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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

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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

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,

a
F-

L ottery num b'ers

•

.Cards 5-8; K·C;
4-D; 9-S

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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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' .,.,.

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

·'

90

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

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Pick3:338
Pick 4: 8637

Page4

'k

1Weather

OhiQ ~ottery

Ohio State
tops Michigan .
Wolverines

Jl:

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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.

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i--Local briefs-~

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'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.

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�Commentary

Will coalition hOld together?

The I)aily Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

,

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.·MASON ARE A
~~~
t!i!m~
~v

WASHINGTON • President pean nations , particularly GerBush has grown fond of Qle coali- many, to ltelp pay the postwar
tion of allies he has gathered under costs. And Japan draws 6S ~
the "new world ooler." He hopes.to of its crude from the Persian Gulf.
hold the alliance together even The president has in mind a biger
after the Iraq is defeated. But just . contribution 'o the stability and
as the 'war is a.joint effon, Bush security of the Gulf.
·
wants the aftennath to be a joint
What
the
United
States!
role
obligation.
·
·
will be iii stabillzin the Gulf after
· The United States does not have the war is still in do~bt. One worrithe resources to foot the bill for some intelligence repon out or
postwar reconstruction, so Bush Damascus before the war began
has asked his subordinates to draft warned that Iran and Syria had
a plan for burden sharing.
· agreed to join forces to challenge
At the top of the list will be any future V.S. control of the
Saudi Arabia. The allied forces region.
saved Saudi Arabia from being
Both countries opposed the Iraqi
overran. And one way for Saudi annexation of Kuwait, and Bush
Arabia to repay the favor would be counts them as pan or his coalition.
to pump enough oil to keep the But once the war is settled, Inn's
Western world supplied at a rea- President Hashemi.Rafsanjani alld
sonable pri~e.
Syrian President Hafez Assad
The European Community is agreed !hat they want the Ylinkees
heavilY. dependent upon Persian togo home.
Gulf od, so Bush will expect EuroBoth leaders suspect that the

,.....__,.._'"T",rTE&gt;r=t•= ,

:

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ROBERT L. WINGErT ·
Publisher

Page 2 The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
1\181day, February 12,1881

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General Maaager

PAT WHITEHEAD
.
Assistant Publisher/Controller
A MEMBER of The United Press lnternationsl. Inland Dally Press
Association a nd the American Newspaper PubliS hers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION ar e welcome. They s hould be less !ban 300
words tong. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
nam e, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters will be publis hed. Letters should be ln good taste, addressing Issues, not personall·
ties .
'

Letters to the editor
Full cooperation appreciated

United States has tateit advantage
or the Iralj.i agsression to gain a
foothold m the Gulf. The U.S.
o,b.iective, they h&lt;:~eve, is to ~ .
~nt militar)' l)IIIICS m the '
1bcre are 90111e grounds for that
suspicion. President Bush would
like to use his new leverage with
oil sheikdoms to proteCt oil security and stabilize oil prices. Our
administration sources indicate that
Bush's postwar plans include a
quick puUoui of U.S. troops _ in
other words, no continuing U.S .
military presence. But the Arab
leaders wouldn •1 put it past the
United States to continue pulling
strings long distanee.
Rafsanjani wants to drive up oil
prices as high as the market will
bear.
·
·
He and AsSI!I agreed that only
the countries in the region should
·
.I

Dear Editor:
Floyd, Cheryl Carpenter, Dennis
To the residents of Racine and Wolfe, Jeanette Lawrence, Mary
surrounding Meigs County Com- . Byers, Jeff Thorton, Bea ~ Bill
munities. What pride you sh()wed Cornell, Jenny Cook, Rober.ta
in Supporting Our Troops in the Maidens, Jo Ann Tullle, Sean Rif.
fie, Southern High School Band
Gulf.
.
Choir Ministers of Meigs
and
When we began planning this
County,
especially Roger Grace
march ,one week before we hoped
Raci'ne
Volunteer Fire
and
the
for support, ideas, participation,
both
.
o
f
which
wodced hand- ·
Dept
help, good weather, and togetherpess. Well, we're very· proud to in-hand with us.
say, we. got IOO% ofeverything. · Thanks to everyone fqr bringing
This came l'rom the Veterans, the to realization what we already
young, the seniors, teenagers and knew but needed to llhow, that we
the children. All or which had a "Love and Support our Troops"
and pray for their safe return home,
special place in the rnarcll. ·
We received full cooperation and to their families we want you
from everyone that we asked espe- to know were .always thinking of
cially from the following groups you.
Racine Emergency Squad
and individuals; Jim Adams,
·Linda Diddle
Racine Village Council, J.D.
Sally Caldwell
Drilling and employees, Harris
ChairperSons
Farms, American Legion, J!lne

TWIS WAR
Jc; H@LL! ...
MV CQ\1PUTeR'~

.

JAMMeo· ·~
.

Restaurant yes., bar no
Dear.Editor:
I am absolutefy appauled !lY the
idea of someone .wanting to put
another bal: in Pomeroy.
A fme restuarant we can use, but
why does ever= have to be
messed up with
li
The person who requested this
liquo r license should be wi~­
ning all the souls to,Jesus Christ
that they can, instead or seeing how
· many they can send to beD.
If that liquor license is issued
that only
one thin, .the people at Hillside Baptist Church is
going to have to work a little hard~
er to win more souls, so they can
work to win souls, but that is
alright because Pastor Acree loves

means

Dear Editor:
President Bush has taken America into a war that the American
people do not want and for reasons
·that are. not entirely clear. And our
actions in the Persian Gqlf seems
ihconsistent when compared to our
policy to the Soviet Union and
China.
.
In the Gulf, we are blasting Saddam Hussein's military off the face
of the planet. While at the same
lime we send billions of dollars to
aid the Soviets who supplied most
of the military hardware and continue to lnlde with the Chinese and
modernize their indusaial base.
The size of the Gulf war certainly sug~est a major operation and
comm1tment to a definite plan
beyond eliminating Iraq's military
capability. What is that plan? Does
the Administration ·liave a "secret
agenda?"

a cliallenge, and yoo can count on
him coming ·out the winner,
because he has a church full of
dedicaled, devoted people aiKI God
on his side helping him every step
of the way.
·
I would like to say this in closinl!, to the people who will be
gomg to that bar (if it opens)
please, before you go tl!ere. please
give God a try. You are always
welcome to our church, but if '"''
Put a duncecap on me. When
ours, then try one somewhere.
"Politically Correct" and "PC"
The beautiful music we have, by m.ade ·the cover or Newsweek, I
our own singing groups, will pui thought the current arguments ·
you on a natural high and a high for about academia must be exaggeraJesus Christ is one that you will tions. I mean, really: Cleansing the
never want to f&lt;rgeL
. curticula of "Dweens" (Dead
Barbara Stahl White Males, like Shakespeare)?
Censorship of non-left views? I am
now in re-t4ucalion camp.
I SJK*e recently to students from
Hoban and William Smith ColCould it be that the Gulf opera- leges. I am a Hoban graduate. It's a
tion is a major step in the "New fme liberal arts college.
I explained my hawkish views
World Order" that Bush and Gor·
on
the Gulf and my expansive view
b&amp;chev are creating?
.
of
America's
global role. Students
Americans should be concerned
disagreed.
They
said America was
about our Republic being transimperialist.
America
,vouldn't obey
formed into a socialist state subthe
World
Coon,
and
sup)XIted the
servient to tbe Uniied Nations. If
fbat is the case, then we will loose United Fruit Company in Ceniral
our Constitution, our BiD or Rights, America, not democracy. What
and all the blessings of ow system. right had America to choose which
·.
Our standard of living would be governments to dwrip?
Later,
I
said
I
wanted
to
learn
as
reduced to the level of the average
well
as
lecture.
I
asked:
Was
there
soviet citizens today.
'
Is that what you want for Amer- PC at Hobart?
Hands
shot
up
all
over
the
room.
ica, and your heirs? Then, wake up,
before it's too late. We are being · It was the tum of the silent majoriled down this path by our "lead- ty. One student said conservative
·views were ne.ver presented.
ers". So, it's up to you and me.
If you would like to find out Another said conservative views
more, please contact me at: I4222 were penalized on gnldes: A school
Lee Hwy., GainesviDe, VA 22065..
Yours lnlly,
Mason Gardner

Berry's World

I

'Politically Correct' incorrect

. .~campaign

.

be involved in any peace-keeping
force. They ha~ already ~ to
promote a·reponal secunty Slr_UC·
ture that would eJC!ude the UJUU:d
States 81111 be dommated by Syna
and ~- Bush would rather that
theth
peacehe cankeeperstruscamet
moreflom
e . ons .
.
p· n m e n
• au

KuW81t,Saudi~~E&amp;YPt;

~ush v.:ou!d!l t mmd keepmg
S~ on h!s Side after the
but
he will bema _tug-of-war With Iran.
~ssa!f has tried to plac~;t~ both
s1des ..He S~?nt tr~ps to .JOIR the
Arnencans m Saudi Arab~ ~ut be
also apeed ID help Rafsal~ keeo
Amencans ~ of the Persian Guff
after the war 1$ !JYer.
KING VS, _DESPOT -. ~or
Saddam Hussem ~d . Saudi Kmg
Fabd, the Gulf war IS a duel to the
death. Each wants the other eliminated. Saddam sees himself as the
greatest Arab leader of his fCIIC'I·
lion who earned his place mstead
of inheriting it. He wants
vengeance against King Fabd for
giving the United States a sprin$· .
board to ~ Iraq. So Saddam IS
ltying to inflame the Arab masses
agaiust King Fahd. The kinJ. in .
tum, is plouing to try Saddam m 111
Islamic coon for crimes' against •
God and Islam.
. . . .
MINI-EDITORIAL - The
United States is in danger of 'win·
Ding the Persian Gulf war but losing the peace. Saddam Hussein has
emerged as a hero of the Arab
masses. He is seen in the Arab
world as tbe one who stood up to
the great powers of the West. aad
the lonJer he can hold out ~ .
the alhed forces, the sreater hiS
· rq10tation will be. He will become
an agitative force to a risin~.
restive Arab generatioo. And h1s
defeat will only deepen Arab frus.i .
b'ation and desperation. His decision· to allow Western reporters
back into Iraq last week to film the
carnage ·ausec~ by allied air raids
Willi calcalated to win the only viciory Saddam has lef! to reach the viculry of public opinion in the
Arabworld. .

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Brandon. Church, Ryan Kimberly, and assistant
Tom Sadler. Shawo Taylor•tied with Sh.awo
Murphy or the Warren "Warriors" ror most
, points scored, and Ryan Kimberly earned the
trophy ror the highest percentage ror rree
throws. This team also captured first place booon as fifth !P'IIIlei's ·Ia the tournameot spoosored
by the boosttrs last year.

FIRST PLACE CHAMPIONS • The Little
Hocking "Yellow Jackets" sixth grllde basket·
ball team captured tint place honors at the
Eastern Athletic Boosters rd'th and sixth grllde
basketbaU tournameot. Pictured, 1-r, are froot,
Steve fuchs, Shawo Taylor, Jeremy Thomas,
Shane Sadler and maoager, Jasoo Taylor. Sec·
ond, manager Bobby Lewis, coach, Kevin
Thomas, Tooy Fredericks, Daony Greeowalt,

FOURTH PLACE WINNERS • Earaiog
fourth place trophies at the Eastero Athletic
Boosters fifth and Sixth grade basketball tournament was the Coolville "Trojans" sixth grade
team. Pictured, 1-r, are Tabby Roush, Randy

Shuman, Todd Trudo, Amanda Newbanks and
Lindsey Hart. Second, .Coach Roy' Hart, Jesse
Weekly, Keilb Sears, Heather Newbanks, Mike
Hart and Adam Fowler.
·

SECOND PLACE WINNERS • The Warrell
Warriors sixth grllde basketball team took second place at the Eastern Athletic Boosters fifth
and sixth grade basketball tournament. Pi~­
tured, 1-r, froot, Earl Tidd Ill, Josh Covey,
Mark Lee and Joe Baker. Second, Jlllitin Mayo,

Ben Watt,enberg

newspaper editor said student PC conservative politics and media. . washed. Brains don't wash easily.
leaders stopped the paper from pre· For examfle, the me4ia wasn't giv- The potential tragedy is that stu·
seli ting a full range of views. A ing a ful explanation of Saddam dents twill believe there is 110( much
COIUl!e in researth methods became
·Hussein's ilion.
to 1eatn from their teachers.
a course on gender studies. It was
oriented teaching bal·
What's the J'CIIIed1? In the 'tiiB,
said that only liberal professors get anced all lhat, he said. he said that activist students sa1d don't trust
tenure.
my bringing up the PC topic was anyone over 30, and we"ll decide
A few left-liberal students said dangerous because the left view- what's relevant because we 11e the
this PC stuff was untrue. But even . point has typically been threatened brightest generation ever. Too
more left-liberals said it was so,and by the establishment.
many fearful faculty members said
unfortunate.
I later spoke to Sheila Bennett, yes·boss, and changed the course of
I asked my host, Associate Prof. the provost. She says there's not study. .
Craig Rimmerman, what he much PC there. She believes that . Now those !ICtivists are faculty.
thought. He .is an articulate politi- because faculties everywhere are They have every reason to think no ·
c ial scientist. I summarize bis somewhat more liberal, and stu- · one will stand up to them.
·
views as staled at the meeting, and dents are more conservative, the
The next logical lines of defense
confirmed later:
gap is wider than ever. That yields are college admiru.trations. What
. He Slid professors were not the perception of indoctrination.
aboUt college praidmts and boards
denied tenure oa political criteria;
My friend Roy Dexheimer is a of lrustees? What are they in aust
he doesn't believe non-PC students member or the Board of Trustees. of? Might it 110( be academic free.
are penalized in the grading sys- He says the swement about tenure dom, for students as weD as facultem.
is bunk. PC is overs1ated, he says, ty?
It was good for the students to but reform can only come from the
But administrators are behaving
hear this discussion; a college 's faculty. Trustees may raise an like the intimidated teachers of the
duty was 10 air opposing views.
issue, but the faculty makes aca- '60s. They have bought the idea
or course, he said, there was no demic
decisions. That's the way it that academic mecJoni protects an
such thing as value-free ieaching. ha,!i to be.
attack on academic freedom.
he himself was the left. Although
I lean toward the student view.
They ought fo deal with the
· he assigned works from across the PC is present and harmful. It's issue, moderately and gently.
spectrum, his courses yielded a probably wotse at other schools. Because the next stop is parents,
leftish view. Af1er all, students had The problem in American coll1111es alumni, voters and politicians. That
earlier. been exposed to America's
is not that the students are br:111n- ~ get mean.
.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
6:30 p.m. for the upper-bracket
OVP Stair Writer
crown, That game will' be followed
Tourney time for the boys will by the 8:15 p.m. contest between
begin next week. !lut for the girls it. Gallia Academy (9-11) and Vinton
will stan tonight, as North Gallia County, which will decide the
and Symmes Valley will square off lower-bracket championship. The
in the Division IV Gallipolis sec- winners will p~y in the Chillicothe
tiona!, which wiD have~ 7 p.m. tip· district tournament on Monday, .
off time at Gallia Academy.
Feb. 25 and Tuesday, Feb. 26, with
The winner of that game will the upper-bracket champion taking
. take on second-seeded SVAC co· on the Unioto lower-bracket cham·
champion Hannan Trace (14-3) on pion and the lower-bracket titlist
Thursday, Feb. I4 at 6 p.m. for the facing the Coal Grove lower-brackupper-bracket championship, while et winner.
No. I seed and SV AC co-champion
Athens hoopfest • The Division
Kyger Creek (16-3) will take on Ill boys' sectional will begin on
Southwestern Thursday at 8:15 Wednesday, Feb. 20 at 5:30p.m. ar
p.m. for the lower-bracket tide.
Athens H.S. between North Gallia
The bracket winners win move (9·9) and Crooksville, with the
on to the Jackson district tourna· winner of that l!ame heading for a
ment, which will begin ,on Satur· 6:30 p.m. date with Albany
day, Feb. 23.
Alexander on Friday, Feb. 22 to
Oak Hill cagef!!St • The Divi· decide who will win the uppersian nOak Hill girls' sectional will bracket title.
begin today at 7 p.m. at Oak HiD · Lower-bracket action will begin
H.S. with the Jackson-Meigs game. on Feb. 20 when Be~·s 7:30
The winner of that contest will face p.m. a'ppointment with
Hill (7Wellston on Monday, Feb. 18 at 12) will be followed by Federal

Briao Adams, Shawn Murphy, Trevor Hearo
and' Shad Spence. Third row, Earl Tidd Jr.,
·Gary Muphy, Chip Speoce aod Jerr Covey,
coaches and assistants. Shawn Murphy tied with
Shawn Taylor for the most points trophy.

Hocking's 9 p.m. game ·with Nelsonville-York. The frrs t-round winners wiD play each other on Feb. 22
at 8 p.m.
·
The bracket winners .will move
Continued on page 4

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 ·4524

'~;,~~f~~o::~~'

FEBRUARY 8 lhru 14

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1,____: FRIOAY tllru TMUitSOAf l 1: 15 , 9 : 20 [)A ll Y
Ml l N([S

~AT /5 UN

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MUD Il l

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1:30PM DAILY
SAT/SUN MATI .N ~E S
I : 30

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THIRD PLAC~ WINNERS ' The Coolville
Chiefs sixth grade ltasketball team took third
place trophies at the Eastern Athletic Boosters
fifth and sixth Jlrade basketball tournament. /

Sen. Jan Long

-- c.-

·

The Daily Sentinel

Another interesting aspect ot ough debate of the .issues during
this legislation is its call for pro- the fmal days of a political camhibi ting political TV and radio
advertisement seven days before a
voters are fed up with the
primary or general election. We increasing costs of campaigns. Last
have all experienced the political year records were broken throuJh·
blitz or advenising in the last week: out the state on campaign speading
of a political campaign.
and ,_,,ull
•...,...., y, House BiD 0no will
•
With a ban on TV and radio ads, finally put an end to the abtiurdity
the last week of political cam- or increased campaign spending,
paigns would be spent on grass
As always, please (eel frie to
roots ~litics, a practice that has call or write me, Swe Senator Jan
diminished due to the onslaught of Michael Long, if you have any
money for radio and TV.
questions or comments about these
Instead or depending on 30 sec- , or any other issues. My number is
ond sound bites, campaigns and (614) 466-8156, and my address is
candidates would be forced 10 take the Statehouse, Columbus, Ohio,
their message direcdy to the voters, 43215.
hopefully encouraging a more thor-

(USPS 141-MI)

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~hlo

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Today .in history .
By United P~eaa International
Today Is Tuesday, Feb. 12, the 43rd day o! 1991 with 322 to foUow .
This Is Abraham Lincoln's birthday.
The moon Is wantng, moving toward Its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
Those born on this date are ~nder p.e sign o! Aquarius. They Include
philanthropist Peter Cooper lil1791; Abraham Lincoln, 16th president
o!the United States, and biologist Charles Darwin, both In 1809; actor
Lorl)e Greene In 1915; and baseball player and sports commentator
Joe Garagtola In 1926 (age 65) .

...'

$3 . 00 BARGAIN ~ f! N EE S S ArUIIt1A~ l SUNDAY
SJ. OO aARGAIN PH~T TU[Silo\1'

Li~

ing the primary election and
$2,000,000 during the general eleclion period.
.
While these fl~s still appear
to be somewhat high, it would be a
drastic reduction from the current
$10 to $20 million races thai we
are seeing today.
Candidates for Attorney General
would be limited to spending
$750,000 during the primary election a~d $1,500,000 durln~.'!:j
general election period. Candi
'
for auditor, b'eaSurer and secretarY
of state would be limited .to spending $500,000 during the primary
and $1 million during the general
election.
In the Legislature, candidates
for Stale Senator would be limited
to spending $100,000 during the
primary and $200,000 during the
general election. Candidaies for the
House of Representatives would be
limited to spending $50,000 cUing
the primary election and $100,000
· during the general election.
House Bill One also establishes
limits on · ,~ amount of funds a
· candidate could receive from polilical action committeea, state peny
organizations and legislative CJU·
cus cam~ committees. These
limits w1ll undoubtedly level lhe
playing field ill Ohio campaigns, so
that eJections will not necessarily
go to the higbeat bidder.

•,

Tales from the hardwood ...

.

Finance Reform~ House Bill One

Some $16.2 million spent on
Governor's race, $6.million spent
on Attorney General's race. These
were the doUar amounts spent in
last years campaigns for statewide
ofi'JCe in Ohio.
Even in the legislative races for
state senate and s11te representative, records were broken on the
amount of money that was spent in
those respective campaigns. Clearly, some action has to be taken 10
limit the amount of money that is
spent in campaigns. ·
This past week, legislation was
introduced into the Ohio House of
Representatives that will hopefully
put an end IQ the spiraling costs of
political campaigns. Sponsored by
Representative Judy Sheerer, DShaker Heights, House Bill One
would limit the amount or money
candidates for statewide offJCe and
the General Assembly could spend
on T.V. and radio advertising.
The bill would also ban political
commercials on T. V, and radio
during the sevea days leading up to
a primary 'or ~eneral election and
would set lim1ts on contributions
made to the campaign committeea
of
and Sl8tewide elected
offJCialJ.
AJ designed within the legi.llation, caodidatea for Governor
would be limited to •pending
$1,000,000 during the primary dur·

.laton

"IIJPPMI to you on behalf of the automotive
Industry.... "

'

Jack Anderson

Members, l·r, mint, Neil Nelson, Josh Chapmao,
Travis Jones, Jamie GiUian and Jeremy ~oore.
Second row, J.R. Springer, Jason Kn1sely,
Andrew Plants, Cecil Atkinson and Coach Paul
Brannon.

----SVAC standings---· (Overall)
TEAM
W L
Southern ............ l4 4
Hannan Trace .... l4 5
Symmes Valley .ll 7
Eastern ............. .10 8
North Gallia ........9 9
Oak HiU .......,......7 12
· Kyger Creek ........2 17
Southwestern....... ! 15

PF
1333
139I
lll7
1276
1509
1271
1145
912

(CoQiereoce)
Southern
12 I 1004
Hannan Trace .... 11 2 1018
Symmes Valley ... 8 5 794
North Gallia ........ 8 5 1104
Eastem................7 6 953
Oak HiU .............. 5 8 849
KygerCreek ........ l · 12 772
Southwestern .......O 13 700
TOTALS
56 56 7194

PA
1109
1123
1114
1376
1457.
1371
1429
1167
788
746
799
960
1003
946
996
956
7194

Subscribers not deslrtng to p ay the carr ier may remit In adv anC'e direct to
The Da lly Sentinel on a J, 6 or 12 month
buts. Credtt wUI be g1ve n car r'e. eac h
• weE&gt;k.

1

Sporfl!J&gt;riefs

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Moll Subocrtplloao · .
ll•lde Melp C.unly
13 WeekB ........... ........... :.... ....... $19.24
26 Weeks .................................. $37.96
52 Weeks .................................. $74. ~
Oulllde Melp County

13 Weeks ........... ....................... $20.80
26 Weeks .................................. $40.30
52 Weeks .................................. S75.ro

TrKk aod field
Canadian sprinter Ben Johnson,
continuing his comeback foUowing
a two-year ban. from uack, won the
60-meter dash at the Chitose International Indoor track meet in
Osaka, Japan, beating out Cuban
Andres Simonn when the judges

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Tuesday's game
Southern at Warren Local
Friday's schedule
()ak HiD at Southern
Eastern at lfannan Trace
Symmes Valley at North Gallia
Southwestern at Kyger Creek

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Many Meigs Countians are serving in
Operation Desert Storm, and
we want to show them our support ...

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Saturday's result
Ironton St. Joe 75, Kyger Creek 59

.,

No subscriptions by mall pe· mltted In
areas where home carr ier service Is
ava ilable.

(Reserves. SVAC only)
TEAM
.W L PF PA
Hannan Trace .... 11 2 746 566
North Gallia ...... 10 3 769 548
Southem ............ 10 3 . 732 552
Oak Hill .... ..........9 4 700 621
Eastern ................6 1 589 698
Symmes Valley ... 3 10 589 732
Southwestem.......2 11 · 472 1!56
KygerCreek ........ l 1~ 492 716
TOTALS
56 56 5089 5089

I£

reversed their decision 30 minutes
afitr the race. Johnson and Simonn.
both crossed the fmish line at 6.64
seconds, and judges originally

On Thursday, Feb. 21st,
The Daily Sentinel will have a
Spec.i al Editio=t with photographs of our
Service Personnel from Meigs County.
A copy of this edition will be sent to each one of , i(
our local troops statlo~ed In the Persian Gulf.

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~:~~!tae~~~~v?o:o~i~~: « .

£

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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~~d~e~~~:::CW.:'enr:;s l************************************~
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(i

�. 1\Jesday, February 12, 1991

,........_-Local briefs-__, Meigs...

OSU downs Michigan _81_-65
·

By JOHN HENDEL
.
UPI Sporil Writer
Ohio State was primed for a fall
but found the righl prop on the
. Bucke_yes bench. .
Ohio Slate had JUS1 moved up 10
No. 2 in the Board of Coacbes poll
and is less than 8 week away from
a ~ with No. ~ Indiana, but
With Chri~ Jent sconng 14 points
Monday rugbt the Buckeyes posted
an 8Nj5 vicu.y over the Michigan
Wolverines to grab 1 shai:c of Indiana's Big Ten Conference lead.
In other games involving Top 25

sec&lt;ind half that was worth control
of the game.
"Chris did a great job for us,"
said Ohio Slate head coach Randy
Ayers. "~e !Jis~ two games be:s
been looking JDSide to score. He s
an emotional-type leader. He got a
lot of loose balls and got the crowd
involved.:·
.
Jent h1t a·three-pomt shot that
gave Ohio Stale the lead for good
at 11-9 and the Buckeyes led 36-29
at.halftime. Michigan pulled within
44-39 but Jent sank two free throws
and hit another three-pointer to pul
Ohio Stale up by 10 points.
Wolverines head coach Steve
Fish~ said, "Jent was the big dif.
ference in the first half, I thought.
Viiley and Oak Hill, respectively,
ChriS Jent p;·ovides inspiration,
However, if Trace disappoints effort and those kinds of things that
the oddsmakers and the second- yo11, don' t look at when you read
place teams win, there will be a how many points he scored and
~:. for the brass ring, as how many rebounds he had."
the w·
, Midshipmen 1111d the
Iim Jackson scored '21 points
Whirlwinds will fmish the season and had six assists and severl
with ll-3league records~
.
to lead the Buckeyes'
Apologies • The scribe extends rebounds
attack. Jent was among five Ohio
liis apologies to Kyger Creek
players in double figures.
reserve center Keri Black, whose State
Michael
Talley had 21 points t6
name was unintentionally omitted . lead Michigan,
which feU .to 11-10
from the caption below the picture
overall
and
4-7
in
the 1;011ference.
of the S VAC co-champions from
Ohio
State
went
to 20.1 on the
Cheshire in last Friday's Gallipolis season and is tied with
at
Daily Tribune. In the photo, she 10. I in the Big Ten. theIndiana
Buckeyes
was wearing No. 50 and stood
Hoosiers square off at Columbetween teammates Beth Bradbury and
bus,
Ohjo, on Saturday.
· and Lisa Swisher.

teams Monday night, Furman
knocJred off No. 9 East Tennessee
State 104-93 and Coilllecticut was
a 61-SS winner over No. 17
~. No. 10 Southern Miss1ssippi was an 81-62 winner at
McNeese State and No. IS New
Mexico State held off Cal-Santa
Bllbant 67-64 in a Big West Con·
terence pme.
Jent. 8 juni&lt;I, was a starter as a
sophomore but has been liUide into
an irreplaceable sixth man for Ohio
State this season. He scored half of
his points durinll an 11-2 run in the
.
·
ColllillrudfrO• Jldlf3

Tales .••

on to the district cagefest at Ohio
Universitf-s Convocation Center,
with the upper-bracket champion
facing the Waverly lower winner,
and the lower-braclret titlist qU;ing
on the Shawnee upper winner.
Rio Grande sectioaal • The
Division IV boys' sectional at the
UniversitY. of Rio Grande's Lyne
Center, will commence witlra four.
game slate on Saturday, Feb. 23 a
3:30 p.m. (noon) between Glouster
Trimble and lro!lton St Joe (6-i2).
In the second game, No. 2 seed
Hannan
Tr~ce (14-5) will pi&amp;)'
State's
Jamul
Brown
(JOJ
and
Treg
Lee
apply
BUCKS APPLY PREASURE ·Michigan'$
Hentloclc
Milk;r at 5:15p.m. (1:45
back-to•back
co.
u
rt
pressure.
OSU
won
in
Eric Riley looks to pass otr to teammate as Ohio
p.m.),
and
the third game will feaColumbus, 81-65.
ture Kyger Creek (2-17) and Southwestern (1-15) at 7 p.m. (3:30
p.m.), while the nightcap will have
Eastern (10.8) taking on top-seeded
Southern (14-4) at 8:4S p.m. (5:15
p.m.)
The times in parentheses are ihe
.alternate times that these games
will begin if the Rio Grande Red·
women
(18-8, 7-2) make the DisNEW YORK (UPI) -Nevada- seems) the only thing that couid seen that kind of defense. They
Las Vegas, cOOJ\ng off its touldlest derail them possibly is themselves hustled frol!l beginning to end, We trict 22 playoffs. Good luck Redwin of the season, remained the and they seem to be so well- got whipped."
women!
unanimous No. 1 choice Monday in focused that you don't even see
On Tuesday, Feb. 26, the win.Arizona dropped one spot to
the United Press International col- that ·happening. It's a 1remendous ·sixth, while two losses by St. Delll of the fmt two Feb. 23 games
lege baslcetball ratings, while Ohio basketball team."
John's allowed No. 7 Synicuse, No. will meet at 6:30 p,m. for the
Stale took over second place.
UNL V is attempting to become 8 North Carolina and No. 9 East upper-bi'acket championship, and
The Runnin' Rebels, who beat the fmt team to win back-to-baclc Tennessee Stale each to move up the winners of the last two Feb. 23
previous No. 2 Arkansas 112-105 national championships since one position.
games will tangle at 8:15p.m. for
on Sunday, swept the balloting for UCLA in 1972 and 1973 and the
· Southern Mississi i broke into the lower-bracket title. The bracket
the ninth straight week. UNL V fU'St to take the title with an unde- the Top 10 for the P.:st time this }¥inners willlilee each other in the
earned all 4() fii'St-place votes cast feated record since Indiana in 1976. year after improving two positions. district tournament on Wednesday,
· Monday by the 42-member Board The last time a team finished the · Kansas leaped six spoiS to lith and March 6 at 8:15 p.m. at Ohio Uniof Coaches and finished with 600 regular season unbeaten was 1979, StJohn's wound up 12111, a fall of versity's Convocation Center.
points.
.•
.
when Indiana State and Alcorn · five places.
Title wltbln reaclt , Pon SaunThe Rebels came back from a State turned the triclc. ·
No. 13 Utah moved up two " ders' Hannan Trace boys' reserve
"I think you just saw why a lot places, No. 14 UCLA dropped· team, 11-2 in the SVAC, needs
four-point halftime deficit against
Arkansas to put together a 10-2 of people believe this (UNLV) three and No. IS Ne·w Mexic9 only to beat Jeff Bak~'s Eastern
· $purl to begin the second half and
team could compete with some of Stale gained one. No. 16 Nebraska Eaglets on Friday to capture the
· led by as many as 23 points before those in the NBA," Arkansas slipped two notches and No, 17 conference title, even if the Crater·
" the Razorback&amp; closed the gap in Coach Nolan Richardson said.
Georgetown improved two places.
nity's runner-up squads - North
Ohio State, which improved to
· the final three min11tes.
No. 18 Virginia plummeted five Gallia and Southern, both of which
"I don't know howJou can· 19-1 by routing Nonbwesltm in its spots after suffering three losses in sport 10-3 league marks- do the
play any better than we di the fiCSt only game last week, 'moved into four games last week. No. 19 Okla- expected an~ knock off Symmes
17 minutes of the second half," seconc:t place with 526 points. homa Staie and No. 20 Alabama
UNLV Coach Jerry Tarkanian said Arkansas slilllled to thin! with SIO each improved one position and
after the Rebels; ·20-0, ran their points and Iridiana held fourth with No. 21 Texas moved up three.
. 494.
· · winning streak to 31 games.
No. 22 Michigan State returned
Duke lOOk advanrage of an Ari- to the ratings after a two-week
UNLV's performance also
impressed several opposing coach- zona loss to move up one place into absence and fellow newcomer
es, including one who was in atten- fifth. The Blue Devils po$led three Wate Forest was 23rd. Completing
wins last week, including an the'list were Louisiana State and
danCe in FayeueviUe, Ark.
"I think Nevada-Las Vegas impressive 88-70 triumph Sunday New Orleans,.tied f&lt;I 24th.
,
. : really established themselves, " against Louisiana Stale.
Dropping out of the ratings were
"We lost to the best team we Olclahoma, tied for 22nd 'before
• Missouri Coach Norm Stewart
said. ''They D'Uly are a ~remendous have played this year," LSU Coach baclc· to-baclc losses last week, and
team. They seem to be well- Dale Brown said. "We have never Mississippi State.
focused. Wilen you look at that, (it

Ohio State Buckeyes move to
second place in UPI cage poll

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Village Council
special session

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BELlONE HElliNG liD CENTER
1312 ElSEIN AVENUE (IT. 71-GALLIPOLIS
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13

.-

Colllill,.dfrO• fiGI'l
of people and OQIIIizllions. Thia
includes local oftu:iala as well as
Last week's special election, which saw the defeat of levies for
state officials.
the Meigs Board of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabil·
Tompkins stated that thele are
ity and the Southern Local School District, cost $1.55 per vote cast,
very specific compliance requireaccording to Meigs County Board or Elections Direcllll: Jane M .
ments within the C1e1n Air !d in
Frymyer.
• .
f, which action must be !Ibn m two
, 3,050 voters, or 23 percent, of nearly 14,000 1:cgisteJed voters in
phases. The first phase must be
the county turned out to vote last Tuesday. According to Dim:tor
completed in 199!1 IIIII the second
Frymyer, that figure is not disappointing for a special election.
· phase by the year 2000. He went on
Frymyer also !indicated that the cost of the election was Jeduced ·
to say that even though there are
when the number of pollworl&lt;ers in each precinct was reduced for
very specific rcquimnents, much
two in anticipation of a low voier turnout
·
of the regulations are still being
The entities responsible for the issues, in this case Meigs MRDD
written•
.and the Southern Local School Board, bore the cost of the election.
According to Tompkins, one
factor that is unJcnown 11 that AEP
and other utilities CID set credits
for addins scrubbers. To111pkins
Tlie Iron Sldllet Restaurant in Cheshire has been declared a total
stressed
however that the - o r
loss following a fife ~early Tuesday morning. ·
.
reeeiving
credits js unclear at this
According to Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Dars~ four trucks from
time.
.
that department and one truck from Pomeroy Fire Depw bna~t were
As stated earlier, Gavin plant
dispatched to the scene at 2:46 a.m. and returned at 5:03 a.m. 22
has
two lltematives. 1be tint is 10
firemen from both departments were on the scene, according to
install
scrubbers. This would
Darst '
reduce
sulfur
dioxide~emissipnl to
.
· The cause of the fife is ncit yet known, and Dafst reports that the
about
2S,OOO
tons
per year assumState Fire Marshall's offJCe has been called in to invesugate the fife.
ing
a
high
use
factor.
Presenlly, the
The building is owned by Charles Young of Mason, W.Va.
emissions are about 400,000 to
500,000 tons per y~. The !IC(lllrl()
alternative would be to switch to
REMAINS UNBEATEN· Aaron Sheets, on tbe seaSon winning the hta"Y'felgtb cbampllow sulfur coal. This Jeduces elllisSeven calls tor assistance were answered on Monday and early
Marauder llea~isbt raised his record to :!2-0 ooship. Sheets is 47·2 over the last two yean..
sions to about 70,000 tons per year
on Tuesday by units of Meigs County Emergency· Medical Services.
assuming a high use factor. Both
On Monday at 8:50 a.m., Pomeroy squad went 10 Bailey Run
NATIONAL WEATHERFORECAST FROM7 AM2· 1 3-~.1 TO7 AM 2-14-91
alternatives, Tompkins stated, are work together to select the best
Road for Brenda Templeton, who was transponed to Veterans
well within the compliance limits decision.
Memorial. At 9:20 a.m., Racine squad went to State Roule 338 for
of
the new Clean Air Act amendIn other council matters, Osby
Eliza Hayman. Hayman was tran$p0fled to Veterans. ·
menL
He
went
on
to
say
that
the
Martin,
a Middleport resident,
At 12:26 p.m., Syiacuse squad responded to Minersv~e Road
scrubbers
would
be
attended
the
meeting 10 seek some
installation
of
for Roy Laudennilt He went to Veterans. At 4:10p.m., MilldlepM
more
environmentally
positive.
considelation
in a matter involving
fife ~ent went·to Turkey Run Road in Cheshire Township for
The
amount
of
money
that
AEP
parking
at
his
residence. Martin
,a grass fire, and returned at 4:57 p.m. At 9: 17 p.m., Rutland squad
would
have
to
invest
10
install
requested
that
some
type of action
went to State Route 681 for Charles Martin, who was taken to Vetscrubbers
at
the
Gavin
plant
is
be
taken
that
would
allow him to
erans. At I :04 a.m., Pomeroy squad went to Pomeroy Nursing and
$800
million.
With
this
alternative
park
at
his
residence
without
Reliab Cenier f&lt;I Gtadys Taylor, who was taken to V~. At
six
to
seven
million
tons
of
coal
per
receiving
a
parking
ticket.
Martin ·
2:46 a.m., Middleport and Pomeroy fire departments went to. Slate
year
from·
Ohio
would
still
be
used.
stated
that
his
residence
is
Oile of
Route 7 for a structure fire at the Iron Skillet in Cheshire, and
To
switch
to
low
sulflir
·coal
the
only
three
in
the
village
that
is a
arrived back at 5:03 a.m.
'
cost would be approximately $200 metered site. After discussion on
million but no coal from Ohio the matter, council agreed to come
would be used. 1be ooal, according to a decision and to notify Martin
to Tompkins, would come from the of that decision.
..
Am Ele Power ......................28 1/2
Maf&lt;I Hoffinan discussed
A 111ariiage license has been .west.
Ashland Oil ............................... 32 granted by' Meigs County Probate . Tompkins stated that the cost !" possible projeCtS at the marina area
AT&amp;T ................ Y .... .............34 318 Court to Kennelh Keith Snyder, 3S, Ohio Power to operate·the Gavm on Railroad Street. He stated that
Bob Evans ............................ 171/8 Middleport, and Carol Jean Jeffers, plant under the scrubber option he had been meeting with the
WEATHER MAP • Scattered rain will develop as cold l'ront
would be about $170 million per Corps of Engineers regarding the
Chatming Shop;................... .l4 1/8 37, also of Middleport.
moves into the southern Plains and lower Mississippi VaUey. Scatyear. ·To operate ~nder the fuel land in question and that there was
...c~tding ............................... I6
tered rain showers are also likely in southern Arizona and New
.. F
Mogul ..................... .l6 114
switch option the cost would be a poasibility that the land could be
Mexico. Rain showers will move over .lbe Northwest in advance or
$115 million per year.
signed over to the village at no
GoodyearT&amp;R ........................... I9
an approaching Pacific cold front. Snow showers are 6kely In the
· Tomfkins stated that although cost. If this were to happen, HoffKey Centurion ............................ !!
Northeast. (UPI)
the fue switching opti~n is the m'an stated, the Corps would have
Lands' End ........................,.:171/4
Limited Inc...........................24 3/8
lowest cilst option, these numbers to initiate the process. One possible
Multimedia Inc........·.............71 1/4
are preliminary and they are not project for the marina area, which
Veterans Me..orial Hospital
. Rax Restaurlllt ......................31/32
final numben that AEP will use 10 council discussed, was ·the conThursday, and in the 20s Friday
South Central
MONDAY ADMISSIONS - make its decision. He alSo pointed struetion of a new swimming pool
Robbins&amp;Myers ........................ .25
Increasing clo11diness Tuesday and SB!urday. Overnight lows will
Shoney's Inc.......................... l4 718 ·Eliza Hayman, Racine.
out that the preliminary figures for the viUage.
night, with a low in the lower 30s. be between 15 and 25 early ThursMONDAY DISCHARGES - ignore scr\lbber emission credits · . ¥&amp;tters approved by ~ Co!Jn·
Star BaJ\k ........:...........................19
Cloudy Wednesday, with rain lilce- day, and between five and 15 FriWendy Int'l. ...........................7 3/4 Betty Templeton, Don Belzing and which could possibly a111ount to c1l mcluded an affinnauve acuon
ly by afternoon, and highs near 50. day and Saturday mornings.
Wohhington Ind.... ,..............23 7/8 Eva Milliron.
$30-40 million per year. Tompkins plan which would allow the village
Chance of rain iS 70 percenL
stated that the mdits have not been to participa~ in. Iss11e II projects,
included because. regulations lu!ve and the IIPPOIDtmen! of Jol)n Hood
Ohio extended forecast
not yet been written . Tompkms , to the Board of Public Aft'aus.
Thursday through Saturday
llso said that the numbers ignore
Co~ilman Paul Genlrd ~rt­
A chance of snow ThUrsday and
Pomeroy Village Council will
~,. Stella
M.
Fleshman
he \Vas employed for 32 years.and minc shut down costS which could ed ,on h1s work w1th the Opera~on
.
F
riday,
with
fair
weather
Saturday.
meet
in special session at village
.
was a member of the United Steel- possibly amount to $300 million.
Desert Storm project in wh1ch
Highs
will
range
from
25
to
35
hall
on
Wednesday at 7 p.m.
.. .
worlter.l Locall104.
I
.
If a decision to install scrubbers packages of items would be sent to
;.:
Stella M. Fleshman, 80, .of · He iS survived by his wife, Oma is· made
that
decision
would
have
10 the service people of the Gulf War.
• 22697 Riverfront Road in Racine, (JUdd) Hall; three sons, Hurbert
: died Monday evening, Feb. 10, · Han of Loolin, 1belmer Hall Jr., of come by mid-year of this year and He stated that he now has a list of
the installation would have to be approximately 75-100 people tl_lat
. 1991 at Holzer Medical Center, fol· Elyria, and Ron Hall of Welling- completed
by l!lid-1996, according the village would like reach w1th
•• lowing a brief illness. She was a ton; two daughters, MrS. Richard to Tompkins.
If the fue~ switch th~ project. He went on to say that
· housewife and an Avon salesper- (Emma) Cucco of Wakeman and
option
was
chosen
a mme shut · a team of two to four people would
... son. ·.
Lisa Ann Hall of Wellington; four down would come before
Jan. 1, have to work together to collect
•
Born on March 9, 1910 in brothers, Truman Hall of Flat
1995
and
the
delivery
of
low
sulfur items on a regular basis that could
Carter County, Ky., she was the Rock, Mich., Ranall Hall of Lake
coat
would
be
established
by
early · be sent to ~e IrOops. . _
,
• daughter of t1!e late General Jack- City, Fla., John and James Hall, 1994, stated Tompkins. In either
.
.
Attendmg
the
mee~g. m addi• son and Carrie-Belle Burton Hall.
both of Vinton; one ·sister, Mr$. Bill case, stated Tompkins, AEP has lion to those ment1oned, were
:
She is survived by her husband, (Nola) Skeens of Lorain; and seven got to make a deciSion befOJt June . council members Dewey Hortqn,
Cecil Fleshman of Racine; three grandchildren.
.
of this year This decision has to be Jack Satterfaeld, Judy Crooks, J1m
sons, Fred Fleshman and Gary
One brother preceded him in made say's 'tompkins, because Clatworthy, William "Bucky" WaiReese, both of Norfollc, Va., and death.
AEP ,'voutd have to begin the ter· ters, Village Clerk John Buck: and
V~lentine's
William Reese of Newport News,
Funeral services will be con· minating process of Mei$S coal Ernie Sisson and Dave Baker.
Va., a daughter, Wanda L. Fisher, ducted 1 p.m. Wednesday at the .
: Charleston, W.Va.; 12 grandchil- McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Vin- mini.ng operation •.Or. begm purchasmg scrubber uruts. ·
1
dren and 13 great-grandchildren.
ton Chapel, with Rev. Rick Maloy
•
Tompkins
also
suessed
that
·
She was jJreceded in death by a and Rev. Willie Smith officiating. whatever form compliance takes,
A divorce action has been filed
son, David Reese, and a brother, Burial will be in Pine Grove Ceme- rates will increase for users of elec- in Meigs
County Common Pleas
John W. Hall.
·
tery.
.
··
Court by Virginia B. Reed,
She was a member of the Meigs
Friends may call at the funeral tnc.Jt shut down of a mine in the Reedsville, against Melvin W.
County Senior Citizens.
home today from 5 to 8 p.m.
Southern Ohio Coal Company Reed, llso ofReeclsville.
Funeral services will be held 01,1
Meigs Divisipn would be_devastal.Wednesday at 1 p.m. at Le.tart FallS
ing
to the economy of Me1gs Coun·
Alfred
Toney
Chapel with Rev. Roger Grace offiRAVENSWOOD :
138 WASHINGTON ST.
ty.
The company employs 281
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Monciating. Burial will be in Letart
- 304-273-9038
BOILING SPRINGS LAKES, Meigs Cou.ntians, It p~ys day's winning Ohio Lottery numFalls Cemetery.
.
Friends may call at the Ewmg N.C. - Alfred Roy Toney, 73, of $1,714,989 m taxes to Me1gs bers:
Plck-3
Funeral Home from 7 to 9 p.m . Boiling Spring Lakes, fonnedy of County, with $803,490 to the
Montgomery, W.Va., died Tues- Meigs Local School District. and to
338.
today.
day, Feb, 5, 1991 at Dosher Memo- local vendors the company pays
Ticket sales: $1 ,330,239. PayriaiHospitai,Soutbport,N.C.
$1,417,616.
·
:
Garnet Berry
off: $434,428.50.
He was born in Tien Tsin ,
Oiler spoke at the meetmg, to
Gamet Berry, formerly of Sun
Plck-4
China.
He
was
an
Army
Air
Corps
give
those present an understanding
8637 . .
Set Drive, Gallipolis, died TuesTicket sales: $242,350. Payoff:
' day, Feb. 12, 1991, at Logan Gen- veteran of World War II and a of the way a mine worker views the
retired tockmaister with the U.S. situation. He staled lhat the United $80,100.
eral HO$pital, Logan, W.Va.
Cards
She was born in Gallia County, Army Corps of Engineen. He was Mine Workers can't !IITord to lose
a
member
of
SouthJXI!t
Presbyterithose
jobs.
Oiler
stated
that
the
Five
of
hearts.
daughter of the late John and
an Church, Masomc Lodge, East- · miners do have training but if over
King of clubs.
Clerissa Adkins Hager.
Fourofdiamonds.
She attended the ChurclJ of the em Star, VFWandtheCoestGuard 1,200_peop!e are put out of wo~.
Auxiliary. He was former mayor of other JobS SJmply w•ll not be a~ailNine of spades.
Nazarene of Gallipolis.
She .was preceded in death by·~ Boiling S~~fing Lakes.
#J.' able. Oiler called for an ~ized
Ticket sales: $54,165. ~ayoff:
Survivmg: wife, Elizabeth; son, .. · effort by sla)C and I~ o JCials to $17,670.
her husband, Clyde R. Berry.
S.urviving is one daUJhler, MrS. Alfre!l Roy, Jr., of Cross Lanes, r-=~~l'""'l===:o
· ~~:!:"'-=~~!;""~";";:;";~!T"'...,
Roscoe C. (Velma Lou1se) Sheets W.Va.; daughters, Rebecca Parsons
•· of Logan, W.Va.; two sisters, MrS. of Conyers, Ga. , Mary Elizabeth
Carl (Julia Ann) Gettys of Barton of Parkersburg; W.Va.,
DO MJ DEPENDIN1S
Thornville and Mrs. Hallie Slane of Dorothy Holmes Culloden, W.Va.,
ct•L
,
HAVE TO HAVE SO "
Columbus; two grandsons, Ronald Mae Marie Dee! of Asheville; stepi
SECUIIn NUMIEIS?
Sheets of. Charleston, W.Va. and mother, t;&gt;ora Toney, .o f Point
WHI you claion e~uxtniptionlor
Larry Sheets of Owensboro, Ky ,; Pleasant, W.Va.; brothers. Howard
a .,....,, wha was age two or
two great-grandchildren; and sever- of,Nitro, W.Va., Vallie, Jr., of· Mis•
.W.onlloc..,..r31, IHO?IIsa,
' at nieces and nephews.
.
sion, Te~; sisters, Mae Miller of
yau mustlll1 11M •pendent's social
'
Funeral services will be con- Houston, Texas, Martha Blanche
socwlly nu..., CsNI on your in·
:· ducted I p,ni. Thursday at the Justice of Columbus, Frances
c - lax rotwn. Tht social security
• McCoy-Moore Funeral Home, Roberts of Tampa, Fla.; 15 gran•·
reqoir1111tnt applits to
oach •pendent daioattl on your inWetherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with children.
Private graveside service was
, _ tax roturn. 'h alltlllos Jo
Rev. Isaac Shupe offlciaung. Burial
held
Friday
in
Greenlawn
Memori·
adulh as wei 01 to chllolr...
' · will be in Mound Hill~
DINNERS SERVED WITH SPANISH
at
.
Park,
Wilmington,
N.C.
A
1ht purpe~~o is It - • " !hat all
•
Friends may cal! the Wetherholt
RIC~. REFRIED BEANS, ALL YOU
service was also held 2
txen~plions on a tax roturn repro:. Chapel from noon until the hour of m•morial
~
s.., actual ptoplt and that only
:· the service.
p.m. Friday at Southport PresbyteCAN. EAT SOUP, FRUIT
0111 taxpayer claims a particular
•
rian Church. ,
KARL KEBLER. EA
dtpondtnt.
.
AND SALAD
BAR.
•.
lo olmin a IIGdal IIDirily ..,...,. for a .,..,,, you IIIIHI fill cui a Form
: Thelmer L. Hall
·'
U
SOUg
SS-5. You caR obtain thlslonn at your local H&amp;l lla&lt;k ollice or froin your
;.
Thelmer L. Hall, 56, of Wellingnoartsl ·Social Stcwlly offlct.
·
, ton, Ohio, died Monday, Feb. 11,
A
udgment
action
has
been
ftled
Whortnor
ytu
lla"
.,.r~allo4lt
how
tho
Ia•
laws
alloct
your
return.
!991 in Allen Memorial Hospital,
in
the
Meiss
County
Common
""
yowlecalllllllechflko.
ltHor
ytl,
stop
by
tho
ono-rtsl
you.
Yh'rt
, Oberlin, Ohio.
Pleas
Court
by
Sationwidc
Mutual
hort
1D
halp
ytu.
·
He was ·bom Nov. 6, 1934, in
'
:. Kentucky, 11011 of the tate JOhn and
. IT. 33
13041 773·5321
MASON, WY.
' Minnie (Spears) Hall.
.
(NEXT TO MASON EXXON) .
Mr. Hall retired from the u.s. Reedsville, in the amount of
611 EAST MAIN
992·66U
POMEROY
l,.;.;~:.:;:;:.:=:=...--..;..;;.;;;..;;..;.__________
:· ·steel Corporation in Lorain where $4,641.02, plus $100.

Eleetion statistics

th
. ree-

175 Value

•

. TUesday, Februa,Y 12, 1991

SILVEI IIIDGI
PLAZA
GAWPOUS, OliO
'

,,

•TACO
DINNER
•BURITTO
DINNER

ht

~~~a~i~&amp;::r~ .

..

4 PM-9 PM

'

' H&amp;R BLOCK

Mason Family Restaurant

�The D~iiy Se~tinel

By TI!e .Bend

Fruit trees
available

· Tuesday, .February 12, 1991
Page 6

Community calendar

H~lping Hands

This year the Meigs Soil and

wacec Cciuervalion Dislrict I adiM

.,.,m

for llie, fru!t
tree packeu
contain one
each of OS 165 Golden Delicious
Apple, Macoun Apple, Harrow
Auxi!Wy. is offi ·

circle meets
Ida Mu;phy presented the pro-

Plans were iuaiie 'to· host tbe

C•••••ltJ Caleadar lte••
POMEROY • The Pomeroy Meigs CoWlt)' Women's Fellow· gmm giving some household hints.
apptll' IW ciQI ••e • nwt Men:hiDII
Associ.aon will meet ship on Feb. 28 and !0 present a . She also read "Fun Facll About
ud tile dll7 vi tbt nnt. Iteea
Leftiest "How to Make Holiday
mat be recelored Ia lldqace to Wednalday at noon iD the meetillg Bible Womea's Fashion Show at Plan?S Bloom Again," "A Rose For
the recall mee?ing or the Cin:le of
-re pablkalklll Ia tile calea- room of Bank One. All members Helpinjl
Hands of the Zion Church All Seasons,• llliiL she gave a quiz;
urged
10
attend.
dar.
'
of Chris&amp; held at the home of Vir- "Test Your Weathet I.Q."
" Wit.
.
The hostessea served refreshTHURSDAY
BASHAN • • The Carmel
TUESDAY
Methodist
will have a panHAIUUSONVILLE • 1be Har- cake supperChwtb
on
Thursday
at 5 p.m.
risonville Senior Citizens Club will
The
church
is
located
on
the fifth
bold a flee blood p1aS1ire c:linic on
road
out
Basban
Road.
Kenny
Tuesday from 10 LDI. to 11000 at
Baker,
pastor,
invites
the
public.
the townlloluc. A meetiilg will follow widl a Val~uck dinPOMEROY - The Preceptor
ner. All members
to atrend.
Beta Beta Chapler, Beta Sigma Phi
POMEROY • The Pomeroy Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
Flame Fellowship wiU m~ Tues- p.m. at the Grace Episco11al
day at 7 p.m. 11 the P. omeroy Church. Members bring Items for
Senior Cilizens Center. Hazel Life Hand to Hearl Prop•n. Host r·~
Clarice Krauuer and Maida
of .the Full Gospel Temple Chwdi, are
Mora.
.
LiUle Hocking, will. be the gueat
speaker.

POMEROY • A representative
from Congressman Clarence
· Miller's office will conduct an
open doOr session from 11 Lm. to
1 p.m. in the Court House in
Pomeroy.
: . STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Lori RwiseU was selecled Student
: of the Week at Meigs Junior High School by teacher Jesse Viw for
geography and Ohio History.
\

Long Bottom Community
. group meeting held recent! y
. A plaqu..Q, was dedicated to dinner on March 16. A meeting
deceased members at the recent will be held Feb. 25 for planning
meeting of the Long Bottom Com- the dinner.
mWlity Association.
Hostesses for the next meeting
.. Melody Roberts opened the wiU be Melody Robens and Phyllis
meeting with prayer and pledge in Larkins:
Wlison.
Games were played following
Cards were signed for birthdays the meeting.
and get weU.
· .
Attending were Harland Ballard,
Melody Roberts made yellow Phyllis Larkins, Judy Holter,
ribbons which were distributed to • Kenny Bissell, Mae McPeek, Ada
~h member in support of · th~ ·· Biss~U. A.lta Ballard, Melody
'serving with Operation · D~set.t . Rob~ rts ,"' Dodcl Larkins and
Storm:
~
Delores Hawk.
Plans are in the process for a

CHESTER - The Chester
Township Truscees will meet Tues·
day at 7:30 p.m. at the town hall
RUTLAND· Rutland Village
Council will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at council chllJ1lbers at the
Rutland Civic center.
WEDNESDAY
NELSONVILLE • The Hocking Valley Community Residential
Center Board will meet Wednesday
at 11 a.m. at the Quality Inn in Nelsonville.
·

RACINE • A support group
meeting for those affected by the
Gulf War will be held Th~ at
· 7 p.m . at the Racine United
Methodist Church.
GALLIPOUS • Diahrle• SuppOll Group will meet Thursday, 7
p.m., fifth floor ch 11101n, Holzer
Medical Center. Register pharma~ist Peggy Lee wilf speat. on the
topic: of medicalion IIUIII8gCDICIIL
MIDDLEPORT • The Ameri•
can Legion Feeilc:y Bennett Post
will hold a candlelight service on
Thursday at 7 p.m. under the "Support the Troops" siP that bangs
over Middleport Villqe Hall. All
area minislas are invited 10 participate and there will be entertainment and a speaker. Bring your
own c:andle.

Historical society plans
for upcoming conference
"Historic PreserVation: Cities

and ViUagea," the third annual conference sponsored by the Ohio Historic Preservation omce. will be

bilitaled in 1985, and is listed on
ihe National Register of Historic
Places.

1be conference will follow the

held in Marietta on May 16-18.
The meeting will bring together

spring meeting of Ohio DOwntown,

communities thropghout Ohio to
discuss planning, growth maiiagement, economic incenti"WCS, tourism
and design as they relate to preserving the ~ environment.
1be conference will feature one
track for cities and another for
smaller cities and villages. An
opening reception, educatioaal
tours,, and sr.ecial events are
planned as wei .
·
Sessions will be held at the
Lafayette Hotel, overlooking the
Ohio River at the public: landing in .
Marietta. Built in 1918, it was reba-

16.
For a conference brochure with
complete details, write ~Historic
Preservation: Cities llld Villq
. ea.
Ohio HisUJric: Preservation Oft'JCC,
Ohio Historical Center, 1982
Velma Ave., Col.umbus, 432112497. or can (614) 297-2470.

presenratlonists, planDen, develop- . Inc., which will be held at the
ment officials, and others from Lafayette Hotel in Marieaa on May

•
:

STUDENT OF THE WEEK • Tony Brower )"BS cbosea Studeat
tile Week at Meip Junior High School by teacher Rick Blael·
•tnar for sdenc:e and behavior.

') rot
•
•'·

~upport

group begins meeting

•

: The Diabetes Support Group
will meet Thursday at 7 p.m. in t!Je
fifth floor classroom of Holzer
ftledic:al Center.
.
• ReJ.iStered Pharmacist Peggy
I:ec will speak on the topic of Meditalion Management. fler program
conclude the diabetes educ;auon program of(ered by Holzer

"il

I.

Essay
contest set
•

·: Friday is the final day to enter
tile Ohio Federation of Soil and
Water Conservation District High
$choo1Eaay Conrest.
·TIIlJ conteSt is co-sponsored by
~ Meigs Soil IIIII Water Conseralion ~ IIIII the topic for this
!flll'l
iiiOil, like air, water
ind au
t. is one of the funda81011111 CGUJIOIIC'IIII of life on earth
tAr tmm beiqiiiCrile, never changlq or uniform. soli il a dynamic,
CI*"'Hl "ffccooY of life."
All'/lliMtfn MeJis County in
.... alae dlroaafll1are eligible

!r:lt

!Den•-

.

For mqre informadon, c:ontact
die Melli Soil IIIII W,_ Conser'VIlian Dblric:l ()ffice II 992-664 7.

Medical &lt;::enter during the month
of. February. The mcetiag is open
to anyone interested in learning
more about diabetes.
For more information reganling
the monthly support group meetings please contac:t Sandra McFarland at 446-5500, extension 20,
Mary Harrison or Bonnie Sims, at
446-5246.

-

...........
...........,
._u...,_,.....,
I-

·IV•

INCtMfllr ... 41toM_..._
5I .,... " -

I

Valeut1 ''

Spitw.
Bouquet

ooh ...... - .

__
pc_...__
....
- ......
7low low ........
- ,_._

olllloiA- ....,,_ ..... .....

'"-•-Carr ._
Cll

l~s. we're up to our dcli):htnl

"'"'*d• .......... ,.,..,._
Ul

ellout ltlil -

il I !M*

ROGAN

~u,ER

~

Insurauce Services

noses in lo,·eiy roses. And rhat
means good new~ for YOL.or that special person ' ~"ll
choose to delifi[ht with '
a do:en. Carr.· 'em awa '
at u \"t''"'!.' srtei:.'! iHicc.

$2' 49 5

(~~..~

· Wrapped

lnatw.~?nco C0177t1anie1

154880 SR 124
Portlaod, Ohio 46770
. (8141843-1178
(800115315-28159

~

Or the FTD Flower

Balket Bouquet.

It'a nevar too soon
·to 1end one.
Just :call Qr vl•lt us
today to aen.d the
FTDII Hurta &amp;.
flqwerae Bouquet

~

-

. 42

.60
.05 / day

$13.00

· $1 .30/ day

DAY DEFORE PUBLICA( ION
11 00 AM SATURDAY
2 00 PM . MONDAY
2 .00 P M . TUESDAY
2 .00 PM . WEDNESDAY
2 :00PM THURSDAY ~
2 QO PM FRIDAY

COPY OEAOLINE
MONDAY PAPER
TUESDAY PAPER
WEONF.SOAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
tHIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

BULLETIN
----- BOARD
.

.

- ·-

BULLE'i'IN BOARD DEADLINE
4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

AT

,

LEGAL NOTIF?CATtON
Nome ond Addreu o? op·
•p?lcont:Jomoo E. Oiddledbo
'.Jo. DB. D•!"aing7 Rcom, ponyO,hPI .
• . ox u • oc no,
D
'46771 llon of -polld
1111
Loco
rwotor Injection well: Soctlon
3, Rutlond Townolllp, Molgo
County, Ohio, ?Atond ond
11
""'"Goo~lc~h~rne ond dopth
""'
•of InjeCtion aone- Morcotloua Sholo 3000'-3010'
Mildmum propolld injoelion ,.....,,. - 870Mlldmum Propoood A-' -• Doll• ?n'-+lon Volume
• r-•
- 1200 Bbt
Further lnloimolion ""'Y
bo obt.rnod by contocting
•tholollowtng:JomooE.Oiddie dba J. D. Drlltlng
Compony, P. 0. Box 1187,
llocine, Ohio 411771 , II 14, 941 _2112
1
-or. Ohio D.,.onrnont of Noturot
llooour-. Dlvlolon of Oil I
•0.., Fou.- .,...._Co?umbuo, Ohio 43224, 114·
2111-1823
, Any person ,doolrlng to
commont or to moko on pbjoetlon with -lftcold on
opplicellon lor o pormlt to
conotrulrl. aonvort to. or
:oporllo o oolt
Injection projocl oho?t file ouch
commonli or o7rloctlono ·
in -lling with tho UN·
•OERGROUND INJECTION
CONTROL SECT?ON. DIVI&amp;ION
OF
O?L AND
GAB, FOUNTA?N aOUARE,
'COLUMBUS. OHI0.43224.
Suoll commonll or objoc·
~lone oholl bo tiled with tho
dlvl- no lotor then fllloon
c o - doyo from tho pu·
,i)tjcatfon Uta In • MWI•
'popor of gonoro? circulollon'
,In the- of rwlow .
,12112, 1tc

I'UI 'I ' r

of 1 pompjetely lntogrot_ed
ollsolld·otlla Rodlo To?-lrv Supervisory Cont!OI ond
Dolo Acquioltlon (SCADAI
oyotom: UnCC~~n HH.?, Pomeray. Ohio.
Comptelo opeclflcallono
for thio prajeet moy bo ob·
t.rn..r from tho c- of
tho Boord of Molgo Coun·
ty Commloolonoro, Court·
houoo. Socond St.-, Pam·
ray, Ohio 411789 belwoon
tho houre of 8:30A.M. ond
4:30P.M .. Mondoy through
Fndoy. (Ph. 992-28951B?ddora oholl u• tholr
own bid forme. Front of tho
--•·
I I tho bid
..,• ...,po canto n ng
muot bo mort&amp;od "lid lor
Uncoln Hill Pump Conlrolo". An originol bid bond
or certHtod """" , _ aut
to tho Molgo County Commloolonore 1n the amount
10~oft•·to•-'bldmu- ..
~
~ ,.
•• .
compony tho bid .
Tho -•d of County
Commlnlonor, moy occept
tho lo-ll bid or
· ..,
. oct tho
boot bid lor tho intlftdtd
nd
h
purpooo •
r...,u t 1
•IOhl to rojoct ony or 171 ?lido
ond/ or ony port -eo!.
Molgo County
Com--•
Mory Hobotmer, Clor1o
(21 L 12. 2tc
PubliC Notice
-------.;..;..;..._
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO.
Goo""' M. Colllno,
Molal County T-ouror
Plolntlff

,._igs Count,
Area Code 614

446
367
388
245
256
643
379

992 M•ddteon

GoHIPohs
Ch•twe
Vinton·
Rio Gr1nde
Guyan Oist.
Arabia Oist.
Wllnut

MuonC o. WV
Ant a Code 3011l

Pomeroy
985 Ch•te•

PonJand

803
247
949
742

let1r1 falls
R1ctne
Rull.nd

667

Coalville

PubliC Notice
•aopt.roo -nty-f?voofl of tho North ond of H?d
- b o d troct, bolng ollnp
of lind obout 100 flit In
?ength ond utondlng back
tho width of uld lot.
Po....r No. 1 bolng tho reo?
lllllo co-od by Dovld
Torrolt, ot ol. 10 Bartha Torroll by dood docordod Oet.
11 , 1932, 1n DNd Book No.
137, Pogo 3Hi of tho ro·
cordi of Dood• In tho Rocordor'o
Office, Molgo
County, Ohio.
Tho obovo cloocnbod tr•ct
hll boon loouod the Porco?
No. 14-00387.000 by tho
Molgo County Trooouror'o

l#w

!•xdwug~•, ...

Gell•• Counfv
Area Code &amp;1•

n,-.••

1 C•• ot
2 In Memory
3

Annoutem110ts

•

Give.-.y

31
32
33
· J1
35
36

5 Happy Adii
I Los\ .and founcl
7 V•d SaltCpaid in a•ancel
8 Public Slle &amp; AY£tion
9 Wmt . . to Bu'f

~

Hom" t01Selt
Mo.,.l• HofM&gt;S tor s•v .
F•rms hM Sal•
Bt.ts1n•sa.ail-.
Loll &amp; Ac:rMie
Real Estate

w.....

l r 11 )liO! IdliOn

675
458
576

leo"

773

Mason
New Haven

896
937

Let an

112

Pt

21
. ,22

.23

~:-.==:::::~:-::
far I tote! of· 11,210.00.

I) Tho toll? ornMnt of tlto
finding ·o n - by tho
Court, lnoludlng Ill '"""ah•fl•· pen~
oltloe. Mid i n t - peyoblo

•n=••nta.

to . . delivery

COUIIIY

proHOUting

11
71

c~o E'"''n'"''
c....,.,.
Mot.r

Honu:~s

12 -P'kHMMfte &amp; He•MIU
13 i.-:•••tne I
llll flearicll • Aefr.g_.ttOn
1• ·Gul'lll'_. H.ukny
~

II Mollttle Hume fii.,PMif
17 UPfw*tery

PubliC Notice

ollornoy of the dl71nquont
lind tu cortlf?coto or moll or
1111 of dollnq..- trooto ond
prior to ?ho •tr:Y of tho aon·
flrrnol?on of u?o, bolng tho
of t3 611 72
oum
'
' M. ·Souloby,
Jorneo
Sheriff of
Moir Cou ty Ohl0
n •
~ 6 ' 12 · 1 · 3'c

Public Notice

•o.

1 4.00381.000-t 100.00

.OM• • MoiD&gt;fS l1&gt;t Sille

11 l"tOf'Ae t'""ov.m.m •

53 Aftll ...ves
54 Mttc. M•ch.,..e
l i BYii4cttne su ~·
51 P~t1 for Site
57 MulicalltutrUift•h
51 fru.ts • YeeiiiHf•
59 For 1•1• 01 Tri!Mfe

Busin•sOppo.turl••v
Mon., 10 Loan
P1ot•11onal Servfcn

.

"

71 Aut• P•ts.• Acc•s.ot •o.:
71 Aut• ,...,_.

51 H18U ..hOHIO....
li2 - ....., ... 0...

M~tcetl..,eous

Apple G10'&lt;!e

PubliC Notlc8

.1 t Metete'tCI•

s~e fGf ,..,.,.
47 · W...ted to,._..
•a Equ ....tnt ........ .,.., ·
4t FOfle . .

15 Sc~ols&amp; Instruction
16 R.ctta . TV. Cl Aep;u,

~~~=- ""::d' !:;::,~

_h....,

41 Futnishl'tll "•MI

Ple~aunt

Bulfllo

? 1 . . ..... ,.., s.e.
72 Tnldla iot hi•
73· v.... • -•wo·s

••

18 W..-.tM To Do

, ., .I1.C k

11 -. ' " ' ' Ferlth~&gt;..-

14 lu1in•s Tram;ng
11

)liP 1 lt!S

11 •. ,.,... ,~~·
12 w...... toltly
.3 Lirorfttodl
14 H~~t • GtMf\

House• 101 "em
MObile HDM• tot 11•11
~J F•m• t.rflm
44 ltl*tmd fet .-_..,

1 1 "-'• w... lid
12 Sitvttiott Wt~nt_.
13 tnNr.nc:e

NOTICE OF &amp;ALE
TO ALL PERSONS
?NTEREBTED
CoN No, 81 -CV-22
Public Notico lo Ho,.,y
Glvlft:
·
!lffiCO.
(1) Thot on tho 31otdoy of
Po....r No. 2: Tho follow- .lonuory, 1991 , purouonllo
Ing rNI oototo oiluot..r tn . tho Bonltoov Dlllrlct low of
tho Townohlp of Boltlburv. Ohio. thoro wu fllod In tho
County of Molgo ond Stoll office of tho Ctorlt of tho
of Ohio, of Socllon B. T-n Court o? Common Plooo of
2, Rongo 13 ond doocrlbod M81go County. Ohio, tho peu fotlowo: Balngobout Ton tition of the Vll?og• of Rut·
Hundrodl?lo (10/1001 of on ltnd for lhelllobtlollmont of
..,. on tho Eoot~y .l ido oJ , I ·
bo
Lot No. 20 of Rodford'o
Survey. Baing tho aom•·
property 11 convoyid to
?or
Morgoret Torrell by Robart
To
Dyke ond Flo,.~co R. Ruo- prevent ond
.,. pol·
eoi).,.Oevi- of D. A. Ruooo77 lutlon of Loodlng Crook lftd
by doec? dtlod April 1 1th, other olroomo within tho
1914 ond ,.cordod In Vo?. propoood Banltorv Dlllrlot
111, Pogo 204 of tho ,.. Areo; ond to provldo lor tho
cordo of Doodo of Molgo cotlectlon ond -!tory dioCounty, Ohio.·
poul of • -.. ond other M·
Porcol No. 2 bolng the rNt quid wollo produood within
111111 convoyod by E. R. the propolld Sonltory DloBtof?y, II ot. 10 Bortho Ter- lrlcl Areo.
rel bv dood -doc? Oc121 Thot lhl Iondo ooughl
tobor. 11. 1932 In Deed to bo Included in llld Dlo- 2
Boolt No. 137, Pogo 317 lrlcl comprloo Iondo In Tho
Dood RoaorJo, Molgo Coun- Vlltogo of Rutlond ond Rut·
ty, Ohio, ond further -roo· lond Townollip In Moigo
toto convoyod by Ro?ph R. County. Ohio. doiCfibod
She always ltaned 10
lny4or ond Lorene Bnyder oubotontlottv oo ?ollowo:
watl:h for us
10 Bortho Torro?? by d - re·
Being olt ' the 111t olllto
cordod OCtober 11, 1B32,1n oiluotod within tho vrrrogo of
An1i011 if wt ·are late
Dood Book No. 138. Pogo Rutlond ond thll portion of
In winter by the window
48, Dood Rocordo, Mo?go roo? oototo odJocont to lhl
In SU?Imtr by the 11te
County, Ohio.
Vlllogo of Rutlond corporeAnd lhOI?Ih wt mocklll
Tho obovo dooarlb..r troct lion tlmlto oiluotod wltltln
her tenderly
hlo ioouod tho Porcol tho Tawnolllp of Rutlond
No. 14-00388.000 by tho ond ma11 pertlculorty de·
Who h8d IUCh foolioh
Molgo County Troeouror'• ocrlbod " lot?owo:
_core
Office.
Boglnning ot tho oouthThe lonl way h - ·
Porcot No. 3: Tho lo?low- cor- of the Vllloge of
ld
,
ing doocrlbod _, ollole Rut?ond corporation llmlto:
WOU
Hem mort
llluolod In Sollobury Town· thlftco in o oouthorly dlroc·
salt
ohlp, ond baing Lat No. 20 In lion o dlltlftco of opproxl·
Btcauae
she waited
Rocllord'o Survoy. Town· mototv 1700 to o point
thtrt
ohlp No . 21n Rongo 13, Secthe Oouth- oamor
Her tilo..,,
•'""t
II
tion . 8, Ohio Compony'o bo7ng
of tho roo! ootolo conlolnod
SWill I . 10
P..choeo - nld lot bolng80 within tho prapoood Bonlfull Ol US
.
by 1 00 ..., ond bolng t•rv Olotllct. for rotw-•
She never could forpt
pert of tho rNI 111111 do- Hid llno lntoro• ·11 Loodlng
And 10 I tlliRk . thai
creod by·lho Court of Com- Crook 11
op~ra•lmotaly
_.__
~- 1
mon Plo81 In and for oold 1280 fHt from the point of
w-11 So"' S
Molgo County otlto Novom- beginning: thence In on ooo·
She must bt watchi??J
bor torm A.D. 1867 to torly direction 1 dlotonco of
yet
Morthl Donnie In o oull lor -roxlrn~~taly 1130 to
Wailh?C till wt COIM
dlvorao~~golnll John Donnlo
o point being tho southeoll
homt to ~-r
•• alimony.
cornor of the ,.; llllto con'"'
Bl?ng tho 11- premi111 tolnocl whhl~ oo?d propoood
Anxious if wt 111 l1te
oold .,d oonvoyod by Jonoh Sanitary Dlotrlct, for ,.,.,.
Wllchinc from lltaven's
Bordlft ond wHo to Levi oold SOuthem Mnolnlor·
WindOW
by dlod dotod Juno
13 1180
CO!Intv
Rood
lll177i,..
27th, A :~D. 1814. ond ,.. known oo Dopot Stroot ot
.,. fro• Htlvtl'l
cordod m Vol. 111, Pogo oppraxlmotoly 1120 foot
pte.
294, Molal County, Ohio, from the ooulh- aomor
Doec? rooord.
af ,,. ,.., oototo c~o..ribod
· Bertha Rife
Porco? No. 3 bolng tho reot
Di4[Jd Feb. 12,
111011 co-ld by Lovl
Tonoy to lortho Tonoll by boundory llno .of tho oool ••·
1990
dood roaordod Moy 9. 1918, toto oltuotod within.,. pra·
Eva, Bin, lonnie
In D•d Boolt No. 117, Pogo poNd Sonltorv Diolrlct con·
end FamiiiH
Oood Roconto. Molgo tolno opproximotoly 1040
IHt of tho rood known 11 · .__ _ _..__ __.
County, Ohio.
D~ St.- or County
-n.. obovo doocrlbH troct Rood
3 which 11 oltuotad•
heo luuod tho Porco!
ooulhern
No. 14-00389.000 by tho oout~ of tho
Heppy Ac:IB
Moigo County T,..ourer'o boundorv Hne of the Vi?lo.. 5
of Rut?ond cooporol?on tim- ,:__;.;;;:=~;;.;..-­
Offico ond:
ho: thence In o northwoo- -ouch
·· rH?
ouchpraporty
Judgmont
ordoro
to . tortv direction o diiiOnco of
bo ookl by.,. undorolgnod opproxlrnatoly 3120 to
o point oltuolld on tho • •
10 eottofy tho tot.r omount of
ouah judgment: And oloo tern boundooy line of the VII·
thol uld porcolo bo oo?d to- logo of Rul?ond oorporollon
tlmllo, lor ,.feronce llld
gether:
N-.1-lore. public no- eootom boundorv line lntor·
lice ?o h-Y given lhot I, -stote Route 124otopJornu M. Souloby, Sheriff pro•lmoiiiY 120 fool from
of Molgo County, Ohio, wHI
oo?t ouoh rool praporty II
public IUGIIon, ?or cah, to 71 Autos for Sile
tho highool blddor tholoooo•
of tho foliO::: ·-nto:
AI A folr
11 vlluo of
1916 JAGUAR XJ6

to 1!11

,.._ .

. 30

$6.00
$9.00

.fu//uwiug I «'l«•phum•

Mtblllf"LIIftt

-..l.--~--·~ ·--·--"'

~ · '

tlllidiJy '1.1' 1
Sf'! vl t. P ~.

t••

w-

· ~ ...........

Flovvera Wired Worldwlde/Privloua Coupoo C11h &amp; Carry Ooly.

L l......

THE WAYS

992-6687

"Picbp or Delivered"

·&amp; Floral

COUNT

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

Show your Valentine how much you care••• purchaH your
flowers of $30.00 or mort for Valentine's Day·and we'll
give you one pound of chocolates Frtt.

Greenhouses

LET ME

laiiiiDCe Ripenl one week ahead
rl BanJea. Fruit .... ~ identi·

41
42

H4tppy Ad!&gt;
Yard Sitlt..-5

· '------~---""
Public Notice

. . . . . . . . . . . t ...... . . .

. 20

Ral" MOtor consecuteve runs. bfoktn up d.,s Wtll bech•ged
tor each d., u seperale ads
·

•A thA!iltted outv t~ rlt": tnoul p l.te cd '" l t'lt! Oatlv Stmtlllttl
c ~t
class•hl.lllthsplay . 8usmun Card tll'ld lt~tjitl nOIICtnil
w1ll ahu · appe-itf "' thu Pt Pl t~ a~anl Re!11St1tr and I he Gall ~
pohs 0011ly Tr~lxH• c. •eaclun11 OVlll 18,000 honu~s

'

mm
1 ·•·
1ltt Rli 1111111 c1D 14 II• ........:

14th Valentine's Day!

Ranis ·par •••s

Caut of Thanks
In Mcmoni11'11

. CALL 614-992-7104 FOR APPT. .

11...............

Monthly

.

$4.00

(.'l(l ,,,~jfjl'l/ _ /UI/{1''

FOR SALE IN RACINE

31

li

10

"Ads thlit must be pud tn advanc\: au~

VERY·'HICE t ARGE HOME ON APPROX. 3 ~
ACRES-4 BR, 3 boths. 2 Rallies. rented I
BR apartment. Property in dudes pond, approx. 4,800 sq. ft. farm bldg. and mobile ·
home. Areol blrpin II $84,900.
,

UnllllellmlapallalnllliiC.....,.

' 15
15
16
15
15

J

diiV aiUH publtcatton t o millk tt correct tun

The Basket Weave, Pomeroy
Make a Basket For Your Kitchen!
Class Will Be February 21st
Call 992 -6855 to Register
lots of Valentine Baskets in Stock.

.......
r ·:.·,.... .. pallor-- ;t'

1be~llalloolrwilafar

sale qwaatity ·lluiMIIu of White
Pine, Scolda PI-, Cola• II•
Spruce, Cmtl• Jlwloct, C.mon Pwple Ulac, Wl?lla flowa:s
Dogwood, Blac:t Loeuat, 1ft

The Harvell Queen Pear is a
Banleu type witb IIIOng fire blilhl

"1 poml lnle type only used
, ' Sentint.-4 •s fiOI ntspons•b!e lo r ~rron. attc r hrSt tlay . (Chuc:k
lor enur ~ tint d., ad IIIIlS m papot) Call hdore 2 .00 p in

'

.

-·1111
with no 1100e c:el1l. Maluri·
ty is two weeki . . . rl BardelL

Over 16 Words

Ra•e

Words

"Free ads
G ive otway i'lnd Fou'n d ads undt~~r 1Swoub will b"'
mnl dlfs ill no ch•98·
•P•tttl of .ad tot all capi'laiiMUtrs IS doubie pnce of ad coil

Public Notlct

-doni.

.caual

a

• The Area's Number l Marketplace

'Ru&lt;:ttNI! $ .50 d•uourt for •df poud tn ;utv a nctJ

BASKET WEAVING CLASSES

When you 4UIIIIfY • • , ......... .
rloll "" . . . " - camp . . . .
IIIIGIII II JlllotAIM ....... filii!
_ . , 1111 up wllll , _ tint

,

....

I

We offer U]laginative and ·
beautiful bouquets fpr eVery
Valentine. From the funny to the
true romantic. To pick up or
send a bouquet anywhere in the
U.S. or Canada, drop by your
local Teleflora florist today!

The Han'Qw Delight Pear is an

ltlriClM, IIIah QUIJily, early, pear cal flavor a1cl appearuce lluc
witl? Rood l'fre biiglit reailtance: III&amp;Jidy •Iller ia lill. P,• c 1NB
to
The Crait il ??ICdl•
with an quality Ia aaicl to Ire
lltrled ve red blulh ever yell- Bartleu. It ia ..,.._ -pllible
grouad color. Tbe Cleall 11 "et'f wid; Hanow DelipL

RATES

Days

'Ads outside Me1gs. Galha or .M"nun counliM must be pre

YOUR FIRST

•dNIIuctloolo .... lli

easily.

POLICIES

.t

ACCIDENT

Seventy-five aucnded the opening services of New Ufe Mission at
the Alfred United Methodist
Church on Suaday. Tbe church
held a rec:epcion lifter the service.
Alfred Sunday school teac:ben
for 1991 are Sunbeams, Doris
Dillinger and Florence Spencer:
primary, Susan Pullins and Charlotte Van Meter; WiDing WOlken,
Gertrude Robinson and Lloyd
DiUinger; adult, Nellie Parlter IIIII
Thelma Henderson. Off'JCen are
IICCretary·treasurer, Kathy WIIIIOII
and Tim Spencer; roll call, Florence Spe~JCCr. lillrariw, Marilyn
Robinson and Lloyd Dillinger;
flowers, Thelma Hendenon.
Imogene and Lesler Keaton visiced her sister, Cleora Southall, at
Spencer, W.VL
Nellie Parter visited W'lima and
Howard Parter. Other visiiOfS were
Mr. and Mrs. Todd Lewis and
.Kaeie, Peru, Ind.; Willis Parker,
PIRersburg, W.Va.
Lany Ritchie, Caldwell, is
spending the weC'k with his grandparents, Marilyn and Wilbur
Robinson. Lany is recovering from
recent surgery.
Sic:lt memben ~ the community
include Brenda Weber, Susan
Pullins, Jonathan Avis, Sarah and
Aaron Yost.

Fehr~ary

Valentines n
ForE
Kind 'Of
Sweetheart

1be Macoun is a semi dwarf,
highly aromatic, well colored

benefirs from chemical ?biJ?nina ;o
maintain fruit size ll7d -ual bea'ing. Fruit drops readily and bruises

ish with while crisp, juic:y flesh.

TO Pl.CE AN AD CALL 992 ·21'56
MONDU. thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

The PubHc Utilities Com-.
mission of Ohio has set
. lor .public hearing ease
No. 91-01-EL-EFC, to
review the fuel procurement practices an,d
policies of Ohio Power
Company. the operation
of Hs Electric Fuel Component, and related matters. This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
1:30.p.m., on March 11.
1991 at City Hall, City
Council Office. 218 CleVeland Avenue. S.W.• Canton. Ohio 44702.
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity
to be heard. Further inl&lt;ir- '
mation may be obtained •
by contacting the Commission at 180 East
Broad St.. Columbus.
Ohio 43266-0573.

Chirley Smith n:turned home
Thursday afler spending two week
at Holzer Medicai Cencer.
Weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley Smith were Mr. ~d
Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy, Daniel
and Stephen, Daniels, W.Va.: Mr.
and Mrs. Doyle Knaj)p, Michelle
Knapp, Mr. irid Mrs. Kevin Knapp,
Michelle, Amy and Ashley. Alsp
viSiting were Mrs. J .R. Murphy.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole and Mr. and
Mrs. Karl Knapp.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell were
visi?on of Mrs. Dorothy Reeves.
Mrs. Donna Roush. Syracuse,
was a Friday visitor of Mr. and
Mrs. Kevin Knapp and family.

Mcintosh-type ~ apple. Color
is dark purplish-red lush over arground. Flesh is white, (lf?ll, and
very high quality. Tree Ia upright
powing and a ..- type. Ma:oun
IS a heavy, but biennial bearer that

Classifie

LEGAL NOTICE

.Wolf Pen

Delight Pear and Harvest Queen
Pear. This ~ket seDs for $20 each
and is IVailllbie iD limited quanti·
tics.
The DS-165 is a semi-dwarf
very smooth spur-type golden
apple. Fruit is Gibs,on Cultivar
qualitv; SliiOO?h.• alighily waxy rm-

•

meats to those mentioned and
Hazel Stanley, ~thryn Johnson,
Dorothy Reeves, Peggy Bole,
Suzanne Warner, Chelsea Young,
Evelyn Thoma and Mabel Oliver.

WE'LL
OVERLOOK

Alfred.news

•

&amp;mf'uciife Allen presided at the
meeting and roll call waS answered
with a Bible verse containing the
wonl"love."
Marge Purtell had devotioas
using ID article "Challenging the
Heart," by learning to be patieDL
The
will meet Apil18 to
q_uilts f~~rundy Mountain Mis· ·
SIOD. They will llso meet March 26
to clean the church. .
The menu for the Sunrise Breakfast was discnsserl and dec:ided.

The o.Hy sentinel P~ge 7

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

'1\Jesay, February 12,1991

VANDEN PIA$
4Dr•••-

... r.....

al IIMIIs, origillll wi!Miew
stlckor, ftslly 1eadotl wlllt
cellular plloM. oxcthnt
c.-.?1.., lllack/~oo sltlll.

$16,100.00.

, 614-247-4161'

.....,•.,....,

Gtt4tlllt

SIGNS

tJ.dc IMMDf
s~
· rby
b)(

UALI1T
•

Point Pleasant· 67Ht25

IISSaL&amp;I.a
COMiiiCIIOI

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

CUSTOM IUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

i • • ··-·

ec:••••l ..
......~:~;a

"At

StepiC.••frwllt_, ....

"7-617t

. . . . . . 2!111:si1

.....
...............
,......
Gul• ._.,.

,,

llll~tMIIIAI

Y. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

JU Ia. S.u•

11·····11

Pt

Hand Tufting

.

'Custom D11pea

t .,, OW.
11·14''tO ""

S6 Yton Export••..

614·"2·2121
W. ley - 1 -. Po.
W.DoWhot

.VINYL BID?NG
•ALUMINUM IIDif!IQ

•ILOWIII IN

lldULAt?ON

IISSILL '

215 II. SocMII S?reot
IIDIIL&amp;'Oif, OliO 457..
Olfkt 614-ttt-1116
,... 614-tft·J6t2
110TT11 S. Tllllla,IIOIII

Sl••
co.
.........
..................

t-S't

IOSM*YCAIIS

1-7111

GlOOM

lOOM

Home Repalra

Ctn;ltll lrumhtl
,., d ••••

!10 JOI TOO SMALL
FlEE ESTIMATES

CDAI

........

COIRIUmOI
992·66•1 or
tt.J1-tlro

I. L ·MASH

CAIPEITIY

•Ourugea '
•Room Adclltlons

latha
•VIoyr lldlng

•Kitchena •

It'• h Nlftr :
,.... flftyl

•R .,.,, Work

Love. from R. Jr..
J, C and Am lief.

,.. . .,,0110

•Rnto?'ltlon

"2·5526

' .

131 lryan Place

MIM!eport, Ohio
11-54·

MICIOWIVE
OVIIIIPAII

AIL lUES
.... H .. OrWe

.

PldJip.

liN'S APPLIANCE
SIIVICI

HI·IJJS.,.
tll-1161

. . . ._ .... OHio
117 I. S..0. St. :

rnrn.0110

S/1/to/nn

SIIUI I IIEE
111M and
•LIGHT HAULING

•Remodeling and

•Painting

JAMIS DISII
tft-2772 or
742-2251

IIMOYAL

Ill

•Roofing
•Siding

•l?eplacement
Wlndowo
•l'ioof?ng

N.Mt-IHI
..- .... Mt-1161

HOUIEI•LOTIIPAI?M
COMMII?C?AL
.,• Neeol Uod-1

.

INSUUnON
•VInyl Siding
~?nllllletlon

IFI?IIIIT?MATISI

UPHOLSIIIY

Pll. 949·2·01
.,. .... 949-2160
' llop • Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

J&amp;L

CAifENIEI SOYKE
---c·· •• ..,.

•••n•••• Prien"
4-11·16-tln

YOUNG'S
-II&amp; I "IWI W

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•FIREWOOD

IIU SUCK
992-2269

••u.a

USED UILIOAD TIES

614-992-6120

BlAT TIE RUSHI

DillE

,...,.,,

ow•&amp;Opaall?

1·11·10-lfn

..

Itt y.- lllw IIIII tar·
~~·I· IIR? hlnld ..

IIIII ~ · -·••••
,., fl?t II I
II AIIJI fDIUAIY
- ,,.. (llick?lp and .

I ···•II

..., . , I;;

_. MIUI

Pl?l?tror
dty

(?lrt

lilalh.

WI ~10 III?VICE
CHAIN 'I AWI

...... ..,...
IAYI'S SMAlL

Ill Wilt . . St.
•• .,.,, 01:.

Pl. tt2-lt 2
-4-

.

�.,

The Dally Sentinel

February 12, 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

18 Wlnted to Do

JUT 'N' CARLYLE~~ Lany Wrtpt

41 Houlll for Rent

71

The Dally Sentinel Pag1 I

........

'

1got a real chuckle from 11n
1--TI-.;;,I~TI-,I~rl" ad tftat ran recently In our local
· ._==~~::-:_•::,paper. lt read: "Big Show an~
Sale. Our Antiques are ....,.!

•

.Pomeroy--lllddleport, Ohio

'f1181day, February 12, 1991

Television
Viewing

AUIOS for Sale

M

M

TUES., FEB. 12

I

LEMLUT

EVENING

···--Ill

r ( _Cl

W.n1141do""'-_..
...
_ _ . ,' _ IQ4.7JW4$2.

l:ootJle

iiJINiwa
?'"'
(!Jc:twr.ln~t:;l
CZJH·t Cont8CI
(I) SqUIN Onl
t:;J

•

-----·

C UD E N

g!,~'i.,m.

to--...1,~
In "" ........ "'"""

4

llle • o•

(II

0 IIIlA Today

I

a WCII1d T•r.

Giveaway

aJIOur"-1;;1

1:01 (I) lever7y Hlllbllllll
1:30 ~
Nee Nlg7llly N•w•

e o

FlrlallCicl

,..

WUttclll' 11 Not Admltled

otuwaa,: IIINH bledl Md

_poe,., __ _

. .._
..lrwd
· -~ ....
............
1 -wocl,
Ina

\

~i,.~Newal;l

21

~ 3-2·1 Cont8CI8 .
1111 oec•,...•l;l

1

ohlkll•n. IOMll-1111. '

li

0 L VAC

5

o

.AI s.I'w·vI AICI \ 0

Complete lhe chucklo quoted
by filling i.n the ml•ng 'WOI'dt

R

you devolop lrom

ttep

No. 3 ~low.

I!]). Andy Orlfftth

"il

IDUpCiou
1:35 (J) Andy'Qrlfltlh

9
I cal. 114-

Lost

wanted to Buy

11

7:00~:.,..

Help W11nted

Wo- To lklr. Uood lllllbllo

.......... ._111.

a Found

WhHI or

C1J I DrHin of Joiannll
!II lnatent 11-U
~ (!)

SCIIAM-IJTS ANSWIRI
Enroll- Plant- Haunt -Jester- HAS it ON
"This dress is
fancy for me," sighed the woman.
The salesgirl replied, ' Remember, the important thing
about a dress Is the woman w~ HAS it ON."
·

MltcNaH/Lihrar

too

iJ":".8Edition 1;1
I!]) 1 Nlgltt Court t:;1
Ill

Employment Serv1ces

ill Cu....nt Afl1lr 1;1
IIJMecQyver
=~
a
Mol!lyn~~e

8SearKtoW and

MN. King

BRIDGE

1-IZ-tl

NORTH
+Q7

••

By James Jacoby

tKI0765

7:05 (I) Happy Daya

A logical way ol bidding a stroog
+109762
7:30 I)). 1111 0 Jeopardy! Q
band with a long suit, alter the oppoIll Nlaltt Court t:;l
EAST
neata open lbe bidding, is to make a WEST
!II
l!.nlnllllll-riitellitrnm-•nntt
·+Kl0883
+AJ&amp;S
takeout double and later bid your suit,.
TOitlgltt Stereo. Q
•s3
as South did in today's deal. He didn't .976
(J)
1111am1'1 F1mlly
tQtl
t32
need very much from partner to make +Q83
tiD 18 Tltrtl'o Company
+AKJ4
1D Colfe9e Baake!NII
a pme. On tbe other hand, If North
aCroiiiiN
SOUTH
beld no high cards, South might be
+u
able to take only eight tricks - his
7:35 (J) Santorcl and Son
.AKQJ!Otz
long suit,plus tbe diamond ace.
8:00 I)) 8 i1J MIUOck MatlOCk
t AJB
After South's takeout double, West
defends a ·chemist accused
+s
raised East's opening bid to two
of killing a co-worker. Stereo.
Vulnerable: Both
spades. AltbouBb Nortb was weak. _be
9_ MOYIE: Ninja Ill: Thll
beater: North
bad some sltape, so he b•d three d1a·
lt,;;inatlon (RI (2:00)
monds.
South
knew
that
If
North
beld
!II (J) 8 Who' I 1711 Boll?
Sotlb
Wott
Norlb · Eut
no bonor but lbe diamond king, there
Tony and Angela leam they
Pus
1+
wal a play for 10 tricks, so South bid
are married according to the
DbL
2+
Pus
lour hearts.
IRS. Stereo. a
4'
All The defende!ll casbed two spade
CZJ (!) Nova lire birds the
descendan18 of dinosaurs?
tricks, and then East played K·A of
Opening lead: • A
clubs, l'tlffed by declarer. ~larer
0 tl) IIIICII8: tt1. A boy
drew trumps, noting that West had
and his grandfatltlr beCOme
started with three hearts, and then
lost in tho wilderness. ·
played a few more practice rounds of eventually South decided tbat lbree- ·
Stereo. a
trump.
M you might imasine, neither card diamond lengtb was with West,
tiD MOVIE: Midnight Run
defender threw a diamond. However, so he played ace and jack of diamonds,
(R) (2:00)
11J Waatmlnoter Kennel Club
declarer had a little somethiDJ to iinessing. That scored up tbe .game.
What about timid Soulb players who
DQDShow
work with. East bad probably started
simply
overcalled with two bearta and
ilfbn SUiga
witb five spades; if East also had lour
SPrlmeNewa
clubs, he would be sltort) n·diampnds bid three hearts later? In moat in·
aJ1 George Waahington (PI 1_
as well as hearts. It was•a cloee call, stances, they allowed East·West to
of4) (1 :40)
since the diamond queen might well be play three spades for mlnus.140 - a
8:05()) MOYIE: Blood·Yowo: Thll .
·
wltb East lor his openins bid, but poor result.
Srory ol 1 Matte Will (2:00)
8:30 (I) Clla Davie R. . . Riga
serenadeS the gl~ of his
dreams. Stereo. Q
· 121 Church SINit Sllltlon .
by THOMAS JOSEPH
9:00 (J) 8 (l)lln 1711 Hilt of the
. Night Virgil's friend Is killed
ACROSS
-DOWN
while invesUng •n a
1 Storybook
1 Loony
real-estate venture. Stereo.

a.
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32 Mobile Homes
ta101uuoo.l14 •• IJDD.
lor Sale
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t t m - ...._lor .... .,_.. I'IICIUINNIIII141n II..
IEAIITFUL AMliTIENfl
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- 1o41a.
Col (t) Eol.

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""Solo,
. , OWner, 114•. ·

(t) -

....

...,_.,

Specializing in
Automatic
TrMioml..iono. 8rak11.
Tuneup. Oil Ch&lt;nge.
Clutch Repair.
FREE ESTIMATES
·e Yoora EJ1porl011ce

992·5587

IIIHPIIDIIT
CAIIPIT CIIAIIUS

a.il TILE FLOOI a•

•A-nibil R1t11
•Quality Work
•F"" Eatlmatlla -•Carpet H81 Fait Dry
Time
•High Olooo on Tile
Floor Finlelt

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SPECIALIZING IN .. ..

•Cuatom Bent Exhtuat Syltlma
•Complltt Une of Exhaust SuppHe1
•Handle end lnltell Monroe Shocks
Come allll See VI For A Free Iupec&amp;lon
end Eetbnll&amp;e
Pl. 614·915·3949 IOIIIIY aua
47269 St. lt. 241
1anw loH..._ Oh. 45743

ACTIVIST

IIUDQIT PIIICU AT oiACICM*
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35 Lots a Acreage

1:30 !II (J) e Coach Luther's
best friend steals his bes!_glrl
. '!!lain. (Pt 2 of 2) stereo. I;J
a1 Colfe9e Balketblll
.
tO:OOI))e 0 Law I Order
Logan and Greevey
Investigate an attack on ~n
immigrant. (Pt 1 of 2) Stereo.

IF 'YOL.l 1RE
OKAY, eL.INK
YOUR EVES.

i!II Ne\101 lhlrtyiCIIMihing
(J) •

The outcome of Nancy's
treatment causes a strain on
the lamily. Stereo. Q
(lJ Ylltnem: A Tellvlalon
HlatorJ Q
(!)..EyH on till Prize:
Alnarlca't Civil Rlglttt Y11ra

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BARNEY

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11:00 I)). (i) (J) • ill
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CAU TODAY

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NOJIMI RSI fO ~YI

FEIIIuA~~~:I!CIAL

ZENIX VIDEO

I 'h ..... ef IWnr llespltll -

lt. 35, GalllpeR1

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BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

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"It's either water
feet down or an ocean
on the other side ol the planet"

..

veal
what
you_.
l(lld. tl) A lriend of
Alllll
(March
21-Aplll
youra Ia eager to talk to you about a
maHer thol you've been u equally anx·
1ou1 to dllcuH. Thll opening For which
both o1 you have been looking ·could
pr811RI 111811 today.
TAUIIUI {April »May :Ill) The race
belongl to the · amll'l. not necana•lly
the ltrong or 1111 lwlfl. today. If you
Feb. 1S. 1111
want to outdlaFence your compelllors.
you
muot.bl able to outthink lltlm.
things will add up marwtouoly fot
the ~,--d. SliP by step and 01... (Mer 21.- :Ill) Thlnga
out exFrernaiY. well for you
by una they wftl mark your for.werd · lhoUid progreu. Your O&amp;ICCIII will bl .,. lodiY - If Yf10J trut -.to phlioiOPIIIcally. eapecllilly thole thot produce ad·
11ancec1 by your potllrtCe.
conc1111ona. tOlling won 't bllhat
AQUAIIIUS (Jail. »Pab- 11) In oltua· ...... wi!We you ex.-clll autltOrltY &lt;N« . bad and winning won't be that grut.
othe!S people will be more reapoMiwt CAJICIII (.luna 21-.luiJ 22) Keep In
tow.-d dotnQ your bidding UWhat you mind that 1 amall profll 11 biller thin
"" of tltlm Ia raqueeted lnd not de- nona at all. You won't be dluppointacl II
manded. ,o.quarilll, treet yourlllt to 1 you don't expect mora than you.,. tru-

. ''

ly entnled

'
LEO (JutJ 23-AIItl. 22) Forego makl"'l
en Important decillion today if you feel
you ha-·t hod adequate time to lludy
111 or your altamallwl. 11'1 better to be
wilhy-wUhy now than to be -ry later.
VIRGO (A... 21-hpl. 22) Tachnlqend prooedurn cen be Improved upon
at thla time _ , your car- It con·
cernld. As or today, atart gMng 101118'
thought to ways of doi"'Jihlngl better.
LIIIIA (llept. D-Oct. D) You'll be a fun
penon to uaoelate With today. be~you ' re not apt to take youreell. or
life, too e.IOUaty. Your attitude will bl
contagious end Imitated by othera.
8COIIPIO (Oot. :M-Noof. 22) Let your In·
atlncll gowrn your tlml"'l If - . 11 a
bull11818 matter you hope to today. When you 1101111 yollr proopect Ia in
accord, prDCied to wrap lhlngl up.
SAOITTAIIIUS (Now. 2I-OM 21) Do
not dllcDUnl II bright Idea that might
come out of the blue to flash through
yollr mind today. But, by till lln\e token, dOn't act upon it prematurely. File
11 away lor future uee.
CAPNCOIIN (Dao . .23-.lan. 11) You
mlgltt bl able to make u much money
buying an Item and counting your IIV·
lngolhlr! you can make ielllng IOIIMthlng. Don't bl too picky about - •
your profit -lrom today.

clll COW

41 Connact
42 Rundown
43German
river

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to wort It: 2112
AXYDLBAAXR · ·
lsLONGFELLOW -

1por11 Tonight

11:35!11 Ch..,. Q
12:00 (J) Into lite Night Stereo.
tiD • Party Mlchlnl WHit
Mill P11ptea
oeHan~eopy

121 N811wllll Now

a

Snow lllllng Plymouth
World Pro ChllftiPIOnlhlp
tram Squaw Yallly. Calif. (R)
18 NewlfFialtt
aJ1 MOYIE: lhl True 811rt Dl
...... J - ( 2:00)
12:05 ()) MOYIE: Elilt oF Eden (Pt
1 ol 2) (2:00)

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12:30 I)). 0 ..... Night 'WHit

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One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostropheS, the length and formaUon ci the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
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121 Clturoh
8Uilion
SportaCanter

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30 French
police
group
~3 Comic
Richard
35 FoRow
orders
38 Topper
39 God. In
Rom a

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40 Commer·

ill e Amarlcl Tonight
11J Mllml Vice Stereo.

=
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29 Freed of a

pol~k:lan

~ f,::'~'::t 'itereo. Q

to today.

blasts
20 Mexican ·
Indians
24Ark
landing
she
25 Anc. city
of Egypt
26 Assail ·
verbally
27 Threalen·
lng words

37 NBA star·
turned·

World

birthday gill. Send lor your AslroGraph predk;tlona lor tho year altlad by
malll"'l $1.25 to Aatro-Graph. c/o this
,....,.,.,, P.O. Box 81428. C.....and •
OH « 101-3428. Be aure to otate rhur
zodiac: llgn.
•
1'18CES (Fib......,.,., :Ill) II could be
extremelY diFIICull lor you to keep ...
creta today. Howe-. you r'nuat bl aure
that you c1o eopec:taHy reu•dlng tholl
. - • you promloed you wouldn't,...

~~~;:: Anawar

38Goawry

C1J Medlell SIOI'J
CZJ Adlm lllttltlt'l Monly

BEN"E I I 'S MOBILE HOME
HEAliNG &amp; COOLING

oW ..;..:."".:. ":;., 1

15 - Vlgoda
Asnor .
18 Squid's
7lookod
squirt
8 Mlstroal·
17 Dull
ment ·
routine
9 River
18 Uka some
areas
chips
11 Unwed
20 Plateau
lather
21 Drunkard 14 Dresser
22 Ffuh
drawer
drinks
contents
· 23 Wender
19 Windy
25 Easy gah
28 Prepares
Kls
31 ~owel
Inscription
32 Become
laxer
34 Night
before .
35 PeddiG's
kin

11:301))8 0 Tonight Show
Stereo.

MOillE HOME FURNACES ....,.. HEAT PUMPS
ALL F~NACE PARTS

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....

_3 City of
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12 Fred
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makes Roseanne mad alter
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Now

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Wt llaYI (hanged Our l.oGtltn To
1111 Mills East on II. 241 tlrough
a.est., Oh.

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I'M -A

· ........ - . VlnJI ....... c.ll14 111 .11.1014.
OldeNd
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TIANSIIISSION
and ano IEPAII

CROSSWORD

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Yeet.a,'e Crwpt041•otet PEACE. IS NOT MADE
AT THE COUNCIL TABLE, OR BY TREATIES, BliT IN
THE HEARTS OF MEN. - HERBERT HOOvER

'

'

•

.'

�Page-10-The Dally Sentinel .

Bank One honored.

'

.

•

Pomeroy...:...Middlepon, Ohio

TIJelday, FebrUary 12, 111111

Packet to be prepared _______

The Quality Qf Customer SerTo get the message 10 the men
vice Team of Bant oae, Athens,
recently received an award for and women from this area serving
being one .or the best Quality · in Operation Desert Storm that
lmprqvement Teams in the Bane were honom1 at the "Support Our
Oqe Corpomtion at the Bane One Troops" rally in Racine on Feb. 2,
Corporation 1990 Chairman's a packet is being prepared by the
Quality of Customer Service Racine Volunteer Emergency
Awards Banquet in Columbus.
Squad 10 send 10 each St"ZVice per·
Team membeJS, several Meigs son.
Included in the packet will be
Countians, are Carolyn Bradford,

pictures of tbe panllle, newspaper
8rticles about the rally and peations
signed by area residents supporting

:m

the
will be available II all
schools in the Southern Local.
Sclml District and at the following
Racine businesses: J.D. Drilling,
Vista, Kountry Kitchen, Home
National Bant, Video S10re, Star

Supply, Waid Cross Sons Store and
EbU'sOulf
Pebiioo ~gncn wanting to help
~fray the cost of this project can
=~donation at the petition Joca.
Call Bea Cornell at 949-2884

Uncla Diddle at949:2121, or Sally

Caidwell II 949-24SS to give them
!he ~ of your loved one St"ZV·
mg U1 Desert Storm. I

Hymn sing set
A hymn sinJ WIS held recemly
at Hillside Bapbst Chwdl.
Performina were "Gods Liulc
Lambs," "The Willing Hearts,"
"Joyful Hearts," "The Redeemed
Quartet," and "The Children of

God."

Regular Sunday evening ser·
vices were 'held following the
hymn sing. James R. Acree Sr. is
thepaskr.

Ohio Lottery

.

Meigs property
transfers
Kathryn A. Doidge, lot 533, to
J.B. O'Brien, Pomeroy VIUage.
. Betty' Biggs, aH!d., to E.C.
Ralph and Nora L. Ralph,, Meigs.
Jaymar Coal Company, lots, to
William R. Haptonstall, Pome· ·
roy and Middleport VIllage.

Boston tops
·Seattle 114-111
inNBA

Pick 3:962
Pick 4: 6536 - .
Cards S.:S; A-C;
4-D; J·S

Page3

.

Low tonight in the 30s.
Rain Thursday.

•

...

•
VOl. 41, No. 206

CopyrighiBd 11181

2 &amp;oollona, 16 Pagoa

Pomeroy-Mtddteport, Ohio, Wedneaday, Febr1,1ary 13, 1991 ·

211 Cenu

A Multlmedlo ·Inc. NowJpoper

Community leaders try ,to keep mines open
Meigs County after Al1terican Electric Power Company recently
announced th~t it may slOp using
coal li'Qm the Meigs sites.
AEP operates the James M.
Gavin plant in Gallia County.
The meeting, attended by Ohio
State Senator Jan Michael Long
(D·Circleville), county commissioners, member11 of chambers of
commerce and _ community
improvement or~Janizations, was
called to get opimons from leaders

By MELINDA POWERS
OVPNewsStatr
AJ'HENS -Community leaders from five southeastern Ohio
counties met Tuesday to make .a
concerted effort 10 prevent the PQ6sible loss of more than I ,000 mining jobs in Meigs County.
Representatives from Athens,
Gallia, Meigs, Jackson and Vin10n
Counties met at the Ohio University Inn 10 fonnulate an action plan
to save 1,258 jobs at coal mines in

•

AT YOUR THREE AREA FRUTH PHARMACY ·STORES

on what actions the region should
take 10 save the jobs. ·
. Jack Fowl!lr, executive vice
president of tbe Gallia County
Community Improvement Corporation, along with other mem~ of
th!l group, agreed 10 tentatively set
an evening meeting for Wednes·
day, March 20 II the OU Inn 10 dis:
cuss with the public the possible
economic effects of the mine closure.
In figures released at the mee!-

ALL NAPIER JEWELRY
BASIC SToCK

6Pack

25°;0
-; .
0

Chocolate Covered ·
Marshmallow
Bears
•

OFF

.

.

#182

r

.

ing, a mine closure could cut more
than $81 million from regional
econornii\S in Ohio and West Vir·
ginia.
.
A committee of five represents·
tives - Elizabeth Schaad of Meigs
County, Deanna Tribe of Vinton
County, Pavid Frey of Athens
County, Bob Willis of Jackson
County,'and Fowler- was saddled
with organizing the public meeting
and bringing 10gether ·AEP, state,
and federal officials to answer
questions from the public.
On Jan. 28, AEP announced in a .
news release that preliminary stud·
ies indicated thll compliance with
1990 Clean Air Act lit the. Gavin
plant could mean swill:hing 10 coal
· mined out of Meigs County,
putting workers at Meigs Mines 2
and 31 out of work by 1994. The
coal extracled from the mines bas a
high-sulfur content, a major con·

tribu10r to the air poUution problem

"What I'm looking for is direction
·remedy:
An alternative ll) the fuel . in how 10 save those jobs."
Mike Holzaepfel, an Athens
switching option Is the building of
coal scrubberll at Gavin. Such an division manager of Columbus
instsllation would cost AEP an Southern powec, attended the meetestimated $800 million, a cost that ing on bellalf of the Athens Cham·
would ultimately be passed onto ber of Commerce, of which be is
executive direciOr. He was able to
the company's cust0111Cr11.
Long stated he wanted to see offer a dual perspective on the
help from the federal level in solv· issue.
"I can see both sides of this in,
ing the problem.
.
"The Clean Air Act is a national ' my position," he said. "We ~re
solution to a national problem," he caught between low cost serv1ce
said "Now we need 10 look to the and legislation on the federal level
federal government 10 ~lp .us ~uL" that we need 10 comply with."
·The group agreed to solicit
Meigs County CommiSSioner
Rich Jones said that he hoped the questions and opinions from the
group could aid his county eco· public through newspaper advertisements and news releases, and 10
nomically by saving the jobs. .
"I'm obviously concerned wtth notify the public when a fmn date
the jobs, the tax base. and the econ- is set for the public meeting.

PUCO to conduct in,quiry on
AEP power plant options

'

They told the lawmakers that
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) coal
miners and consumeJS should
The Public Ulllities Commission of
be
considered
in dl!ciding how
Ohio plans to conduct a format .
inquiry on options for a Gallia electric .utilities comply with the
County power plant that may clean lUI' acL
The decision "is not a strict
switch to out-of-state coal to meet
economic test.... We thint Ohio
new clean air standards.
Jolynn Bmy Butler, chairwom· should come first, and the economan of the PUCO, said Tuesday the ic impact has to be taken in10 con~~ Will betrin this week and be sidenllion," Spratley said.
JUushed iii AprtC
His agency is noted for its
The Gavin power plant, which is aggressive, pro-consumer stance in
· owned bt Am~tllllll' ··£1~ctric fi~htins utility rate increase. He
Power, is responsible for 2S per· satd other factors, such as Ohio
cent of the sulfur dioxide emissiOns employment, the long-term eco- .
at all AEP plants.
·
. nolnic impact and the environment,
. In order 10 comply with Federal should be considered in making the
Clean Air Act restrictions, the plant decision.
.
Butler said her agency i.s. the ·
must Slop burning high·sulfur coal
mined in Ohio or install expensive app10pliate place 10 make .deciSio~s
scrubbeiS.
involving consumeJS vs. JObs deci·
Butler and Ohio Consumer's • sions.
"I believe that the quickest,
Counsel William Spratley appeared
Tuesday before the Ohio House most competent oversight will
Select Committee on the Federal result from the use of estsblished
· Clean Air Act.
mechanisms a the PUCO," Butler
.·

Cupid
PopcomH
14"

1

Sweetheart Doll

SOAPBOX DERBY PRESENTED • Roger
Williaius, far right, waa tb~ byuote speaker at
Tuesday's reautar meettnc of the Meigs County
Chamber of Commerce, held at Melp, High
SchooL Williams presented IDI'~alion regard· .

oz.

39&lt;:

By BRIAN J, REEl)
·
Senllnel News Staff
' /i. .,_ultioo on the upconiing
Meigs County Soapbox Delby was
the subject of Tuesday's regular
monthly meeting of the Meigs
. County Chamber of Commerce.
Delby DireciOr Roger Williams
explained Lltat the flfst of what is
hoped will be an annual event will

.

RC AND
COLA

DIET RITE

$2~'
7 oz. .$ 499
4

;

COLA

oz.

FRITOS

oz.

.CHEETOS
• oz.
BAG

CY
........

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9

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, FOR YOUR SWEETHEART

HEliUM
.'

.

REGULAR
11.39

· 2501 JACKSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT, WY. 25550
(304) 675-2303

786 NORTH SECOND ST.
MIDDUPOIT, OH. 45760
(614) 992-6491

;

\

A bid to install new telephone .$ity boys' track coach for the 199().
systems _in all elementary schools 91 school year contingent upon
of the Meigs Local School Dristrict completion of sports medicine Blld
by Gemco was !ICCepted by the CPR; Jodi Harrison as reserve
Meigs Local Board of Educauon in girls' softball coach for the 199().
Tuesdsy's night regular meeting.
91 school year contingent upon
Matters unanimously approved completition of sports medicine
by the hoard included the accep· and CPR; Zane Beelge as varsity
taltc.e of resignations from Russ boy's baseball coach for the 1990Eshelman as cus!odian at Salisbury 91 school year contingent upon
Elementary effective April 30; completition of sports medicme;
from Sharon Werry as_.secretary to Terry Adams as reserve baseball
the treasurer; from Barbara Cut: coach for the 1990-91 school year
bertson as occupational therapist; contigent upon completition of
from Fred Baloy as assistant high sports medicme and CPR; and Bob
school track coach; and from Ashley Jr. and Bryan Swann as
Esther B(ack, bus driv~r. of a junior high 1rack coaches for the
kindergarten route only.
1990-91 school year contingent
The board unanimously . upon completion of sports
approved th,e employment of the medicine and CPR.
following pebons: Shelagh Wislon
Dock days were granted 10 Russ
IS substitute teacher for the 1990Eshelman, Dorset Thomas, Pauline
91 school year; Fred Baloy as var.

A question reglll'ding bllling for
water service
was addressed
when Racine Village Council met
iri regular session on Monday.
Council instructed Clerk Jane
Beegle 10 answer an inquiry con·
ceming why an unoccupied apart·
ment was billed for water and also
why some of the trash was not
picked up.
It was noted that unless the
water department is notified· when
an apartment or residence is vacant,
the full quarterly water bill wiU be
due. As for the !rash in question,
residents are reminded that the
trasll must be in sui18ble conutiners
and must be able to be hauled in
the compactOr truclc.
Mayor Cleland reported that a
bill for a 1991 license bad been
sentiO Manley's Refuae Service elf
Middleport. Mayor Cleland report·
· ed be was investigating reports of
..two other refuse St"ZVices collecting
tmSh in the village. They, 100, will
be billed.
Council beld a lengthl discus·
sion on the Oeneral Relic workers
· not having supervision when the
street commissioner is off sick.
Council member11 and the mayor
. expressed concern that village

QUANTITIES ARE
LIMITED

364 JACkSON PilE
GALLIPOLIS, OH. 45631
(614) 446·6620

inquiries from as far away ai Belmont,' V(. Va., Portsmouth and
Athens regarding the race, which
could poll:ntially drajV participants
from all three areas. (Race partici·
pants are req ulred to race in the
derby closest 10 their home. At present, the closest derbies 10 Meigs
County are in Charles10n, W.Va.,
Continued on page 8

Snowden and Ruth Pearson.
· Eric .Larkins was accepted as a
tuition student for the 1990-91
school year. ·
The board granted permission
for field trips to sixth gmder11 at
Rutland and Salem Center schools
on April 26 and 27, and 10 the high
school business class 10 go 10 the
stale skills competition.
·;
FinaUy, the board entered in10
purchase service contracts with
Holzer Medical Center for therapy
services; and with Blue Strealc Cab
Company, for the transportation of
students.
Attending the meeting were
James Carpenter, superintendent;
Bob Barton, president; Larry Rupe,
Robert Snowden and Jane Fry,
tteasurer. Absent were Jeff Werry
and Richard Vaughan.

Council addresses water billing issue

$199

AND

ASSORTED
FORMULAS

•

t

MYLAR.
BALLOONS

AQUA NET
HAIR.SPRAY
12

89~.
oz.

~

::c. $4 99

be held on General Hartinger l'lut·
way in Middleport during the
weekend of June 22 and 23, and
that the event is open 10 all young·
stcrs aged 910 16.
According 10 Williams, participation by area youih is expected to
be high .. He reponed 10 the Cham·
ber of Commerce on Tuesday that
he had already received telephone

Board acc·epts phone system

.Hearts
HEAD &amp; SHOULDERS

lag lbe upcoming Meigs County Soapbox Derby,
scbeduled for June ll and 23. 1\lsn pictured,
are, Chamber Presldeat Dr. Nick Roll'-• and
Vice President Cbuc:k Kltdtea.

.SJ!gP.kfl.X.. ,.derby·t£i begin . J une. 22

Cute Conversation
INTENSIVE
TREATMENT
SHAMPOO

omy in ·the surrounding areas

that the Clean Air Act attempts to · around Meigs County," Jones said.

.,

•

.Taft calls for election
financing reform in Ohio

gi~n :10 one person 10 make. a. COli·
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio's chief elections officer Tues- tnbuuon for another, providmg a
dar called for changes in state cam· tax write-off for ama1l contributors
pBJgn financing laws by requiring . to encourage more of them, and
full disclosure of who is giving requiring candidates for the Ohio
money and limits on the amount General Assembly 10 file cam~
fmance disclosures with the Ohio
thai can be aa:ept.ed by candidates.
· "There is a growing perception Elections Commission in Colum·
'that Ohio is becoming a pay-to· · bus IS well as in their local Boards
play state where money buys of EleCtions.
"Sunlight is the best cleansor,"
favors and s~cial access 10 slate
thesecretaryofsl8tesaid.
govemmeht, ' Secretary of State
Taft refused at this time lO
Robert Taft II told the House
include
a certain·monetary limit 10
Ethics and Standards Committee.
Taft called for the disclosure of contributions, saying he wants to
the employers of those giving con· meet with Gov. George Voinovich
tributions to political campaigns, fiiStiO prepare a a joint recommeneliminating the power of attorney dation. They will ask the legislaiOJS
·

work is not getting done.
National Bant. in Racine was also
It was reported that the drainage present at' thl' ~ting and asked
problem on Main Street b~ Wolfe's council if the park board would be Garage had been repaired. A new interested in an old burr miD 10 be
section of plastic pipe was installed erected at the park. He indicated
where Ontario Pipeline has dam- that the bank would be willing to·
aged the sewer llle during construe· furnish lumber 10 building a small
lion of the sanitary sewer lines.
building to house such a miU.
Date· Hart of Yellowbush Road
Fire Chief John Holman report·
submitte~ a proposal to council.
ed that a new chassis for the tanker
Mr. Hart owns several acres of land had been ordered, and is expected
along Yellow bush Road and report· 10 be in by AuJUSL
.
ed that he wants to sell lots. He
In other BCIIOII, council:
proposed 10 give a section of land
• aPproved the·mayor's report
to the Village 10 be used for a street of fines m the amount of $43.
· if the viUage ·would construct the
- approved the ~base of 100
streeL
dogwood treeS through the Soil and
The proposal was labled until all · Water Conservation Services. The
members had the chance to review 1rees will be olanted in one loCation
the proposal and legality could be for further planting when they get
. bigger. .
checked. ·
Mr. Hart also inquired about a
• authorized Mayor Cleland 10
waterline being extended 10 his res· send a leuer of commendation to
, idence. He advised that a former the emergency .squad staff for the
council had promised the waterline . recent support prc.gram for the
~hen d!e ares was annexed. ~our:':
troopS.
ed
ho
. .
CII advised that such extension IS
. - thank everyone w partiCI·
handled -by the Board of Public pstcd in the parade and~
Affairs. The only council would •
• discussed cost of sidewalk
have to approve or disapprove replai:emenl on Thin1 SlreCl.·
~w omcrs lOY scour ww .
• heard the village financial
expenditure of funds for the proMemben of PHJeroy Troop 24!1, WoiYerl•e
jecL
statement showing receipts in the
Patrol, ~em"ed tlllla display In Andenoa'a
amount of $19,422.60 and expendiTom Wolfe. President of Home
_wiDdow Ia Pomeroy I• c:oajaaetlon wtlh Boy
tureS of$21,0SI.47.

.,

j

...

said.
Both Butler and Spmtley urged
legislaiOrs not 10 pass laws in ail
11 th·hour effort to deal with the
situation.
AEP offiCials announced Jan. 28
that they are leaning toward
switching to low-sulfur, out-ofstate coal at the Gavin plant to
meet sulfur dioxide emission
restrictions in the clean air act.
That would mean closing its Meigs
County miRe, which employs 1,258
. people.
"The loss of minm' jobs is of
crucial concern, and the .rip,ph:
eJiect on Appalachian Ohio is pret·
ty easy 10 see," Butler said.
The alternative 10 burning low- ·
sulfur coal would be to add scrubbers to reduce emissions at the
ptaDL Tbat could cost SSS million
and result in hi~Jher electric mtes.
AEP has wd it wants 10 make
its decision by the end of April.

-·--•

.....

--

~

~

.

10 set lhe BJ!Iount of giving for their
own campa~gns, he Sllld.
C.urrent Ohio law does not place
limits on the amount ,candidates
can receive from individuals or
political action committees, b'ut
does prohibit contributions from
corporations and allows labor
unions to contribute directly to
campaigns.
Some corporations have been
accused of using the power of
attorney to direct contributions
frOm their employees 10 particular
candidates, .something Taft wants
10 encl. He called for sepamte legis·
lation 10 increase the authority of
the state Elections Commission and·
for hiring invem.ators.

Scout Week wllllclt

WM

llleld Jut wHit. Muy

area Boy Scoatl dec:orlted tile wladOM ot local

•
bustne.a to bltora. the pablle about tlle'ICOUta. • '

I

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