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Monday, March 4, 198l

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

Page 1G-The Dally Sentinel

Ten prisoners...

ollege
earns earn
CAA berths

COIItbtlled tro. page 1 ,
led caalltioa fon:es. They all called
for die removal of Iraq1 President

Saddam Hussein."
In Paris, Foreign Minister
Roland Dumas said in an interview
on Europe 1 radio !hal Busb, "very
eager" to involve france in t.he
postwar process, will meet wtth
Mittcrrand on an unspecified date
in mid-March. French diplomatic
sources said lhe meeting probably ·
will take place on a French
Caribbean island.
.
DUmas said that with the fighting stopped in the Persian Gulf
WEATHER MAP • A few snow showers will develop with a region, lhc United States intends to
mqve quickly to resolve lhe !'ales,
warm rront In the northern Plains, nortbern Rockies, and In
linian
problem, which called "lhc
northun Maine. Tile Southeast wUl be mild uciiiiOStly nnny. A . most difficult
and most urgent'' of
few showers will develop In Southml CaUfornla. The Plains will be
alllhe
issues
in
lhe region.
windy and Wlll'lll • (UPI) .
. .
.
And lhe foreign minister said
Mitterrand's suggestion Sunday
~------Weather------ that the heads of state of the U.N.
Security Council nations meet to
Friday.
Highs
willn~~ge
from
the
ref.liate future arms sales to lhe
South Central Ohio
.
50s
to
lhe
lower
60s
Wednesday,
Middle East could evolve into an
Partly cloudy Monday night,
from
lhe
mid
40s
l()
lh~
mid
50s
overall
peace conference on the
with a low between 20 and 25.
an~
mostly
m.
the
40s
region.
The
Security Council has
Thursday,
• Mostly sunny Tuesday, with highs
Friday.
Overn1ght
lows
willn11ge
never
met
at
the
head-of-state level.
·in the lowc:r 50s. ·
from
lhc
mid
30s
to
the
mi~
40s
Israel
has
opposed
an internaOhio extended forecat
early
Wednesday,
and
mostly~
the
tiona!
Middle
East
peace
conferWednesday throa111 Friday
30s
Thursday
and
Friday
mornmgs.
ence;
saying
the
only
way
to ·
A chance of rain Wednesday
. resolve the Arab-Israeli conflict is
and Thursday, with fair weather
to conduct direct negotiations
between the nations involv~
The release of the prisoners was
worked
out Sunday during ceaserted
.
Units of the Meigs County
file talks betw.ccn Saddam 's high
Emergency Medical Service po At4:22 p.m. the Middleport unit command and coalilioin military
responded to 11 cillls for assislance was called to South Fourth for Bur· leaders in a heavily ~tent on
over the weekend and early Mon- well McKinney who was taken to a stretch of desert m allied-occu·
day morning.
·
·
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Iraq.
.
.
The Rutland unit, at 5 p.m .. piedAfter
On Saturday at 12:33 p.m. the
the mcctmg, Gen. H. NorRutland Fire Department was rransported Roger Utley from the man Schwarzkopf. ·the U.S. comcalled to Leading Creek Road f&lt;&gt;r a stalioo io Holzer.
mander of the allied forces, said, ''I
downed electrical line at the Mar- · At 10:16 p.m. the Middleport. am very happy to tell you that we
unitll1llS(l011ed Doris Haynes from agreed on all matters. We. have
shall residence.
the
station to Veterans:
· At 2 p.m . the Pomeroy Fire
made a major step forward m the
The
Racine unit went to Broad· cause of peace."
Department wont to Kingsbury
Road for a brush fire at the Dias way Street at 10:33 p.m. for Lois
The agreement. the general said.
residence. While thete the depart· Frank who was taken to Holzer.
meant the signing of a formal
This morning at 3:58a.m. the cease- ftrc was not far away.
mcnt had to extinguish a fire on a
Syracuse
unit was cillled to Buck·
truck belongillg to a fireman.
Schwarzkopf said the Iraqis also
town
Road
in Letart for Courtney agreed
· The Middleport· unit, at 6:17
to identify the location of
p.m., went to Laurel Street for Jones who was rransported to Holzland and sea mines and that both
Kenny Sec who was transported Ill er.
sides agreed to a line of demarca- ·
·
At
4:28
a.m.
the
Pomeroy
unit
Holzer Medical Center.
On Sunday at 2:42 a.m. the Rut- went to Morning Star Road for tion tli separate allied forces and
defeated Iraqi military.
land Fire Department responded to l..isha Linn Buck who was taken to theIraq's
U.N. ambassador, Abdul
Veterans,
and
at
8:02
a.m.
the
Mida call on Hysell Run Road for an .
Amir
Al-Anbari,
said his governelectrical problem a! the Ste"!8f! dleport unit went to South Second ment also accepted U.N. Security
residence in wh1ch Chnst1 Av.enue for Frances Martin who Council Resolution 686 setting up
Barcswilt was treated but not rrans- was treated but not transported.
the terms for a cease-ftrc. The measure, fassed Saturday, included a
Jist o demands, including. those
agree4 to at the 'military meeting
Movies to be shown
5005.
Sunday.
"Pevil and D8niel Mousefl and
Pespite the persistent repons of
. "Fisherman and His Wifefl will be
unrest, Saddam appeared to be
· Uterary club to meet
· holding on to power. Baghdad
shown at the Meigs County Public
·The Middlepon Literary Club Radio said he presided Sunday
Library in Pom~y on Sa~y at
2 p.m. All area children arc mVIted will meet Wednesday at I:30 p.m. over a joint meeting of the ruling
Mrs. Sibley Slack will review
to anend. Admission is free.
Command Coun~il
"Genghis Khanfl and Mrs. Roy Revolutionary
and the ruling Baath Party to disHolter will review "The Emporer's cuss political developments in the
Winding Sheet Mrs. Wilson Car· . gulf area. It said he was in conttOI
Fish fry
The Cliester Fire House will (JC!Iter will be the bosteSS. Roll call of the country and that Iraq would
have a fish fry ori April6 from 4 to will be answered with a custom of start reconstruction soon.
the Middle East.
7 p.m. at the tue house.

Ohio Lottery
Pick 3:269
Pick 4:6816

Cards : 8-li, to~c;
Q-D; 3-S

: VoL 41, No. 221
Coprrtp!'ad 11111. .

DISCUSS PERMANENT .CEASE FIRE·
AIJied· Forces Commander General Norman
Scbarzkopf (left) aad Sandi Arabian Comman·
der of Pan Arab forces General KbaUd Bin Sui

-----

tan (second from left) IDeet wltb unidentified
Iraqi military commaaden (rJaht) to.dlsc:a_, a
· penaanent cease ftre at Safwln air base In aiDed
occupJed southera Iraq Sunday. (UPI)

.:

....·

•
·
.
.
.
·
'
·
'
·.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Starr·
'
Plans for the SecQ~ AnnUl!~ Big
Bend Stem wheelers Festival are ·
underway, and were discussed at
Mondsy ni~t's. regular meeting of
Pomeroy V1Uage Council.
· According to .Councilman Bruce
Reed. who helped to head up last
fall's festival on behalf of the
Meigs County Chamber of Commerce, the festival has been tentalively set for October 11 and 12.
The numberofboutsexpected to
be on hand for this year's festival is

almost double lhe number on hand prOposed ordinance, which updates would be in town lor an extended
last year. Accll'ding to :Reed, near- the bylaws and regulations of the period of time while widening the
ly 20 stemwheelers arc anticipated department, with fu-emen who had intersection at Nye Avenue, and
· exoreSsed coricern with the word- suggested that the department be .
for the festival.
ing surrounding the department's contacted about the resurfacing
Minersville-area residents Jim
age r~ctions.
wtl'k. According to Seyler, the road
and Donna Davis, who conceived
Mayor Richard Seyler voiced has not been resurfaced for at least
the idea for s·uch a festival last
year', arc also involved in the plan- his interest in contaCting the Ohio 1-Jfl years.
Department of Transportation to . Reed told council that he would
ning stages f&lt;ir this year's event.
discuss
blacktopping Main Street contact ODOT Deputy Director
The third reading of a proposed
from
the
Nye Avenue intersecti&lt;&gt;n ·John Dowler to discuss the possifire department ordinance was
to
the
Middleport/Pomeroy
bound- . bility of resurfacing !\lid to arrange
tabled last night, pending at least
ary.
a meeting time for the same.
two minor changes. Councilmen
'
Seyler
pointed
out
that
ODOT
Council also entertained discusBryan Shank and Larry Wehrung
'
reponed that they had discussed the

By MINDY KEARNS
OVP News Starr

Contiaued l'rom page 1
West Bank and Gaza Strip.
· Hope also abounds lhat the convergence of interests forged by the
war will cause Saudi Arabia,
Kuw~t and other moderate Arab
states to formally make peace with
Israel. To date, Egypt is the only
Anlb country that has done so.
Participation in the anti-Iraq
alliance helped nurtured a glimmer
of improvement in U.S. relations
with Syria, an avowed enemy of
Israel and longtime pariah to the
United States as a hsvcn for terror·
ists. Baker credited the Syrians
with taking "some action" to stem
tenorism against U.S. and Western
wgets to gain favor with the West.
A Kuwaiti pfficial said Sunday
that his country, in conjunction
Sarah Irvine O'Conn~ a daughter, with t)le Arab Gulf Cooperation
Maureen O'Connor of the borne; a Council, may review its relationdaughter, Mrs. Robert (Sally Ann) ship with Israel. The Kuwaitis and
Woodford of Lucasville; and three others also will be consulted on
creation of an Arab-led peacekeepgiandchildren.
·
Services will be held Wednes- ing fm:e backed by a strengthened
day at 11 Lm. at the White Funeral Jongterm presence of American
Home in Coolville with the Rev. naval and air forces and pre-posiGeorge Horner officiating. Burial · tioned war supplies.
Bilker will be seeking input on
wiD be in the Coolville Cemetery
where military graveside services all these issues when he leaves
will be conducted. Friends may call Wednesday on a trip that includes a
at the White Funeral Home Tues- stop in MoscoW to thank the Soviday from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 ets - whose influence lhe United
States for years sought io curb - ·
p.m.
for supporting the U.S.-led stand
.
against Iraq and recQgnize their
desire to remain ~ngaged in the
Satuiday night'~ winning num- Middle East
bers were 2, 3, 20, 36, 37 and 42.
There were 95 people with five
correct numbers and they will
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Saturreceive $1,218 each. There were
4,374 people with f~ur correct day's winning Ohio Lottery numnumbers, worth $85 ap1ece.
No one had all sill Kicker num- ';Pc~.3
186.
bers - 137121 - Saturday night.
Ticket sales: S I ,65 I, 771.00.
Eight people had. five numbers,
worth .$5,000 each. Four num~ Payoff: $578,755.50.
were picked by 52 people, who will Plck-4
4769.
receive S1,000 apiece.
Ticket sales: $308,217.50. Payoff: S2627oo.oo.
Cardi
Thtee of hearts.
Veterau Memorial
Jack eX clubs.
Saturday admissions: Bobby .
Five eX diamonds.
Stanley, Racine.
Ten of spllles.
Saturday discharges: Reva John·
. Ticket sales: .$78,982. Payoff:
son, Wayne Gilliand.
$31,680.
Sunday admissions: Mary Saper Lotto
·
Hawk, Rutland; ·Iamca Perkins,
2, 13, 20, 36, 37, 42.
Poma-oy; Laura SC&lt;JII, Middleport;
Ticket sales: $4,250,799.00.
and Burwell McKinney, Middle- Kldler
137121.
""'§unday discharges: None.
Ticket sales: $668,743.

-

LEVEL LOOP
CARPET.
•18 Colors
eAdvanced Generation Olefin
•100% Polypropylene Back
•Easy Care
SQ.

'·

'FOR
AND·.rrius"! Appi'Oxlma~ly 100 petlple li'om Mason, Gallla IUid Meigs counties attended a meetl!ig Monday nlpt at tbe Mason Cou!lty Public Library, In an effort to bring jobs and industry to the trl-county areL Speaken for the evening were Frank Lee, director of the Mason County
Development Authority; JJ, Wedge, who orgaalzed the meeting and served as emcee; Rlcb Jones, Meigs
County Commissioner; and T001my Meadows, business development officer for Star Bank in Gallia
County. Pictured a hove, left to right, Lee, Wedge and Meadows. (OVP photo by Mindy Kearns.)

'24 Colors
•Zoftron Nylon Pll~ _,
•stain lolease
•continuous. Heat Set Yarn
•Good HousokHping Seal .

Collins named to ODOT post
Meigs' County Treasurer George
Collins will be going to Marietta to
serve with the Ohio Peparunent of
Transportation.
Collins, a Republican, con finned his appointment to the District IOollice on Tuesday morning.
Collins' appointment to the
position of District 10 AdmiiJislrative Assistant comes afler nearly
two months of controversy and
waiting. Both Col!ins and Meigs

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---Area deaths-Arthur S. O'Conner

Arthur S. 0 'Connor, 69, of 53
Rock St., Coolville, died early ~1!­
urdsy March 2, 1991 at the Chilli·
cothi Veterans Administration
Hospital following an extended ill-

ness.

Born in Jersey City, N. J., he
was the son of the late Claude and
Elizabeth Hilton O'Connor. He
was a U.S. Air Force veteran of
World Warn where he was~ B-17
pilot. Hew~ as a mac~.
Survivors uiclude h1s w1fe,

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No
one wins. Ohio Super Lotto jack pot
.

TEXTURED LEVEL LOOP CARPET

CLEVELAND (UPI) - Ohio
Lottery officials reported Sunday
there were no winners of Saturday
night's $8 million Super Lotto
jack~ot. meaning Wednesday
night s Super Lotto jackpot will be
worth $12 minion.

•7 COLORS
•oUPIN/NYLON PILE
•10 Yl. UMinD WEll WllllNTY

'

Stocks
Am Elc Power ......................28 S/8

Ashland oil ..........................33 3/4

AT&amp;T .................................. .33 S/8

Bob Bvans ............................I8 1/8

Chlrlllina Sbop..................... t3 7/8

City Holdina.........................J4 1fl
Federal MoJiui ......................,..... J6
Goodyear 'f.u .....................22 1/4
Key CaiiiJiilll ............................ 11
LaiKII' Eflld •••.•... ~.................. 18 518
Limited Inc. ..........................23 3/4
Multimedia Inc. ....................71 l(l
Ral Jteaaurllll .................,....... 1/8
Robbini&amp;MyeB ...................26 lfl
. Sholle)''alnc......................... 14 3/4
s.. Bink ....:......................... 23 1/4
WerJIJy lnt'l..................................8
WorthingiOII Ind...................22 3/4

·''

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County Engineer Philip Roberts
received the approval of a majority
of the lOth District's Republican
Party chairmen in January for
ODOT positions. Collins was .recommended for the administrative
assistant position to which he has
now been appointed, and Roberts
was believed to have been a sttOng
candidate for the Deputy Direc1or
position.
The party's endorsement of

Roberts was ajlparently ignored Athens native John Dowler was
appointed to the top position in the
Marietta office in late January.
.Dowler was unavailable for
comment on the appointment on
Tuesday morning, and Collins
refused to ·comment on the matter
until Dowler made a statement,
other than to confll'm the appointment. ·

Meigs County teenagers have
one of state's .highest birth rates

INSTAWD

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Sentlael News Starr
Meigs County .teenagers continue to record one of the highest birth
rates in the SIBle or Ohio. according to Nonna Torres, nursing director for the Meigs County Health
Department.
She said that according to figutes recently released by the Ohio
Department of Health , Meig s
County recorded 60 or 30.7 percent
of live births per 1,000 females
ages 10-19 in 1989.
Meigs County teenagers was
below Pike County which recorded
the highest rate of 88 births or 43.1
percent, followed by Jackson with
102 births or 38 percent; Vinton
with 37 births for 35.9 percent;
Scioto with 253 or 35.5 percent;
and Gallia with 63 or 24.9 percent.
Adjacent Athens County had
102 births for 18.4 percent per
1,000 Jive births with Washington
County reporting 99 births for 17.8
percent. The figures indicated that
Southeastern Ohio Counties led the
state in 1eenage births for the year.
The Ohio Oepartment of Health
noted thai once every 23 minutes a
baby was born to an Ohio teenager
dlJI'IIIg the year. The total of 22,469
Jive births to Ohio teens in 1989
showed a 3.S percent increase over
1988.
According to James F. Quilty,
Jr., MD., Chief, Division of Maternal and Child Health, Ohio Department of Health, more than 400 of
the births were to children 14 years
of age and under.
,
State wide, 10 of 14 Ohio teen
births were' to unwed mothers ,
although the Department of Health

sion on purchasing a new police
departm ent cruiser last nigh!.
Money has !&gt;een appropriated for
the purchase of the vehicle.
According to Councilman Thomas
Werry, a new radio is needed in ·
one of lhe cruisers, and a
lightbar should be purchased for the
other cruiser.
.
.
Werry said that he would investigate possible dealers for such a
cruiser and assist the police de ~­
ment i~ writing out a bid advertisement.

new

In other action, council:
- disc ussed various stree t
repairs in need of auention, as well
as
needed repairs to stonn se~ers and
catch basins within the village;
· - heard discussion or a property
dispute on High Street;
- accepted the mayor's repon of
fines collected in the amount of
$3,167.
Also present were Councilman
Bill .Young and Clerk Brenda Morris.

B.usiness leaders say
area exports its b_est
resource -young people

'' ,.,

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CARPET

A Uultln\edle Inc. Newopeper

Tentative dates .set for Sternwheelers Festival

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,

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1 Socllon, 10 PlgH 25 ...,,,

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, ·TUesday, March 5, 1991

----Announcements

Cemeteries to be cleaned
Quilted sweatsll!" class .
Lebanon Township will be
A quilted sweatshll't class w1U
begin March 12 at the First South· cleaning cemetery grounds after
em Baptist Church near the Meigs April I and those wanting to save
County Fair Grounda. Rcgisuation flowers and other items should
deadline is Friday. For more infor- remove them by April I .
mation contact Bunny Kuhl at 9927537.
Dance to be held
The Pomeroy· Senior Citizens
Dance Club will be .having a dance
SfriD&amp; banquet
The Me1gs, Count)' C.hamber of on FridaY. from 8 to 11 p.m. at the
Commerce will have 1ts annual Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy.
spring banquet dinner and dance on Music will be by the Happy HolSaturday at the Royal Oak Resort low Boys of Athens. Those attend·
Club. Advanced reservations are ing bring snacks for the snack
required. For .more information table.
contaCt the chamber office at 992-

Low tonight in mid 40s.
Wednesday, high near 60.
Chance or rain 30 percent.

•

Meigs EMS responds to ~1 calls

Arab•..

\

noted that metiopolitan counties
had the highest rate of births to
unwed teens while Southern Ohio
counties had the lowest reported
rate. This, Quilty said, clearly
shows the danger of premature sexual activity.
Torres expressed the concern or
the local health department about
the lack of prenatal care for
teenagers during the fU'St trimeste•
She said that teenagers because
their bodies are not mature arc at a
higher health risk for anemia. pregnancy-induced hypenension, cervical trauma, and premature delivery.
She also pointed out that one oul
of every 10 live births to teens are
of low birth weight and that
between eight and I 9 percent of
very low birth weight babies may
be severely handicapped. Another
15 to 20 percent may be moderately and mildly disabled, she said. It
was further pointed out that low
birth weight accounts for twothirds of the infant deaths within
the fU'St 28 days of life.
Other health concerns center on
sexually transmitted diseases, Tot-

res noted.
Numerous services to teenagers
who arc pregnant as well as older
women are available through the
Meigs County Health Oepartment
which has a prenatal·clinic program
as well as services of WIC
(women, infants and children).
ln. addition to health related
issues of teenage pregnancy, it was
pointed out that there is a definite
economic impact on .the individual
as well as society at large.
Twenty-five pm:ent of unmarried teen mothers drop out of

school as do 75 percent of high
school women who marry and have
a child. The result is that teen
·mothers generally find themselves
in low paying jobs or become
dependent on welfare for support.
Statistics from the Pepartment
of Human Services show at least60
percent of Ohio's teen mothers
become
dependent upon public
111
assistanCe at some lime. This created an increase of nine percent in ·
· government spending for teen
Continued on page 10

"I'm concerned about the
exporting of natural resources. People say that West Virginia is shipping limber and coal out-of-state.
But our most valuable resource
we're shipping out isn't timber or
coal, it's our young people."
This was the statement of
Mason County Economic Pevelopment Authority Director Frank Lee,
when approximately 100 people
from three counties joined Monday
evehirg in a bic;l f9r imlu~try and
jobs.
.
'
•·
Commissioners from Mason,
Meigs and Gallia counties. as well
as·blmkers, businessmen and union
• officials turned out at the Mason
County Public Library to see what
they could do, both individually
and as a group, to bring jobs to the
Iii-county area.
Moderator J.J. Wedge introduced the speakers for the eveni!lg,
Frank Lee; Ri ch Jones, Me1gs
County Commissioner; and
Tommy Meadows, business development officer for Star Bank from
Gallia County.
In addition to Jones. fi ve other
commissioners represeiJting Mason
and Gallia counties attended, Sadie
Bailes , Larry Sayre and Tucker
Mayes of Mason, and Harold
Montgomery and George Pope or
Gallia County.

Wedge noted at the beginning of
the session that although he is 100
percent in support of Pyrochem, the
meeting had absolutely nothing to
do wilh the company.
Wedge served as the Mason
County liaiwn for Pyrochem a few
years ago when they attempted to
locate an incenemtor in the county.
"I ' m here for jobs in Mason
County, Meigs and Gallia counties.
The purpose of this organi,zalional
meeung is to lend suppon to industries. This group can be productive
if we keep one goal in mind •
,
jobs," Wedge said.
Lee was fttst county represenlative to speak. telling those attending of three projects that are ongoing at lhe present lime, each thai
ha s a direct impact on Mason
County.
McArthur Lumber and Post Co.,
located on U.S. 35 at Southside, is
a small, employee-owned operation, Lee said, but is rock solid
financially and is a good corpomtc
citizen. Lee stated the company
buys logs from farmers and other
local people, which provides them
with extra money.
The second project J.ee .spoke of
was General Dynamics. "Senator
Byrd brought us General Dynamics;" the authority director said.
General Dynamics. located in
Apple Grove. is a hi-tech resean:h
center thai will also bring jobs and
money into the region.

The third project Lee talked
about was Alabama River Pulp
(ARP). Lee dispelled rumors that
are circulat ing concerning the
plant, saying he was sick and tired
of reading nonsense such as ARP
would clear cut all SU\nding limber
in !he county.
l.ee said in Alabama, the company does not buy timber land. but
contracts with individuals. They
have their own forest management
people, he added, ilfld arc not going
to use the large veneer logs, but
scrap material and crooked trees.
The authority director went on
to say the company would provide ·
about 1,000 jobs. "They want to ·
come here. and will come here, if
we don't shoot 'ourselves in the
· foot," Lee said.
Lee also stated the county is
being considered for a new power
plant instead of the repowenng of
the Sporn Plant that was announced
a few years ago.
Byrd announced lhatlhe projec1
would be in Mason Counly,
according 10 Lee. The nexllhing he
knew, he continued, was there was
a consul !ant knocking on his door,
and th en he found out Mas on
County was competing wilh another community for the new plant.
"And we still arc," he said.
"It was announced for Mason
County. And, it can burn the coal
that is produced in the Meigs Mine.
Continued on page 10

c ·a r overturns; woman slightly injured .;'
A Hamilton woman suffered
minor injuries Monday after the car
she was riding in turned over on its
right side on State Route 338. ..
Edith Smith, 77, was transported
to Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the Meigs County EMS following
the accident in Letart Township.
She was treated and released for
her injuries, a hospital spokeswom an said Tuesday.
According to a report from the
Gailia-Meigs post of the State
Highway Patrol, Smith was a pas-

seng er in a car driven by Elva
Corbin, 46, of Racine. Corbin was
southbound on State Route 338
when she apparently lost control of
her car on the snowy roadway and
slid off the right side of the road.
Her 1988 Ford Aerostar then
Uirned over on ils righl side, and
then tqrned back over onto its
wheels.
Corbin was not treated for her
injuries.
A Middleport man was cited for

·-

failure to control after the car' he
was driving flipped over off of
Meigs County Road 5 Monday.
Christopher M. George, 18, was
cited after he apparently lost control of his 1975 Chevrolet Impala
in the eastbound lane of CR 5. The
vehicle slid off the right side of the
roadway and struck a power pole.
Geor~e 's vehicl e then rolled over
onto 1ts top where it came to rest
George was not injured in the
crash.

ODOTfunds
received for

new van
Purchase of a new van with a
wheelcllajr tift for tlle Meigs County Council on Aging has been funded ~n the amount of $16,93.6 by the
9h1o Depanment of Transportauon.
Cost of the van which will
replace a 1983. vehicle with nearly
100,000 miles pn it is $21,170. All
of that amount with the exception
of 20 percent or $4 ,234 will be
paid by the state.
Delivery Of the new van is
expected within eight weeks.
Meanwhile, the Council is soliciting' donations ~d will begin several fund raising projects to get
together the local share.
Eleanor Thomas, Council d·irec- .
tor, is asking churches, organizations and individuals' to contribute
Continued on page 10

TO BE REPLACED • This 1983 van which
bas traveled aboat 100,000 miles over the bumpy

backroads ot Meigs County to traasJ)ort senior
citizens will be replaced Ibis spring. Cost of lhe
~an is $21,170 with all bqt $4,234 to come

through I grant from the Ohio Department of
Transportation. Wanda Vining is transportation
coord10ator for the Meigs County Council on
Aging. ·

�-.

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111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·JI(ASON AREA
_,~

tl!m~

r-T'L-1'-"T'' ,..,..,.,c::~,""'

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publls!Jer

PAT

CHARLENE HOEFLICH

General "anager
WHITEHEAD

Aaslstaat Publloher/ Controller
'

'

A MEMBER of The ,Unlted ·P ress International, Inland Dally Press
Assoclailon and the Amer ican Newspaper PubliShers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
na m e, address and telephone number . No unsigned letters will be publis hed . Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not per_sonall·
ties .

Berry's WoriEJ

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WITH THE lOlST AIRBORNE Godfrey has demythologized the psychological terror than tactical
DMSION, Saudi Anlbia - Try not boogie man:
weapons.
.
to compare the flight surgeon of the
We ~nt the night as a guest in
In a speech last September, Cen·
lOlst Aviation Brigade to "Hawk- Godfrey s Ient, and were awakened tral Intelligence Agency Director
eye" Pierce. Ignore the fact that he to the sound of him lecturing aides William Webster reporied lhat Sadsleeps in a body bag as a liner to on an affliction lhat would cause a dam had a "sizable stockpile" of
keep his sleeping bag dry. Forget man to show."expressions you've biological weapons. A member of
that he once dressed up in Arab never seen on a man before, and Congress called it "militarily sig·
grab and briefly convinced a few you'D~ things from him you've nilicanL"
Gls that he was Saudi King Fahd ·never heard from a human before."
The weapons were primarily
"Biological weapons?" we developed at Salman Pak, a
reviewing the troops. Pay no arlen·
asked. .
research facility about 18 miles
lion to his one-linerS.
No,
he'
said.
A
testicle
disease.
southeast of Baghdad. It was
This is Lt. Col. Larry Godfrey,
Then Godfrey proceeded to lee· bombed into oblivion in the first
not Alan Aida, He is equal paris
comedy, compassion and confi· ture on the unnecessary hysteria the days of the war. But what survived
dence. He lr:nows his stuff. And that press created over Saddam Hus· was Iraq's stoCkpile, which is eapa·
is why there is at least one brigade sein •s potential to use biological ble of being delivered in bombs,
at the front that isn't afraid of bio- weapons. The known agents in the short-range rockets and artillery
·
logical weapons, because "Doc" Iraqi arsenal are more useful as shells.

Jack Anderson

and Dale Van Atta

Saddam is believed to have used
biological weapons • apparently
with _little effect compared to
chemical weapons • against the
Kurds in his oWn country.
The two chief biological agents
in Iraq's arsenal are anthrax and
botulin toxin. According to Godfrey, only a small number of troops
would be affected by either, and
Iraq would have to have an aerosol
generator capable of contin.uous
pumping of the agents. within a
mile or tWo of oncoming troops.

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NO

PUMPIN6

Senate Bill 3

"

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This 1?85t w~. the Ohio Sen~~~e exemptions to all OhiOans who are
. held voung ~ss1ons !'" t~o 5C1?8' now serving on active duty in
mte days. While We di~ not COOSid· Operation Storm for military pay
~r many p1ec~s of le~lallon du_r- that they are now receiving as a
mg those vollllg sess1on~. we d1d result of their active duty staiUs.
Because some had expressed
enact or_adopt ~an Oh•o.Sen!'te
concern
that this particular amendone partlcu!ar p•ece. of l~gtsla!ton
ment
would
reduce state revenue,
thai I had discussed m this parucu·
the
bill
was
~-referred
three weeks
lar column &lt;?n ~v~ OCCBSIO~s. .
from
the
Senale
floor
back to the
That l~gtslatlo!!•s embodied m
Senate
Finance
Commit~
for fur·
Senare ~111 3, a bill ~was mtrother
debate
and
reflection
on the
duced m last y~ar s Gener~l
Assembly' and re·mtroduced th1s costimpacL
This week during session, the
year.
. .
.
.
. The bill 1s des1gned to prov1de Senate Finance Committee met and
differenuated pay to s~ employ- the committee removed from the
ees. who ha~e been a~uvated to bill the tax exemption status. The
achve duty ·~ Oper~tmn Desert bill was then presented to the floor
Storm. ~he b1_ll received a great where again, an effort was made by
deal of discussiOn.and has generat· · seveml of us to re·instale the taX
~ a lot of debate 10 the Senale and exemption for all Ohioans.
That effort was defeated on the
10 fact, was presented to the ~enaie
floor
of the Senate. In addition, I
three weeks ago for fuU conSider&amp;·
offered
some amendments that I
hooD. .
.
felt
were
important to provide the
unng t~at t1me, three weeks
differentiated
pay application to all
ago, the b1ll was amended to
state
employees
regardless of
extend benefits to non-government
whether
they
were
in a combat·
employees. T~e amendment that
zone
or
non-combat
zone.
was approved m the Sena~e three
As the bill reached the Senate
weeks ago would prov1de tax

,.

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floor, it had also been amended in
commitiee to apply the differenliated pay to only those who served in
combat zone duty.
Consequently, I offered the
amendment to provide a fairer
method of providing the differenti·
ated pay status to all state employ·
ees who have been activated.
Clearly, the families of both those
on combat duty and those who are
not in the combat zone are suffering some fairly severe economic
hardships and I believe that as an
employer that the State of Ohio can
set an example in providinl! those
benefits and providmg the differen·
liated pay to all employers regard·
less of combat zone and combat
duty.
I think that later on perhaps we
can re-visit the issue to reward
those who have been in harm's way
. in a greater fashion and served in
the com bat zone, but ai this point, I
believe that it is the intention of
S.B . 3 to P.rovide benefits to all
those families whose loved ones
are now soldiers serving in Opera·
lion Desert Storm.

. ..
By_Sen. Jan .L_o,n$ ..(
Unfortunalely, my amendment
did .not succeed in getting incorporated into the bill and the legisla·
lion was adopted in the Selllle proo
viding the differentiated pay siBIUS
to o~ly those state employees who
are 10 the com bat zone. The bill
will now go to the Ohio House of
Representatives for further study
and for the House's vote on this
particular measure.
Once adopted by the House then
it would make its way to'Governor
Voinovicb for his review an4 hope·
fully his signature.
It's my hope that I can continue
to provide the residents of the 17th
Sena!e District with discussions of
what is occurring in thC Legisl8lure
and ask you to let me lr:now your
opinions on .these issuea and keep
me informed of how you view
Ohio's direction should be as we
conclude this decade or the twenti·
eth century.
Please feel free to write me,
State Senator Jan Michael Long,
Staiehouse, Columbus, OH 43215,
or call me at (614) 466-8156.

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a right to worlc tigainst practice he
or she believes is immoral. But
. saving lives with a drug that just
lso happens to be able to be used
as an abortifacient ha.s nothing to
do with abortion. To forbid the
testing and use of such a drug, is to
sentence victims of diseaseS that
could be treated by it to intense
suffering and death when the drug
might cure them. It is immoral. It is
. also cruel and uncaring;
I wonder how former President
Reagan feels about his RU-486 ban

•'

every couple of days.''
. scored 95 poiniS the ilighl before,
LSU head coach Dale Brown holding the Gaels to 36 percent
said he would not use O'Neal in shooting. Se$1 Green, Iona's senior
the NCAA tournament unless the forward who scored 43 points In
player was 100 percent healthy. the Gaels' semifinal win over
The nation's leading ·rebounder Siena,' was held to 10 points by SL
with an average of 14.6 a g!lflle, Peter's Marvin Andrews.
Andrews had 13 points and
O'Neal is -averaging 27 .7 points
eight
rebounds (or SL Pe1er's and
and five blocked shots a game.
was
named
tbe tournament's most
· Missouri center Doug Smith
valuable
player.
Tony Walker
played the fmal home game of his
·
scored
18
poiniS
to
lead the Pea·
career and went out in style - bit·
cocks' auaCk.
·
At Richmond, Va., Jim Shields
fie.ld of 64 ~ were Rich- rout of Notre Dame. After the scored' 26 poiniS and grabbed 11 ,
mood, the Colonial Athletic Con· game, Missouri retired Smith's No . . rebounds en roule to being named
ference champion; SoUth Alabama, 34 uniform number to a huge ova· most valuable player of the Colonial Tournament as Richmond, 21the Sun Belt Conferenartillist; and lion.
Pepperdine, which t:nockectoff SL
"It's an outsWiding way for an 9, earned iiS fifth NCAA tourn a·
Mary 's in the West Coast Confer- outstandi~~yer to go out," ssid ment berth in eisht years with an
"In 81·78 victory over George Mason.
h Norm S••wan.
Missoun.
ence championShip.
The word was not so good for athletics everything passes quickly, Richmond lr:noct:ed off· both lndi·
LSU. O'Neal, named the SEC but that type of reception is going ana and Georgia Tech in the 1988
Player of the Year earlier in the to stick with Doug for a long toumamenL
At Mobile, Ala., Derek Turner
day, underwent an examination time.'.'
.
.
Monday evening and team physi· . The people at St. Peter's w•ll, broke 11 72·12 tie with a three-point
·dan I&gt;r. J. Thomas Kilroy sai4- also remember Monday for some shot with 2:+3 to play and pushed •
·O'Neal bad a. hairline fractore of ·_time because the 24·6 Peac!JtkS, the Ja~ further ahead with coli·
the fibula just belciw his left bee. - whic.h had lost to lona twice m:!he seeuuve inside baskets that put :
The 7-1 sophomore center regular season, used a smotheMg South Alabama ahead by 7 pomts
injured his leg Feb. 27 in a game at defense to grab an NCAA tourna- with 1:16 left as South Alabama
Florida. O'Neal played the final ment berth:
.
. posted an 86-81 victory over Old
few minutes of that l!ame with a
''They were S':"J''Ised. when we Dominion in the Sun Belt final. It . :
noticeable limp and miSsed the reg· won IS. They were suprised when will be the fourth time in the
ular season finale on March 2 at we won 20. Now they '11 be real NCAAs for the Jaguars, who upset
Mississippi State.
supris~d ,tha_t we ma~e. ihe Alabama in a frrst-round game in
"Those who saw the florida NCAA s, sa1d ~!· Peler ~ head 1989.
At Santa Clara. Calif., Geoff
game saw he was limping real bad coach Ted Fiore. Whai this was
Lear
scored four of his career-high
toward the end of the
Kil· was a case of wills, a c~ ~t:. true
~2
points
in ovenime, leading top·
roy said.
.
grit. Maybe now we put 11 (St. ·
seeded
Pepperdine
tb a 71-68 tri'
•'He's out of the SEC Tourna· Peler's) on the map.
umph
over
St.
Mary's
in the finals
· ".If &lt;:vera group of gur,s deserve
. ment. We will continue to check
of
the
West
Coast·Conferen'i¢
tour·
him verphorou~hly and we'l! be to wm, 1t w~s these guys.
, ..
conductmg ongomg exanunallons
Sl Peter s defense su~se'd the nament.
and consultations with Shaquille potent lona offense. wh1ch had

CELEBRATE VICTORY, TITLE· St.
- Peler's -he•d COllch Ted. Fiore·(center) and his
learn celebrate tllelr MAAC championsh_ip and a

bkl iD tbe 'NCAA touroamenl after bealinglooa
In Albany, N.Y. MOIIday,evening. (UPI)

·

•·

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Sarah Overstreet·

now that he lr:nows it may also be
used to cure breast cancer. Nancy
Reagan was a breast cancer victim
and underwent a mastectomy.- Mar·
ilyn Quayle's mother died of breast
cancer.
Perhaps now even those who ·
disagree with abortion will help : :
give this drug a chance to save the
lives of American women. If you
believe keeping RU-486 out of the
country is wrong, let policy makers

know.

Two basketball teams with effectively last week, knocking off conference later in the year to purequal records, each one JJOSi&gt;CSsi~g Findlay 93· 73'and Tiffm 83-80. So sue an independen~ schedule, ·
Currently, Malone is averaging
at least one' of the top athletes m did Malone, which dumped post·
season
challengers
Urbana
96-88
98.2
points a game .8J!d _giving up
· Disaict 22 and each with an even
and
Cedarville
116-101,
bo'
t
h
at
79.9.
The Redmen are credited
chance of . . the Ohio NAIA
Canton,
to
meet
the
Redmen
for
the
with
97.1
points per outing and are
champions=competing in the
title
game.
surrendering75.2.
NAJA National Tournament next
A key component of the Pio·
Lawhorn - the District and
week wiD go head-to-head for the
neers'
success
has
been
-6·6
for·
MOC
Coach of the Year- will
title tpnight ai Lyne Cenler.
ward
Todd
Rowe,
a
junior
from
start
in
addition to 1-Wrison, Mark
The top seeded Univ~rsity of
Leavittsburg,
Ohio,
chosen
the
Dis·
Erslan
(6-2,
junior. 14.7 points, 4.1
Rio Grande (30-4), coached by 11·
trict
Player
of
the
Year
and
Nation·
rebounds
pe~
ga~e) a.t shoot~ng
season veteran John Lawhorn,
al
Player
of
the
Week
during
the
guard
for
ton!ght
s game. Starting
-faces the defending champion Mal·
one College (30-4 ), stewarded by season. Afler 34 games, Rowe is forwards C&lt;!DUnue to be B~ Schu·
bringing a per-game scoring aver· bert (6·3, Jumor, 13.9 pomts, 4.4
Hal Smith, ai 7:30p.m. Admission age
of 26.9 points and 7.4 . rebounds) and Jeff Brown (~·5,
is $4 for aduliS and $2 for slildents.
·Rio Grande season passes will not rebounds, as well as a free. throw sophomore, is. I pomiS,·3.1 assiSts,.
perCentage of89.3. ·
·.
8;6 rebounds) and Troy Donaldson
he honored ai the gale.
Rio
Grande
is
led
by
Gary
Har·
(6· 7, sophomore, 11 .9 pomts, 7.9
· Rio Grande earned the number
rison,
6·0
point
guard
from
Gal·
rebounds)
.at center.
.
.
one spot over the 17 disaict Iearns
lipolis,
now
averaging
20.1
points
·
Rowe
u
ex11ected
to
st~
for
foUowing a 28-4 fmish in the regu·
and
S.S
assists
per
game,
in
addi·
Malone
and
w1ll
be
backed
up
~~
lar season, the championship of tlxl
tion
to
.
a
56
percent
field
goal
the
other
foi'WB!'d
slot
by
S~
Stan·
Mid.Qhip Conference (10-2) and a
13-game winning streak which showing and an 8S percent perfor· ford (6-4. semor, 6.2 pomts, 5.8
· reb~unds), wi_th Jim Kjsh (6-7,
commenced Jan. 20 when the Red· maneet'mnthefreethrowline.
Hlln:lson
the
MOC
Player
of
the
semor, 20.4. pomts, 8 rebounds) ai
men defeated Wilberforce 106-79
Year
aill
n:nnerup
to
Rowe
on
the
the post. qwu:ds will be ~alt Wil·
on the road.
Ieam,
scored
40
points
.son
(6-4, Jumor, 10.4 pomts, 4._6.
AII-Disttict
Based on iiS schedule and the
over
Tiffin
Saturday,
netting
16
of
ass•s!s,
5.3 re~ou.nds) and ~h1l
level 'of competition it faced; Rio
21
field
goal
attempiS
and
hitting
Gebh~t
(5·ll,Jumor, 17.9 pomts,
Graiide earned enough poiniS in the
seven
of
eight
Dies
from
the
foul
5.5
ass1sts,
2.6 rebounds).
Hunter power rating system, uti·
line.
It
topped
his
season
high
of
3S
.
Previously,
the Redm7n de.fea_t·
lized for the fmt time by the dispoints
scored
against
Mafone
on
ed
Walsh
f~r
the
~hamp10nsh1p· m
trict this season, to edge out Mal·
Nov.
17,
1990
in
the
championship
1985
and
~mdlay
.m
1987 ~ repreone in spite of the Pioneers' similar
28-4 season record. Malone's 123· round of the Bevo F@flcis Classic. sent the dutr•ct at t~e nattOna.ls.
J'!le Redmen lost a b1d for a thu:d
116 loss to Central State in the Rio Grande won 103-98.
That
was
the
first
meeting
trtp ·to Kan;ms City_ to Defiance m
final week of the campaign ensured
1988 ~Y a smgle pomt.
between
the
Redmen
and
the
Pio·
.
Rio Grande's chances of wil)ning
·
·
·
J
1989
hen
Th1s
year's
tournament
will
be
the leadership role in the district n~ers smce anuary
•w
held March 12·18 at Kemper Arena
c·
and a home court advantage for the · RIO Grande lost to Malone 101-69 . Ka
at Canton. Malone, then a member 10 nsas •ty ·
playoffs.
The Redmen used the advantage of tlie MQC, withdrew from the

game."

.

Sheets advances to ·state
wrestling .tournament
BY DAVE HARRIS
Aaron Sheets, a .senior lieavyweight for the Meigs Marauders,
has advanced to the Fifty ·Fourth
Ohio State Wrestling TOurnaments
this weekend after finishing second
in the heavyweight division in the
Division n llisaicts this past week·
end ai St. Clairsville.
·
The state tournaments -will be
held at The Ervin J. Nutter Center
on the campus of Wright Stale
University at Dayton.
·
Sheets earned the trip to the
finals by picking up wins over the
heavyweights (with records) Bill
Dawson (11-10) of Washington
Court House, Jason Hassoo (23-5)
of Edison South and Jack Anders
(28·3·1) Miami Trace High
Schools, before losing in the fll!als
to Bellaire heavyweight Norman
Ayers (33..0). Two of Anders three
losses have been to Sheets.
· Ayel!l is the number one ranked
heavyweight in the state of Ohio
and picked up the win by pinning

SheeiS in the second period. Twice .
during the match Sheets had Ayers
on back but was-unable to finish
him off. Sheets was behind only 4·
2 when Ayers picked lip the win.
Sheets will wrestle Kevin
Shultz a junior from Miami Valley
High School with a 33-3 record,
ShultZ finished third in the Wri,ht
. Stale districts. Si11teen wresden
will take part in the heavyweight
division with action in Division II
to begin at 5 p.m. Thursday
evening.
Sheets will take a 31·1 record
into the state fmals and has an outstanding career recotd of 95-9 in
three years of varsity action. Sheets
finished with a 28-6 mark his
sophomore year and 36-2 last year
when he placed ftfth in the disaicts.
The last Marauder to qualify for
the. stale was Gary Nak11moto in
198.2, it is believed that Sheets in
only the third or fourth Marauder to
qualify for the state.

IN STATE MEET •
Aaron Sbeels, a senior heavy.
weight for lbe Meifi Mar•ud·
ers, will compete m .. e state
wrestliag .tournaments this
weeken~ at wrlglll State Uni·
nrslty. Sheets fllllshed second
In the St. Clairsville district,
losing a dose match to the
state's nmber one ranked
heavyweiRhl, Bellaire's Norman Ayers. Aaron wiU take •
between the ears. What happened
ineligible because it is on proba- 1ar season champion.
31·1 record Into the loarna,
NEW YORK (UPI) - After
.KISSIMMEE,
Fla.
(UPI)to
me each of the last two years
lion.
New Mexico State held ai 11th
·winning a piete of the Southeastern
Young, once one ·of the was that 1 came out or sprin~ .train· · ment and a 95·9 eareer mark..
No.4 Indiana and No . •12 East despite losing to UNLV. East Ten· · Gerald
Conference tide for the fint time
Tennessee State also made big nessee SISIC, 28-4, jumped 10 12th Houston Astros' top prospects, ing with a grea1 frame ofintnd.OO
.'
since 1963, Mississippi State vault·
fully expects to be wearinga differ· ·· then - boom - 1 hit a brick wall.
ed to 16th Monday in the 1aiest UPI gains, and Nevada-Las Vegas afler winning four games, including ent uniform ai the start of the sea- 1 just haven't been able to over·
remained the u.nanimous No. 1 the Southern Conference tourna·
Board of Coaches ratings. ·
son.
come whal's happened in April and
Mississippi State used victories choice for the 12th straight week. ment, 10 earn an NCAA toumament
SPRIN[, VAIIl Y CINEMA
"The honeymoon's pretty much May the last two years."
over Auburn and cO-SEC champion The Runnin' Rebels, 27..0, received bid and set a school record for vic· -over, isn't it," said Youn11, who
·:1~ 45?4
Young had agood winter, hit·
'Louisiana Stale last week to gain · all 36 first-place votes cast afler tories. Nebraska held 13th for the continues to work out w1th the ling .305 and compiling a .459 onU .• - · Mrllln SAnDY I ~y
U .aD a.AII IICIIT TUUM~
iiS flfSI Top 20 rating of the season. defeating New Mexico State and third stnlight week, Oklahoma fell Astros in spring training. "I'd be base percentage.
The BuUdogs, who had been Filllerton State last week \o bet;ome two places to 14th ·and UCLA really surprised if I'm here (with
"All the 'things 1 expected to do,
ranked 21st and 25th earlier this the ftrst Ieam since 1979 to fmish stayed at No. IS.
Houston) on Opening Day. I really 1 did," he said. "I think I've
Mississippi State was followed thought at the end of lasl year that matured a lot and I've come to
season, ·were unranked last. week.. · iiS regular season unbeaten.
No.2 Ohio State, 25·1, clinched . . by No. 17 SL John's, LSU, No. 19 !he next time I saw the ~me, realize what I'm capable of doing
They finished tied with No. 18
LSU at· 13-5 in the SEC to share at least a tie for its first Big Ten Southern Mississippi, No. 20 It would be from the. v•s•t•~g and wball'm not capable of doinf,.
the title. Kentucky was 14-4 but is title in 20 years, and received 3S DePaul, No. 21 Alabama, No. 22
dugout or on TV.! was kind of dis· The confidence is defmitely back. '
second-place vbies and one third· , Princetoil, No. 23 Seton Hall, No. appoinled that s~mething wasq't
The Astros were unhappy about
place vote. The Buckeyes' Big Ten 24 Louisiana Tech and No. 2S - done over lhc wmter. ~unny, ,as - Young's work habiiS, to which he
The D!lily Sentinel
rival Indiana, 25-4, moved up four TelUIS.
ac:uve as ~y w~ all Winter, I m countered: "But.! don't think I'll
places to third after Artansas, Ari· .
DePaul and Louisiana Tech are still here, h~ S81d of a team that ever 11et the credit I deserved for
(UIPilf. . . ,
zona and North Carolina dlopped. · ranked for the 'fnt time this season. ho~~~ 1ts v~.
A 111•11._ ot-.._..ua. lllc.
.
working hard enough, to get to. the
Syracuse m9ved up two spots to Georgia Tech, North Carolina SISIC
!
did ·a lot ~r thinki~g wh_Ue I majors when I was 22."
Publlahtd every afternoon. · Monday
fourth and Duke jumped three and Geor$C'Own dropped out of the was m Puerto Rico (playing wmter
General manager BiU Wood and
throu ... Friday, 111 Court ' St., PO·
meroy, Oblo, by the Olllo Valley Pubball) abou~ wh_at I could do. to manager Art Howe have said
places to fifth after its victory at Top 25 thiS week.
·
lllhlq CGmpiii)'IMUillmtdla; Inc.,
North Carolina for the Atlantic
The Big East (Syracuse, St. change the SltuabM. It keptcommg Young will stay with the club if he
"""'-"oy• Olllo f!l"l89, Pb. 982·2156. SeCoast Conference tide.
.
John's and Seton Hall), Big Eight back ,lfJ a change of scenery. I like has a good spring.
.Ood cluJ pootqe paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
No. 6 Arkansas dropped from (Kansas, Nebraska and OklahoQ)a the cny of Houston, and I m com· r--...-~..,....,~~:;:--,:~~~":";;":!~;;;:;&gt;;!;';:1!:1:~-,
third
after losing to TeltliS Sunday, Stale) and SEC (Mississippi State, fortable there but I think I know
Member. United Prei. IntematlonaJ,
.
·
lnlud DaUy Prill AIIOCiat!oa aad lbe
No. 7 Arizona tumbled from fifth LSU and Alabama) each placed an'd they know it's time to push
ObloN~~Iatloa. Nat10110l
on.''
,
after
a
loss
to
Oregon.
and
Nonh
·
three
teams
in
the
rankings.
·
-tlaiiC
tatlvt, BraDIIam
Youtlg made a impressive Slarl
Carolina fell four places to eighth.
All five teams that ha'jC secured
NOJVIPOper
01, 733 Tldnl Avenue,
t'Hf IRS'SENT ME· THE
with
the Astros. In 1987, ai age 22,
Now York, New York 10017.
.
No.9 Utah and No. 10 'Kansas b'ad· NCAA tournament bids - Ohio
SHORT FORM, :rHE 1040A.
he hit :321 with 26 sr.olen bases in
ed places from last week. rounding State, Arizona, East Tennessee
POIITMASI'ER: s-1 addn!lo chu...
less
than
half
a
season.
The
next
SHOULD I USE IM
out the Top 10. Utah's No.9 rating State, .Princeton and Louisiana
to The ~ SentiDel, Ill Cow1 St.,
year,
his,average
dropped
to
.257
·
is the highest of the season for the Tech -are in the Top 2S.
Pomeroy,
·.
'
r... theugh
tht
but he set a club record with 65
lls.....
-. -.,-···
.. .. _..
..... l,h
Western Athletic Conference regu·
.
ltJIIIIQIIPTION IIAI'D
Sieals.
.
.
,_ nljmnilllllty 11 llllct •1111 ••
c..-•• - .. . One WHt .. ................ .. ............ ... $1.60
· Then, Young's game staned to
tht f - ,.., Is .... fw pur ow•
One Month ................... ,........... .. 11.9&amp;
decline.
In
19119,
he
hit
.233
with
One Yeor ..... :............. .. ............ 183.20
only 34 stetlls. Last SGIISOO. he was
IINGIJICOPI'
II _,til te , _ · - · t.
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Tickets di~l, by Ielephone and at hitting .179 in late May wh11n be
'
I'IIICII:
Dolly ..... ...... .......... .............. 25 CentJ
Centers.
was shipped to Tucson, ~ .. or
....................&amp;111
for the CleYeland Indians' 80 home Tic
The
Indians
open the season the Pacific Coast League.
Subocrlllero not dfolrlnl to pay tbecar·
baseball d•&amp;ea, including one
'
· rler mAY remtt In advance direct to
Now, for the' first time since,
'
scheduled double·header, went on April 8 at Kansas City and also
.; '1'110 Dolly Sentinel on a 3.1or 12 month
· sale Monday, 44 days 'from the play in Boston before the home 1988, Young is not assured or
bull. Credit wtll be~~- earner Mch
II Mll\l tht llw ••••
horne opener Tuesday ·afternoon, opener April 16, which begins an . being the Astros' starting' cenler
ltAIIL KEILEII,
the! pt1 ... IIIII .... fwm.
....._ yllli' IIIIHIIIM _, .... ,_ y• te ,_, . . , . ..... te M. .
eight-game home sumd including fielder.
.
Aprill6, apinJt TeD$.
No oubocrlpUo•-by mall permitted In
that
Jill . . 111i111 tilt hmi IIIII _, dlillr IUitl ,_ ..,... tal tllwtla
area• where borne curler tervlce II
"It's kind of tough when you
Ticket prices arc un.changed _games against Texas, Boston and
available.
Wlilnn•
you lttwai)Untl• ..... hew the tax lawa tfflct pur retw11,
have the same stroke you have in
from last year. Box seats are Kansas City.
Cllll
your
local
HU -.ct oHica.lllt• yet, lltlp ltr tilt- - l i t JIL We're
Cleveland will be on the road Florida and the base . hilS aren't
$10.50, reserved seats $8, adult
hlr•
to
~
you.
·
.......... CouiJ
'
general admission tickeiS $4.50, from April 26 to May 8 l!efore falling " he said. "You have a ten·
u w..u .................................. nu•
general admissi011 lickeiS for peo- opening ·a 13-game home stand . dency io start pressiiiJ. 'lblnp jlllt
:16 WeeltJ .... ..... ............. ... , ....... . M3ol6
·"
52 w..u ................................... lllf.'N
ple 60 or older and 14 and under May 10 aplnst California. Seattle, start snowballina. and th10 next
O..lalde lllolp C..lll)o
$3, and bleaclter tickeiS on selected Oakland and New Yort: will also thing You know, you're in a~
13 W..U ....... ....... , ......... .. ...... .. I2UO ,
be part of thai hc)me stand.
• w..u .., ............................... 1«1.110
dales$3.
. ruL"Baseball is play~d mo~tl y L.;...;.;;;..;;;;;;;,;;..;;:;;.;;;;;..
61111ST Ull _ _
991·6674
PO-OY
...;....;..;...._ _ _ _....;;..;;,;;;;;;.;;.;...;...J
·- SIWeeb ............... .............. .... . afO
Tickets are available at the sta-

·Rebels remain.first, Buckeyes Houston's Young sees
second in UPI basketballpoll handwriting on the wall

·

RU-486 ban is cruel and unusual
a

Imagine this: There's a disease preposterous? The exact scenario is
that runs among the men in your happening to American women
family.lt's devastating, painful and who suffer from breast caneer and
often fatal. Your grandfather had it, oth_er diseases affected by certain
your father had it and two of your hormones. The· drug, RU-486, has
brothers have iL You're a man, so been shown by French researchers
you could very well have it next.
to block the action of these hor- ·
. You pick up a magazine and mones. But since the drug ·can also
learn that there s a promising new be used to induce abortion early in
drug on the horizon that doctors a pregnancy, policy makers in the
estimate could increase the cure Reagan administration who disand survival rate for this disease, - agreed with abortion outlawed any
and, in addition, it has great possi· research or use of the drug in the
bilities for the treatment of other United States.
·
medical problems. The drug is
Just how effective could the
being tested in another country drug be against certain diseases?
with excellent results.
Dr. Gary D. Hodgen of the Eastern
Then further down into the ani· · Virginia Medical School says the
cle your hopes are dashed: There is .drug·could successfully treat as
a federal policy which forbids the much as 40 percent of all breast
drug being tested in this country. cancers, could do away with the
Why? Because one of the uses of need for 10 percent of all Caesarelhc drug . not the .use that could an section deliveries and may be
save your life and the lives of oth· valuable in treating endomeaiosis,
ers in you family . some policy ·a painful condition in which tissue
maken don't llpprove of. To make lining the pterus starls growing
sure the drug would not be used in elsewhere in the )lelvis. The disease
that manner, they made it illegal to commonly results in a hystel'ecto·
test the drug in this country for any my having to be performed.
use whaiSOever.
In addition to its application to
Next, imagine that the use that women's diseases, RU-486 is also
c11used policy makers to outlaw the be.ing successfully prescribed in
drug ill not even against the law in France as a treatment for Cushing's
this nation. But since one group of Syndrome, a serious endocrine dis·
policy makers doesn 'I agree with order that can cause high blood
the practice, you can't have access pressure, weight gain and emotion·
to the drug for treaunent of your al disturbances.
disease.
Abortion is one thing. and every
Sound complicated? How about. citizen and every policy maker has

The Dally Sentinel 1'119e 3
)

~Y~ ~": ~ur:;~OU·~- ~g~fef~mr~~~!W~~

Redmen, Malone battle tonight
for Ohio NAIA championship

,

.....

B JOHN HENDEL
JnsporiiWrlter
St. Peter's earned· its first
NCAA tournament bid Monday
night about the same time 18th·
raied Louisiana Stale was learning
that it may ~ve lost Shaquille
O'Nealfortherestoftheseason.
SL Pel«'s lmocked off Iona 64S8 to win the Metro Atlantic Ath·
letic Conference Tournament and
was one of four IC8ms to gain entry

•

.•.

......,

St. Peter's in NCAA tourney;
O'Neal to sit out SEC hoo_pfest

2-The Dally sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO
Tueec:tay, March 5, 1191
Page

.Doctor -gives troops healthy dose of reality

'

...

.

Administration scores
victory over the press
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Wbite House Reporter
~
WASHINGTON - The Bush administration, particularly the Pentagon, scored another victory in the Persian Gulf war - defanging the
. media.
After years of blaming the press for an ignominious end to the Vietnam War, the While House and the military establishment learned their
lessons well and put those lessons into practiQC.
Early experiments in wa'rtime control of the me(lia and press blackouts
during the U.S. invasions of Grenada in 1983 and Panama in 1989 were
· the forerunners for the strategy to rein in the usually independent press.
U.S. officials gained insights former British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher, who literally made reporiers captives on ships, during the Falk·
lands war in 1982.
In the five months of planning the war against Iraq, the Pentagon
devised pool systems to get reporters to the scene of battle, but also
imposed guidelines to control when and how much information was
released.
Security reasons were valid but there will always be the lingerin~ suspicion that many of the rules _and regulations in _the Penla!lon bluejmnt for
handling the press were des1gned to pamt therr oper811ons only 10 rosy
terms.
So when President Bush on Jan. 16 ordered the. relentless bombardment of Iraq to begin, the briefing officers had their marching orders, and
their coordination was superb. They all sang the same tune.
.
Reporiers at the Pentagon and in Riyadh, where U.S .. Saudi and British
officers took turns at the podium. could not complain that they were not
being briefed on timely developments.
The problem is that it was all one-sided and demanding proof for some
of the mmtary claims was considered inappropriate.
It was the American people's flfSt glimpse of war on video. At flfSt it
all ·looked like a Nineiendo game with Iraqi Scud missiles successfully
intercepted by the U.S. Patriot rockets. Few scenes of suffering were
available.
The media, which is expected to give all sides of the story, found thai
the public only wanted to know that Baghdad was·being punished by an
aerial war, but didn't want to know how.Pictures of the precision bombing of a concrete building in Baghdad,
described by Iraqis as a shelter where the elderly and women had taken.
refuge, aroused so~e sympathy in the world .. But one u.s . senator said
that his office receiVed only nme calls regarding thai bombmg and three
of the callers urged more. attacks.
Reporters, meantime, chafed under regulations that kept them in
" pools" and away from enterprise reporting to see action. Censorship
reache.tl .a new low when one reporier's word "giddy," to describe ai·
umphani'returni!'g pilots after a bo~bing run. was changed to "prooo.. :·
Only the daring newsmen expenenced danger and success by sttiking
out on their own, sans military approval. CBS correspondent Bob Simon
and his three crew members strayed from the fold and were captured by
Iraqis. They were released Saturday.
Part of the planning for the sanitized view of war was the closing of the
armed forces mortuary at Dover, Del., which had been open to the press
for 18 years. It was placed off limits to reporters with officials explaming
to prolesting Ielevision networks that "it would upset the American peopie" to see the war dead returning in flag-draped coffins.
·
Bush played an important role in giying the White House a high profile
during the war, keeping the public pressure on Saddam as public enemy
number one.
He pledged in the strongest terms that the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait last
Aug. 2 ·'will not stand.'' He gave frequent news conferences denouncing
Iraq's "naked aggressio11" and likening Saddam to Hitler.
He repeated over and over again that it was a "just war ...a moral war"
and kept up the verbal offensive against lmq with a daily barrage of
invectives and made headlines.
Schwarzkopf also gave the press a dubious compliment. He said the
press, fed_ by m.ilitary leaks and re~ pic~. helped f~! the Iraqis
into thillking there would be an amph1b1ous landmg on Kwwrut s beaches.
It did not materialize.
.
·He insisted that it was not in1entional deception and there would have
been amphibious landings if they were necessary.
Asked how else the media had helped in the U.S. military straregy, the
general told reporiers: "I guess the one thing I would say to the press
what 1 was delighted with is, in the very, very early stages of this opem·
lion when we were over here (in Saudi Arabia) building up and we didn't
hav~ very much on the ground, you all were giving us credit for a whole
lot more over here. And as. a result, that gave me quite a feeling of cnfi·
dence that we might not be attacked quite as quickly."

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO · . j

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel

..

.

r

Today in histQry
By United Press IDienUIIiorull

.

TJP

a,

~y is Tuesday, March 5, the 64th 'day of 1991 with 30lto follow.
',..,moon is w8!1ing, moving toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercary, Venus, Mars and Satwrt.
The evening star is Jupiter.
Th_ose born on this ,date are under the sign of Pisces. They include .
Flemuh mapmaker tlerhardus Mercator in 1512· Antoine Cadillac
founder of Detroit. in 1658; poet Lucy Larcom
1824; lithogravher
James Ives, partner of Nathaniel Currier, in 1824; author fiWik Noms in
1870; actors Rex Harrison in 1908 and Jack Cassidy in 1927· and actress
Samantha Eggar in 1939 (age 52),
'

........

Indians tickets go on sale

.........
'""" .......... ,..
.......................
,............... ...,_

--

u;

F THE WEEK

.--rlpi-

On this date in history:
'
In 1770, Britiah troops killed five colonials in the 110-Qlled "Boston
Massacre," one of the events that led to the American Revolution.
In 1933, in German elections, Adolf Hider's Nazi Party won nearly
half the seats in the Reicbstag, ihe German parliamenL
. ·
In 1953, the Soviet Union announced that dictator J~f Stalin had died
al age 73.
.

H&amp;R BLOCK

•

\

I)

"

�•

Tuesday, .March 5,1991

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 4 The Dally Sentinel
'

..
•

Leyland tells Pirates' Bonds
.to shut up or take a hike

'

81 TOM WI11IERS
to Bonds, and the oulfielder began pitchel Wilson Alvarez and agreed
10 lerlllS with left-bander Jerry KutUPJ Sports Writer
• yelling at Vitdon.
.· Barry Bonda bu labn his neioLeyland, hearing the IWO argu- zler and catcher Matt Start. The
'
tialin table fnlslralions Slrlight 10 ing from an adjacent f.eld, ran over While Sox still have several playthe p~yinllield. ·
and confronted Bonds. Soon, Ley- ers unsigned including pitchers
Bonds, the National League's land and Bonds were screaming Greg Hibbard and Jack McDowell,
who is projected as the team's
Most Vahaable Player, who has obscenities at each other.
· voiced his displeas11re with the
Leyland reportedly became Opening Day starter.
At Sarasota, Fla., Hall of Farner ·
PittsbiD'gh Piralcl after losing his ansered when Bonds questioned
second arbitration caae with the thp manaser's authority. Leyland Jim Palmer continued his comeclub in as many years, engaged. in criiicized Bonds' attitude and told back, throwing balling practice for
heated arsuments with manaser him to leave camp if he wasn ' t the 'second time. Palmer, 45 , is
scheduled to pitch is Wednesdsy at
Jim Leyland and two others on · happy.
Monday.
.
· ·
No punches were exchanged the team '.s intrasquad scrimmage.
. Bonds, who hit .301 last season and the workout resumed without He is scheduled to start his first
exhibition game March ·11 against
with 33 homers and 114 RBI to . any further incidents.
help lead the PiraJu tn the National
General ' Manager Larry the Boston Red Sox. Reporters
teasue East Iitle. has been at odds Doushty said that any disciplinary watching Palmer throw Monday
with the club since he lost his arbi- action would be up to. Leyland. said he looked bette( than in his
tration case on Feb. 17. Bonds hid Lachimia added that the club con- fltst batting prac~ce wiJ'kout Saturasked for $3.3 million but was sidered the manner finished and day, which also received favorable
awarded $2.3 million. .
would noc discipline Bonds. ·
reviews.
Last year, he asked for $1.6 milAt Port St. Lucie; Fla ., a · · AI Tempe. Ariz., Seattle
lion, but was paid $850,000.
renowned orthopedist confirmed Mariners outfielder )(en Griffey
After reporting to camp last the original diagnosis of bone spurs Sr., injured in a traffic accident,
week, Bonds told Pirates media in New York Mets pitcher' Frank will miSS just three ·to four days of
practiee according to Manager Jim
relations director Jim Lachimia tlUu Vio)4's pitching elbow.
he did not want to talk to the media
Viola had told the team on Sat- Lefebvre.
this spring.
.
· urday that he wanted a second -. · Griffey, 4l, whose s.on, Ken
At
Monday's workout, opinion and Dr. Richard Caspari in Griffey Jr., is the Mariners' star
Lachimis said Bonds was l8lldng lp Richmond, Va., agreed with the centerflelder, suffered a strained
a still phoiOgrapbcr on the field. No findings of doc10rs near the Mets' . lower back and'neck when his Mercedes car was struck from ~hind at
media is. illlowed on the f~e~d dll!- spring training cornpklx. .
RECEIVES INSTRUCTIONS • Kansas City
Steve Crawfonl .(left) during spring practice in
a
Phoenix intersection last weekend
ing a workout, and Lachmua satd
Caspari found three spurs ,in
pitcher Mike RoddicJ,er (right) gets instructions
Haines City, Fla., Monday. (UPI)
he
went
over
to
break
up
the
disViola
•
s
pitching
elbow
but
said
·
by
a pickup truck.
from Coach Guy Hansen (center) and pitcher
' 'It was a green lisht and as I ·
cussion. .
they w~re not large enough .to bingot close to the intersection I heard
Two PittsbiJI'!Ih-area television der his spring training.
crews were at the w!l'kout filming
Viola, 20-12 with a 2.1'J7 earned sirens coming, so I stopped," said
Bonds from afar, and Bonds yelled run average last seaspn, is in the Griffey, who wasn't wearing·a seat
at them to $et "out of bis face," final year.ofa three-year, $7.9 mil- belt. "A truck l?ehind me didn't.
Lachimia SBJd. ·
·
lion.contract and is eligible for free He knocked me clear through the
,
Bonds and Lachimia then agency after the season but said-he intersection."
"I haven' t seen my car, but
argued, with BOnds saying, "I will will continue negotiations through
decide what cameras stay here."
the season.
··
Junior has and he says we might lis
~J..
After
that
ar~ment subsided.At
Sarasota,
Fla.,
the
Chicago
well buy a new one," the elder
·
credit goes 10 Dee for penetrating
all alone at the three-point line.
:• By United Press International
Pirates
Coach
B1ll
Virdon
llcc&amp;me·
White
Sox
signed
left-handed
Griffey
said.
Bird connected on five of six and kicking it back out to him.··
·~ The Boston Celtics weren~ t
involved
when
he
said
something
Kevin Gamble scored 19 points,
: '1ooking out for Larry Bird t-1onday three-pointers in the first. half,
Robert
Parish . finished with 17,
~;.,ighL But neither were the Indiana shooting the Celtics into a 17-point
Reggie Lewis bad 15 and Kevin
lead.
:~rs.
·
''When lhe first two went dQwn, McHale chii!Ded in with 14.
.,. The Celtics didn't run many
Reggie Miller. led Indiana with
:&lt;i&gt;Iays for Bird, but when the All- it got kind of easy," said Bird, who
MIAMI .(UPI)- Rocco Medi- Divis Love HI at 219. Mark Cal~;star forward did get the ball he is 19-for-32 from thtee-point range .21 points and Detlef Schrempf
Monday 1110rning. He parred his
ate came tn the Dora!~ worried cavecchia (73) finished at 280 and
~ round himself alone ·enough to conin his last three ganies. ' '.There . Scored 20.
fU'St ~ holes, and lhen rolled in
With Boston holding a 16-13 about malcins the cut and left it as a Lanny Wadkins (73) was at281.
•.nect on seven of I 0 shots from weren't a lot of rlays for me, so I ·
a 20-footer for a birdie 3 on No. II.
edge early in the opening quarter_. first-time PGA 19umament winner , Play .in the final round of the
~three-point rimge, leading Bos111n had to take what could get."
On the par-4 seventeenih he
tourilament was suspended at 4:10 knocked his approach 10 12 feet
~4o a a 126-101 rout of the Pacers at
Bird, who firlished 10 of 18 Parish drove through the lane f!l' a leading the TOlD' m earnings.
The .28-year-old Pennsylvanian p.m. Sunday after a lightning strike
:•lhe Hanford Civic Center.
from the floor, matched his club basket, triggering a 19-4 Celtics'
and sank that putt 10 give him the
: · Bird matched his own club record three-pliint tntal set April 3, run over the next 3:56. During the sank a five-fOOl birdie putt on the near the course.
lead.
'
spree, P~h scored eighL Brown, first playoff hole. Monday to defeat
Mediate stormed to the ftQnt
~ fecord for three-pointers in a game 1988 asainst Dallas. .
Nicklaus played his final five ·
, 'lind fmished with 29 jloints.
Rookie Dee Brown, .malting his Lewis and Gamble each had two Curus Strange and win the $1.4 with birdie putts of 20 feet on the holes Mon!lay and had makeable
. ; · "We didn't get 10 him," l'acers rust Stan in place of injured point baskets, and Bird nailed his rust million tournament; which was 12th, and 10 feet on the 17th and putts for· birdie on fOlD' of them but
~ head coach Bob Hill said. "You guard Brian Shaw. finished with a ·three-pointer.
·
·
postponed because of lightning , 18th holes.·
couldn't get them to go down.
'
· season-high 22 points.
..l;an'tleave him open."
Boston shot 69 percent in the Sunday.
"I knew I had 10 birdie the 17th ·
On the par-4 18th, he hit his
·: , A number of times in the first
Mediare, in his sixth year on'the · hole and 1was extra nervollj&gt;over approach 10 seven feet below the
"There weren't a lot of plays · opening quarter. to take a 37-21
:-balf, the Pacers, whci tried four dif- called for Larry IOnig~t." Bosron lead.
·
Tour, has been one of the hottest the putt," he said. "'On 18, nothing
hole and lipped out the putt 10 col: ferent plllyers defensively against head coach Chris Ford said. "The
Midway intn the SCCOJid quarter, golfers with five top-10 finishes in 'faze4.me. I said 'You mi~ht as well .lect par.
f Bird,left Bosron's All-Stat forward
Indiana c!oted the margin 10 50-41 six iournaments this ye8r. · ·
hit llie !lest putt of your life. This is
"I had my chances, but I didn't
on LaSalle Thompson's free throw . "I wasn't surprised .I won, I the time to do it:' And I did it"
take advantage of them when I
before the Celtics closed the half; didn:t think it would happen this
Mediate's solid year comes afrer needed to," said Nicklaus, who
with a 19-11 spurt, capped by fast, " Mediate said: "When 1 ~ot a weight loss of 30 pounds since shot himself into contention Friday
Bird's two three-pointers. Bird here, I was worried about malting · November and a switch to a long, wilh a 63. "I played well. I'm very
,_
connected on aU four of his shots the ~ut, hcca11se 1 was lired."
49-inch puaer of the type used fre- · pleased. I concentrated well.' •
from
·the
three-point
stripe
in
the
With
the
winner's
check
for
quendyonthePGASeniorsTour.
Nicklaus said the only 10urna: ·
FinalS: Saturday, 1:30 p.m.
:~. Girls
quanBoe:~.
whl
'
ch
held
a
.
_
iead
.
$252,000,
Mediate
has
earn~d
'"I
needed
a
change;
1
was
lired
..
At LaDcaster
·
ment he would play before the
69 52
...,.,
$403,824, enough to put him on top of the old stuff, •• Mediate said of Mas.ters April 11-14 might be at
•
Heath
(24-0)
vs
West
Musk'
the putter. '""I've still got a long
New Orleans March 21-2A. but he
ingum (20-4), 6:15p.m.; Hunting- at intennission, pushed its advan- of the 1991 money lisL
.:By United Press lntematioul
tage
to
26
midway
into
the
third
·
Mediate
drove
••a
little
broken
way to go with it. I've only used it has not decided yeL
·
ron
(17-6)
vs
Beaver
Eastern
(22·
: ; Pairings for this week's girls 1), 8 p.m.
The closest the Pacers got bat single': intn the right rough on for three months."
· quarter.
Bean
and
Cochran
were
on
the
the rest of the way was 17 points the par S f~rst hole but recovered
.: -state high school regional basketlOth hole when the lightning
Finals: Saturday, 1:30 p.m.
late
in the fourth quaner.
nicely and wedged his· third shot
•.baliiOuriUllllents:
Strange
was
on
the·
13th
tee,
'
f
lashed, postponing play Sunday.
At
Va1dalia
Butler
"We just weren't prepared at five feet from the pin. Stran~e had where. he r&lt;isumed •play under Both
~ Division I
players crafted nine straight
Grandview (22-2) vs Springfield all," said Hill. "We were awful. a 12-foot putt for a bird1e but
·~: Tuesday
almost
ideal
weather
conditions
pars
Monday.
Kenton Ridge (18-6), 6:15p.m.; Plain and simple - awful."
missed iL
·
-· AI ParJU Normandy
(22c2) vs Wyoming (22In
other
games
Monday
night,
.
.
•
'I
don't
even
remember
much
::· Rocky River Magnificat (21- 3) Versailles
2), 8 p.m. · ·
· ..
·
· Utah· stumped Orlando 106-88, of the playoff. 1 was in a daze,"
: VS Mentor (21-3), 6:f5 p.m.; Panna
Finals: Saturday, 1:30 p.m.
Dallas nipped New Jersey'I02-100, Media said
-Holy Name (19-5) vs Cleveland DlvislotllV
week .... The San ·Antonio Spurs
Games
: Heights (22.0), 8 p.m.
Phoenix
pounded Charlotte 1~93 · str!ge ~d Mediate finished
Spcedskater
Angela
Zuckerman
may have guard David Win~ in
Tllursday
·; .Fillals: Friday, 7:30p.m. At Masand Seattle outlasted Golden State ihe 72 holes at 12-under~ 276.
uniform, Tuesdsy against Pluladelof
Milwaukee
finished
fourth
in
the
At Parma Normandy
105-99.
•"!loti Perry
Jazz
106,
Magic
Strange,
playing
most
of
round
McDonald (24-0) vs Upper
88
I, 5()Q meters on the second day of phia. Wingate, a former George- '
, • Boardman (20-2) vs Wooster
At
Orlando,
Fla.,
Karl
Malone
in
Sunday's
ferocious
winds,
shot
a
competition at the World Universi- town sw involved in two cases of
I (23.0), 6:15 p. m.; Cuyahoga Falls Scioto Valley (16- 8), 6:15 p.m ~;
scored
14
of
his
30
points
in
the
S-under-par
67
and
Mediate
manty G~es in Sapporo, Japan. Chris .sexUal assault that were put aside
~ (22-1) vs l...ancaster (16- 6), 8 p.m. · Kidron Centtal Christian (18- 4) vs
second quarter, leading the I azz to ased a par 72.
.
Shelly of Waltham, Mass., paced recently, reached.agreement on a 3: Fmals: Faday, 7:30 p.m. At Belle, Buckeye Cenlral (18-6), 8 p.m.
their
lhird
straight
victl)ty.
Dennis
"I'm
disappoinrented,
and
then
Finals: Saturday, 7:30p.m.
American men in the 1500, finish- year deal Friday contingent 'on
: .fOIItl~
.
Scott led Orlando with 28 points. It I'm not so disappointed," Strange ing seventh. Winners in the event approval from the NBA expected
• Celma (20-4) vs R~ynoldsburg At Elida
was Karl Malone's lowest output said. " I played such a Sood last . were Soviet Natalia Polozkova, in Monday . ... Washington guard
Kalida
(184)
vs
Liberty-BeniOn
: (19-5), 6:15 p. m.; Sylvania
against the Mimic ·this season, but . 'round. Rocco has been playing 2 minutes, 12.21 seconds and Aus- Darrell Walker was fined $4 SOO
(21-3),
6:15
p.m.;
Fon
Recovery
( Northview (20-4) vs Pickerington
twice in the fourth quarter he well. He has turned his game trian Michael Hadschieff, in and Milwaukee guard Dale Ellis
(22-2)
vs
Stryker
(213),
8
p.m.
' (24-0), 8 p.m.
.
answered
Orlando rallies with basfined $2,000 Monday for an Inci2:00.57.
.
.
Finals:
Saturday,
7:30p.m.
; Finlls: Friday, 7:30p.m. At Vankets·
that
kept
Utah's
advantage
in
One
stroke
back
at277
over
the
dent
following a game at MilwauAt
Byesville
Baiketball
• dalla Butler
double
digits.
par
72,
6,939-yard
Dora!
"'Blue
kee
last
Fri!lay. Ellis initiated the
Bellaire St. John (22-2) vs
•· Beavercreek (22-2) vs Mount
Guard Gerald Wilkins of the
102,
Nets
100
·
Monsrer''
course
were
Andy
Bean
Mavericks
confrontation
by challenging Walk: Hellthy (17-6), 6:15p.m.; Cincin- . Zanesville Rosecrans (19-5), 6:15
· New YIJ'k Knlcks won NBA PlayAt
Dallas,
Rolando
Blackman
with
a
final-round
74
and
left-haner
after
the
Bucks'
106-105 vicrory
• IIIIi Seton (20-4) vs Vandalia But- p.m.; Crooksville (11- 12) vs made two free throws after time der Russ Cochran with a 73.
er of the Week. WilkinS averaged
but
Walker
was
assessed'
a stiffer
Frankfort Adena (194), 8 p.m.
; lcr (23-1 ), 8 p.m.
. .
23.7 points, 6.3 rebounds 'and S.O
expired
to
climax
the
Mavericks'
Jack
Nicklaus
continued
to
play
fa- throwing the only punch. ·
Finals: Saturday, 7:30 p.m.
• F'mals: Friday, 7:30p.m. ·
· assists while helpin~ the Knicks fine
comeback.
It
was
the
ninth
straight
well
with
a·70
and
was
tied
with
Cycling
·
At
Vandalia
Buder
I DIYIIIoa II
win all .three of theu games last
road
loss
for
the
Nets,
who
had
a
The U.S. Cycling .Fc!deralion has
Fort Loramie (21 -2) vs South
: Taaday
12-point· lead early in the founh
chosen
Altoona, Pa., as site of the
Charleston
Southeastern
(23-1),
:At Stow
quaner. Blackman had managed
1992
Olympic
Cyclin' Trials and
6:15
p.m.;
Middletown
Fenwick
• Canfield (23-1) vs Jefferson ·
only seven points going into the
National
Cham'pionsh1ps
for road
(19-S)
vs
J)anville
(20-3),
8
p.m.
• Area (23..0), 6:15 p.m.; Norton (13fourth quarter, but scored Dallas's
events.
Finals:
Saturday,
7:30p.m.
; 10) vs Louisville (22-1), 8 p.m.
PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. (UP!) three spurs in his pitching elbow
!ast 12lx:ginnl!lg with 3:39 remain; Finals: Friday, 7:30 p.m.
The original diagnosis of bone not large enough to hinder his
mg tofm1sh w1th 21.
I At Willard
spurs
in New York Mets pitcher spring training.
·
Suu IU, Hornets 93
: swanron (23-1) vs North Ro alFrank
Viola's
pitching
elbow
was
Viola,
20-12
with
a
2.67
earned
At Charlotte, N.C., Dan Majerle
; 1011 (16-8), 6:15 p.m.; Upper ~an­
Monday College . Basketball scored 21 points and Kevin John' conf'mnecl Monday by a renowned run average lastcseason, is 'in the
: dusky (18-6) vs Medina Buckeye Results
son added 19 points and dished out orthopedist the left-bander consult- final year of a three•ycar, $7.9 mil. lion contract and is eligible far free
• (21-3), 8 p.m.
Bl' United Press International
10 assists to lead the Suns' rout, ed for a second opinion.
: F'mals: Friday, 7:30p.m.
·
Doctor
Richard
~
in
Richagency after the season but said he
their lhird straight victor}'. Johnson
' At~r
•
TournameniS
.
did aU of his work in the fJtSt three mond, Va., qreed With the find - will continue negotiations through
! Columbus Beecheroft (23-1) vs Atlantic 10 Couference ·
·
quarters, hitting six of 10 from the ings of doctors near the Mets' the season .
llullnea miU,.,_ pack.
'
: WashingiOn Court House .(21-3), Semiii•Is
floor and all seven of his free sprins training complex who foimd
ega. that i•. lt"a SERIES
I 6: I5 p.m. Dresden Tri- VaUey (23· Penn St. 52, Temple 50
throws. He had 15 points and six
ONE. 1 broecl-t-rage.
! I) vs LOgan ~24-0), 8 p.m.
cCifYII*itlvely-prlcM
plan
G. Washington 84, St. Joseph's assists at the half. Xavier McDaniel
Pomeroy
, Finals: Fnday, 7:30p.m.
. (Pa.) 820T
and Cedric Ceballos grabbed seven
lor reteil lltOtel.. offiCea.
! AI Dlytoll Stebbins
rebounds apiece, leading the Suns
churchll, i!pllt11'11111S Inti
Colonial Atbletlc Conference
Hours:
.
1 Cincinnati Mother of Mercy CbampiOISI!Ip
drug lltorn. Cell ua for a PiO•
MNOW ·
to a 52-38 domination on the
· ll am. to Mid. Sun. -Thurs,
boards.
.
poul and quotation.
; (23-0) vs Urbana (23-1), 6:15 p Richmond 81, George Mason 18
HAY£
ll
am
10
1
am
Fri.
lA:
Sat.
t .m.; Dayton Dunbar (24-1) vs Sun- Metro ~lllntle Atbletlc Colfer·
Soalcs 105, Warrlon 99
DIET !'£PSI
At Oakland, Calif., Ricky Pierce
: bury Big WJ!nut (2~-1), 8 p.m.
eace
sank a pair of free throws with 21.7
• Pinlls: FridaY. 7.30 p.m.
Cltaiaplonship
.·
I
seconds left and Sedale Threatt
SL ~·s 64,lona 58
scored 2A ~IS to lead the Super• Wedl "1 .
MJd.Coud-t Ccinrereace
Sonies. W1th Seattle ahead 101-99,
Se•llluls .
t AlA"' ce
. Pierce was fouled and made them ·
• Li1bon Anderson (23 ' 1) vs No. Illinois 76, vs. No. Iowa 63
214 EAST MAIN
: Doylellown ~ (22-1), 6:15 Wis.-Grcen Bay vs. Eastern Illi- both for a 103-99 lead. The WarWITH 4 LAIGI PEPSI'S .
'
riors
missed
a
pair
of
three-point
nois,
!are
: ~ (21-1) YS Medina
POMEROY
sho.ts in the closing seconds.
; .
(16-8), 8 p.m.
Sua Belt C01fereace ..
992t6687
Threatt hit eight of 15 shots from
~
• Satl!nJay, 1:30 p.m.
Cbampionblip
.
the
field
and
all
eight
of
his
free
South Alabama 86, Old· Dominion
: AtiM!)•• .
throw auempu to lead the Sonics.
• Sherwood Flirvjew (21-2) vs 81
.,.., DieM...., ....... lito. Chtr;...,.,. .., .... lflllt UO.OO. DtiiNrr lfll IIMIIId ••
Mi~h Richmond led the Warriors
: AYOII (22-2), 6:15 p.m.; Wynford . ·West CCIIII CoafereDce
........
,~v• ·•,.•u,.-..,......_•~·
......
4 5' ut' P T 11M I AND
R OPIIOR Nmll NOW AYAILAIUI
with 30 points, 13 of them in the
. : (15-7) VI Caslllil Marpreua (21- .Cballlpleuhlp ·
fourth quartu.
Pepperdine vs. SL Marts, late
' 1), 8:30 p.m.

POMEROY -Revival at Fellowship Believers Ministry on
County Road 18 at Kingsbury
through Wtdnesdsy. Rev. Ralph L.
Stewart will speak. For information, call992-2463.
POMEROY - The Pomeroy

·· ThC Rutland Garden Club met
recently 'at the home of Marcia
Denison with Margaret Parsons as
co-tiostess.
Mrs. Denison had devotions
reading "Momin~ of Magic" from
,a church bulletm and "Point of
. View" from inspirational book fol. lowed with prayer.
.
The Creed and collect were
given i!l unison and r~ll call as
answered with ."A Bud at My
Feeder."
·
Stella 'Atkins gave a report on
.the Middleport Garden Club open
meeting att.ended by herself and
Pauline Aikins.
.
Binds Diehl reported on the Fernwood Garden Club open meeting
. attended by 'herself, Stella Aikins,
Neva Nicholson, Pauline Atlcins
and MMI:ia Denison.
Stella Atkins reported that .she
and Ruby Diehl had taken Valentine plates 10 the Meigs County
Home.
·
Plans were made for a visit to
Nature's GardeD Club at Gallipolis
Development Center on March 28.

Homer and !Uta Smith are
&amp;Mouncing the birth of a daughter,
Megan Michelle, on Jan: 28 at
Pkasant Valley Hospital.
. The infant weighed six pounds
and IS ounces and wis 20 inches
long
.
.
Materqa!IIJ'8ll(!parents are Bud
8lld Wanda V'ming, Rutland.
Paternal grandmother is Ruth
Smith POmeroy.
·
. · Great grandparents are Basil and
Kalhleen Cremeans.
Great
is Goldie
Graham
The ' ·
also has a daughter,
IWo.

Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Knapp and
Ashley were Tuesday visitors of
Mrs. Donna·Roush, Syracuse.
Mrs. Barbara .Divis and family
were recent visitors of Mrs. J.R.
Murphy.
· Weekend visiiOrs of Mrs. J.R.
Murphy were Mrs, John Downs,
Eric and Dickie, Tremble, and Mr.
and Mrs. Jeff Bole. They also visited Mrs. Iva Johnson at Americare. ·
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Bole, Horner
Hill, were called recently to hi.s
mother's at Stockpon due to the
death of his aunt. Mrs. J.R. Murphy
and Mrs.John Downs attended the
funeral at ChesterhiU.
'

·Meigs County- land tranfers
Charles A. Ritchie and Lori D.
Thomas 0. Stewart aka T.O.
Ritchie, parcel, to Paul Clay and · Stewart,Joan Stewart, easement,
Dora Cia)', Middleport ViUage.
10 Ohio Power Company, Rutland.
Opha Offutt and Marjorie JeanRichard B. Payne and Shelry L.
nine Offutt, tracts, 10 Opha O.ffutt Payne·, easement, to Ohio Power
and Marjorie Jeannine Offutt,' Company, Suuon. ·
Chester/Salisbury,
.
.

TIRES ARE ·OUR BUSINESS
Quality Service Before, During and Aftel'
·
the Sale.

fcou,,iV":"C'oiiPoN".couPoiV-:-couPOiv-:cow.o"Nl
REVIVALheld lit BeUevers
Min·
istry oa Count,. Road 18 at
Kinaibury throulh Wednesday
wltb Rev. Ralph L. Savage omciating. For more infonnation, call
992-2463.

· Th~ monthly meeting of the
Leading Creek Watershed scheduled for today (Tuesday) has been
canceled and rescheduled for
March 12 at 10 a.m.

The La 'Lec!le League of Point

Heath uMw meeting.heid

PEPPERONI '

Serenity House board . meets

PIZZAS·

Seacnlty HOuse board mem.bets
met recently at Woodland Centers.
Attending were Linda Warner,
cllairriWI; Pat Tope, vice-chairman;
Nancy Scarbrough, secretary-trea.• surer; Rita Fields, Carol Ault, Torn
; Halnton, Sue Hudson, Sally Clay
· ·: and Hilda Tc:rado, e~teculive direc.

.S 12''

•II•••"" ....

;I

tor.
Others attending were Terri
Weier and Cathy Phillips. ·
The next meeting will be held
March II at Woodland Centers
from S:30 to 7 p.m. ·
The public is invited to attend.
'
I\

~o\

. . ·-

~

.-

~

.5 DAY ,SPECIAL

•

IIIld Avenue. S.W., Canton, Ohio 44702.
All interested parties will
be given an ~pportunlty
lo be heard. Fllther Information may be obtained
by contacting the Commission at 180 East
Broad St.. Columbus•
Ohio 432fl6.0573.

~~

EV~RY TIRE IN STOCK

·~I

Sale End1 Monday, March 11. 1991

·

$5.00 .OFF

81I

.[&lt;;?.!:~03~.5£lj!~~;_:,o!~~~~~~~r::_c~~~:J

POMEROY
HOME AND AUTO

600 EAST MAIN

992-2094

POMIIOY, OH.

SEIVING THE 1•1 FOI 25 TUIS

expeciiRt and nursing mothers are

Pray For Our Troops.

~w~e~lcorn~:e~to~at=te~nd~an=d~c=hil=dr:e=n~are=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~
always welcome.

The CentraLine
Home Equity Loan
from Ceptral Trust
.·

Now An Even Better Way To Borrow
REDUCED

CLOSING COSTS
For n limited time onl y. you c'n' J;!Cf a
CcnlraLine llro)nc Equily Loan wilh
subSianlially reduced ,dn&lt; in~ "" ' "'

.

2 LARGE '

I·
1§
1~
I.

Meeting canceled

·Racine.UMW meeting held

992-2124··

'

Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Sarver, Hatfield, Ind., were
weekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs:
Howard Thoma Sr. While bere they
also visited grandmother Mrs. Iva
Johnson at Americare.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were weekend visitors of. Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Worley, Stacy, Daniel
and Stephen, Daniels, W.Va.
. Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsv1lle, were Sunday evenmg
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Knapp, Michelle, Amy and Ashley.
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp and
Ashley Knapp were Sunday afternoon visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Charley Smith.
·

". S-m·l"th bt"fth
.

'"anything that has 10 do with EastPleasant
willPresbyterian
meet Thursday
at 7
p.m. at' the
Church.
er" sale at the next meeting.
· Games were played and won by The topic for discussion will be
Doris 'Wilt, Kathy DaliOn, Brenda "The Art of Breastfeeding and
Bolin and Janice Fetty.
Overcoming Difficulties." Mothers
The door prize was won by who wish to breastfeed their babies
will find encouragement and inforBrenda Bolin. .
'·
The next meeting will be held at mation at the meeling.
the home of Delores Whidack with . ·La Leche League. believes
Lynn McKinney has hostess.
breastfeeding gives the best possible start in good mothering and
helps to develop and deepen the
close relationship between a mother and her child.
The meetin~ discussions include
"Prayer and Self Denial" was
Sue Grace reported on the Chil- the 'latest medical resean:h, as weU
as personal experience. Many ques·
the theme of the program presented dren's Mission program.
by Martha Dudding at the r~ent
The second annual ~live tions asked by itew mothers are:
meetin~ of the Racine ·unued Parish Children'&amp; Choir Festival
"What can rou do for a 'colicky'
Melhodist Women.
· ·
will be held at the Racine Chlirth. baby?" "I m afraid to nurse
I,.ois Bell presided at the .meet- UMW ·members are 10 bring cook- because it will lie me down, is this
true?" These questions and many
ing in which members rece1ved a ies.
prayer card and gave a self denial
.It was voted to buy ano~r bul- otllers are answered during the
offering.
lebo board for the fellowship hall. meeting.
. A donation was sent tn the Bible · There were 51 sick calls reporte~ · Angie Wamsley will lead the
: Society to help buy Bibles for ser- and ~ w~ signed tn be mailed discussion. All interested persons,
. vice men and women. .
to the sick and shut-1ns.
•; Plans were made to help with a
Dorothy McKenzie ·and Alice
LEGAL NOTICE
''churth soup dinner on March 20 at Wolfe served refreShments 10 the
The Public Utilities Com; 4 p.m. .
IS ·members presef!L .
missiOn or Ohio has sat
lor public hearing Case
No. 91-01-EL-EFC, to
review the luel pfocurement . practices and
The United Methodist Women ,program on the UMW' Reading
of the Heath United Methodist Program.
.
.
. • policies of Ohio Power
Church met recently at the home of
R~rts on ~ were gJv~n. bl
Company. lhe operation
Emma'Ciatworthy.
Juan1ta Bachtle, By My Spmt;
of its Electric Fuel ComBetty Fultz ~ided at the 111eet- · Betty Fultz, "See~~ o~ Promise;"
pof!ant, IJid related matirig which opened with prayer. . and ~an ~o~re, W1se Women
ters. ·This hearing Is
It was announced that the moth- · Beanng Oifts.
scheduled to begin at
er-daughter banquet will be held
Hoslelses ~ere Mrs. Clatwonhy
1:30 p.m .• on March 11.
Ma 6
and l)vlla Clukls.
·
1991 at City Hall, City
. ~Ciilah McComas conducted a
Cotld Olllce, 218 CIM-

'

'

pounds and 14 ounces ·and was 21
and a half inches long.
Grandparents are Mr: and Mrs.
Billy Dailey , Long Bottom and
Wayne Milhoan, Shade.
Great grandfalher is Oscar Fitch,
Lo11g Bottom. ·

Wolfe Pen personals .

Breastfeeding topic of LaLeche League

Tbe February meeting of the
Cha~ Club wis held at the home
of Delores Whitlock in Syracu~ . .
She received a hostess gift. ·
Dues and flower fund were collected and reports were given.
Susan Cleland, Mary Myers and
'Lynn McKinney all received their
birthday gifts from secret pals.
Refreshments were served.
The group decided 10 have ali

'

I

Milhoan birth is announced
· Mr. and Mrs. William Milhoan,
Long Bottom, are annollncing the
!rinh of lheir third child, a son, Jeffery William, on March 2 at Camden Clark Hospital. ·
The infant we ighed eigh t

County garden clubs will meet sections at ille very base of the
April 22 at tl)e Extension Office srem. Remove leaves from the potwhere final plans for \he Ohio tion to be buried and plant the cutAssociation of Garden Clubs ling in a black plastic P.Ol with mixregional meetin¥, will be made. . lUre of Perlete and fine peat. Put a.
The cl11b will tour Hubbard's plastic bag over the cuttings and
Nursery on March 18 10 view East- hold in place with a rubber band.
er Lilies.
'
·
Stella Atkins had the "Hint on
, DOrothy Woodard and Pauline · Pinching Plailts.~ Pinching plants
Atkins furnished flowers for removes the growing tips and acti-.
churChes and other organ~liims.
vates several stimuli in the plant
Neva Nicholson won the i;avel- .which keeps it full and ~ompact. .
ing prize fuinished by Binds Diehl. Many plants in hanging baskets
She also read an update on Ameri- need regular pinching.
flora.
Binda Diehl had the arrange· Ruby ·Diehl had an article on ment using forced branches and
"The Cardinal" stating that the featuring a redbird.
· male cardinal is the only crested · · Dorothy Woodard read poems,
redbird .. A black \hroat and fore- "The Bird. Feeder" and "Eternal
head point up brilliance of the rest Father, Strong to Save."
ofits plumage. The female is dart
Members brought seed catocolored with red only on die chest lo~ for display and sang "Happy
and wings. The voice of lhe cardi- Bmhdar" to Margaret Parsons .
nal is a varied series of loud clear Binda D1ehl and Marcia Denison.
whistles.
Stella · Atkins won the door
Pearl Canaday s~ke Qn "Sue- prize.
.
,
cess with Cuttings. ' The cuttings ·
The March meebng Will be held ·
. foNoses should be about six inches at the home of Margaret Bell
long with a heel. The heel is a short Weber. .

chatter club has meeting

College scores

r.

5

Rutland Garden Club meets

Viola diagnosis·confirmed

¥ '

,.

. . TIIURSDAY
RUTLAND • The Rutland
Township Trus~es will meet
. ThUfS!Iay at 6:30 p.m. at the Rutland Fire Station. The public is ·
.invited 10 attend.
. RACINE _ The Racine .Amen·can .Leglon Post 602 will meet
Thursday at7:30 p.m. at the haD.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middle-.
. RACINE- A Support Group
No. 363 F and AM will
meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m. fa- work meeting f~r those affected by the
in the felloweraft degree. Refresh- Gulf War wiU be held.Thursda,Y at
·7 p.m. at tbe Racme Untted
ments will be served.
Methodist Ohurch.
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REEDSVILLE - Revival at the
WEDNESDAY .
TUPPERS PLAINS - There . Fellowshieetum:h of the Nazarene
will be an.officer's meeting of both in Reedsville will be held Thursday
VFW and Ladies' Auxiliary of Post ~gh ~unday a1 7 p.m. with Jim
9053 on Wednesdsy at 7:30 p.m. Kittle, Wmchesrer, Ky., as cvangelis~. Special singing nightly. Rev.
.at the post hall in Tuppers Plains.
John W. Douglas inviies the public.
·
POMEROY - Salisbury TownRUTLAND
- There wi!l be a
ship Trustees Will meet Wednesday
·
m
eeting
for
residents
oppose
at 1 p;Jil. at the home of S!ulih the Rutland Sewer who
System
on
Gibbs.
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. Call Bill
POMEROY - Revival at Nicholson at 742-2454 for infonna·
Believers Fellowship Ministry cin tion . .
County Road 18 Kingsbury with
RACINE - The Southem Junior
Rev. Ralph L. Savage. Call 992High
Athletic Boosters will meet
2463.
Thursday at 7 p.m. at the junior
MIDDLEPORT.- The Middle- high building 10 discuss the sports
port Literary Club will meet banqueL

CHESTER- The River Valley
Herbalists will meet Tuesdsy at 7
p.m. at the home of Lila Ridenour
on Rovte 248. Dues f9r ·the year
should be paid.

-----Sports briefs--...;....---

.Sl 099

Page

port Lodge

WELLSTON - The Board of
Directors of the AGHJMV Solid
Waste District will meet on Tuesday at 2 p.m. at City Council
Chambers m Wens10n City Building.
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PIZZA

CHESTER • Chester Co~ncil
No. 323 Daughters of America will
meet Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. lnitiation scheduled for that night has
been postpOned until the district
meeling. That district meeling is 10
be held Saturday at 1 p.m. at the
Chester Lod$e.Hall. Members wear
white and bnng gifts for prizes.

WELLSTON - The Executive
· Col)lmittee of the Policy Committee of the six-county AGHJMV
Solid Waste District will meet on
Tuesday at 10 a.m. at the District
Office, lucated at 213 East Broadway in Wellston.

pairings

LARGE DELUXE

'

Chapter, Order of the Eastern Sw. · \Vedneaday at 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Sibley Slack will rev1ew "Genghis
will meet 'l'uesdsy at 7:30p.m.
·Kahn" and Mrs. Roy Holter will
REEDSVILLE - The Olive review "The Emporer's Winding
Township Trustees will meet Tues- Sbeet." Mrs. Wilson Carpenter will
day at 6:30 p.m. at the RCC!Isville be the hostess Roll eaif answered
with custom of the Middle East.
Fire House.

TUESDAY
RACINE - Revival at ML Moriah Church of God will be held
through Sun!lay ~~ 7 p.m. nightly
with Donald Stacey, evangelist.
Special singing. Pastor Jim Satterfield invires the public.

~: Spo.rts scoreboard

:DI,...m ·

1\leaday, March 5,' 1991
'

Communlt1 Calendar items
appear two clays before an event
and tbe day ol ·tbat eveat. Ite.IDIIII be rteeiYed weD iD lldVIIIDCe
to - r e publlaltion In tbe calendar. .

Mediate captures Doral honors

arouoo...

By The Bend
Community calendar

.B ird's treys push Boston to
~126-101 win .over Indiana ·
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The Paily ·Sentinel

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FLEXIBILITY ·.
We can design a CenlraLine Home Equity
Loon In meet your specinc needL. with
varinhle rn1es nnd flexible repaym~nl plan ~.
And you can usc your CenlraLine to finance
anylhing you need like college 1ui1ion. a '
home improvement or t 'Jen B new ca r.

GREATRATF.S
A CenlroLil)e Revolving Line offers a wide
range of credit lines. all wilh incredibly

low rates.

TAX SAVINGS
The inleresl charges (m secure•l CentrnLines
may be lax dcduc1ihlc. Thn nx law allows
for deduclion of s1;1mc or all nf lhe inlercst
on loan~ secured lly a pcr~onhl rc~ idcnce . •

•
· IJ's easy 10 see why lhe CentraUne Home Equil y Loan is no w
an even bener way In borrow. ~ o acl now.
' I

,,,,IJI,.,.., '"' o lil&lt; l"~

CENTRAL TRlBI'
A~BANK

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Page 6 The Dally Sentinel

I

"The Iraqi armed forces are
ready to frustrate any attempt to
undermine their country's securi ~
ty," the newspaper said.
, ,
· Former Defense M10tster
Ibrahim El Dawood called for an
international court to examine the
crimes committed by Saddam 's
regime since it took power in 1979.
"The prosecutors in this court

should bC the 1111;~i, ·~uwaiti a~d
Iranian peoples, R1y~dh radto
quoted El Dawood as sayutg.
"Saddam Hussein and his gang
are charged with genocide, intema- ·
lional terrorism, destroyina natural
and energy resources which God
created for humanity," said the for·
mer defense chief, who helped Sad·
dam lake power by particiJ!IIting in
a Ba.aihist coop in 1968.
· That was in stark contrast to
remarks attributed Monday to
.'
Iraq's official INA news agency,
'.
' '
monitmed in Beirut, quoting Revolutionary Command Council head
'
Ezzat Ibrahim as telling the Ira~i
people that Saddam deserved' thetr
loyall)', despite' the humiliation of
the war.
"President SaMarn HUiSCin is a
brilliant and courageous leader who
enjoys 'rare characteristics in this
age," Ibrahim was quoted as saying. He ealled on Iraq to express tts
"loyalty and th\lir deep belief.in
the glory symbolized in Its leader."
State-run Cairo Radio late Monday quoted an obscure London·
based Arab newspaper as reporting
that Saddam had cirderell the execution of Defense Minister Saad
Mahdi and two senior aides.
, "The London-based newspaper
AI Ahdath quoted well-informed
sources as saying Saddam ordered
.
.
Iraqi Defense Minister Gen. S.aad
SCOTLAND
A•BRAVE
•
A
British
!IOldler
relaxes Ia the sun
Mahdi and two of his senior aides
banner
Sunday,
as
be
walt$
to
be given the order
under
a
Scottish
execullid on Thursday for ~ .fail­
ure to stop American, Bnush and
French troops from penetrating
southern Iraq during the gulf war,"
Cairo Radio said.
The Egyptian radio quoted the
newspaper as saying that Hussein
Kamel, a member of Saddam 's
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (UP!) • starting 10 'get fci aims around this
Tikriti clan and heavy industry -Elite troops loyal to Saddam thing now," one source. said. "It
minister, had replaced Mahdi and Hussein are fighting a revolt by may lead 10 a collision or it may
was signing all military decrees.
regular army soldiers· in Iraq's sec- lead to the traditional Iraqi
Egypt's Middle E11s1 News ond largest city of Basra, and response - that is to submit. This
Agency quoted U.S. sources in · unrest is continuing in five other type of thing is what Saddam han·
Washington as saying thtit despite Iraqi cities, senior military sources dies best, but it may be his biggest
appeals from Iraqi OJlposilion Said Tuesd4y.
challenge yeL"
.
1
groups active in southern Iraq, the
The
sources
also
said
II .West·
Tbe source said about 4,000 to
United StateS is unlikely to act on em journalists who left Kuwait 5,000 troops armed with machine
their behalf for the moment.
for Basra on Monday were guns are involved in the fighting.
. "They Sllid it was more likely City
reported
missing Tuesday a~ter He said there arc more than 200
that the Unitejl States and its coali· . passing through
li U. S. cbeelepotDL tanks in the city, some of them in
lion partners would wait until the
They included two from CNN, combat formation, but "there have
situation developed further and IWO from the Reuters news agency, . been no indieations of tank batdes
awai£ the outcome of ·these devel- one
each from the New York yet." He said there had been at
opments, which are the direct result Times and National Public Radio, least one use of artillery. He had no
of the gulf war on the internal situ·
five Italians. from unidentified . word on casualties. ·
inion in Iraq," the Egyptian agency and
news
organizations.
"The Republican Guard right
reported.
The sources said units from now.is working under some type of
. Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein's elite govemiJienl control and is trying to
Republican_QI!Ifd .~ trying to restore order. The regular army
put down a revolt tiy re~ armt units are anti-government."
·
troopS in·Basra. They said the tniuSaddam has ruled Iraq with an
bJe began Thursday following the iron grip since 1979 despite several
, cease-fire that ended lhe 43-day reported attempts by disgru11tlcd
·sent minority government, ·has . war that forced Saddam to with- officers to overthrow him. U.S.
accused Motzfuldt and his Cabinet draw his occupation troops .from military officials had predic~ed.
of misusing public funds, causing Kuwait.
serious unrest once Iraq's masstve
Siumut to rule out further coopera''The (Iraqi) ll:Overnment is casualty figures in the war with the
lion with the pany.

·
' COPENHAGEN (UPI) · Polling stations opened Tues-·
daylhroughout iCY._Greenland as ~e
small populauon ohhe world s

largestislanddrove,sldedanddogsleighed in sub-zero but sunny
weather to VIlle in.watershed gener·
al elections.
At stake were 27 seats in the
home-rule Parli.BJDCnt, wh~ Pri·
mary post-elecuon task will be to
solve the arctic island's complex
cultural, social and econoinic prob- ·
!ems, six years after the territory
left the European C~mmunity.
Tuesday's ~lecuonf e~pec!C" to
return the rulmg Soc~ahst Stumut
Party of ProteStant pnest Jonathan
Motzfcldt, comes~ the large but
sparsely populated ts~d strugg~es
to fin4 a way out of tiS financ.1al
dependence on Denmark, .wuh
which it maintains constJtuuonal

Butaltackshaveilso·comefrom
within Siumut. Sunday the cam·
paign took a dramatic tum when
Siumut pany chainnan Lars Emil
Johansen announced he would
challenge Motzfeldt for the premiershipaftertheelection.
Johansen wants to continue
cooperation with Aiassut and its
leader, Konrad Steenholdt, after
Atassut recendy backed away riom
demands to rejoin the EC.
Motzfeldt favors cooperation
with ·the left-wing Inuit Ataqatigiit
Party, which is working to raise
national and cultural ronsciousness
and to develop cooperation with
other Inuit populations in Canada,
Alaska and the Soviet Union. .
lionds.
·
"If Siamufwins the election. I
Election results are expected to believe the time is ripe for cooperabe announced W~sday.
·
· lion wi"' Inuit Ataqatigiit, which
De!lmark p~o~1des Greenland has matured politically and is not
about $400 mtlhon each year to as radical as it was previoliSiy,"
maintain a Scandin~Jvian standard Motzfeldt said.
of living on the world's largest
.Regular elections in 1987 gave
island, where 45, 000 oC lhe 55,000 both Siumut and Atassut II seats,
inhabitants. are. aativc Inuit who lA four seats and the Sllll\ll Issittup
rely 011 fishmg mdustry and lradi- Partii·a of independent fishenncn
tional sea mammal cuDs.
and businessmen one mandate in
"II is still possible to exist off Parliament.
seal cullin&amp; IRI the free life in c:crRcgardlesil of who· wins, the
tain .places in G!'CC!~Iand, but the ·resulting_governmentwill face sericost of life here IS enormous. ous problemS, including unemployEvcrythinf w.c use has .t~ be menl, dwindling cod stocts, severe
imported,' sa1d Pnme Mmtsler nationwide alcohol abuse and a
Jonathan Motzfeldt.
. soaring violent crime rate. .
Motzfeldt, 52, has been m
Several thousand Greenlanders
power since 1979 and wi~l lrY. to are qneniploycd at a tUnc: when the
gain mnewed support for hiS poltey nation imports most of tts experts
of reduced dependence on De~- and public servants from Denmark,
mut and the, Eutopean GJnm~nt· which provides 10,000 of Greenty from whtch Greenland wnh- land's population of 55.000.
clrCw in 1985 but maintained favor· . To even·oul emrloyment opporable trading status.
tunities, a specia law that gave
The fint European territory to · Danes in Greenland higher salaries,
do so, Greenland's decisi~n .to housing and other fringe benefits
leave ~ EC halved the temiOJ'Ial will be abolished on A~! I.
areaoftheCommunity.
And with firearms commonMoczfcldt's policies in the pre- place in most fii!Jiilies, widespread
ceedlftl period have been ~eared to alcohol abuse has given rise to a
cetDCDtinl a continued htgh level .Joag list of fatal tragedies and
of Wdfire and social security in the caused public demand for urgent
auiOIIC)IIIOIIS territOry.
action lo cUrb drinkin,B.
,
"Some people believe GreenTho latest major incident
land lhou)d bo a reservation, !"JI Involved that of a 17-year-old boy
~~ WRllll.'lbe~ is no turnmg who gunned down seven of his
"Molzfeldl satd.
contemporalics because they would
But wbllo Motzfeldt has man- not let him into their New Year's
~~~~~ rlile Oreenland's profile ~
OII*IIUy in his charisma!·
• When somedling as terrible as
ic clef- of dte QR~on's contra- the seven murders occurred that
veniiJIUicuiBnJ, his government New Year's morning, each and
hal booll unablo to develop self- every Greenlander felt hit in some
111 lri""')' IIICI be hal become the way," Motzfeldt said.
IIU
Mte at home.
"But I don't believe in a general
ut'a .Wa opponent, the ban on alcobol in Greenland. We
non-Soclalill, pro·BC Alassu1 must learn to live decently with
. Party~ wbidt
e"F(IIICd the pre. alcohol," he said

urw••oip,uw.a

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GUIf campaign
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lane" flopped but he can be seen
on the cover of the April issue of
Penthouse . He posed with Penthouse Pets Paula Lercbenfeldt
and Janlne LlodemuUder, putting
him in the company of Georae
Burns as the only men to appear
on the magazine's cover.

By United Press International
HITCHCOCK HOW-TO:
MILKEN REPORTS FOR Alfred Hitchcock scholars will
SENTENCE: Fallen junk bond want to check out the new exhibit ·
king Michael Milkeo showed up at Universal Studios in Los Angeearly 10 begin serving his 10-year les that shows just how Anthony
sentence for securities fraud . Perkins killed Janet Llegh in the
Milten, 44, who once made $500 infamous showcc scene from "Psymillion a year arrived at the Feder- cho." The exhibit will feature a
al Correctional Institution in···· film in which Perkins discusses
Pleasanton, Calif. , Sunday evening ho.w Hitchcock shot .the scene
and was processed into the mini- usmg 30 cameras. Umversal has
mum-security prison. He will go also a film in which Jimmr Stewthrough a week of orientation dur· art tallcs about Hitchcock s teching which "his skills will be niques in "Rear Window," "Veematched with institutional needs tigo~· and "Rope" and one with
and he'll be assigned a job," said Khn Novak, whq starred . as t~e
prison spokeswoman Janice Kll· obJect of Stewart s affecuons 10
Han . Jobs available include "Vertigo."
·
· grounds maintenance, landscaping,
electrical work, roofing and motor
HE'S BACK: Andrew Dice
repair. .Milken will be allowed to Cl!ly is making history. The comewear his own clothes at the prison dian faded from view after the
but not his toupee, which is forbid- furor over his fouJ-·mouthed act
waned and his movie "Ford Fairden by regulations.

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The Dally Sentinel Page--7 ·l

FROM RAP TO MOVIES:
Militant rapper Ice·T might seem
like an unlikely choice to play a
policeman in the movie "New Jack
City." "I was risking my career
(as a rapper)," the former Los
Angeles street gang member told
Th'e Boston Globe. "Everyone
knows whc:re I stand with the system. 1 don't lilce the police but at
the same lime I wanted to ~ an
actor. Talk about having to stretch
for a role." Jce-T, who P,lays Judd
Nelson's partner in ' New Jack
City," says the movie is fairly real-

·'

istic. "We showed the film in Los
Angeles in a theater full of pistol·
packing, beeper-carrpng brothers
and they were cheennF, when the
pusher got it," he said. 'What they
CINCINNATI (UPI) - In a
were doinll: was cheering at them- sign of the limes, dlcR 'a not a sinselves going down the drain . II gle movie theatre loft in downtown
twisted their minds, made. them Cincinnati.
think." Ice-T's next movie role
Downtown Cincinnati's last
will be opposite Oscar winner Deu· · remaining movie theatre - The
zel Washington in "Ricochet."
Movies Repertory Cin.ema closed Monday.
In recent years, downtown
movie theatres have been closing
because of theatres in suburban
Protela
shopping centers, cable TV movies
Proteins, composed oi amino acids, and rental movies for home video
are Indispensable ill the diet. They pla~ers.
'The economics of the movie
build, lllllntain and repair the bQdy.
Best sources for proteiD are ecp, business have changed," said
milk, filb, ~Mat, poultry, 10~01 Larry Thomas, co-owner of The
and nuts. High quality protelllt lildl Movies RepertOry Cinema. "We
~ eggs, meat or filb supply aU eight just couldn't do·it anymore."
amino acids Deeded In the diet.
"We got to the point where our
expenses we(e exceediaa our

,_'

income," added co-owner Phil
•'
Bonlck.
Cincinnati Mayor David Mann
said it was "very disttessing" for
down10wn to be left without a sin· · ·
gle movie theatre.
"It's of terribly symbolic significance," said the mayor. "It's 1
terrible blow,"
John Morrison, who operates a ·•
movie theatre in suburban Clifton,
said he was .. dumbfounded .. by ·:
thenews.
,
"For downtown Cincinnati, the · ,•
closing represents much mote (than . ·,
the loss of a particular movie the· -:
acre)," he said. "II means that for
the ftrst lime in nearly 80 years, the ··
strug&amp;lin&amp; downtown area will be
without a movie thealre.•'

.,

Classifie
POLICIES
"Adl oulslde Metgs. Galha or Mason couni!M must be pur
pa•d
.
_.
"A.cctNVt! $ &amp;0 dts.counl tor adl pond m ou1Yo.nc\! .

that be eaa leave for home. No troops wiD be able to Je~~ve undl the
cease-fire agreement.bas been signed. (UPI/Reuter)

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pnl•~

MONDAY PAPER
. TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER

t-HIUAV PAPER
, SUNDAY P:APER

WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS

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

Malon Family Restaurant

n.
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THIS'.f'l \"
BUL~ifiN WJARD

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SPACt~V~It:ABLE

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AT $5Jih :P~R DAY
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MOHAMMED SAID
SAATYond
SHAWBO SAATV
·
Dofendonto
NO. 80-CV·130 .
In purauenee of en Order
of Sele In the obove entltlld
action, I will ~for Ill• It
public ouctlon, It the lronl
door of the Sherttf'a Bldg.,
Molgs County Courthou•.
In Pomeroy,. Ohio. In the
obovenamedCounty,..,the
11th day of Aprl, 1111. 11
10:00 o'clock A.M .. the lol·
lowing daecrtbld Naleotetl,
situate jn the County of
Moigo end Sleta of Ohio,
and In the Townohlp ol Col·

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Gallia Coun1v
AreaCode614

Meigs tounty ~
Area Coda 614\

446 Galltpotis
367. Ch•hire

99 2 M•ddlepotl
Pom ... oy
986 Ch••r
843 Ponland
24 7 letar1 falls
949 Racine
742 Rutland

388

Vin1c;wt

245 Rio Gr~nde
256 Guyan Oist.
643 Arabia Otsl .
379 w.. nut

l19lnnlng et the north·
weot comer of Henry Meoh·
otsr'a land In Seotlon No. I.
Town No. I. of Rena• No.
15 of the O.C.P. In Col·
um!M Townahlp, Molga
County, Ohio; thence Eell
114 chllno to the road;
~hence South 17'Al ~J',j
Weot 5.N aholno olong
rold; thence I doog. Weot 10
chlino; thonce Iouth 34
dog. Weot 8 chOiinl: thence
South 12 dog. Weot 1.13
cholnl: thence Iouth 21
dog. Woot 7170 chlinl:
thence w- 48 .17 chllnuo
tho well line of Hid lootlon
No. I ; thence North 32.21
chelno to the ploae of begin·
nlng, contelnlng 113 ecreo.
more or leu. oaoept 2.21
ocroo oft of the northeall
comer lheoool conveyed by
C. A. Me-• end FID01
Ma..,_, hlo wife, 1D N. G.
Cheadle b y - dated Apol
18, 18011. •d ........S.cl In
at "' Poge 314 of the
Deed loolll of Melgo
Ohio,
leaving
County.
110.n • - · moNoriNo
convoyed by Charle1 A.
M...,_ ond Floro Moah•
t•. hlo wife, to Jeme1 D•l·

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RP.&lt;JI fslole

1 1 Htlo Wantud
12 Situa1ion Wanted
13 lnsurillnce
14 Busin•s Tra1111ng
1S School1 6 lnstrucunn
16 Radio. TV &amp; CB Rep ;"'
17 M•scetlan.aus
1.8 Wanted To Do

Mason Co . WV

Area Code 304

675
4&amp;8
576
173

Pt Pl•••nt
L.on
Apple Grove
Mason

882

New Haven

895 letart
937 Butfl!lo

21

8u5in•s Oppa.tunrty

22
23

Profeuiont~l

Man~ lo

loan

61 .. Farm Equ.pmum

62 Wanted to Buy
63 linslock
64 Hay &amp; Grahl
66 Seed &amp; Fert ..uer

I:@I I

Tr ~n:;ourtal i o n

PubliC Notice

miMI OU1 to the public oaad,
aefd rltht of WIY being
lo01tec1 on the Woat olda of
the ·K. a M.
Reliway
Company (now N.V.C. R.R .
Company) right ol way ond

the epproiNd vllue.
TERMS OF SALE: Cloh
on delivery of daed.
Jameo M. Soullby,
ShorJH of Molg1 County
121 21; 131 15. 12. 3tc '

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of ., Order of
PubliC Notice
S ... II..... out of tho Coonman PINo Court of Molgs
ley by dMd doted Morch 11,
County,
Ohio, In tho "'• of
1102, ond recorded in Book
Bri One, Alhlno. NA,
" It P19• 13 of Mid DNd PflllntHI. va. Rodney A. Pul·
R-a. end oloo tho fol· lint, et ol., Delendlnlo. upon
Iawing ,.., ollote oltuetld In
1 Judgment therein ...,_
lloetian No. I, Town No. 1. dered. being c- No. 90·
Ronlfl No. 11 oltheOhlo CV ·237 In uld Court. I wll
Compony'o PwchoNin Col· .,..,
for aale It the lron1 door
""""" Townahlp, Molga of 1M Courlhou• In Pom·
~ounty, Ohio. beginning ..,
Mllgo County, Ohio.
the E... Nne of the Sugor eroy,
on the 21th dey ol March,
G-. School Hou•lot ot •
19111. It 10:00 o.m .. the fo~
lUke; thence Iouth 4114 lowing
IIndo ond ,_,...nta,
dog, Nit on Mld Nit line of
loolted It 21 I Eut Mlin
uld lot I rodo""d 20 links to StiNt. Pomeroy,
Ohio.
I WIN fence on Reflrold
A
cornpte•teool
487119.
rtaht of way; thence North ICtiptkM of the r•l - t ecia"
II
3Hio dog. Nit olong Mid n lollowo.
rtgllt of woy 74 OOdo to •
The following rN1 • ...., thence Welt . . OOcla
In the VUiolfl of Pa·
1111d 2 llnko to 1 ot.Uin aen· oltuete
m.....,, County of Moigaond
ter of n - rold; thence Stete of Ohio:
Iouth 10 deg. Eoot II OOcla
The aouth-ot hill of Lot
to 1 • • on llfd rood;
93 In the City of Pomeroy,
thence Iouth II dog. Eoat being 24 feet I lncheo on
20 roda ond 18 Unka to 1
Front qr Flrot Strwl ond ••·
"'""•: thence South 1,1,. dog.
tlndtng bock ot thot width
Eeot to a alike; tl\enc• (24 feat I lnche1l to 1 dlo·
Iouth 21 dag. Weot 17 ooda
of II felt. oublect to
Md 22 links to a
the right ond privilege of
thence Iouth 51 d19. W.at Cherteo E~bloh. TrultN,
10 tho place of beginning.
hie .,ccee10ra or 11llgn1 to
oontolnlng 1 .47 aorM, moN
connect
with the - • on
or leN. com~eyld by Howerd
uld
lot 10 the Ohio R-.
Throckmorton end Ellie
u• of aetd
1D and the Throckmorton, hla
· provided, thet when
J•mea Dilley by dald doted uling llfd . _ . Hid
July 22, 1801, end .-rded Chlrles
Eberllilloh. hlo
In took
et Palfl 327 of o u - N or eulgno. ahlli
aefd OMd · Raoordo. IIIII'•
oold open 11 oil
piing 117.11 ICNI. EX· U.
tl,...o to the Ohio River.
CEPT ...... llvm 3.18 ICNa
a rtaht of wey ov•
conveyed by Jemea Dolley theAloo.
South-S ond 1/3
end Phebe Oelley, hlo wife,
INI of I.Ait 124 In uld olty,
to Hawerd Throckmorton, .
"' "'"' width •
by dald dotad July 22, ·llt-lnt
of H folt towar4
11101. and ,_rded In looll dlotanoe
p1'0111 ltl'Mt In oald ally.
••• """• 331 of l8fd O.d
Refer- Oiled: V"'Recorda, end eacept 78
313, P • 117, Meigs
aorn th•elrom oonv.,..t Couilty OMd Rocordo.
by 0. H. S-art. AdmlnloletdRNI_hea ......
1rii1Dr of the -ofJ1"'" . 11olgned the folowlng Audl·
..... •~ey. d1 1 11d to Mdtll1 tor'l Paroll l'fum~ 11·
w~~y oiMd c11tec1
"""'" 002431.
17. 1111. -dad In
letd_l_leoulolect
112 II P... :182 ol
l8fd Deed R_,., lelvlng
to 1H1.
1
lor
11.21 lOrN. mo,. or leu:
REAL
EITATE
AP·
• ......, wllll a right of woy
PRAISED AT: •31,000.00.
forlntJN•""d ..... Nil - • oannot be
uld 1.47 _.......,befoN The
oold for leta then two-thlrdo
deocribed from Mid Pf8:

It••:

wn..

n

-eel-·-.. .

I '

Mer i liolllllsr.
HouMhoHI Go•
Sportine Gooa
Antiques
Mi1c. Merct•.,..d•e
luildi"'~ Suppli•
61 Pets tor Sale
57 Muticatlnslrumants

81

Homelnlprcwemtnt~

'

'

)

'

'•

..
-.. .
·:

82 Plumtttne &amp; He1hny
83 £ Clllating

'

84 Electrical &amp; Rel,.gerMllon
86 CWn.-el Heuliny
81 Mobile Humo Attp~tit
87 Upholstery

fruit1 &amp; Vegl'labl•
for 5•1• or Tr•ci•

. .'
. ' ·-'

Sf' I VICI~S

61
&amp;2 53
64
56

.!.' ,i

'

~

..'

':

•

..

~

'I

·Read the

'

.

'

CLRSSIRED RDS

parallela the Nmll •• wa1 re~

Vo~

71 Autos tor Sale
72 Trucks for S11le
73 Yftfll Ia 4 WO ' s
1 !4 Motorcyc:IUI
15 8tNth &amp; Moton lor Sal tt
76 Auto P..-ts &amp; Acc•aort•
71 Auto AepiMf
78 C•mptng Equ1pmwm
79 C11mpeu &amp; Motor Honutll

43 farms lor Rent
44 · Apartm11111 lor Runt
45 , · FurrUshH Rooms
4&amp; Spac• for Rent·
47 Wanted to Rent
48 Equipment tor Aunt
49 For LIMI

58
59

Servicn

SuprJites

'l . ,

'

Public Notice

Mrvld end ..ceptld In Mid
to Methloo Wood her·
olnbelore Nfernd to.
Releronce Deed: Volume
23l. Poge 713.
Meigs
County Ooad Raoordo.

\ o'

I

~ I "l'&gt;iOC~

31 · Homn lor Sale
32 Mobrl• Hom• lor SOIIt!
33 , F~rm1 for Slle
31 Busin•s 8uilding5
35 lots • Acre~•
36 Rul htate Wam.ct

w.,_._. to luv

667 Coolvtlle

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE DF
REAL ESTATE
Tho St- ol Ohio
Moigo County
BANK ONE. Athena, N.A.
Plelntiff

Annoucem.nt~

Empl oyn.c r' l
Serv tce"

ju/luwifl# !f•ll'l'h1irw I'Xcltull#«'.~ ...

;

Public Notice

Card ol Thank•
In Memory

Ha,py Ads
LOll and Found.
1 Y •• Sale tpatd '" adnncet
8 Public Sale &amp; Auction

Clu.~.~iji1•tl IJII#I' .~ cm'l'r I lw

· Laet D..d Reference';

CALL 614·992.7104 FOR APPT.

.. ""- •

)

Announcements

Over 16 Words
Rate
.
.20
$4.00
.30
S6.00
.42
$9.00
.60
$13.00
.05/doy
• $1 .30/ day

41 Hou"'• fOf Rent
42 Mobile Homn fof Rent ·

lumo 291, Pege 217, Melgo
County ONd Raoordo.
Sold. PNmiMs located at
Weoi Side of County Rollli
10, Colum!M Twp., Molgo
Co., Ohio.
Sold Preml- ApproiMd
at t1 9,300.00 ond cennot
be oold for ioN thin twotltlrdo of thot omount. All.
SheriH' I Hill op101te undl!
. the Doctrine Covtllt Emp·
tor. All pro•octlw purches·
•a .,. urged to check for
Ilene In the office of tho
Melga ·County Rocorder.
TERM8 OF SALE: 10%
Cooh or Certified Check on
Dsy of Selo, tlolanco upon
Delivery of DMd.
Jomeo M. Souf1by, Sheriff
Melgo County, Ohio
121 21; 131 S, 1.2, 3tc

.VERY NICE LARGE HOME ON APPRllX. 3~
ACRES-4 BR, 3 boths, 2garages. rented I
BR apartment. Property includes pond, ap·
prox. 4,800 sq. ft. farm bid~ and mobile
home. Areol barpin at $84,900.

4 PM-9 PM

•TACO
..
DINNER
•BURinO
D.INNER

i1

FOR SALE IN RACINE ·

. .'.

MEXICAN NIGHT

15
15
15
15
15

9

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
11 .00 A M SATURDAY
2 00 P .M . MONDAY
2 00 P M TUESDAY
2 .00 PM. WEDNESDAY
2 00 P.M . THURSDAY
·2 00 PM. FRIDAY

BULLETIN BOARD

' '
•

'.

' Ra1e1 arc tor con.-culnte runs. brobn up d.ys w1ll be c.h•glld
lor eKh d~ as Stplfate ~ .

D&lt;uly lnbunc. rtJaChln1J OVtlr 18,000 hornt!S

COPY DEADliNE

n I·n ht•story'

MASON FAMILY RESTAURANT

Monthly

• A c l01551f1od adver1ist:onh.1111 pi&lt;~ C clllll The Oa!IY Stmlult!l \llll.
ct:opl
cla15tfttld chsl)l;t¥ . Bu11ntss Card omd lt.oulll llOII C t!~l
w 1n 11 1$o &lt;IPPt=ilt m !he Pt Pleotum Rt~~fl51ur ;md th6 Gilllt

wm

.

11)

• 7 potnl .. IHI type only uM!d .
.
• Senl ttu,t t$ nol fBSpOftltbltt h:n enu1s ah~r brst d#'f (Chetek
lor ~rrun hrst diV ad rutis 111 pilpur) . Cot II bt~fore 2 .00 p.m
difY ether publication to rnilke .couechun .
"Ads thill must bu pa•d'" )dwilncu ilfl!
C;ud at Thanks
HiiPPV Ads
In Memorlll'll
Yard SaleS

~

w·

Words

Days
1
3
6

..

-'

"Ftet! ads
Gtllet~wav and Found ads under 1£t..wonhi wtU bv
run J daws al no ch•ge. ,
,
•
'Pi •cu of a~ for all captlillld.hus •s d!)uble prtce ol ad cost

U.S.-Ied coalition became publicly serious unrest is in Naiaf. where a
known as more troops returned number of government buildings •
home.·
are on fire." ·
Iran's state-owned Islamic
He listed the other cities as
Republic News Agency on Monday · Na~iriya~; Samawa, Zubayr and
quoted refugees arriving at the 'Jr.i, Suliyman!yah. . .
.
nian border as saying ttoops return·
He sa1d allied mtelhgence at
ing from Kuwait gave their ftrst believed Iran may have been
weapons to the. crowds and joined behind the unrest~ "~ut !here are
demonstrations against Saddam;
fewer and fewer md\callons that
The refugees were quoted as Iran ~.directiY,involved." . : .
saying Several people were wound· Shiite Muslims are a lliiJOClty 10
cid and that at least two top local Iraq's southern cities, and during
officials as well as a son of Sad- the Iran-Iraq war one of the aims of "
dam,
killed.
Jt:in's Ayatollah Ruhollah K~~- ~
"Basra is now in the control .of 01 was to .set up a separate Shu!C '
the people," the refugees were state in southern Iraq centered 10
quoted by !RNA as sayinjl.
Basra.
..
.
~.
The military source m Riyadh
KhomelDI also fought !0 repll!CC ,,
Tuesday said there was continuing Saddam's mostly Sunnt Mushm •
civil unrest in B11$ra "and we get leadership with ~ g,overnm~nl ~
the sense tliat it's growing." The dra.w~ from Iraq s ~wn ·Shute ,-.•
source·said there was a shortage of m~J~nly. In a pol?~a~on of 15.5
security forces mthe city, but more milhon people~ Shittes 10 Iraq out·
were being flown in. Meanwhile, number Sunms 50 ·percent to 40 ',
the civilian population is continu- percent. . ·
· :·
ing to flee the area.
·
· . U.S. Lt Gen.- ~as Kelly told :
There are also disturbances in at . a Pentagon ~nefmg ~onday tl!e
lea~t five other cities in southern alhes dl,l not tntend to Intervene m :
Ira((. the source said. "Th.e most the lraqt clashes.
,•

sC'hwarzkopf go do'.

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

RATES

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 992 •2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

WASHINGTON {UP!)- Mili- given his third star on the battle- Rommel as exainple5 of speed, sur- coin searched for throughout most
· tary historians will pour over maps field, will~ a place in ~ histo- prise and ,deep strikes th~t were of the Civil war."
.
and records of Operation Desert ry of loguucal op.e rau.ons .for reflected m Schwarzkopf s camDefense Secretary Dtck Cheney
Storm for years, but there is no assembling and .distrib~ting a 60- paign.
.
.
added, "He obviously will go
question that Gen. H. Norman day supply ofwarmatenel.
The campatgn made heavy use ·down in the history books as haySchwarzkopf and the campaip he . The operation will also be stud- of psychologt,cal operauons a~d ing operated one of the most suedirected will have a prolliment ied for its speed. The 24th Mecha· spectal operattons forces deep m . cessful military ventures of all
place i,n the boots they write.
nized Infantry Division clocked Iraq, anti the press wa~ used to time."
He used the essential elements more than 240 mile.s in less than 48 some degree to ~l.P convmce ~adBut perhaJlll the highest compli·
of maneuver warfare - surprise, !lours to cut supply routes from dam that Bl11Phtbtous operauons ment came from the commander of
strength, envelopment and dccep- Baghdad to Kuwait trap the Iraqi were likely.
.
.
.
the British forces in the Middle
. lion- much as did campaigns run army.
·
BecaUS;C, he effecltvely blm~ East. LL Gen: Peter de Ia Billiere,
by Eisenhower, Rommel, Patton,
. To
a
large
degree, Iraq's abthty to peer- beyond tiS who said, ~'It is his brilliance, his
Lee and even Hannibal.
Schwarzkopf's strategy of using border, Schwankopr. managed to . leadership, his drive, his dctermina·
And the combination of air threatened amphibious landin$s keep, hidden the masstve w~tward tion- and' I have to say it occapower and a tOO-hour land assault, coupled with dece{ltive strik~s m mov~ent ofmen .and matenallhat sionally ... his rude~ that's got
once the battlefield had been suffi· southwestern Kuw&amp;t and t)le hght- preceded the mvas1on. .
things done and gotten done so
ciendy prepared, provided a statis- ning maneuvering.around the west . His bOss, Gen. C:ohn Powell, damned efficiently and helped us
tic for the history books: The short· side to env'elope the Republican chairman of the Jomt Ch1efs ·of and enabled us 10 win this war. So
est major will' in the nation's histo- Guard followed the philosophy of Staff, described Schwarzkopf as General Schwarzkopf is indeed the
ry. ·
Gen.George~ton.
"thekindofgeneraiPresidentLin- manofthematcb."
Schwankopf, head of the U.S. . '"Hold 'em by the nose and
Central Command and head of the kick 'em in the ass,"' was Patton's
coalition forces, dominated the war philosophy of warfare in World
· by the sheer fOtte of his personality War II, noted John Purdy, director .
-and what strategists say was the of the Pat19n Museum at Fort
brilliance of the Oanking maneuver Knox, Ky. That is' precisely what
that wrapped up the larger Iraqi Schwarzkopf did.
armed force into a ·neat package
"The enemy's rear is a happy
that collapsed under the weight of hunting f!?.Und for atinor," said
the bombing and speed of the ' Patton. ' Use every means to get
assault.
there." Again, that is precisely
, Included in his battle plan were what Schwarzkopf did.
tactics u~ by the great comman- · "The whole ground maneuver is
ders of history and elements that a classic calli! of maneuver and
CIIIJIC sttaight from (9xtbooks.
double envelopment," said Purdy.
And the ICXIboo~ that are going ••It contains all ·the ·clements of
to be 'l'ritten about the operation classic warfare: deception, mass
wiD focus on how Marine Lt. Gen. and.movement."
.
Walter Boomer punched through
John H:oh:,~liams, military
dense Iraqi fatificalions and raced historian at
. State Univem·
to Kuwait Cicy, while a potential ty at Terre Haute, said
amphibious force kept Iraqi troops Schwarzkoprs.armor climpaign is
pinned to the Kuwait coast wau:h: paralleled . in history by the
mg the horizon for an attack tMt blitzkreig that Germany used in ,
never came.
.
racing aero,. Poland and the low
"He knew the art of war damn countries and to conquer France
well, •• said retired Army Lt. Gen. early in World War 11.
·
WillilllJI Yarborough, a veteran of
Those campaigns of 1939 and.
special operations and airborne 1940, he noted, were the ftrst to
/
CA!Jipaigns. "His place in history is truly combine air and land campoassured. Tbe fact that theic wRSD't nents, just as Schwarzkopf's was
.QINNERS .SERVED WITH SPANISH
a hell of a lot of ~lion doesn't the first io history to apply the
RICE. REFRIED .BEANS, ALL YOU
meantherecouldn thavebeen."
newest docuine wltllin the U.S.
'
Joining
Boomer
and service: the "air· land battle doc·
CAN EAT SOUP, FRUIT
Schwarzkopf in the books will be trine'' that also employed a naval
AND SALAD BAR.
the man who contributed signifi· component.
canlly to the weakness of the Iraqi · Williams said Schwarzkopf
trOopS when the final asaault did used the ~iple of "fiXing" an
eome: Air. Force Lt. Gen. Charles opponents force much the SA!Jie as
Homer. Five ·and one- half weeks was practiced with unusual success
of bombing coordinated by Homer by Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee
left Iraqis reelina and many eager during the Civil War.
JS
1304) 773·5311
MASOII, WY.
to urender when c:oalilion forces
Other students of milif:Brr histoadvanc:cd.
ry point to the North Africtia camArmy Lt. den. Gus Pagonis, . .paigns of German Gen. Erwin

,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-People in the n e w s - - - - - - - - - - -

Troops reported ·righting in Basra

Greenlande·rs vote-·a·ffi· J•d
.cultural econo'm·J•c.crJ•s·J•s ·.
'

Tuesday, March 5, 1991

•

CAIRO, Egypt (UPI) - The
Iraqi govemmenl, faced with raging anger at President Saddam
Hussein's rule, promised Tuesday
to return propeny its soldiers stole
during their 7-month occupation of
Kuwait. Baghdad Radio reponed.
The prmilise came as a highranking Iraqi.offiCial, in an indica- ·
lion !hat the ruling Baalhists fear a
backlash against Saddarn's leadership during the Persian Gulf crisis,
called on Ira11is to pledge allegiance to their 'mUiant and courageous leader....
' The spreading dissent aaainst
Saddam prompted Baghdad Radio
to accuse the allied leaders of conspiring to undermine Iraq's unity
and sovereignty.
·
·
And a former Iraqi defense minister called on the Iraqi peo~le to
topple Saddanl "and his gang ' and
for trial by an international coun in
which the people of Iraq, Kuwaiti
and Iran would be the chief prosecutors. . ·
· Baghdad Radio, monitor.ed in
Cairo, said the decision 10 return
stolen Kuwaiti property was made
Monday at a meeting of the Revoluti&lt;ilary Command Council and
ruling Baath party late Monday,
chaired by Saddii!JI.
"The Revolutionary Command
Council decided to return the properties the Iraqi authorities toc:ik possession of (in Kuwait) since Aug.
2," it said. "This act will be in
compliance with United Nations
Security Council resolutions which
Iraq has already accepted.'' ·
Baghdad Radio's commentary
quoted an Iraqi official as saying
the unrest that followed Iraq's
retreat from Kuwait proved there is
a conspiracy to undermine the
country.
"The independence of Iraq and
its national unity are not neg'!_tiable, " it said.
The government-supervised
Baghdad daily AI Qadislya, the
spokesman for the Defense Min.
· istry, said law and order will lie
maintained.

1 •

1\Jeldllj, March 5, 1111

Pomeroy-MiddlePort, OhiO

Iraq vows to r\e turn
Kuwaiti property
.I

-·.

Public Notice

•

Open II Deya
Mon.-l'rl. 1-1
CIOoacl Sat. • Sun.

546......
u,or614-44'-1002
.... N.l •••••
0.. f/llt1
DIM.- "

vs

MICHAEL L. MILLER,
ETAL.
Co• No. 80 CV 1 34
In pur.,ance to 1n Order
of Sole directed to mo In the
obove entitled action, I will
offer for .... at public oue·
tlon, It the front door of tho l.,_ _ _ _ _,__ _'T""_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,
Court HouM. In Pomeroy. r
Ohio. In the lbovtl named
county, on April 12, 1991,
ot 10:00 o.m .. thefoHowlng
&amp;
rNI
"""'•·
doocrlbld
lituotod In the County of
Melga, ond tho Steta of
Speclalldnt In
8NfWHIM11
Ohio, ond In Vlllogl of MidCusto111 fr-• IOHir
•Ga......
dleport, to·wlt:
.NEW a USED PAIITi
Part LotNo.lllnthot port
ICDIIIjllttl
FOR ALL MAKES a
of Mid Vllloge known 11
MODELS
Coelport ond which Hid lot
9412-7013
Is bounded ond deoorl&gt;ecl ••
Stop &amp; Co~~~pare
lottowo. to·wit: l19lnnlnget
or
992·5553
FrH l1lllllat"
the South- cor- of Sa·
01 TOU FlEE
cond and Dlomond Str-o;
thence Iouth alonA s-nd
1-100·141·0070
Str- 10 leet;thence Waot
DAIWII, OlllD
po,..ol
with
Dlomond
3/11'11 /1 mo.
5·31-'to Ill
Str- lor o dlltlnce of 10
feet; lhonce North parollel
with Second Streot 10 '-"''
ISID APPUANCES
- " " Eeot el•g tho loulh .
tODAYWAIUm
line of Dlomond ltl'Mt 10
feet to the ploae of betlnWASIIIIS-$100.,
nlng. Being 1 lot 80 .... by
. DIYIS-$.. .,
•VInyl lldlno
10 feet on the SouthwllflltiiUIOIS-$1 00 .,
comer of Dlomond St.-t In
•Repl•cemont
UIIIES---$125 .,
the VIHogo of Middleport,
Wln~wa
FIIIUIS-$125
.., ·
Ohio.
•Rooftrig·
11(10 OVIIIS-$J9 .,
IUIJECTto efllogol• .. •
•lnaulatlon

Services

WHAlEY'S
AUTO PARTS

BISSELL BURD
CONSIIUCnON

._......

•as..un
667·6179

mente•d.......

'

lA- SlOP

SHERIFF'S SALE OF
REAL ESTATE
The Stoto ol Ohio
Mefgo County
STAR SANK, N.A ..
TRI-STATE

1

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERYKE

- ·

For IOU- of tMio. refer•.
ence Is mode to Deed of Re·
cord In Volume 301. Paoo
121, DMdReaordoaiMol~•
County, Ohio.
Parcoii0"1I·Ot012.000
Property Addreu; 119
North Socond 8trMt, Mid·
dleort. Ohio.
Property
epproloed ot
u.eee.oo end cennot bo
oold for leN theft two·tltlrda
of the •praleed volue. •
TERMI OF SALE: The
oucceolful pun:ho.., oa
.,_ u hlo bid 11 ecoepted,
....tl be required to depoolt
on the elite of aale. In ceoh or
by oertlllld chlak PllYibleto
the SheriH, 10% of the
emount of ouch occeptad
bid buJ In no event IHo then
ThrN HUfldNd Ootlero
1•300.001 noo mvN thon
ThouNnd
Dolloro
Ten
(t10.000.00). The unpaid
beloncl of tho purolio•
prlaa oMII be duo ond pilyo·
ble to tM lhertfl wMhln 30
doya from the elite cit the
oonflnndon of the Hie. Tho
purcheMr ahlll ill required
to pay lnteNII on uld un·
paid llelonoe 11 1% par 1n·
num !Nm the dato of oonflr.
nunton of the NielD the dote
of ....,....... of the bel-•
unleM tho belanoe aheH be
mec1e within eight illya from
the dote of Mlo.
·
J1met M. loullby, Shariff
Molt• County, Ohio
O.ONnEvAitorney lor Plalnliff
121 21; (31 I, 12, 3tc

992-SUS ,

915-1561
Aaoa Frtm PMt Offlct
POMROY, OliO

t0130fl9 lin

IIlli: F[ Nl ;11

:=====
R. L MASH
CARPENTRY
•Oorogoa

•Room Addhlona

•Kitchens • letha
•VInyl Siding

•Rottoratlon
. · Ropelr Work

992-5526
POMIIOY, 0110

IOOFING

Middleport.

Ohio

lt-14-lltt

··•

Pomeroy,

INSULATION

1138 BryMI Piece

EMILIE MERINAR

614·992·6820

hward L Wri..MI

992-2772 ...
7U-2251

Complttt Grooming
For All lrllds

o- &amp; Operator

J&amp;L

JAIIU nii'"ISI•I

GROOM
ROOM

NIW -IIPAIR
Outten

SIMON'S . .,'
PICK·
A·PAIR
SAME
LOCATION . ' .
I •I

'

U• Ceur.t StrMt '

Entrance
PDIIERDt_ OHIO

..

,
IIONZE ,
PIOM TANNING
..
''
SPfCIAL

..

~OIIVII

ht 50 High School

stv•nt•
c. 949·11!6

10 SESSIONS - $1 0

FREE ESTIMATES

POIIVD IIONZE

J.4·tl-1 . .. "'·

..

2tZI/11/I MO.

Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Peintlng

949·1168

I

~

,., .......

,·,

IASIAIIt.,UCM
3-4.'91-1 mo.
': !

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IIILT
HOMES &amp; GAIAGES
"At l••nalllo Prices"

, .. 949·1101
or ••· 949·1160
•, Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS
4·16-H·IIR

,MICIOWAVE
IIPAIR

ov•
AIL IIAIIS

. . . It .. Or ••

1111'S~..tiiiCI
SIRVICI
H!·SIIS or
915·3561

Acnalf-PeltOHtc.
117L ..... It•
POMIUY, . .
311110/111

'

SHIUI .&amp; 1111
TIIM and
IEMOVAL

•LIGHT'HAULING
•FIREWOOD

BILL SLACK ·
992-2269
USED RAILIOAD TIS
l-12·tD-tfn

-....

•VINYL SIDING
~ALUMINU~ IIDING

•BLOWN IN

INSULATION

•ssELL
SIDING
._ CO.

... ...

"FNO Eatlm8t•"

I'lL 949·1101

., ... 949·1160
IIOSiiiiUCAU.S

1-11-111

lllfiMittiH
UPIIOU'IIIY

'· ~

'1J'7m { I. llr

ool t '

·-

111-._ hu •

·a pi

I
HilMI Tufting

Cuttom Drape•

,,

S6Y_,Ia,..._eo

614·"1·1111

We ..., Whit w. Do.
Wa Do Whit We loy.

tO.tf.tM.

-

'

We Need

,,,.//
Niwl•

MOIRE HO. FUINACIS - HEAT PUMPS
All FUINAG PAm

~~~ I

••

~--~--------------------------~
-·
•11m'S MOIU HOME
IU111G &amp; COOLING
Lull• Ia ...,._ 'tniM efflt. 1•1

''

�il

TUelday, March 5, 1991

Ohio

Sentinel

m' 'N' CAJILYLE~ r.y Larry Wrlah!,

Real Estate

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements

11

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

..

Auloe tor Sale

• •

•

•

The Daily senunei-Page

....
'=~::' SCQ'\\~1-A- 4~t;Ds·

;

Television
Viewing

e

UMI

Hlto4

Rearrango lenors of
0 four
ocramblod -ds

.

EVENINO

~ CLAY I . POllAN

!he
bo-

•

low to form four slmplo words.

• · TUES.. MARCH 5 •

8:00 C2l e

~

'

Ill 1D e

(J) (J) e

· ONewa

(J) Clleltft In Cha~ Q
(l) 3·2·1 Contlct
•

·ill &amp;qu.ra One
. [J)IIALFD

Q

=~.~~=.u~I6:P:Io=:NI::h iI se?n';~~~r:,~~i~ i~~~

0 c.toon l:xpreaa
8World Todlty

Qll Our llouM Q
8:05 (I) levelly Hlllblllea
8:30 ~a~• 11J NBC Nlglttly Newa

=·=:·=·=:·~r_•:,

.
.r .

,..
t
. -

®Abbott and Coetello

17

lesser
two evils?
Food food
that
Is
beingofwasled,
or good

~. _·,.;v...:o;...::..s;.;,A....:I;..
. ~~ going to ···· ···-?·

, (J) llleABCNe~ .Q

(l) WflciA1Mrlc8 Q ·
. ill 3·2·1 COftlllct Q
. all IDe CIIS·Ntwo Q
. Ill) II ~ncly. G~llltll
.8:35 (I) Andy Grtlflih
7:00 (2)
aJI .I!Jl Wheel ol
' FINtllneQ
.
CD t D,..m ol,..nnle
llle lnakle IEdllton Q '
(l) l!l MacNeii/LahNr
NewaHourD

..I I ·
:..:..
R

· I~
. ....J
L-1.-.J.L-..L. -J..-1.

I

a

1
.

0·

.

Com~lete

tho chucjdo quotad
by IHiing in tho missing - d •
you develop from flap No .. 3 l&gt;elow.

e

w

[I) II

.· SCRAM-LETS ANSWIIIS
• • '&lt;
.Thesis- Knack - .Fight - Uncork - EAT OUT
·. One workar.was talking 10 another, "I bring home the
bacon, " he grumbled, "and my family wants lo EAT .
OUTI"
·
.
·

Night l::QUrt Q

1D II CUrrent Affair Q
0 MaeGyver

Q llportaC.nter

IBMDMyllne
Qll Scerocrow ond Mro; King

Q

7:0&amp; (I) Happy ·oaya

Oog: •ao• Loet Around

Loet

Cllarot••• i,ako, sa lb. Enatlsll 11
Help Wanted
SaHor, MIK Black 6 WhHo. .:..:,_:.:.;;,;:;.,:.:.;;,;,;,;,;,;:.;:.,,...,._
~mlly Pot. Plooao Col ~M-446- AVON • All orooo, Coli Morllyn
· .,35,
Woovor 304482·2145.

Yard Sale

7

3 socurlly Guard paoHiono; 2
houHkMplng, 2 malntenence
pooHiono - n. Aollrod poroono

art welcome to

Gallipolis

. .

.

ht. 313.

.

.

Wf~L. J&lt;fff
'1.00/tiNG. • •

Bumnia~
$111 ·' March
s· E•portoncod florlo1 ' naodod.
8:30o.m.-3p.m, Ora.,. .Unllod Frnh ·cut and 1llk arranlhthodlot Chulch. Ellllboth ......... Coii6M-44HJ110. ·

Clrc'-.·

'{ani Solo: Mondoy, T.. oday.

In

'Ch.olala

Hilla,

~lgno.

8

W.tch

home,

I

PUblic Sale
&amp;Aucilon

~

'

.. ..

'

() 111 1 t1r NEA. InC:.

• s·s .serv1ces·
• · ::~·..:._.nt!l dr.:='"·G:;
B ustne.
'

_ ... _ ... ·

.. '" " .... -···

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER .SERVICE

•Sidl"g

-Oufter wortl ,;,;

•Painting

-Eioctrlcal oriel
-Concrete 'A'Orll
-Roofing

- fiOom AddlliDna

NO JOB TOO SMALL
. FREE ESTIMATES

-1nfei.·10r • Exc,rtoiPolntlng

. CEDAR
CONSIIUcnON

· V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

'

driver tor ona of tha Ia~
trucklnJI componloo In tho bull•
nooa. THIS IS NOT A GIMMICK;
CorM lo o.n• of our Hmlnar•
at:HOUDAY INN
450 Plko Str0o1
Galllootlo, OH
lHURSDAY311111
10A.M., 2P.M .. AND 4P.M,
CAST
!;qual . Oppo'IIJI1Hy Employor

PonMroy, · Olrio

12·31·1111-tfn

11-14·'90

.

. BEAT THE RUSH!

TII·COUNn

o~~~~~L~~~s

lawn ,... ..,.
den lqllipmlnt'tulllll up
and llladtl 1harjllftlll
for the coning HDIMIIt

. Gat your

. AWEEK

DUliNG FORUARY

-F"" pickup and ·.·

iltlinry in Pomeroy
and Middllport dty
lhnits.

. 9 A.M. 'TIL 7 P.M.
d•n up your
yor on wubnrls ....wl

12

If]"

Will car• tor ••• 11~ person,
In their homo or bellyOH. El·
Dlflonca &amp; Roloron-. , , _

01-COUNTY ·
RECYCLING

locatod OH lht lypat1 On

. Tho Com• of
II. 1 I II. 143

WE ALI!O SERVICE
CHAIN SAWS

Pom«ay, Ohio
. PaytnQ cath for 1lumlnum,
. C~PP•." Me~ .Uinl•

DAVE'S SIUU
ENGINE REPAIR

JN~~n•lum,

*•Ill.
rwdiltOrt, ltar1·

• ., alt•n.cot'l •nd 111 non-

253 Wntllalll St.
,_,.,, Oh.

tWrouema •.

614-H2-5114
tAil-7 PM-7 a.yoaW...
2·21 '91.2 ....

3137.

14

.

I TOLD HIM I «JAS Wl'!ll

Buatnass
Buildings

34

RoCroln
NowtiiSoutllaootom
Buolnooa Collogo, S~ Vatloy
Pt-. Colt T~ 438711

Rovtot-lon

Butavllle -d, Coli 114-4418415.

Good -

Com11101Cial building In Maoon,
good pc40nllal lor beouly ohOp

or

other .

--:::12·-·

·2405, 304-

Want to

'

~-:

_.,.'1827.

51

HIL can be fll~loly flno..,.cr.
Guido Gl-ml 114-11112-2521. ·

LOTI FOR SALE In Gallpollo

GOOD

Porry. Will occool"'ralloro, chy
• .,. onltabla. Jlhono 304-175-

2722.

APPUANCEI

w..-, clryaro, relrlg-oro,
,.._, Skoggo Alliillanoao,
Uppir Rlvor Rd.

Boaldo Slono

Croot Motol. Coli 6M-441-73ill.
llollohan Corpolo AI , 111 North,
814-446-11144. 9112 Room ~
Kllchon
Corpot
18Strlpo,
prd. eo._
14.!10
yord,
Condy

36

Real Estate
wanted

WUI Mnt or buy mobile hom• lQI
11 or 2 acrn) In Dalila County,
wJutliHioo hook-11p. IM-441-

118'1t.

Rentals

buy otandlng timber,

"

11877, ~-'·
~ploto

j

'
'
MEEKLE
AND WINTHROP

.

.,

THE¥' GAVE FIRST PRIZE

.,

••

•

mA

PI:XlDI..E, ANDe&amp;CX)t.O
·· 'PRIZE "TOA COU..IS.

rodllloro I .....,orod. •,

21% off et naw radiltCH' price. 11

AI • . 3 18 Murray Rood, Bldwoll. ' •

SIGHS: PoMbla .lahlod $329;
IIOIHighlod
$21111. . Freo
doll..ryllall-. Plllllc IOIIeni
147.50 boL 1400 132 1113

WI-

Inti

!!,be.
•• .1-'ltll.

*"&lt; ...,.
ltod',

~-­

..,,.

PI..ACE

8YATWRTLE.

~·

.,
~

Campers &amp;
Motor Homes

.•

-......;~:.:.;.~;.;;;..:..;;,,...,..:..

.:

'•

Q"""

R-ood Ctmpor '32 ft,il
lolo ol ·~~ air, awning

112,000.00, e

t-21H. 1

:

I

BARNEY

(J)

Mt4111.

g:: :

TO RUN IN ONE DOOR
AN' OUT T'OTHER !!

814- :•

•'

l,

11:00

oilojl&gt;llocolodiO·IOOIMtiiOmlflt ho"'e

· -IIIII corotructlon

LOAD EVElY 12 HOUIIS

FtniltlCial

.,.,,......,.....,..,.._,wv_

ASTRO-GRAPH

" ' - (:1041 17t-22111111i ~p.m.

BERNICE
BEDE OSOL

· «)' \

.

84

•• 895

o,., 1oo chon-

houro. IRD oyatam In·

NonM

iurt

cludullnodea .
CALL TODAY
FEIIIiUAflY.II'I!CIAL

·

·

JIIJ MIIP W. tf 1Wrtr

-

ZENIX VIDEO
,.

Rt.'

'

.

...reh 1, 1111
You might nol be Inclined to expect
easY victories In the year lh!lad , and
lhialsloyouredvantege. You'llewntu.
ally get what you go aner, tHtc;auee
You'll . be willing to do aH . thai Is

""*·IN lito -•LIVE
•• " ........... '- 24

COifUTE RSf TO

8

'blr. ..
CJIIrthday

.=~~:(;..,_

..._rch

2111 Amblllou•
lntenllona can be gratified at this time,
provided you have bOth 118tlenca and
endurance. Think win, but remember
Rome was not built in a day, Plscea,

ONLY

.
I

"

'
treat yourself to a birthday giH . send for VIRGO (AUjJ. 23-a.pt. 122f li's very 1myour Astro-Graph predlcllona lor the port~nt a11h1Stime, belore you Involve
year ahead by maHing $1 .25 to Aslro- yourself In new endeavors, thai you fin·
Graph, c/o this niiWspaper, P.O. 801 · Ish now what you started earlier. Re91428, Cleveland, OH .44101 -3428. Be wardo are much closer than you lhink .
LIIRA (lepl. 23-0cl. 231 A social relasure 10 state your zodiac sign.
Even tlonshlp ol considerable signifiCance
ARIES (~ Zt·Aprll
!hough you may o•t Involved in il ntw could be eatabMshed at this time that
development today, 11 will ac:luaUy be will prove to be. enduring and advanta·
very similar to something you prevtously geoua In many ways. Lucky you.
hal)ded successfully. Follow your orlgi· SCORPIO (Oct. 14-llav. 221 You arq
nal script.
now entering a proto~ cycle where
TAURUS·(Aprll :ZO.M-r 201 You should you should begin to marked lm·
be quite adroit at handling an arrange- provementsln your llnanclal anatra. .lnlrnent that Is materially meaningful 10 · tlat aygnts mlghl nol be dram.atlc, but
both you ilnd another today. Juot be th&amp;y'll grow In Importance.
sure ltls you who calla the 111o1s.
SAGmAJIIUa (Nov. .ZJ.Dec. 211 ·u·
GI!IIINI IM-r 21..1- 2111 You rnlghl be you've been displeased with your pre,..red to make an unselfqfl decision MOt vocation, your 'po11lblllilas for
today thai will be of more benefit to making a change to something more
someone else than It will be lo you. ·gratifying and rewarding are starting to
Much to your credit, you're aptlo do it lOOk brighter.
with a minimum amount of fanfare.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..1M. 111 Two In·
CANCER (Jutle 21-.IUIJ 221 Thli Is the· votvementa wltlch, lhua lar, have been
day. your past performance may oltittle llgnnlclnca 1o you finanCially
be IJ\Ialuated. If you were Industrious, c6uklalart .to look be1ter at thlsllme.
the returns cou.ld be lmpreselve. If you H~. you might not get allhal you
weren't, the payment will be proportiOn· orice expected.
ate to the effort expended:
AQUARIUS ,,..,, . 20-l'eb. 11) Hopes
LEO I""IJ 23-Aut. 221 Someone with . and e&lt;pectaUons predicated upon realwhom you're very coiy socially Ia In a IItie fiiCior1 have aolld c:hancee 01 being
. f)OIIUon to help you In another area. tuUIIIed ~!he coming monthl. On the
Don't l;le hesitant about lalklng to this other · whimsical objeCtiveS may
Individual about this serious Issue.
be IOO fragile to endure;
·

.

w• w

llle l!llll2le
liJ) News
I]) Night Court C
(l) 1111 Moyart' World of
ldell Bill tslka with fiction
wrl1er Nadine Gdrdlmer.
Stereo.Q
·
Ill) 11 Al'ianlo Hal Stereo. Q
0 Miami VIce Stereo.
QDOn Sltge

8lca-w
OMoneyiiM

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another .. ln this sample AIs used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are
all hlllts. Each day the code letters are dlrferent.
3•5
CRYPTOQUOTE

iiU"..:t"'.:.l
..reo. ~;~
e Amarlca

=
allllpOrla

Tql!lgM

8net $tallon

8porteCanler

Tonlghl

.

.

11:35(J)CheeraQ .
12:00 (I)
Into the Night Stereo.
l!l)e P1r1J Maalllna With
·
N.. Peaplll

M 0 IT G A F LA

1111• 'llhtt~rar' c~ Lata

NW

Night
0 The Equallaor
8NeohvllleNow

a wan. Milar'•

CAQG

8NewaNiahl

NO

IZ

TAQGUY

Q0 F

10 A' W

IJYA

GQW UN 0 L

WAG

MOYIE: l'our Guna to the

'·

''•

T AQ G U Y

RONDACWA

. -

'

•

•
'•
'

'

YQCIGF WYACXQO
.
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: .I KNOW .ONLY 1WO
TUNES. ONE OF THEM IS YANKEE DOODI.F., AND
THE OTHER ISN'T. - ULYSSES S. GRANT
.

12:01 (J) Nlghtllue Q
12:30(}). (!))Lata Night With
Da\rldl.wtlliniWI
m MOVII: w-n and 1M
Hunter (1 :30)

.

U YN W

Z

I0 GS

8nowond1r

.....(2:00)

••

•

e

0

'

DAILY CRYJFI'OQUOTES- Here's how 1o work It

and Mro. King

Stereo.
Ill !llodlcalltaly .
1D • Moran' World of
ldall Stereo. ~ .
1D
QD Church

.'

•

11:30 (2) e IIJ Tonight 8llow

,.1

•

30 Marching
Insect
34 Not .
present
(abbr.)
350ne
$1ooge
38 Chinese
Chairman
37 Smee'a
boss
40 Frtnch
friends
41 Crooner

Qll 700 Club With Pot
AobertltOn
10:30 QD Croolt tncl CIIIH
10:35 CD MOVIE: Thuntltrball

·' '

12:30)

CALL
VICKER'S WOOD HEATING

Ice's

music

all CNN E'18111ng Ntwa

·. o4JSI8 ,uw P!Hifl ttl"'lrrl G.M:t Sy!lll!m

Enjoy

Ill. tlltrtyeornethlnQ

,.,.llonQ

ollo.-.altolor-nthin!idt"'""
t8uml•up ID 11-i'lch dilrnlllf wood
oHIIfl . . lot hcMehold UN
-sun. up to !O·Inch long ilooct

.

.

~~~ Stllr 1Nk: Tho Mtxt

II

Mel

42 Hour·
6 Insertion
glass
mark
unks
11 Carroll
43 Oktober·
heroine.·
lest prop ·
12 Scent
.· DOWN '
13 Hawaii ·
1 Gem
discoverer
feature
15 Riviera
2 Overjoy
Yeatarday's Answer
season
3 Mature
16 To's
4 Perf6r·
undoer
· Trek"
counter·
mance
.22 Like ·
counselor
part
5 Lusher in
candles
30 Accumu'
17Sauft tollage
23 Venezulale
6 Church
Marie
elan
31 Love, .
1$ Mental
regul;~tion
capital
Italian·
slraln
7 Circle
24 Where to
. style
piece ·
20Woods·
lind ·
32 David's
&amp;Farm
man's
Selma or
. greatmakeup
alarm
Marion
grand21 Sawbuck 9Hamming 25 Ball·
mother
22 Dapa1ted
it up
hkting
33 Subway
10 Become
23 Supply
action
fare
fond of
tha food
26 Glues
38 Actor
lor
14 Press
down
Danson
26 Freighter 19 "Dele"
28 "Star
39 Steaming
contents ,.,......,,......,......,.......,....270odles
28John
Ritter's
dad
29 Vanilla

MIChael geta hiS
long-awaited raise bul can't
taM Eliot. (R) Stereo. C

PAW !liT'S BAD LUCK

23Ft. Honnlbot Trlvel Traitor;~

:;£1~~~th~WJ;r
~~
on. t
.oo, linn.

ACROSS
1 Wild

=

Eo.., 1-11'11' Olldlntt - · 1-3' 11'70 · Rover Camping TraiJer, 1•
ftiM - : ii6,2U l!ioctod lrDn S l - Six,
condMion, ,... '
Bu-.114-332-81118.
·
. ..
king $400. 114-3118 -

tAKJ95

by THOMAS JOSEPH

a-·

F~

••

.Q85 2

CROSSWORD

QD Naahvla. Now
.
8 Latry King Uvtl
. 8:30 (J) llle Davia Rulea ·
Gunny's sister proves to be
full ol surprls_as when ahe ·
Yls"s. Sterab. Q
l!l CIVI War President
·
LinCOln addressee the people
at Gettyaburg. C
College lalbtball
1D:OO (!) Newo

':iJ:..kup, $171.
bod, olld· ,,
304-

875-4251.
..

UtJNty luHdl'!fl SPL: 30'140'xl'

~ TJ:NTH

:.

6.s•

e

I 60T NOSED CUT

t1

T - lot I
Ina alau w1

r:

W,t.TER MTCII WELL DRIWNO
WATIR
QUARANTEED. · _

,.

114-311 1570.

Serv1ces
/""

:;

reWtt, 11anlng at Sft; 114-245- :;

m

USED

::

_ _ _ _ _ _... i::d;;;~~;;·;;e~ss~o;;;;rJe~sii;;d"i ,lr
63
Livestock
Budaol T-•lleolono, u.od &amp; '' ·

Household
GQocls

County Appllanoo tno. Good
ulld opplla._ T.V. 004o. a8 1.111. 10 I p.m. Mon.-811• .,._
445·1&amp;1!,,.
3rd. A... Galo
llpolla, un

l,a1111 lol on Poo-k Avo.
$1,500.00. 1? IIGI'M on IJnooln

for sale
14 ft. 1lumlnum SEA. Neanypa
llehlng · boat. lnclujloo 1'112

;:. ~~ :' :l ;;or· :;~:~al

r.1erchandlse

35 Loll &amp; ACreage ·
For 8111: ·10 ..,.., Aouoh Hoitow Rood. Blaok1op Rd, Awol
W.tO&lt;iWIII Conaldoir Lond Con-

75 Boats &amp; Motors

"" 1m Pinto. •

CJI.·autOi oaU l81ti!O.

emal . bUllnHa.

,175-6640 or

121111.

Cor1lf!eo! Daycoro Provldw
Will Do IIIJIYOIIIIng In lly Homo.
IAoolod .on Wllidlor cr~... oil

62 wanted tO Buy

EAST

s..••

0 In a,. k..t oltM

w

..

.,0

WEST

tQJ8753

...

heTp wllen he is arrested lor
mu.rder. CR) Stereo. C
I]) MOVII!: Ughlnln' In the
FD1Wal (1:00)
Clle Ro..
Roeeanne and Dan talk to
Becky aboutblrlh contrOL (R)
Starea. D
.
(l) Grac.ltncl: The Alliclln
Concert Paul SlntQn's
Grecatand album and tour ,
have bean hailed among the
most slgnitlcant musical ·
events ot the decade.
Highlights of the South
African tour. j1 :50)
.
1111 1121 MOVIE: 'Red HMI'
CBS Tllftday Movlt CR)
(2:00) Stereo. C
0 lluclweiHr Tu11day Night

'
· •'::

tQI0742
tAQH

Most players with the South cards +9 8 4 2
.1083
found themselves in a COIIIII!rvative
SOOTH
six-heart contract. A · grand slam in
tAK9U2
hearts was reasonable, but hardly
.AJ 1094
ironclad. Th09e who reached the grand :
slam failed to mate it. Understand·
tK 7
able. But why should anyone in .his
Vulnerable: Norib-South
right mind not make the small shim?
Dealer: North
Here's the intennediate philosophy.
"Darn! I missed a good grand slam.
W.•t Nors• Eaot
We'll play Ibis fast and get on with tbe
It
Pass
next hancl." So down comes the ace of 1•
Paos 2+
Pa10
hearts at trick two. ADd away goes the
Pa10 ••
Pass
slam.
Ail pas.
Is there any reason to play East fdr
Opening lead: t 3
length in hearts? Not per se. But if declarer is trying to.secure his contract
against any diitributicin, he should ruff
the opening lead and lead a low spade,
i'Uffed in dummy. \\'hen thai holds the
trick, be should play a low heart front Instead he picks up the remaining '
dummy and insert tbe nine. When trumps and scores his slam witb five
West shows out on lhe nine of hearts, heart tricks, one spade ruU, tbe .A·K of"
declarer abandOns anv.olav for seven. spa4es. ~tnd four good club trjcks. .

Night Tibbs seeks Gillespie's

THIIJK ' ASAI~ · TA~

1-1-11

.K 7 63

By James Jacoby

Cltun:h Strael SteUon

9:00 (2)8

A'~RSOt\JP,L' RaATIOOS .

· Buslnesa
Training

18 Wanted to Do

CAU FOI PIICES

PH. 992-3922
l-4-11

Snuailon
Wanted

bu1._ 01 wttlutnda.

.i

NORTH .

Nailing down
12 tricks

w

llcanoo, gOod driving rooord,
ond adoijuoto outoniollllo lnaurance covnge req.ulrecl.
Honio muot moot " - " ' ' ol
Iucken . CommUnity Sor¥1ooo
arid Cldla . County Boonl ol
MIWD. II lnt11oltod oall 1.-.
ll31.a$12 no • - than ll1lt1;
Ilk lor Chrioty. !;qual OpportunHy Employe&lt;.

WHY SPEND THOUSANDS?
Whon you con artond oohool lot
• • thin $800 and become a

IFREE ESTIMATES)

992-6648 or.
698-6864

Pw.On In Gallo
County to provldo occaolonol
care In ~r own home to

Houro may v..., with Dlflrnlahlo ...,u,,.... lllf'
iclloal dog..., vald drl- o

•Remodeling end
·. Ho'me R•p•ira
•Roofing

.

Civil Wor Things get
Increasingly desperate on the
Confederate home front. Q
1111 Reoouo: 91 t A
hang111lder falls Into the sea:
• a mailman tries to stop a car.
Stereo. D
Ill) II MOV(E: Patry Moaan:
The Caoe of the Loal LoV8
(2:00)
1D II lilly Grah1111 Cruaada
Thousands of peopla
. overflow the Hong Kong
Government Stadium for BIHy
Graham's largest ever
outreaCh. (1 :001 C
.. · 0 Murder, She Wroto Q
, QDOn Stege
8 PrtmeNewo
0 MOVIE: Lauro (2:00)
1:01 (I) MOVIE: Goldfinger 12:30)·
1:30
lila Oovlo Rule•
· Robbie tries out for a spot
on the baseball team. Stereo.

_....;_ _ _ _ _ _....,1'-.;.,;,.-,__":"'~~~ wANTm:
· .. ..

.

the lloaa?

'/il

Tup-

Fot

.

Tony ·becomes a volunteer
lireman. IAI Stereo. Q
(l)'Novo Whales Migrating,
Breaching, Feeding, ·and .
ScuHIIflg With a Young Seal

tcEfp L-Oo/&lt;1~6 •• •

111.. RI&gt;OIII lor oldll1y mon or

1:30-2:30, Rf, 160 to Whlte.RoecJ,

(1:00)

(J) lll8 Who'•

•·-,

U&amp;3

a:oo &lt;lle 01 ,..Hock Q ·
. (!) MOVIE: Kill or Bit KHied

ALL Yord SliM Muot Bo Pold Ill AVON I All ,t.rao I Slll~oy
· ,f,dvonoa. OEAIIUNE: 2:00 p.m. Spooro, 304~75-1429.
·u.. doy befono1he od Ia 1o run. Eooy .Workl hcollont Poyl Aoo
Sunclly odHion • 2:00 p.m. .-mta&gt;le Products at home. C.U
F,rldoy. Mondov odHion • 2:00 lor l!ilormo11on, -1-8003
p.m. So1utdoy.

e

· 7:35 (I) aa.nlord and Son

Racine, OH 45771

BRIDGE

aJI

8Croltllra

placa ap-

pllootlono. 33429 Flotwoodo Rd.

&amp; VIcinity

(!)) J.-pardyl 1:;1
CD Night Court Q
(J) 1121
Entertltlnmant
ToRiahl Stereo. Q
llle Marna'• Family
[1)11 M'A"S*H
tD Collage laakotbelt

7:30 (2) •
·

·

",1

'

••
•

�Page

1G-The Dally Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

TUesday, March 5, 1991

I

Business
leaders ... continaedrromp.et
I
Another power plant... Think what auth~-:..:.ty,_:
. to=su.:.p.;;po;.;.;.n:..:th::.e!:..pa=pe.:.r:..m_il_.____________ Are·a
· deaths· EMS units respond to 11 calls ·
. lhat would do for Mason County," 100 percenL
liducation and Mason County

Units of Meigs County Em~r· transported. At 2:50 p.m., Racme
Lee concluded. .
.
_It's 8 small group that's protest- School System was represented
.
gency
Medical Services responded squad went to WeDs RWI Road for
Rtch Jone.s satd Me.'gs County ing the paper miU, the silent major- also,, with board member Paul Melvin Circle
to
II
caUs
for assiStance on Mon- Pearl Hawth&lt;ne who .was taken to
ltas had pracncaUy nothing as far as ity is for it. 1'm fed up with thilt Doef!inger commendinjl the steps
Word has been received of the
day
and
early
Tuesday.
Veterans. At 3:47 p.m., Pomeroy
new mdust~ goes for the last 10 · small group," Sheline said. He qath.a County is takln, in the unexJ?ected death Monday of
At
9
a.m.
on
Monday.
Racine
squad
went to Mulberry Avenue.
year~. He srud the county has not expressed concern and asked if 10
direcuon of schools. "You re going Melvm Ctrcle at his home in
squld went to State Route 338 for Betty Templeton was taken 10 Vet· ·recetved much attentton from the paper mill officials would listen 10
have 10 back the board of educa- Wichita, Kansas. Mr. Circle is ·the
Edith
Smith, who was taken to Vet- erans. At 5 p.m., Olive Township
State of Ohio, coupled .":'ith poor this small group.
lion;•· he told the group, "we have s'!n of the ~ate Howard and Mary
erans
Memorial Hospital. At 10:28 fire department went to State Route
roads and~ commun~aes. .
Lee answered, saying he hoped some hard decisions to·make." ·
Cll'Cle, Racme area. He is married
a.m.,
Tuppers
Plains squad went to 124 for an auto fire. The vehicle
Jones satd tf the Metgs Mmes .ARP would not listen to those few,
Doeffinger also said the area to the former Pauicia Blakeslee of
Vanderhoof
Road for Kenny was owned by Larry Dillon. At
a~e lost, Metgs has more to lose and told Sheline the industry would needs job training for river work Pomeroy.
who
was
treated but not 7:51 p.m., Pomeroy squad went to
Hager,
S!flce the county recetves $1.6 mil- provide 2,000 construction jobs for including pilots, deckhands and
Among his survivors are a
transponed. At II :02 a.m Tuppers Peacock Street for Carl Roach, who
0
lt~n· from tax· revenue from the a minimum ,of 30 months.
~~pe·rintendent of Mason Coon· daug.hter, Marianne, and a so.n, Plains squad and Pome;oy squad was taken to Veterans. At 8:48
mt~es. H~ an'!ounced ·a meeting at
Am Winter, director of Mason
· Mark. Funeral arrangements will be
went to Tucker Road for Edith p.m., Pomeroy squad went to Mul- :
Ohto ~mverstty for March 20! to · County Libraries, said he came
Schools Rick Powell summed up announced by the Ewing Funeral
who was taken tQ Veter- berry Avenue for Shaun Gilmore,
Reeves,
meet wtth state and .federal. officials from Pennsylvania where there is a his feehngs by saying, ''Those who Home.
ans.
At
11:18
a.m., Rutland squad who refused treannent.
~egardmg the posstble mme clos- lot of industry. He said the people say it can't be clone should get out
went
to
Meigs
Mine 2 for Anthony
on Tuesday at 3:42 a.m., Midmgs.
work together to bring industry in f[,llie way of those who want to do . . U
• • • ..
Crosi, Jr., who was ta!cen to Veter; dleport squad went to South Fourth
Jones pledged Me_igs County to that area, then. work out the
Contt'nued "•ro·m page 1
ans.
for Betty Archer, who was talce'n to
. Sh. awn Scarberry, who I1'ves to the fund Chec'-·
suppon to t.he orgamzation that details and see how it can best ben- wtthtn
should be made
At
12:21
p.m.,
Middlepon
units
a
quarter
mile
of
the
pro·
·
..,
Veterans. At 5:37 a.m., Pomeroy
I
f
P ans .to anse
rom the group efit the community.
· COQnty Counc 11
posed paper mill, said he felt not out to the Metgs
1
went
to
Bradbury
Road,
(or
an
auto
squad
went to Peacock Street. Carl
d
anen
Savre,
who works at AKZO enough information was geuing out . on Agt'ng and destgna
· ted .or
• th e acctdent, although nobody was
Alth mg
h hast n.dight's
M .. meeting.
&lt;
Roach
was taken to Veterans.
oug .c sat
e!gs County . Chemtcal, said that company works about the mill.
·
van fund.
does apprectale the bus1nesses they hard to clean up the water, spendAlso being addressed by some
· Currently the Center has three
~~ve ~n getting, most only pro- in~ millions of dollars a year. Sayre in the audience were poor road vans in operation, aU several years
v.tde1 mmunum wage JObs.
sa1d the EPA has a lot of regula- conditions in Mason County and old · One has a wheel c·hatr
· J'ft
1 •
.uled fOr today (Tuesday) has been
Herbalists to meet
• I was noted that Mason County lions that must be followed to prethe labor dispute at Ravensw'ood While the one being replaced has
canceled and rescheduled for
.
The
River
Valley
Herbalists
will
has. 143 people employed at the vent any type of pollution.
Aluminum. Wedge stated his 'hean fewer miles on it than the other
March
12 at 10 a.m.
meet
toni$hl
(Tuesd:iy)
at
the
home
Metgs Mmes, for a total of $9.2
"I just can't understand why goes out to the employees of RAC two, it has a rusty body and
of
Lila
Rtdenour
on
Route
248
in
million in .wages ll!'d benefits that a'!yone would oppose the paper who are out of the. plant and out of mechanical problems. One of the
·
·
Sport card sh!lw
w1ll be los_ttftlie mmesclose.
mtll," Sayre stated, receiving an a JOb,
·
· s has 125,000 mil es on 11· . Long Bottom.
but said the organizat·1'on other van
M
d
f
A sport card show will be held
. ea ows, rom. Gallia County, ovation from those present.
would not take a stand on the ue. while the third van has 117,000
April 7 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
Hymn sing
satd he was steppmg in for Jack
Frank Herald, a Meigs and H
ted
miles.
·
Fowler, exec
· pres!'de nt_of Mas
·
the group
is pro-industry
. utive v1ce
. on county busmessman,
asked fore no
the purpose
of obtaining
bust'_ •
In addition to the $4,234 which . There wiU be a hymn sing at the · the senior citizens center in
Pomeroy. Cost of a table is $12.50
the
Galha
County
Communlly
tf
anyone
had
been
m
cnntact
with
1
c
ness, industry, and jobs to the area. · must be rat'sed ••or the local share of Fellowsh1p Church in Racine on and the event is sponsored by the
mprovement orporation (CIC), Sen. Byrd concerning the clean
At the conclusion of the meet- the van cost, an additional $300 Saturday at 7 p.m. with Russ and
who was tU.
.
coal tech~ology power plant Lee ·
ill be
ded
the Southern Hills Singers. The Girl Scouts. For more infonnation
Meadows satd assets must be assured hun that Byrd is now look- mg, Wedge said another will be w
nee
to put a radio in i~ public is inviled to attend.
call Sarah Johnson at 992-6890 or
promoted to attract industry. He ing into the matter.
held, with those attending being . Mrs. Thomas reported.
Julia QuaDs at 992-2442.
stated we must improve schools
The Mason County Board of nollfied of a date and time.
Food distribution
Open hymn sing
·
Indoor camp meeting
and programs, parks and recreation,
~
·
·
·
locations
are
announced
Faith
Gospel
Church
in
Long
1
The Meigs County Holiness
and promote our people.
Bottom will have an open hymn
Association
will be holding the
sing on Friday at 7 p.m. To book,
AcJ:;
annual
spring
Indoor Camp Meetcall Dolly Reed at 378,6237. Steve
cat10nally or mdustrtally w1'thout
Snow and slippery conditions wt·th a fractured left arm and left apple
sauce,
flour,
peanut
butter
ing
Monday
through
March 17 at
· Food Reed, pastor, invites the public.
educating our young people," he are being blamed for several acci- 1 T d ·
and butter to persons haiding
the
Syracuse
Nazarene
Church.
'
sa.id. Mead.ows .said Gallia County dents that occ
. urred around the area
eg ues ay · John and Cheryl Commodity Cards on Tuesday, Meeting
begin
at
7
p.m.
nightly
Services
canc.eled
Saunders
· 1ocats a_ttempung to tmprove by passing .Monday.
d d were
d' both reported in ma rc h 12 at the f o11owmg
lind
6
p.m.
on
Sunday.
Special
The monthly meeting of the
school bonds and levies, improvin~
In the most serious, four. Crown guar e con Ilion with multiple lions: ·
·
Leadmg Creek Watershed sched- music and speaker will be Rev.
trauma. John, Jr. was transferred to
MEIGS COUNTY
M ·
Thurl and Mary Kay Mann. Public
area parks, and providing arts, sue
City reside.nts .i_n. G.allia County c b ll H ·
.
. - ctgs
as the Ariel Theatre.
suffered senqus IDJunes when their Ha e - unungton Hospital in Count:- Faitgrounds, Tuppers
invited.
.
We need to put politics aside," vehicles collided on State Route
u~llngton, • w~~re he. was repon- Plains, Fire Station, and the
he said. "We need to promote our 588 near Bob McCormick Road ~u~:.rur conditiOn With multiple Pageville Town Hall.
Dance
counnes, and work.together."
·
Monday.
There will be no distribution at _ Continued 11-om page 1
There will be a round and
Meadows listed ongoing proAccording to a report from the
the Racine American Legion. Per- mothers between 1988 and 1989 square dance at the Tuppers Plains
jects in Gallia Cou~ty as the by- Gallia-Meigs post of the State
sons previously receiving com- and costs Ohio taxpayers $220 000 VFW Buidling oil Friday from 8pass, proposed new sewer system Highway Patrol, John M. Saunders,
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Mon- modines at this site are asked to go ~ day for medical expeoses, ~Wi­
11:30 p.m. featuring Rocky Mounlles~ food stamps and children's . tain Bluegrass. Ronnie Wood is the
for the RL lliO area, new shopping 26, was westbound on SR 588 , and day's winning Ohio' Lottery num- to~ Meigs_ County Fair¥"0unds.
center, and programs such as the Daniel R. Wheeler, 20, was east- bers:
Dtstrtbu.tton wtll begm at 9:30 servtces.
caller. Public invited.
To help combat the increasing .
city park, streetscape, parkfront, bound when their two vehicles colPick-3
a.m. and last unW noon or until the
downto~n beautification project, lided head-on in a curve. Both
269.
supply is exhausted, whichever rates of tee~ pregnancy and sexually transmllted d!seases, Torres
Ticket sales: $1,3l4,IS4.50 . conies ftrst
and Artel theatre. He said the vehicles sustained heavy damage
90
350
reports
that the Oh10 Department of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
chamber of commerce and CIC and Saunders and his passengers
Payoff: $4 • ·50.
~eallh has eStablished a toll-free
continue to grow.
Cheryl D., Saunders; 26, and Job~
Pick-4
HI
MONDAY ADMISSIONS 6816·
mformation line (1-800-TEEN- Doris Haynes, Middleport; Anhur
Following the presentations, the M. Saunders, Jr., II months, had to
South Central Ohio
123) to help teens make informed Roush, Mason, W.Va.; Meda
floor was opened for questions and be cut from their 1989 Pontiac
Ticket sales: $248 ,6!7. Payoff:
Becoming cloudy Tuesday
90
000
decisions
about sex.
comments.
Grand Prix.
$ • ·
night, with a chance of showers
Watkins, Pomeroy; Stephen
Th~
information
line is one Houchins, Middleport; Chester
Kenton Sheline, past .president
Wheeler and the Saunders were
C~i~~tofhearts.
toward morning, and a low
of the Mason County Commission transported to Holzer Medical CenTen of clubs.
.between 40 and 45. Chance of rain component of Teen Decisions a Young, Mason, W.Va.; Anthony
and president of the Carpenter ter by the Gallia County EMS.
is 30 percent. Partly cloudy sta~wide education project of ihe · Cors1, Pomeroy; Ethel Reeves
Union•Locall159. asked what the According to a hospital
Queen of diamonds.
Wednesday, with a chance of Ohto Department of Health with Coolville; Carrie Whaley, Shade;
people could do to help. He stated · spokeswoman, Wheeler was admitThree of spades.
.
showers, and highs near 60. Chance the ~urpose being to help teenagers and Beatrice Blake, Syracuse.
reahze the consequences of their
his organization had given him the ted and was in stable condition
Ticket sales: $48 •744 · Payoff: of rain is 30 percenL
MONDAY DISCHARGES $14,850.
·
feeL
sexual activity.
Bobby S_tanley and Flpra Bailey.

tr

ISS.

lea:~~ u~Y.J~ ~·~~~~;~oo~~~ .

Rio Grande
earns trip to ·
Kansas City

Pick 3:572
Pick4: 8471
Cards : 6-H, Q-C;

4-D; 9-S

• .

our IDJUred in Gallia wreck

x::a;~fftg~CJi:ib~ti~~

Meigs...

Lottery numbers

n:'eather

Hospital news

· Low tonight near 30.
Thursday, mostly sunny.
High in mid 30s.

Page3

•

01 T\OT.

Meigs anrrouncements

F

Ohio Lottery

' Vol. 41, No. 222

•

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.

2 Sectlono, 14 Pogeo 25 oonto
A Mutttmedta Inc. Newop11per

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, March 6, 1991

Copyrighted 1H1

:Bids will be opened on Rutland project Mar¢h 26
By Cbarlene Hoefticb
will be opened by village officials
Sentinel News Staff
and it is anticipated that soon after
Construction of Rutland's $2.2 the opening, contracts will be
million waste water collection and awarded.
sewage treatment system is expectTo date all but 19 of the 304
ed to get underway this spring.
propeny owners have signed easeAccording to Rutlatld Mayor ment documents which allows the
James Fink, who heads uP the Rut· construction company to move
land Sewer Project Planning Com- across their land to install the necmittee, a pre-bid meetil\jl for the essary lines and equipment
· contractors-who have ptcked up
Patrick O'Brien, the Rutland
· bidding conttacts has been set for project attorney, advised that of
· Tuesday at I p.m. at the Rutland those 19 an additional nine or 10
Civic Center.
arc really to move forward with
.
ContractorS wiU then ~ave until executing the easements, while the
: March 26 at 6 p,m. to submit bids , other half have voi~ objections 10.
: on the project At .lhat time the bids the entire project
·

be established a Sanitary Sewer
District to manage the systel!l.
According to Fink, the agency will
be composed of a committee from
RuU\Ifld Village Council which will
work with an appointed board of
directors. That ~roup will be
responsible for managing the overall oper~tion including maintenance, billing, and user rates, as
well as whatever administrative
functions are necessary to better
enabl&lt;; the system to be cost effec-.
tive.
An open meeting to discuss
questions concerning the sewage
system was held recently at the

Enforcement, he said, will come
either through the EPA ot the Rutland Sewage DistricL
,
·
O'Brien
went
on
to
explain
that
p.m. to further discuss their objections to the projecL
· residents who do not sign but
O'Brien explained that the pro- decide to go into the project once
ject wiU move forward despite the the construction is completed, will
fact that not all property owners then be required to assume the cost
have signed easements. He further of the individual grinder system of
pointed out that no work will be approximately $3,000 plus a condone on properties without an ease- necting fee.
For those who go into the promenL
ject
now there is no charge whatsoHe did, however, emphasize that
ever,
O'Brien said. "Everything is
"eventually all properties will have
to be connected in order to be in · free during the construction pericompliance with the Environmental od," explained the auorney.
Mayor Fink said that there will
Protection Agency rulings."
The .grOup opposing the instaUation of the sewage syslem has ~t a
meeting for ThUrsday night at 7:30

Civic Center. At that meeling to
answer the questions of the 12
interested citizens who attended
were Mayor Fink, members of Rutland Village Council~ the Project
Engineers Kent· Baker and Jim
Andrick, O'Brien, project auomey,
and Art Carpenter, project. inspector.
Five specific areas were
addressed during the meeting project funding, monthly user rate
and maintenance costs, the effect of
flooding on the operation of the
sewer system. the problems with
similar systems in other communiContinued on page 5

Collins to leave courthouse
..post 'with -mixed emotions'
'

'

.

.

'•

.

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff

•
: M~igs County Treasurer George
• M. Collins will leave his court: house office. on Friday for the last
: time with mixed emotions.
· Ohio Department·of Transpona;. tion Dfstrici 10 Deputy Director
: John Dowler announced on Tues. day that Collins, a Repubtican, has
: been appointed to the position ol

Dowler' s Administralive 'Assistant.
Collins will report to work at
ODOT's Marietta office on Monday.
Collins' appointment to the
ODOT position follows Dowler's
controversial appoinnnent in January as deputy director. Meigs
County Engineer Philip Roberts
was recommended for that position
by a majority of the Republican
Party county chairmen in District
10. Despjle that endorsement, however, Dowler, an Athens native,
was appointed to the position by
Governor George Voinovich.
Collins also received the chair·
mPn 'o endorsement fOf hiS pOSi-

-·

'
.
··According
to Dowler, both' he
and Collins were appointed to their
positions on the basis oflheir qualifications.

"Though I've only met (CoUins)
during the interviewing process,"
Dowler said, "I'm detennined that
he is very qualified fbr the administralive assistant position. The position requires a 'people ~son', and
George CoUins 1s certamly that."
Dowler said Tuesday that
Collins will be directly reSJ?Onsible
for managing all of District IO's
430 employees. He also indicated
that while the personnel department
is the only department-directly
under the control of the administra·
tive assistant, CoUins may be given
more responsibilities as time goes
on.
"I am very_ honored to accept
th~ QPpointment,", Collins said in a
statement on Tue·sday~ "and I am
looking forward to beginning my
duties with ODOT on Monday. My
Conllnued on page 5

Lincoln Day speaker.named
Rex Elsass, Political Director
for the Ohio Republican Pany, will
be the featured speaker at the 1991
Lincoln Day Dinner. sponsored by
the Meigs County Republican Pany
Executive Committee.
The dinner will be held at the
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy

~-Local

briefs----

Thefts, vandalism investigated
Several incidents of vandalism and a theft are being investigated
by the Meigs County Sherifrs Department.
· Meigs County Sheriff James M. Soulsby reports that on Saturday, deputies took a repon from Winifred Dent of Middlepon, who
told the department that sometime that morning, acid had been
throw.n onto her 1989 Chrysler, causing the paint to blister. Her
vehicle was parked at the Meigs High School parking lot at the time
of the incident.
Sheriff Soulsby repons that the incident is believed to be related
to the Ravenswood Aluminum Corporation strilce. ,
On Monday morning at 4:30a.m ., Deputy Jeff Miller discovered
that the front door glass at Home National Bank in Racine was broken. MiUer, who was on routine patrol at the time, reponed that no
entry had been made at the bank.
.
Deputies later learned that the Racine post ,office windows had
been Shot by a "BB" gun but that glass had not shaaered. A residence on Fifth Street in Racine also had sustained a similar shot
Alfred Birchfield of Middleport reported that a lock and hasp
were knocked off the door to his shed and a lawn mower was stolen
on Saturday evening.
The deparnnent also reports t~at a· water pump and dog were
stolen from a Bull Run residence. According to Soulsby, Angelia
White reported the incident on Monday.

Truck fire investigated
The Meigs County Sheriffs office reports that Tammy L. DiUon
of Hudson Valley Road in Reedsville was turning into a private
drive off State Roule 124 on Mon~y when she heard the engine of
her 1978 Chevrolet make a "poppmg" sound. The vehicle then
caught ftre.
,
·
The Olive Township Fire Department responded to the fire,
which caused heavy damage. No injuries were reponed.

Cla rlijilCatiOn
The Charles Wright who was a defendant in a civil case dismissed by Meigs County Common Pleas Court is not Charles C.
Wright. Jr. of Middleport.

Pomeroy accident investigated

What
of new services would you like to
Why would one of the most successful banks in
see from Bank One?
.
~ertca ask such a thing? Simple.\1\.e knowrurfuturesuc(Be reasonable now. Free samples and hot tubs cess depends on making you feel good about our bank.
don't count.) If you can think of.something that gets you
So we're willing to go a little farther than the
excired about banking with Bank One, let us know.
average banker ~o win your busiQess and keep it.
No fooling. Vk want to hear about it.
Along With new products and services, and

CJ99JIIII:£11w~ ,

the convenience and stability of one of the nation's strongest banks, this unusual attitude is what sets us apart.
To see bur approach
-·
inaction,stop by the I:IAAIV_r,.,.._l~
closest Bank One.
IJII'tUWI\ - VIW'j;".
Our door's always open. \Vhatever it takes.'" ·
Membtr FDIC.

..

·
· ed
'de
th ·
·
f
Pomeroy poI.tce mvesugat
an acct nt at e mtersecuon o
East Main and Nye Avenue early Tuesdlly evening.
Aecording to the repon, Ronald Cwpenter was turning from East ·
Main ·onto Nye Avenue on a green tight. when his pt'ckup truck was
struck by another truck driven by John Greer, New Haven, W.Va.
Police reponed that Greer failed to stop for the traffic signal and
struck the front left side of the Cwpenter vehicle causing heavy
damage. There was light damage to the left side of the Greer truck. ·
Neither driver was injured.
Greer was ciled to mayor's coun on a traffic· signal violation
charge.
Continued on page 5
~-------;.,;,._ _ _.,;,..;,._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _... ,

on Wednesday, March 13 at 6:30
p.m., according to Republican
County Chairman George M.
Collins. The menu will include
both ham and chicken to accommodate different tastes.
.
"It will be an evening of good
food and good fellowship," Collins
said.
·
Elsass is an accomplished public
speaker, according to CoUins, having hosted a weekly public affairs
TV show and a weekly radio talk
show; as well as anchoring a night- ·
ly news program in Ashland, Ohio.
"I have heard Rex, and can say
he is a dynamic, informative and
entenaining speaker," CoUins said.
Elsass also served a stint as a
member of the Mansfield City .
Council. In addition, he served as
Vice Chairman of the Richland
County Rer.ublican Executive
Commtttee. n his current position
with the State Party, Elsass works
out of the State }{eadquarters in
Columbus and is responsible for
developing written campaign
strategies, recruiting quality candidates, and working with incum-·
bents seeking reelection. Elsass
regularly teaches ljnd lectures at
regional campaign seminars for
candidates, and is nationally known
for his knowledge and,ability.
Tickets for the diriner at $10 and
are available from any Rerublican
officeholder, or from Pau Gerard
at the Meigs County Courthouse.

RIGHT TO READ WEEK OBSERVED •
Stacy Shank, rlgbt, and Mike Van Meter, students al Meit~s High School, look lime out on .
Tuesday to .read to kindergarten class of Mrs.
·Mary Carolyn Wiley at Pomeroy Elementary.
Shank and VanMeter read to the students as a

pari of Rlgbt to Read Week being observed in
the county. Other students rrom· Meigs High
School readil!g lo students at Meigs Local Elementary Schools are Amy Warth, Tara Gerlac.ll,
Heather Davenport, Julie Buck, Chrissy
Weaver, Kelly Smith, Kristen Stanley, Love
Batey and Melanie Qualls.
•

Scioto County native is
killed in Middle East
in Iraq.
he had been wounded until that
A press pool report cleared by story came out,'' Wisener said.
Department of Defense censors
She said she placed· a blacl&lt;: ribsaid Applegate was wounded in the bon on an orange wooden plaque
back of the head by shrapnel, bearing his name on a spec1al tree
which required 12 stitches.
in her front yard.
Applegate was quoted in the
The oranmental pear tree
pool repon as saying, "It gives us a belonging to Wisener and her huslot of confidence in the tank and its band, Jim, has become a focal point
survivability. We went .through it, for Scioto County's patriotism. It is
and we came out OK.'.'
decorated with more than 200
Applegate's family members bright orange plaques bearing ihc:
declined to talk 10 reponcrs Tues- names of Scioto County serviceday.
men and women. Applegate's is the
"They .are aU gathered IOj!ether only sign with a black ribbon.
in that house .... Nobody wtll tell
Cathy · Crabtree, a clerk at
them who to get in touch wilh," a Fuller's Stop and Shop, said everyfriend, Virignia Wisener, told the one knew Applegate.
Columbus DispalCh.
"This is such a small town,"
She said the family wonders if Crabtree said. "When something
the shrapnel wounds Feb. 18 were happens to somebody. it takes
the ones that proved fatal.
about five minutes .for it to .get
•'The family did not even know around.

McDERMQTI, Ohio (UP!) Flags are flying at half staff in this
Scioto County community in honor
of a native son killed in the Persian
Gulfwar.
·
The Pentagon said Tuesday that
Army Staff Sgt. Tony Applegate
was killed in action on Feb. 27. He
was the fifth Ohioan killed in the
U.S.- led war against Iraq.
The news shocked residents of
this community of 2,800, where
Applegate's mother, Dolly Bellomy, lives, especiaUy because they
thought he had made it through the
war with only an injury.
The Portsmouth Daily Times
had reported on Feb. 26 that Applegate was wounded on Feb. 18 when
his tank came under Imqi artillery
fire as his unit returned to the
Saudi-Kuwaiti border from a battle

Turner has sights set on Pomeroy mayor's post
Dottie Turner, a Pomeroy realtor, has her sights set on. the
Pomeroy Mayor's office.
Turner is the owner of Dottie
Turner Realty in Middleport, but
resides on Mulberry AVe!JUe in
Pomeroy, Turner has been a Meigs
County resident for 18 years, and a
Pomeroy resident for II year,i.
A graduate of Rutland. High
School, Turner has five children.
Her eldest daughter, Denise Bunce
is an Athens attorney. Her son,
Clinton (Junior), is currendy serv·
ing in the U.S. Navy in Salldi Ani·
bia. Another daughter, Charmelle
Spradllng, is employed at the realty
office, and two other daughters,
Monica and Katrina, are students,
Monica at Ohio University and
Katrina 81 Meigs High School.
A realtor for II years, Turner
has experien·ce with income tax
preparation, operation of a grocery
, and general store, furniture re-

upholstery and a satellite dish business. Turner was also employed by
the U.S . Air Force, and feels that
her background in business qualify
her for the office of Mayor of
Pomeroy.
Turner's community activities
include ~rvice as PTA vice presiden~ four years with the Rutland
emergency squad and six years
with the Pomeroy squad. She is
also a current member of the Middleport Community Association
and on the membership committee
and the Chrisbnas parade committee.
While with the Southeastern
Ohio Rlllltors Associatio~. Turner
served as CXH:hairman of the Green
Up America program and was the
co.chairmail of the Conti'nuing
Education for the Board of Realtors.
Turner sees village improvements as a maj~rkey to community

.

for their party's nomination..
development
"I would work toward a com- Democrat Larry Wehrung is
pletely new septic system," Turner unchallenged in the spring primary.
says, "so as not to pollute the Ohio
River with Pomeroy's sewage. I
would also start to install all new
water lines that arc in bad repair."
Turner also pledges, if elected, to
repair streets.
·
~'Houses that are falling down
and are health hazards," Turner
continued, "should be tom down."
According to Turner, the village
should reevaluate its finances and
its income sources, apply for grants
and encourage community development
"We should try to encourage
pride in living in our beautiful river
town," Turner said, and to improve
the looks of our town, and' try to
.develop the river for recreation to
make Pomeror a resort town."
·
Turner wil face fellow 'Republi·
DOTI1E TURNER
can Bruce Reed in the May primary

I

'

I

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