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                  <text>Page-10-The Dally Sentinel .

Bank One honored.

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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.

•

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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

.

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#182

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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
........

. - --- (

I

9

·'••
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, FOR YOUR SWEETHEART

HEliUM
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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.

.,

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.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.

.,

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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.

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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. • '

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Wednesday, February 13, 1991 '

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

•

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA
~~~
~m~

............ .._..,.. ,,..,..._c:~, ""'

'qjV

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher

.

CHARLENE ROEFJ.JCR
General Manal{er

I'AT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publis her/ Controller
A MEMBER o! The United Press International , Inland Dally Press
Association and t he America n Newspaper Publts.bers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less Utan 300
words long. All letters are subject to edlttng and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned_letters will be published. Letters should be In good taste. addresshig Issues, not personall·
ties.

Sabo
opposes suggestions
.
By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHJNGTON (UPI) - The idea of limiting the length of time
elecled officials can serve in office has become someth.ing of a political
fad lately, with several states and local l!ovemments' having already
adopled tenn limits and others lilrely to conSider them.
·. In Congress, several lawmakers have suggesled that members of the
House 8nd Senate also be limited. perhaps to a dozen years of service.
But one House member, Rep. Martin Olav Saho, D·Minn._, is looting
ir! the other direction. He opposes such suggestions and in particular
wants to remove the existing two-tenn limitation on the JRsidency.
·With war and recession dominating the nation's auention, the debate
over limiting the .terms of presidents .is not likely to make J)llge one of
your local newsJ)aper, but Saho is pushing the idea regardless. "Even in
.the face of such cataclysmic events, the business of AmeriCan goverD~~~ent
p!ust be done," he says.
·
,
·
· And, in the PII&amp;CS of the Congressional Record recently, Sabo offered
i;ome rea,wned arguments for repealing the 22 Amendment.
That amendment, to impose a two-term limit -on the presidency, was
proposed in 1946 in reaction to Franklin Roosevelt having won election
four times. As a result, no president since has had the opponuniry to fmd
out if the voters would keep him on the job aftllr two tenns.
A few observers have suggested that some of the m&lt;re popular presidents, notably Dwight Eisenhower and Ronald. Reagan, might have
become three-tenn presidents had it not been for the 22nd Amendment
But the voters were not allowed the opiJotblnity to malce that decision,
leading Sa)lo to condemn the two-tenn limit as "anti• democratic."
The amendment "assumes that the American people lacli: the wisdom
and common sense" to decide if a president should continue serving,
Sabo said. ''lllelieve the American people are capable of deciding if they
want a c~ge in presidential leadership."
If a president retains the "respect and affection of the voten," then his
contract should be extended; if not, he can be-voled out, Sabo argued.
Aside from being philosophically objeCtionable, the two-tenn limit
creates cenain practical problems for the chief executive. "It institutional·
izes the 'lame duck' status of second term pesidents, consigning them to
political and adminislrative limbo," Sabo said
"A president's clout- with Congress, his political party, the bureaucracy and foreign nations- is diminished when people know he or she
won't be around much longer," Sabo noled.
.
Some supponers of the 22nd Amendment were concerned about one
person accumulating too much power, but Sabu argues that the original
Constitution includes "an .elaborate system of checks and balances" to ·
av.oid that problem. A!td it nlakes the president accountable to the voters
every four years. ·
.
·
•'That system has worked well. But for the vagaries of political
vengeance, it would never have been changed,'' he said. ·
Saho draws on the argument voiced decades ago by Woodrow Wilson,
who warned that "by seeking to determine by fiXed constitutional provision what the people .-e perl'ectly competent to determine bt themselves,
we cast doubt upon the whole theory orpopular government '
'
Sabo urged his colleagues to support repeal of the amendment and
"show their faith in democracy and in the judgment of the American people."

_Today in history
By United Press International

Today Is Wednesday, Feb. 13, the 44th day of 1991 with 321 to follow .
The moon Is waning, 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 under the sign of Aquarius. They include
Bess Truman, wife of President Truman, In 1885; artist Grant Wood
In 1892; entertainer "Tennessee'· Ernie Ford ill 1919 (age 72); actors
George Segal in 1934 (age 57) and Oliver Reed In 1~38 (age 53) ; and
muSician Peter Tork of the Monkees In 1944 (age 47) .
~ On

this date in history:
In 1635, the oldest public institution In America, the Boston Latin
School, was founded.
In 1945, Soviet forces captured Budapest, Hungary. The 49-da~
battle killed more than 50,000 German troops.
; In 1974, the Soviet Union expelled dlsslde!'t writer Alexander
• Solzhenltsyn.
; · In 1984, Konstantln Chernenko succeeded the late Yuri Andropov as
• Soviet leader; Chernenko died 13 months later and was succeeded by
·' Mikhail Gorbachev.

...
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FBI violating -privacy of American citizens
All.,_

reasonable suspicion of criminal Friends Service Committee, a
activity before it is allowed to jliOIIP that disagreed with U.S. polinvestigate 10 a U.S. cilizen, and he tcy in Nir""'"''" tbe FBI reJ-·-~
--o..,......
wants the FB.I to limit the investi- its file on Ahrens, but much of the
galion to gatherillg evidence on a information was blacked out. It
specifiC federal crime.
carne from a "confidential source
Such measures would have kept who was furnished reliable infor·
the FBI from investipW:~g ~ps matico in the past."
that~ U.S. 110licy in bal
The Latin American SuPIKirl .
America in the 1980s. The FBI laid • Committee of Fresno, Calif., was·
10 slap its own hand when those
stunned to fiqd last year that it too
invesU(Pitions were exposed. One bad been under the FBI's micro·
probe, mto the Committee in Soli· scope. What had this lliOUJl done to
darity with the People of El Sal· deserve an FBI dossier? 11 had
vador, or CISE'ES, 7eP•ltcd in disci- raised money for relief programs in
pline for six FBI agents and a Nicant&amp;UB and El SalVIdor.
promise from the FBI director that
The FBI also felt ,'j%1led to
it wouldn't happen again.
open a file 00 Lance · loom of
Other, less well· known cases, Dlinois because he was qUOICd in a
prove that CISPES was the rule, Chicago Sun Times article as being
not the exception.
"very concerned" about safety of a
,Lim summer the FBI reluctantly South KOrean disSidenL
released·a heavily censored, 12·
Rep. Edwards' bill would stop
page fil~ on Lois Ahrens of New . those unwarran~ investigations,
Hampslure. What had she done to and would also keep the FBI from
deserve an FBI dossier? She was a checking on Americans who compeace activist with the American mit the sin of writing to. foreign

"Sorry, this isn't bomb damage assessment- this is the state of,our
economy.','

(

..

.....,_
'-"(1-;· -,.;.,~
DW NlA. lftf:.

'

\

wt lUI - · .
embassies. One of the FBI'IIICtics
__ _. the
. ....... .
is to """"u
mum o.uuH 1115 on
the mail going to certain foreign
embassies.
.
From 1984 to 19489, II least 33

wmeemrebers~ue~i~y ~g
-ents
~b:!s;:.!t!;'~~~:.,: ~

_, .._, _ _ .Bloc counaies. T'bele
""""' .,..,....u
weren't letten of support for the
evil empire. They were clusic
Amnesty IDternational business protest'letters urging -~~ pernmeots to release polilic;ll pruoqen.
If the FBI thought, the Amne8ty
members were in cahoots with the

cwoondermmu!b
_ isyts~ ~!t!'-•:f
..,.-

U.S. mail and put.~tum llllchsaes
on their letters. Some Amnesty lc:tter writers were ilskcd if they had
"subversive communist" literature
in their homes.
•
Amnesty told us its members
continue 10 be cmtacled by the FBI
regardinfprotat 1cacrs.
·
The Pl'!rsian Gulf war has given
the FBI a whole new class of people to worry about • Americans
with Arab ancestors. liome 200 of
them have received cans from FBI
agents wondering if they had any
insights into possible terrorist tiC·
tics of Iraq. That's akin to c8lling
every American named O'R~illy
atu1 asking them if they know- wtijt
the Irish Republican Army is up·'to
these days.
Tbe. FBI has come a long W~!f
since J. Edgar Hoover was Btg
Brother, but the tendency is stiiiiO
consider every American a poten·
lial file. One vetttan agent told our
associate Jim Lynch that he though
the bureau bad toned down its
domestic spying. But he added that
plenty goes on in the agency that
most agents don't know about
He also told us that the bureau
keeps secret files on its o\vll people
ancfbugged one agent's bedroom
looking for evidence of hanky·
panky.
You can ·expect the FBI and
Attorney General Richard Thorn·
burgh to call Edwards' bill an
infringement of the FBI's mission.
FBI Director William Sessions was
candid enough to admit that the
guidelines are unclear on investi·
gating U.S. citizens when ll:rroriBm
. is the issue. The Justice Depart·
ment issued a revised set of guide·
lines, some of'which are classified,
of course.

spendinf

•ncn:ase

I'

{

:

·

total

·

But masked by that surge in
popularity 1re a l!ost of problems.
Fundamentally unsanitary procedures employed durin&amp; the slaugh·
· tering, proce•ing and packaging of
.chicken have produced elevated
~ of ~-ina~ by diseasebearing nuc:ro-orgaruams, especial·
ly salomoneUallldcampyloblcter.
1'hol4: bacteria, estimaied to be
present Ill. SO to 60 percent of all
processed IJOU;In,, are blamed for
at I~ ~.5 million moderate gas·
tro-ll'll\sllnal ailments every year as
well as far ~ -:rlous neurologi·
cal and respuatory illnesaes.
. In most cases, the symptoms
1nclude stoauM:h ~ps. vomiting
and diarrhea. But SOO,OOO people
require hospi~lization for more
severe food poisoning every year,
wliile lhe estimated number of
deaths caqsed by infeclcd poultry
ranges from SOO Ill 5,000 annually.
For many of the 150,000 (liCk·
ing·bouse and processina plant
emplo&gt;:ees, the health. costa are
even htgber. As the. btrds move
past Ihem Blrale8 u high as 91 per
minute, they must perform "11C~Ied
knife cuts or Olha' abrupt motiOfiS.
That can lead to rcpeuuve
·••..'....1. - -- -

''

.

.. champs last week.
Wrigl\t was able to return in the
Meigs jumped out to an early 8second period but the damage was
3 lead behind the scoring of Trevor
down the Lancers opened up 49-32
Harrison who scored the Marauders . at the half. Wright had to set out
most of the second period after
fll'sl five points. Federal Hoclcing
picking up his third foul midway in
came back; to tied it at eight but
Harrison gave the Mar!luders a
the .quaner.
short lived 10·8 lead with a 10
The Lancers had the fast brealt
in high gear in the second· half
footer.
increasing the lead to 71-48 head·
Marauder play maker Jason
ing into the final period. Federal
· Wright suffered a nose injury bat·
tling for a rebound midway to the -• Hocking was smelling the confer·
ence crown by this point and
first quarter and had to come out.
outscoied Meigs 24-20 1n the. fmal
The. Lancers took advantage off
Wright' s injury as they forced
eight minuteS to give the Lancers
the 95-68 win.
numerou~. turnovers and scored the
last 19 pomts of the quarter to open
!'!all Watson, Mickey Cozart
and
Randy Shuford combined for
up a 27-10 lead at the end of the
62
poiuts
for the Lancers. Watson
quarter.

led the way with 23, Cozart added
21 and Shuford 18. The Lancers hit
38 of 96 (34 of 79 two pointen anci
4 of 17 three's) from the floor for
40 percent. The Lancers had 53
rebounds as Watson grabbed IS.
Trevor Harrison scored a career
high 31 points to lead the Marauder
attack, Shawn Haw ley added 13
and Mike Van Meter 10. Meigs hit
27 of 58 from the floor (including
one for eight from three point
range) fo~ 47 percent and n of 19
from the line rot 59 percent. Meigs
had. 27 rebounds with Hawley
grabbing eight and Harrison seven.

__:R.:....:..obe:..:..:.rt...:.:.:waU==':..::.n
motion disorder, especially C1111a1
tunDel syndrome. a PBinfu1 aflfic:tion that cripples ihe workers'
hands and leaves them permanendy
disabled.
. ·
The effect of other worli:place
abuses was described last year in
"Southern Exposure," the mapzine
r.ublished by Hall's organization:
'Wort rules in iiOIIIC plants are 80
rigid that employees forbidden to
take a break have urinaled, vomiled
and even miscarried while stanclinJ
on the assembly line."
Fmally, there is the plight of the
farmers who raise the chickens ·
under contract to the agribusinea
flliiiS. They provide the "pow-out
houses" (typically struc:tures the
length of two football fields that ·
can hold 26,000 birda) in which
new-hom chicks are transformed
into four·pound broilers in six
~-

The g~owas say the CCII!Ipl"lea
often unfairly demand that die
farmers aceept a disptoportiOIIIte
share of the responsibilitlea and
cos11 of that pcoc:eu. El!JIIIinl one
farmer here in North Carolina:
"You are lilte a !tid on your own
land."
1.

In the reserve game the Maraud·
ers placed four players in double
figures as they posted a 65-58 win.
Jay Cremeans led the way with 16,
Shawn Hamon added 14, Todd Dill
12 and John Bentley 10. Bentz led
the lancers with 14.
Meigs will close ,out the season
at home on Friday night against
Nelsonville-York. Senior night will
be obsereved with seniors Jason
Wright and Mike Van Meter being
honored.
MEIGS - Frank Blake 1·0.0.2,
Phil Hovatter 0·0·3·3, Jason

Wright 1· 1.0·5, Terry Mcduire z. :
0·0-4, Shawn Hawley 6-0-1 · 13, :
Trevor Harrison 12-0· 7"31, Mike ·
Van Meter 5.().().10, John Bentley :
0-0-0-0, Todd Dill 0-0·0·0. ;
TOTALS 2.7·1·11-61
FEDERAL HOCKING · ;
MilCh Gillian 0-0-0·0, Matt Harris : •
1·0·1·5, Mickey Cozart 4·0·1·9 , ·
Tracy Boho 6-3.0-21, Inigo Mar· :
tinez 2.().().-4, Richard Deaver 2·0. :
0-4, Mike Summerfield 2- j-2-9,Bt'U\n Bennett 0,.0.0.0, Shaon Mol· :
lohun 1-0,0..2, Randy Shuford 7·0· : .
4 - 18 ;~ Brad Bentz 0· 0·2· 2. ·
TOTALS 34-4-15-95.
.

·Jackson girls eliminate MHS
Marauders jQr tourney play
.

"

OAK Hll.L - Jackson scored 10 victory. Meigs played most of the
or the last U points of the ijnt half rust half without Smith and Jen·
and went on to defeat thtlMeigs nifer Taylor who had each picked
Maruders 54·39 in girls sectional · up three fouls.
tournament action Tuesday night at
Tiffany Reasor led Jackson With
0a1c Hill.
23, Kellina Cooper added 14. Jack·
After a early lead by Jackson the son hit 19 of 70 from the floor for a
Marauders came back to tie the cool 28 percent, and 16 .of 23 from
game at 13 with 4:08left in the half the line for 68 percent Jackson had
on a bucket by Kelly Smith. But 47 rebounds with 6·0 sophomore
Jackson pulled away to a 23-14 Julie Coffey grabbing 16.
lead at the half.
Tricia Baer led the Marauders
Meigs scored eight of the first wilh 12 poinu, while Vema Compo
10 points in the third period to cut ston added 11. Meigs hit 15 of 60
the Jackson lead to 25·22, but the from the floor for 25 perceni and
Iron Ladies made it 34·26 heading eight of 20 from the line for 40 per·
into the fmal eight minutes. Ill .the cent. Meigs had 23 rebounds with
final period Jackson outscorec! Baer getting nine . .
Meigs 20· 12 to pull away for the •

J!

As sure as night follows day, the does not inClude the escalalin$ cost size of the projecled increases are
veteran's benefits, will increase
President's State of the Union of the war presently going on m the being proposed by the Administra- consistent with the antici~ 3.1
spcech is quickly followed by his Persian Gulf.
lion. Believe me, and I say this as percent in our nation s g~oss
submission In Congress of his budSo when you hear anyone com- one who has consistently voled to 1111tionaJ producL
, get for the coming fiscal year. So plaining that the federal JC!vern- eliminate government waste and ·
In an .effort to focus federal
this week I would like to follow up ment is cutting its spending and duplication, seldom is a real cut
where it is ll)ost qeeded,
last week's commentary about the backing awa)' from its commitment ever made in-a federal program much o the called for increase in
State of the U':lion, which is nor· · to the American people, when yoli 1!'1~ that program has clearly out· discretionary spending poposed by
mall&gt;: an overvtew of. where we as hear anyCJ.Pe contending that the lived tiS usefulness, and even then, the President, would be directed
a na~n ha~ been, and where we federal government is ·neglecting etTons are made by some !0 pre· toward the lower income fainilies.
are got~g. w1th a clo~~ look. at the many_of !he social concerns we as serve those outlays. In Washingto~. G1111ts for education, r.m subsidy
allocauon and admmtstrauon of a soctety face it is time you told once a prlljVBDIIS on the books, 11 · payments, veteran's survivor beneprojected federal receipts and them "Not w.~ It is time you tOld . is next to IDipossible to let it otT. fits and th·e like, would all be
expenditures for the coming fiscal them that we are doing tbe best we The "empire builders" of Congress reconsii'Ucted to provide greater
year.
,
.
can under the circumstances. Con· and the. Washington bureaucracy assistance to those most in need. ··
One doesn 1 apprectate the trary 10 popular petteption the fed· truly no know equal.
Generally speaking, given the
growth and cost of running the fed· eral government is ~ting a
As mentioned 11 the C!IJisel, the existing condiuons facing us as a
era! government until one stops and significantly larger share of social bud~et proposal submitted by the nation, the war in the Gulf, the spi·
does some sobering comparisons. programs than at anytime in our Pres1den1 this past week calls for raling budget deficit, and the run·
When I first came to Congress in history. How ever you measure the outlays of $1.44 trillion for FY away~ of the Savinis 101 Loan
1967, the annual budget for that level of federal spending be it in
1992, an overall increase of 2.6 crisis, meC:~olitical analysts
with the Slruc:ture
year totaled some $179 billion, and real dollars, or as a ~ntage of percent over the cmrent year's bud- appear pi
a very large s_hare of that was GJ:'IP. more money ,than ever is ~et. Domestic ~retionary spend- and emphasis of the President's
d~voled to funding ~ very expen- bemg spent by Uncle Sam on pro.
mg, th~t spendtng which is the new budget. While some critics
stve ~ar t!tat ~as bemg waged at grams and services for the Ameri·
un~erpmnmg for our country's view it as a veiled aa.empc by the
that orne ·~ Y!e~. The budget can people.
:;ocial service programs, is slaled to President (given its heavy emphasis
Bush Admt~nsuauon sent to the
Often you hear critics or the mcrease by wme 6, 7 percen1, while on helping tl,le poor) to take the soCongr~ss thts J)IISI weei'-l;al~s. for White House contending that cuts def~nse spending is projected to called "fairness" issue away from
e~nditures of some $1.44'frillion, are being recommended in this or decline by 2.4 pettent. Entitlement his opponents, most agree the
an
over the last 25 years or that social program wbcn·what they spending, those mandaled expendi· Administration has managed to do
approlUIDately 700 percent And I really mean is that reductions in the tures for such programs as social the best it oould given the existing
should add that the c~nt_ budget
securi~y, medicare, medicaid, and constramts. .

an:

••'

"This is my leader. "

Jaek Alllknon and
D-' l-1 A,._

A tight budget for tight times __
con_g.c_~_ence---:M•_·lkr

DURHAM, N.C. - Because
~though there~~~ JX?poullr)'-particularly poullry-is ducuon.centers_of !muted stze m
espectally healthy, nulritious and theW~ anc! Midwest, most of_the
inexpensive, its consumption has country s c~ and other edible
increased at a phenomenal pace in fowl
grown m vast crescent that
recent years. "But many people are begms m eastern Texas and Ok!a·
paying terribly high cosis (ot that homa, strctches across the entire
growth," warns Bob Hall. "As with South and reaches mto southern
everything else, there is no free Maryhlandlandd!'elaware.
lunch."
1'1 e. ea mg states, each
Hall is a rescarcb director of"the acco~un$ f~ 10 J!C!tCDt or more
Institute for Southern Studies, a of the nation s broil~ production,
Durham-Wed non·profit organiza· are Arkansas, GCO!gta, Ala~a
Iion committed to "workin$ for and. North C!~folma. Rankmg
progressive change in the reg~on." ~nd them, wt_th ~ 1~. S percent
Its examination ol the poullry busi· aptece, are Mustsstppt • Texas,
ness produces a I?Ortrait of an Delawii'C llld Mlryland.
industry that rouunely sells its
Althoush approximately SO
products at bargain prices of less fums share the poulay industry's •
than $1 ~ pound yet imposes ~«- $18 billion in yearly income, four
ribly high biddeu costs on society.
dominani agribusiness companies Those costs are paid by the :Ty1011 Foods, ConAgra, Oold Kist
independent farmers who contract :and Perdue Farms · account for
to grow the bilds but cannot lllilfy 'about 43 percent of all sales.
the demands of huge agribuliness Indeed. Ty1011 alone controls more
carporations by lbe ill-paid peck· than 20 pmtenl of the marteL
in$house employees who sustain . That market is growing so fast
pamful injunes while processing tha.t ~ultry passcil beef as the
poultry and by the millions ~f !18'JOD s 11101t JJOPUI.: form of meat
chicten consiDilen who become ill 111 the lale 1980S. Per capita conevery year after eating tainted Slllllption now e•!*ds 90 pounds
mraL
annually, wilh c:hickert responsible
·
for more than two·thirds of Ihat

By DAVE HARRIS
Hoclcing reeled·off 19
unanswered points near the end of
the first quarter to power the
Lancers to a 95-68 win over the
Meigs Marauders in Tri-Valley
Conferen~e action Tuesday riight
The wm gave the Lancets under
first year head coach Dennis·
Honkala the outright Tri· Valley
Conference championship. Federal
Hoclcing fmishes the regular season
wilh a 111-2 record o~erall and 14-2
" in the TVC. The title is the fJrst in
boys basketball .at the school in 18
years and also gives the varsity
~ basketball teams at Federal' Hock·
ing a clean sweep as the Lady
Lancers were crowned the TVC
~ Federal

Chicken isn't all it's cracked up to be.___

Berry's World

Lancers top Meigs 95-68 to claim TVC title '·

P8G• 2-The Dally Sentinel

PomerOY M.lddlefjOI't, Ohio
·w~nnctay, Februer'y 13. 1111 _

By Jaelt
and Dale Vu AU.
WASillNGTON - The man in
the IJIIIII8ltcd sedan •ai..:A. iaures
at a demonstrati'on 1. 8~
001..aPtourist..
Back at his off'tee, he develops the
film, collects snippets about the
organiz~tion that sp?n~red the
protest, types up the mstghts of a
few "infmnants" and ~ it all ill
an FBI file stamped "secret"
The scene is not fiction. As it
now stands, the FBI can investigaJC
any U.S. citizen on a flimsy suspi- .
cion or ties to iniemational teJrorism. Agents continue to use that
broad authority to scrutinize for- '
eign policy critics and human
rights advocates, all in the nanie of
national security.
Rep. Don Edwards, D-Calif., a
foniter FBI agent himself, wants
those invasions of privacy to stop.
He believes they threaten Ameri·
cans' nghts to free speech and
political dissenL He is pushing for
legislation that isn't too much to
ask. He wants the FBI 'to have a

The Dally Sentlnel..:;.page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Ob~Higb~~ButdMill

Akr East 62, Akr Buchtel 52
Akr Firestone 61, Akr Cen Hower

-51
Akr Garfield (f}, Akr Ellct 56
Akr Nonh 63, Akr Kenmore 59
· Alexander 92, Trimble 81
·Alliance 79, Wno!UJr76
Amelia 87, Cin Cal Chr 36
Amherst 73, Westlake 61
Ashtab Edgewood 63, Ashtabula

54
Ashtab John 61, Paines Riverside
56 '
Aurora 66, Chagrin Falls 63.
Avon 61, Columbia40
Jon Koncak as ·ball bounces away during first
COLLISION • Chicago's Michael Jordan
Avon Lake 51, Rocky River 45
period action in chicago Tuesday niogbt. (UPI)
and Horace Grant (54) collide with Hawks's
Badger 66, Cortland Lakeview 68
Bay Village 54, N Olrnsled 47
Beallsvile 77, CadiZ (/}
Bedford Chanel73, Elyria Cath 60
Bellaire 69, Martin F::ry 52 .
Bellaire John 75, St Clairsville 72
Bellbrook
73, Liale Miami 53
,
Ber Ctr Wsn Res 66, Waterloo 46
team is that alhletic, you have to go Berea 71, Lodi Cloverleaf 45
the Seattle SuperSonics.
By DENNIS ANSTINE
back to fundamentals, and that's Bowling Green 67, Millbury Lake
The Sonics, 22·24, had raced to
UPI Sports Writer
61
At 37, Boston center Robert a 13-point lead in the first half and puta·hody on them.
"Once we ,started to box out, I Boyd Cry (Ky) 70, Ironton 68
Parish has trouble keeping up with an 88·80 lead entering the final
the NBA's speedsters. But he still quarter bdore the Celtics rode felt we started 10 control the Brecksville 58, Brunswick 42
Lewis's 13 fowth-period points 10 boards," said Parish. "When you Bridgeport 53, Shadyside 50
holds his own in the trenches.
do that against a team like this you Bunon Berkshire 42, Kirtland 41
Parish proved his worth inside victory.
start to get easy buckets. The Caldwell87, Newcomentown 53
"The
Sonics
have
a
lot
of
ath.
agl)in Tuesday night as the seven·
boards
is what won it for us at the Campbell92, You Wilson 74
.letic
guys
with
lively
legs
who
can
. footer's muscle and a 30-point perend.''
jump,"
said
Parish,
who
had
20
Cedarville 77, Day Chr 68
formance by Reggie Lewis led the
Celtics to a '114-111 victory ,over points and 12 rebounds. "When a
Cllameion 69, Hubbard 63
Cin Aiken 78, Cin Woodward 77
Cin Bemanl67, New Richmond 54
Cin Landmark Chr 76, Miami Val
57
Cin Purcell 53, Walnut Hills 40
Cin Sycamore 75, Cin Moeller 61
Cle Benedictine 92, Cle Univ 82
Cle Hertage 76, Willo-Hill 72 (01)
ures
by
Tim
Bissell
with
16,
Mao
Cle Holy Name 65, Panna 57
SOUTHERN·Andy Baer 0.3·1·
By DAVE HARRIS .
Finlaw
13
and
Randy
Moore
10.
Cle Lincoln W69, Qe Rhodes 43
Roy Lee Bailey scored a career 10, Michael Kincaid 3..Q.Q.6, Todd
high 31 points and grabbed 17 Grindstaff 3,0..1-7, Roy Lee Bailey · Eastern hit 31 of SS ( including Cle SW 66 Cle Bapt62 (Ot)
rebounds in leading the Southern 12·0·7-91, ~ichael Russe112·0.0. eight of 13 from three point range) Col Briggs 94, Urbana 61
from the floor for 56 percent and Col DeSales 68, Col Mar Frank 63
Tornadoes to a 74·59 win over the 4, Rus!jj:ll' Singleton 1·0.0-2, JereII of 19 from the line for 59 per· Col Maranatha 90, Ohio Deaf 51
Warren Local Warriors Tuesday my Ro5e 6-Q.2-14 TOTALS l7·l·
cent.
Eas.tem grabbed 39 rebounds Col Tree Life 75, Xenia Wilson 55
11-74
.
night.
.
led
by
Finlaw with 12 and Murlhy Col Wellington 62, Delaware Chr
WARREN-Todd Fous 0·1·0-3,
· · Bailey scored 23 of his points in
54
the second half as Southern pulled Eric llarper 1·1·2·7, Travis Henry with 11.
Waterford
posted
a
73-46
win
in
Col Whetstone 75, Col Watterson
away from a 29-27 lead at the half. 3·1.0·9, Scou Brackenridge 2.Q.4In the second half Jeremy Rose 8, Kirk Huffman 2·1-1-8, Aaron the reserve game, Brian Spencer 69
. held the high scoring Brian Bowe . Merrels 1·1,0..5, Chris Ruble 0-0- led the way with 12, for Eastern Colerain 87, Cin NW 58
Colurnb Crestview 67, Lordstown
to only four points as the Toma· 1 ~ 1. Chris Carpenter 2.().()-4, Brian Wes Holter had 15.
Eastern is now 10.9 on the year 47
does outscored the Washington Bowe 7.0·0·14, TOTALS 18-5-8and will travel to Hannan Trace on Conneaut83, Madison 69
County school 45-32 to postlhe 59.
Friday
to close the regular season.
Cuyahoga Falls 112, Ravenna 66
vicuxy .
Waterford romps
Day Carlisle 73, Day Jefferson 71
Bailey was joined in double fig . .
EASTERN·Mark
Murphy
1·0.
·
A
trio
of
Waterford
Wildcats
Day Stebbins 85, Keu Fairmont 51
ures by Rose who added 14 points
1-3,
Matt
Finlaw
5-1.0·13,
Randy
scored
84
points,
led
by
Shawn
Dresden Tri Val73, Riverview 57
and Andy Bser 10. Despite being
Moore
3.Q.4-10,
Tim
Bissell
4-2-2Wagner
with
38
as
the
Wildcats
E Cle Shaw 113, Cle Adams 72
held .below his average, Bser ran
the club to perfection. Michael posted a 113-81 victory over the '16, Jeff Durst 7·3 ·4·27, Chad E Liverpool78, Buckeye Local62
Kincaid had an outstanding floor Eastern Eagles in non·conference Savoy 1.0,0..2, Chris Adams 2,0..0. · E Palestine 67, Uniled Local61
game with six of ~outhern 12 action on Tuesday night. Eric 4, Wes Holter 0-1·0·3, Robert Elyria Bapt83, Kings Academy 69
assists and five of the teams· 12 Reeder chipped in with 25 points Reed Q.J.Q.3, TOTALS 23-8·11· Fairbanks 90, Degraf Riverside 83
Sl.
Fairpon Harding 66, Ledgemont 52
steals. Todd Grindstaff also had a and Json Powers added 21 points.
WATERFORD- John Spung I· Federal Hocking 95, Meigs 68
They over shadowed a brillant
good game on defense.
Southern hit 30 of 67 from the 27 point performance by Eagle l -O·S, Jason Powers 4·2-7·21, Felicity 71, N Adams 66
floor ( including three of seven junior Jeff Durst, Durst has ripped Scott McCutchen 1·2-4·12, Greg
from three point range) for 48 per- the nets for 59 points in his last two Adams!.().().2, Eric McCurchen 2·
0-0-4, Shawn Wagner 15·0-8-38,
cent and cashed in only II of 23 games.
Waterford jumped out to a 31- Eric Reeder 8·0-9·25, Jeremy
from the line for 49 percent Ro~e.
also added eight of Southern's 35 24 lead at the end of the fii'St quar· Strahler 1,0..0.2, Denny Sands 0,0..
ter and went in the locker JOOm 4-4, TOTALS 34-4-31·113.
rebounds.
·
Bowe led the Wariiors with 14 with a 47-43 lead at the half. The
points, Warren Locan hit i8 ,of 52 Wildcats increased the lead to 72 to
(five of 12 from three point range) 61 heading into the final eight min·
~
from the floor for 45 percent and utes. Waterford exploded for 41
eight of 13 from the line for 62 per- points and held the Eagles to only
cent. Bowe had 8 of Warren's 24 19 to pull away· for the victory in
· the final period.
rebounds.
•
Southern won the reserve game
Joining Wagner, Reeder and
51·43, Mark Allen led the funnel Powers in double figures was Scott
111 Second St., POIIIII'Oy
cluds with 17, Josh C00ner added McCutchen with12. Waterford hit
II. Jay Burroghs led warren with 38 of 94 shots from the floor for 40
YOUIINDEPENDE~
percent and 32 of 41 from the line
10. .
AGENTS SEIYING
Souhtem now 15-4 will close for 78 percent. Waterford had 47
MEIGS COUNTY
the season at home on Friday night rebounds with Wagner grabbing
.
17.
MASON, WY.
a$3inst Oalc Hill.
.
SINCE ·1R61
Durst was joi~ in double fig.

·Parish ·helps·push Boston
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Southern rolls over Warriors;.
Waterford tops Eastern, 113-81

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Frontier 80, Magnolia (WV) 66
. - Garfld Trin 68, Lou'VI Aquinas 57
Gat Mil Hawken 66, Orange 66
Goshen 67, Loveland 65 (Ot)
Gmfld McLain 80, Leesburg 35
Hannah (WV) 51, Gallia SW 42
Hilliard 42, Mt Vernon 39
Holland Spring 66, Syl Southview
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Indian Hill 77, Glen Este 68
Indian Lake Ill, Ridgemont 66
Indian Val 62, Uhrichs Claymont
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Johnstown 72, Marion Cath 60
Kalida 73, Van Buren 43
Kent 91, Akr Spring 57
Keystone 69, Cle Luth W 59
Kidron 86, Ashland Crestwiew 70
Liberty 102, Brookville 59
Lima Cath 64, Elida 63
Lisbon 67, Southern Local 34
Lorain Cath 76, Lorain 75
Lbuisville 59, E Canton 53 ·
Lucas 69, Hillsdale 62
Lyndhurst Brush 88, Hudson 96
Madison Plains 65, W Jefferson 63
Malvern 66, Can Heritage 38
Manchester 71, Maysvl (Ky) Pat 59
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Malhews 82, Midfld Cardinal 56
Maumee 95, Anthony Wayne 72
Mayfield 69, Kenston 66
Maysville 58, Morgan 48
McDonald 74, S Range 55
Meadowbrook 89, Whig (WV)
Linlsy 78
Medina 83, N Royalton 65
Medina Buck 52, Grafton Midview
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Miami Trace 76, Spring Cath 58
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they will play Jackson County rival
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MEIGS -Jenn ifer Taylor.
2·0· 2·6, Kelly Smith 3 ·0-0-6 ,
Vema Compston 5-Q.J.Jl, Tricia'
Baer 5·0.2·12, Kim Ewing 0.0-2·2,
Missy Nelson 0·0·2·2, TOTALS
15.0·9·39
.
JACKSON • Kellina Cooper 40-6-14, Tiffany Reasor 8·0· 7·23,
Julie Coffey 3.0-3-9, Kim Lanhari
2·0·0·4, Carla Stumbo 2-0-0-4, ,
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Tuesday's cage scores

By United Prns International
Tuesday, Feb. 11

DOWNING ·CHILD5
MULLEN MUSSER

Meigs will close out the seao;on
with a 16-5 record, seniors in their
last game include Jennifer Taylor,
Kelly Smith, Missy Nelson and

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Page

4 The Dally Sentinel

wednelday, FebrUiry 13, 1811

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Brown explodes for 32 points
to lead Redmen to 112-87 win
The Redmen raced to a 17-6
Jeff Brown, the University of
in the fli"St seven min·
advantage
Rio Grande's 6·5 starting forward
utes
of
the
ope~
half and posted
· from Newark, poured in a career
a
19-point
lead
gomg
into the mid·
high of 32 points and added II
rebounds to his team's offense to game break.
The key from that point, Assishelp guide lhe Redrnen to 112-87
victory over Cedarville Tuesday at 1801 Coach Jeff Lanham noted, was
to close down the visitors' offense
Lyne Caller.
Brown was one of six Redmen · in the f1ISt few minutes of the secplayers to place in double figures ond half. This the Redrnen did, limas the Redmen l!llljlt to·a quick lead iting lhe Yellow Jackets to 25 perand survived a scaing a!lai:k from cent from the three (three of 12).
Cedarville's main offensive Then, as Lawhorn observed, ''the.
weapon, Ken Rucker, who hit 29 game was over" as the Redmen
points and IS boards for the Yel· bench supplemented the lead, with
relief forward Lester Smith dumplow Jackets.
The victory cemented Rio ing in a total of 14 points.
The Redmen defense, led by
Grande's hold on fliSt place in the
Mid-Ohio Conference, where thei Gary Harrison and Mark Erslan
Redmen are now 8-2. Overall, John and then by Jawanza Childs and
Lawhorn's club went to 25-4 and Chad Shumate in relief, did what it
started this week at numbel one in could to contain Rucker, but sui:District 22, based on its winning ceeded in makin$ him and point
guard .Todd Penrungton, who hall
percen~e. Following the Redmen
was Marone at 23-4 prior to Tues- 11 pomts; Cedarville's only high
·
day's game .at Walsh. Actual dis· scoring players of the game.
.
"It
was
a
very
complete
game,
uict si8Ddings are being detennined
this season by the Hunter rating one we eStab~ early from bolh
system and will decide pairings for en&lt;ls of the floor," Lawhorn said.
the playoffs, set for Feb. 27, and "We had to keep in mind that
Cedarville is a very athletic, very
March 2 and 4.
Cedarville, which had been on a explos"ive team, so we did the
skid since its 89-86 defeat of Rio things we had to do to win.
"Everybody conttibuted, and I
Grande at Cedarville Jan. 19, went
to 4-S in the MOC and 17-10 over- . think a key to the win was to keep
fresh bndies on the floor," he added
all.
The Redmen shot 58.3 percent

(42; 72), including 11 "or 20

aaempts from the t1uee for 55 pet·
~L

The team COIIliCCicd m 17 of
24 attempts from the free throw
line for 70.8 percent, but only
brought down 39 rebounds to
Cedarville's 48.
The Yellow Jackets posted 42.5
percent from the floor (34-80) and
netted 16 of 20 foul line attempts ·
for 80 percent Cedarville commit·
ted 16 turnovers to Rio Grande's
11.
The Re&lt;lmen return to the road
Saturday for a 7:30p.m. $&amp;me with
Bluffton, while Cedarvlile hosts
Tiffm Saturday.
Box score:
. RIO GRANDE (112) • Chad
Shumale, 1..()..2; Gary Harrison, 4·
2-3-17; Jawanza Childs, 2-1·0-7;
~ Erslan, 1-3-1-12; Brad Schu·j
bert, 1·3..0-11; Lester Smith, 6-2·
14; Jeff Brown, 9-2·8-22; Tim
Christian, 2..0-4; Troy Oonaldson,
6-1-13. TOTALS31·11·17·11l.
. CEDARVILLE (87)_ • Darryl
Ltsath, 2..().4; Tocld Pcnrungton, 3- ·
1·2-11; Frank Back, 2-0-4; Ken
Rucker, 13-3-29; Craig Miller, 1-1·
0.5; Jaden Callahan, 1·1..0.5; Ron
Pierce, 2-2-6; Tracy Slringer, 2-4·
8; David Barnes, 1-4-6; Dominic
McKinley, 2..().4; ·Kelly Seboe, 2-1·
S. TOTALS 31·3-16-87.
Hall'tlme score • Rio Grande
49, Cedarville 30.

Rio ladies crush Mt~ Vernon;
share MOC title with Tiffin ·
Balance, exemplified in the double-figure performance of Ann Bar·
nitz and Kathy Snyder, boosted the
University of Rio Gnll!de women's
basketball team to its lOth COIISCCU·
live win of the season Tuesday at
Lyne Cenler with an 81·51 defeat
of;Mount Vernon Nazarene.
·Because Tiffm defeated Walsh
63-41 last night, 'the Red women
will share the Mid-Ohio Conference championship with the Lady
Dragons. Both teams hold 8·2
s(4ndings in the MOC. The Red·
women starred this week at third
plice in Dislrict 22, with Central
Sl!lte in first and Tiffin in second.
The Lady Dragons went to 17-6
with the Walsh victory, while the
Redwomen are now 19-8.
With the memory of last
month's·double overtime loss to
Mount Vemon last month on their
minds, the Roowomen jumped out
to.a quick lead and outdistance&lt;~ the
Lady Cougars by 16 twice late in
the riod.
.
rarnitz poured in 18 of her 24
points and seven of her 10
rebounds in the game's opening
minutes to help build Rio Grande's
scoring advantage. Mindy Montgomerr. had seven points and
Kalhy Snyder netled five of her 13
markers to put the game under con-

trol at the half, while the defense
held Mount Vernon's Robinne Barton to eight points and Shannon
Bell to five.
. Shooting 49 percent overall of
34 of 72 field goal attempts, the
Rio ladies kept Mount Vernon's
offense in check and capi\alized on.
soflle· of the visitors' 18 turnovers
to maintain a healthy lead for the
rest of the game. Barton, with 12
points, and Bell with 13, were the
only Mount Vernon players to
break into double figures.
"I thought we came out with
more intensity than we have
before," Red.women Coach Doug
Foote noted. "Our two juniors
(Barnitz and Snyder) really played
and gaye us a big game. The big
key was balance, because when
you have 81 points and two kids
placing in double figures, it means
they are walcing well and in c;ommand of the game.
.
"I'm proud of lhe kids because
with a conference cham~p on
the line, they didn't tlghten up,"
Foote continued. "That was
because of our balance. Now we
have to go out and win our remaining four games."
The Redwomen made five of
seven lries from the foul line for 71

percent and outboarded Mount
Vernon 35-26. Jenni Couch had
five assists to boost the offense,
and turnoven were held to 13.
Mount Vernon, which went to
8-12 and 5·5 in the conference, net·
ted 23 of 61 attempts from the fteld
for 41 percent, but but sank nil two
of its tries from the line, courtesy
of Eiin Sharrock.
T)le Redwomen start a road tour
that ends ·their regular season Fri·
day at 7:30 p.m. at Malone. Their
remaining ·game include Lake Erie,
4:15p.m. Saturday; Bluffton, 7:30
p.m. Monday; aod Findlay, 7 p.m.
Tuesday.
Box score:
RIO GRANDE (81) · Marlo
Kistler, 0-143: Jenni Couch, 0-1·
0-~; Gena Norris, 1-2-0-8;
Michelle Crouse; 1·145; Debbie
Fredrick, 1..();.2; Kerri Kidwell, 4-0.
8; Mindy Mohtgomery, 1-2-0-8;
Alin Barnitz, 10-4-24; Stephanie
Gudorf, 2-1..0-7; Kathy Snyder, 61-13. TOTALS U-11·5-81.
MOUNT VERNON (51)
Shannon Bell, 2-3-0-13; Lori
Brown, 4-0-8; Shauna Moore, !..()..
2; Heather Stingel, 1-0-2; Erin
Sharrock, 3-2·8; Robinne Banon,
6-0-12; Eve Webber, 2-0-4; Jen·
nifer , 1..0.2. TOTALS 28·3·2-51.
Hall'time score • Rio Grande
41, Mount Vernon 27.

sv~c

..

CHESTEil SJX1H GRADE CHAMPIONS
: • Chester's lllxtll IJ'Ide captured first pllt:e Ill Its
bmaUIWIII toarDameat, taklot 1 dose 54-4!1 wiD
! over Portla1d. Pictured are front, 1-r, Dulel
: Otto, JGIIa Cuto, Erie Dillard, Rickie HoUoo,

BROWN SHOOTS • Jeff Brown shoots for
two on his way to scorlog 32 poiDts for the Rio
Grande Redmeo Tuesday at Lyoe Ceater • )Niir

•

or Cedarville deleoders brace for action. The
Redmen won 112·117 and boosted thlr overll
record to 25-4. (Photo by Kazumi I-.)

.•

Trimble hands Southern girls 68-38 setback
By Dave Harris
Trimble opened up a 31-17 half·
time lead and went oq to post a 68· ·
38 victory over Southern in girls
sectional toum'ament action Tuesday nigth at Meigs High School. ,
Trimble 'will adavnce to play top
seeded Crooksville Thursday at
6:30. Southern will close the sea·
son at 1-21 after beating Symmes
Valley last week. Details of that
game will be in at a later date.
Jennifer Koons led the Lady
Cats with 22 points, and Teresa
Fouts added 20 to pace Trimble in
scoring.
Sarah·Duhlled Southern with 16
points, while Junie Beegle· addoo
· 12. Wendy Wolfe led Southern
with eight rebounds. No other
cletails of the game where available
at pess time.

Seniors playing for the last time
in· the purple and gold are· Junie
Beegle, Mica Jones and Wendy
Wolfe. Another senior Tonya
!ogles missed the whole season
after being seriously injuried in a
car accident right before the start of
the season.

•••

SOUTHERN-Mica Jones 1-0·
1-3, Junie Beegle 5-0-2·12, Wendy
Wolfe ()..()..()..(), Sarah Duhl 4..0.8·
16, Jennifer Cross ()..()..()-0, Sherri·
Stover ()..().1-1, Amber Ohlinger 1·
0·0·2, Aimee Mills 2·0·0·4 .
TOTALS 13-0·ll-38.
TRIMBLE • Alicia McClelland 1·0·1·3, Cher Peart 0-0..0-0,
Terry Lynn Skinner 1..0..()..2, Kelly
Coeen 1·0·0-~. Chasty Antle !..()..(). ·
2, Teresa Fouts 8·1·1·20, Angie
King4.0-l-9, Wendy Irvin 2..()..().4,

'
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We prepare all kinds ol
income tax returns, from
the simple to the complex .
Whatever yo,u{ tax situation, we can handle it.

•
•'
•

H&amp;RBLOCit
ilmerici's TaK·Tum Put us to
Hours: "Mon. :.... ··:.:· · ·~

•

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PM

E

Sat. 9

North Gallia ...... 10 3
Southem ............ IO 3
Oak Hill ..............9° 4
Eastern ..........;.....6 7
Symmes Valley ...3 10
Southwesteril.......2 11
Kyger Creek ........ ! 12
TOTALS
56 56

l)nois
1
Sevenfb se'ttl Michael Chang .
defeated Australian Todd Woodbridge, 6-4, 6-3, in the opening
round of the $600,000 Donnay
Open in Brussels. No. 4 Guy For·
get of France overcame Israeli
Amos Mansdorf, 4-6, 6-3, 6·3,
while No. S Jonas Svensson of
Sy;eden feU to Swiss Marc Roaet,
6-0, 6- 4 .... Intemational Business
Machines unveiled .a higlf·technol· ·
ogy radar system said to be lnore
sophisticated than sySiems used by
police around the world to track the
speed of each serve. Activated by a
.

.

...

remote switch the radar makes use
of micrC)wave technoloRY to track
the ball as it leaves the server's
racket Making its European debut
in Brussels this year, it recorded
the fastest serve as belonging to
Frenchman Guy ~'«get • 125 mph.
... Warren Jacques, the outspoken
AUSiralian who has been responsible for British men'alennis for the
P~st three· years, has been dis·
III!Ued by the Lawn TenniJ AssoCiIliOn. The LTA said Jacques' a con·
IIICt as mt.enlllionaJ Uld dim:tor
and _Davis C:up ca~n "will be
~ With effect from the end
of this month."
•

• ' , ..

'I., '

Baseball
Cleveland Indians second base·
man Jerry Browne lost his arbitra- .
tion case but will still receive a
raise from his 1990 salary of
$490,000 to $800,000 for 1991.
Browne, who hit .267 with six
home nms and 12 stolen bases last .
year, was seeking $1.1 millim.
Boxiog
· Light welterweight Shane
Mosley of Po!Dona, Cali!'·· will rep- :·,
resent the Umted Slliles m the 1991 ,
World Championships' Chnllente ·
Bangkok, Thailand, March 9.-IO.
The U:S. CQliCh for this event is Joe ·
Byrd of Flint, Mich. The invitalion- · :
al competition features the 12 1990
world champions defending their
titles against top challengers, and
Mosley was selected by the Inter·
national Ama~ Boxing Associa·
lion as the top challenger at 139 · ·
po~.
.

BY SCO'IT WOLFE
In first round play of the sixth
CHESTER • The first annual grade single elimination tourney,
Chester Elemenllry Basketball Coolville I defeated Coolville II
TOIII'IIIIIIent was a great success, 31-18, the I:.etart Blackhawks fell
and to further emphasize its sue· to champion Cl!ester SS-45, Port·
cess Chester's sixt)l arade claime&lt;l land rolled over Salisbury 56·16,
the championship, wlii.le the Salis· anti Stewart downed Tuppers
bury Blue Sireaks claimed the fifth Plains 47-41.
grade title.
.
In the semi-rma,l{ Chester won
In the first round of the fifth handily over Coolville I 61-42 to
grade action the Pomeroy Panthers aclvance to the championship game.
defeated the Riverview Rebels 37- Portland handle&lt;l Stewart $3-41 to
34, Coolville n ousted Coolviile I advance.
26-14,' Chester's Raiders won a for· · The championship game was
feit over Tuppers Plains, and the quite a thriUer and see-sawed back
Letart Black,hawks fell to defeat at and forth to the finish, where
the hands of Salisbury 39-26. Chester came out on top 54-49 .
Pomeroy defeated Cooolville ll 32Chester's Chris Bailey led a
19 to advance to the fmals, while weD-balanced attack with 46 over·
Salisbury blitzed Cheslt'Z47-17. In all points and had 44 rebounds.
. the finale Salisbury defeated Eric Dillard was next with 31!
Pomeroy 53·31.
points, four rebounds, six steals,
Overall in the tournament Jason and had ten important assists. Josh
Frecicer led champion Salisbury Casto added 22 points and five
with 43 points with scores of 10, steals, Rickie Hollon had 25 points
17, and 16 in the three nights of five rebounds and four steals, aod
Roush, ·Maoager Mac:y Rees, Nathao Franko, -·· . action. Miele Bart hacj 35 with Patrick Aeiker had 13 poins and
games of IS, 6, and 14, while Tom five reboun&lt;ls. Patsy Aeiker had
aod Matt Evaos. Back row· Coach Joaatbaa
Billingsly had 20, Brad Davenport · nine points, Laura Eastman 5,
Rees, Jamie Evans, Greg Mc:Kioney, Brlaooe
14, Chad Folmer 9, Jeasy Eastman Daniel Otto four, Robbie Reeves
Promtt, Gary Cooper,ud Z.ck Coucb.
four, and Lacy Dickens two.
four, and Crystal Holsinger two.
Frecker and Barr combined for · For Portland young Jamie Evans
16 and 14 points respectively in the dazzled the crowd with a tournacharnpionship game.
ment higb 85 points with scores of
Leading Pomeroy was David 33, 30, and twenty two in the
Anderson with 45 points overall fmale. Justin Middleswan had 27
with 19 in the win over Riverview, ovemll, including 14 in the opeiiC'Z.
twelve against Coolville, and 14 Greg McKinney had 15, Matt
.against Salisbury. Jason Roush was Evans 13, Gary Cooper 12, Zaclc
next with 18 markers, Clay Crow Couch 4, and Joshua~ two..
had 13, Steven McCullough and
Chester hope to agam have Its
Daniel Whiuiltind eight each, Brian tournament next year and thanks all
Nutter three, J.C. Varner three, those who took pan in this year's
Matt Riffle, and Adam Thomas two event.
each.

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA
446 4524

~ ..

:.

U .OO IAAQA!H MTIIIE(S SAfUitiiAl 6 SUII(M.Y

U.OO MJUIII JIIIGHT rutSM'

FEBRUARY

•

788
746
799
960
1003
946
996
956
7194

548
552
621
698
732
656
716 .

5089 5089

.
Tuesday's rmals
Waterford 113, Eastern 81
Southern 74, Warren Local 59
Friday's schedule
Oak Hill at Southern
Eastern at Hannan Trace
Symmes Vnlley at North Gallia
Southwestern at Kyger Creek

'GOOD USED
WASHERS, DRYERS,
IEFRIGEIATORS, IVs,
GAS &amp; EUC. IANGES

COUNTY

APPLIANCES ·

627 3rtl Awe., o•lpollt
PH. 446·1699

HOUIS: I A.M.·6 P.M.
'·

~,.

• ,,,

"·"'

\:' '1 • •

dodsoo, Chad Folmer, Jared Waner, aad Brad
Davenport. Back row· Assistaot Coacb Dao
Dodsoo, Jessy Eastmao, Steve Hysell, Tom
Billingsley, Mlck Barr, Jasoo Frecker, Larry
Dickens, aod Coach Mark Friend.
·

: By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
· Trib~ ~Ia~ Write~ .
• North Gallia s Pira~s c!id what
: they had to do • play high-pressure

,.

769
732
700
589
589
472
.492

SALISBURY BLUE STREAKS • The SalJs.
bury Blue Streaks streaked to victory io the
Cbester Elemeotary fiftll grade touroameot
recently with a 53-31 wiD over Pomeroy. Pk·
lured are members or tbe cbampioDSbip team,
froat, l·r, Viace Broderick, Jeremy Kio~:, Josh

'

it

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

.'

-tc
-tc
-tc
-tc
On Thutsday, Feb. 21st,
-tc '
-tc
The Daily Sentinel will have a
-tc
Special Edition with photographs of our
-tc
-tc
Service Person~el from Meigs County.
-tc
-tc A copy of this .edition will be sent to each one of

t

-tc
:
-tc

t

our
local troops stationed in the Persian Gulf..
.
•

If you would like to be a part of this special

'

edition- whether professional, ,business,
, individual, or civi~ organization - .
give Brian or David a call·at 992-2156:

.

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~**************************~r-~r*,~*·~+++·•
, .. ..
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:symmes Valley downs North Gallia
i 43-33 in Division IV girls' sectional

..

TEAM -···-.. -·W L PF PA
Hani18D Tmce .... 11 2 746 566

briefs-----

Sports briefs

Salisbury Blue Streaks .
.jc apture grade school title

.

(Reserves· SVAC only)

--~-Sports

.

SI:XTH GRADE RUNNERS-UP • Pori·
laud's Plotes captored runHr·up booors io .the
Chester touraameot. Pictured with tbelr fro.
· phies are front, 1-r, Justio Middleswart, Joshua

POMEROY

PF PA
1407 1168
1391 1123
1117 .1114
1357 1489
1509 1457
1271 1371
1145 1429
912 1167

(Coofereoce)
uthem ....... :.... l2 1 1004
Trace .... ll 2 1018
~
mes Vnlley ...8 5 794
North Gallia ........8 5 1104
Eastern ................7 6 953
Oak Hill ..............5 8 849
Kyger Creek ........! 12 772
Southwesteni.......O 13 700
TOTALS
56 56 7194

t''

••

UIVIO Aldti'IIOID,
Nutter, aad G.J. Powell.
row- Asslltant
Coach Kea McCullouab, Wayne Barnllart,
Steve McCalloagh, Daolel Whiltikind, J.C.
Varoer, Matt Rifne, Michael Fi'ymar, and
Coach Doo Andersoo.

standings

(Overall)
TEAM ..............W L
Southern ............ l5 4
Hannan 'l'mce ... .14 S
Symmes Valley .11 7
Eastern .............. 10 9
North Gallia ........9 9
.. Oak Hill ..............7 12
KygerCreek ........2 17
Southwestern ...... .! 15

GOING FON TWO • Rio Graade's Kerrl Kidwell (23) 1J0f1 for
two pniilts wblle Mouat Veraoa defeader MaDdy Jambosld (40)
aod aa ualdeallfled player awall tbe raul! at Lyae Ceater Tu~
day. Tbe Redwomen won 81-51, closiDg out Mld·Oblo Coarereoce
actioo for the seiiSOD.

•

Anna Downs 2-0·0·4, Jennifer
Koons 9..()..4-22. TOTALS 29-1-6·

Pit Aelwr,IDCI DaYicl Vulmrqeo. Bac:k row·
Coach Ric~ HoUoa, Crystal Holsln1er, Patsy .
Aelker, Laura Eastmao, Cbrls Bailey, Robbie
Reeves, Maoater Eric Holloo, and assistant
C111~ Joe Bailey.
·

noau,

SECOND PLACE POMEROY • Tbe
Pomeroy Paathera swept tlttroagllt the early
rounds of tile Chester Elemellary tourumeat,
but fell to defeat It the baods of cbamplou SaiJs.
. bury 53·31. Pictured are members ul tile rua·
· oer-up team, froot, l·r, Jason Rousb, Adam

.. ( ..
f

wasn't more of lhe same for either
team (the gray-dad Vikings ~red
nine of that frame's 15 pomJs),
Vnlley put enough coals on the fue
~~nse.attackthe~etandkeep
to expand the .IO-pointlead they
Junior center Jenn1fer Owens and carried into the second q~ancr to
sophomore forward/center Cathy
13 by halftime. However, 11 would
have been worse for the Pirates if
Krausz, Symmes Valley's twin
towers, scoreless while making a
the Vikings had done better !han
comebaclt:.
,
the 3-for-10 showing at the charity
The problem with all of this was
slripe they had in chat periocl.
that it happened in only one quarter
The third quarter was the· time
• the third, because in the fourth
for the Bucs to believe in themquarter, the comeback ran out of selves, as four straight baskets by
gas and Jennifer Davisson's Robie (short right-wing jumper,
Vikings began to reassert them6:43), freshman guard Elisha
selves in the paint, which was what Meadows (layup, 4:34), Salisbury
Valley needed to hold on for a 43(short left-wing jumper, 3:31) and
33 v1ctory over David Moore's Meadows (layup, 2:29) combine&lt;~
Pirates in the Division IV girls'
with the Vikings' off-target passes
section81 tournament CJP,CilCr at Gai- and lack of position in the paint. to
liaAA:ademyTuesdayrup:hL
cut Valley's lead to 24-19 w1th
The victory enabled the Vikings 2:29left. But Symmes survived the
to advance to the upper-bracket ti- possibility of a three-second viola·
. tie game against Hannan Trace, lion (2:12) being the cause of a. fur·
which will begin Thursday at 6:30 ther!decay of the lead when the Pip.m. The second game of that tour- rates failed to come away with a
nament doubleheader, which will · basket on the possession that fol·
follow at 8: 15 p.m., will feature · lowed. When Symmes got the. ball
SVAC co-~hampion Kyger Creek back, a three-pointer in line with
and Southwestern battling for the the key by juruor point guard Trina
lower-bracket crown.
Schneider and a foul shot by junior
In the first quarter the senior· forward Stacy Conley • the
leas Vikings, .the host team in this Vikings' only poilU of the period • .
game, ran and hid from the Pirates, in the 9uancr's laat minute~
u they rackro up 13 straight points Valley s lead to nine by its conclubefore saphomore guard B~th Sal- sion.
isbury canned a 15-foot Jumper
The flllll chapter saw the return
from the left wing with 1:S4left to of Krausz, a 6-1 sophomore who
ring up North's fust points of the scored fOil' points in the first half
a.ne and cut Volley's lead to 13-:l. but was held sc:oreleas in act three.
' Though the second quarter Picking up her third, foul in that
.,
"
'

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~· .

i

'

frame didn't help matters for the
Vikings, but Krausz made up for it
by scoring the first of her seven
fourth-quarter points after rebound·

NO LOWER PRICING THIS YEARII CALL TODAY.

in for the layup w1~ 5:46left. And
even though the e1ght-pomt lead
that shot produced melted to four
under the heat of baskets by Salisbury (jumper beyond the key, 5:31)
and a pair of free throws by Robie
(4:01), Valley outscored Norlh 13·
7 the rest of the way to claim the
victory. ,
The Pirates, who finished the
season at 3-16, bid farewell to seniors Dee Dee Dobbins, Robie aod
Mary West.
Quarter totals
North Gnllia 5 6 8 14=33
Symmes Valleyl5 9 4 15~3
Symmes Valley (43) • Jenmfer
Owens 7..().1•15; Cathy Krausz 5·
0-1=11; Trina Schneider 1·1·2=7;
Stacy Conley 2-0-l:oS; ~ulie Wil·
son 1-0-2--4; Shelly Wilson 0·0·
1=1. Totals ·1'·1-8-43
From the neld. 17-48
. At the Une • 8-22
orr the atass • 38 (Krausz &amp;
Owens It each)
Steals • S
: Tarooven • 13
F0111ed oat • Krausz
. Nortll GaiDa (33) • Beth Salis·
bury 4-0-1•9; Susie Robie 1·0°
5=7; Elisha Meadows 3·0·0,.6:
Dama Twyman 1..()..3•S; Beth Me·
Cormick 1..0.1•3; Tina Myers 0-1·
0=3. Totals ·10·1-10=33
AI tbe Uae -10-18
Foaled out· Dobbins
,.

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197 WEST STATE ST.

ATHENS, OHIO

FREE COMPUTER ESTIMATES
LOW INTEIEST FINANCING .
1·800·24 7·6110
TOLL nEE

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. WriE IIGGISTIICAISI WE'D liST

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(Coupo111 on F,eb. Contracts Only}

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�Page 6 The Dally Sentinel .

~edne&amp;day,February13,1991

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, Ohio

Child safety rest~aint is the . law, OHP commander says
Lt. R.J. Woodford, commander of 1991 's awareness week, accordof the Ohio Srate Highway Palrol's ing to Woodfool is to urge correct
Gallia-Meigs post, today urged use of these protection devices.
families to recognize the annual
"Wben used correctly," he said,
Child Passenger Safety Awareness "child safety seats are extremely
Week from Feb. 10-16.
reliable in preventing deaths and
The .theme, Buclcje Up for Love, injurieS to young passengers. This
·is designed to encourage parents fact becomes especially significant
and others to proteCt their children when YO!I realize that motor vehiin child safety seats and saf~ty belts cle crashes are the number one
by correclly using lhem. The goal ltiller and crippler of children."
FORECAST FROM 7 AM 2·1"-il TO 7 Ail' 2·1 5-91

..

•

n•
'·

WEATHER MAP· A strong cold rront wiD bring another blast,
or winter to the northern Plains and Great Lakes. Highs in tbe
northern Plains will range from tbe middle teens to the lower 30s. A
low pressure system wiD move into tbe northeast bringing snow and
rain. (UPI)

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

AU SO srates and the District of
Columbia have child passenger
prorection laws and national statistics indicate that about 83 pm:ent
of children under five years of age
are buckled in safety seats. However, nearly one-third of these safety
seats are being used incorreclly and
are, lherefore, ineffective.
"Every person who drives is

responsible for protecting lhe lives
of .the children who ·ride with
them," said Woodford. "Tbi$
includes making sure the safety
seat is appropriate for lhe age and
weight of the child, that lhe seat is
secured correctly within the vehicle, and that the· child is buclded in
properly."

Thursday. Ove!llight lows will be
mostly in the 30s.
The low will intensify and move
~t of the state on Thursday,
This w!ll open lhe door to let very
cold 111r to pour over.the lower
Great .Lakes and Oh1o Valley .
Thus, tt will become windy wtth .
temperatures falling well into the
20s Thursday evming.
. Moisture wrapping around the
mtense storm will produce
widespread snow over the state
Thursday with some accumw.tions
likely over northern sections. The
cold will continue inio the weekend
with lhe snow gradually becoming
confined to the snowbelt areas of
lhe nonheast by sometime-Friday.
On the Wednesday morning
weather map, .a low press'!l'e sys-

Meigs property transfers

drivers and their fiOnl se_lll )IISICI!gers," the lieutenant s81d. "Wliit
betltl way to celebrate Valcii~'J
Day lhan the use of a child aaf~
se81 to keep yoor liUie me ~·
healthy, and safe from harm ." · ,
Motcrists are invited to pick up
free safety brochures available A
the Gallipolis post on the use of
safety belts' and child safety seats•..-

.

'

..

~·

STORE HOURS
Monday tht:u Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

99&lt;

298 SECOND ST.
·POMEROY, OH.

Much colder air will invade
state Thursday, changing the rain Iii
snow. The low will continue i'b
intensify as it moves into Ne;t
York stale by Thursday evenins.
The cold front will approach thC
eastern seaboard by Thursdar
night
~,
· •

SUPERIOR TAVERN

PRICES EFFECTIVE FEB. 10 THRU SAT., .FEB. 16, 1991

BONELESS
HAM

Bookmobile stops-----;0•

The Meigs County Bookmobile
will make the foUowing stopS this
week: WEDNESDAY: Racine
(Home Nlllional Bank), 12 noon to
5 p.m.; Porlland (Post Office), 6
p.m. to 7 p.m.; THURSDAY: Rut- .
land (Civtc Center), 11 a.m. to 3
p.m.; Dexter (Church), 4 p.m. to 6

UP TO

p.m.; Langsville, 6:30 p.l'(l. to 7:30
p.m.; FRIDAY: Tuppers Plaids
(Lodwick's), 12 noon to 4 p.IJI'.;
Success Road, 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 ·
p.m.; Keno, 6 p.m. to 7 p.m.; SA't·
URDAY: Syracuse (Biill Field),.9
a.m. to 12 noon; PagcYi!le, 1 p..dt.
to 2 p.m.; Harrisonville (ChurcJ.r),
2:30to4:30p.m.
~

1 RACK

50°/o

$219

.....'·
,.
..,...

OFF

1 GROUP.

'

CASUAL PANTS ..... $7 OO EA. ·

GIRlS JEANs: ..................~!.!.~;.1.~..............

'

'

'

.
.
·
lB.$179
B·ologna •••••••••••••••
CUMBERLAND GAP SMOKED
$ 69

.

MEN'S FlANNEL SHIRTS ..........................

·.

ECHRICH SLICED

.

LADIES' JEANS ................ $9 9 9 EA.

1 GROUP lADIES'

LB.

$ . 29 COCA-COLA
S.teaks/Roasts .•• !~ 1
PRODUCTS
. LONGHORN
.
. $.
9
8
12 P-'K 12 OZ. CANS
1
Colby (hees.e ..... !~ ... . . ·
FRESH PORK BUTT . ,

BOYS' .SHQlTS .................... $5 00-EA••.
'

'

10 OZ. PKG.

v

tii

tern was developing .over the centra1 Plains. A warm front e:xtended
east from the low into extreme
so~lhem .Ohio. The low is forecast
to mtenSify and move northeast to
.southern Indiana by Wednesday
night and intO eastern Ohio by sunrise Thursday.

7

SAUSAGE
LINKS

l

Compiled by:
Chester. ·
.
.
South Central Obio
Obio extended forecast
Emmogene Holstein Congo
Geneva J . Frecker, l/15 mt.
:
Friday through Sunday
Occasional rain and a chance of
Recorder, Meigs County, Ohio
parcels, to Ed W. Frecker, Chester.
: thunderstorms Wednesday night,
Scattered snow flurries Friday,
Sharon M. Darst and Danny
· Geneva J. Frecker, 1/15 int.
.. wilh rain possibly mixing with or with fair weather Saturday, and a Darst·, right of way, to Leading parcel~. to Robert K. Frecker,
·: changing to snow late, and a low in chance of rain or snow on Sunday. Creek Consv. Dist., Salisbury.
Chester.
. the mid 30s. Chance of precipira- . Highs will range from the upper
t;:sta Brickles, dec'd, cen., to
Rita J. Sinilh. aka Boggess .and
. · tion is near 100 percent. Windy and · teens to the middle 20s Friday, Larry Brickles, Gladys Brickles Alvin R. Smith, l/3A, to USA
• colder Thwsady, with snow likely, from IS to 25 Saturday, and in the and Carolyn Perry, Scipio.
Farmers Home Admin., Letart·
• possibly miJted with rain early, and 30s Sunday. Overnight lows will
Carolyn Perry, Jack J. Perry and
Alice E. ~ys, sec. 5, tQ Ina M.
• temperatures falling into the 20s by range from near 10 to the upper Larry Bricldes, 8.000A, to Gladys VanMeter, Orange.
~ evening. Chance of precipitation 70
teens Friday morning, from zero to Barker, Scipio.
Larry G. Johnson and Gloria J.
percent.
10 above zero early Saturday, and
Gladys Barker and Clarence Johnson, 40A, to Ronald D. Arms
in the teens Sunday morning.
Barker, parcel, to Carolyn Perry and Brenda S. Arms, Salisbury.
and Larry Brickles, Scipio.
Walter E. Morris and Nancy G.
Larry Brickles, parcel, to Car- . Morris, llacts, to Kevin M. Graham
olyn Perry, Scipio.
and Cheryl L. Graham, Salisbury.
•
Dolphus Burke Jr. and Wanda
Earl E. Frecker, aka,- Lilah T .
prisoners by the resident disp81ChMiddleport Fire Department
C.
Burke,
parcel,
to
William
Ray
Frecker,
aka, parcels, corrected
er.
According to Middleport Mayor
Seven accidents were investigat- Brooks and Ma!:~llfet M. Brooks, deed, to Rodney E: Frecker, BedFred Hoffman, the Middleport Fire
'
.
Columbia.
ford &amp; Salisbury.
Depanment answered a .total of 65 ed.
George
Stratton,
Trustee,
Steven.
·
Richard Kibble, 40A, to Terry
Two
of
the
department
cars
calls during the monlh of JIIJiuary.
A.
Giglio,
et,
al,
Sheriff's
deed,
to
E.
Kibble,
Meigs. ·
were
driven
a
total
of
5,762
miles
Of lhe calls, 12 were ftre calls and
W.E.
Engle,
ColUinbia.
Martin
Leo Woodard, Jr. and
using
646.3
gallons
of
gasoline.
53 were Emergency Medical SerJ.
Frecker,
1/15
int.
Shirley,
M.
Woodard, easement, to
Geneva
The
fire
departmen.t
used
49.1
gal: vice calls.
parcels, to Mona G. Colenian, Ohio Bell Telephone Co., Rutland.
Ions of gasoline.
Arnold CI yde Green, Sr. and
MC!&gt;~t police collection was · Chester.
Geneva
J.
Frecker,
1/15
int.
MaryA.
Green, easement, to Ohio
~136'
and
parking
meter
collection
Middleport Pollee Report
parcels,
to
George
E.
Frecker,
Bell
Telephone
Co., Rutland
was
$583.50.
The Middleport Police DepartChester.
Charles
W.
Miller and Marcel
A
total
of
316
parking
tickets
ment made 82 arrests during the
Geneva
were
wriucn.
J.
Frecker,
1/15·int.
Miller,
Right
of
way agreement, to
month of January. .
parcels,
to
Sharon
Keck
Downing,
Columbia
Gas
Transmission
Corp.,
There were 199 meals served to
Bedfol'll.
·

Middleport reports listed

r

•

Citing 1990 f'Jgures, Woodford
said. Gallia·M.eigs ~st officers
issued cirations to 106 driven for
failure to proleCI cbild passengers
in safety seats.
"As time goes on, more and
more mOIAlrisls are complying wilh
both the child aafety seat taw and
the mandatory .sa!ecy belt law for

P~g1

MOUNTAINEER

Winter we~therto return to .Ohio Thursday·;
By United Press International
After Wednesday's rain and
mild temperatures, winter wealher
is expected to return with
vengeance Thillsday.
A low pressure system is
expected to cross lhe state Wednesday night, producing additional
rain. A few thunderstorms could
crop-up overnight in the unstable
air over centra11111d sout)Jem·Ohio.
Some locally heavy rain could fall
where the thunderstonns develop.
As the low moves across the
state Wednesday. night, coider air
will wrap into the system from the
northwest, changing the rain to
snow. over western Ohio. Some
accumulation of snow is possible
over northwest Ohio by daybreak

The Dally senune1

Ohio

30°/o OFF
30°/o OFF

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k
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B
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9
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1c
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Whole
3
9
Beef
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$1
'Ground
U.~D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS
$ 99 .
R1beye Ste~ks •.•• ~~ 4
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Bacon •••••••...•••••••• ~~·

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$279
CARNATION

HOT COCOA

·MIX
10 PAK BOX
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FILLING

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MIX
Head Lettuce ••••• 2 f$1 MUFFIN
8.5 OZ. BOX

$ 59

1 . 4/Sl
. (. PINK .
Large Eggs ........~:•• 69
SALMON
6 I $1 ·TV Dinner •••••••••••••-· sq(
Snack Cakes .•••.•
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$199
$
99(
Crackers ••••••••• ~;l:·.a2: •
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LITTLE DEBBIE INDIVIDUAL
ZESTA

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What'll it take for you? A higher level of oneto-one service, or just more banking convenience?
WhateVer it is, we're prepared to give it a try.
• That approach to banking has worked well
for us in the past. It was behind our imroduction

· retiSOit~
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To see how bankers act when they're fager;to
of the first 24-hour banking machine in the
please, visit your nearcountry back in 1972.
And it's that unusual attitude, along with the by Bank One.It's I!!JA AIV
convenience and stability of one of the nation's definitely a step 1::1/'UWR ~VI~'-:·
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MAXWEll
MAmR BLEND

34.5

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$39.9

a-1 Only At ,._.,, Super Valu
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litllt t ... c _

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Ju•o
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6. - Foil. 10 111rU Foil. a, 1991
· litl" 1 Ptr Cust-

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POTATOES

WHin

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4 ROll
PICG.
a-1

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99&lt;v•

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�•.

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P.Qe 8 The Dally Sentinel

Poineroy-Uiddleport, OhJo
I

...----· Local briefs---.....
Tournament tickets available

The Eastan High School boys will filce Soutbem High School in
tournament basketball game on Saturday, February 23 at Rio
Grande at 8:45p.m. Advanced tickets may be purchased at the Eastem High School alhlctlc offiCe from 8:00-8:30 a.m. and 3:004:00
p.m., for $3.

EMS Runs
At 9:09 a.m., Middlepon squad went to South Second for Ethel
Priddy. Priddy 10 Veterans. At 11 :07 a.m., S}'racuse Road 10
Basban Road for Betty Friend 10 Veterans.
At 1:10 p.m., Rutland squad went to Price-Strong Road for
Gilbert Fitzwaler. He was taken 10 Veterans. At 3:55p.m., Pomeroy
squsd went to Lincoln heights Terri~ Hauser 10 Pleasant Valley
Hoapital At 9:27 p.m., Rutland squad went to Meigs Mine 31 for
John Marquis, who was liken to Hol7ir.Medical Center. At 11: II
p.m., Pomefuy squads and fm: df,patuitent went to a tar iecident 11
Flatwoods and Stale Route 7. Carrie GillillaJito V~s. Macinc
Griffith and Charles Griffith 10 Veterans.
·
At 7:45 a.m., MiddlepOrt Squad went to Lea4ing Cleek Road for
Jobn Lambert, who was treated but 11« transported. ·

sOapbOX. ••

•

Wednelday,Februarf 13, 1991

Eigld )lleOiliC forfeiled bciads and

r ancaiter llld Hillsboro.}
. A lealbship CCI!ference is being
fi ve wore fined ' in' the court of $47 speed.
Williams said that a corporate planned for ch~~J~~ber meetings, · Pomrroy
Fined were Jeffrey Oblinger,
M8ycr Richard Seyler on
spollllli'Ship drive is sliD UDc!etway, according to RobiiUoo. The event Tuesday cveniaa.
Pomeroy,
SS3 1114 COSIS, failure to
and invited businesses who have will be held in con~on Wilh die
!

not already pled~ a IPOOIIOI'IIIip
IO do so. At a cost of $300 to bllsi-

. Ohio Cooperative Extension Service, and a dale wiD be set later.

nesses, lhc sponsorships reduce die
cast of participation f« the youngster from an estimated $400 to
$100. All niCe cars must be BS~e~~~bled by lhc child and • adult, and
materials are ordered from the
Derby hcadquanm in Alaoo.
Clinics will be held to assistlhc
child and his orber parents in' ·
assembling the cars, allhougb 110
dates have been set for the same. .

Seven! members of lhe cbamber, including Executive Direoior/Development Director Eliza.belh Schaad, were not present ·11
tbe meeting, opting instead to
attond a meeting at the Ohio URiversity Inn in Athens regarding
)JOJSible closing of Meigs County
minoa due to Oean Air Act regula-

lioos. ·. . · , · ·

I

conii'Ol, and $163 and COlliS, falao
information to a police officer: •·
Dwayne Qualls, Pomeroy, $2~3 :
and costs, :;rsssing; Ores Bolin, •
Rutland,
and costs, DUI : "
I..Qna Riffle, Pomeroy, $163 and ·
cosu, Cabe information 10 a police •
offar; and Gordon Speacer, New
Haven, W.Va., $20 and~. faillire to wear seathdt

s35

--~-Announcements---....:.:.!,

•o:t_c

Band E, vandalism investigated

Accordinl:

Hospital news ·

I

I

Steinmetz to be returned

David Steinmetz, who was recently transported to SEPI'A Center
in Nelsonville to serve a sentence for breaking and entering, was
. reiumed to the Meigs CoUIIty Jail on Tuesday.
Steinmetz was to appear at an extradilion.hearing on Wednesday.
According 10 Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby, Steinmetz is wanted in the S!ate of California on charge5·of being a
parole absconder. ' . .
.
.
Steinmetz recently pled guilty to brealriiJg and en~ring at the
Delbert Fridley gamge.

---Area deaths-Judson M. White
Judson Milia' White, 79, of Mill
Street, Middleport, died early
Wednesday, Feb. 13, 1991, at
Overbrook Center.
. '
BO!n in Middleport, be. was the
son of the Jato James Earl and Inez
Hoffman White. He was a graduate
Of Middleport High School, a
~member of the Middlepon First
United Presbyteriar) Chun:h where
tie served as and elcb, trustoe and
youth counselor; the American
Legion Feene)' Bennett Post No.
128: and lhc Pomeroy Seni« Citi·
zens. He was a United Stares Navy
etoran of W«ld W•
; Mr. White is survived by his
t.-ife, Helen LouiSe OWells White, a
sister and brother-in-law, Jean and
Ch4rles Seines, California; a sisterin-law; Eloise White, Columbus;
IocaJ nieces and nephews, Joan and
Bob Tewksbary, MiddleJiort; and
Carla Sue and Dennis Saelens,
Middleport; and several other
Dieces and IICJihewa.·
: BesKJes his parerus he was preceded in dealh by a brother, Dan
White.
'
• Private funeral services wiD be
6eld Friday at 2 p.m. at Ewing
f'UIIeral Home with Rev .. O'Quinn
Kelly officiating. Burial, with
·· American Legion graveside mili181)' services, will be in Riverview
Cemetery ..
Friends may call at the funeral
horne on Thursday from 2-4 p.m.
and 7-9 p.rri.
.

v

n.

3 DAYS ONLY

NO PAYMENT
TiLL AUGUST

She was preceded in death by
her husband, Clarence B.
O'Rourke, in 196S; great-grandson,
four sisters and lhree brothers.
Services will he held on Saturday at I p.m. 81 Murmy City Unit- .
· ed Methodist Chun:h with Rev. Ed
Mingus, R.ev: David BoweD, and
Rev . Ja11e Howell officiating.
Friends may call at the Brown
Funeral Home in Murray City after
7 p.m. on Thursday .and 2 p.m. 10 4
p.m. and 7 p.m. 10 9 p.m. on Friday.
Burial will be in Greenlawn
1
Cemetery In Nelsonville. ,
Theodore Strom, 80, of 32390
Bailey RUII Road, POmeroy, died
M011da)' afternoon, Feb. ll. J991
at vCIIQDS Memori81 Hoapital following a short ill11ess. He was a
retired highw.ay worker for the
Stale of Michigan.
Born on Aprill9, 1910, he was
the son of the late William and
Anna Void Saom. He was a voter:
an of the U.S. Navy during World
Warn lllld a member of the Ameri-

lnvi!fi ~ublic

' ,..

lie invited. ·
MIDDLEPORT - Dr. Suess'
"Pontoffel Pock" and "Ira Sleeps
Over" will be shown at the Meigs
County Public Library in Pomeroy
on Saturday at 2 p.m. AU area chi!dren are inviled free of charge.

POMEROY • The youth group
of the Rutland Church of God wiD
hold a carwash m Sawrday from 9
a.m . to 3 p.m . at Pleaser's in
Pomeroy. Cost is $3 per car.

SALEM CENTER • Star
Grange will hold fun night and
' work session on Satutdar at 6:30
. WILKESVILLE - There will p.m. at lhe fire Stl!tion m Salem
be . a · sweetheart dinner at the ,Ce.nter. A potluck, supper will be
WilkcsviDe Pylhian HaU on Slltur- 'held. AU mernbeis urged 10 attond.
day 11 4 p.m. Cost is SS adulis and
$2.50 children. Public inviled.
TUPPERS PLAINS • The TIIP.:
pers Plains VFW Auxiliary will
POMEROY • Belles and Beaus spons« a Valentine Dance on SatWestern Square Dance Club will urday from. 8-11:30 p.m. at the
hold a dance Saturday from 8-11 VFW. buildiliJ in Tappers Plains.
p.m. at the Pomeroy Senior Citi- Music by Jumor White, callet Jim
zens Center. Billy Gene Evans wiD Carnahan and Red Carr. There wiD
be the caller.
be refreshmenrsand door prizes.

'J'+e Red Red Rose
A red rose is pretty,
·
A red rose is sw.eet,
A red rose smells good,
and it i s so neat.
It has preity petals,
lhcy smell so good,
I jl!Sl:JIIi~t take one,
but I don tlalow if I should.'

Where candy and cards
Are made for You and Me.
Valentine is on the
. Fourteenth of February
Candy hearts and
beautiful cards are dancing in
your head.
The candy ile'.ts are ·
.,,~ '.. lhC color of the rainbow

'

'

intreging.
It whispers love!
The Red Rose has a Red petal
so sweet.
.
Wilder and sweet the flower
repeats.
I love you.
Misty Hysell
•'
Grade 5
Racine Elementary

tary

6 Months Same As Cash
No Payment Till August ·
1

3 BIG DAYS

ALL ITEMS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE

..

•

Februarv 14th ~alentine's Day!
" Show your Valentine how much you care ••• purchase your
flowers of $30.00 or more·for Valentine's Day and we'll
· give you one pound of chocolates frH •
"Pickup or Delivered"

.

The choir members, &lt;;J!arldin~
Alkire, Eileen Bowcrs,-Naom.•
Oblinger, Janet Venoy, I'll Thami.
Pauline KcMedy Frances Eslr:e!,
Andrew Miles, Bci Venoy, Cl'llg
v~ lllld RCJIICI' Alldre with Ellz..
abeth Duffy at tho piano. They
SIR" "Amenca the B=••iful"1llld
"TJiis is M Country." "My Co!mttY Tis of ~ee" was lhe closmg
· hymn. Silent prayer was also bold.
I,' )

WINTEI HOME
IMPIOYEMENT SALE
1hru SAT., 2/23/91
!

AKIHUR A. HUNNEL

Deployed to
Persian Gulf

ll~lfti·SlJN

•

9,600 BTU Radiant
Kerosene Heater,
Heating Capacity -

400 Sq. Ft., Burn

109.9$

,Time • Approx. 32

Hours, Fuel
Capacity •· 1.92 Gal.

Double Tank, Safety Features.
We Stock o.,er 100
Wicks.

0' DELL

LUMBER

634 East Main St.
Phone 992-5500
M-F 7 -6:30
'SAT. 8-6

MEIGS ·cOUNTY
REAL ESTATE
OWNERS

The service at the Pomeroy
Church of Christ was dedicated on
Sunday to all serv.iccm~n . and
women by Andrew MUea. n_tm.iSier.
He discussed what iJ his mterpretatiOII of lhe flag. He ll8lcd lhat
red was for the lllood of Christ;
white for the pureness in people;
. and the blue for the hard working
Americans serving with' the mili-

ELIVERY .

LLS

..

Pomeroy church
service dedicated
to servicemen

.

0

!

I

HOLZER-CLIMC
LET'S BE P.EI) PALS·.
.

dancedes
.

I

roo"'·

..

· Then prune any clainaSed roots or
branches, set immediately in pre-.
pai-ed boles, waler wen using one
quarter strength fertilizer water.
Protect the plant from lhc elements.
An upturned bushel basket works.
wen.
Bette Lou Dean's dernonstrstion
was "Return to Romance - AD Season Victorian Decorations." Various sizes 111d shapes of wreaths ·
were covered with spanish moss as
a base. One used potpourri, einnarnon sticks and shiny red apples.
Globe thistle gathered at this bl_ue ·
tint stage and dried was used With
flowerlette ·secuo
· ns of red celosia
with paper ribbon trim on a heart
shaped wreath. Baskets were also
decorated using a variety of dried
pla11t material. Mrs . Dean also ·
dem011strated making paper roses
and roses and mums using ribbon,.
moire and gassamer. Each mern.ber
fashioned a rose from psper Ullder
MrsA. Deanv
. a1 'su.gwne· -n
· co
. ,_. was
en
-served by the hostesses . Door
prizes were awar~ed to Dorothy
Karr and Edna Wood.
·
, Following the meeting a miscci· laneous· auction was held by Mrs.'
Dorothy Karr and Twila Buckley. -

Poet's comer

'

I

mer

'

Calendar Items will be a round and square dance
appear two daYs before an event ori Friday from 8-11:30 p.m. at lhc
and the day ot that event. Items Tuppers Plains VFW Building r~­
mut be ·received in advance to turing F'Iea Market Express. Jam
assure pabllcatlon In the calen- Carnahan will be the caBer. Public
invited.
dar.
MIDDLEPORT -There wiD be
a
sweetheart
dance on Friday from
WEDNESDAY
,
8
p.m.
to
midnight
allhc American
.NELSONVILLE • The HockLegion
An110x
in
MicldlepQn
sponing VaUey Community Residential
sued
by
the
Middleport
Communi•
Center Bosrd ·will meet Wednesday
ASSociation. Tickets are $10 11
at 11 a.m. lithe Quality Inn in Nel- ty
the
door. Music by Crossover
sonviUe.
Band.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Village
.
SATURDAY ,
Council meets in special session at
MIDDLEPORT·
The Grubb
7 p.m. in council chambers.
family singers will sing Saturday 81
at lhc Ash Street Freewill
POMEROY - The Pomeroy 7:30p.m.
Bapust
ClJurch
in Middleport PubMerchants Association will meet
- Wednesday 81 noon in the meeting
~
. l room of Bank One. All members
urged to attend.
CoJ~~manlty

· VBlentitie comes and
They ~ ·~big,
· · ' Valentine goes.
. Mother, I Thank You
or lhe)l can be small,
.
Elmer Benjamin Parsons
Mother,
I'm leaving, I'm proud
I love.red ro~.
Grade6 togo. .
.
don't~ all!
' . ·
Racine Elementary
Please don't
be .grieving, I love
' .
'
· Jennifer Hendricks
you
so,
GradeS
Crystal Bea11ty
Here in· this pocket over my
Racine Elemen181)'
The golden sun was shining
heart,
Down on lhc world of snow
Is the Bible you gave me, your
A Day Of I..Qve
And
when
the
wind
blew
gift
as we pan,
· RAciNE • A support group
. One day I bad a dove,
The
snow
turned
to
dew.
~ My country needs . me, you
meeting for those affected by the
I cooldn 't carry it without a
lalow lhal's true,
Gulf War wiU be held Thursday 81 glove,
The trees are run of snow
.
Pray for me, mother, tiD this war
7 p.m. at the R~;~cine United
As it got clear,
They.
look
like
a
piece
of
dough
is
through,
Methodist Church.
It shed a tear.
·And every night they glow .
God wiD protect me, you must
be
brsve,
They make a big
GALLIPOLIS - Diabetes SupBecaule of my heart is glad
Mother, I tha11k you Cot the
port Group Viill meet Thursday, 7 ..,._y.
·~•·
·•
.
,
J
H
lz
The
ground
is
sound
I
Bible you gave,.
p.m., fifth floor c assroom,. o er '
1will not work or play.
And i! is so round
Medical Centet. 'Register pharma·
1wi1111\lf; go out today,
Mother, I' m wrilling this letter
Its a beautiful ~d
cist Peggy Lee will speak on the .
for I ha'\1~ no sleigh.
That looks like Its found.
topic of medication management.
.....
.
.
b · Cards mny be sent to Bob HoeBarbie Layne 10 say;
!
love
my
Bible,
I
l'CIId
11 eac
flich, a patient 81 Ohio State UniWben:e·ve'to my love,
Gl-ade6
MIDDLEPORT - The AmeriA big ile dove.
Racine Elementary dayAnd hen 1 read it, my Buddies , ver~ily Hospill;l in ~olurnbu~, at
can Legion Feeney Bennett Post ·
It resem cs a big red heart,
dra
w
Oh1o State Umversuy Hospital,
will hold a candlelight service on
lh8l rides in a cart. ..
The~~sed
ScriptUre
they
love
720
Doan Hall, 410 West lOth
Thursday 817 p.m. under the "SupRonald Jones
to
hear,
Ave.,
Columbus, 43210.
Robert E. Lee
pon the Troops" sign thai hangs
Gr.lde6
Robert E. Lee is the
Midst aU this nunult, of earthly
over Middleport Yil':al!e Hall. MI
Racine Elementary
one forme,
lhings,
area mimsters are mVIted to parUc•101EMBEI ·
He rode his ttoop !hough a
.
What peace and comfort the
pate and there will be entertaill:
Valentine Poem
WnH FLOWEIS
defeat of one of the Best Cal- Holy Word brio's,
ment and a speaker. Bring your
To •..,. • booulllutly
When Valentine rolls around
vary,
Mother, don 1 worry, I will be
own candle.
de.lpud funeral
It's time for sharing
safe,
.
•
arriAJienaenl,
Jual
Along wilh giving chocolate
ROben E. Lee had known
Mother, I thank you for the
eall or vll'll
TUPPERS PLAINS - T"ppers candY.
.
it would be a defeat,
Bible Y,OU gave.
Plains VfW, lbUJSday, 7:30p.m., · It s time for caring.
POMEROY
He
had
victoty
at
his
feet.
posthome• .•
FLOWER
SHOP
Molher, a battle has just been
"Tiat r, America Send• Love"
When Dan Cupid comes
He was sure 10 knock
won,
SYRACUSE • There will be a
. He shoors his arrow
PH. 992-6454
doWIHhe
enemies
doors.
You have a hero, now; for a son,
special meetinll of the~r:,~­
AI a gal or a feDow
As he did he said home,
I had been wounded, left !here
ty Board of Mental
on
He floats around like a spalTOW
You
all
are
grown.
·
fordead.
,
Thursd'y at 7 p.m. at the board
.
Joseph Johll Layne
God in His mercy, spared me
offICC.
It's time to send candy
Grade6 instead.
To your flivprite gal or fellow
·
Racine
Elemen181)'
.My Bible saved me, i~ play~d
FRIDAY
With a couple rose
it's pan,
TUPP.ERS PLAINS • There
The gitl is giving a fellow a box ·
TbeRedRose
• It stopped .the bullet aimed at
of candy .
The flower is sweet.
. my heart,·
'
.
Charles Roberts
The fragrance is so reveling and
Your
blessed
present,
my
life
I
Grade6
has saved,
.
Racine Elementary son~L
The Red Rose brings happiness
Mother, I t~ank you for the
to people in disgrace.
.
Bible you gave.
·
A pay of Sweetness
.
Author Unknown
They wrap the Red Rose With ·
A day of sw~mess
Submitled by
white lace.
.
&lt; A day of love
Freda Vanlllwagen
The Red Rose has a S1em lhat IS

can~on.

~I

dance routine. Pictured, 1-r, front, Jessica
CbevUer, Aqle lllckmu, Bellky Mcllltyre. See·
ond row, Janet McDould, ,Jalllle Erwin, Jamie
Ord. Third row, Heather Well, Col11111ey KDapp
and Melissa Dempsey.

'

POMEROY • The Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday at 7:30
p.m. at · the Grace Episcopal
Churcli. Members bring Items for
Hand to Hean Program. Hostesses
are Clarice Krautter and Maida
Mora.

Middleport
Mayor's court

I

WINNING TEAM • The EMfen Jnlor High
Cheerleaders recently placed lbH In tbe Clleer·
leadin&amp; Competition at Plketoll. '11le Dine membtn nr the squad w&lt;rked in preparing their routine wbl~ consisted of two ftoor cheers and a

I

Baker, pastor,

. The February meetillg of the
Chester Garden Club was held
recently at the horne of Maurita
Miller assisted by Eleanor Knight.
Maida Mora, vice preside11t,
conducted lhe meeting. Ron call,
"Share a Romantic Memory" was
imswmd by 12 members.
Devotions by Mrs. Mors were
on "Faith, A Complete Trust and
Confidence,
Unqui'Jslioning
Belief. • She spoke of the JI'Ofusion
of colorful wild flowers lhat heralds spring in the Holy Land and of
the mustard flower, recorded in
bol ff111'th Prayer
·
Mat·~·
•
..,w
.a
syrn
•
for lhc renewal of Lent and servicemen followed.
Springs plans were discussed
and lhe spring TOJiional meeting to
be held in Meigs County in April
noted. An invitation from Femwood Garden Club to an open
meeting at the Zion Church of
Christ on Feb. 19 at I p.m. was
noted.
·
Thank you notes for sunshme
remembrances were read.
Church altar flowers in January
were provided by Maurita Miller
and by Bette Dean In 'December.
Paullne Ridenour gave a paper
on "Unpacking Mail Order Plant$."
She noted lh8l plants should be left
undisturbed in lhe shipping packet
a11d placed in a cool spot until
planung time. If weather conditions
delay planting, a well drained
southern expos~ area shoul~ be
pre~d for temporary planung.
Do not expose roou to mud and
sun even while carrying 10 planting
site. Keep plants in packing cover.

°

.· community .calendar

THURSDAY .
BAS HAN - ., The Carmel
Melhodist Chun:h will have a pancake supper on Thursday. at S p.m.
The chun:h is located on the flflh
road out Bash11n Road. l&lt;,enj~Y, ..

He 11 survived by a stepson,
Richard Shaddian, Tempera11ce,
Mich.; a brother, Morris Strom,
Hancock, Mich.; and a sister,
Dorothy Kumpale, Clawson, Mich.
· Besides his ~nts, he was preceded in death by his wife, Leora
Strom in '1990, three brothers, and
twa sisters.
Funeral ~rvices wiU be held on
Thursday at! p.m. at Ewing F'UIIeral Horne with Rev. Ed Boyer offiCarrie M. O'Rourke
ciating. Burial will be in Bradbury
Carrie Marie O'Rowte, 92, of Cemetery.
Nelsonville, formerly of Murray
Friends may call at the funeral
City, died 81 home Tuesday aCtor- home from 6 10 9 p.m. today. .
noon, February 12, 1991, after an
~tended iUIICSI.
\
• She was born July 20, 1898 m
Amesvine, the daughler of the late
Harvey and N~~~~Cy Barcus Nida.
For 68 years, she was a member
of the Evangelical United
Three people forfeited bonds
Bretheren Church (presently the and four were fmed in the court of
United Methodist Olurch) in Mur- Middlepon Mayor Fred Hoffman
on Tuesday evening.
rily City.
• She held most oflic:es in the forForfeiting bonds were Harvey I .
EUB Cbwch, and was a long- Lambert, Langsville, $460,
time Sunday School teacher. She physcial control under the illfluwas a member of the United ence and $60, left of center; Patrick
Methodist Women and was a 1011(1- O'D~y, Bidwe~. $60, e~pired regtime president of tho Ladies' Aid lSiralion; and VidiiJ. MiUsap, New
.Society. .
. Haven, w.ya., $S4, speed.
• She is survived by two daugh·
Filled WCie Kenny A. Morrisoil,
tees, Mrs. James (Kathryn E.) Rob- Middleport, $10, fictitious tags;
~.Pomeroy, and Mrs. Bob (Beuy Kunis Braloy, Syracuse, $10, fictiL.) Anders, with whom Mrs. tious tags; Brenda L. Lewis, BuffaO'Rourke made her home; 13 lo, W.Va., $42S ~costs and three
IJ'8Ddchildren, 2S great-grandcbil- days jail, physical control under the.
ilren and 11 great-peat-gnindchil- influence; and Vince Laudermilt,
dren.
Middleport, $SO and costS, assauiL
'

.J

A support group for family
members and friendS of me11 "'d
women in the militlly met f« lhe
fust time 1bursday cvC!ling in the
. fellowship ball or the Methodist
Church in Racine.
After introductions, discussions
were held about the mail problems,
about bow 10 be supportive of each
other and about projects lh8l can be
done to keep the patriotic spirit
alive in the area so the men and .
woinen in the military will know
thlllhcy are supporred. ·.
All family members and friends
of lhe mili181)' an inVited 10 attend
the meetings wliich are held every
Thursday at 7 p.m. The next meeting will be held in the feDowship
hall of the Methodist Church in.
Racine.
A video of the Racine parade
and program wiU be shown. One
topic for discussion wiD be w!Iere
10 meet - a pennanent place or by
invitation to different facilities
lluQughout the area.

t

Theodore Strom

992-2188

..

Chester gardeners meet :

MIDDLEPORT • Gideons will
, be ai Ash Street FreewiU B!iptist
.Cbun:h on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
in ~ddleport.

I

Pediatrics lr

Support §roup
.starts meeting

I

is taking orders f« homemade veg- '
Past COUDCilor's to meet
In other business at the meeliDg,
etablc
or chicken noodle soup. The
The Past Councilor's Club of
Accmling to Dr. Robinson, the .
held at Meigs High School, Cham- chamber. is IIOW planning a tole- the Chester Council No. 323 soup wilt be made Monday and
ber President Dr. Nick Robinann phone 01' Ieuer-writing campaign 10 Daughters of America will meet wiD be available for pickup by 4:30
announced that the chamber's area legislators regarding AEP's tonight (Wednesday) 11 7:30 p.m. p.m. lh8l day. Soup will be sold by
81D1ual Spring Banquet will be held recent mnouncement that a fuel at the
baD. Members wear · lhc q11111 for $2. T"o order call 992~arch 9 at Royal Oak Park. switch at the General I ames M.
red and
and unsigned Valen· 5480, 992-3717, or 011 Monday, ,
"Counay COIIIICCiions" wiD be the Gavin Plant may close the local , tine card and pictures of a m -3172. ·
entertainment f« the evening, and mines lllld eliminate over 1200 jobs boyfriend or husband. Erma Cle·
The Meigs Co1;1nty Sh~rifr,s. Department is inves~gating the
a silent auction wiD be held as a in the area.
land, Pauline Ridenour and
breaking and enlenllg 81 Rivemew School near Reedsville over the
fundrsiser
in conjunctiOn with lhc
· Red, wlllte and blue week
weekend.
.
.
Dorothy Myers will be hos&amp;csscs.
·dinner
and
dailce.
Ticli:ets
may
be
Red, white and blue week wiD ,.
.a news release dated Wednesday. lhe dead bolt on
obtained
through
the
chamber.
Dtmce
be
observed flriday .,from 2 10 3:15 •
· the kitchen
was pried off but "e11try was not gained.
office.
The
Gallia
Twirlers
Western
p."'
.. at.P&lt;?fiii!Jid Elementary. The .
· The department also took 11 report from lhc Salisbury Township
'
Dance
club
.
will
bold
a
.
public
IS mVIted to see what has
Square
U'UStees lh8l somCQlie had brOken m,tt four windows'at lhc township
Robinson
reminded
those
in
.
dailce
on
Saturday
from
8-11
p.m;
been
done.
.
· · building at Rocksprings. It is beUeved that rocks were thrown
attendance
of
the
new
chamber
·
V
etenms
Memorial
Hospital
at
the
Headersiln
Community
Con·
.
.
lluQugh the windows.
·
office,
located
in
the
Carnegie
TUESDAY
ADMISSIONS
ter
in
Henderso11,
W
.
Va.
Cbuck
aati..:.
.In other news from the depattment, Jimmy L. Buchanan of Rain- . Building in Pomeroy (the former
Iris WiiWmls, Pcmeroy; Ethel Prid- Marlow will be lhe caBer. Public
bow Ridge lost control of his vehicle and damaged the fence at
· AA.A.m-""" -"'; be
Pomeroy library building). The· dy, Middleport; Betty Frie11d, invited
·
· A 12-step A meetu'£eww
Sand Hill Cemetery in Long Bottom. According 10 the report, · Meigs County·Parts District is
Raci110 and Ralph Oms. &lt;llcsta-.
·
·
held Sunday at 7 p.m. at
J'IPA
Buchanan reported lhc damage to Olester Wells, a cemetery trustee.
sharing the office space wilh the
TUESDAY DISCHARGES Soup to be·aold
.
· office, 117 West Second-Street in
chamber.
Richard Finlaw ..
The Trinity Chun:h of ~meroy Pomeroy.

\

I

'

Kristina Rodger, Mason, w :va.,

Forleiting bonds were Alban
Curtis, Pomeroy, $4S, speed;
Theresa Philli,Ps. Dexter, SS2,
speed; Marguente Erwin, Atbens,
$46, speed; Daniel HaD, ~·
$46, speed; Charles Renfrow, W lowwood, $47; speod; D. Jas Cleland, Racine, $44, speed; MicheDe
Triplett, Pomeroy, ·$46,speeid; .and

The Dally Sentlne~age 8

Wedneaclay, Febf\IWY 13,1991

Pomeroy Mayor's 'court

Coatlllaed lrola paae 1

•

Flowers Wired Wt~rldwide/Previoua Coupon Cash • Carry Only.
64880 SA 124
Portlend, Ohio 46770
18141843-6178

Harris Farms

&amp;ifo~Sbop

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

LAST DAY TO PAY FIRST
HALF 1990 TAXES IS
FEBRUARY 15, 1991 . .
TAXES PAID .BY· MAIL
MUST BE POSTMARKED
NO -LATER THAN .
FEBRUARY 1'5, 1991.
GEORGE M. COLLINS
MEIGS COUNTY TREASUR.R

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�Plge-1Q.....The Dally Sentinel

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Ohio

Weekly lenten services slated

Wednesday, February 13, 1991

Willford birthday ·

Literary Club has meeting

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A party was beld rec:eatlt:sc:J·
elnlo the ftnt binbday of
y
The· Meigs County Ministerial an Churches preaching; March 7, Willford.
A "SCSIIIIIe Street" theme was
Association will again sponsor St Paul Lutheran Church, the Rev.
· weekly Community Ill 7:30 p.m. Roger· Grace of Racine United earned out wilh cake and ice cream
.
Methodist Church preaching; saved to fiCSIS·
:. each Thulsday.
Alll:nt!mg
were
his
pllellts, Ray
The fust service will be at 7:30 March 14, Rock Springs United
and
Kimberly
Willford,
sister, ·
: p.m. on Thursday at Trinity Con- Methodist, Rev. Sharon Hausman
Jamitha
Willford,
grandparents,
; gregational Church. The Rev . of the Alfred· Tuppers Plains· '
!--amar O'Bryant, pastor of the First Chester United Methodist Charge Marie and Howard Bilthrleld and
· Southern Baptist Church, will be preaching; March 21, Grace Epis· Olar1oue Wlilford.
Olhers 81tending were Melvin
the preacher. Olher dates, locations copal Church, Rev. Walter Heinz
·
Van Meter, Mike, Cheryl and
11nd preachers arc: Feb, 21 at of Sacred Heart prt*hing.
Austin Willford, Van, Vickie, Josh
.. Sacred Heart Catholic Chu,rch,
The Community Good Friday and Skylar Willford, Jim Birch·
· · Rev. Roy Myers of G~ EplSCO·
CASSADY ll. WlWOIW
field, Lmi, Tyler and Jake Barnes,
· pal Church preaching; Feb. 28 at service will begin at noon on Fri·
. ·. First Southern Baptist, Rev. day, March 29, at th!l Pomeroy Jake and Misty Birchfield, Mar· and JadeD Honaker, Jl'Citpandpar·
ents, Bernice WillfO!d and Enullelt
1· ·William Middleswarlh, retired piS:. Uni~ Methodist Church: Those of · jorie, Shawna and Holly Davis. .
Sending ~ were Kelvin, Lisa and Qoldie·Lillltfoot.
.- -tor of SL Paul ilnd St John Lulher. all faiths arc welcolll!l.

'f

Mrs. Dwilllt Walllce reviewed
the book '"l'lie Cbineae Emperor"

by Jean Levi It die recent meeting
of the Middlepon Literary Clob
held 81 l'omeroy·Americatc Nuts·
inl Cellll!r wilh Mrs. Roy CasseJI
uhoste&amp;s.
In her review, Mrs. Wallace
stated that the novel was of lhe
Gtca1 Emperor who l!!lified seven
· w~ provinces into China and
built the Oreal WalL She sWCd lh8l
this ruler held abaoluiC powll' ovll'
lives. The Emperor dreamed of
eternity and' be ordered history
books destroyed in order to wipe
· out the pasL She staled lhat he W8S
an obsessed cruel man and a ruth: ·

le.ss mlllipufative and decadent
ruler. .
Mrs. Oeorp
Jr. presid.
ed at the meeting ia wblcli Mrs ..
Roy Cas8ell pve a briof insipt of
her life. Mrs. BerDard Paltz abo
. pvc I brief insight of heir life.
Roll call was iiiii¥Cftd wilh the
mcmben giving • eumple of life
. in isolation.
· ·Refreshments were served by
lheboSias. .

anea

Libra~ closed.
. The Meigs County Library, in

Pomeroy and Middleport. will be
closed Monday in observance of
Ptcsident'fDay.

· ----~---------;~----~--------~--------------~~------------------~--~----COPYRIGHT 11111 • THE· KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
)'RICES GOOO ~UNOAY, FEB. 10; THROUGH SATUR·
DAY, FEB.18, 1.1.1N

"""-ITOM

.

WE RESERVE THE RIGiiT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. NONE
SOLD TO DEALERS.·
MITIIIED mil POliCY-Each o f - odvonlsed looms is roqu~od io be roodily available for
Kroger Store. e111cep1 as spec:ific::allv noted in this ad. If we do run out of an
we will offer you your choice of a.comparable item, when available,
same saving&amp;M a raincheck which wl entide
to purchaiB the advertised
iten1
advertised price within 30 days. Only one vendor coupon WiN . ~ accepted per

voY

item purchased . _

White
dless
Grapes
P0111il

Epstein Barr
syndrome is
specific virus
QUESTION • One of my
friends has been ill for about six
weeks . .She is usually amazingly
full of energy, but not since Ibis
started. She has had a low-grade
fever, sore lhroa1. general aching
and no energy. Her doc tor thioks
she ~as,llpstein-Barr syndrome.
What is this illness?
·
ANSWER · Epstein Barr is a
specific virus which can cause ill·
ness in humans. The most common
illness caused by this is infectious
mononucleosis • sometimes simply
called "mono" • that often arises
during .adolescence but may occur
at any age. The virus invades lhe
body, usually through the mem·
branes of lhe mouth, and damages
many body organs. The mosl common complaint are of a sore throat
with enlarged tonsils, fever,
swollen lymph nodes and general·
izcd aching and tiredness, The
body's defense mechanisms usual. Iy control the infection within three
weeks. No medication has been
shown to speed recovery.
Mono occasionally is a more
serious illness with damage to tbC
blood cells and immune system,
respiratory system, nervous system
and to lhe liver and spleen. Forwnately, this doesn't occur often. An
additional complication is the
development of a chronic "monolike" illness; The symptoms are lhe
same as those of mono, butlhe ill·
neils continues for weeks and
weeks instead of clearing up as
mono does. This may the the ill·
ness your, friend has, or she may
have another condition, ·Chronic

FINANCIAL IIEPORT OF
TOWNSHIPS
For Floool YNr Ending
Docombor 31, 1te0
~.o~&gt;onon T-ohlp.
County of,..._,
''Thlolo on unaudlttcl
Flnonclol Roport"
·SUMMARY OF CASH
BALANCES. RECEIPTS
AND EXPENDITURES
GOV.ERNMENTAL FUNDS
RECEIPTS:

Famili
Medicine
John C. Wolf, D.O.
Associate Professor
of Family Medicine

l•x............ ...... ..... 11.U8
llcenooo. Pormlto
ond Fooo ......... .... ..... 400
lnt-vemrnentol
Recoipto ..............71 .292 '
l n t - ............ ........ 1. t48
All Other Rovonueo ... 7. 720
.TOTAL
RECEIPTS .. ......... 98.21)2

fatigue syndrome, which was pre- swollen that it is nearly impossible
viously lhought to be cauSed by the to brcalhe, but there arc rarely of
Epstein~ Barr virus.
benefit in chroni.c infections. I'm
The symploms of chronic sure that your friend's doctor has
fatigue syndrome are similar· to explained lhe imPc&gt;rtance of ade- G.enerl!l
chronic mono, but there's a greater quale rest and nutrition as well as
Government ........ 20. 154
Public wort.o .......... 44.877
tendency for decreased mental abil· avoiding contact sports.
Hoolth .:., ....•............. 1,878
ities and more musculoskeletal
You should not be worried Copital
Outley ........ 14,171
symptoms. Early in the study of about catching a chronic Epstein· Not• Principal
Ibis ·mteresting illness it was found Batr i'nfection from your friend.
Poymont ...............2 .234
lhat a large percenlage of the suf· Isolation from friends and family is Int . • F-1 Chorv• ....... SII
ferers had antibodies 10 Epstein· not needed or desirable, because TOTAL
DISBURSE ....... ...83,487
Barr virus. Since the symptoms arc the virus is only present in large Totol
R-lpto Over/
similar to mono, it was a simple . enough numbers to cause infection
(Undort Dlob .... : ..•12.708
step to assume the virus was the mille saliva and the blood. If your Fund C.oh Bolonce.
Jan. 1. 1880 .... ...12.174
cause. Further research has shown friend doesn't kiss you or donate Fund
Cuh Bolonco. ·
lhat 95 percent of lhe heallhy adult blood f~ a tran~ you receive.
Doc. 31. 1810 ..... 24.178
population in the United States car- you'll be safe. .In fact, because(!()
TOTALS.
FUND BALANCE
ries signs of previously having an percent of the a.dull population
Cooh .Bolonce. ·
Epstein-Barr infection ever} though have a few of the Epstein· Barr Fund
Jon. 1 .. .. ..........; .. 12.174
tfie majority don't remember hav· viruses present in their saliva evlen Fund Cooh Bolonco,
Doc . 31 . 1180 .....24,879
ing mono . Chronic fatigue syn· though they are healthy. you're
Fund Cooh Bolonco
drom!) is caused by one or more probably safe even if She did kiss
Dopooltory Bol. ....•.. 28.073
lhings we don't understand today, you • but don't teSt your luck! She Tot.
Truo . Bel ........ 28.873
but it is not caused by the Epstein· will, though, need your support and LOll Outotendlng
caring as she recovers from her
Chlcko .. ........ ........4,894
Barr virus.
TOTAL
BAL . .. ... ...... 24,878
Once
Esptein_Barr
infection.
QUESTION • If She does have
SUMMARY OF
chronic mononucleosis, what recovered, she wiU ha~e a life-long
INDEBTEDNESS
should she do and what should I immunity to a second infection.
OUTSTAN 01 NG
Jon. 1, 1890
do?
TOTAL ........ ............ .2.234
"Family
Medicine"
Is
a
weekly
ANSWER - There arc no medi·
RETIRED
column.
To
submit
questions,
cation lh8l arc effective 81 clearing
up this illness. The drugs acyclovir write to John C. Wolf, D.O.,
and prednisone are used when the Ohio University Colle1e of Osteosymptoms of the diaeaae are aevere, · pathic Medicine, Grosvenor Hall,
. such as when the tonsils are so Athens, Ohio 4!701.

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U.S. Grade A Rockingham

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MULTl,f'URPOSE

Lpal Direct ··
Clllllll'

Chicken

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Zl-oz.

TRYING IT OUT • This sample soapbox
derby car was on display at Pleaser's Restaurant
in Pomeroy recently, and Billy Kennedy was
eager to give it a try. Kennedy is the son of Billy
and Lilley Kennedr of Rutland. The Meigs ·

Breasts........:........... lb.

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"SILVER PLATTER"
!SOLO IN PKGS . OF 10·10.5-LBS.t

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NORTH ATLANTIC

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Fresh Ocean · ~
Perch Fi

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9 Lives
Cat Food
&amp;-oz.

Pound

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FRESH CUT

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Colgate
Shave Cream
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Kroger 1%
Lowfat
Gallon

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992-6782.

Ohio's Wild Birds was the edu- Also seeds and infonnatinnal hand·
cational topic when the Rutland outs will be researched by Mrs.
Friendly Gardeners met recently 81 Fetty. with Mrs. Bolin to contact
lhe home of Kimberly Willford.
the local litter control agency for
Following devotions on the literature for distribution to the
theme "Open Mine Eyes" by Helen community on Apri114.
Steiner Rice, read by Janet Bolin, ·
Garden therapy will continue 81
members answered roll call by the Meigs Extended Care Unit at
naming a favorite bird
Veterans Memorial Hospital. Mrs.
A video from the Ohio Associa: Fetty and Mrs. Edwards met wilh
tion of Garden Clubs Iibnlry, enti· residents to make corsages in a
tied, "Something Wild," a feature Valentine theme : The need for
on wild birds, was Shown by Mar· more club involvement in the seagaret Edwards, chainnan. . .
sonal projects was noted.
Mrs. Willford read a score of
Judy Snowden gave Ups on 94, excellent rating, for the comfeeding winter birds locally, noting . bined clubs flower show held in ·
that suet is good for the insectlov-. September.
ing birds, such as bluebirds and ' Members were invited 10 an
woodpecters. Table scraps can be open meeting of the Fernwood
offered to the mockingbirds and Garden Oub on Tuesday at l p.m.
robins; while chickadees, titmice wilh a program on Creative Use of
and nuthalches all like sunflower Herbs by Meigs County Extension
seeds. Food should be offered from Agent, Cindy Oliveri, and 10 anolh,
feeders in a place safe from preda· er open meeting hosted by Middletors, out of severe weather and cov- port Garden Club held recently.
ered with a top or in a hopper to Meigs County clubs arc in charge
protect the birds and their food sup· of lhe OAGC Region II meeting
ply. Birds shoold he fed year round on April 27 at Salisbury Elemenas much garden dam~ge is done by tary .
birds lhat are hungry or lhirsty.
Mrs. Snowden won lhe traveling .
Joanne Fetty : president, gave prize brought by Mrs. Bolin and
garden ti_Ps for February, noting Marie Birchfield won the door
that now ts a good time to do plan· prize.
ning for 1he coming spring. She
. Mrs. Bolin has had the recent
cited plans for 1he community displays in the window of the Rut·
flower bed project at the Rutland land Post Office, featuring different
CiviC Center, planted by the club.
uaes of, gourds and more

recently with a display infonning
the public about the forthcoming
Ameriflora event to be held, in
Columbus as part of the 1992 ccle·
bration.
The scheduled auction for lhe
next meeting has been postponed
until Marth. Members are to meet
with hosless Suzy Carpenter on
Feb. 27 to view slides of flowers
with Rev. William Middleswarlh.
and All-American Selection win·
ners by Mrs. Willford. Garden tips
will be by Marjorie Davis.

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1t 2&amp;t 81
3034B Volley Bello Rd .
R..:t... Ohio 48n1
(2) 13. 1tc

A candlelight vigil to hoDQr the
troops serving in Operation Descn
Storm in the Middle East will be
held Saturday at 7 p.m. at Royal
Oak Resort
IJiU Siuckey, vice president, will
conduct the event .as master of cer·
emonies, with soloist, Johnnie
Belinda , singing the National
Anthem. Drew Webster Post No .
39 will conduct a flag prcaenlation .
Rev. Carl Hicks will be the guest
~er.
_
· ,l.arry Bunger, manager and viet·
nam vetei'BII, will read the list of
list or troops and initiiiiC the candlelighting. During the anlleli,ht·
in.« process the En~ U01ted
Metllodist Church Chcnr will sing.

Po9•

Dlvloion of
Reclo11111tlon.
Fountoln Squ-. Buldlng
H·3,
Columbuo,
Ohio
43224, w.ltton thirty doya
of tho loot dote of publ ico·
tlon of IIIIa notlco.
r·.
121 13, 20, 27: (3) 8 4tc

srr..t: thence S. 4 deg

150 39" W. olong the ••lot·

lng contorllno of Pog•
StrMI, 528.88 f - 1~ 1
point: thonco 8. 34 dog. 04'
00 " w. olong • Uno ond poo·
olngon IMn pin ot40 .87t.er
o lotol diouonco of• 129.33
toot to on Iron pin; thence S.
87 dog. 04' 48 " W. olong o·
lin•. 113.45 twit to on iion
pin; thence S. B2 dog. 58'
20" W. along 1 llno. 71 .00
foot to on Iron pin In tho

Public Notice

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtu• of on Order of
grentora northeaat property
Solo lo.. tcl out of IM Com·
comoo; thence S. 32 dog.
mon
"'-•
Court
of
Molgo
ADDEDUM TO ITEM 8
County, Ohio, in tM cooo of 33' 09" E. olong th• gron·
SOUTHERN OHIO COAL
tora 1111 p~operty line ahd
Dlomond Sovlngo • ~oon
COMPANY - MEIGS
putllng on Iron pin in tho ox·
Compony, Plolritlff.
vo.
MINE NO. 2
lotlng northerly right of woy
11
ol.,
Dt·
Sommlo
P.
Plonto.
.. $0uthet'n · Oh.l o . Cool
llno of Powoll StrHt 11 ·
fendantl,
upon
1
Judgment
Compony, P.O . Box 490,
147.84 1 to toot diotonu
therein
rondortcl,
being
Atheno. Ohio 41701 hoo
of 172 .1111 feet too point In
Cooo
No.
90·
CV·2481n
oold
.,bmitttcl oppllcotion Num·
th• grentorl aouthe111 propbor 11· 03111·23 to oovl• . Court • .1 will ottw; for loll 11 erty corner end the exlltlng
tho
front
door
of
the
Court·
.
cool mining permit 0 · 0315.
centerline of Powell Street:
to tho Ohio Doport,...nt of houM In POmeroy, Mtige
thonco
115 dog . 110' , 3"
Count\&gt;.
Ohio.
on
tho
15th
Noturol Rooourau, Dlviolon
W. elong the g,.ntora aouth
doy
of
Morch,
1891
,
ot
of Roclo,...llon. Tho permit
property lin•· end the e~~~:l1t·
oreo lo locore.t In Molgo 10:00 o.m ., lho following
h1g centerline of Powell
llinde
and
tenement•.
10County. Colurnblo Town·
StrMI, 108.24 loll IO rho
lhip, Soctlono 19. 25, 211 cotod ot 1282 Powoll
rool point of beginning for
Middleport.
Ohio
end 31 . ond Mligo County.
tho lond herein doocrlbod;
Solem Townohlp, Beotlono 4117110. A complotologol do·
rhenco S. 55 dog. 50' 13"
tcripdon
of
the
r•l
ettatels
17, 23 ond 24 on the prop·
W. continuing olong ooldlino
orty of Southern Ohio Cool •• follows:
70 twit to 1 poinl in th• gron·
Situoto In Section 211.
Compony. The .permit oreo
tors 1outhwe1t property cor·
Town
1,
Rongo
1
3.
Soli•
encompeuee117 ecre1 end
nor; rh.,.u N. 32 dog . 00'
lo locottcl on tho WllkoovHito bury Townohip, Vlllogo of
27 ~ ' W. along t!lo gronror1
Middleport,
Molgo
County
•
.
ond Voloo MHio 7Yo Minute
We.-:
property line •nd p...
U.S.G.$. quldronglo mopo. Start of Ohio ond being · 1irig an iron pin In the exl•tmore
fully
doocribod
••
fol·
·
opproxlmotoly
1.1 mlloo
lng northerly right of way
oouth- of Point Rock. lowe:
llno of Powell Street line and
Comm.ncing at an jron
Ohio.
pa11Jng an Iron pin In the exTho opplk:1otlon propoooo pin in thi •outh..•t comer
loting northerly right of woy
to Incorporate .11 1 part of it1 of lot Number 9 of Foirlono
line of Powell Strut at
porn111n.,.t permit o blootlng Subdlvialon 11 recorded In
25.01 feet 1 totol dlotonco
Plot look 4, Pogo 1 15 ond 1I
pion.
of126
.01 feettoenironpin;
In
tho
rocordo
of
the
Moigo
Tho oppllcotlon io on fllo or
thence
N. 5&amp; dog. 110' 1 3"
tho offlc:o af tho Molgo County Rocordor'o Office
E. olong I line, 70.00 fHI lo
the
oxlotlng
wootorly
ond
County
Recorder, Moigo
on Iron pin; \hone• s .. 32
County
Courthouoo, St· right of way line of Pogo
dog. 00 ' 27 " ·e. olong otino
cond It-t, Pomeroy. Ohio Stf'MI; thence S. 811 dog.
and paealng an ir'?n pin ln)he
411788 for public vlwNing. 24 ' 21 • E: olong 1 line.
IConrlnutcl on Pogo 13')
Written comments or re- 20 .00 toot to o roll rood oplko
quett• for en· informal con- In tho ulotlng contorllno of.

PubliC Notice

a.

srr-.

The ceremony will close with
lhe sinptg of patriotic songs lead
by solorst Johnnie Belinda,
The public is invited to aaend.
Those attending should bring their
own candle.

Layette shower

A baby showll' was held recently fa Tammy Woodard atlhe Vic·
u.-y Baptist Church in Middleport
The shower was given by Mrs.
Shidey Woodard. Attending were
Frances Oldaker, Phyllis Hudnall,
Joy Hysell, Tonyli Woodard,
Shirtex Woodard, Cora Woodard
and Billie Hyaell. Prizes WII'C won
by Tonya Woodanl, C&lt;n Woodard
and Joy Hysell.

Pal Arnold presented a cultural
program on "Meeting &lt;;hanges:
The Nature of Change and How to
Handle It," 81 the recent meeting of
the Xi Gamma Mu Chapter, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority held at the
home of A.R. KnighL
Tina Blevins, a transferee, was
welcomed into the group with a
formal ceremony cQnducted by
Shelia Harris.
'
. Several items as well as a monetary donation were presented to
Janet Peavley who expressed her
IIJlllrCCialion for the ~htfulness.
Forms were received for mem·
bers to send in their favorite reeipes
b a cookbook lh8l International in
compiling. State convention infor·
mation wu lllo reeeived. It will be
held May 31-June 2 in Cleveland.
Registration will ~ approximalely
$70.
A letter from Norma Torres,
Meigs County Heallh Department;
asking for donations toward the
purchase of child restraints was
read to the members but no action
·was laken.
. Members were reminded of the'
movie and pizza party on March 5.
Newsletters b the troops in the
Gulf 'are in lhe fmal stages and will
soon be mailed. So far, 88 names
are on the list and it is updated
periodically.
.
Jackie Hoover, Niesel Gerard
and Carolyn Gr,ueser recently
aaended a Meigs County Fairboard
meeting to .obtain infonnation on ·
changes for the 1991 Mci~ County
Fair. This year's fair will be six
days long.
The next meeting will consist of
a workshop in which members will
make and Easter bunny for $20.
Bring scissors. Sharon Pratt and
Barbara Welsh will have the cullllr·
alrepon.

•ALL WOMEN'S DRESS
·&amp; CASUAL SHOES
•ISOTONER &amp; DEAR·
FOAM SLIPPER$

rand

\

I

ference m•v be eent to the

PUbliC Notice .

The February meeting of the
Asbury United Melhodist Women
opened with a reading by Hope
Moore, "All I Really Need to
Know I Learned in Kindergarten."
Marcia Kafr led the group in
prayer and Beulah Ward read "If I .
Had Not Life." There were 23 Shut·
in calls reported.
•
It was noted that work will
begin on conlributions for lhe Fes·
tival of Sharing.
.
It was suggested that members
do more visiting of the sick and

shut ins and the group noled that
lhey would like to visit Sine Cern.
Helen Teaf&lt;ird ~sented a program entitled ' Seasons of a
Women's Life" on Naomi. Mary
Cundiff closed with "A Missing
Bible" and she served refreshmeniS.
Attending were M;lry Cundiff,
Buelah Ward, Marie Houdashelt,
Man:ia Karr, Ann Sauvage, Helen
Teaford, Hope Moore, Mary Lisle
and Harriet Sinclair.

~ALENTINE'S

DAY
Thursday, Feb • .14th

The Perfect Gift ...

TIMEX WATCHES

30°/o OFF

COMPLETE STOCK

SWISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy
iioniiiih loiOCillliiU.,.;·iiJ;ii:-cii;i;.

ii'"'• ;.:Pi..

Ronlld H.nntng. R.Ph.
Mon. thru ht. 1:00 •.m. 10 1:00 p.m.
lund., 10:00 e.m. to 4:00p.m.
PAESCRIPTIONI
PH. 992· 2958
E. Main
Frltndly lientlce
Pomlfoy, OH.
, op., Wool&lt; Nlahl• "Ill 1

Mason ·family Restaurant
Thursday ·Night is

Candlelight vigil planned

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REGULAR, SENSITIVE SKIN

Lonp Stim
V1sa Rosas
P•• Wrapped 0..

•

County Soapbox Derby Is acbeduled to be held
i.n Micldleport in June. I1formadon about the
dtrby can be obtained from Roger Williams at

Rutland Friendly gardeners meet

Fresh Assorted
Pork Chops

~

TOTAL ,,,',,,. .. :........... Z.Z34
I c.tlfy tho foll-g re·
pon fD bo -..ct ond '""'·
to the boot of my knowl·
tclgo:
..
Dllf1llhy A. Ro•bony.

Mu meets

2J.OJ :

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Public Notice

Xi Gamma Asbury Church women meet

Cleanser .

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PubliC Notice

PUblic Nota

Ohio University
College of Osteopathic Medicine

Lysol
Deodorizing

•'..

The Dally Sentlnei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO .

rl'i\LI!\N

~IC ~I rr

4 P.M. - 9 P.M.

•Spaghetti
•Lasagna

•PURSES

20°/o

OFF

AU WOMEN'S
ATHLETIC SHOES

htrita_gt houst

•

MIDDLEPORT

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All Dinners Served WiJh Our ali-U·Care-To-Eat
Soup, Fruit&amp;: Salad Bar &amp;.Garlic Bread, ·
Or Try One Of The Other Fine Menu Selections .

·Take Out Ord.ers Available.
"Senior Citizens Receives 10% Discount

·mle

SHOE PLACE

•Chicken
Cacciatorie

992-5627

Mason Family Restaurant
Rt. 33

(304) '1'73-5321

Ma90n, WV

�1891

· Wednelday, February 13, 1891

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BULLETIN:BOARD

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Prkea Effective
2-13·91 through
2-16·91 While
Quantities Last.

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. PLE~SE USE COURT ST. ENTRANCE

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SIMONS PICK-A-PAIR

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The Daily Sentinel has.
an enormous amount of
·Happy Ads, In Memory
Of, Etc., dating back at
)east to 1988. Ptctures
must be ptcked up at
The Daily,Senbnel office
before March 30th to
avoid being destroyed.

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Long ·Stem

ose-s t

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Surp
. rise her with a ~\.quet of.long
stemmed roses from ~e Big Bear
Floral Shoppe. Then, juSt to be
different, deliver them ~Unielf instead
of having Ralph the florist drop them
off. And oh
. yes, this is a jJreat
. price!

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·Boxed With Greenery

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Available In Stores' With Floral ShllJlpes, See Store List Below ·. ·

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Check

Sweet Tasting ·

Here

·Lob.s ter
Tail 7 oz. Size

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Previously Frozen

BONELESS
Beef Rib ·E ye or · .
Beef Rib Delmonico

Surf &amp; Turf. Admit it, you don't ·even
know if she likes Lobster, that's why
we suggest this great combination.
And if you haven't the slightest idea
how to prepare this feast, just ask the
Big Bear Butcher. He knows how.

Steaks

99

Public Notice

Public Notice

{Contlnuod from Pogo 1 11
ulotlng northllly right of
way llno of Po-11 Stroot at
100.00 fHt • total dlotonco
of 1211.01 feet to tho point
of beginning end containing
0.201 ecroo.
Togothor with en Hoe·
mant for ln. .u-eorooo beIng flftMn 11111 loot In width.
- e n d one·holf 17.111feot
on ol....,. ilde of tho fllllowlng cloocrtbed centerline;
Cornmericing at an iron
11in In the -southooot comer
of-Lot N u - 9 of Folrler\o
Subdlvlolon oo recotclod In
Plot Book 4, Pogo 11 ond 1II
In tho recordo of Motgo
County Rocorcloro Office
end tho exiotlng wllltllrty
right of way line of Pogo
- ; thence S. 85 dog.
24' 21" E. along o llno,
20.00 foot toerollroedoplko
In tho ulotlnt centerline of
Page StrHt: thence S. 4
clog. 50' 39" W. .along tho

""litlng centerline of Pogo
Stroet 528.811 foot to •
point; thence S . 34 clog. 04'
00." W. long • line end
olng en lton pin at 40.97 foot
o total dlotenco of 129.33
loot to on Iron pi~; thence S ,
87 dog. 04' 48" W. along o
line, 193.411 foot to on Iron
pin; thMce S. 82 dog. 58'
20" W. olong. • line, 71 .00
feet to an iron pin In the
·grentoro northeeot property
comer; thence S. 32 dog.
33' 09" E. olong tho a•••·
tara ea8t property line end
poulng on Iron pin In tho ••·
toting n«~horly ;ight of way
line of Powell Stroot ot
147.14 loot • totool dlotence
of 172.8G - t o o point In
tho or-oro oouthellt property corner ond tho ulotlng
contorilno of Powoll St-t;
thence S. 55 dog. 110' 1 3"
W. along tho arantorosouth
property Hno •nd tho oxlotlng centerline of Powell
Stroot, 18.74fHttotherool

2

Each

Fresh From Our Bakery

Heart Shaped,
Valentine Cake~

Check
Here

A Friend

1

14 oz.
Size ,·

To ill of our friends who remembered us at the
time of Grace's death. we want to Thank you.
You remembered us with aifts ofllowers. food,
calls and cards in abuandance, you visited with usat
the funeral home and attended the setvices ·at the
church. These thinas all helped us at this sad time
- knowina that you cared made it easier.
Special thanks to Rev. Paul Taylor and Re~.
Samuel Clay for their wotds of comfort and th!1r
prayers. Also thanks to those who present~ spec tal
music, and the pallbears who took the1r time to be
with us.
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. The Rutland EMS responded to our call for help
and did all within their powtt to help Grace.
Also thanks to thr staff at Wauah-Halley-Wood
Funeral Home for their help withthearra111ements
and kind consideration of our feelinas at this time.
The members of the Rutland Freewill llltptist
Church and the Rutland NaDrene Church were especially thouptful.
Each act of kindness means more to us then you
can imaaine and we will never foiJtt them.
Our loss is Heaven's pme. Thank you f~m the
family of Grace Ellis who died Jan. 20, 1991.
Husband Dale, sons and dauahters-in-law, Bob
· and 'pegy Gene and Vickie; arandchildren,
Richanl Eupnt, Bobby Dale and Trace,y; sisters
and bfothers·in·law Ellen and Bredy Gilbert and
Helen and Gleason Gilbert and brother,
Richard Doualas Darst.

ce·Cream~2t~1·
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For Emergency Use Only!

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Dear

Check

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I didn't listen .to my good friends at Big Bear

flere

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and follow t~eir ~asy four point Valentine
Checkli~t- SO here it is February IS.and I'm in
for twelve months of a.gony for forgetting
Valentine's Day 1991.

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I admit that I am forgetful and from now on
when Big Bear suggests that i do something, 1
will listen.

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Whatever you do, don't lorjet to atop
~ the Greeting Card diaplay In Ylrtually
. every Big Bear. It's a nice finl ...ing
touch to a wonderful evening. We know
SOBle of you wiD ignore thla cheddl8t,
10 to the right Is a handy Valentine
ga ietlng that you can quickly and easily
pei'IIOD8llze, If you want the pea feet
Valelltlne's Day, just follow these loar
simple stepL If you choose not to, don't
bl•me
us, .we
.
. cUd everything we coald.

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This certificate Is your assurance that I wHI
prepare one home cooked meal (menu of your
choice) and yes; I will settle for buying nothing
less than top quality Big Bear products' and
services.
Please forgive me. •
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REGISTERED NURSES

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I LONG STEM ROSES available in tbe FLORAL

· jl · 1 SHOPPE at Gallipolis Big Bear Location only,
:J while they last.

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Join the Healthcare Family at Ve·
terans Memorial Hospitsl. lmmedi·
ate openings for Registered Nurses
to work in Emergency Room, Home
Health Nursing, Special Care Unit,
and Acute Care (Med.·Surg.). Sa·
lary commensurate with experience. Excellent fringe benefits.

I '

; CONTACT:

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Help Want6d
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card Of Thanks

CARD OF THANKS

Beat ·Premium
(:h~r..Y Vanilla

· For dessert, we suggest this nqvel
heart shaped cake with Big ~r's ·
very own Cherry :Vanilla ice cre.am. If
you like you can take credit for
baking the cake yourself, but don't
expect her to belive you.

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
Ooorgo M. Colllno.

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Rhonda Dailey, RN. B.S.N.
Director of l\lursing
Veterans Memorial Hospital
116 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy. Ohio 46769
(614)992·2104, Ext, 214.

•••

Public Notice

Public Notice

end 2 -

•-rd.

""tor"

________._________

·Bu.st· ness
se rv·Ice s

Meiga County Treaaurer,

Plein tiff
Yo.
Tho Ohio Velloy Monufoct·
urlng Corpor1tlon. et 11.
Defendant
CASE NO . 90·DLT·01
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
To W. A. Oobotn, whooe

~=======::;'t:=::;;;:~;;;;;;:::;

SIGN
' s

l11t known· eddresa waa

Tupporo
Plelno,
Ohio
411783; To W. Fred Ooborn,
Who• ..It known addr..•

woo Tupporo · Plolno, Ohio
45783; To Audrey Cheval·
tor, whooo loot known ad·

who• lalt known addreaals

unknown; To W. F. Kampf,
who•l•lt known 1Ufdre11 ia
unknown:
To Andernn
8rothoro
Sawmill, · Inc.,

thence nonh 4 rode to the

center of the uld ooctlon
No, 31: thence weot to tho
piece of beginning, contooin·
ing 33 end 87/100 ecroo,

who• Iaiit known addreaala
unknown; you ere hereby

Manufacturing Corporation,
it 11, Detendent. This action

hoo
been eulgned ceu
llumbor 90-DLT ·01 end lo
l'""dlng In tho court of Com·
mon PINo of Molgo County,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45719.
The object of tho coin·
plaint lo to foreclooo tho delinquent real eltate taxea
egalnlt the real estate
located ol:
Porcel 1 : Situated In tho
County of Molgi, Ststs of
Ohio, end In lhe Townohlp of

more or 1111.

Dotd.Fioferencoo: Volume
1110, Pogo 37; end V&lt;!lumo
234, Pogo 411, Metoo
County Deed Rocordo.
Porcol 3 : Tho following
deiCrlbed
premitee, eitu·
ueted In tho Townoillp of
· Orongo, County of Mota•
end State of Ohio end
bounded end clo~j:rlbod eo
followo: Baing In Section
No. II, Townlhlp No. 4 and
Rengo No. 12 of tho Ohio
Compeny'a Purcha•. and

beginning in tho middle of
State Highway No. 880, on
tho North line of Section No·.
II, 44 rado 14~ feet Woot
from thl Northuat corner of
oeid Section No. 5; thence
welt 28 roda1 01f• fHt to the
Chrlotion Church lot; thence
South 8 rodo; lhonco Woot
10 rodo; thence South 21 'h .
rods; th'ence !:111 52 roda

card Q( Thanks

1

I wish to express my
thanks to all the
lovely people · who
helpd during my re·
cent heart attack
and surgery. To
Pomeroy emergen·
'cy squad, Veterans
Memorial staff, with
a special thanks to
Dr. Hunter, the transport unit, .the won·
dertuJ staff of sur·
geoDit and crew at
Grant Hospital; my
famUy and friends
for your support and
prayers and my
friends and neigh·
hors ·at the
Ma·
pies. I ~preclate everything so . very
much. Thanks.
Louise llelnes

5

Real

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EOUALHDUUrfG

, OPPOIITUNfTY

R. l. MASH
CARPENTRY

pr•ml•• -

by Forreot A. Word ond Eule

Subject to on on end goo

deod
doted Auguot 24,
1946 end rocorded In Book
163. et Page 817 of Dood
Flecordo of Mote• County,
Ohio;
oxcopt 0.311 acre
thereof convoyed by H. A.
Cole and Onolto .Coto, huo·
band Md wHo, to Ida Allee
cooper by cloed dated AprH
3. 1947, end rooorclod In
· Book 1 119 ot pogo 230 of

24th, 1948, ond ·rocordod In
Vol. 41, pogo 3B of t. ho

uld DHd Flocordo.
Beine lho.u""' rNI ootote
conveyod to .H. A. Cololum·
bar Co., Inc!, by Hornor A.
Md Onolto Colo by deed re·
cordod in Deed Bool! 181
Page 204, Melgo County

oil books, original window
stldror, fully lo4*d wl,.
dllulor -pll111o, t~cellortl
condi~M, black/doe drln.
·

~!":ndhl~.:::· ~~~~;· :Y ~~~f~:::~~· !':rl~f.

~dRecorda.

71

Autos for

Sale

4 Dr., 1 owner, ol r•ordt.

$16,100.00.

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61•·2•7·•161
1

Real Estati General

T

: GROHEOM
,.~
't :..-.~.. ROOM .
'' ·~_,__
I t G uom1'ng

C

1986 JAGUAR XJ6
VANDEN PIAS

omp 1 1
For All

614 • 992 • 6820
P-or. Ohia

2-11·11·~•

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DOTTIE 5.

Happy Ads

•Room Additions
•Kitchens • Baths
•VmyI S'd'
I ntg
•Restor$tion

·

•Repair Work

lreeds
·
....:.
EMILEE ME111nAR
Owntr &amp; Operator

205 N. Soc .... 51rHI
IIDDUPOIT, Olllli 45760
Offlco 614.992-2116
HilMI 614-992-5692

POMEROY. OHIO
992-2259

•Garages

r .

iuiiio~~:: .. nc k l TT

11101111

WeN...t

992·5526
POMEIOJ, OHIO

•Remodeling and
Home Repaira
•Roofing
•Siding
•Painting

NO JOB TOO SMALL
. FREE ESTIMATES

CEDAR
CONSTRUCTION
992·6648 or
698-6864

t2·31-10-tln

:====~----­
USED
•o•nwuum
APPUANCES

WASIIIIS-$100 op

DITIS-$.. up
IEFIIGWfOIS-$100 op

IAIIGIS-Goo·llo&lt;.-$1 U .,

YOUNG'S

FllfiZUS-$125 up
MICIO OYINS-$79 up

CARPENJEI SERVICE

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE '

-Room Addition•

-ou.., won

-Eioct~col ontl i Plumbing
-Concrete work
- Roofing
-lnt•lor • Exterior
Pointing

BIRTHDAY!
Mom is 32 today.
WE LOVE YOUI

$56,00,~., ~'l!''1

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· Jessica

Pomwey,

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••-tilling

/if'~'
""TUU'iu: 1&lt;1 At A1TT ,\l,':.l

Stop

ROCK ·SPRINGS ROAD - Great location - and approx. I
acre of ground with a one stQrY homelhal has vinyl siding, L·
. shaped deck, rear porch, satellite dish, and has 2 bedrooms.
Has an assumable loan. Could be yours lor $2 ,000 down and
assume a loan of ·$27,039.90 wrth a 9\1% rale for 28\1 yrs.
Payments are $270.00 a month which includes insurance &amp;
taxes.

VACANT ACREAGE IN SALEM TWP.- Approx. 57 acres of
nice meadows plus wooded acreage. Housing site or hunting
. land. REDUCED TO $19,900.00.
PRICE REDUCED on thiS country home. This home features
3 bedroollls, I bath, all electric with a 2 car garage, storage
building all on approx. r acres of land. IMMEDIATE POSSES·
SION- MOVE RIGHT IN AT ONLY $34,000.00.
THE PERfECT PLACE FDI AN OLDER COUPLE OR fOR THE
NEWLYWEDS- In town one floor plan home close to ever·
yth ing! 2 bedrooms, I bath, nice .kitchen cabinels on a
66'xl66' lot. Just perlect lor 2! ONlY $19,500.00.

RUTLAND - Smith Run Rd.- Beaulilol slart, approx. 3
acres ol vacanl ground with a dug well, barn, stock tank, and
is fenced .
$13,500

POMEROY - COUNTRY BUNGALO!f - Out of town. Re·
cently remodeled , garage 2·3 bedrooms, equipped kitchen .
All this. for $14,900.00.
.

· RUTLAND- Stete Routel24 - Building lot. Big 2 acre lot
that is level and has a lot ol llontage. Public water and elec ·
tric available.
.
· JUST $7,000

You'll have a wonderful ltelln&amp; when you pul.yourHlf .in
our hands . Wheth.- you'ro houn huntln1. nllin&amp; or both
- your lilt.-esls aro "QUR" ltlt.-1111 Our beckpound of
experltnct Is tKttnslva .. :and Is rAdY to serw youl Satisfied clients uva madt our lf9UIItioa. So wtly110tco11111n
and put your housln&amp; problems in our hands! .

POMEROY -NO DOWN PAYMENT- Owners will carry 2nd
mortgage on this two story home on a good street. Has a lar.ge
family room, some ha«&lt;wood floors, 3 bedrooms, and a d&gt;n ·
ing room. Has vinyl siding lor low maintenance .
ONLY $24,000 ·
LANGSVILLE - Bil Level Lot - Side sifting porch, new
kitchen, vinyl siding, new ·carpeting, 2 bedrooms, big living
room, plus a 3 room house for storage or rental. '
JUST 125,000
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CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES .&amp; GARAGES
"At

Reo10nable Prices"
.

9·9·2101
or 111. t•t-2160
PH.

'

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALlS

4·16·11·111

c....,,

Freellthllatft

INDIPINDIIT

915·4473
667·6179

CAIPIT CLIANUS
Dllll nLI fLOOI CAB

5-ll·'to lfn

RUTLAND- Beech Grove Rd. -Appro!. 2 acres and acute
Ill story' home with 3 bid rooms, a deck, garden area , part
basement. ·a nd a dining room. Own er wants an oiler.
\ $26,000

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Ohio,

II·14-'90 llr)

•Garag~l

~

10/lOfll Ho

992-6215

.....
"·-·
•c-...-te

General

POMIIOY, OHO

V. C. YOUNG Ill

BISSEU &amp; BUllE
CONsTRUCTION

&amp;

992-5335 .or 915.3561
Acress from Post Olflco

{FREE ESTIMATES I

DEXTER- Here our home in the country- Secluded 3
acre wooded home sile and a newer "Barn" style home in
great condition 3 bedrooms 21&gt; baths, full basement are
just a few qf the features thishome offers. This is a "Steal" at

206 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
. OFFI'CE 992·2886/HOME 992·6892
DOTTIE S. TURNER , BROKER

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dr111 waa long Bottom,

Ohio; To Hornen 0 . Ooborn,
who• loot kno- eddren
W81 Long Bottom, Ohio
411743; To Ouy G. 8ogg111.

named defand1nt In 1 leg~l

Our hearts ere very Hd today,
For thie loved one who'• gone away.
It' I good to know it' a not good·bye,
For Chrilotion peopl• never die.
They juu croa ·over·thet grea1 divide
To walt for us on the other side.
Really, there ie no cauoe for tears, ·
·
Remember the joy she gave through the yeera . .
Now it' a time to part. jult lor a while.
Recalling her love, brings on a smile. .
She'• gone to relt from the cerea of liflt,
To live forever with no war or strife,
Thla wotld Is not fit for the goodaa 1ha,
There ia jgy and peace where shs'll ever.be.
So. please don't cry and try to be brave,
She awaiu for you just beyond 1ha greve .

lb.,

Public Notice

.
; thotloo Norlh Zloi
Loooo R-rdo of · Molgo - . d.
Botno tl!lllme r H I 1 I rodt'
Dood Rlfer-: Vatu""! Caunty, Ohio.
rod . ~
o; tnonce
• 191, P8go 213, Moigo
· Subjoct to tho rlglst of tho - o d unto IN. Fred 01- .
thMoo North 27 rode to tho County Oood R-da. .
Grantaro, Guy G. loggou born by Homan G. Ooborn
II'- of beginning, contain·
Po reel 4 : Tho following Md Myrtlo C, Bog-. tholr Md Allee Oobo•n. hlo wlh.
Ina 11.28 ocree. m- 0!1 looo; roa1 Htete bolngln Section end llolgno, to con- by doted October 10,
ellceptlng tho following do· I , Town 4, 11- 12. otruct, maintain, ....... • otx 1882. recorclod In o.d
ICIIbed proml- C0ftU6tld
Ore- Townohlp, Moigo inch line to 1 run on 8oolt No . 217 ot P- It,
to Blaine Hordwey by Florr~ County, Ohio, ond b o - Mid ,_. lltota, together Roco~do ol Moltlo
0. Lomb end bounded end Md cloocrlbod u foltowe:
with tho rltht of ....... ond County, Ohio.
cloocribod •• followo: Sagfn·
lloglnnlngln tho center of ogrou for Mid G..ntoro,
0 - Roferenco: Volume
nlng 3 l i - Eut of tho StooteFioutaNo.ll81 , w - _ , _ . ,, oulgnoondln- 238, Pogo 3411, Moltlo
NDOtlwoot comer of lot No. thoWootNnooflhiChrlotlon vltMio, toconetructmolntoln Collnty DHd Rocorclo.
3 In W. W. McCuno'o Flrot Chun:h Comotory intor_.o end repair tho Mid oower end tho proyorloto foreclAddition to tho Vlllogo of the contot of uld Stt.ta line .
oll lnt.,.ot owned by yau
Tupporo Plalno, Ohio, fn tho Route; lhence- 907.88 , Subjoc' to oil ..oomooto •nd for coate .
center of tho Tu_. Plolno feet olont tho contor of oeld end hlghweyo of
You art roqultod to M ·
ond Alfred Rood. now on Stots Route {to whore tho
lloforMOO Doodo: Vol. tho complaint within
tl: ond Volume 28 cloyo oft11 tho ~rot IIUbll·
plot 01 MOISt.; thence Eoot 1-'llroot line of Ouy 801111ooo' 185, 170 feet; t!Mnce South 205
ocro ferm, ciomrlbed 227 , Pogo 408, Motgo cation of thlo notice which
loot; lhorico Woot 1 10 t.ot: In Vol. 1.18, pogo 88 Of tho County Dood R-.do. · ·
will be . publllhed onoo •
Percol II: Situated In tho wook fo• lhroo conoocllthHI
thonce In • NorthwHtorly Melgo County Dood
County of Molgo, . In tho · -ko and moll Include tho
dlr9ctlon to lhl plAce of bo· cordo, lntot•cto lh~
Stoto of. Ohio, end In tho doto on which • - n d ulo
ginning, containing 'A of on of uld St- Flo!lttl
ocre; reoorvlng tho right to oout~ 0 clog. 2 2 ' Townohlp of Olivo, bouJ!!Ied will bo conducted If no bid lo
Md cloocribod 11 follgjlo"!'- oc-ted at tho flrot ulo.
ley end molntoln • drain or foot olong tho oeld - •
_ . , from tho hou• now thonoo oouth 88 dog. oeot
8oing tho wntam ono- Any number of porcolo may
2017 .88 to lho oonter hall of tho
one·hllf bo incluclod In ono odvortiM·
on tho followlnt ....cribod
promt•o:
Sltuotod
In of State Flouto No. 7; thence In Froctlan 32, Town 4, m.tt. The ftr• pubUcdon
Orongo Townlhlp, Meigo north 4 clog. 40' woot 80 Rengo 11 of tho Ohio will bo modo on tho 8th doy
County, Ohio, bolno In Soc- foet along tho centor of oold Compony' o Purchooo, end of February 1991 endtho21
tiOn No. II, Townlhlp No. 4, Stolt Ftouta, to tho south· beginning at tho -hoeot d1y1 for 1n1wer wilt cam·
Flongo No. 12 Md bounded •ot comer of tho Ohio Yol· corner of oold Fraction No.
rnence on thet d1t1.
end doocrlbod •• loliowo: loy Monufocturing Corp.; 32, ond running woot to
In CIIH of your f11Jure to
by Lone anewer or otherwiM re•
Beginning In lho middle of thence North 87 ·clog. 110' Iondo now o.Btoto Highway No. 7 Woot - • 348 loot to o lot now Vlnoyord .{lormorly o. - ed pond •• roqulrod by tho Ohio
29 rodo I - · and South owned by tho Ohio Vol· by Roubon Weblter) ; thence Ruloo of Clvn Procodu,.,
18~ rodo from tho North· loy Monufocturing Corp.; north tor enough to make judgnM~nt b~ dofouH will be
e11t comer of uld lectlan thence north 2 clog, 10' ooot ana hundred ecru; thenco rondorocl egolnot you lor tho
No. &amp;: lhonco .Woiot 1 I rodo 1211 foot with thollno ofoeld ·
tho Froction llno: relief clomondod In tho com·
10
lo on Iron t&gt;lt!; thonco South Ohio Vll'-v Mot~~~loCNrlnt
~;;:;:~oo::uth
to tho place of plaint.
8~ rodo to en Iron pin; Corp; thence oouth 78 clog.
containing twM·
Lorry E. Sponcor,
moro or 1o ,
Clork of Coun,
· Deed Reference: Volume .,h.,co Eeot 18 rodo: thence 30' woot 272 lo~ with tho
11
Molgo County Common
195, Poo• 719 of tho Motao North 8'4 rodoto tho place Uno of uld Ohio Vol- and lying
contolnlng loy Monulocturing Corp.; holf of rool • • Ple11 Court
C011nty D•d Rocordo.
. of beginning,
0.85
of
en
acre,
mora or thence nonh ~8 dog . 211' oW...d by lucy Dobom, do· .{21 8, 13, 20, ~tc
Porcol 2: Situate In the loll, and baing • port
of tho woot 244 feet with the line ~.w.
T-noillp of Rutland, In the umo proml- oon~ed by of uld Ohio Yollly Menu- ;
County ol Molgo ond State
of Ohio:
.
Flotrio
Lomb,bylit
el .. to feoturlng
Fotroot 0.
A. Word
worronty
north 1 clog.Corp.;
41' oootthence
229.&amp;
Boolnnlng about eighty- cloW of dots March· 17, foot with tho line of oeid
one rodo end fourtHn llnko 1944, ond •-•clod AprH company lothosouth llnoof
Hit from the centlt' of wnt
line of Section 38, Town II. 17.1944,1nDoed8ooitNo. tho Chrlotien Church lot:
·
·
•
R•nae 14 of tho Ohio 1111 , p - 321, DHd R•· thence woot 331 foot otona
cordo
of
Molgo
County,
tho
south
line
of
tho
Church
Compony'o Purchooo ot tho Ohio; over end ocrooo tho lot ond tho 110uth line of tho
nonhllari comer of JoMphua· C1rpenter'a
land; flrat httreln1bov1 deacr,bed cemMery to the •outhwellt
thence oouth 44 rodo to tho promiMI lither to tho ditch comer of uld cemetery; 1,
IEQ HIGUY S
northwnt ~orner of G.rent running through tho llrot thon~o north 0 dog. 3S' o11t
above d111cribod promloeo 2111. neot ·along the weot
etuttl:tit
IAtiEI SHOP
Romine' a lend: thence eaa1
.)()pan 6 Doyo
701h rode to the nortt'!eaet ond crooolng Stllta Hlghwoy llno of oeid cemetery to tho
, Mon .-Fri. B-8
comer of Grent Romln.'s No. 7 or to. tho ravine run- ptoco of beginning, contain·
Clooed Sot . &amp; Sun.
land; thence oouth 19 rodo ning North and South on tho lno 22.38 ocreo.
EXCiptlnt ond reooNing
b y' _• . L ..,0 ~.,.~
546 Upper liwtr ld., Gallipolis
and 2311nko; thMco ooet 77 flrlt obovo cloocrlbod promi-. which revlno lloo to t•· forma• Gr10tor, Eddo
'Uc:R ,.. "'~--,
rodo and 2.2~ llnh to the W
. of •• hou L ••·j t
~
•••!, 6J4•446•000J
welt line of JomH Chep·
t.~ • un••
loggooo,
her odmlniotfl·
B~
Dotw-:"Ht
o..., """
eot cloocribod
ObovO
premiMI,
ton,
OliCUtort,
heiro
end
II·
man' eland; thence north 80
oold
droinCIJ-ortoboloid
oigno,
ono-oixtHnth
111111
rodt to the oenttr of the at o depth 10 •• not'to Inter· of oil oil end goo lylng .undor
roocl; thence oouth 117~
degr•s Wid 18 rods end 8 foro wilh tho lormlng"' cui· o~d within tho proml••
llnko: thence nonh 7S~ tlv•::J of tho fltot OboV11 do· hereby convoyed, dovolop~~o1nv ed,
produced ond removed
degr•• welt 14 rod1; ocrl
the aemi prOperty conveyed
therefrom.

notlflod that you hove boon

lnMemory

MEMORY OF
·GRACE ELIZABETH ELLIS
1/13/34- 1/20/91

'·

D

P••·

IN

99

Public Notice

OrMgo, and bounded and
deocrlbld oo f-o:
Bolnu In Saotlan No . S,
T-nolllp No. 4 .,d Rango
No. 12 of
tho
Ohio
Compony'o
Purch- In
0 - Townlhlp, Melgo
nate.
C011nty, Ohio, beginning at
Subject to ell llgol high· the South-t co...., of •
Wty11 end N•ments of re11. 28 - • trac1 of land of Tho
cord.
·
Ohio Yolloy Monutocturlno
Dncriptlan for tho abo .. Company, o CO-Ition.
cloocribod trac1 baing tho ••· deocribld In rocordad
auha · of • turvey made by in Boolo 111, at pogo
283 of
Richard C. Gleogow. R. S. the Dotd. Rocordo of Melgo
No. 11181, doted November C011nty; Ohio, thonco South,
21, 1977.
' 58 clog. 25' Eoot 244 fwat:
RoferMco DHd: Volume thenco North 79 dog. 30'
218, Pogo 903, Meigo · Eaot 272 foet tot.,.EIItlino
County Dood Rocordo.
of Iondo of Ouy Q, and
Said rool ooteta h11 boon Myrtlo C. Boggooo, lhenco
oeolgnod Auclltor'o .Porcol North n .1foottothe8outh
Number: 1 11·01 1 00.
llno of oold 11.28 ocre tr11Ct,
Propor1'j Addro11: 1 282 thence Woat 475 loll olong
Powell Str-... Mlddlepon. tho Soulh Uno of uld II. 21
Ohio 41780.
ocro troct to tho ploco of be·
Sold rool .loleta lo oubject ginning,
contllnint 0.911
to eccrued r..l eatlrte texea ecn. Excepting end reMrYfor1811 .
Ing ono·olxtMnth {1/1 llthl
REAL ESTATE APPRAIS- of oil oil end gil undlllying
ED AT: •17,000.00. Tho
premiHI 11 heretofore
rMI ...." cannot be eokl for Ollcoptecl ond rooorvod by
le11 than • -· thlrdo the •P· prevtoua grantors.
proiood voluo.
· And baing pert of tho r•l
TERMS OF SALE: Cuh Olltoto convoyed by Eddo
on delivery of cloed.
Boggo11 to Guy G. ,ond
Jemoo M. Souloby, Myrtlo c. BoggHI by d•d
Sheriff of Melgo County detecl October 21, 1950,
121 8, 13, 20, 3tc
end reoordod In Book 11111,
at pogo 99 of tho DHd Re·
cordo of Melgo County,
PubliC Notice
Ohio.

point of boglnnlnt for tho
MM""'nt herein d_,lbod;
thence N. 32 dog. 00' 27"
W. along tho contotllnt of
· oold ooooment, 1 2, .01 foot
to 1 point and there to termi-

oct ion entltlod OOO&lt;ge M,
Colllno, Melgo County Trea·
aurar. va. The Ohio Vtlley

Sweets For Your Valentine

•

Public Notice

Public Notice

••Jd

'

Dozen
\

w- ••

In the Heart of Pomeroy

•'•

.-

•

SIMONS PICK-A·PAIR
HAS MOVED TO THE REAR OF
THEIR BUILDING

•'t

'

-.,.

4:30P.M. DAY BEFORE
PUBLICATION

•

'

-~-

:8UJ.I.ETIN BOARD DEADLINE

•

Here it is Valentine ev~ and asliusual, you have no idea what yoJ1Jare going to do to "!ake
tomorrow a special day. Well fear not guys, .Big Bear is here wj~~ this simple four point
checklist that will get you out of trouble and back in good graces • ·

·

The

Ohio

',, ,,,,.,,,
UPHOLSTERY

•Reasonoble Rat•
•Quality Work
•F- Eotlmatea
•Carpa.t Hea Feet Dry
Time
•High Qlo'" on ,Tile
Floor Flnlah
MIIIUWIJ, ow;,.,

2U lle.Secef141

II. I, lutlonol, 011,

11••••irt

7U·2U1

Hand Tufting
Cu..om Drapee
S6 Year• bperleace

' . 61.·992-1321

.W.DoWhaiWelaf.
w. Say Whet w. ,De.

' 10-lt'IM.

DAN'S

TRANSMISSION
•1141 AUTO IEPAII

HENRY E. CLELAND ...................................... :992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL ........................................ .....949-2&amp;&amp;0

Spaolallllno In
Autometlc
Tr-mlaalona, BrekH,
Tuneup, Oil Chsnge,
Clutch llapalr.
FIIIIISTIMATEI

OFFICE ................:........................................ 992·2251

992·SSI7

JO Hlll ........................................................915-4411

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

INTERESTRED IN A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE?
CALL CLELAND REALTY! ·

1611M . .
Pe•iray, 01.

U: 1111

BEAT
Gat your

lawn and

... lllfUipment

.... ......

lharpar~~,.l
for tht coming Halelll
DUliNG FliiUAIY

- FrH pickup ~nrl
dtllverr in P!Nntroy
gnrl Middleport city
limits.
WE ALSO SERVICE
CHAIN SAVVS

DAVE'S SMALL
ENGINE IEPAII
ISJWtstMsltiSt.

p.,......,,. Oh. ·

.

.

�Page-14-The Dally Sentinel

Wedne~y, February

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements

41 Houlll for Rent
lllloa .......,., Doy CoN c.ntor. 2 bedroot;; DDUIIby ~ .._
••· •ffonl•bl., ahiiJc na • ..., t"ll-1111.
I Lftl. • 5:10 p.111. ~ 2 ·10.
lolofw, aftor acllool. llro!&gt;-IM 2 bid 00111 hoftwln N. . HaWn,
wv..-71NIII.
18

CJ•w,.,...,. ,...,..

~.,_~,..... -

---lpe.
81..·

3 · Announcement•

Ouallly .
Peopla
Few s.-.llanlllcant
eonlldanlla~. I
Wrtlr. - - . h, P.O. lo• !

wanted to

Do

'

•
1111 CUI11om, o&amp;Q, •PI,

r...... ~~

.
GoLD CREDIT CARD, • •
poooad, $1,SOO. erodk llqo
-bock a_,.ntoo 1 o r - 1
.... d

Block

Lhlll

·--·

a.....

I:DO (])II I]) (J)
illl ID
tiJ Nawa
CIJ Cllarlaa 1n c~ Q
3·2·1

1QI.

.....

" -• . fornll

kM to farm four simple .words.

I I; tv I 1°I I

m

e

II tyIE El IJ
.I.-,1".:'~ . . .-1~r

ContaC.Wc

~:'1'L1~ Q
(IJ ·c .- lltjlf81t

.

Wll billy Ill In my homo, · to-=hoOI, ~- .
· ~.2bodnNIIII­
,nlcl locltlon, -.111-7373.
Will lllby;IN In my h01111 -tOol
~n oa,.:r. 1n Clly UmHo. IM- 42 Mobile Homes
11
tor Rent

71-Cm

....... 304..

d . . . . In

~~~·79,000
-

Financ1al

"+

TELL ~ER 11M NOT .

W~AT

I:IER SWEET

l-IE

8A8800!

QJ I n - the PGA Tour ·
atWOikiTodar_
llll our Ho~M Q
&amp;:05 (]) Beverly Htllbllllta

DOES

KNOW?

6:30 C2J II

1

NBC NlgfiUy Newa

(J) (J) II AIC Howl
(!) Wild America l;l
(!) 3·2·1 Contact Q

j

L--'.L--.L--'-.....1'---'---'
· you develop (rom lfop No. 3 btlow.

8 ~:i~JRry~si~~RES
6 ~~~~tRMSLE FOR

QJSportoCenter
6:35 (]) Andy Griffith
7:DO (2) 8 (II)' II)) WhHt of

Loll&amp; Found

6

Wanted to Buy

11

. FortuneQ
·
(]) I Dream of Jeannie
. (J) (J) II lnllde EditiOn Q
(!) (!) Mec:Neltflthrer
NaweHourC
II] 11 Night tourt Q
112llll Current Aftalr Q ·
aJ MacOyver
QJ College Beekelball
at Moneyllne
·
IU Scarecrow end Mra. King
7:05 (]) Happy DIYI
. 7:30 (]) .. IIJi tiJ Jeopardy! Q
(]) Night Court Q
(J) 1121111 Entertainment
Tonight Ster~. Q
(J) a Mama'• Family
II] Ill Three' a c;ompany
at Croaaflre
7:35 (]) Sanford and Son
B:DO (2) II II)) Unaolvtd
Myeterlee New evidence
about Butch Cassidy and the
Sundance Kid is revealed.
Stereo. C
·
(]) MOVIt: Animal Houu

Help Wanted

Wanted To lui: J...k Autoo

AlTENTIONI

with ., without - -· Coli
l.any Uwly. 114-31M303.

MALE, FE~ISEWIVES,

FOUND young -Coon dog 1'111
)0 Enl-lc Porw!Whfto opoto, trolnod, \..;;;jj Wonted: Junk Con, Trucko, I Wo Fa,. · E~lpnMnl, Run.,lng or: _ . To Eom Up To $10/Por
HolloW Rd, .....5-311118.
Nol~ For Sohllll", Wo Buy Soli
Hour Tal!i[IV Onloro In OUr
Olllcl.
GUarontaod lailrY,
LOST Nonooglan Elkhound bill Or!rodo.l~.

no-

Com mini rme

w/gny, blue wiiltV'W
otlidl, llmpa. toot 1 out Wo want to buy your olandlng
Send Hill !1_!11 ,!IEWAAD,
tim-..,. Ha- ' Plno. Loaon
woogoo. -111-7115 or 1111- ~.lnfl. 814-28~T.IO, &amp;M-:ae3415.

=-------.Wood
Yard Sale .

;...
7

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity
ALL Yotd So... Mull lo Poklln
Advonco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.111.
tho dey .,...,. tho od '- to run.
Sundoy odftlon - 2:00 ~·"'·
Frldoy. Mondoy odltlon - :DO
p.m. Soturdlly.
·

8

Public Sale

CUii

Nlc1U1ry Will Train. We Aleo

NNd Li&gt;col Dallvory 1111,_ To

Source, Inc. WANTED
18" d.._., mu,

Eom Up To $70 • Day. All!llr In
Pei'MII To llaanYm CommunlcatloM Inc. lt lho .__

· -us 'Ill applo
Located
:1:1-oropine.
l-

HOIII • Point - n l , Roolll
13:11. llon-l'ri,
h.m.-To.m.
Mlnaaer Tr~ln. Po.fdone
Avallib~.
'

~

wood

or longer,

12ft

·,

end

BonUOMII Day ond E...lna
Sltlfto Avatlablo. No E~anco

do 1101 wont

Hewn 1bo¥e Amertc1n Anora
plant ~right.

-.noo.

72 TruCks tor Sale··
1m Toyoto plok-up, • cyt, 4
......,, camouflaugod/mliddor

Employment Serv1ces

saoo.

11

.::AVON=~.A~l~l~
1. r~-~....~CoU~IIM~~tyn~

W••• 304 -

... 8

topper, 304.a37-237'1.
1tM F-11111 Ford, .17.000 mi., 3
........ 302 engine. No rval.
Good lhlpo, . -. .,...,..
0111.
.
.
:
1111 Toyog, 41:4, 13,000 mltH,

'fOfiC:

Ml.... ft,

/JCr-1

Eocoltonl-lllporo ,._ Eaay- .. homo. No

.....,

-m-ms.

"""-' ron ...,,

~c

•

-

1881 Ford pickup, long wtioOt
- · 302 ........ aplod With

.

. CIH 1.acM-6C1-7771
Rlctl Pllr- -ion compony
Opan 2C hoUra, lnnaw booking •ucthHte, ••.,._.,..... .,.,.,..,.nco. oludlng SundOy.
L-.1 Ohio, Kontuclly, Will .........Wilt ... -.plod
VIrginia,
.... ,.
.... llarch
tiel
,........
and11or
, .·
,._
,
Al&gt;llllcatlana IIIII' ... plcUd ...,
9 wanted to Buy
Ohlo llato Ellltitovmont orne.
to buy, Standing timber, or 21M
st;Pott......,.h,
Bob Wllllamo A SoriS 1M-812- OH. E.O.E.
544t.
A - 110. "" 2 .... doing
W.nlod to buy: Junk coro with ComoO Ungorla Po~loo. Froo
or whhout molor._ Ia 8Ct'ap met- kit, .... bOOidng .......... t75-ei3X . . .
al. IIC.379-2829.

w.-

TONIGHT 'f .

..~m.

Help Wlnted

.

&amp; Auction

1••.

111111 Ford caurr~~r

now tiroo, 1450. loth Nn go!od.

~2:00)

&lt;

.,

, ar\d
/'110/('A I. I

••-..&lt;•

llgiU, M,IIDO. IM-2iWiii ,

oaw.

ctern.a cemper, Mlf conlilned
with muter bldroqm, M,OOO.
~IIIII or fl78.11t:!.
111511 Ford Rl..,, XLt DlfUxo
""""'' F.,.. IIOdllnor, COp, Un-

NOPE!
.JUST
THESE

=-~aao mllll, 1 - · ~

T\oi,O!

NAME'S DINN'I'!

·T~r
--ulfo--1
H,dnullo Woncii.IM - 1122
Mit. Dull Tondom -

'-IY Folllwol cirgon
wllh ...... Qanlo""""'" ond17

T2 Ford
truofl,
.....,
·
good
-"
lruol!.
115111.00
1114~'1771 or fi'M-8411-2121.
•

lnilt....................... .

73 Vana &amp; 4 WD'I :

--

""'.._ pra llua 11

SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and ·
.EMOVAL

-.n

and

DDIIIIIIIan ......, 114 •• 2113

Suppl1r'

rc~rm

eLIGHT HAULING

•F'IREWOOD
·BILL SLACK

~~~~ CJI . . . Y-1 a":;..U.DDO
miiM, aOod oond
• ,.._
1111-+1:8 oftor 8:00 •
.1

--~·=···•,
7U1. ...,...
.

,\ ltvcstocK

- i.!.!•"zm.....

- · Sl,tfll.

PI air, good oyt.
oond,8

opood,

61 Fann Equipment
-~~ft ~•

992-2269
USED RAILROAD TIES

n

._.,,a

T7 Chivy Von. Nlcl ri1111 a tiro1, ·
Nno aoOd- $1GOO. Colt Rob, IM-

-..1101.
-74-....;,Mo
_______

lnd-

Loo. .1.JI,IIII;
111111 Olhlw D - Wfth ln-

with

duotrlal Loodor, Mf:j oiSO lntornatlonol Olllal.w;
. OWnor

MICROWAVE
OVEN REPAIR

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INS,ULATION

Wlll'lnittco. IM -

1822.

n:..

locldto With IINIII Strop I

-SIIII,IM2111122.

Pick Up.

Acro11 ,,_ Post Office

NO SUNDAY CAUS

PO. .OY, OliO

.. 110 Hortzon. 18
.. hull with llf!llo

..... .._..

.....

t-ore &amp; 1111,...._.,
-~- Buy,
1111, trodo, I:OIIoi:DO - , o ,
lot till Noon.

. 316/90/lfn

John -

7ft1
;;;s;......,•••r, noltollorid
oond, 304-

en•-llioYoiH.
ln'-'
..... -· ,, ...
_
.........
llpd, •
lop

MOBilE HOME FURNACES- HEAT PUMPS
All FURNACE PARTS

wAtlggar • •

2 pta

~.

10

BENNm'S M~BILE HOME
HEATING &amp; COOLING

John Dllro C bottom plow, .c•,
aood ahopo $500; m - Holland - · 101!'1 ........ $11100;
John ~ ·2 aulkoy
plow. IOWJI.M117.

-

Anltoblo. c.-

M..........E -

KELLER'S CUSTOM BENDING

Iron -

~

We Han Changed Our Location Ta
1111 Miler East on lt. 241 through
Cherter, Oh.

•

Auto Parts &amp;
Acc8880rlel

82 Wlnted to Buy ·

l
!'

•
- ...
Tronorntaalana,
Uoad!1
..
bullt,
~Ina .....; .,..._
~~~3,

I

... ChrDIIII Rallo ... 1ft lied
Ford - •

m. Hvdl'aulic ,,.nor

broke - - · 120. SIIUlll-

...

l

l JEST
LOST MY

Serv1ces
Home

!
,

Improvements
BASEMENT

-'"' *

Plumbing &amp;

.....

· unlden

111y

Heating

. Hay &amp; Grain

Ooolll .ttl............... ....
1:00 end' - . :lOW.,..

DELUXE SA TELUjE TV SYSTEM

tor 1o11. Clo¥or 1 nrnOttw.

llaUnol -

2tl'"

In ... Flllol. 114-

ca~or·a

Pluftlllfng

ondHoattna

-ondPrno
Qalllpotlo, Ohio
114 4413111

84

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Rlll•ntilll

wiring, -

llaolar

SJ 895

.

.

.

FEBIIUAIIUPECIAL
ONLY

ZENJX VIDEO

llf1 .. ,. W. If Holzer Hospital - 11: 35, G..lipolis

446-2411 - 1·10 •
I

•

.

~

-!!cion.

85 General Hauling

24

houra. IRD oyatem lncludol decoder.
CAll TODAY

COMPlETI -

or - l o t
llfYicl or ,_.,.,

R - Eloctricol, _.'Ill'
1711.
.

Enloy · iwor ~ 00 ohon·
ne 1 · SNt~o newo LIVE

NOflllfG RSI 10 IUYI

:oo

I

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

0_
I .
. Porll~ll
~~-doft'l
_
.........
_lUll

55

0ooc1 ........ boplna,
by or lob. 30Wlll-

••·
..........
-

-nina, ~.

...,.

"They ll8ld I dOn't haw the aptitude for pollee
· work. I drove right by 10 donut shops."

Building
Suppllll

-.llntlll,--~=
- --

- . brlcll,
lora, R i o - · OH' 'caiiM-

24U121.

rn a

ACROSS

•

~t---------~------------­ mance? The Astro-Graph Matchmaker

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

. 3428.

PIICEI (Fob. 20-Merch 20) Your possibilities for fulfilling a secret ambition
are starting lo look bell~ and better.
Don't lose faith or swllch objec:llvee, ~
'
cause victory may be closer than you
'
think .
ARIES (Mon:h 21·Aprll11) As of loday,
..,
you will b8 entering a new cycle thai will
have some hopeful ramlflcallona you
have not yet explored. Be sure to take
ample time to In-ligate each one.
TAURUS (April ao-Mar 20) This Ia !1
:"',!.'
good periOd to elevate your sights a bit
and upgrade the quality ol your objeeFlb.14, 11i1
• "'
:II' I .
tlvM. You can dO better than you think II
"Circumstenceo thai hove a bearing on you luat push yourMII a little hWder.
your matenlll security could be dlttlcult GEMINf &lt;M!tr 21-.ltlne 20) New knowl·
, ,,10 define In the yeer ahead•. H - . edge you acquire during this time can
:;;!Mn though you may not fully un&lt;Mr· "e91ntually be put to very conatrucllve
stood them, lhay will be working In your u-. Don't be o-ly concerned about
~ 18Yor.
·
finding Immediate appllcatlona.
AQUAIIIUI (..... »Fob. 11) S.V.al CANCER C"- 21......., 22) Pay partie• 'lltuat- Which penonally 8lfect you ular heed at this ·time to Invest.-.I aug)htt nave bean handled poorly by oth- gestlons olfered by two people whom
~ era in the put will r-tto your control. you completely trust. Each one hu en
'fry to prollt lrotn t-lndlvktuala' mil--- ' established and auc:ceos~l track
Trying to.. patch up a brokM ro- record. .

__

··""

r .......
j)

LEO (~uly :13-Aug. 22) L!!Qal agreements or partnership arrangements
Into which you enter now should have
good chances for success. proYICied
they benefit all acting parties equally. ·
VIRGO (Aug. :a-. .; 22) There could
be some lnt•retiing car- ~
ments this week which may lead to a
raise. bonus or promotion. Be a1ort eo
you'll recognize new opportunities.
LIIRA (Sepl. ·23-0cl. 23) Listen to
urgeslnalructing you to reorganize your
aHalrs both socially and commercially
along more productive llnM. It wll help
you-tIn both areu.
ICOIIPIO (DoL ~. 22) Certain
conditions which have caused you fNItratlons may end today, signalling the
beginning ol aome new Influences
which could be meaningful to you In It,.
nanclal or material .waya.
SAGITTARIUS (lliltl. 23-0ac. 21) You
will now have to lnlormallon
you've prtvloulfy lacked, which Inhibit·
eel- your progr... over the pstlt few
- s . Your new I W . , _ will enhance your potential lor OUC: CUI.
CAftiiCOIIN (Dec. ~ 11) You
hove ententd a cycle that could grMtly
Improve your ftnanclal clrcumstanca~, II
you handle .dewlopmenta ellecllvely.
Three advontiiQCIOUI ,,_, are.ltirrlng. .

•

.'

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America Tonight
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(2:00)
12:05 (J) NlghttiM Q

tiJ Lite Night With
David Lett........

.12:30 (2) 8

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Hu
+to 3

.QIOtH
+J 74 2

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sOUTH

+AK107
.AKJ-7%
+K86

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: North 1
S...tla

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West

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Pass
Pua
4NT
Pass
Pua
7+
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•two aces. p_lus queen of trumps

t+

Opening lead:

+2 .

held all his diamonds when East
showed out. But .the last spade was too
much lor West. II he threw the queen
of diamonds, declarer's jack wot11d be
high; II be threw a club, the rest of the
tricks would be taken by dummy's remaining A·Q-9 of clubs.

mainlainer
20 Aloud
21 Pickier's
need
22 Radar
spols
23 Bullalo's
lake
25 Unadulterated
29 Spin
30 Slocklng

,...,....,......,r-

sluflar
33 Uncovers
34Doe's
mate
'36 Pinnacle
37 Flexed
38 Dollop
39 Swiss
canton
40 Tavern
41 Balderdash

wood-

.

wirlds
34 Remain
35 Airport
aulo
38 Hendrix's
instrumenl
41 "Clue·
. weapon
42 FancHul
43 Slore
door sign
44 Benders
45 Course

a21e

I •

.K9

DOWN
1 "Tht,King

1 Massage
target
and I"
· 5 Llama' kin
heroine
11 High time? 2 Like some
12 Fanalic
dorms
13 Dweeb
3 Newspa·
14 Au I hor
per
Gay.
feature
15 Fuss
4 Flriale
16 One
5 Mexican
of the
nalive
Trumans
8 Ranis
17 "The final
7 Cronies
lronlier"
8 Pub quaff.
19 ·-·s l~tle II TV comic,
· Acre"
lor short
22 Pie nut
10 Dined
24 "Heidi"
16 Prohib~
author
18 Window
26 Press
lealure
27 Russian
19 Equilib- :
1iver
rium
28 Hamelin's .
pesl
controller
30 Fairy lale
heavy
31 Envision
32Some·

1

""-•

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+J93
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WEST

+42

by THOMAS JOSEPH

at CNN Evening Ntw.l

llobertaon
·10:30 Qll Crook end Chi.""
11
C2J 11 Ill
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II)) New•
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II]
Araanlo Hall Stereo. Q
aJ ami Vice Stereo .
Qllllerbenl Mandrell and
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Larry GatHn and the Gatlin
Brothers and Robert
Gillaume visit. (1:00)
'QJ Sportleenter
18 Moneyllne
13J1 8carecrilw end Mre. King
11:05 (]) MOVIE; The Dirty Dozen:
Na•t Mlulon (2:00)
11:30(J)e 0 Tonight Show
"' Stereo.
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(!) America'• Daltnlt
\ Manltor

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CROSSWORD

illl 7DO Club WHh Pal

- flltltl.·1·
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murder of savan victimS is
traced to a dentist. Ster

-·--

North' overtraded on his diamond
void to jump to three spad~ . Since
South was looking at the dedi;, be wat
quick to ask I!Jr aces. In North-South's
Blackwood rll'tthods, live spades by
North showed.not only his two aces.but
also the queen of trumps. South
thought that was enough to c0 lor the
grand -slam, but the. contract was far
from laydown.
Declarer won West's trump lead In
hand and rolled ·a diamond. He came
back to his hand with a second higb
trump, gratefully noting that everyone followed, and rolled another low
diamond. He then cam~ to his hand
with the club king and cashed another
high spade, throwing a heart frorq
dummy.
On this third spade play, West was
in dire straits. A diamond sluff would
make declarer's diamonds all win·
ners, a club discard would make dummy's clubs all gOod, and West could
not really 11!11 that it was safe to blank
the king of hearts. He finally did onguard the heart king; assuming that
South held a hidden diamond suit lor
his aggressive grand slam bid, but that
only postponed the day of reckOaing.
Declarer now cashed A-K of ella·
monds, and West was glad that be had

H
Ill Star ;.;.k: The Held
o-ailonQ

can help you to understand ·what to do
to make the relationship work . Mall $2
lo Matchmaker. c/o this newspaper,
P.O. Box 91428 . Cleveland, OH 44101-

PS 1000

01 It hoppona -

THIS WEEK

$..1

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(1 :00)

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NORTH
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Larry Gatlin and lhe Gatlin
Brothers and Robert '
Gillaume visit ~1:00)
at PrlmtNtWI
IU George Wa1hlngton (Pt 2
of 4) (1 :40)
8:051IJ MOVIE: The.Dirty Dozen .
(3:00)
8:30 (J) (J) 11 QrowiRg Palna
Mike competes iNith an
established actor lor a part
in a soap opera. Q
9:00 (J) II II)) Night Court Harry.
thinking Margaret has
'-.Jv-- marriage on her mind. pops
the question. Stereo. C
(J) (J) I!J COOgle HOWHr,
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ill Smllheonlan Worid
Stereo. Cl
I!Dl 1!2llll' Jake end the
Fatman .Jake aM McCabe
help a dying man find his
own murderer. Stereo. C
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121 Naehvllle Now
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9:30 (}) II II)) Selnfeld George
seeks Jerry's help in getting
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Hannah anracts a
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photographer. Stereo. Q
10:00 (2) e · II)) Hunter Hunter is
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wilh Novak. Stereo. Q
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Peter handles a sociopath
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Television
Viewing

KIT rN' CARLYLEII by Larry Wrlaht

Wile n-. IU Ul 1224.

1lle Dally Sentinel Page 15

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

13, 1991 ·

J.r+-+.....i

book
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here'• how to work It: .

2113 .

.AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

•

One letter stands for anDthef. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the t*o O'a, etc. Slnflle letters,
apostrophes, the lenfllh and f0111111tlon of the words are all
hints. EaciHiay the rode lettel'l are different.

·caYPrOQoorE
2-U
·'
I P ''G 0 X V T V C 0 G Y

R
IRA

..

DPY

G 0 M

FJV · XRA

MLRZ

XRA'Y

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Y J ·V I R G

'0 G

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D L L· X J R I

YetterCia,'• CaJPt ...IIOtei IF UITLE LABOR,
um~ ARE OUR GAINS; MAN'S FORTUNES ARE
ACCORDING TO HIS PAINS. -ROBERT HERRICK .

'

.

.

.,

• i

�'
Sentinel

D Your Locally Owned,

Y111 11

Low Priced
Supermarket ·
.

•

Wedneeday, Febniery 13, 1991'1,;

Ohio

Ohio Lottery

Sooners
defeat
Cowboys

Week'1

Ptl~etl

Pick 3:883
Pick4:0787
Cards 7-H; 5-C;
A·D; 10-S
Super Lotto:
4-16-28-29-36·40
Kicker:699323

Page3

Low tonight in mid teens.
Chance of snow Friday70
· percent.

••
· ilo1. 41, No. 201

2 Sections: 14 P1ges 25 Cent•
A Multimedia Inc . New81)eper

Pomeroy"Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, February 14,1991

Copyrighllld 1991

Permit agreement terminated by commission
'

3 MINUTE BRAND

OATMEAL
. WITH OATBRAN .

'

QRIAN J, REED
Coumy Building Pennit Office per· ing insread that .that authority rests
Sentiael News Staff
formed building permit serv1ces with Meigs County Prosecuting
The Meigs County Commis· (building inspections, permit pro- Attorney Steven L. Story.
sioners decided to terminate an cessing and violation citations) on
Story, on !he other hand, stated
agreement with ·the Washington a contract basis for Meigs County at a meeting last week that the cur.·
County Building Permit Office dur- and four of its villages.
·
rent agreement between Meigs and
ing their regular meeting on
Due to what it cited, however, Washington Counties did not burWednesday afternoon.
as a lack of enforcement on the pan den him with the responsibility of
· Extensive discussions have of Meigs County, the Washington prosecuting building code violataken place recently with the . County Board of Commissioners tiOns.
Washington County Commission- announced that it would terminate
Following a meeti11g last week
er~. the Washington County Buildthe contract with Meigs County in between the two boards of commis·
.
ing Permit Office, the Washington March.
sioners, James Bir of the WashingCounty Prosecutor's Office and the
The Washington County offi. ton Counly Building Permit Office,
Meigs County Commissioners cials contend that while they are Meigs County Prosecutor Steven
regarding the continuation of con- authorized to issue citations for · Story and Assistant Washington
tracted building permit services to violations of the building code, County. Prosecutor·Alison CauMeigs Counly.
tliey do not have the authority to thorn, re~esentatives of the paniciUntil recendy, the Washington . prosecute in another county - statviUages (Pomeroy, Middle-

.

PALMOLIVE

By LEON DANIEL

22

oz.

FAB
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT 42roxoz.

WHITE

69i

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POTATOES
SO LB. BAG

....

I .
I
I
I
I
I

FOODLAND

LARGE
EGGS

DOZEN

•

LUCKY LEAF

APPLE
15 oz.
CANS

SAUCE
ZESTA

SAtTINES.

1-LB.

lOX

MORTON HOUSE

STEW

·

'

24 oz.
CAN

$i
I
I

$1

I
I
I
I

.
Umlt 1 With Coupon and Additional Purc:h•M- Qood ThN Ftlb. 18, 1991 1

WIC Coupon1
• Not Reaponlible for
or Plctoriel E....,.,
--------------------~-------------------~
. ..... f

'

mar

II .
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_9 9:

ALL PURPOSE

BEEF

drop of its martyrs' blood. This
ugly crime will not pass without
ifaq,. vowing to take the the strongest retalia\ion from our
"strongest retaliation" to avenge people and armed forces.' ' .
civilian deaths in an allied bombing
Iraq originally said about ~00
raid on Baghdad, fired two Scud people, most of them women and
missiles into Saudi Arabia in broad children, were killed in tlie bombdaylight Thursday, faining debris ' ing, but on Thursday Baghdad
oli a coalition military site,
Radio, monitored in Cairo. Egypt,
A senior Pentagon official said a said 200 people died and 94 bodies
major Iraqi military command cen- had been recovered from the buildter hidden in the ·basement of a ing.
major Baghdad hotel will not be an
Allied · military officials
allied wget because it houses civil- expressed outrage that S~~~am
~.; '-',!. . .!' _ . ,
·~ "'.,...~.- -' Ji!lssem ,
have_houa:d ,CIVIlianS
Mil itary officials said two U.S. m a. strateg1c military center,lll!d
Air Force pilots were killed when Whnc House spokesman Marhn
their .radar-jamming jet crashed in FllZwater sa1d the Iraqi president
Saudi Arabia while returning from ''does not share o!"' ~~ue for the
a combat mission, and allied com- sanctity of human life..
.
manders reported a surge in defecThe U.N. Securny Counc1l
lions by Iraqi soldiers.
scheduled a priva~ debate ThursU.S. officials said the bunker hit day on whether alhed forces have
by two laser-guided bombs early exceeded theu m11ndat_e under a
Wednesday was a highly fortified Secunty Cou~ctl reso!utJon passed
mili~ facility but Iraq said it was Nov. 29 to drive Iraq1 troops from
a civilian bomb shelter and Kpwatt.
promised revenge. , . .
. Yemen and the Maghreb FederAn Iraqi armed forces statement ahon - made up of Algena, Ltbya,
broadcast on Radio Baghdad, said, Morocco, Mauritania and Tunisia .
"Iraq will severely revenge every - successfully pressed for the
' UPI Chief Correspondent

. an.

/

ing .permit business will now reven
back to Ohio Department of Industrial Relations and its Factocy and
Building Division in Columbus.
In other 'business on Wednesday, the board decided against
allowing a Pomeroy resident to
clean metal plates on the Ci vii War
monument near the courthouse, due
to a probable lack of liability insurance both ·on the part of the c6unty
for Watson's saftey and the service
provider, Terry Watson, for the
monument itself. In refusing the
offer, the board ex~ssed its "sincere appreciation •·.for Watson's ·
offer.
A request for a $150 appropria-

uon was approved for ihe Meigs
County Juvenile Coon's Indigent
Guardian Fund.

County Engineer Phil Robens
reported to the commissioners that
a slip has occurred at the Meigs
County Fairgrounds, and that
efforts w~ currently underway to
repair the slip. ·
Roberts stated thai the slip
would be repaired using bridge
flooring and steel pilings.
Present at the meeting were
Commissioners Richard Jones,
Manning Roush, and David
Koblentz, Clerk Mary Hobstetter,
Roberts and County Garage Superintendent Ted Warner.

Iraq promises to avenge
bombi;ng deaths lJ/ civilians

'-·

DISH LIQUID

Port. Racine. and Syracuse) indicat·
ed that tlley would be interested in
maintaining their separate contracts
with the Marietta office regardless
of the decision the conimissioners
made regarding county-wide repre·
sentation by the Manetta building
permit office.
The commissioners discussed
advantages and disadvantages of
the coniract at their meeting yesrer. day, and unanimously decided to
let the contrnct expire on March I.
The commissioners, ht;~wever,
emphasized that the ·villages were
stiU free to contract with the Marl·
etta office if they so desired. '
Without such a contract with
Washington County's office, build-

Discuss dispute

•

•

More than 100 locked-out
Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation workers from Ohio
filled the Meigs County Com·
mun Pleas courtroom oa
Wednesday to discuss the
three-month qld labor dispute. .
David Hei~ District Field Rep·
riSeatatlve for ConiiJ'essman
Clarence Miller (R·Lancast·
er), kldicated that Miller's
role In the situation WaS ''Sup·
portive but limited.'' AccordIng to Heil, tbe resolutioa or
the strike Is now In the fulnds
or afedenl mediator. and that
Miller bas no control over
action taken by that medilltor.
Approximately 1,700 union
workers have beea locked out
or tbe facility since October
31, when their contract with
RAC expired. Hell also
reported that a letter-writing
campaign was underway
among Ohio and West Vir·
ginla legislators to RAC
Ghairnian. Emmett Boyle. 15
percent or tbe workforce at
tbe Ravenswood plant are
Ohioans • comlnJI primarily
from MeiJIS, Gallla, Athens
and Washington Counties.
(OVP Photos by Brian J.
Reed)

U.N. debate, The Security Council
voted 9-2 Wednesday to hold the
session.
In urging the debate, Yemen ' s
U.N. ambassador, Abdalla Saleh
AI· Ashtal, cited Wednesday's U.S.
bombing of Baghdad, calling it
"cold- blooded murder from the
air."

The United States successfully
argued for a closed meeting, saying
an open debate would endanger
diplomatic efforts. .
The Pentagon sent a team to
brief U.N. Secretary-Genemllavier
Perez de Cuellar on the war, at his
request.
·
· The two Scuds fired into Saudi
Arabia about midday Thursday
were not intercepted by Patriots,
and debris from at least one of the
missiles fell on Hafra ai-Batan,
about 50 miles south of the Iraqi
border, said Air Force Lt. ·col. Virginia Pribyla, a spokeswoman for
the U.S. Central Command in·
Riyadh .
Most civilians have left the .
town because of the war, but there
is a Saudi military installation there
occupied by allied troops.
,

Fashion show tops merchants meeting

•

Plans for the 1991 Spring Fashion Show we.re discussed at
Wednesday's meeting of the
Pomeroy' Merchants Association.
The show is tentatively scheduled for April 12 and may possibly
be held a1 the Pomeroy Elementary
School.
Susan Clark, association president, announced that this year's
show will be P.resented in a new
way which w1ll i.ncorporate not
only fashion but entertainment in
the form of musical numbers as .
well. This new
is neces-

sary, explained Mrs. Clarlc:, due to
the lack of businesses that carry
wearing apparel.
Gwen Hall, publicity chainnan,
stated that perhaps a name change
wirb the show • something pertaining w entertainment and fashion •
would be beneficial for the show's
success.
The rii'St meeting of the fashion
show committee will be held Toesday at noon in the conference room
_ofBankOneinPomeroy..
In other matters, Anme Chap·
man announced to the association

that one of the new Christmas banners is missing. If anyone has any
information regarding this miSsing
banner or its whereabouts, contact
Mrs. Chapman at Otapman Shoes.
Other topics of discussion at the
meeting i11fluded Heritage Weekend on June 8 and 9; the Ohio University Communiversily Band Con- ,
cert on June 27 sponsored by Bank
One·of Athens, N,A.; and a car
show on the parking lot on July 20 ·
sponsored by the Oldies But Goodies Car Club.
·

Eastern bosses nabbed in scam
NEW YORK (UPI) - Nine
The cOmponents left unrepaired
Eastern bosses at Atlanta's Harts- included altimeters, compasses,
field International Airport were cockpit landing gear lights, wing
arrested Wednesday for allegedly flaps. auto pilot systems, flight
falsifying maintenance records directors and fuel gauges.
the latest to be named in a far-rangThe complaint arises out of
ing safety case against the defunct · prosecutors' safety investigation, in
carrier.
which two ex-managemem
·Prosecutors said the nine were employees have already pleaded
•
charged in U.S. District Court in guilty and nine are ~heduled to go
Brooklyn with conspiring to to trial April I.
defraud the Federal Aviation
Last July, Brooldyn prosecutors
Administration . The nine, who announced a 60-counl indictment
were rounded up in Atlanta, will be in the case - which affected,air' • anaigned Thursday.
ports in Miami and New York as
U.S . Auomey Andrew Maloney weD as in Atlanla.
said.the nine - including a former
Prosecutors at the time had commanager of Eastern's terminal plained the alleged fraud put pasoperation - allegedly failed to sengers "at risk every day"
perform maintenance on critical .because rests were not administered
aircraft components, then falsified and pans were left unfixed.
records to make it appear the work
Maloney has said Eastern's
had been performed.
upper managef!ICilt put "unreasonable demands, pressure apd intimi'·

dation" on its airpon managers and ,
superivors to keep aircraft in flight
at all costs.
The results, he claimed, were a
"pencil whipping " scheme in
which record falsification took
place on log books, work cards and
computer entries.
The carrier, which went into
federal bankruptcy proceedings in
March 1989, struggled to devise
and put into effect a reorganization
but fmally closed down last month.
Those arrested Wednesday were
identified as Edw~~Td Hay, former·
manager of I;astern's terminal
operation in Atlania, and Richard
Blanton, Charles Bray, James
Bunch, William Cook, Hollis Huff.
man, Charles Rolon, K.; Ray
Stooksbury and Roben Zuege!, ail
former supervisors in the ciurier's
maintenance operation there,

iiNiiiiwA Y•

Aaotber hoiiR im Nye Avenue Ia Pomeroy was
demolished oa Wednesday morning,~ the Ohio
Department or Traasportatlon prepares for a
rOIId widening project at the Intersection or U.S.
Ro11te 33 end State Route 124. Tbe White
House tavern and the Roedel Building, located

•t tbe cor•er or Nye Avenue and East
Street, wDI also tumble to ,the wrecking b•ll ia
the project. Acc:ordiag to 1111 ODOT spokespet. son on the scene, thiS bouse will be tbe Jut to
1come down for a whlie, as real estate closings
are now at a standstDI. (Sen tiDe! Photo by Brian

J, Reed)

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