of Olendale, Ariz .

. -- ...

~~

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CONSULTANT VISITS • Consultant
Michael Loldoa speat
118.7 on Saturclly w1t11
lhree tra1tees of lbe Middleport Arts Council.
L•doe Is U llldependtnt teac.. q COIIIaiiiDt
8110Ciated wltll tbe Obio Artl Coalldl, worldna
wltb tbe Minority Arll l'rvaiiW, Tbe pi'Oifm's
prlmar.J parpou, ac~ordlna tn London, Is to
empower CJI'IIIIizltioDI like tbe Mlclclleport,.Arts

*

~-

Cnundl wlllt 011 '"tJ...., 1W llllmltlwea.
1.-1o11 worb ~ w1t11 t11e MiddlepOrt.
Artl Coundl, wldeli pr ides 1111 ucl callural
PJ'OII'IIIII to Middleport ud Melp C..ty resimslon on SabU'da.J - , tdenll. Plttw eel 1t

*

r, Ma11 W'-t, Lndoa, Janette TlloJDal and
S1118D Biller. Tile IJ'OIIP met 11 tbe Middleport
bollle or 'I'bollu.
.

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�•
Monday, February 11,1991

,C ommentary

•

••

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVQTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.·MASON AREA

.

IIJh .

~m:s~

~~

........_.....-.- . ~ c:~ ,=

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

.

.

·

lhanked him for "volunleering" 1,0
play.
Barkley was ably backed by Jorday. Charles B1rkley made the dan, who made his All-Siar homemosl d his afternoon.
coming 1.0 Norlh Carolina a specThe Pbiladelphia 76ers forward lacular one. The Chicago Bulls
was named Most Valuable Pla~er guard finished with· 26 points, five
of the NBA All-Siar Game, leading rebounds, five assists arid IWO
the East 1.0 a 116-114 victory over steals.
the West. He finished with 22
The Eas1 led 116-114 wilh 23
rebounds ud 17 poiniS ·- his 22 . seconds remaining when Bukley
rebounds lhe most in an All-Star was tied up by David Robinson.
Game since W'lil Cbamberlain had The Easllosl possession on the
the same number in 1967.
jump ball and the West called timeBartley is recovering from a oul wilh 15.5 seconds left
fool and ankle injury and said
R:obinson lobbed a pass ou1 to
· before the game be didn'l want to Kevin Johnson, who lo(ted a tlute•
play. NBA offiCials ordered him 10 point shol from lhe righl side with
participate.
six seconds lefl. The polential
"I am glad I came here now," game- winning shot appeared on
Barkley said. "Michael (Jordan) target but teammate Karl Malone
did a really good job of giving me inex~licably inlerfered wilh lhe .
the ball today: I wanted lo come ball. The East iilbounded and Jorout and play as hard as I could .. dan ran out lhe clock.
Hopefully, this ITOphy will give me .
"I'd bet money lhal shot was
some extra momentum for lhe rest going in," Johnson said. "We
of the season."
would have tied the gam~. There's
NBA Commissioner David no doubl in lily mind. II looked
Slem was not about to let Barkley good."
· ·
off the hook when he presenled
Teammale Magic Johnson
him wilh his MVP uophy on lhe agreed.
:
.
''From my poinl, il looked like
floor of the Chulotle Coliseum.
The commissioner sarcastically it was aoing In," he said. "I was

CHARLOTI'E, N.C. (UPI}-

EPA keeps deadly information -t~ itself----=!~=-J•_t..~·--_"·_•_o.~~_J~__,
··

The Daily Sentinel

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Gen.eral )lfanager

PAT WHITEHEAD
As81stant Publls!M!r/Controller

•

A MEMBER of The United Press Intern~ tiona!, Inland Dally Pres s
Association a nd the American Newspa~r Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less Ulan 300
words lon~. All letters are subject to editing and must be sl~ed with
. name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be pub. Ushed. Letters should be ln. ~ood taste, addressing Issues, not personal!·
· ties.

.

Fixing a.constitution~l goof.

WASHINOTON -'The Environmental ProteCtion Agency's habit
ofkeeping dirly secrets to iiSelf
could prove deadly in several communities across the nation.
Government investigative
reports we have obtained show
widespread lapses in lhe EPA's
handling of lhe buned herbicide
Dinotleb. There are huge stockpiles
of the cbemical si8Shed around lhe
country wallins for the EPA 10 dispose of them. And some of those
stockpiles ~;~re lealdng, unbe'knownsl to the emergency planners
in the cities and slates where lhe
chemical is stored.
In Goldsboro, N.C., nearly
32;000 gallons of Dinoseb are
slored al a warehouse near the
Neuse River. In 1989, the EPA
inspector general cbecked the sire
and found some conlainers were
·rusted and leaking, taking the risk
of piiisoning lhe groundwatu that

.

ByARNOLDSAWISLAK
UPI Senior llditor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - It is for good reason that we hold the men
who wrote the Constitution in considerable awe, but in at least one
. respect they goofed.
·
.
That was on the subject of pay for members of Congress. They tried
to avoid controversy on the issue and instead created a never-ending
conflict thai now has resulted in an absurd situation.
The framers of lhe Constitution took care in designing the presidency to make sure ttuu the issue of compensation would not cause political problems. They simply prohibited any change in a president's pay
- up or down - during any term of office.
This had two advanlilges. First, il prevented Congress from trying 1,0
either punish or reward a sitting president for his conduct or the office.
Second, and perhaps more imponant; it gave the voters every four
years the sure knowledge what lhey woul!l be paying the person lhey
were electing president
'
But when the framers came to provide for lhe pay of members of
Congress, they made no mention of changing compensation in lhe mid- .
die of terms, perhaps because senators have SIX·year terms and represenlatives two-year terms.
.
If they had app,lied lhe same. resaiction on midterm salary changes
to Congress, it would have meanl lhat any change in congressional pay
to take effect after the nexl election would affect lhe entire House of
Representatives bul only one-lhird of the Senate, since two-lhirds of
the senators always have two or four years left 10 serve at lhe lime of
each election.
The framers may have thouglil giving lhe whole House but only
one- third of lhe Senate pay increases or cuts would have caused chaos,
and perhaps lhey had a peint Bul such a sib,!alion could not have been
100 much worse lhan what we have now.
Today, lhe salary of the 435 House members is $125,100 a year, but
lhe 100 members oflhe Senate get only $101,400. However, senators
are pennitted to accept a limited amount of fees for making speccbe~
before private groups. House memben may not accept such fees.
On top of lhat, some of the House members who voted againsl lhe
pay raise ip November 1989 vowed not to accept the increase even if it
· were approved. The Cilpitol Hill newspaper Roll Call checked back
: recently and found lhat at least 36 of lhe 147 members who voted .
•'no ~· on the pay raise were reiiJming the exira money to lhe government or sending iii.O charily.
So whal we have is one pay level for the Senate and another for the
.House, although not all of the memben there are collecting il. Thai
·means there now m lhree differenl salaries being paid for the same
work on Capitol Hill, and that sure looks like chaos from here.
.
II would have been easy for lhe framers 1.0 put the same provision on
Pity the poor oil companies.
congressional pay changes as they did on presidential compensation.
Everylime lhey 1urn around, il
There even was a proposed constitutional amendmenl (an unratified
seems, they've gol uother public
addition to the Bill Of Rights) 1.0 apply lhe presidential restriction to
relations problem. Now it's huge
Congress and someone in:v,~ably reintroduces in every'session.
profits. Will their troubles never
To date, lhe amendment never has gone anywhere. Maybe the
cease? .
absurd situation Congress now finds itself in will give il new impeiUs
Consider their awful situation.
!his session.
Since Iraq invaded Kuwail on Au~.
2, lhey have been l1:ying 10 explain
why gasoline prices sho1 up e&amp;(:h
time Saddam Hussein belched indeed, 44 seconds aftrr tJK:h burJ.I.
Re: lost dog
on average. At one poinl in the' en,I live on Mulberry Avenue in · find her. My 1wo girls came and we sis, by my count, lhey had lhoughl
Pomeroy. I lei my little dog out and searched again, knocked on doors.
up 26 different explanalions for
she disappeared. She is sick, 16 Then they went to lhe vet clinic
!his purely natural phenomenon.
years old, starving herself and only and asked if they knew anylhing.
Oh, I know what you're lhinkstaned 10 eat few days before. They said thai."on this sam~ aftu· ing. You're wondering why the Old
About a week ago, her hips starting noon some one had called and said Curmudgeon had a change of heart.
giving her !rouble. I searched lhey had a dog (she lhoughl lhey I was the one, aftrr all, who came
everywhere she could have gouen said it was a neighbor's dog) and 11 up the acronym APPOCS, which
10. Knocked on doors. One penon
had a bad hip and asked if anylhing slands for Arroganl, Predatory,
said she seen it She looked bad, I could be done. I later called to hear Price-Goughing Oil Companies
l:now. but we love her and lake aboul .lhe phone call for myself. I (pronounced "A Pox").
c.eof.ber.
was told lhe same thing, Now, I
The fact is, I still think much of
,... • Againsl what we wanted, we believe someon has her. I believe !heir early PR smells like methane.
;were going to try and put her 10 maybe they lhought she was mis~Jeep - SOON. She's been my
trealed. Thai has never been the
~ughler's friend. Libra !my dog)
case. She's only been getting bad
;t.-as four weeks old arid my daugh· this time for a couple of weeks. I
:F was aboul ei~l years old when asked this, please! If someone has
For a gag . gift recently, . I
INC got her. She s been her failhful
her bring her back. We want to received a little voodoo doD and a
friend and wben she dies she needs· · bury her when lhe lime comes.
bookle1 called "VooDoo II Yourto be wilh us.
self," all aboul while voodoo
~ : The nexl day afler I couldn.'t
JoTyree magic. That's lhe good stuff as
••.• ' .
Pomeroy, Ohio opposed to the black hexes, which
require pins and olher people's sur·;.'
. Something to be Proud Of ·
!Ogate body palls.
: 'I belong to an organization half in IWO and shredded edges.
I had to laugh when I came to
:uJied ~·The Daughters of AmeriMeanwhile, our troops are in lhe section on love. If I'd had this
u". Our aim is 1,0 have the Ameri- Saudi Arabia defending !he United book back in high school, I'd have
::can flag flying over every school- ' Stales of America.
tried every sjlell in there in lhe ·
1iouse and lhe Bible therein.
·
This is lhe American flag and I hope of gelling a boyfriend, or
··: But the reason for my letter is feel we should Sland up and defend even just one boy to a1 leas! hang
.the American flag at lhe Meigs il as our ITOOP.llaie doing for us.
around me during the month of
:Memory Garden Cemetery on Swe
The flag definilely needs 1.0 be February.
·Route 7. It is a disgrace to this replaced.
Moat of the speUs call for eit.ber
:Country having this flag flying, tom
a personal article of lhe intended
Chatloue Grant

The Dally Sentlnei-Pag.....:l

For someone wilh a bum ankle and'
other ideas on how 1.0 spend a Sun-

feeds lhe Neuse, a source of drink- ' lhe EPA isn'1 inlelesled1ti •la'inl
We uked firefiJblers in GoldS·
ina warer for more than 70,000 that il won't be lainled in lhe boro, whose jurisdictiQII Coven the
people. Cily officials, including future.
·
storage sile, if lhey knew the
f~refighrers 'who would have been
The EPA inspector geneml ream Dinoseb was !here. They said no.
exposed 1P 1.0Xic fumes if lhe stor- - the watc~ 0\'el' the EPA • says Then jlle asked the fare chief, and
,age sire caughl on fire. didn't know if found leaking conlainers there, he retiued 10 talk llbout iL
and put lhat in writing last year.
A farmer in Corvalis, Ore.,
il was there.
Dinoseb was first parlially But an EPA spokeswoman · in IIOred 505 gallons of Dinoaeb in a.
banned by lhe EPA in 1986, but WIIShingtoil now teUs us lht.le WQ'!) silo 100 feet from his driDking well
some swes were allowed to contin- no leaks, only rust. And a Jegional and ·within 400 feet of lhn&gt;e wells
ue using it through the 1989 grow- EPA offiCial told our 'repont.r Paul he used for inigalion. SIBle and
ing season. Fanners and chemical Parkinson, "OUr records don'l iodi- regional officials didn' 1 know
companies with stocks of Dinoscib care !here was a leak, so !here is aboul the. storqe sire because ·!he
were told '1.0 store il until !he EPA not a reason for. us to ibsl that EPA didn'llell therJI.
In facl, the inspector aeaeral
got around to desttOying the left- area."
The inspector general also said found that emergency planners in
oven.
.
. Dinoseb is dangerous. Laborato- local authorities weie DOt notifiQCI many states didn't know d)ey had
ry animals exposed to il bad off- about the Dinoacb as they should lar~e stocb of Dinoaeb under their
spring .wilh serious birth defeciS. have been. Bul EPA headquarters · jiD'isdiction. Yet the EPA claims il
Researchers fouild increased inci- says il's nol .lbeir job to tell the has gone out of iiS way 10 m'alt:e
dence of sterility among farm local authorities, nor is lhe EPA Jhose nolificalions. II appears thai
workers using it
responsible for making sure the some Dinoseb, liletllly and figuraThere is no evidence thai lhe . storage sire is safe until the EPA tive.ly, has fallen throuah the
warer in Goldsboro has been tainl- officially lakes over the sile 10 han- cracks. . ·
·
. eel by Dinoseb. Bul il appears thai die lhe disposal.
$1991 fOirWOIIM ~.,.~ ~'ff'A
· .
.. ·
18 ~ULME

tlfllir

thinking, 'OK, yeah.' Then aU of a
sudden il was what is he (Malone)
doing? Whm people contesl shots
like that, you !mow inlensiiy level
is there. I think we all came 10
play."
The East, which tha11ks to
Barkley enjoyed a 61-46 n:bounding ~e. has won nine of the last
12 All-Star Games. The East lelds
the series 27· 14. Malone, Robinson
· 10 hnson led lh e west
and Mag1c
with 16 points each, Palrick Ewing
added 18 for the East.
The game was dedicale~ to
American troops in the Persian
Gulf.
· "In a lime lilce this, you have_to
put sportS, and this game, into. perspective," Barktey said. "Thci real
heroes are over there. And the real
heroes are the families of our
troops over there. Whal lhey are
doing is much more important than ·
what I did IOday."
As is typical in the!!l sons of
games, lhe play was s~y al ~ITSt
as the teams peeded tune to adJust
to lhe free-wheeling style. The
West led 23-22 afrer one period,
hitting 35 percent of its shots. The
Eas1 shot jusl 32 percenl in the fiTSI
Quarter.

.INSURANCE
INSUAANCE

'

I

·washington beats
-Philly .S-2 Sunday
By PAUL WALSH
' UP1 Sports Writer
LANDOVER, Md. (UPI) 'o 'Now lhat Washingi.On has acquired

Bullhis high-profit problem seems
genuine. Indeed, I believe !his so
deeply that I wiD resist lhe suggestion of one reader lhal I add lhe
phrase LSOBs 10 my acronym, so
lhal
il
would
read
APPOCS/LSOBs. The new initials,
said my ·correspondenl - I have
edited his language only sliglitly would sland for Lying Son~ of
Buccaneers.
A brief review:
In Augusl, the pump price of
gasoline shot up with such vehe·
mence lhat service stations were
being notified of increases several
times a day via electronic mail. The
befuddled consumer naturally wondered whal had happened to the
petrol in lhe inventory - the millions of gallons that had ~ distilled from crude purclwed at preinvasion prices. The APPOCS had
answers.
. .
When il came right down to il -

be•ee or a lock of his hair- "'Scuse
me, Billy Ray, mind if I snip just a
tenny-tiny little piece of your hair,
maybe back here on your neck
where it won 'I show much? How
'bout your back, lhen? No? Then
could I borrow one of your gym
socb there for a week or two?" so I probably wouldn'l have ·been
able to perform them. Bu1 I'd have
tried.
I might have been able to sland
lhe resl of the year without a
boyfriend if il hadn 'I been for
February and Valenline •s Day.
First, there was the Swee1hean
Dance lo worry about, wltere all

...

---

Mary appeared to her at Lourdes.
In 1945, President Roosevelt, British Prime Minister WlnsiOn
Churchill and Soviet leader Josef Stalin ended their wartime
·
.
conference at Yalta.
In 1965, U.S. and Soulh VIetnamese planes made the first bombing
raids on Norlh VIetnam.
· ·
- ~ 1970, Japan put a satellite In space, folloWing in the footsteps of
the Soviet Union, the United States and France.
In 1987, Corazon Aquino was sworn In for a six-year presidential
term under the new Philippine constitution.
A thought for the day: Inventor Thomas Edison once said,
"Everything comes to him who huitles while he waits." ·
''

"

,

•

10 put it in

Stteet lingo - lhe bottom
line was 1ha1 the APPOCS were
. struggling to make ends meet. And
!hal gives perspective to their new
problem: The major oil companies
are now averaging profit increases
of 70 percent compared 1.0 the figures of a year ago. Pay altention
here: The seven biggCSI oil companies will earn $S.8 billion for the
fourth quarler - a 145 pe'~cent
increase over last year.
· Mobil Corp; 10 cile jusl one
eX&amp;mple, deducted from their profits $271 million for devalued coal
depasiiS, old Cll(lloralion properties
and future "envJTOIUJiental remediati6n" projeciS and still enjoyed a
46 percent increase over last year's

j'

,. '

In a game 1ha1 included 294
penally minutes &amp;lid 20 fighlinl!

. hadpublicpoli~y." And,Derradds:

"You ask me wbal I'm worried
about I'm worried aboul a dumb
reaction."
The nexl time you ·take oul a
loan to fiU bp, JlOII(Ier' that "anomalous" argument and think about the
earnings.
painful crisis the APPOCS are tryyou can guess what the critics mg to work lhrough. Maybe lhen
say. The APPOCS are war-profi- you'll agree with The Curmudgeon
leering, they say. The APPOCS are that perhaps we oaghl 1o add
fleecing cons1111ers, f:hey say. And · LSOBs 1!1 the acronym. Oil execuhow have inlt.nsc lobbytng 10 head lives are Loving·, Sincere, Openhearted BusineSspersons.

lhe cule girls whose swealers and ·
But lhe ·administraiOrs al m·y
skirts were exactly the same shade school didn't let dateless girls and
of ligbl blue or eggshell and who boys auend the Swee!MMt Dlnee,
gol up two hours early every mom- Pemaps they thought kids would be
ing to sculpt their hlir into perfect more manageable two by two, easy
flips wilh a coat of Dippity Do and to herd onlo an ll'k if there was
Aqua Net were eilher wearing a trouble or 10 kCCJI from gathering
boy's senior ring the size of a golf on the schoolyard and maybe startball and had Ill automatic date, Q1' ing B f"ISt fighL
were asked to the dance by some
I suspect mos1 of us girls who
other salivating boy the tlrst day of slayed borne on Sweethelrt Dance
ihe month.
·
night didn 'I form much fondness
Nexl those girls would then forSt Valentine or his day. Since a
show up'at school a couple or lhree · lot of us eventually ended up wilh
days before Valentine's Day with guys who never undcrsiOOd what
. huge, lhree-tiered boxes of Yalen- lhe big deal about Valentine's Day
tine's candy 10 show off, opening · was, ~nyway, lhe FTD truck
diem seductively for us candylcas doesn I ~:~sually pull up a.t our
girls, telling us ooh ud ahh over orflces .w1th bouquets too b1g..for
the lace and bows and IICtllllly get one delivery man 1.0 cary by him·
close enough to smell the candy. self. \hose land on 1he other
They never lei us eal any. I don't W?'f'CO s desks; and ~Y compere
know why they never gained uy w11h each ~er much ·m the same
weigh! or sprouted any pimples · way they did dec'"'? before when
aftu eating all that chocolare, but 1hey were companng cll'dboard
1hey didn't. The rest of us got hearts full of candy,
. ,
So to my fellow Valenune s
-lhem.
. Our lack of boyfriends on this Day dance s1ay-a1-homers, may
all-imponant day Qligbl have been lhis monlh be nlled wilh the ttue
more bearable 1f al leasl we had love of folks who don't~ if your
been able 1.0 aaend the Sweetheart . sweater IIIIIChes your skirt or your
Duce if we'd been able to shop hair can execure a perfecl flip. And
for st;apless Iuiie formals 1ha1 may aU of us- the girts who stayed
would hive scratched our amipits home ud lhe sweet, tender boys
as we sroocl in a gaggle in the cor- too scamii.O risk UW. one of us
ner of lhe gym bf ounelves, still and ~ 10 am bow to dllnoe keeping alive the hOpe that one of beiieW tbal if we hadn't been 1.00
those bofl SWiding by themselves shy or 1.00 awkwlrd or a just a lillie
in the other ~ might ask us to 100 , late in blooming, we'd have
- dance a at least talli to us when we met at lhe Sweelheut Dance ud
went 1.0 gel punch.
waltzed away together.

.. .

Charles captures Suncoast .
PG A Seniors Classic tourney

TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - Bob quick, ~ ~!y, lhat you can'l be
Charles posled a 2-under-par 70 aggresSive. ·
. ,,
.
Sunday to outlast a faltering Lee '
Charles showe~ gre!'l confiTitvino and win his second Senior dence on 18 by plac!"g his .ree shot
GTE Suncoest Classic.
!Me feet from the ptn dcspire ~Charles, winner of the 1989 by waler for a · su~sequent budie
tournament, received $67,500 of ~~X\~ four-stroke viCta:y. .
the $450 000 purse He fmished at
He should have pul 11 away
6-under '210 for the 1ournamen1, earlier," T~ .said. "He missed
four shols ahead of Trevino an,d al~~f sborl birdie pullS (81 14 and
George Archer. Trevino, last year s I6).
runnerup, losl four SITokes on
Charles ~ the 1989 S~t
Charles over the final two holes.
when Dave Hill ~k 111 e1,ht on
"I was a little apprehensive wilh the par-five I~th. Hill put his ball
Lee Trevino breithing down my mthe water ":''CC ~blew a lhreenect out there," Charles said.
stroke lead wilh ~ triple bogey that
The momentum awilc:hed to led,\Oaplayoffwllh~•
Charles when Trevino took a disasThe 11th, has ben ~ to me at
trous triple-bogey on lhe 171h. ot!'er people s expense, Charles
Tltvino leed off out of ~ for said. .
. .
.
.
a stroke penall)l and then lried 1.0
Mike Hill; defending champ100
rebound wilb an aggre~sive !'Jid younger brOiher o.f Dave, ~m­
approach shot which fell in 'Waler 1shed at l-ander and aed for lhird
for another penallY Slroke. Trevino wilh 1988 champion Dale Doulhen three·putted and fell ou1 of ~· Don Maaengale, and J!obby
COitention.
Nichols. Only -n playen m the
"I had 10 par the hole," Trevino field of 78 finished below par.
said. "Bul lhos~ greens are so

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llthlna Coinpany/Multlmedta, lac:,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Se·

1

J

~
~~;~· uJ

.1

NEW 14x76
Patriot Hanover

L

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,, !
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f , ,.... , ,.pr.-·
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lfl• ll .

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paid at

Po~roy.

Member: United Pres&amp; International,
Inland Dally PrE'Bs Assoclatlaa and the

.

Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advertlltng Representative, Branham
NNspapft Sales, 733 T.hlrd Avenu@,
New York, New York 10017.
~R:

Jay Jones of Belpre in 103, 1asoc
Wright of Belpre in 112, Jesse
Roberts ot Nelstinville in 119, Mal
Ritz of Nelsonville in 130, Seth
Perdue of Belpre in 135, Adam
Kennedy of nelsonville in 140,
Jeremy Sheets on Nelsonville in
145 Joel Speelman of Nelsonville
in is2. and Norman Bickley of
Trimble in 160.
Burt Kennedy of lhe Marauders
was voted by·the coaches the Most
Valuable Wrestler in the Tri-Valley
Conference. teammate SheeiS won
the award last season. The coaches
also selecled Bill Harris of Federal
Hocldng lhe conferences COIICh Of
lhe year.
The tallest struclure in the United
States is the TV tower in Blanchard,
N.D., which slands 2,063 feet !all.

Selll addr... ChiD&amp;ft

to The Dally Sentinel. Ill Court St,

Pomeroy, OhiO 45769.

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m.co .

MASON FAMLY RESTAURANT
WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS

JUST .ARRIVED!

~r ~ "- :
j

po&amp;tag~

cond class

. Ohio.

.

'
The Meigs Mara11ders pinned his opponen1s on Salurday afrer· down their first ever Tri-Valley noon to win lhe 171 poUnd weight
Conference wres1ling cham pi- class, while older brolher Burl
onship Saturday afremoo.'! at Larry Kennedy picked up lhree wins and
· R. Morriso!l Gymnas1um. The
a technical fall over Terry Moody
Marauders were in lhird place · of Trimble. The vic1ory over
heading into the final round behiad Moody was a measure of revenge
Nelsonville-York and Belpre but for the senior, as Moody defeated
Mei~s swepl Vini.On County and Burt lui season. Kennedy is now
rece1ved ·help from Trimble and 22-1 on the season with 16.pins.
Federal Hoelting 1.0 vaull over lhe Aaron Sheets won anolher heavyBuckeyes .and Eagles IO win the weigh! championship. The senior
champ1ons1p.
.
had three pins 10 raise his record to
The championship is only lhe 22-0 with 16 pins, lhe last two
second title ever in the schools his- years ·Aaron has posted an outtory in wteslling. In lhe mid 1980's slanding 47-2 record.
·
Larry Grimes led the Marauder
Winning second place silver
g~plers to a sectional champi- . medals for the Marauders were P.
on 1P·
J, Chadwell in !he 103 pound class
The Marauders won the champi- and Joe McEiory in the 130 pound
.. onship wilh 242 points, Nel- class.
sonville-York finished seco~d with
Winning 1hird place bronze
238, followed by Belpre Wllh 23l, medals for Meigs were David
Federal Ho_cking wilh l68,,Trimb!e Swanson in the 112 pound class,
129 and Vmton Counly Wllh 36 10 ·~ Chris Swanson in lhe 119 pound
sixth pla'7·
.
. . : class and Frank Blake in the 145
Wm~mg TVC Utles 10 theu pound class. The toumamenl was
respecuve welf,ht class~ for lhe the fust time Ibis season that Blalte
maroon and 0 d were Eric Heck, has wrestled, as the junior trac!ed
Jake Kenn y, Burt Kennec!y ~d hisbilsl&lt;etball uniform for wrestling
Aaron Sheets. He.ck wl:t1 1~ tighiS for the afternoon.
lhe 125 pound welghl c s
·
Others clamin$ TVC cahmpihis record to a perfect 22-0. Fresh- onships is their we1gb1 classeS were
man Jake Kennedy pmned four of
·

'I

Publlth«&lt; every afternoon, Moaday
lhrourb Friday, 111 Court St .. Po·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub-

Marauders capture first
TVC. wrestl•lDg champiODS
. h.
IP

penally for a11empang to mJure,"
said tfolmgren.

PhiladelphiaFiye{S Sunday,
who shouted "stupid" and
. The ganie also included seven ' "c'mon" at May. Flyer Scott Melmisconducts, six g11me miscon- lanby 'raced in ud grabbed May.
ducts, one gross misconducl and Afrl:r 22 minuta in penalties were
two five-minut.e·charging penalties., called:'Keilh Aclon and Iafrate lanThe 294 penalty minutes sel a Cap- gled.
~'ita! Centre record, breaking tlie
With 7:56 left in the $&amp;me,
mark of 240 set by the same teams CraiJ Berube elbowed Washington
nine years ago. ,
. goalie Don Beaupre behind the net
, The brawls involved bolh . Beaupre relaliated with an elbow, ·
goalies, ud taunts bclween fans lriggering anolher all-oul fighl.
,.and sidelined Flyers In lhe press Flyers goalie Pele Peeters came the
-box forced securtly guards to step length of the ice to pull Beaupre off
in to prevenu violentoulbreak.
the pile. ~II the while, .Holmgren
· • Two fighting penalties each an&lt;! was shouting and pointing at Capi' game misconducts went to Capitals tals Coach Terry Murray.
Allafrale and John Kordic, the for"Once (Beaupre} wenl into lhe
mer Toronto bad boy acquired to pile and started pounding ... I knew
·~·.......,""'lineup.
I had to 110 and pull him off and sil
""'P.'w;u;:they, brought me bere for on him;',. said Peeters. "And that's
a reason," said Kordic, who whar !.did."
•bounced from lhe Maple Leafs \0
Five·'Fiyers and four Capitals
1heir Newmarket minor-league received misconduciS. Injured Fly"afliliale and lhen ou1of hockey this ers Rick Tocchet &amp;lid Jeff Chyswon bec•se of his penchant for cluun, sitting in the press box, were
fighling wilh his own players as lhe object of taunts from nearby
well as with opponents.
Capital fus.
· ''They made il point-blank,''
The three straighl wins move the
· said Kordic. "I'm just doing what Capitals within Wee poiDIS of the
lhey wanl me to do. I'd like to third-place Flyers in tbe Patrick
·think il's helping out"
Division. The Flyers have losl four
Wilh the Capitals leading 5-1, a straighl, scoring only five goals in
of penalbes' eru"'•A with 5:10 that stretch.
spa,.
~
,.....

(IJSPS UI-MO)
.t Dlvlllea of MuJUmedla, lee.

row from left to rtabt are: Geoff C111ar, J . Hull'lllaa, Mike Call, Burl Kenaedy, Aar.on
Sheets, Steve Woods, Jake Kenedy and Milr.e
Cremeaas. Third row lrom ldt to right are
assistant coaches Jlm Sheets, Rod Stewart,
Jared Sheets and bad coach Kevin Shepard.

. TVC CHAMPS-The Melp Marallden woa
'their nrst ever TVC wrestll•a cilampionsblp
Saturday aftern- at Mtlp High Sebool. Pic·
tared from left to rtabt are: Frank Bllke, Scott
Bartoa, Joe McElroy, Eric Heck, Chris Swanson, Dave Swanson and .P. J. ChlldweU. Secood

gone in the thjrd period. Capilal
Dale Hun!N elbowed Gord Murphy
behind the Flyer net, and Philadelphia Coach Paul Holmgren

:a't!~~~c=~~~= of~:yer~~!oo~~~n!
' 10 score a 5-2 victory over the second oulburs1 from Holmgren,

off regulation and wilh some very
crealive. PR. The critics are illinformed,,lhe APPOCS ,say. The
new earnmgs will be spenl on
expansion, they say. And hen's the
humdinger: The founb-quarter
profits were "anomalous."
. No, seriously. Listen 1.0 Chevron
chairman .Kenneth Derr: "If legislalors overreacl to fourlh-quarter
profits lhBIIUII lil)omalous and try
to pass k,nee-jerlc: legislatian, that is

...,_,

The Daily Sentinel ·

~i:::;ss:i!i~. =a~:~~ ~~~~~~¥o~~;: - 'Meigs

ow_ntru_t

Today in .history

;:
By 1)nlted Press International
_
•:Today Is Monday, Feb. 11, the 42ndday of 1991 with 323 to follow.
,•The moon Is waning, moving toward 1\s new phase.
:: The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
·: The evening star Is Juplter.
.
:. Those born on thlsdateareundertheslgnofAquar!,!ls. They Include ·
· J;lngllshman William Talbot, a developer of photography, In 1800;
tiiventor Thomas Edison In 1~7; KlngFarouk, Egypt's last monarch,
It 1920; acu-ess Kim Stanley In 1925 (age 66); actor Burt Reynolds In
1936 (age 55); anil Brazilian' musician Sergio Mendes In 1941 (50).
•
v
•
· •'On lhls date In history: ·
In 1858, French 'peasant girl Bernadette Sourblrous said lhe VIrgin

st.

, son during Sunday's NBA AU-Star game In Charlotte, N.C. The
• East won, 116-114. (UI'I)
•

L

•

I

JORDAN SLAMS IN TWO • Cbka&amp;o's Michael Jordan (left)

Valentine's Day is a lonely holiday_·_ _ByS_tua!t~
·

..••.

I~

slams bome two points over tbe West team's Earvln (Magic) Joha·

. Let's all take pity on poor Big Oi'J_ ___;;,_s'J--=o",.---=s,.,_

....

Led by senior forward Mike All:ers' game-high 28 poiniS, Ironton
SL Joe racked up a 75-59 victory
over visiting Kyger Creek Saturday
night
·
The Flyers, 6-12, erased a twopoint def"ICit in lhe second 'QIWtel
and primarily behind the offense of
Akers sophomore point guard
Chuck
Jones Jnd
ka, ouiBCored
lheforwtu:d
BobcatsTim
27-8Lat·
in
the second quarter to take a 17point lead at halftime.
Kyger Creek, which dropped to
_
2 17 and ended its regular-season
campaign 18ainSI non-league teams
. at' l •S, was led by senior guard
Sean Denney, who scored 20. .
The Bobcais will end !he regular
season on Friday al home against.
. Soulhwearem.
Quarter totals
Kyge(Crcek 12 8 13 26-59
St.-Joe
10 27 11 . 21=7S
JOE (75) • Akers 11-06=28; Jones 3-0-S..I4; Latka 6-02=14; Mall Smith 3-0-3=9; Mark
Smilh 1-0-3=5; Matella 2-0-0-4;
· Delawder 04h•l. TOTALS- U0-23=75 ·
Free throws • 23-33
KYGER CREEK (59) - Denney 8-0-4-20; Bradbury 4-0-0.8;
Hall 2-l-1=8; Kingery 0-2-0-6;
Villanueva 1·1•1=6; Swisher 2-01=5; Covey G•l-0=3; Barrick 1-00.2; Snyder 0-0- t'= I. TOTALS •
18-S-8=5!1
. Fieklloals- 23-69
Three-pointers- 5-26
Free throws • 8-15
Rebounds • 24
o\sslsts. 8
Steals· 3
Turnovers • 9

'

''It covers you in the event that your insurance rates go up."

Letters to the editor

Ironton St.
Joe hands
Kyger Creek ·
75-S91oss

Barkley overcomes injury to
lead East,squad to victory ·

•

r

Ill Court Street

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 2-The Dally Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, FebruaiY 11,1891

•

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lnl oto' "' \1

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&lt;I,,.

· ~··

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' ' "'

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"'"'"
J'

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4 PM-9
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Features: 2 bedrooms, deluxe bath, cathedral ceiling,
upgrade carpet &amp; pad, self storing storms , 2 K 6 walls,
6" insulation in roof, mini blinds throughout, house type
front door, cottage door on rear and much, much more.

INT~rio~~~:vLoFFER ...·s21 24~M~
'10'/o down, 2•0 months at 12.25 APR

•TACO · ·
DINNER
•BURITTO
DINNER ..

PM

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DINNERS SERVED WITH SPANISH
RICE, REFRIED BEANS, ALL YOU
CAN EAT SOUP, FRUIT
AND SALAD BAR.

"New Shipment of Homes Arriving Daily"
See John Smith or Dick Cole Today . . , You'll Be Glad Vou Did I

COLE'S MOBILE HOMES

Located 5 Miles East of At. 33 on Rt. 50, Athens 592-1972
..

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Mason Family Restaurant
IT. 33

(30.) 773·5321

(.II 10 IASOIIIUOII)
· 4o

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MASON, WV.

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�•
Page

4 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

Monday, February 11,1991

Rio ladies nip Walsh
in 58-53 OT ,situation
Gena Norris sank a 25-foot
three-point bank shot - her only
scoring of the game - and Kerri
Kidwell added .two pofnts at the
free throw line to lift the University
of Rio Grande women's basketball
team to a 58-53 win in overtime
over Walsh College Saturday at
Lyne Center.
.
Norris, a 5-2 freshman guard
from Kingston, Ohio. helped put
the game bac.k into the Redwomen's hands following ~gulation
play that saw both teams come
from behind to seize the lead.
It was the first overtime situa·
lion the Redwomen had faced in
Lyne Center since Feb. 6, 1988,
also against Walsh. The Lady P!valiers won that coolest in one extra
period, 63-59.
Walsh, an earlier victim of the
~edwomen in Mid-Ohio Conference actiOIJ, advanced in the .fust
. hal( on an 11-point, 10-rebound
perfonnance by Felicia Baggett and
10 points from Stacy Richards to
lead the Lady Cavaliers ID a fourpoint advantage at halftime. The
Red
women,-plagued by a 25 perFOURTH PLACE • The Riverview Rebels
turect, 1-r, are Amanila Maynard, Joba Myers,
cent showing on its shooting, were
liftb wide basketball team earned fourth place
Robert Bartlmus, DUly Barber, Kim Mayle aDd
le.;l by KidweU wilh nine points.
honors in the Eastern Athletic Boosters Fifth
Christina Westfall. Bade, Coach D1ve Decker,
Doug Foote's Rio ladies came·
and Sixth Grade Basketball Tournament. PicRyaa Hawley, Robert Harris, Mark Jones, Matt
back in the second half and held a
Myers ud Asslstlnt Jack Niday.
modest lead through most of the
second peri,od. but the visitors ral·
lied to ue tbci score at 49 with twO .
minutes remaining. Rio Grande's
Debbie Fredrick scoR:d two from
the free throw line to lead 51-49
with 50 seconds left, but IIJI()ther
Walsh basket with two seconds
remaining again knotted the score.
By SCOTf WOLFE
could not break the strong-willed Caldwell's game plan. Behind
Rita Morris netted her only twO
Vikings, who stayed within nine- Rose and Singleton were Kincaid points of the game at 3: SS m tbe
Sentinel Corre:spoadelt
RACINE· Taking advanrage of a to-thirteen points or less until the · and Baer with five each. Behind extra period'for Walsh 1D lead, but
9.0 start out of the gate, the South- fmal 2:30 of the game. That con- Robinson's 13 was Lester's eighL
l&lt;athy Snyder teplied with her own
em Tornadoes rolled 10 a 79-62, tinuing threat expelled peale perforSouthern had five steals, twelve basket at 1:30 to set the deadlock at
SVAC basketball victory over the mance from the Tornadoes all turnovers, S assists, aild 22 fouls. 53. Following a chan$e of possesup-lnd-coming Symmes Valley eveninJt long.
Symmes Valley bad six steals, 15 sions, the ball fellmto Norris'
Vikings Friday night in Charles W.
From its 9-0 advantage, SHS turnovers, ninr assists, and 24 hands for Rio Grande. Norris let
Hayman ~nasiwn.
advanced to a 16-5 lead as Todd fouls.
tile'ball fly for three and connected
The Will pushes the Division IV Grindstaff hit a bucket and twoThe Vikes hit a warm 15-37 with 15 seconds left, and Kidwell
Tarnadoe$10 14-4 ovelllll with two free lhrows in a four point first from the floor for 41 percent, 7-23 added her two foul shots with one
. .
· games remaining, and insures .pen·oo.
from·the perimeter, and 9-21 at the second left on the clock to finish
Southern of at least a tie for the
Having a chance til really blow line.'
·the game.
SVAC tide. SHS is now 12-1 in
Southern's reserves won 68-36
the Vilrings away, Soulhern led 18"We were outplayed and OUt·
the league, ooe game ahead of nm7 with three minutes left in the ini- tl'ehind a 16-point Josh Codner hustled, but the only difference
ner-up Hannan Trace. Coach Terry
tial round. Symmes valley made · effort, and double figure scoring by was, our kids have been in that
Saunders' Vikings are now 11-7 some necessary adjustments, and Michael Evans wilh 13 and Jamie same situation so many times this
and 8-S in the league.
,
reeled back some of its offensive Proffitt 12. Singleton had nine. season," Foote commented. "BasiGoing into the contest Southern composwe to outscore the 'Does 6- · Coach Scott WICldine's charges are cally, the whole game was a suugknew it had to do twO things • con2 during the latter stretch for a 20- now a fine 12-6 overall. For gle for, us to get anyching going.
trol the tempo of the game and hold
13 score at the buzzer.
Symmes, Travis Pierce had 9 and Walsh did everything well and we
its own on the boards. Southern
In methodical fashion Soulhem Jerome Fuller 13.
got luclcy at the end.
did just that, and the result was the would grab the rebound (Rose, BaiSouthern plays at non-league
"It was one of those games
crucial SVAC win.
ley, and Singleton), qu.icldy hit the Warren on ·Tuesday, !hen returns you're glad to win and get out of,"
Several Southern players outlet (Baer, Kincaid, and Orind- . home to hopefully wrap up ·the the coach added, paising the work
excelled in different ways Friday staft) and really ·pusb the ball up league title on Friday with an done by Kidwell and Kathy Soy- .
night, all of which contributed 10 the court. Andy Baer hit 3-S fust SVAC bout with Oak HilL
der, last week's District and MOC
the win. Symmes VaHey had been half three-pointers (6-12 overall),
Soulh6rn also drew Eastern in player of the week. Kidwell ended
gainin~ momentum lately with
and ended the half with 17 ID pace the Division IV tournament at Rio up wich 17 points and 13 rebounds
giant VJctcries ovff Hannan Trace, Sou them.
Grande on February 23.
and Snyder posted 16 nwters and
Eastern, and North Oallia. putting
Sou'"'them had leads of 22-15, 2910 boards to record Rio Grande's
iiSelf in a position to add Southern 20 with 3:30 left in the half, and Quarter totals
only
double-figure scoring of the
to its list of victims. From its offen- 31-20 before finally gaining a little Symmes Valleyl3 9 19 21=62 game.
20 IS 18 '1fla79
sive anenal, Southem sought Andy
more breathing room at 35-22 at Southern
The Lady Cavaliers also placed
SYMMES
VALLEY (62) Baer to do the job, and that be did the inlellllission.
two in double fi~ures as Richards
in fine fashion.
The second half was explosive Chad Renfroe 3-3-0•15, Chris recorded 20 pomts and Baggett
Tbe senior southpaw hit six
with Symmes Valley outscoring the GateS 0-0-1=1, Andy Lester 8-0- . added 17 points and 13 rebo~mds to
three poin~ to boost his IOials to
hosts 19-18, behind the efforts of h•l7,Jaye Criswell 0-1-4=7, Eric the Walsh offense.
'
a game-high 33 points. In the paint, Renfroe, Lester, and Eric Wall. Wall 0-3-2=11, Chris Blake 0-0-1"We
played
tough,
aggressive
Tornado~ coach Howie CaldThe SV three pointers were spec- 1. Carl Robinson 5-0-0=10. TO· defense, but shot ooorlv from the
well called upon the dependable tacular and at this point kept them TALS • 16-7·9=62.
SOUTHERN (79) • Andy Baer free throw line. We turned the ball
J~y Rose and Roy Lee llailey,
in contentiOI), however, the Norse4-6-7•33,
Michael Kincaid S-0· over 3S times, which ultimately
men tried too mucll of a good
but when Bailey went down early
0=10,
Todd
Grindstaff 4-0-2=10," was our downfall." Walsh Coach
thing and the well ran dry on the Jayson Codner
in foul trouble, sophOmore Russell
John Michelle Steele remarked. ~Rio
three-point arsenal as a comeblck Hoback 0-0-1=1, 0·0·2=2,
Singletoo was swnmoned to do the
Grande is a tough team and they
Roy
Lee
Bailey
job. Singleton responded with a strategy.
3.()..0.6,
Scott
Lisle 0-0-2=2, Rus- have so .many weapons offensiveteam-high nine rebounds and
In the openipg of the IMrd frame sell Singleton 1-0-3=5, Jeremy ly."
the 'Wellmel( sue~ehed lhe 53-41 Rose
comibine4· with Rose (eight
Overall, the Redwomen did not
third frame score to a 1 S point 19=79.4-0-2=10. TOTALS ·21+ · improve
!dJounds) 10 domiiwe the paint; an
on their shooting. They
an:a SV senior Carl Robin1011 has advantage, but a turnover, and two
owned this season.
missed buckets pulled Svmme~
Robinson had a good inside back 10 within nine. A Renfroe
game wilh 13 rebounds, but that chree pointer pulled the score to
was far shy of the 20-plus he has within nine, sparking a string of
garnered .on several occasions this
four slraight three point field goals,
season.
two by each.team. Eric Wall knotBehind Baer's 33 points and led another for SV and Baer had
dazzling floor gan\e, was a bal- both of Southern's to bring some
anced ten point triumvirale of Todd life back into the crowds of each
Grindstaff, Michael Kincaid, and team.
Rose.
Southern lost Bailey to fouls
Andy Lester led the Viking with 6:32 remaining in the game,
attaek with 17 poiniS, was followed but Singlctoo filled in to do a grea1
by Clad Renfroe's 15, Eric Wall's
job. Perhaps the final decisi~e
llllld Ca1 Robinson's 10.
blow !hal put SHS over the top was
· B~er was hot from the onset, a successful drive and ensuing
ripPing the SHS nylons for a three three point lllay from the baseline
'
pomter and deuce to stan the J1111C by Jeremy Rose. This gave SHS a
with supporting buckets by Rose
IS poU:!t lead and aUowed them to
and Kincaid, rocketing SHS ID an IIIIIIUain at least a 13 point margin
early 9.() lead.
10 lhe finish.
Southern had one of its best · Southern hit 51 percent of all
nights of the year operaling iiS nm· shota from the floor, hitting S4 perDing game, and perhaps turned up cent (21-39) on two pointers, and
die wick a liule, early to establiSh 6-13 three point tries. The 'WeDtempo against the ever persistent men hit 19-33 at the line.
Vikings.
.
Southern outtebounded Division
, Despire grabbing the early lead mSymmes Valley 40-32, a credit
and the momentum, Southern just to Sou them's hustle and Coach

By The Bend

'I

.I

Heard about ·

.RAPID REFUND?
1ut Anwla's Tax Tum to worlr for you!

LAST DAY TO PAY FIRST
HALF 1990 TAXES IS
FEBRUARY ~ 5, 1991.
TAXES PAID BY MAIL
MUST BE POSTMARKED
·NO. LATER lHAN
FEBRUARY 15, 1991.

818 EAST MAIN STREET-POMEROY
992-8874
..

Monday, February
. 11 , 1991.

Meigs ·man deployed
Kenneth (Kenny) E. Wood, llOil
of Jean and Norman Wood ,
Pomeroy, was deployed from
Blytheville Air Force Base in
ArkansiS to Operation Desert

sum.

·

His wife, Yong, and daughters,
Canie, Cathy and Donna. rernain at ·

Blytheville. ·
Wood is a 1970 graduate of .
Meigs Hil!h School and will celebrate his l!irthday on March 3.

Parents will receive a letter
describing the conference scheduling procedure along with infonna. lion on the conferences. ·Students .
will lie bringing this information
home op Friday.

Cards and letters may be sent to
T. Sgt. Kenneth E. Wood, 97th
S.P.S. Deploy, APO New York,
N.Y. 09125-5001.

Free trees
offered

RACINE ROYALS ·The Sixth grade cheer·

Ten free American redbud trees
will be given to each person who
joins The National Arbor Day
Foundation during February.
The free trees are part of the
nonprofit Foundation's Trees for
America campaign.
"American red buds are outstanding flowering trees which will
add graceful ~uty to your h0111e
and neighborhood," John Rosenow,
. lhe Foundation's executive director, said. ''Redbuds have clusters of
rosy pink flowers in spring, and
dalt green summer leaves turning
to yellow in the fall."
The trees will be shipped postpaid at the right time for planting
between March I and May 31 wilh
enclosed planting instructions. The
six to 12 inch trees are guaranteed
to grow, or they wilr be replaced
free of charge.
.
To become a member .o f the
. Foundation and to receive !he free
trees, send a $10 membership contribution to Ten Redbuds, National
Arbor Day Foundation, 100 Arbor
Ave., Nebraska City, NE 68410 by
Feb. 28.

ketball Tournament. Members, 1-r, are Camilla
Yoacbam and Amy Northup. Second, Melissa
Smith, .Kristen Hensle~ aad Angle Carleton.
Back, Sberri Hensler and VIcki Northup, advl·
-.. Barbie Llyne was absent.

• · leading squad won second plaee honors at tbe
Cbeerleadlng competition held during the Eastern Atbletk a-ters
Fiftb and Sixth Grade BasI
.

Meigs Local
parerit~ teacher
conference set '
The ~eigs Local School District
will be holding parent-teacher·conferences on Feb. 21 from 6 to 9
p.m. and on Feb. 22 from 9 a.m. ID
noon. C!tildren will not be in attendtmce
on Feb. 22.
_,

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KENNETH E. W~D ·

-

.
purpose of the conference is
. to allow the parent and teacher to
discuss pupil ~ss and ID keep
the parents and schools inforined
about student activities as they
relare to school behavior and performance.
Parents_are encouraged to take
advantage of this opportunity to
communicate with !heir children's
instructors.
F-urther questions regarding
these conferenoes should be direct- :
ed to the children's schools of
atrendance.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

•' ;

U .OO 6AIIGAI H ~T I!U£S Y.'JUI~' I SUNCIAY
$l . OO IAAGAJ!t NIGHT TU£SM~

RACHAEL RJ-2HMOND .

I'I!PUAIIY I thno M

' - - - f'II IM'f t~ rv TliVIISDA' I - - - '

Richmond birth
Chris and. Valerie Richmond ,
Rutland, are announcing tile birth
of a daughter, Rachael Ann, on
Dec. 30 at Pleasant Valley Hospi·
tal.

.

The infant weighed seven
pounds and two ounces.
Grandparents are Bob and Doris
Richm·ond, Rutland, and Ray and
Kathy Deskins, Harrisonville.

.,.,.

.
k.+·***'~~~r+'llr+·***,.~*'~~r'***********************·

ie ·

'II

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WID-( COUPON BELOW
I I i - . . . . . . . .. .

'r;;....;.;.._-,.

HURRYI

2116197

SECOND PLACE WINNERS • The Chester
Raiders ftltb and sixth 1rade cbeerleadin&amp; squad
• was awarded tbe second place trophy In tbe
~ cbeerle~uiiDR eompetltlon held durlngtbe Fifth
~ and Sixth Grade Basketball Tournament spon: sored by tbe Eastern Athletic: Boosters. Pictured,

l·r, are Bethany Cooke and Tilfa•y Robertson.
Second row, April Foreman and C1ndace Carleton. Third row, Billet Renae Pooler and
Racbael Seth. Back, Sharon Pooler and Debbie
Cooke, advisors.

Community calendar
'.

Charbroiled
Sirloin Tips Dinner

· Community Calendar items
appear two days before an event
ud tbe day ·or tbat event. Items
must be received In advanee to
Ulure publication in tbe calell-

llldvdes Sirloin r~ with poltJIO tJfld l'tlllderosD •
AI·You·Can·Ecrt GrondBuffel':'

=. . --=-"-"
················PONDEROSI\

dar.

-

-O:.~ra~~T or
l* licipalji'V~

liURRYI

MONDAY
POMEROY • The D.A.V. and
Auxiliary will meet Monday at 124
Buuemut Avenue in Pomeroy at 7
p.m . .
•
BEDFORD TOWNSIUP • The
Bedford Township Trustees will
meet Monday at 7 p.m. at the town

P.U. ,...,vwy.

NI::II\UIM

1?11; "-UIIIl, 'Ia.

2117197

PONDEROSA'S

KIDS
MEAL
(FOR liDS 10 AND UNDER)

ball.

•
YOUR CHOICE OF, Hot Ooa &amp; Friel, Hamburg« &amp; Fritts
or A/1-YaorCan·Eot Grand lull.t:"

I

GALLIPOLIS

Upper River Rd.
(Across from the Airport)

.

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.

POMEROY • The Pomeroy
Flame Fellowship will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. a1 the Pomeroy
Senioc Citizens Center. Hazel Life
of the Full Gospel Temple Church,
Little Hocking, will be the guest

.'

WEDNESDAY
. NELSONVILLE • The Hockmg Valley Community Residential
Center Board will meet Wednesda
at l.l a.m. at the Quality Inn in Nef.
son ville.

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speaker.

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POMEROY • The Pomeroy
POMEROY • A representative
Merchants Association will meet
from Congressman Clarence ' Wednesday at noon in the meeting
Miller's office will conduct an . room of Bank One. All members
open door session from 11 a.m. to urged to attc!nd.
1 p.m. in the Court -House in
Pomeroy.

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- Cfi'ESTER
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TUESDAY

HARRISONVILLE • The Harriaonville Senior Citizens Club will
hold a free blood pressure clinic on
Tuesday from 10 a.m. to noon at
the townhouse. A meeting will fol-.
low witll a Valenline poduck din-

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JOHN A. WADE, M.D.,
Inc.
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PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

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141,
NOSE &amp;. THROAT
.
GENERAL ALLERGIST

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"WE HAVE HEARINS AIDS"

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(304) 675-1244
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p.m. at council chambers at the
Rutland Civic Center.

ner. All members urged to attend.

• The Chesler
REEDSVILLE • The Great Township Trustees will meet TuesAmerican Book Fair will be held in - day at 7:30p.m. at the town hall.
the gymnasium of Riverview Elenientary School on Monday, Tues. RUtLAND • Rutland Village
day, Wednesday and Friday from 9 Council 'will meet Tuesday at 7
un. ID 3:30p.m. Call667-6886 for
information.
· ·stiVERSVILLE
Revival at the Stiversville Commu. nity Wont of Faith Chwch will be
held Sunday through Tuesday at
7:30p.m. nightly with J~. C~­
ill, Palestine, W.'!&gt;/a. Public mVJted.

MEIGS COUNTY TREASURER
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•

connected 011 21 of 76 attempts, Vernon Nazarene Tuesday at S: IS
including three of IS from the, p.m. Walsh went to 10-12 on lhe
Un&amp;-poinrrqe, fur 27.6 percent,
season and 5-4 in !he MOC, and
but netted 13 of 18 tries from the
travels to Tiffin'Tuesday.
foul line for 72 percenL While out- Box scae:
rebounded by Walsh 41-4.0, the
RIO GRANDE (58) - Ml!rlo
Redwomen held their tumoven to Kistler, 1-0-2: Jenni Couch, 0-1-017.
3; l)ebbie Fredrick, 1·2-4; Kerri•
Walsh shot 44 percent from the
Kidwell, 6-5-17: Ann Damitz, 3-3·
floor on 22 of SO atten1pts, includ- · 9; Kathy Snyder, 7-2-16: Gena
ing one of lhiee from the outside, Norris, 0-1-0-3. TOTALS 18-3·
but bad only eight of JS free throw
13-58.
tries go .dlrough for 53 ~ Of ·
wALSH (53) • Jill Hanigofsky,
those, RichardS was respoiiSible ~or 2-0-4; Shelly Dunmyer, 3-0-6;
~and Baggett had the remam- Stacy Richardl, 7-1-3-20; Jeanine
mgThefiveRed
.
.
ho
. .
Kleinhenz, 1-0-2; Felicia Baggett,
. ~· ~ . rerDIIIJ! m 6-5-17: Colleen Thompson, 1-0-2; .
conle!JUOn wtth T~fftn for fu~t RitaMorris,I-().2. TOTALS 21-1· ,
place m the MOC, tmproved their , 8 53
conference standing to 7-2 and 18• tiamlme score . Walsh 2S Rio
8 overall. They will host Mount Grande 21.
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GEORGE M. COLLINS

Mon. Thn1 Fri. 9 AM-8 PM; 8•t. 9 AM-15 PM

.T he Daily Sentinel
Page-&amp;_

Southern hands Symmes
Valley 79-62 defeat Friday ·

MEIGS COUNTY
REAL·EST ATE
OWNERS-'

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Many Meigs Countians are serving In
. Operation Desert Stor~, and: ·
we want to show them our..support...
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On Thursday, Feb. 21st,
The Daily Sentinel will have a
Special Edition with photographs of our
Service Personnel from Meigs County.
A copy of this edition will be sent to each one of
our local troops statloned· t~ the Persian GuU.
If you would like to be a part of this special

edition - whether professional, business,
Individual, or civic organization give Brian .or David a call at 992-2156.

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�Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

VAllEY:
lUMBER

THIS

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Prosecutor: Witness -in
:Mandela trial kidnapp~d

1990 Local Schedules

WEEK'S

GAMES

:SOUTHERN
BOYS

Fib. 12 - Warrtn, Awa'
Fib. 1S - Oak Hill, Home

GIRLS.

&lt;

Fib. 12 - Trimbll, 7:00 p.m.
· S.tional. Teurnament at Meigs
High School

·MEIGS
BOYS

F... 12 ' F... 15 -

F... 12 S.tional Tournament at Oak Hill
High School

I

EASTERN
BOYS
Waterford, Awoy

Fib. 12 ~•• 15 ..:.. Hannan Trace, Away

•

GIRLS
Mill•, 1:15 p.m.

'
JOHANNESBURG, South ment accompanying her plee. that effons 10 end while minority rule.
Despite unease in ANC cilcles
:Africa (UPI) - A judge adjourned she was out of town Dec.,29-31,
1988,
when
the
assaults
allegedly
about
Mrs. Maildela's alleged role
lbe auaub and lridnlpping trial of
·• . ·
in the crimes, an official SIBieiiiCIII
·Winnie Mandell aftu prQSCCUtors took place.
She had been told on her reiurn has charRed the nia1 iJ part or "a
announced Monday that one of
three key witnesses in ·the case that three boys, including Mekgwe .paaern o1 harasament IIIII penecuand Seipei, were staying in back tion 10 which Comrade Winnie has
apparently was lridnapped.
Mn. MalKiela, the wife of anti- rooms of her bouse in the black . been ...subjected for the last 3,0
Years•
apartheid leader Nelson Mandela, townshipofs owe10.
" I did not not take part in any
Mrs. Mandcla, the ANC's head
pleaded not guilty earlier Monday
assault 'or ~ing," she said in or social welfare, was re~~Y
JD Rand Suprane Court 10 all eight
charges of assault 1111d kidnapping the statement. • No assault took detained and h~d he,r acllVII!~S
in lhe case involving the mqrder·of · place in my presence alid nor did I severely restncted for antiassociate myself with any ISSIIIiL"
8parthei~ activism while her busa 14-year-old·boy.
One
of
her
co-defendants,
Xoli•
band was in jail.
· Judge Michael S. Stegmann
wa
Falati,
had
brought
Seipei
to
the
When pr.!)secuton announced
adjourned the trial until Tuesday ·
house
after
allegatic:xts
the
bo)'
was
last
September that Mrs. Mandell
after prosecutors disclosed tha1 one
being
sexually
abused
by
a
while
wQuld
face charges, she said she
of three· key wilnesses - a boy
.
priest
in
a
Sawc10
Metboclist
boswelComed
the aial as a chance. to
named Gabriel Pelo Mekgwe tel
Mrs
Mand!:la
said.
"clear
my
name."
. .
apparently was lridnapped froll! a
'swa.iepoet,
sayinf
the
case
"is
She
quickly
retained
lawyer
plal:e of safety Sunday nighL
not
a
politicaJ
trial
'
despite
the
George
Bizos,
who
defended
her
Mekgwe's guardian, civil rights
identity
of.
the
accused,
told
the
husband
in
1963
before
thj:
ANC
lawyer 'Geoff &amp;udlender, Informed
prosecutors the boy had been coun be intended 10 submit evi- • leader was convicred on cbarJ!es of abducted, cllief prosecutor Jan dence of oibcr lridnappings involv- plotting 10 overthrow the governing Mrs. ~Ia during the course ment
·
.
SwanepoeiiOld lhe courL
·
The trial stems from the Dec.
"•f it's true, it's a very ~~ of 1988.
The nial begiln last Monday, but 29, 1988, abduction from the
developmelll," Swanepoel Slid. "I
can not expect the remaining two was 'adjourned a day later when Methodist hostel of four youths
(witnesses) to. testifY if their lives · defense lewyers unsuccessfully who were taken to her home by
. ...;
. . trie.d to have the cliarges quashed members of th~ Mandela United
are in"·- 11 1
Sle&amp;m*lft· pled the recess so for vagueness. Prosecutors were soccer team, which doubted as her
.
prosecutors, could reassess their instruered by Stegnuum to pn)Vide security guard.
more
details
of
the
indictmeDL
According
10
prosecu10n,
aU
case. Prosecutors told' the .court
Monday they intended to subf!!it ·
The case,bas dimmed !OUCh of .four youths, among them Seipei
evidence of further unrelared lrid- Mrs. Mandela 's support m black and Mekgwe, were beaten by Mrs.
nappings in which Mn. Mandela, townshiE and robbed her of her MandeJa and others afler they were
tide as ' mother of the nation," but accused of having sexual relations
·56, was allegedly involved.
"I am not guilty," dec.lared · she retains a hard core of suppon.
with priest Paul Verryn.
.
Mrs. Mandela, 'who faces four
African ·National Congress
Seipei was liken from the house
charges of lridnapping and four or Deputy President Nelson Mandela three or four days later and killed
.· assault . g from the 1989 slay- has vowed to stand by .his wife, by the former M~ndela United
ing of 1~-ytl!ll'-, old James S10mpie noting she dtd the same for h1m , "coach," Jerry Richardson, who
l;lefore he was rei~ last F~bru- was found guilty by a court in
Moekets1 Seipet.
August last year and sentenced to
Her three c.o-defendants also ary aftu 27 years of mcarcerauon.
Mandela has said the trial will death.
_
pleaded DOl guilty.
The incident prompted a black
Mrs. Mandela said in a state- not interfere with the ANC's
community uproar, ending the public use of Mrs. Mandela's informal
title of "mother of the nation" in
honor or her anti-apartheid activities and her husband's SIIIIUS·

'

Fib. 14 Sectional Tournament at Meigs
High Schaal

_...._.......,....,..._BOYS'
SOUTHERN
Nov. 27- North Gallia .,,,. ;;u,, Home

Nov. 3o.:... Hannan Trece .. .... :: ...Home
Dec. 4-Eastem .... .. ...... .. ;...... Away
Dec. 7- Southwestern,.,,,,,,,, Away
Dec. 8-Paint Valley ............ .. Convo
Dec. 14-Kyger Creek ............ Home .
Dec . .15-Symmes Valley ........ Away
Dec. 21 - Oak Hill .......... .. ...... Away
Dec. 22-Southeasterl! ... ....... . Home
Dec. 28-Athens .. ...... .... ........ Away
Jan. 4-North Galli a. :............. Away
Jan. &amp;-Gallipolis .. ........ .. ....... Away
Jan.1 1 -Hannan Trace .......... . Away
Jan. 18-Easter'n .... .... ............ Home
Jan . 22-Ravenswood:... .. .... .. Away
Jan. 25-Southwastern .... .: ... . Home
Feb. 1-Kyger Creek ............... Away
Feb. 8-Symmas Valley ......... . Home
Feb. 12-Warren ........... ......... Away
Feb. 16-0ak Hill ................. .. Home

SCHEDULEs~~-~-MEIGS

Dec. 1-Athens .... ...... ............. Home
Dec. 4-Balpre .... ... ... ... ... ....... Away
Dec. 11 - Miller ... ..... ..... ... .... .. Homa
Dec. 14-Vinton County .. .. ..... Home
Dec. 18-Aiaxander ............. .. Away
Dec. 21 - Wallston .:. ..... .......... Home'
Dec. 28-logan .. .. : ........ .. ... .. . Away
Jan. 4-Trimble .... ...... ..... .. ..... Away
Jan. 8-Federal Hocl!ing ... .... .. Home
Jan. 11-Nelsonville-York ... .... Away
Jan. 15..,. Balpra ..... .... ... .. ...... . Home
Jan. 22 "- Miller .. .. .......... ........ Away
Jan. 26-Vinton County .. .... ... Away
Jan. 29 - Aiexender .. ......... ..... Home
Feb. 1-Wellston .... .. ..... ... ... ... Away
Feb. 2- Athans .. .. ......... .. ..... .. Away
Feb. 6- Warren ........ ........... ... Home
Feb. 8-Trimble. : .. .. ....... .. ..... ... Home
Feb. 12 - Federal !'tock!"g .:..... Away
Feb . 16- Nalsonvllla -York ...... . Home

EASTERN

Nov. 20- Millar .. .. .. .. ..... .. . ,...... Away
Nov. 23 -"Federal Hocking .. .... Home
Nov. 27-Kyger Creak .. ......... . Away
Nov. 30-Southwastern ...,.... :. Hoine
DEC. 4-Southern .. ... .... .. .. ..... Home
· Dec. 7-Symmea Valley ..... .. .. . Away,,, .
Dec. 14-North Galli a .... ..... .. , Away
Dec. 15-0iik Hill ,................. Home
Dec . 18-Waterford .......... ..... Home
Jan . 4-Kyger Creek ........ .. ... :. Home
Jan . 1'1-Southwastern·... : .. .. . , Away
Jan . 16-Hannan Trace .... ... ... Home
Jan. 18-Southem ...... ........... Away
Jan. 25-Symmes Valley ... ... .. Home
Jan. 26-MIIIer.J.: ... , .. .. .... ..... ..... Home.
Feb. 1-North ualha ...... ...... ... Home
Feb. 6-Fadaral Hocking ..... .... Away
Feb. 8-0ak Hill .... ....... ........ :. Away
Feb. 12-Watarford .... .. .......... Away
Feb . 15- Hannan trace ........ ... Away

.....-...--~-GIRLS' SCHEDULES~------Nov. 12-Nalsonville·York .... .. Away
Nov. 19-Meigs .......... .. ......... Away
Nov. 26-North Gallia ...... .. .. .. Away
Nov. 29-Hannan Trace .......... Away
Dec. 3-Ealtam .... .. ............... Home
·Dec. &amp;-Southwestern ....... .. ... Home
Dec. 10-Kygar Creek .. ......... . Away
Dec. 1 3-Symms Valley ..... .... Home
Dec. 17-Watarford ....... ........ Home
Dec. 20-0ak Hill .. ........ ...... .. Home
Jan. 3-North Gallia .. :.... :.. ... .. Home
Jan. 1 0-Hannan Trace .......... Home
Jan. 1 4-Meiga ......... ...... ... .... Home
Jan. 1 &amp;-Nelsonville-York .. ..... Home
Jan. 17-Eastern ................. ... Away
Jan. 24- Southweatarn .... ...... Away
Jan. 28 - Watarford .. ...... .... .. .. Away
Jan. 31 -Kyger Creek ............. Home
Feb. 4-0ak Hill .... ................ . Away
Feb. 7 - Symmes Valley .. ........ Away

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MEIGS

Nov. 19-Southern .. .............. Home
Nov. 26-Trimble .... .... .. .... .. ... Home
Nov. 29-Vinton County ....... .. Away
Dec . 3-MIIIer .. ... .... ....... .. ... .. . Away
Dec. 8 - Eastarn ............... , .... . Home
Dec. 10-Nelsonvilla-York ...... Away
Dee. 13-8elpra .. .. ..... .. ...... .... Home
Dec. 17-Aiexandar ..... .. .... .. .. Homa
Dec. 20-Wallston ..... .. ......... ,Away
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking ...... .. . Homa
Jan. 7-Trimble .. -..... ........ ....... Away
Jan. 10-VInton County .. ....... Home
Jan. 14-Southern .. .. ... ... .. ..... Away
Jan. 17 -Miller ... .... .. ............. Home
Jan. 21 -Eastern ....... ............. Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonville- York ....... Home
Jan. 28-Balpre ..... : ....... .. .. .... Away
Jan. 21 -Alexander .. ............. . Away
Feb. 4-Wellston ............. :.. .. .. Home ·
&lt;=ab. 7- Federal Hocking ...... .... Away

EASTERN

Nov. 19-Fadaral Hocking .. ~ ... Home
Nov. 26-Kyger Creak .......... .. Home
Nov. 29-Southwastarn ..... .... Away
Dec. 3-Southern ......... .... ..... . Away
Dee. 6-Trimble ................. ..... Home
Dee. &amp;-Symmes Valley .......... Home
Dee. 8-Meigs ........ .. ......... .. .. Away
Dec. 1 0-North Gallia .. ........ .. Home
Dee. 13-Qak Hill ...... .. ........ ~\ Away
Dec. 20-1-fannan Trace .......... Away .
Jan. 3-Kyger Creak ......... ...... Away
Jan. 9-Trimble .... ..... ............. Away .
.Jan.1 0-Southwestern ...... .... . Home
Jan. 14-Fedaral Hocking ....... Away
Jan. 17- Southam .. ...... ......... Home
Jan. 21-Meigs ............ .......... Home
Jan. 24-Symmas Valley ..... ... Away
Jan. 31-North Gallia ... .......... Away
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace ........... .. Home
Feb. 7 - 0ak Hill ..... .... ... ......... Home

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FEBRUARY · 12 THRU 16th .

20°/~

OFF STOREWIDE

FOR THE LADIES..... . .

.

Hush P.uppies, Naturalizets. D. Myers,
Nurse Mates, Purses, Tennis Shoes.
- andJ,atur:alize'r Snow Boots. ·

.. . 25.-~I~10· 'Of.f.,

,

·

.LEATHER and SUEDE BOOTrS
-----S001//0 Off
GROUP OF ·SHOES
,

HOOD .FAMILY ""SHOES
210 EAn MAIN -,

POMEROY
~
~

992-6254

..._,.
...

· CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) - President Hosni Mubarak called Jordan
a "tool" of Iraq for leading sup. port 10 Baghdad and also accused
· Ira(\i leader Saddam Hussein of
sacrifteing his ow.. people for per-·
sonal glory, an aide said Monday~
· •'The Jordaniant have to differ- ·
entiale between what is true and
what is false," Mubarak said.
"The Jordanians are playing the
' role of messenger boy and tool of
the Intqi regime."
The Egyptian leader's remarks
comes after King Hussein of Jor-

t=:C:~!':hh~o~o~

swing further 10 the side of Iraq.
Mubarak also auacked the king's
role.as ''illogical and a tool" in the
hand of Saddam. ,
Muharak also denied rumors
. that a number !lf Egyptian troops in
, Saudi Arabia hacf been killed or
wounded by friendly fire in the
easlem ~ ol ~ k!J~Jdo!". I?BYPtian soldiers -are partlctpallllg m the
U.S.-led multinational forte trying
to liberate Kuwait, which was
invaded by Iraq on Aug. 2·

~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~"~E;gypftian;~tr~oo~ps~(~in~th~e~G;ulf)~
PubliC Notice

Public Notice

LEGAL NOTICE
Notlcolo given thot One Cell
Cornmunlaatlona, Inc. twa
flied . , oppllcatlon with tho
Public utlltiH Commlulon
of Ohio ICoN No 81 ·9D- TP·
AACI for outhorlty to omlftd
~o Cen~ of Public Convonlonco Md N-olty No.
12 In order to ••pond Ito in·
troltoto long dlotonco tole·.
phone nmco to Include
Adomo.
Aohlllnd, Aohto·
bulo, Auglol1o, Bolmont.
Brown, Corroll, Choinpolgn.
Clinton, Coohocton, Crow·
ford. Dorko. Oolhlnco, Fey·
otto. Oollll, Guemuy, Hon·
cocic. Hordln,
Horrioon,
Henry, Hlghlond, Hocking,
Holmoo. Huron, J ...oon,

LEGAL NOTICE
Sealed blda for tile conttructlon of we8tawater

•v•

tem Improvement• for the
Villogo of llutlend, Ohio, !"fill
be recolved by tho Mayor of
tho Village of Rutlond, Ohio.
In tho llutland Civic Confer
on Moln Stroot. Rutlond.
Ohio until 1 :00 P.M. locol
time. Morch 21. 119 I ond ot
thot limo ond ...... will bo
publicly o p - and reod.
Tho work f&lt;&gt;&lt; which 8108
ere invited conaiRa of the

lumla/!lng of oil mitorlolo
and a.bor for the con*1ruc ~
tlon of lho following con·
tracte:
Contrect A - Walteweter
Treatment Plant General:
Conilotlnv of lumllhlnv all
Jeffermn. Knox. Lllke. LIWmotorlolo and lobor for tho
ronco.
Lotion.
Morlon, conotNctlon of 1 11,100
Moigo. Mercer.
Mloml,
waotewatel trootmont
Monroe. Morpn, MOrrow, gpd
plant.
.
Noble. Pouldlng. Perry.
Contract 8 - Waateweter
Plck-oy. Pike, Preble, Put·
Plont Eloctrictll:
nom, llo11, S.ndulky. Sci· Trootmont
Conolotlng
of
fumlahlng oil
oto, SoniCII, Shelby, Tu~e~~·
motorlllo ond )abor 10 pro·
riWII. V1n Wert, Vln· vldo o completo o~trlcol
ton, Werren. Weehlngton.
control •vit•m for
Wayno, Wlllllrno 01111 Wyon· end
the
weatewet.r
t,...m.nt
dot Countlao. Ohio. Any per·
plant.
oon. finn. corporation. or
Controct C - 8onltary
entity who con ahow good
s-or
Syotom: Conalotlng
cou• why !he oppiiCatlqn oflurnlahlng
oil matorllland
-ld not ... gronted lobor for the conltnlctlon
of
ahould fila with tile Com·
oppro•imol81y 24,110 Hnoal
mlulon a w - lltltOmont t.ot Of pr-N lOWer,
dotolllng h ,.aont on or 28.410
lin_. fMt of proa•
_ , . Morch 4 , 1 111 . Un·
ouroi
loteral, 300 grinder
1H1 !hi Comml•lon ro·
pump O!otlono ond appunoco1we a wrllton lltltOmont nancee.
1
to thot .,...., and on ..,.
Tho
aomblnad
ootlmotod
companying requoot for on
coniiNctlon colt tor Ill con•
oral heorlng In thlo matter,
.,.... 11 u.081,ooo.
wll be clocided on
tho Coploo of tho controct
tho boola of the I n - - n documentl era an fill In the
contolnod In !he appllntlon
and ,.,. .tflclovlll .,bmltlad . office of Engln-o A10o·
datoa. Inc.. 700 Winkler
by tho _.....,, ...... n.
Woootar.
Ohio
Drl..,
Further in-ilon may be
44181 ; and In tho F. W.
obtained by
the
Oodgo ofllcoo In Ctevalond
Public UtRitlaa Commltolon
and Columbo10. Ohio and oro
of Ohio. 110 Eoot lroad
a..U.blo for ln-""n by
Stroot.
Columbua. Ohio
proap•tlvo blddora. Plano
43211·0173.
and apaclfl..tlona moy be
12111, 1tc
purc-d from tho olflca of

con-••

Public Notice

PubliC Notice

Englneorlng Aaooclotu,lnc.
The price• for the cantrect
documllnte •r• 11 follow1:
Contract A - Wootowotar
T,.tmont Plant General
Contract a - Waotawotor
TrootmontPiont
. tiO.OO
Eloctrlcol
Contract C - Senitary
s-er Syotem
'110.00
Blddoro will bl required to
comply with Foclorol lAbor
Standordo, e._.tlvo Orcl~r
11241, Minority lualno11
Ent_.. ond Women'•
BuolnoN E-priH requite·
menlo 11 ldonllflad In tho ·
Contiect Docurnenu.
All plonholdon muot ot·
tend 1 pre·bld me .. lng on
March 12. 11181 ot 1:00 P.
M .. locol limo, In lho llut·
lond Civic Center to dlocu11

FINANCIAL REPORT
OF tOWNSHIPS
For Fl-1 Year Ending
Doca-31 , 1890
SALEM TOWNSHIP,
County of Molga
' 1'hllll on unoucllted
Flnanclll Report"
SUMMAIIY OF
CASH BALANCES.
RECEII'TS AND
EXPENDITURE&amp;
.
GOVERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS:
To•oa ....... ......... 28,748.82
lnt-vamrnoniAII
RICIIIpta ......... IB,IOI .II
lnt.,.., ......... .. .... 3, 148. Ill
All Othtr
R..onuo......... 4V.238 . 77
TOTAL
RECEIPTS .... ! 10.143.38
OISIUIISEMENTS:
'
Gonerol
GOYernmont ...34,8112 .11
Public Solety ........ .. 171 .21
·Public Worko .. ...11 .700.48
Hoolth ........... ...... 2,201. 37
Capital Outloy .. ... 8.827:ze
TOTAL.DIIBUIISE·
MENT .......... 108,231 .87
Totol R-pt• Ov•l
(U-) Dlob ...... 44,841.18
0-8our-/
llocelpta ........... 1.017.10
TOTAL OTHEII FINANC·
lNG SOUIICES
(UMI) ................ t,017.10
FIMidCaah llelonco
1/1/81 .... ........10.203.41
Fund Caoh S.lonco
, 2/31/10 ........ 94,102.08
TOTAL
BALANCE ...... 14.102.08
I _,..., thlo rwport ·to be
eo,... ond tNo, 10 th boat

contract requlremel'llle end

tho plano and opoclflcotlono.
Follure to ottend thlo mHt·
lnv may 'bo couM for reJec·
lion of any or olfbldo.
All bldl Will bo compored
on tho bull of tho utlmatod
quantltllo gl.,., In tho bid
blinko. Tho• quontltllo oro
approximate and era given
to provide • uniform boolo
tor tho comPIIrloon .of bldo.
Tho Moror of the Vllllgo of
Flutlond, Ohio ronrvoo tho
right IO l n - . doarHH
or omlt lha omount of ony
claoa or portion of tho work
01 provi&lt;Ud for In tho Contract Documentl.
THo right Ia ,..,.ad by tho
Mo.,.,. of the Vlllavo of Rut·
.lind to roJeoi·IIIY ·OI oH bldl,
10 wolve lnformolltill or to
any bid which lo
dllmtd mo8t f8VOrabf• to
lhoYIIIoga.
ly Ordar of h Moror.
Vlllogo ol llutland. Ohio.
Jomoo M. Fink, Moyor
VIllage of ll~ttond, Ohio
FEB. 11, II. 2tc .

British PM arrives

BONN, Germany (UPI) British Prime Ministu John Major
arrived in Bonn Monday on his
ftrst official visit 10 Germany and
immediately spoke with Chancellor
Kohl before his rlanned
are safe and performing their task Helmut
meetings with families o British
efficiently,'' Egyptian Information troops deployed in the Persian
Ministu SafWat As Sherif quoted Gulf. '
.
· .
Mubarak as saying during a late .
His
visit
follows
sharp
criticism
Sunday meeting pf the ruling by sbme British officials or what
National Democratic Party.
they cons~ed Gerrnany:s ~de­
"Those rumors are grouncfless quate
role m the gulf con(licL ·
... the (Egyptian) state is always
"We have a lot to talk about,"
telling the U:Uth," Mubarak was MajOr said on arrival at the Chanquored as saymg.
where he was welcomed
Mubarak also accused Saddam . cellery,
with
full
milititry honors. ·
of seelring glory at the expense of
Speaking j11s1 before he and
his owu people and co~Kohl sat down rex talks scheduled
. "I can' t imagine that a rule~ to last two .hours, Major said
would sacrifice his people and Britain and Germany had "a lot in
army for the sake of a personal common.''
During his talks with Major,
glory," Mubarak said.
Kohl is likely to point out that
despite his government's belief the
· The Egyptian president, who is German COJIStitution i1oes not allow
taking a firm stand aBainst Iraq's for a German military presence in
occupation of K11wau, reiterated the gulf, the 'Bonn government
the only way to end the war was 1 pledged considerable financial aid
Iraq's acceptance of y .N. ,resolu- for the multinational troops fighttions demanding Baghdad 1eave
Kuwait.
·
ingO~e $8.5 billion in military
aid pledged, more than ~~()() ~i~- ·
th .
lion was given 10 the Bnlish mlh"The only solution e mtema- tary, which has deployed ~s to .
tional community can accept after
the war erupted is ·that Sadd.am participate in the U.S .-led alliance
lighting to oust Iraq from KuwaiL
announces
f.rom
Kuwait imd his
the withdrawal
restoration of
the The allied forces launched an air
emirate's legitimate government."
he said.

asS&amp;ult against Iraqi forces on Jan.
17 in an effort 10 end Iraq's occupation of Kuwait, that began with
an invasion on Aug. 2.
k ohl is also exl?ected to tell
Major thai Germany tntends 10 play
an even ~r role - f111811Cially
alid politically - in rebl_lilding the
gulf region once the war 1s ov~.
· Diplomatic sources say the talks
will largely concenuate on postwar strategp,es, including proposals
for the establishment or a Middle
East crisis-prevention body similar
10 the Conference on Security and
Cooperation in Europe.
The two governments agree on
several key issues or future Middle
East policy. But Major is ~ikely
10 supP?rt Kohl's suggestion or a
financial package foc the gulf similar 10 the Marshall Plan provided
by the Unired States for the reconstruction of Europe after World
warn.
nie two leaders are also 10 dis- ·
cuss European policy, a topic
which Kohl is likely .to find easier
to discuss with Major than it had
been with former Bri!ish Prime
Minister Margaret Thatcher.
Diplomats say the friendly relationship between the two conservative leaders stands in sharp contrast
with what one British official
.described as Thatcher's "deeP. distrust of the Germans and dislike of
Kohl."
'

y

Mubarak also accused Saddam
of harming the Pale~tine que.s~on·
by invading Kuwait and fmng
Scud missiles at Israel.

NIGHT

SPECIAL

"The moves or the Iraqi ruler

adversely affect the Palestinian
cause, '/ihether ~ the forceful
occupation of Kuwa11 or by divening the 'IIIICntion of the world community away from this cause," he
said.
''ISQ~el's self-restraint allowed it
10 receive aD the milirary and eco-

COining • - Only)
Served with whipped potlton, chick"!'- gravy, colo olow. hot roil1nd butter.
Sorry. no oubotltutea ••capt beveroge
·
with additional prjcoo. .. ·-

~c~it~(theUnited

StateS and Europe) for," he said.
Saddam fired more than .30
Scuds at Israel since the gulf war
be$.8" 26 days ago. The last Scud
strike Wlf on Friday, when missile
ftlgments wounded 26 Israelis and
clarnaged bomCs in Tel Aviv.

$ 36 5
·

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER
. ROLL
~

.·· CROW'S
PH.

~

PlMI~Y( REST AURA NT
!

_

l

·-;

POMEROY I OH.

Frlatl Clricka11

February 14th:~alentlne's Day!
Show your Valentine how much you c~re.,..purchase yo~r
· flowers of $30.00 or more for Valentini s Day and we II
give you· one pound of chocolates Fr.e.
·

_. ·

"Pickup or Jt.llvered"

Flowers Wired Worldwide/Pravioui .Coupon Ca1h &amp; Carry Only.
64880 SR 124
Portland, Ohio 46770

ofmykn-dgo.

Bonnla Scott, 1118/81
Townahlp Clerk
21231 loalon flood,
longovlllo, Ohio 4174 I
114·811-30111
121 1 I. ltc

attacks In the area by tile
Organtzalion. (Reuter/UPI)

DEFENSE AGAINST PLO - Soldiers or the
Israeli-backed South Lebanon army ddend
their ar.Wiery position a rew days after rocket

Mubarak calls Jordan
'tool' used by Iraq

SPECIA.L

SOUTHERN

••

~lf!o- 1

Ftcleral Hocking, Away
Nelscinwillt-fork, Home

GIRLS
Jockson, 7:00 p.m.

I

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

:Monday, February 11,1991

Harris Farms

h

&amp; Floral S
Greenhouses

,

.......... .,,.
(8001 &amp;ft-28159

afti'

•
II

/

\

. ... e-

�'•

Page 8 The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy~lddleport,

'.

•

Monday,~ 11,1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Classifie

during bi-weekly child health clin-

ics.

Days

$

"free ads
Giw~oaway 11nd found ads und~ 15 words w1ll be
ruu 3 dil¥'5 al nu ch•ye.
• Pt~ttr ot .tet tor all capnallettttrs 1s. dou~lc pflctt ol ad cos t ,
'7 poult ltnt! lyfMI Only used ·
.
·
'Senlint.ol IS 110t unponslble lor errors ilhllt l11st J61f (Chuck
tor t!rrurs hnt d.;- ,ad ri•ns m papUt) . Call bttlore 2 00 p 111
d~ altt!r publu:ation to makt! correction
• Ads. that mu1fbe pond 1n advanc\1 ar•J

•

Hillppy Ads

In Mt:monam

't"owd Sillus

Clussifi('d
Galli• County
Area C.ode 61 •
446 Galli'pol•s
367 Ch•hlf•
388 . Vinton
245 Rio Grande
256 Guy1n Oist.
643 Arabi1 0111.
379 Wllnut

DAY. BEFORE. PUBLICATION
COPY DEADLINE
11 .00 A .M . SATURDAy
MONDAY RAPER
2'00 P.M . MONDAY
TUESDAY PAPER
2 :00 P ,_, _TUESDAY
WEONESOAY PAPER
2.00 PM , WEONESOAV
THURSDAY PAPER
2 :00P.M . THUASOAV
1-HIOAV PAPER
2 00 P,M . FRIDAV
SUNDAY PAPER

li·

tor, aeated, aDd Pam Sharp, bealtll pi'Gfetlional
aad nutritionist, Norma Torres, R. N., 1tacil
director, aad Dortba Riflle, ADP coordlaator,
seated left to right.

aad famUy health services program or tile Meigs
County Henlth Department. Joa Jacobs, stalld·
ing, Is the fiscal a1ent. Carol Tanaeblll, RN·
, CFHS, not pictured, beads up the program for
the departmeat. .
. .
'

•

'

Records put on file and' sent to the state ....... 208
Cancer &amp; Lymphocytic Lymphoma ·::~ ..... ;....... 26
Death Records .............................. l87
Pnf!!lmonla .... ,........... ,...... :..... ,................. : ..... 12
Birth Records .................................. o
Respiratory Failure ..............: ......................... 7
Certificates of Servlce ..... ,...... , .. ,.....21
Multl·system Failure .......... ,.......................... , 7
Certified Death Records Issued ........ ............ ,.. 0 Sepsis ;............................................................ 7
Certlfle'd Birth Records Issued ............... ; ... 1,016 Accident ....... ......... ...... .... ......... ................ : ..... 5
Burial/Transit Permits Issued ..................... 205
Renal Fallure ................................................. 3
Total Remitted to State Treasurer for ,
.
Aspiration ...... ,............................ ... ,...... ,....... ,2
, Child Abuse and N'eglect Funds ...... ,.. $2,072.00
Emphysema ................. ............... ................... 2
C'\USES OF DEATH:
Acute Right Subdural Hematoma ..... :............. ,l
Heart Related .................................. :............. 97
Acute Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding ............ !
Arteriosclerotic Cerebrovascular
Bowel Obstruction .......................................... 1
Disease .............................................. 4
Diabetes .................. ;............. ,..................... .'.. 1
~terlosclerotlc Heart or Vessel
,
Extensive Bra1n' Injury &amp; Maceration.............. 1
Disease ............. ....... :....... ·..... ,........... 12
Hepatic Failure...... :........................................ !
Cardiac Arrest or Sudden Cardiac·
Homicide ......................... ,........ ...................... 1
Death ................................................. &amp;
Hypotension................... ,................................ 1
Cardiac Arrythmia ....................... ,....... .4
Malnutrition
...... ,............................................ !
C11rdlo Arystole ..................................... }
Cai'dlogenlc Shock ................... ~ ............. 1
l
Cardlo ~ulmonary or Cardlo .
Possible Pulmonary Embolus ......................... !
. Respiratory Ar.rest ............................ 25
· Progressive Dementia .................................... !
Cerebro·vascuhir 'Accident or .
,
Septic Shock ................................. ....;.............. l
Thrombosis .......... :............ :........... :.. :. 5
Sudden
Death ................................................. 2
Congestive Heart Fallure ...................... ll
·
Suicide
......
: ................................. .'.. :.............
,Hypoxia:"... ., ..... :....................... ;.... ,.. :..... . }
Urinary
Tract
Infec.Uon ........... :...................... !
Ischemic or Pllated Cardiomyopathy ..... 5
VIral
Syndrome-Bronchitis
............•....... :........ .'.1
tdyocardfal Infarctlon ............. :............. 20
Cause
pendlng
...............
.............
~............ :...... 1
OrganJc Heart Dlsease ................. ,..........2

\

MEIGS BOARD OF HEALTH ·Jon Jacobs,
seated center, Is the deputy bealtJJ COIImllsioner
for the Melp County Health Department. Keith
Lillie, seated left 11 the director or enriroDiDntal •eallb, and Norma Torres, R.N., Is nurslag
dll'fttor. Others active with the department are

left to right, standing, Pearl Scott, registrar, ·
vhal lltatlltltlaa; T. C. Ervin, R. N., -latant
nur~lnl director; Zane Bee11e, ualtarlan Ia "
!J'If!llng; Edwlaa Bell, nursiDt:'k,
iStrar; Carol Guinther, adJn
adve
t,
and JKkie IU!debrand, Green Tbnab

JII'OII••

DR. MARCIE LAWSON

dep:t:.•· :
worm.

Evnironmental inspections·increase ~·i
lnspeelions by the envirorunen:
tal health section of, the Meigs
County Heallh Depanment conlinued 10 incn;ase during 1990 with
the largest increase being inspections of ~censed food service qperations, iccording to Keith Lift!e,
director. There were approximately
225 inspection- conducted it the
128 licensed fOOd service operations in lhe county.
Thirty-five permits to install private water sylilems and 119 pennits
to install private sewage disposal

systems were issued during the . home parks and se.Sonal health
year.
and safety inspections were con- ·
In addi:::O.Juarterly inspections ducted at all licensed n;creatiODal
were pert:
at the Meigs County Landfill and also 811he two land- vehicle parks and cam)lii'OUIIds. ·
Inspections, both fOOd service
fills ·owne4 by Southern Ohio Coal
and
classroom environment, were
Co. Even though the landfills are ·
conducted semi-annually at all the
no longer in operation, it is schOOls
in lhe three disqicts of the
required by Ohio law that the county.
Heallh Department monitor them
for 1 period of several years after
Approximately 73 requests for·
closun;.
.
testing
of private water systems
Semi-annual inspections. were ·
were
n;ceived.
conducted 81 all licensed mobile
•
There were 52 animal bites
investigated with·appmimately 75
percent of diose reported being
dogs. Liute IIOICS that Wayne RoseDr. Margie Lawson is Meigs tionist; Edwina Bell, nursing ben'y,·county dog warden, has been
County's Health Commissioner, clerk/deputy registrar; Phyllis very he.Ipful in ~he pickup and
and Jon Jacobs is lhe deputy health Bearhs, Women's Health Care quaranune of ammals whenever
commissi011er and registered sani- technician; Dorothy Riffle, possible.
t.ariam, '
W.I.C./A.D.P. coordinator; and
Overall,lhe area of envirotuften.
Nursing personnel at lhe depart- .Belinds Jeffers, pan-lime A.D.P. tal hei!Jth in !&gt;feiJS CountY, seems
ment are Norma Torres, R. N., assistant coordlnilor; Pearl Scott is to be unprovmg u each calendar
nursing din;ctor, T. C. Ervin, R.N., lhe department n;gistrar and vital year passes. 1'hO continued 1111ppor1
-assistant nursing din;ctor, Carol statistician.
and ~011 of lhe citiaill of
Tannehil~ R. N., child and family
Three Green Thumb employees Meigs:;;ty is a very im~t
health services director; Debbie work 81 the Meigs County Healllt faciOr for the coatinuil upgradina
Babbitt, R. N., W.I.C. Director, Department througll a federally and improvement of the environ1'1111 ShaaJ.I, B. S.• home eca10111ics, funded program tllat taps the ~ in which they ilve, according
and Connie Little., R. N., pres111ta1 nnmerous talents of Senior Citi- to lbe depai UllenL
~.
.
zens. They are Faye Schubz, Mary
Penonnel iD the environmental
Ancillary personnel includes Durst, and Jackie Hildebrand. health secti011 includes Ulde, 1011
Carol Guinther, administrative Twice montbly the nursing staff is D. Jacobs, a~.
assistant, Health Chek Clerl1recep- also aided by two volunteers, and Zane Beegle, sanitarian in
Dorothy Loilg and'Mary Buck.
training.
.

Lawson, Jacobs head department

EARLY INTERVENTION· Rita J, Fields, licensed 10elal
• wwm, •ted. 11 C!GOP'" 1" ror tile Elrlyllltenenllon
at tile Melp County HeaiCII DepartllleDt. Her role Is to. ldtntlfy
pofeDtlll prolllelu ud t ''nlpplq ClOIIdllloal In pre«tooo qed
etlldrea aacl work witt ...., •ndet on IDIYIDt or aDevlatiq
a.- IIJ'MieDJ&amp; Worldlla witt Mil. Jileldlln tile PJVFUIII Janet
Donie, a lllldal work .._. , _ a.Jo Ulliverslft. Joa JIICObl,
deputy,_.. ClllllllildiiMI', II tte lllal Dlllm for the JlfOIJ'IIII. ·

Are.i Code 304

M•ddhport
Pom•ov

Ch• .. •
Pot11and
Letart flUs

Racine

J

'

In Memory

6
1

Annoucements
GiVIIWI'f
Happy Ads
LOJI and F'!)und
Y•d Salelpaid •n advance)
Public Sale &amp; Auct10n
Wented to Buy

112 N.-w

St·rvlc~s
Helo w..-t tKt
SitUIIbOn Wanted
Insurance

21
22
23

letart
Buflillo

Coolville

liustnMs Bu1ldmgs •.
lots &amp; Acruag'
Real btne Wanted

41
42

Housel !01 Ren1
Mobile Homtn lor Rent

•J

f&lt;~~rtt~s

44
45
46
47

FurRI5hed R ooms
Sp~c• lor Rent

61
62

~ Farm

Tran s ortation
71 Autos tor s .. "
7 2 Truc~t ·tor Sill .~
73 v.~~ns &amp; 4 wo·,

for A.-.nt
Apartment tOr Runt

7A
7!)

MotOfCVtl ..
BOilll &amp; Mo110tri lor Sal t!
Auto PitfiS &amp; Ac:cauouDS
AutO Aopait
Ca 1np1n9 Equtpm.mt
Cillmpen &amp; Mo1or Homes

76
7-7
78
79

Merchandise

Services

51 H'ouMhold Go9ds
62 - Sporling G!)oda
·

Bus in•• Opporlundy
Money to Lo"n
Ptofessfon•l Ser~t~•c:n

5]

AniJQU81

54
55
56
57
sa
59

Misc. M~t ch&lt;~~nd•se
But! ding Suppli81
Pett for Sale
.
Mulic.t lnihurntmtt
frUIIS

"

a. Vegetables

For Sale

ot

Trarte

Equtpmont

Wanted to Buv
Lr\leUock
Hay ~ Gram

61
64
66 • Sued Ia Ferttll.tel

Want ed to Rent
48 Equ,pment for . Aunt
49 F01 lease

13
14 'Busm•• Train1n9
15 School• • InstructiOn
16 Radio. TV &amp; CB Attp ;m
17 .MisceUan.ous
1 8 Wanted To Do

Ha~t~en

31
35
36

I;AbrNI

EIIIII I0 yIIll: II I
11
12

&amp; Livestock

Hoi'UIItS lor Sale
Moblht Homts tor Slllt!
JJ · Fa"rms lor Sah.o

31
32

''"'"

81
,82 -83
84
85

Home lmptowunent s.
Plumb•ng &amp; Hulmy
E~U;:iYilting

Eltc~rical &amp; RehtgurMiiOil
G"n~~rel Hauhny

86 Mobil11 Home Rep.au
87 Upholsterv

'

"

MIDDLEPORT COMMUNITY
ASSOCIATION VALENTINE
DANCE
FEB. 15 - 8 to 12
CROSSOVER BAND

MIDDLEPORT'S
CANDLELIGHT SERViCE
FEB.14- 7:00P.M.
AT CITY HALL

Call 992-6128

BASKET WEAVING CLASSES

DOMINO'S PillA

,The Basket Weave, Pomeroy

Make a Basket For Your Kitchen!
Cl~ss Will Be February 21st
Call 992·6855 to .Reg1ster
Lots of Valentine Baskets in Stock.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
llernord 8. Huret
Olr!ICior of Tr.. aportotiO~
Stoto of Ohio
, '
PLAINTIFF
VI.
Unknown J1olro. 0..1-1."
E•ocutoro, .Admlnillrotoro,
or Anigno of the Eowe of
Mallia WHiiemo, Docoeoed.
et ...
DEFENDANTS
Con No. 80·CY·2911
AFFIDAVIT
Btoto of Ohio,
County of Melgt
RICHARD A. SZILAGYI.
being llrot duly •-n. de·
po..o end HVI 111ot he lo 0
duly , oppolnted. quollflod
end octlng Aulatont Attor·
noy Gonorel of the Stole of
Ohio; 111ottho Plolntllf. Ber·
nerd 1. Huret. Olroctor of
Tr..,oportotton. Stole of
Ohio. - o by hlo Petition,
to opproprfato ll1o property
deocrlbod thenln end to fl•
the veluo thereof: lhet II op.
peero thel tho Unknown
Hoiro, Oovl-o, o•ocutora.
Adminlllrotoro. or Aaolgno
of:
Mallie Wlllfamo .,d
Moxie Adell RayiiOr end Ad·
til Rayoter. decoond. ore
neceoaory pertleo to lhla.,....
coedlng ond It further op.
peare tMt their n1me1 •nd

Sltuotecl In the VIllage of
Pomeroy, County of Moig1
end • • - of Ohio. ond more
fully boulhtod ontt deocrlbod
11 followa:
·
PARCEL NO. ti·\VD
!HIGHWAY)
AU RIGHT. TITLE AND
INTEREST IN FEE
, . SIMPL.E. EXCLUDI!IIG
liMITATION OF ACCESS,
IN THE FOllOWING
DESCRIBED PROPERTY.
INCLUDING THE
STRUCTURE 'THEREON ,
· Being the nortll hill of Lot
17 end the whale of Lot 18
1ftuated on the w.t: 1id1 of
Kerre Run. and U. B. Hor·
ton'o Addlllon to Pomeroy,
Ohio, tho cool ond other mlneNII contelned h•aln.
with the right to mino the
a me. togllher with oil wove
end rlghto ol
tiona ony
mln.-al Mam having been
t-ofore reMrvod to s.
Wyllie Pomeroy.
,
Owner• retoln rlghto of In·
graN end
to Md lrom
ony reolduol oree,
,
Ownero cloim title by inltrumant recordN In Volume 231. 11 Pogo 13 t. of
tho Oood Recorda of Mtlga
County, Ohio.
. Bold peroono noted obovo
aholl Nrther toke natlcothot
unleoo they, or tholr ottornoy, file .. An._r NO LA·
TER THAN 21 DAYS otter
tho camplotlon of tho Service by Publlc81ian, they wMI'
bo doonMid to hove wolvod
tltelr right toan1wer. and the
"-titian wMI bo token oo true
..,d Judgment wMI
bo
rend.,.d occardlngly; ClvH
Rule t2(A)(t).
BERNARD 8 . HURST.
Director of T;an..,on8tion
(1) 7. 14. 2t. ZB:
121 4. 1 1. etc
111· 1120

place• of _
,..w •.nn are un-

known to Plointill end con·
not wtt11 · ,..toneblo dll~
gence bo •-ned; ond
thet It Ia - - r y -•fore
to give notice of tho filing rrl
the Petition heroin by Publl·
cotian. In occordonco with
-ian 2703-14; t83.07;
2703 .24; ond ClvH Rule
4 .4(A). Revioed Code.
And further offiont aolth
not.
Rlchord A. SriiOJIYi,
Aaolatont Attamoy Generol
· Swcwn to bttfoN me and
..t.acrlbod in my p,_co
thlo 13th dey of Doct1mbor,
1880.
Amy R, Goldttoln. Eoq.
Natory Publla. Stole of Ohio
LEGAL NOnCE
FOil PUILICAnON
Unkno- Holro.
Eaocutoro, Admlniatretart,
or Aotlano of tho Eoteto rrl
Mallia Wll..mo. DOCIIOHCI.
ond Unkna- Holra. Dev·
1-a. E_,toro. Admlnl•
ttotoro or Auiant of tho E•
tote of Moxie ol:dell Rayoter.
Docoooed, end Unknown
Hlliro. Devl-. Exocutara,
Admlnlett-ro. or Anlgno
of the Eototo al Adell Royt·
!M. Doaeu.d. wllll8ko no·
tlce lhot "'"' ..... .....
ouedbytlloD'-ofTnn·

Devl-•·

oport.· - "!
Ohio,
Who of
hot""'
~lllluled
I
prDCMdlng In ll1o CamrMn
Court of
Meige
County. Ohio. to op""'prt.
at. ....,. praparty claocrlbod .,.,...... tor highway. purpoMO, nornely tho
- . . . . - - • im·
of:
· · - R - 33/124.
aootlon 1 2.11,
22. 71.
Melao County, Ohio, ""d to

po•••••t

tho ...... al ........
"'The"'
to
lie opproprla1Nio--.

fiJI

a•'"'--"'

clflcelly dNorlbod •• fol·
Iowa:

tlu in bidding.
Fred Haffm1n, Mayor
Vlffag.o of Middleport
!2) 4, 11. 2tc

AT

992-2124

""'Y'

eor••

Pwllc Notice
ADVERTISEMENT FOil
liDS
-led blda lor
tho canotruction rrl on eddl·
tlan'lo end tho renovotian of
tho Molgo County Deport·
ment of Human Servicea
lacloled 011711 ............
Mfdclloport, Dhlo. will bo ro·
ot tho office of tho
Moigo County Commlallan·
""· Moigo County Court·
houn, Pomeroy.
Ohio
411711 '"''" 2:00 PM llaaef
thM! on Flbruory 27. 111'1.
ond then. ot loid office pub·
llcly a p - end oloud.
Warll ~~~- by the Can·
treat Dacu-olnCiude tho
following ltomo for whloh
bldowll bo_.oCI: ADDI·
TION TO AND RENOVA·
ME!OI
TION OF 'THE
COUNTY DEPAR~ENT
Of HUMAN IERVICEB.
A now building oddllion to
the oxlotlng Deportment of
Humon lorviN,o with Into·
rlar -··
· tho ......
lng
building
together
with
the .,.... ...., opportoinlng
work.
8-roto Controcta Far:
1 . GenOtol. Archlttoct't .._
1111.112.00.
El~. Arohltoct'o
Eotlmoto et21.112.oo.
• 3. HVAC. Archfloi:t't E..._
..,.., e142.771.oo.

a_,...

z.

71

Autos for Sale

. 1986 JAGUAR XJ6

VANDEN PIAS
4 Dr., 1 own.,., .. rocords,
aiiiiOal&lt;s, original wlllllaw
otlcker, fully loaclod with
cohlar phOM, oxcollont
condition, black/doe skin.
$16,100.00.

· 4. Plumbing. Arcl!ltoct'o ,

The Cantrect
Dacu..,.nto .
Eothuto
U9,180.00.
moy bo OX8mlnod ot:
1'h• , Olfl~• of tho Moigo
County
Commioolonoro,
Molga Counly Courtllouoo.
Pomeroy, Ohio 48719.
Burvno • Nlple, Uf11hod.
4424 Emoroon A....,uo, P••·
koroburg, Woat Vlrglnlo
21104.
'
Caplea of the Contrect
Dacumonla may bo ob·l
tolned ot tho office of
Burvoxo • Nlple, Umltod.
lacloted ot 4424 Emoroon ·
Avenue. P•rk••burg, W111
Vlrvinlo 28104 upon PI!Y"
mont . of Fifty
Dollor1
(.50.00). NONE OF WHICH
WILL BE REFUNDED.
The Moig1 County Com·
mloila-1 moy occopt tho
l._ot bid, or Ml*'t the boot
bid lor the lnt-od pu,..
pooo.' ontt ,....,. the right
tu 1ccept or l'lliec:t eny or all
bldo end/or ony port thoro-

l[

614-247-4161

toMPlfTt iYSUi

•On 'Scr•fl Gr.,Wrs -

M.h .,..........,.
•UHf l•mete - Ptrftc:t
for rtmete .,.,,lion.
. •full StttH

COMPlETENOTHIIG

mr TO

IUY!

LEGAL NOTICE
Nolicolo glventhel One Coli
Communlcoliano. Inc. dbo
OPT ICO M 1111 flied on oppU·
eolian wMh the Public Utllitloo Comml-n of Ohio
!Cue No 90·1BO·TP·ACE
lor outhorlty to emend Itt
nilllng lntorlm IUthorlty in
order to provide alt..-natlva.
oporotor oorvlcoo In Adomo.
Aohlond. Aahlllbulo, Augloire. Bolmont.
Brown.
Corroll, Chompoign, Clln·
tan, Colhootan, Cr8Wford,
Dorke. Doflonctl. Foyetto.
Gollle, GuomMy, Hon.-.
Hordln, Ho&gt;Tioon. Henry,
HJ9hlond, Hocking, Holme1,
Huron, Jockton, Jolforton.
· Knox. Llwronco. logon.
Morton. Molgo, Mer-. Ml·
oml, Monroe. Morvon. Mor·
..,w, Noble. Pouldlng, Perry,
Pike. p,.blo, Putnom, Ro11,
londuolty. lclato. Bonoco.
Shelby, Tu-r-,fa, Von
Wort, VInton. Woahlngton.
Woyne, Willlomo end Wyon·
dot Cauritloo; Ohio. Any per·
eon. flrm, corpontlon, or
ontlly who con thow good
ctiUIO why tho oppllcotlon
,thould nat bo gronted
thould fila with the Cam·
mloolon • wrltton ototomont
clet8lllng tM rNeone on or
before Morell 4.' 1811 . Un·
fan the Commfoolon ro·
Dlivft • wrltl.. ltlltement
to lhlt olloct end .., ••·
calllfllnylng req_, for on
orll hoorlng In thlo metter,
tho ceoo wiH bo docl- on
tho boolo of Jllo inlarmotlon
aontolnod In the -lqetion
end tho offltlovllo .,llmftted
by tho Oflllfiaent heroin.
Further lnlarmotian moy bo
-lnod by aon-lng tho
Public Utlilloo Cam.....,n
rr1 O~lo. 110 Eoot lrood
Columbu._ Ohio
432111·01173.
i2i11,1tc

S1,895

!

EnJoy ;, • ., 100 chon·
nolo. s .. tho nowo LIVE
oo II hoppon'o - 2 4
houri. fAD •vttem In·
elude• decoder.
CAll TODAY
FEBRUAR_\'.SPECIAL
ONLY

ZENIX VIDEO

~""".
'-,

THE

W" GROOM

~
For

All Breeds

EMILEE ME Rl NA R

614-992-6820
p

. omeroy,

Oh'

.,•e,•.tf~

Aa..a ,..,. Post OHico

117 r. Secottd st.
POMIIOY, 01110

3/6/90/lln

G
1 '
Real Estate enera

USED RAILROAD TIES
I· 1 2·90·1fn

YOUNG'S'

BISSELL
BUILDERS

· CARPENTER SERVICE
- Room Addition•

-Gutter work

CUSTOM BIILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

-Electrical and

-Rooflng
-Interior • bt8fior

P•lntlno

PH. 949-2101
or Its. 949-2.60

SIGNS

!FREE ESTIMATES!

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS ,

by tlck moi1Yltl(

. s~rby

992~6215

Pomorar, Ohio
II· 14!90 tfn

4-11·16·11•

~UALITY
Point Pleasant • 675-6925

BISSEU &amp; BURKE
, CONSTIU(nON

J&amp;L

INSULATION .

etllew .H-s
•Garagtt

•Vinyl Siding
•Replacement

Window.

•Co•JII•••

••-deli..

PubliC Notice

DEXTER - Here is our ho'!'e in the country - Secluded 3
acre wooded home site and a newer "Bam" style home·in
great condition. 3 bedrooms, 211 baths, full bas~~ent .~re
just a few of the features lh1s home oHers. Thl~ IS a Steal at
$56,000 00

POMIEROY - ONE OF POMEROY'S MOST
Old Elm Hurst Tavern~ now for
ing has a variety of potential uses. Call today
mg. ONLY $12,500.00.
·
,
VACANT ACREAGE IN SALEM TWP.- Approx, 57 acres of
nice meadows plus wooded acreage. Housing sile or hunting
land. REDUCED TO $19,900.00.
.
PRICE REDUCED on this country home. This home teaiUies
3 bedrooms, I balh, all electric with a 2 car garage, slprage
building all on approx.l acres of land. IMMEDIATE POSSES·
SION- MOVE RIGHT IN AT ONLY $34,000.00.
THE PERFECT PlACE FOR AN OLDER COUPLE OR FOR THE
NEWLrWEDS- In towo one floor plan home close to em·
ything! 2 bedrooms. I bath, nice kitchen cabinets on a
6&amp;:x166' lot Just perfect for 2! ONLY $19,500.00.
POMEROY - COUNTRY BUNGALOW - Out of town, Re·
cently remodeled. aaraae 2·3 bedrooms, equipped kitchen.
Alllh~ for $14,900.00.
You'll IIIYt 1 wonderful fnfin1 wh•n you put JOUI'ItH in
our hlndJ. Wlltlllor you're h0111 huntlnl,llfllnl or both
- your int~sts are "OUR" lnlornl! Our blclrpound of
"parf1nct Is oK!InJivt... and Is r•dy to
roul Sttls11111 clients hev•lllld• our ropulltfon. So why notcomt In
1nd put your housit1 probl1ms in our hendof
•

•M

HENRY E. CLELAND ....................................... 992-6191
JEAN !RUSSELL.. ....... ,............. ,..................... 949-2660
JO HILL ........ ,........... ,........ ,.......................... 91$-4466
OFFICE .......... ,, ......... ,................................... 992-2259
INTERESTRED IN ACAREER IN li£AL ESTATE?
CALL CLElAND REALm

.

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
The Ohio Dopartm'ent of
Naturel Reaourcea, through
tho Divlolan of Pirkl ""d ro·
creetlon, purauent to end In
eccor.nce wh:h the provt•
llano of Section 1101 ,10 of
tho Ohio RoviHCI codo pro·
pooooto l"nlor the OJIOfl·
tiOn of the bolt rente! 1t
Forked Run Stoto Park,
Mtlgo County. Ohio,
OHiclol bid propoloio will
received In tho office of
Divlolon of Porko""d llo·
orutlon until 2:00 p.m,
T-dey, Morell I. 1981 .
Bldt wiN bo publicly opened
th-ltot by tho Chief or hlo
outhorired ogont, Tho right
Ia re...-ved to reject any 1nd
Ill bldo.
Tho leon will bo lor • term
of opproaimottlv four 141
.,_,, from execution of
le11e to
December' 31,
1184. Sold leoao moy be ro- e d ot the aptian of tho
Director lor o period not to
oxcood lour 141 yooro.
The Oivlolan of Perko Md
llocrMIIon wNI fumlah one

·-·

•Roofing
•lnouletlon

Stop &amp; Ce111pare
frM Estimates

JAMES IEESEE
992-2772 or

985-4473
667-6179

742-2251
&amp;38 Bryan Place
Mlddfepon, Ohio
I 1-14-lln

S-31·'90 tin

•Remodeling al)d

Home

•et•

IPI~'flo&amp;IIDna.

h
bo lholntont of tho
.....lhottho minimum-·
oon of -etlan for I lie ,con·
Cltllon bo from Mev 1
th.............30.
.. _ .... "" bid propoooi
lafmo ahauld bo ..,.. to tho
Ohio Dopo"mont al Nolllrll
Rooourcoo, Divillon of Portee
end RoaNotion. canoiana a!ICiion, 1 liZ llolohor
D- C·3. Columbuo. OH .
43224·1311, Telephone:
ti14) 211·1140,
fRANCIS 8.
IUCMHOLZIR.
.
DIRECTOR
(2) 4. 11 . 18. 21. 4tc

,

Repair~

•Roofing
•Siding

·

•Painting

NO JOB TOO SMALL

205 N. Socantl Str•t
IIIDDLEPOIT, 01110 45 ,..
llfft&lt;. 614-9U-2116
HOMr 614-992-5692
oomr s. TUIND, 110111

FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION

HOUSES•LOTSHARMB
COMMERCIAL
We Ne~ Llotlnpl
I 1-1· 10-lfo

992·6648 or
698-6864

IIIDENIIDENT
CA..IT CUAIIIIS
•111111U fLOOI CAB

. DAN'S
IIANSMISSION
and AUTO IEPAII

12·31-IIO·tfn,

•Raaaoneble ,._...

lpoclollzlng In
Automotlc
Trenomloolona. Brekeo,
Tuneup. 011 Chongo,
Clutch Repolr,
FREE ESTIMATES
8 Yoort Experiln ..

•Qulllty Wotlt

oqulp..,.nt 01
bid apoclficotlono, ond
Wllter end watt• w•ter
treetment nece•ury for thl
cancoollon _.,ian,
The Can-llan~~lre wiN
lumlah oil oqulpmont,
.-chondiM, m-o. oup.
plloa, utllltioo end labor no......, to oporoto tho boot
...,... can-un to ap.
ptDVOd ltondordt during tile
- o f -otlon- dolly
houro dell11od In tho lo-

Plumbing

-Concrete wart.

"At Roasonablt' Prien"

C'lt4tlllt

POMEROY. OHIO
992-2259

BILL SLACK
992-2269

Hl-lln

992-5335 or
915-3561

~======~::.!.:~==~;::::::::

SHRUB &amp; TIEE
TRIM and
REMOVAL
•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD

PH. 949-2101
or.,._ 949-2160
NO SUNDAY CAUS

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

2

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM ~IDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Now H•.. lulft

Pick Up.

Owner &amp; Optrotor

Lacatetl On Soiftonl Schtol I d. off It. 141
!614) 446·94U or 1·800-172·5967

"frM Ellfmetes"

ALL MADS
Bring It In ()r We

Complete Grooming

BENNETT'S MOBILE HOME
HEAnNG &amp; COOLING

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

MICROWAVE
OVEN IEPAII

ROOM

Public Notice

a......

.~

MOBilE HOME FURNACES- HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACE PARTS

of,

Mory Hobotettor, Clerk
Molal CounJy
Comrnlllionr•
(2) 4. 1 1, 1I, 211. 4tc

g,,./1

binetlon fire engine. Pump

Legion Annex, Middleport

S5.99

,

Now lfl

oqulpmont'
19110 Soogro../lntorn•·
tionel Hervester triple com·

right to reject 1ny or all bids
and to weive any lnformall·

Call 992-7057

PS 1000

for the following ••ce..

DESERT STORM
SUPPORT. MEETINGS
THURSDAYS ~ 7:00 P.M.

·

·PICKUP ONLY SPECIAL!
Large 1 Item Pizza

PUBLIC NOTICE
. Tho Vllfago of Middleport
will rocolvo aoolod bide .untM
4 p.m, Fobruory 211. 1ss1 ot
tho Movor'a Ofl[co, 237
Roct1 St., Mlddl-rt, Ohio,

capoclty: 710 GPM. Tank
copoclty: 1100 g.ollana. Some
equipment Included. Mini·
mum bid: I 1 0, 000.
t948 Soogrovo BOO GPM
open cab fire engine. restored In 19811,
For complete equipment
list1 or more informetion,
contoct: Chief Jeff Dorat at
1·1114·992·7332 or 1·114·
992·7318,
Tho Vlllogo renrvoa tho

Bring Your Own Candle

· ~~vance Tickets: $8.00 single;
$15.00 Couple
•10 Per ~erson at Door

Business Services

Public Notice

•'
~···

2
J

f Mill Su pplres

Re al Estale

675 Pt Pl•••nt
45e
576 Appte Growe
773 ~ason
895
937

Rutland

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

:.!

Doctors from Meig~ as well as frequent prenatal checkups, lab
surrounding counties provide serscreenings, home visits and ongovices 10 the Meigs County Health . fng counseling.
Clinics which provide numerous Department. The doctors along
Pren811il clients are seen by lhe
preventalive heallh services as well wilh lhe department's nursing SllltT physician, Wilma Mansfield, M. D.
ps treatment PIOgfams for Meigs spent time assessing, treating, · and Connie.Liltle, R. N., the p-enaCounty children and adults were a scheduling, referring, counseling, tal director on a routine basis
. major part of activities of the and genemlly assisting patients.
through 26 weeks, of pregnancy 81
Me1gs County Health Department
In 1990 the cholesterol 'SCreen- which time IIley an; lhen n;fein;d to
in !990.
.
in~ J)lOjUIIIll was abig success wilh . a physician and hospital of choice
: A total of 3,113 shots were 652 Meigs Counlians being served
for delivery. The clini~ stJesses lhe
given in lhe immun!zations clinics by lhe ~·Seve~ volunteers
l)eed of early prenatal care and
during the yem:. Th1s mcluded' flu from the Retired Sen1or Volunteer
good basic health habits that will
Vaccine which was .given to 1,499 · Program assisttl(l with lhe cholesbenefit both the women and their
fo{eigs Countians for a small fee, terol program, as weD as other serunborn children. The CMic is'coorand rouline immunization shots to vice programs Of lhe department
dinated by Phyllis Bearhs,
children in the ,regular lmmunizaHome visitation is an important
Women's Health c.e technician.
tions clinics sponsored by the part of the work or public health
W.I.C. is lhe supplemental nutriHeallh Department
nurses and Tooes and T. C. Ervin, · tional program of the department
; During the year 358 children R. N. made numerous trips opt in
and is directed by Debbie Babbit,
were assessed, diagnosed and treat- lhe county 10 visit residents in their R. N. In 1990 2,339 visil! for assisild fn lhe Well Child-Health qek homes.
tance through the program wen;
Clinics coordinated by Carol Tan- .
MOre dian a hundn;d children on
recOrded. ·•Working m the program
pehill. R.fi. In addition 24 children the Bun;au for Children 'With Mediis a part-time registcn;d dietitian,
. wen; seen and treated in lhe Ortho- cal Handicaps Program have been
Janet Bolland, who assists in propedic Clinic, 157 were screened in followed by.the department's ours- , viding individuals and group nutrithe eye and ear clinics, 20 were ing Slllff.
tion couiiSeling. Olhen who work
lreated in lhe Plaslic Surgery Clin- ' The prenatal clinic which cares . with W.I.C. clients an; Pam Sharp,
lc, and 29 in lhe Cardiac Clinic.
for pregnant women provided ser- B. S. , Home Economics, Dortha
Ninety-six residents took advan- 'vices to 112 Meigs Countians in Riffle, coordinator, Be~nda Jeffers,
lage of the Cancer Screening Clinic 1990. These services included edu- ccntract assistant A;D.P. coordinaand 43 children were scn;ened for calion, dietary counseling, social tor, Torn;s, the.fiscal director, and
· the Head Start Progmm. .
assessment, physical examinations, Qloria Michael, a pan-time assistant fiSCal direciOr.
In 1990, S06 chHdren and adults
were diagnosed and treated in lhe
spe~:eh and hearing c~nics. Some
were n;ferred for mon; speciali:u:c! ·
services.
·•
Health education clssSC!s were
held ·in numerous locations providing information on nutrition and
· weight control, Lamaze, anhrilis,
drug abuse, cancer, early lntervenlion, poi$00 control, communil:lble
disease, ~Y and sexually transmi
diseases. ·
Jackie Starcher wss instructor or
the nutrition and weight control
classes, and Torres, Jon Jacobs,
Connie · Little, and Connie
Karschnik, R. N. were iri'structors
for the other health·related classes.
Through the yell' health department personnel attended health
related seminars for continuing
education and also hosted 10 health
related seminars.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stair .

Ma5onCo, WV

915
843
247
949
742
667

Card ol Th.nlrs

5

I'XcJWti#{I'S ...

Me1gs County
992

1
4

\
lu•

_Area Code 614

BULLETIN BOARD

M~ta'!~f~~~~r.~~ .~.~!~~·~·~· . .......................

iAnnual health report released, clinics
~provide major part of overall pr,ogram
.

paKI'.~ r'fll 'r•r 1

J-----------------------..,..----1

Statistics for 1990 released

CHILD AND FAMlLY HEALTH SERVICES - Connie Litde, R.N. pre-aatal director,
seated left, and Carol Guinther, Health Cbek
Project clerk, work In the pre-aatal, weiJ-cbHd

•'

•

W~C. • The Wo;_en, nand CbiJdren's
program operatiou at the e · Oliiilty Health
Department are llllder tale supervision of Debbie
Rabbit, R., N. director, not pletved. Her MsiltaDts are Linda Jelrers, assltaDt WP eoordlaa-

,.

Ann uurl ,:el'l e nl s

Over 15 Words

8
9

jul/uwitll{ I f'II•JJhOIII'

'A ciMS•Iit.."f.l ;uJv~rlisunll..onl plo.c.:d 111 lht! Oruly Sm)lnurl(llll
cept
clrtss•IIL'd tit splay , Busuu~s Card otnd ltJUi!&amp; nohct~St
w•ll also appeilf 111 the PI Plua~;mt Aenumtr 01nd the Galh
-polls Douty Tr~bt.nu:. ruachnlg o~o~ur 18.000 honuts

"

Rale
$4,00

lor each d'- as sepAr•te •ds.

50 d•scounl tor &lt;Jdf pa+d 1n advomcc

Card 01 Thanks

Words
15
15
15
15
16

. 20
.30
ss.oo
.42
$9,00
6
10
613.00
.60
.05 / day
Mon1hly
' 61 .30/ day
Ratfti.ar8tof c:on1ecutive runs. broken updol!jswlllbe ch•g~
1
3

POLICIES
"Ads Outs.~v Me•g•. Galha 01 Mason l:ouniiM 111us1 b• pre

P•O
·Rvcervu

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to S P.M.
. 8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
ClOSED SUNDAY

In 1990 357 home visits wen;
made in lhe countY and there were
205 office visits. Ninety-five developmental screenings administered to children in lhe COUR!Y.
Janet Downie of Pomeroy is a
SOcial work inlml from Ohio University now working in ihe J".'O·
gram. In addilion she works wtlh a · .
new support group which
off~ time 10 stwe experiences and learn skills in the difficult jcb of parenting.

•

1he Dally Sentlnei-Page-8

•

Early intervention program
provides children's
health
care
.

The Early Intervention program for Community Health and Early
of the Meigs County Health Educaaion Resource Services.
Department which provides ser- · The interagency committee
vices for children ftom birth wotks with Mrs. Fields to idenlify
· through three years of age contin- needed services and then to share
: ued in 1990 10 show an increase.
reso.urces with the parents and
Rita J. Fields, a ~censed social involved agencies to ensure that
:worker is the coordinator or the developmental delays or suspected
program for Meigs County and handicapping conditions are diag.works with an interagency commit- nosed early so that the child can
tee consisting of representatives start school wilh no labels that mar
• from various heallh, social services follow him or her. She also pro• and education agencies. This group vides developmental screenmgs
; is called CHEERS. an anacronym and social services assessments
•

Ohio

.&lt;.

•F,..Eittmltll . • '
•Carpet H.. F•lt Dry
Time
•High Olotit on Tile

Floor Flnlth
MillE LEWIS, Owotr
II. 1,111--, OM .

992-5587

368 East IW11
OH.
. 11/9111 o.

P-rol''

742-2451

R. L.MASH
CARPENTRY

•I Mill,,

U,HOLSTnY ·

•Oeragee

211 ... ,._.

•Room Additions

Hand Tufting

•Kitchens • Batha
•Vinyl Siding

." ····"

Cultom Drape•

·•Restoration
•Repair ~ork

36 Yooro &amp;otoertiooee

614·"2·Utl

992-5526

Wo loy Whet Wo Oa.
Wo Da Whet liVe loy.
10.11-1 ...
1

I •

POIIIOY, 0110
"

I

"

CL#=IS'SIFIED
••

' '

!,

~OS

•

�'
Pag&amp;-1G-The Dally Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

Anno uncemen 1s

~nda~February11,1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

11

JUT 'N' CARLYLE~ by Larry Wrialtt

Monday,

Autos for Slife

•

••

1t71T-IInl.,.._

w~ DW"~

11

"This dress is too laney for
me; sighed the woman. The
0 sale~!Qiil replied,· Remember,
the Important thing about a
...T-E_J_E_R_S--. ~-~ei~-." is ltle woman who .

'

Television
Viewing

..... ,_.,. ~ In
aood _ , ...... - - •

""' .... .,......1714.

Sentinel-Page

The

Ohio

11 , 1991

.

........., I.Jral MOO. m•.,_

•

MON.. FEB. 11

•

EVENINO
6:00aJe CIJ we 1111 c e
IIJ)Neon
Cil Charlae In~ t;1

llorthl
·- . _
..... ,
ll
,_
y-

----lulwllh

(l)3-2·1~

~-:-,..:::·~ha~
GIYNW11Y

4

, _ , .,

-·

blaoll

Ql)!..~.'i....... .
IIJ
tA lch alllllllc 11pot1e

VOlJ HAVE NOW!!

and

-Tamer. . . . . . . -.
.....,..., port _.., Tomor
and Sloopllerd, 104-115 11121-

AmertqC

.

Ill World TOdlly
QOurHou•Q

r--

1:011]) lleMI1}o 111111111111
8:30 ~ e

!'r:r""''
S ' " - coi. 114.

To
1112

7

N A U T H f~ ~
"
I
I , I I 1· 7 j

t;l

(}) lqueN One

11J NBC Nightly tiewe

{lj Ultcler 11 Not A -

C

(I) (J) D AIC Neon t;l
(!) Wild Ametlclt t;l
ill3-2-1 ~ t;l

Yard Sale

1
·

l

Complole tho chuckle quolo&lt;l.
I 15 I I I e
you develop from
3 below.
.

.

by. filli.ng In the misting words
stop No.

c.

Ill IIJ D Cll Nnro t;1

e

ll])

Anc!J Grtlllth

tA Ull CIO• . "
6:35 (]) Andy GrtHIIIt

' ANSWERS
SCIAM-I.ETS

7:00 ale ilL GJJ Wheel of
FOIIuneQ
(!)I Dream of JHM!f
(I) (J) llnalde Edition Q
ClJ ill ICNeii/Lehrer
NeweHour C
D Night t:our1 Q
a2le Cunent Affair Q
I!J MttcOyver
Ill lllortaCenter
IIIMoneyllne
Scarecrow ond Mra. King

..

7:05 (ll Happy Dayo
7:30 al D 1111 GJJ Jeopardy! Q
C!llflghl Court t;1
(I) (12) til Entertolnmant
Tonight Stereo. t;1
()) • Mama•a F8mlly
ll])
Th,..., Company
Ill Collejla ll11ketball

e c"'"'""

gt..u5H Wlf'Jf.f, KIJT'
WE HAVE $OME
VVHITE$ yov'LL CE

\

II

7:35 (]) .Sanford and Son
8:00 al D IIJ Fresh Prince of
Bel Air Will takes a shy
houseguest to a hlp ~ance
club. Stereo. t;1
(J) MOYIE: Maak (PG13)
(2:00)
(I) (J) D MlcOY"er
MacGY"er helps an innocent
parolee escape from a gang
of blackmailers. Stereo. t;1
(!) Miracle Plenat
(}) Trevela g
1111 (12) ~Evening Shade
Stereo.
·
ll]) Ill M VIE: 'Young Ouna'
FOX Night at the Movlea (RI

EIYIIIA~~A$~r~

To

.IEtrv~

(2:00)
.
I!J Weetmlnot.r Kennel Club
Dog Show

Cl!l On Stage
Ill PrtmeNewe

..

1311 Beauty and the Beall t;1
8:05 (]) MOVIE: Metier Sktltlr
(3:14)
8:30 alD lUI lllouom Blossom
feels left out when her beat
ftlend abandons her. Stereo.

Employment Services

11

Help wanted

'1tlE.
I

WIF~

ca..J SULTfkJG
A LAU.MR..

MY e:tRANDFATHeR
Fa.JNDeD MY MA.Mtt....Y-8

I ~JSUAANCe ~INEee .

DID HE: E=VE:IC! FIND
·OUT WHO L.05TED
IT~ .

I 1..1.. floeT ~'M TH5 ONL-Y
5TRAieHT .MAN IN THIS
\NHOL-E 'TOWN.
1

10:00® N""
(lJ lllacll IIIUII Forum
(}) Eyea on tile Prize:
Amerlca'a Civil Rlgltta Years

i

!l21e Trtala or Roale
O'Neill Stereo. Q
ll]) Ill Star Trek: The Next
O.nereUon Q
Ill CNN Evanlilg News
1311 700 Club With Pat
R01Mf180n
10:30 Cl!l Crook arid Cllaoe .
11:00alD lll WD IW a2llll
ONawa
(]) Night Court Q .
(lJ Newawatch
1!1J A.-niO Hall Storeo. Q
1!J Mteml VIce Sleroo.

Scrv1ccs
8t

Livestock

IIAIIIMEHT

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

WATERPROOFING

•

Utno-....iodiiillluoiiiwl lllotlmo . _
· - Local .......... turnllttN.
,
_ - - -day
Coli or
- nlg!p.
·1IM-m-0111,

We Haft Changed Our location To
1'12 Miles East on Rt. 241 through
ChMt., Oh.

A..,_ - -

llnj.

SPECIALIZING IN ....
•Cu8tom Bent Exhaust Syetems
•Complete Une of Exhauet Suppliae
•Handle and lnltall Monroe Shocks
Come and See Uo For A Free Inopectlon
aild Estimate

. MAW WANTED ME
TO MARRY ONE OF
THEM RICH
INN-KEEPERS

BUT I WOUND UP
WITH A PORE

OUT-KIEPER II

e

a on stage

a Moneyllne

8

Wol•poop.

Scarecrow and Mra. Kl!lg

t1:30alD 0 Tonight Show
Sloreo.
(J) The llttema
(lJ European Joumel
.
()). Nlghtllne
iW Areenlo Hall 'Stereo. Q
11J e A....,. Tonight

c

1'1. 614-915·3949

IODin DUD
..... loHIOIII,

472.9 St. II. 241

·BARNEY

Home
lmprovemanta

-.v.e

Dovto
8oMco,
Os ogeo CoOIIl Rd. Porto, Ill!&gt;'
.......- pla...p, and dollvwy. IM-

44e.ci2ll4.

ASTRO-GRAPH

Plt.mblng &amp;
55

- -

Building

a.---HIIY:.II-Io
•ul. Round llaloo, IIi lluleh

Heating

:li.IO- and up. o~

Suppllea

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

........

·
-BI2L
Rio Gr-,
OH Coli 1142411
•

lion a n d - - • • alii
- povllt-llna .............
and -~~~
glfta .to
.................
Ill..,.....
.

__ ____

_,_,,I_ .. _

a.m

- - 12 ,.., .... AAA-1
-~· No liiilllliUWit. No

Autp1 for Sale

till

Ponl T-Binl, :tiO lour. ber-

Aaaldontlal

or

_

_,lal

rei, lldiF
IIIIo,........
good - 111
· 1&lt;100.
001
till. or
.

wlrl ng, ... -

,m-.,uu ''..:;;'/."'"'

A - Eleclrlaal, 304-f'll-

,=-=;

11'N Dido, Dolto

porlo- 1111 ......-. Wrlto:
llaltlrt, Hand ,..,., Illig. Co,

Coold'=lo

=~

11oM. Ktttio, -.... -

I!Otol. IIS.l'l2ottll.

• Adullll and

PH. 9

12011. Pheno

......

UCI"JJ~

•

:'::
-ellct
clan.

1m C.rNrO,
4312. ·

Aoral, Moor A·1

85 General Hauling
~-

72,oraM-

Doll¥orod
And
lrnld htwN&amp; 4 And I Ton
,., ........ 111 ••• lid.

~VI, ~

R.
R Wltor
~,_ala- I
•
-.
woll&amp; S..loe.
,_ _
, _ or

1100.

~

clollvory. COM :184-

Upholstery
......,
.. u...-!!!nt .
... t r l - y - 21 ,..,._ Thl

a tew pennies spent here

·-...

" These lbgs eliminate lhe neecl
for kihei ling. "

-

Col

'

}

ElectriCal &amp;
Refrigeration

84

11

~~o.~~- ~ . ~m.~.--~------~

,.

""" lloura. l'nllnt!1, fltoidr

comes back folding money

TrJnsportJtion

- · ......... ole. Claiodo Win-

llatuo lion IIF.. or port 1111111

......... 111111111 . . .

BERNICE
,BEDE OSOL

"

In lllmltUN .,..._...,.,

~54""

.... .. .

ftib.12.1101
l
'four moat • ccaaalul endeavora of lhe
·~ aheld could be thoM which do not
call too much att.,llon to yourself. You

don't need acknoM•dgment and appleUie, juat thlo .-da that work done
well will bring .
.AGUARIII 1"- aD-fall. 11) Par1nera
' could turn out to be liabilities rather
than -today. II you're teaming up
with -

for a IIJIIClal endeavor,

be .,re lhla lhdivldual can make a dell-

LIO (July 23-Aug. 22) II you have to
nita contrlbullon . Know where to look make some lype of 191 commitment
lor romance and you'll lind it. The As- loday,becertalnyouhavethe""Ybett
tro-Graph Matchmaker Instantly re- counsel avaMable. Thlala not a good day
vealo which signa are romantically P.«· to rely oolely upon your own Judgment.
feet for you. Mall $2to Matchmaker. c/o VIRGO (Aug. 23-lepl. 22) Be extremely
lhlo newopapor, P.O. Box 91428. Cleve- selective today regarding the aoolgn·
land, OH 14101' 3428.
menta you give to subordlnaleo. II you
PIICEI (Ftll. ~ :lO) Thla might chooee 1he wrong parson lor ·the job
nol be one 01 your ball or dliyo lor doing now, you may ha\18 to deal wilh a big
work thot requites total concentration · mess later.
and continuity of purpose. These quail· u.RA (lept.D-Oct. 21) Don'llet yourlies may not be your long oullaloday, so sell be drown Into petty pollllca by wrwy
wall until !hey are.
of a dlaegreement b e - two lrlende
ARIEl (March 21·Aprll11) II you're in· today. Regard leu ol whom you side ·
vlted t.~ sometlllng of a social nature with, the position you take will be
lhal you're reluc1ant to altend, II might unpopular.
be wtoe to pua up the activity today. ICORI'IO (OcL 24-flov. 221 lndllferYou could make a bed lmpreulon II once could be your worat ·enemy today,
you're In lhe.wrono mood.
eapeclally rtgardlng a maner you've
TAUIIUI (April 211-Ma' :lO) Lady Luck .,_, anxloua to finalize. Don't jult ula not likely to Intervene today to help aume lhal beeauoe thlngl Ire running
you achieve critiCal objeetlvet. II you smoothly, the conclusion will be to your
hope to succeed, you may haiiB 10 do II aallafactlon.
IAGITTAIIIUI (Now. ZJ-Dec. :11) Be
lhe hard way.
GD''II (.., 21...._ :lO) Be extremely · extremely canoful aboul whal you put In
careful regarding • the comments you wrlllng today. Also, avoid altering
mike to othera todll)l. When repeated, _,.u,jng which you had agreed upon
your
atotementa
might
be In the pMI. Bolli oil'- mau.. coukl
mleconatrued.
llilve crttlcall'lmlflcatlona.
·
CANCER (oiUM t1..Julr 22) Discipline CAJIIIICOIIN (0.. 2NM. 11) Unformlght be required so thai your.B!"OIIona tunately,ll you have financial problema
do not govern your apendlng patt•n• loelly,lt ltn't likely that you'll be getting
today. Extravagant urges mual nol be · much help from othera. Thla Ia a time
allowed to .,_rule your pruden! when you'll have to tlke care of tlllnga
judgment.
far yourHII.

12DOnSt.ae

+A97
.Q7
• 9 8i 5
+Q643

+K92

SOUTH
+QJ85
• A8 5

. 4J6

+AJI07

Vulnerable: Both •
Dealer: East
Soalh

Wert

Nor tlo

Eut

t+

Pass

!4

Pua

I+

Pass

t+

Pus
AUpus

Opening lead: • J
Another line Is to win the ace of
hearts at trick one and lead the j~k of
diamonds. A cover by West . would
solve tbe problem, but If West plays
low, declarer can still decide to go after clubs.
Since all other declaren acored &amp;iO,
'¥" must regretfully charge our vintage declarer for falling to bring in the
overtrick.

painter
41 Deuce
bealer

1 Arab
cloaks
5 Ready
apples

DOWN
1 Dwelling
2· Testdeveloper
Mred
3 Koran

for
cobbler '

10 Swindl!!

•

11 Battery
ends
13 Sole
14 Grand
Canal
salting
15 Mideast
salt lake
17 Mazel 18 Moral
19 Chem.
suffix
20 Tub
21 Active

de~y

4 Parachutisl
5 Warning
6 Fawcelt's
lellow
7 Director
Howard
8 Issue
9 Solved
cryptograms
12 Cuts off

one

16 Battle
reminder

21 Fighler ·
. lor honor

27Bog
29 Crete's
capital
30"Lou

Grant" ·

22 Punctua-

s1ar

tion marks

23 Made use 31 Budget
amount
(Fr.)
32 Pert
36 Soviet
plane

(of)

24 Risk
going

25 FOR
pooch

22 Spelunker

25 Supplies ·
money lor

26 Finished .
27 West of
Hollywood
28 Checker
piece
29 Arrests
33 Cam bridge
sch.
34 Soviet
body of
water
35 Vassar
grad
37 Taverns
38 Regular
TV show
39 Colle.c -

DAILY CR YPTOQU9'fES "':' Here'fh.O)' to work It:

11:35 (I) Chloal8 t;l
12:00(1)11 Into tile Night Sloreo.
Party Machine Wlllt
NlaP. . . .a
HardCopy
1!J The Eq1111llzer
Cl!l N11hvllle Now
Collage lleaktlball
Newalollght
.
aJI 8eaii1J ind the Beall Q
12:05 (]) National Oeographlc
Explorer
(I) NIQhtllne Q
12:30 alD lUI Lata Night Wlllt
Dlvld Letterman
·
(J) MOVII!: Thundering Tralla
(1 :00)
Ill Perl)' Mtlchlne Wlllt Nle

Ql) •

c•

.=
a

~.:Oat of Love

ColwiiiCtlon · .

c e ....._.....
12:311 (I) LMe ConMCIIDn

~. Rallflldl

One letter stands for another. In this Sample A' is used
for the three L's 1 X lor the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the ~:ode letters are different.
CR\'PTOQtJOTES

2-11
DAPSA

BQ

SVRGSBC

XH

IEAPIBAQ
NAPEIQ

NAEXAEI

WPLA

p I

IPX C A .

VE

GVI .

INA

-

o•'"'"
11J

2/11

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

I N A

1:00(J)=~Q

XRI

V. z

BG
WAG .

NVVKA E

· Yeetewday'e Cwyptoq•ote: GOOD TASTE IS

M•da-'a Place

Ill 8ho10ll1 TOdll'

1311 llnuty end ....... Q

-~

.J10t32
• Q4 3

tions

· Ill lpartaCanter
Ill Sports Tonlghl

..

EAST

40 Balle!

ACROSS

Mondlly Night et the Movlea
(2:00) Stereo. C
(I) (J) II MOVIE: 'IIMdly
lntentlona...Agt~llt?' ABC
Monday Night Movltl (2:00)
Stereo. Q
.
· Cll (}) Ainerlcen Experience

read a spy novel he has
been wrHing. Stereo. t;1
Cl!l Naahvltte Now
Ill Lltrry King Uvel
1311 Beauty and the Belli Q
9:30 1111 (12) litDealgnlng Women
Stereo. Q
.
Ill College Beeketball

WEST

+&amp; 4

by TI:IOMAS JOS!;PH

•

i,alkiyvs
a2l til Milrplly Brown Jim
his co-workers to

4 A K 10 2

+as

CROSSWORD

Cl!l On Stage
9:00 alD 0 MOVIE: 'Parry.
Meaon: The C.8e ol tile
Maligned Mobater' NIC

IS

%-U-11

•K64

Tbe irilllies of matcbpoint play are
well depicted In today's deal, in wbicb
a one-time national champion got a
zero by failing to make an OVl\rtrick.
Soutb won the ace of hearts and, after some thought, played the queen of
spades. Ea.st took the ace and returned
the queen of hearts. Declarer won the
king In dummy, then played A-K and
rufletl a diamond. Wben the queen
came down, declarer played a spade
to dummy's 10, and ca.bed the 10 of
East followed to the diaand West was not able to ruff. So
shed bis last beart and then
a heart with the remaining jack
spades. However, dummy was left
with K, 3 of spades, and East still beld
tbe nine-spot. Wben declarer played
ace and a club, Wes.t stepped in with
the club king and played · another
heart. Tbat promoted a trick for
1,..~.-. remaining trump, and declarer
beld to 10 tricks.
Although playing for the overtrick
I':~:~I~S~ starUs not without risk, delc
should take the chance. If he
tbe opening lead in dummy and
1pla,ys a club back to his jack, intending
take another club finesse to
· dummy's losing beart, he will
leasllv make the overtrick.

.i,embarrasses
a2l til Major Dad P.;.ly
the Major when
sM reveals her romantic
s id~. Stereo. t;1

NORTH

+K 103 2

By James Jaeoby

e

\

r
· -- ' - - -- -- - - - .

BRJDGE

8

WE P&gt;ON'T HAVE ANy

q

Repeat - Alias - Pr~ne - Hazarq - APPLAUDS
The young couple had a big arMment. The mother
lold the woman, ' Marriage should be a duet. One
person sings wtiile the other APPLAUDS. "

Ql)

FRANK. AND ERNEST

.

1:05(1) !ntlrtalnment Tonight
eo . Q

s-..

j

BETTER THAN BAD TASTE, BUT BAD TASTE IS
BETTER THAN NO TASTE AT ALL - ARNOLD
BENNETT

�•..
•
Monday, Feb!'UII'y 11, 191

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

•

Allies••• _coa_tin_ued_rro.._.:...,...::......l_ _ _ _ _ _ _-;:

EMS answers six calls
Six calls for assislance wm answmd by uniiS of Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services. . .
.
•
At 9:31 a.m., SIDliCusc squad went to State ROU!e 124 for George
Hicks, who was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospilal. At 10:54
a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Condor Street for Sydney Woodyard,
who was transported tQ Holzer Medical Center. . .
At6:16 p.m., Middleport squad went io Main Street for Charles
Pugh. Pugh was taken to Vclerans. At 10:41 p.m.. Pomeroy squad
went to Swe 143 f&lt;w Tbcocla'e SIIOIII. He was~ 10 Veterans. At
11 :05 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Union Avenue for an auto aa:ident Cindy Pickens refuacd treatmcnL
On Sunday at l:Ui. a.m., Middlqlort .SQuad went to Ovezbrook
Ct:n~et for Jo Aru\ Keyes, who was tatca 10. Vererans. At 8:19p.m.,
Middleport to North Second. Robby Clonch.was transported to Vet-

erans.

A

Hospital news·
Veterans Me11orlal Hospital
· '
•
. SATURDAY ADMISSIONS - !cifu\~. Pomeroy; G«qe
Hicks, Pomeroy; Geald Overturf RUilapd
·
SAtURDAY DISCHARGES'- Fnmk Inlboden.
SUNDAy ADMISSIONS- Theodore StrOm, Pomeroy.
SUNDAY ADMISSONS - None.. ,
.
1

.

STATE SENATOR SPEAKS- o•lo State Seaator Jan
Mlebael Long spoke briefly at Suaday's rally, "Operation Feed
Desert Storm," beld at the I..oc:omotio. In Potperoy. Senalol' Lon1
called for all Amerlcaas to support the troops who are servin1 in
the Gulf War, ancl stressed the importallce or Ill oftbe support rat- ·
I~ lhal are beln1 lteld across the nation. He also extended his
llianks and appreciation to all v,terans wbo bave served and
rou1ht for the Unlled·States or America.

'

Marriage lice~es granted '

~ ,f:"!j'

(

· Marriage licenses have been granted in Meigs Cowity Probate
Coun to Bobby Joe Lester; 25, Rutland, and Helena Marie Thurman, 19, Rutland; Brett Alexander~. 19, Pomeroy, and Lori
Mary Delores Bittner, 19, also of Poincioy; Robert Eugene Johnson
27, and Carolyn Jean Paulk, 24, both of MiddlePort,
'

\

Meigs girls play JHS in tournament

--AnnouncementsDance scbedale reltalled
for Thursday at 7 p.m. urider the
The 1991 schedule for the Royal "Support the Troops" sign that
Oak Dance Club has been hangs at village hall IIi Mit1dlepon.
· lumounced: March 2, Gary Stewart The event is sponsored by the
Qt!artet; May 4, George Hall; Nov. ·American Legion Feeney Bennett
2, Orlando Colambo Band; and Post and Auxiliary No. 128. All
' Dec. 21, not yet scheduled.
area ministers are invited to particiAll dances will be held from 8 pate and there will be cntenainio 11 p.ni. at the Royal Oak Resort ment and a speaker. Bring your
dance hall.
owncandle.
·
Deadline for membership in the
dance club is Feb. 28.
Equestrian PrOIJ'IIIII
. The presentation of new plans
for ali equestrian part will be the
Cbeerlfadln1 competltioD
topic of a special cornm~ meetThere will be ii cbeer leading ing called by the Ohio Umversity
competition at Easttm High School Equcsaian Team on Wednesday.
All March 2 for vimly,junior varThe agenda for the meCting is to.
·sity, and junior high squads, as well present new drawings of the proas an individual competition.
posed equine facility to the public,
For more jnformation, write or to outline a handicapped riding
call Debbie Brooks at 42551 Tuck- program and to allow lime for input
er Road, Coolville, 45723 or (614) and suggestions from the commu985-4152.
.
nity.
.
On hand will be State Re)I'CSCIItativc Mike Shoemaker, Wanda
;.
Sweelbart dlnllft'
Reynolds, director of Easter Seals
: f There will be a sweetheart din- for Southeastern Ohio and the 1988
' mer on Saturday beginning at 4 p.m. Stock Scat National Champion
· fat the Wilkesville Pythlln Hall in Kelly Singleton.
1wilkc5ville. Cost is $S for adults
Members fran the Ohio Univer' ~nd $2.50 for children. Public sity Equestrian Team will be avail: :invited.
able to a11.swcr questions on the
importance of establishing a park
for
the Athens area.
·~
' " Sweelh.-t dance plaJmed
The proposed park is for The·
:, The Middleport Community Ridges, the name given to the for; oAssa:iatioil will hold a Sweedleart mer Athens Mental Health Center
'dance on Friday from 8 p.m. to land on Roure 682 overlooking the
midnight 11 the American Legion . Hocking River. Ohio Unh;crsity
• Annex on Mill Street in Middle- began ~~Cf~uiring the land in fall of
; 'porL Advance ticlreu are available
1988.
: at Fruth's, Video Touch, VaughThe equestrian park plan
:; an's, Blue Tartan, and Donie Turn- includes
restoration of the existing
:· er Jtca!ty. Cost is $8 single and SIS historic horsebam
as well as a new
-:couple. At the door the cost will be stable and show arenas.
:·s10 per person. All proc~ will ,
: io toward runding the CClllSIIUCtion . All horse enthusiasts and inter- '
, pf a covered stage at Dave Diles ested community members are
: :Park. Music will be p~vided by encouraaed to attend The meeting
: 'the Crossova Band.
will be Wednesday at 7 p.m. in
Room 237 Morton Hall on the O.U.
campus. For further information
j CandleliiM senice pluned
call Martha Lim!&gt;li (614) 696-1072.
~ A candlelight service is planned

"

I;

Ii

i:.
f.t

Area deaths~-

by two husbandS, Charles-P. "Sii'arbaugh in 1949, and Golden B.
; Thclmar Hall, 56, of 5076 Hazeleu in 1983; two brothers,
! iAUSiin Rd., WeJlin&amp;ton, Ohio, died Fred E. Spencer, and Mason S.
·Monday. Fell. I 1, 1991 II Allen Spencer: and one sister, Mary S.
I ;Memorial J.k)spital, Oberlin.
,
I:• Funeral amngctnents will be Stadler.,
She was a mef!lb;)r of the Bachtel
; iannounced later by the McCoy- United Methodist Church.
h M()Oie Funeral Horne, Vinloo.
Survivors include four stepsons,
Kenneth, ·Eugene and Hugh Shar!Virginia Hazelett
, \ .~gh, 8nd Evan B. Hazelett; seven
Vi . . H
Siepdaughters, Kathleen Esher,
ugmia azelett, 91, of New Mollie Yannon, Monica Vilanova,
• aven, died Saturday, Feb~ • 9,i Margaret n Troyan, Bernice·. M. ·
'!99! m Pleasant Valley Hospital. · Krunkel, RQSBiie Wingren, and
. ~om January 4, 1900, atrGraham· Clara Dunlap· three sisters Grace
Station, w. Va.. she was' the. ·M. Brown of New Haven, Ftorence
·)laughter of the late Harvey M. and L. Moore of New Lexington, Ohio,
~'JaMie B. Roush Spencer.
· · "and The~Jmi . N. Cachlin of East
. She was also preceded in ~th , yvcrpqol, Ohio.
• " ,;, .. ·. j ,.Sprvices will be conducted
' .
' ., 'i\leSdaf. at 11 ·a.m. at Fogelsong
' ~ ,~ Fuliera Home with the Rev. Cllf• ' ford N. West o(ficiating. Burial
,..... Wealber For
· __.
. follow in the Graham Cemetery. ·
UIUU
Friends may call the funeral
8&amp;~::-' rr- lalenadonal
home teiday between 3 and 9 p.m.
I
.onaJ flurries and squallS .
northeUl Monday. some aa:wna·
llation likely extreme northeut.
·
:PardY cloudy elsewhere Monday.
Pkk-3
054 ·
Highs 201 aorth to lower 30s aouth.
N arilblc doldincu Monday night
Ticket sales: $1,679,396. Payl
·oaal Dairies and squalls off; S463 .586·~k-(
.
LowllO 11120. Tuclday,
7940
Dllriel narthealc, other·
·
il..-1IY
30s. ~·RIPs mid 20s
Ticket sales: $307,201.50. Paymid 30s.
off: $81,900.
Cards
Seven of helwts.
··
8•'"'1ed Pcnclll
Nine oC clubs.
( WtdiiK117 ...... ,..lda7
Jack of diamonds.
1
A cbaDU of snow NCb~·
Two of spades.
·
IUinly mid IINIIIID nUd
'
Ticket sales; $86,641. Payoff:
IIIOIIIy llicl201 10 mid 301.
s38.230.
.
ball! Maadly IIIII Moodly
Super Lotto
. :11i...,L Ta I hy; 11101¥ llurrieJ libly
6 7 17 23 2~ "~
~:.i' a cllaace of sqaall1 In tbe
• • • • J, ""·
rn
ina.
Hiab
in
the
·mid
201.
Ticket
sales: SS,054,564.
mo
Kldl.er
60
'ChlnCO rA- is pen:eaL
359532.

liThelmar Hall

i

The Meigs ~uder girls basketball team will take a.l6-4 record
into sectional tournament play
Tuesday night~ainst top seeded
Jackson 1U Oak Hill High School.
Meigs is coming off a IIcari-·
breaking loss the the state's sixth
ranlled team Federal Hocking last

Thurday night. Meigs led the entire
game before the Lady Lancers
came llack in the last period to win
their 20th game in as many tties.
Meigs was knocked out of tournament play last season by Jack·
son. Game lime is 7:00p.m.
·

will

'

,

a
F-

L ottery num b'ers

•

.Cards 5-8; K·C;
4-D; 9-S

•

Vat 41, No. 2.05
Copyrighlld 111111

. ,.

By JULIE E. DILLON
were Jim Tompkins, vice president assist AEP in any way would be Wehrung, Bruce Reed and Betty
Sentinel News Stal'l
and general .mlll)ager of Southern canie4 out to assure .that the most Baronick, and Pomeroy Village
The difficult decision that must · O!lio Coal, and Bill Oiler, 1 repre- beneficial decision is selected. Clerk Brenda Morris were also prebe made by American Electric . sent&amp;tive of the United Mine Work- . M&amp;yor Hoffman Staled that in Mid- sent at the meeting to show support
Power (AEP) regarding the impli- ers of Southern Ohio Coal Compa- dleport alone, 31 people are and willingness to assist in any
employed with Southern Ohio Coal way.
cations o'f the Clean Air Act ny.
·
The Clean Air Act, which
at a S1.1 million annual payroll,
amended by Con~ m·NcvemMayor~ Hoffman stated his
requires
electtic utilities to cut sulber, 1990, was discussed by AEP concern on behalf of Middleport's and that a shut down of one of the
and Southern Ohio COal
Village COIJ!Icil in
to the mines would have a devastl!ting fur dioxide emissions by 40 to SO .
percent, means tl!at AEP must
representatives at
future staws of the
iu the effect on the local economy.
Four members of Polnero)i Vil- decide how 10 reduce emissions at
meeting of Middleport .
area. He went on to
that an
Council.
at the
· orpnized effort and
to lage Council, Tom Werry, Larry . a number of its coal-burning power

'·

COLUMBUS - An American machinery that also brings out rock
Electtic Power Co. coal mine that from below the seam.
employs 1,258 workers in Meigs
Ohio Power's Gavin plant, ·
County may close even if the locatcil in Gallia County ,is blamed
Gavin power plant, its chief cus- .. for about44 percent of sulfur dioxIOmer, mstalls scrubbers to prevent ide emissions from all of Ohio's
pollution aa:ording 10 an ~iat- coal-fired electric generating.
ed Press story today.
plants.
Gerald P. Maloney, 'AEP's execOhio Power is an AEP subutive vice president, on Monday sidiary.
clarified what he said was an
At a news conference Jan. 28,
aPJlllrellt belief by some people that AEP listed options under the newly
scrubbers would save the mine ; aniended Clean Air Act that includwhich J!fOC!uces high-sulfur coal. --00 scrubberS, but said ·a switch to
· While the new equipment might . low-sulfur coal from outside Ohio,
satisfy federal clean-ur standards, followed by a shutdown of the
the cost of coal &amp;om the mine may mine, would appear less costly.
be 100 high to make its continued
It was not clear at the briefing
use economical, Maloney said in an that the iqstallation of scrubbers,
interview.
. .
followed by the mine closing, was
"That's basically the problem. a third possibility.
·
We have to mine two tons of coal . Maloney said he mentioned this
and rock 10 get one ton of coal We scenario at the bricfmg, but in news
are
time, money and cost S!orics ~a~ and i!l ~ent disc;u~.;
iil1i&gt;Il,"
. ~ b. '''::!,.;• o&gt; l&lt;.lli"'
SI~M.'IYifb. iud.uitry, 11111on and goyHe sai die C081 Caines uum a eriunent officials, it bcctime apparnarrow seam and is ·removed by ent it was not understood.

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*Afgans *Pictures ·
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U~S.

planes pound Iraqi
convoy, Scud launch sit~s
EAS'l'ERN SAUDI ARABIA
(UP!)- U.S, fiahlet pilots pound-

ed an Iraqi military convoy in
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Two Kuwait, shot down a helicopter and
decorated combat veterans are may have destroyed four more
leading Senate task forces lhllt have Scud missile launchers in Iraq, milnearly completed a sweeping bene- · itary offteials said Tuesday.
fits JJICkage for miljtary personnel
Updating reporters on overnight
fighting in Operation Desert Storm. developrilents in the war, in iiS 27th
day, senior military sources said
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio, a pilots reported that a fifth Scud
Marine combat pilot in World War .missile launcher exploded on its
II and Korea, and Sen. John own just as it appeared ready to
McCain, R-Ariz., a Navy combat rue.
pilot and a prisoner of war in the
Tbc action occurred about the
Viemam War, are ~ifting through time Iraq · managed to lob two
some 50 bills that have been ern- Scuds into Israel and the Saudi capposed for inclusion in an ommbus ital. of Riyadh, and followed the
measure.
destruction the day before of four
The proposals, most of which other launchers in east and west
have suong support, delve into Iraq.
~!~most every war and post-war sitMilitary sources said Air Force
uation, ranging from an increase in and Marine planes hit a convoy of
combat psy for those now in the between 2S and SO Iraqi vehicles
Persian Gulf area to more unem- inside Kuwait ajlout midday Monployment compensation for those day . They Jaid the convoy was
mustered out at the end of the war'
headed south, but refused to say
how close to the Saudi border it
They break down into three sep- had reached.
arate categories: protections and
Although the military sa!d it
aid for rescrviSIS and their families;
combat-related benefits; and a variety of programs for Desen Storm

.

veterans.

The Clean Air Act requires coalburning utilities to reduce sulfur
dioxide emissions an average of 40
percent to 50 percent over a tOyear period staning in 1995. But
~oney said AEP must decide by
mtd-1991 because of the time
required 10 gear up tor complia!lce.
Maloney projected the cost of
operating Gavin with scrubbers at
$170 million a year, compared With
$115 n\illion with low-sulfur coal.
However, he said that there 1:0uld
be a .savings from emissions credits
-in rules yet to be written - of $30
million to $40 miUicn a year.
Gavin burns about 6 million
tons of coal a year. Early 1994 has
been mentioned as the possible
shutdown time of the mine. ·
Maloney indicated it is not
apparent whether the Meigs mine is
doomed. But he added: "We don' t
wan1 people to be misled into
rh;ntnha . ~1 scrubbers wollld oave

was not prepared to issue a formal
damage assessment, a spokesman
said that the convoy "was hit prctty good~' and that the American
combat planes survived the
encounter unscathed.
Sources said an Air Force F-15
pilot shot down the Iraqi chopper in
northern Iraq late Monday, raising
to 40 the number of confirmed
"kills" of enemy airciaft, four of
them choppers.
,
The sources said that preliminary reportS from pilQts showed the
possibly four Scud launchers, a
' prime target of the air war, were hit
and destroyed Monday in Iraq.
"They !epOIIed that a fifth blew up
on ill own just as it was ready to
launch," an offiCials said. "Hopefully, that one did a lot of dam·
age.''
Military sources said there also
was a minor border skirmish Monday night between handful of
Marines and Iraqi troops. There
were -no reports of casualties on
either side.
At a bricfmg in Riyadh on Mon-

.day, Marine Brig. Gen. Richard t
Neal said he was unable to conf11111
reports that two U.S. POWs, a man
and a woman, had been taken to
Basra, scene of hes~ air attacks.
A woman soldier, 20-year-old
Mcllssa A. Nealy, is currently car•
ried on Pentagon rolls as missmg jn
acticn after she and a male soldier
vanished. Their supply .truck was
found in the desert. The report that
she might have been taken to Basra
was was said to have originated
· with an Iraqi prisoner of war.
But, he snid, the i~sue "highlights even more the total disregard
by the Iraqi govemm'ent to follow
the Geneva Convention rules and
allow the International Commission of the Red Cross to tell us
aboutthestatusofourPOWs."
Neal also said some 2,900 sorties had been flown in the P!ISI 24
hours, boosting the coal~
'tion's total
to 69.000 since the war
Ui
days ago.
·
Another 18 Iraqis were taken
prisoner, he said, including 11 who
crossed over bringing machine·
guns with thein.

.

One controversial measure, .
, SALUTE TO AMERICA • This lleaudtuUf deslped, giant banexpected 10 be offered by Sen. John
ner flanks lht sl_de of J.D. Drlllinl Cnmpant Ia Racla~, , oae of
Heinz, R-Pa., is a proposal _io
·.many Melp County COIIImunltles wbkb bas liveD ~rtat support to
review the policy that allows marour troops In Saudi Arabia. The INinner depicts Apport for Presl·
ried couples with children and sin·
dent BUlb and lilt )'011111 11en aad womea of tilt servlee wbo are
gle parents in com bat. Defense ·
represeatin1 America Ia the Gall. The ltaallft' Will_palated 117 Curt
Secretary Dick Cheney and Gen.
aad Ruth Nalsteller of PIBeroy fur Linda Diddle, Betty Carpen!er,
Colin Powell, chairman of the Joint
Cricket Brlnaaer, SaDy Caldwell ancl J.D. Drllllnl C0111pa11y, aU of
Chiefs of. Staff, strongly oppose
which are "tr'J stron1supporters of our coualry's flpl for uniYer·
any change in the policy.
sal freedom.
·
· ·
Glenn and McCain are cbainnen
of separate Democratic and Republican Persian Gulf personal benefits
POMEROY - The Daily Sen- submitted by Friday to be included. task forces and expect to have the
tine! is requesting families of all
The pictures and information legislation ready for Senate action
Meigs County service men and will be used in a special supple- shortly after Congress returns from
women who are currently serving ment to pay ttil)utt! to those serving iiS recess Feb. 1!1.
The House has organized simi·
in Operation Desert Storm, to in the Middle East A copy of the
either mail or bring into the offa a supplement will then be mailed lar task forces and has already
photograph of the service person free of charge to each service man approved a bill- which the Senate
for future P.Jbllcation.
or woman whose photo appears in has not- that pr~~vides proteCtions
In addition to the photograph, the supplement It will be published for reservists. called to active duty
111)11 for their flmilies. .
The Daily Sentinel requests infor- in February.
Glenn, giving a status report
.mation including the person's full
The addreas to which photos or
shortly
before Congress recessed;
· name, nickname, adc1ren and par-. information should be mailed Or
said,
"It
is somethin1 that we
eniJ' nomea. Tho• bri!'ging in brought Is ~ Daily Set:Jtinel, 111
should
haVe
foreaeen, but really did
pbotDp'lphs should aJao UICiudc a Court St., Pomeroy, .Ohm, 45769.
not,
because
we have not had a
telephone number in the event of Information can not be taken over ·
res,erve call-up like this in many
questions from the staff preparing the telephone.
·
years.
.. the supplement All photos must be

Sentinel seeks ODS photos

BERKLINE RECLINER .SALE
90 DAYS
SAME ,AS CASHII

1 Section, to·Pages 25 Cents
· A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio 1\.telday, February 12, 1991

·'

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Low tonight in 30s.
Cloudy Wednesday, rain
likely.

•

at

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Pick 4: 8637

Page4

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1Weather

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Ohio State
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Wolverines

Jl:

I

•

voys can'ying thousandl of Marines 0111 damqe to maay CllqUies orr
have.been moving north, clol« 10 slrllqic llrPIJ-thltincludeihis r
Kuwait, and the lcathemclcks are air firce IIIII his navy.''
~
boring into the sand, diggip&amp; foxTile liP.if'ICIIIt number qf scr-..
holes for sleeping - and' maybe tics DOtWIIhltllldinl, the military :
fighting.
disclosed few ope11tioaal details :
"Everywhere we go, we dig SUDday.
.
· •
holes," Lance Cpl. Kearney
U.S. fcxceslosta secand
Brown, 21, of Jackson, Miss., said AV-8 fiatuer' to entmY artillery in '
· Sunda)'. "We're moving today, .Qpcntion Deaert S/01111, Neallllid . ~
digging more holes. No 1111111« how 'Jiie· plane was shot down Sunday ,
deep you dig, the wind is gonna over southem Kuwaitllld the two- ~·
come m."
member crew was reponed miss- ;
· But all the shifting around the ing.
·
·
:.
desert doesn' t necessarily mean a
The downed Harrier brings Ill•
. looming ground war. In the think- 25 the number of ll1ied pllnea thll:
ing of a military tactician, a mov- have been lost or shot down by ~
ing target is harder to hiL
Iraqi fue; 18 of wbidt Ameii.- ~
Marine Corps Brig. Gen . can and seven that belonged to•
A·~- A-"uon' forces.
:
· Richard Neal told reporters in """"
""""
Riyadh Sunday eveninJ that U.S.
Neel also said a U.S. Navy A-:
fighters would conunue their 6E fighter 1"'CktA and destroyed:
~success 11tc of hiuing lrlq's twoG~p~::S
~ng of:'
orrmd•ble
military araenal. The Bri' tai'n's at· r 'orce said
. British~:steady
air-to-surface
pounding of
•
Iraq would lessen the dangers to bombers in the past 24 hours had;
allied ground troops once a land destroyed 'four Iraqi · bridJ;••
war begins.
.
inelllding two "pontoonlk bri s;
. "It's a target-rich environment" rec:cutly constructed to eep supfor aerial bombardment, Neal said. ~lies coming 10 the Repu.blican
"II looks .....,
"'"A II· •s gomg
· to be a tar- uard." an anillerv unit, a come'
get-rich envirQnment for a while."
mand headCJ.Uirten. two sllkworrrr
Despite the U.S. IDilitary's anU-ship rrussile sites.' in 'Kuwait•.
assertiOn that it has deslroyed IS to and a munitions factory producing'
20 pcn:ent of Iraq's tanks, artillery artilJcry pieces. .
•
pieces and armored penonnel carri·Meanwhile, the number of Iraqi
ers, officials say they are impressed prisbners of war, some of whom
by the enormity of Iraqi President am thought to be defecton, coolin~
Saddam Hussein's military mipL
ucs to mounL On SuQdly, 42 IraQi
, "I am struck by the enormous troops were· captured by U .!L
. ~
· size of the Iniqi military establish- forces or surrendered.
ment," CheneY said after meeting · Sixteen Iraqi soldiers surren-in Riyadh with leaders oC the allied dered to Egyptian forces in Saudi'
contin~nL Saddam "retains a very
Arabia Sunday, the Middle East
significant part of what was the News AlencY reported. ·
·
world's (ourth Jarxestarmy."
·
Aboutl,OOO Ilaqis have become
Nonetheless, Cileney said, "we priso!lers since the allies auacked
believe we have in faci done seri- Iraq Jan .. 17 ~ an anempt to cvicl ·
Iraq from KuwaiL
.
~·

Harriert.

1'

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,'

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i--Local briefs-~

....

•

(.

'V ·

BOY SCOUT WEEK • ne Pomero7 Cab .
Scotti Pack pat IOiedler ..is dilpla7 tblt Wllln
!be wladow of the Darii·Qulckei Iaauraace
CompaDJ 01 Colirt
Seeoad Stre~t1 In

••!I

Pamei'OJ. Tbe window ,... prepared Ia t:alljac.
lion wi!lt N1doaal Bo7 ScGitt Week wlllcll Will
oblerved last week.

'i

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,

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